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Friday, October 4, 1t191

Pomeroy • Middleport. Ohio

· hge 12 • The Dally Sentinel

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,_.,.,w.-...Ciool*lfaortol •

SDC"

~-ltd.

w....., .•o.....
w

,6p.m.

Hol111e~,s

'yServi&lt;a •7p.m.

0

PUior: J.D. Young

,_,AI

PUior. Kellh Rader
Sundoy Schooi·IO a.m.
Wonloip · lla.m.

I ¢

-lp-10:45a.m.
•
., flnt llopllol .
: PaulSiinlon
EolllllainSt
- y Sc:hool • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
. flnt s !' • •pdll

Rid: Sejdls
Sunda) Sdlool· 9-.JO a.•.
Wonllip · I0:30LIII.

418n-~Pike

Sundoy Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonlllp. 10:4$ a.m., 7:00p.m. ·
Wodneoday Services- 7:00 p.m.
ll1nl ~ Cloon:b
. _ ; Mark Morrow
.
6111 llild Pallll!'r St., Middleport
$unday Sehool - 9:1$ a.m.
Wonllip • 10:15 a.m., 7:00p.m.
¥tt"wck :t•r Service-7:00p.m.

RMI

E-•ill: ltcilh Coo!&gt;&lt;r
YOIIIII~ Midloi:IT&lt;apnlen
s-ky School· 9.30 a.m.
- . - 1:00 Lm. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
W •. ' ) Serviooa • 7:00 p.m.
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IIOIIIockGn&gt;.. Cioudl

P..wr: Oeno lapp •
Sundoy .....,. • 10::10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.ni., 7 p.m.

Wonllip • 9:30a.m. Sunday
lllblc Study· 7:00p.m. Wodneoday
Qld 11otW Free Wll Jlopdol Clo281501 St. RL 7, ~eporl
s.aySdlooi·IOa.m.
Evenin&amp; ·7:30p.m.
'J]Iundoy Serviooa • 7:30

Chrrstian Un;on

, _ , Rev. l01e1 R. A&lt;n:e, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 . ....
WonhZ: • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wecb · - Sa viola·7 p.m.

Honfwoi

:r;tadut

Wonhip • !Oa.m., 7 p.m.
Wtdnt1d1y Suvicet-7 p.m.

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............ Cio. . Roilrood SL, MMon
Sehool • 10 a.m.
W

y Serv- • 7 p.m.
F - Rtil Bopllll .

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a.- olaortolll

Church of God

United Metllod;st

ML Mnlt Cloudlor God

·Gnllo11 Uolttd Metbodill
·Worship · 9:30a.m. (l&amp;t &amp;. 2nd Sun),
· 7:30p.m. (3rd a: 4th Sun)
Wcd~y ScNie&lt;: • 7,30 p.m.

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Sc••.,. •

I· f.30 o.m.
Wanlllp•10:45 a.m.
1'holnd!tJ
7::10 p.m.
Sundoy

r-: ..... Pill :J'ayl..s.Mo; ..... ·IO~m.

- l l n l Clrardl ollllt Nlllllftllt

Worahip ~ 9 a.m.
Sun&lt;loy School • to a.m.
Thunday Sen~ leta. 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wcdnadoy Service• • 7 p.m.

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~CII-oiGod

p.m.

S. R. 248 II Riebel llood, Oleleer
P.a: Rev. William D. Hinda
SoondaY Sc:hool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 6 p.m.;
Wcdneaday, 7 p.m. Family Tralnloa Hour

Congregational

Eprscopal

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Wonhlp · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sdlool • 10:30 a.m.

'-&amp; llollOrol

.

Sunday School • 9:30 l .m. '
Worship· 10:30 e.m.

-lilt

s,,.....Pallor: Bill Slircl

Topptn l'lroiaa St Pool
Pastor: Sharon H11111n1n
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Woiship, 10 a.m.
TUIII!br Serviccto •.1:3Ctp~m•.ll\. ~~~"-r~- J'

~- ·~--• 9:30 m
SU•-Y
..._,~. ' a. .
Wonhlp-10:30a.m.,6p.m.
SerYtca _7 p.m.
Wednudar

Haul Commu•lly Cburt•

Mlddlepnrl l'r&lt;sbJitrllo
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m.

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Scvellii·DIY
Mulbeny Hts. ld., Pomeroy
Pulor: Roy Lawinllc.y
Sal..day Scn~i..S :
Sobbath School· 2 p.ra.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

,_.,CiollrdlolllllfNiillil,....~,,.
, _, .... Thonw Mea.,.
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Fn-GospiiM...,_
~Knob, oir
Rd. Jt.

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Pastor: Robert Barber

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Soalbll&lt;lbo:ll'ltw T_,...,
Silver Ridp
·Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonhlp - 10 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
Wcd!l&lt;odoy Sen~ice • 7 p.m.
C.rlttoitllt..ltnl&lt;oomllolloool cti,...h
Kinpbury Road
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Pastor: Jeff S....ith .
. Sun••r School· 9:30a.m. .
WoJhi~ScNiCC 10:30 a.m.
No Sunday ~~· ednc·•·
-Y N'aft!Sc
1-.;-.- ~~'eel .

RIVERIIIDE COOKIN' - Nothing goea with
a cool autumn evening like a little hot chill.
From left, Mike Englert, owner of the J.f'.
Englert, and Ray Bogge11 watch while · Bob

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2 112 miles north of Reedsville
on State ROUie 124
Pastor: Re~. Robert Markley
Sunday School • 1I a.m.
Sunday Worship. ·10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7:30p.m. .
Wednesday YoiJth ScNI«: ·7:30p.m. .

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P. J. PAULEY, AGENT '

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CLASSIFIED ADS ·.
a supermarket
· for everything

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204 Condor St.
Pomeroy,OH

992·2975

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HEARING CONTINUED - ,Jack D. McCredy U, •n Ohio eteta .
trooper ch•rged ·with killing hie wife, kept hll heed, ~ad. clur·
lng much of en extradition heerlng Friday In Perkartburg, W.VL
The hMrlng wea contlnuR until Monday. McCrady we• reprellnted by court-appointed ettomey William Kiger, right. (AP)

Extradlti.on continued for Otllo
trooper charged in wife'~ death

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plan.

tour of Ohio

Rowe, englneet on the Rufue B., lletlr• e hefty
kettle or chill to help fight off the Friday evening
froat. (T·S pho~o by Jfm Freemen)

Sunny weather·prompt~ record
turnout for ·Stern wheel Festival

By TOM HUNTER
Tlmea-&amp;lntlnal Staff ·· ·
POME~OY - The seventh Big
Bend Stemwheel Festival concluded
i&gt;ARKERSBtJl!,G, W.Va. (AP.) -A former Ohio state trooper of the
its weekend run along the Pomeroy
year who ~ his wife missing and filed for divorce days later was
riverfront Saturday with slemwheel
arrested Fnday after her decomposing body was found in a shallow grave.
races, the crowning of the festival's
Jack -McCrady I _l, 31 , was charged with murder. He was being bela
queen, and a big evening fireworks
pending an extradttton heanng Monday m Wood County Circuit Court in
display along the Ohio River.
,Parkenburg. The llcaring was postponed from Friday.
·
Saturday's festival acliv.ities began
If convicted, be could face 15 years to•life in .Prison and a fine of up
with the second "Days Gone Bye"
to SIS,OOO.
.
parade through the streets of historic ·•
McCrady, ,who joined the State Highway Patrol in 1991 , was arresle'd
downtown Pomeroy. .
early Friday at his p~nts' home in Parkersburg. His parents declined to
Several floats and marching units
comment after lhe arrest. .
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were featured, lnduding the Meigs
. Washington County, Ohio, Sheriff's Capt C.E. Forshey said lnvesliHigh School Marching ):land, Gal, gat6n believ~ McCrady shot his wife Jenifer McCrady, 30, in the heRd, ,lipolis Shrine Club, a barbershop• ·
wrapped her tn'a comfortl!r anc;lleft her.body in a shallow gra.ve abOut 10
quartet, and; several antique tractors
miles west of Belpre, Ohio. The two were married in 1989.
from the Big Bend Farm Antiques
Her body was found Thursday, two weeks after McCrady had report\. .
Tractor Club.
~
ed her missing. Newspaper llccounts said McCrady filed for ·divorce six
A large crowd gathered on each
days after his wife's disappearance, seeking custody of the couple's young . side of Main Street 10 walch the
sons, ·ownership of their house and spousal support.
parade make itS way through the
. Investigators said a purse and oti)er items McCrady had said his wife
route, which begiiJI at Bob Roberts
was cmying when she disappeared were found in a ceiling storage area
Field aad made the turn home at Sec- ,
oflhe couple's home. A search also turned up a .357 Mlll!num revolver
ond Street and Butlemul Avenue.
believed to be the gun used to shoot Mrs. McCrady.
Rounding oul the 1parade lineup
Mc(;rady told authooties his ~ife I?Ok a suitcase, some personal
were two floats which carried the 15
belonsmgs anli $4,000 tn c~sh, pohce sard. He also claimed his wife left . candidates for 1996 Big ·Bend Sternher weddilig ring on the kitchen counter.
,
wheel' Festival .Qtll)en. Each of 'the
1
. Sgt. Brenda !="lliqs; State p~tt:ol spo~esWOIJ1an, said Friday the parrol
queen contestants ~ere dressed in·
has b_caun termmahon proc~ms~ agamst Mc(:rady, who i§ on adminVictorian style costumes, reminiscent
islrallye leave. The p_roceedmgs wtll take sevelll days.
,
of the early days of the Stem)lhcel
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era in the mid· late 1800s.
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Following the pa,rade, each of ffie
Kem~
b~s
candidates enjoyed a luncheon cruise
on the slemwlleeler Jewell City, ·
COLUMBUS (AP) ..., Republican presidential candidite Bob Dole and
arriving
on the downtown rivetfront
his running mate Jack Keml? will return to·Ohio next week -by bus,
al 12:30 p.1fl. for the iqlrOdl!Ctions
Dolo C8111pal8/l spokesman Jim Lynch said friday thai the two willtrev·
el tftrouah the ..-.pn Thursday-and Friday. Detail~ of the visit were not· and crown\ng of the 1996 festival
queen.
co':~olltte.
' I cand:d
.._· 1n
' Ohio on the same da
. y. Pres!·
, ·
The queen candidates were iqtro,. pn:a"..... nha
t ates wr.II ·....,
duced
lo the large crowd that sathdent Clinron il whCduled to appear Thunday in Dayton.
1
ered at the main ,stase by local tele·
o0Je a wife, BliZjlbelh, also witl campaign in Ohio next weelt. Sbrl \viii
visiQn personality Jack Kane' .of • play
apeik iQ ,Clndnnati on Wed~esday, Lynch .said, • ~ •
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(~tlnued on A2) .

Dole,

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United Brethren

Edea Uailed Brftll"••• O.risl ·

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·forrntmr -,.;· .

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ML Htmooo Ulllltd Bnl~no
· lo Chrflt Cloor&lt;b·
Texu Community off CR 82
Pasto'r: Robert Sanders
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship~ 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.

Tuesday &amp; Thunday • 7:30 p.m.

let••• frio.......
CJo.ra of dot Nlllllftllt
P -: loilllt A. Dupler
Sundiy School· 9:31h.m.
Worship. 10:4' a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednaday Serviooa • 7 p.m.
a...... ollllt Nounat

Pulor: Rev. Clwles Mull
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
UMYF Sundoy 6.:30 p.m.
Finl Sunday ol Monlh • 7:30 p.m. ~ioo

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Seventh-Day Adventist

t

' f~Jldlh'g,

H•rrlsoa.-llle rfttbYitrlll Cllurtll
Worship - 9 a.m.
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Sunday SchOol · 9:4$ a.m .

E"Yening7:JO p.m.

SundaJ School· 9:30 e.m.
Wonhip • t0:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wt:dtliooCioy Scrviooa • 7 p.m.

t4o. 35

Trustees·
·challenge

Sunday Sthool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m.

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Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
•
Evenina • 6 p.m.
. •
Wcdnctday Sen~ices · 7:00p.m.

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Vol.

economy, and leadership worthy of
your trust," Dole told supporters in
Pennsylvania last week.
Perot performed well in .'92
debates between Clinton and former
President George Swill, but bas been
shut our· this time .. Hfs running
adver(iseme~ts urging- that he be .
included, but he lost court cHal· '
lenges to the independent Presiden·
tial Commission on .Debates' decision
to exclude him.
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The most interesting question is
which Dole comes 10 rhe podium:
• The veteran, quick-wined man
lauded as true lo his word by even
liberal Democrats when he left the
Senate in June;
• or Dark Shadow Dole, the man
who blamed Democrats for the wars
o,f the 20th Century in a 1976 vice
. RI;ADY TO DI;BATE - Republican pr. .ld~ntlal hopeful Bob
presidenti_al debate.
Dole reaporldR to e rtlporter'a question Seturdey In Bel Hllrbour,
":Under the lights, you revert to
(Continued bn A2)
Fla., during a lunch with former Prealdent George Buah. (API

P~tor: Re~. ,alrk Baker

FuR Gospd Uptbouoe
33045 Hiland Road, Pftmeroy
Paslor: Roy Hunter
&lt; Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Mlddti~~~rt CloU&lt;b ollbt NuaniC
PUior: Gt&lt;l"')' A. Cundiff

Paslor: Bob Rfndolph

Third Ave.

Sy CHUCK RAASCH ,
presid~ntial recipe, whether his lead
(JNS Political Writer
. in national .polls i~, as Republicans
HAKIFORD, Conn. - Bob Dole argue, a souffle of broken promises
hopes that Sunday night's nationally ready to fall ; or Clinton's meal-and~elevised clebale begins -10 days that potatoes argument that the country is
shake up th~ campaign. President more prosperous and family-friendly
'Clinton hopes it's more campaign than when he took over four years
business as usual .
ago .
Clinton will try to kee~ tlleJacus
The first .o f two presidential
debates offers the first real compar- on .the futuie, portraying the countrY
alive moment between Dole and as heuer off than when fie·was elect·
Clinton. Vice Presidential candidates ed four years ago, an~ himself as a
AI Gore and Jack Kemp debate reasonable check on the Republican
Wednesday in St. ,Petersburg, Aa.; revofution in Congress.
and Clinton and Dole reconvene in
"The important thing 1o remember
San Diego Oct. 16.
i~ the debate is as much about the
They will be staged before an American people and their future as
American public that, so far, is less it is about Sen. Dole and me," Clininteresled and less stim:d up than four ton said.
,
years ago, wilen Clinton rode in on a
Clinton supporter Jennifer Shock·
cauldron of voter discontent and ·Iey, 21 , a student at Elizabethtown
aoss Perot grabbed nearly one in five . ,College in Pe~nsylvania. said she's
votes.
looking for "just basically a strong
The de~tes will. t~sl the Clinton showing from the president. Good

answers. nQwavering on issues,"
Dole gets his first face-to-face
chance to show how · different he
would.be as president.
"lie has to just get up and tell the
truth, " said Dole backer Bob Miller,
21, also an Elizabethtown student.
. "He has lo focus on why his message
of tax cuts.and growth is exactly what
the country needs. And he has to talk
about moral leadership from the
White House."
Dole will try to sell his 15 percent
tax-cut plan as achievable and right
for America, and ponray Clinton a5
a double-talker who broke a middleclass lax-cut pledge of the 1992
campaign. He's also said he'll press
Clinton wh¥ he won:t release an FBI
report critical of Clinton's record
again~t drugs.
' "! will use every chance l get to
repeat our message of less government in your life, more growth iri our .

Pastor: Rev. Kriana Robif\100

Ualltd Foil• Cbun:b
Rl. 1 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pastor: Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m .
We,dnesday Service· 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Gallipolis • M;cfdleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • OCTOBER 6, 1996

Syn&lt;111&lt; Flnt Ualltd ,.,....,,..-

Pastor: l..awrcnce Bush
Sunday School • 9:30a.m,
Evening. 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service • 1 p.m.

Co. Rd.63
Sunday Sdlool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.

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.Syro&lt;IUI! Mtsoloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracuse '
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
E~ening 1 6 p.m.
· Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

MI. Olin Commually Cburtb

Ton:~Cioortll

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l'esllt&lt;OOtol A11tmb1J

Follb Gospel Cblin:b
L..Ona Bouom
S~mday sdiool ·9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneSday 7:30p.m.

ll•kl_,t Cloun:b
Orand Street
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship • II i .m.
Wedncldly ScrvM:t1 • 8 p.m.

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Mono Cbapcl c•ur&lt;b
SundaY school ~ 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.
Wednetday Service· 7 p.m.

Clllar&lt;l of Gad .,.........., \

sunday Sdlool • I&amp; a.m. . )
Wonhip • II • ·Ill·
Wedneoday Sen~icta • 7.l,&gt;.m . . ' ·

llolcm St.

Main &amp; Firth St.

.
tmts·

Expectatio11s rise as ClintOn,
Dole square· off in first d.ebate

Ntw Uft VIctory Center
'3773 Oeoraea Creek Rnad, Oallipolis.'OH
Paslor: Bill Staltn
1
Sunday Services· 10 a.m. &amp; 7 r.m.
• Wcdncaday · 7 P·~· a: Youlh 7 p.m.

DyavUie C0111111uallJ Cblll't~
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Clltsltr
PIIIOr: Sharon Hau1man

PaskH:PJ . ~an

Rai:ooadF.reoWII .......

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Presbyterian

OffRi. 124
Putor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday Sdlool • 9:30 a.m.
Worship·lla.m.. 6:30p.m.

0 .1. White Rd. oiTSt. Rt 160

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Pentecostal

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follb
Tabtno&lt;le
Cbor&lt;b
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: R.;v. Emmell Rawson
Sunday School· 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7 p.m .

Apple and Second Sis.
Putor: Rev. David RUIICII 1
Slndoy Sdlool and Wonhip- 10J.m.
Scrv~ 7:30p.m. •
w
y Servk:es • 7:30 p. '

:::!Z

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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Middleport PeoltcGOiol

Sundoy School· I0 a.m.
Worshif - 9 a.m.
Tuesday Scrvoces · 7 p.m.
BetlleiCbor&lt;b
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday Sehool • 9 a.m.
. . Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.

Allftd

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CUfton ToberldCie Cllur&lt;b
Cliflon, W.Va.
Sunday.$(hool ~ 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Thursdly Service ~ 7 p.m. ,

· MlddltiNH1 Coauauolty Cbur&lt;b .
. 57S Pearl 51., Middleport ,
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 1o a.m.
Evenina -7:30p.m.
Wcdnctday Service - 7:30p.m.

n-•&lt;?~'.!l&lt;lcn Kline

NortlltlotCiultr

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Apootolk Follll
· 1/4 mite piSI Fort Meip on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van .Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday· 7:00 P·!"·
Friday-7:00p.m.

St Rt. 124, Ral:ine
Putor:·william Hoback
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
·. E~ening ~ 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services.· ~ p.m.

~Q•rrll

. Mrlp Cooprnllvr Parlsll

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c~• ..,~ or J.... c•m~ ·

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Eadlbntllout of Pnytr .
(at Burlinaham churth off Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vance
Sunday wuahip • 10 a.m.
Wcdnctday o:rvia; · 6:30p.m.

CooMU&lt; Ualttd Melbodloe Parlall

ML OliYt Uohcd Metbodlsl
Off'i24 behind Wilkesville ·
'Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Ser.oices - 7 p.m. '

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Ro:jokl'l Ule Cbiii'Cb
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawrence Foreman
Sunday School • tO a.m.
·Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Postor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
wa..hlp . 9 a.m.
Wednesday Sctviceo · IO a.m:

ltacloe

Details on
pageA2

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Service: Friday, 7 p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durhom
Sunday · 9:30a.m. and 7 p.m .
Wcdneldoy - 7 p.m.

Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday Sdlool· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

St. Pool Lolllt,. Cloucb
Comer Sycamor&lt; II Second St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Dawn Spaldina
Sunday Sehool · 9:45a.m.
.
Wonhip. II a.m.

s,, .._ Flni a..,.. of God /

Foor111. Maill St., ldlddlepool
, _ , kv. Gilbert~ Jr.
5uatliiJ Sdsool· 9:30a.m.
Waiolllp • !0!45 a.m.

wkel·~7

Ottr SOYiov Urtbeno Churdl
Walnut and Henry Sta.• Rawnswood, W.Va.
lntrim'J&gt;UlOrs: Oeorae C. Weinck
·
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
' Wol"'hip • ~I a.m.

'

Rlllllld Clouc• or God
eillor: Randy Barr
Sunday School • 10 l.m.
Worship • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednelday Serviooa • 1 p.m.

....,. : Ari• Hurt .
10 a.m.
Wonhlp • II ' ·'"·

~School·

aw:z,·1 P·'"'
Wedut ' f

Worship • 9:00 a.m.

Sunday Sdlool· 10:00 a.m.

Fall• Ftllowalllp Cruodt IGr Cllrtll
Putor: Rev. Franklin Dickens

Sunday Schooi - 10 a.m.
Wonhip. 9 a.m.

S•tloo

Pine OfO\Ie
Pastor: Dawn Spalding

RaCine
PUIOI: Rev. IIIDCI S.uerflcld
SUiday School· 9:45 a.m.
Evcni!IJ· 7 p.m.
Wedneoday Sen~icta • 7 p.m.

.tJa._m.,6p.m.

H.......,.... COIIDiuolly Cloun:ll

Pastor: Kemtelh Baker
Sllnday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:4' 1.111. (lsi &amp; Jrd Sun)
' Eutl..elarl
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sllnday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 9 a.m.
Wednesday • ~ p.m. .

SL J... Ll...... Cloor&lt;ll

QriolluU...
Hortfanl, W.Va.
· Putor: Rev. David McManis
. Sunday Sdlool· II a.m.
Wonhlp. 9:30 a.m., 7:io p.m.
Wcdnelday Servicta • 7:30 p.m.

ru·N, 2nd SL M' leport
Putor:'J...,.. E. K&lt;eoee

w

Lulheran

. . . . . . Cloardl or Clorla&amp;
Pastor: Pllilip 5curm ·
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
. Wonhip Servia;: 10::10 a.m.
Bible Study, Wcdnelday, 6:30p.m.

...... ....... Ciom:k
. St. Rt. 143 JUII.olr·Rt. 7

V~8llplllll

.•

'

Pastor: DaYid Dailey
Sunday S&lt;:hool-&lt;9:30 a.'!' ·
EYenina ~ 7 p.m.

Tile Btlitvtn' Fdlowihlp Mlolltry
New Ulll!' Rd., Rutland
Putor: Rev. Marprel J. Robinson
Serviczs: Wednesdly, 7:30p.m.
Sundoy, 2:30p.m.

Monl•aSiar
.... PutOf: Kenneth Biker '
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
· Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Setvic&lt;o ·7:30p.m.

w....-

Pallor : Daniel Bmline

..

'

C1 Pump~ins:' lookin' good • 08

••

Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m.

Sullday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip ~ 9!30 a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wcdncadar • 1 p.m.
Friday. fellowahop service 7 p.m.

Carmel
PUtor; KenneJh Baker
Sunday School · 9:311 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:45 a.m. (2nd II 41h S'"')

........ ~Cioutb
Sundoy Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
7 Servioo 7:30p.m.

'

Worship 10:30 a.m.• 7:30p.m.

FaUll Foil Golptl 'Chur&lt;b
l.ons Boltom •
P~or: Sttve Reed

.....,

Dcxler
' '• PUior. Wood)' Call
Sunday Evenlna · 6:30p.m.
Thunday Seniice ·6:30p.m.

~eature,

t'

Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd.

Rock~

s.o....

Llborty ClorlsltU Cloudl

C..,,..

Foinlow Bible
!.&lt;tart, W.Va. 1!1. I
Putor: Rankin Roach
Sundor School· 10:30 o.m.
Worship . 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednctday Service • 7:00 p.m.

Putor: Rev. BIK'Ic.wood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Rev. Clyde Hendenon
SundaY .ervic:e, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youtb Fellowahip Sundly, 7:00p.m.
Wedneldoy servic:e, 7:30p.m.

.Salem Cooter
Putor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School • 9:15·o.m.
Worship· 10:15 a.m.

Cloudl ol Clorial
&amp;-Hal Jooeph B. Hooklns
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedncaday Serviooa • 7 p.m .

•
:•
•

Hl70
LOW 40s

Cal"l')' Bible Cloirtb

Hobooll Cllrtotlla ftllowllllp Chan•

Sunday School · 9:30a.m. •
Worship· 10:30 a.m. ,
nunday SerVica •., p.m.,

· R•llud c-m•r Cloardl ,
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCarly ·
Sundoy School · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Evenina • 7 p.m.
Wedneadoy Servicta . 7 p.m.

•

Yankees advance
-in playoffs • 81"'
.

Wednesday Service • i p.m.

Pam rDJ
Putor. Robert E. Robi1110n.
SUiday School · 9:15a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tui:lday • 10 a.m.

.RIIIoad

llidoorJ -

SlmrRliiBapdll
PUiot: Bill Uttle
Sunday Sdlool· IO..m.
Wonhip • I! a.m., 7:30p.m. •
Wcdnelday Servi&lt;a· 7:30p.m.

.

Pulor: l'elcf"f!emblay ·
Sunday School • 9:30 i.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m. ond 7 p.m. '
Wodneaday Service-.7:00 ~-m.

Putor: Rev . Phillip Ridenour
Sundoiy School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Impaired?
Not anymore/

Sllnnv'Uie Word oU'a,llb

PUior: Ke11h Roder
Sunday Sdlool· ~:15 a.m.
Wonhip · IOa.m.
'
Youlh Fdlowlllllp, Sunday · 6 p.m.

l..aalol Cllffroe Mttbo41111,Cio-

•••••• Chra ol Cllrlot
car- oiSLIL 124 A........, Rd.

Sunday Sch&lt;&gt;oi • 9,: 30 a.m.
Wonhip · IO:&lt;lOa.m., 7:00p.m.
w....,....r Seivicts • 7:00p.m.

llacine, Oil

I D-.. ofCiorlol

·Wonhip • !Qo.JO a.m., 7 p.m.

Youth Pastor: Aaron Youn1

---·

Sunday School • 9:30 o.m..
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thomday Scrvic:c • 7:30 p.m.

-.E.-E. Undo,_
Sunda) Sdlool- 9'.30 Ltn.

RldiC F1nt Bapllst
Pallor. Rev. Lawren&lt;e T. Haley

•

H,....r -:
Rail "
Cluardl
Robert Manley

) Ciool* of Clrill

Purl Clolpd '
Sllnday School· 9 a;m.
Wonhip -tO a.m.

Clll'lotlla Ftllo•...P Ctaltr
Solem 51., Rutland
·· Putor: Robert E. MIISIOr
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 11:15 a.m., 7 p.m.
W - y Scn~ice • 7 p.m.

PUior: Owl.. Neville
Suaday Sdlool· 9 a.m.
~onhlp. 10 a.m. ·

H.._Cio.,..
Pearl St. Middlepell.
hslor: .... John Nevill&lt;
Sunday-. 9-.30 a.m.
Wonhip·ID:JOa.m., 7:30p.m.
W...,.....y Service . 7:30p.m.

Es

_....

.

Wbllo'•

OHH:r

Putor: Vemapyo Sullivan
Sundar School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:30 a.m.

w..,..
....
7S

:s

C~wrct1es
Follll Clol..r Optalllle Clo923 s.111ird St, Mlddleport
PutOr Michael Pal!li&lt;&gt;
Sunday .....,;.., 10 a.m.
Thbnday servk:e, 1 p.m•

w..,..

c...Coolville Jt.ood

I "'""'tf .. N
w
-Rcv.Hctllort0n10
9:30
Ill
W ' School·
• II a.m.,
6 p.m.
W
y Scrvic&lt;a • 7 p.m.

Par11ud11n1Ciotrn:b oldie Na ...
PUior: Muk Ma....,
Wonhip • 10:30 p.m. ·
Sunday School • 6 p.m.
w...-y Scrvicta. 7 p.m.

Had! (MWd Dortl

.... Gc:MolllltH_Cio_
1/2 mil&lt; otr Rt. 325
Pulor: Rev. O'Dell Malloy
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · I0:30a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wcdnelday'Scrvict ·7:30p.m.

Pulor:Sootip Servioo • 9 ua.
union • 10 a.m.
Sdoool ' ID:U a.•.

Putor: E. Lamar 'Bryant

ML Uoloa a..,O.r ,
Putor : Joe N. Sayre
Sunday Sehooi-9:45 a.m.
Evefting- 6:30p.m.
w...-, Sctvicta • 6:30p.m,.

Leadinc a.et Rd., Rutland

Sunday Sdlool · 9:30 •·• ·
Wonllip- 7 p.m.

Sel•lcea · 7p. ...

R....... Cio..... oii)&lt;N_. ,
Putor: s.-llloiH
Sunday School · 9:301.m.
Wcqhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
,.,ednelday Sl::rw~icea - 7 p.m.

PUior. Owlu Hcvill&lt;
Sunday School - 10 . ....
Wonhip . 9 a.m.
Thunday Scrvi&lt;:ea. 6:30 p.m.

· P -: lev. Dewey Kina
. Sunday aehool· 9:30a.m.
SUiday wonhip -7p.m.
w.........y prayer mceriiC· 7 p.m.

tirpponClo- oiCiorill
.

Ia 1 I
. -

y ScrviCO · 7:30p.m.

. . . oiSUniH-Cioardo

._...

·.

s-loy Sc:hool • 9:30 l.m.

~

Sundar School t-.JO e.m.

~t. II ' ·!"·• 7:30p.m. .

.' ..y...-,

•
I flnt ..,oM Clo_.

-,_._·

hslor: Rev. Vic:lor Roush

W

0

!lerviooa • 7:30 .....

c.J¥.., P1lptll O.,.r
tJ.nitotwille load

,.

Zlol Clou&lt;b ol Clorla&amp;
'Pomeroy, Hanltotwille Rd. (Rt.IC)
Pucor: Rot&lt;f w..
Sunday Sdlool · 9:30a.m.
Worship - !Qo.JO a.m., 7:00p.m.
Servk:es • 7 p.m. •

ServiC.-7:30 p.m.

•

..,.

Sunday Sdtool· 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • 9 o.m.

. PaRor. Jack Cc:tteanwc ,
Sundoy Sehool -9:30a.m.
Wonhip • !0:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wedneadoy Servioies • 6:30p.m.

~x'*:'"it.o
Scbool.·7:30p.m.
10 a.m.

1

, ,Sunday worship · 10:3$ o.m. I! 7 p.m.
Children's church - 10:35 a.m: Youth 6 p.m.
Wedne~y prayer service • 7 p.m.

............. JUdae Clotu&lt;b IICiorill

"*-.

w-...u .....

P~~t'~ader

Sunday school • 9:30 a. m.

KeH Dora ofCIIrlol
Wonhlp · 9:30a.m. ·
Sllnday Sdlool · 10:30 a.m. •
r --JeiTrey Walla&lt;c
taund3rdSunday .
· S10GraatSL,Middlcpan
Sunday ocbool·9:30a.m.
'WC~fthip • 11 a.m. ond 7 p.m.
W ' d•y ,Service . 7 p.m.
' PnoWII ....... Cio,_,LaMiddleport
Hayman

w

Du-H H
Clo31057 Stllo Route ~25, Lanpvlle

Mill 1 iCiowcbofQrial
$Ill and Main
HarUOO
• Youdl Minilter: Billfruler
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15.10:30 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wcdnelday Scrvicel · 7 p.m.

w.-..,

• ~·~Z!l:l-::i:le
_ , Sc:hool · 9:45 a.m.

~ldlool-11a.m.

,_,Rev. lopt Wi!Uod

....,. Sdl!lol · 9-.30 .....
.......... . 10:30 ..... llild 6 P.'"·

••
•••

GALLIPOLIS - Claiming that
the Gallia County Budget Commission's formul~ for distributing local
government funds is arbitrary and
illegal, Green Township trustees have
lalcen -their case 10 the state Board of
Tax Appeals.
'
The trustees believe the threemember commission erred when
alloc!'ling the 1997 distribution to
township, village, city and county
government by .using a. "purporteCI . '
'alternative' formula.which was neither adopted by the .commission nor ·
approved by l,he political subdivi: sions".under state law.
·
In an appeal filed· with the boaril
by Township Clerk Howard J. "Jot"
Foster and Westerville auomey John
R. Varanese, the trustees said the distributiop was made "according to,an
arbitrarily fixed percen13ge" of the
total amount.
State law requires that the com· ·
mission calculate and determine the
guafl!nteed minimum allocation and
"relative need" of the township,
according to the appeal.
,
The commission erred by giving
Green $6,465.06 from-the undivided
local government fund, and
$2,010.23 from the local government
revenue assistance fund, the appeal
claims.
The actual amounts !lie township
should have ~eived, the appeal
claims, are $191,456.06 and
$52,010.24, respectively.
Undivided loc'ai government
monies for 1997 were alloctited under
a · fortnul~ to guarantee an equal
., (Continued on A2) ~·. ,,

Good Morning
Today'a C&amp;au.i-Jimtbwl
· 17 Sections • l7li.Pages

Columns

DorotJay SaYre
. Sam Wl!oon ·

1Jm5e•

C3
BS

ct

Olllo Val~y Publlohioa Co.

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S.:n:I..,.,Oct.6
AQ:uWulhcr" forecasl for ~aylime colldilions and
MICH.

•

IToledO! 7'Z' I

IMansfield !sa· I•
• IColumbus l7o• I

· nt may brl"ng .·
. .-..... ld fro
.II... ow
· ers
back to .·Qh"lo
. .

Gallla County trlck-or-trest Oct. 31
counlywillbeThursday.Oct.3i rrom5:30-6:30p.m. ·

Road closing begins Monday ·

By WILLIAM M. WELCH
House Republicans being ha!J1mered
USA Today
in TV ads aired by theAFL-CIO. The
CLEVELAND - One of the · adsaccuselheGOPoftl)'ingtoslash
Democra!S' best chances anywhere of Medicare benefits for senior citizens.
knocking off a Republican Hoose Hoke estimates thai lhe union has
member is an unlikely figure from spent .$700,000 against him.
this city's past: former Mayor Den·
Hoke links the Medicare attack to
nis Kucinich.
the tumult and tmuma of Kucinich's
Elected al jusl 31, 'he was history term as mayor.
.
ar 33 - blamed for the city's finan·
In one of his ads, counleri~g the
cia! default.
Medicare attacks, Hoke is seen play, Maybe even w~rse, he was ing the piano and singins "America
blamed for cementing the city's place the Beauiiful" with senior citizens.
as a national joke: The Mistake by the
: "His solution for Medicare is jusl
Lake, they called this city. Things like il was .for Cleveland: po nothing.
. 111ete so bad that when he threw out Lei it go into defaull," Hoke says. ·
the firsi pitch for the Cleveland Indi. The grandson df a .Romanian
ans on Openiqg Day 1978, Mayor immigrant, Hoke he~ame a millionKucinich ~ore a bulletproof jacket. aire in the cellular phone business in
He threw a strike.
the 1980s. ·
.
Now, after nearly two decades in
He defeated a scandal-plagued
a personal and political wilderness, Democrat incumbent; Mary Rose
Kllcinich is back as \he Democrat. Oakar, in 1992. Despite controversy
He's challengmg two-ie.:m GOP Rep . . over some indiscreet remarks about

Hydrant flushing set in Gallipolis
·GAIJ.IPOLIS - Hydrants will be flushed in Gallipolis this week,
according to the following schepule:
.
.
Tuesday, Oct. 8 - Eastern Avenue, Maple Shade area, f'irst Avenue,
.Second Avenue. Third Avenue,. Fourth Avenue, Vinton Avenue, Neil
Avenue and Ohio AYenue.
'
.
Wednesday, Oct. 9 - State Route 7 (downriver), Neighborhood Road,
Green Acres, Texas Road , and stale routes 141 , 218, 588 and "160 to the
U.S. 35 bypass.
1
·
·
, Thursday, Ocl. 10-AII of U.S. 35 west'and all ofMcCormick'Road.
· Hydrants wil~ be flushed in these areas between 8 'p.m. and midnight.
R~sidents are cautidned that some temporary discoloration of the water
·and ..low pressure may occur during these periods.

· ~Hire Ability' theme of campaign
" G~LLIPOLIS

- The !heme for the 1996 National Disability AwareCIIJtlpaign is "Hire Ability," the Ohio Bureau of Employment Ser•
·vices office in Gallipol_is announced. ·
•
'
Businesses and organizations can benefit by lapping into this pool of
w~(!c;ers, an OBES spokesperson said. People with disabilities are successful atjobs,lhat utilize their training, ski)ls and talents in a variety of
. occupations, the spokesperson added.
·
. .
. .For mm:e information, stop by the OBES offic~ at45 Olive St., or call
. 446-16~3. .
.
.
'
.
)
'',

Chlldrens Services Board to·meet
, GALLIPOLIS - The Ga\lia County Childrens Services Board will
meet at noon Tuesday in the Childrens Services office, 83 Shawnee Lane.

TB skin tests scheduled Tuesday
GALLIPOLIS -Extended hours have heen set by the Gallia County Heallh Department for Tuesday. for anyone wishing 10. obtain a food
handler's card.
,
'
. TB skin tests will be given frqm 4-6 p.m. The department will also have
extended hours (4-6 p.m.) on Thursday, Oct. 10 to read those tests.
The TB skin tests are free and available to Gallia Coumy and.Gallipolis
city residents,

Health unit offers .immunizations .
GALLIPOLIS.. Free childhood immunizations will be given by the
; Gallia Counly Health Department from 4-6 p.m. Monday In the courthouse
lobby.
Children in need of immunizations must he accompanied ·by 'IIJ&gt;arent
and bring acurrent immunization tecord wilh them.
No flu vaccine will be given, lhe departnienl advised.

leon ress adiourns quietly

Minor inju,.Y reported in accident
HARRISBURG- A Crown City area man was "slightly injured in a
· one-vehicle accident Friday on County Road 75 (Adainsville), the Gal·
lia-Meigs Post of the Stale Highway P~Jrol reported.
Christopher G. Fitch, 18, 176 Rocklick Road, was not treated at the
scene,,troopers said.
Fitch was eastbound; six-tenths of a mile west of County Road 39 (Har·
· , jii~burg) in -Springfield Township at II :27 p:m. when 'his car went off the
left side of the road and·overturned, according to lhe report.
' ' ·
Fill:h told trooi&gt;ers he swerved to avoid a deer that had run onto the
road: His car was moderately damaged, troopers said.

.Fu_nding formula

.

Citation issued following crash

~

.SOMETIMES,
it's hard to
be a wo.manf•

Sunny weather

. ..1M _

'"

.

ouna-...,.,
Peddler
Showe

October 11, 12, 13

r

West Virginia

,

rle

•-c-eo.,;,

are

.....

If you have a medical question,
feei free to call the
·

at

~

e

,.;~~~~

t4C-•

•~. . -=

'

The HOTLINE re~eives many calls
from women whoconcerned
' about symptoms they are
.
.
.
expenenc1ng, umque to
· their species.

HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE

~;-~:··~·=:~=~~:

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nes~

· ths, \
uer 21 s torm.y mon

1

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CADMUS - Gallia County Road 150 (German Hollow) in Walnut
Township will be closed starting Monday at 8 a.m., County Engineer
Joseph L. Leach announced.
· The county Highway Department will replace a deficient one-lane
bridge, located immediately easl of the intersection with Stale Route 141.
Weather permitting, the road will be reopened Friday, Oct. 25.

Expectations.
·
r
ise
.

ln

Regiona_
l

1·800-462·5255

i\ registered nurse is on duty
6 a.m. 'til2 a.m. seven days a week.
.

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MERCERVll.LE- The Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
cited Donald B. Whealdon, 41, II 033 SR 160, Bidwell, for failure to control following a one-vehicle accident Friday on County Road 20 (Lincoln
Pike).
.,
· •
Troopers said Whealdon was soulhbound, one-tenth of a mile north of
County Road 148 (Peters Cave) in Walnut Township at 11:25 a.m. when
lhe car went off the left side of the road and struck a tree.
.!&gt;amage to the car, owned by Buckeye Rural Eiectric Cooperative, was
mqderate, troopers said.

Patrol tickets driver in accident

I

d
.Ul c rea·s I n g anger
··n seclude"d areas
·

. GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis City POlice and lhe Galli a County Sher1ff's Depahmenl have announced that trick-or-treat night throughout the

MartinHokeinOhio'siOthl;listrict. women,Hokewo~re·electiontwo
Kucinich's comeback has been years ago with 52 percent of the vote.
made possible by a timely civic reviKucinich turns 50 Tuesday but
sionofhisroleinthecontroversy.that possesses lhe same slight, boyish .
· led 10 Cleveland's fiscal disaster. That appearance as when he was the com:STERNW~EE;L STATION • Jim Su11dqulat, Middleport post·
.....__ •• .. let d. p
·
wru; Kucinich's battle againsi lhe bative mayor. After several attempts,
By.........
oc a r1111
• 1·
·
.
·
•·
·
k
·
·
master,
delivered li speclll po,s tmark commemorating the Big
city s economic powers to eep Its his ·c.o.me back tQok hold two years
A high pressure system will control OhiO's weather on Sunday, keeping electric uti·lily in public hands. a bal- · ago: In the the face of a landslide, he
Benl,l Stemwheel Festival at the Pomeroy Post Office's "stemwhliel Station" lilon_g the Pomeroy rlverwalk Friday. The spiclal
sunny skies over the sta!Q and highs in the mid- to upper-60s.
. '
lie won atlhe cost o~his own exile. upset "a .GOP Slate senator.
•A cold fron1 will move into Ohio late on Mon!lay providi'ng a chance' of
d ff
·
·
cancellation,
featuring an authentic aternwheeler wttti the date
LA··rthe
d
He stave o a recall effort but
The congressional district includes
and town postmark, was available throughout the weekend at'the
so~rs· ovcrno · man eastemareas.I;!Isewhereskieswillbepartlycloudy
1
1 · · 979 R bl"
and highs will range from 65to 70.
ost re·e ecuon m I
to epu lcan much of his legislative district It
festival and wllllle offered for a limited time at the Pomeroy Post
We.ther forecast:
George Voinovich, who is now in his • takes in middle· and·upper-class suliOffice. (T·S photo by Tom Hunter)
second te1111 as governor.
· urbs in Cuyahoga County as well as
s
unday... Most Iy sunny. Highs from the middle 60s northeast 1o around
I • be
·
70 southwest.
" t s en a very steep CQmeback the ethnic west side wards that were
Sunday night.. .Increasing cloudiness. Lows in the upper 40s to lower 50s. climb," I)ycinich says. "I was_ rea!; his springboard to City Hall. Some of
Monday... Partly cloudy. A chance of mainly afternoon showers north and ly m lhe desert for a long, long h.me. . those cily precincts gave him I00
west. Highs 65 to 70.
, There have he_en no _pubhshed ~ercent of their vote in a four.· way
(Continued from At)
But debates require far different
,
Extended forecast:
·
~ndependenl polls m the drstnct_, but """T&gt;rimary this year.
. ..
-~ ~· ·Tuesday... A chance &lt;&gt;f rain. Lows 45 to 50. Highs in·lhe middle.60s.
mslders '" both parttes say pnvate
Cleveland has seen a renaissance form." said Clin10n aide , George skills \han standing up and delivering
a stump speech, and Dole had more
"
:MsW.
. edQes.day.. ,A chance of rain. Lows 45 lo 50. Highs upper.50s 1_0 lower . polling has Kucinich in lhe lead.
since Kucinich was mayor. The Rock Stcphanopoulos·.
"llle expectations game favors than three decades Of debate practice
f',V,
.
.
. H?k~; '44, a ch~mplon ?f '..the and Roll Hall of Fame is centerpiece
Dole. The president's rhetorical skills in Congress. Sti:phanopoulos noted
, ., ' Thursday. .. A chance of rain. Lows in the middle 40s. Highs in the upper GOP s Contract Wuh Ame~lca 10 of a gleaming rebirth on Lake Erie.
~Us 10 lower 60s_
·
.
.
Hou_se debates. IS broadcasun~ ads
But only a short driv~ westward have been built up by the press and that the Senate is "the foremost
·a , , ·
remmdmg Cicveland of 11s m1sery down avenues · such as Lorain or Republicans.
debating society in the world," and
.
Clinton· "can sell Fords to Chevy thai Dole is "quick-witted and shiiiP
,Jt. .U
un~~r Ku~inich.
Detroit 'finds gritty,. working·class
~
Thts IS lhe guy who sent Cleve· neighborhoods. 'Romanian. Polish, dealers," said Republican National in debate."
,
land into defaul.t, but more than t_h~t. German, Spanish, Russian, Croatian Committee Chairman Haley BarThe presidential campaigll has
1
been
in a static, it's Clinton,s-to-lose
bour:
•
subjected us to nallonal humlha- andotherlanguagescanbeheardon
'I
,
tion," ~_says.
.
·. these blocks. A sea of yard signs proDespite White House attempts to state since the end of the.Democrat·
Jty ALAN RAM
, Dana Rohrabacher, R-Calif.. claimed
KuCIDICh has alred no ads of his . claim it Kucinich 's lurf: He grew up portray hiin as a skilled Senate ic convention in August. Many vot·
~tocfated Press Writer
victory !"or the GOP's "Contracl own. But Hoke IS one of scores of here, one or seven children of a Croa- debater," Dole has been recently por- ers are not enamored with Clinton,
trayed as a bumbler and stumbler. bul so far have been less taken with
.WASHlNGTON- Wltti llnle of With America" campaign promises
tian.
One
of Dole's biggest September either Clinton or Perot, the Reform
lli)l1isan bAle tlja.t marked much of of 1994, saying, "The direction has
Kuciniclj's political and fiscal criheadlines
was when he fell four fe.et Party candidate, according to a sur•· lenufl'. the ID41h Congress is changed. " ·
·
sis came in 19,78 v,;llen local banks
·off
a
platform
in California.
vey released Friday. by the Pew,~en~
ading ho"!.e, 21' months afler
But_ for the mOS\ part, things were
(Continued from A1)
refused to refina~Of-· $- 15. million in
''If I show up. I win, because . ter for the People an~ the Press)" i
ept!bl,cans ca'!&gt;tured the House and lrqnqud.
•
amount for the lown~hips. vi)lages, short-lerm city debt they had rouaccording to the press, he's the great·
In their poll of 1,517 voters, Clin,
enate amid promiSes of revo!Otion.
Given the . two years or often Gallipolis cily,govemment and coun- · tinely roll~d pver previously.
est
ever,"
_
Dqle
said
_
i
n
his
swing
ton
gol only a collective "C" average
, . After a 52-minute session in vehemenr partisan wrangling, Fri· IY government
•·
Th~ loans w~reluni-elared lo the
through
l'eimsylvania
last
week.
as
president.
, 'hlch il sent 14 mostly minor bills to day's session was markedly arnicaThe county receives 43 percent, or electric utility, lhcn called Muny
esid!)nt Clinton, the House finished ble, wilh lawmakers shaking hands $320,319.90, the city 15 percent Light.. Bul hankers demanded its
is Congress' two years of legis! at- and 'even embracing members of the ($Ill ,739._50), each of the county's sale 10 the local private uu~l;i:l:i'~iyn:c~~o~m::·rr"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!!!'l'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!~"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!9'J
ing at 2:52p.m. Friday before a hand- opposite party.
15 townships 13 percenl ($6,456.06) ·pany as the price for "
ful of law.makers, aides and tourists.
As the House finished its final bill • and the villages 29 percent Kucinich refused, and the city
T'
a mark of the political turmoil -designating &lt;lolorado's Cache La (~43,205.94 each). ·
nically defaulted when the .noltesl
he '104th produced, the House 's top Poudre River a national water her·
The same formula was applied to expired.
wo leaders were not in the chamber itage area - Sclu"oeder jok.ed to· her the local government revenue assis·
Voters later approved a
'
u1 rather lrying to help _their respec· GOP rivafs: "You \Vould wait for las!, tan,c fund distribution. In this case, increase to keep the· utility and
,, ive parties win coilrrol of lhe new wouldn't you,'to bring this up."
· each of the townships received out lhe city. But .Kucinich
ongress thattakes office in January.
·. From across the chamber. Rep. $2,010.23, while the villages were . crushed political!~ and personally:
S~ker Newt Gingrich, R·Ga., Gerald Solomon, R-N. Y., drew awarded $13.453.10 apiece.
"My political planet exploded into a
as camplligning for GOP candidates laughter by replying: "I just wanted
"As a result of the errors and million pieces,': he says.n North Carolina and Michigan, lo make sure the gentlelady had the intentional acts ... the eommi~sion has
Kucinich spent the interim in and
erroneously determined (Green's) out of politics. mqstly unsuccessfulhile Minority Leader Dick lasl word."
phardt, D-Mo., was soliciting con·
The quiet ending was in stark con· allocption from the (funds), having iy. His marri~ge dissolved. He
ibulions by te~phone at Democra- tra·s tto Jan. 4, 1995, when Gingrich made unlawful and excessive alloca- trouble finding a job.
•
ic Pany headquarters a few blocks House speaker in the first GOP-con· tions to the ... subdivisions," 1he .
The seeds of his own renaissance
ro\n ihe Capitot
trolled Congress in four decades. appeal claims.
·
sprouted in 1993 when the utility,
''J'he chair declares IHe second Then, the Capitol was bristling with
Green, ,one of the county's more now Cleveland Public Power,
e.s~ion of the J(l4th Congress network television anchors, journal- populated -townships, has requesled expanded. Thai brought a public redjourncd sine die (without date)," isiS from lhe world over, lobbyists, : tbatthe board enter a finding thatthc examination of how this city still
, he p~esiding officer, Rep. Robert lawmakers' families and ev~n televi- commission failed to determine the owns a power CO\'Ipany. Cleveland
. .
allocation according to statute; allo· magazine says lhe utility's low rates
' Walker. R-Pa. , said with a rap of his sion's Power-Rangers.
"aveC '
·
.
·
Wilh lawmakers struggling most cate the funds under slate Jaw; have saved customers $195 million
There was some sniping on the of lhe \)leek to complele an assort- increase the township's allocillion; over 10 years, compared wilh what
way out
ment of relatively• minor bills, the and reduce the o.ver-allocalion to the they would hav~ paid ifMu(ly
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, DeCola., Senate's adjournment Thursday nigh! other sulxlivisions.
.. had .been sold IO·lhe private utility.
e1iring af1er 24 years, blasted her and the House's departure Friday '::- All five of the county's villages
"History is on ~is side righl now,''
are owned in the _appeal -along wilh says Audrey Chapman, Cleveland
, ge-oid enemy. the Pen lagon, for seemed like the longest g()()dbye.
~tilhholding information she was
the budget comm1ssion.
senior editor. ''It was on hi~ side ha~
•eking on military officers it has
As of Friday, a hearing on the then. but no one knew it:''
working in Gingrich 's office.
appeal had not yet been set by the
The Muny Light fight undergirds
"1bcy'rc probably happier to S&lt;:e me
board, which operales under the stale Kucinich's campaign and he's eager
(Continued from ~1)
Departmenr of Taxation.
to remind' volers or it. He wears a
cave than anybody on the other side
1 the aisle," s.hc suggested.
WCHS·TV. Charleston, W.Va.
Green's appeal marks the second gold li~ht bulb on his lapei.·His cam·
t Rep. Eliot Engel, D-N.Y., criti·
Jessica Karr, a 1996 Eastern High filed against the budget commiSsion . pmgn slogan:
, ·
·1.ed 'I:cxas Gov. George w Bush for
Schoof graduate and current fresh- this year. The Gallia County Local
"Light Up Congress.''
·aying he would need a gun to go •lhc man at Wilmington College, \Vas School District is asking the board 10
Bronx to see the Texas Rangers play c!owned 1996 Big Bend Slernwheel del&lt;!rmine if its true millag~ rate is 15
Lilllt things
he New.. York. Yankce.o;.. An!l Rep. , .1-o~st•val Queen.
.
' '
mills, and nol ,I I, as determined by ·
llrt Worlh.
i
Karr, daj!ghter of Roger and Susie1 ihe budge! i:omnyssiOib in, rhll inid• . "•~ :
"Karr of Long Bouom. ~ecciv"ed a 1970s.
.
the CIAssi[itd Stet ion!
$1 ,000 scholarsftip, sponsored by
vurious Meigs County merchants
'
.
tiJSPS !i2S·8fHH
and individuals.
First runnerup was Meigs High ·
..Pifbh &lt;, he&lt;t till.,tt S unday. fl2 ~ 'lhird Me,
~ltpuli,, {Jhtt,, by lhe Ohiu Valk:y 1\lhlh hing
School student Jessica Malson,
Cump&lt;:~nr!Gannen Co .. Second d n-., po'-m&amp;C
daughter or Jerry Faulkner, Middle·
;,.ud a1 lialhWJh ~. Ohiu 456) I f! n1crcd n ~
port. Matson received aS 100 savings
"'Xund dll'&gt;~ ma~llllg muuc~ " ' l'unll.!rny. f lhi(),
'
foo;tOf'lia:.
bond and a personal CD player.
Southern High SchOOl senior Melis·
Mtmher: 'l'i.t: A,&lt;,U~.:jalco;l PI\::.~. and the Ohiu
~..... paper A\soc::lattuh.
sa Canan was chosen Best Cos· ·
1umcd,
while Meigs High School stu.·
Huntin~ton,
SlJNDAYONI.V
.
den! Jennifer Smallwood was named ·
SUIISCIUPTION kATilS
· Huntington Civic Arena
BJ Ckrkr or Motor Koote .
Miss Congeniality, as chosc;n by lhe
~- W~k : ............. ,..... ......... _...........SI.25
~e ,and h.uy the linttl ""hand-crafttd" f~ .art r•produrtioM.
~ 15 ~ucen contcslants.
Ye;w, ................ .............................. &amp;6,.&lt;J!&gt;
" Co~nlry Furniture, Dried f)oral Arranpmnts, Potlery,
•· Favorable weather conditions
Coli..ryDelishb'""" -~-~
_
SINlJLI&gt; COPY PRICE
under sunny skies allowed stemwheel
.
..
A
Spect~cular
Country
Gathering
, races to return lfter an absence last
.· ...at tht Original Country Ptddltr Show!"
year due to stonru passing throuJI!
~ . . . . . . . . . . . . ;s •.-.....
afler Hurricane Opal. 'The wuther
NEW LOWER ADM:S~ION!
was also a key in a record rumout of
~ SondiJ , ...... - ... 01M ""'be ....
stbit fot ldvllftOC paymmt$ Mlldc 1o canier5
J.IL
· Fr!day 4p·9p
Adulb
$3.00
festiv.al goers to the downtown river·
frunt.
•
Saturday 9a-Sp
Child (2-121
~---,
Sunday 11a-4p (hcili.,c"-Je,.ilbOool
MAll.
SlJII!ICRIPTIOMI
Otter festival activities Saturday
, .
Oi~1o1 O#f, f.IW ..... H4lt ~ ..... hil, p 14ft •• Jr4 An,
included the chili cookoff, the
I) ........ ;., ... M·•····-"''"'''''''"";............ S27 ,JO
,
...
W~!~tki t•ltwlc:iM,_.t Jr4AMM41rlt IL Owl~ AoteNI ... t .. CW!Mf,
26 w.t....................................., ........,.... 55l.82
Pomeroy Merchants Associalion
JZ ...........................................,.St0l.56
Ducky Derhy, floral herbal fest and
'ITEMSMAHAIYAJ
~DI5COIJNIS"'"-Y
a--c-e-or
n -.....................................s29zs
antiques sho~ along Coun Street. and
info: MUIICAN
160 • fl. Mrm. fl Jll02
16 Wc!ekli.......... ...,....................... _, __ ,......... ,S16.61
•Please consult your physician about ntedicatlons
thQ
American
Heart
Associadon
. . . . . . ...o'&gt;'!lf, .. J.,,,, •....,I ......... ,,,_,.,., ..,.,_,.. $1()t.1l
Heart Walk.

~

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tri-County Briefs:___,,'Pot' hunters face~

.

.illc

..

October e, 1998

.Race for Congress
pa.rt of comeback
trail for Kucinich

l)HiO Weather

•

Sunday, October 8, 1111

Pomeroy • • l'"ltpllll't• Gllllpolls, OH • Point P11rnnt, WY

r

. MINERSVIii.E -A Syracuse man was cited for assured clear dislane? by lhe Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol following a
one-&lt;:ar accidenl Friday on SR 124 at the intersection with County Road
403 (Minersville Hill).
Troopers said Andy L. Pauerson, 33, was westbound on 124 a1 11 :58
a.m. when he rounded a curve and spotted a truck. turning left from the
county road onto 124.
Patterson went off lhe left side of lhe road, lost control, cwne back onto
the road and then went off the right side of the road, where his vehicle
struck an embankment. ,
Damage to the car was slight and no damage -was reported to the truck,
driven by Loren L. Casto, 48, Rav~swood, W.Va .. the patrol ·reported.

~

incOme evaSion.

·

·

·

Stereo theft reported to deputies . .
QROWN CITY- Ronnie Lee Anderson, Crown City, reported to the
G~llia Counly Sheriff's Department on Friday that an·unknown subjecl
broke out the left side window of his vehicle and removed lhe car stereo
while the vehicle was parked at his residence.
·
' Deputies set an estimated loss for the stereo and the window a1 $325,
·jlccording to reports.

-

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&lt;

( -,

•

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• ••

•
•• ••••

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II ·MONTH .22MONTH
'

'

'

6.00%
The)8 COs ae
peoaty ror

Htuhins Tanner tlw.nktJ Cite ~onurw.nity for letting u.t •ene you for '
130 yearo. A• a tllallk you we Or&lt;! givif.g you .... opporturlicy
buy .Ner11 Fall Mcrcl&amp;oradUc u't rcduce,l price•
. tlait aMeli.

'

•

••••

'·..

6.50%

Men's

e

.-"

Dlcklltlll
Slack!

outomofle~J&gt;Iene~e ond reQi,are o rniOmom dep:~~ i of $500.00
A.Pr'V . ~ avalable OGOI the dote at 'ltiiSISIUe, bullS subject

• :: ::

e

Nl""•• ..

.

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•

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•.. ·:. ' _: '
•.

•

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••. OU·OSU ·••

l

• •:
o

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-~

•· · Mens Su1ts •
• · os~Vl

~t 20·15~'

,,

Group Of

1QOl70

levi Sport ·

Shirts
Mens Haggor
Slacks

•Over 30 Booths'
• Safecy
• Demonstrations

Presented

(•
t

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Local A,encJes,
Organizations
Pardclpatlna

Pediatrics and MtU:WellltealthWise

•. oMens Sp

• .,.

"

'··

I

! '

10% OFF

•·

Cotits

• -.a s~Vl
r

~
•

20•25
0

r

,

•

•

Mew's Dress •••••
Sltlrts
.....

AJ

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e

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~M,

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~2f~::•· ~ !!!~ . .:~:•• ~:

. ·•.

change .

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. .·,

• •· ., Gr01p tl ...

.•••• •••· Plllhtaa StDifiWII ····•
···••· ·~ llaRkets
.••••

\•

eEx~lse

•

AppracliCe;aa Daya

Open house . ,, -..
slated for this
week at stor~ ·

eHutrldon

• I •·

Depression screenings
offered in area Thursday

,.

RAVENSWOOD. ,W.W..- Drew
and Belva Fisher of Racine will be
holding an open house all next w~k
al their new business. an appliance
store in Ravenswood, W.Va.
Located across froni lhe MeDon. aid's restaurant on Rav~swood's
Main Street.. the Fishers have sever·
al.iteins in .stock including washers,
driers; refrigerators, freezers~~ ,stoves,
miCfowaves, some f€ctronics and a
little furniture.
The couple is dealing with one
main appliance brand, White West·
inghouse, and two electronics brands,
Quasar and. Pa~asonic. He plans to
run aU-Haul rental service out of the
store while she will be making crafts
and cent~rpieces to sell.
The building. a fonner auto pans
SIOf\\o waS the subject of extensive
rehov"adon by the Fishers. receiving ·
n~w carpet and rel\ovations to the for' mer auto repair s•raae.
Store hours 'are" 9"a.m. to~ p.m .

'

; ' i.

By KEVIN JOHNSON
. uproot marijuana farms more risky
USA Today
than in~ deep Kentucky woods. So
LONDON. Ky.: - There is no far !his year 31 booby traps have been
more perilous time to wander deep in discovered, a figure that already
the nalional forests than in the heat of eclipses the 23 booby traps found las!
till' marijuana harvest season.
year in all U.S. national forests com·
From July through autumn 's first hi ned.
frost, Forest Service police don the
In just the past three week~ . lhe
armor of drug enforcement agents Kentucky National Guard, state
and pursue marijuana growers. a oolice and forest service a~enls have
group taking inpreasingly extreme made some alarming finds:
• At the home of one marijuana
tneaiures to protect the valuable
· suspect ill southeastern Kentucky,
crops.
. Jusl this season in and around the federal agents found enough deto- '
Daniel Boone National Forest here, nating cord, about 200 feet, "to take
'
rangers and state police have discov· out a large building." '
ered 'II least 22 "guerrilla gardens"
Detonation cord is a ·· common
protected by a stunning array of boo- component of the homemade explo·
by traps. In· addition to spike boards sives used to booby-trap marijuana
and vines filled wilh suspended fish fields.
hooks has been a harvest of explo·
• A search warrant presented at the
sives that presents a growing threat to home of another suspecl opened the
those trying to eradicate a crop whose door lo 40 to SO blasting caps.
street value comes in just less than
On occasions when the job's
gold. .
·
inherent danger begins to fade, it
," I don't know how to explain it," · takes only a minor explosion or the
·said Glen Thomas, a Forest Service discovel)' of a modified ·animal trap
agent s'"tioned in the forest, "These to summon officers back to reality .
be offered ihls Thursday In Gallipolis
by an area
guys seem to he going l .I06tuffthat · .· About two weeks ago during a
mente! health 11gency and thtl'·board that oV81'HH ·lte funding.
could really lake you out.''
raid .engineered by the Kentucky
From left are Ron Adkins, executive director of the Gallla-Jack·
Marljuan a growers routinely stake National Guard, an Army Black
son-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug._ Adillcllon and Meotel Hatlllh ·
out and cultivate fields in remote Hawk helicopter hovered ove( a mar·
Services; Linda Adams of Access to Human Reaouce Devil~
'areas such as stale and nalional ijuana field in full bloom. The pow·
mant; and Access Executive Dltactor Romola HopkiM.
forests. And ·in many ways, the situ- erful down-drljfis whipped from the
ation in Kentucky provides a window rotors set off tripwires connected to
. on a largely forgotten front "in the six exploding ra11raps on the ground.
Common during the Vietnam War,
nation's war on drugs.
While much of the debate about the !raps had been armed with live
drug use in the United States has ammunition rounds, set to detonate at
focused on shipments of cocaine and knee level. All of them w.ere placed
GALLIPOLIS- Free screenings and treatments of depression, fol·
heroin from foreign drug cartels. within 25 yards of the field.
for
depression will be offered Thurs- lowed by a short video. Individuals
"This is t6e kind of thing that
domest!c prodUction of marijuana has
day;
Oct. I0 in observanc~ of Nation- will complete an anonymous wri~n
quietl;y flourished. And il .is ll)arijua- · coulq take a leg off, no problem,"
al
Depre.
ssion Screening Day. .
screening test f&lt;?f. depression and .
na, not herQin and cocaine•. that is said Thomas, displaying one of the
The .screenings villi be provided have the opportunity to discuss the
behind the recent surge in teen~age crude devices.
loc~lly
a1 417 Second Ave., Gallipo- results with a menial health profes;Visitor~.
to
the
forest
are
not
drug use, which has doubled since
lis,
by
the Gallia~ Jackson-Meigs sional.•
.
'
believed to be at risk, because grow- •
1992.
Board
of
Alcohol
Drug'
Addiction
&amp;
·
'
Depression
strikes
more
than
1;7
Marijuana's availability national- ers seek cover deep in lhe woods and
ly, measured in seizures · alone, has far frdtn well-traveled trails. And · Mental Health Services, and Access ·million Americans per year, accordincreased substantially, according 10 despite the sharp increase in the num· · lo Human Resource Development, ·' ing io figures from the Nation~
the Drug Enforcement Administra- ber of booby-trapped fields, no offi-· from ll:30 a.m.-1:30 "p.m. and 5·7 lnsti(ute ofMenral Health.
"We hope thai this nationwide
p.m. ·
:.
tion. Federal seizures in 1995 totaled cer has heen injured rhis year.
Screenings
are
also
being
alTered
effort
to provide mental health
·
The
last
serious
injury
came
last
528 tons. up 129 tons from the year
at
Our
House.
64
Church
screening
for depression will educate
Thursday
year when a:state trooper unknowbefore. •
St.,
Jackson,
from
11
:30
a.m.-1
:30
the
public
aboutthe-signs and sympEfforts to contain dome!lic mari- ing!)" wandered into a manjuana
p.m.
and
5-7
p.m.
!Oms
of
depressi9n.
and encouraic
juana production rest largely with an field seeded with poisonous snakes
National
Depression
Screening
!hose
who
may
be
vulnerable
to seek
unlikely army iiltgely draft!:d from by·gro~rs. The trOoper was bitte!l by
the Forest Sefvice and Civil' Air · a copperhead and still has not Day, held each year during Mental evaluation and tr~atment," said
Illness Awareness Week, was devel- Access Executive. Direclor Romola . ·
·Patrol. They face marijuana growers regained use of his hand.
oped
by Dr. Douglas Jacobs of Har- N. Hopkins.
·
Ironically, the booby !raps are not
increasingly willing to use force to
·
vard
University
and
served
more
than
The
program
is
sponsored
by
generally intended to target la111
protect their crops .from poachers . .
numerous psychiatric and health
In California, Forest Service enforcement officers. Lt. Col. Bill 8Q,OOO people last year.
Participants.
at
lhe
Gallipolis
or
organizations
and is supported in part
agents and sheriff's depulies recent- Whitney of the Ken1ucky National
ly ctasood through lhe brush of the Guard said growers more oflen take Jackson scrcenmgs will hear a pre- by a grant from Eli Lilly &amp;. Co. .
Angeles National Forest, rousting such extreme measures -lo dissuade sentatmn on the causes, symptoms
st;utled growers who left behind "pirates" from stealing plants, valued
•
shells from a high-powered rifle. Two at up to St ,500 each,
weeks ago a man was found slain in
The dimgers l!ssocialed with mar~',
a marijuana garden on I:oreSI Service ij uana production are evident in a
D
grainy videotape ·silently flickering
. property near Fresno.
In Washington, · qfficials have on the screen at the Forest Service
issued. a grim forecast: according to office trere . .
D
.
In the bloody images, police
The .National Drug Control Strategy
Report, the Forest Service expects to .dressed in combat camouflage point
I
find a three-fold increase in booby to the battered torsos of three partially
traps, mostly culled' from the fertile clad bodie~. The family of.growers
was attempting to string a garden
forests of the Southeast
Today • LISt DtlyNowhere, lhou$h, are ·efforts to with explosives linked to a trip wire
M-,Oct. 616
when it blew
in their faces .

~~1/Jpolls, officer~ iss.ue 2 citations
, GALLIPOLIS - · The following were issued citations Friday by Gal'
lipolis City Police: Teresa M. Sommerville, 36, 2131 Chestnut St., Gallipolis. passing bad checks;· and Gordon Scott Betz, 34, Crown City, city

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Commentary.
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Pag~AA

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Sunday,Ckrtoberl,1988

f

Ohio/W.Va• .

:October6,1996
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iunbq Xst4Dfisfld
1rimes· ierd:bul House control could be decided in Texas
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825 Third AVMue, Galllpolla, Ohio
814 446 2342 • Fax: 4441-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • ·Fax: 992·2157 ·

·A Gannett Co.. Newspaper
• ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubllaiMr

•

file-.,.

Margaret Lehew
Controller

.

.

TINJI flhould w ~ llllln 300 """*·
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·

·P olitics may be a sport,
but it ain't baseball
By WALTER R. MEARS

· AP Spacllll CorrupOf\(lent

•

·

emerges with a majority of at leasl 50
percent, the top two vote-getters
square off one month later in a
"' ·
runoff election.

By Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

so ,....

Ulll\1 rY\ Vl"'l

WASHINGTON·.;_ In baseball tenns, the presillential debates are like
the \'{orld Series -the major leagues set the rules and their champions seltle tbe contest.
.
.
.
Politically, of course, the majors art Democrats and Republicans, in this
case President Clinton and Bop Dole, du~ to debate Sunday night and again
on Oct. 16 despite the protests ani! challenges of Ross Perot and other minor
party candidates.
. .
. ·
.
·
Unless the system and probably the sponsorship is changed between seasons, the nationally-televised debates aren'tlikely to be any more accommodating to minor party entries in 2000 than now.
~ broader question is whether debates should be limited to candidates
'kith a realistic chance of winning the election- which as a practical matter means lhe major party nomin'1"s - . or should they be forums in which
voters can see other candidates and hear their ideas, too.
Since eitlier Clinlon or Dole will win the Nov. 5 election, tbe Commission on Presidential Debales decided they should be the only debaters, rul·
· ing out Perot. 'The Dole and Clinton campaigns agreed on two-man debates
· when they set the final terms. The major parties alwayschave had the last

~ wri

•

V.K 1 W

l

EDilfOk'S ~OTE- Walter R. Mears, vice presid011t.aad eoluiiiDilt
for The Associattd Press, has reported on }Vashi.,.tolt aod aatloul pol·
ltia 101! more•th;ul&gt;30&gt;yean. , ., " .~ • ·~

Ar r , \1.

· f•\t'

T1::R 1ctJ?
•

. ·
.

·

': •
'

ed by Stockman two years ago.
Texas officials recently ruled l)lat the
new Mr. Brooks must run under his
·real name, which, is George. RepubJican officials deny that they .recruited Brooks t? dil~te the anti-Srockman ·
vote.
.
The candidate most hun by the
redistricting is Rer. Ken Bentsen, DTexas. a freshman and the nephew of
fanner senator Lloyd Bentsen, who9e
district lost thousands of registerell
Democrats in the redrawing. Ten candidates have filed to run agai~t
Bentsen in November, and Repubh·
cans are confident they can pick up
his seat in a runoff.
One thing is certain: Where there's
a runoff, canipaign cash is sure to follow. The Federal Election Commis'
sion recently ruled that PACs a~ .
individuals inay contribute the ma~­
imum legal amount to candidates in
that short one-month span. By. Ia~.
PACs qan give up to $5,000 and individuals can give up to $1,000 per candidate per election cycle. A runoff
would create an immediate land-rush
for conlributors and consultants eager ·
to exert their influence.
Jack Anderson and Jan Mollt'r
are writers for United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

..

