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                  <text>Page-10 The Dally Sentinel

Friday, September 23, 1994

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Britons show sense of hunl.or when naming children
Ann
Landers
994 Los Angeles
l 1mft~ Syndrcate and
C reA tors Synarcate'

Dear Ann Landers: I have
business in London and travel there
frequently. One of my greatest
pleasures is reading the London
Times.
Last weelc, I clipped an item to
share with my wife because I thought
it was pretty funny. She roored when
she read it and said, "Why don't you
send this to Ann Landers? 111 bel
she prints tL"

So, Ann, hece it is. I say, "11uee
cheers for the Brits." -- LONGTIME
LONG ISLAND NEWSDA Y
READER
DEAR L.T L.l. READER: I loved
iL Thanks so much for sending it
on. You bet 111 print iL Here it is:
"Britain has become a nation of
jokers when it comes to naming
children. One of the country's
busiest registrars has witnessed such
unforgeuable moments as a Mr. and
Mrs. Jordan calling their son River
and the child of a family named Beer
being registered with the name
Bottled.
"Maureen Price, superintendent
registrar of Stafford, has collected a
long list of strange names over 14

· · ~u~ri}iJ.t.ed ~~~Rl~.\;9Y ·,

- Meig~ C9unty \ij'iliji~ter~;

Br Pi\SOTR PETFil TREMBlAY
Someone 11:" desc ribed the cr:1
WL' li\' L: tn ~tnd an.:: moving dc q1cr

tn\(1 "'"lite lnfonnation Age".
:-Jcvcr before has so much inform;~tion been availnhle . A problem
\\·tth thi s age is tltc danger of
" information overl nad: ". So man y
heeds arc placed before us fr om
around the world. so many gadgeiS
arc being marketed lO us. and so
many ideas arc b~ ing prescntc·d lo
us. it' s easy to sh ut-down just l'rum
the shear volume of inform &lt;t tton
ancl become apathetic. It's c:1sy for
us to get an "I don't care" J!tiLudc,
because we canno t pr nrt's s Sll
much inform:Hion.
When it comes to the clam1s of
Jesus Chnst, I believe man y penpl~
arc n ' t Iistcni ng bccau s,· , 'f m·,- rload. But when it com e·, 1u the
question of eternity, we dare nn1 he
apathetic. Almost everytl:l y I ttJar·
vel at how quickly my c hildr en
have grown. I remember hold ing
them in the hospital room as if il
were yesterday. Now my so n is
thirteen and my dau ghter is ten.
Ltfc is just a moment in tim e and
then it is over. The question of life
after death and it's nature is a pri ority we ignore at our peril. The
Word of God makes tillS promise to
us.
Jere. 2:13 And ye shall seck me.
and find me, when yc shall search
for me wit h all your hcan. (KJV)
God promises you will lind Him
when you search for Him wtth
"ALL YOUR HEART". Fir st we
under stand that it 's primarily a
search conducted by the heart. No,
God doesn't want us to be mindless. Often the Bible tells us to usc
reason. to think things through . All
it takes to avoid the
irrational cult qroups around us is a
little reason. But faith requires that
we engage the heart as well as the
mind.
The claims of Jesus Christ. His
earthly life, His Words, His character. 1 guarantee you, will engage
your heart as no other. If you will
only take the time to search it out.
If you will only take the ~me to put
your whole heart into it. I quaran-

iee you. if you will search for God,
with all your heart in the person of
Jesus , you will find the God that
exceeds all your expec tations.
Many culture s worship sta tues
that represe nt their idea of god. The
problem wil11 an id ol is this, an idol
is mad e in the image of man. It's
cha ra ct er can he no greater. In
Roma n mylholoqy, the gods were
no bigger than the humans that
wo rs h1petl them. Ze us often
deceived. co mmitted adultery, murderee!, and ac ted in the heat of pas·
sion . The Roman gods were no big·
ger than those who invented them .
They displayed nothing to engage
the heart of the seeker. But in Jesus
we find something greater than any
man cou ld destgn. We find mercy
and love that forgi vcs a prostitute,
heal s th e sick. tak es ch ildren on
Hi s lap . In Jc.,us we find a justice
1h;1t knuw s no re gard for rank or
po st li o n. Wh il e forgiv in g and
rC':Kh ing oul 10 l11c poor and helplc&gt;S , He holds the religiou s rulers
accountable for their hypocri sy.
In Jesus we fi nd a God that so
love s Hi s err ing chtlclren Hers
wil lin g to pay the ir penalty on a
crue l Roman cross of tortu~c. He
speaks from that cross concerning
those that kill His body. "Father,
forgive them they know not what
they do".
In Je sus we find a call to selfsac rifice . mercy, forgiveness. and
love. He calls us higher. He reveals
somet hin g greater th an the frai lties
of mortal men. He enga ges the
heart. When we seck for God with
all our heart we wiII find Hts glory
and love in Je sus clearly displayed.
Do you know that mercy and
love? Do you have faith in Jesus
today Won't you give your life to
Jesus? Won't you pray? "Father
forgive me because of Jesus. Make
me your child. I give my life to
you. I trust you are the only way to
Heaven. Change me and give me
eternal life. I believe Jesus died for
me and rose from the dead. Amen".
I hope you prayed that prayer
and placed Jesus on the throne of
your life where He belongs. If you
dtd . write to us at Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church, Laurel Cliff Rd.
Pnmeroy. Ohio 45769.

y~. She is sympalhetic to the odd
choices. 'We are dealing with people
who are oflen very emotional and
happy with a newborn child, so it is
important we understand their needs
and help them as moch as we can,'
she said.
"'There's nothing to say people
cannot call children whatever they
like. Only if names -are really
objectionable would we need to get
special clearance or warn the
parents that the name could be
embarrassing in later life. Evro thro,
we can nO! stop them.'
"Her list of the weirdest names
includes Mr. and Mrs. Wall, who
named their boy Stone; Mr. and Mrs.
Waters, whose daughter was called

include them when we have family
get-togethers. The boy's table
manners are atrocious. His head is
in the plate, and he eats everything
with his hand~. The girl's constant
chattering disruptS the entire meal

Mineral; and Mr. and Mrs. Castle,
who named their son Windsa.
"There was also a Mr. and Mrs. ·
Belcher. who called their son Prince
Charles, a Mr. and Mrs. Pitt, who
called their son Frankenstein, a girl
registered as Rheumatism, another
called Daft and one child known
officially as Fatso."
Dear Ann Landers: My
daughter has two children, a boy,
age 6, and a girl, 2. The girl totally
dominates the household, and she
always has. Their family activities
are often restricted because of this
child's obnoxious behavior. There
are many places they dare not Ullce
her.
I no longer have any desire to

and makes conversation impossible.
I am aware that this behavioc is not
the children's fault but the parents'.
Please leU me, how does one !:roach
this sensitive subject? · -CONCERNED GRANDMOtHER
'
CHARLESTON, S.C.
DEAR CONCERNED GRANDMOTHER: If you admonish the
parents, you will surely end up in a
four-door family fight and
accomplish nothing. Go to work 011
the children.
Be patient with the little girl. She's

Community
calendar

in the middle of the "terrible twos"
and will eventually outgrow them.
You could perfonn a truly valuable
service by correcting your
grandchildren in a loving way and
teaching them some manners. To cut
them out c.f your life at this early
age would be a big mistake. You
would sureI y regret it.
Do you have questW/lS abo111 sa.
bill no one to tallc to? AM l..andus'
l&gt;ookltt, "Sa aM tM Tttm-Agu,"
is frank IJIId to the poillt. Send a
self-addressed, long, busi~ttss-siu
envelope IJIId a check or money order for $3.65 (this includes postage
and handling) to: Ttti!S, c/o Ann
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chicago,
Ill. 606/J -0562. (In CIJflllda, send
$4.45.)

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, Golf
scramble, Saturday, 9 am. at the
Me1gs Cou nty Golf Course.

VICe.

MIDDLEPORT - Herb Fest,
Dave Diles Park, Middleport, 10
a.m. to 4 p.m.
CHESTER - National Hunting
and Fishtng Day observation at
Izaak Walton Farm on Boy Scout
Cam p Road from 9-3 p.m. for
youths ages 8 to 18. Parents welcome. Lunch provided free.
SUNDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Presbyterian Church will
hold I OOth anniversary service at
II a.m. Sunday at the church, basket dinner at noon , program of
singing and speaking at I: 15 p.m.
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 will host an all-youcan-eat chicken barbecue at the
grange hall on county Road I,
north of Salem Center, II a.m. to 2
p.m. Sunday. Local clogging group
to entertain.

··~

~,..,.

11

'1;

'

HERB FEST SATURDAY - Sharon Tuttle,
Karen Showalter, Karen Werry, Denise Arnold
and Connie Hill of the River Valley Herbalists,
from the left around the table, discuss plans for
the Fifth Annual Herb FeStto be stagrd at Dave
Diles Park in Middleport Saturday from 10 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Culinary and decorative herbs will be
featured at the fest. At 11 a.m. Connie Hill will
give a demonstration on making \Heaths, at
11 :30 Hal Knccn will talk on "Herbs Found in

the Park Gardens." There will be entertainment
by Sharon Yench on the dulcimer at noon and at
2 p.m . Middlebranch will perform. Other
demonstrations will feature Jan Gerhold with
pressed nower art and Sheila Curtis with dried
arrangements. Herbal food samples will be
available along with potpourris and everlastings
in a variety of arrangemerlls. Refreshments will
be served by the Middleport Arts Council.
(Photo by Charlene Hoenich)

____,-----In the service-----Timothy P. Blankenship
Navy Airman Apprentice Timothy P. Blankenship, a 1993 River
Valley High School graduate,
recently graduated from basic
avionics technician course in
Millington, Tenn.
Blankenship joined the Navy in

September 1993.
Daniel R. Midkiff
Marine Master Sgt. Daniel R.
Midkiff, a 1972 Meigs High School
graduate, ha s earned th e Nary
Commendation Medal.
Midkiff was cited for meritori ous service as administrative chief

with the training and ed ucation
divisiOn of the Marine Corps Combat Development Comma nd in
Quantico, Va.
He is assigned with the head quarters and s upport battalion
based in Camp Lejeune, N.C. He
joined tJre Marines in 1973.

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RACINE - Descendants of
Edward and Anna Dill reunion
Sunday at Star Mill Park. Potluck
at I p.m. Bring covered dish and
table service.

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CARPENTER - Mt. Union
Baptist Church revival, located off
State Route 143 hear Carpenter,
Rev . Jesse Tipton, speaker; special
sineine.

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Regents want $500 million more for higher ed
By JOHN CHALFANT
1l1e regents proposed a $1.7 billion budge\ for fiscal
Associated Press Writer
year 1996, whichslarts July I. That would amount loa 9.R
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Stale spending for hi gher percent increase over cu rrent spending.
educati on would increase almost I0 percent in each of the
A budget of$1.8 billion was recommended in FY 1997 .
It also would repre se nt a I).S
nexttwobudgctyearsiftheLegislature goes alongwilh an Ohto
percent boost from I he previ Board of Regents recommendaIIA resolution the board adopted Friday pro- ous year.
lion .
posed $3.5 billion In state aid during the next State aid now is dJslrtbutetl
Andforthcfirstlime,colleges two-yeargovemmentbudgetcycle. That com- almost solely on enrollment.
and universities would receive pares with Just over $3 bllllon In the current The re gents proposed a sys tem
some of the money - although two-year budget.
I hal would conunuc to renee\
notmuch comparedwiththe$3.5
numbers of st udents but also
billion total - based on their
reward colleges for working
performance in working toward state and local goals .
toward goals and demonstrating qua lity and innovation.
A resolution the board adopted Friday proposed $3.5
Amounts of money proposed for performance stan billion in stale aid during the next two-year government dards and innovation were compara tively sma ll :
budget cycle. Thai compares with just over $3 bi ll ion tn
• For FY 1996, the regents want $1.3 billion for subsithe current two-year budget.
dies based on enrollment; $3 mi llion for performance

POMEROY - Meigs Cou nty
Retired Teachers Association, Trintty Church, noon luncheon Saturday, J unc Newberry, district director, speaker.

POMEROY - Revival serv ices
Believers Fellowship Ministry,
Thursday through Sunday, Rev.
Doug Willis, speaker, 7:30 p.m.
each night, 2:30 p.m. on Sunday.
The Oatley Family Saturday ser-

·Featured on page B-1

Hi: 70s
Low: 60s

Some college aid would be based on performance

SATURDAY
ANTIQUITY - Faith Fellowship Crusade for Chri st Church,
songfcst, Saturday, 7:30p.m. Endtime Singers and others to attend.
Public invited.

DEXTER - The Old Dexter
Church Homecoming, Saturday
noon. Take covered dish. Afternoon sing.

On the
right track

White House staff reshuffling - Page A7

funding ; and $27 mtl lt on fur quality
and innovation .
• For FY 141!7. I he panel proposed
$1.4 billion for cnrullmcm subst dies ;
$:16 mi llion for pcrfurmancc; and $43
mtlltun for qualtly and on novation .
Matthew Filiptc.' a regents vice chanccl lnr, said lhe hulk of stale aid probahly always will be hased on enroll ·
ment.
··Eve n '"""" 1ry Ill focus on pcrfur·
mancl' and n u h.:o m ~.:s, it will remain
the case thai whal will Jrive campus
budgets murc than anyth tn g el se is I he
number of s\ udcnb \he y have lo teach
and lhc pwgrams I hal lh ey offer and
the lcve lsof lhose program s." Ft lt prcsaid in an interview.
" That' s I he log tc of I he inst ructtonal subsidy. It will

Contract Engineer reports to county commission
talks at Meigs highway department
impasse closes Bashan Rd. bridge
Union representatives
'optimistic' accord will
be reached with district
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- The two unions
representing Gallia County Local
Schools employees are presently at
impasse in negotiations with the
board of education for new contracts, but spokespersons for both
organizations are optimisttc that accord will be reached soon.
Di{ferences with the board center
on economic and job security issues,
Gary Phillips of the Gallia Local
Education Association and Carol
Smith of the Gallia Local Support
Staff Association said. Phillips and
Smith are chief negotiators for the

unions .
The unions have been at impasse
with the board since mid-summer,
they said. The support staff's threeyear contract expired in June and the
teachers· association's two-year pact
ended on Aug. 31.
In each of the old contracts, the
teachers and staff had worked without pay raises and reductions in insurance. The duration of the new
contracts is also one of the items
under negotiation, Ph ill ips and Smith
said.
Smith, president of the support
staff group, confirmed that insurance is one of the points under negotiation. The board is presently considering a proposal from Blue Cross/
Blue Shield of Ohio through Toler &amp;
Toler lnsura·nce Services of
Continued on page A2

POMEROY- Motorists using Bashan Road in eastern Meigs County may soon have to find another route.
The Meigs County Highway Department closed the
Keno Bridge over Shade River to all traffic effective
Friday afternoon. Last week, the bridge was closed to
truck and bus traffic after inspectors discovered a broken
crossmember underneath the bridge deck.
Meanwhile , Engineer Robert Eason is attempting to
find emergency funding to replace the aging, one-lane
bridge with a new, two· lane structure. If successful in
Columbus Monday, Eason said the bridge may be replaced this fall.
Gravel will be dumped at both ends of the hridge and
barricades set up to keep vehicles off the bridge, said
highway department office manager Dave Spencer.
One 'rGason for the closing: attempts to keep trucks alii\
other large vehicles off the bridge have been largely
unsuccess ful.
Bashan Road serves as a connector between Ohio
Route 7 and U.S. 33 carries a lot of traffic, said Spencer.
In addition, the road connects Racine and surrounding
areas to Belpre, Marienaand Parkersburg, W.Va.
Spencer said the speed with which the bridge is replaced may depend on what the state considers an
emergency.
"We absolutely consider it an emergency," said Spencer, adding that the highway department has received
letters from Eastern Local Schools, Carleton School and
the Meigs County Emergency Med1cal Service concern·
ing the bridge closing.
Spencer recommended motorists use state Route 248,
state Route 7 and Eagle Ridge Road as a detour.
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners met with
Eason Friday afternoon to discuss the at-that-time proposed bridge closing, agreeing I hat it may be better to be
safe than sorry.
In other highway department developments, Spencer
said paving should begin on Yost Road in Sutton Township on Monday and may begin on Hiland Road Tuesday.
In other business, commissioners:
•Met with representatives of the Ohio Department of
Industrial Relations concerning new prevailing wage

Some Haitians hope, some
plot; Marines in the middle
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)- At the end of an extraordinary week,
millions in this oppressed, desperately poor land now dare to hope for peaceful
change, others scheme to hang on to old ways, and U.S. troops are right in the
middle.
Eleven thousand American soldiers occupied Haiti this week to pave the
way for the restoration of the elected president ousted three years ago. They
quickly settled in Haiti's two main cities, dismantled the army's heavy
weapons and curtailed police violence.
Grateful citizens who have lived under a reign of military terror for the past
three years have welcomed the Americans
as heroes in the streets
they patrol.
Troops were scheduled to enter the cities
ofGonaivesandJacmel
today, while the chairman of the U.S. joint
chiefs of staff, Gen.
John Shalikashvili, is
to arrive in Port-auPrince, the capital, to
review the mission.
The top three army
commanders who run
the count:y are to yield
power by Oct. 15 and
military rule is to come
FOOT PATROLS· A U.S. MariDe Corps pa· to an end. Some in
trot lrles to make Its way through a aowd of Haiti's armed forces
HalllanswbllewalkiDgbrdowotowoCap-Haltlen. chafe at their sudden
U.S. troops began tllelr llrst foot patrols through loss of privilege. Civilians love it.
Haiti's second lai'pst city Friday.
After night fell Friday, thousands in the capital slowly walked streets near t.b~ U.S ..troops at the
airpQn and dock, waving tree branches in the air in a traditional stgn of. peace.
- Until very rec:cntly, most Haitiana were home by dark, fearful of pohce and
paramilitary attacks that often broke up such gatherings.
.
In Cap-Haitien on the north coast, Haiti's second-largestcrty, spontaneous
Continued on Jilt• A2

Jlwa y.., be th l.' case

,_

Tim••-S•ntln•l photo by Georgt Abate

KENO CLOSED- The 80-year-old Keno bridge
was closed Friday because the noor support bar that
attaches totbe truss has failed, Meigs County Engineer
Bob Eason said. Here, Randy Pyles points to the
weakened structural support. The bridge had to be
closed to all vehicles because the larger trucks that
initially were ordered to slay off the bridge would not,
Eason said,
guidelines for state projects.
•Paid weekly bills of $146,623.75 consisting of 95
entries.
•Granted an easement on county property between
Hiland Road and Union Terrace in Pomeroy to the village
of Pomeroy for construction of a public roadway and for
Continued on page A2

I hat Ohto
lh&lt;~n

Co lumbu s

Sl&lt;lh.: hccausc it has

mnrc ~tudents and
1ha1 \hey are en rolled in more advanced level s.' ' he
said .
At the same time,

" What we are engaged tn
poten ti al 10 expand,·' he said

tS

Filipic """ lhe
money reque sted
forpcfformancc anJ
qualit y tS enough lo
encourage ca m·
puses to parli cipalc
and foster change.
a process \hal has 1he

OAPSE director urges
members to •turn back'
effort to privatize schools
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Voters must work to~t;,p the nch from turning public
schools into private industry, the executive .lor of I he Ohio Association of
Public School Employees said Sat urday.
"'Thai 's the door our present govern ment is try ing to ope n - one which will
allow the private indu stry to step in and
take over," said Joe Rugola at the 55th
District OAPSE mccling at Washington
Elementary. He urged union members to
"turn back the tide that is trying to take
back what working men and women
have worked hard to gain in this coun·
try. "
Rugola said some government officials are purposely trying 10 make the
current educalional system fail so 1ha1 it
could be replaced with one which will
benefit only 10 percent of the state 's
populalion.
The wealthy would receive subsrdies
to send their children lo private schools whi le the children of working class
parents would attend sub -standard public schools, he satd.
Ohio ranks first in the nation in the diScrepancy between rich and poorschool
districts, Rugola said. Poor districts average $3,000 per pupil in state funds
while rich districts receive $15,000 to $17,000.
"No other state even comes close," he said. The discrepancy is one of the
reasons OAPSE is cooperating with the Ohio Coalition for Equity &amp; Adequacy
in its suit against the educational funding system in Ohio.
In June, a Perry County judge ruled the state's system was uncon stilutiona l.
Gov. George Voinovich is appealing the dec is ron.
"We knew we had to make this fight or we were never going to see an end
to the problems you are all too aware of in this part of the state, " Rugola said.
Another battle the union is helping lo fight is the priva tizal ion of public
schools
There have been three dozen attempts to privatize and sub -co ntract services
such as bus, custodial and maintenance services, Rugola said . In some cases,
private companies are out to buy the entire schools system, he added.
OAPSE is assisting with a lawsuit in S~ringfield, where the school .&gt; ystcm
contracted out transporJation services to a private company. All of the district's
bus drivers were let go and replaced with the contractor's personnel. Rugola
said.
The union is helping prepare an argument for the Supreme Court, asking 10
Continued on page A2

News capsules
IRS developing new,
simplified tax form

Stale wi ll

need mnn: mone y

GOOD MORNING
NLRB orders union election at SEOEMS
GALLIPOLIS • The National Labor Relations
Board haa ruled that employeea of the Southeastern Ohio Emergency Medical Services have
the right to vote tor union repreaentallon, ac·
cording to a statement relueed Friday by the
UnHed Mine Workers of America.
SEOEMS argued against employee rights to
unionization at a- Aug. 25 helrlng In Jackson.
The NLRB also ruled that dlapatchars will vote
with all full•tlma and regular part•tlme (working
at least 9 hours per month) EMTa and paramedlca.
The parties ars nnallzlng tha details ot tha
alecUon, which the NLRB will conduct the week
of Oct. 17.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The IRS is developing a new, easier-to-fill-out tax form that residents
of four states will see in 1996 and the rest of the
country in 1997.
Right now it's called 104(Tf, for test. It features
bigger type, more space between the lines and a
box for every numeral.
It will replace the !040A form, for individual
taxpayers who don't itemize deductions. But many
taxpayers who now use the long form, I 040, will
be able to use the 10401', the Internal Revenue
Service said Friday.
The four-page form has space for the most
popular itemized deductions, including state taxes,
mortgage interest, charitable donations and medical expenses.
It also has space for three other functions that 'ii'ow require a separate
attachment: claiming the credit for child and dependent care, filing for the
earned income credit for low-income people and listing dividend and
interest income.
"We believe the form is a much-improved design over the current I 040
and it will enhance the ability of taxpayers to comfllete the form correctly,''
said Sheldon D. Schwanz, IRS director of tax forms and publications.
The new form also should cut down on IRS errors. It will be readable by
machines, eliminating the need to keypunch the information into the IRS
computers.
"To the extent that we can process the form more accurately and more
efficiently we expect it to liave an impact on the timeliness of refunds,''
Schwanz said.
..
The 10401' will be tested in 1996 in Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and
Texas. And then, if all goes well, it will be used nationwide in 1997.
Last year, the IRS received 60 minion 1040 forms on paper and 19 million
1040As. After the switch, the IRS anticipates 45 percent of taxpayers will
use the 10401'.
The simplest tax form of all, the 1040EZ, already is machine scannable
and is not involved in the redesign.

Poll: Voinovich leads
Burch, Inmon in race

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections- 158 Pages

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports
Along the River
Weather

Dl
B2&amp;5
D3-7
Insert
A4

A3
A6
Cl-8
Bl
A2

Columns
Fred Crow
Jjm Sapds
Chuck Stope
EdYollbom

CINCINNATI (AP)- Sixty-four
percent of the respondents in a state·
wide poll said they would re-el~t.:
Gov. George Voinovich.
·
His Democratic challenger, state
Sen. Rob Burch of Dover, was favored by 22 perce~t of the respondents t? the Ohio Poll released Friday.
Three percent sa1d they would vote for mdependent candidate Billy Inmon
of Willard.
The University of Cincinnati's Institute for Public Policy Research conducted the poll, which the university and The Cincinnati Post sponsored.
From Sept. 12 through Tuesda~, the institute interviewed by telephone a
random statew1de sample of 767 hkely voters. The margin of error was plus
or minus 3.5 percentage points.
"We think this is a renection of George Voinovoich's hardball fund
raising,'' Burch spokesman lim Bleilcamp said Friday. "It's also a function
of Voinovich's name recognition after four years as governor."

L------------1

�Clinton survives tumultuous wee.k

Weather
OHIO Weather
Sunday, Sept. 25
i\ccu~ Wcarl1er 0

forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

MICH

'' '''

!Mansfield

171 I•
o

''' ''

. .W.VA.

' ' '' '
Ice

Sunny PL Cloudy Cloudy
C01994 Accu· Weather, Inc.

Rainy weather
returns to Ohio
Hy The Associated Press
Rain continued to slowly push
northeast across the state Saturday
but the best chance of precipitation
will remain over the southwest
Temperaturcsthenexttwodays
will be seasonable with highs from
the upper 60s to middle 70s while
lows will range from the mid to
upper 50s in the northeast to low to
middle 60s over the southwest.
Extended forecast
Monday and Tuesday ... A
chance of rain. Lows in the 50s and
highs near 70.
.
Wednesday ...Fair. Lows ncar
SO. Highs in the 60s.
Southern Ohio
Today .. .Occasional showers
and thunderstorms. High 70 to 75.
Chance of rain 80 percent.
Across the nation
Scattered showers were rc~
ported Satunday from the Great
Lakes to Maine and down to Ror~
ida. In the West it was clear and

wann as moist Pucific air blew far1hcr
north , bringmg heavy rains to so ul hern
Alaska.
Mostly or partly cloudy &gt;kies
settled over the eastern half of the
United States, with heavy showers in
some areas.
A pocket of wet, windy weather
settled over the Midwest. High s were
expected to be only m the 60s m par1s
of Kansas, Oklahoma,jl.fkan sas, IIIi ~
1
nms and Iowa.
New England was rain y Saturduy
morn ing and afternoon highs were
expected in the 60s. Highs in the 70s or
80s were expected elsewhere in the
East, as well as in the Plains and Rock~
ies and along the Pacific coast. A
warmer pocket with hi ghs in the 90s
seuledovcr southern Oregon and nonh~
em California. It should hit the 90s in
the arid Southwest.
TI1e hot spot in ~1 c nation Friday
was Lake Havasu City, Ariz., w i~1 an
afternoon high of 106 degrees.

Marines in the middle
Continued from page A 1
demonstrations in favor of exiled
President Jean~Bertrand Aristide
erupted Friday. Hundreds of people
danced through the streets, singing
about how life will be better when
"Titid" is back.
''·No more paramilitaries, no more
policemen beating us when Aristide
returns," they chanted.
Army chief Lt. Gen. Raoul Cedras
and police chief Lt. Col. Michel
Francois, both involved in the coup
against Aristide, met during the past
two days with U.S. officer.; to clarify
the terms under which they will yield
power.
The danger to U.S. troops is far
from over. The Cedras regime armed
thousands of paramrlitaries with as~
sault rifles, pistols and grenades
shortly before it agreed Sunday to
step aside and cut short the invasion
President Clinton had launched.
The weapons might be used in ter~
rorist attacks against American forces
and pro~democracy Haitians, a source
close to the Haitian military said Fri~
day.
Among many developments in a
tumultuous week, Aristide finally said
Friday from exile in Washington that
he would encourage his supporters in
Haiti's congress to pass a political
amnesty demanded by Cedras and
approved by
the Clinton
adminstration.
FromGuantanamo Bay Naval Base
in Cuba, across the Windward Pas~

Publiahed eldJ Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
Oalllpolil. Ohio. by file Ohio V~tey Publilhilla
Coqw~y/Multimedia, Inc. Second cllll post-

• l*d •

Oalllpolil, Ohio •S6ll. Eotc:nd •
IDIXJDd ciMI rr.ilina mltlef Ill Pomeroy, Ohio,

IUtOOioe.
Tho Allodi!Od
New1p1per Alloclltioo.

-.and

sage from Gonaives, the fir.;t 200 of
the more than 14,000 Haitian refu ~
gees there will be brought home be~
ginning Monday.
But of overriding importance was
the general sensation of relief spread~
ing throughoutthrs Caribbean nation
of6.5 million that is the poorest in the
hemisphere.
Capital residents flashed smiles and
the split~fingered peace sign at Ma~
rines, and offered stalks of sugar cane
to munch.
In Aristide 's hometown, Port Salut,
on Haiti 's barren southwest coast,
residents said they can't wait for U.S.
troops. The late~night knocks at the
door, the beatings, the murders are to
be things of the past once the Ameri~
cans arrive.
''Resistance? Hell no 1''exclaimed
Clemence Sinal, a bubbly elderly
woman wearing a tattered blue dress
and no shoes. "We're happy. We're
very happy . We'll be hopping up and
down and waving our armsr"

Dayton man pleads
to odometer fraud
COLUMBUS (AI') - A second
man has pleaded guilty to charges
related to a vehicle odometer fraud
operation.
The State Highway Patrol said
Friday that Lawrence Steinman Jr.,
63, of Dayton pleaded guilty in
Franklin County Common Pleas
Court to 24 felony counts. The
charges included forgery, tamper~
ing with records, tampering with a
motor vehicle odometer and failure
to provide true odometer disclo~

sure.

(USPS !15-IN)

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-A2-Sunday llrries--Sentlnel

By RITA BEAMISH
As.sociated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - He averted
war '" Haiti, but endured slaps
from Congress, swipes from Jimmy
Carter, and snub s from Jean ~
Bertrand Aristidc - even as Amer ·
ican soldiers streamed into Pon~au ­
Princc by the thousands to rescue
democracy.
Pres ident Clinton squeak ed
throu gh th e fir st week with hi s
Haiti accord battered but still work·
ing. Now he faces the prospect of a
three-week ro ll er~coas ter before
Haitian military rulers must leave
power.
Administration
offi cials
brc&lt;J~1Cd easrcr at week 's end. They
looked back on the remarkable
accomplishment of II ,000 troops
occupying Haiti with nary a shot
flfed.
"We're
making
good
progress," Clinton said Friday.
"On balance it see med like a
very good outcome," Secretary of
Swte Warren Christopher said.
If the first week is any indica~
lion , the rest of the days before the
Oct. 15 deadline will be anything
but smooth for the White House.
"We arc cautious but feel we

have things under control," said
one senior State Deparunent offi~
cia!. "There are obviously risks.
We have to maintain a lot of vigi~
lance."
Snags sprang up almost as soon
as former President Carter, Sen .
Sam Nunn, D~Ga. , and form er Joint
Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin
Powell negotiated a departure from
power deal with Haiti' s Lt. Gen.
Raoul Cedras last Sunday.
Carter quickly showed himself
an independent -mind ed emi ssary .
returning from Haiti and promptly
contradicting adminrstration pro ~
nouncements in public.
He even told Ce dra s he was
ashamed of his government' s poli·
cy.
Cedras himself injected uncertainty into the new accord by vow~
ing to remain in Haiti after leaving
power.
Meantime, Aristidc, the deposed
president of Haiti, initially refused
to endorse the deal worked out with
the Haitian junta. His aides crili ·
cized the accord des igned to return
him to power while Aristidc kept
silent for three day s. He finally
gave a public nod of gratitude only
after considerable administration

September 25,

but l1Jrveys showed Amerrcan s
cajoling.
The week's most jarring ima~es remain wary of the whole entangle.
were those of U.S . troops standmg mcnt.
U.S. officials give no predic by while Haitian military men
tions
of clear sailing ahead, but say
bludgeoned people who turned out
·the
presence
of U.S. troops gives
to welcome the American s. A
them
confidence
that at leas t the
quick update of the rules of
bottom
line
transfer
of power from
engagement, di spatch of military
police, and a stern reprimand to th ~ ruling junta to Arislide will be
Cedras appeared to allev late the accomplished.
The military leaders " under~
worst violence - for now.
stand
that the game is ~P· There is
On Capitol Hill , am icipatcd
a
change
in mentality from the
Republican broadsides were heard .
days
when
the same leaders broke
But Clinton wa s not spa red by
prev
ious
accords,
said one Whrte
members of his own party.
Hou
se
official.
Sen . Tom Harkin , D-lowa,
Still, Defense Secretary William
blasted th e cooperative arrange ~
Perry
predicted "a very difficult
m;nt that allowed U.S. troops to go
ti
me
ahead
of us between now and
in peacefully. "Before we were
Oct. 15. The Haitian army is strll
going in on the side of ~t e Haruan
people. Now we arc going in on the there, it still has a commander, and
side of the Haillan mili tary, " he is still armed."
Already, Emile Jonassaint, the
said.
junta~installed president who has
Key House Democrat s even no legal standing, has contrnued to
rarsed the prospect of requiring
issue decrees, mcludmg announcClinton to end the military mission
ing he would convene parliament, a
by February or March .
responsibility of the duly elected
The bright side of Clinton's
president.
week was that so many U.S. troops
" No one should be under any
took up posts in a volatile enviro n ~
il:usions that it's over orresolved,"
m~nt without a casualty .
That upside won Clint on some sa rd a senior White House official.

lican election gains might not be
what the GOP is hoping for.
Republicans, convinced they are
headed for a strong showing on
Nov. 8, offer a different interprew~
lion.
"What we're doing is killing
bad legislation and we're doing it
proudly," Sen. Mitch McConnell
of Kentucky said as he led the GOP
through a protracted filibuster on a
campaign finance bill expected to
provide public subsidies for polili~
cal candidates.
The most thoroughly studied
and debated issue of the year health care reform - is dead,
although some Democrats want a
vote in the final days of the session
on a measure that would extend
insurance to low ~i ncome children .
They hope to put Republicans on

REDA DONATION - A donation to the Regional Ecunomic
Development Association from Holzer Clinic is presented to R,V,
"Buddy" Graham, left, REDA ' s eucutive director, by clinic
administrator Robert E. Daniel. REDA is a multi-county group
based at tbe University of Rio Grande working to assist and coor~
dinate economic development efforts in Gallia and Meigs counties
and Mason County, W.Va. The organization is in the midst of a
fund-raising effort.

boosl in th e public opinlo n no ll s,

Contract talks
OAPSE director
Continued from page A 1
have the practice stopped.
"We believe it's against the consti ~
lution of the state of Ohio," he said.
Rugola also encouraged union
members to support Democratic in~
cumbents Ted Strickland, Mark
Malone and Jan Michael Long in their
bids for re ~election to the U.S. Con~
gress, Ohio House of Representatives
and Ohio Senate, respectively.
"These are three good, decent
people who have worked to establish
a good record which is supportive of
the working people in this district,"
he said.
Each of the candidates were present
and also spoke at the meeting.
In other business, the union reap~
pointed its unopposed district offic~
ers and state executive board mem~
bers for 1994~95. The officers are:
Marsha Harper, president; Carol
harper, vice president; Mary Patrick,
secretary;Jill Turner, treasurer; Marge
Gillenwater, executive board mem~
ber, and Hoberta Roach , alternate
executive board member.
The OAPSE 55th District cover.;
12 counltes, including Gallia and
Meigs.

County commission

Continued from page A1
Gallipolis, its present carrier, and a
Community Mutual offer from a co n ~
sortium of four insurance agencies
led by Saunders In sura nce of
Gallipolis.
Phrllips and Smith said no deadline
has been set for new contracts, and
were hopeful that a path for se ttle ~
men! could be cleared following a
meeting with a federal mediator.
Board President David Woodall
said the meeting is scheduled forTues~
day.
"Right now, we are studying the
district's financial condition to give a
raise," Woodall said, although the
precarious state of its finances present
a problem, he added.
Phillips said the GCLEA opened its
b;lrgaining with the board in April.
' ' "Our intent in starting so early was
that we could have a contract before
the old one expired, but unfortunately,
that hasn't happened," he explained.
"We are still hoping to gel it settled
after another session with the media~
tor," Smith said. "It's something I
think everyone wants resolved, but at
the moment, it's a wait~and~see situ~
ation."
The GCLEA has scheduled a rally
in the parking lot of the district's
central office at approximately 6p.m.
Monday, one hour prior to board's
regular monthly meeting.
"The association wants to show that
it's concerned about the educational
process in Gallia County, that we're
serious about getting this thing
settled," Phillips said.
Woodall noted Saturday that the
board is anxious to reach a selllement

. . Contl~ued from page A 1
Utrlrty serviCe.
•Agreed to open the Meigs County
Courthouse on Columbus Day, al~
lowing courthouse workers to take
off the day after Thanksgiving.
•Met with Ruth Powers, Meigs
County Librarian, concerning the old
library building currently used by the soon.
Meigs County Chamber of Com~
merce, the Meigs County Park Dis~
trict and the Economic Development
Office. The lrbrary board has decided
to sell the building, she said.
Present were Commission Presi~
dent Fred Hoffman, Vice~president
Janet Howard Tackett, Commissioner
Robert Hartcnbach andClerkofCom~
mission Gloria Kloes.

record m opposrllon to the politi ~
cal ly attractive idea.
Sen. Jay Rockefeller, D ~ W.Va ..
said he and other Senate Democrat·
ic liberals had explored the possi ·
bility of trying to get a lame~duck
session convened after the Nov . 8
election to act on the child health
care measure. But both Senate
Republicans and House Democrat~
ic leaders have made it clear they
would prefer to put off any action
until a new Congress convenes
next year.
After a week of struggle, both
the House and Senate adjourned
early in the day Friday to give law~
makers time to catch planes home
for a fuU weekend of campaigning.
Lawmakers return to work Mon·
day to confron t a bewildering
thicket as they work to adjourn for
the year within two weeks.
• GOP opponents of the cam ~
paign finance legislation can force
the Senate through another 60
hours of debate before House and
Senate negotiators arc permitted to
sit down to begin formal drafting of
a compromise. That measure would
also be subject to a filibuster.
• The California desert bill,
which would set aside a vast tract
as park and wilderness lands, is
being filibustered, although com~
promise talks are proceeding on a
separate trac~ .

• A compromise worked out by
Democratic leaders to tough en
restrictions on lobbyists and crack
dnwn on gifts for members of
Cnngress is pending in a meeting
of House and Senate negotrators.
Republicans balked at signing off
on the measure on Friday after ~
noon, saying they had only been
given c opies of the bill a brief
while before. Another meeting is
set for Monday.

-Tri-County Briefs:___,
Rest-stop robber goes to jail
POMEROY - One man connected to the May rest~stop robbery
and assault was sent to the Orient Correction Center Friday to begin
his sentence, according to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
James W. Burcum Jr., 28, was sent to jail for beating up Danny
Norman. Steven D. Marshall, who escaped from the Middleport Jail
in June, will be returned to Meigs County since he waived extradi~
lion from Illinois this week, reports stated.

Persons to return to Meigs County

BANKRUPT?
BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?

POMEROY - Meigs County fugitive David M. Persons, who
has addresses in Long Bottom and West Columbia, W.Va., will
return to the county this weekend, following his arrest in a rural
Alabama county two weeks ago, according to the Meigs Sheriff's
Department.

At Dutch Miller we
Care about your
future, not your past.
We have new and
pre-owned vehicles in
stock for this special
financing program.

rPolice make DUI arrest
GALLIPOLIS- Rudolph M. Gordon, Jr., 38, 34 Neil Ave., was
arrested early Saturday for driving under the influence and driving
under suspension, the Gallipolis Police Department reported.
Arrested Friday morning by the1Jallia County Sheriff's Department was Jeff L. Clagg, 33, 1178 Fnendly Ridge Road, Crown City,
for domestic violence.
Jailed Friday afternoon on a municipal court ordered 12 ~day ·
commiunent was Charles L. Daniels, Keystone Road, Vinton. The
charge was not reported.

Call Doug Smith
at

GVFD called to Federal Mogul

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Arena to bear owner's name
CLEVELAND (AI') - Cleve~
land Cavaliers owner Gordon Gund
will pay $14 million over the next
20 years to put his name on the
team's brand new arena.
Gund, who has owned the Cava~
licrs since the early 1980s, outbid
about a half dozen other companies
for the naming rights to the new
facility.
"It is very appropriate that the
Gund family, who has been so
instrumental in the development of
Cleveland, have a memorial to their
family that this spectacular arena
provides," said Thomas Chema,
executive director of the Gateway
Economic Development Corp.

OHIO RIVER PLAZA, GALLIPOLIS, OH.
PHONE 446-9495

Cleveland Indians owner
Richard Jacobs agreed last year to
pay $14 million for the rights to
name his team's new ball park,
which is adjacent _to ';henewarena.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Addie
Warner, Pomeroy; Emma Duffy,
Pomeroy; Thomas Parker,
Pomeroy; Ethel Mullens, Pomeroy:
Eber Lewis, Middleport; Jessie Jar~
rell, Pomeroy.
Friday discharges - Glenna
Soulsby, Pomeroy; Mary Smith,
Middleport.

SP~S

RACINE - A Racine woman
reported someone broke into her
house and tried to steal a videocas~
sette recorder, a microwave and a
carton of cigarettes, according to
the Meigs County Sheriffs Depart~
menL
Cathy Givens, State Route 338,
told deputies she heard a noise and
when she looked the door was open
and the items gone. The VCR was
left on the front steps, reports stat~
ed .
The incident remains under
investigation.

OCTOBER IS
NATIONAL BREAST
CANCER
AWARENESS
MONTH

HOLZER CLINIC
IS OFFERING A

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WEEK OF OCTOBER
3 THROUGH 7 !!!

at a

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Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service logged 10 calls for assis ~
tance Friday. Units responding
included:

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2:36am., Lincoln Street. Willie
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4:03 p.m., Lincoln Heights,
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Harold Hysell, HMC.

October is National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. From
Monday October 3 through Friday October 7 we will extend our
Main Clinic Mammography Department hours until 8:00 PM.
To schedule evening appointments, call the Diagnostic Testing
Center at 446-5289. Regular hour appointments should be
scheduled through your physician's office.
HOLZER CUNJC ... THE BEST PUCE TO COME FOR CARE!

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$250 of fine suspended upon com - Vrn ccn t La ud ermilt , Pomeroy .
pl elion of residentialtrcauncnt pro ~ .s pee d, $22 plu s co sts; St ~ vcn
gram: failure to con trol . S~5 plu , ll y.scll . sexual imposillon, 60 days
costs ; Gard M. Willi:~trr s, prl s uspended, costs. one year pro Reedsville, operating a motor l' d li
ba t uJ n, rcs train iR.g order i ~~ u c d ;
cle after und erage co nsump tr orr . f.l."iS ault, si x months Jail, cos ts, one
$25 0 plus costs, t~rec days j:ul . Jill )'l':lf probation, rcsUilrli on.
a;;d $250 of frne suspend ed upu11
Forfeiting bond s were Pa ul
completion of residential tfl::tllfh'nt T:aikoll, Aswbula. reckle ss o pe ra ~
p rog r:~m , 1-1/2 years proh.tl ton : k it
ll un, $90; Paul De ern. W:~tn lu rcl ,
of ce nter. cosLs onl y: IIIHkr:l ~ c· ': ton ~ scat belt , S45; James Harris, Mid sumption, SIOO plu s cost&gt;, '""'ll-:rr dicpon , seat belt , $45; M1chacl
probation, three days .1' "1 ' " ' l'c' IHI· S·.cphcnson, Cincinnau , speed, $70;
ed;
.~: r c qu c Fowler, Ne w lla ven
Matt C. Lewis, Mason. W.Va .. W.Va., .speed, $70.
,

BIDWELL - A stereo and speakers were stolen Friday from a
Bidwell man's truck, the Galha County Sheriff's Department
reported.
Carlos M. Stanley, 820 Africa Road, told deputies the items were
removed while he was attending an auction.

o. v-................................................. 146.80

oail ptrmltlod ID . . .
nQar carl« I«VV&lt;e II millble.

Richard Carter, Delaware, speed,
$30 plus costs; Thelmer L. Wool ·
ford, Vinton, overload, costs only;
Barbara S. Taylor, Chaun ce y,
speed, $30 plus costs : Brian K.
Willi s, Rulland, seat belt, $25 plus
costs;
Guy A. Mon son, Cheshire, scat
belt, $25 plus costs; Rusty Book ~
man , Pomeroy , failure to control,
$20 plus costs; James Clifford Jr. ,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus cos ts:
Gary A. Miller, Gallipolis, speed.
$30 plus costs; Cody T. Boothe ,
Crown City, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Todd Grover. Middleport,
seat belt, $25 plu s costs; James S.
Stetler, Reedsville. driving under
the influence, $500 plu s costs, 10
day s jail suspended to three days ,
180-day operator's license suspen·
sian, one year proba tion, jail and
$250 of fmc suspended upon com·
pletion of residential treatment pro~
gram; failure to drive within
marked lanes, costs onl y;
Charlie Canter, Syracuse, tcl e~
phone harassment, $100 plus costs,
$30 days jail suspended to 10 davs.
restraining order issued; Alc:xanucr
B. Waterman, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
speed, $23 plus costs; Kns Jones.
Little Hocking, failure to di splay
registration, costs only: Joe Lewis,
Belpre, failure to display registration, costs only; Jonath cn R.
Smeeks, Hockingport, fail ure to
display registration, costs only ;
'Chad S. Duncan, Middleport . scat
belt , $25 plus cos ts; Arlene K.
B lflles, Racine, no OL, $ 100 plus
costs, three days jail suspended ,
one year probation;
Scott E. Peterson. Rutland, DUI,
$500 plus costs, 10 days jail sus·
pended to three days, 180~day OL
suspension, one year probation. jail

Stereo, speakers stolen

SUNDAY ONLY
SVBSCIUPTION RATES
IJ c-rier or Motor Roule

-

POMEROY - The follo;ing
cases were resolved Wednesday in
the Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
Fined were : Jeffrey W. Kin g,
Wauseon, speed, $30 plus cos ts ;
Jon Barker, Pomeroy, seat belt, $25
plu s costs: Kevin A. Kubit,
Brun swick , sc at belt, $25 plu s
costs; Beth A. Tanner, Cincinnati,
speed, $30 plus costs; Leonard D.
Miller Jr., Newark, seat belt , $25
plus coSlS; William E. McC uske r
Jr., Cincinnati, speed, $30 plu s
cos t,.; David A. Kerwood,
Pataskala, seat belt, $15 plu s costs:
Jack R. Wells, Shade, ass ured clear
distance, $20 plus costs; Charles R.
Baum, West Chester, speed, $30
plus costs; Charl es K. Riggs,
Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs;
Joseph A. Howard, Parkersburg,
W.Va ., speed , $30 plu s costs;
Donna S. John son, East Palstka ,
Ra . speed, $30 plus costs; John D.
Appleton, Lucasville , speed, $30
plus costs; Randall R. Moore, Syra~
cuse. left of center, $25 plus costs;
possession, S50 plus costs; Earl C.
Wellington, Bidwell, overweight,
cost.s only; Ellis McMillan, Racine ,
failure to yield, $20 plus costs;
Todd Davis, Worthington, speed,
$30 plus costs; William C. Hoi ~
brook Jr., South Webster, over ~
weight,costsonly;
Larry A. Heiser, Jackson, speed,
$30 plus costs; Harold D. Rodgers,
Canton, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Peter A. Deutsch, Norwood, Mass.,
speed, $30 plus costs; Michael J.
Rehn, Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus
costs; Rudy A. Stewart, Middle~
port, speed, $30 plus costs; Marvin
L. Friend, Pomeroy, speed, $30
plus costs; Dottie S. Turner,
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs;

GALLIPOLIS - An overheated oil tank was the cause of a
small fife Friday afternoon at Federal Mogul Corp., 2160 Eastern
Ave., the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department reported.
Workers extinguished the ftre before the department arrived with
19 firefighters and one truck. No damage was reported.
The call was the 262nd of the year.

rbe Ohio

)lo JUI&gt;IatptioDI by

Times~Sentinel I A3

Sunday

Cases resolved in Meigs County Court

'Delaying tactics' irk congressional leaders
Hy DAVID ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AI') - Frus ~
trated in their attempts to push
through year~end leg islation ,
Democratic congressional leaders
are accusing Republicans of using
delaying tactics on measures rang~
ing from campaign finance reform
to a bill to protect a huge Ca!Ifonua
desert area.
''Senators have shown an
increasing willingness to exploit
the rules to maximize political and
partisan advantage with virtually
no concern for the effect on the
institution itself," Senate Majority
George Mitchell said Friday as he
struggled to maneuver past side~by~
side filibusters.
He predicted Republicans would
regret the day they settled on the
strategy and suggested that Repub~

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1994

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�Commentary

September 25, 1994

sunctayTimes-sentinei/A4

A Division of
.M..UKOIANC
H15

Third Ave., Galllpoll&lt;, Ohio

offer a "contrtJCl with America."

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio

(6 14) 446-2342

(614)992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR .
Exe&lt;ullve Editor

and for the peopte. · ·
That' s a strange preamble for an
old-fashioned political shakedown.
For individuals and PACs, a table

MARGARET LEHEW
Controllt·r

A \1EMBER of T he Assoc1a ted Pre ss. and th e Amcncan
Newspaper Publishers Association

LETTERS OF OPINION arc wdcome . They should ~c less than
300 wo rd s. A l l letters are suhject to ed iting and must be signed wtth
name , address aud telephone number. No unsi gned lettcn wdl be
published . Letters should be in good taste, address in g tS} Ue s. not
personali ties.

Concerns about cleanup
By JOHN NOLAN
Associated Press Writer
CTNCINNA Tl - The govcrnmcnl 's problems w111t demolishing Ihe
largest building at the Fernald uranium proces&gt;ing plalll lt as led to ques·
lions about the cleanup of the rad10acuvc Site.
The U.S. Department of Energy made much of the planned Scpl. 10
razing of the seven-story building that was most v1stble rem md cr of the
plant's 38 years of production that ended in 1989.
It was the first of about 125 production buildings that wi ll be tkmolished at the 1,050-acre site in a clean up of radioactive was tes expcucd to
require atlcast 20 years and $ 10 btllton.
.
..
The department invited members of Congress , 1ts top off1c1al s from
Washington and other VIPs to watc h as a con trac tor set off charges to
level the building's stripped steel framework. Instead, the bwldmg JUSt
tilted to one side.
It also resisted being pulled down by cables a day later. It was Scpl. 17
before the building collapsed under another round of explos1ves.
Ken Crawford, a neighbor who turned acov1st when he suspec ted I0
years ago that his family was drinking uranium-contaminated water I rom
the site, sa id Thursday it is another exam ple of government mtsmana gcment.
·
h
"!think that it's unfortunate that every time they do somcth tng, l cy
stop and spend a lot of money ," said Crawford, who lives I 1/2 m1lcs
from the Fernald site 18 miles northwest of Cmcm natt .
.
"This kind of backfired on them this time. They bused people m from
Washington, and fed people," he said. "That's just a big waste of mon~y.
They ought to wait until they geL It all cleaned up ... and then celebrate.
" Ken's entitled to his opinion," Energy Department spokesman Gary
Stegner said. "It was obviously something that was symbolic."
The job will be done ahead of the December deadline, Stegner said.
Controlled Demolition Inc., of Phocntx, Md., the conlractor h1rcd to
raze the building, was mystified that :he structure with stood the flfst
round of blasts. CDI has demolished structures around the world, Including the 26-story Sander Hall at the University of Cincinnati in 1991.
Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, who attended the Sept. 10 ceremony,
immediately asked Energy Department offi cials 1f taxpayers would have
to pay more money to have the job done right the second ti me . Portman,
whose district includes the plant, was assured that CD I w1ll be pa1d a
fixed sum for the job despite the second effort, Portman spokeswoman
Laurie Head said.
''He hopes this wiU be an isolated incident,'' she said.
John Applegate, chairman of a volunteer citizens' task force the Energy Department appointed to adv1se n on Fernald cleanup pnonttes and
goals, said the Sept 10 muff was a public-relations flop but should have
lit~e effect on the long-term cleanup.
"Nobody was hurt, " Applegate said. "I don't see it as being representative of the kind of problems they' ll have out there. "

Today in history
By Tbe Associated Press
Today is Saturday, Sept 24, the 267th day of 1994. There are 98 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Sept 24, 1789, Congress passed the First Judiciary Act, which provided for an attorney general and a Supreme Court.
On this date:
In 1869, thousands of businessmen were ruined in a Wall Street panic
after fmanciers Jay Gould and James Fisk attempted to comer the gold
market.
In 1896, author F. Scott Fitzgerald was born in St Paul, Minn.
In 1929, Lt James H. Doolittle guided a Consolidated NY-2 Biplane
over Mitchel Field in New York in the first all-instrument flight.
In 1934, Babe Ruth made his farewell appearance as a regular player
with the New York Yankees in a game against the Boston Red Sox. (The
Sox won, 5-0.)
In 1948, Mildred Gillars, accused of being Nazi wartime radio propagandist " Axis Sally," pleaded innocent in Washington D.C. to charges of
treasOn. (GiUars ended up serving 12 years in prison.)
In 1955, President Eisenhower suffered a heart altack while on vacation in Denver.
In 1957, the Brooklyn Dodgers played their last game at Ebbets Field,
defeating the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-0.
In 1960, the USS Enterprise, the f~rst nuclear-powered aircraft carrier,
was launched at Newport News, Va.
In 1963, the U.S. Senate ratified a treaty with Britain and the Soviet
Union limiting nuclear testing.

-~

~NfA. Inc

Later th at n1ght, Repub li cans wi ll
cut another contract with lobbyists
ami spec ial intercsb al a GOP gala.
During ~tc first two years of the
Clinton admin1 Slra11on , Republi cans ha ve proven th ey know the
pr ice of everything from medical
care to ml(lmght basketbalL But the
fund-raismg di nner for this year's
co ngressional ca ndidates shows
they also appreciate the value or
political access. The Nation al
Repub lican Congressiona l Committee ha s fired off a two -page
fu nd-raising leiter that reads more
like a nuc card th an a reform agenda.

NRCC Chairman Bill Paxon
heg ins hi s pitch to GOP contributors by waxi ng se ntim ental abpu t
stand ing beneath " the watchful eye
or the Statue of Freedo m" on
Tuesday and restori ng "our Founding Fathe rs' dreams of a government of the people,. by th e people

By Jack An.derson
and
Michael Binstein
of I 0 is fe tching $5,000 for the
GOP. Corporations must pay
$7,500 for a tab le - but they
won't complain since th e GOP
"contract" teems with tax breaks
they 'vc been coveting. NRCC officials say they' ve so ld 140 tables.
Paxon pleads in the letter, "We
cannot do it alone .... Join our team
today by purchasing tickets to The
U.S. Capi tol Steps Ga la ." He
writes:
"With the purchase of a table,
donors have the option 10 request a
Member of the U.S. Hou~ of Representatives or Congressional Candidate and hi s/her gues t to com-

plete the table of I 0-... In addition,
one attendee per table 'may join the
Private Reception with the House
Republican Leadership and other,
specia l VIP guests prior to th e
Gala."
It's unclear which of the two
contracts is binding on Republicans: the written or the unwri tten .
In both cases, there's a large degree
of false advertising.
The unwrilten contract will be
scaled Tuesday night with the special interests, who will want to collect on it in the future. The written
contract is a checklist of I 0 bills to
be voted on in the first h·undred
days if Republicans take control of
the House. Its economic promises
have an all too familiar ring: Trust
the Republicans to cut taxes, balance the budget and not hurt the
needy. So und s like a seq uel to
Reaganomics and a sce nario for
quadrupling the natio nal deb t
agai n.
Though th e writte n con tract
wuld turn out to be more fantasy
than fact, a senior White HotLse
official told o1tr associate Ed Henry

BATTLE PLANS
AGAIN~T THE
HAITIAN OPRJ~IT!ON?

