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                  <text>Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 22, 1995

Local lawyer speaks ori Constitution for DAR
Tbe U .S. Constitution and its
modern day applications were discussed by Linda Warner, local
attorney, when she addressed the
recent Constitution Week: meeting
of Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution.
Warner reviewed the Amendments to the Constitution and
pointed out how each amendment
was made to protect the rights of
citizens . She explained that the
Constitution originally consisted of
a Preamble and seven Articles and
in that form was ratified by a convention of the States Sept. 17 ,
1787. The Government under the
Constitution was declared in effect
on the fust Wednesday in March,
1789, she said.
Opposition in and out of
Congress to the Constitution, in
that it was not suflicient ly explicit
as to individual and State rights,
led to an agreement to submit to
the people immediately after the
adoption or the Constitution anumber of s:tfeguarding amendments.
Tbe first ten amendments to the
Constitution were proposed, ratified in 1791 and hecrune a part of
the Constitution. Article Pive of the
Constitution allowed amendments
to he adopted. Warner related each
of the farstten amendments to modem day adaptations and how these
amendments are applied to protect
citizens from hrum or wrong iJoing

by other citizens and also by ~ose pro.gress of the Return !onathan
in law enforcement and authonty.
Me1gs Chapter DAR proJeCt - the
Warner outlined briefly the restoration of the original Chester
rights of the first ten amendments. Courthouse- the first coQrthouse of
She pointed out that Article I of the ~eigs County ~d th~ oldest standfirst ten amendments, or B•ll of mg courthousem OhiO.
Rights as they are commonly
Application for an Appalachian
referred to established freedom of Public Facilities Grant of $125,000
religion. speech, the press and the. has been made and is being
right to petition; Article II gave cit- ~."1ewed by the Appalachian Facil-··
izens the right to keep and bear uaes Grant Commlltee , Powell
anns; Article Ill, states that no sol- reported.
dier shall he quartered in any house · She said that over 600 letters of
in time of peace without the con- support were received from local
sent of the owner; Article IV regu- residents. corporate representatives,
lates the right of search and and organizations and submitted
seizure.
with the grant applicatioo fonns.
Powell said that if the grant is
Article V granted provisions
concern prosecution , Trial and received then the Meigs County
Punishment- Private pmpeny not to Commissioners would serve as
be taken for public use without administrator of the project and
compensation; Article VI provided handle the grant monies. She said
for the right to speedy trial, wit- that two other applications have
nesses; Article VII gave citizens been submitted for utilization of
the right to trial by jury; Article the funds. Each county in Ohio will
VIII prohibited excessive bail, receive a grant from the Appalachifines and cruel punishment; Article an Public Facilities Grant Program,
IX states that lhe. enumeration in it was reponed.
the Constitution of certain rights
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds was bonshall not be construed to deny or ored at the luncheon following the
disparage others retained by the meeting for her service to the
people; and Article X deals with Daughters of the American Revoluthe rights of the States under the lion on U1e local, state and national
Constitution. Warner concluded her levels.
presentation by answering quesThe regent cited Mrs. Reynolds'
lions from the floor.
16 years of service to the Return
Patricia Holter, regent, conduct- Jonathan Meigs Chapter through as
ed the business meeting at which Regent for two terms, as registrar
lime Mary Powell reported on· the and chairman of numerous conunit-

tees. She has served the Obio Society Daughters of the American
Revolution as state organizing secretary, state American History
Month chairman, and was also on
the Board of the Officers Club and
currently is the Southeast District
Director. Later this month she will
conduct the Southeast District Conference which includes twenty
DAR chapters in the Southeast District and will he held in Marietta.
On the national level; Mrs.
Reynolds serves on the national
speakers staff.
The Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter received applications and
approved memberships in the chapter for Dorothy Pickens Sayre and
Elisa Young.
Mrs. Holter, regent, welcomed
the new members and recognized
guests from the French Colony
Chap1er, Gallipolis, and from the
Nabby Lee Ames Chapter, Athens.
Next meeting of the Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter will be
held on Oct. 14 at the Pomeroy
Lihnuy. The guest speaker will be
Beverly Schumacher, regent of the
Nabby Lee Ames Chapter, Athens,
who will present a slide show of
tl1e quilts of U1e DAR Museum in
Washington, D.C. Members are
invited to bring their own U]!asured
quills to share. The Meigs Coumy
Historical quilt will also be on display.

and Eloise Archer, Richard, Florence and Tim Spencer, Thelma
Henderson, Osie and Clair Follrod,
Kathy, Stacie, and Alan Watson,
Sandra Sue Wright, Dan, Shelia,
Kirt, Danielle and Tiffany Spencer,
Sarah Yost, John and Tishlyn Taylor, Bobby and Kevin Keaton,
Michael and Michelle O'Nail, Marlene and Mitchelle Donovan, Joe
Mayhew, Lloyd and Ruth Brooks,
Debbie Barber, Philip and Sharon
Boyles, Nellie Parker, Will Poole,
Charlotte Van Meter, Gertrude
Robinson, and Melvin lrncy.
Others attending were Eleanor
Boyles, Bob and Janet Robinson,
Linda Williams, and Mamie
Fredrick, all of Belpre; Alma,

Harold, and Neva Swartz, all of
Williamstown,' W.Va.; Mildred and
Rubal Caldwell, Annie Calaway,
all of Tuppers Plains; Berniece
Meeks and Grace Dorst of Shade;
Elizabeth Hayes and Golda Frederick of Chester; Etta Collums and
Helen Swartz of Hemlock Grove:
.Rev. Charles and Geraldine Gaston
of Kiburt Church; Gerald and
Juanita Guthrie and Helen Findling
of Orange Christian Church;
Norma and Gerald Swartz of Marietia; Clarence &lt;md Edna Warner of
Athens; Starling and Sandra Massar of Keno Church; Betty Tennant
of Vienna, W.Va.; and Dale and
Janice Kuhn, of LitUe Hockin~.
Homecoming was observed

Sunday by tbe Alfred United
Methodist Church. The regular
morning services were followed by
a basket dinner, Pastor Sharon
Hous(llan giving the blessing.
The Rev. Charles Gaston had
prayer preceding the afternoon program which featured the Bill Ward
Gospel Trio. Their selections
included "Mighty Fine," "Home in
Glory Land," "Just a Closer Walk
With Thee," "The Hands That Set
Me Free," "Home in Glory Land,"
and "Do, Lord, Do Remember
Me."

and

Lost in the Pages
By Myca Suz'anne Haynes
Lost in the pages I'd rather he,
Where I can .be anywhere else 1

please.
Reading a story for hours upon
hours,
A book becomes a genUy-blossoming flower . .

Walking. through a forest, the
sun shining down,
Catching the splendor of majestic trees all around.
Experiencing the coolness as it

Arts council relocates
'The Riverbend Arts Council, for

the past several years located in the
Coates building on North Second
in Middleport, has moved into the
former Western Auto Store building now owned by Bill Haptonstall.
Fa!J classes are now being organized, Mary Wise, president,
announced today.
On Wednesday evenings beginning next week, Sept. 28 and continuing through Nov. 8 at 7 p.m.
. Gerald Powell will give dance
lessons in jitterbug ~nd swing. The
eight sessions are pnccd per couple
at $7 per session.
,
Again this year Carol Tanneball
will offer beginning art classes.
The four sessions will be held at I
. p.m. on Saturdays, beginning Oct.
4 and continuing through Nov. 4.
Cost for the course is $20.

A three-session training program in Tai Chi will be given by
Eric Chambers at the art council
headquarters. Dates for the classes
are Oct. 16, 23 and 30.
Other classes of individual and
group instruction which are continuing are instrumental music classes
by Roger Williams, and baton
classes by Nancy Swartz, Dazzling
Dolls.
In addition plans arc being made
for practices for a community choir ·
to be directed by Roger Williams.
The practices will begin in October.
The Big Bend Community Band
will resume pr·a ctices at Meigs
High School soon. Toney Dingess,
instructor, will announce the practice schedule.

A Multimedia Inc., Newspaper
RECOGNIZED - Mrs. Ronald Reynolds, seated right, was
honored at the recent Constitution Week luncheon of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution,
for her service to the DAR on the local, state and national levels.
She is now Southeast District Director. Pictured with Reynolds,
and Pat Holter, local chapter recent, standing right, were other
guests at the meeting and lunchcnn, seated, Catherine Greenleaf,

'regent, French Colony Chapter, left, and Estivaun Matthews,
s·tate organizing secrdury, and standing, left, Beverly Schumacher,
r.gent, Nabhy Lee Ames Chapter, Athens.

;s;s¢;j;)-~~o~~-,;~=

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•Oil Changes •Lube Jobs •Tune-ups
•Engine Diagnosis

au,. ~ IJ.octins iNd.
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If. mile Down River from Pomeroy Bridge
Mar1o:'s Auto Sales Inc. DBA

Phone 992--4484

OlDSMOBILE
ACHIEVA
MYCA HAYNES,
whispers across my face,
Or carefully caressing a piece of
Victorian lace.
Clutching a book, the cover tom
and tattered,
The words on the pages certain]y do matter.
Who could know except the
reader herself,
How much a book holds in treasure and wealth.

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant . September 24, 1995

Housing prisoners:
·Concerned by liability, Gallia sheriff ·
'Seeks revisions to contract with city

Retirement
Planning

H

W. Tad Cuckler

Phone 614-992-4216

1-800-861-9392

City commission
plans second
public meeting
on annexation

Galli;! Co. Sheriff
J.D. Taylor

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY -Plans forbuildingabranchtothe Meigs
County Public Library in Racine are moving forward

again after a year's delay due to space and construction

.----=---,

basic services, such
water.

as~

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

stops.

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

For any additional information, call 992-2697, or slop by our office at 112 Mulberry
. Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio .

'·

• AU prices include
rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; fees not
included.

bid problems encountered on the earlier proposed project.
The Board of Directors now has a new location for
construction of a library building.
·
Last week I he Board purchased a siae of approximately
six acres on Tyree Boulevard from Herbert w·hite and
·Patsy White.
·
.
'
Thursday afternoon the trustees will meet to begin the
process o( hiring an architect to design the building.
The acreage nf the new site now allows the board to
consider a one-story building instead or the two story
Slructure planned for the original smaller siie, a Jot at the
corner of Fourth and Pearl Streets on land donated by the
Home Naaional Bank of Racine, said Ruth Powers.librar-

sewer and

A proposed map of the annexation area- primarily
'!lest of the city out State Route 1.60 and including the
Spring Valley area - has been drawn up by Landis
Engineering of Dayton.
Among the areas on the original map - which city
leaders stressed is not finalized - was Mitchell Road. ·
which does not receive sewer and water service from
Gallipolis.
A del~gation of the road's residents met with the annexation committee in late August and asked to be removed
.from the map because "90 percent" of the residents, a
spokesperson said, were opposed to aligning with the city.
Although the full committee was not on hand. Coppler
a~d City Commission President Carol O'Rourke, who are
committee members, said their request would he probably
be honored.
'The committee is not drawing lines yet,"Coppler said.
"We haven't had a chance to discuss it with !'he engineer.'"

A HAND-CRAFTED mualc-play!ng carouael waa prepared lor exhibition Saturday by Sandy Turner of
Columbus, left, and Harold Kettrell of Carroll, Its owner, during the "Down by the 0-HJ-Q" band organ rally
held In the Gallipolis City Park this weekend. Band organs and calliopes created and owned by entbuslaata
from around the atate converged on the park lor the annual display, sponsored by the Ohio Valley Visitors
Center.
. .

mn.

While the original site would have worked for the
branch. when the · plans were completed and the project:
advertised for bids, the figures came in well above the

Slick-talki.n g escapee suspected of stealing car

projected cost.

·

Since the~ the overall project has been re-evaluated by
RACINE- "Let the buyer beware" is an old adage, but County Sheriffs Department was then contac.ted.
the Board ol Trustees who opted for a larger area. The new·
on occasion ''Let the.seller beware" should apply as well.
It was found the 1991 Ford pickup truck driven by the site has space for a one-noor building as well as a larger.
Lawmen in Ohio and West Virginia are investigating subject was reported stolen earlier that day in Glenville, parking nrea for the library users.
·
.. :
the possibility that a smooth-talking jail escapee lured a W.Va .. and is owned by the Waco Drilling Company or
Money for the co~struction will come from the building
Racine-area man to Parkersburg, W.Va., Friday evening Glenville, Soulsby said.
fund established several years ago by the library trustees.
to steal his car.
According to Ihe Wt!st Virginia Stale Pnlice, the person Thai fund represents monies received from lhe state in
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, ~uspecled of taking the pickup truck was an escapee from excess of that needed&gt; 10 operate the main library at
the subject stopped at the Dorcas residence ofTom Theiss the Harrison Coumy Jail.
Pomeroy, the branch in Middleport. and the bookmobile.
where George Cooper Jr. had a 1969 Pontiac Firebird for
The description given by Cooper matches that of the
Libraries are funded in Ohio by a poraionofthe personal
sale.
ln&lt;.:ome tax.
escapee, it was reported .
The subject offered to buy the car from Cooper for
· An officer at the Harrison County hi I said the suspect,
Currently 5.7 pt:r~ent of that tax collected is allocated
$3,500 hut said he needed a ride to Parkersburg to get the who was not identified, had been held on a charge of grand for operation uf libraries in Ohio.
money. After Cooper cooperated, the subject test drove larceny.
The Racine branch will be the fourth major expansion
the car alound the block... but never returned- leaving
He also reported the suspett was wanted by the U.S. In library services to Meigs Countians in the pus I six years,
Cooper stranded ~ithoutthe money or the car.
Marshal's Service. but said he did not know on what all made possible by the change in .,tate funding which
Cooper notified Parkersburg Police 01id the Meigs· charge .
Continued on page A2 .

ments to borrow money for energy-conserving projeCts as long as the amount

You may also register at the following locations: Meigs County Department of
Human Services, Meigs County WIC Office, Bureau of Motor Vehicles, Board of
MR/DD, both county libraries, Meigs County Treasurer's Office, and all area high
schools. You may also register on the Meigs County Bookmobile at its designated

Library board
set to move
forward with
Racine branch

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS ~A second public meeting to answer
questions and inform interested residents about annexation will be held in October at Gallipolis Developmental
Center, City Manager Matthew Coppler said.
I
The exact date and time of the meeting will probably be
nailed down next week, Coppler
·
added.
T~e first public session, sponsored
by the city's annexation committee, ·
was held in July and drew more than
70 people.
While benefits of annexing to
Gallipolis were outlined, city official~1, were also met with questions
about farming, ..hqoting rights and

Times-Sentinel staff
.
:POMEROY- Following last week's meeting with Honeywell representative on energy conservation, the Meigs County Board of Commissioners
Friday met with Brent VanHoose and Rob Priest of Landis and Gyr Consultants who presented the board with a different proposal for a House Bill 300
project.
·
·
House Bill 300 is an energy-saving program which allows local govern-

The Board of Elections will be open the following additional hours for your
convenience:
8:30 a.m. till 5:00 p.m.
Sept. 25-September 28:
8:30 a.m. till 4:30 p.m.
September 29:
8:30a.m: till 5:00 p.m.
October 2-5:
8:30 a.m. till4:30 p.m.
October 6:
8:30a.m. till 12 noon &amp; 1:00 till 4:30p.m.
October 9 (Columbus Day
October 10 (Last Day to Register): 9:00a.m. till 9:00 p.m.

'
\.

be

A spin on the carousel•••

By JIM FREEMAN

Vote at your new precinct and avoid long lines at the Board onf Election Day by
changing your address (if you have moved within the county) or if you have
changed your name, by updating your registration by October 10, 1995.

I.

"We want to make sure that
the county is not held liable for
things that the city should
liable for. "

Meigs commission
.News capsules
considers alternative
Bill would assist
energy saving proposal fire departments .

12994 SR 124, Pomtroy, 01'1. 45769

Another complication with the current jail contract is
that the counay wants to place liabilities for damages done
to the jail by city prisonets upon the city. The city wishes
10 have the county seek for damages by billing the individual. then ha•e the matter lie in the hands of the coun.
"We want to make sure that the county is not held liable
for things that the city should be liable for," Taylor said.
He said that these issues are just something that seem to
he missing from the original contract and that both issues
can he worked out.
Gallia County Prosecuting Attorney Brent Saunders
and City Solicitor Douglas Cowles will probably meet to
address the legal aspects of the contract revisions before a

a

·Due to concerns over farming and hunting in the some

Cuckler Consulting Inc.

Vol . 30, No. 33

By JILL WILLIAMS
ing last week' sGallipolis City Commission meeting when sponsibility when a prisoner arrested by Gallipolis City
· nmes-Sentlnel Staff
City Manager Matthew Coppler outlined the proposal.
Police becomes unreasonably unruly .
GALLIPOLIS- "I fell that the county was assuming
Taylor. citing concerns over liability to the county when
"Someone who cannot be subjec1ed to ~:ontinemcn1 · final decision is made by commissioners from both the
an unnecessary liability,"
lodging those arrested should be sent to a city with a more secure atmosphere," county and the city, Taylor said.
Sheriff James D. Taylor
by non-sheriff's police
said.
Taylor believes that the issues will be resolved within
City Manager Matthew Coppler said he agencies, said one oft he Taylor
said Friday when exWhile the cost is more per~hed per-day , larger cities the next few weeks.
plaining
proposed hoped for a meeting to resolve any differissues he's most con- have facilities that are used to dealing with extreme
Coppler told the city commissioners he hoped for a
changes to the contract
cerned about is being behavior:kl problems of prisoners, ahe sheriff explained. meeting to resolve any differences in the near future,
with Gallipolis for the ences in the near future, although he
allowed l'o reject a pris- These facilities also have on-duty nurses Who could nket although he indicated he wasn't comfortable with giving
housing of city prison- indicated he wasn't comfortable with giv·
oner due to behavioral' the needs of pri soners seeking medical .care.
anyone authority to reject pnsoners since the city is part of
ers.
or
medical
problems.
·
The
contract
now
reads
thai
the
county
will
be
held
the county.
·
ing anyone authority to reject prisoners
Taylor's request for
He feels that it is un- responsible for acts if its staff is Iiablc. This becomes a
· City leaders had signed·a one- year contract for housing
revisions to the existing since the city is part of the county.
fair for the county em- problem if prisoner isn't round to have these problems prisoners earlier this year, but the county commissioners
agreement came up durployees to assume re- until after they are received liy the jail. Taylor said.
opted 10 extend the old contract .

of the proposed areas to be annexed, the committee wants
to look at possibly deleting large unoccupied spaces from
the map where such activi1ies occur. City ordinances ban
Continued on page A2

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE NOVEMBER 7, 1995 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1995.

.I
I

Ralph Fowler, Mechanic

-~g\)~=--**

ARE YOU A RESIDENT OF MEIGS COUNTY?

I

Randy Jewell, Mgr.

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 1-992-6614- 1-Boo- 837· 1094

Buair~ess

on Page A2

tm.es

CAR SALE

Traveling through time with
words on a page,
Standing on a prairie amidst the
sweet sage.
Steering into the waves that roll
my ship,
Feeling wind on my face and
salt on my lips.

Retirement planning . Page oa

•

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.
GM FACTORY PROGRAM

Local student recognized for poetry
A poem, "Lost in the Pages",
wriuen by Myca Suz'anne Haynes
bas been selected as one of the
"Top Ten Poems" in the 7-8-9
grade division of the Ohio's Young
Poet's Contest.
As a winner sbe will receive a
$50 SaVings bond
Will have her
poem published in the poetry
anthology entiUed "A Celebration
of Ohio's Young Poets." .
·Myca. daughter of Paul (Sonny)
and Janice Haynes, is now a sophomore at Meigs High Scl\ool.

Putting family
&amp; children first
Featured on
c-1

FINEST EQUIPMENT AVAilABLE

Alfred Methodist church holds homecoming
The Alfred CJMC Choif sang "In
{}lory Land," "Land Where We'll
Never Grow Old," and "He Looked
Down."
Sunday School superintendent
Lloyd Dillinger recognized Trisba
Taylor of Germany as the long distance visitor. Other churches represented were Tuppers Plains UM C,
Belpre Community, Tuppers Plains
Church of Christ, Middleport
Church of Christ, Chester UMC,
Orange Christian Church, Kiburt,
St. Marks of Belpre, Bethany of
Vienna. W.Va., and Keno.
· Attending from Alfred UMC
and the community were Nina and
Marilyn Robinson, Sarah Caldwell,
Lloyd and Doris Dillinger, Russell

intervention:

H.S. football results • B·section

of money saved through energy conservation is enough to repay the loan within
a 10 year period.
They proposed lighting upgrades in all county-owned buildings as well a&lt;
new equipment and controls to make existing heating and cooling systems run
more efficiently.
The two estimated the total cost of the ~project at $148,950 with energy
savings of $18,950 a year.
.Last week, Honeywell proposed focusing measures on the counhouse and
the Meigs County Multipurpose Building.
The board took no action on the matter.
The board opened bids on the Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District Peach
Fork Road waterline. project.
Submitting bids were Rose's Construction of Racine, $36.345: Home Creek
Enterprises of Pomeroy, $32.744,and Lawson's Southern Ohio Excavating
Company of Albany. $35,712.50.
The bids were tabled pending a legal and engineering review.
TPCWD manager Donald C. Poole said work will start as soon as possible
on the project.
In addition, following last week's bill opening for the Racine Community
Housing Improvement Program sidewalk project, the board accepted the
lowest bid of $23,080 which was submiued by Ken Haltley of Pomeroy.
In other business, the board:
• Vacated pan of Pilgrim Ridge Road in Salem Township and approved
dedicating two roads in Scipio Township: Fire Department Road and Riggs
Cemetery Road.
Conlin ued on page A2
•i

GALLIPOLIS - Legisla- ,
tion to assist rural 10wnships
and communities with
firefighting and emergency
medical needs wi II be Introduced this fall in the Ohio
House by State Rep. John A.
Carey Jr.
Carey, R-Wellstoo. said the
bill will create a revolving loan
Carey
program with no interest and a 20-year payback for
loans.

Funds would be. available to municipalities under
7.500 and to townships with 5,000 or less residents
located in a county with less than I00.000 people.
Jim Beckner of the Ohio Rural Fire Council said the
bill, if approved, would assist rural communities in '
keeping up-to-date with firefighting and emergency
situation equipment.
Carey said he worked with the council in devel~ping
the legislation and said he was pleased to work o~ a bill
"that would assist rural fire departments which too
oflen provide a much-needed ·service with too little
resources.''

GOOD MORNING

Ohio gets 41st conviction
from Lucasville prison riot
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio (AP) - State prosecutors have
·obtained their 41st conviction on criminal charges resulting
from the 1993 inmate riot at the Southern Ohio Correctional
Facility .
A jury in Clark County Common Pleas Court convicted
Rasheem Matthews on Thursday or two counts of murder in
the killings of inmates Bruce Vitale and Darrell Depina.
Judge Warren Lotz sentenced Matthews, 3l,lo 15 years
to life in prison on each of the two counts stemming from the
April 1993 riot.
The sentences are to be served consecutively after
Matlhews completes his current lerm of 15 years to life for
murder and escape.
He was convicted of those charges in 1990 in Cuyahoga
County, and since the riot has been transferred to the
Mansfield Correctional Institution.
Nine inmates and a prison guard died during the 11 -day
siege at the state-run maximum-security prison.
Previous convictions have been · handed down during
trials officiUted over by ·two local judges. Sitting Meigs
County Judge Fred W. Crow Ill and former Gallia County
Judge Donald Cox have presided over trials stemming from

Today's Times-Sentinel
18 Sections· t86 P•KO•
Business
CpJendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along lhe River
Weather

Dl
C2&amp;3
DJ-7
Insert
· A6

AJ
A4
Bl-8
Cl
A2

Columns
Jack Anderson
Fred Crow
Bob lloeflkh
Jim Sands

I

the riot.

Four-lane upgrade to U.S. 35 in Mason County to beg!n in October
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.- Gov. Gaston Caperton announced that
construction on upgrading U.S. 35 in Mason County to four lanes will he gin
in mid-October.
A $17.8 million contract forthe upgrade has been a..,arded to the Mashuda
Corp. by the West Virginia Division of Highways, he added.
"This improvement will make u.s. 35 a safer highway that is better able
to handle the heavy traffic demands in the Mason County area," Caperton
said.

"West Virginia roads and bridges are a critical part of expanding the
economic opportunities for our residents," lhe governor- t~dded . 'The importance of our commitment to infrastructure cannot be overstated.''

Mashuda. based in CranherryTownship, Pa .. will improve two milesof35
lo four lanes. The work will include grading, drainage, paving and signs. The
construction area extends from the Coast Guard slat ion to the -eKisting fourlane approaches to the Silver Memorial Bridge in Henderson .
Construction on the two-mile stretch should be compl~ted i~ January 1997.

•

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�)

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Page A2 • JJ~nW-v 11limn-JJentintl

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

Regional

Sunday, September 24, 1995
September 24. 1995

White House, GOP work to avert shutdown

OHIO' Weather
Sunday, Sept. 24
Accu-Weat!)cr" forecast for daytime conditions and h1gh temperatures
MtC H

IMa nsfield 166' I•

Youngstown

tNO

• IColumbus 168' I

WVA ·

~M~cQc&amp;.}.Q (f ~ c£Q
'''''~ '

Showers T· storms Ram

·•

Flumes

·~·'I'

Snow

Ice

Sunny PL Cloudy

Clo udy

le 1995 AccuWoaltlor, Inc

Vr&lt;t AsSOCIRisd Press GraphJc5Nel

Partly cloudy skies, cool
temps. to prevail Sunday
By The Associated Pres.&lt;
.
Ohioans are seemg sunny sktes
lllld cool temperatures this weekend.
Cool Canadian high pressure
senled over tbe region, giving
Ohioans vinuaily cloud-free skies
but cooler than nonnal temperatures. Highs Saturday were in the
upper 50s to around 60 across the
state.
A frost warning was issued for
.most of the northern two-thirds of
Ohio for Saturday night as temperatures dipped back into the low to
mid-30s. Temperatures were even a
bit cooler in some northwest C9Unties, so a freeze warning was issued
ror the northwest corner of the
state. Lows were to approach
. record levels in many areas again
Saturday nighl
More sunny skies are on tap for
Sunday with temperinures a little

wanner than Saturday. Readings on
Sunday will top out in the low to
mid-60s statewide.
At least four Ohio cities set new
record lows Friday night:
Youngstown, where it reached 32
degrees; Columbus and Mansfield,
33 degrees; and Cleveland, 36
degrees.
The record high temperature for
Saturday at the Columbus weather
station was 91 in 1945. The record
low was 34 in 1974.
Sunrise .on Sunday will be at
7:21a.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday ... Variable clouds northwest and southeast ... Otherwise
panly cloudy. Highs 60 to 65 ..
Sunday night.. .Mostly cloudy
west and north. Partly cloudy elsewhere. Lows mostly mid and upper
40s.
cMonday ... Variable high cloudiness. Highs in the 60s.

Three more held in toddler's death
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three
Details of the arrests probably
people were arrested in the won •t be released until Monday.
ambush-slaying of a 3-year-old Dunkin said.
girl, who was shot when the car she
Stephanie Kuhen died from a
was riding in accidentally turned gunshot wound to the head last
down a gang-infested street, police Sunday after the Ford Thunderbird
said Saturday.
she was in was fired on by gang
The arrests were made Friday , members in the Cypress Park area
nigbt, just hours after witnesses north of downtown Los Angeles.
failed to pick a fourth suspec~ Vincent Caldera. out of a police lineup,
Lt. John Dunkin said. Police still
consider Caldera a suspect. but no
Continued frorn page A1
charges were immediately filed.
the
discharge
of firearms .
The three people were booked
Coppler
said
he and other commitror investiga,tion of murder. Dunkin
tee
members
have
heard pros and
111id. Their i6entities were withheld
10 preserve the integrity or' future cons from residents about annexation.
but he added that the chances for
lineups. he said.
annexation won ' t be known until pe-

Annexation

·Racine library

t

I

Continued from page A1
funnelled thousands of dollars into
libraries.
In 1989 the Board purchased the
building on West Main Street in
Pomeroy for .the main library and
immediately wem into a major renovali,on and expansion project.
The following year the Middleport
branch library wa s remodeled and the
collection of books increased.
That same year the county purchased its own bookmobile and hezan a program of service to communilies on a frequently scheduled basis.
Prior to that time the bookmobile from
Ohio Valley Association of Libraries

(OVAL) came into Mei gs County on
a periodic basis.
Establishment of a Racine branch
is another step in the Meigs County

Library Board of Trustees' plan to
increase library services by making
lhem more accessible, said Powers.

tition s are passed.

"Informally, we' re alway s talking
to people and you hear the same sen timents -

some for. some again st."

he said. "We won't know until peopl e
sign the petitions."
Formalizing a map is part of a plan ning process. Co ppler expl ained .
Should some _areas annex. the CllY
will have to schedule se rvice. resources and its budget to meet th~

needs of new residents.
"It's simply planning ahead and we ·
need to have that kind of work done. "
he said.
Gallipolis is looking to annex to
preserve its city s tatus by in cre asing
il s population base. Bec ause the city
cannot actively pursue anne xation .
the committee is providing infonnation and guidance to residents who
want to annex .
An annexation petition rnu ~ t carry
the names of 51 percent of a targeted

area\ property owners to be con sidered. The final deci siOn to allow. an·
ncXation rests with the county commi s ~ioners . who have taken a neutral
stunc€ on the city ' s plans:

ByALANFRAM
A&amp;oioclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Clinton
administration officials and congressional Republicans say they are
working toward a deal that would
prevent a shutdown of federal
agencies. but their talks will have
to continue next week.
Both sides say they arc eager to
avoid a veto fight between
Congress and Presid ent C linton
that would force hundreds of thousands of federal employees to stay
home a fter the ne w fi sc al year
begins Oct. I.
Top officials from the two sides
commenced face-to-face bargaining on Friday on a formula for temporarily financing the government
while lawmakers and White House
officials seek final decisions on
spending legislation.
"We're getting some idea of
where the White House is coming
from ." said Senate Appropriations
Committee Chainnan Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., after a one-hour bargaining session in his office.
Also ·attending were House
Appropriations Committee Chairman Bob Livingston. R-La .. White
House chief of staff Leon Panetta.
and administmtion budget director
Alice Rivlin.
"We're making progress here, ' '

Panetta said.
As they met , Federal Reserv e

Chainnan Alan Greenspan said it
would be "a major mistake" to let
the budget fight trigger a first-ever
federal default , which House
Speaker Newt Gingrich , R-Ga.,
threatened Thursday.
Amid battles between President
Clinton and Republican.• over proposed GOP cuts, it is certain that
not all of the I 3 annual spending
measures will be enacted when the
new fiscal year begins next weekend. Unless temporary legislation
is approved to keep agencies functioning, some of them would ha ve ·
to send workers home·. '
1
Aware that they have bigger
budget clashes ahead over Medicare, ra.x cuts and other issue.•. both
sides say they want to craft a stopgap bill keeping agencies operating
for several weeks .
The administration has agreed to
hold spending to the levels
Congress approved earlier this year
in its I 996 budget resolutiop which are below 1995 amounts but Republicans want to push the
ligures ev~n lower to more closely
match the cuts they are seeking for
next year.
1
Meanwhile,
Gingrich • s
expressed willingness to precipitate
a federal default carne under fire
from Clinton and a host of
Democrats. The speaker had said
that when the government's borrowing authority expires, prnbably

Diverse groups opposing
Time Warner-Turn·er deal
By SKIP WOLLENBERG
AP Business Wriler
NEW YORK - While Time
Warner Inc. and Ted Turner' s cable
empire were in ecstasy over their
media megamarriage, a con~umer
group. a phone company and two
cable system owners stepped in,
hoping to ruin "the dream deal.'·
After weeks of intense negotiations. Time Warner agreed Friday
to pay about $7.5 billion in slack
for Turner Broadcasting System
Inc. /
It was the third media megadeal
in two months and assures Time
Warner that it will remain the
biggest media and entertainment
company with $18 .7 billion in
annual revenue.
But no sooner was the deal
announced, it quickly encountered
resistance.
The Consurners Union said it
would ask federal regulators to
review the deal because it could
mean higher cable pric~s and possibly prevent some cable programs
from reaching viewers.
And Time Warner's telephone
partner, U S West, sued to block
the deal, claiming it would improperly compete with the Warner Bros.
moviemaking and HBO cable services that the utility owns in pannership with Time Warner.
The deal also drew fire from
two cable system operators that
seats on the Turner hoard and
abstained from the voting on the
merger.
Corneas! Corp. :lnd Continental
Cablevision Inc. said in a statement
they "are deeply troubled by the
process that guided this decision
and particularly by the preferential
treatment afforded to one shareholder to the detriment of all the

The sL1tement did not mention
anyone by name or cite the preferential treatment. but it wa.• believed
to be a reference to Tele-Communications Inc., the nation' s biggest
cable system operator, which owns
21 percent of Turner.
TCi chief executive John Malone negotiated long-term extensions on its agreements to carry ail
of Turner"s cable nelworks in the
deal. Other cable ·system holders
fear their program carriage rates
may go up.
A more relaxed regulatory environment and technological innuvations are driving media and entertainrnent companies into alliances.
They feel size and common ownership of buth programs and distribution systems are key to success.

·=

WE'RE VErERANS!

Alzheimer's expert to speak locally
GALLIPOLIS - Diane Nader, an expert on Alzheimer's Disease, will speak to the Alzheimer's Support Group at 2 p.m. Friday.
Sepl 29 at Pinecrest Care Center.
Nader will discuss skills needed in communicating verbally with
those diagnosed with Alzheimer's or dementia. Various languagebased strategies will be offered during the meeting, followed by a
question and answer period.
Nader holds a master's degree in speech pathology from MarshaH University. For more inl'onnati&lt;in, contact Pinecrest Care Center at 446-7112.

Youth injured in accident
GALLIPOLIS - A 7-year-old Gallipolis boy was injured when
he was struck by a pickup truck late Friday at the intersection of
Third Avenue and Cedar Stree~ Gallipolis City Police reported .
Nicholas J. Stratton, 69 Dearfield Road, was transported by the
GaUia County EMS to Hplzer Medical Center, officers said. He was
treated and then admitted for multiple abrasions, a hospital
spokesperson said.
Police said Stratton was attempting to cross the intersection at
10:07 p.m. when he was struck by the northbound pickup, driven by
Christopher E. Burd, I 6, 49 Hillside Road, Gallipolis.
The· accident remained under investigation Saturday, officers
said.

•

Yes, our Home Health Care Service Personnel at
Veterans Memorial Hospital are "veterans" in
providing you with health care while you remain in
the comfort of your home.
Our Home Health Care Service has been serving
the public since 1971 and our staff members are not
only skilled and experienced but are licensed in both
Ohio and West Virginia.
A variety of services are available through a
physician approved plan and fees may be covered by
Medicare, Medicaid, private insurance, United Mine
Workers, the Veterans Administration, Workmen's
Compensation or other methods.
For information on how you or a friend or family
member can take advantage of our excellent service
just give us a call at 992-3231 or 992-2104, Ext. 253.
· Our office hours are 7:3(} a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday.

RACINE - A one-car crasb on State Route 124 Friday left a
Pomeroy teenager slightly injured, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol reported.
Sue Barnhart. 15. 212 Rock St.. was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital by her parents, where she was treated and released.
Troopers said Barnhart was a passenger in a car driven by Rayan
E. Young, 17. 411 Spring Ave., Pomeroy, that was eastbound in
Sutton Township at 8:07 a.m. when her car dropped off the right
edge of the road, came back onto the road and began fishtailing.
The car then went back off the right side of the road, over a small
, . embankment and struck a small tree, according to the report.
The car was slightly damaged and Young was cited for failure to
control.

•

••

Driver ticketed following accident

•

•••

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis woman was cited for assured
clear distance by the Gailia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
following a two-car crash Friday on State Route 7 near Gilllipolis.
Troopers said Barbara A. Stover, 34, 149 Honeysuckle Drive,
was southbound, 30 feet west of the U.S. 35 westbound exit ramp,
at6:45 a.m. when she could not stop in time and struck the rear of a
car driven by Jimmie N. Locke, 21, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Locke had slowed for a red light at the time of the crash, according to the report. Damage to both cars was slight.

••
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~........................... :

Hend.erson man arrested by police

•••
•

, I

others.''

Meigs commission
Continued from page A1
• Accepted Clemans. Nel son and
Assoc iates of Columbus to prepare
legal documentation for the department of human r ervices al ,a cost not

to exceed $1.507: •
• Approved a $125.000 to the DHS
publi c assistanGc fund from the child
welfare subsidy fund pending receipt
of funds from the Ohio Department of
H urn an Serv1ces and approved trans·
ferring $10, 100 to the Meigs County

Sheriffs Department to pay outstanding bills for contract repaif', housing
prisoners. medical e xpenses and supplies.
• Paid weekly bill s of $2 10.292.35
consisting of 129 entries . .
Present were co1nmi ss ion preside nt

'.

Fred Hoffman . VICe-president Janet
Tackett , Commi ss ioner Robert

I

•

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police arrested Richard F .
Fuller, 18, Henderson, W.Va .• for underage aico~ol consumption in
connection with an alleged shoplifting late Friday at Big Dear, 31
Upper River Road.
Police were called to the store at 10:40 p.m. when store person. nel detained Fuller, but the subject who allegedly accompanied
Fuller attempted to steal a jar of peanuts and fled when confronted
by personnel.
·
. Fuller was booked into the Gailia County Jail at I 1:27 p.m. and a
: search was mounted for the other subject, police said .
Also booked into the jail by police at 2:23 a.m. Saturday was
: Scott A. McGuire, 18. 108 Locust St.. Gallipolis, for fisordcrly con-'

••
!
'''

~th the right'

••'

•

connections,
your child can go
to Jupiter,
search for
African wildlife,
visit the Titanic
and still be
home in time
for dinner.

••
•

l•
'•'

: duct.

.

••
••

.

'I
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1

SUNDAY ONLY

One Year .. .. ....... ..,. ..................,............... S52.00
SINGLE COPY PRICE
Sunda)l ........................ ............................ $ 1.00

ment Wednesday. the lntemal Revenue Service and the Justice and
Labor departments said in a joint
news release.
The indictment alleges that Ms.
Wallace embezzled the money
from the pension plan and the profit-sharing plan of a northern Florida group of doctors and their
employees.

GALLIPOLIS - Linda Lane. 787 State Route 588, Gallipolis,
informed Gallipolis City Police Friday that all four center caps from
the wheels of her car were stolen.
Lane told police she believed the theft occurred sometime before
6 p.m. while her car was parked at the Kroger store in the Silver
Bridge Plaza.
Belinda S. Burnet~ 1060 Mill Creek Road, Gallipolis. infonncd
the Gallia County Sheriffs Department that a ring was stolen from
her residence sometime between Sept. 1.8 and Friday.
Both incidents are under investigation.

,-------.."

O'DELLS
END OF SUMMER

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~-===

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••

Contact:
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john Miller

The manufacturer is
discontinuing many styles and
we ordered a truck load. fUStlo
pass the savings on to you.
(limited to panels in stock)

Account Executives·
441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

Aluminum
Roof Coating

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

$2595

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Veterans

Editor's note: Narnes and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reports. All newsworthy actions will be published without exception.
·

•

••

TRU-TEST
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Ratts Outside Gallia County

See puzzle on page 02

'I

· tAK.ING EDUCATION ALONG THE CABLE HIGHWAY

,634 E. Main St.
Vlne St.
Pomeroy
Galli poll a
614-992-5500
614-446-1276

t

~

•
,•

L

•

•

·,·

1-...;..------1,.
SPECIAL BUY
PANELING SALE .· .'

. •IRA's

COOL VILLE - Officials are investigating a lire that destroyed
96large bay bales near Coolville early_Saturday.
Robert Keaton, State Route 681, owner of the bales, reported that
a passing motorist woke him up to report the fire, according to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
'
Tbe Tuppers Plains Volunteer Fire Department responded to the
scene.

...•

The Ohio University Marching 110 Band got Into lhe spirit of
its performance Friday at Eastern High School. Noted for its
music and nair for choreography, the band staged a benefit
concert for the Tuppers Plains Elernenlary PTO to help raise
money for cornputers to be used by students at the sch&lt;HJI. The
EHS band, under the direction of Susan Clirner, ulso perforrned
at the •how. Sylvester Young, who assumed directorship or the
OU band several years ago, visited TP Elementary last week
and said it was ''always great ... to be helping someone do something worthwhile." (T -S photo by Torn Hunter)

Woman charged with pension theft
CINCINNATI (AP) -An Ohio
woman has been indicted on federal charges alleging that she stole
more than $243.000 from Florida
pension and profit-sharing plans.
Nancy L. Wallac~. 47. of
Hami!ton, is charged with embezzlement and money laundering.
federal authorities said Friday.
A federal grand jury in CincirJnati returned the 24-count indict-

•

/A3

Strike up the band--;

JACKSON- Mayors and city which are extremely important to
managers in 11 southeastern Ohio the communities repre sented." the
communities recently joined forces release said .
The mayors and city managers.
to form "a strong voice'' for the
region. according to a press release. representing communities in Mining agency gets
The first meeting was held last Scioto, Ross. Pike. Hocking, Vinweek in Jackson with Mayor Tom ton. Jackson, Lawrence, Gallia. some funding .back
PIKEVILLE, Ky . (AP)- ConEvans hosting. Chillicothe Mayor Meigs. Athens and Washington
Joseph Sulzer was elected the counties, will meet regularly to dis- gressional budget negotiators have
group's temporary chairman. and cuss upcoming issues and fonnu- restored some 1noney to the U.S.
Office of Surface Mining. but not
the group began looking ahead to late a response.
"Efforts will be advanced to to restore jobs for inspectors and
changes being made on the state
assist our federal and state repre- other regulators being laid off, the
and federal level.
sentatives
and to ensure that the agency said Friday.
The group, in its press release.
region·
s
voice
is heard.'' said the
.
The agency had been bfllcing for
said it would work to have state
release.
which
was
issued
from
cuts
of up to $27 million. D ut a
and federal leaders understand that
Sulzer's
office.
House-Senate
conference committheir communities receive ~qual
tl1c
frrst
meeting
Also
attending
tee
agreed
late
Thursday upon a cut
treatment in highway projects.
were
Bill
Kelly
of
Waverly.
Joe
of
just
around
$23
million from the
block grants and other funding.
Matthews
of
Marietta.
Gene
Denagency's
$292
million
budget.
The local leaders "also recog·
nis
of
Logan.
Frank
Gerlach
of
The
committee
repon
may mean
nize the extreme importance of
Portsmouth,
Jim
Andrick
of
Nelthe
agency
can
restore
the
jobs of
regional cooperation toward ecosonville
and
Martha
Deck
of
Wellsome
of
the
265
people
it had
nomic developrnent, tourism and
ston.
planned
to
lay
off.
the overall quality of life issues

Hay bale fire investigated

Traveling the world, discovering new things, learning aboUt
our lives and others'- this is what Cablevision enables children
to do. And that's why we're supporting The Cable In The Classroom initiative here at home by (wiring schools free of
charge, donating equipment and providing special grants). Hey,
our kids are our future, right? We think it's smart to invest in it.

SUBSCRII"'TION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week .................................................. $1 .00

Regional mayors, officials
exploring upcoming issues

'

Gloria Kloes.

Membtr: The Associated Preu , nnd the Ohio
Newspnper Auocintion.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ciao practitioners.
Pleasant Valley Hospital and the
In addition. infonnation ' regardMarshall University School of ing scholarships. loan repayment,
Medicine have joined forces to sign-Qn bonuses. spouse job opporoffer physicians from around the tunitie s. coverage and hospital serworld the opportunity 10 practice in vices are res earche d and made
a rural setting, according to PVH available to candidates.
Executive Director Michael G. SelAs for Pleasant Valley llospitai.
lards.
the community-Qriented health care
Through the Internet, the MU facility promotes available physiRura!Nc;l (Rural Health"Gopher cian practices in family practice.
Server and Rural Health WWW) emergency medicine. radio logy.
presents subject-oriented access 10 neurology and cardiologylintervenhealth care-related servers. with a lional and non-invasive.
focus on those resources most releOther heaiUJ care sites in West
vant to rural health care.
Virgjnia taking advantage of the
An individualized profile is RuraiNet are Family Healtl1 Care
developed on behalf of each medi- . (Spencer). Davis Memorial Hospical' student an\1 resident who tal (Elkins) and Fairmont Clinic
expresses an interest in exploring (Fainnont).
these rural opportunities. The
"With Marshall Univers ity' ~
Office of Recruitment and Place- RuraiNet, there is 24 -hour free
ment at Marshall University then access for someone who may be
matches the profiles with the inter- searching for a physician opportuest of the community and existing nity," explained Bill Lucas ,
medical services.
research analyst for the MU
Federal, state. hospital and local Department of Family and Comfinancial resources are identified munity Health.
and presented to prospective physi-

:Thefts reported to authorities

••

•'

PVH, Marshall offer
Internet information
on rural health care

\

Hartcnbach and clerk of comm1 ssion

Company/Multimedia. lnr.:. Scc:Q nd das5 po~ t ­
oge paid at Gallipolis, Oh1o 4 ~ 63 I. Emered _:u
lleCOOd class mailing mntler at Pomeroy, Oh1o.
Post Office.

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

GALLIPOLIS - The annual "Voice of Democracy" conrest
sponsored by VFW Post 4464 of Gallipolis is underway in Gallia
County'nwo high schools, Post Commander Charles Bailey said.
Participants are to write and record a three-to-five minute audio
essay on the topic of" Answering America's Call.''
The local VFW is offering prizes totaling $250 to winners of the
local competition. Local winners advance to the state &lt;;ompetition.
and Slate winners proceed to the national competition.
For more information, contact Bailey at 446-2889.

·: One-car crash leaves one injured

Publis hed ~ach Sundi'l}'. 825 Th1rd Ave.,
Gnllipoli .~. Ohio. by the Ohi o Val ley Publishing

............ ..... ....................... $2.5.61

VFW speech contest underway

'

ti!SPS 515-8001

13 Weeks ....

Tri-County ariefs:

provisions requiring congressional •
approval before any deployment of ;
U.S. troops in Bosnia. and restrict- ;
ing abortions at overseas rnllitary :
hospitals: Clinton is expected to ;
veto the btl!.
·
• Senators. br voice vote. :
approved a provision by Sen. Bar- :
bara Boxer, D-Calif.. and cospon- ~
sored by leaders of both panics that •
would block the president's and ~
lawmakers' salaries if the govern- :
ment's authority to spend or hor- :
row money lapses for more than a •
day.
'
!
• The Senate gave tina! congres- ~
sional approval to a $2.2 billion !
measure financing Congress' own '
operations in I 996, $200 million :
less than tbis year. The measure, :
floor.
94-4. is the ftrst of the 13 :
approved
Amid the negotiations and
spending
bills to be readied for •.
rhetorical battling, lawmakers did
complete some of their spending Clinton's signature. The president '
has threatened to veto it because. :
work:
• House-Senate bargainers he says, lawmakers should not :
agreed to a compromise $243-bil- finance their own operations when ~
lion defense spending rneasure for other parts of government may :
1996, tile same amount as this year have to close, bul Republicans '
•,
but nearly $7 billion above what hope he may sign it anyway.
• D y voice vote, the Senate : )
Clinton wants. It includes $493 ,
million to build more B-2 stealth approved $712 million in federal ,
aid for Washington's local govern- •
bombers than the Pentagon wants
ment. the same as this year and as :
and $700 million to start building
another Seawolf submarine. It cuLs Clinton proposed. The measure ;
would establish a panel to oversee l
Clinton' s $!i00 million request for
the city's schools.
:
converting defense technology to
• The Senate voted 86-14 for an •
civilian uses to $195 million. The
$11.2 billion military construction :
bill also eliminates House-passed
measure for 1996.
:
in November, be would not allow a
necessary House vote on extending
the debt limit unless Clinton
accepted GOP plans to cut taxes
and balance the budget over seven
years.
At a news conference in Santa
Monica, Calif., Clinton said Gingrich ' s idea would boost interest
rates, as many experts say, and do
nothing to bold down the deficit.
Gingrich's "arrogant brinks manship can do irreparable damage
to the United States, to its creditworthfness and to its international
standing ... in order to satisfy the
political ambitions and hubris of
one single individual," Sen. Robert
Byrd, D-W.Va., said on the Senate

Sunday Times- Se nt ine l

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Sunday, September 24, 1995

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

--Area Deaths-- Surgery
Charles J. Bosworth
RIPLEY, W.Va. -Charles Jefferson Bosworth, 63, Ripley, W.Va..

died Friday, Sept. 22, 199.5 in Jacboo General Hospital, Ripley.
Born Dec. I, 1931 in Ravenswood, W.Va., son of the late Clyde and
Freda Hendersbol Boswortb, be was a former machine operator for Kaiser
Aluminum &amp;: Chemical Corp. and Ravenswood Aluminum, and retired
after 38 years of service.
He was a U.S. Navy veteran, ·a member of USWA Local .5668 and
attended lbe flatwoods United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Aloise Hughes Bosworth; a son, Craig
Boswortb of Ripley; a daughter, MichaeUe Wrese of Ravenswood; three
grandchildren; a brother, A. Leon Boswortb of Klamath Falls, Ore.; two
sisters, Henrietta Stackpole of Sistersville, W.Va .. and Lucille Steed of
Chillicothe; several nieces and nephews.
He was p!Ueded in death by a brother, Ted Bosworth.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Straight-Tucker &amp;: Roush F11neral Home, Ravenswood, with PhUiip Scarberry officiating. Burial will be
in the Jackson Memory Gardens. Friends may can at the funeral home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
·
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Nannita L. Carpenter
VINfON- Nannita L. Carpenter, 55, Logan, died Sawrday, Sept. 23.
1995 in Columbus.
Arrangements will be announced by lbe McCoy·Moore Funeral Home.
Vinton.

Russell Holsinger
CHESTER - Russell Holsinger, 73, Chester, diejl Friday, Sept. 22.
1995 in the Pomeroy Nursing and Rebabilitation Center.
Born Feb. 28, 1922 in Roodsville, son of the late Alva and Martba Barber Holsinger Sr., he was a pipe fitter, a U.S. Army veteran of World War
II, anti a lifetime member or .the Pomeroy Disabled American Veterans.
Surviving are his wife, Freda GUlilan Holsinger; two sons, RusseU Ray
Holsinger and Phillip Holsinger, both of Chester; a son and daughter-in·
law, Randall and Sherri Holsinger of Belpre; two daughters and sons-in·
Jaw, Sharon and Merlin Swain; and Daphne and David Young, all of Long
Bottom; three stepdaughters and husbands, Judith and Tom. Buckley of
Reedsville, Georgia Ritchie and Janice and BiU Alexander, all of Colum•
bus; II grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren; five brothers, Vir·
gil, Alva Jr. and Clinton, all of Reedsville, Rodney of Greenfield, and
Clifford of Ucb Hill, Mo.; and four sisters, Fannie Bigley and Virginia
Carter, boib of Reedsville, Emma McHenry of Parkersburg. W.Va .. and
Donna Webb of The Plains.
He was preceded in death by a brother, Winn Holsinger; and two
nephews.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the White Funeral Home,
CoolviUe, with the Rev. Raben Webb officiating. Burial will follow in the
Pleasant Grove Cemetery, where military graveside services wiU be conducted by the Tuppers Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 9053.
Friends may catJ at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Sunday.

Frankie A. Varian Sr.
COLUMBUS - Frankie A. Varian Sr., 79, Columbus, formerly of
Meigs County, died Thursday, Sept. 21, 1995 in the We Care Health
. Facility.
He was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II.
Surviving are a son and daughter-in-law, Frankie and Beth Varian Jr.
of Frederickstown; two grandchildren; and a sister, Lucille Cameron of
Crestline.
Friends may call at the Shaw-Davis Fun·eral Home, Victorian Village
Chapel, 34 West Second Ave.•. Columbus, on Sunday from 24 and 7-9
p.m. Graveside services will be Monday at II a.m. at the Riverview
Cemetery, Middleport.
Memorial contributions may be made to the Mid.Obio Lung Association, P. 0. Box 16677, Columbus, Ohio 43216.

Deaths of note elsewhere

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Frederick Kent
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP) ~ .
Frederick Kent, an attorney who
spearheaded the creation of florida's community college system,
died Friday. He was 90.
Kent beaded a commission thai
recommended creation of the
sta~ewide junior college board and
helped get it passed by the l.Algisla·
tore. He also served as cbainnan of
what' is.now known as the board of
regents.

Edward Lyncb
WASHINGTON (AP)
Edward J. Lynch, a civil rights
lawyer who championed the rights
of people with disabilities, died
SepL 9 in the crash of a plane be
was piloting. He was 62.
Lynch's.battles on behalf of the
disabled began in 1982, when be
alleged that the Department of
Education illegally fired him from
its office of civil rights. He said !be
depanment did not accommodate
his epilepsy.

