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Pointroy-;-MiddlepOrt,

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Pag~16-The Dally Sentinel

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,----------------------~----~------Win ·o r lose

Veterans

·PageA2

of'

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Valor

)

College football action . Page c1

·Feetui'Hon

HI: 601
Low: 408

~
P.1rt!y ',tnlii'J
louthw,...rty
wlndo: 1040m.p.h.

Detlllll
on PegeA2

•
mttS•
A Multimedia Inc., Ne~spaper

LOS ANGELES (AP)
Sylvester Stallone says it's tough to
be a star. Or to love one.
Media scrutiny of your
romances "cal! be~ome quite
buJniljating and incredibly painful, .
particularly for some of tbe otber
people inY'Ol"'lld." S'll'kw .t!IW E
Entertainment Television In an
inu:rview scheduled to air Nov. 3.
Stallone ended bis relationship
with model Jennifer Flavin last
year, then became Involved witb
model-photograpber Janice. Dickenson. She gave binb to a cbild last
summer, bui tests showed Stallone
wasn' t the father.
" I ju~t got out of a situation like
that .... It was very ~ing to me
physically. It really wu, ' be said.
" 1 feel very, very guilty l!lld it was ·
a tough, tough year."
Stallone currenlly stars iD "The
Specialist'' wiib SbaroD Stone;

B KEVJN PINSON

FRED ,BDFF
.

Connote mea~ns tQ sugg~st or
imply. something beyond the
explicit; denOte ~ to be '?'Plk:·
it about tbe meanmg.
Conrail is an acrooym for Consolidated Rail Corp.. a !XiviiC, for·
profit corporation set ~p by
Congress in 1976 to reorgamze and
consolidale six ballbupt Nortbeaat
rallroads - tbe Pema Central, tbc
Eric Lackawanna. Readin&amp;, Cenlral .
of New Jersey, Lelllib Valley and
Lehigh &amp; Hudson River. '!J!e legis·
lation provided for a $2 billion federal loan to tbe corporation and set
a pbased schedule of repayments.
A consulate is tbe residence of a
coo sui in a roo:lgn city. It baDdies
tbe commercial affairs aod·~
needs of citizens of tbe appoinllllg

country.
The Continental Divide is ~
ridge along the Rocky Mountal!ls
tbat separates rivers flowing east .
rrom
•
,, those tbat OOw weal

Public Notice

i

I
I

November 15, 1994. .
(10) 28; 1TC
.I
_1

.

:

• . .

••

-· ~

1" ,

'

.

Get $200 lri FREE Clothing Or Accessories
PLUS lwo FREE Lifevests With The
Purchase Of Your 1995 Polaris Watercraft!

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995 Polans SL650
tandard, SL6SO.

11ith a $200 non-refundable
deposit bv November 21. 1994.
Polaris will ~uarantce availability of the model you choose.

..

j~ISt take .delivery by
Fcbruary 2R. 1995
and ~et $200 in ·

- . Jir.,;·- ·&gt;m!..E

1;.7SQ..~Sj,J;J_5&lt;1)0,

, it.

l lo, II , , ! 1,.-, ~ t'''"'"'" " ••• ,., l,ohl,• ,.. I'"'~ •r•l· '" ,-,, 1 ,h~•··. , I ll.t,,,. 1...1 " "~-· I I' '"''" " ''~·I 1'• 4m• '"''"'' " '"'· .moh·•o,.·d I \~'" '
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.88 FORD 150

86 BRONCO II

.

'·~··t'•

· 4X4, 6 cylinder,
5 speed, air conditioning.

·
Your Meigs County Commissioner

I"

90.FORD F·150 LARIAT- 6 cyl, auto, elf'
89 CHEY 3/4 TON C25qO.auto,alr

FRIDTBOFFMA
Meigs·Couaty Commissioner .
. ..· . / . lxptrleil•ell,.Capable
. .
Dedl1ated to Progre1l lor ALl of Meigs Countrl
Your Vote ·a~d ·lnlluen" Agredated
Plld for by the Clndldate, Fred Hoffmin, 2111 So.

·

· '·
~-·-

..._

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f

Nleigs ~ommiss on
contractor for bridge

ews capsules
Cremeans, Strickland
meet for final debate
Tuesday in Marietta

In case vou fOrgot:

Today's Times-Sentinel
t 7 S.ctioas - I 76 Poz.,;

'Timee·Sentlnel atefl
·
. .
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- •. POMEROY - The Meigs Counly Board of CommiSSioners Fnday apBusiness
Dl
.. proved a contractor 10 replace a closed bridge ov~r the Shade River on Bash an
Road near Keno.
.
Bl
·MARlETTA- A debate between Calendars
: · The board approved an emergency bid from the Ohio Bridge Corp. after
the candidates in the Sixth Congres - Classifieds
DJ-7
•funding for a new bridge was announced Friday morning. .
.
WASHINGTON (AP) - America is back
sional District race is scheduled for
Comics
Insert
·. Stale Capilal lmprovemenl Program (SCIP) funds lotahng $179,500.86
on standard time.
Tu es day al 7 p.m. in Mar iclla
were made available to build the bridge. The money is an advance on next
Editorials
A4
The shift from Daylighlto Standard time
College's McDonough Cen'ter.
year's SCIP funding.
occurred at2a.m.Sunday, moving an hour of
The evenl will mark the fou rth and Local
A3
Meigs County Engineer Robert Eason said Ihe co~pany h~s already ordered l'dltVIi~~ht from evening to morning and profinal exchange beiWeen U.S. Rep. Obituaries
Ali
steel for fabrication and added workers w1ll ~gm d1smanthng the old bndge
an extra hour of sleep to replace thai
TedStrickland, D-Lucasville, and his
Cl-8
soon.
.
.
Josl the spring.
Republican challenger, Galli polis Sports
• · The new bridge should be open to traffic by lhe_Jast part of January, he sa1d.
In addilion to changing the clocks, public
businessman Frank Cremeans. Previ - Along ibe River
81
· The ex is ling bridge was closed Sept. 23 after mspectors found a bu~kled
safety experts are again encouraging another
ous de bales have bee n held in Weather
'
A2
• ~ossmember under lhe bridge - eliminating access to State Roule 7 m the
change - pul new balteries in the borne
Mariella, lronlon and Wilminglon.
· eastern part of the county, Easen slalcd earlier.
.
.
smoke detec1or. ~
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·
~ ·
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· ·
. : The entire project will cost about $218,000, w11h lhe counly h1gb"':ay
Columns
department spending about'$40,000, Eason added.
Eason and Highway Deparlment office manal!er Dave Spencer commended
WASHINGTON (AP) - Barely slowed by a pile of laler."
Fred c
the board of commissioners and others, mcludmg lvcal emfrgency serv1ces
interesl·fale increases, the .national economy is slill
Theeconomyrow
and school districts for their support.
.
, .
bubbling - making i1 more likely even highe~ rales IS. " probabl y a Jjm Sands
: "II iakes everybody working together to make somethmg happen, sa1d
ate on the way.
bit too spry for Cbyck Stope
· I!ason. "It is amazing it moved this rapidly."
. .
.
Bul strong growlh figures for the third quarter the Federal Bob HoeDicb
Commissioners approved ·money transfers withm the f~llowmg funds:
reporled Friday by 1he Commerce Department were Reserve's likc ,,.. ""~ . ,,., ,....,..., c~
highway departmenl, $40,290.35; MRDD, $30,877 .. ln add111on, the board
balanced by beni gn inflation dala that helped buoy ing,'' said Rob- L_...:.;.:::.:::.:;:::.:.:.:;::;:::..:;;,_...J
ap,proved creating a Drug Abuse Resistance Education (DARE) fund for the
financial marke l~ .
.
ert Barr Of the
•
~eigs Counly Sheriff's Departmen~ and appropriated $11,340 from a recently
The GOP measures all the,goods
Led by higher consumer spending, business invest- U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
~ceived DARE grant.
·
.
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.
ariel services produced by workers
ment and governmenl purchases, lhe gross ·oomes11c
The Dow Jones industrial average was up more than
· . The board also approved sending a leiter to Ibe D1sney Co. urgmg thai Metgs
and capital located In the Un~ed
product ~ the lolal oulpul of goods and services 50 points by ea rl y aflernoon, rising along with bond
cOunty be considered as a site for a historic theme park.
States,, regardless of ownership.
produce!! in the United Stales- grew at a 3.4 percent prices and the dolla r on inlernalional currency marc
· · 'In other business, the board:.
·
.
annual rate in the summer. That was slower than the kets.
.
THI/ions
of
dollats,
IMIIIII rate
• Approved 1he transfer of county-owned propeny on Hiland Road to
4.1' percenl rale in the spring, but easily ucccded
Analysts said Ihe Federal Reserve is almost certain
·llomeroy Masonic Lodge J:;o. l60 F&amp;AM in return for $1 and the old Masomc
Ad
)
analysis • expeclations.
to raise short-term inleresl rates a sixth lime Ibis year
Building in Pomeroy;
.
.. .
3rd quarter ( vance
" The economy is still humming along, but not or&lt;' when its policy-making Federal Open Muut Com. • Approved a leiter of support for the HUD Family Umficallon Program al
liliil
fasl as 1o g~nerate an immediate worsening of mfla- millee meets Nov. 15 - after the congressional elec·
· tfte request of the Meigs County Housmg ;\ut~onty ;
. !
•' said
Robert Dederick of the North- lions. They said lhe only question is
J • Approved the sole bid from Asphalt M~lenals Inc., Marietta, for b!IUmlern Trust Co. in Chicago. "The pace is one that does Fed tries to convince financial markets 11 IS not losmg
qous paving materials for November;
. .
.
~~~~·~~in~fl~a~tio~n~~~~w~il~l~~~~~he~b~a~lt~le~t2o~~~~~~~--·--~----J
• •l'aid weekly bills of $147,420.23; cons1st1ng of 110 entnes.

,Ohio

..

36
3 4%
$5
~~~~-~~(.JJ~~+==·~·=~~lion,

l

\
·~--

GOOD MORNING

Gross
dom
product

10'1'1 .FOR AND ELECT

Across from ,S uper America if! ~omeroy
1
Jimmy Deem
614-992·3490 Cecil BOggess

POMEROY - As early as nexl
semesler, a unifonncd officer will soyn
be a familiar site in all Meigs Counly
elemenlary schools.
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department recentl~ received a grant for
$1 i ,340 io initiate the [)rug Abuse
Resislance Education (DARE) program in area schools. The money will
be used 10 help pay lhe wages of a
speci allytraincddepul~ whowillwork
full-time in the county 's elementary
schools.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said this
is the lhird year the department has
sough Ifundingfortheprogram which
has already beel! implemented in many
01her areas of lhe state, including
Gallia County.
The program is primarily for fifthand sixlh-grade sludents, but rna yalso
be of assiSiance 10 other.students, he
added. In addition, lo leaching slu·
dents lo say "no" 10 drugs, sludents
receive lessons in responsibilily, selfrespecl and self-discipline along with
olher lopics. "
"The program will help in all aspects of I heir Jives," said Meigs
Counly ProseculingAitorney John R.
Lentes. who assisted the sheriff's department in securing lhe grant.
" Unfortunately some students have
family siluations lhal don't promole
self-respect and other qualities," he
added, citing as an example that al
Jeasl six juveniles have been senl off
for rehabililation within the last few
weeks.
"We need to reach them a1 the elementary school level," he said .
"(DARE) lets kid~ sec law enforcemen! personnel in a posilive light."
The officer selected to be lhe new
DARE leacher is Depuly Mony Wood
Continued on
A2

Strong eco.nomic growth inakes interest rate hike likely .

Fre~ Hoffman

.

Elementary schools
benefit from program

Students explore
wf;)rlds of justice,
law enforcement

We're back on
standard time

~14--(ln~

II BRONCO II ~x4- Auto, air, 6 cyl.
•• 'GMC JIMY 5·15 .4•4- V6, AutOTI'IIIll,

DARE:

'Vital Links' -program:

Ely JIM FREEMAN

a

'l

RIVERSIDE.MOTORS

r.

.

an

4X4, air conditioning,
4·speed, Southern TK

------

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1

RIVERFRONT HONDA
GAUlPOLIS

' Loaded w~tt~extru.

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By KEviN PINSON
Tlmea·Sentlnel St1fl
GALLIPOLIS -Although h wasn 't quite
as glamorous as Hill Street Blues or L.A.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Village
Law, Gallia Academy Junior High School
Council President John Musser, who
students who interned at the Gallipolis Po~layed a key role in acquiring about
lice Department and Municipal Court said
$475,000 in '
they enjoyed I he opportunity for bands-on
state revitalcareer exploration.
ization grants
Levi King and. Corey Hart spent lhree
(pr Pom~roy,
mornings at ·lhe Gallipolis Police Departhas been semerit riding Qn M!rol and issuing parking
iected as lhe
tickets. Rod Ho)al 'an11 An'drea Haskins,
1?.94 ~~igs
assigned 10 lhe Gallipolis MU!Iicipal Cpun,
County Person
&lt;)bserved Judge WilliamS. 'M~Iey presido(the Year, ·.
ing over hearings and shadow~,the bailiff
· · :Mlls~r' ~nd
and probation officer.
1•
'I Oothersoulh·
About 136 students reported to 42 work
easlem Ohio,
Tuesday lhrough Thursday as pan of
ans will be honored by the Soulhlhe Gallipolis City Schools Busi.ness Advieastern Ohio Regional Council at its
sory Council's Vital Links program.
24th annual Person of the Year
King and Hart said lhey were surprised at ~~~~ THE BENCH - Gallipolis Municipal Court Judge .
Awards Binqu~t on Nov. 3, sa1d 1 how much of law enforcement is menial Wllliam S. Medley sbows Gallia Academy Junior High School slu·
Bob Evans,presidentoKthe SEORC.
tasks such as filing reports and looking for dents Rod Hojaland Andrea Haskins l)is point of view from the bench
Tuesday. The sh1dents were participating in the Gallipolis City
The affair will be held at the Ohio
parking violations.
tJniverSity Inn in Alhens.
"llhought it would be prelty exciting, but Schools Busines~ Advisory Council's Vital L.ink.~ project.
Musser, 52, has been associated
it was actually prelty boring," said King.
with the Pomeroy finn Downing
On the olher hand, they did get to respond to an auto back to lhe school with a good allilude about law enforceChilds Mullen Musser Insurance for
accidenl wilh lights blazing and sirens blaring, talk to ment."
,
20 years. He was elected to Pomeroy
Hojat, who said he was "headslrong" about becoming a
prisoners at the county jail and fire M-16rinesatthe police
Council last November.
doclor before participaling in Vital Links, satd lhe expefiring range .
·
• He has held posts on the advisory
Police Chief Roger Brandeberry said the students were rience at municipal court has encouraged him lo consider
goard of Farmers Bank and the
shown many aspects of police work in order to demon- a law career.
~burch council o(the Trinily Church
"I'd like to look into il," he said. "(Lawyers and judges)
strate how everything from malhemalics 10 grammar is
in Pomeroy. Musser was fonnerly
really make a difference every day ."
.
used.
ilte manager and owner of the Meigs
Haskins agreed. "llhink it 's greal.lt would be fun to be
Brandeberry said lhe experience also benefited the
l)in.
police department
·
a judge or a lawye~. "
.
.
, He and his wife, Dollie, have one
The studenls said they were SUJPnsed allhe mformal
Officers do nol gel many opportunities to work with
son, Steve, who is currently enrolled children, he said. For many kids, !heir only encounlers atmosphere of Medley 's courl.
.
.
in Harvard University.
"In this certain court they 're nol as un1forrn as you
with the police are when they are in·trouble with the law.
The award winners were selected
"Any lime you gel a positive interaction with a younger would think," Hojal said.
·
~asedon their participalion and leadHaskins added, "The judge has a lot of r~specl, lhough ."
group like that, il's a positive thing," he s&amp;id. "They 'll go
Continued on Daae A2

and _

accessories PLl IS two FREE
performance lifcvests when you
complete your purchase.

.

..

· ·· During the few months wbic.ti Lh,ve been yoyr coovnissioner, Meigs · 1&gt;
CountY ha$ been on th·e m ove with many improvements happenmg
many more to begin in the n,ear future .
.
,
As your county commission~r. I h~ve beeR dir£!ctly involved in obtaining
almost one million dollars in graht funds for ritl'N rural watet lines in Scipio,
Rutland, and Columbia Townships and for housing improv~men~s in the
Village of Racine.
.
.
.
.
I have also worked diligently on the Issue 2 grant.prograrri .as a; mefT1~e! ·
of the District lntE:;grating Committee, which ha5 res·ul~ed in \liillidns of .
dollars of paving, sewer, culvert replacemen( and ot~er .improvements in
many areas of Meigs CountY.
· . · ·
·
I am concerned with all of Meigs County and its future. I am committed
to improving the industrial and retail business .base of the county!. and I
have the knowledge, the contacts; and the ·experience to see that it
happens. During my tenure as mayor of Middleport i was directly involved in .
the creation of over 175 new jobs - such as at Overbrook Center - and the
retaining of many others.
.·
. ·
·
I am a lifelong resident of Meigs County and am deeply int~fested and
concerned about both the present and the future of our area,
My wife, Pauline, .and I have resided in Meigs County all our lives, and
our four children were born and r,.,a ised here and all graduated from Meigs
High School.
.
.
• I am a veteran of three years, in the_ U.S. Army during the Korean War
and have always been supportive 'of .assistance to
of our veterans~
·
I feel that 1 am providing thetleadership Meigs Counw so. desperately .
needs at this time and am certain that many more good things can be made
to happen in our county if we all ~ntinue to work together.
.
. . .,
My main goals to achieve for ·Meigs Couf!IY are to: . attract industry· to ·
sites which are here,. work w.it_tl the Governor to get long pending new
highway projects under construction, assist our present businesses and .
industries, expand water and sewage services throughout the county, and improve housing for our residents. I feel that all these goals can be attained
and 1 can make a difference toward them becomi{1g realtY: '
.
I am asking for your support in the upcoming election and pledge to you
that I will help make progressive things happen in Meigs County during the
next four years.
Your vote and support woul.d be gr-eatly appreciated.

E:li. ,doJhinK~lr ,...,,.,
. ., ;.1 •·

PDLARIS" Believe

.

TO THE RESIDENTS OF MEIG$.CP.U~,TY:·

Offer good OcJober 1 ~November 21, 1994

\-

'

. Count»~

'·

'foiu Ltut Stop Car Shop

-+r

Musser
named
•p·erson
pf year•

For._Meigs

~

Syracuse, Ohio, during the
180 dey period beginning .

·,

Mailing A

89 GMC S15· 4 cyl, 5 spHcl
.90 CHEf IERRETA • 2 dr, sharp
AM· Atrto trans, air
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NOTICE OF AVAILABIUTY
FOR PUBUe INSPECTION
The Ern•' ' and Maxll.lt
Wingett Memorial Educlllon
Trual hoe flied Ita annual
return of 1 privata
foundation , Form HCJ.PF, ·
with the Internal Revenue
Service for fleeaf·yaar 111394. In accordance· w.l th
Internal Revenue Coda
Section 6104 (b), IIIII form ·
Ia available lor public
lnapecllon at. the lioma of
Robert Wingert, IMIH,
1367 College Road,

•

Your·Cllunty :

,t,- .a. ,,t,1,, '" ""'' l~ "· k·•"

LAS VEGAS (AP)- There are
some tbings tbat not even master
illusionists Siegfried and Roy can
make disappear. Like Roy's knee
injury.
Roy Uwe Ludwig und~n:ent
aribroscopic surgery on h1s nght
knee Wednesday iD Los Angeles.

Ellis said Ihe flies are annoying, but nol bad enough to · Many home and property .
J'me•S•ntlnll Stall
.
cn;,ale any heallh probl.ems. .
owners m the Spnng Valley
HILLSBORO_ For a facility which has neatly ·1,000
We gel a new '.nfus~~n of 1_ns~~ts every Mon~y (~fter area of G a ll!~ol! s h~ve
head of cattle, hogs, lambs and goats pass through ils the hvestock aucl!On), he sa1d. But they have~ t k1lled mountedacampa1gnagamst
·
·
·
MQnda the Producers Livestock· anyone yet. They ' re prelty much under control.
bUIIdmga PLA stockyard on
110n
auc
nng
every
y,
·II
·
·
bl
h
dd
d
Association stockyard seems to be a preuy good neighbor
The odor usua y IS not noucea e, e a e .
proper tY ad"Jacen t. to 1he
.
io the surroundin businesses and residences.
"One~ in awhile, if the wind comes out oft he north~~st, Galha County Jumor Fm" A far as 1kn!w we have never had any complainls," we 'll have a good old country smell for a day or two, he grounds because they believe
s Evertts manager
'
.
1tw1111owerpropertyvalues
said Don
of lhe H1llsboro
stockyards"l
·
sal'd·
.
.
. .
h d ,
bl
11
'th
any
n•!'ghbors
here
Lori
Jordan
manager
of
Highland
Tire,
wh1ch
IS
across
andblcreate healt an sa.ety
,
h
'
don t ave any pro ems a1 a WI
. ~- .
·
. . ~•
~·
d
We have a good relationship with all the businesses."
the street from the stockyard: also ha~. goo co~ments;
pro ems.
..
, · •Howard Ellis owner of the Dairy Queen restaurant
"We've had no problems w1th them, she ~.a1d: There s
An unannounced VISit by
STOCKYARD AUcTION- An animal handler works 11 cow around the -.ow
~hich has occu~ed the lot next to the stockyard for 44 never an odor lhatl've noticed around here. Files are not Galha Counly news medl~ ring Monday at the Producers Livestock Association stockyard In Hillsboro.
·
·
d · h f 1 thai a problem, she added.
last Monday revealed a rei a
years, was qUick_to ~~phment PLA espll~ t e ~cess
Jordan said Hi bland Tire once complained to PLA tively clean, noise-free atmosphere . Located on the north- week is dedicated to hog sales.
m?.'l of l~e fac!htr, ~ H!esda~~~~~r~ct~~
~0!;s b~SI~ ~u because farmers ;ere blocking their driveway and the wesl side of Hillsboro, lhe slockyard is busiest on Mon- The odor was only noticeable within a few feel of the
00 0
a pe P .' Y
slockyard took care of. the problem "immediately."
days when it holds a liveslock auction. The rest of the
. ;ney re grea~, e sal ·
Continued on page A2
can t beat them, .
. .

Differen~e
The Hottest
Deal ' on Water

Vol. 29. No. 38

PLA's Hillsboro stockyard a
igood neighbor• say residents

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Witb His condition was described as
Paige will fill in for six monibs
tbe wave or a binding agreement. excellent and be returned heme 10 as Nora Desmond in Lloyd WebDavid Copperfield bas made lbe Las Vegas to recup«a~e.
ber's "Sunact Boulevard." She
Ludwis's doctor said tbe injury previously starred as Loodoo's firsi
secrets to bis magic tricks disappear from a new tell-all book.
bad been agar&amp;VIIed by tbe SireS&amp; Eva Peron in Lloyd Webber's
Copperfx:ld and publisber Life· of two Dighlly paformimces at The UEvita.."
time Books announced Thursday Mirage resort.
Paige will replace Betty Buck·
tbat "Secrets of Magic Revealed"
Siegfried and Roy have chalked ley, who Is recovering from a lllpwill not include Copperlield' s tech· up 2,I7S performances at The tured appencllx and is expected to
niques.
.
Mirage over the jlast 4 112 years. be out unlil Jan. 9. .
The decision was bas¢ in part They pii!D 10 resume tbeir shows
"Sunset Boulevard," based on
on a secrecy agreement tbat autbor Dec. 29.
tbe 1950 falm noir classic by Billy
Hcrben Becker signed backstage at ·
WUdtJ', start.s previews Tuesday in
a Copperfield show. It also was
LONDON (AP) - The sun New York; where it stars Glenn ·
based on an independent expen's · hasn't ~t 90 ibe lell!l of E!Jine Close. 'The Broadway opeoing is
assertloo tbat Beaer did 001 actu· Paige l!lld Andrew lloyd Webber.
Nov.17.
· .
rately describe Copperfield!&amp;
secrets. ·
"My company and I value our
integrity," said publisher Don
Lesnee. "We will booor tbe Secn:cy agreemenl"
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Joni
Mitchell's new album ·goc otr to a ·
uubulent stan.
Mitcbell separated from bet bus·
band and oo-p!OWcer, Lury Klein,
nne day before sbe started recording ''Turbulent Indigo."
"People don't even like to worit
with a married couple, let alooe a
separating ooujJie, so ·it was a litlle
difficult," Mitchell said.
But, Mitchell ·said, sbe and
)!:lein "bad a good friendship to
begin with, and a good musi-cal
relationship." They're even collaborating oo two new projecrs.

MiddiE!port-Pomeroy-Gallipolis· Pt. Pleasant· October 30, 1994

econ~Jmist

ho~ ~uch,. as ~e
'·'

�..

•

.

- - -- - ---

..,.

Weather

Voinovich, B 1ur~h fJre
off barbs in debate

OHIO Weather

By TERRY KINNEY
hoodlded rr- Writer

CINCINNATI .- Gov. Oecqe
Voioovich paiDied a rosy p1anre of
bis administration's accomplisb·
menta dnring a debate Friday niJbt,
wbile cballenger Rob Bun:b spent
tbe bour calling attention to lbe

· MICH.

IToledo I 62" I

. tborns.

In their only debate before the
Nov. 8 election, Burcb, a Democratic slate senator from Dover,
accused Voinovlcb of leading an
administration rife wltb invcsdga·
tiODI of im)JIOIIricty.
Afterward, Voinovlcb said
Burch Is "Ill-prepared, Ill·
informed, reckless ... be is the leall
qualified person to run for gover·
nor in anyone's memory."
"It was attack. atlack, attack,
a~- but no substance in tcnna
of wbat be would do as an altanalive,'' Volnovicb said. "It's easy 10
tbrow stones; but the difficult tbing
is to come back wilh ... bow is be
going to Improve tbe economy.
how is be going to improve educa·
lion?

"He just ignores the facts and
just keep going."
Blll'c:ll said be - satisfied lbat
he bad scored some points in tbe
debate. ''Tbere aren't many lblogs
I would cbange allout tbe last

:Sunny skies remain
throug-h Monday

hou!:.~ ' be said.

During tbe debate, Burcb
accused tbe Republican governor
of being "sadly out of touch" and
pualng 1ts1e go~ 011 "autopilot.'' He raised ''pay to play''
allegatiODI tbat businesses that conlributcd to the govCIIICX''s campaign
. gOI preferential trealment in stsle
contraciS.
Voinovicb Jald the allegalioos
were untrue and lnesponslble.
"After Ibis campaign Is over,
you're
going to bave to Jive wllb
1
-yourself,'' Voinovic:h said.
"For all Gov. Voinovicb's
experience in management and otb· .

By The Alloclated Prell
·The N81ional Wealhc:r Service
Wedncsday.•.Fair. Lows in lhc
says it will be partly sumy today middle to upper 30s and highs 50 to
wilh JUshs between 60 and 65 Slale- SS.
wide.
Aci'OIIfl th natloa
It bcl:amc inaeasingly cloudy
Most of lhc counlly was oool and
Friday night in much of lhc stsle, clear Salunlay, wilh a few clouds
wilh high. patchy clouds reported in scauered across the West.
mostcases.EarlymomingtemperaBrcezesfnmlhc80Uihwestwere
turcs Saturday nnged from lhc up- expcclcd to circulalc warm lit from
per 30s in cast centnd Ohio to lhc lhc_Gulf Coast SlateS toward New
mid 50s across the northwest part of England, bringins sunshine and temlhc Stsle.
_J)!IIIII!Wi!lll!o{i(lf !!l~~~~'l'll !hinJ
TheleC&lt;Whigh tempenture for of the COUIIII)':
Satunlay at the Columbus wealhc:r
Some showers were Cllpectcd in
stationwas80degrccsin 1900. The thecastcmCarolinas,soulhcastGcorrccord low was 21 degrees in 1925. gia and soulh Florida.
SUIISet _Saturday was at 6:33
A leading edge of cooler air was
p.m.BDT.Sunrisetodaywasat6:S8 expocted to slreldt from the CCIIIIlll
a.m. EST.
Gn!at Lakes to lhc southern Plains,
Southern Oblo
wilh temperalllleS mostly in lhc 50s.
Today."Partly sunny. High in SomelighUainwaslikclyintheOhio
the middle 60s.
Valley and lhc liOilhcni Great Lakes.
ExteDdecJ foreeast ,
. The N_!&gt;rth~t was Cllpectcd 10
. Monday .. .A chinl:e of shoWel1 be sunny'iiiicl Cciiil, Wilh temj;leilltilre&amp;
west. Fair cast. Lows40to4S and inlhc40aand50sandsomenlinalong
highs from lhc upper 50s ncrthwcst lhc Washington ((]lSI. The Southwest
10 lhc middle 60s soulhcast.
wulikelysunnyandscasonable, wilh
TucMay•..A chance of show- tempetatuteS up 10 lhc 80s.
en. Lows 40 to 4S and highs in tbc- . The nation's bot II)XJt Friday was
middle 50s.
Palm Springs, Calif., at 9S dejpecs.

I

He refused to discuss polygraph
tells.

On Friday, two dragnets on
opposite sides of tbls rural (9wn
yielded JiUJe.

DARE

ConJinued from page A1
who will attend DARE training ses·
sions early next month. The next step
for lhe sheriff's department will be to
coordinale Wood's visits with teach· ·
ers' schedules.
"He will be lhe DARE officer, a
full-lime job entailinglots of hours in
and out of the classroom," said
Soulsby. "It is not a soft job."
Since lbe grant money can only be
used for wages, Soulsby said community donations are very importanl to
lhe program for tile purchase of materials and olher -DARE· related items.
"It will be a definite asset lo the
community," Soulsby noted.

(UIP!I5:z5.11t)

Mil- uc:ll SuD&lt;Ioy. 125 Tlllrd 4,.,,
Golllpcolll, Olllo, bylbo Olio Volley N&gt;llobiDa
~y/Mubi-1,11&lt;.- .... pool·
. .......... ~II, Olio 4.1631. ~.
- - ...lilt-. .. ........,.,OIIIo,

_Tbo_. . . . . . . .

.... Olllco.
Ntw~ llf

All

I

lbeOido

rtinl.

lUNDAY ONLY ·
II1ISCitii'TIOI UTII

arc.ra.r·-- .

j

0..11ftek.._ ........:.. .... ~-··~··--------·90tt

___
.,.... .. _
n.-u

O.Yw.... - ...·--···--·.. -·----.... $46.10

.

f1

IIIIOL&amp; oorr I'IICI

.

DIIIJ•-·--···--··....·-··-..--·-:--Sl.OO

-

_

No ..-tplioll b)' IIIII , . - II -

,.,..._,.,__..

Commlulon to meet

!ceiWWUIMII .......

--c-r M=

GALLIPOLIS- Tbe Cll1lipolll

City C';"'mlw)(ll! will meet 1'laetday at 7 p.m. Ia tbe Gllllpolla

MAIL~

13 l6
_ ·-·--····-·-··········---IZI.M
_ •., , ____, __,______,_..116

n ------------·---SN-711
1'' 13 - -.................................
OoiiWo- Co"!"J
___sn.tJ
» - ·-·---..··--·--------SCSJO

n----·-·-·---·-------40

1
I

.,.

WIIIIIO(IIL

.;'==kicked
;

·

QALLIPOLJS - ·Flrefigbters made tbclr fillb run In dlree,days '

·~1\lrlcen flreliJ!etcrs reaponded wilh two tnK:b to Kriner Road
and biiUJed ·lbe
for 3-112 hours, uaiDg 22S gallons of water.
'lbe· fire bumcd an aMiilonal acre of land, bringing the 101a1 damql!'cl area to eipt acrca.
·
Two of the five nma were made 10 Clldgnisb rr.ldndled fires, but
a Oalllpolls Volunteer Fire Deputment spokwn•n said Friday's
fire W!ll ouUide the fire llnc and appeaied to be set.
Tli.e GaiJia County Sberifr s Dcpartmeat Is Investigating tbe
firea. but oo illfonnation - available Saturday. •
·
Tbc call was the 302nd of the yelr. .

. ..

DRAWlI
CIES1

S6t.t5

.. Stockyard opposition to meet
RODNEY - 1be Committee for the Preservation of the GaJJia

·

i CouDty Junior FalrgroUDds will meet 7 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 10 at
· the.,Rodney Gnnae Hall.
t ... ~ ~·.. J.."

''RQO,d closed for bridge project
.
.!

offices to close during- move

tbe perao~ tbe office js closed,

POMEROY - Unlta of tbe
Meigs County. F.1JterBenCY Medical
Service Jogged sill Calls for assis·
tance Fridav. ·
·
MIDDLEPORT
9:58a.m., Children's Home
Road, ~ Cremeans, Holzer
Medical
tcr.

a_l~ougb ID~ing linea may be

hDllted from lime to time during
the swltcb-over period.
BREC mc:mbers needing to caJI
should keep trying if tbJs bappens.
BREC Ph!JDC numbers will not
change dnring or afta' the move.
BW payments sbouJd be mailed
or made at BREC pay stations .oo
Tbu~sday ~nd Friday, since. tbe
c~haer s1auons ~t botb locauons
will be closed during the move. AU

6:27p.m., Middleport, Grover
Rqad, bruab fire at Mike Putmey
property.

RUI'LAND
10:44 ~.m., Leading Creek
Road, Betty Lemley, Veter1111s
Memorial Hospital.
SYkACUSE

&amp;OWN CITY - ~ Bllllcb Road (~ ToWDSIIip Road

.

.

.. -

.

.'

~

- Flu Verdnafions e DDW available. the Gaiiia
CoUiltr Health Depanment IIIIDOWICCit
'l'liC'fOIIowing clinics bave been scbednJed·
~Y - 8:30 10 10:30 am. at Greenfield Townsbip Fare Slatklil; 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. al the Cadtnus Community Cenier; and 2 to
3:30iJ14n, at Patriot Lodge Hall.
.
.
Y(CiJtWday- 2to 3:30p.m. at Olesblre Villale Offices.

-~y- 9 a.m.IO 1I a.m. at Vintoo Town llan.
~ ~ also available 8 a.m. to I 1:30 a.m. and 1 p.m. to 3:30
p.m. :ruesday and Fridays In tbe courtbouse basemen•.

Gallia Local Board to meet
GALLIPOUS -'lbe GaJJia Cnonty Local Board of Educalion
will,hold a special meeting 7 p.m. Monday in the admio!•tratlve
om.;e.·230 Shawnee LaDe.
1'be ~ will include an execulive session. In pubUc sessioo,
theliOani will i:onaider pofcssionalleave a'equests.

~OY 7 Three pusengers received millOI' Injuries Iii a
twoo.veliicle accident iridaY 11 the lnt&amp;Dectl011 of Stsle Route 681
and SWDIICr Road. tbe GaiJia-Melgs Post of tbc Stile Highway
Patrolsald.
. .
NOIIJalcd a1 the scene were Cbristic A. Mills, 14, 41327 But
Sbade Road, Reedsville; Angle Riley, IS, 37S63 Skinner Road,
Pomeroy; aad Sbilo D. Moore, 17, 40 I 20 Gold Ridge Road,
Pomeroy.
Cbristle Mills and Riley were passengers in a car driven by San·
dra K. Mills, 3S, 41327 East Shade Road, that was westbound on
681 a1 S:30 p.lll. when It turned left onto SUIIIIICI' into the palh of a
weitboOJnd van driven by Lenora M. Moore, 38; 40120 Gold Ridge
Road. and alllided, the patml said.
·
DamaJC was IIIOdcratc to MIDs' car and sli&amp;bt to tbe Moore vebicle, In wbicb Shllo Moore was a pa•senger, the patrol said. Sandra
Mills was ciled for failure to yield.

Get your free gift for .__

ChriStmas '94 and extra_
cash for Christmas '95.
1

Open a Christmas Club now aud receive a FREE Antique
Photograph Frame. The Christmas Club is so convenient!
Your Chris_tmas check arrives when you want it most-j~i in
time for Christmas.shopping ..Christmas Club is so easy to.
join-and:so easy to keep up because you choose the amount
of your regular deposits.

Newari&lt;

'
11re Pl2lns

75H955

788-8820

797-4547

.PLIIIID PIRII7111D
ar
1111

!!
•

kDal
. LOAUS EXICUJCEO

for females a malea.

oMedlcal Exams
.Pap Tests

..P.-.griancy tests a counaellng

Middleport '·
992$1 · ·

\

TIID Only
~76-7123

_
•Teats a treatments for sexually transmitted dl......
•Anonymous HIV teats a counael,,ng
.
.U.thoda and ai.lppllea for bllth control and lifer sex ·
Norplent·lmplant
.
DepoProvtre-ln)ectlon
Bllth control pill

3 MONTHS FREE
FINANCING

Sliding Fee ~~~·
We ac«:41pt Me"lcald and private Insurance.
414 SECOND STREET

GALUPOUS
. 448-0186 •
'-

..:..

•

Ci';.::Li:h

~

when yoa ~n Says Ngw!

·Confldentlal Family Planning Services

OFFER OOODTHRU MONDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1K4

- _..

TUPPERS PLAJNS

9:59 p.m., State Route 681, Flic
Adams, VMH.

we're. mountlna a SALE
tbat will Jltt you In the
Holiday abopplna mood.
Huge, Huge, Sa'rinp oa
aU quality Jew,Jry. Wlay
walt until December

CondomiSpennlclde

••

6:42 p.m., Cbildreo's Home
ROad, Opal Cmnr4!ns, HMC.
RACINE
9:48 p.m., Cross Street, Laura
Cleland, HMC.

We ~\ Its l montbs
before Cb.......,."but

Three injured in two~vehkle crash

Nelsonville

BREC's new mailing llldreu 1s
4848 So Route 325 Soutb. P.O.
Box 200, Rio Gnole, Obio 4S674-

SAVE
up to
, 50%
:: OFF

-

~

LoweU

Aid

t .... .
·DOn ' t M'ISS I'

FlU.shots available
-

896-2369

)

.

Diamonds &amp; Jewelry at
Fantastic Reductions,

· ))cjlir1Di6nt·tltay rep1at:e a one-lane bridge nortb of Swan CRet
Road (County Road 152), County Engineer Joscpb L. Leacb
~·

Belpre

0200.

-,

.

:WQI!dla'.pcnnlaing, the road will reopen·by 4 p.m. Friday.

42J-75.16

14 BREC pay d!!tlcins w111 condoue to accept payments. Tbeac
include:
Frulh Pbarmacy stores Iii Wellston, Athens Middleport, Gallipolis and Proc:iorvWe; National City
Bank locatioasln Cbeaapeake,
Coal Grove Ironton Jactson and
Portsmoulb;' and I&gt;ickeu Markel 11

~Win dOle 8 a.m. Monday so lbal the Gaiiia County Highway ·

'DDO!IIiced

Athens

for November,
and the
added Kim Kemp to
the substitute personnel list in the
areas of cafeteria, cuiiOdian, seerctal)' and swltcbboanl.
Iii otber Jllllller1, the btwd:
• Allllroved revised Boanl Po1icy No:'74SO, property inventory,
on iiS second reading.
• Approved a I'CIOiutioo aupport-

MeigS EMS units record six calls for help

I

593-7761

Nurstng~am

•

ins tbe 114 percent sales tax
intcease in GaiJia County for 18
l!lllugJaoA! 91 I sysam.
Accepted tbe dOaalloo of 18
IBM typewriter 18d tlaree U.S.
Wcat telcpbonea from K 1: E
Planimeters, and a Lasiclo planimetcr from the GaiJia County ASCS
offace.
·
• Accepted tbe doaation of a
VEMCO Mark XU drafting
machine and a MayliDe Dest-omat1c drafting table from Jleliancc
Elettric.

Loot

•44•5

Marlena
37HISS

c;or.
Rebecca Stump wu ~=
Klinf coordiDatllr ol the

GVFD called to smoke scare

. : GALLIPOLIS- A Hamden man - arrested Friday by Vinton
,' CO!lnty sberlff's deputka on a GaJJia County w_.. for a grand
jury,lndictlneut.
.
'
: · James D.
35, was transported to the GaiJia County Jail811d
.·iDat,ttaalcd 011 cblqes of theft and tampering willa records.
I
Arrested early Saturday by the Gallia-Meip Post of lhe Slate
Hlgbway Pauol wu M._icb~J G. Porter, 33, 647 Osbotne St.,
Pomeroy, for driving under the inDaienc:e, drivini iillder suspension
• IIIII driving left of center. .
JOiiD A. CJoncb, 33, 4707 Stsle Route 141, Gal1lpolls. was jailed
', Fri!lly night on a municipal court &lt;Xdered 1().day commllmeot for a
• preVious cbarge of DUI.

..........

.,.
OFF
20
•

Buckeye . Rur~l

and ABLE/JOBS auenc!anc:e; and
Doma Smltb, Power Patb inllruc·

: Man jailed on indictment cluzrge

Join the Christmas Club now! Get a free gift and earn interest
on the daily balance in your account. Come in today-it?s
never tdo early to save for Christmas!

_J;_ .

Adult UleriCf
and Coor·
dinalion gnmtl.
Roben Muller waa llliiiOved u
a substitute lnslluctor bi lnduauial
Maintenance. wbile the· followina
part-time appolntmenta were
approved: Betty Adklna, TAG
coordinator; Greg Carter, Auto
Body; James Collins, Hydraulics;
Ira Eggleton aDd Cbriatine
Wllliaml, PALS inllniCIDrl; Betty
Finney, ABLE lnsttuctor; Darryl
Harris and Terry Jones, EMT-A
Refresher; Gene Lyons, Basic
EMT-A; Lynn Sbook. CSS c:lerk

GAU.IPOUS - A Point Pleasant, W.Va., woman was taken
liiiQ custody Friday after Jibe allegedly sbopllfted from Hll1s DqJart·
ment SIDle, Upper River Road, lhe GaiJipolls Pol{ce Department
rePQited,
Setty J. McCarty, 613 Shawnee LaDe, was later released on a
•llj)IIIO!!Ito appe.-ln court

Gi\u.IPoLJS- Unt In a wall beater - the apparent cause of
a smoke II4*C al a local motel Friday morning, lhe Gallipolis Volunteer Fire DeplltmcDt rejlortecl.
' . ~~ firefigbtcrs responded 10 Super g Motel, 321 Upper
Ri~ Road, With three lnleb. A GVFD spokesman said the smoke
barJ:OlUPied by the time the depaiiiDent arrived.
.. 11li' GVlll&gt; also responded to a false alarm SaiUrday morning at
PUre ·crest Care Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive. Six firefighters
~ Witb one truck
·
calls were tbc 30lst and 303nl of the year, respectively.

4 .

Plllft 8 ILICKI

L

RIO GRANDE - Budgets ·for
tbree Adult Education programs
were appoved by the GaJUa:.Jactson-Vintoo Joint VcadonaJ BOiid
of FAantion at lfl recent meetlna
at BuclrCye Hills c- CeollCr.
Approved for funding were 1be
.Auto Bojly, EMT-A Refresher,
EMT-A Basic and Welding programs.
·
In otber adult division action,
tbe board gave Its permission to
applyfortbeABLEDrmooAtration
Leamer Advlainalmprove Retcn·
tlon and ABLE Demonstratio6

GALLIPOLIS - Buckeye
Rural Electric czrativc will
clollc itll'llaiDcll
In Oalllpolis oo 'lbursday and Friday, Nov. 3·
4, 10 move 10 Its new beadquanen
at 4848 State Route 325 Soulb,
fourmllessoutholRioGrande.
The office will reopen in tbat
site, the fcmta' Soudnvf4tem Hl&amp;b
Scbool building, 011 Monday, Nov.
7.
Pbone calla for outages and
emergencies wW be taken during

Woman detained for shoplifting

.
oldie ..... Ire mil·
able .&amp; the Qy Bu11dlag, SIS See- '
ODd Ave., IIIII tbe Dr. S1111ucl L.
,B ouard Mcmorill Library, 7
SpruceSt
' r

.

; .Frldiy a11emoon to tbe 1c:e11e ol a brusb and wooc1a fire wblch om- ·
• cla1a llclieve Is bclDJ re-set by •.-~st.
·

1s

LIUIDERID

'·:~·-·

: Allt,ged arson fires continue· .

Musser .

dllfered at times.
"We have bad questions about
ber story. That's wby we talktd 10
ber more lban one ume," be said.

Jun:hq 'lim.a ~ ieutiud

. ··~ ........... clilpule ID wllicb llil wife 1 -WllllldlicD,
GI1IIA Cotmty Sllerift'al&gt;eparllneut reported.
;. ·· , ,,~ M. SulB-. 30, wu chlrpd W1tb doaielt!c violence after
bls wife, Deborah, causing ber to fall and

:a
c:rper
lnsinna: ~

Continued from page A1
does Dot include
faciliry,aswerethesoundsofanimals cost of a pilut. which can run as
and the ongoing auclion.
blab as $28111 bour.
However, there was a large mound .
Ia a 30·second. Volnovich TV
of manure piled near the facility.
spot tilled "Harder and Smatter,"
Evern said the manure is piled oul· an an_noun~er says, ''Gov.
sideforremoval;itistakenroanearby .· Voinovicb said be would getstafe
farm where it is spread over eighr or · government working barder and ·
nine acres of land.
smart« - doing more witb leu,
The manager said ihe facility is ~~ Volnovlcb sold off 1be filley
thoroughly cleaned and disinfected $70008Jane, ~.avlng taxpayers
abour once a week, usually after the
• a year,
Monday sales. He added that animals
are never kepratthesite for inore than
24 hours.
Continued from page A1
Evert! admined that an animal oc·
casionally escapes !he facility, but ership in community affairs, Evans
with cooperation from local law en· said.
The honorees represent I I south·
forcement, !he animal is usually
easlern Ohio communilies and were
rounded up righr away.
''We make every effort to bring nominated by lhe chambers of com·
them back .." ~e said. "We don 'I wan! merce and business groups in their
home counlies and communi lies.
to cause any pnlblems."
The Southeaslern Ohio Regional
Presen!ly, the Hillsboro facility is
qne of the nearest stockyards. The Council is one of the oldest develoP"
prowsed Gallipolis site would con· menI and prbmotion groups in Ihe
duct business with 2,000 farms in _the United States, daling back lo the early
area and create three full-time and 10 1940s.
Those nominated for rhe awards
part-lime jobs.
County Extension Agenr Ed include: Amanda Bc:nt Bolt Co.,
Vollborn has said lhc slockyard could Logan; Rex );;ra;ae;r;' Nelsonville;
generale as much as $50 million for Harold Laughlin, Athens; Tom
Wiseman, Gallipolis; John ·and
!he local economy.
Evert! said PLA has not made a Charles Mark ~aynard, Lawrence
decision on whetherto build in Spring Counly; Raymond and Jeanie Balzer,
Scioto County; Eric Long, Pike
Valley.
"The big issue for us right now is Counly; Jerry Tatar, Chillicolhe; Rick
whether it's feasible to put a stock- McCarty, Jackson; Deanna Tribe,
yard in that area and whether ir's Vinton Coun~y; and John Carey ,1
Wellston.
worth (PLA's) trouble," h_e said.

Briefs:-

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Regional
JVSD Board gives OK to budgets· ·
l'llllnina
Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

O!;tobCt 30, 1994

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~~In office. d s~!= Unda =~:r=
r~:; ~WJe

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• N!,(lll jalkd for domestie violence
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'-' ID~ '-'A local iDaD WIIIII'Utal elltf 5aday follow·

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LORAIN (AP) - Gov. Georae
1be Morning Joumal bu found
Volnovicb was rlgbt wben be aalcl . tbat io tbe past sill months,
be didn't need lhat fancy stale air· Voinovicb bu made 19 trips plane favored by bis predecessor. including five c:ampaign 1r1pa -in •
He bas an expensive flellcopter to a Sl.S million American Eurofly bim around, a newspaper copter owned by lhe Statdllgbway
reported Sllllria}'. ___
Patrol.
.
Voinovldl, a R&amp;:pubiiCI!II.ls runSgt. Jobn Born, a pauoJ
Ding a auJ11111i1n CliiiiiiiiCidalbout· spokesman, said-tbc Volnovicb
ln&amp;.of the $70.000 a , . be aaled . campaign Is beiDa ~ blUed WS q
tupayers by selliDg oft a itate; bour for non-ofticlal liipl; Tlie
owned aircraft uaed by former includes tbe pilot and losuraace,
Democratic Gov. Ricbard Celesle . Born aaid.
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She wu questioned earlier In
the week and ber husband, David
Smith, from wbom sbe filed for
divon:c 1a1t moath, was qneuioned
again Friday.
.
Wella aaid •lborilk:s were lrY·
· log to isolate a motive. "We
baven't bad a 111110111 cJaDand " be
Jald, and DO one seemed "~ at
thefamil ."
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The dreenville Ntwl reported
Saturday that Mrs. Slliith did not
pass a Jle-detectnr tell given to ber
Thursday. The newspaper Jald It
~ 00t delcmlloc wbat queslions
sbe bad failed.
Wells told tbe newspaper tbat
details of Mrs. Smllh' s story bave

tonS_ still In tbclr saC~ seals.

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Report finds governor using
Highway Patrol helicopter

Clues in hunt for missing
children remain elusive
lJy CBRISTOPBER SVLLIVAN
AP National Writer
UNION, S.C.- QuestioniDJ
Camily mtmbers and following up
unending. pbone tips tbree days
after a pair of young brolben VBD·
lsbed, anvestigators indicated lhe
cue was far from solved.
"We .are not ruling out any.
tbing, •• Union County Sheriff
Howard Weill said Friday, a day ol
. frantic but fruitless searches for
evidence in die disappearance of .3xear-old Mlcbacl Sinitb and 14·
monlh-old Alex Smltli. Tlieit motll·
er reported they were taken from
ber by a cari~M:ker.
"We do. neil bave a c.. We do
aoc have tbe children. We do not
bave a suspect," tbe sberlff said.
"We bave information coming Iii
from friends, relatives, psrcbics,
general crackpots. And we ve gOI
to 80 tbroup all of iL"
1be boys' mother, Susan Smllb,
23, said a man wilb a gun jumped
IillO ber car at a llaffac lipt Tuts·
day niJ)It and forced ber out after a
few miles, driving away with ber

if

ctwise, the list four years It' a been .
IJiismanaiement and misplaced pri·
oritles," Blll'c:ll said. "lob Bun:b
can do much beUer lban tbal."
Voioovlch sbot back tbatbeproud of Ills reconl.
"In all the eodonements I bave
received - In faa I bave received
all the endmemenls so far - they
have mentioned tbc fact tbat we
bave broufbt integrl~ back 10 the
governor s offite,' Voinovicb
said.
·
"My IIIIIDing mate, Nancy Hollister, is 11101e qualified 10 be govemor lban Rob Burell."
GUBERNATORIAL DEBATE- Gov. Ge0rp Volamcl_.
The debale, sponsored by The
a
polllt
as DemoCratic CMdldate Roll Bun:la Jlltened prior to die
Cincinnati Post, originated at
I
.
dart
of
their
dellate Friday In Clnclnuti. (AP)
WCET·TV and was broadcut by
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some Oliio Public Television sta·
lions.
merclal real estate developer and t
ingiO appear Witb him.
Burch accused Voinovlcb of
former
gcueral manager or tbc r
•'lbe secreauy of state bas said
proposing a so-called outcome- I'm a mtifJed candldale and going Ohio State Fair.
:
based education plan, whicb is to he oo the ballot, 10 I believe that
Voinovicb, 58, of Cleveland, •
opposed by many conservative par- the people of Obio sbould have the bas been a state leaislator, essistNU '
enta wbo don't want ICbools taking freedom 10 see all three candidates attorney generalo C'uyalloga County :
a parental role. And be said . r:~-to·bead and toe-to-IOC,'' auditor and mayw of Cleveland for ;
Voinovich bas failed to Uve up to
10years.
'
said.
his promise to be the "education
Burch, 4.5, of Dover, bu been a:
"Obviously, George Voinovicb
govCIIICX'."
bas ~n to use bis power 8ll!i bls sraa: senator the put 10 yaqa. He !
Volnovicb dispuled tbat con· money 10 pJ!t the big thumb over also bu been an auislant attorney ~
tcnlion, and said bis administration on the Bale guy and say 'We don't geoeral, Natiooal Labor Relations ·
. bas Increased spending for cduca- want Ibis guy to be tieanl.'
Boanl Lawyer and bas been in prl- : ·
tioo by $1.1 billion.
,
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Inmon, 47, ~Willard, is a com· vale praclic:e since 1980.
"Il Gov. Voinovich tliinb Oblo
Is a leader In edncation, be is 11101e
sadly out of touch tban I tblnk be
is,'' Bun:lrsaid.
VOinovich, wbo bad refused to
take J*t in a debate that included
iDdepeodcat candidate BW Inmon,
similarly dismissed Bun:Jls candi·
dacy. Some poDs earlier tbls month
showed Volnovlcb.leading Burcb
by
-mucb as 38 percentage
points.
•
Inmon wlllebed the debate from
the lobby ol the WCET·TV studio.
Earlier Friday, be debated Blll'c:ll at
lhe City aub In Cleveland, and be
lasbed out at Voinovicb for refus-

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APPLY TODAY AND.
RECEIVE A FREE GIFt

608 S. THIRD STREET

MIDDLEPORT
182-6812

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404 SECOND .AVE.
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GALUPOUS, OHIO 45831
MEMBER AMERICAN
GEM SOCIETY
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Commentary

Sunday 1imes-Sentinel/A4

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WASHINGTON- Src Nng of caucua will be more Iibenllw:anse
the aftermath of a uuclear war, the moderates arc the ouca that
Nlkila ICiuusbdlcv ouce said: "'lbe have close I'IICCI and are Ioalug....
liviJigwllleu lhedead."
You're JlolniiD have lhe (DemoA politic~ ~roUaiy to that
chilling sta~UIIBy be In the B
kA d
maltiug for House Democrata the
Y aC n erSO,n
mcnlng aflet the Nov. 8 midlcnD
and
elcclioos.
Michael Binstein
.Even if Democrata survive a
Republican onslaught and retain
their numerical maj!dy, lhc victory will be oue of lhe most hollow iD aatic) couaervativea dcm!IJIIJiD&amp; a
lhe history of the Houac of Repre- biller voice. The liberals will have
seutalives. The casualty COUDlJoe&amp; ·a bigger perceutage of lhe caucus
beyond the number of seats the and wlll be demanding that you
Republicaus gain ou the stay the uarrow path." 1be reault,
Democrats, who c:urreolly hold a Coelho added may he that "you
40-seat advautase: The House woo't have lhc votea ., put thlnfs
Democratic Caucus wlll emerge through withlD YOUJ: own caucus.'
balltauized between liberals and
Rep. Jim McDcrmoU, 0-Wasll.,
conservatives because moderates a liberal and a close ally of Houac
are facing a meltdown ID their Speaker Thomas Foley, 0-W~..
ranks.
concurs with Coelho's outlook.
This specter Ia beiDa sufgeated "('lbc 104th CooJI'CIS is) JOID&amp;ID
by ooe of President Cliotoo s ctoa- be ooe of the 10ugheat acssiooa, l
est political advisers, f01t11er Call· thlnlt, In SO yell'S," ays MeDer·
fomia Rep. Tooy Coelho, and aev· mott. •'Wboever wiDa lhe so-callcd
era! senior political strategists. numbers game- aod has 218
Coelho told us during a recent {seats) plus ooe - will eaaeulially
iurerview:
be stru~gllng to govem the whole
"Tbe odda are the Democratic time.' McDermott frets that

A Dl'rillon of
~IC.
8l5 Third Ave, GoDipollo, Ohio

J·

.lJI Court SL, Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 446-l34Z

(614) 99Z·Z156

ROBERT L. WJNGETJ'
PubUsher

HOBART WilSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW
C&lt;Jntroller

El:ecuUve Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.

lEITERS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 wo1'jlo. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
umo, .llddress and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be
pubU.bed. Letters should be in good tasle, addressing issues, not
penonllities.
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·Mayor says nuclear plant
.site is on the rebound ·
BJ JAMISBANNAB

AMI
drr.Wrt~tr
· . MIAMISBURG - Mayor Dick Church bas spent much of his lint
tllnle yals In oiJice leylng to save jobs at lhe MOUDd nuclear weapons
plllii. ADd it' a ba:ll ooc loog rollcr1XJ1111Cr ride ofvkt«&lt;ca aud defeats.
No IOODCl' wu Churda clectcclto office lhau lhe U.S. Departmeut of
EaeraY clecldcd In Dcc:cmber 1991 to all but close the plant, a major
·~ 11111 wpayer In this 1111111 weatem Oblo coumunity.
· ·
. . · AI the llllcm Dcpelllllellt cut fuDdln&amp; aucheducetl operatioos, Church
WltCbcd dlo MOund work foroe abrlnk from more than 2,000 to about
1,300. The fublre was UDCetiBin and wutts morale was low.
Cbun:h decided he wouldn't go down wilbout a fight
, He Cllliatcd lawmaken aad lobbied the department to rec:oasidcr its
dcc:ialoD to p11uc out dcfeuac operalioos at Mound aud leave cleanup as
the primary activity.
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Hopeallllll'ed wbal the dcparlmeot agreed to rec:oasldcr, tbal plum·
meted whcll the govemmeut IIUCk to liB origiual decision.
Thlt'a wbal Cburda decided 10 lry IIIICllh« approach.
Plllla were drawn up to aanct privaJt bns!I!HIH aJ the 306-am: site,
usiDg the aqJMsdcaled cquipmcot aad llaiDed work force at Mound as a
IIUigDet. The IQJc was 10 avoid a lnlD drain by keepiDgthe Mouud work
force In place wlth private jobs.
A breaktbroU&amp;b oa:UII'CCI earlier Ibis year whcD the Energy DeJIIII1IIIelll
~aVe Mi••i!iura the IIOol1tY Ui lea&amp;e buildln&amp;i at Mouud to Interested
It

Rcpubllcaus wiD team up with
Democratic COIIICIVIIlves 10 11tcer
the agenda away from thlnga he' a
been pushing, Illte lcalth care
reform.
The comlDJI upheaval reached
critical mass because of two
dyuamlca, uys·Norman Omatem,
rcaidcot ICbolar at the AmaiWI
Enterprise luatltute. First, the
acdviam ill the RepubliWI party
teuda to be IIIOI'C oo !be ideologlcally cooacrvallve side, juat as 1bc
activlam iu the Democratic party
leDds 10 be more oo the liberaf side.
Second, redlslrictiDS has left many
c:ooareaslooal diatricta frieudly to
lilJeralt.
Political aualyll Charles E.
Coolt alao acea Democrata IosiDg
moderate voices through retirementa and defeata. "They aren't
golna to lose Dl811Y liberala," saya
Cook. "So the center of aravity
within the Democratic caucus is
goiDJIIO JDOVC sharply left."
Uoder one scenario spun by
Coelho, the Democratic caucus
could be thrown 1n10 cllaos if the
Democrats lose more lhau 25 stars,
wllidl is withiD the 11111e he's pedieting. Others Ji1te Coolt are fore.

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Progreu .was slow, but four amail busiDeUes that provide services
nualnl from preclaloo mniniDgiD d!tmk:l!l aualylia bave set up sbop
at die llitc. Cburdl said othct hniiDCases an: waitiDJin lhe wiugs.
But he saya he's C:::!hndlered tape.
"We have to be
g," he said. "This is !be first time it's
ever ba:ll dooc • DOE. We're c:blrtlng oew Walen."
Cbun:h woo a majll' victoly Ibis ·wcclt wheu EDergy Seaetary Hazel
O'Leary visited the plant and c!Jopped off a $10 millioo grantiO belp ea&gt;J!Oiilk: dcv~ at lhe site.
Nevertheleas, Cburdlla like Ill e~&amp;er racdlll'ae loaed iD the starting
· Jate. Ooa: the flnt
Of baalllmn ·to MIIUIIII; die ikxlll'
. gatcl
will opl!l.
.
' nlnn be s........,..,
.. -.~ul at 11.
•"
"lberc's
DOlhe
a doublln
my -'-"
JWUU we re ~u...,. to

The Emil Ka.p teina story_
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·ll·f'!
Emil Kapteiua resided near
NaylOr's Run iD ~y. He was
ooe Qf several dlildreu of the Got- ·
tlieb KapreiDa fiiJI!ily. Earlier iD life
be was a coal mmer. Emil was a
sensitive, nice person who was
always;smiliog. The fJrst tho~ I
lalew him was wbal I was lp high

World

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During the summer mouths In
my college football days, I COIIIll·
liooed myaclf for football by nfw.
log a boat each day ou the Ohio
River. ill my travels I usually saw
Emil sittiug oo lhe river habit with
a fisbiDJI pole io his hands . .This
fishiug pole was a Ioog caue pole ·
aod exteudcd about 1S feet over lhe
Ohio River. 0u the Jioe itself was
Fiedalilllebellwhicb.wouldrlngif
a fish l'llbbed lhe bait. Emil Dl811·
aged to ca~ a goodly number of
fisb to eat. The Kapteiua family
were furnished with a fish diu~
several times a weclc by Emtl' s
efforts.
It sbOUid also be ·mentioned that
Emil liked 10 SllOOZe while fishing.
His unique way of fllhiog permit·
· ted him to do this aud to fish at the
same time. Emil d!d not have to
move too ofreu wbile fishiug. He
had his one special SP!ll which
could be aceo by all ultra of the
Ohio River.
One year, probably In the SOs
aud during the summer season,
Emil_ Wt:Dl to his fiSblng hole, put
~t h_ls .Iioe and fell asleep. A West
V1r~1Dia state same warden saw
Emtl fisliiog at his favorite spoJ.
TIIc law eofon:etnCut officer laodcd
near Emil and asked him If he bad

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BELL COR'Ie;

Democrats moat CCDICIIt their de(

, ..... SJadkale, lac.

he said. ·~~ ~~to fall in place.' .
that die ecooomlc dcvelopmellt piau will aeate more
Cblllth
jobs at lhe llile lhau the 2,400 Mound ooce bad.
"l'm)..l lidded pink about I!," he said. "I tbiok we're making history here.'
.

CONGR.ESSIO~AL PORK

to 40 you could lave cWcc:tlool (14
the GOP), Or uy you act to 3Q;
you could have ·a CCIIIIItfoa ~ Ill
where Elaoot:l'llll and Republkaor
act tosether and or11aulze til(
Houae iu.a unity tleiet.. .. Yo~
could have Democrata bolt tho
party aud for a coalldoo iovem~
IDCIIl with Repulllicatla."
:
Coelho even believes ·House
Minority Wiilp Newt Glnp;lda, R:
Ga., lhe Demoalta' dlicf -ms;·
could be eleclcd H.ouse Spealtct,
even if the GOP faill 1.0 seats ahy,
of wiDDIDa a uumcrk:al JUJority In
lhe Houac. A ~ apobiFpU•
1011 diPDiaaed Coelbo'a ClOIIJectur'
IDJI aa beiDa "iD lhc zooe ofpoliti·,
cal sclCDCC fictloD" and "on the
extreme edge of plausibility."
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0 191M t¥ NEA, Int.

a West Virginia license to fJSb In
lhe Ohio River. Of course, Emil did
u01 have a West Virgiuia lic:cuse.
He w~ fishing from the bank of
- -

Fred W. Crow

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the ~0 River. The &amp;~!DC wardeD
told ~UD that he .h~ VIOlated the
Iaw 5 ~
0 hio ver: e";I~~
10
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lC? get~ his vessel aod IIO With
hiDI 10 Pomt ~le858!'t to face the
charge of fishmg wtthout a.Wcat
Vlrsluia ~iceuse. Appateally 00
oue saw Ibis ~·Kapteiua
·
. f~-·
That eVCDIDg ""'
. IHIUI·
ly became alanDCd when ~ did
uo.t show for supper. Emil never
miased a mc;al . When 8 p. m.
arrived there was still DO Emil at .
home. So, members of his family
proceeded to visit File spot where
Emil us~y fished, :rt'CY diacovered that his fishiDg ~ was milalng. ~ were a few trema 011 the
bank which ~ that Emil had
beeo there earlier lu the day· As
time wellt by the·famlly and frleuds
were clftlviuced. that Ei!~il had
SODI.ehow f lipped miD tbc nver and
drowned. Emil could not swim.
The authorities were called ~d
they came ~ the same CODclus1011.
The only. thiDB left !O do was to
drag lhe nver to ace if.they could
locate lhe bedy. For two days this
was repeated many time~. but, DO
Emil. The whole commUDity was In
IDl uproar.
PiDally oo the tbinl day after bla
disallPearaDCC. Emil c:ailed heme 1D
tell &amp;fs rela!ives he waaln jail iD Pt.

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Coelbo aya GiDgridlla allelldy
worldua to Induce Dcmocntio
defections to the GOP, aad
acblowledged tbat ICJIIIe COIIIOVa-!
live memben of the plrty mlahl
bolt if Relublh:aaa ICl c:loee. Cocl•
ho adde·cf that lllcrc'a not mueti
President Cllntob c.ait do at IIIIi
poiDt 10 datu lhc defectlooa · .
"He' a &amp;Ill to he careful at thla
pomt." COelho said. "I liiiDt you~
atartllllkillg thoac pboue caDI ori
Nov9"
J~k Aadenoa and Mlcll•t
Bluateln are wrlten for tJalaej

,uneaaea.

B~rry's

CUIIng a blow-oat of II illlll)' d
35 aca11. "Tweuty·ftve ~) lC
lhc aat-olf," Wllill Coelho. ''Oacl!

votes.''