Travelers .say disc,ontent widesp,read in America
. By BOB WEEDY.
Wluil a diffe.rence a day· makes!
April 18th, April 19th. 1\vo dates
that have always followed in that
sequenCe on our calendars.
Americans have
come 10 symbolize
. April 19th with the
confronlation of
the government
and il's citizens.
Waco, the tragedy
of the government
ldtiiclrittg the .compound of
the Branch Davidians. where 8 ~
people perished in a fire, nlany of
them children, 'jl'illlong be •remembered.
· l.
The nexl April I 9th is thought to
be retalialory, where cilizcns are
accused of bombing ·the federal
building in Oklahoma Ciry, where
168 people Jostrheir Jives, many of
them children. ·
In beiween was the confronration
at Ruby Ridge where federal agents
shot family members in a siege.
Milch anger,' hatred and mistrust
in America has resulted from big
brorher's attempts to extend .the rule
in the lives of private citizeos. At the
same time we have many calling for
government to do mcire and persons
to ·do Jess for themselves. In this
atmosphere we have complaints
being raistd that we are no longer
'civil' to one another.
Those who travel the country a
Jot are saying that lhe discontenl is
widespread, ·not . an ' ilem' being

reported by the media. S~le of various arms of manY, lypes IS reponed
to be at a high level, apparently
unimpeded by recent gun control
Jegislarlon. Self protection seems to
drive these purchases, although the
distrust of government is certainly a
factor.' The slow des.truction of· the
middle class, through taxation that
they can not afford, and ·subsequent
wasting of that money, is also ·a big
. factor in this distrust.
The foregoing shows the spirit of
the . age in which we now live. We
really aptiear to be at war -with ourselves. Oh, it's not like I 35 years
ago where we took up anns to seule
the dispute 'over.slavery, but it is no
Jess serious. The Union was saved
then, out we ~ave no guarantee thai
this will happen now. Our voters
today are divided on the proper
course of action, they are manipulat·
ed by the media and often vote for
folks who have self-interest a1 bean.
Sadly, mos1 are either very unin·
fanned or apathetic about the jlossibility of ever turning things. around.
A self-go~eming people are failing
·in tbe~uty, and are getting much
. closer to tUhtinl! rule over to a dictalor who "Will sol.ve all our prob.Jem's".
. What a· contrast all this is to the
spirit·of April 18th. The interference
· of King George of England in the
Jives of the colonists, usurping their
freedom to have a self-goveroin&amp;
· role, was IIIOnl than they ..aiuld
stand. This feeling was so intense

that it brought .on a revolution, and sion. When it ~came necessary t,o
those , colomsts defeated the most agree upon a hmtted form of gov·
powerful nation on earth at .that emment, that lask was not an easy
lime.
one because the adverse effecl of
Many of the_older generation sti!l turning o~er fr~ed~ms to a 'sl~te'
remember portions of Longfellow s was fresh 1n thetr mtnds. Many sttp"Paul Revere's Ride":
ulations to protect that freedom, won
"Listen, my children, · and you . at such a high cost, were placed in
sha!Lhear
the Constitution.
Of the midnight ride of .Paul
Today, the trend is to e~pect more
Revere,
from government, creattng 1~ the
On the eighteenth of April, in early 21 sl century a burden of taxes ·
Seventy-five;'
of around 81 ~rcent of personhl
Hardly a man is now alive
income. What a horrifying, frightenWho remembers that famous day ing thought to .conside~ our children
an year.
and gnlndchildnin in such a night·
mare. What has happened to our
He said 10 his friend, "If the common sense thai we would even
British march .
give a se_cond thought to continuing
By land or sea .from the town the tremfwe are now in? Why would
tonight,
the older generation dare to think
Hang a lant~m aloft in the belfry about maintaining the uncontrolled
arch
·
growth of entitlements and place
Of the North Church tower as a this albatross around the necks of
signalligl)t, ..
.
their own children and ·grandchilOne, if by land, and two, if by dren? Where is rhe compassion of
sea;
some self-sacrifice for lhe ·good of
And I on the opposite sl!ore will thll whple of oilr people? We
be,
·
absohllely must take a stan'd, aqd
Ready to ride and spread the 'take it now, or what has been called
alann
the "American Dream" will becon;Je
Through every Middlesex village a nightmare no orie wants to ev~n
and farm.
contemplate.
..
For lhe country folk to be up and
Bob Weedy is a "l&amp;istered p~·
arm."
1
fessional ~ngineer and taught ~~~
No. the government did not take Hocking College for nine yean. A
thi: place of personal responsibility resident of Logan, he has se"'eral
in tho~ days. The people stood relatives In Meigs County where
together, t!)ere was unity and that his mother, ,t he late Ethel Edwards
unity brought success to their mis-. Weedy, was born and reared.

:l

Fuhrman,guilty,of far, .WC¥Se than mere racial. epithet ,.· ..~1 .. , ~

Today in history

Dave Wicldlitm '
',
.
Gennett NeWs &amp;ervlca ·
WASHINGTON
Mark
'
By Tha Aat~ocllted Press
.
Fuhrman is guilty of a lot more~.
Today is Sunday, Oct. 6, the 280th day of L996. There ar~ 86 days left A~Sina a racial epilhet.
in the year.
· -~ •
'The no1=ontest plea the former
Today's Highlight in History:
Los Angeles police detective entered
On Oct. 6, 1927. the era of talking pictures arrived with the opening of Wednesday w'as to a sinale perjury
"The Jazz Singer," starring AI Jolson, a movie -which featured both silent count- acharge of lying under oath
and sound-synchronized scenes.
about using the word "niger.'' In
On this date:
return he got off with three' y~ proIn 1683, 13 families from Krefeld, Germany, arrived in present-day bation and a measly $200 fine.
, Ph~ac!elphia to begin Germantown, one of ,America's oldest settlements.
Asked during the OJ. Simpson
· In 1884, the Naval War.College was established in Newport, R.I. ·
muidertrial ifhehadusedtbcracial·
In 1889, the Moulin Rouge in Paris first opentll its doors to the public. Jy charged word in the past 10 years,
In 1939, in an address to the Reichstag, Adolf Hitler·denied havins any Fuhrman said he had not. But four
intention of war against France and Britain..
•
witnesses who followed him io the
In 1949, American-hom Iva Toguri D' Aquino, convicted ofbelna Japan· stand Hid Fuhnnan made reJUiar use
ese wartlp\e broadcaster "Tokyo Rose," was sentenced in San franci11c:o to of the offending word when talking
10 yean in prison and fined $10,000.
:
. .
about African AmeriCans. One of
In 1973, war erupted in the Middle East as Egyprltnd Syria lltaelted Ianiel· them had tape recordings of conver·
during the Yom Kippur holiday.
.
sations in whichFuhrnwlsaid "nigIn 1976, in his second debate with Jimmy Caner, President Ford..-. ger"41 times.
ed there.. was "no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe.:.· (Ford later c.onThat lhouJd have come uno surceded he'd misspoken.)
prise to police officials and prosecuIn 1979, Pope John ,Paul II, on a weeldong U.S. roui, became the first tors in Los Angeles. .
·
pontiff to visit the White House. where he was received by President Carter.
Fuhrman's racism should .have
In J98l,ilJyptian ~ident Anwar Sadat wu shot 10 death \)y exrrem- been well known lo t~. · f1fteen
ls!$ while reviewlnt a military .parade.
·
.
ye~ a~?· w~ be w,u lrymf&lt;IO let
+
In 1989, actres1.Betrc Davis died in Neuilly- sur-Sein~, Fran~. ataa• 81. II dtlibiltty retnanent, Pultrman_told

.t.

IU\J

Fbbl VJb;g:

U.S. Distri.cl Judge ThOmas Hogan upheld Perot's exclllSion. althQugh he
. acknowledged the frusll)ltion and perhaps unfairness of the process. •
Perot and' another minor party candi&lt;!ate are appealing the decision. But
the courts and the govemmenl have effectively stayed out of the presiden;
tial debate process in the past. leaving it to volunteer sponsors and nominees.
There was a move in the Senate five years ago for government-sanctioned
debates; it voted to require thai presidential candidates who get federal financing meet in at least four debates. But thai didn '1 get through Congres~. and
' has not been revived.
· 'fhe debare commission has been sponsoring these meetings since 1988;
' it is privately fipanced, with no official standing; rooted in the IY(O party tra·
dition with leadership divided between Republicans and Democrats.
II has withStood minot party court challenges twice before; the Supreme
Coon dctlined to hC&amp;J: the appeal of an excluded.candidate after the 1992
election. '•
.
The commission oiled that Perot was entitled to debate the major party
· entries in 1992. His support in the polls was down, not much better than il
is now, when those debates began. They helped him boost his losing share
of the popular vote in that election. His inclusion in 1992 was an easy call,
·
since the major party nominees already had agreed on it
•
In this Cll!l\paign, he's at about 5 percent, and the commission ruled him
• our. saying he has no realistic chance of, winning the presidency and the
.
debates should match candidates who do.
"This is the World Series," Paul Kirk, the Democratic co-chairman, said
at the lime. "This isn'l pic.king the wild card, the guy who was third in the ·
polls.':
·
·
· · .
He Said the debates shouldn :t be used as launching point for candidates
'witholit a real chance of winning the White House.
Perot and omer minor party enlries complain that ft is a self-fulfilling
prophecy, that tbey can't win if they are excluded from the relevis¢evenls
that draw more voter attention than any others.
Either way, it's so.
· Perot drew 19 percent of the popular vote in 1992, but did not win a single elecloral vote. In a federal court appeal filed Wednesday, Perot cited
another 1996 aim -he wants to get 25 percent of the popular vote in order
to ,..in major party status for his Refonn Party next time, an aim irrepara::
bly damaged by his exclus\on.
.
'
Again, that points the question of whal purpose debates should senie.
Advocates for including minor candidates note that third parties often have
lniti'ated ,ideas that eventually became major party policy. But that history
predates televised debates. .
' Judge Hogan said he wished there could ·be a more open and accessible
debate process. but that he could not order it under the law. Then he tried,
c
but lwistedl a b&amp;Sebit!J analogy:
. "I think we're sort of at a point where it reminds me of the playoffs ...
and we have the wild card team that makes the playoffs bur isn't allowed
to play in the World Series eventually, even if it's succeeding well in the
playoffs, lind that's regrettable."
A winning wild card team does get to the World Series.
On the debate calendar, the sponsoring &lt;:ommission ruled, playoff time .
is past and these are the finals, reserved for potential winners.

a

*

II'niiJWf3~[ii;i.j:i)~-------~::~~~~::-----~-~=~==l
'L ur...
l\:1.. IV\6

··

COLUMBUS (AP)' - A judge
will decide later this month whether
to accept a jury's death penalty recommendation for a man convicted of
killing four people- including a 5month-old girl- during a, shooting
spree.
,
Judge David Fais of Franklin
County Common Pkas Court will
sentence Jerry Hessler on Oct. 29.
Hessler, 38, of Westerville in suburban Columbus, was convicted ~pt.
17 on six counts of aggravated murder. The jury returned its recommendation Friday nighl after deliberating
that evening.
Jurors also could have recom·
mended )ife in prison with parole eligibilily in 20 or 30 years on each
·
count.
Last Nov. J9,just more than a year

because everybody's focusinB on party could pick up as many as ISwho's going to ·win the House (in 20 new seats. Some Democrats &amp;.l'l
November). But if Democrats do similarly starry-eyed. judging from:•
really well and there's five ' c1r
recent prediction by Rep. Steny Hoyseats up in Texas (after election day); er, D·Md.. that Democrats would
things will go 10razy down there.''
gain a netof 50 seats next month. :
This scenario hin1es on two major · · A neutral observer, Political sa~e
factors. First, Democrats would have Charles E. Cook, believes the margtn
to win back enough seats on Nov. 5 will be slimmer. Anyt~ing from a 10.
to be within striking distance of seat Republican gain to a 30-seat
retaking the House. Democrilts need Democratic swing is entirely possi·
a net gain of 19 seats to reclaim con- ble~Cook recently wrote.
To take advantage of the new
This has operatives in both parties trol of the House from Republicans.
Second,
the
Texu
races
would
rules
both Democrats and Republilicking their chops .. and fearing the
worst. Democrats don 't want the have to be close enough to warrant a cans have t~ied to flood the field "':ith
election decided in Texas, a conser- runoff. Right now, most of the 13 dis· fringe cand1dates m hopesofforcmg
vative stronghold where turnout is tricts in question appear to have a · runoffs.
.
. . . .
'
The moslu1tere~ung mctde~tlook
likely to be light . in a runoff. For clear front·ninner. But al least rwo
Republicans, a \exas showdown races .. and ao manY as five or six - place in the Houston-area dtstnct currently represented by fres)lman ,.
would be a sign of defeat for a party • could be decided in December.
Depending on which sidHOU talk Republican Rep. Steve Stockman .
that was riding high just two 'Years
to the Texas scenario"' could be a Democrats alleged (oul play after a.
ago.
"Texas could decide which way ·• m;,Q. point come December. Repub- candidate calling himself. "Jack:'
the House goes," one Democratic licans are confide~tly predicting that Brooks filed as a DemocratiC candt·
congressional · staffer told us. they 'll add 10 their majority in date for lhe primary. The real Ja~k
"Nobody's focusing on it now, November with some believing the Brooks represented Stockman's dts'
........ ·trict for 21 terms befotl( being oust.-

By Jilek Anderaon
andJanMollllr
WASHINGTON - The baUie for
control of the I05th Congress may
· come down to a December surprise.
Irs too early to tell, but political
consultants in Washington are gearing up for the possibility that the electoral ·majority in the House of Representatives won' t be settled on election day. Instead, they fear that a federal court ruling could mean-that con·
trol of the House will be decided in
a December runoff election in Texas .
This scenario evolved after a federal court ruled that I 3 of Texas' 30
House districts :had to be redrawn.
The remapping was made necessary
when the Supreme Court ruled earlier this year that it was unconstitulional for congressional districts to be
carved out solely on the basis of race.
In these 13 districts, the· Nov. 5
election will serve as an open primary where all candidates from all parties run on lbc same ticket. If nobody

,I

a police psychiatrist h., left the . Once on Sin:tpson's propeny, be's Atlama overfl?~ with inmate~. :1
Marine Corps because he was "lired · l~e cop who discovered the bloody . _The t~th IS that majority-blao~
of having a bunch of Mexicans.and ~love ~hmd .a guest house that ~urnos routmely send black suspects 10
.nigsers that should be in prison" giv- hoked Stm~on to the brutal mu~rs J&amp;ll - when the evidence supporls
-ing him a hard time.
!If hts ex-wtfe1 Ntcole Brown Stmp- the chm:ges. . .
:: .
He also confessed to the police son, and he~ ~nd, Ronald Goldman.
But to the Stmpson case the evtdepartment's shrink that while work- 1
And while Jurors never gollo hell~' dence was badly tainted by
·ing as an L.A. cop he beat up Larino ahoutthts, Fuhrman -:vu accused of Fuhrman's racism. Once his hatred
aang members he suspected of com- tam~ng wtth a cructal ptec~ of evt· ·for blacks was established, the evl. milling crimes, then lied to inle'mal · d~nce'" another murder case JUSliii(O dence he found became suspect, anjl"
affairs investigators about what he'd monlhs be~orc he took the stand tn reas~nable doubt set in·. If you'no
done.
tbe Stmpson In~!. On the same d~y lookins for. someone to blame fdr
"You don't see, you don't remem- the charge. surfaced, p_rosecutors 1ft Stmpson gomg free, blame the proCber and it didn't happen. Those are the Los A:ngeles dtstnct attorney's . ecutorswhobililltheircasearound)l '
the thre.e things you say and stick t&lt;l ·offi_ce dropped lhe charges agamst the rna, lhey should have known was'a
it," he . bragged to tbe doctor about whtte sus~l and had the recm:ds of ractst.
'
&lt;
how he stonewalled investigators.
the ..case - a copy of Whtch I · Or hlame Fuhrman himself fot
11 wu Fuhrman's racism, aot , obtained-~~~~~. .
gettm~ caug~l Jymg_on the witnelfi
some twisted notion of racial soli· ,
Puhnnan !s ~tlty of undennmmJ stand m .• tnal whose outcome l)ie
darity. rhat planted the seeds of rea· .the prooecu!: 1f':"·
.
once )&gt;eheved hung heavily on 14
sonible doubt in the minds of Simp• In .'he w .0
.')()t·gut11Y~~r- testunony.
:1
10
son's majorily-blac. kjury.
diet.
lh_e Stmpson ~ase, cnllcs , ''I'm the key witness in. ~
Fuhrman was the linchpin of the c~lheJUI)'wasprednsp&lt;!"edtoJel btgaest case of the century," M
·
prosecution's circumstanlillevidence ht~ free. Anyone who. ~lieves that Fuhrman braJged before the 0 .
case againsi Simpson. 11 was · ~II h~ve troub~ exbpllaintn. _why !he ~impson murder trial got under w.a~.
Fuhrman who ~ealed the fe- of Jill Is !" maJ_onty- ack ~lites hke
If I JO down they lose the
Simpson's estale without a search Detrot~ Balllmqre, WllhiniiOn •n4
And that's no lie.
.
~
w.,anl after discovet:inl a speck,of
·
. ~
blood ill the dead of nisJit on thC for· '
Thouahl for Today: "~owledge comes, but wildom liltpn."- AI ·
mer fuothail •UJI&lt;tslqr'~ Bronco.
Lord Tennyson (1809-1892).
·
'

....

'

Ju_ry recommends d_
eath· for killer of four

g

in 196&lt;;

•

after being-.fired from Bank Ohe's
credit card cenrer, Hessler wrote up
a list of people .he felt twj slighted
him either at work or in love. Then
he headed out to kill them.
He arrived fit;lit at the home of a
Columbus couple who had worked
with him at the bank. Hessler had
harassed the wife, which Jed to his
firing , and she had planned to seek
police help the (ollowing day.
Hessler broke into their home and
fatally shot. Brian Stevens, 36, his
wife Tracey; 25, and their 5-monthold daughter Amanda. A 33-year-old
bank co-worker st~ying with the
family also was shot bur survived.
The couple's 7-year-old son hid
from the gunman and was not
harmed.

The shooting continued a half·
mile away when Hessler arrived at
the home of a 27-year-old bank
emplpyee and shot him in the Jefl ·
liiJD. He survived.
He then headed to the Columbus
suburb of Worthington , and killed P.
Thane Griffin. Griffip, 64, who a few
months earlier had retired after 22
years as president of Ohio United
Way; was the father of a woman who
was a friend of Hessler's years ago.
Hessler then headed 75 miles
northeast to Ashland to the home of
Judy Stanto~·- "twoman he had dated
15 yea"i be~ and who was now
married.
•
·
Stanton was tipped off by a friend
watching television that Hessler was
on the loose. She and her husband
.
•

decided to gather roaether their children and head out when they ran Into
Hessler &lt;Mitside.
The family ran back to their home.
but Hessler fired three shqls into the
back door and kicked il open .
The husband, Dougla;; Stanl!Jil.
armed with two handguns, returned ·
fire, hitting Hessler in the chest.
Hessler was wearing a bull etproof
vest and wasn't seriously hun. He
ned in a car and was captured a shun
time later.
At trial, Hessler's lawyers called
one witness, Cindy tfessler, a sisterin-law who said the family tried to
have Hessler treated for mental illness. His ·Jawyers had hoped Ia con- ·
vince jurors Hessler should be spared
the death penalty due to his mental
condition.
.

Suspect surrenders in alleged wife 'killing

1, •. MAKING

HIS POINT.,.. VIce
·
Gore gestured while
m!lklng his point during a campaign stop Friday lt:l Columbu•,
"wher,e amollg other topics, he dlsctllaed flna.n clalald for college·
r students. (AP)
· .
· .
·

LOGAN (AP) - A Columbus
man charged with killing his wife
. finally did as he promised - tum
himself into authorities.
Larry Brown, 59, surrendered to
Hocking County sheriff's deputies
• shortly before midnight Friday.
A Hocking County grand jury on
Thursday indicted Brown on one
count each of murder and arson and
two counts of insurance fraud. The
indictments were in connection with
the June 2.1 death of his wife, Joyce,
in Hocking County, according to Sl().
ries saiurday in the Logan Daily
News and The Columbus Dispatch.
Brown has maintai:ed th:l the

death of his 56-year-old wife was an
accident. He said she backed a 1992
Jeep Wrangler into a 35-foot ravine
and the vehicle caughl fire as he lried
to rescue her.
At 11\e time, the two were looking
at land to buy.
Prosecutor Charles Gerken had
made arrangements with Brown's
anorney, Charles Knight of Pomeroy,
to surrender by 3:30p.m. Friday and
to be arraigned later.that &lt;lay.
Brow(! didn't show when Gerken
and Knight mer about 2 p.m. in the
Hocking County Courthouse, and an
arrest warranl was issued. Knight told
the Logan newspaperthat Bro:n did

not show· up when he learned an near the courthouse .
arraignment could not take place FriMs. Wain was arrested as she lel't
day.
the restaurant driving Brown's car.
A friend of Brown ~. Larry Robin - Ms. Wain. who was charged wilh
son, said Brown told him he could obstructing justice, told authorities
turn himself in either Friday 'or Mon- her fonner husband drove Brown out
day. Robinson said Brown wanted of town.
more time to raise bail money.
Knight said Brown does not want
Contacted at home Friday night by Judge Thomas Gerke!' of Hcicking·
The Associated Press, Gerken County Common Pleas.Coun to handeclined to comment on the case.
die the arraignment because he and
Sheriff Jim Jones said Brown left · the pr9secutor· are brothers. Brown
the area with the help of a former would hav~ to stay in jail until the
brother-in-Jaw, Raymond Wain, of Ohio Supreme Coon appointed a
Cincinnati. Brown met Wain and judge to handle the. arraignment,
Brown's sister, Elaine Wain, 51. of Knight said.
at a :endfs restaurant
•

·G0 re touts ed u·ca':tl• on
~poI i c ies at 0 h io ,S tate ..
Cinci·n~ali.
co••~Restraining orders ISSUed .In steel strike
' &lt;.

·

·

·

''

. COLUMBUS (AP)- Vice Presfleilt AI Gore knows how to target his
.oampaign pitches.
;;. Oore, who on Friday made his
tJlird trip this year to Ohio, touted th~
.Clinton administration's education
... p_roposals to students' al Ohio State .
'(Jniversity. .In Cleveland, he talked
'bout. jobs and opportunities for
'rban areas during a visit to an inner- .
.~ity small business development cen-

college
.
l)ut not everyone was recepttve to
,
·
' went on
Gore's comments.
WHEELING, W.Va~ (AP)- A
Wheeling-Pitt workers
"I worked to get he~," said Brad spokesman for striking workers said strike after their contracts expired at
Croco; 23, il s.enior respiratory ther· 9 it was unnecessary . fdf Wheeling- midnight Monday. There are n,o plans
apy student from Pittsburgh. · Pittsburgh Steel Corp, 19 . 'obtain for new.lalks:
'.'Where;s all the money for the pro- restraining orders to.allow manage· The main issue Separating union
grams' going to come from1~'
menl into thre~ plants in West Vir- workers and the company lias been '
In Cl~veland , he,visited an inner- ginia apd Ohio.
competing pension proposals.
city neighborhood he said shows that
But rhe nation's ninth-largest steel ·
Workers who accepted a less costCllnton administration's policies . manufacturer plans to go one step ly defined contribtirion pension plan
· ~r.
have reinvigorated the nation's urban funher in seeking injunctions next when the company was in bankrupt"What you eam will depend on areas.. ..
week to allow nonnaltraffic in and cy in 1985 want to change to a
whal you learn and your ability to
•"This is progress," Gore said. out of the plants, said Gregg Warren, defined benefit plan common among
,,onlinue to Jearn," he told a rally of "We're going in the right direction." company spoJ&gt;esman.
major ~tliel .n~nufacturers .
several thousand stbdents aod others
Gore spoke to more than 200' peo"Ifs just another form of harasson the OSU campus. "Your access to pie in the courtyard of the Glenville menb We ha.ven 'l had any prob· .
education is your key to the bridge to E~terprise Center, an industrial com· Je1,11~." said S~,.,.Santoro Q.f the
No (\re(lit, .Slow Cr~dit
, -, th.e2\,6\l;&lt;.:entPrx~ ': ! -~~: -i ~~ f'~' plex that now serve~' liS headq~arters united Steelworkers · '
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?
·
Gore touted President Clinton's for small .busin&lt;!\.ses trying to get
. The temporar.y restraining orders ·
,plan to· provide $1,500-a-year tax started. He also toured a nearby in Broo~ County, W.V~ .• and Jeffer•redits for post-high school education shopping center.
son County, Ohio: co&lt;oer tJ:trci: plants
At Dutch
Chevrolet,
•and a $10,000 income taK deduction
Gore said the neighborhood, dev- ·in the Ohio Valley where workers
WE CAN HE[,P
~ for educational e Kpenses.
. astated by riots in 19.68, has been allegedly .prevented managers from
HYou Have At Leut SI,300
· • His comments struck a chord with reborn in recent years with more than enlering, Warren said.
· .
JB-year-old Chante Lee.
a month Income
500 single-family homes, two new
There is no need .for court orders
"One of the reasons I'm voting for shopping centers :and two more for five other Wheeling-Pitt plants in
, Clinton is because of Bob Dole's past· planned and three new bank branch- West Virginia, Ohio and Pennsylvavotes to cut ~student aid programs," _es .
nia because strikers have not pre:.$8id Ms. Lee, a freshman studying
"This enterprise center is a stun ~ vented access to the gates, Warren
:·molecular genetics from Akron.
ning success," Gore said. "The said Friday.
8 SAVE THOUSANDS$
, ' While Ms. Lee is· attending col· Glenville Enterprise Center, thereSantoro denied that workers preDon't Pay Tho" High Kentucky
• lege on. a full minority scholarship, fore. eKemplifies this administra- vented managers from entering any
and Ohio lnterlet Roteol
. she said she has many friends who tion's policies of community empow- of Wheeling-Pili's eight plants. .
Many Vohlcl-o Are Avallllble With
. rely, on grants and'.loans to pay their ennent being, put into action.':
, overall, the strike by 4,500 steelNO MONEY DOWN! .
·
CALL 24 HOURS ADAY·
workers has been peaceful otherthan
7 DAYS AWEEK .
a few scattered reports of rock- L..--..:.;::.:::.:.,::.::,:,:::..:.,__..[
throwing, flat tires and the disabling
'
.
of a surveillance-camera, Warren said
•' By The Associated Presa
with four of the numbers are each Friday.
·: The following numbers were worth $250. The 4,531 With three of
"Aside from those incidents, the
; selected in Friday's Ohio and West · the numbers are each worth $10. The pickets Jines have been very orderly,"
: Virginia lotteries:
45,997 With two of the numbers are · Warren said.
L
OHIO
¥ch worth $I.
· ·· Pick 3: 5-9-9
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$429,687'to winners in Friday's Pick
l • Pick 4: 4-5-3-4
':· Buckeye 5: J-23-24-25-30
.3 Numbe~s d~ily game.
,./ The owner of one Buckeye Stick,Sales m P":k. 3 Numbers totaled
~ et with the correct five-number com- $1 ,522, 1.44.50.
~1\ination may claim 'an Ohio Lottery '
In Pick' 4' Numbers . . players
·prize of $100,000, the lottery wagered $383,655 ~nd w11l share
11 ilnnounced Saturday.
$144,100.
,
The Jackpot for Saturday_s Super
The winning ticket was sold at
·•Stumph Huffman Shell in Panna L6tto drawmg was $I 6 m1lhon.
''Heights.
. WEST VIRGINIA
I .· Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
Da1ly 3: 0-6-0
.
Daily 4: 4-4-0-0
l·$412,254.
"' .The 135 Buckeye 5 game tickets
Cash 25: 3- 12-16- 17-2()..25

..

PROPANE TANK SET SPECIAL
Set with 400 gallons of·..... ,_.,
Propar1e
* Price includes complete ·
set to exterior of dwelling up
to 25' of copper tubing

OR
Set with 250 gallons
Propane
* Price includes complete

set to exterior of dwelling .Ati&lt;
to 25' of copper tubing

Take additional 51000 off if you
mention this ad.

Fern IIgas
446-:-2264 or 1-800488·2264 ·

·:Ohio,
W.Va. lottery picks
.

Some things may ·be f~lling

~

this time of year hut not
Farmers Bank's rates.
Deposit

-~nergy · ~fflcient . System Guarante~d. ~o .

Reduce
I

',.1

6.00% Annual Percentage Yield

·'-l'f'

·,.

H~at:ptg
·&amp;;. Cooling·. Costs! · ·
L
.

Deposit

\.

6.45% Annqal P~rcentag~ Yield·

•
Both COS are automatically renewable, requ ire $1,000 minimum deposit too · n 'ancl·ob1aln the APY which Is
. ICCUIIIe 81 of 9/27/96. A penalty will be imposed lor early wilhdr
,

New
At Quality
Window
Systems
• · Blocks 99.5%'01 ultraviOlet rays· . · • ''
• Superior resistanCe 'to' co~ensat1011 · . _
• Up to twice the in~ulation of conventlonlll Low·E argon giles

II'
II'
II'
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14 month Certificate of

HEAT MIRROR PATENT1!D IYITIM

Your Bank(tn~,...
( FB J Farmers
· ........
. Bank
-1cmbcr FDIC

221 West Second·St.
Pomeroy

'·

AS SEEN ON ABC a CNN NI!WS

HIQHIEST ~R VALUE" RAnNO
LIFEnME WARRANTY

992~2136

State Route 1.
Tuppers Plains
985·3385

cue."·:.

'

•

I
(

'

..

�I

~

I

•

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

Cases concluded in Meigs County Court

:Death Notices
'

'•

lorena Carter Wooten

GALLIPOLIS - Lorena Carter W~lipolis, died Friday, Oct.
4, 1996111 her residence.
Born March 10, 1910 in Huntington, W.Va .• daughter of the late Walt~
llld Ida Mae Barton Caner, she retired from the Gallipolis Developmental
. Center.
·
A member of Providence Baptist Church, she belonged to the Order of
• die Eastern Star Chapter 283, and was a membet of the Old Time Chorus
· Mel Glllia County Senior Citizens.
She was also preceded in death by her husban~. Russell A. Wooten, whom
· she married Jan. 22, 1927; and a sister, a brother. a half-sister and a half·

. brother.

.

/

• . Surviving are a sister-in-law, Sibyl Toops of Mount Sterling; and two

meces.

Services will be I p.m.. Monday in the Waugh-Halley· Wood

Fun~ral

Home, with the Rev. Willard Blankenship officiating. Burial will be in the

~vidence . Cemetery. Friends may call at'the funeral home from H p.m.
; Sunday.
.
'
.
EaStern Star services will be conducted in the funeral home at 7:30 p.m.
Sunday. ,
·
·

Area ·News in Brief:--.
J}eputies hunt suspect In drive-off .
. TUPPERS PLAINS - The Meigs County Sheriffs Department is continuing its investigation of a drive-off gas theft from a Tuppers Plains gas
station Friday, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
Deputies said a subject in a light blue 1975 B~ick four-door entered
Cliffs BP Station at 7:50p.m. and prepaid for $5 in gas. The subject then
pumped $28.41 in gasoline, and pulled to the side of the lotto make the
attendant believe he was coming inside to pay the balance.
v~bicle then backed up and pulled onto State Route 7, and the vehi·
cle s.engme stalled. The attendant r31) out and took the vehicle's license
number, as the subject went south on SR 7.
·
.
· Around 9: ~5 p.m. Friday. the department received a report that the vehi·
cle mvolved tn the gas theft was on SR 248, approximately three miles
from Long Bottom, and was having car trouble. Deputies were unable to
!peale the vehicle in the area, but learned the driver of the vehicle' was
heading toward the Portland area.

!he

Sheriff's cruiser damaged In accident
FIVE POINTS -The Meigs County Sheriffs Department K9 cruis:
er was .damaged in.adeer accident on SR 7 near Five Points Friday night,
accordmg to Metgs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
'
According
to
reports,
K9
Deputy
Steve
Heater
was
enroute
to SR 248 ·
1
to lqcate the vehicle involved in a Tuppers Plains BP station drive-off,
when he struck a deer that ran into the roadwQy.
·
The 1992 FORI cruiser sustained heavy damage to the front end. Heater
received minor injury to his arm when the airbag v;as deployed. He was
treated and released at Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Sunday, October 6, 198§

POMEROY - The following
cases were resolved recently in the
Meigs County Court of Judge Patrick
H. O'Brien .
Fined were: Steven James,
Pomeroy, passing bad checks, five
counts, costs plus restitution on each;
Paul J. Duff, Albany, failure to dis·
play valid registration, $20 plus
cosls; William N. Bush, Moraine, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Ronald L.
Ostrander Jr.. Jackson, speed, $30
plus costs; Robert L. Brooks ,
Coolville, speed, $30 plus costs;
Lisa A. Creech, Ironton, speed. $30
plus costs; Edgar E. Criner, Bidwell.
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Adam C.
Morris, Marietta, speed, $30 plus
costs; Jayne L. Williamson, Cincin·
nati. speed, $30 plus costs; BettY J.
IWillis. Racine, driving on wrong side
of divid,cd highway, $20 plus costs;
Richie. L. Wolfe, Grayson, Ky..
speed, $30 plus costs; Cindy R.
Aeiker, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus
costs; Yifat Avisar, Cincinnati, speed,
$30 plus costs; Sherry A. Clatwo!thy,
Leon, W.Va .. speed, $30 plus costs;
Christopher 0 . Celletle, DeBerry,
Fla., seat belt, '$25 plus costs; Alison
L. Cawt!Jorn· Kreiss, Reedsville, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; Yolanda M.
An:her, Parkersburg, W.Va., seat belt,
$25 plus costs; Elizabeth L. Cobb,
Sandyville, W.Va .. seat belt, $25
plus costs; Wendy A. · DeLon·g.
Ravenswood. W.Va., seat belt, .$25
plus costs; Ronald S. Midkiff,
Pineville, W.Va.,. speed, $30 plus
costs; Howard Dorsey, Stransberry,
West Union, W.Va., seat belt, $25
plus costs;
Bennie R. Stumbo, Bidwell, gross
overload, $337 plus costs; Chad V.
BurJh, Fort Wayne, Ind., speet!~ $30

'

plus costs; Barbara A. McMahon, Washburn, Ironton, seal bel~ $25 plus
Mount Kisco, N.Y., speed, 530 plus costs; Gary S. Grant, Nelsonville,
costs; Laurie E. M9yer, Mich., speed, seat belt, $25 plus costs; ·Trudy J.
$30 plus costs ; Justin T. Diddle, Marshall , Pomeroy, seat belt, $25
Racine, speed, $30 plus costs; plus coSIS; Jon W. Cooper, Lynch·
SteRhanie S. Snyder, Middleport, f:&gt;urg, Va., seat belt, $25 plus costs;
seai belt, $25 plus costs; Nonnan E. Joseph D. Rebecca ill, Blacklick, seat
Dibble, Cincinnati, speed, $30 plu~ belt, $2S plus cosls; Alec J. Hirsch,
costs; Ronald L. Castor, Logan, Proctorville, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
speed, $)0 plus costs; Brenda K. Pamela Haynes-Ulery, Reynoldsburg,
Swisher, Gallipolis, seat belt, $25 speed, $30 plus cosls;
.. plus costs; Christopher M.- Corcoran.
Charles S. Allman II, Albany.
Powell, speed, $30 plus ~osts; Robert failure to control, $20 plus fOSts;
M. Halbert, Parkersburg, speed, $30 James A. Hansen, Plainwell, Micl).,
plus costs; Robert P. McMullen, speed, $30 plus costs; Sybil Rift1e,
Miqeral Wells, W.Va., speed. $30 Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus co$tst
plus costs;
Doug C. Clelland, Pomeroy, seat bel~
Paul A. Pritt Jr., Sissonville, $25 plus cos\5; Gerald M. Mohler,'
w.va·, speed, $50 plus costs; Charles Middleport, failure tci control, $30
R. Conkle, Middleport,• speed, $30 plus costs ; Shawn C. Fitzgerald,
plus costs; Rodney K. Allen, Port· Coolville, driving under finanCial
land, seat belt. $25 plus costs; Brent responsibiliy action suspension, $150
T. .Wright, Radcliff, seat belt, $25 plus costs, two years probation, five
plus costs; Gregory S. Hargett, Mil· days jail and $75 suspended if valid
·ford, stop sign, $20 plus costs; Kim· OL presented within 90 days; Dllyle
berly D. Turner, Coolville, seat bel~ Brooks. Chester, crimin_al trespass,
$25 plus costs; Lester M. Lewis Jr., costs, 30 days jail suspended, two
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; years 'probation, restraining order
Mary Ellen Murray, Albany, speed, iss4ed; Terry L. Cupp, Wilkesville,
$30 plus costs; Abigail M. Lopez, . no operator's license, $150 plus costs,
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs; Ali· 30 days jail suspended to three days,
son G. Lange, Athens, speed, $30 two years probation;
plus costs; Roger C. Morgan. Gal·
Darrell Johnson, Racine, menac·
lipolis, seat belt, $25 plus costs; ing, costs, three days jail suspended,
Michael D. Poff, Columbus, speed, two years probation, restraining order
$30 plus costs; Stacy L. Hall, Proc· issued; Rebecca L. McLain, Apache
torville, speed. $50 plu~ costs;
Junction, Ariz.;sp.ed, $24 plus costs;
Russell M. Singleton, Portland. William L. Dorkoff;Canton, reckless
seat belt, $15 plus costs; Patty L. But· operation, $100 plus costs; open
ler, Kenton, seat bel~ $2.5 plus costs; container, $25 plus costs; John w.
William H. Fox, Hazel Park, Mich., Davis, Syracuse, domestic violence,
speed, $30 plus costs; George C. costs, '10 days jail suspended to three
Hancock Ul, Stew~ speed, $30 plus days, two years probation, protec·
costs; James J. Hyland Jr., Library, lion/restraining order issued; James
Pa .. speed, $30 plus costs; K~ri E. E. Morrison, Middleport, driving

'..

under the influence, $850 plus cosll,
I0 day s jail suspended to tllrcc day~.
9Q..dqy OL suspension, jail IIIII S5SO
df fine suspended upon completion of
residential treatment program, one.
year probation; failure to control•. $ljl
plus costs;
,
~
Vernon E. Perry, Pomeroy, domes·
tic violence, costs, one year probi.·
tion, 10 days jail suspended ro two
•days, restraining/protection ord\r
issued; Willie E. Moore, Gallipolis, .
DUI, $850 plus costs, 10 days jall
suspended to three days, 9()..day-pL
suspension, one year probation, jall
and $550 of fine suspended UpM
completion of residential treatment
program; Thomas M. Stewart, Mid·
dleport, underage consumption, $100
plus cos~. 30 days jail suspended 1\J
three days. t"'o years probation1
. obstructing official business. costs,
two years probation, 30 days jail suspended to three days concurrent;
disorderly conduct. sso plus costs; .
Joseph J. Walters. Cheshire,
assault, costs. two years probation, 3ll
.days jail suspended to fi•e days; Kenneth S. Brown, Pomeroy, DUI, $850
plus costs. 10 days jail suspended to
three days, 9()..day OL suspension.
one year probation, jail and $550 of
fipe suspended upon completion of
residential treatment progranl;
William V. Jefferson, Newark, speed,
$30 plus costs; Horace · W. Kart,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; seat
belt, $25 plus costs;'Dreama D. Beli.
Middleport. speed, $30 plus · costs;
Nancy J;. Reitrnire, Pomeroy, seat
belt. $15 plus costs; April Reitrnire,
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Jerry E. Reitmire. Pomeroy, seat
belt, $15 P.lus costs.

·Rockefeller campaign spending questioned.

By PAMELA BROGAN
" But they are not supposed tp use his farm in West Virginia for an annu· getting elected as far as I'm conGannett News Service
campaign funds for personal use."
al party for his supportets, Rossi said. cerhe~," said Huntington lawyer
WASHINGTON- When multi·
The FEC also is prohibited by law Rockefeller also took another plane Richard Bolen, who donated $700 to
millionaire Sen. Jay Rockefeller IV, from randomly auditin~ reports to back to Washington, Rossi said . .
Rockefeller's re-election campaign .
D-W.Va., hit the campaign trail last ensure that lawmakers or candidates
Rockefeller traveled to Atlanta this year and whose finn also repre·
October, it wasn 't at a county fair or are properly disclosing how cam· three times between 1991 and 1993 sents tho Huntington Herald-Dis·
Fieldhouse vandalism investigated
a
town hall meeting. It was at Snow- pajgn funds are spent, Snyder said. and stayed at the Ritz Carlton. FEC patch.
· ~CINE -. The Mei~s County Sheriffs and Racine police de()llrtments
I'
shoe Ski Lodge, one of West Vir·
Critics say the vagueness of the · records show nearly $2,200 was
are mvesugatmg vandaltsm at the Sou.them High School fooiball field·
. "As long as il,is spent in a legal
ginia 's best known recreational regulations and the lack of enforce· spent by the campaign for "lodging." fashion, the candidate ·should be able
house Friday night. ·
· .
.
reserts, and his campaign committee ment allow members of Congress td
But Rossi said the senator also had to decide how it is spent," ijolen said.
According to reports, writing and graffiti was sprayed onto the 'doors
picked
up
the
$3,246
tab.
.
play
fast
and
loose
with
their
cammeals
with polilic'al and busine$5 offi. "I doubt whether many peopl,e have
of the fi~ldhouse. The incident remains uqder investigation.
.
Federal Election Commission paign funds.
cials she couldn't identify, in addition a burning desire to dissect his camArea NAACP banquet set Oct. 12
records show Rockefeller's ·cam."Vagueness ·is our biggest prob- to spending the night at the bote!.
paign expenditures.
·
paign spent the money on "lodging," lem right.now,'" said Lisa Rosenberg
The senator's campaign treasur}',
· RJO GRANDE -'lbc fourth Freedom Fund banquet sponsored by the
."1 credit Rockefeller with bringbut ittums outthat's not exactly how . of the nonprofit government refonn funded by donations from West Vir· ing T~yota to Putnam County. and if
· So~theastem Ohto Branch of the NAACP will he Saturday, Oct: 12 at the
Umverstty of Rio Grande.
the money was spent.
group The Center for Responsive ginians and others from across the he can get Toyota plants in West Vir·
, "It was for a fund-raiser, includ· Politics.
country, also paid for more modest ginia, he can stay at the Ritz 'Carlton
, The social hour is set for 6 p.m. and dinner is at 7.
ing
food
and
drink,
and
h~
spent
the
T)le
,
G
annett
News
Service
com·
expenses
for Rockefeller and his every night. I really don't knQw bo,':'
)"l'! ~ynote'lpealc~,
be Gallipc)lis 1181ive George L. Gilmore, nalion·
ntght,'' spokeswoman Mindy Rossi · puler-assisted ana.lysis of RQ~:ke· campaign staff,· .
al ~erg~JJCY·P!~r for the U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers in Washington.
'the money was spent."
'
said. ·
feller's campaign expenditures, along
Meals at Shoney's Restaurant and
Mustc
he pro~tded ~y the A~ape Community Ensemble of Ironton.
Other contributors alsb supportell
The Snowshoe "lodging" bill and with those of30 other senators up for lodging at the Ramada Inn were Rockefeller but· said he should he
: ,FIJr pru:e alld ucket tnformatton, contact Martha Cosby at .614-28(i..
hundreds of similarly vague expen· re-election or retiring this year, shows charged to his campaign fund, FEC .more fiugal1"ith donated campaign
3301' or 286-1776; lames or Faye Crump at 682-6009; Darlene Fcrd .at
· ditures analyzed by Gannett News that he spent a.bout $152,625 in cam- records show.
· 286-8929 or 286-6362; James D. Keels at 245-5418; John Howard at 245·
·
funds.
Service raise questions about the paign funds from 1991 through June
LastJuly,Rockefeller'scarnpaign
."Any political candidate I con. 5441 ; Jessie Payne a[ 245·5216; and Boh Smith at 532-8660.
FEC's reporting ·rules, how strictly 1996 that had no obvious links to his spent $27.33 for "meals" at Shoney's tribute tcr, including Senator Rocke·
those rules are enforced and about the re-election campaig11. That's about in Sutton. Rqssi said the.money was feller, I would trust tl , to use the
nature of campaign spending.
6.5 Pc:rcent of his total campaign for "staff food." Rockefeller didn't
money as they see t, said Hunt·
~OfJJ'"U"er
Se~vmour
FEC law says •cimpaign·related spending during the 5 1/2-year peri· eat there.
.
~·
I" 11
I ,
,T ,
expenses include meals, media adver· od.
•
FEC records also ·show that his ington resident Sonia Charnbe~J&lt; a
~
tising, salaries, polling, travel, polit· · • By comparison, about 20 percent campaign fund paid for "lodging" at health care management adviser at
Marshall University Medical Schoo.!
~
. .
ical ·pany fees. phone banks, travel of the campaign funds of Sen. Larry the Ramada Inn in Morgantown last who contributed $250 to Rocke·
...
expenses, catering costs, and official Pressler, R-S.Q, or $490,758, weren:t Aug. 24. Rossi said the senator spent
.
Senate business.
clearly defined, the,highestamount.in the night ·atthe·motel and attended a feller's re-electioJJ campaign.
"I would probably. prefer that
: Q!;NvER (AP) -Computer wiz: person," said John Rollwa'gen, who · But the rules, which were tight· theGNS study.
fund-raiser.
they
use it more frugally for the elec·
, dlieym&lt;iurCray,whopioneeredlhe worked ·With Cray for 14 years at ened last year, still give lawmakers
The analysis of the FEC records
SomeofRockefeller'ssupporters
tion
effort
like direct mail, bumper
· !'" Qf transistors in compu~rs and Cra)l Research Inc. "He lived for his . and candidates a great deal ofleeway showed that Rqckefeller's campaign and constituenls say how Rockefeller
stickers,
etc,
" Chambers said.
· ptef developed massive supercom· work; that was key to his life. He as to when they ·can label expenses committee,. paid an October 1993 spends his campaign inoney isn't as
Chambers is no strtlllger to poli·
. uters to run business and govern· knew why he was on the planet and campaign-related..
· "travel" bill for $8,840, but there important as whether he is re-elect·
tics.
She formerly was Rep. Bob
nt infonnation networks, died Sat· just pursued thai relentlessly."
. "It's sufficient if a lawmaker just were no other details. The money ed. And some don't know exactlr
Wise's
legislative director and is
a,rday at age 71.
· ·
, For many years, Cray Research · dtscloses 'meals' or 'lodgings' (on !'!S covered expenses for chartering air· how the money they donate 10 his
married
to Charles "Chuck" Cham·
i Cray died of complicati ons from was the U.S. leader in superconiput· reports) becau~ v;,e ~sume thattt s planes at Page Flight Inc. in Lees· ~ampaign is spent.
hers,
the
.speaker of West Virginia's
~vere head. and neck injuries suf. ers, multimillion-dollar machines campwgn·re!ated, satd Sharon Soy· · burg, Va., to take Rockefeller and a .
"The particulars of bow campaign
House.
!l'ered in llthiee-car traffic crash, His used for sophisticated tasks like fore- der, the.FEC s deputy press secretary. guest speaker on separate flights 10 • money was spent is secondary to him.
~eep ~&gt;:as hit by another car Sept. 22 casting weather or building bombs.
·
~ndrolled
..threelimes.
·
''Therewouldn'treallyheasuper~ He took a tum for the worse Fri· computer industry as we know it
U
ltay after being listed in critical con· except for SeymollrCray," said Lar·
tion earlier this week at Penrose ry Smarr, director of the National
·scHENECTADY, N.Y. ·(AP) tant director of ihe- Equinox Youth festo , Kaczynski recognized his
ospital in Colorado Springs. said Center for Supercomputing Applica· Theodore Kaczynski's brother, who Shelter in Albany because "I cannot brother's wtjling style and tipped
· ate Brewster, a hospital spokes· ti·ons at the University of Illinois. "I gave authorities the initial tip tliat led go on.ihillifl~itely juggling my work investigators. His brother was arrest·
roman.
really think his ~chievement was the to the Unabomher suspect's arres~ and my personal responsibilities and ed' at his Montana cabin 'in April.
POMEROY
Cniy is crediied with revolution-· creation of computers that were plans to quit his job at a youth shel· expect to fulfilltheni both."
David Kaczynski refused to disNear
Ponieroy·Muon
Bridge
zmg computer speed.
essential for solving the nation's ter to help with the defense.
Kaczynski. 46, of .Schenectady, cuss his life since his brother's arres~
992-2588
"Cray's genius and singular drive gr~nd challenges."
David Kaczynski , in an interview said he instead will work pan-time at or how he will go about trying to help
. VINTON
ave already marked indelibly the
Cray's work .was used in physics Saturday in The Daily Gazette of the shelter.
defend Theodore, who hils refused
Gallla County Dl1play Yard ·
hnology ofthi.s cen!ury," Business research and weapons dev elopment. Schen&lt;7tady, said he has "grown
David Kaczynski was instrunien- contact wiih his family since his •
' 155 Mllln St.
'
ee~ magazine wrote in 1990.
One computer he developed was tncreastngly aware that my role in tal in leading authorities to their first
In a world where time is meii5ured used 10 simulate nuclear ex peri· auempti.n~ to defend ~nd protect my real break in the Unabomber case . .
n mcrements. faster than the blmk of ments, which helped eliminate the brother ts m ttself a full-time job.'?
After The New York Times and
n eye, Cray s ben.ch~ark achtcve· need for physical tests, Rollwagen ·
He wrote a memo to co-workers The Washingto~ Post published the
t;Jcnl$. wete acc,nmpamed&gt;by.pwnfuho said-Saturday,...,;.
sayilll! he would,step down as assia. Unabot!)her's 35,000-word mani" f ctbi!Cks.
.
. . . _ .. "He provide!l1 so • many,•of'- us;"• r"'---.::=~=--=~~--~-..,.--:r...,-.~.,..!!"":"J
Still, Cray spent . ~0 relentless maybe witjtout even knowing it,
~·r.: scarchmg rora.sc tcnllfi c Holy such ' a wonderful opportunity of _;__
.
ratl, the world s fastest supcrcom· worktng wtth and developing this
••
tut~r.
· ·
:
important technology," Rollwagen
·
·
··
·
·
•
He wa~ a very centered, f( x.;uscd said.
.
ObltiMirlle we ,_ld 1mounnmwats ·•=:z.:c•l fuMI'II hDIIIel.
1 Oltltu.'IM-publloheciM~Io
•
lhowciMirlngman
•
The end of the Cold ·War, howe•· ' lnlonNIIoo then 11 provtdld In t~~e·8CCompenrJne -.l!lotloM.
cr. d!minishcd the demand for t~e a...;.;.;;..;;;.;;;;;.;;.:;.;;:;;;;,;.;;.:;;;;,;.;;;:;.;;;.;;;::.:;;:.;;;;;:;;;;.:;;:.;,;;;~==---.:.~
POMEROY _ Units of the M . , . masSive maohtncs. Also, advances m
t-·ounty Emergency M~dical Scr~'K~ computer technology were allowing
MTIIIIr LIJTI
J'- .
.
.
~c.c ~mallcr t.:ompulcr.; tn reach the pro.
WNIILDIIAIH
Ollfttlll
-.nswcrcd ntnc t.:a lh for a.,!\J'lant:c h1 ·
·
d f ·
l!ay; includin~ three tran, J&lt;;r call ' ""'.;~;~ ·' pee • " '':{:rcomrtcCrs.
GALLIPOLIS - Loreqa Carter Wooten, 86, of Gallipolis, died Friday,
COMPLETE HOME MEDiCAL EQUIPMENT &amp;
!Jnits rc,r on&lt;ling induclcd:
.
&lt;a meant 1oug hmes or ray. Oc'tober 4, 1996 at her resi·dence.
:
(
POMFI&lt;OY
In I JCJ~ he was forced to close the
Born March 10, 1910 in Huntington, West Virginia, daughter of the late
SUPPLIES
• Jl'f12
.
ch"'"
of
hi,
s
6-ycar·old
Cray
Com·
Wal.
t
er
Caner
and
Ida
Mae
Barton
Carter,
.skr,etired
from
the
Oalllpolis
•
1
,. a.m.. luttcrnul Avenue, putd Corp. aller the Cray-4, which Developmental Center.
1
SALES • ·RENTALS • REPAIRS

will

.,-.!•.

l '

,.

.

gu•u ',
ra. y is dead at age 71 .

.

Unabomb.er suspect's. .,;.rother to·· 81·d defen·se

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f

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,. · loppong, Vctcr&lt;~n\ Metnona

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Loren a Carter' Ooten

cu' t ahnut $16(1 million to build, · A member of Providence Baptt'st Church. she belonged to the Order of
I I cJ
.
· 1 b
SYIV.CIJSJ·:
"' .c to cnucc
a smg c uycr.
the Eastern Star Chapter 283, and was a member of the Old
Chorus
'
t Jndauntcd, in August he opened and Gallia Count)' Senior Citizens.
II :41) a.iTt ., Union Avenue, Ewoa Sl&lt;(' Comnutcr Inc., a Colorado
1 add' ·
·he
'
i/llc, VMH.
s
,.
n ttton to rpuents, she was prtceded in death by herhusbilnd, RUi. 'rrin~s· ha•cd
ccimpany
that sell A. Wooten, whom she married Japuary 22, 1927· a sister· a brother· a
Rfo:fo;USVII.LE
cmpluyccJ five. The mission, simply, half-sister: and a half-brother.
'
'
'
'
.1 2:29 p.m.; Olive 'litwo,
ltip
Fire
Wll\ lu "hut'ld cctmnutcr·
.·.·"
Sur
'
.
'
.
I
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1
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M
.
,. .•
.
vtvtng arc a stster·tn" aw, 1 y •OOps o ount Sterling; and two
ancJ ' qua d• .runcti•m
pllrlmcnt
·
of
Cray
he&lt;&gt;an
ht
·
s
·
car'ccr
at
Control
· ofLo uisville. Ky.. and Wilda Matheny of
124 d SR 24X 1·
o
nteces. Carol yn "'
woolen Gut hne
. an ·
•c wnncy lire, no " •ta Cotp. in the late 19SOs.• de
. v-1·
Col UmbuS. .
·
Ufll:.S.
&lt;"'
•
oping one of !he fitst cc1mputers to
,Services will be 1 p.~ . Monday. ~Iober 7, 1996 in the WauP.H1IIey•
~·
RUTLAND
usc radio tran sistors instead of vacu· Wood Funeral Home. Wtth the Rev. Wtllard Blankcn·• 1p o~willt'na. Burial
he
.,, "'
...
1 3:26 p.m., Carpenter Hill Road .
:.hvorc,l Maksimczak , Holzer Mcd· um tu •s, ~hich weighed tons and will follow tn the Provtde~ Cemetery. Friends may call II the r-ral home
~upped huge lt11JounLs of electricity. from 5·8 p.m. Sunday, October 6, 1996.
.
1C
auad
. ClllCr.
Assisted
hy
Middlepnrt
l'hc
transtNt.
o
..,.
allowed
l'
c
or
the
mt
'
nt
'
a·
cStar
.
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bo
d
11
·
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,...tern
serv~ces WI
con ucted in the funeral"-· It 7:30p.m.
q
.
•
turit.ation of cornronents.
' · Sunday. October 6, 1996.
''""~
o' pttal.

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. ~egal· .

Ignorance of O.J. murder
case astounds civil trial

.

:~se.tback
;B ombing trial
:Judge blocks
,;interviews, nips
;~se of testing
.r8y S-r:EVEN K, PAULSON .

,,Aseoclated Prell Writer
':

DENVER .....: A judge dealt set·
~~backs to both sides in the Oklahoma
.&lt;City bombing case Friday, barring
.,;r;mothy McVeigh from granting
.)nterviews and, pl\&gt;secutors from
. using the results of a bomb lest as evi·dence.
.. U.S. District Judge Richard
.Matsch also iipheld an earlier ruling
:ciJanning victims from attending the
.trial if they pl~n to testify during the
,( sentencing phase.
"' ·Prosecutors detonated a 5,()()()..
pound fertilize( bomb in New Me xi·
'jco this year, but Matsch barred tbem
r,f(orn introducing .the results at trial
because defense attorneys had been
:!mproperly excluded from observing
the tests.
;. The results from two smaller
bomb tests done by the same team of
1

DISCUSSING
. - Stephen Jonaa, defllflse attorney for
Oklahoma City bombing iuspect Timothy McVeigh, discussed the
separation of trials for his client outside of the federal courthouse
in Denver Friday. r.&lt;~lchael Tlgar, upper left corner, defense aflorney lOt: suspect ·Terry Nichols, listened. (AP)

:~~~r=~~B3~\~:ia ~!;;,"~:::~tsg

· death penalty if convicted ofmurdcr.
will be allowed, he said,' forthe pur· conspiracy and using a weapon of
.
n1ass desr·rue t'ton m
· th e· Apn'I 19•
..pose ofqualify,ing the team members ' 1995, federal'
building bombing.
J~S expert
.
· h k'll
d 168 an d IIIJUre
· · d more
·
Matschwitnesses.
also ordered prosecutors
whtc
I e
than 500.
to turn over grand jury testimony
McVeigh, dubbed the hombing's
frqm Michael Fortier and his wife, "mastermind" by prosecutors, asked
Lori . She reportedly said McVeigh Matsch to make an exception to hi s
once set soup cans on the noor lo gag order allowing him to grant
show how barrels of explpsives could interviews to his choice of journalists
be arranged 10 create a bomb of mass . and counter what he call eel his
. ,destruction. Prosecutors said they "demonization ." .
His allorney, Stephen Jones, said
,complied later Friday.
•. Matsch reserved ruling on a Mt;Veigh has been acc used 'of being
'. defense request to separate the trials a monst~r. a racist and a mass mur.of McVeigh and co-defendant Terry derer.
Nichols.
Prosecutor Joseph Hartzler argued
.~! Defense lawyers have argued they that Jones wante~ a "beauty ,ontcst"
:.will have no choice but to.allack each where he could select reporters he fe't
other 's ,clicnls unless Matsch agrees ·. would treat McVeigh favorably, pos·
.Jo separate trials.
sibly tainting the jury pool .
McVeigh's lawyers argued that the
lh upholding his ban on victims
use of statements by Nichols impli· attending the. trial, Matsch said he
.eating his co-defendant would violate understood their pain, but felt they
·-]McVeigh's constitutional rights.
would be influenced by trial testi·
McVeigh and Nichols face the mony._·
,, '-'•·

. " ln,.ml"'mind there is simply no
way to separate it," he said. Prose·
cutors hitd asked him to ri:i:onsidcr.
citing experts who said crime vi ctims '
are helped psychologically by par·
ticipating in a trial.
lannie Coverdale, whose grand·
" h, 2, were
· sons, Aaron, 5; an d El 'Ja
killed in the blast, insisted she and
other family members and survivo rs
could keep thei r emotions separate.
"Every day since April 19th I
have been in pain because I don 't
have my gr:mdso ns with me," she
said. " It doesn't gel any better and
looking at them (the defendants)
' does not make it any worse."
However, Dr. Paul Heatlt, who
. survived the explosion, ag reed with
Marsch's decision , saying studies
have shown that victints do change
their testimony based on what they
see at trials.
" While it does victimi1e people
again, it is the right , legal decision to
, make," Heath said.

By LINDA DEUTSCH
.AP Special Correspondent
SANTA MONlCA. Calif. - Who
hasn't heard of O.J. Simpson's mur·
der trial? A number of people who
mi ght try his civil case, apparently.
Several . prospective j urors in
Simpson 's civil trial told an incredu·
lous judge on Friday they knew little
or nothing about the case that was
broadcast g&lt;tyel·to·gavel on televi· ·
sion and made worldwide headlines
last year.
Potential jurors were asked about
their uposure to media coverage of
Simpson 's criminal trial. which end·
ed with his acquittal last year of dou·
ble murder charges. Simpson is being
s ~ed by the families of ex-wife
Ni cole ijrown Simpson, and Ron
Goldman.
•
One black woman said neither
friends, relatives norco-workers ever
mentioned the case to her.

Asked if she might have heard
about it at church, she snapped, " I
don't go to church."
·
" Would you have heard it dis·
cussed at any social ·clubs?" asked
plaintiff's lawyer Paul Callan .
" I don 't belong to any social
clubs," she said. The middle-aged
woman also said she doesn' t watch
much television, doesn 't read news·
papers, listens to the radio only for
traffic reports 31)d.docsn't converse
with co-workers because " we 're on
the phone constantly." She said sbe ·
lives alone.
The woman. who said she collects
unpaid bills for a utility company,
conceded hearing some reaction on
the day of Simpson's criminal trial
acquittal.
" I remember some people were
upset about it and some weren't,' ' she
said in a flat voice. " ... I didn't have
anything to say about it really.... I try

not to get caught up in those thing$.
I'm into positive thinking."
Callan challenged the woman for
bias, suggesting she was " not being
fonhright."
Superior Court JudJe Hiroshi
Fujlsaki appeared troubled by the
woman's answers. butllllowed her to
stay for the next phase of jury ques.
tioning.
"Looking at this particular juror's
answers," the judge ,.aid, "she does·
n't know much about anything in this
case or she is an extremely disitisen·
uous person.u
Next was a white man wbo plead·
ed a slightfy lesser dcJree of Sii)IP;
son ignorance, saying he disliked thci
media and shuns all news "unlus it
affects me .,Crsonally." . ·
The man conce~ he wu unable
to escape the celebrity of Brian
"Kato" Kaelin.

Japanese prime minister finds
himself in race for political life
TOKYO (AP) - In Pri111e Minis· the powerful Buddhist group Soka
.
ter Ryutaro Hashimoto's home dis· Gakkai.
'" If the Soka Gakkai puts all its
tri ct, they're calling the upcoming
strength into supporting Kato, then
election a "samurai showdown."
· Describing the Oct. 20 contest as Hashimoto is in a dangerous situa·
a clash of warriors may be no exag· tion, " said political analyst Minoru
·gcration: The race against an oppo· · Morita.
Under Japan's const,itution the
sition party rival may cost Hashimo·
prime
minister must be a member of
to his political life.
HaShimoto's Liberal Democratic parliament, so if Hashimoto loses,
P~rty is expected to finish with the he's out of a job .
"It's going to be a samurai show·
most seats in Parliameri.t's lower
down,"
said Kurashiki retiree Yasuhouse, which would normally put
.
Hashimoto in place to keep Japan's zo Sato, 65.
Hashimoto's struggle renects the
top job.
perils of Japan's new election system,
But maybe not thi s year.
•Hashimoto must first win a seat in . approved by Parliament in 1994.
Under the old system, each district
his local district, centered around the
elecied'severallegislators.
Hashimo·
old merchant city of Kurashiki in
western Japan. Political analysts say to and Kato ran in the same district,
his opposition party rival, Mutsuki but ·it didn't matter much who fin·
ished first beca~se the top live won
Kato, is p,utting up a mighty fight.
Kato, 70, has served in !'arliament oarliamentarv seats.
In the ~maller·sized districts of the
for 29 years and has lined up the sup.
new
system, only the lop vote-getter
. port of a key labor ,union ~ well as

wins a seat. The system combineli
300 one-seal districts and 200 sealj;
divided proportionally based on a
separate vote for political' parties. ' ·
The new system was supposed t6
encourage one-on-one debates on
issues, but the Hashimoto·Kato bat•·
tic shows that has hardly been ~
result. The two candidates shn sim:.
ilar policies and have stressed their
ability to bring government favors tG
the distri~t.
;
Hashimoto's camp reportedly h~
heen putting the ~ueeze on local
compimies for support, in a sign of its
concern over the outcome.
:
Yet. Hashimoto himself skirtecj
two c~ances to ensure his re-electiol&gt;l
' The new election system allowa
some politicians running in district4
to also run for the seats allotted to th~
political parties. If Hashimoto had
done so, he would have stayed in Par:
liament regardless of his succesagai"st Kato. lie turned down that .
chance.
~-

· ~ise '! h1

jo·b lessness
·f ails.to slow stocks .
By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
. said a tl'\ler picture was rellected by
'.: AP Economics Writer
the fact that school employroent is up
·· WASHINGTON - Unemploy· 157,000 workers from a year ago .
/ ''men! edged up slightly in September
But discounting the statistical·
;1to 5.2 percent. The weaker-than· quirks, priva1e cconomis.ts said ttiere
,I expected jobs report sent Wall Street were reassuring sign·s that job market
soaring to a record high as investors growth is slowing to a more sustain·
became convinced the Federal able pace and the Federal Reserve
''Reserve will not have to raise inter· does not need to worry apqut boost·
est rates.
ing intcrc's t rates.
' The Dow Jones industriai average
The central bank at its Sept. 24
gained 60.01 to close at 5,992.86, just meeting passed up a chance to raise
·shy of the 6,000 mileston~~ Strong rates -.ven though there had been
· 'demand pushed the yiel~ on 3().year widespread expectations that light·
. 'Treasury bonds , a good barometer of ening labor markets would trigger a
'inflation concerns, down to 6.73 per· pre-emptive strike against inllation.
"The employment data vindicates
·cent, the lowest level in nearly iwo
months.
the Fed's decision not to raise inter·
Economists ~aid- Friday's surpris· est rates: The economy is clearly
ingly weak jobs report would slowing down," said Jerry lasinows·
strengthen the hand of Federal ki , president of the National ASsoci·
Reserve Board members who have at.ion of Manufacturers.
been opposing any hike in interest
Still, some analysts worried about
rates.on the grounds that the econo· a 0.5 percent increase in wages· in
my was already slowing on its own. September, putting them 3.5 percent
Some predicted tpe Fed would hold · higher than a year ago.. Some analysts
rates steady through the rest of this were worried that this was a marked ·
year and into f997.
acceleration in wage gairs and would
Buy Any Maytag Washer and Dryer and If
Featuring The
The Clinton administration, which ultimately led to rising prices.
has made the good economy a cen- . Bill Joseptt Stiglitz, chaim1an of
you're not happy with I~ for any reason
World's First
terpiece of its re-election effort, was the president's Council·of Economio
~adSensor™
within the ·next 40 days, we'll buy It back!.
smiling as well , contending that the Advi sers, said the higher wages
See store
Labor Department report depicted the merely represented a make· up fol·
Agitator
for details
test of all worlds - steady: sustain· . lowing a prolpngcd (leriod of wag~
The only agitator
·able growth wtth low tnflauo~.
stagnation and would •not result in
lhat adjusts to
The 5.2 percent Septe'!lber jobless higher i~flation.
each
and every
~ marked only, a •111111 uptiCk. ..... "Thi~ is&gt; om·· oh thOlleJ galden.
1
..... ,
loactsize
ft'Oio;,the S.::ven-year low of 5rl! ~ •'n!lllll)eri' tha~ mean~ rt•,l wages are
II!.•· ..,.df."
"
ceo~ s~t tn Augqst.
.
·.
coming up to a rate ~bmmensurate
Introducing Maytag
Care
' The e.c~~y ctm,IJOIIOS ~~. slm· With productivity," St\ilitz said.
.. mer along wtthout boding ?"er;, sa~d
GOP presidential candidate Bob
'97 Washers and Dryers
[!l] ,
Labor Secretary Robert Ret~h. Mam Dole has attacked Clinton's econom·
Street ought to be delighted because ic record, contending t~Ji!t real wages
•
~the rate of unemployment contmues have remained stal!,nant. during his
,..to be rc!lJarkably low and Wall Strt:et time in office. A CcKsus Bureau
; should he delighted because the report last week showed that Ameri·
cans' median family incomes rose in
;teconomy i• not overheating. "
,., Friday.'s report came as a surprise 1995 for the t1rst titne ip six year~.
~to many analysts, who had been fore· • Private cconomis(~ said with
Aile for details.
:a:asting a rise of about 170,000 pay· unemployment at its lowest level on
•
oil jobs in September. Instead, jobs a sustained basis since the 1~70s and
ell hy 40,000, the fir st setbacl&lt; sin ~e ihflationary pressures under control
tllluary.
for now, the economic advantage still
The weakness was centered in remained 'with Clinton.
l-"""l'--------------------------------------,~----r-----~--1
anufacturing. where widespread
"f have never seen an economy
a~offs accoonted for a loss of 57,000 looking so good for "'I incumhent
'iiobs.
president," said Aile~ Sinai, chief
1
'11 Employment allooal schools was global c.:onomist fot: Primark Dcci·
own by 67,000, but analysts dis· sion Economics in New York.
ounted this decline as a statistical
Bruce Steinbcrg, an e~on cmist at
,
' berration in the government's sea· Merrill Lynch in New Yorl\. said he
onal adjUSIIJlCgt procedures. The · believed thc-ecommly hnd 'slowed tq
ugust gain was overstated as a moderate rate of 1.5 rercenl to 2
ools s,tarted earlier tllan usual, al1d petcent i~ thC third quarter. with Ibis
1704 Eastern
Galllpoll•, OH 45631
~Nd the Se(llem
. ber pen&lt;
. or- ' moderation likely lo keep the ce11tral
""•
..
·bank on hold not only•this ~elll' but
- o r Ubor ~illiCI Com.. . for much of 1997 ·~ well. .
.
Across from McDonald's
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'Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Phtasant,

wv_

Sundey, October 8, 1918

Sports

Opposing sides maintain
calm as peace talks dawn ••'

'

I,

'

• EVANSTON, Ill . (AP) - Brian
Gowins thought he'd won the game,
completing one of Northwestern's
greatest comebacks Saturday. The
crowd was in a frenzy as his kick
~ailed through the uprights. _
• Then he was told he had to kick
-it again.
' And he did , hilling a 39-yarder
with 13 seconds left as No. 22
Northwestern rallied ' from a I6-0
(ourth-quarter hole to stun . ))lo,' 6
Michigan 11- 16.
. "The first-one was really perfect,
the second one was probably three or
(our feei off-ce nter/' Gowins said.
~There was ·a lot of pressure on me
tb kick it and also a lot on the holder and the snapper."
· Gowins' initial kick was good but .
officials ruled the play had not been
whistled to start. Gowins said he
understood that one of the officials
was not in proper position when the
ball was initially snapped. so the play
1\ad to -be run over.
"That W'JS tough," he said.
So he simply kicked it through a
second time-· his third field goal of
the final period that capped an amazing comeback victory for the defending Big Ten champions.
"That I had to do it twice made
it even sweeter," Gowins said.
"I' ve coached in a lot of games,
but right now there doesn't seem like

'

di~rupts gove~:nment

Bof!Jb

activity ·

there 's one that's bigger, better or

\

* IOftCB *

in

J BILL·W£LLI

n•

OCTOBERFEST

'

At

Enterprise- Nagle

-·

Heating and Cooling
992-4485

Perot, H~.gelin ~taying off stage
after court nixes debate appeal.

