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•

By The Bend
·.

The Daily Sentinel
· Page-12

Friday, November 5, 1993

:.
I

STUDENTS OF THE MONTH • Pictured from lert to right are
Missy Darnell, Tricia Davis, Nancy Whaley and BiUie Bentley who
were selected as students of the month for October at Meigs Junior
High School for behavioral and academic reasons.

Group recognizes
breast cancer month
The October meeting of the month by purchasing the gold rose
Ageless ClassmateS was held at the . pin that was designated as the offiBob Evans Reslauran~ Rio Grande. cial mammogram/breast cancer
The group was seated at two awareness pin.
tables and the dinner was preceded
Secret sister cards, gifts and
by the group holding hands and goodies were exchanged and a
shon business meeting was held.
praying.
.
The group chose a new meeung
Attending were Carol Workdale. It will now meet on the sec- man, Connie Smith, Marjorie Walond Monday of each month at 6 burn, Sue Hayes, Shirley Tucker,
p.m. The November meeting will Peggy Edwards, Emma Lee
be held at Shoney's Restaurant m Kearns, Pat Allensworth , June
Maxey, Carol Roush and guest
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The group acknowledged Gcnny Wiggins, Ramona Knight
National Breast Cancer Awareness and Bernice Smith.

First
birthday
celebrated
Brfan Manley celebrated his
first binhday recently with a

pany

given by his parents Roger and
Margie Manley.
A Thomas the. Tank Engine
cake was served with ice cream,
chips and Kool-Aid. Garnes were
played with prizes going to Erica
. Haning, Maria Meadows and Kayla
Smith.
Others auendin~ and presenting
gifts were his stster, Chalsie;
grandparents Roger and Connie
Manley; grandmothers Ada
McHaffie and Margaret Nunn;
Dave and Becky Lynch, Trish
McHaffie, Charles, Dianna, Kevin
and Cody Smith, Timmy Dexter,
· Johnny and Nildd Roush and Cathy
Haning.
Sending gifts were Thurman

Smith, Ivan and Helen Myers, John
and Betty Roush, Chris Lane, Ted
and Crystal Dexter, Dave, Albena,
Andy, Beth and Hannah Hysell,
Tom, Connie, Tommy and Tricia
Roush, Christopher Smith and
Brandon and Raben Grover.

Woodmen benefit UNICEF
At the Modern Woodmen of
America Camp 10900 Halloween
masquerade pany, the Woodmen's
Creed Service was led by Ed Russell, Martha Elliott and John
Breedlove, all of Coolville. The
service included a "Silver" offering
for UNICEF.
Costume prizes were won by
Kim Cowdrey , Garnet Griffen,
Clint and Karen McPherson, Josh
and Gloria Gilbert, all of Coolville.
Games and contests featured Halloween safety tips and the meaning
· of giving to needy children around.

the world through UNICEF donations.
Door and contest prizes were
won by Ruth Hollman, Paul
McPherson, Juanita Litteral, Milford Griffin, all of Coolville and
Kaitlyn Cunningham, Parkersburg,
W.Va. ·
Camp 10900, MW A, will sponsor a matching fund smorgasbord
dinner for the benefit of Torch
Food Pantry, at Torch Community
Building on Nov. 6 from 4 to 8
p.m. Profits of the dinner, up to
$1250 will be matched by Modem
Woodmen of America.

Newspaper loses pay battle, judge
says reporters not professionals
By FRANK BAKER
Associated Pres Writer
CONCORD, N.H . (AP)
Newspaper reporterS and photographers are not professionals under
federal labor law and are entitled to
overtime, a federal judge ruled in
ordering The Concord Monitor to
. pay $21 ,000.
.
U.S. District Judge Shane
Devine said in the 12-year-old case
that the newspaper did not willfully
violate the law, but must pay 12
former and current employees for
· bilck overtime.
Tbe U.S. Depanment of Labor
filed a complaint accusing the
Monitor of pressuring employees
into not fil ing for overtime from
: . 1973 to 1980. The newspaper
· · arped tliat about 30 r:porten and
: ' pholpgraphets included m the com,· plaint were professionals exempt
• ~ &lt; from the law.
' •, ,. ·
'The law says editorial writers,
: ; j columnists and other "top-flight"
writers or anilyticitl or interpreta·
· live articles are professionals ~d
thUS ineligible for overtime. .
&gt; -' "There is no qliCstion but that
, · .Gme of the work product of the
~ , -loyces presented ~ evidence at

.

"l' ' . ;
'~

~

'

trial demonstrated creativity. invention, imagination and talent,"
Devine wrole in Wednesday's ruling, " but the bulk of such evidence
is not or this ilk.·'
"We were told to alter time
slips." said Margaret Bunon, a former Monitor reporter working for
the Cape Cod (Mass.) Times. "We
were told to find our own ways of
keeping overtime down and then
given assignments that required
overtime. How willful is that?"
Bunon will receive $99.76.
A former Monitor photographer
was awarded· more than $4,100,
and two former reporterS more than
$3,300 each.
The newspaper said its repcll'lelS
were professionals and therefore
exempt from the 1934 Pair Labor
Standalds Act. The act labels most
reporters, editors and photogra,
phers non-professionals and there·
fore eligible for overtime after 40
hours of work.
The Monitor's lawyer, Terry
Shumaker, said Thursday be still
believes reporters and photogra'
phcrs are professionals. The news·
paper has not decided if it will
appeal.

I" ' "''

·

Ann

·

111yway. Its about the snide remarks
from women who were critical of
the lady who "spoiled" hc:r husband
by bringing him a soft drink.
I know a man who gets up at 6
a.m. and fixes his wife breakfast
He pays the rent, the electric bill,
the phone bill and the cable TV bill.
He hires a service agency to do the
heavy household work. He does the
marketing and brings home steala,
lobsters, oysters, filet mignon, New
Zealand lamb, Norwegian salmon
and English pheasanL
He has given his wife a beautiful
air-COnditioned car and three credit
cards. for gas. He pays an account·
ant to do their taxes. He sits in as a
fourth for bridge when ooe or the
regulars can't make it He has given

know the man weU. I am he. - A
HAPPY HUSBAND IN MOUNT
ROYAL, QUEBEC
DEAR MOUNT ROYAL: I
wouldn't dare print your name. You'd
be mobbed by women from all
comers of the earth. Too bad you
didn't !ell us why your wife merits
such fabulous trealmenL
I'm not sure it's a .compliment to
be called by the name of a goat even Eisenhower's. But thanks for
letting us know that Ozzie and
Harriet are alive and well and living
in Quebec.
Dear Ann Landers: Neither I nor
my husband smoke. My hUsband and
I are in the military and can get
cigarettes at half price in the
commissary. My mother asks us to
buy cigarettes for her. We're not

should I do, Ann? - HONOLULU
SALLY
DEAR SALLY: Keep saying no.
. By this lime, we all kllow that
cigarcaea can kill YQU. That dueat,
plus breaking the ru.lca of the
commissary, is enougb to justify
your saying, "Sorry, Mom. No
more. • Crank up your cowage, and
doitl

to ·death. The heroine is abducled,

·slapped around , then stalked
through the desert by a bowhunler.
That's C, C, B, A, C.
By the end of the hour, Hen drickson has counted 15 acts of
violence. She puts down her pencil.
"I didn't realize how much I
overlooked," she said.
Concordia, across the stale line
from Far~o in Moorhead, Minn ., is
conducung the study for Sen.
Byron Dorgan, D-N.D., sponsor of
a bill that would require the Federal
Communications Commission to
issue a quanerly repon card on TV
violence.
Each volunteer rated a threehour segment of programs taped
between Sept. 28 and Oct. 4. The
ratings were completed Tuesday
and sample report cards are expected within two months.
"I hope this study will demonstrate that it £all be done and that it
should be done," Dor$an said.
At a Senate heanng Oct. 20,
Allorney General Janet Reno

warned ihat the government will
intervene if the TV industry
doesn't lake steps to curb violence
on television.
The Concordia study defines
violence as the " deliberate and
hostile use of overt force by one
individual against another." a standard set by the National Coalition
on Television Violence.
An "A" covers aggression that
inflicts minor or momenlary pain:
pushin~. grabbing, spanking, spit·
ting, mtld slapping.
A " B" is for stronger violence
that still lacks deadly force.
A "C" is for acts in which a
character clearly intends to kill,
maim or incapacitate. Shooting,
stran~ling, stabbing, poisoning ,
bombmg, hanging, torture and rape
are covered.
Martin Fnmks, Washington vice
president for CBS, said Dorgan's
bill and all the other anti-violence
legislation pending before
Congress have the same problem:
They would require subjective

•
·: tmtsHolzer's CEO sees need for health care reform
By TAMES J.ONG

TJmn=SC!JdpeJ Staft
GAlLIPOLIS · If
have ttouble
understanding why the United StaleS
needs to reform its system or health
care, imagine being president of a
• hospital and knowing that you're going to lose $20 million each year in
un(!OIIected fees.
Charles Adkins, president or Holzer
Medical Center, expects many
changes ill detail before health care
reform legislation cixnes about, but
be is certain of one thing: the system
that drains 13 percent or the GNP
needs an ovtthaul.
Seen from HMC's perspective, all
the concern over reform makes more
sense.
"At our bospitallasi year we recog-

Drugs are everywhere. They're
easy 10 get, easy 10 use and even
easier to get hooked on./f you have
questions about drugs, you llt!td Ann
Landers' boolclet, '7he Lowdown on
Dope. • Selld a se/f-addrused,long,
business-siu tnWilope and a check
or money ordu for $3.6S (this ill·
eludes postage alld lloMUng) to:
Lowdown, c/o Ann Uwltrs, P.O.

you

Box II562. Chicago. Ill. 606/l -

0562. (In CIUilJda, selld $4.45.)

judginents about what is violent.
" Define violence," said Franks,
recalling the Senale hearing, during
which the lawmakers themselves
could not agree on a defmition.
Hendrickson, who lives in Melrose, Minn., said sbe volunteered
" because in no way, shape or Conn
do I want censorship in television
or any media. But I don't think
there's anything wrong with a rating syslem."
.
"The feedback that's coming
back from students was that they
hadn't really watched television
with their eyes open," said psychology professor Mark Covey,
coordinator of the project.
CBS' Franks said Dorgan's bill
would unfairly target advertisersup)??.ned lelevision.
'If advertisers were intimidaled
into not showing what was interpreted as objectionable progqtm·
ming, that may get it off the networks," he said. "Does it get It off
the·independent channels·or cable?
No.''

By JENNIFER DIXON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
Social Security Administration,
under pressure to do a better job
·answering its telephones, is looking
behind bars for a low-cost way of
handling the 80 million calls it gets
each year.
The agency said Thursday il is
considering using federal prisoners
to Lake down callers' recorded
requests for forms and applications.
The prisoners would not deal
directly with callers and they
wouldn't have access to Social
Security records, spokesman Phil
Gambino said.
Social Security acknowledges
Lhal it is not able to cope with the
volume of calls it receives and that
it puts many of them on hold.
.
"SSA is committed to providing
world-class lelephone service to the
American public," said Gambino.
"To accomplish this self-imposed

goal, within.the current fiSCal. environment, we must think creatively." ·
One option, he said, is contracting out some of the agency's telephone work to the Federal .Bureau
of Prisons, which pays working
prisoners between 42 .cents and
$1.05 an hour.
The inmates would be used to
transcribe recorded messages left
by callers · who request simple
forms and applications. Gambino
said the plan would free Social
Security workers to respond to
callers with more complex
requests.
"The privacy of SSA records
would be ~ully protected with no
access .~vatlabl_e to non-SSA per. sonnel, Gambtno S81d.
A spokest:nan for. th.e Federal
Bureau of Pr•sons, Dan tel Dunf!e.
S31d the agency has gtven Soctal
Security a "general proposal" to
do some telephone work but that

CONSTRIJCTIO
NT

the negotiations are "very prelimi·
nary."
The Baltimore Sun ftrst reported
Social Security's plans Thursday.
Federal prisoners are used elsewhere. In factories around the
country inmateS produce office furniture, bedding, textiles, brushes
and brooms, and they also work in
data enlry, printing optics and electronics, Dunne said.
Just putting callers to the tollfree line on hold cost the agency
$11.5 million during 1991, according to an internal agency audiL
In Seplem ber, a report from the
inspector general or the Health and
Human Services Department said
that getting through to the 800

number "oflen is not easy, which
has become a major problem for
SSA, and more importantly the
calling public."
" Nearly from its inception, the
800 number has been a source of
public comrlaints regarding high
busy signa rates and long hold
times," the report said.
Social Security took public
information phones out of its field
offices in the late 1980s when it
installed the toll-free number as
part of a restrocturing that cut its
work force by 21 percent
Congress demanded that callers
be allowed to contact their local
Social Security offices, and the
agency eventually relisted the local
ohone numbers.

THE KIND
OF FOOD
THAT
BUILT

ERICAO
/

Let Ctruclf WIIW«t
ShoW Yaq HUN Jb .5!we Ttrousancls
In Jtllllllry, February lint/. Mllrch
Purchase Your New Home Now. Take Delivery of Your
'New Horne Between January 1st and March 31st, 1994
and Receive Your Special Willter Construction Discount.

Chuck Wingett; Builder
Comer of Rt. 50 and Carol l.li. • Athens, Ohio
Call 592-4119,592-3749 or 698.:.ta404'

Dnllllk',Bulldl!r
'Homu Sold Umlu Fp!HA Do Not Qotal/6-

We've got your hearty dinners right here. Pot roau. Meatloaf.
Country Fried Stea k . Se rved with your choice of two vegetables,
fresh bread . AU-You-Care- To -Eat Soup , Salad &amp; Frui.' Bar.
AUf or one low price.

LOW

'Dr. Death' on hunger strike, AS

'above and beyond'· Bl

College students recruited to rate TV violence
By MARILYNN WHEELER
Associated Press Writer
FARGO, N. D~ (AP) - A slap
across the face is violent, but not
life-threalening. Amy Hendrickson
gives it WI "A."
Two men .are shot. Deadly force
gets 11 C's."
Hendricl&lt;son is one of 120 Concordia College students who volunteered to rate violence on television
during a week's worth of primetime programming as part of a
study for a U.S. senator.
It is a revealing exercise.
"I thought, 'How many violent
acts probably occur in half an
hour? Oh, probably one, when
somebody gets blown ~way , "' said
Hendrickson, 20.
She is nmed in to a CBS madefor-television movie, "River of
Rage." The heroine. played by
Victoria Principal, is on a rafting
trip with her boyfriend.
At the 20-minute mark, the
rafters are set upon by a pack of
drog'· dealing desperados . The
boyfriend and river guide are shot

IU40

three stories of service

which entitles suppoaed 10 btiy · cipn:aa ill the
her to alarge Ufe income and agreat commiaary for ,other dlltl penona1
use. but more imponant il that Mom
deal of cash.
should
really quit itnoldng.
All this by a man who WQiked his ·
When I ay "''m not buying you
way through llllhooi while supporting his parenll. He knows his wife any more cigareltell• abe yells, •All
Is a jewel and takes pleasure in the things I've dcne for you IOOs,
showing her how much he &amp;ppm:i· and you won~ do this for mel" Sbe
ales hc:r. He calls her KriKri after makes nle feel like a heel. Wlw

L--------~........1 Eisenhower's white Chinese goat. I

--···-----

Devils win SEO. grid title, C2

WW 11, Korea; Vietnam •

~a COpy of his will,

Federal prisoners may help social security cope with phones
BRIAN MANLEY

\loll~ Ill&lt; 1&lt;11&lt; r

'

Indulgent husband appreciates wife
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
17-year-old high scboo1 senior. I
ae~:identally got my girlfriend
pegnanL Here's the cau:h: We never
act~~ally engaged in sexual
inten:ourse. As a mauer of fact. we
IU'e both virgins.
Please tdl your rQdm that any ·
ejaculation, whether directly within
or outside the female, can lead to
pregnancy. Semen ejected outside of
the woman's body can drip into her
body and fertilize the ovum.
Although this is an uncommon
occurrence, I now know from
experience that it can happen.
I want to do everything I can to
inform other tcen-agm of this risk.
The media is saturated with
messages concerning teen-age sex
and pregnancy, but instead of
telling teens to use a condom,
parents should remind their kids that
e&gt;en what may seem like harmless
foreplay or "fooling around" can lead
to an unwanted pregnancy . ..
BUFFALO, N.Y.
DEAR BUFFALO: You told them
·· 8nd very effectively. Thank you.
Dear Ann Landers: I'm awfully
late with this, but I hope you print it

••

2,000 more
Ohio coal
mining jobs
in jeopardy
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
stale will lose 1,500 to 2,000 more
coal mining jobs over the next two
years, costing Ohio's economy $1.7
billion annuOhlocoaiproduc- ally,amining
tlopwu5Smilllon .association
tou ill 1970 and Is leader said.
Theprob- .
expected to be lems arise as
· ~1-;t:'~" ~~ , utilities ll:Y to
toilftbls year.
meet tougher
fed«al regu·
~ql!S •. S)Yitchlng from the state's
ttigll-ilttlAtr cOal 10 tow-sulfur coul
produced elsewliere, said. Neal
Tostenson,JXe~ideilloftheOhioMin­

ing and Reclamation Association.
''If~ stronglr that people underrale the economte impact that Ohio
coal has," TostenSOn said.
Coalproducti(lll was 55 million tons
in I970andisexpectedtobeabout28
million toos this year. Tostenson said
it could fall to about 17.5 million
within two years.
The stale had 20,000 coal mining
jobs in 1970atthepea.kofproduction.

By TOM BAIJM .

Associated Prep Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - Ross
Perot and the White House traded
insults all day Friday, then settled
on lemls for an exttaordinary 90minule debale between the Texas
billionaire and Vice President AI
Gore.
The two will face off at 9 p.m.
EST Tuesday on CNN's "Lany
King Live" to debale the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
Theywiltalaotakepboned·ill~

lions.
Administration officials said.the
TV confrontation with Pr!lsident
Clillton'sf&lt;ntercampaignrival was·
necessary in a bid to drum up support. The meamre is still far short of
the backing needed for passage in a
Nov. 17 House vote.
White House spokesman Mark
Gearan said that time and fonnat
were nailed down in a lale·after·
noon conference call among Perot,
White House counselor David
Gergen and Cable News Network
president Tom Johnson.
. "The Titanic is sinking and

nized that 30 percent of our budget
was not going to becollceted," Adkins
says. This amounts to about $20 million lost in operating revenue.
Contractual adjustment! (hospital
terminology for the difference be·
tween ·what is charged and what is
actually paid by Medicare and Medicaid) are one of the biggest ways in
which money is losL On a $100 service, Adldns said, HMC might only
receive$76 from Medicare.Pay menu
are sometimes even less than the cost
of giving care.
"How would you like to run a business knowing a third of your charges
are not going to be collected?" he
says.
Patients who won't pay their bills
(bad debts) and people whoean 't pay

their biDs (charity care) help complete the 30 percent defiCit And the
problem Is com- - - - - --f
~ when hos"The .bigpttals ~ forced to gest thing in
charge msurance
•
. ,
companies suffi· C l 1 11 t 0 n s
ciently to make up health care
for these dangerous package is
losses,Adldnssays. that we're go~
''The president's •
plan does not cor- mg to have to
rectthat,"headds. change our
Clinton's pro- healthcanal·
posal, Adkins says, titruhs."
presents both prob- -:-:--:-:---1
lems and opponunities. And with actuallegislation at least a year abead, it
is hard to talk in specifiCs.
Continued on page A-2

HMC President
Charles .Adkins

EST Tues.my
-'- on CNN's
"Larry King Live" to de·
bate the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
They will take phone-in

they're despera~e," Perot declared.
Each side accused the other or try·
ingtobackout - agreeingtocometo
Tampa, Fla., on Sunday but disagreeingonjustabouteverythingelse.
Perot proposed that the debate be
held at a previously scheduled Perot
rally 81 the stale fairgrounds.
King said Friday afternoon that be
had talked to Perot in the morning.
"Ross said he'd be
about it,

ti"

buthewouldliketodoitmfion,LI·']of;~,~~;;~;;;;;~i;~~~.·~~=catelf.
- "=·~i:~~·"-Joluv
-~o::n:s:.Mct.aughlin's·'Onc'llll
:::::·::::=::--::=;;=::=:==:;:::;;;:::;:;IJ
irl'"'
'· ,, ·

this.
Administration officials conceded
that giving Perot a debale platfonn to
denotuice the pact would cany a risk.
They acknowledged Clinton remains
far behind in votes and needs something dramatic to try to build public
support. A House voto is scheduled
for Nov. I7.
Clinton is40or more votes short. A
heavy While House lobbying effort
over the past few days has produced
few converts.
· Perot and.organized labor con lend
the pact would cost hundreds of thousands of U.S. jobs.

largely
when he's been
questioned," Clinton said during an
Oval Office conference call to ranchers and farmers around the counlry.
"I think the vice president will do just
fme. I've got a lot of confidence in
him."
Some,including While House aides
speaking privately, suggested that
Gore could be dominated by Perot.
"He'sgoingtokiliGore,"saidEd
Rollins, a veleran Republican operalive who briefly worked for Perot's
1992 independent presidential campaign.
Rollinswasinlerviewedonthesyndi·

One."
Perot said there should be three
debaleS: Sunday at 2 P·'R: in Tampa,
Wednesday in Detroit arid Nov. 14 in
Seatde.
•
Said Gore: " I don't want togo to a
rally filled with 20,000people on one
side of the issue . ... We want a neutral
format and a neutral place." ·
Gore's chief of staff, Jack: Quinn,
said the vice president would go to
Tampa in any event on Sunday.
Perot, 81 his Dallas office, said:
"They made the challenge and now
they're scared to death. The question
is now, 'How do we wriggle out of

He said he would be at the fair.
gro\IDds in Tarnpa'at 2 p.m.
And he invited both Gore and
Clinton to show up "and I'll lake
them two-to-one."
In his conference call to farmers
andrancbersinMontana,Missouri,
NortbCarolina,lllinois,Kansasand
Texas, Clinton said that the agree.
ment would open new marlcets to
U.S. agricultural goods.
And the White House even sent
the popular former chainnan of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, Colin PoweU~
to the microphones outside the
While House to endorse the pacL

Harrison named Meigs County 'Person of the Year'
POMEROY· Phil Harrison of Pomeroy, Meigs County
person of the year, will be recognized when 12communities throughoutsoutheasrem Ohio present theirpersorwof
the year at the 25th annual Southeastern Ohio Regional
Council Annual Penon of the Year Banquet at the Ohio
University Inn on Thursday.
The honorees come from 10 counties and were nominaled by local committees and the SEORC. The award
winners h~ve distir1guished themselves as leaders in their
communities and are being honored for their efforts in the
industrial and economic development of their communities and s6utheastem Ohio, said Robert L. "Bob" Evans,
ptelident of the SEORC.
.
·The·honorees have given of themselve$ so that other
citizens of the region might enjoy a betler standard of
living, he added.
Bernard Fultz, an attorney from Meigs County, will act
as maswof ceremonies for theevenL The hospitality hour
begins at 5:30p.m. followed by the banquet at 6:30.

valuable basketball player
"This award goes to
.
.
someone who is commitled "Thisawtudgoes to someone wlw is commined in southeaslem Ohio basketball All Stale.
to Meigs County and has
I
'
to
Meigs
County
and
lws
brought
jobs
to
the
After graduating from
broughtjobs to the county,"
Pomeroy High School in
said Pultz.
1960. Harrison atlended
Harrison is pan owner of county."
Attorney Bernard Fultz Bethany College in
PDK Construction Inc. of
Banquet
MC graduated
Bethany, inW.Va.,
anda
Pomeroy which employeeS _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _SEORC
___
......;___
1964 with
55..(]0 people, Fultz said.
"Most of the employees are Meigs County residents," bachelor of arts degree in education with a minor in
Fultz said. ''This, coupled with Harrison's involvement in economics.
youth athletics and scholarships, is why .Harrison was
Remaining active in athletics, while at Bethany College
selected as our person of the year."
Harrison was selected three times to the All Conference
About Harrison
Team in basketball and named Most Valuable Player in
Phil Harrison wasbomMay27,1942, inPomeroy,son 1964. He was also named outstanding senior athlele,
of Olen and Louise Harrison of Pomeroy,
holl018ble mention All American and was inducted into
He distinguished himself in scholarship and athletics the Bethany College Athletic Hall of Fame in 1981.
while a student at Pomeroy High SChool where he was a
Afler graduation, Harrison worked for American Oil
member of the National Honor Society and named most Company in Baltimore, M.D., from 1964-1967, St. Regis

Attorneys-negotiate
to end Fife stalemate
case against Robert D. Fife will not go to a grand jury
arnl~~~=~~a~~ceording to Meigs Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes.
take this case to the grand jury, we want to go before the grand
jury ready for trial," he said Friday morning. "If we file charges, we'll start with
a clean slate."
·
·
Meanwhile, attorneys representing' both sides are negotiating to end the
stalemale SIIJIOUDding Fife's pi~:~~ agreement.
Robert D: rue or Middleport was arrested July 9 on two counts of receiving
stolen property and one count or traffiCking in foOd stamps.
He pleaded guilty to the charges three daySIIaler in the Meigs County Court
of Common Pleas.
l.Jn~pnvisions or the original plea bargain, Fife agreed to forfeit approxi-'
mately SIBS,OOOandabout 1,540rifleS, shotgullsandhandguns seized from his
South Third Avenue hoiDe ilnd business to the Law Enf(Xcement Trust Fund
where they Wete to be distributed to the Meigs County l'r!lsecutor's Office and
the Meigs County Sherifrs Department.
On ()cL 15, Fife Silled be would not comply with the forfeituro agreernenL.
At that point, the forfeiture proceedings were dismissed without prejudice,
meaning they may ftled again at a latet dale.
At the time, Meigs Prosecuting Aitorney John Lentes indicated criminal
charges would continue agailtst Fife.
"We're in negotiations," saici.David Baeror Albany, oneofFife's attorneys.
"We hope to get into a beuer f.•logue lnd come to the table and see what
Cont DueG OD p8Je A2

Paper Company in Columbus from 19671971 and the Ben Tom
CO!pollltion ill Columbus and Pomeroy from
1971-1985.
In 1985, Harrison
slaned with PDK Con·
struction Inc: of
Pomeroy as pan owner.
PDK Construction
Inc. is in the highway
construction business ~,;;;;;;;;~Pb;iill:'ii:;;~;-==::.1
erecting guardmil, signs
and fencing. The company presently employs 8ppioximarely 55..(]0 employees.
He is married to the former Paulette Hudson ofPomcroy.
They have two sons, Trevor, 81 home, and Rodd, Who is
Contiaued 011 Pile A·l

News capsules
Reich joins coal negotiations
CHARLESTON; W.Va. (AP) - U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich met with both sides ill the.nation's
coal strike to urge a settlement and special mediator Bill
Useey said Friday be was optimistic.
"Secretary Reich implored the parties to work togethtl ill good faith to bring this unfortunate situation to
an ilnmediate conclusion,'' Usery said.
USery said he is optimistic an,qreement can be
reached soon, ''based primarily on the commiunent and
seriousness which both sides have demonstrated since

their return.'.'
Negotiations between the United Mine Workers and
the Bituminous Coal Operator's ..Association resumed
Wednesday in WashingtOn, D.C. Usery on Oct. 22
atUlOIIllCCd talks had broken off because an agreement
wasn't possible at the time.
Uiery said difficult issues still need to be resolved, be
he did not elalxnte. ·
"The ta11cs have continued almost nonstop since their
resumptiop,"hesaid.N'egotiationswillcontinuethrough
the weekend, hC said.
· While meeting with Usery and negotiaturs on Thun•
day, Reich e~tpressed his concema for the hardships
suffeted by all involved, Usery $aid.

Jobless rate
drops 0.7%
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio's unemployment ra1e
dropped 0.7 percentage point
in October, despite an increase in the national rate,
according to Labor Depanmentfiguresreleasedl'riday.
The Ohio rale decrea3ed to
6.6 pen:ent from 7.3 percent
the month before, the Labor
DeparUnent said.
Nationally, the liJIW'C for
October was 6.8 peltelll, up
from 6.7 percent ill September and August.
Labor ~nt off'teills
said more people fOUtldjobs,
but the national rate increased because more jobless
Americans were encouraged enough about tbe economy
to ~c looting for work.
OBES spokesman Briln Baker said the number of
employed Ohioans increased to 5.09 million in October.

Today's

.10 Sections . 180 .. .....
Business
Calendars
Classineds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituarlts
Akln11be River
Spp;rts
.Weather

-

Fred Crow

Bob HOcf!kb

CltarJcDc uO,.nirh

KcJbtPhem
llm.sUos '

Dl&amp;S
116&amp;5
Dl-7
(JIMI1

A6
A3
AI

81
(:1-1 .

.u ,

,t4_·
.. "'

Ia
M·
11

�November 7, 1993

Tri-County Briefs:---. Mason commission to run jail food service :~\

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Nov. 7
. Accu· Weather• forecast for

conditions and

MICH.

•

I Toledol36" I

W. VA.

Sunny skies set to reappear
By Tbe Associated Press
Snow flurries expected on Sat·
urday were expected to linger in
extreme northeastern Ohio Satur·
day nigh&amp;, accumulating an inch or

40.

two.

. 'Flurries were to end Saturday
night elsewhere and skies were
expected to clear over the western
counties toward morning. Lows
were in the 20s.
'It will be sunny over most of
Ohio today. e~ partly cloudy in
the northeasL Highs will lie 35 to

The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 77 in 1975. The record
low was 20 in 1953.
Sunrise today was 81 7:08am.
Extended Forecast
Monday-Wednesday:
Fair Monday. Highs 40 to 45 .
Lows 25 to 30. Tuesday, a chance
of rain or snow. Hi~hs around .40.
Lows 25 to 30. Fall Wednesday.
Highs 35 to 40. Lows 20 to 25.

Attorneys negotiate
to end Fife stalemate
Continued from page Al
happens."
Whether or not Fife reneged on his
plea agreement is a legal ,issue that
may Deed to be raolved, he added.
Len tea .said he wanted to raolve
thecaseassoonaspossibleandpointed
:out several reasons.
: F'USl, he. is reluctani to send Fife
:and his wife to prison due to their age
·and health problems.
: "Any sentence could be a life sen·
:u:nce," he explained.
: "They do have to be punished," he
•added. "His (Fife's) thoughts were
:that he didn't have to spend any time
:or money. It doesn't work thai way."
: "l'lllive up to my bargains only if
·they live up to theirs."
: Second,Lenteswantstoretmnsome
:or the items claimed to their rightful
•owncr.J as soon as possible.
• "I have sympathy for the people
:who pawned items with Fife. They
:are victims too," Lentes said.
• "rlfe charged them interest he
:wasn't allowed," Lentes explained.
· Lentes said local, state and federal
proceeding could take up to four years
·to complete during which time the
:items confiscated from Fife would
have to be held as evidence.
: :·weare.tryingtokeepthefuurms

oiled and maintained," Lentes said.
"Deer season is coming up and some
of the people want their guns back."
Locally, nothing is pending regard·
ing the case at this time... civil or
criminal, Lentes said.
However, other agencies are taking
interest in the case.
Lentes.said federal prosecutors are
investigating the case as regards to
income tax and possible racketeering
violati&lt;~ns.
.
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms has taken a preliminary
look at the guns confiscated and de·
termined many of the guns were fueanns that had been reported as stolen,
he added.
In addition, a report has been made
to lhe Internal Revenue Service,
Lentes said.
"We got a call from them (the IRS)
and they are waiting to see what happens," he commented.
If Fife reconsiders, Lentes commented he would go along with the
original plea agreement: "If he carne
in today, we'd have a hearing immediately so people could get their be·
' longings back,''
It could talce three to four years for
people to gel their belongings back if
the case goes to trial, he said.

Coatlued from page Al
However, Holzer's, top offiCial is
pleased to note that the final product
ofhealth care reform is almost certain
to place a heavy emphasis on local
decision making: the national con·
ctmovercOstand access will become
equally impmtant on the local level.
"Anything and everything that has
to do with health care now and in the
future ·we along with the other area
providers want to have a voice in so
that we may protect the best interests
of our.patients," he says.
According to Adkins, HMCisready
for this challenge- and needs to be
if it will retain its traditional stablS as
the region's top provider. The hospi·
tal is the only designated rural referral
center serving Gallia, Jackson, Meigs
and Mason counties- one must drive
an hour before reaching another pri·
mary care hospital with the capabili·
ties and sophistication of HMC.
"We continue to plan that to the
extent that health care can .be provided in the area we will be among the
major providers," Adkins says. "My
obligation i~ to see that Holzer Medi·
cal Center survives reganpess of
health care refonn. That's what we
call the Holzer herirage."
Part of this plan includes forming
alliances to help keep the costs of
health care down, which will mean
sharing services and technology in
order to streamline the system.
Adkins asks what if: "there were
only one mammography unit in the
area? Naturally thai would reduce
costs, but its not convenient to the
patient"

Giuliani is bringing change to C1ty
H"'l but don't mess with "Tile
BuilL"
,.. ' That Ruth_
,.
House
' The mayor-elect, who won a
tiiht race last week; is·an avid YanUes fan who doesn't like the idea
o( moving the team to greener pas·

tures.

: "I want to work very closely
wldl the borough president to ·make
certain thai we 1tcep the Yankees in
t11i1 Bronx," Giuliani said Friday.
•

(1)81'5 SJUII)
f»V.bllabed each Sullday, 125 Third Ave.,
a.tHpollo, Oblo, b)'
Oblci Valley Publillliaa
Co-~la. ""· S&lt;cood ..........
t&amp;e pold o1 OalHpolla, Olllo 4!63!. e-.d "
McaAd ct• aUlD I nwt« • Ponwoy.' Ohio, _

u..

pP.tom.e.

.

r.i.mb.r. Tba AHocillted Prea, &amp;Dd the Ohio

Nrew..,.... .Auoclltiaa, Nadoul Ad¥atllia&amp;

R!=Pfaentalte.;: Bruham Newapapet Sales,

7~3 Tblrd A,..•\l•, New Yort, New Ycrk

111017.

:.

SUNDAY ONLY
&amp;UISCRIPilON MUS
a7 c.mo.wM_R_

•

SINGLICOPY

•,

d.
- ....................................................
SIOJ
Qolo y. ............................
$46.10
J..... _

•

_ ..

mea

. . ,......... ............ - ..............--SI.OO

,.....-GIW!Ior....a•• .,., s•••

1{. Mo&lt;ttpuou by .,.U -ttod 11 .,..
~:"
will oo~• nopoojil. 1W
M
a adl ~ Olfl'iln,
~
JWI,QI!CIIf'I'IONI

·' Yw....:.............................................
...... 0017
a.
$47...
._,. ...o~~w ...........................................m19
;;
M.UL~~~

' ·~

...... c-.,

.

,.1,

IJ - ......... - ..........--.................SZl ...

26 ................._....... - ......:....... - ..........

Jt---.
. .·~·-·--. ·---..·---76 .
....-Cooo~J

I ) -................. _.............. - ......... .$2!AO .
16.- ·--·-"''"'"'""'''t4$JO •
,.,.,...................
___ ..._...-~·...-,..JN.AO
,j

I

•

for Adults

Each and everyone of us, at some time In our lives, may
need someone to share our burdens with;..to help us
solve problems so that we can fully enjoy and partlci·
'
.
pate in our day to day routines. Early intervention can
prevent small problems from ~coming overwhelming
ones.
Services Offered:
1. Outpatient Clinic
3. Crisisline
2. The Residential Crisis 4. Adull Community Training
Intervention Center
5. Case Management

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man was issued a summons Friday to appear in Gallipolis Municipal Courl, cit~ police reported.
Patrie L. Hawley, 18, 126· 1/2 Third Ave., Gallipolis, was
ordered to coun to answer a charge of underage consumption.

GALLIPOLIS - Due to Veterans Day falling on its regular
meetinl! date, the Gallia County Board of Commissioners has
moved Its meeting this week up from Thursday to Tuesday.

GALLIPOLIS - The Women Infants and Children program is
currently accepting applications for services.
To be eligible, a person must:
•be female who is currently breast feeding, pregnant or just had a
baby; or
•be an infant up to one year old ar a child up to five years old;
and
•submit an application that meets income guidelines. For example, a family of two must have an untaxed monthly income equal to
or less than $1,454.
WTC is a nutritional program sponsored by USDA that provides
supplemental foods such as milk, eggs, cheese, juice, cereal and
iron fortified il!(!¥11 fonnula. Persons wishing to apply should come
to the WIC office· in the basement of the courthouse or call 4464612, extension 302.

Call Toll Frea1·800·492·5837(Ask for Extension 60)
for free brochuru or visit our model home centaf

6061st. Ave. South
(U.S. Hwy. 25 E)
Ph: 3041727·2296

Open 7 Oaya a Week. Weekend Hour&amp; · Sal. 8 A.M. lo 8 P.M.. Sun. 1 P.M. to 6 P.M
CRC 0523.7'8 WI/ 001536.

GALLIPOLIS - Bossard Memorial Library will be closed
Thursday in observance of Veterans Day. The library will also be
closed until noon Nov. 18 for an employee in-service.

'The Ohio Va·lley Bank

Truck damaged in blaze
SALEM CENTER- A 1987 Chevrolet S-10 pickup truck
owned by Charles W. Warth Jr. of Rose Hill, Pomeroy, was heavily
damaged when it caught fm: Friday.
Warth was nonhbound on Parker Run Road in Salem Township
when he smelled smoke, according to a report from ~eigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby. He stopped and discovered his truck was
on fire.
The Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department responded to
ihe scene. No injuries were reported.

Federal Reserve District No. 4
of Gallipolis, GaUia County, In the State of Ohio at the clotle of bush- on September JO, 1993.
ASSETS

Casb and balance&lt; duo from depository inslituliolli:
a. Noninteresl-be\lring balances and currency and coin .......................................... ......................... 5,725,000.00
b. Interesl-bearing balances.......................................................... ..................................... ................ 3,592,000.00
Securities ............................................................ :........................................................ ....................... 85,011,000.00
Federal funds sold &amp; lleCillilies purchased under agreements
to resell in domestic officea of the bank &amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries &amp; in ffil's:
Federal funds sold ..................................................................... .................................................... l3,4?5,000.00
Lo11111Uld leue finllliCinB rec:eivablea:
Loana and leuea, net of unearned incomo .................................................. l81,313,000.00
LESS: Allow~~DCC for loan and lease losses .......................,............................ I ,650,000.00
Loan~ 111d leuea, not of unearned income,
ollowiUICC, and reaerve ............................ ....................................................................................... l79,663,WO.OO
Premises and fixed wetJ (including capitalized leases) ..................................................................... .5,470,000.00
Olber real estate owned ....................................................................................................:........................ 25,000.00
lnlangible assets ....................................................................................................................................... I03,000.00
Otber asseiS ...........................................................................................................:............................... 2,984,000.00
ToialasseiS ........................................................................................................................................296,048,000.00
ToialasseiS and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 18230) ..................................................... :. 296,048,000.00

·Man begins sentence for B&amp;E
POMEROY - Sky Flynn, Portland, was transported to the
SEPTA Center in Nelsonville Friday to begin serving his sentence,
imposed by ihe Meigs County Court of Common Pleas.
Flynn earlier pleaded guilty to the breaking and entering of a
hunting cabin on S!Won Hollow Road last spring.

Otbor bolTOwed money.......................................:............................................................................... I0,71S,OOO.OO
Otber Uabilitiea ........................... .........................................................................,................................ 2,480,000.00
Toialliabilities ...........................,............. ........................................ ............................................. ....274,913,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL

Common stock (No. of Sbares a. Autborized .................. !,OOO
·· b. Outstanding................. l,OOO) ......................................................... .5,617,!100.00
Surpllli (er.clude aU surpluo related to prefened sloc.k) .......................................................................9,715,000.00
a. Undivided.profill,and capital raerves ................................................................................. ........ 5,896,000.00
b. LESS: Nel unrealized lou on mllllcetable equity securitle.t ............................................................... 93,000.00
Toial equity capital............................................................................................................................. 21,13S,OOO.OO
Toial equity capital and losses deferred
·
pursuant tO 12 U.S.C. 1823Q) .......................................................... ...................................... :......... 21,13S,OOO.OO
Totalliabili.liea, limited-life preferred ato&lt;k, equity capital,
and losses deferted pillluaullo 12 ~ .S.C. 18230) ............................................ ............................296,048,000.00
MEMORANDA: AmolUIIO lllllllaDdlng u Of Report otCoadhloD date:
Standby leuen of c:redlt. Total.:..........., ............................................................................................... .384,000.00

Melga
992·2192

Woodland Centers; Inc.
· A Private, Not for Profit Agency WOII&lt;ing
.
Hard to Serve You in
Gallla, JacksOn, and Meiga.Countles. ·
Woodland C.ntlra, Inc. le funded In pa11 by the
Gallla..Jacklon-Mtigl· Board of Alcohol, Drug
Addiction &amp; Mental Heahh Seryice1.

'·'

'

!

.

'

l

'

..

I, tbe undersf&amp;lled offieer, do beleby deCIIre 11111 tblo Report of Condition bu been prepared in conformance
wilb official inotnJct~en• and jl trap .ad cutect.to lbe 11M of my laiowlotlae 111&lt;1 belief. ' · .
.

' ' .

Midp E. BOap

Vlco l'hoidenland ConliOUer, October 26, 1993 .
f

: ;'

~

.

'
'

"'McGrufr reinforced the mes·
sage of our Crime Prevention
Month activities," Lentes said.

MRDDboard
offers thanks
to area groups

to repurcbue in domelltlc offieea of~ bank&amp; of its
Edge &amp; Agreemenlauboidl.,_.o, &amp; in ·mFa:
Seouritle~ sold underqreemonts to repurcbase ..................... ......................................................... ll,l84,000.00

•1

Crime'."

Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on official reports.

{I) Nonlnterest-bearing .................................................................................. 23,549,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ....................................................................................... 226.985,000.00
Federal funds purchased and rJeCUritioa sold under agreements

j

We, tbe ~BDed diRclon, alliolt tbe ~ of lbil ll'l'"fi of Condition and decl.. lbat it bu ' o•wiW 11)1 uo and 10 tbe boot of our lmowlodp and belief and bu bioo pnpomd in confo1DlliiCC wllb otncill
inlli'UCtionJ 111&lt;1 1111'110 and cornet.
·.
". ' .
tc.ltli R. Brandeberry
Robert H. E!Ubnan- Directon
-..
Jeffrey B. Suiilb
Stale of Oblo, Coullly of GaiUa,·as:
Swam to 'and ouboorilled before me Ibis 26tb day of October, 1993 llld I be"'by certify lbat I am not 10
off'o:er or dlroctor of lblo bant.
..
.
Cindy H. Joballon, Notary Public ,..
Cindy H. Jobllltoa, Notltry Public, slate ofOblo. My colllllliulon explm Man:b 2~, 1996.
•

'~

..
'

~

.,

.•
''

SYRACUSE - Resolutions of
appreciation to several persons and
organizations for special assistance
and contributions to Carleton
School and Meigs Industries were
passed at the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation.
Included in the group were
Lennie Eliason and Brian Collins
of WMPO for a public awareness
opportunity on Benjl Area Focus;
Sam Cummins and family for their
donation of pumpkins and Halloween treats for the school; and
Gary Snouffer and Snouffer's Fire
Equipment Co. for educational
material and a fire extiniuisher
demonsuation during Fire Safety
Week.
Other resolutions went to the
Meigs cosmetology class for hair
care and facial services to Meigs
Industries participants; the Syra·
cuse Volunteer Fire Department for
a tour of the fue station and equipment demonstration for Carleton
SChool and ne.t Start students; the
Meigs United Methodist Coupera·
live Parish for donation of school
supplies; Shirley Jones for donation
of a wheelchair; Dan Smith and
family for hosting a visit to their
firm for tile Carleton primary
class; and Jeannie Whobrey and
Meigs Carpet Outlet for donating
an area carpet for the Carleton
School intermediate class,

MID-FIELD CELEBRATION • Members
of the Gallipolis football team, cheerleaders,
band, and coaches 1atbered In tbe middle of ·
Memorial Field to celebrate the Blue Devils

undisputed Southeastern Ohio League footban •
championship followin1 Friday's 20·6 Parents ·
Night victory over Jackson. See details on C-2.
(Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

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

·c, od~&lt;ella"

POMEROY - A crime prevention educatton program which
included assemblies for intermedi·
ate elementary students in Meigs
County is nearin=letion.
According to
uting Aaorney_) '!.M R. J.e.P.!CS. Jll£JJ!r9JIJllm
was 1:oniliil:1C!I"m· oll~ervance of
Crime Prevention Month, which
was observed in October.
All fourth , fifth and sixth
graders iii Meigs County's three
local school districts received a
crime prevention activity book, .as
well as drug education bookcovers,
Crime prevention and safety
assemblies were conducted by the
prosecuting attorney's office staff
at each school.
Students heard information
regarding safety in their communities, how to react if tlley witness a
crime taking place and an overview
of the law enforcement process.
Some schools participated in mock
trials, as well.
"McGruff," the mascot of the
National Crime Prevention Council, was used in the materials distributed to the students.
"' McGrufr is easily recognized
by elementary students," Lentes
said. "In an mformal survey of~
classes at our assemblies, we found
that virtually all the students knew
about McGruff, and were aware of
his slogan, 'Take a Bite out of

Library closed Thursday
CONSOLIDATFD REPORTOFCONDmON
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)

or.

Program briefs youths
•
•
on cnme prevention

WIC accepting applications

TM I'IIIIOn'' lafVUI bollder ol on~-101. linglt-fatnlly nom.. SinCe 11M6, CMI 300,000 built.

389 County .Road 120 South
Ph. 614/894-3881

A pioneer women's rights con·
ventiQn was called in 1848 by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia C.
MolL It convened in Seneca Falls,
N.Y.

County commission to meet early

Jim~laHer HDMEB

dent Interf~ qUO!Cd him ~ saying
he plans •'•tq wCJ;k in order to make
the people accept" this new candi·
date.

•

&amp;Mela-

Area man issued summons

a. In domestic offices .................................................................................................................... 250,534,000.00

Why should I seek help?:

. Gallll, JKkaap

GALLIPOLIS - A Columbus man reported Friday that someone broke into his hunting cabin and stole $230 worth of property,
the Gallia County Sheriffs Depsrtment reported.
Paul Evans said someone forced open the rear door of the cabin,
located on Rice Hollow Road, as weD as a door on a nearby out·
building. Stolen were several items, including a lawn mower and a
chainsaw.

Deposits:

How can we help?:
Woodland )Centers employs a group of energelic, dedi·
cated and caring mental health professionals to ensure
that every client receives appropriate services. The staff
work intimately as a team to provide you with the mosl
suitable services to meet your unique needs.

Gallla
446-5500

Hunting cabin burglarized

8avings an seleotod models. See repraoentative fer details and models. This offer Is
good only fer allmKod .time. Artwuk shows actual homalhat may Include additions,
optio[IB or customer modifications not part of our standard offering. Shrub&amp; and land·
ocap1ng have bten oddod,il) Jim W - Homos, Inc., 1993 Copynghl slricUy enforced.

Wauerson and William Hu~s.;
owner of the food mart, m~ w1th~
commissioners Oct. 28 wllh an,
agrdment to pa_y the bill. Watter·:
son said at the ume he would con·•
tinuc 10 provide the food service as:
he had in the {l'ISl. or not at all.
:
CommiSSioners apparently .
answered the ultimatum when ~ :
voted to take ova the food servlCC ·
and make the cook an employee
the commission, DO! ~ she~ff. _
In:
addition the commtSSion w1ll hllC ·
a pan-tiiilc cooL

between the months of May and
September, the sheriff had been
given over $16,800 for food for
prisoners, based on a rate of $5 per
prisoner per day.
Sheriff Ernie Wattmon said on
Oct. I tbal he had done nothing
wrong, and th~t the food bill had
not been paid due to problems. The
food bill was once again the topic
on Ocl. 7, when Wattersoo came
before the commissioners slating
that he only owed the food mart
$2,100, oot $4,754.73 .
·

POMEROY - Enrollmenl in
Meigs County schools for 1993
totals 4,289, according to a report
by Superintendent John Riebel to
the Meigs County Board of Educa·
lion Thursday nighL
The numbers showed a decrease
in enrollment from last year of 31
students.
The superintendent reviewed fCI'
members a proposal for a new telephone system. Dixie Arbuckle was
employed as a substitute teacher on
an as-needed basis. The resignation
of Linda Haley was accepted. She
is retiring as of Dec. 31.
Board members elected to lake
office on Jan. I, 1.0. McCoy,
Howard Caldwell and Jeanene
Thomas, were present at tile meet·
ing, along with Bill Quickel, who
presided, and Jeffrey Harris, Robert
Burdette, Harold Lohse and
Dorhman Reed.

GALLIPOLIS - Three men were cited recently for driving
under the influence, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol reported.
Gregory A. Shelton, 37, 13002 State Route 7, Gallipolis, was
cited early Saturday for DUI, speedin~ and no seat belt; Mark A.
Cremeans, 34, 60 Burdeue Road, Gallipolis, was cited early Satur·
day _for DUI, driving left of center, speeding and no seat bel~ and
David L. Ztckefoose, 33, Buckhannon, W.Va., was cited Thursday
afternoon for DUI, speeding and no seat belt.

building as easy as HD, HO, HOME!

Bailes. Commissioner ·Phyllis
:-\rthur was absent from the meet·
mg.
The contrOversy over the food
began at the Sept. ~0 meeting,
~hen ~om.missioners called for an
mvesuga11on to determine where
money allocated for to the sheriff's
departn:-ent for food for prisoners
was bemg used, and why an out·
standing bill of $4,754.7~ to Apple
G~ove Food Mart had not been
pa1d. The btU had apparently been
outstanding since May.
Sayre said at that time that

Meigs County
student count
stands at 4,289

Three cited for DUI

1

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POINT PLEASANT- Membe.rs .o f the Mason County Com·
m1sston voted Thursday to take
c~ntrol of the food services for
pnsoners housed in the county jail
after much conuoveny during the
past mon~. .
.
Comnusston ~ident Larry R.
Sayre made ~_motion to talte ov~
the food servtces and the took s
position as of Nov. 16. Sheriff's
depsrtment employees will con~ue 10 take food off the dumb watter
and _serve it to the prisoners. The
motiOn was seconded by Sadie

GALLIPOLIS - Local authorities jailed eight men Friday and
early Salurday.
. Arrested br Gallipolis police were David R. Crittendon Jr., 21,
V~nton, early Saturday for contributing to the delinquenc_y of a
Harry.L Legg, 29. Shelby, Friday night for domesuc vio. ence and reslStmg arres1; and Charles E. Jackson, 48, 18 SWIIllgO
Road, Gallipolis, early Saturday for disorderly conduct by intoxica·
bon.
Arrested by Gallia County sheriff's deputies was Michael D.
Fhnt, 42, 98-1/2 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, Friday afternoon for
domestic violence.
. .Jail~ on municipal coun ordered commitments were Michael R.
91mski, 28, KeJT, I0 days for a previous charge of driving under the
mlluence, and George Peuy, 52, Village Street, Bidwell three days
for a previous charge of DUI.
'
Also jailed on municipal coun orders were Ernie w . Workman
J~ .. 2~. 513 Burnelte Road, Gallipolis, Friday night for a probation
v1olauoo and James Walkins, 18, Point Pleasanl, Friday morning for
a wildlife violation.

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Yeltsin opposes early elections
MOSCOW (~). - President
Boris Yeltsin said Saturday he
opposes holdin!! early presidential
elections, breaking a pmmise to put
his leadenhip to the test next June,
a news service reponed.
He also suggested he would not
run in the next election.
"I am against presidential elec·
lions il) June 1994. I support using
the rresident's mandate in full,
unti 1996," tile Inter fax news
agency quoted Yeltsin as saying.
Yeltsin spoke at a closed-door
meeting with Russian newspaper
editors.
"
His statement was the fir~t in
which he directly spoke against
early presidentjal elections. Earlier,
the president had said that the issue
should be left for the new parliament to decide.
Yeltsin said his main task now
will be "fmding and educating" a
candidate to become the nexl presi·

Authorities jail eight

access,

MBE Commill2e.
Cootinued from page AI
Being recognized are: Gary Smith,
deceased
lfalrison remains active in youth New Lexington; Ralph Courter,
affairs. He was past president of the · Logan; Mike Brooks, Nelsonville;
Pomeroy Youth League and the Big Phil Harrison, Meigs County; RoBend Little League Association. He nald G. McDade, Gallia County;
wasalsoformerheadbaskethaliC:oach Jenny Mays and Mary Beth Nenni,
at Meigs High School from I 990- Lawrence County; C. Clayton Jolm·
sonandRobertE. Dever,l'lrtsmouth;
1993.
He is the sponsor of the Rodney Christopher and Mary
.
Paul Harrison Memorial Scholarship . Jo Dean, Pike County; Alan
Fund. From the fuud, scholarships Stockmeister,Jackson; Dan Lockard
are given each year to Meigs High Jr., Wellston, and Gladys Ankrom,
School Seniors thai have done the Vinton County.
most toward drug and alcohol preTickets for the SEORC banquet
vention while at Meigs High School. cost $17 and are available at Fanners
lfalrison is a former member of the Bank or the Meigs County Chamber
Ohio Conlrllctors Association EEO/ of Commerce.

:New mayor
Individual and
:says leave
~stadiuin alone Family Services
· NEW YORK (AP) -Rudolph

The waiting period for a ihe 1a~e Ocwberdraft rney instead pay besaystheCiintonshavedoneagood
mammography, which is CIIJI'CIItly the same percentage of average pre- job in marketing their health care pro:
about four weeks in t1lis area, could milllll5.
posal, Adkins says he feels theirpacki
'1bis is signiftcanl," Adkins says. age may have been ov~Id, causing
lengthen to eight weeks in this soe·
nari&lt;' Coopmlion will depend on the "What is average?"
people to expect too much.
•
Finally, with Congress still waiting
eutirer lgi&lt;~n-hospitals,pltysicians,
"The biggest t!ting in Clinton';
insuran.."Clirms,custanen-reform· to pick apart the bill, little about the health care packagt is that we're g&lt;k
ing their atlibldes about health care. president's health eire proposal can ing to have to change our health C8l1!
As fcl'
the hospiraJ is at- he counted as certain.
attitudes," Adkins says.
·
"It's going to beamantlhon and not
ready taking steps to spread the reach
"We've got the best health care iii.
ofitscsre.Forinstance,HMCbastwo a sprin~" Adkins insists.
the world as far as cost and I wouldn 'C
Perhaps in the beginning stages of want to see thai suffer," he adds. "Bu~
primary care affiliates in Jackson
CoiUity: Oak Hill Community Medi· . this revolution the ID08I crucial thing American people think we oaght "'
cal Center, whicll operates on its own for the public to understand is that have the best health care without ~
with HMCasback-upand the Jenkins expectations must be loWered. While coSt."
.
:
Memorial Health Clinic in Wellston,
which is an ambulatory primary care
center.
Andthehospitalalreadyhasapolicy
that it will tmn no patient away, regardlessofwhelhertheperson is likely
able to pay for treaunenL
But while on the one hand it stands
poisedfCI'refoon,HMChasalsofound
itdifflcultto plan ahead for proposed
legislation that leaves many questions
unanswered.
Adkins' biggest local concern is
overwhowill bechargedwithpaying
for hospital services. In this region
populated heavily by the pour and
elderly, he says over 70 percent of the
hospital's business is paid for through
Medicare and Medicaid - both of
which have been threatened with cuts
in the health care debate.
Ask About Our Holiday Specials
And HMC must deal with shifts
You can gift wrap the joy and security of a
and uncertainties as both an employer
home
lor your family lhis holiday season. It's
and a provider. For instance, busi·
easy for qualified property owners:
nesses were told in the Sept. 22 version of the bill they would pay for 80
• No Money Down
pen:ent of health care premiums. In
• No Points or Closing Costs

Meigs 'Person ofthe Year'

Sunday Times SenUnei~A3

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

"That is, citizens of all ages,
including school-aged children, are
responsible for preventing crime
and making our communities safe."
Those making the presenrations,
in addition to Lentes, were Assistan~ PrOIICCul,in&amp; A;IIOOiey Christo·
pher E. Tenoglia, Secret Service
Agent Gary Wolfe and Communications Officer Brian Reed.
Siudents in kindergarten
through third grade were invited to
participate in a coloring contest.
Judging of those entries will be
completed next week with prizes to
be awarded to winners in each
school.
"I think it is important that we
make an effort towards early education," Lentes said, "and it's never
too early to start. These boys and
girls are now more equipped to
handle themselves in an emergen-,
cy, and more importantly, realize
tllat they, too, play a role in keeping Me1gs County's communities
safe.
"Sadly, our children are exposed
to crime at an earlier age than ever.
For the sake of our communities,
we have 10 get our message of safely and preparedness to them," he
added.
Funding of crime prevention
education program comes from the
prosecutor's Law Enforcement
Trust Fund, a discretionary fund
established for crime prevcmion,
which is maintained by cash and
property forfeitures in crim inal
cases.

'
OCR'•

so

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TO EVERYONE WHO CONTRIBUTED
FINANCIALLY
TO EVERYONE ·WHO WORKED SO HARD
CAMPAIGNING.
AND TO EVERYONE WHO SUPPORTED OUR
EFFORT WITH YOUR VOTE.
.SINCERELY,

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THE C.A.R.E• COMMIREE
ond-

Plld for br lht COIIOifnlll ArM ;,
E*-tlon CULidl .....
llonoroly ~: John ~. M
Cl'1141lltQII&gt;Il; I loriiWf 1'-.i: Hlatdno;
1

I

-a.trperoono; Gor)'O:nd--:-T-.:

......

Api~.-.,4Sl--.. Oo--. Oh.45M1

Southeastern Business College;
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Spring Valey Plaza • Gallpols
Accn&lt;lltld
....bor

A&lt;crlelling
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Call 111 Mil

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Ohio/W.Va.
November 7,1993

CXlUJMBUS - A former slale employee convicred of theft in
allk:t WIIS 9ellltnCed to thrlle years probation.
Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Guy L. Reece II on
n.nday also fined Gladys Burlduirt $1,000, ordered her to reimbune die SlaiC $8,292, and suspended her I 1/2-year prison 1erm.
Ms. Burthart, oC Crestline, was former CJtccutive secretary of the
SIIIC Opdcal Dispensers' Board. She was paid $SS,24S a year.
A jury convicled her last month of lWo counts of theft in office
1111 one count of receiving stolen property, all felonies. She could
have rec;eived a maximum penalty of S-1/2 years in prison and a
. SI2.SOO fane.
. The jury found that Ms. Burkhart bilked the stale of thousands of
dollars by using a stale word processor, 1elephones and other government equipment for her personal law practice over a four-year
period.
She also collecled thousands of dollars for bogus overtime and
· ttavel expenses.

Kevorkian spurns
bond in new battle
By JULIA PRODIS
Associated Press Writer
DE'IJl,OlT- Death doctor Jack
Kevorkian says he is ready lo make ·
the supreme sacrifice in his fi~ht
for assisted suicides: starving hunself to death in jail.
.
Kevorkian was jailed after
judge ordered a $20,000 bond to
stop him from defying a state law
banning assisled suicide. The gaunt
doctor, his body limp in prolest,
was dragged from court vowing "I
won't eat"
He said he was refusing to post
bond to protest the law.
"We are now beginning the
death watch of Dr. Kevorkian," his
lawyer, Geoffrey Fieger, said after
Friday's hearing. "He won't die
today. I do think he wUI die unless
he is released."
A~thorities said force-feeding or
hospttahzahon could be options,
but that would be up to the courts.
.':If you're asking me, ·Are we
gomg to let Mr. Kevorkian die in
our custody?' No," Wayne County
Sheriff Robert Ficano said.
Jail officials said Kevorkian, 65,
is drinking waler and juice but not
eating. He was put in a green jail
suit and held in a 10-by 10-foot
cell, isolated from other prisoners.
His supporters, who planned a

·: County launches payment plan
TOLEDO - Lucas County resideniS will be the flfSI in the sra1e
· whose real estale taxes can be automatically deducled from their
checlcing accounts.
Property owners must call the county treasurer's office before
· Dec. 31 to register for the program. Tax bills to go out in January
would be deducled from bank accouniS on Feb. 5. The second-half
deduction woul!l be made July S.
"This goes aloog with our philosophy to make it easier for taxpayers to pay their bills," Treasurer Ray Kest said Friday. "Most
utility bills are paid this way." .
Deductions would be made until the treasurer's office receives
wriuen notification to end the arrangement, Kest said.
There are about200,000 parcels in the county. Kest mails about
115,000 tax bills twice a year, while some 85,000 taxpayers pay
their bills through an escrow anangemen~ he said.

~FISHER

Dole speaks at fund-raiser

AUDIC&gt;/VIDEC&gt;

CINCINNATI- Senale Republicans are willing to consider
President Clinton's health care plan, but they also will offer their
own alrematives,the U.S. Sena1e minority leader said.
Robert Dole, R-Kan., was at the Alben B. Sabin Convention
Cenaer Friday for a 5250-a-plale fund-raiser for the Ohio Republi.can Senatorial Campaign Commitaee.
About 1,000 attended, mostly business people and GOP politi.cians.

· Ohio Senate President Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati, hosled the
: event. Money raised will be spent on Republican candidates in state
Senate districts next year. Republicans now control 21 of 33 Senate

seats.