PleaaQt and wanted to come boolc. Emil waaawakc. He qreed 10 poc6
Ammgemeuta were made and Emil fll' me and the picblrel. Emil.wU:
was quite wen aad alive. His rcla- DOt employed by thc ICroter
lives 11a4 apparcutly paid a fiDe for
his release. Emil still smiled at
everyone, uotwitllstaudlug his
advaslty.
Earlier the West Virginia ·
authoritica felt that auyooe fiSblng
iu the Ohio river should have a
West Vlrgiula Iiccuae because of ·
their view that West Virginia
owned lhe Ohio Riva. There was a
later decision lu the Court that
reversed this declsloo. Emil had
ueverleft the Ohio &amp;bore to fish. If
he had, he could have fished iD the
pool desaibed 81 the low warer
mark of the Ohio river. The State
ofObioowuaaportioooftheriver
~
above !be low warer marlt. Sioce
.Emil's pictuJe Ia alao illclu~:
the lnatallatiou of dams the Stare iD IDY Wall of Fame. bN:ause of his •
of Ohio DOw owoaa porti00 of this uousual aaivltiei. Emil's brotherI:
river aud did at the time of Emil's Prauk, graduated with me In tile:
misforluoe.
PHS clan of 1933. He I!vca in;
The iojustiee of this case was Charlestoo,
W.Va. 1berc are sever::
that Emil KapteiDa, a law abiding ai nieces aud oephews of Emll's •
citizen was arrested for fishing
liviD&amp;. Ooe Ia Mildred l'llilliiJII;
withoui a liceDae llld ClOIIvlcll!d 00 a daugblll' of Charles ICaiMeluL ; •
a falae ciNqe. The IIIII thing about
U is au illdi'vidual liltc Emit
the whole sray waa that IOIDCOIIC KlptciDa that mate&amp; you 8llllftiCiate .
shoald liave called home when
Mclga Couoty. .
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Emil \vas AWOL.
Iii Ged we trust.
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lu 1974 the employees at tbe
r
-.,
~ 1 011.
local 1Cro11er store were 00 strike.
Editor'• aote • Loaa·tlme,:
On my. way from Syracuse to Attorney
Fred '!f. Crow Ia
Pomc:ro,. IIIOliced my friend Emil coutrlbator
or a weekly col1111111 .
Kapteiua aalcep In a chair. He was · for Tile Suaday
T~·S.a~l:
surrounded by strike posters. 1 .Readen .......... to applalld, ~:
immediately turned my car 8roQDd
lcbe Gl' - - 011 ID)' nbM
and lelUmed to m)' bouac In Syra- {tllctpt
reupoa or polities)
cuse to aet my csmera to take a
·-raaec~ to Wlite to Mr. CraW
picture of Emil. When 1 retumed .
. . oftllla lliwl..per.

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PRESSING THE FLESH- Mike DeWiue,
lt'PIIIJikaD candidate for U.S, Seutor, 1bak11
:1 ilanda with Melp Couuty rC~ideuta. De Wine
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::DeWine stumps in Gallia, Meigs

· "AD IQ Is a dubious IICX'IIIIIivc
!KXJII, Wiwpped up iD a nllo.that b.
- blled ...... h'lpo"!lblc _....,.
tion1about the equivalence of
lll!iJIID cxpcricDce and tbo opportu·
~ to len... - HeDry s. Dyer,
fonDCI~~the Educa-

.oDI!l'cado&amp;Servicc

ID ''Moby Dick" caiicd "white·
• .·
Amaicus are obsea~ with · ueaa" as a clctermiD• of Amal. OJ. SIJDpiOII, but DOl ~se a ~ power. Ra Ia ... iCIIIOO wily
·~ Ji:lll' athletic lcoo •u accuacd of three curreat boob on IQ··••ve
aurlleriDI
wife. Similarly, tatm over the cdtodoDal qeudi,
AIMricaDI have receudy become aa recent Newsweek aud New
G1l maed with IQ. but aot.bereoac Republic CCMn act-.id.
' • II a pl)'dJcpcCrk: clctcnnlnaat for
ill this era Of CWiiOWitli!el over
lacrit~racr. J'lhat ~tlntea multaliiFJ'IIilm In .o· CQ~c~e; wi'Aalcrbill. Ia diese illaes n •'M+(JI! .......
o!::::lll!! i lllnaadVe
-leD. ellWill,
..,...,..,
Vlriable.
t)l .ID the wort force. III:C-apecifjc
Rice.
.
COIJWsiswl h•..tdwiea, 0"4*21•
·nc former foodllll i~ aacl lllllrY odorath• for~ 11111
.televlal~ croaao.erlau't merely polltic:al c:onectucaa, II Ia 110 acdr
iccuacd ofllllildedDI lila wile. ·She deut dial rour dlallDpiahed ~
was the blldt Jcaeucl'a bklDd tro- ari 6ave wdJbcd lulmuiiiDCouliy
play wile. 'l1lc c:tiiCIIl pedonel lla· with thRie boob oaiq aad race.
' duadoa witb IQ
!IIL'#ly IFbool
"The Bcll Curve,. by llii'Ud
the meaauremept propertiOa of I · 1. Hem11teill and Cbarlcl Munay;
tliDdatdlzcd tell; 'tHi IIHMat the. "The Decllae of lateUIJieDCe lu
m:ut
aJ w1ik:b it~ bllcb IIC Amerial,'' by 8eymog' W. ltWlli;
1

.Is

~:;Officials,

journalists meet fQr conference
· wbloera. We Mell't," aald Fostoria
Mayor Batblra Marley. "We want
-10 1lriq ""P'ioo 10 other- out
dlae.
·
"If our tu doDan are goiDg 10
Columbua • Wuhiugtoo, we'd
lite to sec whether we .fCl a fair
• • for our buck hlct, ~fuUy,
wbocver Ia iD Colnmbua will real·
ize tlilr we • e!entd omctaia lave
10 loot out for our citizeua;" lhc
Marietta Mayor Joe Matlhews
said he does DOt expect major dod·
si&lt;lll10 be Dillie today.

· lobo .Robiusoo Block, co-publisher aud cditor-iu-chie'f of The
Blade lind the Pittsburgh PostGazette, baa suggested the next
step could be,p bus tour of .the
"Other Ohio" for four or five
days, with politicialls aud oewspa·
per editors oo board.
Bill Hopper, edllllrial page edi·
tor of The Repository of CaniDa,
said he hoped the c:oofereuce woilld
lead to a "clearillghouse of iDfor:
matlon" about Issues outside
ColumbuJ, Oeveland and Ciac:iD·

:.:t•Tbe Blade aud The Marietta

do it I dliuk we uced IIIOiher meet·
iDII to foUow it ap,'' be said •'II
cau't be oue mcetlna and theo it

He also said he hoped the cootmucc would oot aeate a speci8I
lnraat.orpressurc JIOUP·

pvc

aapaper

said.

·~

~~ are spoasoriug die evau.
"I don't
... Wlllt it to appear we're

..,
'"

•.J.

.

:'FDA:
warns against eating
Ohio-made potato salad
~:! '
~

, WASHINGTON (AP) - The
• govemmeut bas iaaqcd a uatiou. wide alert against cadua potato
·-Aiad that a Delplloa, Obio, DIIDu:lacturer produceS. The govQIIIIICIIt
'tald it may CODIIiD a bal:lerlum that
"tau cauac strioua or fllallnfectiOD.
J1 Couaamers ahould throw out
··auyy potaro salad made by I .t K
&gt;.Diatributora, lncludiDJ that market·
.&lt;eel u Yoder' a~ Muslald,
RcdaJriD, Amlah and De!Ullo, But; terfield'a Regular and M..FIId, and
J811r Muataad,brands, the Food and
Drua Mlntnulialloo said
The mater ICCIIIcd $01DC o the
produCt Oct. 21. But the FDA said .
, DCw Information SUIIcill all the
t CODipany's potato Iliad proclucta,
~·

.\lottery numbers

..,

.By Tile Allodlted Pral 'I The followiDI uumbcra were
·cboaeu In Friday's Obio and West
ViraJula kiaaies:

.

.
· · Buclceye S: 3·12-lS-21-2.4
The owner of oue Buckeye S
1
'iickct.with lhc coaec:t five-D•,J!Dber
·~mbiDitiOD Dla)' claim au OhiO
l.oUery priU of $100,000. the lOt·
"·h-'•
....ler)' PDI'O'uoccd _.,.y.
"" 'The tk:kct was aold at the Quiet
$top Food Mart iD Parm,a. ·
11• Sales for tbe Bucltcyc S game
.JL:.::O $320,369:
•
·.~ 226 Buclceyc S dc:ltets with
·~our of the Dumben IIC each worth.
6,201 with three of the
uumben are each worth $10. The
59;6911 with twO tJf the Dumben IIC

The Oli~o Lottery will P•Y
$513,4~.50 10 wloualio Friday's

Pldi 3 Nuai!ICn dail)' game. SaleS

I. .

snsJ93-~ ·.-e$83,200.

lt. ' ne

jackpot for Saturday's
l ~uper LottO Draw)Da wu $8 milWilD. ,' 0 •• I

. Dlity.·wUr
VPlGINIA
3·1-4-3 ·: . .

' r.! n.~~, 4: 5·1.0.9.

'

..

,

...:...

·~·

~~~-4.,..·~~"''"-~'IL-~ ~ -- ~ '
~- -----....;. -

-

f

._,

-

'**

!JicYcled IIIWld lrelaad; lie

. 110

Itinerary, earrylog oul)' a aaall
backpack, a few dollan aac1

•11

curiocity.

, He ~~ he bas a - . coa·
fortable life lhau maay d: the peapleiiCmetoohiswait.
In IDdia, he laid, • 'the llotMa
were 10 PDall that the Dial aad
boys would sleep iu the bara I
weotiO sleep IDIIIY Dighla fccUai I
was witb special people DOble peapie; and I WBI blessed' to be wldl

-.e

them.''
His ~ now Ia 10 teD rw'm-a
about thcm.

Elect Dan Davies
Gallia County Auditor
It's Time for a change in the auditor's office It's Time to Communicate and Co-operate
for the good of Gallia County.

·Qualified
• Honest
• Dependable
• Fair
• Caring
.. .It's time for a change!

On Nov. 8 Vote

&lt;;l

Davies for Auditor
Para For By Commrn ee To Ele ct Dav res A ud110r

Parge and Lors Sheets - C~arrs Mrs Monon DICkey

Treas 5St Deoble Dr Gallipol•s Ohio •5631

•

to a
on the

-

Pe.ople who recently bought
UDiabeled potato salad In stonls iD
!bose states should chedc to make
swe thai I .t K did DOt make II. the
FDA said.
No ooe auswered the telcpbooe
. at File plaot early today.

Dl. I. TODD RAGAN

Bank One Basic llonJe Buying Sentinar

·Oplameblat
would like to notify hla patients that he is no longer located
at the office of Gary L. Clarke •
Dr. Ragan Is opening his private practice at
458 2nd Avenue, f9rmerly Dr. George Davia' office.

Accepting ApPointments Beginning Nov. 1st

448-21.

Come get the good word on everything that ·goes into buying a home-at our
Basic Home Buying Seminar.
.
• Learn how to apply for a loan and what it takes to get it approved.
• Detennine what you can afford based on your income and debt.
• Fuid out about our Special Mortgage Program-for low to moderate income
families.
• Di~uss questions with local Bank ,One lenders.

U.S. Chamber
of Commerce

' Meet Bank One Real Estate Lender Sharon Smith, and other Bank One lenders
to get all the details on .Purchasing your new home.
.
·

OUR NAME

OPENS DOORS.

U.S. Olamber IJ not a rovmrmtnl~J~ef1C1.)

'

Basic Home Buying Seminar
Thursday, November 10, 1994
6:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
at
Bossard Memorial library
641 Second Avenue~ Gallipolis

*

("l7R

'

·

The U.S. Chamber 9f Commerce hu been earning the respect of American
business since 19!2 .. Today, with over 215,000 member companies, we're
looking lor highly driven Membership Sales Representatives In SOliTHERN
OHIO who con keep pace wtth our growth.
•
These key positions oFfer:
•
Protectedterrllorles;
*Complete training, both In the classroom and In the field;
* Promotlonslrom within. based on contribution;
*Great benefits package, Including: pald vacation, retirement pion, medical
and llfelnsuronce, ond a 40Jk plan;
.
*Excellent earnings potential . Many experienced representatives can earn
$501000 anC! more, based on commissions, effort and sales ability .
For Immediate consideration, please CALL Mr. Wayae Ducu, D11D1ct
M......,r, at (BG0)87U8C!f!, SUNDAY, Odober SOb- 8poa Md 11poa or ·
MONDAY, Odobel' S1 betweet~ S.. aad 10...
.
EOtM/F.

' ' Cab 25: 1-U-14-19-23-25

Illes - auch u chopp~J..!ood;
blltiDg In his wOoda or
· g for
baaa and ca!fiah iu the pond kceRhimhooiC.
'Quile llallesdy,ln the laatsevaa1 yean. I've heellln aort of laoladoo, ouly comiu&amp; out to do my
apcecbca," he aa1ct.
Today, be makes his living
through public apeatiug. Audi·
CDCCI sit J1llll u he weaves ta1ca of
the walk: of die BIOIIX 11rcet pug'
tbat lialelled 10 him reD IIDries iBID
lhe wee houri, tbal saw him safely
to the subway; the womau io
Frauce who apied the U.S. nag
stitched 10 his b1ckpack llld rushed
to give him a candy bar, as au
Amcric:aD soldier had doDC for her
40 yean before,
Newmau loves the stories and the amilea aud tean !hey pull
from people. He also uodcrstauds
how F. Scott Fitzgerald felt after
fiuishiDII his masterpiece "The
'

audthereatolhisllfcilouttkft.
''That 1w been probablk:,Y
biQCIIIInlule rlaht -·"
•
man aaid. ''That is always teMiJ11
at me. It' a a horrible lhia&amp; to fee)
tbat the IIICII of your life Ia beWad
you. ... 1 Ccell ucec1 10 Jel
to
writiug, Writiug for me Is thalpy.
If I Wl't walk U'OIIIId ~ woifd
asalu, maybe I WI Je-Crelte·.dle
101'1 of adveuturea, at lealt ia ay
imagiu•tioo."
·
Evcu ao, he takca
off
to travel and ellplore, II
lie

Indiana, Kentucky, Peousylvaula,
Michigan, North Carolina, South
. ~ llliDOis, Wiscooslu, Missoun aud Tennessee.

Pldt 3: 2-9-6
Pldt 4: 9.().8.()

;~

Ordiuar)' people helped him

IIIOUDd the world; OfdiDary people
bouJbt hla boot, "Worldwalk,"
allowiDa him 10 buy laud overlook·
iD&amp;Ihc Obio River. OrdiDary activ·

I lEW LOCAtiON I·

omo

Ulat ibe ~totaled St.'l00.990.50.
a;L Ja IIIli 'olhcr dlily piiiC, Pick 4'
Nilmbon· ·• pl!yera wagered

_

iucludiog those made since that
recall could be cootamioatcd.
The FDA said the (l!llBto saJad
could bave li&amp;teria moooc:yrogeoes,
whicb cao cause aerlous injury II'
death ID small children, frail or
elderly people aud others with
weakeued immUDC ayatems, aloo11
with miscarri•"CI or stillbirths iD
pregnant~.
.
The produc:ts arc tuown 10 be
dislributed In Ohio, West Vil'giuia,

Frldar.

.

-

.

~

I '- , .-aa .,..act~~ SL .

'

•

Slclps."

·~-~~lhe~IO~

$250: ne

··t

.. ··-·

Repablican," he lddcd. .

TOLEDO (AP)- A movemcut
to chauae the itate'i focus from
Cleveland, CiDdDDBii IIIII Colum·
baa muat spread 8aoas die state,
- .dlc mayor of Toledo said.
'"'l!ere's a recoplitioolhcre's a
ilfoot iD !lJiij to balance out
the state apeudiua patterns,''
'Mayor Carty Flnlthelner aaid Fri~ day.
:.
:..; FIDitbeiuer, otlier municipal
·~ aod
publlahcn
: ~-iiOUud die ilate, were expect:'!'ed to alteDd lhc "Oihcr Ohio" coa:~raeuoe IOday M M••m Bay Slllte

I

~

perspective, DOl just nauocrat or . with Wcifiie. We've dooe eoough
tiDiterlng," he added. "We need 10
Specifically, DeWioe sald .he get people; off welfare." .
will ·wort to cut red tape and
"I'm somcooe who for 18 years
bureaucracy, while developing has made a difference," DeWiue
hipwaya llld jobs.
said. "I've fousht for Obio. There
DeWine dfffers with Hyatt ou will be uo doubt I'm fill~lios for
isaucaofaimc,educadouandwel· Ohio."
,
fiR.
At. a father, DeWiDe said he is ·
"l speot 18 years fighting crime especially coocemed about the bur·
(81 a couuty pnliCCIIIIll')," he said. dlea famlllca face today. Taxes oo
"He's ~Dt 18 mouths taltiug families bave iocrcased 220 pcn:c;ut
aboutlt
.
iD20yean.hesaid
·
DeWine said he has worked 10
"I've been campaigoiog for a
cut plea begalnlng, aud wrote lhe year lllld my oppoDCot has fiDally
OhiO dnlllt~ver law aud llllllda- decided the campaiJID issue,"
Ully llalamclDJlaw.
DeWille said. "It's uot crime or
0!! wolfare. P~Wil!~ ~@!!! !!~ Jolla, but my plaid sl!i't"
.intends to do away with state
DeWme iDBde a ilille-stop tour
iDwlvemau and tum the respoosi· of lhe region Friday, whidl includ·
billty over to Iocal offiCials.
~ ~ area cities 81 Jackson, Gal"My OJIPOIIeut wants to tilllt:er lipolis and Atbals.

';,BJGEORGE ABATE
, Tim is S uw Stlllr
l POMEROY- RepublicaD !J.S.
.~Senate candidate Mike DcWiue
·i.aaid Friday he will serve the eutire
:..... DOl just Columbus or aeve, land.
·,, DeWiue aliiPhis wife, Frau,
,·:made a whirlWI'hd helicopter lOur
of the area Friday, just 10 days
· ;prior to the election. DeWine,
·:Obkl'alieiiii:DIIDigovemor, Ia IUD·
:••DiualllllnstDemoalltloelH)'Ml
~ '"We're DOt goiDg 10 solve all !he
:nproblaua iD Washlngtoo or Colum·
·l:bua," DeWille aaid. "But I'll be
J your arlyoeUc iD Washlngtlll."
•• Local off'JClala solve problema,
but DeWine emphasized he wlll
.iiiCip with highways, crime, river
. ·•lillllttia aad job aatioo.
··= "We IICCd 10 loot from Obio's

manJIIrca to cud u many daya u
he WI with a walt down the aloplng gravel driveway that c:ooi'N'ta
his hilltop hooiC In IOUthcnl Ohio
10 the rc1t of the world.
Halfway down, he pauaea It the
end of a 1111111 pood for u hila 11
he uecda 10 ahc4 lila boola, ahirt
aud~, thclldivea lutodlewater.
' I do It eveu wbal il'a ke-eold
becauac I love the fcelill&amp; 1 act
wl!eu I dive off lhe cb:t and iDto
the water,"· Newmau aald.
"There's that "1111 ~cold Wl!a' u
I~ swccpa over )'OU and that 110111UOD of deaccudlus down Into the
depths &lt;if the pODd where the flab
ate. It's a rulh; that' a my drug. It
makes '!IC f~ all the 111001 alive."
. The IIIIBIIe&amp; of death aad rebirth
ate uumistaltable. At40, the man
who spcut four years In the mid1980s waltiDg alone around the
world bas t1ecka of gray In his red
hair and beard. Uuchan11ed !• his
aeuse of wonder • life aad liviD&amp;.
DOW it oftco Ia joiDed by I feel·
mg of urF.ucy.
,
, "Ooe of lhe great lt»&gt;Ds from
my walk was I became aware of
how incredibly fragile aud short
life is. I realize that every aln~le
day,, every single mioute, you ve
gOIIO try Iii rcally live lw:a•uc it's
all over soquiddy."
He is remiuded of lhe awiftuess
of the cloclt• s tumiJig bauds when
he tries to recall some oC lhe details
of hia jouroey, whicb covered 20
countries, five cootiDeuts aad Jilore
than lS,OOO milea.
''What Ia SlnUIIC is - aad this
is what Ia IIIII- the walt hu beeD
fiui•hed for acveu yem." Newman
sald.-"To me, lr acema like It was
just a liUie dream I had ODC DigbL
That's how distant it~ now.''
The wall: ended iD 1987 where
it had beguo iD 1983 - his fami·
ly'a bome iD Bethel, Ohio. Televi·
sioo camaatl, IICWspapCI DbofoRraphers !lDd btiudreds of fans followed him lhe last few miles.
After four years of seldom
koowiug where he would sleep or
whether he woul,d eat, Newman
fouud fame DOl always to his lit·
lug. He appeared ou network.TV
shOWS but SOOD severed tiel With
the public relalious company that
hired bodyJiuarda to puah mliDary
people away from him.
"My greatest enjoyment and
thrill come from everyday people,''
he said. "They delight me 10 uo

ret

i

are

lntelli.gence -debate rag.es on~----....;..._..;,.,__----....:.

·sunday limes-Sentinel/AS

World wal·ker spends

Il l II

'

10 couaervatives within thdr own:
puty - or face au even furtbel'
eroaiOD of lhcir bue. He added tW
"the (elldeot Ia good • tbla llUf[
(irooiDJ out diffaeucea with rebel-,
lious Democrats). Bat from day ·
ooe it's aolna 10 be diffaeut lhau
the last two yean:• ·
;
"(The Democratic leadcnhlp)
will have to deal with them,
btQ!ntC if ibcy don't, the COIIICl'VIi·
lives w111 team up with Republl.
cans aud coouol everything:
Dqlmdlna oo the uumba of {lolt)
seats, you are getllng to the po~
where it could be lllte 1981-82;
where the c:ouservatlvca aud the
Republicans coutrolled the Houac

.'

Ohio/W.Va.

·.; :&lt;k&amp;obet 30, 1994

Democrats face trouble, ·win or los, '~.

•

'

I

}I

~

Refreshments wiD be served. Seating is limited. so caU to mal&lt;e """'rvations with
Sharon Smith or Debbie Rhodes at 446-0902 by N&lt;M!mber ~ 1994. The [:tlblic is
"'iJiii"' invited to allend at no charge. C:H994 BANC ONE CORI'ORKI10N.

~

'

''
I

�'
,

--Area deaths~----­ Gunman opens fire
Aiberta Holliday
GALLIPOLIS - A1ba1a Hollldly, 73, K204 CJurlklo Drive, Gen.,_
lla, died Saaunlay, Oct 29, 199411 Middleton Ellllles.
Bom Juoe 16, 1921 iD "-d. Ky., 111e wu lbe d"'C"'« of 111e Jaac
Lutbet Holliday llld Hazel Sblrley, .
.
Survlvon IDc:lude I spedal frieDd, Aua McCoy or PoiDt Pleaal,
W.Va.
She wu preceded iD deltb by ber pamlll; ODe 10D and Olle 1ilfer
Gatrudc Broob.
.
. '
FriCIICia may call tO to 11 a.m. Tucaday atlbe W111k F1mer11 Home .
Graveside services will be held 11:1~ a.m. Tuesday iD lbe Cenre,_,;
Canetety.
.
.
_,

on White House·;
Clinton not injured

BJ NANCY BENAC
-Allodlled rr.. Writer·
·
WASHINGTON - A man
armed will au usault weapon
IJXIyed bullellll die W!dte HOUIC
oa Saturday, hot no one wu
injured, wltneuea and pollee
reported. PrcaldeDt CliDIOII wu Dot
haamed.

Nellie Myers
LANGSVILLE- Ndlle Myas, 68, J..masville. died Friday, Oct 28
199411 Holzer Mcdlc:al Cadtt. Sbe wu an employee of 1bc
C&lt;lmnllllity
A1:tioo Agcocy iD ...__ llld a member of lbe DlllvUJe
HoliDcas OuJrdl.
•- u l
.
Bom Dec. 3, 1~ iD DUDiap, Kan., llle Wll the ilaugblrr ot 1be 1are
Reeves Mlller IDd Carrie Scvat Mlllcr.
Survlvon iDdudc four 110111, Ellia Myen of MJM!epnrt; Joe (Valorie)
Myen of C•Dipnlls, Tcm (Muy ADD) Myen of LqavUie ad Wllllam
(Mclllsa) Mym of Sbldc; OIIC bnltber, Cut Miller of Ame:ricu, Kan;
two siaten, Jaac:ie Miller of Amalcua and Hazel DuuauJ of P..aqxm.
Kan; llld the JllllllcbllcbaL
Sbe wu preceded iD ciCIIb by t;:cuts; her husband, Auc~Rw
Myen, who died Aua. 7, 1988; line
IDd ODC alllcr.
FrleDcla may c:al1 2 to 4 p.m. llld 7 Ill 9 p.111. Monday II lbe McCoy·
Moore FuDenl Home iD ViDIOD. Scnica wiD be held 1 p.m. ~II
lbe DIDvWe HnliD'II Churc:b with lbc Rev. IUct Maloycd o
J.
Burial will lie iD 1be DIDvWe Cemesery.

GaiJla-Meip

Eula Richards
CHESHIRE - Eull 01)'11111 Richuda, 82. Cbcahln:, died Friday, Oct.
28, 19941D Hobicr Mcdldl Ccotcr.
.
Bom Mardi 23, 1912 iD Mocpo Coaoty, Ky., daugbt« of 1bc late
Jolm IDd Rcbcccl O'Neil, abe wu a hnm•'l•"kcr. Sbe wu prec:cdcd 1D
deltb ~ holbllld, Jcuie D. Craycraft, IDd 11« ICCald buwnd,
ururvlvlDJ are four lOIII, Ballard Craycnft of Bilbop, Calif., Dam11
Cntycnft IDd Llrry D. O.yaaft, bod! ofCbcabiP:, llld Cod! Plul Rk:1or;
two daopla'l, BODDie HarrllclD of Coal Grove, IDd fJI;rahefh Remy of
CbcaN~; IDd 23 plllllcblldrCD llld 39 pell·gJ'IIIdchildrea.
Sbe Wlllbo pm:ecled lD dellll by I dlugbter, Rill, and by five brodlen IDd two llslen.
•. FriCIICia may call II die WIDil Flmeral Home &lt;11 MoDday from 11 a.m.
1111W 1 p.JII.; wileD ICrVicel will be bcld wltb die Rev. Dellny Callum ofllCiiiiD&amp;. Blidll will lie iD Gravel HW Cemetery, OlesbR.
.
·

·Alexander Sammour
..

Bylf8nden 1111 for cover u tbc
81J1111W1 lired about IS ahota from
tbe sidewalk O!lllide tbe Wblte
House renee on Peansylvaola
AveDUe, bullbcli two DICD IICkled
the JDDmaD. Ponce toot tbe man
IDto c:uatody.
A Secret Service officu, wbo
aatcd not to be ldclltlficd, said tbc
wapoll Wllan AIC-47.
OIDIOII, just bact II the Wblte
House after ao overniabt.!':.f!'t
from the Middle Eul, wu
1
Ia tbe residence. Cblef of Staff
Leon Panetta lllld Cliotoo was
watchiDJ 1 football same at tbe
time ad "heard tbc aacb."
"He's fiDe" Panetllllicl "He
heard tbe same tbln1 Ill of us
beard, wbidl-lbc aacb."
Asked about Clinton's
demeanor, Panetta said, ''He
WIID't allakeD II all. He had been
oapplnJ IQd tbeD had oue of tbe

' pmcs oo." .
·· Hl1laay Rodham 01o1011

·'-'~ rr- Wrtm-

Hospllll, Lopo.

: Mlddlo Blat diplmw:y PreaicW
: -cJb!IOtl oblerYed, eveiy wOld 11
JIC:lllth!JIOCI for ill real IJICIDIDJ.

' Pn.llll the WIXda JdlidJ apotm

• (,;!lllfotnla, aoll Paoetll alid
· Cl!eiiCII CliDIOII Wll DOt heme.
Reporters OD the Whito HOUle .
Iawo rao for co- wileD die ahota
J:8118 oul, IDd PIDeCia rullled to die
preu arei to ace wbat had happeocd. At leut OIIC bullet piemld I
wlodow of the .,.as IOOID IDd 1
ridjJe wu visible in 1 Delltly wall.
Secret Service aaents advised
reporren 10 keep clown.
Lee Brooks, 24, or Newart,
Obio, a custoolei -.vice lepeaelitalivc rOi' tbc CSX Ral1roM, llld be
wu "mii!IJ oolbc aiciewa&amp;: 10 or
12 feet from the suspect wbeo be
PUlled out bla weapoo. "He aimed
lt at tbe front steps of the White
House and started shoodoa,"
Broob said.
He said tbe normal crowd of
tourists wu 011 the sidewalk, but ·
~ 'it took about five lhota before
tbey actually realized wliat wu

.duriJia OIMaa'al!b:-llllima ~ Ita
;pozzf:IIJ wllethcr proarcu wu
··I'CillJ mlde ID peace lllb.
·

LOS ANGELES - Consider
Ilk without newspapers. No
amlcs. No apollllaii'CI. No held·
I111es or horo"opes, ADd foraet
about. pcddna to see If you picked
lbcwiDDIDsLoaoomohen.
No TV 11st1D1s. altboup thel
wollld III'YeDO )lUI'JIOie. You Cllll
Wllldl televlsloD.
. No eve;:n newa. No Molld4y
N1ght Foo
• No~~ '!'
Stlamt Strttl. No
. . ou Clll t
even Wild! NYPD Blllt to see bow
llearttbrob David GIIUIO II written
out of the lhow.
.
.
Foraet about ,radio. You may

. Bom Nov. 26, 1944 ill Jen...dem, be wu die 11111 of lbc lllil Gccqe
Sammoonod Evelyn FaWI Sam-. wbo survives.
SurvivlDJ iD addlliou to bla liiOiba arc bla formrr wife, Baablra Sammoor of Bidwell; tbree daupten, Lisa Moaodl of Columbus, and
CLEVELAND (AP) -:- Ponce
:Alelllndrla Sammour IDd ADaenu Sammoor, both of Bidwcll; line luive
ldzed an UD)cwdcd •?2-eaJJber
110111. Alexander SlmiiJIOUI' BldwcJI, and Ocoqe Snii!O'II' and lflrold , •
mol~
IIIII ~ IIChool.
S• ew,\lloth of Cohabua;- a•wl "~'; .S .. .. ... A-""riaAutborldea IR: not sure wbo
Kc~Dccroit, Midi.
•
brouabt tbe weapon, wblcb wu
.
wiD be
Sllllllay ill lbc WiWa Funcrll Home, wltb 1bc
found llllldc Lou:.. Puleur EJc:meo..
.Rev. J - Luallcrlliq Barlll will be iD 1bc Ccotcoary CemciCiy. llry
School ou Friday. Two atu·
Frialda may call Ill die fuDcnlbcmc SUDday from 1-2 p.m.
cleull were suspended peodlug an
lovesdJadoo. Studeou from
klndcrautcu tbroup tJW:d grade
altaid lbc acbool.
''This board hu bad eooup
ud
we will not tolerate any
RACINE - Clareoc:e Richlrd "Jack" Saraeol, 81, Racine, died
more,"
school board Prealdeot
Wcdoeldl)', Oct 26, 199411l Holzer Mcdlc:al Cenler ill Qtlllpolla.
Lawrence
A.Lmupkln llld Friday.
Bom Oct. 16, 1913 iD WabiDl GroYe, W.VL, lOll ot tbe tare EdWIId
Lumpldn, fiiDked by school
and Emma Bays SlrJCI!l, be - I redreclderJrbiDd for AEP Rlva' TniDIboard memben Adrilll Mlldcmado

• aw.._llc :
a_..,...-•W
dip towwd •

SHOOTING SCENE- Pulice ofllnn

r._,......
Wit•••••
........_lie_,_ _.In

WUiplllllllll • ... - " ".....

(AP)

:

street 1D Lafl)'cCic PR.
:
Seerct Service qeoll aeardllD&amp;
tbe preu brlefina room found a
bullct JocJsed ill 1 wiDdow l!lllh O!i
tbe outside wall of tbe White
Houae IDd aecurcd It temporarily
witb ~~~~~ nmoval for. bal~
Jiltica
8· A llllllliOIIId hole:
wltb star-like cracks l'ldiiiiDJ out
from il, WU c:leirly villble lD lbe
Jlua 11e1r wbele tbc bullet IociJcd. '·

Simpsoo, not 11bout ewrytbill&amp;.'' •
Amoaa tbose dlamiued last
week: 1 woman wbo watched
recently videotaped episodes of
Beverly Hilll, 9inJO IIIII Melroll
Place wltb COIIIIIICII:ill aDd oewi
brclka cldcled· 1 ma wbo viewed
cartoons with bls J1'811dloo; 10
admitted addict of 1 Spanlah-laol
111118e aoap Operll' 8· 6'7-year-olll
WOiDIII wbo ~·t rea1at 1 Westcro acarrlna Badllal StaiiW)U; anil
a mao who watcbe4 Tile Micke~
MOUlt Club wltb Iiis'atrlfrleod't

to stay away from Ill mecb llld
out of bootiiOia aftet die rclcue
of a tell-Ill boot about Simpsou
and his slain ex-wlfr., Nicole
Brown Simpl"".
Ito bu excuacd anyODC wbo, no
matter bow sliJhdy violated bia
Older.

'

Tbe judJe will Jive proapej:ll

acceu 10 IDfonaatioa iD ooe area

- tbe Nov. 8 elec:dous. He 1111c1
Friday bls staff wu compllloa
eleedon-rellted newspaper clipPiDII for poteodal jiiCIII.
Seldom has a judae ordered
such extrellle lsoladoa llefore a
jury lleJlos deliberadn&amp;, let aloae
before l!eiDIIMllll ID,lepl ~llpCIII
said. And llllmY waJdcr If It s JIOI·
sibhi' to follow IIO'a lustructlons
and maiDtalD 10i11C lallblaDce of I

~:~m. extreme to me. I;·

cbildreD
,
·~ lliOil you em ~~ope ror ill
ood·llith effort," satnormcr

~eputy

:J;:-

Clarence Sargent
'

.

n.:...~~d: 1o Raveoawood, W.Va.
.-...-..

I!CeiiiJ lmpouible.

WHEN IT COMES·
To CHOOSING
A MEMORIAL,
THE CHOICE
SHOULD BE

Betty Walters
OALLlPOLlS- Deny J. Walliell, SB, 727 Foon11 Ave., Oelllpolil,
died Fd!Jay, Oct 28, lllbc OwdJroot Care Cenler. Sbe wu 1 houlewlfe
aDd J!l!'lllbcr of die WIIIDIII of tbc Mollie 1665 ot JICboD
Bom Nov. 2. 193S ill Loopc:re, W.VL, lhe w-s .lbc 4PJ)IIer ot die
tare Willllm IDd Edna McCall KIDJ.
Sunivon Include OIIC ~Bdaa ~ oflMDIP'Ib; OIIC
1011, J!mmru w. BOidc of Ga
; _ ...... GaiidiDc Mooie of New

Cude, PaiD; four~ lnddleep'Cil~

f.m.

Frlcods may c111 6 10 9
M&lt;llday 1t die wnns Fuucnl H011111
wbele ICfVIc:ea will be bcJd I p.m. 'I'Dclday witb JICt f!DIIiaml oftldll.
IDa. Burlll wiD lie ill tbc Bulfllo Jdcmoril1 Palt, Botrllo. W.VL

~

POMEROY - Susie KoeDiJ WlndoD, Poaieaoy, fOIIIICidy of Hender1011. W.VL, died Sllllnlay, Oct. 29, 199411 Veletllll Memllrlal Hospi111.
She Wllapl=t factiXy warbr ID Pciot PII ant, W.VL Sbe llleDdcd

. tbc PoiDt Pie&amp;- Ciudl ofC!Idat.
BomJaoe 27, 1902 ill Melp Coallty, abe Wildie daupter of die 1aac
Vllllld J.1i1* Fidl KoeoiJ.
'
Sarvivon include 011e siatcr, Edlel Koeoi&amp; Of Mlddlepolt; IDd tbree
bMbcn. WilbDr Koeuia of Mlcldlepon, Heory ICoeDia ot Cambridae IDd
Leo 1CoeDil of~
.
She W11 plececled ill delllb by her Jllnlllll; ller hPWnd, Slllllie Win- ·
dell; two aWen. Frec1a Iricler and Rossie Warner; IDd four lllotbcn,
lfldeY, van. Willy and Elmer Koeuia.
·
Prfeadl may call 6 10 a p.m. MoDclly • tbc ·EwlalfOD Funenl Home
wbcre .. ricel will be lleld 1 p.m. 1'Dclday wltb die. Rev. Odell Maoley
oftldii'IDI- Bllrill will be In Moaod C:c llry.
,

lancli JOVCfiiDICIIt spokeal!1!!n
Uri Dromi said Cllotoa ud
~,... ljJIMiwtly "are ot lbc

&lt;lpi•b tbll tbcrc ' - In fact bcco
~L Bat we ..ve already
ben Ill diOie tlliDp be Aid."
.Bf.lbe time Olni!J! rctumcd 10
WlllliDpla oa Saturday, he, too,

-·t

oflnaocent

)lelllllc.

· 8owever, tbe adminlstrltloo
11ici it·was siplfice~ thl1 SyriaD

... ' ••• dartnc. 181 'Inc wllll S.adl AnW. u Kilt&amp; Falad, rtpt, at Kine Klll1ed Mllllary

•

Partic:lpats are expected to
, DUBLIN, lrcliDd (AJ') - Tbc
J10Utlcll elite of IreiiDd llld tbe lllllll wec:tiJ 10 cJivwa ..,... bell .,
JRA's political plrlDCn listeocd mmcl1c die c:Ialms ot -l'lolts.friday u Omlao W'IIIIJII, bla face - iD NOidlem lrclllld, who Willi
!Jiu'hcd IIIII bla WOlds c;bobd with .., "•'•M•h• ties 1D BrilaiD IDd lbe
,aDOtloo, llllbd about !be oecd for Clmlll bonier, witb die dl1ma of

,pcaa: iD NOidlem lrc1IDd.

~tlalll: CllboJjc

''Wbeu you have stood It an

;91Z11 JD1Ye IIIII laid 10 rcat boac of
·Jf*r boac IDd flesh of yo.' fielh, it
'" • _.....,., lllllk ~"

cllic! Willllll, ~ Proteatut retired
hurt

·· - fftlm Ni:itbtili lrc1llld

mlDcd ., Dillie lrc1llld.
.

MiulDJo
too, wu IIIJ Britilb ·
... ve to die foaum. wbidl

1ep1

wllole 19-yar-old diopter Wll Wll bcld 8l Dublio Castle.
tilled lll1987 by llllrilh RepwNITwo mrmbm of die pro-Brilisb
Ulalcr UnioJIIstl h"MMcd ill I letiCi
Caa Alray bcmb.
: Tbc lelllcn of 10 lrilh polilka1 of proiCil oullide, but rcfuscld to ao
)llltla. u well u Sinn Faa. die
in. Niael Dodds. a adiuamcmbcr
.
of
die hlld-lille DciJIOJCIIIic UJiioD.
~:fiii'
•. poll~cl!'aed Frl•
· ated11Cia 1st Party, llld "ao ri&amp;bt·t-IDklna
uniolliat would touch tbe forum
Uotllwow, - Y of die
l!ld aelaocd 10 mec1 willl j:; with I 40-foot lllqe pole.''
~
. Ollly l.oJII Aldc!dlteo Protcsllllt

•In Stock
. •FI'HDellvwy

.Adllu eDipbuilied bls ammit-

bctwcco bla aovemocut IDd Sinn
Fein would go ahead bcfOie Christ·
mu u )(IIJ u the IRA liWCC held.

meot to Sial Felli IDd the IRA's
IIIIIJIIMdlDJ goal: Bridlh with·
draWII fftlm NOithCfD lrclllld. But

Katlit Miller, lllu111ger

Pd. lor by Comm. to Elect Gary T. S.ne. Richard M. IbM, T-.,
1.34 Stele RL 218, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Choose from famous names like Around Town, Sabino,
London Fog Pendleton, Sweetree, Levi's, Alyssa Carr~tmy
Jess, Vand~rbilt, Haggar, Arrow, Saxony Hall, Stacy A ams,
Cotton Club, Jantzen and Palm Beach.

982·2588

VINTON
011118 County Dlapbly Y..-&lt;1

HOMECARE MEDICAL

Jay I Joe Moo,., MIIUI(IIf8

155MIIn at

.t ill\ ~
'e/. ,

QALLJPOUS'448-7283
Toll FI'H uoo 451 8144

U T II

JACI&lt;SON 211-7414

II f.

C)

~

,..,

We are extending a sp~cial invitation to our .local cus~~~~
and friends like yourself to come early to thiS LIQUID
- .
SALE where you will have th~ opportunity to shop and save on
our entire inventory before many items are sold out.

J I Z t: U f.•

I. f. l

,. ,

Now watch televisi.on
·on a Fl~x-A~Bed. ...
~

Be Slll'e you have
on hand for

SPECIAL BONUS TICKETS will be awarded to ~ustomers
returning this letter to our store Thursday (3rd), Fnday {4th),
and Saturday {5th). We ~ill b~ giving .away many fabulous
prizes during our special pnze gtveaway.
.

~1;_,\'

.,

nextyeat:

With a Holiday Savinl!li Plan
from Bank One. you won 'I have
to worry about having enough
money for holiday travel.
entertainment or gift-giving

We will be closed tomorrow (Monday), Tuesday and
Wednesday to prepare for Ulii liQUIDATION, S~LE •
. be
.sure to see our advertisement in Wednesday s newspaper.

-/ICAU MIDICAL SIJHtY

I

Provide resources for the increased demand
placed on our courts · and law enforcement
agencies. The rights and welfare of person
and property must be protected.

A GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE will begin Thursday
November 3rd at 9:30a.m.! Prices will b~ Sl~shed on EVER!'
. SINGLE ITEM of Men's aild Ladie's clot~tng In our store. ThiS
~IQUIDATION SALE includes ALL suitS, slacks, dresses..
sportcoats, shoes, shorts, shirts and MORE.

POMEROY
I

BOWMAN'S

·BOWMAN'S .

I

BANE

SPECIAL INVITA1'10N

. .Jl

· Gallipoli{·•"'!!:72:R.1¥:~~~
Jacksonloll Fre,

•

~~~

-I

~· ......,..,-+.

.

··

..-:.......,...__

---•

( II''

f/, /.u.,d \1:: lJIJ.,''

To startyour Holiday
Savings Plan, stop by Bank
One today in Gallipolis,
Pomeroy or Rutland. It's the
besi way we know to stock up
on {"'J)erfor.holiday gift
.
govtngnext year.

Whatever it takes:
MemMnltC

be to BRING ll:ilS

. P.S. Don't miss the opening oJ our sate.and remem r

,.

'

'·

0

just deride how much you
want to save and we'll aut~
matirally deduct tht•appropri·
al(•amounl from your Bank
Oneeht•rking an.·ount.
Weekly, biwt't'kly or monthly,
whichever you prefer.
·
Your money wi II earn a
comgetitive variable interest
rate from the date it's
deposited into your Holiday
Savi ngs account

Keith Thomas
Owner

.

I )1: I 'I

nexl St"ason .

~· ~

I

0

(ea4)' 446-1418

Sincerely,

'

GARY I.

QA' IIPOUS, OHIO 45881

Mllge County Dllplay Ylfd....,
Pomeroy.Maon Bridge ·

•3 Yt1r Complltt Wirranty
•Fre. Demonatritlon
•S.In • Rtntal

s. Me.lteti,Judle.

.

ELECT

of

oarimeliatt deter·

..Nortbcm
Mill!!!fr;-~ !be debate were
'a two main proBiitllh pda.

leader or the moderate AlUaoce IOiiiC of bla WOlds binted Ill amr.ty, pllllicipllcd. Alliii!Q'! is lbc )lllllniae llld I'CII'C'PIICDl iD lilht
ODly pmy ill Nutbaa lrclllld witb of tbc IRA' a Sept. 1 cease-fire, a
sisaificaot support from both acsture matcbcd Oct. 13 by pro- ·
OJ!NlliQ IDCl Protestln!S.
Britiall J*U!ilillrY Jnqll.
Aldadice clcfeodcd ProiCstrD1S'
· Adlma noccd ''tbc C0D111C and
riabt to lilY away liml lbc fonmi geocaOiity" W'llsoo, IDd Slid bla
llld lol*ed - , wileD SinD FeiD CIIIDIIIc paiNed lbc way.
leader Gerry Adami pl'liaecl bis
"We must build to&amp;etber 1
deci&amp;loa 10 come.
peaceful fularc, tbrouJh clialopJe.
Gordan Wllaoo, 1 Protestant tbrouJh eosaacmcot IDd tbrouah
appoiared 10 tbe ~sb senate iD errommodali&lt;ll, tbrouJh a bellini
rec:opltloa of Ills COIIIIIIilmeot to JI'OCCSS," be said.
foralveoesa, best captured the
BritaiD is prormliDJ cautiously,
bearliiDd minda of tile IJIProxi·
c:alculatlu&amp; tbll it cu't afford to
lllllelJ 350 polldc:illll IDd dlgni- alienate Protestant uoloaisll by
lllieiiD die main cutie bllkoom.
making cooc:essioos to SinD FciD
Botb aldcs of the politicll-reli- 100 opculy or quickly,
JICIIa diYidc nr:edeciiO •'rile alme
Prime Minister Jollll ~ said
IIIII' inmllrlty," lie Slid.
last week tbatexploretory talks

354 SECOND AVENUE

UFT CHAIR/POWER
RECUNER

TeftiiiA/~I!Ida.lel

.

&lt;11-

ceatn Ia Saadl Arabia FridaJ. IUpt rear b

Thomas Clothim

M..MeWborllr; bodl olOOWIIQty.
· KWi Ill} A.lloll ..+hllldLIID
C,lllvn, botb ofViletiL

.,.

s..dl l'rlM a...... BilloSaliU IIdia&amp; • ......,..
pnter far Kq Jalld. (Aft , . - II u
I' 1
lied lni&amp;JXetl!f far PI Melt
(AI'),

MIDEAST MEEIING- Plwldeutlll ~

relevisioa later lep1ayed tbat portiou of tbe news coofe~ace Ia
wbid! Ojntoa revealed wlllt Auld
had told llilll prMiely.

Dear Valued Customer:

Marr1ap lk:ellla .
Dcidra G. L)'lllllllld David W.
HOU88, both of TbUIDIIII.
· Tamara M. BDiot and Mil:bael .
0.1\.fr()mlril,lloth·ofGilllpolll
Palty J. Wllllatnlllld Jolm A.
McGuire, bod! ofGeJ!ipolls
.
. Valerie L. Cooper llld Rcald
D. Mlyl, bolbaf~la
Jllllce IC. Lee IIIII Sltlpllco S.
llelry, bolb of Oe!'q II• •
BlltJita I. Cllry ml JeD! D.
Rocchi, bot~! of Qilllpo!U.
. · Amee K.. Foaer llld 0 . L.
Reel, bodl of Rio Orlllde.
. ~ B. lildlllld Brilll H.
Bllte, botb ofiCar.

Susie Windon

IIIIJawy.

Pne man's forgiveness example for peace forum

(f,mydccision shou~l rclkd
your wishes. it isthcchoiceofa
mcnlOI'iiJ.
As a IW.:~ ufAges I::lc.l.r, we .
~now I10W important choice is.
That's why we ollcra wi.le range·
ol'onconool.J.. M&lt;lll~e~tbility to ·
l"',.,.)i7.c !l... n. Vo$t·us """'· .

For That Added
for ao opcnlor'sllccose
Feeling of Self-Confidence
John C. SimpkiDI, 30, Lelld, .
•V.rlety of Color•
W.VL, $100 plus COUll costa for no

Probate

sllllday'}'imes-Sentillel/A7

~s; ·

S88. Galilpolls, SlOOpluscourtcolta

.

.

-tbs before the fnill tif CJiD.
lOll'a ¥ililwcre obrica .
If aytblDJ, tboeJ~ CJiDIOU'a
viait ICived 10 biplipt die pmblaaa, ]llltil:alariy aboal lemlrlam.
And it didn't provider za:es
10 lsndll, wllo are •lnua after a
llllpoflinllllt!l!ecb
Pill oa tbe defCIIIlve by hard·
~) die SJrim lcadcr
~!=led be Wlllled peace
Will llnellllld tbe rcll· q11e1tioa
Wll ....... llllel Celt die-.
More trouble.=nc, tbe AmerJ.
Cllll felt, Wll IIIII Auld aefasecl to
publidy em' ' ICii'DilU 11111:b
IJiiDit Israel. lastead, Aand .
deoied IDY role lD telrOiisll! IDd
bcaredJy llici tbc chlrJa llaiUU
Syrja wae tile I'CIUlt ot Ill CYIIfJict
wilb lne1.
Clin10n later Slid be wished
Auld had bcco fOitln••IDs.
He excused Auld by "'IDL:
Syriao lelcier
DSed 10
lalloews CODfenillca.
"I re.,et tbal PmicW Auld
did DOt lite tbc OftJIIII&amp;Iity 10 aay
ill public wbll be aid., me iD private, about bis deep ~t about
tbc ku
lWei, IIIII !*·
ticuJarly tbc bus bombina." Cliotoo Slid, refcrrioa 10 tbe recent
bcmbinJ ill Tel Aviv th8l tilled ZZ

played down lbc Syrlao atop. He
didn't "'"'li&lt;&lt;l it cbioa 111 llriYII
aswy Ill die While HGuc. And
iD Ilia weeldy rldio addreaa, lie llid
IOl of ler&amp;'Orilm. ·
DIIJ lhll it Wll time for Auld to
AmcriciD officlala felt .Auad "follow tbc "uaple llld ·l upillOMd CJIDIOD !I(ID!':thillg for J1111*1 tiOD ot 1111111 llld lOida''
bla preadac &lt;11 1bc llDe and Jcnohc
"We lllMic propaa 011 Ibis q,
aedlblllty Ill Auld's autholilllia lllld we'l CODiiDP 10 do our JIM to
reJhue.
briq peace to this louJ·trDublcd
Yec, It wu impouible to 11111k J*lollkworlll," llellicl
CliniOD's dlaappolnlmc$ u be left
Two weeks before electiolla iD
Syria. A111aic111 oftidals ot!•l~'llcd wllidl D '"" 1111 far bc1vy a.,
1D trylDJ to put tbe beat fiCC oa O..,.leizled Cll die trip u 1 blpwbat they admlaecl privarcly . _ pufilc OftJIIIIDility to oel :lillie tile
1111111 moves and technical stepS ~.accord the United Stites
tbat llll&amp;bt have a QID!ulatlve~ llelped broter between lsnel IDd
o- time.
lOida
The admloiatratloo credited
In alllldc.for-ICicvisioa clly FriAssad with saying reassurioJ day, die presidellt 11so went illto
thtoa• about Israel that be bad 1bc Kuwait deacrt 10 Sllure AmerilleVCf llid before when, ill fact, he
c:111 troop11Dd iiiDe DCW Wllllin8s
had made sueh Jtllemmta.
10 Iraq.
Secretary of State Warren
From tbe oatael, Wubingtou
Cbristopber, for example, told said It did not expect a breakreporters that Assad had never tbrouRh witb Damascus. At bcsl,
:

SnthcdMJiccol·a onemori;ol wiU
really beyours.
.

Gallia·County Court .News
opsaior'slic:eDse

• CliDtoo'a vislt .IO Syrian Prcaideot Hafez Auld's bi1bop pataa:
- die tint atop ill 20 ,an by 111
Amertcu president 1o 1 coaatiJ
la8idtid by WublnJl(ll u 1 IPOD-

rcllliou wltb land." Tbc seaellry apjwed tUal llbact wileD a
JqiOIICi ibowed h1m I DeW1 dipPlDI quotiuJ Auld uslua thole
c:actwuda lftcrlllb witb alniOD

You as.

boanl memben, teldlen; ictmlni•· Teacben Union, which orJcd the
ln!WD, panlltl, SIUdeDII, miDJs11en· dlatrlct 10 use armed pollee olflc:en
IDd pollee dill will explole ways 10 andmctll deAeCIIII ill ldloob.
,

.

.

lf!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!l

~arvivon iDdudc bla wife of~ ye111. CllriMae RDbiiiCJI s.pu of
RaciDc; 1 daupter llld 1011-ID-IIw, ADD IDCl MIX
::::::'.:=:of~= scbool could.DOt baDdle.
.
and diDplel·lD-law, Ric:k IDd Debbie Saraent
• ~ " rlsiDJ violence In :t:_boola.
Tbe board's propows Fnday'
Jfllldc:hlldrCIIDd 011e peat-graclloa. Also survlvlo&amp; are two
· tmmediare lftlll will
·
differed rrom IDiliatlves 11188eated
aod.~~ll arc bclo&amp; hiDdlcd by tbe Stralpt·Tucter. .t Roush ·
• Formadou of 1 tut force of Wednesday by tbe Cleveland

S*c:.:;w;;:: b

u.s. Attorney Generil

Carol Cbaae, ·now a PeJili.Crclint
UnivmltY Iaw 'profeasor. .
.

You're auppoecd
to auapeod 'your interest Ia the
• A mcelinJ IIClt week between llDIIlao rille?" ·••ted Bay Atea
school officllls, Pollee Cblef criminal defense attorney Ted
P.atrict Oliver IDd Safety DileciDr Caa•u·. "I'm DOt l1li'C we Wlllt 1
William DcllihaD to nwine Wl)'l jury who could. Do we waot 1
to improve ponce patrols of tbe buDCb of robots?
areaalrolllld achoola.
"I UDdentl!ld what die Judie is
• A review oftbc district's diad· tryiDJ to do," Cuamao added.
Pllu!aY polldea IDd a loot Ill Wl)'l "But"lle abould have been more
to dell wltb ltudcall ldmtlflcd u spec:lfic. It lilly be 11101C felldble to
safety riska.
1natauct tbciD 10 avoid aeportsllbout
Teoaloo between students IDd
teachen It FraokliD D. RooaeWit .
Middle Scboolarew so lotenae
INDEPENDENCE
Thunday tbal:ZS of lbe lchool's37
tead!en refused to 10 to wort Friday. City pollee IDClachoolleCUIIty
aod the Rev. S':fheo Sulllvao, '&amp;uardl were caJiecl to quell a dlaturbaoce substitute teachen at tbe

of

pollee •

AnaH oiliWt ... w~ :
Roue Sahrd•J·
Aid ..., aaw • - pall wliat ;
appeand to be a
allowt ~IliaCI '
t.ewanldle Wat WJat, 'Wilen PI 1 ldnt CM+e'•alloe lllaallld
car DD W•Waafa'•

·aroot!'

ambat school vlolenee.

TbciiiOililtrlauiDIJJMofOiaIOD~s trip llal week - bla qln
Syria, reaa.•Jed as tbe key to a
coqadliwlw .,........... thllp!D
Syria llld LebiDou at JICIIlC wi1J1

1"'J -l.

tactfcd the shooter and Jmoc:kcd
bim to
.. tbc aroud, "and tbco tbe
cops showed up," Broob Slid.
Secret Service lnvestlaaton
l!a&amp;lJlcDiD "
sealed oft' the Wbl H
brielln
said tb11 afttt ClllptyiuJ !'00111 afttt the Inc~:: kdt f~
tbe weapou the alle1ed ullilaot bullell IDd eumiue the damaRC.
beJ&amp;D to run. "AJ be wu nmnlna. PoHce bloctcd off tbc two-block
be was trylna 10 reload, try1us to strctcb Qf PeuuayiVIDil Avenue ill
get a IICW clip illto It," he said. At froot ot lbe While HOUle, althougb
tbat point two mea 1D the crowd 1 lli!all crowd pabaed11a011 die

DOl, for any reuou, step foot ill a
boob~.
.
Ooc 9tbcr tbloa. Avoid all dU·
ClllsioD about OJ. Simpeoo,
All. IIlia Is the start reality ~f
Supenor Court Judae Lance Ito 1 ,
strict rule for proapec:tive juron 1D
SimpiOD'smilnlcrtrial.
Tbcy proiJably kilew before IIIey
showed up iD COUll that If aelected
for the jury they mlgbt lie lcxted
up with Cldl otba' for -tba IDd
r.:d juat $~ a day for lbc priV!Ie&amp;e·
ut ~bele ill lbc A!JDIIIODI fiDe
print did tbey 1eam they mlpt be
virtually cut ?ff ~society.
Ito, presidio&amp; over a mediupec:tacle, tbls montb ordered )II'OIIIeCII

Nation/World

.

~2!~'!.!!!'!:..OJ!.'!!!!!PJ!!B£'!..w!tJ.Iks during Clinton trip a puzzle

lsplation stark reality for Simpson jurors i

~y D~OilAR HASTINGS

. Ocruber30, 1994

%

w.a 1n

,.,.reac
'
ts •&amp;0 VIOlence
•I
8 oaru
in Cleveland city schools

. . GALLIPOLIS - Alel1811der Sammour, 49, WIDdlDJ CJerJt ~ve.
Coi1Dbul, died Tbdnday, Oct. 27, 1994 ill HockiDJ Valley Commuulty

·.:

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J

•
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October 30, 18M

Pomero~ldd~alllpolls, OH Point P11111nt, wv

P1g1 A8 Sunday Tlmll Sentinel

GOP control of Senate hinges on lossups
By JOHN KING
AP I'CIIllbl Writer
WASHINGTON - Ulllc lllllJ'C
lhan a week before ElectloD Day,
Republicans have a clear opportunlty to acize Selllle conlrol, with
the balana&gt; banging 011the survival
skilla of Democraak: lnaimbc:tlllin
seveml Jossup races.
Tbe GOP needs a net gain of
acven scats to wrest the majority
from Democrata, and a state-bystale aoalysia of die 3S Senare cooJesiS suggeata Republicans are virtua111 certaiD to gain at leait four.
That iD itself wool~ nndge the Senate, and Preaident CliniOD's agenda, to the righL
Beyood thai, however, the outlook wu murky beading iDto the
fmal run wed!; of campaigniDg. An

exuaordlnarlly high number of

joked recently, a refcralcc to Vk:c
President AI Gore's tlc-breaklllg
role, 11 presldellt of tile Senate.
Of the 3S Senate na:a, 22 arc
for acata now held by Democrats;
13 by Republicul. Demoaats currcntly have a 56-44 cdsc. l!ld have
held the majority aiDce 1987.
Most ripe for Republicans arc
seats now held by Democratal.n
Maine, Ohio, Tennessee and Arizona. lD each case tbe GOP ~~aers wbo 1ft ahead !IRI also dlatinctly more COIISCI'Vative lhan the
Democrats they would succeed
From there. the GOP, 10 CODIIOI
the Senate, would need to gain
three more Democratic acats, and
perhaps more if ltloaea any of liS
scats.
Much of the competition is iD

na:a wee ca~~ldacd tosaups, Uld

a major unknown was whether
Democrata bad time to revcnc a
turnout dynamic that atjlreacnt
appears likely to benefit tcepubti-

ama. . · ·

"SCvcn la a IJiJIIIIDlbcr but we
have a very good shot at w1DniD4
seven or more in the Senate,'
Republican National Commluee
Chairman Haley BIJ'bour said iD an
iDrervlew. "If an of the cloae O!ICS
go one way, we will eitber fall just
short or gaiD die majority by a few
seats."

A SO-SO split after the Nov. ·s
elec:tions la hirdly out of the queation, either. ''Old AI might be
apending a good deal cA time widl
us," Seuate GOP leader Bob Dole

die nine llMlCI widl DO IDcumbenll
running. But the final partisu
breakdown bioses 011 cloac races
fcan.IDJIIOIIC of die Seualc's better-tn~wn Democrats: Budget
C01111111uee Cbalrman James SasS«
of Tennessee, 1991 upact winner
Harris Wofford of PcDDSylvanla,
and Virginia's Charlel S. Robb.
Two other promlncn« Demoaata
appeared to move off the danger
list In recent days: Edward M.
Kennedy of Massach.uactts ud
Dianne Feloatein of CaJ!fomla.
Heading Into Ibis weekend,
Republlcana wee leading iD every
race for a seat now held by the
GOP, bot a few of those races wae
tighL
One, for the seat of retirillg Sen.
David ~berger in MiDDCIOla.

week.
And a Serb mmmander threat·

ened to renew bombardment of
Sarajevo if fovernmenl fm:es cootlnue thelt offensive. Gen.
Dnaomir Mlloacvlc: said he bad a
duty to protect Serb civillau from

"Muslim fanatica" and would about attacks by Mustim-leil govorder the sheiH"'I of "aclec:ted tar- ernment troops underscored the
gets" In Sarajevo whenever tbe slrikina role reversal brought about
govCIIII!ICIIt mounta a new llltllek.
by the government offensive near
U.N. peaa:tecp~na oftic:lal&amp; sug- Bibal;, iD whicll governmentlroopl
gested the threat wu bluster, but captured tanka and mortm as their
warned Milosevic, the commander foes retreaJed in dlwray.
of 1roop1 beliegiug the capital, that
The Serb army rctaiDs an edge
any reprisal ,.ould risk NATO ID heavy weapoory, but la believed
alrstrites.
hurting for fuel following the
'lbe threat of aintrikes lndliced August cutoff of supplies by ill forlbe Serbs to stop shelllng Sarajevo mer p!llroDS iD Sabia. 'lbc governIn February after a two-year bar- ment has more soldiers and bas
rage that killed thousands.
beco steadily acquiring IJIOre and
in Brussell, NATO approved a beuer weapoos thanks to holes lD
hard-fougbt compromiac with the the international arms embargo 011
United Nations Friday allowins an parties in former Yugoslavia. ·
allied warplanes to act more swiftly
'lbc United States introduced a
- and effectively - asainst the resolution in the U.N. Security
Bosnian Serbs If necessary. Tbe CouocU Friday to 11ft the embargo
plao requires fmal U.N. anmval.
on tbe Bosnia government unless
The Setb general's complalDta the Bosolao Serbs agree to an iDlernational plan to end the war.

Fnmce. Biitain and Russia - all
permanent members of the council
- have opposed lifting the t.JIIbar·
go.
"The strategic balances are
slowly tUtins agaiDst the B0111ian
Serb army," LL Gen. Sir Midllel
Rose, commander of U.N. peacelreepen iD Bosnia, told S~evo's
Radio 99.
Several U.N. officials have
exprcaaed coocem lhllt die government's battlefield succesa will
eDCOIJI'IBe it to acet further vlctories and mate It less flexible in
peace negotiatiooa
''There may come a moment
when the Bosnilll govemmcnt percelves It la iD their 1Dterest to proceed back to tun-scale w111," Rose
said. That, he slid, ! 'wonld be a
catastrophe."

RE·ELECT A
COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
WHO PROVIDES
STRONG
LEADERSHIP TO
GALLIA COUNTY:

I

•,

By SERGEI SHARGORODSIC.Y
. Aaoclllfl!d rn. Writer
USINSK, Russia (AP) - On a
tiDy, nm•med river lD Russia's F•
NMb. die Wiler flowed bial:t Friday, tblct widl a 4-indlllOIIIIDg of
pll, dirt and half-melted snow.
Two men In a motorboat
. aaapcc1 the surface with spades,
mOVJDg die oily mess 10 the center
of the river as a wet snow feU. Oth-

ers pushed the oil clownstre8m with

wires, where still ochers dircclicd It
towards a filter from which the
water floally emerged.
While the workers waded
tbrou~ oil sUets In the forest and
tundrii, shoveling aallons of oil,
Russian officials IC)ectcdclalms by
Western officials that the oil spifl
from an old-and leaky pipeline is
ao envlromncntal catastropbe.

Estimates on the sl:ie of the
splJ!, whi!.i! occurred about6 mUea

said It wu nearly 9 milll011 gallou.

south of the).fcllc Circle, vary
widely. U.S. Energy Department
officials In Washinston said It
could range from 4.S milli011 galIons to more than 80 mllll011 aaililns.
Yekaterlna
Murova,
a
spokeswoman for Russia's MinIs try for Emergency Sl.tuatlons,

5pWCd? It's liilpiiiilllle to

* Gave Sworn Testimony Before The Puco In Support Of
Installing Scrubbers At Gavin Plant Which Created New
Jobs' At Gavin And Retained Jobs At Meigs Mines

* Established An Emergency Management Agency Office

Lu:!,

Courage and honor.
Area service men 111d women made the
supreme sacrifice by giving up their lives in
combat for their country. As Vererans' Day
approaches, area veterans called for all ciuzens to remember the deeds of the military
duriDg peace and war.
But,= all prayed 1hat those who died in

I

In Gallia County Which Organized The Efforts Of Area
Agencies During Winter Storms &amp; Floods Of 93/94
,,

City, Townships &amp; Villages Bringing Grants Totaling
More Than $4 Million To Gallia County

RE-ELECT

this kind of ~~" said cleanup
worker Muolr
_yev.
Galeyev and bit collcaguea are
well-diggers wbo wee called iD to
wort In a small tributarY of the
GALLIA COUNTY COMMJSSlONER
Kolva River north of USI!J&amp;k, a
1
town of 70,000 people located l---2:~~1-!!:!!;:!~~~~~!!!.e~~~~
1,000 miles IIOl1heaat of MOICOW.

f3 11.\ROLD C. :\10\TCO\IERY

Aristide leaves for firs·t visit home
By CBRI8 TORCIIIA
paramiHtary JUDIDCD loyal to the
Auodated rn. Writer
former military government, may
PORT-AU-PIUNCEo Haiti (AP) pose a secuiity threat to the pn:si- President Jean-Bertrand Arlstide. dent.
mille ·his first trip to his home iD - Arlatlde' s bouse was fll!sacted
three yean u U.S. soldiers stood after die coup. He bad .been slcepoutlide and .-my helicopters ina iD tbe palace while his bouse
overbead.
was faed up and a accurlty system
Arlltlde. who bad been holed up lnstaUed.
In the ~!lllonal Palace since tbe
Also Friday, Smarct Michel,
U.S. military engineered bit Oct. Arlatlde's choice for prime minis-·
IS reiUtD, flew In a UH-60 Black- ter, submitted his credentials to
hawk helicopter Friday to bla mod- Parliament, officially begiDniDg die
ern, multf-atory home In a ratificalioo process. .
11msl!ackle neighborhood oordl of
Michel, a S7-year-old businesathe dty.
,
.
man, JRIC!Ited documtallaneatinB
"He haan t been 1D bit hoole for • that he meets tbe conatltnlional
three years,'' said Arlstlde requlralienll for die job, lncludlos
spokeswoman Vivien Brates. "I beiDB Haitian-born ownios proper, thiDt that he's going to stay for at ty and payiDJ • .
1eut the weekend."
Buta 110111a:, sprakins (II aJndi.
Durins Arlalide'sacven mllltha lion of anonymity, said Michel's
· iD power follow~= 1990 elec- pactaae of mater1a1a wu missing a
don, die Roman
lie priest of document proving bit DlllllgCIDeDI

"The br!IWI men, living and dead, who
struggled htre have consecrcued il far tibo~e
OIIT poor power to add or detract .... It isfor us,
tht living, rQihtr to be dedicated here to tht
unjinishtd work which they who fouglll here
lumthus!arsonqtliy!ldvanced." -Abraham
Lincoln, Geuysbwg Mbess

* Gave Strong Support For The Pumping Of Meigs Mines
To Save Jobs Foi Gallia County

''Who knows how much has

measure

B.

