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                  <text>•

••

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Meigs shares TVC title -Page e1

Ceat:ling Gil
int:lepent:lent
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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

HI: 40&amp;

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Raiders shut out Blue Devils - Page e1

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-tty ounny Sundoy

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Gall ipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • November 3, 1996

'

•
•

•

oo

Yideo cameras, trespassing charges; Just another day on the
~ampaign trail in '96 edition of Cremeans, Strickland slugfest
about
southern
By JOHN SEEWER
rivalry:
Ohio,
I
don
't think
C(emeans describes his opponent - a former
l'••ocl•ted Pre•• Writer
they
care
about
• GALLIPOLIS (AP)- Break-ins and video camer;~S ­ Methodist minister - as ·anti-Christian, a friend to
Frank
Cremeans."
In another congressional district, that might make for inmates and a trespasser.
Political heavyStrickland jlas followed suit, calling Cremeans a hyp$candal. In Ohio's 6th District, it's just another day on
weights
have
ocrite
who
has
sold
out
his
constituents.
!he carnprugn trail.
stepped
in
to
help
The
district
is
cov~ted
by
both
parties
and
special
• Freshman Republican Rep. frank Cremeans faces
both
sides.
Democrat Ted Stric.kland in Tuesday's election for a seat · interest groups. Both candidates are getting more than
that could help determine which party will control the half of their money from outside the district. Special -- In the past two
interests and other well 'heeled backers have reimbursed weeks , Democrats
U.S. House.
'
·
; Two years ago, Cremeans won the district that covers Cremeans for $451,023 in personal loans he gave his have sent first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton and Tipper
Gore, the vice president's wife, to southern Ohio,
inost of southern Ohio by just 3,401 votes, knocking own campaign. ·
"The special interests do not want to lose this seat," Republicans have countered with House Majority
:Otrickland out of Congress after one term. That began
Strickland said in an interview. "I don't think they care Leader D1ck Armey of Texas and former Vice President
what has become a spirited - and sometimes nasiy -

Vol. 31, No. 39

Dan Quayle.
At times, t11e accusations and
actions from both camps have
bordered on the bizarre.
Strickland, 55, has shown up
at his opponent's appearances
· with a video camera. Sometimes, Strickland admitted, he
kept pointing the -camera even
after it ran out of film ,
Cremeans, 53, accused his
opponent of breaking into his
concrete supply I,usiness.
Strickland called the accusation
ridiculous.
Both candidates say the ·.
sideshow atmosphere surround- .
ing the campaign has taken the ·
spotlight away from what really
matters.·
Strickland thinks Cremeans'
is trying to draw attention away from the issues with
negative messages.
Not so, counters Cremeans: "I hav.e repeatedly tried
Continued on page A2

·Taft forecasts low vote statewide

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tentative national
contract Saturday

.Jt

DETR9fl' (AP) - General
Motors and the United Auto
Workers reached a tentative
national contract Saturday, but
strikes at plants in Wisconsin and
lndiana will continue until their
local issues are resolved.
Despite the national agreement, UAW President Stephen
, there c~uld ,be
'''~li·l~· •·• if OM does not
resollve the backlog
dis~&gt;utes at many of its 123 .UAW
•Page AI

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ARC gr~nts gear
area for high-tech

GOP
. Oomocnd

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GOP

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·COLUMBUS - Southeast
Ohio is going high-tech as four
local technology projects were
iacluded in the 30 Appalachian
Ohio projects approved for $4
million in funding from · the
Appalachian Regional Commis;
sion.
Li. Gov, Nancy Hollister
described the projects as "cooperative effons of local, state and
federal resources .. , This funding
is key to improving the economic
development
climate
in
Appalachian Ohio, thus affording
residents and businesses the
resources needed for prosperity
an4 gmwth."
• Page A3.
\

Md!!nr!!f-0' ... -

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Good Morning

PJk:e!.D

Shllpe Avs. Oevirfo.O .
a

ThoiU!t&gt;ot'CJI-.... taslince 1988:

Today'a Chad-~
17 Se&lt;tlons·17

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Ca!egdan
Clppifieds
Comics

C4
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Editoriel¥

A4

Qbltuaries
Sports

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81-8
A2

WeatbCr

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Impact of lo·cal races
may l,ead to heavy
turn-out on Tue$day