Dole, often a harsh critic of the Clinton administration, sounded
· almost conciliatory as he spoke about the health care reform battle
brewing in Congress.
"I've told President Clinton, let's try to start down the road
together. Let's find some common ground," Dole said.
He said Republicans were concerned about Clinton's plan to
require small business owners to provide employees with health
. care coverage.
· Dole praised the Democrat for supporting the North American
· Free Trade Agreement, a treaty negotiated largely by the Republi: can Bush administration.
· Most Americans, Dole said, "don't know what NAFTA is all
: about. They think it's an auto parts chain."
'

:.Dayton asked to meet ozone ruling
·: COLUMBUS- Gov. George Voinovich has asked the U.S.
: Environmental Protection Agency to declare that the Dayton area
: complies with federal air quality standards for ozone.
.
· · ''The economic development poaenual of the Dayton area ts at
· stake" Voinovich said Friday. "Companies won't locate or expand
: in th~ area if they're forced to spend millions of extra doUars on
: -unnecessary air pollution conb'OI equipment."
. .
·: The area - including Montgomery, Greene, Mtanu and Clark
:. counties- failed air quality standards for ozone in 1988 and 1989.
·: The state must collect data showing three consecutive years without
; a violation before the U.S. EPA will consider declaring the area in
-• compliance.
.
.
.; Donald Schregardus, Ohio EPA director, filed a redestgnauon
:. request for the area :ovith the U.S. EPA on Frit!BY· It sa!d hydrocar~· bon emissions from mdusmes and vehicles whtch conmbuted to the
•: ozone violations have been reduced.
;. "Redesignation will make it easier for us to compete as a
:: region" saiil Sieve Koziar, a group vice president at Dayton Power
•: and Ught Co. "Not only will it be easier .to get new i~~ustry, but
• industry that is here would find it much easter to expand..
.
:
Volatile organic compounds react with other chemicals m hot
: • sunshine to form Ozone in summer months. Ozone, a component of
,.. smog. damages lungs.
·•·
- Tbe Associated Press

... Trust your senses.

Ex-lottery counsel
to appeal conviction
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- Former Lottery counsel Ed
ReB rook faces up to IS years in
prison and a fine of $500,000 when
he is sentenced Jan. 3 for his conviction in federal court of insider
trading and wire fraud charges.
Shortly after a U.S. District
Court jury convicted ReBrook of
the two felonies on Friday, the
State Bar's Committee on Le~al
Ethics filed ethical charges aUegmg
he solicired sex from clients.
ReBrook's attorney Arthur T.
Ciccarello said ReBrook will
appeal his conviction.
ReBrook appeared composed
afaer the verdict and declined comment. After leaVing the coutthousc.
however, he shoved a newspaper
photographer. ·
The jury delibemled five hours
before finding ReBrook guilty of
using his position as Lottery auor·
ney to gain inside information
about the planned stalewide expansion of video lotaery and the company that was to receive the $35
million contract to install the
machines.
ReBrook purchased 100 shares
of stock in the company, Video
Lotlery Consultants Inc. of Bozeman, Mont., in September 1992.
The purchase cost him S1,400.
ReBrook, 44, a Charleston
lawyer and formenide to ex-Gov.
Jay Roc~efeller, tipped two friends
to the stock and ·they invested
$90,000, federal prosecutors
alleged.
Jury foreman Dale Parsons of
Cross Lanes said one juror hesital·

ed and another had questions, but
10 were in favor of conviction right
away. He. said the hesitant juror
was won over and the other juror's
questions were answered.
Acting U.S . Attorney Charles
Miller said the investigation into
video lottery would be compleled
"as soon as possible."
Jill Wilson, spokeswoman for
Gov. Gaston Caperton, said the
administration was glad the trial
was over.
"It has taken attention away
from the real focus of the Caperton
administration, which is jobs, education, health care and the future of
West Virginia," Wilson said.
.. ''

:On

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£ottery· numbers
~&lt;

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.rtA\

:: ly Tbe ~ted Prall .
•'Here are the winDing numbers

~WJI· in Friday'• Ohio Mid West
'VJiainla lotteries:
.OHIO

i&gt;tct-3: 8l0-6

.~-'4: 6-5-4-7

I'Jiucbye 5: l-S-26-27-32
· !'1'hllre l!'ll one ticket sold namaD .ftve uum~ drawn in Fri.~ night's BuFkeye S dnwing.
~winning cic:ket sold in KetteriniJ is w~rth $100,000, the Ohio

.il!i

~•1be Saper LoUo jlclcpot fill' Sat·
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~VIRGINIA.

tDaoy 3:9-7.0

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:DillY 4: 3-6-4-4
Casll2.': 7-9-J2·1S·19-2?

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..
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Upper Rt. 7
Ohio

HOME NATIONAL BANK

..

of Racine In the state of Ohio, at the close of bll81ness on September 30, 1993, publlsbed In
response to caD made by ComptroUer of the Currency, under IItle U, United States Code,
Secllon 161.
Charter Number 9815
Comptroller of the Currently 4th
District.

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Cash and balances due from depository instirutions:
Noninterest-bearing balanus and currency and coin , ................................... ................................... 1,399,000.00

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Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loon~ and leases, net of unearned inoome ................................................................. 27,120,000
LESS: Allowanu for loan and lease lossea ..................................................................... 489,000

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

•

~ Premises
~=an~.~=~~~~.~.
~~-~ ~.~~:
26 63100000
and fiXed asseiS ·(including capiialized leases)............................. ................... ..................... '268'ooo'oo
Otber.real estate owned ....................................................................................................................... .-::: 108:000:00
Otber asseiS ..............................................,...................................................................... .........................S21,000.00
Total asseiS .....................,.................................................................................................................. ..42,958,000.00
Tolal asseiS and loss.. deferred punuanllo t2 U.S.C. t8230) ......................................................... 42,958,000.00

--...

NEW KING KUTTERS

§

4, 5, 6, 7, and 10ft.

t

Phot~• 446·9771or 446-2414

•

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T , \lltl;~ uru,
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Morr cholctr maU for ~lttr living.

P.O. BOX 614
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
1-800-458-9990

niles were arrested for murder,
according the Bun:au of Alcohol,
Tobacco and FUC111111S.
The bureau released tbe statis·
tics in launching a i:ampai•n to
traee all fu-earms involved in JUVC·
nile-relaled crimes and found in
schools.
"Every day, we hear our children are being killed or wounded
by other children, " said John
Magaw, the bureau's acting director. The violence, he said, is "aearing at the core of our societv."

Let ua copy your old
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TAWNEY STUDIO
424 IECOND AYE.
GAWPOUI

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DeposiiS:
In do~estic offiu~ .......................................... ................................................................................ 38.007.000.00
Nonmterest-beanng .................................................................................................. 3,0 12.000
In~•!-~g ..................................................................................................... .34,995,000 '
Other liabilibes .....................................................................................................................................:.. 300,000.00
Tolalliabililies ................................................................................................................................... .38,307,000.00

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Common sloek................................................................................................ :................................. ...... l25,000 00
Su~pl111 .................................................................................................................................................... 125,000:oo
Undivided pJOfiiS and capilal reserve .........................................................................................,,
4 40t 000 00
ThW "'luity capiW...................................................................................... :............ ........ ............ ::::::... 4· 651 'ooo'oo
Tolal equity capilaland loooeo deferred
· ' ' ·
pUIIumt ~ \2 U.S.C. 18230).......,.............,. ..................................................................................... 4 65l 000 00 :
Thtilli,bililieo, limiiOd-life preferred slllc:k, and O&lt;juity capilal,
· ' " ·
Ill
and .1o11es deferred plinuantlo 12 U.S.C. !823(j) .......................................................................... 42,9S8,000.00

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I, Oary P. Nania, Cashier 'ot the above-named bank do hereby declare lhat this Report of Condition is lrlle and
coirect 10 1he best of my knowledge and belief.
.
Gary P. Norria, Cubier
.
10126193

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We, tbe undersig?od direciOn, attest lhe correctness of Ibis atatement of ruowcea and liabilitieo. We dcclore tbat
it bu been exarruned by 111, and 10 lhe best of our knowledge and belief bu boon prepared in contorm11100 with
tho inatrucliono,and io true and oorrect.
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David W. Pox - Directon
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Used Tractors alld Equipme...t
You Can See This Equipment at

weeks that the army and police fighting for territory in central
fanned out across Sarajevo in wha~ Bosnia not occupied by Serbs. This
the government said were clamp- week, the army captured Croatdowns on organized crime and held Vares north of Sarajevo in an
offensive that caused an estimated
black-marketeering.
Several groups of HVO soldiers 15,000 Croats to flee their homes.
In a stalement on Bosnian radio,
were seen being marched through
the
army said it was disbanding the
parts of the city under armed guard.
HVO's
Sarajevo headquarters ,
JournalisiS were warned not to phowhich
it
said h'ad been established
tograph them.
illegaUy.lt
alleged that some memA soldier who answered the
bers
had
been
'·'actively involved"
lelephone at Sarajevo's HVO headin
fighting
against
government
quaraers said the militia's commanforces
elsewhere
in
Bosnia.
der, Slavko Zelie, had been arrestIt accused some members of
ed and the building blockaded by
coopenli.~-wiiP Sed! f9.rces.
government forces. He said there
around
SaraJevo,
Jeoparoizmg the
had been no shooting.
capital's
defense
Jines. the staleZelie has professed loyalty to
ment
also
inviled
HVO
members to
Sarajevo's defense, but has 'said his
join
a
new
Croat
brigade
of the
orders come from Croat headquararmy's
1st
Corps,
the
main
Sarajeaers command in Mostar.
Government and Croat troops vo defense force.
U.N. relief agency spokesman
have fought side by side against the
Ray
Wilkinson said some aid
dominant Serb forces, especially in
nights
were still landing at the airSarajevo, which has been under
port west of the city, but that traffic
Serb siege throughout the war.
into
the cenler had been disrupred.
But their alliance collapsed in

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ii

Lots of

By MAlJO S. BEELMAN
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Army and police forces virtually shut down much of Sarajevo
Saturday in what was described as
another crackdown on lawlessness
in the Bosnian capital.
The target this time was the
Croatian Defense Council, or
HVO, the mainly Croal militia that
has been allied with Muslim-led
government forces during most of
Bosnia's 19-month-old war.
State-run radio said movement
was restricted throughout the city.
Soldiers manning checkP-oints
barred journalists and U.N. vehicles from large sections of western
Sarajevo.
The restrictions forced the Red
Cross to cancel a long-planned
convoy that was to have taken
nearly 1,500 Serb, Croat and Muslim refugees out of the city on Sa• ~
urday.
It was the third time in two

•,

CONSOLIDATEDREPORTOFCONDflnON
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subtlldlarlea)

=

aceountable when they ldll someone." said Sen. Carol MoseleyBraun, D·lll., who sponsored the
amendment.
. Moseley-Braun noled, however,
that existing law would bar youthful criminals from facing the death
penalty and that the amendment
would bar such young people from
being held in an adult facility .
Last year, more than 46,000
juveniles were arresled on weapons
charges - a more than doubling in
the past decade - and 2,829 juve-

rally Saturday at the Wayne Coun- been charged twice with violating
ty Jail, said imprisoning him will Michigan's 8-month-old law
only· strengthen their cause and agai nst assisted suicide. He had
remained free on personal bond
make him a martyr.
"It's going to make us stronger. pending his trial as long as he did
Wc•U be standing at pocery stores, not assist in more suicides, a condistreet comers, gathering suppon for tion he allegedly violaled.
.Judge Thomas Jackson on FriJack Kevorkian," said Marge Sinday
granled a request from prosegley, a member of the Hemlock
cutors
.to increase the bond to
Society of Michigan.
$20,000,
requiring Kevorkian to
Kevorkian, who has been at the
put
up
$2,000
to be released.
deaths of 19 people since 1990, has

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FOR SALE
USED BUSH
. HOGS

'DR. DEATH' GOES TO JAIL- Dr. Jack Kevorkian, 65,
went limp Friday In Detroit as Wayne County deputies Leonard
Haske, left, and Cpl. John Cblrkum, rlgbt, dragged blm from
court after Jud1e Tbomas E. Jackson ordered Kevorkian's bond
increased in assiSted suicide cases against him. (AP)

By LAWRENCE I. KNUTSON
Assoelated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Amid rising
concern over unsafe streets and
schools, the Senate is seeking 10
prosecute youths aged 13 and up as
adults if they used a gun to commit
a violent crime.
The plan, approved by a 64-23
Sena1e vole Friday, would become
part of a wide-ranging bill aimed at
combatting rising crime in America
if it gains final congressional passage.
Both the House and Senale are
working hard to pass substantial
anti-crime measures before lawmakers leave for the year. Congressional leaders have said they hope
to ~et everyone home by Thanksgmng.
The Sena1e will resume work on
its version of the crime bill Monday. The House, which already has
passed a half-dozen separate anticrime bills, is poised to consider
legislation next week to impose a
waiting period on people planning
to purchase handguns.
The Senate measure dealing
with juveniles would "make
youngsters know they have to be

Security forces shut down Sarajevo

I ll

4, 5, 6 and 7 ft.

.

ut(j'ay Wll $4 .....IN

package purponing to unmask the WTI's opponents of fighting the
opposition.
incinerator industry as a way to
The packet held 13 pages of bring in donations.
notes from a recent strategy session
"Fund-raising clearly is their
by groups that have been fighting goal, since their plan does not disincinerators around the country.
cuss any long-term solutions to
WTI spokesman Raymond environmental challenges that are
Wayne called it "our pre- reasonable, responsible and ratioresponse" to the demonstration nal," the' news release said.
planned for Saturday across the
Rick Hind of Greenpeace, which
street from the White House.
. organized today's planned protest,
The goal, he said, •'is to try to laughed heanily at the slalement.
get people to understand the motiHe said whales, not incineration,
vations that are driving these bring in the bi$ bucks when GreenactivisiS."
peace is solicinng contributions.
Wayne's news release accused

'

ali IUACY

;East Liverpool incinerator's
~ritics take protest to Clinton.
:--· By KATHERINE RIZZO
' . ' Alloelated Prall Writer
:·wASHINGTON· Opponents
ot 'a baZirdous~waste incinerator in
eptcrlt Ohio say D) Ore than I00
pi9ple are headed to Washington
fcj a new wave of proleSIS.
•:QPJ!Osition groups have been
· ccillecllng copies of Vice President
AI; Oorc's environmental book
Etirtll in the Balance to return to
Gbre .as a gesture of their frustrati9lt that the new administration
hain't lhut down the Waste Techndloales Industries incinetator.
; The ·company that operates the
ill£jnenitor in East Uverpool, about
8Q· milea southeast of Cleveland,
prepared for the protests with a
pUI;!Jic relations barrage.
Friday, .an overnight courier
service delivered to the Washing·
toit orfices of large newspapers a

.

Sunday Times- Sentinel/AS

Senate approves bill to prosecute ...1
youths using guns in violent crimes •

doctor'
won't eat

Ex-state worker gets probation

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Nation/World

1993

'Death

-Ohio News in Brief:

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November7,

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

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FDIC

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"Partners in chang~, as we continue the Holzer Tradition" '

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7,1993

Commentary
Black Caucus holds open its arms

November 7, 1993

Sunday

.F ir.e-weary town
returning to norma-

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A6

In Malibu, it's another
night just a tad smokief:

Huntonforauthor of'Fedbuster' letter
825 Thlnl Ave, "GoUJpolls, Oblo
(614) 446-2342

By MICHAEL WHITE
Af!loclated Press Writer
MALIBU, Calif. - Firefighting
heli~J)ten diJlllC!llheir huge buck'
ets mto the f'acific while surfers
paddled nearby as signs of nonnalcy retul'!led to an area devastated
by deadly wildfll'es.
More than 6,000 firefighters
remained in Malibu Saturday to
mop up the arson fire that killed
three people, ravaged hundreds &lt;if
homes and forced more than 2,000
to flee.
City officials anticipated long
lines at a disaster relief office, and
planne~ a community picnic to
help reJuvenate battered residents
said Mayor Carolyn Van Hom. '
"It's a healing process. We've
done il before out here. We will do
it again," she said, referring to
m11dslides and previous wildfires
that have hit lhe star-studded seaside community.
The fll'C that raced over 18,500
acres was 80 percent contained Fri·
day night, said Fire Department
Inspector Dan Ertel. It desuoyed or
damaged more than 360 buildings,
most of them homes, causing $170
million in damage, he said.
Hot, dry Santa Ana winds had
fanned the flames in past days, but
Saturday's forecasts called for mild
winds and cooler temperatures.
Investigators have said the fire
was Started Tuesday by an arsonist's malCh or lighter allhe top of
Old Topanga Canyon.
Arson has been blamed for 19 of
25 fll'es that desuoyed 1,150 build·
ings, blackened more than '200,000
acres and injured nearly 200 people
across Southern California since
Oc~ 26.

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(Uf) 992-2156

ROBERT 1.. WINGETI'
Publisher

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
ControU.r

A MEMBER ·of The Associated Press and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
'
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be tess than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nam~. add ress and telepbonc ~umber. No unsigned letters will be
publ1she.d: Letters should be 1n good taste, addressing issues, not
personalattes.

Toledo Edison
breathing sigh of relief

"This has to be one of the
biggest tragedies ever atlributabJe
10 ar5on," said Larry Cornelison of
the federal Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms arson bureau
in Los Angeles.
"It took such a· toli in damage ·
and human misery. And to know
that individuals were responsible
fot this makes it even worse," he
said.
Investigators from 13 agencies
pursued dozens of lips and worked
on a psychological profile of .the
arsomsts, said Special Agent John
D'Angelo of the (ederal Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Fireatms.
Several witnesses said a young
couple they saw near the fire's
flashpoint might have started i~ but
they could not give authorities
•
clear descriptions.
The Los Angeles Times reponed
Saturday that the investig'alion
included a searc)J for the aulhor of
a letter in which a man identifying
himself as "Fedbuster" threatened
to "set a big ftre" because government agents seized some of his
property.
The letter was sent 10 about 35
Southern California law enforcement agencies, the Times said.
The death IOU in the Malibu fue
rose to three Thursday when sheriff's deputies in a helicopter spotted two charred bodies on a winding din road
AT FURY'S EDGE -The Sea Llon/Cbart House restaurant in
Their identities had not been
Malibu, Calif., sits oo tbe beach with blackened hills behind it. The
released by authorities Friday
home next to the ramed restaurant burned down, threatening the
nigh~ bul neighbors and co-workestablishment, when ft.ames r~~&amp;ched tbe Pacific Ocean. (AP)
ers identified lhe dead as Donn and
Amy Yarrow. Mrs. Yarrow was a
friends said.
British diiector Duncan Gibbins
retired mail sorter at the Santa
The .co~ple had liv~d without 41, died Wednesday of bums afte;
Monica Post Office. Donn Yarrow
electrtclly m a mountamlOp home he tried to rescue his cat from his
was a retired philoSophy professor,
for about 40 years.
home.
p

·

New democracies seek NATO security
By SALLY JACOBSEN
Associated Press Writer
BRUSSELS, Belgium -,Month
after monlh, Eas~ Europe s 1~ers come kn~ckmg on .NATO s
doors, appealing to lhetr former
Cold War foe to take them under
the alliance's security umbrella.
And month after month, the
response is !.he same: Not yeL
With ethnic strife and political
turmoil spreading on the eastern
half of the European. continent,
East E~s ~~10us to get a
memb~rshtp 'ar.d m ·!he North
Atlanllc Treaty Orgamzalton ~ ~e security guarantees that go
wtth 11.
,
Under NATO s 1949 .treaty,
members agree to constder an
armed auack on any one as an
attack on aU.
The United States and its NATO
allies have refuse&lt;! 10 take in any
new members, feanng th~ "!do ~o
would c~eate .a new dtvtde. m
Europe, tsolaung and upsettmg
Russl3, still a formidable military

power.
The "partnership" proposal
President Clin10n and leaders of would allow the East Euro)ieans to
the 15 other allied nations will join NAT&lt;? in ~ili.tary exerci~es,
meet Jan. 19-11. m ~russels to chart peacekeepmg mtsstons and cnsts
the orga~tza!ton s future, and managemen~
membershtp will be one of the top
In return, the partners would
items on the agenda.
have to share information about
In a recent interview, NATO · defense budgets and defense
Secretary.Qeneral Manfred Woem- forces, promise civilian control
er predicted the leaders would over !.he military and standardize
declare their willingness 10 accept weapons systems.
new members, but without setting a
"The plan would build on the
timetable or identifyi~g candidates. North Allantic Cooperation CounCnttcs say that s no longer cil, a security forum set up by
elll!~gh.
.
. NATO leaders in" l~f'to ·create
The danger tn Europe IOday IS links with Eastern Europe.
instability an~ that CI\D Dn!Y \Je preThe NACC - pronounced
vented by ulu~ly mtegtllti,~g ~e nack-see in NATO jargon - has
East E~ ~10 NATO, . said turned oul 10 be merely a talking
Jonathan yal, dircc10r of studies at shop where its 38 members meet 10
Royal United Services Institute in discuss security issues of the day.
London.
·
Members mclude the NATO
l!.S. Defense Sef.retary L~s allies and 22 nations in Eastern
Aspm has.~uggested Partnershtp Europe, stretching from nearby
for. Peace accords I!' bnng the Po)and and Hungary to the former
!13Uons closer- but wtt!tout grant- Soviet republics of Tajikistan and
mg them full membership and bor- Kyrgyzstan in faraway Central
der guarantees.
Asia.

Late rally eases Wall Street worries
· "If you live In a countty which
run by a commia.ee,'' sociologist
WIUiam Graham Sumner once
i~

o'bsCrvod. umake sure you're on

tile conlmittce...
· Ia New Jersey and Virginia, two
women guberutorial candidates
~ . ttying 10 gel on the commitIIIC. ·In bolh states, women voters,
studiouslf neutral or just plain
a11tai0nlsuc, .helped 10 keep them
off the commmee.
· Barring major upsets in both
states, the latest pollS showed New
Jersey Republican Christine Todd

To~ay

guided program trading punctuated
By MARYBETH NIBLEY
the session and made for turbulent
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK- The stock mar- activity.
Markel analysts said the two·
ket finished mostly higher Friday
thanks to a late rally that capped a day selloff subsided as· stock
investors pul aside worries about
j~mpy sess.i'!" d_ominated by worrising
interest rates.
nes about tlSlng mtcrest rates.
A
government
report Friday
Renewed buying enthusiasm in
10
lhe
edginess
among bond
added
the final hour drove up the Dow
uaders,
giving
them
a
fresh incenJones industri!ll · average and
aUowed iuo end lljllll' its best level tive 10 sell, which sent interest rates
of the day with, a. gail' of 18.45 at still higher.
The Labor Department said the
3,643.43. It lost 37.16 points for
nation's unemployment rate rose 10
the week.
·
Declining ·issues still outnum- 6.8 percent in October from 6. 7
bered advances at.the close on lhe percent a monlh earlier. A survey
New Yor1c SIOCk .EX\:hange but by . of businesses found payrolls
a .IUllTpwer matgin. than they did expanded by 177,000 jobs, includearlier. The prices· ot about I ,260 ing 12,000 at factories.
The 30-year Treasury bond
stocks fell in -price, 860 rose whUe
ended off about 1/2 point, pushing
570 were un\:hangeil. ·
Trading was .active as it had its yield to about 6.20 percen~ A
been during the two P,R;Ceding ses- month ago, the long bond's yield
sions of heavy s,e!llin$ ~hat had hovered around 5.75 percent.
Amoog broad market indicators,
-lopped more than 70 W,Jllts off lhe
Dow industrials. Volunie on the the NYSE composite rose 0.73 to
floor of the Big Boar(came to 254.20 but lost 5. l8 in the week.
331.29 miUion shares iiS of 4 p.m., The Standard &amp;: Poor's 500 stock
compared 10 320.98 millipn in lhe index rose 2.08 to 459.57 but shed
8.26 points in the week. At the
previous session.
· The'NYSE said the week was American Stock Exchange, the
the second heaviest ever in terms or marlcel value index dropped 2.20 to
trading volume, which amounted to 475.33 and ended 6.111ower than a
1.55 billion shares. It was second week earlier.
Sm,aller stocks also rebounded
only to the 2.3 billion shares l1'aded
and
the Nasdaq composite index
in the week ended Ocl. 23, 1987. ·
Periodic bursts of computer- gained 5.73 to close al 762.99,
which was 16.27 below its week
.earlier reading.

Whitman and Virginia Democrat
May Sue Terry as losers.
Both candidates seemed destined to replicate Canadian voters'
humiliatinl( rejection of incumbent

Chuck Stone
Kim Campbell, that nation's first
woman prime minister.
Campbell almost pied pipered
her Progressive Conservative pany
into a watery grave. Voters reduced
the PC's legislative seats from 175

in history

By The Associated Preis
Today is Sunday, Nov. 7, the 3llth day of 1993. There are S4 days left

in the~.
Today's Highlight in HiSIOry:
On Nov. 7, 1917, Russia's Bolshevik Revolution lOOk place as forces
led by ·Vladimir llyich Lenin overthrew the prpvisional government of
Aleunder Kerenslr:y.
On thii dltfc:
Ia 1874, the Republican Party was symbolized as an elephant in a car10011 drawn by 1bomu Nast in Halpcl''s Weeki~.
In 1893, Colorado J11!11ted its women theri t 10 vote.
In 1916, .Republican Jeannette Rankin o Montana became the fllllt
woman electaliO Congress.
·
In 1918, ditrlnf W~ld War 1. an erroneous Jeport from the Unit~
Press that an tlf!II!Jiicc bad been signed set off celebrations across the
country.
.
Ia 1940, Jlie "'lddlc lll!'ltion of the Tacoma Nanows Bridsc; in Wash·
durin&amp;
ingt.Onllllt
IoJ94,4,
PraMiin1 windstorm.
D. Roolevelt won 1 founh term in offiCe,
d~eating Thontlll :e:Dcwey·
.
In 1962. RiCIIard M. Nixon, having lost Cslifornia's gubcmaiOrlal race,
held what hillllld -his lul•ws c:onfamce. telling tepcxteq, "You
won't have N'amto Jdck uuUnd an)'llltn."
Ia 1962, fcnnedl~lady FJanor Rooleveltdied in New YortCity.
1a t963, the
c:omec~y "It'• • Mad. Mad, Mild. Mad
V( id"llld ill wodd
_.... ia Hollywood
0
1972, Pi 1 • li ~ Will " I lid in • IMdslide OVC'l' Democrat

. Meigs Fair Board
boasts new members

==

POMEROY - Two me.mhers
were re-elected and three others
added to the Meigs County Fair
Board ":hen the annual election 9f
the Metgs County Agriculture
Soeict)' lOOk plaCe this week,
Re-elected for· terms on the
board were Virgil Windon and
Brent Zirkle. New lllCIIIbers elected
.were Jim 'Va~son, Richard
Koblen~ and Kenneth Buckley.
• They join ,otlier members Dan
Smith, Jennings Beegle, Roger
Spencer, Addalou Lewis, Mary
Kay Rose, Carolyn Rit~hie, Ed ·
Holtet, Tim Bearhs, Leonard
.Koenig and BiH Ducldey.
Jim Sheets and Charlie Shain
did not seek re-election.

G

t

an.- Clr•••

~Mc:Govem.

r Ia 1m,~ ovarode Prelidenl.Nixon's veto of the W• Powers
· Act, "'hich 'limit,t 1 chief aec11tive's po'iVa' 10 wage war wilhout conpq.
sionali1Jllllival. · · ··
Todiy's Binlldayl: ~¥MJil'll• Billy G!aham is 7S~ Jazz musician AI
ijinis 71. Opera linJII' Dllite 1- Sidllerl8ad ia 67. Fcxmcr,Sen. Rudy
, Boa:bwicz, R·Mim., il Q, ....... MirY 1'nwal i156. Sin __...,.,..,;;..,.
' J~Midlellii50.~ . .'PIIIo·29.
-..- - - · ''

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Tobacco siOcks caught fue aller
word circulated in the marlcet t1rat a
Sanford C. Bernstein &amp;. Co. analyst
had made positive comments about
the group. Philip Morris reportCdly
told distribuiOrs that it will begin
restricting cigarette shipments, a
m~ve .that in the past has preceded
pnce mcreases.
Philip Morris surged 2· 7/8 to
SS-1/2 lD heavy NYSE trading.
RJR Nabisco rose SIS 10 6-1/2 and
led the Big Board's list of active
issues on volume of more than 12
million shares. American Brands
rose 2-118 to 34-3/4.
Stocks droiiJ)ed steeply in Hong
Kong and 1"okyo as well as in
Frankfun, Londori and Paris after
bearish sentiment that originated in
the United States overflowed to
markets there.

While details of the "partnership' • plan have yet 10 be fleshed
out, il would appear to do lillie
more than expand the securit~
forum, which has· also lalked about
carrying out joint exercises and
peacekeeping with the East
·
·
Owen Harries, editor of the
WashingiOn foreign policy magazinc, The National Interest,
described the new proposal as "the
worst of all worlds . What this
would do would create uuer confusion; uncenainty,IIIJdambigu.ity."
Czech President Vaclav Havel
said il must represent a first step_
nol·an alternative _ 10 admission.
"We need something more,"
said Gyorgy GranasziOi, Hungary's
envoy 10 NATO. Membership, he
said, "should be a rapid process."
Since the plan was unveiled last
month, Woerner has sought to dis·
pel doubts, saying it should help
ease the way for some to join.
Privately, diplomats predict the
alliance will opep its doors to new
members in three to five years,
with Poland, Hungary. and the
Czech Republic as the fronl·runners.
But even that vague timetable
would depend on events in Russia,
a nuclear power buffeted by internal political woes.

By FRED BA YLI!S
AP Natloaal Writer
MALIBU, C1lif. - "Pestilence," said lhe man in the heavy
F.luses over his white wine.
.'Earthquake. Mudslide. Ftre. Mongol borde. What's next?"
Hi~ co:Cnion at the bar had
more unm
te concerns.
"I wonder if they've turned on
the cable yet," she said.
Weloomc IO ·Malibu on a smoky
Friday night.
This pricy seaside community,
singed and seared, struggled back
to some semblance of normalcy
this weekend after three days of
fiery teiror.
A fue, started in the hills above
Topanga Canyon, swept down on
this celebrity communtty, destroying homes and ctosing Pacific
Coast Highway, Malibu's lifeline.
Smoldering, blackened hillsides
said it all Friday as IJ'ali'te returned
with those seeking refreshment at
bars and restaurants that hug the
shoreline.
The scent of smoke hung heavy
in the air. Whole families, dressed
in whatever they could grab in
advance of the fll'C, sat stunned in
the comers of bars and hotel lobbies while insurance adjusters in
fresh suits and ties busily juggled
paperworlc.
Malibu residents flipped over
fuefighters. Signs set up along the
road gave praise, including one at
the Palm and Card Reader shop
thai read: "Thank you fll'Cmen and
LAPD."
As the sky purpled over the
ocean horizon, restaurant staffs
nervously awaited health inspeciOrs
for fmal permission to open. Most
had lost their power and refrigera·
lion during the fire. Soot was
another health issue.
"We really had to buff lhe place
out," said Rich Conlon, manager
of lhe Pierview Cafe and Cantina.
Parking lots normally filled with
the cars had plenty of room for the
Winnebagos and converted
campers marked with banners that
read: "Allstate Catastrophe" and
"State Farm Disaster Relief."
With the fire moslly contained,
its effects remained overwhelming.
"Everybody's still in shock,"
said bartender Kevin Hoff. "ll's

going 10 be awhil~ before peo~~tci
realize die enormity of this.'
·Oalhtled in small blots at bars
and hptels, survivors told their

Illes.

At lhe Malibu Beach Inn, lksk
clult Brelll Smith told of lhe Ocr.
man tourisu who w~rc uappccl
when authorities shut down the&gt;
highway. Unable to drive out to
catch their night home, the Ocrmans came up y.ith another idea.
"They chartered a speedboat,
came down 10 the pier and dropped:
lheir IUJOOQt~ iniO the boal and lOok
off for Marina del Rey," he said. :
At the Picrview, brothers Tom·
and Tim Corliss tried to keep up
with the flow of salad, pizza,
french fries and drinks brought by
an auentive wail!ess.
"You guys are homeless so eat
up," she said.

Auto policy

expiring?
You may qualify for
A,llstate Good Driver
Rates and be entitled
to some discounts,
too.

Stanley

417 Sec. Ave., Gelllpolla, Oh. ·
. 446-1761.

AUstate®
Allst.•te lnsuranee Ccmpan)'

THE FOLLOWING FINANCIAL
INSTITUTIONS WILL BE CLOSED"
TH~RSDAY, NOVEMBER 11th,
1993 FOR VETERANS DAY:

BANK ONE
OHIO VALLEY BANK

STAR.BANK
UNITY SAVINGS BANK ·

Ex-clerk Rinehart
has new address
. GALLIPOLIS Marjorie
Rmehan, a former Gallia County
clerk of courts (1936-76) has
moved from The Inn at Sharon
Brooke in Newark to the LPN
Health Care Facility, 151 Orice
Road, Newarlt, Ohio, 43055. .
Miss Rinehart, who has been in
declining health in recent months
would like 10 hear from her frie~
from G~lia Cpunty.

CALL NOW
FINAL WEEK!

Florine Marl&lt;
Area Direct~
Lost 50 pounds
and has kept "
off 27 years.

We'll show you how you can eat all your favorite foods. And you'll
get the group support and encouragement you need. So call
Weight Watchers today, and enjoy your holidays like never before.
,WithQut gaining weig~t!

. COme to the Wdght Watchers meeting nearest you.
N'EW MEMBERS, PLEASE ARRIVE 30 MINUTES EARLY FOR REGISTRATION .

THUTWORI PROGIIAII"
'Pul Weight Watchers to waft for you and
your felloW employees. cau lor current
IVllillbiUty and pricing. At Worl&lt; meetings

·

an1 pre-paid programs.

_,..........,...

- 1 M oot-t C001muolty

GALLIPOLIS
ST. PfTER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7:00p.m.
Wed: 9:30a.m.
'~llollln1

Call Tol.l F,-ee

JACKSON
JACKSON COUNTY YMCA
275 Portsmouth St
Moo: 6:30 p.m." •

I

�nmes Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

November7,1

--Area deaths-.·:Ruth B. Avner
GALLJPOLIS- Ruth B. Avner, 77,412 Hedgewood Drive, Gallipo; , lis, died Friday, Nov. 5, 1993 at her residence.
j•
Born Oct. 12, 1916 in Czechoslovakia. daughter of the late Ben and
l : Molly Bwech, she was a homemalcer. She was a member of !he Women's
• : Auxiliary at Holzet Medical Center, Order of the Eastern .Star No. 283
: : and the B'nai Sholom Congregation in Huntington, W.Va. She volun: leered in the Holzer Surgical Lounge for several years.
• ' Surviving are her husband, Max Avner, whom she married in 1935 in
: • Cleveland; three sons, Dr. Sanford Avner of Denver, Colo., Dr. Ted
• : Avner of Roanoke, Va, and Dennis Avner of Salt Lake City, Utah; three
; : grandchildren, David Avner, Marc Avner and Deborah Avner; a brother,
, • Irvin Burech of Florida; and two sisters, Helen Heiser &amp;f Wellston, and
• : Blanche Bernstein of Phoenix, Ariz.
: : A memorial service will be held at 1 p.m. Mondar in the Willis Funer• •al Home, with Rabbi Dr. David E. Wucher officiatmg. Burial will be at
: ' the convenience of the family.
: : In lieu of flowers, the family requests that conaibutions be made 10 lhe
: Holzer Medical Center Hospice Foundation.

;:Arthur Henry Kibble
COOLVILLE- Arthur Henry Kibble, 63, Tuppers Plains, died Salllrday, Nov. 6, 1993 at his residence following an extended illness.
: Born Nov. 18, 1929 at HarmorviUe, Pa., son of the late Arthur E. and
:Josephine Hauber Kibble, he retired from Ellcem Metals of Maricua after
·31 years of service. A life member of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
· :workers Union 3-639, he was a U.S. Army veteran of the Korean War
: ·and a member of YFW Post No. 9053 at Tuppers Plains.
:
Surviving are his wife, Violet Wilson Kibble; a son and daughter-in• law, Arthur Jr. and Cathy Kibble of Tuppers Plains; a daughter, Mary
: Elizabeth Kibble of Tuppers Plains; a granddaughter, Katie Kibble of
· .Tuppers Plains; two brothers, Francis W. Kibble of Reedsville, and
· ,Thomas J. Kibble of Long Bo110111; a sister, Dorothy l'a!ter of Pomeroy;
; and seveml aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews.
· · Services will be II a.m. Tuesday in the White-Blower Funeral Home,
: Coolville. Burial will be in Coolville Cemetery. Friends may call at the
: funeral home Monday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
.'

.

·Esther A. McKinney
: : MIDDLEPORT - Esther A. McKinney, 35, Galloway •. former~y of
: Meigs County, died Friday, Nov. 5, 1993 in Veterans Memorial Hosp1tal.
· · Born May 12 1958 in Gallia County, daughter of George an~ Cath.er·
: j 0 e Robson Lo~ery of Harrisonville, she was a graduate of Me1gs High
· ~chool and the Buckeye Hills School of Nursing, and was employed as a
' aicensed practical nurse at the Colwnbus Medical Center.
: ' She was a member of the Columbia Heights Methodist Church, and
.: !was formerly a member of the MID-POM School of Dance. She was for. rnerly active in the Spring Fling of Pomeroy.
.
.
.
: Surviving in addition 10 her parents are he~ hus'?&amp;OO. Lew1s McKinney,
)I daughter, Megan, at hOme; a broti!er and stster:m-law, Tom an~ Debo·rah Lowery of Syracuse; brothers-m-law and Slsters-m-law, Bn&amp;l) and
~ Pe · Hartman of Middleport, and Tim and Jo Dunn of Cheshue: a
, '1 ma~:kal gmndmother, Florenc~ J. Robson ~f JefferSim, Pa.; her !ather·m:
· :taw and mother-in-law, BurdeU and Kathenne McKinney of Middleport;
'and uncles aunts, nephews and nieces.
.
: She waS also preceded in death by a son, Bradley.
. ; Services will be II am. Tuesday i~ ~e Fisher_ Fun~ral Home, M•ddle'port with Pastor Alvis Pollard officulUng. Bunal will be m the Wells
; :ceO.:etery, Harrisonville. Friends may call at lhe funeral home Monday
• from 7-9 p.m.
'

--Deaths
elsewhere-.
'

Charles Feil
· · PRINCETON TOWNSHIP,
N.J. (AP) - Charles Fe it, co·
.founder of Weight Watchers Inter. national Inc., died of a heart attack
Wednesday. He was 69.
·· Feit was an at10mey and certi·fied public accountant .before help~ng found the group m 1968. He
was an executive vice rresident
and board member o Weight
Watchers from 1968 to 1980.
''. Feit also endowed a Baruch
College forum to allow top students to study interdisciplinary top' jcs and set up scholarship funds for
'Baruch graduateS wanting to attend
''New York Law School. Baruch
awarded him an honorary doctorate
~{&gt;f humane Jeuers in 1987.
'

'Marlo Cecchi Gorl
ROME (AP) - Mario Cecchi
Gori a leading Italian mm producer VO:hose credits included the
:Oscar-winning "Mediterraneo,"
: tljed Friday, apparently of a heart
•JlUIICk. He was 73.
; , CecChi Gcri produced more than
~0 Cilins over more than three
' decades ranging from grade B fare
1•lo such ' successes as "Th e Easy
~ Life," a 1962 tragicomedy.
· "Mediterraneo," a film about
Italian' soldiers stranded on a Greek
;jsland during World War. II, won
.ihe 1992 Oscar as best fol'Cign film.
Cecchi Gori was also well
known in Italy for his pass~~n . for
.soccer. He came under cnuc1sm
.this year when the team he owned,
Fiorentina of Florence, was demot,ed 10 the minor leagues.

sultant and inventor of the frozen
french fry, died Wednesday after a
long illness. He was 87.
The Caribou native was best
known for his inventions, including
the frozen french fry, which he
developed in the mid-1940s (n the
H.C. Baxter Co. laboratory in Hart·
land.
The rlTSl frozen fries were sold
through the Birds Eye Co. frozen
"foods plant in Caribou in 1947.
Pierson later designed and engineered the first french fry plant for
McCain Foods of Florenceville,
New Brunswick, a company that
has grown into a worldwide conglomerate.
Pierson graduated from Caribou
High School and the Massachuseus
Institute of Technology before joining what was then known as the
Army Air COI]lS.
Later, . he became a United
Nations consultant and traveled 10
Poland, Brazil, Greece, Sweden
and Canad!lto help with potato
processing, machinery selection
and plant design.

Landlord in trouble

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Jandloill who disobeyed an order to
live in one of his dilapidated properties until they were renovated has
been given a _curfew and other
restrictions.
. Nawal K. Pandy was ordered on
Oct. 13 by Environmental Judge
Richard C. Preiffer 10 live in one of
his properties until 16 were ren&lt;&gt;vated to meet housing codes.
A· city code enforcement offiocr
and an inspector for the court found
·oJor P. Pierson
on a recent inspection that Pandy
. CARIBOU, Maine(~) - Olof was only sleeping at !he house des·
P. Pierson, a United Nauons con- ignated by Preiffer.
,.

1 would like to Thank the people of
Racjne for the support they gave me in
my election. There were a lot of untrue
stories being told. I've worked hard the
last tout years anct I plan to keep it up.
In Meigs County a !~t of people ~at
hung up on politics~ To get anythmg
: accomplished we, as Meigs Counti:· ans, should work together.

Served

+ . **·.
*it ._.*"*
'..

PARENTS NIGHT OBSERVED· Parents Jlllgbtinl observed
prior to the GaWpolis-Jaduon football eamt oli Memorial Field
Friday nlght1 Parents or 1uardians or all rootball players, baild

memben and·cbeerleaclers were introduced
(Tiuies-Seatlnel photo by Kevin Pinson)

Open r~cords
report goes to
legislators
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
40-member committee reviewing
Jaws that regulate access to public
records delivered a smorgasboill of
possible changes 10 legislators. ·
The panel created by Attorney
General Lee Fisher managed unanimous agreement on only two ideas:
compiling illl open government legislation into a smgle chapter of law,
and making the process of requesting public records easier.
They had subsllintial agreement
on several other proposals, includ·
ing a 25-cent per page cap 410 the
fee agencies may charge for copying records, and a requirement that
copies be sent 'by mllil when
requested.
The committee was unable to
reach consensus on '1m array of
other issues, including a proposal
to require that closed meetings of
public agencies be tape recorded,
and payment of attorney fees for
groups that must go to court to win
access to information.
Fisher endorsed some of the
. panel's suggestions, but not others.
However, the entire report was
delivered to !he General Assembly
where it is expected to be the basis
for bills that Rep. Vernon Sykes,
D· Akron and Sen. Scott Oelslager,
R..Canton will introduce.
Fisher outlined the committee
report at a news confere~ Friday.
He defended an earlier decision to
ask the Senate to delay action on a
bill thal.&amp;on.tained .some of t.)le
same recommendations.
"I didn't think it was apprqpriat.e for me 10 get ~ of our task
force," he said. "I felt it made
sense for the Geneml Assembly 10
have the benefit of our report
before they made their final decisions."
Sykes said chances were good
that many of the recommendations
in the report would be enacted
before the end of next year.
"I think that !he Legislature has
shown an openness 10 this concept
of open meetings and open recotds,
open government issues," he said.
Fisher said some information
ought to be exempt from disclosure, including personnel infonnation about law enforcement officers.
"Any information that can compromis~ the ability of that peace
officer 10 do his or her job is what
we're concerned aboul It may very
well be that not all personnel information has to be exempt, only
some," he said.
"We did not get into those kind
of details for now. That's not to say
we won't during the debate in the
Legislature," Fisher said.

·
Thanks Again
Mayor Jaffrey L. Thornton
~

:~

received a Superior I Rating Oct 30 at tbe 14th
anaual OMEA State Marching Band Finals In
Columbus, will march In tbe Disney World
Parade or Characters in Orlando, Fla., later this
month. (Times·Sentiael photo by Kevin Pinson)

Bill would let convenience
stores keep taking food stamps

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
comer convenience store may be
, the place to stop when the late·
night munchies call for soda pop
and potato chips or you need a
quart of mille 10 hold you over until
the supennarket opens.
But for many poor people, it's
the only place nearby to get eggs,
cheese, bread, bacon, fruit- whatever is neec!¢ to make i meal:
Witl\ the urban and 'iimd poor in
• Qlind, ~.ulb!re Diepartmc:nt
gave its ~ Thursday 10 a bill
making it easier for the convenience stores to keep accepting
food stamps.
Ellen Haas, assistant secretary
for food and consumer services,
told a House AgricUlture subcommittee the bill would ensure people
can buy food in rural areas and
inner cities where there are few
supermarkets.
The bill, introduced Wednesday
by Rep. Charles Stenholm, DTexas, changes the defmition of a
retail food store. Without the legislation, Stenholm said, many of the
nation's 56,000 convenience stores
would be disqualified soon from
the food stamp program.
Current law lets only retail food
stores that make more than half
their food-sale money from basic
or staple foods accept food stamps,
which 27 million Americans
receive at a cost of $28 billion a
year.
Convenience stores must sell
more soft drinks, candy, snacks and
other foods to make a profit, the
industry says.
. "This definition has neither
kept pace with changing retailer
practices over the years nor consumer shopping practices," Haas
told the subcommittee on department operations and nutrition
chaired by Stenholm.
The bill would let stores accept
food
stamps as long as they reguCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) larly
sold a variety of the staple
More than 300 f01eign students at
foods
in each of the four cateOhio State UniverSity were unable
gories:
mealS, poultry and fish;
10 get into a required English-lanbreads
and
cereals; frmts and veg.guage class, university officials
etables;
and
milk or other dairy
said.
products.
More foreign students enrolled
Foods in two of those categories
this year than ~xpected, and the
would
have to be perishable, so
budget for the dass was cut by 15
stores
couldn't
just stock some
percenl

Students unable to
get required class

ume from a single staple food·
could qualify, enabling meat or rtsh
markets, fruit and vegetable stands,
day-old bread stores and similar
outletS 10 accept food stamps.
·

canned and dried foods that never
sold in order to take food stannps
for snacks.
But stores that have more than
50 percent of their total sales vol-

....,:•h&amp; ,trnftftc!,..r- ..,.....£.,;

-~~

~ ~~ ~~~

'

,'

·r

tl

•+.-~

'·lc,

:. : Atthe.iilglitofthis pilrticlilardance
'Oile~·hadb!oug!lthisowndanc-

1Dg eompanion-il prostitute.
: . ''The girls refused 10 go out with
her there," Kratz said. "I had 10 guout
aDd ask him 10 take her S(lmeplace
~C)jse," she said. ''The other girls didn't
·want to be associated with her."
::: After a year in service, Kratz re;.iiuned to the United States. She resumed teaching but later reiumed 10
. 'theRedCrossduring the Korean War
aM was stationed in hospitals. She
; ~gan in Tokyo in a psychiaaic hos· tvtal.
· · "These were men who had broken
down on the front line," she said.
"And they were really raked thrOugh
the coals 10 see if they were fooling
(Ill being unstable)."
With four padded cells in the facili ty her safety was secure.

\

\
. FLAG PRESENTATION·- Kennetb Farmer,
County
Commissioner (left), Roberta Roush, ccmmemoratlve eveats chair
or tbe Ohio society or tbe Daughters or tbe American Revolution,
Jabez ParsoDS, county director or veterans services, Bess Grac~,
co-chair of the French Colony DAR, Harold ~ontgomery, Galha
County Commissioner, Harold Saunders, GaUl&amp; County Commis·
sioner and Wilma Brown, co-chair of tbe French Colony DAR,
display a flag commemorating the SOtb anniversary or World War
n, Tbe nag wUI ny on ~ pole outside the courthouse untU 1995.

ASincere "Thank You" to All The
Voters of .Green Township for
Electing Me Township Trustee.

MARK S. MOONEY
Term Beginning Jan. 1, 1994

. ..

~-~~~~=:.§ ~llb'gi'"'

' '"' ... . ..... ~ ..

glad she, was able 10 ~ i :\oalu- 10 hone their sharp sense of smell and . They required a resting period of
ableserviceiOthosemenyeaniingfor theneverydaytosupporttheirschool- three days in which they would refamiliarcomfotts.
ing.
ceivearefreshertrainingcourse,said
"They were so sad and many of
They could smell wire, explosives, Mulfoill. And the trainers load could
them were so depressed," she said. buriedcachesofweapons,snipersand weigh in excess of 100 pounds from
"We gave them a place like IKJ!!le," pungi pits.
dog food and water.
she said.
"Up 10 400 to 1000 meters the dogs
As testimony 10 their intense traincould smell a Vi~ese," Mulford ing, only seven dogs were ever ldUed
•
MICHAEL MULFORD
said. ''They were tramed .to neva baric during 3.000 missions, Mulford said,
A dog is a man's best friend. No or bite." ·
.
and no dog handlers were lost
uuerwords could probably bespoken
Each dog would have a Slgn&amp;lure
If errors were made it was gener10 Michael Mulfoill, commander of a reaction for his discovery, 10 which ally on the human side. In one inscoutdogplatoon in !he Vietnam War. the trainers learned 10 recognize.
stance, Mulford recalled, the troops
Pre-enlisting for service in 1969,
"If atrip wire was found some dogs were entering a hostile area in a fanned
Mulford received training and entered would flicktheirearsorlhehairwould out formation instead of using a point
the war as a lieutenant. He ope!'Bted stand up on their neck. If their nose man with canines.
Someoneaippeda500poundbomb
out of fire bases in Chu Lai and Da went qp in the air it generaUy meant
personnel or something was far away and shrapnel bit at the back of his
Nang.
The flight 10 his assignment took and if they found explosives they were pants.
25-hoursand he was immediately sub- trained 10 sit"
The mistake could have been preThe demands of rough terrain, vented by utilizing the canine forces
merged in a hostile situation.
"The first thing I iqlew sirens were leeches and pressure took a toll on the as point leads, he said.

Jt"did not t(fii'ier)lSOik's"hke ibiS 10 ~ '" tt;X;ps bed,haveihcm pinpointed then
make Mulford realize the value of the return 10 attack later, he said.
dogs on his life.
Precautions like this presenled

"E~ery time I went out I was grateful for the dogs," he said.
CROSSING THE LINE OF F1RE
The special foree of dogs could
reduce the lossoflife when traversing
into hostile tmitory but the danger
that Mulfoill confronted went beyond
the trails. It was common knowledge
men in his position was expendable.
"Lieutenants weren't expected to
Jive 100 long," he said.
Camping at night, for instance, was
a discrete and life threatening opera·
lion.
The troops would bed down and
then move during the night 10 a new
locallon 500 to 1,000 feet away perimeter of guards always stood wau:h.
The Vietnamese would see the

FonKnox,Ky.Pfc.Ciaryshippedout
toJapaninCompanyK,21stlnfantry
Regiment, 24th Infantry Division. He
arrived in Japan in April1949, and
On Jan. 11, 1952, Homer Clary wasstationedatKumanata,whenthe
' '
l'rlfatrUd.
was discharged from the U.S. Army war broke out in June 1950.
after three years service. He enlisted
Company K landed at Seoul, South
Jan.lt,1949arid ,.-------~--, Korea. July 2,
spent II moriths
1950 but it was
of his service in
The ceremony will be held at
two days bef01e
Army hospitals
Doughboy MonuiJlent on
Prc.Ciaryandhis
as the result of an
buddies saw comordeal on a KoVeterans Day and officiated
baLlnitialconliiCl
rean
battleby Gen, George Bush follow·
wasmadewiththe
ground.
ing the traditional parade.
enemy in the viPre .. Clary recinity of Osan,
ceived the Silver
south of Seoul.
Star for gallantry
inaction on July 11, 1950. There was American forces were falling back
no official presentation when hisregi- along the road from Seoul to Taeaon,
--~-~----""':'==---, · ment~inreview. There'snoth· then to Taegu and finally 10 Pusan.
r:
ing in the records about it. But, he has Gen. William Dean, who later wu
iL He was already discharged, and captured, W\15 in command of the 24th
·home, when it caught up with him. Division.
Falling back, the 21SIInfantry was
ThathotJulyday,Pfc. Clary was a
mcniber or Company K, 21st Infan- ordered 10 hold a Olonui. But the
try regimenL His outfit was being fighting was so fierce thallhc21st had
thrown piecemeal against a Commu- to withdraw and set up new positions
nist horde from North Korea, ad· afewmilesnorthofCochiwon.Amcrivancin&amp; dOwn from Seoul, in an ef- can planes and tanks poducecl .tbe
fOrt to .pin, valuable time for the greatest destruction of enemy ·armor
Americln.
in the entire war that day 11 Chonui,
The Oallia County soldier single- but reupat was still in order.
~y re~led an enemy attack
It was in this fierce fighq that !he
ODbiscotnJBiy·'spositiol)and in tum Crownqtyareasoldierdistiquished
knocked out an enemy machine gun himself in the lllldition of !be Ameri·
polilioR, killing its crew aJitl 'aevelll can~ tnlll. Here is the citation:
other tbe enen\Y in the immediate
l'(C. HomCr F. Cllry,RA 1523591,
area.
. lntanlry USA, member orCOt•puy
Afte1; ~ wedu basic training at K, 2bt Infantty. R.egiment, 24!11 In-

'

Pd. lor by u.rk 8. Mooney, 112 Dogwood Dl., Galltpolle, 3711-2135.

.iMurance
' Let needswith a free
me analyle your

Family Insurance Checkup;''

·

CAROLL

u, ',Ol

.... 4161290
111M44H511

'..

POINT PLEASANT

~==~=~·

VIETNAM PAST AND PRESENT.
Michael Mulford, right, served in the
196th brigade, abo~e, during the Vietnam
War from 1969 to 1970, He was commander of a &amp;cout dog platoon that lead
troops Into enemy rerritory. Bud, below,
was one of50 dogs in his platoon,

wm

a low level of fear for Mulford..
The deepest anxiety was in rll'e
fights, when contact with the enemy
was actually made.
·
"It •s absolute chaos... when bullets
start flying, you can't hear and
everybody's down being shot IL
You're so scared; it's really 101a1
chaos," Mulf&lt;Xd said
'
After Vietnam Mulf&lt;Xdle~Umed to
the United States and resided inCalifomia and pursued a degree in ""'ralion.
He now lives in Cheshire witb his
wife Marie and dog Sassy. He is .a
librarianatRiverValleyHigbSchool.
LookingbackonhisscrviceinVietnam Mulfoill said, "It was an intaest.
ing job and one of the most
scariest.. .and God bless dogs"
·

honor a Korean War hero

SNGWDIN
341 Sociol , ...

949-2351

*.

After 43 years, a ceremony to

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
· WEIGHT CONTROL

zsm

and.you dido 't," she said
Attempting 10 Jilpvide the plllients
with temporary relief
from !heir institu·
. ..
tiona! setting the •
worters would •
·
serve confeclions, schedule
bingo games and
providealounge
for socializing.
Taking leaVe
ofTokyo Kratz
was relocated
in Yokbhamaat
a hospital for
asthmatic patients.
"These boys were
bored 10 death," she
said.
The workers tried anything 10 entertain and lift the soldiers out of depression.
''We would hold contests 10 sec
who had the biggest foot. On SL
Paaick's Day we would l!ave them
guess how much a blarney storie
weighed,"
.
..
·
From there Kratz ended her second
service in Korea with a Mobile Army
Surgical Hospital (MASH) UniL
Under constant threat of auack the
unit was not stable.
·
"We practiced bug outs as if we
were auacked. I was in charge of
getting the red Cross rec~ out
safely" she said.
With this cloud of uncertainty hovering over the unit, the workers kept
their diversions simple. Crafts were
simple and easily used as entertain·
ment, she said
At the oonclusiQn of the war Kratz
assisted with the cleanfUP ef(ort and

going off," he said "and we w~
jumping behind concrete pylons.7
~t.wting out as an Infantry Platoon
Commander of the 196th brigade,
Mulford W1S promoted
to commander of a
scout dog platoon of
SO canines.
lbemove
waslattnlt;hesaid,
from being a grunt
toagruntwithdogs.
Mulford's mission
was 10 walk point
with a dog. Walk·
ing point, a soldier
was the rlJ'Sl 10 enter a conflict area
with the troops following.
"It was the most
dangerous 'job plain and
simple," he said
If there was troubl&amp; in an area, such
a sniper rm:, a dog platoon would be
requested A helicopter would then
haul tbe troops and dogs to the ftre
base ofa conOicurea.
The fire base was a storage area for
guns, ammunition. and supplies. The
troops. would divide and search for
their target
German shepherds were used as
polntdogsandlabradorretrieverswere
used as tracker dogs to follow a trail of
blood.
The person leading lhe troops was
coined the point man. He was the flfSt
one 10 make contact with Snipers, trip
wires ancl pungi pits. Pungi pits were
caverns dug 10 house explosives.
Canines were taught 10 sense these
dangers and alert their trainer.
Tobeabletodeteetthesubtlethreats
!he dogs were subjected 10 an.intense
lrilining.
"ItwtiSabsolutelyphenomenal how

Received Silver Star by mail in 1950

FAMILY PRACTICE

TO ACCOMMODATE 'nJOSE_W_~~!l!~~ PEIJPLJ!;;
'WE AREoOPEN 'TIL !i P.M. ON TUESDAYS
·(POINI' PLEASANT MEDICAL CENI'ER)
&amp; JEFn:RSON AVENUE ·

me

"One of the head nurses tQkl
'don'tlllrn your back on these men'

VOLUNTEER SERVICE ·Betty Kratz,
'
ltft,·was Red Cross ~c~ation worker
I
' during World War II and the Korrarr
War; To ensure her sqfety the embltm
pklund below Will sewn on the inside of
1 \•
· ~Nr:)a~L It reads, that she Will willl 1M
By DICK THOMAS
(This
story was adapted from a
'
Clfl!ul Bumu~lndhl Thearer and Iffound ·
story written ip Jan. 11, 1966 for
•nd ltllln can of Iter guardian would be
The Gallipolis Tribune.)

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

···. Pd. for by ClllldldMa, Box 154; RICIM, Oh.
~

By LISA PETERSON
. Times-Senti!lel Stair
... GAUJFOLIS-OnVeteransDay,
the hearts and gratitude of the nation
out to every man and woman who
Jjave served our country in times of
't ar.Theirdevotiontodutyandcoun·
'lfy is recognized in the following
·Portraits of three such patriots.
··'
BETI'Y KRATZ
.:; At 27 y~ of age Betty Kratz, a
·college level physical education
·iCacheratthe.wasreadyforachange;
was the middle of World War n, ·
lnd she had patriotic duty on her
:·" ind
·
ShejoinedtheAmericanRedCross
;tj) serve in the China India Burma
:rJ!eatre as a recreational :worker.
: ~ "I though! I was going 10 conquer
·the world,'' she said.
· ~ After VJ day she began helping 10
:oombllt depression, boredom and
:Jooeliness of troops rewming home
'o'r awaiting assignment.
Beginning her lOur in Kunming
she eventually moved 10 Shanghai
·and aided in' the establishing a haven
called the Foreign YMCA.
: The YMOAofferedaplaceforthe
men to take asliojYer, socialize, bowl
:or eat a full brealcfasL The Red Cross
workers organized teas, dances and
shopping trips.
Theworkersauemptedtosimulate
American activities-which was no
easy task. Kratz recalls a dance the
'Workers coordinated.
· "WehadtogetgirlsfromShanghai
'Ill attend and had 10 make arrangeinents with the parents," she said.
'{he girls were transported 10 and
from the dance and were under the
workers care.
Once the hostesses were secured,
long tea dresses had 10 be found for
die diminutive girls and they were to
e'nter tOgether 10 be dancing partners

::n

SENIOR BAND MEMBERS HONORED •
Gallia Academyls aeaior band members were
. bonored dllrlng Friday night's halftime show
betwee• the Jackson-GaUipo11s rontball game on
Memorial Field. Tbe GAHS band, whi~h

Portraits of three local heroes

·~

·'!f

•I

' :"If we wprk togellu.tr and tuk tlu.t LOrd ]e•u•
;
to lu.tlp, anything u pQui!Jiel"

with

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••••u•,cl'
State Farm

. IOSI!.ran.f'e.Companies
Home ()ffice: BltKitnington. Illinois
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Uke a gOod' rteighbor, State !'arm is there ..
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fan try Division, is awarded the Silver
Star for gallantry in action on July 11
1950, near Caonui, KO'ell.
'
"DuringanenemyattackonaCom.
pany K position, Pfc. Clary had
knocked out an enemy machine IUD
with rue rom his light machine IUDThe enemy tried attaclting over Clplill
ground IOlhecotnJBIYcommandflOil,
Uf!011 seeing this, he swung his ma.
chine gun around and sJarted 6ringon
them.
"After firing a few shots his ~
was disabled by enemy small~
fue . Undaunted by this and with~
disregard for his o,;n safety, W·
charged the enemy inachine gun poai;
lion, firing as he advanced, killin&amp; Ill
membersoflhecrew and sevaalodwf
enemy in the vicinity.
•
"The act of gallantry displayed W,
Pfc. Clary reflects great crediton birO'S
self and the United Stales Anny.• :
The cilation
'gnecl by 'Ma ..
Gen. WilliamE,;;,Idjuqateea~
era!, and Frank Pice Jr~ Sec:retay
the Army, Sept. 25, 19Sl, in Wilb_.,
ington, D.C.
After his ordeal by fire, P&amp;:,
was shipped back immediately 110
pan, first 10 a hospital in TokyO...,..
fering from an acute nervous .~
der. Then he waa Dow111o Tr&amp;'fiti Ail
Force a-. c~., ~ till
months he wu boapoeltacl,be Mllf.'

at

=,'

u:.

KellnedyGentaiHotPitll.l'e .W·I ~
Tenn., IIIII Witter Reed Holjti:.. . '
Washington.
· . •
r::ortY~IImio )an . . . ..cr.,~
beotraciallylftllllledbisSi1•s-.:'

,'

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Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Tlmee S.ntlriel

Gallia community calendar
Sllllday, NoY. 7
RIO GRANDE • The South
Cenllll Ohio l'relcrvaiion Society
.wiU hold its fall meedng Ill 2 p.m.
at Bob Evans Farm Shellerhouse
with Emmett Conway making a
presentation on lf!dian trails.

llhletic boosiCIS wiU liiCCI at 7 p.m.
in the middle IChool cafettria.

•••

GAll.IPOUS • PBR1 will meet
at Senior Citizens Cencer at 3 p.m.
wilh Susan Hightower to speak.