October 30, 1884

alorouS
eterans

* Served On Integrating C!)mmittee Representing County,

Cleanu'p workers shovel oU in dark, bleak Arctic

~itltes- itntintl Section

wu considered a touup, pitting a senior White lfouac political
COIIICIVIIIlve Rcpubtiam Rep. Rod lldvilcr.
Grama against liberal state law'lbc Jltdy GOP Salalc plch.,a
mater Ann Wynia.
In Maine, Ohio, Tennessee and
And Demoaata moved within Arizona arc four ot die alx ~
striking distance of two GOP "CIIIIk ICIIIIin whldl DO incllllbc:tlt .
lnallnbents, Sens. Slide Gorton of iD IIIJI!Iing. 'lbe olhcriii'C iD OldJt.
WasblngiOD IJid James Jeffonls ot boma Uld MldJipn, ~ RtpubVermont, although both were slill llcana are slightly lil!elld and dead
favaed.
even, respectively, entering the
"If we get die movement iD die final run wect of CIIIIP"IgniDg.
final 10 days that we had in tbe
StiU, even if pc;:;ect In these
past tO days, Ibis 1s goiDg to end up
contesta, Republicans wonld have
being a normal midterm electloo, to topple at 1cut one and, if they
and that means losiDg tbn:e or four loae a seat or two now· in their
In the Senate and 20 to 2S tn the banda, perbapl u many u three
House," said T011yCoelbo, the for- Demoaalk: lronnbentato capture
mer Callfomla conaressman who Is die majority.
-----------,
:-

Bosnian Serbs try to prevent·battle
loss from becoming war's turning point
By DAVID CRARY
Allodated rr- Wrlt.r
SARAJEVO, BOIIIia-Hc:rzegov·
loa (AP) - Scetlng to prevent a
stunning defeat fn northwest
Bosnia from becoming a turniDg
poiDt iD their clvll Wll' aaamu the
Muslim-led govemment, Bosnian
Serbs 1ft trying to regain the upper
bl!ld.
Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic on Friday called for a
counteroffensive to recapture territory lost wben Mustim-led government troops overran a key Serb
military complex near Bibac this

Along the ·River

f:.,

of public funds was abo¥e
reproach. Because offices are
closed for the weekend Uld Monday and Tuesday are Haitian bolldays, the lapse was expected to
delay parliameot' a coosiderali011 of
Michel's candidacy.
Still, the Senate and the Chamber of Deputies are expected to
approve Michel's aomioation. He
Will replace c:aretater Prime MiDlater Robc:tt Malval.
Meaowbilc, a dozen internatiooal pollee monitors arrived in the
southwestern city of Les Cayes,
exlelldiDg their million to Haiti's
third-largest city.
'lbe deployment wu the tint of
nloe that will cover all of Haiti's
major populad011 centers by Dee. I,
said Paul Browne, deputy director
of the lDII:fD!doall Polki MooltorinR Force.

actionor ormedbeyondthecaDofdutynot
be forgotten.
.
Two area men werccited with the highest
award- the Congressional Medal of J:fonor
· -Middleport's&amp;lwanlA.Bemlell!lldJimmy
G. Stewart
Stewart, a nalive of West Columbia,
W.Va., valiantly died May 18, 1966, so bit
squad might live.
A reiilf&lt;ltcd North Vietnamese company
aai!Cked ~Y B, Second Baaalion. I21h
cavalry, which was manning a defcnliVC'pcrimdii.
. 'lbe swprise onslaught WOIIIded fi~
members of a six-man Army squad c:aught m
the directpadl ofthcenemy's thrust. StaffS"'
Stewartbecame alone defender of vllal terra111
-virtually one man against ahostile platoon.
Refusing to take advantage of a luti in lhe
firing which would have permitted him ':"
withdraw, Sgt. S!ewart elected to hold his
ground to .-otect bit f~en comrades aild
prevent an enemy penetra110D.
As the full foo:e of the platoon-sized main
aaack S1IUCk his lone position, be fought like
a man possessed- em~g m~ after
magazme at the delemlmed, on-charging enemy. The enemy drove almost to his positi011
Uld hurled grenades, but Sgt. Stewart decimated them by retrieving aod throwing the
sren::g his ammunition, he crawled
under intense fire to his wounded team
ben aod coUectecl ammunition they were unable to use. Far past exhaustion, he held his
position for four hanowing hours and through
three assaults, annihilating the enemy as they
approached and before they could get a foothold. As a result of his defense, the company
position held until the arrival of a reinforcmg

mem-

platoon wbich counter-attacked lbe enemy, now occupyin!J foxholes to the left of
Sgt. Stewart's posiuon.
.
After the counterauack, his body was
fowxl in a shallow enemy hole where be
!!ad advanced in order to add his fue to that
of the counter-aaacking platoon. Eight
enemy dead were found around his immediate position, with evldenee that IS others had been dragged away. The wounded
whom be gave his life 10 protect, wee
rccovcrcd and evactllled. Sgt. Stewart's
indomirable courage, in lhe face of ovetwbelming odds, stands as a tribute to
himself llldao Inspiration to an !DCII of his
uniL
Stewart's mother, Ethel StiU,said her
son's pliant fight was indicative of his
•

• 'L

canno\~~'t mauer who, be was always

willing ., help others," said StiU, a Middlcpolt rcsideiiL NYou dOD 't blow bow
many times I've sat and lootel! at his
picnftandllllled. Every time I beiii"TI(lS"
I want., c;ry."
Despite her wishes be had not died,
Stitt said she remains proud of her son.

Ifit wuri't bthe courage of men and
WOI!ICillike Jimmy Stewart -we would
not enjoy our freedoms llday, said Andy
ot the Feeney-Bennett Post 1211. '
Many are fO!JOUell. But they're not
forgcaen by their buddies or family
members," Dilley said. "There' s too many
people 1hat 1ft heroes in their own rillhL
They won't tell you, '1 saved his life.'llut
there's many 1hat have dooc iL"
Many today doo't respect what has
been given to them, Batey said.
"The llas Iql!eSCDIS our country," be
added NJtmeansa wonderful family; freedom. It lets me voice my opinion. Go out
of the country sometime and come back,
(The fias) is the most beautiful sight there
is."
Peacetime vetA:1311s- even todayalso showed tremendouscourageandduty,
he added.
Through the years the hernes are recognized in hard times, but in good times
are forgotten, Batey said.
"There are some men here that have
really seen hell. But they won'tiCU you
they'ye seen heU," Batey said. "Peace is a
wonderful thing, but you've got to gtve up
something for it"

Bltez

---·----------..i'i--.

walled compound,
usiDg
palace . -...
humble
origins lived
iD histhefamily's
only for wort. Bralea said recently
the JJ8lace "reall lsa't bit style."
Aristlde fie~ Into exile after·
army leaders ouated him from
office in September 1991. Posters
and wall murals of the populln
priest have sprouted around the
capital since the military rulers
agreed last month to band over
power.
Despite the U.S. occupation,
·officials are worried that some
Aristide opponents, indudlns

WINTER POOL COVERS
&amp; ACCESSORIES

6 Months Same as
Cash Financing
That's April1995

'

ENGLAND
Not '1199"

Clearance s44444

Table w/Chalrs
Not '499"'

Clearance '19915
Over 40 Dlnettea On Salt

ners
Living Room Suites
Bedroom Suites
Dining Room Suites

FREE FINANCING
FREE DELIVERY
FREE SET-UP
ON MOST

Cli.ristmas £ay-Jll.-Way
wit/i. 'lJec.t:m!Jer 24tli.
'])efivery JtvaifaOCe

Pay Cash
·Get Extra S'lo Savings
Checks count too .

All Clearance Priced

'

Choose an~· term
from
•

29 :to ,9 month~.
,,

'

l

Minumum deposit: $ 5QO.QO. This CD is automatically renewable. Penalty for early withdrawal.
:A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this iasue, but is subject to change.

OliiO Valle Bank
-berFDIC

--

~-

- .1

..

. i Carry Seltctlon1
NeW·UHd· Discontinued
, ~I at Cash i C~rry
Warehouse.

BHiroom Suite
Spltct ,

All Lamps .at least·

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Over 40 Blclrooma In Stpck

Suggested Retail

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•

OPEN
Saturday 8 a• til 5 p•
S•nllay 1 P• til 5 , ..
......, .... til • , .
Fill DELIVERY &amp; 'SIT UP
.,
FREE
I

11 .

VETERANS'VAUANCE-Mlddltport'sAmericuJ...egioiiPostisumedlfterdlearea's
lint two World War I callllltles,Joha Beuett, alleft,ud COI'IIttiu FHDty. Below, die Melp
Couty M - dllpla:Jia n-ber olmeclala,COIIIIIIelldaliou and other memorabilia rro.111e
m~ wan lDdMIDalhe Penlaa GuU War. (Times-Seatinel pb~ by GeorRe Abate)

I ,

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�Explanations offered for
Crown City phantom house

alllbewindows.~andWaiaa

b7 .Jla Sudl
Special CCJrreiiiiOIIdellt

DAWN GILBERT AND BRADLEY BELVILLE

.Gilbert-Belville

THURMAN • Connie and . majoring in Medical Laboratory
Tenna Gilbert of Thurman Technoloay and she will further
announce the engagement and
""•r!!I!OO In research.
'
upccminJ marriage of dleir ~Blll.villc is a paduatc of River
1er Dawn Marie Gilbert 10 B
y Vallcf Hi&amp;h Scbool and II peac:otJuon Belville 1011 of Donald and. · ly employed at Lulglno' s Inc. of
Robin Mlrtln of BldwcU.
Jacbcll. The private ccn:mooy will
Gilbert is a graduate of River be beld Dec. 23 and lhe couple will
Valley Hi&amp;h Scbool 1m11 is BII.CIId- reside In Rio Grande.
Ins the UnlveniiY of Rio Grande

ber

. In 1952 and 19S3, Crown City
.made the nalimal news wbeu a
"mystay houac" waaJqn led aeon
onlbelawnoflbeMclhodiJtChJKb.
Lulber Sulbers,lbc:u in bis 80s and
liviog 300 fccc
Crom the church,
rqJClriCd that fer
six weeks be had
. aeon a "pbanrom
bouse" near the
church.
According to an
interview with
SUibendalcbythe
Columbus Citizen, Sulbers slated,
"Sometimes it (lhe house) dissolved
or moved away after beina there."
Sulberslriedlootingwithooceye
atatime,butthehouacwaalllilltherc.
Fmallyhewaaconvinceclhisoldeyes
were not playing tricks on him.
"It waa always the same - a ooc
s!ory house without windows cr
door," he said. 1'here always waa a
IOto 12footshrubthatthatwasvery
green in frau of !he house."
Later,P.C.GarewoodandG.tield
Wa118sawthehouseas!heycamcout
ofamid-weekchiuthservicc. These .
two men saw a two S1!!JY ~will!
large windows down and smallcrmes
up.
, A soft yellow glow came lhrouldl

Gallia community calendar
SUDday, Oct. 30
...
GALLIPOLIS - French Art
Colony baunled bouse 7 to 9 p.m.

enrs 7:30 p.m. New ute Lulheran
Cburcb.

BIDWELL - Layman Day Sezvice Mt. Carmel Church at 10:4S
a.m. and 2:30 p.m. with Gospel
Recruiters.

GALLIPOLIS - Canaan Missionary Baptist Church weekend
revival 7:30 p.m. nightly Oct. 26
lhrougb 30 wi!b Charlie OemeaDs
and Garland M0111g0111ay.

•••

•••

•••
•••

I

VINI'ON - Deer Creek Chun:b
7 p.m. Oct. 28 through 30 with ••.
Rev. Buddy Kelldrick.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Fallh Baptist
Missionary Conference Oct. 28
lhroup30.

POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
Anonymous Clean and Free Group
7:30p.m.

•••
GALLIPOLIS - Community

.Suppon Group for Grieving Par- .-- - .. -

the appearance of the ''phantom
house" as an omen !hal God would
bless the wat of the chun:b. The
chiD'Ch was in the midst of raising
money tobuild a basement and Ill add
a modem heating syiiCIII.
AftertheiJliiCifliiiCCOfthe "phanrom bouse,"CXIIIribulionsiOihiswcrk
inc:rcaaed grcady.
Some skeplica c:laimed that •
cxplaJation c:ould be found in lbe
fact that alllhrcc IIICII who saw the
"house" wac elderly. Tboacpersons
claimed that "'ircd eyes" play tricks
Oil people.
·
'lb&amp;n was ooc other possible
expilnation and very few in Oown
Citylbc:u wnuldhavelhoughtofiL At
the tm1 oftheCCIIIUry, thcminislerat
the Methodist ChJKb in Crown Oty
W&amp;spuching aaermoo that quoted a
text about a house, not made wilh

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Debbie Drive
Chapel 7 p.m. Oct. 31 through
Nov. S with Deaver McCarty and
spec:ial singing.

bands, eleiDal in the heavens.
The minister quored the vene,
smiled, and lbc:u collaprd over the
pulpiL Members rushed to his aid,
but he waadead from allllllive heart
luack.
·
Noooctnows,ofcoune. butapmc
suspecled that the miniller IOIIIC SO
years before had been the finlone 10
see the house.
Sofaraswctnownoonebanec:n
tlie "phanrom houae' siDcc 1953, but
who knows but what it may make its
third appeaiiiiiCC or aet of appearances lhiJ cenrury.
. The houBc always awearcd iJi the
twiliaht of late October days:

..
·-.
.

The tradllional Thanksgiving
SC8IOII twtey dlnller of lhe Rutland
Fue Department baa been set for
Thursday, Nov. 17 81 the Rutland
Elemenrary School.
This dinner bas been a projO!i! of
the depaitmcnl for many years' so it
is, iDcleed, quite a lladiuoo. Serving
rbis year wjll start af S p.m.
Advance licbts arc $S and mal be
purchaled from any member.o the
departmellt cr at Quality Printing iD
Mi~ and Bil110115 and Bows
In Pomeroy.

Jamea Saudi Ia a special CGI'Te•
spoudeatoltbeSIIIICiayTianea Seallnel. Hill llddi'CII Ia: 65 Willow ·
Drive, SpJin&amp;boro OH 45066.

C.._,..,...

Bloc••
5oth
Annfver•i1J ·

•••

•••

Every 1Ucaday evening, realdents of the houalng facility meet
in the activities room to cur and
martblocbfcrlheiraeations,and
some 161o 18 people have attended
!boae seialons ,over lhe put lhrce
wetb. Tbe aewlng Is done at other
times al the convenience of eacb
. participult
Double-knit pOlyester material
is needed to help wl!b lbe project,
so if you bave any scraps of the
material ahoul the bouse, the rcaidents of Maplea would be happy to
lake lhem off your bands. Blocks
.· I
for the quilu aod lap robes are
i
done In lhrce- and six-Inch dimcn·
sioos. so you can see that you doa't
bave to come up with yarda and
yanls of maaial to coalribule. Tbe
group also can use monerary doaalioos to be used fer purchasing the
45TH ANNIVERSARY· Mr. and Mn. Cui Cooper of44 Sumbatting needed.
.
merwood Dr., Bidwell, celebrated tbelr 4!tll ,..,.,lng llllllv~
If you can help drop your mate- .
Oct. l!l. They an tile (18NIIta ol Tlloaw Cooper of Mldclleport
rial or money contribution by
·• · IUid Sbaroll Rutehilll ol G•Uipollo
.
Maples cr call Evelyn &lt;ladr; at9927022 aud abc will make any
arrangcmentsiiCCCI!sary.

...,_,.to ...

••••

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

by Bob Hoeflich

PHANTOM BOUSE • Tile CroWB City Melltodllt Clllarclll
dates to 1172, bat Ia 1HZ 111111 1953, ..,_ aw 1 "plalatom
rtpt ., ... d!vdl•- Yllrwi' tlllla pldare. It - •
1J1111er7 tlllat U. aenr bela lllequtd;y uplelped.

GALLIPOLIS - Bell Chapel
Chllfth 7 p.m. Oa. 23 lhroup 30
wi!b Rev. Bob Thompson.

...

-·

Action PropmL

•••

-

Beat of the Bend ...
of "Maples," a sen1cr c:lllzcn-bandicapped houalns facility on Mnlberry Helgbra in Pomeroy, arc
doing.
Residents arc iD the process of
making quilts and lap robe&amp; to be
diltriburcd to the Ulldcrprivileged
througb the Melaa Melholliat
Cooperative Pariah and poaslhly
the Gallla-Melga Communlly

•••

Tuesday, Nov. 1

Join us in remembering 1!1!! pa~t and
celebrating the future for George and
Mary Block on their 50th Anniversary
Nov. 6 w~h Open House at Vinton
Town Hall from 1:00 to 5:30p.m. They
are the parents of Angie, Linda, Bud
and Terry Block.
You're both very special.

..

MR. AND MRS. TOM RUNYON

:

MiDDLEPORT - A reception

Tbe public is lnviled to 8II.CIId

lowlnaa 7:30 bymn sing at the
:: Middleport Churdl of Christ.
.
'
The minister of the Bradbury
~ c1tun:b of Cbrilt is retiring and he
~ and bis ~ plan to move 10 Flori~ da. Tbey have had a six-year min: istry at the Bradbury Cburcll.

held a farewell diDDc:r fOr tbeit paslor and his wife. Tbe couple was
rrcsenrcd with a plaque from the
.A.M. you~ aroup, along with
numerous cards and a money rrce
from churcll members and friends.

;ArM hours

The first bow and arrow in a
recognized country was used in
Egypt 7,000 years ago.

~

SHANNON FRAIIKUN AND BRANDON PRATT

MeiJa iUJh School and il
employed u a certified nursln1
assistant at Pomeroy Nuraina .ancl
Rebabilitalioo Center, Pameroy.
Her fiance is a graduate of Ncr·
wood Norfolk High Scbool, Norwood, N.Y., and Is employed aa a
glass mccbanlc for Canner Glass
SysleDIS, Cbarloue, N.C.

; machine, 24-bour ATM card in
~ band. Surprise.
.. ·Banks around lhe country are
: curtailing cash machine hours
• because of the risk or gettina
; mugged at night.
:~.
A spree of 30 robberies at auto~· · mated leller machines in Tampa,
• ~Fla., prompted Barnett Bank to
~ close some ATMs these at 10 p.m.
• and some in neighboring SL Pele:r&amp;: burg at 7 p.m. The machines
: ·reopen at 6 a.m. In Tampa and 7
: a.m. in St. Pele:r&amp;burg. ·
~ "The benefits of convenience
•·were outweighed for safety rea·.·:sons," said Robert Slic:kler, Barnett
·• spokeS!JIIIII.
.' Other banks keep C8lh marhinca
· in low~ttaffic are1u closed
.;·overnight WeUs Farso Bank closes
::ATMs in downtown San Francisco
in !be evenings.
: "Durlna the day the area Is
~ filled with people, but 81 night it's
· deserted," said William R. Wip! jlrecbt, director of security.
.. 'We've had some ClOIIIplaints from
:-;,oople who do use the machinca at
: night, and It's a toup IJ1Ide.off, but
:;..we feel it's beuer 10 be safe."
• • One hundred seventy of
: BankAmerica Ccrp.'s 3,400 A'I'Ms
l lhroughout California have restrictl ed hour&amp;.
i: Barry Schreiber, a professor or
rc:riminal justice at St. a~ State
, University m SL Cloud, Mlno., and
~n ATM crime ellpert, said that
:l.fewez than I pen:eDt of the nation's
~s.ooo cash machines have restria-

Handmade Holiday Treasures X
Craft Show

IOD

and Rulh Ami Brown of Vlnloo.
He Ia a 1988 puate of North
~Hlp Scbool and 8D employee or Goodyear Tire and Rubbcl.
Tbe open churdl weddlng will
be Nov. 5 at Trinity United
MedJodlst Chll'dl In Por1er. .

.Gilbert-Dillon
- Kathlene

Scbool.

Dilloo Is lhe aoo or Gale and
Daulhy a.- of Crown City. He
Ia I pldullc of SoulhWCIIerD JDgb .
Sc:bool and au employee of 1
.
~~. . .·ofLlo}'d RamiiWOOCI ~jmm .
Tbe
weddlag
will
be
In
May
· ~- ·
IIIII Vqlnla Ply of 'I'IIUIIDIII. Sbc · ~99S.
.
·
.
Ia a JD11u1e of Soudlw eall:m Hlp

Ollbcrt of Galllpolla uid Micblel

Ray Dillon of Crown City
announce lhcli engagement and

Spurlock-Robson
THURMAN - Caiolju Ann
Spurlock of Thllfllllll ud Jake
Edwud Allen Roblou auo1111ce
their euJagement and upcomiDJ
I • llllllilp.
.
~ '
Spurlock is the dauabter of
Clalrlel W&amp;IIOII Sr. and Carolyn
SpDtloct of Patriot. Sbe Is
--,-

employed by lbe Oal1lpolla Dewlqmeolll Ccaler. .
Robaou Ia tho aoli of Lelsaa ·
KstNet Oilbcn oiOalllpolil.
.
Tbe wedding will be lu May ·
1995 at the laome of Lelua

Ollberl'a.

r;-

• AoiPrllarJ n....... On SWI
• 2Utr. Elwfiiii'Y Sorvlct
• DWoct.Billing: llodaolllodic.W
llldAI!nN-

l44&amp;·72as

I

Tol Frtt lliill.aoo-&amp;1144
70 PINE ST. GALLIPOLIS

part 100.

Tbe show bas been In rehemal
fer !brec wetb, wbicb pvea cast
members plenty of time to polish
up their numbers before show lime.
Advance lick.ers for this year's
musical will be going oo sale soon.
This II the fust year lbe the show •
has been staged on two nlgbrs. It
bas been ttadltionally just oo one
nigbt- the Saturday following
Thanksgiving. Due to the ovedlow
of people last year, it was decided
10 stage lhe production two nights
lhiJ·year -on Friday 'aod Saturday.

AlmoSJ NoV!IIJlber. 11!14 $!!DIIDCf

flowers still blooming profusely. Is

this lhe calm before the slcrm? I

hope oot. Do keep smilinx.

M.D.

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT
(304) 675-16;1-5

TRAVEL

TIPS
FROMAAA

-~~.Lugenqr
Linda Carney
'For those of you thai would like a short one day trip to shop and
enjoy the Christmas lights of 'Wheeling's Festival of lights' at
Oglebay Park · we have lhe tour for you. Join Brenda Roush
December 4 for our one day t(ip to see !he lights. The coach is
filling fast so call !he office lo reserve a space. The coach will
depart at 8:00 AM anp return aboul 10:30 PM. Cost is only $30.00
' per person.
We have a unique experience for you to enjoy on November 4.
The 60-foot Yukon Explorer lounge coach owned by Holland
America line Westours will be parked near the City Park and the
AAA Office. Everyone is invited to experience the sigh!s and
sounds of Alaska: Relax and enjoy Holland America lines Tours
beauliful film on Alaska while experiencing !he ride of this mas!
unusual molorcoach. This is !he same motorcoach they use in
Alaska while on Holland America line Westour Tour. They are here
in our area !o promote their Alaska produc! and will be offering a
special ' ONE DAY' promo!ion of up to $100 In shipbQard credit
for booking an Alaska cruise thai day. We are lakin~ reservations
for !his unique experience by calling our office al 446·0699. If you
have been lo Alaska and would like to, ~ring your photos and
reminisce, come join us. If you have alwayswan!ed 10 go Ia Alaska,
come join us, too. The coach will be a! our office a! 10:00 AM. Call
!oday for your reservalion.
. We have a few seals available ori the Thanksgiving Pinehurs!,
· NC lour Nov. 23-24 and our one day tour Dec. 5 for !he McGuire
Sisters/Columbus. Call !he office for more details one e~her lour.

Gallipolis AAA Travel Agency
J~ 360 Second Ave., Gallipolis, OH

T'

Phone 446·0699

; By KAREN GULLO

Hotcomb-Brown
Brown Is the
of Harold E.

GALLIPOLIS

measures 10 ensure !hat Ibis cootribution is rccognlzed ·and to Jll8llillliti the public benefit," Varmus
w~ote Rep. Ron Wydeo, D..()rc.,
Fnday.
Wyden had jlfessured NIH to
enswe !hat BRCAl would be uaed
fo.r the public good and fairly
~e are dil~ that the NIH
apparently baa proVided valuable,
indeed seminal, assistance to the
BRCAI P!,Oject abac~t a writteD
aarecmcnt guaran!eCmg lbe governmcnt's rights, Wydco told V•m"""":us=.::-"===== = ==t

., AP Bua!DCII Writer
·
~
NEW YORK (AP)- You need
• money at 3 am. and go 10 lbe cash

employed ai'IDI:a1:ll Care Center.
llrandon Ia a 1994 graduate of
Gallla
Academy
· Hlah
SchoolJBuckeyc Hilll Career Center and Ia employed by Roberta
Con&amp;cruc:ti011 Co.
A wedding Is being planned foi'
Feb. 11, 199S at ElizabrJh Chapel
Cllurch.

Coleman-Thumer

EWINGTON - Kimberly A.
Holcomb of Ewlngtoo and Lance
C. Brown announce their engagement
Holcomb Ia the daughter of
Donaid and Heorletta Holcomb.
SJJe Ia a 1993 lllduw ot River
Valley HiaJl Sdiool and albldeot
at 1be University of Rio Otaddc.

By LAvRAN NEERGAAJW
AMOCI•t•d Pn. Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) _The
government 1a baalina a Utab 0010•
pany for rights ID lhe newly diacovered breast caoc:er gene, a move
that could affect bow much WOIIICII
pay fer cancer tests or trcalmenta
~C::::.ultimately evolve from tbe
· Scientists last mooth unveiled
the BRCA1 gene wblcb may put
as many as 600',ooo American
women at risk for the inherited
formolbreastCIIIICCI'.
The gene's co-discoverers the University of Ulab and Myriad
Genetia Inc. - left their govem·
menr collaboraton off the patent
forBRCAl.
That meant the Nationallnsti·
lUtes of Heal!b would lose any coa11'01 over diagnostic tesrs or cancer
therapies developed from BRCA 1.
NIH Director Harold Varmus
revealed Friday !bat he has filed a
counter application addina NIH
scientists 10 lhe palent. So lhe coo·
tradiCiory pateniS dOD' I wind Up in
court, lawyers from NIH and Myriad are beginning ''active discussions" 10 resolve the feud, Vannus

You'll be seeing SOIIIC new ratent at lhe fall musical of !be Big
Bend Minsrrel Association to be
staged at the Meigs Junior High
School iD Middleport 011 Nov. 25
and.26. A half dozen YOIIDII people
arc malr!ng their debut In lhe show
- doiDg songs from lhe '30s and
'40s and appareotly enjoying lhe said.
.
ou!dated music. Of course, many of
"We have taken all necessary
lhe regular. participants are taking

boocrina Mr. and Mn. T0111 Runy"- - therecqlli011.
liD will 6c held Sllllclay cvcnina folSIIW'day, the Bradbuiy Cbun:b '

·; are curtailed

Franklin-Pratt

daupler of Loren and Mary Coleman. Pomeroy, to .Russell Gorden
Thurner, 1011 of Ricbud and Palri"
cia Thurner of Adams, N.Y., will
be 11:30 a.m. on Nov. 26 at the
ZioD Churdl ol Chrisl, Rutland.
Tbe bfide.elect II a graduate of

It's begiooillg to look a lot like
Christmas. Excuse me. I meant 10
say Hnllowecn. Hal-e you in previ·
ous years seen so many Halloween
decorations before? I haven't.
Orange llgbts, pumpkins, Hallowecn fiaures and more IJC being
displayed at maoy homea. I admire
those who lilllkc life a 1iU1e brighter
for lbe rest ol us throop .tbeae decorati011s. A nice IOUdl. ThaDk you.

f• Minister of six-years retires

-

POMEROY - Tbe open cburdl

sraa-

ing a Ctmtmas auc1i0D 011 Nov. 12
al the department headquarters
begionlng at 7 p.m. Kcitb Molden
will be doing the auctioneering
with Christmas items, toys, tools
and other itemS to be sold. Rcfrclhmenrs will be available lbrougboul
the evening.

HOLLEY~
FAMILY PRACTICE

~

wedding ol B.tlara Ann Coleman,

F~rc DqJartmcnt will allo be

ROBERT -M.

Meigs community calendar

GALLIPOLIS - Robert and
Pamela Franklin Gallipolis
announce the engagement of !heir
daughter. Shanlloo M. Fl'llllklln to
Brandoo L. PraU, 1011 of Anna and
Evereae Klna. Jr. of Oallipolil.
Franklin Ia a 1994 graduate of
Gallla Academy Hlah School
Bucteye Hilll C... Cenlerlmd II

IH,
company
file dueling patents for
breast cancer gene

--;Tbatn;;.:;,;.;;'in~-;;ce:'ibb;j;;;;;;;id;;;-:~~&amp;Y1~ way~.iileRutland

•••
GALLIPOLIS • Multiple ScleCROWN CITY - Crown City
rosis Suppon Group 1:30 p.m. at
New Life Lu!beran.Cbun:b.
• Wesleyan Cbw:cl! 7:30p.m. Oct.
25 lhrough 29 and 9:30 am. and 6
•••
J'
.ID. Oct. 30.
Moaday, Oc:t. l1
GALLIPOLIS - French Art
CoiOny baooted liouse 7 10 9 p.m.

'

•'

thoUght the building looked foursquarc,IIIClllliDg it waa some public
building, not a houac.
When Gatewood and Waus saw
the "!Nnrom houac" ir blocked our
the coal houac at the back of the lot.
They Sl8lted for it, but as IIIey approached, the "phan!Dm house"
drifted away.
These three men were aU convinced!hatolherCrownCitypmona
had seen the houac but were afraid 10
admit iL The chun:b lawn becalne
quite a IOUrist atlriiCiion as pmona
came 10 sec if !hey conld sec the
"house.• But no ooc ever did, other
than lhese three men.
Explanations for !he vision were
offered. Bury Hum, who was then a
writer for the Gallia T'unes, spent a
whole day in the Gallipolis h'brary
researching space lime c:ontinuums,
space worts, space faulty and miI'BIIes· But he came up empty.
One man offeml the IIUJ8estion
!hatlightsfromiiCfOIS!he Ohio River
reflected off !he windows of the
chun:h 01110 !he lawn.
The minister of !he Crown Oty
Methodist Chun:h said, "If I saw
somelhinglilre that house and I was
not right with my God, I would aet
down on my knees and try to get
right"
.
Mostofthechiudlpeopleregarded

Sunday 'nmle Sentinel Pege 83

;..: October.30,1894

October 30; 111M

Pomeroy-Middleport . Gelllpolle, ~oint Pleasant, WV

Page 82-Sunchly nm--sent1ne1

-oxygen Service
In the.Home.
-ostomy Supplies
•Diabetic Supplies
24 Hour Emergency
Service
Free Delivery!
to a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday
Noon,- 5 p.m. Sunday
"Home Ow!*l Home Qpiiahld
"Serving the AIH for Over 16 Yeats."

Dillons

Medical Shoppe
1480 Jackson Pike
W Dlol, Wts M1 n 111

· Galllpolla
.DH Dlol, R.N., Owllr

446·2206

1-1100,o445-2206 .

'1Jd hours.

. National Guard Armory
· Route 62 North
Point Pleasant, WV·

•

·, Tbc closings are especially
~nconvenicnt for people !D poor
· ;'iGeigbborboods wbo already mu.st
nontend with relatively few bank

Sponsored by:
. Mason County Extension Homemakers

I.

Wahama High !ichool Home-Econ qasaes
GfWC Point Pleasant Junior Woman's Qub

IWnW &amp;l'rhlllt--

!~s:!ber esrimaltid !hal there is

~OIIc crime for each 2 million to 3
~on ATM lnlilllcriona, despite
~-macblnc safety laws iD moat
:-~ !hal require banks 10 provljle
.:-~allipling, video Uvclllamce
~... olber

.
t

1.--

wishes to express its support
for the propQsed 9~ 1-1 system,
a~d encourages all
Gallia C~unty residents
to vot~ ''YES'!.for 9-1-1
on N o~ember 8th.
~

•I

m•murca
.. .

•

I

�,.
.,

..