.

By HARRY F. ROSENTHAL
hers- five representatives each of
Aaaoclated Preu Writer
the Democnitic and Republican par· WASHINGTON - Ross Perot · ties - ruled that llltbt, the Reform
and Natural Law Party candidate Pany candidate, and Hagelin did not
John Hagelin will have to watch Sun- have a realistic chance of being
d.,'s first presidential debate on . elected and did not invite them to the
television afte{ los!ng their court debates. .
fight to go head-to-head with Presi"We'll take this to the American
de,nt Clinton and Republican Bob people and on Election Day they ' ll.
l&gt;ole.
have .'the opportunity tn rectif~ it,"
Their attempt ·tzy sue· the'if way-· said ~uss Verney, Perot's campaign·
onto lite debate· stage was rejected. coordinator. "We'li step up public
Fliday by the U,.S. Court of Appeals. appearances and long-formatteleviEarlier in the day, the Federal Com- sion appearances to talk about this
munications Commission turned travesty of justice."
·
dQwn Perot's efforts to force the 1V
Hagelin, who took a different
networks to·sell him blocks of prime tack from Perot in his lawsuit, is fn:e
time.
to. file a new suir challenging the way
The appeat4couit upheld a lower- the FEC implements its regulations.
coun order dismissing the lawsuits. Any action in that regard, however,
Perot complained that the Commis· could not be resolved in time for the
sion on Presidential Debates, which debates,' the first of which is Sunday
'excluded him and H~gelin , used cri- night.
teria that went -beyond Federal Elec·
"He will not suffer unduly from
lion Commission regulation s and any delay in resolving this issue," the
that the FEC delegated its power to three-judge appeals ~ourt panel said
the private group.
of "'agelin. "Even an immediate
The debate commission's mem-

•

· ~uy _a Heat Pump or Furnace from EnterprJ.se-Nagle Heating and Cooling
m the Month of October- and get the. following:
.
.

.

order invalidating the regulations
would. not provide him with any
meaningful. .relief from the alleged
harms.:·· :
Perot and Hagelin originally t hallenged their e.clusion from the
debates by arguing that. the debate
commission used subjective standards, such as consulting with news
bureau chiefs on the third party can· didates' "newsworthiness" instead of
fol)owing its own opje&lt;:tive criteria en·
the leuer.
But at the appeals court level, ~er-"
ol contended that the FEC unlawfully delegated its legislative authority
to a private non-profit corporation, in
violation of tl,e free speech clause in
the.Constitution.
Hagelin contended that the ~islrict
court judge was wrong when be dis• ,
missed the case on the ground he
lacked jurisdiction. '
That judgmen~ the appeals court
said, was premature and it ordered the
disl(ict cMrt judge to reconsider his ,
ruling in that respec~ only.

FOP lopge breaks ranks,, backs Dole
HAMILTON (AP) The
endorsement of Republican presi- ·
. dential candidate Bob ~le by the
Hamilton lodge of the Fraternal
Order of Police is not valid, according to the head of the national FOP.
Members of FOP Lodge 38 in
Hamilton
voted
unanimously .
·Wednesday to endorse the GOP nominee. LOOge 38 president Gary
•
:r -·-

•weeter than this one," Northwestern
c.oach Gary Barnell said.
,
. After a despenltion Michigan
pass fell incomplete, Dyche Stadium
became a sea of purple celebration
after yet another victory for a pro-·
gram thai was once the· doormat of
college-football befon: going to the
Rose Bbwl.
" It was a great comeback. We
h~ve no eXcuses ,,. said Michigan
coach Lloyd Carr, whose·team was
outgained 172 yards to 28 in the
fourth ~uarter. "We had the gamejn
contrpl.andjust made too many mts. takes :" '
...
·
Northwestern· (4-1., 2•0 Big Ten)
also rallied to beat Michigan 19- 13
last s.eason in capturing the Big Ten
title.
Btit a comeback Saturday didn't
look possible against the Wolverines
(4-1, 1-1) and the aggressive defense
that pressured and hurried Schnur.
No. I Florida 42
Arkansas 7
\.
At Fayeueville, Ark., Danny
Wuerffel threw four touchdown
passes, three of them · to Reidel
Anthony, as top-ranked Florida
broke open a close game early. i.n the
second•half t.o beat Arkansas 42-7
Saturday. .
Wuerffel's scoring passes gave
him a career tptal of 89, pulling him
third on the NCAA Division I·A
career list. He completed 23 of 39
passes for 462 yards, breaking the
school record of 458 yards set last
year by Eric Kresser, who slarled.one
game as Wuerffel 's backup.
Florida (5-0, 3-0 SEC) scored on
two of its first three possessions, but
' l~d only 14-7 at the half. The Gators
outscored their first four oppo~ents

146-13 in the first half.
Arkansas (1-3, 0.2) had a chance
to tie early in the second half when
a pass from Wuerffel bounced off .
Anthony's shoulder pads and hung in
the air long enough for Chris Akins
to intercept. Quarterback Pete Burks
made a .measured first down inside
the 12 before the Florida defense
took over,
Ed Chester tackled
Oscar Malone
.
I
after a one-yard gain . On second
down, Johnny Rutledge knocked
down Malone for a three-yard 'loss.
Burks' third-down pass was too
long, and Todd Latoun:lte missed a
30-y~d field-goal attempt.
The Gators then covered 80 yards
in 66 seconds. Wuerffel completed
passes of 18, 22 and 18 yards before
Anthony caught a perfect throw for
23 yards and a 2! -71ead.
No. 3 Ohio State 38
No. 4 Penn State 7
At Columbus, Ohio,Stanley Jackson turned No. 3 Ohio State's
matchup with No. 4 Penn Stale into .
a mismatch Saturday, throwing two
touchdown passes in a 24-point first
half that propelled the Buckeyes to
a 38-7 victory.
In what was supposed to he a test
of Big Ten powers, Ohio State (4-0),
· playing before an .Ohio Stadium
crowd of 94,241 on a sunny autumb
day, overwhelmed the Niuany Lions
(5-I ), who suffered their worst defeat
~ince a 44-7 loss against Notre
Dame in 1984.
The impressive win kept .Ohio
State in the thick of the national title
chase, while Penn Stale all but fell
out of the running.
Jackson had scoring passes of 42
yards to Dimitrious Stanley in the
first quarter and 24 yards to fullback
Mall Keller in the second as the
Buckeyes rolled over a defense ·thal
allowed just 27 points in five games.
- Joe Germaine, who usually shar~s
tiine with Jackson, came on in lfie
middle of the .second quarter and
threw a 34-yard 'touchdown pass-to
Stanley on his second play. Ger. maine added a three-yard touchdown
pass to fullback !-fall Ca!houn in the
fourth quarter.
Pepe Pearson chipped in with 28
carries for 141 yards and scored on
a one-yard run in the third quarter.
Jackson was 11-of-22 for 169 yards,
while Germaine was 3-of-8 for 46
y...-d..
'
II was Ohio State's first-half blitz
that stunned the Nillany Lions. By
halftime, Penn Stale had punted on
all seven possessions, never crossed
. midfield' and totaled JUSt 74 yards.
'The Lions finishfd with 211 yards ,
and avoided their first shutout since
1987 when Anthony Cleary scored
from a yard out with 6:03 left. The
Buckeyes, meanwhile, had 565
.yards. ·
Curtis Enis, who returned home
to Ohio for the first time since choosing Penn State over the Buckeyes,
was held lo 34 yards on II carries,
while Wally Richardson was 14-of.'
30 for 105 yards.
. The game ended with Ohio Stale
at the ·Penn Stale two.

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1 -

ELUDES WOLVERINES - Northwestern running back Darnell
Autry (far left) eludes several Michigan defenders, Inducing David
BoWens (6) on his way lo a 12-yard gain and a first down in the third
quarter of Saturday's Big Ten game In Evanston, Ill., where the 'Wildcats came from behind to win 17-16. (AP)

In other Ohio

ct;~llege

.

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Steve
Hookfin rushed for 119 yards and
Hank Ray turned Ohio's only complete pass into a 39-yard touchdown
as the Bobcats beat Eastern Michigan 7-0 Saturday.
Ohio remains unbeaten in two
Mid.. American Conference games

and is 3-2 overall . Eastern Michigan
is now l-2intheMACand l-5over-.
'
..
all. .
Hbokfin le~ an Ohio running
auack that accounted for 249 uf th e
Bobcat's 288 yards. Ohio kept the
ball on the sround for 62 of its 66
plays.
Yet it was the passing gmri e that
. accounted for the only score. Faced
with a third-and- 12 from the Eastern
Michigan 39-yard line early in the
third quarter, Ohio quarterback
Kareem Wilson found Ray wide
open down the fight sideline. Ray
caught the pru;s a\ th~ 15 and scored
casoly.
·
.
.The Bobcat defense made the
score stand up, as it limited the
Eagles to 24 yards ru shing on 28
auempts. and intercepted freshman
quarterback Wally Church three
times in the second half.
Ohio fumbled to squander three
opportunities in Eastern M ichigan
territory. Two of those. came in the

first hal( Overall, the Bobcats fumbled eight times, losing three:
Ohio Wesleyan 27
·. Kenyon 20
At Delaware. Ohio. Ohio Wesleyan's J.R. Kidd scored on a twoyard run wit~ 4:31 )eft to pi'ay to give
the Battling Bishops a 27-20 win
over Kenyon in the North Coilst
Confere:m::e.

Kidd had 35 carries for 249 yards
for an Ohio Wesleyan (3 -1. 2-1 )
record . The previous record was 206
yards set bl Richard Holmes two
weeks ago again st Earlham . .
Kenyon tied at 20 in the fourth
quarter when Anthony Togliaui
picked up an Ohio Wesleyan fumble
and ran 39 yards for a touchdown .
Derrick Johnson ran for a two-point

'

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((Jrrier

.

100% Sati&amp;faction Guaranteed .
We ~ll put it in. writing

1.

i.

conversion to tie at 20.

Ohio

Wesleyan

quarterback

Willie Tarman c ompleted seven

passes in 12 auempts for 75 yards.
He threw a 20-yard touchdown pass
to Joe Buckley.
Terry Parmel ee0 had 7 I yards
passing, completing four tosses in .14·
attempts for the Lords (2-2, I:2).
Kenyon's Deqick Johnson had 26
carries for 110 yards. .
Mount Union 44.
Ohio Northern 7
'At Ada. Mount Uni on quarter-back Bill Borchert threw for three
touchdowns to lead the Purple
Raiders over Ohio Northern 44-7 in
an Ohio Conference game Saturday.
Mount Union improved to 4-0
overall and 3-0 in the OAC. Ohio
Northern is now 2-2 overall and 1-2
in the OAC.
Borchert threw 'touchdowns to
Marc Lantos, Brian Flinn and Kevin
Knestrick: He fmished the day 20 of
28 for 295 yards, three touchdowns
and an interception . Knestrick had
five catches for 132 yards. Flinn also
caught a touchdown from backup
quarterback Keith Zeppernick.

.,

PURSUING the baseball the Texas Rangers' Will Clark drove Into
foul territory are New York left fielder Tim Raines (far ,right) and an
unidentified shirtless fan in the fourth inning of Game 4 of their
American League first-round playoff series Saturdtly In Arlington,
· Texa1, where the Yankees won 6-4 to earn the right to face the Baltimore Orioles, who beat the Cleveland lndlani later In the day, in
the American League Championship Series this week. (AP)

In t~e AL playoffs,

.

Vanke.e s topple
Texas; Orioles ,
oust Cleveland

By DENNE H. FREEMAN
' the Rangers won 6-2.
ARLINGTON, Te.as (AP)
Williams tied the game at 4 in the
With big-Cecil Fielder and Bernie fifth inning with a solo homer off
Williams on their side and Texas' Pavlil&lt; on a '3-2 pitch. Williai)IS conbulipen again helping them out'. the necled 'from the lefr slde for a 42$New York ·Yankees pushed the foot drive.
'
·
.
Orioles 4, Indians 3 (12) ' ·
Rangers right out of the playoffs.
Despite giving up another home
At Cleveland, Roberto Alomar
run to Juan Gonzalez, the Yankees gave Cleveland another reason to
rallied for the third straight game to hate him and Baltimore.
win 6-4 Saturday, laking the AL
Alomar, in a slump and under tire
Mount Union scored on its firsl · series 3-1 and reversing their histo- . for spilling at an umpire, homered in .
four possessions lo take a 23·0 firstry of failure in Texas.
lhe 12th inning Saturday as the Baiquarter lead.
:Williams homered from each side tim ore Orioles advanced to the 0
Ohio Northern quarterback Scott ~fthe plate and Fielder, acquired in. ALCS with a 4-3 victory QVer the ·
Tekancic scored the Polar Bears'
midseason to deliver big hits, had an Cleveland Indians.
only touchdown on a four"yard rush
RBI single in the seventh inning that
The Oriol'es, in -the postseason for
on the third quarter to malte it 30-7.
broke 'a 4-4 tie.
the first time since 1983, eliminated
He gained 28 yards on' six carries,
Gonzalez homered in his fourth Cleveland 3-1 despite striking out a
and threw for 143 yards on 18 of37
straight game and hit hi's fifih home playoff record 23 times. Baltimore,
passing.
ryn of the series, tying a pair 'pf the AL's wild-card entrant. will face
The win gave Mount Union head
records'. He helped Texas take an ear- the Nc~ork Yankees in the ALCS
coach Larry Kehres his I DOth career ly 4-0 lead, but ·again the Rangers beginni Tuesday night.
victory.
relievers could not protect the edge.
The ndians, who lost to Atlanta
Hiram 15, Heidelberg I2
The Yankees, who rallied for two in the World Series last year and Jed
At Tiffin. Donnell Davis scored
runs in the ninth Friday night for a the majors with 99 wins this season, ~
on an It-yard pass from Dave Der3-2 win, advanced to American wer.{trying to become the fifth team
ryberry with 8:57 ·to play and· folLeague championship series for the to c,ome back from a 2-0 deficil in a
lowed that with a two-point coverfirst lime since 1981.
n;:-game playoff series.
sian Saturday to give Hiram a 15- 12
New York will face the winner of
~n s tead in Cleveland; where fans
victory ·ovcr Heidelberg:
the Baltimon:-Cleveland series, start- we1e already enraged that BaltiWayne Wilson scored Hiram:s · ing on Tuesday night. The Yankees mo•e took away their beloved
other touchdown on a seven"yard run
were 10-3 against the Orioles this Browns, now ~ave to wait until ne.t
and finished with 133 yards in 33
season and 9-3 against the Indians.\ season, for a chance to get back at
carries for the Terriers ·
The Yankees carne .to The Ball-, their riew nemesis.
park in Arlington having won jl,lst , · .A1omar; who tied the the game in
three of 13 games at the stadium, yet the ninth with a two-out RBI single,
twice came back to win.
hit a 1-1 pitch from loser Jose Mesa
Texas threw seven relievers at the over the wall in right-center. Alomar,
Yankees after starter Bobby Witt left, booed relentlessly by the Jacobs
but couldn 'I postpone the inevitable. Field crowd, raised his fist in the air
New York took a 5-4. lead in the as he rounded first and smiled wideseventh on singles by 11m Raines , ly as he came home from third.
Tina Martinez and Fielder off·loser
Alomar's suspension for spilling
R_oger Pavlik..
at umpire John Hirschheck set off a
·David Weathers pitched three _week-long controversy in the playinnings of one-hit relief for the vic- offs. Umpires had threatened to
tory. Mar_ian? Rivera pitched 2 213 strilte because the suspension didn't
·scoreless onnm~&amp;aoolo)m WOllteland' ' apply' to the postseason. One day ~
worked· lhi&gt; . non.th. for, ..ht&amp;' seeond•'' after th'l!' spilling incidcn1· in•Tor~n• _,..,,_,.~,
stratghl s~ve.
.
to, Alomar hit a ·IOth· inning homer "'
WeUeland walkod Ivan Rodnguez thai clinched the brioles a playoff
leading off the ninth. One· out !ater, spot.
Mesa, normally used for one
Weueland toolt no _chances with
Gonzalez, w~lkmg htm on five pttch- inning to close games. was starting
es. · . .
.
.
his fourth inning when A)omar
Wtll Clark follow_ed wtlh a drove homered to end the Indians' season.
that Rames caught JUst shy of the Alomar was 3-for-15 in the series
wammg track on left field, and Wet- before, his game-tying single in the
tel and struck out Dean Palmer.
ninth off Mesa.
The New York-bullp~n has been
The Indians got. the winning run
. so tough that Te&lt;~s has scored only · to third with two out s in the bouom
one run .aftcr the ftfth inning in the of the ninth.
series, and that was in Game I when

.

' . f/1

..
Meigs head coach Mike Chancey (waarli'lg ~)and •vel'll of the
Nlareuder congratulate junior tallbtck Mtdt Wllllama (30, but witll
; only the 3 visible) a!ter Wllllama got the yardtlgt n-aary fot him

t'
&lt; •

'

r

Hamilton County to interview finalists
vy1ng to design Bengals stadium

We~The In~ide Guys. ·..·
'

I

'~

football action,

OU ha·nds Eastern
Michigan 7-0 l.oss
.

!

1'

...-----..;.,__-----·-Williams gets kudos---~....,

..

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&gt;

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gone against the national union 's
Roberts complained last month L
when national FOP president Gil Gal- endorsement of Clinton. But, pasco
legos announced the Clinton endorse- said: "II would not be considered a
ment in Cincinnati - that local legitimate FOP endorsement.''
Pasco said delegates to the FOP's
members had . no input into the
national
convention _in August 1995
national FOP decision.
Jim Pasco, executive director of had approved a resolution b~ voice
the na~ional FOP in Wa•hing\on, vole which authorized the FPP's
satd Fnday he had no offioial notifi- national board of trustees to endorse
·,
cation that the -Hamilton lodge had a presidential canwidate.

••

+

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'

Sunday, October 6,1996

'

I·I'J most if not all states, lesser
known names seek presidency
'

B

Northwestern
upsets Michigan;
Ohio State wins ·

ERTABIAN

.

Section

iunbav 1!imtJ- Jtutintl

In Top 25 college football,

'

It is not uncommon for Hamas to mosque. Please go home quietly," J'
· By SAID GHAZAU
deny leaflets issued in its hame, prayer leader Mohammed Hussein
Anocl.wct PrH• Writer
.
JERUSALEM - Working side- reflecting deep divisions between · saicl over a loudspeaker.
·
Israeli
police
ringed
the
comby-side, -Israelis and Palestinians rival factions within the group.
quelled stone-throwing protests at
Since their midweek Washington pound, but did not react to the ston{erusalem's AI Aqsa Mosque Friday summit, both Al]lfal and Netanyahu ing, only asking Jewish worshipers to
and enforced a curfew in the West have tried 10 reduce tensions that step.back from the Western Wall that }
Bank to"(n of Hebron.
flared in the wake of last week's gun runs along the compound.
The Jerusalem police commander,
Muslim militants; who oppose battles between Israeli soldiers and
Arieh
Amil, Said his men were under
Yasser Arllfat's peace agreements Palestinian pOlice. The fighting killed
· with Israel. had urged Palestinians to 59 Palestinians, 161sraelis-and thn:e orders to show n:strainL " II was clear •
to all of us that for Sunday's talks to ,
stage protest marches after Friday's Egyptians.
.
noon prayers in Jerusalem;The West
The .protests were sparked by begin well ... we needed to do every- ,
Bank and Gaza Strip.
Israel's _opening a new entrance.ro·a thing in order that the prayers finish But ·prayers ended peacefully, touri st tunnel along ·the AI Aqsa peacefully," Amit told Israel radio. ·•
In Hebron, whose future will be
indicating that most Palestinians are Mosque compound, Islam's third
willing to give a chance to peace talks holiest shrine. The tunnel also runs the key issue in Sunday's talks, :
with Israel scheduled (o start Sunday along the Western Wall, revered by Israeli . soldiers and plainclothes
at the En:z cros$ing between Israel , Jews as the last remains of their tem- Palesti~ian !police patrolled side-by· •
Side Fnday to enforce a mnth day of i
and Gaza.
,
ple. It was closed Friday.
t
U.S. Secr~tary of State 'warren
Netanyahu,'s Cabinet announced cudew.
The central issue. Sunday will be •
. Christopher was to fly to fsrael Sat- after its weekly meeting Friday that
~ urday and meet separately with Prime the siege of West Bank town~, ·an Israeli troop pullback from Hebron
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu lind imposed last week, would he gradu- - a provision Israel's previous gov- .
Arafat on Sunday, Staie Department ally lifted over the weekend if the sit- ernment agreed to in peace accords •
their convention In Washington In July. Browne
RUNNING II( OBSCURITY - Libertarian .
Regotiated with Arafat.
spokesman
Ni cholas Bums said in uation remained calm.
Is one of the lesser-known candidates, cam' . P..ty pr..ldtlntial·candidate Harry Browne and
Netanyahu has insisted the terms 1
Washington.
Arafat, in tum, issued orders to the
paigning for the most part in obscurity. (AP)
. hie wife Pamela greeted party membera during
of
the
withdrawal be-.renegotiated to ,
He may also participate in the 30,000 armed men under his combetter protect the 450 Jewish settlers
talks at · Erez, a strong signal that mand to prevent any violence. ·
Washington wants to see at least '
During his sermon at the AI Aqsa who live in sin all enclaves in Hebron, ,
a ciiy of 94,000 Palestinians.
some progress . .
Mo~que Friday, chief Muslim cleric
Israel radio said Netanyahu would ·
Meanwhile, Mahmoud Zahar, a Ikrema Sabri fiercely attacked the ·
, -leader of the Muslim militant group · United States, which many Pales- propose thhl Israeli troops maintain .,
Hamas, distanced himself from Fri - tinians believe 'i ~ siding with Israel. ;' hift positions overlooking the Hebron
.day's leaflet calling for protests, say:'God destroy 'America, its allies, seuler enclaves and in exchange give ,
' 'Nader has long fought against larg~ grasp and take of the federal govern- , ing it vias not issued by Hamas. He its collaborators," Sabri told the Palestinians 'control over territory
BY BRIAN WITTE
.
corporations in the role of consumer ment." The party platform says that said Hamas· wanted to give the talks
Aaaoclatecl Preas Writer
crowd of .12,000. "God cover the elsewhere in town.
WASHINGTON Browne, advocate. Nader's name is on 21 state while the United States should be a a chance, although it believes they are White House with blackness."
A chief Palestinian n~gotiator,
Hagelin, Har~is, Moorehead &amp; ballots. The party hopes to increase friend to liberty everywhere, it should destined for failure.
,
Hassan
Asfour, said Friday the Pales· .
But when dozens of worshipers
Phillips may look like the letterhead thai number to 30 and to encourage onl~ invest and fight to guarantee it
" When the peopie decide to face hurled .stones at Israeli riot police tinians were not willing to renegotifor a downtown law firm, but add the write-in campaigns in the remaining for · the United States. Phillips, 55, the Israelis, HamHS will be with after the prayers, Muslim clerics ate the earlier agreement on Hebron.
mon: well-known Nader and it's a list states. Nader, 62, plans to us.e his can- supports dismantling the Education, them, but they (Hamas activists) are quickly appealed for calm.
However, Arafat has said he was
of candidates running for president. didac.y as the catalyst for starting an Housing and Urban Development no't going .to take the initiative,"
"We don 't want to give the n:ady to discuss some changes in
Candidates oiher than Bill Clin- "aggressive political force for the departments and - end government Zahar said in an interview.
aggressors a c)lance to · close the security arrangements.
ton, Bob Dole and Ross Perot, that is. future." H~ says the two major par- support of the arts. He is on the hal, Although the second - or even ties have become so similar in their lot in about 40 slates.
• Monica Moorehead, Workers ·
third - tier 'hopefuls aren '1 house- viev.:s that ·voters are left with little
hold names, ·they've got more than choice. When Nader was nominated · World Party: Calls for tripling the
to head the Green Party ticket, he minimum wage, making polluters
winning_on their minds. .
'
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) street and the building . ~· said a guard is repaired. . ,
: ••A few years ago we weren't everl said, "It's lime tl!is country has a pay for a clean environment, further- . - .A power;ful bgrob damaged the who would not give hi_s mime. "I saw
The bomb disarmed in the Liber·
. on the tabl~. but we're building our political alternative ~ a progressive ipg affirmative action and ensuring Legishilive Palace and the Central only fi.n: and smoke."
al Party headquarters in the southeast
own table very, very quickly lo rival mainstream that.defends consumers equal rights for women, lesbians, Bari(( in &lt;townt9wn Tegucigalpa earAuthorities said the legislature · sector of the capital contained five
them," Libertarian Party candidate and workers against corporate wei- gays and bise&lt;uals. The party sup- ly Friday and an unexploded device will go into recess until the damage pounds of dynamite'.
ports big cuts in military spending.
Harry .Browne says of the Republi- fare. "
• John Hagelin, Natm:al·· Law Moorehead 's party, which is on the was found at the headquarters of tHe
cans and Democrats.
ballot in 12 states, believes the elec- governing Liberal Party.
'· And James Harris, the Socialist Party: On the ballot in 47 states The bomb exploded shortly after
Workers Party candidate, gives this and still trying in New Hampshire,· lion is dominated by the rich and conmidnight.
Police told The Associated
In answer to several questions - YES,. I can, and will,
rallying cry: "Our campaign really Georgia and Oklahoma - the Nat- sidcrs the Workers World Party cam- Press there were no injuries but the
work with 11ny elected county officials without regard
wants to win politjcal change, which . ural Law Party hopes to "br·ing the paign an opportunity to bring workb~mb blew a hole two yards wide in
to politics. The sheriff's duties are to·serve the people,
Is not synonymq_us with winning light of science into politics." Its plat- ing-class politics to a broad audience. the floor and shattered windows in
form includes prevention-oriented It is opp&lt;iS\'d to capitalism, advocat·
.
political raceS." ,
the courts, and to maintain peace and good order In
three ~uilding~. including the bank. 1
Campaigning !Rl]Siiy in obscurity, heallh care, renewable energy and ing socialism instead. Moorehead, 44,
ttie cpunty. This Is exaCtly .what I Intend to do •• ",Your
No one took- imritediate responsi-·
these lesser-kiiOwn men and one . sust!Hn~ble agriculture without pesti-.. has .been a leader the party since . bility for the e&lt;plosfon.
··
'
·
woman, have rpanaged to get their cides. The paity also wants a cost- 1979.
Sheriff.". ,
.
"The
bomb
fell
this
morning
on
• Jamt$ Harris, Socialist Work·
names on mqst tfnot'ali 50'stale bal- effective govemmelll with a safety
net that promotes well-being, includ- ers Party: Stands f&lt;&gt;r "the struggles the floor of the Legislative Palace and
lots.
P•opa.•s Cltofe• for A.rfH
ing a 10 petcenl flat -fax by 2002.. of the oppressed and exploited e&lt;ploded ten meters (yards) from
Hen: they are:
where I was. Everything shook, the
, Paid lor by Candldote, 130 Eagle f!d., BI-ll, Oh.
• Harry Browne, Libertarian Hagelin, 42, is a Harvard-educated against thdncreasingly brutal assault
Part1: A best-selling investment physics professor and one or the par- by lh~ wealthy minority the world
writer, he's on the ballot in all 50 ly's founders. In 1992 he garnered .over," according to. the party platstales. He says the Libertarians less than 40,000 votes. The Natural form. The Socialist Workers Pany
Law Party advocates transcendental supports the right of Cuba to defend
"be~ve in indiv' d!ml liberty, personal responsib · tty and freedom meditation, contending it can lower its sovereignly. Harris, 48, a former
from govemm 1." The party seeks the crime rate by setting up medita- meatpacker in Atlanta, is on about 10
end in
e tax and "lo reduce lion groups in prisqns, and can serve ballots. Harris criticizes the govern- .
g
nt to the absolute minimum as a foreign policy tool by support- meal's response to black church
possible." Browhe, 63, &lt;ipposes Inter- ing gro'ups who' practice it 'in other burnings, airline safety and labor
. unions. The Socialist Workers Party
net censorship and supports a repeal countries.
• Howard PhiUips, U.S. Taxpay· accuses the major presidcntial'candiof the assault weapons ban. The Libertarians have been around for about ers Party: Hcipes to restore .American · dates of continuing "their war prepaa quarter of a century. Their platform jurisprudence to its "heritage of bib- rauons tn response to the increasing
includes proposals to deregulate the lical liberty, " abolish the Internal world disorder, 4sing threats or milhealth-care industry, privatize Revenue Service and eliminate fed- itary force from. Cuba to Liberia,
Medicare and Medicaid and legalize era! income taxes, capital gains tax- from China to Korea, and by backing
· es and inheritance taxes. Phillips' par.- the Israeli regime's brutal assault on
drugs.
. .
"
• Ralph Nltder, Green Party: ~­ · ty also supports ending legalized Lebanon."
mary concerns are envirOnmental, but abortion and reducing "the reach, the

•

to become his school's all·tlme career rusher. For the story and
additional actinta from Friday night's homacomlng battlltgaln-'
Wellston, ·~ B-4. (Tlmes·Sentlr)el photo by Dave Harrle)
·

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

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Hqmilton County is prepanng to interview the
thn:e finalists vying to design a football stadium for the Cincinnati Ben gals.
. Four companies submitted proposals, but one wasn 't considered because
it had no experience in designing football stadiums, The Cincinnati Post
reported Saturday.
The construction cost of building a football stadium is projected to be
between $180 million and $200 mi!lion.
. The companies 10 he interviewed Thursday an: HOK Inc., of Kansas City,
Mo., NBBJ Architecture, of Los Angeles. and a partnership of Ellerbe Beclt•
ct of Kansas City. Mo.. and Cim,inna'.i-based FRCH Design Worldwide.

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Page 82 • Jluallag Cl.ls-Jhatlad
.
.

In the AL playoffs,

Sunday,~ober8,191;

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

·

'JiAHS edges Athens
~1-14 for third victory

Indians defeat Orioles 9-4 .
Br KIN BERGER

It looked like home field advanFor a change, Belle wasn't the
Those tage would work for Cleveland right most controversial player in ehe
w' Ill'• on the tarmac in Baltimore
from the start. The first ball the Indi- ·ballpark, or even in baseball. At least
.,.•tJ•shing now. One swing,and ans hit- a Oy ball to right by Lofton ror now. that honor goes to Orioles
Alban Belle made sure of that.
- went off B6bby Bonilla's glove second baseman Roberto Alomar,
AI the Cleveland Indians sat in for a two-base error.
whose suspension for spitting at an
fhe!r plane after losing the first two . Then, with the game tied 4-all in. umpire set off ·a week-long contro·lamet of their AL playoff series t&lt;i the seventh, Belle hit a 1-2 fastball Versy in the playoffs.
the Orioles at Camden Yards, some
The crowd of 44,250 booed and
from hard-throwing reliever Armanworkers taunted them with brooms. do Benitez, driving it 398 feet out to mocked Alomar. waving signs and
'"lbe maintenance people took left. It was Belle's eighth career gesturing. At one point·while Alomar
out their brooms right on the iarmac grand slam.
was batting, a group of fans in the
lllld l&amp;arted sweeping," Cleveland
"I remember when the count bleachers turned their backs on the
.. ~r Mike Hargrove said. "You, was 1-2 on Albert, I said, 'A sac Oy plate, apparently in pr~sl.
obviously don't feel too good about would be nice,' " Indians starter Jack
Lofton started the Cleveland sevht."
McDowell said. "He hit a sac fly- enth with a walk off Jesse Orosco (0On Friday, Belle took any idea of to one of·the fans."
1), who relieved Muss ina to start the
a sweep and launched it into the cold ·
Belle, who batted .239 in the inning. Lofton stole second, sprawlClev~land night. Jacobs Field shOQk ' postseason last year and was 2-foring on the ground momentarily a{ter
with cheers when the slugger's sev- 9 in the series before the homer, took his head slammed into shortstop Cal
enth-inning grand slam landed in the an uncharaclerisfic curtain call after Ripken's knee.
left-field bleachers, extending the the homer. He stood on the top step
Kevin Seitzer followed with a
defending AL champions' season of the dugout waving his arms and a walk. Casey Candaele.then pinch-hit
with·a 9-4 victory over Baltimore.
white towel. thrilling a crowd that for Jim Thome, who has been both"We got the firsJ one out of the adores him despite his frequent con- ered by a sore right hand he injured
way," said Kenny Lofton, 'who troversies.
while swinging earlier in the series.
reached base four times and stole
Lofton, one of Belle's few close Candaele was trying to bunt, but
three bases. "Now, we've got to do friends on the team , said it was one !)rosco walked him Hi load the
it again."
.
'
of the most emotional displays he's bases.
The AL CentraL champion Indians seen out of the slugger.
Orosco s'aid he was having troupulled within 2-1 in the hest,of-five
"He did lhal once before when he ble gripping the ball because of the
series ag!llnst wild-card Baltimore. hit a home run," Lofton said. "It was cold.
The series continued Saturday. with one of them, yeah."
"I just couldn't get a feeling on
Charles Nagy pitching for Cleveland
the ball," he satd. ·
.
As is his practice, Belle did not do
against David Wells for Baltim'ore.
Cleveland made it 9-4 in the
interviews ·after the game. Like the
The Orioles arc still in contrQI, rest if us; hitting instru'ctor Charlie eighth on Seitzer's infield single.
but find it hard to feel lhat way at Manuel could only guess at what
Paul Assen.macher ,( 1-0) was the
Jacobs Field.
winning pitcher, getting one out in
must ·have been s'w irling· inside
"Hopefully,· we can play some Belle's chest, the same one he claims . · !he seventh.
better baseball (today) and pull Jt the media has stamped with a l&gt;ull's
The matchup of former Stanford
out," said Mike Mussina, who start- eye.
pitchers McDowell and Mussina
ed Game 3 for Baltimore. "If we
lasted only until the si&lt;th inning,
"He doesn't say much to me,
don·~ then it's going to be very interwhen McDowell WaS\ taken out
either," Manuel said. "He hits 'em
esting and very difficult to· win on out and we congratulate him. That's
despite having retired eight s(raight.
· the fifth day."
Mussin:J! hild retired seven·in a row
as far as it goes."
when he was lifted in favor of
Orosco to open the seventh.

"§sunders' pass interception with
~ seconds left secures triumph
£.: GALLIPOLIS · Gallia Academy placement was true.

CLIWELANO (AP) -

.,.~··

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ARRIVES AT THIRD- The Cleveland Indians'
Omar Vlzquel $11dea Into third base ahead of the
late tag by Baltimore third saoker Todd Zelle In ·

the eighth Inning of Game 3 of their Amarlc:atl
League playoff fl,.t-round aeries FridaY night
Cleveland, where the Indiana won 9-4. (AP)
'

In

· In the AL playoffs,

·

:

Yanks get past Rangers 3-2 ·~i
·'
By DENNE H. FREEMAN
. ARLINGTON, Texa• (AP)
There wa• bad karma in the New
York Yankees dugout until the eighth
inning when the screaming and
shouting began.
· "Jimmy Key yelled 'somebody's
got to do it' so.! stepped up," said
Mariano Duncan. who delivered the
game-winning single in the mnth
innmg to cap a two-run rally for a 32 v1ctory over the Texas Rangers.
The victory gave the Yankees a 2- .
I lead in the best-of-five series AL
playoff and broke their jinx at The
Ballpark in Arlington .
"There was a lot of yelling and

In other SEOAL football action,

screaming in thedugout," New.York
manager Joe Torre said. "We final·
ly came to life. The· players knew
they had screwed up and they wanted to make up for it."
The stadium had the vOQdoo on
the Yankees once more until Rangers
manager Johnny Oates made a move .
that backfired as New York once
again victimized the Texas bullpen.
Duncan, the Yankees leading hit·
ter, spoiled Oates' strategy with his
hit off Mike Henneman.
"It was a forkball and I caught it
pretty ·good," Duncan said. "We
have a different hero every.game. It
Was my time:,,

Helped by another home nln
from Juan Gonzalez, Texas took a·!1 lead into the ninth. But Darren
Oliver, who had allowe~ only fo•r
hils, and reliever Henneman could
not hold off the Yankees.
· . '!
Bernie Williams, wbo homeredih
the first inn~ng, hit a sacrifice fly t~t
·tied it and Duncan put the Yankells
ahead. New York was just3-10 aulle
ballpark since it opened in 1994, alld
had lost five of six this season. ·'
John Wetteland struck out Darryl
Hamilton with a runner on third ·{o
end the game, preserving the victery for reliever Jeff NelsJ,Jn.
'

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Marietta shacks logan; Warren wins again

O'DONNELL HONORED ·Odie O'Donnell, right, a graduate of
Logan, Ohio High School and staunch Gallipolis Blue Devil supporter for tha past 42 years, was given an "Honorary Varsity G"
by GAHS and the Gallipolis 200 Club during Friday night's home.coming activities on Mamorlal Field. Making the presentation was
GAHS P.rlnclpal Bruce Wlleim, left. O'Donnell, an ex-chieftain, has
served as Gallla Academy's PA announcer at home football
game• for more than 30 years, and has kept the Blue Devils offl·
clal basketballscorebook since the mld-1960a. Representing the
200 Club was Tom Meadows.
·
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By ODIE O'DONNI!:LI,.
. five-year losing srreak at the hands
T-S Correspondent ·
ofthc Chieliains as little used Nathan
GALLIPOLIS -. Victories by Swartz scored lhree louchdowns and
· both Jackson and Warren Local Fri- ran for 102 yards on just 10 carries:
day night sets the stage for the show- Marietta's last victory over Logan
down this week .when the two unde- came in 1.990 by a 10-7 score, also
feated Southeastern Ohio Athletic at Mariella.
. ,
League powerhouses clash a! JackFriday night's contest featured !he
son, in a crucial football game that ground game as Logan showed only
could determine the eventual 1996 three completions 6f 15 attempts for
league champion.
55 yards while the Tigers hit only
The Jackson Ironmen rolled ovet two of six for a minus three yards.
River Valley 41~6 while Warren
After Logan took a 7-0 first quarLocal easily disposed of the Belpre ter·lead on Ryan Butcher's one-yard
Golden Eagles by a 49-28 score in a run and the extra-point ·kick by
non-league outing .at Vincent, Both Drew Thomas the Tigers knoued the
score in the second quarter when
1the Warriors and the Iron men are
now deadlocked with identical 3-0 Swartz raced 57 yards to pay dirt and
and 6-0 records.
Jim Goeller toed the extra point .
In SEOAL games played Friday,
Logan climbed into the lead again
the Gallipolis Blue Deyils downed when their leading rusher of the
Athens 21-14 and Marieua surprised game, Clint Crago, darted 56 yards
Logan i.n a 34-20 triumph. The Point to score and Thomas 'added the
Pleasant Big Blacks lost for only the extra-point kick. Marietta came right
second. time in five games, as they ' back on an 11-yard run by Mall
fell to visiting Hurricane by a 10-3 Boley, but the conversio"n kick was.
margin in a non-league ~ontest.
blocked, giving Logan a 14-13 halfMarietta 34, Logan 20
time lead.
At Marietta, the Tigers snapped a
Marietta put

==

Monday's game
P•Usburgh ut Kan5all Cit~. 9 p.m. ·

Ohio H.S. scores

AL playoff's

Friday's action

Teusvs.NewYork
FridaJ'• acore
New York 3, Texos 2, New Yurk

leadt senes 2· 1 ,
They played Sahlrdl)l

0

(B.Win 16-12), 1:07 J!:m, (ESPN)

"7

New York (ROJ~ts 12-8' at Texn1

Akron Ken1nore 61 . Akron Cen-How. ·
M&lt;~m.:hcster

Todayspme
New York (Cone 0-1) at Texus (Burkett 1-0), 4:07p.m., if~Sfiary (ESPN)

56. E Canton 0
ll Jkiofl Spring. ]3, Canal Fullon N;w'

Oeveland vs. Baltimore

"lkn E 40, Pauldmg 0
Alliance 26, Mauillon Perry 21
Amanda-Ciearcreek 2 9. Cann1
Wi llChe!iler 0
Amcha 44, Glen Este 7
Archbold ~5. Delta 0
Ashland I0, Mansfield Sr. 0
Ashland Cres1vi_ew 21 , S Centml 13
Alihtabu1a Ed!IIIVood 21. Ashtabula
HaJbor 8
-. ,
·
Au stintown Fu..:h 13. M;~hson 10
Avon 42, lorain Brookside 6
Avufl We :\0, Amherst I)
Ayers ville 49, Edgerton 32
Bay Village 3~ . We ~tluM:O
Beallsvtllc 21 , C11ldweJI. 7
Beaver Local 28, Rayhmd. lJU(IIc,ey-411
21
Beavercruk 19, Xenia 12
Bedford 46, Brush 28
Bedford, M•ch. lr. Oregon Clay 16
Bellbrook 28, l;&gt;-.1y. ();jkwood 7
Bellefontaine 20, Urbana 6
Bellevue 31 , Willard 6
Bexley 26, Big Wnlnut 21 COTJ
Bl:u:k River 27. Medina Buckeye 7
Bloom·Quroll41 . Fairfreld Union 1
Bluffton 4~. Lima Cath. 1
Bowling Green
Anthony Wa ~ nt 6
Brtdsville 37, Clo\'erlcaf 19
Bridgepon S7, Sl'lrn nndooh 14
Brooke, W. V11. 26, St. Claiuville 14
Brookfltld 34. Newton Foils 14
Brooklyn ~9 . Columbia 6
Brookv&amp;lle V , Uix1e 16
IJrun., wtdt 4~ . Berea 26
Buckeye Vnl. 21. Elgi n 19
, Bncynn ;42, Norwalk 22
Buffalo. W.Va. 2J. S. e111nt 8
Cad il ."i6, Buckeye-Trail 12
Camtkn ~Mkh. l Frontier 20, Hilh ()p
12
Confield 2J. Gtrnrd 14
Corey 27. r-oswtia Sr. Wendelin 1
Carrollwn 19, M:~~linglon 1
Ced;)fv1lk: 4~ . W;~ytM:IVillc ~
Centerbl.lrg .\2. I.M:as 22
CcntCI'\Iille J l, SprinJ. N011h I J
Chardon 4~ . W. Geauga 19
Oturdon NO-CL 39, Cb:~nel 20
Cin. Andmon ~6. Cin. Woodwllfd 6
Cin Cokrwn 42, Cm. Oak Hi111 7
Cin Coontry Dny 28, Oara ...ia 14
Cin. mder 28.' Cm St. Xavk!r 7
Cjp lndtttn H11l 60, N: BendTD)'hlf 0
efn. Maril:mont 15, Cin. Wyoming 11
Ctn. M oeU~J~ . Cm . l.aSnllt: 14
Cin, Prirk:cton4B. Milford l.t
Cln. J"urci:fi·Mt~rian 7, Hamilton
Badln ~

Friday'• KOft
Cleveland 9, Bahimo~ 4, Baltimore
lead• series 2-1
'llley pb:yed Sahlrd.y

Baltimore (Wells 11·14) at Clcvr:ll:md
(Nagy 17--'), 1:01 p.m (ESPN2)

Tenlaht'•cam•

·

Baltimore at Cleveland, 7 · ~ p.m., If

~nary {FOX)

NJ., playoffs
.. San Diego•w.$1. Louis,.. ;, ·~
They Playfd Sltunl•y
St. louis (Osborne 13·9J llt SBwDicgo (Ashby 9-5), 7:37p.m (NBC) .
. Tcidly'•Jame

.

St. Lou1s at San Diego. ·U:07 p.m.. 1f

neccnary (ESPNJ ·\
Monday
St. Louis at SM Diego, 4:()7 p.m., if
oecuwy (f.SPN)

Allanla vs. Los An11&lt;les

~1 PiaJed Saturday
los Angelet (Nomo 16-11) Ul Atlanta
(Oiavinc IS.IO), ..:IS p.m. CFOXJ
,

··

Todoy'•- ·

Los An,eles at Adnnra, 1:07pm., if
·•

necawy CESPN)

Munday

los Angeles at Atlanta, 7.11 p.m. if
nc«nary (FOX)

NFL's Week 6 slate
Totlay's games
Atlllnla 111 Detroit . I p.m. ,
Carolina at MlfliiCIOCa, I p.m.
Cmrn Bay 11 ChiCIJo. 1 p.m.
New England a1 Ballimorc, I p m
OKitndaN.Y. Jers, l pm..
Seatrle ILl Miami, I p m.
lndianapolii-llt Buffalo. 4 p m.
liiCk.urt&lt;o~ille at Nt!w Orlean(, 4 p.m.
Sari'Otc~o at Denv~ . 4 p.m.
Snn Frantill.'u a1 St Louis, 4 p n'l.
Ho u.IIOil ar Clt:'CINNATI, 8 p.m. ,
()pea dale: Arizona. Dall:u. N. V . Gt antl. Philadel~. Tump118ay, Wasbins-

oon

'

Adena 7, Huntington 0
"kron Garfaeld 49, "kron N. 0
Akron Hoban 28, lou•s!llle Aquina"

r

/

Akrofl

~lexnnder 30, Tnmble 14

a

Federal Hocking 4!!, Miller 8
Field 28, Waterloo 8
Firdnlll.ls 21, Keystone 6
Fisher Cath 24, Heath 6
Fuslorio. IK. Fr..: mont Ross 0
Ft. Frye JO. Fromier 24
Gahanna 44, Groveporr 19
Galhpolii 21 , Athens 14
Garaway 47 , Ridgewood 14 ,
Gnrfield Hts 16. OeVel:md Hts 7
Genevu I J, Ashtabula 12
G01lhcn Jl Roos 28
Granvtll.e 32. Berne Union CJ
Greeneview 7, S. Charleston Sou.th-

Cm. Reading 14, Cin. Finneymwn 7
Cm. Summ1t 47,landrnark Chr. 0
Cin. Turrin 27. Cin Taft 14
Cin Wnlmn Hilb 14, Cin Nor1hwest ·
0

0

Cin. Winton Woods SS. Mt. Hc:llthy
Cin. Wfthrow 22, Cm. Weslerfl Hills

14

Cle. Collinwood J2, Cle ~ay 0
Ck:. East 40, Cle. Lincoln-West 12
Clsll&lt;enncdy 28, Oe. Rhodes 6
C~i!r'Fork J~. W. Hoh111:a12
O~arvicw 24. Wellington 14
Clermont North~astern· J~ . We5tern
Brown 21
Coal Grov~: 20. Che5apcakc 14
Col. Beechc roft I J, Col. Indepen dence 12
Col. Briggs 24, Col. M:trioo·lhnkltn
20
Col. DeSales 20, l.ancaster J 9
Col. ~orlhland 32. Col. South 0
Col St. l1tarlea 70, Col. Centemninl

l!IUit:mti

Col Walnut Ridge 19. Col. Mifflin
11

7

Col. Wanenon 21. Col. Brookhaven

Col. WeJt 27,Col. Eastmow20
Col , Whetsl ol}e 33. Col. Linden·
.McKinfey J
..
Coldwo11er 14, Mla~ter 9
, Coloc~t:l Crawford..l7. R~~1• 0
14 ~"'
Columbiana· Crestvi1"'
Columbinnn9
,
Columbus Gro.,e 19. Upper Scioto
Val, 14
'
Cortl;wd Lakeview 16. Warren
Kennedy 10
Cory·Rnwwn 2H , Arcadta 6
Coshocton 35. Claymont 29 {OT}
Covenuy 47, Snncly Vnl. 6
Covington 54, Arcanum 1
Crestline 11. Ontnriu 0
Crestwood .:m. Win.Jham 0
Crnoks&lt;o~illc 32, May1ville 7
~ Dnlmn ~7 . W. Safem Northwestern 6
4
Danbury Lnkeside J7. Ru.ckeye CcntraiJ4
Day. CtUToll 3~. Lcmon·Mooruc 20
Day J~son 26, Duy, Belmont 20
Day. M~wd:lle 27, Day. While 12
Day. Norrhri(lgc; 4.l , Carlhle 3
O..y. P111tel'st)8 32, Oretnfield 14
DecrPnrk41. Cin. Mw:leira20
Defiance 21, Wup11konetal8
1 DeGraff R.l&lt;o~eu•de !12, w. Liberty•

Saaem 20

Delaware 32, Fmnklin Htt, 27
Dflpho! Jefferson 1~. Ada 7 '
Delpbo1 St. Jubn'-1 U ParkwayO
Dovtr 42, Conlbndie b
Dublin Coffman J6. Wutervtile N.

i6

•

Dublin Scmto 66. WMbinzton Ktl·
bourne 28
'E. koox 26. JOOnslown No!jthridge 7
E. Liverpool ~3. Ollkl11nd (Md .)
Soolhm .' 0
,E. Pa~tlhe 12. Leetonia 0
&amp;urwood 21:1, Kansat lalnto 0
F.aron 3t Preble Showntt 7
EliJ)n 20, Uma Shawnee B
Elyria 18. VenriiUon 7
Euclid 41, W~luke N 0
E~er~n J4. Ore-on Slrit~h 6
fairbank• H, BenJ..-nin Loaan 20

.

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Greenon 22. Spring Nonheastern 21
Greensburg Green J R. Medina Htgltlund 12
Grove C1ty 34, Pickeringron 1.1
Hamilton 1\vp. 45, Cin:leville 34
Hnrdtn Nonhero 47, Arlington 6
Hnnison 27 1 Cm ..Hughes 26
Hawken 21: Chagrin Falls 21
Hilliard 16. Gnlloway Weslland I J
Htllsboro l6. loveland 6
Holland Sprin~:. 21. Maumee 1
Hubbard 20, Liberty 19
lndepcnden~-e :l!i, Richmond Ht1. 0
lndion Creek IQ, Unioolocnl 0
Indian Ulke 33, Ridgemom 7 ·
lnd1an Val. 47. Canmn T•mken 16
ladaon 41 1 Chl!lihire R1ver Vnl. 6
Jackson-Mtlton 20, Mi.ncrul Ridge I~
John Glenn 21, River View 1
·~ _.J.ohnstO!wn 2l DllllVIIIC..U .
J11nathan A1det67, Grnnd&lt;o~i ~w 34
Kent Roo,~:velt .l'i. Barbentm B
Kenton41 , Onaw&gt;~ - Giunlurf 10
Ke11ering Aller 35, Cm Md~_it hol;~•

16

Ki"j• 20.lillle Miami 14
Kirt lind 14, Aurum 12
laD rae 17, Ch::impion 12

Lakewood J~ , V11lky Forge 12
Lebanon J!'i, Talowanda 12
l.et.lgemon1 .\2, Fairport H:ubur 12
Lehman , 4, Grnham 6
Leipsic 49. McComb 22
liberty Center 28. Sw,anlun 18
L•bctty-Oemon 7, P..1ndurn-Gilboa ·o
lkklni Htt. 26, Liberty Un1on IS
Uck1ng Vnl 28, W. Jttfenon 14
l..ima Balh 24, Vnn Wen 0
Umu St. 31 , Ham1hon .t
Lisbon 49, Southern l..ocn16
Loaan ElltJ 19. Teay~ Val. 0
Lornin Cath ·28. Tuslttw 14
Lorain King 21 , Rnii.C:nnn 20
LooiHille U Cnmoo. S. 16
liiCil$
Ccnkrbvrg 22
lucuville Yolley28, Por11mouth E. 0
Madi100 Plains 21, E. Clinlun 0
MIIACheteer S6, E. C1nton 0
MIIDII'Ield Mlldi&amp;M 24, Orrvillt 6
Mmplc1on27. Plymouth 2~

n,

~·J~Rtt•

21. Clyde~

Manetta 3•, Lo11n 20
Marion Hfldini :l~. Lc.dnafun 2,,:
Marion L..Oca~ .\.$, Ft. Ra:o\'ery 0
Marion River Val. 46, N Unioit 0
Martins Ferry 36, River 14
MUJOrr 32, SJ'fii'IJboro 0
Mnnlllon 34, Wnlsh Jcsuh '10
Mn.ulllon J~~eksun 22. New Phlladcl·
phinl9
Mlll)onJild 56, lkrlin Center Wetlcrn
Rnerve 1

board in the ·third quarter on Boley's
three-yard smash, Swartz's 50-yard
return of a Chieftain fumble and a
two point conversion run by Ash
·Briuon for a 27-14 lead.
Early in the fourth quarter Swartz
scored on a seven-yard run and
Goeller's kick made it 34-14 before
Butcher tallied a Logan touchdown
with six seconds left in the game.
Statistics sh'bw Swartz with 102
yards, Boley \lolith 85 and Jarrett
Barnhouse with BO for the winners. ·
For- Logan, Butchercatried 19 times
for 88 yards and Crago had 10 carries for 89 yards.
Quarter tl!!llb
Logan
7-7-0-6 =20
Marietta
0-13-14-7=34
Warren Local49, Belpre 28
At Vincent, the Warriors contmued !heir offensive juggernaut . by
rolling up 489 yards as Todd Caslin
scored three touchdowns and Jeremy
Thomas two more against the now 15 Golden Eagles.
In six games: Warreri has scored
273 potnts while permilling opponents to score 189, ·

Med,mn 21, N. Roynlton 1
Meigs 28. Wellsmn 7
Men1or 61. E. Cleveland Shaw 8
Miam1 Trace 12, Col. Hartley J
Mintmsburg ~2. Franklln 14
Middletown 2] , Fmrfield 16
Midvi~w 40, Oberlin 12
Milan Edison 38, Perkins 0
Miller5purt 34, New AlbanY 1
Mogndore 67, Woodndge 10.
Mohr~wk 8, Seneca E. 7
MonroeCcntrul41 , WarerfordO ~
Monroeville 1~. Collin" We~tetn Reserv~ 0
MI. Gilead 42, Ridg1.:dale 0
f1. COIIe'ge Hill 28, New Miaml 6
N. Ridge&lt;o~ille 56, Lorain Southview 0
Nnpolcon 50, Sylvunm North view 14
New Lexing10n 26, Tri-Vnlley 21
Newark 38. 'nmmas Wcnhington 6
Nrwcomer5t o~n Jli, Strasburg 7
Ntles 10. Howland 7
NurdQnia 17. Maple His. 13
Nonhwooil19, MillbJJry Lnke 26
Norton 20. Copley 17
Ouk Harbor 54, Port Clintun 7
Onk Hill 28, l'or1smouth Notre D&lt;Jme
8
Ol.cnlan~y 26. Hebron L'lkewood 8
Olmstetl Fnll ~ 49. Fnirvlew 20
Of!lt:HO 56. Gibsonburg 20
Pai.IUn 7( £1yria Cut h. 3
- •
Valne~ v ille Hnrocy 39, Connenut 14
Paine ~ ville Rlwcnide 38, leffe!1('10 8
Painr Val. 48. Ridlmond Dttld. S~Ir.
ea:stem 0
Putrick Hl:!nry ]6, Hryan 20
Perry 27, Berkshire 20
Ptny.iburg .~0. Sylvania Southview
ll
Philo 41. W. Mu.skmgum 14
Piketon 19, Westf11ll)
PJeasant48, Noohn'IOf 0
Portsmouth 41 , Ironton 28
PonsmoUih W. 23, McOerrnon NW 6
Ra,.rnna SE S6. Roo~stown 8
Re¥tn: 14, Tallmadge 0
Rock Hitl40, .Frurlnnd 7
Rocky Ri~er 28, N Olmsted 2.\
Rossford 21 1 Elmwood 14
S. ftilnge ~U ; Mmhew&amp; 14
.;
Sundu&amp;k)' 41 . Blenheim. Ont. 7
Shodysitk 28, Buq~esville 13
Shelby 41 , Upper Sandusky 19
SheriUan ~6 , MotJIIn 7
Sherwood Faii"Jiew 4~ . Holgnt:e 6
Sidney 36, Dny Northmont 21
Stnithvlllr 4-9, Hill!iilak: 6
Solon 62, Orange ll
Spnn~ Highland 14, CaaUJnJion 0
1 SpenctNiHe 42, Cridersville Perry 6
' Sprina. Shawnee .~ . Kt:niOA Ridge 0
Spnna. South 40. Fairborn 7
St. HeJI')' 28. NeW Brcme11 7
St. Marys .B. Ce!ini 27
Steubenvillt I0, Edison Local 9
Stow 14, Cuy11hogn Falls7
Srrecubmo 3:4. Ciltrertsville I~
StronsiVil}e 42. Midpark 1
"
Symmes V11. 20. i-mnklln FurnAce •
Green 19
Tecum•eh 4.t, Sprins. Nutthwestem
14
TIJ'tift Columbian 62, Galioit 27
nnnra 20. An1w.oerp I~
Tlpp Cny 40, S{lring. Culholk 0
Tol Bowsher 40, Tol. Ubbey 0

con

.

Friday night's shoot-out saw Btl'
pre's Scott Roberts run for 14'4 yard'~
and three. touchdowns with teamate
Eric Chevalier adding I04 yards o'h
13 carries, but Warren's quick strike.
offense continued to do its job. "
Cas tin scored on runs of one, fivS
and six 'yards. Thomas caught tw~
touchdown passes from Shawn Taylor from 10 and 78 yards. Shal\e
Richards kicked seven extra points
for the winners:
.. ;
Taylor also connected with Braq:
don Church on a 17-yard touchdown
pass, as the talented quarterback fin:
ished the night by completing 10
16 passes for 239 yards and t~
touchdowns. Warren's ground attac~
was led by Rob Callahan's 88 yardJ.
and 84 by Church en route to a 250:.
yard night.
''
. Belpre's Matt Lyoris completed !U
of 20 pass attempts for i 62 yards
two scores.
•'J'
Quarter l!Wib
Belpre
6-B-8-6=2&amp; •
Warren Local
7-14-14-14;4~·;

of

ana

Tol. Ceritral31 . Tol. Scorr 14
Tol. RoJt11i 20. Tol. WoodwardO
Tol. St. Franci.J 35, Tol. Wllile 0
Tol. St. John's JS. Tol. Start IJ
Tot Whirmer 40, Findlay 0
Toronto 16, Piusburgh Acndeiny 6
Triad 19. Wnyneslield-Goshen 0
Triw:1y 17. L.ou.don~ille 14
Troj 60. Vandlllia-Butler 14
Tuscnrawas Vui..JI, Fuirlesa14 .
'twinsburg 22, Kenslon 16 (2
Uniolltown lake 2?, N. CIPtOn 21
United Loco.l U, 8ebring 21
·
Upper Arlinston S5, Chillicothe 6
Utica 2S, Col, Academy 23
Valley View 60, Middlclown Madi·
sonO
Van Bun::n 44, Vnnlu'e 6
VerSilll~es 6], Day. Stebbins 16
V1nton Co. 42. Nelsonville-York 6
W. Brarn.:h 21 •.Minerva ll
·
W. Carrollton 48, Trotwuod. Uadison
14
'U
W. Chester Lnltota 20, On• S)lcamorc
19
Wadsworth 17. Hudson 10
local 49, Belpre 28
r
W
ville 51 , Normandy 7
ashing1on CH 52, london. 8
W11tkin1 Memorial
~IU')'IVille 20
W111111eon 34, Montpelier 14'
Wti&lt;o~erly .414. Minford 16

on""

~

,J
t

••
)

~ I

•)

n

~··''
S. 22. Reynold&amp;bui'J Zl .. ~'f

WnyneTrnce42.Hicbville6 '''

Wnterviilc
W~ilehall 20, Mt. Vernon p
Wld:.liffe21,Cardmnl0 ,
Williamlhurg 20, Bethei·Tllte 12
Willoughby S. 42. MnyReld 20

,.
'

Woodrrxn 40. Genoa 14
·
Wooster 1:3, Oanton OlenOak 7'
Wyn(ord 33. Frtdericklown 1~
You. Chaney S9. Strulhers 14 ·

You. Mooney 14. Wnrrm Hardina 10
You. R11ycn 48, Campbell Memorill

8

Yo11. Ursuline 20. Boardmnn 1:\
Znne Trnct 19, Unioto 14

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFERENCE
At ..ntirDkolllon

Ioota

»: L I

AoC'idn ................ .0 0 0
Nell( k11ey ..........0 0 0

1:11. Ill !iA

N.Y. R~mger~ ....... O 0 0 • 0
Philadelphil!. ...... .. 0 0 0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

0
0

T""""' Bay ......... 0 0 0

0

0

0

0
0

0

N.Y. IIhmden ...... O I 0

0
0

Wa~hinamn .......... O 0 0

0
0

Nott-Dh·- .

t

8011on ............... ... 0 .Q 0

0

0

0

...,(Otd ............ .. 0 0 0
Mpntreal ........... .. 0 0 0
Oltnwa ................ o ~ 0

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0

0

0

0

0

3

..

PilllburJh ..:......... 0 0 0
B11ffalo ................0 I 0

• I

Jiigh School's first pass interception
Of the 1996 campaign proved to be a
big one Friday night.
The theft by Blue Devil free safety ·Isaac Saunders wit~ 44 seconds
left in the game sealed Gallipolis' 21l4 homecdming triumph over Athens
on Memorial Field. •
~ Opponents bad riOed 53 passes at
Gallipolis' secondary before Saunders stole number 54 to give the Blue
Devils their eighth straight victory
overtbe Bulldogs.
1
· • "We told our kids they coullln 't
make any mistake~ early in the
@arne," sail! GAHS Coach Bent
liaundors·, adding; "because if we did,
it'wollld keep, them in the game." .
In the first half, the Blue Dev~ls
were their own worst enemy as
Athens stopped three potential scores.
Nathan Meyer's two pass interceptions near the goal line in the first and
sceond quaners, and a 15·yard penal·
1\}' against the Oallians following
·,pave Rucker's 63-yard kickoff return
, .~;Did-way in the second quaner almost
·;game back to haunt the Gallidns.
"r'i" . 1'l'm proud of the way we came

:back in the second 'halfoto drive it in,"
,$aunders conlin~ed. He was referring
;Ao:the ~lue Devils 73-yard drive in II
;plays which resulted in a 14-7 GAHS
• ,~ in the third stanza ..
1'1· Bulldog mentor Matt McPhail
...:id, "We played well enough to be
1i!' a position to win it at the end.
.~We've still got a long way to go, but
.!Jie were pleased with the effort our
boys put up against a prelly good
football team." McPhail thought the
Bulldogs defensive play was more
physical than in their past two outings, and he was also pleased .the
. way his boys played their hearts out
in ·a11 four quarters. ·
·.
Gallipolis drew first blood in th~ .
~ontest in the second period. The
.~ore ,was set up by an Athens fumjile, recovered by Aaron Stout on the
o\}ulldog 26.
~.. Four plays later, Seth Davis blasted· over from the five (8:54). T. C.
~eaver's kick made it 7·0. Big gain·
$1 in the drive was Davis' 15-yarder
o~. a draw play.
~.. Athen~ wasted little iime iit tying
\flO sco~.
.
;, .MatrQoodwin returned Beaver,'s
~'!~uing kickoff from hls eight to the
~5 ·32, Nick Carroll rambled for 37
IP .the. GAHS 31. Joe Sparhawk hit
chad Thomas with a '17-yard strike,
/lien Goodwin got foJtr to the GAHS
~~). Sparhawk then found Mall
)Yeaver all alone in the endzone for
11,)0-yard TD strike with 7:33 left in
t~~ half. Andy Perry's kick from

&lt;•

fcore by quarters:
Gallipolis ............. 0 7 7 7 · 21
Athens ................. o 7 o 7 · 14
Statistics .
A
Department
G
,Firsl downs ................. 16
10
Yards rushing ........... 1 95 104
· Lost rushing ............... 27
31
~I rushing ............... 168
73
:eass attempts ............ 23
18
:·Completions ............... 12
10
·Intercepted by .............. 1
3
; Yards passing .......... 185
94
iTotal yards ................353 167
\Plays ..........................60
45
~ Return yards...... 5-145 9·135
:Fumbles .................... ...0
0
tlost fumbles ........... .. .... 1
1
•Penalties ................. 6.· 60 5-45
:punts'..................... 4:160 8-237 '
.; Individual rushing •
• Gallipolis • Davis, 20·105-2;
Bodlmer, 7-28-0; Rucker, 4·24·0;
Saunders, 6-11-1. Totals 37•

!

168-3.

t Athens ·.Carroll, 6·67·0;
tGoodwin, 12-33-0; Sparhawk, 7 ·

t(-27)·0. Totals 25-73-Cl.
Receiving • .
'
:
• Gallipolis - Rucker, 2·71·0;
Stout, 4·50-0; Woodward, 3-37· O; Lloyd, 2·24!-0; Davis, 1·3-0. ,
Totals • 12·1115-0.
· Athena • Thomas, 5-69·t;
Weaver, '4-21-1; Carroll, t-4;0.
Totals 1()-94.2.
·
.
·1 Pa. .lng- ·
.
, . Gallipolis -,Saunders, 12·23·
•3·185.0.
. .
t Athena • Sparhawk, 10·18·1·

!!

:94-2:
•
,
•

Punts·
Gallipolis· Saunders, 4-160.
Athens· Perry, 8·237.
• Recovered
opponent• fum:bles:
.
~ Gallipolis - Stout
, Athen1- None.
': Pa. . h1tarcaptiona ' : · Gallipolis, Saunders, F38-0;.
~ Athens- Meyer, 3-17·0.
; Scoring:
; Athena· - Weaver, 10-yard
pass Irom Sparhawk, Perry kick,
i7:33 second. Thomas, 35·yard
pass from Sparhawk, Pery kick,
;,;11 fourth.
: Gallipolis • DaYis, 5-yard run,
l3eaver, kick, 8:54 second; saun·
l;lers, 7-yard run, Beav11r, kick,
jl:20, third; Davis, 4' yard run,
~:23 fotlrth, Beaver, kick.
t Next Glllllpolla game: Oct.
~ 1, Logan, home
l
.
L

rtf:,
. DAVIS
CARRIER • Gallipolis junior l'ullback Seth Davis '
(46) gained 105 yards In 20 carries, and scored two Blue Devil
touchdowns'ln Gallipolis' 21-14 victory over Athens during Friday's homacoml11g game on Memorial Field. Davis stiff arms
Athens defender Onlku Carver (82) on this play In the third perl·
od. Davis also atood Ol!t defensively for the Galllans.

't:t\~Coun6.

'

SEO.A t football standings

.

- * SEOAL teams * n:L

IwD .

u

Overall . ·

League

.w::L

fA

Jackson ..............................3-0 158
6
6-0
Warren Local ....................3-0 JOB
92
6-0
POINT PLEASANT .........2-1
83
5.7
3-2
GALLIPOLIS ................... 2-1
78
64
3-3
RIVERVALLEY ............. I-2 34
83
1-5
Marietta ............................. l-2 48
107
1-5
Logan ... ,............................0-3 62
91
1-5
Athens ........... ...... ..............0-3 27
98
2-4
- * No,.league opponents • -

Iwn

~

Lucasville Valley .... ........ ..............: ............ 6
Coal Grovc ........ .. ,.. ................. :...... ............ 5 .
Meigs .. .................................................... ,..4
South Point .. ..... ,, ..·........ :........................ :.. .4
' Fairland ........................ ...... ...... .;.. ....... .... .. .4

L

l.E

262
264
103
115
54
78
117
59

24
189
81
133
158
156
187
206

fE

lA

I

183
129
94

2
2

' 100.

O·
0

114

Hurricane I 0, POINT
PLEASANT3
Jackson
41,
RIVER '
VALLEY6
Marietta 34,• Logan 20
Warren Local49, Belpre 28
Coal Grove 20, Chesapeake
14 .
'
"
RO.k Hill 40, Fairland 7
Lucasville Valley 28 ..
Portsmouth East 0

·Im ~ 1oeegda
Friday:
Logan
at
GALLIPOLIS; Athens· at
POINT PLEASANT"; RIVER
VALLEY at Marietta; Warren
Local at Jackson*; South Point
at Coal Grove; Fairland at
Buffalo-Wayne;
Symmes'
Valley at Lucasville Valley*; ·
Nelsonville-York at Meigs

homecoming game

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Meigs28,* Wellston 7
Buffalo-Wayne 23, South
Point 7*
·

Fridav's scores

GALLIPOLIS 21,*Athens

t

y.

'

In the third period, after forcing an
Athens punt, GAHS put together its
first successful sustained drive to the
night. Moving 73 yards in II plays,
Saunders took it in from seven yards
out with 4:20 left in. the period.
Beaver's kick made itl4-7. Big gainers in the drive included a 12-yard
pass to Greg Lloyd from Saunders, a
17-yarder to Rob Woodward. an.
eight-yarder to Rucker, and a 14-yard
romp by Rucker.
· It ap~ared GAHS was going to
pull away following the Blue Devils
next score in thl final period. The
Gallians marched 61 yards in' six
plays with Davis going over from the
BIG PLAY- GAHS free aafety Isaac Saunders (11) Intercepted
four with 8:23 remaining. Beaver·~ · lin Athens pass with 44 seconds left In tha game to protect a 21·
kick made it 21-7. Big gainer in the
14 Gellipollalead and seal a Blue Devil homecoming vl!:torY over
drive was a 41-yard gallop by Davis.
Athens on Memorial Field Friday night. Saunden1 ·returned the
Again, Athens caine right back . . pass from his own 45 to the Athens17 yard-Una, a 38-yard return.
Goodwin returned Beaver's kickoff
It was the Galllans' first pasa Interception In six games. Saunders also completed 12 of 23 pass attempts (3 Intercepted) for
from the Athens 12to the Bulldog.44.
185 yards against the Bulldogs.
Athens moved 56 yards in · iu~t three
(See BLUE DEVILS on B-4)

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'

�•

•

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(

"

I

•

•
'

•

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

Sunday, October 8, 1 •.
•
"
3

•

In the Marauders' homecoming game,

.·

..•

·

.