•••

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
CROWN CITY • Born Again District Library Board of Trumes
Believers Mid Gospel Sounds Quar- at Bossard Librarv at 5 p.m.
~ will sing at Crown City Unired
GALLIPOLIS - Chamber of
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
.
Commerce will meet at the StowGAGE • Rev. Grady Crowell away at noon.
wiiJ ·be presenting ~be sermon at
GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Southern Baptist Church at the
Anonymous wiU meet at Woodland
I0:40 a.m. and 7 p.m. service.
CenretS multipurpose at8 p.m.
•••
MACARTHUR· The former
POINT PLEASANT - Narcotics
employees of En111e Construction
Co. wiU hold it reunion at the Com- Anonymous Clean and Free Group
munity Building at noon. Bring a will meet at Episcopal Church at
8:30p.m.
covered dish.

--.,.

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...

CADMUS • Walrer and Phyllis
PoJ,lC will host an open house at
their new home I 5526 State Route
141 from 2to S P.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
will hold an open house at 7 p.m.
with a presentation of ''True Living
God."

MR. AND MRS. H,OWARD LOGAJI{

50th anniversary celebration set
POMEROY - Howard and
Ele~Wor Jordan L~~ will celebrate their SOih w. 'ng anniver-·
sary on Friday. They were married
qn Nov. 12, 1943 in Amarillo·,
Texas.
/

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They are the parents of a daughcer, Barbara of Pomeroy, and a son,
Ron of Middlepon. and have two
grandsons, Darin and Kevin Logan.
Mr. Logan retired from
Columbia Gas of Ohio.

Community
Comer

/

. Several fun aclivilies are being
r:nned for youngsters at the
ICip County Public Library next
.:week in observance of' Children's

)Oclkwcet.

; The programs wiU be held on
Nov. 16, 17 and 18, besinning at 7
p.m.
.
On Tuesday of that week
younpten will be makins person·
ilized bulletin llouds, on Wednes·
;~Y.· the friendly purple dinosaurs
~ visit to enttrtain and sing wilh
3J1e you.ngslers, and on Thursday
'(toda boule aquariums will be

.milde.

;- Those planning to attend the
~ or Thursday programs, are
~ to call the library to regiscer.
.,That's so library personnel can set
J IOtJether .adequare macerials for lhe
pro,JCCts.

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'a:ran
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Our congratulations to Dorolhy
~olkl.
~-, Tuesday she will observe her
:pQth birthday.
Friends are planning a card
oihower for hcr.lf you'd like to join
. ~ that, lhe address is 366 South
·~illlh Ave., Middleport, Ohio
;t '

~5760.
il

.: Gee, Linda; we'D miss you!
Genial Linda Aaley in the
p.Jeip County Board ?f ~lion
olfiCC for many years ts rettnng on
of.&lt;:. 31. She has worked in lhe
~County school sySiern for 32

i~hc began working in the Rut·

land school office, then wilh con-

ll!iidalion went to the Meiss Local

liOitd office, and in 1969 to lhe
c:Q.UIKy office.
· • i'(ou can bet .her relirement plans
do Jlol include a rocking chait.
,1~ manj

months of planning,
the, commumty education program
~ by the Ohio Department
of Education is gelling off the
!he Meigs Local School

=t.ln

Janet Bolin, coordinator, advises
that any community member can
entOll and says lh!ll lhe costs are
being held down, in many cases

Holiday
happening to
be presented
PO~OY • The amtual Holi·
dly Happeniag ~ by ~
Meip Count)' J!xllllliiOII Oflic:e IS
seiiQduled for Tuelldly. Nov. 16
from 1
a.m. to ~oon at the
Scniar CitiJeU Cel*l' ID Pomeaoy•
The IJI'OII'IIri Will.be presented
by Couril)' Blltellllion ApiiS Becky
Cul.,ertson, Oallia County, and
Ciady Oliveri, Meiga Coun~)';
~ this r- wiU be on fesuve

o:oo

fdb!ls. decollling llld flm!ly b'ldi-

tioill.
• J»&gt;rricipiDtS wiU eiCh receive a
IWCiw pqe handout with m:ipel
. . jlft' pg~UODI, ID~C tWO
~

llcllliiiYe • vppaallilili:y 10
yea ibrr....a ~ipc~.

............
._f.::;, .!W..:.~s"?.
aiiiO, k

•

just tO lhe cost of materials.
A low-impact aerobics class is
currently under way at Meigs Hish
School. The class is taught by
Mary Owens, a certified instructor,
and costs $25 .
Although already started, the
class runs six weeks and it's not
too tare to enroU. Sessions will be
held Tuesday, Thursday, and !hen
on Nov. 16, 18, 30 and Dec. 2, 7, 9,
14 and 16. Two class times, 4 p.m.
and 5:30 p.m., are offered for varying schedules.
Then on Tuesday and Thursday
in the Meigs High School library,
Jean Lyons for lhe Meigs County
EMS, a certified instructor, will
reach an American Red Cross CPR
class.
There will also be an American
Red Cross First Aid class with
Adult CPR offered Nov. 16 and 18
at the library. Cost fill' each class is
$1 S which pays for the required
book.
OSU Extension Agent Cipdy
Oliveri will teach "Sweet Treats
from Your Kitchen" on Dec. 2
from 6 to 8 p.m. The cost of !he
class is $4 for supplies. Each student will taste and have treats to
take home.
For those who want to learn or
updare their computer skills, two
classes will be offered at Meigs
High School.
An IBM computer class will be
offered with Becky Cotterill
instruciOr, and an Apple program
will be offered by Jim Sheets.
We'll announce the time and dates
orice those decisions have been
made.
Meanwhile, if you need furtber
informalion on lillY of !he programs
already arranged. or suggestions
about classes you'd like to see
offered, just call Janet- that's
742-2095.
Have a nice week!
President Harry S. Truman
signed the Presidential Succesion
Act in 194 7. lt designated the
Speaker of !he Ho11l1C. next in line
to the presidency after lhe vice
president, followed by lhe Senate
president pro tern, lhen by members of the Cabinet.

if:· .: ·~.HANDMADE
t ·JA&gt;~A:· P•&gt;,•'W"'"- '*"·"'"*'"'-"'*·,I
HOLIDAY TREASURES .:·
·,

CRAFT SHOW
November 13 &amp; 14, 1993
Saturday, 10 a.m. - .6 p.m.
Sunday,12 noon - 5 p.m.
'

Route 62' North
. l
Point Pleasant
.,

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~-· · .· - ~

•

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GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Animal Welfare League will meet
at the Bucli:eye Rural Electric
office at 7 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support Group will nieet at New Life
Lutheran Church at 7:30 p.m. For
more informalion ~all446-4889.

•••

' Tueaday, Nov. 9
KYGER • Kyger Creek Jr. High

~~i/:"e-

.. ,·· .·.: ·..· ...··.·· , ·... ·. ·~11

HAR'IFORD - Soup .sale and
bazaar at Hartford Early Childliood
Center, Nov. 20, 12-4 p.m. For
more information call 304-8823333. .

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~f o 0
· -,- wJ [H
.!a--'! r. .
!II I

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GAll.IPOLIS • The French Art
Colony wiU hold its annual art11 and
crafts fair, ''The French Art mart,"
starting Nov. 5 and running
~ugh Nov: 30. The grand opening will he Nov. 5 from S to 9 p.m.
Hours for !he Art Mart are Tuesday
3nd Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Wednesday and Thursday from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday from I to S p.m.

.\

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Queen Anne StyUng
,,
\

, Wluot better lillie lbaa Fol, jutlwloeayou'n looklq to opeod _.. dme
' lndoon, to make J011 dolo opa:lal ULLER.erl ·
For aU JOUI' family diJol11a ... llollday eatcrfllltolq Ia th _..., llload,
It'o oulheatlc:ally-IIJied ICqlblo Rople bJ Xolltr. M - QuaiiiJ entiamoouhlp. TwepoupUplo ....... "-a.

:; ~=ltat~ 4AS::';,.

::

n

Condo ClrsJn • And th&lt; b&lt;out~
ful Royal Annt Condo China
• No rwd ta ~ qU/INty
in a -thfanptw. Thirl.o rh&lt;

•

•/qanr Royal Am,.. Dining

ChiM. Allin old-world Jlyling
thllt fiu toddy~ Uvl"'f p&lt;tf.crly.

Table &amp; Chairs ~ $1773
Chioa a..,wn
$14(;9

Thank You for Your
Support In the Gallla
County Local School

··-·

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CCYJl93I9o£&amp; S~'PUJ&lt;N]rztlltJl:J, ···

----

HS Second Ave.

--

Board Election.

Galllpolla, Ohio

DAVID MILLS

446-1171

"From Our H - To Youn"

N.bbfw•tt

c::nr

..
'·'

•·

Roadco as a Gallia County ODOT
employee. He has since taken a
new position in the Safety Depart•
ment of District 10, making him
ine!ij!ible for further roadco competition.
. .

·
··

is nine weeks
6 through 7:30
this workshop is
public and $45
for the
session.

with

Plrt&gt;..,.,
(814) 448-8100

Prot.alotMI Wlldcit'll

Al,lypel OIIIIJLIICitort EqUpmlnt for Sale or Rent
'

o()xygen Therapy Equipment
o()xygen Concentrators
•Refills

* 2x6 Exlerior Walls, 16 In. On Center

...,_,AV~ {/if1tiria Btllt-

• Annstrong Solarian Floor Tile
* Kitchen Compact Cabinets
* 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2x!O Floor Joist, 16 ln . On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
• Carriage Carpets
* Mastic T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
* 25 Year Warranty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

.

i~h~~~:;~pa:dd
;;le;w~h~..
~~-~
adMned

Pt. Pleuant
Tuesday, Nov. 16

Ne~r~~~ lost Clmnt hffems

Pllllnburg
Friday, Nov. 19
Satwday, Nov. 20

1Winclley Park
Sighlming Cnise

9:30-11:00 am
Noon-1 :30 pm

$5.00
$5.00

7:00-10:00 JXIl
1:30-3:00 pm

$8.00
$8.00

Polrtl'llk
'Cwrtry Dance Cnise
Sigld uing Cnise

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

PrJne Ail Dmed
Dance Cniae

~

Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00-S:OO p.m.
Tue·Sat. or by appointment Call 614-992-2478

7:00-10:00 pm
12:30-3:00 Jm

$30.00
Sunday, Nov. 21
Bnn:h Cnise ,
$18.95
Tlckltl avallllble at 81 PEOPLES NEWS OliTLETS or by calling
80CJ.327·1381. Children'• rlcaa avllilllble.

IN STOCK

Wan,_,., I Border
An Adrlitlonal

.20o/o OFF
,.~, 60·700/o
NowThru Nov.17, 1993

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP
MIIIOIIIAL-DCII-CM DC1

CWIFIIIJIIVL, 'AIIUMIUIICI

MON.·FRI; 9-9:
SAT. 9-1:30 SUN. 1·5

Shop Early for Christmas and SAVE During Our Open House

eare

·sALE!

,

'

* Andersen Windows
* Georgia Pacific Doors

with . over $70,000 In lights, decorations and
anlmaUon.

'A ND BORDER ·

Price• AN Now

FREE
Gift Wrap

Charm of Riverboat
Travel aboard the

WeR

Thr!~!~~~!~ opens
by sivins
•:each
a pe(sonalized
Each

SUNDAY lAST DAY TO SAVEl

A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features

and
Santa's Showboat

~ ·S.
U
PE.
R
WALLPAPER

offered

at the Ohio State
represeuted
and brought

~--------------------~
Expetlencethe

'

i GAl-LIPOLIS . Beginning in
:January, James E. Althof, Ph.D.,
:and Ohvia Zivney, M.S., of Althof
; and As~ociatcs, 58 Court Street,
1 Gallipolis, will conduct a "Stress
! Hard mess and Self·Development"
: workshop ...,

1workshop

Truck Roadeo held
Fairgrounds In Columbas.
District 10 In the state
back a second runuer-up

CHECKING .
- Steve Beaver
searches ror def'ec:t5 on an Ohio Departmeat or
Tnnsportatlon truck as part •or the pre-inlpec·
lion competition In the State DireCtor's Cup

• WAVERLY
• IMPERIAL
• SUNWALL
• WALLTRENDS
• MAYFAIR
CMR.,.40ro50% OFF

A~IY

Medical Oxygen
Supplies ~':me

&amp;- Swimming
LAYAWAY

Model Home Located at
Intersection or Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478

I

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FAMILY HOMES INC.

---.....,;,.----~---....,..----·'·

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GALLIPOLIS
- Gallia County
!f&gt;hio ~cnt of Transportation
:employee, Steve Beaver finished
~econd runner-up in ODOT's
':1tatewide "Director's Cup Truck
&gt;Roadeo" at the Ohio State Fair·
llroundS·iii Columbus.
~ Beaver, who earlier this year
:..won the District 10 Truck Roadeo
Marietl8, compered in the recent
.statewide event against winners
::from ODOT' s 11 other districts
;pnd a driver representing the aaenl~y's Central Office in Columbus.
.,. The final four drivers wilh the
~be$t scores from morning competi:1)on, c:ompeted in the afternoon for
"''he four top positions. The winner
and the runner-up will ream up for
,.. the national roadeo competition in
~Colorado .
Ohio's winnin$ state roadeo
driver isJron'i Distnct 5, headquartered ~i)iic'ksontown, Licking
County. TljC flfSt tunner-up is from
District ·s. headquartered at
Lebanon, Warren County. The
~tftraJ. Office driver came m third
ltlnner-ujl; rounding out the final
~ur finishers.
:. ' The· District I 0 Roadeo was
held· in May at ihe WashinBton
County ODOT garage in MarietiB.
Qcavcr :1111d 'olher drivers from Gal·
Ua 'fo'ni~ in a field of more than
!JO drivers. The winning driver
.r1'0m each,of the nine counties in
District I0 competed in lhe final
round of competition for the dis·
trict roadeo title.
District 10 is comprised of
i Athens, Galljjl, ~~kins1 Meigs,
1 Monroe, Marga~, Noble, Vinton
• and Wishingion Ultlnties:
i :file roadeo; course•;s comprised
of six' segmcints, including a pretrip inspection, and driving courses
called the serpentine ,alley dock,
the narrow lane, offset lanes and
the stopJine.
As second runner-up, Beaver
received several prizes, including a
jacketaod plaque.
·
Beaver competed in the 1993

j

$1630

Table &amp; Chain

11

lite Holzer. Meclcal
Celmlelr:· Donna
R.T••R., Cat Sea11
Paul Hilderbnat,
.-R~, CT a11d X-Ray;
HUderbraut, R.T.·R., Cbler TediDOioeilt, Redia·'
lion Onco~; Mike ., Cblef Teebnologllt, Radi·
ologr; Gatl Davenport, R.T •• R., Naelear ·
Medttlne and Ultrasound; and Magaie OUer :
R.T.-R. M, X-ny and Dta.IDlJIIlllphy.
;

RADIOLOGY
County Commissioners
designat1n1 Nov. 8·14 u
Week in GaUia County.
Vice President Kenneth
mission President Harold
Commlssloaer Haroid li.
the siplna of the Proclamation are,

!Jualifies for
.
'itruck'
'roadeo '

i Stress ·management

0

30%

OFF·

5.11%

All Keels Work Boots &amp;
Western Boots ,

40%

SILKS WALLPAPER

w~·· ·

Nui'H·M_...

75%0FF

OfF
.
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4211•1065
,.....,_•Eri•rl

AI~RMJ

OF

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Select Tabl.. Run·nlng' $hou
and Athletic Shoet ·
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• ~-'-&lt;.

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Current Patterns
with borders to

-.n time,

hat 1

1

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can ,

lht.aklng.
u 1
. 1t1 purchue
bUY. I thl: monument dealer who
a· pefiOftallzed monument to har·

moniH I Ito
\11!1 hirfi,IM 'I'RO~•nce.
~· complote dloploy, Yovr purch... ll bOCk·
od' t&gt;y iili '~trofioolt monument guoran~M obtainable today,

10".4

~It

1 WEEK ONLY

BUY NOW PAY LATER NYLON
CARPET, PAD &amp; INSTALATION

$

12
Price

•

. ·'tOGAN .MONUMENT CO.

Colo1llal

· •POMEROY
Melia ~ai Ill Qllpi_,Yilrll.._
,.~,e. nor Mnan lll:kllle
J ..... A.lkll!ll,lotgj. -111-2111

.

()fflclt"lii ~ Cllll ~ Ia
limited.

,,

- .'

. VINTON

a.A Cowl~~;
J.i, • .loe
,

1.11111in "' •
'

' ..

-

VVI I A

5 Colors to Select from
with Stain Release

lind 111.,.. In Cotwenlont Low Mototllly Payment•

CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAL 1M SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

95
PAD

CONVIHIINT CREDIT TERM_i AVAILAILI- WE CARRY OUR OWN ACCOUNT$

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Suites In FJepnt

.,a.
JJ.,&gt;,. iilltlflt_... · - f

•

,'i)¥o Lo~el~ ' ,

tee of the Ohio HiStorical Society.
And in 1989 and 1990, Wood
served as consultant to the Ohio
Depanment of Transportation on
the preparalion of lhe Second Ohio
Historic Bridge Inventory, Evalua·
tion and Preservation Plan .

tMll...._
n.e. M. crown
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liii,IDI

By

Author to autograph work
' RODNEY - On Sunday, Nov.
14, Cedric and Helen Lewis will
host a book·sisniQg event at !heir
home at Cora Mill for Miriam
Wood from I to 4 p.m. Wood is the
author of The Cov~red Bridges of
Ohio, An Atlas and History, which
has coverage of each county in !he
state.
A native of Columbus, Wood
has studied Ohio's bridges since
the early 1950s. In 1960, she
became a charter member of the
Ohio Historic Bridge Association
and has served the organization as
president and historian. She is currently !he the corresponding secretary and editor of Bridges and
Byways, ~~~~ OABA publication.
She has been awarded lhe Public Education and Awareness
Award by !he Ohio State Historic
Preservauon Office and has served
for over 20 years. as Secretary to
the Ohio Covered Bridge Commit-

:' .

DINING ROOMS

•••

GALLIPOLIS - OPASE will
- meet at Washington Elementary
cafereria at 7 p.m.

..

'Festi.val Featuring
Eri8lish Royale·

•••

:r~e~t:.rism increased

advimcing educational Blandards.
While the simple x-ray
m11c:hines of the past may have
been operated by a secret., in a
particular. physician's office,
tod•y 's technologist frequently
holds an advanced educt~tional
degree from a major university, as
well .s advanced certificauons
form the Am'erican Registry of
Radiologic Technologists.
As Saied M. K. Hojal, M.D.,
Chairma11 of the Department of
Radiology at Holzer Medical Center points out, "Few people who .
enter today' s health eare system
can progress very far before !hey
come in contact wilh a radiologic
technologist, whether it's for a
sonogram of an imborn baby of a
simple x-ray of a broken arm of a
child who has fallen off his bike.
An. elderly patient may need a CT
scan to determine the size of an
abdominal tumor."

::to

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•Fan Furnittue

•••

•••

Sponsored by:
Mason County Extension Homemakers
Waluima High School Home Eamomics c;lasstS
GFWC-Point PletiSIInt Junior Woman's Club

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.'

: yALLIPOLIS • Radiolo~ic so many other modem technololb:hnologi~ • the ~lzer Medical
gies, has dramatically advanced
:{.:inter will be honored by !heir and expanded in jusi lhe last few
·medical coUeagues bolh locally and years. Now, besides using basic x;&amp;Om across the rest of the countty ray films , physicians can look
is pan' of the national observation inside lhe body through masnetic
l:n.?wn · as · "Natio~al Radiologic resonance imaging (MRI}, comput·
j echnology.Week, Nov. 8-14.
ed tomography (CT scanning) ,
: The Gallia County Commission· sonography, nuclear medicine, and .
ers .officially proclaimed "Radio- a host of olher imaging r«hnolo·
~r.c:..Technology Week" iQ GaUia , sies !hat rival lhe science coming
~l'Y, With a n'!"'~ of~ Hos· ' out of today's space progranis." .,
Ill s technoiOBJsts m attendance
All lhese different health care
tl)e signil!l ~f the Proclan\Blion disciJ?Iincs fall under lhe generil
the CotnmJSStoncrs' office.
descnption of radiolosic ·tech nolo.~ ~he o\lservatto~ !llarks the gy or medical imaging. The
ilnnt~ersary of the discovery of~- 200,000 plus u. S. technologists
..ys ~~ 1895 by the German physt· working m hospitals, clinics, 119c$iSt Wilhelm Konrad Roentgen.
tors' offices and imaging centers
:; Mike Roe, R.T.-R., Chief Radi- are key members of today's modj!logic Technologist at the Hospital em health care ream.
'
iO&lt;&gt;ints out. "Medical imaging, like Decades
were
~·
known as
but that

p DOT worker

NATIONAL ;.•·.
GUARD .,.
ARMORY .,

•••
· Vinton

VINTON
Baptist
Church will hold revival Nov. 7
.through 12 at 7 p.m. with singing
GALLIPOLIS - Keith Eblin will by Ed Crawford.
•••
present the service at the 11 a.m.
BIDWELLSprin,field Baptist
service at Debbie Drive Chapel.
Church
to
hold
revtval Nov . 5
•••
through
7,
7
p.m.
daily. Ronnie
CROWN CITY - New Vision
Lemley
and
Gloryland
Grass to
will be singing at Kings Chapel
sing
on
Nov.
S.
Rev.
Worley
to
Church at 7 p.m.
and
New
Version
Trio
to
preach
•••
sing
on
Nov.
6.
Rev.
Mark
Morrow
POINT PLEASANT- Tri Coun·
ty Croup will meet at611 Viand SL to preach and the Grubb Family to
at 7:30 p.m. Use side entrance for sins on Nov. 7.
basement
GALLIPOLIS - Dickey .Chapel
Church
will hold's revival Monday
Monday, Nov. 8
with
Robert
Hershman and various
GALLIPOLIS - Narcotics
singers
at
7
p.m.
Anonymous Just For Today Group
will meet at Grace United
PORTER · ' Clarks Chapel
Methodist Church at 7 p.m.
Church is holding a revival through
LOGAN - Narcotics Anony· Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. with special
mous Courage to Change Group singin$ nightly and Keith Eblin
presenung the sermon.
First to Change Group at6:30 p.m.

•

Kamen's ~ggestioil. ~ sua.·
gesred I triO, Adams said.
:;
Rod Stewarund cStlng were
Adams' fust choices. •
~
Adams, 34, sai~ lhe song w*JI
"a bit Ql' • uialto fct.tllroull!t ~
technical aspects o how· IQ. ~
three men sound like· ll!ey've ~
singing tog.ether for years. W~
managed to pull It' off.'~ , · · . ii •

NEW YORK (AP} - Bryan
Adams' latest project came in
threes.
,'
He made a video a8 pan ofa uio
singing a song !hat had three writ·
crs for the upcoming movie "The
.Three Musketeers."
AdamS said Friday that' he wrote
,"All for Love" wilh Robert Jolm
Lange and Michael Kamen at

GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia
County Extension Homemakers
Council wiU meet at C.H. Mackenzie Building at 10:30 a.m.
Revivals
CROWN CITY • Crown City
Wesleyan Church will hold a
revival Nov. I throush 7. Mon.
through Sat at 7:30 p.m. and Sun.
at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. with Rev.
Denver McCarty and the Sisson
Family.

•••

.by Charlene Hoeflich
• By Charlene Hoeflich

•••

CROWN CITY · Ralph Work·
man will present the sermon at
Good Hope Baptist Church at the
II a.m. and 6 p.m. service.

-

Adams to produce for musketeers •

•••

•••

.

Novembitr 7, 1193

:

�. November 7, 1993

-

.•

~~~. :; r;allia
Academy boasts
.

Beat of the Bend...

::· ,
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by Bob Hoeflich
Some businesses have had
' Christmas decorating items for sale
since Au(USt. so Lguess I ~dn ' t
feel guilty about menttomng
Christmas even thou~h Thanksgiving is lltill down the hne a biL
Since the holiday season does
talce some advance planning and
this time you're involved, let m~
·!Dentlqn that the Meigs County
Mu~um will be carrying out a VicIOriali theme with its holiday sea.. sol) eXhibit this year.
' As a pan of the theme.• plans are
to display Old World Santas and
that's where you come in. If you
have snme or these attractive
pieces, personnel at the museum
. ~ould appreciate your sharing
·. diem with the public. If you'd like
to do that, plr.ase call the museum
at 992-3810 to let them know
"you•re in".
The annual open house to show
.
off this year's holiday exhibit has
MR. AND MRS. THOMAS WAUGH
been set for Sunday, Dec . 5. so
museum personnel will need to
know right away if they can count
Best men were Steve Waugh on you.
GALLIPOLIS - Charity Marie
Dellarco and Thomas Carr Wau~h and Roben Waugh, brothers of die
Friends are planning a card
were united in marriage at Cheshire groom. Ring bearer was Any shower for Mrs. Edna Pickens, forBaptist Church on SepL 3. The cer- Waugh, nephew of the groom.
of Racine. Mrs. Pickens will
Music was provided by Gert merly
emony was officiated by Rev.
mark her 93rd birthday on Satur- .
Hysell. Melissa Mays, friends of day, Nov. 13. She is now confined
William Uber.
Charity is the daughter of Bren- the bride, registered guests. Flow- · to Overbrook and cards will reach
da J. Holley of Gallipolis. Thomas ers were done by Robin Reynolds her at the Overbrook Center, 333
is the son of Bob and Donna of Chillicothe, aunt of the bride.
Park St., Middleport, 45760.
The reception followed in the
Waugh of Gallipolis.
The bride was escorted by her fellowship hall at the church. The
Jake and MildreO Gaul of out
grandfather, Bndford Massey. cake was done by Dorothy Thomp- Chester way will be observing their
Maids of honor were Kim Betz and son, aunt of the groom.
wedding anniversary on SaturFollowing a honeymoon in 50th
Shelle West, friends of the bride.
day, Nov. 27, with an open recepThe ,flower was Ambef Reynolds, Maryland, the couple resides in tion staged at the Pomeroy Gun
Gallipolis.
cousin of the bride.
Club by their children.
Both Mildred and Jake are lifelong residents of Meigs County.
' As a part of their SOd! earlier this
• year, they took their children and
grandchildren for a trip on the Mississippi ·Queen. Mildred and Jake

Dellarco-Waugh

MR. AND MRS. DOUGLAS FLINNER

Jeffers-Flinner
GALLIPOLIS - Ellen Caroline
Jeffers and Douglas Russell Ainner
were united in marriage at the
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church, Crown City. The candle
light ceremony was performed by
Pastor Albert Earley III Sept. 4 · . .
Ellen is the daughter of Mr. an~
Mrs. Jack Jeffers of Gallipolis.
Doug is the son o( Mr. ·and Mrs.
Danny Flinner of Gallipolis.
The maid of honor was Angela
Baird of Gallipolis, and die flower
girl was Tristan Crenshaw of Silver
Springs, Aa.
· The best man was Michael
Norlhup of Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Music was provided by Donna
Sanders, aunt of the bride. The
guests were registered by Karla
Phillips.
The reception followed in the
church fellowship room, with cake
and punch served by Kate Daniel
and by Karla Phillips.
The bride is currently auending
the Holzer School of Nursing at the
University of Rio Grande, and is
employed with the Ohio Valley
Banlc in Gallipolis. ·
The groom is employed as a lab
technician with West Virginia
Paving Inc. of Dunbar, W.Va.
· The couple reside in Gallipolis.

..... . .

~-:

since 1983 have been wintaing
Florida but always head .back to.
Meigs County for die summer 8lld:
early fall.
. :
The open ~eption is ~1!1. 2 10
4 p.m. and Mildi'ed and Jake ask· ·
that you omit gifts. They say talc-'
ing your time to stop by 10 visit.
with them for a bit is the gift they·
want.
Dick and Joan Nease who bave
been living near Nashville, Tenn.;
are now residents of Meigs County.
Dick, the son of Paul and the
late Alice Nease, near Pomeroy, is.
formerly from here and auended :
school at Eastern High School.
Dick is attending the Methodist·
Theological School in Ohio at :
Delaware but has his classes·
packed iniO an approximate three ·
day week. He and Joan are making .
their home with Paul and I look for
them to become quite active in the ·
community.
Monday evening's rehearsal for .
vocalists m the upcoming musical ·
of the Big Bend Minstrel Association bas been canceled.
Aaron Sheets, son of Jennifer
Sheets, the show accompanist;
received a knee injury while
wrestling and is scheduled to
undergo surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic on Monday. Naturally, Jen- ·
nifer and lier husband, .Jim, need to .
be there. Hence, the cancelllltion. .
However, vocalists practicing
regularly on Monday evenings are
asked to attend the Thursday night
rehearsal lhis week. The time for
that rehearsal is being extended and
will be held from 7to 10 p.m.
Time was we had, to bite the
bullet to make iL Now we're going ,
to .tax the bullet. Is· that really .
gomg 10 help? Do keep smiling.

Bookmobile schedule slated
POMEROY - The Meigs Coun. ty Bookmobile will visit the following locations next week:
Tuesday- Pomeroy Nursing
and Rehabilitation Center, 11:30J.~:~O p.m .; ~ar~in, 1-2. p.r_n.;
Burlingham, 2.30-4.30 p.m., Wildwood Estates, 5-6 p.m.; Bauin
Addition, 6:15-7:30 p.m.
' 'Wednesday -Racine, 12-4
p.m.:-I.etart Falls. 5-7 n.m.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, ~oint Pleasant, wv

.

.
.
Tuppers Plains, 2-4.
.

Thursday p.m.; Reedsvilte, 5-7 p.m.; Long'
Boaom Post OffiCe, 7:15-8:15 p.m. '
Friday - Maples, 12:3Q-2 p.m.;
Overbrook Nursmg Center, 2:30-3 :
p.m.; Pomeroy Pike, 3:3.0-4:30·
p.m.; Chester, (Keebaugh's) S-6·
p.m.
Saturday - Rutland, 9- I p.m.; :
Danville, 2·3 p.m.; Salem Center,·
3:30-5:30 p.m.
' ·

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rich educational h~story

'

j

.

: • • tlierisirJggmeratial,lhenilbebooves
all good .citizens
10 See m.t the
moril culture
· · and education of
~ compris·
ing that genera·
ticin be not ne-

.,.
.;

glected.
'
'"The children
in Gallipolis num- .
berprobably 400 and of this number
but a very few are going 10 school.
. Widloneofthelargestandbestschool
houses in the State of Ohio and a fine
· . academy building also, with funds
: sufflcientiO pay competenueachers,
. who for months have been unem. ployed,thechildrenofGallipolisare
as completely cutoff from all benefit
, · thereof as though they lived in the
· Sou them Confederacy."
So stated the Gallipolis Journal
on November 6, 1862.
ERECTED IN 1853 • GaiDa Academy was
the U. S. Army used tbe town's schools tor hos·
At the beginning of the Civil War
organized lD 1811 with the bulldiDg sbowD
pilals, omces aDd supply depots. Tbe Sean fam(April, 1861) the schools, chun:hes
above buill iD 1853. During the Civil War, oDiy
Ily taugbt bere from 1854 to 1861, aDd from
and public buildings were given for
a few or Gallipolis' cbiklreD attended sebool as
1864 to 1867.
. the war effort. These places become
hospitals, offices, and supply depots. also had a law school academy in the room upstairs, the n,ext age groop
For about a 'year the U.S. Army
The "best school house in the 1850s.
(usually 910 13) used the large room took over Gallia Academy ( 1863)
State of Ohio" referred to by die
GaUia Academy was begun about upstairs and the advanced scholars whereas Union School was used by
Journal was the Union School which 1811 by a siOCk company and many used the lower floor. The school year the Army about 4 years. By 1866
. was erected in 1858. It was com- of die early leaders of Ohio and West began the fust Wednesday in Sep- most of the children in Gallipolis
. pletely shut down from the spring of Virginia trained here, including tember. The first session then pro- .were back in school.
1861 to die spring of 1864 . Hence Governor Ewing and Senator Lewis ceeded to early February.
children ran the streets, were hired Summers.
'There was a break of about two James Sands is a special correspnn· off for odd jobs, and increased dleir
weeks
and then the secood session dentorthe Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Of course the academy charged
odds of getting in trouble.
instruction fees as free public educa- began. It ran until the middle of July.
· In fact, in that same Journal an tion in Gallipolis was still several The summer vacation was only 6 His address is: 65 Willow Drive,
Springboro OH 45066
article reads: "Our youth are thrown . decades away. The original Gallia weeks.
upon the street. where, laying aside Academy building was located on
The teachers from 1854 to 1862
thedangertolifeand limb, from their SecondAvenueacrossfromthepark. and 1864 10 1867 were members of
crowded state, and the constant rush It burned down in 1846 and was not the Sears family. The father, A.G.,
· or horsemen riding furiously, or rebuilttultiii853 .. ThesecondGallia was the principal, his wife, S.A., was
teamsdrivingatakillingpace through Academy building was located on in charge of the Ornamental Departthem, the examples of intemperance the (XOperty that oow houses Gallia ment. and the daughter, Lizzie, waS
and profanity, are not well calcualso a teacher.
Academy High School.
lll!ed to bring about a high state of
Other teachers in that decade inBetween 1846and 18S3 there were
moral culture. n
cluded
Mr. Cooley, Mrs. Davis, Mary
a number of private schools and two
The one school that did continue public schools in operation. For in- Reeves, Addie Jimison and Eliza
to operate through most of the Civil stance, the school run by the Baptist Sanns. In the 1850s courses included
WarwasGalliaAcademy. ActuaUy, Church advenised that, ''the govern- geology. mineralogy, physics, drawthe above was just one of three ac- ment of this institution will be mild ing, painting, French, philosophy,
, . ademies in Gallia County that re- yet firm and dlat it was dedicated 10 music, and teaching as well as the
.. mained open through the Civil War. the advancement of bod! correct fundamentals of reading, writing and
The Cheshire Academy and the morals and useful learning."
arithmetic.
: ' EwingiOn Academy also stayed in
Tuition was about $6 per session,
When theGalliaAcademy opened
business. In the 1850's there had in 1854 it had space for 200 pupils except from 1863 to 1865 when
been academies in CenterviUe, Por- and they used a graded arrangement Gallipolis ~d double digit inflation
. terandVinton. ThevillageofVinton The young schpiii!'S ~ the small and, fees w~nt up 10 $7.

" ,.
. I ' # ~ 'f.,··

~
9-7
WOODWORK
BASKETS
PILLOWS
SEWING
DECORATIONS
SWEATSHIRTS

lmboden-Eblin
--. '''
-.
-- •'

MR. AND MRS. THOMAS CALLAN

'V\fllitt-&lt;::~11~

VINTON - Dawna Michelle
daughter of John and
1 ; Athalie Whitt of Enosburg Falls,
:: .vi. and Thomas Paul Callan, son of
I liCk and Cecile Callan of Fairf~eld,
'·,..,· 25
were united in marriage on Sept.

~: Whitt ,

;!

~:: ·Dawna is the granddaughter or
,~ ·' Leona Whitt and Kenneth Ralph
. •ofVinton.
: ' The double ring ceremony was

..

· ,pen:ormed by Rev. Edward Hackett

the Enosburg Falls United
• Methodist Olurch at II a.m.
: ·· The matron of honor was There··: sa SaniOr. Bridesmaids were Crys: tal
Charron Yvonne Howard and
Doris Parent, all friends of the
bride. They all wore fuschia taffeta
dresses with graduated hemtines.
The nower girls were Nicole
and Brittney Lumbra, cousins of
the
bride. They wore light pink. taffeta
dresses with graduated hem tines.
The best man was Gregory Spaulding, friend or the groom.
Ushers were Randy and Jason
Callan, brothers of the groom, and
: Timothy Callan, cousin of the
· groom. James Callan, brodler of
: the groom was die ringbearer.
:

1n

The bride wore a white satin
gown with a V-neckline, basque
wain. long tapered sleeves and
trimmed with iridescent sequins
and simulated pearls. The cathedral
length train boasted cut-out
apPliques and a scalloped hem. Her
fmgertip length veil fell from a
crown of simulated r.earls and
sequins wid! a back pou .
The bride's mother wore a purple street-length dress with a braid
trimmed tapestry jacket. The bridegroom's mother wore a navy print
street-length dress.
A reception was held at The
Crossing m Richford with music
provided by M and N Music of
Bur6ngton. Sandra Wright circulat·
ed die guest book.
The bride graduated from Enosburg Falls High School and is
employed at MillOn Bradley Wood
Products in Fairfax. The bridegroom graduated from Bellows
Free Academy in SL J\lbans and is
~mpJo~ed at Pepsi-Cola Company
m Burlington.
The couple left for a wedding
trip to Florida and the Bahamas.
They will make ·their home in St.
Albans, Vennoni.

Wedding policy
Those not making the 60 day
. The Sunday Times-Sentinel
deadline
will be published during
: regards weddings of Gallia, Mei~
the
daily
paper
as space allows:
:• and Mason Couiuies as news and LS
Photographs of either the bride
~ happy to publish wedding stories
or the bride and groom may be
. : and JihocDgraphs wilbout dwJc.
' lfowever: wedding ncwa must published with wedding stories is
meet general standards of tim eli- desired. ~may be either
: nesi. The newspaper prefera to black and wh1te or good quality
·: 'publillll ,ccounu of weddinaa as . color, billfold size or ..ger.
Poor quality piJotot~phs will
:! soon as Ji'c-.ible after the event
::1 To be uUbliJhed 111 the Sunday not be accep!ed. Oenerauy, IIIBp• ~"'ilion, t'he weddina llluat bave shou or instant-developing photos
· : ~""
wilhin 60 ~ P,:lor to ICC not of~Je quality,
. All m8terlif submiiled for publi·
and may 'be up 10
·~ WOlds in Jenglh. · Malaial for Cllion Is rubjecl to editinf
Questions lnay be d1rected to
;o\loog the River mUJt be rcceivc4
by tfie editorial department by the editorill ~t from 1-5
Thwsday, 4 p.m. prior to the dalt p.m. Monday through Friday at ·
446-2342.
of publication.

bon.
The maid of honor and flower
girl wore teal tea-length satin
dresses. The maid of honor carried
a bouauet of minature carnations
and roses accented wid! mauve and
teal ribbon.
The flower girl carried a white
wicker basket decorated with
mauve and teal flowers with ribbon
and accented with pearls. The basket was filled with mauve and teal
rose petals. The basket was deco'
rated by Reba 0 'Brien, aunt of die
groom.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a white bow tie and cumberbun. The groom's boutonniere was
a mauve rose accented with baby's
breath.
The best man wore a black tuxe·
do with a white bow tie and cumberbun. His boutonniere was a
mauve minature carnation. Both
boutonnieres were made by Reba
O'Brien, aunt of the groom.
At the end of the ceremony die
bride sang "Wind Beneath my
Wings" to the groom.
The reception was held at the
Senior Citizens Center with a buffet dinner served and a three tier
wedding cake made by Charlene
Eblin, aunt of the groom.
Servers for the reception were
Debbie Hill, Teresa Ward, Charlene Eblin, Raena Eblin, Debbie
Bums, Shirley Jeffers and Betty
Wimams.
The' couple now reside in
Pomeroy.

•

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New technologies have arrived. only
to be re plac ed by eve n newer a nd
more effective methods o f diagnosis and
treatment . But the experience. knowledge and understanding that add the
human touch to cancer treatment have
remained constant at your Community
Comprehensive Cance r Center.

The Community
Comprehensive
Cancer Cen1er

SPIRAL PERM

.

RUB!

Diamond

•

&amp; BRACELETS

STOP TO SEE THE NEW

Free Ring Sizing - Appraisals

•

=~J::cion,

'·

G•..ity •.,..._., It

•

ORIGINAL
81.,\CK HILLS.GOLD .
€1tEATIONS'

.

You will have over T90 styles ol
tuxedoato choose from. We nave a
large aelection of the latest styles
and COfllllimentary accessones lor
thia special occasion.

your Selection until Christmas

•Rings
•Bracelets
•Clusters

~1andstronm ..1:
T
'&lt;:I ---

If you are planning a wedding,
then you should eo me see us at
Haskins· Tanner.

::r

2 MI.?{, 01'SIL'III$(,~'1Xj'E IYJ{.mm~ 7

I

•

, . •·. . I

• Small Down Payment Holds

r-------~-----~-~~-~

A COLLECTION LIKE NONE OTHER!

(.,:~ .

.,. \

CW'IS ~ 19(.~-t:OO!J{J!JMUJ(

MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL EBLIN
POMEROY - Ro.bin Renee
Imboden and Michael Joseph Eblin
were united in marriage at the Middleport Bible Weslyan Holiness
Church on Oct. 2 by Pastor John E.
Neville.
Music was provided by Patricia
Neville and David Ferrell, friends
or the bride and groom. Registering
guest were Jill Chichester and Jennifer Deem, friends of the bride.
The bride is the daughter of
Frank and Lora Mae Imboden of
Pomeroy.
The groom is the son of Henry
Jr. and Hester Eblin of Rutland.
The bride was escorted to the
alter by her father and was presented in marriage by bod! parents.
The maid of honor was Miranda
Nicholson, friend of tit~ bride. The
best man was Ronnie Eblin, brother
of the groom. Ushers were Victor
Roush, Timmy Jones, friends of the
groom and School Hubbard and
Jeremy Hill, nephews of the bride.
Bible bearer was Brandon Bell,
nephew of the groom. The candle
lighters were Stacey Hubbard,
niece of the bride and Levi Burns,
cousin of the groom.
The bride's gown was made of
white sating and fashioned with a
Queen Anee neckline with pearl,
sequins, lace and a catheedral train
with lace accents around the bottom . The hairpiece consisted of
flowers, lace and pearls.
The bride's bouquet was make
of mauve and white minature carnations and roses accented with
pearls, lace and mauve and teal rib-

~

1$~

«6·4SJO

RACINE - Racine Board or
Public Affairs wiD meet at 10 a.m.
at Star Mill Parlt.

CHESTER - Izaak Walton Chester Town Hall.
Leaguebs!~e shoots start at I p.m.
POMEROY - The regu lar
at the
Walton Farm on Boy
monthly
meeting of Meigs County
Scout Camp Road. Smooth hore or
forty
and
will be held at the
rifled barrels should be used, no Pomeroy eight
Ameri~ Legion Post
scopes.
with dinner starting at 7:30 p.m.
Members are asked to attend and
MONDAY
bring
a guest.
CHESHIRE - Women Alive

- POM&amp;AOY·
• Layaways Welcome

....

I

will meet at Kyger Creek Club
House at 7 p.m. There wiU be a
Thanksgiviog diiiDet and a devotional soeaker. For more information calf 992-2469.

RACINE - There will be a barn
and turkey dinner sponsored by the
POMEROY - Disabled Ameri·
Racine Elementary PTO at South- can Vetemns and I ac!ies Auxiliary
em High School from II a.m. to 2 will hold the ir regular monthly
p.m. Cost is $4 for adults and $3 meeting at 7 p.m.
for children. Carry out is welcome.
DARWIN • Bedford Township
ROCK SPRINGS • First Soulh- Trustees will hold their re&amp;ular
etn Baptist Church will have a monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at the
revival Nov. 7 - 14 at 7 p.m. night- town hall.
ly. A nunery will be provided for
all services. Evangelist will be Rev.
TUESDAY
Clifford B. Coleman. There will be
- The Chester Townspecial singing wid! Rev. Charles shipCHESlER
Trustees
wiD
hold their regular
Walters.
monthly meeting at 9 ·a.m. at the

~

.

P8a• 85

community calendar

SUNDAY.
LOTI'IUDGl! ~ Loari4ge Community Center wiD sponsor a smorgasbord from noon to 1:30 p.m..
Cost is SS for adults and $2.50 fot
children. Carry out will be avail~- Everyone is welcome.

• ".If 'the hope of the country be in

.·,•
....'
' D'

M~igs

b;JID1Sands
Special Correspondent
.

Sunday nme• S.n"net

;

,..

WEDDING
BANDS

s...

lOK and 14K

20-40°/o ou

Gold Creek
Black Hills
Gold

50o/o

OFF

�llmee Sentinel

7UP, DIEl7~,

f

DR. PEPPER
2Uter

~:

STORE HOURS

MOIIday tlri S•lllay
I AM~ IO PM

(

291 ~ECOtiD ST.
POMEROY, OH.

1'HE RIGHT TO LIMIT QlfANTITIES
GOOD
AMANliA RI}SSELL AND RAY REDMAN

BlUDGE'\' JACKS AND CHARLES MULHOLLAND

Russell-Redman

Jacks-Mulholland

RACINE - Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Russell
announce the engagement
Renee to Charles Lee Mulhollaild,
and
approaching
marriage of their
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A.
daughter,
Amanda
Lynn to to Ray
Mulholland of Wilkesville.
Thomas Redman, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ray ltedman, Mason,
W.Va.
·
The bride-elect is a i990 graduate of Soothem High School and is
currently emplo&gt;:ed with the Meigs
County Tide Office.
for the seat. A brass plaque that
Thomas is a .1987 graduate of
describes its purpose will be Waha~a High School and is
attached 10 the seaL
,
The seat was selected by
William Medley, Jabez Parsons
and Gen. Bush.
Immediately following ceremonies in the city park, association
representatives aitd the·donors will
go to the Ariel theatre to dedicate
the seat and attach the plaque. The
public is invited.

MiDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
David C. Jacks, Sr. announce the
engagement and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Bridget

CARALEE MARTIN AND TOM BARR

Martin-Barr
GALLIPOLIS - Doug and Marilyn Martin of Brick School Road,
Gallipolis announce the engagement and approaching wedding of
their daughter, Caralee to Tom
Barr, the son or Ken and Barbara
Barr or Chillicothe.
: Caralee is a 1993 graduate of
~iver Valley High School and is
enrolled at Ohio University, ChilliCothe branch. Tom is a 1989 gradu-

.

ate or Huntington High School,
Chillicothe and a 1993 graduate of
the University of Rio Grande. He is
employed at V.A. Hospital Hospital, Chillicothe.
T!Je open church wedding will
be Nov. 27 at 2:30p.m. at the First
Church of the Nazarene, Gallipolis.
The reception will follow in the
church fellowship hall.

•

General Mills sues over
'Roadkill Helper' parody
! MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The

.lokes about Hamburger Helper are
~retty

stale by now and General
·foods still isn't wnused. The company is suing the maker of a gag
product called Roadkill Helper,
~leging trademark infringement
• Kevin Johnson, president of
Oag Foods of Woodland Park,
Colo., says he got his idea when he
~ his son saw a squashed animal
0n a highway.
They'd just seen "National
Lampoon's Vacation," the 1983
JIIOVle starring Chevy Chase that
included several Hamburger Helper
jokes.
: Roadkill Helper
contains
.
. only

.

about a penny·s worto 01 macaroni
- "just enough so the box rattles
and stands up straight," Johnson
said. And it comes in a box that
resembles Hamburger Helper.
In a U.S. District Coun lawsuit
filed last month, Golden Valleybased General Mills said consumers will be confused by the
prodUCtg, jcopardizlng&lt;ltlldemarfrs.

that cost SSOO million 10 build.
Christopher Sandberg, Gag's
attorney, said Roadlcill is a parody,
a protected form of expression
under the FlfSt Amendment. "It's
the price of being famous," he
said.

Veterans to be honored
with seat dedication
GALLIPOLIS - Maj. Gen.
George Bush and Dr. and Mrs.
D.H. Whiteley will dedicate a seat
at the Morris and Dorothy Haskins
Ariel Theatre in honor of local veterans.
The event be held Veterans Day
concluding activities at the Dough·
boy Monument in the City Park,
Nov.tt.
The donors contributed $1,000

24 Pit, 12 OZ. CANS

::

presently employed with Shell
Chemical Co.
The opC.J church ceremony.will
take place ell, Dec. It at 1:30 p.m.
with mu.sic ~ginning at t p .m. at
Mason United Methodist Church,
Mason, W.Va.'•Rev. Ben Stevens
will be officiating. The couple
invites their friends and family to
join them on their ~ial day.
A receppon .wil fbllow at the
Christian Brethren Church build·
Mason, VL

49

::
:•
::
•:
:·
::
•:
:·
·:

FAMILY PAK ASSORTED

Pork Chops ••••••••••~••• S1

Cubed Steak•••••••••~••••S1

FISCHERS

Bologna •••••••••••••••!~...
FLAVORITE ·

.·Steak•••••••••••••$399 Sliced Baco" •••••••••!!·•••

THANK YOU

LB.

Steak •••••••••••••

fiWi~ilp•toftrl for- t-+~'1f1Aii:ES &amp;•YEINA ~STER
v
Pd.forbyCI-10,
tOU!r apporI 01 ••t
107 Von a.....
VInton, Oh. 4&amp;1H,

•••.•••••• "'", '

s

Eltctio1 for
Tow•••ip TrustH •.
Kt·l· Ha1dley

Pd. ~ by KeHh Horuley

'

' '

-•her

•. Loans and lease fmancing receivables:

Loans and leases , nel of unearned income .................................... ............. .38,117,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease to ......................................................... 405,000.00
Loans and leases , net of unearned income,
allowance; and reserve ...............................,............................................................................... ......37,712,000.00
Premises and rued assets (including capilalized leases) ...................................................................... l,224,000.00
Other realestsre owned ................................................................................................... .......................... 15,000.00
Intangible assets ......................................................................................................................................... 35,000.00
Otber assets ................... ................. ..........................................................................................................981,000.00
Totalassets .......... ..... .......................................................................................................................... 67,043,000.00
Total assets and losses defen-ed punlUanll2 U.S.C. 1823(j) ........................................................... 67.043,000.00
LIABILIDES
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ...................... ..... ................................... ........ ................................................. 60,014,000.00
(I) Noninterest-bcaring ............................................................................... 6,944,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing .............................. ........................ ............ ..... ............. 53,070,000.00
QtbCr liabilities ...................................... ........................................... ....................................................... 297,000.00
Toulliabilities .. ......................~................................................................................ ...................... ....60,311,000.00
'
EQOITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of Sbare a. Autboriud ............. ..... 20,000
b. Outslanding ................. 20,000) ...................... ................ ......................soo.ooo.QO
SUJl'IUS.:........................................................... ...... ................................... ............................................ 1,000,000.00
Undivided profiu and capital reserves ..................................................................... ,.......................... S,232,000.00
Tolaleqliity capilal ...............................................................................................................................6,732,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant 1o 12 U.S.C. t8233(j) ... ......................................... .. ..... ........................ ................ ............... 6,732,000.00
TocalliabiUUos, limilod- llfe preferred stock, and equity capital,
and tosses deferred pursuant 1o 12 U.S.C. 1823(j)......................................................................... .67,043,000.00

w. .HyseU,

Vice Pn:sidenl-Casbier or the above-named bank. do hereby de&lt;:lano that the Report of
Condition bu been prepared in conformance Wltli off'lCial instnx:tions and iJ true and correct 1o me beat of my
knowledge and belief.
Roger W. HyseU -Vice Prelident &amp; Cubier
'
Dare Signed: Oelobet 19, 1993
We, llle undersigned difel:lors, attest the COJTecllleA of the Report of Condition and declare tbal It bas been
examined by us and to tbe best of our knowledge.and belief and bas been prepuod In coaformance with off'lCial
insttUction• and i• b"ile and correct.
PAUL E. ICLOES
11IEREON JOHNSON. - DireetDn

1

$

49

We ~ often asked, "What's the best wa~f rmding
. out whether or oot a doctor of cbiropiacti.c · help my
problemT
We believe the answer can be found 'in a complete
&lt;;biropraclio consultation and examination, including Xrays.
And, to help you rmd out for sure, we do a complete
chiropractic examination, including X-rays (procedures
that normally cost $128 or more) for $35 .
We will make· Ibis special program available until .
November 18, 1993. The only exception 10 our offer
involves personal injury eases {wader's compensation,
auto accidents) and public assistance (ADC) in which
case there is no cbarge billed directly to
patient for
the nrst visit

$3500

... '

..

$199
,.!;•

FLAVORITE .

LB.

•

~.-.-·

-l;

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

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

Sib. hag

79(

9

.C

I lh.

99(
GROUND
Dr. N. P. Klme &amp; Dr. N. W. Robln10n

Lettuce •••••••••••••••••~:d•••• 59 c

Regular $128 Program '
(Offer Expin:s Nov. 18, 1993)

BROUGHTON$

2o/o M·ilk ••••••••••••••::~ ••

· KRAFT

A referraliO the proper specialist if we detennine chiropractic can't belp you

121 X-rays if necessary

. DEL .MONTE

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME OF THE
DANGER SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

T D All 'tctiOIII Of Ute

Htad tnel "•Co

To Tnroat

l;tJ Headache

To UD"r L.lmln
To Heart

~ Arthritic pain by stiff neck

TOLuqt

Toltomllft
- •\

To·KNnl•l _ _ , ,

TooW
ar ...

.

ToA•tM••I•, •
T• ~........

2

2·

·

.Pin~eapple •••~~~:!......

llJ Fatigue
llJ 'Iension

~Backacbe

!;ZI Scoliosis

!;ZI Ann pain &amp; numbness

Instant ·Coffee"_!OLJAR

121Wbipl~b

'

. IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCINCANY
OF THESE SYMPTOMS, CtU. OVR OFFICE
TODAY FOR AN APPOINTM~NT

, Toa....er
To L.ewef LIMiat

- MEIGS COUNTY
'CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
963 General Hartinger·Parkway
:,
Middleport, Ohio
·.

992·2168

•

•
'·

•

•

.Velvetta •••••••••2.~:!·••••••
BANQUO

•

BEEF
IU.

$ 189
$399

.
k
$199
(h
Frozen 1c ·en .;!:~••••••
PATIO
$1 QQ

4
Burritos •••••••~~!~..

MAXWELL HOUSE

IZJLoss ofsleep'
liZJLeg pain &amp; numbness

Tolli ...otl ~~~

TllndaY '

(

CRACKERS

121 A private consultation with U.e doctor
121 A th~~ugb spinal examinati&lt;ln incl~ding orthopedic &amp; neurologiCal tests
121 A confidential report of our rtndin~
121 An explanation of our ~t ~ure if we cktennine chiropractic can help you

Mon. 8 ltH pni
.Tuea., Wid.. Frt.
81111-5 pnl •

32 oz.

ZESTA

YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE:

HOURS

COOKIES
\

lbe

TO Gtll . . . . . . ,

SHOPPERS VALU

129

HOW MUCH WILL IT COST?

RiCHARD C. FOUROD

State of Obio. Counly of Meip, u :
sworn to and· •ubJCri~ before me thil 19th day of October, 1993, ond I hereby certify that 1 ~ DOL an
officer or director of thla blot.
·
JoAnn Crilp. Notary Public
' JoAnn Crilp, Notary Public, SWe or Ohio. My co111111iuion oxpirei July 17,_1998.
' ', ,

•'

$

99
5
S.nilktd Sausage.:.~~ 3

Can Chiropractic
Help Me:•.-?

i;tl

39 oz. can

99

~.

or Pomeroy, Oblo Aad Foreign and Domostlc Subsldlarlel, at tbe cl- ol ~- SepleDlher ~ 1993, a
ol
otate banking Institution organized and openttng under tbe baaklq laws;ottbll otate lllld a
tbe Fodenl R...r .. System. Publl.sbed Ia acooniODce wllb a call lUCie b7 tbe ll!'te Benklaa Authority •
aad bJ tbe Fedenl R... rve Bank orthlo District.
·
State Bank No. I OSOX
Federal R_..e District No. 4
ASSETS
Casb and balances due from depository instilutions:
·
.·
a. Noninreresl-bearing balances and cli!T&lt;ncy and coin ................................................................... 2,038.000.00
Se&lt;:urities ............................................. •·· ...................., ..................·.................................................... 25,038,000.00

HOUSE COFFEE

LB.

To the Resi.ents of The
Village of Vinton &amp;
Huntin,gtonTownship for·
YOII' Votes. Youf SupPort
Was Greatly Appredatecl.

Tha•k You Cllesldre

69

PORK

up in a public housing project with
seven !Jrothers and sisters, bought a
home here and also owns one in
Branson, Mo., where he has exten·
sive business interests. He's also a
partner in Kenny Rogers Roasters,
a popular chicken lianchise.

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Music,
movies and chickens have taken
~enny Rogers a long.way from the
Houston housing project where he
grew up.
"My father never earned over
$75 a week," Rogers, 55, recalled
Thursday, taking a break during
filming of his new lelevision show,
4
'McShane." ,
"The minute I made $100 a
week, I thought I was successful,''
he said. "I always figured as long
as I could pay my car note and
sing, I'd be happy."
The counuy singer, who grew

Farmers Bank and Savin,gs .(q·mpany

\

1993

Kenny Rogers traces S\lccess .

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDIDON roR

1 Roger

RCCOI.A,
DIET RiTE COLA,
A&amp;W ROOTBEER

GROUND

CHUCK
10 • •

\

�OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

nmea Sentinel

I'm kindll101111 on 1 diet, 10 Pizza. iad hpli B"'!lkfl" II ~
!'dapprec-itifyouwould~
CO'li•HNII)Jililr!l which
lbat food oatil my RKh. Dan 1 beer 11111a bell with pelllut buller
offer me pic or~* cake or and jelly.
ice aeam cr_
Wbl1 I hiM clone is CUI out
Lei's move this lbing alcnJ, tbole tbinl IIIII fourth helpings.
I'm stsniDg til dmol on· the by- Espcdallyclilliqaiymid-mamins.
board.
mid-aflanoo111nd lllidnlgbt mrls
Befole I IIIIJICh into IDOiher
II seems ID be wmldag - carpain~ politicllly iocomctdia- licr ihia week. I -aclll.llly able 10
uibe designed to solicit Icum to put my wallet ill the blck poctel of
;•oeditor;let'spul the cuds on the an old pairofJ)IIIIS fotthe fliSt lime
, lC. •
in I'I!OIItbs I'w CYal managed ID
And no, they're n01 Richanl saw a few buc:b by Sllying away
"A. :o" Simmons' Deal-A-Meal from the puc:cry SIIR.
caru.;, either.
The best !bing abOut this diet
I'm not one of those sweaty, plan, which I dcaiped (think you
iaawny'jogging-in-the rain-slcct- verymuch),is lhalitaRowsforplcnt}'
and-mow health nuts concerned of c~.
wilhbeingformandhcallhycvcnif
For example, there's the Freeit lrills me.
loader Rule: If IIOIIICOIIe offal to
· I'mjustafraidofwakingupiO buymeabect,fixmcdiru!erortakc
rmd that none of my clothes fit and me out ID cat, the cntiJe diet plan
having 10 come to worbd naked. goesoutthewindowforthecvenillg.
(Or, as we say in the southeas~
LUckily (or unfortllll8lely "nckkid.")
depending on how you look at it), I
I am not reading package only swmble across one or two gencontent labels, I am not COU1IIins erous people a week,,
calcxics,andlamdcfinitelynotlhe
I ~-got ho!i'!l'ys- such as
proud owner of a Tbighmaster.
pvmg,' Cbrimus and NaMy nuuitiooal guide is still IIOnal Potato Montb- off.
.
The Bachelor's Handbook, which .
Olbc:tpbilosopbiesaba!(ecpme
consists of great no-cooking-rc- · fromexpericacinglbattDrlllredfcclsuch as the Cold
of self denial.

Veterans Day tribute
dinner to be held
. - MIDDLEPORT -Feeney-Ben.nett Post 128, American Legion,
Middleport, will conduct a Veter"ans Day Banquet Nov. 11 at the
Post Annex with dinner to be

ierved al6~~c~m.

: Guest s
r will be Dominic
V. BeUoni, Past Department Commander and Past National Execu.iive Committeeman of the more
'than 170,000 members Ohio American Legion.
· Belloni is a Past National Executive Committeeman, having
,wved
~two tenns (1986 -1988 and 1988,:1990). He served as State Com~mander during .the 1981-1982
Legion year.
.
He is a World War II Veteran

whh service in the U.S. Air Forte
A Life Member of Harr-Reese
American Legion Post 160 in
Brewsrer, Ohio. He has been af!Uiated with the organization fpr 42
years. He was commander of his
Post, County and District before
serving as Department Commander.
Belloni is a retired merchant
who has been successful in numerous
businesses. He and his wife, Evelyn, have a daughrer who is a member of the American Legion Auxiliary. and a son who is member of
the American Legion.
Following Belloni's address,
entertainment will be provided by
the area band the ''The Classics."

Thaltks.

., ...

•

\

SEOAL CHAMPION BLUE DEVILS- ne
1!193 Galla Ac:ac!emy rootbaU team, after beadng
JlldP 20-6 on Memorial Field Friday !llaht, fin.
lshed the Sf!IISOn !1-l overaD and 5.0 In Soutbeast·
ern Oblo Athletic Lea1ue play to become tile
leapt's undisputed champion. Brent Saun(lers'

Jackson doles
out candy

Senior Portrait Specialists
(614) UH70D

' MEXICO CITY (AP)
Michael Jackson fed the sweet
tooths of 18!! Mexican orphans
.with pinatas of candy while he
recovered from an abscessed
molar.

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) -Jay McDonagh passed for three
touchdowns as Western Michigan took a 34-6 lead into the fourth
qlian.er only 10 have Ohio University fail on a last-second pass in the
en!l zone to allow the Broncos to hold on for a wild 34-28' MidAmetican CDilfercnce victory Satw'day.
.
Sam Vinic came off the bench to pass for 310 yards and three
touchdowns, but Ohio's three-game winning streak still came to an
end.
, Western improved to 6-3 overall and S-1 in the MAC, while Ohio
dropped to 3-7 and 3-5. ·
.
The Broncos built a 28-0 lead on touchdown passes covcnng 66
and .sevcn ~from McDonagh to Andre Wallace, Dave Madsen's
seven-yard run and a 12-yard fumble return by Matt Sikora. Madsen
also caught a 16-yard I!COfing pass from McDonagh, who passed for
256 of his 266 yards in the rust half.
Vinic came in in the second quarter to hit Courtney Burton on a 13·yard touchdown pass. .Vink, relieving slarter D.R. Robinson, passed
for 197 yards in the f~ quana.
-.i~/IJI!IbWt'llttli:f._~hdown plays covering 23 and 64 yan!J.
The BObcats ~- to,px points when Dewight Pickens~ on a
OJK&gt;yard nm and Vipk hiiJenlOns on the twO-point convctSion pass
with 1:44-lefL
'Ohio failed to get the baU on the onside kick, but forced a punt and
~over at its own II with 34 secont,ls left. Two Vinic completions
got the ball to the OU 37.
·
A personal foul on the last play of regulati~n '!ive the B~ the
ball at their own 49 for one moo: play, but Vmk s long pass mto the
end zone fell incomplete.
.
.
Tbe teams combined for 18 punts, I I by Western, which remamed
a game back of MAC co-leaders Ball State and Bowling Green in the
loss column.

SHOW11ME8

··

FRI•• SAt 7:30 6 1:30
IUH. ntAU ntUA8.
otE EVEiiNG SHOW 7:30
ADIII.-otf 12.00 ·
· 411 Gill

In college action around the Buckeye State,

Wilmington, Kenyon,
B-W among winners
WOOSTER; Ohio (AP) - Eric
Noble scored two touchdown passes and Luke Chambers ran for two
scores Saturday in WilmingiOn 's
41-19 victory over Wooster.
Noble's touchdown passes carne
on plays that covered 46 yards to
Tony .MJ!y and nine yards 10 Jason
Tinc~llambers scored on a psir
of OJ.Ie.~ yard runs. Other touchdown$ 'fOil the ~ers (5-4) carne
Ql1 a o~yard run by Doug Eastes
and a two.·yard pass from Steve
Foerstnb to B!l"}' Wulf.
The Scots (i-7) ~cored on touchdown ~ or three' and six yards
from Jtm SmllC:ker l(l Rick Fox and
a two-yard run by Abdul Rashid.
Chambers finished with 123
yards in 30 carries. Wooster's John
Grsebing led both teams with 194
yards in 29 carries, including the
game's longest nm, a 40-yarder.
M~kingum 32, Otterbein 29
At New Concord, Ohio, Shane
Strawn's 35-yard fteld goal as time
expired gave Muskingum a 32-29
Ohio Conference victory over
Otterbein Saturday.
·
Bubba Kidwell ran for two
touchdowns ·and passed for another
as Muskingum improved to 2-6-1
overaU and 2-5-1 in the OAC. The
Muskies scored 19 points in the
founh quarter in cotrung baclc fr01n
a 23-7 deficit
Kidwell scored on runs of 59
and one yards and abo passed two
yards to Brad Gedllld.ig (or a touchdown. Kidwell ran 17 times for 79
yards and completed 13 of 23 passes for 145 yards with one interception.
Kenyonl4, Oberlin 7
AI Gambier, Ohio, Derrick
Johnson ·had two touchdowns and
rushed for 161 yards to lead Kenron to a l4-7 VJCtory over Oherhn
on Siturday.
JohRIDII scored on a 13-yard run
in the fltSI &lt;N~f~er to give the Lords
(4-S ovetall, 3-4 in the Nonh Coast
Conference) a 7-0 lead.
·

PHOTOGRAPHY

A·rut:L,
JC:~ABLISHEO
1895

LESLIE PEnEYS
Pianill

Sat., Nov. 13
8:00p.m.

TONIGHT 1HAU lHUAI.
lOll HANKS,IIEG RYAN II

SLEEPLESS IN SEATTl.E PG

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

~~He-

CO LONY THEATRE

at HaaklnoTanner &amp;. Thai &amp;p.clal Touch
Morrlo ond Dorothy HMI&lt;tna
Tlcketo IIYallable

(') Set against iht thrilling
t% world of slt.d dog racing
~if in 1917, adetennined
'"' Minnesota !ann boy tries
J! to tam his college tuition f~
by entering agrueling '"
, cross-wuntry race.
.OmmmingtxtretM odds,,
he pnMS himself a
l2l compttitor and becomes !9
fii ahmlto a ~on of new (:II
%1l fans.With its uplilting 1\l:
~ themts and 'underdog' a
hero, this family 6hn will til
have audimces cheerin8 &amp;;~
atthtend.

Arlallhatre
426 2nd Ave., GlllllpoUo, Oh.
Colt446-ARTS lor morolnlo.

....... iu:TiiiiiS SAT. I SUN.
INtQAtN MCIHf TUIIDAV

ctn

Blue Devils ouiscored tbelf opposition 314-80. In
tbe rront row are (L·R) Eric Humphreys,, Mark
Clark, Chad Shamblin, Jason DaUey, Andy Betz,
Rob ~beard and Cbad Briggs. In the secood row
are manager Alex Saunders, Casey Canaday,

OU's w~n streak ends

Conversation series continues
bined with discussions of the
music, a concept pioneered by
Edward Baxter Perry, a blind
pianist from Boston, with his
explanatory remarks about pieces ·
being performed. Perry perfonned
at the Ariel Opera House March
12, 1900.
Tickets for individual performances are $6 each; season ticlcets
are available for the remainder of
the series. Other series concerts
feature Tom Shriver wilh "Percussion Music from Around the
World" on Feb. 19, 1994, and Jane
Dressler with "A Celebration of
American Song~ on March 5, 1994.
For information about tickets and
programs, call446-ARTS.

•

My favo!ile is, "Damn the cho- curse placed on me because I relentlcstcroUullllltl:lybloc:lat&amp;e~l" lc¢y tessed a ~ ,·~· coAs 1 said befcn, my goat is not 10 work« whpso doctor placed him oo
live toogcr, feel bcacr Qt 1ou1t Jdod, one of those old people's diet plans.
l'ofiCli tcaled bim over my breakI'm just 100 cbeap (llanslation:
fast
of
Hostml Cupcakes and' Mounundelpaid) 10 go buy a new watdrobe.
tsin Dew while be uied 10 appear
· · 1 stiU cat Big Macs; pease. enthnoiiaslic . about his" forthcoming
dipped fries and 10p-bcavy pizzas, bm¢b of StyrOfoam-flavored nutritional food.
but l'm·jUSt·cating for one now.
Utile did !know I would psy d!e
WetStll Cljlltrol is usually not a
problem for me, unless you count price.
I encowage everyone 10 try my
tbosc couple of jcirs when the
Puberty Fairy paid a visit and in-· new diet plan, but not until I've 1\Bd a
flatedaRmYJlandsiD300p.sj.But chance to write a boukaboutit so I can
1grew out of that and a1e anything chargt~fatpeople$29.95 for
and evcrythit)g.all the way through
KeYID PiiiiOll !s
scbool aild coD* without any !DY advice.
·
starr wr1w ror

LESLIE PETIEYS

GALLIPOLIS - The second
concert in the Ariel Theatre's
:-Musical Conversations series features pianist Leslie Petteys, associate professor of music at Marshall
University, with a prognun entitled
"Piano Music by Women Composers." The concen is scheduled
for Nov. 13at8 p.m.
Pelleys last performed at the
Ariel with the Fontana Trio in June
1992. She holds piano ~ormance ·
dogrees from the University of ColOilldo (M.M.) and the University of
Missouri-KansJS City (D.M.A.)
and has traveled throughout the
Midwest and East performin$ as a
soloist and as. an ensemble ptanist.
J1et wmll: c;an be heard on a soonto-be-released CD of American
chamber music.
'The Musical Conversations
.series features perfonnances com-

November 7, :1113

.

COli._.

VETERAN ENTERTAINMENT- "l'be Classics" Band will be
tbe reatured entertainment at the Veterans Day Banquet, or AmerielD Legion Post 128 at the Legion Annex Nov. 11. ''The Classics"
wbose variety or instrumental and vocal music goes back to the
20's, will be blgb-llgbting polfular bits or the World War ll era.
Making up tbe group left to right are Junior White, Rita Wbite,
BID Ward and AI Windon.
.._, .

Section. ·C

1rhnts- ~entinoel

Sports

The Pinson diet: Cutting down to one trough a day

·I

CD!'IFICDD AYAII.UI.II

•

I
wonhyl

••

l

:~

'

1

Baldwin· Wallace li2
Obio Nortbern 19
At Berea, Ohio, John Koz
passed for a school record eight
touchdowns as Baldwin-Wallace
beat Ohio Nonhero 62-19 Satw'day
in the Ohio Athletic Conference.
The eight scoring passes broke
the record of seven set by Tom
Phillips against Mount Union in
1948 and Chuck Brady against
New Haven in 1958.
Jeff Stuart caught four of Koz'
touchdown passes -for 10, 27, 74
and 19 yards - to tie the singlegame school record set by Mike
Scullin :fsoainst Heidelberg in 1971.
Koz
threw IDUchdown passes of II yards to Bucky Hall and 9,
34 and 28 yards 10 Lance YandeD.
Tyrone Price ran 39 yards for a
touchdown for BW (8-1 overall, 71 OAC).
Youngstown St. 17,1ndiana SL

10

AI Youngstown, Ohio, Tamron
Smith's fourth-quarta IOuchdown
aUowed YoungsiDwn State 10 break
a tie as Division 1-M's top-ranked
team held off Indiana State 17-10
Saturday.
Youngstown State (8-t), ranked
No.I in NCM Division 1-M, was
outgained 265-262, had fewer first
downs and less time of possession
but still pulled out its seventh
straight victory and lOth in a row at
home.
Smith, who had 84 yards on 20
carries, scored on runs of one and
four yards. The latter came with
9:41 remaining, capping a nineplay, 91·yard drive that took 3:51
offthecloelc.
,
The Sycamores (2-7) had two
more Jl9SSCSsions; but were forced
to punt on each. The last time they
had the ball, they ~iclced up a first
down at their own 30, but a motion
penalty nullified that and forced
them to punt.
The Penguins then rnn out the
final2:44.

Jesse Stacy, Adam Clark, Burt Wood, Brad Har·
ris, Howle Foster, Brian Truitt, Rick Perdue,
Nathan Swindler and Seth Davis. In tbe third row
are Chris Casto, Heath Hutchinson, Luke Patrick,
Ryan Barnes, Dylan Evans, Terry Qualls, Jason

In Top 25 college action,

AP Top 25 scores

OSU, Wisconsin
battle to 14-14 tie
MADISON, Wis. (AP)- Wisconsin students didn't rush the field
after Saturday's game against Ohio
State, and tight security wasn't the
only reason.
There was lillie lo celebrate
after the third-ranked Buckeyes
blocked a 33-yard field goal
auempt with one second left ID preserve a 14-14 lie and severely daqlage the Rose Bowl hopes of the
151h-ranlced Badgers.
Officials beefed up security at
cold, snowy Camp Randall Stadium to prevenl'A:ropearofrla••
week's student stampede that
injured 69 people following a win
over Michigan.
But Ohio Slate made sure there
would be no pos~e problems by
rallying for the be with a 99-yard
scoring drive and then denying
Wisconsin the victory when Marlon Kerner blOCked Rick Schnel. zky's kick on the next-to-last play.
Tbe tie left Ohio State (8-0-1, 50-I) in control of the Big Ten race.
The Buckeyes can clinch a Rose
Bowl berth by winning their last
two ~ames against Indiana and
Michigan.
Wisconsin (7-1-1, 4-1-1) now
needs help to reach its first Rose
Bowl since 1963.
No. 1 Florida State 49, Mary·
land 20 - At College Park, Md.,
Danny Kanell, subbing for injured
Charlie Ward, threw five touchdown passes and No. I Florida
State pulled away from lowly
Maryland in the second half Saturday for a 49-20 victory.
The Seminoles, perhaps think·
ing ahead to next week s showdown with No. 2 Notre Dame, led
by only 28-20 early in the third
quarter. But Kanell's fifth touchdown pass, a 33-yarder to Kevin
Knox, started a string of 21 Aorida
State points.
Kanell, a sophomore making his
fust college start, was 28-of-38 for
341 yards. Ward injured his ribs
last week against Wlike Foresl
The Seminoles (9-0, 7-0
Atlantic Coast Conference) have
won 16 straight, tied with Notre
Dame for the longest current winning strealc in the nation. The string
lies a school record lind broke the
ACC mark set by Maryland in
1975-76.
The vic10ry clinched the ACC
title for Florida State.
Maryland (1-8, 1-5), a 45-poinl
underdog, scored more points
against the Seminoles than any
other team this season. Allen
Williams ran 30 limes for 118
yatds, the most yardage by one
back against Florida State since
1991.
No. 4 Miami 35, Pittsburgh 7
- At Pittsburgh, Ryan Collins
threw four touchdown passes to
different receivers In the rust half
and the No. 4 Hurricanes beat Pitt
35-7 Sarurday.
Miami (7-1, 5-0 Big East) has
won its last 62 games against nonranlced opponents over the past I 0
years and 34 of its last 35 in the
regular season.
A turnover led 10 the only score
for Piusburgh (2-7, 1-4). With
Miami pinned back near its goar
line, Collins was intercepted by
Tony Reardon one play ahead of
Billy West's one-yard touchdown
run with 10:41 remaining.
Larry Jones, who ran for 130
yards on only six carries, promptly

How the top 25 teams in the Associa!NI Press' collcge foothall
poU fared this week:
I. Aorida State (9-0) beat Maryland 49-20. Next: at No.2 Notre

Dame, Saturday.
2. Notre Dame (9-0) did not play. Next: vs. No. I Florida State,
Saturday. .
.
3. Ohio State (8-0-1) tied No. IS Wisconsin I4-14. Next: vs. No.
17 Indiana, Sarurday.
4. Miami (7-1) beat Piasburgh 35-7. Next: vs. Rutgers, .Sarurday.
S. Alabama (7-1-1) lost to LSU 17-13. Next: vs. Mississippi
State, Saturday.
6. Nebraska (9-0) beat Kansas 21-20. Next: vs. Iowa State, Saturday.
1. Tennessee (7-1 -1) beal No. 13 Louisville 45-10. Next at Kentucky, Nov. 20.
8. Auburn (9-0) beat New Mexico State 55-14. Next: a Georgia,
Saturday.
9. Aorida (7-1) beat SW Louisiana 61-14. Next: At South Carolina, Saturday.
·
10. Texas A&amp;M (7 -I) did not play. Next: vs. No. 13 .l,QuisviUe,

retailiated with an 88-yard touch·
down run 20 seconds later.
Until the interception, Collins,
making only his third college start,
was near flawless. He was 12-of-21
for 173 yards and threw scorin~
passes on four of the Hurricanes
frrst five possessions, including a
55-yardet to James Stewart on the
second play of the game.
LSU 17, No. 5 Alabama 13 At Tuscaloosa, Ala., he nation's
longest unbeaten strealc ended at 31

r.;:es~~K:~~

upset the No. 5 Crimson Tide 1713.
Alabama (7-1-1, 4-1-1 Southeastern Conference) was a more
than three-touchdown favorite over
LSU (4-5, 3-4). But Alabama threw
'four second-half interceptions as its
hopes for repeating as national
champion were crushed.
Alabama hadn 'I lost since Sepl
14, 1991, a 35-0 defeat at Aorida
The only blemish since then was a
17-17 tie with Tennessee earlier
this year.
Afrer a scoreless first half, two
Alabama interceptions led to two
LSU touchdowns.
Third-string quarterback David
Palmer, usually a wide receiver.
came in next for Alabama and led
an 80-yard drive thai ended with
his three-yard pass to Tarrant
Lynch.
Alabama forced a punt, and
Palmer again had the Tide moving.
But Rodney Young intercepted
Palmer's pass at the LSU II, and
Andre LeFleur gave the Tillers
more than enough insurance w11h a
36-yard field goal tO plays later.
No. 6 Nebraska 21, Kansas 20
- At Lawrence, Kan .• Barron
Miles broke up Asheiki Preston's
two-point conversion pass with 52
seconds remaining Saturday as No.
6 Nebraska squeaked past Kansas
21-20.
Kansas, led by freshman running back June Henley, marched 80
yards in 17 plays after the Cornhuskers, a 16-point favorite, took
the lead on Tommie Frazier's scoring pass.
Henley, who had 148 yards on
37 carries, vaulted across the goal
line from three yards out to pull
Kansas (4-6, 2-3 Big Eight) wilhin
a poinL
After a timeout, Preston went
back to throw for two points and
Kansas' rust victory over Nebraska
(9-0, 5-0) since 1968. But Mile~
tipped away his pass to Ashaund1
Smith in the end zone and the
Huskers then recovered the onside
kiclc.
Nebraska hasn't lost since a 2714 setback to Aorida State in the
Orange Bowl last season. It has
beaten Kansas 25 straight times.
No. B Auburn 55, New Mexico
St. 14 - At Auburn, Ala., Stan
White set an Auburn record with
16 straight completions and threw
llueo touchdown passes in a 55-14
rout of New Mexico State on SaturdaY.
· New Mexico State (S-4) jumped
ahead 7·0, but the Tigers (9·0)
scored five iouchdowns in the second quarter, beginning with Tony
Richardson's 21-yard run that put
Auburn ahead I 0-7.
Richardson also scored on a 9yard run, but the rust half belonged
to White. After his rttst psss was
incomplete, he hit the next 16 to

Casey, JeremlabWangb, Brett Cremeens, Robert
Bro-ing and Brandon Hill. In tbe rourtb row
are Troy Duncan, Paul Stur1U1, Sbaun Wauch,
Dwain Beaver, Mike Dounall.f, Matt Wamsley,
Bryan CampbeU, Matt Loveday, Jamie Caldwell
and Chad Barnes.

..,. Sailuda ·•

·

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I

."

,.

. • '+,-.

'.'

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~

· II. West Virginia (8-0) beai Rutgers 58-22. Next at Temple,
Sarurday.
12. UCLA (7-2) beat Washington State 40-27. Next vs. Arizona
State, Saturday.
13. Louisville (7-2) lost to No.1 Tennessee 45-10. Next at No.
10 Texas A&amp;M, Saturday.
14. Arizona (7-1) vs. Oregon. Next at California, Saturday.
15. Wisconsin (7-1-1) tied No.3 Ohio State 14-14. Next at Illinois, Nov. 20.
16. North Carolina (7-2) vs. aemson. Next at Tulane. Saturday.
17. Indiana (7-2) lost to No. 19 Pem State 38-31. Next at No. 3
Ohio State, Saturday.
18. Kansas State (6-4) lost to Iowa State 27-23. Next: vs. Missouri, Saturday.
19. Penn State (6-2) beat No. 11 Indiana 38-31. Next: vs. Illinois, Saturday.
20. Oldahoma (7-2) beat Missouri 42-23. Next: vs. Oldahoma
State, Saturday.
21. Virginia (7-2) beat Wake Forest21 -9. Next at Clemson,
Saturday.
22. North Carolina State (6-3) lost to Duke 21 -20. Next vs.
Maryland, Saturday.
23. Colorado (S-3-1) beat Oklahoma State 31 -14. Next: vs.
Kansas, Saturday.
24. Wyoming (7-1) did not play. Next at New Mexico, Sarurday.
25. Virginia Tech (6-3) lost to Boston College 48-34. Next vs.
Syracuse. Saturday.

break the school record of 13 set in

1971 by Heisman Trophy wimer
Pat Sullivan. White's streak included 23-yard touchdown pass to
Thomas Bailey and a five·yarder to
James Bostic.
The run of completions finally
was broken on a dropped pass, but
White was good on his last three
throws of the first half, cupped off
by a 17-yard touchdown to Frank
Sanders thai gave Auburn a 38-7
lead at the break .
White, .who left the game after
the first series of the second half,
was 23-of-30 for 238 yards.
No . 9 Florida lit, SW
Louisiana 14 - At Gainesville.
Fla .. Terry Dean threw for 448
yards and a Southeastern Conference-record six touchdowns Saturday to lead ninth-ranked Aorida 10
a 61-14 romp over Southwestern
Louisiana.
Dean, a junior who staned the

first two games of the season
before being benched in favor of
redshin freshman Danny Wuerffel,
completed 26 of 38 passes and connected with Jack Jackson on three
touchdown passes.
Aorida (7-1) went ahead 40-0 in
the second quarter against a porous
Ragin' Cajun (6-3) defense.
Dean engineered scores on six
of the rlfSt seven drives. He rolled
up 386 yards passing in the firsi
half with scoring strilces of 35 and
14 yards to Willie Jackson, 19 and
49 yards to Jackson, and six yards
to Chris Doering.
· .
Dean went out of the game with- ·
a sprained shoulder with 5:48 lef(
in the third quarter after throwing
his last touchdown, a 21-yarder to
Jackson. Dcan·s 448-yant passing
total was a yard shy of the schOOl
record set by Wuerffel against Mississippi State earlier Ibis year.

Arcangues wins Breeders' Cup ..
By JOHN NELSON
ARCADIA, Calif. (AP) - Party ·
on, dudes. It was just about an allSouthern Califorrua affllr Siturday
at Santa Anita until the French- ·
based Arcangucs staged the biQiist
Breeders' C'lm upset of all time.
'
"I cou1dii'i even undentand the
instructions in the (lllddoCk I don't
even know how to pronounce the
horse's name," Arcangucs' jockey,
Jerry Bailey, said.
Learn it It's Ar·Koog.
The Kentucky-bred An:angues,
who went off at odds of 133-1, rallied furiously dOwn t!le stretch and
won the $3 million ausic by two
lengths over ~.?~=r;!l&amp; Bcmando.

Arcangues returned $269.20 f~ a
winning $2 ticket.
The previous record winning.
payoff was ~asharki", wbo paid :
$108 afll:r gomg off at S3-l'ln die •
1984 Turf.
&gt; . •
While the party wu over for lhe :
New York 2-year-old Dcbett wtJo :
lost in the Juvenile, the wia by :
Arcangues salvaged the day fOr •
Frenchman Andre Fabre. Forelaii :
horses failed to win •lin&amp;le ~ • •
the Breeders' Cup lalt ;mr at Ollif.. :
stream and none of thfi 19.ci.- ·( f :
which were trained by Fa!ri, 1114 •
won here Saturday . until :
Artangues.
(
;:

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wv

OH-Polnt

• ••
•
::Page C2-8unday Times-Sentinel

Novemb8r'7, 1893

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

.

~;\fith 20-6 victory over Jackson,

~1GAHS
....

:~ Warren

SEOAL grid championship, and
fifth under Coach Saunders.
"We felt if we played hard, we
would win," said Saunders. "In the
first half, our line did a good job
blocking and our backs ran well,"
he added.
Gallipolis, taking advantage of
Jackson mistakes, scored early and
often during the first 24 minutes of
play. GAHS led 9-5 in fmt downs
at the half, and 149-103 in total
yards.
Jackson, on the verge of a
blowout loss after two periods.
came back suong in the second half
to blank GAHS 6-0 and limit the
Blue Devils to a minus five yards
in just 14 plays from scrimmage.
"In the second half, they did
some things difrerently and our

offensive line broke down. We
knew they would be tough to move
the ball on constantly. We beat a
. good football team. Our kids were
happy to win it all this year," Saun·
ders said.
Gallipolis' fmt touchdown was ·
set up by a fumbled Jackson punt
in the early (IOing. With Terry
Qualls recovenng on Jackson's 26,
it took the Blue Devils lhree plays
to hit paydin. Chad Barnes raced
over from II yards out (7:31) and
Brctt Cremeens point after made it
7-0.
Gallipolis marched 51 yards in
eight plays for its second score.
Barnes scored from IS yards out on
the fust play of the second period.
Cremeens' kick made it 14-0.
Jackson marched to the Gal-

touchdown pass with four miimtes
remaining to assure the victory.
Warren got on the board first
with 10 minutes left in the frrst half
on a three -yard run by Ryan
Alloway and Brian Pinkerton's
exll'8-pomt kick. A short time later,
the Tij:ers marched to Warren's 21·
yard !me and stalled. Darrell Shuss
missed a 38-yard field goal and
Marie Ita came away empty.
Early in the final quarter the
Tigers drove into Warrior territory
for only the second time in the
contest, and when they bogged
down at the six, Shuss drilled a 22yard field goal. This set the stage
for the clincher when Graber
teamed up with Perdue on the late
touchdown pass.
Alloway led the winners with 32
carries for 114 yards and Graber
completed two of six passes for 50

dangerous weapon, with Logan ·
completing five of 10 for 30 yards
and the Bulldogs just three of II
for eight yards.
The Chieftains jumped 10 a 21..0
first quarter lead on 30 and 19-yard
runs by Cosgrove, a one-yard
plunge by quarterback Brian Miller,
and three extra point kicks by
Jordan Jackson. The Chieftain
kicke~; was a perfect five for five in
extra point attempts.
Cosgrove recorded his third
touchdown on a one-yard run early
in the second period before Toth
streaked 84 yards to paydirt and
kicked the extra-pomt for the
Bulldogs' first score.
In the third quarter Toth scored
from the five and booted the extra·
point 10 reduce the Logan lead 10
28-14, but not for long. Cosgrove
raced 73 yards as the third period
ended, but a run for the two point
conversion failed, but Logan's lead
was 34-14 entering the final quarter
of play.
The teams traded scores in the
fourth quarter with freshman Joe
Sparhawk passing one yard to
Bryan Wharton for an Athens
touchdown and Jason Weaver on a
one yard plunge for Logan.
Offense was the name of the
game as Logan rushed 42 times for
314 yards and Athens finished with
32 rushes for 305 yards.
Athens played the contest
without its top rusher-scorer,
IS:ahieem Maxwell, who was
benched in a disciplinary
suspension . Toth was switched
from quarterback to tailback for the
game. He and Cosgrove combined
for Sl2.yatds of.tile 101a1 offense of
656 yards and the total rushing of
619 in the game.
Quarter totals
Logan ..................21 7 6 7 = 41
Athens ...................o 7 7 7 = 21

yards. The Tig«s neued only 51
yards tushing, but Bill Binegar and
Brad Kroft teamed for a combined
nine of 21 passes for 143 yards.
Quarter totals
Marietta ................ 0 0 0 3 = 3
Warren Locai ........ O 7 0 7 = 14
Logan 41, Athens Z1
At The Plains, it was the John
Cosgrove-Nick Toth individual
battle for rushing rights, with the
talented Athens quarterback
winning the yardage, but not the
game.
.
Toth fmished the game with 269
yards on 20 carries and a pair of
touchdowns. Cosgrove, who was
limited to 36 yards last week by
Gallipolis, broke loose for 243
yards on 27 carries and four
touchdowns.
Neither team used the pass as a

Ohio high school football scores

~Ada t 9, Riclaanont 0
• ·Akron Ellct 21 , AkJon Cent-Hower 6

. :Abm M"""'"""' 23, Cov""'Y 0
• AbonSp.... 41, C....U...I2
: Ale.&lt;OP&lt;l.. J6, Rocdovillc Eutem 20
• A11a1 E. 27,BIWI\on 14
• .Amlnd•-Oeucreak rT, Fairfiold Union 7
• .Anlonil29, Miuiainawa Va1128
: •AJhlond en.tv;ow 29, Plym- 27
•Athubola J6, A - Sc.John 0
~tubuli flubor 19, Aaht.bull Hdaewood 14
· •Aunn lS, Boeehwood 6
: 'Au.aintown·Filch 21, Youn• Boudmm 0
• :Avm 21, Obcdin 10
"' ,AvCilLakct7, WsdakeO
: AyeaWle48,Antwerp6
• 'Badin 7,Cin. HaniJon 6
3, Unicla Local
.. Jhy Villap 21, Ambcat 0
; ·Bodranl 33. M&gt;~ Hlo. 0
· 'Bolli•"'* ''· DWo 26
:ao~~owe•1. Sholbr 1•
Belmom 36, N1timal Tnil22
: •Belpo&gt; 14, Map 7

•:aamemuo

lians' 31 on its next series, but the
drive ended when Seth Davis intercepted a Geoff Matthews pass and
returned it to the GAHS 35. Jamie
Caldwell uncorked a 37-yard run to
Jackson's six. but after reachirig the
JHS three, Mlltt Robbins tossed
Barnes for a six yard loss to end
that thneaL Cremeens missed a 26yard field goal attempt with 3:35
left in the half.
·
Two plays later, Mike Dolmally
recovered a Jackson fumble on the
Ironmen nine. That set up the Galhans' final score.
One play later, Barnes threw a
nine-yard strike to Qualls 10 make
it 20-0 with 1:SO left in the half.
The point after attempt was no
good.
(See GARS on C·4)

*

..

o

• 'Benjamin Lotan 41, Trild 0

.• :o26.
Ocme Union. 20,

Middlof'Wd Cudinol 0
Millcnpon 14 (OT)
: •Dcthell7, Areanum to
• ·Bethel·Tile 14, Nonhcutcm 1
• ;a11 Walnut». Utica 12
' .Blick Jli~• S3, Lucu6
oftlaom-CuroU 42. On:levillc 7

.• 'B""'""' !4,20,c..;,.,..
o
v....,. Libony 12
)~d

• .IJroatville 40, O.y. Cllrl.ille 1
: ·Buckeye Cenl. 21, Wynford 0
, Cold..U 28, Shenondoah 12
• Cambridae 26, Me~~dowbrook 6
' Campbell Mcmoria142, Stnuhen 14
: Canf'Wd 21, Lakeview 6
, "CanlM C.lh. 21, Louilvillc Aqu.inu 14
• ):anton S. 20, C1t11l F\ilion NW 6
· CudlnJIOO 41, Ridplalc 20

' &lt;CcduviHe 21, Grecncview II
20, Lim• Balh 0
• tentcrbutJ 34, ZanaM.lle Raaam.n~ 7
• CCiri&amp;CI"'ilJe JS, BeiYeKftlldr 7
' .Champi• SJ, NeWlOn Falla 6
: Chardon 7, Twin•burJ 0\ambedain 0
• 'c-hin River van. 12. waawn.. w.v•. 6
: '['e:linl

· ;c~n. Aikfl'l 20, Cin. Hup. 10
' ..Cin. CAPE ~. Cin. Dear Pull 7
, 'Cin. Colenin 44, Hamilson 6
· J:in. !!Ida 30. Cin. Ook.llillo 0
.em. 1.1to1o 21. K-ma AllO' o
Cln. Lockland. 'D, Cin. MaDcm0111 o
: 'Cin. Lovd&amp;nd 21, Ameli~ 13
· 'can: Madcltt 35, Cin. P'u~My\Own 6
' Cin. Moe1lot 20, Cin. Prineaon 7
Cin. Read ina 23, can. lndian. Hi1120
Cin. Roacr Bacon 21, Cin. Norlhwca 0
~in. St. X1vicr 31 , Cin. Anderton 7
.a.. Summit 12. Cin. N. C4llep ltill7
&lt;Cin. Turpin4l,Cin. McNicholu6
tin. Walnul Hilla 28, Cin. Taft 12
£in. Western Hilla 16, Cin. La Salle6
Cin. Woodwm~ 11. Cin. Willuow 12
Cin. Wyornina39, Cin. Taylor 12
'Cic. OlawWc 12. Clc. Collinwaod 6
Matsh•ll 33, Clc. Adam~ 0
Clo. RhOcb 21, C.. 8&lt;Nih 12
{J ......W 28, ICef"""' 0
}:Untan·Mutio 11. SauthcaJlCm 21
.Cicw..s.t 26. Medina 0
Clyde 21 ' Ook """"' 6'
Col. -..,n 14, Col. Nonhlond 0
~ol. Brigl 51 Col Lind..,·Mdlinlof 0
Qol. )koclkhlvm 24. CoL Mifllin 20
t;ol. DoS11ot 40, Col. St. O..rleo 0
Col. ·,.;,.moor 26, CoL 1!41at 0
J!ol. ~-22. Col W&lt;Ol6
.Col. IW!CII·Fnnklin 34, Col. Sow. I
COl. Jleo'IY 21, Cot. Hutley 7
1:o1.
10. 0o1wono 6

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ColctnOl Cnwfo&lt;d II, 0... Fodd3

{!oi-J9, Seellrin&amp;6
'tolumltul OrDYo 33, PouldUI&amp;.0
( ! - 30, Jotr..... 0
~ 13, TallmadpO

Garfield 27, Waterloo6
G&amp;Jfield Hll. 40, Parma 28
Gonoa 21. Elmwood 6

Plinl Vall 25, Zane Trace 16
Pandon·Gilbol 53, Vaaluo 0
Pltrick Henry 51, Evecpcn 14

Gilmour 24. Ch.udoo Nl).Q. 6

Pmy 26. KinWtd 6

&lt;JUud 35, Salem 20
&lt;hand Vall. 29, Pymauoning Vall 0
Oran\'ille 21, Libeny Uni011. 7
0.....21.Rcvael4
Onadidd-Md:h.in 28, Cin. Country D•y 14
Oretn011. 20, Northwcwtcm 6
Onweport 21 ' Dublin 3
lhmiltcu Roa 29, Oc.hm 6
llarnilJ.oa Twp. 'D, Teay1 Vlll. 25
Hudin NOithem V, McComb 12
IWtvil1c I.Ua3J, Rlnnna 7

.Pickerington 38, Mtr)IMlle 20
Pikekln 37, Rlehmond Dale SE &amp;
Piqua 31, Northmont 1
Pol1nd 16, Wlll'rM Kennedy 1
Port Ointon 8, Sandulk)l l'e!:kins 6
PortlmOUth 20. Whctlen:burg 1
Portsmouth W. 3.5, Buff1lo (W,V1,) Wa)lnC 13
PnxtoMlle Fllirl1nd 20, Chesapeake 0
Reynoldsburg 17, Wh.i.t.ehlll 13
Ridgewood 31, NewoommlOwn 0
River View 44, W. Mu&amp;lr.ingum 13
Riverdale 34, F.rWcricktown 0
Rock Hill 26. C01l Otovc 15
RootftOwn Z7, Field 13
Rou 29, Golhen 1
S. Point 2.8, Waverly 23