~~

~~~~nm=__.~~~~~------~Po~==~y~·I~Jid~dle~~:~=·:·m~po~II~~~~Po=lm:Au:u:n~~w:_
· --------------~~=o=w~~~,1~*~~~-'~~~=~~~~.18=N~--------~--~~~~~~~~~~P~~nt~' · ~w~------~~=-~,n~m=•=~~~~-~l!h~
..=·a:,s

.FROM THE ·~~
Her.e's what the experts have
to say about our big

LIPOLIS RETAIL MERCHANT .ASSOCIATION
~

IN HISTORIC DOWN.TOWN GALliPOLIS.
•. '

.,

Downs
Are
Simply .

MONDAY
ONLY!
9:3 A.M.·8:0 P.M.
SAVE UP TO

Low -~.

Prices :,.
Will ::

MONDAY
OCTOBER 31 I 1994

"

. 9:30-8:00 p.m.

--....
(ONE DAY ONLY)
MONDAY, OCTOBER 31ST
YOUR TREAT FOR llt\LLOWEt:N

If You Buy ASuit

Your Trial Willie •

FREE SHIRT, TIE &amp; BELT
If You Buy ASport Coat ·
Your Treat Will Be A

FREE SHIRT. liE &amp; BELl
If Yo• Buy A Pair of Florshelm - .
Your lreat Willie A

FREE 3 PAIRS OF SHOCKS
If You Buy 3 Pairs Levi's Jeans YOur Treat Will Ia A

-~--· ~~~~~~~~"-4·.•

·BARE a·oNES
SALE .

.•...

..,.
.

.

~

I•

'fo11

~
•'
.....

.·
.•"JO
"

.
.

ALL LADIES
LEVI'S8
99

.........."""'

ENTIRE STOCK

·

TAKE ADVANTAGE

OF THIS

: ·· ~
,,

'

;.:I

VALUES UP TO $50
.Monday Onlyf

•. :
.: . I

KNIGHTS

I ,

~, .1.

.

'

.COSTUME JUDGING

·,

.};

.,_
,.

. .TO·BE HELD DURING
,
THIS EVENT!

·~

....~ H\
f

s:

.

Sa"e!

&gt;:\'

"Good things at great prices"

~u-sj;;

PRE-CHRISTMAS SALE

. PRS.CHRISTMAS .
KICK OFF SALE
·-$30 off all
Tony Lama Boots · ·

- Save up to 50%

Register to win a Fre~; Pair of Boots!
Layaway For Christmas (SII$all Deposit required)

· OH

Hauntin!! Halloween .··

AVING

s25 GIFT CERTIFICATE _
TO BE GIVEN AWAY
FROM 3·6 P.M.

CONVERSE®
SHOES ·

$9 9

Register to Win A
FREE Pair of Converse Shoes

;~:

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SCHOOL JACKETs·25% OFF

•SUEDE JACKETS
•GREAT SELECTION OF
CHRISTMiS -DRESSES.
•BEAUTIFUL HAND KNIT
SWEATERS by
Eagle Eye8 &amp;

•Nice Selection of
Holiday and Casual Dresses
•B.U.M. &amp; lena Jeans
~1928 Jewelry

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• Morula~ 0.1,- J.ast Clulne•f · :

•.,.=.THE PUT·ON SHOP •
.

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258 THIRD AVE. GALLIPOLIS
446·6560

wilkmy'A

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· ALFRED~: DUNN-I®

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~to": ~ offi~
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You

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ALL COATS

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Northern Isles•

·IIIEld

"HAPPY HAllOWEEN"

-·

Sale Ends Nov. 5th

LAYAWAY NOW
FOR £11RISTMAS

· F.actor·t Rep. will be on hand to
discuss latest styles!

'

Shop early. Don't miss this
one' Save 20% to 50% on
diamonds, colored stones,
14KT gold jewelry and
watches. Our amazing
Pre-Christmas Sale offers the
same high quality merchandise
and styling that you have
come to expect from us - but
at a fraction of the regular •
price. Shop now and enjoy
savings from 20% to 50%.

([;he Shoe C!.ttte

Special Prices on
ln·Stock Shoes!

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446-4222

"No Triclcs - All Treat•"

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Lafayette Mall,

Register for TWo $25 Gift Certificate• to be
given away Monday, October 31st, 9 p.m:
Need not be present to win.

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And ·
. · Somewhe:re

LAFAYETIE MALL - .

Court St., Gallipolis

FREE LEVI'S T·SHIRT .

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MAGic 101

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MANY MERCHANTS
.'.f,. \fiLL BE IN COSTUME .
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FOR THIS

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· =~wv::______:Sund::"" 11m•• &amp;entlftll Page ..87
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10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
PRODUaS
Hot Dogs 21s1.
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STORE HOURS· .
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

49

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD OCT. 30 THRU NOV. 5, 1994.

POMEROY Rounne
McDaniel and Sean PlllrlckO'Mal·
ley were united In marriage on Oct.
IS In tbe Prospect Heisbts ChrisCROWN CI1Y • Melissa Gail ' iv&lt;X)' silk rose witb baby's breatb.
lian Cbun:b, Prospect Heights, m.
SlrowandDonaldDuaneVIJIScoy
Best man was John Bevan of The double-ring nuptials were
Jr. were united Ia marriaae Aua. 27 C-.allipolls. Groomsmen were Chris performed by Felix Malbew, assoat tbe Crown City Wesleyan Strow of Crown City aad Timothy elate minister of the Prospect
Cburth.
Louder of Gallipolis. They also Heights Christian Cburth, follow·
The double riD&amp; ceremony was wore black tuxedos witb black tie ing a balf-bour of music on tbe
performed by Rev. Gecqe HoiJey. and cummerbund. Tbeir bouton- acoustic guitar by PhD Angolll of
Melissa Is the daughter of Judy nieres consisted of an ivory silk Chicqo.
Strow of Crown City and Nick 111c1 rose with baby' s breatb.
1be bride Ia 1be daughter of Bil,l
Cberyl Strow of Leeta. Donald 1a
Guests were registered by and Carolyn McDaniel of
tbe son of Cllft'ord 111c1 JOBIID Sta· Cbu«:t Strow of Crown City .and Pomeroy. Her husband Is die SOD ot
pletoo of Crown City and Donald Michelle Toppins of Ranger, Frank and Cella O'Malley of l'alk
W.Va., brothef and cousin to tbc Ridge, m.
.
van Scoy Sr. otl'llrlot.
1be bride was pven in manlaae bride. Music was provided by War1be liride was given In marriage
by her parents and escorted 10 die renandGail Holley of Crown City. by berparents. Tony JaoofMortoo
altar by ber father. She wore an
·Mothers and grandmothers of Grove, m., friend of die bride, was
iv&lt;X)' iatln floor Jcngtb sown wltb .die bride and groom wore corsages bet honor attendanL
an off the shoulder IICOOpli(l neck· of ivory, emerald and rose silk
Serving his brother as best man
line, filled bodice and dropped flowers, greenery and baby's was Frankie O'Malley of Park
waistline. Her bouquet was a cas· breatl!.
Ridge. I ·
.
cade of ivory, emerald and rose
A reception was held outdoors
The .new Mrs. Q'Malley is a
flowers accen~ witb Ivy, baby's at tbe residence of Judy Strow,
IAJe
___
breatb and pearls.
mother of the bride. The threeV 1
U1
Maid of.hooor was Donna Van tiered wedding cake was made by
Scoy of Gallipolis. Matroa of Becky Rotbgeb of Gallipolis. It
Tbe Sunday Timn-Stnlilltl
bonor was Jeanette Taylor ·of was ivory and decorated with regards tbe weddings of Gallia,
Wayne. Bridesmaids were Nikki shades of emerald rose and Iaven· Meigs and Mason counties as news
Strow of Crown City; and Janet der roses and leaves. Tbe cake was and is happy to publish· wedding
Louder aad Joey Miller botb of topped With an Ivory lace and erys- stories and photographs witbout
Gallipolis.
.
t;li hean and swans arrangemenL A charge.
, ·
However, wedding news must
Tliey wore emerald colored similar smaller arrangement was
antic lengtb dresses. 111c1 ea:b car· placed betweeo lbe fii'St and second meet general standards of timell·
rlcd an ivory lace fan accented wltb tiers.
ness. The newspaper prefers to
emerald, Ivory and rose flowers
Michelle Toppins, Sandy Top- publish accounts of weddlags as
greenery and ribbons.
, ._ . pins, Jean Artis and Misty Trent
soon as possible after 1be event
· To be published In the SuDday
Flowersirls were Kristie Van served at tbe reception.
Scoy of Gallipolis and Brittany
1be bride is emplo)'(\d at Holzer edition, tbe wedding must have
Miller of Gallipolis. They 'Wore Medical Center. The groom Is taken place witbin 60 days prior to
ankle lengtb floral dresses wltb employed at Merrilat Industries, lhe publieati011, and may be up to
iv&lt;X)' plnnafores.
They are botb gracb!B(es of Hannan 600 words In lengtb. Malerial for
1be groom wore a black tuxedo Trace HiRb School.
· Along the Ri~er must be received
witb a black lie and cummerbund.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald D. by the editorial department by
Hil boutonniere consisted of an VanScoy Jr.oow reside at Palrlot.
Thursday, 4 pJD. prior to the date
ofpubHcatioo.
MR. AND MRS. DONALD VANSCOY

Strow-VanScoy

_

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1

· Asloclatcd Preis Writer
NEW ARK, N.J. (AP) -They
.: divide lbclnselves into die biker set

•
·:
:
.

and tbc golf course sel, and tbe
only tbing tbey bave in COIIUJI0!1 is
what brought tbem togetber Ibis
wetkml-dieir laUool.
· Here at die secood annual Ink·
Credible Tattoo Convention, you
caD find botb a bartender named
. Viper witb a topless Mona Lisa 011
· bis dlest and a stockbroker named
: Walter wiJb a bull and bear 011 bis

·. sboulder.

•·

"It gives people a aealive out·
let;" said Vl~r, 23, whose real
· name Is Joshua Newton and who
· lives In Los Angeles. "Wilhout tat·
: toos, this could all be graffiti.
· Think about iL"
.; TaliOO utista and body piercing
~ !lp"dalis~:~. rrom as far away as Hoi'. land bave come to Newark for die ·

Society
scrapbook
CRAFT SHOW
. POMEROY -Tile Ultb 1111111. a1 Arts and Crafts Show will be
held at the Meigs County SeDior
Citizens CeDtcr. Mulberry Heighla,
Pooleroy, Friday frllln 10 a.m. to S
p.m.
Over 20 area artisans will dla·
; play a wide varlet:="Jc:
· craftl for boliclay
IIICI
: Jlft aiviDI· Ctlfts willlndude IJIII.
: tets, wreatbs, pillows, rag rugs,
; ceramics. woodal cJc:antlooa IIICI
· • , fumliiiJC, tole paiDied llalll, bllt
· aDd croebet artlc:Ies, fiower
: arrugementl, Christmas om&amp;·
: ·IIXIIIIIIICI dcc:oralioal.
Sudwlches, vegetable stew,
' aDd pie will be available from
12:30 to 4:30 p.m.

0

: ' · MODERNWOODMEN
. POMEROY- The Modem
• Woo1""'11 of Amcrk:a. Camp 4798,
Athens, wW spooaor a DiatehiDs
fund diW 1U1JPet at tbe Alexl"der
· School Saturday from 3:30 10 11
p.m. witb all plllCCDIJIIO go to lbe
school for tbe purchase of Dew
band inltrumcntl fot. ~.

and runs through Sunday.

Tbe convention features tattoo
contests and tbe presentation of
what organizers call the tattoo
world's Emmy; It .was scheduled to
be awarded today to Roseanne, for
helping give tattoos a positive
image. Roseanne was aot sched·
uled 10 aacnd.
"Roseanne is among an ever·
growing group of Hollywood
celebrities who proudly wear tat·
toos on tbelr bodies," said Cbrls·
tiDe Bfief, wbo organized tbe coo·
ventioa witb her husband, Cary.
The ~~~uple bas a tattoo shop tn
Montclair.
Mrs. Brief said proceeds from
the contests would be donated to
tbe Nationill Associ•tioo for Peqlle
WilbAIDS .
1be nugority of tbC people at lbe
eo~~ventioo belong to die biker set

and - like Roseanne - go by
only one name: Viper, Star, Sun·
flower, Buddha.
·'Why do pe.;!L'l:O, need two ·
names?" asked B
27, whose
real name is Mike Canaly and who
sported a tattoo of- what else?Buddba on bis back. "That's so
conformist.'.
·But lhc aolf course set is com- ·
log on strong, even !bough it will
be some time before anyone mls·
takes tbe New York Stock
EJU:bange for a Hell's Angels coovenlioo.
·
"1 tbink tattoos are a way of
expressing yourself," said stock·
broker Walter Jacobs, 36, who
-declined to uame bia company
because be feared his co-worton
would disapprove. ''1\11 I ever do is
wort, so a bull and a bear is so
appropriale for me."
Then there's,Carmen SL Ooge, a

Caldweii-G illispie

•

2S-year-old legal secretary from
Quebec City who sported an entire
westera motif - mountaias, cow·
boys and horses - 011 her back and
legs. She showed off tbe ensemble
wearing a backless fringed vest,
deaim skirl, cowboy boots aud bat
People like SL Ooge are regular
customers at tattoo shops, said
Mike Nyegaard, who owns two
New Jersey parlors.

Effective November 1, 1994,
The Gallipolis Chiropractic
Clinic will offer evening hours
on Tuesd11y evenings for those
people who work or are unable
,to come in during the day.
The Gallipolis Chiropractic
Clinic offers facilities for
spinal screening, X-Ray,
diagnosis, physiotherapy and
treatment of spinal related
conditions without the use of
drugs or surgery.
We accept Workers ' Comp ..
Personal injury and most major
medic&amp;) insurance . Our staff is
knowledgeable in the reporting
and filing of health insurance
claims.
,
Dr. Wilcoxon graduated from
Palmer College of Chiropractic
in 1985. He is a diplomate of
t'he National Board of
Examiners and is licensed to

'

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49(
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U.~.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
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FAMILY PK ASST.

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CLOROX
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IN CONCERT
Thursday,. Nov. 3, 1994
7:30P.M .

MAXWELL HOUSE
MASTER BLEND
COFFEE

Fellowship Chunh of the
St. Rt. 124 (Across from Forked Run St. Park)

John W. Douglas - Pastor

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Sun. 12--7
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frabencr

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_

VALLEY BELL

to

practice in Ohio.
Dr.
Wilcoxon bas
maintained a private
practice in Gallipolis over
the last ~ight years.
Call (614) 441-0200 for
an immediate appointment.
722
Second
Ave.
Gallipolis, Oldo

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BO~ElESS BEEF

?--'$129 '
Pork .Rib ••••••••••••••••••

•

'

tbclrfamilles.
!
Following the wedding, a rea:t"
Uon was held for the couple wbb
then were eseorled up Route 2111
and ooto Route 7 and tbrough Gallipolis on Goldwlng motorcyd~
owaed by brothers of the llide. :
A housewarmlafu~!!~be held
later dne to cunent
s In ~
family. '
..

pis;tur~

Joey D. Wilcoxon D.C.

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

btotiiers aud slsrm or lbe bride~

COUNTRY STYLE

Those not matins tbe 60-day
deadline wW be published during
tbe daily paper as space allows.
Pbotograpbs of eitber lhc bride
or tbe bride and groom may be
published witb weddlag slories If
desired. Pbotograpba may be cltber
black and white or good quality '
color, billfold size or laiger.
Poor quality photographs wlll
not be accepted. Generally, snap·
shots or instant-developing photos
are not of aceeplable quality.
All material sulmittcd for publi·
cation is suiject to editing.
Questions may be directed to
tbe editorial department from 1-.S
p.m. Monday tbrougb Friday at
446-2342.

GALLIPOLIS CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC

Dr. Joey D. Wilcoxon

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC •COUPONS

-----

: Tattoo You: Convention attracts both bikers and brokers
conventioa, which begaa Friday
~· By DONNA DE LA CRUZ

.•

GALLIPOLIS - Jeannie Tay·
lor CaldWell of Gallipolis and
Robert H. Gillispie of New Haven,
W.Va., were married on OcL 16 at
2:30 p.m. at the home of her par·
eats, the Rev. and Mrs. Russell
Tayl« in Gallipolis.
The groan is tbe SOD of the late
Haskell "Jate" Gilllsple aud Doris
J. Gillespie of New Haven.
Best man for tbe groom' was
, HaskeU L. Gillespie Jr. Matton of
honor for tbe 'bride was Jane
Gilbert,
sister of lbe llide. The cer·
graduale of Meigs High SchoOl and
emooy
was
performed by lhc fatber
Ohio University. She is employed
oftbe
bride.
by the University of Illinois Ia
The outdoor wedding was fol·
C,bleago where sbe also attends
lowed
by a teceplion. The couple
graduate school classes.
now
reside
In their homes in New
Sean Is a graduate of Main . Haven and Williams
HoUow Road,
Soutb High School aud Columbia
Collcse. He Ia employed as a com· Gallipolis.
Attending were the daughlm of
puter analyst for · Household
the
groom, Penny and Robin
Finance lnterllllliooal in Chicago.
and grandson, Brady;
Gillispie,
A receplioil was held following
Anpe
Adkins,
Melissa Martin and
tbc ceremony in tbe church social
rooms. A dinner receplioo was held Citldy McGuire, dauJbters of tbe
bride and grandchildren. Bi'CDt,
later In Padc Ridge.
Tbe couple will b011eymoon In Brittany and .Brett Adkins, Derick
Barbados and tben make tbelr and Dakota Martin, Ashley !lnd
bome on Nortb Magnolia Avenue Andy McGuire and Davey Darst.
Also allmiJing were die brotbers of
in Chicago.
'
r
'Besides tbe bride's parents, tbe groom and their families, tbe
tbose atleadlnf from the 1oea1 area
were the bride s sister and her fam·
lly, Bill and Rochelle Lawlesa,
Delaaa and Cara. Lyn, aad her
grandparents, Glenn and Pbyllls
McDaniel.

. l"ng pO'I"Cy
v d'"
1

·
·

MR. AND MRS. ROBERT H. GIWSPIE

7 ·UP
PRODUCTS

1 1
I

s199

QoociOnlyAIP-l'aSupar'ollllu
oner Good Oct. 30 thN Nov. s, 11114
Umlt1 P e r C -

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COUPON
GOOD FOR
5 TRIPLE
COUPON ·
GOOD
SUN .10/30,
MON 10/31

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--~·~nd;•;;Y~Tl;m~·---sa~~n;:;tlne;;;I==~~===~~~P~o;;me;;;ro~v~M;;Id;;d;;;;le~po;rt;-....G;;•;;II~Ipo;;;;;II•~·;O;;H;;;;P;;ol;;nt;;PI~ea;;;sa;;n;;t.::;WV~======~~==rr7~0ct=obe~r~3~0,~1~88¥~
. ·..

Music makers: R.E.M. is cranking up the guitars_for new album 'Monster' :

By DAV1D BAUDER
A.clcl•ted Prell Writer
Guitarist Peter Buck bas tJaded
his mandolin for an electric guitar,
and. R.E.M. is ready to bit the road.
R.E.M., long the kings of the
de
uo rgro und rock Scene buI Dow
one of the most creatively engaging
· mainstream ·superstar acts, is
preparing for Its flnt concert tour
of the decade. The tour will last
about a year.

Preceding the live shows is the
critically acclaimed album "Mooster." The disc is a return to mck
'n' roll and a sharp departure from
the folky , subdued sound of
" Automatic for the ~&gt;.nnie."
• '"""'
"Itjust5eeJ!!I'Ailike the thing to
do, to be really ambitious and do a
rock record while we still wanltld
to do it," BuCk said. "When we're
around 60, I don't think it will be
good to do tbal. Not that we're any-

where near that. I.
No, but Buck, singer Michael
Stipe, Mike Mills and Bill Berry
are no longer able to pile into vans
and spend months drivina ·around
the country with no cares behind
them. Buck spoke by telephone
while his twin, four-month-old
daughters slepl in an adlacent hole!
~

roo~ guitarist bad spent the last
few years exploring die quieter side

of his art - his mandolin is the not like some old R.E.M. fans may
featured instrument on "Losing remember it. Tile chiming, folk
My Religion" - and was ready rock sounds of their earlier albums
!:~:!:.visceral pleasures of rock is gone, left to such bands as the.
Gin Blossoms to mine.
Instead, Buck plays a rougher
"It is pleasurable, you forRet
about all of that," .... said. uv011~- guitar. "What's the Frequency,
""'
•· ·~
kind of an adult and playinL~ Kenneth?" features some
SlUff, bul there's srmething
of psychedelic ~ guitar, and
ideal about Billing in a basement or "Circus Envy" is a sill-stringed
c~e and playing really, really dnet with Soule Youlh' ~ Thurston
Moore, who sounds like rac!ng cars
·'
"MOCIIter" is rock 'n' roD but

Largest permanent Warhol collection opens
By CHERYL BORG
Aasoclated Press Writer
BALTIMORE (AP) - When
the Baltimore Museum of Art
opened doors to its new $10 million 20th-century art wing Ibis
month, visitors will get a look at
the world's second largest collec"tion of works by pop artist Andy
Warhol on permanent display.
The 35,000-square-foot addition
also will bouse paintings and sculptures by more than 75 post-1945
American and European artists.
Included in the wing are several
pieces tha1 never bave been on per·
manent public display, such as
Warhol's "Brlllo Box," "Del
Monte Box" and gold "Jackie."
Mter a decade of planning and
more than tw.o years of construction, the New "Wing for Modem Art

floors and soft, gray walls. Instead
of having visitors walk thr11ugb
Dai'I'Ow doorways from one gallery
to the ne~L ·corners are missing to
aUow visitors in one gallery a view
of art in three others.
"On every tum and every twist
there are comparisons to be made
among objects,'' I dim an said.
"Many people are apprehensive
of museums, they fear lbey'll set
lost. There are dead ends that
inhibit the free and bappy movement of a visitor in a museum. We
wanted to eliminate that and let the
mnseum open up."

opened OcL 16. More than half the
funding for the project came from
the state and city, with the rest
from pivate donors.
The mllseum's state-of-the-art
desi~n includes an energy-saving
cooling system, described by museum direciOr Arnold Lehman as ''a
gigantic version of your ice maker
at home."
The Ice Sla'age Energy Conservation System aeates big sheets of
ice overnight when energy costs
are low. During the day the ice
sheets are dropped in an underground pool used to sustain a 70degree temperature in the building.
Similar cooling systems are
used in computer labs and bospilals
to protect equipment.
The 16 new galleries have an
open, airy feel with wflite, ash

Bower Lewis Thrower Architects of Philadelphia designed the
addition.
Among the artists whose wort
will be displayed in the new wing
-are Richard Artscbwager, Anbile
Gorky, Donald Judd, Ellsworth
Kelly, Robert Rauscbcnb_erg, and
Frank Stella.

The BMA's Warhol colleclion
includes "The Last Supper," ''9
Jackies," "Four Colored Cam~
bell's Soup Cans" and "Self-Portrait."
The largest Warbol collec·
As an additional energy-saving
tion
on
regular public display is .
measure and to help reduce glare,
housed
at
the Andy Warhol Musethe museum will use florescent
um
in
Pittsburgh,
Warhol's birthlighting in the wing. Florescent
lighting bas been used for some place.

People in the news

October 30, 11M

STATE COLI..EOE, Pa. (AP) -Penn Swe did
illl it could to bokl onto its No. 1 Jllllkln&amp; Salwday,
IIOUJICin&amp; No. 21 Obio Swe 63-14 -lbe Buckeyes'

. Berrlnaer, at run atrengtb for the lint time since
autfcrillg a
collapsed IIBI~:,e!;'st Wyoming
Penn SIIIIC, wbidl already kneW No. 3 Nebrub
on Oct. 1, q
critics who c
be couldn't
bad beallen No. 2 Colorado 24-7, led.35-0 8l balfllmc. ' lcld lbe Cornbuakers over a top team like Colcado.
Kl-Jana Caner, who grew up 10 minutes from the
'• 1bc junior completed 12 of 17 passes for 142
Ohio Stale OI!DJMII, 1111 for four toudldownl and left
.)'IIIIa and did 1 good job c1irectiD.11 Nebclllka' s opdon
in the third quaner with the 1e01e 49-7.
llllaU. wbidl bad loll its punch after Frazier was loll
· Carter finished wilh 137 yards on 19 carries.
for lbe acason with a blood clot in his lea after the
{Cerry CoUins, the nation's to~mled pauer, eng!Hllltas' fourth game.
ncered five Ions drives and completed 19 of 23 for ·
But the liar of the day was Nebraska's defcnac,
265 )'IIIIa and two touclldowns.
'
wbldllimlltld Colorado to 314 yards in total offense,
· TbC Nlttany Llona (7~. 4-0 Big Ten) acnt Ohio
189 under its second-ranked national average.
SIBIC to its IDOil lopalded lou 11noc a 511-6 defeat in
Sal•1111, die na11on' s leadingi'Uiber wilb a 179-yn
1946. Only a touclldown in the llnalthree minutca
averaae, gaincd 134 on 22 ames 1IIK his only loog
helped the Buckeyes avoid tbelr wont toes since 111
run wasa41-yarder in the tbird quarter.
86-0 beating by Mlcbigan ill 1902.
.
Nebraska's Lawrence Pbilllpl, third nationally in
• Ohio Stale (6-3, 3-2) fdltwo games behind Penn
nubing with alS4-yanl average. gained 86 yllds on
Stale in the Big Ten confcreacc race.
25 CMrica. .
No.3 Nebruka 24, No. 2 Colorado 1- At LinColorado quarterback Kordell Stewart, the
1;01n. Neb., the poU v01er1 will dccldc, but Netnata
nallon'a flfth-leadina paaacr, was partk:ularly thrown
played Saturday like the 1181ion'a No. 1 team, defeatoff by the Nebraska.clefcnac. He was 12-of-28 for
· ingColorado 24-7.
lSOyardsandmn 14 times for24 yards.
·
· · Quarte1bac1t Brook Berringer, tbruallnto the spotThe losa stopped Colorado's 11-game winning
light after atarta: Tommie Frazier was aidellncd for
streak and probably ended the Buffaloes' bid for the
lbe aeason, direcltld the offcnac with precision and
nalional cbamplonsblp.
the Cornbuskcrs' defense abut down Colorado' a
Nebraska playa Unranked teams in ita last three
liigh-powercd attack for the victDry in their aucia1
games, wblcb means the Cornbusten have a good
. Big FJgbt abowdown.
dlancc to 10 undefeared in the regular season for the
· The win over die "second-ranted Buffaloes (7-1, 3-second suaigbt year.
1) gave the No. 3 Cornhuakers (9.0; 4-0) the inside
Nebraska droinated the first half, outgaining Col. track to the
Eight ~J:!:ablp and Orange
ondo 234-89 and holding the Buffaloes scoreless for
·· Bowl berth,
could vault
over No. 1 Penn
the lint time in their last 28 gamea. ·
; Stale wbCn lbe poDs ue released Sunday.
No. 4 Aubua 31, Arhma• 14 - At Auburn,
; "I don't want to get Into that controversy,"
Ala., Stephen Davis rushed for a career-high 246
·Nebraska ccech Tom Osborne said about lbe rank,yllds and scored three fourth-quarter Uiucbdowns to
: ings. "We'D let lbe pllldiiS ragure that out."
help No.4 Auburn overcome a poet-florida hangover
: The Nlttany Lions played No. 21 Obio State later
and beat Arkansas 31-14 on Saturday, the Tigers'
in the day.
19th IXIIISCCIJtive vicwry.
· Colorado ccech Bill McCartney 111mmed up die
Auburn (8-0, 5~ Soutbeastan Conference) trailed
day. "TbCy cJrolnated the game from the oniet in all
14-10 entering the fourth quarter, the lllb lime the
: · ~ofthegame,"bCsald.
.
· Tigers have fallen behind while compiling the
Nebraska built a 24-0 lead on Berringer' a 30-)'1111
nation's longest winning streak. Then Davis toolt ·
touchdown ~ to tight end Eric Alford wilb 10:42 ·
over, doin&amp; his best Bo Jackson Imitation and per·
~ in the third quarter.
baps vaulting himself into Reisman Trophy con. "We threw the llell a DUie more with Brook,"
ICildon in a acasoo lacking in atandoot candidates.
Osborne said about Beninger. ''He did a great job."
On the third play of the fourth quarter, the 223Colomdo, abut out in the flnt half (or the flnt
pound junior powered over from the one to put
· time since 1992, llnally scored on R•abaan Salaam's
Auburn ahead to stay against Arkansas (3-S, 2-4). On
. 6-yard run with 1:06 remaining in lbe third period.
tile Tlgcn' next possession, Davis burst around rlabt
. But the Buffaloes, who were avqing 40 points per.
end for a 24-yanl !Ot!Cb!!own to push the lead to U.
· game, continued to struggle against a swarming
14.
'
·
: .defcnac that bad given up only 16 points in its JXCVi·
He delivereid the coup de grace with a 53-yn run
· pus three games.
down the right sideline, streaking past the smaller
: Colorado was 0-for-10 on third down tries and ().
defensive backs with the speed that made him a blgb
: for-5 on fourth down.
school track star in South Carolina.
. • ''We wen: real pleased wilb the effort of our play·
No. 9 Florida St. SP, Duke 20 - At Tallahassee,
. , en, •• Osborne said. •'They showed a lot of c1uncter
Fla., Danny xanen threw for 225 yuds in a 32-point
~oday..u~. I!!!Ji~~'!!'}· ..Vf.e .J!layed a complete
second qllllter SIIIUiday as ninlb-mnked florida State
aame.
beat previously unbeaten Duke 59-20 for a reaJrd
: · Nelnlka won ill 22nd Slrlight game at Memorial
·22nd lllligbt Atlantic Coast Conference victory.
Stadium, wbidl was sold out for a recml200tb conKanell, wbo bad saugglcd in florida Stale's last
secutive time, going baU to 1962. The win also
two aames, passed for 394 yards and three touchsnapped the Cornbusken' 12-gamc losing streat
downs befon: leaving the game in the third period.
ilgainat topS teams since 1987.
Rodda State (6-1, 6-0 ACC) roned up 434 yards
Colorado bad beate!l five nnlrlid 1C8ml this seaand 22 'lint downs in buildin&amp; a 38-6 balftime lead,
son, includlnl the Hall Mary mimcle against Michlholding Duke (7-1, 4-1) to 45 yards and four rllSt
gao. But the lMfaloes ran out of magic in Uncoln,
downs bcfon: die break.
'

":':!!

Worst toes in 48 years.

Explore! "Aiasl&lt;a "
November 4, 1994

10:00 AM - 12:00 Noon
You are cordially invited to e:cperience the thrilling sights .
and sounds of Alaska presented aboard the 60- foot Yukon
Explorer lounge-coach, the largest motorcoach on the road
Rela:c and enjoy this beautiful film produced by Holland
America Line Westlnlrs, the leader in Alaska travel. Receive .
up to $100 in shipboard creditfor booking your Alaska cruise :
during our ONE-DAY Alaska presentation.
Grand Door Prize

A Cruise Certificate For 5200.00 Per Couple

.

Also included: Videos, Travel Bags, and Refreslunents

TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) - Rapper Ice
Cube's backup singer T·Bone is ~heduled for
trial next month on charges of shooting a man to
death at a bowling alley .
Superior Court Judge John Shook set the
Nov. 14 trial date Friday _for Terry E. Gray, 24,
known as T-Bone and alsoamemberofthe mp
group Da Lencb Mob.
Gmy is charged with murder and attempted
murder in the February Slaying ofHerberlBIIlllc,
22, and the ·wounding of Lasbawn Townsend,
22, both of La!i Angeles.
Gmy was fRed Match 11 on $1.5 million
bail His lawyer;Ailtbony A!Cllllllder, said Gray
left the bowling alley before the shootings and
the wrong man was arrested. .

Sports
"In To 25 college action,

Holland America\\estours .
Call446-0699 formore infonnalionl

SAN DIEGO (AP)- What did Jonas Salk, the polio vaccine inventor,
do on Dr. Jonas Salk Day? Apparendy he celebrated his BOth birtbdayquicdy
with private wishes from colleagues at the research institute he 'founded.
Earlier in lbe week, Salk was feted by fellow illustri~ scienti8ts after
a theater performance.
AmongtbosewboattendedSundayoight'scelebrationwereDr.Fmncia
Crick, wbowOI)aNobelpriZeforbiamodelofthestructureofDNA,andDr.
Rcnato Dulbecco, who won aN~ for diJcovcries relating to the vlml
origins of canter.
The mayor proclaimed Dr. Jonas Salk Day in the; city Friday to mark the
"birthday of the man wlio became a hero to milliOIIll wl!en be ignored
scien~ doubters and ~killed virus to develop the first polio vaccine in
the mld-19508.
.

cr

In Ohio college sctlon,

GILLIA COUNTY AUDITOR

RONALD K. CANADAY

OHIO VALLEY SYMPHONY

OVS to let loose with·laughing music
OALLIPOUS· • TbC Ohio Valley Sympbooy musicians are letlini
loose with the season's Second concert featuring such variety as
"Three Brass Cats," "Quartet for
Paper Bags," "Two Rags" and
"Fiippery No. 2" at the Mmia and
Dorothy Haskin's Ariel Theater in

~kleine

Lacbmusik" (A
Little Laughing Music) by
Scbroelfer be the 8 p.m. Nov. 3.
Coordinated by OVS director and
conductor Ray Fowler the classical

variety show Will reveal the orchea•
tra's capacity for humor, along
wilb symphonic classics.

this season, and season tickets are
still availal!le for the four remaining performances.

On the serious side of the program will be Mendelssohn' s·
"Octet," and DvOI'ak' s "Serenade"
and "Slavonic Dances." Through91Jt the program a wide range of the
symphony's members will be fea·
lured on a variety of instruments.
This is the accond.of five .concerts on the symphony's schedule

The symphony will also bave an
open rehearsal from 1 to 4 p.m.
Saturday, at no cost for people who
want to preview the eveni11g performance and get to know the
ordlescra.
Those needing more lnformalion may ca11446-ARTS.
·

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THAU THURS.

THE NEXT KARATE KID PG
ONE EVENING SHOW'7:30
ADMISSION $2.00
446-0923 ·

Ohio Valley
Symphony
Saturday, Nov. 5
8 p.m.
Tickets.Still Avalllble.
Morris 6 Dorothy Ha1kln1
Mtl ThtMrt 426 :Ind. Avt. Gtlllpollt, Oh

. Call 446·ARTS

A RECORD OF DIDICArED SIIVI(E fO Tlf
PEOPLE OF GALLIA COUNJr
Ronald· K. canaday pl'l!ctices good mona\' management. Ha
has proven that he can operate the Gallla County Auditor's
Office effectively and ifflclently and staY within the budget
Since electec! auditor, he has set and accomplished many
goals.
One of these goals accomplished Ia the Installation of en
integrated real estate assessment computer syatem Which
assists the auditor'S" office in aseignlng market value to
propertiee. Thill system maintains data relative to lllch ,
Individual parcel of land In Gellis County and Is easily
acceased by the auditor's staff. An ad.ditlonal computer
terminal has been Installed on the counter In the auditor's
office for public access.
Each parcel of land traneferred In Gallla County Is aulgned a ·
parcel number. Thia number Is shown on all data relative to the
parcel. By entering the parcel number, owner's name or _
address In the comP,Uter, all data on the property is readily ,
acceaeed.
All docl!mentation of property transfers, value changes and . ;
legal descriptions are now done on a dally basis, providing 11p-: :
tCHiate real estate Information. ·
~
In cooperation with the Ohio Department of Natural Reaources - ,
and the Gallla County Engineer's Office, Ronald K. Canaday; ;
and the.auditor's staff are now in the process of developing a ; ;
computer mapping end· lnfonnatlon storage systam to assist ;
with local land use and resource man11gement. Resource data', ;
gathered by the Ohio Capability Analysis Program (OCAP)' :;
including resource maps of soils, land use, geological and ;
ground water Information will · be apj,lled to the currant :;
agricultural use value program.
·
~Manual meaaurement of each agriculture parcel'a soil and land
use by using soli survey maps and aerie! photographs Ia time
conl!umlng end ean be Inaccurate. The OCAP computer. ·,.
system proceases CAUV information accurately lind Ia very; ; ;,
cost effective. .
Computer generated .OCAP maps ara alao helpful in&lt;
determining cepabillty of land lor other uses such &amp;8'· • .
aubdlvlslons, landfills aild lnduatry.
·

.

RMLIC!·
BLVEGRASS PEili'OitMANCE • Allloa KnUII aDd Union
Stadoa wldl .,...... P.. Tlte Cal Family 8 p.m. Nov. 10 at 1M
.,.......,... Ai11 Ce•teril301 WiDI:•ater Ave., AIIII8Dd, Kr. u
pu1 of ...
c-~~t Seriel. Tlekefl, OD uJe IIOW0
he pun:llued JIJ
' (6116)324-3175,
I

Trou=

may

RONALD I. CANADAY
OALLIA CIUiff IUDrrGR
Paid lot by Ronald K. Canaday, 4097 Bulavllle Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
· II

1.

. I

•l
l

-

acason.

·

Moss, who missed games against Purdue and
Minnesota, which resulted in a tie and a defeat,
rushed for 106 yards on 26 carries, including a lbreeyard touchdown for Wisconsin (4-3-1, 3-2-1 Big
Ten). The Badgers' defense came up with tbree inter-

for mort of die lint quner.
CoUlas &lt;XWDplcted 14 of 25 for 172 yard&amp;, iDcluding a tbree-ylWd toudldown pass to Jay Riemmma.
with two iniCRqldona.
Beven .bad toudldown JIIIICI of 1~ IIIII 31 yiRII
to T&lt;ii!Y SnnJJIONI and a two-ylri acormg IOU to J.C.
Dawkins.
~ Tyrooe Wheatley ~c the first pia~ to nub
or 100 yapls or more agaiDal Wi""'!sm ~ ~·
WbCatley bad 132 yards on 20 carnes. mcludinJ I
24-y~ ~run ..
Michigan fim•bcd wath 33S yard&amp;, CXllllpiRII wilb
303 for \:Visconain. But the Badgers controlled die
ball33 ~utcs, 34 seconds.
.
Co~ was burt on the fifth play, but finilbed the

first sencs.
.
Jason Carr, a senior !'fbo was 0-for-3 1n two
games of mop-up duty this. year and 4-f?t"-9 in his
career, en~: game wa~ 8:33 left m the lint
quarter. The . were Jll'ediCW!Ie.
, ~
The w_olvcnnea, •mfanillw wadi c.r I C"'tNNC,
were offs\de ~the first snap. A!te' ~ wa
held f!Jr oo gam, ~ lhre~ .an mcompletion, then
was PI~ off by Wucomm ' .Jeff Meuinger who
returned It 21 vards.

·

GOES FOR nllsT DOWN- Penn State naablock l'nm
teUIDiate J011 Witman (ceater) on 0•1o State
lineman Mlb Vnllel dlll'lnl Cuter'• llnt-dowa

nJ.aa back KJ.Jana Cuter (32) ptl a

.

run In llae lint
~r

tat at State
won 63-14. (AP)

ots.iudar'• lia Tell-

Pa., wMn ... Nlttally ...._

·

Central Michigan keeps OU ·win_
less; BGSU beats Miami
:ona

...

TIM MCGRAW
LlTI'LE TEXAS
BLACICIIAWK
Tim McGraw will be performing
It the Hundngton CivicCenter,HuntiJIIlOII, W.Va 7:30p.m. Nov. lOJIO'
moting his aclf titled debut album
wilbsuchbitsas"lndianOutlaw"and
"Don't Take the Oirl.•
AaiPearina with McGraw will be
Lillie tCui liid Bllckbawk.
Tickell are avlilable by c:allinc
(304)232-1170.

straight against conference opponents under coach
Jerry Claibomc in the mld-1970..
Wllco•ln 31, No. It Mk'lpn lP- At Ann
AdQ, Mich., the reiUIII of llin.:k Brent Moes gave
Wlaconlin the aput tblt bad been missing the past
two wccb.
The running of Moes opened things up for Darren
Beven who complete~ 18 of 26 JIIUCI for 161 yards
and three touchdowns as the Badgers defeated No. 10
Michigan 31-19 SIIUI'dsy.
It was the lint win in Ann AdQ since 1962 for
the Badgers who bad lort 11 atialjbt in Michigan
Stadium.
It 111ao was the lint time since a.y Moeller suececded Bo Scbembecbler as Michigan's coach in
1990 tbat the Wolverines have lost to the same team
twice in IXIIISCCIJtive yeu:x:'tir"'were 7~ in "::'J~
games durin&amp; that time, ·
paybadt tri
over Notte Dame, Michigan Stale and Dlinois this

::1

RSV,P ONLY, LIMITED SEATING
Call today at (6U) 446-0699

NASHVll..LE, Tenn. (AP) - Counl!y singer
Ronnie Dunn's world was rocked by a little
counl!y girl: newborn daughter Haley Marie
Dunn.
. Janine Dunn gave birth Friday to the 7-pound,
7 1/l-ounee girl at Baptist Hospital. It is the
couple's first child.
·
''This bas been without a doubt one of the most
wonderful days ofour lives," said Ronnie Dunn,
who has two children fran a p-evious marriage.
Dunn is part of the duo Brooks &amp; Dunn, whose
bits include "Rock My World (Little Counl!y
Girl)" and "Boot Scootin' Boogie."

WS ANGELES(AP)-Unpierced;'iiiilatooed,
without even a black Iauber motorcycle jacket,
Bob Hope ventured in!O!t~banging territory 1the section ofHoliywood's
Sunset Boulevn lined with heavy metal mUStc clubs.
·
An eclectic crowd of 400 people showed up Thursday night to meet
Hope at Tower Rccordll, where the 91-year-old comic signed copies of his
vldeoandcompttCtdisccalled "Bob Hope Remembers ... World War !IThe European Thealre." .
·
"I love Bob Hope," gushed Roben Green, 20, who sported a purple
earring, a goatee and a shark tattoo. "He's a legend. I've been wanting to
meet him all my life."
ThddMeeban,lhcstore'smanager,saidbewasskepticalwbenHope's
publlcists suggested the signing at his store, which has record-signing
evenIS with s · hcsvy metal acts as Megadeath.
"At riiS~ 1 ugbt it was kind of SJmnge," said Meeban, who at28 is
youn,enough to .~~·s ~-grandson. "But~ ... the morel started
thinking, 'Hey, this s.cooll People love to meet an aeon."

revving up.
:
One 1101181gic toiJcb is die IOIJII!I
.mix, which frequently buriu
Stipe's vocals- a reminder of die
days wbeil bC was shy and afraid I!'
stand in the spollighL
·
Except for some occasional
shows, such u an "MTV.
Unplugged" segmcot, R.E.M. hal
stayed away from live pcrfor,
mances since their last big tou~
ended in 1989.

· (IR). THE
, MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL

lime in European gallerlei, r "bman
said.

r-

~ ·.

Marietta 42, Otterllelal6
Wlttenllerg 40, Den'- 8
At Westerville, Ohio, 1Curt
At Springfield, Ohio, Marcus
Weiclwt rushed for 147 yards on · Booker rushed for three touch-.
25 carries and scored three touch· downs as Wittenberg shut out
downs to lead Mariella over win- Deaison 40-0 Saturday in tbe North
less0tterbein42-16 Sawrday.
Coast Conference.
Weickart scored on runs coverWittenberg (7-2, 6-1 NCAC)
log one, nine and 54-yards. The rusbCd for 291 yards and bad 228
Pioneers piled up 286 yards rush· yards passing. Dension (2-6, 2-4)
ing.
.
was belil to 3S yards rushing on 20
Youngsto- St. 41, Akron 7
auempts.
•
At Youngstown, Ohio, Sbawn
Kenyon ~lll, Wa~~ 14
Patton ran for two touchdowns as
At Gambler, Ohio, Mylm John·
undefealtld You:agstown State beat son returned a fumble 94 yards for
winless Akron 41 ~ 7 S11-turday a touchdown as Kenyon defeated
before a record Stambaugh Stadi· Waynesburg 19-14 Saturday.
umauwdofl7760
Ben Julllp's one-yard toucb·
Patton scored on 'a one-yard run down run ,gave the Gambicn (4-4)
with 5:061eft in the second quarter the go-ahead score wilb 10:33 left
and
on a 13-yard run in the third and capped a 10-play, 87-yard
, ... l'lndlay 39, Urba:fta 7
quartcrforthel'enguins(7.().1).
drive.
At Findlay, Ohio, Bo Hurley ran
Patton
finished
with
a
gameE. Carollu 35, Clnclonali21
for two toucbdowns and passed for
At Greenville, N.C., Marcus
two more as F'mdlay ran its win- high 85 rushing yards on 21 carDing streak to five in a row with a ries. Ten running backs combined -Crandell threw two touchdown
fm 173 yards rushing for the Pen- passes and ran for one on Saturday
39-7 victory over Urbana Saturday.
as East Carolina went on a !bird·
. Hurley rushed for IZS yards on ~
W~
Pa.
25
TIIIID
23
quarter spree and cruised to a 35-21
13 carries, scoring on runs of67
At
T'affm,
Ohio,~
O'Shea's
victoryoverwinlessCincinmti.
and 1 yards. He also completed 10Crandell comple!ed 19-of-26
of-23 passes for 127 yards and 30-yard touchdown pass to Tim
touchdowns of 22 yards to Scott McNeil with no time remaining passc:s for 19.5 yards m. three quar·
McLaughlin and 14 yards to Bill gave WesiJIIinster a 2S-23 viclO!y te~ an keep1ng th~ Pirates (5-3)
over Tiffin Saturday In a Mid- alive for a ber~ 10. the Liberty
Yeager.
· Bowl..East ~lina IS one of live
Findlay (S-3) won in the 200tb States Conference game.
Tiffin's
Scan
McKinney
who
teamS man •lllana: from wblcb the
game of coach Dick Strahm's
completed
19-of-289
pas~s
for
howl
will choose.
career. He Is now 141-S6-3 with
256
ylris,
passed
for
three
touchAIJePe~Y
6l, W-'er 7
two NAJA nadMal cbamjlionsblps.
downs in the rmaJ nine minutes to
At Meadv1lle, Pa., undefeated
AUcgbCny _..... an NCM Divl·
. . . - - - - -......--------:----------------.make~ game close.

ATIIENS, Ohio (AP)- Brian
Ohio did not gel Inside the
Pruitt rushed for 183 yuds and two CMU 32 in the second half.
touchdowns - 121 yards and the
Bowllnl Gnea 27
c:lincbing touchdown comln~ in the
Miami (OIIIo) 16
• $ecODd balf- as Cenlral Michigan
· At Bowling Green, Ohio, Ronkept Ohio University winless willa nie Rcdd caught a Ulucbdown pass
822-10 Mid-American Conference and scoo:d on a SO-yard reverse as
Victory Saturday.
Bowling Green stayed undefeated
1 Pruitt, fourth In the nation in
in the Mid-American Conference
nubinJ comiq into the game, was with a 27-16 victory over Milllli of
limiltld to 62 lids on IS Cllrics in Ohio on Saturday.
the lint half. ~ul wilh Ccnlral JliO'
Miami (3-5-1, 3-3 MAC) scored
tcctlng a lead, bC carried 23 times on its
&lt;kive on a one-yanl
for 121 yards in lbe second half.
run by De:
McCullough.
His 29-yard touchdown run in
But Bowlilig Oreen (8-1, 6-0)
the fourth quarter put lbe g1111e out · scored 17 points in the second
or reach for Ccnlral (7,2 overaU, 6- ~:::er to take control. Keylu
1 in the MAC).
•
scon:d on a two-)'ard run and
The Bobcats (0·8, 0-6) took Brian Leaver added a Sl-yn field
only their second lead of lbe season· goat
"' - ., .. · . . "·~·
when Scott Jtoberts· kicked a 26Just before the half, Redd
yard raetd goal to cap a drive that caught a livo-yanl pass from RfaD
tilok 8:44 off the clock after the Henry. Henry was 11-20 pass1ng
opening kickoll .
.
for i44 yards despite playing most
Seven plays latti, T'an Thomas of the game with a muscle strain in
piJ1Ied in a 54-)'1111 touchdown pus his back.
fromErikT'unpftomakeil6-3.
Miami quarterback Nell
OU scored iu fmal pointi on Dougherty was lmoctcd out of the
Dewight Pickeos' four-yanl run.
game in tflc lint quaner wllb a sepPruiu then closed the first half arated shoulder. Sam Ridu:tiS CIIIIC
Willi a 15-yn touchdown run that on and threw for 110 yllds with a
gave the Chippewas the lead for 35-yard touchdown paaa to
good. Mter Brad Blasy kicked a Tremayne Banks and one inta'oe~
35-yard field goal in the fourth lion.
quarter, Pruitt added the cllncblng
Rcdd's 50-'"""' run in the third
1e01e.
quarter broke
open. Redel

ope:J

Iiad four

four 71 yards.
T
oiii,Kentl4
At Toledo, Oliio, Casey McBeth
rushed for 142 yards to become
Toledo's career rushing leader and
the Rockell bad a 20-2 advantage
in fiht dowDa by balflimc in a 4814 victory over Kent State Satur·
day.
McBeth needed 21 carries for
his 142 yards, addin&amp;.:::·&gt;:ard
touchdown run as lbe
(5-21 overaU, 3-1-1 in the Mid-Ameri·
can Conference) built a 27.0 lead at
the half. He upped his rushing total
to 2,SS8 yards passing the mark of
2,543 set by Steve Morgan from
1981 to 1984.

d;'iamc

n•'"""'

Major college football scores
Eutl Boatoll College 30, AnDy 3; Bouia U. 28,
Manadnueaa 24; Brown 16, Carnell3; Cllllll• 36.
: St. Peter's 15; Columbia 17, Prinecloo 10; DclaWiftl
42, Norlbeastem 20; Georgetown, D.C. 35, Marlsl
12; Harvard 3S, Dartmouth 12; Holy Cion 31,
Fordham 21: Lafaycae ~. BaaeD 14: Lebigll 25,
· Clllgate 22; Monmouth, NJ. 32, Sacred llelrt 13;
:· New Hampsbil'c 13, Rhode llliDd 7; Penn 14, Yllc
: 6; Ptuaburgb 45, Temple 19;' Robat Morris 14, SL
Fmncls, Pa. 14 (tic); SL Jolm'a, NY 24, Siella 8;
, Wqaer 28, Ceat. CODDCCdcut St 21; Wcet Vlqln!a
': 52, Louisiana Tech Ui; William a: Mary 5!,
·. 'Villanova 28 ·
,
'. · · SOli~: Ala.-Biiintagblm 36, Morebead St. IS;
· Alabama St. 26, .Alabama A&amp;M 0; Auburn 31,
• Arku111 14; Bethune-Cookmu 28, N. Carolina
: Aa:T 24; Clcmaon 24, Wra Fcxal8; But Clrolila
" 35, OnclnnMI 21; Florida SL 59, Duke 20; Funnlo
•'33; E. Tenneaace St. 21; Hamlldcn-SydDey 12,
t.Davldaon 7; James Madiaon 29, IUchmond 16;
I '

J

Manblll 42, Citadel 30; Maryland 38, Tulane 10;
Mtulsaippi 34, LSU 21; Moraan St. 24, Florida
A.tt.J 20; S. Carolina St. 42, Delaware St. 38;
Tem mee 31, Soulh Carolina 22; Vandertlllt 17, N.
llllnola 16; W. Carolina33, VMI7
Mill-a: Bownna GreeD 27, Miami (Obio) t~:
Butler 49, BVIDivillc 14; Cent. Michigan 22, Ohio
10; Dlytal30, Valpniso 13; E. Illinois 30, Indiana
St. 21; B. Mlcblpn 41, Ball St. 20; Illinois 28,
Ncalllw I D7; lllinoll SL 38, S. lllinolll7; Kuua
24, OtJebom1 SL 14; Mlchigm SL 27, lndin 21;
Mluourl 34, Iowa St. 20; Nebralb 24iColorado 7;
Nolle Dime S8, Navy 21; Purdue 21, owa 21, tie;
Toledo 48, Kent 14; Wisconlin 31, Mlcblaan 19;
' YOUIIIIfOWD S~ 41, Abon 7.
'
S..~...U Baylor S2, HOUlton 13;.Kanlll SL
37, Oklebom• 20; T - T~ 33, T- 9
Far Willa Air Fon:c 34, Wyoming 17; Arizona
St. 36, Brigllam Young IS; E. Washington 34,
MIIIIIDI SL 31 (3 Of); MODtllla 4S,Idabo 21

sion III record 774 yards in total
offense and bad five players rush
for 8l least 60 yards Saturday in a
62-7 defeatofWoouer.

Baldwin-WaliKe 29, C.pltaU
At Berea, Ohio, Kevin Keefe
"passed for 195 yards and three
touchdowns as undefeated Bald·
win-Wallace beat D.,ilal29-6 Salurday in the Obio Athletic Conf!:l"·
ence.
John IAmJII 33, Mlllldnpm 3
At University, Obio, PJ . Insana
left the;.. game after a sack to get
seven stitches in his cbin and
returned 10 throw three touchdown
passes to Sean Williams as John
CarroU beat Muskingum 33-3 Sal·
urday.
·· '" •··•·
Mount Union 27, Heidelberg 6
At Aliance. Ohio, Bill Bm:hen
threw four touchdown passes as
Mount Union beat Heidelberg 27-6
in an Ohio Conference glllle Salurday·
OllioNortHm 14, Hlnmt
At Himm, Ohio, Ben Snell c.lied die ball 14 times for SS yards
and a touchdown and Scott Tekallcic threw a 42-yard touchdown
pass to LaVan! King as Ohio
Nortbem beat Hiram 14.() S8lurday
intheOhioAtbleticC~.
Tekancic completed six of 21
passes for 94 )'IIIIa for Ohio NonbQU (4-4 overaU, 4-3 OAC)

This week•s gridiron action
'Ibe 1994 bigb school football season wblcb will
enter its llnal regular-ICIIOII wcdt for all Ohio and
West VIrginia lielmls.
.
GaiDa Academy's Dine DevUs, having suffered
their second setback of the CIIJIII&amp;ign Friday night,
will be die guests of the River Valley Ralden, who,
after loeing to the te1111 tbat blllded the Blue Devik
their firlt lou, will have their flnt-ever cbancc to
finisb die year with a brelk-evcn record.
Eastern's·Eagles, who loc1ted up a winning recml
in their llnal home gac Friday nigbt. will, in their
qUCitto get mon: w1na !ban the 1993 1e1m bad, go
DCXth to lake on a club tblt bill a 2.0 lllllt against
Mella Coutlty aews ao f•.
·
.
The Meiss Marauders aad the Southern
TOI'IIadocl will. in their quCit to cad loeiq llmlb,
close their season at •ome agalDit Tri-Valley
ConfeRDCC divillonal foes.
r

Wabama's White Falcons, who have suffered
through an ().for-October season. will end the ICIIOII
IIIII I three-stop road tour in Huntington, wblle Point
Plcout's Big Blacks, having lost a one-point
belrllbrealcer in their last home game Friday night,
will also conclude their sridiron business In the·
.Cabell County seat
Haanan's Wildcats, still in SCIIdl of tbelr first win ·
of lbe.)a', will bead dee9 into tbe MODDtaln State's
inlerior to face their only Clllbolk-acbool oppo:nt
of the campaign.
Here Is a glimpse at who will do battle with
whom Ibis Wftl.
•
Frldar: Gallipolis at River Valley; Euten at
Aleunder; B~ at Meigs; Federal Hoctlna at
Southom; Wlhaale at Huntinatoa VInson; POint
Pleuut at Huntinaton East: Hannan 8l CllrbburJ
Noire Dame

For die lat.t loail liiP acltool foadNIII aetiOD, 11art 011 e-i

•

'

,,

�•

-~~
· ~~~3~~~·1~H~M~~~~========~~======~P~ome~~~~y~M~Idd~I~~=~~~G~~~~~~~~~OH~~P~~~m~PII~a~u~n~~~wv~~==========~s:un:~:.•~r~~~m:•:;~•:·~~-~~·'-::!i•~,cag··~·

~r3Ci,18M

Pomeroy-MiddllpOit--GIIIIpolls, OH Point Pl~unt, WV

PIQ• C2-8unday nm.:. Sentinel

At the Raiders' Senior Night, ·

J·ackson eliminates GAHS from title picture ·2.0-6 ·
·
Aaldemy'a42.
IIIICd
c:llampioo Oa!HpoThe ruged !acboD defeaae,led
· lis from the 994 S'outheutern by tacklea Ralldy EYIIII, Jay Wack·
Oblo 1.eape tide 1110e Friday Diabl · ler, and defeD&amp;ive eod Kevin Bax, with a 20-6 vic:tory over tbe vilit· tcr 001 only limited tbe bJ&amp;h·ac«·
ins Blue Devils
inS Blue DcviiiiD Cli1C eouclldowD,
, Coach Jim ~yaolda' same plan but held the Galllaas below 100
· was to keep tbe baD from the Gal- yards rusbktg fcir the t1rat lime tbl&amp;
. llpolitans. With the help of six Gal- year.
. lipolis turnovers, tbe 1ronmen did
Coach Brent Saulldera' aquad
just that, running 56 offensive 11111111ed only 74 net yards
plays from scrimmage to Gallia (in 28 attempts) against !be
·
GALLIPOLIS • Jlldaoa ellmi-

t!efr:adiaf

"'Q

cbarsmaiHS defense. The alert
Iroamea picked orr three Blue
Devil passes and recovered three
GAHS rumbles to stop repeated
Gallipolis drives.
·
"You can't tum tbe ball over six
times and expect to beat a team like
Jactsoa " said SIIUIIden. "1°1"11.
along with Lopn and DOw Wam:o
Local, bave solid football progratlll. You just can't lllllb: simple
mistaJres against teiiiiiS of tbeir cal-

: " SIUIIIders -Jacksoa, gavial
·
ibet and expect to wm,
tbe •---u~ a 14-6
added. · ,
.'
.
advaataae. Tbe Gal hans n.ever
Jackson s specialty teiiiiiS also ~vered fran dial blow.
.
stood out against the Blue Devils
We bad several opr.-_tunt~ea
Ftlday niabt. Joey Boggs set up to score , but we di~ t"execute
Jacksoa's tint score by n:tumlnga properly,1 S81111den &amp;aid. It was a
kickoff 52 yards. Geoff Maltbewa haid-bittii!S contell by both
became tbe flnt Blue Devil oppo- lrAIIIS," S81111den added
nent this year to retum a punt ,rcir a
I?espite tbe loss, Saunders
touchdown. It was Matthews 88- pr11sed the Blue Devils for their
yard shocker late in the second efforts In what several observers
period wltlcb turned the tide for called-:l classic matcbup.

··By'G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tti11 rSeotlneiSbtlr
'; ' CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP 1 Rlva- Vllllcy'a Raiders uaually put a
4-4 defense against the offenses-

:-they face.
-~ Lopnla Chieftain&amp; laid a 4-4 of
• tbdr own on River Valley's defense
~ - a adlooi-JeCOCd four touc:bdown
cardles by senior Eric Cox and four
rusbina touchdowns by senior
•:tailback JoliD Cosgrove - 10 I10idl
:;a 61-6 walkaway win during Senlor
~:Night at tbe Raiders' field FHday

uxf

ll~
197
67

Logan ................................S-0
Jacki"'!..............................S-1 213
GALLIPOLIS ...................3-2 ISS
Warren Local ....................2-l 123
RIVER VALLEY .............2-3 48
Marietta .......... ,.................. 1-4 83
Alllens ...............................0-5 52

S9
48
lOS
186
193
213

lY:L
6-3
1-1
7-2
6-3
4-5

. 1-8
0-9

lA

296
277
266

"69

209

154

118

340 '

89

lt

Fairbmd ......................................................8
MimDi Tnce ..............................................8
Coal Grovc .................................................s
Putsmouth .................................................4
Mei81.................................................... :.....3
Polat Pleasaot ............................................!

Plcuant29
Coal Grove 28, Roct HW 25

Fairbmd 39, South Point 22
MimDi Tnce 25, Putsmouth 7

9i
31S

s

232
97
183

I
1
4

6

109

8

-

A1beos (0-9) got 011. tbe boll'd ill
the third quaner when Joe Spubawk
bit Mike Grippa with a 25-yanl pus
aod Nick Palmer kickell the extra
point. Warren tacked on a
toucbdowa in the tbird ~ a 10-yanl
nm by Matt Myers, and another in
tbe fourth quarter wbeo Jamie
Walker scored from tbe CliiC.
Oo the ensuing lrickoff, Kabitan
Maxwcll 8lreaked 90 yards to ll1llrc
the Bulldog bigbligbt of tbe eYalina
with 6:44 left in Jbe same.
Warren (6-3 &amp;: 2-3) bad 23 fint
downs, 290 yards rusblag, . t 179
passing wblle AtbeDs pickecl up 112
rusblog aod added ss passms. ·

·Blue Devils•••

lA

116
118
214
196
226
237

Friday: GALLIPOLIS at
RIVER VALLEY; Athens at
Loaan; Warreo Local at
Marietta; Nelsonvlllc-Yort at
Jacki"D; Belpre at Mella; Point
Pleasant at lluotington East;
Coal Grove at Buffalo-Wayne;
Fairland at Chesapeake;
Waverly at Mlamr Trace;
Portsmouth at Wbeelenburg.

up the middle from the Lopn 38yard line in tbe boats' aeaJDd 111C1
final trip across midfield, broke
tbroup tbe CbieftaiDI' S-2 defellle
aod iaJo the clear toward tbe left
corner of the cat end ZODC. Tbe fact
that the last LopD defeoder gra!Jbed
Haislop's face maak lo a vain
attempt to stop blm only made the
. (See JtAJDERS Oil c-4)

to concede the oulrigbt league title
River Loca1 ............7 8 0 7 = 22
to the Loaan Cbieftaiaa following
Rl.er Loc.J22, Marietta I
Marleaa..................o o o o,. 0
their 61-6 aiampede over River
At Marietta, the boat Tl,ers
(ConlilatedfranC-2&gt;
Valley, alvlna them a perfect 5-0 suffered tbeir tblnl shut out o tbe · WarrH Local41, A..._14
reaxd with only next week's same 11C111011 against a River deC~ that
At Vincent, Jullin Frye ran for
~8 yards. Matthews bit Travis
GallipoliS dropped to 7·2 ovaall against wiDlels AtbeDs remainina. permitted them only 110 yards Ia 157 yards anc! scorc'd two
'Hughes with a 10-yanlatrike witb and 3-2 io contirencc play. Tbc
. In other league games Friday tbe total offeDSC aod four first doWDs.
toucbdowns wblle Brilnl'inkernult
. 19 seconds left in the petlod to Gailiaoa, now· third in 1caaue Jackson Ironmen nailed down
The viaitors rao their season ldcked six extra points to lead the
· ·bot tbe count at 6-aD. Ryan Hall's action, will play at River Valley in second place with a 20-6 victor)' reaxd 110 8-1 by jumpin&amp; to a IS-O Warriors to their sixth win in nine
:kick from placement pot Jackson Its ftnalgame of tbe sc:asat Friday. over Gallla Aaldemy, WMR:D Local halftime lead in dealing the Tiser- games at tbeir bonJe&lt;aniag pine. ·
: 011 top to stay.
Nathao Swindler, startios whipped Albens 48-14, aod Marletla tbeir eighth lou in nine starts.
Warren scored almost at will,
-: After Jesse Stacy returned the ' GAHS guard; was evicted by the took
it
on
tbe
chin
from 1Hannlbal
The
Pilots
scored
on
a
CliiC·yard
aettiag
14 in the first quarter on
· :.foUowins ldckoff 17 yards to the officlala during the final minutes of River Local 22·0 Ia the only non· run by Michael Mistovlcb In the Shawn Taylor's
one-yard nm aoc1 a
·GAHS 31, the Blue Devils play for unsportsmanlike conduct. lc:ague cootest
ftrst
quarter,
a
three-yud
blast
by
fou.
r
-yud
blast
by Frye. Tbe
: lllllldted 61 y.-ds In nine plays to SwiDdler will bave to sit out the
Tbe Iroomeo will face Man Sniviey in tbe sccond period, sca'eboll-4 allowed 3S-O 11 balftime
: tbe Jackson 17, but on a fourth and River Valley same this week undefeated Nelsonville-York this and a 3S-yard scamper by Guy on a 53-yatd nm by Frye, a 24-yard
Ogartcr lllllla
•silt altualioo, Eric Humphreys wa5 acaxdlng to new stale rules.
week In a pivotal clasb that could Brandon in the fourth stanza.
touchdown pass from Shawn Taylor Atbcns ...................o o 7 7 = t4
: tosse4 for a IS-yard loss.
.
send the winner inro tbe first round
River finished ·With 203 yards to Joe Greenwalt and an 11-yud WarreoLocal ......14 21 7 6= 48
·
: ,After sa excbanae of downs, Score by quarten
the
stale playoffs. The Buckeyes rusblag and bit IS of 22 passes for atrlke fran Taylor to R'Yllll N'lcbols.
of
7 70 6·20 are 9-0 and Jackson Is g.t, Jacboa 183 yards wbilc Marieua DCUed ~
·Mittbews returned Cremeens' 38- .J~........
•yard punt from bls own l2 to pay- GallipOlis..................6 0 0 0 "' 6
dirt to make it 13-6. Hall's kick
Statistics
''from pliii:CDiellt made k 14-6 witli
.9:29 let\ in tbe balf.
Department
G
J
-' Tom McNerlln intercepted a F'trst dowos ....,..................9
12
;Blue Devil pass with 1:SO left in yard$ rusbing ...............112 202
tbe balf to stop IDOtber Blue Devil Lost rusbiDg ................... 38
18
t drlve.'
. Net rusbiDs ..................... 74
184
) HutdJIDSOD returned tbe ICCXll1d Pass attempts .................. 14
s
I balf ldckoff 22 yards to tbe GAHS
Completlons .....................6
3
: .31. The Blue Devils reeled off two Intcrc:eplt:d·by ...................o
3
: quick t1rat downs and moved to the Yards passing ............... 111
24
: Jac;kson 45 where Johnny King Total yarda ......;............ ISS 208
• recovered a Blue Devil fumble.
Plays ...............................42
56
Tro1 Duncan recovered a Return yards ................... Sl
197
Boaas fumble oo the GAHS 38 Fumbles ............................3
2 ·
with 8:26 left in tbc third period, LOst fumbles. ....................3
2
but GaJUpolla failed to capitalize Peaalties ....... ~ .............5-SS S-60
oo that JHS mistake. On the fol- Puots ...........................2-64 S-134
' lowlna Blue Devil punt, Boggs·
Individual ruablng • JUS •
: fumbled 011 Jack~"!!' a 21 after sis· Matthews, 18-66; Robllins, 15-59;
; naliDg for a fair c:ardl. Gallla' a Seib Boggs, 8-26; Baxter, 6-16; AU., I' Davis recovered on tbe JHS 21. but ll; Wolford, 3-6. TOTALS 51·
~ a dead baD foul by G~S took tbe 184.
~ Blue Devils out of IC«iag poaili011.
GABS - Hutchinson, 12-64;
•lTbat may llave been the game' a Stacy, 11-36; Dailey, H·l);
key play as tbe llmmeD dili in and Humphreys, 4· (·25); TOTALS
· beld"on their own 34 (ollowlng the 28-74.
.
15-Yiri penalty.
· · .
,
R-Mna • JHS • Hugbes, 2-22tllc Galllans were able to 1; Boggs, 1-2-0. TOTALS • 3-24advance to the Jackson 22 wi_th 1. GABS • Qualls, 2-18-0;
1:26left in the third period, but Hut&lt;ttinsoo, 1-79-1; Barnes, 1-10Jacbon's dcf~ beld again. Tbe- - 0; Stacy, I· (·3); Ciatk 1·7-0. TO.
Blue Devita bad possession only TALS -,6-111·1.
.
six times durin&amp; tbe f111al 13 min·
PIIIIDK • JHS • Malthews 3-S·
utes wblle Jlll:kson ate time off tbe 0-24-1. TOTALS 3·5·1·24-1.
dock by mooing 22 plays from GABS. Humphreys, S-12-(2)-104saiuBiage.
I; I. Saunders, 1-1 (0)-7-0;
Jackson's Jasoo Brown and Hutcbinson, 0-1-(1)-0-0. TOTALs
Craig Cusick bad pass intcrc:epti&lt;!D' 6-14-(lJ-111·1
In the final two-and one ball DIID·
Reconred fumbles: JHS:
utes of play. Cusick ran bls back 22 Wackier, King and Rippetb.
yards for the final Jackl"'! touch· GABS: Duncan and Davis.
·
down with 11 scoonds left to play.
Scoring • JHS • Hughes, 10
The victory left Jackson 8-1 . yard (lass from Matthews ,0:19
Na Orx F-. DIMred"
overall. JHS oompleted lea&amp;ue p~y ftrst, (Hall, kick); Mattbews, 88with a S-1 reaxd. The lronmeo still y.ard punt return, 3:29 second,
bave a mathematical chance to (Hall, kick); Cusick, 22-yard pass
IIIIAIIIIEW '95 CIEVY 5-SERlES l.S
share the title with Logan if Athens interception return, 0:11 fourth,
. EX IEiiiiED CAB PICIII'
• Arfi.lodc Brakes
defeats Logan this week. Jackson kick fail; GABS· Hutdlinsoo, 79·
• Ella!&amp; Pad&lt;age
· Powers...,.
•
Wei
EqLWOd'
·Aunrun.,....
also bas a shot for a playoff berth yard pass from Humphreys 6:05
•Power BrakeS
• Loaded!
.
iD DiviJIDD 11 drelea If the iroDmeD first, ldckfail.
•.wfN Stereo
defeat Neli"Dvllle-YOlk in a DOD·
Next game: Nov. 4, at River
league outing at Jacksoa Ibis week.
Vailey.

........... Jllllla

Fddty'•ll:llm

Jackl"'! 20, GAWPOLIS 6
Losan 61, RIVER VALLEY 6
River Loca122, Mlrieaa o ·
Warren Loca148, Atbcna 14
Vlalal County 20, Meigs 7
Roane Couaty 30, Point

L

halftime deficit In River Valley 33 yards in their first-half
blal«y.
posseasiDDS.
The Chieftains scored on every
The beat went 011 for tbe guests
first~balf posseuion but a aedes after ltalftimc. Cox and Cosgrove
balfway tbrougb tbe seaxtd quarter, got the next two toucbdowns before
in wbicb they' moved tbe ball nine they and most of tbe starters passed
yards to the Raiders' 11 before the torch to the second- and tblnl·
losiu&amp; It 011 dowDi. Meanwblle, tbe atring players.
Raldels, wbo never crossed midfield
Tbe Raiden' btlgbtest moment
before balflime, moved the baD 24, On offense came into through the

·.

317
342

69

.

three tou~hdowna before halftime six, one. 48 (Loaao's 1S·ylld lllepl tbW qu.ttl', wbeD they oaly.neecled .
aod Drew 'l'bolitas' live extra-point substitution penalty belped them get three playa to go 76 yards to dr:oy
boola help boost.Lol!an's balftimc across midfield In tbia drive, tbeir tbc Cbleftaina the abutouL Seaior
lead to 42-0, wbldt was tbe largest first of the JCCODd quarttr), zan IIIII tai'bri A!lc Haialop, wlto c:blqed

~ With just one game remaining in over ID tbe 1994 Soulbeastcm Ohio el!Cepl the fat Ja4y bun't a~mg yet. , school officials are bracina for a rusblag yarda aod 84 passing.
:.~
. · ID~ •liiiO!I. .,lay, It's just about Allllellc I..eque cbsmpionlblp race,
Most Je&amp;ane observers are ready standing-room only crowd.
Ogartcr lllllla

158
103

-•Noa-...... ep~•­

Ialll

·
scrimJDaae play-reaolted on a alx"We don't doeoytbing fancy," yard lou on a run, senior
said bead Chieftain Dale Amyx, quarterback Chad Zimmerman
whose warriors eltlended their dropped back to CODDCCt with Cox
wiimlng streak to five pmes. "They for tbe flnl of blsl!lydirt 8J1I(II wilb
went to man coveraae on our · barely a minute gone from the
receiver Cox," be aaid or bil clock.
veteran's scoring catches, whlc;lt
After Cox's second ~. it wu
came on sllalsbt-clown-tbe-aldellae Coasrove'a turn to shine. Tbe 5paltei1IS wbk:b beat the Raider deep foot-10, 165-pounder, helped
backs by two to three steps each Immensely by a quick and strong
time.
offensive .line, basically dartc.d
Logan wutcd liUie dmc fettlng wherever be w111ted 10 go eo rouiC
011 lbe boud. A&amp;r the pme • t1rat to another 100-)'lld-plua effort. His

JRiver Local blanks Marie~a 22-0; Warren rolls over Athens 48-14

Overall

f[

·

DigbL

~In other SEOAL action;

-•SEOAL ..... • -

lY:L

·

~ Logan blasts River Valley 61-6 to co~ntinue win-streak

After
stopplna
laitial
aeries,
GAHSJacbon
acorec1 on
on lu
itl
third play from acrimmaae When ·
·Eric HumpiareyaWt 11e1111 IfutddDson with- 1 79-yard strike at the
:0S mark. Brett Cremecm polDt
6after
llt.....pt wu DO aoocL
Bolfl&amp; returned the enanlu
kickoff 32 yarda to the Blue Dcvlla
set Jacki"D's fint score. It
48 tbe ~ playaiiO move
11
(See BLUE DEVILS
oa C3)
-

Area football standings
lam

·

RAMBLING ON - Wltla G . Academy'• J - Stacy (44) ltay·

GET OFF MEl - GaUJa Academy raoolal back J - Stacy
(rlgltt) JIPII to keep Jatlmn defender KeYID BuW l'rom pt'h• a
pip on ltlm durlq Friday Dlaltt'• a- at Jacklea lllP lkltool,
t1te 1ta1ta 20-i nctury completed Jeape MY for t1tem aad •nt
the Bille Devi11 to tltelr -.dloll altlte year. (811 a- pltoto)

Inti on 1111 beell, f'allbllck H•tla Bvtdtt-uJ (30) keepllolaa upfleld

put JackiOD'I Matt Robblal (28) duriD&amp; Friday aiglat'1 ·sEOAL
game ln Jacbon, wlaere the lroDDMn won 20-6 to enlaance their
cha_. ala p111t •••- playolrbertla. (BW R- plloto)

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~Octobtr'30, 1884

SunUy nm•

Pomeroy--Middleport-GIIIIpolla, OH-Polnt Pleulnt, WV

· By beating the Marauders 20.1,

~

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... ,. • '"• '

Sentinel Pli• · Cl

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Vinton County hand·s Meigs fourth cons~cutive defeat ··

: ''By DAVE IIAIUUS.
' Jflu
S1DtlDel Conllltlllllt
·': · McARTHUR
Vinton
·•·County brol1c open a clole lime by
~•rscoring 13 points 1D tbe final 5:13 to
•defeat 111c Meip Marauden '1J)..1 1n
,•f!l'rl-Valley Coaference football
:"acdoa · Friday night at Vinton
•lCount)' High Sebool.
• •. It waa an excellent played
' .\football game ~y bolb teams that
• :.waa mu,ch closer than the final

-Hull

sc:«C.

:. •

The Vlkingucored lbc evenins's

fint aeon~ when BJ. CoariiiiCOied

;-from five-yards out 011 tbe tblrd play

· Cif tbe.IICCODd period. Kevlu Caudill
: added tbe extra ~lull to sive the
( Vlkinl!l a7-0 lead at tbc tO: SO mat
:· of. tile first balf. Tbe score capped
; C)lf·a Dille play 52 yard drive set up
: by a Travis Ruckel recovery of a
i Manuder fumble.
·
~ The Maraudaa took tbc ensulus
: kickoff and drove 68 yards in 10
: playa to tic tbe score when Israel
. Grimm dove ID from one yard oul
: Brent Smith added tbe extra puiull
: to tie lbc pme at aeven with S:44
. left ID the balf

CRASH TIME lsllbolat to hap(ll!n r~r Eutem nnntna bact Juon
Sheets (U) 1111d MOler deep back' Juon LlntoD (7) durlq Friday

.17%

photo)

Raiders...

.,
WRAPPED UP- River \'.Dey fuUt.c:k Steve lhiiMIMIIMI (center)
ftnda lllmlelf about to be wrapped up by Loau linebacker Mike
liuba (31) • lie laeads Into i11e 6ellrl ir1 t&amp;e Clileftaln aere- Iii llie
. aecond qurter of Friday nlaht'• SEOAL conteat on tbe Ralden'
home fteld.
won U-41 to capture Ita nru. stral&amp;ht victory.
(TIIMI-Seatlnel plioto by G. Spencer Osbone)

Loa••

Passlilg yards ............... 181
Ccmp.-au. .....;..............4-S
Incercepdoos tbrowD .......0
Fumbles-lost ................2-1
Penallies-yards ...........6-SO
Punting ....................... 1-35

soorin8 play sweeitt for tbe .Raider
faithful. '
Losan
r~onded
when
aoplloliioR: full
QulniOII BVIMIS,
rewarded for bls belp Ill clearing
boles for Cossrove and bia pass
bloc:klns for Zimmerman, bad bls
nlllllba Willi called 011 a IICCODd-adtbree situation at midfield. Evans
barrelled up tbe middle and cut to
. bis left Into the clear for a
IDUcbdown run ID plain view of tbe
. River Valley sideline.

23

2.-6
0
4-4
4-20
7-234

••

APY

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30 Month
PeoQles Value CD ·

I

6.43%Af,Y

Statistical leaders
Lopn Cbieftalnl (6-3)
Rushing - Cossrove 1S.209 &amp;

Call TeleBank to open the account
41Ds; Evans 8-79 &amp; 1 TO; Brown
or request more information.
ll-42;Crsgo4-13
·
·Mlnlmmn deposillo open ID accoualls $7,500.00. Ra1es lodicale
Paalng - Zimmerman 4-S, 80
This week's asenda baa River
annual percentage ~eld and are mllable for accounts opeaed October
Valley cloling Ill campaign Friday ydi.&amp;41Ds
27 - NoW!IIIber l; 19')4. Deposlls of $100,000or more uuubjecllo
RiicelVIDI
eox
4-236
&amp;: 4
at home asalnst Gallia Academy,
dally
nile quolllloas. Ajleaally {or e~rly wllhdrawal may be Imposed. 1fi:ftld{
wbile Losan will end its seaaoo at 1Ds;
Above
niA!s Millble II all People!! Bank locllllou.
Fu01ble recuverlea - Phelps,
bome aplnst Athens.
WilsuD &amp; 2 Olben'ID traffiC
Ouvter tallll
Losan ..................21 2119 0.. 61
River Vdey Ralclen (4-5)
RiverValley ..........o o 6. 0 = 6
RuahiDI - Haist~ 8-96 &amp; 1
7
1042
Scoring summa. ry
m;
26: J.HaaUnund
Jentlns 2-3. ; · lenJI!Ds \
' Paalng - Kelley 2-S, 23 yds;
Lclsan: Cox 64-yd. past from Stepbala 0.1.
Zlmmetman(Taylorldck),10:S81st
llecelvlng- J. Jenkins 1-17;
qtr.
, s~ 1-6
· Losaa: Cox 45-yd. pass from
Fumble recoverlea - one (in
Zimmerman (Taylew klc:lt), 7:57 1st .~traffic~:t..,_ _ _,__......_ _.___:--::~~=--==--:::--"7"~-~----"'---""1
Logan: CosJ:rove H-yd. run
qtr.
.
•• yd. run
(Taylor kick), 11:28 2nd qtr.
Logan: Cosgrove S-yd. run
(Taylor kick), 7:19 2nd qtr.
.·
·Logan: Cox S3-yd. pass from .
Zimmerman (Taylew kick), :10 2nd

(T!=~~~~S~~~eq:

·
Ro
·
NG
1 .~

AJ~MSIJ
~ •1

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!

q~.

Fiidaiv. Ff1!,r:

: By SCO'IT WOLFE
coacb Dave BOIIOII lben paclouaiy
: ALB ANY Alexander . aubatituted freely. In tbe last three
: COIJII)IIed 324 total yards en route to playa of the game, be had his
·a 36-0 shut-out victory over lbe players simply fall 0111be baU to nm
Southern Tornadoes Friday night .Ill - out lbe cloc:k.
: Alexander High Scbool.
Southern aopbomore Jamie
: Alexander, lbe defending Tri- Ewns led Soutbem rusbing ~itb 49
•Valley Conference Hocking y;Rs ID 16 canlel. wbile Mike~
: Division Cluimpioa boostccl ill mat caught a pass for 17 yards and Eric
'to 2-7 overall, but is 2-2 in Jones bad one for 13. Maynard was
:divisional play. Southern drops IQ 1- 2-9 passing, asaln under much
pressure, for two lntem:ptlons and
: 8 and 0-4.
: Both teams traded poaaessiuns 30 yards.
.
• throughout the first quarter, as
Aleunder was led by Rosa WJtb
: Alexander bad a baUbadt pass film t 4 carries and 8D even 100 yards,
·Matt Rosa to MD Riley toucbdown while Dailey was 9-1S and
:pass called back. Alex tben besan a sophomore Wcs Wilson . 6-44.
; 60-yard drive that ended on a Nate Rolston waa 5-7 passlug with o.oe
' Dailey sweep right for tbe interception and 64 yards, wblle
: to111chdown with Ross added the Ross Willi 0.3. Jarvis caught two for
: two-point conversl011 run to make 1 yards. Boggess 1-26 and Rosa 1: the acon1 8-0 at tbe 11:57 mark of 20.
~..,. ards
' - .•Lrthe second canto.
Alexander ball .IAN y
.........g
: Momen'ts later at:tbe 6:19 mart, and ·64 in tile air for a mix that
: Rusi bad a three-yard nm, followed netted 324. Southern netted elgbt
: by a Lance Rolston to Chad Jarvis yards rusbing and 30 passing for 38
: pass conversion to make the aeon~ total yards. Tbe first down ration
: 16-0 That play waa set up by a 26- was 28·7.
• yard ·pass to Fred Bogsess.
Southern will host Fed~ raJ
: ·Just before the half, Alex took Hoc:klug ID tbe season fmale Fnday
: over 011 tbe Soutbern 34 yard line, ID Racine.
· settins the· atase for three straigllt Ouarter llllall
:passes and evenlllalaconl by Chad Soutbem ................O 0 0 0
0
:Jarvis, who collected a RolsiOII pass. AJellatKier..............o23 13 0 = 36
' Thomas Hasklll's ldck made It 23-0
: with onty 23 seconds remintns Team statistics
: bef(JI'C the balf.
; Early ID tbe third frame, Dailey Qepednocp&amp;
.511. ~
•picked o« a Jesse Maynard pass and Fll'll downs ......................7
28
i :J:m~\=
Total yards ... :................38
324
~ to make tbe score 30-0 at tbe 9:17 Ruabins yards ............ ~ ·60-260
:martoffbe .tbild flame.
·CompPassJilsau.yards................~
' Two plays after Adrew Stump
·• .................... .
1
:recovered a Soulllem fumble, Ross lntei'CCpliOIIS thrown .......l
; broke off a 32-yard run. The kick Fumbles-lost ................2-2
2-0
' failed and Alex led 36-0 at tbe 4:46 Penalties; ....................~ 11-85
: marlt of lbc tbiRI frNne. AleJiander Punting .....................6- 6
3.S I

'

Olborne)

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Dellll'lmr;!it

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n7

L

Fll'll downs ......................9

-

Scrimmage playa ...........S8
45
Tocal yarda ...................SS1
164
Rusblug 111.-yds.....43-3-70 31·141

...

SALE
STARTS
10-9-94 .

thlleuoa•tal'tlaow

......,_. ..

lht CAwlpO 12 ...
lolc:W \IJ• .....,_,
limlttd wamnty.

SALE
ENDS
DEC.1, 1994

1

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ro~~.

REMINGTON
SLUGGER
I oz. Hollow Point
Rlned Sl~g Lo~ds
FlatS-Pack

,
12, 16, 20 GA. 5 Pack
'

, Rifle Slugs

Meiss tben drove to tbe Vltlng
3S yard line, but Haaaon's firat
down paa waa illten:epkd by Ward
at lbc Meigs 1s wllb 2:00 left ID die
game. Booth ended lbc ICOIIng 111rec

Booth ainied all three plays in the
81-yndrivetoia:tbewln.
The Marauden received soother
blow 011 tbc pme's fmal play wben
.,.,.._ end Mike Mlnba1l went

defenaive lineman and dpt
•
Donald Sbaffer wbo aaffere4 •
concuaaloo ia last week'alou tO:
l'olnt Pte•••
:
(See MARAUDEltS aa C6) '

Eagles ..._~&lt;~~from~·~c-4~&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____;...~:

EolltiD lOCi: abe openl0, lddt of
tbe ICilOIId balf and mrdled the baU
down the field 62 yards ID eleven
plays for the score. Cbarlie Bissell
bammered tbrougb tbe line for a 12yard touebdown acamper at lbe 7:03
mat. Bissell, Buckley and Bowen,
a rust down. MHS called another Eaatem'a "killer B'a." took tuma
time at the 44 aecond mark, then with Jason Sheets In putllag
::::fie'::!':~ as Eaateru · ~m:f~eied~~vcral011
On the oext play, Miller bit
Miller besan a drive with bls
Nathan Merclde on a 20.yard pass nms by Keller IDI JOIICI, bow~.
to tbe 18. Excltlus actioo followed Eddie Friend thwarted the drive
11 Jenka was trapped by the EHS with an luterception and 27-yaad
defense, escaped, lben fuOJbled return to lbc Mi11cr 4S-ywd line.
before recoverlug and settlug back
After a penalty, Bowen faked
to the originalllue of scrimmase. luto tbe line, then dropped back to
With 7 secoods left, Eddie Friend pass, bittlug OUo ID slride few a 40brol1c up a deep flag paUem near tbe yard game. Otto fended orr the
end zone as time ran out, Eaatem Miller defender with t!Je right band
leadlug, 14-g at tbe balf.
and hauled it ID with tbc left. Three
Unofficially at the balf, Jason playa lalcr from lbc ten, followlus a
Sbeela led Eaatem witb SB yards on Sbeets gainer of five, Bowen
ten carries and a touchdown, Cba'lie dropped back under pressure and
Bissell bad SO yards on eight heaved up a "Hail Mary" deep 1Dto
·ames. wbile Ryan Buckley bad 26 the furthermost portion of tbe end
yards on six carries .and a zone.. . .
.
llltlclmwn.
CJ!arlie Btssell ~ bigb 1nto
Brian Bowen was two for five tbe au, dragging bia feet across tbe