Columns

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

Jack Andenon
Doli HosD!cb

~~~~~!;. ,

...... .....

Jim S•rnls

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Dorothy S•vre
Sam WU.On

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B6

0 1996 Ohio Vnlley Publishina Co,

M

RVHS class focuses
on acceptance of
cultural differences
By KEVIN KELLY
Tlm...sentlnel Staff
,
'CHESHIRE - For.River Valley High School English.teacher Kristy'Woodall, her, elective class on the
Holocaust is not so much about one of mankin~s dark~\.CJ:ulpt~ Put abo)i.t,tracbiPg tqlel'llllGI;. and ~''Jl.Hf
tlonce of other cuiiiJli:S "'' ·• ~---" -· ' ~ •.
Woodall was nam.ll a' Mandel ·Fellow· .6 f the tf.s: ·
Holocaust Memorial Museum this year, allowing her
· to expand on her class. She hopes to obtain grants ~nd
fu~d workshops so that other teachers and the community may consider her "Holocaust and Tolerance" unit
as an educational tool.
Eventually, Woodall hopes to bring the pr(&gt;gram to
e~ucators throughout southern Ohio.
"I don't profess to be an expert, or a representative
of the museum. The mission is to get this into the community," she said.
The cl36s, taught during River Valley's second
semester, started th~ee . years ago, .but Woodall said her
interest in . Nazi Germany's systematic elimination of
Jews, as ·well as other racial and religious types the
Nazis found undesirable, stretches back almost two
decades when, as a substitute teacher she began assign.
ing "The Diary of Anne Frank'' to students.
"Anne Frank" had remained part of her student
reading list for years. But Woodall said she became
interested in the period and concerned with the rise of
neo-Nazi movements in the U.S. and overseas, leading
her to collect articles, newspaper clippings and related
materials.
Her research led lo her to the Holocaust Museum ,
and this past summer she was one of 25 educators to be
pa11,1cd a Mandel 'Fellow through the museum .
Woodall's trip to the museum to accept the fellowship,
funded by the Cleveland-based Mandel Associated
Foundations, also provided her with more resources
forthe class.
.
On the local level, Woodall said she looks to prepare her students to travel .tp Oallia County Local
Schools elementaries .and make presentations on prejudice and tolerance.

PROBING DIVERSITY - ..River Valley High
School teacher Krlaty Woodall, aeen In one of her
English classes, uses her elective class on the
Holocauat to teach students dbout cultural dlvaral·
ty and tolerance.
•·
' The class has made an impact on students who were
either unaware of the Holocaust or felt it was too far
back in time to be concerned with today, Woodall said.
It has also had a sobering effect on students nearly
insensitized to violence. through television and other
media, Woodall said, as they discover the extent of
.atrocities that occurred prior to and before World War
II.
''They almost .find it unbelievable." she added. "I
use it as my springbOard, but what I want to teach is
tolerance.
'
·
· "We're all so alike here," Woodall added . "We cat
this and do that, so a lot of it is learning about cultural
differences. We really get into a lot of discussions ,
Continued on page A2·

•

GALLIPOLIS- Although a record 6.8 million Ohioans are registered to
vote in Tuesday's election, just 69 percent of them are likely to do so, Secretary of State Bob ·Taft said
. ...
..
. ;;;;rr;•:;::;i"i:.:J;'l!m
Thursday.
.. Local election officials, however; foresee a potentially large
turnoUt in Oallia and !vfeigs coun·
ties, given the significunce
l'I'Veral c®nty-w~ ti\C,OS
,. the :local\ implic:t ' on the healteil
ra'ce fdr .representation in the 6th .
ConBe.ssiO!lal District.
"~e's a lot of interest by·
voters b\lcause of the presidential.
election, but the big draw for
voter interest locally is primarily
the county office races, state representative race, and the U.S,
·Sixth District House race," said
Rita Smith, director of the Meigs
County· Board of Elections.
"We e&lt;pect a. heavy voter
turnout on Tuesday which, coupled with the heavy absentee
_
vote, could produce a record voter turnout iri the county," Smith said,
•
With President Clinton maintaining his 10 point or mote lead in receni :
statewide polls over Republican candidate Bob Dole, turnout is not expect- •
ed to be a factor in deciding Ohio's.21 electoral votes.
:
But turnout could have huge implications in a number of other races,
including the bitterly-fought campaign between freshman Congressman .
Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis , and the man he beat narrowly for the seat in •
1994; Dcmocratic challenger Ted Strickland of Lucasville,
:
For Strickland to win narrowly as he did by 3,000 votes in 1992, he must :
squeeze a huge number of votes out of Athens County, a Democratic-strong- •
hold.
·
:
· Strickland himself acknorledged the imponan&gt;e of turning out the coun- ·
ty's vote, in remarks following Hillary Clinton's Athens address last week. _
"It's very, very critical (the Athens vote). If you look at the student vote
in 1992 compared to 1994, the fall off was right around 35 percent, so obviously it's very important to my chances."
.
. According to Athens County Board of Elections Dlroctor Kathy Bennett,
voter turnout is expected to exceed 1992 numbers by around I ,500 votes for
a total over 28,000.
However, a large Athens turnout could be cancelled out by the vote from
Continued on page A2

AEP instal.ls new c~mputer system at Meigs Mine
SALEM' CENTER- State-of-the-art computer technology
is now at work controlling and monitoring operations at American Electric Power'! Meigs Coal Preparation .Plant.
AEP hopes the new system will enable the Meigs Coal
Preparation Plant to clean a projected record 6,3 million clean
tons of Ohio coal by the_end of the year, up from 'a record S-8
million tons in 1995, according to Mike Lively, superintendent
of surface relations.
The plant, which ?pened inrJ974, cleans and processes
some 2,200 tons of Oh10 per hour produced from AEP's Meigs .
.No: 2 arid 31 and sends the clean coal via conveyor to AEP's
Gavin Plant in Cheshire, about 10 miles away.
The new control system, consisting of a Modicon Quantum
model Programmable Logic Controller (PLC) and four personal computers, was installed in mid Septen1ber. The system
replaces a computer system installed in 19~2 that was slower,
took up more space, provided less information , and had far less

fault tolerance.
A single PLC with. a 486 processor running at 66 MHz, all
housed within a lunchbox-sized package, .is used by the new
control system, This replaces 12 Modicon model 384 Pj..Cs.
each the si~c of a suitcase,
· "We 've replaced a roomful of equipment with one .PLC to
handle :he entire function of the plant," said Lively.
The computer system regulates the performance of each
operating component in the plant
.
. .
The age olthe ongmal system and the decreasmg ava11ab1lity of parts for it drove the decision to replace it, Lively said.
Control room operators receive data updates on the three
computer monitors once every one to one-and-a-half seconds .
The computer system monit ors and controls more than 350
interlocking drive and control systems in the plant, which is
one of the largest coal preparation plants in the United States ,
Three video monitors show processes as they occur.

NEW COMPUTER.SYSTEM- Dan Rolllna, left, and Dick
Dailey, control room operators at the Melga Coal Preparation Plant, mo11ltor the new computer ayatem at the plant.
The system replac11 ona that waa Installed 14 years ago
and Ia designed to help the plant run more smoothly and
efficiently.

eigs County ~fficials deny accusations of c:riminal misconduct
By TOM 1-fUNTER
Tlm•a-&amp;entlllll Staff
• POMEROY - Court affidavits have been filed In
· Meigs County Court all~ging c_riminal 11_11sconduct b!
nine Meigs County individuals mvolvcd tn the lnvest:gation, prosecution. and drug conv.cllon of a former
Pomeroy attorney,
,
.
.
.
The allegations, l~vted agamst Mcogs County Prosecuting Attorney John Lentes, assistant prosecutor Chris
Tenaglia, former assistant prosecutor Charles Knight ,
former prosecutor's onvesugator Gary Wolfe, Mctgs
County Sheriffs Deputy Danny Lco~ard., and three other
individ4als. were stated in court atl1dnv!ts filed by former Pumcroy attorney o. Michael Mullen and his broth-

-

cr. Brian 0 . Mullen, in the Meigs County Court oi',Judgc election, I do not believe that my opponent had anything
to do with this. This is purely an attempt by a criminal to
Patrick H. O'llrien.
interfere
with the elections proces~," Lentes-said.
"I think that the charges are meritlcss. Mr. Mulo en
In
1994,
D. Mkhael Mullen was found guilty of four
was convicted and sent to prison for a number of
heinous crimes involving his providing drugs to girls. charges of corrupting another with drugs , after providing
aged II and 13, ,at his residence , These charges arc un drugs to two g~rls, ages II and 13, at his Pomeroy resi·
attempt by Mr. Mullen to get back at a prosecutor. Sim- dtftcc. Mullen was also charged with one count each of
ilarly. we believe :hat Brian Mullen's an1davits may aggravated menacing and contributing to the delinq~enhave been filed in response to a previous convi~:tion cy of a minor. which were later dropped .
Since hi s conviction. Mullen has acted as his own
related to his possession (_If a nrcarm earlier this ~car at
legal
counseL He has filed several motions •for a new
Veterans Memorial Hospital." Lcntcs said Saturday
tri»l.
stalin¥
that he ha~ nc)ll evidence proving someone
morning,
else
comm&gt;Ucd
the cnmc. All motions for a new trial
"The timing of these .,ncg&lt;~tions, is purely political.
with the liling of the ul11duvits only four doys he fore the havc been denied hy the Meigs County Common Pleas

.•

A--· - -

Court and the.Ohio Court of Appeals.
·
Mullen was sentenced to prison following the trial,
but was released on Aug. II. 1995, Since his release, he
has been continuing investigative work on the incident,
· according to statements made by Mullen in a July 1996
court brief.
Mullen charges in the affidavits that Lentes committed four felony counts of kidn~pping , two felony counts
of abduction, and a T)lisdemeanor count of intimidation
of a crime victim or witness 'during the course of D.
Michael Mullen's arrest and criminal investigation.
Mullen is currently serving probation time related to
his drug conviction. Part of the terms of Mullen's probaContinued on page A2

�Page A2 •..

, I IJ!

a. ,..

Sunday, November

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleaNnt, wv

.. 11 I

Regional

.Jiovtmber 3, 11196

Ohio weather

Officials deny charges brought by convicted feloJl
Contlnuld from J11111e A1
lion are that he is not to be UIOCiat·
ed with the viclims or the victims'
family. according to court documents~

Other individuals mentioned in
the court affidavits filed Friday
afternoon include the victims' stepfather, and the parents of a minor
who did not tes\ify at lhe Mullen
trial.
Similar allegations of misconduct
by Lentes and other officials during
the investigation were brought forward by Mullen in .a 1995'motion for
a new trial, which was denied by
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
Presiding Judge Dan W. Favreau of
Morgan County.
"The Court specifically finds that
there were no aclions o" the Prosecutor's Office or the Sht .-ifrs Office
either at trial or pretri&lt;tt, including
those raised in the Jictition by lhe
defendant. that prejudice the Defen·
dant's right to a fair trial. The court
specifically finds the issues raised
by the Defendant would have had no
effect on the outcome of this lrial to
the bench and therefore this petition
is denied," Favreau slated in the
court brief filed April 17, 1995.
D. Michael Mullen also alteged
in Friday's affidavit filings that for·
mer assistanl prosecutor Charles
Knight knowingly committed several felony violatiof)s during_the inves·
ligation including intimidation,
complicity, and attempted bribery.
, Knight arid fanner prosecutor's
investigator Gary Wolfe, who is

ter urn 0 ut

\YI 10

~-

heavily Republican Warren County,
where tumoul is also predicted lo he
somewhat higher lhan in 1992,
according to Warren County Board
·of Elections Director Beverly
Moore.
•
Another crucial county for turnout
could he Gallia, where Cremeans
. lives. Absentee ballot requests in the
county .are down at least 30 percent
froml992, and turnotil is.expected-to
be ·off by some 25 percent, said Gallia Coonty Board of Elections Director Jeff Halley.
If Taft's prediction holds true, that
would he the lowest percentage in a

. -

presidential election in at least 20
years. In 1988, 72 percent of
Ohioans registered •voted in the
George Bush-Michael Dukakis race.
Four ye,ars ago, a· record 77 percent
of registered voters 'chose Clinton
over Bush and Ross Perot in Ohio.
Perot's appeal- he drew 20 percent
of the vote - helped push the per ~
cenlage to lhat rocord. Taft said.
Taft said local races also will affect
overall turnout. In addition to picking candidates, Ohioans statewide
will vote for 1,067 tax levies, 56
bond issues and .275 miscellaneous
issues.

I :02 p.m., Main Slreet, Daniel~­
POMEROY- Unilll of the Meigs
County Emeogency Medical .Service Hill, Veterans Memorial Hospital;
I:30 p.m .. Village Green Apartrecorded JO calls for assistance Friment 2 I. Beverly Hill, Pleasant Valday. Units responding included:
ley Hospital;
POMEROY
5:30 p.m., West Main Street,
9:14 a.m., 1542 Nye Ave., Jolin
motor
vehicle accident , Staesha
Beaver; did not treat;
Kennedy and Jessie Davis, VMH,
treated and released;
·
11:51 p.fll., Spring Avenue and ·
East Main, Corner Bar, Jenny Hall,
VMH, treated and released.
SYRACUSE
. POMEROY -1Wo vehicles were
9:23 a.m.• 1542 Nye Ave., John
damaged and four persons suffered
Beaver,
VMH;
minor injuries in an accidenl- mi
S:38
p.m. West Main Street,
West Main Slreet Friday evening.
Pomeroy,
motor vehicle accident,
Pomef\Jy Police reponed thai a car
Herdman
and Betty Riggs,
Sherry
o1riven by Betty Riggs, Pomeroy, was
VMH.
lreated
and
released:
stopped in traffic when it was struck
.
COLUMBIA TWP.
from behind by a vehicle operated by'
5:56p.m.
Dyesville, chininey fire
Eric White, Pomeroy. He was
at
Carl
Woodyard
home, no injuries;
charged with failure to maintain
State
Farm Road, tree
7:19p.m.
ass~red clear distance._
f
ire.
'
, Riggs and her three passengers.
RUTLAND
Jessie Davis, Sherry Herdman and
8:33 p.ll)., State Roule 143, motor
Staesha Kennedy, Were transported
vehicle
accident, Nancy Davis, Medby the Pomeroy and Syracuse-squads
Fiight
to
University Hospital. Colum10 Veterans Memorial Hospital,
bus.y;here they were lreated and released.
' There was heavy damage to the
front end of the White vehicle, and
light to the rear of the Riggs car.

Two-car crash
leaves four hurt

.,

Tolerance

Continued from page A1
-------------------"I would urge 0hioans to look
beyond the presidential election and
look to the very important downticket · races. ... · There are many,
many decisions that will affect the
quality of .life in every community
across the staie of Ohio," Taft said.
He said the riverboat casinos issue
should bring out mQre voters in
counties where the casinos would.do
business - Cuyahoga, Hamilton,
. Lorain and Mahoning.

Continued from page A1
some of them pretty lively."
The class affected one of
Woodall's pa_st students so much it
has altered her career outlook.
"I! was unreal. I had no idea what
went on before thai class," said
Kendra Diddle, now a freshman C:le·
mentary education major at the Uni·
versity of Rio Grande.
.
The class, and a trip she took to
Washington sponsored by a local
church for volunteers in which they
slept in a "burch and worked in a
soup kitchen , prompted her to want
to work with the poor and homeless.
Diddle read Elie Wiesel's Holocausl memoir "Night" during
Woodall's class, and the report she
produced on the hook earned her a
Martin Essex award for ci&lt;JssrOom
.excellence.
"It tolally changed niy life," Did·
die said. "The class, the trip and a
visit to the museum led me ori the
path I chose to work on. missionary
work.",
Woodall sl res sed I hat the class
doesn't focus on the oppression of Jews', but on all people who arc subjected to prejudice. Additionally, she
encourages children to think about
the consequences of blind obedience
that was required in the Third Reich.
"It's not that! teach kids 10 question authority, but to ask if these
actions are morally right," she said.
"The big excuse at the Nurernburg
trials was t.hat they were just'following orders."
.
Woodall said she plans to share
the museum materials with a River
Vafiey 20th century history class
being laugh! by Luis Sheets.
"There are so many facets of
learning in 1his," Woodall said.
"That's whatllike about it."

Continued from pege A1
to focus on the real issues." he said.
Bu1 the rancor has deepened as
lilection Day approaches.
This week, the Cremeans cam·
paign began running radio ads
depicting a fictitious meeting of
uprisoncrs fur Strickland."
The ads take aim at comments
Strickland, a psychologist at the
Southern Ohio Correctional Facility
before runmng for Congress. made
during the 1993 SOCF riot that left a
guard and nine prisoners dead.
The ad, in which the bogus
inmales cheer repeatedly when told
that Stricklanil has worked to get
them governrnenl perks, includes
audio of Strickland 1saying: "l',rn
concerned about guarll hostages but
I'm really concerned about the
inmates."
.
He admits he made the statement
on the third day of the standoff but
complained thai. Cremeans took it
out of context.
"He ,said a1 an editorial board
.;eeting that this is politics.... Well,
l say bullcrap, lhis i ~ character
assassination,:• Strickland respond·
ed.
Cremeans has called his opponent "anti-Christian" because he
received H,500 from Americans
United for Separation of Church and
State. Strickland had participated in
a debate the group. sponsored.
"! regret sometimes that ,I have

been distracted," CI"""Mt • said,
hastily addin1 that he's not 10 bllme";
- the "media has eaten ·the fDCUS •
away from the real iuucs."
'
What matters most 10 the people ~
of the poverty-stricken district is •:
jobs and' the economy. Spread out :over the Appalaehian foothills and :
along the Ohio Rlver, it includes •:
eighl of the 10 poorest counties in !·
Ohio.
_.
Il's an area where roadside veg· :
etable stands outnumber grocery :
stores and the people are u-aditional· \
ly conservative.' Slrickland was the :;
only Democrat they have sent to :
Congress in the last 36 years.
:
Income levels are below the slate ·
average, and 13 pe(Cent of the resi- ~
dents are age 65 or older.
.,
Philosophically, .the candidates:
are polar opposites.
,
Cremeans, a self-made million· ::.
aire, believes in less gov~mment, &lt;
lower taxos and less environmental:
regulations. He thinks people are ·:
responsible for their own well·:being.
.Slrickland, a psychology teacher-:
who graduated from seminary:•
school. believes constituentS need\
government help. He thinks pro-;:
grams such as the Medicare, Medic-,:
aid, and the local Appalachian1• '
Regional Commission shouldn't be;:·
targets of budget cutters.
·:

Tri-County Briefs:-- ARC projects help gear area for high-tech
By AARON MARSHALL

Grant application available for review

CAA schedules public hearing ·.
CHESHIRE- Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will conduct
a pubhc hearmg at the Guiding Haud School (Gallco Workshop) on fri·
day: Nov. 8 at I p.m. to 'ohcit input on community needs in Gallia and
Meogs counues.
An election to ljll &gt;~&gt;digent vacancies on CAA's Board of Directors.for
1997 will al so be held.
.
·

Township to vote on renewal levy
,

ADDISON -. Addison Township trustees are reminding residents that
they will vote on the renewal of a three-tenths of a mill levy for fire protection in Tuesday's election.
The toral tax is the same amount residents have paid for the past twe
. years, trustees said.
·

, Hours extended for RED advising
· . RIO GRANDE - Hours have been extended for the University ofkio
Grande/Rio Grande Community College's Evening Degree Program spe. cial advising session, set for Tuesday in Room 115 at the Emerson E. Evans
"College of Business Management.
· The new hours are 4-8 p.m.
Krishna Kool, Ph.D., Rio Grande professor of economics and RED
coordinator, will be available to advise current RED students and new stu·
dents who want to enro11 in winter quarter classes.
,
RED, introduced two years ago, is geared for adults who want to take
evening classes toward an associate degree in accounting, business man. agement aftd microcompuier applications in business. Classes toward a
bachelor's degree program in business management will be continued for
• those who started 'the program.
.
.
, Winter quarter regislration for all RED programs will continue until
Jan. 2, 1997. For more infomtation, call 245-7267.

'·

.,
.,

:

ROCK SPRINGS - The election of members to the Meigs County Agri.:·
cultural Society Board will be held Monday from 5-9 p.m. at the secretary's::
offi~e on the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
:
MeigS County residents with membership tickets are eligible to vote far::
candidates 10 fill the five three-year terms and the single one-year unexpired-:
term on the ballot.
•
·
The candidates on the board seeking re-election are Virgil Windon, Jim :
Watson, Carolyn Ritchie. Kenny Buckley and Rick Koblentz. ·Other candi-::
dates for the five open seats are Jennirlgs Beegle, Bob Calawa:(and Jini :
Sheets.
Running for the unexpired tenn is Brent Rose, who was appointed to the :·po,sition last year when an elected member resigned.
·

· Rio Grande sets leaf pickup dates

RIO GRANDE 1. Leaf pickup for the village of Rio Grande will be
Monday, Nov. 4 and Monday, Nov. II. village officials said.
• Residents are ~.;ked to bag their leaves and have them at the curb.
·

.Immunizations slated for Monday
GALLIPOLIS ·- Free immunizations for children will he provided by
the Gallia County Health Department in the courthouse lobby Monday
from 4-6 p.m.
Children in need of immunizations should bring a current immunization record with them and be accompanie&lt;\ by a parent.
No llu vaccine will be available al this clinic.
· .,

~SECURITY

Woman injured in accident 'fair'

State Farm has the hjghest
financial strength ratings from
. A.M. Best-A++
'MOODY'S-Aaa
Standard and Poor's-AAA
~eiss Research-A+

IG

CARPENTER -A Langsville woman was listed in fair condition Sat· ·
urday at Ohio Srate University Hospilals, Columbus, with injuries received
in a one-car accident friday on County Road 10 (Dexter): .·
Nancy A. Davis, 48, 37584 folden Road, was lransported from the
scene by MedFiight, the Gallia-Meigs Post of ihe State Highway Patrol

.

rppo~.

.

.

Affordable, sensible life insurance
to fit your needs.

....

fYSERVICE

EB

l am just a working man, l came from a very large poor family. We had

Company!Gannett Co.. Second clan postage

K!Cond clan mailing rruJttu at Pomeroy, Ohio,

.

PostOffice.

f

· 342 Stco•d Ave.
hlllpolls, Ollllo
Plio• 446~290

·

Member: The Assoclated Press, and the Ohio
Newspaper Auociation.
SUNDAY ONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S

By C~rrter or Motor Routt
One Week................................................ $1.25
One Year ............................ ..................... $65.00

have more lax revenue to better support any organization that needs help.

:~

announced.

No subscriptions by mail permitted In

"area~

where mo1or carrier servloe is available.

STATE FARM UFE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home Office: Bloomington, lllinois

The Sunday11me~ -Sentinel will not be: responsible for advance payments made to Clllrien.

THE KOLBE AMENDMENT TO BILL NUMBER 1-530 WAS VOTED ON JUNE 14, 1995
,_

O.lly and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Imide C..Uia County
Wceks ...................................... ........... $27.30
Wceks ....................................... .... ......SS3.82
Weeks ............... ................. ...............$ I OS .56
Rain Outskle Gallla Counly

,.'

1

•

Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$421.310.
The 131 Buckeye 5 game tickets
with four of the numbers are ~ach
worth $250. The 4,636 with three of
the numbers are each worth $10.
· In Pick 4 Numbers, players
wagered $416,745 and will share
$125,700.
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
Lotto drawing was $8 million.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily3: S-1 ·5
Daily 4: 4-5-3-7
Cash 25: 1-5-7-8: 11·25

SINGLE COPV PRICE
Sunday ......................... ...... .... ,........,....... .$1.00

StateFarmSellsLifelnsurance.

said.

two children. Jenny and Tony, and
live in Addison·Township.
Boothe became a cooperator with
the Gallia SWCD in 1980. He owns
90 acres in Gallia County. and rents
an additional 50 acres. He has
approximately 45 head of callle and
runs a cow-calf operation His primary crops include around 4 acres of
tobacco, plus cover crops, pasture
and hay ..
He has completed three acres of
multi-flora rose control and four
spring developments. He has been
improving
. his pastures through rota·
tional grilling, and has recently completed a long tenn agreement on 33.8
acres of pasture and hayland
improvements
He was named the 1994-95
Goodyear Outstanding Cooperator by
the district. Boothe is a math teacher
and counselor at South Gallia High
School, and a member on the board
of directors of the Gallia County
Tobacco Association.
He also is a member of the Gallia
County Local Education Association,
Ohio Education Association and
National Education Msociation. He,
along with his wife Joyce, and their
three sons, Todd, Breu and Jarre,
have been farming for 17 years.

.

Crisenbery moved to Gallia Coun·
ty from soulhwestem Indiana in May
1981, and staned managing the Butler hereford farm along State Route
7. '
The farm consists of 675 acres of
which 250 are tillable. Crops include
corn, soybeans •. barley rye, wheat,
oa1s and alfalfa hay, with heavy
emphasis on no-tilll planting.
The farm participated in a rnultatlora rose control program with the
Gallia SWCD. They run around 280
head of canle, including registered
homed cattle, including registered
homed here fords. and a small herd of
Angus and Angus/ Shorthorn Cross.
He takes part in an intensive grazing

program in cooperation with OSU ..
Extension Office.
Crisenbery serves as director for
the Ohio Hereford Association, is a
member of the Ohio Ca!tleman's
Association. a member and past
director for the Gallia Caukrnan 's
Association, and was a 4-H advisor,
for I0 years.
,
He and his wife Donna are the
parents of three children, Leslie, ·
. Bobby and Amy.
Tickets for the banquet are $5 and
can be purchased at the district office.
Ill Jackson Pike, Suite 1569, Gal· lipolis. For more infonitation, contact
the office a1 446-868.7.

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Maaon Bridge

!192·25Be
VINTON
O.ttla County Dllpley Yard
155MalnSt

388-8603

Celebrate National Home ·Care Month! !
Attend the

e Care Fair

VMH
•

Thursday, November .7 • · 1 0 am to 2 pm
Pomeroy Public Library
Sponsored by Veterans Memorial Hospital's Home Health Services

Door Prizes

Display

ELECt

-·•·

BIOS.COU

........ ,... ....
-Round -Emerald
•Princess -oval

SAYE10•20%
141 :1011 CHAIIS
&amp; IUCELETS

."

san50·70%

CHRISTMAS lEAR$ IEING lORN DAILY AND
, tffW ARIIVALS DAllY ON OIIISfMAS ACaSSOIIESI
• lrdJ (JI

SAYI 20•40%
01 WATCIES All

, 11r•l ,JIIA'•

Congressman Cremeans voted to have prisoners do construction.work on federal proj.ects, free of charge.
.

·r~.o.a
r !c;;

.

GREAT. YOUR HOUSE IS ROBBED AND YOU'RE PUT OUT OF A JOB ... ALL BY THE SAME GUY.

422 IICOID Aft.
MUJPOUI,HIO

,

'

"

l 1 'fl

1

1[1!lf 'lll'lfl lfl 1!1/di

,J ,\l1kLI

(),'i\j,IITI

lliJIT[ [)

• .' .Bear CcJrrlJt1ny
Ohi? RiJer 253 "·a-nd Awn~•

At ~r ~ l.ooi!IOn

10.6 Mon.-s.t. ·

5019

~jr\ 1 '•

\A/l.fJLI

Mlcld~, OH 45780

614-992-4055

Egerleneed

Effeetive

Committed

- Meigs County Prosecuting
Attorney. (1989·1993)
- 17 years practicing law In Meigs
County
- Former Solicitor, Village of
Middleport
- Graduate of Meigs High School
- Ohio State University Graduate
- Member Committee to Evaluate
Ohio State Supreme Court
Candidates 1990, 1~· 1994
- Ohio State .Bar Association Legal
Ethics and Responsibility
Committee
- Ohio State Bar Association

- Started first Multi-County Anti·
Drug Task Force
- Most drug prosecutions in Meigs
County History prosecuted
during my term as Prosecuting
'
\
:Attorney
--: Largest Delinquent Land Tax
ForeclOsure In co1.1nty history
- Prosecuted and obtained
conviction on biggest thief in
county history, who stole o.ver ,
' '
$500,00 In Meigs, Vinton and
Athens County. Thief received ·
19-40 years In prison.

- Route 33 Corridor Committee
Chairman

.,

••

- Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce • Board of Dlrectoli6
- Sixth Generation Meigs Countian
- Served seven years on the
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Board of Directors
- Served on Meigs·Tuberculosis
Board
-

N~ Member·

Rated "A"

10/22!96

Pd. for by c.ndld•t•; 236 Wt•t Second Str..t

South
it

•

I

,' I

"The Miracle of Home Care ...
Uniting Caring &amp; Technology''

=~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::fS::~

w. ...,. •., .....,.

I'

·

;

The following numbers were_selected in Friday's Ohio and West Vtrginia
lotteries: ·
OHIO
Pick 3: 8-6-2
Pick 4:7-0-4-2
Buckeye 5: 1-11-22-26-37
No Ohio Lonery phiyer came up
with the right five-number combina·
lion in Buckeye 5, so no one can
claim the SI00,000 prize, the lottery

paid at Oallipolis, Ohio "563 I. Entered as

Caroll Snowden, Agent

lion for Marietta Schools.
The two grants received by Mari·
etta College " 'II both go towards get·
ling area busu.esses online. A grant o(
$74,835 will aid 30 southeast OhiQ,
companies in developing horne pages
to market products internationally
over lhe lnler Net. said the lnterna·
tiona\ Trade Assistance Center's
director Emerson Shimp.
The grant will also allow the college to give the businesses support
staff, e-mail accounts and links to
other sites on lhe Inter Net. The sec-·
ond grant -of $9500 will allow 25 .
southeast Ohio companies to get a
presence on IBEX, the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce lnler Net site, Shimp .

By The Associated Pres• ·

(USPS 525-1001

to conserve everything we had to make a living. Working together meant

Co... fofiiJHy'S

Tawiey Jewelers

GALLIPOLIS- Three landowners in Gallia County are candidates
for the two posilions to be filled on
the Gallia County Soil and Water
Conservation District's Board of
Supervisors during an election at the
annual meeting and awards banquet
on Thursday, Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. at
Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The candidates are Mike Hughes,
Cody Boothe and Jay Crisenbery. ·
Hughes, along with his father
Ray, has a 60 cow dairy farm, plus a
30 head cow-calf operation and feeds
out 50 head of beef. To help feed
these animalS, Hughes raises corn.
hay and whe;tt. Tobaeco is also raised
as a cash crop.
Hughes' no-till plants much of the
corn acreage, while using mipimum
till planting on the wheat acreage.
Grass water ways hav.e been installed
on cropland where needed. The addi·
lion of thousands of feet of sub-surface drainage has increased the overall production of the crops.
Hughes has served on the Soil and
Water board for 12 years. He is also
a member of the Addison United
Methodist Church, the Galli a County Farm Bureau . and Gallia County Tobaeco Association.
Hughes and his wife Debbie have

Lottery numbers
Published each Sunday 82S Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the ohio Valley Publishing

survival.lo us. I am running for County Cummissioner, because I have been
fortunale enough to live in Gallia County and make a living. Sometimes. I
had to make my own jobs. but I survived. Now I think it is time to pay
something back to the people of this county.
·
·
We need to support our Senior Citizens. We 1•eed to support our Veterans.
Now it i~ time we suppart our tax payers. The only way we can do that is to.
alft-act business, industry., and jobs. We need to expldre any avenue thal will
altract business and induslry to this area.J1verylhing revolves _around taxes.
If. we can creale more jobs and get more people in the work force, we will

School for computer equipment and
two grants to Marieua College's
Small Business Development Center/lnternational Trade Assislance
Center.
The career center will receive
S15,000 that will be u~ed 10 purchase
19 computers for students in various
classes to use, said Lisa Wagner, tech·
nology coordinator and business
instructor for the center. $50,000 in
grant money will go 10 Marietta College's high sc hool technical educa·
tion classes.
The malching grant will buy a
variety of equipment including Computer Assisted Design Equipment,
special computers used by students in
simulating design and drafting, said
Henry Fleming, director of instruc-

Three candidates. vie for seats on SWCD board -

•

'•

For life insui-ance backed by good
neighbor service, see your nearby
State Farm agent today.

the grants totaling $467,236.
1be largest of the four technology related grants, was a $85,351
award that went to the Was hi ng(&lt;!n
County Information Technology
Group, a coalition of business and
education leaders in the area.
Ed Holzatfel, Washington Srate Community College's vice president for
administrative services. said the money will go towards developing an
'''on-ramp" to the informatioq superhighway, which could be accessed by
area residents.
He said the project is still 18
months to 2 years away from being
off the ground and running.
Other technology grants included
$65,000 to the Washington County
Career Center and Marieua High

'

'

OIDWIDI.?

IIACI IILLS IOU

COLUMBUS - Southeast Ohio
is going high-tech as four local technology projects were included in the
30 Appalachian Ohio projects
approved for $4 million in funding
from li)e Appalaehian Regional Com·
mission.
'These ARC projects represent the
cooperative efforts of local, state and
federal resources," said Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister in a news release.
''This funding is key to improving the
economic development climate in
Appalachian Ohio, thus affording
residents and . ' businesses the
resources needed for prosperity and
growth," said the Marietla native.
Seven local projects were included in

, Davis was westbound al 8:i0 p.m. when she failed to st9p for a.s!op .
sign at State Route 143, crossed the state highway and struck an embank·
ment, according to the report.
The accident remains under investigation, lroopers said.

fYPRODUCTS

tANIIIAft FOR

My job takes me to all points of this coumy, in so me places, I see tax
money well used. Yet in other. places I see lax money-wasted. Who would
know the needs of this county better than me?
I will work hard for lhe people of Giollia County. Your vote and support
wi II be appreciated.
tor the
2126 Hazel

G•nnett New• Service

GHESHIRE - A Community Services Block: Grant application !or
1997 prepared by Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will be available for review between Tuesday and No,. 15.
A copy of the application can be reviewed ai CAA offices in Cheshire.
Comments on the application should be received by CAA no later than
Nov. 15. The corn'llents will be forwarded to the Ohio Depanment of
Deve)opment's O'ffice of Community Services.
.
CAA administers the block grant for Gallia and Meigs counties. The
grant provodes funding for a number of services to low-income residents.

•,

Fair Board election set Monday

SHIRLEY
.

EMS u_n,its answer 1d calls

Wll!ftllll

Weather fore&lt;ost:
Sunday.. .Morning clouds and
lingering snow showers northeast
early... Then becoming partly sunny. Partly to mostly sunny else·
where. Highs from 40 to 45 north
and mid and upper 40s south.
Sunday night...Mostly clear.
Lows generally in the upper 20s
·and lower 30s.
· Mon&lt;;lay ... M~stly su nny and
wanner.

charged with an alleged count of section 2935.10, upon the filing of
complicity during the investigation, an affidavit, the judge shall forthissued a brief joint statement on the with refer the maner to the prosecuting anorney or other attorney
allegation£ late Saturday morning:
"! won't give Don Michael. charged by law with prosecution for
Mullen's lies credibility by respond- investigation J&gt;rior to the issuance of
ing to them. I will state that I am warrant. Our office has not received
shocked and deeply injured that a any of Mulicn's affid&lt;tvits from the
judge who knows that Mullen is a office of Jud~e O'Brien," Lentes
disbarred lawyer; a de-certified said.
"This leads to a dangerous prece·
teacher who almost killed lwo II
dent,
if the judge allows convicted
and 13 year old girls by giving them
illegal drugs; and a man who spent or charged crimi nals to lile charges
years in prison- as a result of this such as these against elected county
crime would allow the legal system officials," Lentcs added.
to he used for politics," ·Knight stat·
Tite Mullens also charged assistant prosecutor Chris Tenoglia and
ed.
"We a11 know that this libel has Meigs County Sheriffs Deputy
been lying around in the Judge's Danny Leonard with alleged crirni·
possession for a month or more, and nal.misconduct during the investiga·
to allow it in as a purported court tion. Tenaglia was cited for alleged
document only four days before an intimidation of a crim6 viclim- or
election gives the appearance of ' witness, while Leonard was cited for
judicial impropriety," Knight stated. two counts each of alleged kidnap·. "Be that as it may, Gary or I are ping and abduction.
,
"Mike Mullen had a trial before
not public officials and therefore,
libel actions from any source of the the judge and was convicled and
lies and public ali on of them .by ar.y- sentenced to prison. Since that time,