OO)HE
AMERt:AN
OPR'E ITrON.

th Jt the Clinton admini stration is
"1&lt;ing the Republicans at their
word . "Over the next f1ve years,
they'd have tocut a total of $858
bit! ion m spendmg m order to make
these taX cuts and still balance the
budget," this official said.
Republican , pollster Frank
Luntz , who has been w~rking on
Tuesday 's event, ex plams it this
way: "You have to make.a com mitment to the concept ftrst and
then you deal with the details."
There's also the question of how
Republicans propose to clean up
Congre ss without reforming the
corrupting system of campaign
fi .tance. There is no mention of the
runey chase among the top legi• lativ e priorities. ''(Campaign
finance reform is) a cutting issue
with the swing voters," Luntz told
us. "A fair conclusion is that you
can't change the system if you benefit (from it). It's going to take people on the outside, a new Congress
with a lot of freshmen."
Rep. Dick Armey, a catalyst
behind the "contract, " . suggests
Republican candidates will get a
sort of freshman orientation Tuesday night. "I have to sa~ that the
(fund-raising) event 1s mc1demal to
the fact we arc going to have all
our candidates in town that day,"
Armey told us. "Since our candidates are already (here) for the contract thi s was an opportunity for the
PAC community to meet them ."
Paxon declined to be interv ~wed, but an NRCC spokesman
o 'fered this novel justification:
Republicans are throwing the spec.al intere st gala because it will
n ise money to defeat "Democratic
i1 cumbenls who are the main
c .stacles to PAC reform."
To be sure, both Republicans
a.'d Democrats have dirty hands.
But Republicans have largely
stayed in the rafters, jeering and
second-guessing Democrats. Only
last week did Democrats manage to
overcome Republican opposition to
forge a tentative deal on lobbying
reform .
That reform was part of Bill
Clinton's "contract" with voters in
1992.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

A Meigs County story: Fred Crenshaw
An old TV program ca lled
Naked City, located in New York
City , used to start out by sayi ng,
"there arc eight million stories here
in New York City." Here is one of
them .
On Sunday, September 18th,
there was a ni ce event at the Racine
American Legion Hall. Fred Walter
Crenshaw, 4]03 Offut Drive, Suitland Maryland 20746 (30 I 4207424) came to Racine to check on
his roots - just like Alex Haley.
Fred Walter, coincidentally,
lives in the same town as a cousin
of mine, Spence Hayman . It's
funny how two individuals, with
Raci ne roots, both came to live in
such a far-away town.
Fred Walter is retired from the
Air Force and the Federal Aviation
Adminislration. He is using his free
time to investigate and learn about
his roots. He left his lovely wife
Shu Huan, and son Fred Jr. and
daughter, Laura, at home, while he
listened to many interesting stories
about his great-grandfather, grandfathe r and his dad, Fred William
Crenshaw.
Fred's
great -g randfather ,
William H. Crenshaw, was bam in
Boston, Massachusetts in 1850. He
moved with hi s parents to Rich -

mond, Va., at the age of eleven
months, where he resided until he
was 13 years of age, at which time
he was bound, as was the custom at

Fred W. Crow
that time, to a barber to learn the
barber trade. He served an apprenticeship of three yClll &gt;. After moving around Washington D.C. and
various eastern cities, he moved to
Racine in the summer of 1875,
where he lived until his death in
1917. He is buried in the Racine
town cemetery at Greenwood,
although his headstone has not
been found. In 1877, William married Polly J. Pollard from Virginia.
Now, you ask, how did he meet a
girl from Virginia while living in
Meigs County? The answer: she
came to Ohio via the "underground
railroad" in 1866. Shortly after she
arrived, Dolly was baptized in the
Racine Methodist Church.
William and Polly had one son
named Fred Douglas and he had
one son, Fred William, who was
also born in Racine in February
1907.
Some of you old -timers may
remember some of the aforemen-

tioned Crenshaws. They were all
barbers. There is a wonderful early
1900 picture of the three of them in
their Middleport barbershop. Fred
Douglas also used to cut hair in
Racine, where the Paul Hill barbershop is presently located. My
grandson, Wil, got his first haircut
there last Saturday. I was told that
Ollie Shaeffer took over Fred Doughs' shop when Fred retired .
Fred William graduated from
Racine High School in 1927 and
di·i not particularly like the barberin~ profession. He played a good
g; me of Racine basketball and later
pl.1yed for Wilberforce College. He
went to New York City and played
baseball for the old Negro Professional League. He taught school
and died in New York City in
1980.
I should have added his name to
the list of professional Meigs
County ball players, because the
Negro League was also a major
league team.
In 1929, Fred Williams went to
Wilberforce College when Fred
Douglas !died in 1941, it ended the
Crenshaw Meigs County connection, but the Crenshaw barber will
f&lt; rever be pan of Racine, Middlep&lt; ·rt and Meigs County hi storv.

Fred Walter had a wonderful
ti:ne at the Legion . He brought
s&lt;•one of his father's pictures with
hi11, one of which was a picture of
o~e of his school mates , Bert
c~ow's one, Dr. Charles Crow, of
Luncaster. A few of the friends
who visited with Mr. Crenshaw
were Robert and Martha Lee,
Josphine Smith, Dan and Donna
Smith, Emma Jane McClintock, Ed
Howell, St. Clairsville, Catherine
Crisp, Robert June Ashley, Keith
Ashley, Harold and Marjorie
Roush, Wes and Velma Herrick,
my son Judge Fred W. Crow III,
and myself.
Fred Walter also attended services at the United Methodist
Ch urch that same day and met Paste.· Ken Molter and the Racine congtegation.
In God we trust.
Carry on.
Editor's note: Long-time
attorney Fred W. Crow is the
contributor or a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, criticize or comment on any subject
(except religion or politics) are
er.couraged to write to Mr. Crow
in care or this newspaper.

Clinton stumbling onto his sword
Watching Bill Clinton careen
down the slippery slope of a onelcrm pres idency evokes as much
sy mpathy as it docs incredulity.
Last week 's s loppily crafted
Haitian speech left little doubt that
Clinton has a subconscious selfdeslructive streak.
He now seems destined to join
three of his last four predecessors
who served only one-tenn.
One foreign-policy disaster
doesn't terminate a presidency.
However, a public w1th a highly
volatile position on Haiti, a
Congress united in bipartisan opposition and a Clinton approval raung
at a historic low may be a lethal
combination.
His sin wasn't going on television, but failing to give his gasping
presidency mouth -to-mouth resuscitation.
' As a quick reminder of Clin·
ton 's consistently ineffective Haiti
policy, recal l the name William H.
Gray III. Clinton's typical band-aid
diplomacy appointed Gray for only
one reason: skin color.
Gray, who is African-American,
subsequently became a Ral!Jb Ellison "invisible inan," bringmg virtually nothing but epidermis to
. White House policy decisions.
After U.S. troops land in Haiti for
the second time in this century, it
will be a 111atter of time before

Gray joins White House Counselor
David Gergen and former Chief of
Staff James McLarty in Clinton's
game of musical chairs.

Chuck Stone
Yet his three-network -covered
talk was a spectacular opportunity
to make as effective a case for a
Haiti invasion as two previous pipsqueak interventions -Reagan's
Grenada and Bush's Panwna.
Clinton alluded twice to our
beefing up national security, but
failed to spell out precisely what
that entailed.
He spoke of the horrors of rape,
murder and the Haitian military's
version of ethnic cleansing. But the
only reason he could give for
invading Haiti and not Bosnia is
that Haiti had become "a problem
in our neighborhood."
That's shorthand for selective
compassion. We only help an
oppressed people when they are
close to Florida.
Trotting in face-saving mechanics from Poland, Israel, Jordan and
Bangladesh to oil the American
military machine won't impress the
American public. If our president
can't make a more convincing case
that Haiti is our dirty little war,
surely he can't e)tpect Americans

to buy into !he hcllon that four tu has brought Clinton's failed
nations 8,000 miles away have a H.1itian policy to its knees - the
vested interest in resolving Haiti's w ·etched mediocrity of his secrcconstitutional crisis.
tary of state, Warren Christopher.
But where Clinton's Haitian Having contributed so little to the
policy went bankrupt was his fail- m·lking of foreign policy, his resigure to educate the American people nation is overdue.
about Haiti, about its rich history of
In the last 50 years, this nation
African slaves fighting for freedom has had four great secretaries of
in successful insurrections led by state, men whose creative wisdom
the brilliant leaders, Toussaint and encyclopedic grasp of foreign
L'Ouverture, Henri Christophe and policy was legendary- George C.
Jean-Jacques Dessalines.
Marsha!!, Dean Acheson, John Fos-Haitians also have a history of ter Dulles and Henry Kissinger.
overthrowing tyrants, Gen. Paul Christopher couldn't carry their
Magloire and "Baby Doc" Duva- lu.!lch boxes.
lier. But Haitians may have finally
In this month of September, as
wearied of resisting oppression by ":he days dwindle down to a pretheir own people. If they cann,ot ci.~us few," so does the Clinton
mobilize themselves to fight for · p1esidency.
their freedom, then the United
What a tragedy for this brilliant
States is placed in the paradoxical Homuo Alger who always dreamed
position of trying to convince a of becoming president. relentlessly
people to fight with "reluctant pursued it, achieved it and now is
feet."
fr.ttenng It away.
And that is where Clinton's
Chuck Stone is a syndicated
comparison to our history was as writer for Newspaper Enterprise
worthless as his claim that he did Association.
not inhale. The American colonial(For lnrormatloa on how to
is.s themselves, not an outside for- communicate electronically with
eign power, fought for life, liberty this columnist aad others, conat d the pursuit of happiness.
tact America Online by calling 1But one larger, overarching fac- 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
ThOught for Today: • '99 percent of the failures come from people who
have the habit of making excuses." - George Washington Carver
American botanist (1864-1943),
'

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A5

Clinics using taped messages to ease state abortion laws

GOP set to offer a new 'contract'
WASHINGTON - More than
100 Rep ublican Hou se candidates
wil l be herded 10 1hc slcps of the
U.S. Capi tol Tuesday morni ng to

Ohio/W.Va.

September-25, 1994

I

j

By DAVE IVEY
Associated Press Writer
PIDLADELPffiA (AP) - Clinics across the state have found a
loophole in Pennsylvania's new
abortion law, which requires doctors to "orally" inform women of
their options 24 hours in advance:
The cli ni cs have put a doctor 's
three -minute message on tape,
enabling women simply to phone
in ahead of time.
Such recordings are also used in
Ohio, Nebraska, North Dakota,
Ulah and Kansas.
Abortion rights activists said the
recordings spare some women the
need to travel to a clinic twice once for counseling, and once for
the abortion.
"There are obvious advantages," said Barbara Rinto, exec utive director of Planned Parenthood
in Cincinnati. "There are several
clinics in Cincinnati but no one else
for 100 miles .... We have people
traveling from a multistate area. It
eliminates the need for extra travel. ..
Abortion opponents in Pennsylvania say the clinics are violating
the spirit, if not the letter of the
state law, which went into effect in
March. They have urged the state
to take legal action against those
clinics.
" In my opinion, if the Legislature had wanted us to do face-toface two-trip counseling, they
would have said so," said Austin
Kirkbride, spokeswoman for the
Women's Suburban Clinic in Paoli.
''Other portions of the law are very
specific in their language.''
Pennsylvania's law requires
doctors to inform women of their
options and the risks.
Senior Deputy Attorney General
Kate L. Mershimer said the state
once argued that the counseling
could be done by phone.
"But I don ' t think tape
recorders were ever discussed,"
she said. " How is a tape going to
address a woman' s concerns or
answer any questions?"
Mershirnt;r said the job of challenging the use of the recordings
falls to local prosecutors and the
state medical board.
In North Dakota, which also
requires doctors to counsel women
"orally," an appeals coun ruled
that the law allows. telephone
recordings, said Kathryn Kolbert,

vice president of the Center for
Reproductive Law and Policy in
New York.
Abortion opponents qu est ion
why abortion -rights advocates, in
fighting Pennsylvania's law,
argued so vehemently about the
burden of having to make two trips
to an abortion clinic . The U.S .
Supreme Court in 1992 upheld the
constitutionality of Pennsylvania's
24-hour delay.
"Now they're saying, 'We'll
just do this over the phone.' What
kind of a burden is that?" said
Michael McMonagle, spokesman
for the Pro-Life Union of Sou th eastern Pennsylvania.
Barbara Webber, clinical direc·
tor of the Elizabeth Blackwe ll
Health Ce nter for Women in
Philadelphia, said mos t women
seen there are poor, and two tr ips
represent a burden . .
The tapes may lift some burden
from women, bu t th ey place a
financial burden on clini cs, said
Rinto of Cincinnati's Planned Parenthood.
"There were significant start -up
costs because we had to expe riment
with a couple different syste ms;
that took $20,000 to $30,000,"
Rinto said. "We also added a full time nurse."
Women calling the Blackwe ll
Center can either sche dul e an
appointment with a doctor. go to
the clinic and walch an informltional video, or listen to th e three minute phone message. Webber
said most women prefer the message.

The tapes include a desc ription
of a first- trimester abortion; th e
medical risks of abortion and childbirth; and the availability of finan cial support from the state or the
father if a woman decides to give

birth.
.
.
At the Women's Suburban Chn·
ic, when a woman finishes listeni ng
to the message, she tells an operator what time she called and must
recount some specific information

heard.
Kirkbride said that enables cllll ·

s~~

ic officia ls to determine whether

the woman lt stcned to th e entire
recordi ng. Th en th e c l1n ic ca n
schedule an appointrncnl.

"Docs anyone really think thai
telephone eounsclmg makes the 24
hc urs p&lt;m any qu 1cker ?" Kirk bride said. "The women sWJ have
that time period to think and possi bl i change thetr mmds. "

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BALTIMORE, Ohio (AP)Five people were killed and another injured when the car they were
in was hit by a train at a crossing
considered dangerous by neighbors
and nearby residents.
James M. Allen , 47, the driver
of the car, was taken to Grant Medical Center in Columbus where he
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No one on the train was hurt,
· said Craig McQueen, a spokesman
. in Conrail's Philadelphia office.
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their way to a football game at Libeny Union High School against
Heath High School, said Sherrif
Gary DeMastry.
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kid were killed bY. a train right
hm," said Dan Wilson, who lives
near the crossing. "I've just missed
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�Page-AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Gallia County ,......._..Keep 'em
--Area deaths-- court
news

Gino Barsotti

GALLIPOLIS - Gino Barsmti, 91, Gal lipolis, died Saturday, Sept.
24, 19094 at his residence. He was the retired owner of Gtno 's restaurant
and bar and a member of the Saint Loui s Catholic Church.
Born June 4, 1903 rn Bagni di Lucca. Italy, he was the son of tho late
G1usspe and Barsi Enrichctta Barsotti.
. .
Sw-vivors include his fom1e r wife, Adrimw Petri Barsotti uf Ga ll 1pohs,
and one son, Rick Barsotu of Gallipolis.
He was preceded in death by his parc· nts. tl1rce brothers and three sisters.

Fncncl s ma y cal l 6 toY p.m . Monda y at the Wau gh-Hal ley- Wood
Funeral Hom e in Gallipolis, where a prayer service wi ll he held 8:30 p.m.
Monday . The fun eral will be held 10:30 a.m. Tuesda y at the Saonl Lours
Catholic Church with Msr William Myers offic iating .
In lieu of Oow crs, mcmonal contributions may be made to the Ga ll ia
Cou nty Scn1or CitJzens Center, 1167 State Rou te 160, Gallipohs, Ohio,
45631.

Hazel N. Freeman
COLUMBUS - Hazel N. Freeman , 78, Columbus, di ed Th ursday,
Sept. 22, 1994 in Mount Carmel East l lospital , Columbus.
She was a member of the Eastland Christian Ch urch, 337 1 Noc-Boxhy
Road . Columbus. and was retired from Whitehall -Yearling Htgh SchooL
Surv iving arc her husband, L. Virgil Freeman ; a son and daughter-mlaw , Eugene and Patti Freeman of Reynoldsburg; a daughte r and son -mlaw , Carol and Laird Smith Jr. of Columbus; four grandchildren and two
great-grandc hildren; a sister and brother-In-law , Florence and Forrest
Freeman; and many nieces and nephews.
.
Services will be noon Monday in the Eastland Christian Church, w1th
the Rev. Dave Nelson, the Rev. Todd Marrah and the Rev. Randy Snyder
offi ciating . Burial will be in the Forest Lawn Cemetery, Colu mbu s.
Friends may call at the Evans Funeral Home, 4171 E. L1vmgston Ave.,
Columbus, from 24 and 6-8 p.m. Sunday.

;!f"&lt;&lt;4•"f'

.Jvstph l. Cain, judge,
Arraignments
Jack Y,lies, no address available ,
pleaded guil ty to se xual battery. A
pre-sen tence investigation was ordered .
Sentencing
Rose Mary Hayman, 816 Ftrst
Ave., Gal lipolis, Sl50 plus court
com, six months in jail (suspended}
and one year probati on for providing
false information to the Department
of Human Serl'iccs.
S1r C. Co nwell , Columbus,
$1,500 plus court costs, 12 months in
jail, six-month license suspension for
attempted drug Jrafficking.
Divorces
Deborah and Leo Wellington ,
84 Viney Road, Bidwell.
Randy MeGuire, 920 Bladen
Road, Gall ipol is,and Diana McGuire,
266 Colonial Drive, BidwelL
Dissolutions
Larry North, 76 Court SJreet,
Gallipolis, and Janet North, 1395
Fairfield Church Road, Gallipolis.
Miscellaneous
Shock probation was granted to
Larry Mitchell , Columbus, serving a
sentence for drug abuse.

Gallipolis Municipal

POMEROY - Ruth Monk, 94, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Sept. 24,
1994 at the Darst Private Care Home in Pomeroy.
She was born Sept. 17, 1900 in Birmingham, Ala.
Survivors include two sons, Marvin Monk of Pomeroy and Thomas W,
Monk of DcJroit and two sisters, Bessie Friedlob of Nashville Tenn. and
Susan Ponder of Binningham.
'
'
She was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Roy T. Monk ,
who d1ed m 1968; three brothers and seven sisters.
Graveside services will be held 10 a.m. Tuesday at Elmwood Cemetery in Birmingham. There will be no visitation or local services.
Local arrangements arc under the direction of Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport.

William S. Medley, judge.

RACINE -Frederick S. Nease, 70, Racine, died Saturday, Sept. 24,
1994 at his residence. He was a retired farmer and member of the Forest
Run United Methodist Church.
Bam Jan. 21, 1924 in Mmcrsville, he was the son of Leah Baer Nease
and the late Uswin Nease.
. .
.
Survivors include his m01her; h1s w1fc, Mary Hiller Nease; one daugh ter, Ann (Brad) Smith of Gallipolis; two sons, Daniel (Kellee) Nease of
Racine and Stephen (Belrnda) Nease of Portland; one stster, Margaret
Davis of Athens; one brother, Wtlham (Barbara) Nease of Bellefonuune;
one brother-in-law, Clifford (Penny) Hiller of Youngsto":n; one stster-mlaw, Jean Nease; four grandchildren and two step grandchtldren,
He was preceded in death by hiS father; one brother, Davtd Nease, and
one brother-in -law, Herbert Davts.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m. and 6to 9 iJ.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy, where serv1ces wtll be held I p.m. Tuesday
with the Rev . Deron Newman. Burial wi'l be in Gilmore Cemetery.

Harold E. Roush
MASON, W.Va. - Harold E. Roush, 67, Mason, died Friday, Sept.
23 1994 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
'Born June 24, 1927 in Graham Station, W.Va., he was a son of Vannie
Ohlinger Roush of New Haven, W.Va., and the late Hazen H. Roush . He
was a retired coal miner from Southern Ohio Coal, a U.S. Navy World
War II veteran, and a member of Stewart-Johnson VFW Post 9926 in
Mason.
He was also preceded in death by two sons, William E. Roush and
Timothy W. Roush ..
Survivors include his wife, Rosalie VanMeter Roush of Mason; three
daughters and sons-in-law, Rose Ellen and Clarence Lee of Rutland,
Vickie and Carl Jeffers of Mason , and Sandra and Floyd Stewart of
Letart, W.Va.; a son, David Roush of New Haven; a daughter-in-law,
Debra A. Roush of Middleport; a brotl·er, Virgil Glenn Roush of New
Haven; a sister, Wanda L. James of Mason; and 15 grandchildren and two
great-grandchildren.
Services will be l :30 p.m. Monday 111 the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, with the Rev. George Hoschar officiating. Burial will be in Graham Cemetery. Full military rites will be perfonned by VFW StewartJohnson Post 9926.
Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m.

'Psycho' author Bloch dies
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert and wrote TV scripts for shows
Bloch, the prolific pulp fict1on ranging from Alfred Hitchcock Preauthor whose novel Psycho became sents to the original Star Trek, EDithe classic Alfred Hitchcock horror son said.
film, has died . He was 76.
He scripted a slew of low-budBloch died at home Friday of get horror films. becoming an
cancer of the liver and esophagus, expert on the genre and a close
longtime friend Harlan Ellison friend of Boris Karloff and Basil
said.
Rathbone, but he disliked the
"The death of Robert Bloch graphic violence of modem ftlms.
closes that door on the Golden Age
of fantasy writing, " said Ellison,
also a noted author. "For 50 years,
this man was at the pinnacle. He is
always listed as among the masters
of imaginative literature.''
Using straightforward prose,
Bloch described everyday worlds
that turned out to be anything but
nonnal. And he liked surprise endings.
Although he wrote fantasies ,
OFFERING:
mysteries, essays and humor, Bloch
is best known for his chilling psy• Stocks
chological novel s of suspense,
which in spired such writers as
• Corporate Bonds
Stephen King, whom he befriend• U.S. Treuury Securities
ed.
• Mutual Funds
Bloch sold his first story at 17
and was nourished by the pulp
• Insured To:-Free
magazines of the 1930s and 40s.
. Munldpal Bonds
He went on to write mort than 400
• Insured Money Market
stories, more than 20 novels and
dozens of film and TV scripts.
Accounts
Many of his stories have been
• IRA's
adapted foc radio, TV and ftlm and
won him numerous awards.
Contact:
"I think the outstanding thing
about him is that not only did every
Jay Caldwell
other writer respect him as a writer
but they all cared for him deeply as
Account Executivt
a person," said Richard Matheson,
441 Second .&lt;venue
who penned many of the original
Gallipolis,
OH. 45631
Twilight Zofli! episodes.
- Robert Albert Bloch was born
on AprilS, 1917 in Chicago.
(614) 446-212S
He moved to Los Angeles in the
1-800-487-2129
1950s to try his hand at film work

.

-•

Common Pleas

Ruth Monk

Frederick Nease

coming...

DU!s
Brenda K. Wolford , 4l , Vinton,
$1 ,200pluscourtcosts,six months in
jail (all but 150 days suspended),
three years probation, a 10-year license suspe nsion and forfciturt of all
vehicles in her name for each of two
counts of driving under the inOuence.
The se ntences arc to be served concurrently. Charges of driving under
suspension, disorderly conduct, registration violation and no seat belt
dismissed in exchange for guilty plea.
Randall D. Kiser, 279 Evergreen
Road, Bidwell, $750pluscourtcosts,
30 days in jail (25 days suspended)
one year probation and a one-year
license suspension.
Kevin E. Denney, 34,212 Rainer
Drive, Oak Hill, S750pluscourtcosts,
30 days in jail (27 days suspended),
one year probation and a six-month
license suspension,
Earl C. Bonecutter, 50, Jim Hill
Road, Henderson, W.Va., $500 plus
court costs, 10 days in jail (six days
suspended), one year probation and a
six-month license suspension; 4100
plus court costs for no operator's license. Charges of drivingleftofcenter
and no seat belt dismissed in exchange for guilty plea.
Anthony Shamblin, 1000 E.
Canal Street, NelE'Jnville, $450 plus
court costs, 10 days in jail (seven
days suspended), one year probation
and a six-month license suspension.
Charges of OJiving under suspension,
improper backing and carrying a
concealed weapon dismissed in exchange for guilty plea,
Louis E. Cox, Jr., Route 2, Gallipolis, $750 plus court costs, 30 days
in jail (27 days suspended), one year
probation and a six month license
suspension. Charges of speeding and
no seat belt dismissed in exchange
for guilty plea.
Theresa D. Queen, 35, 502
Johnson Road, Gallipolis, $450 plus
court costs, lO days in jail (seven
days suspended), one year probation
and. a six -month license suspension.
Charge of failure to drive within
marked lanes dismissed in exchange
for guilty p~a:-"
James · R. Johnson, 26, 1609
Bunce Road, Gallipolis, $450 plus
court costs, l 0 days in jail (seven
days suspended) one year probation
and a six month license suspension.
Charges of driving left of center, no
seat belt dismissed in exchange for
guilty plea.
Jacqueline Salcedo, 52
Westwood Drive, Gallipolis, $450
plus court costs, 10 days in jail (seven
days suspendt!d), one year probation
and a six-month license suspension:
$25 plus court costs for failure to
drive within marlcd lanes.
Robert L. Bates, 32, 2242 State
Route 14I,Gallipolis,$100pluscourt
costs for DUI reduced to reckless
operation because of question on
probable cause.

.•r.:

II I

,.

&lt;I

By LAWRENCE L. KNUTSON
Associated Press Writer
, WASHINGTON (AP) - A dis·ciplined, fo c used White House
:staff dedicated to sharpening President Clinton 's policies and message is the goal of a shakeup
ordered by Chief of Staff Leon
Panetta.
Panetta said the realignment, the
.result of a two-month review, was
intended to impose order on the
staff, end a series of embarrassing
mistakes and ensure "greater focus

and greater long -tenn planning. "
But with an apparent last-minute
reversal on the role of Press Secretary Dee Dee Myers, Panetta's own
authority to make his recommendations slick appeared open to question .
Myers made a successful appeal
to the president, apparently saving
her job and obtaining more access
and clou~ at least for the rest of the
year.
Myers, at 33 an experienced
political operative, is kn own to

have told friends she intends to
leave the White House staff by the
end of the year, no maner what.
But Panetta said her job was
''permanent as far as the president
and I are concerned."
Myers had been widely expected to be replaced by State Department spokesman Michael McCur ry. However, that change was said
to have been overruled by Clinton
himself.
The major change at the top of
the White House restructuring list

By RITA BEAMISH
for him , too, to meet with -u.s. offi. Lake on Thursday would be to
Associated Press Writer
cials.
organize an investment conference
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
The administration is consider· to draw U.S. industrialists and
White House is considering a con- ing various components for a U.S. fums to Northern Ireland.
ference to encourage bu siness assistance package for Northern
The senior official said it is
investment in Northern Ireland Ireland. Officials have cautioned doubtful a substantial increase will
after partisans visiting Washington budgetary constraints dampen be forthcoming in the current $20
stressed economic assistance as a prospects for fmancial aid. A senior million U.S. contribution to the
key to peace.
official, speaking on condition of International Fund for Ireland ,
White House and State Depart- anonymity, said the White House which pays for economic development officials had sought opinions sees its role mostly as ''a catalyst . ment pro;ects on both sides of the
separately this week from leading moving things forward," encourag- border.
Catholic politician John Hume and ing all sides to "say no to violence,
Adams' visa required a waiver
from a delegation representing the yes to politics."
of the ban on visas for anyone with
One prospect, discussed with links to terrorism. However, it held
pro-British Ulster Umonist Party.
A visa for Gerry Adams, presi- the Ulster Unionists in a meeting less controversy than the milestone
dent of the Irish Republican with Vice Pres ident AI Gore and decision by President Clinton to
Army's political arm , Smn Fein, National Security Adviser Tony allow Adams' ftrst visit in January ,
was granted Friday pavin)! the way
because of the because of the peace
initiative that resulted from the
IRA cease-ftre declaration Aug. 30.
"His visit is something that we
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A Correction, would not respond Fribelieve
will be in the context of our
legislator wants all members of day to Fox's demand.
own policy that is supportive of the
Ohio's parole board to resign
Fox also said he will introduce a work being done now to bring
because tt authorized the parole of bill in the Ohio General Assembly
Ricardo Woods, convicted and to open parole board meetings to
once sentenced to death for the the public, allow public input into
1974 murder of a Cincinnati police board decisions and create a panel
· officer.
of crime victims with veto authoriState Rep . Michael Fox, R- ty over board decisions.
Hamilton, satd all nine members of
Fox's bill is being drafted with
the Ohio Adult Parole Authority the aid of Hamilton County Proseshould resign because of what he cutor Joseph Deters, who has
termed the board's "reprehensi- threatened to sue the parole board
ble" release of Ricardo Woods.
to force Woods, return to Ohio
"If you voted for the release of prison. Woods was released Sept. 2
Ricardo Woods, you should imme- and is living in Palmdale, Calif.,
diately resign as a member of the but remains under Ohio parole
Ohio Parole Board," Fox wrote to supervision, Deters said.
all nine members of the state board
Fox said his bill would remove
parole eligibility from offenders
Thursday.
Joe Andrews, a spokesman for convicted of murdering of a law
the parole board and the Ohio enforcement officer.
Department of Rehabilitation and

The Shelly Co., TbornviUe, wrapped up a paving project in Gallipolis when it resurfaced the
intersection or Second Avenue and Pine Street on Friday, Police Chief Roger Brandeberry dorected traffic while the Shelly crew worked. Earlier in the week, the firm repaved First Avenue from
Spruce to Vine streets,

Three motorists cited ~XunPa~r~!~J!remy
GALLIPOLIS - Citations were
issued to drivers in three accidents
investigated Friday by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Pab'OL

Woman guilty
on two charges
COLUMBUS (AP) A
woman who left her newborn baby
in a hospital trash can has been
cleared of attempted murder, but
found guilty of felonious assault
and child endangering.
A lawyer for Terri Watkins, 32,
of Columbus, admitted that the
baby was found on May 31 at Doctors Hospital North, although the
mother said she cannot remember
placing him there.
Ms. Watkins has been free on
bond. Sentencing was scheduled
for Monday.

A Marietta woman was cited for
in a no passing zone Friday
afternoon following a twrx:ar accident on State Route 7 in Meig s
County, the pab'OI rtported.
Tai J. McBurney, 22, was northbound when she attempted to pass
another northbound car driven by
Sharon K. Warner, 43, 42048
Seneca Road, Pomeroy, and collided with Warner's car.
Warner was making a left turn
onto Will Hill Road at the time of
the crash. Damage was moderate to
McBurney's car and slight to the
Warner vehicle.
Troopers cited a Gallipolis man
was cited for failure to yield Friday
night in a two-vehicle crash on
Jackson Pike.
Timothy L. Snedaker, 18, 389
Jackson Pike, turned east from Lariat Drive and entered the path of an
pa~sing

W. Pitchford, 24, 7302 Cora Mill
Road, Thurman.
The collision caused slight dam ·
age t.o both vehi cles, the patrol
reported.
Earlier Friday, a Gallia County
man was cited following an accident involving a sc hool bus, the
patrol reported.
James A. King, 44, 2637 Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis, was cited for
no operator's license and improper
passmg.
The accident occurred on East
Bethel Church Road in Springfield
Township. The Gallia County
Local school bus was driven by
Geraldine M. Sheets, 54, 1309
Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis.
Further details on the accident
were unavailable from the patrol
Saturday.

Parole board asked to resign

Free clothing day set
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day will be held 9 a.m. to noon
Thursday at the Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency clothing
bank in the old schoolhouse building in Cheshire,

104 Years Of Service
Most of our business
comes through
people we've
thoughtfully served.
The reasonunderstanding, sincere
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Sunday Times-Sentinel /A7

White House staff reshuffled ·to aim for sharper focus

llll ''

involved a job swap ..
Philip Lader, currentl y Deputy
White House chief of staff and a
top Panetta aide at the Office of
management and Budget, moves to
head the Small Business Administration with Cabinet rank.
Erskine Bowl es, th e cu rre nt
SBA chief, takes Lader' s old job at
the White House with a new focus
on Wltite House operations, access
to the Oval Office and the day-to·
day activities of the president.

Business conference may be held in N. Ireland

BOWMAN'S
HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

about both a permanent cessa tion
of violence a peace betwee n the
parties," said State Department
spokesman Mike McCurry.
Adams, president of Sinn Fein,
the political affiliate of the IRA ,
has a two-week itinerary with stops
in Washington , Ne w York, San
Francisco, Hartford, Conn., DeJroit,
Cleveland, Philadelphia and Los
Angeles.
It is still being decided at what
level he will meet with government
officials.
The Unionists and Hum e both
met with politicians on Cap itol
Hill, and at the White House with
Gore and NSC officials. Hume also
met with President Clinton.
All sides are seeking to sway
U.S. opinion to their view, with the
Protestants conce rn ed that the
administration may be pressured by
domestic political pressure to lean
to the IRA.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Federal investigators say turbulence
spawned by the wake of another jet
may have sent USAir Flight 427
into its fatal nosedive, The Washington Post reported today,
. Tests have found no evidence of
problems with the rudder or the
right engine of the Boeing 737-300
that crashed near Pittsburgh on
Sept. 8, killing all 132 people
aboard.
Now investigators wonder if the
plane got caught up in turbulence
from a Boeing 727 flying about
four miles ahead of it, the Post
said.
National Transportation Safety
Board officials say it's po_ss!ble the

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Toll Free

Harold Ickes is slllying on as a
deputy chief of staff and was given
a specific portfolio that includes
the White House political, intergovernmental affairs and Cabinet
liaison duties.
The changes involve more clearly defined duties for two of Clin ton's most trusted aides, George
Stephanopoulos and Bruce Lindsey. Stephanopoulos was nam ed
executive assistant to Panetta for
policy; Lindsey is to work as
deputy White House co unse l for

special projects .
Mark Gcaran, who under the old
system supervi sed Myers' a CIIVI ·
ues, wt ll be moved from commun ications director to a new pos t as
director of strategic plannin g.
In that job he wi ll report drrcctl)
to Panetta and conc entrate on io n ~
mnge stratcgy.and plann rng.
Pan ella salll th at pro bl ems am i
confusion arose under the o ld sv stcm wheth er M yc r-' or ( il' Jr;\n I;: HI
primJry rcspon:-. lbilll y l or d :._· ;tl il l)!

Wilh tby -tu -(fi.l y (lfl''-.'\ U ltl\ ~h: t s.

-

Rev. &amp; Mrs.
Gordon
Johnston

'Missionaries To
Papua
New Guinea, Will
Speak At The
..._
Chester Church of the Nazarene
Monday, Sept. 26, 7:00P.M.
Rev. and Mrs. Johnston are furloughing in 1994 . The Johnstons
were transferred to Ammon, Jordan in 1976 after being forced Ia
leave Lebanon because of lhe civil strife. They served there until
1980 when a national district superintendent was appointed . The
Johnstons transferred to Papua New Guinea in 1981.

that's
In 1993, Peoples Bank put
$14,000,000 back into the
local economy in the f(Jrm of
salaries, benefits, supplies ,
taxes, contributions,business
expenses, etc. On average.
each dollar changes hands
6 -7 times, making the impact of our
investment close to $100,000,000.
To help you work the magic, Peoples Bank offers you a package of no-fee accounts when you support local businesses. It 's
called Money Magic, an essentiallhree-in-one account that
includes Checking, Visa and Peoples Line of Credit.
Spend $250 with local merchants and monthly maintenance
fees and Visa annual fees are waived for one year. Spend $500
and fees are waived for two years. Just have the participating
merchant validate your Money Magic card and bring it to
Peoples Bank to open your no-fee Money Magic account.
Between us, we'll work magic.

Wake turbulence may
have caused USAir crash

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from

crew overcompensated tor the
"wake turbulence" as they
switched the plane from automatic
pilot to their own control. the Post
said.
NTSB member Carl Vagi told
the Post that the turbulence and
crew reaction are being looked at,
but stressed that many other issues
were also under examination.
NTSB spokesman Michael Benson said testing and inspections
showed no evidence of rudder malfunction.
The findings might shift the
investigation's focus away from
problems with the rudder as a possible cause, but Benson stressed
that nothing has been ruled ouL

Rock of Ages.

Visa and Peoples Lrne of Credit are subject to crcdli approval. Offer cxpues Septemhn .10. 1'1'14.

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POMEROY
Melgo County Dloploy Y•rd Neor
Pomeroy-lbeon Bridge

K•U• Mlllw, lhn-uer
1112-2588

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Gotllo County Diapllly Yud

~
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J•y ...... Moore, .........
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There are a limited
number of spaces
and certificates

The $625 certificate
can be applied to
any arrangemenl in
the park. This tact
alone gives you one
good reason to do
now... what has to be
done sooner or later.

·. Hours: 9:D0-4:00 M-T·Th-F. Others by appointment.
583-4516 or 446-2327

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ENTOMBMENT CREMATION

D

Naniet _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone - - - - - Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS
Ph. 446·2327

D

Galllpcllla, OH.

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BURIAL SPACES

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·Nation/World

September 25, 1994

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Hogg &amp; Zuspan
Ingels Carpet
Ingels' Furniture &amp;Jewelry
Johnsons Variety Shop
K &amp; C Jewelers
King Builders Supply
Mason Furniture
Middleport Department Store
Middleport Flower Shop
Middleport Trophies &amp; Tees
Mill End Fabrics
Mill Street Books
Motor Parts

Acquisitions Jewelry
Anderson's Furniture
Bahr Clothiers
Buttons &amp; Bows
Chapman Stores
Clark's Jewelry
Dan's
Dollar General Store
Fabric Shop
Family Dollar
Floral Bouquet
Foreman &amp; Abbott
Fruth Pharmacy
General Tire

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O'Dell Lumber Company
Office Service &amp; Supply
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Pool People
Quality Print Shop
Rite Aid Pharmacies
Rhojean's Reflections
Snouffer Fire &amp; Safety
Super 10
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Tri-County Ford
Trolley Station Crafts
Valley Lumber &amp; Supply
Western Auto Store

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Page-AS-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

Asians 10 percent. says a report
from the Independent Population
Bureau.
But Philip Martin of l.he University of California-Davis said Friday
Lhat m l.he past when immigration
has risen to high levels Lhe government has acted to stem the tide, and
it seems likely that will happen
again.
.. Martin added that hi stori cally
l.h e asse rt 1on s thai 1mm 1grau on

would lead to disast~r have usually
been proven wrong. For example,
BenJamon Franklon once fretted Lhat
the Gcnnans settling in Pennsylvania would prove to be} "stubborn
and indigesuble lump, he srud.
Whrle the report looked atJhe
flow of Immigrants II d1d not
address poky Issues or make recommendauons. Frndmgs mcluded:
•lmm1grants _are concentrated rn
certam areas w1th thrce-fourlhs of

Lawmakers restrict alternative
uses of food stamp money
By JENNIFER DIXON
that is attempting to restrict errorts
Associated Press Writer
at creative and effec tive welfare
WAS H.L"'GTON (AP) - House reform ."
auJ Senate negotiators have agreed
"If the federal government is
to restrict experiments to conven spinning its wheels and is grid food stamps imo cash, a decision locked, then you ought to let Lhe
Lhal could stall grassroots welfare states be laboratories for reform,"
refomns al a Lime when a national said Rep. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.
overhaul is dead.
Advocates for the poor say the
The compromi se, included in an limits were needed because low Agriculture Deparunent spending income fami lies who receive cash
bill that cleared the House on Fn - instead of coupons buy fewer groday, could mean that only a hand- ceries and eat le ss nutritiously.
ful of new pilot projects will go They also believe more cash-out
forward in Lhe stales.
experiments cou ld undermine the
Growing numbers of states are character of Lhe poli~cally popular
pushing USDA to let Lhem use food food stamp progr~m.
stamp benef1ts, which are func1cd
More than 27 million Americans
entirely by Lhe federal government, collect food stamps, at an annual
to subsidize wages or encourage cost of $24 billion. The average
work by paying cash instead of monl.hly benefit is $6K.
coupon s to recipients who find a
"This is a nutrition program.
JOb.
It's supposed to feed people. It
"It's the kiss of death fur shouldn't be a basis for experimen'workfare,"' the term used for tation," says Carrie Lewis, staff
putting welfare recipients to work, attorney for Lhe Food Research and
said Robert Rector, a welfare Action Cent er, a research and
expert with Lhe conservative Her- advocacy organization.
itage Foundation.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., fears
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., Lhat cash-outs will leave poor famicalled Lhe compromise a "counter- lies even poorer "and that landproductive intrusion by a Congress

lords will JUSt rai se rents , knowing
that l.heir tenants have additional
cash."
The cash-out compromise was
reached earlier this week by lawmaker s working out detail s of
USDA's $69 billion budget. The
House approved Lhe bill by a 297I 07 vote, and the Senate is expected to vote on it early nex t week and
Lhen send itiO Prcs1dent Clin10n for
his signature.
The legi slation would allow 25
cash -out pilot projects and restrict
th '; number of hou se holds that
re ;eive cash instead of coupons to
3 percent of ti1e II. I million fami lies on the roll s.
Seventeen cash-out experiments
arc ei ther runnin g or have been
approved to be gin. That giv es
USDA room to approve eight more
experiments, said David Super, a
food stamp expert and ge nera l
co un se l at the Center on Budget
and Policy Priorities.
Nine sta tes already have
requests pending and Mich1gan 's
pruposal alone would provide cash
in stead of coupons to as many as
611,000 families.

the nation's foreign· born popula·
t1on lovrn~ rn Cahfornta, New
York, Flonda, Texas. New Jersey
and Illinois.
•Mexico is the largest single
source of 1mm1grants and 85 percent come from Laun Amenca and
As1a. As recently as 1950 Germany
was the largest source of new
arnva}s to the Umted States.
. •It shard to deterrmne Lhe costs
of 1mm1grants but It IS clear that

Aircraft crashes into
sea near Hong Kong
HONG KONG (AP) - A transport plane carrying 12 people
crashed into Lhe sea today after laking off from Hong Kong's airpon,
killing at least two people and
injuring six. Divers searched the
submerged plane for missing crew
members.
The Lockheed LI00-30 Her cules transpon crashed in light rain
as darkness fell. It was Lhe second
crash in less Lhan a year at Kai Tak
Airport, which has one runway tlmt
juts into the city's harbor.
Divers and rescue workers were
searching Lhe plane, which had broken into pieces was submerged in
murky water adjacent to the run way, said Mak Kwok-wah, a government spokesman. Four people
were missing, Mak said.
The Hercules, a four-engine propeller-driven transpon plane, was
used earlier today to forcibly return
33 Vietnamese to Hanoi, Vietnam,
Mak said.
The plane was chartered by the
government to return Vietnamese
today and Thursday. It returned
safely from Hanoi and was taking
off for Jakarta, Indonesia, when it
crashed at 7:14 p.m. local time
(7:14a.m. EDT).

while the bulk of l.he taxes they pay
go to the federal government, the
cost of social services for them
tends to be borne at the state and
local levels.
·There is no consensus on the
impact of immigrants in the U.S .
labor market.
•There were about880 ,000 legal
immigrants to Lhe United States last
year and as many as 2.5 million
en tered the country illegally.

"Most of Lhese unaulhorized aliens
leave aga1n,_ but an estimated
300,000 remam as pennanent settiers," Lhe report said.
•Immigrants are less lil&lt;ely to be
high school graduates Lhan Americans in general.
The Population Reference
Bureau, based in Washington, is a
1Jrivate, nonprofit research organi zation that studies population
1ssucs.

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By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
judge in the O.J. Simpson case
threatened today to restrict news
coverage of the murder tr1al
because of what he called erroneous reports by a television station about DNA evidence.
Superior Court Judge Lance Ito
Lhen ruled Lhat most of Lhc evidence
seized from Simpson's es tate on
June 28, including a note from his
ex-wife, can be used during trial,
with jury selection scheduled to
begin Monday.
It was unclear whelher Ito meant
all media coverage or only KNBCTV in Los Angeles. which he singled out again over Lhe same issue.
He said he w1U hold a hearong next
week to discuss Lhe station's access
to Lhe courthouse.
Ito stressed that other news
organizations hadn't carried the
same report. The station reported
Wednesday Lhat DNA testing found
a match between victim Nicole
Brown Simpson's blood and blood
found on socks at Simpson's house.
The judge and prosecutors, who
are overseeing the DNA tesung,
called the story erroneous. On

Thursday, KNBC said it stood by
its story and embellished it on later
newscasts.
KNBC had no immediate comment.
''This news operation was put
on notice yesterday Lhat this was
incorrect information," Ito said.
"They have chosen not only to republish it but embellish upon it.

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JUST SOUIII OF TilE
POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE

This is fundamentally unfair. It's
also fundamentally wrong."
Among the evidence 110 allowed
today is a note written on a 3-by-5
card taped to a manila envelope
containing precious mementos
from the Simpsons' failed marriage: home v1deos of their wedding ceremony and the birth of
Lheir daughter, Sydney.

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Nome:

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Born:

1987

Resides:

Southeastern Ohio

Summers:

First Trode:

June, soiling camp, The Hamptons;
July, i"!vesfmenf seminars; August, visiting grandparents at Palm Beach
Made in ail by Greof Grandparents Hollander &amp; Edith Humphrey
Age4 1/2

Investment Strategy:

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Bonk:

The Peoples Banking &amp; Trust Company

Family Fortune

Hobbies:

Miniature golf, reading Wall Sireet Journal, video games

Dislikes:

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Bulldog, Capito l Gains ("Cop")

Pel:

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1990 GEO
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WAS$5995

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1984 PONTIAC

Fiero, Nd, only 83,000 mat Power
windowo,air, AINFM .,._.,_

S-10 Pickup, Aid, bed liner, 5 ..-f,
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WAS$6995

Now 15995

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1983 RENAULT

1985 OLDS....
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1981 SUZUKI

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Samurai, 4x4, G"""' .with white
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1985 RENAULT

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1988 FORD

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Th"-program funded through a grant by the Ohit Department of Alcohol and Drug Addition Services (ODADAS)
through ihe Gallia-Jackson-Meigs Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services Programs, provides
drug-free after school programs in Gallia County Local elementary schools and seems to be working receiving statewide
recognition with Governor 's cup award for Blue R1bbon Drug Prevention Programs.
Program services are provided by the Gallia County Local Schools in cooperation with the Family Addiction
Community Treatment Services (FACTS) and are coordi nated in the school district by Jan Coen, Gallia County Local
Schools guidance counselor.
1
Establi shed in six Gallia Coun1y Local elementary schools, the program features a four par! curriculum covering the
importance ofwellness, nutrition and bas1c hygiene. dealing with peer pressure, recognition of individuals as special and
unique and knowledge of harmful
drug and addictiv.e substances and
their consequences to the individual
and the community.
"On the Right Track" has
become a rallying slogan for the
students as well as members of the
school community. The clubs have
involved parents, education professionals and medical and mental
health professionals in a concerted
effort to provide opportunities for
students to get on the track to a
positive self concept and a drug
free lifeslyle.
Cmdy Harrison. RN, representing Holzer Medical Center,
conducted mini -lessons on the
Students at Addnille Elementary School work
harmful results of inhalant abuse.
together on 'On The Right Track" club projects. The
Harrison
visited schools with video
program serves six schools and approximately 700
and
v1sual
displays to reinforce her
students.
message.
Magician Steve D1xon performed al the schools with a drug-free message delivered through his magic show. He pointed out I he importance of
making good, informed decisions, and emphasized that each student and all close to them have to live with the
consequences of their decisions.
School clubs became involved with teachers and members of the school community working cooperatively to
provide fun , informative activities for students.
Bidwell-Porter Elementary School's ORT club met at Haskins Park for a club picnic where teachers Judy Burdell
and Karen Thomas presented a lesson on backpacking. The students decided which items would be healthful or bad to
take along on a hike.
Vinron Elementary ORT club sponsors, Edie Bostic and Eileen Hall , organized an Olympic Day/Cookout for ORT
members on a Saturday al the school.
The Hannan Trace Elementary ORT club performed for service clubs with their drug-free message and concluded
their year's activities with a trip to the Columbus Zoo and a family picnic. Hannan Trace ORTsponsors were Ollie Barry
and Wendy Nactzel.
Southwestern Elementary
ORT students illustrated their
knowledge and beliefs through
drama. They produced a sk1t on
Mac a caterpillar that makes the
choice to use marijuana. When
Mac becomes a butterfly, he is
deformed and unable to fly
across the meadows with his
friends. Students have used Mac
to involve other students, parents, teachers and members of
the school community in their
effons to spread the word-"Just
say no to drugs." Southwestern
ORT sponsors were Darla
Southwestern "On The Right Track" sponsor Darla
Saunders and Mary Lynn Jones.
Saunders and club members practice the right moves
Addaville Elemel\tary ORT
during a program at the school. ORT received a
club sponsor Debbie Walker
Governor's cup award for Blue Ribbon Drug Preven·
designed activities to demon tion Programs.
strate that students could be
"with-it" in terms of what's
popular and still make good choices for a healthful life. One such activity was line dancing taught by Addaville teacher
Marilyn Kuhn. Addaville students concluded their yearlong program with a trip to the Columbus Zoo.
..
Kyger Creek Middle School learned that just as it is vital to keep a race car fine-tuned m order to be compellt1ve,
each student must make sure to take care of themselves as individuals through Keith Smith and his race car. ORT club
sponsor Janet Stiltner drew the parallel for students between good nutrition, getting the right amount of rest, good
grooming, and maintaining a drug-free body if they are to be competitive in society..
. .
. .
All Gallia County Local ORT clubs joined together for an environmental educatiOn actiVIty sponsored JOintly by
Gal11a County Extension Service forester, Cindy Jenkins, and the Meade Paper Company. Using pine tree seedlings
donated by Meade, Jenkins taught students the proper planting procedures and the benefits of trees to health and
environment. Each student received his/her own seedling for planting.
ORT clubs provided an important extracurricular experience for district students. In addition to providing a natural
extension of classroom instruction regarding good health as a foundation for a better life, students had opportunities to
build self esteem as they interacted with peers, staff and parents who supported healthy choices.

Enter lhe Peoples Bank Stock Picking Contesl. Compete against Pete . . . ond about 600 of your closest
friends and neighbors! Just place 5 publicly traded stocks in on imaginary folder and show ou~tanding
performance over lhe fourth quarter. We'll track the percentage gain/loss of all entries for 13 weeks and
award prizes to lhe top performers.
Status reports will be posted in every Peoples Bank
oHice by noon eoch Monday during lhe contest. Look lor a
leoders report in areo newspapers lhroughout lhe contesl.
This contest requires no inveshnent. The Peoples Stock
Picking Contest is sponsored by Peoples Bonk Discount
Brokerage Service. Ask lor a complimentary fee schedule.
Peaples Bank Brokerage Services are offered lhrough Olde
Discount Corporation, Member SIPC, NYSE, NASD. Funds
ore not FDIC insured.

EDITOR'S NOTE- Man·
uers, courtesy and thoughtFulness
are simple and basic lessons aU
too often ignored at sdlool and
fo11oltcn at home. But now
specill etiquette classes for
cbUdren are springing up across
the land.
By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
-Ten-year-old Lindsey Glock
twisled Lhe telephone cord around a
small fmger and politely told lite
caller dlat her mother couldn't come
to the telephone. She gently offered
to take a message.
"All my friends eall me 'The
Manners Princess,'" Lindsey says

Allison
Cutlip, 9.
"No.
tell him to
write it
down,"

1986 DODGE
Lancer, 4 door, blue, locally owned

trade, automatic, air, nloa family ca~
WAS$2986

I

,
I

Children minding their p's and q's

Spelsbefl
replies.
Across Lhe nation, etiquette for
children is making a comeback,
thank you, in classes like
Spelsberg' s.
Manners, courtesy and thoughtfulness are simple and basic lessons
all too often ignored at school and
forgotten at home.
"It's kind of sad you have 10
call in a specialist, but I recognize
it's necessary because peq&gt;le are

Manners, courtesy and thoughtfulness are simple and basic
lessons all too often ignored at
school and forgotten at home.

WAS $41195

Now '3295

\

Basic etiquette takeS to the schoolroom

now:
.loot_,_

September 25, 1994

On the
Move

Evening Appointments A118ilsbla
Our Regular Service Ia Available AI All Office•.

~t

Along the River

Section B

Work

Full Foundation

WITH FLNtSIIED
UPSTAIRS

MHS yearbook in

Judge lashes out at KNBC, allows
evidence from Simpson search

~imes- ~tnthttl

Team

4 Redrooms- 21/ , baths
2 Dormers

BASEMENT

ROCK SPRINGS - Copies of
the Meigs High School 1994 yearbook, the Marauder, are in at Lhe
high school and may be picked up,
school officials announced.

'

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, YN

Immigration changing the face of America, study says

By R~NDOLPH E. ~CHMID
Assoc1ated Press Wr1ter
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
face ol Amenca on Lhe year 2050
will be far different from today·s
look 1f l.hc current flood of 1mm1grat!On IS allowed to contrnue,
accordmg 10 a populauon study_
Non -H1span1c wh1tes could
dec lin ~_ to JUS! 52 percent of the
populauon by th~l year. H1 spamcs
woul d m&lt;~k c up _o percent of the
nati on . hlack s 14 perce nt and

'

Sponsored by the Discount Brokerage Service C?f Peoples Bank. Pick up
the complete rules, a list of stocks, and contest forms at any Peoples
Bank location. DeadUnefor entries: Saturday, October 1, 1994.

as she roDs her eyes and hangs up
the receiver to the giggles of
classmates and the applause of her

Now 12195
373·3155

Athens
593-7761

Belpre
423-7516

896-2369

Marietta

Lowell

~

teacber.
Julia Spelsberg, the etiquette
· teacber, then talks about a bay who

Middl

992~

Nel&lt;mville

The Plains
797-4547

roo Only

753-1955

J76-7l2J

1

not teaching these things," says
Judillt Martin, whose Miss Mannen
column appean in 250 newS)IIIpen
three times a week.
"It's like any other language. If
you learn it early, it's much easia."

When SJ;JCisberi. 42, an
8JIIMml the telephone, bU\ forgot
advertising
rnanagez, watched her 9·
to write down the messqe, making
year-old son spit a piece of meat out
big trouble for his fadtt:r.
"What's the lesson?" Spelsherg of his moullt onto the floor, she
says, "It was just like a light bulb."
. asks.
"It's not that etiquette is a lost
"Kill your b-other?" says

and Lhat carries all the way into
bWiiness," she says.
Spelsberg says that's what
parents are looking for.
"It's just the idea that children
need reinfon:ement of basic manners," she says. "When you get out
and take a class, Lhey're being rein·
forced by someone outside the
family and I think they take it a
little more seriously."
Lindsey
concedes she
wasn't thrilled
about learning
how to write
thank-you
notes. But
now, she says,
there are "lots
of fun things
to do."
She has
also picked up
some lltings to
impress her

Ralher
than
learning
how
10
eat
at
home
jWit don't put the emphasis on 11. It
willt
mom
and
dad,
!hey
learn
how
was jWit something we sort of
to
eat
in
elegant
forgot about."
restaurants and
Spelsbefl put together a course
ride in limoufamilies.
where
bolh
parents
wlrt
from various etiquette books and
sines,
she says.
and
dinnm
are
often
sltared
with
began offering jl'i vate classes last
"How
many
the
television.
fall.
kids
know
how
to
''Tho3c
are
the
people
who
are
·
Since the ftrSt men went out
ride
on
a
public
flooding
my
mailbox
saying,
'My
around nearby Weston, she has had
bWI?" Martin
parents lied 10 me. (Proper eli·
an overwhelming response from
said. ''They're
quette)
does
matter,'"
Martin
says.
parents eager to get Lheir kids'
teaching snob"It would be equivalent 10
elbows off the table and their
bery and snobpushing a child on lhe soccer field
thank -you notes written,
and telling him, 'There are 110 rules, bery is bad
"It's something we can't
tna1111e1S and I
jWit kick the bell.'"
calculate the benefits we derive,"
fmd it appalling."
TtSh Spaulding, who hiL'I been
says Tina l.evelle of Morgantown,
Spaulding
ttaching ellquette 10 businessmen
whose twa children are enrolled.
agrees.
Her
mom.
and women since 1991, began
"I think it's a very imponant
classes
range
offering classes similar 10
part of their upbringing that they
"She was
from~
don't get from Lheir peers anymore. S{'dsbert!'s two years ago in
surprised
iruroducnons
to
Burningham, Ala.
I lltink we've lost that in some of
when I told
going to movies
"When you see the need for it
the you lit today.
herlknew
and
concerts.
at
Lhe
adult
level,
you
realize
a
lot
"M!Xe importantly, I wanted
where lite
"It'sjust
of
this
starts
when
they're
kids,"
them to lltink their mollter was
salad
fork and
about respect for
Spaulding says. "! could see we
right."
the
Ol)le:
penon
Suzanne Glock of Morgantown needed 10 beck way up.
and pulling them
"A laclt of IIIIJIIIm is going to
enrolled Lindsey, and sisters
sey says .
at ease," she says.
walk them right into limits and no
Ashley, 11, and Tori, 8, to "fineTony
"It
also
gives
you
one's ever going 10 tell them what's
lUIIC" llteir social skills.
Antonini,
I0,
a
set
of
rules
to
wrong except their family, maybe,"
"I'm hearing a lot more
of
Morganyou
lluough
get
she says.
'please' and 'lhank.yous' at the
Judith Martin
town says he
some difficult
Martin, whose boob include
dinner table. Their manners are
also
has imsiDiations
in
life.
"Miss Mannen' Guide to Rearing
better," Glock says. "It makes a
pressed
his
"When
you
difference when someone othez than Perfect Childrelt", says courses
family.
radiate
dial
confi.
hive become popular over the last
mom and dad says litis is what you
"!'was rude bef!Xe, but now
dence and have Lhe ability to put
decade, but too often focWI on
do in a social situation."
I'm
getting
better," he says. "I have
people
at
ease,
it
instills
truSt
in
you
"SJtobby
etiquette."
Manin says manners began to
a long way to go."
an," she adds, "but maybe JICOille

take a tum for Lhe worse in lite
1960s, when many parents too1r. a
bandso{)ff approach to teaching
etiquette.
Those childlen are now raising

"How many
kids know
how to ride
on a public
bus?
They're
teaching
snobbery
and snobbery is bad
manners
and I find it
appalling."