~~~!;~olwlown21
. Ri.l1i.ud 'II, Grove Cily 12
HillabcwD Tl, Wa.tan Bmwn 20
Hillldalc 29, W. Salem NW 6
Hilllclp 28; Ol&amp;awa 1lilJ.I; 0
HollandSJH*II· ll.AnlftonyWa)'l'leO
Hudton 2t,Nonm 14
Huron 7, Marptena 3
Independence 16. Cuy•hos• Hta. 0
Ironton 'n, Cin. Mount Healthy 6
John Cncm 21, MoiJan 12

KC1111\oo 7, Wickliffa 0
· Klfi11tcdiYill1,4, Stow 6

Kcn&amp;oa'35, W•pakonct~3
Kinp 43, Sprioaban&gt; 13
LaB me 22, Hubbud 17
l...akr~wood

33, JohMlown 21
Ldpac 2l,Cory.Jla...an 11
Ubcfty Cauer 21, Atdlbold 17
Libetly Union 16, Ot.n-.ri11e6
Ud&lt;ina ""· 16, U..th 6
Lickin&amp; Vall. 26, Ok:ntanp 21
Lima Sr. 40, F.ncllly 6
Loaan 4 l, Athcn~ 21
Loaan Elm 21, Canal Wmclt...,. 20 (OJ)
lorain Calh. 28, .Dlantl 20
LouiMlle n. Minc:rva 26
Lowellville 17, llcklon Mil!Ut 14
Luc.IVillc Vall. 40, Minford 7
Madison 21,Jtivmlde 19
_
M ipoli•, W.Va. 10, Nehonvillo-York 0

Mattafoeld Madiloo 38, Athhnd 7
' Mudfoeld s•. "'· Lexinpn 0
Marion Local39,Mway7
Mlrion Pleaant 21, Buckeye Vlll. 0
Mlrion River v.n. 32. Elf,in 1
Muon 10, Liulc Mi1mi 9
Mauillon Pal)' 20, C11uon GlenOak 13

Mlumoc 42, PtrryabutJ, 6
Mayfoeld 27, Bnuh 14
Maysville 31, Now Loxington ll
lwkC1ain 28, Cin. County Day 14
Mro:DarmCil' NW 7, Franklin Fumu:e Green 0
MI:Donald 37, Bed.in Cenler We.lem Reaervc 0

Mc:nU)t'35, Valley Forse 0
Miamilbwa 41, Day. Carroll 6
Mi.ddlc:lown Madilon 22, Eaton 21
lotidpaD: 29,
19
Midview 19, N. Ridacvillc 18
lldilford 21, Cin. Olen EM 0

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Mopdore 21. R1vennt SE 14
Moruptlier 30, Bl)'&amp;n &amp;
Mown Vemt~n 27, Frankliri Hta. 20
MI. Oilcld 21, Northmor 12
N. Canton 11, Mu1illoo J•cklon 6
N. OlmMd 21, Fairview Puk 16
N, Royallen 21, B...u.ille 10
Nap:»lom 2S, Swanu. 15
New l..aubi4D, MtpiCLOr! 21
New Richmmd 21, Blandleatcr 18
N-..tt 26. Zanoo,;n, :Ill (2 OJ)
Nonlonia 22, llubotton 19
NMhcutem 21, Bdlc!on~ 0
N......,.., 22, WilmU&gt;gton 7
Oak llill20, fl!nmwuth E. 6
Olmlwt Ftlll 3l. Rocky River 13
Ouqo 20, Kanau Lakou. 14
Odord Taltwandt 33, Edsewood 21
Plinclville Harvey 36, Geneva 26

s.n4uty 33, Varmilicn 13

Shad""' 49, Philo 0
Sidney Lehman 2.8, Spdna. C•lholic 7
SliPI""'' Rod&lt; J6, l=onia I
Smithville .53, Rittman 0
Solon 41, Chagrin Pal.ll 0
SprinJ. Greenan 20, Sprina. Notlhwatcm 6
Sprina;.l.ocal V, S. Ranp24
Sprina:. South·35, Faizmonl7
SL Ctinvillc 24, C01hocton 22
St. Henry 4&amp;, Wtyne Trace 20
St Johns 10, Ta1. Ctlholi.c 7

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Team
W L TP OP
Gallipolis...............9 I 314 80
Point Pleasant. .......7 3 198 99
Logan ....................6 4 238 210
Coal Grove ............S 5 264 265
Jackson ..................4 6 166 208
Portsmooth ............4 6 . 196 185
River Valley ..........3 7 89 329
Warren Local ........ 3 7 149 226
Marietta .... :............2 8 129 251
Athens ................... ! 9 125 286
Meigs ................... .! 9 104 31'1
( SEOAL only)
(Final)
Team
W L
P OP
Gallipolis ............ .5 0 160 42
Logan ..................4 1 148 86
Jackson ................3 2 103 93
Warren Loca1......2 3 79 137
Marietta ............... ! 4 35 101
Athens .................o S 67 133
TOTAL
15 15 592 592
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 20 Jackson 6
Logan 41 Athens 21
Warren Loca114 Marietta 3
Milton 16 Pt. Pleasant14
River Valley 12, Wahama 6 ·
Belpre 14 Meigs 7
Rock Hill26 Coal Grove 15
Portsmouth 20 Wheelersburg 7

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Tri-Cwnty N. 21, Twin V•Uey S. 20 (OT)
Trimblo 34, Hemlock Miller 12
Triway31, Loudonville 14
Trotwood M•dison 16, Sidnc)l &amp;
Troy42, Wee:t Carrollton 14
TlllctfiWU v.u. 24, Tuu:.uawas Cath. 0
Unianlo....nl..alce 31, Ravenna 7
Upper Sandulk.y 14, 011ion 0
uPP" Scioto 44, Lima Pmy 6
Valley Vicw48, Preble Silawncc 6
Van Wrn 20,0t~wt·Olandorf'O
Vandalia BuLler 28, Orocnville 21
Vcr:ruilles 35, Milton Union 0
ViDea Wam:al4, Muieua 3
Vin~m Caunty 32, WdlMn 6
W. Branch 14, Ma.tlingtan 7
W. Holma 26, Median Buckeye 14
W. Jefferson SO, Grandview II
W•d&amp;worth 17, Medina lliahl.md 9
W111h Jesuit41, Akron St.V-St.M 6
Warren 011mpion 53, N~W\on Ftlls 6
Warren Huding 17. Tol Whilmer 6
w.nen.svillc 24, No!TTIIndy 19
Wa shington C.H. 40, Oekk)l7
w.uscon 37, Dcl1..16
W1ync 40, Xenia ll
Waynedllc 39, Chippcw1 0
W1ynufic\d 18, F•irbanlll l
Waynesville 21 , E. Clintnn 13
Waynsfield ·Go~cn 18, Fairbank• 7
Wellington 21, DrookaidcO
W~t.ervillc N. 34, Worthinaton Kilbourne 12
WCltfaU 34, Aden• ~
YJhcclins rN.Va.) Cern. 28, Wellsville 21
Willald 14, Ducyru1 12
William&amp;hur&amp; 27, D1tavia 6
Woodmore47, Qjbsof'tbufJ6

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YollnJ. Mooney 20, Youna. Ursuline lJ

Interest Rate
•1 ,000 Minimum Deposit

i•

For a limited time, Bank One is offering a special Sweet Sixteen
16-month certificate of deposit. To get this offer, stop by.our:

••
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!lo•. Moadowdalo 22, Day. Dunba•l3

'Do'".Oilt...... p, Noalhiidp 12
pa~.- 41 Miami E. 21
- l S, I!Ildo 13
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Gallipolis Office
352 Second Avenue

~-:zi,Sponoaoillo 14

Poineroy Office
Court &amp; Second Streets

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'1ldlooa 25. ~ Liloall2
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Bank One, Athens, NA
Member FDIC ·

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PenaHy for earty withdrawal. Maximum deposit of $99.999 per account. Interest rate and Annual Percentaga Yield
shown In effect as of November 1, 1993. l~terest rate subjecl1o change at rollover. Ollar expires November 30,' 1993•

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Tbomu Worthinaton 33, WCitei'Villc S. 24

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MATIHEWS HIT HARD • Gallla'11 Mike Donnally (16) puts
a bit on Jadlson QB Geoff Mattbews during setottd bait action or
Friday's SEOAL lt'id game on Memorial Pleld; Gallll '1'011, :w-6.
Blue Devil Ryan Bames (10) closes In from rear. Ia fort~4 ill
Jackson's Jerod Warrens (67). Tlmes-SeaiiDel pboto by Kevin Pill·

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Local, Logan win final SEOAL bouts

. Gallia Academy's Blue Devils
· captured the 1993 SEOAL football
: phampionship Friday night in an
: ugly 20-6 victory over the Jackson
· lronmen, the Logan Chieftains
: wrapped up second place with a 41·
. !!I win over Athens, and Warren
. Local rook fourth place in a 14-3
: triumph over the Marietta Tigers.
: . GAHS finished at 5-0, Logan 4. ·1, Jackson 3-2, Warren 2-3,
:· Manella 1-4, and Athens 0-5.
: In preseason predictions by the
league's coaches and media
conducted in September, the order
: ilf finish was ,correct except a
: switch by Gallipolis and Logan for
· first and second place.
· Warren Local14, Marietta 3
At Vincent, the Warriors were
clinging to a precarius 7-3 lead
pntil Heath Graber hooked up with
. Shane Perdue on a 24-yard

.

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sole owner ofSEOAL crown

' ·
•• GALLIPOLIS • Gallia Academy
: Jtigh School built up a command: ing 2()..0 halftime lead, then held on
; lo defeat visiting Jackson 20-6 on
.;Memorial Field Friday 11ight to
: -capture the undisputed football
&lt;championship of the Southeastern
: Ohio Athletic League.
: : · Coach Brent Saunders' 1993
• Blue Qevils fmished the campaign
: with a 9-1 season record and per: .feet 5·0 conference slate. Jackson
•:w.ound up 4 -6 overall and 3-2
•·inside the league.
-: Coach Jim Reynolds' lronmen
. ;entered the contest with a chance 10
: gain at least a share this year's
• crown had they beaten the Blue
· : Devils. But it was not to be on that
: cold and damp evening.
It was the Blue Devils' 12th

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�~IIQI C4 Sunday Times Sentinel

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

~ovember

Novembe'r7, 1993

· With 36-20 win over Eastern,
lries for 29 yards, while senior Wes
Arbaugh was 6-23 and Ryan
Buckley 4-17. Eastern was 9-36
passing for 112 yards. All passing
came from senior quarterback
Robert Reed, who made many of
h.ts passes agamst
·
tremen dous
press~ from lhe _Alex defense and
some tn desperauon at the end of
lhegame.
Eastern got off to a good start,
despite falling behind 7-0 at the
6:34 mark in the fltSt quarter when
Alex quarterback Eric Wagner
tossed a 35-yard touchdown pass to
tight end Jim Nicholson . Wagner
added the extra-point kick.
The Eagles held their own most
agallantcf~ortoftheorown,ending of the first half defensively,
the campatgn wnh .a 6-4 overall however, it had to wait for the btg
mark and 3-_2 slate m the league, play later in the half to put some
good for thtrd place. Alexander points on the board. Meanwhile,
posted a 5-0 league slate and 6-4 Alex just pecked away on the
mark . ovp_all_. The league ground, mixing things up between
champ10nshtp ts reported to be Ross and Rosier.
Alexander's ftrst in nearly 20 years
The first quarter ended 7-0
in football.
Alexander.
Overall, Rosier the 5·11, 225In the second quarter, Eastern
pound fullback rambled 25 times struck paydirt when Robert Reed
for 145 yards after nC?Srly bc:ing fired a bullet 10 Ryan Buckley on a
. shut out last week 10 Ractne. 55-yard touchdown connection.
Opponents know they can perhaps Buckley eluded several would be
stop one of the talented Alexander tacklers en route to the score. A
backs, but not bolh, as Rosier and Reed-to-Arbaugh pass gave Eastern
Matt Ross reversed their rQies of an 8-61ead.
one week ago.
.
The next score came after a
· Ross, a 5-10 sophomore tatlback sustai·ned drive by the Athens
rambled 21 ttmes for 86 yards as Countians The Spartans took the
Alex rushed 54 times for 248 yards upper hand at lhe 4:46 mark when
on the ground.
.
Wagner hit Fred Boggess on a
Overall, Eastern had JUSt 71 seven-yard slant. A two-point
yar'!S on 23 Carnes on the g_rou~. conversion pass to Rosier was no
Semor Pat
led wtth stx
· ·

good, but Alex led 13-S. ·
Just before the end of the half
when Alex looked as though it
would ground the Eagles, Eastern
got a huge break when sophomore
Brian Bowen grabbed an
·
· an d ran tt
· bac k 85
mterceptton
yards for a score. The two-point
conversion pass attempt failed, but
the Eagles led 14-13 a score they
held to the half.
'
To start lhe second half, Eastern
grabbed the momentum in a game
that resembled a troubled mmd
~ith multiple mood ~wings. Th!s
ume the swmg was m Eastern s
favor as "Prime Tim~" Pat
New~and took the spothjlht by
runnt~g 90 yards to payd!rt ~nd
thus gtve Eastern a convmcmg 20·
13 lead.
.
At the 8:22 mark, another Alex
drive ended with a 17-yard field
goal by Wagner, making the score
:10-16.
That score held until the 2:59
mark when Wagner handed to Ross
for a six yard run, then the same
connection failed on the two-point
conversion for a 22-20 Alexander
lead.
On lhis last Alex drive, signs of
emotional and physical drain begBR
to shOw in the EHS defense. The
crew had done such an outstanding
job, however. the grinding offen~
from Ross and Rosier had taken tts
toll.
With 11:22 left in t~e game,
Alexan~er scor.ed agaon when
Rosier htt the endzone on a three·
yard run to
the score to 29-20
as
the

rights
up Easte~ mad
th
.
e srn~progress, but
e anxtety 0 . 1 e moment
~~ced som~ mtstakes, and EHS
e s ort.IAdhJ_gh snaphand aborted
punt
R 1 resu
Thte' 10 anotf er Rscore by
05
R 1er. h1f.:cjb.e a ~er ass and
0
~t
I ttg_gamers.
h
os er s as _Jaunt mto t e
endzone pus~ed f!ie score _to 36-20
W~gJ:er s . k~ck agam went
ug e upng 15•

rc,

::!o

interceptons,
fumble recovery and
with 20 . Randy Kay
17
tackles, and Buckley and Charlie
Bissell had 14 each, while Jared
Ridenour had 13 and Brian Bowen
had 10.
Rosier, Wagner and Ashley had
interceptions for Alex, and Matt
Cochran had a fumble tecovery.
Much credit must go to the
Eastern kids and head coach Dave
Barr for the dramatic tum-around
from last year's 1-9 team.
Quarter IDtals AlexBRder .............7 6 16 7 = 36
Eastern ..................0 14 6 0 = 20

• •

Statistics
Department
Ftrst
··· 78

-. ·
Total yards .. ................326
Comp.-att..•.. ..............4· 11
RE Interceptions thrown .......2
18 · Fumblcs-lost... .............2·2
23-71 Punting.......................2· 16
112 Penalties ................... ..4-4S

Belpre game, they will talk abOut
"The CalL"
The play in question carne with
3:071ert m the contest and the
score deadlocked at seven . The
Marauder defense held on a fOUJth.
·and-eight play at their own 3l·yard
line, forctng a Belpre punt. Jamie&gt;
Roberts went back in punt
formation for the Golden Eagles,
despite getting a hand on the ~l~
snap the ball rolled 10 the Mala
40-yard line . Roberts under a
strong rush, scrambled and got a
short punt off giving the Marauders
seemingly good field position near
midfield. But the Marauders were
flagged for an unbelievable
roughing-the-punter penalty.
Instead of Meigs having the ball
just inside of Belpre territory,
Belpre had the first down at the
Meigs 16. Two plays later Belpre
quarterback Todd Lorentz hooked
up with Jonathan Stump from 28
yards out for the game winning
touchdown with 2:42 left in the
contest. Chuck Garvey added the
extra points for the final score.
Meigs received lhe fltSt break of
the evening when Scott Peterson
' picked off a ~s on lhe last play of
the first penod and returned it 13
yards to the Belpre 10. After
Peterson picked up four yards on
consecutive plays the Marauders
had a third and two at the threeyard line. But on third down Israel
Grimm lost five yards . Jake
Kenned~ aucmpted a 25-yard field
goal whtch was wide to the left.
Thirteen plays later, Belpre took
a 7·0 lead when Lorentz scored
from two yards out, Chuck Garvey
added the extra points and Belpre
held a 7-0 lead with 3:55 left in lhe
fust half.
Belpre got a break in the third
period when Shannon Pettit
recovered a Marauder fumble at lhe
Meigs 36. Two running plays land
a 15-yard Meigs penalty gave the
Golden Eagles IJ'he ball at the
Marauder IS. Jason Walker broke
up the middle and looked like he

183
9-36

3

4-3
3-149

TVC football standings
Oblo River Dlv~loo~ftnal
Overall
League
Team
W L W
L
Nelsonville- York• ................... 8
2
4 -0
Vinton County .........................9
I
3
I
Belpre ......................................6
4
2
2
Wellston ................................... s
s 1 3
MEIGS .....................................!
9
0
4
Hocking River Dlvlslon-nnal
Alexander* ..............................6
4
5
0
Trimble ................. ...................6
4 •. 4
I
EASTERN ...............................6
4
3
2
Federal Hocking ... ...................3
7
2
3
SOUTHERN ............ ................3
7
I
4
Miller .......................................0 10
0
5

PF
303
348
196
170
98.
252
152
22S
129
157
46

PA
116
83
177
191
312
194
226
129
265
183
330

• • Division champion
Friday's finales
Belpre 14, MEIGS 7
Magnolia (W.Va.) 10, Nelsonville-York 0
Vinton Cowny 32, Wellston 6
Alexander 32, EASiERN 20
Federal Hocking 21, SOUTHERN12
Trimble 34, Miller 12

RUNNING FOR IDS UFE- F'eellllg the, beat from Belpre line·
mao Ja)'toD Ramse;y (58), Meigs quarterback Chad HalUIOII dol!l!l the
prudeat tblag and beads uplleld during Frlda;y algbt's giDie In Belpre, where tbe Eagles won 14·7 in tbe season nnale ror both teams.

• PITCHOUT- EUtera quarterbackRObert
~eed (7) pitches out ID wlagback Pat Ne~laad
:~d from left) 011 a sweep play duriDg f!lday

nl&amp;bt's eame apl01t the vlsltiDe Alexander Spartaus, who woo 36·20 to wiD the TVC's Hockiag
River. Division title.

·Federal Hocking beats visiting
·Southern 21 .. 12 in season finale

•

By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Contributor
STEWART- Greg Gilders'
FedCral Hocking Lancers, bolstered
by a 21-point effort in the fust half
of action, -fought past Scott
Wic~~j ~~W' "I::o~9e8l ,for_
a 2f{I'Z' WID ID 1rOJI_I
argc
crowd at Lancer Field Friday night
The win boosted Federal
Hocking to a 3-7 record to finish
the season. Southern also finished
at 3-7 overall.
Federal Hocking opened up the
evening's scoring on lhe lhird drive
of lhe contest. Chris Lewis found
paydirt for the Lancers on a twoyard touchdown run with around
8:00 left in lhe fust quarter. Keilh
McPhee's kick on the conversion
was good, and the Lancers led 7-0.
In the second quarter, the
Lancers struck early as Nathan
Gilders, son of coach Greg Gilders,
scored on a 26-yard pass reception
from quarterback Tim Farley .
McPhee booted lhe extra point, and
Federal led 14-0.
. .Southern carne fighting bade, as
they penetrated deep inside Lancer
territory. Senior back Aaron
Drummer capped off lhe lhreat by
the Tornadoes with a three-yard
touchdown run. That fltSt Soulhem
. tou~hdown came with 8:02
remaining in the half. Eric Jones'
kick on the conversion appeared to
be narrowly good, but was waved
wide by the official and ruled no
good.
Federal capped off !heir scoring
· for the 'evening as Farley found
Ken Hunt on a 25 yard IOuchdown
strike late in the half. McPhee's
kick was good, and Federal led 21-

I

ora

..

,.

• ,• STAY IN Tms, GUYS~ - nat's what East·
;,.. llead coacb Dave Barr (ceater, with bis back
:to the camera) lllldllill-lstaots seem to be telling ·
~!'e Eagles during a timeout during Friday night's

season noale against Alexander,·wblcb saw the
Spartans win 36-ZO to cad the Eagles' gridiron
business wltb a 6-4 record.

(iflllSwins ... __&lt;_con__oo_ued_f_rom__c-~2)_________________________
f' ~

.

.

• •;After an exchange of punts to
' ' second half play, Jackson,
by a 15-yard penalty against
Gallians, marched 66 yards in
16 ·plays. The drive consumed 7:20
~:ihe scoreboard (;lock.
k:On the first play of the final
~tiod Matthews plowed over
rf~m the six (11:55). Jack.son
·~ the point after. It remamed

~either team

threatened the
rMt&amp;incler of the game.
'

..

..

l, ,•

'

Caldwell paced GAHS runners
wilh 80 yards in 10 carries. Bran·
don Hill had 19 in five lrips, Jesse
Stacy 16 in six and Barnes carried
13 times wilh net zero yards.
Barnes rushed for 40 yards Bnd
scored lhe Gallians fltSt twO touchdowns, but JHS defenders accomplished what no other team mBRaged to do all year Friday - they
caught him behind the line of
scrimmage six times, tossing the
GAHS ace for losses totaling 40

yards.
Barnes completed three of six
passes for 29 yards and one touch·
down.
The Gallians finished the
evening wilh 115 yards rushing in
34 lrips, giving lhem a total of 144
yards in 40 plays from scrimmage.
GARS finished with nine first
downs and was penalized four
times for 30 yards ..
CrtmCCIIS purited four times for
154 yards to kee~ the Ironmen in
poor field positton most of the
evening. One of Cremeens' punts
was a 63-yarder in lhe second peri·od.
Kev Wolford led the lronmen
with 45 yards in . 16 carries.
Matthews finished with 33 yards J.
on II lrips and Randy Evans 13 on
fiveaunes.
·
Mauhews completed eight of 20
passes (three intercepted) for 87
yards. Robbie Travis caught lhree
aerials for SS yards.
Jaclcson had 91 yards rushing in
33 attempts, giving the lronmcn
178 yards in S3 plays from scrimmage. Jacbon had 12 first downs
and was penalized seven times for
82 yards.
Scare b)' quarters
Iacbon.............. 0 0 0 6 • 6
Gallipolis ...........7 13 0 0. 20

Statistics

Fura.bte.a ........................o

Southern held lhe Lancers well
in lhe second half, and posted the

•

,

FH
Department
RS
17
First downs......................8
50
Plays from scrimmage ..39
Rushing att.-yds .......25-81 41-203
85
The Tornadoes' rushing leader Passing yards ................85
288
Total
yards
..................
166
was Drummer with 17 carries for
5-9
65 yards. Tucker Williams finished Comp.-atL ......:...........6-14
0
Interceptions
thrown
......
.3
with six carries for 15 yards.
5-l
Fumbles-lost
................
0-0
The Lancers' rushing leader was
McPhee with II carries for 65 Penalties-yards ... ...... I0-70 13-90
2-60
Punts-avg ........... ........3-64

Thank you for your influence
and support in the
November 2nd election.

.'
•

•"•
'•

•

'I

'I

•

·-~

•

•

Golf
YOSIDKAWA, Japan (AP) Laura Davies and Deb Richard
each birdied the final hole for a
· share of the fll'lt-round lead at 67
with Alison Nicholas and Japan's
Suzuko Maeda in the Japan Queens
Cup, the final tournament of the
U.S. I.PGA season.
One shot back 81 68 were Americans Hollis Stacy, Val Slcinner and
Betsy King. Australia's Jan
Stephenson, Canada's Barb
Bunkowsky and Japan's Kaori
Harada.
Teaa is
PARIS (AP)- Goran lvanise-

Paid for by W. David Graham, Rt: 2, Box 47184 Stata Rt. 338, Racine, Ohio

1·800•294-IA..~..A 'to sign
Don't Oela I Call Toda 1

'

\

SWIJtial
Departaent
M
Fnt downs...... ................7
RUihing yards ...............73
l'luing yards .............. 107
Total yards ...•.............. 180
Camp. -atL •.•..••..• ·•··· •••6-15
Intateptions thrown .......1
Fumble8-lost ................ 1-1
Penalties.....................2-30
. Puating .•.•••.•.•.••••••...•6-228

vic beat top-ranked Pete Sampras,
while Arnaud Doetsch defeat~
lhree-time champion Boris Becker
in the quarterfinals of the Paris
Open.
Ivanisevic heat Sarnpras 7~ (73), 7-5 before Doetsch upset Becker 3-6,6-3,7-6 (7-4).
Also, Stefan Edberg beat
Michael Stich 6-2, 5-7, 6-2, and
Andrei Medvedev rallied to beat
Mark WoodJorde 4-6, 7-5, 6-4.
Edberg and lvanisevic meet in
one of Saturday's semifinals.
Medvedev takes on Doetsch in lhe
other.

B

t8

210
1033 11.

6-1,

.:t:

Zrl•
9/l«l"
3-C}Q

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Year. Came Check U)
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•
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Loaded cor, new Chevy trade.

1989Taurus
Auto., air, 66,386 mlleo.

1988 Beretta
Auto., air, red, new Ford
trade.

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Auto., air, 69,356 mllee.

1988 Fiero
Auto., air, 4 cyl., 79,418 mn"•·;J
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Your support was appreciated.
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Chester Township Trnstee

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wh•ela with naw white lettered all
terrain tires.

Call

2

Walker led the Belpre ground
auack with 151 yards in 26 carrica.
Greg Lyons added II for 68. and
Lorentz had nine for 34 yards.
Lorentz was six of 14 in the air for
I 03 yards and threw an
interception. Heath Dennis pulled
in two~ for SS yards.
Senter Scou Petenon led Meigs
wilh 12 carries for 53 yarda, and
Healh Hudson added lhree for 20.
Hanson was six of 15 in the air for
107 yards and threw an
interception. Chad Duncan pulled
io four passes for 77 yards.
The Marauders end their season
with a 1-9 mark and 0-4 in the
1VC. Despite the record lhis Meigs
team improved with every contest.
Belpre futishes with a 6-4 mark and
2-2 in the 1VC.
Quarter totals
Meigs ....................o o o 7= 1
Belpre .................. o 7 0 7= 14

W. David Graham

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12
103
12
91
20
8
0
87
178
S3
40

winning touchdown.

Statistics

CELLULARONE®
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•

would score, but after a hard hit
Walker coughed up the football
wilh Travis Curtis pouncing on the
loose fOOiball in the end zone for a
touchback.
Meigs put IOgether a five-play,
80-yard dive, aided by two Belpre
IS-yard penalties that was capped
off by Brett Hanson scoring on a
quarterback sneak on the fltSt play
of the fourth period. Jake
Kennedy's kick tied the game at 77 heading into the fmal 12 minutes.
Peterson set up the ICOn: wilh a 24yard run two plays before Hanson's
touchdown.
After an exchange of punts,
Belpre took over the football at
!heir own seven-yard line. Twelve
Rlays later Belpre, with help from
'The Call ;" scored. The Golden
Eagles scored with 2:42 left when
Sturn£ pulled in a pass aver the
.midd e and cut back against the
grain and into the end zone for the
28-yard scoring toss and the

yards. Nathan Gilders finished wilh
10 carries for 58 yards.
Southern•s Trenton Cleland was
6 of 14 passing for 85 yards and
threw three inteJCeptions. Federal's
Tim Farley was 5 of 9 passing, for
85 yards.
'Southern's receivint'leaders
were Billy Jones with two catches
for SO yards. Cass Cleland also had
two catches for 28 yards.
Federal's receving-leaders were
Gilders with lhree catches for 42
yards and Ken Hunt with two
catches for 43 yards.
Quarter totals
Southern ...............0 6 0 6 = 12
Fed.'Hocking ........7 14 0 0 = 21

GET

Lost fumbles ...............0 '
2
Penaltlea, ...............4·30 7·820
Punta ...................4-1.54 3-72

•

final potnts of the evening shanty
iniO the fourth quarter.
With II :51 remaining in the
game, senior quarterback Trenton
Cleland hit senior Billy Jones on a
37-yard scoring strike. Cleland's
pass on the conversion was ll.P
good, 'and the game ended with
Federal ahead 21-12.
Seven seniors P-layed !heir final
game in Southern s parple and gold
uniforms Friday night. Those
players were Ryan Adams, Trenton
Cleland, Billy Jones, Aaron
Drummer, Tucker WiUiams, Jamie
Smilh and Sam Shain.
The Tornadoes' record didn't
renect the constant improvements
in this team all season long.
Southern always gave a great effort
and never quit working during what
was deemed a rebuilding year by
Wickline in the wake of 1992's key
personnel losses.

6.