passlug for twenty yards. One went end zone as bia momentum carried
to Bissell for 13 and another 10 bhn IDto tbe dalbess out-of-bounds
MicabOUofcwseven:
at Shade River Stadium. Bowen
Miller quarterback Rob Jenks led dropped back to pass on tbe
. all offensive performers with 76 COIIvetSion, lben slipped lbmush the
yards 011 six of twelve· completions; llue and luto the end zone fur lbe
Joey Jones was 6-33 rusbins and extra point run to tpake the score
Jerrod B.-owning waa 230. Keller 28-8.
bad three receptions for 49 yards.
Interception again spelled
EHS bad ten fll'll downs and Miller disaster for tbe Falcons as Travis
six.
Curtis picked off the Rob Jenka'
hammered Miller twicC few sacka ID
the bacldield, but after a Miller lime
out, quartelback Rob Iellks tbreaded
tbe needle to Jeremlab Keller for a
fint down oolbc ZS-yard gainer. As
time w11a wiDdlug down, Miller bad
an incomplete tben JOIICS rushed for

J18111Dl returned it 37 yards 10 lbe Suttle, Friend and Curtis bad U:
26-yard line. Five playa laler, Ryan iDiaceptions.
:
Buckley piiiDSed luto lbc end zone
The Eaatem defeuae Willi led by
for his second score at the 11:26 Adam McDaniel' a 10 lacldM, !!lDv.
malt of lbc fOta'lh quarter. Bowen's llltkle efforts from Blaacll.and•
kick split the uprlgbts for the Sheets, seven-tackle efforts by.
COIIVer&amp;ion to make tbe score 35-8. Friend and 0Uo and Bucldcfa four. :
Eaatem hammered Miller after a
Offldally, Sbeela bad 116 yards'
Bowen kick-off went for a 011 18 carries. wbile Bissell bid 13-;
~back back out to lbc 20-yard ;:; ~:~;::. ~::!'l.lt1I:
Eaateril then emptied its benc:b paaaing, with Otto maklog two '
but waa faced with a fourth and catcbea for 41 yards and Biuelt:
three from the 20. Jason Sheets gelling t_wo few 36. ,Steve Dunt waa:
returoed and oot only aot tbe rant 0.3 passms.
•
down ·but also rambled tbe rest of
Jones led Miller with 11 c:anlea·
the .,;ay for the score aod io the rew_S6 yards. wbile BrownlngW814-:
proceu went over the 100-yard 34.
•
mark few tbe game Bowen split the
Eaatem goes to Alexander next·
uprigbtl with the· kick for a 42-8 week in a fi~t for 011e of tbe top_
score at tbe 7:31 mark. After JosiDg three spots tn. the Tri-Valley:
oulright posses•iOII of lbe Tri-Valley Conference. Tnmblc waa 3~ 13
Coofcrence title last week, EUtem victor over Federal Friday niJbt,
went at Miller, pulling out all the ~-n~ a 4-0 lead in the Hockin&amp;
stopl, ew so it seemtA.
DiVISion race.
On the kick-off return, Jones Ouartcrllllala
•
broke several tackles and woo a Miller ....................8 0 0 22 • 30
four-man foot race to tbe end zone Eastern ..................6 8 14 14 • 42
for an SO.yard toucbdown rellll'll. A
Jenb to Brownlug rec:eption added Team statistics
the two-point exuas to make !be Dfnutuwm
lt1
I
score 42-16. A Jenks to Brownmg - - · · - pass completed tbc scoring at tbe FU'SI~ ................... .13
22
4:46JIIIIIk, as Miller's Jones added Rusl!ing atL~yds . .... 28-107 56-173
lbc exllti for a 42-2A tally.
Passins yds ....................94
77
After Jenks bad an luterceptlon Tocal yardage ...............201 . 2SO
and ran it to tile 19-yard line. Jenks Comp.~ ..................9-22
4-lS
bit Brownlus for tbe game's fmal lnten:eptiOIIS thrown ...... .3
1
aeon~ at tbe 1:49 marie on a IS-yard ; Fumbl~lost .,..............3-1
3-1
reception, the score 42-30 as the ~ Pe~bes-yds . .............3-lS
S-20
conversion was no good. Cbip Punting .......................4-30
2-ZS

WHEN YOUR BOAT NEEDS SERVICED•••
Winterization Special
Now In Progress

MARIN-ESERVICES

Karr St., Just Off Rt. 124, Syracuse, OH

OUR ·vEHICLES LOO
GOOD.EITHER

COMING OR GOING!

=

. ·;

-..~a.

aao~~

on the first play of the drive oa a
pass from Wlllilanl to Duaty Ward.
Jammey ~ JatDC&gt;:) ..
also bad a bis play m tbe drive WJtb
a 39-Yanl sc_~per oo second and

Chec• With Us For DetaDs

•

·.

Tum statistics .

!1:

:;;.:r--

!Alexander beats
!Southern 36-0 ·

Losan: Cosgrove 23-yd. run
(Taylor kick), 8:22 3rd qtr.
River Valley: Haislop 38-yd run
(run failed), 4:21 3rd qtr.
Losan: Evans SO-yd. run (kick
failed), 3:07 3rd qtr.
SACKED- River VaDey quarterback David KeDey ftndl blmlelf
011 hll back after Loa1111 defeDIIvt tackle Tim Woodge•d lays blm
out fur a lou In tile aecond quarter or Friday nlg•t•s same near
Claelbln. Tbe Cbieftalnl posted a 61-61ow:kout wiD ID llae lint-ever
-tlua betweea .tile two duhl. (Timei-Sentlnel photo by G. Spencer

Eight plays IDI 92 yards laler It six sJvillg tbe Vlldngs a ftnt clown playa later wltb a 67-yard 1C1111J1et down with a 1a1ec bijury. It .Ia aUt
was a 14-7 game when quarterback ·at lbe Marauder eight yud line. witb 46 IICCODda left ill tbe COIIIell •tnowa bow ICriOIII die
to
Doug Williams ICOied from a yd Caudill OIICC igaln added the extra Caudill's kick Willi no aood but tbc w.uan or PalliDI a
Will:
ouL The Vlldnga picked up 26 yMds pulull.
VikiDJI bad posted the 20-7 wiD. already playlag without sea.::

TuRNS THE CORNER - Melp liiUback brael Grimm (left)
: turna tile corner and prepares to jet away from VInton County's
•• Bn nt •
· - .......
_ -ID McArtbur,
-...,...
-....
.L-"" bout
b Di\'·• wlaere tbe Viklnll- 20- • (T
p......
Y e llll'tll)
•

qtr.

Logan: Cox 74-yd. pass (rom
Zimmerman (ldck failed), B:SO 3rd

field

beld.

18Month
Peo les Value CD

night's TVC J11UM at Eastern lllgli School, wllere llae ~ won 4130 to aweep l.he HUOn aeriea between die two duba, (Scott Wolfe

&lt;Cootlouedfnmc-3&gt;

Vinton County took tbe second
balf Jddroff and ckove to lbc Meigs
21 yard line in 12 playa, but lbe
Meigs defense stiffened and
Viklns be~td coach Malt Queen
elected to 11y a
soat 011 fourth
and nine from the Meigs 21.
Calldlll's Irick bad ·lbc dislance, but
was wide to lbc left.
The third period ended with
Meigs on tbe move as the
Marauders drove to the Vlkins
eight-yard Une but thiDss began to
fall apart for Meigs. With the
Marauders faclns a first-and-goal
situalioo at tbe Vikings' eight, IIIey
were called for a clipping penalty
and boldlns and all of a sudden
Meigs "as facing a fO!Wih and goal
from tbe 35-yard line.
Hanson fired a strike over the
middle to Paul Pullins wbo tipped
lbe ball and pulled it in, but the
jwdor was unable 10 elude tbe fiDal
Viking defender between him and
the goal line wbo J!IJIIed blm down
at lbc eight yard line with 8:12 left
1D 1bc J!&amp;me. Pullins IDjured bia leg
on the play and was unable to rellll'll
to 1bc C0D1eSt. ·

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See Puzzler on Page D-2

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REMINGTON SLUGGER•
RIFLED SLUGS
High-veloclly maplim and short magnum
Slugger loids - two of the fastest rifted ,
slugs ever made
,
• Speeds up to 1760 fps
• Flatter trajectory
~ Less wind deft~li'l"
• Made In U.S.A.

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�Page Cl Sunday 11m.. Sentlnal

Pomero.,......lddJeport-GIIIIpolla, ·OH-Polnt P11111nt, wv

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Roane County comes back to beat Point Pleasant 30-29·
·
1
P9P
,a

. In Landis' birthplace,

Wirt County pounds Wahama 42-14

.!IQIDCihioi Ii DOticeably missing. The dlilehlt. Ia about October ttmshlne.
1bc day' I DeWS and 1be winless NFL 1ellll that playa
Tbe judge' 1 birthplace Ia 25 miles nortb of
down the road in Cincinuatl. No ODC even liiCiltiou Clndnnatl, bomc of balebill'a flnt profcasioaallealll.
1bc D8llonai l*lfn'e
.
'lbe historic house llld c:ln:uB lladlum 1ft COilllected
In 1be blrdlplalle of Keoca.aw MOUDiltin l.llldla by a streldl of road tbal JDeM¥ia1 tbrough 1bc coun1bc mao wbo BB\'ed.basrbaU _,tile pne IJ as dead as tryside like seams on a MsebaJJ
Although fw in Millvillc doo't like wbat's going
1bc wltb=cl COI'Il lllalb lllling the road oat of town.
''Footballu an lbcy talk about DOW- bow bid 111c oa wttb the 11r1te and an. they're still poud of their
Bengalalft doln(. ADd they're aiW talkillg about OJ. special plalle in bascbaltbiAory.
Simpson," McQueen said, during a abort break
It came about because tbe Landi' family belwecD arden. ''I bave not helld UJybody tdt about Gennan lmmigranll wilo aai\'ed in 1749 - settled in
IwaeiJIII"
nearby southeast Indiana. Abnbam Landia married
Neltber bai Roser lama. The retired ldloolacller and moved to Millville, railing a family of five. He
llva in 1bc boule wbcre I andia, baiCIJall' a flnt CIOID~ was iD llUIIlCIOUI CIYil War blldca IIIII, ICQliiJins ID
m(uJmer,. Will born. lams says baseball talk died loa&amp; flmlly legeild. nearly died wileD be toe* a 12-pound
before 1bc playtn' strike wiped out tile SCUOD and cannonball in the leg at a batdc ncar Kennesaw
MOUDtain in Georgia.
1J11t11m CIIICded 1bc World Series.
"Moat people don't mls1 It," lama said, faj;fnl
Landis mumed home and bad two 10111. Tbc
toward die comer of the bouse wbere, acc:ording to · lint, born oa Nov. 29, 18li6, was lllllled for tile plal:e
legend, Landla was born. "Tbcre's just not a lot of wbcre be nearly lost Ilia life.
Although 1bc family later moved badt to Indiana,
cftuuuim about il
Millville
bad ita plalle in bislory. Lllldia' blrthplal:e,
"I wcxtcd for the (nci&amp;hboring) towDiblp OWl the
annnw IIIII die people were Dillie inltn!lled in bow atop a geode bill that-overlooks a auk, baa been
1bc tlll!l• were growing or wbale-. Tbey weren't remodeled but preserved. A baseball field hal been
R81ly intereated in baseball. To me. lbcy'w
kiDd aaaldled out at 1bc .bottom of 1bc bill.
Roger and Nadine lams becanle caretakers of the
of wblpped a dead dog. Wbo cares ailYJII!lR?'
Wbal would LiiDdia think about an Ibis? 11eacr yet, legend wileD they bbugbt tile boule in 1979.
.._:'That's where be wu born," Mrs. lama said,
wbll would be do about it?
.
One dliDg Ia IID'C: Tbc- they· call Judge l.llldla llllllioning toward a ClOIDCI' of the paneled liVing room
woaltlnever
sat bid: and let a Ieason be lost to a wbcre a table and flowered lamp DOW all
Appropriately, tbe curialt owners 1ft aporta fillS.
.•
dispute.
..
Mn.
lams, wbo like her busbllld Ia a ldtoolteacber,
''Maybe we could use blm today," lams said.
11a1tm
to Reds games on tile radio. On IID!Jmcr nights,
The pmc needed blm in 1920. It cbolle 1bc federal
bnwtcasler
Many BreDD!111811's voice filii every corjudge with the funny nme to saw 1bc major leagues
ner
of
the
bouse,
iDCiuding tile one wbere the fust
from the "Biaa Sox" gambling KBDCial. Tbc Iaiii
from Cbicago was accused of trying to throw tbe 1919 commissioner was born.
The .BOWlds of baseball belong in this bouse.
World Series to the Cincinnati Reds, and 1be public's
"I do think tbal if spring rolls· around and lhere"s
faith In the game was sbaken. ·
Laudis got virtually unlimited powers and used no baseball, people will miss i~" Mn. lams said. "I

lust

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Area sports briefs
.

Anglers' club holds .first tourney

Redwomen lose to Cedllrville

RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande's ~ te1111 fell to vialtlng ,

Cedarville College 16-14, IS-10, B-15, 15-7 Tbunday nigbL · •
"CJaiaaa Delorenm - out twansc of lllneu. and we just dldn t ·
bave another bitter to step in and take her plal:e," said Rio head

c:oadl
~ke~Cooper paced tile RcdWiliDCII (:it-11 ovcnll and
8-4 in the Mld-Oblo Conference) with 25 tills and el&amp;bt digs.
Heather Sbefbuch and Jaime Rolston chipped In with eigbt and
'seven ldlls, reapectiwly.
The RcclwomCD will close tbe regular season at home Tuesday at
7 p.m.lll8inll Shawnee State. · , • .. • , , , ,,
. GAU..IPOLIS - Matt Bokovitz announced S~y that an
organizatiOnal meeting for lllidget wrestlin~hea will be held
Tucada~ Ill 7 p.m. Ill the BOIIMd Memorial L
-

P&amp;R to sponsor aerobics class

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Winchester Sp·X1 Rifled SluJs

GALLIPOLIS -The GaiBpolis Parb .t RcaadOD DeJ*11DeDt
wtn •JIOIIIOC a momina aerobics c1au to bealn-. Mtlllday, Nov. 7.
1bc clasl, wbldl will meet oa Mond!lya. Wedneldaya IUid Frida from 9 to 10 a.m. for eliht c:ooaec:ntlve weeki until Priday,

•Superior upeet performanoe
-High energy and penetration
-outstanding accuracy ·

MAx:DR.EQ.
1()Z.SLUG .

0::. 30, will COIC $36. A baby-sittiCt will be available for $1 per
'hi= -~~clasa will be open for 1bc first

IS wbo pay.
Cbecb sbouid be made payable to the Galllpolia PUs a: R«&lt;eation DcpartmCDt DcparllDellt. SIB Second Ave., Gallipolis. Obio

5 cr.

101

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~ more infomiatlon. call 441-6022 during regular busineis

4

Itoun.

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. DR. A. JACK BAILES, OPTOMETRIST
·Is Happy to lnno•nce the Relocation of
· hit Me'l11 County OHice to

5 CT.

. 224 -1~ MAIN STREEIIN POMEROY

I

lOllS 12, 1_6, 20

(formerly Pomeroy Health Cere)

. ~ . lh• p...roy office at the
new lo.Catlonls offerlftl full·servlce ·
1 f••lly vision care lncl!"ll~l glass•
~
· · all typel of·contact len••· ·

••tl

PHOIIE 992·3279

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Lyne Center slate

c:ou-••

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making aucb phenomenal money and ..: it doesn't
sean to mab: a lot of acose to tbe kids.'' ·
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Moat baseball fans In these pans take an even
lllllllger line.
, "I tbint It's a bunch of baloney," said Matt
Roberts ·as he stopped in the !loughnut sbop for
cbccleburgcrs to go. ''They're quiog over money. I
just don't undenland IL I won't go to another game
qaio.''
Just down 1be road, Mike Hanman is sitting in tile
office of bls car dcalersblp, curiously named Lemon
Auto Sales. (His partner came up with the name when
tbe dealersliip wail in Lemon Township; and Hartman
kept it wben he moved to Millville. "I'm not brave

enough to 00 it, but rm aazy enough to keqJ it up/')
Sports Ia not one of Hartman's favorite subjcc:ts
right DOW. Hartman, 33, usually makes the balf.Jiour
drive to Riverfront Stadium a Qumber of timea eldl
season. He' 1 disillusioned by wbat' a going dD. ·
"It's taken away a lot of my Interest In aporta in
general," he said. "It an revolves too mucb around
the dollar. I think it's going to drive people away. I
think it sltould.'.'
· Back at tile dougbnut sbop, McQueen is llliWDIID
clean up. Tbc little diner cloeca Ill 2 p.m. and doem't
reopen uotil the next IIIOIUg for tile breakfast auwd
There will be no World Series to watch ovcmiPt,
ootbing for tbe diner to buzz about the .next. day over
tile world's best coffee.
Disappointing? Not really.
'Tve got to admit it was strange not turning 111 tbe
television and r.eeing baseball," McQueen said. "I
don't miss i~ tltough."

WILMJNGTON, Obio (AP)"It was !Jrougbt to tbe coicll'a en, It was aupJI!Ir!Cd by presideilt were not retuned. Wojda said left for Thorburn were.not returned. ream with only 14 playtn for CCI'·
Wllmingtoa CoUeae may have to attelltion that the (alalbol) policy Neil Tborbum. •
Thorburn was In ll"'rJinp and not
Wojda said the suspensions tain. About 20 players did DOl
scrnb 111c leal oldie foothBIIICUOD bad been vlolllled," said Wojda.
Calls to Wallace to comment available to comment. Messages included starters and hal left the atlelld tile ream IIM'C'ing,
aftl:r Ill!{!!{ the lellll Will SlllpendHe said tbe policy problbiU
------~~~---. ed for vJoladoa the collcac'a policy playtn from
any a1co. extension 7495.
alcobol
c:CIIItlffilldon.
ltolic
bevealaes
durin&amp;
tile
season.
Free-wtiPt
1'00111
Racquetball
coun
reservations
All guests are to be aa:ompa011
. School apgkeaman Raymond He aald the luapeulona were not ~~leG~~ ~~0:
T~-6-llp.m.
can now be made one day in nied by aLyneCentt.rmanbenblp
WojdalllidbeallCOIIChMikeWal- · tlleresultofaslnglcevml
Nov. 1 at tbe University of Rio
M
:r-3:30-8:30p.m.
~Y;:.l?'r:n:g ~ci)?1:i.~t holderanda$2fee.
lace 1a evalua&amp;in£ wbether be will
"They were not an at a party," Grande'sLyneCenter.
Tuaday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
bavc enough p a yen to field a be said. "It came to the coacb'a
i'ltnNI c:eut., .
Wedllllllay _ 3:30-8:30 p.m.
team.
attention tbrough a variety of albiaJIYIDIIUIIIIII
Tlnnda:r - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
"He'a v~ry c:oaeenc4 aboat tiona, atartlnf with koowledac of
andneqiletbltllcaua
Ji'riday -3:30-Sp.m.
their safety and Injuries," sald· . onc'inc:i&amp;int.'
• ·
Today-l-3and6-1J p.m.
Satvday-closed
Wojda.
Wojda aald Wallal:e then c:a1Ied
Moaday-7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Suadly, Nov. 7 -closed
WilmiDatoD canrded Saturday's tbe teiiD meeting.
Ttlelday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
eame at IUaffton, but bas not
"They were aated who in the
Wed---"
a- ...ldk ...ata
~..... AaA _..._.._to play 1bc fdlow- room baa violated policy, a n d , _ , a y - 1 a.m.- 11 p.m.
Today - soccer vs. Untv. of
...,....,... w,_
Tlllll'lllav -7 a.m.-11 p.m.
ing final two pnea, ·
._ &amp;RX'O'im""IY 40 In die mom· said
•
Indianapolis, 2 p.m.
--'" Wallal:e dcc:ldcd to - they-had," Wojda said.
Frtda;r -1 a.m.-9 p.m.
W"'""
T•uday - volleyball vs.
UJ&gt;- _ , .
If
I
Wal
Sablrday- cloled
suspend about 40 playtn followlq
e said that wblle I was
- • SUDday, Nov. 7 -closed
Sbawnee State, 7 p.m.
a team meeting Friday JllOI'IIIna.
lace' a dec:laloa to auspead tile play· Saturdl:r - Mid-Obio CCIIference
c:rQSS country ~piooshlps
Pool
(men at 10:15 a.m. &amp;: WlliDCII at II
Today-1-3 and 6-9 p.m.
a.m.)
Monday- c:ioled
'
Tllllllay - .6-9 p.m. .
Nolel: A Lyne Cenler memberWedr~Nd•y -6-9 p.m.
ship Ia required to use tile fadlitica.
Tllunday- 6-9 p.m.
HANNIBAL - Tbc C'..UipoiJI Bass BUlla'S Club lleld ita first
Faculty, staff, students and adminli'rlday -closed
IOinlP""'l' of the 1995 IC8IQ 011 Oct. 16 at tile Obio Rillef' I JlanniistralOIS 1ft admitted with tlleir ID
Sablrday- doeed
cards.
SIIPday,
Nov.
7
-closed
bal.g:'iop ftw finlsben in tile tournament were {by pOIIllda and
ounces) Wa)'ll!: FJliot (5-8), Rio Onmde'a Stew Bradbury (4-10),
Ecldle Flyc (4-2), Rusty Ruslell (2-10) and Dlllny Role (2-4).

Wrestling meeting Tuesday

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will."
Tbc only time baaeball CCliDCI to mind now is when
.. """J'e brings it up al her middle lldlool.
"The kids sometimes talk about it," she said.
"The feeling I get from most of thtm is that tbey're

wllen, accordlq to JeceDCI, Ke-aw Moutala
•nclh 'II'M bon. (AP)

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·Wilmington College suspends about 40 players for. drinking .

t:J.~

12GA. 23/•IN. ·

HE WAS BORN HERE- Retired lldJoolteadt.
en Nadine and Roser hml dt Ia their llvtns room

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beat, it: tile DCOD sign In tile wiDdow Ia' to be belie\'ed.
blstoric lllllters note.
.
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Folb talk aparin(IY u . they finish off the $3.25 . While Landis presided over baseball, the game
IUlkey dub special. oa:asloDally tlley glaD out tile flourisbed and grew into the national putime. It
pic:ture window that facea a dlree-way intenectioo llld thrived in big Cities and little placea like bis bome1bc IOWD' I only traffic lighL
town. a village of 972 people nesded in sprawling
It's a typicaiiUIICb aowd at Old Mill Doouta, but cornfields and billsides tbat.glow orailge in tbe

.

What America Shoots."'

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' poun aDOtber cup of stmnlng coffee ~ tile world' 1 and more Uke a czar than 111ything clle, as Millvillc'a

.......
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course record
In Kaanapali
Classic

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them without besitalion during bis 24-yu: reign. He
MILLVILLE, Ohio (AP) - Com1try music playa - 1bc Bal!e Ruth of aJllmlukJnen - even went 10
Ill tile radio bebiDd tbe alUDit.r ai Wendy Mc:Queen fw u to suspend the Babe NmaeJf for six weela -

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Murphy matches

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IJJOEKAY

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nside.Uizhama fioofball

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Baseball rarely-discussed topic

"We got some very critical calls in some critical situations against us. We're on three pisses.' He found Bl~~~;k on a tltreeyar!l
p~ for '9Uc~wn:
moving down for the put away score and have iJhold called against us down Then Zdanek lofted one to .Underwood, who mllilaged a one-handed JUg~
around the 10 xard l,ine. Tha! crew seems to do that to us every time they gling act along the backoftheend zone for the conversion and the lead, 16]
have a game here. Its something where m lhe founh quaner they find some- 15.
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thing to call. I think that really penalized our kids, who played really hard,"
Underwood carne up big again in the third quarter. Zdanek found lh1
said S!~fford.
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. tall senior r~iver .on, a 33 yard sideline ~ttem for a score.
.
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Ne11her team managed a lead of more than seven pomts, but both teams · It was agam Pomt s tum to answer. Gill faked a plunge to Hall, spul
enjoy~ a touchdoi:YD lead as th~y exchang¢ the lead ~ughout the night. and beat the sec_ondary down .P~int Pleasant's sidelin~ on a _58 yard kee~
Pmnt Pleasant got on lhe board fll'St when Cory Hill capped a 16 play, that enabled Pomt to close Within one as the conver51on faJied for the Bt
.81 yard drive with a 25 yard field goal. A 20 yard completion from Gill to 1 Blacks, 22-21.
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Gilley on a crossing pattern was the big play on lhe drive, but Point also
Point Pleasant's defense came up big following the score. After the Raide
found success on~ ground. On lhe night Point ~ould total nearly 35~y~ returned lhe kickoff~ lhe~7. Sayre batted d~n a Zdanek throw, and
.
on the ground w1th B.J. Grady (21-137) and G11l (13-109) each echpsmg steamrolled lhe Rmders s1gnal caller for a SIX yard loss that forced Roan
the century mark.
to punt.
. On the first play of the second quaner Shawn Black carried two tacklers
Point Pleasant went back to ~ork. Gill found Cottrill on a cro~sing pat
mto the end zone, and Roane County grabbed llle lead. Zdanek just tpssed . tern for a 15 yard advance to. midfield. Then a few plays later, tt was th
llle conve~ion up for grabs, but Underw~ came do_wn with it between two quarterback keeping it and lunging ~nto the end zone for an e!ght.yard score\
defenders m the back of the end zone to g1ve the Rmders an 8-3 advantage. Aquarterback keeper on the converston also was good and Pomt h3d regmntf
Po!nt Pleasant came right back. Two negative plays not willlstanding, · the lead, 29-22.
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the Btg Blacks ~pped off at least ~even yards a crack on every other play.
!'-~Roane's late_go ahead score, Pomt Pl~ant ~a4 o~e last chan~
AdumplJBSS to bght end Matt Cottnll went for 23 yards to put the Big Blacks This bme though lheu offense_ would falter. Jarrue Hill rec&lt;1vered a Pol
at the Roane 17. A few plays later, fullback Robert Hall banged in from fumble at the 36, and Roane killed the clock.
one yard away. The conversion was no good though leaving Point PleasThe win enabled Roane to finish its season at (3-7). Point drops to (I
ant up, 9-8.
·
8). They will try to regroup for their last garile of the seasOn at.Huntingto
The conversion failure was just one such failure that would come back East next Friday at 7:30 p.m.
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to haunt the Big Blacks. "We had some miscommunications. We had a kick
:
blocked and then we missed some kicks lhat really.should have been ginune's.
Youknoweveryoneofthosepointsbecameimportantatlheendoflhegame,"
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POINT PLEASANT TEAM STATISTICS (versus R0811e)
I
said Salford.
Rushing Attempts - 53
Opp. RA's - 35
•
Nonetheless, Point Pleasant continued its stellar offensive marches in the
Yards Rushing - 343
Opp. YR - 120
I•
second quarter. Grady used 15 and 23 yard bursts to help lhe Big Blacks
Avg. ~er Rush - 6.47
Opp. APR - 3.43
•
mount anomer scoring drive. Again Hall did the scoring honqrs, this time
Pass Attempts- 10
Opp. PA's- 14
from two yards away. Hill connected on the point after, and Poi.nt had a 15Yards Passing - 86
Opp. YP- 172
:
8 lead wilh I :29 left in llle half.
Int. Thrown - 0
Opp. IT - 0
1
Roane got a quick strike ,rieht before the half thouJ(h, as Zdanek connected
First Downs - 24
Opp. FD - 19
·l
Penalties/Yards - 6170
Opp. PlY - 6!35
'
1:umovers - I
Opp. TO's - I
Pqints Scored - 29
Opp. PS - 30
I
Total Off. - 429
Opp. Total Off. - 292
I
.
. By Gary Clark
second period IOUChdowns on a 63 . that was much closer than the final
Five minutes later the White Fai- PPHS INDIVIDUAL STATS
.
.
I
Sporfl Correspondent
yard run and a SS yard pm1t rerum score might indicate. WHS trailed cons struck again as Johnson
Rushing: BJ. Grady (21-137), Jermyn Queen(2-13), Donnie Leport (3 1
before the ngers scored 21 un- by a lone touchdown, 21-14. at the hauled in a Wm County punt and 28), Roben Hall (14-56), William Gill (13-109).
ELIZABETH WV-Coach Joe answered points during second half half and were still in contention af- weaved through the nger defense
Passing: William Gill (5-10-86 yds., 0 Int., 0 lD's).
Johnson's Wahama White Falcon play. The loss was the second .ter three quarters with the ngers for a 55 yard punt return fa: a
Receiving: Kris Gilley (2-35 Jds.), Matt Cottrill (2-39), Donnie''"""
. football team failed to contain a suaight for the White Falcons and leading 28-14 befoo: Win County touchdown. Johnson added lhe PAT (1-12).
.
pair of Wm County running backs gives the Bend Area team a 2-7 put the game away wilh a pair of kick and Wahama ttailed by a lone ROANE IND. STATS
touchdown at the half.
Friday night and as a result the 141h mark going into IICltl weeks season fourth period scores.
Rushing: Shawn.Black (12-58), Adam Anderson (12-24), Scott Tolle
"I hate to sound like a bro~en
The poly scoring in the third. (3-23), Zach Zdanek (8-15).
rated ngers edged a step closer to finale at Vinson while the ngers
•
yet another playoff berth ·with a improved to 6-3 on the campaign.
record but it was the same old quarter was a one yard run by CaJe ·
Passing: Zach Zdanek (11-14-172 yds., 0 Int., 3 'I'D's)
I
convincing 42-14 win over the
Wut County rushed for 346 story," an optimistic Falcon coach midway through ·lhe period wilh
Receiving: John Underwood (4-81), Scott Tolley (3-76), Nick Crawfo1
visiting White Falcons.
yards on the night with junior Joe Johnson commented following Seevers tacking on lhe point after.
(1-.10), Adam Anderson (2-3), Shawn Black (1-2).
Wahama made a game of it tailback Billy Bevel totaling 138 the loss. Johnson, always looking at The White Falcons moved deep SCORE BY QUARTERS
during first half action as Dale yards and senior quarterback Ryan the positives despite lhe one-sided into enemy territory twice in the
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
total
"Scooter" Johnson scoo:d a pair of Cale adding 108 yards in a game final scoo:, stated "we had our ·third s~za only to come away Pt.
3
12
14
0
29 .
J
moments". "At times we played empty a penalty and a fumble . RC
0
16
6
8
30
r-------:-.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . , good defense even though the score · lhwarting the local elevens scoring
mightnotshowil We had a couple chances.
YY (
of drives in the second half that
Win County put the game away
.were just a play or two from a in lhe final period wilh Cale tossing
Rcture this:. Somethirig f
WAHAMA TEAM STATISTICS (versus Wlrt)
touchdOwn and ovemll our effon a 24 yard touchdown pass to Aaron
1
Rushing Attempts - 33
Opp. RA's -- 54
was outstanding. The attitude theSe Hill and scoring on a one yard tun
unexpected happens tO'lt
Yards Rushing - 165
Opp. YR - 346
kids have shown \hroughout ~ to complete llle scoring. Seeven
~·.
Avg. Per Rush - 5.0
Opp. APR - 6.41
year, even in sevml blowouts, will booted the point after following
pay off sooner or later. We have a bolh founh quaner scores for the
Pass Attempts - 12
Opp. PA's - 9
·~
yom1g team and riaht now we just Tigers to make the final tally 42-14.
Yards Passing - 0
, Opp. YP - 39
don't have the size or sttenglh to
Win County dominated the
·'
~·
Int. Thrown - 2
Opp. IT - 0
:
you
or
your
spouse.
:
:.
match
up
against
the
better·
teams
games
final
statistics
with
its
devasFirst Downs - 7
Opp. FD - 23
"'
on our schedule ancJ Wirt &lt;:ounty is tating ground gam~ with the ngers
Fumbles/Lost- 210
' Opp. FIL- 3/l
One parent must now "
a playoff caliber lealll."
piling up 23 first, tlj)~ 'and 346
- 3/30 ·
Opp. PlY - 4/40
!'.Jl
The White Falcons gave the yards rushing and 39 moo: thtOugh
Sc(\l'e(l- 14
Opp. PS - 42 ·
'''"" ·...... ,., With §d!led
ngers its lint touchdown on Win the air for a net 385. yards In total
- 165
Opp. Total Off. - 385
'
'' . ril
COWlty's opening drive after stop- offense. Wahama manage4 just
responstbihties . .Makdl
INDIVIDUAL STATS
. Rushing: Jason King (7-18), Dale Johnson (11-99), David Mitchell (13- ping the host .team and forcing a seven first downs on 165 yards
sure your child~~ are ~
punL :Wahama had 12 men on the rushing. The White Falcons failed
44), Tim Jordan ( 1-4), Chris Roush (1-0).
.!J
field
011
the
founh
down
kick
to
complete
a
pass
in
12tries
011
the
·. Passing: David Mitchell (0-7-0 ydsj, Jason King (0-3-0 yds., I In~ OTD.),
taken Care of:
liOwever
and
the
ensuing
penalty
evening.
Dale
Johnson
paced
Dale lohnson (0-1-0 yds .. I Int.), Gabe SC'ott (0-1-0 yds.).
gave the ngers a first down and Waharna offensively with 99 yards
wntTINDIVIDUALSTATS
.
A Nationwide• Insurance
.
r2'
· Rushing: Billy Bevel (30-138), Ryan Cale (12- 108), Aaron Hyre (6-61), kept its drive alive. Bevel scored in 11 carries wilh David Mitchell
from a yard out with Darin S~vers notching 44 yards in 13 tries.
Clin~.McFee (5-48), Chris Long (1-(-1).
" '"l(t:m can bring your family •
booting the point after~ make it 7- Defensively for lhe W6ite Falcons
· PaiSsing: Ryan Cale (3-9-39 yds., liD)
0 in the opening period. Win Scott Yonker was in on 12 tackles
peace of mind. Witl\1 a
'·.~eiving: Aaron Hill (1-24, I 'I'D), Clint McFee (1-8), Jason Williams
County
made
it
13-0
on
its
second
foUowed
by
Gabe
SCou
with
seven
(1-7):
· ' insurance plan that fits
posseS$ion after forcing a Wahama and nm Jordan, Chris Brinker, and
'SCORE BY QUARTER
·punt with a 6S yard drive wilh Mike Anderson with'six each.
··,. , ':
1st
2nd
3rd
4th
total
your needs. And.· your ·
Bevel once again scoring from nine
"We showed some of the spark
14
0
o
14
o
yards out with the PAT kick falling in our team speed that these young
Wh:t 13
.8
7
14
42
shorL
·
kids have," Wahama assistant
Wahama answered on the' second coach Ed Cromley said. "We just
Call the Nationwide
play of the second canto when Dale need to work at, getting stronger
Agent nearest you today.
Johnson took the handoff on a . and making lhe necessary adCOUD!Cf play and need 63 yards to justnients in order to be in the ri~t
paydin._ Johnson added the extlll alignment and lllat will come w1th
~mt kick to pull WHS to within
experience. Overall we played
stx at 13-7 at the 11:44 mark of the pretty well considering our youth
second quarter.
and against a team headed for the
N A T I 0 N W I 0 E. I S
. Th~ ngers marched 53 yards for playoffs added Cromley."
0 N Y .0 U R S 1· 0 E"
Its third touchdown of the game af- , Wahama will · ttavel to Vinson
W.R. Dick Brown .
ter Johnson's 63 yard scamiJ!ll' wilh next week for its final grid conteSt
GallipOlis
Bevel scoring for the third iime in of lhe 1994 season while Wirt
446-1960
the game on another one yard County visits unbeaten Valley WetN illhlnwi~f t.tu1u:al ln~uranl.'l' Cnnm:m~ anti AfiihJI(d Cumflllfl.kli.,
; plWJge. Ryan. Cale connected w!lh zel in its quest for a playoff spot in
l hmll' POk e: l1rw N ~lltmwKk Ma:a. Ct~umhus, OH &lt;t lllfl
N ~ut.-.wi r.lt.•' and ·N:uiol!l Witlc lli nn Y•'llr liillc" art ~I Si t;n-d f~UI; rnl ~ rvln m:&amp;rh ,,f
Todd G_oodwm for lhe two pomt the Class A field of 16.
N:at~mwldt• MUluallnsurJnl.'t' ( j,omp.1ny, f) IW&lt;t ~:Kiun wKlc M u lll:llln sunin~:r Cum (');In~
convemon to malce it 21-7 wilh
7132 remaining in the half. ·
By Doua Host
Sports Editor
. POINT P~EAS~. W.Va- Roane County came to saunders Memonal Field Fnday mght and lived up to its nickname as a late raid gave the
Raiders a 30-29 victory over the Point Pleasant Big Blacks.
Qulirterhack Zack Zdanek threw for 172 yards for lhe Raiders, 15 came
on a fade pattern to 1ohn Underwood in the left comer of the end zone with
just over~ minutes l~ft in lhe game. More important !hough, was a Zdanek
pass to a w1de open N1ck Crawford in the right comer of the end zone for
lhe game winning two point conversion.
"We got some fourlh down plays that were pretty unbelievable" said Coach
lim ,Hamric, of Roane County, afterwards. "We executed and you've got
to gtve these kids credit. A lesser team would've folded up when we got
behind."
"Probablr the bi~ play was when they went for a field goal and didn't
make 11," smd Hamnc.
Point Pleasant was leading 29-22 with one minute I~ft in the third quarter whe~,Scott Cochran recovered a River Valley fumble. Suddenly it appeared
hke Pomt would get the insurance i.t needed.
. Even _though the opportunity quickly turned into a second and 26 si.tuatton, :Will ~Ill found ~s G11ley on a 13 y~d thi.rd down pickup to keep
the dnve ahve. The drive totalled 10 plays m, the final coming as Johnny
Krebs lined up for a 25 yard field goal attempt. The ldck sailed wide left
though.
·
Roane took over on its own 20, and suddenly Zdanek turned i.nto Joe Montan a. The Raider quanerback completed all six passes he attempted in the
game winning drive for 66 of the 80 yards.
"We've got a great receiver in John Underwood and we've got a very
capable quanerback in Zach Zdanek, and they've been a great combination
all year. So that was no surprise for us," said Hamrick.
In lhe Point Pleasant dressing room lhe mood was understandably somber.
"This was a lot like the River Valley game. I don't think' we punted the ball
once tonight," said Coach Steve Safford. "Number 80 made some absolutely great plays for lhem."

I

·

I

FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET
AND GUN SHOW
GALLIA COUNTY JUNIOR
FAIRGROUNDS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
,,

NOVEMBER 4·5·6
HOURS: 8 A.M.·5 P.M.
lAST SHOW FOR 1994
FOR INFO 245·5347

1

�Outdoors
· In the Open

jFood plots help improve health of wildlif!""

- By BILL SCHULZ
·
~ ATI.ANTA(AP) - Foodploll
- attract wildlife to your 1aDd and
- imllrove lbe beallb of lbe animals, .
-· 'lbe plots are ganlen&amp; or fqe
nmea-Sentlnel Stall
· : that attratt a wide variety of
___,._..,.........,...,...__,.~~=-...-!'~ ; w11dllfe and lie legal in almost all

of &amp;Dilen.
So feeding helps both herd
health an!! tbe quality of trophy
deer.
Dcuoo, wbo does semlnan~ for
bunting clubs around lbe country,
!'CialeS propel 11l81181CIIIent,Of bunt·
mg land to fiiJ'IIIiDg.
Both bunters and farmers must
know their soil,. prepare their
ground, decide wbatanimalsto
attract, choose wblcb plants to
grow aDd select vMietiea tbat are
adapted to their part of the country.
''Turkey and deer do well
together. I've seen deer and IUikey
grazing together In late June,"
Deason aays. "But the deer would
run the turkeys off --...ectually runnlng 111 them to c:buc them off."
Throughout the procesa_your
lotal oatwa11C80111'CCS agency 8Dd
agriculture extension service are
going to be your best buddies.
Start with a soil teat. That will
tell you wbelber the soil is acidic
8Dd what nutrients It needa moaL
"Moat woodi8Dd soils tend to
be acidic," Dcuoo says. Ooven,
which 11e extellent deer and turkey
food crops, "need to bave the soils
(witb a pH rtading ot) at least 6.0
or preferably 6.5. It takes six
months for Ibis lime to bring lbe
pH up to tbal point."
.
"You a1wa1,s want to put sane·
fertilizer out, ' Deason says. "A
soil 1e11 will teD you what kind of

By Jim Freeman

Potential for trophy bucks
excellent in Meigs &amp; Gallia

.caaea.

It's DOt lbe- u tbrowlng out
food. wblcll can be ronaJdmd bait·
log wildlife - Illegal in many
place&amp;.
In addition, you can grow mBDY
dmea more food lban you CaD baul
to your bunting land.
Tbe key to a succeasful wildllfe
food plot Is r!lallzlng that It's a
year-round proposition.
_
"It's not just planting something in tbe'fall of the year to
attract some deer in to where you
caD see them or harvest them or
whatever," aays Roy Deason, forage speclaliat for the Pennington
Seed Co. of MadiSCD, Ga., a majiX'
seed and feed provider.
•'The critical aced for deer Is
after lbe doe bu fawned and begins
to lactate," Deasou aaya. That's In
the spring. •'Then, as summer
comes and tbe fawn grows,
demanding more milk, lbe doe ron·
tinues to need young, f:tesb vegetat1on tbal'sfull of nutrients."
For tbe fawn, those needs In
spring and summer rontlnue each
year. The female needs lbe nutrit1on to carry bealtby fawns; and the
butks need It to develop large sets

In Gailia County. 83 IIQphy bucks
bave been registered between 1958
and 1993 with eigbt of !bole being
taken last deer SCISCII.
According to Ohio Game aDd
Fish, Ohio hunten have claimed
two of lbe top three non-typical
deer in the country. In addition,
Oblo Is ooe of only two &amp;taleS (IUInols being the other) to produce
two typiCal racb over :ZOO pointS.
To qualify for tbe Buckeye Big
Bucks Club, bucks must store
either 140 trplcal points of ~60
non-typical pomli, Culbertson said.
Hunters takios a deer tbey IUipCCI
qualifies should call lbe district
wildlife office in Athens to get a
list of certified acoren.
A mxJn1 421 bucb were regia·
tered with the Buckeye Bl8 Bucka
Club m its 1993 members 1isl.
Tbe sighting of a large buck
near lour favorite bunting area
doesn I OCCC'"rily mean he can be
found in tbat area qain, Culbdtson
said. Usually the likelihood ·
depends on the annual rut, or
bleeding season.
"Deer have a home territory," By BO.L SCHULZ
Culbertson said, "until tbe rut kicks
EUFAULA, Ala. (AP)- As we
in.lfyou see a big buck during the eased up lbe small creek feediDg
rut, be may DOt be in bis home ter- Lake Eufaula, our depth sounder
ritory."
.
showed flab holding on both blnka.
In soulbern Obio, lbe rut usually
We were usins a Hwomlnblrd
peaks between Nov, 10 and 17, be Wide Side. part of the newest gennoted. We getlillg into that window eratlon of sonar units dcs!ancd to
now, be said.
find flab. They can loot wliere no
"If
one now, be's likely flab findcl bu ever looked befare,
in bis
ltrritory. you bad bet·
tbrougb tbe branches of fallen
· ter get your bow and start bunting trees, between pilings and under
IL" be added.
boathouses.
They don't guarantee that an
BDgler will caldl fish. but lbey will
show him empty water wbete be
won't catcb fu.b.
Tbe trict 111 Ibis new generalion
of
flab
finders, wblclllndudea units
By JOHN WJSSE
but also produce a series of bi&amp;b·
sucb
as
lbe Sidefinder by Bottom
Dl'fldolt of WlldUie
frequeocy sounds through II process
Line
and
tbe-Ea,le Ultra II by
konwn as echolocation - or sonar
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ which they use to oa.noet.. and LoWIIIIICC. Ia packing a bindful of
1bose dart, winl!Cd creatures tbal
•. _
transducers in a alngle UDII.
' fly tbrou·h lbe nfgh1t8Dd !!CX'C4!Ipl· fmd their food IIOUI'Ce.
TnJDsdncm are units wJik;lt fin:
11M
•
Wbilc DIOit bits feocl Cllduny mBDy or Halloween 1 ghouls, slvely on Insects, there are three a sound into lbe water 8Dd read It
goblins, vampires 8Dd wi!Cbes •
peel tbat ....... 011 anlm.al blood whcu it bounces bal:t off or mud,
amoa the IDOit beneficial lnbabl· s ea
·~
•
llllts:,Obio'swlldklngdom.
The ~ost oo~noua of tbeae, lbe rocks, tree stumps or flab. The
lolormatiou Is relayed tb the comor the approximately 9SO vampuc bat, IS foUnd only in Ceo- puter
unit, wblcb prints It u a pi!:species of bats worldwide, U - · tral andWSoulbbll AmOblc:rica.b t- f d
tute
m
a liquid aystal display.
speciel 11e 1a1own 1n Qbio, Wblle . e
~ a s ee. ~n
Tbe
use of multiple llallsducen
some bits feed upou DCCIIr, fruit, IIUICCts, they ICID"'III'CI fall VIC1Uil
allows
lbe
linle COIIIputers to disflab, frogs and blood, muy bats to black rat snakes, I'IICCOIJ!IS. and play tbrce-dimeDsloo
portraits or
tnsteld eat mly IDsects, lnduding owls. Frequeolly,lbey are killed by
aU 01 Ohio's bits
bUmaDS.
. The IDIIua ~ 8Dd the gray bat
- Less IbiD one-bal.r of ~?De
are lbe olily endangered bat speciel percent of all bats contract rab'CI,
found in Oblo
and the risk of COGtracting rabies .
Bllasuffer.frombadpublicreia· from a.batis or~n blow_n ou~of
tionl.
proportion, say wildllfe biologiSts.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) "Sclmewberc 1Ja1:t 1n time, bats Over tbe last 30 yean, more people Tbe state has received $20,089 In
and a·belief In vampires were die each year as a result of 11taCb restitutlou pa~ts for water polUntecl This later evolved Into u by doga, bee&amp; and In lawn mower lution that tilled 79,461 flab and
wild animaJs.
association of bats wllb a whole . ~DI$ tban from ba1 bites.
boat of·otber apooty, evil tbinaa.
- Bats rarely beCome aggres·
The Ohio Department of Nllllnl
AI meJdnd &amp;pll'1llcbca the eve of al!e. Most bites result from hiD· Resources &amp;aid it received:
- A payment of $6,000 from
the 2111 century, bats generally dlin&amp;abllthatsaneone~fouod.
have remained victim to some . - Bats ha~e no .desire to fly BD Auslaize County fanning opera·
ttOb.v mytila and lmt~lnitlve folk- 1nto ~ person a ba1r. Bats may. don. In that case, MimaliiUIIoftl
lei;,'• 1114 Ron Bland, a Division SOIIIClllDeS fly close to a penon, or entered a four-mile stretch of
of Wildlife employee.
· - . appear to be IWOOIJini at them; but Carter Creek, Clllllinglbe deaths of
The Divlaial of W'tldlife contln· are only In punQit of their insect 14,481 fish 8Dd wlldanlmals; .
- A $500 payment from a
..
·
. ues to wort .in aJOilCrllliOII with the prey.
- Bats typically Uve In caves, Meigs County farming operation
. Division or.Rcclamllllon 8Dd concernec1 cllizeDI when old mines In tree1 and a V1Kicty of buildings 8Dd for pollution In Walker's Run
Oblo are loca'..; · Fences ~~e put up o1ber dwcllinga.·Some bilts. such a Cleek that killed 4,185 fisb;
to~ the bat&amp;.
the hoary aDd red bat, migrate
- A $6,000 payment from Cal·
Other efforts of the wildlife annually whUe otben, suc:b u 1be Maine Foods Inc. of Rouburg for
aicncY are aimed largdy at educil· big brown, little brown and tl!e manure discharge that caused the
ing the public lbout the ficts con- eastem pipistrelle bats, hibernate deaths of 49,004 wild animals,
celnlng bits and bow nesting cavi- during the winler.
m061ly ftsb, in tbe StiUwater River
ties ma be built to beoefit Obio's
-Bats may be found just about in Darke County;
bits. Y
anywhere iu the world _except
- A $643.59 payment from !be
Just what are sane of tbe batty restooa llhove the Arctic Cucle, in city of WUmington for sewage dis·
racu?
Antarctica and on some isolated tbarge Into ~ trlbut,ary of Lytle
Cleek in Clinton County tbat killed
- Bati have excellent vision, lalands.

By DOW It' I lllltlng Ill loot llkc
another fine year for Gallia ·aDd
Meigs County deer bunrtn - at
leut as far u lbe number of deer
are c:oocemed.
In add1tlon tb1s alao stands Ill be
a SDCClCS&amp;ful year for !bole b1111ten
looting for thai elusive troplly
budt-of-a-Ufctlmt.
Tbe two counties, Gallia and
Mel&amp;s. wmllsted in the Novcnlhel
issue or Oblo Game and Flab 1n Its
list of Ohio's Top Tropby Deer
Counties. ~lft! County rBDked
nlntb while
County was listed in 20th place. The tql five Count
ties were, In order: Musklngum,
Licking, Guernsey, Washington
and Hocking.
Overall, the list oltbe top 2~
counties Is dominated by those
associated wltb eastern and soutbeastem Oblo.
· "Just by lbe sheer numbers of
deer, we expectlbere to be more
bucks eligible for entry Into tbe
Buckeye Big Buck Club," said
Lloyd Culbertson, tbe wildlife
rese•ch technician for tbe Waterloo Wildlife Reaeartb Station
located near New Marshfield In
Alben&amp; Qlunty,
"Meigs and GaWa Counties represent lbemselvea pretty weD," be
added.
Citing statistics from lbe Oblo
Division of Wildlife, Culbertson
said 132 trophy bucks bave been
1egistere!l by the Buckeye Bil
Bucks €tub in Meigs County
belweel! 19SB and 1993 witb seven
of !bole bucks being taken in 1993.

'

=·

does bave, to b e ~·we
:

SCD&amp;ays. ~

l:!:e

tbe bottom as well as Images of
BDylblng In the water.
They come with a tremendous
variety of additional features, ranging from alarms wbidl go off when
the unltspots a flab to readouts tbal
show boat speed and water temper·
·

aturc.

Prlcea range from $100 tolbout
$700.
The fuat of today' s slde·&amp;CID·
nins units was lbe Stalker, intraduced by Bottom Line In 1991.
Lowrance foUowed with its unit in
1992 and Hummlnblrd joined the
COIIIpetltleilin 1993.
Early this year Computrol,
maker of Bottom Line products,
flied suit against Lowrance ElccIronies, claiming violation of Its
patent. First bearlngi on lbe suit
were delayed.
"Bottom Line baa not beea In
the lnduatry that long. We were
looking at some way to increue
our share," says Gorham Bird,
sales manager for Bottom Line.
"Because we didn't bave tbe name
and reputation as lbe leaden In the
Industry, people lbougbt of it as a
gimmick-type product."
When LoWIIDce 8Dd Hummlnbird came out with their products

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Dtamber J 1, 1994 in carqoritl (oil through ltl'tn. _

•

·

1,825 fish;
- A $4,236.70 payment from
B&amp;M Meat Packing orWapaknaeta for a discharge of meat-process·
ing waste tbal led to lbe deaths of
8,07S fisb In lbe Auglaize River in
Auglaize C0111ty;
- A $1.~00 payment from a
Greene County farming operation
wbea m&amp;Dure bad drained Into
Grog Run In the Uale Miami River
watcrsbed and killed 1,569 flab;
- Aocl a $1,200 payment from
Wrigbt Brotbers Aero Inc. of VandaUB wben jet fuel ellleled a tribu·
tary of lbe Great Miami River In
Montgomery County aDd caused ,
the dcatbs of 322 fbb.

act"*"'

~·
~It doeln't have to be' a beaut!-

ful: smooth field, but tbe ground

"it leBDI some credibility to the
of alde-looldog sonar," be
say.s. "We have noticed the
increase In demand. ••
"Tbe amazing thing Is .the
dem&amp;Dd wasn't for tbe low-eud '
models," Hummlnbird's Larry
Colombo aays. •'Witb lbe rcc:csslou
endiu,, fishermen are opting for
the umts witb mm features."
The new units can probe lbe
bottom of all but the country' a
deepest lakes·. They CaD find flab
and show bottom contour 1,500
feet down. Moat llfC deaigned to
worlt witb the transducer unit ofl
the troUing JDOWr It the front of tbe
boat.
But it Is the CXIIIIbined side- and
bottom·ac•nnlns capability which
will endear tbese units to moat
millen.
llumminblrd'a.Wide Side, for'
example, bas three tr&amp;Dsducen.
Two of them loot sideways aDd
C8D read _S!lllc:tute OJ? 1;0 1.20 feeL
roncept

,,

"d:e

~- ... ~·~IIOIIIIR
..,.... w...... •....-w !DOle .
will die. Mixes alao tend to lellglben the productive SC111011 because
sane 11181U1C c:awly and otbcn provide fOI'IIF for alouger time, DeaSCII aays.
Other milles are creared fqr
pri~ or to make lbe desired crop
easato bandle.
-·•"" ,
Here 11e some suge- •01111e
plants:
.
- Quad. Lespedeza, mlllet,
peas.~C~f~D~~, sesbania.
- Deer. Lespedcza, peas,
dover, rye.
-Dove. Millet, peas. sorglnm.d
- '1\aby. Rye, dlufas, over,
sorghum.
·
1
-Duct. Millet, sesllllll•
Millet, cbufas, sorghum and
peas generally are best planted in
the sptlng. Rye or fescue grusca
Clll be planted In the fall. Fall 8Dd
winter plBDtlng II belt f"! most
cloven, Including the wbtte and
I w!ino varlcdes.
A ..

._,,
'---~

Pllo11e Specl•l

I

•Fully Featured Phone
•3 Year Wirranty
oMonlhly Plana Starting e1 $21.15
• s county calling Arll
-

... : -

/

NATE COMMUNICATIONS
675-2722

Point Pleasant, WV
Mastercard • Visa

DO YOU HAVE TROUBLE GETTING
YOUR HEATING OIL DELIVERED
IN BAD WEATHER!

tl Now Accepting New Accounts ··
'

t1 We DeriVer Only Clean B.P. Fuels
t1 Courteou.s Dependable Delveries
t1 We Accept HEAP Vouch8rs

BP OIL CO~ .
.
-

.

•

The third Joou stialpt down to
gather lnformatiou lbout the bot·
tom.
If tbe angler Ia wortina along
lbe shore of alallic or a dam, be can
use just 111e side of the unit, wblcb •
gives a more detailed reading on
lbe screen.
·
Furlber from abore, lhese units
can locate underwater bump• or
points. Mountlbe nnsducer m the
foot of a trolling 111010( and you can
SCaD abeld of your boat by turning
lbernota.
Some uDits, such as Eagle's
rnn n.·offer split screen viewinp.
The Ultra D will show lbe sbordlne
on ooe half of lbe dlsplay and the
bottl&amp;belowlbetnl'lduccrmtbe
otberaidc.
LoWIIDce and ~IIDits also
will show a flaabcr
lay on ooe
side o f · - screen.
fllllller Ia
mm elllclcnt at ftnclina ICbooll or
baitfiab' and "If yOu lind the baitflab, you will fmd lbe pmc flab,"
says Lowrance's 11m Neece.

$49

'

./'{i-l ..

tJc:c&amp;u:~~~=:~

COMMUNICATIONS

1215 VIand St.

f';'' •·

foodploula .
witb,.11 •
Seed fa11s
s DO ..._e
·,
in
00 a rock, leaf, doesnut comJa to
;.,'fn.~ tbe soil we cnou
. y
. • Iaiit eidJer aiDA"' Viri•
ou can P
. aetlea ormlxea of seeds.
Mixe&amp; tend to improve aurviVIl
8

' October

.'

ao. 1.... '

.,.·;~·;:t.·;~ ,~: .

ftDii

·

ODNR receives restitution
from firms for ~ater pollution

{

fertilizer. WoodlBDd soils ICDd to
belowinpboapborus. Needagood
pbolpboroua CXllllalt in lbe fc:ni11z.
er."
Sllldy the area you want to IUI1I
Into a food plot. Remember tbe
crop you plant will need filii SUD·
Ugbt at ltaat ba1f of each day. Tbat
JDeiDiit's JOIIII be an open II*'C·
11 the 1011 uaually molal or usu·
ally dry? Don't put a plant that's
to a wet site on a dry ridge
or visa versa, Dcuoo aaya. Cloven
like moill« ioll&amp;, for example.
That's where your extension
agent comes in. He knows what
types of plants wlll wort In botb
sih•adoos
Wben planning food plots, the
beat bet Ia to plant several smallet
ones, ralbct than a alngle large one,
Deason aays.
"They sbould be long llld oarrow, witb a heQd of some ldnd, and
close to cover,'' Deason says.
''Deer are very shy. They live at
edge of the meadow 8Dd lbe forcaL
Game food plots· should be _long
8Dd narrow so deer Clll sUp out to
feed and only be ducc bounds back
into the woods.
"If lbere's a curve in It, tbe deer
can more easily loot around to, see
whateisels lbere,"
·
Then lbere's got to be sane soil

Sonar helps anglers see fish-empty waters

Ohio's bat species benefit
man with insect appetites

•

Farm/Business

Sunday Tunes-Sentinel /C8

DISPLAY PLAQUE • The Ohio Department of Agrl~ulture
Freel Daney, rlgbt, and ODA As81stant Director Larry Adams display a plaque presented to the department for its management of
the Oblo Rural RebabiUtatioo Program (OIUU'), Tbe ORRP was
one or only two su~b rural rebabUitatioo programs In the country
rewplzed by tbe National Council or Rural Rehabilitation Corporations for outstanding work toward i.Jcreaslng the prolitabDity of ·
low inrome farmers. Adams serves as ~llainnan or the ORRP and
directed the prop:anf's efforts in eatabllahinll a support project for
fanners eatabllsblng year-round grazl..1g programs to Olllo.

ORRP recog·n•·zed for excellence
_of year-round grazing program
COLQMBUS • The Ohio Rural
Rehabilitation Program (ORRP),
was recently retognized by the
National Association of Rural
Rehabilitation C01porations at their
annual meeting held in Billings,
Montana. The ORRP was one of
only two Rural Rehabilitation Programs in the country recognized for
innovative programs designed to
improve the profitability of lowincome fanners.
·
The ORRP provided ~rants to
the Athens, Carron, Galha, Highland aDd Pike Counties Soil and
Water Conservation Districts to

purthasc specially designed no-till
drills for the establishment or warm
season grasses. The five counties
hsv.e llgreed tn l!lalr" the (!rill s
available to surrounding counties
S!l more than ~0 Ohio counties
have access to the five specialized
drills. Warm season grasses are
excellent forages for developing
successful year round grazing programs.
The ORRP also produced an
informational brochure Existing
Forage Availability for YearRound Grazin~t" with the assistance

nent of a successful year-round
grazing program. The price of the
drill would be cost-prohibitive for
most-espetially low-incomefarmers to purchase. Tbe ORJlP
assists low-income farmers and
rural areas by providing grants and
loans to non-profit organizationJ
and individuals. ORRP is administered by the Ohio Oep:utment of
Agriculture through a use agree·
ment with the USDA. Contact Lori
Panda, executive &amp;eerelary, ORRP,
for more infonnation at (614) 752·
9711.

Alaska-Yukon loungecoach
to visit Gallipolis _on Nov. · ~

GALLIPOLIS • An AlaskaYukon Explorer loungecoacb,
exclusively operated by Holland
AmCflca Line-Westours Inc. will
anive in Gallipolis m Friday, Nov.
4, to bigbllgbt both its unique mode
of tourln' the Far North aDd tbe ·
liJOtb 8DDIVCI'II&amp;ry of Royal Canadi·
ao Mounted Police service to Cana·
da's Yutan.
.
The longest and most luxurious
II10illrCoal:b on the highway today,
lbe Alaska-Yukon Explorer is one
of two such c:oacbea traversing the
U.S. and Canada to visit more tban •
100 cities from mid-October to
early Apil. ,
.
The 60-foot-long, articulated
c:oac.b and the AAA Travel Agency
will host on-board rec:cptions, educational videos, and· sample drivearounds, fran 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at
tbe agency's office: 360 Second
Avenue in Gallipolis.
Tbe public is welcome to
inspect the loungecoach' s unusual
interior features and learn about
NEW SHoP OPENS - Catlly ·Clark, owuer of the CoUntry
vacation travel with HoUand ArrcBobbin, _.ted by elllllloyee CarDMI E.,..., arranges some dis·
ica
Westoun in Alaska and tbe
play1 at tile HW 1llop located on Slstlt Street In Syrac:-. (T-S
Yukon.
l'laole by CliarleM Hoellldl)
Tbe visiting loungecoacb will
display a 12-foot-long replita ofthe ~2-font-long Royal Canadian
· Mounted Police Centennial Mural
in Whitehorse to bigbllgbt the
Yukon's coming celebration in
1995. The Alaska-Yukon Explorer
loungecoach
Is operated exclusiveSYRACUSE - The Country u1ar everywhere, are also In stock
ly
by
Holli¥td
America Line-WestBobbin,-.e shop featuring home- at lbe Country Bobbin.
ours,
Int.,
which
has joined forces
made crafts and custom aewlng-. . The shop also features a wide
ba been opened by Cathy Clark m variety of b&amp;Ddmade gifty items with the Royal Canadian Mounted
Sixtb SIJ'CCt InS~. the former includillg things like novelty Police to cclelirate their I OOtb
locatioli of the Berry Basket.
stuffed bunnies, tows, aDd other BDDiversary.
wThc Gallipolis AAA bas
Regular ~ours are 10 a.m. to farm Mimal• along witb decorated
plarmed many 11£1ivities around tbe
~:30 p.m. Monday lbrougb Satur· sweatsblrts and veats.
•
clay. The montb before Cllristmu
All of tbe craft items In the loungecoacb's visit to educate conthe sbop wiD also be open m Sun- shop IIJll made by local aallsmen, · sumers on travel to Alaska and tbe
day afternoons.
according to Clark, who stteascd Yukon," said Linda Carney, ManPlans are now being made for that her primary emphasis from
an open bouse next. weekend. now through tbe end of lbe year
Hours on Friday and Saturday will will be on lbe holiday hBDdmade
be from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and mft.s and gift illlms.
•
SUDday, Nov. 6, from noon to 4
After tbal abe plans to get into
p.m.
more sewing. Clark has extensive By BRUCE WO.LIAMS
Holiday Items are now being experience as a seamstress in both
My family was on our way to a
feature(} along with tbe regular line clothing aDd decorating. Making well-known resort. Unba~pily,
of crafts and other merchandise, curtains 8Dd home accessbriea will tbere were no non-stops av81lable,
aucb as note pa~er, potpourri, be 8D emphasis of her sewing bual- so we took a flight that bad two
porcelaln dolls, quilts, afghans, )lil: DC&amp;S.
connectiOns. The f!Rt went off like
lows, wood set·abouts, wmltb8 8Dd
Assisting Clark in tbe shop is clockwork, but, ttie way to our
other home decorations aDd bas- Carm~ Evans. The ltlepbooe num- second destination, the fun began
kcta.
.
'
ber of the Country Bobbin Ia 992in earnesL
Big and small teddy be1n, pop- 7523.
Can you imagine sitting in' lbe
airpon for almost six bo~ witb
three young children 7 Owing to
bad weather, we were stranded at
the airpon all day. effectively
spuiling oue day of our seven-day
vacation.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic cise physiologist, mcdicai seaelary
When we asked the airline for
: recently 8DDOUIICed it plana to open . receptionist and a housekeeper. cc:.c:sation, they stated that
. a Dew oc:cupa&amp;lonal bealtb, sports Other staff will be added as need- w
delays were beyond their
~ medicine and reilabllltalion facility
ed.
control. Since there was DO
· In Jackson County.
According to Patricia Woolum, overnlgbt Slay, IIIey offered to buy
:_ The Holzer Rehab Center of R. N,, Holzer Clinic of Jackson us a meal. but DOthlng more. What
: Jackson CoUDty wlll operate as a brBDcb manager, '1'be move will can I do to be n:imbuned for a very
· se~te entity from Holzer CUo- - not only allow for expansion of trying day?- N.R., Casper, Wyo.
i lc slactlon Colmty Bfl!ldl;
rehab services in Jackson, but will
; Located in the former U. S. also free up space in our facility
Health of Soutbera Oblo bul1d1ng (Jackson County Branch) for
DEAR N.R.: I can certainly
at 336 Main Street. the new
expanding our servicea by provid- apprcciate tbe dlff'tCulty presented
will offer pllyslcal therapy,
ing iocrcased pbysldan coverage."
by small cbildrcn ill BD ~ for
therapy, physical reconditioning,
Jolm Cunmngbam, M. S., Holz- I, too, have played tbat room.
work conditioning 8Dd transitional er'a assistant adntinlstrala' of reba· Unfllllllllldy, tberc Ia very little an
wort services.
bUitative services, Is spearbeadlng airline can do about bad weather.
In llllditlon tolbe existing pbyal- lbe project. Cuoningllam's goal Is This writer bas spent countless ·
cal tberaplats, It Ia anticipated sev~ , to have the facility ready for opera- boon waiting at airports because
:eral staff additions will be made, t1ou by mid-J:lerember of1994.
intludlng a speech therapist, exer-

New craft shop
· opens in·Syracuse

To- visit Gallipolis Nov. 3
an

ager. "Ne11.t year wiD be
eapeciaUy exciting dme to ttavel !0 tbe
Klondike because ·or tbe-1995
Royal CBDadian Mounled Police
centennial.··
.
The articulated Alaska-Yukon
Explorer loungecoacb is 20 feet
longer than conventional motorooaches. It is named for Its specially-designed lounge in the rear compartmen~ which features plush sofa
seating for 14 people around oak
tables and a galley staffed by gracious service attendant to provide
light snack aDd beverage service.

Missed connection
oo-

Holzer Clinic to establish
rehab facility in Jackson

Money Ideas

=:h,

of the Soil Conservation Service
and OSU Extension.
Year-round grazing is a livestock management teChnique that
enables farmers to graze livestock
on stockpiled forages through most
of the winter, without feeding hay
or silage. This saves farmers from
having to purchase forage equipment and lowers or eliminates their
expenditures for hay_
The ORRP believes that the pur·
chase of these special drills will
enable low-income farmers to have
an opportunity to establish. warm
season grasses. an integral compo-

Travelen can socialize, relax over
a game of backgammon or cards, or
simply enjoy the freedom to move
from their comfortable, redining
seat for a "change of scenery."
The ~2 passenger loungecoacb
also offers II Inches more beadroom and 70 percent more baggage
space thaD standard motortoacbes.
Windows are larger, with glare--cutting glass, and all .passengers sit
bigha than the driver so everyone
bas an unobstructed view _The
loungecoacb features an on-board
video system, individual climate

spoil~

and llghi oootrols. modem ICSU'Oall
facilities 8Dd hixurious dcicor.

'

Passengers consistently have
given the Alaska-Yukon Explorer
klungecoacb lOp ratings: customer
satisfactiw was 9H percent in tbe
most recent survey.
For more information on tbe
Alaska-Yukon Explorer loungecoach and its 8divities, mnlaCt tbe
Gallipolis AAA Travel Agency at
446--0699' The tour via niOCCll'c:oac.b
is free and open to BDyone wllo
might be interested in future toun
Ill Alaska.

vacation day

upou discovering that the botei wu
completely booked.and that our
Some people seem to lblnk tbe rooms bad been given to someone
a1rliDes should just trot out anotbet else. It is in situations like Ibis that
murdering a clerk ought to be no
airplane.' Unfortunately, if tbe airline is being.run efficiently, there more thaD a mi5demeanor.
Tbe cud result was that they
ue no spue airplanes - they ue
us to a competing hotel
drove
all being flown. An airline can't
seven
miles
away, tbeit transferred
teep minions of dollan worth of
us
back
10
the
original facility lbe
equipment on stand-by just in case
foUowing morning.
something intenupts tbe sySiem.
Yes, everyone was so nice and
During lbe winter, one can
undastanding.
But DO rna~ bow
depend upon Ibis kind of a delay.
Frankly, I prefer sitting in an air- compassionate they were, lbe fact
remains that we were hauled all
port witb screaming kids to hoverover
the place, and forced to
ing above, hoping we can land
unpack.
pack and llDpiiCk again for
before we run into a fuel emergenabsolulely
no reason. How do you
cy. These sorts of delays are .
avoid
Ibis
sort of tbing? - O.B..
indigenous to air travel -you may
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
as weU get used to tbcm.
DEAR 0 .B.: I have .yet to disDEAR BRUCE: I'm sure you cover a foolproof method for
are intmdated with vacation bomr avoiding the son or travel nightstories at this time of year, but mare you describe. The problem
here's another for your files. My from lbe point of view of tbe hotel
entire exltnded family anived at a operator is that people sometimes
vacation destination on a Friday make reservations but don. ( sbow
evening. Although we did not up. These would-be guests tben
arrive before lbe normal 6 p.m. scream like hyenas wben t)ley are
reservatiou deadline, we bad given charged: '.'I never stayed there
tbe hotel a credit card guarantee wby in the world should I pay f~
the room?"
and we did anive before 10 p.m.
I ouce knew a young lady whose
You can imagine our frustration
job at a major brut consisted soletbe equipment was tied up 1,000

miles away.

-ly of fmding rooms tor me overbookings eacb evening. The rationale was that if they didn't do Ibis,
tbey would wind up with a 10 percent to 15 petCCDt vacancy, perhaps
the difference between profit and
loss.
L too, have bad this happen and
I undentand your frustratioo. I can
also appreciate the problem that lbe
hotels bave witb "no shows.. wbo
oootest the tbargea for rooms they
never occupied. I invite members
of lbe botel industry to comment
and will certainly print those comments here_
Bruce WUliama Ia • writer for
New•p•per Entrprlse Assoda doo.

(Send your questions to :
Smart Money, P.Q'. Box 503,
Etren, FL 34680. 'Questions of
genenl Interest will be aiiSftrtd
In future toi1111U1L Owing to tbe
volume of 1111111, pcrs0118l replies
cannot be provided.)
Copyrtgbt1994 NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
(For lnform•llon on llow to
tonununlate eledronlaUy wltlt

Ibis tolumnlst and otlten, contact
America Online by calliDK 1-Q.
8l7 -6364, ext. 8317.)

Training sessions announced for pesticide applicatqrs

,/nVeStment Viewpoint
By BRYCE SMITH
Adveat, lae.
When looking for solutions to
financial problems of a personal or
business nature,
don't overlook
aust services as a
way to safeguard
assets 8Dd provide
peace or miD1I for
youandyourbein.
Below are examples of situ·
ations where trust avlcea would be
· helpful. While the names and situBlions are bypothelical, the circumstancesarctypical.Pedlapsywknow
aomcone with similar needs.

-I.

ByHALKNEEN

Siou Office. TheSe sessions arc 1101
mBDdatory, however, there Ia a
great deal of material tbat Is needed
to be studied before: you take lbe

I

I

morning session is on developing a
twelve montb grazing system wilb
guest speaker, Dr. Roy E. Blaser,
from the University of Virgin'ia_
The afternoon will highlight tours
to local grazing demonStration
plots. If intercsltd in tar-pooling
from Meias County call my office-

POMEROY - Farmers. have you
Middle aae couple
cllecked
your Pesticide ApplicilMr. and MIS. Part 11e ~lor's
license
for Its eXJ)iration date? ing retirement With their three chitIf
It
is
expiring
in 1~5 )'QU sbou1d
dren graduated from coUege and on
be
receiving
notifiCation
rrom lbe Ohio l&gt;eplrtmc.u of Apicllltute's
their own, the Parks ~~e eoneemed ·
Oblo
Department
of
Agricullle for pealicide ippllcator's teat. Review
with ''puUing their affairs in order." a request of payment llld a ootice materials, sold at cost, can be 11992~.
Problcrns facing them include .
A Land Use Planning Seminar
of your current rccCrtificllion aed· picked up from your local extenrnanaains their money while on ex- It hour llatus. Read the notice Cll'&amp;o sion office.
for local officials is being beld in
tended vacations -and preserving a- fiWU' !
We have scheduled, willl tbc Columbus, Ohio, on Monday
sets in the event of disability. They
1armen. greenhouse operaton Ohio Deplrtment of Aaricultuie. to November 71b. The workshop is
have about $750,000 in marketable . ID1I vegetSb1e .growers. Me you in ' offer a lelting aile In l'mleroy ·on deaigned to provide relevant aDd
securities, mostlY held jointly with .-s o(UviD&amp; a Peldc:idc Applica- November 22Dd lla'tiiiJ at 3 p.m.
pr'ICtical information on selected
riglit of survivorship.
tor' II icm1e to )IUidllise restric:ted
lntereated In raising profitable lai!CI 111e planning and zoning topics
Their will was prepared over 12 chemicals? Peatlcidc Applicator's canle? 1'1111 10 a1ICD4 lbe Soulbem of local concern. Although the
years ago alid they want to leave TraialnJ aeulona will be Jiven Ohio Gllzlng Seminw m Slturday, wortsbop Is open to uyooe wbo
• everythins to each other BDd ulti- November 2nd from 7-9 p.m. ID1I Novanber 1~ II the Universltv of ba u inlerCSI in tbese lssuea. it Is
martly to their childreo 8Dd srand- again 011 November lo4tb from 1-4 Rio Gnnde, Wood HaD from 9:30 primarily oriented toward local
p.m. at lbe Meigs County Exten- a.m. to"3 p.m. Tbe focus of t!le offida1s wbo actually develqJ and
Continued on Oil
'
II
"

_Extension Corner .

implemenlland use policies in their
canmnnities. The workshop is JmdiiCed by the Ohio Dep111mcnt of
Na1unl Resources. Tbe OSU
1School of Natural Resoun:ca and
Ithe OSU ExleDiiou. Brocll~n~ w1tb
! further details ue availa,ble from
: tbe exleDSion office.
_
Homeowner Fall Rcmlndcn
- Time is runnlns out for
· planting sping flowering bulbs like
: daffodils, tulips, crocus and
byacintbs. These bulbs need to be
planted this fall so roots can be
established before the ground
rreeas~.

.

-

- Remove dead plantslfrllts
ID1I fallen leaves from /WI flower
beds tiPd vegetable gantem. 'Jbese
provide over wiiUcrlng p1ar:e1 for

Continued on D-e
I

..

�', •

l.

.. October

1994

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV
32 llloblle Homll
tor Sail

BULLETIN BOARD
Public Not~
·PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE OF AVAILABIUlY
OF UNCOMPENSATED
SERVICES
Vete r ant
Memo r ial
Hoepltal, locetod at 115 E.
Memorial Drive, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, avolleblt
uncompenuttd aervlcee
during the llacel year which
beglno January 1, 1995 and
ende December 31, 1995.
Uncomptnoatad Mrvlcea
will be evellable upon
requeat to eligible peraono
on 1 nret come llrot 11rved.
baele until the annual
compllence level lo
oallolltd. Eligible poraons
are thoae who art In need of
heelth care and whose
family Income dooa not
exceed twice the current
poverty Income guldellnea
eotobllohod
by
tho
community
urvlcea
admlnlotratlon. Peroona
whoee Income lo greeter
than the poverty level, but
not more then twice the
emount will be coneldtred
lor tOO% reduced chorg11.
Income lo defined In
accordance with the
community
aervlceo
admlnletretlon guidelines
dtllnltlona. Thlo notice Ia
publlthed pureuant to
ftdertl low 111 forth et 42
CFR 124,505 notice of
availability
of
uncomponootod oorvlceo.
(1 0) 28, 30; 2TC
Public Notice

Pt. Pleasant

11

Help Wanted

11

&amp; VIcinity

PUBLIC NOTICE FOR SALE
Yard . &amp;ala lion.,
Tho Leading Creek Community
Ocl. 31 thN Sal, Nov. I. 1-.
Conservancy Dlatrlct will be
receiving sealed bids until
5:00 p.m. on Nov. 17, 1994
Pomeroy,
ot the District office located
Middleport
at 34481 COrn Hollow Road,
Rutland, Ohio 45775, for the
&amp;
Jollow l ng
surplus
equipment:
I
1982 Chevrolet C·30 PU,
SN·2GCGC34M9C1184349
t986 Chevrolet S·10 PU, SN· 1 ~~nOo, .......ombw
tGCBS14E5J2183397
~:
~
1986 Ford F·150 4 WD PU,
All Yard Sa._ le Plld In
SN·1 FTEF14YOGNA02838
u . o - . - n o: 1 - t h e
1990 Ford f·250 PU .day
llohn lha ad II lo ""'•
Fleetslde truck bod only
8uilday ad~- 1:00pm Friday,
The equipment to be aold
adltlan
10:001.111.
may be ooen at teh Dlotrlct S.blrdoy.
office on Monday· Frldey, 7 fMIIty ywd - . Dol 31. .....
8:00 a.m.· 4:00 p.m. up to 1-2_ -W.Way rlnll NtM~
the date and time of the bid GtudAtw,RaciOihaok
opening. Persona wishing TV'e, ......_
I ·
- .,...._
n-=NM,
.._
to purchaaa any or all of
gultlr,
ellc:Uic
~-.
these ltema mull submit a· Ieino. wlnt• olotlioe I _..._
sealed bid for each Item.
The equipment will be sold
to the hlgheot bidder "as Ia"
without any expreaaad or Yard- 1~ _ , 1Implied warranty. The oolorTV, daakand-~
Leading Creek Conservancy - - o l
District rooerves the right to A - a n d -

-Rd.

-y .

_,.,..r

~--. . . lnln, .,._

AIIERICOR=EDED IIEIIIIEIHI

"AptMtllchlan

The

-

·

Pol••

=---.

.eubonYIIIIPIIrllon

=.w:.......... y

......-.

MlllbotO.
II I nwfllo,

!!:-Of

-=»

bile Notl
Pu ·
ce
PUBLIC NOTICE
T-he Morgan Townahlp
Truotooo are changing the
nut raguliu monthly
meeting Nov. 5, 1894 from

for

;'=::.,;."""::;:_'--,;.._,,......,......-::,~Mionl
for
Qafllor In
llrawn'o lOA,

"'"=n-.....

IDSIIII110,

==

c-

':!

....._to
...r~d~lcold

-

~·
Ohi.ot1710.

: ,.._

-ou-'

c:.rww, •

llulld a lillang. Glflna

S Cool -

P......., Port

a-,._1211. .
Ftully, t1wt1. old

Lllb, Sheponf end
77S-118S.

Public Notice

Fill I

PUBLIC SALE
The Eastern Locel School
District will conduct •
:public ula o~ the preml101
· of the dletrlct's bus garage
·located on SR 681 near
·Tuppell Plaine, Ohio, In .
· Melga county, on November
.s, 1994. Vehicles will be
. avalleble tor lnepectlon and
· bide will be accepted
:bo-n the houre of I 0:00
· a.m. and 11 :00 a.m. All
: equipment Ia sold on an os
-II ba111. The B.o ard
· , ...rvn the right to piece a
:minimum bid price on each
Item. All blda are to be
received In a 111led
. envelope. Alf bide accepted
·will be llnal. Title tranolore
:wm be mede In the district ·
·trlleurer'o oIll co Mon d IY
•thru Wedne1day of the
:following week between the
· houre ol8:00 a.m. and 12:00
:o'clock Noon. All equipment ·
. mull be removed by Friday
November 11, 1994, or will
. ,.._. back to the dlotrlct.
· Item• are : one 1980
: Chovrolet echool bue; two
· 1982 Ford · echool bueee;
• one t976 Ford pickup; one
: 11179 Ford van; one 450 &amp;
· one 550·. gallon guollne

: ~tong~ tank.
.

(10)30 (11)22 tc

Public Notice

pu..,.., port

304-

~r old P - , blk,

=~.......

Wonted to buy lllndlng orplne~orlllolfl
-.
7110.

. . . =a-;

IUiol I

:;;..~ 1Mi1ot'llldJiop:rt,

w/lolo

1om 'lllcMo... llutllna En" ' - · Ruoh tt.OO - J. Boll
'ddrt•lll. ...... lnnloDI:
Homo, To: Hollo &amp;...
Wpftm, P.O. lea - . o\pphgow, W..YAIIIDI.

w.::::=:-~

Pold: All 0111 U.l•

----.....-

=-:i o:t

-=

: DOir ol wtth
"""""
.... lllcldtoport
.
. , 1,.OnuW
MIT.
1113
two " " ' - one _.,
ono
,...whtt.P and I'IJ, ~

Employment Services
,;1,;,1,.,..;H;:.e:;lp;;..:;W~a;;,;n;;,;led~,..,...,AVON 1 1 All - . 1 IIHrllr

.,_..,!OWlloMa.

Bullneu
Opponunny

=

9:30 • 8 :00 - Friday
446- 8776

...

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $5g .oo
Large Stock
Engineer ....... ........ .. ....... $49.00
Welllngton .. .................... $49.00
Loggers .............. ....... .... $50·55
Harness .. ........ :.. .. .........$59.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated, Safely, Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

Oonorol ""'"'-- Pol•'""
Yard w«ti"'Wi.;'i;;. Wiiii:l
Gutt.,. a..nad ' ................,
con..Ubtr Til- trucko, ComnllttCIII, llllldi':'.ioi,"ii;:: •NalfatJI!1ty
~ ..,....
llllfiiO!M pold IMunrnoe I 111 ttl t14l.
Fronc:Hoi ll'lllloblo for . _
-tiOn '"" 1Y'·· .,.._ - ·
Uolad
On
cleon IIVR, ,.._plolll- ~~~
... PooUbtr~toS.thewmlll.~..:!
ENTREPRENEUR lfUC.
11
tcrwn~nt!. II·IIUI :Mynr. Old. 1o
mil,... CE81IIaaozlneoAIOnoOt1'he
1101'-221-hBI, mk tar Satoty ·1;011
;;::,1
Moat Prolloblo Fronchloao 1n
Dept,
lloglo y.,. Dar - - 1'he USA. Slobtr, Roaurlan
RIIIEIIotocar-. Protulonal chOol, llon-f'rt, 7:1N:30.- - - • - 'L':.,::!!'

-.

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

.;::..:.::;..::::'::::·:---==:::::::-

=

=-an... t-:"·'"' ~=~-w~..:

l:ttf~;.~ ~

lf.,.,.alble llilff,
rour
· - - fontUIIo day !'~IDvfna ooro. 1(. yaoro

8t..n,

..,..._....,-.-

Support.

c;:.jllltl

-~~
"-''red. , ........
-

Drywall I
F1nleh Work In Our Homo,

Nmdo.

SIJing

~.

CMII - _ Ptload lei loL

1-

a·.r--