~-

'

�•

Page-B2-5unday Times-Sentinel

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-83

Meigs community calendar
SUNDAY
HOBSON - Homecoming will
be held at the Hobson Church Sunday, with Sunday school at 10 a.m ..
dinner at noon, and an afternoon
serv1ce at I: 15 p.m. Music will be
by the ReO ec ti ons Tr it&gt;, Narrow
Way, and McDaniel Trio . Rev.
Keith Eblin will speak.

POMEROY - Pomeroy 12 .
&amp; 12, Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Believers Fellowsh ip on Mechanic
Avenue.
MONDAY
EAST ME IGS - Amer ican
Red Cross bloodmobile. Eas tern
High School, Monday, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m .

ANTIQUITY - H.A. Fred
Hayman and Garnet F. Po lk Hay man descendants' reunion Sunday
at the C. E. Hayman Sr. resrdcnce,
Antiquity, startS at 10 a.m. Chicken
dinner at noon, games in afternoon.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Ve tera ns Serv ice Commission ,
Monday, 7:30 at Veterans Service
Office, Pomeroy.

REEDSVILLE - 58th annual
Buckley reunion, Sunday, shelter at
Belleville Dam Park, Reedsv ille.
Covered dish dinner at I p.m.
HARRISONVILLE - Har risonville Presbyterian Church will
hold I OOth anniversary service at
II a.m. Sunday at the church, basket dinn er at noon, program of
singing and speaking at ! :15 p.m .
DANIEL AND AMANDA POLCYN

Cox-Polcyn
GALLIPOLIS · Amanda Diane silk rose with baby 's breath.
Cox and Daniel Joseph Polcyn 11
Best man was Matthew Polcyn,
were united in marriage Aug. 6 at brother of the groom. Groomsmen
St. Lows Cath olic Church. The were Steven Brobst of Westerville
SHAWN AND LEANNA CUNNINGHAM
double-ring cere mony was per- aud Stephen Cox, brother of the
form ed by Monsignor William R. bride . They wore black tuxedos
Myers.
accented with teal ties and cumKev in Teaford of Rodney was
Amanda is the daughter of Larry merbunds . Their boutonnieres were
SYRACUSE - Leanna Sue
Clark and Shawn Allan Cunning- best man , and Rob Cunningham, and Linda Cox of Gallipolis, and ~e&lt;~l silk roses with baby's breath.
ham exc hanged wedding vows in a Syracuse, brother of the groom, Daniel is the son of Daniel and
Organ music was provided by
double ring ceremony on July 23, and Doug Owens, Pomeroy, cousin Debra Polcyn of Gallipolis.
Barb White, and guests were regisat 1:30 p.m . at the Syracuse Church of the groom, were the ushers.
Given in marriage by her par- tered by Eva Northup, great-aunt of
Rmgbearer was Kyle Cunningham, ents and escorted to the altar by her the groom.
of the Nazarene.
The bride is the daughter of Syracuse, nephew of the groom.
father, the bride wore a white satin
Immediately following the cereAll of the flowers for the wed- floor length gown with a sweet· mony, a reception was held in the
Ronald Lee and Judith Ann Clark,
Rae inc, and the groom is the son of ding were arranged by the bride. heart nec kline and an open back, church hall. The three tiered wedRobert Leslie and Sharon Lee Cun- Mothers of the bride and groom both adorned with strings of pearls ding cake was decorated with teal
wore corsages of ivory gardenias · and sequins . Her bouquet was a ar.d white satin bows and roses and
ningham, Syracuse.
The Rev. Rick Sturgill per- and peach baby roses accented with cascade of teal and white silk roses leaves made of teal icing. The cake
formed the double-ring ceremony peach baby's breath and peach and accented with ivy and pearls.
w3s topped with a Precious
following a progmm of music by ivory satin ribbon.
Maid of honor was Deborah Moments procelain bride and
A reception was held in the Mingus of Gallipolis. Bridesmaids groom. Cheri Clagg and Marianne
Rathy McDaniel, pianist, and Debbie Powell, s;&gt;loist.
church social room immediately were Beverly Lafferty of McAnhur Cardwell served at the reception.
The sanctuary was lighted with following the ceremony. A peach and Rachael Polcyn, sister of the
The bride is a 1991 graduate of
two tier candelabra, white minia- tablecloth and skirt with an overlay groom. They wore teal satin tea Kyger Creek High School and a
ture lights and candles in the win- of white lace was used on the length dresses with scooped neck- senior at the University of Rio
dows. Greenery and ivory bows bride's table which featured the lines, puffed sleeves and an open Grande. The groom is a 1991 gradwere used thrpughout the church.
wedding cake and included a cen- back. Each carried a bouquet of u~te of Kyger Creek High School
Given in marriage by her par- terpiece compote of peach water teal and white silk roses.
and a senior at the University of
ents, the bride wore an antique with ivy accent and Precious
The groom wore a black tuxedo Rio Grande . They reside in Rio
ivory gown of lace fashioned with Moments bride and groom replica, with a black tie and cummerbund. Grande.
a sweetheart neckline, full length with sprinklings of gold confetti.
His boutonniere consisted of a teal
Guests were registered by Pam
sleeves, and a handkerchief bottom.
She wore pearl and diamond ear- Cunningham, sister-in-law of the
rings, gifts of her parents, an groom.
antique diamond ring which had
Mr. and Mrs. Cunningham now
trelonged to the bride's great- reside at BidweU.
The bride is a registered nurse
grandmother, and a gold bracelet
borrowed from Sharon Cunning - and is employed at Veterans
POMEROY - The Meigs for making healthy chorces. The
Memorial Hospital, Home Health County Red Ribbon Commiuee has council's mission is to promote a
ham, mother of the groom.
: The bride carried a cascading Department. She received an asso- been awarded a $320 grant from coordinated, county-wide effort
Qr&gt;uquet of diamond peach roses ciate's degree in nursing from th e Ohio Parents for Drug Free among community leaders interestoohanced with ivory flowers and Hocking College and is currently Youth.
ed in promoting healthy lifestyles
working on a bachelor's degree in
i ~y.
The grant will enable the Red in Meigs County.
· Pa1rice Circle, Racine, was the nursing at Ohio University.
Ribbon Committee to train students
Anyone interested in working
The groom graduated from the in grades 7 through 12 in presentmaid of honor. She wore a peach
with
the Prevention Council here
suit and carried an ivory lace fan Ohio State Highway PaiTOI Acade- ing drug free programs for their
mar
contact
Robinson in
accented with peach and ivory my and is now a trooper with the peers and will help to make the Me1gs CountyReggie
at592-5912.
flowers, greenery and peach and Paoul, Gallipolis Post
county's young people a partner in
Among those attending the wed- creating a safe. healthy place to
ivory ribbon. Margilee Lemley,
cousin of the groom, was the flow- ding were Mary and Simon Geist- live and grow.
er girl and wore a peach dress. She white of Steubenville, grandparents
The training in Meigs County
cerried an ivory flower basket of the bride, Richard Geistwhite of will be held on Saturday, Oct. I
accented with peach ribbon and Oregon, uncle of the bride, and from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m at Meigs
peach baby roses and greenery Jeremy, Beth and Lauren Hamblin, High School.
ProfmiOMI Wedding Pho!ograpby
ftom which she dropped peach and Perrysburg.
Ohio Parents for Drug Free
(614) 4466700
Youth is a non-profit organization
incorporated in 1987 to support and
empower parents throughout Ohio
in raising children who are free
from tobacco, alcohol and other
drugs.
Red Ribbon Week is Oct. 23-31
Get The
and the theme this year is "Neighbor by Neighbor...Ribbon by Ribbon ... Partners for a Drug Free
From
Ohio."
The Red Ribbon Campaign was
begun in 1988 to honor the work
and memory of Qrug Enforcement
Agent Enrique Camarena, who was
murdered by drug traffickers in
1985.
The Red Ribbon symbolizes a
commilfnent to a healthy drug free
lifestyle.
Earlier this month the Meij!S
County Prevention Council held 1ts
first meeting at the Health Recovery Services office located at 119
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
The Prevention Council is a new
program sponsored by Health
Recovery Services and designed to
bring the community together in
creating a sup~':live .a~osphere

Clark-Cunningham

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange 778 will host an all -youcan-eat chicken barbecue at the
grange hall on Cou nty Road I,
north of Salem Center, II a.m. to 2
p.m. Sunday. Local clogging group
to entertain .
RACINE - Descendants of
Edward and Anna Dill re un io n
Sunday at Star Mill Park. Potluck
at I p.m. llring covered di sh and
table service.
CARPENTER - Mount Union
Baptist Church revival, located ofT
State Route 143 ncar Carpenter,
Rev . Jesse Tipton, speaker; special
smgmg.

Location:

Saturday, October 1
~ A.U. II S P.M.

MIDDLEPORT Meigs
County Trash Haulers Association
meeting Tuesday, 6:30p. m. at
Manley Recycling Building on Mill
Street. All county trash haulers
urged to attend.
POMEROY - Meigs County .
Cenmil Committee meeting, 7 p.m.
Tuesda y, Meigs Co unty Courthouse.
RACINE - Ed Jo hn son fea tured spea ker at Car mel United
Methodist Church Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Potluck, 6 p.m. Public welcome.

Janis Maoornber
614-388-8952 .

4DO ROUih Hollow Rd.

Red Ribbon Committee wins
grant to combat drug abuse

~~ir-e-.
PHOTOGUPHY

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• £uy lo lnst.JI on wall or on an OJMional Poor
stand.

SYRACUSE- JaneL. Jeu and
Jefferey A. Morris exchanged wedding vows in a ceremony at the
Union Plaza Chapel of Love in Las
Vegas, Nev. on Aug. 23.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Jennings C. Jeu of Minersville, and the groom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Guy R. Morris of .
Pomeroy.
Roben Wingett served as best
man.
The reception supper was hosted
by Wingett at the Paradise Lounge.
Au.ending the wedding and reception were· Wingett, Judge and Mrs.
Fred Crow lll, Syracuse; Mr. and
Mrs. George Strode, Columbus,
and Mrs. Jean Powell, Pomeroy.
Upon the couple's return ~orne
-they were giv~n an ol~ fashtOned
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EAST MEIGS - OAPSE 448
Union meeting Monday, 7:30p.m.
at Eastern High Sc hool.
TUESDAY
RACINE - Rev. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson, missiona ri es to
Papua, New Guinea, speakers at
R"'cine Church of the Nazarene, 7
p.m. Tuesday .

You are invited to preview Jafra's
exciting Holiday Line_ - Date:

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POMEROY - Ohi o Hunters
Sa fety Course start ing Monday
from 6-9 p.m . at Meigs County
Publrc Library. Free. Call 992-6311
to register.

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JEFFREY AND ALISA

MlDDLEPORT- Heather Ann white straw hats with peac h accent
Hovatter, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. trim . They wore pearl earrin gs and
Richard Hovatter, Middleport, and chokers, gifts of the bri de. They
Jason Mi chael Booth of Middle - carried hurricane lant erns decoratport, son of David and Barbara ed with peac h and white silk !lowBooth , Route I, Hamden, were ers.
united in marriage at 6:30p.m on
The flower girl s were in white
July 23 at the Middleport Church dotted Swiss organdy ankle-length
dresses and wore satin bows and
of Christ.
Mr. AI Hartson performed the gardenias in their hair. They carried
candlelight double-ring ceremony wJite wicker baskets accented with
following a program of music by pearls, lace and peach flowers.
Amy Rouse, vocalist, and Cris
The groom was in a black luxeRouse, organist
do with paisley vest and matching
Baskets of white mums and a bow tie with a white rose boutonbrass archway decorated with ivy niere. His attendants were in identiand white doves decorated the front cal attire but wore peach rose bouof the church. White satin bows tonnieres.
with peach flowers marked the
Aaron Booth , brother of th e
pews, and candles with silk flowers groom 'wa s bes t man, Zachery
were used in the windows. Unity Buckley of Charleston, S. C.,
candles with white silk flower rings cousin of the groom, was ring bearwere lighted as a part of the wed- er, and Kalad Hovatter, nephew of
ding ceremony.
th ~ bride, was the acolyte.
Given in marriage by her father,
Groom smen were Tommy
the bride was attired in a gown of Owens, Oak Hill; Philip Hovatter,
white imported satin fashioned brother of the bride; Greg Fee,
with a sheer yoke neckline with Zaleski; David Cline, Columbus,
wedding band collar. Scrolls of and Scott Gilliland, Jackson.
pearls were used on the basque
For her daughter's wedding,
bodice. The !eg-o-mutton sleeves Mrs. Hovatter wore an ivory
were heavily beaded with pearls embossed lace tunic length top
and sequins, and the skirt flowed over a pleated chiffon skirt. Mrs.
into a cathedral train with 7 Booth was in a peach dress with
appliques of beds and pearls down embroidered dropped waistline and
t6e back. The train was accented chiffon skin and both mothers
with a buu.erfly bow at the waist. wore corsages of peach roses.
The bride wore a beaded tiara from
A reception was held at the
which fell her fmger tip veil .
Senior Citizens Center where
She carried a cascade arrange- ·music was provided by Moonlight
ment of white silk roses and peach Elllertainmenl The lighted fountain
forget-me-nots and the lace hand- three-tiered cake decorated with
kerchief which belonged to her peach roses was topped with a
maternal great-grandmother. In her lighted bride and groom replica and
shoe she had a six-pence given to was surrounded by four hearther by an aunt.
shaped cakes. The peach and white
The bride's attendants were color scheme of the wedding was
Amy Johnson, St. Petersburg, Fla., carried out in the Center decoramaid of honor; Dreama Knight, a Lions with silk flowers and bows on
sister, Ashland, matron of honor; hurricane lanterns.
Rhonda Hovatter, Ashland, sisterNikki and Becky Meier, cousins
in-law; Elise Meier, Columbus, of the bride, registered the guest.
cousin of the bride; Lee Henderson
The couple honeymooned in the
Pomeroy, bridesmaids; Beth Pocono Mountains. They reside in
Knight, niece of the bride, Ashland, Middleport.
junior bridesmaid; and Jennifer
Both Mr. and ~rs . ~ooth a~e
Knight, Ashland, niece of the graduates of the Umversuy of Rio
bride; Holly Piper of Beaver and Grande. She has an associate
Lindsey Booth, Coalton, relatives degree m bu~mess , and he rece1ved
of the groom flower girls.
a degree m nursmg and •s
The attendants wore peach ankle employed at St. Joseph's Hospital
length princess style dresses with m Parkersburg, W. Va.
soft pleated V-neck collars and

Wedding policy

1-% Ton
With Trailer Package

1-~

Ton

With 60-40 Seat

1-~

Ton

Bucket Seats - Z-71 Package

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
charge.
However, wedding news must
meet 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
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday , 4 p.m. prior to the date
of publication.
Those not making the 60 -day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
are not of acceptable quality.
All material submitted for publication is subject to editing.
Questions may be directed to
the editorial department from 1-5

Card shower planned
_ GALLIPOLIS. A card shower
is being held for Mildred Tope for
her birthday Sept. 29. Cards may
be sent to Scenic Hills, 311 Buckridge Rd., Bidwell, Ohio; 45614.

p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

TAWNEY STUDIO

Willford-Caldwell

JASON AND HEATHER BOOTH

Hovatter-Booth

Reg. $9.95 Now •7' 5

LL

RACINE - Alisa Renee Will- tcrcd the guests.
A buffet reception was held at
fo.u .and Jeffrey Todd Ca ldw ell
were united in marriage on Jul y 23 Carl e ton Sc hool in Syrac use.
at the Racine United Methodist Hostesses were Megan Mdnucl and
Church .
Kay Graham, aunts of the bride,
The Rev. Ken Molter performed and Darlene Guthrie, aun t of the
the ceremon y for the daughter of groom. The three- ti ered, heartGary and JoAnn Willford and the shaped cake was topped with a Preson of Jim and Sa lly Cald well, all cious Moments top . The heartof Racrne.
shaped cake table was decorated in
The bride wore a full le ngth teal and white as were the gues t
white satin gown with a white lace tables.
overlay. The bodice was accented
Th e coup le honeymoo ned in
with iridcscents and pearls and was Aorida and now reside in Jackson.
fashioned with full-length finger tip The new Mrs. Caldwell is a gradu sleeves and the neck! me was heart- ate of Southern High Sc hoo l and
shaped. The back opening was also Hocking College and is employed
heart shaped and m the waist was a by Dr. Douglas Hunter, Racine .
white sa tin bow from which Her hu sband gradu ated from
ex tended the train.
Southern Hi gh School and' Marietta
She wore pearl and rhin cstonr College and is employed by Eastearrin gs belonging to her paternal ern Local Schools of Pike County
grandmother, Libby Willford, and where he is a teacher and reserve
carried a handkerchief belonging to basketball coach.
the groom's maternal grandmother,
Audrey Torrence. The bride a nd
groom delivered her a basket of
wedding flowers.
The bride 's bouquet was of
white roses accented with teal netling and white pearl accents.
The groom wore a charcoal gray
tuxedo with tails and a boutonniere
of white roses with teal netting.
Tabitha Willford served as maid
of honor for her sister. Bridesmaids
were Jodi Caldwell, sister of the
groom, Robyn Stout and Tricia
McNickle. The attendants wore teal
tea length gowns and carried spring
bouquets of flowers . Mallory
Guthrie, cousin of the groom, was
llt •tl \X ' rllfot \'fr &gt;rl.. l l• ~ •l ~ &lt;l lllf~· \\rill ...,,l m..'lhnll(
the flower girl and wore a white
l "S if.l
P&lt;'.ll l' oJ! lll!lld
1'11.1( ~ l~o. •t ,lll'o&lt;.: lll&lt;'r
I null h &gt;r )•&gt;Uf ,,l it'!\ .Hld to&gt;llllo&gt;n IP &gt;Il\ lht• '&lt;&gt;11
satin dress covered with white irip.1dded &lt;11ll.1r I• I 1lw !&lt;&gt;tif.!h ' It'd l &lt;ot '
descent nylon. She carried a basket
of spring flower petals.
Jimmy Caldwell was best man
for his brother, and groomsmen
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolla
were Troy Guthrie, cousin of the
groom, Chris Stout, and Chris
Petra. They were in charcoal tuxeRE&gt;~ D~'i:t~~
dos with teal bow ties and cummer~~H~ls·
bunds. as was the ring bearer, Dal,:_.:.1~ Mode ill U.s.A.
ton Cummins.
Music wa s provided Carla
Shuler, pianist, and Laura Guthrie,
both cousins of the groom. Jonna
Manuel, cousin of the bride, regis-

424 2ND AVE. • GALLIPOliS
446·1615

GRAHD OPEHIHCi
OCT. 1, 1994 -7 A.M.
AT OUR SECOND LOCATION

THE CORNER RESTAURANT
SYRACUSE, OHIO

Refresh your&lt;Self my friend. and rest.
And feel you are a welcomed 8uesl
Where you can enjoy friendly service,
g~od home cooked food,
Homemade baked pies and cakes
and fresh rolls daily_

JOB
SECURITY

Take Out Orders Available - 992-2507
HOURS:
Monday-Friday 7 A.M.-7 P.M.
Saturday 7 A.M.-7:30P.M.
Open Sundays- Better to Serve You
7 A.M.-3 p.m.

f t'

COME ONe. COME ALL 1D TilE
-COQNW RJ',&amp;TAURA.IIT~.
LOG\1tD B01'H MIDDLIDOQT AND ~YRA.CU8E.
'
~l'.'l'fEQ 'ID ~EQVE YOU!
(1:{)

THE SHOE CAFE

--[iCI]

State Route 124
Syracuse

301 Soutll111ird

Middleport

In singing group
PARKERSBURG , W.Va. Robin White, son of Robert and
Dove White of Coolville, has been
selected to sing in the Ohio Valley
College's A Capella Singers.
White is a senior elementary
education major and member of the
brass ensemble. The singers will
perform in several states during a
spring tour.
NATURAL AFFINITY '"

THE ATTACHABLE
BREAST FORM
THAT GIVES YOU
FREEDOM OF CHOICE.
Onrr ,Jealtt \\HIt·\ \ llU'1'l ~ 1lit' lll 't'd "
of \lltl/1\0'Il&lt;lf l rr bWoi:'l ~ llq.!tTI 111111 ol llf ' "

:tll .trh; tllk hn •a..,l lonn

The larger the size of your new
matt~, the more we'U
pay you for your old one!

\,tl llr:tl \lluut 1

A.n \flinu 1 .llt. trh:ihl• · bn'. t..,t ltlrrll

.,

••

. 4

h~ tt ·a~'

l! tilttl-lh

;uullit ~~~"'·rur• ·l l

lt tu

can r h•Mt:-1' fn•m .1lllilt·r r:tnCt'ttl l:t,.llltllltlt lll! m-.
~·tu111 -· &gt;lldt'rful It lU ll kd 111 ~ il l. 1 linl.!nW

aml sol t_t lillt!)

.; v.r •: ltt·~ 1 '\t'n..;\\ am ~ u tl-.

Dun t t,Jl. l' ltlir \o\ tlrll l••r it
,·nrn!'tfl arllt -.rr f• •f lttUI':'t'll \n \ffi11111

attarllahh'

hn·a ~t formtu ~ r

TRADE-IN VALUES

lltal 111·

1hr pt"rt •1·1 dwin· II •r '1111

~A MOEN~

i'"

Tilt• S.tfr• Ul!Jirt' ~·m l 'u~ l Krt'ol ' l ~Il l ~ l'fl II Hill!' II

Thes.B Repn!seolaliw will~"""'"'­
m1 display • V01E1J ol produas b

Bu y• q'"'" ' ;.,..,,

and'N'C'IIgivc)ooa
$00 1radc-in allow-

Cameo ladies Support Group
1

Monday, Sept. 26,7 p.m.
PVH DownstWs Conference Room

s2TW7
'lN

Btlyatwin s17.eset
and we'll
you •
$00 trade-in allowance rrgardless of
size or ccndi1ion of
}'QUI old bed.
$1J TllAJ)Jt.IM

0

s4QUE9
'EN 9-

a~ regard~ or
size or condition o(
Y"UU old b&lt;d .
$'75 TIWIB-IN

~ng

Buy'
,;, "'
and
~ IISJvt you a
100 lrldc-in allow·

s5KI9NG9

anct rq.ardku of

sizt&lt;woondrtiooof
'"'" old b&lt;d.

Slit 11tADB-IN
DIJCOVer why many ~

""-Our B aN 1'o r-rs"

soy, ..,

won' mv Setfor·

CO!l(rJJI9{ &amp;
955 SICOID l¥1., IIWPOUI
•

�Page-84-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

September 25, 1994

wv

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-85

•

'Helen E.' made reputation on r1ver
Iipolis where the soldiers would buy four hours for tl1c icc 10 utkc the
liquor. In 1917 and 1918, it was Helen E. from Gallipoli s Island to
against the law to sell "intoxicating the park where it stuck lor most of
the day .
spiri!.'S" tp soldiers.
After repeated warnings, the
Traveling with the Helen E. were
army's lOth Infantry blacklisted several unattached barges. the EnterGallipolis. Any soldier found in prise Docks and the C.C. Bowyer
Gallipolis could be searched for boat. The next day the icc moved the
credentials . If he was from the lOth Helen E. around Raccoon Island and
Infantry. he was to be jailed immedi - to Dam 26.
The watchman stayed aboard the
ately.
The Gallipolis Journal reported in runaway boat until it reached Racone-inch headline type "Gallipolis coon Island. where it passed close
enough for him to jump oiT.
Not Safe For Soldiers."
At almost the same time the Helen
But perhaps the boat's most exciting adventure occurred in January E. hit the dam , a mill barge from
of 191 B when an ice floe pushed the Point Pleasant hit the comer of ihc
boat downriver some 293 miles.
bear trap m the dam , broke int wo and
The winter of 1917 and 1918 was sank.
one of the five worst in this century.
Nine packcLs , seve n towboat s. and
It was -5 on December 9 and 10, then seven ferries were los t in the Ohio
-18 on the lith, - lOon the 15th, and that week . In due time the icc carried
-16 on the 30th.
the Helen E. across Dam 26 il nd on
There were also two 9-inch snows down the ri vcr.
in December 1917. January brought
Rumor reached Gall rpoli s Jan. 3 t
30 inches of snow and II days of that the Helen E. had sunk ill
below -zero weather. Boats docked
at Point Pleasant, including th e Helen
E., were pushed away from t11 cdocks
by ice floe s.
The firstobstruction that the Helen
E. hit was Gallipoli s Island. A few
hours later, the boat was dislodged
and pushed to the park front It took

by Jim Sands
Special Correspondent
The packet boat Helen E. was
probably the best known boat in
Gallipolis. The boat was built in 1913
at Point Pleasant for Capt. Gordon
Greene. George P. Gardner and
Wardie
McDade.
The name
came

McDade' s
daughter Helen
Elizabeth who
later became the
wife of G
George Bush.
McDade was the master and W.R.
Barringer the clerk for the Helen E.
In its first few years the Helen E. ran
daily between Gallipoli s and Racine,
carrying both freight and passengers.
The boat also did excursion trips in
its later history to Huntington and
Charleston , W.Va.
During World War I the Helen E.
unwittingly participated in actions
that got Gallipolis blacklisted by the
U.S. Army. Several soldier.; were
stationed in the area to guard the
railroad bridge in Kanauga and the
bromine mines in Meigs County.
Soldiers would ride the local
packets like the Helen E. into Gal -

CANDIDATE'S WIFE VISITS- Fran DeWine, wife of U.S.
Senate candidate Mike DeWine, attended a reception at Gallia
County Republican headquarters in Gallipolis to campaign on
behalf of her husband. Present for the reception were, seated, from
left, Guyan Township Trustee Roger Watson, Gallia C?u.nty
Recorder Molly Plymale, Gallipolis Municipal Judge W1I~1am
Medley and Dan Davies, candidate for Gallia County aud•tor;
standing, from left, Gallia County Commissioner Harold Montgomery, Gallia County Treasurer Larry Bet~, Dav1d T. Ev~ns,
chairman of Gallia 's De Wine for Senate comm1Uee, Mrs. DeWme,
Karla Carpenter, DeWine campaign assistant, and Gallia GOP
Chairman Verlin Swain.
.JODY TAYLOR AND WESS HOWARD

SARAH CALDWELL AND DON MCDADE

Caldwell-McDade
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
David Caldwell announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sarah, to
Don E. McDade of Henderso n,
W.Va. , son of Yvonne McDade of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Sarah is a 1992 graduate of
_: K 1ger Creek High School and is

euploycd by Neville' s grocery of
H~nderson, W.Va.
Don is a 1987 graduate of Point
P:easant High School and is
enployed by McDonald' s of Hen derson. W.Va.
fhe wedding will be Oct. I,
I' 94.

Taylor-Howard
POM EROY - Jody L. Taylor,
daughter of Jeannie and Fenton
Taylor. Pomeroy, and We ss
lloward, son of Eva and Dan
Howard, Pomeroy. announce their
engagem ent and forthcoming marnage.

Miss Taylor is a 1989 graduate
of Meigs High School and a 1993
graduate or the University of Rio
Grande . She is employed by the
Meigs County Board or Education.
Her fiance is a 1989 graduate of

KIMBERLY TAYLOR 'ID DAVID EDMONDS

Meigs High School. l-Ie IS a veteran
of the United States Marine Corps
and is currently employed by M.P.
Dory Co. of Columbus.
The small family wedding will
take place on Saturday. Oct. I. It
will be an outdoor affair on property of the bride's family in Greenbrier County, W.Va.
A reception wi II be held for
friends and family on Saturday .
Oct. 8. at the home of the bride's
parents here .

Taylor-E monds
1

RUTLAND - Carolyn Zim merman of Albany, and David and
Rose Edmonds of Rutland,
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their children, Kimberly Taylor and David

from

Maysvil le. but the report was false .
The boat passed Cincinnati , struc k a
pier, tore off part nf the deck and left
the paddle wheel on the ice.
It later lost other parts below
Cmcmnau hut continued on to Madi son , Ind., where it finall y grounded.
The principal owner at that tim e
was Sy lvan Gardner who. after some
weeks of ll' lJa ir , Wi.I Sab le to pilutlhc
boat hack on its own power. Bu t in
Junc. I'Jl H c:anlncr sold the boat to

ihc Wilkumon.s who used th e Ik lcn
E. hctw rc n \Vhcclm g tmd New Ma ta·
lllOfLl\

lir 1'1\4 the Helen E. was rebuilt
rlll o the towboat Clairm ont. The
I klcn E . lor a few montl1s hcfore
bccorning the Clarrm ont . did travel
frIll\ Gall1 polrs to Charb ton on
regular run s.
Jamt's Sand ~ is a special ('OrreSJ ondent oft he Sunda yTimes-Sentinel. His addres.' is: 65 Willo"
Drive, Sprin~b o ro Oil 45066.

Let us copy your old
family photos. Special 25x7's for $14.95. Reg.
$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
also do passport photos,
Identification photos and

--

9

~~ ~ ~ ~~y;~~E~ STUDIO

cou Edmonds.
The open church wedding will
e an event of Oct. I at the Rutland
reewill Baptist Church at 3 p.m.
he Rev. Paul Taylor will perform
e ceremony.

·

··

'ij

424 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS

!ij

McComas-Ballantyne
VINTON - Kathy McComas of Columbus.
Ballantyne, the son of Colleen
Columbus and Bryan Bruce Ballanand
Jack Teal of Plant City, Fla.
tyne of Columbus announce their
and
Judy and Art Ballantyne of
engagemenL
McComas is the daughter of Upper Arlington, is a 1979 graduAvelene and Jesse Carroll of Ever- ate of Columbus North High
green and Gary McComas of Vin- School. He is employed by Kenton. She is a 1984 graduate of well Printers of Columbus.
The wedding is set for Oct. I at
North Gallia High School and of
Havens
Corners Church of Christ
the University of Rio Grande. She
in
Christian
Union of Blacklick. A
is employed at Wagonlit Travel of
reception will follow at Briarwood.

'.""· .

PAULA MASTERS AND KENNETH WILLIAMS

Masters-Williams
GALLIPOLIS - The parents of
Paula Kay Masters and Kenneth
Lee Williams announce the
engagement and upcoming marriage of their children.
Paula is the daughter of Robert
and Kathy Masters of Gallipolis.
She is a 1993 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and is
employed by senior citizens and

Ponderosa Steakhouse.
Kenneth is the son of Jack and
Peggy Williams of Bidwell. He is a
graduate of Kyger Creek High
School and is employed by Ohio
Valley Bank.
The open church wedding will
be Oct. 15 at Trinity Methodist
Church in Porter, with music to
begin at 3 p.m.

1ttriesstes at

the original
FREE! Plus sleep
180 nights!*

\

JIM AND VICKIE WARD

CROWN CITY - Jim and Vickie Ward will celebrate their 25th
wedding anniversary Sept. 25 by
renewing their vows at Mt. Zion
Church in Crown City.
The former Vickie Williams and
Jim were married Sept. 25, 1969
and have resided in Gallipolis for
most of their lives.

Sunday, Sept. 25
CENTENARY - United Christian Church 7 p.m. with Rollins
Family and Rev. Donnie Johnson.

•••

CENTENARY - Mina Chapel
homecoming Raccoon Creek
County Park shelterhouse 4 11 a.m.
with Rev. Bob Grubb and Grubb
Family singers.

•••

•••

PORTER - Exodus at Clark
Chapel Church 7 p.m.

•••

•••
•••

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

•••

CROWN CITY - Matthew ·
Henry and Heirs of Grace 7 p.m.
Good Hope United Baptist Church.

•••

•

•••

Revival
THURMAN - "Weekend of
Hope" 'I:hurman United Methodist
Church 7 p.m. Sept. 23 to 25.

•••

•••
Tuesday, Sept. 27
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics

GALLIPOLIS - White Oak
Baptist Church 7:30 p.m. Sept. 23
through 25.

Anonymous 8 p.m:Woodland Cente · multipurpose room.

GALLIPOLIS - Harris Baptist
Church Sept. 22 through 24 7 p.m.
w;tb Calvin Minnus and homecoming Sept. 25 with potluck and special singing.

•••

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club 6 p.m. at OVB to go
to Colonial Restaurant, Jackson.

•••

•••

•••

BIDWELL - Apostolic Faith
Church Sept. 26 through 28 with
E:Jer Wesley Robertson from Dayton, 7 p.m. nightly.

Today's Birthdays: ABC sportscaster Jim McKay is 73. Actress Sheila
MacRae is 70. Actor-singer Anthony Newley is 63. U.S. Rep. Joseph
Kennedy II. D-Mass., is 42.

RIO GRANDE - Evans Grocer
Pennyfare reunion 12 p.m. Bob
Evans sheherhouse. Bring covered
dish.

POint Pleasant

•••

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

Legion Post.

REEDSVILLE
Buckley
reunion Belleville Dam Parle I p.m.
Bring covered dish .
GALLIPOLIS - Multiple Sclerosis Support Group 1:30 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church.

DIANA CHENG

Chapter #283 OES regular meeung
7:30 p.m . dinner 6 p.m. Officers
and member bring covered dish.

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Auxiliary 7:30p.m. for
election of offtccrs at American

•••

Direct Shipment
· To The Orient

GALLIPOLIS - Tammy
Wynette Watson and Timothy
Shane Brumf1eld of Gallipolis
announce their engagement and
approaching marriage.
Watson is the daughter of
Shirley J. Watson of Gallipolis and
the late Virgil R. Watson. She is a
1989 graduate of Hannan Trace
High School and is employed at
Toddler Tech Day Care.
Brumfield is the son of Ivan and
Roxie Brumfield of Patriot He is a
· 1990 graduate of Hannan Trace
. High School and is employed at S
: and 1 Lumber Company at Thur. man.
: _ The wedding i_s set for 2:30
: p.m., Oct. 8 at Ebzabeth Chapel
. ·church. Music will begin at 2 p.m.
: A reception will follow in the
- church basement.

They have two daughters
Stephanie Kiser of Gallipolis and
Jamie, a senior in high school and
one grandson Justin Bryant Kiser.
Jim is an employee of Kyger
Creek Electrical Company in
Cheshire, and Vickie is employed
by Gallipolis Developmental Center of Gallipolis.

POMEROY - September is
National Dental Month and area
dentists have emphasized the need
for learning about proper hygiene.
Gum disease is caused by bacteria that attach to the tooth and root
surlaces. These bacteria organize to
form a film, called plaque. Because
plaque is sticky and is constantly
forming, it accumulates on teeth
and gums. If it is not removed
daily, it produces toxins or poisons
that irritate and inflame the gums.
In the early, stage of gum disease. known as gingivitis. toxins in
plaque irritate the gums making
them red, tender, swollen and likely to bleed easily. Eventually the
toxins destroy gum tissues, causing
them to separate from the tooth and
form pockets. The pockets then
hold more bacteria and detach even

CENTENARY- Montgomery
family reunion Raccoon Creek
County Park shelterhouse 6 10 a.m.
Bring covered dish .

•••

ROOTS

675·4018

• •

Gallia County community calendar

WILD
DRIED
GINSENG

(JO;)

"

25th anniversary celebrated

FOR

Watson-Brumfield

!

•

..

Proper hygiene emphasis
of Dental Health Month

CROWN CITY - Matthew
Henry will speak at Good Hope
United Baptist Church. 7 p.m.

TAMMY WATSON AND TIMOTHY BRUMFIELD

.

___ ,.

HELEN E.- The Helen E., docked behind the ice piers at Gallipolis, is shown in this 1915 photo, used with permission from the
Cincinnati Public Library. In 1918, the Helen E. made a memorable 293-mile trip without crew or passengers.

Dress-a-Doll
contest set
by area bank

POMEROY - A Dress-a-Doll
contest sponsored by the Farmers
Bank and Savings Co. of Pomeroy
will result in cash prizes for the
participants and costumed dolls for
disadvantaged children and senior
citizens this Christmas.
Today , the bank announced
plans for its Dress-A-Doll contest,
conducted many years ago and
being revived this year.
The dolls to be dressed are at the
bank and can be picked up at any
time.
Patterns are available at the
bank and at various fabric and craft
shops in the community, or those
who want to be creative can design
an original costume.
The dolls are to be dressed and
brought back to the bank on or
before Nov. 18 for display in the
lobby.
They will be judged in the categories of prettiest, bridal, character,
and 1904 style dress and the winner
in each category will be awarded a
prize of a $100 savings bond.
Those four winners will then compete for the grand prize of a $200
savings bond.
After the judging takes place
and the prizes are awarded, the
dolls will then be donated to area
infirmaries and children's homes in
time for Christmas giving, according to bank officials.

·.

•

GALLIPOLIS - Bell Chapel
Church, New Vision Singers and
Rev. Truman Johnson 7 p.m.

•••

RIO GRANDE - Annual Welsh
gymanfa 10 a.m. with dinner at
noon.

•••

Monday, SepL 26

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis

further.
In this stage, known as periodontitis there can be irreversible
damage, because bone and soft tissue that support the teeth may be
destroyed. The teeth may become
loose, fall out, or need to be
removed by a dentist.
Although gum disease occurs
more frequently with advancing
age, even children can be affected.
For example, gingivitis is common
during the teen years because of the
hormonal changes that occur during puberty. Likewise, hormonal
changes during pregnancy cause 30
to 60 percent of pregnant women to
expenence red, tender or bleeding
gums. If gum disease has been present in either of these groups before
hormonal changes the symptoms
may become even more severe or
harder to control.
If you notice any of the following warning signs, contact a dentist
immediately:
• gums that bleed during tooth
brushing and flossing;
• red, swollen or tender gums;
• gums that have pulled away
from the teeth;
• persistent bad breath;
• pus between the teeth and
gums;
• loose or separating teeth;
• a change in the way your teeth
fit together when you bite; and
• a change in the fit of partial
dentures.
Except in rare cases, gum disease can be prevented by daily
brushing, cleaning between teeth
with floss or interdental cleaners,
and by regularly visiting your dentist for a professional cleaning.

•

DINETTE
SET
With drop-leal and
2 high back, extra

heavy solid beechwood chairs.
Sugg. Relllll S260

Woocf{anc£ Centers, Inc.
ONE Of Tllf MOST COMPAfHENSIVE &amp; PRlFESSONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES N SOOTHEASTERN OHKl
Woodland Conlon Ia fundod In po~ by lho Clollla-JocboM!otgo Boon! ol

PLANNED PIREN,.BOOD
or SOU,.BEIS,. OliO
Confidential Family Planning Services
for females lc males.
-Medical Exams
•Pap Tests
•Pregnancy tests 6 counseling
•Tests 6 treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests 6 counseling
-Methods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
Norplant·lmplant
DapoProvera-ln)ectlon
Birth control pill
Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance.
414 SECOND STREET
501 S. THIRD STREET
GALLIPOUS
MIDDLEPORT
~168
812-5t12

3 PC.

Alcohol, Drug Addlotloft ond llonlol Hoofth-

PRIVATE
INSURANCE
PLANS PROCESSED
-2-4-Ht. Crisis flesldenllol

-·

-24 Hr. Emorgoncy Seovlcoo
-Mantaga&amp;FIIIIIIy
co~

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY
PROTECTED

~ Adololl*ll
COtrrwolng &amp; T18111&gt;Y
oChlldnln't R - I a l

llndlorOUI·PIIIIoniT1811menl

•VIclm'o - " - " "

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

.Polh-Sentk:o tor iho Homolosl
of'lydlolllerapy
of,..,toyoos Assl. ~
oGallaMolgoHaacllllan
oeu.~~o._..,.

-6!1- - ·
ofvaluallon &amp; TOIItlg
oAdul Cornmunly Tratrq
~tbUlglot
ErnoOonolly~

IAED!CAREoMEDICAIOoTITLE XX•SLIOING FEE SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE OF OHIQoEVENING APPTS. AVAILABLE

JACKSON

' 24 HOUR

200 MAIN ST.

"ftiSIS LINE

GALLIPOLIS
3086 STATE RT. 160

OIITSIOE OF
GALUPOUS CAWNG AREA
TOU FREE DIAL 1
AND THEN

MULBERRY HEIGHTS

446-5500

800-252-5554

992-2192

286·5075

\In

LOCALCRISISLINE

446-5554

TOO AVAILABLE
24 HOURS

POMEROY

�•
Page-B~unday

Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

September 25, 1994

t

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

POME ROY - Sixty-one units
of blood were co llected when the
Red Cross Bloodmobi le came to
the Senior Citizens·Center in Meigs
County last Wednesday.
Multipl e gallon donors were
Donna Davidson, 11 gallons; Donald A. May, seven gallons; Susan
E. Piggou and Gloria Kloes , five
ga llons each; Bryan Sha nk and
Marta Blackwood , four ga ll ons
eac h; Oris Smith , three ga ll ons,
Grace E. Holter and James Witherell , one gallon each.
Assisting at the site with clerical
and other work were Flore nce
Ric hards, Jack Sordcn, Beulah
Ward, Helen Bodimer, Lula Hampton , Dorothy Long, Ted Hatfield,
Betty Spencer, and Ed Co7.art. The

Only One Bonus in Bright, Airy Home
By PAT LVKAS
AI' Ncwsfcaturl'!l

Traditional styling is not a common occurrence in many walkout
models. but this hous e is an
exception. It is traditi onal on th e
out si de, but ha s I he wide open
( interior space favorrd by bu yers
of co ntemporary homes.
De sign F-14, by HomeS tyles
"So urce 1" Designers Network,
enjoy s an airy int erior . In side,
th e til ed ent ry of this 2.6:tAsq uan- foot home unfolds gracefully into the formal dining room
The dining room has more
de tailing than most in other
house plan s. It offers a 15- fout
vau lt ed ce iling and distingui shed
colu mns. A window wall extends
hig h above for a dramatic and
11aturally lit in terio r.
A convenient den or extra bedroom is on the other side of the
entry , backing up to the master
suite.
St raight ahead of th e entry is
the great room, which continues
the soaring ceiling of the dwwg
room, with its own Hi-foot vaulted ce iling. A love ly fireplace is
see-through, meaning it is shared
by th e kitchen and breakfast
nook .
Windows are another feature,
thi s time again as a wall of glass.
Picturesque views are a highlight
as well as access to a large back
deck through sliding glass doors.
A half wall is open to th e skylighted stairway and a planter
below.
Th e 'adjacent kitchen packages
a walk-in pantry, a planning desk
and a snack bar. Natural light
through ample windows brightens the breakfast nook, which is
acce nted by an octagonal tray
ceiling.
Convenient to the kitchen is a
utility room with space enough
for a washer, dryer and closet.
There is also access to th e

canteen wa s served by Preceptor

Beta Beta Chapter of ·Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
Donors by community were as
fo llows:
POMEROY - Harold Norton ,
Janet Peavley, Debra Mora , Janet
Ambrose, Donald May, Stacey
Shank, David M. King, Rebecca
Newell, Bryan Shank, Cyndi D.
King, Patricia Barton, Janet R. Liflle, Mary L Voss, James Witherell ,
M. D., Gera ld Rought, Eunic e
Jones, Mary Spencer, Paul Marr,
Sister Fedelis Bell, Howard Logan,
Jeffrey Wamer, Diana Coates, Dale
Thoene, Bracy !(orn and Gloria
K.loes.
RACINE - Charles Bus h,
Marie Bush, Freddie Simmons,
Mary Curtis, Gract Holter. Harry
(Continued on 88)

D

Above Grou-.Round . . . Ground-oval
12' Aoun&lt;l .................. $26.95 12'X24' C'N II ............. .$48.85
115: Aound ......... ......... $38.95 15~ Ovol .............. .$66.95
8 Round .................. $45.85 1111A33 0.11 ..............$82.115
21' Aound ......... ......... $58.85
24' Aoun&lt;l .................. $69.95
28'Aouod ......... ......... $ii3.D5

1-80D-552-1990

POOL CLOSING

Deck

r----------------------l
I
I
I
$6995
I
I
I

_..

1 POOl ClOSING ON DOVE GROUND
AND INGROUND

-

WHh This Coupon

L----------------------~

(For a more detailed, scaled plan
of this house, including guides to
estimating costs and fmancing,
send $4 to House of the Week,
P.O. Box 1562, New York , NY
10116-1.562. Be sure to include
the number of the plan.)

"ow Yoa Can Travel With
Yoar Favorite "LF Team
EVERY WEEK!
22X21

.,..._

/

13.18
..,_

COMPLETE SATELLITE SYSTEMS
95
AS LOW AS

$39

A MONTH

lacludes Complete NFL Package

LARRY'S
SATELLITE SALES

BASEMENT

in
nook as well as the
room, and has a convenient log box. A wet bar cull! down on
kitchen traffic.

Mark A. Smith
Navy Pe tty Officer Second
Class Mark A. Smith recently completed a six-month deployment in
the Persian Gulf, Western Pacific
and Indian Ocean on the guided
missile cruiser USS Arkansas.
- Smith, son of David E. Smith of
New Marshfield, graduated in 1986
from Alexander Local High
School.

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

12 PK. 12 OZ. CANS

II

EVERY AMENnY makes the great room a standout - ample window space, outdoor access, a wet bar and a fireplace that happens
to be shared by the breakfast nook. Unfinished space on the lower
level Is still divided enough to give the owner a stBrting place. A
bonus area leads to the patio.
·-

To Order Study Plan

149
Chuck Roasts ...........L!.

(
Hams •••••••••••••••••••• ~·•• 79
(
Sausage •••••••••••••••••••• 79
$
39
(
Leg Quarters •••••••••••• 49 Bologna ••••••••~........... 1
SMITHFIELD SMOKED PICNIC

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 Sell ft. Ranch Homes. 24 of the most popular tram this
feature ; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week. The Sunday-Times Sentinel. P 0 . Box 1562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.

ECKRICH

PORK BUn

$

OSCAR MAYER

$1 19

•
W1eners
•••••••••••••••••••LB~

CORN KING SMOKED

Sausage •••••••••••••L!~ ••••

$ 129

21 0~ .