.

Depart•eat
G
First ilowaa .................9
Yards rushln, :......... l60
Lostrushii'IJ ..............4S
Net r11sbing ............. liS
Pass attempts ..............6
Completions ............... 3
Intercepted by ............. 3
Yards pauin&amp;., ..........29
Total yards .............. 144
Plays ... , ....................40
_Return yards .......... ,.. 39

C.5

Sunday 11m• SenUnel _ Page

Belpre uses controversial call to notch 14-7 win over Meigs

Alexander wins TVC Hocking River Division championship

'•
By SCOTF WOLFE
"Tlmes-Seatinel Correspoadent
• EAST MEIGS - A great
second half and gallant effort from
seltior fullback Matt Rosier allowed
Alexander to overcome a 14-13
hal~tun
•· 10 a 36-20
. · e defic"t
1 en rou~
wm over EB:Stem, which ~ave the
Spsnans thetr fust-ever Tn-Valley
Cbnference Hocking River
Division championship.
_; · Played before a huge crowd in
111e .~tern stadium, lhe .BI:""e ~as
6ctung from start to ftmsh wtth
e,ice~tional play from_ both ~ides
w'!"!'mg up the~ am1d a quockly
chilling fall evemng. .
.
Eastern bowed out m sryle ~tth

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

7, 1993

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Brln• In your best de•l on a New Car or Truck and we
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FOR A. GOOD DEAL••
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Muffler Shop Mon.·Frl. 8-5; Sat. 11-12
New Hours In Sales Mon.-Fri. 8·7; Sat. 8-3 p.m.

!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!==::

·•

'

�.

November 7, 1993

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

November 7, 1993

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

On Haislop's last-minute touchdown,

Today's
· Ozentary

River Valley hands Wahama 12-6 loss
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Raiders' 35 when Mayes and Chris
Tlmes.SeatiDd Starr
Roach were stuffed.
CHESHIRE - After a fiv~play .
J
Ma ,
.
79-yard mareh to score the initial
oey
yes punt ":ent mto the
touchdown 011 their fust possession end zone, and the Ra1ders set up
in Friday night's game against the shop. at !"e•r own 20. Then came
host River Valley Raiders, Wabama lhe m~ht s longest run.
had their chance _ no, two
R!llder. fullback Adam Denn~y .
chances - to do what the Raiders' playmg his decoy role IO_pcrfecuon
seven previous guests had done _ on h1s fake to lhe left Side, had at
~.
leasl three Falcons draped all over
put the game l!way before hal tun~ . him while Covey boollegged to the
But, the pnnc1pal propellant 10 ri'ht side. Covey cut back to the
the Raide~ 12-6 VIctory .- 11 was , m1ddle, outrunning the rest of the
the club s ftrst-ever tnumph at Falcons to the promised land. The
home and die f1CSt by a 00'!'C ~ two-point conversion run was shon
o_n the Chesbue Township ~1eid of the mark, and the game was tied
SJnce the Kyger Creek BobeaiS 306 win over Southwestern on Oct. at 6-6, two seconds after the
26, 1991 - was a defense that bit quarters h_alfway nwk had passed.
hard and often, allowing the
As a tnbute.to the def~nses ~f
Fali:ons to get no closer to the red holh ~s. neither offen~IVe
zone (lhe area from the 20-ymd line made 1t mto the red zones m a third
to the end zone) than the Raiders' quarter m~ by the f~ on-dle29-yard line after the guests' only field fight m Riter Valley s ~!Story.
touchdown oflhe night
. Tb_e brawl resul!ed m the
The Raiders, which finished with e)ecuons of four R~1ders (three
a 3·7 mark for lhe second strai$hl linemen and one ruruu~g back) and
season, had a three·and-out senes two F.alcons (one nmmng back and
to start the game that moved only one othe~ unknown playe~) . The
four yards before the Falcons (4-6) fig~t. w~•c.b occurred dunng the
went to work at their own 21. At Ra1ders fnst possessmn of the
the Wabama 27, Falcon tailback quarter, was confined 10 ~players
Chris Roach turned a =dlinl·and-four on the fie!~. as. both C&lt;:J&amp;Ching Slaffs
situalion into a 69-ylird run that set were effecllve m keepmg the rest of
up senior fullback Tommy Mayes' lheir troops off the field !Inti! lhe
tw::dk,ard touchdown run up the eJectees were sent to the1r locker
mi
•
rooms and other tempers were
River
Valley's
second coolf!!.
.
.
possession was marked by a passP~1me ume saw the Raiders
mterference penalty against conunue to play lhe !dn.d ?f defense
Wahama that got the Raiders past that kept the West Vlf~UillS out of
midfield. But at the Falcons' 40, th~ red zone while trymg II? get to
Raider quarterback Paul Covey ml&lt;lfiel~. But after a possessiOn dlat
threw an interception to Falcon started m the last 65 secon~ of act
safetyfquartt.rback Jason King who three and a three-and-out senes !hat
returned il four yards.
'
got the ball to their own 10, 1he
With the first quarter a little
more than half gone, lhe Falcons
were at midfield and looking to
cross that stripe again, but holding
and personal-foul penalties snuffed
that drive. Wahama ended that
possession six yards from lhe poinl

Raiders set up shot at their own 38 who had two of die three rllSI-down .
following a pair of three-and-out runs. Not to be ignored in lhe drive.
was Covey's 15·~ pass to· senior
possessions by Walwna.
Using up 3:34 in the last half of tight end Lonn1e Simpson; who ·
the founh quarter, River Valley made it into the game BS pan of the :
alternated runs between juniors Raiders' two-ti11ht end 8l11111Rement '
(See RAIDERS on C·7)
Abe Haislop and Ja$0n Jenkins,

I

II!''

- IS HE OPEN? - River V.nei quarterb~ek Paul Covey, ooe of
:lO uulors on his team playln&amp; his final pme at home, rolls out
WO"Ina for a receiver Ill tile aeeood quarter ol Friday Dlallt's game
H!&amp;alut tile
Wall•• Wldte F)le..., who lost u early lead
·beCause ol his
toadldowu 1"1111 before loala1 tile pme OD
· Abe Halslop'a
rn. (Timea-Seatlael photo by G.

of oriJlin,
The Raiders • f'ust drive of the

second quarter resulled in another
interception, but this time Falcon
defensive back Todd Roach got his
hands on it 81 the Raiders' 36. But
Wahama was stopped at the

-dqull'ler
Ralden, who
J81011King
by G. Spencer

.

Friday'• openers

Pfoi

AlL Com.
Menan•. K..C. ....122
73

1

BC~Rem

'Tharnu,Buf.. _... t 66 69!
Fa.wt. Piu. ......•. .147 !61

; c. w...... s... .. m
, , R....U. N.E. ....... !32

~

llS7 6 3

4.2 25

19 30 7

14

lll

l'llyer
No.
Blooloo S.. ...........47
1 Slluahier Hou ... ,..41
; Shatpe. Den. ......... 37
, A. Milia, S.O. ...... l6
Mulln. s.............34

•

Ydl.

11 3

15 21 2
1S 14 2

465

White. Hou. ........120 423

.........

A~LGTD

503 10. 21 3
431 10.7 41 3
385 10.4 '11 2
444 12.3 43 3
417 12.3 39 2

! Pia,..-

'
;'

Simms.NYO ..... .II4 114 1330 9

AIL Ydl. A..,_LGTD
4.4 42 3
4.5 29 I
4.5 )9 4

• E. Smith. 00 ..... 103 549

5.3 62 4

:

4.2 29 4

.l,._

·-

Bcoii,R.unl ....... l26 :530

No. Yck.. A..,LGTD

• Sho""" OJL ....... .50 564
~ Irvin, DIL ...~ ........-'9 741

• R;... S.f .............. M
•

:

641

11.3 lO

7
2

1~.3 61

Ill ;1

~

Rilon, A&amp;l. ............ 41 647 13 llllo
C. CaM~, MiNt. .. A3 416 9.7 .,.., 3

EASTERN CONnR!NCE
AU.OIIc....._ ,
WL
P'&lt;L

s - ___ ...........- '

Mionli ....- .............0
New,._, .............0
0

w......,.. . . . -...
At~aM&amp; ... -

1
I

I
I

011

::l
000

o·""' ,,_........-...o

Cl£VI!I.'ND........o

0
1
1

lndllril .................... o ~ 1

.
,000

1.000
1.000
1.000

.ooo
.ooo
.ooo

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mid~· -

WL

_

P'&lt;L-

-

.................. ! G 1.000
~ AalaU ............ I G 1.000
! 0 1.000
......................O I .oaa
1o.g.
.,.._ ,__ _ ..........0 I
.000
ill
' ..--.... - o t .oaa

.uw. ........................

.
...ftc DhiiiM ..

LA .. d!IA-........ 1
LA
- -............. !
s-Je ..... - .............0
Ooldon sw ........ _o
~ ................... 0
l'l:lrllmi ... , ............. O

uan... ......... o0

.J

·'
~

.'

~

Team
W
PhiWolphia .... .. 11
N.w Ieney
9
N.Y. Ronpn .... I
WuiWI .... ...... 7
Florida ...... _...... oi&amp;
N.Y. ..land«~ ... 3

L T

3 0
3 0
5 I

Pll. GP GA
22 64 47
47 31

CycllnK

u

7 0
1 3
9 I

17 52 41
14 4l 52
l1 39 44
7 40 41

TampaBay ....... 310 1

1 30 41

IJNJ1llD STATES CY'CUNO
FEDERATON: Nam.od OuU Cannichad
director ollhe USCF.

FootbaU
MINNESOTA VIKINOS: Plo&lt;Od lim
MeMJh&lt;n, quutal&gt;oa; Ed MeO.oicl,

Northeut. Dlwillon
3 l
II 42 29

Pi-•11&gt;......... I 4
s 4
Quebec.............. 6 7
Otuwa ....... -..... 4 6
Bulfolo.............. 4 8
Hanronl ............ 3 10

Bolton ..............

2
4
I
l
I
I

I.GOII
1.000

0

1.000

1
1

.000.000

0
I

AUTO., AIC, AM'FM, .
TILT, CRUISE

Nall•al roatbaiU Leque

l..incbtcker, 01anda Troia. wide m:civer;
and l!aen T111olo, dcfa"ive Lackie on lhe

II 47 43
14 41 36
13 57 53
10 .S2 S9
9 47 ll
7 36 l7

-lill.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS:

Activa\OdCWU. Buckley, defc:Niva back,
and Shawn Price. dcfemive linanan , fran
d!.e pnctioe 1q0ad.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
T••

c-"-

W L T Pta. GFGA

TaraniO ........... _ 11 1 2
S..L.ouio ........... 9 Z I

o.uu................ 6

6 3
Dlooll .............. 6 7 I
W'UIIIipoa .......... 6 7 I
Ooka. _......... 5 1 2

P•clfk DI"WM

Cal&amp;otY .............

9 4

z

24

59 34

l'

19 42
IS 57 3
13 59 56

Lcaiue for 1wo woeb fl conditionina.
NEW YORX ISLANDERS: San Brent

Grieve, forwud,IO SahL•bO.tyof\he
lntcm1tional Hockey Leapc.
NEW YORK RANGER$: Ss\1 Jim

13 ll 56
12 41 49
20 55

Hiller, riaht wina, so Bina,Mmlan of lhc
Ametiean Hockey Leaaue for IWO wccb
d conditicrtinJ.

47

=:1'.;:::::: ; ~ g :: ;~ ;~
... -

.... _ ..... 4 9

z

10 35

8
5

32
37

SAN JOSE SHARKS: Traded Dave
Capuano, Wl ...U.,,Ia lh• Ba~wn Bruins
for funn CIDrllidanlionl.
TORONI'O MAI'IJ! LEAFS : Tndo!
Mike foli81o, ritJ'It winJ! \0 '!'- Florid•
hnlhart fOr flm&amp;tt CMI:IdentM!ftl;.
lloo.u.d YW:
ond Chrio
GJveda:tia, forwudl, from SL JaM 'a of

49

l2

-uh

ll

Waohin&amp;tal 3, 9anc:ouvtr2
Oouwo,,-6(01)
San Joao.tl, DIUU 1
N.., I""''' 6, Anohcim 3

lhoAmodanHocteyLoo-

CoiiHe

NCAA: Named Oldilc Dempicy
IIUIIUtin ~.

,000

.ooo

Thanks to all the people
who supported, voted &amp;
helped,· me during my

campaign
Good Luck Bill!
Richard Roderick
'

J

1
',

Paldforby ... ,.ld&lt;lalt, Filii Ave. Go/fipoli1

(Continued from C-6)

1'7-yard run preceded his one·yilld
ul)u;hdown run in lhe final minule
!hat created the final score.
"Wahama moved 1hc ball 10
yBrds in its final drive, but time
expired after King's last pass.
; To prevent a post-game fight,
Wahama's coaching staff got the
piayers on the bus without benefit
o( showers or a change of ·clolhes
and left
Quarter tOtals
Wahama ..............:.6 0 0 0 = 6
River Valley .........0 6 0 6 = 12
{'

,

Scoring summary

HARTFORD WHAIBRS: Sipod
Andrew C..ta, ocnklr, so 1 tn\lliiye~r
emtnCL Sift Dan Koczrn•, de(cNcman,
1a SP~indield or 1M Amorican 1-kdey

:

in the second half. Then H:iislop's

I

Nollonal Hoou1 Laa..

c.,.,-

~ .. --....... 1

\

Ad ..Uc Dl•ldon

Tboy played Saturday
N.Y. ....... otQuobec.l:ll pm.

............. 1 0 1.000

g:"'_r.·---·-..
-' a
-·--·---·-' 0

T-

EASTERN CONFERENCE

FridaY'• scores

NewYcd ......-.--1 G 1=
G 1:000
l'hiWolplll&lt; ......- -1 G I

Odondo............- ... 1

199.4 SPIRIT $202.8.7*MONTH

-*NHL*-

"""""" ........... 3 9 2
l!dmoolon ......... 2 II I

-*NBA*-,
· T-

'Raiders win ...

Hockey

• Sandon, Doc. ...... Ill 790
,. Pqrun.A&amp;l. .... ,•
602
.. W1ucn,s.F....... .121 :567

- PI.-JW

""'"'"'

7

........

,._,_

Jact Morril. pi.td\er. Sipcd Dick
Schofteld, lh.otUwp, \0 a ono-ycar

Manual ........... I

Quarierbackl
AlL Com. YU TDI.t.
j
Aikman. J)&amp;l•••.• ••206 135 1746 ! 2
t Hobat.Ad---····" 165 IOl 1152 II S
' Youna. S.F......... 2AS 161 1901 11 9
' C11am, Aiil........ l10 76 ISO ! S
~

led.-.

1'/lRoNTO BLUE JAYS: !WI......

New JaM)' at San An1Mlo.l:30 p.m.
LA. C1ippen a1 Dmwr, 9 p.m.
Sacramenta 11 Phoari.I, 9 p.m.
HOUilm It PonlaM, 10:30 p.m.

o ;::::o

NFC leaders

"

Baseball

TCH!IIht's Elmes
New Yozt 11 D.EV£LAND, 1 p.m.

2

.:. Cedric Dempsey's appoinunent
as NCAA executive director is
probably had news for a Division J.
A football playoff.
. Unlike his predecessor, Dick
Schultz Dempsey does not plan to
make a ~layoff a top priority.
· · "Philosophically, I've never
lieen as strong in that position as

A....a.~...a1•
CHICAGO WHITE SOX: Declined 10
uoardMtb•l994 upl.ion on BoJal:bm,
dcoi

LA. Laken 11 Soaule. 10 p.m..

AIL Ydl. AV~oLGTD

PIIIJ'Cf'

'

'119

.......

O' J)ooooii, Piu. .. lll

·
B DOUG TUCKER
; oVEMAN'D PARK, Kan. (AP)

- • Transactions • -

C.utc.lcJ 11 Milwa!lkee. 9 p.m.

Elwty, Drtl .........263 164 1903 12 ~

II Buffalo. 7:05p.m.

7:0S p.m.
Witrlipct. II~· I~ ~m.
.. Chico.o,8:3l~r.m·
Pi&amp;uburJtlat Anlbeim,I0:05 p.m.

do,7:3Dp.m..

With football season drawing to
a close and pre-season ·basketball
practice just around the comer, it
~ may be ume to con.sider two items
, of importance to some. of our
young people. ,
In a manner similar to-what high
school players endure, junior high ·
basketball players play two or three
games per week on school nights.
· Di&lt;! sop~eone forget that junior
big~ is a transition s1age for these
. students?
It just might be less cosily to put
all the junior high players - boys
and girls - on tl!e same bus fpr
away games and Having diem play
their doubleheaders at nearby sites
for home--games for the conve·
nience of visiting schools, who
,surely wouldn't turn down a
chance to save money. These days,
if lhe same school is·!icheduled, !he
boys' teams play the opposite of
where the girls' teams play (home
for one, away for l)le other).
The calendar plan would have
the games on Wednesdays and Sat. urdays, two days lhe varsity teams
rarely use as game days. The
. Wednesday twinbills would be
~ scheduled as usual (5 or 5:30p.m.,
:depending on local custom), but !he
:· Saturday doubleheaders could slaft
·: anywhere between 10 a.m . and
. noon, with emphasis on noon for
, games with faraway opponents
:(Marieua, W~UTCn llotal and Logan
for Gallia County teams and Fort
Frye, Miller imd Waverly for
Meigs County teanis). The Saturday times would also help to keep
1he junior high' games from conllicung wilh the high school games .
should they happen to share the
same cowt on lhe same day.
An example of Ibis would be if
Logan's junior high teams came to
Gallipolis on Wednesday .' The
boys' learns could play at Gallia
Academy High School. At the
same time, lhe girls' teams, if Gallipolis Developmental Center
superintendent Michael Dey gave
his pcrtnission and olher compensatory arrangements were made ·in
advance, could play at the GDC's
regulation-size coun. Both sites arc
comparable in size and bleacher
capacity.

After lhe 11ames, the bus could
pick up lhe glfls at GDC and then
move down Ohio Avenue to Fourth
Avenue, where they could fi!lad to .
GAHS and pick up i!le boys before
rolling home,
-This plan would only have lhe
players budgeting their urfle"for lhe
relalive loss· of one school night
(allowin$ roc what they can't salvage by mvoldng the lime-honored
tradition or taking their homeworlc
on lbe bus wilh them), dlus giving
!hem four·tchool nights -in,stead of
three or fewer nights to complete
their homework. ·
In addition, !hey would be on
the bus only one night a week
instead of the two tO four for which
they now are scheduled. If their
parents dido 't choose to take them
somewhe.-e (namely, to lhe nearest
mall, eatery, relative or old friend)
after tire game, lhe players could be
returned 10 !heir school and picked
up by their parents wilh plenty of
daylight remaining.
Granted, the plan won't save all
the kids from having lheir grades
fall below the level necessary to
slay eligible, because the ones who
put more importance on athletics
than academics will fall from
active competition as surely as the
quality student-athletes will,
regardless of the quirks of their
schedules, slay on the honor roll
and on the roster.
It jusl may save !hose alhletes
who are in that no man ' s land
belween the honor roll and the
counselor's office. It just may save
par.ents some headache wondering
tf their a1hletic children made 11
back in one piece, especially on
!hose days or nights when freezing
rain and/or snow headlines the
weather report. It may save school
disuicts some money, even if il's a
few bus !rips.
But in these times of tight budgets and cost overruns, who waniS
to pay for drivers and fuel for 12
bus !rips carrying 20 to 22 players
per !rip when a bus can carry 40 to
44 players and !heir clolhing on six
trips to lhe same area, with little
extra expenditure per trip in fuel
and vehicle weat?

Dempsey new NCAA
executive di-rector _

v~atl'hiladelpliia,

Ullhot-lp.m.
'
Miami .. Chi..... 1:301"'""'
Ooldm !Ukll' o.uu. :30 p.m.

Mil........ uo 91 1211 1 3
ED.uon, NYJ ......209 I:M 11-40 9 6

lphi•atTormlo,liOSp.m.

florido "Qu...... !'ill ......
Now Jatey It SU\ JDM. 5;0.5 p.m.

Detroit at lndilna, 1 :lO p.m.

Yda. TDI.t.
961 6 l

rn~~rna

. Today'apmes

They P!!_s:;,•turday
IJolt.an It W
7:30p.m.

l'lllyer

10 HASSLES.

Edm-at St. LcW,I:3l p.m.

SawiitWlO 109.Dc:awt 100

Q...........

.
WE'RE THE DEAlERSHIP YOU'VE DEPERDID ON fOR YEARSI
'

PilllburJb all.ol Anaelol. 10:35 p.m.

LA. a;,- 97, l'oltlond 9l
LA. Lo£in 116. I'I&gt;&lt;"'U. I08

AFO«aders

GOOD PEOPLE, IOOD
IOOD·PBICBS

Col~ II ......... UIS 11'0·

Dowiii04, Minlwclu99
Kauaoa 110. N.w J...1 u
Odando 116. Miami 96
CUcap 1)4. 0.1daae 123 (01)
San Ail.tmdct91, Ooldln State I~
uw. 102, Dill• 16

cm.t Bay al Kanau Cily, 9 p.m.

ift1F. @1993 BANC ONE CORPORATION. Subject to e~ed 1! approval.

atN.Y.Mm+-, 1:05 p.m.

NowYodolll,-101
Atil'+'pbil 9'. Wabinatoa 12
Adanoall6,lao6ont 110
Milw1ukoc 94, a.EVELAND 91

~·t

Q

T..,.a.,
.. _,:Olp.m.
Hard'_.

'

M«*~•J

At Bank One, Athens, we can't remember
when our interest rates have been so low. Ask
your ~er b the aifurdable,
competitive auto
loan interest rates
II!JIAUIV=AAIII!!!
from Bank One,
UNJWA-.vn&amp;.
Athens befure
Whatever it takeS.
Bank One.Aihens,NA
you buy!
Member FDIC

By G. Spencer Osborne.
Trmes-Sentlnel Staff

1994 SHADOW $156.76*MONTH
AUTO., AIC, AMIFM, FLOOR MATS,
MANY MoRE EXTRAS

·2 DOOR

·Wabama: T. Mayes 2-yd. run (2pl. pass failed), 8:29 1st qtr,
:River Valley: Covey 80-yd. run
(2·pl. run failed), 5:58 2nd qtr.
Haislop 1-yd. run (2-pt. pass
failed), :50 41h qlf.

Statistics

EXCELLENT SII.ICTION
*CARAVANS
*VOYAGERS
*SUND4NCES

Deparbnent
W . RV
12
First downs ........ ..............5
258
Total yards .................. 160
Rushing att.·yds .....35-153 38-201
57
Pissing yards ..................7
4-17
ClJmp.-att .................. I-13
2
InterCeptions thrown .......0
0-0
Fiunbles-losl ............... .1-0
6-40
Pimallies-yanls ...........S-50
6-164
Punting ..................... 8-276

TITLE I UCENIE EXTRA

Statistical leaders

OF FACTORY 11NIT5
*DYNAsrrs
*SPIRITS
*ACCLAIMS
'tALE PRICEs
PAYIIEI'mt BASED ON

OR TRADE.IO IIONTH8 ~APR

Phone 372·2901
372·9511
342·7571
335 s. Church Street.
Ripley, WV

River Valley Raiders
· Rushing - Covey 7-77, I TO;
Haislop 14-58, 1 TO: I. Jenkins 10~;Cook4· 8; Denney3·1.
• Pasllng - Covey 4-17, 57 yds.,
l'lint
~ Recelviaf · - Cook 1· 16,
Simpson I- S; Haislop 1-13; J.
J!lnkins 1-13.
'
· WabRma White Falcoos
,• Rushin&amp;- C. Roach 14-105;
~ng 6-26; T. Mayes 8-14, I TD;
J6hnson 3·5.
Passing- King 1-12, 7 yds.; T.
Mayes0-1.
·
..
ltece!vlng- Johnson I· 7.
JaterceptloDI caaght - King
1-4; T. Roach 1-0.

Sunday Times SenUnel·

hga r:t·

Redwomen choice to repeat as MDC champ L
By KEVIN KELLY

PorTIIeTI~IIDe~

. . DUI~UN - The pn1vemty of
R1o Grande women s buketball

lf:lUD WIIP~ to~aacha!np1on of the M1d.()hjo Conference
In a p~season poll of the MOC

~omen s .coaches 8111lODnccd dur·
mg the second MOC Basketball
Luncheon. and Media Day Thurs·
day at·Muirfield Country Club. .
The Redwomen, who had earlier
received 13 votes i'n the NAlA's
Division I preseason poll, received
seven first-place ~otes. while
Shawnee S1a1e rece1ved a smgle
vote.
Rio Grande, which opens its
season Nov. 13, netted 61 points
and Shawnee State was awarded 57
for second place in~ poU._Tiffm
w~s chosen to be th1.rd w1th ~9
pomts, Walsh fourth Wllh 37, Ohio
Domin!can . fifth. with 31,
Cedarville s1xth w1th 29, Mount
Vernon Nazarene sevenlh with 19
and Urbana, wilh 16, was picked
eighth.
The poll wasconductedafterlhe
coaches each gave brief previews
of their teams' strengths and weak·
nesses. While some of the conference members each expressed con·
cern over lhe relative youth and
inexperience of their squads, most
were guardedly optimistic that
improvement and the competitive
halance of lhe MOC would make
lheteams better.
The parily of the reams, which
has c0 me closer with each season
in recent years, have helped the
MOC gain attention throughout the
state. As a result, coaches have
been in agreement that on any
given night any team can knock off
a stronger opponent - a fact
Walsh Coach Michelle Steele
·attributed to improved and aggressiverecruilingbyMOCmembers.
"I tliinlc the coaches work very
bard at their recruiting, instead of
being satisfied with what they've
got," she said. "That generates
more competition within lhe team
to do better. At the same time,
there hasn't been as much turnover

Diclc," Dempsey said Friday when
he w~ intn_XIuced .as just lbe !bird
executive director tn .!"CAA hlstory. "But we have some financ1al
considerations that we need to
review. I don't see t1!at as a. prim~­
ry ~~tor as I move mto lh•s posiuon.
.
NCAA t;es1dent J!'C Crowley
and Greg 0 ~nen, chaum~ o~ lhe
NCAA Pres1den1s Comm1sston,
spent much of Friday'1l news conference answering questions about
football infractions the NCAA
enforcement division convicted the
University of Houston of while
Dempsey was adlletic director 'from
1979-82.
Both said it was determined
Dempsey had no pan in or knowledge of under-lbe-lable slush· funds
and other violations, including
$500 cash payments 10 football
players.
Schultz \vas pressured to resign
last spring when he was linked .to
an improper loan program while
athletic director a1 Virginia.
Schultz, like Dempsey, denied any
knowledge of lhe violations.
·
The official NCAA infractions
repon did not cite Dempsey, officials said. He told investigators he
did not know about the violations
until lhey were uncovered by lhe
NCAA.
The case resulted in a two-year
probation.
•'We believe !hat Houston chapter is one that we came to under·
stand aS well as it could be understood," Crowley said . "Cedric
expressed a view from the start that
we bad to look at that. We did, and
it did not alter our confidence in
Ced as our choice.''
The Presidents Commission
could have vetoed !he selection.
" I believe it's very fair to say
the presidents are confident that
throughout this gentleman's career
he bas behaved widl integrity, with
a desire to adv.ance the role of
in~ercollegiate athletics as a posi·
tive force in ev~ institution where
he has served, • O'Brien said.
"niat ilyegrity bas been displayed
throughOut his career, and we lt'no.w
it will be displayed in this position.
We have&gt; conflilence this u a per.· sol!·.wh~ vision and ·inte~rity is
what this association needs.'
. Dem~y, who holds a doctorate
in phySical education frodl Albion
· College in Michigan ;-will sign a
five-vear contract. Tenns were not
disclosed.
As head of the ruling body of
college spons, Dempsey s~id he
was looking forw~ to a vanety ~f
cballenges, including ~ender eqw·
ty, ethnic representation lll)d .the
~overnance of the assOCiatiOn
Itself.
.

in coaches ~ therl: w.as in ~ past,
so lhe stabdlty _wi'!JIR theu ~anks
bas beenacon.mllf:lungfactor.
The foUowmg IS a capsule look
at 1993-94 for. the MOC women:
CEDARVILLE
( 1992-93
record : .18· 10, 8-6, fourth) -:Oven:ommg ~loss or All-Amen~ and leadmg scorer Amy Zehr
will be the task of Kathy Freese's
club, w~1ch ~~ts three returning
starters 1n addition to 11 freshmen.
The Lady Yell ow Jackets will be
rebuilding !heir inside game, but
Freese_feels the overnll talent avail·
able WID get lhe team on track.
. MOUNT VERNON (8·16, 1-13,
e!ghlh) - The Lady Cougars'
b1ggest emphasis will be on
improvement, Coach Jeana Howald
noted. That'.s po&amp;Sible ~au,seof
sev~ returntng vetmns, mcluding
Lon Brown, ~ve Webber a'!d
~y Jan:'boski• seniors w11,0 will
provtde guidance for ~C s five
freshmen. Howald sa1d the team
will rely on the fast break and pressure defense in itS plans.
OHIO DOMINICAN (7-22, ~II, seYenth) .,- Coach Tresa Dav_IS
is looking for veterans Kaue
Moeller and Molly DiSabato to rdl
the holes created by lbe departure
of last season's leaders, Kelly Hovest and Lisa Janusz. At the ~me
time, freshman post player N1co~e
Randall is expected to make contnbutions to an imF.ed ODC season, which w1ll include six
returnees . "In the past we. were
small, but this year I think you'll
find us more physical and
improVed on heigh!," Davis said.
RIO GRANDE (26· 5, 13-1,
first) -With eight returnees, four
of them starters. Dave Smalley' s
Redwomen wiD be athletic and lalented , in the coach's estimation.
Smalley looks to seniors Lori
Hamilton, Gena NQrris and
Michelle Crouse. and sophomore
Stacey Ritter for strength, particu. larly from post player Hamilton,
who was named a Kodak All American earlier this year. AI the
same time, Smalley expects his
four recruiiS to come in and make

conuibutions.
SHAWNEE STATE(22- IO,ll3, second) - Robin Hagen·Smith's Lady Bears have but one
senior in Robin Luck, but will look
to her and school record-breaker
Jenni Wei!SCI to kl:ep tbem in con·
tentiol\ for the top spot. "The
strength this year is 10 offense and
we have gusrds who can
on
arty given nij!bt," Smith noted.
TIFFIN (17· 11, 10-4, third) With one senior three juniors and
12 unden:Iassm~ tbre Lad Drag·
ons' Annette KesSler feels~ team
wiU come togelher by the start of
the conference schedule Strength
and -leadership will be 'expected
from veterans Angie Shardo Lisa
Witt and Mary Lanker
'
URBANA (9-22, S-9, tied for
fifth) -. A team of two sophomores and nine freshmen presents a
challenge for second·!le8SOO Lady
Blue Knighl9 mentor John Woods,
who nevertheless expects tballhe
campaign will toughen his hi s
young squad.
WALSH (9-20, 5-9, tied for
fiflh) - A beuer season is in store
with the return or three top scorers
to lhe Lady Cavaliers' rants, particularly MOC honorable mention
Colleen Thompson . Steele said

transfers will malce a difference iii·
Walsh's fortunes down the road,
providing her wi th additional
de¢1.
·Coaches also acknowledged the
MOC'a decision to expend the ronference by approving lhe inclusion
of Findlay and Malone both to .

tn·

m

from.
baDd.

r---Area sports briefs---.
Soccer shootout today
GALLIPOLIS - The Benevolent Protective Order of Elks No.
107 of Gallipolis will hold its fiCSI soccer shoot-out TODAY at 2
p.m. at the Gallia Academy High School gym.
The competition is open to all youlhs born from Aug. I, 1981 or
sooner. The boys' and girls' divisions will have four divisions - 6under, 7-8, 9· 10 ·and 11·12 year-old groups. There will be prizes
awarded after lhe competition.
No cleats will be allowed in lhe gym. All regislration wiU be at
lhe door.
For more infl)nnation, call Wayne Rose at 446-4627 .

Informational meeting },fonday
GALLIPOUS - Gallia Academy Blue Devil basketball coach
Jim Osborne announced Saturday that students in grades 9-12 planning to play basketball at GAllS this winter and their parents are to
meet Monday, at 7 p.m. in the OAHS gym.
The informational session will las! approximately 30 minutes.

Coaches cheer two RVHSfreshmenpostwinningmark
0 e~!'!s&gt; C i!!!e~~~~~~ ';:~;~~:·s:h:~:~:·~:~:9 :.de:3: :~a:~:n: : i~:IU:~n:~:~:;:tbal :aso:n:season:recor=:~:last=:w:e k.=:w:h:ich=·~·
CHESHIRE- Mel Coon's River Valley freshman football team

For The Times-Sentinel
DUBLIN - Mid-Ohio Conference men's coaches raised a chorus
of approval over the September ·
decision to re-admit Findlay and
Malone to lhe organization, bd9st·
ing the league's membership to 10.
Findlay, which lef( lhe MOC in
1971, and Malone, which went
independenl in 1989, will resume
conference play in 1994·95.
Findlay was 26-6 in 1992-93 for
rll'St place in District 22's Division
I, while Hal Smith's Pioneers were
fiflh (16-16) in the same division.
Ron Niekamp's Oilers have been
pic'ked ninlh in the division's preseason poll.
Praises for both were sung at lhe
second MOC Basketball Luncheon
and Media Day Thursday at Muirfield Country Club, where coaches
updated each olher on lhe prospcciS
for 1993-94 and chose Tiffm to finish first in the conference in the
preseason poll.
"We are excited, pleased and
appreciative to be back in lhe con·
ference," Malone SporiS Information DireciOI' Mark Bankert said on
behalf of Smilh, who was unable to
attend.
Tiffin received 60 points and
four votes for the top spot, while
Rio Grande and Urbana tied for
second place. Both received 48
points in the polling, with lhe Redmen, 21st in the Di11ision I poll,
earning two f'lfst-place votes and
lhe Blue Kni~htS one.
' Walsh, w11h 46 points, was chosen for fourth place, followed by
Mount Vernon Nazarene 27; Ohio
Dominican 26 (and one vote);
Cedarville 20; and Shawnee Stale
13.
In presentations on the learns,
coaches felt the conference has
gained .stren§th and exci1ement due
to balance. ' There are no breaks in
lhe league," MVNC mentor Scou
Aemming noted.
Keeping lhat in mind, lhe new
season outlook for current MOC
members went like this:
Cl!DARVILLE
(1992·93
record: 23-9, 9-5, tied for !bird) With top scorer Ken Rucker and
other leading perfonners gone, Don
Callan opens his 34th season wilh
the Yellow Jackets wilh serious
bo~s to fill. He's optimistic veterans El Seabra, Josh Rang, Malt
Reynolds and David Whisman can
take the leadership role and help
Cedarville oul of a developmental
stage. Callan said transfers Jeff
Bradley and Bobby PoUack should
he a help to lhe cause.
MQUl'IT VERNON (13·19, 3·
n. seventh) - Flemming feels the
Cougars are. beaded in the righ1
din:ction by focusing on speed and
athleticism. Russell Jewell and
·Doug Speelman top the returnees
who will be d~pended upon to
make the · season, which puts
MVNC on ~. road for 19 games.
The ~ wm also look toWard lhe
thrcC-point u one of its weaqx&gt;ns.
' OHIO DOMINICAN (15-16, 410, sixth) -. Once the perennial
basement dweller of the conference, the Panlhers have steadily

tutelage. With five juniors eligible,
ODC can look to Clint Arnold,
Jerry Lanier, Mike Bell and Brad
Manetz as the veterans who will
extend lhe Panthers' improvement
DiGenova expects a weak inside
game to become a !bing of lhe past
1hrough accelerated conditioning
and"flat-outrecruiting."
RIO GRANDE (25-8, 9-5, lied
for lhird) - Wilh scoring and
rebounding sensations Jeff Brown
(See FORECAST on C-8)

T .. &amp;

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~~

F Or "'our
Suppor t f Or the
a~
Bedford •ownship
a'
Trustee Race.
ROBERT F..,......,.
B &amp; ...,_.
ft.
Paid lor by the canddale, 421100 cook Rd., Pomeroy, Oh.

290 Nonh Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760
614-992-3684

10% conoN
JOHN LAWHORN

Thank You
Lebanon Township
for your support.
Elson Dailey
30478 Barringer
Ridge-Rd.
Portland, OH
Pd. lor by lhe canddalo 30478
Barringer Ridge Rd., Por11and, OH

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446-9971

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7

·-In the Open

and Troy Donaldson now alumni,
John Lawhorn's Redmen still have
reason for optimism thanks to a
cpmbination of new and existing
talent. Scoring talent Matt Powell
will be joined by a lone senior,
transfer Jeff Hoeppner, in leading
Rio Grand~ through one of its
tougher schedules. Overall,
Lawhorn expects the team consti·
luting his 14th season at Rio
Grande
to competitive.
.
youngsters in the world. Their eviSHAWNEE
STATE
(11
-18,
2·
dent thirst for knowledge and
12,
eighth)
Signs
that
Jim
desire to express their doubts and
Arnzen's 6-year-old program in
fears shines through.
Ponsmouth
is taking shape can be
Your favorite pan of a newspaseen
in
a
roster
containing II
per is the comics.
·
seniors
and
juniors,
one of whom,
Mine too.

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

Kids smarter than·believed
Better believe il. Kids today
know more lhan we think.
Frid11y afternoon I met with
Donna Jenkins' fifth grade class at
Rulland Elementary to help wrap
up their week on newspapers. To
those 19 boys and girls I dedicate
this ~=Qlumn .
Oc~asionally I am called upon
to~ my supplies and camera bag
to an area school and talk news
reporting. After several sue~ preSI!I:Iwions, I have developed a routine.
After my intrOduction by the
teacher, I have the students construct individual "table tents" on
.which they write their names. This
way, I know which youngster I am
addressing, making it easier to pick
on the shy pupils.
Second, I introduce them to
some of the "tools of the trade":
trustr ballpoint pens pilfered from
poliucians during election season,
note pad, camera, the Association
Press Stylebook and Libel Manual,
brain, etc.
Next, to guarantee instant anarchy in the classroom, I crack my
knuckles, lean back, relax and utter
the magic words: "Any questions?".
This -is great fun for me because,
due to the nature of my work, I
usually wind up asking the questions. It is a refreshing change of
pace to have a dozen students
shooting questions at me at the

Horse racing
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Scudan, $4.60, P!lSted a half-length
win over Cornish 'Brush in the
$43,620 Dorileo at Churchill
Downs.
Horse racing
CHICAGO (AP) - Marsayas
Again, SIS.40, sco_red a half,length
victory over Amazmg Leader m the
$19,800 feature at Hawthorne Race
Course.

celebrated Corry' Aoolific. But with
the return of two starters, Scott
Young and TOdd Bro~n. to lead
the six lel!tflllen, Lof ~ allr&amp;Cted •
a promising recru1t · m Canton .
Glenoak'·s Doug Meyer to h~lp
lead Walsh through a chaltenamg
schedule.

Sectioil D .
.

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November7,1913 :

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Sports brief.
Golr
SOTOGRANDE, Spain (AP) -- :
Ian Woosnam ftred a 4-under-par
67 and toak a one-shot lead over
Colin Montgomerie after two ·
rounds of the Volvo Masters, the
final event on the European PGA

Tour.

COOPERATION AWARD- Smellzer Rose of Green Township ~ft) accepts the award for Goodyear Outstanding Coopera·
tor rrom Paul D¥BCIIII at tbe Soil and Water Conservation Dis·
trict's annu~l banquet and awards ceremony at Buckeye Hills
Career Center, Rio Grande Thursday.

WOODLAND OWNER - Jerry Grezlik (len) presents Tom
Jones, Ohio TOWIISblp,wlth tbe award be and Clara Jones won for
Woodland owners or the. year at Thursday's annual Soli and
Water Conservation District banquet and awards ceremony at
Buckeye Hills Career Center, Rio Grande.

OUTSTANDING WOMAN- Bernice Woods (left) receives the
award ror Outstandin~ Farm Woman or tbe year rrom James
Howard at Thursday's annal Soil and Water Conservation District banquet and awards ceremony at Buckeye Hills Career Center, Rio Grande.

-

\

Mystery of the week: What's driving the econo.my
By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK- If you're won~ring how people are earning the
money to buy the cars and homes
that seem to be fueling the economy's growth'· tately,' the answer js
they'n: not. They're borrowing it.
. The mystery over th~ true
strength of the economic recovery
was at least panty solved this past
week, when the Federal Reserve
reported the bigges.t one-month
leap in consumer borrowing in
nearly six years for September.
This is important, because it sig·
nals that the economy's stamina
isn't from a vast increase in high-

::au· :, 1'111'111:

!1111 11,11'1' ~~,:: 1

paying new jobs and risfQg
incomes, but has a limited source
of energy. The pace of borrowing
cannot last
"There's somelhing very much
·wrong with this picture, • • .said
Robert Brusca, chief economist at
the New York office of Nikko
Securities Co. International
The consumer credit figures .,
released Friday capped a week of :.
surprisingly strong data about the
economy that rattled the stock and
bond markets by arousing fears of
resurrected inflation.
The data showed rising rroduc·
tivity, the first expansion o manufacturing in nve months, the ·

New surgeon joins HMC
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Sports briefs
BasebaU
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians's star-crossed
year toOk another tragic tum when
a truck driven by piicher Cliff
Young crashed into a tree Thursday
night near his hometown of Willis,
Texas, killing him instantly.
Young is the third Cleveland
pitcher to die in an accident this
year. Steve Olin and Tim Crews
died and Bob Ojeda was injured in
a March 22 boating accident in
central Florida on the team's only
day off of spring training.
Young, 29, was _on his way to
pick up a relative from a dance
class about 9:30 p.m. when his
four-wheel-drive truck veen:d off a
winding road, hit a tree and flipped
over.
Young - who was not wearing
a seat belt - was thrown halfway
through the sunroof !IJld was dead
at the scene. A blood test was
ordered to determine whether alcohol was involved.
Young had appeared in 21
games for the Indians in 1993 and
went 3-lo with one save and a 4.62
ERA.

season

by sen(or Jeff Ward's .21-point
average from last season.
URBANA (26-8, 11·3, second)
- Like Tiffin, the Blue Knights
have talent to spare in the n:turn of
Jerry Ljgon and An James, but Bob
Ronai feels the team's fate is a
question mark at this point. But
with its trademark pressing on
offense and Ligon's past perfor·
mance in defense and scoring, the
team should lea.l(e a good account
of itself, Ronai noted.
W ALSfl (29-S, ll-3, first) Steve Loy opens his second season
with the Cavaliers making up for
the loss of six top contributors from
its champiorishio year. led bv the

•

same time.

In retrospect, it son of res embles a presidential press conference
with dozens of reponers clamoring
for attention. The difference is the
students ask more sensible questions and hardly ever ask the same
question mon: than once.
One question I always face is
"How much money do reporters
make?'•
"Well, you don't get into the
business to get rich," I usually
respond in a futile attempt to maintain a semblance of d1gruty.
One other thing I do is make
each kid write a one or two paragraph note about things they have
learned about newspaper production. I also invite them to·comment
or mention things they &gt;yould like
to see in the newspaper. Some of
the pupils, those wlth' \He· mosr ·
insi,ht I presume, indicate they
arcn t 100 mterested in the newspaper buSiness.
.
Stu~ts. here are my comments
to you:
I notice by the questions you ask
that you show great interest in murders, cops and robbers and other
grisly news items. This disturbs me
because I fear you are becoming
desensitized to violence.
Some people criticize the press
because we print too many "bad"
things. I wish we had only happy
things to print. Unfonunately, the
world be!ng what it is, we will continue to mform the pubhc on war,
violent crime and death.
"No news is good news," the
sqying goes. It is true.
You want news that kids write
packaged in a special kids' section.
You think adults need to know
kids' feelings on subjects. I agree.
11 seems we only hear negative
things about the youngsters of
today. The children I have had the
pleasure to meet in our public
schools an:, I would wager, surpass
or at least equal any group of

Travis-Merry, has gone the distance
with the Bears. Merry's. talent,
backed by the return of Darryl
Lisath, Craig Miller, Brian Dyer
and Ryan Hndsorl, will supplement
the Bears' strength, as will some
promising transfers. The overall
competitiveness of the MOC may
work in Shawnee's favor, Arnzen
feels.
TIFFIN (21·12, 8-6, fifth) Picked fourth in the Division I prepoU, the Dragons still have
some work to do before the conference schedule gets underway,
Coach Jim Hammond noted. However, Tiffin boasts a roster of six
lettermen, four of them stanm,
led
''
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November 7, 1993

o.-·

-·'1·1111111·--

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0

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l~Nre IR~IItable

GALLIPOLIS - Pradist
was privileged at Lakewood Hosathum, -M.D., an ?rth'?J?Bedic sur- pita!, St;. John Hospital and I&lt;fser
GALLIPOLIS • The Ohio Val·
geon, has taken a P9$1IJOn,.,.,ctn,ll\e_,...£ennanante... ... , . ~ ,,.. . 1 .., . . .. c .., .• '' 'ifm Holzer Clinic' Medici! Staff. Re •.. Dr. Satayitlium is eertificlif'bf · ,ey ...esoun:e o
.v~uo
joins Malcolm w. Lentz, M.D., in the American Board ' of Development Counh1 want~ to
the clinic's orthopaedic depart· Orthopaedic Surgery (l%9) and is encourage backyard composung.
mcnL
a fellow of the American College The .schools or youth groups.may
Dr. Satayathum is a graduate of of Surgeons (1970).
recetve ~2S to $50 to. establish a
Chulalongkorn
University,
• composbng ~emonstranon.
Is
Bangkok, Thailand. He n:ceivcd
Grants will be made to schoo
his Medical Degree from
or youth groups m the RC&amp;D ten
Bangkok's University of Medical
c_ount~ area of Adams, Brown, Gal·
Science.
ha, H1ghland, J~kson, Law~nce,
He served his internship at
P1ke, _Ross, Sc1oto, a!ld Vmton.
Mount Vernon Hospital Mount
Selecuon for ~ts. w1ll be based
v
NY
'
on communtty mvolvcment,
e~~n.:CSid~ncy in general practice
demons.tration value.• and scope.
and surgery was at Cabell HuntingMone~ ts to be used for rnatenals
ton Hospital Huntington wv from
needed, although a small amount
1958 to 1960. His orthOPaediC resicould be used for worker n:fresh·
dcncies were at Albert Einstein
ments.
.
.
Medical Center in Philadelphia, PA
The composung demonstrauon
(1961-1963) and the Hospital for
should handle only leaves, yard and
·
led
Ch'ldren
U
'ted
H
'tal
garden waste.
Cnpp
1
•
nl
ospl
The Ohio Valley RC&amp;D wants
~~J:l).wark, Newark, N.J., (1963to show the public how easy it is to
The doctor has been actively
compost. In the future, landfills
· engaged inthpracticinlag ~rthopa?dic
'
}Z'~ :~~~nfst:::;: :!~~s:~r~~~
surgery m e 0 c_ve n area smce
./ll~
ot presently recycled.
1964. He was an mstructor at Case
n a 1s n
f r
PRADIST SATAYATHUM
Mulches have great value. o
Western Reserve University and
- ·
·
lawns, gardens, and landscapmg.
m
For information on composting,
't••
contact your local Soil Conservation Service offJCC, Soil and Water
Conservation District office, or
OSU Cooperative Extension office.
Information is also available on
composting as well as the grant by
contactingtheOhioVaneyRC&amp;D
office at614-353-4557.
.By EDWARD VOLLBORN
soft and spongy decay of the bulbs
Third quarter
GALLIPOLIS • According to as well
.
"Doane's Agricultural Repon" disThe following are suggestions earnings announced
IIJ?P!&gt;inting
for control of tulip and daffodil
MARIETTA • Roben E. Evans,
y~elds and low test weights in
bulb rots. I) Buy bulbs from a relimajor corn producing areas are able source. 2) Use crop rotation in President and Chief Executive
being reponed. Iowa corn yields the flower beds. 3) Plant in a cool, Officer, announced third quarter
are falling well short of expects· well-aerated and well drained soil. earnings for Peoples Bancorp Inc.
lions. Even Illinois and Indiana 4) Do not use excessive amounts of of $1,417,000, compared to
yields don't seem to be living up to nitrogen, ~hosphorus, or oraanic $1,191,000 for the same period last
the earlier assessments. A final pro- matter. 5) Avoid unnecessary year, have been announced by
duction estimate due out in January injury to bulbs before planting. 6) Robert E. Evans, president and
could reflect a major reduction to Sort through the bulbs and discard chief executive officer.
Primary earnings per share for
the USDA production forecast. those that are partly decayed. Look
the
qUIU1er
were $0.97 compan:d to
There also seems to be little especially at the neck and basal
$0.85,
an
increase
of 14.1%. Fullyr.rogress being m_ade on where areas of the bulbs. Healthy tulip
diluted
earnings
per
share incn:ased
'ethanol" fits as a part of our bulbs immersed in water will Sillk,
national energy policy.
decayed bulbs will float. If this 18.3% to $0.97 compared to 1992's
John Hartman, Univ~rsity of method is used for sorting, .th,~: third quaner amOUDt of $0.82.
For the nine months !nded SepL
Kentucky, says to prevent tUlip and bulbs .must be treated with fungidaffodil 'diseases now. Tulips and tide such as thiophanate-methyl , 30, both primary and fully-diluted
daffodils are.planted in fall with the . after dipping, because dipping CllfDings per share increased. Primary earnings per shari! increased
e~pectatlon that they will provide a . ·spreads fungal spores from dis·
9.2%, from $2.49 to $2.72, while
colotful show in spring. Tulip and eased to healthy bulbs.
daffodil bulbs are fleshy structures,
A special,,congratulations to the fully-diluted increased 17% from
and are subject to decays caused by Gallia Soil and Water Conservation $2.29 10 $2.68. All 1992 per share
fungi, nematodes, and bacteria. Dis~t for pulling together ,a very . information has been adjusted due
to 10% stock di.vidend iss.ued April
R~ognizing diseased bulbs and delicious Oallia County produced
.
I, 1993. All per 'sl~Q~e infonnanon
u~ing control measures now are
meal.
ant)
othct references,10 net income
important tQ prqducing healthy
The southern Ohio Grazing
plants and flowers in spririg.
ConferenCe held Sarurda~, Octobl:r are preaented atter tile cumulative
• DiseaSes of tulip and daffodil 30 was a huge' succeSs. More than effect of accouating chaaata. ·
bulbs include baSIIi l'QI, caused by one hundml people attended from
f~sari~m bxy~m;· black slime 'all over Ohio. Mark your calendar
(black rot), caused by Sclerotinia for the evening of January 20.CIDCAGO (AP) ~ Pilots and
bulborum; blue mold, caused by Plans are 10 invite Jim Gerrish, Formachinists at United Airlines could
species of l'~icullium; and crown · age Specialist at the National Forget more lime to negotiate a buyout
rot (soulhem wilt), caUsed by Scle- age Research at Linneous, MO.
of the.-airlin.e with the company's
rotium rolfsii. Various nematodes
ED Vollborn Is Gallla 'Counoffer to drop the planned sale.of its
c'an cause discolon:d patches and a ty's extension 11ent, 11rlculture.
flight !litchens.

Corn Yl•elds faiii•ng
•
Sh Of t 0 f expec·t 3 t lOllS

1

I . ·llllrUJ B:lllll:ll
11U t•u·•ID-1411 • 112·21ft • Hf.IHI• 412-118
lldiJ
1:1
111:11
• T81CeS, Taos. Title Feeuxlra. Rebalil included In sale price of new Whlcla listed
'on IIJI)roYed credit'. Nol responsible for l)'pogrrClhical errors:

;·•

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Busines~

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Announce
school grants
for COmpOSting

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"'0oo ""·"'"""' lAD '1121

biggest gain in home sales in seven
years and surging sales of new
vehicles.
But a number of economists
focused on the weaknesses. Besides
the uncertainty of how -long consumers will ·spend money they
diiil't have, questions arose on their
·spending-behavior.
. Big American retailers, for
example, reported mixed sales
results for October, a month that
historically has indicated how
lliey'll fare during the Christmas
selling season. Discounters did the
best, pricier merchants did the
worst.

'

I

brief

"Yes, there's spending going
on, but consumers are very costconscious, very pra~matic about
what they're buymg, ' said David
Bostian, an economist at Herzog
Heine Geduld, a Wall Street investment firm. "They're going to the
PACE warehouse clubs, the Wal·
Mans.''
The sharp increase in October
automobile sales was at least partly
due to necessity. Many consumers
have been delaying the purchase of
.replacement vehicles for years.
"Their cars lire falling apan and
they need new o~es," said Sandra
Shaber. a consumer economist at

the Wefa Group, a forecasting con-

cern in Bala Cynwyd, Pa.

Moreover, au tom akers have
devised many clever ways for consumers to get behind the wheel of a
vehicle they can't otherwise afford,
such as low-interest loans and
extended leases with no money
down.
"The auto companies come up
with the financing," said Bostian.
"They give you the money if
you're halfway creditworthy."
Still, others said they saw signs
of significant long-lasting strength
in the economy . Although the the
Labor Department said me October

CONDUCT FRUIT SALE • The Gallipolis
Future Farmers or America Alumn~ with assistance or the Gallipolis FFA members, are conducting their annual citrus fruit sale. Pictured
lert to right are FFA President Bill Jo Jones,

unemplo&gt;'roent rate edged up to 6.8
percent, for example, that was at
least partly because more people
were again looking for work after
having given up their search
months before. It also repor.ted "
companies created nearly 180,000 .
jobs last month and more employ· ,
ees were working overtime.
"It doesn't sound like much, bul ·
it's better than a lot of press '
repons, which focus on the layolfs ·
and the downsizing and the nega- ,
lives," said Richard Berner, chief
economist at Mellon Bank in Pills·
burgh. "Less reponed are the posi- "
tives. There is hiring going on."

Gallia Academy Principal James Pope and
Alumni President Scott Donahue. Orders may
b~ placed by calling tbe GAHS agriculture
department at '"-3250. (See story on D-8)

East Coast pear industry may be reborn
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
long-dead East Coast pear industry
may be due for a rebirth, Agricultun: Depanment plant researchers
say.
A new variety of pear called
Potomac has just been released to
plant breeders by Agricultural
Research Service scientists at the
Appalachian Fruit Research Laboratory in Kearneysville, W.Va._
It resists fire blight, which can
destroy a tree rapidly. Caused by a
bacterium, fire blight attacks all
parts of a tree and can leave affected areas of the tree looking
scorched and blackened, as though
it had been burned.
The Kearneysville scientists also
have discovered a compound to kill
pear psylla, a devastating insect
pest.

Pear Psylla, which looks like a
miniature cicada, feeds on pear tree
leaves, reducing yields, weakening
the tree and eventually killing it.
The insect also secretes sticky
material that.· decreases photosynthesis aOd causes moldy fruiL
"This disease-insect combination wiped out thriving New England pear orchards from the late
1700s to the mid-l800s," said
HowaniJ. Brooks of the research
service.
Speaking of the new Potomac
pear variety, Stephen S. Miller.
director of the Kearneysville lab,
said: "Although we'n: n:leasing it
for home orchards, this new pear
can also be used by commercial
growell! who want to store the fruit
for less lhan a couple of months."
He said the research also could
help ensure the continuing health of
the existing pear industry on the
West Coast.

In field tests this spring, the
Kearneysville scientists discovered
that a sugar ester- a natural com·
pound extracted from a wild tobac·
co plant and sprayed on insectinfested trees - killed more pear
psylla nymphs than did a commercial insecticidal soap.
A report on the research appears
in the November issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
Several other pear varieties that
are resistant to fire blight are being
evaluated by university researchers
and could be ready to release to
plant breeders w1thin the next
seven or eight years. These are all
more blight-resistant than Barllett,
the most popular pear variety now

grown.

0

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
European Community's apple and
pear crops are forecast down 20
percent and 17 percent, respective~-

'

As opposed to last year's large -.
harvest, this year's crop is repor1ed ·
ft?m mos~ major prOducing coun- ·.

mes as bemg normal.
~
"This will be welcome news to
many Southern Hemisphere coun.
tries who depend on the EC as a
major off-season market," said a '
report in this month' s Horticultural :
Products Review by the Foreign ·:
Agncultural Service.

Davison completes 20 years
service with Appalachian Power
GALLIPOLIS - Lawrence A.
"Larry" Davison of Gallipolis.

LAWRENCE l&gt;AVISON

Ohio, has observed his 20tti '
anniversary with Appalachian
Power Company. He is a maintenance mechamc welder for the ·
company's Centralized Plant Main- '
tenance (ACPM) group.
Headquartered in Point Pleasant, W. Va., ACPM provides main- ''
tenance service to APDBiachian's .
Mountameer and John Amos .
Plants, Central Operating Company's Philip Sporn Plant, and Ohio
Power's Gavin PlantAn Army veteran of the Vietnam
War, Davison lltended Gallia ·
Academy. He began his career with '
Southern Ohio Coal Com)J!IIy in ,;
1973 and transferred to Ac:PN Ja"
1979. Davison and hil wife Doris
have one ·daughrer, ltrist\~, lad llix
sons, Keith, JefttCy, Mark, R-ank
Scott,' and Kurt.
'
He ftttends St. Louis Catholic
Church, GallipOlis.
:

•

�November

1813
everything today you promiled itlociatee have today which could be ol benelit to
you would do. Hyou try to hedge your cotn- close lrlenda as well as you,..tl should live
mltmanl "' do lela, you'n come our looking up to your expectations. Oon'l make any

very bod.

GENEVA (AP) - From prosperous West Eprope to the world's
poorest nations, contaminated
blood supplies are spi"CIIiins fear
that liCe-saving li811SfusiOIIll could
aetUauy lead to death from AIDS.
Evidence that a German CDmJIII·
ny distributed plasma products
tainted with the AIDS vi,rus has
spread panic and IICDt other European countries scurrying to check
their stocks.
A recent scandal in Colombia
set back South American effoo.s to
improve safety. Patchy testing of
blood supplies in 'Africa has hindered attempts 10 stem lhe spread
of lhe killer disease in the worst
affecled continenL
Abd tainted blood given to
orphans durins the Communist era
resulled in 2,376 infecled children
inRomania.
·
What is lhe risk of contracting
the virus that can lead to AIDS
virus lhrough conraminated blood?
Low in wealthy countries and
hip in pans of the Third Y/orld.
The World Heallh Organization
estimates there have been about 2.5
million cases of full-blown
acquired immune deficiency syndrome since records weze firSt kept
in 1981. Around 14 million people
worldwide have the human immunodeficiency virus that leads to
AIDS.
"Globally between 5-10 percent
of cases are eslimaled to.be due to
transfusion-transmitted infection
through blood and blood products," said Dr. Jean Emmanuel of
WHO's global program on AIDS.
WHO estimates about 75 percent are from heterosexual inter-

er er~ekdowll ~ lawl
Hila the B0111iu aapital. Th1restrlctloaa foreed the Red Cr011 to
caneel 1 'on&amp;~plaaned eoavoy that' W.. to have
taken nearly 1,500 Serb, Croat and Muslim
refugees out of die dty on Saturday. (AP)

.Vares campaign draws to a close,
~:~fJonarde braced for possible assault
~

.

course, the rest from homosexual
intercourse, contaminaled needles
or from mother to child.
Emmanuel snssea that indusDialized countries have the lechnoiO'
gy to destro~ viruses in products
like plasma, the RSOUrCe$ to test all
blood supplies for HIV, and the
infrastructure to ensure a reliable
blocid supply•.
In the United States, health
authorities estimate the risk of
patients becoming infected with
HIV from blood .transfusiona is
about one in 250,000, compared
wiili iJne in 2,500 in 198S.
· ,Allllut half the 20,000
hemol'/lillac;s in the Uniled States
wete ibfected by HIV before test·
ing for" the virus was introduced in
1985. Similar tragedies unfolded in
Japan, Canada, Britain, Spain, Italy
and Switzerland.
In France, four senior health
offteials last yw weze convicted of
knowingly allowini hemophiliacs
to reeeive blood~IOUing products
tainted by HIV in 198!5.
Heat-treated plasma had just
become available from theUniled
States; but the head of France's
national blood bank decided the
imports would be too costly. About
1,200 hemophiliacs were contaminated by the Facta 8 they needed
to clotlheir blood to prevent bleeding.
"The risk is now subsiding for
hemophiliacs,'' said Sheila Brading
of lhe Montreal-based World Federation or Hemophilia. "But that's
in counDies with the money."
In poorer parts of the world,
chances of contracting HlV
through blood remain a real prob-

ia.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

!em, Emmanuel Siys. Thil
ly due to laconsislent - .;pn:lCCdures, lack of tei:bnOI!!IY ~ncJ
expertiae litd·dle hiJII·cOII Qr lliatl~ blood pmdiK',t•
'
• The m~ of WHO iJ pievent ion rather 'than cure. The
recruitment and retention of. low
risk blood donors, carrying out
HIV teSting and only using blood
when it is necessary," Emmanuel
says.
Developing countries rely heavily on paid donors, wbo may
include prostitutes or drug addicts
needing money . Countries like
India and Paldstan ancl Russ.ia have
an open paid donor system. ·
·
Parts of Africa and Latin America use family (eplacement dQnors
- a scheme which ,in practice
a!)ows ~ dcnors to pose as relatives o( the patienL
,
In Colombia, a drug-addicted
blsexusl who knew he bad AIDS
sold his blood 12 times to a labQratory. Twelve patients ICCeived the
blood between 1989 and 1990 and
went on to Infect a further 200 people lhrouah sexusl coni&amp;CL
"Any form of payment of any
kind whether in cash or in kind will
attract lhe very people ihat (ou
want to !'void," says Emmanue .