Patty A. Powers, 41, Middle·
port, was charged with driving
under the influence and fined $450,
three days jail, one year probation
and a 180 day license suspension.
Timothy Wilkins, 18, Rio
Grande, was charged with ·under-

}.. Militia member's wife believes husband was murdered

needed?

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Congress looks
at various plans
to save Medicare

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By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - In a few
short days, the Rep,ublican
Congress plans to perform major
reconstructive surgery on Medicare
and Medicaid, the twin pillars of
government health care for 70 mil·
lion Americans.
Tbe programs are likely to
emerge leaner, more expensive for
patients in some respects, closer to
private health insurance and,
Republicans insist, in beuer shape
to survive into the next century.
1be House Conunerce Commit·
tee already has put its stamp of
approval on the GOP plan to tum
Medicaid over to the states and cut
its growth by more than balf.
On Tuesday, the Senate Finance
Committee will start work on its
overhaul; the House Ways and
Means Comrniuee1takes up its task
Wednesday. Before the week is
ou~ the moves to squeeze $450 bil-

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emer.gency Medical
Service recorded to calls for assistance Friday, including three trans·
fer calls. Units responding includ·
ed:
I
MIDDLEPORT
.
2:05 p.m., voluntrer fire depart. · ment to Race Street, oven fire at
: Virginia Hindy residence.
POMEROY
9:48 a.m., Pleasant Ridge Road,
. Valerie Ulley, Veterans Memorial
· Hospital.
RACINE
8:26 a.m., volunteer fire depart·
ment and squad to State Route 124,
motor-vehicle accident, Rayan
Young, William ·Young II, Sue
Ellen Barnhart and Ashley Davis
refused Ireabllen~ Syracuse assist·
ed.

RUTLAND
6:37p.m., Point Rock Road,
Christy Johnson, Holzer Medical
Center;
9:05 p.m., State Route 143,
Aldena Welch, O'Bieness Memorial Hospital. ·
SYRACUSE
4:45 p.m., Country Mobile
Home Park, Byron Watson, Pleasant Valley Hospital.
TUPPERS PLAINS
8:10 a.m., Eastern High School,
Camela Stinchcomb, OBMH.

Hosoital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - none.
Friday discharges - Holly
Green, Middlepon; Bemida Boney,
Middlepon.
',/,

said. "They put a gun in his band
and shot him .... I am r,ositive my
husband was murdered. '
Mrs. Hill also accuses authorities of trying to cover up the cir·
cumstances of the dealb of Michael

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Ohio News in Brief:

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COLUMBUS -The wife of the ringleader or a marijuana
smuggling operation bas been sentenced to nearly five years in fed·
eral prison.
Pamela G. Hill, 45, of Upper Arlington, pleaded guilty in January to one count of conspiracy to launder profits from lbe smug·
gling ring. On Friday, U.S. District Judge James Graham sentenced
her to four years and nine months in prison.
· Her husband, Roben W. Hill, 58, is serving a 20-year sentence in
a medium-security federal prison in Cumberland, Md.
The ring smuggled more tlian 3 tons of marijuana to Columbus
from Tucson, Ariz., over five years, ending in October 1993.
A member of the family that owns Scioto Downs harness racing
track, Hill pleaded guilty in January to federal charges of being a
drug kingpin and money laundering.
Mrs. Hill is the last person in the 19-member smuggling ring to
be sentenced. Besides the Hills, 16 olber defendants pleadc;d guilty
to drug and money-laundering cbarges. The 19th member shot and
lcilled himself the day he was expected to plead guilty.

.•••... Pot ringleader's wife sentenced

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MAKING HIS POINT -U.S. Rep. Sam Glb·
boos, D-Fla., center, gestured over transcripts
from previous Medicare hearings Friday on
Capitol Hill during a Medicare hearing of tbe

Choice," seniors who chose less
expensive HMOs would get back
75 percent of the premiums saved
at
year-end. The House "Medicare
lion in ·savings over seven years
Plus"
would limit rebates to the
will be one step closer to law.
amount
of the Medicare Part B preHere is a look at what is in store
.
for those who rely on Medicare and · mium.
Medicaid and those who care for
People who chose liMOs could
them:
switch back to regular Medicare in
The elderly
the first 90 days. There would be
The $,46.1 0 monthly premium an open enrollment period every 12
for Medicare Part B, which covers months. with no restrictions due to
doctor bills and lab tests, would pre-existing Ulnesses.
roughly double by 2002 to more
The eldetly could also opt for
than $90. It would rise to $60 under catastrophic-only coverage, with
current law and $82 under a White deductibles as bigh as $6,000 In !be
House plan.
Senate plan and $10,000 in the
Those premiums would climb House. The government would put
much faster for wealthier seniors, money in medical savings accounts
starting at incomes of $75,000 for these seniors could tap for routine
an individual and $100,000 for medical expenses.
couples. Premiums would triple for
·: The young
those with incomes above
The Medicaid overhaul would .
$100,000 for individuals and !brow out the current requireme~t
$150,000 for couples.
that states cover all poor children
Under the ·senate plan, the up to age II, and, by 2002, all poor
elderly would pay the first $150 of children up to IS.
doctor bills in 1996 instead of
States now also must cover all
$100. This annual Medicare pregnant women and children·up to
deductible would climb $10 a year age 6 from families below 133 per·
to $210 in 2002.
cent of poverty; many states go up
Seniors would g,et a wider to 185 percent. The poveny line for
choice of health plans, including a family of four was $14,763 in
HMOs and other managed-care 1993.
plans that might restrict choice of
About half the 36 million Medidoctors but feature added benefits.
caid beneficiaries are children.
Seniors could stick with tradi·
Under the GOP "MediGrant"
tiona!, fee-for-service Medicare, approach, st11tes would decide
but Medicare would limit what it which children to co~er. They
spent on their care.
could tailor the benefit package to
Under the Senate "Medicare provide more for the poorest and

House Ways and Means Committee. Gibbons II
flanked by Chairman Bill Archer, R·Texas, and
Rep. Charles Rangel, D-N.Y. (AP)

less for those above the poverty
line.
·
Welfare recipients would no
longer automatically get a Medi·
caid card, and molhers wbo left the
rolls to work would not be entitled
to stay on Medicaid for 12 months,
as they are now.
·
The mlddle-age.d
The Senate plan would require
everyone born since 1938 to wait at
least two months longer to qualify
for Medicare. The eligibility age,
now 65, would eventually rise to
67.
This would start gradually in
2003. Those born from 1943 to
1954 would bave to wait to age 66
for Medicare. Those born since
1960 would wait to 67.
Doctors
The Senate plan would scrap a
formula experts say bas been too
generous to surgeons. Payments to
physi'cians would still cl,imb 7.5
percent a year.
'
The House reforms would limit
awards in medical malpractice lawsuits to $250,000 for pain and suffering and no more than $250,000
for punitive damages.
The plan would also ease
restrictions on doetors' referring
patients to outside labs they have
invested in, and allow physicians
and hospitals to form their own
health plans, culling out insurers
and HMOs as the middleman.
Hospitals
The antmal fee bikes for hospitals would be shaved by 2.5 per-

Meigs County Court cases ended
nal trespass, SI 00 suspended on
each, costs, 30 days jail suspended
on each, two years probation,
restraining order issued;
WUliam E. Tborla, i\kron, DUI,
$750 plus costs, one year OL suspension, 30 days jail suspended to
.10 days, 90-day vehicle immobilizaticm, two years probation;
Cathy Jacks, Middleport, passing
bad checks, costs, 10 days jail,
restitution ordered within seven
days;
Robert V. Buckland, Evans,
W.Va., reckless operation, $100
plus costs, $200 forfeiture; Dottie
S. Turner, Pomeroy, reckless oper·
ation, $100 plus costs, $400 forfeiture; marked lanes, costs only;

•
centage points in 1996 and 2 percentage points each year from 1997
through 2002. Payments to hospitals would still grow at S percent a
year.
Fewer hospitals would get extta
payments for large caseloads Of
poor patients. Medicare would cut
lbese payments 25 percent
Extra payments for teacbin'g
hospitals would also be changejJ.
The House would create a trust
fund for graduate medical education, while phasing out subsidies
for ttaining residents who are not
U.S. citizens.
Home health
Medicare would limit bow much
it pays for each episode of illness
requiring home bealth services.

&lt;;OLUMBUS - More than $3 million in disaster aid bas been
paid to Ohioans who suffered damages in last month's storms and
flooding, emergency management officials said.
Nearly 1,700 people in II counties bad applied for federal assis·
tance. Officials said $2,487,284 bad been paid in housing assistance
and $603,500 hlld been dl~tributed or approved for Small Business
Administration loans.
1be figures were·released Friday by the federal and state emergency management agencies.
The II counties declared disasters were Ch:unpaign, Erie, Licking, Logan, Lorain, Marion, Mercer, Miami, Scioio, Shelby and
Washington.

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Employees tested for marijuana use
COLUMBUS - Some employees of the Franklin County clerk
of courts office have been tested for marijuana use.
The tesrs were conducted last week and followed allegations of
drug use by employees of Clerk of Courts Jesse Oddi.
Oddi said Friday that eight or 10 workers in the auto title division submitted to urine tests upon request.
If any tests indicate drug use, the employees will be referred to a
counseling ag_ency the county contracts with for workers' mental
health services.
Oddi said be asked the sheriffs office to investigate after he
heard rumors .of employee drug use and trafficking, mainly involv,
ing marijuana. He said a two-month investigation found no evidence that drugs were sold or bought at the clerk of courts office.

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QUALITY
THAT ENDURES

PLANNED PAREN,HOOD
or SOU,.HEAS' OHIO

Hospitals await carrier decision
CLEVELAND- Twelve Cuyahoga Counly hospitals will soon
know whether they wiD remain pan of Blue Cross &amp; Blue Shield of
Ohio's "Super Blue" network, which the insurer is seeking to
streamline.
.
MctroHealth Medical Center, which had not been part of the
Super Blue network, has been added. On Thursday, MetroHealth
signed a five-year contract with Blue Cross and irs managed-care '
subsidiary, Northeast Ohio Community Health Plan, which manages Super Blue services .
MetroHealth' s addition to the network could mean a major influx
of privately insured patients into the _county hospital, which bas
experienced financial difficulty during the last two. years.
On Oct. I, the number of hospitals in the Super Blue ·network
will be reduced, said William Silverman, spokesman for Blue
Cross.

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Katie Miller, Manager
992-2588
VINTON
Gallla County Display Yard :
155 Main St.
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Managers
388-8603

t~
''

• DepoProvera-injection • Diaphragm
• I.U.D.
• Birth control pill
• Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOUS
446-0166

By The Associated Press
The followin~ numbers were
selected in Friday s Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-3·7
Pick 4: 3-64-1
Buckeye 5: 1-8-12-13·24
The owner of one Buckeye 5
ticket with the correct five-number
combination may claim an Ohio
Lottery prize of $100.000, lbe lottery announced Saturday.
.
The winning ticket was sold m
Galion.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$458,958.
.
The 194 Buckeye 5 game tickets
with four of the numbers are each

and shot him as he was on th e
ground.

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Point Pleasant, WV 25550
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992-5912

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worth $250. The 5,699 tickets with
three or the numbers are each.
worth $10. The 55,515 wilb two of
the numbers are each worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$717,523.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,417,119.50. In Pick 4 Numbers,
players wagered $330,827.50 and
will sbare $207,300.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing was $4 mil·
lion.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 4-0· 7
Daily 4: 6· 7-6-9
Cash 25: 4-8·10·13-16·18

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. CLEVELAND - . A teenager was s.entenced to life in prison
after he pleaded guilty to murder in the beating dealb of his 14-yearold girlfriend:·
.
Wayne Snitzky, 18, who was to go on trial Monday in Cuyahoga
County Common Pleas Court on a charge of aggravated murder,
was allowed to plead guilty Friday to the lesser cbarge of m.urder
before Judge William Mabon.
· ·
Assistant County Prosecutor Michael Horn said the state agreed
to the lesser charge with lbe approval of Meghan Norman's family.
·
-The Associated Press

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into th e torso, acco rdin g to a
Beth esda Hospita l emergency
department report oblaincd by t11e
Zanesville Times Recorder.
Mrs. Hill said F~iday s h ~

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Teen sentenced in girlfriend's death

Be Confident!
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STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

Hill, a member of the Ohio Unor· before a Muskin gum County grand
ganized Militia. Law enforcement jury reviewing th e shooting . The
officials deny her allegations.
grand jury is scheduled to meet
Hill, 50, of Woodsfield, was again Tuesday .
shot by Frazeysburg Police Sgt.
Sheriff Bernard Gibson said Hill
Matt May during a traffic stop June was holding a gun when he got out
28 abput 15 miles north of this of his car. May fired at Hill four
times.
eastern Ohio city.
May had stopped Hill's car .
Hill was .struck in the left chest,
because it bad a homemade plate above his right eyebrow and on the
instead of an Ohio license plate. left side of his face.
Hill's plate said " Militia 3-13
.lbe wound on his left cheek had
a deep, gouging track that angled
Chaplain."
Mrs. Hill testified twice Friday the bullet into the left shoulder and

Disaster aid paid to Ohioans

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
rarest quality of all:

LARGE SELECTION

•

ZANESVILLE (AP) - A militia member shot in a confrontation
with police was a murder victim,
his wife says.
"Somebody shot him while he
was on the ground,·' Arleen Hill

'

POMEROY - The following responsibility, $75 plus costs;·
cases were resolved Wednesday in
Glassco Fairrow II. Pomeroy.
the Meigs County Court of Judge DUI. $750 plus costs, 30 days jail
Patrick H. O'Brien.
suspended to 10 days, one year OL
Fined were: Michael\ Conlin, suspension, 90-day vehicle immoMiddleport, domestic; dolence, bilization, two ye!lfS probation:
costs, 30 days jail suspended to leaving tbe ·scene of an acciden~
tlme served, two years probation; "· costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10
Ruby F. Nakao, Racine, tum sig- days concurrent. two years probanal, $25 plus costs; seat belt, $25 lion;
plus costs; Raben L. Ellis, Crown
Sheila Stanley, Mason, DUI.
City, seat belt, $25 plus costs; $500 plus costs, 10 days jail susKaren L. Lamb, Middleport, seat pended to three days, 180-day OL
bel~ $25 plus costs;
suspension, one year probation,
. Peggy Reiunire, Pomeroy, driv- $250 of fine and jail suspended
age consumption and fined $150,
30 days jail suspended, one year ing under the influence, $750 plus upon completion of residential
probation and SO hours of commu- costs, 30 days jail suspended to 10 treatment program; Christopher
days, one-year operator's license Stites, Pomeroy, criminal trespass·
nity service.
suspension, 90-day vehicle immo- ing. $50 plus costs, three days jail
Common Pleas
.
GALLIPOLIS - Richard L. bihzation, two years . probation; suspended, one year probation,
Chapman and Sandra Maxhimer. Paul Chadwell. Middleport, DUI, restraining order issued;
both of Bidwell, have been termi- $500 plus costs, 10 days jail susDeborah L. Diddle, Pomeroy,
nated from probation in Gallia pended to three days. 90-day OL seat belt, $25 plus costi; no 1:hild
County Common Pleas Court. Both. suspension, one year probation, restraint, costs only; Brenda K. ·
were charged with drug traJficking $250 of .fine and jail suspended Randolph, Pomeroy, seat beli, $15
in April 1992.
upon completion of residenti.al plus costs; Karen L. L:unb, MiddleProbate
treabllent program;
port, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Keith
GALLIPOLIS - The following
Troy Yankuns, Pomeroy, DUI, T. Herdman, Pomeroy, seat b'ell,
couples recenlly filed for marriage $750 plus costs, 30 days jail sus- $15 plus costs;·
in Gallia County Probate Coun:
pended to 10 days, one-year OL
F. Phillip Ramey Jr .. Zanesville.
Jill Paige Allison and Douglas suspension, two years probation, no OL, $100 plus costs, five days
Alan Cox, both of Gallipolis; Amy 90-day vehicle immobilization;_ no jail suspended if valid OL presentBethel Bailey and Luis Fernando OL, $50 plus costs, 30 days Jail ed within 60 days; seat belt, $25
Zurita, both of Rio Grande; Beth s~spcnded to 10 days c.oncurrent plus costs; Terry D. Burns,
Alisba Daniels, Crown City, and With DUI, two years prob~tion;
Wilkesville, driving under FRA
Steven Glen Carter, Gallipolis;
Tina Slater, Racme, seat belt, suspension, $200 plus costs; two
Anne Elizabeth Brown, Bidwell, $15 plus costs; possession of drug years probation, 10 days jail susand Jason Brian Sims, Chillicothe; paraphernalia, $50 plus C?~ts; pended if valid OL presented withRebecca Jean McCormick and Steven James, Pomeroy, drovmg in 90 days 30 day vehicle immobiDanny Carron Taylor, both of Gal- 1under financial responsibility lization· '
·
lipolis; Stacy N. Moss and Rodney action suspension, $100 'plus costs,
Sha~na A. Doucet Racine
E. Byus, boll! of Gallipolis; and 60-day. vehicle immobilization, 30 speed, $24 plus costs; se~t belt, $2S
Rhonda Lynn Carter and Terry Len days JIDI suspended to 10 '!3ys, two plus costs; Scott Reed, Jackson,
Reed, both of Gallipolis.
years probatiOn; no fmanc1al criminal damaging, assault, crimi-

EMS units record 10 calls

Sunday Times-Seni inel /AS

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

Gallia County court news
Municipal
GALLIPOLIS -The following
cases were recently resolved in
GaUipolis Municipal Court
Pamela J. Mooney, 28, 8612
State Route 7, Gallipolis, was
charged with driving under the
influence and fined $850, 12 days
~ail, one (year probation and a one
year license suspension.
Kimberly J. Upchurch, 27, 246
Dillon Extension, Gallipolis, was
charged with driving under the
influence and fined $450, three
days jail, one year probation and a
180 day license suspension.
Marian Penley, 30, 436 State
Route 7 North, Gallipolis, was
charged with possession of a
Schedule 5 drug and fined $150, 10
days jaiJ suspended, one year probation and ordered to auend
monthly Narc-a-non moolings.

0 hi o/W. Va.

September 24, 1995

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�Commentary

)

September 24, 1995

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A6

Ill Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 991-1156

815 Tblrd Ave, G•Utpoll.o, Ohio
(614) 446-1.341

ROBERT L WJ;NGETT
Publisher
MARGARET LEHEW
Controller '

HOBART WILSON JR.

Enculhe Editor

A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press
A&gt;sociotion and !he American Newspaper Pubtisben AsSO&lt;iation.
LETTERS OF OPINION an: w~lcome . They should be leso than
300 words long. Allletten are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and tel.epbone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good tute, addressing iuuea, not
personalities.

. Washington Today: .

•.

President weighs in
with cultural outrage

WASHINGTON - It takes a
lot for a government program, ooce
begun, 10 run out of gas - but the
federal helium reserve, initiated
seven decades ago for a fleet of
military blimps, may finally be.
doing just that.
The Helium Field Operations
Project, operated by the U.S .
Bureau of Mines and located in
Amarillo, Texas, has vied for years
with federal mohair subsidies for
top honors as the government's
most ridiculed pork barrel project
Yet the program still survives.
Ronald Reagan couldn't axe it,
even in the early days of his presidency when his popularity was
highest. In fact, the story of its survival and expected demise is a classic Washington tale of how oti'r
gpvemment really works.
In the early days . following
World War I, the U.S. military
envisioned a large tleet of blimps
to be used for reconnaissance,
bomb delivery and otlier duties. So
the government began stoCkpiling

By TERENCE HUNT ·
AP White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON- Rap music. Racy movies. Now ads for jeans. They
are all symbols of the culttU'lll wars buffeting presidential politics, underscoring the growing importance of social issues in the contest for the
White House.
President Clinton flfed the latest shot, denouncing Calvin Klein advertisemeniS that show young people in strikingly suggestive poses.
"Outrageous," said Clinton, the father of a teen-age daughter. "It was
wrong 10 manipulate those children and use them for commercial benefit."
Already criticized as kiddie porn and withdrawn under pressure by
Klein, the ads were ripe for political attack.
Clinton pounced after reading an advance copy of a newspaper column
written by his wife, Hillary, condemning the Klein ads as disturbing
exploitation.
The first lady lOOk her attack well beyond the Klein ads. She encouraged Americans to "stay away from the.thearers and tum off our (relevi·sion) seiS because we are so offended by .the gratuitous violence, s~xual
degradation and bad L'ISte we are subjected to on the screen."
The criticism from the White House was just the latest volley by a
politician in the name of family values.
•'There's all kinds of evidence that suggest that cultural considerations
are as important as economic ones in moving voters,"· said Thomas
Mann, director of governmental studies for the Brookings Institution.
"Clinton is trying to find some basis of engaging voters who have turned
away from lhe Democratic Party."
Conservatives doubt Clinton's sincerity but worry that he's striking a
chord with voters.
"Any lime the Democratic Party or the president can touch a socially
conservative theme, it yanks back on millions o( voters who in the last 10
years have drifted out of their party,_'' said Gary Bauer•. a former Reagan
While House aide who runs the Famtly Research Council, a social conscr-

helium, which was far better than
the flammable gas the Germans
used.
The program puttered along for

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
decades, receiving a huge infusion
of cash in 1960 when the government bought the entire reserve for
$258 million borrowed from the
American taxpayer. And over lime,
the program accumulated far more
helium than the government will
ever need. The current reserve 32 billion cubic feet - is enough
to supply the U11i1ed States for 80
years - or the entire world for a
decade.
'Defenders of the helium reserve
claim the program should be kepi
because it turns a "profit" - $12
million in 1994. But this is a profit
on paper only, since it's one gov-

Sarpalius told our associate Dale
Van Alta thai be never cut a specific deal with Clinton in exchange
for his vote. But be does acknowledge speaking with Clinton four
limes on the day of the vote - and
that he used his time with the president to push for the helium program. Ultimately, Sarpalius voted
with Clinton. Soon thereafter. the
helium program escaped criticism
when the National Performance
Review was released.
Despite his heroic efforiS to save
the helium program, Sarpalius
wasn't rewarded by his Amarillo
constituents, who bounced him in
favor of Republican Mac Thornberry in the 1994 elections. The helium opponeniS once again had rea·
son to cheer. Even Clinton- who
was released from his pledge once
Sarpalius was defeated- came out
against the helium program.
Once in office, Thornberry
quickly found himself - like the
helium stored underground - ·
caught between a rock and a hard .
place . Although be ran for
Congress as &lt;In opponent of waste· ·
ful government spending, his own .
congressional district' was borne 10 ·
one of the most wasteful programs
of all.
So far, Thornberry has chosen ·
the middle road. In an interview .
with us, he strongly defended the :
program as something that's "too
easy to make fun of, even though it .
gets no current appropriation from :
the federal government. There has ·
been a lot of misunderstanding
about it."
But with the deficit taking center stage this year, it looked as if
the helium program was finally on
its way out. So Thornberry threw
his support behind Clinton's.plan,
which phases the project out over a
three-year period and provides a
. ~·soft landing" for iiS workers.
That plan didn't win the day in
the House Resource Committee last
week, however. Instead, an ISmonth termination plan snagged a
26 to 9 vote. The vote is an early
indicator that the reserve, though
representing only a minuscule part .
of the federal budget, may be in iiS .
last days. But given its history, it
may still be too early to tell if the ·
helium reserve will rise again from .
its most recent setback.
(Jack Anderson and Michael .
Blnsteln are columnists for Unit· .
ed Feature Syndicate.)

ernment agency selling helium to
another. Besides. if NASA and the
Defense Department weren't
required by law to buy their helium
from Uncle Sam; they could find it
on the private market at far lower
prices.
After years of ridiculing the program, deficit hawks in Congress
thought the program was doomed
when the Clinton administralion set
about 10 " reinvent" government.
The word around Congress was
that the president's "National Performance Review" would target
the program for elimination .
But those hopes faded when
Clinton desperately needed an extra
vote for his 1993 budget plan,
which passed the House of Representatives by a one-vote margin.
· One of the most critical voles in
that d~amatic debate belonged to
then-Rep. Bill Sarpalius, D-Texas,
who just happened to represent the
Amarillo district where 200 voting
citizens work for the helium pro·
gram.

ANoTHE~

CALVIN KLEIN

AD

nomics over values, Bauer said.

,

··

\

·

Politicians of every stripe are trying to connect with Americans by
addressing their concerns on social issues- teen pregnancy, family
breakups, violence, the coarsening1:1f-the cplture.
Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole, a candidate for the Republican presidential nomination, made headlines by attackil)g Hollywood for sex and
violence in music and movies, singling out groups such as Cannibal
Corpse, Gcto Boys and 2 Live Crew and movies such as Natural Born
Killers and True Romnnce.
It was reminiscent of the assault on Hollywood values by Dan Quayle
who, as vice president, charged that J!l~ TV character Murphy Brown was
glamorizing illegitimacy and undermmmg values by havmg a child out of
wedlock.
.
For Clinton, the emphasis on family values is yet another move toward
tl)e political center. On school prayer, a favorite Republican issue: Clinto.n
~ssened that the First Amendment ''does not convert our schools mto religion-free zones."
·
Under GOP pressure, Clinton proposed a balanced-budget plan that
was scorned by many Democrat&lt;. And to the dismay of liberals, he
e)nbraced a Senate welfare reform plan that would a~&gt;?lis~ the longstanding federal guar-.mtee of aid for every poor fam1ly that IS ehg1ble.
· An of this comes as one of Clinton's pollsters, Stanley Greenberg,
warns that the president is ··rundamentally mispositioned for 1996"
among working class, non-college educated ":hue voters. These ~?~ers,
Greenberg said, do not believe Clinton rs workmg to address thelf hves
and daily struggles.''
They are also extremely anxious about a decline .in values, .and some.
qilestion Clinton's authority to deal .wtth the tSsue, gtven quesuons about
Ills personal life.
·
. "The national character deficit is more important than any budget
deficit or all the problems being talked about in Washington," former
education secretary William Bennett said last week. "My only worry is
uiat it becomes a fad, the flavor of the month. We did granola. We did
jogging. Now we're doing virtue.
· "This ain't some passing fancy," he said. "This is important stuff:'
- (Terence Hunt has covered the Reagan, Bush and Clinton presl·
d'encies and is the AP's chief While House correspondent.)

Today in hi.story

.

you.''

Judge L1mce Ito, remarking that
"the court can control lhe orderly
process." allowed Simpson to
speak. o·
"As much as I would like to
address some of the misrepresentations about myself, and my Nicole,
and our life together, I am mindful

. At this point in time, I understand that each player is 10 be given
a jersey with his playing number on
it I am not cenain as to what' other

Fred W. Crow
events will transpire at that time.
Nevertheless, it will be exciting to
me. I only hope that I don't blow
this by not being able to ¥o, but I
can assure you that if I m conscious I will be at this game.
Some other biiS of information
that you may enjoy are as follows:
I. Coach Stahl is 'tbe one coach
still living at this time.
2. It is my understanding that
there were 8 I ,000-plus fans at the
1935 gapte.
3. The price per ticket in 1935
was $2.
4. My seat is in Section 21A,
Row '1, Seat I. This will mean that
there are very few steps I will have
to climb. My sons, Carson and
Rick, will attend this game with
me.
5. There were no scholarships
given to students at that time and
very few received job opportunities. Yours truly was a waiter, dishwasher, elevator operator and a
professional pallbearer.
One old lady wanted to be
buried in style and she had no relatives and no friends. The only people attending this funeral were the

By MARCY G.QRDON
Terwilliger told the Senate JudiciaAssoclatedPress Writer
ry subcommittee on terrorism,
WASHINGTON - On the technology and government inforbeels of sharply conflicting tesli- mation.
mony by FBI officials, Justice
That shooting by an FBI sniper
Department executives now are during the 11-day Ruby Ridge
giving divergent views or FBI siege came as Mrs. Weaver stood
shoot-on-sight rules used in the behind the door of the family's
.siege against white separatist mountainside cabin holding .her
Randy Weaver.
infant daughter on Aug. 2Z, 1992.
At a Senate hearing Friday, the A day earlier, the Weavers' 14author of a Justice Department task year-old son, Sam, and Deputy
force report on the August 1992 U.S. Marshal William Degan died
Ruby Ridge siege stood by the in a gunfight that occurred a&lt; Cederreport's conclusion in June 1994 al agents che~~edout Weaver's
that the FBI shooting directive was property m ant•c•pattol\ of arresung
unconstitutional. The Justice _ him on a weapons charge.
Deparunent recently disputed that
Earlier this week, Eugene
finding, saying it remains an open Glenn, the FBI field commander at
question that is .part of a pending the scene, testrfied that suspended
criminal investigation.
former FBI Deputy Du&lt;:&lt;tor Larry
The Justice Department's for-· Potts approved the umque order
mer No. 2 official, testifying at the. that snipers ••could and should "
same hearing ; said the FBI was fire at any armed adult male spot"clearly in error'' when it issued a ted outside the Weavers' cabin.
directive that snipers should fire at
Potts disputed that in subsequent
armed adults at Weaver's Idaho testimony, saying, ''This change
homestead.
was made at the crisis site by onBut former Deputy Attorney scene officials after 1 had
General George Terwilliger also approved" an earlier version of the
said he .believed thai the language rules that said "can" but not
using the word "should" was not "should."
· unconstitutional.
'
Polls, who is among five lOp
"I do not believe" the order FDI officials now under suspension
that preceded the FBI's killing of ·amid a federal crimi~al investigaWeaver's wife, Vicki, "was meant tion of tbe destruction of some
to be an unlawful license to kill," Ruby Ridge documents at FBI

.

preacher, the funeral director and end on both sides of t.lle line. I was.
six· OSU football players ·as her out of position the first two years at.
pallbearers. We received $35 total OSU. I played the strong side end ·
and I received $5. Thlu was a lot of which was the containing end. My ,
money in those days, but I decided best position was thC weak side or ..
that I would never again be a pro- charging and there I did excel. I .
was a good pass catcher and an
fessional pallbearer.
Our coach was Francis Schmidt · average blocker on offense.
In addition, the only thing that a ,
Francis had been a sergeant in the
anny prior to coaching. He was as player received from the university
·rough and tough as any person you would be free tickeiS to the' game .. .
would ever see or know. Although Each sophomore get two tickets,
he had a coaching staff available, juniors got three and the seniors got..
he rarely used any of them. In four. Most players would sell these
short, he was both the offensive tickets and keep the· money. My 1
tickeiS were always given to memand defensive coordinaior.
.•
Francis Schmidt had the most bers of my family.
In
conclusion,
I
have
never
been
wide open football team in the
country. He believed in the lateral quite as excited for a long, long '
pass. One of his plays involved time over any event. I can recall, as ..
three laterals. He.was like a cat and a kid, when I got my first baseball ·
could tell in a minute's time glove at Chrisunas, how thrilled I. .
whether you were doing your job was. This event rivals· that one in
or not.
intensity. I only hope that I can be::
There were very few specialisiS present for the festivities. .
who played for Schmidt. The quarIn Gnd we trus~ ~;
terbacks had to have plays in difCany on, •...•.
ferent formations on paper, which ·.
Fred W. Crow .::
EDITOR'S NOTE- Long· ,.
were conveniently placed under
their helmets. He had, at least, lime attorney Fred W. Crow Is If" .
seven or eight different fonnations the contributor of a weekly col· ~
and the quarterback had to be able umn to The Sunday Times-Sen• "
to call a play from any one or them. line!. Readers wishing to ~
The T or split T formations were applaud, crlllclze or comment on ~·
not known in college football at' any subject (except religion or :i
that lime, although it was being politics) are encouraged to write ·~
introduced in the pros.
lo Mr. Crow In care of this news- •
••
In 1935, a player played both paper.
offense and defense. I was the left

unknown .

'(:OULD NOT' KILL -Double-murder defendant OJ, Simp·
son declared ''I did not, could not and would not" commit murder
as he addre~&lt;ed the court Friday In Los Angeles. The jury was not
present. Both sides then rested, finishing the presentation of evidence in one of the most sensational criminal trials In American
history. (AP)
viet him of second-degree murder.
still shaking with anger in a news
He told them closing argumeniS conference outside court.
would begin Tuesday and be was
"If he had a statemen't to make
considering longer coun hours next he should have gouen on the .damn
week to speed things up.
stand and said something and not
The 10 women and two men on been a coward and been unable to
the jury, along with two alternates, have the prosecution question
have been sequestered at a hotel for him," Goldman said.
more than eight months.
Then, referring to Simpson's
Fred Goldman, who sat in coun statement about missing his chiland muttered "murderer" under dren, Goldman said: "I will never
his breath as Simpson spoke. was see my son again."

headquarters, said the Justice
Department is withholding evidence tlmt would exonerate him.
And Charles Mathews, who
conducted an internal FBI review
last year of the Ruby Ridge operation, backed up Potts, testifying
that the unique rules were approved
by FBI ageniS Glenn and Richard
Rogers at the northern Idaho scene,
not at headquarters.
· Five FBI agents wbo were at
Ruby Ridge, including Rogers and
Lon Horiuchi, the sniper who shot
and killed Mrs . Weaver, have
invoked their Fifth Amendment
right against self-incrimination and
refused to testify.
The author of the Justice
Dcparonent task force repon, Barbara Berman, told the senators she
hadn't seen the notes described by
Potts. which he said demonsl!illte he
did not approve the improper
shooting rules.
Berman, who was then assistru11
counsel in the Justice Department's
Office of Professional Responsibility, said she had been unable to
determine who approved lhe
unique Fill shooting rule because
there was insufficient doc~mcnta­
tion.

"We could not explain why
there were no records available for
us to look at." said Berman, who is
now first assistant U.S. attorney in
'

.

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Milwaukee.
Terwilliger said he was on vacation during the siege and that his
top deputy, Jeffrey Howard, bandied the Justice Department's liaison with the FBI in the operation's
first days.
Terwilliger conceded that he
bears some responsibility for whal
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views of what the future will be
like, adding further risk to an
already big challenge: integrating
an acquisition into a larger unit
without ruining iiS vitality.
In the interim, while companies
such as Time Warner are battling 10
control the demons within the company, more agile competitors with
eyes focused on goals could nibble
away at the market, a Ia Microsoft
and IBM.
Add these to the routine impedimeniS, such as regulatory intervenlion and lawsuits - and in Time
Warner's case, an ·enormous load
~f debt - and it might be a long
ume before shareholders receive
their due.
Already, they. h.a~e been wailing
a while. Before Jommg with Warner Communications to form Time
Warner, the Time Inc. board turned
down a $200 a share offer from
Paramount, much larger than they
eventually received.
(John Cunniff Is a business
analvst for The Associated
Press.)

NATO is pressing its efforts to
· rescue the fighter pilots, U.S. Adm.
Leighton Smith , the alliance's
commander for souU1ern Europe,
said Friday at a news conference.
The search parties went inlo
action Sept. 6, 7 and 8. The first
two au em pis were hampered by
bad weather and mel with some
small arms fire, Smith told
reporters in Naples.
A barrage of bullets forced the
third to turn back in the darkness
after 30 minutes over the area. ButleiS or metal shards from the fusillade struck the two Americ:UI crewmen in the leg.
They continued carrying out
their duties despite their wounds,
Smith said. NATO warplanes
returned lire.
One crewman suffered a " grazing wound" to the knee by a piece

of shrapnel and has returned to
active duty. The other had a piece;
of shrapnel embedded in his thigh
and was convalescing.
Both are back in the Unite~
States at Eglin (\ir force base in
Hurlburt, Aa. Neither was identi~
lied.
.
The French Mirage 2000 wa~
shot down at the outset of NATO's
bombing campaign against the'
Bosnian Serbs.
·
A strange scene emerged aftet
intelligence experts examined a:
photograph from a German recon"
naissance plane, said O.S . Navy
Capt. Mark Van Dyke, a NATQ
spokesman.
"In the clearing, there appeared
to be a crudely drawn outline of an
aircraft, and other figures that
appeared to be similar to a call sign
or the &lt;~ircrafl, " he said. The radiq
call sign was EBRO 33, and tho
figures E, B and two 3s apparently;
could be made out.
.
''Tbete was potential thoso
symbols could have been drawn by
the airmen," Van Dyke said.
.
Smith said the ph01ograpb was
part or "convincing evidence" thai
it was worth sending In rescue
teams. No voice contact was made
with the French airman, unlike the
case of U.S. airman Scott o•Grady,.
who was plucked out of Bosnia in a
,dramatic rescue in June after evad- ·
ing Bosnian Serbs for six days.
The United States bas no groum} .
troops in Bosnia but participates in
NATO· air raids and other alliance..
operations there.
Fifteen or 16 people were on
each of the U.S. helicopters;
including U.S. Air Force and Army
personnel and French air force rep-.
resentatives, Smith said.

(614) 446- 5100

:..

..."'
Shareholders forgotten in merger mania· :i....••
•.

By The-Associated Pre~•
'
· Today is Sunday, Sept. 24, the 267th day of 1995. There are 98 days
left in the year. The )ewish New Year, Rosh Hashanah, begins at sunset.
· Today's Highlight in History: '
NEW YORK - The folks who decisions of managements, but in
Merging large, high-identity
· On Sept. 24; 1789, Congress passed the First Judiciary Act, which prodevise
these
big
mergers
have
an
this
proposed
merger
they,
along
corporations
has proved more of a
vided for an Attorney General and a Supreme Court.
awful
lotto
think
about,
so
you
can
with
large
shareholders,
have
a
challenge than the textbooks enviOn this date:
In 1869, thousands of businessmen were ruined in a Wall Street panic understand why they can forget a very special interest, the dilution of sioned. In theory, big mergers C:UI
after fmanciers Jay Gould and James Fisk attempted to corner the gold few things. Like shareholders.
produce efficiencies of scale and
In the buyout of Turner Broadsynergy, but as often as not the
market.
John Cunniff
reality doesn't measure up.
In 1929, Lt. James H. Doolittle guided a Consolidated NY2 biplane' casting by Time Warner, for example,
hardly
a
nod
has
been
given
to
their
Time
Warner
shares.
In fact, some of the largest corover Mitchel Field in New York in the first all-instrument flight.
Time Warner is expected to pay porate acquisitions have been or
In 1934, Babe Ruth made his farewell appearance as a regular player the shareholders, wbo are, in case it
with the New York Yankees in a game against the Boston Red Sox. The hasn't been made clear, the folks . for the Turner acquisition by rais- . are being undone, involving names ·
who will pay for the deal.
ing the number of iiS shares by 50 such as Kmart, Sears, AT&amp;T, liT
Sox won, 5-0.
Well,
that's
not
entirely
true.
percent, thus giving existing share- and General Motors, all as eager to
In 1948, Mildred Gillars, accused of being Nazi wartime radio propaMuch
negotiating
time
has
been
holders
less of a say in the new divest as they once were to ·acquire.
g3ndisl ." Axis Sally," ple:Wed innoce~t in ~ashington 10 charges of treadevoted
to
a
special
arrangement
company.
Seagram's for example,
son. Gillars ended up servmg 12 years m pnson.
The problems with huge mergwould
have
markedly less say.
for
shareholder
John
Malone,
21
In 1955, President Eisenhower suffered a heart attack while on vacaers, as retrospection reminds, is
True, all shareholders would that they involve big egos, conflictpercent owner of Turner BroadCasttion in Denver.
mg.
But
publicly,
shareholders
lhen
have a stake in a larger com- ing cultures, the absence of expectIn !957, the Broolclyn Dodgers played their last game at Ebbets Field,
pany,
but size doesn't mean a ed synergy, lost visions and focus,
seem
to
have
been
an
afterthought.
defeating tl)e l'ittsburgb Pirates 2-0.
thing.
Profitability
does. Share val- and the simple inability to run
That
includes
big
shareholders
In 1960, the USS Enterprise. the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier,
ues
are
based
on
earnings,
and the mammoth entities.
and
little
ones
alike.
was launched at Newport News, Va
new
entity
could
have
a
hard
lime
Big
ones,
such
as
the
Seagram
In 1963, the U.S. Senate ratified a treaty with Britain and the Soviet
The recent mergers in technolomeeting
expectations.
Co.,
which
owns
15
percent
of
Union limiting nuclear teSting.
~y, communications and informaIt wouldn't be the ftrSt time. In Uon add another factor: The inabiliIn 1969, the trial of the Chicago Eight (later Seven) began. Five of the Time Warner shares, and U S West
fact,
Time Wamer management has ty to foresee bow the future will
which
has
a
25.5
percent
stake
in
defendaniS were convicted of crossing state lines to incite rialS at the 1968
been
criticized for failing 10 raise evolve. At best, all such mergers
Time
Warner
Entertainment,
and
Democratic national convention, but the convictions were ultimately overwhich
fears
iiS
rights
and
interests
earnings
at a faster rate following are based as mucb on visions as on
turned.
the
merger
of Time Inc. and Warn- sound business insighiS.
In 1976, newspaper heir~ss Patricia Hearst was sentenced to seven could be damaged.
. Small shareholders have long er Communications. It could very
years in prison for her pan m a 1974 bank robbery. Sbe was released after
The likelihood is high that new
been resigned to accepling the well happen again.
22 months under an executive clemenrr ort!er from President Carter.
technology will skew existing

ByVANIAGRANDI
Associated Press Wrller
NAPLES, Italy - The reconnaissance photo was dramatic: a
man standing alone in the woods or
Bosnia, near a road, pointing to a
small clearing .
Drawn into the dirt or the clearing was the crude outline of an airCraft, and the letters E, B and two
3s - part of the call sign (If two
French fighter pilots shot down
Aug. 30 by Bosnian Serbs.
The possibility that the scene
was a desperate attempt by the
French fliers to signal for a rescue
sent NATO commando teams into
action three times this month
aboard armor-plated helicopters,
NATO revealed Friday. But bad
wealher and Serb gunfire foiled the
missions, leaving two American
servicemen wounded and the
French pilots' whereabouts still

Justice officials take closer look at FBI rules

OSU vs.
Notre Dame: weekend of a lifetime
.
The moment I have been waiting for ~ next weekend. The weekend begins when our 1935 football
squad meets at Fawcett Center,
Columbus, on Friday evening to
attend a banquet.
According to the chairman,
there will only be 17 players
·attending. There are believed to be
20 living out of a squad of approximately 60. One of those who will
be m'issing will be Tippy Dye.
Tippy bad previously scheduled a
trip 10 the wildwoods of Minnesota
and be reporiS.it would be almost
impossible to gel to the banquet
and return to Minnesota; therefore,
he will probably be absent. This
will take some of the. luster out of
this party for me.
Vince Gratzer, a national sporiS
writer from Los Angeles, Calif., is
writing a book or some publication
penaining to the 1935 game. I am
schedujed to be interviewed by him
sometime on Friday.
. On Saturday, Sept. 30, we are to
attend a luncheon at Drake Union
hosted by OSU President and Mrs.
Gee. Oite of the outstanding things
about President Gee is that he
wears a bow tic.
At 3:30 on Saturday, the big
game between OSU and Notre
Dame commences. At halftime
during the game my big moment
arrives. The 1935 players are
scheduled to meet as a squad and
board golf earlS to tour the field.

to find missing pilots :

of the mood and the stamina of this
jury:" Simpson said in a strong
voice.
" I have confidence, a lot more
it seems than Miss Clark has, or
t)leir integrity and that they will
find as the record stands now, that I
did not, could not and would not
have committed this crime.''
"I have four kids. Two kids I
haven't seen in a year. They ask me
every week, 'Dad, how much
longer? I want this trial over."
Defense attorney Johnnie
Cochran Jr. argued Simpson had a
right to ~rsonally waive his right
to testify, and he told reponers his
client merely bluned out what has
long been bottled inside of him.
"He was speaking from his
heart," Cochran said. "That was
spontaneous."
'
'-·
But The New Yorlc Times, citing
a defense lawyer It didn't name,
reported Saturday that Simpson had
worked on the ·statement for two
weeks with the help of Cochran
and another lawyer, Robert Kardashian.
"This was so well-rehearsed,"
said Laurie Levenson, a Loyola
Law School professor. 'It's O.J.
making his case to the world, and
to potential jurors and possibly to
the jury iiSelf." .
' .'It is certainly out or bounds,"
added Robert Pugsley, a law professor a( Southwestern University.
"I'm at a loss to explain how Ito
let that get out of his control. I just
think this was a slip that was not
excusable."
After Simpson's speech, Ito
called the jury and read lengthy
instructions. In clear, concise
terms, he explained to them that if
they acquitted Simpson of firstdegree murder, they still could con-

By LINDA DEUTSCH
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - Just as be
did on the football field, O.J. Simpson had a glimmer of daylight and
made the most of it.
· Instead of merely stating his
decision not to teslify, be stood and
launched into a dramatic plea or
innocence, hammered home with
the words: "I did not, could not
and would not have committed this
crime.··
And though it came ouiSide the
jury's presence before both sides
rested Friday, enraged prosecutors
and the father of one victim had little doubt it would reach
sequestered panelists during this
weekend's conjugal visiiS.
"Are we nuts? Do we really
believe that these people are
sequestered to the point where they
don't know what's going on in the
outside world?" asked Fred Goldman, whose son Ron was slashed
to death along with Nicole Brown
Simpson 15 months ago.
"This was part of the no.rmal
orchestrated defense,'' Goldman
said, 'throwing garbage out there
on a regular basis to influence this
jury above and beyond testimony."
Even before Simpson spoke,
prosecu!Or MarCia Clark su~gested
the defense was trying to manipulate public opinion and perhaps
send a message to the jury. ''Please
don't do this, your honor, I beg

.

.

NATO presses effort

As both sides rest, O.J. makes one
more declaration of his innocence

vcltivc grOup.

"It should be a warning to Republicans not to play games at their convention by watering down their platform on these issues," favoring eco-

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A 7

The end is near

No need for it, but helium project flies high
A Division of

Nation/World

September 24, 1995

·

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STOPPED- Wabama running back Dale Johnson
Is tripped
up by Melg&lt;~ safety Paul PuiHns (at Johnson's reet) after a short gain
)'hlle Marauders Craig Knight (58), Adam Barrell (72) and Jayson
Parsons (43) give pursuit during Friday night's game In Pomeroy,
where the Marauders won 35-7. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)

•

1995 WINDSTAR LX

.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
Academy bead football coach Brent
Saunders predicted a "knock down;
drag out" type football game with
visiting Warren Local on Memorial
Field Friday night.
It's exactly what the fans on both
sides of the field witnessed.
Coach Mike DeVol's Warriors
piled up a 19-7 halftime lead, then
held on for dear life as the Blue
Devils came storming back in the
last two quarters to knot the count at
19-all, and force the contest into
overtime.
Warren Local scored on its firs!
overtime when Eric

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Mitcbell pass to end the threat. Ten
plays and 68 yards later Matt
. Williams blasted over from two
yards out with 6:11 left in the third
period. Jayson Parsons added the
extra points to give the maroon and
gold a 27-7 lead.
Meigs scored its last touchdown
of the evening after a 42-yard Joey
Mayes punt rolled dead at the
Marauder five-yard line. Ten plays
and 95 yards later Hanson booked
up with Pullins on a 11-yard scoring
toss. PuUins made an excellent catch
by just getting his feet down around
the pylon for the six pointer. Pullins
then caught a pass from Hanson for
the extra points.
Williams had scored two plays
earlier but the play was called back
by .a chop block on the Marauders.
Pullins then made a diving catch
dragging one foot as he went out of
bounds, but once again the
Marauders had a penalty moving the
ball to the White Falcon 11. One
play later Hanson hooked up with

.

PuUins for the touchdown.
Sophomore tailback Matt
Williams once again bad an outstanding night for the Marauders
with 19~. yards in 29 carries. Cleland
added 12 carries for 98 yards.
Hanson was nine of 13 with one
'interception for 158 yards, Pullins
pulled in eight for 126 yan!s and
Marshall one for 32. Marshall and
and Chad Hanson bad interceptions
for Meigs. One thing that burt the
Marauders all night was the penalty
flag, the Marauders were penalized
16 times for 175 yards.
For Wahama, Jason King carried
four times for 74 yard s. Da.vid
Mitchell was tow of nine in the air
with one interception for 33 yards.
King completed one of two for 14
yards and Stormy See failed to complete a pass in three attempts with a
interception. Keith Cundiff caught
two passes for Waharna for 33 yards
and Lane Young caught one for 14
yards . See had an interception for
(See MARAUDERS on 8 •3)

.

the flfSt overtime, the teams continue playing until someone scores the
most points.
Friday nigh~ GAHS won the toss,
Reusser blasted over from the two- but elected to give Warren Local
yard line on a third and goal situa- the first crack at scoring. Reusser
lion. Nathan Evans kicked the point ripped off 10 to the 10, Brandon
after to give tbe Warriors a 26-19 Church got four to the six, Reusser
lead.
four to the two, then Reusser
GAHS came right ~ck. Jason rammed it in, followed by Evans'
,
Dailey scored from the\ three on kiclc.
third down to reduce the deficit to
Then is was Gallipolis' turn.
26-25. T.C . Beaver's kick from Dave Ruclcer ripped off a 14-yarder
placement was wide to the lef~ giv- to the six. Jesse Stacy lost two,
ing Warren Local a victory in the -Dailey got five to the three, then
1995 Southeastern Ohio Athletic pushed it in. No time is kept in overLeague opener for both schools.
time play. Beaver's kick just missed
It wasuthe first overtime contest going over the crossbar. It was off to
ever for the Blue Devils. Until1984, the left. End of game.
ties were counted in Ohio high
Gallipolis had two chances to win
school football play. When comput- il in regulation.
er ratings were developed for the
Isaac Saunders hit Rob
post-season playoffs, coaches agreed . Woodward with a seven yard touchto the overtime rule in 1985.
down strike with 4:17 left to knot
When a regulationgame'ellds in a the count at 19-all. Beaver's kick
tie, a coin flip determines who gets from placement bit the left upright
flfSI crack at scoring. Each rerun gets on the goa!_pds~ denying GAHS the
the ball on the 20-yard line. If a lead.
•
team gets a frrst down, then it has
The GaiUans regained possession
four more downs to punch it across. with 2:08 left in the final stanza.
If the score is still tied at the end of Following a five-yard penalty,

GAHS erases 12-point halftime deficit
to force ·contest beyond regulation

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on the frrst down King blasted up
the middle running over one
Marauder and breaking several taclc·
les en route to the end zone. Dale
Johnson's kick was good to tie the
game at seven.
Meigs made it a 13-7 contest
after tbe Wabama kickoff by putting
together a 10-play, 68-yard drive
that saw Hanson score on a quarterback sneak with 5:26 left in the first
period.
The first period ended as the
Marauders were driving for their
third score. Cass Cleland capped off
the drive with a 21-yard run, the run
for the extra points was no good bu!
the Marauders held a 19-7 lead at
the 10:46 mark of the first half.
Neither team threatened the rest of
the flfSt half and the half ended with
the Marauders holding tbe 19-7
advantage.
Wabama received the kickoff to
start the second half and drove to tbe
Meigs 36-yard line. But Mike
Marshall picked off a David

Warren beats Gallipolis 26-25 in OT

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By DAVE HARRIS
Tlmts-Sentlnel Correspondent
POMEROY -Senior quarterback Brent Hanson threw for 158
yards and two touchdowns to lead
tbe Meigs Marauden to 35-7 win
over Bend Area rival Wa:bama
before a packed bouse Friday
evening at Bob Roberts Field.
The win was the third in a row
for tbe Marauders.
Meigs (3-1) received tbe opening
kickoff and quickly jumped on top
7-Q. It took the Marauders just five
plays to drive 64 yards for the score.
Man Williams picked up 12 yards
on three carries before Cass Cleland
ripped off 20 yards to give Meigs a
(rrst down at the Wahama 32-yard
line. Brent Hanson then bit a wide
open Mike Marshall down the left
sideline for the touchdown. Jeff
Fowler added the extra points to
give Meigs a 7-0 lead.
It didn't take long for the White
Falcons (2-3) to bit pay dirt. Jason
King returned the kiclcoff 11 yards,

a

1995 BRONCO EDDIE BAUER
STEPS,

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Meigs hands Wahama 35-7 setback

ALUM. WHEELS, POWER WINDOW, POWER LOCKS,

CAB

Section B

••

AUTOMATIC, AIR, CRUISE, TILT, AM/FM CASS,

AUTOMATIC,

~imes- itntintl

F-SUPER DUTY
POWER STROKE
DIESEL CAB
CHASSIS

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

Galila Academy punt In tbe secopd period Friday nlgbt berore
being hauled down from behind
by MoON Clark. Warren edged
the Blue J&gt;evlls l6-2! In overtime.
(Photo by Bill Ross of Elite ·
Photography).