,one will be pursued by me through he has filed numerous molions to
appropriate legal channels against deflect attention from hi s clear cut
any participant in the chain of guilt by accusing law enforcemenl
review, discussion, or publication," officials at the Prosecutor's onice
the joint statoment read.
and the Sheriffs Department of
"Judicial robes do not give prosecuting him merely because he
immunity for non-judicial acts ," was a -lawyer and a member of a
prominent local family," Lentcs
Knight said.
Lentes indicated that he feels said.
"Neither the Court of Appeals or
Judge O'Brien did not follow .the
statutory restraints of the Ohio . the Common Pleas Court have
Rev.ised Code in his tiling of the found - validity in Mullen's claims.
Mr. Mullen is altempling to subvert
Mullens' affidavits.
"According to Ohio Revised code the legal system," Lcntcs said.

Cremeans, Strickland race.

(
I

�-

Comtnentary

•

PageM.
l

Sunday, Novem~

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

November 3,1996

19111

Yolanda Cousins

)

Fpreign influence in elections nothing new

ilmhav 1rimet·.ientintl
'EstiWfisfrd in 1966

825 Third Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
614-448-2342 • Fax: 446-3008

111 Court.S1reet, Pomeroy, ,Ohio
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157

'

:1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L. Wingett
Publiaher
Margaret Lahew
Controller

Hobart Wll110n Jr.
Executive Editor

Le,.,. to fhe editor .,,. wicotnl!l. They ahould be tBas than 300 worda.
All term. •ro aub}IICIIo odlltng end muol be olgnod end Include Mldroao
1111d let.phone number. No unolgned ,.,.,. w/U be publlohod. Lortw.
ohould be In good - · · eddro11lng IOIUOI, nol pet~~onellllea.

High hurdles bar
Jewell's attempt
at legal .redress
By RICHARD CAREW
Alaoclated Prell Writer ·
WASHINGTON- After enduring what he called an 88-day nightmare
of intense FBI ~nd news-media, scrutiny, Richafd Jewell is waking up to a
h~~~Sh reality: Some harms have no leg~! remedies.
Jewell is no longer a suspect in the FBI's investigation of the Olympic
bombing in A~anta, and his lawyers are considering suing the bureau and
some news organizations that reponed he was under agents' scrutiny.
But legal experts say winning such lawsuits will not be easy.
" It's unfortunate these things happen, but there's not recourse for every
. injury," said Timothy Dyk, a Washington lawyer who represents news media
clients. "It's going to be very difficult for Mr. Jewell to recover, either from
the FBI or the news media."
, In any ~ion against the news media, Jewell certainly would be able to
prove he was portrayed as the chief suspect in a. probe of the July 27 bomb· '
ing that killed two and injured Ill people.
,
Jewell's problem is that anonymous law enfiucemenl sourc~s were leaking information about him to news reporters. Unless be. can prove news
organizations strayed from what they were told, what was published would
not amount to libel. ·
Because Jewell was first hailed as a hero, he probably would have to pur,
sue any libel lawsuit as a "public figure" - someone who faces a stiffer
standard of proof.
·
Public.officials and public figures who sue the news media for libel must
prove the allegedly libelous statements were false and were made with
"actual malice"- knowledge or reckless disregard of falsity. Private citizens must prove only that the statements were false and made negligently.
Jane Kirtley of the Reporters Committee for F~om of the Press said
the higber standard Jewell faces makes unlikely his chances of winning a
libel suit.
'
·
Could Jewell successfully pursue claims against news ~edia defendants
·for invasion of privacy or intentional intliction of emotional disrress?
Those areas of the law are less clear than libel, and Kirtley acknowledges
, "the increasing willingness of courts to look sympathetically at such
claims" when news organizations are sued.
But libel-law expert Bruce Sanfond, who repr'esents newspapers, said
JeWell's grievance amounts to a complaint that news organizations did their
job.
"To a large extent, he is scapegoating the news media," Sanford said.
"This was an irresistible news story for the media to report. They'd be crazy
1

•

nol to."
If Jewell sues the FBI, his best claim likely would be tied to the agency's

By JACK ANDERSON
end JAN MOLLER
WASHINGTON - If it's true, as
Bob Dole and Ross Perot have insin·
uated, that President Bill Clinton
overlooked human rights violati ons
in Indonesia in exchange for campaign cash, thi s would be a scandal
of the first order.
,
It should be noted, however, thai
Clinton isn't the first presidential
candidate to accept campaign donations from questionable foreign
donors. And he 's certainly not the
first president to go soft on Indonesia
for human rights violations.
Oole was a young senator in
1968, when then-Republican presidential candidate Richard Nixon
received campaign funds from
Greece's military junta. Even more
serious were charges that CIA funds
found their way, through Greek connections, into Nixon campaign coffers. Brietly, here's the story:
The Nixon campaign was partly
bankrolled by Greek-American Tom
Pappas, who in scme ways was the
John Huang of his day. Huang is the
former Lippo Group executive
whose fund raising for the Democratic National Committee has creat'ld a
firestorm .
, . Pappas, a wealthy businessman,
was a major fund-raiser and contributor to the 1968 campaign of Nixon
and Spiro T. Agnew. An investiga-,
tion into the Nixon-Pappas-CIA con·
nection was begun by th~ Senate
Intelligence Committee in 1975. But
it was dropped at the personal
request of then-Secretary of Stale
Henry Kissinger.
The money trail led from the CIA
to . its Greek counterpart, the KYP,
then to Pappas and back to the Unit·
cd States into the Nixon-Agnew
campaign. Pappas vehemently
denied the charges, which were first
raised by respected Greek journalist
Elias Demetracopoulos. Much like
the current flap over foreign contributions, the allegati6ns were raised
in the last weeks ort_he campaign.
A few weeks before the 1968
election, Demetracopoulos look his

Documents from that time show
ly issued a press release demanding
that
Pappas solicited and received at
that Nixon and Agnew explain their
least $35,000 from Greek citizens
rel ationship to Pappas.
It was a different time in America that went into Nixon's coffers. Most
- before Watergate, before most of that money came from Nicholas
Americans knew just how low those Vardinoyiannis, a wealthy oil refinseeking the highest office in the land ery owner whose company won .a
could sink, Demetracopoulos' alle- lucrative contract with the U.S. mili- ·
gations , as serious as they were. tary five months after a contribution
received little attention in the final was made.
There is no evidence that Dole
days of the campaign. .
had
any connection tci, or even knew
The funneling of money from the
Greek junta to the Nixon campaign about, Pappas' shadowy fund raiswas confirmed by the late Henry ing. Nor is there any recond of him
Tasca, the former U.S. ambassador expressing outrage when the Greek
to Greece, in sworn testimony to .Jhe connection was uncovered. His cam·
House Intelligence Committee in paign had no comment.
Twenty-four years later, Dole's .
1976. Whether that money original·
last
hope of beating President Clin·
ed from the CIA is a question still
unanswered, although Demelra- tonmayrestonwhetherhecanprove
copoulos' documentation strongly that campaign cash from Indonesians
intluenced the Clinton adminislfa·
suggests that was the case.
Four years later, in Nixon's 1972 tion's decision to go : soft on the
re-election campaign, Pappas was at endemic human rights violations that
it again. This time, he was a co-chair continue to occur in the Southeast
of Nixon's fund-raising effort. Dole, Asian nation.
•While Clinton's record on
meanwhile, had risen to become
chairman of the Repul!lican National Indonesia is nothing to brag about,
Committee, a key fund-raising arm 'it's a step above the see-no-evil,
hear-no-evil, speak-no-evil attitude
of the GOP.

'·"

' '" MASON, W.Va. - Cinderella H. Baier, 88, Mason, died Thursday, Oct.
._! !, 1996m Pleasant Valley Hospital.
, , : ~om April n, 1908 in Mason, ~ughterofihe late Henry and Anna Agnes ·
:.,Jtettrmre Wtnter, she was a retired teacher at Mason Elementary School and
• Jl member of the Mason United Methodist Churt:h, where she laught Sun.' oiay School for several ye!lfS.
i I" She was also pre.ceded in death by her husband, Clarence "Buzz" Baier,
!..tn 1981; and by an mfant daughter.
-u" Surviving are four nieces, Charlotte Cremeans of Gallipolis. Juanita Will
of Pomeroy. Jeanette Koenig of Mansfield, and Hester Covert of Charleston,
. • W.V~ .; and a nephew, Henry Thomas of Long Bottom.
•
· [... Services will be 2:30p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason.
· JWtth the Rev. Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial will he in the IOOF Ceme,otery. Visitation was held at the funeral home Saturday. ·
•q In heu of flowers, contributions can be made to tlie Mason United
Methodist Church Building Fu.1d, P.O. !lox 336, M,;.on, W.Va. 25260.

~:;H. Bruce Chadwick.
::;•; P~INT PLEASANT, W.Va.- H. Bruce Chadwick, 79, Rt. 2, P~int Pleas·
-~nt, .dted Fnday, Nov. I, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
,.'", Born Nov.· 30, 1916 in Wayne County, W.Va., son of the late Lindsey and
tessetti Chadwick, he was a retired electrician at Kaiser-Aluminum &amp; Chemifal Corp.
.
~~ He was a member of the First Baptist Church, Kenova, W.Va.. lbe Minturn
~odge 19, F &amp; AM, and the past master, past secretary and past District
Deputy Grand Lectum of the Grand Lodge, Franklin Grand Commandery
7, the Knights Temple of Point Pleasant, the Grand Chapter RAM 7, Point
\'Ieasant, and the Scottish Rite 32nd Degree. He was illso Past Worthy Patron
'bfOES Chapter 75, Point Pleasant.
K He was also preceded in death by a son, Bruce Chadwick Jr.; a brother,,
ohn paul Chadwick; and two sisters, Leola Mullins and Mabel Chadwick.
• Surviving are his wife. Maudie L. Coates Chadwick; a son, Edward
hitley) Chadwick of Huntington, W.Va,; three daughters, 'Brucella Wanling and Paula (Rick) Sullivan, both of Point Pleasant, and Jean (Jack) Morrow af Hobe Sound, Aa.; and eight grandchildren and 12 great-grandchil·
r~ren.
.
.
• Services will be I :30 p.m. Sunday in the Deal &amp; Brown Funeral Home,
1
•J401 Kanawha St., Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Dale Vollmar officiating.
~flurial ~ill be in the Docks Creek Cemr:tery. Wayne County. Visitation was
: at the funeral home Saturday.

!Steven H. Eblin
I

POMEROY - Steven Hardin Eblin, 75, Pomeroy, died Saturday, Nov.
:~. ,1996 in the Veterans Administration Medical Center, Chillicothe.
• ; Born Feb. 20, 1921, son of the late Thomas A. and Emma Vining Eblin,
i~e was a retired steelworker with the formerFoote Mineral Co., New Haven,

__,,.....-.

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:w.va.

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·

estjn,mble ZJ;ligniew Brzezinski "'"7 dom what they seem,
Ga~~~:ewl~rvlce
pre&lt;l1cted that outcome three years
Russia is not a simplistic Punch
I~,,vN In 19~9, ago. . . . •
, ,. •
and Judy Show. But we keep trying,
under the d . k clouds ·Of war, W1~ ·
In thiS Ye~ s. ei\'Citons, nervous
When President Boris Yehsin
ston . Churchtll told the worl_d. I network nelhes nallered that Gen- , fired Security Council Secretary
cannot for~cast to·you the acuo~ of. nady Zyuganoy and the former com- Alexander Lehed on Oct. 17, the
Russ1a. ll ts. a nddle wrap~ th a m1es were mJking a comeback. U.S. media again pushed the panic
mystery . ms1de an . emgma. That Today, Zyuga~ov'~ just another button ., blathering on about a Red
sull appl,1es.
,
beaten pol lookmg 10 the Lost aod Aliny takeover and chaos in the
What s ahead for R~ss1a? Who Found for a mandate ,
Kremlin.
kno~s? Surely not J1m Lehrer, . With that track record. WashingThat continued with Yeltsin's
Co~e Roberts or John M~Laughhn . ton's prognosticators cannot be Oct. 28 scuttling of Alexander
Ft~e years .ago, Amencan Sov1- looked upon for ,reliable guidance on Korzhakov, a lieutenant general who
etolog1sts - mcludmg th~ CIA the fate of Russta.
wielded behind-the-scenes influence
fatled l~ foresee the m&lt;raculous
Few foresaw the truly significant as a bodyguard with a Rasputin-like
evaporation of the 74·year, Red developments , in the new Russia. role in the Yeltsi!J, household. (It was
regtme. Yet, on the heels of that W1despr~ad en me, the rise of a poW· Korzhakov who m Juoe floated the
colossal fatl~re. they f~recast wtde· e,rful Mafia, an mcredtbly shnnking errant rumor that Yeltsin w,ould cansprea~ fa~me and ~.1w lernfl~d. hfe span, the collapse of the Red eel the elections.)
poverty-stricken Russ~ans floodmg Army and its defeat in Chechnya . At the moment, Russia appears
mto o~c~helmed Europe.
stunned nefwork savants and think· somewhere between total chaos and
It dtdn 1 haj&gt;pen.
tankers. .
.
. ,
bl':'oming democracy. Its fever chart
When a ':"tid-eyed . vodka soak
In swtftly changmg Russra wtlh sptkes and falls hke the Wild West's.
named Vlad~m&lt;r Zhtrtnovsky got II time zones, 200 ethnic groups,
Freedom ~s an unfamiliar comlots of v~tes m 1993, commentators scores of languages and mexun- modtty. Russta. ~n't really known
P~tnted piCtures of a new generation gutshable memones. there are no 11. Prestdent Lmcoln said Russia
o Nazr-style, brownshtrts marcht_ng easy answers.
"made no pretense of loving liberupon dRu~la s . ~bbl;s~nes! sh1pl!'s a country of gray-brown ty," calling it a place where "despopmg
ents o to 1 na m box- morality prone to a national m·anic- tism can be taken pure, and without
cars. , ~re.
.. . .
..
depressive syndrome. And you must the base alloy of hypocrisy."
AbZ~umrsky now •• JUst a Joke. remember thaphe Russian's favorite . Over centuries of czarist and
50 ute Y no one -: not even the . game is chess, where things are sel- Marxist rule, Russians became

.,

,,

~\

accustomed to a life of lies, ~nvy
and gray prediclllbility. It is un~rstandable if many Russians prefpthe certainty of long lines, meager
rations and plentiful idle time to t~e
uncertainties of competition, priees ·
and new leaders.
One can only imagine the terrific
shocks to the system being expe..d
enced by individuals in Russia. '!l
They aren't accustomed to seeing
successful capitalist neighbo!&amp;
throw up great houses .and drive
around like pelly royalty in tlas~
cars.
•
Their previous rulers- the cz.;:s
and czarinas of the Politburo- kept
the great riches and1. sumptuous priv,
ileges of the socialist dictatorship
secret from prying eyes, keeping u
the illusion of equality at the cost
reality.
It's no wonder modem Russia~s
haven't accumulated widespread
confidence in the democratic expet~
iment. They are learnin&amp; by do-ing.~
Yeltsin is a new czar but a wea\
one at best. Russia's cdurts are still
virtually powerless, its Duma men;~­
bers prone to adolescent, drunken
brawls and vandalism of the parliamentary furniture.

.. .

Deputies Investigate stolen truck report
POMEROY - A stolen vehicle, a domestic violence complaint and car win·
dow damag~ occurring Frid~y night are under investigation b~ the depart·
ment of Me1gs County Shenff James Soulsby.
Harold Lawson, Manuel Road, Racine, reported that his 1966 GMC pickup truck is missing. He said that he had gone coonhunting and had parked
his truck at the intersection of Tanner's Run Road and State Route 338 about
6 p.m. Ft;iday. When he returned about 8 p.m., the vehicle was gone, he said.
.Mrs. Audrey Ours, Racine, reported to the sheriffs department that her
1992 Ford had the driver's side window broken out by a pumpkin apparent·
ly thrown from a passing vehicle.
Domestic violence charges have been filed against Richand and Barbara
Williams as lbe result of an incident which occurred atlhe Williams residonee on SRI24, according to the sheriffs report. Mrs. Williams is confined
at the Ross County Jail and her husband is lodged in the Meigs County Jail
pending hearings in Meigs County Court, officials said.

·
d 1
S USpeCted arson
un er .nvest.gatton
,f

CROWN CITY- The State Fire Marshal's office is investigating an
apparent arson Friday in a wooded section along Pete"rs Branch Road, acconding to the. Gallia County Sheriff's Department.
Amy Blazer, who resides on the road, informed deputies that she noticed
the woods.nearher home were burning and called the Guy an Township Volunteer Fire Department. which ex.tinguished the fire.
Deputies said the fire appears to have been deliberately set and called the
fire marshal to investigate.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police cited Dwayne T. Lawson, 23,
1994 State Route 588, Gallipolis, for improper left turn in a two:car accident at the i~tersection of Upper River Road and Gallipolis Township Road
ll (Airport) Friday.
.
.
Officers said Lawson wils southbound at 12:32 p.m. when he anempted
to make a left tum oritq.Airport and collided wi.th a southbound car driven
by Mary R. ~arris, 63, Rio Grande.
Harris had pulled into the left turn lane to make a left onto Airport at the
time of the crash, acconding to the report.
·
Both cars were moderately damaged, officers said.

H; GALLIPOLIS - Hele~ L. Rubenstahl, 79, Cincinnati, formerly of Galiipolis, died Friday, Nov. I, 1996 in the Deaconess Hospital, Cincinnati:
II' Born Feb. 8, 1917 in Oallia founty, 'daughter of the late George and Rosa
·Walter Watson, ·she was a homemaker.
She was also preceded in death by her husband·, Raymond Rubenstahl i a
djtughter, f!elen Suzanne Rubenstahl; a sister, Kathryn Watson; and three ,
brothers, Waller Watson, Gene Watson and Earl Watson.
Surviving are three sons, James Rubenstahl of Hickory, N.C., John Ruben· ~! of Cincinnati, and Joey Rubenstahl of Loveland; a daughter, Kathryn
~tadie of New Castle, Ind.; 18 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren; and
.~. sister, Mary Johnson of Canton.
;Jl She is also survived by six sons from a previous marriage.
.
Services will be 3 p.m. Monday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
,tfo1me, with the Rev. Jack Finnicum officiating. Burial will be in the Pine
Cemetel'y. Friends may call at the funeral home on Monday from I
until the hour of the service.

against high gaaollne
with the u.s. Atty. Gen • .
County to save your

concerns.

* Proven

cotioirr1Ac,r

for everyon• •

not Just arjitc~ll

ELLEN
•

•

g""U.N DERS'
. Jan. 2 Term
Gallla County

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M NDAY ONLY!

Gal/is deputies place tWo In jail
GAL~IJ&gt;?LIS - Donal~ E. White,_39, Apartment 2, 381 Buck Ridge
Road.B1dwell, was lodged m the Galha County Jail at II :39 p.m. Friday
by sheriff's deputies on charges of driving ~nder the influence and driving
under suspension, acconding to jail reconds. ··
·
Theresa D. Queen, 37,_Hebron, was placed in·tbe jail at 4:30p.m. Friday by deputies on a charge-of contempt of court.

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605 East Main
Mon: 6:30 p.m.

__-

COMFORT INN

ST. PETER'S

...

541 Second Avenue
Tue:
6 p.m.
Wed: 9:30 a.m .

$hop Locally and ill
· $ave AlotU · a'ICOPEN
•
Friday
till p.m.

.:................

Monday

Sei'VIq GaDia County Smee 1866
I

(

·SAVINGS!·

Levfs

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police are jnvestigating the theft of a
kerosene heater Friday from the residence' Qf James Wilburn, 122 Vine St.,
according to reports.
Wilburn informed officers the heater was taken sometime after 5 p.m ..

-...-'iii~'~

•

GALLIPOLIS - Ted w. Stoney. 70. of Gallipolis. died Thursday, October 31, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born on September 5. 1926 in Dunbarton, South Carolina, son of the laic :
James Stoney and Lena Thompson Stoney, he' retired as a concrete coni rat·tor.
He was a member of the Ancient York Lodge 33, F &amp; AM, and a member of the Tnedstone Bapttsl Church in Oallipolis.
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Sarah L Newby Stoney, whom
he marned on July 6. 1955; a Sisler. Nora Stalhngs; and a brother. James
Stoney.. .
,
. SurviVIng are a Sister, Ruhena (Oscar) Kemp of Clearwater, South Carolma; three brothers, Wrlbert "Buck" (Rose) Stoney of Gallipolis, Fred H.
Stoney of Barnwell, South Carohna, and Archie R (Nancy) Stoney of NewportNews, Virginia; ~ foster sister, B~baraAnn Frederick of Brooklyn, New
York; and a host of nteces and nephews.
Serv1ces Will be II • :m. Monday, November 4_, 1996 in the Triedstonc
Bapttst Church, Galhpohs, wtlh 1he Rev. Melv_in Freeman officiating . Burial will be in the Pine Street Cemetery. Friends may call at the Waugh-Halley-Wood FuneraUiome from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday, November 3, 1996.
Masonic services will be conducted in the funeral home at8:30 p.m. Sun day, November 3, 1996 by Ancient York Lodge 33, F &amp; AM. The body will
lie.in stale one hour prior to services on Monday, November 4, 1996.
Pallbearers will be Jesse Saund~~cil Vinson, Louis Green, Bill Qualls,
Louts Cox and Red Gordon.

Theft complaint filed with pollee

"'' NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - Ellen M. Layne, 78, New Haven, died Friday,
Nov. I, 1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
. ·
-''. Born Oct. 26, 1918 in New Haven, daughter of Archie Stanley and Dora
'C. Hoffman Layne, she was a cook for the Mason Senior Center and attend'ed the United Methodist Church of New Haven.
·
.
~1 Surviving are a daughter, Paula Blankenship of New Haven; a sister, Ila
'W. (Leo) Friend Gibbs; nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren;
~pd a special friend, Pauline Grinstead. · .
·
·
'• She was also preceded in death 'by a son, MichaelS. Layne; a sister, MilWred Moses; and a brother, Ivan Layne. · .
,
,. Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
'f.Va., with the Rev. Gregory Blair officiating. Burial will be in the Hoff1:\Jan Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Qn Monday frol!l II

-~e~~~e~url~e Rubenstah I

'

Driver ticketed in two-car accident

Ellen M. Layne

r -1
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tfr

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IIMN'ellfociji . . . . . .

-Area News in Brief:- Ted w. stoney

c'

No living American, including the pundits and
In the 1980s we persevered until the tyranny tif
the pollsters, knows how the voting will tum out socialism in the Soviet Union was broken. Incredin advance. We do know, however, that the system ibly, we see o~r nation speeding in that vecy
needs to be improved. Huge chunks of money, d1rec1ton, at a time when we should he building
some even from abroad, have tlowed into decep- more self-reliance for our people.
tive ads. A grain of truth may
Two· years ago, when Petrr Jeimings said th~t
he found, but the message is
voters were like a small child having a temper
intended to ~loud candidates
tantrum when they voted in &amp; batch of fre~hme'n
actual positions. A simple
congressmen·and congresswomen. He ~asn'tto'a
ex~ple would be: "So aqd so
pleased with that. One could wonder if he will b(
voted against education." The
elated or sad Ibis year. And there are still sQJil.,. ·
truth was the vote was against
~ho .believo the network.\ simply report the ne~;
federal control of education.
The cartoun;st :'ece.olly •hnwed a classroom i~
The great majority ' of Ameriwhich the in.structor asked: "Can anybody tell mC
cans think local•control is best,
the three branches of government?" The studetlC
Weedy quickly replied: "NBC! CBS! AJ)C!" ·
they know that the farther away
l'i
we send our money, the less of
If, when voling, we have dc;pende4 upo~
it comes back for our use.
another, or a political party to get us out of tbf
On Nov. 6, while some are in gloom and oth· mess we are in, we err. Tbe parties today liR bll$
ers are celebrating victory, ordinary Americans a retlecli?n of what _they think we want to 1teat11
will still face the same challenges of a day earli· Lead~h1p by polls ts not leadenhip at all. WitJC
er:
·
selfishness being the single word mostllP(llicab~
• ·Too much of their money is being spent by to descnbe the public today, is it any wonder
others through wasteM government programs.
find it so hard to.get off our merry-ao-round? •
• Too many of their children are not lll'hieving
1ime-hon.or.ed and time_·proven principle~
educational levels that they should.
•
must once agam become the bedrock of ·leader
• Too many children are ·relying on A.FDC, ship, not the errant doctrine, man made at best 0
. nearly a four-fold increase since 1960.
a jeJf-serving political philosophy.
· '
. • Drugs, teen suicide$ and pregnancies are · · Oh, for statesmen who will haye the guuz
plaguing the home. .
·
·. excuse rne, the intestinal fortitude, to stand fof
• Personal debt has now exccede4 one' trillion what we need to do, llld then do it. Tben we c~
dollars. Many credit cards are maxcd·out.
joyful.ly sing "Ood Blesa AmericA," llld knovf
· • Class warfare has pitted one income level there 11 reason to expect Him to do it.
against another, pullin1 the "conurion good" in
(Bob Weedy II 1 Nt(IIINcl Dfofuelon.l
jeopardy.
engl""' m111 taught et ttooltlne • :~ fOt
We can't be cenain if there will ever be arioth- nine YNI'I. A realdent of Login,
~
er opportunity to change our di""tion. We are a . eever.l l'llltlvee In Mlkla County, wMrl hi
long way down from where we were. The cross- mother, the tate l!lhel l!dward1 Weedy,
roa~s of change are becoming·more narrow 'rOads, born lnd reared. He II chairmen ol the Hock
wh1le t~e broad road le~tding to dependency is lng Chrlall111 Coalition end 1 member ol
II ~muntty ~llltlone.)
·
, paved with our sweat and tears.
·

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When .will politicians do what needs done?;

..•

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: . Before working at Foote, he owned and operated coal mines. mwas a
World War II veteran, a member of the Drew Webster Post 39 of the Amer·
ican Legion, the Meigs County Disabled American Veterans, and the Lau!fl Cliff Etee Methodist Church, Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Wanda Jacobs Eblin; a son, Gregory (Janet) Eblin
jof Pomeroy; a daughter, Rebecca Sue Eblin of Pomeroy; two granddaugh·
'ters; three brothers, Arthur Eblin and Lawrence Eblin, both of Pomeroy, and
Robert.Eblin of Middleport; a sister, Mamie Stepbenson of Pomeroy; and
several nieces and nephews.
·
'
He was also preceded in death by two brothers. James Eblin and \Valier
'ilblin.
·
. " Services wili bC I p.m. Monday in ihe Fisher Funeral Horne, Middleport,
'il!itW.the 1Rev; Peter Tremblay officiating: Burial will be in the Rocksprings
~emefery. Priehds may .call at'lhe funeiat home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m'. Sun'day . . ' '
'
Memorial contributions may be made to the Laitrel Cliff Free Methodist
&lt;;;hurch. Laurel Cliff Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

0

Beware naysayers, forecasters ·of Russian doom ·;
By JOHN QMICIN$KI

.

{I

then. chairman of the Democratic
National Commiitee. 0' Brien quick-

;Today in history -

..

I , II

•

s""

J

· Cinderella H. Baier

n

accusalions to Lawrence O'Brien, ·

search of his home and confiscation of his property.
A 1~71 Supreme Court decision allows private citizens to sue (ederal
agents for alleged violations of the Fourth Amendment protection against
unreasonable searches and seizures. .
,
Jewell would 'have to prove that the FBI lacked "prol:&gt;able cause" to
believe he had been engaged in any crime when it sought and obtained court
warrants to search his apartment, car and a storage unit.
A federal judge has released copies of the affidavits FBI agents submit·
ted when seeking the warrants, but many sentences and pirragraphs were
blacked out.
"What's left doesn't present a particularly strong case for probable
•cause," said Kathryn Urbonya. a Georgia State University law professor.
'But Ud'&gt;onya said the blacked-out material makes it hard to tell for sure
, . Jewell's lawyers contend that ·the affidavits are full of lies. Even if that
we~e tbe case, misrepresentations would be relevant only if FBI agents knew
,their mfonnants were lymg or recklessly disregarded the truth.
' Because federal officials enjoy what the courts call "qualified immunity," J~wel! might not win lawsuit against the FBI even if he proved the
•searches and seizures occurred without probable cause. ·
• He also would have to prove that FBI agents could not possibly have
'believed the searches were justified. If a court concluded a "reasonable mis- ,By BOB WEEDY
:take" had occurred, Jewell's Fourth Amendment claim would fail.
As I write, we have all just turned over our cal• (Richard Ca,..ll covert the Supreme Court and legal affaire lor The endar to a new mOnth. Thursday was Hallowed
Anoclated Pren.)
Eve, we now call it Halloween. Trick or treaters
have their bags full, and possibly their stomachs
as w.ell.
Nov. I was All Saints Day. That is why Thursday
"Was a hallowed eve. Interesting, isn't it, how
'By The AIIOCiated Pren ·
we
Americans have turned this observance
I Today is Sunday, Nov. 3, the 308th day of 1996. There are 58 days left in
around,
in quite a different direction. Witches and
ilhe year.
.
.
goblins and ghosts have taken the place of our
: Today's Highlight in History:
One hundred years. a~o. on Nov. 3, 1896, Republican William McKinley remembering saints of old who touched many
lives for the good. Halloween has now become
&lt;defeated Democrat Wtlham Jennmgs Bryan for the presidency.
the
second most popular holiday, only Christmas
: On this date:
is
ahead
in popularity,
·
: In 1839, the first Opium War between China and Britain broke out.
By this time oflhe year many are sick and tired
• In 1868, Republican Ulysses S, Grant won the presidential election over
of all the rhetoric and campaign ads just prior to
.Democrat Horatio Seymour.
.
: In 190?, the first' automobile show in the United States opened at New the election. Perhaps Halloween has become a
,York Cny s MadiSon Square Garden under the ausptces of the Automobile welcome diversion from all the election hype.
However, once the election is over, Americans
.Club of America.
will
still have to deal with the realities that con·
; In 1903, Panama proclaimed its-independence from Colombia.
: In 1908, Republican William, Howard Taft was elected president, out- front us every day. Just talking about the issues
and making promises do not our. problems solve.
:Polling William Jennings Bryan.
In 1936, Prestdent Roosevelt won a landslide election victory over Slick ads may touch a nerve, and gel our vote, but
many are going to have to bite the bullet, and
epublican challenger Alfred M. '" Aif" Landon.
some hard choices 'if the job is going to get
make
In 1957; the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 2, the second man-made
done.
.
,isatellite, into orbit. Onboard was a dog named Laika, which was sacrificed
We Americans have e~tablished a reputation
· · n the experiment.
In 1964, President Johnson soundly defeated Republican challenger for dumping candidates for office who have commilled themselves to pulling our fiscal house in
rBarry Goldwater to win a White House term in his own right.
that order. My recollection was the · 85 Congress
; In 1970, Salvador Allende was inaugurated as presi\lent of Chile.
, In 1979, five radicals were killed when gunfire erupted during an anti-Ku made moves in that direction, and it cost many o(
Klux Klan demonstration in Greensboro, N.C., after a caravan of Klansmen !hem their job in the 1986 election. That is why it
ts dtfficult to find those who are committed in our
-and Nazis had driven into the area.
In 1990, Broadway musical actress Mary Martin died in Ran~ho Mirage day, they know what happens to any who want to
Calif., at age 76.
.
' put programs o~ a sound footing.
Wasn't it Notre Dame coach Lou Holtz who
· Ten. years ago: Ash-Shiraa, a pro-Syrian Lebanese magazine, first broke
the story of U.S. arms sales to Iran, a revelation that 'escalated into the Iran- told the story about the kamikaze pilot who tlew
SO m1sstons? This pilot was involved, but he wasContra affair. ·
n't
committed. Are we training our candidates to
Pive years ago: Israeli and Palestinian representativ'lli;lheld their first-ever
be
like
that pilot?
.
·
rface-to-face t.alko in Madrid, Spain.
-\
·

a

.of his predecessors.
t
Clinton applied pressure lim
Indonesia early in his administration
and several minor reforms were
adopted. But Sidney Jones, exceutive director of Human ·Risbts
Watch-Asia, says there was 1an
"abrupt ceasing of pressure" 'On
Indonesia midway through Clintoil's
term. Dole and Ross Perot would
love to know if this was the resull'of
the donations that soon began pouring in.
,
Jones told our associate Aal'on
Karp that she \!VOU!d'he "surprised"
if this were the case. Other influenccs surely were involved, such.as
heavy lobbying by American companies that do business in Indonesiw.
The probe into Clinton's ties to
John Huang and the Lippa Ordup
will likely extend far beyqnd Tt.*osday's election. Yet it's sadly ironic
that Bob Dole speril the w~ing 4~ys
of his last campaign attacking a prilctice that his party pioneered nearly a
quarter century ago.
.
(.lack Anderson and Jan Moner
are columnlata for United Feat~re
SyndlcatL)
•

GALLIPOLIS - Yolanda Cousins, I, 81 Pine St.. Gallipolis; died Sat·
urday, Nov. 2, 19% in Hoi~ Medical Cenu.r.
Arrangements will be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

'

till p.m •

�P-ee AS • ~ hiu ~~--~ lbwl

Sunday, November 3, 1998&lt;-;

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpotla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

CIA insists it's hiding nothing on Gulf War illness
WASHINGTON (AP) - Under
growing pressure to tell what it
knows about possible exposure of
U.S. troops to poison 'gas, the CIA
said Friday it has no evidence IIaq
used chemical weapons during !be
Persian Gulf War. "Nobody is hiding
anything," said CIA Executive Director Nora Slatkin.
· At the start of an unusual news
conference at CIA headquarters, Ms.
Slatkin read a lengthy statement
·insisting that the agency is committed to disclosing as much as possible

about the issue.
" We know how important this
issue is to Gulf War veterans," she
said.
In the five years since a U.S.-led
coalition drove Iraqi forces out of
Kuwait, many U.S. personnel who
served in the 1991 conflict have com'
plained of a variety of unexplained
illnesses.
Until June, the Defense Depanment maintained there was no evidence that U.S. troops were exposed
to chemical or biological weapons

during the war. But now the Pentagon
says up to 15,000 could have been
exposed when U.S . Amiy troops
destroyed an Iraqi ammunition depot
at Kamisiyah in southern Iraq.
A presidential advisory committee
is examining intelligence .repons and
hearing testimony from veterans who
complain of symptoms that· include
memory problems, fatigue, diarrhea
and insomnia.
Ms. Slatkin said the CIA has given the committee all the material it
collected on possible exposure to

•
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q

chemical agents.
"On the l!asis of a comprehensive
review of intelligence, we continue to
conclude that Iraq did not use chemical or biological weapons during the
Gulf War," said Ms. Slatkin. ,

~. TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) -

DUPES by Deiign

ELECT

48 COURT,STREET

NOREEN M. SAUNDERS
* Clerk of Courts*

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Annual Holiday Craft ~how

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· Saturday, Dec. 7
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Sunday, Dec. 8

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20;_50o/o Off

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31 ]946 PautDuvies
On Augu.sl ' d ·1 doors to the
jewelers opene I s Paul Davies has

Nov. 1 thru 11

public. 50 ye~~ ~:;~~at~on of s~rviug
earnecl a so
~th the utrnust U\ •
tlte -area w . .
h'le offering
· l servt.ee 'UI '
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prufesslona d' e .Ot tile best va ue:
lity rnerchan IS
'lh d newly
qua
lebrate WI
• • g
"'oday we ce . ,
{ways strltlln
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Were a
.
remodeled store.
We believe ,n o~r
10 serve !ou b~tl::k forward to belng
communitY an tlte nexr50 yeurs.
here for you

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WJTJf NEW J'VJINJTUJI.I!

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The Area's Finest Selection
• Seiko • Bulova • Pulsar

20% ·t o 50o/o OFF

30% OFF

·.... X

DIAMOND
PENDANTS

~

REG.
$399
$579
$749

. REG.
1/4Ct. . $289
112 Ct.
$749
1 Ct.
$1949

LIVING ROOM SUITES
GLIDER
ROCKERS

STONE RINGS

. ~ li~\~
$1~ ~~;-~;''
$499
,
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SALE

1/4 Ct. Tw.
1/2 Ct. Tw.
1 Ct. Tw.

Ladies &amp; Gents · ·
Onyx •. Signet • ·Opal
• Pearl • Cameo &amp; More

Je '··

$1199

~

.

20% OFF ·

EA~RINGS

MY FELLOW GALLIA COUNTIANS:

DIAMOND
I FASHION RINGS

Entire Selection of Pins,
Earrings, Pendants &amp;
Bracelets

SALE
$279
$399
$499

'

ALL
WATCHES

• Herringbone
·Rope • Box
• Milano
• Venezian
&amp; More .

1/5 Ct.
. 1/4 Ct.
113 Ct.

I have known Jeff Fowler since he was born. He Is the :.on : f
Buddy and Phyllis Fowler and grew up Sl~ ~u~nut~o~1n: J:~w~
resentl resides on the family farm on . a e 0
'
.
~lty Oh~ He graduated from Hannan Trace High School in 19:3
d' h has a B.S. degree In education from Rio Gran e
an
e
where he raduated Cum Laude In 1987. Jeff ·was a
~:=~~~the early p:rt of bls life and Is presently a teacher at
1 ble HI h School In Athens County, Ohio.
~=ff Is a !ember of the Gallla County Agriculture Society and a
f the State Extension Advisory Committee, and was a
m~m~r\ oIn Big BrothersiBig Sisters Association. Jeff has been
~~~l~t':~ Superintendent of the Crown City United Methodist