c
RED OR WHITE SEEDLESS

Grapes •••••••••••••~•••;:~••
VALLEY BELL

3. Character
4. 1904 style dress

2. Bridal

~~~

The winner from each category will be awarded a prize of $100.00 Savings Bond.
AND All four winners of this contest will be entered in our

Grand Prize fA»ntest:
The winner will receive a $200.00 Saving Bondi!

State (ZIP)
-

7BANKYOU
• After Much Thought and
Deliberation I Will Give Up My
Trolley Station Crafts Business At
l 0 Diamond Street, Middleport,
Ohio on Sept. 30, 1994.
I wuh to express my sincere appreciation
to all my many crafters and devoted
culforners. The friends I have made while
doing busine11 as Trolley Station Gifts will
always be special to me.
Sincerely,
Patty Pickens

18 LB ..

BUSINESS ROUTE 7 &amp; HOBSON ROAD
MIDDLEPORT
992-6173

I. Prettiest

City

DOG FOOD

FILLING

Enclosed Is $4 lor plan No.

Street

SUNSHINE
PREM. CHEESE

THANK YOU
CHERRY PIE

Winners wll be chosen from the
foDowing four categories:

Enclosed Is $4.95 each tor the booklet(s)

c

I# roll or 10 oz. links

Stop by the Pomeroy Office of he Farmers Ban~
and pick up YOUR doD for this exciting Contestl

Clip this order and return label

6.5 OZ.

MOUNTAINEER BRAND ·

Announcing the
Dress-A-Doll Contest
~t The Farmers Bank!!

I

Name

$

U.S.D.A CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

STAR KIST
TUNA

139
Steaks or Roast ......~.

Bonue

Unltnlllled

In the service

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

LB.

,...., :

111&lt;12

TUPPERS PLAINS - Amy Jo
Murphy, daughter of Boh and Sina
Murphy of Tuppers Plains, has
been hired as an activities therapist
at Eastgatc Healtll Care and Rehabilitation Center in Cincinnati.
Murphy, a 1990 gra duate of
Eas tern High School~ recently
graduated from Kent State Universi ty with a bachelor's degree in
therapeutic recreation.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SEPT. 25 THRU OCT. 1, 1994.

CHICKEN

Gerege

Br4

Area woman joins
staff as therapist

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

11-Ground • Rectangle

(..,. . lily. M watwhiiM1)
t2'l2-4' ....................... $49.85
t6'lc24'
$8() 115
16'lc32' :::::::: ::::::::: ::::$75:115
1S'lc38' ....................... $81 .115
18'lc3&amp;' ....................... $82.D5
11'1140' ...................... .$1l8.115
20'1140' ..................... $110.95
20'x45' ..................... $t20.95
2S'x45' ..................... $147 .VS
30'x50' ..................... $1116 .115

Plllo

GALLIPOLIS - J enni e M.
Sui ter Waugh, daughter of the late
0. Kei th Su1ter and Lola Mae SUiter, who re sides at 661 Second
Ave., Gallipoli s, will retire Tuesday as director of nursing at Jack-.
so n Genera l Ho spital , Ripley ,
W.Va.
A 1949 grad uate of Gallia
Academy High School and a graduate of the Holzer Hospital School
of Nursing, Mrs. Waugh served on ·
the Holze r fa cul ty for 12 years
before she and her husband Jack
left Gallipolis.
Mrs. Waugh has served Jackson
General Hospital the past 21 years.
In 199 2, Mr s. Waugh was
named Wes t Virginia Counseling
Association's "Administrator of the
Year" and has been listed io
"Who 's Who in American Nursmg" each year since 19&amp;6.
Mrs. Waugh is active in numerous community activities in Jackson County .

8 AM-10 PM

These People Are closing Pools for $69.95.
Yes Indeed, This Even Includes the Chemicals.
Do You Need A Winter Cover?
lnvestigale These Prices:

TillS lRADIDONAL exterior isn't commonly found on walkout models, homes with a "daylight basement." The column at' the front entry heightens the home's distinguished air, and symmetry of the
roofline pruen!JIIions.

esign F-14 has a great room, dining room, kitchen, breakfast
nook, three beJrooms, a den or bedroom and an entry, totaling 2,638 square feel of habitable space. There is a half bath,
utility room, garage and unfinished space on the lower level. The overall dimensions of 60' by 51' include the garage.

24 pk. 12 oz. cans

Monday thru Sunday

FOUND AT THE POOL PEOPLE IN POMEROY, OHIO

garage. A half bath is just around
the corner.
The master suite showcases a
tray ceiling, a huge walk-in closet
and plenty of windows. The private bath encompasses a spa tub,
a separate shower and a dualsink vanity.
The lower level of this walkout
features not only two bedrooms
and a bath but also plenty of
bonus space and additional unfinished areas as separate rooms. A
patio is just outside.

R.C. COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE HOURS

MAJOR COVER UP

MAIN FLOOR

Gallipolis native
to retire Tuesday

Daily Special In Our Bakery
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3/$1.00 plain

Bloodmobile collects 61 units

All Dolls are due back for display at The Bank on or before November 18th, 1994.
· Patterns are available at the Bank, and Various Fabric and Craft Shops in the
Community. Or, you may design your own clothing to create an

original work of art!
After Judging takes place and prizes are awarded, the Dolls will be donated to the
area infirmaries and Children's Homes in time for Christmas!
Stop in arid see us for further Details!

Your

Bank
For
Life

Member FDIC

TUPPERS PlAINS &amp; POMEROY, OHIO
5667·3161

GRADE AMEDIUM

992·2136

Eggs •••••••••••••••• :~; ••

2 $1

9
9
(
Charcoal ..........~;••••••••

KEMPS

$299

SWEET SUE CHICKEN OR

MORNING STAR FARM

99(

Scramblers
••••
~-.:~
......................
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Beef
Broth ••••••••••
~~:~
...............
-....
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COUPON

:

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NINE LIVES

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CAT FOOD

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II
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DOMINO

'

SUGAR
49

:: ::
:: ::

: 5/$1 : : $1
1
1

,5.5 OZ.

1

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'I

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:1 :
1
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COUPON

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OllerGoodSipt.251hNOct.t.lll94

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____

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••••••••

--------------------- 1

COUPON

CUDDLES

::: ULTRA DIAPERS

:: :

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OllerGoodSept251hruOct.t,11194 ,1
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l·ce Cream •••••••••!~·-~:....
2

340Z

$ 189

SHOPPERS VALU

1
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Bank

IY\ilk ••••••••••••••::~ ••

l9(

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND
COFFEE

GROUND

BEEF
10 LB .

COUPON
GOOD FOR
5 TRIPLE
COUPONS
MAX. 50¢
GOOD SUN. 9/25, MON.
9/26, TUES. 9/27, WED. ·
9/28, THURS. 9/29,
FRI. 9/30

�Entertainment
Romance to take the air on Sundays
September 25, 1994

Bereft of football,
CBS set to court
female viewers
By lYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - Hey, CBS,
you've !ost your NFL broadcast~•
Whaocha gonna do now?
Go to Love land, tha t's what.
Starting Sunday, it's a whole new
ballgamc as the network co urts
fema le viewe rs wi th romance
novel-based mov ies in the time slot
where football was king.
Trea cherous Beau ties, wi th
Emma Samms, Catherine Oxe nberg and Bruce Greenwood , is the
first of four 90-minute film s based
on Harlequin books. They' ll air at
4 p.m. EDT through Oct. 16.
For 38 years, CBS and the NFL
were Sunday aftern oon steadies.
Then young and dapper Fox Broadcasting Co. sauntered in, whispering swee t, $ 1.54 billi on enticements in the league's wi lling ear to
woo it away.
That left CBS with a program ming hole, and a decision: schedule

action ·adventurc films to raid the opening up daypans at tllis network
predom inantly male audience that m tlle last year, a Ia David Letterwatc hes footba ll . or cult ivate a ?,Ian" in late night, Warner said.
whole new learn of viewers.
And who knows what the caps
Be bold, the network decided.
are on anythmg nowadays? 1 don't
"We took a look at the available thmk anybody expec ted tllat Fox
audience out tllere, what's not been would put on football and outperprogra mm ed to, and we said, form CBS."
'We ll , women haven't bee n proAccording to Nielsen fi gures for
grammed to,"· said Steve Warner, the frrst two weeks of the season,
CBS senior vice president for pro- Fox posted a 13 percent audience
gram planning.
increase over CBS • ratings las t
Then, he says, came the crucial year. The numbers also show that
ques tion: "Are women no t there abo ut twice as many me n as
because they don' t want to watch , women watch the broadcasts.
or are women not there beca use
. To win the slighted fe male
they' re not being served?"
v• ewers, CBS turned toward its
CBS decided the odds are it's Harl equ in Boo ks film pr ojec t
the latter, justifyin g a bid to estab- already in development
lish entertainment programming on
But can the fan ta sy-drenched
Sundays - or, in ne twork par - affairs common to romance novels
lance, "build a daypart."
be efrec ti ve ly tra ns lated to the
Other networks have tri ed the smal l screen? lim Hensha w, excc ualternati ve approach to sportscasts, li ve producer of Treacherou.' Beausuc h as NB C's use of Dani elle t1 es for partners CBS and Alliance
Stee le mov ies to coun te r C BS Communications Corp., says they
baseball . But CBS ' task involves can -with care.
breaking in a whole new Sunday
"People have tried Harleq uin in
audience.
the past, and my opimon was they
Wamcr says there's evidence it didn' t work in that they were overwill work.
ly rom a nti c," Henshaw sa id .
" We' ve been very successful in . ' Th e y beca me fairv tal es an d

became unbelievable. ' '
"We tried to develop what for
want of a beller phrase, we c~lled
bel ievabl e fa ntasies," he sa id.
" What we've tried to do is create a
reJlistic story and then overwhelm
it with romance."
Treacherous Beauties is about a
wqman try ing to trac k down th e
man who ki lled her brother. In Broken Lullaby, tlle heroine encounters
a mystery whi le trac ing her gcnealogy to the tsars of Russia. Mel Harr is (thi rtyso me•hin g) and Ro b
Stewart star.
. There's no skimping on product10n costs , CBS promises; th e
moVIes cost the same as primetime
projects. F ilmin g was do ne in
Canada and Hungary.
About the cas tin g: " No
F~bi os , " He ns haw sa ys fl atly ,
re.emng to the well-muscled and
maned model wh o decora tes
romance novel covers.
Don 't exl'ect all cl iches to be
bamshed. Fa1thful romance readers
will be served as the action pauses
fo r sensua l scenes, such as in a
sauna or - honest, this is what the
producer said - a woman watching a man wash a horse.

Weekly music
chart leaders
Hy The Associated Press
Weekly charts for tlle nation's
bes t-selling recorded music as they
appear in next week's issue of Billboard magazi ne. Reprinted with
permiss ion . (Platinum signifies
more th an I million copies sold;
Gold signifies more than 500,000
copies sold.):
TOP SINGLES
Copyright 1994, Billboard Soundsc an In c.- Broadcast Data
Systems.
I. · T II Mak e Love to You. "
Boyz II Men (Motown)
2."Endless Love," Luther Vandross &amp; Mariah Carey (Columbia)
3. "AII I Wanna Do, " Sheryl
Crow(A&amp;M)
4."Stay (I Missed You)," Lisa
Loeb &amp; Nine Stories (RCA) (Gold)
5. "When Can I See You ,"
Babyface (Epic) (Gold)
6." Wild Night," John Mellencamp &amp; Me'Shell Ndegeocello
(Mercury)
7. " Stroke You Up," Changing
Faces (Spoiled Ronen-Big Beat)
(Gold)
8." At Your Best (You Are
Love)," Aaliyah (Biackground)
9. " Never Lie ." Immature
(MCA)
10. " T hi s D.J .," Warren G .
(Violator) (Gold)
TOP ALBUMS
Copyright 1994, BillboardSoundscan Inc.
l. "From th e Cradle," Eric
Clap ton (Duck)
2."11," Boyz II Men (Motown)
3. "Rhythm of Love," Anita
Baker (Elektra)
4." ' The Lion King ' Soundtrack," (Disney) (Platinum)
5. "Dookie," Green Day
(Reprise) (Platinum)
6." Smash," Offspring (Epi taph) (Platinum)
? ."'Forrest Gump ' Soundtrack, " (Epic)
8. "Tuesday Night Music
Club," Sheryl Crow (A&amp;M)
9. "Purple, " Stone Temple
Pilots (Atlantic) (Platinum)
10. "The Sign," Ace of Base
(Arista) (Platinum)
COUNTRY SINGLES
Copyright 1994 , BillboardBroadcast Data Systems
!."Third Rock from the Sun,"
Joe Diffie (Epic)
2."Down On the Farm," Tim
McGraw (Curb)
3."Who ' s That Man," Toby
Keith (Polydor)
4."Whatthe Cowgirls Do,"
Vince Gill (MCA)
5."What's In It For Me," John
Berry (Libeny)
6."Callin' Baton Rouge,"
.Garth Brooks (Liberty)
?."She Dreams," Mark Chesnutt (Decca)
8. "I Try to Think About Elvis,"
Patty Loveless (Epic)
9."XXX's and OOO ' s (An
American Girl)," Trisha Yearwood
(MCA)
10. "Hard to Say," Sawyer
Brown (Curb)

•

8y RUSTY MILLER
COLU MBUS, Ohi o (AP) - Edd ie George and
Jerman Jackson sandwiched touchdown run s around
a safety as 20th-ranked Ohio State scored 16 points
in a two- minute span of the first quarter on the way
to a 52-0 victory over Houston Saturday.
George finished with 105 yards on II carri es ~
hi s fourth straight game with more than 100 yards
rushing - while Jackson scored the first three touchdowns of hi s college career.
Houston was shut out for the second game in a
row for the fi rst time since 1965. The Cougars, who
averaged 54 points a game five years ago with Heisman Trophy winner Andre Ware at quarterback, have
scored 20 points in four losses this season while giving up 135 points.
They also re mai ned scoreless in the first three
quarters of their games this year.
It was the most lopsided shutout by Ohio State in
14 years, since a 63-0 victory over Northwestern in
1980.
Five different players scored for Ohio State (3-1),
which substituted freely beginnin g in the sec ond
quarter. Starting quarterback Bob Hoying and wide
receiver Joey Galloway - returning fr01.1 an NCAAmandated two-game suspension for accepting $200
from a fmancial adviser - did not play in the second
half.
Hoying completed nine of 13 passes for 136 yards
and two touchdowns with no interceptions. Galloway
had four catches for 44 yards.
The Buckeyes, a 38-point favorite coming in, had
one turnover and missed three field goals.
Ohio State amassed 373 yards in the first half
while piling up a 36-0 lead.
On the Buckeyes' second possession. Hoying
faked the play-action and passed deep to the end
zone where a diving Chris Sanders caught the 41 yard touchdown throw.
After Trace Craft missed a 30-yard field goal on
Houston' s best shot at scoring, the Bm keyes reeled
off those 16 quick points over a period of 2:06.
George gained 32 yards on the last six carries of
an 80-yard drive, scoring on a two-yare touchdown .
Three plays after a muffed kickoff return put the ball
at the Houston three, fullback Ryan Burton was tackled in the end zone for a safety by Ohio State's Matt
Bonhaus and Luke FickeU.
Then Jackson went untouched on a 10-yard run
for the touchdown to cap a 53-yard march just five
plays after the ensuing kickoff.
Jackson, a freshman from Ironton, added 14- and
three-yard touchdown runs in the second half. He fin ished with 54 yards on 15 carries. Another freshman ,
Pepe Pearson, chipped in with 65 yards on 15 carries.
On their final two possessions of the half, the
Buckeyes scored on Hoying's I !-yard pass to tight
end Rickey Dudley and Pepe Pearson concluded a
96-yard drive with a one -yard touchdown run.
Chuck Clements completed 14 of 29 passes for 92
yards with two interceptions for the Ccugars, while
Clay Helton - son of head coach Kim :~elton - hit
seven of nine passes for 51 yards.
Jermaine Williams led Houston with 75 yards on
15 carries, the most yards by a Cougar back in a
game this season.
No. S Penn State 55, Rutgers 27 - At State College, Pa., Ki-Jana Carter ran for three touchdowns
and Kerry Collins threw for two scores z·; No. 5 Penn
State continued to put up impressive oftcnsive numbers with a 55 -27 victory over Rutgers Saturday
afternoon.
Rutgers (2-2) gave Penn State (4-0) its toughest
challenge to date, pulling within one touchdown late
in the first half.
Penn State took advantage of a fumble and pass
interce ption midway through the first quarter to
string together three touchdowns in 19 seconds.
Jon Whitman put the Nittany Lions up 7-0 with
7:06 remaining in the first quarter in a three-yard run.
On the next play, Terry Killens caught a fumble in
midair by Rutgers receiver Reggie Funderburk, setting up Carter's 22-yard run through the heart of the
Rutgers defense.
Brian Miller intercepted a pass by Ray Lucas and
Carter scored again, this time breaking a tackle and

GALEN 1\ HD UR-RAZZAQ

Noted flutist performs
at RG on Wednesday
RIO GRANDE . Galen Abdur·
Raz zaq-,"the leader of Sa ud Live
Jazz, will be in performance in the
Fine and Performing Arts Center
on the University of Rio Grand e
campus 8 p.m., Sept. 28.
Galen is considered to be one of
the world's greatest flutist. A graduate of Rutgers University. New
York,, he recei ved a mas te r' s
degree in the arts, and is a former
student of the Bcrklee College of
Music, Boston. Galen has been per-

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cindy
Crawford is making her big-screen
debut in an action-adventure film
co-starring William Baldwin.
In Fair Game, the model and
TV personality will play an ambi tious lawyer targeted by high-tech
assassins. Baldwin is the detective
who protects her and learns that the
bad guys are watching their every
move, thanks to sophisticated com puter technology.
. Work on Fair Game will begin
m December, Warner Bros. said
Friday . It' s th e first full -length
effort for director Andrew Sipes,
producer of Lethal Weapon and 48
Hours, among other films .

PROMISES, PROMISES • Tbe national
touring company of Neil Simon comedy
"Promises, Promises" wiD appear Oct. 4 at tbe
University of Rio Grande. Tbe performance wiD
be 8 p.m. at tbe URG Fine and Performing Arts

Center. The musical, wbicb features the songs or
Burt Bacbaracb and Hal David, is the first of
five events being held this year in the Valley
Artist Series. Those needing more information
may call Connie McNerlin at 286-7353.

Rating the top 10 kids' TV shows
NEW YORK (AP) ~ The early
ratmgs are 10 on the networks'
hotte st Saturday morning chil dren ' s shows, and tlle Top 10 suggest the kids arr.,all right.
l. Mighty Morphin Power
Rangers (Fox) - OK. so it' s an
exception. The appeal of this toprated live-action show eludes most
adult s - especially if we've
shopped in vain for Power Ranger
action figures.
Nonetheless, the Power Rangers
have been a TV hit (and a retailing
mega-hit) since their rollout as a
syndicated weekday strip.
Verdic~ Pass on this one.
2. Animaniacs (Fox) - Imprisoned m a stud1o water tower since
the '40s, these three red-nosed,
black-on-white zanies are Warner
brothers Yakko, Wakko and their
sister Dot. They periodically
escaJlC for some of Saturday's most
soph1sbcated s1Uiness.
This high-octane half-hour combines classic cartoon gags with the
h1p rrreverence of the '90s. Where
el se can a cartoon critter get
mashed by a toppling statue of
filmmaker Martin Scorsese? QueUe
homage!
V~rdi c t: A delight. Now, pay
anen!JOn!
3. X-Men (Fox) - Emotionally
complex mutant superheroes (who
actually mspued the Ninja Tur tles!), the X-Men survived their
transition from Marvel's popular
comic book mto the simpler world
of children' s television.
It's a teen-age wish-fulfillment
fantasy •. with emotionally immature
adults ~I.e ., teens) coping with relauonshlps and responsibilities while saving the world from nifty
explosions and evil, alien peril.
Verdict: "Evil mutants!
Duck!!!"
4. Batman &amp; Robin (Fox) -

donor), Donna Hawley , Donna
Davidson, Robert Taggert (first
time donor) Clarence Frank, and
Gloria Peavley.
MINERS VILLE - Kenneth
Wiggins.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Chad
Griffith.
SYRACUSE - Dianna Lawson.
RUILAND - Candy Tillis and
Marta Blackwood.
REEDSVILLE ~ Jonathan
Sanders and Fonda Thomas.

The Fox network brought the
moody, atmospheric Batman: The
Animated Series to TV last year as
a druly, afternoon strip. It was the
most distinctive, stylish cartoon on
TV.
Critics loved the series' well written, character-driven stories, its
somber-hued palette and the
expressionist cityscapes that
evoked tlle Batman comic's original style. Surprisingly, kids loved
II, too.
Verdict: The dark side of the
hero, still magnificent.
5. Ed!stravaganra (Fox) ~
Starring Eekl the Cat, one of Saturday morning's more abused 'loon
critters, who absorbs an horrific
amount of abuse from an arbitrarily
hostile umverse, yet never loses his
optimism, his sweet nature or his
bilateral emission lisp.
Verdict: The sweetest victim
since Mr. Bill.
6. The Tick (Fox) - Our title
character is a seven -foot, 400pound, V-shaped mass
manly
muscle, a crime-fighter in ale-blue
skm -t1ghts whose juttin jaw is
three times wider than his row.
What The Tick lacks i brain
he make s up for with st i 1:
arrow virtue, enthusiasm and, well,
enthus1a~m . H1s s•dekick is Arthur
a plump, timorous former accoun:
tant 10 a moth costume (voiced by
ex· Monkec Mickey Dolenz)
Verdict Superb.
·
7. Reboot (ABC) _ TV's first
wholly computer-animated series is
the ~ost original concept for kids'
TV srnce 1953's Winky Dink and
You let us crayon critical plot
devices onto a plastic sheet over
the TV screen.
"Reboot," set in the cyberspace

computer city of Mainframe, stars
Bob, a " guardian program" ; Dot
Matrix. a smart young businesswoman, and her kid brotller, Enzo,
·who idolizes Bob.
Verdict: To heck with the kids:
This one's a must-see for
grownups.
8. Bump in the Night (ABC) T~1s nonstop, stop-action animation is led by the fren zied Mr.
Bumpy, a lumpy, green moutll on
legs with eyesLalks but no head.
He ' s pure id, loves to eat dirty
sweat socks and is totally channin.:.
Verdict: Delightful. And he'd
eat Gumby ... ALIVE!
9. Where on Earth Is Carmen
Sandiego? (Fox) - The computer
game spinoff is a painless geography lesson, in whiCh teen sleuths
Zack and Ivy perennially pursue·
Carmen to foil her dastardly thefts
of world treasures.
Verdict: Tune in "Beakman's
World" on CBS.
10. Tales of the Crypt/ceeper
(ABC) - This is an animated
spinoff of HBO's live-action series
which was itself spun off E.c :.
o · s' gory, classic comic book
of the Os. The cartoon is a toneddown collection of mooility plays.
Verdict: Yawning graves? No,
just yawns.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
JOHN CANOY
IN

WAGONS EAST

PG-11

ONE EVENHG IHOW 7:30
ADIIISIION $2.00

'·

form ing, arrangin g, compos ing,
di recting an d instructing for over
25 years. He has perform ed and
rec orded with such re nowned
artists as Billy Tayl or, Houston
Preston and Melba Moore.
This event is sponsored by the
Student Programmin g Board and is
open to all students, staff and the
co mmunit y. An intermi ss io n is
bei ng hos ted hy multi -c ultural
membe rs and fri e nds of th e
CityKids Foundati on from New
York.

Tom Forrest

llan~~G~mp
1:00,9:)0 DAILY
IIA"l11UI SA'l' &amp; BUM
1:00 ll

w.. .-_

, -··
, ........

., ........ .,

7 ! 10,9!10 DAILY
MA71Ria&amp; SAT I S UR
1 11 ]110

liM CAHIY

'AASI
,_,_to_
lPG I
hl0 , 9 ! 10 DAILY
IU.!'IQU SA'!' •

"'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Name.
recognition hasn't exactly been a
problem for Charlie Sheen, but he
neverthele ss seemed reassured to
be getting a star on tlle Hollywood
Walk of Fame.
"Now that I'm famous, no one
has to think of me as a Vietnamese
hair product," Sheen joked Friday
at the dedica tion or his star, just six
blocks west of the star honoring his
father, Martin Sheen.
Dad was on hand, along with
brother Emilio Estevez and friend
Brian " Kato" Kaelin. best known
as O.J. Simpson's house guest.
The ceremony coincided with
the release of Sheen's new movie,
Terminal Velocity .
LONDON (AP) The
Dutchess of York and Prince
Andrew would get back together
tomorrow 1f the royal family
wasn't such a royal pain, her father
says.
"I believe Sarah does love
Andrew and he · d have her back
tomorrow," Maj. Ronald Ferguson
told the Daily Mail, which is serializing his book, The Galloping
Major, about his family's relationship with the royals.
The Conner Sarah Ferguson and
the prince separated in 1992.
"Sarah would love to go back to
Andrew," Ferguson said in today's
paper. " But she's concerned that
he isn't .strong enough to stand up
for her m the face of oppposition
from the people at the palace and
possibly from other members of the
family, though not the queen."
Fergie's dad says Andrew "has
never fallen out of love with her.

He's been very long suffering and
patient.''

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) That Tammy Wynette, she's T-0 U-G-H.
· The singer got out of tllc hospital Fnday after a bout with pneumoma, and hasn ' t given up plans to
smg at Opryland Tuesday.
" She has a fever arid a touch of
pneumonia, and her doctor ordered
her to continue resting ,"
spokeswoman Joann Burnside said.
Wynette was hospitalized in
Pittsburgh on Sept 12. She planned
to spend the weekend restin g at
home in Tennessee.
The star known for such hits as
"Stand By Your Man" and "D·lV-0 -R-C-E ," ha s a hi story of
health problems. She was on a respirator last year, when sh e wa s
fi ghting a seve re bile duct infection.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Greg
Morn s,. the techni cal wi za rd of
Mis.&lt;ion : Impossible, has been battling brain cancer.
The disease is in remiss ion but
Morris isn't doing everything he
can to regam h1s health, said his
son, Phil Morris.
"This is the thing about my dad
h~ 's very stubborn and very much
hts own person," he said on Thursday's broadcast of TV's American
Journal.
"My dad is a hard liver, a hard
charger."
Though it's frustrated some times, his son said, " I love him and
sopport him . He's really trying."

/tl[~
OHIO VALLEY
SYMPHONY ·

8Ufll

running over another defender during a 12-yard run.
A failed two-point conversion try left the score at
19-0.
l ucas then led the Scarlet Knights on three long
scoring drives, using a variety of roll-out passes and
misd irection plays to take advantage of the larger but
slower Penn State defense.
With a I :07 left in the half, Lucas threw a short
pass to Funderburk , who spun away from Cliff Dingle and ran 46 yards for a touchdow n to make th e
score 27-20.
Penn Sta te struck back qui ck ly as Co llin s engineered an eight-play, 80-yard drive cul mi nated by
Whitman ' s five-yard touchdown with five seconds
left in the half to make the 34-20.
Collins fi nished 14-of-16 for 328 yards and two
touchdowns. Carter ran for 122 yards on 15 carries.
One play after Chris Mazyck blocked a Rutgers
field goal attempt, Freddie Scott caught a pass fro m
Collins and outran two defenders fo r an 82-ya rd
score th at made it 41 -20.
Penn State's last tw o scores ca me on Bri an
Milne's one-yard run and Co llin s' 15-yatd pass to
Bobby Engram.
No . 9 Notre Dame 39, Purdue 21 - At South
Bend, Ind., ninth -ranked Notre Dame didn't need
leadin g msher Lee Be~ton as Randy Kinder and Ray
Zellars each had career-best days , sparking the Iri sh
over Purdue 39.2 1 on Saturday.
With a groin injury sidclming Becton for m least
four weeks, Kinder ga ined a career·hi gh 122 yards in
the first half and finished with 143 and two touchdowns. Zellars had 156 yards on 14 carncs, includin g
a 62-yard touchdown run .
They led a ground game that acc umulated 428
yards on 54 carries, the most by the Irish since gaining 467 against Purdue two years ago.
The run by Zellars put Notre Dame (3- 1) ahead
32-7 late in the third quarter. Purdue (2-1) fell behind
39-7 in the final quarter before drivin g for two touchdown s in the final minutes by Corey Roge rs, on a
one-yard run and a five-yard pass reception.
No. 10 Auburn 38, E. Tennessee St. 0 - At
Auburn , Ala., Stephen Davis rushed for 120 yards
and two touchdowns and Fra nk Sanders caught a
career-high eight passes in the first hal f as No. 10
Auburn defeated Division 1-AA East Tennessee State
38-0 Saturday.
Unlike last week, when the Ti gers (4 -0) needed a
furiou s defen sive rally in the fourth quarter to beat
LSU. Auburn cru ised in ex tendin g the nati on' s
longest Division I winning streak to 15 games.
Despite the lopsided defeat, East Tennessee State
(3-1) didn't appear intimidated.
No. 16 Wisconsin 62, No. 25 Indiana 13 - At
Madison, Wis., Darrell Bevell rebounded from the
worst half of his life with a perfect first half Saturday, triggering No. 16 Wisconsin's 62-1 3 rout of No.
25 Indiana before a sellout of 77,745 at Camp Randall Stadium.
Bevell threw four first-half interceptions in a 5517loss at No.7 Colorado last week. On Saturday, he
completed all 13 of his first-half passes for 184 yards
and three touchdowns as the Badgers raced to a 4 I -0
lead.
Wisconsin (2-1) opened defense of its Big Ten cochampionship by scoring on its first seven possessions and forcing punts the first 10 times the
Hoosiers had the ball.
Bevell's frrst eight passes went to eight receivers,
including a three-yard touchdown toss to tight end
Michael Roan and a 38-yarder to redshirt freshman
wideout Tony Simmons in the frrst quarter.
Bevel!, who finished 13-of-I 7 with no interceptions, also hit Roan wide open in the end zone from
five yards out with 3:241eft in the frrst half for a 41-0
lead.
The 41 first-half points marked the biggest half in
Wisconsin's 103-year history.
Wisconsin tailback Terrell Fletcher, who rushed
for 146 yards and two touchdowns 01 · 10 carries,
broke free for a 56-yand touchdown run on the ftrst
play of the second period for a 27-0 advantage.
Fletcher followed an enormous block by left tackle Mike Verstegen and broke an ankle tackle by
linebacker Alfonzo Thurman for the score.

After Langham tells of dealings with agent,

Ttekets still available

By PAUL NEWBERRY
MONTGOMERY, Ala (AP) Four of Clyde Goode's sons have
played football at Alabama. His
nephew was an all-America comerback for the Crimson Tide.
It pained Goode to tell NCAA
investigators that his favorite
school may have broken the rules.
"Yes it does," said Goode,
patriarch of the frrst family of football in Town Creek, a northwest
Alabama hamlet that has funneled a

String Classes begin Sep1.20 '
Mont• &amp; Dorothy lbeldno
Altll - 4 2 8 2nd. Avo. Cllltpob, 011

Call 446·ARJS

HAVE A BIRTHDAY
'

ON SKATES!

number of players to the Tide.
" But all you can do is tell what you
know and be truthful about it.
"If I did it any other way , I
wouldn' t be setting a good example
for my kids."
Goode said he instructed his
nephew, Antonio Langham, to tell
Alabama coach Gene Stallings
about Langham's dealings with a
spons agent just hours after the
Tide won the national championship at the 1993 Sugar Bowl.

Major college football scores

SATURDAYS
ONLY

Yale47, Holy Cross 22

East

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SKATESYILLE, USA
211 UPPER RIVER RD.

4~,;'' ·-···
•,';~

)

.. ~

......
IT MIGHT NOT BE a triple axel like the ones
seen at the Winter Olympics in lillehammer, but
Ohio State's Jermon Jackson (far right) does his
best imitation under the circumstances with his

'

1.;

leap-and-turn move into the end zone in the first
quarter of Saturday' s game against 'he Houston
Cougars in Columbus, Ohio, where t •e lluckeyes
won 52-0. (AP)

In other Ohio college football,

Michigan State hammers
Miami ~Redskins 45-10
Between those sc ore s, Miami is hed with 130 ya rd s in 2S
EAST LANSING . Mich. (AP)
- Tony Banks threw touchdown mounted its best drive, but it took attempts.
an offside s penalty on Michigan
pa~ses of 10 and 38 yards as Michi The game matched the tw o
gan State pounded Miami of Ohio State and a roughing the punter call highest-scoring team s in the con45 -10 Saturday to claim its first on Aaron Jackson to keep it going.
ference, but was more of a defenvictory.
Cent. Michigan 45
siv e battle than anticipated. Grand
Seven Spartans scored KentO
VaH ey had bee n a ve raging 39
including cornerback Brian Echol s
At Mount Pleasant, Mich. Ccn· pomts and Ashl and 24 points a
who returned a blocked punt 25 tral Michigan's Brian Pruitt ~shed game.
yards for a touchdown - as Michi- for I 19 yards and Eric John so n
Cumberla nd 27
gan State pushed its record to 1-2.
scored twice as the Chippewas beat
Mount St. Joseph 8
Miami of Ohio (0-3 -1) held the Kent 45-0 Saturday.
At Cmcmnati , Ahmad Brodnax
Spartans, of the Big Ten, to only . Central Michigan (3· 1 and 2-0 ra n 99 yard s on a quarterback
three points in the first period , a m the Mid-American Conference) scramble to brea k open the gam e
37-yard field goal from Chri s dommated throughout. gaining 390 and lead Cumberland to a 27-8 vicGardner.
yards total offense to 158 for Kent tory Saturday afte rnoon ov e r
However, that was as good as it (l -2and 1-1 in the MAC).
Mount St. Joseph .
.
got for the Redslcins, of the Mid Cumberland
(3
-0)
went
up
17
·0
The game matched the confer·
American Conference.
ence's two leading rushers. Pruiu, when Brodna x. dropped bac k to
Michigan State racked up 28 wno had averaged 174.3 yard s a pass in hi s own Chd zone, avoided
points in the second quarter as it game, gamed 100 for the third suc- the rush and ran the length of the
rolled to a 31-7 halftime lead. cessive game. Kent's Astron What- f1cld w1th 1:54 left in the half.
Banks, a junior college transfer ley gained 85 after averaging 136.
Cumberland co ntrolled the
starting his third game as a Spartan,
Central Michigan led 10-0 after gam e by rushing for 277 yard s.
got both his touchdown passes in the first quarter and took control James Ganzy had 64 yards on II
that period.
with three second-quarter touch - carncs, mcluding a three-yard run
First, he hit a diving Mill Cole - downs.
for Cum berland' s first touchdown .
man on th e 10-yarder to thwart
Mount St. Joseph (1 ·3) was led
Central Michigan held Kent to
tight Miami coverage. On the next ei ght first downs - one of those by T.J . Hilven, who completed 16Spartan possess ion , a scrambling cuming on a penalty - and forced of-30 for 180 yard s and ran eight
Banks found a wide-open Nigea the Golden Flash es to punt I 0 yards for a touchdown.
Carter for the 38-yard touchdown times.
Geneva 33, Urbana 7
pass play. The closest Redskin was
At Urbana, Ohio, Willie Murray
Earnest Perry, who was a good 10
·Grand Valley St. 17
ru shed for 124 yard s and two
yards away from Carter as trotted
Ashland 7
touchdowns as Geneva lead to take
the final few yards into the end
At Ashland, Ohio, Darnell Jami - a 33-7 VIctory over Urbana Saturzone.
son gained 102 yards in 27 carries day.
and scored twice as Grand Valley
Murray scored ~n runs covering
State defeated Ashland 17-7 Satur10- and 2-yards 10 the opening
quarter as Geneva (2-2, 2-0 in the
day.
Jamison scored on runs of I and M1d-States Football Association)
25 yards and Will Sanders kicked a opened a 21-point first quarter lead.
34-yard field goal for. th e Lakcrs
R1ck McClellan added a touch(3 -1 overall , 3-0 in the Midwest dow~ pas s to Jeff Beltz in the
opemng quarter.
In:ercollegiate Conference) .
Tuscaloosa after the Tide held a
Urbana (2-2, 0-1) got its only
Keith
Weaver
ran
eight
yards
·
light workout before Saturday's
score
m the fourth quarter on a
fc:
a
touchdown
for
the
Eagles
(1-2
game against Tulane.
touchdown
run by Ron Mast.
overall and conference) and fin The Atlanta newspaper also
reported Friday that Langham told
Stallings of his dealings with the
agent. Langham , who now plays
for the NFL 's Cleveland Browns,
declined comment Friday.
!he 1994 high scbool football season will enttt its fifth week in
There was a sense that Alabama
Oh1o
and for some West Virginia teams, its sixth.
has escaped the investigation with·
Gallia
A~emy's Blue Devils, who put their H)-game winning
out serious damage to its reputastreak
on
the
lme Saturday night apinst WarTen Local in a battle of
tion, which has been tarnished only
unbeaten wonders, will return home this week to face one of the
by a public reprimand two decades
Southeas~ Ohio Ath_letic league's two winless clubs.
ago. Indeed, the Tide seems
Eas_tem s. Eagles will f~ their fmal out-of-state opponent this
assured of escaping the most dam·
week: m thelt quest to claim a clean sweep against West v:·g· ·
aging sanctions: a ban on television
•ma
entn.es. R'
. 1ver Vall
. ey 's Raide~ whose win over Athens Fridayu night
and postseason play and a loss of
was. !herr. flfSt m a homecommg game after five setbaclcs in such
Southeastern Conference revenues
aff~, w!D head to the Fayette County plains to do business with
for one year.
the Miami Trace Panthers.
Under NCAA bylaws, Alabama
The Meil!s Marauders, who picked up their seoond win of the
is subject to two years probation, a
y~
by bea~ng Wahama's White Falcons, will seek to breathe "the
reduction of scholarships and
atr
up
~ere (a.k.a. the territory above the .500 mark) in their road
expense-paid recruiting visits by
battle
w1th
Ale~der.
prospects, and a ban on off-campus
Southern's
Tornadoes, having celebrated their first victory of the
recruiting by coaches.
season
over
the
still-winless Hannan Wildcats (they will play at
Loss of TV games was not a
Hundred
this
week)
Friday night, will play the White Falcons who
possible penalty listed by the
span.
~n
County's
~ record so far and could be dang~us.
NCAA. And bowl trips could be
con.s1denng
tha~
they
w1~l
go on holiday next week. Speaking of
off-limits only if the NCAA finds
hol!d3y~,
the
y.om~ess
Pomt
Pleasant Big Blaclcs will return from
''lack of institutional control."
thetrs
with
their
third
home
game
of the year.
Enforcement director David
Here
is
a
glimpse
at
who
will
do
battle with whom this week.
Berst said in the inquiry letter,
"We did not uncover systematic
Frklay
.
Satunlay
abuses.''
Marieua
at
Gallipolis
R1vcr Valley at Miami Trace
Asked whether he was worried
Win Co1111ty (W.Va.) at Eastern
about his job security in light of the
Meigs at Alexander
NCAA charges, Stallings said, "I
Wahama at Southern
think everybody is always conHurricane at Point Pleasant
cerned about that. I'm going to do
the best I can. I'm concerned about
O&amp;lla: kk611:1ipu.
my job every week."
Hannan at HUlldred

Alabama target of NCAA investigation

Saturday, Sept. 24, 8 P.M.

2·4 P.M.

44MI2I

September 25, 1994

No. 20 Ohio State
pounds Houston 52-0

People in the news

Bloodmobile collects ...
(Continued from 86)
Holter, Patsy Cornell, Kenny
Hawk, Michael Winebrenner, and
Louise Frank.
LONG BOTTOM - Henry
Bohr, Susan Pigott, Laura Hawley,
Trennia Harris, and Oris Smith.
GALLIPOLIS - John CorneD.
. MASON, W. Va. - Brian
Johnson.
LANGSVILLE- Alva Clark
8nd Ellis Myers.
MIDDLEPORT - Patricia
Weaver, Mary Compston, Chad
Duncan, Thomas Tobin (first time

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B 8

Soutb
Boston College 21, Pittsburgh 9
Appalachian St 56, Citadel 14
Boston U. 30, Villanova IS
Cent Florida 59, W. Kentucky
Brown 32, Rhode Island 29
45
Bucknell 42, Harvard 23
DaytOn 32, Georgetown, Ky. 29
Buffalo 36, Cheyney 10
Emory &amp; Henry 34, Davidson 7
C.W. Post 42, Cent. Comecticlit
Georgia 17' Mississippi 14
SL 14
Jacksonville St 24, N. Carolina
Canisius 28, Siena 7
A&amp;T17
Comelll3, Fordham 6
Maryland 31, Wake Forest 7
Delaware 58, West Olester 55
Mississippi St 24, Temessee 21
Hofsua 1J, Lafayeuc 6
Tennessee
Tech 56, Morehead
lona 31, Georgetown, D.C. 28
St. 14
Lehigh 28, Columbia 28, tie
Towson St. 51, Charleston
Massachusetts 20, Maine 14
SouthemO
New
Hampshire
20,
William &amp; Mary 45, VMI 7
Connecticut 19
Penn 13, Darunouth II
Midwest
Penn St 55, Rutgers 27
21,
OIDO 14
Ball
St.
Princeton 29, Colgate 3
Cent.
Michigan
45, Kent 0
Richmond 23, Nonheastem 11
Michigan
St.
45,
Miami (Ohio)
Robert Morris 28, Gannon 0
St.
Francis,
Pa.
45, 10
OIDO ST. 52, Houston 0
Bethany,W.Va. 20
Valparaiso 45, Kalamazoo 10
Temple 23, Anny 20
Wisconsin 62, Indiana 13
Wagner 30, Marist.S

"I told him to call his coach and
tell him what he had done," Goode
said "He said he did."
Langham was allowed to play
the frrst II games for Alabama last
season before being declared ineligible for the Southeastern
Conference championship game
and the Gator Bowl.
The tardiness in addressing
Langham's eligibility was one of
two potentially major violations
cited Thursday by the NCAA,
which ruled in the case nearly two
years after another Conner player,
Gene Jellcs, accused the Crimson
Tide of wrongdoing.
Most of Jelks' allegations were
dismissed by the NCAA, which
said they dido 't fall within the
statute of limitations or failed to
meet the standard for reliability.
However, a Birmingham sports
agent who used to be an Alabama
booster was accused of violating
NCAA rules when .he arranged
$10,000 in loans for Jelks in
January 1990 shortly after he
played his last game.
Alabama, which has won six
national championships and is
!lllked 11th in the country this sea·
son, could be facing probation for
the fll'SI time.
Stallings said he was never told
by Langham that he had been dealing with an agent and put the matter aside when the player said he
wanted to return for his senior year.
Stallings refused to discuss the
matter further when questioned
Friday by The Associated Press as
he headed off the practice field in

This week's gridiron action

I

•

\

.\

�•
I

Pomeroy

Page-C2-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

September 25, 1994

Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

At the Bulldogs' homecoming game,

River Valley edges Athens 17-14 in first SEOAL bout
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
THE PLAINS - The Athens
Bulldogs earned the respect of the
River Valley Raiders in Friday
night's Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League gndiron encounter at Ruucr
F1eld.
However, the Bulldogs didn't
earn the win they so badly wanted.
Why?

Don Wamsley's 20-yard field
goal in the final !hree seconds gave
the Raiders a 17-14 win in the
Bulldogs' homecoming contest.
"Thousands of things were going
throu~h my mind," said Wamsley of
the f~rst f•eld -goal attempt in the
club' s history. "It could have gone
Cilher way," he said of the boot,
which was the first for a Jac,k
James-coached team m the Iauer s

15 seasons as a head coach.
For a while, it seemed that the
Raiders would continue playing the
"this-is -what-we're-running-youtry-and-stop-this" brand of football
th~t characterized the first quarter.
MIXed in with runs by semors Abe
Haislop and Jason Jenkins and
sophomore
fullback
Steve
Hammond were chain -moving
passes by junior David Kelley, who

succeeded m ach1eving his first
interception-free game.
After Haislop beat two Bulldog
defenders for his first touchdown
reception of the year after his
touchdown run was called back
because of a penalty, Athens
charged up its crowd when junior
tailback/kick returner Kahieem
Ma&gt;:well put his speed and slipppcry
moves to usc m a 33-yard return on

In action involving other SEOAL teams,

r----------------------,

Area football standings

•

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{Continued from C-2)

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

Mauger's four -yard run to
paydin with four minutes left sealed
the victoly. Logan feU to 1-3 against
vrsy strong O(lllOIIellll,
Mauger had 162 yards on 19
carries and Valentine completlld 10
of 14 puses f«267 yard&amp;.
F« Logan, it wu Cosgrove with
21 carries f« 204 yards and Chad
.,Zimmerman completing 11 of 16

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On this week's agenda, River
Valley will head to Fayette County
to take on Miami Trace Saturday
night. Athens will seen to end its
nine-game trail of tears Friday at
home against Jackson.
(RAIDERS end on C-4)

th-tt

~ lHTIL' l h 111g Ulll'\ jll'lll'd

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Richard Fuller went in to snap and
Kelley went in to hold for
Wamsley 's clutch kick.

Gill

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(Continued from C-2)

HOT DEALS
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:
Determination a shared trait
at the Bulldogs' 29, Kelley fired a
"He (Spence) wasn't going to be
:
The refrain "Athens is a good 28-yard rope to Spence, who denied the catch," said James.
•. foolbaU team" was heard throughout stretched his 5-foot-5 frame to catch
Then Kelley threw an incomplete
; the River Valley camp after the it at the Athens one.
oass in the end zone before junior
: contest, and it wasn't because the
: Raiders were trying to be nice.
"They knew what we were
:
• running," said Haislop, who was an
: eyewitness to the Bulldogs'
: changing how the Raiders executed
~ the inside running au.ack that made
: significant gains in the first half,
• "We never stopped the middle
: linebacker all night," said James of
Winter's coming, and It's time to get a hot deal
: senior Dustin Wheatley, whose onon a Stllll. This aale Is tqr a limited time,
: the-field impersonation of the San
so hotfoot It In today.
: Diego Chargers' Junior Seau was at
: the center of the 4-3 defense that
STIHL CHAIN SAWS
• slowed down the Raiders ' running
: game in the third quarter.
Powerful, dependable and
:
Meauwhile, some of the Raiders'
easy
to use . A great value.
: mistakes - a low snap that Haislop
: had to eat for a safety during a punt
: early in the third quarter and
• Maxwell's sweep run past left tackle
.nHL~·
0
~ for a 64-yard touchdown - helped
: the Bulldogs get a 14-8 lead, their
~ first of the season.
llodel 023-$2H.95
:· Then with less than two minutes
· left in the third quarter, things
: began, albeit slowly, to turn against
: Athens.
The new BG 72 has a powerful
:· Shortly after Maxwell's
• touchdown run, the Raiders blocked
airstream for cleaning up
~ Nick Miller's exlnl-pPint kick. Then
quickly and quietly
~. the Bulldogs were whistled for a
Vacuum attachment
: personal foul in traffic on the
available.
: kiclcoff to the Raiders, despite the
' protests of Athens boss Mike
IG 72---$169.95
: McPhail.
• River Valley and Athens traded ·
.two possessions after that as the
fourth quarter began along the way
before River Valley got the ball
back on senior linebacker Ryan
Ashworth's recovery of Sparhawk's
errant pitch - Maxwell was the
intended target - at the Bulldogs'
29.
634 E. MAIN ST~ POMEROY, OH.
With the seven-minute mark
992·5500
·approaching, the Raiders gave the
:bail to Haislop, whose runs of 15,
I 0 and four yards got the baD in the
end zone for the game-tying
touchdown. Kelley's two-point
conversion pass to tailback Jason
Jenkins zipr:" by Jenlcins, and the
game remamed tied three seconds
past the six-minute mark.
"We executed better," said
Haislop of the Raiders' return to
their fiTSt-quarter mash-mouth brand
of football. "We decided we wanted
to win the game."
Athens, which wasn 'l faking its
plans when Maxwell found himself
alone in the backfield from that time
forward, almost killed its victory
chances a lot sooner than the final
three seconds when Sparhawk's
pass in the left flat was dropped by
Ashworth, who was probably
looking at the end zone. The fonner
center had a similar fate with one of
Sparhawk's earlier passes.
51 seconds to go 50 yards
In the final two minutes, Athens
started its next-to-last possession at
the Raiders' 41 after Wheatley
recovered a Raider fumble. After a
five-yard penalty, the Bulldogs
drove as far as the Raiders' 37 on
Sparhawk's nine-yard pass to junior
flanker Mike Grippa. But after an
incomplete pass and a stuffed run to
· the right side, the Raiders chased
Sparllawk and forced him to pitch
out to MaxweU, who was insumtly
18Ckled at the
The Raiders had 51 seconds left
Senior flanker Michael Spence's 21yard run on a reverse (Kelley-toJenkins-to-Spence) preceded two
in:omplete passes. With the Raiders

To Close-Out All
'94 MC Trucks!

Jimmy

"I wasn't surprised to
get the call. But when I
got there, thousands of
things were
going
through my mind. It
could have gone either
way." - River Valley
straight-ahead kicker
Don Wamsley on the
field goal that split the
uprights to beat Athens.

'
· ~~~--------------------------------------~L-----------~

l ·"/wf·iu/1_,- 1,-uinf't! U. \,- i.-; on duty tu
u 11 ·" 11·' _n wr (111 1io 11 ·" o 11 h,. u It h ,. u ,-e

CROSSBOWS

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seaso11 starts

SALE

•'
••
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••
••'

OFFICE HOURS _
Monday a1d Tllursclay, 8:30 a.m,•6:00 p;m,
li.uesdav, 8:30a.m•• 9:00p.m.
''
Wednesday &amp; Friday, 8:30 a.m.•12 Noo1
Saturday Appointments Avalla.le

10/22 STANDARD
.22 SEMI AUTO

~.

•

_

IV
IIIII
the
now

-•
•
•••
•
•
•

o

when Valentine found Melvin
Beverly on a 42-yard touchdown
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPlE,
strike and Mauger's tick made it
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
14-7 after one quarter.
Mauger, who ran for 162 yards,
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
scored four touchdowns, and kicked
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
two extra points, then scored the
POINT PLEASANT
next three touchdowns on a pair of
six yarders and a one-yard blast to
(304) 675•1675
lift the Cavs into a 34-7 lead.
I.:======;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~~=====;:::!J

•

.

ROBERT M HOLLEVI 1 M• D

po~ss than one minute ticked off

PROGRESS

quarterback Joe S~arhawk s sweep
run to the nghl s1de was stopped
short
.
Wllh two mmutes left before
halftime, J1m Llewellyn's recovery
of Ha1slop's fum~le gave hope to
the Bulldogs. However, Athens
moved the ball only two yards
, beforegivingitup.
(Seo RAIDERS on C-J)

0
0

Following four weeks of action
Logan closed the gap on a three- pass from Chad Zimmerman to
by teams from the Southeastern yard run by Quinton Evans and a Chad Rickells that reduced the
Ohio Athletic League the Jackson seven -yard dash by Cosgrove, spread to 34-21 early in the fourth
lronmen and R1ver Valley Rruders followed by a two point conversion
(See SEOAL on C-3)
have auracted the attention of
league fans, joining Gallipolis,
Warren, and Logan as possible title
contenders.
In Friday night contests River
Valley edged Athens 17-14, Jackson
- • SEOAL teams • destroyed Marietta 42-0, and
Chillicothe outscored Logan 40-21.
OnraU
League
Gallipolis played at Warren
fA.
I.l:aw.
~ f.E
fA. ~ l f
Local in a rare Saturday night
4-0 106
38
Jackson ...... ..... ........ ........... l-0 42
0
contest
River Valley ...................... I-0 17
3-1
87
113
14
Jackson 42, Marietta 0
85
IS
Gallipolis .......................... 0-0
3-0
0
0
At Jackson, the lronmen
Warren Local .................... 0-0
3-0
67
37
0
0
outrushed the Tigers 322-42 and
1-3
99
91
Logan ................................ 0-0
0
0
sacked the Marietta quarterbacks
21
124
Athens ...............................0-l
14
17
0-4
nine times in preserving their
Marietta .............................0-1
0
42
3
120
0-4
perfect 4-0 season record. Marietta
is now 0-4, and has now lost six
- • Non-league opponents • straight since a 3-0 victory over
I.l:aw.
~
L
lf
fA.
Athens in 1993.
Miami Trace .............................. ................ 3
0
!57
57
Tailback Joey Boggs led the
Fairland ..... .......................... ...................... J
0
147
60
lronmen with a four-touchdown
Portsmouth ................................................. 2
2
40
85
performance that included runs of
Meigs ......................................................... 2
2
99
90
one and four yards plus a pair of
Coal Grove .................................................0
4
56
105
punt returns from 59 and 37 yards.
Point Pleasant ............................................ 0
4
36
67
Other Jackson touchdowns included
a 44-yard pass from Geoff
Friday's WlW
~~slm
Matthews to Travis Hughes and a
River Valley 17, Athens 14
Friday:
Marietta
at
one-yard plunge by Chris Kin g.
Jackson 42, Marietta 0
Gallipolis; Jackson at Athens;
Ryan Hall kicked all six extra
Chillicothe 40, Logan 21
Warren Local at Logan;
Meigs 48, Wahama 14
points.
Portsmouth Notre Dame at Coal
Fairland 26, Coal Glbve 16
Grove; Fairland at Tolsia
The intense Jackson defense
Miami Trace 56, Dayton Col. (W.Va.); Meigs at Alexander;
throttled th~ Tigers, limiting them to
White 24
Hurricane at Point Pleasant;
just 42 yards rushing on 27 carries,
Portsmouth 14, Dayton Belmont Portsmouth at Ashland.
five first downs, and 35 passing
8
Saturday: River Valley at
yards on four of 13 attempts. Chris
Miami Trace
Knight topped Marietta with 28
Ihu olayed Saturday
yards and Chris King led the
Gallipolis at Warren Local
lronmen with 99 yards. The
lronmen completed three of four
Note: Point Pleasant is on
passes for 72 yards.
holiday.
Quarter totals
Marieu.a ................. 0 0 0 0 = 0
Jackson.................. ? 21 14 0 = 42
Cbillicothe40,Logaoll
At Chillicothe, the chains were
moving at a rapid rate as the two
teams combined for 848 total yards
OJI offense with the Cavaliers
IJ91ding a 453-395 advantage.
' The Cavaliers {3 - 1) struck
quickly on the first play from
scrimmage when Todd Valentine hit
John Snow with a 62- yard
touchdown pass and Matt Mauger
kicked the extra point. Eight
minutes later it was a tie game as
John Cosgrove raced 48 yards and
Josh Carpenter kicked for the extra

CONGRATULATED - River Valley
tailback Jason Jenkins
(30) is congratulated
by teammate Abe
Haislop (3'5) after
Jenkins' first-down
reception in the second
quarter of Friday
night's SEOAL battle
against Athens at The
Plains. The Raiders,
ahead 8-6 at the half,
shed a six-point deficit
in the final quarter to
win 17-14. The decision was the first in
River Valley history in
which the Raiders
came from behind
after halftime and
won. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

.

SMITH'S

Jackson remains undefeated;
Chillicothe beats Logan 40-21

SALE
NOW IN

the kickoff. But the fust quarter
ended With the Ra1ders ahead 8-0
and drivmg the ball.
,
B~t R1ver Valley couldn t do
anythmg. w1th •t. and Athen~ got the
ball on 1t~ o~n 38-yard hne. The
Bulldogs s•x -play dnve ended
when MaxweU went off nght guard
to score from four yards out.
However, the.two-poml conversiOn
run was m•crons short when

'

SEE
Mike

.9nc.

252 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, OH
Phone # 446-0842
Dwight
Stevers

Tom
Sprague

Pete
SomeroiUe

AI
Durst

Eric
Blackbur

Morris
Sheets

Cbiilicotbe...........14 12 8 6- 40

'.

••

•

�September 25, 1994

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Southern beats Hannan 14-6
to gain season's first victory

CHECKING THE DEFENSE - Mt·igs quarterback looks down the line of s.-rimmagc a.s he checks
out the White Falcons dt&gt;f'ense in Friday night's nmtrst. The Meigs Man1uders eemed to ha ve the answt!rs
to Wahama's defensive set~ as they ~&lt;:on-don seven of their nine ofTcnsiYe pos.liiiession.\ f(l post a 4M- 14 win.

Meigs returns to .500 country
after blasting Wahama 48-14
By GARY CLARK
Times-Sendnel Correspondent
MASON, W.Va. Mike
Chancey's Meigs Marauder football
II found the end zone on seven of
its nine possessions on the night and
grounded Joe Johnson's Wahama
White Falcons Friday evening by a
48-14 score before an overnow
crowd at the Mason County school.
Seven different
Marauders
scored touchdowns with Brent
Smith adding six straight extrJ
point kicks as Meigs claimed its
fifth career win over Wahama in as
many tries. The victory evens
Meigs' season record at 2-2 on the
year while the White Falcons dropped its fourth straight decision to
fall to 1-4 on the 1994 grid cam paign .
Meigs ran roughshod over a
young White Falcon defense with
the Marauders tolaling 314 rushing
yards and adding 128 yards through
the airways for a convincing 442
yards in tolal offense on the night.
"I can't be any more proud of our
kids." a pleased Marauder coach
Mike Chancey said following the
one-sided win. "We did a nice job
of eslablishing our wound game
during the early gomg and that
enabled us to obtain an early lead
and they seemed to get down a
little," added the second year

coach.
The Marauders puc 2 I first
quarter points on the board before
scoring 14 more in the second
period enroute to a 35-0 halftime
advancage. "Meigs was big and
physical as expected and we got

Raiders win ...
(Continued from C-3)
Quarter totals
River Valley .......... 8 0 0 9 = 17
Athens ...................o 6 8 o= 14

down on ourselves in the first h-alf
after they jumped on · us early,"
Wahama coach Joe John son stated .
"We came back in the second hal f
though and played much beuer and