Rucker ripped off a 22-yard, gain to
the Warriors' 45. Dailey got eight to
the 37, and Stacy picked up a first
down with a 11-yard jaunt to the 26
with 1:18 on the scoreboard clock.
However, lin that play, the ball
popped loose on rain-soaked
Memorial Field and Warren's
Reusser recovered with 47 seconds
left
"We were disappointed with our
defensive play in the first half and
the overtime period," Saunders said.
"We weren't tackling ·and offensively. our blocking assignments broke
down early in the game."
Saunders continued, "We got in a
bole early," referring to a 12-yard
out-of-bounds punt on the Gallians
21, which set up the visitors first
touchdown and a fumble by the Blue
Devils on their first possession,
recovered by GAI-fS.
Saunders added, ''I'm proud or
the way our kids fought back in the .
second half..We bad several chances
to win it."
DeVol said. "We may not beat
everyone on our schedule this year,
but we hope to be competitive.
(See GAHS on B-2)

In the Tornadoes' homecoming game,

Southern gets 22-13 win vs. Hannan ·

IN STOCK!!

By TOM HUNTER
Tlmts-Sentlnel Staff
RACINE - Junior tailback
Jamie Evans raclced up 113 yards on
the ground, as tbe Southern
Tornadoes came away with a 22-13
win over the visiting Hannan
Wildcats, in front of a large bornecoming crowd at Adams Memorial
Field Friday night.
Hannan took advantage of early
opportunities in this contest in
putting together a six-play scoring
drive early in the flfSt quarter. Stacy
Foster found paydirt at the 9:22
mark, as be ran in from 42 yards out
~ ENCOUNTJERS RESISTANCE- An unldentllled Hannan running to give the Wildcats the early lead.
hick gets resistance from Southern ddenden ~oe Kirby (left) and Jay Jody Chapman's extra-point kick
McKelvey (80) during Friday night's game In Racine, where the was good, and Hannan led 7.0.
Southern took over possession
firnadoes won 22-13. (Times-Sentinel photo by Tom Hunter)
.

f·250 SUPERCAB
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POWER STROKE
DIESEL LOADED

IN STOCK!!

•

and gained one rlfSt down, but was
forced to punt on the sixth play of
tbeir flfSt drive.
Special teams play hampered
Hannan all evening, starting with the
return of the first Tornado punt.
Hannan coughed up tbe football on
the return, giving Southern the foot· ball on tbe Hannan 34-yard line.
Seven plays later, Southern found
'tbe end zone on Jay McKelvey's
one-yard scoring plunge with 5:10
remaining in the first quarter. Jamie
Evans scored on the two-point conversion ·run, and Southern took an 86 lead, its flfSt lead of the night.
Hannan took over possession and
looked to take back the lead on
Stacy Foster's 35-yard touchdown
run. The touchdown was called baclc

on a holding penalty by the
Wildcats. and Hannan eventually
turned the ball over on downs as the
first quarter ended.
,Southern marched downfield in
six plays, culminating with Jamie
Evans' touchdown run from 29
yards out with 8:03 to play in the
first half. The two-point conversion
failed, and Southern led 14-7.
After successive possessions,
Hannan look over on its 30 and
looked to score before halftime.
Turnovers once' again made their
mark on the storyline for Hannan, as
Jody Chapman fumbled on first
down with I :54 left in the half.
Southern took over on the
Hannan 46 yard line, but was forced
to punt. Poor special teams play by

Hannan created another opponunity
for Southern, as the Wildcats fumbled on a punt return for the second
time of the night.
Southern took over on the
Hannan 13 yard line. The Wildcats
forced Southern into a fourth and
nine situation with under a minute to
play in the half. Great defensive play
sparked the Wildcats, as they picked
off Tornado quarterback Jesse
Maynard to escape the sccring
threat. Southern went to the locker
room with a 14-7 lead.
Southern took the second half
kickoff, only to turnover the ball to
Hannan on a fumble . Eight plays
la!er, Hannan pulled a huge trick out
of its offensive playbook.
(See TORNADOES on B-3)

At the Raiders' homecoming game,

Athens downs River Valley 40-18

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlma-Sentlnel Staff
CHESHIRE - In Friday night's
homecoming game and Southeastern
Ohio Athletic League gridiron opener at River Valley Higb School's
field, the Athens Bulldogs tallied
four second,.quarter touchdowns that
fueled their 40-18 win over the
Raiders.
Tbe Raiders, wbo welcomed
senior halfback Matt Jenkins, senior
cornerback Don Wamsley and junior
guard/tackle Steve Owens back from
the disabled list, drew first blood
less than two minutes after the opening kiclcoff.
After holding Athens to a three·
and-out possession that didn't move
off its 35-yard line, senior tailback
-River VaDey quarterback
Jamie
Graham scored the first of his
(15), behind the virtually rusb-proor bloc:klng offered by Steve
three
touchdowns
from five yards
(52), Dennis Dodrill (79) and Brad Kemper (68), beads for the
out.
That
capped
a
four-play, 38during Friday night's SEOAL game agal01t Athens, which the
yard drive fueled mainly by runs of
won 40-18. (Times-Sentinel photo by G, Spencer Osborne)

,.

15 and nine yards from senior quarterhack David Kelley.
Both teams failed to make it into
the red zone in their next possessions, but Athens got a substantial
break when Graham muffed quarter·
back/punter Joe Sparbawk's punt
near the Raidefll' 15. Athens recovered tbe pigskilJ. in traffic o.n the
Raiders' 32.
From there, Athens tailback/safety Kahieem Maxwell ran for six
yards before breaking into the clear
on the next play to complete a 26yard touchdown run . Shamel
Maxwell's extra-point kick gave tbe
Bulldogs a 7-61ead.
The deluge
"It was the second quarter, two
weeks in a row," said Raider boss
Merrill Triplell of the frame in
which Athens scored touctidowns on
all of its three second-quarter drives.
Meanwhile, the Raiders, who got

past midfield only·once in the four
full drives (five if the drive started in
the last 1:48 of the flfSt quarter and
carried into the second frame is
counted) they bad in that period, saw
a fumble kill the drive that crossed
tbe 50.
Kelley, who later went on to have
his best rushing night of the season,
·rumbled on tbe Bulldogs' 45 sbonly
after breaking into the guests' sec.ondary coverage area from the River
Valley 42 on a second-and-eight
play.
Shamel Maxwell was about five
yards from Kelley when the latter's
fumble occurred. Shamel Maxwell
picked up the loose ball amongst the
diving bodies and outraced tbe
Raiders for 55 yards along the
Raiders' sideline for the touchdown.
Athens took a 26-7 lead after
Shamel Maxwell's extra-point bOot
Athens wasn't done yet. Taking

1

I

•

up two of the last three Iminutes of
the second quarter, the Bulldogs sustained two reverses (a five-yard
penalty and Kabieem Maxwell's
being taken down for a five-yard
loss·to the Raidefll' 12) on a 42-yard
drive before Sparhawk rrred a 12- ·
yard touc.hdown pass to senior tight
end Mike Grippa with 19 seconds
left. Atbens led 33-6 at that point
Raiders show long
·
and short drives
River Valley was eight seconds
short of using the flfSt nine minutes
of tbe third quarter to complete a 16play, 75-yard drive that ended with
Graham's two-yard touchdown run.
But ' the Bulldogs had sel)t
Kahieem Maxwell in for a pitchoutand-reverse-of-field 29-yard touchdown run to go ahead 40-12 in the
final period's frrst minute before the
Raiders returned to executing the
(
See RAIDERS on B-3)

Glenn's catc~es help No.8 Ohio State blast Pitt~burgh 54-14
Bf JEFFREY BAm

•PmSBURGH (AP) -Terry
Glenn caught nine passes for a
sc!IOOI-record 253 yards and four
touchdowns Saturday as eigbthnUiked Ohio State wore down oul·
m~ned Pittsburgh 54-14.
·Glenn, a starter for the first time
tbls season after baclcing up current
~fL players Joey Galloway and
Cjris Sanders in 1994, was open
fli)- most of the afternoon and

•

scored on passes of 75, 61, 36 and
12 yards from Bobby Hoying.
Hoying completed 15-of-24
passes for 296 yards and five
touchdowns in three quarters.
Eddie GeOrge ~ained 121 yards on
24 carries in httle over a balf and
now bas 433 yards in the Buckeyes· three wins.
Pitt. using five wide recei~ers at
times, trailed only 20-14 at halftime but appeared to collapse early

after the break. John Ryan, who lost neither. His twisting, leapins
threw two key late imerceptions in 18-yard catch on the sideline in the
last week's 38-27 loss at Texas, second quarter caught the attention
of an NFL scout in the press box
bad three interceptions Saturday.
Glenn, a junior with 19 catches and sustained a drive.
Coach John Cooper bas said he
for 449 yards this season, broke
Gary WiUiams' 14-yea:r-old record is counting on Glenn to replace
of 220 yards against Aorida State , Galloway, top pick of the Seattle
and tied Robert Grimes' 33-year- Seahawks, and Sanders, now with
Houston . Glenn almost missed all
old touchdown record.
He had a case of the drops early, of last season because of bad
fumbling two punts, although be grades but saved himself by finding

a mistake in his transcript
Early in the first quarter, Pitt (22) punted after Ryan Miller tackled
Demetrius Harris for a nine-yard
loss. Two plays later, Hoying
found Glenn wide open down the
middl• ~im Williams and Daryl
Cash reached Glenn but collided
and fell, and Glenn had a 75-yard
touchdown.
Pitt answered with Ryan's 24yard scoring pass to Dietrich Jells.

whose fumble earlier in the drive
was snatched out of the air by
teammate Mark Butler . Sadiq
Durham put a basketball-like pick
on cornerback Shawn Springs ,
enabling an easy touchdown.
Nicky Sualua's 25 yards on consecutive carries set up the Buckeyes' next touchdown, a 12-yard
pass from Hoying to Glenn who
eluded freshman Rasshad Whitmill's one-on-one coverage.

I

�Sunday, September 24, 1995.
Page 82 • Jiun.hav Ulime•-Ji•~irul

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

GAHS loses ... &lt;ContinuedfromB-1)1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
We're still a young ball club. We
didn't play very good in the secood
balf. Church is still nursing a old
injury, and was 1101 at full strength
tonight. He's our best running
back."
DeVol concluded, "We almost
gave it away on that fumble in the
last period. We are proud of the way
our boys played against a good ball
club."
It was Warren's first win ever a1
. Gallipolis, and only the Warriors
second triumph over GAHS in 10
years.
After an exchange of punts to

open the ~arne, Warren took over on
the GAHS 21 when Isaac Saunders
was forced 10 hurry up his kick.
Shawn Taylor bit Dan Greenwalt
with a 20-yard strike, !hen Taylor
rammed it over from the two. Evans
kicked the point after with 2:43 left
in the period.
GAHS tied the score 7-7 following a nine-play, 59-yard drive. With
.8:52 left in the half, Stacy scored
from the one. Beaver's kick was
true.
After Church returned Casey
Canaday's ensuing kickoff 46 yards
(he was hauled down from behind

·Area football standings

by Moose Clark on the GAHS 38)
Reusser scrambled 38 yards witb
8:15 on the clock to make it 13-7.
Eric Humphreys blocked Evans'
kick from placemenL
Six plays later, Taylor bit Church
with a 54-yard touchdown pass
(4:00 left in halO to make it 19-7.
Taylor's pass for two points was
incomplete.
GAHS bad a threat going late in
the half, but back-to-back. 15-yard
penalties halted that drive. After
Greenwalt returned Saunders' punt
25 yards to the GAHS 25, Evans
missed a field g.o~l auempt as first
half action expired.
In the third period, Gallipolis,
after stopping the Warriors, marched
55 yards in four plays. Dailey scored

from the six (7:03) following his 38yard gallop 10 set up the touchdown.
Beaver's kick was low. It was still
Warren on top 19-13.
After Andy Betz recovered a
Warren fumble on the Warrior's 49,
the visitors drew a 15-yard penalty.
Rucker romped for 29. FoUowing a
series of penalties against both
teams, Stacy got two, then three,
then Saunders bit Woodward with a
seven-yard touchdown toss to knot
the coun~ The rest is history.
Warren Local improved to 3-1
overall and 1-0 inside the SEOAL.
GAHS dropped to 2-2 on the year
and 0-1 in loop play. Gallipolis
plays at Marieua Friday. Warren
Local will host. defending league
champion Logan.

Score by quarters
Gallipolis .. ................. O 7 666=.25
Warren .............. .......? 12 0 0 7=26

1-9-0. Totals • 7·18·1·124·1.
GAHS • Woodward, 3-r-1: Dai·
ley, 1-9-0.Totals 4-9T·O·J ·1 •
Passing· WL - ay 1or, 7- 18- 1124-1. Totals. 7·18-1·124·1.
GAHS . I. Saunders, 4-9-0·33-1.
Totals -4-9-0-33·1.
Recovered fumbles: GAHS:
Betz. WL • Eddleblute, Reusser.
Scoring:
WL- Taylor, 2-yard tun •. 2:43,
first (Evans, kick).
G . Stacy, !-yard ru, 8:52 secd (Bea er kick)
on WL.
'
v '
·
Reusser,
38-yard
run, 8:15 '
second, (kick blocked).
WL . Taylor to Church, 54-yard
pass, 4:00 second, (pass fail).
G • Dailey, 25-yard run, 7:03
third, (kick fail).
G . Woodward, 7-yard pass
from 1. Saunders, 4:17 fourth. (kick
bit left upright, bounced away).
Overtime:
R
2
d
WL - eusser, -yar run,
(Evans, kick).
G • Dailey, 3-yard run, (kick
fail).
This week's game. Sept. 29,
Gallipolis atMarieua.

- • SEOAL teams • League

Iwn

lY:L

Jackson .............................. 1-0
Athens ...:.............. /............ 1-0
Warren Local ........ .:.... ...... l-0
Logan .. .............................. 0-0
GALLIPOLIS ...................0-1
Mariena ... ......... ... .. ............ 0-1
RIVER VALLEY .............0-1

fE

27
40
26

Overall

£A
0
18
25

0

0

25

26
27
40

0

18

~

4-0
2-2
3-1
1-3
2-2
1-3
1-3

fE

£A

120
115
49
89
19
68

104
74
100
76
79
133

144

- • Non-league opponents•-

Iwn

.

· -w

Miami Trace ........ .................................... ..4
Meigs ......................................................... 3
Fairland ............ .. .......................... .............. 3 •
Coal Grove ........ ........ ................................ 3
Ponsmouth ................. .................. ..............O
Point Pleasant• .......................................... !

L

0
I
I
I
4
4

H

120
96
92
125
63
88

6

• t'
St· at IS
ICS

Department
· G WL
First downs ................... .. II
12
Yards rushing .. ........ ..... 239
174
Lost rushing .. .. ............ ... 29
24
Netrushing ................. .. 210
150
Pass auempts ............. ..... .. 9
18
Completions ..................... 4
1.
Intercepted by .......... .... .... . I
0
Yards passing .......... ...... ,33
124
274
Total yards................... 243
Plays .. .. ........ .. ................. 47
53
Return yards ................... 77
134
fumbles .. ................. .. .. ..... 4
2
Lost fumbles ...... :... .... .......2
I
Penalties ...................... 7-55 7-48
Punts ........................ .5-148 3-74
Individual rushing· WL ·
Reusser, 12-75-2; Church, 17-730; Taylor, 6,2-l.Totals - 35-150.
GAHS - Dailey, 14-86-2;
Stacey, 15-68-1; Rucker, 4-66-0; I.
Saunders, 5-(- 10)-0. Totals • 3H·
210·3.
Receiving - WL - Church, 2-54I; Greenwalt, 2-36-0; Reusser, 1-

u51
25
56
82
146
155

• - Poilll Pleasant will begin SEOAL play in the 1996 season
Friday's S!!m

Ih.l1 week's !l;!k

Warren Local 26, GALLIPOLIS
25&lt;on
Athens 40, RIVER VALLEY 18
Jackson 27, Marietta 0
Watkins Memorial 30. Logan 28
Coal Grove 40, Miller 0
Fairland iS,' Portsmouth East 14
Meigs 33, Wahama 7
.
Miami Trace 20, Frankhn
Heights 14 •
Point ·PJeasant27, Winfield 7
Ashland (Ky.) 32, Portsmoull!
16

Friday: GALLIPOLIS at
Marietta; Athens at Jackson:
Logan at Warren Local; Tolsia
(W.Va.) at Fairland; Alexander
at Meigs: Point Pleasant at
Hurricane; Portsmouth at
Columbus Independence.
Saturday: Miami Trace at
RIVER VALLEY; Ontario at
Coal Grove

.

14-0; Cramiet, 1-11-0; Robinson,

College football scores .
By The Associated Press

East
Brown 31, Rhode Island 28
C.W. Post 40, Cent. Connecticut
St. 0
Cornell 28, Holy Cross 19
Danmouth 34, Fordham 14
Delaware 41, Boston Univ. 29
Duquesne 13, Georgetown, D.C.
7
Harvard 28, Colgate 8
James Madison 28, Villanova 27
(01)

Lehigh 21, Yale 10
Massachusetts 21, Northeastern
19
Monmouth, N.J. 47, St . John's,
N.Y. O
Pace 29, lona 22
Penn 28, Lafayeue 8
Princeton 20, Bucknell 3
Syracuse 27,Minnesota 17
Wagner 23; Towson St. 15
West Virginia 45, Kent6
William &amp; Mary 39, New
Hampshire 0
South
Baylor 14, N. Carolina St. 0
Emory &amp; Henry 32, Davidson 0

. Tbe Wildcats fooled Southern
.. Wtth a reverse that went for more
than first down yardage. John
Oiapman raced in from 39 yards 011t
for ~ Hannan_ touchdown with 5:38
left m the third quaner. The exlt'apoint kick failed, and Hannan cut tbe
lead to 14-13.
Southern's luck looked to be
going to the Wildcats, as the
Tornadoes f~mbled o~ their first
· play from scrurunage following the
Hannan touchdown. Hannan recovered the loose ball, and the Wildcats
tooktheballattheirown46.
· After a Hannan punt, Southern
took over possession on its own 36,
but the Tornadoes could not move
the ball . Southern punted away to

Ferrum 15, Charleston So~thern 6
KentUCkY 3S, South Carolina 30 '
Liberry 41, Delaware St. 14
Morgan St. 38, Oleyney 7
Thomas More 16, Evansville 14
Virginia 22, Clemson 3
:
Virginia Teeh 13. Miami 7
W. Carolina 31, Citadell4
Midwest
Ball St. 10, W. Michigan 0
.
Cent. Michigan 22, Bowlin!!:
Green 16
Dral&lt;e 37, Aurora 1
Dlinois 7, East Carolina 0
Indiana 27, Southern Miss. 26
Iowa St. 57, UNLV 30
Kansas 20, Houston 13
Miami (Ohio) 23, Cincinnati 16
Missouri 31, NE Louisiana 22 .
N. Dlinois 25, SW Louisiana 24
Nebraska 49, Pacific 7
Northwestern 30, Air Force 6
Notre Dame 55, Texas 27
S. Illinois 48, Nicholls St. 20
Valparaiso 47, Kalamazoo 39
Wis.-Stevens Pt. 37, ButlerO
Wiscon.•in 42, Soulhem Meth. 0
Far West
Wyoming 45, Oklahoma St. 25 .

Hannan, as the fourth quaner began.
On 1he possession follow ing
• Southern's punt, Hannan launched
its most impressive drive of the
evening. A time-consuming drive
saw the Wildcats march 56 yards in
16 phiys, seuing up a second and
goal situation at the Southern five
with 4:00 left in the game.
Running back Joe Kimble was
n~aring paydirt on a right side
sweep, wben the wet football
slipped out of Kimble's hands just
short of the goal line. Southern
recovered the fumble in the end
zone, giving the Tornadoes a big
sigh of relief and a first down at
their own 20.
Southern looked to chomp away

quick-strike offense they displayed
in the ftrst quarter.
After Kabieem Maxwell's last
touchdown, the Raiders used three
plays- Graham's 49-yard breakaway touchdown run capped the
drive - 10 cover 56 yards in 28 sec• onds and collect their final points of
:-the night.
·
:~ Notes: River Valley talli~d 120
·:fards on kickoff alii) punt returns.
:IJraharn bad 96 or these.
:: On defense, the Raiders saw
·senior end Jason Peck and junior
:linebackers Jerry Brammer and
:Steve Hammond lead in tackles.

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l!le White Falcons.
• The Marauder defense held
Waharna to only five first downs
lifter ·King's 61-yard run on the ftrst
play from scrimmage. The
Marauders held the White Falcons 10
is yards rushing in 18 carries.
: The win was a costly one for the
Marauders as they saw senior cornerback and back-up tailback Israel
Grimm suffer a possible broken arm
the third period.
~ "Meigs is as·good as we thought
.'Clley were,'' While Falcon coach Ed
.&lt;;romley said after the game. "They
:are a very good team, we played
~d, but with their size and strength
·tliey pushed us around. Williams is a
:great running back, but he has an
)l.Utstanding line in front of him.''
·• "Wahama came ready to play,"
~riday in the final tune-up before
Ohio Conference play starts.
·• Wahama will host Southern ille Tornadoes defeated Hannan
f.riday 22-13- Friday.
Ouarter .l!!llb
Wahama ................. 7 0 0 0 = 7
Meigs ................... l3 6 8 8= ~5

.----------------""'!'------------------"1

u.

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qtr.
'
River Valley: Graham 2-yd. run
(run failed), 3:08 3rd qtr.
Athens: K. Maxwell 29-yd. run
(S. Maxwell kick), 11:02 4th qtr.
River Valley: Graham 49-yd run
(run failed), 10:27 4th qtr.

Team statistics
Department
A
BY
. 12
First downs ................. ... 10
Scrimmage plays ...... .....42
54
Total yards ............ ..... :.310
280
Rushing au.-yds ..... 36-270 46-251

Marauder coach Mike Chancey said.
"They played a heck of a game, they
scored early and we bad a let down,
but we bauled back. We shot ourselves in the foot with all the penalties. Now we have to get rea&lt;!y 10
play Alexander."
Meigs will host Alexander Spartans dropped a 20-14 contest to
l&gt;lelsonville-York Friday evening -

Scrimmage plays ........... 40
67
Rushing au.-yds . ... ... 19-76 51-317
Passing yards ... .... ....'.... .47
158
Total yards ..... .. ............ l23
475
Comp.-au. .................. 3-16
9-13
Interceptions thrown .......2
I
Fumbles-lost .... ............ 2-0
!.()
Penallies ............ ......... 6-65 16-175
Punts-yds ................ 5-183
3-75

1·0: Bentley 1-2,
WAHAMA: Johnson 8-21; King
4-74; Mitchell 3-(-36); Mayes 3-12;
See 1-5 '
Passing
MEIGS: Hanson 9-13, 158 yds.,
2IDs &amp; I int.
WAHAMA: Mitcbell 2-9, 33 yds.
&amp; I int.; See 0-3 &amp; 1 int.; King 12,14 yards
Individual statistics
Receiving
Rushing
MEIGS:
Pullins
8-126 &amp; I ID:
Scoring summary
MEIGS: Williams 29-193 ; Marshalll-32 &amp; I TD
Meigs: Marsha!! 32-yd. pass from Cleland 12-98 ; Vaughan 2-10;
WAHAMA: Cundiff 2-33;
Hanson, (Fowler kick)
.
Parsons 3-11; Hanson 3-3; Marshall Young 1-14
Wahama: King 61-yd . run,
(Johnson kick)
SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC.
Meigs: Hanson 1-yd. run, (kick
133 Pine Street
blocked)
Meigs: Cleland 21-yd. run, (run
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
failed)
.
Meigs: Williams 2-yd. run,
(Parscns run)
Meigs: Pullins 11-yd. pass from
Hanson, (Hansen Pullins pass from
Hanson)
1

Herb Smith
614-446-2532

Team statistics
Departmel)t
. llilb.
First downs ......................5

Mdu
22

..' .

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Team statistics
Department
H S!w..
First downs ........... :........ IO
12
Rushing att.-yds..... 43-197 30-172
Comp.-au ................... 5-13
5-18
lnterceplions lhro wn ....... 0
I
Passing yards ...... ........... 12
62
Total yards ................... 209
234
Fumbles-lost ................ 5-4
4-3
Punts-yds.................... 2·50
3-78
Penalties·yds.............. 7. 55
1-15

Passing yards ........... ...... 40
Comp.-all. ............ ........ 3-7
Interceptions thrown ..... .. 0
Fumbles-lost ....................0
Penalties-yds .............. 5-45
Punting .................... .4-120

$48.99
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·61.99
64.99
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29
2-7
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6-3
5-57
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yds. &amp; 1m
Receiving- S. Maxwell 1-33;
Grippa 1-12&amp; Ill); K. Maxwelll(-5)

}'umble recoveries S.
Maxwell 1-55 &amp; I ID; No. 44 1-0:
one other recovered in traffic

Statistical leaders

River Valley Raiders
Rushing- Graham 22-161 &amp; 3
Athens Bulldogs
Rushing - K. Max well 21·228 TDs; Kelley 12-46, Jenkins 5-28;
&amp; 3 IDs; Sparhawk 3-26; Goodwin Cochran 5-11, Peck 1-7, Gibnore 17-17: Thomas 4-2: Wharton 1-1 &amp; I (-2)
Passing- Kelley 2-7, 39 yds.;
m
Graham
0-1
·
Passing- Sparhawk 3-7, 40
Receiving- Graham 2-39