~~~~~f"~~lW
~

All _..AVON ~-

In!~ •,,~·*!t!.lllrlvn

lA IIWI-- _ , _ _,.....

0

181 Meaning
182 Stage direction

DOWN
1 Kilns
2 'War and - '
3 Rye fungus
4 Compass pt.
5 Dried out
6 Group of geese
7 - Baba
8 Be victorious
9 Barrels
10 Kind of thief
11 Brother or sister
12 Timetable abbr.
13 Dregs
14 Makes into law
15 Automobile type
ItS lnslance
17 Poem
18 - acid
19 Flaxen Iabrie
20 Cooks slowly in
wafer
27 Skating venue
:J1 Venetian boat
34 Bus. abbr.
37 Meat for
sandwiches
39 Go out '
40 Precious slone
42 Implement
44 Group of bees
46 "20,000 Leagues"
captain
47 Loud·noise
49 Barking noise
51 Greek le11er
52 __: and raves
53 Parting word
54 Make
56 Rome's river
59 Uable
60 Stand lor a canvas
. 61 Layered rock
64 Minus
66 Bread roll
68 - ·Mineo
69 Fiery signal
73 Abbr. in politics
75 Cut off
78 Fellow

80 Drone
81 Domesticated
82 Fasl
84 - Knox, Kentucky
87 Make dirty .
89 Something sticky
91 .Roman god
93 Dupe
95 Racket
"&gt;
98 Word of assent
100 Hils with open hand
101 Weird
102 Siesta
104 Lacking color
f 05 Not at all wordy
106 Information
toe Gladden
109 Appraiser
112 Furrow ·
114 Foot digil
116 Mix together
119 "Call Me -"
12f Mr. Arnaz
124 Encounter
127 Recipe abbr.
129 Points a weapon
i31 Holiday time
132 Satiate
136 Colonist
138 Tax org. letters
140 After deductions
142 Rocky hill
143 Cily in Washington
144 Indian garment
146 ·crocodile - •
t47 Build
148 Sorrow
149 Stop on - 151 Countenances
153 Contests Of speed
156 Emissary
157 Mountain series
158 Senior
160 Wagers
161 Give oft
163 Masculine .
165 Container for
flowers
168 Golf ball stand
170 Workal
171 Large cask
172 Asner and Sullivan
174 Hr. part

which Is In violation of the 'law.
Our readers are hereby
informetJ that all dwellings
advertised in this newspaper
are avaHab le on an equal
opportunity basis.

32 Mobile Homes

and up to 2 gallons of anti·

121:10 HoiMtte a led wn,
• - I Retrlalrllor, FUIJ ea..
...ad. IIUII le llovadl 12,1110,

Sun. 30th 1· 4 pm Mason, WV.
(Former Sports "N" Stuff
Building)

.

Mon. thru Sat 9·5; Ph. 446·0322
3 Miles Out Bulaville Pike

----R-...
......

10d0a.in.-.1flado

Miscellaneous Items
Nov.

1&amp;2

Carl Waugh Residence
Lower

ATIENTION
Residents of Green &amp; Perry
Twps . including Patriot,
Centenary, Rodney, Spring
Valley &amp; Northup
REPUBL1CAN RALLY
&amp; Meet the Candidates
Tues. Nov. 1st 7:00pm
Green Elementary School
Refreshments served- -·
Sponsored by the Gallia Co.
Republican Club

At

218

Perhaps you se nt a
lovely card, Or sat
quielly in a chair.
Perh aps you se nt a
fun eral spray, If so we
saw it there.
Perliaps )'OU spoke the
kinde st word s, A s any
frie nd could say;
Perh aps yo u were nol
th ere at all, Just th ought
of us lhat day,
Whatever you did to
console our heart s, We
th ank y ou so mu ch
whatever the part.
The famil y of
Jimmy L McGuire

2

"' Qalllpolll. 82!MID.. •
t171
Dlpoelt. Alfwencee A.
qulrad. Phone:...........,.,
No - · You Ply
Utllltllo,

Happy Big 50

2

Peggy Call
11
N EEDED
l ooked for w._.,,.,
fo r
th e
p e rf ec t
pic tu re . B u t you were
to cleve r and had hid
them ~ II. So yo ur
birthday w as M ond a)
and no thin g w as
do ne . To bad you
forgo t thi s b ea uti f ul
one.

I

L oving Memo ry
of o ur Mother,
GARNETT
PHI L LIPS,
w h o p assed aw ay 6
yea rs ago to d ay .
M able

..

S h e bakes
h im
coo k ies and d octors
his eyes. If you ge t her
m ad , ge l out of the
H er temper is bad
if
goes astray_
, H er
wit is qui ck , her sm il e
Now Yo ur A n
i s ni ce, B ut if y o u
Offic i al Tee nager .
" tick" her off w i th her
H appy 13th Dirth.d ay
long ue she' ll slice.
Missy Le hew
She ' ll c hew yo u up
God Bless You !
and spit you o ut, So its
Love,
best to agree with her
Mom &amp; Dad,
then hea r her shou t
L.,_ _...;,;
M,;,;a;.;w;_;;
&amp;;.
· ;.
Pa;;.w
..,.,
T he w r i n k I e s w i II
I com e, the eye will go,
She m ig ht as we ll
herse l f i n the

I

In Memory

Attention Republican

HAPPY
BELATED "58"

Voters Huntington Twp.
Huntington Precent

C a rroll

to attend a meeting to
meet the candidates
Where- Vinton Townhall
When- Oct.

31 , 1994

Time- 7:00 pm

11

CLORADEAN

' I

Call 446-2342
or992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

O H 456.1 1
P th•IH' (hl-'l -'-lfl · "Jtt&lt;;

wanted

Ca '!' e

In

E E01A DA Empl uvc r.

television system operation s in West Virgin ia.

O CTOBER 30 , 19 9 3

Kentucky and Virgin ia. Positions hase d in Point

The

Pleasant, WV Some overn ight travel and reliable
vehicle requ ired. Salary plus commissio n.

Pain ,

Competitive he nefil package.
The

Daughter· in·law,
Shirley Shockley
Grandchildren,
Nieces And Nephews

''

M c di ~a l ·
G a ll tpo li ~.

Ho lLe r

Ce nter.

professional sales and audit personnel tor it 's cable

ForMe.
But Now I Am AI Rest
I Have Found Peace
I Am Abi ding In The
Sheller Of Hi s Love.
Miss~d By Your
Daughters,
Mary E. Jones
Alzona M . Holmes
Bessie W. Grah ~m

t:;

M c.d ic ai /Surgic al and
C ri ti c.al Car e a reas
a va i l able
f or
expe rienced RN s a nd
L PN s .
E x .;c ll c nl
wag e and h c n c fi t
p ac k age .
S~: n d
res um e o r c a ll .
Ros1c.: Ward . Dir c.:c lor
o f Human Re source~

Ri fkin Comm unications Partners, LP is see king

WHO PA.SSED AWA.\'

Morning I'm Free.
Mus t J esus Bea r The
Cross Alone
No, T here Was A Cross

be. served

Full lime. pa rt tim e
p er
di e m
pos iti On s in th e

and

OUTSIDE SALES

M.

SHOCKLEY

Suffering, Sorrow·
· Joy Ca me In

Person"

Help

IN LOVINC MEMORY OF

Joy

"Exercise and the Cardiac

IMM ED IATELY
'Exper ience d
R Ns and LPN s

T DD (hl -l l-l -lr. "lOt&gt;

Morning .
Fr ee
From

Topic:

Robi e

&amp;

Morgan Twp. Invites you

Holzer Medical Center

.,

Po inty nose, kink y
ur i s and fl as h i n g
. Tod ay is h ere
b irt hday . i t s no
surpn se .
Sh e ' II dr i ve th r u
tow n wi t h gl il ari d
g litter,
eve n
t wo
injur ed
sh o uld e r s
dldn ' t m ake her b itter.
H er roof blew o f f
her ho use gp t wet ,
she a m ess, o h
, you bet.
he
ha.s
a
I d·o~'pe rsom , i n her van

_..., ..,_pold,

. _...... to -

card of Thanks

.

French Five Hundred .Room

.,

1 Mil 2 brdroo4a ~
and ........
urihrmlohad,
-urfly
doiiOIII
no

.14-441 0211

MOVING SALE

1.25 hp $275. 1 new J .C .

meet on Thursday Evening,

I

~-175-

1300 to S400 I - h , Mud walo

for Sale

Christmas in October

I

I

_,

knowllngly accept

1

Cardiac Sypport Group will .

=

II,

advertisements tor real estate

Reviv.al Oct 25th • 30th
Tuesday Thru Saturday 7:30 pm
. Sunday 9:30 am and 6 pm
Evangelist George Holley Jr.
Music by John and Cindy Born .
Crown City Wesleyan Church

.. pm.~
.
'

;g-fHtf;.,1tl4
: ........ e;1tl4

IlL PI

This newspaper will not

tests. Sliding Fee Scale; PrivatB lnsll'ance
and Medi~id aro accepted. Planning
prevents unintended pregnancy. For an
appt. call (614) 446-0166

F REE DELIVERY

•

and ol
n

sex familial status or national
origin, or any intention to
make any such preference,
limitation or disc rimination.•

transmitted disease and anonymous HIV

$250 . $425

I

.......___:=•ull._
.........
!:ll ar. a m tbr. aplo. -

Paid, 114I

lim itation or discrimination

Only $30.00 +tax incl. labor

Computerized Tread Mill

Refreshments
will
.
.

cw.

may· receive tests and treatment fDf seKually

•

- LOUNGE RECLINERS

....!"'-'

ttiMit,U..M

t1

Did you know thai... Planned Parenthood ol
Southeast Ohio in Gallipolis provides
confidential famity planning services to 600
Gallia COUnty residents each year. Birth
Control Servials Include a phys ~ian
examination, cancer screening, education
and birth control supplies. Women and m.en

Holzer's "Heart Tp Beaf'

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

S25Qo11o. All -

for Rent

for your appQintmenttoday

November 3 , 1994 6 pm

W

""'r: aoocl -

I Prfwlle

based on rae$, colOr. religion,

Call 446·3672

HUGGERS, CHAISE

...., ••• Noadad Ill .. .,._
oN. 1'llll . . . . . . . . .
P 1 mall WRdebh . _
rn;z Clll p. . .
,
IIIII Ill larnlnll .. 4G IHr. Ne l'.ll ..... '"' .... " ' I
.
DoorToDoor.l.--..... • ..... "

771l

""""*' •

ttle Federal Fair Housing Act
ol1968 which makes ii illegal
to adveftlse "any preference.

freeze

ROCKERS, WALL

•• I

Furnllhld I d -

...,
• """ u. Of
RrlldiiiOI,
......,at--.

Apanment

All real estate advertising In
thiS newspaper IS SUP]ect 10

Freeze Change Special"

RECLINERS

A-. Noadad I ....... Who
...,. IIIII Te 118 ...... 114-

TuppiN

...... tfWIIW211.

Gene Johnson
Chev.- Olds

LANE ACTION

YardSale

••••ar ...........
....,.._

_.

Gallipolis

LARGE SELECTION OF

LDII: Iiiii 811- Cot 110111 Ar-. -.rdt . _
01110 ' DIII/I; . - - E........ .

........

00:5! . . . . In

~--=.,

~ """' ,.. ..... Into On ••
Corillr Lot Lllno ....... . .
Court. - . . T- lf4.

..................

Service Dept.

Fall Festival
Rio Grande
Elementary
Games! Food! Fun!
5-8 pm
November 5
'

__

1'WD •••

Totti IEiootrtc, Ut.......

-

,. ............. Rood,

(614)446-6111.

AVON

Stove $175 (614) _
2 56-1270

Fkl -

::'f.'::.':'
:.,.'=..,._,
•II ·

Phone

1 new Preform

Penny Brick Lined Wood

..:.srg.

_ _ ......__,Zflado

- - to

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

.

...._ ~ 114-iG
_ St:lt •
fl4otiH27I

It:'

8::'::.
'lll'=.r.U::. ~
.__ 114-441-11:14.

Insurance

New company coming into area.
We are a Fitness Center
dedicated to the needs of todays
.
.
woman . We provide tanmng
beds, aerobics, weight loss
training, physical fitness training._
Group and private instruction
available, also child care facility·
this facility is open for women
onty. For more information call
446-3401 . Scheduled to open
Octobilr 1sl.

-·--- ...._

ae:zo.

!!ltahen.
Holt
9 , .............
,... -c. ......

• DUI • No Prior

446-9814

i....:block-wtth-1101,

'·-

Nouoea.-adOn-M\ '111rM I d : ; I, ... In

.......... . , .- - ••• hornl,

tl\100.11 ..... tU21

Cancelled/Rejected

PROFESSIONAL
AERIAL&amp;
COMMERCIAL
PHOTOGRAPHY
Construction, Homes,
Farms, Business,
Other

::·Rod

7

holt, 82t.ooo. ttl ..

"Get Ready for Winter Anti-

I

-lor-.--..

--~~~-lid.. 1 lllh. AC, I I=•

SR-22

.\46-9004

• -.of - ·
lone Doa. 1.111 In VIcinity Of • · IIi.~..~
Knua Uoll Rood On 1IRW'I.
U'*lllglll Eye, -.rdt
111~t~t~tl~t~I~04!:..:~;_:;:;::::-:::::­
1111 emn -

II ~loti

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

See the beautiful
fall colors.
Plane ri9es
Flight instruction
Plane rental
Gallia-Meigs Airport

Chlldcaroll.f -~Aim
~ y_, .._ Aai Duil!ll ( - - - - - - - - - -....,, S:Da!ll lllf Weill ... 3l Ho- for Sale
lmuml14oo446-3117.
.....
Trm Work, Dolor ~ 11uv
Nouoe 1 '2 car
Timber, Cut I Hou1, Flu. .ooil
~Far~Ot
Mel Ram:dollng. ~
~IP•
Af..
Or 31MOZ3.

W $qon
96 Not talking
97· Wages
99 Love god
t 00 Division
t03 eat's cry
105 Weary
107 Drunkard
110 - bygones be
bygones
111 Untruthful one
113 Old-fashioned
115 Cui-de- 117 Ms. Falana
118 Genus of herbs
120 Potato
122 Where Oslo is:
abbr.
123 Mr. Selleck
125 After Fri .
126 Pittsburgh player
128 Oolong is one
130 Native of: suffix
132 Sport
133 Summer: Fr.
134 Sows
135 Family member,
. for short
137 Wic'ked
139 Dmking spree
141 Fitting
t43 "Good - "
145 Learned
147 Mild cheese
150 All - - ·sudden
152 Leading actor
t54 Astonish
155 Weight allowance
159 Actor Steiger
160 Support
162 Mine car
164 Neighbor ol CaL
166 Lass
167 The upper crust
169 Hard to understand
173 Change for lhe
better
175 Celestial body
176 Writer lola
177 Get away from
178 Bum superficially
179 Saplings
180 Mythical creature

l:n droo11 wlbllt'l dun ,..,

35 Lots &amp; Ac1aage

DISCOVER FLYING

=rill~ll~btr.~~Coii~~R.~C.~81~•=-==·..:.,.
11A~11131100,En:zata.
1

-~
Con11nrc11on,
VENDING
Gill
For All -Your Honll_
RaJoalr llk:ll
QrlcLROUTE:
. . ChiWOol,
A ltmdv

s..,-,. To Do

--....,..old,..,,
FA-,•

FLAG CLASSES &amp; MAJORETIE
TWIRLING CLASSES
To prepare lor High S11hool
Tryouts Classes Start Nov. 7
Patty Fellure
245· 9880 or 446·0526

9 :30 • 5 :00 • Mon. - Sat.

81

. PUBLIC NOTICE
G lllpoll
EQUIPMENT BID NOTICE
a
I
The
Oallle
Melg e
&amp; VIcinity
, Community Action Agency,
·
· 1'. 0 . lcix · 272, Choahlro, 11 Iouth ~-* 81., a.llh,
01110.
hU tor 1111 to
~Neo p~
· the hlglleet bidder one (.1) ~·
ICitohen ,_,.
: 71CJ0 BTU window unit air ....,_
• Mr~C~tlontr. lnterutad AU. Ylnf 8olle 111uo1 • Porld 111
• part!.. at ., ufd eubmlt ...,.,..,.._~ &amp;'08 pJYL
: clolld bide to the Oallla. IMI!If
the ad 11 to 11111.
· Melge C.A.A. ofllol' at the· ~ .....,. • 2:110
alarlmentloned 1ddro11.
llllleft • oo
· 11c11 wtlll!e accepted untll4 I!:::..:::=.::.:;..._.,.----::.,.: p.m.
on
Thunday, , .._...., :J::::.~
. Novtmblr 10, 11114. The
Clllllpoth,
: c .A.A. hal the right to .11, ttl
, rafuee ai!Y and all bl.d l.
• 11af11 on the outaldl of thl - . ~8 till
I'IPIIII: e,.velope · "AC liD ".· ltotJJI~IIt = ONie

&lt;

1 Sets ajar
6 Stares
11 Soupy 16 Embers
21 "20 ,000 Leagues"
author
•
22 Foreigner
23 Peace goddess
24 Let in
25 Avia
26 Cake made with
molasses
28 River·in Paris
29 Mil. rank
30 Breakfast· item
32 Travel on wafer
33 Climb
35 Original
36 Son of Adam
38 Mr. Cassini
41 Grow together
43 Explosive stuff
44 Beau and Jeff
Bridges. to Lloyd
45 Attached
48 Is aware of
50 Morning moisture
52 Butted
55 Not genuine: abbr.
57 Sticky stuff
58 Makes a sound
recording
62 Neighbor ol Miss.
63 Lose· feathers
65 Pen point
67 - Angeles
69 Actress Fawcett
70 - sequitur
71 Cry at bullfights
72 Insect
74 Time of year
76 Flat·topped hill
77 Ruffian ·
· 79 Cigar residue
81 Male singer
83 Bread mass
85 Punla - Este
86 Strongboxes
88 - and spK:e
90 Chum
92 Face seen from lhe
side

- a d To Bur: W - To lluv

Rll-..:.7"\ llloln1ty: Old
=.,.lclllload,

Gallipolis

torRent

.., .. _,..t w-.-

336 Second Avenue

F1nanc•al

21

=for...._....... -"""' u.•.

e

ACROSS

Gold Colne. II.U. Coin 8hop,
111 '-11111-Wipolll.

;.......,.:.:;.:;.,.~~~-:::-:::=
- : ~ Or -

The Dove's Nest Antiques

lnllructlan
- - . ...

voice

October28· November 5

'

See Anser to Puzzler on Page C-5

Coiiii,'Oold ..._ . . . . C1olno.

l.Oit &amp; found

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.... .., OMa.lll
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.

SUNDl'Y PUZZLER

01'11. .

6

Plona

&amp;..........,.
Door lnolallir, IIUII Hove f!ir.

Ploytllo-,

Junk,-tot30tVIand•or
CIIII30W7Wl20.

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Instruction

Tho Dmrllne 01 Novembor 1,
1- To:
PHil,
In Overhead Doon,
Dinclar Of Rorrnln RMOURIII,
And "-froL IM-4411~r 01 Rio Oronda1 _~- 1i;;;i';t-~•;•~vyTltnr
~;;ri;irtday=fio.;;:
lea . ., lllo Orondo, OM ...,,._ I Wanted: . , _ !Ieino... CGno
EEO IAA Ernployar.
tnctor, OUm Equtp.
PC Umnr - · SUIC/Vr. 14
rnont, 4Pt
..
12.1nMr-. CaiiCrnlrt
1
11
poten~W. ?It Ill 1110 ut. 1161.
1

=-

otlcivo. :IOM7H8tl. ·
Up rlahl lllono. J114.178.1217.

JIO~=---=
............. 11
-a

and dad&amp;tlon to

Everything 1 0% off

a

01"- E-1
C11 K8vln 114 ttl Mil All• I

lor Wecldlnae

Planning a Party?
Step back in Time
Call 446.0586
Our House Museum
Book You're Holiday Partie's
Early

Autumn Sale

~ Pflol~ Anlbb'l

Pirl·~ ~ ntrualcn, R a - RaquiNCI, Cal AIIM llomodallng. - · - - . : . . , . . . _
lvonlnaltno a-., 1,1-.ati:M.
.
IIH4S-1311.
•
Hooded' for WI
Mel llprf"'
Quortw, Sand RmtonM llforo W.ntad:
a.._ Sun Vllloy N~ _ School.
Real Est v te

Old · - 11g111n, ~•In pono, ollvlnnn,

'!:op -

-Ina.-_. .
11-. ' ..., . _

aompaalon lor ~
~ou~l:'!:: leokl"'
~~oncl -.a.~

Wanted To f!uy: 1117 Or ~· llotlllli . . ......... ""
114.Z4wse1, .
. -

4173.

tMIII IO

- for - .........

Olbr llortln, t1Wit-11ML

Kltteno To Good Homo, 114-4411-

-

Sand
- o r llop In and oomplllo

DEPUTY DIRECTOR POIITION

'fpllclllon Dledllne: No••••r

lor--

lllddlc:.w..
",
p,

andtul..........ornptklgto

1 1114

.

~

r,-

~·CL,~":.:

Truako, till' Or flo t:l'6
lmllh · - Pontile,
Eutem """.... Clllllpalll.

flurl"' ~:
4
Giveaway
t...ckL
--....;,.,.....,--::,....:.,---=--: ~

...

WILDUFE
/CONIEIIYAllON
JOBI
Game
Wardonl,
.......,,
llolnt""""!1 Elc. No EU.
"..·
fllrtna,
Clll-21
71IWOIO
I!Jt for
1710,lnlo
I
.\.II, To 10 P.M. 7 Day-.
aklllo, 15
Schools&amp;

to Do

Wanted

and Rove-, WV bolld oontor
......
._
h.lrtno tnock dot- to DUll
van a ftllllltl trollaro. 111Mo15

100 bod
........., laolllly Ill llldd'-1,

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JID'oAido-ondlolv._

18

War'lled

-.J011----

. . . -ton

=~

Tho Mel111 County Public
Library Ba.fd of Trustees
are occeptlng bids lor the
aele of the Camagle Library
· building, loceted at 200 E.
second St., Pomeroy, OH
45769. Bide will be accepted
until 1:00 p.m. Wedn11dey,
November 30, 1994. The
Truateeo reserve tho right to
releet any and all bids. Ret.
Deed Volume 108, pogo 488,
Lot 1148.
. (10)30,31(11)1,2, 3, 4, 6tc

Help

Pooltlan ., DIRECTOR OF ADo1 OVERBROOK
c:EHTER ..
II 1 llllutlflll, _ . , bull, 100
load, nunlng faolltty locotad In
llldd~, Ofllo ~-· Ohio
IIINI). Ra&lt;iukol lo P.l"' ol II•
......,_ In Adu lulg,. role.
-

='"'for

ieoD1e lldlo. ~=
,.,. ..tdna -odgo ol

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bldo will be
accepted by the Board of
I . a.m..
p.ll.
Director• of the GaUlt,
a.m. to
Jackeon, Meigs, VInton 7:30
willa :3o
be p.m.
at Tll•l==i::R:a:in:o:r:S:h:::ln:::e::=
the
moating
Solid Waeta Manegement townhouse.
Dlotrlct until 4:00 PM
Phyllis Hash, Clerk 8
Public Sale
November 30th, 1994 for the
Morgan Twp. Gallla
&amp; Auction
following vahlclee:
october 30, 1994
1 new 1995 van
t new 1995 pickup truck
Ann o unc em en t s
Speclllcatlono may be
obtained at the District
office at 722 Eaot Tenth 3 Announcement•
Street Wellston, Ohio. Bids
· will be opened at the Elfoctln lrnmodlolll)o, na - .
regular meeting of the ~ or lrrtp 1r'ng on the~
· Board of Directors on ol IIOoi!Jnl
Q - .......
"'
I
I Mol
: December 15th 1994 In the T........... · AJoMI
· Board Room at the Dlstrl~t
office. The GJMV Solid
waote District reserves the
right to accept or rtlect any
or all bids.
October 30, 1994
November 6, 1994
Cloon lAte llodai -c.,. Or
PUblic Notice

11

boalnnora,
ooliool ....... - 018
- .-..z30.
11-24. Conlool .....
flld .
- -....... """
-lion Wll
A ~ » y_,
~CCX:
EIUIIE
to:.Dawlrllnydw,
Ado
SSI!i,, ,I.A.
Ill
..
_
~
·tnlnlolrotor,
Ouabtooli
cent.,
Ot •·-.....
111 o · bt- ~ 11:::1 •
"-. 11treo1. .,,,.,_.,
llontNy. ......... lha8ll . . . . . -··
Ohio 41710 .,..._._ PAX:
18 wanted to Do
-a61 car.
0n
the ~ 1011
114-1112-M
~...
.."',.... Noadl, PtuoAn . . _ av--.olc:::': ,":,.,~
POI'I=·-.•
tlonol- 0184.721,.,..... ~-~~-~........
dllabya·~-~~~
........
=.:....~
~Oh.::-h . . . hut Mr. for EDm- .........
.
- -:
•·
-IIIJIIJ tnU11 heft two 12•) AIIDiicollan lnfa. Coli CJtll,... Clro Far Eldorlr I l l - Hotne
yoaro p In lana term d01 En OHIIt, t o\.11, 4 P.M, Wllkdoya Onlv. F.. Or """'
.........-. .... ..... Sun .frt.
Tlml, Pfione: lfolt41 2421

ltlllfll' RUIIIIIIGII

a

ood -

OH.
........ Oonohlo
Ill OUtdoor Wor!l Wlh Ohio
JINfi!lle '11111 • •• 111
lloportrMnt
Of
Ntllftl
_'llt ....... C..AM . . . . ·Rrr; r11G•II.OOMour,40fNK.

.

Where: Manley's
Recyclng CHI«,
MJdilleJort, Ohio
for: lt'ay Wolfe
"who neeils a Bone
MarrOW 'JiranspIaII"•
When: Nov. 2, 3, 4,
59
5

1

a. 1

Help Wanted

M

oq111oo

oklddor -tor,
Of ...... for The FoiiQwfllfl ........_ ........... - Athlno./8t, Clol~ Ill 3t01
turthir In-lion
IIIII:

-.

Sale

~

-

AmertCorpo Prognm II In Hood

==.~::-.: ..:..n
................
.,.. ...

accept or reject any and all
bldo. Terms of sale, CASH .
or CERTIFIED CHECK.
By Boerd of Turotee1 of
Leading Creek Con11rvancy
Dlatrlct Robert F. Snowden,
President
(10) 30 (11) 6, t3 tc

11

Help Wanted

42 llloblle HomN

In M e m~ o f

Yo u have experience in ~ab l e television outs ide retail

Ralph R. (I odie)

sales (or relaled f ield) and a proven I rack record .

K erwo od
Who Passed A way
O ct . 26, 1985
A t twi l ight when the
day is done,
,.. And sunset
fl ames the sky, We
think of you Father.
lhe happy days
gone by, Thoughts of
you come dr ift ing back,
W ith in our .dreams to
stay. To know that you
are resting, When the
twil ight end the day.
Sadly missed by wife,
A nna, Chi ldren and
Grandchildren

Please sub mit your resume. inc?me hi story and cover

·

ktter 10 Regional Manager of Operations
Rifk in Commun ications Partners, IP
•P.O. Bmc- 106 - ... ·
.

Point Pleasant, WV 25550-0106
I

No phone calls accepted
EOE M /FN
Rifkin Comm unication s Partners,
LP is a drug·free workplace.

Rifkin
Communications
Partners
·.

�...,

.•,

*
,.....-;'

Pameroy--Middleport~lllpolla, ~oint Pl....nt, wv

Page D4 Sunday nm• Sentllwl

See Scram-Lets on Page D-7

Merchandise
........... ~ .... n.iir-

Merchandise

ANSWERS TO
SCRAM-lETS
GLANCE '
NEEDLE
YONDER
PISTIL
JUMPER
ANSWER
WILDERNESS

54 MlacellaiiiiOUI

54 MIIC8IIaneous

Our family was preparing for a
weekend camp out. We tri~ to be
prepared for any type of weather.
Gramps says that we need more now
for camping than our forefathers
needed to conquer the entire Wll- • 2
DERNESS:
·

-

...... ..

,_
.
.
.
· MerchlndiN • ·\.

54 MltcelllniOUt

54 IIIC8IIanaoua
· Marchandlle

Real .._.General'
AUCTION

WED., NOV. 2 at 6:00p.m.

Size . Ellctlto
ar MO; 8motlt AIC 110

-tloloalor,wlh-a ......

_,.,....,

·October 30, 1194

October 30, · 1~:

1141412141

:14"....,.-- ...... ... Brlnd- FUll lla PaofTollla
•~ni-nga.

WllhAICJII~F.... t~

Real Estate General

Real Eatate Gener~l

J

-

,......----~-~~'-'~'-

11u1.

A11arted

8

44

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Blcyoloo:- To

Apanment
for Rent

I'M~

Minion Mobile
tloneecau ...

llodlm 1 Br*-m .,.,.rnenl,
111111 D310.

FLEA MARKET
At Hutchinson Auction INC.
Nov. 4, 5, 6 9-5 pm
Located on 50 W. towards McArthur.
Antiques, collectibles and other misc.
items. Inside $25.00 Outside $15.00
Call 614-592-4349 for space
reservation.

=.,··~~':~Ji;=:

Flrnllf

Mo, , _ ,

aD

We~

4-698-6706
Lic:em&gt;ed and
in

tl aide
A c..

~·-otliltt12SEEA P - And F..,.
-AndllobiiiHomtFIII', _ ,.... Wllh Flnondng
Avollobll Col . . . _.. 11abt1i
Coollna All14o
- · 01 ~.alll7. Alii
EJIIIII!o
Homo Wll Fumooo
Thtl- . _
No littdolclty.
010212.

...............
12.
Nloe Two leclraom Untumllhlcf
~
,.,....,_
With
lletrtjonlor And lion, Con-

-IIIIIIJ .._.., 1210111o.

1210 o.po.a, 114 ttl Ud.

lied-·

CMtllon ga """-. :14,100
Ono
lumlohod opt
'M20 t..wle II, 104-171o14ao.
. • ITU, ttoo; 114-M2-3131
SNOWSHOE. wv.
...
WllhWIUt
2 2 Btnohn,
LAROE I IEDAOOII ~ longullr
Tobit
Sl.fEPI lo10. 8Kt _ . uuo. 2 Chtlta,ll1181 To.. Alll114o441o
IEIT LOCATION ON THE 11:14.

Isaac's Auction House
Antique Or Collectible Sale

St-. -

IIOUNTAINI
IIMIII-7727

Vinton, Ohio
.
Saturday, November 5, 1994, 7:00 P.M.
The Following Is A Partial Listing, More Hems Are
Aniving Daily. Consignments Accepted
Until 6 P.M. Day Of Sale.
Walnut Vaneer Gate Leg Table
"J.R. Hughes" metal &amp; wood came l-back trunk
(nice) 3-other Large trunks, Square oak table, Michael
Jackson Phonograph, .1940's Better Homes &amp; garden
Mags., Much more to come.
F'osteria, Fenton, over 75 pes. Depression ware,
Ruby, Fireki ng, Blenko, and Smith gl ass . Hull,
McCoy, Hall, over 35 pc. bell collection, over 20 pes.
granite ware including large sw irl blue-green coffee
boiler, Double Springs golfer decanter, Beam Bottles,
Super Sport # pedal car, metal "Kroger" ~emi, Tonka
earth mover, E. M.S. van, cast iron, toys, ball , clawfooted cast iron bath tub, cast iron skillets including
Wagner ashtray and skillets, apple peeler, Sad irons,
old sugar jar, graters, slaw cutters, numerous tin
cookie molds, metal wash pan stand, si lver ware and
silver plate items, 30 year button collection, crocks,
jugs, and bowl s, Hope vio l in w/case, new hand·
stitched quills, old eye testing machine_. 1-2 cent
graduated grocery scales, old chalkware items. Coins,
6aseball cards including 1955 Joe Nuxhall, Hank
Maveski, Johnny Klippstein, other baseball, football
and hockey cards.
Auctioneer F'inis " Ike" Isaac
Phone: 614-388-9370 and 388-8880
Licensed and Bonded Ohio 113728
Terms: Cash or Approved Check
Not Res nsible F'or Acctdents Or Lost Items.

Real Estate General

~1-.

45

GREEN TOWNSHIP
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2 baths.
LR. features lg. bow window,
modern kitchen &amp; dining,
area, pool, gas heat.
Excellent neighborhood. Only
$70,000.

SAT. NOV. 5, 1994 AT 10:00 AM
From Pt. Pleasant take Rt. 2 N. 14 miles, tum right
on Rt. 87 go 3 miles, turn right on Red Mud Rldga.
Follow signs.
ANTIQUES
Hotel washstand (pre 1930), 1940 chair, wood 4 pc.
bedroom suite, buttetfly vanity (1940's, excellent),
wood dining room table, 6 chairs &amp; buffet, china
cabinet. 2 cabinet sewing machines. wood bedroom
su~e (bed lmme, dresser, vanity stool, &amp; cedar lined
wardrobe), 2 halltrees, cabinet, 3 drawer dresser
(1940's), 5 dmwer highboy chest, milkstool, milkcan,
magazine racks, oval mirror, 4'x4' mirror, floor lamp,
old lamps, A.E. Donaghho Parkersburg, WV stone
jar &amp; others, depression glass; old bottles &amp; jugs, old
camera, crocks, crystal canisters (1940's), punch
bowl set, pHcher &amp; bowl sets, wood kegs, metal egg
baskets, glassware, White House vinegar jug (1909),
old books, encyclopedias's, wall mounted keroeene
light, big dinner bell, 40 yr. old carnival monkey's.
HOUSEHOLD
18 Cu. Sears Cotdspot frostless refrigerator, Robison
kerosene h,eater, 2 TV's, Bentwood rocker, Capehart
stereo, nice chair, loveseat &amp; chair. stereo console,
exercise bike, recliner, shelf, metal cabinet~~. old
child's chair, chest freezer, china cabinet, diSnes,
appliances, pots &amp; pans, etc ., Eureka upright
sweeper, plastics, milk glass. comm. pop bottles, ·
sets of glasses, houseplants, Avon, buglite, quilts &amp;
blankats, linens, nature books, and lots more.
MISC.
8x1 0 metal building, picnic table, child'~ swing set,
Sta-Rite well pump. approx. 12 loads of firewood, 2
wheelbarrors, 2 alum. ext. ladders, baylor twine,
gravely wheels, plastic pipe , rabbit cagas, grinding
stone, gas cans, metal dl'l!.m§ &amp; stand, •cann ing jars.
lawn fumHure, chainsaws (Homelite &amp; Poulan), hand
tools (shovels, hoes, forks, etc.) Skil rotor, table &amp;
access., nuts &amp; bolts, Southern States 5 hp. rototiller,
car chains, potato plow 3 pt., hand com sheller, 3 pt.
grass seeder, 3 pt. scoop. hammermill, 3 pt. buzz
saw, 2 wheel !ann trailer, bee hive boxes &amp; smokers,
hide stretchers, defleshing b9Brd.
Nit&amp;-lite,
suspenders, vannint caller (cassette), caller speaker,
dog trophies, beagle pups (6 wks. old), &amp; more.
AUCTIONEER: COL. OSCAR E. CLICK
Lie. &amp; bonded in WV 754-94
OWNERS: Clarence &amp; Sybil Campbell
·John L. Sayre
Terms: Cash or check with proper ID.
Not responsible for accidents odoss of property.
Lunch Availabl.e

Real Estate General
Phone
Main Oflice-388-8816
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

Fumllhecl

Rooms

A_,.tari'ORI·-or _,.h,

Slontna 1 1 . - . Ollila Holtt.
ll4 411-1810. .
.

Bmnch Office· 446·6806
13 Locust St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 456JJ ·

w.-.

Stttplng AOOIM $11 Par DIJ.
Conllnldton w.....
EHicllnor
Kllchtn,
,,..

......... wlh IIOiflna,
tnilltr
rlvw.p.m.,
All
hoctl-upo. CoM on.on2:00
:JCM.7T.HIII, MalOn wv.

46 Space for Rent
24x40 ' - lulldlna For
A:r~.~JI ll{.m4341 Or 114-

2

Evonlnge.

1171. LAND CONTRACT -

Ma~e

. · ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAIIIY

a deal here.

Older home w1th some work completed. 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, new cabinets In kit., good
garden. Bam &amp; garage. 4 ac. This will be a_good
spot to start or retire. $45,000 .
M977

ATTENTION! PRICE REDUCED to 59,900, will

purchase a lovely 3 bedroom ranch w/tull basement. 2
car garage. Also 2nd home which was remodeled. This
can be great income property. Located in town . Quick

Sale Needed. Located in the City.

3 " - 0tt1co SWto Wllh

PriVIII ToiiM tn 11oc11m Rr1
Proal Bldg. C.U 11om. Hotklnt
814-441-l!Qt 01814-4*'2112.

lloblll Homtl.ol For-. Tollt
Ellolrlo, I;IWI'T-11131.

m5. COIIIIERCIAL BUILDING · S40 sq ft quarry
til~ ftoor, new rubber root, 200 amp. 3 ph8s8 'electric
drrve thlu window, 5 ton heating &amp; coot~g un• ·w111 sell
or lonp term lease. Vlri!lnia 388-8_826___ !!, --"-•

1133. HOllE AND INCOME - Double ;.lth eam!n

Addllvlfte Schfol, 11t ••• 1atl.

Merchandt se

1118. LARGE HOllE IN VINTON · 5 Dellnn., 2 stories
LR, OR kit lam. nn., enClosed I&gt;O&lt;Ch. 3 building. Sales

1

a... To

ontce, extra building, fenced, blacktop drive &amp; patio.

5I

Household
Goods

--·--____
...

PUBLIC AUCTION

Ctrpot a VInyl In 81ock 11.00 liD
llol- Fuinllln, AU N. 114Saturday, November 5, 1994, 10:00 a.m.
Located at Getaway, Ohio, on State Route 243 Across
COUNTRY FURNITURE
from the Lawrence County Vocational School.
The following willbe sold:
....................... ourlo ........
TOOLS: I 0 HP Gravely w/rototiller, 42" grass . ollol..-; llonoht. ..... At. 2,
Noolh, Pt. - ....... 1120.
mower, Sulky, 4' sickle bar•. and scraper blade,
speedex garden tractor &amp; plow, 10 HP Bolen tractor
w/42" . mower deck, 2 McCulloch chain saws,
'Homelite weedeater, 2 wheel barrows, 2 lawn
spreaders, jig saw, bolsters for Log truck, telephone
poles, 1 lot 4" field tile, air compressor, 4 bicycles, 2
extension ladders, 2 farrowing crates, pickup truck
· LAYNE'S FURNITURE
racks, woven and barbed wire, 12 folding chairs,
CGmplllo homo tumllhtnga.
kerosene stove, storage cabinets and shelving,
Holrt:lltarto8ot,N.114o1410322, I mlllt oul BulovUII Ad.
lumber, picnic table, horse drawn plows, one large lot
F,..Dtltvory.
of hand tools such as saws, wrenches and many,
PtCtCEN8 RIANITURE
many other hand·tools and miscellaneous items.
No _ . . . _ Houuhotd Jur.
Antiques &amp; Ho.usehold: Antique Buffet, Oak
nllhlng. v.l mt. JonloiD Rd. Pt.
Pt-il WY, •I ltl4olllo141G,
Secretary, glass d~or cupboard, antique dresser
114 ... :-141
w/folding mirrors, corner cabinet, treadmill, excercise
SWAIN
bike, dining room suit w/china Cabinet &amp; 6 chairs, I
AUCTION a FUINTUAI. a
lot of books and many other household items.
Olivo 81., Ottllpolll. - . Uttd
lumhon,
a
Terms: Cash
Concession Stand
Work
boole.~
I 4":ie · 18.

....
-.--.

1148 - TRULY DEUGHTFUL - The remarkable

utMitles available.
1914· FOUR BEAUTIFUL ROLUNG LOTS On White
Ad. all utilities· available. 2 1f2 Ac. mil each make your
choice nowl Build your dream home in the country and
have everlasting comfort.
•
•
.
1M3. NEW LISTING • HOME &amp; INVESTMENT •
be bought together. New 3 bedrm. ranch home
rms .• White brick front. charming I,.R, din. rm .,
th
ho t 1 d 1
rms. roug u . oa s o oak cabinets In kit., 2
garage, 2 ac. M/l w/home.

1 112 story home w/2 baths, 3 ac. m/1. The interior 1~
most urMJsat finished In beautiful wood. The LA has
cathedral ceilings &amp; lott: The-wrap around deck is a
Dr'NIJII"':" to awing &amp; ~· 2 car garage &amp; ~ldlng

use this super nice 5 bedim for PRIVATE HOME
3 baths. 3 ac. m/1. Virginia L Smith 388·8826.

1155. HOllE W/RENTAL UNIT. Also 2 mobile pads.

Home•can be reverted to one lg . family home. SA

t 60. Call lor runner Information $65,000.00. May

· trade.

1916. LA.RGE HOllE IN.VINTON . 5 bedrm., 2 stories
. L~. DR ktt. fam . rm., enclosed porch, 3 building. Sales
Office, extra building, fenced, blacktop drive &amp; patiO.
Great Buy $44,500

bath, snack bar, loading dock, fenced, 6 ac. MIL Well
water, county water available. Propane gas tleat
trucking terminal, storage lockers boat storage or
maybe a bam dance hall This can be a real mo~ey
maker. $89,900.

room with woodburnlng fireplace, equip. kllchen,
brea.kfast room has a lg. window, stereo speakers
throughout, brass light fixtures and much more. 2 car
anached garage, anlc storage, 2 acres m/1. This house
is maintenance free of best quality. Make your
ap~ntm~ a,nd see if you don't agree.

,,

1147. NEW LISTING ·- KING SIZE FAMILY HOllE

H83. LARGE sniEL BULDtNo w/15,750 sq. "· ~/L

epaclous hi;Mne with view of the county. Italian tile foyer,
cathedral ceiling with balcony, 3 BR, 2'/r baths, ll"lng

1145. SA 1880- 'eonvanlent to the F1eeway

1873. OLD PLANTATION HOME - Built-In 1
waiting to be restored. Large bam &amp; shed. 117 k .
crop land &amp; pasture &amp; wooded. Close to Holzer.

1844. NEW USnNG -PRIME POTENTIAL CORNER.
2, t 60 sq ft .• block bldg. bath 1ac. m/l Equipment extra.
Located on SR. 388·8826.
111/78. CUSTOM BULT HOllE- Very neat 3 bectoom

power. You can live In one unit and rent the olheg
~~ose to schools, shopping &amp; churcheS. Call for tu~i
. ormation and an appointment VL smnn 388-8826.

Trolllr • - For -

Two story home, full basement and garage has a great
deal to offer. Designed !or great living. firSIIIoor has
formal entry with open stairway, formar living room with
fireplace. formal dining room, Cherry cabinets line the
wall of the extra large ki(chen. Breakfast room and .
rawder room. Second floor offers four bedrooms and .
ath. Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardwood !
floors, bath h~ all new fixtures and Love Tub. Basement ~
has huge ramtly room w/flreplace. bedroom , exercise
area, laundry 100m and storage room this home is ol
superb quality as the plumbing has been replaced All new
all covering, beautllul new carpet throughout, new
:Windows Installed. Spacious kitchen with cherry caDiFlSts,
tslaRd for Jenn·Alr range. Only private showing will decide
the value Is here.
CAll VIRGINIA L S~lH 440·6806 or 388·8826

3

rm

bedrms., ranch w{new kit. &amp; ·bath. lg. family
W/woodburnlng fireplace . on acre m/1. OnlY
$45,500. 388-8826.

1884 NOTICE: ONLY 2 LOTS AVAILABLE IN

1959. COIIIIEACIAL BUILDING • Olive St. t 6' door

make your offer on this 4 bettoom ranctl with fireplace

lull basement and In a nice neighborhood. CIOSll to
town In Grandview Estates.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1994
10:00 A.M.

.....

Robert

L.

(Bob) Wade, Owner

VI'AA FURNITURE

4111111 Out At. 141
IM-441o3111

wAA:'IOJohnson • Auctioneer
Crown City, Ohio
Phone: 256-6740

1 1/2

fenced. Renoodo•led
DR. new neat pump
18M AFFORDABLE UVING.AT ITS BEST, 4 Dellroom

INVI.~Tuoroi' PROPERTY all 3
$76,000 ·
plus 2 ac. mil 2 bedroom home, lull living room, kltcen,
utility, 2 enciosed porches (big enough for extra rooms)

2 story just remolded with lots of space, has new
furnace. roof. and siding, you need to check this one

2 garages oeautitul landscaped plus 2, 2 bec1room
rental units. pay for your home with the rentals. Appro11
2 miles !rom University ol Rio Grande, all blacktop road,
city schools. a must to see.

1987 FAAII WITH ASPECTACULAR VIEW, 100 acres
of level to slightly rolling farm O!nd. 4 Dellroom spacious

out

bl·level that anyone would just love, call Wilms tOday,
you """" to ta~e a look a1thls beauty. .

-

For AccidentsOr Loss Of

-

~·

J

.'

Tni~

1982 COUNTRY DELIGHT, 3 Dellroom 1994 Tangleolood

Bam and buldlrig, !ence fo1 a hoiSO, etc. Garden spot,

1131 COUNTRY GENTLEIIANS RETREAT. 25 acres
with a 3 room cabin pllced to sell at $38,000.00

UNUSUAL

HOllE · w/4 Ac.

home is so easy to care for Its like being on vacation. 16X80 mobile home on 3 acres wllh a nice
3,168 sq. ft . mJ1 with an oak wrap·around deck. Rooms Rio Grande area.
• &amp; dooi's are e&gt;&lt;lra large to accommodate the har)dlcap.

52 Sporting Gooda

c.o. ....

With . . _
.... And lofto, Wll Tllta
2

mn.

lhll lovely 14170 Rtcnlon, 3 -..... 11111
. . now on I ocn lot and • 2 c:.r 111r1111
to town Md Iliad to 111. bltlwlluny onc1

...... -.
-

:

Located at 213 Midway Dr. in New Haven W.V.
Watch lor signs. The estate of Fred P. Stark will be
sold.
,
. FURNITURE
Nice Lazy' Boy sola w/incliners, swival Focker, recliner,
coffee table &amp; end tables, Emerson 19' color TV
remote control, tables, 5 pc. map~ dinet sel, 4 pc.
maple B.R. Suite (Basset), 13' Emerson color TV
remote control, Emerson stereo, Sharp VCR, Shapr
Carousel Microwave oven. matching harvest gold 30"
electric range &amp; ·,J.6 cubic ft. G.E. Refrigerator,
Maytag washa! &amp; dryer like new.
., .
HOUSEHOLD
'
Plaltzgraff ,&amp; other dishes, quality cookware, small
kitchen appliances, lamps, oil lamps, irons, flatware,
towels, blankets, inens, bedspreads, pictures, mirrors,
electric heater, Hoover sweeper. Bissel 3 way vac •
Coleman lantern, fishing rod &amp; reels, Schwinn girls
bike. ·
QUALITY TOOLS
B&amp;D Circular Saw, B&amp;D 1/2" drill, Stihl-0152 chain
saw, Ryobie 7 1/4" saw. Ryobie Reciprocating saw,
Ram bench grinder, set of wrenches, ~raftsman hand
tools, 10 amp. battery charger, Honda. EK 650
ganerator, 3/4" drive socket set. levels, btts, bolla,
nuts, screws, ext. cords, B&amp;D hedge lrimmers. ramps.
•~··••• hose, metal work bench, Dolly, trailer hitch,
barrow, 20 II .. ext ladder, rotitiller, Minnkota
[ trolllir1o motor, motor guide trolling motor. Craftsman 14
tractor, l.llwn Boy mower.
FIREARMS
.'
Mod. 490 Wlncheeter 22 Auto rifle, Marli~ Mod. 60-A
22 rifle, R.G. 22 reYOiver, H&amp;R 9 shot 22 revolver.
CAMPER
988 Avion by Fleetwood 35 II. camping trailer,
r.t,~lniess steel. air, all power, loaded. Top of the line.
Sells with Feserve.
.
7o VEHICLES
9BB. Ford F250 disel, air, cruise control, 115,787
1 wltopper.
·
- Dodge Omnl 4 dr, air, 4 speed, 73,534 n:tilee. ·
BOATS
.
Baas Tracker Pro 16 W/35 ho"'e Mercury
5:~E: &amp; !teller. 12 ft. alum. Star Craft boat.
Note: Fire anns will be sold at 11:30 a.m.,
vthlciM, &amp; boats. will be sold at 12:00 n~.

1173 OWNER WANTS SOlD HOW, you - t o

:P'~""~""·"11

too. Vllglnla 386·f!B26.

Ouno On Troclt, 114-111-214S,

Como
... -... (l;hH
............
Lovl ,....
• _,,

-·-·-·=r-·$tll0tlnn,l-

;...,..':::..,lnll:..'! J!;:
.... hunllna •IPIIIIII. Tnolna
~fist. Pl. ...._..

IKI '""' wlh 'II ,_,.. lnd •

Thursday, November 3, 1994
at 7:00p.m.
From

Gallipolis take Route141, Turn

54 IIIC8IIaneoua ·
Merchandise

Left onto Rt. 775, Turn Right Ooto

beautiful cabinets, woodburnlng fireplace, extra room for
a hobby garage. 2 acres m/1, clly schools. This Is an

Patriot Road, Watch For Signa.
Lots and Lots of Toys.
Jam Boxes, AM-FM Clock Radios, Pillows,
.•·•
Lamps. Pictures. Gun Ra?ks, Tools,
· · . Singing Anlmals, Trucks, Chnstmas Paper,
.~ ·
Clocks, Dolls, Sweat Shirts, Christmas
Night Gowns, Jewelery, Cookware, Dishes,
Cast Iron Toys, Car Sets, Toysl Toys! Toys!
and Much. Much, More!.
Big Truck Load of New Merchandise.
Sornetttlng for ttVery member of the family.

,.

-

Marlin We,demeyer,
Auctioneer
cs'thc. 3615 Eat~14-37P~~~l~fD.

•~·' Not Aespon
. slble For Acciden.t Or Los.s

O
. f

1184 SPACIOUS HOME DOWN RIVER 10 RMS. to
enjoy, 4 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths , equipped kitchen with
aftor&lt;lat&gt;te home and a pleasure to show.

1810 OWNER· ANXIOUS TO MOVE TO THE

GALUPDUS AREA. will sell or trade lllr a homo In the
Galllpolli area, lovely 3 bedroom 2 atory with 2 car
garage and a ga- apartment tl1alls - · stays ranted,
so extra Income Ia yours year round, on a niol ttreet In
tne.Aibany .....

GREAT BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY AT HOllE,
calltodayJor a view ol this ntce'3 bedroom bricll
ranch on 4 acres with a 4000 sq. ft. commercial bldg. to
wort&lt; at home. Priced rignt and would make a great
.· pllceiO live, call Wilma at 44HI8321or more Info. ·

1987 HOME/RECREATION/LAND SCENIC ACRES SURROUND THIS
CHARMING HOME, 30 FT. LIVING AM ., INVITING KITCHEN 3
.
'
BEDRMS ON THE FIRST FLOOR FULL BASEMENT FINISHED .IN 2
LARGE R~S., 1/2 BATH, UTILITY AREA CLOSETS .•ENCLOSED
PORCH. POOL W/BATH HOUSE, PARTY HOUSE OVERLOOKING A
STOCKED POND. 2 CAR GARAGE, 21 ACRES MORE OR LESS. THE
HOME SETTING IS BACK FROM ROAD FOR PRIVACY- OWNER MAY
'SELL ON TERMS TO A QUALIFIED BUYER. REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE.

-to

Property .. .' .· U"' ..,.._ -

And Whb

i M&amp;:#MM•~~W~ l:.U::~V:;;:'"' ~

.'

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PWSON AUCTION CO..
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
.
' EXCOTRIX; VIRGINIA ROSE
LUNCH
·'
MASON, WV
773·5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH I. D. OUT OF
STATE BUYERS MUST HAVE A BANK LETTER OF
CREDIT UNLESS KNOWN BY AUCTION C0.
Not ...,onolble for .cci•ntll or lou of property
UwnHCI
Ohio, Kentuplly 6
.
~
'

house on and toth left over, 123 acres tor only

$58,500.00

11511. GREAT FOR 'THE CAliPER. lot wnh a 22 toot
camper with deck and IIWnlng In Big Foot Pork
campgnllllld Just $5600.00

I

I

~

I

,_GREAT LAND FOR PASTURE, 50 acret,
sttgntty rolling with a 4 bedroom !arm houl8 and 2
outbuildings In the Ewlngton .,..,
1188 ACREAGE, ACREAGE, to build your dream

~'E:eto\:i4~'::7:i

What is aQJI Qualfty Home?
5/12 RoofPiu:~
o-. ·'•0: •.
FuU Bascmoa or

Allder.eo·Witldc:lll4
Stanley
• · ·

•":::; &amp;:'*• ............
......
~-IIIIer

•

,,
•

I.

,,'

Cra•laptce
OatKIIdlcrn
5&lt;61 Hardwoo4
w.kli'Trill

HOUSE, BUILDING 6 8 ACRES MORE .OR LESS,
located in Lawrence Co., 2 bedrooms.living room. dining
room, kitchen, bath, lg. garage 24x40 . CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT/II
LOT IN GREEN TWP. FOR SALE- 156X1 00 city water
and sewer, electric to pole level. Priced $14.000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
ACREAGE FOR SALE- 16 acres more or less locted
close to Rio Grande. PRICED AT $64,000 Realtor
Owned.
VACANT LAND · Approximately 10 acres located on
·Bob McCormick Rd. Call tar more information.

:14114tl
KJLU IUASI Buy Eti'OACER
,... KJtllra tar ..... •
V8rtL GUARANTEED .., 'ual
l - II: AaQ FEED liND
o:DELL WlriiEIL

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
HIOCHI~1066

m
._

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOliES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RETAIL.STORES, SUPERMARKETS; MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

Real

Estate General

HEW USTINGI STOf'lll PAYING THOll
RENT PA~S
this 2 slory older
home at 1021 Second /liM. 3 bedrooms, Nvlng
IQClffi, !llniiiiJ 100111. ~. 2 car garage. New
C81Jl&amp;ting I , _ Don'l4ittly call today! $40's

and""

AUCTION

&amp;

ceiling wlloft for storage 210 &amp; 220 elect . water &amp; sewer.
6' cement to load &amp; unload in front. 30x80 building
approx. 3900 sq. ft. block &amp; trame. $45,000.

...

:-

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK FOR SALE· 2
bedrooms , a bath, 2 decks, new roof. electric heat. 1 1/2
acres. more or less. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOME FOR SALE- 3 bedroom home, hardwood Moors,
ceiling fans, lire place with insen. 20 x 24 garage and
much more, city schools. CALL TODAY
LOT TO RIVER- ·A 1~ x 65 Mobile home, 3 bedrooms.
1 bath. ,t car garage. front &amp; back porch . Priced at
$22,500
.

ESTATE

1931 OWNER WANTS THIS SOLD NOW, call and

LAKEVIEW· ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5ACRES MIL ALSO 2.346 ACRES
M/L CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER
HOSPITAL. AlL LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE
COVENANTS.

on approximately 1 1/2 acres more or less. City

Schools. CALL TO SEE!

10H71-

Lau"*r,114 •ua.

HOME ON RACCOON CREEK- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
li\oing rbom. dining room. ldtchen. 2 car garage located

.....,., f71.111 11.11411.

lllllolalud opt. tar . _ , ....
EOH

7f-2·2954

Fai-.
,....,__..,..._

1\llln
A..... T-,""-,.,,
-·
Ina IDDIIclllant
HOD
hand'n1 f I d
Itl7tl.

U111114-.. 2
house,
storage bua I g. concrtte driveway,
2 apple b u, 12t,soo.

t n - O r - P I lJO

50 ACRES +1-. Green Elementary.
Some good building sttes.

Real Eat~e General

446-1066
Allen C. Wood, Aealtor/Broker-448-4523
Ken Morgan, Reallor/Broker-446-0971
Mosa Canterb)lry, Reattor-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, ReaHor· 256-1745
nm Watson, Realtar-446-2027

E l l - Top llae0111 ~
Cdl I
Ctlllelltllll

ST. RT. 588 - Can be sold on
Land contract 2.33 acres +1-. All
wooded, some lg. timber. Green
Twp. Only 5 miles from town.

PICTURE PERFECT
"SOLD"
7 Acres, lovely home,
18x28
main
bedroom,
16x24 LR. w/stone lireplace. Priced $80's.

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

Ohio

LOOKING FOR CITY PRO·
PERTY to build a new office or
start a new business. Also would
be ideal for residential. 4 lots, can
be bought together or SOLD
separately. Give us a call for more
details.

--...a '
u. - ,....
wv

Wood Realty, Inc.

Take US 50 &amp; 32 west and exit onto 50 west towards
McArthur. Auction is quarter mile'on left.
We will be auctioning the personal pr~perty of
Louise Beckett deceased at the age of 77. A resident
of Athens for 20 yrs. ·and a former employee of Law
He~d Press. Bedroom suite; matching couch and
chaa~; dtnette set; side by side refrigerator; other
furntture; lamps; picture frames; open rose cracker
jAr; bedding; pots and pans; jewelry; old clothing;
•· m•nv other sman items.
Terms: Cash or check w/positive ID. Food
available.
Auctioneer Mark Hutchinson

,f80;2111tio M"TN,
"'Y IIIII, lllkl
t17l • Will .........
_ ... Ull EMil, ltWIU7III.

doltcllon. -

.,:.

- ...
....
......._..........

tm-

NEW LISTING!
LARIAT DRIVE!
Exceptions! 2,200 sq . It ranch. vinyl Siding ,

.
"
'
IIIW USTIHQIS ACRI!It RICER VIEW! One
story frame " - consiQIIIng of 3 bedrooms,
lioing room, dining room,lillchen, bath. Storage
building. Geed hunting.,., Call today lor 111
apj)Ointmeltlt $40'&amp;
1718

beauti~l view. Large l1vtng room and fam1ly

room each with a hreptace. 3 bedrooms. 1 112
baths. Lots of cabinets in kitchen , large dining

'·

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

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

loll ,.... •

Old S30U-.

SolO - ..... bitt pick.. - .
lplll wood. HE.V vouc._ ~
~.

.......... ""*1110111!! ....
.......

81,_, p i t y -

Nu"t

I I,

=-~--

,.,..._ . . . . . Cant . .
For-.~

=

MEACIAUI
tor rriany types o! business! Listing too
lkllilrous to mention in this ad! Call for more
1683

area . Super lOCation close to hospital and
shopping,,
.
t715
CHECK OUT 'nitS PRICE? $34,0DO.OOI 3'
bedrOOm• nmcotl. nowor raot &amp; Vlnyl wi(ldows,
living room llltHn kitchen. Concrote drivo, 1
Ollr carport. S.rago buildinQI Call for your
~tltldlyl
K80
LOOK THIS ONE OVER! A very nice home
buUt in 1977. Full tow story &amp; 2 lull baths A
nice setting with a yard to entoy. Most dl lt1e
land is tillable and will raise good crops Has a

tobacco base and timber lot Should oe a good
hunting. area . as.well as.Wayne Nabonal Forest
owns lots of land close by. County water tor
house and a st!Wlg .stream for farm . Call tooay

for a showing.
·
1710
WOULDN'T IT BE NICE TO HAVE SOMEONE
ELSE PAY YOUR MORTGAGE PAYMENTS?
Then 111 them, buy this ho..- with ,.., additional
mobile home that has ,.., oxcellent YNIW of tho
Ollio River. Fnomo homo .has. nowor, go~
fUIMIICe/central •ir condrt1onrng, 14 w70
will 2 bedrooms tnd 2 tuM baths,
. . cled&lt; ..cl 2 .....go buicingo. Appro• 112
_. lot. minulet lrom town, city ocha&lt; sl ·
UnbttieYeablo prico of $37 ,900.00. Coli '":;,
1

,...._home

ACREAGE- 12 plus acres! Road frontage.
county water available. N1ce homeSite
1635
SIMPLY BEAU'IIF\IU Really nW:. tO+ ac"'s
(oomact 8Ql0Unl ot acreage to ba ~tarmmod
II¥ turvey) pond and 1992 14'x70 Mansoon
mol&gt;ill h..,;• which consists of 3 ba&lt;tOOmS &amp; 2
balhs. City scllOOiol
t686
WANT SOMETHING A LITTLE DIFFERENT?
Take a peek at this home , tlarge .liymg r.oomi
dining room and kitchen wllots ol ntce cabmets.
2 acre lawrl more or less. lots of fruit trees. Call
today, immediate possession!
1664

I.C.IIIIII .... a

Caooel~urv; Inc. 45718
Speclil\~ in Pole
' 8-L '·~.

Designed jg lllltt '"'

n•d•. Anr lize.