I'm plea1ed that we didn 't quit. Al though we took a thorough whipping we still found some positi ve
things to build on," added Johnson .
Jason Parsons opened the scoring
with a four yard run on the
Marauders first possession follow ing the opening kickoff with Smith
booting the point after to give the
visitors a 7-0 advantage. Meigs
struck quickly on its next possession when junior quarterback Brent
Hanson tossed a 54 yard scoring
strike to Paul Pullins on the first
play from scrimmage following a
Wahama punt witl1 Smith again adding the PAT kick to make it 14-0
with 5:17 to pla y in the opening
quarter.
Just under a minute later Jcred
Hill picked off a Ja.~on King pass to
set up the third Meigs touchdown
of the period. This time Cass
Cleland found the end zone on a 17
yard gallop with Smith's kick
giving the Marauders a quick 21 -0
lead.
Israel Grimm. who emerged as
the games ~ng ground gai!'er
with 105 yards in 24 carnes,
opened the second quarter sconng
with a 10 yard jaunt to cap a 56
yard 10 play Meigs drive w1th

Smith's k1ck making the count 28-0
hcforc Hanso n completed the first
half assault with a seven yard run.
Sm ith drilled the PAT kick to give
Me1gs a commamhng 35-0 advantage at the ha I f.
Wahama got on the board follow ing the second half kickolf with a
seven play 58 yard drive that resulted in a 14 yard scori ng run by Dale
Johnson. '" Our offensive line came
out and opened some nice holes to
begin the second half and that
enabled us to put t11e ball in the end
zone.'' Johnson s:ud. "Freshman
quarterback David Mitchell came
in at quarterback and gave us a
spark wlmh resulted in a score for
us:· said John son. The two point
convers ion attempt came up shun
and Meigs held a 35-6 lead with
9:32 left in the 4uarter.
The Marauders answered as Matt
William s completed a11 II play 60
yard Meigs drive with an eight yard
run to paydin. Smith added the
point after to make it 42-6 at tl1e
3:37 mark of the third stanza.
Johnson then took the ensuing
kickoff and after sccmmgly being
stopped somehow squ irted through
the pack and raced 94 yards for the
final Wahama touchdown . "Playing
unti l the whi sile blew got us our
kickoff return that went for six
points," WHS assislant coach Ed
cromley said. "Everyone thought
(See MARAUDERS on C·S)

By TOM URY
Sports Correspondent
ASHTON, W.Va . ~ [f you
heard gunfi re in the Ashton area
last night, tt wasn't a typical crime
in pro g ress. It was th e Hannan
Wildcats repeatedly shooting them se lves in the foot enroute to a disappointing 14-6 loss to the visiting
Southern Tornadoes.
The Wildcats played one of their
be st defensiv e games in rece nt
mem ory , but on seve n distJnct
occass ion s a bad pitch, untimely
fumble or unnecessary penalty hurt
the Wildeats' chances of snapping
their current 14-game losing streak.
Hannan (0 -5) ki cke d off to
Southern. and th e To rnadoes
looked as if they would sc ore on
their initial possession. However,
Mike Sturgeon pounced on a fumble by the Buckeyes. Hannan took
over at the 4 7-yard line.
On the second play from scrim mage, Ron Pike burst over the middl e. veered right and motored 45
yards for a Hannan touchdown.
(Mason Coun ty Sheriff Ernie Watterson. a Hannan alum, said he
would have g1ven Pike a speeding
ticket if he could have caught him .)
The two-pomt conversion run
was no good. but the Wildcats were
on top 6 -0 with 6:2B left in the
opening quarter.
After the ensuing kickoff,
Southern moved the ball to the
Hannan 19, but a sack by Ben
Baker and a nifty pass breakup by
John Chapman gave the ball back
to the Wildcats early in the second.
Baker pulled a sneak to pick up
13 yard s, but then shots one
throu gh three were fired. An IS yard p1ckup by Baker was nullified
by a clip and a fine 15-yard
advance by Jeremy Long was
brought back on a holding call.
Chapman wobbled a rare bad punt,
and the Tornadoes were suddenly
sitting on the 'Cats 24 yard line.
Southern's Jamie Evans ripped
off a 13 -yard scamper to the 10.
Two plays later he rook it into the
payoff patch from six yards out.
A fake kick was not successful
on the conversion auempt, so the
game remained 6-6 with 5: 16 left
in the opening hal f.
Joe Kimble's two carries for
nine yards, Pike's 16-yard run and
Long's 22-yard burst moved the
ball to the Southern 12. Then shots
four and five were fired .
A holding penalty against the
'Cats moved the ball back to the
22. Then a bad pitch gave the ball
back to the Tornadoes at the 25yard line. Hannan's defense stiffened and held Southern as the frrst
half ended in a 6-6 deadlock.

The third quarter didn't produce
any scoring, but it was probably the
best defensive quarter produced by
Hannan in a long time.
Mike Casey had a bone jarring
tackle. Baker had a sack. Pike and
h .:on Holton took the wind out of
two Tornadoes on lakedowns.
Late in the quarter South ern
moved to the Hannan three. The
Wildcats managed to hold though,
as Southern's field goal auempt
just missed.
Hannan answered the challenge
when Long tore off a 28-y ard
chunk of real estate. The Wildcats
were quickly down to the 12-yard
line. But they ran out of downs.
Both teams exc hanged punts
and it looked as ·if Hannan was ,
slow ly taming theTornadoes. That
when the falal number si ~s hot was
fired .
Southern pounced on a Hannan
fumble at the 37-yard line. Quarter~
b::ck Je sse Maynard made th'e
W1ldcaL~ pay with an 18-yard run.
That took the ball to the 17. Jamie
E- ans' 15-yard run took the ball
down to the two. Maynard sneaked
across for a touchdown. Then Maynard found Jay McKelvey in the
front end of the end zone for the
two point conversion. That put
Southern ic1 front 14-6 with 2:51

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Eastern beats Miller 14-8 to get second road Win of year
spo~~i~J! 14po~n~l.e~e~~~ ;~~li~ ~~~~i~~d th{4~ag~d~-~} ~:.t This
together a successful second half,
forcing Dave Barr's Eagles to slave
offseveralfourth-quarterthreatsas
Eastern rolled to a 14-8 non-league
.
th Fal
F 'da · h
wm over c cons n Y mg t.
Junior Jason Sheets and senior

left to play.
Chapman had a food return of
the ensuing kickoff that brought the
ball out to the 42, but a bad pitch
on the first play from scrimmage
gave the ball back to Southern with
just2:24 left.
Hannan was able to hold Southern on four downs. TI1e Wildcats
took over with 39 seconds left but
('oe short completion, two incom pletions and a sack brought the
g;cme to an end.
A jubilant Joe Hemsley, the
head coach of the 1-3 Tornadoes
said. "Sweet! Both squads tonight
ptayed a tough football game.
Coach Kimble has the same problems that I have in getting enough
boys out to play the game. Those
Pike and Baker boys are tough ."
I didn't ask Coach Kimble for a
post-game comment. I could read
his mind. He was thinking, "When
is the snake gonna stop biting?"
Hannan returns to action next
Fnday evening when they travel to
Wetzel County to do battle with the
Hundred Hornets.
CAT PAUSE: Wendy's Wildcat
of the Week again goes to Pike on
offense ( 15 carries. 119 yards and
o•.e touchdown) and Baker on
dc·fense (seven solo lackles, nine
(See TORNADOES on C-5)

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of Sept. 250ct. 2 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
Fitness center,
gymnasium
and racquetball courts
Today- 1-3 and 6-11 p.m.
Monday- Ba.m.- II p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.- II p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m. -II p.m .
Thursday- 8 a.m.-11 p.m.
Friday -8 a.m .-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 2- 1-3 p.m. and
6-11 p.m.
Pool
Today - 1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
Monday -closed
Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 2- 1-3 p.m. and
6-9 p.m.
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.
Friday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 2-6-11 p.m.

STATE FARM

INSURANt~

J

Eastern's tolal305 lal
Sheets rambled ~04 ~are:~n 27
carries with one PAT and one
touchdown while Bissell netted a
·
.
100 yards on 25 carnes and caught
five passes for 41 yards
.
·
Q uarterback B. nan Bowen had
another good ntght at the helm of
the EHS offense with 16 ru shmg
yard_s and _a touchdown on three
carr1es while completing seven of
13 passes for 76 yards.
.
Add•tonally, Sheets had a kickoff
return of 25 yards and R~an
Buckley had punt returns of thrrty
and seven yards.,
After Eastern s defense had held
Miller at bay. one yard on three
plays, Eastern scored first on a stx
yard Bowen run for a 6-0 lead. The
extra pomt ru~ failed .
Barr saJd, Even though the score
was close, we played our game
enurely. We created the1r score w1th
a turnover. Without.the turnover,
theyprobablywouldn thavescored.
We ran when we wanted to run w1th
It and passed when we wanted to
passs."
Obviously, Eastern didn't "score
when it wanted to score" as Barr put
it, but the Eagles played great ball
between the two end zones. Barr
added, "We played a good defense.
In fact, our goal line stand in the
fourth quarter when Miller had a
first-and-four at the four probably
won the game. We held them at the

stand showed a lot of touchdown. The Jay ~ones run was
good and Eastern s lead was
own ~~e t~f~ ~ok the ball o~ our narrf~ed t~ 1~-~ ~td~ore stoo;:
out the I k v~nmt~utesan run unu een o e tr ramean
off . cloc · cahn t gdtvc our also to the end of the game.
cnSJv e me enoug t ere 11 . The
backs did a good · b bl k'
f
3
1 b F Jk
each other and ~a tlJO b· Joel •lnl~ or
A 7 yard scram e y u set up
"n 1c a we .
what looked to be a sure touchdown
Eastern led 6-0 at the end of the for the Falcons. With their back s
first quancr
against the wall, first and four for
In the second stanza. Eastern Miller on the EHS four yard line in
pounded the turf well and wc·nt to the final frame. Eastern draped an
the air several times with Buckley, iron curtain across the goal line. 111c
Tmv1s Curt.Js and Bissell as 1argets.
Eastern defense bent slightly, but
The Eagles hit paydirt on a six the unit did not break as Eastern
yard run by Jason Sheets with the repelled Miller's threat and
junior halfback running off Iackie ultimately saved the game.
for the two-point conversion and a
Eastern then took the ball and
14-0 Eastern lead. The remainder of drove 79 yards down field to run out
the fram e, Eastern dominated the clock and deny Miller any hope
between the white stripes, but failed for a score.
to score.
Buckley caught a pass for 18
In the third fram e. a turnover yards for Eastern. while Bissell had
gave the Falcons some new life as 42 yards recei•ing and Cwtis nine.
they took over on the Eastern 2o. Bowen had punts of25 and 38 yards
After a Jason Fullc, option play from and a whopping 45-yard kickoff.
quarterback Rob Jenks provided the
Eastern tacklers were led by
set-up play, Jeremiah Browning M1cah Otto (1 3), Bissell (nine),
caught a 14 yard reception for the Geoff Watson (eight), Jason Sheets

..

Department
E
First downs ....................24
teFemM ' J~each).
Rushingyards .............. 231
. or, ' er. Jones carried six Passing yards ................ 76
limes cor 14 yards, Fulk eight tim
f 40 ru
· · es T0 tal· yards ................... 307
3o0r ardsyarJ s ksand Jenks SIX umes for Comp.-att................... 7-13
Y . en was 6-18 passmg for Interceptions thro n
1
51 yards.
w .......
F bl 1
11
Eastern will host Wirt County, p~~alti~.~~~.::::::::::::::6.4o
W.Va Friday night at Eastern
Pu ts
2 33
·
n .......................... -

Marauders win ... (Continued lrorn C-4)
the pla y "'" ove r hut Johnson
broke free and llutran everyone into
the end zone.'"
Meig s closed out t11e scor ing 111
the final 4U&lt;J rter when Raben
Qualls scored from 13 ya rd s out
capping a 62 yard seven pla y dri ve.
The PAT pass fell incom plete leaving the final coum 48 -14.

StatistiCS

and Ryan Buckley (six each). Wally
Rockhold (f•ve), Matt Bowen.
~u~Is, (~on Goheen and Jeff

$99
Pho11e Sped•l
ofully Fwtunld Phone
&lt;1
WllrfMty
oltlont_!lly f'lllll~ S~!'lllll $211.116

v-

Wahama sc ored &lt;tn apparent
touchdown mtdwa y through the
final canto when D&lt;tvid Mtlchell
raced 65 yards on an option run but
a cl ippmg pc1wlty nulilf•cd the Falcon score and squdchcd the ~uca t.
The Marauders al so threatened to
add yet another six IJOllli S before
(See MARAUDERS on C-6)

. Wovo $40 Acttvollon Fee
Your choice of Battery Pack or Magnetic Antenna thru September.

NATE COMMUNICATIONS

614-441-1168
1502 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mastercard • Visa

--

Notes: A Lyne Center membership is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff. students and administrators are admitted with their ID
cards.
Racquetball court reservations
can ·now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at l-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
holder and a $2 fee.

CAROU
SNOWDEN

342s.-llvt.
Gallpolls, OWo
Pit. 446-4290
H-446·4518
State Farm Lite Insurance Company
Home OHice: Bloomington. Illinois

84 Month

FINANCING*

Tornadoes win ...

WHY PAY MORE?

(Continued from C-4)
a· •;ists and two sactcs).
The contest was the stage for
Parents' Night at Hannan. All the
m·Jmma and pappa Wildcats were
h~.-'lored before the game and at
hall time.
Joe }Vaugh and Stacy Foster
were out last night, but will return
for the Hundred encounter. Baker
is okay. Jimmy Wallace is out for
the rest of his career because of a
knee injury. He 'II be missed on the
line.

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Statistics
Department
RV
First downs ................... .15
Plays from scrimmage ...66
Tolal yards .................. .290
Rushing an.-yds .....48-133
Passing yards .............. .l57
Comp.-an................... S-18
Interceptions thrown .......0
Fumbles-lost ............... 3-2
Penalties-yards ...........9-72
Punting ....................... 3-95
Time of possession .. .30:26

A
7
36
145
24-65
80
4-12
I
5-3
3-35
5-155
17:34

Statistical leaders
River Valley Raiders (3-l)
Rushing - Haislop 24-122, I
TD; J. Jenkins 9-26; Spence 1-21;
Hammond 4-13; Kelley 9-(-40), (I)
2-pt. conv.
Passing- Kelley 8-18, 157
yds., I TD.
Receivln11 -1. Jenkins 2-45;
Spence 2-44; Haislop 2-38; Lloyd 1-

22; Ward 1-8.
lnlerc:eptlons caugbl - Rucker
(1-W)
.
Fum!Jie recoveries - Ashworth
(2) &amp; team (I)
Athens Dulldogll (0-4)
Rusblng - Maxwell 16-78, 2
TDs; Meek 2-3.
Passing- Sparhawk 4-11, 80
_yds., I int; Mall well 0-1.
Receiving - Fledge 2-53;
Wharton 1-18, Grippa 1-9.
Fumble recoveries - Llewellyn
&amp; Wheatley

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FROM NATE COMMUNICATIONS
CELLULARONE"

Home athletic events
Tuesday - volleyball vs.
Urbana, 7 p.m.
Wednesday - soccer vs. Ohio
Dominican. 4 p.m.
Saturday- URG Cross Country Invitational, 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; volleyball vs. Malone. I p.m.; soccer
vs. Bluffton, 4 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 2 -soccer vs.
Tiffin. I p.m.

State Farm
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Life Insurance.

M

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Scoring summary
1st qtr.
Athens: Mal!well 4-yd. run (run
failed), 8: IS 2nd qtr.
Athens: safety on punt attempt,
8:04 3rd qtr.
Athens: Maxwell 64-yd. run
(kick blocked), I :53 3rd. qtr.
River Valley: Haislop 4-yd. run
(pass failed), 5:57 4th qtr.
River Valley: Wamsley 20-yd.
FG, :03 4th qtr.

Page-C5

�•

J

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-C6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Marauders win...
Cin. Wyoming ll. Covingtm Holmca
14

CUclcville 23,

NFL's Week 4 slate
Today

ac..

Allanu at W ultinatm. I p.m.
a..EVEI.AND 11 liu±ianapoliJ, I p.m.

rs...,"r .......

LouiiVillo 2l . Mttrtin

ManiW.I 18, Campbcll-MomorW

Oe.. Sllgnatiul

)8,

Tol SL Jdwl6

Oe.. UtUvc:nit) 35. Col Ae~dany 6
Oeu Fodl 29, Loudmville 22
Qcuvicw 30, K.cyrtmc 12
Oydc 36, Edi.on 0
Col. Hoochcroft 2.1, Cal Eut 0
Col. ()a.Sale~47, Cin. Moont Healthy 0
Col _ lndepmdence 28, Cnl. F.aatmoor

11 Sill Franciaco. 4 p.m.
LA. Raidc:n. 4 p.m.

Piwl:u.Jsh at Seaule, 6 p.m
OUago at N.Y. lc:ta, 8 p.m.

p.m.

Mauillon Wuhinpon 21,

Amand•Oeutrceli

n, Bloan-Carroll

14
Amncn1 X. Bay 0
Anaonia SI, Nnional Tn.il 7
Anthony Wayne: 7, Millbury I.A.c: 6
Archbald )7, Evc:rgrt:en 0
Aahu.bul.l 32, JclTcnoo 6
Auron 47, Brooklyn 0
Au.Unt.own -Fitch 10, St. Edwan:l7

Avon Lake 51, Wt:lllake 0
Beachwood 28, Columbi1 2ti
Bealbville

J~.

frontier 0

Beaver l.oca..l30. E. l....lverpool l4
Bella~ 35, Wheeling Centn..l 6
Bc.l.lc:vuc: 28, Willard 3

Blac:k Rivu 42, Buckeye 13

Brm.k.Jide Tl, Wdlingtm 20
Bmohillc 4l, Bollboolt 0

8Nidwici. 31, 00¥c:deaf I
Brwh 21, ae.. Sooth 6
Buckeye Caltnll8, Rivc:niale 13
Buckeye Lncal 34, ac.. Kennedy 6
8uckeyc::Trail35, Bunesville 14
Buc&amp;.c:ye Vall. 20, N. Union 0
BucY"" 32, Norwolk 28
C.dtz 42, Morioo C.lh. 6
Canal Winchmcr 28, Teays Vall 6
Cant.on Calb. 21, Ooville 14

Joltnotown 19, C.......... 1

Cin. Coontry Day 34, B•tavil S

Cin. McNicl&gt;olu 17, Cin. Pura:ll Mor-

Crt.. Milford 1i, CiD.. Src.amore IS
Cin. Rcadins 21, Cin. FinncyLOwn 3
Cin. Summit 41, On. Utcltlond 8
CUt. Td\22, Qn. Huahoo 21

~Wine

I

Cin. Walnu&amp; Hilla~. AmclU V
Cin. Wintm Wood• 63, Cin. WoodwordO

Wll•c:on 15, Petrick Henry 7

Wn'Crly 46, S. PWtt 18
w.ync22. Xenia I
Wcllit.on 40, Federal Hockina26
WellMUc II, Toron1.01
Wczk:rVillc N. 41, Gaharu11 6
w_,;uo s . 21, ui'P"' AdJnaU&gt;n 14
Wcotr.U 13, Ad"" 1 (C111
Wynrmd 2S, Bmjanin Logan 12
Youna. Boardman 17, Youna. Mooney
14

Young. Chancy 14, RaWIUlol 13
Young. Uberty 1:7, Moa•daro F1Cld 0
Zonoovill&lt;o l9. CAmlridac 6

BALTIMORE ORIOLES: Eaerciaed
contnct option~ on Mark Eichhorn and
Jamie Moyer, pildlcn, few the 1995 lei·
aon. Announced a two -year wortin.J
agreement with High Deaert of the C.lifonU LcasucNallonal Laaue
ATLA~A BRAVES : Named Scott
Nethery acout and Roy Cladt 1100thea11
acoutinaaupcrvUor.
LOS ANGELES DODGERS: Enaulcd the c:ontne1 d Tom Luotcia, manager,
through tho 1991.....,.. Fimd Rm PannoW., pitchina coach, llnd Joe PerJuaon.
cou:h. Named Davo Wallac:o piLc:hin&amp;
cooclt.

Sonehm 14, Haman. W.Va. 6

Nlllonal B.ulttlboll "-lallon
lNDlANA PACERS , Apoti 1D """''
wilh Damon Bailey, auud. oa a mo-year
contnct.

Riwnide 14, Ridacmoo16
RodtHill2I,............, W.I4
Rou 18, Kinp 0

LOS ANGELES LAKERS' Ac&lt;juiml
Cedric Ceballos, forw ard , rrom the

S. Owla1oo SE 31, E. QinlA&gt;n 13
S. Rance 33, Hud100 Wcatc:rn ltaerve
6

l4

Solom l3, a.. Rhodoo 7
S..-y 36, Lonin 7
Sonduolty Patina 24. Morpr&lt;m 20
Shdby 62. ui'P"' Sonduolty 6
Shtnandoah 29, Waterford 0
Shoridon 33, CrooUville 14
Sidnej 63, Tn:twood-Madiacm 28
SmiUivillc 36, Doylcltown OUppcw•

0
Soloo 19,Chopinf.U.O

Spring. Nonh 32, F.utom 12
Sprina. Nortbc .. tem 23, Sprina.
Shawnoe 19
Sprinafiold 13,C.....S.l2

K.c:ttcrin1 Fainnoal 2.5, Sprina. South

Now you can bank by phone.
just pick up the phone to open accounts
or receive information on existing accoums.

BasketbaU

R.idpdale I.f. Nordmiw 6
Ridpwood47, Jo-·ScioO
Riwr V.U. 46, SpaUifi&amp;hlond 0

{f you've got a phone,
you've got a bank.

Pha:rti.t Sww fm a (11'11-round dnf\ pick
in 1995, 1996 or 1997. Aa:r-d so terms
wilh Ccb&amp;ll01.

FootbaU

National Foolblll Leque

Monday-Saturday

~of merchendil:in&amp;-

s.. llauy 42. Morion I-120

St. Mary.

3

lj ,

-

,."

..
-·
..
'-

-

'·
rn

,,,

..

mosl
tnvlronmtnts.
lcro11 comprf'Ssors on

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. (!)

Ge• Summer Sell Down W_

GM

LOOK FOR GREAT SELECTIONS
AND PRICES ALL MONTH
308 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio

1-992-6641 1-800-8237-1094

NEW
1994 CHEVY
BERETTA
2 Dr., -Auto ; #

&lt; rv1orc

1994 PONTIAC

SUN BIRD
Automatic, air,
stereo.

1

SERIES PICKUP

~SIAL

$9,699_

COMFORT ASSURED •

1994 GMC1500 PICKUP

Efficient quittand corrosion -m~ 1nl v.•ith morr
t-1/ident.air delivt-ry .

VB-Auto, air, low milea .............................................. $15,995

1993 CHEVY CAVAUER

EfluXnl.alr drtivery at lowPr noM levrl5.

lcngrr lt'n"icf lift .

Auto, air, 11en10 ............................................................ $9399

Quirttr optr,tion

Auto, air, atereo, 7 pau............................................ $16,995
1992 CHEVY LUMINA EURO
Auto, air, stereo, V~......... .'................................... $1 0,499

1994 CHEVY ASTRO VAN

18111 CHEVY LUMINA EURO

2 dr, auto, air, more .......................................................$9999

1993 BUICK LESABRE
Auto, air, low miiM, loaded.·-························-··$16,995
1993 POtmAC GRAND PRIX

lncr~a~ dur•bilil)' . Cabinl"! rl"!.~l s o~ id11tion

1nd rust

Assurn rompld~ coil drainagr

,~1-N...:ST.:.:'A:.:L...:LA:..::.J.::.IO::.:N::.::I

COOLING

Serring Meigl, Ma.on &amp; Gollio

l

By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The Division of Wildlife is sponsoring a program to allow youths
age 15 and under to hunt while
accompanied by an adult.
Participants in the youth hunts
must obtain a special pennit from
the division and have a valid residenl youth license, which costs $8
thi s year. Deer permits and state
and federdl waterfowl stamps arc
also required for the youth deer and
waterfowl hunts.
This year, however, no special
participant permit is required for
the young hunter's sma ll upland

Meigs ..................21 14 7
Wahama ................0 0 14

SERVICE

game season to be held Oct 22 and
Oct. 29.
While the first youth hunt was
held earlier this month on the
Killdeer Plains Wildlife Area during the special early goose season,
young hunters can still look forward to deer and small upland
game hunts. A youth deer hunt will
be held Oct. 8 on 1he Ravenna
Arsenal in Portage County.
On Oct. 15, young hunters can
take pan in a waterfow l hunt on
Killdeer Plains, Magee Marsh,
Mercer and Mosquito Creek
wildliFe areas and the Ottawa
National Wildlife Refuge.
An upland game hunt will be

,,

0::"

.,

.-,,

-'·
-

ll)

Auto ., ABS, air bag,
air, stereo.

Statl•st•ICS

Qualls 9-70; Williams 9-68; Shuler
6-23; Cleland 2-21; Hanson 3-14;
Petrie 2-9; Parsons 1-4.
Passing- Hanson 4-5, 128 yds.,
1 TO.
Receiving - Cleland 2-31;
Pullins 1-54, 1 TO; Marshall1-43.

Department
M
W
First downs .................... 12
8
Total yards ...................442
132
Rushing atL·yds .....57-314 25~9
Passing yards .............. .l28
43
Comp.-au................... ..4-5
3-7
Interceptions thrown .......0
1
Wahama White Falcoos (1-4)
Fumbles-lost ....................O
0
Rushing - Johnson 14-58;
Penalties-yards ........... ?-45
3-25 MirchellS-28; B. Sranhope 2-3.
Statistical leaders
PISSin&amp;- Mitchell 3-3, 43 yds.;
Meigs Marauders (2·2)
King 0-4, 1 int.
Rusbinll - Grimm 24-105;
Receiving -G. Scott 2-26;
VanMeterl -17.

..

.,
-

...

'·'

SALE! SALE! SALE!

Sale Continues Through Month of September
On All New J994 Models.
1992 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL 4 DR.
-~

---.....

SALE
STARTS
SEPT. 10,

SALE
ENDS
SEPT. 30,

1994

1994

•:..'
,_

-.

1994 CHEVY
CORSICA LT

lv1IDDLE PORT, o\'\

-

.,,.
GMC
TRLJCI-(

went home with an archery hunter,
accordin g to Division of Wildlife
statistics.
Many deer hunters this fall we
be able to take two, and in some
cao;es, three deer. Hunters who buy
the newly created Urban Deer Permit can take up to three deer this
year, but the special pennit is valid
for use only in selected metropolitan areas that include Akron-Cleveland, Dayton-Cincinnati, Columbus. Toledo and Youngstown.
The Division of Wildlife es ti ·
males Ohio's white-tailed deer herd
to be between 350,000 and
475,000.
In 1993, the top counties where

BPS Hunting,
Pump Shotgun

Auto-S Shotgun

19,995

1994 CROWN VIC. LX 4 DR. SEDAN
4.6 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans ., air cond.,
AM/FM stereo , cass., dual air bags, anti-lock
brakes, J -BL auto. system, P. win . &amp; P.
locks, dual P. seats, tilt steer. wheels , cruise
control, cast alum. wheels , company official
car. This car is loaded.
STK. #4117100

18,995

8

1990.LINCOLN TOWN CAR 4 DR.
302 V-8 eng., P steer, P.. brak es, auto.
trans .. air cond., AM/FM stereo cassette,
P. windows and P. loc,;, tilt and cru1se,
leather interior, rear defroster, cas! alumi num wheels. new tires, one loca l owner.

•}l

w

• I
-

~

1994 OLDS
4 To Choose From

Reg. $389.t9

of93 &amp; , 4

Only

Program Cars.

Hurry/

0/ OFF

30 /0

Reg. $399.99

Reg. Price

$34999

Ballistic Mirage

BROWNING:

Gore Texand
Down Filled
Jackets and Coats

flteyAre
lastI

II

.
Reg. $399.99

$29999

Closeouts!

Maxim

I

Reg. $169.95

Bridger II
Mirage (Closeout)

Good Selection

Hunting Bows

$13999
99
Reg. $219.99 S199

Summit

34999

5

Closeouts!

Upland Waterproof
Thinsulate Boots
In
Stock.
Only

nOIIIOUIUt ...DIY •
UIUDIY, NO 111-laOO..,

•

'I

1990 PLYMOUTH SUNDANCE 4 DR.
4 cylinder engine, power steering,
power brakes, automatic transmission,
air conditioning, AM/FM stereo, full
wheel covers, extra clean, rear
defroster. Local owner.

-. -IL

-'

4995

8

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

taB FORD
REG. $109.99

$7999

THUNDERBIRD 2 DR.
302 V-8 eng., PS, PB, aulo. trans., air cond .,
AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise. P
windows &amp; P. locks,
rear defroster.

1895

8

or Truck 'and we ·

PIOII (1041 675•2911 •lOCATED IEIT ro IWOI COUm FIIIGIOUIDS
POIIT
WV 25550

ff'S WORTH YOUR DRIVEl

11,995

8

~BROWNING,

CUTLASS
SUPREME

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
•

- .£:~·

12 ga. Only

12 or 20 ga.

·o

$14,495

3.8 V-6 engine, P. steer., P brakes. autom atic trans., AM /FM stereo cassette, P. wmd ows and locks, du al P. seats, leather in tenor,
crUise and II II , rear defroster. cast alu minum
wheels. one owner, extra clean, 27.000
miles.
STK #44117700

8

WAS 125,140

All payments subject to credit approval

PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-7254

•

large crank baits at depths of I 0 to best results. The outlook is fair for Lorain. Eucltd, tdgewa1cr "'"'
18 feet when fishing for muskles. channel catfish, bullheads, yellow Fairport Harbor.
Live night crawler rigs and trolled perch, and largemouth and small crank baits work best when fishing nJJulh bass.
PAULDING RESER VO IR for walleyes. Fish with minnows in
the areas that have discarded Usc jig s tipped with minnow s
Christmas trees to take crappies. fi ; hcd along the bottom to Jak e
Maps of these locations are avail· saugeyes. Use traditional bai ls such
as night crawlers and chicken li vers
able in the park office.
fi &lt;bed along the bottom to tak e
Central
BUCKEYE LAKE - Fish ncar channel catfish. Try casti ng surface
Clouse Cove and Cranberry Marsh batts to shallow areas during early
with streamers, four-i nch plastic afternoon and evening when fish worms or live bait to take large- ing for largemouth bass.
Northeast
mouth bass . Shoreline cover and
held on bet. 22 and Oct. 29 al all other areas with submerged strucPYMATUNING RESERVOIR
Division of Wildlife-owned areas, ture are good places to fish for - Bluegills range from seven to
except Killdeer Plains and Indian crappies when using minnows sus- nine inches and can be Ulkcn from
Creek wildlife areas. Legal game pended beneath a bobber. Th is is the shoreline on wax worms and
for these youth hunts include rab- one of Ohio's best carp ami nat- !a.-val baits. Troll small crank baits
bits, pheasants and ot her legal head catfish lakes. Channel catfish in the area south of the causeway
game that is in season.
are numerous and can be Ulken on when fishmg for walleyes.
Some homes try to -,crxtnllc
The regular hunting seasons for traditional baits.
SPENCER LAKE - Bu llh ead~
quail , pheasant and rabbit begin
O'SHAUGNESSY RESER- average 12 inches and can be taken
you !rom the environmt'nl .
November4.
VOIR - Fish with minnows along 1n early eve ning on small night
Our homes make vou &lt;~
Young hunters must apply for a the deeper shoreline areas when crawlers. shrimp. and chicken li vpart of ii. ~
free pennil during October to par- fishing for crappies. The entire ers fished along the bouom. Chan ticipate in the special youth deer west shoreline is the best area to nel catfish are also in good num Call tot.laJ fnr nwr~ inform &lt;.Jtlfnl
hunts to be held Nov. 26 on the U!kc largemouth bass. The drop-off bers and can he taken in the same
Mosquito Creek and Urba na points and the tail waters are popu- areas. Crappies, bluegills and large1\ppalachiatt
Wildlife areas, and on Dec. 3 and lar spots for saugeye anglers.
mouth bass provide fair to good
JStruclur ~s.
Jan. 7 on the Killdeer Plains
Northwest
fishing opponumues.
I II c.
Wildlife Area.
Lake Erie
LOST CREEK RESERVOIR Yellow perch can be taken
Mqre choices make for ht!lla lil-ifl;.:.
The outlook is good for bluegills
and crappies anglers. Saugeyes and throughout much of southern Lake
P.O. BOX 614
walleyes range from 12 to 23 inch- Erie fro m the western basin reef
RIPLEY,
WV. 25271
deer were taken during the archery es. Drift weight-forward spinne rs complex east to Ashtabula . Top
1-800-456·9990
season in clude Tuscarawas, or use jigs tipped with minnows for spots include the areas th at are I
Coshocton, Ross and Jefferso n
1/2 to three miles offshore from
counties. Hunters using crossbows
took a record 13,005 deer last season. again surpassing for the fifth
consecutive year the number of
deer Ulken by longbow hunters.
The division expects to sell over
300,000 deer penn its this year in
addition to about 100,000 bonus
deer pennits.
Ohio's deer seasons include the
461 SOUTH THIRD
PHON E 992 -2 196
four-month archery season, a special early primitive season Oct. 2429 on three public hunting areas,
the six-day statewide ftreanns seaso n Nov. 28-Dec. 3, and the
statewide primitive season Jan. 5-7.

can be U!ken on tradttional bail~.
Southwest
LAKE LORAMIE - Fish the
brushy shoreline areas with minnows to take crappies. Use small
worms and larval baits fi shed
beneath a bobber at depths of three
to eight feet when fishing for
bluegills. Try the lower end of the
lake when fishing for bullheads.
ROCKY FORK LAKE - Troll

-1-

1-8*767-4223

.

results. Channel catfish weigh up to
I 0 pounds and can be Ulken during
early morning and evening hours.
Bluegills, redear sunfish and largemouth bass are also available.
BLUE ROCK LAKE - Surface
lures and live bait fished at depths
of two to six feet ncar the shoreline
can result in good fishing action for
largemouth bass. Channel c&amp;tfish
arc present in good numbers and

All Used Cars a Trucks Must Go.
Taxes and title fee not included.

HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES
35615 OAK HILL RD.
CHESTER, OH 45720
614-985-4222

'

$1 1,995 $10,995 $10,999
NEW
1995 CHEVY S·

bad:..d b)•a ten·yur
Umitrd l\'arnnty.

ER HE

·

'"

tht C~t121rt

/C7

DOW sponsors youth hunting program

Quarter totals

Lima B•lb 6

0
0

uhirwtlini~h

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the Division of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources:
Southeast
JACKSON CITY RESERVOIR
- Fishing for golden trout is popular in the fall. Use kernel corn,
small marshmallows, Velveeta or
small night crawlers for best

Sl O.U.ville lof, lruti1n Creek I

Lo;pQ&lt; 20. Libony-B...., 13
Lanm·Mollroc 7, Oafcxd Tallwancb

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Jackson reservoir's golden trout like corn and cheese

yards and a touchdown with Paul
Pullins owmng one recepuon for 54
yards, Mike Marshall one for 43
yards and Cass Cleland two catches
fo~ 31 yards.
Wabama will travel to Southern
11ext week to try and halt its four
game losing skid while Meigs plays
its fourth straight date on the road
against Ale~ander.

Open 8 a.n1.-8 p.m.

HO&lt;key
NoU...IIIocbJ .......
BUFFALO SA BRES: Named David
Rcchcr vice prcaidau·ac:ncnl mana,gcr of
Empire Spodl SaiCII and Julie Scully di·

·-

p,,wdn rmnt

Ohio fishing report

Marauders win ... .:.: &lt;C:.: .:no:.::_lin::.::ue=d.:.:fr.: : m:.:...:
_o C:.:...:-6~)-----=--::--=-='"=-:-:-:---:--:::-:::--:....,.

CINCINNATI BEN GALS: Fiuod

Harold Omen, nmnin8 Nck, for milling
two daya of pncticc wilhout pennjalim.

-

0

Outdoors

1994

By JOHN WISSE
Division or Wildlife
FALLSBURG, Ohio (A?)The fertile farmland that surrounds
this central Ohio village is lypical
of where hunters can fmd while-tail
deer.
Some of Ohio's 400,000-plu s
deer hunters will be stalking those
deer when the statewide deer
archery season begins Ocl I. Bow
hunters can track the deer, except
on Sundays, through Jan. 31.
Last year, bow huntes killed a
record 23,160 deer, or 16.7 percent
of the 138,752 deer killed in Ohio.
In 1984, 6.8 percent of the deer
killed during lhe hunting season

BasebaU

R...tiVillAtEu-14, Homloclt Milia

September 25,

Fallsburg area prime whitetail country

Amerit.aa Lup

Rc,..,.dobwa 20. Muytvillo 13

LaBne 21, Lakeview 14 (2011
Lancutcw 26, O.y. Moadowdale 18

rJ.an. Flortbwe.~IO

(CYI)

Rewn 2J, Talbu~sc 17 ·--

IS

22

uu.

W1taioo 2.1, Wandhun 6
w.t.tw Memorill 20, Wh.ilehall 14

RaVCIInl Sauthc:u\ 20, Str"c~C:Ubuo 11

lCMan Ridao 2, llollobtW.. 14
Ketlclinc A1t.ct 17, Cin. Rop Bacoa

i•n 14

Wura~ ' Kennedy2I,S11Uthcn II
W.aatnillo 20, Gknvilk 14
w
Ri V'CI" V"lCW 20, Ml yavill.c 16

..,._..8 Voll. 3l, Cudinol 14

Konou Lolto1o 19, ~ ll
Konotoa 20, Wit:kliflo14 (OT)
Kau lloooe'loll 3, y -~- l!ul 0
Kauon 29, Umo Shnmool

C:n. Deer P&amp;lk 35, Cin. Indian Hil120
Cin. t.S.Uc 46, Cin. Oalr. Hilt. 0
Cin. Muianmt3S, N. Bc:nd T•ylor 0

Walah JauiL 21, Alhland 1
Wurcn Hardin 10, Yauna.. Ul'lllliDc 7
Wumn HowlAnd 31. Clc.. E. Ted! 16

Polllmoulh B. 13, ldA:DomKn Nortb-

Lbort'-

Cin. ColQUn 21, Cin. Sl Xavier 7

W. Salam Northwatcrm 41, Rittman

-7

Humibd )U.,.. 35, Te)'la", W.Va. 0
lWdin NGIIIan 34, CGr)'-llo..,.. 0
Hoolh Jl,
Ullion 12
llillobom 62, Willianoburo ll
Hopowdl-Loudon20, Mobo..t 19
Howland~- 14,ParryAw)6
Hu-. Z1, Wodlwooth 2A (20T)
Huron :14, Pult Clinia&gt; 6
lndiaa Lake 20, W•YDSfield Gt.hen 1
lndWt VolL33, B. C..toa I

Cin. Andcuoo 28, Cin. Haaiaon 6

..

.

12

-...,oh 22, llclmoot I

Julicnne9

Wotnl4,Wboolonboua7
JocltDt42.-0
JocltJoo Mihal 31, Mttlho"'

..

Painonille RivCUiickl 38, Allhtabula

Hamilt.on Badin 20. O.y. Oluni!Uido-

Cltilliro&lt;he 40, Lotion 21
an. Aiken 21, Cin. G1ca Ea~.e 6

...

C 0 N V E N I E,. ...N C E

w. Ocaup 3l, 0nn8"7
W. Holmea 26, Triw•y 14
W. J&lt;d!enon42, Wuhi-CR ll

lhrbar l4
Paint Vall. 4S, Zane Tnce 1
Pandon-Gilbo. 14, Van Buren 9
!'my 3l, FoUport H.udina 12
P!tilo 216, Morpn 0
Pickcringtm 26. Mown Vernon 1
Pilt""" 32, Ridtmond Dolo SE 20
Piqua14,0.yton Nonhmca~tO
l'lymoulh 40, S. Contral 0
Polond 20, N'tloo 7

Groatvi&amp; 21. Vutdolio Butler 0

Cllao~o 34, Iluvoll, W.Vo.32
0~ River Vall 17. Atheru 14

- . .. .

E.tll"wood 1a

Onnvill&lt;o l6, Now Albony 0
Oroc:n 31, Mcd.ina 7
GtcaiCwiew 23, Ointon-Malie 14

Owdon I 0, Chamberlain 7
Owdon ND,Q. 2A, Tdnily 0

Merlino 10, N. Royalton 3
Map 41, Wolwno, W.Vo. 14
M.;,. l!utcm 14, Millor I
Mimti Tncc l6, Doy. Colanol While

""""' 0
Norwa yne X1, HiJ.1adale 0
Norwood 26. &lt;bhcm 21
Ool: Glen, w.v•. 14, P.diJon 1
Oo1: """"'21, Sontluolty SL MHJ' 7
Obartin 39, A. von 12
Olauonc 43, ._........ 14
Obtutotffolla 41 , Rocly Ri= 0
Padua 19, Cle. Calholic 14
Painoavillo Harvey 33, A1htabula

Onnd V.U.ll6, Kirtlond 0

Cantoo MdC.inl~y 28, Mentor 21
c...!in
3], El . 0
Cuoy w.'Tiffin ~at 13
Cartillc 7, Prcblc Shawnoc 6
Ccduvillo 20, MotWon PWno 14
Celina. 29, W1pakoncu 12
C......uloll. Bca"""""" 21
Ownpicn 21, Hubbard 0

Vmail.lc:~ 34, Sidney l.dman 0
Vintm Co. 21. McClain 0
W. Branch 42, CII!Ollton 0
W.CarrollLM 14, Troy6
W. a-\C:r Lakota 19, Middletown 1

New Richmond ll , Clennont North ·

Oinrtl 6, Con&amp;tld 0
Onhom 46, Mihon-l.lnion 6

Can100 OlenOU 47, W001tc:r 6

Van Wrzt. 35, Elid•1
Vc:rmilim 35, N. Ridgeville 12

MouooC-..1 lS,Caldwdl6
M......,.;noss Alhlaoda..m-6
MountO:iload il, Muion P\cuantl4
N. Olmlled 29 , Foirviow l2
NapoloM 77,0ret&lt;lll Cay 10
Ndoonvillo-Yo4 48, Alcoonda 14
Now .......... 22, John Olom 3
New London 7, Colliru: Wmtem Re·
ltn'el 0
.

· :14,
Mid&gt;.
3
mnl&lt;W&gt;
21. llodfcml,
Middldmm
P,,.;&lt;i&lt; 7
mnklinHa.3l,Dolowuo7
Pmnont.U.4l, TIL - 0
Oaraway41, to..in C.lh. 21
Gufiel41111. 2.4. Clo. Sootllt 12
Gonotuvillo 36, Moaodono 0
Omc:va 34, Conneaut 30
0..0. 41, Elmwood 0

Bltlck.lville 30, Baa 20

Brookfidd 50, Newton Falla 0

Valley v.e .... 34, O.y. Nonhridae 6

Minner 19, Pukway3

12

Bradfon139, MiNiatinawe ValL 16

M~n~;fidd

MiddlmoWD MAcl:i.cm 33, 0Wo 8
Midviaw 7, Lanin Adm. Kina 0
Nilfmll?, Cin. Sycamoro 14
Milava 44, Canal Fultm NW 22

l!lyria C.lh. 21, 0.. lby 6
Elyria W. 42, F........ 7
Euclid 33, N...scn;, 17
FWfidd Union 14, Hamil&amp;.on Twp. 13
Fairland 26, Coal Otvvo 16
FainncmtlS, Spring. Soulb 22
llndlly21, MorimlJantina 14
fuhm Coth. 41 , Millaspcn 19
Fort RCCOYCIJ 18, O.ubwy Lakcaido

Biahop (lnci.) Chaurd 29, Cin. West·

Qn. Turpin

24

EaLon 37, o.kwood 1

em Hilla 26

v..u.

28

Edgewood J4, Miamii:Wq, 6

Belpre 44, Trimble 0
Bakshire 38, (rt:ltwood 7
Berne Union Jj_ J.icking Hu. 0
Bcthcl 30, Covingtm 0
Bahel·Tttc JO, Wc:llCll Drown 1
8cAley V, Grandview 6

Triad 43, F.ubank.• 0

TUICUIIwll
31. Sandy v.n. 1
Twin ValleyS . 28, Dian~ 18
Unioto 53, Jluntinatat 13
Uni\Cd 45, Swlhcm t..oOO 6
Upper Scioto Vallll, Spc:nocrvill. IS
Utica .26, LUewood IS
Vall Fo~e 35, Nom~andy 12

Mce.mbl2, Vonltoo6
Mcl&gt;mald 38, MiJxnl Rklac 6
Mocltoniccbttra 49, W. liberty Solom

Crawford 1, Ontario 6
Columbiana 13, E. Palestine 6
Cohanbiana Catvic:w 34, l..cdmia ?
Columbul Grove 41, Antwerp 6
Copley 12, Nortoo 6
Coehocton 21, Davcr 14
Coventry 46, F&amp;idat 0
Ctailine 22, Fn:dc:ricktown 7
CuyahopP.U.ll,N. C..ia&gt;6
Cu yahop Ha. 29. il.dmand lllo. ll
n.h.ce 16, WeJMdale 6
Ilonville 34, Norlhridp 6
Day. Camlll 34, i..d&gt;ol&gt;m Z1 (2 OT)
llay. 1'1...... 12, o.wq,on 10
o.y. s.-..36, Spnn11- c......., 20
Deliance 26, Oaa -..(il.uwbf 0
DcOn.ff Riw:nidc 34, Ridaanoot 6
De1phoo J&lt;d!cnao 34, Bbdloo o
Dublin II, Wonhinal&lt;m Kilbourne 7
1!. KnM. 26,l...ucu &amp;
Eutlake N. 13, Bod:fcwd 6

Akron finsmc: 17, Ak.JUl Kenmore 7
Akron Garfield 28, Akron N. 0
Alaoo Sprin~ 14.(:0ntm S. 12
Akron St.V-SL M 56, Cle. W~ Tcdt 0
Au.. H. 47. Lim• Pliny 7
Allianoc 16, Uniontown LU.c: 7

Tol Catholic 61, Tal. Rot«~ 6
Tol Swt41, Tol. Wlitc 12
Tri.Coumy N. 31, An;anwn 7

Mlurnee 31. R'*forcl 13
Moyfodd 34, Mop!&lt;""- 21 (CYI)

Colcm~

Ade 20, Pwldins 14

Tol BoW"'het S-4. Tal Woodward 1

13

Col. *fSl21, Col Bnx&amp;haven 14
Col. Weltland Z2, Grove Ci1y 13

Ohio H.S. scores

Tiffin Col.umblan 21, Galion 6

MaaillM21, Mmlfield 1J
Ma.uillon J.cbon 25, New ~UdeJ.
phil7
Ma.illcm Pury 21, Cam.on Tunkal 6

Col. Wiliut Ridge 30, CoL LindenMcKinle 8

Monday

Thom.u WortJUnat&lt;&gt;ot 17, C!L Mifllin
0

Mooao 33, Sprin,.,... 21

Col Sooth 32. Col. Wheutooc 0
Dcuve:r at Dllffalo, 9

Stronpvillo 31. Midpom 12
Torunuoh 20, a - 10

Ma.rim-Fnnklin 48, Col. Cm1cnnial

Cul. Nunhl~nd 14, Col8riy1 0
Col. Ready ~0. Col. SL OarlCI I J

Gianta, Philadclphil

Stow 42, Cle. Ad&amp;ml 6

14

0

OPEN DATE : Anrona, Dallaa, N.Y.

9

l...ouin-ille A .
Rooutown o
Lo..Uvillo
14
M.diam 41, Alhllbula SL Jcim 1
Magnolia, W.Va. 21, Union l..ocal6
Manchel&amp;a 40, Tutllw 7
Ma.ndi.c.ld MadiaM 21, N.-.uk 24

14

LA. RUJU11l Kuu.u City, I p.m.
Miami 11 Minnesota, I p.m..
Tampe B•y tt Groen B1y , 1 pm.
aNONNATI I t Huuatun.. 4 p.m.
New EnaJand 11 Detro&amp;!. 4 p.m.

New Orfeuu
San D:iqro 11

Loson l!lm 21

O..ymoot 26. MoaOOwbrook 14
Cle. lla\odictinc 40, Hol.y Name 0
Oe. John Mmh.U 18, Campbell12
Oe. ludu:ran -We~t 16. Indcpmdenoc

Meigs limited Wahama to just_K9
the final seconds ticked off the
rush
ing yards and 43 yards passmg
clock with Meigs marching in side
the White Falcon 10 yard line but on the nigh! with Dale Johnson
coach Chancey showed what a runnin~ for 58 yard s 1n 14 tries
class act the Marauder program has while David Mitchell carried the
become by electi ng to let the final pigskin eight times for 28 yards.
seconds tick harmlessly off the Mitchell also completed three of
clock.
·
three passes for 43 yards with Gabe
"Any win IS a big w1n, espec ially Scott catching two aerials for 26
against a sc hool in our own back- yards and Tommy VanMeter one
yard," Chancey SUited. "We were for 17 yards.
In addition to Grimm"s 105 yard
ready for this game and we can enjoy th is victory over the weekend rushing night for Meigs was Roben
but come Monday we have to get Qual ls with 70 yards 1n nme atback lO work and prepare for tempts and Man Williams with 68
Alexander. I do want to commend yards in nine carncs. J umor
'Wahama for not giving up and that quarterback Brent Hanson comsays a lot for coac h Johnson." pleted four of ftve passes for 128
remarked Chancey.
(MARAUDERS end on C-7)

SLC:Ubcnvillc 35, Oc. Collinwood 21

Udin Vill9,Bi&amp;Wobut6
...... ~.CUt. - 14
Lima c.th. 19,Coldwa1Cr7
Llllc Miami Z1, Wilrniaitoa 24

(Continued from C-5)

9110 UW.OO PM
I hOO 1M 6aOO PM

�,_

"'

Page-c8--Sunday Tlmes--Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Farm/Business

Don wood

By ROB WELLS
AP Bw;iness Writer
CHESTNUT HILL, Mass. - When it comes 10
socking money away for retirement, thi s country is
sharply split into two camps: the dos and the don'ts,
And if current trends hold, baby boomers - a
generation of don'ts - run the danger of a severe
decl ine in the quality of their lives, perhaps even
poverty, if they don'\ gel serious about sav ing for

commemorating
tile close of tile
f994 model year

IJY offering e11ery
new '911 11ehicle in
our showrooms
for only••.

retirement , experts at an economic conference said

this past week ,
.
"This is the last generation that, I believe, will
have the type of retirement benefits that people have
been accustomed to over the past several generalions," said L Carter Beese JL, a Securities and
Exc hange Commission member. "I think there is a
retirement savings crisis in America, .. It's clear there
is a severe shortfalL"
A Boston College seminar on th e future of the
financial markets led off with thi s sober ing assess-

GENERAL

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GALLIPOLIS - Tom White, customers, both employer and jobmanager of the Ohio Bureau of seeker, receive a quality result
Ohio has already started this
Employment Services' Gallipolis
local office attended the Annual partnership with other agencies
Interstate Conference of Employ- with the creation of Customer Serment Security Agencies (ICESA) vice Centers which house represenwhere the emphasis was on new tatives of various employment and
technologies to improve service to training service providers allowing
customers needing unemployment jobseekers the opportunity to
benefits, job searc h or training receive these services in one central location. This "one-stop shop"
assistance,
JCESA is an association of top- approach, coupled with modern
ranking officials of the job service technology, positions Ohio in the
agencies of all 50 state s, OBES forefront of providing quality, cuswas host agency for ICESAs' 58th tomer service,
Ohio Chamber of Commerce
annual conference September 1114,
at the Greater Columbus Conven- President Andrew Dochrel; U.S.
Congressman John Ka sich; DL
tion Center.
White states that while anending Jerry Mechling, Director of Stratethe various workshops and talking gic Computing and Telecommuniwith other participants, the impor- cations in the Publi c Sector, Hartance of creating a "customer driv- vard University's John F. Kennedy
en" employment and training ser- School of Government; and Assisvice was stressed, Working closely tant U.S, Secretary of Labor for
with other agencies involved in Employment and Training Doug
providing these services will insure Ross were special speakers,

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TOYOTA TOV CH lE .. SE

ment Retirement savi ngs is a natural topic when
exploring the outlook for the financial markeL~. since
pensions and retirement plans pose the sing le biggest
source of invesunent capital in the nation, said Karen
Ferguson, executive director of the Pe~sion Rights
Center in Washington and another conference panetist
One intriguing issue raised by the panel, which
also included Peter Lynch, vice chairman of Fidelity
lnvesunents Inc ,; and Nobel prize winning economist
Franco Modigliani, dealt with a gap between the old
and new lcinds of pension and retirement plans,
Lucky employees have the older plans, in which
employers spell out a defmed benefit or a predetermined amount paid to workers after retirement
This group, known as the benefit elite, don't face
the burden many employees face from the new-style
retirement plans, in which the boss may contribute
something to the plan but the employees must make
the thorny decisions on where and how to invest their

White attends ICESA session

MERCURY

.....
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SONOMA
C,U&gt;ILUI!C
G.MA C s.MAFH LE.ASE

Indo I" o• u -

FORD

TOYOTA

MOTORS

To.. m

Oth er top managers of the
Department of Labor outlined
trends in empl oyment and training,
unemployment insurance, workforce developm ent and labor market slatistics,
White was also able to attend
work shops dealing with employment services, state financial initiatives that affect employment and
training, the status of veterans preference in job referrals and how data
bases can increase job service efficiency, In keeping with the theme
of the conference, Bringing People
and Tec hnology Together, the
emphasis was on how new technology- including multi-media and
imaging systems- can improve customer service,
White's altendance at this
important conference about jobrelated issues is an element in an
on-going Ohio Bureau of Employment Services' program to upgrade
customer service,

AEP worker marks 25th year
AU l [ A5 E ~ R£001At fiR S! FA'I\l[tfl

~~ liM~

01'

[)(UII[~V ' ~A[f\INDIIBL£

POMEROY - James E. Snyder, Pomeroy, observed his 25-year
service anniversary with the American Elecuic Power System. He is a
maintenance
mec hanic
at
Appalachian Power Company's
Centralized Plant Maintenance
(ACPM) Group,
Headquanered in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., ACPM provides maintenance service to Appalachian's
Mountaineer and John Amos
Plants, Central Operating Company's Philip Sporn Plant and Ohio
Power's Gavin Plant
Snyder joined Ohio Power

S{ CURil ([)(POSH

Company's Philo Plant as a utility
man in 1969 and was promoted to
maintenance man B in 1975, After
two years with Southern Ohio Coal
Company, he moved to ACPM -in
1977 as a maintenance mechanic B,
He was promoted to maintenance
mechantc A in A in I 978 and
maintenance mechanic earlier this
year,
Snyder and his wife , Marie,
have two sons, James k and Joey;
one daughter, Melissa, and two
granddaughters. He is an elder in
the Middleport Church of ChrisL

SMOBILE CIERA
94. OLD
...._ ..... cruise contra1, Io aded
V6. tott """"''
•12,998

GRAN~ AM
.

93 FORD
TEMPO

JUST •9998

87 CHEVY C·

10
ortbed

1 AMIFM. automatiC . sn

f54036 ·

oVOTACAMRV
93 T
co ~•l•• - sumool

.

e(\ra clean

HEVV S-10
89 C
I.I~M ca&gt;Sette

440381 IJ6 automat~e , A
I
. $7398

cassette .

$4528

$9978
EVVSTEPVAN
87 CH
tic ,uns strong,
••csoNoMA
92 G.., _.. AM!fi.l cassTtte

"$~978

91 NISSAN 4)(4
1741631. all. maroon$10,978
UBARU WAGON
87 S
•• 1dtiva, aw. turbO1743341 ' 4$44w·~·95
A ACCORD
92HOND"'';e..ts loaded!
wz40351 , loathe&lt;
$ 14,39

B

R'(

85 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE
vs, autom otic air
JUST $29' .
95
85DODGE

~

93 poNTIAC BONNEVILLE
flti13B4. ted, cassette.
$16,978

AIX
pQ!{fiAC GR~HOP
93
l~h in\eno&lt;, LE
llti1344 m,.oon. c
, casso4tte4pl'7"a
$1 '

~
92 MERCURYTOPAZ
'
\ mat~
, 742241 , ice cold ell, au o
$7498

OLDSMOBILE 88
92
V6 loc&amp;l trade

87 DODGE SHADOW
•743051 , , automat~

SABLE

agon, V6 , automatic, air, cassette
oneowner
'

LUXURY

1140722, station wagon
$2788

85 OLDSMOBILE
'
FIRENZA
1540114, whla , good cador\he ~ods.
$1238

w

BARGAINS

$4678
' :VMOUTH
88 P '"
RELI ANT

GE INTREPID ES
93 0001 \haT low miles. shafll\
11140781, ea •
$18,798

V6, automatic, air.

JUST$6995
88MERCURY

JUST$6995

»74\ 481 , great gas mileage.

g••""·

$4978

JUST $5995

90 FORD FESTIVA

EVV BLAZER
94 CH
4 doOI loW miles
1741471.
998
,
$18,

f44D461. automa ·

Automatic, air &amp; cassette

l741731 , loW m•les, loaded
$9278

91CHEVY
lUMINA

ousands,
12,995

92FORO
FESTIVA LX

OMNI
5 spead, 4 door air
JUST $1995
85 BUICK
SKVHAWK
Autom r
JU"s"-T4 do$o r. 4 cylinder.
299 5
84 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS

l

88
CADILLAC
SEVILLE
eather inletior, local OWner

6 cylinder, 5 speed,
10,000 miles

JUST $11,798
93 FORO RANGER
JUST $12,495

92 CHEVY S·10

4

cylind~. 5 speed, clean
little fl'l.Jck

JUST$6995

MINI VANS
CONYERS. ION V.AN

By JAY CALDWELL

Autom at'tc, 81r, cruise "'
tilt

87LINCOLN
TOWN CAR
IQnature Series new l '
trade ,
•nco/n
JUST $6495

90 CHEVY ASTRa
CONVERSION VAN

91 LINCOLN
TO
WN CAR
EJxeu'"'s""T·new Unco/n trade,
$14,995

Investment Viewpoint

88 CHEVY ASTRO
JUST $8995

s·

ELLIOTT HONORED • Shirley Elliott, Gallipolis, received a
medallion bracelet with three diamonds ror 30 years service with
the G. C. Murphy Co., recently. Making the presentation is Pat
Kenney, store manager. EUiott began her career on Jan. 24, 1964
in the housewares department. Throughout her career, she bas
worked in other departments and today, is the store's supervisor.
"Several changes have taken place over the years," she said. She
said she remembers when there were : everal manual cash registers
throughout the store when she first b~gan working ror the lirm,

4 wheel driVe , .....
........ a owner
5 Speed
'

JUST $8495

84 OLOs
98 REGENCY

•

93 F-150 XL

.

· automattc , air,

casseue
JUST $7995

save lh

JUST$

90 pONTIAC FIREBIRD

LATE MODEL

, been \oo~ing lot

LOcal trade,

cassette.

$9797

ORD F-150
88 F
d ust what you've
42191 short be , I

1742851 VG

88 PONTIAC GRANO AM
~141 . maroon, 5speed, a•r.

·

94HONOA
CIVIC OX -

$2978

91 H ONDAd CIVIC
· AMIFM
•742681 . 5spae,
all,

Brilhanl blue VG

JUST $8495

cassette

$15,978

92 CHEVY
lUMINA

2 door, automatic r~ • """· atr
cassetle

87PLVMOUTH
TURISMO
,44()421 _' blacK. 2 dool, AMIFM

16139l.leatl'ler see.ts.
dar\1. gn:en

$7478

17

All the nice option

JUST $10,S95
88 FORD AEROSTAR
V6, automalic, air, ca83etfe

lowmHes.

'

JUST$5995

JUST ARRIVED
93 DODGE DAKOTA LE

92 ToVOTAC~~M~,~--l_~~:40:n::
,742111. ton. 1"'"' .
$1 1~g~l~8~----l_----_!~~~----_.
?
M
·~m~~~~
..____J~U~S~T~$~1~9~9~5~--l_--~Fu~ll!s~!.~!!~~w!'"';
-~•t·----~~:E:XT:E~N~D~E~O;::~~~
1

$14,978

t..--r--

nest eggs,
Lynch, a Wall Street legend who managed Fidelity's Magellan Fund, said many workers aren't doing
a good enough job with their own accounts. Generally, they 're plunking too much money into_ conservative bonds and not enough into stocks, whtch hJStoncal ly have surpassed the returns of bonds over time.
Ferguson presented forceful criticisrr: of the newstyle retirement plans. including tax-deferred 40I(k)
plans, saying they don' t meet the needs of less affluent workers who can't expect Social Security benefits to sustain them in retirement.
"What concerns us the most is those who most
need something to add to that Social Security cannot,
and are not contributing to these plans," S81d Ferguson, " We already have in this country a tremendous
income disparity between the haves and the have
nots. " Current trends wiU only widen that gulf, she
said,
Some hope for people wrestling will, their retirement savings plans came from Robert Reischauer,
director of the ConJUessional Budget Office,

He said a survey of the ~aby boom generation
showed they still have a chance to sock away money
for an adequate retirement, since the bulk of retirement savings occurs in the last 15 years of a worker's
life.
_"Most of the race has yet \o be run," Reischauer
satd,
The prevalence of two-earner households, higher
household tncomes than the previous ge neration, a
growmg economy and more sophisticated financial
products such as reverse mortgages arc positive
trends for the boomers.
But they will contend with either an erosion of
government benefits or higher \aJ\es as the likely outcome of efforts to balance the federal budget deficit
Medical expenses will continue to rise withoul health
care reforms, and college expenses are nsing,
Reichauer said it's clear "the baby boomers have
their work cut out for them over the next few decades
___ They are going to have to buckle down and make
some sil(llificant sacrifices.''

.'~.\.·.\:'

\,

JOINS STAFF • J. D. Staats, president or
tbe French cu, Mobile Homes, Inc., Friday
announced the addition ol bls brother, Thomas
H. Staats, to tbe staff or tbe Manufactured
Housing Sales Center, 269 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis. Pictured left to right are the owaers
or French City Mobile Homes, lne•• Thomas H.

Staats, Jamei H. Staats, and J. D. Staats. The
dealership also owns and operates-Mountain
State Homes, located at 3411 Jackson Avenue,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Tom and his wife Catby
reside at 916 Mossman Circle, Point PleasanL
They are the parents or two children, Thomas C.
Staats and Kristen Staats.

GALLIPOLIS - Rick A. Swain
has been promoted to assistant
cashier and region manager in Pike
County for Ohio Valley Bank
according to President and Chief
Executive Officer James L Dailey.
Swain transferred to the Waverly
Office earlier this year where he
has served as a loan officer,
Swain, and his wife Cheryl, a
teacher in the Gallia County Local
Schools system, will soon be moving to Pike County according to
Katrinka V, Hart, vice president of
branch administration for OVB,
"Rick, Cheryl and their young
daughter Courtney are excited

about the move_ They're a young,
energetic family that will make a
real contribution to the community,
Plus, Rick: has an excellent staff at
the Waverly Office to support
him," she said,
Swain has attended the University of Rio Grande and Southeastem Business College, In addition,
he recently graduated from the
Ohio School of Consumer Credit at
Kent State University, sponsored
by the Ohio Bankers Association,
He also has srudied real estate and
taken numerous American Institute
of Banking classes,
RICK SWAIN

Soybean, corn harvest underway in Ohio

~
Automatic: , air. load

September 25, 1994

Swain receives promotion

JAMES SNYDER

93 poNTIAC

Section D

Experts offer sobering outlook on· pensions

Automotille
complex is

Poym•••

~imts-~tntintl

agnum V6, automatic, air,

DONWOOD

I

"Where Better Really Matters"
• Buick, Olds, Pontiac, Cadillac, GMC Truck

• Ford, Uncoln, Mercury

• Toyota

EAST

·st3·6641
OHIO

Interest rates
• CPI up only 2.9 percent year
over year, slightly
higher than the 2}
percent in 1993.
• Consensus ··.
inflation estimate .
for 1995 is 3J
percent
•
Capacity
Utilization rate
hits 84.7 percent
• Fed expected to raise rates at
least once more this year, possibly by
50 basis points.
Thisweek'smixedeconomicnews
. whipsawed the markets, but overall it
appears that the economy continues
its expansion. While there are some
pockets of higher prices, it appears
limited to commodities and automobiles.
Competition is keeping retail
prices from accelcnlling and wage
increases have have been moderate
(about 3.2 pen:ent). For inflation to
accelerate, wage increases must increa&lt;~e substanlially and inflaUon
iJSychology must take hold.
Wages could start in~ng if
unemployment continues to decline.
~mber's "core" pnx!ucer price

index could show another large increase, but any such acceleration
would due to seasonal factors and
narrowly based. There is a growing
consensus thauhe Fed will raise interest rates at least 50 basis points by the
November 15th meeting. However,
expectations continue to change with
each economic report,
Eoujtjes

• Merger mania continues in the
health sector and expands to foods.
• Bottom·up estimates are being
increased rather than reduced
• Underlying economic conditions
remain healthy and there is a reasonable chance at an extended expansion.
Our primary stress remains on
selection bocause we do not expect
stocks to post a broad-based move.
Second quarter corporate earnings
were excellent, and the outlook is
good for lhe rest of the year and into
1995, but investors remain hesitant
due to interest rate concerns.
The markets continue to be
whipped by knee-jerk: reaction to the
latest economic data, presenting
opportunities to long tcnn investors.
Mr. CaldweU Is an Investment
Broker with TbeOblo Company In
their Gallipolis Ofllce.