RUNNING IN 'TRAFFIC - Meigs tailback .Matt Williams (30) runs
In lnlfllc: c....-ct by Wellston defenders VInce VIckers (29), Rob Martin (55) and Shawn Brennan (grabbing Wllllams'lag) during Friday
nlahfa homecoming game at.Sob Roberta Field. Williams' 2GO-yard
effort, which led all ru1har1 and made him the Maig1 all-lime career
rushing l•der, helped the Marauders tally their ~ird straight dou!Jie.dlglt vtctory. (Time•Sentlnel photo by Dave Harris)

'
.

•.
. :

"

f • :

•

•

SPECIAL END OF
TIE ·sEASON
CLOSEOU,.

:, l

I

"

-

UGoodrates

backed by

.

STIFF·ARMS DEFENDER - Meigs
Justin Rouall
· . atlff.enna a Wellston dal1lnder while the Golden Rockets' Vince
·, era (21) pur•...- the M~raudll fraahman during Friday night'a
· Dlvlalon game In .Pomeroy. The Marauders :won .211-7 to capture their
fourth atralght victory. (Time•Sentlnel pjloto by Dave Harris)
'

~ Blue

make
State Farm
unique."

Marauders took over on lheir own

DevilS... -,(,C::lo!!.!n!!!lin!!!u!!::ed!:!..!!fr.l!iom!!!..!:B:;;-3:1..!1_.....,.._____

: plays (aided by a 15·yard penalty
GAHS). Sparhawk hit
: Thomas with a 35-yard strike .at the
• 7: II mark Perry's kick made it 21·
. 14.
Athens then forced a Blue Devil
punt near mid-field. Saunder's boot
• sailed 58 yards into the endzone.
Athens regained possession with 5:00
left in the game..
• Brilliant-defensive play by Davis,
; Ben Sheard and Tim Siders stopped
~ the Bulldogs again with 2:38 remaining.
, Athens held again, forcing a Blue
Devil punt with 2:19 showing on the
clock. Taking over on their own 14,
Sparhawk hit Weaver for 9, Carroll
ripped off· 13 to the Athens 36.
Thomas got a 4-yarder to.the Athens
· 40, then Stewart an 8-yard pass to the
~ against

AHS 48 with less than a minute
remaining. Then came Saunders'
pass intercep~on.
The Blue Devils ran out the clock
on Athens' 17-yard line.
Standing out defensively- for the
Bulldogs were Nathan Meyer, with
three pass interceptions (two near the
goal line); Frank Parker, Seth Laufman, Scott Neal, Ryall Dupler and
Andy Perry.
,
Besides Saunders' key pass inter·
ception, other GAHS defensive
standouts were Davis, Stout, Rucker, Travis Fisher, , Woodward, Tim
Siders, Joe Darnbrough and Sheard.
GAHS defenders threw Athens backs
for 31 yards in losses.
Friday•. GAHS. WI·n hos1 Logan.
Athens wtll travel to Pt. Pleasant.

39-yard line. Williams scored his
first touchdown from a yard out 12
plays later. Jeff Fowler's kick was
true, giving the Marauders a 7-0
lead with 4:19 left in the first .period.
Once again Meigs held the
.Golden Rockets to four and olit.
Then Jeremiah Bentley found a
seam and returned. the Wellston punt
33 yards to the Golden Rocket 27.
Six p'lays later, Williams scored
from four yards out. Fowler's kick
gave Meigs a 14-0 lead with I :23
left in the perio9.
The Golden Rockets .went for it
on fourth and one from their own 44
on the next drive . Marauder
defenders, Rick Hoover and B.J .
Nicholson threw Bryan Murdock for
a yard loss, giving the maroon and ·
gold the ball ·~ ·the Wellston 43.
· On second down, . Brad
Davenport hit Chad Hanson for 19
yards to the 24:yard line. After
Willia,ms picked up three yards on
first down, the junior scored his
third touchdown of the night down
he near sideline fro'l' '21 yards out.
owler once again added the extra
points. With 10:40 to go in the half
eigs held a.21-0 lead.
Wellston drove to the Meigs si,
a "ierlhe Marauder kickoff, but '•
Jason Roush, R,yan Ramsburg and
. Aaron Hockman stopped Nalin
Arthur short of the end zone on
fourth down.
,
WeUston rcce1vcd a break when'
Joe Z1egler recovered a Marauder
fumble on the Me1gs 33. Four plays
later, Murdock scored from 21 y~rds
out, Murdock added the extra pomts
p~lhng Wellston to w1thm 14 wuh
1.28
It left.
took Meigs seven plays to
drive 71 yards for the scofe after the

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'(Fowler kick)-10:04 2nd
·
StatI8tl C8I I88ders
~ W•ll~!9": M!lrdock&lt;Z I-yard 'run,
Mulil~~ek-1 : 2Pnd ·
.
Rpthlqs
.
Meigs~ Hanson 29-yard pass
Meigs: Mau Williams 3()-200,
from Davenport (Fowler kick)-0:00 Justin 12-il5, leremiah Bentley i\2nd •
,
·
IS, Caleb Shuler 1-2, A. J. Vaughan
, ·,
'
2-4. Brad Davenport2·(-)6
1
Wellston: lJryan Murdock 18·82,
Shad Wonders I 0-69, Nalin Arthur
~
·
11-24, ~evin Young 5· 8, Beau ·
~,..ih rt
l!
M Fortner 2·1, Cris Kight 1·(-) I, Mall
Firstdowns .... ..................9
18 Kendrick 1·(·)4, Brian Shaw 1-(·6)
56
rwm1
rimm&amp;,. plays ,.......... 53
shing att.-yds ..... 47-143 47-329
Meigs: Bnlll Davenport 318/1 61
61 yllrds
1 using yarils ........ :........ 38
!TO!AI yards ................... 211
3~
Wellston: Kevin Young 11210 38
1Comp.·atl............. ,....... l·3
yards, Brian Shaw 0-1·0
I
Rcc:cima
!Interceptions thrown ....... I
mbl~s-lost ................. 2·0
2-2
Meigs! Ch•d· Hanson 2/49,
nllties·yds .............. I·-U
4-25 Jeremiah Bentley I· IS.
~~~~-)'~.., .. :......... .3·92
1-35
Wellston: Lee Lamben 1· 38

•,'Team StatiStiCS

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Offar endt Qct. 31 It

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•

W'!

By SAil WUQtt
Tlmu IanUM! Conetpondant
II was d1fficult for me to decide on a single topic
for this week. After all, I was prepared to describe
my tnp to South Bend, where the Buckeyes domi·
· nated the Irish. Ohio State could have won that
ST. LOUIS (AP) - After years Los Angeles edged the New York
,came by a 40.7 score. I don't know the result of the
of relying on veterans, Mike Keenan Islanders 1-0.
. Penn State game, but the Buckeyes arc impressive.
is giving younger players a break on '
The rest of the NHL's 26 teams
They were bigger, fi!Ster and stronger than Notre
the StLouis Blues. And they're giv- broke the ice with II games SaturDame.
, .
ing the team breakthrough perfor· day night with the New York
What I will always remember about this game, however, is a comment an mances.
Rangers at Boston, Phoenix at HartIrish fan made as the Ohio State band \ The kids were out in force Friday ford, Tompa Bay at Pittsburgh,
,\1~;;:~·~,. began to perfonn on the field; "I hope night as the Blues opened the season Ottawa at Montreal , Detroit at New
they do the Script Ohio. I have waited my with a 4·2 victory over the di:fend- Jersey, Florida at Philadelphia,
·
_ing Stanley Cup champion Colorado Chicago at Washington, Anaheim at
: whole life to see it."
·
If you wanted to experience the Avalanche.
Toronto, Colorado at Dallas, Calgary
.( pageantry of college football, you needed
Rookie Jim Campbell made his at Vancouver, and the Islanders at
.' lobe in South Bend. 'There was nothing Blues debut a success with a goal San Jose.
., but admiration and respect for both insti· and an assist Fellow rookie Harry
Oilers 41Sabres 3
tutions and programs by all the fans. Wit- York had an assist for his first NHL
At Edmonton, Alberta, Dean
ness that after the game ended, the Notre · point. And Chris Pronger, in his third McAmmond continued to show the
. Qame band faced the Ohio State. crowd ·year in the NHL but still only 21 scoringtouchhedemonstratedinthe
· and played the Buckeye fight song. ~
years old; also contributed a goal and preseason, producing th~ gamc-wiQ;
.
.,
· There was sadness. Fans of both teams an assist
ner for Edmonton.
wtshed 'this rivalry would continue. Unfortunately, if the game · is to be
. Campbell .was the most· impres·
McAminond. who had five goals ·
renewed, it' won't be untiL2005.
.
.
sive of that trio as · be earned the in four exhibition games. ripped a
· I was all prepared to discuss this game, but then 1 was outraged at the . game's No .. 2 star. Arter failing to shot from the right circle at 4:04 of
incident involving Baltimore's Roberto Alomar and umpire John make the grade in Montreal and Ana· the third period on a pass from line·
Hirschbeck.
·
· heim. Campbell appears to have · mate Andrei Kovalenko to . beat
To spit in im umpire's face, then to justify it by ref~rring to this man's found a home in Sl. Louis.
_
Dominik Hasek.
"btllerness" after the death of his son to a rare brain condition, is an act so
"He has the sreod," Keenan said.
The goal gave the Oilers a 4-2
despicable that it demands·attention.
"and he seems to have a knack tor lead and helped them withstand a
Could you imagine Hank Aaron, Willie Mays, Pete Rose or Stan Musial finding the creases. He shoots the third-period goal by Buffalo rookie ·
doing such a thing? Today's' high-priced athletes have an exaggerated idea puck hard and well. He had .a good Curtis Brown.
·
training camp and that's why he's
Kings I, Islanders 0
of their importance.
.
Is this how today's role models do when they disagree with a decision? I here."
At Inglewood, Calif., Ed Olczyk
guess because yo~'re a star and make great amounts of money, you can treat
Friday night was a drean\'come · scored his first goal in a.Los Angeothers with contempt and arrogance. The rights of common decency do n'ot true for Campbell.
Jes : uniform and ~tephane Fiset
"The game was on ESPN and my stopped 26 New York shots.
apply to those wbo can't hit a 95 mile-an-hour fastball or don't make $5 million a year? I guess this is the way baseball intends to win back fans. ·
whole family was watching." he
. Of course, we solve our problems by using money. That n\akes every· · · said. " It was a ~Ice way to begi.n."
thmg all righl. What kind of lesson is this for our children? Alomar and the
Pranger was also looking for a
. RIO GRANDE - Here is the
Orioles pledged $50,000 each toward research for adrenoleukodystrophy fresh start. He came to St. Louis
(ALD),tbe disease that ·kilfed Hirschbeck's son and affiicts another. Now all from Hartford in a controversial schedule for the week of Oct. 6-13 at
is forgiven, right? Not hardly!
trade for fan-favorite Brendan the University of Rio Grande's Lyne
I believe Alomar's face should have appeared on "America's Mos~ Want- Shanahan in the summer of 1995 and Center.
Fitness center, gymnasium
ed." He .should have faced an immediate suspension from the en!ire playoffs · struggled for much of the year.
and racquetball courts
an4 ~ru~ any playoff money. He should be forced to clean up used·gum on
"He's playing better and' he will
Today1-3 p.m. and 6-10 p.m.
the sttee!S of Baltimore's inner city.
.
. get better," Keenan said. "People
Monday- 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
II ma)l be harsh, but Alomar crossed the line. The young fans need to see seem to forget he's only 21 years old.
Thesday6 a.m.-IO 'p.m.
swift and decisive justice in this_elise. Otherwise, they will see athletes as I' saw an article the other day about
Wednesday· 6 a.m.-10 p.m.
abo~~ the law. Are all of us ~ual, but athletes more equal than others? In · our 'Kiddie Corps' und he. wasn't
Thursday6 a.m.-10 p.m .
.
even mentioned. He's the youngest
.
case, let money and status· lose and dignity prevail! . ·
Friday6
a.m.·JO
p.m.· .
·
· '
one out lhere. "
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
:
Som Wlloon, Ph.D. Ia on ooooclote profeaaor of hlatory at'lhe Unlverally of
Several times Prenger came up
, Rlo Oronde. An ovkl fon of olloportt - end o near monlocol folloWer of book•t·
.Sunday,
Oct. 13- 1._3 p.m. and
:boll-he Ill nltlvt of Gory,lnd.,ond ogreduot. oflndlono University -which into the play Friday night. He'd like
6-10
p.m.
'
, aho~ld tetll'&amp;lldln aomethlng about where hla heod (ond Hooaler hurtl .la.
to' do more of that this season.
j
•
'
"You always want to try to make
Pool
Ast·,o·~
things happen out there," Pranger
1
Today- I-3Jm. and 6-9 p.m.
...,
,
I
~ 1~1 I
said. "That'sthenameofthegame."·
Monday- 6 p.m.
·
After Steve Leach opened the
Thesday
6p.m.
'
.
'1\1
scoring at 10:06 into the game.
Wednesday - .6-9 p.m.
Pronger and Campbell made things
Thursday
- 6-9 p.m.
stunned.
happen 'on a power play. With less
By MICHAI!L A. LUTZ
Friday6-9 p.m.
''It's
like
some01ie
says,
'we're
•than a minute remaining in the first
HOUSTON (AP) - The HousSaturday
·1.. 3 p.m.
·
plitting you in a rocket ship and period, Campbell rushed up ice on
i ton Astros admitted to an unusual
Sum,fay, Oct. 13- 1':3 p:m. and
move, but did it aQywliy on Friday • sending you to the moon;" o Dierker left wing and slid a cross-ice pass to
·
6·9
p.m.
said.
"You
may
not
wane
to
get
on
a
Pionger.
He
tapped
it
past
Cdl·
by firing manager Terry Collins and
ship.
but
to
go
to
the
moon,
rocket
orado's Pairick Roy to make it 2-0.
replacing him with broadcaster LarFree-weight room
how could you refuse? ...
Colorado cut the lead to 2-1
ry Dierker.
Sunday, Oct. 13 Through
McLane
agrees
the
move
could
"It is an unconventional decision,
when Scott Young scored at I :48 of
closed
'
the second period. But Campbell
bu( btl in&amp; ,'in a small market and lead to a wild ride.
"We have to try to be a ,little answered that by swatting a rebound
jlieing forced io compete with the
Home athletic events
smarter
and we have tp take risks past Roy 4: 13.lilter.
' best revenue teams, if we have to do
Tuesday
- Volleyball vs. Ohio
now
and
then,"
said
McLane,
w.ho
"1 played with him in Montreal
; everything they're doing, we're not
Dominican
at
7 p.m.
was
supportive
of
Collins
after
!he
and I knew he gives up rebounds in
~ going to get it done," owner DraySaturday. Soccer vs. Walsh at
season ended. "This is risky and front," Campbell said. "I just tri~d
1ton McLane said.
; , · Dierker, a fonner Astros pitcher unconventional, but we feel it's the to go to the net as quick as possible." 3 p.m.
right move."
Shayne Corson also scored for the
l and the teams ' first 2Q..game winner,
Notes: A Lync Center memberOeneral
manager
Gerry
Hunsick·
·
Blues, and Eric Lacroiit added a goal
~ ·has· no coaching experience. He's
ship
is reguired to use the facilities.
er
reportedly
had
planned
to
recomfor Colorado. St. Louis goalie Grant
I'been the Astros color commentator
Faculty.
staff. students and adminis·
Collins back Fuhr earned the No. I star by makf since 19'79 and adl)1itled he was mend the Astros bring
''.
ing 35 saves. It was not lhe way Col- trai.Ors are admitted with their ID
i
cards ~
. orado wanted to begin.
• Racquetball court reservations
" They played prelly well defencan
now be made one day in advance
sively against us," Avalanche star
by
calling
245, 7495 locally or tollPeter Forsberg said. "We got ourfree
at
1-800-282-720
1, extension
- * Oblo Division • ..:.
selves ln a hole ·and we were never
7495.
' Overall
Divlsioo
able to catch up."
• All guests are to be accompanied
,W,.L
,W,.L
fE
lA
lA
In other season-opening action,
Illlm
;
4·2
130
154
by
a Lyne Center membership hold·
42
6
Vinton
County
.................
.1-0
r
Edmonton beat Buffalo 4-3, and the
43
4-1
94
7
28
er
and
a $2 fee.
·
.............................. t-O
1i MEIGS
119
4-2
150
6
42
Nelsonville· York ..............0-i
154
3-3 114
1
28
Wellston
........................ :...0·1
I Belpre ................................
199
0
1-5
144
0
0-0
L

•

•
.By DAVE HARRIS :
kickoff. Williams had carries of six, inteFCcption. He htid at least three an even better player."
passes
dropped.
Hanson
caught
two
'fhls
week:
The
Marauders
(4-1
T·S Correapondent
19 and four yards in the drive. A.13·Junior Matt Williams carried the yarjl Davenport-to-Hanson pass for 49 yards. and ltentley had one overall .t 1·0 in the Ohio Division)~
winners of their last four games •.
ball 30 times for 200 yards Friday gave Meigs the ball on Wellston's for IS.. ·
'Mdrdock
led
Wellston
wit~8
will host Nelsonville-York in a bitevening to break the aU-time Meigs 29. On the last play of the half,
carries
for
82
yards.
Shad
Won
,
game
Friday. Wellston (3-3 &amp; O.l~
Marauder career rushing record as Davenport_threw a PB~fS to Hanson,
6-foot-3,
225-pound'fullback,
bulle
whose
loss ended its three-game;
·the Marauders •rolled to a 28-7 win ,and despJte a pass Interference
his
way
for
69
in
10
carries.
Kevin
winning
streak, will travel to Belp~,
over Wellston.
penalty on Wellston.• Ha.nson made a
.,
It was the Tri·Valley Conference beauhful catch falhng onto the end Young was one of two in the air for next week.
Ohio Division opener for both teams zone for .the score. Fowler !Dade u 69 yards .' That pass was to Lee ' Qyl(krtllllll
,
Wellston ..............0 · 7 0 0= 1.
played before a large homecoming fo~~ for four '?n the extra poonts and Lambert.
"The Wellston kids played hard," Meigs ................. l4 14 0 11= 28.:
crowd at Bob Roberts Field.
Me1gs went mto the locker room
••
. Williams who scored three With a 28-7 lead. Withams had the Chancey said after the game. "We
··
touchdowns', broke the career record in sight a't_the half with 20 knew we had to stop their running Scoring summary
game.
.
yardage record (2,595) set in 1984 carr1es_ for, 120 yards. ·
.
"I'm
really
happy
for Mall,"
Me1~s had a chan~e .to score tn
and 1985 by Brad Robinson.
Meigs: Williams one-yard rut(
Chancey
said.
"He
has been (Fowler kick)'4: 19 Ist...
Williams has 2,604 yards in 500 the th1rd penod dnvmg to the
·, Wellston one, but fumbled -on th1rd outstanding for us for three years.
carries (5.2 yds./rush).
Meigs; Williams four-y,ard run;
When he broke the record late' in and goal and Wellston recovered to Ho is a great player and an even (Fowler klck)·l :23 1st
••
beuer person. He ""mes to practice
the game, Meigs head coach Mike e~d the threat;
Meigs: Williams .2 1-yard run:
Chancey called a time out and
All that.'":as left to do after that every day and works ~ard to become
(See MARAUDERS on B.Sl . '
presented 'Williains with the game was for Withams to get the record.
ball as the record was aimounced to' The Marauders took over at the"
the crowd. The Marauder fans ov:-n. 40 . ~1tb 3:49 remammg.
responded with a standing ovution W•lhams npped off runs of 17, four
•
and a large sign was displayed on and 12 ~ards, w1th the last one
the hillside across from the Meigs puttmg him m the record books, the
bench, reading "Congratulalions game was topped and he was
Mall." .
presented the ball and was mobbed
"It feels ~reat, this is probably by h1s .teammates as he left the field.
the best feeling in the world." a tired
Meigs rolled up 329 yards on the
..
Williams said after the game.
ground. Fr.eshman J~stm Rou~h
"This is not my record. but a contmued h1s outstandong play w1th
team record," Williams said. "1 have 115 yardsm 12 cames.
.
.
Davenport was three of eight ~~
been fortunate to have a great line
starting with my freshman year with the aH for , 61 yards and an
my brother Walt blpcking for me.
This year the line'. has been
outstanding for me 'and Justin
'
(Roush) both. Every time we get the
Modti26S·H 15trPLDI¥n,
ball we have five or six yards before ·
and Gatd~n Traclor with
we get hit."
48" mo,.;ngdtct 38'
.
Meigs kicked off to start the
Recycle,.
deck opti(}fl(l/,
contest and held Wellston to four
servtce
and out. After.a Wellston punt, the

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

The best of football,
the worst of baseball

•

Meigs tallies 28-7_ win over·Wellston

•

Iunday, October IS, 1996

1988 FORD F350
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interior, flat bed, metal stake
rack, new paint, 12 k miles on
long block. Nice Truck.

See
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, Marvin Keebaugh
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1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE #6094, White, A/C, AfT, AM/FM .
cass., iilt, cruise, P. windows I locks .......:.............................. $9995 .
1993 NISSAN SENTRA 16154,.AMJFM caaa.,lltt, cruise, A/C, rear
clOth Interior ........ l ............................................................ ,.. $8995
DODGE INTREPID #6107, Pewt81, A/C, A/t, AM/FII casa, till,
I P. windows I locka .........................:....:.................... ,... $9375
lrd4 t·UHU TAURUS GL #6t39, Blue, A/C, A/T, AM/FM caaa., till,
c1ulse, P. windows &amp; locks ....... :................................................ $9995
1993 FORD TAURUS CL 16138, Dk. pewt81, AiC, A/T, AM/Firl casa.,
till, c1ulse, P. seats &amp; wlndows .................................................. $9480
1995 DODGE NEON 16056, Blue, A/C, A/T, 28,000 mllei, bal~nce
factory warranty .................................................................. $10,599
1990 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 16113, "Leather Pkg." .
.
Loaded ......................................................................................... $8495
1994 PO~TIAC GRAND PRIX SE #6121, Red, A/.C, AfT, V-6 eng.,
cruise, AM/FM cass., P. locks, P. wlndowa ..............:....... $10,~
CHEVY LUMINA #6090, plue, A/C, AfT, till, CIUI.se, AM/FM .
casa., cust. wheels ...................................................................$11,495.
1995 CHEVY CAVAUER #6181, Red, 4 Dr, A/C, A/T, AM/FM casa., .
air bag, 32,000 mlles ................................................................ $11,783
1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM GT #6178, Green, 2 Dr, V-6 eng., A/.C,
A/T&lt; sport wheela,titt, cruise, P. windows &amp; locks ............... $11,400
1993 PONTIAC SUNB!RD #6199, 2 D1., blue, A/C, sunroof, AMJFM
cassette ............. .-......................................... .-............................... $8495
1992 MAZDA 323 16206, While, 2 Dr., AM/FM caas., low mllll,
$5895
~···~ .~'""" S.L 16204, White, AIC, A/T, V-6 eng., PW, PL,
~~;~· ~~: reardefroaler ............................................$11,274
JANLIIIM S.E. #6205, While, A/C, A/T, AM/FM .
casa.ette,lilt, c1ulse, rear defroster, clolh lnlerlor................... $9814
CENTURY #6206, Red, A/T, A/C,
AM/FM cass., tilt, cruise, power windows,
rear defroster, clolh interior.................................. :.................$10,874
00

.

o

II

o

ftUCIS ·IUS - 414'1

1991 GEO TRACKER 4X416186, LSI Pkg., sport wheels, AMJFM
cassette .................. ,~.................................................................. 16495
1992 DODGE CARAVAN #6195, Burgundy, A/C, A/T, ~M, V-6
eng., air bag, rur defroster ......................................"'""'"'"'"'$7495
19931SUZU TRUCK 16160, AMJFM cassette, sport wheels,

dual mlrrors ................:.........................................:......................$7800
1992 CHEVY S·10 #6176, V-6 eng.,long bed, 2-tone paint, AMJFM
cassette, rear slider, sport wheels ............................................ $7845
1990' CHEVY S-10 16141, AM/FM cass., rear slider, sport wh11l1,
sport stripes ........... ,....................................................................$6900
1993 FORD RANGER #6142, AII/FM cass.,'sport wheels, cuslom
stripes;.........................................................................................$8495
1995 FORD RANGER #6185 ..........................~ ........................... :$8995
1993 GEO TRACKER 4X4 #6082, AM/FM ~usette,
aport wheels ................ :.............................................................·.. $9385
1991 NISSAN KING CAB 16070, White, A/T, AM/FM Cl88ettt,
tear slider, rear flip seata ..........................................................18495
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER 16099, AIC, A/T, V-6 eng., till, crullt,
air bag, cloth lnlerlor .................................................................. $9460
1991 OLDS SILHOUETTE VAN 16175, Red, AJ.C; AfT, AM/FM caaa.,
V-&amp;111g., 7 pass., sport wheels, tin, cruise, PW ....................... $8995
1994 FORD RANGER XLT SUPER CAB 16144, Green, A]C, cruilt,
tilt, bed llntl, AMJFM, rear sllder.............................................$10,495
1993.GEO. TRACK~R 4X416152, AM/FM caaa., 'port wheels,
custom stllpes .......................................................,-............. $10,400
1992 DODG! llAKOTAc CLI.IIl CAB 116197, V.O eng., 2·1one paint,.
Tonneau cover, rear H.als, rear slider, sport wltetlt,
AM/FM cass ..............................................................................$10,400
1994FORD RANGER XLT SUPER CABI6021, 26,000 miles, A/C,
rear seat, AM/FM ca11., rear slider, bed liner, spl. wheels ... $10,995
1994 CHEV S-10 EXTRA CAB 16003, Red, LS. Pkg., AMJFM CHI.,
rear ftlp seat, dual ml1rors, Vortec V-6 eng.,
sport wheels, bed liner, clolh interior..... :.............................. $10,995
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER GRAN VAN SE 11&amp;149, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM cau., 7 pass., V-6 eng., II", cruise, P. window• a locks,
cloth lnlerior............................................................................. $11,450
1993 NISSAN KING CAB 4X416059, AM/FM cauette, 11ar flip
teats, bed liner, rnr tlld1r, llpOrl wheels,
1unning boarda.........................................................................$11,995
1995 CHEVY BLAZER 4X416080, 4 Dr., L. S. Pkg., A/T, A/C, 11",
crulae, AM/F~ call., aport wheels, P.locka &amp;windowt ...... $19,995
1993 CHEV. S-1016209, Green, V-6 eng., A/C, AM/FM caaa., 33,000
mllas, Tahoe Pkg., lpOrt whltla, running boards ................... $9805

�..
I

••

,Page 86 • ......, C'-e-Jiadbu:i

'

·---· G Pu An

...,_

~Wolford,! ............ .............. 5 78 18.6
Mallwl Stalder, N· Y .................... s 7J 14.6
Bryao Murclo&lt;h, )'/ells................ S 71 14.2
Vemoa Reams,.B......................... S 62 12.4
Todd Caslin, w ................ ,........... S 54 10.8
Justin Roush, Meigs..................... .t 36 9.0
Jaime Evans. S ......................... ,.. S 42 8.4
Brandon Olurdl, W..................... S 42 8.4
.Todd Braden, V.C........................ S 42 8.4
::IY., Buleher, L.. ......................... i 38 7.6
.an Camechis, T ....................... 5 36 7.2
ltoch Miller, T ............................ S J6 7.2
am Meek, ............................... s 28 5.6
::ltike Our, Y.C........................... S 28 5.6
::-•Y Blankenship, J..................J ••••• ~ 2l 5.0
ioSim Sochllar, F.H. ....................... S 24 4.8
"H..h H""dysbcll, Mi................. S 24 4.8
i:Joey flo&amp;gs, J............................... S 24 4.8
4.8
nny Kina, !....:.......................... 5 24
t' WIIhams, Me1p ......... ......... 4 18 '4.5
Jlft Caudill, v.c. ....................... 5 22 4.4
;Na&amp;e Dailey, Alex ............... ,.,.,.... S 20 4.0
~bony Collura, T.., ...................
18 ' 3.6
~rmty 111omas, W..................... S 18 • 3.6
._uic Mi~tbcll, N·Y ........................ S 18 ' 3.6
~ichael Ash. S!... :....................... S 18
3.6
t Ben R2!!ey, N·Y ........................... S 18 3.6
:
RUSHI!IG
"'PIIJer .....- ..........- .......... · AU Yds AYt
:V•moo Rearm, B..................... 106 797 7.5
.Shane Wolford, 1.. .................... 63 644 10.2
!Nathan Stalder, N· Y ................ 105 635 6.0
..
!
.
:Jusba Rousli. Me1gs................. 70 634 9.0
;rcdd Braden, V.C.................... 92 621 6.8
!:Bryan Murdoch, Wells............ 104 621 5.9
,.Naoe Dailey, Alex .................... 104 SS2 5.3
~ite au.r, v.c........ 1......... ..... s2 524 10.1
iltyan Buk:~er, L....................... 84 469 5.6
McDaniel, E.................. 66 411 6.2

~

s

r--

Hea~b Howdyshell, Mi ............. 93 380
Mtn Williams. Meigs .............. 68. 303
Malo Goodwin, Aoh .................. 64 292
Shannon Smith, J ................... 33 213
1
BJ. Grady, Po. Pl. .................... 42 273
Johnny King, !.. ....................... 42 271
Chris f\leek, Alex .......... ,.......... SS 259
Todd Castin, W ................... ,.... 34 251
Eric Glass, N-V ........ ~............... 36 244
Sam Sechkar, F.H·.................... '37 243
Dave Rueter, Gal. .................... 4S 223
J.D. Ousley, V.C................:······ l6 210
Eric Olnalicr, B........ ....... i .... 3S 187
Adam Cummings, S................. 31 175
Nalin Arthur, Wells. .. ,. ............ 34 171
Jaime E~ans, S ........................ 23 170
Seth ,Pavis, G~l. .......... .'............ 47 169
Ben Robey, N Y....................... 48 161
Malt Boley, Marlena .... :........... 41 156
Seoh Dovis, GaL ';:;;/"""'"'"· 34 143
Quinton Evans, 1..! ................... .. 33 141
Ously Higgenbotham, Pt. Pi . .'. 17 132
Robbie Cooper, T ..................... 17 13t
Ryan ilolbb, V.C....................... 2S 127
Jason B~n. F.H ..................... 28 123
Lance V.olstan, Alex. ............... 31 122
Beau Fonner, Wells........~....... . 9 121
Anthony Cnllura, T .................. 43 119
Brandon Church, W .................. 17 117
Rob CAllahan, W ...................... 13 104
Parker Elliott, N· Y ................... 9 100
Brian Camechis, T ........,.......... 17 100
PASSING
PIIJtr .........................~........ CP AU lat
Ben Robey, N-Y ............... 50 93 3
lsaat: Saunders, Ual........... 53 84 3
Jesse Maynard, S ............... SS 110 6
Shawn Taylor, W ............. , 29 52 J
Lance Richards, F. H......... 27 70 S
Zach Miller. T .....,............ 30 82 6

4.a
4.S
4.6
8.3
6.S
6.4
4.7
7.4
6.8
6.6
4.9
5.8
5.3
4.7
S. I
7.4
J.S
13
3.8
6.2.
4.3
7.8
1.1
S.l
4.4

3.9
13.4
2.8
6.9

8.0
II. I
5.9

Yell
794
660

599
570
494
463

N1than White, Ath ............ 30 66
lance Rolston, AieL ........ 19 60
Matt 1Lyons, 8 .................... 27 49
Steve Durst, E .................. 21
55
Lt"i Wt:ppler, Marietta..... 10 J6
Austln Penrod, L ............... IJ 27
Jeff Maib~h. L .........: ....... 16 37
Matt Hatem, V.C............... II 32
Brent Rollins, Pl. Pl .......... 9 18
Brad Davenport, Meigs .... 12 31
Anthony Riley, Mi ........., .... 9 46
37
JQe SparbaWk, Alh. ......... 15
RECEIVING
Playtr ............:.......................... No.
Branden Olurch; W................... 11
Eric Mitchell. N· Y ..................... IS
Mau Weaver, Ath ...................... 19
Ryan Caudill, V.C....... ........ :...... 9
Brian Camet:his, T ..................... 9
Dav.e Rucker, Gal... .................... 16
Rob Woodward, Gal .................. 10
Jamie Evans, S .......................... 17
Keith Sears, F.H ......................... 7
Pa'rk.er Elliott, N~Y ..................... 12
' Ste)le Cox,' B............ ............. ,.... S
Jonoohan Ogg, L..
......... 9
, Dan Greenwalt, W :.................... 9
Ma.tl Sowards, B.... ,.................... 9
Nale Dailey, Alex ...................... 1
I.R. Springer, F.H ......:...:......... 7
Chid Thomas. Aoh ..................... 8·
Flynt Smathers, N-Y .: ..'.............. 6
Nathan Stalder, ~- Y ................ 1
Oay Watkins, N-Y .................... 3
Jason Brown, F.H...... .':~;"""" "'" 5
Eric Glass, N· Y ......................... 5
Mark Riley, Alex.
....... 3
Bert G(obe, Ath ... ~ ....
.. .... 6
Catl Stump, Alex
............. 2
Scon Youtsey, Mi.. ...
.. .... '3

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4
I
I
2
3
3
I
2
2
3

323
264
243
175
173

Yob
318
245
214
202
253
203

167
140
133
127
118

Ave

28.9

16.3

I 1.2
22.4
28.1
12.7
195 19.5
188 11.0
170 24.3
ISS 12.9
ISO 18.8
125 13.9
114 12.7
114 12.7
107 15 .3
102 14.6
100 12.5
94 15.6
90 12.8
84 28.0
84 16.8
76 15.2
75 2S.O
73 12.2
72 36.0
70 23.3

~Hurricane notches 10-3 win

~over No.

By JON TROYER
pie down blocks and simple tackle,s
Tlines-Sentlnel Staff
to make and just couldn't get it done.
ASHTON, W.Va. - A blocked
But give Hannan's coachii)8..Jifillf-a
field gmil by Doug Beaver set up.the Jot of credit. 'They had'em ready to .
first of two late Hannan Wildcat play."
touchdowns in a 12-8 comeback win
Burch now has to play·two top· I0
over the Burch Bulldogs. The win on
teams in a row: No. 6 Ceredo-KenHomecoming gives Hannan a 3-3 ova and N0 . I Gilbert.
rel;ord on the season.
A Jason Wray interception de~p
Senior running back Joe Kimble
in Hannan territory in the first quarscored the go-ahead touchdown from
ter preserved a ·scoreless tie until
13 yatds oul with 6:42 remaining in Bureh hal !back Nick Elia scored
the game. The two-point conversion from 28 yards out wilh 6:24 remainauempt was no good, but Burch's ing in the second quarter. The extra
Jason Donahoe fumbled the ball9~ick was no good.
Hannan's 36-yard line four plays Jat· · With Jason Wray and ~ussell
er.
.
augh splitting time at quarterback,
The fumble came after Nick Eli a Wray drove the Wildcats down to the .
ran for 27 yards on two plays and Burch 25 before thr:owi'ng a Wayne
Donahoe addeoj a 12-yard run.
Cooper interception with less than a
Hannan was forced to punl with minute left in the h.alf, and the score
3:22 remaining, and the Bulldogs al halftime stood at 6-0 Burch.
made il to the Hannan 42-yard
Then with barely a minute
before senior defensive lineman elapsed in the third quarter Waugh
Mike Sturgeon broke up a pass' play . fumbled and the Wildcats recov.ered
on fourlh down to seal the win with the ball in their own end zone for a
U 4 remaining.
_
two-point Burch safety.
"This ·was a good team efforl on
After the blocked field goal· by
everyone's part," Hannan coach Kent .Beaver, Burch's 6-0, 220-pound
Price said. Price was also pleased quarterback Brian Diamond guided
with how the Wildcats bounced back the Bulldtigs to the Hannan 27. The
from last week's loss at Soulh Gal· Bulldogs were then forced with a
lia lo give a winning effor1 on fourth-down-and-two situation and
Homecoming night.
' .
decided lo'gq for it with 5:00 to go
Burch High School coach Doug in the third quarter. .
Ward. in his first year with the Bull·
Chris Huddleston stopJl"d Fred .
dogs, said, "We just didn't come to Cruon in the backfield and the Wildplay, and Hannan did. We had sim- cats took over on downs.

On the AFC scene,

-

With Burch ahead 8-0 Hannan
put together a scoring drive that
hegan at their own 25 and efl!led
with a Jasd'n Wray touchdown with
four seconds left in ~the third;.,
:
'Freshman tight end Josh \..ardell
caught a Russell Waugh pass and
took it33 yards before being.brought
down al lhe 10, where Jason Wray
nin it in on the next play. 'The two- ;
point conversion failed and Hannan.
was down 8-6.
The Joe Kimble touchdo'fn in the,
fourth quarter put Hannan up for:
good and gave them their first win in·
four games after starting the season
2·0.
Jason Wray was the leading rush-•
er for Hannan. carrying lhe ball 27
times for 128 yards arid· a touch-'
down. Joe Kimble ran 13 times for'
55 yards and a tou~hdown as well . '
The Hannan passing game w~· ·
still suspect, as Wray completed just
two of three passes and was inter-: ·
cepted once. Russell Waugh com-·
pleted two of two, including the 30-:
yarder to Cordell.
'
Mike Sturgeon led die Wildcat,
defense with II 1/2 tackles. Chri'l
Huddleston and Jason Wray eacn:
had 5 lf2 stops, followed by Josh,
Chapman with~ 1/2.
J
Hannan travels to Class A top-ten
Hamlin ne~t Friday before going to ~
Clarksburg-Noire Dame October 19.
They'll be home ·: to Marsh Fork,
. October 25.

Ravens expect 'Bam' Monday;
Bengals.to sta~ Hearst today

13 Point Pleasant

first down at the Point 10 only to set· any one play could be deemed a key
. " By RICK SIMPKINS
tie for a three point s~ore.
'
play, this one surely tits the·bill. Three .
: T·S Cornaponllent
.
.
'
l
. : HURRICANE. W.Va. - The . Wal,roth's field goal came with plays later, the Redskins came up By USA TOI)AY
praclice along with top backup S'\T- about90.94 percent, something like
: unheralded Hurricane Redskins 2: 10 left in the o)iening quarter and with their only interception of 1he
.
. ·,
that." Glenn ~as 17 catches in three
Baltimore: TE Eric Green was . mie Burroughs (calf).
. : make it six in a row over J1!e Point was 'a direct result of a Point turnover. night to II) wart lhe drive and let some expecled to ··be out for two more
.
Jacksonville: The waiving of LB games. .
Big Blacks had possession of the valuable air out of the Big Black sails.
JPleasant Big Blacks Friday nigh~ as The
New
York:
The
Jets'
wide receivReggie
Clark
leaves
the
·Jaguars
''There's no doubt about it, that weeks, but lhe ~earn upgraded his
!tlhe Putnam Countians upset coach football and were facing a 2nd down
ing
corps
got
a
do!lble
dose ,of bad
with two. reserVes at the position SJatus to questionable Wednesday ....
.;Steve Safford's , 13th-ranked Big and 16 situation when Hurricane was a big play," said a dejected Steve RB Bam Morris is expecled to arrive Jeff K0 pp and Brant Boyer. Kopp, news Wednesday. Keyshawn Johnfon:ed a fumble that the Redskins Safford after the game. "We were dri01\.Blacks by a final score of 10-3.
.
recovered
the Big Black 30, Two ving ~nd had lhe momeniUm, but I · as schedule1 Monday for his first signed last week, played 16 games son bruised and sprained his right
4 . 'The win raises Hunicane's record and a half atminutes
with the Dolphins last year. Boyer, knee in a collision with CB Aaron
later Matt Tidd, guess it just wasn't meant lobe. I told·
; to 3-3, while the Big Blacks fell to the Redskin quarterbaek,
also
signed last week', played the Glenn early in practice and was takmisfired on these guys all week that Hurri£ane
':3-2
"
..
linaJ.two games of last season with en to a New York hospital to see · . ·
) earned ~FC. offensive honors .
· • 'the Big Blacks, who had been a third down pass and the Hurricane was very capable of coming in here · ries.·Buffalo:
&lt;]IT Glenn Parker. who the Jaguars after being released by team orthopedist Elliott Hershman.
and
beating
us.
We
had
to
'play
the
.
team
had
to
settle
for
a
field
goal.
.; averaging ~arly 245 yards rushing
missed the Sept. 22 game vs. Dallas 1he team after last preseason. He also His availability &amp;Sunday's game
That scored stood until the 6:11 kind of football that we had played
~per contest, was held to a season-low
With
a torn calf muscle, returned to was released after this year:s pre- vs. Oakland wal'l!'iideteimined late
; 110 yards on 33 carries. Hurricane did mark of the third period when Hur- ·· in our pr.,.vious three and a half
Wednesday, but Jeff Graham, the
practice
Wedtifsd!!Y and should start season.
not fare mu~ better, rushing for only ricane went on a 10-play, 75-yard dri- games, but we did not do that and it .
other
starting wide receiver, earlier .
Kansas City: Heading inl&lt;i their
· ' 97 yards alainsf the tough-against- ve that was culminated by 'Ihlvis Car-. cost us. But, we have five games left vs. Indianapolis.... DE Bruce Smith
. : the-run Poipt defen~~. btl( the Red- riefs 23 yard touchdown gallop. Wal- and there is nothing to do now but put needs I I/2 sacks to move into sole home game against Piusburgb Ol\ was declared out .with aknee sprain.
: skins found some soft spots in the roth nailed 'the e~tra poit1t and the this one behind us and get ready for possession pfsecond on the league's Monday night, the defending AFC Webster Slaughte~ will start for GraWesl champions ate an uncharacter· ham, ang Wayne Chrebet would
all-time Jist.
•locals' pass defense, as the visitors Redskins were up 10-0. The final six Athens," added Safford'.
minutes
of
the
third
quarter
belonged
Hurricane's
Travis
Carrier
was
the
(SeeAFC 'onB·7)
is
lie plus- I in giveaway-takeaway
Cincinnati:
Coach
Dave
Shula
::Completed 10 of 17 ~terials for 120
t
the
Big
Blacks.
Starting
on
their
game's
leading
rusher
with
74
yards
margin
coach
Marty
Schottensaid
RB
Garrison
Hearst
will
start
in
~ards. Brent Rollins, the Big Blacks'
27,the locals moved the ball to on 15 carries. Dusty Higginbotham place of ~i-Jana Carter Sunday
heimer's favorite stat. That lies them
-:sophomore signal caller, was forced
urricane five yard line where the led the Blacks with 35 yards on II
against lhe Houston Oilers. Carter, for I3th in the NFL, far behind
,.10 go to the air many times in the
;fourth quaner ~'&gt;/hen the Blacks were Blacks had a first and goal. But, an . tries. B.J. Grady picked up 32 yards the No. I pick of the 1995 draft, is .league leader Green Bay's plus-13.
-mounting a furious comeback illegal procedure penalty put the ball on 9 attempts. Jeremy Whiuington healthy but has slruggled since comMiami: Former. FBtrE Keith
:Attempt and finished the game with on.the 10 and the best Point could do caught 2 of Rollins ' passes for 45
ing back from reconstructive knee
Byars, cut Tuesday, took some part- ,
was get it back to the five after three yards, while Jeremy Rickard latched surgery. "Garrison Hearst has earned
~ completions in 23 auempls for 65
ing shots ~· coach Jimmy Johnson. ;·
.:.l'ards. The Redskins intercepted one plays .. The steady Whittington was onto the other two for 20 yards . ·
the right (to start).'" Shula said.
saying Johnson was '.'intimidated by
Defensively, senior linebacker Hearst gained 7 I yards on 10 carries
call~ upon, and the senior respond~ollins pass, while the local defendmy leadership skills'' and that Johned
with
a
26
yard
field
go.
~
!
that
cut
Steve
Thomas led the way with 3 solo
-ers grabbed 3 enemy aerials.
in a loss Sunday, and Carter gained
son
wants "followe{s, 11 nbt leaders.
the
margin
to
seven
points
at
10-3.
stops
and.'
9
assists.
Jeremy.
Whit:; Point's offense did not challenge
15 yards on five attempts, rushing
Byars also said he wasn't given a fair
Momentum ~med to he on. the . tington had 3 soi\)S, 2 assists, and an
No Payments Until 1....,,. •
) he Redskin defense on many occajusi
once
in.
ihe
second"
half.
chance
to win .the starting fullback
-sions. The Blacks got inside the Hur- Big Blacks' side now and they hegan interception. Rob Wilson turned in
Denver: Despite a partially-lorn job againsl rookie Slanley Pritcheu
· NO MONEY DOWN II
a drive that surely seemed destined another fine performance with one
~icane 20 only one time all evening
and
tl]at
he
wasn't
given
a
chance
to
ligament
in
his
right
knee,
FB
Aaron
to come to a close in the Hurricane solo tackle and 10 assists. Josh
Vinyl Siding - and )nd that trip led .to Jeremy WhitCraver was upgraded to probable for · be a factor in the offense. Johnson.
zone.
Starting
at
their
own
35,
the
end
Jones
had
2
solos
and
9
assists.
Replacement Windows,
/hngton's 26 yard field goal with 11:36
Sunday.... With LG Mark Schlereth · responded by wishing Byars the
:left in the game. On the other hand, Big Blacks got a 15 yard gainer by Jermyn Queen and Jason Roush
Roofs, ON THE SPOT
besl of luck.... WR Fred Barnett iS
and LT Gary Zimmerman
-Hurricane had many chances to put Rollins on first down to put the ball each came up with an interception. (ankle)
at the midfield stripe. Dusty Hig- Queen had 3 solo tackles and an assist (shoulder) also h·urting, the Broncos on schedule to return at the end of ' FINANCING STARTING AT
l he game away, but the proud Big
ginbotham, the Blacks burly sopho- to go along with his theft, while ,..signed OL Bucky Greeley for the October or early November from
9%. with payments
~lack defense managed to fend off
surgl;f)' on his right
:Jhe Redskin advances. Twice the Hur- more fullback, then ripped off a 25 Roush was in on 3 tackles, 2 of the praclice squad. Cut: TE Michael Tit· reconstructive
knee.
yaril gainer to the Redskin 25, but a solo variety.
.
lei
00
,ricane offensive unit had the ball
as low as
monthly
·
holding
penalty
brought
it
all
the
way
Houston
:
Sixlh-year
CB
Darryll
. New England: WR Terry Glenn,
· Poi!!' will. ge_t back into league
_inside the Point 10 yard line only to
back
to
the
Point37.
'The
net
loss
was
.play ne~!! t~thens jlull- Lewis continues to he the big-play even though he missed the opening
~ turned away. And, on HurriFREE Estimates.
42
yards
and
the
Point
boys
never
dogs come to town m the annual man in the secondary. His 36-yard game with a hamstring problem;
,cane's first score, a 33 yard field goal
ALL AMERICAN
seemed Lo recover from that blow. If · Homecoming contest.
interception return for a touchdown · ·leads the Pats in receiving yards with
~y Leif Walroth, the Redskins'had a
against Pillsburgh was ihe fourth of 23 I and said Wednesday that he still
'
isn't 100 percent "The couple of
his career and moved him jnto third
· Oh the NFC scene, ·
·
on the Oilers' all-time list in that cat- days off '(bye week) helped, I'm
egory. Earlier 1his season, his two
'
picks against Baltimore marked the
third multi-inlerception game of his
career. Lewis has I 5 interceptions in
his last 40 games, dating to I993.
Indianapolis: DE Tony Bennett,
Qr
'
who has missed Jhe last two games
;By USA TODAY
nal\remain in their regular positions. two third-down carries for 0 yards. with a knee injury, practiced
:; Arizona: Simeon Rice was
Chicago: With RB Robert Green Hicks had one catch and one rush .wednesday and could se!' limited
jlward~ a,sack on' the final play of . (knee) ou.t, the Bears are searching. each for a loss of~ yard. Overall, the
action against Buffalo. The outlook
;regulation last week, giving hjm five ((,Jr a lhird-down back. They used Bears were 3-for-14 (.214) on lhird isn't quite as bright for three ailing
l:lhis. season, the mosl of lillY· rookie .•.•. Rashaan ·salaam, Torty Carter un&lt;l down (0-ol-7 in t~e firs.l halt} ... linebackers. The two starting outside
)I
Ill~'
iftis closest rookie comJ!"tilor is . Michael Hicks againsl lhe Raiders, _ Player of the week: K Jeff Jaeger linebackers, Quentin Coryatt (calf)
and Steven Grant (groin), did not
:'Jacksonville'&amp; Kevin Hardy (three). bul none was effective. Salaam ·had ·
( .'W/J fo/ .)-/IJ/11
/'111\ I I'll· I~ I \1
(See NFC on B-7)
;Jie's ·a former teammate of Rice 's al
'llinois .... Player of the week: QB
j&lt;ent Graham (37-for-58, 366 yards,
·,four louchdowns) earned NFC offen·
fiive honors.
'· Atlanta: With two starting
:Ceceivers - J.J. Birden and Bert
.,manuel - listed as doubtful wilh
hamstring injuries, backups Roell
;Preston and Tyrone .Brown are lhe
~ ikely 1111-in slllrters. This comes a
~~---:!"'!"
~eek after Ilrown and Preston had
the Falcons' •touchdown catches
suhl outdoor p~d:Uctl are·
::Ogainst the 49ers, thOugh neither
.
built to handle any size job.
;:l;tw:lcd. Both are second-year play~ I"" warn poofession.ol quoiJoy a a pri&lt;t dol&lt;s """' " e..do.
rs . Tim McKyer will start at cor-·
look" the qualioy leader
I"* .. Solol.
- " " - I " " ' ,....[ Solhlhoo • ""' ;, IlL ...... """"""
.Jletback for the third consecutive
• .,...011 chain liW lo will puny job down" slu. Uoo kbCioOOq
arne.
"""""' llnobilot and tolroolnln&amp; Then """ oht 017 up """'. duoablo
Carolina: After watching Jack·
Soihlle.olhkMot lo'sJl'd!&lt;olorr.llle.ol.
Utekonoldo ••
do:ks. ...... and~ ohe badt o(
!sonville DI:l Tony Brackens make
I""' pickup In &lt;I. In .....,, I""'"' ....ty
job.
:.Oinccmeat of Mark Dennis, co:wh
·, . ·
~l'll.'flliX'I th.Jl it p.1y ~ Ull! SdJl Ja.f out
.'
I'I(I(Ju,~ n•.W l~ I ~ . . jobl• blttlt.
~m Capen shook up the offensive
~ inc. Blake Brockermeyer moves
• Di&lt;•wo"hown . l":-PIUI •
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CE;NTER)
rom right tookle to left tackle, and
nnis moves from left tackle to
25YH &amp; JEFFERSON AVERil
Ridenour Supply
ri$hl uickle. Utility 'lineman Mall
POIIIY PLEASANT
State Route 248 · Cheeter, Oldo
;elliqll will take ov4r for the injured
)frank Garcia at left Juard. and C ,
675·1675
985-3308
):unis Whitley and RG Gre1 Skrepe-

\

Bv G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tfmes-Sentlnel St.fl
CHESHIRE -Senior quarterback Joey Boggs scored three touchdowns by land and thr.ew for a
fourth, as Jackson's varsity football
team scored on five of its six firsthalf p9ssessions en route to a 41-6
yictory over River Valley Friday
htght on River Valley High School's
field.
·
' 'l'lie visiting lninmen, unbeaten
after six contests, maintainetl that
status by holding the Raiders (1-5)
to 15 rushing yards in the first quarter while using their first 100 rushing yards and the hosts ' first two
fumbles to set the stage for their first
three touchdowns.
The Raiders never started any of
their seven first-half possessions
beyond their.own 35-yard line.
They also were held without a
first down until the final' minutes of
tlui third quarter during wdrive !hat
was their first of the game with a
duration of at least four minutes .
.That drive, which began with 3:1~
left in act three, lasted until' the
Raiders' punt from their own 41
· gave Jackson the ball with 11 :14 left
in the game.
After the majority of the lronmen
starters - Boggs , junior halfback
Shan.e Wolford, senior halfback
Johnny King and senior split end
Jason Brown, among others- were
sent to the bench in favor of younger
players; River Valley took the ball
with 6:'86 left.
The Raiders, who begah their
drive on·their own 26, did~ ' l surrender the. ball until time e~pired. That
. occurred only seconds before senior
wide receiver Aaron Adams - earlier in the I5-play drive, quarterback
Richard Slephens hit the 6-foot-3,
195-pound senior for first downgaining passes of 25 and nine yards

- cauaht Stephens' 13-yard pass in
the back of the end zone in a fourthdown-and-seven situation against a
napping Jackson defense.
•
This touchdown pass, which was
the secon.d of the season for
Stephens and the Raiders, made
River Valley the first Southeastern
Ohio Athletic' League team to score·
on tire Iron men in the 1996 earnpaign.
1
Steve Boso, a sophomore who
was put into action in the ihird quarter, led the Raider running backs
with 20 of his team-high 31 yards in
the driv~. ·.
.
.
"He has so mqch want-to," said
Raider boss Merrill Triplett of 1he
ex-Southern Tornado.
Fti.ture 'notes: River Valley !s
reserve team beat Point Pleasant 302 on .Sept. 30 to inflate its record to
3-1.
The .fresh.man Raiders (2-2) hit
the .500 mark with a 32-12 victory
over Marietta Thursday.

River Valley (:00, 4th qtr.) Adams 13-yd. pass from Stephens

Team statistics
Dcaartnu;nt

l

First downs ......................9
Total yards ......... .......... 250
Rushing au.-yds ..... 44- 186
Passing yds ................. ...64

This week: River Valley will
to Marieua Friday. ·
Ouarterll!mJ&amp;
Jackson .............. 20 15 6 0 = 41
·River Valley ........0 0 0 6 = 6
hea~

Scoring summary
Jackson (9:19 1st qtr:) - King
64-yd. run (kick failed)
Jackson (5:03 1st qtr.) - Boggs ,
.2-yd: run (kick failed)
Jaeksdn (1:39 lst qtr.) Wolford 4-yd. run (Wolfor.d pass
from Boggs) ·
Ja&lt;kson (8:21 2nd qtr.) Brown 17-yd. pass from Boggs
(Wolford run)
Jackson (1:18 2nd qtr.) Boggs 3-yd. run (Blankenship kick)
Jackson (7:04 Jrd qtr.)
Boggs 14-yd. run (kick failed)

~

.BY
4

Comp.-au ....................6lnterceptions thro n ....... 0
Fumbles-lost ...............0-0
Penalties-yds. .. ........ .3· 30
Pu,nts-yds ................ A- I31

3-5
0

4-4
3· 15
4-76

Statistical leaders

I3 I
34-84
47

Jackson Ironmen
Rushing -King 7-88 &amp; I TO;

PArRJOT..:... The 0.0. Mcintyre Park District is participating in ·
a cooperative hunting program for bowhunling at Raccoon Creek
County Park.
·The program i's sponsored by the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources' Qivision of Wildlife.
·
•
;
Bovihuntiqg with wrilten permission from the OQMPD will be permit!id d~,ring archery season, which will last until Jan. 31, 1997.
Wriuen permits will be issued on a 'fir5t-come. first-serve basis al
lhe OOMPD office at RCCP. !'ermit req"esls must he made in person. All applicants must have their 1996 hunting license. Wriuen permits are limited to 20 hunters per day for ·12 days.
For more information, call the OOMPD office at446-~ I2, ex ten·
sion 256.
·
·

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley Christian's soccer team got goals
from seven different players en route to a 7-0 win over visiting Teays
Valley Christian Friday. ·
. . .
.
'The Defenders (10-2) got on lhe board 13 seconds inlo the ,game
when Jaddy Newbold, geting an assist from Benjamin Taylor, scored. "
At th~ 12:26 mark; Taylor scored unassisted.
.
Sizemore, who scored on Newbold's assist at the 31:24 mark, gave
an assist to Jeremy Wolfe, who scored less lhan a minute later.
Later on, the Defenders got goals from Micah Lanier (35:56), Bill
Miller (38:35) and Nathan Smith (59:30).
OVC had 14 saves on the goal, with 'Smith tallying eight and Lanier
had four. Teays Valley had 37 saves, with goalie aen Lewis geuing
24 .
The Defenders had 48 of their 71 shots on lhe goal. Teays Valley
had I4 of I5 shots on the goal.
·
The Defenders will play at South Point Tuesday.

AID- The Symmes :Valley Band Boosters Club will sponsor a
turkey shoot on three Sundays - today, Oct. 20 and Dec. I·- on the
Symmes Valley .High School grounds.
The slug and shot matches that will comprise the competition will
be held behind the home football stands.
.
·The cost is $2 per shot. Only i2~~ 16- and 20-gauge shotguns will
be allowed in the competition:
'
The prize is a SIO·pound turkey or equal value.

South Gallia varsity sextet
.loses twice in tri-match
WELLSTON- Soulh ,Pallia's varsity volleyball team lost its lwo ·
matches ,in Wednesday's tri-match al Wellston High School against
,
'Logan and the host Golden Rockets.
Logan beat South Gallia 15-5, 15-1.0 behind Roberts' nine points
and Stacey Mervis' seven. The Rebels were led by Laura Queen's six
. service points .and I l·for-12 effort at the line that yielded four kills.
Juniors Vanessa Short and Sabrina Mooney had four and three points,
respectively.
Also at the net for the Rebels were Short (6- 10 &amp; three kills) and
· Racho!l Waugh (5-6 &amp; one kill).
The hosts heat South Gallia 15-9, 8-15, 15-~ . M. Doles led Wellston with 13 points. Queen led the Rebels with 12 points and an · J~­
for-18 effort that harvested six kills. Waugh had nine points, and
Mooney had five. Short's 7-for-10 effort yielded two kills.
The Rebels (7-7), who are scheduled to play at Coal Grove Monday, will reiUm home to host Wellston Thursday.

WOOD CumRS SAVINGS SALE
MODEL CS3.f00 CHAIN SAW '

$20999

(Direct Shipment To The Orient)

N (;

take Johnson's place.
. Oaklan{ Senior exe~utive Bruce
A:1Jen saia.lhe team would meet with
AiWOL DE Anthony Smith "ot the
a)Oproprialc time" but that time. "is
not this we&amp;" Smith loses ugame
cl\eck and the team can impose an
additional fine of a Second paycheck,

In---

I

,.

•n._
•

'

va

''

1995 CHEV BERETTA
V6 engine, auto,
Ill, pwr steering,
air cond, airbag,
. anti lock b~akes
and more.

,.,-."'

4x4, pwr steering,
air cond, pwr
.windows, pwr
looks,'tiit, cruise,
burglar alarm.

..

va

Sportside, 350
eng, auto, ·tilt,
cruise, pwr
windows, pwr
locks, locally
owned.

3800V6eng,
auto, tilt, cruise,
pwr windows, pwr
locks, 7 pass(ilnger
seating

• Chrome whe,els,
tilt, cruise, pow
windows, power
locks, and much
more.
'

'

I'

I.

AFC•. .: (Conlin~ed from B:6)

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

.., ,

Silverado pkg. ,
454
vortec
eng, Bi.!IO , tilt, ·
cruise, two tone
. paint, pwr w. pwr
locks, only 3300
miles.

For a great
deal on any
one of these
cars see ...

UPFIELQ
(left), get• .
18alatance from fullback Shannon Smith, looks over
defense on h Ia way to a 15·carry, 68-yard effort Fritha
day night at River Ve,lley High School's field. The Iron men's 35-point
victory gave them a 3-0 Jud In their ell-time series with the Raldera.
(Photo by Ron Caudill of River Valley Photography) ,

FAMILY PRACTICE ,

'r"'"

Auto trans, air
. conditioning, pwr
steering, pwr
brakes, sun roof.

·'- "

ROBERT M. "OLLEY, M.D.

TO ACCOMODATE THOS.EWORKING PIOPLE,
WE ARE 0"11 'TIL 7 P.M. 011 TUESDAYS

I

TIE l111r TOOL!

F Wild Dried
&amp;inseng Roots

"""'"'""'
uh*" '"''Ito.

I

Leather interior,
V6 3800 engine,
pwr seal, pwr
locks, pwr
windows, till,
cruise, loaded .

TOP DOLLARS

I A !V:t f;

t
I

·

.•

flolmgren says Packers must
~nub reports of Bears' injuries

I

OVC soccer team
blanks Teays Valley 7-0

Turkey shoot slated

. $69

River Valley Raiders
Rushing - S . Boso 5-31;
Maynard 6-15; Bradbury 5-13; Terry
3-9; Stephens 3-7; Gilmore 4-7 ;
Slone 3·1 ; Stout 5-1.
Passing ~ · Slephens 3-5, 47 yds,
&amp; I TD
Receiving- Adams 3-47 &amp; I
TD

OOMPD issuing
bowbunting permits

GALLIPOLIS -· The third annua~ Gallia. Academy Varsity "G"
Golf Scramble will be held Saturday at Cliffside Golf Club. ·
'For more information, contact Jim Osborne al446·3212 (work) or
446-9284 (home), Tom Meadows at 446-0662 (work) or 446-7570
·(home), or the golf course at446-GOLF.

TAKEN DOWN- River Valley quarterback Richard Stephens (far
le taken down by two JacksOn defendttr• on a act:~mble play
llul'lna Frl1~av night's SEOAL' contest on the Raldenl' Cheahlre Town.
41-6 victory kept the lronmen unclefuted overand In league play after six weeks. (Photo by Ron Caudill of RlvValley Photography)

Wolford J5.68 &amp; I TD; Boggs
P-in&amp;-Boggs6-8,64yds.&amp;
1 TD; Chamberlain 0-1
Recelvln&amp; - Brown 3-33 &amp; \
TD; Campbell 2-28; Wolford I ·3 &amp;
a 2·pt. con.
Fumble recoveries - Brown I·
0; Coffey 1-0; Cusick 1-0; recovery
intraffic (player unknown)

Area sports briefs

Varsity 'G' scrambl~ slated

~;!;s~tsy~~;(~~~~a~~~:~~~!~

•

J'~tnbag G!aa..-~1· Page 87

wy .

Jack~·on stays und~feated after beating River Valley· 41-6

Hannan hands Burch 12-8
loss in homecoming _
gam.e

400

4

; ·Note: These first-half season totals do not include sta~
~tistics from ,games played on Oct. 4 or 5~

t

Pomeroy • Middleport •.Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasa..,t,

'

achool football leaders
SCoaJNG

Sunday,October&amp;,1998

Sunday,
October&amp;, 1811
c

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

NFC...'.

estimated at more than S I00,000 in
each instano::e, during his absence.
"There is very liule Anthony could
say right now," Allen said. Smith left
the team unexpectedly before its
night to Chicago last Fridqy. and the
team has llad no contact with him
"'since. ·

(Continued from B-6) .

t

i

.99~cH.
OFF-THE.aAW CHAINS
ONLY, PLEASE

CYDfLL LAWH

$299
GALLON

Trevor

Dale ·
Lear

Bob .

LOu Ia

•

REG. 3.49

REG.1.49

(four field goals) earned NFC spc- marking the first time previously
suspended WR Michael Irvin will
ciitl·teams honors.
j Dallas: Third-string TE Derek
have practiced with the team since
v./are was rllleased, presumably to Aug. 22. His five-game suspension
has e&gt;pired, and Irvin will. start the
c~atc en3ugh salary-cap room to
Cowboys' ~ext gam~. Oct. I 3 against
si~n a veter•n otfcnsivc linemen fur
· b~~Ckup purposes .... The Cowboys . lhc Arizona Cardinals.... Player of
the we~k : DT Leon Leu
will return . to practice Thursday,
-

.ECHO BAR&amp;
CHAIN OIL.

. SAW CHAINS
SHARPENED

GEO

•

· · Shawn

..

OLDSMOBILE

•

SAVEl

a GARDfH CfHTfR

150 UPPER RIVER RD. (8croaa from KMART)
GALUPOLIS
.
614 446~7826

•

•

Galllpolla' Hometown Dealer

1616 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, OH

446-3672

'

•

,.

,,

~)

••

,,

)

�Outdo.o rs

•

•

Along the River

•,

•

Oct. 6,1996
•

· lzaak Walton League prepares for 75th anniversary observance
affairs.
,
have laken similar positions on lhese zeal for promoting retiponsible outIt helped to sponsor the Land and
door behavior. Under lhe leadership
is~ues, lhe League has maintained its
Water Conservation Fund, whifh is · slrong stance on lhe conslilulional of execulive director Paul Hanson,
used to acquire wildlife habitat and right of citizens to own and use the League's Ouldoor Ethics Prorecreational lands, and' has been firearms.
gram was inilially targeted at hunters
inslrumental in its supRorl of the
One of the more important issues wilh the slogan, "We need to clean
Clean Wat~r Act.
on lhe League's agenda is lhe pas- up our act." 11 now extend's fls mcs·
. Concerned with maintaining bio· sage of the Fish and Wildlife biver- sage of recreating with care 10 lhe
logical diversily and impro.ving . sity Funding lniliative, which pro· enlire ouldoorcommunity, including
wildlife, il lobbies on grazing, wet- poses lo tax recrealional equipmenl skiers, wildlife photographers, bird·
lands and endangered species legis- s~ch as binoculars and backpacks to ' walchers. hikers. climhers and river
runn..ers.
lalion. Unlike many broad-based generate money for wildlife.
As the host of three national and ·
The "lkes" have not lost their
environmental organizations that

By SPORTS AFIEI,.D
sinn was to clean up p&lt;;&gt;lluted walers,
A Hearst Magazine
stop the diversion of streams for
The lzaak Wallon League, with agricu llural and induslrial purposes
350 local chapters and 45,000 mcm· and prevent overfishing.
hers, is approaching its 75th anniver·
Under the leadership of its first
sary in 1997 as one o(lhe mosl pow- ' dirccior, Will H. Dilg, lhc League,
erful voices representing anglers, · almosl immediately took pn olher
,.hunters- and the environment. '
conl'ie rvati(m issues - wetlands
It's accomplishments, Ted Kera- ' preservatioQ, the formation of
sote wrot.e in an article in !he currenl national wildlife refuges. reforest.a·
issue of Sports Arteld. include play- Lion ahd e nding federal land· agening a part in the es1ablishmenl of lhe cies' acling as arms for lhe limber
Black Bass Act wh1ch prohihiiS · and mining industries.
interstate commerce of the spectes,
Organized lhrough )ocal chapters.
the formation of the naltonal w1ldlife the League gave its members not
refuges m Jackson Hole, Wyo., and only fellowship but the opportunity
the upper Mississippi , Biscayne Bay . 10 participale in the hands-on work
Nalional Park and the Boundary of conservation, habitat restoration,
Waters canoe Area Wilderness.
stream monitoring and trail mainte11 also played a.significanl pan in nance.
the purchase of a Bell Jet Ranger
On the nationallevel,lhe League
helicopter and airboats to help U.S. fought for legislation thai promoled
Pis~ and Wildlife Service lawthe organization's rnouo, "Defenders '
enforcement personnel stop water- of soil. air. woods, walers and
Jowl poachers in the Gulf of Mexi- wildlife."
co and lhe creulion of the Land and
·The League has dropped its male
Water Conservation Fund.
exclusivity and continues its work or
Founded by a group of Chicago balancing grass-roots conservation
anglers in 1922, the League's mis- ~ilh a conslant eye on national

OU and

· huhter educ~lion course will be held ler on a I 00 queslion lest to earn certilicalion.
·
·
on,Octl5, 16and 17'frori16-9 p.rn.,
Class size is limited, so preregisaqd Saturtlay,,Ocr. 19 from 9 a.m. lo
.noon al' the Meigs Counly Public lration is required: To pre-register,
Library.
·
..
· call Jim Freeman al The Daily SenCompletion of 1he hunter cduca- . tinel at 992-215S,·exl. 102. Callers
can leave messages after hours. The
tion course is necessaty for all
class is free. All materials are prohunlllt~ wanting to purchase their
vided.
first hunling license. All class ses-

this study and hope all wildlife are
visilors who receive the survey fill il
oul and recurn it," ·s'aid Division of
Wildlife . chief Michael Budzik.
Researchers want people who
receive a survey during separate visils to a wildlife area Ia fill it oul again
and return il.
"We wanlto know what people .
do on each of th~ir trips to the
wildlife area, so we encourage everyone to-nil outthe survey eve a if they,
have answered one earlier," said
Mike Finney, universily project
leader.
Since the study begar six months
~go, more than 7,000 queslionn~ires
have been placed on vehicles P!ll'ked
·at wildlife. areas. About 1.400 sur'
vcys have been completed and ·
returned. ·
"We have found visitorSio Ohio's
wildlife areas are involved in a vari·

WALLY PDU:'S OUTDOOR LIFE .

sions nlust be attended and partici -

.- ----Sports deadlines-----

•
&gt;

intemalional elhics conferences. the
League has sumulared diScusSion o~ '
a vartety Of SUbjeCtS, mcludinJ
poaching, wilderness campsite selec-

•

tion. the· use of motorized acccsJii

leaching single female parenls 10
shoal and hunt, fishing competitions
and catch-and-release angling and,
most important, it provided a forum
on conservalionts fundamental question - whal is the Eanh's carrying
capacity?
'

S

rt b • f
ne S

p0 S

PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
judge slopped umpires from striking;
· saying ·their anger at Roberto Alomar
did not juslify violating their labor
conlracl.
During' a 45:minute hearing,
umpires union head Richie Phillips
railed al baseball officials over last

A WILD PAINT· Jt&gt;S UKE
THAT FOR YOUR
PICK· UP I SID/

-.
By BOB

.

week's incident in which the Balli•.
mol'.\! Orioles _
star second baseman ·
spil al umpiie}ohn Hirsch beck. ·
Afler brief slalements by lawyers
from bolh sides and without hearing
any witnesses, U.S. Dislricl Judge
Edmund Y. Ludwig barred a walkout.
ANNBOYD, a teacher for the visually Impaired at Rio Grande Elementary School, assists Ja"!8s Heady on the Braille Writer.

Teac

NEVER SPEND MV
HARQ·EARNED

MONEY.~

•

g independence
'

for the nomination by winning the National Federa• given the right training all of her .students can grow
tion of the Blind of Ohio award in November 1995 . . up to be productive members in society," said John
By June, Boyd was informed that she was the Smith, first vice president of the National Federa·
single best such educator in the nation and was ' tion of the Blind of Ohio.
,
selected
to
receive
the
honor.
In
addition
to
a
Boyd
credits
By LISA PETERSON
plaque, she was awarded $500 and a paid trip to the some of the
Tlme..Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Watching them inake their convention in Anaheim and asked to give a speech success of her
way from a busy airport tenninal to a bustling hotel at the convention.
years as an edulobby, and seeing them weave .through busy streets
To be recognized as the top educator in •her field . cator to the sup,, iq A_nl!fi_.\li,nt,~Clll)f., .it all c.li£J&gt;e4 fQ.r :An!lJipy&lt;;l, ~ was , result of yelP'S of inn9VJ!live classr.o.om te!(.h· . p,ort of parent~ . •
~eacher for the visually impaired at Rio Gran&lt;;le Ele- · niques am! going beyond the required call of duty.
A network of
mentary Scllool.
·
·
Boyd began teaching 23 years ago and at the parents, from .
Sh·e knew why she had put in the extra hours and time thought 'ihat "lleing a teacher meant dealing students past
why her work meant so much to her - so her stu· with reading, writing and arithmetic." ·
and
present
With . a' degree in elementary education, she meet
. dents would ·one day be that person crossing an
each
began teaching· developmentally disabled children. month for funcbusy intersection, confidently.
Boyd saw these goals as an educator while she After a couple years of teaching, she was asked to&lt; lions outside of
was receiving the most prestigious award in her take on' a vision program at the Rio Grande school. the classroom.
profession, the National Distinguished Educator of
. Through the· years, Boyd has done . more than Parents lend a
Blind Children Award, in Anaheim earlier this year teach the reading, writing and arithmetic that she hand in school
at the National Federation of the Blind's 199!i.con- . originally thought was all that was necessary, she " activities
as
has taught independence and how to function in a well. They have
vention.
While being selected as the .best educator of the sighted wo~ld.
. . l~beled
t))e · ANN BOYD.accepts the Nation·
sight-impaired in the U.S. was definitely a feather
"My math objective in working with ·visually school . wtth al Faderatlon of the Blind of Ohio
in her cap, what Boyd valued most was the chance impaired students Is to bring the world to them in Brat lie spckers. award during their convention In
to be In the presence of independent impaired peo- ways they can understand," she· said. "I have spent .• Boyd · has November 1995.
·
ple and the ability to network with esteemed pro- m0st of my life trying to bring the sighted world seven students
one step closer to my kids, while at the same time this year ranging from pre,schooi thr.ough sixth
fessionals in her field.
With approximately 3,400 irnapired people hoping that sighted people will become a little more grade. The students participate in other classes as
attending the convention, Boyd was surrounded aware of what we so often take for granted."
well as hers.
She has faced the challenge -'\'ith structured
S~e teaches students from five counties -Galwi!h examples of. what a struc'tured classroom cur·
approaches to teaching students Braille, how to use lia, Meigs, Vinton, Jackson and Athens - and also
riculum, such as hers, could produce.
- "When I saw these people," Boyd said, "I said, 'I a slate and style, utilization of a white cane, and helps ou.t in other communities.
··
"In many ways for ab~ut a 100 mile radius, she
know now why I spend the time I do and do the how to type .·
But Boyd's success as an educator can't be is the only solution for a pan~nt of a blind child in
things I.do. I want them (her students) to be like
summed
up in a classroom curriculum. It is ·in her • this .area."
·
that."'
.
. Boyd was no!J1inated for the honor in May, and drive and the high standards she holds for her stu:. .
'A.fter the sixth grade studenis can attend their.
.
·
·
afong , with the l~tter of recommendation, she was · dents. ·
regular
high school or travel to Columbus · to the
"She demand~ excellence from her students, and
asked to submit an essay on her experience of being
a teacher for the visually ImpaireD. She qualified she truly believes that given the riglit skills and Ohio State School for the Blind. ,

.Area educator of the
blind wins national honor

B ,.. =~

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"In addition to studying how O'IJ'
wildlife areas are hegin used, weals?
wa~llodeterrnine h,awmuch rnon:
ey ts bemg spent on local goods ani!
servtces by Reople usmg thessareas," Budzik said. "Resul!s fro'!'
a _1991 U.S . Ftsh and W•ldhfe SerVICe ~urvey ~howed !hal wtldhfe
assoc1a1cd recreauon annually pro,:- .
duces an econam)c ·~~act of abo~t
$2.1 b1lhon for Oh10 s economy.
That figure is no doubt bighill'
today."

NOT ME. I'D

'IOU SHOUI.D GET

The Gr.llip,olis Daily Tribu11e, spans is lhe Salurday before the
The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday Super Bowl.
The deadline for photos and relulTimes-$enll'nel value th~&gt; conl(ibutions !heir readers make 10 !lie spons ed articles for basketball .(summer
sections of these paper,;, and they basketball and related . caljlpS fall
,under the summer sporls deadline)
. will continue to be publ~hed.
However, certain deadlines for . and other winter spans is lhe las I day
of the NBA finals.
submis~ions wi!J be observed.
These deadlines are in place to ·
· The deadline for submissions of
focal baseb~ll- and softball-relale&lt;l allow contributors the time they
photos and relaled articles, from T- . need macquire their pholos from the
ball Ia the majors, as well as other photography studio/developer of
spring and summer spans, is lhe day choice and 10 give the staffs 1he
of the last game of the World Series. chance to publish'these items in the
The deadline for pholos and relat· . appropriate season for those sports.
ed articles for football and other fall

'ety of aclivities such as bird walching, . outdoor photography, mush·
room hunling, target shooting, tield
erial competition, hunting, tishing,
and much more," Finney said.·
"We've also identified visitors from
at' least ten slales outside Ohio from
as far away as Rofida, Mississippi
and New Jersey."
The Division of Wildlife expects
mor~ surveys will be completed and
returned during the upcoming fall
and winter hunting seasons, when
wildlife area usage increases.

Section .C

Sunday, October. 6, 1996

"o,ow conducting survey on state-owned wildlife area~

By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlife ,
ATHENS, Ohio. (AP)- If you
see something on the windshield of
your vehicle while visiling a state
wlldijfe area, it most likely isn 'l a fli cr or a parking ticket Jnslcad, it
probably will be a sUrvey form.
In cooperation with the Pivision
of Wildlife, Ohio University's JnstiIUie for Local Governmenl Admin- .
istration and Rural Development is
studying the recrealional · use and
economic impact of state-owned
wildlife areas. The survey form s,
which feature a drawing 6f a black
bear•. a.re being distributed in 22
wildlife areas across Ohio lhroligh
nexl ApriL
:·'Wildlife arei!S support many
recreational acliv.ities and are imporlanl to the stale 's economy. We
aJ5preciate cilizen participalion in

·Hunter education course dates set
'
POMEROY - A 10-hour Ohio pants must sco.re 80 percent or bet-~;

'

.

You remember Myron aijd June Scin~s
Duffield, of course.
You should. After all, !hey are former Middleport residents, grew up in the town and both
graduated from Middleport High School. But
!hat was over 40 years ago so maybe you don't
really remember.
. Let me refresh your memory.
~yron . and June have made a number or
visits to Meigs County over the years and
you'vl' seen Myron pounding oui tunes on the
calioPe/ housed in that beautiful ciNus wagon.
By the way, did you know that he mad~ .both
of them at his home? A natural musician,
Myron taught himself lo play the nostalgic
ins\rument and lhe couple carne back to Meigs
County the rtrsl time in June, 1972, to take
part in a parade which moved from Middleport
to Pomeroy. Over the years, Myron and Jun,e
have been on hand for ijerilage Weekends at
which lime Myron entertained you.
The couple has resided in a number of ·
states over the years, Myron having beep .
employed by AT&amp;T for ·five years and RCA
for 25 years in addil,ion to employment ,with
other companies. ·.·
.
As a stUdent at Middlepon Hi~h School.
~yron studied music under Band Direclor
Bernard Krinke and also sang in a barbershop
quartet. His natural ability with music grew
over the years and Myron now plays some 2-t
instruments and has •orne unusual pieces such
a seven foot chimes which he uses to entertain .
. Of course, lhe caliope is a fascination· to' ·
most of us and iiS popularity is auested to by
1he fact thai Myron and June before his retire,
rnent made some 20 to 30 appearances a year
with the wagon and instrument across the
country. Since "'}iring, the bookings have
reached 50 to 60 annually. They have founded
lhe Kingston Music Co., and through' the corn.
pimy they travel about the' country filling
bookings ·not only wilh the caliope which
works okay in the summer but in the winter,
Myron has developed an indoor program
which he present.s using his many musical
instruments, some quite unusual.
At lhe present time, Myron is attempting.to
get listing in. the Guinness Book of Records lis
lhe "Caliope King of the World" on lhe basi's
of having played 75 different caliopes all over
the United Stales.
Most •recently, June and Myron ha11e been
residing .ih Coshocton but their visits1 back 10
. Meigs County arid to Middleport hav• reminded them of !heir "roots''. And you know what?
The happy ending is lhal !hey have moved to
Middleport and are residing in lhe .francis
Anderson property on South Second Avenue.
You're bound to hear. more about chis active
couple. Do join me in welcoming lh~m back 10
Meigs County and Middleport.
...
And there's hound to me a lot of you who
remember Carl Weese. ·
'
Carl taught in Meigs County schools for 50
years, especially in the Southern Local School
District where he spent 34 years.
:
Carl began ·his long teacl!ing career at t""
Mbrning Star School. He· also taught Sunday
school at lhe Asbury Methodist Church in
Syracuse for 35 years.
(
In his long years of teaching he ,really inust
have had quite an inflllence on many young
people. I'm sure many of them will be interesi·
ed in knowing that Carl will observe his 90th~
birthday on Thursday, Oct. 10. Cards will
reach him at P.O. Box 133, Syracuse.
Happy birth'day, Carl.

-------

And a peck on the cheek of a classmate by
a six-year-old boy becomes a national incident. I look for :valentines to be outlawed any
minute: Aren't we over· reacting? Do keep
smiling.
'

.

Soldiers' Reunion. There was gied Brothers building on Vine .
tors. Oral lraditfon has it
By JAMES SANDS
even a cannon especially made Street. There was also a large pile of
Spacial, Correspondent
, . that Jenny Lirid was enter·
for lhe occdsion in 1888 by a scrap melal n~r the Ohio Valley
One of lhe things ·missing from tained at lhe Our House,
Stockyards.(on Pine ~tree!). The pile
Gallipolis foundry.
making the· GallipoliS&gt; City. Par~ "-"" but itts, u.Wi-kelY: that1 she; h •• f "'''
was aboul 180 feet long, 20 feet
complete living · museum is the gave a concert there.
All lhe .canno~s (acttlally wide arid about five feet high. It was
ahscm;e of u Civil War cannl)n. Such
In the early days of
one was a rnorl~r piece) left guarded by members of the Ameri, was nill always the case, as anesled steamboating small can'
the City park in the fall of 1942 can l::egion. On Oct. 31 shots were
to hy the piclure accompanying nons were used on the
when they were donated by the tired by the L~gion guards when
today's article. It boats and at the landing lo
city fathers as scrap me!al. It lhieves tried Ia take some of the
shows a gun in the announce to the lawn the
0
was all a part of the drive to scrap.
upper end of the · arrival of lhe boat. fonucolleci
metal .for use during
park ncar Stale nalely lhe cannon was
W.W.II.
The !heme of the drive
The city manager had even g~ven
Slrcel. lfl fact during eventually replaced by the
was:
''Don't
be
a
slacker-leave
lhe
guards the orders to "shoal 'o
year. 1907, there whislle and· the calliope.
no
useless
'metal
behind.:'
In
·
hit"
anyone who tries to take even a
_,.··.· 1ha1
were four 1111nnons in
In 1862 that 1850 brass
one' week's time nearly ISO pin ~ff the pile. In lhe pile were auto
lhe park. A couple of cannon was nred again to
tons of scrap metal were col- fenders, cypewriters, pipes, beds,
the cannons were the warn some Confedera1es
lected . ' Major collections bedsprings. cages, vaults, cash -regis·
same ones the area mil ilia had used who were doing some ·
besides the park cannons, lers and of course pins. Scrap metal
~' protect the town fro~ Fortifica- . spying· just across 1he
included a gasoline locomo- . in 1942 was selling for about $17
tion Hill durjng the fall of 1862 ·and Ohio River ftorn Fortificalive, an 85 horsepower 15 ton per con. The cicy park cannons were
durihg Morgan's raid in July, IH63 . _ tion Hill. Once again the
engine. a 65 horsepower spld 'to Meyer Maggied at his COSI.
In 1hc Tall of 1862 one of lhe can- brass cannon backrtred.
engine, 60,000 pounds ·of He sold !hem to a broker. There
nons used to protect the town was an
By 1863 llie lawn had
scrap from the Keener Sand were some rumors,lhat lhe cannons
old brass cannon. That particular four iron cannons. These
Co. and a I 2 ton printing were kepi 'by these brokers until
piece dated, to about .1850. It :"as ~ere moved a· couple of CITY PARK. This 11107 photo of
Gallipolis City Park ehows the bendatand and press1 from the Gallia Times after W.W.II and then sold. Perhaps
first used m .! 8,51 when Jenn.y Lmd,: , umes dunng July,.1863 as 1 Civil War c•nnon. The river Will up which II whv the wharfboat appeara to be 1t offiCe, then located in the Park- Gallipolis' caMons exist somewhere
lhe fa,mo~s .swed•sh N•ghungalc,
they sat both o.n Fort1ficak 1 1 in 11107• Thera w- four cannons In thet·perk.
·
er building in the 400' block of else.
made her bnef appearance 10 Gal- t10n H•ll and on Brand- par IV&amp;
.•
·
, .
Second Avenue.
'
· Jipolis. When th.c stpamboat carrying slelter Heights.. Two of ..
war
1he
cannons
were
put
After
the
Langley
and
lhe
fourth
cannon
wa_s
. James Sanda 11 a epaclal cor·
Jenny Lind neared !he Old French those four cannons. \vere, actually
Ove~500 Gallipolis studenls and
reepondant of the Sundly
City the brass cannon was 10 "belch Confederate cannons. They had made in Gallipolis al one of the in storage. It appears !hat it was in I
888
when
lhe
city
decided
to
display
,'
teachers
canvassed
the
cily
door
to
!own's
foundries.
The
latter
piece
Ti~a-s.ntlnll.
Hie address 11:
out" a tribute to lhis famous visiHir. been captured at Lewisburg, W.Va.
Civil
War
cannons
in
the
City
P,.k.
.
85
Willow
Dr.,
Springboro,
Ohio
was
nicknamed"The
John
Damron,"
door
IQOking
for
scrap
metal.
Some
:Unfortunalely the cannon backfired One of the cann011s was brought
Gallipolis
~os1ed that year a great of lhe sc~p was taken to .the Mag,
45086.
Ia
honor
the'
mayor
of
Gallipolis.
:and slightly' injured two of ils opera· here frail) Pittsburgh by William
.
.
.

-~
-

to" JC 30'" EcllpH w1th rrnegr~ Skirt
• Std. ;.!1, 3/~HP Motor and .45 a.l Cap.
60' M32' White or Bone S599.99
60" • 38' Wtitt or Bone Sst9.91

Je11er11on Ute 1.5 O.P.F. Toilet
• F.Jush.S on 1.6 Gallons per flush
• 16'/.•w X 26~~td X 27'11~h

'49.99 White

'

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.·

tO" )I 32" Vltlor
""" Opo..... Sldrt

• 6 S1d. Jeta, 3/IHP Mol~

rl:SA MSON .

and so a. C.o.
eo· • 32' 'M1Il* or'Bone

S591Uti

the

VALLEY
.

.•

Jet. Rt. 35 &amp; 160- Gallipolis, Ohio

•

555 Park St. - Middleport, Ohio
•
· Phone: 614-992'16611
St~re Hours:. Mon.-Fri. 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Sat. 7:00a.m. to 3:00 p.m. ·

Phone: 614 446·2002
Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Sunday 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p~m.

'

..

j

R&amp;SUPPLY

,.

;

•·

•

"

'\'i •

~· .·
!

.,

�•

•

'

"(

'

'!}age C2 • ....... e:~.n...

!~~~ere~!i~~..~~2~.?w~i~~~~~~~ w~~~~.

r

Tbc younJ man appeared quiet,
but scM-assured, not shy. This seat
mate of mine, on a train from Lon·
don to Edinburgh, was neatly
dressed and his dark hair was shon
and combed with a pan. Dark·
rimlllCd eye glasses framed his wellchiocled features. I liked him imrne'diately. He reminded . me of a
· young~'!' version of our family physician ip Denver.
George and I had raced off to
Scotland again this September. We
so e~Qoyed our trip hiking the West
Highland Way last fall, that when
friends from Kansas said, ·"Come
over to Sootland and hike it with us,"
we thought it was a splendid idea.
Now, here l was sitting bcsipe
this unknown young rnll!l who had
graciously offered me a seal next to
him. George and I had hurried to
catch this pa"icular t~n . connectin g. to our final destination of Glasgow, and the availability of seating
was limited. We saw no seats together (except .for one · lady who was
occupying six seato with her two
dogs) and .the train was beginning to

RUTI.AND -- The Riltland et.1n:1t of Clvist will celebrlle its !67th
anniversary with homccomina on SWiday. Oct. 13.
Guest speaker will be Dave Lucas and special musK: will .be_pn:scnted b)'
"New Vioions Trio" and soloist, Jane Wisc ..The morning ocrvicc will be fol·
lowed by a basket dinner and afternoon program in observance of the
church's commemoration of its long hiilory.
·
' The Church of Christ was orgapized on Nov. 8, 1929 in a log cabin
belonging to Elder Elijilh Rathburn. The cabin was locjlted'on Happy Hollow Road just norlh of the churc.IQ prcocnt site. At thO first organizational
meeting more than 30 Meigs Coutliy pioneer.~ attended. The church ledger
records the 15 charger members as Elder Elijah Rathburn and his wife,
Polly, Mr. and Mrs. William Sargent and so, John, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin
Downing, William Parker •nd his wife. Betsy, Mr. and Mrs. Sehal Wil~ams
and his mother, Gideon Barker, May ·Bolton, and John Humphrey.
·

'
The ground upon which
the church now reSts was deeded to the trustees
of the Church of Christ Oct. 20, 1885 by J.N, and Clariooa Rathburn. ,
Trustees accepting on behalf of the church were Stillman C. Larkin, William ·
.Parker II, and W. R. Bailey. A new church was completed in 1893 upon this
site with J.C. Zollar, president of Hiram College, presiding at the Aug. 7
dedication. Over the years the churth has built a parsonage in 1991, moved
the church over its present day basement in 1939, and built an i.ddition at the
back of the church in 1972.
As the Rutland Church of Christ moves toward 200 years of existen&lt;e;
the congregation invites the public to join in its celebration. Sunday school ·
will begin at 9:30 a.m. with church al1d communion service following at
10:30 a.m. A bask.et dinner will be held at noon with afternoon services to
begin at 2 p.m.

----~Meigs
· Ill

TRACl CROW AND ROBERT KINCAID

. £1

I

Crow-Kincaid

•;•: PdMEROY -- Mr. and Mrs.
Kincaid is a 1989 graduate of
; Jlanny Crow ·of Pomeroy announce Waharna High School and received
the "engagement and approaching his bachelor's of business adminis', fllarriage of their daughter, Traci . lration degree with a concentration
' 'Oanicllc, to Roben L. Kincaid, Ill, in accounting from Bluefield State
~on of Susan Kincaid of New
College, Bluefield, W.Va. in 1994:
;:}luvcn, W.Va. and Roben L. Kin- . He is employed as the head golf pro. caid, II of New Haven.
fessional at Hocking Hills Country
l
. .crow is a 1994 graduate of Club in Logan .
·'.'k-!cigs High School and will receive
The wedding will be Dec. 21 , at ·
'·:her associate degree in nursing from 5:30 p.m. at Trinity Church in
Pomeroy.
~~~ ~ocking College,in December.