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Waham a, 'Friday ni ght. Game time is
7:30 p.m.
Quarter l21ah
Hannan ................... ? 0 6 0 = 13
Southern .. ............... 8 6 0 8 = 22

~~~

,.

LOW PRICE

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For Southern, Maynard's 5-of-18
passing yielded 62 yards . Hann an
senior J .R. Thompson's 5 -of- 13
passing netted him 12 yards.
Southern receiving leaders were
Jay McKelvey with two ca"hes for
34 yards, Evans (1·10), Brian Pagel
(1-20) and Ash (1-2).
Defensively for Southern , Jay
McKelvey led with five tackles and
a fumble recovery. Mike Ash had
four tackles and Mall Dill had three
tackles . Jeremy Johnston, Nick
Smith and Kevin Poner added two
tackles each.
Hannan (0-4) faces Hundred ,
W.Va. Friday night.
Southern (2·2) travels to Mason' s
Bachtel Field to face Bend area rival

~

Peck .bad three for-loss tackles, Scoring summary
while sophomore tackle Nale. Polcyn
sacked Sparbawk for an eight-yard
River Valley: Graham 5-yd. run
Joss in the second quarter.
(run failed), 10:05 1st qtr.
·
K.
Maxwell
26:yd
.
run
Athens:
River Valley will host Miami (S . Maxwell kick), 1:51 1st qtr.
Trace Saturday night.
Athens: K. Maxwell 70-yd'run
Quarter .l!!1!h ·
(kick
failed), II :28 2nd qtr.
Athens .......... ..... ..... 7 26 0 7 = 40
Athens: Whanon 1-yd. run (kick
River Valley ...... .....6 0 6 6 = 18 blocked), 7:19 2nd qtr.
Athens: S. Maxwell 55-yd. fumble recovery return (S . Maxwell
kick), 5:06 2nd qtr.
Athens: Grippa 12-yd.' pass from
Sparbawk (kick blocked), :19 2nd

..
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drive together, but a penalty beld the
Wildcats back, and time ran out
"I have to give a lot or credit to
our offensive line. They played a
terrific game tonight; opening up the
boles when we needed them and
giving Jesse Maynard time to run
the offense," stated Tornado mentor
Mike K!oe~.
,
In addtuon to Evans' rushing perfonnance for Southern, Ash added
eight carries for 64 yards. Jay
McKelvey picked up six yards on
three carries.
Foster led Hannan on the ground,
picking up 90 yards on 19 carries.
Kimble and John Chapman picked
up 53 yards each on the ground for
the Wildcats.

Marauders win ... (ContinuedfromB-1) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

West

Import Radial

al th e clock with its ball-control
offense to preserve its slim lead.
Seven plays later, Southern was
forced to punt after an excellent
defensive stand by the Wildcats.
Once again, a costly special
teams mistake cost Hannan dearly.
The Wildcats fumbled on the punt
return, giving Southern the ball at
the 50 with 1:511eft
A slick, well-executed two play
drive put Southern up for good.
Jamie Evans broke a 25-yard run on
first down, to set up Mike Ash's 25yard touchdown run with 1:051eft.
Jesse Maynard scored on the twopoint conversion run, and Southern
led 22-13.
· Hannan tried to put a last minute

Raiders lose ... &lt;ContinuedfromB-I&gt; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Max Schmeling was awarded
the heavyweight title on a foul by
Jack Sharkey in 1930.

. OLDSMOBILE
ACHIEYA

jiun.hag Ulinu•-Jirntiml • Page 83

:_Tornadoes win ••. (ContinuedfromB -1)1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

-

Gea

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

Sunday, September 24, 1995

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�Page 84 • ~urtbav 'Giimts-~rtdhul

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

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Eastern varsity sextet gets victories over Miller and Wellston

Point Pleasant beats Winfield 27-7 to get season's first win
By RICK S~PKINS
Times-SenUnel Correspondent
POINf PLEASANT, W.Va. The Pomt Pleasant Btg Blacks woo

their first ~arne of. the 1995 football . Sanders Memorial Stad!um.
.
seas~n Fnday mght in inpressive
The twentr poml dtfference .•s
Cashton, defeaung the Wmfteld somewhat !ll'sleadmg. The Btg
Genernls 27-7 rn a game played at Bl~cks dommated m every aspect of

MASON, W .Va. -:- Earl Johnson of ~~m~~~
rnt~...~~ lim!
0
ouung
e .
ve.rs•.,.. entOr
League. compctuion wtth a shm 6
l/2j t;:''"t lead.
0 nson, who has held the top
spot much of the season, currently
has a total of 168 points to lead
Ralph Sayre of New Haven with
161.5 points. Bill Howard of New

Haven also remains in contention
with 159.5 points.
Riverside pro Ty Roush estimates tbat a possible total of II
points can be scored on the final
week if the average of 44 players
per week holds true. There is a passibility of a three-way tic for first
place if all situations fall into place.
If this occurred, it would be the

the game, and did not allow theGenerals to score until the last thiny seconds of the game.
So dominating was the Point

•tJJ
d
R
•
•a
s
•
L
s
I
ea
s
IVers/
e
enlor
eague
Johnson t
f:

Mter the 18-holes round is·completed, players will be treated to a
steak and chicken bar-b-que with
all the trimmings, and awards will
be presented.
.
Tuesday's play was decided in a
tie, at six under par 64, for U1e day .
The team of Jim Capehart of Poim
Pleasant, Darwin Clark of New
Haven, and Chuckie Lester of
Evans tied wilb Ralph Sayre, Donnie Fields of Hanford, Jim Harris
of Mason and. George Burns of
Clifton. Closest to pin winners
were Don Kay of Ne.y Haven on
Diana Bodkin of Point Pleasant,
.
No.
14 and Darwin Clark on No. 7.
who shot rounds of 88 and 93 for a
Following are the players in the
two days' total of 181.
top 20:
Right winners for gross were as
Earl Johnson, 168 points; Ralph
follows:
CHAMPIONSH IP: First place, Sayre. 161.5; Bill Howard, 159.5;
John Benlley, Symcuse, 223; scc- Dill Winebrenner, Syracuse, 155;
ond place, Ron
Spencer, Jack Maloney. Gallipolis, .l45.5;
Reedsville, 226; and lied for third Dana Winebrenner, Syracuse, 145;
Don Roush, Racine, 142; Jim
place, Adam Krnwsczyn, Pomeroy,
and Ron Bachtel, Michlleport, both Wikoff, Shade, 141.
Jim Harri s, Mason, 137.5;
with 228 scores.
Harold
Lobse, Pomeroy, 135.5;
ARST FLIGHT: First gross, Jay
Don Wilson, Middleport, and
Cremeans, Middleport, 237; secCbuck Lester, Evans, tied at 130;
ond, Jack Maloney, Gallipolis, 240;
third, Bob Blessing, Point Pleasant,
Don Fields, Hartford, 127; Bob
Hysell, 125 .5; George Burns,
243.
SECOND FLIGHT: First gross,
121.5; Bill Pethtel, New Haven ,
114; Jack Fox, Clifton, 112; and
Bob Mcintosh, Athens, 23a; secAndy Anderson, Pomeroy, Clark
ond, Carl King, Ma&lt;an, 241; third,
Greene, Hurricane, and Jim CapeShawn Baker, Middleport, 243.
THIRD FLIGHT: First gross,
hart, all tied at 109.
Mike Fetty, Pomeroy, 263; second,
Don Nelson, Middleport, 264:
third, Max WhiUatch , Middleport,
first tie in the league's sbon history .
.
League officers remind players
they are invited to participate in
Tuesday's fmale. Tee time will be
9 a.m., with a continental breakfast
and blind draw for teams. Players
will then play their final season
round of competition with some
videotaping laking place.

squad that they had five individual
rushers with more yards than the
enure Winfield team. The Generals
rushed for only 29 yards in the contest while throwing for another 118
foratotaleffonofonly 147yards.
The Btg Blacks, meanwhtle,
rushed for 311 yards and picked up
another 54 through the air for a 365
yard total.
Add to the one-sided statistics the
fact that the Big Blacks failed twice
· inside the Winfield five yard line, and

·

MASON, W.Va. - John Bentky of Syracuse, a former Meigs
H•gh School golfer who is now in
bts sopb?more year at Methodist
College m Fayettevtlle, N.C., shot
rounds of 73, 77 and 73 to e&lt;.trd a
2~3 s~~Je and capture the 1993
RtversiUe Club championship.
. The champmnship competition.
wub a total of 52 men in four
flights, was also used as a qualifier
· for the 1995 Rivor Cup Team to
compe te against Cliffsi de Go lf
Club on Oct. 7-8 al the Riverside
course.
.
.
. .
.
Other R1vers1de quahfters, m

addition to Benlley. were Ron
Spencer, Reedsville: Adam
Krawsczyn of Pomeroy and also
auending Methodist College: Ron
Bachtel, Middleport ; Jay Bostick,
Racine; GillY Roush, Mason; Bruce
Jenks, Bidwell ; Milch Roush of
Harvey Road ; and Bob Greene,
Hartford. These nine players, along
with Ty Roush, constitute this
year's Riverside team.
In the Ladies Division, Joyce
Quillen of Racine was the winner
wilb rounds of 86 and 84 for a 170
score. Quillen topped runner-up

- - - - Lyne Center slate - - - RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of Sept. 240ct. I al the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
Fitnes.~ cenler,
gymnasium
and racqu~lhall courts
Today- 1-3 p .m. a nd 6-1 I
p.m.
Monday-7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Tuesday - 7 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Thursday- 7 a.m.-1 I p.m.
Friday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 1- 1-3 p.m. and
6-ll p.m.
I

Pool
Thro'ugh Sunday, Oct. 1closed ·
Free-weight room
Today- 6-11 p.m.
Monday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Wednesday-:- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thursday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.

Frid~y

- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 1-6-1 I p.m.
Home athletic events
Friday- Volleyball vs . Tiffin
at 7 p.m.
Saturday- Men's cross-country at 10 a.m.; women's crosscountry at 10:45 a.m.: .soccer vs .
Findlay at 2 p.m.; voll eyball vs.
Findlay at 2 p.m.

--

Notes:' The pooJ..will be closed
to complete !he renovation project.
A Lyne Center membership ·is
requ ired to use the facilities. Faculty, staff, stude nts a nd administrators a re admi ll ed with their ID
cards.
Racquetball court reservations
can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1-800-282-720 1.
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
holder and a $2 fee .

266.

By SCOTI WOLFE

the score could very easily nave ()een
much worse.
.
.
'11tere 1s noquesuon this program
needed a win," said an obviously elated PPHS Head Coach Steve Safford.
"Weplayedwithalotofconfidence
and that was the difference m the
g&lt;lllle. We moved the ball well on
offense and played a very aggressive
defensive game.
"I think the key to our win was the
way we .went after them on defense.
(S BIG BLACKS on B-5)
ee

Tl_.;-Sentinel Correspondent
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles stormed to two key victories
this week in Tri-Valley Conference
volleyball, as they trimmed the
Wellston Rockets, then completed
the week by defeating perennial
power Miller at Hemlock for lbe
first time in eight season&lt;. The win
marked the first time Eastern bad
beaten Miller anywhere in four seasons.
Eastern defeated Miller 15-5, 2-

Big Blacks

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

Bentley nets Riverside championship

•

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ilonelay aacl n.umlay, 8:30 a.-.•6:00 p.JL
Tues.day, 8:30 a.nl, •7:0~ P.ll·
Wtd1esclay &amp; Frlclay, 1:30 aJ11,•1floon

Statistics

.

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

Rush alt.
Yds rushing
Pass alt.
Pass camp.
Yds passing
Interceptions
Total Off.
First downs
Penalties/yds
Turnovers
Puntslyds.
Return yds.

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ALBANY - The Southern volle~ball team fell for the ftrst time
thiS season, as Alexander woo I 59, 13-15, 15.-13 in .three exciting
games Thursday night.
Jennifer Cummins and Bea Lisle
pacc:ct Southern (7· 1 overnll &amp; 6-1
an tbe Tri-Valley Conference's
Hocking Division) with 10 points
each. Cummins added seven kills
and four blocks with anolber headlining front line game, while Lisle
'&gt;eaded the assists deparunent with

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fashioned throughout with Southem taking ll-10 and 12-11 leads,
before Alex's Thompson made it
14-12 Alex. Southern added nnother, but Dixon clinched the game.
Alexander won the reserve
game 15-4, 12-15 , 15 -8. Cynthia
Caldwell led the te am with II
points and Ranetta Wheeler had
seven. For Alex, Stacy Collins had
10, and Bobbi Jo Davis and Missy
Trout had eight each.

Southern came back to win the
second game 15-13 in another
close encounter. Rolston had tied
the game at 8-8, then Bea Lisle
added two points, sandwiched
around an Alexander time -ou t.
Southern went up 13-9 on serves
by Proffitt, then Alex tied it at 1313 . Sisson added a point, then
Caldwell finished it off 15-13.
The third match was in the same
. fashion, but this time Alex posted
the win. The game was see-saw

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points with two aces, II kills arid
seven blocks. Keri Caldwell had
seven points, two aces and ooe kill,
while Sammi Sisson had two
points, 14 assists and two kills .
The' first game was a barnbumer
as Alexander walked away from a
10-9 lead after Caldwell's ace.
Amy Dixon reeled off three points,
then Andi Rolston netted the last
two to seal the game, 15-9.

Redmen

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Alexander varsity spikers hand Southern first loss

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kills. Evans had a career game on
the frontline, batnmering the Wellston front runners.
Karr was 6-9 with six points and
an ace wilh two kills and a block. ·
Caldwell was 7-9 serving with five
points and a kill. Patsy Aeiker was
5-6 with three points, 5-8 on the
front line and a kill; and Martie
Holter was 2-3 with an ace and a
·
poinl.
Eastern was 40-51 for78% serving and was 17-29 serving for 59
percent and five sets for kills.
Eastern will host NelsonvilleYork Monday.

Earlier in tbe week, Eastern
defeated Wellston 15-6, 15-10.
Jackson said, "This was one of
our best nights spiking. We had the
sets and we finished it off with a
kill. The experience is starting to
show on this team. They are beginning to put things together. Hopefully, that will help us through the
rest of this season and in the tournamenl."
Brannon led East em with an 1112 serving night and eight points
with (2-3) one kill. Evans was 9-11
with seven points, (10-ll) and five

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•
I
•I

95 CHRYSLER
SEBRING LX

Evans was 4-6 with two points, 4-5
spiking and two blocks.
Michelle Caldwell was 3-6 with
two points. 6-8 spiking with one
kill, while Martie Holter was 1-2
with a point, while Valerie Karr
was 3-4 with one kill.
Overall Eastern was 28-37 spiking wilh nine kills.
Jackson said bis club played
good team ball and played "pickme up" when someone made a mistake. "The girls ran lbe offense perfectly and the result was beating
one of the best teams in the area."
Eastern advances to 6-4 ovcrnll

•'

•

'

run, PA kick Matt Young.
Point Pleasant- Dusty Higginbotham five yard run. PA kick failed.
Winfield- Mark Walker 6 yd pass
from Sam Stuck. PA kick Alex Beltrao.
Individual statistics
Rushing
.
PP - Chris Sayre, 12-7 1; B.J. Grady,
9-71: Jimmy Hall, 5-56; Jeremy
Buskirk, 5-42; Jermyn Queen, 8-35;
Ethan Green, 1-19; Brent Rollins, 29; Dusty Higginbotham, 2-8.
Winfteld-Jon Bowman, 5-19: Brian
Hagar 1-16; Randy Shon8-ll; Sam
Smith 4-5; Jason Keeling 5-3; Sam
Stuck 4-(-25).
Passing
PP-Jimmy Hall 10-4-0-54. Brent
Rollins 1-0-0-0.
Winfield - Sam Stuck 21-8-2-115.
Jon Bowman 5-1-0-3.
Receiving
PP- Matt Young, 1-28; Mike Anderson, 2- 19; Jason Roush, 1-9.
Winfield - Mark Walker, 3-63; Brian Hagar, 4-44; Travis Bailey, 1-6;
Nathan Gumm, 1-5.

returning in 1995. It took a good
game to pull off the win, and Eastem attained tbat level of play.
Mindy Sampson led lbe Eagles
back court with a perfect 14-14
nigbt with 12 points and one kill .
Freshman Jessica Brannon went
12-13 with eigbtpoiniS, a4-5 spiking night and one kill; Jessica Karr
was 6-7 with an ace, four points, 57 spiking nigh~ with two kills and
two blocks. Patsy j\eiker bad perhaps her best game ever as she was
perfect at 3-3 both serving and
sl'iking with three' points, three
lalls and one block; while Rebecca

•'

BIG BOYS WATER TOYS

DIANA CHENG

lTHS

Score by quarters:
1 2 3 4 Total
PPHS
0 14 0 13 27
Winfield 0
7 7
0 0
Scoring
Point Pleasant-Safety (Winfield
punter slpped out of end zone)
Point Pleasant-Chris Sayre .I yd.
run , PA kick failed.
Point Pleasant - Jimmy Hall 32
yard run, PA J&lt;ick failed.
Point Pleasant- Chris Say~e 4 yd.

Settrq the sto•dard Ao a/WO)t!.

To The Orient

the defense to lake charge. The Generals managed only a single yard in
three plays and were forced to punt.
The Big Blacks then began a very
impressive offensive drive that ended prematurely when the locals fumbled the ball away at the Winfield
eight yard line. Staning at the General 48 yard line, the Blacks moved
,to the Winfield 12 in .only five
plays.

-------

NEW PATIIIITS • WAll·lll MLCO.f

LADIES: First g ros s, Joyce
Quillen, Racine, 17(¥, seco nd,
Diana Bodkin, Point Pleas.wt, 181 .
. SENIOR CHAMPION: Gary
Roush, Mason, 229.

Eastern coacb Don Jackson said,
"We played really wellln !be fust
and third games. We couldn't make
a mistake and Miller could feel tbe
pressure. We bad a let down in the
second game. That' s one thing
we'll have to remedy -to be more
consistent and learn to keep the
other team down."
Miller, one of the top teams in
the region and state the past severn!
years again bad a good nucleus
·15, 15-9.
...

win.~C:'tinuedfromB-4)

We made some changes defensively
• that really helped us. ~most
important and mosl beneficial c6ange
; was to a 4-4 defense rather than the
: 5-2 we have been playing. There is
• nothing wrong with our old defense,
• but our kids really responded well to
; the 4-4. To say the least, we are very
· pleased with the way we played,"
' added Safford.
· The Big Blacks kicked off to start
' the game and it di~ not take long for

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Sunday, September 24, 1995

Outdoors

Reds have NL Central title in hand before beating Phils 3-2
By JOHN F. BONFA'ITI
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Champagne dripped off his bead as
• Bret Boone remembered similar
celebration be' d witnessed 15 years
ago at Veterans Stadium.
"I remember 1980," the

a

Boone, was old enough 10 drink the
champagne as the Reds celebrated
their NL Cenual title following a 32 vic10ry over lhe Phillies on Friday,nigbt
Amazingly. due to the intricacies of the new wild-card playoff

Cincinnati Reds second-baseman
said. "I was only 10 years old
when the Pbillies won the World
Series , and I was in the clubhouse.' '

This time, Boone, the son of former Philadelphia catcher Bob

system, few of the Reds realized
they'd actually clinched the title
late Thursday night, when the San
Diego Padres beat the Los Angeles
Dodgers 5-1.
·
Tbey entered the game knowing
thai either a vicJory over the Pbils,

or a loss by Houston. would guarantee the~ Iitle. Through a convoluted set of procedures, the
Dodgers' Joss actually sealed the
title for the Reds.
"I dido' t know we had won it
before the game," said Boone, who

Ohio fishing report

delivered the game-winning, tworun double in the ninth.
"I bad no idea," added 'Ron
Gant, who scored the tying run in
the ninth. "This is a better feeling
going out there and coming back in
(See REDS on B-7)

Fairborn 14, Spdna, Nc:rth 12
f'Birfield Uniqn 21, Teays Val. 6
Fairland 28, Portsmouth E. 14
· F"!rellndl 21 . Elyria W. 20
Fort Frye 27. Zanesville R~Xtcran5 12
Fraaklia 33, MiddJe(owD Feowiet 14
Gahanna 9, Thomu Worthingto n 7
Garaway 3.5. Cadiz 7
Garfield Hts. 41, Cle. Sooth 0
Getoa 26. Elmwood 20
Gruxhiew 26, Bexley 14
Granville 65 , Millersport 0
Greeoeview 16, Mad110n Ptaiu 13
Greenfield McClain 34, Vinton Co. 14
Grceoon 25, Sprlna. Nortbweatern 6
Greenville 41 . Vandalia Butler 0
Grove City 27, Wcrthinilon Kilbourne

At(or.Coventry 40, Fairleu l3
Akroll Ellct ..2, Akroll E. 1

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE
,

EuttnrOI•Woil

53

,6().4

l&lt;lo

.Iii

New Yorl .............. 72 C...

•.529

10

Baltimcwe .............. .65 12
Oetruit. .................. .57 71
Toronto ................. ~4 ll

.47..
.422
.397

17 ..S
24 ..5
21

.ll: L

Yuill

x·B&lt;*on ...... ,.... ., ...11

•

Central DI.. Wo.
42 .691
K.auu City ........... 6B 68 .SOO
Chicaa:o .................. 63 72 .467
/

x-ctivB.AND .... 94
Milwaukee ............. 63

7l

MinDe~ota .......... :.. .52

26
l0..5

.463

31

la.s

Ill

41..5

WHiern Dh'blon
Seattle ....... ........... ?3

6)

..537

CaJironUa ......... ...... 72 64
Telal ... ...... ........... 69 67
Oatland ................. 67 69

..529
.507
.493

x-c.Uoched divisio t.

1
4
6

l.llir.:

Decroil at New York. ppd., raiD
Toronto at B01ton , ppd., nUo
Tau 8, California 3
CLEVEU..ND ~ . Xanw. City J
OliCIIgo !i, Minnesota 4 (10)
Baltimore 10, MilwMJtee J
Seattle ~0. Ouk.land 7

They played Saturday
Toronto (Leiter 11 -9) at Boaton
(Clemens 8-~) . 1 : 0~ p.m.
DH: Detroit (Lim.a2-S and Ur1 9·1l)
al New York (Cone 16-S and Kamieniccb
5~). 1 : 3~ p.m.
Toronto (Ware I· I) at Bolloa (WateCield 16-5), 6:05p.m.
Califorala (finley 11· 11) 11 Teut
{Pavlit 9-9), 8:05p.m
CLEVELAND (Martinez 10·~) 11
Kansas City (Gubicza 11 -13) , 8:05p.m
Olicago (Alvarel 7·10) at Mllltlt~ota
(Pam 1·4). 8:05p.m.
Baltimore (Haynea I· I) at Milwaukee
(Booe~IO.lO), 8:05p.m.
Oakland (Johns 5·1) at SeatUe (Johnson lS·lJ. 10:05 p.m.

Today'a games
Toronto (Guzman 3-14) at Bolton (Ell·
helma.D 6-3), I :dSi p.m.
Detroit (Beraman 7·5) at New York.
(Pettine II ·&amp;), I:35 p.m.
Chica8o (Andujar 2·1) at Minoesotii
(HawkiDSI ·l), 2:05p.m. ·
Ballimore (Krivda 2-6) at Milwaukee
(Spurb 8· 10), 2:05p.m.
. CLEVELAND (Clart 9-6) al Kanw
City (Appicr 14-9), J:35 p.m.
C1lifornia (Abbott 10·8) at Teu1
(WlU 3-3). 3:05p.m.
Oakland (Onliveroa 9-S) at Seattle
(Bosio 10·8), 4:35p.m.

Bellevue J8, Galioo 8
Berne Union 23. Heath 14
Bethel-Tale 42, Western Brown 6
Bowling Green I], Sylvania
Southview 6
Brecklville 23, Berea 17
Brookside 24, Wellloaton 6
BruDIIw1ck 34, Lodi O overlear6
Buclr.eye Centra! 9. Rivcrdllle l
Bucktye 1.ocaJ 28, Oe. KeDlledf 14
Buckeye Val. 30, N. Uoion 26
Cambridge 7, Zaneaville 3
Campbell-Memorial II , Cle. Marlihall
6
Canal FuJLon Northwest 3... Minen'a

.ll: L &amp;1.

I·Atlanta ................ &amp;7
Philadelphia ..... ..... 67
New Yort... ............63
Aorido .................62
Montreal... ..............62

50
70
73
73
73

54

.600

Houston .... .... ....... ,.70 6S
llicaao ..................66 (§)
St. Louis .............. .. 60 1S

.519
.489
.444
.412

Pitllburgh ..............56

80

We-lllrrn DI,-Won
Colorado ....... ......... 73 62 .541
Loa Angelea ...........72 64 .529
SanDieao ............. .66 70 .485
San Francisco ........64 71 .4741
1-tlioched division tille

I.S
7.5
9

Friday's scores
O.icago 6, PittJburgb 3

Atlanta S, Montreal I
St. Louis 3, Hc)l.lllon 0
CINCINNATil. Philadelphia 2
Aorida 3, New York 0 (J 112 iun.-rain)
Colorado 6, Sllll Fl'lUICisco l
Lot Ango:lea 6, Sao Dieao S

They played Saturday ·
Pilllbura:h (Looiu 8-9) at Cbic:a1o
(BulliaB,er J 1·8), 2:20p.m.
Colorado (Retar 4-4) at S1111 fi"'DC:iiCO
(Brewington .._4), 4:0S p.m.
New York (lone• 9·9} at Florida
(H&gt;mm:llld 7-6). 7:05p.m.
ClNCINNATI (Scbouret 17-7) at
Philadelphia (Fernand" 1&gt;1), 7:0S p.m.
Montreal (Martinez 13-9) at Atlanta
(Avery 7-13), 7:10 p.m.
Sl. Loull (Petkovsek 6-S) at Houaton
(Wall2·1). 8 :0~p . m.
San DieJO (H.a.mi lton 6-9) w Los An -

Liberty Center 55, Delta 12
liberty Union 49, New Albany 6
litclr.ing Val. 46. BiJ Walout 7
Lima 13, Fairfield 7

lima Shawnee 27, Ottawa-Glandorf
13
lillboo Andenon 33, Hanoverton Unit·
oo9
little Miami 26, Springboro 0
loodon 36, Jonathan Alder 14 .
Lorain Cath . 21. Newcastle (Pa.)

Unioo 8
Loruin Clearvlew 28, Keystone 7
IAudonville 51 , Oatu Mills Hawkeo
20
Lowellville 35 , JacDoo-Mllton 12
Lue&amp;~ville Val. 49. Scioto Nonhwest 8
Madi~n 21, Geneva 3
Manchater 14, TUIIaw 7
Man1field Madison 21, Delaware 0
Man1field Sr. 21, Massillon 20
Maple Hts. 16, Mayfield 13
Mapleton 20, Collins Wc:~tern Rcserve
0
Marptetta 38, SBDdtaky St. Mary• 7
Marion Elgin 47, Cardiogron Lincoln

an

Oe. Independence 24, AUIOI"a 0
Oe. LLltheran W. 47, Cuyahos.a Hta. 7
Oermont NE 7, New Richmond 0
Clyde 24, Port Clinton 6
CoaJ Gmve 40, Hemlock Milla 0
Col. Beechcro(t 38, Col. South 0
Col. DeSale~~ 35. Cin. ML Health)' 0
Col . East!&amp;, Col. Wht!lltooe 12 (4

11 .

IS

Lexfogton 13, Clear Fort 12
libef1y 4S, Newton Falll 7

Cia. Woodw.ard7, Belmoo10
Cio. Wyoming 41 , Cin. Fioneytown 8
Oaymont 20, MeOOowbrook 12
Clayton Northmont 20, Piqua 17 (2

20
23..S
2•
24

21
25.5

3

Woods 14

Crntr"al DI,Mon
1.CINCINNATI ....81

Ketterloa: Fairroont 12. Spring;. Soulh 7
Lakeview 3~.Hubbard JJ
Lakewood 26. Utica 21
Lakewood St. Edward 31, Auliliotowu·
Fitch 17
Lebanon 21. Day. CmolllO
Ledgemont 24. Newburyl4
Leipsic 26, liberty-Denton 0
Lemoa Monroe 7, Olford Talawaoda

Canal WiDChestcr 10. Circleville 0
Cal!lield 48 , Cie. Glenville 18
Canton OleoOak 40, Alliance ll
Canton McKinley 29, Mcmor 16
Cedanille J8, S. Charlcltoo SE 14
Celina 54, Defiance 6
Centerbwg21, E. Knox 0
Centerville 39, Beavercreek 6
Olardon 16, Twinsbl.l'a Chamberlin 0
Cin. Aiken 21, Cin. Glen Este 0
Cin. Colenio J6, Cin. St. Xavier 7
Cin. Country Day 41, Bat.avia 6
Cin. Deer Park 20, Cin. Taylor 13
Cin. Elder 33, Cin. Withrow 0
Cio. Hatriwn 27, Cin. Andmon 23
Cin. Indian Hill 48, Cin. Madeira. 8
Cin. La Salle 54, Cin. Oak. Hill' 14
, Cin. LakoLB 14, Hamillon 12
Cin. Lovt;land 36, Blanchetter 9
Cin. Mariemont 35. Cin. Reading 0
Ciil-. N. Colleae Hill 24, Cin. Land mark6
Cin. Summit 32, Cin. Lockland 7
Cia . S)'Ca.IOOre 17, Cio. Prinedon 16
Cio. Tail ll, Cio. Hughes 13
CJ.n. Turpin 22, Cin. Nonhwat 0
Cin. Western Hilll ]4, Cin. WiDIQn

ll.B

.635
.489
.463
459
.459

1

14

NATIONAf. LEAGUE
Yuill

Hamilton Badin 31, Day. OtantinadeJuliellDe 14
Hamilton Ron 34, WilmJogton 7
Hamilton Twp. 39. Bloom-Carroll 7
Hamlin, 'w.Va . 34, Federal Hoc king
20
'
Hardin Notthetll 3~ . Cory-R.aw1nn 0
Hilliard 28, Groveport 0
Hillsboro 38 , Williamsburg 21
. Holland SpriDg. 28, Perrysb..a6
Hubet Hta. Wayne 53, Xenia 9
Huntinat ou (W.V11.) Vinso n 14,
Symrnca Val. 0
lodia.D Creek 14, SL Cllinville I (01')
IDdia.D Lake 36, Golhea 8
hxliaa Val. 41 , E. Canton 7
Ironton 36, Wheelenblwg 12
Jad:JOo T1, Marietta 0
Jefferson 12, Painesville Harvey6
Xcollon 24, Wktlille 14
KeotRooaevell 12, You. Eas!O
Keaton Ridge 13, Urbaoa 6
Ketterin'i Alter 14, Cio. Raaer Bacon

•

16

Matioa Harding; 31, Tol. Roaen 24
Marion Pl~a&amp;ant 22, Mounl Gilead 0

Maysvillt 14, 1Uver VJew 7
Medina Highland 27, Gr~D 21
MeiJI 35. Wahama, W.Va. 7
M~ntiX' Lalce Cath. 41 , Bedford Chane!
0
M tami Trac:e 20, Fra.akJin Hl5. 14

M ilunisb..a 32. EdJewood 26
M1ddk field Cardinal 17 , Pymatuaioa

v~ .o

..

Middletown 21, Milford 7
Midpark. 20, N. Royalton 7
Midview 21, Cle. lOOn Hay 20
Milan Edi10113S, Huron 0 ·
MiDeral Ridge 12, McDooald 7
Minsler 41 , Rockford P•tway 14
Mrl gadore 42, Blat:k River 12
Mohawk 26, Hopewell-loudon 19
Monroeville 41, S . Centra! IS
N. BaJtimore 26. SeDeCa E. 0
N. Canton Hoover 13, Cuyahoga Falls

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin. Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed
Jual 20
Dnve Sltalghl Up
Rt 7 North 1hru Tuppers Plains

42945 State Rl. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

667-3350

Today's games
Mo'nueal (Alvarez 1-4) at At lanta
(Schmidl2·1), 1:10 p.m
New York (MI1cki 9-6) nt Florida
(Bowc:n 0.0).1 :35 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Wells j-4) at Philadelphia (Spriaae,- 0·1 ), 1:35 p.m.
Pillsbur&amp;h (Wagner 5-1.5) at Chlcaao
(Navarro 14·6), 2:20p.m.
St. LouiJ {Oaborne 3-6) at Houatoa
(!Iampron 9-8~ 2:35p.m.
San Dleao (Blair 7-4) at Lot An~,elea
(Candiotti 7-13), 4:05p.m.
Colorado (Reynoao 6-7) at SaD Frau•

Troy 33, W. Carrollton 13
52 , Sandy Val. 0
Twin ValleyS. 19.Jefferson 0
Union Local II. Magnolia, W.Va. 1
Unio11towo Lake 22, New Philadelphia

1\iscarawu Val.

1

Unioto I&amp;, Huntington 0
Valley View 62, Nonhridge 0

N. Olmsted l6, Fairview 0
N. Ridgeville 12, Vermilion6
Ne15onville-Yort 20, Alexuder 14
New Bremen 9, Delpho. St. John• 0
New Le,;1ogtoo 35, lohn Glenn 33
New LoDdon 35, Plymouth 12
Newark Cath. 13, Hartley 6
Newcomentowa 8, Tuacarawu Cath .

FWS guide
ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) - The
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
issued iiS new guide to recreational
and edu!=3tional opportunities on iiS
refuge system .
The guide covers 380 refuges,
with a chart showing amenities,

••Nile&amp; 17. Canton Timkeo J

Northmot13, Ridgedale 1
Northridge 13. Johnstown 0
Norton 29, Copley 1
Norwalk 21, Vpper Sandusky 12
Norwalk. St. Paul 20, Ashland
Crestview 17
Norwood 15, GasheD 1'2
Oak Harbor 29, Sandusky Perlins 6
Oalr.,-lill50, Welllton ~6
Oberlin 6, Avon 3 .
O!,otaniY 28. Mary&lt;&gt;ille I 3
Olmsted falls19, Roct:r ltiver 7
Orrville 55, Wtxirter Tr1way 1•
Orwell Grand Val. 22, KlrtJand 3
Otsego 41, Kansas Lak0lil27
Paint Vat. 34, Zane TraceO
Pandora-Gilboa 32. Van Buren 13
Parma Holy Name 30, Elyria Cath, 0
Parma Valley Forge 19, Parma Normandyl2
Patrick Henry 24, Wauseon 9
Pauldioa 12, Ada 7
.
Perry 41, Fairport Hardioa 28
Philo 39, Moraan 6
Pickerington 18, Olillloothe 1
Poland 2"'1, WIUTeD Howland 0
Preble Shawooe 26, Carlisle 0
Racine Southern 22, Hannan (W.Va.)
13

.

By JIM FREEMAN
Ttmes.Sentlnel Staff

W. Geauga 23, Orange 6
Wllkwonh l4, Hudlon 13
WaJ1h Jesuit 41 , Barb«toli 18
WapW:lueta 23, Lima Badl '20
Warren ChampioD 31. Brookfield 15
Washin]lton Court House 30. W. Jef·
fenon 1
Waterloo21 , Windham II
Watkin• Memorial 30, loiM 21
WayDC 53, Xenia 9
Wayne TriCe 54, Holiiite 1
WayDC5Yille 29, New Miami 6
Wellsville 24, G:ureusville 0
Westerv illeN. 31,Newark8
West.erville S. 17, Upper Arlini{on 0
Wutfall 34, Adena 0
Wil!ard 38, Shelby 19
.
Willoughby S. 27. Lyndhurit Bnuh 21
Woodmore 41. Oibsonbura 1
You. 0Buline 29, Warrto llardina 8

opportunities and seasonal activities available at each refuge. The
system has 504 refuges, but those
without such visitor opportunities
are no! listed.
The guide also includes a map .
showing the location of the 380
refuges.

: Michael J. Budzik, the longtime
!Danager of the Ohio Division of
Wildlife's Southeastern Ohio Dis!ficl, was recently appointed chief
of the division by E&gt;onald C .
Anderson, the director of the Ohio
j)epartment of Natural Resources.
• As manager of wildlife District
l since 1987, Budzik holds 1he
Jongestlenure of the division's five
district managers. Based in Athens,
Ole 19-county district runs from the
()bio River lo the Scioto Valley
and from Coshocton to South
~oint.

: B udzik, 41, assumes his new
position immediately. He succeeds
~ichard B. Pierce, who retired May

B udzik joined ODNR and the
Division of Wildlife in Jan. 1975.
serving as a conservation aide at
the Wolf Creek Wildlife Area in
Morgan County and later as a
wildlife management supervisor at
the Delaware Wildlife Area in
Delaware County . He became
wildlife biologist for District 4 private-lands program in 1979 and
served as wildlife program coordinator at the division's Columbus
headquarters from 1982 umil
becoming District 4 manager in
May, 1987.

.

StayWann
All Wmter For
Just Pennies
A Day.

game.··

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- 1988 White wlblue cloth interiorr
72K or 1989 Gray w/gray leather
interior 86 both 5.tl liter auto, A/C,
pwr seats, windows, locks, mirrors,
cruise, tilt, rear defrost, AM/FM
cass,. Both1 owners. In Excellant
Condition. Prices to go.

The only other members of the
Reds who knew that the title was
won before the game were in the
bullpen. Mike Jackson had heard
the news over the rndio and told a
few olher relievers.
"You knew?" Barry Larkin
asked Chuck McElroy amid lhe
raucous celebration that left lhe
Reds' clubhouse damp and smelly.
"Yep, Jack (Jackson) came
around and told us," McElroy
answered.

Rl. 7 North thru Tuppers Plains

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

4/

windows and locks.

•r,·•

anapolil. Miami, New E111laDd, Seattle~

Monday's game
Saa friDciloo Bl Detroit, 9 p.m.

Stale Farm Insurance Companies
Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois

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of old non-bicxlegradable roofing.
• Saves money-No landfill disposal
chargtiS.Culs time and labor costs in hall.
• Loou gyeat on any home. · Sale
• Uletlme limited warranty.
BROWN
GREEN

REO

""

"""" SJJ49
"-UE

O'DELL LUMBER CO.
61 VINE STREET

E1ch sheet
48" X 19'

1263 "N.)

GALLIPOUS
446-1276

I '

*

IN, STOCK
•

TOYQTA·SUZU Kl

PARKERSBURG

RT. 50 EAST 424-51 22

HURRY
WHiLI THEY LAST!

6 cyl. eng. 5 speed trans .,. PS, PB , Limiled
slip rear axle, air cond., manual locking hubs,
bright/low mount mirrors, AM/FM stereo cas·
sette, rear step bumper, P -235/75x15 all terrain tires, 117 wheel base.

·Sale Price

16,215

31

8

•

••

LESS ANY REBATES THAT APPLY

1993 RANGER
XLT4X2

1992 FORD
F-150 PICKUP

1991 CHEVROLET
1-10 PICKUP

4 cyl. engine. power steering,
power brakes, 5 speed trans..
AM/FM stereo casselte, a1r
conditioning, rear step bumper.
casl aluminum wheels.

302 V-8 engine, PB, XLT Pkg.,
auto. lrans .. tilt &amp; cruise. power
-windows &amp; power locks, 8 fool
bed, bed liner. rear step bumper,
air cond.. AM/FM
stereo
cassette.

4 cyl. eng ine. 6 fool bed. rear
step bumper. This lruck is extra
clean. AM styled wheels with
trim rings , AM/FM stereo
1
casselte.

9,915

NEW 1995
NISSAN SENTRA GXE
and locks. , ·

5

12~999
NEW 1995
NISSAN 4X4 TRUCK

13,999

NEW 1995
NISSAN ALTIMA GXE

15,999
NEW 1995
NISSAN QUEST
rear air. casseue, cruise. till.
power windows &amp; locks.

$18,499
120 Day Delayed Payment Ia Qualified Buyers. Call for Delails. Sale Ends 9-30-95. In Stock Units

'••

••
•

•

''

4,995

8

198lBUICK
LESABRB

·

power locks. quad captain chairs stereo cassette, tllt wheel, 'power casseue. cloih split bench seat.
with ·sofa bed in rear.
windows &amp; locks.
·
good Iires.
WAS $7,995

••• •&amp;,915

Spacial

2,995

8

1991 FORD
ESCORT LX

power 4 Dr.. 4 cylinder engine , power
sleering.
power
brakes, Steering, power brakes, auto.
aulomalic trans ., AM/FM stereo trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
casseUe, air conditioning, power casselte, power windows &amp;
power locks, rear defroster.
locks, local car, 23.868 miles.
4 Dr.. 4 cyl. engine,

5

·~~:e.o'-

Spacial

V-8 eng .. PS, PB, aulo. trans., 4 Dr., V·6 ~ engine, power
V·B engine. power steering,
AM/FM stereo cass., dual air steering, power brakes. aulo. power
brakes ,
automatic
cond. &amp; heal. power windows &amp; trans.. air conditioning, AM/FM transmission, AM/FM stereo

1994 PONTIAC
SUNBIRD

automatic, air, casselte, power windows
&amp; locks.

....v-

12,195

8

1988 BUICK
1988 FORD E-IA
CONVERSION VIM CENTURY LIMITED

air, cassette, cruise, power windows

5

ONALL.1995 .........
TOYOTA
&amp; SUZUKI

'DRIVE .

1195 F·IBO 4

8

air, casseUe, chrome wheels, sliding
rear window, 4x4.

... 1.....

Philldelphilll Oatlaad,' p.ra.

Gteea Bay Ill Jacb:lnvlllo.
Opea dlte; Burfalo, C.OI •· lltdl·

2 dr, greeh w/black cloth
interior, V-6, auto, NC, stereo
cass, Pwr lock, Pwr windows,
rear defrost, 31 K. It's sharp.
It's a steal.

985·3301

l

SIIOWDEH
342s-.1Avt.
G I all, OW.
290
Ht.44H511

Howtoo 01 CINCINNATI. 4 p.m
KaD1u City ~ CLEYEJ..AND, 4 p.m.
Atim!lllal Dillll. 4 p.m.

667-3350

''

Chester

CLE
NCE
DEALS

wou

N.Y. lou ol Allanio, a.m.

PONTIAC GRAND
PRIX

BE SURE TO CHECK OUT OUR USED CAR &amp; TRUCK INVENTORY

0J.K:a10 It St Loull. I p.m.

Deaver at San Dle,o, p.m.

MIODLEPOR1" • o\'\

air, cassette, tilt, Cruise, power

A

B•r·

tt~\-County
t/*Qi;a

BAUM LUMBER
State Route 248

.

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed
Jus! 20 I
DriVe Straight Up

UUUlAN("

NewOrleaual N.Y. OIIDll, I p.m.
W•hln.... o1 Ta!q&gt;o
I p.m.
Milltle.olaat PittJburah, p.m.

(HECK THE (lASSifiEDS fOR All YOUR NUDS!

NEW 1995
NISSAN 200 SX

ITATI .• AIM

Today'•a:ames

largemouth bass. Use six-inch pias- spinners, Rapalas and Vipers to
Lake Erie
COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) tre
wonns,
small
spinners
and
live
Smallmouth
bass joins with ycl ·
take northern pike.
Here is the weekly fishing report
bait
for
best
results
.
Channel
cat·
low
perch
in
providing
excellent
provided by the Division of
MOGADORE RESERVOIR fish
ing
fish
can
be
taken
from
many
areas
opportunities
this
time of
Use wax worms, small night
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
at
night
when
fishing
on
the
bouom
Use
shiners
or
soft
craws
cast
year.
crawlers or larval baits suspended
Narural Resources:
with
lraditional
baits.
to
the
shallow
reefs
in
Ute
western
:
under a bobber to lake bluegills .
Ohio Rinr
basin
to
take
DARii
Y
CREEK
Fall
is
a
smallmoulh
bass.
Spreaders lipped with shiners or
The Racine Pool in Meigs
County offers some good fall fish· special lime on Ohio's rural night crawlers and fished near the Perch fishing has been good
ing action for several species of streams. Popular among some bottom is a good method for taking throughout !he western basin and in
bass. Use top water baits or live anglers is 19 combine fishing and yellow perch . Largemouth bass the Cleveland area. Walleyes are ·
bail cast to areas wilh submerged hunting on a float trip . Sunfish, fishing has been good in recent s1aging at night along sonic island
shorelines and feeding on shiners.
structure. The stream confluences bluegills, bass, carp suckers, rock weeks.
bass
and
channel
calfish
offer
good
are also good places 10 fish . Catnsh
can still be taken when bo110m fisb· fall fishing action.
Northwest
ing with night crawlers and chicken
LAKE
LECOMTE
- Channel
livers.
and
bullhead
calfisb
can
be caught
Southeast
in
the
morning
and
evening
hours
PIEDMONT LAKE - Channel
catf"lsb are being taken Jakewide by on cut bails and prepared bails
1992 PONTIAC SUN BIRD SE
anglers using night crawlers and fished at or near U•e lake bottom.
chicken livers. Some musldes up to The fishing outlook is good for yel42 inches have been taken in shal- low perch and largemouth b~ss;
low waters. Try the Essex Bay area fair for walleyes.
RESTHAVEN WILDLIFE
when fishing for flathead catfish. ·
Use chubs and small pan fish as cat- AREA - The wildlife area is
located on state Route 269 near
fish bait for these large fish .
SENECA LAKE - Walleyes Castalia and offers a variety of fall
· See
measuring up to 30 inches inhabit . hunting and 'fishing opportunities.
Jerry Bibbee
the lake. Try drifting or slowly Bass, bluegills and channel catrtSh
Keebaugh
Marvin
trolling small crank ballS. Channel are commonly found in these
Doc
Hayman
catfish, largemouth bass, striped wildlife area ponds.
Clark Reed
Norhteasl
bass and bluegills also provide
4 dr, red w/gray interior,
CUYAHOGA RNER - Crapgood fall fishing action.
JUSI 20 Mlnulos Drive Straight Up
pie fishing has been very good
Southwest
AI. 7 Nor1111hru Tuppers Plal116
V-6, auto, A/C, AM/FM
along Front Stfeel. Use tube jigs
CAESAR CREEK ,LAKE stereo, interm wipers, Pwr
42945 Stale Rl. 7
The decline in summer boating tipped with mealwonns for best
•
CooMIIe, Ohio 45723
.locks, 51 K. Very clean .
activities should improve fall fish- results. Channel catfisb action bas
ing opportunities. Fish at depths or · been excellent. Try fishing along
Priced to sell.
eight to 20 feet with larval bails From Street and under bridges wi!h
and small worms when seeking
bluegills. 'The backwater areas are
good places to fish for largemouth
!
bass. Watch for white bass chasing
shad along the surface to locale
good fishing spots.
·
ROCKY FORK LAKE- Most
muskies are taken by trolling
muskie-slyle crank bails at depths
of six to IS feet. Largemouth and
smallmoulh bass provide some
461 SOUTH THIRD
PHONE 99 2. 2196
good shoreline fishing this lime of ·
year.
Central
. · a~IGGS RESERVOIR- Fish
in lhe upper end of the reservoir
north or the island when seeking

If you ask me, it seems a little
fishy.
31.
Secretary of State Bob Taft
; "As a seasoned district manager, . reported recently that Ohioans have
responsible for one of our most "changed direction in the middle of
diverse and challenging wildlife lhe stream" as far as designating a
district, Mike Budzik has estab- Slate fish is concerned.
lished an excellent track record in
Ohioans panicipming in a mock
all aspecl~ of fish and wildlife man- election at the state fair last month
agement, habitat improvement and preferred the walleye, by a vote of
private-lands management issues," 182-158, over the smallmouth bass,
Anderson said.
· Taft reported. Three years ago,
The ODNR director praised Ohioans voted 79-74 in favor of the
Dudzik's key role in significant smallmouth bass.
property acquisitions by the divi"Our unofficial election may be
sion in southeastern Ohio including all we~" Taft conceded . . ·
·
· the new Egypt Valley Wildlife
This heated debate sllikes soon
Area ( 14,600 acres in Belmont after the recent Ohio House action
County) and Woodbury Wildlife lo designate the black race as the
Area (17,510 acres in Coshocton state snake.
County).
If selected, .the walleye will join
A native of Shadyside in Bel- lhe ranks of the aforementioned
mont County, Budzik is a graduate black racer - in addition to the
of Hocking College with an 3.'\SOCi- white-tailed deer, cardinal. red carate degree in recrealion and
nation, Ohio buckeye, white trilliwildlife management. He and his
wife, Melodee, reside in Logan um, flint and ladybird beetle which
serve proudly as tht: state animal,
with their two daughters.
bird, flower, tree, wildflower, s10ne
and insect, respectively.
Jusl in case 'you're wondering,
(Co~linued from B-6)
the stale fossil is lsotelus trilobites
the ninth inning and winning the - known as just "trilqbiles" by
their friends.
game.''
Manager Davey Johnson and his
coaching staff knew. Johnson was
1993
informed before lhe game, but"
deliberately withheld the information from his team.
"I wasn't going to let them put
the champagne out until we won or
they (the Astros) fost," Johnson
said. "We wanted to win this

Reds win •••

Revere 6, Tallmadge 0
Richrmnd Edi110n 13, Oak Oleo 12
Richrmod Hta;. 28, COlumbia I&amp;
Rldaewood 37, lewett·Scio 7
River Val . 37, Spllrta Highland 7
,Rivmlde 3S, Ridgemont 0
Rock Hitl28, Portsmouth W. 20
Ro~&amp;rom?, Maumee 0
S. Point 34, Waverly .6
Salem 13, Girard J
Sandusky 28, l.ora.io Adm Kia1 0
Sheridan 31, Croobville 14
S)lerwood Fairview 35, Ottawa Hills 0
Sidney 41. Trotwood Madi~an6
Sidney-Leluneo 21, SpriDJ. Catholic 0
Smithville j6, Chippewa 8
Solon 53, Chagrin fall• 6
SprinJ. Local27. Mathew• 26

cisco (Leiter 10-10), 4:05p.m.

NFL slate

W. Bnmch 14. Carrollton 0

7

"
II
,.

aelcs (Valdet12-ll), 10:05 p.m.

Van Wett 3J, Kenton 27
Vm ai lle~48 , Milton Union 0
Vibeeol Wantn 26, GallipolillS (Ol)

Triad 42, Fa.irbanU 0
Trimble 19, Belpre 16

an

Col. Eaatmoor 6, Col. Irnkpendeuce l
. Col. Linden-McKinley 20. Col. Walnut Ridge 14 (OTI
CoL Miffiio 41, Col. BriiP 21
Col. Northland 27, Whitehall6
Col. SL &lt;ll•les 41. Col. Ready 21
Coldwater 47, Fort Recovery 0
Colonel Crawford 6, Oncario 2
Columbiana Crestview 16, E. Palestine
12
Columbus Grove 31, Lima Cath . 20
Covio~ton 20. Bethel 0
• Crestline 12, fredericlc1own 0
Danville 18, LuC&amp;!ill
Delphoa Jeffenon 34, Bluffioo 0
Dover 21. Coshocton 0
Dublin Coffman ]4, Col. Westland 3
Dublin Scioto 17. Reyooldsbura7
E. Liverpool 7, Beaver Local 6
Eastwood 24, Northwood 21
Ealoo 41, Day, Oakwood I)
Euclid 31, Notdonia 7
Evergreen 33, Arcbbold 30

St. Henry 24. Marion local 0
Steubenville 4J, O e. Collinwood 34
Stow JO, Warren Kennedy &amp;
StJUb .. 428 , Ma!Yern 0
Stronpv11le 16, Medina 0
Swant011 49. Montrelier 20
Tccul'nleh 20. Sprma. Shawnee 13
Tiffin Colutmian 41 , Bucyrw 6
Tinora 43, Hicksville 0
Tipp City 14, Graham 0
Tot. Bowsher 42, To! . Waite 21
Tal. Ubbey 44, Danbury lateaide 2l
Toi. Start .. 2, Woodward 6
Tal. Whitmer 20, Orea:on Clay 0
Tri·Valley 41 , W. MUikingum 14

17

21

0

Friday"s smres

"

AtroD. Hobo 27. Cle. VA-SJ 23
Akron MIAC:hest« 14, Twlaw 7
Atron N. 31, Akron Cent.-Howcr 0
Abtili Spriaa. 21, CantonS . 7
AkroD St.V-SI .M 14, Lo ulnille
Aquill317
Allilllee M•linaton 20, Louiav\lle 13
Amanda-Ciearqeelr. J~ , t..oean Elm 0
Amelia 3S, Cia. Walnut Hii!J 12
Amhrrst 43 , Bay 1
Msooia 24, National Trail 6
Anthony Wayne 28 , Millblr)' Lalr.e 14
Antwerp Jl. Cardi!Jal Strltth 20
Allington 21 , Arcadia 6
A5h1Wid 35, Mount Veroo.o 14
Ashland (Ky .) Paul Blazer 32 ,
Portsmouth 16
Athelll40, O.eahire R i ~et Val . 18
Avon l..ah 14, W~tlake 7
Beachwood Jl , Brooldyn 21
Bedford 49, Eastlake 16
Bellaire 34, W. Holmes 21·
Bellbrook: 26, Brookville )4
..
Bellefolll.Bine 21. Sprina. Northeaern

Marion·frant.l iDJJ, Col. CenteaniaJ 0
MarlinJloa 20, LoW1villc 13
Mason 21. Kinga ·20
Mwillon Perry 23. Massillon Jacbo o

Bass angling in Racine Pool rated highly

In the open ...

•

Ohio H.S. scores

Sunday Times-Sentinel !B7

Spacial

9,995

8

10,495

8

.
1

Special

895

8

1999FORD
CONTOUR
4 cyl. engine. power steering,
power brakes, auto .' trans ., air
cond., AM/FM stereo casselle,
till &amp; cruise, power windows &amp;

locks. t 1,DOD miles.

Special

14,495 •·

8

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING
'
'
Brlnlln')'our
belt deal on a New Car or Truck and we ·
.,
· will tr)r to meet.or Beat tbe Deal.

FOB A GOOD DEAL••
SEIJACit ROUSH, VICTOR ARMS or BOB BOSS
OUR SERVICE 'DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.·FRI. N; SAT. 8-12
MUFfLER SHOP MON.·FRI.
SAT. 8-1

•

�•

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

Last year

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Along the River

edouton

Section C
Sunday, September 24, 1995

1m General
.---1

~ Motors i - - ..

,

14507!1, 2 dOOt, driver side air bag, power windows &amp;
locl&lt;s, air conditioning, cruise control, ti~ wheel.

185419, Air conditioning, power mirrQ(, A1,tifM cassette,
cruise coo1rol, dual air bags, miaon fll1ra1kln system, loadII(!.IISRP $14,888.

$1(0) oo-np... 111 ~ ~ dlpolil. tu., titltlnllblnH. 15,000!TIIel PI'
,_., 101 b'IICII lldlionll mle, 24 mar'll1 ODiecl end IMie.M rabales.-l nar'IIM!s
n indl.dad, lltJ;ed 1o dlqlf ~.. ~ ~ on91'27/95.
•Option 10 purohlle $89\0,Iot&amp;l pavmenl!l $6350, W.A..C

$1!110 dawn JU ,. plyn'IIIIW.IIICitly . . . - . . . . . bill. 1$,000 mill,...
,_-, 1tltb' lll:h lddlionllmll. :M JriDI1II a..llft:I...._AI ,.._._, ........_

nlne:Wid. . . ., ~·~ PI'C9l'Mdw9 t:r~taY/115.
..ctp0on to~ Sl171, ~ PIV'I'*ItiS47W.~ WAC.

95 BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM

,

'
115083, 6 way power sea1, keyless entry, floor mats, pow·
er windows &amp; looks, tih &amp; cru~e. 3.8 V6 engine, aluminum
wheels, AM/FM cassette. Was $23,286.
$\OOJ dOWn pLis 1SIIJ¥'II!f'll. Jl!ru'~ deposit. tax, Iitie kW1d 1108!1M 15.000 rrjes pet
'f8'1',
..:11 addilitnl mit, 2-4 ITKDh dol«&lt; enc1 ~ease. AI rebllet afld i"C:entivee
•m it'lciiOed,
ID ct1r9f1 t INf'lllletln ~ cn.veon 9127!95
.option IOJNfct\aM $13,505.88,\olal payrnerts $8585.76, W.AC.

raJ v

FAMILY AND CHILDREN FIRST· The Gallia County Cluster me1 Wednesday in Rio Grande ror a retreat. The group finalized plans ror the transition 1o a Family and
Children Firs1 Council. The members separa1ed into groups, above, with ea~h rocusing on a certain aspect or council programming.
·

185296, AMIFM cassette, chrome bumper, sliding rear
window, driver side air bag,·alumirrum wheels, tach, clolh
60/40 seat. MSRP $12,097,

'

,,~ ~ plull. plyi"M. l8tUiiW dtpoell, . . . . ..:1 lent. 15,000 , . . per
.,_, 1tlt b' .:h lddilionll mit, 24 lllldl cloled tnd .... Al.,.,_ln:l
n inCUtlld, UjiCIIDc:IWigt M~protpn~ctlqlontmm.
.option 10 I)UfChal $77Ml.29, IGlll paymeta 13599.76, WAC.

nc.e.....

-.::s

Family and Children com·e first with council

95 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX LE
'·

~

145070, B4 Vspo!1 appearance package,·mmote keyless entry,

185228, Automatic, 5.0 VB engine, ti• &amp; cru~. air conditioning, power.windows &amp; locks, abninum wheels, chrome rear
step bumper, driver sicle ~r bag, loaded. Was $18,820.

n5220, AMJFM cassette, air cooditioning, power steering,

rear spoiler, dual air bags. special alloy wheels, anH·Iock brai&lt;es,
AMifl.l cassette, power ..;ndows &amp; locks. Was $19,300.

carpe1ed floor ma1s, dual air bags. Was $14,582.

II lXXI dolln plus 1St~ seart, .... lax, tile :n:llleenM. 15,1Xl0 milel per
.,_,IOC b~ idilialalmit, 24fr(Qflcbl«&lt;~._. . oiJfabaii!Stl"d~
n Wilded, MI;BI:ID e11rogt IIIWl.ifacUnprpp?~S c:~~qe on 9fl1~­
.option IOpurchase l11,001.1otal payments $8669.76. W.A.C.

.... -~..

SICOl!XIwn pU I. peymn 11CU11y dlpOII, ta. ~ n1 ._._ 12,1Xll mill per

r-.10C b

,_, 101: lllr.tllddillonll de.~ mcnlldoMdtrld..._M,..._IJ'Id ........
n i'd.dld. aiJflel todWigl• tiW'IItanrl ~d'Wige on9(l1m
*Option to pun:tw..e $9139.20, 1CUI payment~ $S074.5e, WAC.

95 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS

nh:Wid.

*Opllonta

--......... . -..

GALLIPOLIS -If a
child has a behavioral problem, trouble in his home life
or psychological distress. the
typical response would be to
use a band-aid approachaddress the problem and it will
go away.
But the way 1hese prob·
lems are dealt with in Gallia
County have been changing
ani! ·will continue to change
for the better of the child and
the community.
The first change came
with the Galli a County
Cluster, a program designed
by the stllte in 1987. Social
service agehcies uni1ed in the
cluster to provide children
. with holistic services.
Rather than juggle a child
with multiple needs from one
agency to another, the cluster
pooled its resources and pro·
vided setVices to a child in a
timely and coordinated man·
ncr.

-..~
c:a.ltnd IIIII. }I{
. . . . . ilal*lt

11'111, 24 ~
~ ct.ngel~popn~ dm;ll Df'I!Qm5.

l12,458.20,total paymenll$5999.78, WAC.

95 TOYOTA TACOMA XTRACAB 4x4

I

135024, Northstar engine, white diamond paint, neu1ral
leather interior, power lumbar supports, sport interior, alloy
wheels, kladed. Was $44,640.

175215, On 4x4 demand, tin wheel, chrome btrner, AMn'M stereo, sliding rear window, air conditoong, tach &amp; dock, ft011 mats.
driver side air bag, tinted glass, power steering. Was $20,105.

11000 doWn 1M 111 l)rfmllll. 5fiCldy depOSit. tu, title n hcense. 15,JXKl ~1!11*
,.., toe o 8ld'l olddillonal mile. 24 mont! c:tosec1 anc~~eaM . ,.,. reoatm ilnd f1Cen1Nes

StOCO ckMn ~ lit~ 11C1111V d8polll. iax. tie lnd 1C11n!1e. t2,CDJ m1es per
yM', IDC b' Mdllddilonll mil, 2• month doMd endlealt.AI Nb11t1 and~
n JncludK Nlitd to dlqa'l mrutlctiBI pragra~~~~ dlql on 9fllm.
*Option to purd'lale 114,563.53, total paymenta $5864.&amp;4, WAC.

niOJOICI,Ujld~ltlalQIIil~.,..prOQfwns~onw.!7g,

*Option to purcha8e $28,123 .20,10181 payment&amp; 114,716.80. WAC

95 G'IC VM1DURA AUTOfOR'I CONVERSION VAN

ias424, 7 jiiSS89Ir seoDig, mise ~ II, lilt ~ raa' detos( AIM'M
cassetle, PMr wildows,lollis &amp; rrirors. argo~ br- klggage
akJiiun oheel!, ~ . . rerool&amp;~nry. lhs$23,100. .
II !XXI dcMn plullll ~ IIQitty ~ tu. i. R ...... 15,000 mill I*

"*'

•

.,-. 101 bM:fllldi:IIII::U'*, 24 l'lllll'llllcbed a !Mia.'AI r!bll8l n ~
are lndudld. Ujlel ~ tt*'ll' II~ ~c:t.'91on i(lTfA
•Option to pui'Chate $14,855.22, total~ $7879.76, WAC.

95 TOYOTA TIOO PICKUP

But the cluster system did
not seem far-reaching enough
to the state. In April 1993, a
program was implemented
which allowed the clusters to
e~pand their services and cut
red tape. Clusters were given
the option ofwid~ning their
scope to be pilotf'amily and
Children First Councils.
.
Since November 1994, the
Galli a County Cluster has
been working to become a
s1a1e recognized council. And
last Wednesday during a
retrea1 in Rio Grande, the
agencies involved completed
their final steps.
The transition from a
cluster to a council is fairly
smooth. The only major
changes in service are the age
group, which broadens to
include infants to 21-year·olds
and the addition of early inter·
vention in the family unit. The
administration and make· up of
the council will widen to
include family members and
directors of the agencies
involved.
• "The transition from a
cluster to council will be rela·
tively easy," said Ron Adkins,
executive director of th~
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of
Alcohol, Drug Addiction and
Mental Health Services.
"We 've been doing all of this
already."

Gallia County Cluste.r expands
servics·with new program
The Ohio Family and
Children First initiative is a
collabor~tive ~ffort of state
·and Ioc.J.,gqv~ents, nonprofit organizations and
parents to focus on improving
the lives of families and

the state systems, including
.families, providers and local
governments.
Including families in
designing programs for
children will bring a new
flavor to the process. said

One of the biggest benefits.
of the council system is
moving from a reactive to a
proactive approach.
Robert Gordon,
Gallia cou'n ty Cluster chairperson
'
children in Ohio.
It primarily focuses
Ohioans on obtaining National
Education Goal One: By the
year 2000.-all children in
America will stan school
ready to learn.
The mission of Ohio
Family and Childre~ First is to
improve access to and the
delivery of education, health
and social services for children
and families .
The initiative ensures
input from people affected by

Raben Gordon. Gallia County
Cluster chairperson.
"We haven't always asked
what a family needs. and we
need to do that," he said.
Programmatic emphasis in
the council is on prevention
and carl y intervention, whi lc
the ini1iative's administrative .
focus is on streamlining
.
government opcrauons and
promoting local ncxibility.
The early intervention
strategy is a whole new focu s,
Gordon said , and a healthier

.

focus.
It's one of the biggest
benefil~ of the council system,