I

14 KT GOLD CHAINS

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SEE. OUR NEW SHOWROOM

2520 "*¥DIM.-""-'~. VN 25550. ll0tl615-4340

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In· Celebration of
Paul Davies Jewelers
-

• Grand Re.:.Opening - AU Fine Jewelry

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First Avenue, Gallipolis
· .
Sponsond by the
.. .
Holzer·Medical Center Employee ActMtJ Association

513-887·2212

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Davis Hall Building

Russ Nucastle

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BUFKOR INC.

Gallipolis

Upper Rt. 7

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Ple-.se c-.n, C'S()4) ''7'"-ln"l

·West Virginia Electric

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10 am to4 pm

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Best Wishes on your Remodeling- you
have a beautiful store- we were happy ,
to have Installed the merchandise
display props.

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tl l p.M. CF•ee AilMlssio.V
t1 Ple-.s-."i- "-.lley 'lospit-.1

Thank you for choosing us for all
your Electrical supplies for your
remodeling.

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Learn the signs and symptoms that will help
you identify a mlgrain~. how they are triggered
and available treatment programs.

rnt1 Pleasant Valley
ILII Hospital ·

. ,.
meet's his maker he will suffer," he tencing.
Sobek's family and friends hudsaid.
lbe special circumstance provi- dled and sobbed while the verdicts •
sion could have subjected Ratlibun to were read.
the death penalty, but prosecutors did
Rathbun, wearing a charcoal-colnot ask for it. He was ordered to ored suit, didn 't move.
.
return 'to court on Dec. 16 for sen-

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Refreshments Will Be Served

lbe venlict Friday was welcomed
by Sobek's family. Her father, Bob
Sobek, said he hoped that life in
prison would be rouah for Rathbun.
•'I hope he suffers as much as my
daughter suffered, in this life and the
next life .... And I think when he

GALUPOLIS

To
• Do the Sheer Panel Ove• Your
Diamond Ca8~s and the Recovering of
Your display Boards.

'
I

oro~ps ktd Individuals~ Encouraged To Attend .

without possiblity or parole.
The mandatory sentence will be
imposed because jurors found Rathbun guilty under the special cin:umstahce of committing murder while
engaged in a felony - anal npe with
a foreign .objecl

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:

Jurors needed less than two days to
convict a freelance photographer of
fnt-degree murder in the sex slaying
of model and former Los Angeles
Raiders cheerleader Linda Sobek.
Charles Rathbuo, 39, now faces a
IIUIIIdatocy sentence of life in prison

Convatulations On Your RemOdeling
Thank You for Allowing

Q

..

Jury convicts
photographer In
model's slaying

• Extensive Training Computerized Governmental
· . Accounting
• Consultant to Auditor of State's Uniform
Accounting Network
• Plan to serve as a full-time clerk and manage
office cost-effectively. ·
• Capable, Objective, Responsible I..e'adership
• I would like to see a title processing terminal colocated and cost shared within the Bureau of Motor
Noreen M. Saunden (Center), J. Mauhew
Vehicles.
.Saondero, Kate Saonden, Patriok Saunde,.,;,
Lanren Saondero.
Paid for
I
Noreen M. Saunders, 10615 State At. 7, .

j tv\i.Bv~l"e Aw~ve\\ess
! Co\4\tML\\\H·y PvoBv~IM
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Sale

$279
$499

$3211

. $899

$599

$1711

'·

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33%0FF ·

Startf•g AI

'•159'5

CURIO
Wall &amp; Corner

d . Clerk of the Guy~n Township Board .of Trustees
f:ea~e~\t:ear period from 1988-1996. During that period of
time hi: fellow clerks and township trustees elected him
President of the Gallla County Trustees·and Clerks Association.
The citizens of Gallla, Jackson, Lawrenc_
e and Meigs Counties
been Inundated with negative and misleading. character
h
• :::sslnatlons regarding an audit for years 1"4·1995. There Is
. thing In this audit you would not find In most township audits
::ross the state; therefore, the negative ads were politically

Church.

ENGAGEMENT
. RINGS
,.
ROUND

$699
$1199
$1999

SAVE .20%··

SALE

l~s:~:~

Jeff Fowler personally and I know his family and
I t
I will stake my reputation on the fact Jeff Fowler
ass~~ an:~· Intentionally do anything wrong In his office .as
wli 0
hi Clerk. If he had, then 1 am sure you would have heard
owns p
. This is nothing more than political
about !~:ae~c:;:,::: of a very Important election for the office
~pag State Representative. I ask you to use your good
o your
se an~ot to be swayed by a clever, negative TV ad.
cf=:nS.:~y aik ~ to support and vote for Jeff Fowle!" for
State Representative of the 94th District.

BEDROOM SUITES

',::
$1299

DESIGNED

'ct_·

20-33% OFF

•

1/4 Ct. Tw.
' 112 Ct. Tw.
1 Ct. Tw.

COLORED STONES ·

I

DINETTES

WE-HAVE
PRIME STAR.
SATELLmS

Emerald • Ruby
Sapphire . ·

All Birthstones

QUALITY FURNITURE PLUS
Aciou stJHt from Farmers Bank

I

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SAVE 20-33o/o

DIAMOND
TENNIS BRACELETS
ALL SPECIALLX PRiCED

STARTING AT$139.00

•

~

fiiiiJ 'I'f'"lt•••
APPI.'f TODAY
FOfl YCHifl

DowntQwn
Gallipolis
(61-4) 441;)-1647

Plalna, Oh.

Dlftiba
n.," n.....-.f!

.... ,~.,•• r •~u'!

IIQ.Otll,_ .

1·100.200o405
''

Free Inside EngraVIng .
of' any purchase

Sate
$199
$399
$999

404 Second Ave.

614-667~7311 .

Mon.-Thu .... 9-5
Fri. N, Sat. H

Reg .
$299
$599
$1499

&amp; .PLAIN .

SAVE
20·33o/o

··

'

42123 St. Rt. 7

&amp; 14KT
- AII10KT
.
GOLD

ANNIVERSARY RINGS

MARQUISE

.27
.32 Ct.
Ct,
.51 Ct.

WEDDING
BAND.S

SALE
.46Ct.
..88 Ct. .
1.27 Ct.

,

GUARD RINGS

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Nation/World
O.J. attorneys unveil surprises to jury

Which John Huang?
Two men with same name visited
White.House; only one of them
fund-raiser, ·administration says .
By PETE YOST
AaiOCiat.d Pre11 Writer
WASHINGTON - Seeking to
quell a growing controversy over fur~

whonr the Democratic National Comonitlcc f~nd-ruiser mel in dozens of
White House visit• this year.
White House utlicials -

while

eign-link~d

political donations, the telling n:poners such a list existsWhile House disclosed Friday that said they wen: unable to pmvide the
then: were .two people named John . information on such sh&lt;in notice to
Huang visiting the W~itc House Rep. William Clinger, R-Pa.
and that only one of them was a
"President Clinton's lawyers arc
Democratic fund-raiser.
hiding . documents from C&lt;;ngrcss
White House spoke•man Barry and the American people about Mr.
John Huang
Toiv identified the scconJ man with Huang's frequent White Hou.e meet- the fund-raiser
the same nome as heing involved in jngs even though these documents arc
Vice Prcsiden1 AI Gore's review of readily available," Clinger said in a
government agencies designed · to statement.
tund-raiser.
improve their cllicicncy,
White House.counsel Jack Quinn
CBS Radio interviewed a man
While tile White House revealed accused Clinger in a leiter of "using who said he was the second John
. the fact that there were two John your office for panisan electoral pur· Huang and that he had been to the'
Huangs, it refu.•ed to release details pOseS ... Quinn said the White House White House 12 to 24times .last year
it has gathered al)out what people the needs more time to respond because and this year. He said he was with the
fund-raiser from the Democratic "your request covers an extremely Intern al Revenue Service and had
National Commiuce onel with at the broad time frame and requires us been on loan for Gore's review.
executive mansion.
therefore to retrieve and verify a large
The Secret Service records show
1be disclosure came as aides to number of records."
that Huang was a far more.frequent
Separately. Quinn wrote the While House visitor than the Clinton
President Clinton missed a second
House deadline for providing Con- House International Relations Com- administration has said. Previously,
gress information on the Huang who miuee that he would be unable to the administration has said only that
pulled in an estimated $4 million to supply documents immediately on Huang met with Clinton on a few
$S million in Democratic contribu- Huang's ties to a wealthy Indonesian pccasions, without mentioning visits
lions from Asian Americans this· familythathascontributedheavily to with other people at the White House.
year.
Clinton's campaign,
In the past 15 months. the name
White House spokesman Mike
The deadline set for that disclo- John Huang is listed 78 times as visMcCwry said presidential aides had · sure was Tuesday, but the c0 mmiuee iting the White House.
Identified 19 White House visits by · did not reveal that the White House
"I am not the John Huang who
!he second .John Huang, the one missed it until Friday.
works for the Democratic National
mvolved wllh Gore's reinventing
"We will be in touch with your Committee nor do I know him," the
government program. It was . not staff .as soon as we are in a beuer second John Huang told CBS. •
i!"mediately clear what period of position to assess the magnitude of .
The White House learned of the
lime they covered. In the past 15 yow- search request," Quinn wrote.
s.econd man with the same name on
months, the two Huangs have visit- 'The commillee's request "cannot be Thursday after talking with some
cd the executive mansion 78 times- completed in the time frame indica!· pepple listed as having cleared John
' 65 times this year alone, according to ed," he added.
. Huang into the White House, Toiv
Secret Service logs. ·
Toiv said that "a number" of the said.
'
·
The House Government Reform 65 White House visits this year by a
Reponers for several days have
and Oversight Committee chainnan ·man listed on newly disclosed Secret been asking the White House for
had .set a. noon Friday deadline for Service logs as John Huang were by details on the peaple with whom
presJdenttal aJdes to reveal with someone other than the Democratic · Huan~ the fund-raiser met.

I'

·'

,.

GM, union
reach accord
on contract .
DETROIT (AP) -

. General

that

L to R· Kim &amp; Jell Ralllfr, Linda, Cody Wandling,
Larry, Kerry &amp; Angle Wandling.

·X VOTE LARRY M. BETZ
serve the students of

Gallia Local

70
Science Laba and Equipment

eo

Com puler Equipment
Air Condftiontng Every School

W~ttk('l\

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1 : Anny 41, l..afa~eue 21
~ BrbWn 3S, Cornell 21
Bucknell-7, Lehigh 6
Buffalo 14, Hofstra 10
Cent Connecticut St 28, St. Francis, Pa. 14
' Connecticut 45, Boston U. 10
- ~ Danmoulh 6, Harvard 3
Duquesne 52. Fairfield 1
Fordham 28. Holy Cross 0.
Georgetown, D.C. 24, Ca.nisius 0
lona 20, St. Peter's 14 (01)
Maine 21, Musachusetts '14
•
Mian¥ S7, Temple 26
New Hampshire 14, Richmond 13
Notte Dame 54, Navy27
Pen n 20, Yale 3
Pen n St. 34, Nortbwestem 9
Priocecoo 14·. Columbia II
S1. John 't, N.Y. 29. Siena ll
Towson St. 33. Marist 26 (0T)
Villanova 34, Rhode Island 16
Wagner 38, Robert Moni.t )S
,

·Technology

'

80 .

Addftlonat CiaMtOOm.
Improved Putcing

•

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Improved Athletic Fecllltlea
Schoot·Prlde

Community Pride
Building for
the 2111 C&amp;mury

I

1
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ONLY5
¥ILLS

• I .nuku . N.J. wlud1 nmkt.'s
( 'lwvy lllot~.t'l ;uul ( IMI 'Jimmy ).ltutf
utillly vdudt•., ;uul f'h,·vy (iM( ·
fOIIIf);tl I JUt J.:lll"· Wil). du:-.c·ll 1"1 i1iay
111~.hf 1\ Inial :•. tUJJ wotkt•r ... Wt'l4.' laitf

I

.

South
Appalachian St. 20, Tenn.-Chattru~oos.a 6
Cent. Aorida 42. Illinois St. IS
CleTTU!on 35, Maryland 3 •
Dav idson 24, Hampden·Sydney 21
E. Illinois 42, Au"ln Peay7
E. Kentucky 30, Tennesstt St. 10
E. Te~ St. 17,GeorgiaSouthern 14
E.Mt Carolina 34, Arkansas St. 16
Aorida 47, Georgia 7
Florida A&amp;M 83. Moraan Sl. 12
Howard 42, Norfolk St. 14
Liberty 34, Hampton 30
Louisville 13, Memphis 10
Marshall S6, Citadel2S
Miss. Valley St. 20, Prairie View 0
Mluissippi St. 59, NE Louisiana 0
Morehead St. 64, Qu.incy 14
Murray St. 41. Tenoc1,et Tech 3
_N. Carolina A&amp;T 73, 8c tbu~-Cookman 7
New Haven 48, OUirlesron Slluthem 1
North Carolina 52, N. C.-otina St. 20
NorthcaJtern ~ I, Jamts Madi son 1
S. Cnrolinil St 34, Deluwm St. 14
• Sam.forit 20, Wofford 14 (O't)
Southern Miu.t:zl, Cincinnati 17
Tennessee jJ, Sou th Carolina 14
Vanderbilt ] I, Ala .- Birmingham IS
" Virginia 27, Duke J
Virginia Tech 47, SW Loubiana 16
W. C.-olina 17, VM\14
•
W. Kenrucky.SI. S. Olinois 37
William&amp;. Mary 10, Delaware '1 (OD
Mldwdt
·Akron 21, Bowling O«en 14
Butler 33. Evansville ) I
Cent. Michigan 52, Kent 5I
Colorado4l,MiSJouri 13
Dayton 37, Valpurai!O 3$
Drake 43, Aurora 13
Iowa 31, llli~Mi •2 1
* Kansas 34, IoWa St. 31 .
i.ouiJiana Tech 40, N. 11111\[tis 14
Miami (Ohio) 27, Toledo 7
Michigan 45, Michigan St. 29
N. lowa 23, Younastown Sl . 10
Ohio St 45, Mlnnesma 0
Ohio 38, W. Michigan 0
Tenn.-Mmtin 7, SE Miuouri 6
W. lllinoi• 23, SW Miuouri Sr. 17
WiK:on&amp;io 33, Pwdue 23

• Soattt•Ht

NW Louil1111149, SW Teua St. 0

. .

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PLEASE VOTE "YES" BALLOT #125

,r.,tu:· .. tlc·ch uy t,'\uu

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80

pi4.· kups. w.a:-. idkcl l 1riday.
( iM \illcl 'J.,-11WJ wc" k"t•t-,., W4.'11.' l:licl•,ll .

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College
scores
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W•\.f.'mhlc'\ 111 :1/.t'l ·\ , .11111
lilY'• lllull lltf,mnf••k IIJ:1 ~;.,t,. St IV~
II

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N....,lcl73,.otctohomo 11
!'lew !dt&lt;lco J4, Tot01ll
Rice 51, Uuth 10
Texu 2$, B1ylor 23

.