CHOICE OF 10 COLORI
FREE ESTIMATES ON
PntBIIit6laaltld ·
PICkage Deal'a. 8M

Hundreda, ·
of

Tllouundl

t 12 story home co,.rosisting
bedrooms, 1 112 baths , living
.
room kitchen afiCI more. Over 41 acres,
tfld iami po"'- NICe quiet place to live, call
today /or an aJ)IMI!rltment!
1612
FOURTEEN PLUS ACRESI Lois of cleared &amp;
wooded land. Road frontage. mineral rights
inclUded. County water available.
1696

�OH--Polnt Pleaunt, WV
56

Pita tor Sale

Uvestock

51 Fann Equipment

T1 Autoa tor Sale

72 Trucka for Sale

.October 30, 1884

October

12 Trucka for Sale

:.'::~:~:~' S©\\~lA -J££~s· ::::

72 Trucks for Sale

Etllted

lttl 41 HP Toto DloMI Troalot
Wllh Loodor $13,100; 1100 Ford

Club~. Huokor- Blllz
Touchltono 1 Olhon, 114-241........ 1111 - ...- In 110110.
1111.Sidln
EquiDmlftl.175-..21ot1~
Ool- Far Solo: All Agoo,

114 143-2281

tNACLEG

!!oglol- 2 YO.r Old Glorter
Hoioo Goldfnt, ' - ' With
White ttoolllnp, $1,800, 114-

3137 1ngallsRd.
Ga llipolis, Ohio
(j 14-446- 1675

:: I' I I

143-22811.

Equipment :

~

Zt tor · long· Kioti Tractors;
Loaders, Backhoes, Vermee r
&amp; l..ely Hay Equipmenl.

A complete _line of ba le-

gates, corra l panels, squee ze

aq...,. -

tl.:is to $2.00 por
ctovor, on:hOrd
grooe. 304-471-31100.
bolo, 1111111,

Transportation

hcadgate.s,

l gr~~::,~~:·;~ etc.
chain saws; toro
We carry a complete line of
parts &amp; service!
We have a special pnce on
rail bull gates and round

Musical
Instruments

feedt:t

~~~-""'W:h~
211
--.
~
41120, 114-31l7m.

·

1m _..._ -

g~~-

4 ft$ 2] fi ftSi4
lllfi.$41 IZft $46

s

IMIOopllaod.

)t fL $37
14ft. S5 1

:f__._oI
+-

~~~a~~;i~

TAKE YOUR PICK OF ONE OF THESE HISTORIC
BEAUTY'S! Large homes with an excellent view of
--,,-·-~n lhe c~ park and the Ohio River. Would make a good
investment property, or a showy place to live with
some renovation. Information to numerous to mention
in this ad. Call for complete listing and your own
private tourl

16 f1 . $54 Ruu~t.l &amp;I~ Fmkr~ $11•1
Round B11lc ~l or se Fccdcrs$ 115

61 Fann

Uvestock

Equipment

1141 I lplld John 0... I,

1 puno Choral• butt, t
Ohotololol8immontll- 304175-3034.

2 Y11r Old Umouoln Butt Appn&gt;L Wllaht: 11100

JKI!, 1100,

luiiJ . . . - I n - lt4-tl2· ·-ti!GI, 114-4-....

..........""......

-lutopL. ....~

-

~~Pty~.-~h~Ritl:-:-lftl,--o-::-2.2,-::--:-=-11
S7QO,•-..

Font 2300, 4cJI., t2IO.
tro.-loolon foi 2300, m.
tro.-loolon hlr Yl, m.
571-2111.

Brod Coin Far sa11, • 1113, 114 441 3321.

Real Estate General

General

..............

truoll._, ..

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

1-800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley............. .742-3 J7l

_R.._v__._N
I I _o..._E--'
I · 1s-....JI

~:....,R.---.u_J-rE_M""T"l:'"8""P~~

_ I I I 1 I .

..............
-. ..
ctw,....................

-

........... -~

Our family was pr~paring
for a weekend camp out. We
tried to be prepared for any
type of weather. Gramps says
that we need more now for
camping than our forefathers
needed to conquer the entire

h4-2111

79

di"'uts- 1
,

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

lll" ~~I 'onl Condition.
.. 11. ttl t41L
Catllilnn I W ........ Truck

~'=-~~~~~:

V.W P I ,...., Ptfced, 114.... tll.

Scrvrccs

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
81 ·

PH. 446·7699 OR 446·9539

Home
Improvements
Bottom· River Watchers

Great

OFFICE 992-2886

Henry E. Cleland 111992-6191
Bird's Eye VIew!! Soar with the eagles with this
hllllop home. Very unique home and setting.
Outstanding view overlooking the Ohio River,
Gallipolis and West Virginia. Home In great
condition. Perfectly privata location close to
town. $154,900 1227

Perfectly Priced lor Young Families and
maintenance on this vinyl sided 3 b~droom, t
1/2 bath ranch will leave time for all those
family activities. Located on ~ dead-end street
and priced at $58,500.
1540

~~-___;;OFFICE 992~-2:.;::;;25;.;;9_ _~~

"'

r.t

~·

"

THIS HOME IS JUST BOO-TIFUL! Owners
have SLASHED the price $10,000 and are
ready to sell! This executive ranch stayle
home offers 3 bedrooms, the Master bedroom
has bath , skylights. dry sauna, and entrance
to private pool/entertainment ·area. Plush

THE GOBBLINS HAVE TAKEN CONTROL
OF THESE 0 W N E R S ! !I
THEY'VE
ReDUCED AGAIN! This cute home in
Chester would be perfect for a starter home

carpeting , fireplace in den, cedar closet,
Mexican clay tile. in the. kitchen also with
entr11&lt;1ce lo the lovely inground pool area. If
you 're looking for a home to enjoy and relax

bedrooms , attic space, basement, small

in ... THIS IS IT! Now asking $64,900. Also
includes a one car attached garage and easy
accet&gt;s to SA 7.

or retirement home . Close to school,

churches and local shopping . Features 2
garage, nice la&lt;ge back yard with plenty of
room to play or garden. Owners relocated
and wanls sold NOW! REDUCED TO
$29,9001
-

NO SKELTONS HERE! Just fresh clean living
in this 1986 modular located on Greenwood
Rd. 3 bedrooms, full basement. with garage.
central air/heat pump, decking, outbuilding.
Very well maintained . Nice neighborhood.
$44,900

THIS IS A WONDERFUL
HOME
TO
RATILE YOUR BONES I Located on A~h St.
in Middleport. Nice brick/frame ranch wit~ 3
bedrooms, t 1/2 bath, refrigerator, unit air,
attached one car garage. Small yard. An easy
to maintain home. REDUCED TO $43,000

MIDDLEPORT · Localect on S. 5th. St. this 1
1/2 slory home features 3 bedrooms, family &amp;
living room, kitchen. ceiling fans , b.uilt in
shelves, basement, porches. central air. Nice
location. ASKING $28,000

POMEROY •· Two story hOme with basement
and block garage. never paint and repairs
inside home. 2-3 bedrooms, some appliances,
some furniture. Close to everything - great
view of r"'er. REDUCED TO $19,500 owner
may consider offer!

~

:
,

OWNERS ANXIOUSII Beautiful Spring Valley
home. A must,see home that you'll just fall in
love with. Outstanding featiJ'es include custom
oak kitchen, remodeled bathrooms (2), living
room with attractive warm fireplace. 3
bedrooms and cozy den/family room. All in top
notch condition. Plus full basement. 2 car
garage and a
large tree shaded deck in
the back
appointment. 90's. #211

One of the loveliest farms In the area can now
be yours. Located on 21 gently rolling acres,
m/1 , this totally remodeled home offers 3-4
bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, lormal living
raom and dining room, lovely kitchen plus a
bonus room to fi t your family's needs . Now add
the outside buildings consisting of a 2 story
barn with 2 stalls, 3 smaller sheds and a
detached 2 car garage. All we need is a buyer
and the lann of your dreams can by yours. Call
Carolyn for further details.
#607

OLD-FASHIONED CHARMII This spacious 2
story home was remodeled only 2 years ago,
with exceptional quality in mind . New wiring,
drywall, carpet, etc. Offers 4 bedrooms, bath,
utility room, ·large kitchen with new oak
cabinets, range, refrigerator &amp; dishwasher.
Living room with wood pellet stove, formal
dining room, vinyl siding. t car garage. All of
this and MORE with a scenic river view. 1102

FIFTIES BUYER, BEAT THISI Crisp, clean 2·3
bedroom home on large corner lot in
Middleport. Everything you could want at a
price you can afford.
t507

river now. Priced at only $34,500

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'a

Motorcyc:lll

•·c: · _-,

1 112
kit, FA gas, free
owner asked to

·ONLY J4¥.900

Ennlngo.

74

205 North Second Ave.
. Middleport, OH
NEW LISTING· At last, affordable town
property In excellent condition. Located on a
double lot, this home offers 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, lovely formal Ll! &amp; DR, family/sitting
room, kitchen with breakfast nook and laundry
area and 1 car garage with workshop area.
Extensive remodeling done since 1993
including plumbing, wiring , roof and
healing/cooling system. Hornes in town, In this
condition, at this price do nol come available
every day. Priced at $55,000. You better hurry
and call today!
II60it

house to enjoy watcl:llng the

1177 Choir. 4WD. 1111 .......
2dr. bodY. 1111 Ddgo llonii);IO Ran'w TV 1ontoe, -'&lt;IJizlna
4WD. IOW7N4tl.
·
In :r.nltll 1110 IWVICing moil
4x4 GIIC .IIIIII!'J :10 111111 Por othlr llrondo. 01111, ,_
- . Loadlll, a..Jo ..... IIJO.m.GD11, wv 104-175-2311
11 !111!0 !~Condit
,ian, .... ..:OIIIo.::..:..•~::--:--;.:::-:,414~---=-~llooiN :10 YIL Elql.
, _ Exllrnofll. ~4UIIII4

NEW LISTING! It's not too late to be in your
new home by winter. TheSe owners are moving
lo their new home so you can have possession
immedia,tely upon closing. This lovely ranch
offers 3 bedrooms, 1 balh, cozy living room
and dining area off of large cheery kitchen. The
man of the house will love all the tinkering
space- 1 car attached garage, 20&gt;&lt;30 detached
garage and large storage building. Call Carolyn
today to make this home yours. Priced at only
$58,000
11601

or
ba&lt;h, LA

vacation
3 BR,

i panlal bsmt. Fumlsn~ .
poroh complelely along Irani

Cob, u. -...-. Looclod. ....
44W4411 N; ,.....__

Sherri Hart ................. 742-2357

IMAGINE ·VIEWING THE FULL MOON
POINTS · THIS PROPERTY IS"
NIGHTS ALONG THE QUIET COUNTRY Htuu&lt;~tu SO LOW IT WILL SCARE YOU!
SIDE - from your very large outdoor deck,
· be alarmed it"s nol ~ighlening just a
lighted pumpkins reflecting from your spa.cious
deall This mobile home with room
kitchen . This home is so lovely and has so additions features newer roof, newer
much to offer - 4 bedrooms , 2 baths, utility windows, elec heat pump, 2 bedrooms, 2 car
area, 2 car garage, living room with stone garage, caiport, decking, attic space, above
fireplace, family room, newer carpet, newer ground pool. Just off SA 7. Reduced to
elec. he.at pump, above ground pool, $44.900
outbuilding on 1.485 acre. Located lust out of
Chester perfect for commuters working near
the Parkersburg area. ASKING $84,500

Iweeke11d relreet.

·~=====R=ea:;I::;E::;sta;t::;e::;Ge::;n;:e;:ra;;l=====;l72
Trucka for Sale
~.i
1111 Dodal Doliolo Extnnlod

Tracy Brinager........... 949-2439

Office .......................... 992-2259

a

Ac:CIIIDI'IM

... _,

Henry E. Cleland ..•... 992-2259

Kathy Cleland ........... 992-6191

Experience Maftes The Difference! CaU
Cheryl Lemley, For FuU Tinw Meigs
County Agent For O~er 17 yean!

71 Auto Parta &amp;

BUSINESS OFRCES &amp; SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE ·
CLAUDE DANIELS, Realtor· Ph. 388-9612
•
KENNETH AMSBARY, REALTOR, PH. 245·5885
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER

Russell D. Wood, Broker
510 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631
UNMft

Real

.•.;:;
OPPORTUNITY TO OWN YOUR
OWN STORAGE BUILDING
.,,-no• Rer&gt;tlnc a Storage Bldg. for your Boal, Classic
Own your own storage building ill
access to boat ramp, By-pass or
I.~~~~;~~~~ P~~~~~~J~iEasy
ONLY $14,800.00.
1711

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

a

MEIGS COUNTY

4

Kept. ss.-. e14 uu•
111110 IIUI!Ing ar, 25th AMII!I'J 11 K III.L Loodod, Exooltont
Condition ""'foul lnQulrlll
Only $1\Goo, 114-441-0122 Allor
5:00P.M.

Variety of Used Equipment
I Full ServiCe Department

Farm Suppltcs
&amp; Llveslock

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

r

1, gooc1 ....

011........
$3,000
080, ....
1111 ·· Dl'lfUa,
Ex·
37NUt,OrConlo-AI:

•

I I'

Real Estate General

forSala

EN L EE0

fr-----------------,
::=S"'~:n.w= 446-7101 or 1-800-585-7101

lawn &amp; garden
equipmt!nl.
L i ve sto ck
grooming &amp; show supplit:s.

'S1

...

till Orand Am CNIII, Tilt,

wrapping, handling &amp; feedinR I
accc sso ri t:~i Fee d bunks , ca l
ere~. mineral fe e de rs
au t o m~ hvcs tock waterers,

Eleclltcal &amp;

by CLAY I. POLLAN _...;..._ _ __

Rearrange the 6 acrambled
.,
words below to make 6
··ilmple words.
Print letters
-each In its line of squares.

Chlln_ .... , _ ...
Jivide ns Farm Equipmeht

84

75 Boals &amp; llotora

::0

Sholp, .....__~ 3000 lllolot ......... 14,1111, · IIIIU.

h utcs ,

·OH-Polnt Pluunt, WV

POMEROY, Qak Sl. Comfonabte home, reroodeled to live in! Lg. LA, 3
BR, 2 baths. Sunroom. Bsmt. wlfr, kit., &amp; stg. Central vacuum system .
Terraced backyard. Must seelln the 30's.Make an offer.

SVAACUSE~ Beautiful home on a comer lot. Big bay w1ndow.
w/cablnets. Appl ., ~ 112 bath, ntce patto. Garden lol. Mid 40's. Call us
Ieday. '
IUINGSVIICLE· Great Hunting! Beautifully remodeled (almost done)
3 BR, LR, F-A, OR:· Nice home. Call us today . I
an offer.

Cllondllve

33050 NEW
1
story
,
room. living room . 3 bedrooms . eat-in kitchen . 3_o· x
30' log building and a 12"x24' detached garage . 1 acre
1697
more or less lawn . Priced $30"s
LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE:
11
4.507 acrea m/1
'9,000
10,000
12
4.615 acres m/1
9 ,000
4. 702 acre a m/1
13
14
3.181 acrea m/1
8,000
5 ,000
15
4;190 acrea m/1
10,000
116
5.442 acres m/1
6,000
17
6.148 acres m/1
11,000
18
10.320 acres mil
7,000
19
7.253 acres m/1

~

·--

-

1i1!!1J Dovloon TFLHTC . I
F • -ton.·
L.AIII Of a.-, RIN lind
$11,100 010, 11441MC1\

(W()IIIIJMTf

Real Estate General

:LANGSVILLE· Crouser Road- A nice 3 bedroom ranch
•Style home with heat pump, attached one car garage, and a
one car detached garage, above ground pool and storage
building on nice laying lot.
ONLY $45,000
HEMLOCK GROVE- Approx. 6 acres with two 1970
campers- one 16 ft and one 19 ft . and 2 more hook ups.
Also has concrete block john, electric on sile and witched
for well.
$9,000
MIDDLEPORT· Oliver Street· A one story home with 2-3
bedrooms, one balh, space heaters, vinyl siding, and
·carport.
REDUCED $16,900

. STRETCH THE VALUE OF YOUR DOLLARs-:
in this surprizingly affordable ranch . 3 ~
bedrooms, 1 _112 baths, lireplaced living room, .
mce-s 1zed k1tchen, family room; hardwood :
·lfoors and some new carpeting. Call Loretta •
today to •ee thi s affordable priced home.
$45,ooo
, 500

EXECUTIVE BUILDING LOTS ..5
minutes from Holzer, all 5 acres or
more.
1418- JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD- AdciDl
Twp., 388 t1Cr8 1811'11, 3 ponda, ~·~
44x100 bam with concr81a lloora.
oonoldor 'filii. (578)
PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY
1.6 Acres +/·, 3 BR , 1 1/2 bath, full
basement, 24x30 detached garage
with 1oft. doors. Great for large trucks .
Low mamtenance vinyl siding. Includes
an abOVI!·grouncJ pool. This is a mustsee . FHA
home.

,.....y

POMEROY· Laurel Cliff Road- Have you always wanted a
mini farm? Well. here It Is. approx. 17.34 acre farm, with
1979 Holly Park 14x70 mobile home wilh 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2
baths and barn .
•
$45,000
POIII!ROY· Bailey Run· Appnox . 56 acres with free gas and
royalties. A one story small house, and a one car garage.
132,500
REDUCED $29,000

SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE. This 2 story beauty
features 3 or 4 br's, 2 baths, beamed
ceilings in the LA &amp; family rm , cherry
· ·cabinets in kitchen, 6 in. outer walls &amp;
much more. Fantastic view.

11461 - EXCELLENT LOCATION, DAIRY
BAR BUSINESS - All equipment stays,
bldg ., approx. 624 )lq. ft.,.3 half baths, elect.
heat/cent. air. city water.

COUNTRY RANCH Imagine living in the
country. Peace &amp; quiet. Beautiful rolling hillside
scenery. But not too far. Only 5 minutes to
Holzer and shopping. Small family oriented
neighborhood . This spacious home offers it all.
3 bedrooms,_ 3 balhs, large family room with
woodburner, rebodeled kitchen and more . If
you're a handy man or need extra storage,
you'll love the outbuildings- 24x32 pole bam &amp;
12x1 6 workshop. Plus large 24x30 drive-thru
garage. Home In great condition! Green
schools. $109,900
11228

SR 554, has a· really nice homes1te old
barn, lots of privacy yet close to school
and other activities.

MIDDLEPORT· Beech Streel- This home is jusl what the
newlyweds need to get started in. Has two bedrooms
upstarts wllh nice sized kitchen and living room down.
$18,000

1422·0LO CHEVY·OLDS BUILDING .
420' front on Seconcf Avenue and 62
frontage on Grape .

MIDDLEPORT· Corner of 5. Third and General Hartinger. A
realty large living room , 2-3 bedrooms, newer windows, vinyl
aiding, several rooms freshly drywalled. Large lot. $21,000
MIDDLEPORT- S. Third- Gorgeous Historical home with
unusual ornamentallon on the top of the roof on porches.
Has 4 bedrooms, gigantic living room, modern pretty
kitchen 2 baths and above ground pool. Many mora extras.

'

houses. Property is located in Oak Hilt Call

101 more delails.

64 acrea, m/1, Corner of &gt;Yoads M1 ll and

MIDDLEPORT· A large lol with lots. of, flOWers and trees. A 2
story stone home with 2 bedrooms, dining room. and 1 1/2
baths , full basement. Has nice cabinets in kitchan and
kitchen Is equipped.
$35,000
we Are Pleased to Offer this magnificent
t 2.12 acres, mA, estate home This cisssy,
quality buill brick ranch offering approx. 2,500
sq. ft. of living area sits on one of the most %
beautiful sites in Gallia County. Lovely stocked
pond and 23 species of trees complement the
grounds. Features include formal entry, .living .
room , dining room, cozy family room with
fireplace large modern kltches partial
unfinished base I could go on and on about
this truly wonderful property, but I would prefer
to tell you · personall~. Call .carolyn for
complete deta&lt;ls.
J603

11432 - MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR
SALE - Small restaurant with two renlal

RIVER VIEW • $56,900 • 946 lst, 3 Br's, LR, Kitchen, Shower
in full Basement, Garage, Fenced-In Yard, Vinyl Siding,
Immediate Occupancy. Ideal for Starter or Retirement Home.

$H,OOO

136 GRAHAM STREET, LAND
CONTRACT TO QUALIFIED
BUYER .... nice starter home 3 br. lr ,
Kitchen , bath . laundry. garage C1ty
School District.

CHESHIRE· 3rd Street- A 2 story frame with 8 rooms, 3·4
badrooms finished ·basement, one bath, front and side
·porch. storage building and a big lot. •
$38,100

•'

REDUCED TO SELLI L6cated in Middleport
this cozy one floor frame home features 2
bedrooms, appliances, t2 x 16 deck , river
vieW,' NGFA heat, small front porch. NOW
ASK!NG $25,000
·
VACiolfT LOTS • Approx. 1 acre lots located
on Applegrove • Dorcas Rd . Utilities
available. Nice homa sites. ASKING $7,300
par loi...MAKE AN OFFER I
REI:DSVILLE - Cuitie Hollow Rd. 2 lots .92
acre par lot • immediate posseselon. Groat
cabin/camping anes. 55.000 per lot. MAKE
AH OFFER.

BRADBURY RD. •• two story frame home on
5• acres. Home Includes 3 bedrooms. bath.
lafge front porch, free gas to home. Small

• •,..•.~. ThiS hOme needS

pql8rlllall ASKING

---

I

· but /las

LONGBOTIOM -• 153+ acres with 1 1/2 story
frame hom e 3-4 bedrooms, 3 baths ,
appliances, electric heat pump, extra farm
home with barn, sheds, pond, fruij trees and
free gas. ASKING $185,000 for everything.

NEW LISTING! Want a new home without the
hassle of building??? Then we have the home
for you. Built In 19g3, this vinyl &amp; brick spfij
level offers 3-4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room,
family room, lovely kitchen with. dining area, 2
car garage situated (\n 1.7.5 acres, mn. To
make your dream ol owning a new home a
reality, call Carolyn today at a pnce of $97,000
you can't afford not to.
1604

NEW LISTING IN RODNEVI 3-4 bedroom
hOme located on Cora Road offers a large lol
with finished outbuilding (currently used as a
guest house), living room with woodburner and
.eat-In kitchen. Nice deck. large yard. 1 car
· garage with worl&lt;shop. $49,900
· #209
,,

Mind Your Own lll!•ln- at Homell c.lch
on office wolk or 111111118 rNdlng In the
privaey of the lluctf while the niot of Ill flmltt
Ddloro around the fireplaco In the r.mly roam.
'thla 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch wilh 2 car
ollllched ga.-.ge on.ro plenty of filling 1pt101for
up

11473. BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
oilers 63.75 acres, mil. mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x60 barn, 22x44 block milk
house. 750' road frontage for possible bldg.

!!rowing family, Cofl today · for an
appotn~t to- thla Rio Grlndl- horne

tho

priood at $58,000.

,..

v.

TRICI$ OR TREAT!

· FA, kitchen, DR,
cent. elr,
garage
unattached g&amp;rtl(le . Rem.t house
on property.. ·

II you feel like your lost in a maze running
around trying to find that perfect home stop by and see us will help guide and
·
direct you.'We have lot's lo offer!
Also ... Hyou feel isolated in trying to sell
your home or property...Give us a calli We
h~ve buyers and we'll publicize the fact that
your property is for sale!
Have A Safe And Happy Halloween!

,

1447·

OAK IIU,

Ror8....27,ll00, lnlormllllon.
'

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007

•

Of'FICE ~CE AND GARAGES FOR

1411- OHIO liVER PAOPI!RTY loOIIIod al TRUCKS - Frontage on Third Ave . and
end ot Willie Av- oil Gatlleld. s-Ill Gripe Street. CaH for detaila.
Iota 120,000.
I

(

lormer clothing
lot. Cell for rilcn

•111,1011, 47 aCj'es, m/1, Harrison Twp.,

11431 - APPROX. 5 ACRES wllh rrontage
on Raccoon . beautiful shaded lot. house has
3 BAs , bath, LA, kitchen, large unanached
oar,ana Oilers a lot of privacy and peace &amp;
i
.

INCOME FROM THREE MORE ... each
unit has 2 apartments Facing city park
with all the conveniences of in town
living.

�••
•

'."''...
&lt;

..

(
)

OCtOber

loan

announces
dividend results

rates are

COLUMBUS • Tbe Bob EVIIII
Farms Inc. board of direcfon Friday declarcd a quarterly dlvidelld
Of ICVCII and ODC-qua1et cc:llll per
sbare on tbe corporation's oill·
standing common stock ($.01 par
valoe).
The dividcud is payable Dec. I
to stOc:kboldera or record at tbe
cloae ofbusincas on Nov. 18.

announced
By LISA MEADOWS
GALLIPOLIS - Tbe U. S.
Depanmeot of Agriculwre' s Commodity Credit Corporation bas
8IIIIOIIliCed lbe grade loan rates for
tbe 1994-crop of burley tobacco,
based on tbe sale price support
level of $1.714 per pound
The 1994 national support level
for burley tobacco is 3.1 cents per
pOund more lban lhe price suppon
level for tbe 1993-crop of $1.683
cents per pound. The loan rates for
1994-crop burley toba~co range
from $0.97 to $1.88 per pound as
c001pared to lhe 1993-crop rates of
$0.6~ to $1.88 per polllld.
Both burley associations, the
Burley Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association and the Burley
Stabilization Corporation, will
deduct one cent per pound from the
grade loan rates for administtalive
overbead costs.
Commodity Credit Corporation
will not provide loans on burley
tobacco graded N2L, N2R, N2G,
No-6 (no grade), "W" (doubtful
keeping order), "U" (unsound), or
scrap.
Tbe burley tobacco loan rate
schedule is available in tbe ASCS
offiCe.
Call the ASCS office at 4468686 witb any questious concerning tbe 1994 burley tobacco marketings.
Lisa Meadows Is the County
Ex~utlve Director of tbe Gallla
o\grlcultural Stabilization and
· · ~ •ervatlon Senk:e.

STATE FARM

INSUUNC
RIVER VALLEY FFA WINS CONTESTS •

Tbe River VIIIIey FFA reeentiy won lint place In
botb tbe agrlcultunl mel the urban 1011 Judging
contests held at tbe G.W. County Jllllior Yair~
grounds. Pictured above, front row, left to right,
an Carl Madden, Cluia Q-n, Dwayue Angell,
Mat Toler and Richard Stepbe• of tbe qr~c:u.~.

lure team. Back row,, left to rtpt, are Jason
WeUington, Eric Shriver, aad Jeremy Ford of
tbe urbu team. Tbe two u- will receive trophieJ and prbe - y at tbe 50111 annul G.W.
County Soft and Water eo..en.Uoa buquet at
Buckeye 111111 Career Center on Nov. 3.

~

Paul H. Hill, Bidwell, has been
named an altemale delegate 10 the
event
Both Hills are members of the
American Angus Association with
headquaners in St. 1oseph, Mo.

Training...
COntlnUICI from D-1
IIIIIIY iDia:l a diecllice . Compost
t1lil Ofllllic material. COOipostinJ
temperatu.res till most of ~e
iDia:lJ ad dUcaiC problems.
- Trying to over wluter
cbr1santbemuins? Poor water
drainage 111d smotbering· of tbe
-arowlna crown are tbe primary
cauaes of losing mum" planis.
Mike sure willtcr nina and melting
IIIOWI drain away from die plant.
·Stllldinl wawldlls tbc root systtm
llld trowD of tbc plaat. U neces- ·
aary, make a drainage dltcb.
Remember liCit ye. 10 plant !lie
"mu[[ll" ill a. ~ bed. Mulcblnl
tbe planll wl~ llld airy
leaWI, mw Of
·
belt litter
die pouDCI freezes preVCIIU frost
,laYIDI ~ tbc pllal.
J ••

BaiiCMea II .., AarkaltW·'
. ei/Bortlcaltarei(Nataral
. - - - --.4a•nt for n. o•lo .
SC.ta VBIYtrllty Esteuloa •

..... ...,..

Directory firm to
celebrate 125th
anniversary In spri~Jg
GALLIPOLIS - As pllrt of its
125-year 81lllivenary, R. L. Polk &amp;
Co. will deliver a special issue of
the city directory to lbe business
community next spring.
Tbe company will also offer
special promotions 10 Its customers.
In addition, tbe publication witt
sbowcasc many improvementS and
new-user friendly features.
ImpmvCmellts plannt:d for next
year are:
A festive directory cover to
mark lbc 8DIIivenary edition.
A contemporary typeface, Hel·
vetlca, to malre tlie text easier to

.,

'

read.

}\STATE FARM

15

~'J'J [ill@ - ~~ ~~~

~~·Do~
.. '\,j,l\1\1\,j,l

~~
CAROll
SNO.N
342 SICiillvt.
G....s,OW.
Pl446-4290

'. ~t;\t;\rik~
~~~

He. 446-4511

'

tStlllt Farm Insurance Companies • Home Offices: Bloomington, IllinoiS;

.

A special tabbed secliou tO belp
customers fmd infonnalion more
quickly.
R. L. Polk &amp; Co. bas been IJUblisbing the city direc:to'ry in Gallipolis for 67 yean.

Hill ranked second
with
years service were recognized recently. Seated In front or
President Jim Dailey are Warren F. Sbeets, director and Judy
Beckley. Not pictured are Merrill Ev.Jns, director, Katrinka Hart
and Bryan Martin, all 15 year awar111 and C. Leon Saunders, ~5
years.

GALLIPOLIS • Champion Hllf
of Bidwell ranked ICCOIId in regislaing tbc 111011 Angus beef c:aale in
Oblo baving rcconled ISO bead of
Angus witb the American Ani:,;
Associalioa durin&amp; fiac:al year I
. wbldl Cllded Sept 30.
'

1994 BUICK LESABRE
Ruby Red with Power Everything
l 7,000 Low Miles.

For pennies per month, you can
A different channel in every room
watch something different in every - for just a few cents a month. No
room, ,including premium channels · more fighting over what show to
like HBO. ·
watch. No more watching that spare
Now y(lur entire family can choose TV with rabbit ears. Just a lot more
to watch what they want to watch. At fun for the whole family'
the same time... music videos,
Call Cable Vision tol:lay and ask
football, blockbuster movies, politics, about Additional Outlets and our
home improvement shows, comedies installation special.
and more ...

Make Every Room More Fun:!
,,

(~04)

Cable

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

Masonry Extra~ Highlight Home

from lbc rod.
Wood Rooll..
In the old days, wood roofiD1
COIII"'....w.,
-•.....:..
-•was CIICIIIially tbc IIIIIC prodnct.
•
.
or
•....--1
•
it
came from tbe tree. Today' a
ing roof. ~ II a wide variety of
roofing lllllerial to cbooec from. wood sbinglea and sbatel are IIIOR
All bave their un1:.eldvantaJCI aopbladcaiJcd.
and stroog pointa.
also bave
For elUIJlple. cedar roofing can
drawbacb. Here we elllllline a few be faqay lrciiiCd widl dlmlcals 10
of them:
boost ill fire ntinJ fran 0111 C 10
Clay Roollni 1'1111
Class B. Southem Yellow Pine
Clay 111c is IIDODg tbc oldest and sbatCI are presswc treaiCd 10 belp
most durable of roofing l1181criala. tbem resist rot ud decay, ud
It gains ill weather resistant, f~re- altbougb tbC1e sbate1 bave been on
proof and Insect-proof quillliea tbc mmt Cor ouly five ycm, tbcir
fran being made out of kiln-fired manufacturen e1pectthe ~
clay. MOll people dtint tbcse lilea to bave a 30-year lifespan. LIU~
are limited to tbe bmcl-sbapcd wile, a CJXIIIIOIIte wood sbillllc lila
type c;ommon in the west. Clay been on the martet for 15 yean,
tiles can be flat, a Iiiey may bave· and Its manufacturer 11y1 it baa
a glossy surface. Tbey are allo ,..,..IID'ial VICII.b«relilllllc:e.
available in blue llld green, aside
Tbe cliff~ between a IbiDfran recldlab brown.
B1e a a sbakc is that sblnBica are
Metal Roo~~Jii
amootb and uniformly shaped
Metal roofmg is available in tbc wlille most abates bave a rougb,
widest 11111e of Jll8laiala, a combi- UDCVCD texture. SbinJICI are 112llllioo of materials and contlgura- inch Ill lbe tbiclt cud wbilc .....
. MASONRY ACCEN'IS add to the 1tately llnel of th11 two-ltol'y home.
lions. It is fastened in a vmety of Clll lie 1/2-incll or 314-incll tblct.
a window with views to the private
IJy PAT WKAS
own set of comer windows.
ways and comes fac:toJY flnisbed To Bet maximum dulability out of a
AP Newafeaturel
The k.itchen overlooks a large courtyard.
wilb variOus ooating systems.
cedar roof, roofiDB conllliCIOII recApowder room is just around the
Stylish accenta adorn tbe exterior backyard deck. It includes an
Tbe moat common types of ommend you cleaa it with a paesign F-19 has a living
comer from the master suite. Also,
:of this eye-catching home.
island cooktop, a built-in desk and
room, dining room, fami- metalroofillg are lleel panels witb SII'C Wilber oucc or IWk:e a year 10
An:hea. gables and rolWlUis distina large comer pantry closet. The just off the kitchen is a large launly room, breakfast area cxposejl fUicllcn, 11eel pancb in remove molsture-boldinl debris
- ~r~~iih de5ian F-19, by Homestyles
breakfast room features sliding dry-mud room with access to the
and kitchen, three bedrooms, wbicb the fasteoen are bidden, and and apply preservlllivcs to belp it
."Source 1" Designers' Netwprk.
glass doora tbat open to a good- glll'llie.
two baths and a foyer, totaling 11111-ICiistant alumlnuin pane1s tbal resist IUD D weather.
An open-railed stairway leads to
Muonry work is also showcased,
sized baclcyard deck.
Iil:c sbakea, sbinglcs or tiles.
Slata Rooll•
2,223 square feet of living space. look
. as seen In the rounded privacy
A columned snack bar serves the ·upper floor, where two addiResardinl rust, steel paoeli
Slalc roofinJ Ia available in two
The standard b88j!ITient provides adliQ-e corrosion resiatii'Cie wilb a types - pranium clear pielzlllld
fenc:e and a half-round planter. The
both the breakfast room and tlie tional bedrooms each have private
:-arched entry has a French door that
family room, which has an inviting access tQ a large full bath with a a further 1,689 square feet for colllinJ of zinc (Jlalvaoized) or a ribbon sllllc. Ribbon lllalc is not as
.leads to the vaulted foyer, which is
fireplace and a .17-f!lot-high vaulted dual-sink vanity. An open loft area · possible expansion. The overall · mixture or zinc and aluminum dnrable as tbc clelw praniam proddimensions of 61'4" by 56'4" (known as galvalumc or galfao). utt. It Ia dlstinluiabed by tbc riboften a built-in desk and shelves,
. onllined by roiWJUIS.
ceiling.
include the garage. The master Top quality lleel pmcla baYC both bona olliaJil color tbal run aao&amp;S
The main-floor master suite making it the perfect study or
- The formal areas of Ibis 2,223bedroom has its own courtyard zinc 8lld a ractory-applicd coating.
its surface. Tbe ribbona 1re wester
boasts a 15-foot vaulted ceiling and library.
square-foot home flank tbe foyer
and
the _kitchen has access to a
Steel panels attacbed with tbtlllbc lllllllllllding dlllt areaa.
· and are Introduced by striking
private access to a romantic courtrear deck.
exposed fastenera tend to be used
Slate comes in gray, purrle,
(For a more detaned, 8Ciied plan
: ~olumns. To the left of the foyer,
yard. The sunken master bath
on agricultural and ulility build- green IIIII red. Properly inll•lled it
. Jhe living room features a 13-foot- boasts a huge walk-in closet and an of this house, including guides to
ings, but tbcy ilre being more wide· bas inaediblc clunibi!iiy. It doesn't
·high vaulted ceiling, a ~;~~rved waD
enticing spa tub and separate estimating costs and fimincing,
ly used ou bousca. Panels witb no require mucb maintenance,
and comer windows. To the right,
shower, the two of which are send $4 to Hou.se !If the Week,
althouJb u old alate roof migbt
exposed futcners arc known u
. the formal dining room is encased by a curved glass-block · P.O. Box 1562,'New York, N.Y.
standing seam tyjJca. The panels require a lillie leDder lovio&amp; care.
· enhanced with a tray ceiling and its waD. Dual vanitle. are separated by 1011~1562. Be sure to include the
are joined witb crimped or snap- sucb as fixinJ tbe occuional
number of the plan.)
togelher seams tbal.stand vertically cracked piece.
_

By POPULAR MECIIANICS
F• AP Spedill Feataru
WbeD ecleclinl a roof for new

D

·.

$17,900 .

..···

Earh Outlt'l 21k ·\ \Iout h

Allow for time when
staining
pine·{.,.,·deck
.
· -

lrl

675-3398

--

.,

. ";'-;.' .. _:;..

I

GRAND AM

Cruise, Cassette, Rr. Defog.,
Bag, Anti-Lock Brakes.~ Door

Choosing right
material when ,
planning-to roof

12111 ..

1994 PONTIAC

'

i

'
i ................... ..._J

$12' 988

IJIIP£A flOOA

'

'

1994 BUICK PARK AVE.
'

MAINFlDOA ·

$21,988

mE MAS1ER BEDROOM

ha1 a apeci11 mmandc IOUch, its own
The lnl'onnal areae of the. home also enjoy thoughdul
touchea, a fireplace In the family mom and a deck otr the kitchen
and. breaklut room. The eecond Ooor olrera two bedmomil and a
bath.
'
cou~rd.

saw kickback.
around tbc eoglnc bousinJ and. tbe in detergent and water, rinse, and
. • Stand 10 lhe side of the ~aw
muftler to permit efficient cooling.
dry it tborongbly before reinstalling
wben ~;~~tling- never directly
. . Cbect tbc spark plul before It
behind IL ou~ Mbt
lieavy use. If It is beavily coated
Most cbain laWS are powered by · witb oil deposits, replace IL
CIJaia Teasloa
a two-cycle engine tbal uses a
After every five 10 10 boors of
Proper chain tension is the tey
gasolinc-o11 mil to lliOvide lubriaa- wiling, clclll tbc cylinder fins with to safe and effJCieut cutting. Read
lion.JI!'s enlilety clftrera~t tban the a slitJ lliusb and a vacuum exten- your owner's m"'Ual for cbain-ecnoil.I!Sed in auiOIDotJilea or to lubri- lion 1001. Remove tbc sbect metal sion adjustm~nt auidelincs. Tbe
calc· the saw's cbain, and it's sold coven and lbc muft1er 10 reach lbc ICIIsion cbloiCI due to bcatinJ durJX'CPICkaleel 10 mil witb 1 or 2 pi· fins. Remove tbc air rura-. waa11 It •, log operadon, llreldilllg lllld wear.
Ions of gasoline. Always mil the
oil and gasoline in a~· clean
container. Pour lbc oil m tint, lbeo
add some gasoline and sloab It
around until tborougbly mixed.
Add tbc rest of tbc gas lad pour lbc
Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby
milture into tbc saw~s Cue! tank.
blueprint.
Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
All ~aws have cltber automatic
to
Build,
Buy
or Sell/~ Ranch Homes. 24 of the most popular from this
or manual oUen tballubricate the
feature;
Practical Home Repairs. wh1ch tells how to handle 35 common
cbaln. Botb types must be refilled
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
frequently wltb tbe grlde of oil
styles. Send check or money order payable 10 the Associated Press and this
specified by tbe manufacturer.
label to: House oftheWeek, TheSunday-TimesSentinel. P.O. Box 1562,
Witb the manual oiler, pusb tbc oil- . New York. N.Y. 10116·1562.
ins buuon about once evay minute
wblle cutting. Cbcc1t the. oil !,eve!
•
Clip this order and return label ,
d!lrinl use 10 avoid ovedlelliua

1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM
2 Dr., V-6 Engine, Automatic,
T'dt, Cruise, AM-FM
JUJIJI•JL.o&lt;:K Brakes.

Stereo,

$j 0 990
'

II

1993

CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

Ppwer Seal, Windows, Tilt, Cruise,
Delay Wipers; Air , Bag, Anli-Lo~k
Qrakes, Leather Interior.

'.' 2" In
Stock!

and~-

Offer Expires November 15, 1994

JIJr ( lttllt-t l m tallation

. . a.....

Certain' channpls meniione~ may not .qe ~vailable in your service area; Offer is subject to all applicable
franchi se fees and iaxes. Offer valid in all Wired services areas only and applies to standard install~iion in
resiential units. A total of three additional outlets and one primary oullel.per basic cable account allowed
·under this offer. Over 4 total outlets per account may require additional cost. Additional outlet offer may
not apply to certain multiple dwelling units within our service.area. Other restrictions· may apply.

II

. .-

Brush away uy 11wduat-.d
tbe PI CI!IP·ICccp the Cuel dciD by
~ bnisbing dirt fran the opalliner. Alwaya wipe apll1ccl fuel ~
tbc engine bousina 10 ~vo!cl a Ire
lwlrd and JIOIIiblc fouliDg 01 the
lllnet, the -alao.or tbc c:wi!WCib'.

4

To Order Study Plan

·. . _

Enclosed Is $4 lor plan N o . - - - - - - - - - --:--

.

1

Enctoaed Ia $4.95 each lor the booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ _v _
Nlme_ _~----~------------~-----Street_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ..:.'..::1"-'- - - - - -

keep you cbaiD aaw free of
amunulllal llwdult. UIO I wire ,, c~--~--~-------------------or 1111111 ~t~ewclriver 10 c1ea11 !be
State (ZIP)..,__ _ _ ____;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
on bolca in the ~ llld tbe

· gulde·bar -~lot. Bruall aU vcuta

- .

-

.

..

.·'·,~
-~ , .

For AP Spechl ,_,....
.
Q: I baHt a . - deck wt.. treated 10........ plae. C.. It be
ltalned DOW or mut I wait a IPICillc .,..a. ol tm.? Wllldl ltainl
'II'OIIId be IIIOit CCiqN!dble wldt tW. ........ illlmber?
A: If you used WoJmmilli'AI ·wool. lbc lumber you used - p'CIIIIrctrealtd wilb I COIIIIIICidal Cli"Dpo'mct called Oln:mated Copper Ancnalc
(CCA) - a tJadanarll: for tbe formulaliou used by KqJpcn
llld not a
sencric terin for pressure-treated lpmber. Thcec dlcmicals cause tbe
fiUIIilia" green tint in die lumber.
If the lumber's treatmelllsllllllp bas the word "dry" included in it, lbc
wood was redricd after treatment 10 a moiswre cootent of 19 percent.
Tben, as long as wealber lXlDdilions permit, you sbou1d let It dry for 12
wefb before IIIJPlyinJl a semitransp~re~~lllllin wilb an alkyd blae tbll bas
a Willer repellent in it This should mask the jreCII color left by the Wol-

-eo.

mpnizing,

Dual Air Bags 1 Anti-lock Brakes,
Power Seat, Power Windows, Power
Door Locks, Cassette, Tdt, Cruise;
Rear Defog.

Section E
October 10, 11N

1-800-766-0553
••

~im~s .. $eamnel

.

Now yott ca11 l1ave
Gartl1 Broolis siiigi11g
in tl1e livi11g rooilley cl
football ga111e i11 tl1e
bedrooill aii(l ::1
Congressio11al (lellate
i11 tl1e l~itclieii ...

••••••••••

I

Contemporary Living

·.-:-

Hill named Angus
delegate to 111th
annual meeting

stock E~position.

~~alfiiS, DOiiDI die pre...
ous month 1 sur1e and a larJc
inaalac for tbc year, llid tbe IIIIDufacturinJ sector rem!!l,ns IU'OIII.
The economy continncato arow
more rapidly
Federal
would .
saki. .

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sor.

BIDWELL- Sarah Lynn Hill,
Bidwell, has been elected a delegale to the lllth annual m~~ of
the American Angus A.ssoc•aUon,
Nov. 13-15 in Louisville, Ky.
The annual meeting is held in
conjunction with the annual convention and banquet, and the Roll
of Victory Angus Show during the
North American International Live-

ry orders fOr IOI;Ig·lalliDJ JoOda
go~~Y 0.1 percent g~ ~

..t·GoOD
NEIGHBORt•·
'

·qstment...
v) ! Ji l
-t from D-1
ell : lren.
By establisllu. 6 . 'ng lrust,the
Parks could consolida:.. ,;r assets
to simplify current managt:uL.nt and
~rovide for Ucc orderly tr-.msitio11 of
those assets I.: their heirs after lh~
deaths.
Older widow
Nelly Green is a 73 year old widow.
She has a comfortable pest egg of
$500,000. Her goal is to ·leave her
estale to a charity in memory of her
husband. They had no childrP,n.
During her remaining years, she wants
to assure herself a steady income.
If Mrs. Green sets up a charitable
trust, she can use the income gcneraled during her lifetime and get a
current taX deduction as well.
Business partners
Fred Iones and 1oe Brown have
been business partners for 21 years. ·
Their heating and cooling supply
business has been quite successful. It
was recently appraised at over '$1
million. In addition, they have accuc_
mulated sizable sums of money in
their retirement account
Fred and 1oe are interested in
protecting their sponses and children
in the event of death or disability.
Fred has one son, who is interesled in
asswninghisfalher'splacewhcnFred
retires in six years. 1oe has one son
and two daughters, none of whom
waniS to be involved in the business.
To resolve the concerns of tbese
partners, a lrliSI could be esrablished
that would assure them that the busi' ness could be-passed on according 10
their wishes and under a variety of
circumstances.
·
For questions CC111CC111inJ trusts,
plcaso contact yow- inVC5lmeot advi-

Factory orders up :wASHING'ION (AP)- Fidb-

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Q: I pretty mucll !IDilentaDd tile ldnd of HMOIIIll a.Jntenanc:e
tbat my car requlrel, bat wllat do )'Gil AgCil In tile way at perlndit
maintenance for a~?
A: A bouse is not ouly a person's IKme, it's also in 111011 cases, a major
fmancial investmeot. And in order to maintain its value, a howe must lie
maintained. If you've been putting orr mainll'l!ana:: plljc:cts becll.lse of
tbe beat and bumidity of uPDmer, the cool dry days of (al1 are a good lime
10 cau:ll up.
The followinglill is a geocralized one in tba1 it does not contain every
maiDicnanc:c Item. 8lld you may liDd tbaliOIDC oftbc items doo'tapply to
your bouse. Still, It's a good plac:c 10 Sla'lllld you should el1)1811d it to
oiect your needs:
GI'IMIDIII
.
Oleck 8lld repair cxmaele walkways. La* ror areas tbal are suscep!ible to daJnase from de-icing salts.
• Seal driveway. A lJiact surface be1ps melt ice and snow.
• Do faD pruning and lawn care. Spread muk:b on flower beds.
Bo.e Exterior

.

• Clean gutters. Refasten loose gutter brackets. Cbeck for missing

Sllllinen.

'

. • Downspoutseclions sbould be p-operly installed, witb upper section
lower section.
•
TV anteona for sturdiness. Antenna sbould 001 be al1aCbed to
chimney.
• Trim tree limbs away from roof.
• Oleck visually for loose shingles, flashing.
• Install storm windows. Repair damaged putty on windows and
remove debris fran windowsills.
Drain extemal bose bibs and leave bose bib open.

finint::

Interior

Replace smoke detector batteries. Cbeck detector ror operation.
Replace damaged wcalhersttipping. Drab! a couple of quans of water
from wafer beater to remove set!imeoL Have routine maintenance done ou
boiler or ·fUrnace. Replace fUrnace ftlter lllld put several filters aside for
winter months.

Don't scare the children:
tabloid-free line sought
"We'll evaluate," Wulfeck
CINCINNA11 (AP) - Dorotby
said.
"If lllcrc' s defmitely someGnat tbinb ber 5-year-old grandlOll sbould be able 10 wait in line Ill thing we ought to do,. we cu
·
tbe supermarket without seeina cbangc."
He said be knew of no otbel
~lcturca ou tbe front of
customer complaint concemlna
Grant bas asked tbe Kros« SIOrc ta!lloids visible at the checkout
in suburban Madeira 10 set up a counters.
Grot said ber 1randson was
llbloid-fme dlectoutlialc.
. Tile request Ia a flnt for the fri&amp;bteoed by a l8bloid lll&lt;lun. dial
~ger Co., compuy apokcsmao purpcx1.edly sbowed a .rdboy"
Art Wulfect laid Tbunday. Tbc - CODiplcte witb fanas IIIII 1111ma1
company, wblcb bu food stores wt- said 10 bave been bon iD
and food procellinl plull in 32 CalibDia.
Kroger sbould consider people
lliiCI, is WillinB 10 condder rrmovwbo
don't want their dllldral 10
inJ tbe IBbloldJ fran one aisle Ill
.see sudllbinas. Grant llid.
tbc Mldcirl_
Wulfeck llid.

I'

..ore,

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�•
. ·October 30, 1fM

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

Page E2-.-Sunday TlmM-Sentlnel

.

October30,18M

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

Hitler's moviemaker still shOoting at 92
(EDITOR'S NOTE - A couple ofle_..~~aa~., .... - a
glamorou German movie atn,
tllen ail award·wlmi1D8 lllmm•ker. Sbe wu coay wltll lbe Nab,
lncludllll! Adolf Bitler biDIHif.
Now In her 90a, tbl1 uauaual
woman Is back at work wllb
cameru aod acuba gear, detaU-

.IDIIbe world IIDIIerMatllllle-.
Here'• a ran lotervlew wltll Leoi

Rlefendabl, 'll'llo llndl ~ a

palo.)

film inWatry would fiDd out.
Riefenstabl spent lbree years.
under Allied arrest after World
Warn, some of lbe time in a mental bospital. Denazification trlbunals ultimately cleared ber of
any wrongdoing.
Six dcoK'ea after tbe Nwemberg
rally, Rlefenstabl is more appreclated In 111e United Srares and Olber
forelsncountrleslbanloberown.
Ntwswul:. last year called
Riefenstabl the equal of directors
Orson WeUea and D.W. Griffilll.
She gets loads of fan mail. Her
falma an: shown in American college courses. A documentary about
her, TM Wonderful Horrible Lift of
. Ltlli Rit/tn.stah{, played at lbe New
YortFifmFestlval.
Her still photograpba of 111e prtst
tbree decades have been published
around lbe world. She is prosperlog. in tbe eyes of many, her past is
less important lban ber genius.
Her detractors concede her taients: But lhey have not forgiven
Riefeostabl for her links willa lbe
Nazis. Wben TM Wonderful Rorribit Lift of Lt11i·Ritftllstah1 premiered on Gennan television earlier Ibis year, it gave German aitics
a renewed opportunity to attack

Helping Riefenstabl witb her
projects Is Horst Kettner,
'Horsti," as abe calls blm - a
strapping live-in assislllllt about
balf ber age.
The beart of Riefenstabl's home
is lbe ·cellar, wbere sbe bas her
film-editing cqulp~~e~~t. Framed on
a wall is one of ber many prizes:
the IDttnlllliooal GraDd Prix of lbe
1937 Paris World Exhibition,
awarded for Triumph oftht Will.
Born In Berlin, Riefeostahl
achieved her first fame as a freefonosolodancer.
Sbe went into tbe movies,
becoming a derring-do star in
Alpine films like tbe 1929 Tht
White Htll Of Pitz Pal11. She
crossed crevasses on rickety lad· den and let film director Arnold
Fanck bury ber in an avalapvhe
"1..001: at Ibis." sbe says, showlog a still photograph from her
1932 featme film, Tht Blru Light.
'Ibe fetching starlet is cllmblog a
sheer cliff, "witbout any safety
rope,'' sbe jlolo!S out proWly.
RicfensHtabl1 aabeys she ioltfialb~y
admired t 1er cause o 1s
charisma and bis promises to put 6
million jobless people back to
wort.
her.
In ber memoirs, Riefenstabl rapRalph Gioolano, a Jewish writer turously describes hearing Hitler
who barely escaped lbe Holocaust. for lbe fust time- at a 1932 Nazi
says Rlefenstabl must have laiown rally In Berlin's Spotts Palace:
that Hider had an evil mind when
"It seemed as if tbe Eartb's sursbe &amp;&amp;reed to create Triumph ojtht face were spreading out in front &lt;If
Will.
me, like a bemispbere that sudden"Lent Riefenstabl bears Intel- ly spli!S apart In tbe middle, spewlectual guilt because abe glorified ing out an enormous jet of water,
Hitler at a time when everyone so powerful !bat it touched lbe a1cy
knew what a criminal be was," and shook tbc Earth. I felt quite
Giordano says. "Political parties paralyzed."
had ,ltlready been banned, books
. Even lbough Riefeostahl had
were being burned, Jewiab busi- close Jewish friends In lbe arts, she
nesses boycotted, and anyone who sent a letter to Hitler saying she
said tbe wrong wmd was sent to a would like to make bls acquain-

ByTERRENCEPE'ITY
Alloclated Prell Writer
POECKING, Germany - The
sreatest passion of Leni Riefeo·
stab I, age 92, is scuba-diving
among lite world's. coral reefs.
Sbe'r ioaking a documentary about
lbese uodetwater wooderlands, ber
fust film In nearly SO years.
"Di:.f..!!,like living a dream
- lbe
, tbe drifting," abe
,ays. "'There's DO telepbone, no
fax, no tallc.''
And no one barasslng her about
worlcing for AIIQJ,f Hitlct.
Riefeostahl was a glamorous
cinema actress' in 1920s Weimar
Germany.
·
But abe's best laiown for directing Tri11mph of tht Will, a documeotary sbe made for Hider about
l!le Nazis' 1934 Nuremberg raUy.
Another well-known work as
Oiympia, a docmnentary about die
1936 Berlin Summer Olympics,
also made liming Hider's reign of
terror.
H sbe'd followed Marlene Dietrich Slid other German artists to tbe
United States, Riefenstabl might
have become a Hollywood starlet.
Instead, lbe Sarurday Evt11i11g
Post in 1946 dubbed ber a "Nazi
Pinup Girl."
in a rare Interview at her home
near lbe Bavarian Alps, Riefenstabl coocentratloo camp."
is all charm and energy. She's
"It burts wbeo someone says
amazingly fit. Her eyes twinkle. I'm an iocotrigible Nazi," RiefeoShe smiles coquettishly. A dyed stabl says. "I've been defending
blwd curl dips over ber forehead.
myself for five decades. Eilber peoSbe's dressed like someone 60 pte believe me or IIIey don't." ·
years ~ounger: blue tights, high
Riefenstabl is most enlhusiaslic
beets, a billowy white blouse. when speaking about ber current
There's sometbing about her that project: a documentary about coral
seems 10 come straight out of lbe reefs.
1920s Cabaret scene in Berlin.
She has been buckling on an
Maybe it's tbe smoky voice.
oxygen tank, braving sharks and
· Riefenstahl was a confidante of olher dangers, and filminll some.
Hider after he came 10 power. Sbe outstanding scenes.
also knew others In lbe Nazi hierarSitting at a two-monitor com. cby, Including Propaganda Minister puler where she edits film, she
Josef Goebbels, who ended up bat- watches bersell cavort witb fruitiog her because sbe spumed bis color fiShes.
advances.
"I've filmed in lbe Maidives,
Riefenstabl was so cmtru\'CI1ial tbe Indian Ocean, tbe Red Sea, off
back then tbat when sbe made a Twania. I'Ql just on my way to
• ....... ~·a lUI, Wilt · fipa.Ne'W ·O..t ~
'tt'·
~· ~ ·lilt'DM~&amp;iWn bet' olrer bf"a says. Slie teamect&amp;Cu ::fuvliig at
: private screening of Olympia age 72, telllog tbe ioatructor she
: because be worried otbcrs in lhc _ . was .S2 to get Into lbe course.
.

"1/'r-

~ Lithgow

ca~bOversy.

In A Good MIJII ill Africa, Lilb·
gow portrays a pompous Ellglisb
civil servant witb reverence for
royalty and noataigia for tbe late
British Empire (Sean Connery
playa lbe title role).
,.
In Princess Caraboo, be's an
· ·OXford Jansuase expert who veri. faes that Phoebe Cates is Indeed lbe
Javanese princess she claims to be.
For lbe record, John LitbJOW
(pronounced litb-go) is about as
American as be can be. Born In
Rocheatcr, N.Y., be grew up in
Ohio and gnlduated from -Harvard
University.
·
"The editor of Prillcess Cara·

. University told
: to open awards

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COl I OOE PARK, Md (AP)The University of ~land can't
bave acbolarsblps just for black
students because lbe proaram
cloeln't remedy put disaimlnatioo,
a federal appeals panel rutcd.
A •maijlinQUS tbree-judae panel
of lbe 4111 U.S. Circuit Court of
Appells rejected the univ~s
cmtentloo lbal k needs the
ahipll to OVCRXIDC lis poor lqlllta'
tloo and attracJ black ltudcots.
Tbe 33,000-atudeot school,
founded in 1859, did not admit
blacb untlll9S4. ,
"Mere Jatowledge 'or bistorictll
faa is not lbe kind of pn:ICDt effect
tbat can justify a race-exclusive
~y. " Iudae H. Emory Widen,
er Jr. wrote.
Uni= officials aald lhey
would
to the u.s. s.-

·: o'
' "There's notblng that could

; rcp1ac:c it." universl~ apolaCsman
' Roland ~g said of tbe sdlolar·
l ahlp IIOIJ'llll· "It's bad I traDeD·
: doua !:J:!cl on increaainJ our
· black
t PDDI•Ittloo.''
: · 'Ibe llppCij;jli!Dd ovuiiDed a
: I~wer court's ruling and ordered
•· lbe university to reconsider tlac:
.: applicalion 0(•I Hispanic JIDtleat,
: DlitJc1 I. Podllaaty; for lbe Ben-

~ jAuBunct"'~· ,,

Hitler got a lot of proPBJanda
milea'e out of lhe documentaJ'Y,
but Riefenstabl says sbe doesil' t
see it as glorifyiDg tbe fuhrer.
"II Ibis were a propapnda film,
tbe French would not have given It
tbe gold medal two yean before tbe
war. A lot of propaganda films
were made at lbe time. But TriIUIIPh wasn't one oftbem.It bas no
canmenWy. It only contains what
I saw,':
Riefeostabl says abe bad no
political interest In the Nazis. Her
only Interest. sbe aays, was IK1.
.
She says· she did not know lbe
Nazis were Wllilg Jews at lbe coo·
centratlon camps until American
soldiers told her so when lbey
arrested her In 1945.
Tbe . International Olympic
Committee, and Dot Hitler, had ber
do Olympia. Wltb liS high-divers
framed dramati,call y against tbe
aky, Olympia pitw«ed the filmln&amp;

tance.

The two met one spring day in
1932 w a Notlb Sea beach. Ricfen·stahl bad become a movie director
and Hitler said she sbould make
films for bim after be came to
oower, which be did In 1933.
Hiller and Rlefenstahl bad a
number of private conversatiooa
aftec lbat. at bis office In Berlin, 1o
Munich, at his getaway In tbe
Bavarlnn Alps. The,fuhrer usually
ballbled on about hilnself, abe says.
One day lo June 1938, sbe wrote
in memoirs published in English
last year, Hitler visited her at her
Berlin apartment. The¥ talked
about his love life, willa Hider say"My romances were mostly
' ' He confessed he had
Jove wltb hil niece, Geli
~ :@
·

Jf

t ·illl

klt l!a
. :. olllla.lllllitl~
' Rre~Cii&amp;lihl says ltfder was cJot
to Olympia because he tbought
American' alhletes would deal

"That eveniD.s I felt lbal Hitler
desired me as a woman," Riefen-

boo absolutely Insisted I was an pic:Cea. There is nolhlag like the
Eoglisbm•," tbe actor JCCa11s willa aensc of c:ommunity when lhwe is
a hearty laugb.
DO real blenrdly, when lhete is DO
Concerning lbe two roles: "I star but a buncb ofsupportiog playjust gave them my 1Jroadeat English en. ,
aa:CDL Bolli of lbese cbaraaw'S are
''1..001: at Kevin Kline, who WOO
broad enough that you can get an Oscar a few years ago; he plays 1
away wllll 111 awful lot. It' a like an a GRek valet In Prillctss Caraboo.
Eogll•bm111 playing a Soulheroer.'' Wonderful. ... There's oothiDJ
His two new films have SOIDC- wrong willa small parts - If they .
lhlng else in common: He plays captivate yo11. A lot of my best
nonstarr~:lcs . Litbgow has
work has been In supportiDJ
gone lbe
rot* ill Harry cutd roles."
the HtndersottS, Raisillg Cain and
He cited a few: as lbe former
Olber falma. But he never judges a football pro-transvestite ill Tht
script by how many JIIIICI hil char· . World Accordillg to Gorp (bis first
acter bas.
Academy Award oominatioo); the
"I always lbougbt that lbe ideal sby real eltale aalelliJII!n in Ttnn.f
show, wbetber it's a play or a ojEIIdtarmellt(bis lleCODdnominamovle, is an ensemble p,iece In tion); tbe mad scientist in Th1
wblcb everyone can sbloe, ' he rea- Advtlllllrts of Bucl:.aroo Ba~~Zoi;
sooa. "Think of Robert Altman· s tbe terrified air lnlveler In Twilight
best films. Many of tbe pltya I did Zo11t: Tht Movit.
.
in New York - Tilt Cho11ging
Lilll110w's versatlllly barb bllct
Room, Trelaw11y of tht Wdb, to bis early yean wllb his falher's
Comtdla11s - were ensemble Sba'espearean troupe in Obio. His

fatber,- who staged all of Shake~· a playa, alpcd Jolm'a first
equity carcl. After Harvard, John
won a Fulbrif!;!olarsblp and
studied at lbe
Academy of
Muslc and Dramatic Art, where he
learned Ellgliah aa:ents firstband
His work in Tht Cha11gi11g
Room woo him a Tony, and be
made bis film debut in 1971 as a
Harvard pot smoker in lbe aoooforgouen Dtalillg, or tht Bti'Uiey,
IO·BO.rtOII Forty-Bricl:. Lost-Bag
Blws. His role as Roberta Moldooo
(fonnerly Robert) In Garo demon·
strated bls versatility. Witb bis
Imposing prescoce (6 feet, 4 Inches, 210 pounds} and pliable face, he
baa played savants and fools, good
guys and killers, such as Sylvester
StaUone'a nemesis ID C/i.81ulllger.
Lllhgow, 48, Uvea In West Lol
Angeles with bis wife, Mary Yeaaer. an associate professor of history at tbe Uoi\'CIIfty of Califomia 81
Loa Angeles, and their children,
Phoebe. 12, and Nalblll, 10.

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Meai. toys at 1111 1tome 1o JopiiD, Mo. wm..... no bepn coleclia&amp; tile premiums 15 yean ago,
1au about 40,000 toys In 1111 colledloa. The aeweat toy, a tralo futllrlna 15 &amp;apply Meal claarac·
ten, II heiDI olfend durq tile "Happy Blrtllday Happy Meal" pi'GIDDtloo to commemonte tbe
15tb UJDI.enary of McDonald'• Happy Meak. (AP)

·&gt;Latin America's
defacto cultural ~apital
.

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The U.S. Hispaillc population.
according to projections by tbe
cooaultin&amp; finn DRI-McGraw Hill
: · on Florida 'a sllorea and Miami Inc., will srow 41 percent duriDS
· tiu become 'a d ..facto btulneu 111e 19908. compared wllh an aver: : a ad caltural capital of Lalln ase of S percent for all other etlmic
· · America. Indeed Hllr,anica are poups.
oa tile ned to becom ,.
Once Miami was tbc winter
~ ca'l largest minority, and If playJiround of America's rich. For
: · Miami II any mirror, An&amp;Jolan most d tbe city's history since its
' ·. beaiMIDBID retent It.
founding in 1896, Miami's few
: . MIAMI (AP) - The palms Hispanic residents waited tables for
.: . along Soutb Dixie Higbway are lhe wealtby, made beds at hotels
: black siJhoaiCttes .against an orsnge and washed an.
· ."Ur'U F111Dtisco Perez beads for
Now, Hispanics own the restau: · wort, tapping bis fingers rbytbmi- rants, 111e hotels, 111e new car deal: . caUy 'XI tbe au:erlng wbeel.
ersblpa, the home-buildin&amp; compa. - Like hundreds of tbousands o{. . Dies and an: n:preaeoted In virtually
: · other Miami Jesidents, Perez com- every area of business.
· · mutes to work tuned ID to one of
Hialeah a oeighbcxing city once
: · tbe city's Spanish-language sta- home to Miami• a blue-&lt;:ollar wort: · do~ offering salsa and merengue ers, bas been taken over by ~Y
· . musac.
of Miami's 600,000 Cubans. Street
· . In Miami, where a l!l'j~ty of vendors sell sugar-~:oated french
: . tbe population Is ~c, 1t s poe: fries, called cburros, and sugar
·.
: . sible to get a prescription filled, cane juice, called guarapo.
. · have IJraln surgery, talk willa a traf·
Most restaurao!S have menus m
· : fie cop, plead witb a iudse, buy Spanish w1111 BD exptan8dw of tbe
: · stamps and swing miflion-dollar disbes 1n smaller letters In Ellglish.
: deais-allin Spanish.
Scme Jestautants don't bo1ber wllll
:
When Fidel Castro came to tbe EnJiiab.
· : power In Cuba In 1959, only 4 perNeigbborbood grocery stores
; cent of lbe population in Miami sen Latin American brands of food
.· and liS Dade County environs was products - juices from Colanbi8,
: Hispanic. Today, after several canned products from Venezuela,
: waves of Immigration from Cuba beer from Mexico. Products are
. ~d. otber Latin ~erican c.oun- advwtised in Spanisb.
trtes, tbe metropolitan area IS S2
Tbe Miami Herald puts out a
. percent Hispanic, 29 percent black daily edition ill Spanish - El
· . and 19 percent DOD, Hispanic white, Nuevo Herald.
.. or Anglo, sa~Usandro Perez,~
"If it wasn't for my job, I
; , fessor and
ographer at Flonda wouldn' t bave to use Engliab,"
· • Intematiollal University.
'
says Francisco Perez, a native of
: · With tbousands of Spanish- PUerto Rico wbo works lo 111e paint
: speaking immlaraots streaming depa111Deot at aHome Depot store.
:: IDtotbecity and_dozenso~mul~"I would say that 80 to 85 per. : tional corporations mov1ng ';be~ cent of our aastomers speak Span:: regiooal headquarters~ Miami . isb. Hey, I've seen people stomp
: : bas become. a de·f~ ~ and · out of tbe store In disgust because
. : cultural cspatai of Latin America
we had saneooe workio¥ bere who
; . "We're not just ~g about couldn't speak Spanisb,' he says.
·. etbnlc oeigbborboods like you have
· Perez and his Peruvian wife
: ~ in oilier American ~ties, ~~~~ tbetr watch Spanisb-laogusge television
: Chinatowns or tbe1r ltal1an sec- stations At 111e bane video store of
·: tors," Perez III!YS. "We're ~g a natio~al cbain, IIIey cbeck out
: : about enclaves where people hve movieS in Spanlsb or at least willa
: , their entire lives and never have to Spanish subtitles.
: : speak a word of.EnJiish."
Tbe Perezes live In a modem
· : On 1be IOOIDinS Francisco Perez lbree-bedroom, two-batb home in
: drove to work listening .to salsa lhe suburban belt lbat stretches
: : music, an employee at Equity south of Miami. It is an area ~.• Mortsase started bis rounds. carry- nated by young, middlecdass His:· ing a coffee pot and small, paper panics, and houses painted In pink
: . cups - a little larg~r dian lll.ose or peach wilh barrel-tile roofs of
• · that doctors use to dispense ptUa. oranse or red.
: · He served thick, sweet. lndusirial" People In Latin America think
: · strenglll Cuban coffee to colleagues you can get rich if you can just get
"· at their desks.
bere " Perez says. "That's all. Just
: • in nearby COral Gables, a subur- get bere.
.
·: ban city surrounded by Miaoii,
" But it's bard to make a Hving
: .. Annando CodiDa, a weallby devel- here. You've got to work, work,
; . oper, peered into the ~ of his work to make coda meet I. rode a
.. · desktoP comouter ln.biA nenthou"" bicycle to work ...;, I worked at a
·· oftlce. He was worldng 00 a mold· convenience store ...,. and bad to
; ·JDIIHoa-doDar pR?ject which, like share a little efficiency with a
: :much of Miami. featurestlleS~· ·. buddy for five years here In
~ :style architecture of red
s. Miami."
·: ·lfdled doofWiys and wrought-iron
·'The Spaolsb-speaking lmmi:-. Jrillwak over windoWs.
grants still pouring into Miami
:·.. Codloa's pi!Cn!S in Cuba sent often end up in Little Havana, a
:": hJm to Milml 32 years Ill!' bectJnse JandiDJ I pot fer oc'CioJe who tufve
: ~· of rears that CMtro wu going;! wllll Hute m~ dlln"a ablbby lulloff to MOICOW IP
case, family pbolos'llld hi&amp;b hopei.
.·
B
Eduardo Moreno, a CUban who
· :: Lut year, lhe Census ureau · arrived here 1o April wllb hil wife
. : IBid lbal by lbe yell 2010
and. their 6-year-old daDJIIter, has
: : 1c1 wiD replace blackl ~
•. found bow d!lfkul~ k ~ be • ·
, :- ea'allrSCil mtoority, and --1111-, · 1nJ over In a foreisn land, eVen In a
· ;. panic whites wiU barely bold an t!t'::l as friendly to Latina as
. 04ge u lbe majority.
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EDITOR"S NOTE: Wava of

~: Cuban• and other Spanlsb·
· : apeald.. lnvnlgrant. •till break

T.O.

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::C

Miami:

Hours: Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10:00 am to 5:00 pm
Open September 1st to May 31st
June, July August - Open by Appointrrtent

BILl,.

more priDwy care phylicillla.
chanBIDI atdbJdc:a.
"It bas been a wonderful tbree
Conpeas has belun to favclrpior four years for fiiiii!J~:acdce mary care physicians - family
medicine," said Dr. w· · Cote- doctoQ, lotaniJts 11111 ~
man. president of lbe American~ wbell clitecdn&amp; funds for~
Academk;!,!amily Pbyaicians,
on proJtlma llld atlldeat loiU;
based in
City.
.
For instance, the federal aovern~
A recent national COivendCII In meot offers 3 percent lolls to ~
Kansas City sponsored by. tbe mary care llludenta, while IIUdenli
AAFP dr~w almo~t 900 family In some specialities pay 15 percenC
practiCC:Oilenled students and 600
Oilier proJnuoa forgive all or
residents - more tban any otber part of a atudent' s loans or tu1tio1J
such salbering ever held in tbe if IIIey cbooae family practice.
country, Coleman said.
The inceodves seem to be wort.
Perhaps just as importantly, tbe IDg.
convention attracted 100 more
Only IS of the 126 medical
exhibitors and recruiters IliaD had scboob in lbe country dou't have
ever anended similar conventions, some type of family practice proa sian of changing attitudes In med- pam or~ Jllliou said.
1ca1 schools, he said
•
And
said s,m
Family practice docun gcnwal- were In fllnily practice ICSI
ly haven't received profeuional as of July 1, willa 411 residenclca
respect becanse they don't make as available. Botb of diose numbers
much money or do lbe higbly ape- an: lbe highest ever nx:orded In 111e
clalized research thai. brings fame country, he said.
and funds to medical schools, ColeAt tbe end of tbeir four-year
man said
medical curriculum, students arc
However, many medical schools matched wilh residency positions
now 1111: adding family physicians iD tbeir chosen Specialties II teach·
to their staffs 10 serve as role mod- ing bo6pitals. in lbe fmt "match"
els and mentors for students, be of Ibis year, 96.2 percent family
said.
practice residents were able to aet
Dr. William Jacott, a family their fmt choice, Coleman said.
physician at the University of MinThe AAFP esdm•tea that 4,000
ilesota in MinneapoUs and a mem- · . general pbysicians are needed to .
ber of tbe Board of Trustees of tbe fill &amp;bortages of doctors In 2,000
American Medical Association, commiaoitiea nationwide. Tbc
said beallb care reform, which bas ~~ are the worst In rural and
encourage more manased care mner-aty li'CIS.
organizations, bas been ~ factor lo

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By MARGARET STAFFORD
Aaoelated Prea Writer
KANSAS CITY, Mo. - When
Derek Williams went to medical
school. he wanted to specialize In
cardio1o&amp;Y or geoeraiiWJery.
Three years later, during hil first
year of residency at tbe University
of Kansas Medical Center,
Williams is mnmlned to becrmlog
a family doctor.
"Eventually I atiWied to realize
lbat all lbe specialities Interested
me In some way," Williams said.
"And I saw that with family
medicine, I could do a little bit of
everylbing."
MicbeUe Brittm-Meblillch, who
originaUy planned to specialize in
obstetrics, gynecology,
also
changed her mind and Ia now In her
second year of realdency In family
practice at tbe medical center. The
cbance to establiab loog-IWID rda·
tionsbips with patients ·was an
ilnpooant factor in her decision.
" I saw that family practice
would let me 1rea1 a wide nmge d
ages and a lot of Qledlcal cooditioos, including pediatrics,'' Brittoo-MebHscb said. "Ralher than
just treat tbe acute problems, I
would bave a chance to follow
patients aU through their lives.''
WUiiaJns and Brittoo-Meblisch
are examples of wbal.'s bappenlng
In medical schools Dalioowide, at a
time when beallb care experts and
the Clinton administration arc
.p!CSsing for fewer specialists and

7

36949 Smith Rd., lox 141
RUTUND, OHIO 45775

·students try family practice

poverty.
.
She didn't get bllct on her feet :
until tbe 1960s wbell she Uved wltb ·•
1J1e Nuba. a tribe in Sudan who :;
treated her like aJC of tbeir own.
:
"I've never laughed ao moch • r
I did wbeD llving wllll ~ Nube." ~
she says. "I became recon~:iled ..!
wltb myself.'' Her pbotognlllhs of !
the Nliba were publisbed world· 7
wide, IJringiDg in IIOIIIC badly need- :
edcaah. '
.
Riefeoatabl bas also pubUahed :
pbotognlpbl taken during her scuba :
adventutea. Soon to appear in the ·
United States Is tbe reprint of a !
1937 book of Rlefenstabl sdU plio,-, :
tos from the 1936 Berlin Olympics. •
Someone will be botberlni •
Riefenstabl about tbe put until lbe :.
end of ber days. Sbe would rather '
be left 1o peace to punue her art. :
"I'Ql only bappy wben I'm •
doing somelllina creative,'' she .~
says.
·
"At lbeae times, I feel no ~
blinger, no wesrinesa, DO pain.''
~

We've Been In Business Since 1963

If You Can•t Find It Here
They Don•t Make lt.

E3

Meals · Unsure of specialties, med

ground.·

first to admit he's n()t British

By·BOB THOMAS
Aslodated Prell Writer
LOS ANGELEs - John LilbJOW reports witb an indulgent
smile that IIIJij8endy tbere 1re pub
figb!S In England over whelber he's
an Englishman. His two new
movies are likely to furtber tbe

:
:
·
:
:

stabl wrote. 'There were rumors !luiJiiilatlng defeats to Germans.
after lbe .war that Riefenstabl waa Jesse dwens, the black American,
Hider's lover. Rlefc:natabl'deolell k did, and Rlefenatabl caugbt it on
and not even ber critics seem to camera..
believe it.
"If I bad been entbusiastlc
"I would probably bave been about natlonallam I would bave
offered a lot of money·II I said I portrayed the Germans as heroes,
really was Hitler' a ptrlfriend. not Jesae OwenJ." sbe says.
Maybe It was stupid o me to teD
After Germany Invaded Poland
111e trulb," sbe says wllll a laugb.
in 1939, Riefenstabl went across
Accordln&amp; to Riefcnstabl, abc tbe bmler to film the fl&amp;hdng. Gerrepeatedly complained to Hitler man troopaiiiiiSSICI'ed IIOIIIC Polisb
about bis anti-Semitism
clvlllus and Riefenstabl saw it
Riefcoatabl recalls readinJ happen. She 110lested and a Ger·
Hider.'sMtiiiXampfandscribbliDS man soldier lhreatlloed to shoot ber,
notes In iL
·
she says. She aave up combat
•'I liked tbe aspects' ' of tbe reponiilg llld went home.
rebuilding of Germany, she says.
Ia Tht Wolldeljlll Horrible Lift
"I wasn't lbe only one. We were of Lt11i Rie{tll.rta/11, director Ray
really suff~g at lbe lime. It was MneUer cooliooted her willa a 1940
unimaginable. In lbe and-Semitic tetesram in wblcb she glowingly
Jl8SS88e8, I wrote, ''lbill iJ wrong.'
con&amp;ratulated Hitler for bls con"Anti-Semltiam ~ like a rot- quest of Pails.
.
ten ~~!n him. It finiabed blm
Rlefenstabl says lbe tdegrlllll Ia
and
. y."
mlainterpreted. Sbe said abe was
Wbeo Hiller asked Riefenstabl excited about the vicJory beca'!se
to film lhe Nuremberg rally, she sbe lboug'ht k meant "tbe honible
says sbe refused becanse sbe didn't war" would quickly end.
wthean~.t'&gt;~o~~~ybersell. Budt
Riefenatabl spent much of lhe
•wu"" .,......., ou can an war yeara working on a feature
will do Ibis project." Riefenatabl , called Lowlalld, her last movie.
says.
.
American troops arrested
Riefenstabl consented after Riefenstabl as a suspected Nazi.
Hider promised sbe could do what· After her release, abe and ber
ever she pleased after the docu- molber lived ID a one-room apllt·
menWy was flnlahtA
~t. She was boycotted~­
Triumph of lht Will is a tecbni- ~and
to
cal masterpiece. It's too bad that Its
star - Hitler- was tbe embodl- .
ment of evil.
The people of Nuremberg loot
at Hitler adoringly as he strikes
heroic poses. Row upon row of sOldlers march across tl!e parade

Pail

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OCtober 30, 1194
Page-E4-Sunday nmes--Sentlnel

October ~0; 1esM

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

elytize but their efforts have-but·
tressed, the arguments of those who
call the ebun:b a mil
But is it a cult? Even some ait·
ii:s doo't like lbe term. The Boston
Church isn'tlike many cults of lbe
past 25 yean Kip McKean its 40year-old leader, calls lb~ shots,
observen say, but be basll't made
himself a bigbly visible cbarismal·
ic guru. Critics bave~'t charged ,
him with living luxuriously.
There' 5 DO serious coocem that
the Boston Cbun:b of Christ will
tum violent, and memben don't
walk around in trancelike stupors.
Indeed, Malt is a more typical
member. intelligeot, likable, uofaUinglypolite.
"They are all the things your
mother would like you to be," said
Robert Randolph, associate dean
for student affairs at the Massaebusetts Institute of Technology.
' 'That's one of the biggest problems about them. They're extteme·
ly nice people."
The dangen critlca see ate more
subtle: a loss of Individuality,
estrangement from friends and
falnily and mtmben loaiDg cootrol
of their lives ·
Sherrie Morrill rememben her
rust eocouoter with the church. Sbe
was approached by a friendly
young woman oo a New York City
street in 1992; she welcomed the
conversation. Morrill was 28, a
social work supervisor, far from
her Rochester, N.Y., home. She
was lonely and struggling to live 011
a small salary in the big cily.

When tbC woman iilvitCd berto will~tCUrlftbevlcave.
eburcb, Morrill said DO. "I tltought.
"It's a man{putadve procenla
wl!!!' ate you, ~e kind of 1cbo· which.fric:udab!~ b a lllCimlquc. It's
vab s Witoess?
not friendship, said 1eff Davia, a
But the w001811 kept callina her former, miniaiCI' ill lbe lllllDatteam
and Morrill lllleoded a service.
Churches of Chriat wbo bas coun''I thought it was the most beau· seled ex-memben of the Boston
ti~ul ~log I bad ~ver seen,'' she mo~Dl
~ PeqJle holding .banda. pralsRtck Bauer of Bowie, Md., a
m~ God. f !bought this was really leader of lbe loose-bill ex-member
it' . .
. .
movemea~.said church memben •
She JOined, moved m wtth mem- ate taught we ate dae ooly saved
bers and tithed 10 pera:ot of her people Io lbe world."
gross wages. Jler li~e revo!ved
''That ldod of j~011 bas a way
~ound ~ churc~. wt!IJ servaces, of lnspirillg the Oliver North-type
Bable studies ~d little ume. to:!;, rogue ~t of people that realillberfreeume-oo.bike
lybuns, beaut.
or Staten Island Fef!Y trips - she
Church mcmben say they are
was expected to inVIte strangers_ to being criticized for ttyillg to live
cburcb, she said. Oo dates walb . under the strict guidance of the
eb~J!eb IJI!liD~rs •. sbe ~ ber com- Bible - something considered
~ DUght mVJte a W81ter.
IDI~ ill a ~ular world.
They told l!'e that everyo~e
We beheve the Bible is the
e!se that doeso t belong to lb1s solution, the ooly ~~tioo, and that
k!Jig~ everyDII!' ~ 011 the ou!; Is a radical stance, said Gord011
sille ~DOl saved, 15 gomg to bell.
FerguSOD, 51, a ch~ eWer.
sbe Said.
They reject IICCUBillioos they tar~ut when she came home for get the dowotrod~eD and note
Cbrisbnas, ber fBlnily ~arranged many members are, like Malt, weDfor her to meet an exal ~aselor. educated and popular.
After three 12-hour sess1oo~. she
Many members ate profeasl011returned to New York, quit the als. For example, a BostOII·Ilased
church and her job and beaded evangelist, Doug Webber, Is a
home.
,
. Yale-educllled pbyslciaD wbo gave
Morrin s ~~perleace was typl· up his practice to work for lbe
cal, eburcb cnucs say. They say the . eburcb.
church preys 011 the weak and loneThey say ~y don't try tO coo!Y to. make them feel wanted. It trol ~b_en lives but offer sugIdentifies wealaaesses of mem~s gesuoos like a. parent would and
- perhaps a ~is.tory of fa1led that members often tum to dlurch
romances or drinking problem leaden for advi&lt;JC.
and convillces tbcm the problems

Membcrsdon'tdccelve- or at
least they ate told not to, Webber
said. ADd they take proselytlzlna
var, seriously.
'1bi8 II impor18Dlatuff. This is
a life-cbanainl ~I· This bas 1111
iml*t 011 eternity, Wc:bba' I8Id.
1be churcb says Its Jood w~
is ClftCD lgoorcd. l..al!l year, ill char
!table arm, Hope Boston, donated
•$100,00,0 for AIDS research at
Clllldreo s Hospital. .
.
11tetc are dllgnmlled ex-members, they say, but many others
have seen tbeir lives Improve
~~ daesaiddl...~
ul ot be
........
......as ares.~
r
~our yaus ill the church, I make
lillie for people, whereas before, I
~~ ~r that I made my career a

EDITOit'S NOTE- Early
uploren deacrlbed a vut aDd
'b arrea cllaak of Te:ru aa tile
clolut tlaiDI to llell,
laMred. But tlae few people wlao
lfve there .aow _. oDiy li•veu;
·- Dit1Ye - Nftreelt • God'•
Y"1 abode. Wllat aecnt doel thil
lolt aad loMly liDif hold? A curl·ou Ultor'a M8l'dl.

!

- ~ lbe 1 3 ~~
what is :OV:es ~ dae Inttt:·
nationafCburch ofCbrilt.
_
Cbun:b
fonned
The Bostoo
was
ill 1979 wbea McKean, 1111 -aelist from Flori~. took over lite

•-"ediJ

~~of~?""'B{!.a~a
ella-

~.....
....... .....
iclples. and sending
out to ftDd
jmoie disciples, McKeao 8Dd his
,foBowen were able to expand lato
· a CODgregatioo encompassing ~
·whole Boat011 area._Scrviccl were
·beld ID lbe BostoD Ganlco. Maoabencrosbesgtaob'eatartiUnlntegdoe;ta~~

By MIKE COCHRAN
·Aaocletedl"na Writer

:..J~~~J.e:S~~

e':=
·stuJDbJed onto a hauntingly remote
8Dd desolate cbuolt of TelW prairie
illld- not much imprellled.
· W.B. Parker branded the hills
and plains ''lohospitable •' and
dcclaled:
· "Dcadtutc of soil, timber, water,
giDIC, and everytblog elaC tbal can
iuSiaiD II' mate lfe lolerable, IIIey
m111t ranaiD u IIIey .e. •minbablted and tmlobahllable." He vowed
never to return.
Well, that relentlessly raw land
was eventually setded, if sparsely.
But major highways bypassed it,
other Texans Ignored It, and It
remaiDs today a region with little
population or prosperity and no
ilame or ideotlty lilts own beyO!Id
a few hardscrabble rums and
taaaclteJ and small and struggling
towns.
· Apparently, tlioagb, the land ·
holds a wonderful secret that
totacbes lbe DBliw soul.
Joy Cave, a Guthrie
· schoolteacher, put It Ibis way: ''We
don't belong to anr,body. We
belong to ourselves. ' Thea she

abroad.
''They don't deviate from old~
line Cbun:b of Christ teadllogs. It's
pnority.
.
just they bave become high-pres.
Jude Federspiel, a Juoior at sure evangelists," said 1. Gordoq
MIT, said that in his three years Melton, diJector of lbe Ioatitule fQr
wltlllbe church, be bas learn~ the Study of Ameriai'!,RcU&amp;ion It!
bow to forgive people, to~ bis Santa Barbara, Calif. They Will\
pride Ia cbeck '!'!"to stop lymg:
the streets, they !lllderaiBDd E:.g
Saltt Mc:Quide, 44, ao aichitect . adults~ lbe beat ~gets.
I
from Waltham. joined the church 2 why theY re growiD,.
,,
112,rear' 1180.
At a recent aemce at Boaton 4
. I tbiDk they u a whole tty .to Part Plaza H~l, mOll of the JIIIQ
strive to eacouhlge all the Chris- than 200 partiapmts were )'llllllg. ,
dans to Improve themselves as a
· The service was a aou betweeq
~ tballt's.~ of a respoo- a Bible study and an old-tlmo
slblllty, be said, Its not just~ ~vi!al. Members sang. dlscullled
you get ~ once and you re b1bltcal puaages ,and stood ao4
safe forever.
described bow they've beeD belped
~its Blblc-orleoted ~achloss, by God's power. Tbe ~&lt;lC lcadt£
the Boston Cbun:b is similar to .lbe eaoo':Jed them to 1nvlte peop~
malostr~ Churches of Chnst. to dJ
and to coottibule money
But wJ:Uie the 1D11ir11trmm chun:bes to spread the eburcb overseas.
compnse 18,000 iDdcpelldeot coo-

iddecJ: ·

: "Guthrie Ia the geographical
eeoiCI' of DDWbere ... but IJOiilethiog
Las keptmebcrc.JjustloveiL"
: Says Micky Paater, the librwlaD
1o JaytOD, IJOI)!IIalim 638, "We're
iW!y kindOfstepeblldreo bcrc."
: So where Is "here?"
· 1tls 80 111-defilled terrllllry, well
west of Fort Worth, where the
Weat purportedly besioa. It lies
tDdl ot IDICI'alllte 20 within a triaD·
iie coooectiDg Wlcblla Falls, Abitme and Lubbock.
: A true map of "bcrc" probably
ll'llUld iDcltlde all or large pans of
o1oe Weat TelW counties and bill
~~ieces of five othen, That's
8 cnn ..,DB ~ 1111 ~
!111! y - ,.,...,.., • · - -·
lirger than the whole of Rhode
bland, Delaware and Cml'ccticul
. · Fewer lb8D 2!5,000 people live

Scientists make plastic
·copy of skull of 'Iceman'
The reseaR:hen have also madt lists l) ddalled loOt at tJie IDterill',
By MALCOLM RITI'ER
what Seidler said is the flfSl plastic including the lmJRSSions made by
AP Sc:leoce Writer
.
NEW YORK- More than reconstruction of a fossil skull, the brain, be said.
Noting that the work on tbe
5,000 yean ago, be lay down ill the copying a speclmeo some 300,000
Petralooa
skull replica was done
Tyrolean Alps and died. Three to 400,000 years old from
with
Cli~CDCC
gained 011 the i&lt;lC·
years 1180, his frozen and exquisite- Pettalooa ill nortbem Grm:c.
man,
Seadler
described
it as ''a pre·
Unlike
the
original
skull,
the
ly preserved body emerged from a
glacier and made worldwide bead- copy cao be cut opeo to Rive scieo· sent of the ia:man to us.''
lines. .
.
Now, ·scientists report they have
used X-rays and modem ledmolo·
gy to create highly accurate rerlicas of the s1cull of dae •'iceman.•
The accomplishment should
help scientists study the icemao
and recreate what the doomed
·mao's face looked like when he
was aUve, lbe researchers say.
The replicas should reveal for
the ftrsl time just bow the k:emao'a
-facial bODes were slowly dl$torted
by m of pressure from lbe glacial
ice, said team member Horst Sei'dler of the University of Vienna. - Io prior X-ray studies of the
skull, •'no one saw the i&lt;JCmao' s
skull is truly deformed," Seidler
said. With lbe help of tlie copies,
NO CHARGE FOR: Air conditioning, power windows,
researchers DOW can recoosuuct "a
nearly true face," be said.
power locks, c_assette, tilt, wheel, speed
One analysis bas revealed that
the part of the iceman's face
29
between bis upper teeth and lbe top
·
of his nose Wll!l pressed toward the
rear of bis bead. for CXBIDple. That
misled Seidler and colleagues in
their earlier illtcrpretati011 or how
the upper teeth originally met lbe
lower t.eelb, Seidler said.
The jrmlan, covered with lealhery orange-brown skiD, is DOW kept
frozen at high humidity to mimic
the glacial conditions that preserved his body so well.
Reaearcben who want to examioo
it ate limited to about 20. millutes
every two weeks.
Austrian researcher&amp; decided to
Air. cassene. Dedliner. Air, stereo, low miles.
Air, cassette. low
make copies of the sltuU 10 tbal sci- ·
big wheels II. tires.
'4995
miles, just traded.
eotists could study details of the 1-_..:..:.::.....;__ _ _ _+--~==---+--..;_----1
skull at leisure without disturbing
92 DODGE DAKOTA 93 NISSAH 4X4
the iceman, said radiologist Dr.
Dietzer zur Neddeo of the University of Ioosbruck.
"It's impossible to take aU the
measurements, it's impossible to
see IDside the mummy because you
cao' t destroy it." be said in a telephone interview.
V-6, longbed LE, trim,
King Cab; SE-V6,
He and colleagues repon their
low
miles,
just
traded.
cass.,
cruise, tow miles.
work In the October issue of lbe
journal Radiology. They used a
92 FORD AEROSTAR 94 DODGE GR~ND
technique, called stcreolithograpby,
that is also used at a few medical
centers to make models of body
parts. Tbe body part models are
useful for building hip replacemeats or planDiDg compleX 111111ery
to fax misshapen skulls.
To copy lbe iceman's skull,
researcben removed the iceman
V·6, auto., air, lilt. .
V-6, auto., air, power
Air power windOws &amp; locks,
from its freezer to an cxaminati011
cruise, cass., air bag. windows &amp; locks, cruise
room kept at about 4S degrees
F~L Tbeli they scanned the
93 FORD ESCORT 19 PONTIAC GRAND AM 91 PLYMOUTH LASER
bead with an X-ray technique
called computed tomography,
~ .It
wblch allowed a oolllpull:r to store
~·'
elci:troolc "alieea" ofdae sltuU.
I
A second computer used this
loformatiou to build skull repllcaa
alice by lllce, IIIIDJ aliaer beam to ·
a1aape pludc. The copies reveal not
only the exterior of the skull but
also Its Interior shape and booea.
Delli F8it of the State Unlvasity of New York at Albany, an
·aolbropoloaiJt wbo studies skulls
for reaeardl on brain evolution,
called the work "cutlina edge"
8Dd "reaDy fiat rate... . . .
Sdenlista have made lbtee skull
. copies 10 far, eaclt beaer lhiD the
last, and hope to reproduce the
entire jrmlaD skcleCOD. zur NeddeD
said.

$11,99

'.

%

461 SOUTH THIRD

'

Sundly nmee S1nllnll P,• •• 1

!!

What secret doe,s this lost· and lonely Texas land hold? :·

Critics asking is this a church or is this a· cult?
By KEN GUGGENHEIM
Aaoclated Pre. Writer
BOSTON_ She's 24 yean old,
an MIT graduate W&lt;llting 011 a doctolllte in a:ll biology a1 Tufts Univenity. She's frieadly, penooable
and religious
And at ~Y colleges, FJsa Mak
is DOl welcome.
Malt belongs to the Boston
Cburcb of Christ. which in 1.5 yean
bas swelled from 30 members to
about so 000 worldwide
It is bow it became ·ooc of the
natiOII 's fastest growillg churches
that bas stirred criticism and
prompteddozensofcollegestoban
iL
Members say the church bas
flourisbed t.m.use of the appeal of
ill back-to-basics approacb to rcligioo. People tired ot the pomp and
ritual ol traditional churches are
drawn to the Baston church's pure
dedication to the Bible.
But critics say they are being
du ed . They say the church is
ob~ssed with growth and will do
almost anything to achieve it
The critics, including former
members, say the cburcb smothers
recruits with false friendships ' 'love bombing,'' .they call it - to
lure tbem IDto the ebun:h and keep
them there. It c!ccniaates their lives
and, lbey say threatens tbem with
elemal damna'tioo if they leave.
Cburcb memben recruit wberever they can - on lbe street, in
parldog lots, and especially 011 col_lege campuses. They say they ate
folloWing God's command to PIDSf'

Pomeroy-Middleport Gelll~la, OH-Polnt Pleaunt, wv

PHONE 992·2196

l\f10DLEPOR1' ,-0~

~=lc,!'o small farms~ larger . bywioda from bell.

the palot bas peeled. The weekly
1aytOD CbroniCie Ia moribund, too
evai though the town has fired bet~
ter lbao most. Mobil Oil 8Dd the
highway departmeiu are active
employas, and there II a Chevrolet
dealenblp.
A downtown historical marker
reveals that the Double Mountain
Salt Wo~ was localed along the
Brazos River 011 the "lndiao-iofcltcd frmtier:' and was the llll'tbem·
most busmeas In Confederate

thia= c ' : : : : V say of
They boast tbal mags 8Dd crime
ate pretty much nil, tballbe people
ate cloiiC aod caring aod, most of
aU, that It's a great place to raise
kids.
·
"It's God's Country," illslsts
Janelle Barry of Spur, wblcb is
about as close as lillY to beillg this
re&amp;~on'squui-capilal.
"The Big Empty," native son
11m Corder jokes.
"I'm always looldog for Weat
Teus or my part of ll, and not
findins it," writes Cooler ira "Lost
in West TelW," a whimsical and
charming book that deals largely
with his omelesa homeland.
''My part of West Texas doesn't
show up much in books, •1 thus
leaving 11 •'bole •• in Texas, be
grumbles. Outsiders, he says,
' 'miss lbe straoge and looesome
beauty: lbe view one seea of the
Double Mountains down lbe Salt
Fork from the highway bridge
between Swenson aod Jayton; the
fJRt dmmatic drop iDto the deep of
theOotoo Beaks.... "
Corder, an Engllsb (JIOfeasor' at
Texas Cbriatlao Uoivenity, was
born DCa' Jayton, but even be cannot piDpoiDt the bourtdaries or bls
povlaee. "It just doesn't llave aoy
identity, exoept ill the mlDds ot the
people who live there," be told a
repmer receody.
Corder fagures W.B. Palter and
his ~peditioo leader U.S. Army
Capt Raodol!D
with
his province when they ventured
manyyears 1180 illto what is now
Kiog OIUDly.
·
As quoted by Corder, Marcy
was even leas Impressed with the
regioa lbaD ~. "It is, ill almost
every respect, tbC most unlnterest·
illgaodfcrblddingi8Ddlhaveever
visited," lbe ·commaodq' .lf1JIIIIIed.
and spoke banblv of Its "barren
parsimooloua soll.r'
,
Still true. Thia place Ia tOO dry,

•: •
but tbal was Dot always so.
A church marquee Clptllrel dae
Tbc Texas Almanac Jlllla t1ao
Acalnlinl! to ooe jtdcy tale, Cll· flavor of Ibis entire region: "Lite CDUDty pop•I.W. at 3(;1, DDt qaiiD
tie trucks whisked lbc county Life, Few Gardens Have Only half II It ill Glltltrie.
records from the origiDal coun- Flower's."
Althoogh Guthrie lllilde llllft
bouse in Clairemcut, a myalerioua
On Ranch Road 222 to Gutbric, thiiD a raocb IIJPI!ly c:mtcr, daln II
fire destroyed lbe buildiDg 8Dd the bome of the famous Four Siltes a library next to the cowthou•,
records emerged In Jayton. So raoch, the terrain turns hilly and aod "Lost in Weat Texas" wu
would a new counbouae.
/
~ but an oasis, the Qaapaml.
ConttnUid on E-1
"Tliat makes a Rood story,'' ·
·
laughs librarian Mkky Parker, but .1
oo sucb raid occurred. Furtherm~n, it was 1111 electrical lire cDI'illg a saMstmo Ia the drought-rid·
den •50s that demolished th-e
ClaiJclmmt c:ourdlouse.
There Is oo mysiCI'y about;the
Jayton schoolsYJtao. which Is flnt
class.
1im Corder, who attended lbe
old scbool, marveled at the grasscovered football field, lights and
closed-in press box.
·.
"Wbeo my brotha' played foot·
ball at Jayton,'' he wrote, ''I ·
remember watcblog the principal
draw off the yard marten ill the
dirt with a hoe."
.
Jayton High's Jaybirds ooce
played eigbloJIIIID, lbeD II -mao 8Dd
DOwsix·IDBDfootball.
Don Richards, a Lubbock aoorney, played m1aybird 1e11111 tbree
deCades-ago and plans to ret1n for
this year's homecoming 8BlDC and
bis 30lb class reuniOD.
One owner, 70,000 miles. Must be seen
"It wu a great place to grow
up," be says. .
to appreciate!
He rcmcmben havillg to travel
to AspermODl for lbe movlel and to
Spur to shoot pool. And mischief ill
those days was faking late-night
accidents to stop truck driven 011
U.S. 380 and drivillg a car across
the train lrestle at the Brazos River.
Ironically, JaytOD's superb edu·
catioDal system Ia now tbrcaleoed
bytheSiale'sso-calledRoblaHood
school flnaocc plllll, whidl futmcla
tax mmey from rich to poor diitricts.
135 PINE STREET
GALLIPOLIS, H.
As a school official once
446·2532
.

MarcY.IIlited

poor. We juat bappeo to have a
pool or oil In the center of lbe

appean out of oowllere to olf•
wine, beer ad liquor.
·
It is but OM of few . . . Ollt·
po111 in utewl'BI'Iy ckyS:
Purple Mldflowal.
Ill·
odds, .,.oUt alODI the ..S. a
·ly cow Ia wedaed uDder a lllldl
tree in a linway_Bcld. ..t dvilllltiOD is Dot much m evidrace.
The Rlldfeeda info U.S.I2 lid,
after crouiog the Soudl Wldlba
River, whidt ia bone cky,leadlllll»
Guthrie put the Klaa Cout)'

wbcrc the earth YJClds fCw
The prevalliDg south wiDda ate
crq11 and a relative trlckle'otTelW 'lashing gJiaried DJCICIIII!e tteea aa a
aude.
villtllr urives iD ~. populatioo
1bere ate no tourist llltral:doas, 783, on tile soutbcaatem edge of
DO dally IICWipt!p('ll, DO teJeviliOD 11m Cooltt'a ....,.,.,.. .
stations. 1oba are scarce, health
The playground at Slim Sorrells
care enildl:. the popu._.oo 118illg Park Is as empty u the Western
and declloiog. Many schools have Wioda Motel and dae Rule Memoclosed. Othell. tillable to field 11 rial Museum whieb is "Open by
players, play six-mao football, Appoiatmel!l" Qnly. The Rule
IOIDCtimea ill front of an audience drive-In picture lh~w Is open
of pickup trucks.
.ums from April IDIIil It gets

IXlUIIty." ·

.

·

KooK City, population 1,440
ll!d lbe CDUDiy seat ot IICIIby IC.oox
County, is also aomelbiog of a
)B'I!dox. Debtie'a 11 aliteadly cat·
filb and chicken fried atak place.
but)be Oil Palcb Cafe is cloled and
ahudooed
The golf course looka pro1perous, and dae main street is sbadCcl
by sycamores and lea~a