he said, moving from a reactive to a proactive approach.
Each council is required to
address the state ·
policy parameters.
The councils must
review and adjust ex·
isting programs to
better reinforce each
othcr...They should
rill sen-ice gaps and
address needs for
families, children and
prc),'llant women.
The council
should institute an ac·
. coumab1lity system
t6 check progress and
·double check the
system with input
from their clients.
According to the
Ohio Family and
Children First
Cabinet Council, the
councils have been
created voluntarily in
over half of Ohio's
R8 counties.
The Galli a
County and Family First
Council will be applying for
state recognition as a council.
Once that status is secured, the
council can apply for grams
and will be eligible for state
aid.

Gordon said he thinks the
county's families and commu·
nities are hungry for this type
of programming.
· "We're all in this to·
gcthe'r," he said.

FINE TUNING -Oneo(the
requirements or a council is to'
include the directors or social
se .. ice agencies in the council.
The direc1ors above discuss adminis1rative and fiscal issues or
becoming a council.

I

I

175185, AM!FM cassette, ftoor mats, rear step bumper,
power steering, driver Side air bag, anti-chip paint, tinted
glass, delay wipers, gauge package. Was $15,066.

155033, 5.7 li~e VB engine, 3/4 ton chassis, cen~al air &amp;heat, TV prep, power
windows &amp; looks w~h cruise &amp; cassette. Was $26,280. ·

LOADED!

IIOOOdollln JUI• ~ IIQdy ~ t1x, llltnllic:nl. 12,000nillllll'
ya, 101 for~ addilionll mil, 24 J'IIQ'li\O»&gt;Ifnf'-. M rllbDsft~

••idudld..
.._., diQI!I' ~propnsdwQIIon W11f'i6.
•Option tc putChaM $9039.89, total paymera $6111.78, WAC.

DON
WOOD
AUTOMOTIVE, INC.
~he

seal

900 East State Street,

Athens, Ohio

service.

185435. 01111 ai bags, dolll -

chail$, Nl.fM cassetle, allemin lies.
akmiunwheels, I'm lrllls, slep l8s, airwxllilli~. Was $22,8110.
sum lloM'I ,u lilt pl'j'lf*C, MtV'r depoe~~, • ·• .-.:~ . . __15.000 nill ,..
101 b flldllddiiiOnll mil. 2t niOI"'Il ao.Cinl IIIII\ AI reblles and nc:n.
atJjld 1o ~ !l'~npropns cha'lgeon 9fl1f"J

purchasel15.245.75, 1ota1 paymero 17919.76, WAC.

I

By JAMES SANDS ·
Special Correspondent
, The large brick farmhouse that
sits above SR 7 between Addison and
€heshire was bui It about 1850 by Rcu·
ben Rothgeb.
The home re·
mained in the
Rothgeb family
untill%1.
T h e
Rothgebsoriginated in France
but in 1he early
1700s escaped
to Ge"1'any, because of religious per·
secution. In the 1730's they sailed
from Amsterdam to Yirginia,eventu·
ally setUing in Loire, Ya. The first
Rothgeb families to come to Gallia
County were the Joseph Rothgeb
family that sctUed near Cheshire in
1810 and the Henry Rothgeb family
that came to Springfield Township in
I 811.
Reuben Rothgeb was born in the
I SIO's. He was a highly self-educated
man,and his farm was one of the most
successful on the Ohio River.
In 1961 Roy Cross of the Athens

MesSenger visited the house and re·
ferred to it as a."rambling brick home·
with a two story porch that overlooks
the fertile Ohio River."
"The two-story porch was built
for casual living. From the porch,
visitors can enjoy a view of the Ohio
River, and the landowner of yester·
year could keep watch on the workers
in the bottomland fields. The porch
also afforded the Rothgebs and their
guests a place of respite from the
summer h~t. The house 's hillside
location with the long, open porch,
took'full advantage of the breeze from
the river. Fireplaces mark the interior,
and the second Ooor is r~ched by a
staircase that opens into the tradi·
tional wide hallway at'the foot of the
stairs."
Reuben Rothgeb. was an engi·
neer and architect by trade as well as
a very prosperous farmer. He laid out
the present village of Addison in 1851.
The founders of Addison, Robert
Reynolds, William WatsOn and John
Loucks hired Rothgeb to do the work.
Rothgeb was also a philosopher
of sons. His will stated that some of
his philosophy was to be placed on his

distance from the house he built is: wasgivenforthelasttwoitemswhich
"No definite thing in the universe is would in effectgiveevcrything toone
'eternal in duration. The Bible is nephew and one niece. Ali the others.
wholly of human origin; all gods arc would be excluded.
imaginary beings. Death is eternal
The contest involving the nieces
dissolution of the soul and the body was to decide which of them was the.
of man. The soul, as the name of a best housekeeper. People speculated
lamp, is blown out and is no more. that it was Rothgeb's idea that people
The body decomposes, never 10 be will sacrifice their religion and love·
composed again ."
for family for money. How it was.
Rothgeb was a man of science decided about whowouldgetthe fann
and was probably the first person in we do not know.
Gallia County to espouse the idea
One interesti ng bit of •rony in the·
that the ~rth is mi II ions of years old story is that a court finally approved
and can be dated through rock strata. the placing of Reuben 's philosophy
Rothgeb's atheistiC philosophy sb onthestone,butthedocumentsnccded
incensed members of his &lt;lwn family · . were destroyed when the Gallia
that they got an inJunction against County Court House burned down in
inscribing anyth1ng sac rilegious on the 1870's .The Rothgcb.farm contin·
Rothgeb 's slone.
ued to be a successful operation after
Reuben's will had some other Reuben'sdcath. The first soybeans in
ROTHGEB RESIDENCE · The Rothgeb home dates tn the
interesting point' besides the mark ~ Galtia County were grown on the
1850s. Near the house a tombstone inarking the burial or Reuben
ing of the tombstone. His hws (hiS !arms ncar Addison and Chesh~re
Ro1hgeb 1hat became very controversial. The Rothgeb rarm was one
nephews and nieces as he never beginning right after World War 1.
married) were to pay all his debts,
of the most successrul in 1he coun1y in the 191h century.
rent thdarm for 20 y~rs, decide at
James Sands is a special corrrtombstone. It was so controversial many years. Finally his name was . the end of 20 years the best farmer
for that era and so potentially em bar. placed there. Some of the philosophy who would inherit the whole farm spondent of1he Sunday Times-Sen-:
rassing for the family that nothmg that was supposed to be on Reuben and give to his nieces all his cash 1inel. His address is: 65 Willow
Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.
was wriuen on Reuben's stone for Rothgeb's stone, which is justa short holdings. Unfortunately no critcnon
;

I

I

I

�Sunday, September 24, 1995
Sunday, September 24, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, 01:1 • Point Pleasant, WV

Anniversaries

Bluebirds are too aristocratic for backyard brawl
,oo

.. '!!be bdidrobnot thfink iht was onheohf ·
Ddruringdthe dtimehthe babythrobhin
When 1 finally caught the little
our a Y ms rom 1 etr nest tg
was oppe un er t e ucewt t e bird, a curso examination didn't
m thew tid cherry trees near the prop- cat watchmg uclosely, the btrds werc reveal any da~age 10 the robin. The
eny hne, but u appeared to be from ememelyaguated. All thespee1es of cat sulked off thinking I'm sure .. 1
another nest a~ the far end of our south· buds had followed the cat to 1ts home. never get to have any
em nctghbor s com fteld . The baby They were dtvmg atthe .cat and all
After a few moments and asbtrd had e~tdently fallen from tiS nest uttenng thetr loudest shneks.
sured the cat was not w;tching, 1
and wasn t an adept enough llter to
. All bmls were m acuon except a returned the baby bird 10 the area
avmd the cat.
pau ofbluebuds sllUng on~ wtrc by where we fii'st observed him in the
We cou.ld see the cat ~ad not hun therr btrdhouse. The blueb~rds were . eat's mouth. 1 placed him in some
the httle robm. Occastonally the fehne duectly above the yard where the high grass with the parent robins fret·
would drop the b~rdand then gleeful~y ~r~a was unrol~mg .}lle pair cor ling overhead. '
pounceonn~?amandprance~?war s
lfS were per cc Ysu 'ex.cept or
We are not positive, but we he·
home. Thts cat and mouse ga.me theu: heads, and wercwatchmg eve· Iicve our bird neighborhood is what
caused great frenzy among the btrd rythmg mtently. Thetr heads swtv·
dth bl b' d
h'
population. The baby .bird was elect togetherto watch the cat(by that cause Af e ~le ~ s not~· returrn ts
squeaking loudly, too.
time playing with the bird again) run year.
tc~ aed, 50ey ~e ISC~t~'·O::'·
I could not stand to watch the back and forth. The other birds were mhg, we 1
·dr ' P tsiJcate . h'bors;
&lt; ld '
·
As 1h
db' d still sc
h.
d
t ey wou never 1tvc m a netg
r·
un.o mg acuon.
e cat an "
reec mg an causmg a great hood with undignified, common be·
came closer and crossed our prop- ruckus. Thebluebtrdsstmcallysaton h . b h b. d
h
1 ·ed
·
·
· he . ·
d
d th · h d ·
av10r yot er tr s... nomauerw at
to coax the ktlly mto t u wue an move
etr ca s m
.
erty, tn
th b' db
.I
.
h
.
h
dI
was occurrmg.
b . .
rmgm~ me . e tr
ut to no avat . untson as t e actton c angc oca:!1Je cat s acuons. spoke plamly, too, uons. It was a mystery to behold,.. why
(Dorothy Sayre and her husOh, no you dpn t. No one takes my were the bluebtrds the only buds m band, George, formerly of Meigs
County, moved here about three
prey.~way unul I show 1110 my mas- the area not be .become mvolved'
tcrs! The cat contmued on to hts
Fmally,lcouldstandttnolonger years ago and now reside In a
new bouse facing the Ohio River
owner's yard and dropped the bird and~avethccatsomecompetition in
just
below Syracuse.)
under a btg tree.
chasmg the robtn.

r:U....

Watts, S~ephanle Jones, Williams, Karl Aldennan
and Sasha Shriver. Behind them are Melissa Hap·
ney, Rachel Penwell, Jenni Bryant, Ashlee Propp
and Chlsa Briggs. (Times-Sentinel photo)

River Valley Herbalists plan herb fest

GALLIPOLIS • Joe and Freda
: l\lley, formerly of Gallipolis, Will
:eelebrate their 50th wedding
;inniversary in Gatlinburg, Tenn.
-Ole week of Oct. 5 with their chil)lren' s families.
.
.
· They have two children, Terry

THURMAN - Thurrnan Grange
to meet 7:30p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS- Divorce Support
Group 7:30p.m. New Life Lutheran Church.

•••
Tuesday, Sept. 26
•••

•••
•••

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous 8 p.m . St . Peter's
Episcopal Church.

•••

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills
Career Center Ag. Recreational and
Diesel Mechanics FFA Alumni
meeting 7 p.m. in Ag. Mechanics
classroom of the center.

..

Revival

•••
' BIDWELL . Revival Sept. 23
through 30 at Garden of My Heart
Tabernacle.

•••

•••

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . RIO GRANDE · Onen Gate Revival 7 p .m. from Sept. 25 to
Garden Club meeting 6 p.m. at Oct. I at Crodell P;~rk sponsored by
OVB in Rio Grande to go to Stow- College Hill Church .
away. Program "How to Rescue the

•••
•••

GARY AND

GILL AND THEIR SON, KYLE

· Melendez-Gill
Diana Gill of Gallipolis.
· Tbe couple were united in marriage Sept. 9 in Fayettville, N.C.
They will renew their vows 5
p.m., Oct. 7 at the home Gill's parents, 2534 Georges Creek ~d.
The family will reside in Spring
Lake.

chandise. The company argued the
new character will make the public
lose its hunger for SP AM luncheon
meat, Harmel's most lucrative
product.
..
U.S. District Judge Ktmba
Wood said Spa' am acts childish
rather Ulan evil and is unlikely to
cause the public to confuse the
character Spa'am with SPAM
products or believe that Ute joking
reference was sponsored by
Harmel. ·
,.
: Ka-La,Ka-La.
·
"Spa'
am
is
initially
threatening,
.
Hormei Foods Corp. tried to
in
a
humorous,
childish
way, when
· stop Jim Henson Productions from
he
believes
that
the
oUter
Muppets
: including Spa' am in "Muppet
trespassed
on
his
island,"
'have
: Treasure Island" or on any mer-

You Don't Have

RIVER VALLEY HOMECOMING COURT
- Amy Williams was crowned bo!Jiecomlng
queen for River Valley High School during Friday
night's A!hens-River Valley football contest. In
front are (L·R) attendants Erin Conley, Paige

(Pam) Alley of LaBelle, Fla. and
Sheri (Don) Shelton of Gallipolis
and two grandchildren Donnie and
Nena Shelton of Gallipolis. Cards
may be sent to P.O. Box 629,
LaBelle, Aa. 33935-0629.

•••

Last Rowers of Summer."

GALLIPOLIS • Singing in the
park with Rev. Bob Persons 2 p.mc
Gallipolis City Park.

By LARRY NEUMEISTER
· Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -The Mup·
pets got the last laugh in court Fri,
. day: A judge ruled that Spa' am can
· stay.
Spa'am- not to be confused
: witb Ute luncheon meat pronounced
: the same way - will be in Mup. pets' next movie as high priest of
: the wild boars that worship Miss
· Piggy as their Queen Boom Sha-

Welcome
Home!

Alleys to observe 50th

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Heart Line
meeting 2 p.m. Holzer Cj,inic ·
Sycamore Branch with Damn E .
Hayes MS speaking on exercise.

Monday, SepL 25

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Smnlm Kessler
singing and Miles Trout preaching
7 p.m. Debbie Drive Chapel.

calendar---~

BIDWELL - Homecoming at
Harris Baptist Church with potluck
lunch at 12 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia Soccer
Association 2 p.m. at Bossard
Library.

•••

CROWN CITY • Schwartz
Family singing 10 a.m. Kings
Chapel Church.

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Multiple Sclerosis Surlport Group I :30 p .m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

Judge lets Spa'am Muppet keep his nam_
e
. To Spy the Best Buyt In
the Closslficdl.

.

•••

RIO GRANDE • Evans Grocery
and Penny Fare; family reunion 12
p .m. Bob Evans sbeltcrbouse.
Bring covered dish.

•••

PORTER - Clark Family performing 7 p.m . Clark Chapel
Church.

GAlLIPOLIS - Beatriz Melendez and Gary Gill Jr. announce
their marriage and approaching
renewal of vows Oct. 7.
Melendez is the daughter of
Amilcar and Louisa Melendez of
Spring Lake, N.C.
Gill is the son of Gary and

a daughter, Karen (Darryl) Cherdron of Worthington and a son,
Ernest (Judy) Salisbury of Columbus .. They have one grandson,
!'hilip Cherdr&lt;in.
Harold retired from American
Aggregate·and J.P. Sand and Gravel.

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

CENTENARY - Gallia County
Historical/Genealogica I Society
picnic from 12 to 4 p.m. Raccoon
Creek County P•lfk.

Sunday, SepL 24

11

,...--,...---RVHS ro

JOE AND FREDA ALLEY

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-prorlt groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to pr.,mole sales or
fund-raisers or any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guarante~d to run a
specific number or days.

'

Couple to mark 50th
. GALLOWAY - Harold and
·Naomi Steger-Salisbury of Gal: toway will celebrate their 50th
: wedding anniversary with a river· boat cruise, a gift from their chil. :tlren.
· · . They were married Oct. 6, I 945
:m'Colwnbus. Bolli are former resi:~ents of Gallia County. They have

----Gallia community

River reveries

By DOROTHY SAYRE
·
It happened one afternoon, last
o'clock. We heard
year, about 4
birds squawking and a noisy
commotion
just up river
along
the
bank. George
and 1!led out·
side to find the
source of what
sounded . like
the
com.
mencemcntofWorld War lli
We observed the ncigh~r·s cal
with a baby robin in its mouth The
robin parents wer.e highly excited and
·
·
had setoff the entire bird population of
our yard There was much flyt·ng
·
around and shrieks from starlings
'
mockingbirds, jays and sparrows. (A
few finches may have been involved
in the melee, too.) We could almost
. translate their sounds into, "Help, help,
a cat hasoneofourbabics! we must
scare the cat into dropping it. You,
over there, dive 9own! "

HAROLD AND NAOMI SALISBURY

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

POMEROY -The sixth annual
herb fest of the River Valley
Herbalists will be held from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the
Ravenswood Riverfront Park in
Ravenswood, W.Va.
Final preparations for the herb
fest were made at a recent meeting
of club members who reside in
both Meigs and Jackson County,
W.Va.
The festivals a,lternale annually
between Diles Park in Middleport
and the Ravenswood P.dfk.
Featured speaker will be Myra
Hale from LaPaix Farm at 10 a.m.
She will do a slide presentation in
the log cabin in conjunction with
her talk.
At I I a.m. Verla Shaffer will do
a basket weaving demonstration, at
nooy. Karen Showalter will show

herb garden rocks and at I p.m
Edolene Wood will give a history
of native plants and flowers of
West Virginia.
Sheila Curtis will be demonstrating flower arranging at 2 p.m.;
Denise Arnold will shOw an herb
Christmas tree; and Sharon Tuttle
wiU demonstrate making cinnamon
cutouts.
Sharon Ycncha will entertain on
her dulcimer, and during th·e day
numerous door prizes will be
awarded. The event has been
advertised in both local and national publications including. Country
Home Country Gardener, Country
Livi.ng Gardener and the Herb
Companion, .
During the meeting the group's
library of herbal materials was discussed and arrangements made to

renew several periodicals. It was
noted that there are still several
cookbooks "Herbal Flavors, Vol.
II" available.
Fall maintenance of the club's
~ardens including ones at Diles
Park were planned. It was noted
that now is the time to check soil
pH for improvement and clean up
garden debris by pruning out deadwood.
Borage was the herb-of-themonth for discussion and it was
noted that the herb has a hormonal
effect. It was reported that the
leaves and seeds can increase a
nursing mother's milk, that it
induces sweat making, is a good
remedy for colds and flu, and is
·also a useful.culinary herb. The
leaves have a taste reminiscent of
cucumber and excessive consumption can be hannful.

MOMS Club of Gallipolis

Wood said in a 30-page ruling.
"When Spa' am realizes that Long
John Silver is the true villain,
Spa'am joins the Muppet camp."
Tbe decision freed Henson Productions to move ahead with
licensing agreement.; for Spa' ambased merchandis'C with General
Mills, McDonald's and Hershey
Chocolate .
Alan Krejci, a spokesman for
the Austin, Minn.-based Hormel,
said the company planned to
appeal.

"In our view, the issue is

sim~

pie. Henson Productions is seeking ·
to use our trademark," he said.

.. Welcome Home''
Open House
Th.es., Sept. 26th I0:30 a.m.
131 Burdette Rd., Gallipolis
(Behind Clay Elementary)
Rt. 7 South
MOMS Club Sponsors:
• Monthly meetings with
guest speakers
. • Park Days
• Special outings
• Family Get-Togelhers
• Playgroups
• Monthly MOMS night out
• Babysitting coops

Children are
welcome at our
activities!
'
For more information or
to RSVP, Call 256-6011

·- --------Meigs community calendar
CHESTER - Annual National
. The Community Calendar is
:published as a free service to Hunting and Fishing Day obser'Don-profit groups wishing to vance for youngsters 6 to 16 at
:.nnounce meeting and special lzaak Walton Farm on Scout Camp
:events. The calendar Is not Road, Saturday, 9 a.m .-3 p.m .
·aeslgned to promote sales or Signs will be posted.
:fund raisers of any type. Items
REEDSVILLE - Meigs Coun:are printed as space permits and
·cannot. be guaranteed to run a ty Soccer Association, Forked Run
Slate Park, games start at 10 a.m.
:specllic number of days.
:
FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY - Faith Fellow. : RACINE- Meeting Friday, 7
:p.m. in fire department annex for ship Crusade (or Christ song fest
village residents interested in featuring . the Headed Home
·assisting with house numbering Singers, 7:30 p.m. Saturd.1y, at the
Antiquity Church. Sunday, Monproject.
day and Tuesday, three day revival,
7:30p.m.
SATURDAY

Society
scrapbook

:News policy
In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Triburw and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must be submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurence.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editting.

•

•

I

RUTI-AND- Rutland Freewill
Baptist Church homecoming Sund.1y with revival services to hegin
that day. Joe Gwinn, speaker.
HODSON - Homecoming at
Hobson ' christian Fellowship
Cliurch 'with 10 a.m. ~Suntby
school, noon covered dis dinner
and afternoon service at 1: j) p.m .

LOST: 50 POUNDS
FOUND: A NEW OUTLOOK ON LIFE.

featuring special singing by Sheila
Arnold and Sunrise and Sandra
Kiser, Rev. John Elswick speaker.
POMEROY - The annual
Lynch-Riggs reunion will be held
at the Licking County Park, Route
37 ncar Gnmville, Sunday from I I
a.m. to 5 p.m. All descendants of
Jeremiah Riggs, a pioneer settler of
Meigs County, are invited to
auend.
MIDDLEPORT - Special ser·
vice, Middleport First Baptist
Church, Sunday, 5:30p.m. potluck
dinner following by special singing
at 7 p.m. Pastor Mark Morrow
invites the public.

Mammography

HOMECOMING
. HEMLOCK GROVE A
homecoming will be held at the
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
Oct. I. There will be a dinner at
12:30 p.m. followed by a program
at 2 p.m. featuring the Wallace
Bros. or Huntington.
CCARD SHOWER
: A card shower is being held to
celebrate Parker Williams' 91st
birthday Oct. 8. Cards may be sent
to 100 Mudsoc Rd .. Patriot, Ohio
45658.

SUNDAY
RACINE - Homecoming at the
Eagle Ridge Community Church.
Sunday with carry-in dinner at
noon and aflet program at I p.m.
featuring the Bissell Brothers and
other singers.

.

Weight Watchers Florine Mark did it, you CCII do it too.
1

She tried everything - lad
diets, pills, everything. They
all promised her ari answer
to a lifelong problem, but
nothing worked.
.
Now, 29 years later, and
still 50 pounds thinner,
Florine Mark has guided
more than a million people
toward a common goal:
Learn to lose weigfit safely
and how to keep tt off.
"Weight Watchers isn't just~
about dieting," she says, "it's
a new way olliving."
As Florine travels around
the country, she olfers
thousands ol IJeople the
motivation and inspiration
ol her own experience . "I[ I
can do it, you can too. join
Weight Watchers today! It's
a great day to start!"

Aher

hhre

•aand on
consumer brand
preference aurvey1.

.. Aak for dtttlll.

FACTORY REBATE
ON SE'-ECT WASHER-DRYER PAIRS

s45·9 sfij'9

"""'"""""~

lhe Gift Of A Lifetime ...

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�Page C4 • ji...U.q 11limts-jlembul

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

.. ; Sunday, September 24, 1995

Sunday, September 24, 1995

..

•

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

Willy Wonka's chocolate factory comes true with candy sweepstakes
By MARCIA NELESEN
The Janesollle Gazette
JANESVll..l.E, Wis. (AP)- It
was like slarring in lhe classic cbildren's movie, "Willy Woolca and
the Cbocolale Factory."
Especially the scene where
Charlie Bucket wondrously discovers he bas a specially marked
Wonka Bar that gains' him entiy to
the famed 'but mysterious confectionary. And the pan where Charlie
gets his first look at the awesome
mountains of sugary creations.
Seven-year-old Eric Kenselb of
Janesville can empathize with
Charlie.
·
. He won a national sweepstakes
th1s summer to be "President For
A Day" of the Spangler Candy
Co., ille country's second largest
manufacturer of lollipops and
candy canes, including Dum DUID

Hospital's
trauma unit
plays real
life drama
By LINDSEY TANNER
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - The aquagreen double doors burst open as
paramedics bustle a gurney bearing
a young gunshot victim into Cook
County Hospital's trauma unit.
Shaking uncontrollably, his.face
obscured by an oltygen mask, the
.youth Is "shot all over the lower
extremities," says a physician, one
of a team of trauma doctors and
nurses wbo quickly swarm bini.
"Are you cold or nervous or
bolb?'' a doctor asks as others hurriedly strip off the patient's clothes.
cut off his bikini briefs and insert
an IV line.
"Have you been here before?"
another doctor wonders.
· "Ob yeah, you've been here
before," a colleague says soberly.
noting the thick vertical scar
stretching from the young man's
neck to his pel vis, and several old
gunshot scars on his abdomen.
The new wounds have pierced
his left thigh and buttocks, leaving
little visible blood and small
Innocuous-looking boles in the
· skin.
· "He bas boles all over him,"
says altending surgeon Seth Krosner, shaking his bead. "He's 21.
He can barely drink legally."
. Krosner is nol reciting some
: · acriptwriter's dialogue. This is
·: another night of real life in one of
: : the nation's busiest traUIDa units.
:: County General Hospital, the
: • large, public Cook County bospillif -

=~ ~~c~:r::.~i~~~~~~~~~;!~·~;

:· Cook County Hospital tbinic of
· : themselves as lbe real ''ER.''
:: An 80-year-&lt;~ld behemoth on the
:· city's West Side, it's the only pub: : lie hospital in a county of about 5
·: million people. It treats 40 percent
: • of the county) trauma victims, and
• : bas a reputation for getting some of
:: the worst trauma cases but giving
:· some of the nation's best trauma

· : care.

He prepared for his presidential
stint by watching lbe Willy Wonka
movie "a thousand times," his
mom said.
Indeed, family members felt like
tbe awe-struck Charlie and bis
grandfather, especially when they
were notified of Eric's win via registered mail and when they toured
lbe factory.
"There was candy all over, just
there for the picking," Mrs .
Kenselb said. "If you were hungry
for a sucker, you didn't have 10 go
far. It was wall to wall, floor to
ceiling candy ali over lbe place."
Tbey saw freight cars filled with
bull&gt; sugar pull right up 10 the factory . It was pumped out as sugar
waler into gigantic vats.
On Candy Cane Lane, the fami ly noted an almost overwhelming
candy cane smell. Metal arms

pops, Saf-T-Pops and Astro Pops.
Eric and his mom, Chris; dad,
Wayne; and sister, Dawn. 12. were
recently spirited to Bryan. Ohio.
via plane and limousine. The town
of 8,000 is also home to Ohio An.
makers of Etch-A-Sketch.
Family members were catered to
as if they were celebrities, Mrs .
· Kenseth said. The Dum Dum Drum
Man -the. company's 7-foot-tall
mascot - met Illem at lbe airport
as workers banded 'out can'dy to
smprised travelers.
The mayor - whose pockets
bulged with Dum Dums - presenled Eric wilb the key to lbe city.
and townspeople flocked to a band
concert given in Eric's honor atlbe
town's old-fashioned band concert
shell.
Eric even conducted a Spangler
Candy Co. new-product meeting.

CROWN CITY - Ohio publisher, Bottom Dog Press bas
announced the publication of a new
book on Appalachian history by
West Virginia Wiiler, Danny Fulks.
"Tales Along the Appalachian
Plateau" contains twelve non-fiction essays and 14 photos of life in
the Appalachian bills of Soulbem
Ohio and West Virginia. The book
is number two in the "Working
Lives Series" by the independent
publisher. PubHcation is funded in
part through a grant from the Ohio
Arts Council.
Featured are stories of moonshining, tobacco growing coal mining, religious revival meelings,
sports profiles? and tales of families, and even a murder. The
· auillor, Danny Fulks, has published
many of the true stories in such
publications as a Timeline,"
.. Hearthstone." "Country America,"
"In Buckeye Country,"and the
'Dayton "Herald" and lbe Columbus

SHS
HOMECOMING
QUEEN - Jonna Manuel,
center, daughter or John and
Megan Manuel or Racine, was
crowned 1995 Southern High
School Homecoming Queen
during halrtlme of tbe SHSHannan football game Friday.
She was escorted by Kirk Turley, son or Larry and 'Linda ·
Turley or Radne. Here, J~st
year's queen, Tracy Pickell,
len, crowns Manuel.

1
'

SHS HOMECOMING COURT - Southern
High School's 1995 Homecoming Court consist,
ed of the following, from lett: Homecoming
Queen Jonna Manuel and Kirk Turley; J~on
Shuler and queen candidate Jyl Mathews; queen
candidate Jennifer Cummins and Gabe Smith;
queen cand.idate Sammi Sisson and Rob Crow;
'

.

queen candidate Kimberly Cornell and Kevin
Deemer; Tyson Buckley and junior attendant
Amber Thomas; Dean Hill and sophomore
attendant Jayme Miller; freshman attendant
Jody Hupp and Ty Johnson. Cody Patterson
and Morgan Brol"n served as crown bearer and
Dower girl.

Second-smallest preemie called a survivor
"It's unbelievable U1at we could
mandatory because about a lbird of
be
blessed
so much with something
her mother's placenta wasn't work- ·
so lillie," Jackson said.
ingproperly.
Molber Jeanne Roskin admitted
she was "terrified," but drew
MAKE IT ARULE...
strength from Jackson's firm belief
Ann Dee would make it.
USE WANT ADS,
The baby was fed through a drip
tube the day of her birth. When she
developed heart problems, doctors
decided to treat her with drugs
TOOL
ralber lban operate because Of her
.
'
size.
The smallest surviving infant
was born in Chicago about five
years ago and was I 0 ounces and
9.9 inches long, doctors said.
All Natural C.H. 2001 '

"Marria..C! ,,.
.MaintC!naneC!"

''t~e,,,,:&gt;

· ·

•

With Chromium Plcolln.te

I -,RUTHPHAUUCY

He is a veteran of lbe U.S. Air
Force and has worked such jobs as
a grocery store clerk, a school bus
driver, gasoline attendant, truck ·
driver, gas meter reader, aircraft
mechanic, farm laborer, public
schoolteacher, and elementary ·
school principal teacher. He lives : ·
in Huntington, W.Va. .
,

By MICHAEL HADDIGAN
keep the ship in shape.
Hannah said be and the other
AJsoclated
Press
Writer
'·
Walton Manley-he's the one County, Jessie and her husband,
volunteers
ERIE,
Pa
(AP)
-The
brig
Niaspend four hours sand., near Tuppers Plains wbo goes all George, are selling their home and
gara
was
a
&amp;oggy,
rotting
hulk
ing,
varnishing
and painting for
out to present a most attractive plan to move to the Zanesville area
when
crews
raised
Commodore
every
hour
they
sail.
•. Christmas holiday setting at his where they have quite a lot of
"They won't let me climb the
borne-bas some crazy mixed up "family." They've been wonderful Oliver Hazard Perry's flagship
from
the
Lake
Erie
mud
in
1913.
rigging,"
he said. "ll's not that I'm
Dowers.
residents. I'd like to tell you ''not to
Louis
Hannah
of
Girard,
lben
4
afraid,
they
just won't let me up
Small wonder-what wilb the worry,'' the move might fall
years
old,
watched
the
salvage
there.''
strange weather we had in the through. However, it all looks pretClaxton said the older crew
spring.and summer. At any rate, his ty definite at Ibis point. Jessie, ai work with his mother from the
shore
of
Misery
Bay.
contribute just as much
members
lilacs are in full bloom for the sec- an auxiliary member, has an
"It
was
just
a
pile
of
junk,"
he
below
as
they would aloft. They
ond time, ille first time around, of incredible number of service hourssaid
of
lbe
ship.
often
act
as
guides, telling lbe Niacourse, having been in the spring.
in her work with the auxiliary over
Now
Hannah
is
86.
And
restoragara's
tale.
Due to family illness, Walton ille years.
"I'd like 10 lbink the older peotions have made the old ship young
wasn't able to ready his outdoor
again.
The
ship
that
saw
baltic
in
ple
are a lillie bener at lbat since
Christmas decorations last.year, but
Up Syracuse way members of the War of 1812 is a "living" IIley know more, and they have a
if all goes well he'll have them the Meigs Association for Retarded
ready for 1995-and we'll all drive Children will be staging a pancake museum of 19th century on the little more patience wilb people,"
lake.
he said.
out to see 'em.
brunch nut Sunday, Oct. I, from
Hannah is part of the ship's
The original Niagara was part of
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Carleton company each time the ship sails a fleet of six vessels built for the
And here is a clarification on an School cafeleria.
into history.
U.S. Navy.
earlier report of contest judging
Since we're living in a world of
crew
member
aboard
lbe
200A
On Sept. 10, 1813, Perry
held by the Meigs County Pomona initials, the association is also
foot
restored
wooden
sailing
ship
engaged
Ji!rilish ships near Put In
Grange. The first place winner in · known as MARC and is composed since 1991, Hannah is one of a
Bay,
Ohio,
in the llanle of Erie.
· •:. lbe crocheted afghan judging was of parents and school staff memhandful
of
old
salts
who
season
the
Perry
transferred
to the Niagara to
Eilha Louks and her entiy will n'ow bers and raises funds wilb which to
crew
of
40,
said
volunteer
coordicontinue
fighting
after the flagship
go to the state level for further benefit children and adults with nator Patrick Cl3ltton.
Lawrence
was
disabled.
judging. Good luck, Elma.
developmental disabilities through"It adds some leaven to the
Perry forced a llritish surrender,
out Meigs County. In the past the mix," said Cl3ltton, 67. "We need reporting to his superiors from the
The Women's Auxiliary at Vet- organization has purchased adap- the young animals to get up and
erans Memorial Hospital-and a tive playground equipment, has wrestle with the sails and do the Niagara, "We have met the enemy
dedicated, bard-working group it sponsored camping opportunities, grunt work. But the older people and they are ours."
The Navy purposely sank the
• is-bas selected and installed new paid for admissions to vari~us . bring their kn0wiedge aboard."
ship
in 1820. lly the time salvage
: · officers.
eveniS, outings and for field tnps
The twin-masted ship's crew, work began almost a century later.
The new officers include Abbie and assisted with equipment and with 16 professional sailors and 24
" .
•:· Stratton, president; Mildred Fry, uniforms for the Special Olympics volunteers, includes several teen- there wasn't much left.
Erie residents restored the ship
:-: vice president;. Helen Hill, secre- program. Naturally, the Sunday agers.
•
for
the 1913 anniversary of the bat:-: tary; Jessie White, treasurer and brunch proceeds will go towards
At dockside in Erie and during tle. And the state began a major
,-:-. Libby Fisher, corresponding secrecontinuing help for those with . calls in Great Lakes ports, crew restoration in )93 I.
·
.;- tary.
members carry out maintenance to
developmental disabilities.
· ~·
Gra~ Warner was the effective
~-: installing officer and lbe ·group preHopefully, the skies will empty
-'· sented Libby Fisher wilb a gift in out all of the rain over the next two
appreciation of her efforts as presi- weeks to ensure October's bright
dent of lbe organization for the last blue weather for the Big Bend
couple of years.
Stemwheel Festival which promisAnd, by the way, Jessie White es to be preny entertaining. A full
did accept the treasurer's pos~ but weekend of interesting activities to
it may be only on a temporary welcome in fall should keep us
• . basis. Unfortunal~ly for Meigs smiling.
See
•
Jerry Bibbee
· Marvn Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
With the family reunion season spaced for. easy editing. Reunion
Black wltan cloth interior, auto,
quickly approaching, many will be items should not exceed 300 wordS
Jusl20 Minutes Dnve stra~hl Up
AC, Pwr windows. Pwr locks,
Rt. 7 North thru Tuppers Plalno
• • submitting articles of family activi- and must be submitted within 30
: ties for publication.
cruise, rear defrost, AM/FM CD
days of occurrence.
42945 State Rt. 7
•'
player, tilt, 59K. You could be
No eltccptions will be made.
Coolville, Ohio 45723
; •.
To ensure prompt publication,
Ali
malerial
submilled
for
publi•: the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
mistaken for Ernhart.(
{614) 667w3350
: • The Daily Sentinel requests lbat cation is subject to editing. Articles
: : articles be neatly typed and double will be published as soon as possi ·
ble.
'

Making appointments

l * .....·

• In conjunction with Women's Health Month, sponsored by

Holzer Medical Center, nursing staff are visiting area high schools
to teach female students about breast self exams. Debbie Beegle,
RN, CCRN, lett and Fran Secoy, RN from tbe hospital's intensive
care unit will be visiting River Valley High Schbol Sept. 25, Gallia
Academy High School Sept. 26, Buckeye Hills Career Center Sept.
29 and Southern Local In October. They will also be speaking to
the Alpha Epsilon Chapter or Alpha Delta Kappa Oct. 17 at
Racine United Methodist Church.

, 95

K .J04

Plus $6
Svb;ect '"

JS Portrait Sheets In Allmovaluear'BAsh..o

SEE APPROVE &amp;
ORbER INSTANTLY.

--Reunion policy--

.

.' '

SltlJ&amp;CI tee ol $6 00 per pe1son pavatlle when porirQitS are lakeo . No 11 '11 onlf\e 01.1mbe1 ol oct.oertlsed conectloMa
per tam1~. \:lui 0111y ooe advet1lsed COllectiOn per SUbJ&amp;CI · Vour d!OICEI oii)Ose and background A!ldtt10M.I po&amp;e~
laloltl\ l or optional por1ral1 Coii8CI1011 Wlll'l M OllhgllliM 10 pU!choll.a&amp; Por1r!IH Sllllll IIIPJ'li'OXWT1111
8 Hollda~ background
IYIIIIble at no ft!kfllonll chlrge

THIS AREA KMART HAS APERMANENT STUDIO EVERY DAY
Monday- Saturday, 10 AM-7 PM
On Sun. I 0 AM (or store opening,. II later)-6 PM (or store closing. If earlltr)
~!:=

~ ·~

GALLIPOLIS

I I

•l

.:I'
. J

1

I I

••
' ''
••

..
I I

.''

204 '}{, 2ruf., 'Mitfrfkport, O:Jf
992-405510-5 'Mon. tfuu Sat.

PUBliC NOTICI!

:I

;f,I'

C·
••

'

·,.

·.

.

'

NEW CHEVR~L OLDSMOBILES, PONTIACS, BUICKS,
GEOS AND CUSTum VANS.

INVENTORY OF OVER 3011 BRAND NEW CHEVROLET
CI*VERSION VANS.

Certified used car buyeJS wi II be on hand to give high·
est trade· in value for your automobile. Please bring
your tiUe, registration card, and payment book if
applicable.
·

Plus $500 to $2IDI cash back or 1.9% APR financing
available !lease D.P. to 24 months) on selected models
on approved credit. Tenns available up to 84 m1U1S!

Selection Includes As1ro All Wheel Drives and G·20's,
both available with raised roofs or low tops. Prices
range from $17,488 to $36,988.

NO SALES PERMimD TO DEALERS. Tliis clearance is
for retail customers only. Prices apply to available
units only. No ordering pennltted at these prices.

All will be sold at substantial dlscoun1s!
••
•

I

I

WEST VIRGINIA'S #1 CONVERSION VAN DEALER HAS AN

TOM PEDEN HAS AN INVENTORY OF OVER 1000 BRAND

·

·,· Goll poU.... -448.20.

-,.,,
•

RELOCATED .

,,'·

..."

'

The Urgent Care and Emergency Room Facilities ~t Veterans
. Memorial Hospital have been relocated.

,.

•·••

A new Emergency Squad entrance to the facilities has been created
and is now located at the rear, center of the hospital. The route of
motor vehicles to the new Emergency Squad location entrance Is a
"one way" traffic pattern. A second entry area to be used by walk-in
patients and visitors accompanying patients is located near the new
Emergericy Squad entrance at the rear of the hospital.

The evening will conclude with a renewal of
marriage vows and dinner provided by the
church.

Veterans Memorial Hospital will be continuing services in both the
Urgent Care Center from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., and In the Emergency
Room Facilities, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

ISave $6400 I

•·

BRAND NEW '95 CHM ASTRO EXTENDED
CONVERSION VAN
• Extended Chass1s
• Dnver S1de A1r Bag
• Anii·Lock Brakes
• Air Cood1ti00
• Automattc: ~erdrive
• VISia Bay W•ndows
• Power Steenng

Urgent Care and Emergency Room walk-in patients and visitors can
also enter via the hospital lobby until 9 p.m. each evening when
lobby doors are locked. Patients will be registered for services of the
facilities at the switchboard office, which opens onto the hospital
lobby.
·
·

concerns affecting today's marriages.

~

'

..

• Power Brakes

•''
•

•

.'

• Power Windows
• Power Loel&lt;s

• lnd1rect l.lglltmg
• Premium Wood Pkg.

• Till Steenng

• F~t Convers&lt;lrl

• Crutse Control
• AI.'IFM Cassette
• Captain Chairs
·Sola/Bed

• Aluminurn Running
Boards
·l.ooded'

.,

BRAND NEW '95 CHM G-20 314 TON
LONG WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN
• Power WindoWS
• Power lodo;s
• Tilt Steenng
• Crutse Control
• ~MIFM Cassette
• 4 Captam Cha1rs

• lnd1rect llghhng
• Prem1um Wood Pkg
• Full Convers1on
• Alummum Runmng Boards

·Loaded'

•Sola/Be&lt;J

BRAND ~EW '95 CHM 314 TON RAISED ROOF
LONG'WHEEL BASE CONVERSION VAN
350 V-8 POWER I COJ.IIR TV

• RaJseo Root
·Color TV
• Dr111er S1de A1r Bag
• AnU·LCGk Brakes
• A1r Cond1!10n

• 350 V·8 Power
• .A.u!omahc Ov'erdnve
• V1sta Bay WtnDows
· • Power Steer1ng

TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844

344·5947 • 422·0156

• Power Brakes

• lndire&lt;:lliQhtmg

• Power W1noows

• Prem1um Wood Pll:g

• Power Locks
• T111 Steenng

• Cru1se Control
• AMIFM Cassette

• Full Convers1on
• Alum1n um Runnmg Boards
• Loaded!

• 4 Capta1n Cha~rs
• Solallleo

•

Monday - Saturday: 9 am - 9 pm
Noon- 6

•
l

•

•

.

ISave $6500 I

350V-8POWER
• Or1ver SKle An Bag
• An11-Lock Brakes
• An Cond11ion
• 350 V-B Power
• Automahc O,.erdn'Je
• V1sta Bay Windows 1
· Power Steenng
• Power Brakes

$19'988
...

.

jsave $6100 1

•..

For reservations call992-7410.

-

$18,888.

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The hospital lobby is now serving as the Waiting Room Area for
both the Urgent Care and Emergency Room Facilities.

•

,

DANNY FULKS

:•1.L:si~~1cn:.1
IN 3 DAYS
:
I
I
f!ONEY BACK GUARANTEE

by Bob Hoeflich

••

ARANDY

Friday, Sept. 29 - 7:00 p.m.
Ash St. Freewill Baptist Church

.

The book contains profiles of
small Ohio River towns and
descriptions of tobacco farming
and moonshine in Southern Ohio ·
and West Virginia·. It gives a
glimpse of the champion Waterloo
Wonders team of Waterloo and a
profile of basketball great' Bevo
Francis from Rio Grande College.
It reveals a mystery tale of ''Murder
on Greasy Ridge" and an interview
with Ohio coal miner John Walton.
Fulks is a professor of education
at Marshall University in Hunting- ·
ton, W.Va., where be leaches writing and education. He was born in
Guyan Township -near Crown City.
He graduated from Mercerville
Hi¥h School and earned a ·bachelor s degree from Rio Grande College; a master of arts degree from
Marshall University, and a doctorate from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville . He is the .
author of four books of self-directed learning.

-

By JUDITH KOHLER
AJsoclated Press Writer
DENVER (AP) - Ann Dee
Jackson's parents finally got to
show off their firstborn.
Donnie Jackson held his tiny
pride and joy, now weighing in at I
poulid, 13 ounces, for all the world
to sec Friday. Doctors say Ann Dee
is the second-smallest premature
infant 10 survive.
Delivered July 26 by Caesarean
section, more than three months
early, because of problems with the
pregnancy, the baby girl weighed
JUSt 11 .5 ounces and was 10 inches
long.
Before she was delivered, Ann
Dee's chances of survival were
estimated at 15 percent. When she
turned out to be smaller than·
expected, her odds dropped to Jess
than 1 percent, .Dr. Daniel Hall ·
said.
"Nobody talked about it," Jackson said. "But we knew she was
going to survive."

Dispa1Ch."

Beat
of
the
Bend
...
•

Dums IIley received during a meeting. A senior vice president of sales
and marketing asked Eric for a $5a-week raise, and Eric said be' d do
it if the man could find his new
boss a bag of blue raspberry DUID
DUIDS, a flavor lbat bad been discontinue(!. Eric also asked for a bag
of butterscotch-flavored Joliij!ops
for his sister.
Bags are marketed in mixed flavors.
.
Executives had previously and on the sly - determined the
children's favorile flavors.
So just like in a movie, lbe eltecutivc pulled out from under the
table two bags of Dum Dums, one
blue raspberry and the other butter'
scotch.
The last the family beard, the
guy was still waiting for his raise. ·

Garlia native publishes
book on Appalachia

a

(

sweet tooth.
"But I'd have to admit, after
tbat I was suckered out for a couple
of days," sbe said.
Tbe family will be Spangler
customers for life, she said.
Today, reminders of the trip
include bags of candy all over the
Kenseth bouse; an ever-present
sucker in Eric's mouth; Fric' s new,
18-speed bike; a S10,000 savings
bund lbat will go for his first year
of college; and numerous souvenirs
and toys that were sent to the family from bolb the Spangler and Ohio
Art companies.
Spangler officials also promised
enough candy to go around at -Jackson Elementary School, where Eric
is a student.
Eric and Dawn are trying not to
consume two special bags of Dum

Southern
homecoming
royal court
crowned

: · MOst of the nearly 5,000 trauma
:: Patients treated each year are low·: Income minorities, and about a
: • third are gunshot victims.
:: "It's blood and guts in Trau-: ma." a triage nurse says bluntly.
: · Her job, conducted in the large
:: lobby outside the unit, is to quickly
Ann Dee remains under care in
• : evaluate patients before sending
an incubator and likely won't go
:· them through lbe green doors into
home until late November. But
• : the uniL
she's breathing on her own after
:: Wben those doors burst open,
being on a respirator for six weeks.
:- doctors and nurses know they're
· .: often about to wibless a tragedy.
Despite her growth, Jackson
:
"I've seen only-children who
said he still can't find clothes that
: : were murdered on Mother's Day
fit her, dashing his hopes of dress. : and you bave to go and tell the
ing her, at least for now, in a DenHall said Jackson's strong ver Broncos souvenir jersey with ·
· : molhen that," says Krasner, 33, a
: · tall. muscular Sllll!COn with a thatch beliefs motivated the medical staff. quarterback John Elway's number
of punkish thick brown hair, a goa"He'd already pegged her as a on it.
tee and narrow, wire-rimmed glasssurvivor and we had to deliver,"
Tbe parents said they are eager
es.
His most memorable case dur- Hall said, medical director of the to get Ann Dee home, but are willing his three years at County Newborn Center at Children's Hos- ing to wait They just recently have
involved a woman 8 112 months pital.
been able to bold her. The couple
Ann Dee was 27 weeks old said the ellperieilce, though traupregnant, shot in the head and
when she was born, but was about matic, has brought them closer
wheeled in unconscious with faller- · .lbe
size of a 20-week-old. Doctors
log vital signs.
together.
"In case like that, everybody decided a rushed delivery was
thinks you bave two patients, but
,,
you don't," be explains. "You
I,.t,
1\1~
rte '"r
bave one patient -the. m~ther.
eq
~
Without ber, the baby won t surc.
Q lit
tl,.~ ••
vive. So you have to do everything
a~~ze . lfe '•
A"ah
you can to save the mother."
'"fr.
ll(;
·•e?
"So we cut ber open,''· be says
Q
tj
lilt
•
matler-of-factly- a Caesarian sece ..li ,
tion on a dying woman.
~
. It was conducled with the slim
hope ber body could use the; blood
that bad nourished ibe fetus. The
baby survived; the mother didn't.
"You can't bnagine the trauma
of taking a baby wbo then goes on
MIDDLEPORT, OH
10 c7. out of the womb of someone
who s dying." Krosner says. But,
You're invited to hear Pastor Leslie Hayman
be adds "It's nice to salvage an
present .a light-hearted message on the serious
Innocent,, cIean start. "
The green doors swing open
once again and Krosncr diverts ~IS
attention to a 75-year-&lt;Jld man w1th
a gaping 5-inch-long slash from bis
left ear to his lips, so deep that 1t's
nearly sliced open his mouth.
' "He's got a bad one," Dr.
Michael Moore says sofUy, quickly
approaching the gurney.

kneaded the syrupy mixtures until
they were just lbe right consistency . The candy remained bot for a
time and could be bent into shapes.
When docs a candy cane gets its
hook? Eric now quizzes with
authority.
·After it's been sheathed in its
wrapper.
The family also saw a warehouse the size of a football field
filled to the top with bolles and
boxes of candy canes.
Even lbe company's boardroom
looked like a candy store, with lollipop-sucking executives and candy
displays lining walls.
The family previewed a soon-tobe iniioduced product caJied "Suck
An Egg,'' a multi-flavored lollipop
thai can be repackaged in iiS plastic
egg.
Mrs . Kenseth said she bas a

Old salts season crew of
restored 19th-century
Lake Erie battleship

Page C5

Ji'unbag mimes-Ji'ontiml •

•

.

�ements
'

Senior Citizens Expo
attracts over 1,000
JACKSON • More than one
thousand people attended lbe 21st
Annual Senior Citizens Expo at the
Scioto County Fairgrounds Sept. 8.
Those attending were treated to
live entertainment, 65 exhibit and
information booths, represenllltives
of various agencies and organiza·
lions who serve lbe elderly, home·
made· crafts made by seniors and a
variety of food. Other events
included bingo, free health screen·
ings, a cake auction and a special
awards ceremony. More lban 40
door prizes were given away .
throughout lbe day.

The event was sponsored by
McNelly-Patrick &amp; Assoc., Tbe
Ohio Valley Bank, AEP/Columbus
Southern Power/Ohio Power and
Area Agency on Aging District 7.
The Area Agency on Aging Dis·
trict 7, Inc. is a nonprofit organiza·
lion funded by the Older Ameri- .
cans Act with funds administered
through tbe Ohio Department of
Aging. AAA 7 serves senior citi·
zens in Adams, Brown , Gallia,
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence
Pike , Ross , Scioto and Vinton
Counties.

Entertainment

September 24, 1995

Sunday Tirnes- Sentinei/C7

People in the news

Jimmy Smits

SENIOR EXPO EXHIBIT • Donna Sanders of AEP/ColumbUI
Southern· Power/Ohio Power makes a presentation SepL 8 at the
Senior Citizens Expo at the Scioto County~~~· Tbe company exhibited at the expo and was a corporate spo~r.

NEW YORK (AP) -Elton John ... Luther Vandross ... Edgar Bronfman Jr.?
This unlikely trio was brought together by singer
Bruce Roberts for his new album "Intimacy."
Bronfman, chief executive of the Seagram Co., cowrote three songs for the disc under the pseudonym
Junior Miles, Seagram spokesman Chris Tofalli
said Friday.
Roberts, who was the singing voice of Danny on
"The Partridge Family," earlier wrote..songs with
Bronfman that were recorded by Dionne Warwick
and Ashford &amp; Simpson.
It's Bronfman's second foray in the entertainment
world this year. Seagram bought 80 percent of
entenainment giant MCA in April.

the Vietnam War.
The bearded, 48-year-old Texan strummed a 12-string guitar and sang of
small towns and rodeos, teen-age boys with dilapi,dated cars, and young lovers.
"I understood very few words, but it was still wonderful," said DoLan
Huong, a 22-year-old secretary, after Seals and his sideman, singer and
guitarist John Porter McMeans, ended their set Thursday,
Country music is modestly popular in Vietnam, which beg'at\ opening to
Western cultural innuences in the late 1980s.
'
.
· The United States and Vietnam cslllblished diplommic relations last
month.
NEW YORK (AP) - J1mmy Smits could have ended up on "Monday
Night Football" instead of "NYPD Blue" if not for a high school fie ld trip.
The actor, a varsity linebacker at Jefferson High ScHool in Brooklyn,
recalled that on a bus trip, his coach pointed out Shea Stadium. where the New
York Jets then played, and said, "Jim, you could be playing there some day."
Then his English teacher took the class to sec Raul Julia in "The
Threepenny Opera," Smitzsaid in the premiere issue of the magazine Brooklyn

HANOI , Vietnam (AP)- Singer Dan Seals brought some cowboy culture
to Viemam. performing in the first official American cultural event here since

Bridge.
Julia ''was from the same background 1 was. and he was up there and
everyone was looking at him and he was terrific,"
Smits said. "And that was it. I never really wanted
to do anything else after that.''
SmitS quit football . He knew he had made the
right choice when his teammates came lO watch
him in a school play and gave him a standing
ovation.

WILMINGTON , Del. (AP)- Shaun Cassidy
has moved from teen idol to TV writer.
The former star of "The Hardy Boys" is the
writer-creator of CBS's eerie new Friday night
show "American Golhic.·'

Gary Cole stars as an evi l sheriff who controls ~~~=ci~~=
townspeople in the fictional Trinity, S.C. The show Shaun
was filmed near Wilmington, Del.

•

Judge orders beaten girl to marry offender

..
TINA BISSELL AND TODD WOLFE

Bissell-Wolfe
POMEROY -Todd Wolfe and
·Tina Bissell announce their
engagement and approaching mar·
riage.
:; - · Wolfe is the son of Tom Wolfe
'· of Bashan and Shirley Lude of
~: Syracuse. He is employed with
, Electronic Vision in Athens.
•: · Bissell is lbe daughter of Roger
Bissell of Chester and Sue Haning

r:

~

Where does Ohio find .iudlc• like
this? - BOn.ING MAD
Di:!AR BOn.JNO: Tbanks fa your
leuer and the clipping. I don't know
if Judge Meslmaku W&amp;'l elcetcd or
appointed, but it seems to me that
Ohio can do bella: Keep reading for
a 1e1t.ct from IIIIOihcl' readel who is
not happy wilh the law:
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to your letter about adoption
laws. I'm so angry I can barely see to
type this.

Dear Aaa Landen: Now I've
heard cvcrythins. You have printed
columns about IIOIIIC addle-brained
tlecisjms handed down by judges, but
this one takes the cake:
Hamilton County, Ohio, mwticipal
judge Albert Mestcmaker ordcml a
man who punched his girlliicnd in the
mouth 10111811')' ber IS a condition or
his parole. The judge decided it
would be betlt:r for them and their
out~f-wedlot:k children if they

married.
Zauzi Smith, the praident of the
Since some state courts have
of Columbus. She works at the Pre- · Cincinnati chaptel' of the National changed the laws so that "spenn
Olpnization for Wilmcn, was lcsa parents" may now re-enter the lives
scription Shop in Athens.

The open church wedding will
be 12:30 p.m ., Sept, 30 at the
Asbury United Methodist Church
in Syracuse.
A reception will be held imme·
diately following the wedding in
the church basement.