Teu• A&amp;.M 38, Oklahoma St. 19
TelUIJ Chr:luian 42, UNLV ]4

.
f1rWHI
,Iori•- IIl. 29. Oro... Sl. 14

Gallia County Local Sc:hooll ·

Bn,hlm Youna40. Te~at·E1 P•o IS
N8YIIIa63. NewMexieoSt. 14

' • l

21-0

Wellston's win-· over Vinton ·
County helps Marauders get
share·of Ohio Division title

Raiders and Blue Devils tie·
for fourth in SEOAL; hosts
:get first victory over GAHS

'

•· SIIIt'VC:I"'~I. ~ .a . , wltit·IIJll"cNIIIlT~

'.• Mutauu·. (

~pallipolis
.

il,jhi·I.Ut!llfldlf.hl!llli Color ,_11111 teltstalf....._

Total Community
Support needed

Meigs rallies
to hand Belpre
25-20 .d efeat

-iver Valley
dominates

The Following Kmart has a studio open ·every day
.
M"on. • Sat. 1o a.m. • 7 f.m.
On Sun. 10 a.m. (or atore opening, I later) • 6 p.m. (or
. ..
store cloalng If earlier) Gallipolis _

Vote for
Children

·

GETTING AWAY !rom Belpre's Vernon Reams 11 the talk of
MASSIVE PILEUP - River Valley's Chris Maynard is burled·
the
moment for Meigs receiver Jeremiah Bentley during Friday
.In thl~ massive pileup during Friday's GAHS·River
night's Ohio Dlvl1lon contest In Pomeroy. The Marauderl, who
football game. The Raiders won 21-0. M~nard rus)1ed fo~
won 25·20, got help from Wellston to 'w in the dlvl1on title.
.
In 22 trips. Brad Kemper. (68) looks· down on play.
(Times-Sentinel
photo by Dave Harris)
.
·
Ron Caudill ol River Valley Photography)
session.
.
Five plays later. Katzenmoyer, a freshman middle linetiacker, picked off
a Cory Sauter pass and returned it untouched for the score and a 24-0 lead.·
Jcrmon Jackson and Pearson each added . two-yard touchdown runs and
Mi.chael Wiley caught a 28-yard scoring pass from third-team quanerback
Tom Hoying to round out the scoring.
Stanley Jack..on completed eight of 15 passes for 93 yards with the two
interceptions before leaving, while Germaine completed six of II for 75
yards with another interception. Hoying completed both of his attempts.
Sauter had three passes picked off, completing II of 28 for 57 yards.
Spergon Wynn III had his only allempl intercepted as the teams combined
for seven interceptions. Each team also lost its only fumble .
Minnesota was limited to 47 yards rushing. on 34 attempts, ·while Ohio
State gained 230 on 45 carries.
..
.
No. 5 Nebraska 73, Oklahoma 21 - AI Norman .. Okla., Nebraska
handed Oklahoma its worst loss ever Saturday, usinS, a dominating defense
and three touchdown passes by Scott Frost'to beat the Sooners 73-21.
The No. 5 Comhuskers (7-1, 5-0 Big 12) picked off four passes , includ·
ing one that was returned 83 yards for a touchdown by freshman cornerback
Ralph Brown.
The 52-point margin surpassed the Sooners' 47-point loss to Oklahoma
A&amp;M in 1945. The 73 points were the most ever scored against Oklahoma, By DAVE HARRIS
That coupled with the news that
, CHE&amp;IDRE • It was ball control rushing and passingin 73 piays Ira
topping the 59 by Kansas Stale in 1969. ·
t-S
Corre1pondent
Wellston
had pulled a stunning 7-0
'night for Coach Merrill Triplett's Riv- scrimmage, and held Gallia Acaden
After being held scoreless in the first quarter, Nebraska scored 17 in the
think
someone
upset
over
Vinton County gave the
POMEROY
"I
:er Valley Raiders Friday and the · to 86total yards in just 35 plays du
second quaner, 28 in the third and 28 in the fourth.
was
smiling
on
us
tonight,"
Marauders
the Ohio Division co·
upstairs
:result was a resounding 21-0 South- ing the evening.
. Oklahoma (2-6, 2-3) scored all its points in the fourth quaner, en runs of a drained Mike Chancey said after charnpion~hip with the Vikings.
Happy for kids
:eastem Qhio League football victory
94, 17 and 51 yards by Dc'Mond Parker. Before that, Nebraska had gone 27 the game. "The one is for Matt."
II has been a emotional last two
"I
would like to crc&lt;!it Coach Coe.
·over Coach Brent Saunders' Gal·
straight quarters without allowing a rushing touchdown.
t·
Freshman
Justin
Roush's·
one.
w
eeks
(or the Marauders, wi!h
;Jipol)s Blue Devils befon{' approxi· (Mel) for his work with the defensiv•
No. 6 Tennessee 31, South Carolina 14...:: AI Coluil\bia, S.C., Peytoti' yard run with 9:15 remainin~t in the senior defensive back Mall Ault col·
;mately, ~.500 chilled spectators at unit this year, along with the rest o
Manning threw for 362 yards and two touchdowns, including a 48-yarder to·
·· our coaching' staff. They . did ar 'Andy McCullough in the second quaner, as No. 6 Tennessee used big plays game gave Meigs a nail-biting 25-20 · lapsing after the game with Waverly
:RVI{S S~dium .
victory over Belpre in TYC football two weeks ago. Ault died less than
· The Raiders, with their huge for- excellent job all year," Triplett sait
to beat stubbom South Carolina 31-14 on Saturday.
action Friday evening at Bob 24 hours later and was buried last
. ;ward wall dominating action from following the Raiders first ~rid vic·
(See TOP 25 on B·2)
.
(See MARAUDERS on B·3)
Robens Field:
; s~ to finish, ~"?lied up 328 yards
(See RAIDERS on B-2)

~~r~od-1[

OH 45631

·

Minnesota never advanced beyond its own 32 in the first two quaners
and managed just I04 yards for the game.
The Buckeyes finally broke through late in the second quarter when
Pearson carried on all six plays of a 47-yard drive, capped by a 10-yard
touchdown run.
On the last play of the half. walk-on kicker Andy Stamp convened his
first field-goal attempt, a 47-yarder. It was the first field goal longer than 39
y'ards by a Buckeye kicker in more than two years.
,
· ,The Buckeyes didn '1 wait as long in the second half, scoring on Matt
Calhoun 's five-yard touchdown catch from JOI' Germaine on their first pos-

......."""'"" ..,.-.II IWoy ........ -

( 1w·vwk.l. ( iM( · at~el l:o.n1.1i llumhn·

,,,

tors .'

llllr I $5.9llllsia foo .. ..... ...,.... wloo
'""'.lou..,,.
q ... aolll&lt;h"" z~ o.....idcllionol

lmprovemenl8 to au ..:hooll

~htt11lqwn~ :

st~Jight

5). The loss was Minnesota's fifth in a row this year and 12th
in the
Big Ten. The Gophers haven't won in Columbus since 1949, losing .14 in a
row.at Ohio Stadium and the last 13 meetings anywhere,
Pepc Pearson ran for 123 yards and two touchdowns on 23 carries for the
Buckeyes, who won their 14th straight home game.
Ohio State had a 231-33 yarl!age advantage at the half after outgaining
the Gophers 168-0.in the opening quaner. But the Buc~eyes failed to score
otlthrce trips inside the Minnesota 12.and Josh Jackson's 22-yard field goal
attempt clanged off the left uprig~l.
·
Starting quanerback Stanley Jackson was intercepted on Ohio State's
first two posse~sions, then sprained an ankle and was helped off the field.
Backup tailback Joe Montgomery, who gained 160 yards in last week's 38, 26 victory at Iowa, twisted a knee ·while trying to avoid a tackle at the
Minnesota 8 in the second quaner. Both were to be evaluated by learn doc·

1-10xl3 • 3-BxlOs • 6-Sx7s
30 Wallet~ • 48 Keepsakes

Two Modem High Schooll

hc~atl ' I'Ul'stlay ill J:Uil'SVilh: iUKI

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Andy Katzenmoyer's 42-yard interception
return for ~ touchdown helped second-ranked Ohio Stale rebound from a
disastrous firsl half to beat Mirtnesota 45-0 Saturday.
·
The Buckeyes (8-0 overall, 5-0 Big Ten) lost four turnovers and two key
players in the first half, yet still led 10-0 over the hapless Gophers (3-5, 0-

ll Your Favorite Slzesl

ONLY 18.25°/o

. . lncli:m:•t"•lis. 'lllC lndiamlfMtlis su·ik1.·.
whic.:h ~lltfljtelltiN..' I11JW ltf sltt."l'l III.CI ·
•LI p:n·h IIM'.cl :11 most uf ( iM 's 1I.S.
tnK·k IJfoull\, (· n,.\at~.·cl :1 dt,tnint, rlk1.·1
ol

i

. IIICI.UDE~ lii'OIITRAri OtRI~TMA~ cARDS

County .
· Treasurer

Pd for by the Candidate, 242 St. Rt. 218, P.O. Box 149,

Take a look at the counf¥,
These. two high scho(ij
locatiOns wouldbetter

OSU shuts out
Minnesota 45-0

'

(304) 273-9725

Your Vote is
Appreciated!

S!. Mary'~ Col.38, S. Ult&gt;h 20

OU shuts out Western Michigan 38-0
KALAMAZOO, Mich. (AP) -

Kar~em Wilson only completed five

passes . but three went for touchdowns Saturday as Ohio posted its
second-straight shutout with a 38-0
"/ciOrJ: over WeStern Michigan.
Oh10 (6·3, 5-1 Mtd -Amerlcan
Conference) .shut out Bowling Green

last week !Jy the same score. The
loss kept Western Michigan winless.
Western (0-9, 0-6) was done in
by six turnovers that led to 24 !Joints
for Ohio.
Wilson threw for TDs of 30, 37
. and 54 yards and also rushed for a
· two-yard score . He finished· With

184 all-purpose yards, including 5P
on the ground.
With ·a 3-0 lead in the second
quarter, Wilson connected with B.J.
Franklin on a 37-yard score.
On Western's ensuing possession, Mark Stubbs picked off a Tim
Lester pass and returned it 23 yards

to set up another scoring pass from
Wilson to Franklin, this time from
30 yards out
·
The two catches were Franklin's
only receptions of the game.
On the second play of the third
quaner, Wilson connected with Riz
Buckman for a 54-yard touchdown.

Ohio high school football scores
Friday's action
Ada 35, Rid~emont 7
Adeoa 28, Richmond Dale SEO
Akron Buchtel 68. Akron Cenft-Howet' 0
Akron Hoban 38, Steubenville 13
Akron Kenmore 33, Akron N. 0
Akron Manchester 21, Akron Coventry 12
Akron Spring. 55, Ca,rrollton 6
Alexander 46, Reedsville Eastern 0
Alliance 28, You. Boardman 1
Amaniia-Ciearcreek 50. Bloom-Carroll 0

11'\melia 31. Milford 0
Ansonia 43, Missiu inawa Val. 6
Anthony Wayne 14, Lorain Sou\hview "13
~ntwerp 17, Holgate 7
An:;:anum 44, Bethel 15
Arlington 41, Vanlue 14
.
AJhlabula Edgewood 3D. Jefferson Area 22
Ashtabul" Harbor 16, Conneaut 0
Avon 49. FireiWJds 25
Avon Lake42, Fairview 0
i\yersville 26. Wayne Trace 20
Batavia 41 , Cin. N. College Hill 21
Bay Village 18, "Rocky River 8
• Beallsyille liS, Monroe Ce nttnl 14
Beavcr~k 31, Fairborn 17
Bellaire 21. Mlll1ins" FerrY 20
Bellefontaine 34, Tecumseh 13
De\1evue 54. Norwall7
Benjamin Logan 19, Triad 6
Berkshire 28, Middlefield Cardinnl 21
Black River 28, Clear Fork 1
Blum an 36, Allen E. I ~
Brecksville 3S, N, Royalton 14
Brooklyn -30, R.ichmond Hts. 1
Brookville 21, Preble Shawntt 17
Brunswick 22, Strons•ville 3
Bryan 20, Montpelier 14 .
·
Buckeye Trail 33, Conouon Val. 12
Buckeye Val. 33, N. Union 13
BucYJl:!S 23. Shelby 6
Cad11. 21, Danville 0
Caldwell32, Shenandoah 6
C"a1 Winchester 38, T~.ays Val. 21
CanfirJd .~6 Howland 0
Canron Cnt~ 14, L..ouisvillt"Aquinas 6
Canton S. 20. Canal Fulton NW 17
Carey 12. Mohawk 6
Chardon 56, Orange 7
Chesapeake-49, S. Pvi nt 34
Chnhue R.hn Vat 21, Gallipolis 0
•Cin. Aiken 18, Cin. Hughes 14
Cln. Anderson 34, Cln. St. Xavier 21
Cin. Elder J4, an. Oak Hil\1 14
Cin~ Harriso n 49, Day. Pnuenon 0
CiT!.. Indian Hill 42, Williamsburg 0 ·
Cin. La Salle 21, Cin, We~tern Hills 1
Cln. Lockland 42, Chi. Landmnrk 26
Cin. Loyeland JO, Cin. Glen Este 20
Cin. McNicholas 14, Cin . Turpin 7
.Cin. Moeller 2~. Cin. Princeton 10
Cin. Nonhwest 12, Cln. Roger B&amp;con 0
Clrt ReldinJll .• Cln. Countcy Day 6
Cin. Summit Coulllr}' Day 18, New Miami 6
Cio. Syqmore 31. Cia. ~11 Mlflllll4
, Cio. Walnul Hills 7. Cin. t,ft 6
\
Cin, Winton Woodl5l , Faidield 14
·
Cin. Withrow 16, Cln. Woodward 12
Cin. Wyomioa 42. peer Park 14
Clc. Ea1120. CJ&lt;. S..ch I J
CJ&lt;.Indopendt"" 2i, Cuya~~o&amp;• Hcs. I4 (011
Cit. Ke11nedy '22, cte. East Tech 0
Cte. Mafthall IS, Cit. Rhtldf• 0
Coal Orove 1-4, F•lrtand 3

Col

BriUJl5.Col. Undtii-McKlnlcy 14
Col. Dol~l, olt, Ool Sc. a.~ 0
Col. Eutmoar 21, Col. South 6
Col. I - :!o. Col. Weot 12
Col. Mln\in 20. Col. Beechaoft 14

Col. Northland 16, (()\.,Brookhaven 9 (OTI
Col. Ready 9, Col. Hartley 3
Col. Walnut Ridge, 34, Col. W~tstone 19
Col. Watterson 28, Marion H11rding \4
Col. Westland 21, Thornas Worthing10n 14
Columbia 13, Cle. Lutheran We$t 0
Columbus Grove 42, Paulding 2H
Coshoctoi159, St. Clairsville 22
Covington 48, Bradford 14
Crestline 34; Buckeye C~ntral 7
Crestwood 27, Woodridge 13
Crooksvi lle 29, River View 9
0ahon 28, Waynedalt. 14
Dny. Dunbar 26, Day. Meadowdale 7
Day. Nonhridge 27, Middletown Madison 1.)
Defiance 7, Kenton 0
Delaware 35, Mar)IS\'llle 6
Delphos Jefferson 27, Spencerville 6
Delphos ~1. John 12, Coldwater 9
Diw.ie 3, Carlisle 0
Dover 7, New Philadelphla 6
E. Knox 34, Colonel Cmwford 18
E. Uverpool22, Indian Creek 13
E. Palestine 7, Columbiana Crestview 0
Ealon 36, Bellbrook 7
Edgewood 34, Oxford Talnwnndn 20
Elida i3,Celina l2
Elyria 39, Lorain Adm. King 14
Euclid 14, Lyndhurst Brush 0
Fairbanks 39. Waynesfield Goshen 7
Fairle5s 21, Tuslaw 14
Fa.ii]XI.It Harbor 12, Southington Chalker 7
Fairview 47. Hicks'fille 0
. Federal Hoc10 ng 58, RaCine Southern 13
Pishtr Cnth. J5, MIUerspon 12
Fostoria 6, Tol. Whitmer 0
Franklin Hts. 33, WhitChall20
Fredericktow n 39: O,:uario 13
Fremont Ross 28, Napol~on 14
Frtmont St. Joseph 35, Seneca E. 2
Gahanna 27, Newark, 15
Garawny 25, Srrnsbura 6
Garfield HtJ. 43, Panna 14
Garfield Hts. Trinity 27, Bedford Chanell 3
Garrettsville 27, Atw"ater Waterloo 6
Gates Mills Hawken 19, Kirtland 3
Gene-.a 49, Painesville Harvt.y 16
Germantown Vnlley View 14, Day. Oakwood
ll

Gibsonburg 44, Elmwood 20
Girard 38. Salem 0
Goshen 30, Springboro 23
Gra.ham20, Day.Stebbi nll5
Grand Val . 61, Pymatuning Vat 0
Grandview 31, Col . Academy 14
Grnnville 3~. New AlbDny 23
Greeneview 27, Cedafville 9
Greenfield McClain lS, Madilon Plains 14
Greenville 35, Trotwood·Madltun 19
GllJ\·e City JS, Reyno\Wburall ,
Orovej&gt;or121, Dublin Coffman 19
Ouyan (W .Va.) Valley 43 , S. Galli a 7
Hamilton 29, Cin. Mount Healthy 0
Hamillon Badin 45, Cin. Anneytown 24
Hamilton T"l!t'p. 32. Fairfield Union 26
Hardin Northern 53, Leiptk-21
Hnwhn 19. Kjnland 3
Hc:atb 34, Liberty Un.\Di U
Hilliard 23, Wettervil!e N. 6
,
Hillsboro 49, Clcnnont Nonheastem 0
Hilltop 70. Edon 34
Hopewcll·l..oudoo 33, N. Balrimlft-6
Hubbard 28. Nile&amp; McKinley 3
Hud10n 20. Green 14 (0T)
Hunlini\On.t8, Zane TriCe II
Huroo 40, Port Cli1toa 0
JacQon 42. Point &lt;W.Va.) Pleailnt 8
Jewen-Scio 2l, ·Mf.lvcna 7
Kantas Lakn1a 35, Millbury Lake 6 .

Kent Roosevelt 27, Cuyahoga Falls 20
Kenton Ridge 39, Spring. NonhWestem 14
Kings Mills 10, Hamilton Ross 9
LaDme 45, Brookfield 12
Lakeview 35, Newton Fallli 7
Lakewood 47, Panna NorTf\llldy 27
Lebanon 55, Franklin 14
leetonia 27, Columbiana 21 (2 OT)
Lemon-Monfoe 34, Middle~own Feawlck 31
Liberty 33, Warren Champion 6
Liberty Benton 28, McComb 0
Ubmy Center 42, Archbold 21
Licking Hts. 50, Bernt,l Union 14
Licking Val. 47, Uti~a 14
Lima Bath 25, Onawa-Glandorf 16
Lima Perry :l8, Upper Scioto Val 18
Lima Sr. 57, Findlay 6
U!bon 48, Unit~d 18
. t..ogan 32,-A~ns 0
Logan Elm 28, Circleville 22
London 34, Hebron Lakewood 19
Lorain Cath. 34, Newbury 0
Louisville 38, Miner-.a 21
Lowellville 20, Jackson. Millon I)
Lucas 21, Cot Centennial 6
Lucasville Val . 48, Minford 22
Madison 41, Asht&amp;bula 20
Mansfield Madison 34, Alhland 12
Mansfield Sr. 33, Lexington 6
Margarelti 25, Sandusky Perkins 0
Marion Elgin 28, Cardington 6
Marion Fnmklin 35, Walnul Rid.t;e 18
Marion Local40. Parkway 8
Ma,tion Pleaunt 30, Mount Gilead 1 ·
Marion River Val. 57, Sparta Hlg.bland }1
Mason 44, Wilrrungton 0
·
Mauillon Jacbon 28, N. CaDmn 20
,
Massillon Perry 14, Canton GlenOalc. 3
May~ville 59, W. Muskingum 28
McClain 28, Madison Plains 14
McDennutt NW 27, Franklin Flwnace Green 7
Medinlll2, Lodi Clo-.erleaf3
Medina Buckeye 36. Loudonville ll
Meigs 25, Belpre 20
Mentor 3,5, Cle. Ht il hli 1.5
Mentor Lake Catb. 26, Chardon ND·CL 14 .
Millmi Trtke ~9, Waverly 6
Miamisburg 44, Day. Carroll14
Middletown 11, Lancaster 13
· Mid!Wk 22, Berea 18
Mid-.iew 31, Lorain Drookl ide 19
Milan Ed)son 24, Clyde ll
Mineral Ridge 20, MtOonlld 14
Minster 27, New Bremen 10
Mogadore 3.5, Ravenna Soutbeut 21
Monroeville 23, Ashland Crestview 12
Montgomefy (Ky.) Cqunty $1, lr&lt;Naton 26
Morgan 18, New Lelinaton 10
N. Olmsted 33, Amhen( 14 .
Nelsonville,. York 46, Oak. Hill 0
New London .50. Collin• Western Reserve 28
New Richmond 28, Wcstan·Brown 12
Newcomerstown 26, Ridpwcx; 9
Nordonia 31, Mayfield 21

Nonhmor 46. RidJ&lt;dolc 0
Nonhridge 4J, M•ioo Cttb. l4
Northwood 4\J, OttiWI Hills7
Nonon .56, Medina Hiahlaad 20
Norwaync 41 . Hillsdlk 26
Norwood 28, Uttle Mi..U ').7
Oberlin 38, Lorain Cleln'iew 20
Olenlangy 20, Dis Walnut 13
~Olmsted Fall• 48, Wettlake 31
Oregon Clay 20, SylvaNa Nonhview H)
Orrville 17, Wooster 14

Otsqo 29, Genoa 20
Paint Val. -25, Piketon 20
P~a39.~~· 14
Patrick Henry 44, Everpten 14

Perry 20, Chagrin Fall$ 8
Pmy1burg 39, Holland Spring. 13
Philo 42. Tri· Valley 28
Pick.crinjton 23, Dublin Scioto 19
Piqua 30, Vandalia· Butler 22
Poland 24, Struthers 0
Ponsmouth W. 19, Porumoulh Notre Dame 0
IU'fenna 27, Barbenmll3
~ere 35, Copley 14
Richmond Edison 34. Litbon Beaver 17
• RDCk Hil\13, Buffalo, W.Va. 7 (2 01)
Rool51own 32. Mog&amp;dore Field 23
Rossford 3.5, Maumee 28 (2 OT)
S. Centra132, Plymouth 6
S. Cll&amp;rleston SE 35, E. Clin1on 12
S. Ran go 60, Berlin Cen1er Western Reserve 21
Sandusky21, VennilionO
Sandy Val. 28. E. Camon 0
8ebring 38, Southern Local IS
ShBdyside 28, Hannibal River 20
Sheridan 38, John Glen 12
Sidoey Lehman 46, Miami E. 0
Soloo 32, Kenston 6
Spring. Catholic 23, Mi lton Union 0
Spring. Local 15, Mathews 6
Spring Shawnee 68, Gretnon 0
Spring. South 41, Huber Hts. Wayne 40
St. Hefll}' 31, Fort Recovery 0
'St . Marys 26, Van Wc:n 14
Steubenville Calh. 14, Toromo 6
Streetsboro 46, Windham 0
Tiffia Columbian 79, Upper Sandu1ky 0
linora 43, Edgertoo 28
Tol. Bowsher 28, Tol. Roger 6
Tol. Catholic 31, Tol. Woodward 1
TaL St. Johns 24. Tol. St. Francis 21
' Tol. Stan 49, To\. l..ibbey 0
Tolaia. W.Va. 49, Porumouth E. 6
Tri-County N. ~S. Twin ValleyS. 26·
Trimble 34, Hemlock Miller 0 .
Triway o42, W. Holmes 26
Troy 46. Sidney 16
Twinsburg O!amberlain 23, W. Ocauga 0
Union LcK:al \2, Barnesville 0
Uniontown Lake 29, Stow 23
Upper Arlington 37, WorthinJton Kilboumc.7
Urtana 12, Spring. Nonheulem 0
Van Duren 2), Cory-Raw1on 17 (2 OT)
Vent~illes 22. TippOI)' 10
W. Branch 54, Alliance Marlinaton 18
W. Carrolhon 20, Cayton Nol1hmont 16
W. Chester Lakol&amp; 28, Cin. Colerain 14
W. Jefferson 26, Jonathan Alder 1
Yf". Ubat~ Salem 12, Indian Lake 6 (OT)
Wadsworth 27, Tallmadge 7
Walsh Jesuit4~. Akron St.V-St .M 0
Wapakone[ll. 40, l.,ima Shawnee IS
WBJTen Kennedy 22, N. Ridgeville 16 ,
Washington C.H. 46, Bc1dey 35
Watkins Memorial39, Mounl Vnnoo 34
Waule(ln 26, Delta 1
Wayne1ville 24 1 Clinlon-Muaie 21
WellinJtoo 35. Keystone 6

Wellston 7, Viatoa Co. 0
W.-itleS. :ZS,a.tllicolhe t9
Wad"all 35, Uoioto 0

Wltcelenboq •2. Portomoolt\ 22

WbeeliiJI (W.Va..) Pwk. 34, Buckeye l..oc1l 27
Wickliffel9,A~O

Willard 13, Galion 0
r
Willoqltby S. 36. Eullllie N. 0
Woodrnore41 , Eanwood 1!5
W)'lllcot 44, Rhmlote 26
Xenia 26. Sprlna. Nonlt 0
You. a-ey 2'f, Brilf;lb, W.Va.. 21
You. Uberty 33, Wmen Champion 6
You. Unulinc 33, W~n Hlfdlna lO
You. W\l1011. 28, ~II 0
•
Zauesvillc: -47, Canton Tirn.ken 22

I

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Sunday, November 3, 18111

Premier
Medical
Resources

.