'I

Sundly, Nov. 7, 1tfl3

'

. Sol yo ur sighls high and work hard to
: achieve your objectives in the year ahead
. and rewards thai appear ro be impossible
: can be gained. You're the Oil!! Who deler• mtnes ~elhar you'll be a winner or a loser.
: SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be mindful of
• ~our words and actions today or else you
. ~ight Unintent ionally oflend someone

; impoi1an1 W11o dOesn't readily forgive or for' get. Scotpio, treat you(IOW to a birthday gift
. Send fl&gt;r your Aslro-GrspH prediCtions for
, the year ahead by maiing $1 .25 and along,
, seW-addr~ased, stamped envelope 10 Aslro~ Graph, cio this newspaper, P.O. Box 4465.
New Vorl&lt; : N.Y. 10163. Be sure 10 state
:. your zodilfe sign.
! SAGmARIUS (No•. 23-Dec. 21) A pasl
• incident" with another lhat has caused you
10 hold a grudge could be lhe root cause or
'1 some uncomfortable feelings again today
,' for both of yoo. Lei~ go.
' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Owing lo a
' lack of loresight, you might commit yourseW

' .
last minute adjustments or ct.anges.
GEMINI (lily 21-June 20) Someone older . PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Be alert in
anq a trifle - r than you m9&gt;1 off" you lhis cycle for ways 10 add to your eaminga
aome sound ad\llce today . Chences ere, or income through a second aource. Your
however, you wo n't hear or understand . chances lor finding something benelicial
What you're told.
are stronger than .usual.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Irs importanl ARIES (March 2t-Apr1111) Sometimes Ws
this weekend you try lo li11e within Your unw ise to put too much stock into
means . Don't take on new obligati on~ at grandio se promises made by others.
this lime until your old ones hav' been Today, however, the iment will be sincere.
financially ..,tisfied.
even Hthe pledge sounds outtandish.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Today Y9U might TAURUS (Aprtl 20-Msy 20) This IS a good
feel stymied by the very people you're try· day ro tackle tasks or ·assignments you
ing your dernestto help. Try to make lhem temporarily shelved because of their diHi·
understand what you're doing Is lor their culty. What was tough to do last week
benet~, not yours.
.
could be a.piece or cake now.
VIRGO. (Aug. 23-Sipt. 22) Solneone with GEMINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) Involvement&amp;
Whom you're closely lnYOived should try to you have today with members of the oppodo more today Instead of foisting his/her she gender could tum oot quite lucky for all
responsibilities on you. If you don 't say concerned. Bolh cupid and Dame Fortune
.something h might continue on ad lnflnhum.
are pulling tne stnngs.
UBRA (Sopl. 23.oct. 23) Your populerity
with several friend&amp; Is a trifle ~~ie at this
time. )lecause they feel you've ~n ignorPublic Notice
ing them lalely. See il you can1t ma ke
amends today.
•
PUBUC NOTICE
The
el=h- rnembtor
Monday, Nov. 8, 1193

to a financial arrangement at th is lfme
Which may tum out to be more than you can

Old Chestnuts

handle. Be careful.
. AOUARIU~ (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) II you do not
• first show a s/&gt;inl of cooperativeness loday,
,don'! expect others to cooperate wKh you.
, 1 You're the one who will $91 the tone.
.•.PIScES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) Prnlllems wllh
·:·Which you may have to deal today are likely
. .to be self·inllicted. Ule is tough enough
without you littering your palh with obsta-

Chestnuts, the hard calluses on the
inner sides of horses' forelegs, are believed to be the survivals of scent
glands, which are common in many
four-legged animals. Over tim~. how·
ever, horses· chestnuts lost thts func·
lion .

cles and barriers.

• ARI~S (Morch 21-Aprll 11) If th.ere is a
;-.problem festering among fnends today with
' whom you lre&lt;~\tllmly SOCialize. avoid taking
J sides . Partisan gestures could cost you
bolh ways.•
, TAURUS (April20-lley 20) Be sure yoo do

SUNDAY PUZZLER

t

•

Crossword Puzzle Answers on Page C-2
ACROSS
1 - ol Education
6 - mold (fungus)
11 Selected
16 "Wings" prop
21 Showyfl~
22 Eagle's nest
23 Seagoing 24- pate
25 Stalemate
26 Knitting flbers
28 Entire
30 Held apellbo)Jnd

32-

33 Digraph
34 Honesi35 Away
36- Minor
37 Part oiTGIF
38 New Deal agcy.
olD Concocts
42 H.,__
43 Good: Sp.
44 Through ~ colored
glaiiM
45 Falsehood
47 Sword
49 Camp features
50 Small amount
51 Show and Tinker
54 Italian currency
55 Bespatters
56 Igneous rock
59 Chicken
80 Theurlal
62 Staggera
84 Trick
85 Negative prefix
66 Running

67 "-Town"
69
70
71
72
74
78
77
78
79

More recent
Lalnt
Large bird
Pigpen
Hoala
Edge
Pike'sDlllaeed
Abstainer !rom
alcohol

82App~

I,"HILLIP
ALDER

84 Grind the teeth
In anger
85 Defeat
811 Ardor
88 Let fall

WI!ST

.J

•

DOWN

89 TV's Oscar
Madlt!onl 1111' one
90 Helm..,an
92 Hesitate
94 Contingently
98 Objec;t ol
allectlon
99 Fiee tjcket
100 Haul
102 Habituate
103 - de Cologne
104 Unullld
105 Great - (dog)

1 - Rouge, La.
2 WAtow
3 Devoured
4Concernlng
5 Arid
8 e;oedcuter

Red7 Slate ol being
reetored
8 Biller vetch
9 Th.....toed Ototh
10 Condenllld
mollture
11 Heavy biow
12 Sword handle
13 WMhlngton bill
14 Eggar ID
15 Wipes out
18 Entreety
17eo18 VlgodaiD
19 Birds' homes
20 Womawwy
27 Swlnrl29 Sixty mlnutee
31- by anoee
38 ~Iolande
37 Jot
38 Wotlhound
40Wagers
41 Fireplace part
42 Kitchen utenlll
43 Newhllrt and
Hope
«A-.d
411 Door sign
411- Malden
48 Singer Vlkkl 50 Choir voice
51 Swayze/Moore
Him
52 Income In Paris
53 Yells
55 JUdged
56 Berth on a ship
57 Cl1rualrulta
58 Veracity
61 Subtle emanation
83 Twolold
84 Peruse
88 Let go
70 Malcee more
cwelully guarded

108 E I hoe
108 Depo\: abbr.

109 CoyoteiD
110 Tantalum symbol
111 Lubrtcatee
112 AHI~;
-ad
114 Hoalth resort
116 Dry, as wine
117 Skids
119 Ceramony
120 Paddles
122 "- Dallaa"
124 Speck
125 Extinct
ftlghtlesl bird
128Co128 The Mil
129 Prophet

131 "- Trax"

132 LP SuCceslors
133 "Valley ol the -"
135 Damp
138 Guido's high note
139 Goll cry
1ol0 Cloth meaaure
141 Beam
142 Nota or ac:ale
143 Sodium symbol
144- duck
145 The Ram
147 Deteets
149 Thlt man
150 Spirited horae
152 Costa' Rica
currency ·
154 Proverb
156 Avoid
158 Uncanny
159 Ones here
180 Carries
18t Alcoholic

71Em~

73 "- Submarine"
74 Expense

~ages

~~~7Si1MS:.:

Don 't be reluctant in the year ahead to get
involved in larger endeavors than you have

previously. II might take aWhile to adjust to
the new circumstances , but you can cany
them off eHectiYely.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You could be
rather lucky financially at this lime from a
cha in of events nol of your mak ing .
Although. as they begin to unfold. others
may think they are. Major changes are
ahead tor Scorpio in the coming year. Send
for you r Astra -Graph predictions today.
Mail 51.25 a~d a long, sell-addressed.
stamped envelope to Astra-Graph. rlo this
newspaper, P.O. Box 4465, New York ,
N.Y. 10163 Be sure to state your zodiac
sign.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21)
SOmeone with whom you had an arrange·
mj:tnl awhile back that turned out extremely
fonunate lor both of you may have a new
propossltoday. II could be as beneficial as
lheold one .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) tn order to
succeed in lite, it's usually what we know,
not who we know that counts . However, in
your instance today the Iormor could t\ave
more power.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Feb. 19) Plans you

eo

.

90Ltquld-

•

97Stlla~

ol New Mexico

Empire• LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Salel
· Gomfortabla heat at an·
. affordable rrice.
Burlile 01 Co.
446-4119

Mary Kay Consultant

rr..::.
;;
·e: -

dial question for you,
(IIepa tH SLM). Here,
llt"t61a dial.
Some ao
•ao, I
. · · , _ to P'IGridl. for a couple of
Weelll ill P'ebnat;. IJIIIbe beacb one
faJ, ,1 met • l.nllr beautiful young

=:-:.
•

laom•

,.rw

Salld~ You eao

feel''" """" I dlacovwu a U.llridie player and

. my

iloiN llate • PJ1!t ~tb me at tile Ja-

~dall.

.

I HaaeHII', .It t.anld out tbat benm-

..U..JrM ~---ll!uber •bll·
~- ~r~":'n~U.dlll-1111
IIICI r.au
arter
flulatraw.

_,_ •""'

I

..,. .,..,.... !IIIII 1111 ~ ~ wltb

tbe dl«lllinl jiCk. _.... tbe lfll4e
·
pel Dloed a.....S lpade to my

C'............... lllld bad. ebi!ICle
Co ·wrlw '·•• llle CGDtract Ill m:r
f«i earcl. ftlilllle,...... br"oke ._1,

fJ!i coulda't I« CIK.
- Ai 1011 bate 6olloed, ol coune. you
..

4t

tNT
5NT
7NT

I.••••

p. .

p. .

••••

OpeniDi lead: t 10

p. .
p. .

p. .

. aantpotll, 01t1o 45631
Phone: 114-44~

The Bo!lrd 11 llrlvlng to
molnloln a balanced
ropr11antallon
ol
cummunlly membtora and
would WllcorM mlnorl!y or
~em• appllc&lt;onla.

N&lt;womber 7, I, I, 1193

Tr•eurw"e office untH 2:00

p.m. on Novombtor 18, 19113
lnd 11 tho! limo op1111ed by
tho Tr111unar ol utd boord
•• provided br t..w (1) ulld
1M2 GMC Von, tt runa, ond
(1) ulld 1180 lnternottonol
Buo, dooa not run.
Tho Board ~•lh• right to
concolond rl(ioot on blda.
By order ol the Boord ol
EdUCIIIon.
Southern Local
School Dlatrlct
DonnIe E. HUI, t ro~auror
B ox 17e
Raclni, Ohio 45771
(11) 2, 3, 4, 5, 7; STC

-------I
Publlc Notice

.

BANK-ONE
COATS FOR KIDS
We .
·winter coats for.
schliol age children. Collection
boxes are located at BankOne, Kmart, Thomas Do-lt·
Center, O'Dells, Hills. Thank
you for your support.

ne8d

Inventory in Stock!
441-1700

BRUNICARDI MUSIC INC.
330 Second Ave. Gallipolis,
Ohio
614-446-0687
New Shipment of Peavey and
Crates amp· Good selection ol
Guitars, Pianos, Band

Annual Turkey Shoot
'
Gallia
County Gun
Club Sunday,
November 7, 1993
Starts at .10 a.m.
Buckridge Road
Across from Scenic
Hills Nursing Center

Instruments
Lay-a-way now for Christmas

Big Kids

&amp; Baby Program

For Children becoming Big

Attention Elks! .
Veteran's Day Brunch
Nov. 7th 11 am-1 pm
Veterans eat Free

•

Brothers and Sisters
Tuesday, November 9th
6:30p.m .
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Administrative Conference
Room
Call 675-4340 Ext. 230

Young's
Chain Link Fencing
Free Estimates

,. ·

Zivney presents paper
p. .

of Alcohol, Drug Adclctlon
llld Mental HMflh BervlcM
414SeoondAvonue
P.O. Box514

Kim Christopher

~an b•·s,ubtle

zt

Galii-Jacbon-lhlge a-d

.

•Qu

Eon
p. .

from:

·~· ·

, 91 Perlect moclll
92 Cooling dii'JII)JII
' 93 s,peuuan
. 95 SINIMnd 111m
. 98 Jaeklll*l

-lh

PUBUC NOTICE
Seoled propooola will bto
received by tho Boord ol
Education ol Southern
Local School Dlatrtct ol
Roolno, Ohio ot the

Individuate tnllrellad In
begin conoldltld for lhla
oppotnlment can do .1 0 by
requoollng an application

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

87 IIT,IIa(' ,
89 lM1h4ii" 111111

99 Buddlee
101 Oetw prope
105 Food program
toa PliO107 Aclull
111 Aroma
112Aoalalant
113 - lk:ott
115 The-lOP
118 Siuggtlh
118 Menlll Image
118 .tlaly'a capital
121- balt..-y
123 Actor ManMII
125l.eed
128 U'*"Pk~Yed
127 Deelgnltet
129 Judgment
130 Gt.dclen
131 ,.._ turkey
132 Singer Pally 134C-Ic
eubltance
138 Omit lroin
pronuncl811on
137 Oomeetlclltee
138 lola COlor
140 GOd oltove
144 Hawlltan
145 Ginger148 TOOk a chair
147 Heldgllar
148 Stttch
149 AHIIa the 1St Teutonic deity
153 11 - , God"
155 Fumn
157 Roman 61

_4_ _G.;;.w.....,
· eawa;:.:.;.;...;Y::,...___ 9
1

lp
-~~ . . . .
... _..., 10 '"' billed by
the COunty Comm'talonere.

BULLETI-NB·OARD

'

83 Metric. ..,.....,.
84 Adhellve

446-2845

N....

M=

(

75 Tradel fllr money
77 eo,.flrm .
78 Ox of Celebel
lrt81ru"*'t
81 Rodent

• 10811

W..l

lofyloM (4 .,.iolnw.) end
tho coun!y Cornmlulonera
In Golll•, Jaclulon and
Counltae (10

~

+108176

~ "I baM tile cold of w!Dier, • (!l'lllll·
bled tile s.tor Life Muter.
: "WIIJ. -~ you move to Florida?"

lind lhnW
a. rin1
lloppotnlld lly 1111 Dlreator
ol ~ Ohio Depu llnont ol
llontal
Hulth
(4
appoln-l. 1111 Dnctor ol
tho Ohio ·o.,arlinent ol
Alcohol *'II Dr:UII Addlclloo!

Special Services
Mount Zion Missionary Baptist
Church Lower At. 7 Special
Singing' and Preaching
4:00 P.M. Sunday

to register.

Prepare for Majorette or
Flag Tryouts
Classes begin Wednesday Nov.
10-For Ages 12 &amp;over.
Beginners Ballet Classes
Tuesday Nov. 16, 7 pm
Gallia Performing Arts
55 •Court St. GAllipolis
614-245-9880

'

.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
·Bid lor Truck
The Tupporo PlolnoCheoler Woter Olotrtct lo
Inviting blda lor 1 1983
ondlor 1914 Ca~ &amp; Cha11lo
15,000 lbo. GVW Super Duty
Truck with tho following
opeclflc:adona:
Engine·
Option 1 • 460 gao fuel
Injected
Qpllitn 2 ~ 7.11111r . . - ,.
R-Ind Oolr Rallo "'".
5.13 with dine! engine
4.10 with gao engine
137"whntb"o
Dual rear wheela
Duolluolllnko
5-epeed atandard manual

tronornlaoton
8-pty mud ond anow llrn
Powor oleerlng ond powor
broke•
Huvy duty vinyl onto
Rubber floor matt
Doma lamp
Clgorenellghter
AM I FM radio
Red In color
Eoch bid ahoutd also
reflect with and without
trad...n ol 1 1989 truCk with
mochanlco bed. tntereoted
bidder• can coil the Dlatrlct
olflce 10 moke appointment
to view 19891ruck.
The btdo muat be
occampanled by 1 100% bid
bond. and performance
bond !o lhe lull omount ol
oech proposal.
Bldo will be opened
Monday, Novomber 8th, at
2:00 p.m. 11 tho Dlatrlct'a
offlceloclted juot off Route
7 at 39561 B•r 30 Rood,
whooe mailing oddre11 lo
39561 Bar 30 Road,
Reedovltle, Ohio 45772. The
Dlolrlct reo11r1" the rtghlto
wolve ·~r lnlormolttleo and
to retectanylond all bids.
Tuppero Plotno·Cheotor
Water Dlolrtcl
By: Horold H. Blocltoton,
Prnkl.,t ol the
Board ol Director•
(10) 27, 31 (1t) 4, 7; 4TC

An nouncemen ts
3 Announcements
F - In Chrlot Chrlltlan
Dolin~~ - . "Hslolna Chrio-

llon Sl.,t.. finer Chrla11on
Pannoro. Col! a.-.no-7589.

Fs......Unloll Tobacco
w.-..,
Rlp!ay, OH will bo
- n g lobiCco, Nev. 8, flrll
-

..,• ...._ 22. Col! ........ 513-

- - CIIYM!o11'5-!111..., ... or 304No ~-1 No Naaalngl

JUII Tlis Mat• 01 Your CliOicoll
LAYNE FURNITURE
MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULL OR lWIN SIZE
Regular. ,::.. ~ ..... ...... .... .. .... ...... $78
Flrm .. ... ................. .... ............... $88
Extra Firm .. .'........................... $98
Orthopedic
.
King Size Sets ....... $350 &amp; UP
Queen Size Sets .. . $275 &amp;.!.JP
But'li(;~~~~~I!SS .... .... $48 ~ $89
'&amp;icl.lirames ........$25-$35-$50
Mon .. tht!J Sal. 9-5p.m. 4&lt;16-0322

GALLIPOUS • Olvia Zivney
MS., A.B.D,, presented the resulaS
of her ~ research OeL 15
at the Society for Clinical and
Experimental ijypnosis Conven-

tion's scielliific pogram.

Zivney Jeeeived her M.S. from
the Unive11ity ·of North Texas in
J110t11C1 play a apac1e to the 'ace &amp;Jid a Clinical Plycbology and currently
lpade liiCk to ,_. kiJia. u apades re&amp;idet in Glllipolis. She WOib as
breH 2-Z, you claim. But wbea tbey a JlSYCho~ lissistant atlhe Gal2-1, you mut fall back 011 tbe lijiolis DeYelopl!ieotal Center, and
theI&amp; You tme. ~·s jack, cub as a IIJerapiJt at Althof 4: Associkill&amp;. return to . wltb a ella· aleS.
IIICIIId
_._
dland play 11he clllb ace. Wbea
The dissertation te•wch was
e1vide 2-3, you laave U trldls.
coadUCied as a reqUirement for
-.ucb u l Wll pb)'llcally at~ Ms. Zivney's Ph.D. in Clinical Psy~~· r knew we llOUlda't lie ·' eholbsY from Ohio UniverSity. Her
aortli ~ taen for We. I ~lied • cresearch was centered · on the
tbat 1~a.:.,lll:.:=rt!~ e~ ol ~i in lhe soorlu of
ter Ia Florida
' • tninin1 Jiven .10 iftcreuo aa indie-.aa6 Mll•aa
Allii, ' viimil's h)'pDOCiZitiitity.
.

:U:t

3 mlte(~:~~rf.ik~.,..,v

Call 446·2342
· or 992·2156
. FOR MORE INFORMATION
'~

.

,

'

1·100-211-l1C110 Elll. 73117 $2.1111

t M-h Did Dog, 112 sh..and 112 Au.traliln 114-371-331.

-d .
~~X.

Wanted to Buy

Help Wanted

11

Wanl:lld To Bur: 314 To 1 kft ot
Land In Gallla Counly, • 4114.

Wantsd To Buy&lt; Q.E.D. - . _

2 rear Old Gernw~ Colllh4o36l-7734.

good
- · .....
advertiHd
2 month•
.go
(ownera movld), &amp;1C-812-7573.

dot

Wontsd To Buy: Junk Au!.. PIdollvery -PlY In-.~- · lop
Coil comm._.an,
~
Larry Unlr. 614-388-8303.
,..._......
l nr.vo
German
pupVI!!sge
Plzulnn,
••
ploo, 304-171-7771 aftsr 3&lt;00 Pll. Wonlsd To Buy&lt; Stondlng T!.,.
bsr &amp; Pins. Good Pricoi, 114- Sevnl Full Tlrno -toln.
· Cako em, eOUI* of monthll
388-1108.
A.nla.bla -Moura 1 - lpiiL
~to a good ,.,.,., • - IHo.
Top Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Co!no, Geld Ringo sn- Co!nt, Over 11 and HIWe D V 1* '
Fr. Kitt. ., To Good Home Gold Colno. II.T.ii. Coin Shop, Aulomobl!o. Colt lor lnlonlior
lion. Dl' ru.. 1d'8m 1plft. .,.....
Oniyl Coli Aft1&lt; 5:30 P.M. 114151 A-ue. Clalllpolto.
245-4851.
441-1114!'
Wontsd lo buy: uosd moblta
Kltttna to good home, 814·112- homn. .,..............,.,
..... HouoJ Ql
2218.
1051illsmul-.
;;;..;;....._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 WANTEO: engine .., 11181 Fonl Ia: now inWwlsaLlJI: W. · ·
6 Lost &amp; Found
FI01tva, 411&gt;-1 1·3 1'!!'"~..-...
andhaipoiL.,
lui - ......
-ASA"
ca I
IIIM-WR..24SJ,
ilnd ~~~~Lo.t : bh.- euhe c... , Rt. 2 netr 1:30o...a,oopm . ., •-·242A cook. MUit haw pn:ul w a.
parienat
In
li.
~
DiE
.
.
.."
84 Lumbor, Sun. Oc1. 17. 150 aHsr 5:00pm.
10word. 304-1525-0128 ., 614-423·
=~
-:.~
1157.
Employment Serv1ces •h
10 :~:00pori.
'
=7==Ya=rd=Sa=le:i:::==I------- Trucldog CompOny In OM 1111.
Gallipolis
11 Help Wanted
"$400" Or Mont A W.... At Ellcel.. nt P~.
[qotlc a f ·
&amp; Vlclnhy
Home No Experience Neca- Ort-. Only. Cit!! 11MI:t-~
ALL Yard S.ln llullt B• Paid In sary, Rush 11.00 Ss1t110 Envo!opo To&lt; DU
Advance. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m.
In Memory
tho doy botan lho ad II to run. S.. tao. P.O. Boll II, Hllllboro, 2
45133.
:__..:::.:...::::::.:~~--Suodoy sdHion - 2:00 p.m.
F~doy. Mondoy sdHion - 2:00 AVON I AI A,_s I Shirley

11so•

--d

Wllh Or Wl1houl Mororo.

-- - .
......

]9

I

:IULY!
;:;r-r_,
.......:::. ...

:: '~''oJ:i::

=

, p.m. S~u,.y.

Spears, :104-11'5-1420.

Sate, Sun. 7. Fur- AVON! All cr.... NMd extra
nltwe, Dlet.e. Pota and Pane, money or went a c.....r, llltt.r
Sllverwa.... · Ck,lha, Antlquet,
.Mai11Yn. - .VCR Tap4i.1po Chatham Avo. way...ca!l
or1~51.
Inside Moving

8 • P~Sale

t- .,.., If .
lon
Rick ....,...., Auction Company,

Aulltm tlsrYicM Conti&lt; In HunllnQtcti- I I II lnt"an ....,, 1"'
IOiiLwtr .. J If
1 ,......_
In the" Pl. PleiltNnt 1rea a1 1
Pl~n11 Care Antndant. Sutl•
lnclud• working In cliente home

In Mamot~of
EDNA MARIE-HENRY

vary
h•• ptlllld

aucllon
ttrv~t.
Ucenllld and -lollng w/dolly living
tee,Ohlo I WHI VIrginia, 304- 1a1kl: &amp; lraneportlng to apo
TI3-5785.
polmmemt • 12Yr. old client
wlphyolcal
d!uii!Utlss. Muo4
Wldtmav.,·a Auction Strvlce,

bl!t
will ta.1
laat, and our love
grow etrong~r dtly.

Rio Gr1nda, Ohio 614-24$-5152.

day.

f\.111 lima aucllanHr, compt.ta

9

Wanted to Buy

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

Complal• HouHhold Or Ealalnl Any lY"" Of Fumhuro,
~plianc•, Anllqu'e, Etc. Also
A!Jpraloat Avolillblsl 114-2455152.
Anl5quea and uud fumhur11, no

lttm too larg.e or too email, will
buy on• pl~et or complltt
houlthold, call O.by Martin,
S14-H:Z-11141.

have car I
valid *lww'•
llcenea. Relmbui'Mment for
milage. Fl..-lble hours. Send
r. .urnt 1o Per.onnel, P.O. lox
507, Huntlnglon, WV 25111J..05117.

-. -

Aulo Body R•potnnan -sd

Galllpolla

A-.

Ex·

Prior

"""'.,.
To:
Trtbuns,

CLA 2113, C/o Gal825 Third
llpolla Dally
AYSOI..., Galllpolla, OH 45831.

AVON HOLIDAY • Chooes Your
Own Hour., Income, And
Rewa,.., Av~~n~gt 18· $14
Houriy Sslllng at Worl&lt; Or
HomL No DOOR mooR. 1..SOO.
JII2-4T.la.

DecoratN ltoniWIIre, wei • •
phonM, old Iampo, old
Avon Wants Individuals lnte,....
rnontMan, Did c~ocu, •nl5qUI ted In Elrning $8 ·$12 Hr. No
l\lmHurs. Alvortn. Anllq,.s. Door To Door. l..aoo-&amp;27-4640.

''*"

Ruee Moen, owner. IM-882·

2528. W• buy ..lltiL

J &amp; O'a Auto Partt and Salvage,
also buying Junk cars &amp; truch.
304·773-5343.

Junk Car. and lrucU 114-2455001.
LMo uponalve moblla homs,
approx., 11+112-5158.

c

d

f Th

kS

;1:;:::;a::r=o~=an==~
Tammy Kennedy
Family
We wish to lhank
everyone who has
been so concerned
and kind during lhis
difficult time of our
daughters
tragic
death . II is not
possible to say thanks
for .all lhe cards ,
leiters. food . flowers.
and just letting us
know you are there.
Your love and prayers
have been deeply
appreciated .
Junior, Judy &amp; Tony

~~ Min. MUll h 18 Yra. Procall
Co.&amp;ON54-11120.

Eiey Wont! t:Xcelllnl t'ayl ~
Mmblt Product• At Horne. Call
Toll frM, 1-800.-.67-55&amp;&amp;, Ext.

313.

Happy Birthday

I

Your

.

NATHAN

ROTHGEB
03/DI/42"'
Our Gad, , . _
thia 1111 IIQII
..
To our luvld abo..
Toll him h- . . . .

mlu him
And give hiM II

lOve.
God Wllchld yOU M

lutlered

EXTRA INCOME
EARN S200-$500
WEEKLY, MAILING TRAVEL
GUIDES.For lnlormaUon Mnd
..at..ctdr.~Hd

•amMd

~

velope to : B 6 8 Malllng Str·
VIet, P.O. Box 1530525. Miami, Fl

33113 .

HNHh Car• Admlnllfl'ltor
Glenmarll; Auoclat• Ia s..klng
A Lictnstd Nursing Home Administrator For A 88 lid Facility
l.ocliltd In Pl. PINIInt, WV. Individual Mulll Carry a..•rahlp
Oualitln And Be ln Advocatt
ol Part.lclpelory Ma~.
Experl1nce In Skilled Strvicee A
Pi... Apply
To VP 01

'

'tiH you could .. ...

morei

•..,.er-e . "' --.al:l

He gontty .._

ttr!!:;J

And took l'OII Ill
Your mlftiOIY 1
koepuke
With which , _,. .hl!...
p.-1

·.

:l

I:

God h11 you In Hie
k•ping
I
Wo ha.. you In OW ' - t

Operations, 1361 Sltwartstown
Road, Morgantown, WV 26505

Or Call 304 Stl-0315,

HOUSEKEEPING SUERV!SOR

Plnecl'lll CaN C.nltr Hu An
Opon!ng For A W-ng
~ng
P1p • ._-.
Dutlao lnc!udl llon!loilng Tha
Perton•nce
Of
The

~~t:"::e

HiYiclng lbotl, And Worl&lt;l!'a On
Tha FloOr Dip. ca-r
O...topons,. IPromatloll At
llbll. Ar&gt;oly In P I - · &amp;:00 A.ll. To 4&lt;00 P.ll.
WMkdoyo. EO&amp;.
Ute lnauranoe Mile pereon
wentld In an

••bhhed

r--

pn&gt;porty &amp; caouany - · 1\111
or
ptlrt time, training prWicled,

.draw apiMt comml1llan for
flrot s monlhs. to:

The lamily of William
Sorden Sr. wishes to
express our thanks for
your prayers, flowers,
cards
and
food
extended lo us during
the
illness
and
passing of our loved
one. A special thanks
to the Fisher Funeral
Home.
Rev .
Middleswarth , the
v.F.W.
of Tuppers
Plains.
American
Legion, ,Neighbors and
friends . Our family will
always remember you
in our prayers.
, The Sorden Family

rn~moriM

-~•r,
P.O. 8o1
Msrflllo. Ohro 45710.

10111,

Man Ia wark on Miry fl""• ,,...
MW578.
Chrfltmu Money? Col!
Sharrll, I14-SII-tOZ7, Csll 3:10

P.M. To 1:30 P.M.

ll.d aorneone lo car. tor uml
Invalid lsdr In your homo. rallr..,.... Send lnloomttlon to
8o1 1:4 caro of Polnl P-nt

Aecnt•,

200 Main St, Pt. Pft"'

W25550.

lmmsdlll.ty· man or
- . . - to otay with 1 0 - old
man ful time •V'WY olhM' . . . _

Cai!114-MN101.

Pl'*snon Inc. full I part-lima

IKIM'IIy otllce,. nMdtd In ca.lllf'OIII ,.., MUll .....

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

Plld VICIIIIona. frM uul... 1 INollll Int ........ pold bolo•+

:rn.r. ~ ~~':1

Clahii!Oill, ""· 10:110om4llonday, Nov. I, :tftS. EO&amp; II/F. .

Happy
Mom

u:;::t

Today you're
ol In a very •
way
And though . ,.,,,. ••...)'
nol hara· 10·
said
You're thought of_.,..,

ry dly
You're lov1d by

your family,

good ....... tvo

No Mom ln' tM
t• 11 wonCI.rrut
you.

'•

SF..S

-:-..,.,~

�.:§~~~~~~~n~m~n~~S~e~n~tlne~l:=:==r:::=.::;=;=::::=~Po;;meroy-Middleport~lllpolla, OH
Help Wanted

::_11

3t Homo for Sale

~ -VInll ...,.

- 1nno
-"~: ;T.¥-~~
..,.r •""- •-~r.:
· *''*' lo holp _...c,;;,;;,"'
our ..,_
CI ,
1 --~ wtth a
.~• ·.~
. - '1~
.....-.:---:
-•
. Ihe _ . com......
In lhe
.........
lnduoiry- •
todoy. for
,. _
_, .._.
• ...,,
· ,. •. -... 1111, wlolar), lnourionco,
· ·•ond ...- . . 111M. lor ow..,

_..oro -lo 11M,.,.,..,

• ..... -

lnd """' ...... ....

· · -Ill.

Tholr lo a Hmllod
· • · number__ol _openlnp • c•ll
NOWI1~-eo55 1111 lor

42 Mobile Homes

WANTED

Subollutoo: TOIChor, A~
. ,.~--.
,:. . _ And luo DriVOIO. Com: pothl" Sollry. Contoc:1 Tho

11
I

f:':r,.·1Zel
Oood

Qoi.

Heithborhoad,

. i:

Etc.

E.~:p.

Na

N1c:1 ...ry. Now Hiring. For Into
• ·C.U 211~·-0 Ext. mo. 1
• -A.M. To I P.M. 7 Dl)'l.

-\--~1

Pald~nee

:'.::'

Sind FIKor
$1,411; Ron
(No

=

~ HouN For Llrga Br...:l,

Excollont Condhlon, 140, 114446-4283.
Doll Hcuoo Fumlohlngo ond .leo

2 Bedroom•, 2 FIODrW, CA, 1 112
Both~ 2

Pooll, Polio, $32011,1o.

No 1'011, SOC:urlty Dopo11t R•

qui,..., 114-3117-7150.

.

ceatorlel. CaU tor Mor• lnfDrmltlon 114~50-1082

Zbdnn. apll., toltl electric, ap-

ptloncoo

lumllhod, loundry
......, llcll"ill c - to ochoOI
In town. ~1oM aftiii~M
It: Yllloge ~on;;.n Aoto. 141 or
eolll14-112-3711. EOit.

Hoooltol led In Good
Condhlon, RSO, No Sunday
Ellc:1~

D. C. •Ill S.lu.lac.

1171 Ffwdorn mobl.. home,

12xll, 114-M~314.

5I

utlllt... paid, dep. &amp;. ,.,,

3Q4..

53

Household
Goods

AntlqUI curved glua aecm.ry,
SIOO, IM-H2·71A
·

VI'RA FURNITURE

Antonluo Strttdno~uo, Modo In
Sorlln, 814-211H228.
Buy or uu. Alwrlno Anllq-. .
1124 E. Moln Stflll on RL 12~
- o y. Hcun: M.T.W. 10:w

814-441--31118 or 114-441-4428
'!10 DAY SAME AS CASH

OR RENT-.2-0WN (NO DEPOSIT)

812..21186.

a.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sundar 1:00
to B:OD p.m. 014-112·2521.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
2 Ellctrlo Rocll- Uft Cholro,

11t 441 t414.

.

2 Ploco Uvlng Room Sullo Oood
Condftlon,
.,00, 080 · 0111.

$25,500 Mu .. s.. To Appreciate. Gracious living. 1 lftd 2 becJ.
C.ll 0'14447·2032 Leave Mes- room ap.rtm•nta It Vlllaae
Manor
and
Rlvwaldll
Phone -o-It No Answer.
Apirtmenta In Middleport, From
11114 Redman 'Wx7G, 3bdrm., In: $202. Coli 114-1112-58$1. EDit.
cludoo 1kl~lng1 llopo, blccko, Nice, clAn, 2111". IPIIftrnent. wid
5yr. w1rr1nty, nomeownar1
ln- hook-up. ...r., dip., no pala. 3C)4..
IUf'lnct, and 1 yAr of "" lot 675-51112.
rena, 111 tor only f!Tmno., c111 1·

Include grMUng poUonta,
11

Hours will be 1:00 a.m. to

5:00 p.m. ovary Thurldoy.

lncrtaHCI how-a In the
future .,.. 1 definite

Furnished
Rooms

polllblllty.
B•utlful King 8lu Waterbed, 8

Roaru tor rent . weak or monlh.
Stortlng et $120/mo. O.lllo Hotol.

52 Sponrng Goods

81~1510.

""'
J.!IfOlt·..,..,_,
bllare
• oftw - ·
ftnreiU.M
:N. 10M714211.
'

Fmanctal

~ --~~----------:it
21
· Business

•=-•

.r OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHINCI CO.
: reeD
thllt you 4o IMMI.., - . . . , . poopll ycu k,_, ond
.._, 1101' 10 ..net monoy tlnuan tho
·.: moH 1111111 ,_ hovo ln-Tgotod
~ thoolfwlna.

~ &amp;m llonoy It Hotno with

•• CornP.UIIr.

No

Prv cr 1

1
EX~IIICI

Haanh

ln.

r - - Ctolmo. Exolllont In·:: come PGMntiel COiftl!lnr train."' Ina. '""" Ptii Fine g AVIII ....
·;, aob-111-11111 1111. 1142 (24 hN)
·~ Natlanll Clolmo Slrvlco, Inc.
. ~ &amp;m llonoy At Hotno Wlh ,A
. l '9omfiUI•· No
Eu, Aoq d
.= p - Hlllh lnou,.....
·' Clllmo. Exc . , _ -~~.
.·: ·eon-y ~- F,... P,411.
·:; . Flrio'g .I:VIII. 10Cfit81-1111 Ext.
..• ·142, (24 llrl) Notlonll C l -

:;;. . Sorwlco,lnc. .

Merchand ise
3 BR homo to tOM&gt;, dock,
fl..,..co, 2 cor carport. goo
Mat, can11r11 •lr. 142:1.

m5 ...ninge

•~

3 room houH In O.lllpollo.
Newly corpotod, I Fuml-,

IM-441-GH1

1br, wl garage, $210/mo. piUII
deposit, retnnce Nqulred, no
polo. :104-812-2111.

5I

Household
Goods

Only 4 More to
Go Til the Big

New FlberaiiU Shown, 1100
Eoc~ - l ' l b o - - r a
Tub NO Each, S14-24WI52 AI... P.M.

4-0!
Happy Birthday
Steve

·

.~ - k ISodo IIIII. 91,2GCI IWk
. : Pot. Gr.t lnv't11.act 1~1 fal4.
· ~ Voudlng RDUit: For • Bolo.
. '' •lllgh
fllrona.
Sold .....,
Cooh
· - Nice 2 or 3 bedroom hOUM In
lrolflo,
.. . Loootlono.
Pomet oy tor rwnt cw ule on
·; ; Nti!r.Equl_,t. 1..00.21+1313. conllract, •4001mo., no pett, 114-

ProfesSIOnal

. : : 23

.; :

SlrYtces

r -......
--.-..
...::
..
:
"
:
.
...
:
.
:
..
==
.....
;:..,...,llot,--.,.,
JO!I' : :On

llootgego

: Wh- R - - Cll11-aoo.

Nice Horne • U:.l For R•nl, VtrY
Cloon, i12111111o. Pluo Dopoo~.

Ponor Alla,114-248-1114.

42 Mobile Homes

for Rent

I

~·

ReJI Es tate

..

..,

,.

• I

..,.
~l

'
•
....
t

MfM--In

ellili£ I IWIIIUbftdlo
. ._
F-FolrHouotlgAa
ol1
_ _ _ llagol

(

..•.•
f

. . . . . . ....,.prof......

•• ••: •or..,..••lhlallon
-

. , _ , cck&gt;r, rtlglon,
.-• , .-:..,...
•u• or natlonll
Oliglp. or ony lrtantlon to
~

; =:=:.r:::
•

~.

: ·

,..

..•
•r
II

lN. MWIPIP« Wll not
llnowingtyii:OIPI

.....,,.ltaforrealtetate

-•ion a'hlnotoy
""
aur.-....

-•In

11w.

lnfCNnlld lhllll ct 11 tga
•-* dlntit•w ;xv.r
-av-on on oquo1

-"'""Y-

2 81droome,

G1lll~t.

CHy

Sc:-., Roloronco a Dopco"
Roqulrod, 1114-31-32..
2br ........ Heme On Sob

Mctormldl Road For Aenl, 114441-1.

mobllo ........ Rt •

588, G1lllpolle, Ohio. 304-17557011.

2br.

tr~ller, ~oc.~ted

2m1. from

New HIVen In country, 304-TT.J.

1611.

Five-0
You're One of the

~-

-r

11

Help Wanted

that you are looking for,
1nd you ar• a friendly pill'·
1on wfth above average

lyplng
ward

oldll~

your

Thursday,

ploooo for·
reeurne

by

November 11,

19113 to:
J. E. HANGER, INC.
1800A Orond Control
Avonut
VIenna, WV 21101

LDDS Communicatio...,, the fourth large•t
long di.tance telephone company in the U.S.,
i. actively looking for a palished •ale•
profeuionalto repre•ent our company in the
]ock.on, GaUipolu, and Ponsmouth area.
If you have had a minimum of one year
Out•ide Sale• exper~nce and haiJe a proven
track record of uwceu in •ale•, then we
would like to talk with you! LDDS offer. an
excellent compemation package with bo&amp;e
•alary, commusio...,, medical benefit•, 401 k
plan and much more.
Qualif~.ed applicants should contact Cindy
Rhodehamel atlll-800-669-004().

Sweet J6

Olde&amp;t Nur~es
I Know.

Lawen!

Tweedle McNfJbb.
W'b(l?

c......

Would you like to utiU:z:e your
IA.drniruistJrative skills? Positions are
with both clinical and
1AcimlinilitrtJti1Je focus. We provide
ltr,ain.ing while paying. Competitive
ISOiUlr'Y and benefits. Positions open
vnllr area and several W'V sites.
ll(E~locati1m fees paid. EOE. Apply
to Glenmark Associates, ATTN:
Co o r dinator,
13 6 9
RN
Stewartstown Road, Morgantown,

Dt-.astrate yowr IIIDIIgtiMit •• tenlllt
skills Ia nr 100 btcl awrslag cealtr• .._..,..,,.
care experle~ee, excelltat c. . .llcatloils
aad stro•a leadership a•llltles 'rttlllrtlf.
Forward renme, ottllalag qeahfkatlcits
salary history to:

You fJiu!ay• aaid you
were tfjo youlllf to be a
'
grandma.
WeU, I tfUell we timed it
'
j11st about right.
Not~~

you're 50
'
and you· are a
.

GRANDMA
TIMES TWO!
We Low. You,
Tracy &amp;: Sht1....0n

.Fifty Is Nifty
When You're Our
G~a.ndnla.!
Molly, S~, N1H1lle

E:o:ciling opportunity ' available for an

innovative individuolto direct all aapecla of IM
Patient AccOUI!ting Department from tho
regi.tration proces&amp; thro'JI6h tM firaol collection.
We are •oskinB' i:o goal.oru!lated indiuiduol.
The •uccsuful candidate will pout~&amp; · the
leader.hip and viaion to &amp;uptrtiUe emplpyee•
and wiU bs re•ponaibl. for policy. planning,
direclins, organizins and controlling ths
potU.nt account• area • to include accoutlll
receivable, outpati~ia.t and 8mtrgency
re~tratiol!, biUing, credit anil colleciioia.
Quallf~eotio.U include 3-5 year~ e:JCperU.rJCe a.t
a Director, of .Patient Acco~nli"6 in a
healthci&gt;r• 1etti"6; a working knowiBdtJe of a
computerizeq billinslinformotion ay&amp;tem;
proven in-depth worlcirt&amp; knowledge of
heolthcare reimbur•em41nt and resulatory
;,,,...,. An undergraduate desree ia required.
Attractive wlary and benefit packase. An equal
opponUIIUy
Send ruume 10
Daily Sentinel, Box 729-V,

Ohio

1987 Nlcso1A'entra
.1985 Olds Cutlass Calais
1986 Pootlac Parlslenne S/W
198$ Chevy Silverado 4x4 Truck
1986 0e15o\l
1988 PonsoltJoo
1986 Buick Century·

rt••

:: Oi.lrw, deef
anct Mot guna,
• • 221. :104..71141:12.

:•:• ' ~"t!".!
Wllorboll. """'".....
~--lied otylo, hold ..

. . , -··lido-·

1f7l

GENERAL MAINTENANCE
WORKER

54 Miscellaneous

· .,
• '•

.'

Uc. 4596.

Door Prizes.

.....

.

8

Protorm Crouwalk tr..dmlll,
like new, $500. 304:8824'173.

Quaur lloor modal calor TV,
nMdl repelredi 114-MI-2865

dlyo.

Have A Sensa ol

ESTEEM.

Gel a! tho respect yoo deserve wtlh OJI!'O'Iunilies for PTs and
PTAs.ln,Galllpolis, OH , Point Ploasanl, WV, and Becllloy, WV.
OUr lheraplsts enjoy comprohensMI benells includ~g 401 (k),
: . continuing educalon programs, lle&gt;ible sc:heilJin~ and mo"'l For
fu~ar information please call Chris Seidel at Hl00·253-6231, or
wrile to NovaCare, Inc .. 9292 N. Morldlan Streel, Suite 106,
Indianapolis, IN 46260. EOE.
Nov.Cere,lnc.

•

Interested persons should send a ~
letter of application, resume, In- r
eluding the names, addresses and !
telephone numbers of three
references before the deadline of·
November 15, 1993 to:
..

PUBLIC AUCTION

10:001.11.

SATURDAY, NOV. 13, 1993

10:00 A.M.
"ANTIQUE OR COllECTOR'S ITEMS"
ShadOw boli: piCture· frames, flower stand, cane;
Rawlings &amp;. Coates thermometer, cane bonom chair.
wood &amp; wicker rockera, co!Tl)lete cyloid dresser set,
wicker sewing baskel, parasol, 1939 calendar, stands
&amp; etc.
"HOUSEHOLP"
? pc. iiving room suite, wood table &amp; 4 chaira,
Frigidaire refrigerator, end tables, rocker/recliner, 4
pc. bedroom sune, single bed, dresser, lamps, utility
table ·W/wlngs, Hoover upright &amp; co!Tl)act sweepera,
Frigidaire washer, · dryer &amp; freezer, Westinghouse
upright deep freeze. cabinet base. chest of drawers.
misc. electrical _appliances, misc. pots, pans &amp;
dishes, pictures, linens and etc.
"MISC."
t&lt;erQSene heater, fur coat, misc. jewelry, leather
suitcase, step ladder, Lawn Boy mower, lawn chairs,
books, misc. tools &amp; etc.
"AliTO"
1972 Chev. Impala 4 door.
C..h Poaltlva
10
Relreahmenta
. . Joaeph Struble, Guardian of VIrginia Grimm
Dan Smfth ·Auctioneer 57·68-1344 W.Va. 515
. · Rhett Milhoan, Apprentlce/15826
"Not Aooponolblelor Accld.,la or loll of Property"
"AMou.ncemonta by auctioneer take precedonce ovor
prlntad m-•.''

,.•'

Outsliinclng laney Aoti8WOOd white mlll1&gt;1e 10p dresser &amp;
• wulla!Md, CUI'Yed glaaa /18C18tery serpent heads and daw
IMI, Wllnul 4 ~ spool cabine~ LWlUoual carved oak
pedelllld brall serpents, laney pump organ and llool,
I'OI.IIdoak ..aM with claw IHI, to m-roak file cabinet, oak
11111p. h~ wllh claw feel, oak flaiWan, kitchen cupbolrd.
Hl1y grlln painted ay link, omaM oak ioo box , walnu1 VIet.
wullatand, Wllnut knoc:t&lt; down 111110inl, pine comer cup• baM~. Ouatn Anne china oabinet, Voc:L loveseat. ltllck
boolttnt, MWI'IIOikcnsllft, oak wash aland. press back
• ro&lt;Mr. oak 4 ~ Apolhecaly .cablne~ nioo 7 po. 1940'1
• c!lnlng !'I""' aulttl, filleY oak lowseat, laney lwin iron bed,
eNid'• ron top dolk, oak lolaphone, lrUnila, comm chair,
c:aMid Fanting couch, Toger Maple rope bed, 2 Iron beds,
nlnulllii&lt;Nr, Dolft-ult bo•, ovor 30 pc. AIIIUmn Laal ;-1
IN Including 2 muga, Blue Ridge dlo..,a, beautiful 6 pc.
~and bowl set wllh reel and yellow rosae, S Flow Blue
bOwll Manton PMtem England, Flow Blue vasa, sat ol 4
· Ro,8) Douhon colle&lt;*lra jllalla in original bo•aa, set ol12
. •Dalll!il*l blut and while month• of the year; 11\lflalowater
'bolllltwlft ladytlllboasad,llgned UthlaSpringo, Depmlion
nlactlon of glluwal8, Iampo, oil lernpe·, ~
, , ~ lllain glul windowa, collection ol Sl8riing ...
·~poan., w.a P~ 2 large bowls. Rose.wle pot1111y teapo~
I.
nl eugark·,~ ~~· amcooleejaraold.llllgg1a !"'talo
(CIWI ~ ...,. ....,.. pop
r. goa WIQon.
~ Cornplellly 18finlshed mahogany bench ·with r.w
uphollll!y bad&lt;, breaa caah r.giltar. 1*1• mora.

I

Located on St. R1. 248 In Chester, Ohio.
Helen Will.
..
"Antique, collectors Items and Houeahold"
Solid Cherty 8 pc. extra nice, cherry tavern table,
Hlacock chalra, Sial back rocker, Jjr. alngle
cheat of drawera, night alanda, cedar cheat, totii-1
windsor atyle chalra, bullll, ladder back. arrii
corner cupboard, bralcltd room alze rug, deale;• T.V;, ·
Drop leaf table w/3 leaves, book cue, ·round •and
table, couch, mlac . . chairs, coffee table, i l•mp"
talephone ltand &amp; mag12lne rack, pr. walnut frart:)t~, .
auto waaher &amp; dryer, refrlge_ratqr, lots of, ·~llq~e
collector~ dilhea, mlic. poll &amp; pans, dish•• &amp; linen~.
costume jewalty, plua·loll mora.
·. , ,

or

Oesler lliglrhllctlllt of.Htltl WI Estiit j
S•iii._Atcll•••r 11m , ~.; !

o.

Rhett Mlllaal Appreetfct 15926 · .f
Refreshment• by Cheater Fire Awclaty.C..h,
Poe~lve I.D. "Announcement• by Auctloner..tak4
Preeadlnce over printed ll)lllera•
· , :' · "l
Auctioneer Note: Thla Ia ' vety good aucti'cJn•111itll
hald outdoors come ~aead lor weather. ,
good
·
&amp; fum•ure • .

..
• '•

rfr

_ "'·, . · 'AUC1JON CONDUCTED BY

; RICK PEA~SON AUCTION CO.
~

•
~

I

. ~

LuNCH

MASON, WV '

80 wane, llkl
2354.

=I
·.._..

~~~b.::=~~:~.:------=--~......!..=======

;============:=====:::
Real Estate General

S(l:v.41~-4i.~

The pretty lady was taking her
exam for a driver's llcenae. She fin. ished the road test and the trooper
began testing her on highway laws.
"What is the while Hne in the middle
of the road for?" he asked. • That's
easy,' the lady smiled, "It's for
MOTORCYCLES!"

2
Basement, In-ground Poor, 1'!.Acres.

Real Estate General

Rear Estate General

new, M5, t14-n2·

WE HAVE LOTS OF PROSPECTIVE BUYERS, WE NEED NEW LISTINGS! II
CALL TODAY
446-7101 OR 1·800·585·7101

s.t From lwlwl Kltat.n Chair-.
Choop All For $10, 114-448-2117.
Stllnlo11 St_. Loa Bumln!i

---··-..
..

Fireplace Insert Wllh Blo.r

.

S.m Somii'YIUe'a army aurplua

IInce 11114 by Sondyvlllo Poll
Olllco hoi lull llno com·
flauae, Junior kids 4 to •enlor
XXXL Compotlvo Pl'lcll. F~·
Sot-Sun, noon till S:OOom,

ott.ra daya &amp;. houra.
11855.

31)4..~

lonely 1000 El( Complllor, Whh
Monochromo llonhor 5 114 &amp; 3
112 Dllk Drlv'!. P~ntor &amp;
Soltwoow, With unk, 61~

®

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 SECOND AVENUE, GALUPOLIS, OH. 45631

3005.

new cond. all att~~ehm.m.,
13711. 304-171 11m till mlllnl~ht.
WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inc~

:ZOO ~ .,1.15; 1 Inch :ZOO PSI
132.50j Ron EvM'Ia EntarprtH-.

Jockoon·, Olllo, 1-537.g521.

WATER STORAGE TANKS
Abovo And Solow Ground FDA

Apprq,v.c:l For Pat1bt. W.ter..
Ron Evono ·Enll,.,._, Jock·

oon, Ohio, HI00-13l-IS2L
WOI.FF TAN NINO BEDS
Now Cllfnmorclll, HOlM Unllo,
From .,911.00. LompoL Lotlono,

.

Russell D. Wood, Broker..446-4618
Tammie Dewltt.............441-1514 Mertha Smlth ............ 379-2651
Judy Dewltt................. .441-0262 Cathy Wray................ 446 4255
Phyllis Mllter................ .256-1136 Cindy Drongowskl ....245-9687
J. Merrill Cartar.............379-2184 Cheryl Lemtey........... 742-3171

n

CHECK OUT OUR NEW LISTINGS!
NEW LISTING! LOOKING FOR SOME
INVESTMENT PROPERTY? ' LIKE SOME
EXTRA INCOME? Homo with 4 bedrooms,
living room, family room, kilchon, beth and
more. Plus, 2 garage aponmentsl Located at
142 Portsmouth Rood. Call for more dotailsl
H02

NEW USTINGI FARMI Awrox. 52 Acres and a
3 bedroom homo. Uving room, kitch.,, balh,
laundry &amp; mora. Nica location!
1606

AcctaOf'iM. Monthly t'IYment•

NEW USTINGI IDEAL FOR THE FIRST
HOME BUYEAI II lhis well dacomted 3
bedrooms ranch style home. Living room,
kitchen, bath, full basement. Newer electric
hoal pump. Attached one carport. Must see to
appi8Ciatel Just minutes from townl
1603

NEW LISTING! COMFORTABLE HOMEI
Graen Township. Ono story homo ciNn lnd in
good condition. 3 bedrooms. living room, lomly
room, dining room, bath. Nioo finoplooo. 24'lc24'
two car garage. Priced rilt&gt;t in lhl $30's. H05

NEW LISTING! WHAT A LOCATION! 654
DEBBIE DRIVE. Quality brick ranch. Large

SUPER NEW USTINGI 113 IONEON DAIVEUving room, kitchen, 2·3 bedrooms bath
lamily room, u1nity. PartiallonOICHn ...;,. 1 car

rooms ca·nsisling of 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
dining area, INing room, full basement 2 Car
garage with electric door opener. Immediate
Possession! level lot approx. 100' x 150'.

$70's.

Low AI $11.00, Coli Todoy FREE
NEW Colllf Colllog. 1.000-462·

allached gen&gt;ga.

1511

1604

919l

55

Building
Supplies

Block, IHick, _ . , plpoo,

wl,..

dowl, llntlltl,' ate. C)IUdl WI,._
lert, Rio Grtnda, OH Call 114245-4121.

Stoollldgi. Gl1111nllc Suporoolo.
Huge Sovlngo On 871 Sq. Fl .
ThRIUah 1,1500 Sq. R. Wo Aro
Not A'lrokor. Wort&lt;mon Conltr.
114-3111-8420.
STEEL SUILDINO SPECIALS:
Vur End Factory S1te. 24132,
31x60, 60x1001 701:150, Profel.
lllanal Aul.tance, Bob, 814-4450721.

with loto oloxtra room 4

(+ 3 rooms in ba..,e.,t
oould be used as bedrooms)
room,

'"'"'II

araa, knchen complete with awfiancas
2 car garage, large patio and fronch dooralhlt
lead to a nice sized deck. Callodayi
1573

BACK ON THE MARKET! Now Is your chance
to own this newer brick home. Nice river view.
Large great room including living room , dining

)Com &amp; kilchen. Family room, 2 baths. High effi·

NEW LISTING! 2 PLUS ACRES
5fTUATED AT EDGE OF GALUPOI.ISI City

clency electric heat pump &amp; more. 8 years left on
lax abatement. Call today for an appointment.

ubht~es , 2 bedrooms home with kitchen

1593

dning, bath, living room, FA gas heatlteOO'

Pets for Sale

AKC Dobormln Pupploo, Aloo,
AKC Ma'- Doberman Stud

s,,..

..... 114-216-11183 After 1:30
P,ll.

S.lurday

Anytime.

Or

AKC Golden Ratrelvart Born

10,
Dopooh,

Oct

NEW USTINGI VINYL SIOED, 4 BEOROOM

Sundar

1913, $150 Eoch,
Will Hold For

Chrtatmut 114· 388-1243 let·
WNn 11)-10,

AKC Rog. lllglo. All Sholl. 11
llontho Old AKC Pilch Hound.
She Hoe Sll~od IM-317·712l
AKC Aog. Dormon .Shepherd
ouoolol, vot chockld, llrot

Mate atarled, 114-11l2.Z511.

AKC Roglllorod Amoricon Plrtl

EXTREIELY NICE HOME THAT HAS LOTS
OF CAREl 3 boclroomo, 2 t/2 baths, family

1592

room, living room, kitchen, dining room, 2

OWNERI RELOCATED! REDUCED PRICE Ill
WANTS SOLD lllli:DIATELYIII Ideal location.
Roomy 3 b.clroom ranch atyle home. Large
family room, dining aiM, kitchen, balh, laundl'(.
Nice sized level lawn. Wrthln seconds ol Now
35 by-pass.
15&amp;7

NEW LISTING I RANCH &amp; A LitTLE BIT OF
LANDI Home consists ol 3 beaooms , living
room, 1 ·t/2 baths, basement, ~ont porch,
rear porch. 2.494 acm lot. Won't believe lhis
prioe $36,900·
11594

CHEAPI CHEAPI CHEAP! $15,0001 2
Blldraom home, nice level lot. Kitcften,
living room, back &amp; lroot poo:hl
fl588

NEW USTINGI MOBILE HOME PLUSI
Lots of e&gt;tras. 14'x70' 3 bedroom mobile
home. 2 otory I 4' &gt; 22' unfini•hed swelling
Two extra outbuildings. Over t acre lawn.

-co1ontr CGcltM Sl&gt;lnlol Puploll Dockod, Dow Cllwl,
Remowd, Born: 10I1lfl3 Now

Toldng Dopoollo, RIIIIY In limo
Fer Chrlllmul Slucf SlrVIca
Alto AVIIIIblo. 114-3711..2721.

• HOME. Large living room, dining room &amp; kitchen ,
1'h baths. Nice level lot. Partial basement, back
porch &amp; more. Priced $30's.

firepleceo, 2 car .ttac:htld garogo and lll'llnllios
golor.. Call todoyl
1587
TWO HUNDRED SIXTEEN ACRES MIL
Vacanlland. Mobile home pad on p~.&amp;ny
Spring. Several wooded acres ,
paslure land. OWner willing to sell
c:onb'act!

~

~1

$20'1.

Meigs Cou.nty
REDUCED! NOW $57,500.00 - 4 Bedroom
home siluated at Eagle Ridge. Extra nice 1'/•
story home. Oversized 2 car garage. Extra
mobile home hookup. Owo..er wants an offer!.

1588

AKC Toy. P - 11 wtoo, Milo,
"""'~11,114-441-8144 •

.

Auotrollln SlooPhlnl Pupo, AKC
Rog.
304-175-:aeo.

me-.

Bilby t::- Chow I'Uoolol, For

Slto,$10; 114-441-1172.;

Dolmotlon pupo lor - · 111

-old,-81M714.

A HOME OF THt PASTI Beautiful older 2 atory
horne, 4 large bedrooms , den, dining -room, liv·
lng room, 2 baths, laundry and morel Beau11ful
ollk woodwork lhroughoutl Nice view of rlwr.
Slocl&lt;ed pond. Must see n1
111e2
'·

-

'nN715

AucnONEER: RICK PEARSON
11-CAiltqRCHitCICW11MUl. OUTOF8TA1EIUVEASMIMTHA\II!
A~- LE1'11iAIJf Cf!£01T .NQ EIICEPTIONM
NitA I . . . _.....lalill......-tr

.................. '"-. Knlllf,l- Yllgiolo...

FRI ¥UEitCEOVERP

Mll:ed hn, lqUaN biJ5M, $1JaL,
114-111&amp;-31102.

Rear Estate General

~ ·JL·~·~A:Lf:INO=UNCIII==ENTI~=M~A~DE=D~AY~OF[:SA~L~E=TAK;:E:...J o.I~~~~~~~~=
:

!,.

:1537.
:=:::::-=:--:-::---::-::--=
Oklo.- Dolll 81,

Relllatlc car .terao power amp,

,,.,:J'*'_·

,

~~ oM' or
114-812·

sso. 114-441-0734.

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER ON
CAMDEN AVENUE IN POINT PLEASANT, WV

'

nu-

a - . _,.

1 - lor pickup I

G100111 1nd Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All broodo, otyloo .
Julio Wotib. 0.111~31 .
I Mont~ llolo Slomooo Klt1ono

. SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 13 • 10:00 A.M.

...

.
1:9late &lt;i/

$30.oo acll after 7:pm O'f4.2C5-

11515

56

ANTIQUE
At1CTION

•~

r•ur.••.,. 11, 1993

King P~co1 F""" $10, ~1 !1co
Ch-Oifto,l14-381....._
Robbh hu1ch 3 ccmponmont'o.

Tri-Siar vacumm cleaner. dike

Responsibilities of the position!
include general maintenance work in; _
the areas 1of plumbing, electrlc~l,:
painting and carpentry. Must be ablei ~
to read and follow blueprints. Somlj'
knowledge of heating and air; ·
conditioning helpful.
::

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ACCRUE
GLOOMY
JUSTLY
FORGER
YEARLY
ZIRCON
MOTORCYCLES

$10, 114-448-3148.
Stondord I FL Truck T-r
Whh Wlndowo $100, 81~
3816. .

Due to Mra. Grimm no longer able to live alone,
will offer for auction the following. Located at 440
Broadway, Middleport, Oh•

'

.

Oultta All Slua, From Baby To

: ~ NovaCare's respect for the individuaJ is a blessing. Each person is
· a vital link in a team etfort. This aealeS a strong sense of idenlily
and purpose, and tho willingness to grow, change and contribute.

•

3110.

ANSWEIS TO

Public Sale
&amp; Aucuon

NayaCere

l

Solurdoy
only-L~.50
plcoup. 304-175Hov, ..,.,.
e. up.

eouth of C.rpent•. AN and

llotr-.llol••.......,

6-

·

CoM Ul, , _ 11r•

=li=~·:::..
Condllont

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Appl- luot off R1. 143, ono milo
G-n Dollclouo lpploo. Open
Soturdoyoonly.

(614) 446-7750

-..014 ............. tl Ollt.

1- -

8M' r-, PI, PI, PW, '-r
•lne- t.o e ked up, f.C,iOo. 304- SNte, Cllinlte COntrol, , _ ,
l7l-3l4l
.._, Elc•.AII/FII --

Mercharidlse

58

THERAPISTS

The University of Rio Grande!
announces opening for a General!
!.
Maintenance Worker.

The Unlveralty Rio Grande Ia an Equal
Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer

54 Mlsceitaneous

Merchandise

' PhysiCal Therapi&amp;V
, Physical therapist Asst.

.~

Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR, Personnel
Officer
The University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box969
Rio Grande, OH. 45674

-

: · Asctloaeer David Bogg
~.

304-m:itlroillr ....... m.

1171 Corwtte, 1..12 onginl IUIO,
AIC, PS, UK, cruioo1 "'!!'. locke, IUIH'M1111, T~opo, Ill
motch,
whiM wlrta ln1erlor, IM'OfKt car,

· · · two'new clealerL

..