~~~~

enthusiastic. She believes the .iudlc's
••temall rtends the wrong message
to vic:Wns of domestic violence. 'It
is c:omplctdy out of line,• Smilh said.
'Why would anybody think that if
they were married. he wouldn't hit
ber?"~be added, '"Jbe olfCIIIc: of the
judge is IIIDOil U bid U the ofCIIIC
oflbeeb'ser•
Aller contidcrab1c beat from the
community, Judge Meatemaker
til upped his Older but said in closing,
'I still !hint they llbould m811')1'

or the children they discarded, why

not add some requirements that
would ensure a level playing field?
,The adoptive parents should
present an iremized bill to the "sperm
parents" to cover all expenses
incurred in raising and c.ring for the
adopted child This would intludc
charges for the daily 24-hour blbysiaing, loving, caring and nurturing
that the adoptive parents gave 10
willingly. When the 10181 amount bu
been paid; the "spenn parents' my

then re-enter the life of the child they
discaJded.
I wonder bow many 'sperm
parents" wOuld still feel the need to
contact their adopted child iflbey bad
to meet these financial requiraneats.
Not many, rn bet. The laws regarding
adoplion an: a mess. and lam -SAD

IN ILLINOIS

Star Watch: Director says The
Blob' not his defining work
1

----.
Ann
Landers

"If you are calling from a touchtone telephone. press '1.' If you have
been in an accident, pas 'l.'lf you
are having a heart auack llld have
diffil:ully bft:athing,enlt:r your Social
Security oumbet and press the JIOUIId
Ice y oa the lower right l)f your
tclepiiODC.I{Qid for the next available

DEAR ILLINOIS: l~gree wbolehcartcdly. A few months ago, the
Baby Richard case in Chicago
crealed a great deal of resentment
when the 4-year~id child's adoptive
parents wen: forced to return him to
his natural fath«
Anyone who saw the TV coverage operator.' •• ROCKVILLE. MD.,
of that badly handled case wiU vouch PUnJRIST
DEAR ROCK: Let'i hope i1 never
for the faet that the b~ loser is
Baby Richard. In my opinion, that gets that bad.
"ACollecdmlo{MyFIJWirileGem.s
Dlinois Supreme Court decision was

a disgrace.
Now that scaled adoption records
can be opened. fewer children will be
adopted. So again, the losers are the
children.
Dear Ana '•aden: There are so
many au!.OIIIatcd phone sylllalls that
it won't be long until the eme~geucy
900 service sounds like this:

CHILDREN OF A LESSER GOD • Brian
Kapell and Antoinette Abbamonte star In tbe
Fairmount Theatre of the dear production of
Children of a Lesser God. The play will be per·

of 1M Day" 14 1M perfect little gift
for IMI spec/Ql SOtMO/Ie wlro is
impossible 10 bllJ for. &amp;ltd 11 •If·
addre11td, lo11g, busllltll·llJt
tn~ turd 11 cited: or rt11JM1 Older
for $5.25 (this illchuks [JOII4ge turd
luuulll11g) 10: Colltctioll, c/o A1111
l.Jwkrs;P.O. Boz 11562, Chit:4go,
Ill. 6061/4)562 (ill CIIIUJda, $6.25).

RIO GRANDE- The 1995·
96 Valley Artists Series kicks
pff Monday, with a perfonnance
of Mark MedoiT s Children of a
Lesser God. The production features a combined cast of bearing
and deaf actors and is produced
by the award winning Cleveland
Signslllge Tbealre.
The play will be pre sen ted
simultaneously in American

I

MICHELE HART -A !liD BRENT BISSELL
•

•
•

Hart-Bissell

• GUYSVILLE - Mr. and Mrs.
)v(yron D. Hart of Potter Road,
puysville, announce the engagement and approaching marriage of
lheir daughter, Michele Lynne to
Jlrent E. Bissen of Tuppers Plains.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dou~las M. Bissell, also of Tuppers
plains. ,
• Hart is a 1991 graduate of Fed·
~ral Hocking ,High School and
fttended the Ohio State Universi·

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

\

Wedding
policy

: The Sunday Times-Sentinel
:iegards the weddings of Gallia,
:Aeigs and Mason counties as news
t1nd is happy to publish wedding
~tories and photographs without
t:harge.
: However, wedding news must
Jneet general standards of timeliness . The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
Soon as possible after the event.
• To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
. t'lken place within 60 days prior to
lhe publication, and may be up to
l'iOO words in length. Material for
~long tile River must he received
lly the editorial department by ·
thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the dale
Qf publication.
.
• Those not making .the 60-day
aeadline will be published during
!he daily paper as space allows.
: Photographs of either the bride
tlr the bride and groom may be
(!Ublished with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
lllack and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
: Poor quality photographs will
I(ot be accepted. Generally, snap·
sltots or inslllnt·developing photos
ai-e not of acceplllble quality.
: All material submilled for puhliattion is subject to editing.
·:· Questions may be directed to
~e editorial department from I to 5
p.)n. Monday through Friday at
4116-2342.

.
..·
•

ty/Agriculture Technical Institute
at Wooster. She is employed by Dr.
I. F. Kroner III, D.V.M. in Athens.
Bissell is a 1988 graduate of
Meigs High School and attended
Rio Grande University.. He is
employed by Walker Systems of
Parketsburg.
The open church wedding will
be 6:30p.m., Nov. 25 at at the
Athens Church of Christ.

Both For

$199

95

Was 'Apollo
13' shot in
space?
Q. Is it true that "Apollo t3" was
·really shot in outer spaee? I have a

:

: lobster dinner riding on this one. ~ R.E.M., Fords Mills, N.B.• Canada

: A. I hope you bet that it wasn 'l, lle. :cause it wasn't. There are very lew
·cameramen in outer space.
; Q. I have been wondering for

·many years if Mala Powers and Ste· ..
· fanie Powers are mother and daugh·
ter.- J.P.. Grass Valley, Calif.
A. Wonder no longer. They're unrelated. ·
Q. My husband an~ I have a small
wager going. He thinks that the girls
who played on "Benson." "Family

I

Performed By
Trained Vocalist

Boo Boos Happen!

Ties" and "Growing Pains" are all
one and the same. I say they are very

different - Missy and Tracey Gold
and Tina Yolhers. Please settle this
dispute. - K.J., Benton, Ark. (via
America OnLine)
A. You win. Three different young
ladies.
;·
,
·
Q. I am curious as to why we don't
see any more of Johnny Carson after
30 years on "The Tonight Show." ·
What is he doing with himself these
days? - S.W., Port St. Lucie, Fla.
A. He retired. and he meant it. He's
enjoying a leisurely retirement - golfing, relaxing, reading.
Q. My wife and I watch a lot of
"Kojak" reruns. Frequently, the
name George Savalas appears in the
credits. Is he related to Telly. and
what role does he pl.ay in the series?
- D.R.B., Evansdale, Iowa
A. The Savalas boys were brothers.
and George played the part.ol Detective Stavros.
Q. Is the show "The Price Is Right"

ENNIFER
JANEY

Whether it be for sentimental
.
reasons or just for· fnn~ ·
-we've got what you need to
give those special occasions
that unique touch!! ·
.

And the Holzer Health Hotline is here to help
you Jmow what to do when treating an injury.
If you•ve never used the Hotline, why not call
us when you have health care concerns.
..

Seven days a week, 8 a.m. to II :30 p.m.
j

•

ular.' Sh'e is won over by the
teacher's charm and love. They
get married. but' struggle to
adapt to each other and the pressures that accompany Ole union
of deaf and hearing cultures.

Children of a Lesser God is
about a deaf woman's suspicion
of lbe hearing world in general
and her speech teacher in partlc-

For ticket information
call 245-7364. Ohio residents
may call toll free at 1-800-2827201, extension 7364.

.

,j:':111' .. ..-l'~~....-~ ;,... .,-....

L.

'A)S

-----------------:111111
',

1 lo

..

'•. 8

I

,

.c.

•

DAHCIRO~ MIND~

'"

7 : 10,11 : 10 DAJI.Y
I'IATIIIBU SAT/GUll
11"1 0, JIIO

... ~.ow.

.~..

.!.J.__,_,J:o _) ) ~ !' J

!til SENIOR
I'J'i'J

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•

Thttrsday, September 28, 1995.
ALL@ South Central Ohio Offices
ALL DA:V! 9:00 a.tn.-7 :00 p.m.
AAA Gallipolis

360 Second Ave .
446-0699

.C.Iuis.e_DayJ

•

THE MEN OF SEDUCTION
ARE COMING TO ·PT. PLEASANT
FIRST TIME EYER IN WEST VIRGINIA,
THE MEN OF SEDUCTION WILL BE
APPEARING AT

SANDI'S LOUNGE

•\

Showtime 8 p.m. on Thursday, Sept. 28

PRIMESTAR'IS HERE! AND
IT'S THE BIGGEST NEWS
IN TV SINCE TV BEGAN.

You can have your own persona!;
all-digital satellite 1V system,
a
smalf dish that won't take up your whole
backyard, at a cost that won't eat up
your budget!

A. Some of them are reruns, some
are new. Barker is 71 , even as we
· speak, and stil l doing the-show.
Q. I saw an actor called Turban

Bey on " Murder, She Wrote" re·
cently. Was he in the movies as a

child? The name is so familiar. C.K., Baroda. Mich.
A. Bey was in the movies years ago,
but as a young man, not a child. The
child sial' you may rememller was Sabu.
(Send your questions to: Ask Dick
c/o Newspaper Enterprise As'
sociation. 200 Madison Ave., New York,
N.Y 10016. Due to lhe volume of mai~
personal replies cannot be provided.!

ASK DICK . KLEINER

DICK
KLEINER

.'

SIDp__by_&amp;_SAV.E an

PRIMESTAR GIVES YOU:

• More and better prpgrammingUp to 84 channels!
• All your f:wotite channels: CNN,
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[il

--~----,

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

on reruns? I have been watching it

I

GALLIPOLIS

r----~----

I
........
: .•I
.
I Why wait for daye or weeke to get your picturee back whe~ ;~ou can au
1
them today. Brini;J your film to us for 1 Hr. Pr!'Cil661n~.
· 1
''V
:::t't*
•
2ftd five • Dcu Aoum '1JO•
(u::u:a
.;..... C I If TINA C) • (IMJ' 1 ~Q
- I

1:20, J:lC

for zo years. and Bob Barker was old
when I started watching. He must lle
at least 80 years old now. Is he still
living? And still doing lhe show'/ R.S .. Chicago

CALL US AT 441·0 11 0

1725 EASTERN AVE.

every book out of the library I
could find .... I felt that films were
stories that could be used to ¥et
across imponant ideas to people. '
Starting in 1949, the Franklin &amp;
Marshall College graduate produced television programs through
his compillly, Good News Produc·
lions, which also made religious
and educational films.
In the early 1950s, Good News
bought a !50-acre cam1'"s ill
Chester Springs with 18 bwldings.

~TIN~ES

S II
•.I

Sign Language and s·poken
English. The performance
begins at 8 p.m. and will be held
in the Fine and Perfonning Arts
Center on the campus of the
University of Rio Grande.

Yeaworth said.
"We know what happened to
Dick Clark. We don't ever know
what happened to Yeaworth,'' he
said with a smile.
With a lean frame. full head of
light hair and good humor. the
father of live appears far younger
lhan his 69 years.
"I kn ew I should be in film
years and years ago," said Yeaworth. "There was no film training
on the university level but I took

1:20,9:20 DIIILY

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Holier Health Hotline
1-800-462-5255

YOU'LL Uta IIIOIIEY
• THE CLA88Ifllll
Alii TliAT'IIIO 1141.LI

wbo is in Sucec's custody.
After lbe split, Sucec and their
son lived with the cat. But Hudson
took Seymour back in December
1993, according to Jeffrey Leving,
Sucec's attorney.
On Thursd~y, DuPage County
Judge Kenneth Abraham ordered
Hudson to return the cat to Sucec
or be found in contempt of coon.

:By Dick Kleiner

Recliners

formed 8 p.m., Sept. 25 in the )'ine and Perform- ..
ing Arts Center 'on the campus of I he Unlvel'liily
of Rio Grande.

'Children of a Lesser God' launches
1995-96 Valley Artists Series

Woman chooses to go to
jail instead of giving up
cat in divorce case
WHEATON, Ill. (AP)- A
woman fighting her ex-husband
over custody of the family cat
chose to spend two days in jail
rather than give up her tabby.
Terri Hudson battled with Jeff
Sucec over the fate of theca~ Seymour, since the couple began
divorce proceedings in 1993. The
couple also bas a 3-year-old son,

By DINAH WISENBERG BRIN
Associated Press Writer
PAOLI, Pa. (AP) - As be sits
in a study lined with books on lilm
and God, Irvin S. Yeaworth Jr.
holds up a Mason jar with a piece
of gooey, red silicon labeled
"Blob."
"I want you to know Ibis is a
very small part of my life ," he
says, looking at the jar.
"This" is HThe Blob," lhe
1958 horr()r film directed by Yea·
worth that launched Steve
McQueen's career and became an
instant hit with audiences spooked
by lbe man-eating gelatinous mass.
While "The Blob" evolved into
a cult classic, it and two subsequent
science fiction rilms - ''4-D
Man" and "Dinosaurus!" -were
anomalies for Yeaworth. who has
devoted much of his career to pro·
jects involving religious and social
issues.
Yeaworth said he and liis partners shot " The Blob" in Philadci·
phia' s suburbs for $120,000, then
sold it for $300,000 to Paramount
Pictures. which made · millions on
the movie.
"We took our share and threw it
into 'Secret Island,' " a television
program offering moral lessons for
preschoolers. During that one-year
run, the only WFIL-TV show that
got more mail was "Bandstand,"

"t995, Los Angeles
T1m1t SvncJicate and
()ea1on Syndicate'

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Advance tickets are $12 for VIP seating and $10 for reg.
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advance tickets call Sandi's 675·9795.