The Betz Family

.

Section

•

In Top 25 college football,

Baker never accused Lange ¥ ;·
"So you're saying it was kicked in
SANTA MONICA, Calif. (APJplanting
the evidence, but suggestcj!
mid-air
a-.;
it
was
coming
down?"
OJ. Simpson\ lawyer proposed a
be
was
part
of a cover-up for tho•
new evidence-planting theory Friday, Baker asked sarcastically. An objec·
who
did.
: ,
suggesting police placed a glove and lion blocked an answer.
•
cap under a bush inches .from the
bodies of Nicole Brown Simpson and
Ronald Goldman.
Later, the plaintiffs added anoth·
cr surprise to the wrongful death tri·
•
al - taking j~sl 13 minutes toquestion retired Detective Philip Vannatter. a key witness who spent live days
on the stand during (he criminal trial.
- Friday, Vannauer he was asked
only to describe his handling of a
bloo&lt;f vial.
.
Allorney Robert Baker used his
. cross-examination of retired Detective •Tom• Lange,
Vanilauer's partner.1
•
to giVe JUrors the new theory, noting
Providing Service the
the lack of dirt on both items found
in the soft soil,
Old-Fashioned Way.
"Did it ever occur to you that the
cap an~ glove could have been placed
there? Baker asked.
·
.
'
"Cenainly not," Lange said.
Call
us
now
for your durable
·
Simpson was acquilled of murder
charges last year after a trial in
medical supplies and in-home
which his lawyers argued, among
hourly care service needs
other things, that a bloody glove that
matched the one found near the bodies was planted on the grounds of
•
Simpson's estate.
Simpson · is being sued in civil
court by relatives oflhe victims, and
hS00-319~5307
if jurors determine he y;as responsi·
ble for the killings. they can recOin·
mend monet'\1}' damages.
Baker asked whether police had
ever tried dropping the items through
the plants near Ms. Simpson's con·
dominium to see wher~ they would
land. Lange said such an experiment
was not done.
"You would agree the cap could
not have been dropped in that position?" Baker asked.
"No, not necessarjly," · Lange
answered:·
·
"Could it be kicked under there?"
BPker asked.
''Not unless it was kicked while it
was coming down, " Lange said.

• Responsible for bringing you .
the conveRience ofpaying ·
taxes at the banks
• Earned Gal#a County over
. $422,000
in
1995
.
.in interest
.
.
. .
• Tough but fair on delinquen~
taxes with foreclosures

Mo~ and the.United Auto Workers
an~ounced tentative agreement early

-$11urday on a '!CW national contract
for OM's 215,000 union workers in
the United States.
But union leaders said the deal
would not end strikes at two GM
locals in Wisconsin and Indiana. 1be
strike at the metal-stamping plant in
Indianapolis has led to shutdowns of
four other GM assembly plants.
UAW President Stephen Yokich
said negotiations on local supplemental contracts would continue at
those plants.
"Alii can say is, we have it, we're
happy with it and we have a lot of
work in front of us, obviously, with
tbe local unions that we have to get
working on now that we have a ten·
tative agreement," Yokich told a 2
a.m. news conference ·at GM head·
quarters.
At a separate news conference,
GM Chainnan Jack Smith Jr. said the
company would focus on ending the
lclCal "!alkouls a' soon as possible.
"Obviously, we're pulling the
absolute top priority on addressing
the issues at' Indianapolis and
Jonesville," he said. "It's imponanl
In get those operations hack to wnrk
and building high quality curs and
trucks."
No ~cnns of the agrccmcnl were
disdnscd, hut GM chief negotiator .
Gerald A. Knechtel said it lilllowcd
the pullcrn set hy the UAW's conlral:ls with Ford Mntor Co. anll
Chrysler Corp.
The dcufcamc after four months
nf negotiations and li111r days :llkr the
1w.1 IJA.W lcM.:uls went nn slrikc ut
lndi:mapulis :md Janc.rwlllc, Wis ., ~~
lru,ck iiSsCII!hJy pl:1n1.
'lllc IJAW said its lilllionul harp:ai'ning cnnunillcc cr~dnrscd the pact
urianimuusly. II gucs next hcfnrc lhc
1!/\W·OM lc:Klcrship council nf lnt:al
presidents ' fc•· "Jlprnval Wcdnc.,day
hcfttrc J!oing 111 mcmhcr"' for ra
'IlK: wurlcl'.~ h•r~csl autumo1kl.'1·
s:1icll .'riday tl1:11 I X.'X''I nf its wurL. crs were idle I)C(;;Uisc of IlK.~ slrikt.':'\

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Sports
· in ·brief
JACKSON .::.. Bull riding and
barrel racing, as well as team roping, steer wrestling and five other
rodeo events that will bring more
than 90 competitors will he on the
agenda in the 23rd annual
MidStates Rodeo Association
Championship Finals, scheduled
for Friday. Saturday and Sunday,
Nov. 10 at Henderson's Arena.
Contestants will compete for a
total of $25,000 in various events.
Event champions will also receive
atrophy buckle and a saddle.
For more information, call
Denise Ellenberger at286'5447. ·
Devils beat Llgl)tning Z·l
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(AP) .- Dave Andreychuk and
Scoll Niedermayer scored firstperiod goals as the New Jersey
Devils' dormant power play came
alive for a 2-1 victory over the
'fampa Bay Lightning on Saturday.
The Devils, an anemic 1·15 on
the power play over the five previous home games, scored on power·
play goals by Andreychuk and
Niedermayer late in the first period
for a 2-0 lead.
' New Jersey ended a two game
losing streak as it extended Tampa ·
. Bay's winless streak to five. The
Lightning are one of the NHL's
best road teams, having won seven
of their last II (7-3-1) in a stretch
that dates back to last season.
The Devils had an extended
first-period power-play when
Lightning · defenseman Jason
Wiemer picked up double·minors
for .high-sticking Randy McKay at
I 5: 30. New Jersey cashed in both
opportunities. ·
Pitorino runs
for record 443 yards
WAYNESBURG, Pa. (APlA.J. Pitorino 'rushed for an NCAA
all-divisions record 443 yards on
45 carries and scored three touchdowns to lead Hanwick to a 42-14
win over Waynesburg on Saturday.
Pitorino, who had 304 yards in
the first half. broke a record set just
a month ago when Dante Brown
ran for 441 yards for Marietta on
Oct.5.
Pitorino gained all but 14 of
Hartwick's rushing yards.

�Page 82 •If

?

a • .__If

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

llwol

Raiders win ...

'

.

wy

(

•

SEOAL football st~ndings

terback sacks were credited to Maynard, Brad Kemper (two), and
Richard Stephens. Saunders completed five of IS passes (one intercepted by Stout) for 80 yards. Rob
Woodward caught three GAHS passes for 57 yards, including a 33-yarder
in the third stanza.
Gabe Saunders Aaron Adams.
Nate Polcyn, and freshman nose
gu'lrd George Garnes also got in several good licks throughout the 48
minute battle.
·
For Gallipolis defensively, John
Hoptsby, Dave Rucker, Josh Bod·
imer, and Rob Woodward got in several good tackles. Woodward recovered a RVHS fumble in the second
period.
F1Da11ame for senlon
It was the final high school foot·
ball game for eight River Valley
seniors - Jason Roe, ·Richard
Stephens, Chris Maynard, Jody ·
Sian~. Brad Kemper, Mat Toler, Jerry Brammer and Aaron Adams.
It was the last game for 12 Blue
Devil seniors - Dave Rucker, Greg
Lloyd, T. C. Beaver, Isaac Saunders,
STEPHENS STOPPED- Gallla ACIIIIH'ty'a Chlia Bowman (58)
Rob Woodward, Anthony Shipkosky;
River Valley'a Richard Stephena for no gain on thla play
Sam Garber, Brad Rose, John Sturduring Friday'• SEOAL grid game 8t C!leahlre. The Raldel'll won
geon, Andy Blank, Travis Fisher and
21-o. (Photo by Ron Caudill of River Valley Photography).
Aaron Stout.

•top•

Top 25...

Thtirsdtt)',
Thep Melas had to travel to
Villlo.n IJ play the Viklnp for the
TVC erown on Saturday . The
Vikinp defealed the Marauders 28·
1 alld hid seemed to ·bl; in the driver's s~t for the Ohio Division
.crown. Bul the Golden Rockets were
able to pull'the upset over Vinton.
~title for Meias is the first for
the . ~oll and gold since 1987
when tlia,Maquders tied for the title
with Belpre. That. Marauder team
l"a&amp; IF' by current New England
Patrill! tig!Uend Mike Bartrum.
. Belp~ took the opening kickoff.
SP&lt;,.PI*Yf I.rer, Vernon Reams went
ardiind left end 62 yards for the
sc~. Reams added the extra points
to giVe Belpre a 7-0 lead with 9:11
left in lhe period.
·
Bel~re. who pulled out all the
stops 11j~rung trick pia.'; all evening
went for the on side ktck, but John·
DavidsOn recovered .for Meigs at the
Maraudet: 42-yard line.· Three plays
)ater Justin Roush blasted up the
middle breaking several tackles and
went 47 yards for the score. Jeff
Fowler's kick for the extra points
was true and the game was tied at
seven with 7:571eft in the period.
Belpre ~ook the kickoff and drove
76 yards m 10 plays to retake the

,.
J..

(Continued from B·l)

Manning, the Southeastern biggest output ever against the
.
Conference's loading passer at 311 Wolfpack.
yards per game, c.ompleted 20-of-36,
The previous high for North
helping the Volunteers (6-1, 4-1 Carolina (7-1, S-1 Atlantic Coast
SEC) stay in second place behind Conference) in the 86-garne history
toprranked Aorjda in the SEC East. . of the series was a 44-0 victory in
His second touchdown throw 1894, the first game in the 102-yearcame late in the fourth quarter - a old matchup of heated rivals separat·
2Q-yarder to Joey Kent, the SEC's ed by 25 miles.
leading receiver wbo had nine catch- · Johnson, second in the ACC with
es for 104 yards, just shy of his 122- 47 career touchdowns, had two oneyard-per-game average.
yard scoring runs in North
South Carolina f5·4, 4-3), the Carolina's 19-0 first quarter,
league's seco·nd-best defensive returned a punt 39 yards· for a score
team, appeared ready to threaten midway through the second period
after scoring on the first possession and added a two-yard burst early in
of the second half.
the fourth quarter as Keldorf drove
That touchdown was scored on a the Tar Heels 99 yards to ice the
two-yard .pass from Anthony Wright game.
.
to Trevon Matthews, who out- . Keldorf was _just as spectacular as
jumped Tennessee defenders in the Johnson, throwmg scormg passes of
co:Joer of the end zone as the margin 19, 26 and 63 yards ~nd fimshed 16closed to 21-14.
of-22for 315 yards.
. But that was about all the
!'ln. 9 Mlcblgan 45
Gamecocks could mount offensi'veM~pn St. 29
ly.
At · Ann Arbor, Mieh., no
'Michigan quarterback had ever
No.8 North Carolina 52
N. Carolina St. 20
thrown more than three touchdown
. At Chapel .Hill, N.C., Leon passes against Michigan State in 88
Johnson scored four tithes and Chris previous meetings had gone by
Keldorf .broke a school record for between the old rivals.
scoring passes.' as No. 8 North
Scott Dreisbach ended that streak
Carolina beat North Carolina State with four touchdown passes and the
52·20 on Saturday, the Tar Heels' ninth-ranked Wolverines, aided by

,.

.,
I

0 ·1

.

\,

,

·· NBA standings

New York ............... .1
Washinaton .............1

'"

Boston .. ...................0

.._

,....

CI.EVELAND ........ I

Portland ... ................!

&lt;#

f

I'

Golden Swe ............o
Phpe~ll ....................o
S.:nuneDio ......... ,....o
seattle ......................o

1995 CHIVY S•10,
ve, a.lr. 15 speed, rear slider, aport wheels

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
.000
.IXlO
..(XX)

1.00
. 1.00
.1.00
.000

EQUIPMENT RENTAL

Major League Bastball
TAMPA

BAY

DEVIL RAYS .

Named Charlie Montoya a minor-league
manager.
·

...,..

Amerl~n

League

KANSAS CITY ROYALS : Named
Bill Schudlidl national crOuchcclu::r·&amp;pe·

.ooo

ciaii!Ssignment IICOUt.

..lXX&gt;
.000

~ILWAUKEE BREWERS:

reflseman Alexei 7..hitnik for two games
ond fmed him $1,000 for 11 high-sticking
inddenl agains1 Dallas Smrs center Jamie
Lungenbrunner in 'Ygamc on Oct. JO. Pro-moted Gary Meagher 10 managing director of public relntions aild Andrew Me·
Gowan io direct or of public relations.
BUFFALO SABRES : Recnlled LW
Barrie Moore from loan to Rochester of
1he AHL.
COLORADO AVALANCE: Placed F
Mike Ricci uu the injured list.

St. Rt. 7, Cheshi,re, Ohio

Today's games

Baseball
'

Natlu111d Huckey Leaaue
NHL.: Suspended BullaiQ Subres de·

JAYMAR INC.

Edmonton at Chicago, ] p.m.
Dallas at St. Louis, 1 p.m.
Colorado at Anaheim. 9 p.m.
Montreal nt Phoenht, 10 p.m.

lill

Sent OF

David Huhe and OF Turner Ward oul·
right to Tuc1on of the PCL.
. MINNESOTA TWINS : Agreed to
terms with Of Roberto Kelly on a oneyear contract.
NEW YORK YANKEES : Exercised
!heir 1997 oprion on RHP Dwighl Good.

•••TORONTO BLUE JAYS : Named
Jim Leu coach.

Denver at S11n Antonio, 7 p.m.

·c

30 &amp; 35 TON GROVE
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
DOZERS 07- D-9 -1150
LOADERS 988B- 966-1845
TWO 631C SCRAPERS
CASE·580 BACKHOE
CAT 320 TRACK HOE
MACK WATER TRUCKS
35 &amp;50 TON LOW-BOY SERVICE
WILL DO COMMERCIAL
DIRT WORK

614·992·6637 or
614·44.6 ·9786
Jerry .Hall

Rushing
Meigs: Rou sh 15-8 3, Williams
21-80, Bentley 1-(- I), Davenport 3(-7)
Belp~: Reams 27-195. Chevalier
13-51, Sowards 2- 19, Roberts 2-( ·
5), Ring 1-7, Keith 1-0, Lyons 5· (·
18)
. Passing
Mei gs: Davenport 3-7, 85 yards
Belpre: Lyons 7-I7. 73,yards

Recei\ling

Meig s: Ju stin Roush 1-39,
Hanson l-37,1ientley 1-9
Belpre: Sowards 3·33, Cox 2-17,
McCoy 1-12, Reams 1-11

' '
•I

.

Auto trans,
Power windows,
power steering,
air conditioning.
This car is in
excel! ant
condition.

Auto trans,. 4.3
V6, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass,
rear jump se~1ts I
and much
more.

4.3 VS, auto
trans, leather
interior, lilt, cruise,
power seats,
tinted glass,
towing pkg, alum
·
wheels.

ve engine. auto

trans, alum
wheels, wood
I m·ain interior trim,
air condltiol)lng.
Super sharp
truck.

Arizona at N.Y. Giut1 , I p.m.
Carolina a1 Allam.a, I p.m.

C_INCINNATI 111 Baltlmoco, I p.m.
Detroit at Green Bay, I p.m.
Phlladc!Jphia at Dallu, I p.m.
St. Louis at Plnsburah, I p.m.
San Diept Ill lndianapoli1, I p.m.

Tampa~f • Ctkaao. I p.m.
l&lt;aPJU Cif)' II Miueaota, -4 p.m.
Houlton at Seattle, 4 p.m.
Miami al New Elialand. 4 p.m
Wuhin&amp;ron a1 Buffalo, 4 p.m.
San Fraocilco 11 New Orlean~, 8 p.m.
OP,cn dale: J~ebonvlrlc. N.Y. Jct1

$
$

,

We Sold it • it's

I Sl1owroo1m Clean
inside and out.
Col!lpare
anywhere only
42,000 careful
lmiies . .See it NQW.

Mond•y's.1ame

Denver a1 Oattand. 9 p.m.

~

For a great deal
onanyoneof
· , these cars see...

AllultkDt,...._

:·t"" zu.
»: I. :I Ell. Ill: Ia
Floridi ............,.... 8 0 ~ 20 ' 39 . 20

2 dr, 5 apd, air, AM/FM caas, 1-owner.

&gt;: N.Y. llanaen ....... l 6 3 13 &lt;16
Phildlphia ......... 6 7 0 12 3~
;.. ,._.Bay .......... l 4 I II )6
Wuhin&amp;lon ....t....,! 6 0 10 33
NewJ~Cf ~·-.... .;4 _,: I
9 ,23
N.Y. llllndors ...... l 5 4 6 23
~
'
"'
NorthWI Dl,_
Buflalb ..... :~.~ ........ 6 6 '0 12 . 34
( Hartford .............. l 2 2 12 30
OIIAwa ............... ,! 3 l II 31
Boaon........ .......... 4 4 l 10 34
Mon...,. .............. 4 5 2 )0 45
"- Pittsbu~Jh ............ 2 9 0
4 25

·~

$

all-power.. factory

V8,

Belpre : Reams 62 -yd . run
(Reams kick), 9:11 -lst
Meigs: Justin Roush 47-yd . run
(Fowler kick) 7:57 -Ist
Belpre: Reams 16-yd. run
(Reams kick). 3:53-lst
Meigs: Hanson 37-yd. pass from
Davenport (kick failed), 2:43-1 sl
Meigs: Justin Roush 1-yd. run
(pass failed), 9:34-2nd
Belpre: Sowards 4-yd. pass from
·Lyons (pass failed), 2:56-3rd
Meigs: Just'in Roush 1-yd. run
(pass failed), 9: !5-4th

.1988. i~~~~~~~~~

1:
·~ EA~TERN CONFERENCE

cruise,

Statistical leaders

Scoring summary

·

Today's1ames

.$

AM/FM atereo. factory warranty

air, tilt,

1-0
Fumbles-no. lost ......... .4-3
4-30
Pcnalties-yds .............. 2- 10
Punts (n o-yards-avg) 3-86 4- 104

3.8 V6, auto
trans, AM/FM
caSs, tilt, cruise,
power windows,
power loc~s. ·
power seal, and
priced lo sell!

NFL slate

NION

5 spd, leather . .lite.
cassette &amp; C.O. 1-ownar

WECANQEI.P
lfY;,.. Have At teat .1,300
a month lacome
t.1111Jol 529-2301

0
0.
0
1
1
I
1

5~

1- NHL standings

Auto,

At Dutch Miller Chevrolet,

I. ' fl:l.
0
0
0
0
1
I
I

N11tiunal League
·
,COLoRADO ROCKI BS: Named P.J
Carey bullpen co:K:h.
FLORIDA MARLINS i Named Rou
Colnn ~ lo direc10r of b..s~:bull inform11·
tion and publidt)'.
MON TREAL EX POS: Excrd!led
their 1997 option bn C Djlftin Fletcher.
PHILADELPHIA. PHIU..JES: Named
Brad Mills first-base coach. Agreed to
terms with OF T11 11y Uarr(ln on minor
l~:;q:u e contract.
PtTrSUURGH PIRATES : Acquired
RHP Clint Sodnwsky frnm the Detroit
Tige~ fur RHP Dan Miceli.
.

Golden StateiiC Vancouver. 9 p.m.
Minnesota at L.A. Lake:rs, 9:30 p.m. r

No Credit, Slow Credit
· Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?

0

Interceptions thrown ....... 0

• · Today's 1ames

VS, auto, air, 1-o"¥ner. vary low mil... like new

all-power

l&gt;eoortment
1l
M
II
First down s .................... 14
51
Scrimmage plays ...........72
Rushing au:-yds ..... 52·249 40· 155
Passing yds ....................73
85
240
Total yards ................... 322
3-7
Comp.-au ...................7-17

Charlene ar New York. 6 p.m.

1996 fORD DROHCO

1991 PONtiAC GRAND PRIX

Team statistics

350 va, auto,
Silverado pkg,
A/C. front &amp; rear
heat, 8
passenger
seating, lowing
pkg, and more.

HO&lt;kty

' Detroit at Atlanta, 7l30 p.m.
Miami at IIKI.iana, 7:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago, 8:10p.m.
Botton at Milwaukee. 8:30p.m.
Sacrameato a1 Dallas, 8:JCJ p.m.
HOUIIoo 11 Phoenilt, 9 p.m.
Portlarid II Seattle, 10 p.m
Utah at L.A. C1ippm .. l0:30 p.m.

tilt, cruise, -caas. all-power

4 Dr, 5 apd. air. tilt, cruise, caaa.• 1 ~owner

32 yards . Jeremiah Bentley added
one for nine.
For Belpre, Reams had an outstanding game with 27 carries for
195 yards. Eric Chevalier added 13
for 51. Lyons was seven of 17 in the
air for 73 yards. Matt Sowards
caught three for 33.
.
Meigs finishes the season at 7·2
overall and 3-1 in the Ohio Division .
Belpre falls to 3-7and 2-2.
Quarter I!!IJII1 .
Belpre .. ............ .... \4 0 6 0 = 20
Meigs .................. .l3 6 0 6 = 25

'lbey played Saturday

.

1995 DODGI NION

Chancey, was able to run out the
clock to ice the win. The Marauders
had a fourth -and· inches situation at
their own 40 with 2:10 left . But
Chancey decided to go for it, and
Roush picked up two yards for the
first down.
In that last drive for Meigs, it was
announced to the crowd that
Wellston had pulled off the upset.
Meigs then went to work and ran the
clock d.own. for the Marauders' first
TVC championship in nine years. ·
"The Belpre kids really played
hard," a drained Chancey said after
the game. ''I'm so proud of these
kids, they never gave up . The
seniors made a commitment in lhe
off season and did a great job all
year: I feel very lucky 10 have the
opportunity to not only have such
quality kids playing for me, but also
a great group of assistant coaches.
This was a great victory for our program. I want to thank these seniors
for ali' their hard work."
RGush led the Marauder ground
attack with 15 carries for 83 yards.
'l'(illiams added 21 carries for llO
yards . Davenport was three or seven
in ti1e air for 85 yards and a touch·
down. Justin Roush caught one for
39 yards. Hanson pulled in one for

CLEVELAND at Wuthinaton, 7:30
p.m.
.
Toronto ar Qaarloue, 7:30 p:m.