l

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free servi&lt;e to nonprofit groups wishing to announ&lt;e
·meeting and spedal events. The
calendar is not ·daipOd tq promote sal.es or fund raisers .of any
type. Items are priated as space
permits and cannol be guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
SUNDAY
LONG BOTTOM -- Homecoming, Long Bottom United Methodist
Church, Sunday, 9:30 a.m. Sunday
school, 9:30a.m. worship, dinner at
12:15; program at 1:30 p.m . .Rev.
Norman Butler. speaker, music by
Disciples in Song.
RACINE -- Senior Sainto Sunday
to be observed with homecoming at
the Carmef-Sutton United Methodist
Church, Su 0day, program at 1:30
p.m. ~

.

' MIDDLEPORT.-- Hobson Christian Fellowship, Sunday, 7:30 p.m. ;
John Elswick, speaker; . special

'

SYRACUSE -- Syracuse Fire
Department open house Sunday

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

· RACINE -- Racine Chapter 134
Order of the Eastern Star regular
meeting Monday. 7:30 p.rn·. Election
of officers. All members urged to
attend. Refreshments.

.
.

·TUESDAY
LETART FALLS-- Parent Advi-.
sory Committte, 2 p.m. at Letarl
Ele!Tientary School.

~

by MedFiight, DARE, Meigs County
· . WILKESVILLE-- Wilton .Civic . Sherifrs Department Canine Unit
Association dedication , of new and 'the lligl)way Patrol. Door

Rose receives teachinQ award
POMEROY -- Mary C. .Rose,
fom1er kinderganen teacher in Middleport, received the prestigious
'"feacheriffic" award presented by
Walt Disney World Aug. 24 at the
. Contemporary Resort and Conven- ·
tion Center in Oi-lando, Fla.

For her inn_ovative teaching ideas
which involved drastically improv·
ing the writing scores of Lake Sybe·
lia Elementary School's ·fourth grade
students, Rose received a trophy of
Micke~ Mouse and a check for
$2500. Her school also received
$500.
Since leaving Middleport for
Orlando, Mary has been active in
conducting m,any teacher worksljops. writing for Scholastic magazi~es, and attending several national
·conferences to represent the teach·

TERRAMI VANCE AND JOHN WRIGHT

Vance-Wright
.·, CHESHIRE - Michael apd Angel
Vance of Cheshire announce the
engagement of their daughter. Terrami Michelle to John Edward Wright,
son of Donald and Evelyn Wrig/lt of
Gallipolis.
··
.
·
. Vance is a 1996 graduate of River
Valley High School an~ is planning

Wedding policy
_ • The Sunday 'Times-Sentinel
· regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason. counties as nCws
and puhlishcs wedding stories and
photographs without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards 6f timeli·
. ness. The n ~ w spapcr prefers to publish accounts of weddings ._,soon as
possible after the event.
·
To he published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
ihc publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
,Along ~lC River mu.r be received by
the editorial department by Thursday. 4 p.m. prior to · th~· date of pub)icatiop.
'
·
.Those not making the 60-day
deadline will be published during
the dail ~ paper as space allows.
' Photographs of either the bride or
the bride anG groom may be pub·
lished with wedding 'stories if
desired . Photpgraphs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will not
be, accepted. Gfnecally, snapshots or
instant-developing photos arc not of
acceptable quality. ·
All material ~ ubmitted for publi·
cation is subject to cditong.

f

J

Correction
Two. errors were nlade in. 'the

ing: profession

in science and
reading.
ln. 1992
s~e

was

se lee ted as
her school's
represenrati ve
for
the
Orange County Teacher of
the Year honM!lry C. Rose
ors. Last May
she celebrated the' completion of 25
years in teaching.
Mary is the granddaughter of
Jewell Curtis, Pomeroy, and the
daughter of the late Ruth Francis,
also 'of Pomeroy. She is married to
Torn Rose and lives in Winter
Springs: lia~

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...,_.

to attend .the Uni~ersity of Rio
Grande in the spring.
engagement article of Melissa John·
Wright is a ,1988 graduate of Gal- son and Matthew Henry appearing
lia Academy High S10hool. He' is in the Spet. 22 edition of the Sunday
ernploy,ed at Krogcrs of Gallipolis Times-Sentinel.
while attending the University of
Johnson is the daughter ·of Rev.
Rio Grande majoring in communi- · Donnie' and Vonda Johnson and
c.ations.
Henry is a fomer studen~ of Gallia
Academy High School.

pumpkins are the peop_le who work soil. "Analyze, qefinitely," Water- ' to marry with what, combininS: a
hard. They don't overlook any of the man says. ''And if you want to be ':"inning pumpkin with, say, a win- ·
very competitive, I think you might ning squash in hopes of producinj a
Like Charles s·ehulz's Linus, Ray details."
At night, he tucks in his aspiring . spend up to 'five hours a day on the well-pocked pumpkin offspring. i .
Waterman spends the fall waiting for
"The female blossom has a baby ,
prize·winners,
covering them with plant."
the
great
pumpkin.
The
greatest
PAUL AND VIRGIE BUCKLEY .
,
"Everything is right down to a pumpkin under it. The male is a sinpumpkin ever grown. The 1,000· plastic and blankets. Frost•on the
pound record-breaker. A-pumpkin pumpkin is not ·a good thing. Cover- science," ·says Craven, .who always . glc 'blossom with a bloom and a sta· ·
•
ing them wards off disaster and plants his pumpkin seeds on May 4 men," Craven explains.
wonh 50 grand.
To breed a better pumpkin, one
The World Pumpkin Confedera- makes them grow -faster. On a good so they will peak for the Weigh-Off.
COOLVILLE -- Paul and Virgie ried Sept. 22, 1946) n Athens. They
Craven,
like
mos
t
other
growers,
must
"peel the petals off and all you
tion
Waterman
is
founder
and
day,
a
pumpkin
can
put
on
!0
Buckley of Route 2, Coolville, are the parents of a daughter. Teresa
pounds.
·
spends
winters
in
search
of
the
right
·have
is the (st~en) swab exposed,
president
.,.is
.offering
a
$50,000
observed their 50th wedding (Dan) Davis ofCape~oral, Aa.. and
seeds.
''You
have
to
get
a
seed
that
(and
then
you) rub the stamen right
How
big
will
the
winner
be?
prize
to
the
person
or
team
to
break
anniversary with celebrations at a son. Rick (Mary Jo) of Proc"Envision
a
small
Volkswagen,
an
has
proven
itself
over
and
over
up
against
(the female .blossom). It
Sebastians in Parkersburg Sept; 20· -torville. They also have a grandson, the 1,000-pound barrier.
Saturday, the World Pumpkin· orange one," says Waterman, .who again. I only take the very best seed travels down and pollin~es." he
· and at tbeir Hockingpon campsite Wesley Alan Buckley, and a grand·
lines."
says.
"W:'igh-Off"
is beld in Clarence; raised a 780..P9under in 1991 .
Sept. 21. Their children, family and daughter, . Laura Ann Buckley of
That
means
corresponding
with
The plan: "I do a lot of crossipg
N.Y;.
which
will
be
crowded
with
friends attended .
Proctorville.
people
and
their
pumpkins
seeking
Giant
parentage
past
winners
an.d
buying
or
trading
with
heavy pumpkins. I want to gel
Mr. and Mrs. Bucl\ley wer~ marfoftune and glory.
.
Of course, Volkswagen-size pump- to get seeds with good ancestors. a pumpkin smaller and heavier." '
• For most of the pumpkin grow· kins don't spring from the kind of ' "I've paid some growers as much as
Success is measured in ripd
'
thickness, and Craven has gotten his
ers, however, the money is not the · seeds you pick up at a local hard- $20 a seed," Craven Mys.
Once planted,'Craven keeps daily. rinds as thick as 14 inches. 'Thai's
main motivation.
ware. store.
·
" It's like running !he four-minute · The really big ones almost logs. "Everything is recorded irnponant because the bigger the
mile or a moon shot," says Water- al_.;ays come fro~ winning parents when you spray •insecticide; what pumpkin, the more .likely it is JP
man, 46. "It's a big thing for human· that, so far, all have been Atlantic · was the mother, what was the father. split. ·.
.
.: :
:
ity. A hug~ thing. This is fast bccom- Giants, the variety originated by It's very detailed. When ,the pumpkin starts to grow, I take, daily meaSplitting is the pumpkin growc.l''s
ing the Olympics of gardening."
pumpkin pioneer Howard Dill.
~·
Why do they do it? "To see if it
Past winners become stud pump- surernents and· graph them. With.in worst dream:
r,
. .
.·,
can be done," says Laurie Hodges, kins, yielding aro.und 500 to . 700 ·the first .30 days I can tell" if it's
·
Last year ·craven: 37, lost;·a
commercial vegetable specialist for . seed,s each. Thiny seeds are returned likely to be a winner.
the University of Nebraska.
, to. the grower, while the rest are Overdoing it works
pumpkin that was, at the time of the
The real trick is in knowing what big split, 922 pounds.
•
Pumpkins must be present to win. divided up and sold to members of
"We think there's a very strong the World Pumpkin ·Confederation.
possibility that we're going to have (Membership: $15'a year.)
Knowing a pumpkin's family
(a 1,000-pound~r) this ye'll"," Wat_er- ·
• man says .. ''If the Lord is willing to vine can beget an eve~ bigger off.
allow mankind to achieve this feat. spring.
then we' ll definitely see it. •
"Last year, five of the top 20
Currently, the record recognized pumpkins came from a pumpkin that
by the confederation is 836 pounds, weighed only 567 pounds, " says
·awarded in 1993.
Don Langevin, author of "How to
(A rival pumpkin organization Grow World Class Giant Pumpkins"
called the \}reat Pumpkin Common- (Annedawn, $17.95). "The seeds
wealth claims it has beaten that. _It ·~ahat came from that pumpkin pro.credits Herman Bax of Brockville,
uced seven pumpkins tha~ wcjghed
Ontario, with growing .a 990- over 800 pounds."
·
·pounder.)
And a seed is only as good as its
Others who practice the "spon nunurer. "If you 'i(Yant to become
hubby" qf giant-pumpkin growing involved in the spon-hobby, usually
also feel the passion .
we say you have to get some experi"l'rn in the office most' of the ence with the ·_variety first," says
time until pumpkin season comes, Waterman, who quickly adds: "Not
then I'm in my patch.'' says Noi'rnan to say that~ first-timer can 't do.real
Craven,
a Stouffville, Ontario, ·real well. There all levels of the spon,
MR. AND MRS. GEORGE SHI)ENIAKIER
estate broker and grower of the 836- just like there aie in bike racing."
'
Michelle
Gills,
Assistant
Pharmacist,
krot!er
pound pumpkin. "I spend as much
Serious great pumpkin conACCESS to Human Resoun;e Development
as four hours a day. It's constant tenders believe in total plant care.
work.
The
people
wjth
the
big
Total
plant
care
starts
with
the
HiLlARD ' · Mr. · and · Mrs. ,tounty celebrated their 50th wed·
Sarah McGrew, Arthritis PrcJiram, 01)
i G~otge Wisley Shoemaker of !ding anniversary Sept. 28. at a celeLisa-Koch, Audiologist, lnhearina .
1 Htllard and formerly, of Gallia lbration with family and friends .
·Veieran 's Memorial Hospital Jlome H~th
\
Easy Spirit.
\
Judy Jenkinson, Community Service Program, OU
College of Osteopathic Medicine
COMf /IV ~OON AND Hf W'"f.'IT S PllfW
Meigs County Health·Department
C.(1ucolat...Siac~aturai•Block Printed.
With the family reunioo seasqn should not exceed 300 words and
Woodland Center, Inc.
Chocolate Printed
quickly approaching many will be .~ must be s~bmitted within 30 days of
Meigs County .TB Office and Health Clinic
submitting anicles of family activi- occurrence.
·.
ties f9r publication. ·
No exceptions will be made.
Continuity of Care ·
To ensure prompt publication, the
All material submitted for publi·
Margie Lawson, DDS, Racine Dental Clinic
•· Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The cation is subject to editi~g . Articles
Alic~ Hawthorne, LWS, O'Bieness Memorial Hospitai
: Daily Sentinel requests that anicles will be published 'as soon as possi·
• Molly Varner, Southeastern Ohio Breut and
~. be neatly typed and double spated . ble.
t fo. r easy editing. Reunion items
Cervical Cancer Project
•••
..,
••
Dr. David Faro, ~PM, F~nth City Foot Clinic
f,
.. •••
"·
Cheryl Sprinkle, Lifeline of Ohio, Organ and Tissue ,
• Donation .
••
,;
- Rockspriop Rehab Centerr
~:
•
Anwar Eye Center
.
r; ,
Dr. Robinson &amp; Dr. Kime, D.C., Meigs County
Chiropractic Clinic
Meigs County Council on ~glng, Inc.
•.
.
Holzer Medical Ce~ter/Veteran's Memorial Hospital
Satywan Chhabria, internist and
Mick Davenport, Dig Bend Health &amp; Fitness Center
Pat Pletcher, Gallia ·Jackson-Meigs Boal'li of Alcohol,
~ family practitioner, has opened offices in
Drug Addiction &amp; Mental Health Scnkes
~ the Meigs Medical Building, adjacent to
Hospice, Meigs County

Buckleys mark 50th ·

LETART FALLS -- Letart T!&gt;wnship Trustees meeting Monday, 7
p:m. in the office building.

·startiilg II a.m. with ~monstrations

singing.

..

PARTICIPANTS

•Shoemakers1mark 50t~ l

I.

· ··

.Reunion policy · .

· ·

.

CHICK THI CWIIfiiDUOilll YOUR

:·

.r:·

t: ' '

:: ".

~ ~ ·~r.

CHfCKTHi CWIIRIDI fOl AlL YOUR

*

Premier
Medical
Resources

PRACTICE OPENS

•'

Providing Service the
Old-Fashioned Way.

~ V~terans Memorial Hospital.

RoproducUon Slze14x22

Whlte'o Mill, Alheno,

·Here's your chance to ~wn a piece·of Alhens hisiory- _a nostalgic view of While's Mill along the •
Hocklog River. This patntlng II available tn a llmlted edttlon·, signed and numbered lithograph for
· only $65.00 Framing Is available upon request
Mr. Slahl has recently c6mpleteci other new works Including Cape·Haneras Lighthouse Ocr~~ke
·Lighthouse, The Gordon Greene Paddlewheel, Portland Head LighlhQUse The Americ~n Queen ·
Si!ting Bull, and many others loo numerous to mention.' ·
·
'
'
'

.

.

'

-·-

. ~ · For.a1;1 appointment residents may call
992-3632. Dr. Chhabria's office hours are:
Nlondays-1 to p.m. ·
Wednesdays ·"9 a.m.-to 1 p.m.
Thursdays- 1 p.m. to 1·p.m.
'
.
Fridays • 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
f· Dr. Chhabria is also working in
afflliatlo.n With Veterans · Memorial
.~ Hospital.

.

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Call us now for your durable
mediad supplies and in-home
· hourly care service needs

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THE FOLLOWING KMART HAS A STUDIO OPEN EVERY DAY
Mon. • Sat. 1,0 AM • 7 P""' On S!-m. 10 AM ( or .tore opening, If
later)· 6 PM (or store oloalng, If earlier) GALLIPOLIS

_,...,__

infonned me he was going to Inver- ian
minister.•
ness, Scotland, to visit a fri end who Again, curiosity
was being ordained. We chatted made me ask,
about the beauty of Inverness for a "What did your
while, a place I'd only read aboul father say when
and wanted to see 0 n this trip. He you told him you wanted to becoqje
was interested in our planned hike an Episcopalianr· "He wao very
on the trail and what we liked about understanding," was his reply.
Scotland.
.
•·
Not wanting to be too intrusive,
.In the meantime, George W11s
but with natural curiosity, "I finally sandwiched between women at the
asked him if he was a student jn a table who were intent on eatitls,
local ~nivers ity. His answer was not reading and knitting. While rjl&gt;t
too surprising. He was returning intending to be rude, they had left
horne from a summer in Egypt him no foot space. (Perhaps he
where he had been in the Sinai would hav~ been better off sitting ,
studying religion. He had .~ . with the dog.)
·
attending Oxford and had just been
•·
excepted into the Seminary School
We left the no-longer-otranger•IR
at Cambridge. Having previously Edinburgh, but not before I'd made
been told Presbyterians. and Episco· him promise to write every Chriltpalians were the majority denornina- · mas and to visit us on future trips ~o
tions in Scotland, !'had to ask. Yes, the United States. He assured me we
he wanted to be ordained in the would he;u- from him yearly. J!in
Episcopal Church. As George and 1 confident he is "a man of his wor4."
an end an Episcopal Church, th e
Dorothy Soy,._,nd""' huobMd - . . .
d
1
f
d
•
·
·
.
lorme~y
ol yooro
liolgeogo
County,
moved
young .man an
oun t,.e coollct- oboutlh,..
ond now
- t ibliok
la
dence amusing. However, to my houoo, toeing lho Ohto Rt- l•t tool!"'
amaz,ement, he told ~e his father •-uoo.
t

By KATY KELLY
USA TODAY

tl)CCting at 7 p.m.

If you have ever dreamed, of owning a
·• ·log home, now is the tim~•.

lady if anyone was sittiliS in two
seats together wbecc some packages
were piled on one seat, she replied
her dog was there. Yes. sure enough,
thercwasadoglyingacrossthefoot
area of both seats. That is when the
young man just ~aek of there told
me I could sit with him. He moved
, luggage and a coat to accommodate
me. George took an empty seat in a
table seating arrangement just
beyond there.
The trains in the United Kingdom
are extremely punctual, quiet and
very fast. This train was one of the
- ~rY fast" as it stoppt,d infrequently. O~r route took us from London
via Edinburgh where we changed
trains and went on to Glasgow. The
total trip was about a five-hour ride.
My seat companion and I made
• small talk as tl)e· beautiful scenery
passed · by. He pointed out several
towns or buildings he thought might
be of interest to me. The eastern
coastal area of England is especially
beautiful and he had trave 1ed. it
many times. He said his home, .
where he gre.w up and his parenn

Growing great pumpkins an all-consum·ing passion~

community calendar-----

Wilkesville Community Center, · prizes.
Sunday, 2 p.m . Donors and supporting sponsors to be recognized.
MIDDLEPORT -- Homecoming
Refreshments.
services, Ash·Street Frcc"!ill Baptist
Church, Middlepo'rt, Sunday.
RACINE ·- Descendants of Vic· Potluck dinner, 5 p.m. with specia,l
tor and Elizabeth Graber Neutzling, singing and preaching by Rev. Mark
·
reunion, Star Mill Park, Racine, · Morrow.
Sunday. noon. Video of GeiJllan rel atives will be shown. Take covered MONDAY
r
dish .
RACINE -- Racine Village CounHEMLOCK GROVE -- Home- cil, 7 p.m. Monday, regular station at
·
coming will be observed at the Star Mill Park.
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Sunday. Morning worship, 9:30a.m.
SYRACUSE --Sutton Township
Sunday school, 10:30 a.m.' -pot!uck Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m., Syra·dinner, 12:30 p.m.; homecoming cus~ Municipal Building . •
~
celebration, 2 p.m.
.. CHESTER -- An open hou se will
DANVILLE -- Danville. Church be held at·Chester Elementary Mon·
of Christ, special services, 7 p.m. ~t day, 6 p.m. followed by a short PTO
the Danville Church of Christ; Sunday, 10:30 am. and 6 p.m. Denver
Hill, Foster, W.Va., speaker.

JftutbaV Gl!as...Jhzdbul• Page C3

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Rutland Church of Christ
to mark 167th. anniversary

ments

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, W~

SUnday, October 6, 1996

Sunday, October 6, 11118

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

ulbu! -

t

..,_,__..,.._.,.._.tit oursi i i li i.: ..frl. M

•

~ 1-----~~------------~--~~--~~~~~

Sat. ..5 a SUn. 1·5

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(304) 273-97l5
1-800-319-5307

Thank

you

to

the

followi ng·

businesses for your support in
making the hcallh fair ~uc h a
succe:ss thi s year. .
,
I. G&amp;M Fuel Company

2. Klng's Hardware
3. Office Service &amp; Supply
4. Brown Food Service
S. Orogan· Warner lnsarance
6. Middleport Trophies &amp;Tees
7. Swil!hcr &amp; Lohse Plmrmcay
8. Hohllrt Sa les &amp; Service

9. RD. Wilson, Sons &amp; Co.
iO. Sam's Cl"b
it.

Hoi zer Hospital and Veteran's
MemOJial Hospital will do
blood ' typl,ng and hemoglobin
tests free of charge. Qleck
your streSs level by taking
stress test, then let
m8$sage therapist relax you
neck and shoulders with a
massage. ,

Come a11d try rhe up-Io-date

�•

Page C4 • .... • 1 .-.... nul

Sunday, October 6, 1118

Pomeroy • Middleport • G.IUpoHa, OH • Point Pleaunt, W~

- Sunday, October 6, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport • GalllpoHs, OH • Point PIHNnt, WV

Hasbro unveils 1997 G.L Joe ..
line that incl·udes female pilot
By IKE FLORES

•

Auociated Preee Writer
CAPE CAN AVERAL. Fla. CAP) - The latest G.l . Joe is not just one of
the guys.
The new line of ac tion figures un veiled Friday at the Kennedy Space
Cente r features a wolllan - a U.S. Army helicopter pilot dressed in combf
.gear and' armed, ready to airlift the wounded out of battlefield areas.
•
It 's not the fi rst time th at the Hasbro Toy Group has come OUI with ~
woman. but the first fe male toy- a.G.l. nurse brought out in 1967 - "'"S
a marketing fizzle.
.
:
, Boys didn 't want to play with a "girl toy," and there w.:refew, il any,-tJll.lectors bac k then, COm pany OfficialS said.
I
Today, there are an estimated 500.000 G.l . Joe collectors. ·" And this
0

•

female is in direct responae to consumer rcquesls," said G.l. Joe Mhrkctmg

Director Karen Lehman.
·
;:wefeel that thi s is a natu ral, and we predict it wi ll be ex tremely popO·
lar and a big seller. "
·
.
The new fi gures {retailing from.$25 to $45} will' be a sure hit. predittcd
Mike Herz, organizer of a collectors' convention expected 10 anracl scver~l­
thousand people to the space center this weekend .

We will be.offering.a · .
"FREE" Blood Pressure Clinic :

CHRISTOPHER AND NICOLE WALLIS .

Meade..;Wallis

MATTHEW AND HEAllfER I'VliN!I

On

BIDWELL - Nicole Lynn Meade
. Music was provided by soloists,
of Bidwell and ·Christopher Ray Stephanie Campbell and Bobby
WaDis of Bidwell were united in Gordon and pianist, Gwen Phillips.
marriage Sept. 7 at Trinity United .
The bride was given in marriage
GALLIPOLIS - Heather Lynn length, white satin ll,OWn and gloves.
·VERNON AND' JODI JONES
Methodist
Church.
Clyde
Ferrelle
by
her father.
Hastwell
and
Matthew
Thomas
••
The grobm 's father was the best
JEFFREY AND KIMBERLY RATUFF
i
I
performed t~e . double-ring ceremoMaid of honor was Angie
Evans were.united in marriate Aug. man, while the groom's brother,
·\ ny.
·
Arledge, and best man was Darelle
24 at the First Presbyterian Church Christopher Evans, served as the
Nicole
is
the
daughter
of
Thomas
·Patrick.
in Gallipolis. The bride is the first gr~m ·s man. ,In QJemory of the
GALLIPQLIS • Jodi Lea Dailey Ed Jones,.father of the groom .
·daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick J. · bride's brother. PFC Fredrick J. and Vernon Edward Jones, Jr. were
.
•Jodi is the daughter of Joe and
: GALLIJ!'6L'IS · ' Kimberly D. fabri c flowers and fe~tured a pour . R. and Vic kie E; Meade.
SCOTT AND ANN DOifiNE
Hastwell Ill of Gallipolis. The HastweiiiV was named as honorary united in marriage Aug. 6 at Chapel Cynthia.Dailey of Gallipolis. She is
·Betz an( leffrey A. Ratliff were finge t;tip length veil. ·Her bouquei
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. groom's man. Th~ remaining in the Valley, Gatlinburg, Tenn.
. employed as a first grade teacher
united in marriage Aug. '3 at First was a cascade of fresh gardemas,
.
..
.
.
.
groom's men were Jpnathan Petz, ' Given in marriage by her parents, with the Gallia County Local
David R. Evans of Avon Lake .
t·
Baptist Church. Pastor Conn · perThe early evi:ding ceremony was Timot~y Tillman, Chandon Simonis the bride wore a western style gown Schools.
or
. 'formed the .double ring ceremony.
' GALLIPOLIS - Ann R. Adkins · a lace bodice.
officiated
by Pastor AI Earley. Musi- and James Sainuel . The ring bearer with dress lace up boots. She carried
Vernon is tHe' son of Ed and Barand T. Scott Dome were united in
Paula Williams Hall was the
· (vlusic was provided by Ruth honor, and bnde s matd were Mendt By HOLLIS L. ENGLEY
South of the AIDS National Inter·williams, and ,vocalists were Donna Cater, . Letgh Ane Cremeans and GanneH Newe Service
, maniage Aug. 3, at St, pete~s Epis- ' matron of honor. Amy Fooce, cal selections were perfonned by was Michael Graham, cousin of the a nose-gay of fresh yellow roses and bara Jones of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
faith Network {ANIN} in Washingdaisies.
He is employed by Evans Ca(tle
copal Church in Gallipolis. The cer- Stephanie Motts and Jenny Kendall Ann Moody, Carlene Greene and bride.
Sanders and Christian Scott. ,
Cyndy Neutzling. Flower girl was
By Christtnas, Sister Adamarie ton, D.C. "It was ·here before the
Kelly Hast well and Amy Roberts,
Maid of honor was Julie McCul- Company .
The bride is the daughter of Mr. Kaue Dunlap.
. .. emony was perfonned by Rev. were bride's maids. Junior bride's Christopher Bullion, all of GallipoI
Kost's
house will be full of people epidemic and it will be here after the
After traveling to Hawaii for a
Albert MacKenzie of Belhaven, maid was LaureJt Ad~ins . niece of lis. Readings were made by Amy cousins of the bride regi stered ly of Gallipolis. She wore a pale yeland Mrs. Larry M. Betz, and the
Ring
bearer
was
Cody
Wand
ing
with
AIDS.
epidemic."
low gown of iolet and canied a bou- honeymoon, a reception was held at ·
N.C.
the bride. Flower girls were Peyton Roderick of Gallipolis a~d Harold guests.
groom is the son of Mr. and. Mrs. nephew of the bnde.
Two
years
ago,
her
house
--'a
South is a mi'nister of the United
Following · the · ceremony, the quet of fresh daisies.
.'
' Ann is the daughter of Charles I. Adkins and 'Sara Dome, nieces of Duryee:
the AMVJ3TS Building in Kanauga.
Bill R. Ratliff.
The
groom
wore
a
black
tuxe~o.
·.
refuge
called
The
Home
Place
Church
of Christ. .Jlte group he
Given in maniage by her parents, bride's parents hosted a dinner and
The groom wore a black western
, and Marge Adkins, Jr. Scott is the the bride and grooQJ.
The 'couple resides in Gallipolis
.
.
·
.
Escorted
to
the
altar
by.
her
father
Best · man was Bnan Ltevmg . .wa&lt; just the idea of a few people in heads is an ecumenical coalition of
.
.
, ~on ofCJiffand.Cannela'Criswell.
Bob Scot[ served as best man. the bride wore a white gown of silk dance reception at the University of tuxedo, hat and boots. Best man was
and given in marriage by her par- groom' s men were Jamte Campbell, the Chattanooga, Tenn., area;· who 12 U.S. denominations gathering
, , Th~ bride wore a white chapel Dave Mauhews, . Michael Dorne, satin organza. It featured a sweet- Rio Grande. The next morning, a
ents, the bride wore a satin Alfred Steve Rathff ;md Dann Smtth. .
were alanned that AIDS patients in .' religious AlDS efforts under one
heart neckline, on -the-shOulder brunch was held in honor •of· the
lengt~ silk shantl!ng gown. The brother of the groom and Rich
Angelo gown with reembroidered
A
recepuon
was
held
followmg
.
their
city died homeless. ,
umbrella.
' short-sleeved liodice was covered Schell were groom's men. Ushers short sleeves and a basque waistline, bri~e and groom at the Hastwell
ace, sequins and, pearls. 'flte ·gown the ceremony at ~.church,
· In 1995 they hired Kosi, a Roman
More than 2,000 faith-based
with lace and pearl overlays. The were Jeff Adkins and Brent Adkins, The scooped back was accen!ed home. The evening before the wed·
eatured a fitted princess bodice and
·.
Fpllo\l'mg
•
.,;,:honeymoon
to
Catholic
Sister
of
Mercy,'
to
raiSe
organizations
in this country work,
IfYouTouAnd
skirt was accented in the back with a. brothers of the bride. Ring bearer . wi!h silk gardenia flowers . The ding, the groom's parents hosted a
emi-cathedral .train. The bride's Pt~eon Forge, Tenn .,. the couple wtll money and make The Home Place ing are with AIDS and HIV-positive .
headpiece featured matching silk garden pany and dinner in the courttaffeta bow and silk roses. The was Devin .Walker.
eadpjcce was made ·of pearl and . reSide tn Crown C•~Y·
real.
·
people - from MusHm and health
gardenias
and a veil which extended yard of the" historical Our House
'lime You 'lMl A
bride.'s headpiece of silk roses lead
Liz Walkel-Knauer registered
Now there's a building, donated professional Zakkiyah El' Amin in
.
to a chapel-length veil. She canied a guests at the church and the recep- past the gown's chapel length train. MuseuQJ.
by
the local Sisters of Charity. h is · Oakland, Calif., to national organiThe
bride
complemented
the
gown
Their honeymoon · was spent at
bouquet of blush . pink and cream tion.
gutted,
with shattered wind~w s, zations like Catholic Charities that
roses, pink daisies and ivy. ·
Scriptural' readings_ were recited with her grandmother's antique Little Palm Island, in ·the Florida
interior
walls
of bare two-by-fours care for and feed thousands to the
~-.
.
· Bride's maids wore tea-length by Linda Moore and Jim Gaul dur- cameo necklace and a bouquet of K,eys and Disney World . The cou.
•
Kristin
Leigh
C)ark,daughter
of
and
a
renovation
crew at work. But Zen Center of Los Angeles, which
cranberry satin gowns with f)pen ing the ceremony. Flute and guitar gardenias, white roses, stephanotis ple's new address is 137. E. Kossuth
ary
and
Vickie·.
Clark
of
New
Dec.
25,
the
old
place
will l1e heated cares for members of its. congrega,
St., Columbus, Ohio, 43206.
backs and tap-sleeved jackets. They music ilt the wedding and during the and ivy.
aven,
W.Va.
and
Jamel
~ay
.'',Jake";
and
home
for
seven
people. That tion and runs· meditation seminars
Whitney Hastwell, the bride's sisThe bride is a 1989 graduate of
carried pinkroseJ IJid daisies.
'dinner at the reception at the Univerorey, son of Jaln:es and Frances·
completion date is important, Kost for patients and caregivers outside
The groom, both fathers, groom's sity of Rio Grande Student Center ter, served as maid of honor. Bride's Gallia Academy High School ·and a
orey
of
Beckley,
W.Va.;
'!'ere
unitsays,
and not just for reasons of hoi- the center.
.
men and uSben wore black tuxedos Annex after the ~edding was pro- maids were Joili Back, Stacey Hast- 1993 graduate of The Ohio State
iday
warmth
and
good
will.
·
In
the
process,
the religious
d
in
marriage
Aug
..
3
at
the
Beverly
with black '·vests. Contemporary vided by Lisa ThoQlas Peery and Jim well, cousin of the bride, Heather University. She is employed by The
ills
United
Methodist
Church
in
"I
wan.!
the
theme
to
be
'Go
groups
are
educating
themselves
and
black buttons ~nted the neck of Lange, members of the West Vir- Hoffman and Heidi Samuel. They Midland Life.lnsurance Company in
untington.
W.Va.
with
Rev.
&gt;Home
For
Christmas'."
their
comm~nities.
After
more
than
wore . spruce green floor-length Columbus. The groom graduated
their white tuxedo shins.
·
ginia Symphony On:hestra. ·:
!fhomas P. Nolan oO'iciating the
Slogans get attention and she 320,000 U.S. deaths from HIV'
gowns.
The chiffon halter dresses from Sylvania Northview High
The bride's mother wore a tlborThe couple took
honeymoon
needs to gel her city's attention.
AIDS, it's still necessary, they say,
~ouble ring ceremony. · ..
. ..
'length light taupe gown with· a cruise to the Southern Caribbean were accented with matching gloves School in 1989 and Ohio University
"Chattanooga
is
a
very
reserved
to
tell people about the disease.
The
church
was
decorated
with
matching jacket. The -groom's moth- and resides -in Gahanna.
· and !)and-tied bQtiquets of Slargazer in 1993. He is employed by Cinergy
and
conservative
city,"
she
_
says.
"Behavioral change is Very diffi~vy
trimmed
window
candles,
aisle
lilies and ivy: The flower girl, Molly Corporation in Columbus.
er wore a pink tea length gown
with
"There's
a
lot
of
wealthy
people
in
cull,"
EI 'Amin says. "One of the
.
;candles
,;.ith
flower
garlands
and
·
Blake of Gallipolis, wore .a floorthis area, but the ll.nes thai have the things we find with prevelltion eduotulle bows to match the pew bows
money don't seem to want to be calion is we have people who know
:Ond · candelabrum adorned with
associated with anything to do with that HIV disease is out there, but
:Cucalyptus, gladiolas and white tulle
AIDS."
·'
we' re constantly talking to people
·~J&gt;ows . Live fern s, unity candfes and
Sister Adamarie, like many reli- not using any measure of protection.
neeling benches completed the
gious people in this country; says They know, they know clearly.
By PAT.MILTON
·
or next of kin, not. his fiancee~ the
ecor.
Aaeoclated Preaa Wrltar
official said. .
. ·
she is associated with AIDS because 'fltey're not internalizing this.or they
[ Vocalists Amanda and Maura
she has no choice.
don't value themselves enough to ·
SMITHTOWN, N.Y. {AP) Stuart says there is no floubt the
!clark were accompanied by' organist
"I see these.people as the modem use safer kinds of practices."
Among the torn and battered ring is hers.
·
linoi Copenhaver. Guests were
belongings collected from the ocean
The 31-year-old human. resource
· 'egistered by' Ton~a . Phillips, with
Kristin is a graduate of Marshall day lepers ," she says. "If I'm going
,_..,:...,..,_ _ _
after'TWA Flight 800 is Item 26- a · manager lived with ·Krukar, 41 , an
acob Young presenlmg bookmarks ,. ,University with a bachelor's degree to be a woman of the Gospel, that's
tiny burgundy box with a diamond engineer, for a year in Bridgeport,
nd- programs to those attending. · · in elementar)' ed~cation .and is where I'm going to be."
ring inside. .
,
' ·
Conn., before they decided to marry.
Quietly - so quietly most people.
Escorted to the altar by her f~ther · emplo~ed by the- 'Cabell County
Julie Stu an says Andrew Krukar In June.they bought a diamond ring
don't know about it - religious
nd gtven tn marrtage by h~r par- Board Of Education. ·
planned to pla~e the $15,000 . with an antique. setting and made
tents, the bride wore a Vi cto~ian sty!•
Jak.e is also a M¥shall Universi- people such as Kost have responded
' engagement ring - found bobbipg plans for Pa~is .
lbellsleeved gown of whtte satm ty graduate with a bachelor's degree with open heans and practical help
over the waves - on her finger in
;embellished with alecon lace, in criminal justice. He is employed to the 15-ycar AIDS epidemic that
Paris last summer.
');cquins and pearls. She wore a by Mountain Stale Outfitters in has infected more than 500,000 peoKrukar never made it to the City
ple in this country with the HIV
;fnat ching tiara headpiece with a Huntington.
·
· of Light. He was killed July 17 with
Stop the Pomero9 Office of the Farmers Bank,
;two- tiered finge."ip veil and carried
The couple traveled to Cancun, virus.
230 others. Ali Stuart wants now is ·
"The
religious
community
was
a bouquet of pmk roses , a fuchsta , Mexico for' their honeymoon, and
and pick up YOUR doll for this exciting Contest!
to have the ring as a final memory.
always here," says the Rev. Ken
) ily and pink streamers. .
resides in Huntington.
But the airline is,not letting go.
.; Maid of honor was Jenmfer Bull.
"That ring is an incfedible sym. ~l"ith Heather Schwarz, Julie Corey.
Winners will be chosen from the
bol of our love," Stuan said as tears
:Shelly Kuhn and Treva Oxley servfollowing five categories:
filled her blue . eyes. "It will be
' ing as bride's maids. The attenqants
something I will hold onto for the
· ;wor,e off-the-shoulder fuChsia
rest of my life."
&lt;gowns .with chi ffot\ overtax illld jew-.
A TWA official familiar with the
3. Character
Prettiest
~elry accessories.' They carried .
case said the problem is proving
i
11
· :bouquets of fuchsia star gazer lllies ..
Iridal ·
4. 1904 style dress
who took the ring with them on the
with baby's breath and pinks~­
flight.
5. Crochet
·
~·
ers.
· '
•
( ) ll ( C
1
:I l ( J
,.c. Even if Stuart can prove ,the ring
Whitney Knight, nowergirl, w.or~ 1
was in Krukar's pocket, iL would1
.,. ,,..•. " a wh it e&lt;~ in- dre551 withtullasleeve~~ .
• ·"' '!&gt; ... lirn.~~&gt;winn t!Ji from.eBllfl,cateQor,y,wiiJ.be. awar:de£1 a prize , o f,$1,00.00. Si!Y.ing~ Band
.. ' ·.o;,.
have to be turned over 10 h1s parents
and overskirt. She carried fuchsia
· AND All live wir:mers,of. Ibis contest wil; be entered in oyr
., .. ·~ ~' ·
rose petals in a white basket.
' The grooni .wore a black tuxedo··
.
I
.
wil'h a hlack vest and white tie. est
The winner will receive a $200.00 Savings Bond!
· MARK AND EMILY .BRAGG
1\.\( I\ I 0 ._,( 11001
man was Mitchell Corey. Groom's
TRILLIUM,. CLASS lUNGS
'
men were Greg, CoiTman, Brian
All Dolls are due back to (jisplay at The Bank on or before November 15th, 1996.
Hankins, James · Mackey and
.,. Limited
ApPointments
Available •
'
Mi chael Warner. Ushers were Marc
' Patterns are available at the Bank, and Vari ous Fabric and Craft Shops in the Community.
GALLIPOLIS
- Emily Dawn were Chi'istopher Blank, Amanda
'
. .
t
antcrhury.
Dennis
Coffman
and
·
Or, you may design yqur own clothing to creale an
· "anson and ·Mark Lee Bragg were Blank, son and daughter of James
';rndd Miller, Each wore ·a hlack
married. Saturday, Aug. 3 at lhe and Carel Blank, and Olivia Boone,
~ux cdo . black vest' and black tic.
Bible Baptist Ch4rch in Henderson- ·daughter of Richard and Maria
FQI ~ OW MAMMOQRAPtft GU'D'J JNf'S
:Ringbcarcr was Patri ck' Mackey,
ville. Tenn .. with Dr. Carl Frensley · Boone: all of Gallipolis. .
.
;who wore a Qlatching black ' '" edo
officiating.
&gt; IIJ ~ tell Besln 5aeeM1a- Get A lluellne Mlmrflotrun ·
Michael Blank and Tyler Boone
After Judging takes place and prizes are awarded, th ~ .Q~ will be auctioned off with proceeds
j acket with short pants.
The bride is the daughter of were program atlendant.s . • Carel ·.
1
going to The United Fund lor Christmas!
•·
&gt; A8t "40 to 491 Get A Mamnos~Wn EYel)' One To 1Wo Years
The mother of the hridc wore a
Jpmes D. and Sheila Hanson of Hen- Blank and Maria Boone served at
'
~atin
trimmcc.
J
ankl
elength
pink
,,.,,..,,
dersonville and the granddaughter of . the reception table
. &gt; A8t 50 And Own Get A~ E'llei)IYW
'
~ '"" with matchin~ jacket w.hil~ the
IEUI,R tlriALLED"
Stop in and see us lor furtHer Details!
James H. and Dorothy Hanson of
·Emily is a 1993 graduate of Hen~ f! Jffm \P mptm;r chosC u pink ~Print
'IT PAYS TO SHOP
Gallipolis. The groom is the son of dersonville Christian Academy and
/
liEFORE
YOU
BU\'l'
~
n k lc- l cng th two picce,suit.
·
~uth McClure an'd Glen Brag of a. seniQr at the Belmolll University
:1 1\ r~c.:c pliufl was held follnWing
FilE£ FEATUIIJIU OPTIONS
Hendersonville and the grandson of School of Nursing in Nashville,
i hc cc rcnu•ny ut the li&lt;li•llli&lt;Jtlrc on
liP 10 . . . VAJ.UEI
Nellie Bragg of Lanark, W.Va.
Tenn. She is employed by Columbia
j(clUI C r.hE. Vit: toriun dcct)rutiuns
forril/y ol profeulonal• ,
·
The bride was given in marriage Hendersonville Hospital.
:fnd
Prcd ou ~ Mumc"ru!-. a~ccs.!\'1.1ric ~
.~·
2520 Valley Drive, Polnti'I«&lt;IGfll, WV 25550
by her father. She wore an Alfred
Mark is a 1994 graduate of Met••
' '
;were featured ulon g with the nowcr
Angelo Dream Maker gown and car- ropolitan Baptist School and a junior
EGUI. Hlllllll
lopped ttircc ti~red cake· with u fuun, ·' .I
ried a bouquet of double sonja roses at Tennessee State University,
0
LENDER
la irl , g rC~,: ncry '-ml hahy's hrcath .
Member FDIC
t. ............ t
with white bovardia, piUfliOSa and majoring in hospitality•tourism
't Rcc.;cpeion h o~hJ!\:iC'l Wl!rc Mnry
To Schedple A
ivy.
administration. He is employed as
Lu Ld W;u·ds and l.tli' Kincaid . Sura
a2Seconc1Ave.
--..
Cou•ins of the llride who served assistant general manaser for .Thea
&amp;
·
~nn eau. (504)' 675-4340. Ext. 482.
~ n d Jilh an Cl t•rk ;md Jmpic J...cwi s
aS members of the wedding party .Bell in Hendenonville. /
w 1vc;d :~ ju11 i1lr hclstt; ..,:...cs.

Hastweii-Evans

October 9th, 1996

.. Dailey-Jones

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For more Info call us at

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Woman fights for engagement
ring found ·in TWA wreckage

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;P.~·nnyroyal:

Color me autumn: The·changing leaves in New England states
By MARIA BLACKBURN
Burlington Free .,._.
BURLINGTON, Vt. - Under a
, 'clear blue sky, the autumn hills of
'Peacham, Vt., are covered by a blan.ket of sugar maples and oaks, white
' church steeples and acre upon a&lt;:re
. of briule com stalks and velvety
,green grass.
This is the New England flatlanders dream about -: a quilt of
leaves in changing hues.
. .Here are swaths of maize and sea
· blending in!O oxblood and currant,
ribbons of cartot and leaf uansforming into wine and .bark and java.
As the foliage season begins
anew in northern slates, the simple
color names which describe the
1
:changing landscape seem flat and
1
, 'plain. Surely the brilliant colors on
~ the uees would be beuer served by
. ;some of the uendy names from cala·
; ,logs, cosmetic counters and paint
• ;chip displays.
· ' A rose by any other name y;ould
t~till smell as sweet.
. ·
·
,.. But a rose described as brick,
twilight or persimmon sells.
"I am much more influenced by a
color that is painting a picture in my
mind, rather than just red, blue or
- green," says Sharon McNamara, a
product development specialist for

•

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The Orvis Company. She helps ere· September melts into an evening makers Binney and Smith of Easton,
ate color names to describe the sunset of Oame. oak and burnt Pa., who in 1990dared·to yank a few
women's clothing in the Orvis cata· umber leaves as autumn becomes hues from their 64-crayon box, only
By MARIA BLACKBURN
log.
winter. .
to discover that some adults weren't
lurtlnglon Free Pre"
"I w!luld rather have a color that
Not bad. And that's because ere· ready to let go.
· 'The annual uansfonnation of leaves from green to gold, red, oranp
tlrinss to mind somethi,ng that I alive names set a tone, color experts
"We ended up . having adult
and
brown doesn't benefit the uee, says Brent Teillon, chief of forest
enjoy," she says. "We make it more say. They make consumers feel like groups come and picket our plant,"
protection
for Vermont.
'
palatable."
what they're buying is-special. A says spokeswoman Tracey Muldoon
Instead,
Ws
a
byproduct
of
the
~wing
~cason.
When
you
look
at
McNamara. like many color pro· New Yorker who craves the country Moran.
11ature
and
sec
beautiful
flowers,
thetr
color
IS there
attract
bees
and
fessionals, likes names evocative of can take pleasure in buying russet .
"~re were things like 'The
pollinating insects. But when leaves tum color. there s no henefitto the
natural things - mist and sand, · trousers, a sage · shin and maple · Committee to Save Raw Umber' and
uee, just 10 the people.
'The Maize Preservation So!;iety.'
flowers in terra colla pots and spice shoes.
Here is how leaves tum color:
jars of cinnamon. curry and basil.
Color names also help to bring a l;o this day. we still get phone calls
·Outing
the growing season, leaves are green because ch~oroph;rll pig·
So ... couldn't the same color specific shade to mind, says Gael from people for whom ·these colOrs
ments
override
all other colors in the l~ves. Chlorophyll IS continually
meant so much."
principl~ followed by catalog Towey, creative director for Manha
produced.
Combined
with sunlight, water and carbon dioxide, it leads to
designers and merchandisers be Stewan Living magazine. "There
Bur does color description of fali
photosynthesis, which makes food: · ·
•
applied to fo)iag~ season. a product are a million sreens in the world,'' foliage really ll)ake a difference?
Late
in
the
summer,
the
productton
of
chlorophyll
slows
and
the co.!&lt;'r
that draws millions to see the flam· she says. "But if you say 'Japanese
Maybe, says Brent Teillon, chief
green
diminishes
in
the
leaves.
At
the
same
time.
another
group
.of ptg·
ing maples of New England, Ohio, Gourd Green' you know that it's a of forest pnitection for the state of
ment,
the
carotenoids,
come
into
play.
Yellows,
oranges
and
browns
Pennsylvania, Michigan and other cenain shade of llmey green."
VertnOnl, has 28 years 9f experience
become visible in leaves.
)
states; or to the golden cottonwoods · (Provided, of course, that you've dcscribing·Vermont's colors tb jourA
third
group
of
pigments,
anthocyanins.
which bring out reds, purand of western rivers and moun· seen a Japanese gourd.).
nalists from all over the counuy.
tains?
Color, says Kathleen Richards·
"A good description of' colors , pies and bright oranges, also becolne visible.
Each species of uee has a predominant coloration in the fall. Sugar
Take an ordinary tolo!' and Babcock, _, is more than visually can p!Jl a memory in s'omcone's
·
maple
.colors range from bright red and orange red to yellow. ~.
ascribe a nam~ that conjures thin'gs pleasing. It can affect a mood, set mind that has meaning, then they're
maples
tum bright red. Beech and bireh uees tum yellow.
.
sublime: mist-shrouded mountains, your frame of mind. Richards-Bal&gt;- ~ore apt to relate to it," says Teil· •
When
leaves
fall
to
the
sround
in
autumn.
they're
usually
in
the
full
gurgling streams.. warm apple pie a cock is a Georgia wallcovering Ion. who is more likely to relate
Ia mode. In color parlance, brown is · designer and a member of Color • what he sees to the color of a fool· , .~olor Sl'lge. Only after hilling the sround do they dry up and tuin brown.,
chocolate. espresso or oatmeal; red Marketing Group, a national associ· ball team's jerseys than to an exotic
squash. .
mont) forester and leaf spotter Jon
is peppermint, plum and cabetnet; ation of I ,500 color designers.
' 'When you walk into a room,"
,;'The better the description, the Bouton.
"The colors are just plain special.
blue is not only lake but sea, mid·
night and slate.
·
she says, "it can definitely change better ·they can visualize the colors."
and they're there f~ such a shan
. "I don't uy to desa'ibe the leaves period of time. People will ,come
How abOut this for, say, :Ver- your personality."
Color's importance can be a sur"Just as long as it's nothins too in different ways anymore," he says. regardless of what you callthem.'1,
mont? Acascade of sunflower, aspen
and maple sugar lnauves in mid· ·prise. Consider Crayola .Crayon .fancy," says Windsor county (Ver- "Yellows are yellows, reds are reds.

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r .«etty C.ldwell 1nd Rob Wooclwllrd Wlll'tl crbwnecl1818 Gll.111 Actdemy High School homecoming
and King during
pre-pme ceremoniH on Memorial Fltld FrlcMy IVf!!!lng. Ml"
C.ldWelll• the dlughter of Mlkllnd Mllrthl Clldwell. Active In
~ IChoolactlvltiH, 1nd .wt, elllle • member of GI'KI
Un.ltld Methodlat Church. Sill w. . crowned by GAHS Prlnclplll Biuce Wilson.. Woodw1rd 11 th1 1011 of Tombo and Jackie
. WoodW!Ird. Al110 active In nu-oua echiiOIICtlvltlae and 4-H,
hi le a 1111mber of the National Junior Angue Aaaoclatlon.
Woodwlrd - • ci'GWMd by Bath Skinner, GAHS .a tudlnt body
prwldent. IUinblnl' of the qu..n and klng'a court _,.
8hawncll W•118r, Angela Bow!llln, Matedlth Mulllna, Charity
llowell, Micah Lu.hlr, B.J. Cox, Mlkl Shaffer, and Ja.on
Bryan. Program 14¥1'« we• altl'b Rlchercla.