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St.-via., .'tledllln. ~k.'f!•nt rmc•l11! nllo.:M10111 .u ~ tf• c ~ 'ABC, CBS, NHC , PRS ..00 ~·oll channe l~ a"' 3Ya!latHe ooty 1m homt1ll J whtql WYIIJI rtww !ll'lilocuptabjt ptcture from
locll ABC, CBS. NBC I'SS &amp;nd
Jfill.lta \llilil ( flfMfltHJIYi, !N~. rooftOP rectMf'IRllr'lttrll"'a: all(! 12! which haw nollthr:Mhtd ln c..l&gt;lf.l~k\.n.. onln tht lui. 90 ~ . Cr:rt.rn oth«
~/NY.JW!y.

•

rox

·'

I

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

Carmel
church to
observe
. .
anniversary
'RACINE - The IOOtb anniver:sary of the building of the new
Carmel United Methodist Church
:will be celebrated with a Christian
heritage program Oct. L
· Emphasis of the day will be on
remembering things and events of
1895.
: The 12:30 p.m. potluck dinner
.will feature foods whi ch might
have been prepared 100 years ago,
like apple pie and fried chicken .
Today's food. such as taco salad,
are not encouraged for the potluck,
says the anniversary committee.
. Those attending are encouraged
to wear vintage style clothing and
to bring pictures, heirlooms, homemade quilts, sh~wls anu other
apparel or furnishings for display.
Descendants o( early members of
the church and communily are
invited to portray their ancestors
and tell the story of the part they
·played in the development.
The church building was dedicated in November 1895 . Wil
White of Syracuse was employed
as carpenter and members of the
community contributed the labor.

Education
costs on the
rise again

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Faritllllusiness
~

The strip of land for the new build- John Johnson, Rader Kaine, James
ing was obtained from John Roush. Holter, William Yost and Jacob
The estimated cost of the church Aumiller.
was $2,500 and the cost of the bell
The history notes that the first
was $49, according to the church wed,ding in the cburcb was of
history. Of the bell cost, Sally James Madison Circle and Minnie
Aumiller donated $40.
Alice Archer. Their daughter;
Trustees at the time of dedica- Verna, served as janitor of the
tion were Wes Circle, John Circle, chun:b for over 40 years.
The new building replaced one
Clemens Brinker, Charles McKim,
Frederick, Bergscheiker, Enos constructed in 1859 which was
Rose, Daniel Roush, F.S . Roush, called the Horse Cave Chapel.

Price•

Fun tor the
whole family!

Start AI

Complete banking school

$1 ,850

Y.POO~-JNC.

COLUMBUS, Ohio
HOUDA
Seven of Ohio's 13 -~~~e~,;_;~{su;d~:~~ l~ 2973 Ptlldmanl Ail., Huntington (31J4) &lt;2S-4788 . C.:...A"'.
. universities imposed the ·maximwn
·
Man.-Frt. 9:30·5 Sat. 9:30-2
-i~~~
tuition increases pennitted u~·d:~·~~;.;;
ii
state law this academic year, an
Ohio Board of Regents report
showed.
Acting Chancellor William
Napier said Friday that the fee
boosts were among the lowest in
about a decade.
"The figures we are releasing
today make it clear that it is much
easier for boards of trustees to bold
the line on fee increases when the
If you ore plan.flinB a weddifl6 •
state's operating budget includes a
then you 1hould ~rome •ee w at
strong appropriation for higher
education," Napier said in a news
Haskins-Tanner.
release. .
.
You K1UlluJ~ over 190 style• of
He said trustees did not uni·
twcedo• to choo•e from. We have o
formly raise fees for full -time, inIarKe' telettion of the loteat •lyle•
state undergraduate students to the
and c:ompUm.entary acceuorie• for
maximum 6 percent per year that
thia special occa•ion.
state law allowed.
Annual fees for the 1995-96
Quality Formaluear al
year range from $2,814 at Shawnee
I
Affordable Price•
State University to $4,810 at
Miami University.
Both Shawnee State and Miami
imposed .the ma.~imum 6 percent
fee boosts. So did Bowling Green,
Ohio State, Akron, Wright State
and Youngstown State.

I'

•

Soybean
prices
decline

By CLIFF EDWARDS
AP Business Writer
Soybean futures prices sank Friday on the Chicago Board orT~
amid signs an early frost m Midwest growing regions did less damage to crops than expected.
·
Unseasonably cold weather
swept Thursday through much of
the middle United States, boosting
futures prices of grain, soybeans
and cotton crops, which have dwindled steadily in supply this year
under adverse weather conditions
and pest problems.
TAMMY BEAVER
LANA.SMITH
But preliminary producer
Two employees of the People's Bank of Point Ple11S8nt, Tammy
inspections indicated the frigid
Beaver and Lana Smith, have graduated from the West VIrginia
temperatures were not as
School of Banking. To complete the two-year curriculum, Beaver
widespread or as severe as originaland Smith attended weeklong classroom sessions at Marshall Unl·
ly believed and ~ore of _the c_rop
verslty each year In addition to completing assignments between
survived than penshed, srud Chicasessions. Ms. Beaver, who was employed by Peoples Bank In 1985,
go Corp. analyst David Annstrong.
Is a mortgage Joan officer. She is a 1977 graduate of Ravenswood
"It' s still pretty unclear what
High School. She resides in P!&gt;lnt Pleasant with her husband, John.
did happen to the crops, since
Ms. Smith graduated from Wahama High School In 1978. She is
freeze damage always takes several
currently pursuing a two-year banking degree from MU. She bas
days to show up," Annstrong said.
worked for Pepples Bank as a teller since 1985, and for the past six
"Some people were looking for a
: years has been a v1!Ji1-.~r servlc~ representative. Sm~..,sldos In . freeze that was worse than anticiMt. Alto.
·
·:1
. pated." · ·
Cotton and energy future·s also
slumped in a general decline of the
Commodity Research Bureau's
index of 21 commodities. The CRB
fell 2.47 points to 242.61.
Soybeans for November delivery fell IS 314 cents - more than
half the permitted daily limit- to
GALLI{'OLIS - Judge Thomas Moulton of the Gallia Countr,
$6.45
a bushel; December wheat
Prob~te/JuVi:);lile Court, announced Thursday that Robert "Bob'
fell 8 cents to 4.83 a bushel;
Gordon,lllis b'ee11 named director of the Gallia-Jaclcson Treatment
December com fell I cent to $3.10
A:Uematives to SLreet Crime (T ASC) ~rogram. He bas served as
a
bushel.
·interim director ofTASC since June 23.
·
Some investors estimated about
Gordon resides in Gallipolis with his wife and two children. A
25 million bushels of soybeans had
1986 graduate of the University of Rio Grande -he brings to TASC ·
been destroyed by the record-cool
over eight years experience in the social service field as·well as _a
temperatures
Thursday night! but
history of volunteerism in the business, religious and ar1S commumanalysts earlier this week predicted
~LGallia-Jackson 'f ASC, established
.
•
•·
.
100 million bushels would perish.
locally m 1992, Jdenufies,
Temperatures overnight Friday
assesses and refers appropriate alcohol and other drug-dependent
were expected to dip into the 30s
offenders accused or convicted of non-violent crimes 'in juvenile
across
much of the Midwest, btH
court to community-based substance abuse treatment.
·
only
Wisconsin
was expected to
- Gallia-Jackson TASC is funded in part by the Gove~rs Office
have
temperatures
below 29
of Criminal Justice through the Gallia County and JacksOn County
degrees- the point at which hardy
Juvenile Courts anu by the Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug
soybeans
plants begin to die.
AddicliQp ~es:vices through the Gallia-Jackso~·Meigs Board of
Com futures closed lower, but
Alcohoi,'Di-ug Addiction and Mental Health Servtces.
well above· the day's lows as
investo111 focused on possible frost
drunageto the crop. Estimates of
CHESHIRE - C. William Rhodes has been promoted to maintecom losses ranged from 70 million
nance supervisor, effective Sept. 15, 1995, at the Ohio Valley Electo 250 million bushels.
tric Corporation's Kyger Creek plant.
Given the extremely tight U.S.
Rhodes joined OVEC in 1970 as a ~bo!'Cr. .
com supply and demand outlook,
Rhodes and his w&amp;, Carolyn. reside m Pomt Pleasant, W.Va.
even minor losses could have an
and they are the parents of two soils.
·
effect since overseas sales remain
strong; said Dean Witter, Discover
&amp; Co. analyst Victor Lespinasse.
The Agriculture Department
•
PATRIOT- Brandon Montgomery ~ Patriot, is a new junior
announced later that 262,000 tons
member of the Ainerican Angus Association. Junior members are
of corn had been sold to an
eligible to register cattle in the AAA, and take part in association
lffilrnown buyer.
sponsored shows and other national and regional events.
·
Wheat futures. were sharply
lower after Agriculture Secretary
Dan Glickman reilerated it is
~ACINE. Lyle Daker, of the Racine Mower Clinic, has. recently .
unlikeJ'y Russia wlli seek U.S.
taken and passed the Master Service Technician Exam from Briggs
credil&lt; next week to buy wheat and
&amp; Stratton Corporation'.
.
wheat flour.
Lyle is one of 800 engine technicians in North America to have
Wheat prices have hovered near
achieved Master Service Technician status.
:. '
14 112 year highs this week runid a
The Master Service Technician Exam tests a candidates ability to
strong export picture tied to the
efficiently service any Briggs &amp; Stratton produc~ and recognizes
European Union's indefinite moraonly those exhibiting superior skills in all phases of product serv1ce
torium on wheat export subsidies.
aod support.
That decision has forced other
countries to turn to the United
,,
Stales and Canada for its grain
despite extremely high prices.
Cotton futures posted moderate
losses on New York's Cotton
E~change amid signs of minimal
crop damage in the Texas Panhandle and South Plains. Farmers said
there appeared to be little frost
damage, although temperatures that
sank into the 40s were likely to
hinder yields.
·
Frosts typically begin in West
Texas in the beginning of November, with the region's late-planted
crop needing warm weather to
reach its full yield potential.
Losses were limited amid forecasts calling for another round of
cool temperatures overnight Friday.
December cotton fell 1.97 cents to
92.08 cents a pound.
LUELLA
HENRY
THELMA
ELLIOIT
•t
· Continued on D-8
'

Ribbon culling ceremonies were held recently
for Golden Shears Barber Style Shop, located at
4277 State Route 160, next to Harrell's Carpet
Outlet. Owner Dorene Barneld, daughter or
Robert A. Mullins, Sr. and Patricia A. Mullins,
received her training from Brock's Hair Design
College In Carthage, Mlss.Shop hours are Mon•
day·Thursday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Friday 9 a.m. to

1969

CHARLENE DAILEY

. EHS grads
:: perform with
_: OSU band ·
EAST MEIGS -Two 1994
: graduates of Eastern High School
: attending Ohio State University are
. first-year members of the OSU
·
· Marching Band.
The two, Andrew Wolfe, son of
:Gary and Pat Wolf of Chester, and
, Charlene Dailey, daughter of
· Charles and Tbeda Datley of
:Reedsville, performed with tbe
·band for the first time at the OSU: Washington game.
:
In addition to performing at
· OSU athletic events, the band will
:t&gt;e performing at other state activi:ties. Today they arc performing at
·ihe Cleveland Brown's game.
: · Both Wolf and Dailey are honor
.students in the school of music
·with Dailey majoring in music edu:cation, and Wolfe in music perfor·mance and computer science.

:cancer deaths
: ~mong women
:in
. Ohio high
.

_ COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
· study revealing that Ohio ~omen
. : die from cancers at a higher rate
' than the national average shows the
=uate faces a crucial challenge
: going into the next century, a
' health official said.
• "We have to have a better han:dle on bow to prevent them, and we
"have to use better methods of find:ing them early," Robert Indian,
:chief of the Bureau of Chronic Dis•eases at the Health Department,
:told The Columbus Dispatch in a
:story published Friday.
- Tbe Ohio Department of Health
:in a study from 1953 to 1991 'found
· .:that Ohio women get cancers less
' than the national average but die at
:a rate bigher than the average.
. Ohio. ranks ninth in U1e Imtion in
·total cancer deaths among women.
: Indian presen1ed stalistics
:Thursday at a conference called
-Toward the Year 2000: lmprovmg
Women's Health in Ohio.
The study shows one 111 three
females born in Ohio will develop
.a cancer in their lifetimes, and it
·showed that one in nine females
·bQrn in Ohio in 1995 will develop
breast cancer.

a

-DVEC's Rhode'Spromoted

THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 28th, 29th &amp; 30th
OPEN 9 A.M. 'TIL 9 P.M.

SPECIAL PRICES
ON ALL HOMES

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IT HEATS, IT
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Member of association

Baker earns certification

..

i-lenry, Elliott named to·
AAA7
Board of Trustees
'

f,

grown dramatically since 1990, due
to the development of Ohio's
PASSPORT progrrun in S(/Uthem
Ohio. PASSPORT is a Medicaidwaiver program designed to provide home and community based
services. to southern Ohioans 60
years or older.
.
Tile cUent must have a financial
need and have met Iii nursing borne
level of care. County provider
agencies under contract witb
AAA7 deliver services to the client
in his/her own home.
Ms. Henry was nominated by
the Gallia County Chamber of
Commerce because of her experi·
ence with federal regulations. Mrs.
Elliott was nominated by the Gallia
County Commissioners because of
her many years of working witb
community organizations.

......
..,,
'~ ··~······

... .....
~···"-'""

NEW BUSINESS OPENS IN CHESTER A new c:arry out restaurant specializing In pizzas

'.

'
' RIO GRANDE - Luella Henry
Thelma Elliott have been electto the Area Agency on Aging's
trict 7 Board of Trustees.
Ms. Henry worked as an opera·
' I!Pns supervisor ill the residential
fafilities of the Gallipolis Develop.Ijiental Center for 28 years. , . .
· Mrs. Elliott was the execuhve
~lrector of the Gallia County
· ~hamber of Commerce for 32
)'e31'S. Afier retiring from that pos~
she became a court reporter for
both the Gallia County Municipal
and Common Pleas Courts, a positiOn she still holliS.
• The AAA7 IM;&gt;ard is a 15-membef governing body of a 10-county
agency - Adams, BrolVn, Gallia,
Highland, Jackson , Lawrence,
Pike, Ross, Scioto and Vinton.
According to Pamela Matura,
director of AAA 7, the agency bas

7 p.m., and Saturday noon to 6 p.m. Pldured
are, rront, (I to r), Marianne Campbell, Gallla
County Chamber of Cnm·merce president;
Dorene Barfield, Amanda Mullins, John
BarOeld and Linda Mullins; back, Jo Ramey,
Rosemary Lucy and Gene Mulllns. The tele·
phone number Is 446-7990.

By RICK GLADSTONE
three comp.,nies instead of one.
Republican lawmakers. Now
AP Business Writer
BATMAN AND BERNIE
House Speaker Newt Gingrich has
NEW YORK- The biggest
No, you won't see the Caped rattled the multitrillion-dollar bond
phone company said it's too big. Crusader swooping in to host the market, a bedrock of the economy,
lbe biggest entertainment compa- dally live broadcasts from the OJ. by suggesting be might force the
ny said it's not big enough. The trial or co-anchor the evening news United States to default on its debts
biggest debtor nation began bump- with Bernard Shaw. But their cor- for the ftrst time.
ing up against its bigness limit.
porate parents have agreed to
The Georgia congressman
Major business events that marry, the latest in a spree of media threatened to block legislation that
shaped the past week:
· ,,
combinations tlmt could profoundly would ralsc the nation's debt ceilEASIER THE SECOND TIME· . affect what we watch, read and ing unless the Clinton administra·
More than a decade after the hear in months and year.; to come.
tion capitulated on a GOP plan to
federal government forcibly fracAfter tortuous negotiations, balance the budget. The governtured the AT&amp;T telephone · Time Warner Inc. agreed to pur- ment will bump into the debt ceilmonopoly. and ushered in the era of chase Turner Broadcasting Sys- ing, now $4.9 trillion, sometime
telecommunications competition, tem Inc. for about $7.5 billion in this fall. Without moee borrowing
the company decided to dissect stock, stren~thening Time Warn- authority, it will run out of money
itself again.
er's pre-emmence as the biggest and default on bond payments.
AT&amp;T's decision to split into provider and distributor of video,
Clinton aides denounced Ginthree stunned the business world audio and print entertainment and grich for what they called his irreduring a ye;u- when mergers have information.
sponsible attitude. A default, they
dominated corporate makeover.s
The company's vast collection said, could panic investors. create
and resurrected sheer size as a cov- of assets, from Batman movies to global (inancial chaos and irreparaeted competitive goal.
HBO to Sports Illustrated maga- bly harm the U.S. credit rating,
The bust-up amounted to an zine, will now add cable 1V trea- which would make borrowing costs "
admission by AT&amp;T that its sures like the CNN 24-hour news . higher for everyone.
sprawling amalgrun of phone ser-· channel and the Cartoon Network.
A number of high-ranking offivice, phone equipment and com- Time Warne[ also will get brash cials including Federal Reserve
puters was 100 unwieldy to coortli ~0 media pioneer Ted Turner as a vice Chairman Alan Greenspan and
nate. The decision also reflected chairman, major shareholder, and Vice President AI Gore sought to
the impact of sweeping changes in cheerleader to reinvigorate the play down the incendiary implicatelecommunications laws tharmade comJ11111y's creative juices. .
tions of Gingrich's remarks,
AT&amp;T's present structure outdated.
The marriage isn't final yet. expressing confidence that the debt
The biggest immediate im~act Time Warner's telephone venture ceiling would be raised before a
was likely tb be felt at the compa- partner U S West sued to stop it, default.
ny's Global Information Solutions fearing a competitive disadvantage . · WINNERS, LOSERS
computer business, the former The Co11sumers Union sought Juso
Winners: Shareholders of
NCR acquired four years ago. It lice Department help to block the footwear maker Nlke Inc., which
planned to scrap S,500 jobs and deal as well, claiming the com- reported a 55 pen:entjump in quarexit personal computer manufactur- bined company would mean higher terly earnings at a time when chief
ing, an arena where it had never entertainment prices. Skeptics also rival Reebok International is
competed profitibly.
questioned how long, or indeed struggling. Nike stock surged past
AT&amp;T consumers aren't likely whether, Ted Turner could t.hrive $104 a share, a 52-week high and
to feel any consequences for some as No. 2.
nearly 25 percent up from three
time- the AT&amp;T bill will still SKY'S THE LIMIT
months ago.
come in the mail. Holders of
His offhand remarks have warLosers: Workers at ColgateAT&amp;T stock, the most widely held ried the elderly poo~. outraged New Palmolive Co., which will cut
in the country, evelllually will own Yorkers and unnerved fellow
' Continued on D-8

Gordon named TASC director ·

1995

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Major U.S. busin~ss events
take place during past week

Farm/business briefs

DURING
OUR

Section D

ewsho

.J

CELEBRATE THE SAVINGS

~~es-~entintl

and subs, located on State Route 248 In Chester,
il&gt;now open ror business.

New busine$S opens in Chester

HARRISON HONORED •
Donald L. Harrison, shift oper·
atlng engineer at the Oblo Val·
ley Electric Corporation's
Kyger Creek Plant, Cheshire,
recently received his 40-year
service award. Harrison joined
OVEC on Augwot 17, 1955, as a
malntenam:e helper. He and his
wife, Mary, reside In Gallipolis.

CHESTER - A Pizza Stop, a
carry out restaurant specializing in
pizzas and subs, is tbe latest eatery
to open its doors in Meigs County·
A Pizza Stop, located on State
Route 248 in Chester, offers a large
&lt;ariety of pizza and su~ ?n theu
menu . . Prices are compeuuve WI!!'
national pizza chains that located m
the county • according to co-owner
Kevin Brooks.
The eatery bas been a long project in the malcing for Brooks and
his wife. Brook.~ stated that work
· started on the business over a year
ago, and the respons~ from tbe
comm.unity since thetr Sept. 15
opening has been good.
"We are strictly a pick-up, take-!&lt;

.

.

I

•

out business right now, but there ts
a possibility we could expand to
deli very in the future," stated
Brooks.
Four types of subs are currently
on the menu, and two sizes of pizza
with a total of 12 topping offerings
are currently available. The crust' s
and sauce are fresh made daily.
with the crust being a unique type
of pizza dough. "The dough for the
crust's is similar to a breadsuck
dough but with the texture of a
hand-t&lt;~lSsed type crust, Our pizza's
are available in thin crust, normal,
and pan-style crusts.
Brooks, who worked for two
national pizza chains and a regional
pizza chain in the Columbus area,

said that he took a clements from
his past experience in building and
running the business.
Salads and brcadsticks are also
currently available, with additions
10 be made to the menu in the
future. Brooks said that spaghetti
dinners will be added soon to the
menu. Brooks also mentioned that
specials not normally- found on the
menu, will appear regularly.
A grand opening is planned for
Sept28-30.
The eatery is open Monday
through Thursday, from 4 to 10
p.m.; Friday and Saturday, from 4
p.m. to 12 a.m.; and is closed' on
Sunday. The phone number is 9854345, or 985-4300.
•

&gt;

�Page 02 • .)}UtUiav ~inu•-.)'i•tttirul

Business briefs

CUPERTINO, Calif. (AP) -Apple Computer Inc. warned its
fiscal fourth-quarter profit will be
. "significantly below" · analysts'
expectations, dragged down in pan
by a component shortage and new
product delays.
·
· Apple made the announcement
after the market closed Thursday.
But its stock fell 6 percent after
·analysts predicted the company
wouldn't be able to meet demand.
It sbares lost $2.37 112 to close , at
on the
· Stock Market

WASHINGTON (AP) - Higher prices and increased production
in certain sectors boosted net
income for U.S. farmer-cooperatives to nearly $2 billion last year, a
record and 44 percent more than in
1993.
The natioo's 4,174 farmer cooperatives also bad a record sales year
- sales reached $89 billion, 7.6
percent bigher than the previous
year, the Agriculture Department
said.
USDA attributed the robust
growth to higher prices, increased
production of feed grains and milk,
and increased sales of livestock,
poultry and farm supplies.
The number of cooperatives,
which are farmer-owned business
enterprises, fell from 4,244 in
1993, largely because of mergers,
consolidatioos and acquisitioos, the

MEIGS COUNTY'S ONLY
AUTHORIZED PURINA DEALER.
•MEIGS COUNTY'S LARGEST TROPICAL FISH
HEADQUARTERS &amp; AQUARIUM SUPPLIES
•LAWN·BOY SALES &amp; SERVICE

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
399 W. Main _
992-2164
Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store With "All Kinds of Stuff" for Pets, Stables,
Large &amp; Small Animals, Lawns &amp; Gardens ..

ACCORD LX 4 DOOR

V6, automatic, air,

Auto.: power locks&amp; windows, cruise,
AM/FM cass., loaded with equipment

2600

department said.
However, the.nttrnber of people
employed by cooperatives grew from 172,062 in 1993 to 174,690
last year.
.
Also, fewer cooperatives lost
money last year than tbe previous
year - 7 percent compared with
14 percent - and the estimated
loss also was less - $159 millioo

OOO·aF-

compared with $187 million.
Marketing cooperatives, which
process and sell crops and Hvestock
for their farmer-members, bad net
income of $1 billion, up 17 percent
from the previous year. Sales for
Uiese enterprises rose more than 7
percent to more than $65 billion.
Livestock, fruit, vegetable and
dairy cooperatives recorded the

II

To Order Study Plan

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Selllr, Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
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tt..t meet the rooftlne ol thi• home allow viewe ol the •urrowuiinc

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By BRUCE A. NA'IliAN
patio and allow for refreshing,
' AP Newsfeatures
springtime breezes.
Dramatic angled windows that · A handy counter between the
soar up to mee.t the roofline of dining room and the walkthis compact and affordable through kitchen provides a place
home offer panoramic outdoor to put dinner dishes while setting
views. Inside, open, airy spaces the table . A boxed-o ut garden
and high ceiHngs give Plan F-65, window over the sink adds a
by HomeStyles Designers splash of sunshine 1P ever)!day
Network, a spacious feel that chores.
belies its efficient 1,249 square
A main-floor bedroom with a full
feet of Hving space.
bath nearby is a good spot for
A unique, skylighted A-frame weekend guests. An oversized
entry shields visitors from rain utility room with space for a
and snow at the door. The side- washer and dryer; plus a sink
Hghted entry opens directly into and an extra freezer completes
the combined living and dining the floor.
rooms, which share a 20-foot
An open staircase leads up to a
cathedral ceiling and two-story- loft that has a view of the living
high windows. A centrally loca~ and dining rooms below. The loft
ed fireplace adds warmth.
is an ideal setting for a quiet comSliding glass doors on either puter nook or. a play area for
side of the fireplace lead to a kids.

~94

biggest increases in net income,
while sugar, rice, grain and poultry
cooperatives saw their income
decline.
Farm-supply cooperatives.
which sell sucb pmd_ucts as fenili~­
er and crop protectants to the1r
members, saw their net income
nearly double, growing from $436
million in 1993 to $828 millioo last
year.

Name'--------------------Street.___________________________________
City ~·:__

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

State (ZIP) _ _ _ _ ___:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~

The spacious and secluded master suite features a private bath, a ·
walk-in closet and access to storage space.

•

F~.S

STA'IlSTICS -~

D

esign F-65 has a living
room, dining room,
kitchen, two bedrooms, two full baths, a utility
room and a loft. tbtaliug 1,249
square feet of living space.
The plan is available with 2x6
exterior wall framing and a
standard basement or crawlspace foundation . The basement adds an additionar.l_52
square feet of space.

92 FORD RANGER XLT
15204, Blue, air, AM/FM
cassette. rear defroster,
clcth Interior.

$8410.

S147tmo

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Flan'ling light

6 Strikebreaker
10 Not qu~e dry
14 Actors and

ACCORD 4 DOOR LX
all power

'Compact home offers spectacular views

..

By BRUCE WILLIAMS
·rather continue to use tbe older car. said they will not pursue the matter
It would appear that there is :
DEAR BRUCE: I am 23 years Your comments? - B.G., East because there may be someone such a big)) profit to be made in:
old, I live at borne and I wiD earn Moline, IU.
with tbe same name as mine in the issuing aedit canis that the issuers
my bachelor's degree Ibis spring. .I
DEAR B.G.: Simply put, you
city.
do not diligently pursue relatively::
drive, but doo' t own, a car tbat runs are a young man ol cbaraeter and I
I am in the military and I went modest amounts of money. If Ibis,:.
well despite being an '84 witb salute tbat. I do think that things
to tbe school in Florida last year. ever turns up on any credit reports•
73,000 miles oo it.
are appreciated far more when they After graduation, the rest of my in the future, you sbould, of course,.
Due to an iUness, my fatber no are earned instead of given.
class went to a different city, wbicb act immediately to have it~
looger drives. so my mother and I
In this instance, I certainly
happens to be where this bogus removed.
~
are looking to reduce tbe number of - believe that your parents sbould not credit line was started a month
If I were in your position, I'd:
vehicles in our family. My mother ooly respect your wishes, but also later. My guess is that one of my request a letter from the bank and··
· diives a new car and we also own · be extremely proud. of a young fel- friends from school started the - from the party involved in tbe7
an ' 87 wagon tbat we don't really low like you. Tbey bave clearly account.
is-suance of this card, indicating.:
need. I recommend letting go of done a good job raising you.
Is there any way I can lind out that fraud bad been perpetrated and:
this wagon and retaining the other
who this person is? Is there any that you were in no way involved. :
cars.
.DEAR BRUCE: After being
legal action I can take? The bank
(Send your questions to: •
My mother, bowever, would rejected for a credit card recently, I was uncooperative and this may Smart Money, P.O. Box Slll,::
prefer to sell tbe wason and the car requested a copy of my credit have even affected my recent car Elfers, FL 34680. Questions of;,
I cum:ntly drive to buy me a new report. It turns out that someone
loan. -J.H., Killeen, TX
general Interest will be answered::
car. She calls it a graduation gift
had started a credit account with
DEAR J.H .: What you have in future columns. Owing to the •
I'm a full-time studen~ I don't my name on i~ and bad amassed a described is, unfortunately, a very volu~m or mall, personal replies work and I don't want a new car $700 debt I was told that the mat- . common activity. Because of the cannot be provided.)
given to me. I have told her this ter 1¥0U!d be taken off my credit
loose underwriting, people request
Bruce WUJialn'l is a syndicated
and reiteratt*l your advice tbat peo- bistory, but I can't understand bow
credit lines in other people's names writer for Newspaper Enterprise
ple should earn things like cars this ~uld happen.
fairly regularly. The fact that the Association.
rather than having them given to How can someone use my name
individual wbo used your name
(For Information on how to
them.
with a different Social Security
used a different Social Security communicate eleclronlcally with
I'm a responsible young man number and have the credit bureau
number would seem to exonerate Ibis columnist and others, contact
and I plan to work soon, but right report Ibis in my name? The bank's
you. I wouldn't lose a whole lot of America OnHne by calling 1-800now I don' t think that giving me a Fraud Investigation Department
sleep over Ibis.
827-6364, ext. 8317.)
new car is a good idea. I would
'

Farmer cooperatives earned more in

.)'lunll"'l ~inu•-.)'ienfuul • Page 03

The house of the week

I

tion Professionals in the Private
Sector (NARPPS), the National
Assocation of Prevention Professionals and Advocates (NAPPA).
Elswick also sits on the American
Cancer Board and has sat on the advisory board of _the Bethesda Company, a division of the Bethesda Hospital In Zanesville, Ohio.
My goals are to complement the
previously existin~ Rehabilitative
Services by providing insight and to
be customer driven for the Pleasant
Valley Hospital Community Rehabilitation Services," said Elswick.
Further, I am honored to be a part.
of the Pleasant Valley Hospital 'famIly of professionals.' I hope to provide vision and progressiveness for
the future of Rehabilitation Services at Pleasant Valley Hospital," he
continued.
Elswick and his wife Sharon, a
full -time student at the University of
Rio Grande, reside in Jackson, Ohio.
They have two daughters, Brooke, ·
II and Amanda, 10. In his spare time,
Elswick enjoys composing music,
hiking, sports, gardening and ·photography.

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

Sunday, September 24, 1995

Sunday, September 24, 1995 -

New car means more if it's earned

BRUCE ELSWICK

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) MobileMedia. Corp. bolstered its
position as the nation's secondlargest paging company by acquiring BellSouth Corp.'s paging network, including its MobileComm
subsidiary, for $945 million.

•

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

Elswick named coordinator
of rehabilitation at PVH
POINT PLEASANT- Bruce
:Elswick was recently named coordinator of rehabilitation services at
Pleasant Valley Hospital .
Elswick- is a graduate of the
School of Rehabilitation, Wright
State University. Dayton , Ohio.
His focus being Rehabilitation :
Education with emphasis on physical and mental health and vocation- .
al counseling with disabled clientele.
---....._ From 1978 to 1983, Elswick was
'employed in the physio-therapy
aspects of rehabilitation coordination,
serving a pediatric through genatrtc
population a1 St. John Hospital,
Detroit. Michigan.
In 1983-1987 Elswick continued
coordination of Rehabilitation Services at Healthcare Management
Corporation in Dayton, Ohio. · In
1988. he was employ_ed by Nova
House Association (Dayton) as an
outpatient therapist providing bchav-. ioral a&amp;Sessment for an adult population with a variety of diagnosis.
Also In 1988. Elswick was
employed by Combined Health Services of America In Johette, Illmots
as manager for the Work Perfomtance
Center.
Elswick continued to work In
· Rehabilitation Services at Wright
State University of Medicine In
Dayton, Ohio and Upper Valley
Medical Center In Troy, Ohio. providing assessment and Interve nt ion
_- servi ces while developing and
teaching concepts of positive
physical ahd mental health throughout corporations, community groups.
schools and adult and adolescent educational groups. .
From 1990 to 1992, Elswick
served as Rehabilitation Consultant
. with Ability Recovery Services, Inc.
and MedVoc Management. Inc.
Most recently, Elswick served the
Rehab Care CorporatioQ in St. Louis,
Missouri as a Program Director and
Representative CEO in matters related to the Holzer Medical Center
Rehabilitation program in Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Elswick Is a member of the
National Association of Rehabilita-

-

.

actresses, as a
group
18 Loves
20 Marco21 Wicked
22 Caper
24 Serious
25 Steals from
26 Elaborate party ,
'Z1 Musical instnumi1nts
29 Woody plant
30 Iridescent gem
32 Depot: abbr.
34 Diplomat's forte
36 Becomes more ~lld
37 Letter before tee
38 - Knox, Kentucky
39 - Dolphins
41 Tense
43 Baste
44 Shiftless
45 Eyes
47 -and proper
49 PubliC opinion
52 Buddies
53 Clock part
55 .Make possible
59 OveraCt
60 Prairie wo~
62 Edinburgh native
84 Tire surlace
65 Terrible
66 Stolen
67 Contemptuous cry
69 Against
71 Tight ·
72 Scrap of food
73 D)k!l
74 Louaness: abbr.
75 Detests
77 Before: poetiC
.78 Pay Increase
80 Mosque tower
. 82 Abrades
84 Enamel
· 85 Frizzy hairdo
87 Certain

88 Complete
89 Card game
90 Not care for

Destruction
111uminated
94 Pipe or barrel
96 Notable time
97 Ripple pattem
99 An article
102 Sour substance
104 Plant juice
lOS Sch; grp.
I 06 - and reves
107 Time of day
108 Vamlsh ingredient
11 0 Cammotion
112 States, as a price
114 Concems
115 High regard
117 Uttered
119 Streisand film
120 Light frozen dessert
121 Go by boat
- 123 ChiCken soup
Ingredient
125 Airplane part
126 Race an engine
129 British streetcar
131 "The Thinker"
sculptor
132 Cereal plant
133 Jet letters
136 Discord goddess
138 Missing, military
style
140 -Moines
141 Give a rating to
142 Buddhist priest
143 Of the universe
145 Film spool
92
93

147 Th~refore
149 Newspaper

employee
Seat at a bar
Baxter or Bancroft
Facilitate ·
Ketchup ingredient
155 Fever
156 Ships' records
157 Tints
158. Doctrine

151
152
153
154

DOWN
Eat a little of
2 Smells
1

3 Functions

4 Westem Indian

5 Skirt border
6 Jack who ale no fat
7 ChiH
8' Priest's vestment

9 Most domineering
I 0 Slandered

·-Maria"
12 Catcher's glove
13 Fold In a skirt
· 14 Catch
15 Black cuckoo
16 For men only
17 Prongs
19 Doze
23 Nat King ---,.
28 Opp. of NNE
31 Snoop
33 Spigot
35 Tam or beret
38 Destiny
39 Cantaloupe
40 Kind of stew _
11

42 Dye
44 Old stringed

Instrument
45 Check recipient
46 Plant pouch
48 The red planet
49 Perionn again
50 Arab VIP
51 Certain painter
52 Prod
54 Find
56 Helpful ones
57 Bay tree
58 Rims
60 Underground
chamber
61 Black
63 Child
66 Teachers, at times
68 Baked70 Delicious drinks
73 Jargon
74 African- (flower)
75 That gin
78 Push

91 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT SE
15300, While, aulomatic. ~r.
AMJFM, IIR, duise, power seat,
windows &amp;locks. ,$10,635.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

79 Help

eo Title for women

005

81 Regret
83 From--z
84 Amounts charged

LIVE GIRLS! CALL NOW!

mocha with blue eyes. 61 ~-378 ·
6349.
Male Austral1an Shepherd puppy
to good home, 614-992·2508 after

$3.99 /Min. Mu st Be 18 Yrs.
Serv-U (619)645-8434 .

89 Raucous sound

Bpm.

30 Announcements

Where Baghdad is
92 Strikes
95 Fuel fo'r cars
· 97 Actor D111on and
· others
98 Singles
too Colors
101 Gaelic
103 Passes away
105 Preceding
106 City in France
107 Cart
109 Tidy
111 Writer Fleming
113 Like some phone
91

Medium Bull &amp;"White 5 112 Month
Old Male Puppy, 61 ~·446-4479.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Eileen's Personal C9-re lor elderly.
We specialize in Alzheimers care Piano, first come, firs t serve,
givinG. 304-762-2544 .
needs some w·ark. 304-675·3663.
Meet ing of concerned parent s ol

40

11yr

614·992-6728.

Giveaway

60

.

Lost and Found

old male dOQ, half Heeler, hall
H usk~. Has shots. 304-862·2548.

.:...:.-----,-,-.,--,.Lo st : 6 Mixed Alpine Nanny
Goats Wh im And Brown In Vtcm·
2 Angora Nanny Goats, 614·367- ily AI lillie Ky'ger Road And
7.=00::8·_ : _ _ , _ _ , - - - - - J Moor e Hill, 61 ~·367 · 7008, 614367-9389.
2 Ki llens. i Cat Anytime! 614 ·
•" 441 -0021.

numbers

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

To A Good Home: Beaut1lul LongHa1red Golden Tabby Cat, 614 ·
=36::_7.:_
-':::'"::0:_
. -'-----

Roosevelt Elementary at Flatrock
Fire Dep1 (RI 2), Tu esday 9t26195
7pm . Any parent, gu A.rdian .
grandparent, etc. Lers be rhere 10 . Wood fr om a tree tt1at we cut
hetpourchildren!lt
down , you cut. and haul away,

114 Invent, as a phrase
116 Marvel
118 Draws, In a way

phones, old lamps,

A ll Ya rd Sales Mu st Be Pa1d In

Ad vance . Deadline: 1,OOpm the
day beJore the ad IS to run, Sun ·
da~ editiOn · 1·oopm FMay; Mon d a~ edition t 0 OOa.m. Saturday

80

Public Sale
and Auction

Wedemeyer 's Auc t1on Ser vice,
Gallipolis, Oh10 61~ - 379·2720

ters. old clocks. antique lurMure.
A1verlfle Antiques Russ Moore,
owner. 6 t 4 ·992 ·2526 . We
estates.

11 o

89 CHEVY CHEYENNE

15384, Full size truck, ve,
fiberglass topper, 8' bed,
air. AM/FM cassette.

$7995.

Help Wanted

178Jmo

5

vage vehicles. Selling pa,rts.
Old lube rad•os made
1946, big money !or some
Also old rad1o tuhes. paris,
f1e rs. JUkeboxes. old crank
phones, old reco rd
kmd Of t11dCtrOn iC &gt;S~•;•SS ~:;2:2Q I
1946 . Phone 3

s1401mo

1

94 HYUNDAI ELANTRA
15238, Air, AM!FM
cassette , lilt, power '
windows. cloth Interior.

$176tmo

_the Sunda Times-Sentinel

Jay of late night TV

Auto.
FOR FAST FRIENDLY
SERVICE, SEE US!

- ON SA I.E NOW-

(abbr.)
146 Sch. sub].
146 Feed for horses
150 Speck

AM/FM caooette, doth

sa6,mo

sag,mo

15206, Autcmauc; air,

Interior. 141011.

1'5213, V6 engine.
automatic, air. AMIFM,
cus!om wheels, $899!5.

158tmo

5

94 CHEVY CAMARO

IVOMEC 2.sL ............................ $279
(Plus
Rebate Coupon)
BIG RED
$
49
NUGGETS so lb. bag..................... 10
BIG RED
' '99
HIGH ENERGY so lb. bag ........., 13

15328, 15.000

15320, Blue, 34.000 m"iles.
Bulamatlc, air, AM/FM.
cruise, rear defrcsler,
$11,970.

$15

I

15363, One owner,
aulomalic, 1111, cruise
and more
$1995.

PONTIAC GRAND AM

95

I

9 .1 CHEyY
CAVALIER RS

87 FORD EXP

Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

141 Trick
142 Juioy fru~
144 Promise to pay

$8105.

seats. $11 ,310.

$9950.

Craw's on top of things.

Mystical card

1520G, LSI pkg .. ~ut,omlttlc,j
air, AMIFM, clcth I

15392, Air. V6, AM/FM
jca,ssetle tilt wheel, rear flip

3 Month Old Puppies. 614 367 0539. .

137 Air pollutlqn

METRO
CONVERTIBLE LSI

EXTRA CAB

773-5033

0009 Arter 5 P.M.

122 Ordinance
124 JFK's predecessor
125 Weight unit
126 Chronicle: abbr.
127 Love god
128 Prospect
'130 I;:lhieal
132 Instances
133 The devil
134 Struck

. "92 GEO

93 CHEVY S-10

J &amp; D's Au!O Parts . Bu~mg

3 Mamh Ol d Kin en, 614·245·

12o Stock exchange

139

Frie ndly kiltens to goo d home,

1-900-378-2500 Ext 8325.

85 Adjusts
86 Fish paddle

135

Personals

190Jmo

5

Giveaway

40

I ,

$267/mo

$215Jmo

I

mites.

air, AMIFM cassette, II ,
crulsel.. sport wheels.
t14 ,2SO.

15367, Black. air. aulomaliC,
AM,IFM , lilt, crutse, power
windows &amp; locks, $12,905.

236,mo

5

•

· ::"'1:
, ....\

DEL SOL
1995

$1400

POINT PLEASANT COOPERATIVE

Automatic, stereo
cassette; all power equipment

$179

675·2780
1519 Kanawha

Street ~

Point Pleasant

24 MONTH LEASE

•
••

See answer on page A2

ONLY
i See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvh Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

•
••

Just 20 Mtnu1es Drive Straight Up

•

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville. Ohio 45723

••
•

At. 7 N01th rhnil\Jppers Plains

667·3350

•

repla~ement

. $1999.

•

I

t5378 , Red , V6, air,
automatic. tilt &amp; cruise,
AM{FM cassette, po·..ver
windows &amp; locks $8570.

and servl~e
• Drive line , CV joint, U-joint Ssrvl~e . half-shaft

WINTERIZE YOUR CAR NOW

•

•
•

; Battery, Starter, Alternator - dlagnosll~s

• Steering and Suspension- Coil spring, Idler
arm, ball joints, ra~k &amp; pinion, Mls~ . servl~es ·
• Tire Service - Computer alignment, balance,
rotafion and llal repair

PLUS
TAX

•
•

MANY AUTOMOTIVE
SERVICES AVAILABLE

Fled/white wired interior, 302,
auto w/overdrive, pwr windows,
pwr locks, pwr mirrors, stereo
cass, cruise, tilt, 50K. 1 owner.
Pretty truck.