..

fORD THUNDIR.IRD LX

loss on fourth and four. Belpre then
put together a 11-play. 66-yard drive
to take a 20-19 lead. Mall Sowards
pulled in a four· yard pass from Matt
Lyons for the score. The extra points
were no good. but the Eagles held
the sl im one point lead with 2:561eft
in the period.
Once agai.n the Marauder defense
came up with a big play when Scott
Roberts coughed up the football
aft.er a hard hit from junior lineback·
er Jason Roush. Chad Hanson recovered for Meigs at the Belpre 32-yard
line.
.
Five plays later it was Justin
Roush once again from a yard out.
The pass for the extra points was no
good, but Meigs held the 25-20 lead
with 9:15\eft in the game.
Belpre drove to the Meigs 17
wi_th a first· and -10 situ otion. But
· Lyons, under heavy pressure was
callep for intentional grounding ,
giving Belpre a second and 25 at the
32-yard line. Two play1later Belpre
was called for holsJing. giving the
Eagles a third-and -24 situation.
Lyons was then thrown for 11 14yard loss by senior tackle Adam
Barrell. Belpre then punted giving
Meigs ti1e ball at their own 20 with
less than four minutes remaining.
Meigs. with a gutsy call by

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

L.A. l...akc:ra 96, Phoenill82

I'

4 dr, auto,

.

I

Ill, Philadelphia 103
Minneteta 82. San Antonio 78
New York 101, Toronto 99
Houstou 96, SGilllCllto 8.5
Da11u 92, Denver 91
Utah 99, SeatUe 91
Pottland 114, Vancou\'er 8.5
·L,A. Clippers 97, Golden Stme 8.5

1995 FORD ESCORT WAGON

1996.

I
I

· Ollc8fO·I07, Boston 98
MiiUlll 94, Atlanta 81
CLEVELAND 90, New lmey 77
Washinaton 96, Orlando 92
Detroit 9.5, Indiana 89

991 ISUZU TROOPIR

ve, air, tilt. cruise,

~

'1 F,rlday's scores ·

1:

5 speed, air, 4 door, local trade

4 door, auto,

R

L.A. Clippen ........... l
·L.A. Liken .............. I

199a HONDA ACCORD LX

1995 MERCURY SABLE GS

LOO

PadfleDI"..._

4 door, all-power, very clean.

ve,

0

Dallu., ..................... l
Hovston ... -.............. 1
Minnetota ................ l
•' Utah ......................... !
Denver ..................... 0
q, SM Antonio............. O
Vancou"cr ............... 0

l'i
42

Tnmpn Bny Dl New Jersey. I p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at Boston. 7 p.m.
Los An~les ut Hartford, 1 p.m.
Washington at N.Y . lslander s, 7 p.m.
Onawa at Pittsburgh, 7:JO p.m.
Philadelphia Ill Aoridn, 7:)0 p.m . .
Detroit at Toronto. 7:30p.m.
Buffalo u1 ColoradO, 9 p.m.
Calg111:y at Vancouver, IO:JO p.m.
Montreal at San Jose, IO:JO p.m.

~RNCONFERENCE
MidwUI Dl\'illon

Ium

,

They played Saturday

'' Chnrlotte ..................O 0 .000
1 Atlan~a .....................o I ,000
Indiana .......... ;..........o I .000
Toronto .................... O I .000

caaeette
loaded

1

On first down, Davenport
4~mjied a short pass over the middle
to Roush, and the freshman rambled
39 yards, only to be stopped 'inches
short of the end zone. Roush got his
second touchdown on the next play.
Davenport's pass to Hanson for the
extra points was brok~n up. With
9:34 left Meig~ held a 19-14 lead ;
which is the way the score stood at
the half.
Meigs drove to the Belpre 28yard line to start the second half, but
Davenport was sacked for a six-yard

I .000

0 1.00
0 1.00

Detroit. ............ ·...... .1
· Milwaukee.............. .l

1991 OLDSMODILI CliO COUPI

auto, air,

lill "

1.00
1.00

; Cealral Dlvltdoo
ChiCRJO """" ''''"""' !
0 1.00

1992 OLDSMODILI CUTLASS

1

0
0

New Jcraey ..............0
I .000
Orlando ....................o · 1 .000
Phil.&amp;:lphia .............O I .000

4 door, VS, auto. air, all-power, tllt, cruise

auto, all-power, 7

4().

Dcaroit 2, Onawa 2 (tie)
Wasl'iington 4, Pittsburgh 2
Buffalo 4, Sr. looi1 2
Chicago ~. Dallas 2 (OT)
Phoenht J, Calgary 2 (OT)
Vancouver S. Edmonton 4 (OTJ
Anahein1 4, San Jose 3

AtiMUeDbllbl

Ium
w I. fl:l.
Mill111i ...................... ) 0 1.00

1992 DONI CARAVAN Sl

ve.

lead. R.eams scored from 16 yards
out. Once asain Reams added the
extra points witlt 3:53 left (O give
Belpre the 14-7\ead.
Once again, the Golden Eagles
went for the on side kick and
Davidson recovered for Meip at the
Marauder 48. Four plays later, Brad
Davenport hooked up with Chad
!!anson, who took it down the! rig~t
sideline 37 yards for the score. Th1s
time, Fowler's kick was slightly
wide right. Belpre held the 14-13
lead with 2:43 left in the first period.
Meigs received a big break•in the
, second period, when quartcrbacl&lt;
Matt Lyons fumbled and senior
defensive tackle Aaron Hockman
recovered for Meigs at the Belpre

Friday's scores

EASTERN CONFERENCE

V8, auto. air, tilt, cruise, power locks, 7 pass

Sl

(COnlin!led fromB-1) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Vancouver .......... .6 5 0 . 12 l~
los Angelel ..... ,.,. ~ 6 2· 12 3~
Anaheim .............2 ? 2
6 Jl

Milwau~

1992 PONTIAC

•

c

EEDATRUCK?

ve.

•

wy

t

five Michigan State turnovers, rolled
to a 45-29 victory Saturday.
· ·~
The Wolverines (7 -1, ·4-1 Big ·;
Ten) struck for three touchdowns in :.
a 2:01' span of the second quarter ;:
thanks. in part, to an interce~tion ;: .
and a muffed kickoff on the part of.:
Michigan State (5-4, 4-2).
::
J'he Spartans had rushed for more •:
than 200 yards in five straight :•
games . But the Wolverines held ;:
them to 98 yards on the ground,;:
picked off four passes and recovered·:
the muffed kickoff.
· ::
Todd Schultz, who hit 24-of-45 ··
passes for 260 yards and two touch· ::
downs, with four interceptions, had ::
given the Spartans a 10·7 lead on a::
seven-yard touchdown toss to•'
Derrick Mason at the 7:Q5 mark of::
the second quarter.
;:
Dreisbach, who was, 14-of-23 for•:
203 ~ards, p~t Michigan back on.lop::
with an 8-yard scoring strike to ~
Russell Shaw at 12:5 I.
'·
'it was all Michigan after that.
"
No. 19 Notre Dame 54
;:
Navy 27
;: ,
At Dublin, Ireland, Notre Dame, ,.
which had lost two of its three prevl- ::
ous games and slipped to No. 19 in ;:
the national rankings, routed Navy •:
54-27 Saturday in the first college :;
football game ever at Dublin's l·
Croke Park stadium. ·
1
,.~;

LIKE NEW, USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS
SERVICED AND PRICED TO SELL

Auto.

•

Marauders Win •••

(Continued from B·l) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

tory eve; over the Blue Deiils.
line.
. Saunders sacked Isaac Saunders for
He added, "We're really happy for
On a fourth down play, Stephens a 12 yard loss, the Raiders held
our kids. They worked hard during hit Gilmore with a six-y;u:d pass, but GAHS on a fourth down play, then
the off-season. We have been gelling the entire GAHS forward wall dug in marched in from 38 yards out ·with
better each week. We were hampered and stopped Gilmore inches from the Triplett blasting over from the four
by injuries in the Warren Local and goal. Gallipolis ran out the clock to with 4:13 left. Gilmore followed
Logan games, but it all came togeth· end first half play. The Reider drive with the two-point conversion.
consumed seven minutes and two
Substitutes flooded the field for
er tonight."
the final minutes of action.
Chris Maynard scored two touch- seconds on the scoreboard clock.
It was River Valley's fii'St shutout
downs for the Raiders and Jeremiah
G~llipolis received the second
· Triplett one as RVHS improved its ' half kickoff ·· Bodimer returned it ever of an SEOAL opponent. It was
season record .to 3-7 and league from the Blue Devil26 to the GAHS the first lime in · 14 years a Brent
Saunders-coached team lost three
mark to 3-4. Gallipolis dropped to 4- 41.
straight shutouts.
6 overall and 3-4 inside the SEOAL. · Srout sets up score
Maynard rull5 wUd
After
Bodimer
got
two,
Jay
Stout
The Raiders and Devils finished in a
Maynard rushed for 107 yarrls in
lie for fourth place in the conference. intercepted a Saunders pass (no
Coach Saunders said, "River Val· return) to set up the Raiders first 22 trips while Triplett finished with
78 in ·22 tries. Jimmy Gilmore finley played good hard and tough fool· ~ore.
It took River Valley 11 plays ( and ished the game with 71 yards in nine
ball tonight. I give them lots of cred·
it. They have come .a long way dur- five minutes) to march 41 yards for attempts. ''Gilmore played his best
ing the past five years. I sairllast year the game's fust score. Maynard blast· game of the year," Coach Triplett
they are getting better each year."
ed over from ihe seven with 6: 18 left · said. The ex-Blue Devil also had a
The Blue Dl:vil men•..r continued; on the clock. Stout kicked the extra two-point conversion. Gilmore's 30"Unfortunately. we struggled offen- point from placement to make it7·0. yard gain in the sec~nd period was
sively tlie last three games. Losses are
The Raiders wasted little time in the longest run from scnmmage by
supposed to build character. Our scoring again. Following a 37-yard· either team. Jay Stout kic~ed two
kids must now work hard to' get bet· Saupders punt to the RVHS six with one-point conversions for the 'winter for next year."
·
4:23 left in the period, the Raiders put ners.
Gallipolis was held to six yards
Chris Fitch took T. C. Beaver's together th~ir most impressive drive
opening ki~koff on his own seven, of the game. The Triplettmen moved rushing in 20 attempts from scrim·
and r~lurned it\9 yards to the RVHS 94 yards in 10 plays. Maynard gal· mage. Seth Davis led the Gallians
26.
loped in from 21 yards out with 13 with nine yards in five carries. Dave
The Raiders, with hard running by seconds left in the quarter. Stout's Rucker finished with eight yards in
Maynard and Triplett behind a hard- point after attempt was blocked by a four attempts.
The Raiders sacked Blue Devil
charging Raider line and slick ball swarm of Blue Devils. It was· 13-0,
quarterback
Isaac Saunders tour
handling by Stephens, moved 53 River Valley.
yards in 16 plays (a seven and one·
In the fourth period, after Gabe times for 20 yards in losses. Quarhalf minute drive). to Gallia Academy's 21. John Hornsby and Dave
Rucker stopped. Triplett for a three
yard loss. and Gilmore bobbled the
ball for a one-yard loss on third
down. Stephens pass attempt to
- * SEOAL teams*· Triplett fell incomplete to end the
Overall
League
Raiders first threat.
l
[
fA
IM111
lY:L lE fA lY:L
Raiders almost score
442
87
x-Jackson
..........................
7-0
338
69
10-0
Neither team threatened again
422
301
Warren
Loca\
....................
6-1
266
204
9-1
until midway in· the second stanza.
144
POINTPLEASANT ......... 5·2 201
120
6·3 221
Following Isaac Saunders' 48-yard
115
213
RIVER
VALLEY
.............
3-4
95
138
3-7
punt into the end zone, the Raiders
227
GALLIPOLIS ................... 3·4 90
158
4·6 127
dazzled the crowd with a 79 and •
192
212
Logan
................................
2-S
137
136
3-7
one-half yard drive in 14 plays to the
.
127
274
Marietta ............... ... :..........2-S 97 225
2-8
GAHS one-half yard line. Bodimer
88
338
Athens ..................... ..... :....0-7 56 230
2-8
stopped Stephens for a three yard loss
- • Non-league opponents * - .
on third dowh to put the pigskin b~~Ck .
l[
fA
lam
· . · ·
· · · · .W . L
on the GAHS six and ami-yard yard
360
112
Lucasville Valley ..................................... 10 .
0
175
130
Meigs .................... :........................ ............ 7
2
179
98
2
Coal Grove ................................................. 7
Score by qu8!11111'11:
145
156
Fairland ........:.............................................6
4
188
193
Gallipolis ............. 0 0 0 o- 0
South Point ................................................ 5
5
.River Valley ......... 0 0 13 8· 21
Lucasville Valley 48,
· Friday's sgm
Statlatlca
RIVER VALLEY :u, Minford22
Department
G
RV
Melp 25, Belpre 20
GALLIPOLIS 0
First downs ................... 3
24
Chesapeake
49, South Point
Jackson
42, POINT
Yards rushing ............. 28 337
34
PLEASANTS
Lost rushing ............... 22
15
sr·=lllak
Lopn
32,
Athens
0
.
Net rushing ................... 6 . 322
Friday:
Roane County at
Warren
Locill47,
Marietta
7
Pass attempts ............ 15
2
POINT
PLEASANT
COal
Grove
14;
Fairland
3
Completions ................. 5
1
Intercepted by .............. 0
1
, ·.·league champion
. Bold- home team
6
Yards passing ............80
Total yards .................. 86 328
Plays .......................... 35
73
Return yards........ 4-36 4·32
Fumbles ....................... 1
4
1
Lost fumbles .................o
Penattles ................. 5-55
1·5
2-59
1Punts ................... ,.5-182
Individual ruahlng Galllpalla - Davis, 5-9-0; Bodimer, 3-2·0; Rucker, 4-8-0; Saunders. 4·(-20)·0; Siders.. 2-7'0;
Milchell, 1·0-0; Lewis, · 1·0·0.
Totala 2o-e-o. ·
River Valley - Maynard, 22·
107-2; Triplett, 22-78·1; Gilmore,
9-71-0; Stephens, 11-32-0; Teny,
1-7-o; Boso, 1-5-0. Total1 71322-3.
ReceivingGalllpolla • Woodward, 3-57·
0; Davis, 1·13-&lt;l; Stout, 1·10-Q;
Totala - 5-80-0.
River Villey - Gilmore, 1·6·0.
Totala 1-6-0.
Pe1alng,
Galllpolla • Saunders, 5-15·
1·80·0. Totals 5·15+80-0.
River Valley - Stephens, 1·2o-e-o.
4 · door, 4 cyl, auto~ Blue w/gray cloth Interior, air
Puntsconditioning, AMIFM stereo, power mirrors, roof rack, 34 K
Gallipolis - saunders, 5-182
Miles, dual air bags. '25253 w/1000 cash or trade &amp;
Totala 5-182.
approved credit.
River Valley - Brammer, 2·59 .
Totals 2-59
Recovered opponent• film·
bleB:
Gallipolis • ·Woodward.
4 dr, 3.0 V6, auto, White wlblue cloth interior, AC, stereo,
River Valley- None.
&gt;ow,ar windows-locks-mirrors, keyless entrY cruise, tilt,
Pua Interceptions dual air bags, ~292 Mo. w/500 cash trade &amp;
Galllpolla,none.
River Valley - Stout.
lappro·ved credit
\
.
·Scoring: '
River Valley • Maynard, 7·
yard run, Stout, kick, 6:18 third;
1995 CHEVROLET
Maynard, 21-yard run, kic~ ·
CORSICA LT
blocked, 0:13, third; Triplett, 4·
4. Or, 3.1 V6, auto, While WIDIU&amp;I
yard run. Gilmore, run, 4:13
cloth Interior, AC, sterao, nn"''"'l
fourth.
. Galllpolla • None.
locka, $242 w/1500 cuh or tract.ol
&amp; approved credft

all-power,

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

Sunclly, November 3, 1996

•

&lt;

/

"

"

37
42

1616 Eastern Ave.

I

1

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.,
"

'GaUipolis

(614) 446~3672

P•tfte DIYW. '
ft-oo~otado .............. 8• 4 I ' 17 lO , 3l
~ ............. ,7 6 .I 15 39 32
BdaioDI0. ............7 6.0 14 "' · 4!l
Su/................
l ' 6 3 13 41 45
&gt;
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.Call ToU Free l-800-$21-0084
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis; OH • Point Pluaant,

•

W')l

Sunday, November3,18@1

Alexander wins Hocking Division title

~ilJllll......o o o o.. o
~:::::::.... 14

20 6 6 = 46

Scoring summary

Team statistics

Alexander (7:29 lsi qtr.): Hawk
12-yd. pass from Rolston (run
failed)
Alexander (5:S6 1st qtr.): Riley
76-yd. pass from Rolston (Parkis
run)
·
Alexander (11 :59 2nd qtr. ):
Parkis 1-yd. run (run failed)
Alexander (5:48 2nd qtr.): Meek
5-yd. run (Rolston kick)
Alexander (1 :46 2nd qtr.): Riley
58-yd. run (Rolston kick)
Alexander (3:49 3rd qtr.): Dailey
3-yd. run (kick failed)
Alexander (11 :194th qtr.):
Katterhenrich 36-yd. run (run failed)

Department
E
A
First downs ......... :............7
17
Scrimmage plays ........... 56
53
Rushing au-yds ........ 40-97 50.355
Passing yds .................... 27
88
Total yards ........ ..... ...... l24
443
Comp.-att ................... 4-16
2-3
Interceptions thrown .......0 .
I
Fumbles-no. lost ..........4·2
().0
Penalties-yds ............ ,.3-34
7-65
Punts.-yds ................. 7-203
1-35
Statistical leaders
Rushing
Eastern: Calaway 12-66; Long 7·

li G. SPeNCER OSBORNE

26; Delacruz 5-23; McDaniel 8-8
Alexander: Riley 9-121, Meek
15-89; Katterhenrich 3-41; Dailey 833; Parkis 6-30; Mens 3-20.
Passin1
Eastern: White 3-10, 34 yds.;
McDadiel 1-1, minus-7 yds.; Durst
0-3; A. Sanders 0.1 ; Aeiker 0-1
Alexander: Rolston 2-3, !88 yds.
&amp; I int.
Receiving
.
Eastern : Calaway 2-14; Sanders
l-20; Long H -7)
Alexander: Riley 1-76; Hawk 112

Federal Hocking beats Southern 58-13
By SCOTT WOLFE

T·S correspondent

~·

!.:
·
1

:",
~

;.
·:
::
:·
••
::
;.::
:~

·
•,

RACINB ~ The Federal
Hocking Lancers stepped back and
reloaded often as they pounded the
Southern Tornadoes 58-13 Friday
night at Adams Memorial Stadium
in Racine.
The Lancers quickly began to.go
for the record books as they initiated
an effon that netted S33 total yards
offense.
The Lancers got on the score·
board early when Sam Sechkar
plunged in from three yards out to
give Federal an 8-0 lead after Lance
Richards hit Keith Sears for the two:
point conversion pass at the 8:16
mark of the first quarter. The touch·
down was set up by a 35-yard
scramble by quarterback Richards.
Jesse Maynard, the Southern
quarterback, was sacked three times
in the early going and was pressured
intensely as he tried to get off some
passes. Maynard still had a 200:
yard-plus night passing.
After a fumble recovery by Tirn

·Johnson, Federal Hocking again
went 'io work. This time J.R.
Springer dove in from one yard out.
The two-point conversion run was
void, but the Lancers led 14-0 at the
5:43markofthefirstquarter.
Just over one minute later the
Lancers had again hit paydin. That
came after· a struggling Southern
offense went three and out. At the
4:23 mark Richard hit Sears on a 48yard touchdown pass. A Richard to
Springer pass was complete for the
extras and Federal led 22·0.
. The first quarter fireworks were
not yet over as Federal Hock1n~
belched smoke and spewed fire as tt
blitzed 10 a first quarter bonanza.
With O:S9 left in the first frame,
Springer rambled 17 yards and
Chuck Vogt ran for the extras to
givethevisitorsa30.0lead.
Southern did not die as the
Tornado~s completed a mne-play
drive with a Maynard to Jason
Writesel 10-yard touchdown reception at the 10:33 mark of the second
canto. Joao Klirg's kick was good.

and Federal led 30-7.
The Lancers completed a twoplay drive when Richards hit Bart
Lewis 'with a 72-yard touchdown
completion and the Vogt kick was
good for a 37-7 tally at the 9:28
mark. Southern put together two first
down drives, but was halted when
Sears made a 'diving interception.
Federal ground out ten plays and
capped the drive when Jason Brown
swept in from 14 yards. The Vogt
kick was good and Federal led 44-7
at the 1: II mark before the half.
At the 7:44 mark of the third
frame Federal attempted a 32-yard
field goal, but missed. A bad
Southern snap on a punt attempt set
up the next Federal score. The tWO·
play drive ended when Sam Sechkar
bolted in from 16 yards out, pushing
the score to 51-7 as the Vogt kick
was again good. Despite getting off
a great 53-yard punt by Writefel
Federal again managed to come p
with the big play. Jason Sharp sli gshot 38 yards for a score with !:09
left in the third frame. That pushed

the score to 58·7 and Vogt added the
extra-point kick:.
AI the 3:49 mark of the third
frame, senior Jamie !Jvans scored
from eight yards out. The extra-point
kick was void and Federal led 58-1~ .
Jesse Maynard passed for 119
yards on 11 -19 attempts , while
Lancer Lance Richards was 8·16 for
239 yards. Beha caught 4 passes for
50 yards, while Sears was 4-64.
Southern's Jamie Evans caught 5-91
yards.

•

gs to make it a 41-3 contest before
the Tigers closed out the nights scor·
ing with a 20 yard pass play from
Michael Miller to Jason Fountaine.
The White Falcons racked up 410
yards in total offense with 341 yards
on the ground l!lld 69 more through
the airways. An ailing David Mitchell
completed. three of six passes for 42
yards while last weeks hero Ryan
Russell added 27 more yards over the·
top in his only passing attempt ..11m
Jordan and Grant Huff followed
lohnsonwith37and3lrushin~yards
while Keith Cundiff hauled m two

passes fol"31 yards, Riggs one for 27
and Kevin Shields one for II yards. ·
Defensively Wahama forced the
young Tiger team into four turnovers
with the Bend Alea team recovering
three Win County fumbles and pick·
ing off one enemy pass. Chris
Brinker, Steve Sigman and Joe
Finnicum recorded the fumble recoveries while Mike Mmhallintercepted
the Tiger pass. Grant Huff and Scott·

DOWN HE GOES - Eaatern~a Shaun. Lang (33) Ia braugllt
dawn by several Alexander playera during Friday night'•
Hacking Division contest In Albany, whare the Spartena' 46.:0
victory gave them the division championship. (Photo by Jamtf
McDaniel)
.
run (Vogt run), 0:59 lsi qtr.
10-yd. pass (Karg kick), 10:33 d
·Southern: Maynard to Writesel
, (See TORNADOES on B·SJ' •

f

...-

Quarter mlali

Southern ............. :.? . 0 0 6 = 13
Federal Hocking.30 .14 14 0 = 58
Scoring summary

·.

Federal Hocking: Sam Sechk:llr 3·
yd. run (Richards pass to Sears) 8:16
1 1 tr 8 0
s fed~r;l Hocking: Springer 1-yd.
run (kick: failed) 5:43 lsi qtr.; 14·0.
Federal Hocking: Richards to
Keith Sears 48-yd. pass (Richards 10
Springer pass), 4;23 1st qtr.
Federal Hocking: Springer 17,yd.