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By LAURAN NEERGJV'RD
Alloclatecl Pr.s• WrHer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Americans..._are battling teen-age pregna~cy wiih
everything from social clubs for virgins to keeping kids in school- and the
government says something is finally working.
Fewer babies were born to unwed mothers last year, the first decline in
nearly two decades - and one fueled by a drop in the teen-age binh rate,
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Friday.
The fall in the out-of·wedlock bitth rate was small, just 4 percent, said the
COC's annual U.S. birth-and-death count. And one decline after 16 yeru;s of
increases is far from proof of a lasting turnaround.
But it was the fourth consecutive decline in the teen binh rate; which has
dropped 8 percent since 1991. That has experts "cautiously optimistic" that ·
teens are becoming better able to escape the baby trap. . .
'"fl)ere are thousands of people and thousands of programs across the
nation working on this, and maybe it's beginning to pay off." said Kristin
Moore of Child Trends Inc., a nonprofit, nonpanisan organization that studiesteen health issues.
The decline in the number of unwed and teen-age mothers didn't surprise
Deanna Helber, who runs Hawaii's Pregnancy and Parenting Program,
which encourages teen-age parents to stay in school.
.
"Kicjs that do not have goals are the more likely one~ 10 have teen-age
pregnancy. We're uying to make sure they do have goals," said Helber, who
said more youth are getting that message.
Every year, the COC does an exhaustive search of U.S. birth and death
records to track the nati_on's health. Qnce again, hean disease and ·Cancer
proved the leading killers of 1995, although ll)e death rates for each continued to drop slowly, the CDC found.
·
·
As predicted, the death !'ale for AIDS held steady last year for the first
iime in the epidemic, reflecting treatment gains that help patients live longer.
Still, the number of Americans who died of·AJDS reached a record 42,506
last year.,
More. promising were changes affecting American babies, for which Pres·
ident Clinton immediately claimed credit.
,
"We are saying to')'oung men and young women alike, it is wrong to gel
pregnant ot father a child until you are married and ready to. take on the
responsibilities of parenthood," Clinton said in the text prepared for his Sat·
urday radio address.
.
The conservative Family Research Council d(smis'sed Clinton's com·
ment. ·saying girls themselves are forming clubs that promote virginity, a
backi!ISh to thei~ parents' more permissive Baby Boo~. generation.
"There's a new wave of virgins," said Gracie Hsu, spokeswoman for the
councif, which opposes teen contraception .. "They're proud to be pure,"
The CDC report said:
·
- ·Some 1.2 million infants were born to unmarried mothers last year, 3
percent .fewer than in 1994. That meant 44.9 babies were born for every
I ,000 unmarried women. a 4 percent drop in the l&gt;irth rate.

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O'Connor, talk show host Oprah
•:By MARA D. Bti1ABY
ment.
Gannett Roc halter Ne-papara .
Each honoree has a framed biog- Winfrey and famed jazz singer Ella
,J · Ranks at die National Women's raphy and photograph displayed in Fitzgerald.
,_., Hall of Fame has gtown to inqlude the museum.
·
· The new inductees "will .join
Hthe author of "Little Women," the
"It is a celebration of·' · extraor- some distinguished company," says
~lirst canonized . American woman dinary American women," said Lyn Brad Jones, mayor of Seneca Falls,
,~ and a •renowned writer who also Bedell, president of the 2J·year-old '·
· Of the five living honorees this
'l.1 clocked 30,000 miles flying with her museum. "They are all role models year. four planned to attend the cer!';aviator husband.
who made significant accomplish· emony.
,1 Loui$a May Alcon, St. Frances ·"'inents.''
They are:
·-~ Xavier Cabrini and Anne Morrow
The inductees were chosen by an
- Women's activist Charlotte
Anne Bunch;
~~tLindbergh was indu
. cted along with independent panel of 28 judges.
eight · other women Oct. 5 at the
Past .honorees have included
- Military leader Mary A. Halmuseum in Seneca Falls, N.Y.
adventurer Ann Bancroft. U.S. laren;
r1 The ceremony was held at the Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day
~,Promoter of women's an Wil:
~ibistoric Seneca Falls Presbyreria~
'· f;1:hurch, ~here in 1923, women first
_'~ailed for the enactment of an Equal
~;Rights-Amendment..\ ~ l (

..

!;; This year's .induc.tees will join , ~ .
r:!group oj 125 women who have .been
;Wonored previously by the museum
~or their achievements in fields
!,ifanging from athletics to ,govern-

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IN 3 DAYS

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IIONiiY BACK QUARANTEE

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{fUO Off COIJI'ON . . . . I}

~·

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All NIIWII C.H. 2001

Wltlt Chromium P!Co!lno!O

44U620_.

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WE'LL HELP YOU

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1,11

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. ALL THUVIY UP

Home Bevators·RerlidentJai·Commerclal

-Easy lnolaHatlon
-No Mess
-Battery Backup

•Free Demonstrations

es &amp; Rental

, .

~ BOWMAN'S

}&lt;
f~

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IIOMEC~RE

PLANNED P' DENTHO
. OD
or
· SOUTHEAST OHI'o· '
·

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;ff\.
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•

Birth Control Methods including: ·
•Diaphragm
• I.U.D.
• I;&gt;epo-Provera
· • Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spermicide
Anonymous HIV tests and counseling

•••

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

:.··ktacy'stewart:·ce~ter,

crown~

~om• .

HOMECOMiNG QUEEN
W81
1996 Meigs High School
coming Queen Friday· evening blforii the MHS/Wellston foot!Jall game at Bob Roberts l;teld In
Pomeroy. Stewart Is crowned by 1811 year's queen, Suzanne Henderson. Stewart was escorted by
her brother, Cory Stewart, lift.

Sliding Fee Scale

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GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va. ·
Community Advisory Panel of Akzo
Nobel Chemicals, Inc. meeting ·? to
'

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:::'W·'

DIAMOND
EARRINGS ..

E.UREKA ' Homecoming with
Roger Blake spea.lc.ing in morning
service·Eureka Church of God. Din·
· ner a! 12 p.m. and Roben Smith
-speaking in afternoon ..

Y10 ct. total wt. Special

•••

. Y. el.

CHESHIRE - PeJe and Margie
.Parson family reunion Kyger Creek
Shelter House.
·

All you need
to add
is ~ove

total wt,
Y. ct. total wt.
'Is .t. total wt.
1 _ct. total wt,

•69

SP.,eial •130
Special •375
Special •199
Speeial •J..l~uu

· Up To 30 Months To Pay
With Approved

Credit

Acquisitions
91 Mill Street
Middleport. Ohio 45760

151 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Now For Chrl•tm1111

OCTOBERISBREASTCANCER
AWARENESS MONTH

Stahl
MHS HOMECOMING- Thefollowlng.atudents comprlaed tha1996 Meigs High School Hotnec~ut1l
Court Frldly, laft, Ryan Biker •nd Erin Krawaczyn, Josh Wlt~rell and Whitney Haptonstall, Cory
Stewlllt and 1818 Homecoming Queen Stacy Stewlrt, Nakuma Tyree and Stacie Reed, Brad Whit·
fitch 1 nd Amy Clonch. ActiO!) Facemyer· was the. crown bearer while Breana Danae Hemsley was
the flo- gtr1.
·
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·

Reprodi!Oilo~ lla14d2

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AOUII 1, lod21, Uttlt Hocldng, OH

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**!II
GALLIPOLIS · Revival Faith
Valley Church 7 p.m. Oct. 7 and 8
with Gordon Simpson speaking an~
9 through 12 J:om Vogelsong s))e&amp;l!·
ing.

GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

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Stahl's Nur•ery 8 Cftristmas Sfwp
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CADMUS , Annual Cadmus
Alu,;ni reunion in the old Cadmus
High School building, from 10 a.m .

We accept Medicaid and private iqsurance.
. 414 SECOND STREET

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....

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia tounty
District Library Board of Trustees
meeting 5 p.m. at Bossard Library.

•••

Mr. S~l has rec8ntly compleied other~ Works Including Cape Hatteru Lighthouse OcracOke
Ughthouse, The Gprdon Greene l'ac:tdlewheel, Portland Head Lighthouse The Amer~n Queen
Sitting Bull, and many others too numerous to meotion.
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P..tor Alvla Pollard

....

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Here's your. chance to own a piece of Altlel\8 history - a nostalgic view ci! White's Mill along the
Hocking -River. This painting is available in a limltiid edition; signed and numbered lithograph for
only $65.00 Framing Is .available upon request.
{ · · ·

Message

...

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Whlte'l Mill,-·· 0H

"American's Holocaust"

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ALL DIAMONDS ACCOMPANIED BY ~PPRAISAL '
STATING EXACT COLOR, CUT AND CLARITY GRADES .

SU~DAY ~ 2:00.
CITY P~RK

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Tuesday, Oct. 8

CHESHIRE - mPS meeting I 0.
***
''
GAI,LIPOLIS . • Gallia County
to II a.m. Cheshire United
District Library Board of Trustees
Methodist Church.
meeting 5 p.m. at Bossard Library..
GALLIPOLIS · Community
Cancer Suppon Group 2 p.m. New
Revival
Life Lutheran Chureh.

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Monday, 0.:1. 7

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COME &amp; JOIN US

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8 p.m. in facility administralion
building.
·.

CROWN CITY
Raymond
Bragg and Bill Hall speaking 10:30
a.m. Good Hope Baptist'Chutch.

.MAMMOGRAMS
can save lives/

..From Monday September 30
through Friday, October 18 we're
. . offering special rates and extended
houri for mammograms-.-,~,
...
Certified mammography.is available at
our Gallia, Jackson and Lawrence
County locations. Call today to
schedule an appointment.
'

,

to 4 p.m.

•••

"RIGHT TO LIFE CHAIN"

. Con:te &amp;Join Us This Sunday·
.8:30 &amp; 10:30 Worship

water

Combine the ingredients with
enough water to make it doughy but
nol sticky. Fonn balls of I inch
diameter and add tliem to the stew
about half an hour before stew is
done . watchihg that there is enough
liquid in the stew to cook the
dumplings.
VIlma Plkkoja Ia • lon.g-111111
gardener and a loundlng _memblr
· of the Gellla Area Harbll Guild.

KANAIJGA . - Miller-Minnis·
Jackson.'family reunion 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. DAV Building.

~~

The members of 'First Baptlet Church Believe In
the Sanctity of ·H'uman Ute' (Born It Unborn),
and Practice That Belief With Our Participation
This Sunday and.Our Vote on November 5.

Pennyroyal dumplings (serve
with beef stew)
I c. self rising flour
1/4 c. of suet
I T. chopped pennyroyal leaves

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WIT..KESVII.LE · Dedication
of
Wilkesville Community Center 2 to
4p.m.

.

1111 2271

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44f.1213

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Tha Community Calendar It
publl•hed •• a free aervlce to
non-profit group• wishing to
anndunce maetlng• .a nd •pe- .
ciaI evanta. The calendar I• not ,
designed t~ promote ule• or
fund-ralMr. of any type. Items ·
are printed .. !!piCe permits
lind cannot be gua.r a"-'"d to
run a •pecHic number of days.

and
STD Screening
Pregnancy Tests

fjl

GrQw pennyroyal outside the
kitchen door or in front of the
kitchen door. When mi•ed with violets and chamomile it makes a pleas·
ant walking lawn.
Rememl;Jer • the plant becomes
invasive. and has to be consuained.
If it gels too thick, just remove the
section . ,
·

_ _ Gallia community calendar _ __

Sunday, Oct. 6

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R;~~~e:t:nices

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up

Contact may cause dermatitis.

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Confidential Service for Women and Men
· ~ lf€1t.
FaqJily Planning

Rushing Waters by

MEDICAL CEN'ttll

31d1PINE G.&amp;I:LIPO!.IS
_, .
_I

Groun d

SUPPORTS THE

Paator Archie Conn

· ous.
While it takes 70 tons of pennyroyal tea to be dangerous · a small
amount of oil can beTatal. Again and
again it &lt;'Oilles hack to the same ·
know your herbs and a liule knowl·
edge is dangerous.
It took several generations for the
wise women and medicine men to
.
accumulate
their wisdom
and knowledge
of herblorc.
and they dis..
. tri~uted it carefully tying illo the traditions,

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· FIUTH PIIIIJUCY

~Qa.lpoNa, OH '

nation which was Hudson Bay. Now
they were ready to land on Plym'll!lh
Rock becausHhe captain of the •"ip
refused to take further ~hances by
taking the ship fanher along the
coastline.
·
So, here the Pilgrims agreed to
the Mayflower Compact on the ship
of Mayflower in 1620 just before
ldi.hiil® (.,
they made their permanen.l landing
at Plymouth ' Rock. That compact
bound them to live in civil society
accdrding to their own laws. and it.·
was lhe first wrinen consJ.itution ~ in
Nonh America.
How great are Gnd's riches. How
deep are his wisdom and knowledge.
lbis is what the 16th century sur· Who can explain his decisions'!
Romans II :33
geon-herbalist had to say
The fleabane does indeedTake the herb, not the oil. for
".:.purgeth the head mightily
colds, coughs. upset stomachs. Oatuof foul and filthy llimie humor."
John Gerard ( 1545·1612)
lencC' and anxiety.
II has a very strong peppermint
scent
and llavor. Use it sparingly. It
1hey had used up their last pen·
This is one case IO· prove that
modern .times arc not always bcllcr, nyroyal. and after 66 days on the also make &amp;a good sauce.
It is not to be used in pregnancy .
and ' in speeding up and making treacherous Atlantic Ocean they had
lhings easy. it makes lhcrn danger- missed ·their original landing dcsli· or sutfering from kidney disease.

In the middle ;1gc' a wreath of
pennyroyal wa&gt; hung on lhc &gt;ick·
room wall lv help with the healing.
and it aiS&lt;J was used a\,the gout remedy.
With all lhi' fame pennyroyal is
one guo&lt;l herb with u had rcputalinn
and mostly unearned at that.
From l tB I 10
. 1916 pennyroyal
was listed in the U.S.
Phannacopoeia a&gt; a
stimulant • digestive
aid , und mcnSirualion promoter. From
1916 tu 1931 pcnnymyal oi,! was
listed.
.
' Contemporary· hcrha.lists warn
that pennyroyal is !oxic and can be
fatal.
So. remember -.Nl,tlo use the uil
of pennyroyal · without the medical
prescription. II can he and has been
fatal.

FIRS.T BAPTIST. CHUBCt.t •

-~~.·-----·
LOSE r: •• LIS. I
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helmina Cofe Holladay;
- and ballerina Maria Tallchief.

?.

they make a batch of their favorite
"haggas-pudding.''
To ease the poUnding headache or
to light off the on-comin' cold they
used pennyroy.al to make a dish of
"organ·lea". To repel the. annoying
fleas , they sprinkled pieces of pen·
nyroyal on their bedding.
By the way-that's how pcnnytuy·
al got its Latin · name Mentha
pulegium which is derived from
. t.atin word pulcx , meaning "Ilea.''
because both.the fresh plant and tlte
smoke from the burning leaves were
used to exterminate the inscct. It·
also repels Other insects and some
call pennyroyal "tickwced" ahd
"mosquito plont."
In 'he first century the Roman
herbalist Plini noticed the hca
repelling quality of this plant, and it
became quite famous.
Its healing powers were praised
, by the Greek army physician
Dioscorides who seconded Plini
observations and added that penny·
royal also s1imu1a1es menstrualion
and helps expel the afler·birth.

·-'·"',_-_,..Meigs homecomlng·ceu

During the ~arly 1980s, the fate of un..;ed mothers was increasing at~
percent a year, although by the early '90s that increase slowed to just'2 pe~cent. a year. CDC ~emographer Steohanie .Ventura said that signalled that,:S
dechne "was cotn1ng."
·
""
·.
~
.:...Among teen·age!S, 56.9 babies were born for every l,OO(fgirls ages IJ/i
to 19 last year. That's a 3 percent drop from 1994 and 8 percent since 199 ,
when the slow but continual. decline began.
The largest drop was among black teens, who accounted for 95.5 birt~s
per 1,000 women, down 9 percent from 1994.
·
'
-More babies lived to their first binhday. Infant mortality dropped~
percent, to a record low 7.5 infant deaths for every 1,000 b;tbies born I*
y,ear.
.
·. I
Other studies have shown a slowing rate of increase of sexual activi y
among teen-agers, and that youths are becoming m0re lik~ly to use condols
-changes that help explain •their lower birth rate, CDC's Ventura said.
Actually, teen-age pregnancy is a coillplicated issue with no one, simp e
answer, said Sarah'Brown, d!rector of the n&lt;inpanisan National C8mp)lign !O
Prevent Teen·age Pregnancy that met this week to study .scientijically whi,h .
of the nation's teen prqgrarns really work.
·· ·
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"While the adults are arguing" over what to do, ''the kids are geUi~g
pregnant," she noted.
.
.
. •
And the .United States still leads the industrialized world in .teen 'pief· .
~ancies, Moore cautioned.
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rt.n.
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Hall of Fame to induct women jpl annual gala

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An herb with a lot of history and uses

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Out-of-wedlock birth rate drops as .fewer teens give ~irth
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le,ving Southampton,
~ . the first settlers to the
: New World must haye had their
• doubts. but if so, their hopes for the
~ future a!ld ~ost certainly th~ir faith
~ won over the doub.ts.
} The 66 days of crossing the
$ Atlantic ocean was hard on their
: sea-weary txxlics, and more than
: once the travelers were made aware
~ of tile good advice they had been
• give~ and grateful that they had
~ taken it: Take plenty~f
pc; royal
~ herb along and it will
p you on
~ yoiJr v~age when Y. are in need .
t . They called pennyroyal by many
: names the Elizabethan herbalist
~ John Gerard called it ·~the heabane"
~ a!ld "pudding grass" and the old
~ sailors called ir "the seasickness
~ herb."
·
· 'It was .tbe pennyroyal the Pilgrims used as the means to keep
, their drinking water supply sweet
~ and they aiS&lt;J used that strong-scent.
~ ed mint-flavored plan as "pudding
'grass"· by flavoring · and s~aso'ning
their putrid, msmelling meal when
;if.

l

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ly YUIA l'IKKOJA

!o

-- ~ ·· ··

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~ Before
: En&amp;land

Here's why leaves change color

r---GAHS homecoming
'- ·

~" t ........ lbwi•PIIgeCT

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plellum, ¥f'!

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"Back in 1987, Mr. Potato Head
tun-en&lt;lero:d his pipe to (former Sur·
General) C. Everett Koop for
Oteat A!1lerican Smokeoul,"
Gary ~erby, director of public
~llati· ~'ns for Hasbro. "And in 1992;
4oth birthday. he joined
tlte Pre•ident's .Council
Physical Fitness."
Now, the nonpanisan Heads are
·
the League of WQ!'nen
Fund 1996 "Get
the Vote Campaign," which has
a~s: registering adults to vote
educatinl! children about the
[Fh:cti&lt;m process.
·
. ~ part of the campaign, Has~ci .
the LWV, alon1 with Wal-Man,
sponsoring an essay contest that
and their parents to
in
words or less "wl'!y
to the polls and vQtins is
to me and my fumily."

Announcing Cliffside's

'

Routine Screening
Unilateral Diagnostic $50
Bilateral Diagnostic $90

FALL SPEC.IAL:
Not Just Weekdays But..,.
Seven Days A Weeki · ·
·
s21 00 .day
for 18 hole cart and unlimited golf
2nd Round Cart 1/2 price
5 12 for walkers
"'
Foursomes - Pay for 3 - .
,·
The:Last One's FREE
I

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Main Clinic

2S South St.

90 Jackson Pike

Route 7

Jacl&lt;son, OH
186-6417

Gallipolis, OH
446-5381

Proctorville,

......

.

•

Lawrence Clinic
OH
886-9403

•

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Call 61'4-44.6-GOLF
'

Jackson Clinic

.HOLZER CLINIC

Here For Your Health, Here For Youl' Lifetime!

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Entertainment

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----~--------People

'Farin/Business

Oct.6, 1116

•
in th8lnews----·-· _ _:,_______
_

D
Sunday,October6,1996
Section

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By JOHN KII;SEWETTER
The Clnclnnltl !j!nqulrer
.
A couple of 13-year-old k1ds
were riding• home from ·a ballpark
with their dads when lhe co11versa,: tion, as often happens, exl~nded
beyond baseball into life-allering
falher-son chaiS.
On those drives, bolh boys decided to pursue thelf falher's profession. Young Chip and Llltle Jpe
wanted to be baseball announcers,
like Skip Caray and Jack Buck.
Thai's why both are pan of Fox's
baseball team which will cover postseason games through Pox's flfSI
World Series telecast Ocl. 19.
"We were riding home in dad's
car. The Braves had ·won a game
with a pinelt•hit,grand-slam in the
bouom of the ninth , off the
Dodgers," recalls Chip Caray, 31.
son of the Atlanla Braves' Sk1p
Caray and grandson of legendary
Chicago Cubs announcer Harry
Caray.
When the radio replayed hts
father's call of the dramalic shot,
"the hair on my head and my arms
just slood straighl on end! I looked
at dad and said, "I'd love to do that
some day!"' Chip reealls.
Skip Caray didn'l say much. But
his son detected "one of those earto-ear grins on his face lhe rest of !he
ride home," says Chip, who· hosiS
Pox's baseball pregame show. He's
also the TV voice of the NB A Orlando Magic, after lhree seasons as a
Seatlle Mariners announcer.
Joe Buck, by h1s 13th summer m
St. Louis, was discussing !he finer
pomts of baseball broadcasling
while riding home from Busch Sla- By JACK GARNER
!hat her commilment, thus far, IS film, "Nashville."
Her other movies have included
dium with his father, !he Hall of Gannett News Service ·
only for one season. "I have no idea
highs as "1}1e Lale Show"
such
Fame voice of 1he Cardinals.
"Cross me and I'll shred you hke whal'll happen after that."
Sometimes lhey'd lislen to a tape Chinese chicken "
"Th1s show is very spec1al. It's (1977), "9 to 5" ( 1980), and "All of
of the game Joe had made at lhe
With thai pronouncemenl, veter- one of lhe best shows Ihal 's been on · Me" (1984 ), and such lows as
ballpark on his bauery-powered tape an performer Lily Tomlin staked her TV and it's one of the happ1est. "Moment by Moment" (1978).
' recorde~.
.
claim on a new role. She's now the Working here is harmonious and Most recently, she conlributed a
"He'd tell me tllings lo work on, 'boss oflhe FYI news gang on CBS' mess free."
funny lorn w11h Alan Aida as a !aland the things !hat he liked," says " Murphy Brown ," replacing M1les
A long-lime poli1ical aclivist, ter-day hippie couple, dealing drugs
Tomhn also likes " Murphy in lhe desert in " Fiirtmg wllh DisasJoe. 27. "He stressed pacmg, good (Grant Shaud).
English and finishing my words, my
Even as Murphy (Cand1ce Brown's" reputation as a show !hat's ter."
Bergen) offered the new charac1er not afraid lo delve inlo -poliucal
Over the years, ,sue!) Tomlin charpronunciatiOn."
aclers
as Ernesune lhe phone operaThe nine-year head start Qver typ- an oh-so-tentauve handshake, it was 'tssucs. (Remember lhe Dan Quayle
tor and Trudy the bag lady have
ical college graduates helped Joe clear sparks will fly lhis season 10 "fum1ly values" de bale'!)
"Smce 11's an eleclion year, I like become part of lhe nauon 's pop cuiBuck, all9,1and the LouiSville Red· lhc FYI newsroom And, hopefully,
lo fanlaSize !hal maybe we'll do an lure landscape One of her most popbirds' play-by-play JOb. By 21, he most of !hem Will be funny.
was siuing next 10 his falher for the
''I'm sel for lhe 24 epiSodes lhis eleclionshow of some sort," Tomhn ular creations, the precocious
Cardinals radto (\etwork.
season," Tomlin says, during a says
.
"child," Edith Ann , also has
"ll's lhe classic case of a kid phone inlerview from the "Murphy
Performing as a regular on a TV appeared as an anirnaled charaeter in
growing up, admiring his falher so Brown" set. "There's some outside sll-com is aboul alllhe 57-year-old two ABC-TV specials.
much," Joe says. "He took me posSibility I may go a year beyond' · Tomlin has~'! 1ried 1n show buSIevery.where he. went. And l always thaL I undersland CBS made the. ness1 Smcc. moving to Manhattan An Editll Ann Christmas show and
wanted 10 do what he did. hccause I. · overture to Cand1ce (lo conlinue the· from her nati&gt;te DetrOit' in 196S; tlfe " ffve more cartoon program~ are'
saw the smile !hal 11 put On his face. show) for {WO years, bul she hasn 'l wriler-comed!an-8Ciress has WOO a planned for upcOming Seasons.
I never entertamed 1houghts of commtltcd lo 11 yet."
Grammy for a comedy record, an
Tomlin admits she has a tilk~­
tloing anylhing else."
.As for her character, Tomlin sees Em my for one qf her TV specials, a charge per:;pnalily when il comes to
He wa~ 1he youngesl nclwork TV her as "a parenl, 1rying 10 deal wilh Tony, and an Oscar nommation for her work , whtch may expla1n why
announcer. al 25, on a full season of four adolescents." After all. the four her perform&amp;ncc in Rohcrt Altman's much of il has been in lhe fonn of
Nauonal Football League games in newsroom characters "arc hke:o
1994, Fo&lt;'s firs! NFL &gt;cason. Fox's kidS. Murphy, especially, IS a brat
lootball team include' two more • " My characlcr puis Murphy in a
sccond-gcncrataon VOices. Thorn •dynam1c she 's never experienced
8rcnnaman (son of Cincmnall Reds' be lure. She's going lo thmk she has
' -announcer Many" Brcnnaman) and • me figured oul and is on lop of lhe
K~nny Alhcn (son of NBC's Marv Sllualion," Tomlin says, bu1, m real'Aihert).
ily, 1he opposnc IS 1rue.
·ntQogh Tomhn has been a II &lt;lure
A' he loii&lt;JW&gt; "" lather '&gt; fool 'tcp&gt; mt11 the play&lt;J II , and World on 'I V smce lhe days of "The Garry

On Oct. 19 and 20, 75 world class
carvers from all over 1he Uniled
States will display their hand carved
pieces to vie for lhe lop prize in lhe
"Wonders in Wood" compelilion at
Dover.
Prtzes will be awarded to carvers
in various en!ry areas and !he top
carving will receive the Mooney Warlher Award and will have the
carving displayed for one year at
Warther's Museum in Dover.
Warther's Museum is the oome of
Ernesl' '~Mooney" Warther, master
carver. Warlher carved his collection
of steam locom01ives out of ebony,
ivory and walnut. These carvings
have been appratsed by !he Smithsonian as "pnceless works of an."
The show 'ol(i\1 showcll$e carvings
of many styles, whi~h are available
for sale. There will be demonstrations on 1he var1ous forms of carving
dl!ring the two day show.
'

COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY THR\1 THURSDAY

AVERY BRADY
SEQUEL PG-13
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-11923

one-woman presentalions, prepared
i~ tandem witlt long-ulne producuon
partner, Jane Wagner.
"I very oflen have more a pro·
ducer's head," Tomlm says. "I like
to see the piece as a whole. I'm nol
as inlense as I was 20 years ago. It's
hard for me not to put in my two
cenl~ ,aboul everylhing."
But, Tomlin says, coming in1o
"Murp~y
B wn" puiS her inlo an
alread s1ablished
"well-oiled
organ zation.
'
"Certainly, they're open to my
ideas or developmenl. Or what I'm
weanng or some slight direction in 1
lhe characler, bul the.y've just celcbraled their 200th epiSode and obviously know what they're doing. And
il's hard to do, week after week afler
week.''

.'

..

Family Night Is
Back••• Only'Better!
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
4P.M.·9P.&amp;ONLY

Point PI-nt, W. Ve.
GtiiHpollll I Rio Grinde, OH

" Would I have hcon hruadca,ung
when I wa\ age I~ 11 my dad wa., n't
Jack Huck'' No way 'lhcrc'' no
dr,uhi 1ha1 \ whHI got me tn the
thli'•r," Joe :\it )I'•..
What h :pt hun around wa~ ti.llcnl
;mcll111 ha\Chall cduca1111n

FIRST PLACE WINNERS - Membera of the South Gallia Future
Farmers of America Soils team which placed first In the 'Gallla
County FFA Rural Soil Judging Contest recently are, kneeling,
left to right, Brian Lane. Kent 'Sutler, and Amoa Calahan. StandIng, left to right are Chris Barcus and Scott Lawls. The team will
now advance to the FFA District Soli Judging Contest, to be hald
at Federal Hocking High School In October.

the 1960s, "Murphy Brown" marks
her 11rst cl&gt;mmilment to full -lime
wurk on a situation comedy. Her
rreviou' forte has been !he varielyshow funnat.
" First of all, I'm a friend and fan
ofCand1 ce," Tomlm says. "I've had
oflcrs before. but this seemed like a
gtx&gt;d tdea ...
Tomlin says she likes !he idea

.•

•

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MATJIItiU SAT I ""'

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71110 QULY _ . . .

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JIJCNA r.L DOUGl.AS ln ·~ t• f t l 0 ' " - 1

"-:!!!l.~~~~~:::::~~ I GIUIA DAYl. in •11 LGIIG liii 0000

• GALLIPOLIS - The•DebtCollec: uon Improvement Acl of 1996 man' dates all Federal f&gt;ayments eventual. iy be made by electronic: funds
ilranSfer (EFT) commonly called
I direcl deposit. This act applies all
'. producers who first apply and
' IJecome elig1ble for a payment after
Seplemher .5, 1996. Also,. lhis law
requires !hal all Federal payments be
inade by EFT after January I, 1999.
Once a producer receives a,payment through EFT, all fu1ure payments 'regardless of 1he date Of 1he

to

1 UH MRN ITINIINI
~9 : 10

By JENNIFER BYRNES
only mmimal incidence of heaving
GALLIPOLIS - The fall seasop has been.observed 10 alfalfa !hal did
can be a cruical time of lhe year for not have a late .harvest 111 mid-Octoalfalfa management. Alfalfa general- ber. Therefore, producers may want
ly responds welllo !he growing con- to consider weighing the benefits of
dilions during the monlhs of Sep- the lale harvest against lhe cosiS of
tember and October, wh1ch can result alfalfa loss due lo heaving. When
. m enough growlh lo take a late cut- making lhes~ assessments and deci·
ting. However lh1s should be care- sions on late harvest, also keep in
fully planned by the calendar. mind the soil cond1tions 10cluding
According to OSU spec1alis1S, Myers fertility and dramage, and the cond•and Van Kcuren, no harvest should be tion' of the alfalfa stand. Por more
taken from nud-September to mid- inforinalion please call lhe OSU
October. The first killing frost in Ex1ens10n office at 446-7007 and
Soulhern Ohio is generally around request a Fact Sheet on Pall Alfalfa
October 15. By these allowing these Managemeol. ~ _ -~ , .
30 days oolweeii the last regular harveSI and the first killing frost, the
Ag news
..crown and rool reserves will have
Tobacco producers: The Gallia
adequale energy stores for winler dor- County Pride In Tobacco Association
mancy. Manag10g alfalfa for these inviles all area lobacco growers and
rooland crown reserves will promole any olher interested pan1es to attend
_good stands in the spring.
1he1r annual banquet meeting on
· Bel ween Ocloher 15-20, a Iale Thursday, October I0,. 1996. The
alfalfa harveSI may be taken 1f there meeting w1ll begm at 7 p.m . at 1he
has be_en adequale growlh. Because Senior Citizens Resource Center in
of cooler temperatures, shorter days, Gallipolis. The banquel program
and h1gher humid1ty and moiSiure, it includes recognition of award reclpis recommended !hat tins late cutting ients, election of association d~recbe harvested.for silage inslead of dry 1ors. and a review of assoclallon
hay. After this lale harvest, it is aclivilies. Participants will also weiunlikely !hat there w1ll be enough come to Gallia County, Bill Pfeffer of
regrowlh of lhe alfalfa stand to low- Tobacco Ambassadors. He will
er the food reserves in the roots address lhe proposed PDA regulation
below the level needed for regenera- of 1obacco, markeling Ibis fall and
uon in the spring. If producers are winler, as well as projecled demand
contemplating a late hatvest, (after for Burley. The cosl of lhe dinner is ·
October 15), 10 .order to minimize $7.50 per person or $15 per couple,
.complications consider these recom- and 1his includes annual dues. If you
are inlereSied in auending, please call
mendatwns:
1.) Alfalfa Sland should be well the OSU Ex1ension office a1 446eSiablished, not a n~w seeding.
7007 by Monday, Oclober 7.
2.) P1elds should be well dramed.
;...
.
3.) Sml should have a high level
Uiiwanted pesticides: The Oh10
of fertility, and a faiL application of Department of Agncullure and other
'potassmm is highly recommended for agencies are sponsoring a pesticide
regrowlh in the spring.
collection day. All holders of unwant: 4.) Leave a 4 inch stubble to !rap ed peSiicides now have the opponusnow which will provide some msu- nily to diSpose of the chemicals con,lation against other winter conditwns. fidennally, and free or charge. The
Caule producers may also want to collection day is slated for a day m
conSidertop grazing asap alternative December, that is yet lo be
to hay or silage for final harvest.
announced This opportunily IS open
Finally, producers should consid· to all pesticide holders, 10cluding
er the phenomena of "heaving," agricultural producers, golf cour~e
which is the raising of alfalfa roots /fllanagers, landscapers, and homecaused by 1he freezing and thawing owners with lawn and garden prodof the soil, usually resulting in plant uciS. Banned pesticides will be readloss. The following conditions make ily accepled, and all information is
alfalfa stands more susceptible to kepi confidentiaL In order 10 take
'1
. advantageoflhis opportunity, partie-.
heaving:
I.) Silt loam o~ clay soils, which ipaniS must register by filling out a
are highl~ susceptible to frosl.
simple regislration foml which can be
2.) Higq soil moisture content.
obtained from 1he OSU Extension
3.i Temperatures just below !he office eilher by mall.or 10 person. The
so1l surface registering 32 degrees registration deadline is October 25.
.fahrenheit or lower. Mulching with Por more information, call the office
, a strawy manure following a lale har- al446-7007.
' vest will serve to insulate lhe alfalfa
1a~d reduce damage caused from
Jennifer Byrnes is Gallia Cou,n' heaving.
ty's
extension agent, 'agricultull'
1
Research has shown late harvestand
natural
resources.
; cd alfalfa to be considerably more
susceptible lo heaving and plant loss.

[FS"A
now does direct depo~it
.

.. - ""-··
,., ........

• ~ICK

Preparing alfalfa
for the winter

•

Sene,. it\ Joe who mention~ the . Moore Show" and "Laugh-ln .. an

; "N" word Ncpol.,m .

/

·wonders in
Wood• show
scheduled

Television· comedy with Lily! Lily oh Lily! .

I
II

~

J)

Batter up! Fox
broadcasters
are in the ·
booth and ·
ready to call it

'I

Trees should.not be harvested
.
without plans for· ~pl·acement

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) -' John F. Kennedy Jr. and bride Carolyn Bes- Nashville N•ghthawks as~ memento.
The pop saxophonist has moved into part of a bigger h~se he i~ buHd.
,
selle-Kennedy ended 1heir Turkish honeymoon Salurday and headed for lhe
Whoopee owner Pat Nugenl was happy lo,oblige, promising 10 have team ing bn,the&gt;oame property m !his suburb easl of Seaule. He plans a sw1mm1ng
Uniled States, an airport official said.
members sign lhe puck before sending il to Goldberg. Nugenl inviled lhe pool on the s11e of the old house.
The couple boarded a .Turkish Airlines actress to auend lhe firsl game, bul she already had commilments.
The old house is headed lo a new .---'------~--:;:-,
morning flight bound for New York,
owner and will sit on Soulh Beach,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - John Prankcnhe1mer has d~re cled such west of Seaule. The move comes in
accordmg to the offic1al who spoke on
condition of anonymily.
acclaimed films as "The M a n c hur~an Cand1da1e" and "The Birdman of !he same week as lhe release of
The newlyweds arrived in lslanbullate Alca1raz." Bul he got hi s slart doing TV, and lhe small ,creen remains his Kenny G's latest CD. ''The
Moment."
lasl monlh to spend the firsl few days of first love.
1he1r honeymoon in a luxury hole!, afttr
Frankenhe1mer calls his lime direcling dramas for "Playhouse 90," a live
Kenny G said il would have cheaRmarrying secrelly al a remole island show !hat ran on CBS from the 1956 lo '60 TV seasons, "the hesl years of er 10 lear down lhe old house, bul
wan1ed to · avoid losing any adjacenl
resort off the coast of Georgi;&gt;.
my life "
.
They la[er boarded a yachllo cruise lhe
The Museum of Television &amp; Radio kicked off us lhree-week WilliamS. trees during demolition, so he had it
moved mstead.
Aegean Sea. The daily Humyel !racked Paley Televiston Festival with a lribute lo lhe senes.
"The facl thai we 're recycling it,
the yachl down 10 the holiday resorts of '
" I love domg televiSion," Frankenheimer said on the eve of Thursday's
Kusadasi anditok k. II sa1d !he two reolijl&gt;n for program alumm,',who Included wriler ~bby Mann and aclors Jelling someon.e else enjoy it, I feel
were seen sunba ing and swimmmg Polly Bergen, !,.loyd Bridges, Cha~llon Heston, Tab Hunter, Piper Laurie, good aboullhat," he said. ·
and rarely lefl e oal
Cliff.Robertson and Rod Sleiger.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - MuhamThey flew back lo Istanbul on Friday.
Frankenheimer, who won Emmys for the TV movies "The Burning Sea"They were very nice people. l showed son" and " Andersonville," directed such " Playhouse 90" dramas as "The mad Ali's latcsl fight is in court. .
Ali cla1ms his piclure was pul on a '
!hem lhe Aegean coasl. They hked il Days ofWme and Roses," "The Comedian" and "Journey lo lhe Day," with
telephone credit card wilhoul permisKenny G
very much." Greek yacht captain M1ke N1chols.
.
,
·
Andreas Lapoylsos told !he Hurriyel.
"Thai 's alii wanted lo do," he said. "If live television had continued, I sian. He's suing Forever Films and
Whoop! Goldberg
· Nevada-based telephone company Amerivox for $500,000.
n'eve r would have left it."
A Superior Courl judge on Fnday scheduled lrial for Feb. 4.
MACON, Ga. (AP) - The Macon Whoopee is making Whoopi the
'
The
breach of contracl·suit claims Ali gramed the Los Angeles-based film
HUNT'S POINT, Wash. (AP)- That wasn'l saxophone music floating
learn's No. I fan.
company
non-exclusive nghts Ia use his name and likeness in the pro,molion
Whoopi Goldberg agreed to autograph three pucks Ihat wi II be used ou1 across Lake Washmglon. It was just Kenny G's old house.
The 1mposmg 1930s bnck mansiOn, framed with old-growth timber, was of the 1989 film "Champions Porever."
Thursday in lhe firs I game ever for the Whoopee, a new minor league hockBut in 1994, the suit clwms, Forever Films Illegally allowed Amerivtx lo
loaded onto a barge Friday for transport through lhe Ballard Locks and
ey learn.
use lhe boxer's pho10graph on a calling card.
In return, Gol(jberg asked for the first puck used in the opener against the across Pugel Sound.

•r_,.

See puzzle

on page 02
•

~

orilinal program application) will be
made through EFT 10 1he account
elected.
Por further details regarding EPT
(direct deposit) producers should
contact lhe county office to oblain lhe
required form (SP-1199A) or have
one comple1ed 1a11heir financial 'institution where one nonnally does busi·
·ness.
Please contact
lhe GalliaLawrence county office at446-8686
fQr additional infonnation . ,

By ANN BONNER
However, they cannot succeed
GALLIPOLIS - The American wilho~t communily support. While
pubhc·wlll not tolerate e~cessive um- many of our city's trees aren't perfect,
ber -harvesting across our country's il is dangerous to indiscriminalely
timberlands, yel many of us lolerate remove trees wilhoul plans for
and take part in excessive tree replacement. The removal of just on~
removals in our own backyards with- tree can dramatically change lhe
oul a though!.
landscape of an enure neighborhood.
Many environmental groups argue
To avoid lhis, the commumly
thai the wbrld's foresl s are dwindhng muSI evaluate each siluation from a
al an alarming rale, but whal aboul collecli ve perspective. By we1ghmg
our community foreSis?Ttees around lhe benefiiS a lree provides to lhe
our parks, streeiS and yards are dis- street, neighborhood and communily
appearing jusl as fast. Insects, dis· againsl any possible negatives to lhe
ease, pollutiOn and 1gnorance arc tak· individual, the tree commission. can
ing !heir toll on lhis valuable address individual concerns more
resource, our commumty forest.
effectively.
The Gallipohs Tree Commission
The city of Gallipolis is a histone
is working to change !hat. In lhe past place, where at one time majestic
lwo years, lhe Clly has planled more elms and oaks lined lhe streeiS and
!han
shade homes. Names like Elm Streel
200 trees along Clly slreels and m and Maple Avenue described lhe
1he parks. AI the same time, !hey have dominant feature of these areas, the
been diligently working (o find ways 1rees These lrees absorbed runoff,
10 remove hazardous or problem slowed eroSion, recharged groundtrees.
waler supplies and deereased healing

cosiS, alllhe while crealing beautiful
scenery of which people still speak of
today.
Today, many of these slreeiS bear
narnes of these once-slanding landmarks, bul are v~rlually devoid of
ttees. Why? Was it a lomado or disease? No, in most cases, it was the
gradual, individual actions of people.
Someone wanled to show ofT their
house, another didn't hke lo rake
leaves, and slill anolher pul in an
exira driveway. Gradually, the trees
were loS! and wah il, lhe sense of
neighborhood.
Many older lrees do pose legll•mate problems for homeowners and
should be removed and replaced
with a more appropnale species.
.Today, we understand how trees
grow and have learned lhe importance of-species selection. Tree com·
missions no longer advoca1e lhe
planting of waler maples and Siberian elms.
Advanced cultivars of crab apples

and pear trees, adorned with longlastmg flowers and minimal fruit,
have become the preferred choice
along our cily's streeiS. By planling
the right trees in the right places, the
community will derive countless benefits, while avoidmg lbe pitfalls of
planting large lrees under wires or too
close to buildmgs. But this is nol possible if mdividuals indiscriminately
remove city trees at their own dis·

cretion. The tree commissiOn has
been trained 10 inspect and assess
lhese situanons.
We all know 1rees do die or
become problems, bul how we manage !hiS resource affects eveyone. So
think about lhc commumly for~sl the
next time you step oulside, and more
importantly, nexl time you are about
to cut a tree

(Ann Bonner Is an urban
forester with the Ohio Departmant of Natural Resources'
Division of Forestry, District 4,
Athens.)

Environmental awareness a must for landowners
c..

.

11, we should be practlcmg good stew-

By CYNTHIA L. JENKINS
District Forester
Gallla SWCD
GALLIPOLIS - Env~ronmental
awareness is somelhing we should all
Slnve to be a part of, especially 1fwe
are landowners, or stewards of 1he
land. We should nol only be a part of

on the average, less than II percenl
of lhese farms have management
plans for lhelf foresiS . A management
plan does no1 mean planning a harvest. II could mean a wildlife management plan, or one for recreation,
aeSihetics, hunting. etc.
Most of lhe forestland m Gallia
Counly which is classified as commercial forest does not have· lrees
which have reached sawlog size.
Such values indicate greal potential
henefiiS from managing young slands

ardship and conservution programs
on every acre we own.

More than 55 percenl of Gallia
Co only 1! forest land and 80 percenl
oflhiS foreSIIS privalcly owned. Most
arc farms ·of at least !'33 acres and
there arc around 850 of these farms.

J·

"Ms.
Arnell has qver
34 years of diversified experience,

DeCicco joins Northwest staff
POMEROY - Marc DeC1cco of
llelpre has jmned NorthweSI Territory Life Insurance Agency, Inc , a
subsidiary Qf Peoples Bancorp, and
will serve
Bank's off1ces m
Gallipolis, M•ddlerort, Pomeroy
and Rolland .
The
announcement

was made by
Sieve Highland,
PreSJdenl
of
Nonhwest TernDeCicco
tory Life Insurance Agency, Inc.
DeCicco is responsible for coordinating insurance and mutual funQ
serv1ces for all four of Peoples
Bank's Gallia and Meigs offices. He
holds a Ser1es 7 secunnes license
which is sponsored by lhe Securities
Exchange CommiSSIOn and the New
York Stock Exchange and IS admmIStered by lhe NASD, allowing
DeCicco to sell virtually all 1ypes of
mvestmenls. He also hold s a L1fe,

Health and Variable Annuity
License from the Ohw Deparlment
of Insurance. He may be con1ac1ed
lhrough any Peoples Bank office in
Galhpohs, Middleport, Pomeroy
and Rutland or by calhng (800) 3746160.
DeCicco IS a graduate of West
V~rgmia Univemly with a B A in
Busmes s Admimstra11on and has
served as a financial analyst with
Slandard &amp; Poor's Corporation in
New York. He reSides in Belpre with
. hiS wife Slacy and son Brandon.
NorihweSI Territory L1fe Insurance Agency, Inc is a subSidiary of
The First Nat10nal Bank of Soulheaslern Ohio, an affiliale of Peoples
Bancorp, Inc. Insurance products,
mcluding fixed and v'ariable products are offered by NorthweSI Terrilory Life Insurance Agency, lnc.
Vanable products and Mutual Funds
are provided Pourth Financial Securilies, Inc., member NASD, SIPC, a
licensed broker dealer.

I

Arnett named new
nursing VP at HMC
GALLIPOLIS - Sally Arnett,
RN, has been named v1ce presidenl
for nursing services at Holzer Medical Cen1er.

PLACE THIRD IN CONTEST- The South Gallia FFA Urban Soil
Judging team recently participated In the Gallla County Solis
Contest. Kneeling, left to right are Allen Stapleton, Mike Waugh
and Kent Butler. Standing left to right are Chris Long and Robbie Harrison. The taam will advance Ia the Distinct 10 FFA Urban
Soil Judging Contest, to be held in October at Federal Hockln!JI:tigh School.
·
·

lo improve our fore siS for the future.
A large ponion of Gallia Counties
fish and wildhfe species rely on our
forest base for some or all of !heir life
requiremenls The nch d1versi1y of our
nat1ve plants and ammals both contnbule to and are a part of our forests.
They are linked direelly and mdireclly to lhe heallh of pallia's forests.
Recreation is synonymo~s with
forest lands and is a major induslry
~jere. Much of the huntmg, fishing,
Continued on D-8

i~clud1ng

clinical
and
pubhc
sa1d
health,"
Charles
L
ARNETT
Adkins, Jr., president and ch1ef
exec01ive officer. "She also has more
than seven. years in educanon and
Slalf development, and 18 years m
admimstra11on, including hospital
and managed care sellings," Adkins
said.
Wilh an MBA from William
Cares College m Gulfpon, Miss., m
1995, she "completed graduate studies in public health administralion,
holds a B.S. in heallh administrallon, and a diploma in· nursing from

!he M.B. Johnson School of Mursing
in Elyria.
Smce 1992, she has heen chief
operating and nursing officer at Gulf
Coast Me&lt;ficar l!enter ·in Biloxi,
Miss , and served ~s interim admin·
islralor for Gulf Oaks Hospitals for
six monlhs, in addilion 10 other
dunes as director of nursing at Gulf
Coast. She has also served as director of patient care services, director
of nursmg for quality assessment
and urilization review1 vice president
of provider relations, and administrauve director for vanous health
care orgamzations since 198 I.
"We are very e•c•led lo have
Sally as a member of our hosp1tal's
adminislralive slaff," said Adkins.
"Her years of,~xperience in 1he field
of heallh care, as well as her foc us
on patients and their families, exemplify Holzer's mission to provide
quality care."
She and her husband J1m Vllale,
live on Halliday Heights.

•

Newberry named loan officer
GALLIPOLIS - Oh10 Valley
Bank has appomled Sleven W. Newberry to lhe position of loan officer at Ihe 0 VB
Loan origination
Cemter in Pomt
Pleasant. Newberry has
~ecn
employed by lhe
bank for 13 years.
NEWBERRY The Letart nalive
is a graduate of Point Pleasanl High
School and Gallipolis Business College. He is also an Air Porce ve1eran

Over lhe years, Newberry has
taken pari in various American Instltule of Banking (AlB) courses and
the Oh10 School of Consumer Credil He has held several financial and
management positions. In 1989, he
was the recipient of the Gallia Soil
&amp; Wa1er Conservation District's
''DistinguiShed Service Award" .
Newberry and his wife, Karen,
have lhree children. Janel, "!Jlployed
at Pleasanl Valley Hospitllf; David, a
sludenl of the UmverSIIy of R10
Grande; and Chris, a sludenl ot
R1ver Valley High School.

The best investment adyice: Keep it simple
By RYAN SMITH
' 1he
GALLIPOLIS - With all
lerrns abounding in loday's financial
wo1nu. investors may feel !hey have
tun into a buzzsaw of buzz
words . Bul lhc
most 1mportant
word
m lhe
induSiry might be
Simplicity.
Desp1te all the
leY4oraJsed bu11-01Jts. option spreads,
and . accelerated lease agreemenls,
!here is lillie 1hat1s really new.
You m1ght see some new twists to_,~
old producls or some mnoNatJve
methods to take advantage of the IaleS! lax law. Bul for,most of us With
normal inveslmenl problems, it i·s
probably hesl to av~id complica1ed
and hard-to-undcrsland producls
S1mple thmgs still work.
Here's-how:
Define )!OUr JIOOis.
f
What do you want your money 10
do for you? You •mghl wan! to sel up
a college fund for your children .
Perhaps ~ upplemenling your rel~re-

.

.

~

mcn1 fund or savmg for a world
crui se IS your goal. While some may
want more mcomc now, others are
concerned aboul the lax effect Be
sure to state your goals as Simply
and spec1lkally as posSible.
Hire and work with a financial
advisor.

You hire a plumber to work on
your p1pes and an eleclncian to do
1he wirinlf. Why shouldn't you do
the same fQr your finances? A professiOnal can do lhc work for you,
frcemg up your lime for other maltors. once you've covered 1he fundamentals feel it is necessary
Consider the risk. No mvestmenl comes wilhout nsk- whelher 1t
he inOauon, changmg, intcresl rates ,
markel or crcd11 nsk. The higher the
nsk. 1he higher the pn1en1ial reward .
Evaluale your risk lelerance before
mvcstmg

, Keep good financial records.
We live m a world which require s
1ha1 we keep track of 1ransact10ns how much we pay for purchases and
how much we receive for sales,
inlcrest and dividends . 'Keepmg
proof of owncr~hip is anolher key 10

orgamzahon as you pursue your
fmanc1al goals.
Avoid complicated tax shelters
and fancy life insurance.
In some cases, making simple
gifls to charity and to children are
preferable to a complex !rust
arrangemenl. These products call be
excellenl for specific situa11ons and
individuals, but unnecessary tar
some people who could do just as
well with slandard inveslments.
Automate everything possible.
Put technology to work for you .
Have your payroll cheeR deposited
directly mto your IICcounl(s). Have
money . invested d~reclly inlo a
401(k) account You can ~ven have
your mortgage and car loan paymeniS automated Save yourself
hme and hassle.
Consolidate your accouniS.
Ther~ are a greal many financial
tnstitulions !hal now offer cash management accounts. These accounts
can corsolidale checking savings,
investmenls, credit curds and debt!
9'rds all under one masler account,
c~vered by one monthly statemenl
l'

In addition, cash ' management
accounts can also earn you money.
You can choose lo sweep dividends
and 9ther mcome d~rectly into a
money murkel account.
Keep a household budgeL
Agam; !hiS is ncnhmg complex or
time-consuming. An easy-to-follow
monthly household budget form can
be purchased at any stauonary slore,
or you can use any of the numerous

computer sOft ware programs a~atl­
able. Budget form s and programs
serve as a reminder • letting you
knots when insurance premiums are
due , when your esumaled tax paymen! IS approachmg. But most
1mportan1, !hey tell you, allhe end of .
the year, where your money went.
Thai in ilself co uld be your mosl
1mponan1 diScovery. If you match
your finan cial objectives 10 where
you have placed your money, you're
on lhe way lo reachmg the goals discussed earlier And in many cases,
lhe simple rou1e is best.
Ryan Smitti is an investment ·
officer with Advest, Int., In its
Gallipolis office.
'

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.

•

•

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'

•

t

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,

.......

I"

'House of the Week

Affordable, comfOrlable living
~h~f.~~~ iiflll=

Otf • Point Pleaaant, wy

Replacing cracked putty ~
will prevent .- rot from
invading your wind.ows

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Have you looked at the glazing
putty around your windows lately? if
so, chances are you noticed some
_.sracked, broken or entirely missing
~tnps of putty. The fact of the matter
is, all single-pane windows need
reglazing periodically. Replacing
. ......
cracked putty will save energy and
THIS HOME'S BRICK EXTERIOR, steep hlp roof and corner quoins give It a pastoral look.
prevent rot from invading your windows.
By BRUCE A. NATJIAN
· Designers Network, combines within .
Of course; your maintenance job
AP Newofeatures
comfortable living with afford Inside, the foyer i&gt;pens to the will be hastened if you happen to
With Its open d~sign and com- ability.
centrally located li'ling room, have a broken window or .two.
-pact 1,51:5 square feet or living
The elegant e&lt;terior of this
which features a 15-11. cathedral
ceiling, a fireplace and access to a ·
Start your glazing project by
space, Plan G-2:5, by HomeStytes home is matched by the spaces
removing
any screen, storm
rear 1errace.
. or com~,
\,
The unusual kltd1e 1i d.-lgn· bination window that might be in
in,c ludes an ungl~d . snuck bar place. Then look to the most deteri·
between the bayed den and the orated striP' of putty and start chipdining room. Sliding glass doors ping it away with a rigid, chisel-edge,
putty knife. Old, rock-hard putty
operi to a second terrace.
The master suite is a dream mayfirstrequireheattosoftenit. \Use
come true, with

it~

romantic fire - an elect-.:ic heat-gun, rather thap a
place, built-in desk and 9-11. tray torc'h to reduce the risk of fire.

Once the putty is out, remove for
ceiling. The private bath includes
a whirlpool tub and ·a dual-sink the half-dozen glaz~r 's points that
vanity.
,
lock the pane against the sash frame .
Anoth_er full bath serves the . These will either be diamond-shaped