Includes 1 Gal. Antifreeze

Western Auto.
788 North Second

992·5515 -

Middleport

~~~~-J [!;fJi l . lZJ

GREAT SERVICE ••• GREAT PRICES!

Payments figured with down paymenl of $1 ,000 cash or lrade plus tax &amp;Inle.
See salesman for delails.

NO

DEALE~$

PLEASE ON THESE UNITS!

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

Page 04 • "urroav 'alunu' $rntuul
_11_0__~H~el~p~W~a~nt~e~d___ l_11_o___H_e~lp_w
__
an_t_ed____
AvonEan$13

$15 H

No Door

AV ON

To Door Ft. II Par T Tl'e 1 600
73&amp;01681nd R~o

110

No Norlheast oads Homet me
pad vaca on 8 r&gt;o days Cal 1
800 598 6790

EARN $$$ a nome at

CAiiP[NT(R S HFI PFR Must
Ha&gt;Je M n mum 2 Y s E ~pe ence
Truck And Tools R~q u ea Call

ng Center 311 Home Clean ng General De
Bucicr dge Road 8 dwell OH ta led W ndow Clean ng Ins de I

6144:1645 4 Mo n
Jo 5 P M

1 ons For Nurses lt1des Class To

F

S~en.c H li s Nurs

•5614 Is Now Tak ng Appl ca

SA M

Requ ed Exper ence Resea,rth
Stat st cs Use 01 Personal Com
putors Word Process ng And
Sp eadsheet Software P eferred
Exper ence 8achelo s 0 Asso
c ate s Oeg ee In Bus ness Pan
n n9 A elm n s a1 on Or Soc a
Serv ces Grants Wr 1 ng M n\
mum 01 One Vear 01 Wo k 0 In
ternsh p Prev ous Wo k W th lo
cat Level GOve nmen Oil c a s
Subm t Cove Le te Resume
A no Re erences Fo Rece pt By
5 00 PM Oct 6 1995 To E•ecu
t ve D ector OVRDC 740 Sec
and S eel Room 102 Ports
mou h OH 45662 4088

ago
Send Resume An Lener By Sep
tember 29
995 To Health Re
cover Se v ces Inc P 0 Bolli
724 Athens Oho 45701 E E 0
Employer

Outs de {l ast Chance Before
W nter} 614 2'".J6 1370 Marsha

S!an On 6 1995

I '

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

EMPLOYER

210

Wanted To Do

tra mng ERA Town &amp; Country Geo ges Portable Sawmtll don 1
Rea Estate 8 oker Becke Stem haul your logs to the m II JUSt call
:k:l4 675-55.48
304 675 1957

Ea n StOO S2CO Day Enthusils
1c Ene get c Sa espwp e Net&gt;d No E•pe ence Necessary! $500
ed f"O An [IC ng New Se ~ ce To $900 Wel'l.. y ro !!nt at P o
Aoo l ~ A t 336 Secone1 Avenue
cess ng Mo rg:1gc Refunds Own
Ga I pols On Mondaf SepJembe Hours Ca (909) 7 5 2300 E•t
25th F om 11 OC 4 30 0 7 00 782 (24 Ho s)
PM 9 00 PM
Open ng Soon New Steak &amp; Sea
ENVIRONMFNTAI SERVICES rood Res au rani n 10wn Now hlr
SUPERVI£0R
ng tc all s Its wa asses wa 1
Become a membe ol a ap dly e s ba tende s cooks d sh
erpand n9 nnovat ~e health ca e washe s del very pe son s etc
o 9an ?~ton Po., Pleasant Fo wa d esumes o At t Bor
Nu s ng il'ld Rehab tar on Ce"l 639 P Pleasant WV 25550 cr
304 675-FOOD
te a 68 bed sk lleo nu smg lac I
ty seeks ne ghl nd01dua tad
reel s houSE,&gt;k.eep ngtlaund ~
and ma n enance ope a ons The
sJccesslul cano date w 1 oe P
spons ble to man an ng trc ac I
1~ n a clean sate and sa ta y
manner ano supe v se the d y o
day dut es of tl'\e man C'nancP
hOusekeep ng and lau"CI ~ oe
pa lments n acco dance Nth
cu ren lede a l sate and oca Part t me d vers needed to
s anda ds g4 de nes ard egula
anspo t ca s 10 and from auc
tens P re~ ous e•oe e,.,ce sa
ons cal 614 992 2806 between
p s We- w I p ov oc O'l thO ob 11 am 3prn Mu st be at leas! 25
1 a n ng II you a e n ~ ested n a yea sod
e-wa d ng ca ee o ease cat 304
6 75 3005 o w w Po., Pleasant Par T me E •pe r enced Wo rd
Processor IT anscr puon st Must
Nu s ng and Re"lao IIa on Cen
e Rt 1 Box 326 Po n Pleasant Be Knowledgable &amp; Word Perfect
WV 255 50 A G l:'n N k Fac ty Felx ble Hours Send Resume To
CLA 358 CIO Ga 1pols Oa ly Tr bEOE
unel, 825 T1'111Cl Avenue Ga 1 pol s
OH 4563
Wa nted Ful l T me Truck Dr ver
COL C ass A L cense Needed
PLANNER 1 Oho Va ley Regona l
Gall po ls Aeo uc Or) Co A o
Deve opmen Comm ss on Seek
Gande OH51424555 4
ng Emry Leve Reg ona l Planner
To Ass s Staff W th Research
Actv t es Related To Commu n ty
Oevelopmen Block Gran Con
tracts $17 500 S21 000 •Bene
HELP WANTED
PR EVETION SPEC ALIST Ft 9
5 Some Var able Hou s Quail
ca ons Bacnelor s Degree In Ed
uca on 0 Rela ed F eld Plus 3
Vea s Wok Expe ence 0 ~ Com
mensura e Ex per ence Cert I ed
Prevent on Spec al st Pete ed
Or El g be For En ~ Into Ce Ill
ca on P ocess Expe ence In
Wor~ ng W th Youth
Schools
And Commun ry And Exce ll ent
Presentat•on And 0 gan zat anal
Sk lis Requ ed Expe ence W th
Teen lnst lute And 8 ABE S
P eferred Excellent Fr nge Pack

180

Target~:td Case Manager Pa t
t me tempera y pas 110n BA. n t-u

Reasonable Rates Expel' anced
Relerences For Free Esumates
Cal 614 245-5755

W 11 take care of aide ly Have rei
erences 304 895 3234

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opportun lty

WILDLIFE !CONSERVATION
JOBS

NOTICE

Game Wardens Secur ty Man
tcnance Etc No Exp Necessary
Now H ng For Into Call (2t9)
794 0010 Ex 8710 9 AM To 11
PM 7 Days

OH 0 VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
ecommends thai you do bus•
ness w h peep e you know and
NOT to send money through he
ma•l unll you have nvesl galed
the offer ng

Wanted To Do

Ace Tree Se v ce Complete tree
ca e 20yrs erp &amp; nsured free
est mates 614 44t 19 or 1

I

Newly Estab shed Bus ness Ot
ln teresr To Women Selling Due
To Mecl cal Problems
Only
Ser ously ln te eued 614 446
6842After630P.M 9P:M P ce
N&amp;goDable
Vend ng LAZY MAN S DREAM
Few Hou s • BIG $ W II Sal
Cheap. t aoo 820 4353

BULLETIN BOARD

614 286 6298

446 0687

lllls newspaper wt 1not
knowllngly accep1
advertrsements for rea estate
which rs in v olatron of 1he law
Our readers are hereby
inlormed that all dwellings
advertised rn th s newspaper
are available on an equal
opportunity basis

REAL ESTATE
31

o Homes tor Sale

3 bedroom house •n Bradbury 2
bath above ground pool heat
pump approx 2 acres p 1Ce to
sell 6t4 992 ti190

3 Bedrooms Sate Route t4t 10
M les Out Ga I po s 24x32 Ga
rage New Heat Pump &amp; Furnace
In Ground Pool New Satell te
0 sh Gall a Count~ local Schoo
DIS! Cl 614 37S-24 10
Fo sale bV owner 3 br home 3
outbu ld ngs p lme comm land
owner movng mus1 sell cat 6t4

Instruments

FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
WV

ATIENTION
New Guns and Bows 10% above cost
Low pnces on all hunttng supples
Hun11ng Ucense &amp; new Deer Regula! ons
Deer Process ng and S mok ed Deermeat

p1ano's
up to

$1200

off

Real Estate
Classes ,
446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Auto, Truck &amp;
Tractor
A1r Cond1t10n1ng
Serv1ce

Life Cham
Where? C1ty Park
When? Sun Oct 1st
T1me? 2 30 to 3 30
Purpose? To show your support
aga1nst abort1on

All Ages, All Rrsks

Clearance Sale'

everyone'

All Star Waterbeds

AUTOHIO Insurance

Waterbed Sheets
Cadmus H S Reun1on

$1995

Sunday Oct 1 1995

Comforters as low as

mus Community Center
Lunch catered 12 30

Let 1t be known ,
Concerning

895 3376

675 3030

320

12~65 Conca d 3 Bed ooms Gas

14x70 B •stol LaDon a 2 Bed
rooms 1 ~ 2 Baths New Water
Hea er Deck Blocks Underp n
nang Roady To Be Moved Only
$4 800 614 379 9125

We try to rnsure

(614)446 6111

Gallrpolls

3 ton Lennox Heat pump

$29 95

Whirlpool wash1ng mach1ne

dnnk1ng

1451

cemetary

Mrnr - Pumpkrns ,

wv

It

Will

at all t1mes

Cha etas Lake Beaut lui 2 25
Acre l ot Ou et Des able Ne gh
bo nood Res r cted $24 500 304
273 0136 304 273 2940
Fou lots.. near Rae ne approx 1
1 2 acres each start ng a $5000
call 614 g49 2025

LAKE

And Acreage Excellent Fo
Bu dng Campstes Etc Appr tO
Acre Spr ng Fed Stocked Lake
W th Island 3 Bedrooms 2 112
Bath f.Aob1le Home W h Add On
10
M les
Fro m Gall pols
$125 000 614 388 8678
Seen c Valley App le GrQve
beaut ful 2ac o s pub c wate
Clyde Bowen J 304 576 2336

Smme thanks for many cords
ol SPECIAl WISHES thol brought
greol JOY Wllh memones ol
some speool t1mes
Thomas J Scan
145 4th Ave Golbpol1s OH

Two Bed com $250/Ma Pus Uti
t es Depos t Re e ences Ae
qured Rt2 8 A e 6 PM 614
983 4607

440
Townhouse Apartments
Spac ous 2 Bedrooms 2
CA 1 2 Bath Fully Car
Adu t Pool &amp; Baby Pool
Stan $340t Mo No Pets
Plus Securaty Depos t Re
6 14 367 7850
bedroom apartment wash
dryer hOokup b g ~atohen I v
roo., Th d Street Rae ne
IS:,-91-'mo plus uhlt es $ 100 de
614 247 4292

2 Bedroom Apartment In Down
town Gall pohs Centra A r K tch
en Appl ances All Rooms Car
peted $400/Mo Utl t es N ot In
c uded 614 866 7174
2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
1 Sewage Pa d $295/Mo +
614 446 2481
2 Bedrooms 2 Ba th s V ew Of
Park &amp; Rver K !Chen W lh Stove
Aelr goramr 15 Cour Street Gal
I po s $475/Mo • Oepos 1 Refer
ence No Pets 614 446-4926
2bdrm apts total electr c ap
pl ances turn shed aundry room
lac it es close to school .n town
Appl cat ons ava lable at Vrllage
Green Apts #4g or can 614 992

3711 EOH

Immediate opepmg ror
self dtrected indlvtdual

possessmg skills m
~horthond/speed

writing

sent cards Thanks
also for the flowers
cards food and
money Thanks to
the pallbearers Rev
Aaron Young for h1s
comfort1ng words
Your kindness was
greatly apprec1ated
The fam1ly of Robert
H Roush Sr

needed 1n your area to watch
school-age children. Child Care
Monday
Resource Network can help
advertise your servtce.
For free assistance call
1-1100-577-2276

..

.

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

7795

16 boy s bacycle very good con
Bassert 8pc dan ng room set 3yrs &lt;Han $25 614 992 5911
o d ewe cond 304 675-6631
1986 TAX 200 Honda 4 Wheeler
Carpet &amp; V nyl ln Stock $5 00 Vd St 400 Super N ntendo 11
&amp; Up 60 Panerns Of K tchen Car I ·G_a_me__c'c.:S..:c3~00-'6-'1-4-...:3..:c8c.8-'9-'126
__
pet In Stock Over 35 Patterns
V nyl In Stock Mollohan Carpets t99 5 Ranch Kmg R•d ng Lawn
Mower Wath Matchmg Wagon
6 ~ 4 446 7444
$700 1970 Chevy NovaS~ 000
6_14_:16_7_7_90_1_ _ _ _ ___
Fle11 Sieel betge sofa very good _
cond Free matchmg love seal w/ 25 Sylvan a super set TV 24
2 m ssmg cush ons $250 304 push bunon remote comrol cl'lan
675 4516
nel programmmg on sc reen
GOOO USED APPLIANCES graphrcs d splay auto sleep
Washers dryers refrigerators 1 me ellc cond $300 Sauder
range s Skaggs App ances 76 TVfVCA cart w/3 she ves glass
V ne Streel Cat! 614 446 73Q8 lront doo exc cond $75 304
882 2094
1 80().49Q 34Q9

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Sale Th s Week Only I
Relngerator Frost Free Was
$150 Cut To $125 Refr gerator
Ll)le New Almond Frost Free
Was $350 Cut To $295 Refng
erator 2 Doo $95 Washer Was
$150 Cut To $125 Was~er
Wh rlpool $95 Washer Kenmore
$95 0 yer $95 30 Inch E ec tr c
Ra,nge $95 Skaggs App ances
76 V ne Street Gall polls 614
446 7398 Or 1 800 499 3499

Brown Sofa &amp; Tan Recliner For
Sale Good Cond ton Sofa $50
Re el ner $25 080 614 446-

lady Has Beauuful 17 Pc 5 Ply
Surgucal Sta nless Watet les.!
Sets Not $1 200 Only 1399 Sup
phes l•m ted Ann•e 1 800 766
8110
D neue Set 4 Chatu; $tOO 614
2•5 5EI86

Electric Wheelcha rs !Scooters
New /Used Scooter ! Whee char
llts S!a rway Elevators l•lt
Cha•rs Bo'!'iman s. Homecare
614 4-46 7283
E•erc

se

Machtne

$125 614

:JQII.8293
Fuewood For Sale $40 P ck Up
De 1vered $30 P•ck Up 614 379

Concrete &amp; P as.tac Sept c Tan~s
300 Thru 2 ooo Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jac~son OH

, aoo- 537 9528

Holzer Clinic,
lluman Resources
Pk.

Oh 45631

CNA HHA PCA
&amp; Part-t1me pos1t1ons avarlable
Gallia &amp; Mergs County Excellent

Full t1me

Salary Health

&amp;

L1fe Insurance pa1d

Company w111 tram employees wrth Hrgh
School D1ploma GED or

762

•

Send resume to

1 yr

Exp 1n

In Uen1orv
LEO STUMBO
who was taken from us Sept. 25, 1991.
Our hearts st1ll ache from losing you.
Sadly missed
Wife and Child
Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Second Ave Gallipolis

CONSIGNMENT
FARM EQUIPMENT
AUCTION

Seasonal Sales
Associates
Radio Sha~k is now hiring
seasonal sales associates. We
offer above average earning
potential and flexible
scheduling. Prior retail
experience preferred. Please
call Eric on Monday, September
25 from 9:00 am til 5:00 pm.
Radio Shack an Equal Opportunlty/AAE

N SUPERVISOR
Holzer Sen1or Care Center IS currently tak1ng
appl1cat1ons or an RN SuperviSOr Hours are
from 10 00 am to 6 30 pm Th1s IS a full t1me
pOSitiOn
The 1deal candidate Will be licensed m Ohio or
Oh1o eleg1ble for L1censmg w1th 2 3 years
e•penence 1n long term care strong superv1sory
sktlls and have a des1re to work w1th the elderly
If you are Interested m this challeng1ng pos1t1on
stop and f1ll out an application Applications are
available Mon
Fn 8 am to 5 pm &lt;It Holzer
Semor Care'&lt;:enter 380 Coloma! Dr Btdwell
45614 We are an EOE

PRODUCTION WORKERS NEEDED
The P1llsb ury Company of Wellston Oh1o IS
currently h1nng production workers td work on an
mterm1ttent work schedu le There w1ll be test1ng
sessions on Tuesday October 3 1995 1n Jackson
Oh10 Start1ng pay of $5 70 per hour wtth an tncrease
to $6 20 per hour after successfully complet1ng a 45
day probattonary penod
If mterested please call (614) 286 2170 dunng the
week of September 25 1995 between the hours of
9 00 a m and 12 00 Noon Only for an appomtment
THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
2403 Pennsylvama Avenue
Wellsont Oh1o 45692
EEO/AA Employer

Saturday, September 30, 1995
10:00 am
Located on Rl 33 at the
Auct1on Center 1n Mason, WV
Taking Conslgnmenls
Thur. • Frl , 9 ·ooam - 5 OOpm,
Sal. 7 .ooam • 9·30am

Everything Sold As Is
Auct1on Conducted By
Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Lunch
Mason,wv
Res n3 5785
AuctiOn Center n3-5447
Auctloners Rick Pearson #66
Kev1n Meadows #1191 ph 743-3955
TERMS Cash or Check w~h ID
Not
for Accidents or Loss of

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1995
1000AM
Locat1on From Gallipolis follow State Route 141
9 miles to Maple Grove Road (Beagle Club) turn
nght, go to Cora Bndge turn nght and go one
m1le to 3932 Cora M1ll Road Due to the death of
Dean Evans the followmg w111 be sold
1972 two BR Homette mobile home horse tra1ler
3 horse drawn turntng plows HD spike tooth
harrow 3 HD adJustable cultivalors, 2 double
shovels, 1thnble shovel lay-off plow wooden p1g
pen (4 H) utility trailer 2 HD mowmg mach1nes
2 western sacldles set harness bndles 5 speed
bench top dnll press hand tools and other
miscellaneous 1tems
Terms Cash
Glona Evans, Owner

'

FOR SALE Adler Roral 210 C
Cop er $550 Recond toned
New Drum And Deve loper 6t4
446 451-4 Mon Fr 8 AM TO 5

PM

Alp n8 CD Player 2 12 MTX
Road Thunder Pros In Hatchback
Boll Rocklord Fosgate Punch 40
Amp! fer MTX Thunder 280 Am
phler 614 446 8778 After 6 3El

PM
Healthmaster 750 Dual Acton Ell
ere se B cyc le Just L ke New
Hardy Ever Used! S60 614 247
2032 Evenings Or Leave Me&amp;

sage

H EHecaency L P CH Natural GBS
92% Furnace&amp; 100 000 STU
S 1 250 Installed 1 800 287 6308
614 446 6308 Duct Systems And
Atr Conditioners Free Esomates

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa1red New &amp; Rebu II In Stock
Call Ron Evans 1 a:x:r 537 9528
King S ze Waterbed Sem wa~e
less $100 614 379 2887

K ng Wood /Coal Stove W th Ex
haust Fan Takes 2 FQot Logs
Great Heater $200 614 245

5328

In Memory

2:16 032e

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER'
Crown C1ty OhiO
Phone 256 67 40
Not res onstble for acc1dents or loss of ro e

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

K ng wood burntng furnace gooo

2183

Campground Membership Camp
From Coast To Coast U S ICana
da $4 00 Per Naght API Atlt aied
Pd $3 600 Sacra tree $425 1 800

540

cond used
Cookware Ret red Ornner Party 67S 1714

Krng Wood &amp; Goa Stove Dry
Spill Oak F rewood 2 Years Old
614 446 1759

LAYNE S FURNITURE

soCtware

Help wanted

m

540

Pnor E,;ecuuve

Contact Health Management Nursmg

m the hospital and

Buy or sell A venne Ani ques

typmg PC htnacy wilh

The fam1ly of
Robert H Roush Sr
would like to thank
everyone who
help"'d mthe 1llness
and death of our
beloved husband
father grandfather
and brother Thanks
to all who v1s1ted h1m

Antiques

sprea dsheet word

Perhaps you sent
a lovely card, or
sat qucetly i• a
chair.
Perhaps you sent
a funeral spray, If
so we saw It there.
Perhaps
you
spoke the kindest
words, as any
friend could say;
Perhaps you were
nat there at all,
just thought of us
that day,
Whatevet you did
to canso'le our
hearts
We thank you so
much whatever the
part.
The family of Kevin
Lee Grady
Sadly miued by
Mom &amp; Dad

Red Hot Deals

? Call446-2342 or 992-2156

Sporting
Goods

expenence an asset

lUI

110

1·-::=::==::::~::=~
II
Full Ttme Pu~ttlon

canng for elderly

~

And Layaway Also AvaUa~
Free Del very W1thln 25 M les

grator9 90 Day Guarantee!
French Ctty Ma;nag 61• 446 _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:...__,....._

Now open Qual ty Furnllure Plus
SR 7 Tuppers Pia ns Several op
tron s of f nanc ng eva lable aya
ways and maJOr cred t cards 6t4
667 7388

Card of Thanks

Ch1ld Care Prov1ders are

Tuesday Sept 26th

Cash And Catryl RENT 2 OWN

Recond toned - - - - - - - - - -

Complete home jurn ashtng s
Hours Man Sat 9 5 614 446
0322 3 m las out Bulavtlle P ke
Free Del very

Card of Thanks

We wrll be closed

'

Apar menl 1 Bedroom
Loca ted Between Gal
Hosp tal Rent Plus
Pets 6~4 446 2055

WOULD YOU LIKE TO
HELP YOUR NEIGHBOR??

Emp1re Furniture

FOR MORE INFOR~M~/1~TI~O~N~~~~~3

Appl ances

Card of Thanks

245 5887
Look for

614-446 3158
Oual ty Household fUfnll.lre And
App lances Gr&amp;at Deals On

Household
Goods

Wa shers overs Ranges Relr

New 1996 Doublew des D•s
counts up to $5 000 nclud ng free
heat pump de very and more
800 251 5070 ext t1

Gallipolis, Oh1o

Pnscllla Pendleton nnrtrilll

Trailer lot on Braod Run Ad New
Havf:ln $80Jmo 304 773 588t

Pomeroy Hours M T w 10 oo
am •o a oo P m Sunday 1oo to
.,.-...,-----.,.---- 6 00 pm 614 992 &lt;526

New t996 14x70 ncludes sk. rt
ng steps blocks one year
homeowners nsu a'nce and s x
man ~s FREE lot em Only $1025
down and $207 17 pe mon h Ca I
1 800 8:3 7 3238

(619) 645-8434

Will Wholesale

Pendleton wanted 1t
I

VrRA FURNITURE

510

Lrmrted Offer New 14rfl0 No pay
ments after 4yrs Only make 2
paymen ts &amp; move n 304 755
556&lt;3

Touch Tone Phone Serv-U

lndran Corn for sale

alcohol

pract1ce

l•m ted Ofler 1996 doublewde
3br 2ba h $ 695 down $259/
month Free del very &amp; setup
Only at Oaicwood Homes N tro
304 755-5885

ARE YOU READY FOR LOVE?
CALL NOWU
1·900·255·1515 EXT. 9459

$60
446

SWAIN

11 24E ManS1reet onAt124

K ck OH Sale 8 g Savngs On AU
D splay Models Save $1 000 To
$2 000 On All 1995 D splays Call
Cathy Or Sandy At Mounta n
State Homes In Pt Pleasa nt
WVA 304 675-1-400

2.99/Mm. 18+

IS to be no rac1ng 1n
or ex1t of road
the

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 Acre 2 Bedroom T a Ia Deck &amp;
Po ch See To App 304 5 76
3288 App egrove W VA

Insurance

&amp; electnc furnace $375

2acres 1984 Spr ngbrook mobile
home 3m AI 2 N on Rt 62 304
675 6986

OWNVOUROWN

Thr96 bedroom home n country
Whites H t Ad Rutland one bath
n g ound pool 614 992 5067

• DUI • No Pnor

Complete sets starttng at
Hurry before they re gone I
266 Upper R1ver Rd

WV (c lose to St Rt 62 to

wad Cha leston) N ce 3bedroom
nome basement 9acres N eed
otler Call Somerv lie Rea ty 304

the

an~ Marcum Cemetery
Rd
V1nton Oh10

tar,aet

$1500

1238

530

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

Cancelled/Rejected

Phone

Stove Freezer Washer Dryer
Relrgerato T'w' VCR 814 256

Tra ler Space In Centenary Mo AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
b le Heme For Rent Or W II Sell 01 ve St Gall pol s New &amp; Used
On land Contract 614 446 16 10
!urn ture heaters Western &amp;
Work boots 614-446 3159

MERCHANDISE

Home for sale by owner 3BR
Ranch 2 44acres masonry hre
place new carpet throughout ex
tra ou1 bu d ngs $58 000 304

SA 22

Fall -Planting
Trees shrubs perenn1als

Low Low Pnces on All

460 Space for Rent

Household
Goods

2758

P ce Buster New 14x70 2 or
3b Only $995 down $195/month
F1ee de verv &amp; setup On l y at
Oakwood Homes N t o WV 304
755 5885

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

614-446-2412
1-800-594-111

Greenhouse
Off Rt 2tB 256 1140

Rooms lor rent week or month
Stan ng at S120/mo Galla Ho!el
614 44&amp;9580

510

ong T&lt;anslerred 2 Adulls 1 Ch ld 520
304 21:&gt;20ae

GOV T FORECLOSED Homes
For Penn es On $t 0~1 nquent
TaR Repo s REO s Your Area
Tol Free (1) 800 898 9778 Ext
H 2814 For Currentl st ngs

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg $149 00
Sale Pnce $59 00
Large Stock
$4900
Engtneer
$4900
Wellington
Loggers
$50 55 .
Harness
$59 DO
Carolina Georg1a H&amp;H
Insulated Safety GorteK
Swa1n Furnllure 62 Olive St
Gall1polis
All US Made

Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn

&amp;

Furnished
Rooms

Wanted House For Rent 2 3
Bedrooms Galltpol s V cmary Oe - - - - - - - - - -

New Bank Repos Only 4 leh 304
755 7191

Heat New Carpet Excellent Con
dton S7950 6144460 175

CRAWFORD S GROCERY
HENDERSON WV

Davrson s Nursery

tC11chenl All UtI t1e1 paKS
Month Depos 1 Roqu red

Remodeled Small 4 Room
No Pets Porter Area

1968 PMC Bncemeytr 12x60
304 372 3400 -

992 6300

Rent to own Band
Spec1al fall sale on

"Super Furniture Savrngs'
SERTA MATIRESS
$59 00
BED FRAMES
$19 95
RECLINERS
$99 00
4 Drawer Chest
$49 95
$299 00
La z boy Recliners
Sofa Loveseat &amp; Cha1r $599 00

GallipoliS Ferry,

Second Ave

:..::.:~6:...":...--':...•:...e...:~:...S&amp;~;:..::.:____ 12Aoonns Pus Bath Lafa~eue

All real estate actvertlsu1Q In
thrs newspaper ts sub)ect to
the Fede al Fatr Housing Act
of 1968 wh Ch makes at !llegal
to actvertrse any preference
I mila lion or drscnminahon
based on race color religion
sex famltlat status or national
ongrn or any 1n1entlon to
make any such preference
I m1tatlon or d scnmlnallon •

Wanted to rem profess onal fam
ly wo uld 1ke to lease lou bed
room home n Me gs County call
614 992 7272 or 614 992 6503

- DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
330

2 Bedroom On SR 141 1 Mte Out
Of Galhpol s S3501Mo Plus De

Carpet
Oepos11 No

W I Do lntenor E•ter or Pa n1 ng

5

Inc

45o

Apartments
for Rent

2 Bed

Rub &amp; Scrub C ean ng Se v ce
dus ng mopp ng w ndows and
mo e Complete serv ce o touch
ups Ae!e ences on request ca I
Terry a 6t4 992 4232 or 614
992 4451

WANTED Meehan c eng ne e
bu d ng all types assembl y ol
mota s Call 304 372 8633 Hrs 8

Brunrcardr Musrc

667 :me

440

8363

P oless onal Tree Serv ce Com
plele Tree Care Buc ket Truck
Se v ce 5IJ F1 Reach Stump Re
moval
!= ee Es ma1es• to
surance 24 Hr Emergency Serv
tee Cal l And Save No Tree Too
Bg 0 Too Small ! Bdwe l Oho
614 388 9643 614 367 7010

The Un vers y Of A o Grande Is
Accpet ng Resumes For The Po
s 1 on Of Subs! tute Teacher In
The Ch td Oeve opment Center A
H gh Schoo 0 ploma Or Eqwval
ent Is Requ ed Prev ous Ell per
ence Wok ng W lh You ng Ch ld
ren A GOA Or Assoc ate De
gree In Early Ch ldhood Educa
1on A e Prele ed Send Lener 01
In terest And Resume By Septem
ber 29 t995 To Ms Phy 1s Ma
son PHR D IOC!Of Of Human Re
sou ces
Un vers y Of Rto
G ar1de PO Box f"27 Ro
Grande OH 454574 HO IAA Employer

General Ma ntenance Pant ng
Va d Work W ndows Washed
Gu ters Cleaned L gh Haul ng
Cammer cal Res dental Steve
614 446 8681

14x70 Norns 2 bedroom 61•

410 Houses for Rent

.s:;:u.nd
..a~y~,;;;S;:;e~p:;:te~m:!:!be=fr~2~4~,=199::=5====T=====P=o=m=e=ro~y~·r:M:;:::Id~d~le~p::o:;;:rt::•::G::a::l=ll=po~l~ls~,;;=O~H~·;:P;:o~i;::n;:t;:P::Ie=a=s'1an'::t~,=WV===~=~;;;;;;~"llltll1111 -m ........,.nfiml • Page 05

470 Wanted to Rent

1Y 0! R o Grande Is

8.00.:.::_:50:_8:_:::88::8~7- - - - - -

Mobile Homes
for Sale

soe B&amp;B Enterpr se blown nsu
at on Free est mate on house
614 742 2503

Accepttng Re!lumes For The Po
shan 01 An 1stant Teache( I
Floater A.n Assoc1ate Oeg ee In
Ear y Ch ldhood Oeve opment Or
Educaton And Exper ence Work
ng W th lnlants and Toddlers Is
Prefer ed Send Lerte Ot lnt&amp;rest
And Resume By September 29
1995 ToMs Pt1yllls Mason 0
rector 01 Human Resources Un
vers ty Of A o Grande Campus
Box f27 R o Grande OH 45674
EEO tAA Employer

180

local Vendang Bus nen For
Sate I Be Your Own Bosst E•rn
B1g SSS Call Todayr 1 Sdo 350

320

M C:hae Thacker &amp; Kev n Ble d

man serv ces I eld Knowledged ot
se v ces ava able n Mason Lm
con or Wayne Co AI east 1yr
ex per ence n rela eo I eld L
censed or I censable n soc al
work App ly at SCAC 540 5th
Ave Hunt ngton WV 25701
Dead •ne Oct 6 EOE
T~e Un1vers

Ellicellent Reta I Space Ava lable
Latayene ~all 5t3 922-0294

~eon

CUSTOM MADE DRAPES
• Custom Drapes • Fabnc
SelectiOn • Vert1cals •
Shades • Bl1nds • Sheers •
Bed Spreads
Wallcovenng w1th
Match1ng Fabncs
Total Decorattng Shop

Business
Opportunity

Real Estate Career Profess onal

wok AI aeas 3048822645
BOO 992 6356 INO AE:P

0 11er w th Class A COL wanted
We hau l wthm a 7 o 8 state a ea

Help Wanted

Sunday, September 24, 1995

In Loving Memory of
Jome1 Elllah
Province
Paw Paw, You are
gone now. I never
really told you how
lmuch I cared for you
••d how mucll I
laved you. Haw can
I let you know? I
can lust say It out
~ud aad hope you
somehow hear it.
Or that somehow
you lu•t knew the
woy felt. You are
tone now.
But
there will always be
a big place in my
heart for rou.
We love and miss
you
Debbie,
Roger, and
Lisa

o~y

j.:.:..:....~.:..._

a

lvw years 304

_ _ _ _ ___

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Trampot ~ S150 Needs New Pad
Set S2S Needs New Seats,
614 446 2109

Sw ng

560

Pets for Sale

AKC Bosron terr er pupp es 2
gtrls 2 boys wh te collars ready
o go call 6U 992 3752 or 614
gg2 3965

K ng Wood Stove With Blower
Ptasuc TruCk Tool Box &amp; Corner
Cab1ne1 Untl Wtth Countertop
61• 245--9179

Vanous Pa nt ngs For Sale Well
Known An SIS {Surreal) Var ous
S zes Var ous Pnces 614 446

2183

675-6577

Maple dtmng room set $300 An
t que cupboard $90
Ant que
pump organ $250 Zen.lh 25• to
or TV 175 Stalfmaster $75 30•
6 75-1272 attar 9pm

Wanted to buy electnc ndustflal
&amp;ewing machne 6 14 742 2656

AKC Reg Da lm attan pupp es
shots &amp; wormed $200 304 675

Nord e Track W&amp;lk fu C ass c w th
arm mo11ement work out coml)l.lt
er (tells speed ca~r e&amp; 1me d s
tance and pulse) Used ver~ l nle
caii61.S.992 5181 artet Spm
Pam Plus Now In New Locat•onl
51 1 Bu dena St across from Bel
lemeade UM Church 304 675

Wanted nlormat on of Roben
SA Jr Adams Fam y Bur ed 1n
Adams Cemetery Mason C11y S
Adams 5930 Sycamore Bartlett
TN 38134

AKC Reg Black lab pups shots

&amp; wotmed 304 675-6359 or 304

5553

AKC reg steed Beag le pupp es

AKC Reg sterad Rouwe e pup
p es born 815195 $300 t1ad I rs
shots AKC lema le (mother )
three years old gooCI w th ch ld
en $150 6t4 742 3802.

•oa•

Relngerators S1oves Washers
And Dryers All Recond \loned
And Gauranteedl $100 And Up
W~l Detver 614 669:S441

AKC Reg•stered Cocker Spamel
Puppeg $150 614 379 2728

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Ga lon
Upraght Ron Evans Ente pr ses
Jackson Oh o 1 800-537 9528

SAVE Call TODAY Fo NEW

FAt:E Co or Catalo~
1 800 462 9197

T Fat cookwa e set k ng s ze
cranberry bedsp ead
tr p e
dresser w hutch Sout~western
style couch love seat !. chau
sw1ve t rocke w ng back cha r
Broyhill club cha r 4 p ece p ne
I vmg room su te 25 Magnavox
TV double dresser tw n bed
complete end tables all rn eMcel
len! cond hon 6 14 985-3595

In Memory

In Loving Memory of
Henry "BIIIn Durst
who palled away
September 24, 1992
It s11msllke
yesterday that you
were here with u1.
But 1adly, you were
taken away froca us.
We hold you In our
heart• so dear,
We ml11 you and
wish you were here.
Wo often think of
you and ful your
presence.
We want to 111 you
again but must have
patlonct.
For aomoday, the
Lord will call ua
home, too.
Then, our family
will bt complete
agala .•• me, Grace &amp;
rau.
Sadlr mluecl by
wlfe•Grace,
daughter·Kitty &amp;
family

I

PUBLIC AUCTION

pa1r

9 Steel studs Reg 2 98 ea Now 1 59 100pcs 1 39
200pcs 1 19
10 Wood and Alumtnum clad -sltd ng patiO doors 5 Reg
299 95 Now 99 95 8'Reg 699 95 Now 239 95 6X8 tall Reg

699 95 Now 199 95
11 All stzes of wood clad dtrect set doors Reg 199 95

Now9995
12 B Grade commerctal grade cabtnets and parttcal
hoards Stzesupto51(121 tOesq ft

cedar gable ends House -vents octagon
and round Reg 80 00 Now 19 95 to

39 95
15 Krylon clear laguat
Groom Shop Pet G oom ng Fe a
tur ng Hydro Ba h Jul e Webb
Ca 1614 4&lt;~6.0231

B ds Iguanas Ta rantulas m ce
F sn Ta nio. &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Ja ckson Ave Pont Pte a san
304 675 2063

5Cockattets 614 388-8714

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Brush or spray Gallons

Reg

24 95 now 6 95
16 Krylon polyurethane gloss Red enamel reg 8 95 Now
s 95 Gal
17 Self Adhestve vtnyl cove base 4 Mx20 lo ng whtte Blue

1 o1acK

brown and almond Reg 20 SO Now 9 99

18 Crete boss concrete products (Crack ftller} totl andgas
pnmer) Acrylic latel( sealer) Over 50% oH reta1l 1 gallon
19 Ftberglass permtstone and bnck s d ng 9 • 48
B
grade whtte and red and tan Reg 10 95 ea Now 2 99 ea
D1scoun1s on large quanttys

20 SO lb pallet na1ls 6 penny 6 95
21 Whtrlpool bath tubs 72x4B x24M 6 J9t&amp;
control Reg 1795 00 Now 79S 00 and 89S 00

wtth remote

ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY, SEPT. 30, 1995
10:00 A.M.

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.

Located 3 mllea off Rt 87 on Leon-Baden

HOUSEHOLD AND ANTIQUE AUCTION

Road
Follow Signs
Selling the estate of the late Icy Rollins
Kitchen cupboard In good cond1t1on ch1ld s h1gh chau
over 60 years old royal blue cream separator cane
bottom rocker old record stand old dresser w1th
beveled glass m~rror 3 ~ro n beds slat back chaus
oval ~ron kettle milk stool large chalkware bulldog
glassware •nclud1ng old water p1tcher HeiSey Etched
Old Anchor Hock1ng Depression Carn1val 011 lamps
unusual cedar wardrobe sadirons floor lamp old
books old medtcme bottles railroad lanterns pot belly
stove old tools corn shuck1ng peg School Days
peanut butler Jars S1nger treadle sewmg machme
plus lots of other collectibles still 1n bo•es
LUNCH AVAILABLE
TERMS, CASH OR CHECK WITH POSITIVE ID

SUNDAY OCT 1 AT 11 00 AM
We will be aucllomng the personal property of the late
Geraldine R1ggs of Sunset Dnve Alhens She was a
llfet1me res1dent of Athens The garage basement
and rooms were packed full Partial ltsllng only all
11ems very clean and well cared for Due to Inadequate
park1ng everyth1ng moved to our auct1on facility
Take US 50 and 32 eleven mtles west of Athens and
ex1t onto 50 west towards McAthur Auct1on IS a
quarter m1le on left
N1ce 2 door oak bookcase 6 pc mahogany dmmg
room su1te mce 4 pc elm bedroom suHe 3 nice
carved v1ctonan cha11s mahog 3 t1er p1ecrust stand
mce cedar chest maple tea cart chtppendale style
coffee table p1e crust coffe e table matching WindSor
rocker and chair 2 drawer cherry mghtstend 2 ~law
foot sew1ng rockers mce frostfree s1de by side
refngerator w/tce maker wash1ng machme portable
color TV 5 drawer chest 6 drawer chest w1cker chatr
cedar chest 4 drawer f1llng cabinets maple gossip
bench several mce pictures doll 1ce cream table and
chairs 3 mce qu11ts mce lloor lamp w/marble base
mce slag glass lamp w/curved panels one panel
cracked and other mce lamps eastlake parlor chair
f~res1de bench Lynne and Jamm1ne Royal Daulton
f1gunnes 2 lance store tars Fenton glass pc carmval
glass cranberry Hobna1l salt and pepper other
collectoble glass towels and bed l1nens pots and pans
and other kitchen Item s 3 metal 2 door cabinets mce
pressback cha11 w/swans alum gilder and other lawn
furmture step ladder e•tens1on ladder and many
other hand tool1tems from work room 1n basement
Terms Cash or check w/pos1t1ve ID Food available
Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson

Winter &amp; Associates
Auction Service
Auctioneer: Edwin Winter #334
Rt. 1, Millwood, WV
Phone (304) 273·3447
Licensed &amp; bonded In Weal VIrginia &amp; Ohio Not
responsible for accidents or loss of property
We Appreciate Your Attendance!

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1995
10 OOA M
Dtrections Sale IS located at 202 Joan Place New
Haven He1ghts WV From the Pomeroy/Mason Bndge
follow At 33E Appro• 5 5 m1les to Hartford WV or
from Ripley WV follow At 33W appro• 24 miles
Watch for s19ns
Owner Jtm F1elds Mr F1elds 1s an anttque
Public Sale
collector/dealer and he IS selling part of h1s large
&amp; Auction
collect1on of quality anttques Mr F1elds wtll be
available after 4 DO p m at (304) 882 2711 to answer
quesltons about any ttem
Th1s IS only a partial llst1ng
FURNITURE Wrought tron 1ce cream table w/4 cha~rs
lg walnut pump organ Larken desk 3 wash stands 2
rd oak tables oak dressers pressed back rocker 2
Hoos1er cab 2 llatwall cupboards wnt1ng desk oak
Saturday, September 30, 1995
wall phone 19 2 barrel c1der press old cash reg1sters
1:00pm
oak stands oak swtvel chairs clocks dry s1nk old
L&lt;:x;a,ted at the auct1on center on Rt 33 1n Masond bench childs rockers uon bed treadle sewmg
machtne buffets/sideboards blanket boK old trunks
00 rolls of carpet new L R swte new di1inets.IJ new set bunk beds plus more
some new m1sc 1tems For more Information
GLASSWARE Lance COOkie jars DepreSSIOn glass
304 773 5785 or 304 773 5447
green 1ars Dazey churns old dishes red berry water
Auct1on Conducted By
set otl lamps milk bottle collection pttchers Ins &amp;
Rick Pearson Auction Co
Hemngbone plus many box loads to be unwrapped &amp;
Mason WV
sorted before the sale
Auct1oneer R1ck Pearson #66
POTIERY Donahoe (1 2 &amp; 10 gal plus laced)
TERMS Cash or check w1th I D
other crocks and bowls Indian water set cook1e 1ars
Not responsible for acc1dents or loss of property
lg school water cooler churns w/dasher milk crocks
plus more
Public Sale
MISC Old metal lays rug beaters m1lk cans cow
&amp; Auction
bells old ctgarette lighters M1ckey Mouse gUitar
appro• 20 old kmves p1tcher pump 12 Coke stgns
buggy wheels several old carb1de lamps old
d1nnerbell w/pole lard press st razors brass kettles
Sat. Sept. 30, 1995
&amp; buckets canes co1ns (1862 &amp; up) old buttons rd
10 00 a.m
mtner s buckets apple peelers thermometers (Coke
Due to the heaijh of Mrs K1ng her personal property
Master MIK Kentucky Club &amp; country weather
w111 be sold at 889 S 2nd on the corner of Mullbery 1n
stat1on) butter mold glass &amp; brass washboards metal
Middleport Ohto
t1ns metal Wonder Br~ad sign beer &amp; other advert
HOUSEHOLD"
s1gns ch1cken crates lg assort of kitchen utens1ls
Almond 22 cu It Amana refngerator wood table &amp; 6
rolling p1ns cast uon skillets wash tubs old
chairs s1ngle capta1ns bed dressers round coffee
s1lve1Ware Sadd 11ons cream separator 1ce tongs
table Zeneth color floor model TV rockers recliners
corn kmves corn shellers hay forks lg anvil w/stand
double beds chest of drawers cedar wardrobe M W
saws (cross cut &amp; hand) boxes of old hand tools old
miCrowave &amp; stand wardrobe stereos lamps linens
su rveyor s outftt wooden &amp; meta l planes draw kn1ves
pots pans dishes electncal appliance what not
log cha1ns lg baby buggy lawn mowers s1ngle a•le
shelf s m1sc cha~rs metal base cabinet Hover Elne
tra1ler plus more
200 sweeper and ect Westinghouse sew1ng mach1ne
GUNS Old 30" double barrel 12 g (Interchange
tn cabmet
Spec1al?) t 2 9 Westernfleld pump 2 12 9 Mtdland
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS
gun (England) s1ngle shot Model 26 Da1sey J C
Ch~na cabinet lamps sun records hats wood 1ronmg
H1ggtns Model 29 22LR Hopk1ns &amp; Allen Arms 12 g
board stone jar d1euz lantern b11d cage S1nger
plus other 12 g s1ngle shots GUNS SELL AT 12 30
Treddle sewing mach1ne and etc
AND THEY WILL BE SHOWN BEFORE THEY ARE
MISC"
SOLD
F1le cabtnet lawn chaus 8 track tapes storage shelf
Refreshments, Food and a porta potty w111 be
gun rack lots of Chnstmas decor;&gt;t1ons tool boK log
ava!lal)le
chains porch sw1ng work bench barbeque gnll &amp; etc
~-" AUCTIONEER Fmms "Ike" Isaac
OWNER· LUCILLE KING
Phone 614-388 9370 or 388-11880
DAN SMITH -Auctioneer
Licensed and bonded Ohio ~3728 West Vlrgtnla ~1030
Terms Cash or approved check
Billy Goble Appranllce
Ohio 111344 W Va 515 Ohio 6769
Not responsible for acc1dents or lost rtems
Cash Postt1ve ID Refreshments by Hobson
Statements made day of sale has precedence over
Fellowship Church
pnnted matenals
Not responsible for accidents or loss of property"
Th1s wtll be an all day sale therefore wtll not hold our
Note House and lot for sale by owner'
regular auct1on at 7 DO p m on 9 30 95

NEW CARPET&amp;
FURNITURE
AUCTION

pc From 99 95io 199 95
6 10 6 lUbe cons1Uct1on adhesM&gt; Reg $1 98 Now 98
1 Wood and Alumtnum Wmdows From 29 95 and up
1O'Yo discount on 1 12 pes 20% dtscounl on 13 or more
8 In tenor louvered wood shutters Chotco of s zes 3 00 a

14 Western red
rectangle square

SUNOUEST WOLFF
TANN lNG BEDS
CQmmerc•al Home Un ts From
$199 00 Buy Facio y Duect And

Wellston Oh 394 3645 Closed Thursday and Sunday
1 WQO&lt;J 1 Jo1ce 16 8 to 22 long soe pr L1n fl (some
12"and 14")
2 Htgh pressure lamtnate for counter tops $2 50 sq tt
Now toe sq f1
3 Ofler 5000 s pes 01 panel ng Tile board Wood
Hardboard Mndyboard $2 99 and up
4 Tuff Shield congated plane panels Wh le Green Clear
26x12 Reg 1495Now79526"KB Now499

13 Oak cab1ne1 doors B Grade Reg 2 00 Now soe

Sept c Tank Jet Ae at on Motors
New &amp; Rebuilt /Installed Ca ll
Johns John 614 446 4782
Slabs tor ! rewood S3 p ck up
load ca I 614 247 2402 B 11 Ar
non

Penns Warehouse

5 F1berglass tub/showers we have whtte and colors I 2 3

6 112 weeks p oven n unt ng
btoodl nes g eat looks oo $50
'@aCh 6U 662 4302

Building
Supplies

Surplus Closeouts Buy outs
Build~ng Supplies Cash and Carry

Cash and Carry Bnng your truck

Sale ends September 30th

614-698-6706
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
Partner Frank Hulchlnson
614·592-4349

~R~e~a~I~E~st~a~m~~~~~~B~r~u~n~e!,r~La~n~d~C~o~l
·
~
1 03 Greenbrier Dr
Byesville, Ohio

43723

D. C. Metal Salts, Inc.
Cannelburg Inc 45719
Spec1allzmg m Pole
Bu1ld ngs
Des1gned lo meel your
needs Any me
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Bu1ldmgs and
Package Dea ls Save
Hund1eds even Thousands
ol Dollars
loca l Sales Aepresentaf ve
WESLEY MULLET
141 Barlow Ad
Palnol Oh1o 45658
PH 614 256 6031
Real

(614) 685 3064
(614) 685 8138
Bruner Land
Company
1-614· 775-9173
Over 1500 Acres for Sale

COUNTY Jus!
of Stale AI N7 30
mmutes south of Galltpolls

25

wooded

acres

overlooking th e Ohto River
.~.,~ .CIUU , Only $2 000 w•m1

$264 30 per month 1

II~~~:~~~1

0% Interest

COUNTY
area 5 wo&lt;&gt;d••d I

General

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, SE". 24, 1998
2:00TO 5:00
LOCATION: 1154 AND 1154 1/2 2ND AVE.

Cozy 3 bedroom ranch with l!vmg room clmmg
room balh kitchen rull basement 2 car garage
Second home 2 bedroom L R and knchcn newly
remodeled Grcatmveslment or home and ren tal
Your host Claude Damcls 44 1 7072

�Page 06•
560

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

German Shepherd Pure Wh•te
AKC Born 8/17f95 $375, 614·
288-8753 614\523-8965

610 Farm Equipment
New 6 pull type brush hog 1650.
3 pi hitch potalo plows, 175 614 -

Plantatton Creek Orchard Apples
lot sate 304·937·2135

Three Rat Temer Pups 1 Male
An&lt;~ 2 Females, 614 446 1432

570

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

580

Pets lor Sale

843 5216

630

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1 lf2 YtO Jacob Sheep Ram
W1th 4 Horns $50 6 Month Old
B•l y Goat M -.ed Al~ne S35 614
367 7008

Musical

_ _ _ln_s_tru_m_e_n_ts....,._-,- 610 Farm Equipment
AntiQue uprrght piano w1th bench
$200 You haul 304 675 3383 af
le&lt;6pm

Livestock

1

6 Month Old Bull Calves Sunmen
tal IRed Angus Cross Breed1ng ,

Equtpment Trader 7 112 Wtdi 18

Fool long W1th Load1ng Ramps
$1 100 614 446 2528

G111esp.e SR 588 614 446 3969

Bach trumpet used very hrrle ex
celtenl cond11ion pa1d $400 new
sell $325 call 614 985 4489

7 p1gs for sale, $15ea 30&lt;~ 67S
E.qu1pment Trailer 7 112 W1dc 18 6490
Foot Long W1th Load1ng Ramps
$1 100 614 446 25211
Black Polled S1mmental Bull 8
Bundy Clartnet Ver'l Good Con
Month Old Ell:cellent Bloodline
Cllllon Newt~ Re Padded $200 AC combme wlcorn head 8 ta~e
Call After 5 00 614 256 6402
Two
grav
ly
beds
Also
waw
lor
614 446 2109
sale 304 675 5086
Reg1slered Quarter Horse Yearly
Conn trumpet exc cond, $350 11
F111~ Oul OJ ~ay B Doc F1lly In
2karat c:11amond cluster nng $250 01scoun1 larm traclor paris lor cenJ IVE' Shou ld Make E•cellent
304 67S 5726
Massey Ford IH 8 others Investment Or Cow Horse $1 500
S1der s Equ1pment Co Hender 5 14 379 2932
Setmer I ute, good condrbon 304 son WV 304 675 7421 or 1 800
675 2307
m 3917
640 Hay &amp; Grain
Trumpet Bach TR 300 Used Very
L11tle New S645 Sell For S200
614 245-5870

580

Inter na uonal 756 D1ese1 Tractor
$4 995 964 D1esel PS ll11e PTO
$3 995, Sears 12 HP Lawn Trac
tor $295., Case Law n Tractor
129j. 614 286-6522

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

-,-------...::.----------:-1
Ear corn lor sale hautmg
able 614 992 2230

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

71

o

Autos lor Sale

71

o

Sunday, September 24, 1995
Autos lor Sale

Squafe oates $1-$2 Round baes
S15ea 304 675 3960

1983 Olds Tornada 307, Auto,
load&amp;d Many New Parts, S2 200.
614·379 273)

1988 Ford Tempo, 82,400ml 304.882 2640

TRANSPORTATION

1984 Ford Crown V1ctor1a good
condluon S1795 6t4-992..S1S4

Cond 1hon New A1ms &amp; T1res.
$2,495 F~rm 614·388 &amp;425

1986 Chevy Cavaher
$1,800 3:)4-675-2725

GMC Full S1ze P1clc Up 1988 Be

71 0 Au los for Sale
86 Toyota Cehca , red . 170,000
mtles, rebwlt at 100 000 5 speed
4 cyl $2995 614 992 2258 or
614 992 6314
19~2

Chevelle SS 614 985-4306

1972 V W Bug Blue, 5 Star R1ms
Excellem Cond111on $2 800, 614
256-1421
1978 Grand Pru: Small V 8, 301
Chrome Wheels Runs
Good looks Good, $700 614446 4803
1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Best Olfer 614 446
.&lt;1426
S2 000 Or

Z 24,

1987 Pont F1ero ·or Mult1port
Fuel InJected \1 6, 5 Speed Man·
ual Transm1ss1on Very N1ce,
54 295 614-245-5320
' '
1988 Shadow 119,000 M1les
$1,200 614·256-123:3
1988 Cad1llac Sedan Dev•lle,
auto 4dr 130 OOOm1 good cond.
S5,500 304·675-5950after4pm

HISS Mercury Cougar Vary Good

1989 Bu1ck 2 Door T Type, 1989

71 0

Real Estate General

ASIIO 70.000 Miles, $5,000, 080,

OPEN HOUSE

6!• 256 ·~- 614-256-1233

SUNDAY, OCTOBER I, 1995
1:00- 3:00

1989 Chevy Cors•c Ntce Car
Loaded $3 400 080. 1986 FOld
Escort A.uto St 200 080. 614441 0584
1989 Mustang LX Excellent ConClitiOn., $5,500 614·446·2056

313 CHAROLAIS LAKE DRIVE

1991 Pontiac F1reb1 rd T- Tops,
Loaded 614 446 3568, 614-379
9209

1988 Ford Taurus stanon wagon
$2800 614 992 3194

1992 Ford Tempo V-6 loaded,
23 000 M1les Ask1ng #5,350,
614 256 1252 614 256 1138

Quality of L1fe, Quality of Home
Situated m Charola1s HHis Lake Estates, th1s elegant new
Cape Cod offers everyth1ng a fam1ly could want As you walk
1n the entry you wtll be 1mpressed w1th the beauttful oak
woodwork and staucase Formal hvmg room and dtnlng
room, country kttchen wtth oak cabmets adJoins a cozy family
room w1th fireplace, 3 bedrooms, 2 H2 baths Bonus of a
completely f1ntshed basement wtth large rec room and the
poss1b1hty of two more bedrooms Plus a 2 car attached
garage The outdoors offers a beautiful v1ew m any dlfect1on
you look, from the picturesque lake to 1he professionally
landscaped grounds and the natural beauty or the
surrounding hills Come take a look for yourself w1th Carolyn
wasch servtng as your hostess Directions St Rt 160 North
to nght on White Road, approx 1 m11e, turn !eft 1nto Charola1s
H1lls Lake Estates

Real

General

Premtum 18% allaHa nay 2nd cut
SBOilon Morgans Farm 304
937 2018 Seplonly

JD 450 c Doze• ROP Wrench 6 1 .::.:~:..:.::..::.:::..::_:_:______
Way, 614 4146 ·8044 Plu s 1800 S1lage Bagger lor lease 100·150
Sarles Road Trac~e r 1976 low 200 1t bags available 304 273
Mlage
421 5

1987 Ford 4 WO New 3Q2 En
gtrw, New Pamt, &amp; T1res, '78,000
Mires, 614·245-9061

wL~O~~ T!E~~R1!v:H~MI!c.
LET US WORK FOR YOU'
CALL US TODAY '

446-1066
Allen C . Wood. Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanene Moore , Realtor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446-2027
Patric•a Ross, Realtor

BRAND NEW HOME Ta,
abatement Realtor O.Vned 3
bedroom 2 baths located
on 'the coty $52 000 #109

3668 Neighborhood Road 3
BAs 1 1/2 balhs FR full
basement 10 x t2 storage
bulldtng , 479 acre m/1

50 2

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME
CHAROLAIS LAKE DRIVE located on approx 2 78
acres w11h sun room hot tub,
and sky lights MUST SEE
$172 000 #104

FOR ffl~RCONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1 -800-B94-1 D66

~

(=)

1
Ford Bronco 6 Cylinder Au
t0mat1C , 4 WD, $4,799, Johns
Autb Sales, 614 446 4782

1108 Teodora AYenue 3 BRs
bath Rl FR ut1l1ty room
V1nyl s1d1ng k•ncud back
$54 900 1219

843 Second Avenue - Good
Investment on th1 s 2 story
d1v1ded Into two un1ts Each
untt has 5 rooms and 1 bath
$33 900 #234

G't-

..._

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555

--

1990 Dodge Ram Van 9·250
$6 000 Can Be
SeGn At Gallipolis Da1ly Tnbune
825 Thlfd Ave nue Gal11pol s
OhM&gt;

·type
home 29 miles from Parkersburg
5 m1les from Pomeroy on SA 7
Lots of pnvacy, 4 BR, 2 1/2 baths
LA wlfp FA w/fp, DR eat-In kit
bsmt gar stg bldgs, pool. many t hoJnling;
other amonllies Make Us An I'
Offer
LISTING MIDDLEPORT Beech St . Very nice remodeled 2
also offers llvlng room, dmlng room. k1tchen, front &amp;
Ucarpele&lt;: porches Vmyl s1d1ng FA Gas furnace Low 30's
1

Real

1992 For-d E•piorer XL 4x4
41door, Sspd $11 000 304 882
3499
1994 As1ro Van . loaded $21 800
Will sell ror loan payo ff 614 -992
5119

,BLACKBURN REALTY
5 11 Sc..: ond Ave 1, G.JIIIpohs, Oh . 45631

roomy h1stoncal homes! 8eaut1ful
VI9W of C!ty park and !he OhiO
R1ver Reno vate each to your
own taste Would mak e an
excellent home or 1deai
Investment property Call lor
complete listings

lt&gt;edroom ranch Situated
city lull basement 1 car
Calllodayl

113 Acres mi l CLAY TOWNSHIP 2400
pound tob acco base, 4 ro om house, 011
heal 90 acres wooded $75,000

BIG BEND -REALTY~ INC.
1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

RUSSELL D WOOD , BROKER 446-4618
441·-0262
379-2184
446-7101

DRIVEEVERYONE
SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE Th1s 2 story be auty
features 3 or 4 BR.s , 2 baths, beamed
cei11ngs 1n the LR &amp; fam1ly rm. cherry
cab1nets 1n k1tchen, 6 1n outer walls &amp;
much more Fantastoc '

1157 2nd Avenue 2 bedroom 1 1/2 baths
gas heat s1d1ng, n1ce porches cent a1r,
car pari $39 900 00

OWNER WANTS TO RELOCATE!
Appealing 3 bedroom ranch, llvmg
room Ia rge kitchen and dlnmg
area · Divided basement,
breezeway to garage central air
Fenced lawn approx 67 acre C1ty
schools] $40's
1764

Judy DeWitt ..
I Memll Carter
Ruth Barr

COUNTRY SECLUSION • woth lhe
convenience of etty ltv1ng Located 5
m1nutes from Holzer Med1cal Center, th1s
spac1ous home rest s on 6 25 rol ling
acres and offers 5 bedrooms ~ 2 k1tchens.
and ~ bathrooms, With many other
custom features Th1s home would be
for the professional family or a two' duplex

SAY! LOOK WHAT $35,000 00
WILL BUY YOUI ThlS n1ce SIZed
three bedroom home liv1ng room
k1tchen over 1 4 acre lawn
Conveniently located lo grocery
schools &amp; more
lt795
HISTORY ABOUNDS these lwo

Tammte DeWut.

Martha Smith.
Culdy Drongowsko
Cheryl Lemly

~
245-0022
379-2651
245-9697

742-3171

Extra Noce Bu1ldong or Mob1le Home
Lol Mature Pme Trees on thr ee s1de s
Access to Raccoon Creek Located m
Hobart Dolton Subd $11 900 00
COMMERCIAL LISTING Old Bonded
Station larg e open Jot tn town, small
buoldong on lot $90 000 00
RACCOON CREEK
$16,500 00
GREAT HUNTING LAND
$19,000 00

Earl's Home Ma1ntenance, vmyl
Siding, rooftng exter1or painting,
power weshmg Free Estimates
614 992 4451 or 614 992 4232,
Ron's TV Serv1ce spec1aliz1ng 1n
ZeMh atso serv1c1ng most other
brands House calls 1 BOO 797
0015 wv 304 576 2398

840

Res1denllal or commerc1al wtr~r,g
new serv1c;:e or repa1rs Master l1
censed electnc1an A1denour
Electncai, WV000306 , 304 675
1786

LOG HOMES
Comfort,
energy
efficiency,
durability
and
OexibUity In design are
a few of the reasons
why lO,OO famUles
buDd a 1011 bome
yar!

Appalachian
Structures has been
leader In the log home
Industry for over IS
years. Choose from
over 70 standard
models or we'U custom
design one for you.

(614) 742-3171 or 1·800-585-7101

'(!!}

"""'"' Cheryl Lemley ....... 742-3171

~~=

WOWI SUPER LOCATION! ROCKSPRINGS ROADI
ma1nta1ned ranch home, 3 bedrooms, one car allaclhecl
garage, plus addrttonal detached garage Neat &amp; clean'
th1s locatoon thiS listing won I last long I $57,500
#792

Eleclrlcal and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
Heat Pumps A~r Condmomng If
You Don t Call Us We B01h Lose 1
Free [SIImates, 1 800 287 6308,
614·446 6308 wv 002945

BIG
BEND
' .
. REALTY, INC.
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

&amp;

Freeman's Heating A.nd Cooling
Installation And Serv•ce EPA
Certified Res1denttal Commercial
614 256 1611

Roofmg and gutters commercial
and res1dent1al m1nor repaus 35
years ell:pertenca B&amp;B ROOF
lNG. 614 992 5041

Call or write for more
lnfomatlon. '

I

451 LINCOLN STREETt 2 Story alum sided home, I
room, d1n1ng room wrth butiHn china/buffet kttchen ""'' '''
baths, central atr &amp; more'
NEW LISTING! 33739 BUCK WILCOX ROAD- $5~i.000. 0(l-l
3 I acres &amp; a 1/2 story framelbnck 3 bedrooms.
room, fam1ly room &amp; so much more Let Cheryl
one to you, call today•
n97

Log
Structures, Inc.

Appalachian
HARRISONVIllE- New Uma Ad - Great home JUSt waiting tor
you to move 101 Total of 5 BR, 3 baths, LR, OR K1t w/appl . Utly
area, closets deck wlhot tub 2 car gar 1n bsmt Also a 30x50
metal bldg w/2 lg gar doors &amp; 6 tn concrete floor, &amp; 14x20
heatod offtce W1th 10 acres Also , an additional 53 acres wl3
BR tratler ava~lable Ponds Barns This can be put'chased as a
package or separalely Let us show you thiS one today1

Dept.

GOT,

P.O. Box 614

thos In not a
an opportunity to own a 3
1 , at a very reasonable price
home Jn
fl•r•r•e and small basement tncluded Phone tor more
lnkmriati,or whole It is sllll ave1lable
#746
THINKING ABOUT FAll 1995 - Foshlf\ll,
Boatlng ,Huntlng or Just Rela~mg 1n your own Camper &amp;
Campsite approx 7 m1les from Gallipolis, ovetlookmg
Blue Lake &amp; Raccoon Creek WE ARE NOW GOING TO
SELL THIS CAMPSITE &amp; CAMPER BUY IT NOWr!&lt;ND
BE PREPARED FOR SPRING 1996 SEE IT NOW
PHONE TODAY! Reanor Owned
1584

PHONE OFFICE 446·7699
KENNETH AMSBARV, PH. 245-5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

SECOND AVIENIJE
272
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
(614) 992·5333
PCIMt;RtJY- 3 Br. on 3/4 acre Quiet neighborhOOd,
remodeled with nothing left to do on this
I for $12,500 Owner os mot1vated
iiiiiu,rli~iii RIVERVIEW- 3-4 BR. full basement, close
porch, large rooms, no steps $25.000
2 BR mobile home, excellan1 conditit&gt;n.l
A
stay Nice setting, shade trees, nver view 50 x 1

S~~~:~~~~-=

In Racine Great 3 BR w1th,many extras Hard

::~~~~::~:t~re~ei,s

wtth much pasture land Farm equipment
stay $110,000
3 BR. much potentoal Beautiful front
close to town on a seduded street $25,000 won't last
RACINE- Nice 3 BA 1 1/2 bath Wllh a fimshed l t 18S11m•1nt.l
of room with houso and property 1+ acre, enough far
garden Carport. storage building, frutt trees ,
ga1rag,e Let this one be your Home Sweet Home $69,900
·WE WELCOME YOUR LISTINGDALE E. TAYLOR
992-5333

WV 25271
1-800-458-9990

Ripley,

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OFFICE 992-2886

122 MULBERRY HIEGHTSI 2-3 bedroom ranch w1th a
attached garage Dining room, kitchen, utility room &amp;
32 acre lawn
#767
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION for thos 1 1/2
1 ~~;~~()0:3- bedrooms
. Hvlng room, d~nlng room"i'uJ~:~~~~

I coompte·te

w/refngerator &amp; range 30'•32' garage s
College Avenue

'.
•
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Moon•, Assocwle 441 -l lll

ST AT. 124, RACINE. Lovely 3 bedroom home With
handcratted hardwood floonng Detached 2 car garage with
overhead apartment Call to see th1s one
t776

33
20

•

iJCres,
acres

64 ACRES - corner of Woods M1ll &amp; 554
has a realty n1ce homeSite old barn, lots of
pnv;;acy yet clo se to school and other
actiVltleS
KEYSTONE AD - VINTON -AREA '5 acre
lots $5 500 each close to th ousands of
acres of hunt1ng land Only 2 lefl. Call
today

;

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:,'71;.~, " .

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Henry E. Cleland Jr .. 992-2259

We Need Listings!! We Are Moving
Property And Need More to Show!

day

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

REALTY

Realty
25

LOCUST ST.· GALLIPOLIS

Audrey F Canaday, Broker
Mary P Floyd, 446-3383

't't0·-:1636

~

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REDUCED NO REASONABLE
you ever wanted to own a OFFER REFUSED' One floor frame home
Mtnt Farm w1th a mce 1 112 story home? wen w1th 3 bedrooms 1 1/2 baths gas wood
here it rsl 6 67 + acres of ground parttally burner heat TPC water Shed, 2 car
fenced. n1ce garden area and a great yard attached garage, apphances Approx 3 2+
Hotne has 3 bedrooms. n1ce large hvmg room, acres REDUCED TO $25,000 MAKE AN
bath ut1ltly room, k1tchen and d1n1ng room OFFER
Close to town yet all the extra of Country
L1v1ng All thos can be yours tor $39 900

•
•

11048- BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF
THE COUNTRY! Shoal Ck Ad
Crown City/Attention hunters 4 $190,000 00
BR 1 bath ranCh home 12 ac
m/1 Call Pany Hays , 446 3884 lor
details

COMERCIAL SITE ON EASTERN AVENUE,
CORNER LOT PLUS 2 ADJOIN I NG LOTS 2
DWELLINGS . PRESENTLY RENTED GREAT
LOCATION FOR BUSINESS

,_

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separate Fun basement Needs
some TLC Call Patty Hays · 446
3684
11015 • STOP LOOKING· THIS

11006 Close to Holzer 59 6 Ac
m/1 CommerCial or Residential

==

11054 NEW Lll&gt; lliNU
TWP! Immaculate 3 BA ranch
hOme with plenty of yard space
f1.Jit basement w1th a large flntshed
room Large deck 1n ba c ~ Call
HM Large Apt &amp; Commercial
Patty Hays 446 3884
BUJidmg 14728 SA 554 Rental
$1 000 per mo
11055 NEW LISTING lot tn Income
rental
Rome Twp cleared and ready 10
build on $29 000 00 Call Wilma

11052 101 GM!eld Ave All brick
ranch 314 bedrms full basement 2
car garage 9 years old
Overlooking th e 0f1lo Rive r
$95 000 00

11056 NEW LISTING
3 Grande
bedroom mob1le home partially bUIIdtng $50,000
turn1shed with 3 acres, Elliott Ad
32 500 00, w1111 26 acres
$40,000 oo Call Wilma for dela11s

I

POMEROY- A-Frame home wllh I o rooms
3 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, kttchen ltvmg room ,
dmmg room and famtly room Has electnc
B B and wood heat (2 wood burners tncluded)
features deck, pat10, fireplace appliances, 2
car garage With workshop over top ln a good
neoghborhood on a paved streel PRICE
REDUCED' OWNER WANTS TO SELl'

Corner of Flatwood &amp; Rock
1 24 Acre s w1lh 25 x 51
modular large utility room, garden tub, walk
1n closet, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths out bu1ld1ng,
electnc FA heal , TPC water ASKING
$39 500 00
POMEROY one story frame w1th 3
bedrooms ~1tchen hv1ng room and bath
stove and refngerator, floors are carpeted,
wall are paneled and plaster On a paved
street ASKING $18,000

POMEROY Mobile Home wtlh kitchen l1v1ng
room, one bedroom , one bath ,6 x 16deck,
newer Aeuator SeptiC, s1ttmg on 5 3022
Acres ASKING $1 B 500

WE NEED LISTINGSII LET US BE YOUR HOME TOWN REAL ESTATE
CONNECTIONII LET US HOOK YOU UP TO A BUYER/SELLER TODAY!!

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11051 2516 Kriner Ad 3
bedroom Ooub!ewlde on 13 1/2
acres, $55,000 00 Call W1lma lor 11022 150 Keystone Ad V1nton
All bnclc ranch , 2 bedrms ,
a VIeW
beautiful home garag e Also
11034 Bob McCormick Ad 50 collage In the rear and a large
acres, some renee level !O rolling garage Sokt seperate or together
all publlc uti!1118S road trontage on $65,000 00 &amp; $79,000
Bob McCormick &amp; St AI 160
11021- 77 &amp; 91 So Ma1n V1nton
$155 000 00 W1l ma
e&gt;Ccellant rental property 4 units
,,030 4307 Cherry A1dge Ad $72 000 00 call Wilma for lull
Oak H1ll, 3 bedroom mobile home details
on 3 acres pond 2 ca r garage,
11017 6778 Lincoln F&gt;1ke 9 acres
$50 000 00
of vacanl land St 1 500 00 W11ma

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A two story home with 3
Front and rear porches $28,900
DURST RIOGE Rd· A 2 story home woth 3 to 4 bed-rooms,
dln1ng room Has a beautiful vtew of several hills and a
n1ce lot, front porch, and a cellar. Has 2/3 acre
ASKING $2$,000
POMEROY- Beech Street- A 2 story 15 yr old colonial
home with a fantast1c v1ew Has 3· 4 bedrooms 2
f~replaces, 3 1/2 baths family room, formal d!mng room,
fmtshed basement 1n ground sw1mmmg pool, solar heat,
satellite dish, 2 car garage, and lots of pflvacy, s1ttmg an
25 acres
S133,000.
POMEROY- Osborne St -Approximately 255 fool frontage
and lots or depth All c1ty serveces avatlable Could make 2
trarler lots
18,000.
STATE ROUTE 338- Across from Ravenswood Aluminum
approx: 8 acres and a 2 story frame home that has 3
bedrooms and one bath A nlc~ v1ew of the river from the
fronl parch
$25,000
Right on tho Ohio River • A noce bog lot woth two levels
One level close to nver w1th an 18 x 30 p1cn1c sheller and a
dock The h1gher level has a 14 x 70 mobtle home with 3
BR , 2 baths\ storage bu1ld1ng front deck small rear deck
and a fenced in area for children or pets
$38,500
LANGSVILLE- Co. Rd . 10- Approx 2 acres of beauloful
bottom land Water and electnc avcitlable A home or
mob1le home stte
$6,500

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POMEROY- Wolls H1ll Road - One acre parcels wolh etec1nc
and water available $4,500 tJO per acre

,

11038 07f!i Albert Swartz Ra
Jackson 80 acres of pnme
pasture land wtlh 3 bedroom
ranch lull basement large Darn
pond &amp; 2 rental hOm es
$135 000 00 make offer owner
wants sold now call W1lma lor an

One floor frame home w1th 3 bedrooms, gas
heat appliances tnclud1ng washer and dryer
Approx 112 acre wtth fenced yard Full
basement N1ce affordable home ASKING
$18.500,

VACANT LOT ON WELCHTOWN
Immediate Possession Electnc, TPC water
and SeptiC Tdnk on lot ASKING $5,500

-'•'

IS THE HOME YOU WILL BE
PROUO TO OWN! BEAUTIFUL $150,000 00
NEW BRICK RANCH· Cathedral
cellmg 3 BR s 2 full baths gas 1964- Lots 2 1n lakeVIew Estates. 11040 1626 Adamsville Ad 3
sAc $33 000 00
heat central a1r, large k1tchen
bedrm , 2 baths. barn garage
lots of cabmel space dishwasher
buildings, 17 Ac mfl $59,000
disposal 2 car garage 28 )( 48
bUIIdmg w/large workshop area
t 063 ac m/1 Cement dnveway
1 Palty Hays 446-3884

College St Rio
sq ff commercial

SYRACUSE - Newly Remodeled 1 1/2 story
home has kttchen hvtng room, dmmg room. 3
bedrooms 11 112 baths BUilt 1n book cases
Front and rear porches New Gas FA
Furnace i~ew 2 car garage N1ce locatiOn on
a coroer lot ASKING $49,500 00
GOLO RIDGE - B+ acres o1 level/slopong
ground w1th a scen1c v1ew on Gold Rtdge
Road TPC water and electnc IS available
Stte recently surveyed Just mrnutes from St
33 off 681 ASKING $11,000

LAND FOR SALE ON ROUTE 160 BUSINESS AND
RESIDENTIAL SI TES CAL L SOON WHILE THIS
PROPERTY IS S TILL AVAILABLE JUST LISTED•

''··

car garage also 2 bedrm home In home Lot 200 x 300 Make Offer
thr rear In good cond1110n has
been I'Bmodeled
11043 Jackson Co !arm 128 Ac
m{l !re ntage on 3 roads
Devetopmen! land close to
freeway

LOW MAINTENANCE BRICK RANCH ON LARGE
LOT NEAR CITY 3 BEDROOMS NICE KITCHEN ,
DINING AREA OPENS ONTO COVERED REAR
DECK BEAUTIFUL FRONT PORCH PARTIALLY
FINISHED
BASEMENT
HAS
FAMILY
ROOM SNACK AREA FOURTH BEDROOM GAS
FURNACE CENTRAL
AIR COND ATIACHED
GARAGE . PLUS
SEPARATE
GARAGE/
WORKSHOP ACRE
LAWN .. SHOWN
BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY

FARM FOR
OVER 300 ACRES PASTURE,
LOTS OF TILLABLE ACREAGE SOME WOODED
AREAS 3BARNS 3BEDROOM HOME ACREAGE
LIKE THIS IS HAR D TO FIND BETTER CALL
SOON' NEW O N THE MARK ET•

l •''

34
possession 2 bedrm . $43 000 00
Realtor Owned

MISt· 11027· 62 &amp; 58 Ol111e St
Corner bultd~ng $60 000 00 New
BUIIdmg S45 000

•

C07:Y COUNTRY LIVING - 2 bedroom home
s1ttmg on approx 2 5+ acres of level land
Has a bar and some fencmg for a pony or
cowl Small 1 room house wtth attached
sheds for a get-a-away and storage Rear
enclosed porch Great starter home or a
peaceful retnement home ASKING $45,500

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11042 439 Thtnss Ad 3 bedrrp
3 bedrms t bath lull basement 2 3 bedrms 1 1/2 baths mobile

Comfortable one floor frame home w1th
carefree s1d1ng 2 bedrooms enclosed mud
room small porch wlth carpet1ng, appliances,
umt a1r bullt-m hutch part basement w1th
ut1hly hook ups N1ce level yard w1th producmg
Apple Trees , and Cherry Tree and Flowers
IMMEOIATE
POSSESSION
ASKING
$31 ,900

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1837· SR 35 Welt, 117 Ac m/1
older 2 story bnck home and
buildmgs, all u11ht1es avallatlle

11048 1154 &amp; 11541/2 2nd Ave

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ranch , 1 112
basement 3 Ac mil also
cottage w/2 bedrms , garage,
buildings, $70 000

11041 NEW LISTING· 25 MadiSOn
Ave 3 bedroom t bath, on 2 lots
Large kitchen Lot can be sold

LlND£11

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Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

PORTER AREA • 2 ACRES PLUS
Sectional home 1n very good cond1t1on,
LA 17 x 30 cathedral ce1llng, M B R · has
tub and shower separate, double smks,
kitchen feature s counter top range,
double oven, and refr1g , covered pat1os
$72,000 00

REDUCED TO SALE
Ranch home located on Bulav1lle P1ke 3
bedroom, central a1r, two large bu1ldmgs
on prop~erty Basement can be f1m shed for
a 4th room 1 0 mmutes from town 2 acres
m11 $49,900 oo

#746

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

LOOK AT THE NEW LOW PRICE• OWNER HAS
JUST REDUCED THE PRICE ON THIS 3 TO 4
BEDROOM HOME TO $29,000 LOTS OF LIVING
SPACE
2
BATHS
FENCED
BACK
YARD LOCATED IN THE CITY
'

NEW LISTING!'!!
Jones
Road,
Hunt1ngton TWP 5 rooms, 3 baths 1 car
anacl1ed garage New barn 30 x 40, front
porch full length of house 2 ponds,
adro•mng thousands of hunt1ng land
54 38 acres mil $65,000 00

I

Real Estate General

LOOK AT OUR HOME~ IN COLOR!·
REDUCTION IN PRICE I MAKES
THIS MORE APPEALING! Keep
cool m th1s 1nground pool 3
bedroom ranch 2 baths two car
attached garage Pnvale sett1ng
R1o Grande area
#n3

1

~n1sh,

07

reduced to $38,000 or make us an offer!

General

JOl'

NEW LISTING!
CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP- 96
Acres more or less- some
marketable t1mber $3t ,500 00
1800

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondnlonal llfet1me guarantee
790
Campers &amp;
local references furmshed Call
(614) 446 c0 87Q Dr (614) 237·
---::-::--::-'M_o:._t:..:o:..:r:..:H..:..:o:..:m:._e:._s;__ 0488 Rogers Waterproolong Es
:
tabhshed 19 75
1977 Ford 460
tampef
cru1se 2 a1rs 4kw onan top earn· Apphance Parts And Service AU
er casserte rad1o 4 awnmgs Will Name Brands Over 25 Years Ex
accept small standard transm1s penence AH Work Guaranteed
s1on car on trade 304·675 3035
French C1ty Maytag, 614 446
7795
Camper for sale, 20 Aluma l1te
good condmon $2200 neg 614 Bill Ornclc s Home Improvements
992 2773 al!er Spm or weekends
addlltons remodel1ng, rocl1ng
sldmg plumbmg etc Insured call
B11t Ornck 614 992 5183

DRYWALL
repalf
Ce1hngs textured plaster repair
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years
ex penance

Hang

Plumbing
Heating

1f2 MlhS, gorgeous Bay Window In lR FR or OR Bsmt stg

Loretta Ml'Dade- 446-7729
Carolyn Wasch • 441-1007
Sonny Garnes- 446-2707

Hanny fllu c kburn 1 Dro~cr, Phone. (614)416-0008

$12,000.00· 25 ACRES MIL- NEW PRICE $36,500.00
pr1ce
County water ava•lable
1788 Owners dropped
$3.400 00 &amp; still Will listen to an
JUST A FEW MINUTES offer 3 bedroom ra1sed ranch
with large detached garage &amp;
I FROM TOWN. Spacious ranch barn,
over 2.8 acres Call today!
over 2 acres 3 bedrooms, 2
•no
lt181t1S family room 2 car garage,
30 x30' bam LISting too large THIS LOOKS LIKE WHERE
mention call us today for SCARLET &amp; RHETT USED TO
complete Ustlngl
1780 UVEI Take a look lor yourself
outstanding 2 story colomal w1th
tots of l1v1ng space llvtng room
LOTS A ACRESI OVER 251 - 2 dmmg room , k1tchen den ,
barns, large tobacco allotment, lam11y room, rec room 2 full
road frontage along two roads, baths + 2 half baths 18 v 36
Ideal hunt1ng area'
1755 •nground pool 28 plus acres
38'x60' horse barn So much
more Cell today lor a tour of
LOOKING FOR A HOME TO the southern style home 1793
OWN? Here you go 233 Second
Avenue 2 Story home with llvmg LANDI LANOI &amp; MORE LAND
room, lcllchen 1 1/2 baths partial Approx 176 acres of Ideal
basement cool atr condlllon1ng hunting land frontage along
#719
Lot size appro11tmatety 38' x 174' Raccoon Creek
Priced al $63 500 00
BELLAMY LANEI RENTAL
PROPERTY! Great little money
makpr
Duplex and 2 mob1te
FOA ONEI Not one mobile
Owner wants to sell
Mme. but w1th th1s nice shaded homea
open lor an offer Let us f11l you
lot there comes two Both mobile In on the rest C.ll today 1786
1hom'" are m good repair L1ve Jn
and let the rental1ncome from REDUCED TO $56,500.00
other one pay your mor1gage RANCHER with 4 bedrooms
lpayme1nl.
tm and 2 ear garage, electnc heat
pump C1ty school sysJem #760

Home
Improvements

820

MEIGS COUNTY

Lovely older home located on a comer w1lh 3 lots
1-.:..:_.:..:_.-,.______________J..:~.:::..::~~.::.._--.,...._----L...:...__:_______.:__________-I II !iYFIAC:USIE·
kitchen and big shady Iron 1 porch Eat-m kitchen w/appllances,

Real

Get a FREE Quality Homes Booklet at our office or
from your local bank, grocery or retail store.
CALL &amp; WE WILL MAIL YOU ONE.

General Home Ma•n
Pamtmg, vmyl s1d1ng
carpentry doors w1ndows, baths
mobile home repa1r and more For
tree es11mate call Chet 614 992
6323

C&amp;C

Jilu&gt;tbav ~inu•-Jil•ntin.rl • Page

72 000 Mtles

®

ID.
""'

&amp; 4·WDs

1984 Ford Bronco Full 1
300, 6 Cyl1nder, Au!o I
1
cellentt Body Is R1gh t A 1
Blow By, $3 295 OBO 614
5320

233
Second Ave
Remodeled 2 story If'\ town
Beaulilul Oak staircase 2
Brs 1 1/2 baths LR eat-m
kilchen gas heal $63 500

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISII~GS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES,
SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS , \

I

Vans

Home
Improvements

$29,000.00 DEPOT STREET· Approx 3/4 acre, two
three bedroom home, dtn1ng room , l1vtng room, kitchen
#779
morel

7~5936

154 Merrm Road 1 728 sq
It home alters 3 BRs , 2
baths LA, DR , FA ea Hn
knchen ut1hty room $59 900
#506

810

810

t~nence·

SERVICES

New gas tanks, one ton truck
wt1eels, radiators lloor mats etc
0 &amp; R Auto R1pley WV 304 3 72
3933 or 1·BOO 273-9329

OWNERS SAY MAKE AN
Property sotuated
47159 Eagle Rodge- over 1 3 acre lawn, 1 1/2 story with
bedrooms , overs1zed :2 car garage
,558

1985 Plymouth Voyager Van 2 6
4C~, pw, ps Sit, tdt CfUISe delay
w1per pdl auto, am fm cassette
lacfory 11nr, pb, 4 new tires 304

NEWLY LISTED- 2 story
home located 1n V1nton It
has been remodeled II has 3
bedrooms and a garage
PRICED RIGHTI #113
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY - 2 homes
located 1n downtown V1nton
Ltve tn one and rent
other $75 000 CALL
SEE'
#114

304 773 5629

1994 Chevy p1ck-up factory cast
alummum wheels 304 675 2359
from 7 9pm

t991 Chevy pluS 10, 4 3 VB.
5spd, 49,000ml, Ztebart ru st
proof, a~r, 111, CrUise, am fm sliding
rear wmdow bedlmer, Toneau
cover, frame hitch $6 900 304

1978 Jeep Cherokee 4 Door,
With Cuadra Track, Good Cond1
!
$995, 614·245 5597

NEED
MORE
BEDROOMS?? Thos one
has 415 bedroom s 1 bath
located on one acre COME
SEE TH IS NOW" PRICED
RIGHT 1101

VACANT PROPERTY· 21 B
acres more or less It IS
located 1n Galli a and Jackson
county bordenng l1ttle
Raccoon Creek Excellent
huntong grQ&gt;II\d $250 per
a
acre CALL \JODAY• Realtor f~replace and a 2 car garage
Owned 12003
ThiS hom9 also has a Home
Buyers Warranty Pnced
COZY MOBILE HOME
Roght #115
Pos1t1oned on 3 112 acres
more or less It has 2 VACANT LAND - Approx
7 3 acres on Green Twp Coty
garages
a
carport
water
available PRICED
workshop shed and a 2
room cottage YOU MUST RIGHT
#2002
SEE THIS ONE' #1504
JUST LISTED- Take a swom
NUT tn the mground pool at th1s
LOCAT E D IN WAL
beautiful 4 bedroom _i.IJath
TOWNSHIP- Mobile home home~~
a ~l!llftca ,
wtth 2 bedroom on one acre paOli
.li'M"Pnvacy
more or less. With county tenet! ON'T MISS OUT ON
water, satellote ~A L L TO THIS EXCELLENT DEAL'
SEE I $14 000 ••
CALL
TODAY

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Fully sell contamed 10 11211 Ca11
alc:ade Huck camper &amp;li:C eond

1983 S·l 0 2 0 motor wl 5spd
transm•ss1on Best o!!er 304 675
1771 or 304-675-3865

rn

7~0

~-----+~C~o=n=v;•=n~,e~n~ll~o~ca~t:•o=n~#~5~0=1~-+~$6~9~,90~0t502

NEW ON THE MARKET
Spend those cool n1ghts by
a warm t~replace 111 th1s
lovely 2 story home It has 3
bedrooms and a garage
Located on Route 7 1n the
Gallipolis C1ty School
D1stnct PRICED TO SELll
#111

1981 Honda Goidw1ng Excellent

~~n::- $2,650 Or Trade? 614

790

Aulo Parts &amp;
Accessories

151,.83 Scottsdale Chevy 314ton
truck 4spd standard wlpoSitlve
1racuon 350 eng1ne 4 barrel, less
lh"n 39 000 aclual m11es no rust,
Iepper, 1 owner Pnced on InspeCtiOn 304 675 4082

675-3847

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS. 01-110 45631
414 Third Avenue • Pnce
Reduced to $45 000' 11 Lots of
potentoal lor the growmg
lam1ly 3 4 8R s, 2 baths
Beautiful op en statrway

760

Gtastron run a bout 85 hp Mer
cury outbOafd runs sweet tan
::::.::::..:.:.:::_:_:_:_..::.:.:...:.:...::.:__1 d em a•I e tr a1l er, asic 1ng $ 120 0,
1983 Ford Ranger p1ckup 2 3 4 614 992 2001
cyJ auto , 68,000ml , $1 200 or
!ride lor 4 wheeler 304 576 ·
2964
Real Estate
1983 Ford Ranger 2WO, long
bed automatic, topper, real good
work truck $1650 614 843 5453

David Wl1eman, Broker
(614) 446-3644

REALTORS:

Motorcycles

1983 F-250 Ford 1972 27 Ft A1r
streamCampEM' 614·256-6042

WISEMAN REAL EASTATE, INC.
Estate General

740

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolls, OH • !;'oint Pleasant, WV

tfg4 Chevrolet Cavalier A.1r, Au
t~¥T~atlt
A.M/ FU Stereo A.ntl 1 988~ Har ley Dav1dson Sol! all
lf.Cii: Brakes 5,000 l.t tles, Enel Cus10m 30K MileS Excellent Con
~ Condmon l $6 995 61 4·379- d!l1on. $12 800 OBO, Will Take 4
Wheeler As Part Trade 614 446
7
0821 6141 446 6651
1995 Ford Mu stang V6, Sspd,
dark tores1 green 15 800m1 , CO 1993 Kawasaki 500 Vulcan teal
pl)yer am lm cassene, power green, 2 OOOm1 e1ceUent shape
drjvet seal, pi, pw, cru1se. ac. ann- $2,600 304-675-1623
lock brake system, rear spoiler
750 Boars &amp; Motors
Sf OOOn&amp;g 304 882 2094
lor Sale
720 Trucks lor Sale
1977 Mark Twam 16Ft 120 HP
19,51 Chevy P1c~·UP Truck Me· Chrysler Motor Tra1ler Included
tttan1cany Sound But Ne&amp;ds Re- 6144461778
stored $2 395,614 379 2887
1987 Cobra Ftsh &amp; Sk1 Boat 150
1Q69 2 ·Ton Dump Truck, Good HP Ou!board Motcr Depth Fmd
Snape · $2,500 Or Trade For er. Bu1l!-ln CB &amp; AMIFM Stl!reo
Small Tr uck Cal\614 446·4514 Lois 01 E•trasl S6 000 614 256
0~61 4 448 3703
6095

rena 1982 Escor Cook Motors,
614 446 0103

1988 Cnevv Cavalier Z 24 con·
vert1ble auto ll~e new, 2 8 multi
port fuel lnJeGtton, low m1les eli:C
cond loaded 304 895 3393

Each, 614 245 5445

Autos lor Sale

1$92 Plymouth Sundal"'(;e 4 Door

1991 Gee Storm. low m1les 5spd
304 675 2735

I:l:.a-•g: .e.,B""a'"le.s:: O;,I-:M7,-, .=d:cH:a.:y-:S:-l-:2:::5-l

Sunday, September 24, 1995

POMEROY· Ma1n St A commerCial buoldmg wnh 2 ooo
sq tt and 3 apartments above that was remodeled
recently and has newer furnaces The upstairs rents for
$800 00 a month and the downstatrs IS leased on a long
term tease $59,000 00
POMEROY- Crew Ad · A large 1 5 acre lot w/Barnngton
Doublew1de s1ttmg on full basement Home has 4 BR
dmmg &amp; famtly room &amp; In ground pool, back deck #481
$49,900
WILLS HILL ROAD- 2 acres wolh a large pond
overlookmg the golf course, water and electnc available
Beaut•tul , must see $13 ,500

11011 33968 Twp Ad 447 11 01 2 19 Oakwood Dr 4 bedroom
Rutland , 103 acres mostly ranch, basement, large shaded lOt
wooded with 5 BA farmhouse tn
pa1n100 wnh new wall
good cond!tlo n $63 900 Call hOuse newly
very
lovely
$85 000 00 call
Wilma for an the u:.fo

•

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..................... 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS....................... ...... . .. .992-3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882-3498
CHARMELE SPRADLING ................. (304)·882-3498
................................... 992·2886

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Page 08 • $unhq 'Gtimu-$antiml

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

Timely answers about. retirement planning
By MARK SMITH
Advest, lac.
GALLIPOLIS - My income level
exempts me from being able to deduct
·~~~~~~~individual retire;;
ment account
(IRA) from my
taxes Are IRAs
still a good investm en t for
me?
IRAs arc
an e&lt;cellent
way to save for
rctirementEvcn
though many individuals like yourself cannot currently take an IRA lax
deduction, these retirement savi ngs
plans arc still attractive for their tax deferred compounding fc.1ture.
Late on April 5, the Hou se of
Representatives passed H.R . 1215.
the Contract with America Tax Relief
Act of 1995. The House Ways and
Means Commi ttee approved th e
measure March 14. and at the time of
this writing, no further detai ls were
available.
This bill includes the American
Dream Savings accounts (ADS accoun ts) whtch would replace presentlaw nondeductible IRAs. Contributions to an ADS account. w hi~R would
be nondeductible, would be in addition to contnbutions made to a deductible IRA undcrpresent -law rules.

Qualified distributions from an ADS
account would not be included in
taxable income.
The maximum annual contribution that could be made to an ADS
account would be the lesser of $2,000
or the individual's compensation for
the year. and $4,000 for married
couples that have at least $4,000 in
combined annual compensation. The
bill also would permit deductible IRA
contributions of up to $2,000 to be
made for each spouse.
Meanwhile, why not talk with
your financial adviser now to find out
how IRAs fit into your retire ment
plans?
I am being laid off from work at
the end of this month What is th e best
strategy for investing the lump sum
distribution I' ll receive from my
employer' s retirement plan?
Since money in retirement savings plans is earmarked for retirement, it ts granted certain tax advantages .by the IRS. However, tf the
money is taken ou t prior to age 59 1/
2, spec ific tax ramifications result.
Consequently, it is wise to review all
yo ur options before making a decision about whattodowitha lump sum
distribution from a retirement plan.
Your employer is required by the
IRS to provtde you with a written
notice staitng the amount of money

available, your different alternatives
and lh\lir lax consequences. Since tlle
decision to be made can tremendously
impact your financial future, you must
carefully read tlle infonnation providedand unde~landit fully. Seeking
the assislaoce of an investment professional can help.
Ba,ically there arc two things
you can do regarding your lump sum
distribution. You may ask fora check.
However if you receive cash for the
distribution, the IRS requires your
employer to wilhhold 20% of the
amount as pan of your income tax
due on the money. In addition, a 10%
early withdrawal penalty may apply.
Your second choice is to roll
your lump sum directly to an IRA
Rollover account and not pay any
taxes umil you withdraw lhe money
at retirement
Unfonunately, about 70% of
people receiving lump sum distributions do not roll them over to an IRA
account. By not putting aside lhis
money for their future, !hey not only
lose a large ponion of lhe money
available to them , but they are reducing their chances for a financially
secure retirement and !~sing out· on
an opponunity to accumulate fund s
tax-deferred - which expe.ns agree
is the best way to save for retiremen t
Jf there is a possibility you may

work for another employer someday
that offers a similar retirement savings plan, you may want 10 keep your
regular IRA and your Rollover IRA
separa te. That way, you preserve your
ability to roll your distribution (your
Rollover IRA) into a new company
plan at a later date.
Any non-cash assets that are pan
of the distribution can be put directly
into an IRA Rollover account For
example, if you receive shares of
your employer's stock, you don 't
have to sell them in order to put litem
into an IRA Rollover.
Since the rules and regulations
governing retirement plans are complex and can frequently change, you
shou ld always discuss the situation
wilh experienced investment and tax
professionals. Your tax adviser can
explain the latest IRS regulations
regarding lump sum distributiQns and
the tax inferences of your choices. Just
as imponant. however, is seeking the
assistance of an experienced retirement planning professional , someone
who is trained specifically in evaluating lhc curreht alternatives, who can
assess your unique situation, and suggest ways to minimize taxes while
maximizing return.
• ·
Mark Smith is a financial adviser with Ad vest, Inc. in its Gallipolis ollice. ·

Ravenswood to host 6th annual Herb Fest Sept. 30
start that "to do" list of home
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY - The River Val- improvements needing to be
ley Herbalists' Sixth Annual Herb accomplished this falL Sian off by
Fest is being beld Sept 30 at the writing down the list, whether its
Ravenswood (W.Va.) Riverfront painting the house, weather proofing the windows/doors, new gutter
Park frQm 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
installation/repair,
landscaping the
This festival provides entenainyard
,
cleaning
out
the garage,
ment both in ed•cational demonweatberseal
the
driveway,
new
strations and sales of herbal and
roof,
lawn
weed
cootrol
or
the
muleverlasting products. Stay the entire
day to see bow to weave baskets, titude of other items needing to be
listen to a bistory of native plants, done.
Adjacent to the list leave spaces
bow to use herbs ln the home, cre.ating a herb Christmas tree and for the estimated amount of time to
accomplish
the
project,
much more.
Special guest speaker Myra Hale materials/equipment needed, outwill discuss her farm - La Paix of-pocket cost, and skiUs required.
Farm starting at 10 a.m. Plan to You will probably discover like the
spend a few bours strolling through rest of us that lbe list is too long,
the vendors as you listen to dul- too expensive and too time-concimer music played by Sharon suming to complete all this year.
Yencba. lbis event is sponsored by Prioritize the list according to your
tbe River Valley Herbalists, a current situation . Planning will
group of 40 members living in save you both time and money.
Several calls this week have
Meigs County and Jackson County,
been
on the homeowners lawns.·
W.Va. For more information, call
Large
white grubs (1-2 inches in
Debbie Young. chairperson at
length)
have been appearing near
(304) 273-2254.
. the Soil surface. Both Japanese and
Fall to do list
Homeowner, now is the time to June beeOe grubs have been identi-

fied.
It's too late to get maximum
control using many pesticides due
to the maturity of the grub. Chemical control is best in early August.
The large brown areas in lhe yard
wbere the grubs bave fed need to
be reseeded immediately. For information on bow to control grubs,
please ask for our Home Yard &amp;
Garden sheet #2500.
This is a preferred time to control broadleaf weeds in the lawn.
As the weeds are storing reserves
for winter, the flow of plant substances are to.the root system, thus
herbicides used now have a greater
success to kill both the leaves and

PASSES STATE EXAM •
Holly Ann Pope, oflhe Ohio
State University College of
Pharmacy, recently compleled
a five-year college curriculum
and passed tho exam of the
Ohio Stale Board of Pharmacy.
She is now licensed to practke
pharmacy In Ohio. Miss Pope
was awarded .her license during
the annual licensure ceremony
on Wednesday, Sept. 13, In
Columbus. The event was sponsored by the Ohio Pharmacists
Association. She Is lhe doughier
or Jeff and Carole Pope of Gallipolis and is currently
employed by Revco Drug Store
in the Spring Valley locallon,
Gallipolis.

. HOLLY ANN POPE

root system. You need to identify
the weeds in question, before you
allempt any control measures.
Many stores have idenlilication
books to assist or bring a weed
sample into my office. Many times.
just raising the mowing height of
the grass and correct fertilizer
application will prevent the
encroachment of weeds in tbe
lawn. Remember to follow directions on the. bag or bottle label. For
further information as to what
chemical to use ask for Home Yard
&amp; Garden fa'!,l sheet #4001.
(Hal Kneen is the agricultural
.extension agent for Meig!l County.)

Browns
wallop
Chiefs

Insects prepare
for cold weather

3,000 jobs or 8.5 percent of its
global work force because of weak
financial resulrs and the impact of
the recession in Mexico. an important market for the company's
array of soaps and 'toothpaste.
In Between; Users of the Nasda&lt;J Stock Market, the computerized bo•rse under Justice l1,· panment investigation for p ' ' ' ihle
piice fiXing. An independe p:111el
found that Nasdaq needs m&lt;m: public oversight and it recommended
some structural ch~nges . But the
panel didn't address the price:fixing issue and its recommendauons
won'l necessarily be adopted.
TICKER:
Forbes Inc. publishing magnate
Malcolm S. Forbes Jr. declared he
will run for the Republican presidential nomination as _a champion
of lower taxes ... l980s corporate
raider Carl lcahn took steps to
accumulate a sL'lke in RJR Nabisco Holdings Corp., already
renowned as the subject of the

Crude oil and .unleaded gasoline
futures feU in a technical sell-off on
the New York Mercantile
Exchange. Traders noted rumors of
increasing impons slaned lhe slide,
although !here was no independent
confinnation.
Gasoline futures pore have fall en in two previous sessions _amid
active selling by refiner Amerada
Hess, which has raised· fears of
abundant supplies. The upcoming
sale of up to 38 million barrels of

stbckpiled government crude also
overhang the futures, said Pete
Boyce, president of the Califomia
Independent Petroleum Association.
November light, sweet.crude fell
31 cents to $17.25 a barrel; October heating oil fell 0.58 cent to
48 .09 cents a gallon; October
unleaded gasoline feU 1.38 cents to
53.49 cents a gallon; October naturnl gas rose 3 cents to $1.644 cents
a gallon.

UMW looks to recapture previous
status as annual convention opens .

By MARTHA BRYSON HODEL
Associaled Press Wriler
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - With an eye toward the future , United
Mine Workers President Richard Trumka wants his union to relive the
past, when its members were known as the "shock troops" of American
labor.
The union, one of the country's oldes~ provided the ideas, the money
and much of the sweat that established many other unions, including the
United Steelworkers, the Rubber Workers, and the Chemical Workers.
At its' 51st constitutional convention, which began today in Miami
Beach, Fla., about 800 union delegates will be trying to refocus "on
-growth and growing," Trumka said.
"We want to establish ftrmly that all members of the UMW are and
must be organizers ... so we can get through the year 2000 and beyond as
a growing, vibrant organization that can be a force for social change in
our country," he said.
With mining jobs disappearing and mines increasingly nonunion,_the
UMW will be looking outside the industry for its growth.
. "The Mine Workers have al;vays stood for social change and you're
going to see us become more active in our communities. beyond our work
places," Trumka said.
"We will be trying to bring collective bargaining 10 people who need
i~ whether they work in nursing homes, data processing centc~. universities, for the government or wherever," he ~id.
The UMW, whose 400,000 members once dominated the coal industry, now represents about a third of the country's working mi_ners witll
about 75,000 active members, which includes those recently ·laid off.
Cou.nting retirees, the union puts its membership at 200,000.
. As technology improves, overnll mining employment is dropping as
well, from about 233,000 nationwide in 1980 to about I00,000 today.
And that means there aren't as many miners to be organized, Trumka
· said.
Trumka wants the union to put more money into organizing.
_ UMW members now pay 2.5 percent of their wages, an avernge of
about $22 a week, into a fund to linance pay and health benefits for striking worke~.
The strike fund now stands at $75 millior.; and the administration is
proposing to reduce the assessment to 1.5 percent. When the fund hits
$100 million. the assessment would fall to 1 percent. Trumka says.
Trumka's administration will ask delegates to set aside $1 million a
year of that money for a new organizing fund. The plan being proposed to..
the convention would use it a~ "matching funds" for local unions' organizing.
·
"If a local union will bring som~of its mnk-and-filers out of the mines
&lt;o help us organize for a week, we 'II match them for a second week,"
Trumka sald. "That will allow us to devote 15.000 (man-)day~; per year,
. Jr over 100,000 days by the end of the century, to organizing."

ed into three LAA ' s or voting
areas. All three LAA's will have an
election in 1995. The LAA's in
Gallia County are: LAA-1 :
Cheshire-Morgan, Huntington,
Raccoon, and Springfield Townships; LAA-2: Addison, Gallipolis'
Green, Clay, end Perry Townships;
LAA-3 : Guyan, Harrison, Ohio ,
and Greenfield-Walnut Townships.
Boundaries of LAA's, boundary
maps and the number of farms
within each LAA are available to
the public at the Gallia Farm Service Agency in the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
Other election events will be
announced as they occ•r. Panicipation is open to all eligible farmers
reg:u-dtess f!f .race. color, religion,
natwnal ongm.- age, sex, marital
slatus, or disability.
·
Lisa Meadows is the County
Executive Director of the Gallia•
Farm Service Agency.

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Prices at gasoline pumps dropped
' a third of a cent in the pa't two
weeks to continue a three-month .
decline, according to a survey of
10,000 stations.
The overall average price of
gasoline, taxes included, was
119.80 cents a gallon on Friday
- a drop of 0.31 cents since
Sept. 8, the Lundberg Sut.vey
said.
"This is the smallest overall
decline nationally since prices
peaked out back on June 9," but
more drops could be in store, analyst Trilby Lundberg said Sunday.
"Most of the market is still
headed down due to slightly
lower crude oil prices,·' she said.
The average price or self-serVice -grades of gasoline were: regular unleaded; 113.0 cents a gallon; mid-grade unleaded, 123.10
cents; premium unleaded, 131.40
cents, and leaded, 112.28 cents.

--- ~
'
/

~

....

ODOT finds more
than half of state
highways are OK

Approximately four dozen
youngsters parllclpated In the
annual Hunllng-and Fishing
Day observance held at the
Meigs County lzaak Walton
Farm near Chester Saturday.
Boys and girls witnessed
domonstrallons In many outdoor activities including hunt·
lng and firearm safety, canoeIng, fiy fishing, archery, shotshell reloading and shooling.
Above, little lrapper Daniel
Buckley, 5, demonstrates how
to set a leg-hold trap for fur
bearers with assistance from
trapping lnslructor John Hel·
zer. At right, C.J. Eslep, a firsttime shooler, pracllcos .22-caliber riDe marksmanship under
tbe watchful eye or Don Smllh.
(Sentinel photos by Jim Free•
man)

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE
Associated Press Writer
WASHING1DN - Contrary to
the conventional Nisdom, "angry .
- white males" aren't iJJc only fans
.of political talk radio, according to
a new survey of lalk radio statioos
released Sunday.
The TALK DAILY nationwide
poll of more than 3.000 people who
said they listened to a program the
day before or on the day they were
questioned found that women make
up a surprising 40 percent of the
audience.
Meanwhile, the stereotypical
angry male Republican comprised .
-- a meager 22 percent of the listening
public, according to the new daily
digest of some of the m~ion's leading politicall.itlk radio shows.
The survey also found that most
listeners are not Republican and
that 90 percent are registered to
vote. They also are more likely
than the general public to have
graduated college and to have high er incomes.

And nine prognuns claim more
than 60 percent uf the listening
audience.
"So much of the conventional
wisdom has been that the audience is angry, Republican men and the
audience is actually more diverse
than that," said Bill Adams, who is
starting the daily fax repons on ~11k
radio next month.
_
The telephone survey of 3,035
adults, conducted in July and
August by Adams' public opinion
research finn in Arlington, Va .. has
an error margin of plus or minus 2
percenlage points. It did not break
_out the race of those called.
.
"Dozens of these (hosts) claim
to be on everywhere and have huge
aud1ences, but we wanted t~ see
who had a large enough nanonal
audience for us to track ." Athuns
said.
··
According to TALK DAILY.
the top nine political talk radio
hosts are: Rush Limbaugh; convicted Watergate conspirator G. Gurd()n Liddy ; Bob Grant and Tom

When you add our new Overdraft Protection feature to your Peoples Bank checking account.
"we've got you covered" takes on a whole new meaning! You'll never again have to worry
about accidentally bouncing a check· with all the cost. complications and embarrassment
that can. occur as a result

I

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• mason 773-5514

• new haven 882·2135

OVerdraft Prolectlon Is subject 10 credft approvaL

• loan hotline 675-ASAP ~~~

Leykis (tied) ; Michael Jackson ,
Ken Hamblin, Chuck 1-!:l(dcr, IranContra figure Oliver North and
Michael Reagan (also tied).
The IOth host was impossible to
identify, Adams said, because tl1e
rest of the audience is split runong
dozens of local and regional programs.
Of th'e top nine, Leykis and
Jackson are considered liberals; the
rest are conservative. Exc~p for
Grant of New York Citx_mtd ackson of Los Angeles, all &lt;ll- e programs are syndicated nationally
each weekday.
TALK DAILY will track these
nine shows plus the JcmJin g

pro ~

grams in Seattle, Dalla s and
Atlanta. For the next few month s, it
will also monitor talk shows in Des
Moines, Iowa, and Manchester,
N.H .. because of the upcoming
1996 presidential caucuses and primaries in those two slates.
The rcpons will pay close attention to coverage of the presidential
campaigns and issues. President

PUCq slates public hearings
.on phone service competition

·we've got you covered!" Irs not a phrase you want to hear when you're at a bank. But
then again. neither is "l'ni sorry. your check has been returned."
·

· • pt. pleasant 675-1121

By JOHN CHALFANT
As.•ociuled Press ,Wrller
COLUMBUS - Motorist~ who
hit potholes may disagree, bu,t the
Ohio Department of Tmnspon:uion
told a legislative cnmmillee th:tt
highway pavement statewide is
generally in good shape.
An agency rating system of
highway surfaces showed 57.5 percent were good or very good.
Another 23 .92 percent were rated
fair; 14.75 percent fair to poor;
3.71 percent poor; and 0. 12 pcrcem
very poor.
Those figures and an array of
others were presented last week to
a special House-Senate committee
created to siudy the state's highway
and other public works needs.
Gordon Proctor. ODOT administrator for planning and environmental services, said even a pave·
mcnt that carried a fair rating wn-•
not 'noticeably bad.
.. You drive over a fair pave·
men!. you'd think it was good,'-'
Proctor said in an interview.
"The thing~ that make it fair
you can't see. There are.,things
under the roadway the motori ~t
would never know. If we went nut
and fixed a fair pavemelll you'd be.
asking me, 'What in the heck ·arc
you doing?" ' he said, ·
ODOT evaluates the multilane
freeway system annually and the ,
two-lane system every two years.
The agency said l11ree criteria were
used to rate pavements:
• A visual survc y of problems
such as rulling, cracking or potholes.
• A laser·scnsored measurement
_ o'f pavement roughness or riding
comfon.
• An evaluation of pavement
friction using equipment tlml meaClinton and members of Congress, sures skids ahd stopping distmtccs.
Adams said.
ODOT's overall pavoment conSubscribers will receive their dition rating for t11e .multilane sysfirst overnight fax repons on Oct tem wa~ 76 points out of a possible'
3.
100.
Proctor said the department
Among the poll's other findings:
• Tilrce-fourths of the talk radio S(ll'nds 80 percent o( its available'
money to maintain and preserve:wdiencc is younger than age 60.
• Republicans comprise just 38 existing roads. and 20 percenrror
new construction .
percent of t11e audience.
But he told the commillce that
• Nine of 10 political talk mdio
listeners arc registered to vote, ODOT intentionally was funding
compared with six of 10 Ameri- pavement s at minimum level s
cans.
instead of maximum in urdcr to
free money for major new con • Listeners tend to be bener edu- struction.
cated, with 39 percent holding col- ·
u A person cnuld make Lhc case
lege degree s, compared with 2 I that we should be pulling more
percent of Americans ovcmll .
money into our bridges anu pave• In terms of annual family ments hut we're saying we also
income, 30 percent of listeners
have major new construction needs
e xceed, the $60,000 mark, while
that we cannot ·ignore," Proctor
just 20 percent of the geneml pubsaid.
lic have similar Incomes.
A departrnelll analysis of con,
• Two-thirds of listeners say talk
gestion
on interstate highways
radio is a very or moderately
24
percent of the system in
placed
imponam source of political inforthe
worst
category'
for crqwding.
mation and ideas.

Poll: talk_radio not just for angry white males

I

Bank

A Mulllmedla Inc. Newspaper

("

Now Available At Peoples Bank.

~

MHS QUEEN CANDIDATES- The homecoming queen for Meigs High School will be
announced in pre-game ceremonies at the
, Meigs-Alexander game Friday night at Bob
Roberts Field. The candidates are, rrom left,
front, Suzanna Henderson, daughler of Sandy

and Steve Henderson; Heather J(night, daughter
of VIncent and Susan J&lt;night; and Candice
Walker, daughter of Rod and Dianne Walker;
back, Amber Bennelt, daughter of Sam Bennett
and Donnie Bennett, and Lori Rus.-.11, daughter
of Jeffrey and Pamela Russell. (Sentinel photo)

COLUMDUS (AI') - State
utilities regulators arc expected -to
lay down th e ground rul es thi s
week for the coming competition
for local phone customers.
The recommendation s will be
subject to a series of public hearings, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said in a wrillen order
issued last week.
"This propo sal ende avors to
balance all the competing interests
in establishing the framework
under which local exchange com·
petition will take pl ' CC in Ohio."
the PUCO said.
The PUCO also scheduled a
series of 10 public forum s 10 let
consumers know hov. the debate
over local telephone cumpctilion is
shaping up. Chairman Craig Gla7~r
has emphasized tllat 01e forum s are
not required by law, but the commission felt it important to keep
consumers. abreast of the rapidly
changing puhlic policy toward tele phone service.

PUCO spokesman Dick Kim mins saitl the commission cxpecls
to wmp up the entire process hy the
end of the year.
That doesn't me a n consumers
will be able to sw itch phone companies after New Year's Day, however. Most of lhe companie·s planning to enter the market predict it
will be well into 1996 before they
start signing up cuswmers.
So far, four companies - Time
Warner Communi ca tions , MFS
Intclenet , MCI Me tro A cccs~
Transmission and ICG Access Services - have applied to compete
for local customers with
Ameritcch, Cincinnati Dell and
oU1er companies. All but ICG ha ve
already proven to the PUCO that
they have the managerial, technical
and finan cial wherewithal to ctilcr
the market.
The iss ues still be reso lv ed
include:
• How newcomers connect their
equipment with that of ex isting
I

•

lower 70s.

r--

Areas set for FSA
committee elections

For more details on Overdraft Protection. simply call your nearest Peoples Bank office or the
·
Peoples Bank Loan Hotline at 6 75-fl&amp;lf'_

High In

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 35 cenls

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 25, 1995

Overdraft Protection

Soybean prices.~~ntlnuoo_ ~rom o-1

Low tonight In 40s, partly
cloudy. Tuesday, partly sun ny.

Seize the day ---.........Enjoying the great outdoors-- Good
roads?

we·ve Got You Covered I

biggest takeover fight of all
lime .. . Business We ek magazine
parent McGraw-Hill Cos. was
dealt a surprising setback in a First
Amendment fight to publish sealed
documents concerning a legal
brawl between Bankers Trust
New York Corp. and Procter &amp;
Gamble Co.
COMING UP:
MONDAY: Treasury Department holds T-bill auction. National
Association of Realtors repons preowned home sales for August. ·
TUESDAY : Federal Reserve
Open Market Commiuee m,eets,
Conference Board repons September consumer confidence index.
WEDNESDAY: Commerce
Depanment releases durable goods
fogures for August.
THURSDAY: Labor Department releases weekly jobless
claims.
FRIDAY: . Commerce Department relea.&lt;es second-{juaner gross
dome.,lic product, new homes sales
for August.

3-6-8-11-35-41
Kicker:

Vol . 46, NO. 104
Copyrlght1995

Majpr U. S. business...
Continued from D-1

3565
Super Lotto:
475604

WASHINGTON (AP) - With the l;leginning of autumn just
days away, many insects are preparing to dig in for the winter and survive the freezing weather that's ahead.
Scientists don' t know exactly bow they do i~ but they know that
many insects- including the pesky fruit fly and the common bouse
fly - produce specific proteins that protect them when the mercury
dips below freezing.
Agricultural Research Servioe scientists have identifted. several
of the proteins produced by the tiny insect known as the " no-seeem,'' which transmits bluetongue virus.
Bluetongue disease causes about $120 million in annual losses to
domestic livestock producers. Allempts to bait transmission of the
disease are h:unpered by the ability of the insect carrying the virus
to survive the winter, researchers sald.
"The quantity of proteins the insects produce is proportional to
the severity and dumtion of the cold," Richard A N•namaker, an
entomologist at an ARS laboratory in Laramie, Wyo., said in the
September issue of USDA' s Agricultural Research tnagazine.
The no-see-em, known scientifically as Culicoides variipennis
sonoret~sis, prod•ces the protective proteins during a process of
acclimation called cold-hardening.

By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS • On August 22,
1995, the Gallia County Fann ServiCe Agency Committee reviewed
and determined !be local administrative area (LAA) boundaries for
the FSA county committee elections to be held between November
24 and December 4.
This is one of the lirst steps in
the. election process, In compliance
with changes required by the Federal Insurance Reform and Depanment of Agriculture Reorganizatioo
Act of 1994, the county FSA committee set these boundaries. FSA,
an agency of the U.S. Department
of Agriculture - formerly named
ASCS, administers farm commodity, crop insurance. and conservation programs for farmers and
makes farm ownership an~ operating loans.
Elections will be beld to elect
representative direc~y to the county committee. The county is divid-

Pick 3:
012
Pick 4:

Sports, Page 4

Gas prices post
slight decline

,.

Ohio Lottery

Sunday, September 24, 1995

companies. and at what cost.
• Whether companies -will be
required to serve rural areas of the
state.
• If customers will be able to
keep their telephone numbers ir
they switch companies.

Subscription rate
increase set Oct. 1
Due primarily to ·gigantic newsprint increases totalin g over 50 perce nt dunng the past year, home delivery price of the POM EROY DAILy·
SENTINEUSUNDA ¥TIMES-SENTINEL will be adjusted by 25 cents
per week effective Oct. I .
_The new price will be $2 per week.
wtth youth carriers and .motor route
d~i ve rs ~ecei ving a si~nificant portion
ol the on crease. wh1ch is only the
second in over four years.

While mail subscription rates will
ri ~e proportionately, · sin gle-copy
pnces- 35 ce nts dally and $1 Sunday
·remain un~.:han ged.
'

••

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