By EDWARD VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - Harvest of Soybeans and Com has started in a few
areas of Ohio , Soybeans have
matured rapidly. SeveraJ com hines
were rolling on Wednesday when I
traveled to the Farm: Science
. Review. Only one percent of Ohio
Corn had been harvested for the
week ending September 18, It was
reponed that 42 percent of Ohio is
in a short topsoil moisture status.
Both the Ohio Com and Soybean
crop are rated at 70 plus percent
good to excellent "Doane's" suggested this week that cash corn
farmers in early harvest areas sell
up to half of the corn from the
combine if offered a premium for
immediate delivery.

Farm Flashes
They suggested that a near-tenn
downside risk on the December
contract at the contract low of
$2.17 per bushel with a dip below
that level likely during peale barvest In laymen's terms, the 1994
U.S. Corn and Soybean crop is

almost one thud larger than last
year and is expecled to really pressure price downward.
What is corn silage worth? I
have spent a lot of time over the
last 25 years trying to come up with
a good value. Regardless of the formula used, I seem to always select
$20 per tone as a reasonable valne.
It is a good roWld number tJo~i puts
a value in the ration at $i per hundred. The fonnula most commonly
used, starts with the value of
shelled corn and adds a processing
and handling charge. Seven bushels
of shelled corn per ton of corn
silage is common for most varieties, The value must also be
adjusted for "Dry Mauer" of the
silage. A dry mauer of 35 percent
is considered nonnal and considered in the formula at "I". Wetter
silage at 30 percent D. M. would be
factored at ,86 and dryer silage at
40 percent D. M. at Ll4. Pushing
the numbers using $2.25 $2.50 com
and a $4 - $6 per ton processing
and handling charge we're bock to
$20 per ton. Another formula uses.

feed replacement values to show
"what if" the silage had to be
replaced with other feeds such as
alfalfa hay, soybean meal and
shelled corn. Some of these figures
can run the corn silage value up
mto the $40 per ton range,
Any commodity that is not
avatlable on the daily market is
hard to _P~. As you can see, even
wtth pncmg fonnulas there are no
easy answers.
The nutritional value of crop
residue is related to a number of
factors, including intensity of graz.
mg, orne of grazing, and weather.
Cornstalk fields grazed shortly
after harvest contain more nutrients
than fields grazed 60 days after
harvest There are some possibilities of founder if large amounts of
gram are left behind at harvest
Corn residue leaf can average
seven percent protein if in good
condition,
The Hillsboro-Chillicothe Area
Feeder Calf Sale held Wednesday
evening (September 21) at Hillsboro Producers Livestock featured

oea•ly I,000 head of graded calves
and yearlings. This all hornless sale
has traditionally been one of the
stronger sales annually, More than
250 head of the graded steer calves
sold at or above the $80 per hundred mark, Two groups of calves
totaling 45 head and weighing an
average 526 pounds and 539
pounds sold for $86 per hundred,
Hetfers m that same weight and
qualtty range sold mostly in the
$72 - $79 per hundred range, We
still have a few copies of the listing
of 1994 Ohio Special Fall Feeder
Cattle Sales put out by the Ohio
Caulemen 's Association. Stop by
our office or call_ for a copy,
Annual Meetmg Circuit: Callia
County Farm Bureau, Thursday
evenmg, September 29; Ohio Va1.
ley Sheep Association, Saturday
ev~nmg, October I; Gallia County
Pnde In Tobacco Association
Thursday evening, October 13_
'
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County's Agriculture Extension
Agent.

Southern's FFA forestry team fourth in district
Extension Corner

ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY - Congratulations to
the Southern FFA Forestry Team
destroy millions of dollars worth of
for placing fourth in the District property according to OSU ExtenForestry Contest held at Miller sion specialists, In order to assure
High SchooL Team members personal safety and minimize propincluded Philip Hamm, Jessica erty damage in the home and on the
Sayre, Jeff Rose and Tracy Card.
fann, fire extinguishers should be
The top three team members will
kept on-hand and in operational
be participating in the State order. Check to be sure:
Forestry Contest to be held at
- each is in its recommended
Hocking Technical College Nel- location; fire extinguishers should
sonville, on OcL I.
be located on equipment where
Another successful Farm Sci- flammable materials are being
ence Review was held this past stored and any other place where
week at the Molly Caren Agricul- !here is a possibility for combustural Center. How many of you tion.
took the time and effort to review
-ach is checked at least once a
the Fire Safety exhibit put on dis- year to ensun: that they are
play by the Ohio State University • fully pressurized. tamper seals are
Agricultural Engineering Depart- not broken, units are undamaged
ment for National Farm Safety · and that hoses and nozzles are
Weet:/ Have you implemented t~r WlObstructed.
ideas presented so that your house,
Plan to be entertained, by
bam or truck can be safe from ftre. attending An Evening with Ed
Each year, fifes kill or severely Johnson.• on ()c~ 4111 at 7 P.M.
injure thousands of pfople and

at the Carmel United Methodist
Church located on crossroads of
Carmel Road and Pleasantview
Road. Racine, Ohio. Ed Johnson is
founder and president of Agri
Communicators, Inc. Mr. Johnson
is a weD lcnown T.V. sw and agricultural commentator: having his
own Saturday morning T.V. show,
"Agri Country •. daily radio commenwies on ABN radio &amp; affiliates and monthly articles in the
"Ohio's Country JOilflll[". Ed is a
busy man, who still has time tl'
commit pan of his pmonal time to
teach a weekly Sunday school
class. If available, come earlier as a
six o'clock potluck: dinner is _
planned before the evening entertainment begim.
Greenhouse growers, just a
reminder for you to save the four
Thursday nights in October to
attend educational sessions prepared by Ohio State University
Extension and Ohio Fbists' Associalion. Sessions will be held from

7 - 9 p,m, at the Racine United
Methodist Chun:h. The first week's
sessions will include information
concerning new pest products
compliance in new Worker
lion Standards and how your fenilization practices affect plant production and post-production quaJi.
ty.
Interested in Intensive Grazing?
The Athens County Grazing Council is meeting Thursday, October 6
at 6 p,m, at Rick Duff!s. Tour ploU
of turnips, Marion Lespedeza and
walk through his grazing paddocks.
Rick lives at 15628 Bucks Lake
Road, east of Shade. If ycu can't he
there by 6:00P.M., still stop by and
catch up with us. There will be a
hamburger and lamburgu fry. For
further information call the Meigs
County Extension Office at 992-

Protec:

6696.

Hal Kneen is the Olalo State
University Extension Apicllltural A1ent for Meigs Couaty,

;

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

WV

1994
11

Help Wanted

11

---..

Av.rsge Over

l2000 lllont h

J.B. H~;rt Poy A Full DriYwa
Wogo 0nca You Ani A Ouallllad
Slnglo Drivor. Wo
Pay Our
Drivora r.- To lbke Up For
Training Expen. .. 9t~ Br For
A Coniplela CIA« PNMn:•

Don,

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual report Form
990PF lor the Kibble

30 Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772, until 2:00 p.m. ,
prevailing local time,
Thursday, October 6, 1994,
and
opened
publicly
Immediately thereafter
Propoeala may be delivered
or mailed. If mailed, aend
via reg laterad mall In time
tor the bid opening.
A alngla propoaal will be
received for the entire
proJect which will Include
the work of all trades.
Estimated Total ProJect
Cost
$27,340.00
Bidders to designate on

Po undation, Bernard V.
Fultz , Trustee, Is available
fo r public Inspection at
Bernard V Fultz Law Office,
111 1 2 W Second Stroot,

Pomeroy,

Ohio

~5769,

durmg regular boalness
hours lor a period of 150
days
s ubsequent
to
pllblication of this notice.

(9) 20 21, 22, 23, 25, 26, 27;
7TC

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice
h••curlt~ In the form of

o

surety bond or certified
check In the amount of 10%
ot the bid. Failure ot any
bidder to enter Into and
execute a contract for the
work covered by the
propoaal he has submitted,
shall cause tile bid security
to become forfeited by the
bidder to the Owner AS
liquidated damages and not
aa a penalty because of
auch failure on the part of
the bidder. Bids may not be
withdrawn leaa than 45 days
aner submitted.

~~:~:~vb~~~p;h!h~~~~ ':n~ ev~~~h h~~~~~·;h~h~~c~p:=~

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals tor the address of the bidder and
furnishi ng of all material• the name ol the proJect
shall also be Indicated.
and performing all labor for
Drawings
end
Bid
the erection of:
Documanh
may
be
OFFICE RENOVATION
obtained from the Architect
FOR
at 326 Front Stroot Marlena,
TUPPERS PLAINSOhio 45750 lor a rolundoble
CHESTER
depoalt ol $10.00.• Franklin
WATER DISTRICT
D. Loe(614)373-BB41.
39561 BAR 30 ROAD
All propo . . la must
REEDSVILLE, OHIO
Billa will be received by contain a llat ol proposed
Tuppers Plalne-Chootor- subcontractors, and be
by
bid
Watar District at 39561 Bar accompanied

bidder, furnish performance
and lobor and material
payment bonds, In a form
satisfactory to the Owners
In the amount of ~00% of
the contract amount,
guaranteeing the succeaatul
completion of the work bid
upon and payment ol all
obligations
arising
therefrom.
Bidders are advised that
thla 1proJect Is subJect to
prevailing wage rates and

the
payroll
reporting
requirements of Section

4115 ol the Ohio Revised
Code
based
on the
estimated
coat
ol
renovation.
The Owner reserves the

right to accept any bid, to
Wa i ve
any
or
all
Informalities In bids and/or
to reJect any or all bids at
their discretion.

Harold H. Blackoton
President of the Board of
Directors
TUPPERS-PLAINSCHESTER WATER DISTRICT
(9) 21, 25: (1 0) 3; 3TC

Announcements
3

Announcements

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

BRIDGE

achtevmg a spec1f1C ob1ecttve didn 't work
out as you antiCipated It Isn't apt to do
any better 1f resurrected aga tn today
~ 1994 N~: WSI'N't:lrNTERPRISE ASSN

Shrln11, Whllo You Drinkl Colt
"Zona 1-800-IIG7-7548.

~'Birthday

4

to you 1n matenal ways
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) Do not diS·
count your hunches today , espec1ally
those pertammg to e ndeavors you pef·
sona/ly manage Your 1ntw110n could help
you clearly perce1ve thmgs that your log1c
f 1nds confus1ng MaJOr changes are
ahead for Libra 1n the commg year Send
for your Astra-G raph pred1ctrons today
Marl $1 25 to Astra -G raph c/o th1s news-

paper, P 0 Box 4465. New York N Y
ahead bY ma11 1ng $1 25 to Astro-Graph,
10163 Be sure to state your zodrac s1gn
c/o th;s newspaper, P 0 Box 4465, New
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A JOint ven·
York. NY 10163 Be sure to state your
ture looks promiSing today. provided you
zodtac s1gn
play a leadmg role rather than a subordiSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Guard nate one It needs someone strong and
aga1nst •ncllnahons today to be posses gutsy up lronl
SIVe or demand1ng of loved ones Th1s
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23- Dec. 21)
type of behav1or Will push them away
Ne1ther you nor your mate should make
1nstead ot draw1ng them nearer
ma1or decrs1ons today w1thout frrst conSAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dac. 21) sullmg the other . In your tnstance two

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22 -Jan. 19)
Someone you diSlike does not teel the
sa me way about you Instead of g1vrng
th1s person the beneftt of the doubt, you
have a tenden cy to pretudge him/her. as
you mtght do aga m today

horse
PISCES (Feb. 2Q-March 20) Your proba·
b1lthes for berng able to operate as 1nde·
pendently as you 'd hke today are very
slim Don'! let others make unreasonable
demands on your hme
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Make a new
start today w1th assoc1ates who surround
you If you permtt a past 1ntract1an to diStort your thtnktng, 11 Will prevent the problem from be 1ng healed

TAURUS (Aprii2Q-May 20) A fnend who
has yel to return something recently bor·
rowed from you m 1ght h1t you up for
another of your possess1ons today

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Exerc1se
that 1s modestly , physically challengmg
could be both tun and healthy 101 you
today Get oH your duff and stan mov1ng
your muscles
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) It m1ght be
necessary lor you to take a calculated
nsk today m order to strengthen your
pos1t1on where your career •s concerned
Be bold and brave, not brash or fool1 sh

onented adivd~es could prove to be very

grat1tyong today You'll fmd enroyment
mend1ng th1ngs around the house or out
puttenng 1n the yard or garden

ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Th1s 1s a
good day tor you to catch up on mauers
perta1mng to communrcatron Clear up old
correspondence and make lhose phone
call you 've been meanmg to make but

haven't.
TAURUS (April 2Q-May 20) Even though
you won't be unfa tr nor try to take advan ·
tage ol others. you m1ght Slill profit mcely
from your bus1ness Involvements today

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Its 1mpera11ve
today you don t let control sl1p !rom your
hands 10 matters perta1nmg to strong,
Before you do, 11's best to 'establish some
personal mterests Be the manage r. not
ground rules
one who IS managed
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) StriVIng to CANCER (June 21-July 22) A d1tf1cult
make your mark 1n the world IS admtrable,
development can be rect111ed today 1f you
but don'l do so al the expense of others
let the so1u11ons you perce1ve appear as 1f
today There s a difference between they're the 1deas ol persons w1lh whom
climb1ng upwards and claw1ng your way you're mvolved
·
10 the top
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Think tw1ce at
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be careful lh1s t1me before comm1n1ng yourself to a
about offenng unsoltated advtse to others commerc 1al arrangement w1th a frrend
today, because what you say m 1ght be

misunderstood and could be blamed lor

any fa1lures lhat result.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There 1s a nega·
live Situation you have had an opportumty

1110 buying Junk

can

I

trvc:

1.

304-77H343.

Old clgarotto llght11r11, milk bolt~,

fountain piiiW, allverwan,

marble•, llonaware, magal.lnea,
Star Wara and Star Trei hema;

'!\JESD~ SEP'TEII BER

3 ella, I montha old, good
home only, 304~~550.
5 Frteky Cute I&lt;Jtt.,.., L,on.

ghslntd, Gray Whh Whho Foot, 7
Wooko Old, Only To Co~ng

6

Lost &amp; Found

- - - - - - and
Found: Chow with
ch•ln.L. SA 248 and Number Nina

Rd ., \,;hMier/Long Bonom, 8M985_.35l
Found: malo ml&gt;ad bnod doQ,

~ow, SA 143 vlclnhy, 814-~·

7 Cottlo &amp; Lob lllxod Pupploo,

=~7·~~~~----

614-2158-6430.
Shoto, s~ Houao
on, Good W h Chlldntn,
614·388-!1824.

I::'J\. All

Boautllul blonde malo dog, 2yrs.
old,
medium
llzed,
pilrt
Pomw1nlan, lov• chlldfWI 1
nMda to run 6 ptay, to gooa
home only. 304-67&amp;-5253.

Found:
Smolt
Pup
Light
Colored, Eollom Avonuo, G'olII polls, 814-446-8308.
Husky On At. 7, 814-2158-8535
Coli To ldontlty.
Lost: Cowo Add loon Aroo, 814367-7228, 614-367-7206.
Lost: Qotd Wrlol Watch, With
Wovon Gold Chain, 514-215867!15.

__
7

Yard Sale
....;,;_:~~-

female, spayed. 304-87&amp;-1484.

~l.'" hall Baoglo, 304-773-

Public Sale

&amp;

~ollt~r

HomH, 814-446.0317.

9 Month lladlum SIJ.O lllxad

8

Gallipolis

Auction

Rick Poo,_ Auction Compony,
full time 1uctJoneer, compllle
oUdlon
oarvtco.
Uc..IIII,Ohlo &amp; Woot Vlrglnlo, 304-

77U785.
W"'*noyw'o Auctl101 Somco,
GotHpotla, Oh~6~.
Auctto.- Cot. ~tck,
LJcenoo • 754-114 &amp; llondad,
304.atl5-3430.

9::---:-w.,...a_nt,ed_..,to....,..,B_u~y-=-

Comlllote Houaoltold Or &amp;.
tateol Any 'J\rpo 01 Fumno..,
AI&gt;PI~. Antlquo'a, Etc. Ar.o
Appro
. loaf Avallobtol 814-3N2720.
Ctoon Loto llodot Cars Or
Tn.ocu, 11187 llodolo Or - .
SmHh Buick Pontloc 11100
E.otom Avonuo, GottlpcCio.
Dracorated stoneware, MN ....,.
phonM, old lompo . old thormomatora, old cloclca, anllquo
tumlhra. Rlverlr• Antlqua•.
Au• Moore, owner. 114-0022528. We buy aetate1.

&amp; VIcinity
Don't Junk hi Sell U1 Your NonTasr down houM lor material, ALL Yard S.lae Uull Qe Paid In Wortclng MaJor Appltoncae,
T.V. ·,
Rafrigll'ltcn,
must taka all, 304-7n-5240 or Advenco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Color
FrMun, vcA·.. Ulcrowav••.
773-5102.
the day beforlt the ed 11 to run. Air Condlllonera, Wuhera,
Sund1y edition • 2:00 p.m.
Whhe male duck to glweaw1y. Friday. Monday edition - 2:00 DryoraL Copy llochlneo, Powor
Too'-, ~c. 614-256-1238.
614-11112-11211.
p.m. Saturdaw.

Top PrieM Pold: All Old U.S.
Coins, Goki Ringe, Sliver C&lt;Mna,

Wanlod To Buy: Uead Uobllo

porlencad Drlvo111 Including:

Avon Wanta Individuals lnte,.._

tad In Eomlng 18 ~ /Hr. No
Door To Door. 1.aoG411111-11&amp;4-4.

Bebyelttor lly Homo, Pori·Timo
llomtngo, 814-258-1461, 114-2581008.

Week.Ma. Appllcanl MuM Have
COL With DOublu Endorc.
ment. 1 Y-.r OVw The R011d Ex·

1

:t, .Haonh

DOI!enca Excott.re Plan, 1-800-382-

sincere thanks for your
thoughts. prayers. cards &amp;
flowers , during my recent
stays in the hospital It will
be forever greatly
appreciated.
Alden Wedemeyer

See Answer to Pwzler on Page A-2

• K B6 3
4 K 5 2

WEST
aQtOB63 2
2
I Q I0 7

.,o

EAST
4KJ974

•10 4

9 6 3
4A

•A K 8 53
t A J 5 2

•A 8 7
Vulnerable. Neither
Dealer : West
South

1•

6•

West

North

East

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

4•

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: •

Pass

2

The identical
twins of bridge
By Phillip Alder

wtth whom you 've never done busmess
prev1ous1y It could have some hidden

dtsadvantages
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) A goal you
previously though! was unreachable can

to change However, s1nce you haven't
done anyth1ng about 1t. someone else

th1ng IS to first overcome your feelings of

m1ght take ot upon h1mlhersell to alter it
Vlf'GO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) An alliance

Inadequacy and se~-doubt.
CHfil NEWSPAPER ENJ'ERP!USE ASSN

be achieved 1n th1s cycle. The 1mportan1

Alfred , Lord Tennyson, wrote, " The
mirror cracked from s1de to Side. 'The
curse has come upon me,' cned The
Lady of Shalott "
Maybe T ennyso n had bridge 1n
mtnd, because mirror d•stnbul10n,
which occurs wh en both the declarer
and dummy have the same number of
cards in each su1t. IS often the curse of
death for a contract
In today' s six · h ea rt contract. it
looks as though declarer will lose a
trick in each minor. If only, say, the
North hand had one Jes s club, the
slam would be easy to make
Ye t t he declarer , Chuck Lamprey,
an expert who has won many titles,
made the contract. He found the win·
nmg ltnc by drawmg the correct mier·
ences from h1s opponents' passes and
plays
When the dummy appeared. Lamp
rey wondered why neother opponent
had bid spades He fe lt that they must
be splitting 6·5, smce with seven,
someone would have pre·empted.
Declarer won the first trick with his
heart ace and Jed a second trump to
dummy's queen East discarded a
club
South had his second clue Why
would East throw a club rather than a
•pade' !Later, a que stion also asked
of East by Wesl.l East had to have at
least as many clubs as spades. Hoping
East had begun with 5· 1·2-5 distribu·
lion, Lamprey played a spade to his
ace, a diamond to dummy's king and a
second diamond. When East played
low, Lamprey won with his ace,
cashed the two top clubs and exited
with a diamond.
As expected, West had to return a
spade, conceding a ruff.and·discard,
on which declarer's club loser disap·
pea red.

1 POrtiOn
6 Cod or Canaveral

W Land measure
14
19
20
22
24

Dece1era1es
Deleated one
Baldw1n namesakes
lnv1tee
Obtecl lrom
antiQUity
25 Actress Ekberg
26 Jean ol "Upsta,..s.
Downsta11s" fame
27 Speech1fy
28 Of sheep
29 Stem 101nl
30 Famous
32 Play part
34 Nol odd
35 Structure ol
lalllcework
39 Stones
41 Most sore
43 Feathery
45 H1ts w1th open hand
47 Tends
46 Donkey
51 Badly
53 Wood stnp
55 Droop
56 Snead or Jaffe
59 Buttons and 61 Liben1ne
62 Oolong and pekoe
64 Dell meat
66 Crawl
6B RusSian ru ler
70 In a chal!
72 Batman's s1dek1ck
73 Robs
75 Spec1al pleasure
77 Corpsman
79 F1nest
60 Walks proudly
82 01 warshipS
84 Gets healthy aga1n
86 Pals
88 B1shop's headdress
90 Gambling cenler
91 Metnc we1ght
95 Greasy spoon

101 Part of AD
102 "- Marner"
104 Weasel re lal1ve
106 "T1e a - nbbon
106 Dead language
110 Four quarts
112 G1ve ott
114 Boullque
115 Paved way
117 Profound
116 Egypllan goddess
120 Fm1shed
121 Preacher's lalk·
abbr
122 Knock
124 Ooze
126 H1-ll's COUSin
126 Nal1ve ol: SUIIIX
129 Mov1ng aboul
131 Rubb1sh
133 Fam111ar 1V show
135 K1lchen item
139 Book of maps
141 Ridiculed
145 Spoken
146 Kmgly
146 Adds seasomng 10
150 Noth1ng but
151 Outspoken
153 Tncks
155 Incline
157 Monastery head
156 Foe
159 F1ght (hyph. wd.)
160 Wretched dwelling
161 Playground 1tem
162 "We're off - the WIZard •
163 Meet1ng penod:
abbr
164 Marnes
165 Actor Uslinov ol
"Spartacus"

DOWN
I
2
3
4
5
6

Lean
Treat w1th respect
Slage wh1sper
Say aga1n
Penod
Prorect1ng machme
part
7 King and Aida
6 Pres1dent1al
cand1dale Ross 9 Raplurous del1ght
10 In I he pas I
1 1 Mongrels
12 Respond
13 H1gh regard
14 Sold-out notice
15 Crowbars
16 0 11source
17 Sherry, port, etc
16 Odor
21 Hard ouler covenng
23 Navrat1lova's game
31 Quanllty
33 Ms Ferber, el al.
36 Back lalk
37 S1rav1nsky
38 Plant growth
40 Outpounng
42 - R1ce Burroughs
44 F81th
46 Waler vapor
48 Rud1men1s
49 Kmds
50 Sacchanne
52 Memonze
54 Detester
56 Sword
57 Wrongly
58 Aller·dlnner candy
60 Scorch
63 Passover leasl
65 Ear part
67 Most·d•slant planet
69 Ouanllty ol paper
70 Depot
71 Cut 1nto cubes
7 4 Antlered ammals
76 Eager
78 Brooklyn's - Island
81 Small plant shoot

Card of Thanks
I would like to express my

SUNDAY PUZZLER
97 Fme po1nt

We wou ld like to thank
o1.1r famil y and fncnds for
lhen sy mpathy, comfort ,
food and espeCially the
prayers in the death of our
father, George F. Curry, Sr.
To Pastor Bob Thompson
and Pastor Carl (Boxer)
Swisher for officialing,
Rhonda
Lynch
for
arranging
graveside

83 Fasting t1me
85 Ballots
87 Caesar or Waldorf
89 Nerve network
91 Rascal
92 Bury
93 Cut of meat
94 Men
96 Send payment
98 S1ng1ng vo1ce
99 .. _ - L ucy·
100 Bod•es of
knowledge
101 "Oh . woe' "
103 Icy ram
105 Sta11case part
107 EXISied
109 Hosp1tal worker
111 Mus1cal drama
113 Weary
116 Hungry one
119 Dned out
123 Flut1sts
125 Boone and Manta
126 Not deep
127 "- Town"
129 Onf11e
130 Scoundrels
132 Cut
134 Ag1le
135 Des1re greed1ly
t 36 C1ty 1n Mame
137 Countenances
136 Flavor
140 K1tchen 1tem
142 Account entry
143 Deslroy by degrees
144 H1nder
147 Allows
149 Raced
152 Soap 1ngred1ent
154 D1stress ca ll letters
156 Overhead railways
157 V1per

military

the

SCTVlCCS,

Gallipolis V.F.W. Post4404
and Vanessa Cook.
To the pallbearers who so
willingly slepped tn at the
last minule because we had
overlooked that detail,
Dwight Swisher, Robbie
Caldwell, Cliff
Wood,
Dorsi! Messick, Steve
Cunningham and Donnie
Mullins.
Everything was handled

Goltfo..llalgo Community Action

moth or boolckooplng

aldlta 1nd capability of working

lndapondantly, u
woll ee
t..mwork •~ further ,._
qul,_,o 1o&lt; thlo poohlon.
Com~er ••perience dalrable.
The lndtvldual must hllve lin·
cere concern lor the economically dloadvontogad and obllhy
to work ett.ctlvely with them Ia
-111. Htgh ochoot graduoto
or equln..ri r.qulrwd. lrlpa to
0Uk&gt;l4roa madlcatlaclthloo oro
1 pAit ol the lob; theretore, ezpedeince In ...,... programs,

Including
oulrooch
ond
tranoportotlon ""' benoficlat.
Only thoel wtth lnaurable, Nil·
lble tranaportatlon •nd valid
drill'er'• llcen• ahould apply. A
knowladae of Melga County
needed tor outraach tr~naport1·
lion. Appllcatlonl and r11umn
wilt be occeplod through October 5, 1904 II the Gallla-Melga
Community Ac&lt;lon Agency, 60i0
N. St. At. 7, Choohlra, Ohio. Wo
are an Equal Oppor1unhy
Employer.
Hurune Officer To Investigate
Abuao Nogtoct And Cruony To
Animo~, llu.t Lovo Anlmoto.
IIUit "'" CUrrwnt Drlver'a
R.llable Traneporta-

L.lclnM,

lion, Love Of Anlmst 11 And
Fio&gt;lblo Hours. Title Is A Con·
trsctod Service PooHion. Prolar
Condldoto With Low Enlo..,..
ment llockgraund. Sond lntarMI
L..Mter And- A•ume Befora Octoller 1ot To Gottlo County
Animal Wetlars ~uo, P.O.
Bo• 218' GolllpcCio,
..a63t.
Laboror to do rooting, oldlng
Nmodellng, exp. pr~fenwd,
$5.50/hr. to start. ~-675-5521.
t.acot

Company

Quellfled

S.la

Noade
Peraon,

A

Ex·

oarlencad Pnohlrr..r Bul Not
Noco-ry, Eamlng Potentlel
Unllmttecf, S.rtou• lnqulriH
Only. &amp;14-448-2388.
Nood Bartondor lor prtvato club.
loluot have ttnlbto hours, hourly
111te ptua tlpo. Sond lottor of
reeum• to: Box 32, Rutland,
Ohlo45775.
Noad Ext"' llonoy? ft. Fun &amp;
Eaay With Avon. Call O.bltlo For
Dololto, 114-.2158-1502.
Nood

otdor lody

or rotlr..r

couple to stay with elderly
WOII'IIR. Room. bo.rd and $200
per week ..lary. Phorw 614-198-

2785 or 1114~11&amp;4129.

Now Terminal
Cordlnal Fntlght Corrta111 tnr:. Ia
hiring

exporlenced
for
the

owner/o~rato~

nnlllatbad division, prolheblo
PIIY progr1m, ICCUI'IIte WMklr.

loaM on. CoU Boyd, 1-1100-220-

sincerely thank you.
George F Cuny, Jr
Cheryl Swisher

Wilbur

Windland

and family wishes to
express their sincere
for the
kindness and
hat

has

extended

love
been

to

them

through gifts, words,
and prayers,
Wilbur's
July

6,

given
of

since

accident,

special

1994.

A

thanks

is

members

to the

Tuppers Plains

VFW
..,

S.C:rM1ry/Cterk

Oh10. And to those fami ly

but also their hearts, we

Post 9053, and

Coolville VFW Post

3478,

who worked

so

hard on the benefit
dinner and auction.
To

Hard

Country

Band for their music.
To

1.0.

McCoy

for

auctioneering.
Thanks to all who
donated,
bought,

attended,

and made the

benefit

such

a

welcome

success.

Thank you also to
Middleport/Pomeroy
Rotary

Club. The

Orange

Christian

vnurcn. Am Vet

Post

76 ol Athans, and

the

many, many others
who have given in
anyway.
prayers,

kind

Your
gifts, and

words will never

be forgotten.

The Windland Family
J

Str&amp;cl:ly Confldentl•l.
CLA Box 332, c/o Gallipolis
O.lty Trlbu~ 1 825 Third Avenue,

..tttementa, medical ln1. avll·
able, rider program and lime
home, no up front money to

only their hands of support,

Tribunr446·2342 Sentinel 992-2156 Register 675-1333

RaP'I••

long distance because our
Dad lived 1n Delaware,
&amp; friends who eKlended not

Classified Line Ads

Experloncad Soerwtsry • Aoeop.
tlonlot Wentod, Old Eotabllohad
Co. OQwntuwn L.oelltlon. Lota Ot
Rooponolbllhloa, Good Poy 6
Fulunt For Alaht Individual, All

Good

lncl otono, oam ~·· ~~~ln
~--- .. 1 11112
•

Call (304)429-2186 or wnte to
Gary T Houck 4222 Auburn Ad
Huntin ion WV 25704· 11 32

2421.
Cllllco Clortl, Ful~llme, Familiar
To Normol Olltce /Aotoll
Functlona. lladlcal And Compuler Exportenco Helpful, For
Joe,._, Aroa, Sond Rooumas
To: o.n.la Orygon And llod~
col
Equipment, 311 Third
Avenue, Gllllpoll•, OH 48131, Or
Coli 114-446-1212 For Appoint·
ment.
Qwnerl()peratcn

Community
Action Agency ·• Home Enargy
Aasletanca Program hal 1n
lmmedlete
opening
for
1
Rtcordl ClerkAntak.a Worbr at
lt1 c•ntral office In ChMhlre.
Thle poehloo r~ulr. sn Individual th1t won.a well under
praaura and mull be Mnlhlve
to th• nMd• of tM low Income.
Computer 1nd book~ng ex·
perlenc. r~ulred. Mu.t type 50
WPM. Elcportence wtth r.darot
program• desired. AbUtly to
work well whh othen a muet .

3 Bedroome, 2 Bathe, Helt
Pump, Gas Furnac., 1 Acre,
Garage. Will Conekler Single
Wldo On Down Poyment, AdArM, $62,000, 614-367·

WllDUFE

/CONSERVATION
JOBS
Gomo
Wanlano,
Soc:urhy,
Maintenance
Etc. No £xp.
Noco111ry. Now Hiring. For Into
c.a 218-1'94-00lo Ext. mo, o
A.M. To 10 P.M. 7 Dove.

HouH For Sale By Owner:
Upotal111: l.R., Khchon W
/Appllo"'*.1 3 'IIR~ 2 B•!hl1
Loundry w/W l u. Flnl.,_

Woodmon Of Tho World lifo Inaunmce Society hu. curnnt
openings for ca,..,. rapr...ntatlv•ln Muon, GaiUa &amp; Malo•
County are. Full benllhl: two
yNr fr1lnlng 1llowence tor 1
eure atart, plue comprehensive

aval'-!blll,

ruet

card

Imitation or oJscrrnlnallon
based on race, cotor, relgton,
sex 1amllal Slalus or nauonal
origin, Of any lnlenUon to
make any siKh preferel'lCe,
Imitation or dl9crimNI:Ion •

16 Wanted to Do
,..,,..,...--..,..._;;,.;,..;,___

This

Chlldcara, Nglr.ered.lllnk. belt
carll beet ratM. 304-175-2888.

Now

n.r. Home.

For lllora lnlormaUon, 614-4410138.
Oono1111 llelntononco, Polnl!ng 1
Yard Work Window• Waanaa
Guno111 Cleonad Ught Hauling,
Commorlcet, Rooldonllol, Stovo:
614-446-4148.

ne_,- 1011 rnt

Work
Reasonable Prices
Licensed &amp; Bonded
20 years experience
614-388-8030
614-388-9991
HELP WANTED

446-9442

Expe nenced
New company commg mto area
We

Good

a re

a

F11ness

Center

Prolaalonol Traa Sorvlco TOf&gt;'
ping 6 Trimming Hodgo Trimmlng Stump Removal Froa &amp;.
tlmotaal 814-3811-9643, 1114-3671010.
Sun Valloy Nu~. Sehoot.
Chllolcara M-F 6e~:30pm Aaoo
2-K, Young Sehoot Ago Duilng
Sumrnor. ;r Doyo por WHII lllnlmum 81U46-3657.

Trlbvno Photogntphar Avelloblo
lor ·Woddlngo &amp; Othor Evonto
Call Kovln 614-446-8510 Ahor 5
p.m.
Will Bebyoll In lly Homo Or
Poulbty YoW11, Cloaohlra ArH,
8t4-367-4466 II No Ana- Loova
Moooago.

weekdays and 9.50
weekends. A - 1 Nursing
Care ca11614-268-3800
contact Vocky Logan
for more information

b
d d
must e state teste an
require a police check.

fnnge b e nef1ts

bed s.

We

provide

aerobics.

tanmng

wetght

Send re s ume to·

loss

traimng. phys1cal fitness tra1mng .

Human Re sources

Group and privale instructiOn
available, also child care facility-

Holzer Cl1n1c Inc
90 Jackson P1ke
GallipOliS, OH 45631

LAYNE FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR TWIN SIZE
Regular
$85
F1rm
$95
Extra F11m .
. $105
Orthoped•c
Kmg SIZe Sels . .. $350 &amp; Up
Queen SiZe Sels .... $295 &amp; Up
Bunk Mattress
$48 &amp; Up
Bed Frames ...... $25·$35·$50
Mon thru Sa t 9· 5 p m 446·0322
3 m1les out Bulav1lle P1ke
FREf DELIVERY

Yard Sale

Johnson's Greenhouse
2nd Ave. Galhpolts
9 :00-4 :30
All 1tems donated by the
community

Hidden Hollow Arena
For Sale

Presents Fun Show

Oct. 1,

at

1:00

Eureka' Tents
Advert1sed 1n Fam1ly Fun

p.m.

$2 .00 Admission Adults

magazme L1fel1me warranty·
Storm sh1eld Easy set-up 9 '6" x7'

Children 12 and under Free
Chi lli and Hot dogs

center Display tent to see

after show
Located

5 m 1les

Buy at off season pnce now

north of

Reta•l $492 00 Sale $250

Holzer Hospital on State

VAN, FLATBED &amp;
TEMP. CONTROLLED
DIVISIONS

Bnng your lawn chatr

Ohio Valley
Bank
New Car Show
Saturday,
Oct. 1st
Downtown
Gallipolis
9 a.m.-3 p.m.

Gallia County Democratic
Party Spaghetti Supper
October

3,

1994

DAV/AMVETS

Financral

Business
Opportunity

INOTICEI
OHIO VAUEY PUBLISHING CO.
_
. .ndo that you do bull-with pooplo you ru-, ond
NOT to oand monay tm&gt;ugh the
moU unlll vou ha.. ln-lgatad
tha oHorlng.
Investment

Opportunlly.
1
t/30C., ilbr. totol oloclrlc gorage
opl. wnutl garsgo undor, ~ mollll
homo anoa locatad IIO!Ctlon ol
At. 2 &amp; 62, i!t. Ploooant. 3Q4.675.
3000.

Prtvtte homo lor olderty lor 111o
or - I n Mkldtaport, ~.ooo e
yaar tncomo, oolo prloo 1111,000

,114-1112-ao42.
VENDING ROUTE: Won, Got
Alclt Quick. Will Got A Stoodv
Coolo Prlcad to Soli. ;.

• Adding 400 New Unns
• Eam up to S.28 per mil
lo Blart plus bonuaes.
• Orientation and Travel
Corrpenaetion
• Top-of-the-line '93-'95
Freightliners, Peterbihs,
Volvoa
·Satellite
CormtUnicationa
• Guaranteed time oil.
• Excellent
pay/compensation
package.
• 1sl day coverage-heah
life, dental insurance.
CALL:
1·800-346·2818
(BAM· 5 PM C.S.T.)

Part-time A 1d Gallia County RSVP

Adults $10.00
Children under 12 -$2.50
Serving begins at 6:30 pm
Spaghetti- BeveragesDeserts
Meet the Candidates
For information

-PrizesFree Refreshments.

Ca11441-1144
Pa1d lor by lhe Gallla Co
Democra11c Party. Doug Cowles.
Cha,.man

Ca II

Director of RSVP, responsibilities of th1s
volunteers m Galha County;
in-service training to volunteer
orgamzmg activit ies for recognition
maintaming necessary records and

,.,:,,;·;,;i•• and

by the

RSVP office.

for this part· t1me position mclude a htgh school

l

equ1valent and current driver's hcense required Previous
workmg with volunteers is helpful. Applicant must be 55
older Income guidclmes apply
;cs'~~;~~~·~d~c:•:~ndidates st'lould send a letter of application and a
the names and addresses of three Jefcrences to:
Mason, PHR, D~rector of Human Resources, University

PO. Box 969, Rio Grande, OH 45674.

446-2342

1990 Chevy 1/2 ton

or 992-2156

Sport truck

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Great looking, neat as

a

pin, very good fuel
econemy, V-6, automatrc
overdnve,

AC,

stereo, new

tires, trailor hitch 79,000
Well kept $8,200
614-992-4111
992-2478

The University of Rio Grande announces an opemng for a partaid for the Gallia County Retired Sen1or Vo lunteer Program
Oe•velc•pment) as a part of the Semor Communny
V).

oo

·1· 614-446·091 0

Route 160 North .
DRIVERS/TRACTOR
TRAILER
LQCAL REGIONAL
&amp;OTR

and

w o man .

Sepl. 30 - Oct 1st

J

sk1lls

ded1ca1ed to lhe needs ol1odays

Needed For

lloot~go).

computer

shorthand r eq u~red . Excellent

Mrddleton Estates

Supplemental Staffing.
Pa•s Top Pay 8 .50

Secretary /Clerk

nee d ed 1n hea lth care fac1ilty

446·3401 . Scheduled lo open
October 1st.

N ursing Assistant

Noocf Youretoonad?
- · Olflca,
Or
Church
Coli Uot
A•sonsbto Ratool Wo .....
Expertance And Cln Provide
Rotoren-. Coli 1114-36&amp;.allil,
Or 814-388-al75 (lbV l.oave

njl«tt tiN kho4 •IP"'""
JH wm, coliJrftd 111111
Htulliflllla , , ...,.

CIDd7

Dozer &amp; Backhoe

Phone (614)446 - 6111

our reader! are hereby
lnlormod that all dwellngs
adverttsed In ttU newspaper
are avalable on an equal
oworturity baato.

don'

(WlS/49-&amp;'14191)
FIUUIJ lti&gt;w JIHI' blnltt/;IJ
J..U. Ia • ,;.,.,, tlwl

Happ7 Blrlbdo7.

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

this facility IS open for women
only. For more 1nformahon call

is funded through COAD (CorporatiOn for Oh1o

Denllo, Julie, Sle'fe It

In s urance

kno\OIIngly """""'
a&lt;Jvertlsement:s tor real estale
Ylhlc:h Is n vlolallon ol lhe law.

Gaorgoo Ponoblo Sowmllti
haul your to lho m I JIIOI
con 3fi4-67S.1l57.
11
Help Wanted
looking For Lond To llmbor. .:...:__:..:
Colt Uo, W.1t Do y.., ~I , _ - - - - - - - . . . . ,
Good R o - . 814-367·
Date-Tested

Ill Memol']' ol
tLORENCE M. SPIRES .
oa ber Blrtlldoy

,_

No Prior

Pumpkins, Gourds , Indian

All nNOI estate aclvortlolng In
this nawspeperls subJad to
tho Federal Fair Housing Ad
d 1968 wlllch makBB n llegal
to advetbe "any prelerenoe,

304-586-4257

In Memory

M-, .,, "''' 111111•16•

Cancelled/Rejected

Gallipolis

WERNER
- - 8ooklng Pt-nt
w-ra Doy Or boning Sltlho
ENTERPRISES
Anlloblo Wrtll To: CLA 330, c/o
Golllpcllo Dolly Tribune, 825 IIOQ.azo.4353.
Specialized Carrier
Third Avon•, Qalllpcllo, OH
Equal Opportunity
411131.
Employer
Noad man to oot wnh etdorty _1_1_H,......,el,.:.p_w_a_n_ted
_ __
gomtornon, r a - roqutr..r. , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...:,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
2

SR - 22

Room W /Sh.. vll, Small
Khchan W lloundry Room.
Lorvo Yard. Cooport. Coli &amp;14441-lMIOt After 8 P.M.

Call 256 -6795

Charles McKean Farm

UFE &amp; HEALTH

304-l!N-31142 or 119!1-3420.

"Ill reward you lor 1ts re turn

Cucumbers.

SURANCE
VICKIE CASTO, AGEilT
HOMEOWNERS 6 AUTO DIS.
COUHTS

Guttor1ot

Gallipolis at Kroger grocery

BOOTS
All leather We slern Boots
Reg $149 00
Sale Pr~ ce $59 00
Large Stock
Eng.n eer
$49 00
Wellm glon
$49 00
Loggers
$50 ·55
Ha rness
$59 00
Carolina Georg~a · H&amp;H
Insulated. Safely, Gorl ex
Swam Furn1lure 62 Ol1ve St
Gall1p011 s
All U S Mad e

Turnips, Squash, Prcklrng

a,.aarn,

POSTAL JOBS
Slort $11.41 /Hr. For Enm And
Application Into. Colt 121V) 71188301 Ext. OH511, 8 Ul • .a P.M.,
Sun -Frl.
Rill Eatato Coroor. Pro-lonol
trolnlng. ERA Town &amp; Country
Rail Eotata, Broker, llocklo
Sloln, 3fi4.475.5S48.

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment
• DUI •

woven gold band Losl 1n

Start1ng at 7 :30 pm Sep t 26

Shocks, Potatoes.

===,-_,==--AMERICAN
NATIONAL
111-

21

GallipOli s, O h1 o 446 · 0687

Mustard, Kale, Spinach,

Cordlnol Frolght Corrter. Is
hlrlng nportoneod GrR'a to run
- · Excaltont
llatbid, •m percentage of Wilt Ctoon
114-38- ~ No
grou nvenue pulling comp11ny Aotoo,
A,_.,
loll
..
M-ge.
r..lrora or putnng own traitor,
haatth IMurlnce w/dental &amp; vi- Will do hou-toonlng. 3fi4-67S.
Ilion available, baM pl.t• 21112.
1nllllble, bob-tall Insurance
wookly
sottlo. .nte,
rldor
program, time home. 1..aoo.220o
242t
Po~ time oponlng lor on Adaptlve
Phplcal
Education
Speclotlot 11 Cortoton Sehool.
111101 lt.ve or be willing 6
ollglblo to obtoln valid Ohio
Dopartmeno ol Education Phyof.
cal
Education
Cortllicato
w/VIIIdatlon In Adopllvo PE.
Sond rooumo by Sopt. 26, tVII4
to Corloton Sehool 1310 Csrloton ~.!!!:,0. Box 307, Syracuse,
Ohio ..mr EOE.

American L eg1on Post 27

Corn, Munchkins , Fodder

omphools lor totally pn&gt;tatonal appro~~ch. we arw an •
qual opportunity omployor. All
rsptloo will be ehictty -lldontiel Send yow personel reeurne
to: Cloy Roney, 2413 Joe,._,
Ave., pt. Pleuant, WV 25550 or
coli 304-1175-IIOlV
Insurance
13

Experloncod

330 Second Ave

BaMmenl: 112 Bath, FA W
!Wood Bu,..r Hook..Up. OffA

education program. Con•tlnt

Giving t..nona In

Meetmg th e Cand1dales N1ght

lomporsl'f

Lost gold wn sl wal c h with

Assoc1at1on w1ll sponsor a

See Brun1card1 Mus1c Inc

3br., 1 112 blth, large Jot, Milton
Ad, C.mp Cooley, very nlca.
3br. brick, 2 112 both, 21148
llaad-brook Dr. 304-117S.1631.

3br., 2 both, lorgo living l loomlly
rooms, garage and more, Z1
par1-tlme,
for
1ppro1.
5 1121tc. $65,000 tlrm . 304·773monthl/40 houri per wMk. Min- 5688.
Imum education requirement Is
high school IJf"'dUIIte. No medi- 4 Yu.r Old Home, 3 Blldrooma, 2
cal benefits whh thl• poaltlon. Bathe, Large Kltet.n, Full
Apply at the Galtla-Melg• CAA a... m.nt, (arge Deck, 15x30
Control Oltlcol 8()10 N. St. Rt. 7, Above Ground "Pool, Approx. 1
Cheshire, Oh o, no lltler than Iotito From Rio Gntnda, 814-245·
October 5, 1~ . For furth•r In- 0601 Evenings.
formation, call 814·367·7341 or
6t4-992.ol62V. Equol Opportunhy Com Hollow Ad., Rultond, 3-4
bedroom, modern khchen, oak
Employer.
cablnet1, Jenn Alre cooktop,
Trucking Company SMking 121124 ook dock on tTont, LCCO
OTR Drivers, All Now Equip. Wiler, road frontage on two
ment. Mu• Have COL's And 3 eld•, qulot country living, 45•
Yaare Experience. 814-286-&amp;484 acr•, 814-1)02-6572 after Spm
From 8A.M. -5P.M.
wMkdaya.

This pooHion to o

&amp; rentals

Sales

small bu s mess 446· 2 107

Gallia County Veteran s

Jo1n lhe school band

The Gallla·Melge

roocMntsie Worker. Thla pooi-

All oruet AVON Chrlllmaa ool~

To Flit lmmadlate Pooltlon Fer Toam Run
5 Doyo A Wook. Homa

Rutty, Box 783, Gatllpolle, OH
45831.

Four cha1r Beauty Salon for :
sale or lease 1 mile north of •
Holzer M ed1cal Cen ter on 160.
Also lor lease a 20x40 off •ce
space or co uld be u sed for

like mformatton on next reun•on

Flnanclng, Advertlalng, Etc. All
AepUea Confidential. Blackburn

Uon requires 1n lndlvldual who
works w.ll unct.r prnaure.

J.B. Hunt For Dololto.

1 Orlvlf -

Experionc:ad Soc:rwtsry • RoatP'
tlonlll Mu.t Know All Trpoo
Gonenll Olllco Wort&lt;. Wll Bo
Dooling Whh Tho Public,

Aaencv hlia an Immediate opanlnilln ... lge County tor an Out·

Drug Sereen.
-Tnnlng Ia. FlU At Fulfillment
Of 361 Doyo Of Emotoymont.
MIIOI Be An Ohio Or Woot VIrginia -ldonl To Quality. Aok

Sltl~ay

Ext.

Inc., 110 Joe,._, Plko, Golllpclto,
OH 45831.

Or, Coli:
1-80Q.2JB-HUilT
EOE. Subjoct To

P.M.

AVON I All AlMa I
Spoon, 3Q4.675.1429.

1-~~568,

Good computar akJIIa and lhorrequlnd. Excellent fringe
benefh1. Send r"ume to
Human R. .ourcea. Holzer Clinic

•ft•tbed

erciMr Clll 614-441-0814 Art• 5

Help Wanted

F-.

Anent1on Lookmg lor any
Houck's or descendents 01
Gabnel Thomas Houck Woul d

Pa1 nled Halloween Yard
Decorat 1ons
lnd1an corn , pumpk1ns . gourds.
!odder shocks
1914 State Roule 14 1 Gallipolis
Phone 446· 1OBO

Products At Hom.. Call

Experienced

Ex·

Posldons Also Exllt For

Wanood: Uood Nordic Trock Ex-

11

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

noodod In hllhh caro tocllhy.

Homos, Call6~75.

Employment Services

Domino'• Pizza, Pt. Pleuant Is
now hiring motlvatad, anergetlc
delivery per'IOI"'. Apply In per·

Golllpcllo, Ul1 45831.
WEDNESDA!1 9EPTEIIBER :Ill
MEETINGS START
PROMP'TlY AT
3 Pll,'5 Pll, And 7 Pll
COMFORT INN
605 EAST MAIN STREET
t.:IS A-32
JACKSON, OHIO

Wanood To Buy: J..,k Autoe
With Or Wlthoul llol.... Colt
lorry UYOly. 114-388-«103.

Gold Cclna. loi.T.S. Coin Shop,
151 Sacond Avonuo, Golllpcllo.

27

IIE•uNGS START
PROMPTLY AT
1 Pll, 5 Pll, And 7 Plot
COMFORT INN
1-64 Exltl(f
CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA

Ooby Martin, ll1HIII2·M1.

3 Block V2 Hlmotyan Klttono,
614-446-41122.

ACROSS

heads are def1Mely be«er than one

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Suppress
1mpul s1ve urges to take nsks today on PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Dom1C1Ie
th1ngs or people about wh1ch you know
httle You 're l tkely to back the wrong

•ctrk: tyr.:wrltef', antlquee, ex-

Giveaway

• 24 94

•QJ976

Monday . Sept 26 1994

In the year ahead, you're likely to sharpen your skillS and take a more act1ve

Ne1ther you nor your mate should make a
ma1or deCISIOn today w•lhout fust consultmg the other Actmg rashly wtll only g1ve
a problem new legs

NORTH

I
In the year ahead, 11 looks as though you

your Astra-G raph prediCtions for the year

dlolowuhor,

J 6 D's Auto Ports ond Sotvor.,

45

m1ght assoc1ate w1th mo re enterpns1ng
md1v1duals than you have m the past
These new exposures could be at benefit

treat yourserr to a b1nhday gilt. Send lor

dryor,

wuhef,

llfCIMr, m IC.

'Your

Sunday Sept 25. 1994

wrth theus. Don't let disagreements shut
down the production line today Libra ,

Yard Sot.t65 Loyno St~ Now
Havsn, Sot. Sopt. 24. KOOQI,

lion.

PHILLIP

A

1nteres1 1n a SOCial spon or hobby These
won't be tnvolous pursu1ts because they'll
be hnked m some manner to prospenty
and populanty
LIBRA (Sapt. 23-0ct. 23) Co ·workers
m1ghl not be 1n accord w1th your way of
operating and you m•ght nol be in accord

Sove uo !rom the pound,7
adortble puPJMea, Colle/Biue
Hiller, call 1fllr &amp; pm, 614-875-

51122.

ALDER

A
'Your
~'Birthday

Pt. Pleasant

Giveaway

&amp; VIcinity

Iotan 52, bull,_e -ground ' Dvnsmark For Pan., 11 HP
IBA In B..r.- lbnogomont) Aiding lawn 11-w, 114-446unencumbef'MI, win r.locate for 7029.
nve~n paid poo111on -.ung
WOfTIIO, couple or ..-11 •mlty Old upright plano, "'Y good
w"h amall bull,_ torm or shape; bumper pool tabae, tllr
home. All ofteN considered. shape: ti14-G87-34se.
Wrlto: "HBH", POB 253, Port Goldon Ratrtovor, Port Colburg, Mlchlgon 46053.
lie, all white, a.PfN:O:I._jOmo. old,

________. .,;_________+---------..:..----.. . --=-----j
you prevtou sly established tn hopes of

4

Real Estate

BULLETIN BOARD
'

Toll
313.

Travel, Frlldom
lndopondoflco

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-03

Futl-llmo Poy For Port-Timo
Work. Atoo, llooldng Portloo,
814-246-6038.

Mm~

Beneflta

Announcements

Help Wanted

oon.
Exay World Excol- Poyl Ao.

ComPfohanalvo

3

11

Docor And Mont Domonototon
- . t , Froo i:loo Kn, Eem

F,.. Training•

Public Notice

Help Wanted

Chr18tmu Around The World

MAKE A
SMART
CAREER MOVE

9

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

BINGO
Sponsored by GAHS Athletic
Boosters
Starting Monday Oct. 3rd .

VFW Building- Third Ave.
Gallipolis
All Paper Cards
Doors open 5:00pm starts
at 6:45pm
No One Under 16 permitted
No smoking permitted

Equal Opportunity/Affirmative ACiion Employer

i

�ESTATE AUCTION

8

Public Sate
&amp; Auction

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1994
10:00A.M.

ESTATE TAG SALE
Saturday, October I, 10:00 a.m.
59 Hilda Drive (Behind Spring Valley Plaza)
Antiques and Collcct!hks: Ant ique quil ts. Fostoria ~Ja~ s.

This auction is the second sale from th e esl ate
of Mrs. Duris Harder, Ewington . Ohio .
Sal e Location : AMVET'S BlJg.
Ohio, at th e intersection of Stat e Rt.

Kanauga ,

10

7 and Rt. 35

across river from Pt. Pleasant . W Va .
Mrs. Harder co llected for more th an forty years
with many fine pi eces heing offered in thi s sa le.
Ca rnival Glass : Prcspnick "s Humidor. Powder
Boxes (s cottie , Duck. D eer) .

Tw n O il Lamps.

1970-91 C hri stmas Plates , Wall Pockets, Abc
Plates, Severa l Bowls In Sirawherry Fenton,

antique tra ys and glasswa re, crysta l, hoo ks, clock. che&lt;;t of
drawers .
Household Furnt s htng ~ Including . So lid maple co ffee ,
s ide ta hle, end tables, d ining tab l e, and c hair ~ . A\sn lamps,
hut ch, re c ltncr. fre e -s tanding hookcasc un1t ,
mattn:ss/springs, desk/chair , dine lie se t, Jots o f oth er dishes,
gla ssware, and kit c h e nwar e, lugg age , kerosen e heater,
braided rugs, and much more .
. .
Mise: Crafbman pu sh mower, cx tcns1on ladd er. f1shmg
tackll', old hand tool &lt;.; , g rmd er. VISC. wooden tool chest. lawn
furniture, etc
Asst'd Appilan o.:s Jm:luding Tappen mi crowav c, toa_s tcr
oven, mixer. co lor TV ~. huom hux, ccm upcm:r. K~rby
sweeper

Orange Tree Rose , Blackberry l:e nton , Star Of

8

David, Cherry Dugan, Lustre Rose. Ribbon &amp;

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Sunburst , Fantail, Acanthu s, Peacock Tail,
Pansi e, Star Medallion . llnr schead. Pers i an
Waftle &amp; B lock Baskets , Sel Of ( ·ar Vases, Lion
Compote, B l ackberry Buttcrdish. Dugan Beaded
Baskets, Fenton &amp; Northwood Bon-bo ns, Pastel

Our ant1que or co llecti ble auctions are held on the ftrst
Saturday of each month If you have items that you w1sh to be
sold at th1 s. or other auctions. please call us.
.
.
Metal Bluegrass Hardware Adv . sign, metal "F 1re Ch1ef
pedal ca r, Esmond, Watt. Hull Art, McCoy. Homer Laughlin,

Swans, Poinsetta Pitcher, Vintage Powde r Box,
Imperial Grape Water Se t, Bear Cup. Kitten Cup.
Tumbl ers In Waterlilly, Field &amp; Flowe", Arbor
Berry,

Windmill , Dahlia, Crack le, Ramblin Rose, Misc.

Chrrstmas 1tems , football tu mbl ers, co ke g lasses, peps1

SHAR~~~e BLAME

Porch, Y•rd Paridng, No Pet•,

114-448-0tn
Nlco
In Pt. Pteuont,

"':'Jr..

8

Rose Bowl, Rosevi lle Luffa Vase, Snowbe rry

Auctioneer: Finis "Ike" Isaac

Vase, 1-tdll, Mccoy, Weller Velva Covered Jar,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

W eller Cameo Vases (6", 10"), Weller Power Jar,

Over 2,500 Pairs of New Bouts &amp; Shoes to be sold

in "Lois" and ••Piece Meal Fashion''
US Bankruptcy Court Court Case #94-54074, Bl ·
HUD, INC dba CARL'S SHOE STORE.
LOCATED at 328 Second Ave. , Gallipolis, OH.
DIRECTIONS FROM COL., OH : Take US Rt. 23
South to Chillicothe; then take Rt. 35 East to
Gallipolis to Exit "Route 7"; turn right on Rt. 7 &amp;

Some of the Brans available are Red Wing,

'

st lection of Purses &amp; Handbags; children's &amp;
ladles socks &amp; tights; we will be selling husitry "by
the bundle".
TERMS: Cash/Check with Positive J.D.'s; All sales
are final; no n:funds or n:turns; all purchases must
be removed the day of the Sale or will be forfeited;
Sorry, no exceptions.

(10 1/2", 8").

Not responsible for accidents or lost items.

Food and Refreshments Available
(OCTOBER 8th. 10 a.m., Rulland, Ohio · Public Auction ·

LUNCH SERVED

STANLEY &amp; SON
AUCTIONEERS/REALTORS

Licensed and Bonded Ohio #3728, W.Va . #I 030, ln. #7248
Terms : Cash or Approved Check

126 E. Fourth St., Chillicothe, Ohio 45601
(614) 775-3330 (614) 773-5584

24' pontoon boat, 2 trlrs , 4 ve hicles and numerous tools.

At 124E to center of Rutland and follow signs.)

Real Estate General

31 Homes for Sale

s.ntra

R--.

Country

llco

Real Estate General

Prtnle
1 -.

Aunt Wotor.
xlmetoi¥10
mi. from Ooltlpol . Ita Dodi I
-

Smokefree - air cond. bldg.

clean restrooms - food available

_,, vtnyt lllded on 112

One -

-

ulllltiOo, ... - ·

32 Mobile Hom"

rorsa1e

AN,.IQUE
AUC,.ION

1 lldNGIII
IJndlr..
1tl2a.i-=~~7wo
Or

waaher lrd dryer, •lr, $300/mo.
plutt dopot1" ond utll"loo, 814B.droom

Mobile

Home,

w/opl to buy, 814~92-5042.

all •lectrlc, new carptt,
$1711/mo., SIOCI dopoo~ . you poy
utllhloo. 304-875-40811.
2br.

3
B~room
N..r NGHS.
Rd.
Stove
McClaskey
R•frlg•r•tor, W•ter, Tr. .h P•id

$275/llo Pluo

tlopotl~,

614-]811.

11688.
322 Third Avonuo, No Peto, 614448-31118, 614-25&amp;-11103.

Fumlahed 2 BedroorM W•ter,

Truh Potd, Totol Elocttlc, Nc
P.ta, Port.,. Aru, OM-.388-8000.

llcblto 1tomoo In tho country-

water, garbage end ..ww In-

ctudod. Juot 10 mlnutoo from
Athena, otortlng ot $240300/mo., c•ble n1lllbte, 814-

11112-216l

43 Farms for Rent
rfT Aero Form For Ront, 614-256·

1848.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 Dedroom apartments,
fumlahed •nd untumlahod,
..curHy deposit required, no
pelt, 614-62·2218.
1 Bedroom CioN lo Unlvershy

Of Rio Grondo, $200/llo. Plus

8... J88.0048.
2 Roomo &amp; Both, No K~ehon,
$20Mio. All Utllhtoo lncludocl,
614-44&amp;-7733, BotwHn 8:30
Depoe~~,

.a:oo.

z-.

All-., · - -

-

=~14~-.

NEW U8TifGI Biida Ey. Vlewil Solll' wllh the
eaglet wllh !hit hilltop home. V.ry unique
home and Mtting. Outetanclng view
... Ohio Rivor,
o11a end w..t
In graat concltlon. Palfactly
to lown. $154,1100 1227

o·•F

\approx.

THE EYES, EASY
BUiliQII:l TOOII Lovely 2 lllooy home locallld
In a n1oa c:ountry aatting, yet jutt mlnulte away
lrom the pool and gon couraa. Olfara 3
btldrooma, 1 bath, living room, din!"' room,
nice front and back porchaa, ptua patio arM.
Prlcad at only $47,000, you can't alford not Ill
call Carolyn tx1ay baiera itt mo laltll
1600

r_.

......,.7'8t1_

LUXURY
I
NATURE'S
WONDERLANJ). Redwood home • old log
cabkl- hunlng cabil-workahoplgarage-bam•
78 - • · 1M The quiet beauty of woode and
unique landlc8plng maka u Ideal aattlng lor
thle aye appealing Nttic ranch horne. 3
bedrooma, 2 bathe, apaciou~ living room,
28x32 family room with woodbumer or
flrapu, ~ In .,n room. Log c:abln Ia
appmx. 150 yea,. old or IliON and haa fuel ol
lumac:e, fireplace lnMrt In living room, 2
btldrooma, bath. Hunting cabin
20x32)
It neetlad In the woodt ollarlng lvlng room with
-.mar, bedroom and ldlchan. Garage Ia
32x48 with attached 24x32 heated worltohop.
Both have concrata lloo&lt;* willl 12' callings. AI
ol thle Ia located on 78.86 acrao, m/1,
c:omptataly tancad, tobacco ba.., atocklld
~:d 3 very walt maintained bama.
road. You have to ... it to believe

pttoncu

fumlohod,

toundry

room faclltUN, CION to echool

town. App4lclltlont anllabl•
ot: Vlttog11 Gnoon Apto. 149 or
coll614-tll2·:171 1. EOii.
35 Well Apt. 2br, 1 bolh, polio,
. - to grocory ot.,.. &amp; shopping ctnC.!l-.w•ttr, aewer, tra.n
provided, ~5/mo . Equal Houelng ~unhy, 614-441·1608.
Fumtohod EHicloncy, 701 Fourth
A..,uo, GaUipotta, $185/llo.
UtiiKieo Pold, Shore Both,814t41-4411 Aft or 7 P.ll.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 5311 Jockoon Plko
from ~ to $285. Wolk to oltop
a movleo. Colt 61-4~2568.
EOH.
Ctoen oflloncy 1111, not &amp; dop ,.
qulrwl, no poll, 304-875-5162.
Ctjfton, fumlahod 2br.. gorogo
In

apirtmentl

at

VIllage

nice~

LARIAT
Nice
Qulal
Cloaa lo hotpilal and lhopplng. 3 btldroorn brtek
ranch Ia comptata with eat~n ldlcltan, living
room, 2 bathe, famly 100111 end mora. Nice patio,
large ttat loL Priced at
,500.
12110

sn

We Ala PIHaed to Olfor lhle ..aanllloMit
12.1Z IIIII, •tala homa. Thl8 ctaaey,
quality bulk brick ranch ofaring appn&gt;x. 2,570
aq. h. ol llvinll araa IIIII on one ol .,. moat
beautlklt ...... Galla Colrtty. Lataty IIIDcMd
pond end 23 ........ ol-•
graunda. F•turaa Include formal entry, llvlna
room, dining room, cozy famly 100m witli
ftraptace, larga modam ldtchan wtlh bNaklut
nook, rae. room, 3 bedrooma, 3 112 bathe ptua
partilll unlirtllhad buamanl I c:ould go on end
on about IIIIa truly wondllilut property, but I
would prater Ill Ill you panonatty. Cal Carolyn
lor complete dlllllilt.
H03

.....,..,_t ...

SWEET AND LOW- Watch your budget
caloriat.ln IIIIa 3 bedroom IMCh. 1 1'-l bath
home wifl ~. hardwood loora and new carpatlng. lola of apace lor .,.
ol$48,000.

diet=

WEU. CARED FOR SPLIT LEVEU Locallld on
R1100, IIIIa home ltu bean Mil maintained end
ia In move In concltlon. With a olightly dillar.nt
lay out than your average rancli, thta horne
ole,. 3 bedrooma, 1 11:1 bathe, living room end
aat~n kitchen. Lot ~Maturaa 100JC300 ~lowing
for ptanty ol backyard lun. Pric8d at $84,1100.
1218

LOCATED ON BULAVILU: PIKE· lhla 2 t1o1y
home ollara albtdabltity. 3 bedrooma, 1 bath,
living room, aat-ln klldlan and lui . , . _ l
Dac:k ovartooldng nice tiZIId lot $311,1100 I2CI5

304-173-5785

le move. 3 bedmoma, 1
kltehan with new ltoor.
ba111111811t wi1h 2nd bath, 1 car cupOII on
larva l&lt;&gt;ltor only $411,000. Call Carolyn today!

Two

REDUCED PRICEII Handled with
Prideful older home In Uiddlaport, lovingly
maintained by particular owner. large
lo~ 2 car geragt, encloll8d hoot porch
buamant with outaicta antrant:a. Cal
... this one.

Nlco Kllchon Toblo With 4 Choir
Nlco Cond~ton. With 4 Clwlr

Cuehlona, SSO, 080, 814-446-

2334.

Norwalk

Wlngtd

B•cked

3

Cuontonod BOlgo Solo $100,
Belg•

$50,

Recllfllr

brly

Amortcon Maple Clblnot Entor·
tolnmont Clntor $35, OBO 614.448~301.

AUCTIONEER, RICK PEARSON
Terme: C.h Or Check With LD.
Nol ,.fiiDI'IItbla lor 80Cldanta or laae cl property.
Uo..ad I Bonded In Ohio, Kentucky I
W.t VIrginia ....
•--ou,_.ma ma "'- ot . . tau pracadanca

111, -

11 - , INdy

-

tn Hllrtlonl, 4 nlco ,.,.t, tn 11M Hll!!f',_l
nlco locollon, .........

L-----------"~·~~~~ted~ma~a.ra~.--------~=cn=~~-------------

Hou,.: 10-6 llon.·Frl.
10.2 Saturday
1.-oth77U~t1, (SU) :17~

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007

Pets for Sale

57

Musical
Instruments

poporo. 814-!llr.l-2839.
304-i7~2063.

UMd

112

ochoor tonn, now S375, will ooll
S2SO. Aloe, ctolrnot. $150. 304675-5681.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE: Lowr..,. G•nl• organ, $450, 614RocognlzOd Solo &amp; Eflotctlvo 992-iO!I%.
Agalnat
Hook,
Round,
&amp;
Ta~orms In f?ov• &amp; Cats. lowtoy Symphonic Hotldoy
Av•llsble O.T-C At J 0 NORTH

PRODUCE , 61~1al3.

HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIOE:

COnaolli Organ, Uke Nn
446-6452 AHe~ !:00 P.M.

58

J•ck. Rushlt tefrier puppl• for
Nil, $250/N ., 614·742·2050 .

!1866.

SUPPlY, 8\4-W:Z-2"164 .

eon.

dhlon. 614-146-11174 Dayo. 514-

Recognized aat. I atr.ctlve
ao•ln.t
hook ,
round ,
&amp;
tapeworms In dogs &amp; cats
Av.llable 0-T-C •t A&amp;G ~E.EO &amp;

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Pumpkin• •nd corn Melka tw
Nl•, S14-i92-3g85 or 814-892-

Pumpktna, lndll.n Com 6 Slalka,

llolo Pot Bolly pig, $50. OBO 614-245-5887.
304-i7r.-7260 .
.
Mcl.ead'a

Groomlr.g-

Pet

Pood ln groomed, bathed and
dipped, f13; Cocker Spaniel,
$20; tmlll Collies, &amp;25; large
CoiiiH, $30; ntr~~ luge dogs,
$35; houfl 9am-9pm. No Sund•y work, call Coolville, 614oo667-

Farm

Supplies

&amp; Livestock

3915.

61 Farm Equipment

Pom•ranl•n puppln, 304-895-

2 row Oll111r plck•r, 1 row
p&amp;cker, gtlvhy btd wagon, rlMlnlng
U
lug alumn
WhMII Wl niW 1 6~ tlret . 614-388-

31128.

Ratterrler
Puppln,
T11i1
Docked, Wormed , lat Shot.a, 6

w.-.

Otd, 8M-245-5597.

57

Musical
Instruments

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

c...

g•.,.•.

!1684
2 two row New ldM eom picker,
n•now row, exc cond, 3~75-

5950.

5600 Ford lrKtOf With lielvy

Bundy flute, txcell•,.. condit ion,

Duty Bush Hog SU.650: 3020

Htlf Stack Amp UtrsNII Head

John O..rt, Super Sharp,
$7,350, 606 lntern•tlon•l $3,gQ5 ;
614-286-6522.

S175, 814-11411-2006.

Loney 4x12 Clbtnet $800, 614-

446..0070 After 5 P.M.
Kimball Conwole Pl•no, Excel·
~~~- ~Ilion, $1,000, e-14-441·
Lowery Genie 44 organ, excelah•pe,
t•pe
pltyer1
lent
MrphonM, mk:rophone •na
et•nd, t?eoch M.t wflltb;~•,
l.owlry beglnnar musk
a,
Iota of adunced music books,
•altlng $1000, 814-~2 -2081.