i;li~ing Rm
~~~~~~~

t2Xl0

Sunday, October&amp;, 1991 _i

.re":taimng lwo bedrooms, one or metal points or fonned metal clips.
wh1ch ~eat_ur~s •. 10 IIZ, n . c~the- Use a ·needle-nose pliers or screw-

drul celhng and an arched driver to unseat them.
To remove the glass, go indoors
window.
••• ••••••• •
and press evenly against the boltom
of the glass pane. When the glass is

pushed just past the bottom rail of the
sash, go back outside, grasp the pane
(with heavy gloves~ and pull down
steadily. Because glass is usually
seated firmly in a slot in the top rail
of the sash, you may need to twist and '
tweak it a bit, until it breaks free. If
the pane is broken, remove the loose
pieces first.
When the glass pulls free, brush
the L-•haped recess with a wire
brush and wipe away loose particles.
Then use a utility knife to pry the
remaining putty from the top slot of
the sash.
·
To install new glass, slide the pane
from below into jts upper slot and
gently press the bottom against the
sash. If the pane won't slide into its
recess at the bottom, slip a putty knife
into the recess and gently pry the
glass up until it clears the recess edge,
Then secure the pane with glazier's
points. Two points per side and bot·
tom will do. Press the points into the
frame with a scre~driver or a putty
knife.
Install a bead of putty all around
the window. Soften the putty, if nec·
essary, before · using it by" rolling a
glob of it in your hands. Smooth the
putty by drawing a clean knife along
the joint. Carefully trim away anr.__
excess when finished.
·
Iri most cases, you'll want to paint

the glazing when it's had a few hours
to skin over. Don't worry about gel .
ling paint on the glass. Overpainting
makes painting easier and-also he~Jll.:
seal the joint and picks up the otly•
film left on the glass by the putty. Tho,
paint dries in a few hours, so just
Sc:rape the glass clean with a sin&amp;fe
edge razor blade.
Double- or triple- glazed insulated windows don '1 require reglazing
as these units are assembled at the
factory. And the glazing ih.ot is used
doesn 't breakdown as itdoes on sin·
gle pane windows. lf .one of these ·
windows breaks, or its sea) is brobn, ·
you'll have to call a professional, or·
have the entire unit reo laced.
·:

Buf)iness briefs

D

Double Ga1age
20 " 20

·,

rooms, two full baths and a mudroom, totaling t.5U square feel
of living space. The plan is avail able with 2x4 or l!x6 exterior wall
framing and a standard base·ment. crawlspace or slab fu'unda, Ljon. A two-car 8Hrag'e prnvides
400 square feel of spot-e.

'

G-23
THE FOYER nows directly into the living room, which features a 15-n.
cathedral ceiling, a fireplace and. sliding glass doors thut open to a
backyard terrace. To the len, the kitchen, dining room and den m~rge
to create a nice open area. The('e is a snack bar. between the ki,tchen
and the. den. Across the home, a fireplace warms the master suite.
Other highli8hl8 inclu&lt;Ie a built-in desk, a walk-in closet and a private
both. Two more bedrooms and a full bath complete the noor plan.
·

(For a mm't de/ailed, scaled plan
Q/' this house, inclu.d,ing g~Jides to

J

'I

dry. But the chemicals' in cement
For AP Special Features
react and harden as a result of getting
Concrete walls, floors and side- wet. Water
walks can last for centuries, but itot
. To make good, strong concrete, a
all concrete lasts that long. Poorly crucial part of the mix is water, which
produced concrete will crack, crum- moistens the powdered cement and
ble and flake, sometimes at alarming traASforms it into a thick paste. This
rates.·
·
coats all surfaces of tbe aggregate and
Many people confuse th~ords . sand so they 'll stick together. Proper
concrete and cement. Concrete is the , mixing evenly blends the small and
bard, strong material we walk on and large particles so the concrete comuse toconstmct buildings. Cement is pacts well.
one of concrete's ingredients, the glue
The correct amount of water causthat holds it together.
es_the m.icroscopic crystals of cement
Ancient Romans used cement to to react, absorbing water in the
construct their aqueducts, roads and process, growing closer together to
buildings, some of which still stand hold the sand and aggregate more
after nearly 2,000 years. The stronger tightly. Too much water causes the
improved cement that we use today, crystals to grow farther apart and
called portland cement, was invent- - weaken the concrete. The amount of
ed in 1824 and was first used in the water added to' make a good concrete
United States about 1875. lngredients mix .is a compromise between
If you slice concrete open, you'.Il strength and workability.
see a random mix of stones of many ·
Excess water also causes concrete
. sizes called aggregate. Concrete man- · to lose its 'thick, SY.TUPY consistency
ufacturers carefully grade the stones and become soupy. In a soupy mix,
and mix them in exact proportions.so the aggregate sinks to the bottom and
they pack ·together in the concteie · cement rises to tbe top. Result: weak
mix.
concrete as a whole and the exposed
Otains of sand, which are also surface in particular. A mix that's too
graded; lie tightly packed around the wet will cause the surface to crack,
stones. You can also see a gray mate- chip off and powder. Setting
rial- cement - ·filling the spaces
After pouring, but before smooth·
between the sand and aggregate, ing the surface, you have to let the
coating their surfaces. Most biQding · · concrete' set - ·stiffen to the point
agents, such as glue, harden as they

where your fool will sink only llbout
a quarter-inch into its surface if you
stand on it. During this waiting peri- .
od, excess ·water from the concrete
rises to the surface. This bleed water
is normal and is soon reabsorbed by
the concrete. The more water there is
in the mix, the longer you have to
wait for the bleed water ' to be
absorbed. Never a\ld more water to
the mix th,an the manufacturer recOOI!f!ends, &lt;B&gt;Curing
Once concrete stiffens and its sur- ·
face is troweled smooth, curing
begins. The longer the cure, the
stronger the concrete.
After the concrete sets, water
becomes the key ingredient for cur'
ing. The longer concrete is wet, the
stronger it gets. If it dries, the hardening stops. So it must be watered
frequently. Pros sometimes even dam
up the edges of the freshly poured
project and flood the surface with
water.
You'll get fewer cracks with
longer cutes. But there's no escaping
cracks because when concrete dries,
it shrinks. While troweling, concrete
masons control cracki,ng·locations by
deeply grooving the surface at rcgu·
larly spaced intervals to. make weak
spots called control joints . .The conc~ete cracks at those joints and not
randomly.
.
.

&amp; VICinity
·• Famil y Sale 9:00 -7:00 Rain Of'
Shine. 6586 At 554 .. 7 miles from
Porter 5 112 from Chelhffe on
554 . Halloween Stull, Plus S1zes ,
Home lntenor, Curtam s, Bed ·
spreads , Bird ho uses &amp; D 1pper
Gourd s.

All Var&lt;l Salet Must Be Pai&lt;l In

Advanc•. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m.
the day belort the ad is to run.

Sunday

urday.
Big 3 Family t October 4th , Slh ,
8th, 3138 State Route 554.

Cheshire, Ohio.
Octbbir 7·9 Yard Sale 8 :00to
B:OO. 9 loucst 51. lots of Every ·
thi~l

Yard Sale. 1018 - 10/ 10. 9 :00am.
StOne jars, old stamps, .chair,
.c ouches, goll clubs. 51 a-.rrield
Ave.
I.

......

ACROSS

76 Wild boar
'77 - de plume
78 Breakfasl item
81 Trigger or Mr. Ed
83 Settled alter flight

1 Kind oi syrup
6 Therefore

10 Sharp-tasting
. t 5 Fix fraudulently

84 Relaxation

18 "- - a Grecian

· 85 Devour
87 Holy Roman 90 Dried out

'27 Audimehts

92 Depressing

94 Take-ouf order
, 95 Pay increase
96 DnVes too fast

98
99
100
101

·

29 Big books
29 Girder
3t Most impolite
33 Rex or Donna
35 ''Once - a time ... "
36 Jack who ate no fat

113 Painful 'spots
114 Stop
115 Warm and hearty
118 Humcane
119 British streetca r

system .

45 Polynesian image
47 Edible fish
51 Overlays

120\Real cute person

124 Western state
125 -Layered rock .

~cornered

126 Prophets
127 A legume
t 28 'Excavation

53 Sidewal,k rnaterial
55 Lawyers' org .

56 Skirt shape (hyph.
wd.)
57 Hint
58 Splay ·
60 Kind of seal
62 Louver

129 Implied but unsa1d

t31 Decayed
t 33 The devil
135 Beef
136 Pointless

137 Sailing vessels
138 - and kicking
139 Total ity

63 Lustrou s ·

65 Ladder part
66 Football player
67 Child
68 Tardy
6~ OJd Roman poet

7i

6 Aquakong
7 Safe place

140 Locations

t 41 Rather and Ayk•oyd
t 42 Walks back and
lorth

Kind of stew

73 Rainy
75 Cigar res.idue

DOWN

Cou.rt . St., andCarrlera,SirNIVendoro
Pomeroy, Ohio 457e9.
and Countar Saloa: 11,089.
9. Publlahar: Robart L.
2.MaHSubocrlptlono:839.
Wlngoll, Syrocuoa, Ohio
C. Total Pafd Clrculotion:,
45778. Managing Editor: 11,928.
Hobar1WlfoonJr., ThtrdAv..,
D. Froo Diotrlbutlon by
Galllpollo, Ohio 45831.
Mall; 0.
10.- Owner: Ohio Valloy
E. Froo Dlotrlbutlon out·
Publlohlng Co., 111.Court St., otdo tho Moll (Carrier or othor
Pomoroy,Ohio45789.
maano): 113
Portloo holding 1 poreo11t
G. Tolof Dlotrlbutlon:

Weekly.

ormoreofoutltendlngtharet

·

io Seem ·

It Swindle
12 Wander
13 Business abbr.

12,041.

o1 Common Stock; , Multlmo·

1

19 Drive forward

the house
22 Moistens
28 Brass instrurTJents

30 Raised · "
32 Employ
34 flespectable

36 Flavoring plant ,

37 lnqUir~d
39 Wet earth
40 Spreads lor
crackers ·
42 Come after

43 Fly a plane
44 Short stop
45 Youthful suflix
46 C onceivable •

48 Listen!
49 Adam's c h ild

50 Counly in Florida
51 Set if ac tors in a

play
52 Washday item
53 Unrefined
54 Ootong and pekoe.
e.g.

9j

~eird :

var.

·.

97 SWizzle sticks

99 Prejudice
t 02 The lost continent
104 Newspaper piece

.

..

105 Ltnes of stitches
107 Con1rivance
109 Swimmers· place
110 Memorizes
112 - •de Janeiro
113 Declares

••

Found: Aau Terrier While With
Brown Spots Vicinity : SR 588,
614-~6·9338 Alter 5:30PM.'

"

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114 Crawls
1 t5 Punctuation mark
1 t6 Bay window
1t 7 Of the kidneys
118 Gleam

to

'

Friendly Female House Kitten 12
Weeks Old, Liner Trained, 614·

4-48-3897.

,.

-~

lost: engine head, Middleport H1!V
Lead1ng Creek Rd . vic inlly, re.·
V(&lt;lrd, 614-992·4025.

G. Total: 13,800.
I Cortlfy that tho ototo·

Rd . Childs

· 119 Wyoming range

,.

121 Olvision
122 Go away
123 Road divisions
t25 Begone•
t 26 Colonnade
t 30 Black cuckoo '
132 Ancient
133 Plant juice
134 Winglike part

· ben*t' t\HIIt1 with I na{\Jral herDal vitamins, weight loss plan,
''herbal teat, bul~ and muacle pro·
'gram. For irilormalion carr Wendy,

..

614-992-1302.

...

We procau deer, make hickory
a~ed hams, 1rall boloQna, pep-

"''

....

peroni, jerky; summer sausage.
Cooler kept, cloan, sanitary. Hunt-

'"

ing auppllee, license &amp; game
Check 111tlon. CB,\WFORO'I Hen-

"

defsonWV.

40

Hurt
Fierce look
Let out a wailing cry.
Hourglass

Millen pawed kiuens, liter trained,
5 we8ks old. 3P•·'882·3o436.

Robert L. Wlnuo.U,
Publleher

Lo.sl : small b lack fema le long
ha ir11d dog, no ,co ll ar. Mulberry
Avenue, Pomeroy vicinity. 614 -

·",:,

pet. 304·895·3571 .

RESUUS

.

Help Wanled

110

Two a Goo&lt;l Home. 8 montt1 old
Mixe&lt;l Female Aetreiver Good

wilh Children. After 6p.m . 61-4 388-8683

Lost and Found

Found · 1 pair of prescription
glasses across !rom Lega r
Monumen~ Main St~t. Pomeroy.
parking lot, call 614-992-2155 to

10.

mnnagc

selfindi'Yidulas to
utility
pole

lo

to

a
inspection team . Must enjoy
outdoor work lll"!d be willing
tra11el

temporary

Tminin.£:
• FirSt Year Earnings
Potential $25,000+
• Company

• E)tccllent Benefits
Package

713-5785 Or 304·773·5447 .

90

Wanted If? Buy

_ _ _.;.,.._ _.;...,.-:-:._......,
Comple te Housel1old Or Esta tes!
Any Type 01 FumiMe, Applian ces, An ti Que's, Etc. Also Appra.1sa1
Ava•lable! 814 ·379-2720

Field l~e p rcsontat1vo needed to
work 314 time fat the ch ild cin e
lo ad progra m an d family d ay carehomes 1n Lawrence and Gallia co.
Assoc1ates degree 1n nutrit ion ,
chil d doveta pmel)t o r Closel y re ·
IOied . Experience m fa mily day·
Require ab1hty to Communica te w1th peo ple ot d•verse soc1al
and acono mic bac kg rou nd s,
make home 'mi lts, rlo group tram1tlg and ca lcula te la rge voiUIT1 8S
of clai·ms each rnonlh. M ust havo
own tran;; portati on. Fle xible
hours, medical ben ef its . Send re ·

AVON 1 All Areas 1
Spear1, 304·675-1 429.
Able

Absolule Top D ollar : All U.S. S1l ·
vcu And Gold Cams, P~bofse ts,
D i amond~ . Afl tique Jewelry, GOld
Rings, Pre-,9.30 U,S. Cu rrency,
Sterling, Etc. Acquisilions Jewelr.y
• U .T.S. Coin Shop, t51 Second
Awnue, Gallipoli s, 614·446-2842.

Avon

Repr8sentalives

needed. _Eam money lo r Chr i stmas bills tt l homo/at work . 1-800·
992-6356 or' 304 ·882· 2645, Ind .

::R ep.=---------- J , .
AI/ON Sales. $8 · $15 /Hr.
Door To Ooor. Or Minimum Order.
Bonu ses 1-800 -82 7· 4640 lnd /
SIS/Rep.

Model Cars Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer,
Smitt1 Buick Pontiac, 1900 Easl·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

Babysitter need ed in my heme,
non -smoke r. lo r 3 schoo l- ag e
boys &amp; , 1nta nt. 2 ·3 ev en ing s/
week. 4; hrs nrghl. 304 .675·5761

CALL.Today, START :Tomorrow!
$1 ,000 Siqn -O n Bonu s Hir ing
Fla tbed Dr~~~en . All ~ ile s Paid
(New Scale). L1le 1Heallt1, aonus· t
NEW R1der Program . ECKM dler
1-800·611 · 6636. Owner Ope ra ·
tore ltlao Welcomed!
' .
c 'hlld Care Provldtn Nttdtd .
Are you a star at home pareni or
currently doing child care in your·
home? ~cCRN I C . hlld ' Care Re ·
source Netwo rk IS a free serv1 ce
to help you get s1aned . We are
seeking lovi11g individuals · to
watch infant s through school
ages. Call 1- 800· 577 ·2 2 76 to r
more 1nlo.

'

Top dollar- antiqlles, furn i ture ,

glasti, china , clocks, oold, silver,
coins, watches, estates, old stone
jars, old blue &amp; white dist1es, old
wood boxes, milk bonles, Meigs
County Advert.1sement, Osby
Martin, 514 ·992 -7441

bonuses

OpponunitieS
Send resume IO : osmose,
P.O. Box 2527, Mansfield,

Ohio 44906
EDEM/F/D/V

Cerd of Thanks

...'

Holzer Senior Care
Center is aeeklng a
Receptionist/Secret
ary for part-time, 16
hours per week. The
applicant must have
good typing skills, ·
organizational
adl'llty, and'a good
performance
recored. Interested
persona may pick·
up an application at:
Holzer Senior Care
Center, 380 Colonlill.
Drive, Bidwell, Oh
45614

TWyouHom•
National lank far buying
lilY ..... 1996
Melgl.ty Ftir.

l
••
•
•

-

Altdilly
Card of Thanks

• J

••I

TW Yt Dr. Dotlg
Hunter tor ~ng my
knat199
lgs
Counly Fair.
.
,.Haley

I•

Black

Navy

Peg (Cfianel/)

Carpenter
from Mom&amp;'Dal,

~r, Stm &amp;'Eil'Jt•'"'a'ITc-1
Ad

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

HOURS 8 A .M. TILL S P.M.

Amber

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siJ(Jetn ytJJrs oftf..

I

LANE
RECLINERS
OVER 100 IN STOCKI
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250·$450 °
FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon . thru Sat. 9-5; Ph. 446-0322
3 Miles Out
Pike

Need 1 0 Sales Reps.
X·vaccuum cleaner,
X·car .
X-encyclopedia,
X-Avon, etc.
encouraged to
apply.. Salary plus
· comt'lllsslons.
$351000/yr.
c:~mmleslon in this
.
'
business is being
lazy. If you are _
looking for an
exciting new career
call Mr. Jones Toll
Free, 1·888-432·7378
for an Interview

"

SHOP AND)AVE NOW!
$59.00
Serta Mattress
$19 .95
Bed Frames
$99,00
Recliners
$49.95
4 Drawer Chest
$299.00
La-Z-Boy Recliners
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite
$499 .00
FLAIR. FURNITURE
675,1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
CNA will care for elderly in
non-smoking home.
CPR, First Aid, Home
Health Training
Call 446·4525
BOOTS .
All Leather Western Boots
Reg.

SALE
3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 bathroom,
kitchen appliance go with
house, family room, dining
room, full basement, 3 car
gari~ge, on St. At. 7 S.

•

#2025 ESTABLISHED
BUSINESS:
LOCAL PET SHOP
'
If you like animals
ahd
dreamed of owning your own
business, this could be for you.
Equi
in e~cellf!nt
and shop Is wei
Islo·cke•d. Very good gross.
I m'ornin Virginia L. Smith ·Re1:11l
ltsta[te .:388-8826/Claude 446-

$~49.00

Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
·
Engineer ..... ........ ,..... ... .. $49.00
Wellington .... ......... .. ...... .$49.00
Loggers ...... ..... ...... .. ...... $50 ·5~
Harness ... '· ., ............... . .$59.00
Carolina-Georgla-H&amp;H
Insulated , Safety, Gorte&lt;
SWAIN FURNITURE
,62 'Olive St. Gallipolis
THE CANOLE COMPANY ·
"we

make scents"

1591 S.R. 160 South. Gallipolis
Hours: Mon-Fri 10 am • 5 pm •

. Sat.10am -3pm

Candles poUred iri Roseville PoHery,

Votives, Matting Tarts ,

Floating Candles
Vanilla . Cookie Jar, Cinnamon, Clove.
Mulberry, BI!Jeberry, Cranberry,
Garde nit:~, Candy Apple , Christmas
Spice, Christmas Tree
fiEW: Pumpkin Pte &amp; Raspberry

BR'ING YOUR OWN CONTAINERS
FOR US TO REFILL FOR YOU!!

Bunnies.
Ceramics, Melting Pots, Rag Dolls ,
Angels, Baskets. Bears.

Scrollwork. Cotlan Sculptures. Palnt&amp;d
Slates, Wreaths, Basket Tie-Ons,

" Stained Glass.

.

~

Dulcimer/Guitar CD's(Tapes

0

••ctlettt

caiUe totf.ly jitUJ{fygot
lim J4Julri4 CtvrfPlns is

.......
l....

WE NOW HAVE
GALLIA COUNTY
AND
SURROUNDING
AREAS

'PHYSICAl THERAPIST /PHYSICAL THERAPIST ASSISTANT
OCQIPATIOIW TIIIRAPIST/OC:CUPATIOfiAl THIIAPISJ
ASSiSTANT SPEICH LANGUAGE PATHOLOGIST
AZ Dlnrii!W 11ttt1t1t c.. Stnlm Corptrttiltlls 11 ~:!II
poYfllg
111-Mnict
r....
:;=the;~~~
~· Soiftltlnt
AZ .ollorsOltiti 111111Will•
Gl4 ltettlllt
W1 llttft ful-tltM, pttr!·IIIM IIIII PRN positions
Gtt II Itt tltl pill flow tf I ;-11t ctll'llf
Cotthlel Gnt StHI, Vice Pre.W... for hrthor tltlals.
AZ Dlvtrsiflld Htttfl Can Strvlcts Carp.
5773 SlifeR~ 125, Wttt lhtlan, Clitia 45693
1·800-577-4l10 FAX

Sflt oWnd lierftrst Clir
'Bt.fort slie was ft"l!t
J4Juf soon tliis 11lf1 'Bwtufe
'Wif1 6e acensei to tfri"l!t
Jl_tr sliiny 6fut: car
'To pfaas unw(if

'

I .

Help Wanted

Ri ck Pearson Auct ion Company,
fu ll time auctioneer, complet e
auction
u rv 1c e.
lice nsed
t66,0hio &amp; West Virgin ia, 304 -

POMEROY V.F.D.
CHICKEN &amp; RIB BARBECUE
SUN., OCT. 6
AT FIRE STATION
SERVING
AT 11 AM

assignments
in. several
states. Osmose offers:

• Profit Sharing
• Advancement

•

Help Wanted

OSMOSE. INC,
motivated

Found· one class ring In 00

~

·.

11 o

AUCTION HOUSE , Ro ute 2
Northl Jericho Road lntarsecnon,
POint Pleasant, WV, Au cti on &amp;YO·
ry Monday nght. e·oo P.M . New &amp;
Used Mdse. Co ns1gnments Wel cofTl e. Auc tio neer s· Co l. J oh n
McCo ll um •1 189 &amp; Co l. Jear l
Barneue IJ1008. Flea Market sec ·
ondl 'MHtk-end ot f.NfMY month. Reserved Space s mu st be pai d one
w.eak in Advance 304 -45$-1675
or 30-'1 ·675-5287.

THE BASKET TREE
Opening October 161h at .
Kemper Hollow and Bethel
Church CrossRoads
Gallipolis, On 45631
Specilizing in retired
Longaberger" BaJ&gt;kets Lids,
lie-ons, basket accessories,
crafts and collectibles,
Open: Weds, Thurs &amp; Fri.
Noon til 6:00 flm
Sat. 10:00 till 2:DO
441 -9801
Discover

WANTADS GET

P&lt;Jppi&amp;L 30...a.!2-2991 .. .

·See answer on page CB . ·

U ser s Needed . Wor k
$20k 10 SSOklyr 1-800-

1508.

992-732•'-

National Co. seeks

...

DUT$/D.tr SPAC/E$ / Ill I'T. I"RONTAG!r $11.00
Plr/IDAY

1

Frazier A-105.

Thursday, October 10, 1996
Food Served 5:00-8:3Q p.m .
Games 6:00-8:30 p.m.
AUCTION BEGINS AT ,
8:00P.M. ,
Games, prizes, raffl~. hautiled
house, hayride, pictures, face
painting, crafts and much
more!

FORESTRY TRAiNEES

Range, burrters work well, oven
needs repairecl, 614-985· 4288.

60

Giveaway

11 0

Lab mix puppies to giveaway,
614·949·3403.

70 Clock numerals

The Shoe Cafe

~

Agent Outs1de
10n Grow·nv Pt~nter Health lJil;,.
hts Fr&amp;f"lch Clly P1&amp;U 423 S tc·
Avenue, Galhooils. OH

sume or letler detail in g your experience to : Ohio H ung er Tas k
Forc e. Mary Kumanc hik, 55 N.
Cemral A11 e Fairborn, OH 45324,
by 0ctober25,199.6EO E
LPN pa rt time posiliqrt available

for progressive Rehabititalionf
Sk illed ICF lac llil'f, Exper ience
pr efe rred bul will cons ider !tie
right coindidate. Must be wHIIng to

work as a team member witl'l an
&amp;Jr:ceflent &amp;laff or the rapistS and
nurs es that have a histofy of 5
years withoUt any regulatory com ·
pllanc:e Issues.' Excellent benefit
package. Ro tating shihs required.
Call 614 -91l2 -6606 or send ·re ·
sume to Rocksprings Rehabilita tion Center, 36759 Rocksprings
Ad ., Ppmeroy, Oh. 45769 EOE,

BULLETIN 'B OARD

ment• made by me ab.o vt are
correct and. complete.

LOST: Goa1 in vicinity ot Jericho

GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR .F'AIRGROUNDS

. OVtrR 34,000 SQ 1'T UNDtrR ROOI' WITH
UNL/MIT.trD OUTS/DIE SPAt:tr

.Public Sale
and Auction

Wedomeyor's Auc11on Serv 1ce,
Gallipolis, Ohio 614·379 ·2720.

'.

u• 1.a AND JACKSON PIKE (OLD US :sS)

606HOWARD MANAG!rR tfi4•:Z411-ll347

Unaccounted, Spoiled After
Prf_ntlng: 280.
2. Returnt from New•
Agtnta: 1,594.

--..-...
'

· Available

I'IW« ADM/SS/QN ANQ fi'A·RK/NG

H.Coplao Not Dlatrlbutod: 80
1. Office Uae Loll Ovor,

Help Wanted '

lc,,m'"''" ' '&gt;n

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

ween . Ed Fraz ier 93 0 , B re nda

1238.

.

.,.

93 Solemn promises ,.. · ·'
94 Got browner
·
96 Seat at a bar

59 Writes a certain way

• OUR TW!rNTY THIRD YtrAR "

roads" 12 Ful Hours ol Chfistmas
Buys. Bi ll Moore, 10 start. Ron
Pr ict. will finlat'l W!oth·ers 1n bet -

GREEN SCHOOL FALL
CARNIVAL

57 Roomful of students

OCTOBER 11- 12- '13

urday Oct Sth t 2·00pm-12.00am
r.l t. A11o Auc 11on Rt2 ·33 RCross-

.,.

. come up with it. Keatillg has bten Wednesday, walking out of..three
imprisoned for more than 4 112 years plants in Oshawa, Ontario, and one in
in Tuscan.
·
St. Thsrese, Quebec.
·
· DETROIT (AP) - Tite . strike
against General Motors in Canada
could last at least a week. threatening
the automaker's hopes for a smoo.th,
successfuL launch of several ·
redesigned vehicles thi s fall .
The Canadian . Auto Workers
struck GM's Canadi·an unh late

AND GUN SHOW

D. Froo Dfotrlbutlon by
Maii:O
.
·E. Froo Dlolrl.buUon out·
aldo the mall (Corrlor or othor
moane): .113
G. Total Dlotrlbutlon:

110

Wanted To Bur Junk Autos Wilh
Or Without Motors Call Larry
LJV91y. 61-4 ·38&amp;-!13o3

12 Hour Chflltmu Au CtiOn -Sal -

SCA Wolf Tanning bed with ·
new Bull.arium S bulbs under
20 hours old. Original cost of
bed $6500, asking $1300.
'Musl $ell 256· 1559.

--_;,_wBusiness
briefs--.

FRENCH SOO·FLEA MARKET

Pl. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

wanted to Buy

:

Border Colllt &amp; Bltck Lab mixed

TIICSON, Ariz. (AP) - Charles
Keating Jr., the S&amp;L chief who swindled millions from the elderly and
became a symbol of.the -1980. thrift
crisis, was freed from' an Arizona
prison to await a hearing oh a new tri·al.
Keating's release Thursday came
hours after U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer in Los Angeles set bail
at $300,000 and gave the former Lin·
coin Savings &amp; Loan boss 10 days'to

C. Total Paid Circutetion:

79 Clooney of "ER'
80 Muzzled
82 Minerals
' 86 - the line
(conformed)
87 Notable times
88 Pole on a shop
89 Leaning Tower

90

Yard Sale-1-46 English'A&lt;l. October 3-&lt;4-5. Thur·Fri·Sal. • - te• Steel ·
773·5033.
belled raC:IIat tlres &amp; wheels, trasn
compactor &amp; tread mill.
Junk Cars &amp; Tr uck Var ious Run n1ng Vet1ic les &amp; Car Paris , fi14 ·
Garage Sale -4 Family 130 .. 446-4539.
•
Mea.dowbrook Or. Oct 8·9·10R 1 1.
9-?
Non-Working Washers , Dryers,
Stoves . Refrigerators. Freezers.
Sat. &amp; Sun. R1 .21J&amp;richo Road. Air
Conditioners, Co lor T. V.'s,
New cra,ll supplies, clothing,
VCR 's, Also Junk Cars, 614;·256·
household &amp; misc . 9:00-4:00 .

11 ',813.

11,926.

PubliC 8ale
and Auction

J &amp; D's Aula Parts . Buying salvage vehicles. Selling parts. 304 ·

1nd Carriers, Strati Vendors
end Counter Salee: 11,010.
2. Moll Subocrfptlono: 803.

· ·

H. Coploo Not Dlolrlbutod:
dlalnc~. 305 s. Motn St., P.O.
1. Otllce Uot Loll Over,
Box 1688, Groonvlllo, S.C. Uniecountod, Spallod Alto!
29602.
Printing: 173.
11. Holdoroof1%ormoro
2. Roturno trom Nowo
ollotaf Dobto: Npne.
Agonto: 1,576.
Avorago No. Coploo Each
I. Totot: 13,780.
foouo During Preceding 12
Actual No. Coploo of
Montho:
Slngleloouo Publlohad Noar·
15. Extent and noture of eolto Filing Doto: .
.Circulation.
.
15. Extant ond noturo ol
A. Total No. Copleo Clrcutotlon.
P.rlntod: 13,780.
A. To1ol No. Coploo
.a. PoldCireulatlon: .
Prlnled: 13,800.
' ,
1. Saloo through Dnlaro
B. Paid Circulation:

80

Clean Lale

1. Sale• through Dealers

111

locale

14 Certain animal's

61
63
64
66

45831;

· 84 PoSt or Dickinson

8 Western Indians
9 Ocean

20 Footwear fo d hound

remark
1 1 0 Inclined
111 Singer Guthrie

treatment

4 Ship's record

5 Printer's measures

106 For men only
Conc1se. as a

....

var.

hipe .
15 The Nile, e.g.
16 That is: Latin
17 Fellows

109

· 44 Called lor over a
public address

2 Sun-dried b rick

3 British money

Trpubles
Preight boat
Donkey
Lampoon
103 Name
I 05 Burned a little

108 Rarodall or Bennett

37 States positively
38 Glowing coat
4P Newsstand item
41 Distort .
42 Beauty parlor

52 -

words

(

. 1 Tooth

6).

STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT
AND
CIRCULATION
1. TltlooiPubllcotton:The
Sunday TlmN-Sontlnot.
, ~.PubllcotlonNo.52&amp;-500.
. 3. Dolo ol Filing: Soptom·
bor30,18116. '
4. Froquancy ol toouo:
5. No. otloouao Publlohod·
Annually: 52
8. Annuol Subocrlptlon
Prlco: $85.00.
7. Location of Known Of·
ftco of Publication: 825 Third
Av.., Galllpollo, Ohio, Gafllo
County45631;111 Court St.,
Pol"oroy, Ohio, Molgo
County, 457e9.
I. Location of the Hood·
quortoroorGonorat Buolnooo
Ofllcooof1hoPubflohoro:825
Third Avo., Gafllpollo, Ohio,

i

72 Fragrant flowers
74 "- Is Your ~ife"
76 Indian garment:

AU Yard Salas Uust Be Paid in
Advance·. Deadline : , :OOpm the
'd ay before ltle ·ad is to. run , Sun·
day &amp; Monday edifion- 1:OOpm
Friday.

===;P:ub~l;lc:N;o:t~k:e::=l~~P~u:b:llc::N:~:I~:e:;~1r.:::P:u:b:llc::N:~:ic:e::~r:::;P:ub~I~I~:N;o:t:lc:e::=1

..'5',

'

PQmeroy,
Middleport
11
&amp;VIcinity

'queen; Mike Shaffer and Meredith Mullins. Thit
ceremony was held on Memorial Flald prior to
1he GAHS'Athens football game. The annual
holl'I!IComlng dance was held at GAHS Satur·
day night (See king and quaen picture on B·

GAHS HOMECOMING QUEEN, KING COU"'T
• Here's the 1996 Gallla Academy !llllh School
homecoming queen .and king court. Left to
right Rob Woodward, king; Sliawnda Waher,
Micah Luahar, Charity Howell, Jason llryan and
Angela llo)Vman, II. J. Cox and Kelly Caldwell,

-·

PUZZLER ~

edition - 2:00p.m. Frldar.

Monday ~ilion· 10:00 a .m. Sat -

L-===========::::::::::::::::::::::=-~ -~""

Urn"
estimating, cn.u s and jinancinl{, 19 Challers
send $4to House Q/'lhe Week,/'.0 .. 21 Ring up
Box 15~2. New Yurk, N.Y. 10116- · 22 - one's time ·
1562. Be sure In include the plan 23 .Yearns
24 Expose·
number.
25 "War and - "
. 26 Regular

Here's a recipe for strong·concrete
lly READER'S DIGEST BOOKS

SUNDAY

living room, dining room,
den, kitchen, lhree bed -

Yard $lie

GltlllPolil

MONT,GOMERY, Ala. (AP) Kohlberg Kravis Roberts &amp; Co., the investment firm known for its record
takeover of RJR Nabisco and other
big companies, will buy KindetCare
Learning Centers Inc., the nation's
leading day-care chain.
· ·:
The $600 million deal·announced •
after the close of trading Thursday,".
includes assumption of debt and ·val- •
ues KindetCare shares at $20.25, giv·' "
ing shareholders a big premium. The "
stock finished ,Thursday at $16.25, "-;

G-2:5 STATISTICS
esign G -25 has a foyer,

70

NEW: Solid WOod T1unks &amp; Painted
Wood

BaKes

MANY Fall &amp; Halloween items!!
COME CHECK US OUTII
(LQ!:ated
to ·

Aunt Clara's
Collection
4 miles west oft St. Rt. 141

Now has Amish
Baked Pies.
Weekdays10 a .m. lil6 p.m.
Sunday· 12 noon til

5

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING SERVICE
Parts repaired , replaced, rebuilt.
lvorvs replaced. Need your piano
1unea,o1 restored? Call Bob Grubb
61
Gallipolis, OH

Auto Insurance

Low-Down
Payment
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejeeted
• DUI • No Prior .
Insurance ·

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure ·
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

Gallipolis

. GRAHAM
UPHOLSTERY
We offer a large selection
of fabrics new foam
expert craftmanship call
446-3438 for a free
estimate .
2205 Graham School Rd .
. Gallipolis, Ohio·

Toler &amp; Toler I

ARTS &amp;. CRAFTS SHOW
Open House
Overbrook Center
Middleport, Ohio
Saturday,. October 26, 1996
10:00 a.m.· 4:00p.m .
Arts and crafts by are&amp; craftsmen
free table space available for
more information please contacl
Mike Crites at Overbrook Center
at992-6472
between 9·4 M-F

For more information call;
446·
'

BIG BEND CLOGGERS
BEGINNER'S CLASS
Oc;TOBER 111h ·
Pomeroy Municipal Building
6 P.M.
more info

,,

�•

.••

/

•

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

.:..ll;,;:O~:..:He::l!:p..::W::a:::n:,:ted~-!11 o Help Wanted
HOME TVPIST, PC users n"d

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

ed $-4S 000 tncome poten tial
CaH I BOO 513-4343 Ext B·i368

Telemarkeler NeedtKI For lmmed1ate Open~ng AI Local Busu''lell
Experience 4 Plus, But No1 Neeessary. For Interview, Please Call

Jenny Cra111 Waigh1 Loss Cen ltr&amp; Now Has A lacauon In
JatkiOn, Ohio FOJ Mora inlo Call

_.._
\
lady TD l1ve In Wnh Elderly
lll::rty!:.'.:B1:_4.,;-388:::_88::.:;13:____

:"':.:':.:
·44:1:_·'::9,::75:;__..,;____
PAINlER
EARN
WHILE
YOU TRAIN For ~~~~~~,~~O~~o'~
A Career As A Painter Learn 1~

614-774·4010

=

PART-TIME 10mo TEACHER'S

AIDE HS Grad or GED: 11 1ea1t
18 yra. old; abihly ID read, wrne,
and u1e correcl grammar In
;tptaklng and writing , exp. with
preschool children preferred
Submil resume by 10111 to . P.O

Need someone to baby~t. fle11ble
hours, at my home. 304 67S-1a..l

1

180 Wanted To Do

310 Homes for Sale

31 o Homes lor Sale

Proien10nal TtM S.rv1ee, Stump
Removal, Free Etllmatesl In·
suranee, 81dwell, Ohio 15,4·388·
9648, 614--367-7010

3 B•droam HouH, New Hlven.
Etec1ne Heat, Central A11, Bast·
ment, C11y Water &amp; S•w•o•

2 Story 7room house Wt'biMI'T'Ienl.
~pprox 1 112 terti wilh pond,
Located along St Rt 2 near Fllit

-------1

Sun Valli] Nursery School
Childcart -F 6am·5 30pm Ages
2· K, Young School Age Durin~
Summer. .3 Days per ~eek Mm1·

Bas1cs 01 The Latesl Tech:
~1;1:~.·~· No Tunian . GEO IH1gh
Diploma Program Avail·
able Hausmg, Meals, t.tedlc:al
Care And Paycheck Prav1ded
Ages t6 ·2" Job C orp• · A US
Departmen t Of Labor Progr•m
Caii 1·000·733-JOBS, Ext 90

!7'1oUm814-446-3657.

Teresa'a Chlldcare 814· 441· 0854
8 Weekt And Up Certified, Oa1ly

Or Weekly,

FINANCIAL

Box 5&gt;141, HgO\, Wl/25701. EOE

Part· Time Canlrac:t Poalllon
Available For Support Group Co·
ordlnator Working With Women
In Critfl E)lpenenc:e With Group
FAtlhtatJan And /Of Soc:1al Sei'V·
,1ce Background Preferred Approx1marety 6· 10 Hours Per
Week li'l!erested Persons Mar
Respond To Personnel Department, P:O Box 454, Gall1poi1S, OH
•5631

Part-Time Truck Driver, Job
Openmg Galhpoha Area Must
Have 1 Year Experience (Mint ·
~

mum) CDL, Good MVR, No

OWl's, Past DOT Ph~steal &amp;
_ Drug Screen, Send Resume To:
P0

Box 769, Gallipolis, OH

45631

PHARMACY· DIRECTOR
Pharmacy Systems. Inc A Lead·
er In Hospttal Pharmacy Management Seeks Otrector Of Pharmacy
For Veterafls Memorial HospitaL
: Support Pravtded For Manage... ment, JCAHO Compliance And

Cltmcal .6.cttvlttes

lntareated

- Pharmacist Should Contact Jtm
Robertson.
t-800-269- 7879
Ext.18.

Postlton Open For Part-Time Hu·

Mature responsible person for
custOdial duties Send apphca·
11on.1 resume to· Box 113, Syracuse, OH •S779 o(' ca!l 614 9922526

MYSTERY SHOPPERS
Need Several In Your Area. No
Fees Charged. Please Send Your
Name, Address And Phone
NumDer To· UIF, '1572 Captral
Circle NW, Tallahassee, Fl

32303

1 Cold Drawn has JOb
matena.! handle11 and
rntll operator Job , • •
High school degree
prtt-aneument tuu,
mandatory drug test1ng
Please submit resume and appllc:allon to Bureau of Emplovmenr
Pr()9fama, 225 Sixth St Pt Pleas·

art Wl/25550.

West Vlrgmta Cold Drawn tlas a
JOD opening tor maintenance po~l­

llon Job requ•rements AI least 2
year degree (assoctates) 1n technical school, PLC programming,
hydraulics, mechan1cal weldtng
and electncal expermnce preferred Mandatorr clrug 1est1ng.
Please 1bm1t resume and appli·
~ca; tt o;n,an'nso. Burea~r~ of Employment
I"
, 225 S1xth St Pt. Pleas-

00

·· In Memory
IN MEMORY OF HARRY J. COUGHENOUR
FATHER
Father Father precious dear,
How we wish that you were hear.
'
Just to beable to comfort you, When you were down
and feehng blue.
Just to share your joy 'and your sweet smile, to' sit and
talk with you a while. But now you're In a much
better place talking to the Lord face lo face. Now you
way thai you ~sed to do. Now you have no sorrow,
and no more pam. The Lord's sweel Jove Is wbal
you've gained.
So daddy don ' t worry We'll be all right We'll
remember you through day and ntghl, so when we
look up al night to the heavens above We'll coum all
the stars and send you all of our love. Oh father, oh
father oh precious dear, how we wish that you were
here
'
From your wife apd children.
We love you and miss you.
Happy Birthday

In

Any odd JObs pamtmg guuers
cl-eaned, shrub tnmmmg, home
weathenzafton, leaves raked,
complete lawn care. etc, 304-675
7112
Alt1cs-Garages &amp; Outbu1id1ngs,
cleantng and disposal, lor mtormattOn eall-~4-895-3)36
Will do Babysitting Dependable
Snacks t Meals yours or mme
home 614-446 -4932 m GalUpoils
area
Babys1t11ng In

Oct. 29, 1932 to
Oct. 6, 1969

'

•

years, (though many) cannot erase the
I(:J,,,;nasmik upon your face . Memories of you
do not dim. We love you now as then. No
more gathering do we lwve laughter and
tea5ing are no rmire. We long to touch you,
aee your •miling face. So many things to tell
you there remain• an empty space.
Sister, Gwen

r-----~-=-=ln~M~em=o~ry~~~------~
In Memory of Shane Keatley
on his 22nd birthday

October 7, 1974 to July 2, 1993
'lJear Cfiiftf ~n :Heaven,
Y£!u were a 6£Lssing to us a1£,
You wue a specia{ cftiftf,
Jllna we're so gftul qotf sent !JOU
'To be witli us for a wftife.
· J'ou filfd our~ witli liappiness
Jllna I1Ullk our life compfete.
'1lU time we fiaa witfi 9ou
Was far too sliort1 but oft so sweet,.
So111L tliings we aon't fina eas9
'To accept or unaerstantf ·
'Tif{ we realize tlU!J're part of
Our Crealor'•s perfect pfan.
9(_/J'W it comforts us to fC!tow
you're u;itli t!U angefs up a6ove,
'Wftife 111 our !Uarts we lio(a !JOU dose,
Surroanaetf a(Wa!JS 69 our (ave.
-H'elen Bush
We'll alwaya remember
Love, Mom, Dad, Grandma, Grams, Jamie,
Matt, and many true frltnda.
•

My

l-loma, Spr1ng

Valley Area, Cerllf1ed CPR Tram (ng hper~enced, FJeferences,

814-448-8340

Ha&gt;Je You Ever Sold COokware,
Look1ng For Managers lil Th1s
Area, Part-T1me Call 30•· 6758191

Professional
Services

HARTS MA SONARY · Block,
~rtck &amp; stone work, 30 years ex-

reasonable ra tes 304·
895 3591 after 8 OOpm, no job 10
smaH or to BIG WV-021 206
per~ence.

Jl',l1T.%.T..T..T.U.T.:UU..T.
~~ How We Seem To
Forget
r

n

' Do you remember when : ~

January 3. 1992 Former t
Gatlia Counly Depuly

shot

girlfrtend in the

he::ad, w1th hiS caliber ri
handgun found m there
dttch betund the car.
Accident happened tn
lawerence County,

All real estate advertising In
lh1s newspaper Is subJect to
the Federal Fair Houslrm Act
ol1968 which makes It Illegal
to advertise ~any preference,
llmltauon or ~lscnmlnatton
based on race, COlor, religion,
sex familial status or national
ongln, or any Intention to
make any such preference.
llm1t&amp;t1on or discrimination:

310 Homes for Sale
193 lanai Dnve (Ne;w;t To HMC)
Split level, 3 + Br"s large Lawn,
$81,000 614-388·81 77
2 Bedroom house 1n country, 1

acre. Bethel Rd oil Sandh1\l Rd PL
Pleasanl $35,000 new S1C 1ng &amp;
sh1ngles 304 ·675· 7946 before
9pm

2 Houses
675 5513

1n

Pr Pleasant 304 -

t
Deputtes . t..
happened in r

Accident
Vmton, County, Ohio

l Ociober 2, 1996
~

•

lormcr Galha County"' 30 AnnouncemefliS
DARE olltcer~Jeads n
gutlty to gross sexual
SOUP SUPPII WITH &lt;AK!/Pll
imposition Acc1dent
AUOION FOLLOWING

I1~~ Counly,
All or 1his under lhe
Gallla

10

Come and meet your

•

candidates ad nelghbor511
Everyone welcome

admtnlslratlon
How does our sheriff's ~

Sponsored by meh's and

department screen thetr 1

Vtnlon Bapltst Church
Place: Vtnlon Elementary
Cafelena, Vtnton, OH.
Dale Oct 12, Sat
Time e 30 pm
CosI· Adulls $5 00, children
under t 2, $2 50

same

deputies''

We

the~

or Galha County
should thmk hard before
we vote November 5 , ·
•
1996. My opm10n II IS~~

CIIIZllnS

ume- for· a change.

·rri·rrrrrrri'l.'l."rs.

3bedroom, bath. hvlng room w1
hardwoOd floors, kitchen a dll"'lng
area lOgether, new roof, garage,
on Rt 2 304·675·" 139 or 304 675--7328 (!;fters ~

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes

For Penn 1~0n $1 Oohnquenl
Ta;w;, •Repo
REO's ,Your Area
Toll Free
800 898-9778 Ext
1-1 2814 For Current L1atn'lgs

Ranch Style 3 Bedrooms , 2 Car
Garage, Part1al Basement Above
Ground Pool. Bu1ldlng, Approx 1
Acre 5 M1nutes From Holzer.
614-446-9219
House And Lot For Sate:
2 Bedrooms, One Bath, $600
Down, WAC Easy Terms, 1·800·
448·6909, Ask For David

14

REAL ESTATE

found guilty "two"
~former Gallta County

I~

5 Roams, Ba!h, C1rr. Forced AH
Furnace, Cenlfa~ A1r. Carpeted
Floors Storm Wmdows, Doors
Vmyl S1dmg, lot 66x150 . Pnced
AI 134,900, 614·446·4579,

Women's Fellowship of

garage and
workshop,
other
out·
b1.111d1ng
locate
on paved
county
road, Eastern local School DIS·

Rocker, China Cabinet, Wardrobe, Couch, GE
Refndgerator, Several Chairs, Chest of Dra~ers,
End Tables, Kitchen items, Antique Drasser,
Pipe stand , Smokers stand, Stools, Nigflt
Stands' P1ctures, Glassware, Kitchan table &amp; 4
cha1rs, and other miscellaneous Items. •
I T&lt;~rm~ · Cash
Jimmie A. Thacker, Adminlstfator

wml 1101111, m I'IIIIT AYI·

tMJJNQIIIICJIOII
,..
SUIIDAY OCIOIIII111f 11111 U.
,
I! lilY, OliO

Ill

NUI, QALLIItOLIS, 111,100,

J

1!1-?!12.

"-ml8l
320 Mobile .....

'

Tuppers ptalns atea- 28. acres on
blacktop road, 9 rooms, lwo
baths, lovelr farm home, large
rage and barn plus Sl]'l&amp;ller Darn
and shop, $130,000, 614·667·
3336

Two t'lat,tse1 for pr1ce on one- (1)
three bedroom, new c;arpel remo·
dehng done. (2) one b&amp;dtoom ,
hand.,man 6pe&lt;:1al. 11 F1sher, Pomeroy. W!ll land contract Doth for
S2•.ooo w1th $1500 clown, 614·
992-6323

•'

HornN Of BarboUrlttlh, 304·738·

t Wid

•

From Gallipolis, Take Route 141, tum l,rt onto
Route ns, tum right onto PBirlot Road. Watch for
signa.
HOUSEHOLD, ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLE
Weswm 4 pc. bedroom suile, sofa and chair, dlhing
room table and 4 chairs, dresser, book case, floor
lamps, TV table, pictures, Shawnee 6" Com bowl,
sausage grinder, lamps, kitchen appliance, Fire Klng
Green Bowl, apple peeler, McCoy vase, glass
;~:~~~~~:r~i',:a,~nt~iq~u~~e and
dlnnng room table and chairs with
hutch, sweeper, m1sc. dishes,
pans, qulhlng frame, hnene, exercise bike,
1
Ducan Phyla Style Sofa, old rocker, G~swold
food grmder, Keen Kutter food grinder, iron griddle,
Wagner skillel, Wapax Skillel, large while/red Gran~e
ware coffee pot, small white Granite Ware Coffee Pot,
clothes pins, Guyan Creamery m1lk bottle, pr. milk
glass caqple holder, Firestone nre Ashtray, oil lamps,
McCoy Barrel Cookie Jar, Coke Glasses, Watt Ware
Bowl, crystal can~le wick plates, Pr. black mUk glass
candle holder, large. glass swan, cryslal swan, sad
iron, iron bread stick pan, set Non Fake Dishes,
Capodimantl flower figures, Pr. Capadlmontl flower
candle holder, wall mirror whh woOd frame,
depression gtaaa ware, t~reen block oplic, oilier
depression pc. siOne jars, cookie jars, bean botttes,
jewelry, qulltll'1feen handle kitchen Items, feed sacks,
marbles, cast iron bank, McCoy-WesJmorel911d Art
Glass, Fenton, dolls, Revere ware, egg basket, dnd
much much more.
Owner Georgia Shehofl, Move Into Nursing Home.
'Esta
Caah
Pollltlve ID
MARLI!II WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER Lie. 3615
814-378-2720
Not Rteponalblt for Accldtnt or ~~ of

Only AI Oak W00d H
omea

•

• 018or11oumlllo, 304-136-3409

••t Acre,
14x70
Home, Wltt'l 1f2
On McCully Road. Range,
Lta~ll•

• Retr1gerator, OtShWiith&amp;r, Washer
: D'yer: 2 Btdroorna. 2 Full Baths,
i Central A1r, Carpon, Ett: Sacra• flct S22,500. 814 · 446-2725,
L11ve Metaage PMase
:1989 Atlantic 12x60, 2bedroom,

!

350 Loti &amp; Acreaga
15 aetoa, gil'""· 111!12 Schulll

3035

W'l304-7!15-5885,

Parctll on Rayburn Rd . Water,
paved road , reasonable restr1c·
trona 304·675-5253 . (no Single·
Wide JnqLtlreS please)

111 Time Buyera E-Z Financing 2

~o~Hd 12 &amp; 14 ft.
wide mobile homes. l&lt;a,.ug~Mo.
bile Homes GaHipo111, OH 114....a.t862
Factory Goolod 5ovo Thouund~

1976 2 Bedroom , new carpet,
good cond. 304-875-570~.

Direclions: From Jackson follow 35E tha Gallipolis I
ex1t follow St. At 160 3.6 miles to St At 7S. Follow
At 7 3.7 miles to At 218 follow At 218 miles 5.5
miles to sale. Across from Bailey Church. Watch for
signs SALE WILL BE HELD IN THE LARGE
GARAGE IF WEATHER IS NASTY
Owner: VIvian Benson. Call 256-6075 afternoon
more information.
This is only a partial listing . •
Cook Books, chairs, ceiling lights, granite roll9t4tr,.l
picture frames, pressure cooker, salad set,
stool, food mill, canister set, Lance cracker
toaster oven, sm. kitchen appliances, pots &amp; "'""'!!
flatware, misc. glasses &amp; cups, Kraut cutter, end
coffee tables, Hammond Concord eiBG!ric
(almost new &amp; In excellent condition. Graat for
church o music lover), couch, rocker/recliner,
stand, pdrtable electric 'sewing machines,
buttons, hat boxes, dishes, china sat, s~=~:?J
buffalo, &amp; Homer Lauglln china, bed lamp,
lamps; cameras, box fans, Heahh·O·Meter .5Clale,,1
hose reel wlhose, saw grinder/sharpener, 1
Buick Cenlury wagon (V8 w/86,;!05 miles), 15'
speed Craftsman drill press, misc. hand tools, FM61
Bolens 12 HP lawn tractor w/mower deck, n•n•w ..
cultivator, &amp; blade, dump,cart, seeder, ~~~~:!~::~
reel mowers, drop in electric range, sun
tester &amp; d•stributor tester, loads of auto
manuals, lg. bird cage, alu,minum storm
TV antenna. misc. lumber &amp; metal, wooden
pulleys, Glove lock ram truck cart, misc. nails, bolt$.1
&amp; hardware, brass steam horn, 113 wash
McCoy &amp; Brucsh planters,plus loads more
everday hol!l j tems &amp; tools in cabinets.
Refreshments, Food,. and a Porta-Pot! will
available.
-· 'r
~
"?1
AUCTIONEER: FINIS "IKE ' ISAAC '
· Phone 614·388·9370
Licensed and bonded Ohio #3728
Terms: Gash or approved check
Not responsible for accidents or lost riems
Statements made ,day of sale has precedence
over printed materials.

: .;,Mo~ood~8,-1,..•_...e_.ro..;.29;;,;_.....,__

1981 Fairmont 14)(54 Gas cook
''stove &amp; Jurhace, all appliance&amp;
1 included, eta Urtl, ~ce $8,500
: 1976 Park &amp;state 14x70 wtlarge
t l1ving room &amp; dmtng room, expan•do, 2br, 2 bath, front poreh, large

41 o Houses for Rent
2 Bedroom house, fully lurmshed,
$300/mo. U!lhlin I deposit 304-

monlh, Free dolrvory

&amp;

pola, dopolll, e 1•&amp;08·

3 Bedroom Home CA, Natural

tor, SIOYe, Flt6Piace, 1 112 Baths,
Garage, Carport, Located 5
Edgemonr Drive, Galilpolla, $5001
Mo., Plu1 Uttlltin, $500 Deposit,
No lnlide Pett1 Referencoe~, 614·
441·3117.

3 Bedroom. :Ale, l3001mo .- ullh·
an
epa's , only 3 left, us, depotn I refetences re·
11111 under warranty, free deltvery qUJrtd 304-675--4874.
&amp; aet-up. 304- 755- 7191
Older Schultz home, owner pccu· 3 BR. G11 heat. No pelt maide
pled, 2 bedroom, excellent far 1Rentat reference a must. S3B5
Centenary. t200 depoSit. 614·
young or retired couple, priced on 4&gt;18-0181,
insi)ICIIOn. 304-875-5394

UNBELIEVABLEII ALL NEW
SINGLE WI DES IN STOCK
ONLY $411 DOWN, ALL NEW
OOUBLEWIDES IN STOCK

DELIVERY AND SET·UP, ONLY
: :119;;:5..:-114~83:.:;,._-'----- AT OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO
:1982 Brookshire, 2br, elttltlc
, ~at pump, all blocks &amp; aklrung,
• $7,000 304-57'1!1·20•6

7244,

aolup Gas Hoa~ Dlo-.llor, Relngell·

Only at Oakwood Homet, Nitro
WV: ::Jl+ 75S.588S
New UX80 Only make 2 PlY·
men11 &amp; move-1n, no payment af·
ter 4 yea11, free eet-up &amp; deli*Y

=~n~IU:~S :~~ Sa~!l ,~dS~~ ~~~~H~: 9:AY~~:T~, F~~~
WV. 304-755-S885

Unbelievable, New ,4)(70, no
payments after 4 years, onl~
• ,;,..;.c:________ make 2 JllYmartll to mow In, free
•1984 14)170 3 Bedroom, all elec- delivery &amp; aet-up. 1·800·251·
ij tnc, on 50x100 lot, part fenced, 5070
:close to P.P H.S. 304-525-3248
• bf appt Leave message
5 Acre Tracts 3 Miles South Of

For "-'" or aale· rwo bedroom
home, Pomeloy, new double pane
wmdowa. I14·D92·2304

'

•1i92 1unshlne, 2 BR, 2 bat!, cerr
ttal atr, SHI,800. evenings- 814·

388-9342.
1983 70X1 4 Cen!Ur~ 3 Bedrooms,
2 Baths, Heat Pump, Sk11t1ng, One
Owner, $22,500, 51:J.W.SOS4

REALTORS:
Allen C Wood , ReaHor/Broker-446·4523
Ken Morgan , ReaHor/Broker-446·0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256·1745
em Watson, Realtor-256·6102

Requtrecl, 513-574·2539

HoUle 1n country lor rent 61 •4&gt;18·25&gt;14,Relerenc:e requ11ed .
N1ce, Clean, 3 Bedroom , Refer enc:ea &amp; Dtpollt No Pets 304 ·
875-5162

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
NEAR RIO GRANDE
Very Clean 1 1/2 $tory 3 Bedroom
Dwelling Approx. 9 acre lot High·
Overlooking Raccoon Creek Available
Immediately 2798 Creek View Drive
aka Cora-Adamsville Road Owner will
Consider Financing
Price Reduced $39,900

Down $5001Mo., 81 4-869-34B2.

Rodney, $350/Mo , Oepo~l &amp; Ref·
erences, Call After 4 PM 614·

CORUM REAL ESTATE
COMPANY

842918

I $59,000 00 Eat 1n Kitchen , LA ,
FR wnh fireplace 1 5 baths,
concrete dnve. pnvacy lence. 1
car attached garage ~130

Real Estate General .

BLACKBURN REALTY
514 Second Ave., Gallipoli•, Oh. 45631
Ranny Blao:khurn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
~

Joe Moore, Associate'J4t-llll

614-228-0027

Small unfurmahed house near
Raclne, ·tull basement, $300/mo
plus utlhtlea, no ms1de pets, 614-

Real Estate General

949-2587 tiYertlngl.

SPACIOUS 1992 MODULA~ HOME
offers over 2,00Q sq. It of living space,
wtth 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, and
ulility room. Theres a beautiful stone
fireplace in the family room and
endless cabinets in the kitchen as well
as a centrally located serv1ng tsland.
Located at the Junction of 124 and
160 it resl on 2 64 acres m/1 in
Wilkesv•lle Call us today, $72,900.

Three bedroom house stove and
reln98'ratar, washer and dry&amp;f, no
1nslde peta, 6t4·992·3090
Two bedroom house, stave and
refrlgeraJor, no lns1de pels, 614·

992·3090

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY Thts
almost brand new ranch style home
rests in over 7 acres of woods With
arprox. 800 It of creek frontage. Some
o lhe many features are 4 BAs, 2
baths, 16x21 K1t w/range, refrig, dtsp &amp;
OW. 15x15 DR, 16x21 LA w/french
doors, 2 large treated decks, v~nyl s1d1ng
&amp; an unattached 2 car garage. If you
don't want to look at your neighbors.,
YOU MUST SEiE THIS ONE ASKING
$115,000

Public Sale &amp; Auction

ANIIQUI AUCTION
sAT., ocr. 12, 1996,
10t00 A.M.
LOCATED IT THE AUCTION CENTER ON
RT. 331N.&amp;WON, W.Y.
, .

AUOION
Saturday, Odober 12, 1996 10:00 a.m.·

•

ANTIQUE FURNITURE _
FAN:rASTIC 11 PC. RHOMWEBER ROSEWOOD D. R. SUITE, WONDERFUL &amp;
RARE MAHOGANY TETE·A·TETE, WALNUT VICTORIAN GENTLEMENS
DRESSING BUREA, 3 PC. WALNUT MARBLE TOP BR SUITE, 2 PC. OAK BR
SUITE, 12 PC. WALNUT QUEEN ANNE D.R. SUITE, EXCEPTIONAL MAHOGANY .
TALL FRENCH CURIO CABINET, LARGE MAHOGANY CHEVAL DRESSING
MIRROR, MAHOGANY MIRRORED DOOR WARDROBE WILARGE DRAWER,
OAK 2 DOOR WARDROBE, 4 PC. MAHOGANY BR SUITE, 5 PC. PA HOUSE
CHERRY BA SUITE, 6 PC. FRENCH TWIN BR SUITE, PR CHERRY TWIN BEDS,
MAHOGANY DRESSING TABLE &amp; BENCH, 10 PLUS OAK·CHERRY·WALNUT &amp;
WICKER LAMP TABLES AND STANDS, OAK PRINCESS DRESSER, FERN
STANDS, PR OF MAHOGANY END TABLES, SET OF STOCKING TARLES &amp;
COFFEE TABLE, HIGH BACK WING CHAIR, ROSE WOOD GAME TABLE, SM.
MAHOGANY CURIO &amp; CHINA CUPBOARDS, 7 PC. "ART MOD ERNE" DR SUITE,
MAHOGANY TEA CART &amp; CORNER STAND, 5 PC. VICTORIAN WALNUT
PARLOR SUITE, WONDERFUL CARVED MAHOGANY CHAISE LOUNGE,
MAHOGANCY ETAGERE, NICE HIGH BACK VITORIAN BED, SQUARE OAK
TABLE &amp; ' 4 CHAIRS, DUNCAN PHYFE TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS, WALNUT BLIND
DOOR CR. CUPBOARD, COUNTRY BAKERS CUPBOARD WIPIE TINS, JELLY
CUPBOARD &amp; BUCKET BENCH (All WITH NICE PAINT), 3 PC. SELLARS
KITCHEN CABINET, SET OF 8 WALNUT CHAIRS, LARGE JELLY CUPBOARD
WfTIN PANELS, HARD· TO FIND CHERRY &amp; WALNUT HUTCH TABLE, ART
DECO DENTAL CABINET, HIGH BACK CHERRY DRY SINK, WALNUT
VICTORIAN DRESSER &amp; WASH STAND, ICE CREAM TABLE &amp; STOOLS,
· COUNTRY BENCHES, METAL LAWN FURNITURE, OAK &amp; COUNTRY MANTELS,
PLUS MANY OTHER ITEMS.
GLASSWARE A COLLECTIBLES
RARE WALNUT VICTORIAN BABY CARRIAGE, VICTORIAN HANGING LIGHT W/
2 SHADES, PR. OF CAMBRIDGE BOUDOIR LAMPS, 2 LEADED GLASS LAMPS,
G.W.W. LAMP, OTHER FLOOR &amp; TABLE LAMPS, 36 PCS. AZALEA NORITAKE
CHINA, 60 PCS. FLO BLUE PLYMOUTH PATTERN 2·14• PLATTERS 1 ·11"
PLATTER, 6·9" DINNER PLATES, 10 S,UPERSALADS, 1 COVERED DISH, 2
OPEN SERVING DISHES, 9 BREAD PLATES, 6 DESERTS, 1 GRAVY, 9
SAUCERS, 10 CUPS, PLUS 10 OTHER ASSORTED PATTERN PIECES OF FLO
BLUE, 50 PCS. HARLEQUIN CHINA SET, 2 SETS OF HAVILAND CHINA, 2 SETS
OF STERLING SILVER 113 PC. ALVIN SET &amp; 47 PC. GORHAM SET PLUS
OTHER STERLING SILVER PCS., BAKELITE &amp; COSTUME JEWELRY,
WHEELING WV 2 GAL STONEWARE JUG, POMEROY OHIO DEC. CROCK,
PLUS SEVERAL OTHER NICE BLUE DEC. PCS., LARGE ASSORTMENT OF
STONEWARE, CROCKS, JUGS, &amp; BOWLS, LARGE ~ROUPING OF VICTORIAN
FABRICS, LACE, &amp; NICE LINNEND, COVERLET, MARX TIN CKY CORADER,
FILLING STATION &amp; MANGER SETS, SM. SPOOL CABINET, GOOD CHRISTMAS
DECORATIONS, PINK &amp; GREEN DEPRESSION GLASS, 2 VERY NICE PCS.
WELLER ART POTTERY, HULL POTTERY EWER, 1920'S LG. &amp; sM.
ROCKWOOD VASES, GRANITE WARE PCS., BASKETS, OLD MARBLES, BRASS
KETTLE, FENTON WATER SET &amp; OTHER FENTON PCS. HAND PAINTED
CHINA, BLACK COLLETIBLES, COFFEE GRINDER, BOOKENDS, AR LANTERN.
RED BALL GAS STATION SIGN, Oii.CANS, OTHER ADVERTISING ITEMS, YARD
LONG PRINTS INCLUDING SIGNED MARY PICKFORD &amp; PABST BREWING CO.•
CALENDAR PRINT, MAXFIELD PARISH PRINT, MANY OTHER FINE BALKING
PRINTS, PICTURES &amp; FRAMES, MIRRORS, 2 OIL PAINTINGS, GOOD
CHILDREN'S BOOKS, TIN 'JENNY &amp; BALKING MULE", TIN 'SPACE TANK", TIN
BATTERY OCT. 'MOON ROCKET". OTHER TOYS INCLUDING GUNS, TRUCKS,
TRACTOR &amp; DOLLS, UPPER OHIO RIVER MAPS DATED 1Bn OF POINT
PLEASANT. GALLIPOLIS; CHESHIRE, RACINE.&amp; MIDpLEPORT, ETC. OAK GUM
BALL MACHINE, UNUSUAL SESSIONS CLOCK W/METAL CASE INGRAVED
WOMEN HOLDING THEIR I;IABIES, GRAPES, BARREL, BASKET OF FLOWERS
MUS'I' SEEII MANY OTHER ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES.

AUCTION CONDUCTED By

1201~8 CiH'Afii.miG AND DELIGHTFUL CAPE
COD. 3/4 bedrms 2 full baths, kitchen has Bru·ce
hardwood floors, living rm, w/gas f~replace, dtning rm,
1st floor laundry Full divided basement w/famtfy rm
and work area. H.P. and Wood burner, Shining and
spotless through out 2 car attached garage. Also a
New 24' x 48' Multi-porpose buoldtng such as a Guest
House or Workshop. Unusual landscaping wtth a
large fishpond &amp; fountain . 2 acres m/L Mercerville on
SA 218 Owner has a profitable ousoness for sale. Call
for full information Virg1ma 388-8626/446·"6806
Appointment Only.

Estate

....

BLACKBURN REALTY
514 Sco:ond Ave., Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
Ranny Rlackhurn, Broker, Phone: {614) 446-0008
" " Joe Moore, Aosociate 441-1111

THIS PROP,ERTY IS LOCATED OFF GARFIELD AVE. There
is 50' of lots #11, 12, 13, 14, 15, all of lots #16, 17, 18, 19, and
20. There is water, electric, and sewer for this property. You
can build your dream home here and have lpts of room around
you. $20,000.00

i"'~ -.,.,~

This secluded 2
story home has a nice yard It
offers 3 BA baths, LA, OR. k1t
full bsmt, FA gas furnace Well
Insulated C1ty water &amp; sew.er
Immediate possession Pr1ced for
a quick sale at $25,0001

POMEROY - Exacut1ve
type
home 29 miles {r.om Parkersburg
5 m11es from Pomeroy on SA 7
lots or pn\laCy 4 BA 2 1/2 baths,
LA w/fp, FAw/1p, DR, eat-In ktt
bsmt
Cldgs, pool, many
olher

I ,

to Harrisonville BR. 3 balhs. Tuppert Pl1in1 • FREEl • Free
This home has e'ierythmg plus a gas plus royatUes makes th1s
30 x 50 metal bldg wJoffrce Price hause cos1 almotl nothing!
reduced to make a quick salo Located on 6 acres m/1 wtlh a
can us .
pond, this hOme otters a lg LA
.,:::::::.;:;:.;.._....;....;_ _ __, Wf'p 1\J Fr w/FP, ea1·1n klchen, 2
'bedr .... om. bath, attached garage
Oulb UIICIIng
Make
an
appointment to see this one
l Il ~~.,:V C:astnm School District

LOCATED ON GARFIELD AVE. there is an older home with
2.305 acres Along with this is a beautiful view of the river . •

'I

ror

NEW LISTING,
COME TO THE
COUNTRY AND RELAX on the front
porch of this historic 2 story home
Resting on 5.85 acres lies this newly
s1ded and insulated 7 room home with
a 40x40 shop with Qversize doors. Thos
home also offers a 26x30 block barn
and large pond. Call today to get away
$82,900.00
NEW LISTING • 2 bedroom, 1 bath NEW LISTING OF VACANT LAND
located on 127 Rover St. Roof 5 yrs., located on Lake Drive Subd. in Sec 27
double pa1n windows, , large storage Raccoon Twp this lot measures
building. 2 lots each measure 50x150. 100'x100', The wafer and sewer tap is
Call us today. $52,900.00
available $12,000.00
20 ACRES M/l OF GOOD HUNTING LAND This huntong land is off of Jones
Road. Any hunter would love to own his own forestl With hunting season JUS!
around the corner, gove us a call. $19,000.

"'

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
· LUNCH WV 1168
MASON, WV
Residence: (304) 773-5785 or Auction Center (304) 713-5447
TERMS: CA,SH or CHECK WITH !.D.
Not rnponalble
ace~• or lou of property.
Announctmtnt Day of Sale Take Precedence Over Printed Material.

~ Ciroom

Ranch. value worth seeing al

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY-

'

furn~ahed, waahef/ dryer hookup,
caM 814·U2·8886 bo!Weon 5.30·
a oopm.
·

NEW USTINGI Four

Located on Jackson P1ke , Block
Bldg 14600 sq fl with 100 loot
road frontage, niCBSIZe gravel #
parkmg lot You WOlJICI be
amazed at the pnc~! Call for
more Info #5000

1 Story Dwelling .on 1 acre Corner Lot
63 Woodsmill Road and St. Rt. 554
Priced $31,900

Wtllctlviilo On S.R, 180 $500

614.775·9113

This 3

BR ranch located in Clay Twp
V1nyl S1d1g, Full Bsmt, Fenced 1n
lot 2 car anached garage shed
abo~~e ground pool

NEAR BIDWELL

Call for additional information:

BRUNER LAND

•

IP2006 • Moslly flat and some
wooded, appro)( 2 5 acres
PubliC Utll Available r 10,000 00
JUST USTEDI M13t

Pomeroy- two bedroom, kllchen

Down, S150/Mo., 19,900 County
Water, 73 Acres 142.000 12.000

APP EALINUt l f\ree tiHI\...1'\. VUNUU - Located m tne Two Acrel mil · with a 14 lo: 70
bedroom Ranch locate d on At c1ty close to -everythm~ and Low Mobile home situateD on Horse
141 Pnced1n the60 s II 12.7
Maintenance 11122
Creek Ad ~4001

VERY

PHONE OFFICE 446-7699
KENNETH AMSBARY, PH.245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

roam House For Rent. $375/Mo,
Depo~l

Ross 1 Realtor

AFFORDABLE! AEFORDBLEI
OWN YOUR OWN HOME CHEAPER THAN RENT.
213 bedrooms, bath, carport, rural water system,
State Highway. Needs some Tender-Loving Care.
Ph. Now for more inlo. &amp; appointment to see. #759

Fourth Avenue, Galhpahl, 3 Bed

::::.::...--------1 remodeted, atove and refrigerator

Auction

•

tree!. no

Llm1ted Oflerl 1007 doublewidt,
3br. 2bath, 11799 dawn, $2701

:
• r~ght Bath must be moved 304·

·;

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Damewood have sold.their farm
moving to Springfiled, Oh. So will sail
absolute auction. Located from Chaster. Ohio
ST. AI 7 then take St. At 248 to Uck Sklllat Rd.
go approK. 3/4 m1le to· farm. Watch for auc~ion1:l
signs.
"TRACTORS"
1950 J.D. A. w/square axle, live hyc. w/power
troll &amp; rollamat1c, AC-CA w/spin out wheels and
two row cultivator, MH pony, M422 Ditch Witch
"EQUIPMENT"
Two way plow for pony, two wheel trailer,
soiler, 3 pt hitch f~ J.D. rear wheels,
II c:onllilr1tinaiS' mower, electric hammer mill, 2 flat
bed wagons, 5' pull brush hog, I. H. Little wonder
plow, 8' JD Disc, Goble offset d1sc, snow blade ·
for Craftman mower, Tora Mulchery wagon
w/hunting shack, 6' Bell Hillsko hammer mill,
rotc hoa, chipper/shedder, M.W. cement mixer.
"SHOP EQUIPMENT &amp; BOAT"
10" Craftman radial saw, portable 1 table sa•N...
power hawksaw, Craftman band saw, Evinruda
boat motor, &amp; 14' Monarch alull). John Boat.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Wire egg basket, lard presses, lanterns, airline
radio, Blacksmith forage, Balckboard slate,
running board for old car, steel traps,
woodrocker, oil &amp; alladen lamps, jewell tea pot,
Shirly Temple pitcher (good) and bowl, drop leaf
stand, drop leaf table, two Hocking Valley Corn
Shellers, and cream can and eel.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Maytag washer &amp; dryer, 'kitchen table &amp; 4 chairs,
ward 10' chest freezer, slgnituni dexlude freezer,
entertainment center, stands, chairs, Whitney
piano &amp; bench, lamps, stereo w/twm cassettes,
living room su1te, rocker/recliner, recliner, misc.
1tems.
. "MISC"
Hobart meat grinder, log chains, elec. pump for
g11s tank, 300 gal skid tank Mantrls . tiller,
platform scales, pipe dies,grindstone, Iota of
scrape steel, lots of tools, tool boxes, 6'8" level, ,
Dolin ch~in saw, approx. 1000 bricks, country,
saw, oak lumber 2x6, 2x4 approx. 1000 ft. 11 ~.
Husky mower, Kasko fork 1111 for parts. Anything'
&amp; everything ftom a farm. Just what you need. '
Owner• Owan &amp; Lorna Damewood
'
DANSMrrH·AUCTIONEER
BILL GoBLE APPRENTICE
Cltll PoaltlveiD Rtfl attlmtntl

,

304-755-5885
1g1a 28x51J Double Wide 3 Bid· NEWI B k R

rooma, LR. FA, Heat Pump,
Woadburner, Washer, Dryer, Relr~tor. Range W1th M1erowave,
8Ft. .Pool Table S7,000 Must Be

, 32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

RENTALS

675·&lt;833 Allor 7.00 1·814-440
3623
Flr11 Time Buyers E·Z Financing 2 bet:koam hoUH In Pomeroy ror
t
2 or 3 Bedroom, around $200/mo. rent w1th opuon to buy on con·
J 1970 12x85 twa bedroom mobile 1-80Q.25l -5070

1 25&gt;11: •
1872 Kirkwood 2 Bedrooms,
14x74 1 112 Baths, Call Alter 5
P.M Oli\.~·1241

446-1066

'

Patricta

25Hi070

a1o Mltctlon or

, cond, Callatrer Spm 304· 675- 1509

M~. new hoi watet heater, new
gaa range, $3200 turntshed or
12900 unfurmshed, 614· 992·

LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

wa•

I 1M/mo. FrH deiiYetY ll Mt•UP.

Or 3 Bedioams, S20QIUo., 1-800·

W!!~roJ!!I!I!V:H~!c·.

35 atrtl. 5 •ern l1eld, 30 ecrtl
woo~ Col'lYeNently located , Dml
from PI: Pleeunt Clry
avalable. APing $30,000. Home tight
or hunter'l paradill. 1-330-877·
901111

Mobiie home tot fat flnl, ready to
nook-up, rent nego 216 -322 -

only at Oak W9od Homet. Nitro

Real

!Ox!O, - . 2 boil, 11078iluPk. I!IU-3&amp;7-710g or IU -317·
5013

et1.fl777.

1$9,000, U82 Oakwood 14x55,
J2bodroom, $13,000. Bolli m good HI00-2SI·507ll.

SITUIDAY, OCIOIII 12, 1996 IT 10100 LIL
5459 ST. II. 211

Public Sale

air, wlrtl apptov-.d credit. 1·100·

.~~~·~~~--------­ 19117·2 &amp; 3 8 doom, M5 down.

• U" DOWN Buya Any Double

1II;:;=====;;:~;:.========---;

l'lloj'

1117 11110 $ - · 2 lltlh,
11,321/dftn, tl811m0, frM .~.
wllllljlp!VVOd .~ .. ·-111·

· ~f~or;..Sa::::.le:...___ em.
: .,.,..,.~
• 14tt DOWN Bu~o Any Stngl• 111!17 Doul&gt;ltwld•. 3 bod Nm, 2
t Wldo Homo: Onl~ "1 Ook Wood boll\, 11.-M, l21111mo, r-

t··-

lnel, 614-985-3355.

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1996
AT 7:00P.M• .

Es 91,ITE AUCTION

Thacker (Probate Case No 96AM014690) the
followmg will be sold: Lowes 12 hp lawn mower,
Chiffenrobe w/mirror, Automatic washer and
dryer, t;lectric Range, Poster Bed, Bentwood

~

o•

Auction

Located on Stale Route 243 , approximately'3
miles !rpm Bradrick. To settle the estate of Rufus

320 Mobile Homes
lltVIII PIIOIIT I'IIOI'IIITY,
for Sale

Three bedroom w/basament on

AUCTION

SATURDAY, OOOBfR 12, .1996
10:00 A.M.

~0 Homes for S11e

..3 3 level acres,..Q8'x50' three -bay

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Christmas items and misc.
October 11 7:00 pm
HARTFORD COMMUNITY
BUILDING
Auctioneer - Howard Beasley

-~·~JHr~~~~~·~Oc~~~~6~,p1~9~H~~~:;~~~~~~P~o~me~~ro:y:·~M~I~dd~l~e~po~rt~·~G~al~ll~po~l~is~,~O~H~·~P~o~in~t~P~Ie~a~s~atn~t,~W~Y~:'::::::::~~~,~~~~qg~~m~e~~,~~"d~i~m~I:•:Pa~g~e:D:S:

.

FARM EQUIPMENT '
Int. 784 diesel tractor w/3200 hrs, high in '""'hAo,l
• wrtnr_ 2250 loader, (loader will be offered separate); Int.
diesel tractor, 6300 hr. sl, rear rubber excellent
I(Both tractors look and sound good.) Int. 1150
larlnd,er/rnlx•er:; N.H 510 manure spreader w/hyd. tail
: Mayrath 40 It, hay/grain elevator; J D. 241 sq.
lbatler; J.D. 640 hay rake, rubber teelh; Int. 990,7 It
I hioyblne: Ford 501, 7 It mower; 3·pt plo hay tedder;
pull-type rotary culler, King 6 ft. 3-pt rotary culler:
Int. 3-pt 3-bollom plows; White 3-pt 2-bottom plows;
3-pt. disc: J.D. 6 ft. drag disc; 300 gal.
sprayer (tank IS bad); 10 ft. Hardgator harrow on
rubber; 10ft. cultlpactor; Int. 13-hole grain drill; J.D.
1240, 4-row corn planter wlinsectlcide boxes;
Dearborn cullivators; 3-pt. Holland tobacco planter;
1gnlVIIy wagons and running gears; 4 hay wagons (2·
1rougr1); Ford 3-pt post hole digger w/12 ln. augar; 3 pt.
I heaw duly post driver; 6 ft., 3·pt blade, h"eavy duty;
KB 54 silage blower, looks new; 5 sections of
blower pipe and chute; N.J I -row corn picker; caltle
head gate; 2 round bale feeders; tobacco sticks, Also,
approx. 800·900 bulk gallon tank; vacuum pump; 4
milkers, 2 in. glass pipe line for a 4-stall Herringbone
molking system Many more misc. items.
OWNERS: Ruth Gillespie Estate
Probale Court Case #961 071
1
Atty: Mark Sheets
Co-Executives- Shelba Wood, Belh A. Lloyd
Te~s: Cash or good check
AUCTI EERS: FRED C. SCHAFER
PHON 614·838·571 5 ED SCHAFER
P.S Auctioneer's Note: Traclors Sell First Be On Time.
Licensed
In the
Of Ohto

'

•
•
•
Sunday,~r6,111J :

Take US 50 &amp; 32 eleven miles west of Athens,
2•3 BR, b11ck rancn, , bolh, now
kilehen &amp;PIIhances oncluded, ,_ I Ohlllo and e~tit ' onto 50 west towards McArthur.
C8fp8:f. tilt 8 Vlt'Til floor COY8flng5,
ted
lull baaemenl, spaCIOUS deck I Auction is quarter mile on lelt Signs pos •
Aslcong $89,ooo , Mull Seol 304·
Dough cabinet; pie safes; washS!Silds;
87 4212
1
s1'd1ressel'!l w/mirrors; twin bed Iron; sets of ch airs;
3 Bedroom !-lome OouDie Garage
k
d
10 Acre• Of Land Blaeklop Road,
le bOX phone; rook rOO W!JO
f 4.soo. Phon• 6 '"' 46' 0360
llb,ooiKerldS; flow blue milk pitcher; lleetwing gas
depression and other glass ana other
In New Havtn·May·LU·Wan B1·
Level Home large earner kit wlrh I snnalls; very brief listing full ad In Oct. 7 Antique
private baCk yard. •4br, 2 full I w•&gt;Ak Consignmants welcome.
baths, large famll~ room w/bnck
Terms Cash or check w/positive I D. Food ·'
ltreplace, lr, dr, k1t, Iota of extra~
includmg hoi tub. 2.22Saq H.
available.
sao,ooo. 304-882-3388.
Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson 814-69&amp;-6706
Three bedroom home In country,
Licensed adn Bonded In OhiO
Whiles H1ll Rd, RuUand, one bath,
1n-groi.W'Id pool, 814-902-5087
Partner Frank Hutchinson 614-592-4349

GILLESPIE ESTATE AUCTION
Farm Equipment
,
1
Saturday, 'october 12 Time: 11:00 am
Located at 1950 Cora Mill Road, Gallipolis, Oh1o.
From the North edge of Gallipolis at th'e intersection
SA 7 and uS 35, take US 35 West approx. 6 miles
Rodney Pike or SA 850 ex1t, go South on 850 approx.
2 miles to SR. 588, go r1ght on SA 586 approx ..2
to Cora Mill Rd. Left on Cora Mill Rd. approx. 2 miil es,l
to sale sile. Sogns Will be posted from SA 650. Due
recent death of Ruth and the late Ishmael il
i ,
who were well known farmers and active in ti)h
I~~;~~~~~~r. for 50 years, Will sell the followong fatm

This newspaper will oot
knowllngly accept
actvertlsements for real estate
wh1ch Is In vlolallon of the law
OUr readers are hereby
Informed thai all dwellings
B,dvenlsed In 1t11s newwaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis.

,Oh1o
April21, 1993 Woman
kidnaped, shol and raped

l.1 Sheriff's

4 Bedrooms, 2 Batt'ls, Trt -leYel
2.7 Acres In Green Schooi...Area
$1~614 - «8 8706Aher 4

Rock Wtll need romodoli~g Ask
~~-!~~4 Cali aller s oopm

Public Sale &amp; Auction

304-675-1957

Home, olflc:e, or fall cleamng. Call
anyt1me d no answer, leave mes.sage. 304·875-6328

Bedmom, 2 bartl, central heall
a1r, convenler'l! locatiOn , 38 Wind·
sor Court 3041-875-7285

(1..4

House far sale on Leo.n Baden
Rd, newly remodeled , $62 000
304 -882· 3839

Georges Portable Sawm1ll, don't
haul your logs to the mdl just call

happened

In Loving
Memory of
DAVID E.
STRAIT

recommends that you do busi ness wnh people you know, and
NOT to send money through the
ma1l un111 you have mvest1gated
the offering.

230

~14 -

304·757· 1013

____

180 Wanted To Do

can visit your friends, and loved ones too. Just Che

•

1

tRockspnngs Rehablhta!IOn Center
Ia seeking a tun nme RN w11h ex·
per1ence In long 18fm and rehabll·
ilabon nursing ThiS position Will
mvolva resident auenmeru
sy1tems MDS and caae management far our aubac:ulelrehabilitallon umt. Cand1datea thould 8)1- I~~~~~...:_
ohtbll ability to communlcale, or·
WILDLIFE /CONSERVATION
oan~ze and work Wtth the mterdiS·
JOBS I
ctp!inary thefapy tnm. We recognize your career goals With h~ghl., Game Wardens, Security, Matn·
competitive aal•ry and benefll tertance, Etc:. No Exp Necessarv.
package To respond to thts ex:- Now H1n11g For Info Call (219}
c111ng oppartunny, apply at Rock· 794·00,0 Ellt 8710, 9 AU To 11
spnngs Aehab1l1tadon Center Po· PU 7 Days

mane Oftt~r For Galha county To
Investigate Animal Abuse, Ne·
glect And Cruelty Cases Sue- moray, O!Vo, 814-992-8608
- "'Ctssful Completton Qf Ohto
Secrerary /Recepnon l!l, Comput.. Pedce Offtcer's Tratnlng , Valid er Skills W1th Health Benehlt
~ drtver'a License And Dependable
French City Press 423 Second.
Transportat~an Requ1red ; Must
A...,.,o,
Galtpotis. OH 45631 ,
~ love An1mals Preference W1II' Be
.. G1ven To Can&lt;Mates W1th Prev1
TRAINEES WANTED
ous E;w;per1enc;e And /Or Knqwl
EARN WHILE YOU TRAIN For
• edge ol OfHo Antmal Cruelty A Career In Painting, Plumbing Of
• laws Pay Be The Call Plus M1le
Electrontcs Repair No Tu1t1on.
• IQO L1ab1Jny Insurance Prov1ded.
GEO IHtgh School Diploma Pro·
.. If Interested Please Submu Re- gram Ava1lable Houa1ng, Meats,
.. aume lneludmg Three References Med1cal Care And Paycheck Pro: By OclDber 11th, To Gallia Coun - vided. Agea 16 -24 Job Corps- A
• ty "'nimal Welfare league, Inc., U.S. Department Of Labor PraP.O Bo11 216, _Galhpohs, OH ~am Caii1·800-733...,0BS. Ext
45631 .
.,

•

Business
Opportunity
'INOTICEI "
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING ()()
looenlr\o

.... 000 304 882·3772, Or
992-5&amp;11 .

For Sale By Owner 2 -3 Bedroom
Houae In GallipoliS, Good Rental
Property Or Staner Home Call

210

Man Seekmg Full· Time Or Part·
Time AutO Mechan1c1 And Body
Work, W1th Exper ience &amp; References, Please Call~, 4·446-9978

WV

•

•

laah•n Rd. 1•;, story home Is
on 2 acres mil in.a rural setting.
Large LA wtenc:~sEKI porch wlhol

lull, 4 ar, I 1/2 balh, DR, Kil.

den. full bsmt, wllhln driving
dlttance or Parlleraburg &amp;
Ravenswood In the 50 't
Eastern School Distr ict . Call for

an

'

$49,900.
Beautiful Rancn built home
LA, OR, FA,
kll w/appl , utility rms, many
extras on :J acres m/1 alto • 40 x
64 steel bldg wtoffice can &amp; tet

oftert • bl', 2 llalh,

Both of these river front properties are located next to each
other. They can be purchased together or separately. Either way ·
you will have one of the nicest building sites on the Ohio River.
Call Ul

�'
Pac• D6 •

.,....._,tim.. J1eatbu1

420

Homfs

Mobile

440

I

256 8267

Pomeroy • Middleport •

Apartments
for Rent

for Rtnt
121.40 Exltl CIHn 2 Bedi"'Omt 5
M nutea f om Gal pol s 2 Rtt.r
encts "NeedtM 1235 Mo 614

-.........

Ta a Townhouu Apa tmen s
V• y Spac ous 2 Bed ooms 2
Floo 1 CA. t f2 Ba h Fu y Ca
pe ed Adul Pool &amp; Baby Poo
Pat o Sta t S340 Mo No Pets
L~ase Pus Secu y Oepos FJ.e
qu"ecj e • 367 7850

520

Sporting
Goods

540

540

M lscellaneous
Merchandise

E eel olux Shampoo &amp;
Oetha tl8f Fo John

$unday, October 8, 11111

OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Oee

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

.....
.
-.=.-.==:!2:::.-::.;

560

560

Antiques

Po sl'llf
t Rldtng

FALL SPECIAL

Suburban Wood Bu ne w p pe

pos

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan A H -

Buy DIRECT and SAVEl

Jean s used &amp; new lots or bOys
sze 16 bacl\ A zo11a &amp; B ttana
new) $8 99 a pa Baby ems of
a k nds Po me oy Th t Sho~
220 E Man St e9 P!;lme oy Oh
614 992 3725

•

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa ed New &amp; Rebu In S ock
Ca Ron Evans

600 537 9528

6edroom Ut I ea Pa d 260
Fou lh Avenue S255 Mo 614

2 to 4 bedroom bottom floor n ce

Mondoy Salurday tCam 6pm

S400 a monrh 8 4 092 8a23

'

$250 5t4 742 3065

Building
Supplies

Tues Sa.t9-6 Sun 11 5

G E Washe Was $95 Cut $75
G E Washer $95 G E Washer
Nice S175 Wh lpool Washer
1205 1 Year Warranty Wh pool
Dtye Harvest God $95 Electric
Range Was $150 Cu To$ 25
Fr g dare Refr g&amp; a to Frost Fee
$125 Whwlpooi Rerr ge ato Frost
F ee S150 Skaggs App ancea
78VneS eet Ga pols 6t4

Combat boo s a my camoullaae
erual su plus c oth ng by Sandr
v e Posr Off ce Sam Some
vIes F day Sundar Noon
5:00pm 304 273 5655
Concrete I Plasl c Sepbc: Tanks
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH

80().537 952S

Couc:h and Cha r S 150 00 814
441 042

448 7398 1-600 499 3499
GOOD

USED

APPL ANCES

Wasl'le s d ye s relr ge ato &amp;
ranges Skaggs Appl ances 76
V ne S ee Ca fl14 446 7398
l 800 499 3499
..

apanmen

$

at V llage Ual'liJ and

opo t From S232 $355 Cal/614
9Q2 5064 Equal Hous ng Oppo
-Modern

0

DALE E TAYLOR REALTY
272 E 2ND STREET POMEROY OHIO 45769

(614) 992 5333

Call

LINPOR

r wr11

for m rc

PO Box6U
R•pley, W'\1-25271

Ill

'

RUSSELL D WOOD BROKER
446 4618
Judy DeWru
.... .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'..~··.. .'.'.441 0262
379 2184
I Merrtll Carter...
Rulh Barr
446 Hl93

•

446-3636
YOU WONT OUTGROW THIS HOMEI 10 ROOM
HOME HAS 6 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS LARGE
LIVING ROOM AND FAMILY ROOM BOTH HAVE
FIREPLACES FORMAL DINING EAT IN KITCHEN
PATIO BASEMENT 2 CAR ATIACHED GARAGE
PLUS
ADDITIONAL
24
X
20
GARAGE
APPROXIMATELY ONE (1) ACRES GALLIPOLIS
CITY
SCHOOL
SYSTEM
NICE
COUNTRY
SETIING $95 000 CALL SOONI

$39 900 YOUR MISSING A
GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO large covered
PURCHASE THIS HOME 3
lots moreON
Locust
bedroom ranch with a L
FRESH
THE ·~t~N;r.
Shaped kttchen d n ng &amp; 2014 GEORGES
living room attached carpon Excel ent floor plan comes
Moslly level lawn Let us with lhts 3 bedroom ranch
show Hto you
ft21
dining area kHchen living
START OUT WITH THIS room apptoxlmataly 24 x
HOUEI 2 bedrooms living 30 garage w th furnace &amp;
room famtly room bath
water plus a 24' x so
laundry room Nice level lot bu ldlng Cal lor loiS more
be ng approx 320 acre Let Information 1871
us show
t 10 youl
1873
DOUBLE
HOUSE
PAYMENTS
OWNERS
NEED TO SELL QUICKLY
PRICE REDUCED
S2 ooo 001 You musl really MOVE INTO QUICilLt ,_
see th s home to apprec ate Vinton Street Neat one story
all the extras House type brick home Off street
i
extra nsu alton 2 park ng shaded back lawn
I
super floor plan
living room kitchen 2
ceilings Newer
large laundry
Aftordable
l~~~~bUsyslem
deck
&amp;
ldtng Included Lal
windows I
you H870

'

SOUTH And MIDDLEPORT Fixer Uppar
Near lown 1 1/2 storv frame with 2 3
bedrooms front porch level lol ASKING
$15 000 MAKE ONWNER AN OFFERII

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

d mng room 4 bedrooms 2
lSir~;~:~:·
heat pump/C A Beaulllu W B F
Garage n basement Cemen1 dnveway Rver
Fronl lot trull lreee 8 Miles From
Ravenswood Bridge
MULBERRY HEIGHTS 1 t/2 Story Frame
home with carpel and nice hardwood floor ng
Drywall nterlor paneled breezeway electr c
H P /C A Appliances paved drtveway 1 Car
garage sloping yard lwo bedrooms
basement N ce A ea Realty Nice Home
Ntee local on I! Come See This Oneil
OWNER WANTS SOLD NOWII This s your
opportunity to own lh s cute I floor home 2
bedrooms ull ty room N ce siH ng porch wtlh
g"'a1111ew ollhe Oh o Rtverll Th s Home Has
been Well Ma hla ned ~nd would make a ntee
~~~~~~~~;Home or Ren1al investment
·!
'~o ,;•w GOME SEE AND MAKE

OLDER Home on Double Lot on Brick Slreet
In Rutland Fix up Home or use as Mob le
Home/Building Slle or do both There Is
p enty ol room Water &amp; Seplle on aile
Paved Slreel ASKING $18 500 MAKE AN
OFFERII

HELP WANTEOIII WE
HAVE BUYERSIII WE
NEED USTINGSIII
CONTACT US IN
PERSON OR BY
PHONE WE'LL TELL
YOU HOW TO GET
YOUR HOME SOLOIII

2&lt;5-51377
Hang fin ah,
1 ton 1 uck

2511 1540

1985 Bu ck Some tel 2dr 4cyl
auto new rebu It eng ne good
cond S2 500 30" 675-8930 attar

198~

New gas tanks
wheels &amp; adlators D &amp; R Auto
R play WV 304 372 3933 o 1

1g85 N ssan K ng Cab ••• Sapd
ac sun oof bed I ne high m as

1977 Ford F 150 8 c:)'1 automat
c no rust new t rea very n c:e
lruclt S2000 1983 Ford F 150
302 v8 4 spd no rust runs
great $2500 15 m nutel lrom
. . , 814-319 2601
1979 Chevy FullS ze Pck Up
New T as New Front End

SCCl-273-9329

ootid nx:k S• 200 30&lt;-11 75 5009

19go Oodge 0250 Cummins En
AT AC Good Cond 1on
S10 000 614-""48-6783

o ne

1990 GMC S 15 Senea Sapd

acres

more

or

lass

2

bedrooms t 1/2 balhs
garage well maintained

Vou Don 1 Cal Us We Both LoseJ

F ee Est rna es 1 800 291 0098.