~~~oss the Double Mountain Te~ also ia lbe county seat- ~~~a~:~.. ligo. • ~::;~-~~~~to lbeh

Fll'k or the Bram1is a German lid·

tlemeat once oamcd BraodeDburg
but, for pattiotic purposes, became

Old Glory ill 1918.
AD American flag still Rutten in
the center of what is now little
more than a shell of a town. Its
school shut down eight yean igo,
the grocery-service station more
~~y.
·
Right DOw, rm the ouly fella
here,'' drawled Lisbon Letz, the
Old Glory postmasiCI' for 36 yean.
· "Time's starting to pass pretty
quick now."
•
In nearby Aspermont, populati011 1,214, the most arrestloJ feature Is a ebeerful home sUIIOUIIded
by a moat curious feocc.
.
The feocc b made of bedsJI'I!Igs
and wrought-Iron bedposts . It
Rilards such treasures as old farm
machinery, petrified rocks, wagon
wheels, naif kegs, milk cans and,
finally, a plaster duck and ducklings.
Down the road Is Sweosoo,
named for the ODCe-great SwCDIOD
raodling empire. Fat-aale wearing
lbe famou• SMS brand once
roamed raocbes in eeallal, west and
Dll'tbwest Texas.
Now SweDIO!Iia a ghost town,
its.most forlorn remnant a red brick
bank, founded in 1911. The bot
Texas suo peen through boles in
the roof. Over the doorway ao
awning of metal and wood hangs
;like somclbing dead.
Few natives know the country
better than Gene SweoSDD of Stamford.
"Tberc's a lot of this damn ~d
u..t the only thing you can do 1s
run a cow ooit," be says, and evert
lbea it sometimes reqtlires 35 acres
per cow. "Basically, this is raocb
CDIIJI~'' be SI)'S. ''In my opinioo,
some of it was plowed up tbal
shouldn't bave been...
ill JaytOD, the walls or the shut-

1988 CHEVROLET
SILVEUDO

LONG BED

Truck Center, l·nc•.

:la~this~!pb~•:DI:OIJI:·~·s:tate::wi:th:i~~a~s:~:te:,~too:d~lll=ly~and~h~a:m:mercd:~tro~'~o~fteo~~t:eri:cd~~B:arf:oot:.:H:ote:·:late::cr:ac:ked:and:~e:xp~lai~·:o-e·:d::~-":O:ur~peo~p=le~are:·:.:very:1~~~~==========::::::::~=~

1

.I t's The FINAL WEEK Of Our•••

4 DR. SEDAN. 4·6 V·8 eng., PS, PB,
auto. trans., air cond. , AM/FM stereo cassette. dual air bags, tilt and cruise. P.
windows and. P. locks, P. seat, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels.

'WAS$18,995

1114 MERCUIY SIBLE 4 DR•.

Dc.n"' ... Fc.rge ... To s ... c.p
Tc. W i n O u r ftllany D

V-6 engine, power steering, power brakes,
auto. trans., AM/FM stereo cassette, tilt
and cruise, air cond., power windows and
power locks, dual air bags, power driver's
seat, rear defroster, cast alurylinum
wheels. ·

WAS $15,995 ·

R e is ... e r
P r z:es!

Drawin To Be eld Oct. ll

'14,.11 •
3.0 V-6 engine, power steering, power
brakes, air cond., AM/FM stereo cas.sette,tilt and cruise, power window and
power locks, power driver's seat, rear
defroster. .
WAS$10,995

·

$4 J?~

$41?~
$41?~

'11,115
199,1 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE

1993 FORD ESCOR,. LX 2 DR. SPOR'

4 door, 6 cyl, auto, air
PS, PB, AM/FM
POL, PW,

4 cyl. engine, power steering, power

brakes, 5 speed trans., 'air cond., AM/FM
stereo cassette, rear defroster, rear spoiler, cast aluminum wheels, local one owner, extra clean.

WAS$8,!!95

Lovely blue finish

1990 FORD TAURUS LX
4 door. 6 cyl. lOaded

7,915

8

White with silver

trim

•153.00*

1991 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUISLS
door, VB, Loaded.
, Low Miles
p
•

s220

er mo.
1992 CHEV. LUMINA
4 door, 6-cyl, well equipped
Beautiful Maroon
Finish

OCTOBER

S173:oo

Per Mo.

THIS WE.IIC'S SPECIAL

1118 OLDSMOBILE

2 Dr., V-6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air cqnd., AM/F~S!~r~o
cassette; tilt and cruise, power windows and power locks, rear
defroster.

RIIIIICY ,

11

• Monthly paymen.ts based upon $1000.00 dowQ or equal value in trade-in and balance financed thru tending
institutions, taxes, fees not Included.
.
.

1992 PONTIAC GR PRIX LE
4 door, 6 cyl, auto
air, W~ll equipped
OOft
Low Miles
Per mo.

•220.

'140. .
Per mo.
.·'·., .

·'

.v

v

'

' '

�.

\,
P8g~

E~nday nm• Senti,_.

Pomeroy-lllddlepori-Galllpolla, Ott Point j:lll....nt, WV.

From boxer, to mental patient, to janitor, to writer
By NANCY SIRJLINS
·
APSpedeiCornlpoodeat .
Of.Y.MPIA, Wllh. _ Writer
1'bcm Joaea Ia oblesaina- about
die brotell dryer-bose Ye11t spewing
lint all over lbe crawl
below
his house, and how he'f:lw sell
lhe bouse lban bave 10 crawl under·
neatb it.
He's obsessed wltb his blood
auaar. whieh Is danserously low,
IUid hia caffeine Intake which Is
danserously high. He ~nvlalons
himself droppiaJ dcld 1n 111e blck
yard while mowing lhe lawn and
calculalea how loog 11 might u.'tc 10
discover hll body ·
He U.gh1111101ber Kool. wonder·
Ins If liiia Ia lhe one tbat finally
rives him the cancer. and says:
r'Ufe 1a larlbl sad."
Tbla froJ a man wbose
ts have never been better.
~fint book. ''The Puailist lll
Rest,'' was a Natiooal Boot Award
finalist; the Iitle story won an 0.
Heory'Award. The !NJazlnes can't
Set enoup of him. A second SIOI}'
collectloo is In die works. So is a
novel.
But Jones isn'tlhlnklns about
tbal.
The contrast betweea bis
prospects Mid his outlook is by oo
means his only CODII'adiction. He's
also an ex-Marine and former amaICUr boxtt wbo thinks lesiOsterone
is dcslroylns die world; a Cbrlstian
who doesn't believe In an !lftetHfc;
a wriler who lmmor1alizes himself
in his fiction, lhe beller 10 disappear in real Ufe.
"When I write, I'm DO( Tbom
Jones anymore," he says. "He
soes away. If 1 dido 'I write, I'd
)' have 10 be 1bom J01101 alllbe lime.
I've always haled myself."
·
He's been a factory worter, an
advertlsin&amp; copywriter, a high
school janitor, a drunlt. Now 49,
he' s saved his boldest career move
for last transfOI'IIIina .a Dickensian
childhood, a bolling-rellled brain
Injury and a lifetime of ansuisb
Into art.
"Writers as good as Tbom
Jones appear_!!ut ~ly," raved die

New York Times Book Review
after "The Pusilist at Rest" ~!(IS
IJUblished by Little, Brown aod
Co., in 1993.
''There was a n:BQ'Voir or mal·
ice, polson, and vicious sadism In
my soul. and II poured forlh freely
In the junsles and rice )JIIddies of
Vietnam," Jooes wriles in die ti~
story, about a Marine who loses bis
best friend and his seose of self 10
lhe w.-.
Olher s10ries ICII of battles in
box ins rlnss. cancer wards liDd
uylums, against epllep&amp;y, Blrobol,
madneas. The common lhread is
pain: the pain of loll love, betrayal.
diaeaiC and despair.
He hal known lhem aD, oue way
or lmOtber. His best Marine buddy
was ldUed in Vietnam. His fatber, a

bearl failure.
They 1re aD lhere In his lfOries,

alons witb tbe tbinga tb11 have
saved him: fat cars. fallhful dogs,
German pbilosopbers, boxing, lhe
DooR.
The pboiO on lhe boot jacket
shows a menacing hulk witb taped
fists and an Insolent stare. It"s a
misleading image. Over tbe past
several years, diabetes has
devoured more lhan SO pounds of
muscle and boac, leaving him wilh
lhe limbs of a scarecrow and lhe
race of a mouk. all eyes and angles.
Sally, hll wife of 2S years, and
Jenny, dleir 11-year-old daughlel',
are off vislllng friends, but Sbelby,
lhe boxer dog, fills lhe suburban
.ranch house wilh the boundless
enlhuslasm of ber breed.
J1111111101d schizopbn:oic, CUDJDittcd
The family Is geUing ready to
suicide. His molber·in·law died of move to Iowa City for a year. Half·
cana:r, his beloved graodmolher of packed boxes are everywhere. A

bi&amp; house baa been rented; the
owner, perha~sponae to .
J01101' vlolalt
world, hu
demanded a huge dlaul&amp;e deposit
The aulhor Ia highly ""Uaed.
He'D leadl j die Unlvenlty of
Iowa's prestigious wrili~~
gram. where he oace wu a
Sally will like a year oft' from her
Hlnry job at die._ high achool
herhosbladoaceclellled
.
His llleiiDiorpbosi fmm janilllr
10 writes' began Ill CIIDCIIleu !ban
four )'CIIII ago, after a friend 1IIJCcl
him 10 "wrlle ~m~etbinsao &amp;ood
lhey Clll't reject it" II was a uew
concept for Jones, who'd always
assumed It wu be, not,~~~ work,
thai was being rejec1ed. I lhousbl
I bad to have a backJround," he
says.
Jones laad a background, all
righl. He srew up In gritty Aurora,
ill., lhe son of a boxtt wbo aban-

doucd !lie family and lata" hlllsed
himself' at an Oreaon l&amp;ylum.
•'Wbeaevor I did aometbln. g
wroa,, .my unc:le would say,
'That 1 tbe Jones In blm comias
out'" .
Life was no bcUer wilh his step-

Cowboys
. slip past
Bengals

to pay off Iar&amp;e debts left by her
l!uaband, a womaulzer who died
after drlnklag .b•d prohibition
~She ~ved. ~..Df~ than ay~inJ Ia e wor.., Qlles aaya.

-~he-~~/0

... ..,_.. _.....

a vampire. ''The only way not to
set hit by Frank wu 10 divert his
.allenllon. There wu aueh strain
~ r~.I doo't know bow I sur·
vtved iL
His foellD¥,S or worthlessness
survived too. 'At a.istmas, I was
always depressed. I always
tbQUght, 'You don't deserve it.'
The awards and atteadon make me
doubly dcpreued. Each story takes
six Dllllllbs olf my life."
As a child, bis nilicry wu eased
by his srancimolber, a grocer wbo
fed the bobose~ as she struggled

abou~ lhe uliUty ofhllfe IDd prepare .. me 11 mac u anyoae

Pick4:
2566
Super Lotto:
9·11-13-26-35·38
Kicker:
326357

c:. uJean• wbo mnindcd him of ahow ev:zlbody. S wlllled me

can...
~at

!.=

S::

en tine

dido
lalm he
at gym.
IIIUgbl
mel= to =::~In
a5
on
• · • ou
also learn discipline, to set up
:ail~om!:!;: : ; e ml~~··
B
h ,d
guyci
Ytable~ ~::se a
respec:L
• ·-r enlered
~:J!:I· hdr~,L~
~ f:!lowt
_ w 0 ... ~ 0 oc
him m10 dlemlddlerlnext week.

if.

Vol. 45, NO. 126
Copyright 1994

·: By GEORGE ABA1'E
• Selldael NeWI Staff
Realdcnts In lhe Bulem Local
. Schools remain divided on how
· lhey wiD vote for a 4.4-mlll renew·
allevy Nov. 8. ·
a nmdom manner, a handful
· of residents were interviewed
.·ia:endy about die disbiciS' use of .

.· THE GM CENTER

In

FESTIVAL OF FALL SAVINGS

:tax
molley.
.
,. Tlae two-year 1992 renewal levy

.: was decided by a margin of jDit
·~ oue percent, ICCIOidlng to Bulem
•Superintendent Ron Minard. Resi·
:dents will vole 011 a two-year, 4.4:mill renewal levy tbat wnl raise
$154,689. Tbe district chose 10
.dccraue lbe levy from ' m11Js so It
·: wOI!ld seuerate the aame tax dol·

great mileage.

Convertible, stereo, power steering,
Expreaalona Appearince Package.

$6,799

$11,995

3 Door HIB, 5 speed,

Intermittent wlpel'll, more.

AM/FM caaaelte.

..$12,489

$11,769

Iars 11 bCfore tbe reappraisal of
)lloperty, Minard said.
A vOle against die levy will burt
students, Minard said, addin&amp; lhe
district bas budgeted wisely 10
remove itself from lbe loan fund
~we're doing an honest, ·
straightforward job of doing tbe
· best we can 10 III8DIIIe lhe money,"
Minard said. "We're here 10 proteCt
die kids fUll Mid lbe best proteCtion
is keepina lbe schoola solvent."
1bC·dislrict dcmonstraiCI quailty teachin&amp; wllh about 80 percent
of gradWiles In 11111 Jut five yeara
CODtinuing to higher education, he
added.

Mrs. Jolm Heosley said she will
vOle for die levy.

Continued from E-6

1ft'~ !oft&gt;' disJIIay

3.4 .V-6, auto., air, atereo, cruise,

power windows and locke;

IIlii 1995 PONTIAC GRAND AM

·1994 CHEVY .
CAPRICE CLASSIC

WAS
$15,900.

V-8, loaded.

$16,799

5

NOW·$,14,869

16,995

be bu an qe. Not ODly is he the
IDcumbeN. he points to his cxppi·
.eoc:e In a peuslon fund and u a
bant,dlreclor.

1994 OLDS.
CUTLASS SUPREME

ceaa.··

T.::=ss;;,~iarbai~

company once announced in lhe
weekly paper lbal lrash would DOt
be picked up u ldleduled brea!Jie
of a holiday. ItiPJed;
''The whole town will be picted
up 011 Tuesday."
Jim Corder returned to his
homeland Ia lhc '80s and wrole
wiatfully of tbe Croton Breats,
Golden Pond and otber special
plalia in his c:bildhood "cosmos."
"WileD you SCI to Aspermont,
you're dille," he WI'Oiie.
Tbcre7
"Tiaere," be said, "is jJst
8I'OIIId a curve on die Oilier side of
town. Tbcre, off to die left In die
blue dillaDCe. blue above die broken plain IIIIOUIIdlng lhem - lbc

Double Mounllinl."

God lives ato!.:!: Double

MOllO"'"· Conlrr
.
''1bc Double Mountains 1R DOt
oaly lhe ctweDins place of God, but
also, as the mark.era ~
~ IIIey Ire lbe finl
•
ary of die COIIIIOI,'' Conlrr wroiC

,lrBIIdly.

distrk:t, IBid too much homework is
forced on die youngest studcots.

"homework should be punish·
ment" for elementary students,
Brannon said. In die put, many of
the tcachcn did DOt even have les·
son plaos tD direct die learning pro-

r----

cess. he added.

Brannon also questioned tbe
conduct of some bus drivers wbo,
he said, bave yelled Ill and lilt stu·
dents.
Eurem Local Boaid of Edua·
lion President Ray Karr said tbe
disCrlct hal spenllallpaycn' mooey
fru~y.

We've tried ID be hooest wllh
lhe volerl and ID stretch dleir dol·
Jan," Karr said. "It's very easy 10
find a reason to vote aaainst a
levy."
Some examples of wise spending incl11de: revampiag health
insurance coverage to save
$100,000 Ibis year; replacing an
qlng bus fleet as funds are available; and saving on beating costs

lbroualiiODOVlllioDs.
"There are a lot of state mandales. There are a lot of expenses
tbat may not appear 10 be there,"
Karr added. "Tbere ' s no frills.
We're just lrying to opc:nte In die
black."
The scliool DCCds to updlfc tellboots, add more elective dasaes ill
lhe hip ac.hool and develop I aJID·
puler lab, be added.
•
Also, teachers in tbe district
conllnue 10 earn the state-allowed
minimum - wilh raises In the
past five yean,
added. ·
"Just geUing by on tbe miDI·
mum stale IIIDdards for educadou
in today' s world iJ DOl 10 lhe bell
advantage for our children," Karr
said.

K!f

Halloween party-~

•

V-8, auto., air, loaded, 3 to chooae from.

$15,995

--~

'

Tlae Pomeroy MerJbants
Aaoclltlon .laeld 1 Bailo-n
Party Salurdey aight on
Court Street. (nrUcal) Leu·
rell AdkiDI, 3, of Galllpolll,
waa outfitted aa Little Bo
Reep. (llorlzoaiBI) CbeyeDDe
Beaver, 10 montlas old, of
PCXDeroy,- d..-ed up u 1
skunk. Wbuaen for llae tlaree

IIlii 1994 BUICK REGAL ·

llltl

IIlii 1994 BUICK CENTURY
,

V-8, automatic, air, loaded.
3 To Choose From.

STARTINGAT$17,795

1994 OLDS 98 REGENCY

Automatic, air, stereo
· and more.

Duel eir controls, V-8, llltomatic,
air, luxury. "

$13,995

$23,495

ll&amp;tfl994.. CHEVY ET. CAB PU
1

, V-8, leather, all power. Mull Seel
WAS$24,060

NOW$2l,498

aae~ llldnded: (UDder 4
yean old) pnldat, lint Lau-

ren AdtlDI and IICODd
THrauy C.nciHr; qUat, lint
Stephanie J)Meklqw and IIC•

.

Up die hipway, die Double H
MOICI bas rooms wilh refrigerated
air, eleclrlc beat. pholles and truck
puldDs.
A sourmet jelly store is long
goae but die nearby Pmdcrosa cafe
m!ldcady adverdseslhe "world's

principals 1re mating more tban
the sovemor."
Reedsville resident Jim Brannon
said a number of school practices
disturb him.
"If we bad money (our sraodchildreu) would go to lhe Cbrlstian
school," Brannon said. "I don't
want 10 put more moocy iniO lhe
achoolllbe way It's going."
Bl'liiiiiOII, a Cooner teacher In lbe

· Sy~ea, a Democrat wbo Ia
:deputy Summlt County auditor,
ciles yean of experience In Invest, lug and allocatlDi tbe public's

cemetery.

The drive-in is history, so Dick·
ens has a youth-oriented video
busigc:aa opaaliDs out of a bouse.
Tbey brins quilts, pillows,
candy and soft drioks along wilh
S().cents admiuilJII, and t1op doWII
In front of a lelevislon screen
equil!lled wilh a VCR.
•'We've got 2S kids In 10wn and
we've been bavins about 30 sbow
up," chucldes proprietor Mite
Porter. 'So we lhiuk It's a auc-

j ui scliiOJ. It's bad wben die sdJool

for Ibis experience lhat he bas,'
Sykes said.
She touts her experience witb
Akron's f!rumces and points proud·
ly to lhe r~ that, u a councilwoman, she inttoduced IC'slalation that
set the city's lnvestment'po~y.

ence.
·· liiackwell, a Republican, saya

!Iii

A Multimedia in):. N-......r

and I lhiDk abe wouldn't argue wilh
lhat, eilber," BlacltweU saicl
Yes sbe would.
"I bear titles, bul I keep lootln.

By SONIA ..AIUS.C
.Alaol:llted P,.. Writer
lncumbcutJ. fCtmidh Biackwell
and challenger Barbara Sykes
believe tbe Nov. 8 election for
.Oblo treuurer hinges on experi·

IIlii 1994 CHEVY LUMINA ·

"They've done a good jOb. I
have a child In achool," lhe.Tappen Plains resldcntaald. addinll tbe
schools need to add c:cqp11tera to
update lilt~~~· educ:adoola.
. George Horner, also ol Tuppers
PlaiDs. said he will likely support
lhe levy since lhree of his children
graduared from the schools- wltb
two soins onto coUesc.
"Hopefully lbey're dolns a good
job," Horucr said. "The kids do
ueed an education."
Reedsville fcaidcnt Earl Sbepard
said tbe schools waste bls tax
money, addin&amp; be voles against
levies.
"I'm oo a f!XQd Income," die 78year-old said. "I've JO( no children

.CanCJidaf'eS view-experience as
:factor in state treasurer's race

. IIlii 1994 CHEVROLET CORSICA 11&amp;11 1994 CHEVY lERmA
Automatic, bucket ltats,'
Automatic, V-6, 1111,

IIlii · 1994 GEO TRACKER

1 Section, 10 Pogn 3 5 -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 31,1994

Eastern voters split on support of levy

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

1994 GEO METRO

Low toiai&amp;Jit In 50s, rain.

Tuadly, rain Ukely. lflab Ia 501.

••

,

What•..
this SIIIIUIIet.
"You've COUDd a aood place 10
set lost, •• cledarea part-time librarian Karen Petllet, wbo bas lived
bere almost all of ber 40 years.
"It's ttue, dlere's DOt really mudl
10 ICC out bere.
"But tbere's sometblng you
can't Identify. This is a fantastic
plll:e."
Aloa1 tlao lllJbway from
Gutbrie to Dickens 1emperatures
bover near 100 deps and wind
ldcts up distant dust devils. This lr
truly tbe wi=n spaces. An
occasional w
I interrupts die
JBOII/J(Oil;.
.
Only 322 people .call Dicteos
11omc, but dlcy bave lbc csaeotlals
of illl West Teus town,s: a Cburcb
.of Cbrlst, a Baptist church and a

Pick3:
424

Page4

w:t'~up
~ -z- -

falber, Fnuk. • Ul-lelllptted used

Ohio Lottery

llli 1994 CHEVY 5·10 BLAZER IIlii 1994 CAD. FL,EETWOOD

.

·,

Black, 4X4,
Te'-, Loaclect•

IIlii 1994 CAD. SEDAN DEVILLE
V-8, leather, dual air baga.
NO LUXURY TAX

BROUGHAM. V-8, rear wheel drive,
dual ai~ baga, leather.

$21,750

·

198'5 FORDT·BIRD TURBO COUPE .............................. $3,995
Loaded, 1uto., e)ltra clean.

Auto., air, loaded, low mu...

1993 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX COUPE..........................$13,995

·WORKING CONCRETE - Worken· on
t1ae R....,. M-~ Mlil projeel.coutlal•
. IHII wwk oq tlae IMIJidlna Filday efter _ . . .
. !81 poured ta form a aOUd blue ·for tlat 100.

.

'

8,800 milts, 1 owner. Uke Newl

1989 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL.............................$7,995

4 Dr., auto., elr, aluminum wheels. SHARP!

1988 PONTIAC SUNBIRD TURBO COUPE .................... $4,495

Collins .respected by friends, political colleagues

•

West Columbia man
. dies·following wreck

·

1988 NISSAN SENTRA 2 DR. HB•.•.••••••.•.•.•.•.•.••••• ;••••••••.$2,9!$

Air, atereo, black, aluminum whHis.

AutomatiC, air.

1990 OLDSMOBILE CALAIS COUPE ............................. $4,995

1994 NISSAN PATHFINDER SE ......:............................. $24,995

Auto., eir, 1 owner, stereo.

4X4, automatic, air, more.

1988 JEEP WRANGLER CONVERTIBLE ....................... $7,888

·

A West Columbia man was
ldUed and two . . injured u
die result olalhree vehicle ICd·
dent Saturday, 12:15 p.m:, on
S.R. near Jerry'a Run Road In
Anile Grove.
• Billy A. Stewart, 52, died
from injuries received in the

1989 CHEVROLET CELEBRITV'•••.••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••$5,995

• '

Automltle, 11r, etereo,tow m1111.

1992 OLDS 98 REGENCY ••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••• ~ •• $14,995

1990 OLDSMOBILE CIERA .•.•.•.•.••••••••.•.••••••••••••••••••••.•••. $8,895

'

z

4 Dr., auto., air, ltereo, 5,500 mll11.

.

wreck, ~~:cordi~~~
County
Sherifl''
t
·:Acc:ordlng to w
alate•
menta, a 1979 Chevrolet van,
opellted by Herold Lee JOIICI,
(/J, aclclreu. unknown. Wll llaV•
ell~l IOUtb on S.R. :Z when II
wcat'lcft ~ _.., aideawi(lina
' die 1!m ~JOiel tnK:k opcnl·
ed by SICWUI.
.
Stewlrl'I Wllllde .,_ lU&gt; a
18().dcgreo
left the road
and hit an IIPdrmeDL JOICI1 ,
vehicle Cj)lltinued 10111b iil ~

I

DON TATE·MOTORS, INC.

Wllltyllliccl.

· . A more receat visitor,. anplel·
IDJ hla own quest, circled tile
mountaiaa for tbree days. Lite
Corder, he uevtt reached diem, so
. lie oouid DOl c:oufirm dill God llvel
lbere.
But SIIIJIDY 'Baugh does. The
fomler' TCU fOOChallSial IIIII pro
Hall of Pamer owns a ranch that
hi!'*' up 10 d!e soulhenledle.

301 I~ lUll ~1., POIIEIOY, OHIO

614-992·6614, 1·100.137·1094
t '

•

llaun:
. llon..frl.
. . .110
811. t:OH:OO
Sill. 1:0M:OO

.

•!:!:;

.
---·--·- - ·.:f/rr- .. ·

v ··

·r

,.

. . - . .. .

~

,onPJ" 3)•

•,

1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE .......................................... $4,.

2 Door, V-11, loaded. Sharp!

Sllipped by rences. ravlllca or a
sate marked "Posted," Corder's
....,.-oad!IO lbe Double MOUD"W'

plus-year-old blilldill&amp;. Here worken IIDOOtla

coocrete for the haiWI•'• foudatloll (See ltory

1994 FORb ESCORT WAGON •.••••••••.•••••.••••••••••.•.•••••••• $1,01995

Auto., air, loaded, 22,000 miles.

l.olded, AUto., V-8, al;; more.

$33,582

CHECK OUT OUR SELECTION OF 1994 CHEVY FULL SIZE
PICKUPS, 4 &amp; 2 WD- REG.* EXT. ·cAB- SHOAT &amp; LONG BEDS
1990 OLDS SILHOUETTE VAN ....................................... $9,995

1991 Gt,IC S-15 PICKUP .•.•.••••••••••••••.••••••••••••.•.•.•••••••••••••$6,995

4)(4, llepeld.

V-8, Catypao green, leather, dual air
· IHip, Nilrthetar engine~

.s31,995
8ftiUCKS

$32,695
PRE-OWNED

s apeed, air, .rereo.

IIlii 1994 CAD. SEVILLE SLS

....

~

..

. . - ...-·

ond Ryan Tripp; mo.t orl&amp;i·
nel, Rr1t Juaica Slleeta and
IICOnd Larlua Cox; (U yean
old) prettieat, flrat Jobetla
Rodehaver and IICOIId Kayla
Eva01; u111Iut, ftrll Brandy
J,laker and seconcl Ryaia Doaaldson; most orislnal, firat
Jordan Shank end aecond
Lindsey Houser; (9·12 yean
old) prettiest, flrat Nicole
Davis and aecond Jeauetta
Hudson; Ullliest, flrat Carl
Musser and second Ceadac:e
Fetty; and most original, lint
Kelly Jobnston and aecond
Ryan Lemley. (Sentillel pllotos
by Gecqe Abate)

noilhbounci lane and hit a 1985

Chevrolelllllck, driven bY Brilll
M. Nolan, 19, addrcu unlr:nown.

bead Qll.

A passenger Ia Stewart's
truck. bli two-year-old arand·
daupler, J~ Aualin of Ashton. was lalrCD 10 'Cabell·HUDI·
iDJ10D Hospital by Valley EMS.
Jones was flowia 10 Cabell·
Hunllng10D by Healtb Net. Nei·
lher Auadn's nor Jones' coodl·
11on wa~avallable rrom .. ,hospital !Dday.
A1ao asalating at the sceae
were lhe·Pointl'll;aulllllld Val:.
ley fire deplrtlneJ!il. The ICd·
dent Ia IIIII under lnvesdpdou.
Stewart wu a welder for
AEP Centralized Planl Ma1Die11811CC.

1947. After serving In the House
for four yean, lie wu eleded to lbe
Ohio Senale. He represented lhe
17tb Dislrlct In ~ Ohio until
he wu belleD for lbe seat in 1986.
Dlirlns lhoae yean, he contin·
ued to be active In ~them Ohio
education, IOialliD&amp; more lhan 20
years as a school g!!~.!:al and
superinteodent He
superlnfaldcDt of lhe Lawrence County
Baud ol EdJeldoo In 197S.
Since the anJIOOIICCDI!'!II of his
deatb late Saturday, friends and
pollllcal colleagues tbrousbout
soatbeulem Ohio have thought
bldt on Collins' lhree dec:ades of
~bllc aervlce. He wu knowD as
"Old Oak," or simply "Oak,"
diiUulhout die dlslrict.
"lfe wu a fme state senator,"
Mel COUDty Ccxluniuioucr Fred
Hofr.... said Monday morning.
"He wu vcty intereated In Melp
CaDy, u well u die rest ol southeta Ohio."
"He wu always very responaive
l!ld reJpoDsible," Hoffman, who .
served u Middleport's may~¥ dur-

ing 12 years of Collins' senatorial where In southern Oblo, Dakley
term, added.
Collina wu oue of them."

"Oakley was lhe fmcst Republican politician and representative
Ibis area bu ever produced," Slid
Gallipolis auorney David T. Evans,
who served as cbairman of lhe
county' GOP durinll the latter pan
of Collinl' ICDure.
"He always remembered where
Ills roots were," Evans added.
"Maybe IIIey broke lhe mold wilh
him, but we are gplng 10 miss him."
Collins was petbaps best
remembered for his asgressivc,
pa'sonal style ol poUiical campaip
• and, lbc bundreds of promotiODal
comb&amp; lie blllde4 out dnriDB each
elcctiou.
"I don't know how he did it, but
he always remembered people's
• 11111101," E-lldded.
.
· Hoffman recalled tba~~
.political - - . Colllua
10 be mrywJaere.
"In every Cllllplip." lbe Mdai
amminioucr, wllo Slill arrlel one
of Collilll' combl, aaid, "if lbele
were tbree people tosether·
-.
- uy-.
~

'

Born in Weyland, Ky., Collh"
was raised on a dairy farm in
Lawrence County"a f\rahw Township. He grad111tocl from Pedro
Higli Scbool and received bla
•raching degree from Obio lJDiver.
slty.
.
.
After more lhiD a docade a •
cducalor. Col1ios Wll eleaed ., lbe
Ohio House of Repreaanalives ill
1946 and to llae SenaieJn 1950,
While ln.Columbus, he dlaired lhe
Senate Commitlee on Eci11C111011,
lhe Council on lDICnllle Governmeat, and od!cr COIIIIIIi~ai.
In addition, he llld lila family
have dpCIMed I COil .....I open.
tioD • Lawrence County aiDce die
1940s.
.
Collins was precedi4 'Ia ...
bY his wife, Jl!ll!ila ~ 0. •
iD May 1993. He Ia nrvtved 'Y
t'liO . - . one IJrotlatt, line ._,
lllllt'tiOr •wMreL '
. Scrviooa 1re Weotutday Ia llao

~=~= naOwapoa

,,

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