8 John Deere Oozare, 3 JO Log
Sklddere, 3 Truck.&amp; Whh Loading
Loodor, 814-367·7550. 304-3ti:J.

3023.

ba~ &amp; chaine to fit
almost any uw. BMI prk:M In
•raa. Siders Equipment, 304--

Cl'l•ln S•w

675-11121 or 1-800-ID-31117.
For ule- Farmall Suptt A. excel-

lent condhlon, $1750, 014--1Ma2-

1110t.

Real Estate General

l'hont
Main Office·388.1J826
958 Clark Chapel Rd.

Qj} (/""./ . .,£)
~.

trombone

Bundy

Flah Tank &amp; Pet Shop, 241:1
Jackson Ave. Point PI.. Nnt,

\:!J71'U/A-

•~

~~

Bidk·e/1, Ohio 45614
Branch Offiet · 446-6806
lJ Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

SECLUDED RETREAT FOR THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, Scenic acres surround thrs charmmg home 30· Lrv rm . 1llV11t1ny kltt.:htm , 3 bedrms on first lloor. lull basement has
been linishecl in 2 large rm &amp; bedrm. 1/2 bath. utu1ty area &amp; closets Pool wfbath house. Pany house overtooKmg a stocked pond 2 car gamoe pius. 21 acres more Or less Th1s
property may be inspected by an appointment

Ovor SO Ponomo KKchon Clrpll
In Stock. 30 Pattema VInyl In
Mollohan Clrpllt, At.

wr

S1ock,

N., 614-448-"N44.

Solo And u.v-t Entortolnmenl Center, Butch

61ock T•ble,

Comp&lt;llor Oellr, 614-441-1203.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; AJRMTURE. 12
011.. St., Golllpotta. - • Ueod
fumlh••· hat.,., Weattm &amp;

Wort&lt; boote. 614-148-3159.
Vt'RA FURNITURE
4 lltloo Out At. 141
614-44&amp;-31511

Quoltty

Houo-d Fumtohlngo

And Appttoncoo. lion,.. Solo •
SIG.OO; 01-H - 1141.00;

Uvlnt Room St. • $215.~od
rooma

St

.OOj

Rotrtgerotoro •
Woolioro Qyoro

Rongo•

D. C. Metal Salei,IIC.
Cannelburg, Inc. 457t9
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meet your
needs. Any size.

~~&lt;,.;·.·,~·

'931 OWNER WANTS THIS SOlD NOW. a~ will
consider your offer, don·t hesitate on lh1s 4 bedroom 2•
baths with
l
and a fu ll basement 1n one or the

1954. UNUSUAL LOG HOME . w/ 42 Ac m/1 ThiS
home IS so easy to care lor 11s hke bemg on vacat1on
3, 168 sq. ft m,ll with an oak wrap -around aeck Roo ms
&amp; doors are extra large to accommodate the hand1cap
Barn and bu1ld1ng, fence lor a horse. etc Garden spot.
too . Virgima 388·6826 .

N959. COMMERCIAL BUILDING · Olive St 16' door &amp;
cellmg w/loft lor storage . 210 &amp; 220 elect water &amp;
sewer 6"' cement to load &amp; unload m front 30&gt;C80
burldmg appro( 3900 sq tt block &amp; trame $45 000

CHOICE OF tO COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and
Package Dears. Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
ol Dollars.
Local Sales Representative

1963. BRICK &amp; VINYL BI·LEVEL - Home located on
SR 160. 3 brms., 21/2 baths. LA. lg eat-1n kitchen.
lower level w/famity rm ., laundry rm .. bath , kit. &amp; I car
ga rage, 1 ac . m(l. $48,000. 60 Ac. for $65,000

'967 GREAT FARMLAND JUST WAITING FOR TliAT
1966. COUNTRY HOME/GREEN TWP · 3 bedrooms ,
1 1/2 story horne. garage &amp; outbU1Id1ngs 5 ac res all
fenced. Remodeled w/tovely kitchen cabmets, tg LA &amp;
DR. new heat pump &amp; good root

WESLEY MULLET
14t Barlow Ad.
Patriot, Ohio 45658

PH. 614·256·6031

;=========:.!---------,
*FOR SALE*

1979 GRACIOUS LIVING AT ITS BEST in this 3

1988 Fairmont
14'x70' Mobile Home

bedroom bi-lovel that has new carpet lhrough-out fall
cleaning to do sell and will go fast and outside has a
fresh new coat of paint . ready to move into and no you
won't find bener taste in the decor of this home and
priced to so call Wilma today tor a took .

Located on 2 acres In

1630. APARTMENT BLDG. - 7 UnitS. Well maintained

River Valley School District.

1981 . GEORGEOUS HOME - Remod eled 3 bedrm
ranch, 2 baths, slate I oye r entry to the LA . fam1ly rm
wfW8 fireplace. lovely carpet throughout , u1111ty rm .
patio 2 car garage, 24' above ground pool _w,deck Th1s
is a very neat immaculate home and •s ready f or
occupancy. $67,000.

&amp; choice location overlooking the Ohio Ri\ler

FARMER. to enjoy. th1s 1DO acres and a 4 bedroom hi level fhat1S sure to please IS wa1ting for you now so call
us today and take a look, you won"t be sorry
lt964 FOUR BEAUTIFUL ROLLING LOTS on While
Ad all utll1t1es ava1l able 2 t 12 Ac m/1 each make your
cho1ce now 1 BUi ld your dream home Ill the co untry and
have everla song comlort

lt914 SPLIT ENTRY CLOSE TO THE RIVER. and just
mmutes. lrom town . th1s lovely 4 -5 bed room home will
please you I'm sure. a must to see. m a n1ce area .
owner anKIOUS to sell so call us now, also has 2 acres .

Extra clean inside &amp; out. Has 12'x16' metal
building (1 yr. old), full size carport, front porch,
circle drive, split rail fencing, satellite ash,
central air, new landscaping.
INSIDE: 2 bedrooms, 2 full baths, garden tub, 1

utllhln pold, prlvoto ..tldng,
rtvtr view, $350/mo., $200
doped, no ,.,., 614-all:l-5724.
Unfwnlohod 3 9odroom Aportmont, Locotod On 9ocond Fl-.
Ovor Holzor Clinic, Jockoon
Avonuo, Point Pteuont, 304675-44G8.
Real Estate General

BR

has bay window, new carpeting, walk·in
closets, 2x6 walls. Must see to appreciate! Very
private! Call for info.

Daytime (304) 773-5533
Evening (614) 367-7317
Real Estate General

BLACKBURN REALTY

1982 RIO GRANDE, 1 1/2 story 3 bedrm. home 1/3 ac.
Mtl gas &amp; wood haat , village sewage &amp; water, Patio, 2
car garage. Also 1973 Champion Mob1le Home w/3
bedrms. Good Price For 2.

11848 BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY AT HOME. w1tn lhiS
4000 sq . f1 . commercial building and a lovely 3
bedroom white brick ranch on 4 acres and priced to
sell. call Wilma today.

8826
1894 GREAT VIEW OF THE RJVER . in thiS 4 bedroom
2 slory that has been recently remolded at a pr1ce that
you can aHord with lots of space. call us today lor a
view.

11958 JUST IN TillE FOR THAT FALL CAMPING . lhos

1950 OWNER ANXIOUS TO MOVE TO GALLIPOLIS.

22 foot camper with lot in Big Foot Park IS wa1ting lor
you and priced at only $5500 00.

and w1ll sell or trade this lovely 3 bedroom 2 story wrth
2 car garage and a garage apanment that Is new ano
stays rented year round for that extra income. in the
Albany area. call Wilma lor more details.

1165. SECLUDED HOME - Big in everything but pnco.
4 bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths , 24' living rm w/fireplace, 18'
dining rm. &amp;Quipped kitchen lull basement , 43 acres
MIL of PARAD ISE Trails throughout the woods Mineral
rights and the boundary is fenced . Large barn &amp;
outbuilding Also a mobile home w/elec , water &amp; septic

589.000 oo. can Virg'n"' 3118·88261446·6806
1978. CUSTOM BUILT HOME - Very neal 3 bedroom,
1 112 story home w/2 baths. 3 ac. m/1. The interior is
most unusal finished in beautiful wood. The LA has
cathedral ceilings &amp; loft. The wrap around deck is a
great place to sw1ng &amp; rock. 2 car garage &amp; building.

1873. OLD PLANTATION HOllE · Buill ·in 1800"s
waiting to be restored Large barn &amp; shed . 117 Ac. MIL.
crop rand &amp; pasture &amp; wooded . Close to Ho lzer All
utilities available.
1045. SA 1150 - Convenient to the Freeway, 3
bedrms • ranch w/new kit. &amp; bath. Lg. !amity rm .
wtwoodburnlng fireplace . On acre m/1 . Only

$45.500. 388·8826.

Phone: (614) 446-0008
Joe Moore, Associate 441-1616

19~'6 COlY HOME . $39 900 3 BA . carpet . v1n~t
sir lf"IU .QOOd rorA. hot water tank . furnace Lovel~
c: bit'Etts in kllchen. Located 111 the c1!y V1rg1n 1a 388·

1938 NICE PASTURE LAND , 50 ac res of level t o
sligt1tly rolling with a 4 bedroom farm house and a
couple ol outbuildings.

1988 BE THE LANDLORD of 3 lovely 1"10mes In Rio
Grande Area . Each have 2 bedrooms. 2 baths 8)(1ra
Ouildmgs 2 112 Ac Priced Right

Hanny Blackburn, Broker \

1 • • - 30W1&amp;-

21131.

Custo• J.Shirts

114n- LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTS OF OFFICE
.
'
SPACE AND GARAGES FOR TRUCKS... frontage on
Third Avenue and Grape Street. Cali for details.

0c1

56

Merchandise

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER ................. 3a8·6826 ~_.....,
WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR ......... 441·0632
.
.
.
JAMES WILLIAMSON, REALTOR ........ 446-6806
~
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ................... 446-1897
~ . . . ..
LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446-6806
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

1984 NOTICE: ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN

Ave. Paint
I .... "" II ~-··

•

apttr1rnenl,

946 Glgt Rood, Potrlot, Oh.

;!t

...__
2 -.IOW7wl117.
1-

bedroom

The Shirt Shack

PARK I RIVER VIEW! ChooM fRIIII one o1
lhraa Pn&gt;partiea. Baeutilulloc:ation owllooltlng
park and river. Elich p10par1y vadaa 1rom
btl ng ramodaled .. naadlng rwiOdlllng
done to them. "' have II'!Miatllta chun Mil
old-laahloned character. lnvaatmant
opportunity lor r.ntalt or~ Cal
Davia Wi ..man lor mora dlllallat Don't
heoltatet
111M

Fra-

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

~ ~-il

Free Delivery.

OLD-FASHIONED CHARMit Thlt tpiiCioua 2
llory home waa ramodollld only 2 y..,. IIQO,
with exceptional quality In mind. New wiring,
~1. carpet, ate. Of!era 4 bad1110r11a, bafl,
utility room, large kitchen with n- oak
cabinata, range, ratrlgerator &amp; dlahwaaher.
Uv1ng room with wood pallet atova fomtal
dining room, vityt aiding. 1 car ganttj.. All of
thlsand MORE with a aconie riverview. 1102

~-==~

12112

Poto. Coli Boron 7 P.ll. •~

North tth Avo., lllddl_,, Oh,
2br.
fumlo';4 =~··
doooolt l
rwteranc..
2--21A.

:;:ow.

liCK POISON AUCTION CO.

Fumlahed
lmal
HouH,
$275lmo. • Utllttoo, Porlllna. Nc

IXI38.

RODNEY AAEAit 3-4 bedroom home toc:al8d
on Cora Road o"•'* a large lot with finleMd
outbuilding (cui'NIItly ull8d •• a guest houM),
lvlng room wi1h woodbumer end eat-ln ldlottan.
Nlca dllcll. Large yard. 1 car garage with
-'&lt;~hop. $411,1100
12011

Merchandise

-oom

Nlco 3 Bodroom Altortment, In
Pclnt · P-.rt, W'i, Flelorenco
And Depoe~~ Requlrod. 114-4460041 AKor 6P.II.
Nlco 3 br. opl. In lllddlopcrt,
814-11112.J858.

8IIAlL WONDEAo
home for ... money. '

1105

54 Miscellaneous

Cocker Splnl•r pupPn, $50, no

roloronco, dopool~ no polo. 304-

lrNNy palnltd on .,.

54 Miscellaneous

oqulpmont. 2 cooh WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
Chlld'o cor wotorbod, $100. :104- Rootouront
Tondy IOOOEX Comp&lt;llor With 175-1883.
reglal..-.. tablee I. ch81n, dMp 200 Pst SIU5; 1 Inch 200 PSI
Printer,
Deek
And
Software
hy'wa, too much to llal 30o4-e7591 Cedar 614-388-8000.
132.:j
:.::, Evono
Entorprloaa
5650, 614-441-1203.
'
114Jockoon, Ohio
'
Frlgldolr
choot
tyr
ITHZor,
X~-------------­
45
17cu.
ll304-675-205
.
Furnished
S.m SomtrviUe'e Army Surpiue.
Whl~pool HMvy OUIY -lwr
And Dryor, $275 For IJoth. Aloo,
Building
floor furnact, Mil or trlde, Frldoy Sot. S..n. Noon· S:OO Pll 55
Rooms
Whirlpool Rolrlg-or With Oa
only. ~Y Sondyvltle Pool OHico,
614-MII-3011 .
Thru·Ooot
Aceteo
llakor,
304~.
Supplies
Roome for rent. waek or monlh.
Starting •t $120/mo. G•llt. Hotel . $200. All Excollent Condition, Glrto WhKo
S..Ke.
I14-446-JII1'1 tloyo, 114 '" 14112 Double Bod 11011,_ Box St•r Warm In Your llloblle Home Block, brick, lllpoa, wtn61~05110.
Wlwn The Elocl~c o- OH
AKor 5:00 P.ll.
Sorlngo Choot o.-, With Thlo
- · tlntolo, otc. Cloudo wtnWlnt•
Whh
An
Emplro
Slooplnt Aoomo $11 Per tloy.
Mirror, $500; TNI Green llcblte Homo Woll Fumoce 1hot tero, Rio Grondo, OH C..ll 8&gt;1ConetNcUon Wortt..-a W•lcome
Rocllnor $1511, 114-446-11128 U.. Nc Eloclrlchy. Coli a-. 246-11121.
54 Miscellaneous
Etflc:lency
Kitchen,
FrM
Evonlngo.
noa·o lloblle Homo IITG a CLG
l.oundry, 614-J88.11729.
Merchandise
Pets for Sale
Hummlnablrd Flau~- And En- AI IM-446-M1S, Or 1.-.a72· 56
SINplng roome whh cooking. 100.000 BTU Gu Fu,_ 11:2% tiro Sot bt Bnoiltord Exchollgll 5i67 For Detolle.
a
oocl Su- Shop-Pot
Also trailer space on rtver. All Efflelency, 80'JI. ENicloncy. 1· Sorloo "Tho Booutlful Hum- Searl under counl« dleh- Grooming. June Webb. 814-446mlngblnt.·s700, 114-441-ooo:il:.
hoolt-ups. Call •"•' 2:00 p.m., 800-287-6308, 114-448-6308.
wullor, $50. 080. 304.&amp;75-2561 ozn.
304-71'3-5651, M•.on WV.
11170 Edition World Booko ISO; ~ny Lynn Boby Bod, $40, 114- oft or 4,OOPII.
I yr. old Fomole liNgle. 30H75·
World Yoor Booko 1m .a 525; --4"m.
Sectional couch &amp; Nordic Tnck.
181'0.
46 Space for Rent
Wortd Scl•nce Book Annual
11172 To 112 125; Or All For $100. KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER 304.&amp;75-.2157.
AKC Boo- puppleo 5 WMko
3 Room Office Sullo With
Coffoo Tablo 2 End To- $15 Ftoo KIHoro for 1&gt;010. homo &amp;
old, roody to go, ftOCI, F.A.
Private Toilet In Mod•rn Art Exch Or All 3 For $40; Bo~ Fan yord. GUARANTEED olloc:tlvol SIGNS: Portobto chongooble
Proof Bldg. Cotlllorrto Huklno JIO; Sy1000 lluolc Ptoquo $20· • Avaltobto ot: R&amp;G FEED AND olgn 1 1111... $2811. Froe Jottoro Bonodum, 6-7-31156.
614-446-26:11 Or 614-448-2512.
ond dotlvory. Ptootlc llltero 155
AKC Roglllorod Arnorlcon
Duot Buotor Proctlcolly - $10: O'DELL WilBER.
box
taecond
box
fne)
.
AAA
Coeur
sponlll Puppln, Tof.
Wrought
Iron
F
Stond
$10·
Mobil• Home lot Fot R•nt, Tot•l
OuotKy, HlloKhy, Prlvoto Konno.,
Clothoo, Silooo, Punoo, Chupl KindWoodtKJmtng Slgno, 1-80CH3:1-3453 onytlmo.
Eloetrle, 614-387·11138.
MleeeU•n•ou•
Knlck-Knach, stove, onty UNCI One Wlnttr, STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gollon
Rolood
a..mplon
Slro&lt;t
Mobile Home Space For Rent: 7 No C.llt Before 8 A.M., 304-8~ S.SOO, I"M-36'7-7823.
Upright, Ron Evon• EntorpriMo, Bloodline, 2 Uttoro To Choooo
Mil• Out St. Rt. M1, GrMn
From, Born 11112 a lltii!M, Tollo
:zs54.
t.orao 2 Ptooe SocUonol Solo Jockoon, Olio, 1~7-8521.
School Dllltrk:t, 814 44S 4053.
Docked. Dew Clowe Romovod,
z Wom 124 SL Tooolng - . wttfi Roctlnlng Ende, Sloto Blue Two cemecaa.~-=h Grove Protaulon.lly
Butt Colored,
Mobil Hom. Iota for ftht, 304- 8ckf Togothor Or Sopwote, Cokw, Hew Eicettont Condition,
Comllory, I
·
Dopoell Now Bolng Tokon, Stud
6JHU84.
llull Soil. 8,._256-1551.
UOO, 11431e 1112•.
Two Warm Morning hu.tlng , S.rwlc;e Aleo Anlr•ble, 814-~
30 Gal. Hexagon Fleh Tank Whh llotol doloctor· Floltor VLF555- etovee, ~ wood and 0011r, _a7_28_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Merchandise
Oak Stond, Whole Sot.Up 1,. D, good condition, hu corryi"'J .,.. pntptno, both ltovo AKC Rogtotorod Boxor, femole.
ond ..........,_, book, ... blow.re, ucel*rt condhloo, f'llwn. h(.fi2-6025.
eluded, 814 446 B342 Allor t P.ll. klnt $1511, 6 ...1112·2081.
$200/MCh or $375/both, 814-11112·
Anclereon window.- 14 otondard
51
AKC R:,ttorod tlolmollon pupHousehold
lite, I email, one 5'x4', Nlco fronklln WoodburrMr $150; 5565.
Nlco Hutch $1511; SCIII"o $50; lhlllty Trailer, 814-245-6773.
~..• 37
~"-ol. d, •dor~bl•, $200.
.....,...bto, 614-JII2-21M.
Goods
'"..
Nlco Wotorbod a.- Size $150:
Bundy cto~nll SUO. Firm Aox OHico tloek $35; Nlco Cofloo W•nn llomlng gu halter, AKC Reglatered Golden U.b
GooD USED APPLIANCES by Joko $80. 4 It ook -lng $25. Toblo l 2 End TobiN, Block Rod 85,000 BTU, uMd vtry lttUe, 814Male, 3 YNJ'I Old $200. NNCII
Wuh•ra, dryers, r•frigeratore,
304·773-50111.
"
Iron Whh Glue T- $75; All 11112·7042.
Ploco To Run 814·25U621. 614rongoo. Skoggo Apptla~L 78
Extno
Nlcoi11WJII.2720.
VIne Sti'Mt, C•ll 614-448-T3w, 1· Buy Your Wtntor Supply Of
Wa..._., Dryer, caor T.V., 256-1353.
Soooonod Ftrowood Newt 614- R•s Fwntture. We buy, nil and Mlcrowllve, fi'Mler, Stove, AKC AottweUer Puppies, SlOO
800-4119-34811.
387-7088.
trodo
ontlq~1
now/uood llolrtgorotor, lltec. 814-256-1238. Each, 114-«8-41340, 614_.46Kenmo,.. HiEa OUiy Wuher
houoohold fumoenlnt•· Will buy
$95; Whirl
Wuhor S95; Coller ID box, 14 memory, brand •ny tmount, lar~mall. 50! SUNQUEST WOLFF TANNING 3653.
Kenmo,.
ry•r S7S; O.E. 36 - . $43.95, 614-11112.&amp;111&amp;.
Second St., Maori, WV. OwnerBEDS
Bk:hon FriH 10 Montha Old,
Inch
Electric
R•ng•
S?li
Rocky Pooroon. 304·773-5341.
New Commerdlil, Home Untte
Whl1o Fomole Spo~~'· Shoto,
Fridgl~lro
30 tncn Whho Compound bow, otahte ond
$1118.00. l.omt lotlono' Houoobrokon. Good wnn Klda.
Rongo, $125; G.E. Rolrtgorator quiver, Sao; 122 CuD Cadet, Refrigerator., Stov•. WutMrl '"""
Ac-loo. llonth l&gt;oymonto 1400, 614-]811.9770.
Frost HM $125; Upright Fno-r $950; Bhp Cub Codo~ Smo; 614- And llryono. All Recondltlonod lDw Ao $18.00, Colt odoy FREE
Llko Now $175; Upright Froozor 11112-2083.
And Gourontoodl $10(1 And Up, NEW Cokw Cotolog. HI00-482· CFA Aegla1e1Wd Hlmalytn KitFroot Froo,. 15 Cu. Fl $150; Concrllo I Plutlc Soptlc Will Dotlvor. 114.&amp;1t.444~
tent, 614-446-1104.
111117.
18,000 BTu Air Conditioner T•nb 300 Thru 2,000 Oallone
$195· Stdo By Side Horwat GOid Ron Evane Ente.,m..a, JaclcRoiTigorotor 19!1; Skoggo Ap. ocn, Oil 1~37.0528.
Real Estate General
Real Estate General
pll•nces, 78 VIne Street, Galllpcllo 814-448-73G8 Or 1.-. FLEAS? ENFORCER OVERNITE
4811-34811.
FLEA TRAP controla flou
whhout lnMCIIcldoo, ond M'o
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
GUARANTEED! Avollobto ot:
Complete homo fumls~l~f:· VALLEY WilBER AND R&amp;Q
Houno: lion-Sot, 11-5. 81
FEED.
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

IJI-11112.

NEW USTINGI Good locatlonll 2+ acn~t 3
mila• from a.tllpollt. Cozy 3 bedroom home
located In a family oriented nels;lborhood.
Extraa lndude woodbumar and liack cltck.
Eaolly albidtobla at $43,000.
f.404

Household
Goods

2bdnn. opte., totol oloctrlc, op- 0322, 3 m11ee out Bulavllle Rd.

Nlco
2 br
eplo,
In PomeooJ, oil
utltllleo
pold,
814-11112.&amp;851.
Nlco atr., WID hookup,

~nuo,~.

ltd 11Y
• AI&gt;ANTIQUE FURNITURE
- D a n \ - 01111114.
....at2.
Culved ~ oak china cabinet, lg. 2 pc. Mah. china
cabinet, roaa wood viet. marble top draaaer, Clark 1tl2 Tw• •
.....
111001 cabinet, MV. 4 ltack boola:aaea, oak high boy, t14Im,
CA,
... t~
...... lull,
fOIIIId oak table, heavy fancy bt'B88 &amp; Iron bed, oak frOIIl JICII'Qh: S. bf 5 $ lntmii!C
tlkltlboanl 'M'claw 1eat, good Early pins Ice boX. waah ......,.a-a.
Mnda, oak hal aeat, Birdseye maple princess
ch11er, oak hd mirror, 3 pc. wicker eat, Early chaat,
E.ty crlde, rope bed, Prim desk. cedar cheat, cupboard, old crank wall phone, mechanical horae. Ice
cre11111111ble &amp; 6 heart back chairs, nut &amp; bott cabinet 2 llldrocnaa Wllh Expendo WID,
~ 81-IR.tJtanlo_!L P8Jtlltly
- 72 draw.a, Miaalon oak desk, doll trunk. victrola, Furnllhed,IM-aHia
table top victrola, ·organ stool, atand w/claw &amp; ball
a - Good
- Shope,
Tntlor,114-:IUGood
feet. tea cart. marble top table, several trunks, buggy 11rw,
eaat, 2 beautiful leaded stain glass windows &amp; more.
GLASSWARE
t.orao -home. 2totMcltoom,
• 18M
,_
25 pc. American Fostoria square cake stand. plates, moiMe
R112
fiUittle
wilt
vloor
at IM
turrblera, cancle holders &amp; others, pink depraasion, rtvw, Mklng SU,ooo. ~
Fenton. Heisey, Harlequin, Watt Ad'J. bowl, misc. 4U1
glaaawane.
llcblto Homo 11110 SEWER TILE
14x70 2 B • = :::''-A~
La~. lg. vaae, basket, planters, some are signed &amp;
more.
CLOCKS
33 Fanns for Sale
Ingraham regulator school house clock, VIC!. kitchen
• .2br. tog
-.
clock, VICI. calendar kitchen clock, oak clock &amp; more . 24.~
uno_,_
....._
wf'
&amp; eeptlc .,......,
STONE JARS
....... pond, ............
111 marked atone jars A.P. Donaghho, T.F. Reppert, _,.,.
IM!lldlita. BIIMI Rood, 170,000.
HamlMon &amp; Jonea, Jaa, Hami"on Co., D.W. Rhodes, ~271 or IJI-liA.
Coctagevllle. W. Va.; Brinker Brothers, Letart, W. Va.;
Parkeraburg, W. Va. &amp; others. fancy 6 gal. A.P. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Donaghho churn, brown lugs &amp; more.
-. ...... good .........
COLLECTIBLES
till,
I~
IIlio c:r.lloltor
Ad. 7pln.
-·
.
Caroueal horse on a Coca-cola cast iron base, old
china doRa, fancy gi"ed mirror, old pictures, artist 4 - 011 - - ...... eo.Of114,000,
- - Trol And 8-r
proof from the copper etched by Jacques Rich, N.Y., -Aced,
boat ~Cane • Lee Hunter 1889, Jashenelow &amp; others,
copper bed warmer, nice pr. pewter candle sticks, lg. 36
Real Estate
Iron skillet 112. sausage grinder, railroad lanterns- 2
Wanted
N &amp; W globea marked, BLO globe marked, NYCS
globe marked, Urr globe, Penn. Lines globe, 2 C&amp;O
l othera. blue &amp; whke grenhe ware, Mail Pouch thermometer, tobacco cutter, 2 sterling silver Christmas
platea w/24 karat gold, anvil, brass, apple butter katde, lg. braaa bell. coffee grinder, caboose light, round
butter mold, Prim. dough bowl, No. 1 &amp; 2 dinner bela
Rentals
&amp;more.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: There Is much more quality
41 Houaea for Rent
hma coming inlll
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
1 lodr_,.,
!Jv1nS1, 1

-·

141110 2 Bodroomo, $250/llo.
S350•. y.,. Poy Eloctrtc,
Blfl Yord, 114-+1&amp;-8318 Coli
AnJIIIM.
14x71l, 2 bedroom. fumlahed,

Depoe~~

51

Sunday nmes-Sentlnei-Page--05

Unfurnished 3 Rooma 6 Bath
Upatalrs, W•ter Paid, No p ..,:

a bodroorn upotolro oport.•
ment nur Tupporo Ptolno, $250 54 Miscellaneous
ptuo d_., 114-GS!i-3504.
Merchandise

Locllted Ill the Rick Pearson Auction Center
on Rt. 33 In Muon, WV.

.....

8277 eftor Spm.

Apartment
for Rent

llonor
ond
Rlvontclo Houro lion. · Sot. 11-6 Wod. tl-8;
Altortmento In lllddleport. F""" 0an1 Forgot our REPO. s~M355 . Colt 114-11112~1. tton.
EOH.

1111_..,...211·a.. .... ,... ClnMl.Ell-

MASON, WV

Meurtty depo.h, trun Plld.
304-e75-3002 11am-6pm or 6~

roam

SATURDAt OCT. 1, 1994
10:00 A.M

LUNat

$200

\ Fumtohod 1 Bedroom In lltd.1 dlopoft Area. 11188 Ford Aerootar
Van, 614-982.&amp;225, 8t4-0iil2-6304.
Fumtohod 3 Roomo l Both,
Ctoen, No Poto1 Roforonce &amp;
Depoe~~ llequl- 614-446-1$11.
Qrott..,. Uvtng. 1 ond 2 bod-

Full Baeement lor llorage or ptey area lor lila
children. Thit 3 bedroom, 1 112 bath ranch
taatur.. a new family room, raptacamant
wlndowt and 110111• new carpeting •• wall.
Ocn't clotey, cal today!
1502

:s:~=w:.~~~~..:~·
A3
.., 81121SA-Ipno.
-

14x70 3br., $350/mo 1

lpl. w/Wuher/drytr $300/mo
ph• utllhlea, d•poe\t, reterenC88, no ,.... 304-075~884.

Porch. $118,000. 010 114-

37W24111114-11NIII

property

$150

MCWHy depoe;h, tr..h ptld.

2 Br, 2 B•th, all elec:lr~ moble
hom• tor ,.nl betwHn Dexter &amp;
H•rrt~nvlll•, 4 lbll barn &amp; outbuilding~ &amp; pond on 15 V2 .cr.. ,

-3BRHome.AIIEioc1rlc,

Utility

141!2

7802.

Located from St. At. 7 by p88ll of Pomeroy, Ohio.
Take St. At. 124 W. toward Rutland, 0. Watch for
auction signs.
"AUTO I MOTOR HOME"
1984 Celebrity, 4 door, auto &amp; air.
1984 Yellow Stone Cavalier, 26' elee~s 6,. 360 en~ine,
queen size bed, gas fumance &amp; range, a1r, electriC or
motor, generator, double sink, full size bath w/shower,
has awning, 35,000 miles.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Collection of satt &amp; peppers, Fenton, milk glass,
Hobnail, cookie /·ars, 1930 Circa •.ugar &amp; creamer,
Homer McCaugh in cups, Carnival diShes, 100 yr. old
shot glasses. typewriter from Rutland High School,
horse collar, wooden sock streacher, hay fiooks, bed
frame, oak round table wliron base, toaster, Windsor
insulator gas range, tlat Irons, darn needles set,
BlackSm~h taos, Star Burst Ouih and lots more.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Burkline recliner, Kenmore microwave, Home Interior
pictures, two lolding tables, . 14 folding chairs,
65,000BTU gas range, electriC organ, rocker &amp;
alterman, writing desk, color concole TV, maple chairs,
kitchen sink, sweeper, metal bookcase, Iota ol k~chen
appliance, linens, books, misc. knick knacks, trt1ad
mill, exercise bike, round glass top dining room table,
wood burner &amp; lots more.
"TOOLS &amp; MISC"
Crahman electric miter box, Crahman 1o• radial arm
saw, 300AMP lower cranking welder, cement mixer,
cart &amp; wood , metal push plow, farm gates, metal aet of
cattle racks for Chev., blade for Dymark, Proto socket
for square, gold plated pipe wrench &amp; set of tools,
uprke tool boxes, 25' flag pole, picnic tables, weed
eater, Gravely mower deck, garden plow, 2 rota tillers,
air compresser, lime spreader, all kinds of tools,
Rotary mower w/8 HP B&amp; S engine, loll ol jeans &amp;
dress pants 40x32, Lawn Boy mowers, Homel~s chain
saw, seeder, log chains, 23 channel base station
wllurner 112 mike, Bleacher seats and eel.
Owners- Mr. &amp; Mrs. Virgil Parsons, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jerry
Eads and Freeman Williams
Auctioneer- Dan Smith- Racine, Ohio
#57-eB-1344 W.Va. 515
Cash - Poshive ID- Refrsshments
"Not responsible for accidents or loss ol property"

ABSOLUTE PUBLIC AUCTION
FRI. SEPT. 30TH 9:00AM

Phone (614) 388·9370 or 8880

for Rent
2br., $280/mo,

11112-iiOO.

PUBUC AUCTION
SAT. OCT. 1, 1994
10:00 A.M.

Strid-Rit&lt;, Clinical plus many more. Large

cards, 3t. 4¢ and mi xed plate blocks of stamps. c~alk lamp
(drunk leaning on street light post), and many other 1tems . Lg.
n1ce trunk .

Pottery : 6' Rockwood Vase, Roseville 3" White

44

42 Mobile Homes

2

griddle, Wagne r skillets, h orse co llar, P e p si thermometer

Occ upied Japan candle ho lder s. rug beater , umque barrel
shaped liquor cabinet. Elvis Co llec tor's Edition magaz ines
and records Ohio Farmer Mag az ine " 1960's", Keystone,
Economy, U~i versa l . OVB and . Enterprise food choppers,
pictures and fra m es, Japan sp1ce se~. new and old hand

BLAME.'

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

september 25, 1994

$2501Mo. Plus Deposit, 1'14-367·

Keds, Nunn Bush, Dexter, Hush Puppy, Osh Kosh,

"Metal·. H.J. Fuller Detecto scales. brass blow torch .
Wellston. Columbus. Middleport. Ohio pop bottles . ·oan Dee
polato chip can. Mitchell. Hedden. Olympia etc. fishing reels,

"
1 was impressed with my .
brother's position of expertise in a
very large engineering firm. He
would just laughed and said, "An .
expert is someone who is called in
at the last minute to SHARE the ·

114-9112

Snoopy soap dish ' 1950". Horsman and other dolls. Favonte

Slitched quilts, Do·Do Bat portable light. 1958·94 sports

Not responsible for accidents or

ENl3~~~

Good Nol9hborhood,

Rttbok, Ntw Balance, Brooks, Avia, Convene/

Fostoria.

lD
l oss of

HoOI!~

can , bee smoker, 1 gal. "Battleship" mustard jar, wood k1tchen
pieces. England &amp; Japan c u ps and saucers, c rockery, AV?n

&amp; Cruet, American

Terms of Sale: Cash/Check w/positive

FATHOM

In Go~
tlpolte, _LR1 tOt., Dlnotlo, Both,
t.orao ttearoorn, Wullor Dryer

Nlco 4 Room -

Wolverine, Chippawa, Kodiak, Dingo, Durange,

Pot, C up &amp; Saucer, Fenton Shoe Collection, C ut

Ted Harder, Executor for Estate
of Mrs. Doris Harder, case #

Nih, furnace, ·
.. on, 113-254--5088.
dining.

glasses. beer glasses. Nippon. Hall. NYC oil can. soldered 011

China, Degenhart Toothpicks, Nippon Chocola te

Auctioneer: Leslie Lemley
614-446-6241
Licensed by State of Ohio

SYMBOL

Downtown across from City Park on Ohio River.

Other G la sswa re To Include: Geis ha Gi rl

Weller Wild Rose Vases

~~~~

peeler. Fenton, Depression glass. black ame thyst , In s
Hemngbone, Fostoria stem glasses. o ld refrigerator bowls,

35 Patterns, Northwood Nut Bow l,

Perfume

SCRAM-LETS

go approx. 4 mi. into town; CARL'S located

Muc h, Much More.

Sa lt s,

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7
~~~--~~--~~--~--~--~~--~~
ANSWERS TO $~"\t.ij~-ltf..!f~g ... 25 ... 94

Pewter. Wesl Bend Pottery. Cherry stoner "Enlerprise·. apple

Lustre Rose Large Bowls, Sa il &amp; Peppers , Bowls

Glass

on Brlclgemon SIIIOI,
Ownod By VII'- Of SyncuM
At llunlcl... l&gt;oll&lt; Ptopony.
$30Mio. Ptuo Utll"leo l $300
~. ContiCI llayor Pope At
114-11112-3420.
tnoltor, 80 • .,.., 2 bod·
,..,., Mvint room, 1.11~

red ruby. Tom &amp; Jerry punch bowl t 2 cups &amp; pedestal. old

C ups, Large Assortment Of Vases , Two Imperial
In More Than

41 Houses for Rent

Stanley &amp; Sun Auctioneers/Realtors, Agents for the

Isaac's Auction House
Antique Or Collectible Sale
Jackson St., Vinton, Ohio
Saturday, October 1st, 1994, 7:00 p.m .

Medallion . Dragon &amp; Lotu s, Northwood Bowls,

Grape, Robin, Hobstar, Butterfly &amp;

september 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page--04-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

LAKEVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUilD YOUR
MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5 ACRES MIL ALSO 2.348 ACRES
MIL CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER
HOSPITAL ALl lOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE
COVENANTS

1874. RANCH HOlE with full basement. app 1710
living space, gas heat. cent. air, 2 fireplaces , 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. 2 car detached garage, 30x16

shed. 2 small outbuildings. small trame home with 2 BR

and 1 bath, 2 homes and buildings situated on 5 acres
more or tess priced In the $70's.

litH. COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING · 940 sq. ft . quarry
tile floor, new rubber roof, 200 amp. 3 phase el~ctnc
drive thru windoW, 5 ton heating &amp; coc&gt;lng un". W1l sell

or klnQ tarm lease. VIrginia 388·5826.

1968 ACREAGE, ACREAGE. that 1s pnced nght so
you can afford to build your dream hOme on. 123 acres
with 1m1le road frontage . so bener not hesnate on th1s. .
only $56,500.00

1943. NEW LISTING • HOllE

&amp;

INVESTMENT . Can

be bought together. New 3 bedrm ranch home wllarge
rms ., While brick lront. cnarm1ng LR , d1n rm .. large
rms . throughout . loads of oak cab mets m k1t . 2 car
garage, 2 ac MI L w/home.

li71. LAND CONTRACT - Make a deal here
Older home wilh some work compl eted . 3
bedrooms, 1 bath . new cabinets in kit., good
garden . Barn &amp; garage. 4 ac This wilt be a good
spot to start or retire. $45 ,000.
H33. HOME AND INCOME - Double with earning
power. You ca n live in one unit and rent the olher
Close to schools, shopping &amp; churches Can lor futl
inlormation and an appointment . VL Smith 386-8826.

lin ATTENTION! PRICE REDUCED to 59.900, Will
purchase a lovely 3 bedroom ranch w/ full basement. 2
car garage. Also 2nd home which was remodeled Th1s
can be great income property. Located in town Ou1ck

Sale Needed.

ELEGANT AU BRICK BEAUTY
Two story home, full basement and garage has a great
deal to offer. Designed for great liv1ng. First noor has
formal entry with open stairway, format living room with
fireplace. formal dining room . Cherry cabinets line the
wall of the extra large kitchen. Braaklast room and
powder room. Second floor offers four bedrooms and
bath. Bedrooms are king SIZe, carpet over hardwood
floors . bath has all new fixtures and Love Tub
Basement has huge family room w/fireptace. bedroom,
exercise area, 1aundry room and storage room This
home ts ol supertl qualitY as the plumbing has been
replaced All new all covering. beautiful new carpet
throughout, new windows installed. Spacious kitchen
with cherry cabinets, island for Jenn-Ai r range. Only
private shOwing witt decide the value Is here.

CALL VIRGINIA L SMITH 440·6806 or 388·e826

1953 PRIVACY AND GREAT LOCATION. 1s whal
you 'll get •n th1s 4 bedroom b1 -level m Grandview
estates. owner anx1ous to sell so make your offer
today
'939 GENTLEMAN'S RETREAT. 3 room log cab1n on
25 acres w1th Jots ol puvacy priced at $38,000 00

1962 NEW MOBILE HOllE ON 3 ACRES in 1ne
R1oGrande area . w1th 2 outbuildings and a pond and a
n1ce area w1th lots of pr1vacy, call us today. a must to

see
1973 SUPER BUY . th1S 3 bedroom 1993 Redwood o n
112 ac re tot close to town with a 2 car garage owner
wants someone to mak e an offer so call Wilma today
tor more 1nfo Reduced lor qwck sa le

•944. NEW LISTING · PRIME POTENTIAl CORNER .
2, 160 sq f1 • block bl~g . bath I ac m/1 Eqwpment 6)(\ra .
Loca ted on SR 368·8826

'983. LARGE STEEl BUILDING w/15.750 sq. n M/L
bath. snack bar. loarting dock. fe nced, 6 ac. M/L. Weli
water. coun ty water avai labl e. Propane gas heat
trvckmg terminal , storage locker s boat st orage or
maybe a ba rn dance hall This can be a real mo'nev
maker $89.900.
1916. LARGE HOME IN VINTON · 5 bedrm .. 2 stories
LA, DR krt lam rm . enclosed porch, 3 building. Sales
off1 ce. extra build1ng, fenced, blacktop drive &amp; patio .

•975. STEP BACK INTO THE COUNTRY - Watch 1ne
deer run. but be close to convemence. This home and
1s 17 acs more or less. is located appro)( . 2 miles from
R1o Grande on a black top road lhis home includes: 3
bedrooms. 2 baths, kitchen, living room, utility room ,
barn. 2 outbuildings, 2 car garage ana tobacco base .

1947. NEW LISTING · KING SIZE FAIIILY HOllE or
use th1s super nice 5 bed1m lor PRIVATE HOME CARE
3 baths, 3 ac. rrul . Virginia L. Smith 366-8626.

11955. HOME W/RENTAL UNIT. Also 2 mobile pads.
Home can be reverted to one lg. family home. SR
160. Call for further informaliOn $65 ,000.00 . May

!fade.
1849 - TRULY DELIGHTFUL - The remarkable
spacio us home with view of Ihe county. Italian tile toyer.
cathedral ce1llng with balcony. 3 BR . 2'/, baths, Wvlng
room with woodburning fireplace. equip . kitchen,
breakfast room has a lg . window, stereo speakers
throughout. brass hgnt ltxtures and much more. 2 car
attached garage, attic storage, 2 acres m~ . This house
is maintenance tree ol best quality Make your
appointment and see 1f you donl agree.

I'G:Io. NEW LISTING · 3 be&lt;lroom mobile home an&lt;l 4
ac. m/lland Is lenc8d 5 spring on property. Greal place
for kids. 2 car garage &amp; building. $20's . MAKE OFFER.

�Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
61 Fann Equipment

71

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Autos for Sale

John O..e blckhol, 300~, 4 1il81 ChiVIftl, IUIO, needl
WhHI drlva, 600 1'\p, very good motor, good body, $125, 614-1185condition, Nle or l-.M 614-661-- 4235.

3211.

'

Masuy Ferguecn 85 Whh Bullh
Hot~ &amp; Bla~ $3,850; 3&amp; Ma..ey
Ftrguson New MOler &amp; Pelnl,
. $3,550; 20 FerguiOI'I With
Loader, l2,550, 614-286-6522.
Mlnlatuf'll backhoe (Terromlta),
nawly racondltloned, ,...c~y to

wo""' $6500. 304-ti75-3000.

'...