Qualifications for the
include a high school diploma ·orequivalent with five years previous: .
experience In general maintenance~
required. Entry wage is . $6.15 per~
hour. Health benefits available.
•

~ "!It- -

1hor lpm.

11/13/93 It I p.m. at
: : B0111s' AtctiO• Hoese.
. ' ~Toys of al kinds,

.

PW, POL, ltl, ,..._ . . . .
12000, • trade . . lrualri ~ •

· otc.
11231 t1ay1.
wiH ·
na1 PI•
- P-ao
~~~

. · CHRISTMAS AUCTION

..

1114 Ponlilc- 1.1. 'U,.o.,

1111 Ced. a DorMo, 001111111• QUid valut, e14 -.a ua. .
cer, rune good. •
cornp' ••
Ill .,... ilng!no 1r- -Ford Eoeort .................
,,_ ....-. CY'o, .,.;;;t.,;, !lricir: ~-...;;~ - . ,- $fOGO.

Public Sare
.&amp;

An Affirmative Action/Equal Opponunity Employer

•

~*""=:"J':':d
-

1f718.
PI,
PI,ulcl&lt;
Ac0Lwork ar, ..._.,...

....

- · "*
:=..~.J:."".~.r

Oood Candl- 11183

•

-· -

.• 8

T·Ti
17,009

No~uot
14,000, I
II
Aller I Pll. Or 11t t• Olfl.

·'

Minornies and Women are Encouraged ro Apply

Red,.._.

II

•ton,

.

8

'Ill Olde CUI. c:torra. 4
Mil MIR, tMDif, 1M..-.

: . Now polloi otovoo. RC
• Roofing, 304-372·530f.

SECRETARY
Ohio Unlversny Personnel Services Is currenly
accepting applications for the posHion of full-·timt~ ·1
provisional SECRETARY for the College
Osrsopathic Medicine • Cenfers of Excellence
Program. (This position is for one (1) year not to
exceed two (2) years. JOB DUTIES: To provide
secretarial, programmatic, and records support
for four admlnlsrrators coordinating the activities
of three grant programs with associated budgets.
1
QUALIFICATIONS: High school diploma or
equivalent required, technical school courses
preferred. One ro three years experience
required. Knowledge of OU systems In !lfudenr
records, accounting, scheduling and tr"'"Ail
~~~~
General knowledge of word
If
sr~~~(lat!t-erttry·
and computer reporting.
, 1rona
.
&lt;&gt;I
secretariat skills in telephone, reception,
correspondence, etc. Exceptional interpersonal
and organizational skills critical. Ability to read
and follow written and oral Instruction. A wr~•&lt;&gt;n . l .
examination will be given lor this job and
applicaors must be able to type 55 wpm. Starting
salary is $9.82 hourly. Hours of work are u.-•u ,
a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through
APPLICATION DEADLINE: November 12, 1993.
All individuals interested In this position
complete an application available at Un.ivei'Sitll.l
Personnel Services, 44 University Terrace;
Athens, Ohio. Applications may be obtained
belween !he ·hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m..
Monday through Friday.
Ohio University
,
Athens, Ohio

of

- ·
-.--. .....*·-..
=
- - ..'5 =
==

MedernettN-.~.

: . Line !oloOMgO.

36759 Rocksp"'as Rd.
Pomaroy, OH 45769

Autos for Bile

11

..171,
~:1:~:~
.. •Rlclng
· ......
•
721

Pomeroy Nurslag &amp; RehabiBtatlaa (eater,

WV26505

DIRECTOR OF PATIENT
ACCOUNTING

~.$50, ·~~7103.

: • Mono • - llkotee 8111 a,

bt•te a.ctio•

Happy Birthday
Mom!!!

Eioctrtc .._, uppor ond

·'
..

-

lhlo lo tho typo of pooltlon

REGISTERED NURSES

111-7214.

·t '111 tiDI For ONIIil
-'I

11138.
Clller 10 box, brand MW,
$311.95,114-992-1111.

Pravlaua m.dlcal offtce
experience pftferred. If

LDDS Communications
Outside Sales

~
Opportunity
~ ----~~.NOn~~ce;;,~,---­

:r- RectiL

Dnowtr, 3 Storogo compo~·
mant MlrroNd "Book Shelf,
HoodboOrd $300; 114 388 IIU
Slue ujihlro ring, - I, Groll
Ch~otmoo Pmontl 304·773-

-rll •

AU Now WIIN:hootor 12 a.. 1300
mo· M - ; . 12 a.. 11oc111
soo WHh Slug aarro~, si4~s
$110· SKS rno;
UiioiCI 1 Mllll-r Hantl a .....
loll 01 Ammunhlon At Tho 01~
Ill CcuniY fii'IIRIU. ., Roo
=~~~ 1f-3 luridly DrilY, Or
1122. S. A lllilllf IJio.
ptoy 01 Exotic 4 Automotlc f'le.
loii.PJHock.

...... Wll .....,... In my homo, 1111 ..

~

typing dlclltlon ond

correapondenee.

.

ft

courteous medical

1nawerlng Phonea, ~Yt~k·
lng appolntmenta. 11 Well

.,~~~~8~·-----------102 acrn, eome bottom land 1·

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

opoclolly

•••k&amp; • responsible

aec:ratary who paya ane.,.
lion lo d•lall. Dudes Will

Meurhy dapoatt, no .-•: 614-

WV. 304-875-35811.

Help Wanted

and

$22Sima. lncluda UIIIIIIM, 1100

2br., 1 112 t.lh 1r1ller on 11 V4
1crn, drilled well, $20,000,

11

A Galllpollo

Ccmplotly Fumlohld nioblle
homo, I milo liolow Doltlpollo,
HouM T,.llar Whh Houu Tvpe O¥ertooklng
rfwr. Dtpo.H No
Roof 12d4 In Good Condflfan, Plto, CA, HOot.
IM 411 03U.
Mo.t Fumllure 18,000, No Sundey Colli, 814-381-8710.
One
bedroom
epartmente,

h'lliler, 1500. 3CM..J'JI.210t

·FREE ESTIMATES ON
Posl Buildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundteds, even Thousands
ol Dollars.
Local Salas Reptesanlative
· DONNA CRISENBERY
· 1
S. St. Rt. 7
Gaillipoliis,OH.

omce

ION37-3238.

mootly woodod, 145,000. Ho111 45

CHO~~~d~N~ ~beLORS

MEDICAL SECRETARY
ONE PAY PEA WEEK

Exc.llenl Condition, V•ry Clun.

33 Fanns lor Sare

cannelburg, lnc:-4~719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed to meat your

Antiques

.

Lito~.

·Sipervlslot.

Or

Moon 14x70 3 Bod·
• ElR TREE SERVICE. t~, 1877 ,_,, Both And 112, Undorpln· BNCh Slreet, Middleport, 1
offlcllncy o,.,..,_, OUTSIDE
FURNISHINGS:
Tm-lng, lroo
· I
nl~ Aatrlalretor, Stove, ln- room
Trlmonlntl.
F-Eotimotool
utllltl• paid, cap. I rat. 304- Wraughllran T•tM W/4 ChiiiWj
cl
,
~J119:
$1,500,
Nog.
311-7111'Aft• 4p.tn.
882..21186.
F1n BKk Rockl~ Chllr l58i
Clolll14-24..._,5 Evanlngs.
Gordon Arch Woy'o $121.00
First
Holur
Aplrtmenta.
1114 Cllyton mobil home,
-~~'!Win Moh 811111, Ftlll
14x70,_:J"!'1 1 112 both, $7500. S.cond Av.n..-, O._l!lpoUa. I'M- m SO OUoon $141 Sot; 4
441-1800 Sentor, DliaiMd, •
:104-3n-.2o.S.
144.111; Cor lled'o
Handlclppod 1 • 2 Bedroom Oro-.
Bunk Bod'o, Pootor lledo. Full
11• Pine Ridge, J bedroom•, 2 Unlto. Rontolt.Nd On Adlullod Un11 Of Southweatem V••
bothi~lhy room, $13,000, .,.. lncomo. FUH.l Suboldlzocf, HUD Storti!\!! At 320.00; lndlonollony
Cortlllcotu Accoptod. 114-441· Shapoo a 81111 Sllrtlng At
882
I or -2·5449.
1800I Equol Houolng Oppor· $5.00. 2 Locltlona ·SNide 1\uto
1112 Norrie •xeo Trailer. Huge lunlt " ·
Aucllon Or 4 lllloo Oul 141.
Spociouo Roome Whh Cothod·
Open I A.M. To I P.M. Man -1111.
Fumlst.d
APirtnMI'It,
Utllltln
r11
Colllngo
lhrouahoul.
Thr11
·:
a
gw Porteble Slwrnlll~..,don't
Plld, 1 Bedroom, Upotolfl,
•, helll your to tho m• full e.droom, TWo latfi. Huge Oar· Second
Avenue, G•lllpolla, No
••, 01113J04.111.111T.
den Tub In Muter 8111h. lot. 01
Ston... Haa AU The Eitra1. Pl111 Excatlont ConciHion, 114•• . lttdy will tlo light Llv.cl In Lea Than Ont Vaar. 446 .. 523.
you. P
:an hh
tl4'-lOll 8ftYUinl.

Help W....tld

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
·oF NURSING SERVICES '
excellnt opport111Hy ixhts for 11 RN.
lkeased I• Ohio, wit• experleact II a•slig

Calls . 61~

IMntl, oa,.. ADirtmenl,
Full La!. 14 Orapo, tlolllaollo
Auction NovornbW •tit, 11&gt;1-:ZU:
1201

201101'1-1 11171 Thon, Drlo.~;~ lur·
nl-. 141110.
ri.
CorPIMrv
- Roofing,
Now BuHtllno
S..h St., Mid-, I a 2
· or
Rlrtloilollna
Skiing,
bedroom tumi.W apanment•,

=..::. t:w'..=:r::~
. . tor

Ev':o,=••·
L

Fraz•, 2'1 cu. fl. 8'14-245-

11171 Chompoon. Eleotrtc hoot,
~ 4 ;-::.,yooro. SZ,OOOIOBO.

··- '*• •nfl.nli, oooldng, run .,..

RoquiNd)

Jockoon, Ohio 1

for Sale

'

Dollar

CONCRETE SPETIC TANKS
1,000 Gillon, $321; ..._JET Ill

32 Mobile Homes

Dry !"!!t!.~~-.... _
- ..uy
- Etc.--~ Anyllmo.

~tt

1501.

Fllf Solo: I Montho Old, 3
Bedroom•, 2 a.th8, LP 0..
WHh Hoot Pump, WID, Stovo,

Mull Sell: 3 lledroomo, 2 AII/I.
Guiding Hond Schocl At: 614- Excolllnl Condhlon 50'1 Coma
• 317-nn.
SN Moko 011w, e14-3u-.
)'ILDUFE JO~RYATION Rlvor Frontoge . 4 led""""
- Gomo W.rdono, Socurtty, S~ck, 114-448-71&amp;7 AhoriP.M.
Mllni:~Mne:a

Commemor~Uv.

Coin 11211 ~ Tr1lc EF To
Bu Ptlco Roduoid $85, 114-24$-

1521.

Aiid

11

Merchandlee

-·~

Mlnut• From Gilvin

November . 1993

Mtacerraneous

a •-

:~~n -Tronopon, [,~· ~~Acro~u=· ~

·_-

KIT 'N' CA RLYLE® by Larry Wright

Houoo Wlh for Rent
~
011 At, AM Cl!y IIIII""'
.
-.soo fllnn, l'lnlilco, Coli llablll hcmo tor
1101 In Rlclnl.
Lor.y, 1,........1117.
l14-ll2 " ..:.1_
' '-~"'""'"-:-TwO Mdroom1 tumWwct. OM
~R~~ENT=-~T:
child,
.-,_obaw ~
Ho""· no
RL D, .,.401!fto., 304np.
pa.-... v.our 882-24111ny\kM.
.....
10111 111
ForCurronl-·
Rlpo Ext.
U.L QH. 44
Apanment
He- lor 0111 by _,.. OIMI
1111 lo raloo o lomlly. ~L·~for Rent
2

Point Pleasant, wv

DMAT'fERS.

•

"

HOME I 10 ACRES· Salem living room,
dining room, kitchen . Barn &amp; misc. olher
bulldngs. $40's.
1580
REDUCED! IMIIIEDIATE POSSESSION!
49630 Eagle Ridge Road- I 1/2 SIOI'f
brlckMnyl sided homo wllh 4 bedroomo,
balh, family room, dining room with buill-in
hutch, kill:hen , living room, newer heat
pjump. Building wllh fruit cellar.
.2
8t:l8 lawn, tldditional mobile home hool&lt;-tiD.

ATTENTION! DEER HUNTERS! Over 111i
es jusl waiting for you. Lots of WOOded &amp;
ture land. Septic &amp; ~II on property.

RIGGS CREST - This has had lots of
Three bedroom ranch with full ~ment
finishe s. Detached 24'x24' garaga
basement garage also . A must ..., _..,

$65,000.00

�wv

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH Polot

Times Sentinel

November 7 1993

993
Real Eltltt Oenerll

Real Estate Generll

S©RQ{l~-J&amp;~trs·

I

32 Locust Street, Galllpolill

446·1066

4 Or., Auto,

1Hl' , _ -

. YIIY-~Iont144M­

i04' l.Mw II

gr

-1..:"":g

.....
~loc~ ..... nlco,

·~
oll~tllp.m. - - 114-11:1-·
-

.,nctonco z Dr, 1\000

1NI' Ply,

. IIRoo, Auto,
1721.

M: ta.ooo, o1447t-

1HO U. lluo Como10 liS PW,

-

~000

$7,000, fM-1-754, Aft1&lt; • P.M.
&lt;4tlti Como10 RS, lloHHt-231 •.

Located on St. Hwy.
Cholhire. Vinyl tiding,
in good condition . Full
. CIIJIOrl Hat 2 goo .... on
property. 1'/, IIGiy with bom l otl&gt;or ~· Thio home oft·
ora a beautiNI 04111na, beck lrom the hidlway. BE THE ,
FIRST TO SEE THIS l'ARM. PHONE NOW.
17111

.!11!1 ~ Solrtt ES V-e, • Dr..
;....o, All;; n.~.!loo Mlloo, Loaded,
,M,30Dl '?4-3111-272:&amp;.

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

441-.

1110 Plymouth

Mlloo

Lo-.

Cond~lon,

Eacellont

:l

2.1 Lltor EnalnoJ221. 114-446ZUI, Of 114-ln:Wll.

ol

AniiiiNW
........
IO!frlng.

P'

efter

NEW USTING· 4 bedrooms, 2 batho, 2.25 acres more or
feoo, city ochoola, county woter, 2 car garaga and cenlrll
air. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.

~:SOp.m.

REDMAN DOUBLEWIDE IN QUAIL CREEK- 6 yoaro old,
3 bedroom, 2 baths, living room, l:lnlng room, kitchen,
utility room . Priced at$29,900.00
LOG HOME· focaled on Brumfiold Roacl3 bedroom, bath,
on 2 acras motV or lass. Calllo see.

LOCATED IN GREEN TWP. on State Route 141· 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room, kitchen;
utility room, 22 x 14 garage. Home is six yrw. old, hao nlca
levollot. CALL FOR APPOINTMENTII
HOME ON WATSON ROAD- 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, ·living
room, dining room, kitchen, approx. 1 112 acrea, CALl
FOR APPOINTMENT.
HOME with above ground pool, 3 bodroom, 2 batho,
control air, garaga, two out building, city school, IC!C8tlld
Slatll Routll 14 t. Calf lo - · ·

-

I

....

1

WI

uill

-"II If ....
.. - r\clen.

EIHIIbl, WVOOOIOI.

304-171-1711•

Real Estate General

Real E1ta11 General

Real Estate General

FR

ol fl : Er Gl

SOMETHING VENTURED, SOMETHING GAINED! Own your own
body shop and towing business plus family rental units. Body shop
offers 28x34 bay, 1Bx34 bay and 12x26 office/lobby with bath, plus 6
car carport. Owner states AAA lowing contracl will go with the
property. 14x70 1985 Redman offering 2 bedrooms, 2 bath (master
bath has whirlpool tub), large fully equipped kitchen with island, double
ovens, dishwasher, range, central air. 47 wooded acres overlooking
the river just 2 miles south of the dam. The possibil~ies for this
property are limitless. Priced al $74,900. Call Carolyn for add~ional
normation.
'
1600

.

_ •

I ~~~e~~~:J ~~%~st~~~~

. the trooper began testin9 her
:;
on highway laws. • What 1s the
l Ay R y E
white line 1n the middle of the
i.! 1---ri~~TI.;.;..,i;-~f-:-1
road for?' he asked. • Thars
9
0
-J......JIL..,..J.."'--Jl'-......._ .J ~~~~· ~ ~e-1~~~ .smiled, "it's for
•

:I

_ .

The pretty lady was taking

I

1

1...

i 11-"'"''I.-:C~Ir-I.;Zf~~:..,IO~RI~~8

Complete the chuckle quoted
bv. filling In the milling words
• you develoP from atep No. 3 below.

~
~

•

r 1· r I' r r r 1· r 1

~ ·~~*EM r 1
2

•

•

I I I I I I 1· I I I I I

•'

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446·3644

•
•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

74

11m Chevy hoovy lloH 4WD,

-

cond., 305 onglno, monu01

fran~mlsslon,

,·

ntW

1123- MRS. CLEAN LIVES HERE - 3 BR home With
small acreage. CloSe k'I. LR, eat-in kitchen, lg. FA, bath, t
c. garage on 5 acres m/1. Thla nome Is juat nght for a
young family or a retired couple also. Make an appt . to
sea. Call EuniCe Niehm today 446-1897 .

ft22. EXCEPTIONALLf SMART ALL B!IICK
BEAUTIFUL HOME; l.ocolodln Spring ~· Ct1orn*1g
II IV• LR, 3 bodrmo., t &gt;I batho, oak cob Inola and
IIIPflonCto In o mcidom l&lt;ltc:llon, fomlly nn .. booomonl,
storagt throughout. 011 lw•t. C.A., na~~ny new
impfoYemtl'll OOft'ICllltrd on thla lmnwal.... hcJim. 2 car
gorogo onochod. City ocl&gt;oolt &amp; clo.. lo .-lng.
THERE IS NOTHING LIKE YOUR OWN HOM~: Col
Vllglnlo 3118-8826.

IACAN'rLAND
1171. HAVE A BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY ESTATE
• - Build your dream rome OYerfoOking a Iaroe
lake. 73 acres m/1 at roiUng land, clean and
mowed, with a bit of wooc:land, 8 ac. of lakes
mil. This property has many opportunities Its
present use is a paid fishing lake Great for a
church camp, camping crounds or subdMde
LOng Road frontage.

clulch &amp;

1825. VACANT LAND- Close In 5 acres rolling
lan&lt;l.

pnt:1ura plate, $1200 finn. 304S71-27V4.

18M. VACANT LAND- Springfield Twp 59 acres m/1 across tram Holzer Hosptlal Great loca·
tiOr'l fOr large hOmes on a hill

Real Estate General
Real Estate General .

' 1838. LAKEVIEW

t,...

.

1172. STATE ROUTE 180 - 3 ac. lot mn..
$15,000.00. Charolais Hills.

HOME • bedrooms, 2 tiatho, 2.25 aCNis mot8 or leas, city
schools, county water, 2 car garaga and control air. CALl
FOR APPOINTMENT.

rtl
Iii

1113. PRIME DEVEI.OPMENT LAND - Land
lays well. Older 2 story home with 4 bedrooms
and buildings. Home in need of repair, 117 ac.
m,/1. Call for location.

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
~
1-fiOO.eN-1066
~

1881. WHITE OAK RD. location.

3Q acres m/1
vacam land w1tt1 timber, mineral rlghls, good ·
road ~mage. Some cleared Ia~ $26,000

FOR INFORMAnON ON OUR ENnRE UITINQ8 PICK UP
THE FREE QUAUTI' HOMES BROCHURE AT IOM)! OF
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, SUPEFIIIARKETI,

1815 Building Lal•. Addlaon area. Call.

nc1f. Lot Inside The City Llmlls. priced to sell can

MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

Wlma

SL AL 564.. ,0yer 2 ICI'el ~I VICini .farid
un111atrlctlld with elactr!c and watllr ov.u.ble.
Good for building or mollie home. Only

fncomo Producing Proporly on 10 Ac-t Buy
for investment and buHI:Ing lot potllntiel. Clote to
town. Small pond. Duplex typo unit provides
good fnoomo. $29,900
1222

at 2oi5-D070. $2,000.00

tll3o BUilding lol Close lo IOWI). Old house on
PfOI)Irt)' In need of repair. $10,000
fl07 Nlc:e BuDding Area. build that ~re~m. home
!Oday on lhis 7 acres that Is Within thO City lurnts, call
Wilma at 245-9070.

Real Ellate Ge,neral

Real Estate General

SUBDMSION - A CHOICE

PLACE TO BUILb - 2 to 5 acres more or tess
Drive to While Ad to Charolals Lake Or. to
Lalcevlew Ct1 Offering 2 flat to rolling lots, a varIety of
an&lt;l beaut~ul ~ow of t11e lake. All
amenltlea availllble. Rural water, underground
electricity, aerator
systems
acceptable.
Reslricl:lve convenants apply. Close to Holzer
BOO shop~ng .

HENRY E. CLELAND••- 99_2-6 191~
TRAa BRINAGER.--949~24~9i
.

Tako A Breather From Work and fish, boat or
owim fn Raccoon CrHk from your own yard.
Olda• nlcoty """odafed home situatlld o~ _13
acre~ m~. with 4 bedrooms, 2 botho, hv1ng
rodm 'kitchen oitling room and oxl"' room to fit
our ~eeds.
Cln hike in the woods or filh _In
rh. c,..ak, but be turo lo call carolyn for details
too many 1o mention. Priced at $69,900. 1602

I

or

LYMOOG

~======:::!

[i.;. -1.

VACANT LAND·approKiamtllly 10 acreo located on Bob
McConnid&lt; Rd. Calf for morv infonnation.

Real Estate General

Helllflg

L

:1tt2 Ford Exr:.rer, IXCtUint

.....•

Plumbing &amp;

82

lmpiVVIIIItllll

~r llrtJ r 1 11

LEADINGHAM REAL ESIATE

alo"''

Sl-2873

Home

•

GAAAELO AVENUE-3 bedroomo, living room, kitchen
and bath, within walking dstanca of
and oct1oof1.
Caltlosea.

&amp;1

81

O R.arrangebelowthe to6 scrambled
make 6

. ,

OLDER HOME- 4 bedroomo, living room, dfnfnsi'room,
kitchen, family room, locatlld on 1.8 ac,..s. PRICE 18
REDUCED. CALL SOONI.

.coiUIH!an,

SerJ'Ces

campers&amp;

79

Motor Homes

I
I
..
I
~ ll'ltl

ATTENTION INVESTORS II Here's an opportunity in town you shouldn't
pass up. Located on First AND eoond Avenue, 3 buildings. 4 rental
unHs in good condition. Good rental Income. Call for more inlonnation.
$94,900
1212

n,

55,000

Auto Parts &amp;

CUCARE
t--r.ll::-;...1~,2 .:.r-=-1~I

=:

RIVER VAILU•Y

Door l..ocbL T-Topo,
Actuoi.MIIeo, S1,00G. 114-

lolltH ltr ClAY I. POUAN - - - - - -

~ds
slm'p le words. Print letters
.ach In Ill line of squO(BS.

Allen C. Wood, Aeattor/Broker-448-4523
Ken Morgan, Reattor/Broker-448-0971
Mose Canterbury, Aeattor-446·3408
Jeanette Moore, Aeattor-256-1745
Tim Watson, Aeattor· 446·2027

1 N I ' - CAll-Ill, -

78

That Intriguing .Word Game with a Chuckle

Wooa ~alty, Inc.

wv

OH-Polnt

1813. LANP CONTRACT- Corner lot 1n c1ty. 1931
Chestnut St. Comfortable 3 bedrm , 2 baths wfful1
basement Lot 150'x160', D.R , huge LA w/lif'eplace, new
lf'ISullted windows. central air, kh w/diShwasner, trash
compactor 8fld oeUiflG fans Den or office rm., fruit trees,
strawberry patch, grapes, garden spot &amp; basketball court
tin the yard. Owner anxiou~ to aetl
lt13. SUPER BUY' 11,000 -2 bedrm • mob•le home on
rental lot. ($6$.00 mo) Cozy front porch, add-on makes
this a 9paelous LR , pocket doors to close off k1t area

Range, ref Come see to&lt;lay. Aeettor owner
, . . REDUCED - $41,000- Owner IS anx1ous to sell
lhts 3 bedrm. ranch. Very nice home and location. Large
LAw/dining area. Fu11 basement, an extra i8Ige garage 2
lots, city water &amp; sewer &amp; schools.

t171. POINT OF PERFECTION SURROUNDS lhlt

~UI

home. t.oc.led In 1111Xdwtie .,.., Elwin total
roomo with llno bolflroomt. Foyor will open llolrwoy,

•rge lvlng room wlh woodt.Munll~gftl 4' e, kHmlll ~
room, gounnot ldlchon,
room and ,_,
have an Gpol1 flrtplo ... llclortum . . lol you onfoy four
seasons. Fow OYtrllled bedtooml. ......, bM'OOin fU
cotlle&lt;lrol ceiling. __,.... bolh 111111 beautiful ""'hod
wlndowo. Fiflllloor loundl)'. Aft- 2 ..,. - · TWo
heat pumps wtlh backup. 5.441 ac. mil. If you Mkt
lndlvld.Jatly your name can bl on the rnafl:)ox. OU. .IId
Buyero only. Viflllnlo 3118-8~.

f.....,.

NH. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL • 5 BR,2 both on

10~ acres ol r.vetllnd. Nice buldlng IIIIo. Located on
Shelon Aold In Rio Grande -.Cal 2-45-11070.

ft21 , NEW USTINQ - Very cion homo ollorlng 3
be&lt;lrmo., 2 baths, onrry. LR &amp; fllllllr rm .. 3 cor
· UK:atod on SA 180, Thll etn bo 1 good~ to

_.can

&amp; won: 11 l'loml.

1901. A HOME WrTH A WARM HEART - One of the
best llllngs 1n hie is horne ownership 3 bedrm ranch ,
charmtng LA eal-m kit , 1'J, bath, fuH divided ba-ernan.t
w/ot'flce room and outside emrv 24'x32' garage W/10 '
doOrs Make thiS yours now FHA 01 VA
1815. OLD FASHtON CHARM - In town lOcatiOn tor •Mr
FIX It" Large 2 story home 3 bedrooms, LA, lormal
d101ng room . kitchen, bath Attached garage and corner
lot Walk to school and shopptng

..11. OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS ONCE • 5 beellm., Z
llory homo wlonclooed porc:ll, toncod lol, 3 ....,__ Z
bulldlngt, onlct or uloo building, blocldOfl • ~owayt. Boot go- opot In Vllton. $47,700.

11123. NEW LISTING - Nice 3 be&lt;lroom roi1Ch lolvo
kwallol. New hill pwnp wllh central ak', new hoi ....,..
lank. Priced rtghl, don't hlslatt on ttn ore, won't lui
long. Call 'MOM. 245-Q070.

1104. DELIOHTFUL LITTLE - E - Pool 1l'x32'
ngn&gt;oJnd. GNOI-.._ -1\op. 3111go bodrmo 111
bolhs,r.-l.h0t
cozy LR, ldlc:llon,
now_
rongo
l.t..
_
__
_&amp; 2cor
· bUg.,Col
&amp; dog
run. lovoly
homo.
quli:td

-

... gone ..... thlo

U•l - REDUCED SUBURBAN BEAUTY -

The
remarkable spadous hOme with vi8W' o1 the county
18n. OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL, MAKE OFFER - 3 Italian t1te foyer. cathedral ceiling with llalcony, 3 BA, 2'/,
baths, hv•ng room wtth woodburntng fireplace, equip
bedroom, 2 batt! spacious double-wide on an acre lot
k1tchen . breakfast room has a lg Wli'ldow, stereo
CkJse to ttte new 35 bypass 2 car detached garage Call
speakers throughout, brass light fixtures and mucn more .
Wilma at 245-9070
2 car attacked garage, attic storage, 2 acres m/1 nus
house Is maintenance ffM of beSt quality. Make your
n11. IMPRESSIVE BRtCK RANCH o1 superb quality 4 appointment
and see it you don1 llgfee
bedrms .. 3 baths, comfof'labte ltv1ng rm . wtwoodburn1ng
1181.
SPACE
FOR REAL UVINQ - lmmOCUioto •
fireplace, dining rm., equ1ppe&lt;1 kit., all large rooms
carpot, poliO, now - n - covered bat:k &amp; front porch, 2 car attached garage,
her, rang~~ .ncl Nf., dlehed g~ragt,
building &amp; 1·ac. mfl. Green &amp; City S&lt;:hools DON'T BUY cabhlls, clah
outbuilding. Bllautlul lanc&amp;c~pe. Rtltdy' to fi'ICJN ln.
ANYTHING UNTIL YOU SEE THIS. Virginia 388-8828.
$65,000.
1850. DO YOU LIKE SECLUSION? Naot piOco to IIIIo on
2 ac mt1 2 badnn. horna, gar. &amp; bulkl all new. $30,000 or N3:1. PRICE REDUCED, 111•,000.00. 3 will
offer.
tonnol diOOg room, llflng room, klc:llon. dlr*'ll- tiding dOcn to poot .... 1'/o bah, lui ball.,.,. wlh
lUI. LOVELY WHITE BRICK WITH A BUSINESS AT
tamlly
room
2 ..
· aooo
HOIIIE,•on 4.13 ocno. Bldg.... 4.000 tq. ft.
to townelywith
ac:hoofl. A MUST
TO- SEE. . , _ oiOc:ltle, II P,_lill being uood for Mklng. Col
Wilma If 245-9070.
1103. CAPE COD - Bnck Cape Cod Situated on 2'/.
HOO. BUNGALOW with 2 bedrooms, LA ., kit , din area, acres overloOking Oh10 A1ver Home teaturH 4
bedrooms, 2 full baU'Is, liVIng room With flfeplace 1992
u1~ity rm 0\/erlooking the Beautiful Dh10 Rivef $29,900
sq ft bvmg space, 36x,.8 meti-1 building and 14x24
toe. IN TOWN LOT JUST REDUCEO, S1100.00 woll buy frame building. Elec. heal pump and cent air can tor
priCe and kX:ahon of this beautiful Cape Cod home.
this lot. Call today 245·9070
ltOI. COUNTRY LIVING AT ITS BEST. 4 bedroom, 2
1107. 7 ACRES WITH 400 SQ. FT. ROAD FRONTAGE.
bath ranch on 2 8Cies 1n tne Rio Grande area Call 245Nice bu1ld1ng area
9070

bedroom-.. ,_

with-

ftntl-.

POMEROY· cial~llhtrl
IIYiilent in
Mulbar\y Ave. Spe,nllh
3 bediOOms,
slorage spaces,
bfo9&lt; :
garage'w/opener, large Iron! porch.' A goocj •
deal tor the price of $42,500- ownero ~ •
eccept ofterl
·· •
RACINEI 1+ acre with 2 story frame
with 4-5 bedrooms, 2 baths,
Also Includes bam. garage,
and 1971 12x65 Sha~ar ""'""""""""
Shop equipment and .fulniiUre in
includod in sale price. But wii be
ogread price. ASKtNG$45,000.
OFFER I

You

._,,:""''J

..

AEDUCEDI OWNER "WANTS
SALE"· Racine, 4th Street- 2
home with newer root and.
badro~lns, bath,. 'FANG
dishwasher, newer bath, car;pe1if1g
drywal, includeo front I rear pordleo.
space, garage and garden area on
62xl19.

MIDDLEPORT· Very cule home at a very
"allordable" prlcel Brick cape cod styling
with 3 bedrooms, bath, gas heat, del 2 car
garage, fenced yard. This is a home wol1h
taking a look atl

Prfco Aaducod- Colfago Hil Motlll with great
location in Rio Grandt. Next to Bob Evan•
Fanns l Rio Grande Univoroily. fnvelllmonl
opportunity or perfect lor "'tirod porsono not ·
satiofiad with doing nothing. 12 unito plu1
"''ideneo. 'Lorge lot with semi parking. Goo!l
incOme. can Dave for more inforrnatior1.
1211
Privata Balling on Route 588- Locatlld only_a
m·~~·- from town, thio vary nicely decoratlld home
offers 8 lot. Very liveable layout includes 3
bedrooms &amp; 2 lull , baths, fonnal living room,
formal dinifl!l room and family room with cozy
lirapiac. off the kitchen. 2 car garage. Privately.
located on o.ee acre lot in city schools. $79,900
Additional ocroege available.
1211

1
· l.oko Estllta ollari'111
oak kitchen opon
;;~~~~
l brick fireplace,
.
i.
oroa, 2 car attached -garage. Full
unfinished baoomont j&gt;lumbed lor • 3.i "bath,
work room with gerage door anlranco. Enj_ay the
view ol tho lake from the 52 It deck. Why not
enjoy the boll? 143,000 Serious BuyoJO Onlyl

s

ncit

Weak-end Aetroatl You don't hava lo·drfva for
mllaa to gat eway. You Cln have your own
camPing apot among talf. tr..o In a poecalul
oielling and have ACCOH 'to Rlocoon C - for
boaUng and liri':f· Thl1 lot In a private
• campgoound fop
at $7,000.
1505
.. .
(ota For Sale- Locatlld on Jackson Pika and old
At 35, this property is priVate and conveni'"l
Prices start at $6,900. Cali lor more info~.
· ·
,
1223

""'*

A"..
Country Living At It'a Beat focatlld
on 3.8 beautiful acres, m~. Thio homo offe111 2
bedroom1, 1 bath, living room, dining room,
largo kitchen, 1 car garage, plua oopatato
efficiency ifWeling. Efficiency offort iving room,
1 bedroom, ranga rolrigoralor, oink. Call today
tor your IPpolntmenL Pnc.ct ~~ $35,900. 1601

NEED LIS.T·INGSIII
WISEM:AN .REAL ESTATE, INC.
J

1

, ':

'

325· Approx.92 acres of ground
lleautlful yard and appro&lt;. 20 acres tillable or
: ~~W~~!Iaand. Lots of woods and a mobile home with several
a
Over 2,000 square feet with 8 rooms, 3 bedrooms,
112 baths.
$64,900
·

AAC:COC)N CfEEK FRONTAGE ON Tin
OP PROPERTY AND HOME,
3 BRo. LR, kill:han, Bath, largo unattgaraga w/ooncrele ~oor. 4.5 acres mil.

.RUTLAND- Beech Grove Road- Approx 5 acr~s with a 3
'5~:~ 2 balh home w1lh attached 2 car garage. Has
kitchen Including the dishwasher. Comes with
and dryer also. Country living close lo town. S4e,&amp;OO

tltDDLEPORT; Hudson St. · Feel right at home In any room
ot this 1 112 stoty house. from the kitchen that has beautiful
lltln•gue and groove walls, to the light and airy living room,
room area. Setting on 21ots, nhas 3 bedrooms, I 1/2
l.i&gt;!•lhi and a FANG furnace.
PRICED AT $37,900

11•~~;
home starting wHh 3 bedrooms, a large dining
1 ~~~~:~2 1nice
fireplaces. an open staircase, partial basement,

ahoma? How
a
Thlo unique
conlemporary home fot:alod on Skinner Rd.
is a lot more·than just a house, 'fhls offers 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, lllh' room, wrap around
decking, fi'l!ploce, wood &amp; atectric .toeatinu.
5+ acres thai • lncfudoo a spMg lad .
swinvning pool.
AsKING $71,0!10

S Third Ave· You need to see this one. A

wrllpped in low maintenance vinyl siding and priced just
REDUCED $28,1100

:'

brilik

RACINE· Broadway St. 1 floor pltln
home with 3 bedrooms. 2 batho, one cor
garage, encloaed rear porch,, nice wqod
'wOrk, built In China Ct!bi(MIII, Plenty of
cfooet space, lui basel1tlli11 .With fruK cel'*t.
~rePlace. NGFA heat; Owner may go ~
Conlraet with '""'onable clown ·paymfllt.
LOt size 124X1111.
AS!(INI;l SI7,Hit

.

'

'

.'

·

I

'

POMEROY· Older h"""! in
. Ori,3l.oti-ASI&lt;ftl~l $8,5()0.
Tear down hlluiB· Thenl'l a niCit .'lofilillll
· utiiltieo.
. Glve.ul a calf.
'

.

446-3644·
.
.. v

··:

HOLCOMB HOLLOW AOAO... homo anct
3D ac,..s, m~. 3 BAs, LR, kildlon, both.
Owner has dono a lot wotk.

Commercial Property· Forme~y the Excelsior
A very large building with over 20,000 square
apace Lots of parking space with this P,t'Operty.
a 2 bedroom home and appro• 3 acres of land. .
.$300,1100

::rRAfLOA ONLY· A 1991 2 bedroom 14x80 mobile home
With extra Insulation, raised dining room, garden tub, ·and
~fght, piUS lots of extr~ . WAS S11,000_
NOW $11,1100
tioiiiRDY· Uncofn Hloghls· Need a large yard or garden
·_.,a? Then this Is the place for you. Has 2 finished ~oora,
whh 2·3 bedrooms, lots ·of large closets, large utility area.
1¥,1&lt;1 ..... r,oom .
,
~.900
T~

33- A 1 1/2 story Block ho.;.e wtth 2-3
and a large living room w~h open
approx. one acre lot wilh a n-r 2 car
and a heat pump.
SIO,OOO

ond IPPfOX·

Homo on proporty olltrw 5

A 1 1/2 story home wtth . 3
living room, dining room.
hu archway doors, bUll·
shelves beside or .fltepfaco.
ftoors, all on approx. 3

DAVID WISEMAN, ·BROKER- 446·9555

,

IHYEI'IIIIHT 'i'AOPIATY• Mt CiMk Ad.,

3 BAs, LR, 'lttlchen, bath, unatteched

$38,000

loreHa McDatlie 446•7729

,.trlckcoc•ran-

Catolyn wi,ch~44 l• 1007 .
Son•r Gar~s·446~J707 '·

1

1

lllfi'IIO; 122,000

FOR I.W!·

AiJPn*. 8,800 Ill·

Uncohi Pit. Ill Cenllnlty.
·~

•

'

•
'-

I

\

A. in

lOA. In

. •

!lew rum-, wood
liclng. oom• now Clrpol
on proporty. CALL FOR DETAILS.
CHERRY DRIVE· 2 Brs. 1 bath Lft ,
kitchen, gas,heat, city water, used as rental
property. $29,000 (888)
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS. Fioota
Granda on st Rt. 35. W.ll aotabllhed,
laundromlltelso gooo will bUiil-.

OLD ctEYY.OLDI BUILDING- G1 ltont
011 Socond Ava. ond 82' lronllllll on Grope.

TIRED OF BEING ~1\1 I ED FOR.ROOM
but you wont to bo close to town, taa. lllk
homo is for you, locatlld 1 mi. hom,_ go11
cou,.., 3 BAt, bath, LR, DR, kitchen.
JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD - AD0i11D11
1WP. - 386 acre farm , 3 j)Dn(lt, toll :p 1
b -. 44x100 barn with CllfiCI8 floort. Mow
conslder spiH. (578).

4.41 ACAEI. MIL, ~!!nolan

ol SA 325 and Piper

dtlolo. -

�!!-a•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpall8, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

D8 Sunday llmes Sentinel

eneral

November 7, 1993

.

.

Realtors to offer graduate program

MYSTERY FARM -This week's m~ry
.farm, featured by the Meigs Soli and Water
·Conservation District, is located somewhere in
· Meigs County. Individuals wlshina to partici·
.·pate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
· the farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your
: auess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
•Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win a $5 prize from the

COLUMBUS • The Ohio Asso· ·estate continuing educatio~ credit GR'I, executive vice' P,re~iden!,
ciation of REALTORS (OAR) will and contains civil rights, core law Comey &amp; Shepherd, Cinctnn~u;
offer its Graduate·, REALTORS and ethics, which are required 1n ·Joe MacKinnon, CRS, GRI, v.tce
Institute (GRl) I Program, Novem· the continuing education cycle. The president and co-broker of Ktnj!
·-~-- · four con
Thompsen/Holzer WoUam, Colulfl·
ber 30 • December 3, at the Con· program can be """"'
m
• bus· and Jack Miedema, GRI.
course Hotel, 4300. East 17th Ave., secutive days, or in one-day incre· CRB' senl'or vice president a'nd
meniS. General topic areas included
•
Columbus.
OAR's GRI I program is open in GRI I are residential construe· broket of Reitkurg Companies.
to all' real estate licensees and lion, listing property, pricift$, mar- GrandviUe, Michigan.
serves as a specialized program for keting &amp; servicmg, completmg the ' For more information contact
transition into the upper level des· transaction, anti-trust, agency, haz. Ruth Lindsey in OAR's REAL·
ignation programs of the National ardous wastes-radon, equal oppor· TORS' Professional Development
.
Division at (614·) 228-6675.
Association of REALTORS tunity and ethics.
Featured
instructors
will
be
The Ohio Association of REAL·
(NAR).
George
"Pee"
Iiunsten,
CRS,
of
TORS,
with approximately 35,000
Mem!lers wishing to obtain the
O'Connor,
Piper
&amp;
Flynn,
Ocean
members,
is the lar~est professionGRI designation are required to
City,
Marvlat\d:
Terrv
Hankner,
al
trade
association
m Ohio.
lake GRll, GRill and GRllll, and
be a member of a Local Board of
!,mALTORS.
There are no prior licensing
requirements to be eligible for the
GRI program; however, only
REAL TORS can obtain the desig·
nation. All GRI courses can be
taken in any sequence.
The GRI I program has been
certified by the Ohio Division of
Real Estate for 30-hours of real

T~ank

You for Your
Support in My Re-election
as Letart Township
Trustee.
DONR. HILL

Ohio Valley Publlsliing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the newspaper offke by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.

Japan is ready market
for
U.S.
froz.e~ foods
u s
. WASHINGTON (AP) . Japanese consumers don t hke
.
h
k
sIavmg
over a ot wo any ~ore
iban busy two-worker Amencan
Couples like hovering over a blaz·
- to after hard da •
rk
mg s ve
a
y s wo .
· · That means P.recooked frozen
•--~
n'pe "..
•or
'"""
represents •a m·"-et
ao"
development by U.S. exporters
looki ng to.ward Japan "'or sales• say
U. •S; trade spect'at'IS15 •

I 1
· th
'ted
.. n apan,asm e Dl
tates,
more and mar~ consumers (as
weD as food service managers) are
1 0 k'mg to ~ut down °~ cook'mg
c~res, creatmg a surgeDm ~les of
mtcrowave ovens as we as m preked f
foods" 'd
rt
~ 00 . rozethn' AgE' sat a repo
m thts man s
xporter magazine
p'
k d f
f d
recoo e$ rozen
oo s now
·
b'll'
represent a 3.4 1· •on market m

°

.G a11•lpO1•IS FFIfAt t akI•ng
f
•
t
JIOr
rui
Or d ers
~

· GALLIPOLIS • Members of the
Gallipolis FFA Chapter and alumni
are talcing orders for fresh Florida
citrus.
. Citrus fruit available will be
llavel . hamlin oranges (juice
orange), tang'elos, pink ~apefruit
aild a mixed box constsung of
Pa~l. tangeii?S and pink grapefruit.
, Prices wtll $18 per box for
Davel, tangelos and mixed and $10
£9i' one-half box and $14 per bOx
for hamlin and pirik grapefruit and
$8 for a half box. Members will
ikliver the produce directly to each
!)oyer, with the fruit going from the
JP'OVe to the .;ustomer within two or
ibree days.
.. · Dates for the Jund raiser wiD be
~til Nov. 16 and the community is
urged to participate. The money
will be used by the Alumni to
finance various FFA trip~ and
tctivities. Delivery dates w1ll be

the week of Dec . 6. For further
information or to place an order,
please call the Gallia Academy
High School Agriculture Department at 446-3250.
The Gallipolis FFA Chapter par·
ticipated in the State Rural Soil
Judging Contest on Oct. 30 at London, Ohio. The FFA Chapter came
in 19th out of 60 teams from all
across Ohio.
An area of a field was designated with a pit dug about six feet
deep. There were three sites to
judge in the contest. In the rural
con rest, each contestant must deter·
mine the slope, degree of erosion,
texture, depth, air and water movement, land class, land use, and recommended conservation practices.
The rural team consisted of Jeff
Knous, Floyd Evans, and Randy
Harold.
.

:1993 crop corn and
soybean loans available

Japan it said and imports account
fora~ut IOPercentofthatmarket.
C
·
f f
•
onsumptwn o rozen pre
cooked foods has been climbing
d'l1 1· J8
st~•A Ylth onug ~~estem-style frozen
foods such as hamburgers have
· sold ;.,.ell in the past mo;e and
, more Japanese consumers
•
arc
returning to traditional Japanese·
.
. 1s
. where
style favontes
and th1s
•
.
.
the best sales potenttal hes." the

•e

),,

E.

' MAAmrrA .: Robelt EVIDI;
Prealdent and Chief EuQutive .,
.O,Iflcer of Peoples BIIICOIP Inc.,
IIIIICilincCd that the Director~ have
autl)oflzed the repurchue (,om ·
liN Ill lime in the llillbl of up to
,000 ~ of ouiltllldlnJ Com.
lftOII Stoi:k for lhc: ConJPIIIY'a aeanot to e1ciitecl in price
JU. per lhare. cffecti1e Novem·
._, 1, 1993. The DirecliDII lteve
~ !lllldD lilY clcte miNidaD lbolll

fff/IY£•·

M!dldoail treuury purcbuea

lf!onll dlltcurnnl~

PeaiJ'el 11M ;op lni:. Ill Soulb·
..... OlliD . . ~"tt:t:::

r.:
=---.a~~~~~Low-

lnAtbens,

011.·McColtlll;m;.-MiiiJeport,
1'liO ~- Ntlamille. " · •
..,.....•..

-

•Top Soil
•Mason Sand
•Fill Dirt
•Concrete Sand
•Shredded
•Pit Run
•Drainage Gravel Top Soil
•Pea Gravel
•Straw
•prainage Tile
•Culvert tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix
'

\&gt;.

....

•

•;

'14, 595.
'11 , 995

~: ~~~: ~~~~.~..~.~~·............................................... '6,495

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . :. . . . . . . . . '5, 995
!!~~.~.::..~~~.~~. ~~:.~.~~~... . . . . . . . .... . . . . . .*9,995

=~.'!:~~.:~~~:.~

!~~~i~~!!o:~~~~.~.·~~:.~.~~~ ................................. •7 ,995
.'

.~~~~~~~~~.~~.~.~~:.~.~~~~. ...............:.................... '11 ,500
~=~t1 b~u~~~ ~~.~~~~:.~ .~~.~ ......................................... sg,495

!~o~~~~.t~!~~~. ~. ~.~.~ . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . .'9,495

!=m~:~i~.~~.~~::~.~~~:............................................ •6,495

.~=u:,'~~~JV: ~:~~.'. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .*9,600 .
.

.

~~~~ ::.~.~: ................................................................. •4,995

!9!'o~!~e~~~: ............................. ............... . . . . . . . '4,495
'

!':,~~~z~~::'dl ....................................................... 54,995 .
'

'

~~~~!~':n~~~e . . .,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . .. . . . . . .'4, 99S
. .
.~~ :1R!"n~~~ ................................., ...................... '2,495
'

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!9:0~~.~~.~.~: . . ............ . . . . ............ ......................'4,595
.-tiling new model In 19931
WITH STANDARD AIR

recommend future uses for the for- the Appalachian Mountain Club.
est
But the solutions of the .past The swath of woodlands stretch· massive government .pun:hases cs from New York's AdiJ:ondack no longer are appropriate. The
Mounlains across the top quartet of council is considering a plan to
Vermont and through the dense meet both economic and environtimber forests of New Hampshire. mental interests.
It includes two-thirdspfMaine.
That co-existence is essential,
Seventy million people live because 86 pencent of the northern
within an 8-hOl!l' drive of the forest, forest is privately owned and is the
which contains 250 species of lifeblood of logging and paper
wildlife, rivers and lakes, lind pro- communities.
v.ides the economic base for hun"If we can't agree, we're all
dreds of communities.
doomed," said Kelly Short, comEnvironmentalists say the coun- munications director for the AMC.
cil's recommendations could lead
Business and environmental
to the largest regulaiOry change in groups are trying to influence the
the region ·since Congress created council, compri~d of four repre·
the White Mountain National For- sentatives from each state and a
est in 1917.
federal wildlife official.
In September, the council
"We're loo"ing at something
that will do that for the 21st centu· released an overview of the assets
ry," said Stephen Blackmer, direc- and importance of the forest 10 the
tor of conservation programs for regioft's economy. The tcoort also

C~~~~~jlan. ..