61444S-11308

w

OFFICE 992·2886

Autos lor Sale

1978 Dodge Uagnum

59 000

o g na m es n&amp;OOs ansm ssJOn

Quit Renting 1 lnves1 n your
future Needs soma ftni&amp;h

wo k $800 OBO ca I and le s

dea 1614 949 2693 a e 5pm

r-,.,j

HomeJLLove ltll Enl•ov 1work but lor lh' price you can
the cozy ltreplace In
alford II Tills recenlly vinyl
beamed living rootn
sided cottage oilers ltvlng
the family dmners and
room eat in kUchen 3
lho cooktes n every
bedrooms bath olllco utility
dream kitchen or relish
room plus a large storage
poaca and qutet on lhe
building
the heck out
sround
porch
Add
bedrooms 3 baths and a
family
room lhat
accomodata a pool table plus
second complele kltchan
cealed on 5 5 wooded acres
m~ Tills home Is certainly
FUN FOR All. HOME.I Plan a
dream worlh pursuing
vacation thai never endsl

vrrarnra 388 88211' «S II8CII
11 Ott Commercial Bldg 62
Olive St corner location 1990 sq
tt good roof Owne will sell
nventory o bu d ng separate or

Salt ng Spac ou&amp;
sectiOnal home sHualed on 1 3
acres mil Large llvtng room 3
bedrooms 2 lull baths 2 car
attached garage and more
only $43 000 N701
Country

t-he
HOt 2 LOCATED ON all 150
Older 2 sty 4 bed ms
bath 3
ac es mil p us a large barn

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

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

From the sparkling pool In the
summert me to the vlews
wooded grandeur all
long you II never
leave th s beaubful home
Boast ng 5 bedrooms (Yes 5
bedroomsll) 3 baths formal
living room 2 family rooms
large family kitchen 2 car
garage and plenly of decks
and patios lo enjoy any time
you want 20 acres m/1 No
this s not a dream 1s a new
ollffel Callloday lor your
orti1ato
Pr ced al

convenience 4/5 BAs 3 baths
fonnal DR Great rm wN/BFP f rst
floor UBR hot tub oak cab nets In
kitchen breakfast area overlooks a
pond 7 yrs o d large lol call

auollllod only
PRIVATE
LOCATION 1861 McCorm ck R~
La ge f oor plan wt3 bednns 3
baths catnedral ce lings n LA 4
acres MIL REDUCED
110S5 PRICE REDUCED
Homes tes lakev ew Estates Lot
c 5 Ac/IM. $29 500 Lot 2 2 348
ac m/1 $23 900 3 lots 2 5 ac m!l
$1500010$18500

.
,.

. .
"

.

• • I&lt;

I
SYRACUSE Karr Sl S ttlng r ght on I he nver Is a t t /2
w th huge old trees s tt ng on 3/4 ac e Has
knotty plna walls tn the large v ng room Bu It n desk
hulch and lois of cablnels Has 3 lo 4 bedrooms w th loiS
of closets downsta rs and a large upsta rs thta s oot
finished Greal vtew of river Owner wanls an offer
story home

.

I

REDUCTION! 111 900 HAS
BEEN DPOPPED OFF, THE
PURCHASE
PAtCE
Attract ve newer 3 bedroom
2 1/2 bath brick ranch
Fam ly room living room
basement attached 2 car
garage Covered real patio
stocked pond over 4 acres
land &amp; bUilding
LOIS of
extras call lor private
viewing
nee
NOT ONE BUT TWO
HOMESI First home consl111
of lois of extra rooms
l•cludlng 5 bedrooms two
baths large Ioyer dining
room kitchen detached
garage nice sized lot being
approx 1 24 acroo the
second home approx
yno
old wllh 4 bedrooms &amp; 2
baths Ultlng to numero"' to

ranch
home located n town One you
can ano d $39 900 Good
condhk:ln throughout 3 BAs lovely

home
Spac ous rooms
storage galore and new
furnace &amp; central air As a
residence home offers LR

kn LR VLS 3BS 8826
12015 NEW USTING 499 SR 21S

Slarter or Rei rement home w/2
bedrms 2 baths lR eat n kit ful
basement w ec rm new deck
ga age Love y 1rees VLS 388

8S26

38&amp;1 70s
12022 LOCATED SR 141
PERRY TWP: 34 Ac Mil country
showing todayl446

Call for more

delalls20 WOODED LOTS WITH
AN OUTSTANDING VIEW
OF QALUA COUNTY 8
ROLLIMQ HILLSI Lota are
privaiS ranging from 5 to 8
acres rtstrlcted county
lfater available city schoola
Just minutes from town

ranch home 3 bed ms 2 baths
wrap porch 40 ;~eh~vy sree
bu ding wo k
Ius an
apartment w/ 2 b
s galh Just
oft the highway ror enough to
p ov de a private setting among
trees The land Is romno wtth pattla
and trees Cal VLS 388.&amp;826

Hays446 3884
12000 RENT W/OPTION TO
PURCHASE All IRICK
RANCH 3 bedrms 3 baths eat
n k t w/range ref DW Fam

m

rormal cllnlng rm
full
2 car garage Also 1
very large 4 car detached
baseme~

ea~= =an aaa

VLS

ltOU SECLUDED IN THE
WOODS 26 acres Mll3 bedrm
2 sty Add sen area FREE GAS
A retreat from ttle huslia &amp;
bustle Can be used tor a hunting
camp or rust enroy a peaceful
qu a llfa A so 2 pumping gu

•17&amp;

w!WBFP 3 btdrms 2 1{2 balhs
k t w/breakfast rm enclOsed porctl
&amp; open deck Stereo throughOUI
All 2 car ga age w/overhaad
ltorage 2 Acres m/1 VlS 3:&amp;8

12020 NEW LI8TINII I 1/2
story houoe wlh 23 BRo l2
bathS NICe atza ldlchort w/refrla
range

&amp;

ba~or&lt;

mlc owave

F.ull

and town Quick sate wanted

eau Patty Hays now us ass•
11 Ot7 AN !XCELLINT

BUY 8 82 acres m/1 of laval to
ol ng rand A will constructed
31• BR hOme Approx matetv 4 5
8826
m let out ol VInton Oh o If you
1201t HANDY MAN SPECIAL 3 a e into country living this could
bedrooms 1 llath utility hook up oelor you t won11aot tong
Need a little finish work pr ce 11 11034 50 acrat m/1 of prime
lght 41 500 6n8 lincoln Pk
deve opm•nt land close to
freeway and State ROUII Publ+e
ut 1es ava ab e land leYal 10

rQIIng Excellent tor development

or com mere a usa $ t 5$,000

zoned

Cal Patty H~ 448 3884

reslt!enllal All has loll of
potentllll posslb titles can lor
more complele details *864
CHEAPI CHEAPI $7 500
Will buy wllh 10 acre mil lea
tract of land Road lronlage
homoalle Ideal hunting area
. .72

121104 NIW UITING Vocont
land 1 t3 ac mil gently sloped
Raccoon Ad AccHs to boat
ramp on Raccoon Crftk &amp;
palillng for you boal lfiiiDr

lllolutlfulkll to btold your drMm
home or to ~
tr111or1 C.!
Pllty Hayo448 3
ltD05
NIW
~IITINO
Remodeled tt73 12 • 85

l:f

WE NEED LISTIN S OF ALL
TYPES, GIVE ONE OF OUR
A CALL TODAY!

offers the convenience of

living In lhe city Eat In
kllchen llreptace In LR DR
belh and ut I ty room Pnce of

I 'S!!!4~2~5!!!0~0~Is1
J'

easy on the

I ~04

I.

;

.

.

.

Slarduat mobl • tlome with
up1nc10 3 SA a large li'llng
room SltUatltl on t ttC tru1 wtmo
hoolt up tor another mobile
home !Just 10 m nu111 fr.om

~ ,,

.

I

,,_

.

Country
Oreamsll
secluded
hooting 5

Quiet &amp; Su te
Nestled on a
wooded setting
6 acres m/1 lh s

.,.

~-·-'

.

\

MIDDLEPORT Pan Sl A ntce 1 slory ranch w lh 2 3
bod ooms sllllng on a large corner lot Also a one car
garage wHh work area Has lenced In ack yard and a heat
pump
$43 500

appreciate Offers a 29 tong
living room with vaulted
anc on Bsstianl ceiling and pellel stove
d ntng
room
l
maintenance format
w th replacement gorgeous kitchen with Island
11

t ~:~ntll

Th s

POMEROY Condor Stteet 3 lois with a one bedroom
home I hat could have more room II yo~ I x up lhe
basement Has equipped kllchen and washer and dryer
ncluded
ONLY S12 000

oak cabinets never endmg

counters huge pa~try and
breakfast nook Extravagant
master bedroom and bath
that s pract cally a home In

aetoss from the University
R o Grande campus lhls
bedroom 1 bath home
be your Investment for
lulura Off strael parking
one car garage In lhe
nawer roof and ·~ allordallllel
of $45 500

itself

plus

two

MIDDLEPORT A 2 3 bedroom 1 t/2 story home with a
large bath also a 2 car garage s tllng on a n ce lot
WAS $24 DOO NOW 521 000

more

bedrooms and beth Call on
this one If privacy Is what
you wanl 11606

POMEfiOY Osbllme St Approximately 255 loot frontage
and lots of depth.ii!N: ty servtces ava lable Cou d make 2
lral er lots
WAS SS DOO NOW $7 bQO

&amp;LAND

RACINE Apple Grove Dorcas Ad A t 993 Skyline 14x70
mobtle home w th 3 bedroom and 2 baths Very elllclflnt
ltv ng expenses and mobllo home ts In good shape all
slUing on a haK acre lot wllh a 12ll16 storage bu ldtng
WAS S35 DOO NOW $32 000

Conlrect Land Heres )3 41 aetes lor sale on land contract (Under the nght conditiOnS)
building site part ally wooded partially pasture Located In Morgan Twp $24 000 #2t5
Offering You the Unexpected 72 t 5 acres lust on Rl 7 N ncludlng 2 lots overlooking the
river Easement to lhe rest of acreage lor your own use or developmanl Prteed al $107 000
1509

MIDDLEPORT Ltncoln Sl A 3 bedroom ranch home wHh
1 t /2 bath 2 011r garage fenced back yard and pan
basement Also has central a r for those hat summer days

mn

OWN A LITTLE OR OWN A LOTI 5 322 acres
Lakeview Dr Charolals Lake Beaut lui
view Owners will split II you prefer Call lor directions W302

$48800
ROSE HILL Secluded Country L v ng close 10 lown
Approx 1 t /2 acres w th a 1 t /2 story home w th 3
bedrooms Has fenced area for an ammal and sta:rage
bu ld ng
$14 500

HIIHop Heavenll Here are 182 splendid acres from which you can see lor a country mtle and
then some 80. 7D acres of woo&lt;ls The balance on pasture A muHitude of home sttes Cat for
more lnlormatlon ~t6
Homesltall Large maiUre trees help make thts homeslle the deal looatlon lo
bu ld your
hofise 2+ aete lot oilers seclusion bullocatbd only a m le or two on good
roads to Spring Volley aru $25 000 1304
Business Only For Salell Ready to own your own business? Become the owner of
Us Includes all equrpmenl Qn good condHion) and onventory on hand at trme of sale
Priced at $35 000 Call lor fulthar details N6 14

IB

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

¢.
§.

Loretta McDade • 446-771:9

Carolyn Wasch • 441-1007

!

MIDDLEPORT S 2nd

A spacrous 1 1/2 story home

w lhup to 6 bedrooms has 2 baths II replace pari

DOTTIE TURNER Broker •••••..•••••••••' ••••••••••• 892 5692
JERRY SPRADLING
1149-2131
CHARME~ SPRADLING
1149-2131
BETIY JO COLLINS
1192 2383
OFFICE
1192 2116

town oo Potty Hays 448 3884

•

POMEROY Naylors Run A 3 bedroom ranch style home
wth ceiling fans 1n I vlng room and d nn g room has
woodburner stove Just a llnle ways out of town If you
wenl the convenience of batng close to lown bot the feel o1
counlry you will like this place
527 ooo

basement equipped k~ch,n gas furnace w th central a r
s Ulng on approx a 50 x t 00 lot
$54 800

446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555

I A 01

RACINE 4th St A 1wa slory homo wllh 3 bed oom t
balh remodeled ltvtng and dontng room wtth newer carpet
n k tohen and dining room Has a large fronl porch and a
small back s tt ng porch w th a large back yard thathas
strawberr es grapes and blackberry bushes House has
newer vinyl stdlng and roof Also a detached garage
ASKING S35 800
MIDDLEPORT Ratlroad St RIVer lronlage a 3 bedroom
one story home w lh equipped kitchen and washer and
dryer had shingles pul on last yea All slUing on approx
50x354 IOI
S3l 000

cedar sectional s tru y a
home you must see to

wells VLS

utlll1y room fanll1y nn
&amp; LR Ges heat window ar NICe
arge lot , car garage Porch
with sw ng LOcated on 41h Ave
$40 900 Cal Potty Hayo 44S
3884
12007 NIW LllnNO 1110
8unthtno mobllo IIOmo 2 BR I
2 boths La~t1cMn equopPOd
w/range &amp; re
lg LR. Covered
DOrch cabo ui\clry hookupo
Pr ced right Located
n
IIOt PRIVATE LOCATION Johnson s Mob e Home Park
storaae
building
W/VIew Ita! an toyer cathedral 8112
Conven net tc sllopplng center~
ceilings balcony above LA

balh

Located at 154
o vnd
Avenues this 2 3 BR home

has a large I shaped llv ng
room n ce modem
k tchen full basement 4 bedrooms and an alt c for

slorag8 Has 2 lots w th 2 car garage on oppos ts side of
road Price Reduced Owner wants lo sel S40 000

DR 5 6 BRs FR enlall
kllchen 1 lull bath and 2 haK
baths As commercial ~ulld ng
oilers 7 offtees 2 reception or
conference areas k tchen 1
lull bath &amp; 2 hall balhs
hano capped accessible Tilts
property Is d llicult to descr be
an an ad so cal Carotyn for
complete detaila IIIII 1

1~001

REDUCED! I C ty schoo s
Very niCE! 3 BR &amp; 2 bath ranch
hOme w/exlra lot living rm w/FP
La ge fam rm w/WB stove
beamed ceiling &amp; large bay
w ndow Din ng room wJbu t in
she ves Large storage room
connecting, FR and garage Gas
heal cen1raJ air Kitchen equipped
w/range ref g &amp; OW Cove ed
patio In back patio 6n front Childs
play house and swlno In back vd 2
car garage with storage shelves
Call Patty Hays for your private

ry

I.U;.f

I

car ga VLS 388 8828
11071 COZV l CLEAN

e

mention

.. n t:

aluminum s ded home Is n
good cond tlon 4 Brs 1 1/2
Potn~!~~ baths oat In kitchen FR DR
(wh ch could be used as a 5111
BR II needed)
part
basement New carpet new
u
as
or gas furnace new wiring &amp;
commerc al qr perfect to run a breaker box and newer roof
amall business out of your

11011Located 58Q Bulavll e P ke
AI br ck ranch 3 bedrms 1 1/2
baths utll ty rm very a ge kit
enc osad pat o rm 2 porches 2

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL PROPERTYI
Includes 2 dwellings on. 2Ail
Ave which are zoned
commercial office and 2 loiS
Avenue

710

LUXURY
HOME
combln ng elegance wtmodern

1881

3rd

Musical
Instruments

11083

mobile home Alot lor th•
money
Make
an
appo nbnent todayl N875
3 ACRES MILl $5 000
County water available!
County echools Nice place
lor a 111j)blle home or place lo
build
a
-home

on

wv 0021145

2897

VIRGINIA SMITH aROKI!II
EUNICE NIEH!II....................................
PATRICIA HAYS ...
Ul 3114
ETTA SPENCE:...............:....................
CLAUDE DANIELS
4441o11101

approx 66 x 186 s n ore
Caltoda

Electrical and
Refrigeration

a r 83 000 m lea runs good
$5 300 30"'175-7858.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

ha•
llv ng
room din ng "~nn ~ chen
t&gt;yo nice levellol• each 'le ~g

WON T LAST Br ck ranch
w th n m1nutes of town 2 3/4 4

repe~r

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWAE!iCE ENTERPRISES
Heal Pumps Air Cond liOn ng If

N nan P ckup Truck W th
Bedl nar For Parts 5 Speed
S andard li ansm aa10n 814 -«6
1888 Aft9f' 2

C-'RS FOR $1001 Trucks boas
4 whit e 1 mo1o homes lu n
ture elect onlca compute a etc
by FBI IRS DEA Ava abe your
area now Call 1 800 5 3 4343

DRYWALl

Ceilings textu ed p.laste repa c
Ca Tom 30-4 675-4188 20 yea a
tlper enc:e

840

$1 &lt;00 814-379 28&lt;7

General

1848

Ba n separate hook up for

TWO STORY FRAME HOME SPACIOUS LIVING
ROOM DINING ROOM ONE BEDROOM AND BATH
ON FIRST FLOOR TWO BEDROOMS AND BATH
ON SECOND FLOOR LOTS OF STORAGE SPACE
IN GROUND POOL CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
SOONI PRICED LOW AT $39 000111

~if

RACINE
One Floor 0 der Remodeled
Home w lh vinyl s dtng has 2 bedrooms
kitchen dining room t bath lots of closel
space Laundry room wtlh washer &amp; dryer
FA N G heat carpai/VI~ylf oor ng Garden
space an~ Conlral I&gt;Jr REAL NICE HOMEII
NEW LISTING
81 nd Hollow Road
Approx 2 Acres ol vacant/wooded ground
e eclrlc and TPC water ova lable ASKING
$5250

LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE CITY? WE HAVE A
VERY COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM WITH LARGE
LIVING ROOM EAT IN KITCHEN UTILITY ROOM
CARPORT GAS FURNACE CENTRAL AIR AND
FENCED BACK YARD ALL FOR $58 0001'1

"

l
PRICE REDUCED I No Reasonable Offer
Relusedll OWNER WANTS SOLD NOWII
Approx 30 Ac res wllh older One Floor
Frame Home 3 bed ooms 2 balhs Lead ng
Creek water and c stern Nea town JU&amp;I off
SA 7 on leadtng Greek Ad N ce large Pond
wooded and cleared proparty COME TAKE
A LOOKII MAKE AN OFFERII

Budget P c:e Transm ss ons
Uaed Rebu I A I Types Ove
0 000 Transm sslons Clutches
Flywheela lf"O~e t1Ual t&lt; 11 614 6323

1953 Chevy 11 112 Ton long
Wheel Base 4 Speed Trans 2
Spted Ax 01, 1 Good So~ Cab &amp;
Ch11la Runs Good $700 81 4

mas 614 245-9820

Tammte DeWttt .................................. 245 0022
Martha Smtih
441 1919
Cheryll,.emly
742 3171

.a

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

C&amp;C General Home Man..
tenence Pa nt ng v nrl s d nQ
ca pentry doo 1 w ndows baths
mobile home repair and mora For
free est1ma1a cal CMt fl14 992

1982 Fo d F 15D 4 WD V 8 E•
celltnl Cond I on $4 500 OBO
814 258 1063

1g33 Chevy tuck $3000 firm
e14 .t.48 1425

V olin Leuona A so Beg nn ng
Vola Ce o Bass Ba ba a Tho

wu.aAN liC rl'AICE

25 LOCUST ST • GALLIPOLIS

1G7g: Jeep CRJ needs motor

work. 814 gg:2 5880

mo S500 Contldaratlon money.

er Uke New $50 5 P e&lt;e B eak

I
a Lot
ol House w lh a Lot Of Polonlalll AI a very
small PRICEI 3 bedrooms pan basemen!
d n ng room living room k tchen sta ned
glass windows ornale woodwork Beautiful
\i1ew Of Ohio A verll $18 900 OWNER
MAY CONSIDER OFFERII

&amp; 4 WDs

ll'ucks for Sale

M 161 11 SOO 080 814 258 1388
Atoll For Randy After 6 PM

$35 000 00 Ca I VLS 3SS
8826/446 6806
ltD25 RENT W OpUon $450

-

Canaday ~N
Realty

1992 0 dsrnob e Toronado Tor
teo loaded excellenl eond 1Gn
$13 500 81-4 9-4i-2217

Vans

1987 Ply100uth Reliance PS PB

1i!

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

Se1 $150 New
Wasrte &amp; 0
40 Chanr)tl Mol) e CB Aad o $50
New Cove a Ia S ze 42 Regula
S15 0 d 78 RPM Reco ds S1 00
Each McCu och Gas Weedea

'

Ctlevys

AC G eat Cond ton Asking
$ 300 614 387 7480

INC •

1

uncond ronal fat me guarantH
Local r41e enut lu n .. hed Ea
tabl shed 1975 Call (814) &lt;440
0870 Or 1 801)..287 0576 Aogera
Wa 9f'p!'OOflnQ

$1 300 080 614 258-8002

CHERYL IS JUST ABOUT S·O·l:.·D
CALL TODAY SO SHE CAN SALE

BIG BEND RE .tl..I..J
AT

•

Cad•llact

000

1987 Dodge Shadow 2 2 Motor
Automabt Runs I Dr ves Great

614-992 5333

6 .. -446-0924

Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale

Credit Problemt? E Z Bank F
nanc ng Fo Uaed Veh c ts No
Tun Downs Call Ruth 6t4 448

47158 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Aluminum sided 1 1/2 story
home living room kitchen over sized delached 2 car
garage FA electric furnace Additional mobile home hpok
up Must ca I today lor an appotnlmentl 1588

re

~'" 2539

no

ooo

Ext 5-9388

ATTRACTIVE CORNER LOT &amp; THIS 3 BEDROOM
RANCH slyle home Uvtng room knchsn laundry and bath
Pantel basement (Immediate possessiOn H877

Dept GDT,

WE NEED YOUR LISTING

fast Set S85 G E Sde By S de
Relr ge ato F eeze $200 Ca I

n

11'29

......................... :.992 2259

llapt a I U II es Pa d 1325 5 t 3

211&lt;3 814-379 2820

1257

PUPPV Palace KeMttl Board ng
Stud Sttvkoe Puppies Groorrung
Buy Sell &amp; Trade A I B eeds
Paymenla We come 814 388

REA lOR'

USE YOUR IMAGINATION This building has alot of
potential II currently houses a grocery slore with a little bn of
everything lrom great cuts of meal to hardware There Is a
large second slory section that would make a great etalt
barnl So much lor a really great prlcell Call Charyl lor
data lsi H861

Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc

Shem L Hart .... :....... 742 2357

jPakl $1S5 Two Room and Bath at
1'4.Jt bn Pa d $200 One Bed oom

WD 1 Your Area Toll Free 1
100 101 11778 Ext A 2811 For
Cu rentltlllngl

730

CARS From $175

BMW"I Co,.,.llol AltO Joopo 4

1984 Pont ac Sunb rd -4 Door
Aula mat c Air 75 000 M les

5prn

$285 S14 742 3 ..

r r yu

DEXTEFJ RD Beaul~ul remodeled 3 BR ranch country
setting cenlral a t acre Ftnanc ng Ava I $48 600
POMEROY 2 BR colon al 1 acre n town wa k n
basement Has much potent al $20 500
FLATWOODS Ternltc newer home 3 BR lull basement
2 acre m/1 New garage &amp; decks $49 900
MIDDLEPORT Secluded close lo lown 2 3 BR M H
w lh well taken care yard &amp; home 3+ acres $25 000
RUTLAND 3 BR bnck ranch lull basament 2 car
garage owners must sell make an offer $42 500
BRADBURY Centrally located 3 BR heal pump pool
2+ acres Great condttton $39 500

Henry E Cleland Jr 992-2259

t es

t991 Old• Cutlan Sup ame Ell
cellent Cond tiOn A I Powt Op
1 ont • Door $7
6 4 3'7g

SEIZED

S1 6CD 080 19110 Dodgo Shad

Sntre d urn new neve been
used wlh case stand sucks arld
praclic:e pad Pa d $480 se fo

we II cu s t m Jc rn~;n me

'2 Bedroom Apa tment

-pne Room and Ba h all U

Portchet

derton 814-992 3348 al1er 5prn

[H

RUSSELLD WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley
742 3171

750

843 5211

19QO Uodel Ford T.mpo 4 Ooo
AUIOINt C A Cauent $2 300
080 614 258 1252 G14 258
1818

1993 Chevy tum na Z34 back
e~~:cenent concl on call Tom An

Oif 2 Door All omatic Air

570

AJJ alachlan
Log
Struclurcs hu I ccn a
leader m the J g home
m lustry f 'r
vcr 15
years Chc 8c from c vcr
70 s tonrlar f m dch r

Real Estate General

'6 4 446 0390

12 Subufban aood 1Mape 3 4

TRANSPORTATION

Real Estate General

tun-

1980 Olds Omega S700 814448
0519

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

wily 2 000
fam1hcA wall hmld a I @
h •me this year

Pood es teacups toys AKC
Reg stead sho s and: wo med
6 "667 3404

_

s de Apanmen11 n M ddla

t980 Buck station wagon runt
614 985-4335

5193

r
TWAN~··r~'"A~_0~~'sM~~======o=A=~==E=T=~=~=Lo=R=B=R=o=K=E~R--~~~~~-s~o;o;4;s;s;~~9;9;o~~~:;~~v~o~u;R~~~~;;~::;

G acous vng 1 and 2 bedoom

,)1 ve

Elec c Range Good Cond ton
Eve ylh ng Wo ks $60 614 446
2724

1970 Olds Cu a11 Supreme 350
Rocket factor engne 410 poll
t ve 1 ac:k ea end uns good
cages als(l 350 eng ne I 4SO
eng ne both need e bu 1 2S8
ear end eYe y h no $3 000 304
675-1510

Home
lmprovemtnts
BASEIAENT
WATERPROOfiNG

89 fo d Rang•r XLT -41t&lt; m les
cap long bed a SS 000 814

good very good condloon $1100

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

C mJ rl c •nvcmcncc
energy
t fflclcncy
tluralthty and flcxlbtbty
rcas nH

B and New Walke Neve Used
sso 814 379 2728 0 304 937
3363

Coun1ry Furn tu e 3041-675-6820
At 2 N Bm les PI Pleasant WV

MEIGS COUNTY

LOG HOMES

Pets tor Sale

Boots By Redw no Chippewa
Tony lama Guaranteed Lowest
P ICeS AI Shoe Cafe Ga pols

7421

SUN KIST N ce Butld ng lol on a paved street Lo••et&lt;•l
v ew Green twp Restricted

AKC Reg ate ed SheMnd Sheepdog female sable and wh e

m lc11 gn uc u few of tht

454S

1-tyd au c J.loses Made To Ofder
Side s Equ pment Co 304 fi75

almost 4 acres

Ca 112prn.9pm 304-87S-21C7

550

Equipment

!i,ARA WINDS. Only 4 loiS remain Lois 1 2 7 8 Green
Twp Green Elementary restricted t 8 acres up

S60D ask ng $300

141 C cula ampol new pad
cove &amp; ladder Holds 600 bs

6'1 0 Farm

992... 514

WINDING CROSS ROADS
Ready lo butld on Some reslric~ons Possible Land
Contract To a qua ofied buyer Call lor more details

ror

Ho ton Hun er Cameo C ossbow
SOib pu rea peep Slghl w case
and accasso 188, asking $350

Baby bed car seal play pen
walker st oller sw ng 304 675

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVE STOCK

810

Motorcycles

78 31&lt; ton GIIC $150 et• 7&lt;2

10n $3.500 814-992 5532

Tandem S age Wagon 3 Beale
Roof Qood Cond 1 on 6 4 245

Wh ta tubulll bunk Dad rrame WI
ladder Top I'Mn, bottom ful 11ze
Gold a gym adjust
2G exorcls
es o wo k all muse e a oups Pd

Household
Goods

AppUances
Recand 1 oned
Wastle s 0 ye s Ranges: Ref I
g ators 90 Oar Qua anle&amp;
F ench C ty May ag 6 4 446
7795

740

Autos lor Sale
2301

1994 Forcl Mustang convert ble
e cy nde ful y kJaded 814 992

MERCHANDISE

510

71 o

710 Autos for Sail

for Sale

71 P rmauth Vola • 311 fot.~r
bantl new " brlkH and b8t
lOrY $600 614 ~ 3907

Groomrng kannel pe s auppltea
Do the f eaa got your doggy
ClOWn? Wt dip &amp; lhampoo &amp; con
dfhon wth lh a ad get •s olf you
QfOCimiOQ appomtment

WATER WELLS DRILLED
FAST RE.lSONABLE SERVICE
114--'1311

$175
20 Ac es of pastu e W
hose ban
New t 500 SQUa e fee 3 bed
room $500 mo on app Olt ~ ac
as of and
Fll ease a sa e 974 Mob le
home U 000 cash o lease fo
$250/mo 304 756 1331

Vegetables

Autos

Thonk )UU CllriJIY

ya d n M ddlepo ~ S300 depos t,

"2bdrm ap a to a e ecu c ap
:P ancea rurn shed aund y oom
..fac ties close o school n fllwn
App cations ava table al II age
Green Ap s t-49 o ca 614 992
3711 EOH

814

Wanttd to buy SIMI.oldlng
chairs
J m Reedy • Auction Strvlct
46065 SR 124
RaCine OhiO
6 49492192

Apartments
for Rent

388 1708

black Itt lhOII &amp; wormed $200
each 614 992 5347

Con-vne CICli!Home Un IS From
$199 00
low Mon hly Paymen a FREE
ColO Cala og Ca TOOA.Y
I 800 842 1305

614-388-9686

440

AKC Chow pupptts 2 m 2 I a

CHRISTY'S PETS
&lt;71 II Second Avenue
Mlddtopo"- OH

$ 00 304 675-3S38

ent or land contract n Ma
sdn two bedroom b g PO(Ch on
rryer e 4 992 6323 alter Bp'fn

Two 2 Bad ooms Stove Rei g
e a or Wate Traah Furnished
Nea N G H S $200 $250 De

71 o

Fruits &amp;

10,.1 Ulnll aet up l~la 1 F sh

Jank l 9&gt;et Shop 2413 Jack10n
Ave Point Pleasant 304 875
2083

Fo

Mobile Home Fo Rent, 614 446
1279

580

BoooltAKC Rot
I -·
old
IIUn~nt bloCH!!
no ..Ormod
........ .,... 300-875-e..a.

6C CCC BTU S 300 SO' 000 BTU
$t 400 tOO 000 BTU l1 500

6308 1 800 291 0098

Sale

. . . . . . Pili II

92'4 H gh E f c ency Furnaces
Above Pr ees Inc ude No ma In
su at o" To Ex s1 ng Duck Sys
tems 5 Yea Wa anty A.l Parts
L e T1me Wa anty On Heat Ex
change Fee Ea mate 614 4-46

Pets for

Jlmibag tlmu. Jtautbcel • Page 07

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

-Ia

lawnMowet" 614 448 8321

530

Sunday, October 6, 1996

I

•

�-·•
•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH oPoint Pleasant, wy

Page DB • Jtunav GrbaH-jJmttnel

Sunday,October6,1996:

Southern ·
grldders trip
Eastern
,

Meat lawsuit headed for Des ·Moi-nes courtroom By GEORGE ANTHAN
Gllnnett News Service
WASHINGTON- Did the Clinton administration give a breaR to the
poultry industry? The reinstatement
ofacase alleging "inequities" in fedend food-safety regulations could
lead to an examination of the issue in
a Des Moines courtroom.
The lawsuit, brought by a group of
consutnerS and livestock producers,

.alleges that fanner Agriculture Secretary Mike Espy established looser
safety standards for poultry t11an for
beef and pork. Regulations required
beef and pork processors to meet a
"ze[O ~ranee" standard for fecal

1
I ,

culture Secretary Dan Glickman, the
successor
to Espy. who resigned folindustry was allowed to sell products
lowing
disclosures
that he had
on which, as the 8th Circuit Court of
Appeals explained, "a certain level of ' accepted gifts from regulated industries, including Tyson Foods Inc., the
contaminants ... is acceptable."
·1l1e lawsuiCwhich had been dis- · Arkansas-based poultry giant
Rules on fecal contamination of
missed earlier by U.S. District Court
meat
and poultry products were
in Des Moines. was sent ba~k 10, the
lower rourt by the Court of Appeals issueli before Glickman took office,
with instructions to "make a deter~ ·but he has upheld them in the face of
mination of whether the Secretary (of beef and pork industry requests that
Agriculture) abused his authority" in the USDA eliminate the differences. ·
allowing different standards for the
· Es{'Y and Tyson Foods are being
red meat and poultry industries, reg- investigated by specml prosecutor
ulated by laws with "identical Donald Smaltz over gifts to the former secretary from the poultry
goals."
.
The defendant currently is Agri- processor. Tyson's Washington lobcontami'hation . However, the poultry

byist, Jack Williams, has been indicted on false-statement charg~ in con-.
nection with gifts to Espy's girlfriend,
Patricia Dempsey.
Espy has contended that he did no
favors for Tyson .
But that's where the zero tolerance
rule comes in 1
When Espy announce4 early in
199'3 that he was imposing the strict
standard on beef and pork, he was
asked by The Des Moines Register
whether he would extend the same
rule to poultry. He said he would.
For a year, Espy and top USDA
officials waffled over applying the
rule to poultry. Finally, in March

Ssybeans,plunge to 6 1/2-month
lows on ·improved harvest o~tlook

1994, Espy announced a zero toler- paranoid over the issue, and one
ance standard for poultry - except career bureaucrat who answered a
that it allowed products that had been routine question from The Register
contaminated with feces, then ootiming of the poultry standard was·
reassigned. . ·
'
washed, to be sold IQ consumers.
Is Espy a hapless fall guy wHoWhat happened during that year?
. " Espy maintains he wanted to because he foolishly accepted some
apply the same standat;d to beef, pork ; rela!ively minor gifts - could go to
and poultry, but was prevented from jail because Tyson Foods and the
doing so by the White House. Espy poultry industry got a big regulatory
1
contends his proposal to subject break?
-poultry to the saine rule as the meat
The Des Moines fe4er!ll court case.
iqdustry was rebuffed by the Office will be worth watching for a possible
of Management and Budget and Qy answer to that question.
Clinton political operatives in the
White House.
(George Aothao writes tor The'
Espy's staff' bordered . on being Des Moines Register.)

IWeekly livestock report I
I

.

.

Ohio's pumpkin
·c,rop looks bright·

Pick 3:

183

Pick 4:

7698

Super Lotto:
•

6-7-22·25-34-40

Sports qn Page 5

.

535879

..

.
i

'·

•

•

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..
VoL 41, NO. 101

. Pomeroy-Middleport,
.

1 Section, 10 ...... .

Ohio, Monday, October 7,1996
.

•

Leading HMOs begin to
cover'alternative medicine

Big Bend Sternwheel

NEW YORK (AP)- They won't
pay for shark cartilage pills and coffee enemas yet, but leading HMOs
are experimenting with the demi -science called · altemati ve medlcine,

hoping to cure ills when Ifgular medicine fails.
It's a s1artling trend. Many doctors
.still vjew some ahern~tive , methods.'
·with grelll skepticism - the word
"quackery" is bandied a!J9ut - and
health maihten. anc~-otg3nizations
have a reputation for hunning all but
~ most reliable tr tments.
While most HMOs already offer
chiropractic coverage, a number are
adding acupuncturists and massage
ther.apists, along with practitioners
. called naturopaths who use herbal
re.medies, relaxation therapies, yoga'
and more. The health plans are offering IQ cover this care just like 1\fey do ·
for cardiolqg)sts and pediatricians . .
On · Tuesday, the picture will
. broaden when Oxford Health PI ans
Inc., a highly profitable HMO in the
Northeast with a reputation for marketing 'innovation, jymps into the·
field will) the most extensive program
to date.
·
The Big Send Sternwheel
Festival concluded Its three-day
run Saturday, highlighted by the
crowning of the St'ernwheel Fes. tlval Queen and the an'nual
'"Days Gone Bye• parade
The 1996 Sttrnwheel
thr.oughIstheEallern
streets

·Marshall U · versity

Price, however, was beller last year,
·when-he got12 to IS: tents a pound
for pumpkins. This year, he's charg. inlr8 to 10 cents a pound.
He ships many of his pumpkins to
area stores, but he also operates a
patch where people can pick their

..own.
Conditions have been especially
good this sea!on for pumpkin growen; in northern Ohio. said Mike
Pullins, spokesman fa( the Ohio
Fruit Growers Society.
·
'' In northern Ohio, it looks excellent because they had a much dryer
season than the rest of the state. In
central and southern Ohio, ~rowers

Business ·briefs
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) -·
Goodbye TbunderDome, hello Tropicana Field.
The stadium that will house one of
major league baseball's two expan&gt;ion teams beginning in 1998 was
renamed Thursday after a juice brand
owned by The Seagram Company
Ltd .. the Canadian beverage and
entertainment. company.

•

..

• Power Seal
• Remote Keyless Entry
• 3800 Series II V-6 Engine
• Prestige Option Package

·

Accelerated B.A.

·MSRP ••• ~.••••••••••••••••••••~••••••••• $21,655.00

With a Business Emphasis
"Earn your degree sooner than you think."

DISCOUNT ......~.................~••••• $1,571.00
REBATE •••••••••~ •••••••••••••••••••.••••• $1,500.00

~~·. ~9~ FORm~ ~Uf ClASS ~apmeat 310)
t 1 · -~ • ..' · -. ·) :'1!tl . n-.. admitted NOW!
· ~· ·
'
~J"-..J-..at...s~.iloo OALi~--!!~t.
~" .
. . · ,, .1._
.......

.to-.

~nk ~

15 months

.-'Colle~

, .-'A.JI busiR&lt;&gt;.,·cOI.If&lt;es on :accelerntc:d sch.dules
(bnc c()t41;&lt; c:very

Sweeks)

cW. ()ct. 12-Manal\"m&lt;nl

~lO)

•

• .•.

cralit for wod&lt; t"Xpcricncc

~'Dtry into M.ll./\.

·

.-'tn.&lt;UUCtion sit.,; in Sol•h Charleston.

·

l't.•irltl'le-oiSallt. LoRan. Williamson. HootiJIIIIon
.
'
.
.-'UJW MAIIsiiAll"llllTION

To Get Admitted Call

1~800-906-GRAD ( 4723)

Marshall llruvL-rsity-Adull all&lt;l htcnJcd Ed1w::uion.( l\J M:11n II ';.lluntilli(I&lt;HI,WV· 2~7~'1-! l·t &gt;
'l~trtiri)l:ll1t&gt; must he act·qll&lt;"d into the ~1•111'• )(~-w,·nt&gt; U.A.J&gt;r&lt;w•m :md &lt;'lntplt·t•· all
requirements of tl&gt;at prow:mt to n:nivc the R.B.A. dQIR.-c. Ask for Jl:lrlxu-J j;anl&lt;'5 or JcrrliJIIrll&lt;11c.

See Bob Cook, Brett Epling, Don Carter•

Pictured (abc)ve)
from left: Kerr; Je[lny Sm1atl•

. wood, 'Miaa Congeniality";
Melissa Canan, beat costume;
and Jessica Mataon, first run·
ner-up. The 'Days Gone Bye"
parade featured several floats
and marching . units, Including
the Melga High School Marching
Band. A popular float along the
route was an authentic, working
1temwheel float lfilth a Galllpolla-area barbershop quartet
alngll'!g songs ·from the earty
.S temwheel«a of the lete.tBOO'a
to
early
1900's. · (Tom
Hunter/Sentinel photos)

that at least some of these things may
really work.
At least 41 state governments
now require chiropracti c coverage in
some form . Six states require
acupuncture coverage a nd nine
license natllropaths. Late last year, the
Washington state Legislature man,datcd that all insurers provide alter•native. medicine.
Ontil now, leaders in the move,mcnt to coVer altcrnati vc medicine
have mostly bccn .smali' niche companics on the West Coast and upper
Midwest. Also invOlved arc some
respected nonprofits- likc Seattle's
Group Health Cooperati ve of Puget
Sound and Kaiser Pcnnanente of Cal- ·
ifornia.
Even some traditional insurers
like ·Prudential tn~ urancc Co. of
America and Mot~al of Omaha have
dabbled with limited programs.
Oxford's program will offer fully
insured covcTage of chi'ropractic,
acupuncture and naturopathy coverage from a network of pre-screened
'providers for an additional premium
cost of 2 percent to 3 percent.

KETfERING (AP) _ By any
measure. Debbie Brueckman has giva lot .to care for her ailing_,

Brueckmim needed a break from
her grueling routine. but knew that
hiring a home companion would be homc:-type
too
Cider A ."~~··•r:d

Alzheimer's disease. When her father
recently suffered a stroke. Brueckman and her husband sold their
home and moved in with her parents
to care for them .
She also gave up her job as circulationsupervisoratalibrary-ajob
she loved -· to devote her time and
energy to her parents.
"It's a 24-hour-a-day-type thing,"
she said. ''!Can't lcavcwithouthaving somebody in the hon\e." ,
Brueckman 's mother needs heJP to
bathe and cat Brueckman placed her
in a nursing home, but pulled her out
because she was not gelling adequate
care and' was losing weight.
She also was at times the target of
her father's frustrations . He was
depressed after losing 50 percent of
his vision due to the stroke.

car~.

a service rapidly gaining popu,
,larity.
·
Workers from the privately-run
Deerfield Senior Services pick up
Bruc~kman' s parents in the morning
at their New Carli!\le home and drive th~m 25 miles to a center in this
Dayton suburb. At the end of the day,
they arc driven home.
The sprawlipf, smartly furni shed
center featureS ·an cKcrcisc area,
library, dining room and workshop. A
·full slate of actiVities such as painting. singing and baking arc available.
Field trips arc offered, and cxpcrL' arc
brought in t'o speak on selected topics.
Brueck man said her father at·first
fiercely resisted the idea of cldCr daycare.
•
"He was livid abou\ going,"

Ohio-

recalled·. ··1 think he
to be a nursingatmc&gt;Sph~rc ."

and got some expert advice on gardening, a favo,ritc hobby.
,
. " H~ was disappointed he could ·
not stay," said Brucckman. "It wmi an
unbelievable tl...\rnaround. I ·never
expected it. Now, he is up and ready
to go. It's changed him totally ....
There arc people who will talk to him
and listen to him all day long."
Brueckman's mother goes to the
center
once a week; her father goes
.
lWJCC.

....

·

·

The-center gives ·so mething back
to Brucckman- a chance to get out

once a week with her husband. They
.go out to cat or shop and take a
breather.
" I don't have anybody making
demands o n me,·· she saic,t.
Deerfield 's Kettering\ center,

;vhich opened in July, is th~· Baltimore-based company's first in Ohio.

Debate analysis

First debate was.high political theater, but no bre~kthrough for Dole
Yet, for. a challenger like Dole.the ' ' Unfortunately. for Dole, the hard ·
ton University political scientist Fred ' tlemen, let me tax your memories," East to the humiliating resignation of ·
his
chief
political
str')t~gist.
debates
put the challenger on an history' &lt;&gt;f presidential debates b
I. Greenstein. "In fact, he won it on and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, DAP White HouH Correepondont
. .With tens of mil)i'ons of viewers. equal ' fooling with the president this: Usually they don 't change much.
, WASHINGTON- After 90 min- points: Clearly what Dole needed was Mass .. jumped up and said, ".Why,
the
debates were the biggest cam- Thio time there was no Iraq bombing fn every case over the last 20 years,
haven
'1
we
thought
of
that
before."
'utcs of anxious debate, they con- a breakthrou·gh."
paign
audience for the.candidates and ·or Mideast crisis to distract. And with the leader going in was the leader.
"You know'" Dole said·to ClinDole , tried to raise doubts about
cluded wiih a smile and a handshake,
an
opportunity
to focus voters on the Reform Party nominee Ross . Perot coming out and the winner in
iwo men who clearly knew what it Clinton's leadership. Dole said he ton. " ... one of your liberal friends ."
The race hasn't changed !flUCh race for the next 30 days. Unforlu- excluded, it was a one-on-one November.
was like to walk in one another's wouldn '11&lt;11~ about Clinton's youthsince
Dole won the nomination in nutely for underdog Dole. it might not encounter.
shoes. Bob Do1e and Bill Clinton ful drug experimentation, he said he
allowed as how they actually liked wouldn't talk about the tangled March. Clinton has maintained a mauer.
Only 30 percent of the more than
each other. Their families tumbled Whitewater issue, he said he would- steady double digit lead, and Dole has
I
,500
voters surveyed by the Pew
,onto the stage for more himdshakes n'I talk about the president's charac- been left struggling even in Republican strongholds like Aorida, Arizona, Research Center for the People and
ter.
and a group photograph.
And largely, aside·from the cl.ever Indiana, 'Oklahoma and Alabama. the Press said the debates would mat- ·
· 11 was high politie~ltheater, but it
' Nothing has eroded Clinton's advan-· ter to them. And• percent !aid their
wasn '!the breakthrough performance references, he didn't.
were made up already.
. ton. Dole was folk sy and used humor .
Clinton played it safe, although tage, from setbacks in the Middle minds
that Dole needed to break Clinton's
'. ~
'
. By DAVID FOSTER
: to his advantage, Nix said, while· ·
Associated Press Writer
long-running lead in their presiden- television cameras in split screen
.
··clinton seemed smug.
CHEHALIS,
Wash.
Bob
D&lt;)Je
often
captured
a
smu~
expression
'tial duel. Indeed an instant CBS poll
Across
the
country
in
Norwood,
may
have
stuttered
·
and
sometimes
indicated nine out of 10 viewers did during Dole's exposi.tions. Most of
rambled, but that didn ' 1 matter to Bob 'Mass .. Jimmy McGui~c was sim il~r­
,not change their support on account Clinton's remarks came straight out
How .Presidenl Ointon and Bob Dole weighed in on the role of the
Nix, a fanner and staunch Republi· ly unswaycd: .
of his campaigo speeches. He never
of the debate.
government, li:rreign pblicy and school choice:
"I was going toward Clinton prican.
There were no major blunders, no tired of saying that he had ' cut the
or
to
the debate and I'm leaning the
What's
important,
Nix
said,
is
that
by
more
than
half
and
presided
deficit
l&gt;ig surprises, no new initiatives in tbe ·
DEBATE'%
same
way after the debate,.. said
Dole showed strength and confi· first of two televised debates between over the creation of 10:5 million new
McGuire,
43, a blue-collar worker
dence in his debate Sunday night with
Clinton and bole. Now, the clock is jobs: Dole complained that Clinton
President Clinton -qualities need- with.Boston Edison Co.
running out on Dole, with only 30 was taking credit when it wasn't due
"!thought Clinton came across as
where
it
should
be
spread
ed
if he's to pull froiii behind in the
or
credit
days rema\!Jin~ for hitn 10 try to play
·very
presidential.'' McGuire said.
polls.
around.
falch up with the president.
"Dole's
a very honc~t person. He's a
"The truth is, there is a lot .wrong
"He's notoriously not a good ·
The next round: a vice presidenveteran . (BL•',) I don't feel he turned
~·peaker, Nix said. "It doesn ' l mean
tial debate on Wednesday. And then with America," Dole said. He spoke
Bob Dote
the
election around at all. "
'
he
doesn
'
t
-get
hi's
message
·across,
partic.ularly
of
economic
anxieties.
. lhe final presidential debate on Oct.
I
think
he
docs.
Thnight,
it
Dole's
p~ rforman ce relieved
because
the
nation
at
a
Clinton,
leading
. 16.
~--~E=~~~~~·~~-Rebecca
Lyon
of Pikeville, Ky,
looks like bole is tough. He's an old \
Sunday niJhl's matchup offered time of ,peace and prosperity, . • '1be federal govemment should &amp;ive
• "I UUSithc people. The president
, "I was scared he mi ght not speak
man, but he speaks with wisdom . pole an opportunity to shake up tbe answered that America is beuer off
people the IOOIII!Id uy 10 eltlblllh the
trusts the govemmenl"
·
t
hat's
the
Impression·
he's
giving."
~as well as he did tonight," said Lyon,
now
than
it
was
four,
years
ago.
"II
tate so fllf dominated by Clinton. The
Clll&gt;&lt;llklll ill wbldl ~can mate the • ' ..
that
I
IJIOIIoflhelrOWIIDvea.
·'
•·'"fo
.
46, a fonner teacher who runs a cofW~~~
impressions
did
Dole
and
is
pot
midnight
in
America,"
the
pres• debete covered a\01 of ground and
.
•
~
•
&lt;
lhint
1hll
fee shop. " I thought he did a very,
Clinton
give
in
their
first
election
penetrlled a wide range of policy dif- ident declared ..
llld l
debate? tnter\liews"wilh a handful of very good job. ... ! was real impressed
In style, Clinton appeared fluid;
ferences, but it didn't seem to chan&amp;e
any
voters across the nation suggested the with the argument when they talked
Dole was not as comfortable.
. the campai1n environment
two rhen solidified already-held about education.''
"'11te
physical
contrast
between
"Neither panon looked I* or
She and her husband send their
impressions,
but changed few minds.
the
two
was
very
dramatic,"
Greenfuadc any 1errible mistake: On bat·
14-year-old
son to a private school,•
Nix,
47,
raises
hay
and
cattle
on
a
•nee, dill's in Clint011'1 favor," Mid stein said. "Dole was static, corn440-acn: farm in southwestern Wash- and she believes \,)ole's support of
tdJchi•lll State University political pact."
ington
and is active in local Repub- school vouchers is the way to
Dole
'did
!how
fluhes
of
humor.
~eienti.a James GranatO.
·
lican
politics.
During the debate, he improve the nation 's educational sysHe
said
he
recalled
a
day
on
the
Sen·
.
' "Ci!J,iousty. all Clinton needed
cheered
on
Dole
and critjci~ed Clin- . tern.
,
was to hold his own," aped.Prince· atc floor, when he said, "Now, sen'ay TERENCE HUNT

Debate may have solidified
instead. of swaying views

61

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The first presidential debate

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,

11

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authorities are becoming convinced

el~erly popular across

1

V'Mtru business course rrquin:ments for
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V'Ril.Sirl&lt;ss COIIT5CS on Satw'days onl)'
(new:!

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tlfoqcj~encss policy for prnious low grAdes

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• Aluminum Wheels
*Automatic Power Antenna
• Power Windows

Day care for

One big reason is that patients
want it, even though hardly any of the
alternative techniques ·have undergone rigorous, scientifically controlled studies.
.
A landmark survey, published in
1993 by Harvard Medical School;
showed that one in three A!Ocricans
used nontraditional treatments,
spending a total of $14 billion a year
compared with just under $\trillion
spent on traditional health care. •
"Consumers are already voting
with their out -of-pocket expenditures that these services work ," said
Alan KiUner, a California-based consultant who helps HMOs set up networks of alternative providers.
'"Quite often these things can be
less expensive than traditional health
care, especially ifymi can avoid hospitalizations." said Randall Huy ser,.
an HMO mdustry analyst with the
s.ecuritie~ finn Furman Selz_ in San
Francisc.&lt;l, "Secondly, there 1s a tendency for people that. like holi stic
cures to gcneral)y be healthier people,
so they arc more attractive patients
for HMOs."
More importantly. public health
.
.
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96 BUICK REGAL CUSTOM

Including ·
Grand
Sports!!

35 cenls
A GonneH Co. Newspaper

"

Environmental.•. cootinue~r

''12'' IN STOCK!

Cloudy tonight, tow
near SO.Tuesday, cloudy,
high in mid 60s .

Kicker:

I

.

By·The Associated Press
.
Holsteins: select and choice 2-3,
Following is the livestock week- 1250- 1500 lbs. t01.()()-Hl6.00, few
ly sumlnary, ·which includes direct mostly choice 107.00-108..00.
sales in Ohio, Indiana and Michigan:
Heifers: select and choice 2-3 950..·
For the week barrows and gilts . 1250 lb.s. 109.00-lti.OO, mostly
By CLIFF EDWAF\DS·
USDA currently estimates a crop of Man International Inc. " It's fairly weekend weather should finish the
choice 112.00-113.00.
AP Business Writer .
2.2 billion bushels. The influential obvious to everyone we have a good maturity process for those crops and .1.00 higher, sows 1.00-2.00 lower.
speed·
harvesting.
The
direct
hog
trade
closed
highCompared with last week: feeder
harvest
ahead
of
us.
Now,
it's
been
Soybean futures prices feU sharply firm also predicted greater soybean
Soybeans
for
November
delivery
er compared to last week's close. steers , heifers, and holstein steen
Friday on the Chicago Board of demand in the coming year, but most every man for himself running for the
feii!O 1/4 cents to $7.27 1/4 a bushel, Demand moderate to good late with were steady to firm. Demand moderTrade after frost missed key growing investors believe otherwise.
c~its."
regions and ~n influential finn .preSoybean futures prices have fallThe National Weather Service and the lowest level for the active contract light to moderate offerings. As prod- ate on a light movement a~d moderdicted the harvest will be larger than en a sharp 61 cents in sev~n consec· private forecasters predicted wann since March 21; December com fell uct lost ground at midweek, move- ale offerings. The feeder cattle marcurrent Agriculture Department esti- utive sessions as it becomes increas- temperatures and clear skies this 2 112 cents to $2.89 1/2 a bushel, the ment slowed as the harvest was ket was steady.as harvest was in full
increasing, This made some packers swing. ihis should provide feedors an
mates. Com futures also retreated.
ingly clear there will be no frost to weekend that should speed crops to lowest since Sept. 6, r995.
Coffee
futures
advanced
on
New
uneru;y as to'the offerings available to opportunity to decide on replace.
On other markets, coffee futures damage late-planted crops that ·have maturity and aid active harvesting.
Corn futures made new &lt;;me-year York's Coffee, Sugar &amp; Cocoa meet their kill needs, The Saturday ments, along ~ilh help from an
prices surged. Heating oil futures 'been slow to mature. The harves.l now,,
, improving fat caule market. Sales
retreated , while natural gas futures is ,expected to ·be ,the second-largest lows amid expectations farmers will Exchange as roasters began gearing ~ill will be very limited . . ,
, Receipts· this week 175,700; last • confirmed on 92 percent feeder steers
ever and will relieve tight supplies. produce the nation's third- or fourti)- up for the heavy winter consumption
rose.
and 8 percent feeder heifers prices
' Soybean prices began their retreat
"We've seen a lllj.:lldOWO this largest crop in history. Frost in the period with few quality supplies on week 182.900; last 'year \89,900.
U.S. 1-2220-260' \bs. 56.00-57.50, based· on net weights fob after a 3:
. after private crop analyst Sparks week on the beans because we 've had Midwest overnight Wednesday and ·hand and -the threat of Colombian
few 58.00; plants 57.00-58.50, lew percent shrink or equivalent. DeliyCompanies of Memphis, Tenn., -esti- a pretty good frost premium built into Thursday largely missed the most shipment disruptions.
coffee·
December
green,
arabica
5S.75.
ered ~rices include freight, commismated the U.S. soybean crop will the market that qidn '1 materialize," vulnernble crops in Indiana and Ohio,
rose
2.35
cents
to
$1.098
a
pound.
come in at2.310 billion bushels; the said analyst Steve Bruce at E.D.&amp; F. which had been slow to mature. The
Sows: U.S. J-3 •· 300-450 Jbs. sions, and other expenses.
U.S. stockpiles now stand at a his- 42.00-46.00; 450-500 lbs. 46.00Receipts: this week 1,300; last
torically low 1.8 million, 132-pound 50.00; 500-650 lbs. 50.00-53.00, few week I, 100; last yearn/a.
bags. That compares to the five-year 54
average of about6 million bags. And
·:.,, 4o.oo-4t.oo.
Allen, Blackford join
of the. current available supply, only
Ford sales staff
30,000 bags are of the quality needCompared with last week: slaughed for roasting.
ter steers, heifers, and holstein steers
The shortage of green, . arabica · on a five basis mostly 1.00 higher.
coffee has been exacerbated by polit- Demand moderate to good with modical unrest in Colombia, the world's erate to heavy•, offerings. ·Packers
second-largest coffee exporter. Guer- needed cattle late last week and into
. rillas have been hijacking and burn- this week to'meet kill needs. Grading
ing trucks in rural coffee-growing still.remains a problem with finished
regions, said Carlos Knoepfner, pres- cattle scarce and feeders remain very
ident of Miami Coffee Merchants.
current. Harvest has finally started in
Heating oil 'futur.es prices fell to rnosl areas. ·
ALLEN
late profit-taking on the New York
Confirmed sales 4,900; last week
Mercantile Exchange, while natural 3,900; last year 2,700.
GALLIPOLIS - Mike Allen and
gas rose on the prospect of cold
Live basis sales: equivalent to 3 Mick Blackford have joined the sales
weekend weather in the Northeast percent shrink delivered to the plants, staff of Turnpike Ford, Gallipolis,
,amid tight supplies·.
or with 3-4 percent s.hrink fob.
according to John Sang, manager.•
The cold weather - up to· 10
• Slaughter steers: select and choice
, Allen -has 30 years sales experi·
degrees below normal - is sure· to 2-3 J 100-1350 lbs. t\9.50-71.50, ence, 23 as owner of lhe ll11$tille'lne.,
aggra.vate one of the worst supply sit- mostly choice over 1200 lbs. 72.00- in Gallipolis. A graduate of Ga!Iia
uations in more than 20 years.
73.00. Select .1-2 '1050-1300 lbs. Academy High School and the UniHeating oil stocks are 14 percent 65.00-68.50.
versity of Rio Grande, Allen ~d his
below levels a year ago despite the
Holstein steers: select and ciJoice wife Donna have three grown chilfact that factories are producing at 2-3 1250-1500 lbs. 62.00-66.00, dren and two grandchildren.
good crop this year, due to a dry spring and
INSPECTS PUMPKINS - John Kllckman
capacity. And natural gas supplies are mostly choice 6 7.00.
The Aliens reside at 80 Grape
moderate summer. (AP)
Inspects pumpkins on his farm in Elmore FriI0 percent below levels a year ago
Slaughter heifers: select. and Street, Gallipolis.
day. Ohio pumpkin growers are reporting a
foll"wing a cold winter.
c.l]oice 2-3 950-1250 lbs. 68.50Blackford, a resident of 199 Blue
7\,0Q, some mostly choice 7) .50. Lake Extension, Gallipolis, and his
Select 1-2 900-1200 lbs. 64.00-67.50. wife Jody of20 years have three sons.
....;..D-t
Carcass sales compared with last
He was employed by the Ohio
week: slaughter sleets, heifers, and Valley Supennarkets froiD Novemhiking, bird watching, an~ nature non-game wildlife.
photo~ravhv that occurs in Gallia
• Establish perinanent vegetative holstein steers 1.00-2.00 higher.
ber, 1995, until September, 1996, and
CounJy is supported by our fores.t cover and·forest buffers, and stabilize
Steers: select and 1choice 2-3 1100- served 1with Heiner's s ·akery from
base. The beauty of our forestland is stream banks for riparian and welland 1350 lbs. 111.00-113.00, mostly July of 1985 until November, 1995.
choiCe 114.00-115.00.
Blackford is a graduate of Trimble
got a lat~r siart because of al.lthc rain • well documented (Imagine Gallipo- protection and improvement.
By MITCH WEISS
lis'
and
Com\lry
Roads:
An
Audio
•
Establish,perrnanent
vegetative
High
School in·Athens County.
(during the spring). So their pumpAISoclated Press Writer
•
Driving
Tour
of.
Gallia
County
,
a
covers
at\d
water
diversions
for
soil
TOLEDO - Looking fl)r a pump- kins are not as far along," Pullins
video
and
audio
presentation
by
the
and
water'
protection
and
improvekip? Ohio growers have millions of said.
Ohio Valley Visitors Center.) Beauty menl.
1
them in all shapes and sizes !his year
Pumpkins have become one of the
is a concept that is difficult to mea• Establish paths and trails, reduce
- a far cry from t 995, when the fastest-growing specialty crops. Ohio
sure, but is certainly an attribute of stand density, and establish pennafarmers grow about 3 million pumpgourds were in short supply.
our forests .
nent vegetative,cover to enhance for"We have a real good crop this kins 'on 4,000 acres. The pumpkin
What
can
you
do
to
enhance
Gal-·
est
recreation opportunities.
year," said James KlicRman, a grow- acreage has doubled in the last 10
At no charge or obligation, a
lia County's wealth of natural
er who has pumpkin patch in the San- years.
reSources for yourself and for gener- forester will walk your property with
The crop has been so good, Pullins
dusky County city of Elmore.
you and provide a wriuen manage"They have good color, good said, that some Ohio farmers "have · ations to coine?
•
Obtain
an&lt;;\
i!llplcment
a
multiment plan -detailing how you should '
wall thickness, g'ood stems. The qual- become whoiesale pumpkin growers,
pie
benefit
forest
mamlgement
plan.
:proceed
to accomplish, yeur personshippin'g them all over the United
ity is outstanding."
•
Plant
trees
on
marginal
lands
a\
stewardship
goals. All you have to
The reason; more moderate grow~ States."
and
practice
reforestation
after
har'do
is
call
the
Gallia
Soil and Water
Part of the reason for the growth
~'4"
ing conditions. Pumpkin · growers
vest to assure future timber produc- Conservation District at 446-8687
were hurt last year by a range of 1s thai Halloween continues to be a
lion and provide other benefits.
and ask For Cindy Jenkins: District
popular holiday. Another is that
~ weather ex.tremes.
•
Improve
timber
stands
by
conForester. You may also stop by the
"Bees have·to pollinate the nower gourds have become flishiopab)e,
trolling
species
composition,
timber
Gallia
Soil &amp; Water office in the C.
"It's more than Halloween. Peoseveral times to set up fruit ,". Klickquality,
and
competition.
H.
McKen~ie
Ag Center at Ill Jackman said Friday. " Well, last year the ple use gourds to decorate the inside
*
Implement
practices
to
improve
son
Pike,
Gallipolis.
No appointment
extreme heat hurt the pollination. 1l1c of their homes for the fall.". hc said.
for
appropriate
game;ftl'ici--t·...,.,.,essary.
habitat
bees didn ' t do their job. So we only
had half our normal crop."
Klickman. said he average4 10 10
Aimouncing e
12 tons per acre last year. compared .
with Is· tons pe.r acre this year. The

Ohio L~ttery

oil

•.

.

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