1983 Buick Porll Avonua, sg,ooo
MIIH, A-1 Condhlon, 614-2455628.
1i83 LTD W.ll"" , $2000. 3046~1117'0 .

1983 Uarcury Caprt (l.ookl Uke
u .t ~ Cyl ...... ... 3••

1iQ2

5-10

pickup,

"'::f.

1984 Mereed• 3000 Turbo
Show Room Condttlon, Low
MIIM, 614-~2218.

63

lOU Monte Carlo Aulo, l50 EnNew nrea, &amp; WhMla,
Good Condition, $3,500, 304-

IIIIer, $1000, 304-675-.3000.

Livestock

11 big Holstein Sptlnger hleters,

1965 C~ New Yorker, 2.2l,

2 Gated Fil lies, 5 month• old. 1

8c._l., 6i,500ml., good concl .,

big Pony_ 614.24S-S087.

loaded. 304-67S..2•j2·

25 Jersey Ccwa, In Full F&gt;roductlon, 614·286-249ti .

1988 Buk:k Grand Notional,
loaded! ExceUenl Condhkwll
Low Mil•, 614-44e...e1o.

J 1/2)'r. Old gelding, · gentte,
$1200, parade aaddla &amp; hame...
304-ti7S-1876.

Good,

AOHA Palomino Mara, 614-256-

OBO, 114-446-233-1.

Real Estate General

11177 Et C.mlno, V_. oulo, black
whh outlaw mag• $1600 OSO;
1WJC bread truck, heavy duty,
460 1uto, dual whMie, decent

1994
THAT DAILY
PUZZLER

Real Estate General

on flU, $1400 080, 814-II:Z·

MEIGS COUNTY
Experie11 ce Makes The Difference! Call
Cheryl Lemley, For a Full Time Meigs
County Agent For Over 17 years!

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

446-1066

1986 Dodge 600 4 Door Auto, 4

CyllndiH'~

4 New Tiraa, Runs
t-alr Condition, $800,

Hauling,

Livestock

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley .............. 742-3171

rliiil

LAND CONTRACT TO QUALIFIED BUYER. .. nice
starter home 3 BR, LR, k~chen, bath, laundry,
garage . City School District.

f1.445

Anytime,
1987 C.VIIIIar, UOO.

Ohio.

64

1080 Ford Tempo,

all whHI
drlva, PW, PL., PO, alrlcond, 304675-4530.

Hay &amp; Grain

1989 Pontiac Ldi•M, 78,406
800 ~uara balaa of alfalfa, 614- mila,
maroon,
4
door,
667-6653.
automatic, air, ster110, uklng
Square balee . $1.25 to $2.00 per $2100, 614-IMB-2800 daye Of 614=bala, alfalfa, clever, orchard 949 -2 644 evenlnga.
grass. 304~75-3960.
18i'l Ch•vy S-10 S4,0Q5. 1181

===.:.;,:_,;_;,_____

65 Seed &amp; Fertllzer

Oodgo Dakota V_. auto $3,495.
1990 otdo c.tala S4 455. 19117

C.dalllc O.VIIIe ru.l nlCa $3,7'115.

Agrlcutlural limo, delivered &amp; 1987 Blaz.or 4x4 loadod $4,0!15.
spread. 304-882·2211 or 882· 1981 Oodgo Shadow $1,115.
19811 Goo Malro $9,11115. 111111
3358 evenings .
CMv truck S800. Several ~r

$1,000. Scotly'a Uaod c. .., New

Transportation

LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE- 156X100 city water
and Hwer, oloctrlc to pole laval. Priced $14,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
ACREAGE FOR SALE- 1e acraa mora or lose located
close to Rio Granda. PRICED AT $64,000.00 Realtor
Owned.
VACANT LAND • Approximataly tO acres located on
Bob McConnicl&lt; Rd. Call for mora infonnation.

Haven, 'NV. 304-882·3752.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE T1lY
OUR TOU. FREE NUIIIIIER
1-806-884-1066

- - - - - - - - - 1991 PtymoiAh La- Excellon1
Condhlon, $5,750, 6"f4-446.3W17.

11 Autos for Sale
----.,...--,..,.---- 1913 Eagle Taton 1 automo11c, air,
'87 Camaro, V-6 wtth t-to~, excellent

auto., 614-9411-2126.

condnlon,

kHoded,

20,000 mlloo, $12,200 ,.!10-

~="-=:---=-=--:--:-=-c:-- tlabla, 614-258-1401.
1957 Chev. B•IAir, 4dr. Sed1n, QM Oodoa Shadow ES l
IXC. cond. 304-882-2170.
~lue I,SOil Mil•, Aulo,
1g6~ Muatang, 8 cyl., 1uto., PS, Tilt, Air, $11,000, 814~8-7337.
axe. Interior, $4200. 304-675JII Ford Or1n Torino, lS1

en=:

3960.

33050 NEW LIMA ROAD! 1 1/2 story home, family
room, living room, 3 bedrooms, eat-i n kitchen. 30' x
30' log building and a 12'x24' detached garage. 1 acre
11697
more or less lawn. Priced $30's

HOUSE, BUILDING &amp; 8 ACRES MORE OR LESS,
localad in Lawr811oo Co., 2 bedrooms, living room, dining
room. kitchen, bath. lg. garage 24X40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENTIII
GAAAELD AVENUE· 3 bedrooms, iving room, kilchon
and bath, within wolking distance ol stores Bild schools.
Call to .....

lll

FOR INFORMAllON ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE OUAUTY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, IIIOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

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

Real Estate General

304-675-7615.

loadodl Automatic, loothor
Saato, EacelloJt Condhlon, 1
1980 Muotang 4 Cyllndor, 4 Ownal, 80,000 Mllaa,_$8.~.,100, 114Spood, $750, ~5-:!:152.
446-4425 Aftor 5 P.11. ur lao,..
Menage.

I

I

BYSLOM

BEAunFUL MODERN HOME
In GaiUpolia- 3 bedmoma - 2 baths. A uniquely deaigned
multi level home with hoatllm RARELY _ , in lodey
construction. Anderton Windowa Throughout- Huntar
ooUing lana. Laundry chute- Whole houM uhauot ayatem •
Phone jacb in ..,..ry room. Property Tu ABATED !Of next
14 yr.. meana a grgat savings. Phone now for an
EXCLUSIVE
SHOWING .
1713
HAPPINESS IS- Living with a view of the Ohio River. Cozy
and economical to live in, 5 rooma and bath, like new
llhinghod roof, white vinyl aiding (no upkeop), lront porch.
Nioe and clean inside and out. Could be purchased on Land
Contract. SEE THIS ONE NOW. Realtor owned.
16!16
BUSINESS OFFICES • SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE
CLAUDE DANIELS, Realtor- Ph. 388-86t2
KENNETH AMSBARY, Rultor- Ph. 245-5855

LEADINGHAM REAl ESTATE

111t1 louzu Amigo

74

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE :
111
4.507 acres m/1
'9,000
#2
4.615 acres m/1
10,000
113
4. 702 acres m/1
9,000
#4
3.881 acres m/1
8,000
#5
4.190 acres m/1
5,000
#6
5.442 acres m/1
10,000
#7
6.148 acres m/1
6,000
#8
10.320 acras m/1
11 ,000
#9
7.253 acres m/1
7,000
GREAT LOCATION! Texas Road, off Flatwoods
Road . 22 acres farm with a 2 slory home, barn and
#700
sheds. $65,000.00
THERE IS NO PLACE LIKE HOME! Aluminum sided
ranch home. Den, 3 bedrooms, full basement , lots of
attic storage could be easi ly 2 additional bedrooms, 1
car attached garage! 50'x200' lot m/1. CENTRAL AIR!

I was impressed with my
L.-'------'-'---'--..L--..1..___J brother's position of expertise
. - - - - - - - - - - - - , 3 in a very large engineering
NE E I NG
firm. He would just laughed
4 ;,and said, "An expert is some....__._ _.__.____,_..____J~ one who is called in at the last
,----------.,"'minute to- ---- the- ----."

I"'
I1-a;;--lr--,lr-,I-,I-TI-:-9

I

10

1

I) ~~mble
etters

-

~Hij

I IIII

e.....

1182 Yamaha llulm 180 $1,000
010 I1WIHTJ'O.
1114
Yamaha
llmborwoH,
$3,200, exc cond, 304~15-3H0 .
75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
12 R . Aluminum Bolt I Tralier

Mlnnkota Trolling llotor, 14 Ft.
Flbatalua Boa~ lllnnkota Troll·

1m

o~u~..,.,

,,

Fl.

sn. • .

Blual Whh, 110 HP, kcury £n.

g~ne,

l.oob I

Rune Q,..U
$2,500, 114-371-o2240.

I IIII

- 3
16x32 oval

72 Trucks for Sale

72 "Trucks for Sale

11184 Chavy 'IV Sarloa 2 Ton
DumpTI'UCit,
IOFI. Dun~EJU:al.
lan1 Concltlon, l14-25&amp;
.

1••• ~~ F - A 1 A •·•omottc,
~u - - ·• - ·
-

o..r-,

Wllh DNE 2K
1111•. 1~1071.

Real Estate General

2.38 ACRES-Sl R1. 588 ArM
Mostly all wooded! This would
make a stately home s"e.

Real Estate General

1982 Jeop J-10 lorado • Hot
04,000 Point Electric llonga, Atlar 1
P.M. 114-245-1224.

.,.
LACKBURN B

[B

Tracy Brinager........... 949-2439
Sherri Hart .................

742-2357

rHAL 'OI"l

Henry E. Cleland 111992-6191
Kathy Cleland........... 992-6191

~ 514 S~~ond Ave.,

C

&amp; Selectric and TPC water. ASKING $94,900

Russell D. Wood, Broker ............................. .... 446-4618
Phyllis Miller ........................... 256-1136
Martha Smith ..... .......... .. 379-2651
J . Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184 Cathy Wray .................... 446-4255
Tammie Dewitt ....................... 245-0022
Cindy Drongowski. ....... 245-9697
Judy Dewitt ............................ 441-0262
Cheryl Lemley ............... 742-3171
Ruth Barr................................ 446-0722

baautilulltomaa that overlook lha city park
a tn.w of tt. Ohio River. Renovate to ouR your
own lull Cal today ofr your own private tour

and more daWo!

alotofprivacyandpaaca&amp;

=::-.a«...

1446-GREENBFIARAVE... Gnoat homo tor
the family... 3 BRa, FA, DR/LA combo,
ooquippadkltchan.gerega,goaheat/c:ent
1447- OAK HlU, former clothing
store... $27 ,900, comer lot. Cal lor mor.
infomtation.
1461- 151 ACRES, 1110111 or lell, Gnoanfield
Twp. $47,500, Comer of SA 233 amd
KM!niaon Ad
1444- 38.50 ACRES- rnA. Tycoon Laka, 28.5
A. In Raccoon Twp. and approx. 10 A. In
Huntington Twp., homo on property one,. 5
BRa, bath, LA, kitchen, new furnace, wood
burning 11101111, toiding, oorne new carpal. Bam
on property.
1473- BEAunFUL CAPE COD ofler. 83.75
acnoa, mn, mootty pu1Ure, tobacco baM,
40x60 bam, 22x44 blook mitkltoue. 7~ road
frllntagoo for paaoible bldg. t*a.
1422- OLD CHEVY.()IJ)S BUILDING. 420'
front on Second Avenua and 82' foontage on
Grape.
1443- BTATE AT. 325- S. of Rio G,.ncle,
8.40 acnoo, nvl, $17,900. Cal !ordiiVCtlona&amp;
delaila.

S31,500 - ll4 ACRES, Morgan Twp., - 1
land. Poaoible farming land or -tlonal
land.
TWO LOTI, OaJc Hill, $12,000, 8X5e ran~
on property.
LAND CONTRACT TO QUAUFIED
BUYER... niC!I otarter homo, 3 BR, LA,
kitchen, bath, laundry, gaoaga. City School

Oiatricl
A spacious
sitting on approx. 11 acres. Home has 3 bedroom &amp; 1

baths. Also there is
.pool.

agarage and above ground swimm1ng
$86,500

MIDDLEPORT· Oliver Street- A one story home with 2-3
bedrooms, one bath, space heaters, vinyl siding, and

carport.

$21 ,000

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker ..........................992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS ............................. - ...... 992·3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882-3498
OFFICE ........................................................992-2888

~
lfNDlF&gt;

THE END OF THE RAINBOW! Oulatanding
118 ptua acNs with an axooUont view. pond &amp;
oprings, bam and a well maintained 4 bedroom
home approx. 5 yeaN old, atone &amp; vinyl
exterior, full baaem9nt, large apaciouo rooms,
fully equipped kitdun, ovorlizod v.tliolpool tub,
2 112 car goraga. lltrge 12'x48' deck with lower
level tO'x36' patio. Central air. MUST SEEI
1703

unfinished . This is a manufactured home.

ASKING $165,000

AFFORDABLE FOR YOUR BUDGET!
131,500.001 Ranch otyla home oonaioting of
tov-r, living &amp; clning I'Ooml, kilehan, a1actr1c hila!
pumplcantral olr conditioning. N4owar ahingla
roof, 2 car drtr chad galll08 wfrad for 220.
16118

101- Approx. 5 acraa

MIDOLEPORT- Broadway Street- You need Ia see lhts

POMEROY· R1ve r Frontage - Need business building? Great
Locat1on Has approx . 365 feel of road frontage on W. Main
Street . i bwld1ng !hat could be used for a business or tear
1
own

Real Estate General

Jo~ . Moore, As_sociate

tAple payne windows, carpeVwood flooring,

Raccoon, beautN lhaded lo~ houaa
BR, bath, LA, kl1clt.,, large unaltltched

$26,900

Real Estate General

{jive 'Us JL Ca[{ ..

POMEROY- Navlor's Run Road- Close to town but oul of

and dryer

BUHL MORTON ROAD
35 West Area, 5.66 acres.
Blacktop road, excellent neighborhood. Priced 20's.

CHESTER - SR 248 - This beautiful I floor refrigerator, disposal, central air, electric heat
Stone/frame home on 4.3+ acres includes 3 pump, paved street, TPC water, Eastern
bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 car garage , 3 decks, school district, some fencing, Extra small
family room, fireplace, hot tub, dishwasher, home. barn. shed. pond. free gas to small
d)sposal, partial basement, heat pump w/ C.A., house, royalties, fruit trees, 4th bedroom

town , approK . 7 yrs. old, 1 1/2 story home with 3 bedrooms,
2 baths . one car a1tached garage , and a 2 ca r detached
$54,900
garage sit1ing on approx . 1 acre of lan d

equipped k1tchen , newer roof. double front porch. washer,

NEW USTINGIII HOME &amp;
INVESTMENT
Green Elemenlary- Green Twp.
6.Q10 AcreS+ • Extra sopite &amp;
concrete pads lor·a building, apt
mobile home also has waler.
Lovely rustle home . Lg. bedroom
18x28. Lg. living room, 16x28
covered patio. Detached garage
w/attlc,
private
&amp;
wooded .
Property Is fenced. Has a pond,
would be Idea for a horse or to
rai se bael.

MAKE AN OFFER
Lovely home,
maintenance
free. Close to city. Lot is partially wooded. 3 bedrooms, large
living room, lots of windows, full
CENTRAL AIR.
basement.
Priced in 50's.

OFFICE 992-2259

$133,000

MINERSVILLE-Approx . 3 acres vv1th a 2 slory home w1th

complete kitchen, gas heat,

Green

Office .......................... 992-2259

home with a fantasti c v1ew. Has 3-4 bedrooms. 2 fireplaces ,
3 1/2 baths . family room. formal dining room , finished
basement, ln ·ground swimming pool , solar heat, satellite
dish. 2 car gara ge, and lots of privacy, sitting on 25 acres.

$35,000

Mowrwy'1 Upholstery, Russ WHIIamaon, Owner. Serving the
arN tor over 29 years, frH ••tlmat• . 304..fi75-4t54.

l-800-585-710

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

POMEROY- Beech Street- A 2 story 15 year old colonial

porch

Upholstery

ea ty, Inc.

72 "Trucks for Sale

Henry E. Cleland ...... 992-2259

Real Estate General

br., 2 bath, living room

NEWUSTING!
Vacant City Lots: Being lots 8, 9,
10 and 11 of said Manager
Subdivision. Being approx. one
acre more or lesa. Build one
home or four. Take advantage ol
15 year tax deferment. Call
office for more details!

See Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4

LONGBOTTOM · 153+ acres wHh 1 1/2 story
frame home approx . 2 years old with 3-4
bedrooms, 3 baths, dishwasher, range,

story stone home w1lh 2 bedrooms. dining room , 1 1/2
baths . and a lull basement. Has n1ce cab1nets 1n kit chen.
and kitchen IS equ1pped . Lots of Insulation , front and rear

87

1182 V45 Honda no lloi&lt;HCYCto
15,251
1111-.
114-"Nz-2457

1nt~IIOior 114211 M21.

Complete the chuckle quoted
by ftlling in the missing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

MIDDLEPORT· A large lol wtlh lois of !lowers and trees. A 2

304-675-1788.

Motorcycle&amp;

OF

frontage. river frontage-Approx. 50x300 fool lot with a 2
story house w1th 3 bedrooms . equipped k1tchen and a deck
on the back to s1t and watch the river flow by. Get it quick
ASKING $24,900
river lo ts are scarce

or
commercial
RHidenclal
w1rtng, naw Nrvlc• ~ repa!n .
Mallter Ucaneed electrician .
Ridenour Electrical. WV000306 ,

ex.-, 4WD,

23'3"
ll'Ainclollllrd
8pol1
Flalwmon, cuttr cabin, 260
t.or.a mK. CNiaa, oltlp lo oltoro
and """" 111ru, 18800
080, IIUII2-401.

1658

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

I0

LAYNIV
1--r-~-r-~-~.---~r:--::-_-.---f·

lB. Ran.~y Blackburn, Broker,

MIDDLEPORT- Railr oad Street - A1ve1 fr ontage river

C&amp;C
General
Home
Mllnllnll"'ot*o wall~, .torm
doora, roofing and complete
home rep~lr, complete window
,..PIIr, preaaure w•ehlng and
moblie home ~pair. For"" ...
llmate c.ell Chat, GM-9i2-6323.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

811 Ford F2liO, •••• 114-II:Z-7551

I ·,

'

gorgeous home 1n town but on a large lot having 4 spacious
bedrooms. 2 baths, fami ly 10om, dining room, bu1lt-in dish washer. 3/4 basement . deck. garden spot. carport. storage
building . and low maintenance aluminum siding .

e. 84

2111-1551.

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

· ''.,

clal. 614-:15&amp;-1611 .

11181 Full SID Chavy Con-alan Van, Good CondKion, 114-

'.

OFFICE 992-2886

0488 Rogan Watorproollng.
tabllahed 1175.

Plumblnlg &amp;
Heating

F,...m•n's Heating And Cooling .
lnlltallltlon And Service. EP.A.
Certified . Realdent!e!, Commer ·

c.n ,_217-G57ll or 114-237-

~~.~.

. ..,

Real Estate General

Uncondttlonal lifetime guaran••· locAl ret.r.nc• tumllhed.

ty""z:ll-:11·

Clovoland, $100, 114-9411-2840.

1979 Pontiac Formula Flreblrd,
455 high prcfcnnance molor. WhHe Uncoln Town Car 1M8,

WATERPROOANG

Ron'e TV Service, apeclallzlng
In :Z.ntth alec Mrvlclng most
other bnnda. HouM "II•, aleo
.arne 1ppllance repairs. WI/
304-67'6-23Q8 Ohio 814-446--2454.

I

LOT TO FIVER- • A 12 x 65 Mobile home, 3 bedrooma,
1 bath, 1 car garage, front &amp; back porch. Priced at
$22,500
HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE- 2
bedrooms, a bath, 2 decks, ilfiW roof, electric hoat, 1 112
acres, mora or l&amp;ss. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

82

Home
Improvements
IIASCiriENT

"" pa1'111; '117
bumpar,
Men
r-.chromed,; I'M·11t2·2158.
11185 :u tltnl v~ porta; at.o
want to buy mlnlblu; f14-II:Z·
2879.
Budoal Prlcad T.......,lealona,
Uaocl • -.ut, ...
Ina a1 SH; - - ei4-z.t
n,

·MOFHAT
1-~16-r-1~~7,.......1,.......I~

3942 or 8g5-J429.
1987 Fo&lt;d Eoco~ GT1 5 S - .
Whh Sunroof, Loo~ Good,

Registered AngUI bull ealt.Lex·
1... nice, appro11 600 lb8, nOO Rune Good, $1.500, 614-446per lb1 • firm . 304-67~2902 ah•r 4109, 614-3]9...2)10 .
6'00 PM.
1g87 Pontiac r ... n8AmL blaock
SpK ial FMdlf Calt Sale: S.tur- wfllr4ed
wlndowe,
1-'lonear
day October let, At 1 P.M. All removabla lac. CD playar
Yurtlng CaHie, &amp; Spring Catvu wl100waH ape~~kers, eharp, runa
Accepted, AU Cattle May Be g,...t, muet: ._, pr1ced to ..11.
Broughl In After 4 P.r.t. On 304-67~240.
Frlday. All Consignments Ara
Welcome, Hauling Available, 1988 T·blrd, tow mil•, loaded,
614-ti98-J531 ,
614-592-2322, good ahape. 304-67&gt;3069 •har
Athens Ll~testock Saln, Albany, 6pm.

81

'117 Chavy 4 -

a-y

I

BUJELM

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

llapd., 41,000... 30W7U188.

RAN NV BLACKBURN . BROKER 446-0008
JOE MOORE. REALTOR 441-1111

~

Accessories

Rearrange the 6 scramb led
words below lo make 6
simple words . Print letters ol
each in its l1ne o f squares .

9364.

Anywhere. Producers, Hillsboro
Every Monday, Call Tripple
C~•k Trucking, Chuck
Williams, 614·245--5096.

::!:

79

Auto Parts &amp;

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-07

1-800-585-7101

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis
Allen C. Wood, Reahor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reahor/Broker-446-0971
Mose Canterbury, Reallor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Reahor- 256 -1745
nm Watson, Rea~or-446·2027

S©R~N\-LGttfS®

76

"Trucks for Sale

0

I

wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O~olnt

- - - - - - - Edited by ClAY R. POLLAN - - - - - - -

Wood Rea ty, Inc.

8~2352.

25, 1994

"Trucks for Sale

Real Estate General

gine,

614-949-2582.

September

1989 Fonl F100 112 1on
7U7ahor ~.
tNCk, 300 V-8, otandard,
,
6
_14-;;;;JI;;:2·,-23_1111
_.-;-:--,-,-:--- Roll bar on Rangor plck-&lt;Op,
""
$100. 304-675-1111S.
1977 Chevy pickup, lole of new
pa•o, $1500,614-11112-5011.
11811 Chavy Pick-Up, t - Rldor,
Black, Sllortbad, 114-24&amp;-11311.

614 446 -0, 614-2M«&lt;18.

Rop4ilr 11 · 1f2hp riding l•wn
mower, $400. Atso, Bolin• lawn
&amp; garden lractot w/4' alcle bllr &amp;

black

w/chrome bonom, exc. oond.,
$7900. ~7S-725e "' 17114831.

., ,_~~,~~~o, ••· • .,,

u •ng

12

72 "Trucks for Sale

WV

UVE IN ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME
FROM THREE MORE ... eech unll haa 2
apartmanta. Facing ell\! park with all the
convenlancaoo of in town llvhg.
HANNAH TRACE ROAD- u ecnoa mn,
ranch home, 3 BR, 1 1/2 batha, LR, kllchan
carport Poload In the 30'a.
'
14n- LARGE BUILDING WITH LOTI OF

OFF~ SPACE AND GARAGES FOR

T1lUCKS...frontaga on Thkd lwa. and Grape
StnMil Cell for dltaita.

1
A AN 0 NEW, PI C K Y0 U A 0
CARPET, DEBBY DRIVE, 3/4 BAs, 2 baths,
LR w/beamed ceiling, cherry cabinets in
kitchen, FR, extra nice view.
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•

1411- LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN PEACE
AND QUIET· Thla could ball 49.66 ec!Va,
Andrewa Rd., 8 )'Mr old home with 3 BRo, 2
112 batho, LA , DR, FA, heat pump, 2 car
li"III08 pluo 24x43 detached 11'111108·
1436- Ewington alVa, 3 BRa, Bath LA

kitchen, gaa haa~ cont. olr, 8x12 !Mitly

blcv. '

14011- Four Iota, 4 BR home, raducMd 1o
$44,000, 2 batha, LA, DR, lUI be-.-~ 11M
FACING THE OLD FRENCH SQUARE· 1440- ROOMY HOME IN TOWN· home heaVoont. olr. Corner loti.
Retum to yallaryear. Thr81 111oidenceo, two o!lar. 3 BRa, 2 bathe, LR, DR, FA, kitchen,
unito in each. Too much to deacribe. Cell WOtbhop, gao heal, oonl air. Home qualifies 1445· PRICE REDUCED TO Slt,toO ..
Ranny Blackburn at BLACKBURN REALTY for FnHA financing. Cell lor mo111 details.
Vinton Araa, All Brick, 12x24 Fr, t2x12
lor mo111 delaila.
1476- HEAD ROAD- 6 acraa, rnA, 3 BR, 2 Kitchen, t 6x16 Dr, Fireplace, h. .t
bath, kitchen, family rm, full baaament, pumploonl air, garage, new carpal.
141t- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· Adciigarage &amp; pond.
Twp., 388 .,,. farm, 3 pondo, tobacco baaa,
1452- RIO GRANDE· 1 tl2 otory brick home
••x100 bam with con~nole flooro. May
1465- CORNER WOODB IIIU. AND 8R olfeN 4 bN, 1 112 batho, LA, FR, DR, full
consider oplil (578)
325- 33 acnoo, mn, $18,500. Fronts on finiahed baoemen~ attached gar.ge. Cal lor
1110111 detailo.
Raccoon.
ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS
AND
tNVESTORS...EXTRA NICE PIECE OF 14zt.OFRCES, OFFICES, OFFICES· Thafs WIU. TRADE FOR FARM· 27 EVANS
PROPERTY
LOCATED
NEAR what thio 3,000 ac¥1l bu~cing offer.. Located HEIGHTS- $33,1100- 3 BRo, 1 112 ailfy, new
PORTER. ..Latga lake with lalca front aiteo, on SR 180 near Holw. lda8llor many usea. bath, new pain~ and carpal, new roof and
gutters.
mobile home on property at PIV-1 lime, Cal for 1110111 information.
county water, entire tract conalala of
t456acraa mil, Clark Chapel Road,
actel, rnA.
Hveral beautiful home ailea, call for
1442- INVESTORS OR FIRST TIME
information of poaoible oplit of P"'P·
BUYERS· $29,900 home located at 25 107· NEWER HOME AND 1 ACRE... River
Evana Helghta, 3 BAa, bath, kitchen, FR, Volley School Dlatric~ 3 BR, maller BR &amp; $20,000 lots just off White Avenue,
fireplaoo, IJ8' heat, ba-~ woodlumt1r In bath Wlganlan tlil14te21, LA. kitchen, plenty Garfield Avenue area. Call for plat of
of C1b1na1a &amp; cloletl, HP,
FA, Washington Elementary School.
property.
1432· 110M • POP OPERAnON FOR 1411- 10 - · nvl, Sardlo Road, Madi- $49,600, 108 acres m/1, Morgan Twp.,
BALE- Small reataurant with two renllll Twp, Jackoon County, 40x5e bam, 2 panda, approx. 74 acres woods. 13 tillable.
hou-. Property loo localld In Oak H., Cal fencad, GIHI hunting ground.
for more delalla.
1450- $12,100, 17.5 acnoa rnA., Graanflakl $16,800, 47 acres, m/1, Harrison Twp .,
1421- CHERRY DRIVE· juol at the edge of Twp., ba,_ Pott. RD. and Jack- Co. Elliott Road .
town. 2 BRo, t bath, LA, kllchan. Gu heal, llna. vacant klt.
city walar, good lnve_, property.
EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS .. 5 BLAZER ROAD...ranch home 3 BR, 1 112
64 acres, m~. Corner of Wo 0ds Mill and minutes from Holzer, all 5 acres or batha, LA, kitdlen, t81C28 gar.ga. RJvar
more.
VW!ay school dolricL
SA 554, has a really nice homesite old
barn, lots of privacy yet close to school 10.42 acres, m/1, $4,000, Raccoon
COURT STREET RESIDENCE .older
and other activities.
Twp., call for details.
· home has 2 sep . units or could be
$24,900, 43 acres mn, Sect. 21 Morgan
11482 - $25,000... Just minutes from converted back to 1 family dwelling.
Twp.
town, used lor rental property now, 3 Faces city park.
BRs, bath, FR, kitchen, DR, gas heat.
FORMER
CLOTHING
STORE
527 900
IN OAK HILL, OHIO .. racks and
1461 - EXCELLENT L~:~~~:~~~r
display units stay, corner of SR 93 and DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS .. .all
stays, bldg., approx. 624 sq . .,
Main.
baths, elect. heat/cent. air, city water.
1.621 acrea, m/1, $8,900., Clark Chapel
Ro~d. land and mobile home $19,900. 14114- 114.1 ACRES mn, Sect. 37 Morvan
Ca!rtor details.
Twp., aeptic
and Nral
bam and
lhad. Owner

n

n

LET US PUT
YOUR ADHERE

L..---------...:.-

RD .• OutSide
26.2+ acres with 1 1/2 story frame home
featuring 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, carpeted, panel
&amp; drywall interior, bottle gas space heat.
appliances. dug well, 3 sheds, large stocked
pond. Quiet, secluded location . ASKING
$35,000

RACINE - TACKERVILLE RD. · This 3
bedroom modular is presently being
completely remodeled with new carpet.
drywall. trim, new master bath. The family
room has a fireplace with built-in book
shelves . Nice large kitchen with lots of
cabinets, built on room additions, 2 lull baths,
2- 1/2 baths, large pole building &amp; some
decking. This spacious home sits on approa. 1
1/2 acres In a very nice area. ASKING
$64,900

NEW LISTINGII POMEROY - Located on SR
7 • This nice 2 story frame home on approx. I
acre featuras 3 bedrooms, I bath, nev&lt;er
carpet newer furnace, knotty pine paneling In
kltche~. single &amp; double hung windows,
tjardwood &amp; carpet flooring, B.G. heat, C &amp; S
electric and TPC water. ASKING $28,000
MINERSVILLE - 2 story frame home whh 2
bedrooms, bath, N.G.F.A. heat, 80 • 100+ lot.
Home has newar wiring, carpeting &amp; roof.
Cable hook-up, front porch of 7 • 24. located
op paved street.
H'i'SELL RUN AD. - Lovety t 1/2 story frame
home with 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 27 + acres
with free gas, large deck, 2 car garage, 52 x
barn, pond, paslure &amp; hayfield most land
fenced . Home Is well taken care of with
hardwood &amp; carpet flooring, central air and an
unusually deep flreplace. ASKING $89,500

SYRACUSE · Located at Rustic Hills · Nice 4
bedroom, 2 bath frame ranch style home with
ceiling radiant heal, back patio area, shed,
hardwood floor and carpeting, attic space,
unit air, cable hook-up .. 30 acre. Nice
neighborhood. ASKING $39,500

LOOK •11,000 Of mob an olfor. Vnyt aiding
home oonoloting of 2 badooomo, living room,
belh, kit:hen. Niallront porch. Lave! lawn.
1588

Homel One floor
frame home with aluminum siding . Home
features 2 bedrooms, I bath, NGFA heat,
appliances, nice woodwork, storage closets.
12 • t6 deck, screens &amp; storm windows.
ASKING $25,000 MAKE AN OFFERII
APPLEGROVE - DORCAS RD. • I acre
vacant lots. Utilities available . ASKING
$7,300 per lot. MAKE AN OFFERII
TR 275 LONGBOTTOM • 2 story frame
home with I+ acre, bay window, screened
porch, sheds, new implement shed, newer
kitchen. bath &amp; laundry room , newer
plumbing, wiring, appliance, 4 bedrooms, 2
baths. newer roof (Approx . 3 yrs. old).
ASKING $45,000
SUMNER RD. • Very nice Brick/frame split
foyer home with 9 rooms. Home Includes
woodburner, wood burning fireplace, 4
bedrooms, 2 car garage , storage building, 2
decks, some new remodeling completed with
new carpet, vinyl, new electric heat pump
w/C.A .. TPC water. 1.485 acres. Very well
landscaped. ASKING $79,500
ARE YOU CONSIDERING SELLING YOUR
HOME? LOOKING FOR THAT PERFECT
HOME OR LOT TO PUT IT ON? COME TO
CLELAND REALTYII OUR AGENTS ARE
FRIENDLY AND ALWAYS WILLING TO
HELP OUT IN AN'! WAY.

WDUI.DN'T IT BE liCE TO HAVE SOMEONE
ELSE PAY YOUR IIORTGAGE PAYIIENn?
Than lei them, buy ltla home with., llllditional
moblla , _ thalhaa ., axcellent tn.w of the
Ohio Rlvar. Frama home haa nawar gao
fumance/cantral olr conditioning, 1•'x70'
mobile , _ with 2 badroolo,. ancf2 lll batho,
nice dock ancf2 alorega buldngo. Appoox. 1/2
aero to~ mtnlltH 11om town, ciiY achoolo!
Unballaveable price of 137,1100.00. e..llodey!
11181

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE • 10 L01111
Owner wll oonalder oallng on l a n d - D

STIU.
UNDER
WARRANTY! Low
molntananca homo (brand new). One otory
ranch, 3 large baclroomo, dining room, living
room, kl'"'-, cathaolnll ceiling. 2 batho with
lkytlghla. Over t acno lawn. Electric hHt
pump.
16t7
2 LOTS ALONG RACCOON CREEKI Aoca11
to boat ramp. Nioe camping llllta, city ltchoolal
County watar availabla
1701
HEALTHY tNCOIIE· lo IVCIIivad from thlo
1ncoma procluc:lng prope~. 1Wo - 2 baclroom
apa-ta ptua !VIall ..._ All unlla pnoaantly
ranted. CloM 1o downDwn .,.., Comt1r of
Cadlr and Third. Cal for more lnloronltlcn.

-

qu.Ufted buyer. County water avattablal

1114

COUNTRY AliiOII'HEREI 3

lladooMmi~~- 2 -a. Home ,.. vinyl aiding
b rri
-

home

ACREAGE· 12 ptua acrasl Road frontage,
county water available. Nice homeaite. 11635

FOURTEEN PWI ACRESI Lola of dearad &amp;
wooded land. Road frllntaga, mineral righla
lndudad. County walaravaiabla.
116116
CHECK OUT THIS PRICE? $34,000.001 3
baclroomo IIIIIch, - r roof &amp; vinyl wlndowo,
living room, eat-in ki'"'-. Concrate drive, t
car carport. Slorega bulking! Coli lor your
appoi'!"'-t lodllyl
.....

25114 BULAvt~ PIKE- 83 plus aco118. Fondng
pond &amp; buldinga, 3 bedroom ranch style
Tobacco allotment.
1676 ·

.IFLY BEAUTIFUU Really nioa 10+ acnoa
(oornocl amount olacraago lo ba determined
by auovay), pond and tllll2 14'x70' t.lanaion
mobile home which oonaiall of 3 badroolno &amp; 2
batho. City ochoolo!
1811
11 ACREI OF VACANT ACREAGE! COOOty
water tMIIIabla. Sltualad on Georgao Creak

Road. Within minutM of Gallpolo.
QUIET IETTlNG FOR THAT NEW HOIEI
Nlca building lot approximately 100'x300'.
County water available . n,ooo.oo

....

REWARD YOUR BUCCES8 with this extra
large a.tllom brick nonch on a larga t .25 acra
klt. 8 badrooma, formal dining, Mving room, full
flniahed baMmenl Relax in the hot tub
oilualad on a 1rfl341 dack. 3 car gao.ga. ao..
to Dwn loca~.
1685
COitWERCI.WII MULTIPLE USE
tdaltl lor "*'Y typal of buainalll Uating
nurr141roua 1o mention in this adl Call for
information!
1683
OWNERS LOWERED PRICEI TO $47,900
RIIIIIOdaled t 112 atory home consisting of 3
badroojma, t 1/2 baths, living room, dining
room, kilchan and moiV. Over 41 acroa, bam
and !ann pond. Nica quiet place to livo, call
today for an appointrnenU
1612

I WANT 8011Ell1NG A UTTL.E DIFFERENT?

TaJce a peek at Ilia home, large living room,
dring room and ldtchen wnots of nioo ceblnalsl
2lawn more or le11, klts of fouit lnoal. Cal
today,
immediate
poouulonl
11664

PLANNING ON BUILDING THAT NEW
HOME? Hano Ia II ~~no mo111 or 1811 tlltuatod
in Gnoan Townohlp. County wallr available.
1672
GROWING ROOIII El1tlacrao, 1110111 or lau, of
unc!Mipad apaca! PLUS a thrH bedroom, 1 112
batha, living room, dining room, laundry and
~-

Datacltad 3 car li"IIIOI

�(.

Submitted by: Patty Dyer,
Group.
Gallia Farm Bureau
Tickcll may be purchased from
Inrormation Coordinator
any board trustee including Paul
GALLIPOLIS . The Ga lli a Shoemaker, Bill Burleson , C.A.
Cou nty Farm Burea u is making Duncan, Patty Dyer, Bill Fadely ,
final plans for their annual meeting Rob Massie, Kay Michael, Johnny
to be held on Thursday evcnmg, Pay ne and Vi cki Powell. Tickets
September 29 at the Buckeye Hills arc also avai lable from your local
Career Center . The soc ial hour will Nation wide Agents or reservations
start at 6:30 p.m. with the dinner can be made by cal ling 1-800-7779226 and paying at the door.
starttng at 7 p.m.
The Far m Bu reau Women's
Bus 1ness to be co ndu cted
includes vot ing on policy resolu - Rally will be held at the OU Inn in
tions and election of four trustees. Ath ens on Oc tober 4. For more
The entertainment will be tllc Uni- details on t.his you may contact t.he
versity of Rio Grande Chora le

county women's chairperson, Katie
Shoemaker or th e Farm Bureau
Office at 1-800-777-9226.
The Gallia County Farm Bureau
is also planning a Farm Bureau
Night o n Oct. 4 at th e C. H.
McKenz1e Agri cultural Ce nter.
Any and all Fann Bureau members
at invited and encouraged to attend .
This is a new event and we are
looking forward to sharin g some
new ac tiviti es with tho se who
attend. If you are not a member but
would like to be, come and joi n at
that time.

UPS driver Downs honored
Street in Chillicothe.
He presently provides delivery
service in t.he Gallipoli s area.
"I liv e by th e UPS 5 see ing
habits and believe that all t.he UPS
trainin g I hav e received has
enabled mc to achieve tlle 28 years

of safe driving." Downs said.
Center Manager Tim Wolf prese nted the aw ard at a ceremo ny
honoring Downs achieve ment
Downs and his wife Rose, live
in Londonderry. They have 2 chil dren : Kim and KeU y.

Bolin recognized
MARIETTA - Joe Holm from
Meigs County was named the out·
standing member of Buckeye Hills
Resource, Conservation and Development (RC&amp;D) at the RC&amp;D 's
annual awards banquet held Thursday, Sepl 15 at tlle Lafayette Hotel
in Marietta.
Bolin has been a member of the
RC&amp;D council since 1992.
He wa s re cognized for hi s
strong support of RC&amp;D projects
and for spending "countless days
hel ping to identify suitable pond
sites for the installation of 14 dry
fire hydrants in the Meigs County
area."
Sandra Matthews, Washington
County commissioner, received the

September 25, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, WV

Gallia County Farm Bureau
banquet scheduled Sept. 29

CHJLLICOTHE - Jim Downs, a
delivery driver for United Parcel
Service, was recently recogmzed
by the company for c~mpleting 28
years driving without an accident
Downs works out of the UPS
facility located at 1536 N. Bridge

president's award. She is currently
the secretary of the RC&amp;D executive council and holds the office of
vice president of the Ohio Association of RC&amp; D councils.
The Buckeye Hills RC&amp;D executive council is made up of county
commissioners, soil and water conservation district me mbers and
members-at-large from the following counties: Athe ns, Belmont,
Fairfield, Hocking , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washington. The Muskingum Watershed
Conservancy District and the Rush
Creek Conservancy District round
out the council with one member
eac h.
Approximately 60 members and

JOE BOLIN
guests attended t.he banquet. Mark
Forni, Monroe County commissioner and chairman of the RC&amp;D
executive council, was master of
ceremonies. ,

New·heating system reduces utility costs
GALLIPOLIS ·One of the most
effective ways for a homeowner to
cut high utility bills is to reduce the
amount of energy used to heat a
home's space and hot water. "On
average ," says Steve Yates of
Yates Heating and Cooling, "space
and water heating are the two highest use rs of energy in a home more than 50 percent! "
Lennox Industries' new CompleteHeat comb ination system is
designed with energy savin gs in
mind - while also satisfyi ng a
homeow ner's needs. The sys tem
achieves a combined annual effi ciency of 90 percent. This means
the unit recovers nearl y all the
energy produced to heat tlle home
and the water. Using a single heat
exchanger, tlle Compl ete Heat sys-

tern delivers warm and comfortable
air to a home, while also supplying
vinually unlimited hot water.
"The system can supply three to
four times more hot water when
compared to a conventional water
heater," explained Yates.
CompleteHeat consists of two
modules - a heat module and an
air handling module. When heat is
needed in a home, a pump in the air
handler draws hot water from the
hea t module and c ir c ul ates it
through the air handling module. A
blower and heat exchanger in th e
air-handling module then transfers
the heat from the water to the air
which heats the home. Once th~
heat is extracted , the water returns
to the heat module to be reheated.
When hot water is needed for

showers or other domestic purpos- ·
es, hot water is drawn directly from
the heat module, si milar to a conventional water heater.
Lennox is so confident of the
new CompleteHeat system they are
offering a 15-ycar limited warranty
on the unit's stainless steel
heat exchanger and water storage
tank - I0 years longer than the
average on comparable products.
The new CompletcHea t sys tem
is being so ld exc lu siv ely by
Lennox dealers . For more information about the full -line of Lennox
equipment , contact Yates Heating
and Coolmg at 296 West College
Street Rio Grande, Ohi o. Yates
Heating and Coo ling was es tab lished in 1984 and services Gallia
and Jackson Counties.

Producers must be informed of changes
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS · On~- of our
most important jobs at ASCS is to
keep producers informed of farm
programs and any changes in regulations or req uirements that may
affect program benefits.
Our newsletter, supplemented
and radio
with th e new

announcements, is the one major &lt;
way we have of getting this mformation to the farmers and pnxlucers in Gallia County.
If you have not been receiving
our newsletter, it could be beca use
our records have not been updated
with your new mailing address, you
have moved recently, or some other
reason.

tl Now Accepting New Accounts
tl We Deliver Only Clean B.P. Fuels
tl Courteous Dependable Deliveries
tl We Accept HEAP Vouchers

BP OIL CO.

ATTENTION BUICK OWNERS!

1994 BUICK SKYLARKS
V-6, tilt, cruise, anti-lock brakes, power door locks.

$11,990

1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM
Auto, A/C, tilt, cruise, cassette, etc. Factory
program car. Bal. of 36/36 warranty.

$12 990

till, cruise, casseue, power windows, door ·
locks, etc. Factory Program Car. Bal. of 36/36

Available by appointment in Gallipolis and
Pomeroy to personally assist you with all
your investment needs:

john C. Miller
5inuor f,V€ltmntt (orrsMflaxt
Hmtr a,, SPnmtus Corporolimt

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Mutual Funds
Tax-Exempt Municipal Bonds
Self-Directed lRAs
Governmfnt Securities
Common Stock
Personal Retirement Investments
Business Retirement lnveslmenls
Unit Investment Trusts
Annuities

$13 488

1990 CHEVY 1/2 TON PICK-UP
350 V-8 eng., 2-lone, Silverado Pkg., tilt, cruise,
casselte, 28,000 Low miles , New LeSabre Trade
"SHOWROOM CONDITION"

'Makes

···-r BUICK

Bane One Securities Corporation
Important Customer lnfomultlon, pie •e read: Securrt1es products are offered through Ban~ One
Secunlles Corpora!loo. AnnUities are ISSued and underwritten by Insurance companies !hat are no! affiliated wilh
BANC ONE CORPORATION IMMproducta- nol ~- no1 ablg•tlol• of, or guawr
teed br, BANC ONE CON ORATION or-r of Its._. or- B•'* AflllllllH. These
producta_nol ........ by lhe FDIC811d- tublKt
to irMIIIIINIII rllb, hell tl. pa Ulble loa ollhe
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Sport Pkg, sunroof, aluminum wheels , lumbar
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Body ShQp

Member NASD and SIPC

©1994 BANG ONE CORPORATION

1992 S10 PICK-UP
V-6, 5-speed, aluminim whee ls, A/C, Tahoe Pkg.
37 K. Extra Clean.

1993 FORD ESCORT WAGON
Auto, A/C, till, cruise, cassette, 7,000 low miles.
lmmaculale. Shop &amp; Compare.

Call Bane One Set:urities, for an appointment or additional infonnation:
614446-0902 or 614-992-2133.

8

Pick 3:

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PONTIAC~

==!====

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1::::::; • ·: ', '" • ·:: ,: .

;·

Rain

3510

Super Lollo:

4 i

Page4

..._.

rwi.~~:
,, . '+.,,I'. ;y~"
.,.. .·

Pick4:

__1_·-·---..--·--·· -·-

2-14-22-26-30-47

Low tonight In 50s, partly

Kicker:

cloudy. Tuesday, cloudy, chance
or raln. High In mid -60s.

039228

en tine
Vol 45, NO. 101
Copyright 1tM

1 Section, 10 P - 35 cont.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 26, 1994

A Multimedia

Inc. N-op.opor

Governor Voinovich
promises to push
connector project

Greg Smith Says:

LARRY E. MILLER
CALL TODAY 446·1157 • 1·800·598·5654

choices

Browns
.post third
victory

A new sletter wa s mail ed last
week to all producers on our mail ing list. If you did not rece ive one
and wish to, please co ntact our
office by telephoning 446-8686 so
that we may correct our records.
Lisa Meadows is the County
Executive Director or the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation Service.

Save an additional $300 on any New Buick
!
Purchase or L

Bane One
•

___ --...-- .

.

Page-DB-Sunday nmes-Sentl2el

GOVERNOR'S VISIT- Gov . George
Voinovich points to U.S. 33 corridor, which he
emphasized his commitment to Saturday at the
Pomeroy Gun Club. Voinovich and bis running
mate, Nancy Hollister, toured Southeast Ohio

Saturday, stopping in Meigs County for a Southeast Ohio Regional Council meeting on the
Rawnswood connector. On lert is Kenner Bush,
Athens. (Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Sunday hail storm causes
damage in Mason County
By Mindy Kearns
OVP Correspondent
Hail tlle size of baseballs feU in
various parts of Mason County during Sunday evening's storm, leaving devastation for many in its
path.
While -over~.-000 residents in
the Point Pleasant area were without electricity for approximately
three hours, they were, by far, not
the worst victims of the storm.
Milton Burdette of Leon said he
had never seen anything like it in
his 86 years.
"I had a nine foot by four foot
picture window in my house and
the wind just busted it out," Burdette said. "There were hailstones
as big as my fist."
The Leon resident stated windows, including stained glass ones,
were broken out of both the Baptist
and Methodist churches in town,
and damaged the siding. "There
wasn't a house in Leon that didn 't
have windows knocked out," he
continued . Burdette said the hail
punched large holes in his vinyl
siding also.
Florence Shull, who lives near
Cornstalk in the Southside area,
said her neighborhood was hit hard
by the storm also.
"The hail was so thick and
heavy, you couldn't hardly see anything," she said. Shull said hail·
stones there were as big as baseballs.
The storm began about 4:50
p.m., Shull said. Residents in her

vicinity were without power until
shortly after midnight. The Southside resident said damage to her
property included four windows
broken out, damage to the roof, and
windows broken out of her car,
truck and camper. In addition, she
said, tllerc are den!s from the hail
on her vehicles.
Shull said her neighbor recently
remodeled her bedroom and
installed a sliding glass patio door
that was blown out by the storm.
"She ran for the basement after
that," Shull said.
A total of 2,060 Appalachian
Power Company customers wore
without electricity from 5 p.m.
until 8:05 p.m., according to area
manager Chuck Talley. He stated
lightning struck a pole near the
Southern States Coop on Kanawha
Street, burning the conductor and
damaging insulators. Customers
affected were those in the down·
town Point Pleasant area, S.R. 62
to Eight Mile Creek, Henderson,
and U.S. ~5 to Middle Nine Mile.
He said there were also scattered
outages mostly south of the river
and up towards Leon. Thirty customers on the Letart end of Sand
Hill Road also went without power
for a time.
All power was restored by 7:30
a.m . today, Talley concluded.
The storm also caused problems
for the West Virginia Division of
Highways, Point Pleasant garage,
according to Tucker Mayes, superintendenl

Strickland, Cremeans ·
hold debate in Marietta
MARIETTA - The political
differences between U.S. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucasville, and Gallipolis businessman Frank Cremeans, the Republican opposing
Strickland's re-election bid in the
Sixth Congressional District, were
placed in sharp focus Sunday when
the two met in the campaign's ftrst
debate.
Health care reform, government
spending and homosexuality in the
military were among the issues the
candidates disagreed on in the
forum, sponsored by United We
Stand America-Ohio.
Both frequently returned to
basic principles of their campaigns
in response to questions from a
three-member panel and the audi·
ence. Strickland cited the need for
government action in issues such as
health care and job creation, while
Cremeans touted a return to less
government and family values.
It was the family issue that
prompted one of the debate's more
heated moments when Cremeans
said he was in favor of action ''protecting my fami!r, something you
elected not to do - a reference to
Strickland and his .wife Frances
-being childless that drew a round of
boos and hisses from portions of
the audience.
But 1he bulk of the two-hour

forum centered on economic
issues, in keeping with the concerns of Onited We Stand, the
political movement founded by exindependent presidential candidate
Ross Perot.
Strickland argued that action
should be taken on providing universal health coverage before the
cost becomes prohibitive. Additionally, he said he supports insurance industry reform and commitment of resources to long -term care
in the home.
"It's not a liberal or conservative issue, because someone tonight
is paying for someone who can't
afford to pay," he said. "The ques·
tion is, can we do it in a timely
manner, or wait another five to 10
years when the cost has spiralled
out of control?"
"I don't think there is much
point to an overall reforming of
health coverage," Cremeans
responded, saying he favored the
existing system of physician choice
and access.
"I do not want to see government any more involved in health
care than it already is ... we do not
need to throw the baby out with the
wash," he said.
·
While both candidates support a
balanced budget and a line item

Continued on page 3

But the governor refused to make
By GEORGE AII ATE
promises abo ut the rest of the conSentinel News Staff
Gov. George Voinov1ch pledged nector.
"I can' t say it will all be com his commitment Saturday to completed
within four years. We've put
pleting the U.S. Route 33 corridor
- panicularly the portion between it on a timetable,'" Voinovich sa1d
Rock Springs and t.h c Ravenswood, after the meeting. "It' s a high priority beca~~e local officials value tt
W.Va., bridge.
Voinovich , hi s wife, and hi s so much.
The 2.25- mile stretch between
running mate, Nancy Holli ster ,
Spring s and Five Points
Rock
toured Southeast Ohio Saturday. In
should
be sold by November,
Meigs Co unty, he stopped at the
Pomeroy Gun Club for the South- paving the way for co nstruction
east Ohio Regional Council meet- next spring and usc by t.hc spnng of
1996. The 18.6-mile connector ing on t.he connector.
The port1on of th e connector which is divided into four sections
between Rock Springs and F1ve - fr om Rock Springs to the
Points will be fini shed within the Raven swood bridge is sc hed ul ed
nex t four years, Voinovich sa id . for completion by 20 00, sa id

1\ancy Yoacham, Spokeswoman for
the regional Ohio Department of
Transportation office in Marietta.
The entire U.S . 33 corridor has
been designated as one key route in
Voinovich 's Access Ohio,
Voinovich said. Acce ss Ohio is
Voinovich's master plan for highway, rail, water and air transporta·
tion .
The ~ext phase of the connector
should be started at the
Ravenswood bndge to gain access
to potential development sites, he
added.
"I'm certainly pleased with the
progress we've made .... We want
to work with you," Voinovich said.
Continued on page 3

Herb Fest draws big crowd

A boulder, weighing approximately 40 ton s, carne down on U.S.
62, closing one side of the road
during the night. Mayes said a crew
stayed at the site around-the-clock ,
and tlle boulder was removed from
the road tllis morning.
Trees were down in quite a few
places, Mayes added, and the road
crews were still out at II a.m. this
morning, clearing them.
Trying to recover from the
storm may be quite difficult, too,
according to Burdette, who said he
was about 25th in line today for a
new windshield at the local glass
replacement business. He stated his
windshield will be replaced on
Wednesday.
A spokesperson for Irvin's
Glass Service, Inc. in Gallipolis,
said she could not even estimate
the amount of calls th e y had
received this morning. She said
most had come from the Leon area,
and involved botll vehicle and residential replacements.
The spokesperson said while the
business carries a lot of different
types of glass, some people may
have to wait a while to be serviced.
"We're trying to take care of the
worst nrst," she added.

Saturday's Herb Fest at
Dave Diles Park in Middleport
was a success according to the
event's sponsors as hundreds
turned out to learn more about
the plants which are valued ror
their flavor and fragrance,
their medicinal and decorative
properties.
The growth and use or herbs
are experiencing a resurgence
in popularity as more and more
look to culinary enhancers and
medical alternatives.
Tbe fifth annual Herb Fest
by the River Valley Herbalists
featured wide-ranged displays
or plants and dried herb materials, herbal vinegars, jellies
and spreads, visitors' lasting
tables for sampling or products
made with herbs, and tips on
how to grow and use herbs
rrom Hal Kneen, Meigs County
E.tension Agent.
Above Denise Arnold at one
of the many display tables talks
about herbs to Jennirer Sisson
or Parkersburg who attended
the fest with her husband, also
pictured, Ed Sisson.
Len, Emily Aspeck or Mid·
dleport was fascinated with the
colorrui statice and globes in a
basket at Angie Maynard's
exhibit of dried herb plants ror
use in borne decor. (See story
and additional photos on page
10 ). (Sentinel Photos by Char.
lene Hoeflich)

Ohio man
killed by
lightning
HEBRON, Ohio (AP) - Light·
ning struck and killed a man while
he stood beneath a tree, authorities
said.
Fire officials believe Timothy
Sulpher, 46, of Hebron, was at the
home of friend or family member
near tllis central Ohio community
when he was lcilled by a lightning
strike about 4:30 p.m. on Sunday,
Hebron frre Capt Kelly Lutz said.
WCMH-TV in Columbus said
Sulpher had gone out to untie a dog
from the tree and take it inside the
home during a storm. The dog also
was killed.
Andrea Murphy, 33, of Warren,
Mich., was injured by the lightning
strike. She was listed in stable condition Sunday night at Licking
Memorial Hospital in Newark, said
Cindy Ashcraft, nursing supervisor.
Hebron is about 30 miles east Qf
Columbus in Licking County.

Plans set for. annual stern wheel festival
Twenty-five boats are scheduled
to appear at the annual Big Bend
Sternwheel Festival to be held
Thursday, Friday and Saturday,
Oct 6, 7 and 8 in Pomeroy.
A tentative schedule has been
established for the festival which
will also feature crafts and concessions and other activities.
New this year is a masquerade
contest to be held Saturday from 8-

9:30p.m. Winners will be awarded
cash prizes of $10, $5 and $3 in
three categories: prettiest, ugliest
and most original. Participants
should contact Mary Donna Davis
the day of the event for registration
infonnation. The event is free and
open to the public.
Also this year, chili cook-off T
shirts will be available.
The festival kicks off Thursday

at noon with a senior citizens cruise
on the P.A. Denny . The Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Cruise will follow at 7:30p.m. Dee
and Dallas will entertain on the
parking lot from 8-11 p.m.
Boarding time on all P.A.
Denny cruises will one-half hour
before cruise time.
A bonfire will be held on the
levee Thursday, Friday and Satur·

•

day.
The Meigs High School Band
and Flag Corp will perform Friday
from noon to 2 p.m. with a P.A.
Denny cruise following from 2-4
p.m. The Order of the Arrow
Dancers wi ll perform from 6:30-7
p.m. with musical entertainment
from Ricochet from 8-11 p.m.
I

Continued on page 3
\

'

I

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