qu1ckly constructed an

~~~~~:~:g:a;:e::bdri~~~~deb~~~~
bun!\alows, among the natiOn s

'

NEW 94 NISSAN ALTIMA

PINKHAM ~OTOI, N.H. (AP)
· - No t' since the timber barons
ripped throug!t the White Mountams at the tum of the century has
there been such debate al)out the
future of theregion's forests.
Fueled by greed, the timber
companies stripped whole mountains to feed the industrial revolu·
tion, creating a wasteland and
destroying a way of life for local
loggers who had harvested the forest for generations.
Congress came to the rescue •
creating the White Mountain
National Forest and an Eastern
park system that has grown to 25
million acres.
,
Once again, Congress is being
asked 10 intervene in the region this time on behalf of the 26-million-acre northern forest. Next
1une, the congressionally created
Nor:lhem Forest Land$ Council will

u&lt;,w&gt;

111811 HONDA ACCORD EX, 4 door air, auto.,
P. moon roof; CD changer, stereo caaaette,loaded!.....

•

Debate to begin. on new·26-milli·o n acre forest

. .

1191 HONDA ACCORD EX WAGON,
.power sunroof. luggage rack.alr, stereo, loaded.............

•

'
'

'

"We DeU.ar' and Spread U11nes:to1~e"

Pd. lor by Bill Potrle, 1253 Jo- Act., Vln""', Oh•.45881

illteerlng,.rear window defroster.

•
J

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

Huntington Township Trustee

Automatic tra!"Sinlsalon, power

November 7, 1993

'

By MATI HARVEY
Associated Press Wrltet
NITRO, W.Va. - It .seemed
over for Nitro when the fighting
was over.over there.
But Nitro, built almost
overnight to supply gunpowder
during World War I, exptodtl;l into
a chemical manufacturing center.
Now, 75 years later, the chemical
factories are aging with Nitro's
population and some wonder
whether Nitro'sfuture is a dud:
"It'd make you feel bad to
know the town you were raised in
is 11oing to -the dogs," says Paul M.
Wtllard, 80, whose father brought
him to town during the fust boom.
Some say Nitro's 6,800 people
should build on their history. Others want to look to the future.
Nitro was built by the Depart·
ment of War in 1917 and 1918 10
produce nitro-cellulose, cannon
powder, and the name stuck to the
flatlands on the navigable Kanawha
River about 11 miles west of
Charleston.
Railroads. used mostly 10 haul
coal, also mo•ed raw materials in
and explosives out, an average of
t04carsaday in 1918. ·
·
The once-peaceful farmland
teerned with.lhousanJls of workers,

Residents of Huntington Twp.
for Your Votes and Support!
BILL L~ PET·RIE

•

Section E·
outlined the risks posed by timbering, tall policies and other economic foR:CS.
The council listed possible
means of protecting the forest,
including mstituting recreational
talles to pay the biD. Council members now are analyzing comments
the~ received.
'They've almost got to pull a
rabbit out of a hat," said Blaclcmer,
who shares a fear among environmentalists that the council's recom·
mendations will be 100 weak.
Others fear that the council will
go too far.
"Shouldn't the right of earning
a living and providing for one's
family come before that of recreation7" officials from three north·
em New Hampshire communities
asked in a letter to the council
Environmental groups hope to
minimize that divisiveness and

lf,~~ ~:!t~~·. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. .•5,495 .·
.

'

~::ef~~:.... . . . . :... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •a95,

~:!:'il:.~: . . . . . . . . . .. . ....................:. . . . . . . . . ... . '695
.

.

ATHENS HONDA CARS
, "THE 'HAPPY HPNfJA PEOPLF'
810 E.
Athe~, Ohio

._,St. •

... ••••.

IJMd c.t

avoid mistakes made in..thc Pacific
Northwest. Despite that spirit of
compromise, the re~ion likely will
become the nation s next battle·
ground over environmental and
econontic concerns.
The AMC and a coalition of
more than a dozen organizations
including the Sierra Club, National
Audubon Society, National
Wildlife Federation and Conserva·
tion Law Foundation want the pub·
lie debiue 10 focus on three objec·
tives.
First, they want environmentaUy
sensitive forest management to
replace timbering practices such as
clear cutting . herbicide use and
other problems brought about by
mechanization of the timber industry.

.

Encouraging sound forestry
through selective cutting- " basically lilce weeding a garden " -

I~tegrity

Future of Nitro
a questionmark

THANK -you ·

.
NEW 93 NISSAN SENTRA

.\.

'

'

·'

sh•p w•th a Japanese frozen food
processor. "Japan must look
. abroad for a large share of its
d
ingredients for processed food! an
the frozen precooked sector IS no
exception" it said
• . .
·th
-Form a JOIRt venture WI a
Japanese company 10 produce pre·
f th
cooked f,ro~n •--•
ouuu or e. restau·
rant, msutuuonal or~rocessmg secs compa·
·
tors · "· In th.1s case,
e u..
bl
f
t
ny m•ght be a e to mW!u ac. ure

NEW 94 NIS.SAN PICKUP

''

'

report said.
pr~ucts 10 Japanese spectfica~ons
For instance, it said, fish and usmg locally produced.mgredtents
fish products are the roost popular and could then sell duectly to a
precooked fried food products. small number of l~rge Japanese
Among non-fried food items, sales users," the. report S3ld.
of rice and noodle products are
- Buy mto a Japanese produc·
booming.
·
tion facilit~ in Japan and supply
"U.S. companies hoping 10 from the Umted Stares.
market their wares in Japan will do
WASHINGTON (AP) - Callie
best if they design traditional
·
and
calves on feed in the 13 states
Japanese-style products or develop
that
prepare quarterly estimates
Western-style products that are
totaled
9.69 million head as of Oct
specifically ~eared toward
I.
That
was up 9 percent from a
Japanese tastes, ' the report said.
year
ago.
"In particular, strongly navored
''This is the largest October cat·
foods must be modified as
tle
on feed inventory since 1978,"
Japanese generally find American
foods to be too spicy, sweet, salty said a report by the National Agri·
cultlir.!l Statistics Service.
or oily."
'l'he inventory included 6.28
The report suggested three
options U.S . exporters might want million steers and steer calves, 6
to consider for entering the percent a'bove a year ago, the report
said. This group accounts for 64.8
Japanese market:
percent of the total
' - Establish a

gram contact the ASCS office at
By LISA COLLINS~
446-8686.
.
Gallla ASCS County,
Executive Director
. GALLIPOLIS • Looking for a
'!lay to get cash now while yo';'f
grain is stored on your farm or m
an approved warehouse? Maybe
the pnce support commodity loan
proJram available through the
Mrieultural Stabilization and Con·.
St:f\'ation
• Service could benefit your oper&amp;tion. ;The 9-month loans are ve~
low il!terest and provide capttal
While wailing to marJtet or feed the
J111in Jn the future. To be eligible
for a poni loan, pro~ucers must
Jaave perilcipated.in ibe 1993 proP· ffowcver ~_if a producer d!d
not partiCIJI'IC m the feed gram
progl8!ll ~ may request a soybean lo~n if ,hey have certified
t~eir crop acreage. If producers
have agreed to any IYJlC of market·
in~ contniCt, a copy of.the contniCt
134 HP engine, 5 speed, tinted
will. need to be submitted before
glass, 1400 LB. payload.
me
loim can be 8JIIIf!&gt;~· ·
.
'· The November mterest rate •s
3'.37 S, percent. The loan rates in
Gallia, County arc: $1. 76fBu for
Corn and $5.13/Bu for Soybeans.
.The f~ date to ieq~ ~ I~ is
Mily 31, 1994. Pol; lldd\Uonalmformation on
the commodity
loan pro..:t..
•

Directors
authorize
repurchase

.

Pd. lor by the candidate, State Route 338, Raelne, Oh.

ews

will·ensure that the nonhem forest
remains productive. Blackmer says.
He said the government can
encourage this through tall incen-

!lves.
The second focus of the council's report should be on the dan·
gers of unchecked development,
according to the coalition. The sale
of IICilly one million acres in the
norlhern forest in 1988 - n\uch of
it to developers - provided a
"wakeup call" for safeguards.
Black:ma' says.
·
The government could do things
such as buy development riJthts
from timber companies, making it
impossible for them to sell the land •
to speculators and encouraging
them to maintain it.
Third, the coalition recommends
permanently protecting core
wilderness areas. •

division

may
take
or~r
.znvestzgation.
. .
'

CONTROL·
TRAINING • John
Concba, left, and
. Haskett practice prop·
er band cuff technigues du~ing a non-lethal con·
trol class at the Indian Pollee Academy in Arte·
sla, N. M., recently. In addition to police skiDs,

the instructors continually remind·cadets that
working in Indilln country is one of the more
dangerous situations in American law enforce·
menL(AP)
.

-c-·n~n._g
,.,., , 'jinss
~ z·o
·· · n·a"'~- »eWe omers
,

·

I ~

V

spen'd less than' vete•nns

.
firsL
Known as "Ready-Built
Units." the bungalows were copied
WASHINGTON (AP)
from prototypes first built in Ohio's freshmen are cheap.l\t least
Hopewell, Va., in 1915. Each they have staned out that way.
house, shipped one to a boxcar.
As they set up their offices and
were placed aiOp foundations.
began work in the House of Repre·
On May 7, 1918, a record 60 scntatives, newcomers spent less
houses went up, according to than the veterans they replaced.
author William D. Wintz.
Freshman Rep. Ted Strickland
Each house was furnished with spent 27 pencent tess than fanner
grass rugs and wicker furniture, Rep. Clarence Miller and 39 per·
Wintz wrote.
cent tess than former Rep. Bob
· The bureaucracy had no time for McEwen during the first half of the
fancy names. The plant was named year.
"Explosive Plant C" and .the dirt
Freshman Rep. Eric Fingerhut
streets were laid out in a grid and spent 23 percent less than fanner
simply· numbered consecutively, Rep. Ed Feighan and 6 percent less
much like a Manhattan in the than former Rep. Dennis Eckart
mountains.
during the same period.
Still, there was humor among
Freshman Rep. David Mann
the wartime transplants. For exam· spent 15 percent less than his pre·
pie, the soda fountain on 21st decessor, Rep. Charles Luken Street was named the "Powder much to Mann's surprise.
Puff."
"He ran a r,retty cheap office in
According to the pubtic library, the first place, ' Mann sa1d.
Dr. A.A . Swanson, a member of
"I've been trying real hard to
the government's ordinance team, resist the temptation 10 use all my
was the first 10 suggest the name money. So far we've been able to
Nitro for the town. Since the pi~ do that."
was known as Crawford City in
As of June, Mann had spent
1917, 10wnspeople were surprised $289,950 to run his Washington
when the U.S. Post Office was offi· and district offices, according to
cially designated Nitro.
reports published by the Clerk of
Swanson. said one of the other the House. That includes staff
eam members suggested the name salaries, mail, and general expens·
edwop, which is powder spelled es, from office equipment 10 paper
ackwards.
clips.
The Associated Press examined
Residents still marvel at the war
how much Ohio freshmen spent
effort.
.
"They'd put up a street or two and compared it to what their pre·
streets in a day. ' Willard said. decessors had spent at the same
"You could go through here one
day and the next day you'd come
back and you wouldn't know
where you were at because there'd
be so many new streets."
"Nitro was built in 10 months,"
says resident Jack Moody, 74 .
"We couldn't do it again today if
' '
.
our life depended on it.''
But peace in Europe almost
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)
doomed Nitro.
-The United Mine Workers' 6''There was a time that the pop- month-old strilce is taking its 1011 on
ulation of Nitro was approaching food banks and other agencies try·
100,000," says Don Kam~s. the ing to help .struggling mi~rs and
current mayor. "Then World War I others, officials say.
was over and everybody walked
"Within the last month, we
otit. The population dropped to · staned havinJ an influx of miners'
2,000 or 3,000 in just a few days."
families ·commg in and we already
Nitro fizzled, but it slowly service so many people, so that was
returned throu'h the decades as an added burden," said Diana Bell
chemiclll factones pPCned nearby, of the House of the Cat)l!lnter in
including Amencan Viscose Wheellng, 1 Methodist~sponsored
Co~.'s rayon plant, Mqnsanto
food barik and social aid agency·.
Clicmiclii,Co. and FMC Cotp.
"It's been extrell)ely diffiCult.
But the AMerican Viscose plant, We try not to tum anyone away
which employed about 1.500 work· and we never do as far as fOod, but
Coodnued ou E-3
... sometimes we just run au! the

1 U

.

point a year ago.
The comparisons are not exact
because freshmen were not sworn
in10 office until Jan. 5, while senior
lawmakers' operations were going
full-tilL
Office expenses are the one area
of federal spending every lawmak- _
er can directly control.
Each one decides whether to
spend all their money or pinch pen·
nies; whether to hire experienced
hands or newcomers; whether to
send every household a newsletter
or leave the mail allowance almost
untouched.
Members . of Congress get
postage and official expense
allowances that are based on such
factors as offiCe rental rates, district
size and distance from Washington.
Th~ House also limiiS members
of Congress to 18 full-time and
four pan-time employees, and caps
payroll at $557,400 a year per
office. That salary allocation
increases each year. Last year, it
was $537,480; since 1988, the peroffice allocation has increased 34.4
percent.
Ohio's senior Republican, Rep.
Ralph Regula, said making officeexpe~se decisions can be a doubleedged sword: constituents lilce to
see elected officials saving money,
but also want topnotch service.
"I have semor staff. That's the
key," said Regula. "It ·does drive
payroll up versus a freshman."
. Among veteran Ohio lawmak·

ers, Regula had the biggest year-toyear increase in office spending.
For the fust half of 1993, his office
spent 24 percent more than it did
during the first half of 1992.
The main reason: mass mailing.
Lawmakers are allowed to make
three unsolicited mass mailings
each year. Regula sent none out
last year. He sent one this year.
That meant a $33,000 increase in
his fust.quarter postage costs.
Rep . Tom Sawyer, D-Ohio,
spent 20 percent less in the first
half of this year than in the first
half ofl992.
"It's being done in a planned
way," he said. He said he maps out
expenditures far in advance.
"One of the things that surprised me when I ftrst came here
was the number of offices that
opemte almost on a weelc·by-week
budgeting basis," he said.
Rep. David Hobson, R-Ohio,
said he ended up with a 1.6 percent
midr,ear redu~tion - by accident.
' I'd like 10 tell you that I COO·
sciously did that but it dido 't happen that way,'.' he said.Hobson said his payroll is lower
than that of other lawmakers
because he has a young staff and
promoteS from within.
"Everybody in my office has a
job description, everybody in my
office has a review, we only give
merit raises and we give bonuses,''
he said
tonlinued on E·2

Social Service agencies
feeling crunch
of coal strike
-

or

·,
'\

.

.
chases later this month. Campbell
expects the more than 300 families
h~ helps to double.
"It wiD put a great strain on us
and our fundin,. but that's what
we're here for,' he said. "I think
it's more difficolt for them to even
ask for help
they were among
the top pllid wages in the county."
Joann Wallace of the Tri-State
Food Bank in Evansville, Ind., said
hCJ:. ag:;r. li'as worked with four
union
, but the food has been
limited.
"They do pull quite a bit, but
we can't allow them to take everything," Wallace said. "We have to
Continued on E-1

funds for ·things such as utility
biDs," BeD said
The UMW's strike against
members of the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association began May
10 and has idled about 17,500 miners in seven state~ in Appalachia
and the Midwest. ·Miners receive
strilce benefits but nothing close to
what they, normally earn.
Bill Campbell, President of the
Vansant, Va.-based Hclpina Our
People's Existence, said his food
and clothing distribution center
receives numerous calls Clich day
from striking minelll. ·
When the agency receives addi·
tiona! federal fonding for food pur-

since

CINCINNATl (AP) - A little·
known federal agency is deciding
whether 10 take over an investiga·
tion iniO whether Ohio lawmakers
knowingly received illegal contributions from two-year colleges.
Justice Departtnent lawyers will
not say when - or whether - tile
department's Washington-based
Public Integrity Section will
announce a decision.
The section. which includes 27
lawyers, handles corruption cases
involving pubtic officials.
At the request of Edmund A.
Sargus Jr., the U.S. atiOmey for the
Southern District of Ohio, the
office is considering whether to
investigate and prosecute allegations that as many as 112 current or
former legislators received illegal
contributions through the Ohio
Technical and Community College
Association. The now-defunct
OTCCA was a lobbying agency for
the two-year schools.
· "Their mview, if they .reaDy .ge1
into it, is their own investigation,"
Justice Department spokesman
Carl Stern said. "They do it over
again. If they think it should he
prosecuted, they prosecute it."
The office will not investigatc
unless it determines federal laws
may have been violated, Stem said.
Sargus' office and the FBI in
Cincinnati ended their three-year
federal investigation last month for
lack of evidence. A state investigation that concluded last year found
that lawmakers did not know the
contributions were improper. Some
legislators returned the money.
Federal presecutors said they
would not reopen the investigation
unless they receive new informa·
tion.'

Sargus, 40, said he took no pan
in the decision to end his office's
investigation. He said the FBI
worked on the investigation with
assistant U.S. attorney John Dil'uc·
cio.
"But in this business, perception is important as well. And I
don't want any perception that this
case wasn' t being reviewed exactly
as it should be," Sargus said.
Sargus. who has lieen U.S. attorney since May, Wll.\a state-appoint·
ed lawyer for a two-year school.
He worked for Belmont Technical

CoUege in St. Oairsville from 1991
until this lear. Belmont was a
member o OTCCA but federal
investigators have refused to say .
whether i1 was investigated.
Sargus ·worked for Belmont
after the OTCCA contributions
ended in 1989. It also was after
Belmont repaid the Slate $139,664 .
for a fmding by state auditors that .
the school misrepresented its ·
enrollment to receive state subsi·
dies for students who did not attend
Bebnont.
State Rep. Jim Buchy, RGreenviUe, and the Common Cause
citizen's lobby have 9uestioned .
whether the state invesbgmoo was •
conducted properly. Both want in
independent. sta~ prosecutor
appomted 10 tnvesugate the ·case.
Buchy last month introduocd a bill
that would establish the ptose.;utor.
A similar bill he offered in 1991
died in a House committee.
I anet Lewis, e~tecutive director
of Common e11use:-lli~..
showed that lawmakers listed
OTCCA lobbyist Harold Roach as
a contributor and that lawmakers
wrote thank-yous directly to cotlege presidents. She said She hopes
the public integrity section will
fairly review whar she considers a
cover-up.
'
"It was very discouraging and
frustrating to learn that apparently
all avenues of government had shut
down investigation ilr1IEh a monu·
mental case," Ms. Lewis said. · ~
The State Highway Patrol and
Highland County Prosecutor Rocky
Coss, a fanner aide to Democi'Blic
House Speaker Vern Riffe, headed
the state's investigation.
Buchy said he wondered if
Coss' relationship with Riffe, who
had received some of the improper"
contributions, affected his judgment Coss said that had no effect
on his investigation.
·
The FBI and state investigators
also looked at an undated memo
written on former Southern SllllC
Community College president
Lewis M:ller' s letterhead
The memo, made public in
1990. proposed selling Miller's 1
Caves park in Highland County to
the state for $1.7 million. It sug~estcd deducting from that amount
Continued on E-1

Korean arts reflect 18th
century 'Golden Age'
NEW YORK (AP) - A step
away from Park Avenue's fast funnel of traffic down central Manhat·
tan is a haven where you can contemplate the delights of immortal
peaches, painted on silk.
It's a place where playful genre
paintings, among other artworks,
vie for attention with the asiOnish·
ingly pleasing asymmetry of a massive white porcelain jar.
The luscious peaches, on a pair
of l().. foot-high, four-fold screens,
clearly qualify as splendor in
"Korean Arts of the Eighteenth
Century: Splendor and Simplicity." The ceramics represent some
of the simplicity; the genre paint·
ings are just plain artful fun.
The exhibition has opened at the
Asia House Galleries before traveling to other venues around the
country.
"This is the centerpiece of the
Koran festival that's taking place
nationwide over manr, of the arts, • •
explained Janet Gtlmore, Asia
Society SJK*eswoman.
All buf ~wo of the 12S exhibits
are.drawn from Korean coDections,
from 32 IOUfCCS including the former roya!IJII]ace, and most haven' t

been lent ahroad before.
~wei ve of them are designated ·
nattonal treasures - the white
"moon jar," for example among
various ceramics; and a hanging
s~ ro.ll offering an extraordinar}o : .
bird s-eye perspective of "Twelve : , :
Thou~~nd Peaks of Mount Kwn. :
gang.. among the drawings IRd :
pamungs.
G~lleri~s· director Vishal:lla
Desai explains that the 18th oen....:..
was ~~osen as a focus becauseft :
was a ptvotal period when YOU .
~ the beginning of Koran-IICII, ·
as 11 were.
. :
. "It was a relatively IICICe.fal : :
bme that. allowed thiDp to
and !lounsh, a rich )leriod ill Kare.,
an hiSIOty and art. • •
·
. The artwork.s ane organire4 tO
Illustrate three ·aspects of thai
vtb~t culture - w of the Cllalt,
~~arts and ans in the cka•ot :

no- .

Given a trulx royal settla1

b:

~~other 1rcat six-fold acreea .
Sun, Moon and Five Pelb ,f

on

•

in-enid : ·:

painted
silk. It's beea
aboVe an elaixnie lhniDe Lr
··
as it would be in thetin,'?prJ :: , ,
' .

'

I·

.

'

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport-GallipOlis, OH Point Pleaeant, wv

hge E2-Sunday nmee Sentinel

..

1ntegrity•.. _.:c_oa_till_ued_from
_ E_1_ _ _ __
Ss,ooo each for Riffe, Ohio Scnale · more than $68,000 in taxpayers'
President Stanley Aronoff and the
Ohio Republican and Democratic
'parties.
:
Coss said he could not prove the
memo was valid. Miller, Riffe and
Aronoff said they knew nothing
about it. The 7 Caves deal never
went through because money for it
was deleted from the Slate's budget
in 1987.
· As a result of the slate investigation, 14 presidents ol two-year colleges entered a diversion program
to avoid prosecution on charges of
making illegal contributions. The
presidents were accused of usmg

.social. ••

money between 1983 and 1989 for
the iUegal conlributions.
Roach and four college presidents who had been indicted on
felony charges were allowed to
plead no contest to misdemeanor
election violations. They were
ordered to pay $3,600 in fines and
$5,100 in resutution.
" It's hard to imagine that some
college presidents would receive
penalties for wrongdoing, while
some public officials would go
completely without penalties when
they apparently were involved,"
Ms. Lewis said.

t:ontioued from E·l

think of oor other agencies. It's difOcuiL We would like for everyone
to have what they want."
. Sarah Lillie, emergency assis. ~ance director at the Scott' s Run
Settlement House in Morgantown,
said she has noticed an increase in
miners !liking advanlage of the services in recent weeks.
"I think they thought they
would be back to work by now or
they didn't want to come in the
.first place, lfut now they have no
;choice," Little said. "We serve
them, but it lakes away from our
regular clients.••
Margaret Decola, a social work·
er for the Salvation Army of
· Moundsville, expects to be helping
: as many as 900 addioOnal families
· by Christmas because of the strike.
· "Our food pan!J:Y is slowly but
surely going clown," Decola said.
"The union is helping them with
strike benefits, but those things are
: eventually going to run ouL"
· The agency needs more funding,
: but has additional problems
: because miners are among its regu·lar conlributors.
"For the past month, we haven't
: paid &amp;llybody's l!tility bill$ because
we don't have the funding," she
• said. '.'I- thinlt a great deal of that
. has to do with the strike."
· In Marion County, wliere unemployment is above 20 percent, the
union has managed to make do
with·contributiol!s frotn businesses,
churches and other labor organizations, said UMW District 31 Presi-

c

dent Rich Eddy.
·It hasn't been easy, however,
Eddy said, citing a recent benefit
concerL
"It was held in Marion County
and we tried to sell most of the
tickets in Marion County," he sa,id.
"If nobody is woddng, it's hard to
raise money, let alone food.''
While suppon has been good,
union officials also realize
resources are limited. Future fund
drives arc targeted in cities not
affected by the coal strike, including Baltimore, Eddy said.
"We have guys working eight
to 10 hours a day on food drives,"
he s;Ud. "As long as ~ have this
help, I don't see a reason to be
afraid that we're going to cun ouL"
In UMW District 31, based in
Charleston, striking miners have
relied on three UMW -sponsored
food banks that distribute goods
four times a year: said Tony
DeRaimo, a retired miner and secrelary of Local 76'1/i
No one is going hungry, he said.
"If they are, we don't know it,"
DeRaimo said.
SliD, Decola worries most about
Christmas.
"Our main concern is the children," she said. "I don't think
feeding the people is going to be a
big problem. I think the toys are ....
We definitely need more funding,
more donations. We need to be
able to j!i v~ t~. these children 11\at
are commg m.

... _c_o_nt-inu-ed_rr_om_E_-1_ _

O~gressional
'

and bligs, collecting the materiatS '
he needs for his handicrafts from
the foresL
The tourist trade is a major
source of livelihood for the Ainu.
Many others work as day laborers,
making barely enough 10 get by.
Most Ainu, like Kawamura, are
inarried to Japanese or are part
Japanese themselves. Official
slatistics count only 25,000 Ainu
desce~dants, b~ ~e 15,000-me_mber Amu AssociaUon of Hokkaido
puts the number as high as
100,000.
The Ainu are more ha_iry than
the J~panese. Anthropolo~ts once
described them as Caucasl&amp;n. They
are thought to have migrated 10 .the
Far East from the Ural regions of
Siberia.
L~e '!le American Indians ~d
other mdi~enous peoples, the Ainu
were dectmat~d as newcomers
brought new dtseases and !letter
weapons, pushing !hem out of their
native lands.
For 1,000 years, beginning in .
the eigh~ centuiy, the .~u f~ght
a sporadic war of attrmon agamst
the Japanese. But their pois!J~
arrows were ..no match for samurw
swords and rifles. By the 18th ce~tury, they were confined~ Hokkaido - the rugged, unspo_tled land
that was Jspan's last fronuer.
'From their _conquerors, the J\inu
borrowed fishm~ nets IU_1d farmmg.
They traded naove camngs, festhers, furs and.weaving for ri~ wine,
tobacco, nee and clothmg to
replace ro~ made of bark, animal
and fish skins. _ ,
~apanese .colo_mzers sought to
obhterate the nauve language and
c~stoms: .It was an English miss10nary, Dr_. John B_atchelor, who
gave the ~mu • . wntten_ h!nguage
and compiled thw fmt dicbolll!'Y.
y.'~er~ force ~ay have failed,
asstmrlau~n prevailed.
.
The A!nu were encouraged t?
shave !herr beards and dress thetr
freeflowing hair in Japanese strle
and to stop speaking their nauve.
ton$ue. The earrings and the ~lue
factaltattoos favored by Amu
women were banned.
Ainu names we~ ~laced ~Yith
Japanest- a pracuce still required .

By ELAINE KURTENBACH
Associated Press Writer
ASAHIKA WA Japan - The
Ainu of northem J~pan reD the !ale
of a fox that stple a villager's cateh
of salmon. Fearful t1w he and his
kindred might be driven away the
fox begged an old man for pn)rec.
tion and was forgiven.
. :Therefore children not only
the Ainu but aha the liw;g animals
can eat sall'(lon and deer; they all
have the same right as the Ainu
have" the story says.
Shigeru Kayano who published
this story in a col~tion of his peopie's folk 1alcs, thinks it strange
that the Ainu themselves are
allowed to lake only a few salmon
from their own waters.
"It is as if the Americans were
to come to Japan and say, ' You
cannot eat rice' ," says Kayano,
who is lobbying for an Ainu share
in the natural wealth of their homeland on the northern island of
Hokkaido.
Of the millions of salmon
caught in Hokkaido waters each
year ·the Ainu are allowed tci lake
only'400amongallofthem. That's
for ceremonial purpOses, not susie- .
nance. Essentially, they have been
deprived of their hunting-and fishing rights, period.
Historians say the Ainu originally populated much of Japan - as
weD as the Russian-held regions of
Sakhalin and the Kuriles - hunt·
ing, gathering and fiShing in abun·
dant riven and coastal waters.
The Ainu may have lost their
lands, but Kayano and other Ainu
leaders are determined to keep
alive their language their heritage
and their pride.
'
"They call us 'dojin'- it's not
a very nice word," says Kenichi
Kawamura, referring to the
Japanese word for an aborigine,
which can:ies a derogatory connotation of vulgarity or uncleanness.
Kawamura 42 -runs an Ainu
culture center in tb~ Hokkaido city
of Asahilcawa 593 miles northeast
of Tokyo. His suburban neighborhood once was an ·Ainu "reservation'' of about 150 households.
Now, only 15 Ainu families
remain. The others all sold their
land.
"Ainu really aren't very good at ·
farming," Kawamura says, "but
the land was too lousy to make a
living anyway."
The only visible sign of the
area's ethmc past is Kawamura's
family compound: a roadside
woOden museum, small shops sell·
ing handicrafts, and a traditional
grass-thatch Ainu hut, one room
built around a hearth, with a sacred
window facing easL
Kawamura, a gruff, serious man
• will!. W,g.ulder-length Jl,!ac~,hair
beard and mustache, ·§jiends
Hokkaido's long, frigid winters
carving and making bark baskets·

rekases.

. .
Slrickland introduced a bill to
· · · eliminate mass mailings but his
: . legislation also would forbid
Congress from spending money
formetly used on mass mailings on

sos~!'::.e~.io lawmakers send

out news releases every year
· announcing that they did not spend

AU WhO VOiad .

I

1U

Japan-bom,K~,

" The natives in Ezo '(Hokkai·
do), although ther are human
bemgs, are a very· Ignorant peopie," said the 18th-century Kyumei
Koki, a government book on colonizing the island. "All·in-all, it is a
problem demanding patience."
.• The Ainu were forbidden to
hunt deer and ~ fish fm; salmon.
· The 1889 Hokbtdo Former
A,borijlines Act"' grari!ed Ainu
families small parcels of land that
could_be_confiscated if not cultivated wtthm l5,years, but no o~et
re~urce nghts. Today, the Amu
are lobbyin~ for a new law, one
that would gtve them a share in the
island's rich fish and timber
re59urt:es.

agree111e1i~ o~er the ~~linition o~

Massachuselll-:

NoW

..

·R&amp;G FEED ·&amp; SUPPLY CO.
992•2164

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DRAWING NOV. 11,11Q

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(Just in time for winter)
Expirea 11-30-93 or ·

HOWARD CALDW -Oh.,
Paid for by the c•ndklllta, 41036 SR 7,

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MIDIIEPOU· ,
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CALL 992·3967 FOI DETAILS
' .'

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'

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••did•, 363$1

Sale lnvestmenll.
Over 213 of the
1

Loop Rd., Rutbond,.Oh.

inveslmen1securities

owned py P8qpies
Bank are backed by
the full faith and cred~
of the United States
government or an
agency of the

Statement of Condition' at Close of Business September 30,1993 September 30,
1993

Assets

CashandDuefromBanks . . . .
$ 14,850,400.90
U.S. Treasury Securities .. .
42,809,228.58
Obligations of the U.S. Government Agencies &amp; Corporntions ... 15,518,445.75
Obligations of.the States and Political Subdivisions
23,024,975.96 .
Other Securities"'"
8,237,172.81
Federal Funds Sold . ..
11,550,000.00
Loans (Net of unearned interesr and reserve for possible l9an losses ) 271,846,197.33
Bank Premises• Furniture and Fixtures
9.500,:!85.84
Other Assets
5,882,272.07
Total Assets ......................... ...................; ............... $403,218,979.24
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proviile us with !he
liquidity needed lo
meet the cas/1

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NET N'()UN'f

~-}00· 60

A Car Or
=ridllv, Saturday, Sunday
And Get A
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."FRE·E HAT'' ·
:test Drive AH ·

lr~ ·Hillrl Ta StopA

financialy strong
institution with a
complete line of deposit
products and services
to offer our customers.

' ' ' ' ' ' ' H ' ' ' ' H ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' H ' O HH

Number1.

While the bonom line 1s

Demand Deposits
$ 35,857,074.14
Time and Savings Deposits
308,486,0tl.71
Tollll Deposits ........................................................ $3H.343,085.85
Federal Funds Purchased &amp; Securities Sold Under
Repurchase Agreements
6,813,568.02
Other Borrowed Money .......................... ............................................ 16.291 ,034.95
Other Uabilities ...................... ................... ..................... ......................
2,852,243.84

Local Relnvatment.
nie money deposited
with Peoples Bank is
reinvested in our area.
Current~. we have

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over $271.8 million
dolars in loans to our
customers lor homes,

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Tollll Uabllltles ...................................................... $370,299,931.66

business ~t.

education, ~orMI;Iiles

and to meet many
other needs.

Equity Capital
capital Stock ......................................................................................... $ 1,875,000.00
Surplus
........................................._... .............................................
7,346.379.00
Undivided Profits ..................................................... ............................. 23,697,667.58

..........·

important, we know our
customers value
security as well. You
want to feel confident

that the bankyou
entrust with your
business Ieday will be
there lor you tomorrow.
Peoples Bank's history
speaks for itself. We
have been providing
solid. safe, and secure
banking products and
services to oor valued
customers for over 90
years. Depend on us.

Total Bqulty Capital ................................................ $ 32,9t9.046.58
To!al Uabllldes IUid Bqulty Capl!al ........................ $403,218,979.24

There'• only one thin&amp; that C&amp;l1 civo you a cozier foelins tbllil 1 durable,
bi&amp;b-dtlcioocy, oooiJy.CODIOt'ViDJlrane beat pump:, 1 Tnae bell poupp
wilb 1 cub reblla. A.ad remember, a bell pump coo!J 11 well u it beata. So
~ Ill your particlplinc Tnae ~r aod
. • · ,..
&amp;•I a nice, wartn feolinc. ~more ways tl!aa one.
J JM ·. ·

Deals. All ·Week

nevm,

Looldng Beyond the

HO O H 0 H H H O

as cili]
_

Secure Depotb.
We 81J11f9Ciate and
respect the trust thai
vou and yrn
have placed in Paqptes
Bank by aslcing us to
salekeep your deposits.
Peoples Bank is a

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Anniversary Sale Now In Progress!
VIDEO PLAYER__

8 WEEKS - ONLY

THANK YOU
Rutland Twp.
Support!
CHARLES D.
BARREn, JR.

'•

THRU NOYEMIEI 14

.....

government. Ttoese
investments rep~esen1
asa source of
income for the bank.

.

A Car Or Truck '--rr
Satu~ay or SundayAnd Get A

BOUDAY SEA.SON,SP.ICIAI.f

=·haS

requirements of our
CUStOm&amp;fS and to,
make OWN loans in the
communities we sarve.

RICH LAN I&gt;

WEICHT cONTROL

IS'

•&gt;·'•'

~

Ia~

· T~~\~~~;;::;;.~.
sored 1 Jey~mile trip down the
Cohansey ~iver, which empties
into Delaware Bay, 011 a .68-foot
&amp;at npnnally used for fishing tripe
1n the bay.
.
Coatla
_ uectfrvmE-1
If the public-private ve!lttire
-------~~-----1 ~~
·continlii:s, visiton wiU float 4Qwn
·
'
the meanderin~ river past salt. ers in the 194'0s, was solil in the
"Niuo lias what I call an inter·
. - nal .........
-·....~t," says Char'·-marshes, woo lands ' an d f arm 1970s and .even&amp;ually closed. Oth
..,_,, real
countty while an expert 1ecwn1s on ers have cut back.
estate agent Marlene Cruickshanlc.
the region's ecoloJY uid history,
'- 'The chemical industry is going "Peop)e do not tend to locate in
saitl-Deimis ,Cam.
. p1bell, BridJCIOO through a downsi~ ·restructur- Niuo,illlt residents who live 'there
dinlclflr of touriSIII.
in&amp;Silst-culling m :· says Tom tend 10 stay thete. .. ·
·
"There's been a Jot of discus· McKean. ~to pl8nt manager
David Burch, 51, who works at
sion· about ecotourism lately in and I 'Putnam Cbimiy development a service station, lried to move 10
Cumberland County," . said official. "What we have to do is Charleston in 196$ when he got
Stepbc!Q.· Kehs, county director of find ·ways' tci substitute other married, but the newlyweds came
plannlng and, devel=• .. . . .
em~loymenl."
to Nitro two days later.
opulation sagged uv~·
""""' 8,074 in
"This J'ust home, I guess," he
The county · "'WJih ctU·
zens, environinen!al gt'OIIIlS'ind the 19~ to 6,851 in 1990 and Niuo's says. "Back when I was a kid, just
··business community_ is lrf.in« to median age role from 27.4 years in about everyone worked for the
put together a broad ecotOunsm 1960 to 38.7 yetis in 1990.
plants, and the kids pretty much
he
'd
And
the
snle1l
does
.
n't
encour·
·
slayed." . ·.
plan 10 boost the etonomy, S81 •
•·
_-' - _
"We've always faced a dichoto- age newcomers.
"I think it's just a plCIISIIIt place
my here in Cumberland County," .'. A.rank o~or.. from the plants to live," says Dennis Knapp, 81, a
he said. "Any time. ihem's a m!Qor ' hung over Nttro for decades. The federal judge and a Nitro resident
environmental .~tial\ve or 11_m~ .
y.-ea::::e repula· ~~Y~~Fghbors·
"~?"'neighbors are
developmenumtlaiJve, there s a
~the Wpri(J wit I bungabattle between f:bose ~ho want to ,
stil·l. . d ""I not
'
hom
Tyler is worried about her town,
preserve the envuonment and th0$C 1ows . . . stan ; uu , man~ . e . but she won't move.
who wanTW'CieveiOp'"ir'"~y~ ~ ·thetn .out. says ten'!&amp;
''The people are tbe friendliest
"Ecotourism may be·one way to Ty~r. 46, a ~ at S!- Paul.s ,Jd~ of people I've ever known,"
bridge that ~ to provide jobs and · Untied Methocbst hun:h, a rest- she says. "If you walk down the
support the economy and, at the dent for 24 yean. street. exerybody speaks to you.''
same time, protect our natural
resource base," he said.
David Githens, an avid birdwatcher, agrees. He began niMing
pontoon trips this summer along .
the quiet tidal creeks and water·
ways of New Jersey's bl!ck bays
under the name Jersey Cape,Nature
Excursions. ·
' ·
"The area is so wondetful for
. seeing birds and Other wjlc.llife, .we
thought we should sl8tl brin~~~~
other people out to see thts,
Githens Silld. "It's one of the .few
areas that hasn '1 been eaten into as
yet in New Jersey."

, ,

'

!I::C:,~

'*

\

Bunny Hopper
KIMBERLEY, South Africa
(AP) - The springhaas. or jumping hare, has a rabbitlike body and
~ head, a long bushy tail and very
lditg hind legs which allow it to
leap 25 .times its own length.
. I! inhabitS the plains of eastern
. and southern Afnca and feeds at
: night on cropS and plant food.

I

a

.

About _the year 150(!, the
English swute inile was amended
to measure 5,280 feet, or 1.6093
. kilometerS.

MOur Customers Say We-Are 'The Best'."

R~llle,

· The )lridgeton Port Authoflty

Roosevelt Raocblaod
.
.
MEDORA,
.N.D.
(AP)
ThiS
.._ WNDON (AP) - The"English
Badlands town was home to
: wordmilehas·LaUO~.
Theodore ~velt when he was a
It is derived from "milia passuhere from 1883 to 1~. '
urn,.. meaning 1,000 paces..These rancher
Now
is the gateway to
paces, as marched by Roman sol· Thebdoreit Roosevelt
t.ionill
dicrs in double step, were the Memorial Park, a nationalNa,
wjldlife
equivalent of about 5 feet, and the
mile originally measured 5,000 PFC.

DAVID WHITE SER"VICES, INC. -~~~
3
rn~·5t•I·IJII: ~:H;~:,::.~~~~~i47·6l80 ~ · J

·

The rKj, aerod~
· lc vehicle
in Sanden dieam • is a four·
leiiCt wWlcl!air lhil. · IIIIIDY of
his more down-to-earth ideas, is
designed 10 help.people with physical disabilities.
Sanders and his family have
produeed wheelchair-accessible
computet slalions, devices to help
thC dillbled hold bookll, cards or
pencils,llld a motlilication making ·
mow the
from a
The controls for Sanden' compuler are mQUnted on an arm that
swin~s out from 'his desk .and is
posiuoned near his face. With his
cheek and chin, Sandel'S manipu·
lates the controls and clicks the

deftly moves the cursor, and.
widl die t i of a butiOA - zooms
in ~ a~ ol 'What appears to
be 1 delign for a - . car.
"an
· ders, 28,....-man-t'pulates th~
,.
~
comp"ter conttols, showing how
easily he can alter the design,
lierore breatiag'ln~ a srin"This.deu1n is just a dream
r;,;~., 'now, but that's soqd," says
"It's
Com Ucations at birth deprived
Brad of oxy,en; causing him to
have poor control over his arms
and legs, and little verbal ability,
Jlut leaving his miDd sharp.
Using his computer, Sanders

Walldag a Mile

' I ,.

· lncr~as~ the c(l'!ifort in your home and cut your
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11

SiDden -=-~co,npurer screc:n,

maUl 1111

News briefs

---------------WHILE SUPPLIES LAST

1

maran that b!)lds 1~0 whaJe.watch··
enEcotounsm ~clef~ by some
as n;sponsible travel that conserves
· ·the environment and susiBins the
well-being of local people - has
c0111e.to heivily developed. densely
ttl
se cil New Jersey.
.
"I don't think we will ever be as
exotic as l!D Africait safari or a lrip
on the Amazon, bull can tell you
... th·c vanety,
·
d'tvmtty
·
that I th m.
· and quality of whal we can ·offer
could make it (ecotourism) a very
strong t~;~Urismeompon
· ent," said
Eugene Dil~k. director of the
state Division of Travel and
TO!irlsml
.
. Among the attracti.ons for the
. ecotourist in New Jersey ·are th~
million-acre Pinelands 'National
Reserve, a network of IIIISPOiled
rivers and lribularies, $ODIC desig·
: riated wild and ~lc br the feder·
: a1 government, and an mlerllation, migratory
·
· ally renowned haven .or
. birds along the Atlantic flyway.
: Kerlinger, who studied the eco• nomic benefits of the bird obsenoa: tory, is performin~ simi..,. studies
at 21 sites nationwide. He promotes
ecotourism as.a profilable marriage
between traditional foes: the envf.
romnental movement and the busi·
, ness communitY:
.
"I'm interested in the presenoation of open space, •' Kcrlinger
.said. "But to make 6usinessmen
understand this better, we have to
show them that these areas, not
only are they beautiful, but they
also can be an economic benefit to
: the communitY_...
· Robbins needs no convincing.
He got tired of hauling small
groups on three fishing trijls a day.
Ope day, he put up a sign offering
whale-watching trips.
,
"The first day I got 35. people,
·· and all I,llid was run out and show
·· them a whale' and bring them
. back," he said.
·
Robbins now runs a research
center that engages naturalists tn

CHECK OUR LOW PRICES ON
WILD BIRD SEED!

,

others, '

~en.,Y~':.;s a dat;e;:'! ; :: =~~ =::..~~ JII'CICrVB~ ~~~!::~ders.

ANDSAVE20%

·· ~

\\ · ~

M
.
a

Sanden' eleeliic wbeelcltair ,
of OIIC of the jlfiai.,.. . . •
designs - a aurdy trailer bitdL · · Bettrand' Rich8ril s~.~ With specialllUII:IIinelu, S'P'Iel : . ;
their son's taleill '1\'UD't uwou_,
has uae&amp;l tbe cliair to plow the
but bis practkll way of dealing
driveway in the winter, tile
willa problems ~y-llave been. That
law.n in -!Qell!ld
leavea: ill
·
h led the
the fall
p-aJ1118bC apjlrOIC . to
cr&amp;ation of Brad's Toys, a family col·
He also has. desiped COIJIPI*t
laboratiorL
desks, wheelcl!air modifications
" If we had a special need, we and furniture for the disabled.
realize thai cerlainly there are pthet
~ Slllden- with IOIIIC 1!dp
people who have th.at neeil as
from 1001. N.-. 25, ~ ~.
well," Mrs. Sanders says.
30 - builds most of the "ioys!'
Some of the "toys" die family from Brad's designs.
" It's really nice to have 10111e~are puzzling at fll'Sl ~·
thins
CIISJOID.made for people who
~~=-when their funcuon havo IJICCW
needs,," says Stacey
Richard Sanders pulls out a long Jones of Northbrook, whose 8metal stick ending m an elongated year-iild SQR Jeffrey uaes a comput~- Some obscure cooking uten- . er desk Sanders designed about
sil1
)can • ·
.
"That's so Brad can dye Eas1er three
The desk .accommodates the
eggs," he said, showing bow it can . child's wheelchair and die ellpllldbe mounted on headgear to hold l!D ed keyboard he uses to communicare.
egg:

alreidy"lw turned many of his . fwlction bu!IOIIJ 10 tum his menr:a'
dnwnl iJio ucality he _.to bdp images inlo comwrer designs.

A• dalld rn. Writer
OLENVIBW, IlL ~ Brad

ATLANTIC CITY; Ni (AP) : 'speak on endang.ered marine 'li.fe
_Paul J(erlinger, director of the , and doc~~~ !bb 81111 ~
Cape
y Bird Observalory on sightings for facdtlles such ~
Woods H 1 OeelnA-..~.Ic !IIIIi
New Jeriey'a iOuthem tip, says ·
oe
- ,....,..
, •
bird·watchml(tourisll contribu\6 tution in
aboul $10 'nullion ·a year to' local
Cumberland County I!' southern
busiDCS~CS..
.
.
New Jersey, an ~cally JIOC1"
Capt. Ron Robbins; a _se&amp;md- but environmentally ncb area\ ts
~etleration fisbetman, ll8rled offer- trying to lake advantage of the
mg whale~watchiu 1 trips about growing trend
. in ecotOUrism. It~•

the word "indigenous. ·
.
Kayano,'who made an unsuc{
cessful bid fof- the upper houSe ot
parliament in 1991, defines tho,
problem differently: "The.
Japanese invaded QW: lands.lf thef. ·
pass the Ia~, they'll have 10 adrmt
lha!- They d rather look the other
way."
'
Unable to get oflicial attention
at. ~orne, t¥ Ainu .~ lo the.
Umted Nauons,· wh_rch m Novem~
ber 1992 re!=ogntzed them as
Japan's aboriginal natiot!.
·
"That didn't make the govern-:
ment very happy," Kayano sayS'
wryly.

.I·

'

BJ TAMARA STAilKS·

• i.J

GET YOUR BIRD FEEDER NOW

,,

.

' J.e ··~ey ·

OUR FALL SHIPMENT OF WILD
BIRD FEED~RS NOW ON DISPLAY.

399W. -Mai•

Pomtroy..-Midclleport GeJIIpolls, OH Point Pleasant, WV

.

EcQtourism comes . T·hes·e toys are not just fQr amusement
to 'New

An of(teialln the Cabinet secre-!
lariat, who ~e 1)11 CO!t!lition ot
anonymity, said the pqosed lat.:
is still under debate because of dis•

Just
··Arrived!

_..,

f
·•aur
Caunta
Board
0
•IEducation
' · •_-Mam·bar•.
ELL
- ·

of any non-Japanese wanting to
gain Japanese citizenship, even

\V.JNAF~REE

.A' Vary
Spacial
ftiAII
··
.
M .._ 00..,

to oiher elected officja!S, .adminis- •
trative correspondence and news
· .....

·November 7, 1183
.

November 7, 11a

Ainu people of Japan struggle to keep their culture alive l

The cost of ruMing Congress is all the money they were allotted.
increasingly becomil!g an is~ue.
That is not necessarily a savings
Rep. John Kasicb, R·Ohio, for taxpayers because House leadworked with Rep. Tim Penny, D· ets can use unspent office funds
Minn. and a bipartisan 'laSII: force to elsewhere, meaning savings don't
: compile a ~kage ofbudget cuts help reduce the federal deficiL It is
almost cenam to com11 up for a called "reprogramming."
vote this year.
"You don't help . your conIt includes a 7.5 percenlfcduc· stituents by giving that· money
tion in what Congress spends on away to someooo else to spenil on
itself, a lS percent cut in its travel someone ejse's problems," said
budget and a 20 percent cut in the Michael O~el, press secrelary to
poslage budgeL
Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio.
1
Rep. John
Bqehner,
0hio;
inuoduced
legisltllion
this, R
year
thlll '. iJ11111!~11111!11111!11111!11111!11111!11111!IIIII. .l1111!-11111!11111!11111!~11111!..-.~lll!ll
. . .
.. .

d'e~~f:: C:~~:C::!

•••

IIID I UPOIT

NI LIO Jrn iLU

TU fLAI!IIS

TllertLt

993-661it

75H9SS

797-~547

576-7125

�•

Paga E4-Sunday Tlmea ~ Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant
-

I

'

•

J

wv

November 7, 1

Ohio Lottery

Holyfield
defeats
Bowe

Pick 3:

019
Pick 4:

3471
Super Lotto:
1-13-14-16-27-43

PageS

1~ lAY~ ~N1YI

Kicker:
379743

' - wnlcJtt around 30, clear.

Tlltlday,IIIDDY, blcJt ncorSO.

O~~N All DAY

~~uroay, ~ am·~ ~m
Voi.44,N0.137

HURRY III ·WHILI SELECliOIIS ~llE GRATEI ••• LAYAWAY NO.W FOR
Country 2pc. llkll chacit print..... ........................:.............. .......'6Q8 ...........•499
Early American 2 pc. Mlod . . 111uo fknl..... . '799 ..... .o5o1L... . . •449
Colonial2 pc.bonc11HII.&amp;olid.graen.......................... '14811... . ~0811. . ......'799
Traditio na lzpc. mWI-print..... ..... ................. ..... . '8111L.....'E811..........'529
Tradltional2 pc. pea&lt;~~sl!ipo . . . . ............ . •rHIIL. 'IIIIIL ......•589
Curved Sectional Reclining Ends .............o1SGS.....'111l5. .......•899
Cont. 3pc. beiga'luode
. look" ookllim.........:........................'2195......~saa..........'975
Traditional3 pc. 'OYe!IIJt!ed" ............ ..:.....................'2350.....•rm....'1 088
Traditions Is pc. mulkolor. ookllim ................ ......... '1~. .....'1299.........'999
SouthwestSotwvebonct! ...t.. ............................... mw. .... '1399......81099
Cont. 3 pc. oak lrim. mul1i-print...............................................~699..... '1299........•888
Country 3pc. ~ue prinl-. Iring cllair.............. . ... '1699.......'1 199.. .,'799
Early American 3 pc. bll1wn 110111 ..............................'18911.......~~-...•1199
Cont 3pc. beiga •.m. 111n1w pillows......................................'1990.......'1~...'1 099
Traditional3 pc......,IIDIII.........................................'2399......~899....11399
Loveseats LMgt Selr cllon..................................'549J&amp;III... y..,,Choice.....'299

DINING ROOM SUITES
3 Pc. Oak Drop Leaf &amp; 2 Chairs ..................... ..'31i......'238 ...........'199
5Pc.
Country Oak,38x48llblt,4110011Chrlt
.................l.i68......'330............•299
.
.
5 Pc. WhHe Table, Maple Seat Chalrs. ............w ..... .'4811............'399
5Pc. Chrome Set,gt•lo(i llblt,4blutvllvetchalrt. .'481L ...'330.............'199
Pastel f!O)tters
b§autWully di!llliled
aiOp a (lainty,
genuine
porcelain box.
Basket weave
style mirrors the
expensive look·
a-likes sold In fine

.

BEDDING

·... IIO·· PAJMIIIT TILl

LIST SAlE N#IIVERSNIY
PIIICE PRICE
PRICE

LIVING ROOM SUITES

LIST SAlE Nllli'IERSNIY
PIIICE PIIICE PRICE

TWIN SIZE
Miss-Match Finn.......
........................ 11:~~~ .... p:.......'78
Day Sleeper·Finn ................................................ •rsiL..•1rseo.pc. . ...'89
Serta Gentle Touch........................................ .... '179.... .'1211• p:.....'99
Serta Ultra Finn .......................... .................. .'2211'1791111p:. . 1129
FULL SIZE
Eclipse Fleetwood Firm......................... .. . . . . . .'11111..... '149• p:...... '99
Ther-A-Pedlc Sovereign.......................... . . . . . .•m.....'1 79• p:. . 1129
Serta Spine Saver..................
...............'291L'21111111"" 1179
Serta Premium Luxury . . .
. ·~s•L.,. ... "" '249
, QUEENSIZE
Eclipse Fleetwgod Firm................ .......................-.29.....'3311110l ......•249
Serta Premier.................... .............................................. '41111 ....'31111110l......'329
Serta Spine,Saver..............
H... .... '568 ......'418110l ..... 1369
Serta Extra Flrrn..............................................................9......'41111 ..r.....•429

APPLIANC ES
Gibson 15cu.FT.FIOIIF181,r...0....................... .. . . .'5111 ... .'548.......... 499
Gibson 17 cu.FT. 3Shllveo, obi.cnspar......... ...... • . .'51111.........'539
....
Kelvlnator 18 cu.FT. ra~cneoeledSheiY81. .~ ..'719........ 19..........•s49
Gibson 18. 6cu.FT. :~llhoi... F....orohelf................. '1311...... .'6311..........'569
Gibson 18.6 cu.FT. ~~~ooo- ..... ~.k0dod. .'8119.......olllll ......•699
Kelvinator 20.6cu. FT.~--.u-.'868.....'7'611.........!679
Kelvinator 19.6cu.FT. -.--.--.~188. ..'111111 ......8849
Gibson 22.1 CU.FT.SideiiSide,ice&amp;wat.................... .'1400......'1299. . . '1 099
Premier 36".Gas Range Dipl dock. ............. '529... '41111 .......•459
Kelvinator 30" Gas RangeWN~eOnly ......................'3211..........'299
Gibson 30" Elec. Self.or-.1 Laedolt ............................ 79.......621L. . . . '569
Kelvinator30" EleC.Cioct.blad&lt;mwindaw. ........os1a.........~a.........'429
Maytag 30" Elec. w.-.- orolm......................'529 ........'41111...•....•439
Maytag Auto. Washer !Mgt lob, 2c:ydll............ .os:~a..........'41111•• ••479
Maytag Elec. Dryer Au1o. ll!yC4nn~......................... ............1a ...*399
~ibson Auto. WasheremLMgtrub. . ...............'41111..........1449.......•419
GibSon ~lee. D,Yerr... ll!y............................... _..1t. .......'379.....!329

Welfare
reform
begins to
take shape

jewelry.stores.

Shapes
and styles
val)' with
availability.

Use tor tiny
treasures or as
~accent piece.

BEDROOM SUITES

LIST · SAlE
PRICE PRICE

NIINEIISiil'r
PRICE

5 Pc. BasseHe Cherry Suhe Tester Bed........'1299. . .'8118...........1699
5 Pc. Cont. Black Mirror Fronts Incl. stllld ...'1399. . .'M...........'788

•

•

4llc.Bic/Grlen, BIUPiumYifllhld,Qak,-.....'11118.....'111111.. , ........'699

4 Pc. Oak-Pediment Mlrror·Pedlrnent Head..'7111L. '511tL..... •479
4 Pc. Oak-Door Dresser-Door ChesL

............ .....'549..........•399
5 Pc. P~Hutch Mirror-Poster Bed ......... '1299... .'11118...........'749
4 Pc. Oak-Large Places-Door Dresser............'1399. . .'11119...........'799
5 Pc. Dark Pine-Ltd. Mirror-Poster Bed ....... '15111L.~1119.......... •899
6Pc. Pine-Paul Bunyan Bed, night stand lnci...~6Qg.. ..'1299.....•1088
6 Pc. Nostalgic Maple
Beautiful Pieces, stand 1nc1...........................'2111111......M ....•1999

CURIOS &amp; GUN CABINETS
Light Oak CUrio, llmpered gtua,llgh~ 11111 entry.....'3111.......'22i.......'198 ·
Light Oak Comer Curio, n~t.. ............................. '418....'3211.........'289
Light Oak Curio; 32"wklt,IIChJd IDp........ . ....~.......0:....,.....*319
Howard Miller Clock/Curlo,lllldlumoak............. .'725.....~.........'399
Round Front Curio, no•lllgtc oak................................. .'5119...:... -........'389
Cherry Comer Curio, etchld g~~u, pJdl111111tiDp.....'8119.,•••'11119,.......•579
Pine Curio, lllvllld gtua daor, plalll groove alltlvti....J . . .os~L .....*289
Oak 8.!lun, PI•IDI dlrptay, 3 gllll daora.........................'8119......'111111........'569
Pine 12 Gun, llli:trld dDorl, llgh!M......................- ......'849.:.......8. . . . .*399

ENTERTAINMENT CENTERS
&amp; ACCESSORIES

'ust SALE·

PIIICE PRta;

Al\WA'ERSI4RY

PRICE

Blanket Ch8$t Ollt·linlshed011lnslcle......................'3ii.... .oz49............'219
Oak Cedar Chest padded top........ .........................'388 .... ..'3211 .......*279
Cherry or Oak Ent. 54"1all, di1War.............. . ... '6311.....~.... ....•429
Cont. Light Oak Ent.stcrage doori.....................'21L . .~Ii8..........~'129
Pine Finish Ent. 50" wide, 27"TV capablt~W.......... .'31111.......'249. ..........s199
Oakoi-ChtrryEnt.srwldo,;--•
..,..._...'51111......1.168...........'399
.
.
Oak Flrllih Desk lltlo(i,48"wldt,4llrgl drftn....oa......'DI..........•199
PlneSecrttafyBaMdl'opAd,3drlwlri. . . . .:. . . ...J&amp; ......
.. ., ........'189
T

7 Pc. Dark Pine Set, 21eafl, &amp;cllalt•............................'5119.....o.c39...........'389
7Pc. Oak Set,4ZIIIIIblt,a..,.......wtvin,l_.:....w ......'631L ...........*549
'

7Pc. Oak Bow Back ChalrSeJ, ovallable...............'581L. .'4.411............!369

•sag

7Pc. Country Oak, llblt, 21N1o,e..,..boclla~~~~to. ....•10811. ....'799 ..............

6Pc. Solid Oak,dlopltiiiO"IIblt,4chllrla-.....'10811.....'8119..·........... '739
9 Pc. Nostalgic Oak SuHe
a..loot!Mit, '""""'" ...... huicMiullll ........... ..'2299....

.'1699............. 11288

RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS
Carlye Recliner, 2way, co1or dloice...................... ,... '22ll..... .o1a1.. . . '139
Unique Recliner, Heater-Vilral01,2oo1ors................. '368 .....'211tL.........'229 ,
catnapperRecllner, lidapodlll,3cxm............... . 3311.....oa.e ........'199
catnapper Wall Reclln.er, Beige dleck ................'531L...I121L........'349
Flexsteel Wall Recliner, Bile velvtl, rol badt..... 72.....io1211 ............'369
•
Flexsteel Rocker/Recliner, auo~r&amp;a~o'l.IIIW--'687......tol99. .........'389
catnapper Rocker/Recliner, GrlenorBiua...........'G......'349............'299
Flexsteel Rocker/Recllner,.o.."""".................'712...... '529............'399
catnapparRocker/Recllner,Mu~&gt;Cc~ar..............o3G......oz79.......... .'229
la·Z·Boy Rocker/Recliner, Rllll .... 4co~on.......~ ....'349............'299
la·Z-Boy Rocker/Re.cllnerCa~co~~~,llolgoPmt..'saiL. '419............*359 ·
..
La-Z-BoyChaise Rocker/RecUner, Btue. ......-.'slllt. '468...........'399
CharlsmaDecoratorChalr,~ ..... . '3111. ....'22ll ........_'189
Swinger Rocker, Oak-Blue Prirt...................................'349......ozaL. ...... •199
. Charisma Swivel Rocker, Mauw01Biue...................'379.... '21111............'229

TELEVISIONS

LIST

'

SAlE !.'fWEilSIIrt

PRICE PRICE

.

PRICE

Zenith 13'1Color, ~.....................................'289.....t2&amp;L.... . ..'229
J

Zenith 19" Color, Clble~,c~~~n:o~Ieablnet......... .o:~at....'289.............'249
Zenith 20" Remote, -.....,.., ................:. . '11118......'330...........'299
.
Zenith 25" Remote,.ilbltmocW,~ ..................... ... '41111......... "..'429
Zenith 27'' Remote, ~lllldol,sp.3-...........'E811......'G............*539
Zenith 25" Remote, comote,oakorpi,......................E29.... :. .....'569
zenith 2T' Remote, COOIOII,oekcablnlt....................•79rL. • ......... . '629
Zenltt127'' R,mote, -.~.,..~en, VCRo~cnge............'lllill.....o7G..........'679
Zenith 32" Remote, JtnouroundiOilnd............~ 3110......~ 188............'999

.

SOFA SLEE PERS

LIST Soii.E
. PRICE PIIICE

,

IIIIINf1lSNfY

PRICE

Pillow Arm Q&amp;Jeen Size, raa1 prirl.......... . .'799 ...... ...........•488'
Early Amettcan Queen, nrstA~~oeprint ......... 'lllll..............'559
Q~een Size SouihvMIIm Prtnt ............................. 79. . .os48 ........•469
TradltlonaiQu~n. Bkla, 7' mtlll-. ..............,.......'8811 ......'lllll......... .'649
Traditional Queen, bolgtlmauw ~~~..:................'8119......'111111......... !579
Flexs,teel FuiiSize, 81"" plald..."...........".....: .......'llllll.....~_ ......"'569
.

'

'

WASHINGTON lAP) RefOJ:llling welfare is now such a
popular idea that Republicans are
racing to beat President Clinton to
the punch while ·moderate
Democrats press the White House
to overhaul the system in time for
their 1994 campaigns.
House Republicans just finished
their version of welfare reform legislation and plan to introduce the
154-page bill Wednesday. II would
end welfare to most non-citizens,
re~uire mothers who apply for
aS!Ilstance to identify thell' child's
father, and limits lifetime benefits
totwoym~
·
Centrist Democr&amp;JS, meanwhile.
have sent notice to a White House
that needs their votes that they
intend to help the president keep
~is c~paign promises ~ impose
ltme lirlllts and work reqwrements.
"We want him to know that he
does not have to back down and
seule for window dressing around
the edges and leave the dry rot to
continue to wCaken the entire struCture," said Rep: Nathan Deal, DGa.
Moderate Democ;:rats say the
administration is under pressure
from liberals and lhe welfare
bllfe8UCI1ICY that runs welfare programs from Washington to the
CQ...IIlltilll, 1!14 'C= ~· ~.,._t, 1!.,-IIY ·

... I ·
~ ,...,.,, """'~
' 'SOme wonie'n's giOiips and wei-

,~~
. 1'

fane riglits activiSts Jiave deep ·misgivings about two-year lime limits
and "make-work jobs" for welfane
~pients.
..
· "W.hat you (\ave is activist
groups ... who don't fmd fault with
th~ existing system," said Rep.
Eric Fingerhut, D-Ohio, who once
managed a job placement and training ·program for welfare recipients
iii Cleveland. "1bey're an important and respected constitu~cy in
the Democratic Party and have ·
great ability to influence the
debate."
Fingerhut and lawmakers who
call themselves the "Mainstream
Forum" outlined their priorities at
a recent Capitol news conference.
The r'hetorrc was spicy and the
message clear: they're not about to
be left .out when the welfare reform
bii!Cprint is drawn.
Many were onh&amp;J!PY about the
president's $500 brllicin budget·
cutting biD and their lack of a role
in crafting the plan.
•'The subtle message is that the
Continued .on page 3 ,

1 Soclion, 10 ..... :Ill - ·
AMultlmec:blftc. N&amp;IIIPIFJr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 8, 1993

lluHIIMdlolnc.

Negotiators seek
strike settlement,
pressures mount

First
Lady calls
for fewer

specialists
WASHINGTON (AP) -

F'U'St tady Hillary Rodham Clin·

ton came to the defense of the
family doctor, telling a young
medical student "it's about lime
we start thinking about the common good" and not just career
choices that may be more lucrative.
Mrs. Clinton's remarks c811!C
during questions from the audi·
ence Sunday a1 a c;onference of
medical educators where several
medical students said tl)ey saw
no advanta$e to goirig into general practrce where pay and
pres~r~e is lower than among
specialists.
"It's about lime that we stan
thinking about the common
~ood, the national interest,
mstead of just individuals in our
country," she told one studenL
. The student at the University
of Chicago medical school had
complained during questions
that she had come from a poor
. family, had struggled 10 gel to
medical school and said she
now felt '' disadvantaged all
over again" because she had to
commit to general practice to
get a low interest education
loan.
· ~ 'I'm SQ(cy&gt;Y.P.U f~l. per$0nal­
ly disadvant;~ged;H.~ (USI bldy
replied.
·
.
A few minutes earlier another student a.uending;the conven·
tion of the Association of Amer·•

KEYNtlTE ADDRESS - First Lady HUlary
pares tf! give ~ keyuOte address to tbe Assoclad011 ·

pre·
American Medical Colleges 104tb annual meedng Sunday. Mrs. Clio·
ton discussed the administration's bealtb care plan. (AP)
She said the-administration's
ican Medical Colleges also comhealth care reforms hope "to
plained about the disadvan~es
reverse
that description" by
of primary practice medicrne
enhancing
the status of general
over specialization.
practitioners.
"Why should I choose priThe primary care physician is
mary care when generalists do
key
to the success of the Clinton
not receive the same respect,
health
care proposals that are
recognition or reimbursements
aimed
at
providing care for all
that other medical specialists
Americans.
often initially
receive?" David Knutson, a
through
a
general
practitioner,
third-year medical student at the
or family doctor.
University of Iowa, asked the
Seventy percent of the pracfii'Stlady, who had just finished
ticing
physicians are in specialioutlining the president's health
·es,
comJl!lled,to
3Q ~for
ClUl: ~~ plans,_.. . ..
'
·
generll
·pnictil;e;""''ll4
'~S pe.rcent
Mrs..CJiiiiQil · ~aid the"''''wa ·
of
the
medical
students
aimst11dcnt's characterization "is
ing
at
specialties,
compared
to
unfortunately an accurate
.15
percent
for
general
practice,
description" of the situation in
she said.
the medical profession today.

are

CHARLESTON. W.Va. (AP)
- The weekend passed with litde
word from the Washington, D.C ..
hotel suite where coal operators
and the United Mine Workers are
working on a contract under the
eye of a federal mediator.
The talks resumed Wednesday
after a two-week recess, "conlin·
ued almost non-stop" tluough Friday evening, then went on tlirough
the weekend, mediator Bill Usery
said.
"Every effort must be made to
find a mutually acceptable agree·
mcnt." Usery said late Friday
night.
At the time, Usery also said be
was "optimistic that a seulement
can be reached soon," raisin,g
hopes that an end was in sight to
the UMW's strike against selected
members of the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association.
But spokesmen for the operators
and the UMW said there was nothing new to repon Sunday nighL
The UMW began its strike May
10 in a dispute over job security
·and future employment for UMW
members. The union says it has
about 17,500 members on strike in
seven states in Appalachia and the
Midwest.
As the snike ne&amp;B the 6-month
mark. political, and financial pres·
sure is mounting on both sides.
On Thursday. Labor Secretary
Robert Reich met separately with
each side's negotiators. He also

met with the chief executives of
some of lhe operatorS' parent companies, Usery said.
Reich "expressed the absolute
necessity for everyone involved to
find a fair and responsible solu·
lion," Usery said.
The meetings followed a leuer
to Reich from 14 coal-state con~essmen who demanded to know
' what the Labor Depanment has
done ... to encourage a seulemenL••
Third-quarter earnings and coal
production show the effects of the
work stoppage on the operators.
And the UMW's largest district,
Charleston-based District 17.
reportedly has laid off secretaries
and elecled officers.
According to recent statistics:
--Coal production cast of lbe
Mississippi was down 7.6 pen:cnt
to 407 million tons in the third
quaner from 441 million rons in the
same period last year. Of the ~
Eastern coal producing SlaW, lUi·
nois' production was down 25.1
percent, followed by 111 11.7 per·
cent decline in West Virginia
-Ashland Coal Inc. sales
droJ)Jled $44 mUiion ~een July
and- September. 1be company said
production was down 47 percent at
its Habet Mining subsidiary and npercent at its Dal· Tcx operations. ·
More than I:OQO Aslti!OO e•iiJIIOJ·
ees are on stiilce; ·
- ;· · -· ·
-Rochester' .l: Plltsbuiift COil
Co. production at its Slrikebound
Continued oo page 3

State
senate
to
begin
Despite Perot, labor opposition,
Clinto~ predicts NAFTA victory hearings on ethics bill
.o')J

WASHINGTON (i)P) - President Clinton portrays himself as
being in an uphill struggle against
the one-liners of Ross.Perot and the
pre_ssure of organize!! labor but
rnststs he can salvage the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
"I thi!lk we'll make it," he said
Sunday.
In a wide-ranging interview on
NBC's "Meet the Press," Clinton
also said North Korea must not be
allowed to develop a nuclr.;lr bomb,
confirmed that U.S. troops will
resume street patrols in Somalia
and declined to criticize Russian
President Boris Yeltsin for delaying a promised early presidential
election.

On the trade pact, Clinton said hundreds of thousands of dollars
he is 30 votes shon in the House, from labor groups as a candidate,
and attributed mucn of his prob- and another example of how the
trade deal has spawned odd
lems to union opposition.
"At least for the undecided alliances.
Interviewed later on ''CNN Late
Democrats, our big problem is the
raw muscle - the sort of naked Edition," AFL·CIO Secretar~ ­
pressure- that the labor forces Treilsurer Thomas Donahue sard
his "gut response" when he heard
have put on," Clinton said.
He accused labor of resorting to Clinton's characterization "was to .
"roughshod, musclebound lac - be angry. I thought it was a cheap
tics," including threatening to end shot. No need for iL It is simply not ·
financial support for lawmakers true.''
But the labor federation 's No. 2
who support the trade deal and to
field candidates against them at official acknowledged that " it 's
perfectly true that some of our
election time.
. It was a striking remarlc from a affiliates have taken the position
Continued on Page 3
Democratic president who muscled

Lack of repeat offenders
law frustrates officials
CINCINNATI (AP) - In some
states, a three-time offender convicted of a violent crime automatically receives a life sentence with
no chance for parole. Ohio lawmakers erased a similar law from
the books in 1974.
Ohio is among 33 states that do
not require repeat offenders to
serve mandatory, long-term sentences. Habitual criminals often
receive the same punishment as
fii'St·timc offenders, The Cincinnati
Enquirer reported Sunday.
" The system right now is dis·
honest." said David Diroll, executive director of the Ohio Criminal
Sentencing Commission, an agency
fanned three years ago to overhaul
the state's handling of repeat
offenders and sentencing guide·
lines.
"There are some people some really, really bad people who need to be put in prison fer a
very long time. And often, that cannot and does not happen. There ane
some PP._S that need l'IXed."
Oh1o s 25 prisons are among the
most crowded in the counuy. They
were designed to hold 21,800
inmates but boused 40,121 in the
Ohio Deparunent of RehabUiJalion
and Correction's latest count,
released last month.
Jerome Kunkel, an assistant
Hamilion County prosecutor, lllid
be feels frustrated b'y a system that
allows repeat offenders to be freed.
"You obviously feel sorry for

the victim. People in the community , law-abiding citizens, assume
these kind of people are locked
up," Kunkel said.
" We do what we can to get
them convicted, but then they' re
out of our hands. With these kind
of people, it' s just a matter of time.
it seems, before you get them back.
again.''

Kunkel handled the case of Benjamin Blackwell, who was given
sho&lt;;k probation last month after
serving seven months of a threeiO
IS-year sentence.
In October 1992, Blackwell
walked into his suburban Lincoln
Heights home and beat his wife
after fmding her in bed with another man, the newspaper reported. As
her stepdaughter tried to call
police. Blackwell attacked her,
brcalcing her jaw and aeveral teeth.
He was convicted on two counts
of felonious assault
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge William .Mathews said
he granted shock probalion because
the original sentence was too
severe and Blackwell suffered
"mental battery" when he surprised bi5 wife.
. · Blackwell was coQvicted of a
1961 rape in New Mex.ico and a
1973 murder and assault in Colum-

bus

·

•;This is a $.UY who had three
felonies and sun escaped the system," Kunkel said. "That's one of
the ttagedies of the ase.''

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Hearings begin iri the Senate this
week on House-passed legislation
that would ban speaking fees for
lawmakers and require stricter
financial disclosure .fer public officials and lobbyists.
A three-member Senate subcommittee wUI take public testimonY. Tuesday and Wednesday on the
brll, which would req~ all public
officials to disclose annually the
source and amount of any outside
income.
Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincinnati, chairman or the subcommittee, said local government officials
and congressional representatives,
who are defoned as public officials,
would be affected by the bill.
"The bill is full of inconsistencies," Finan said. "The inconsistencies will have to be cleaned up,
or the legislators won't know what
the ethics law says."
Finan said he has no timetable
for completing action.
"I want to see what testimony
we get and what suggestions filter
through," he said.
Sena1e President Sta~~~ J.
Aronoff, R-Cincinnati. had · the

bill would yass in some form by
the end o the year but now
believes iI will not be ready until
January.
House members set out to ban
speaking. fees after allegations that
Rep. Paul Jones, D-Ravenna, used
his position as chairman of the
House Health and Retirement
Committee to attract $500 fees for
personal appearances with groups
mterested in health-care legislation.
Jones has denied any wrongdoing. He stepped aside temporarily
as chairman of the commiaee' and
asked the House Ethics Committee
for an investigation.
On Tuesday, a House-Senate
conference committee on campiugn
reform will continue deliberations
on increased disclosure, as well as
new spending and connibulion limrts.
''The campaign finance issue
has at its core the public's concern
that connibutors are improperly or
unduly affecting the outcome of
public policy," said Sen Roben
Cupp, R-Lima, the c~ of the
committee. "That's the Simc issue
that's pushing the ethics isSue.••

--Local briefs--commission to meet at 2 p.m.
The Meigs County Board of Commissioners will hold its weetty
meeting at 2 p.m. Wednesday instead of its normal time of 10 a.m
at the commission office in the Meigs County Cowthouse.
•

Man cited for DUI
A 23-year-old Athens man was cited to Meigs County Coun 011
charges of driving under the influence and left of center.
Mark A. Loeber was ciled after bein~ by Meigs CQunty
sheriff's deputies on State Route 7 near
.
This is Loeber's second arrest for om. the sherifrs depattmcnt
reported.

Deer-vehicle wrecks reported
Authorities irivestigated two deer-vehicle wrecks recently.
A Deparuncnt. of Natural RCSOW'CCS, Division of Parks, pickup
truek received modenle damage in a deer-vehicle collision on s R. ·
124 near Reedsville Thursday evening.
'
According 10 a n:port from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart.
men~ Dale C. Rockhold, Reedsville, was drivin~ when a deer ran
into the path of the 1989 Dodge truck. The collision occuned about
six-tenths of a mile from the enuance to Forked ~un State Park.
Tbe front grill and fender of a truck was damigod in a deer accident on Hiland Road lbout 7 Lm. Monday
·'
Pomeroy Police !liid thai. a Mid-Ohio ConlraC!OrS truck driven by
Jeffrey Munney of McConneisvillostruclt aild 1tilled a deer when it
ran across the road near the intersection of Hiland and Mulbelcy.

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