EVERY DAY'S ~
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Command Trac four-wheel drive. New easier,operat!ng· soft
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Yonker
emerged as the tackles lead.ers with 11m Jordan and Tyson Rei!·
mire following close behind the two
memben of the WHS linebacker
corps.
Wahama, with its ftrsl playoff
berth since the 1991 campaign all but
secure, must now prepare for a dangerous Winfield opponent with a
home field advantage during post season play on Ute line for the Class A
Mason County gridders.
Score By Quarten:
Wahanui
14 6 7 14 41
Wut Co
0 3 0 7 10

FHE lUGGED, All·HEW f997 JEEP WUIIGtfl.
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:;~gart!l!enl ·
lH
B.S.
;#frst downs .................... 20 ·
8
·~ ushing att.-yds .....47-294 27-S2 ·
:'0 assing yds. ,................239
119 .
:; otal~ards ...................533
171
" omp-all..... :.............. 8·1~ ' 11-19
· tercepttons thrown ....... 0
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umbl.
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lost
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•

Guyan Valley (8:45 lst q!J'.) Adkins 2-yd. run (Bias pass from
Adkins)
Guyan Valley (3:16 lst qtr.) Jason Clay 66-yd. run (Pennington
pass from Adkins)
Guyan Valley (7:26 2nd qtr.)Roy 3-yd. run (kick failed)
Guyan Valley (:28 2nd qtr.)Pennington 10-yd. pass from Adkins
(Johnson kick)
Guyan Valley (6:06 3rd qtr.) Pennington 4-yd. pass from Adkins
(pass failed)
.
Soutb Gallla (1:27 3rd qtr.) Bowers 75-yd. pass from Stanley
(Baisden kick)
·
·
Guyan Valley (9:47 4th qtr.)Balser 26-yd. run (Frye run)

91
8-13
0
6-4
8-95
0

Statistical leaders

SwiSh !lallla Rebels
Rushing Halley 3-46,
Mooney 11-21, Boothe 1- 13,
Callahan 7-12, Justin Bowers 2-3
Passing- Stanley 7-18, 123
yds., I TO &amp; 2 int.; Bowers 1-3, 15
yds.
Receiving - Bowers 5-107 &amp; I
TD; Montgomery 1·15. Mooney 110; Boothe 1-6
Guyan Valley Waqjon

Rushing - Clay 8-122 &amp; I TO;
Vance 7-121 ; Roy 6-49 &amp; I TO;
Johnson 4-36; Balser 1-26 &amp; L TO;
Adkins 1-2 &amp; I TO
Passing - Adkins 8-13, 91 yds'.
l
t ti tl
&amp;2TDs
COCKED .TO FIRE - South Gallla quarterback Rufus ·s tanley
earn S a S CS
Receiving- Pennington 5-70 &amp; (10), getting· blocking help from Greg Montgomery (99), James
2 TDs; Johnson 1·15; Clay 1-10; Congrove (77) and others, cocks his erm before throwing the
, •.,
Den•rtmcnt
WL
~
Roy H -4)
pass In the first quarter of Friday night's season finale against
First downs ......................7
18
lnterceptions caught
Guyan
Valley In West Hamlin, W.Va. Though the Wlldcata
Totalyards; ..................221
512 . Pennington 1-12
claimed
a 36·polnt victory In the Rebels' -third varsity contest, It
Rushing atl.-yds ....... 31-83 45-421
dldn 't come before Stanley threw an almost fleld·length touch·
down pass to Justin Bowers two quarters later. (Timea-Sentlhel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

throwing eggs, rockS, and cans at

each other in the Marietta stands.
Game officials at Don Drumm
Stadium threatened to cancel the
remaining time (Warren was leading
47-7)iforderwasnotrestored.Mari·
etta police, along with deputies from
the Washington County Sheriffs
Depanment, cleared the student sec- :
tion by asking the students to leave
the stad'tum.

~"

BARE
BONES

t· '

•

.

'

SCORIJ'IIG:
t Wah • Johnson SS yd run (Johnson
~ Jdcl:)
l Wah • Jordan S yd run (Johnson
i kick)
i Wah - Johnson 3 yd run (l:ick
! failed)
: }Vut Co • Ommen 26 yd field goal
•· Wah • Jolvlson 88 yd run (Sigman
: ldcl:)
.
•
· l Wah • Johnson 36 yd run (Sigman
I Jdcl:)
.
.
: Wab • Riggs 27 yd pass rom R s
i ien (Sigman l:icl:)
i Wirt Co • Fountaine 20 yd p.Ss
: from Miller (Drennen l:ick)

.

'

; INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
:
RUSHING
: WAHAMA· Dale Johnson 18-263:
-:nm Jordan 11·37; Grant Huff 5-31;
:· Da¥id Milchell S-8: Ryan Russell
; 2-4; Chris }!.oush 1·2; Alan Staats
· 1.(); Lane Young 1-(-4); TOTALS

:44-341

; WIRT - Kris Villars 18·62; Josh
• Bums 8•34: Scott Burgy 7-17;
. ~ Ml~h Lockhart 1·7: Michael Miller
\2-6: Thm~~ Ferrebee 6-(23); 17- '
~ 61; 'I'O'r.
42·103.
.
\ ,
PASSING
tWAHAMA · .David Ml~hell3-6-42 .
• yds-1 lot; Ryan RUMell l·l-27yds·
; lTD; TOTALS 4-7-69 yds·ITP·I
· ~~
\
IWJRT • Thmmy Fembee 3·4·
i S7yds-lin&amp;; Michael Miller 2·5·
~ 27yds; TOTALS 5-9-84 yds·l td·

$16,900

$13,995

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1995 CHEVY
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auto., V-6,

Automatic, air conditioning,
loaded.

OR

1995 OLDS ACHIEVA
TOUR C:BOIC:•

$9199 5

1996 CHEVY CAMARO R/S

VOTE FOR .

I.

T-tops, leather, CD player,

s 1,.1
AN .ENGINEER

stereo•.

$7,995
•\11 1996

GEO TRACKER
'2500 OFF

---------.\.. 1997 BUICK LESABRE
Laadadl
waa $24,688

•\11 1996 CHEVY BERmA
rear defogger, more.

$15,995

$11I 995
.

'

·•\w

1996 OLDS
CUTLASS SUPREME

V-6, automatic, anti-lock brakes,
. much more.

WORK WITH THE COMMUNITY IMPROVEMENT
CORPORATION AND · CHAMBER · OF
COMMERCE IN THEIR EFFORT TO IMPROVE
GALUA COUNTY.

Air conditioning,

13456

1997 CHEVY LUMINA

WHO WILL••••

23,411

Now O•IJ 1

low miles.

.

2 Dr., auto., air, much more.
WAS$17,995

WAS $19,705
NOWONLY

$18,259

NOW ONI.Y

$16

WHO HAS••••
THE EXPERIENCE . AND KNOWLEDGE TO.
PERFORM THE JOB FOR THE BENEFIT OF.
ALL GALLIA COUNTY.

1993 CAVALIER Auto., air, cassetle..,••~ •••••••• ~.............~.,•••••••••••••••••••••••••·••s5995
1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME V·6 auto., air, PW, cass., tilt, cruise.~....S6495
1992 HONDA ACCORD Auto., air, PW, stereo, tilt, cruise ...................~s12,999
199~ CHEVY CAPRICE V-8, auto., air, PW, stereo, tilt, uuise..................s3999
1989 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE V-8, leather, loaded .....- ....................59999
1994 CHEVY S·l 0 PICKUP Air, 5 speed, stereo, 20,000 mles.........,......S9999
1991 CHEV S·l 0 PICKUP 5 speed, air, stereo, cruise ............................. 55999 ·
1994 (HEVY LUMINA APV V·6, auto., air, PW, stereo, tOt, auise ...... 512,995

WHO WILL••••
PERFORM TRAFFIC COUNTS ON ALL
COUNTY. ROADS AND USE THIS INFORMATION FOR HIS DECISION 14AKING.

WHO.WILl•••• .

"'(.~

'

WORK WITH THE . AGRICULTURAL COMMUNITY FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF GALLIA

COUNTY.

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

DON TATE MOTORS~ Inc.

.

JlECEIVJNG
IWAHAMA - Kolth Cundiff 2·31;
1Dt¥id Rlus 1·27'1td; Kevin
Shlelda 1-ti;TOTALS 4-69-ltd
WIRT - Juon FOuntaine 2-4,2-ltd:
Juon Miller 2-35; Bobby lleWart

IT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!
' ,.
I

'•

· 2 To Choose From.
Both Under 3,000 miles

1995 BUICK SKYLARK

l lnL
~

Several to choose from.
All under 7,500 miles.

OR

';===================::.

'•

1996 OLDS ACHIEVA

1995 PONTIAC GRAND AM

Pd. lor by the Committee to Elect John Love Cornmii1Siot1erl
Treu. 252 Rocklick
Crown I OH 45623

~

,

$18I 995
.

COMMISSIONER

.4-305
49

,

1996 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME

4

~" JOHN LOVE

t ·7: ToTALS 5·84-ITD

..... •

· -. VIDEO
TUNSFERS

£C.'t

,

AS LOW AS

me."

:White Falcons ...
•.'
(Continued from B-4)
•
2-24.5
61

I

446·1370

•

folJPJays

HALLOWEEN WEEKEND SPOOKTACULAR

For All Your
Video Needs! ·
Weddings, Insurance,
Special Events.
Let us put this on
video tape.
446·6939 or

"I believe in the people of this
county, Now, I ask you to believe in

Sears 4-64;
Beha 2-50;
,• 72;Federal
Hocking:
Bart Brown
Lewis I 1-- 1
: 43
' Southern: Jamie Evans 5-91;
1-10; Cumings 1·10, Dill
•'t writesel
3-8

I Punts/avg

PRlGE$

--==-;_-======~

•

"•• Tax

·Anti·Freeze

.,

Rusblng
Federal Hocking : Sam Sechkar
! 1,7-95, Sharp 4-5S, Richards 2·38,
' :Brown 8-51
Jamie Evans 13-35,
•.• AshSouthern:
3-14.
;
Passing
1 Federal Hocking: Richards 8-16
: fot 239 yards.
: Southern: Maynard 11-19 for 119
! yards
.R~eivilig

-

Scoring summary

Passing yds ............ .... .. l38
Comp.·all................... 8·21
InterceptiOns thrown ....... 2
Fumb~s-no. lost .......... 2-2
PenaltiCs-yds . ............ .5-45
Punts-yds ................... J-69

son lronmen. capture an undefeated
Order was restored in about 10
league championship, a perfect sea- minutes and the game was resumed,
· · -~ GALUPOLIS - The final cur- son, and a spot in the playoffs begin· but lime· for the fourth quarter was
~illin rang down on the 1996 South- ning ibis week.
. reduced to just. eight minutes. Fol·
~eastern Ohio Athletic League football
Jackson turned back a good Point lowing the contest, two sheriff's
"ileason Friday night that saw the Jack- Pleasant team 4~-S. Warren Local cru'isers esconed the Warren Local
•·..o
took: runner up honors with a 47·7 team back to its Vincent facility. No
victory over Marietta. Rivedr \o\Lalley injuries nohr arrests were reported.by
'· •
defeated Gallipolis 21 -0, an ogan school aut orities.
~~
(Continued fromtB·4)
thumped Athens 32-0.
The Warriors locked up second
; gtr.
All regular-season games have place in the final standings with a 6~ • Federal Hocking: Richards to been concluded by all of the league I league record and their 9-1 season
•tewis 72-yd. pass (Vogt kick), 9:28 teams except Point Pleasant. The Big finish kept alive their faint hopes for
1 Blacks have one remaining game thi~
: %nd qtr.
.
'
(See SEOAL on B-6) .
:• Federal Hocking: Brown 14-yd. week: ~ a non-league contest at
·
;:~n (Vogt kick), I: II 2nd qtr. .
home Friday with Roane County. The
-;. Federal Hockl~g : Sam Sechkar Ironmen most likely will face unde·
•.t6-yd. run (Vogt kick}, 5:37 3rd qtr. .feated Hillsboro in a first-round play:;. FederaiHocklng: Sharp 38 ~yd. off game.
;o:~n (Vogt kick), 1.:09 3rd qtr.
Warren 47, Marietta 7
.
• • Southern: Jamte Evans 8-yd. run
At Mariella officials were forced
:;~ck failed), 3:49 4th.qtr.
to stop the g.W:e with 1:40 left in the
)!'to
third period when a group of rowdy
:tfeam statistics
students from each school began

~'ttatisticalleaders

'

South Gallia..........O 0 7 0 = 7
Guyan Valley .... 16 13 6 8: 43

.

:
•

'

Parta llrld

By ODIE O'DONNELL .

~-9 Correapanclent

~

Check Hosea, Belta, Condition of Cooling
· System and Blower System Operation

l!p•rtsrS!illll

·.:Warren and Logan win SEOAL contests

"'1:: ·

w11a~u:QN .

MIKE CANAN
.

it bounced away. Rebel quarter·
back/safety Rufus Stanley recovered
the ball on the Wildcats' 17.
The guests' extension of the drive
lasted only three plays. South Gallia
receiver Justin Bowers dropped the
ball after catching Stanley's pass at
the Guyan Valley seven. Guyan
Valley defensive lineman Jarred
Yeager recovered the loose pigskin
and took the ball to the hosts' 31.
However, the Wildcats' being whis·
tied for clipping moved the ball back
10 the hosts' 16.
Guyan Valley needed four plays
to gel to the end zone on this drive.
Why? Running back Jason Clay
turned an off-guard run into a 66yard gallop to the promised land.
Lee Pennington's two-point conversion reception put the Wildcats
ahead 16-0.
In the second half, S9uth Gallia
started three of its five pos·sessions
in Guyan Valley territory. None of
those dri·ves resulted in a touchdown. One of the other two drives
- Stanley's third-and-16 touch·
down pass to Bowers in the third
quarter's last two minutes - was a
three-play, 70.yard march that kepi
the Wildcats from gening a shutout.

.:.,-ornadoes•••

ENDORSES

$2399

........ Sa lllflaiiiWI
WEST HAMLIN, W.Va . :~yo Vlll.ley's tallied four touch·
.~wns by land and two others by air
:!(lpace the Wildcats to 143-7 victo·J)c over visiting South Gallia in the
:Qtams' seuon finale Friday night at
:&lt;tuyan Valley High School's field.
: The Wildcats (2·8) built their vic·tory in part by ending four of their
:five first-half possessions with
.
;iquchdowns.
· :~ In six first-half possessiOns, the
: ~bels (4-4-1 overall &amp; 1-2 in varsi·
:It affairs) lOOk the ball inside Guyan
·'\faHey's 20-yard line twice. An
alter-the-catch fumble midway into
iql: first quarter and a failure to gel
·!he first down on a founh-and-one
slluation late in the second quarter
ended these drives.
;;. Guyan Valley got i• ~ first score
i.!ben Rebel punter Dylon Run put
'1\ls knee down on the South Gallia
while trying to field a punt.. Five
plays and a little more than two minUJes later, quarterback J.R. Adki11s
-~cored from two yards out.
. , South Gallia got a break when on
a· fourth-and-one situation at the
Rebels' 45, a Guyan Valley player
teuched the ball on Rutt's punt and

'8

l Wahama defeats Wirt County 41-1 o
~ By Gary Clark
on the road for the duration of•the
ELIZABETHWV . Dale Johnson playoff formaL.
•• added another rushing mileatone to
Johnson scored on runs of88, 55,
~ his already incredible senior season
36 and three yards in addition to boot·
: accomplishments with a four touch· Ins two o( three PArkieks while TIID
• down 263 yard perfonnance Friday Jordan added a five yard gallop.
: ·evening in leading the Wahama David Riggs apprehended a 27 yard
: White Falcons past host W'ut Coun· touchdown pasa from Ryan Russell
' ty by a convincing 41-10 score.
with Steve Sigman splitting the
Johnson, already the career rush- uprights on all three of his point after
:
: ing leader at the Bend Alea school, triea In the White Falcon triumph.
~ surpassed three fOrme! White Pal!:on
"We control!ed the game pretty
~ runners to becoJne the liDI!le season
well but we're still showing the
. recordholderattheMasonCounty effects of being banged up and
~ school with his huge night on the
bruised," Wahama coach Ed Crom·
: gridiron. The talented two StJOrt ath- ley said following the Bend A1ea
; Jete carried the pigskin 18 amea for lCa(ns fifth straight win and seventh
, 263 yards to run his season rushing of the year. "We put some hone jar·
• total to 1388 yards on the season. ring hits on them early in the game
. ~ Johnson also scored 26 points 011 the and that l:ind of set the tone for the
. night which left him five points shy entire night. I was glad.we could gel
of the single season scoring mark at everyone in the game but more
Wahama with one regular season importantly I don't think we got a,ny• game remaining on the WHS fall . body IDY more 6anged up than they
·: card.
already was."
·
1
·• The White Falcon victory unoffiThe White Falcons jumped out to
~ cially Insured the Bend Arcs team of
a 20-0 lead on a 55 yard excursion
; a post season playoff berth while by JohnSon, a five yard burst by J~r. coach Bd Cromlefs clwges will be dan and a three yard jaunt by Jo n·
fi Id berth 10
· the son befon W111 County laCked o a
gu · • h
,or a orne
e they meet 26 yard field goal by David Drenhen
: 16nrung
team playoff
field when
• Winfield next week In the rep1ar _. to .close out the first half.
: son finale. The CIIIIS A Muon
Whama then scored on the final
: County squad most likely will jump play of the third period when fohn• into the top eight if it can hand the son scampered into the end ~e on
: Generals its tenth loss of the year an 88 yard run. A 36 yard voy=by
: while a WHS loss will send the !ocala Johnson p=eded a 27 yard ring
from Ryan Russell to David .g-

,Jwcbau Ct..·.J*'dln•l • Page B5

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

·o uyan Valley beats South Gallia 43-7

By beating Eastern 46-0,
ALBANY - The Alexander
Spartans blitzed the Eastern El'gles
and posted a 46-0 shutout win in the
final game of the 1996 grid campaign Friday night at Alexander
High School.
.
Ale)&lt;ander claimed the Tri-Valley
Hocking Division title with a 4-1
record, while Eastern dropped to 0-S
and 1-9 overall.
Mark Riley rushed for three
touchdowns and Lance Rolston
rushed for two others en route to the
Spartan victory.

:~unctay, November 3, 1996

••

I

All prices include
rebates to dealer.

OPEN
SUNDAY
1-5

,,

�•

•

...

•

•

•

=~.~~!;~==~:=~~~~~~~~~~!P~o:m~e~ro~y~·~M~Id:d~le~po~rt~·~G~a~l~llpo~I~I•~·~O~H~·~P~o~l~nt~P~I~e:au~n~t,~WV~.~~~~~~~~~~~S~u~n;d•;Y~·~N~o;ve;;m~be;;';3,~1~9;;96~

Jackson downs Point Pleasant 42-8

NFL teams as
free agents

'

By Rick Slmpldal
efforts. B.J. Grady and Jeremy touchdown run on the second play to -ety of reuons. We wan~ to ecore
JACKSON, OH-The Jackson Rickard were the workhorses for the put his team out in front by two quickly and tty to take some of the
Ironmen lived up to their pre-game locals during tile drive, picking up touchdowns. Blankenship again con- air out of them. But. those two quick
hype last night as they completed an most of the yardage in tho 13-play, verted the extra point to make it 14· scores really made lhinp diffiCult for
0.
~
ILl SAM WILSON
.
.
undefeated, untied season by defeat- six minute drive.
''The
one
Ching
we
didn't
wantto
Thi. Bia Black offensive unit
iiM-SenUnel Correspondent
ing the Point Pleasant Big Blacks 42Jackson struck quickly, scoring on
do
was
go
out
there
and
fall
behind
again
showed their proficiency, pick8. The game sealed the SEOAL their second play of the next series.
~- Every few months a repon sQrfaces that an NR.
early,"
explained
Safford.
"Jackson
ing
up
a pair of fust downs on their
championship and also propelled Shane Wolford, Jackson's talented
ffanchise is considering moving to Qeveland. One
has
a
very
good
football
team
and
next
possession.
But a Brent Rollins
the Ironme.n into the Ohio playoffs. tailback, picked up three yards on ftrst
teek it's Indianapolis, the next week it's Tampa
(See BIG BLACKS on B-7)
The win gives the Jackson squad down and ~n exploded for a 76-yard theywe&lt;e very emotional do to a variJtay or Cincinnati.
·
. • I could never figure out why Cleveland would want any of these reams. I a I0-0 record, their first since 1961. '
~uld rather take my chances with a Girl Scout troop than wait on the Bucs Point drops to 6-3 on the season and
. to become. a winning franchise. makes next week's game with Roane
More imponant, why would County a must-win situation if the
ICI•ovelland want to invite losers locals have any post-season aspirato continue their losing ways at tions. The Big Blacks were also playtheir 'financial and emotional ing for a tie in the league, but the loss
them to third plact;..ifWarren
expense? Clev'eland ·and Ohio drops
Local won as expected rn their seataxpayers don't nc;ed a team that son finale at Marietta last night.
461 SOUTH THIRD
PHONE 992·2t96
bad.
•
A look at the statistics from the
What bothers me is that the game points to a much closer contest.
:;2,.,~..li\·il!ii . . . . · .. , . , ·, , ''·• ,... NR. could have stopped this The Big Blacks outrushed the Iron·
·
· · ' merry-go-round by awarding men by a 249-233 margin and also
last two franchises to St. Louis' and Baltimore, instead of Carolina and gained more yardage via the airways,
J~~~~~~:\~~; After all, even the NR.'s own research ~uggested that these 68-31. But, one vital statistic stands
f~
cities were the most deserving of all the entries they received.
out like the proverbial sore thumb.
But the NFL, in all its wisdom, decided to go on to new markets. This The locals turned the ball over six
e~entu•ally resulted in St. Louis and Baltimore -stealing teams from other times in the game and the lronmen
. cl!ies.
can actually assume that the real reason the Browns left Cleveland capitalized on those mistakes to take
~s because the NFL failed to give Baltimore the franchise it deserved.
control of the game.
; Who can blame Baltimore or St. Louis after the "'ay they were treated? ·
"We didn 'ttake care of the foot·
PJrst, the NFL allows their teams to leave. Afte..Ward, they wait patiently for ball," said PPHS Head Coach Steve
•;!few franchise, but it's rewarded to other cities. The alternatives are to go Safford after the game. "We ran our
thou! a team, or bribe another franchise into coming to their cities at great
offense pretty well and should h~ve
s.t to local taxpayers. Eventually, both cities chose the .latter course of been in this game, but against a team
IKln.
· the caliber of Jackson, you can't tum
~ The NFL has allowed teams to become fre~ agents. The Colts, which bro- the ball over as many times as we did:
. kired a swe~tjleal from the city of Indianapolis·in 1984, now state that this We shot ourselves in the foot all
d~al is costing them money when compared with the recent advantages '. evening. Point lost th&lt;ee fumbles and ·
gtlned by franchises in Baltimore and St. Louis. Even though their lease threw three interceptions -in the
gJ!es to 2014, they are once again looking into the possibility of moving to game.
Jackson's first score came couraK:ity which can offer them a comparable deal. .
tesy
of Point's first turnover. Tbe Big
V6 engine, automatic transmisoL\&gt;ok at tbese franchises which have moved: ·the Raiders, Cardinals,
Blacks
went on offense to stan the
d.its, Rams and Browns. How many divisional titles or championships have
sion, power steering, power
game and promptly picked up a first
t.lfese teams won? How many years above .500?
brakes, air conditioning, AM/FM
CWe all regret the Browns leaving; however, Cleveland should wait until down. But, on their third play from
etpansion instead of following the temptation of selling its soul for a quick scrimmage, the locals fumbled and
stereo cassette, rear step bumptbe lronmen took over the Point 21.
fiJ&lt;.
The 'hosts needed only five plays to
er, all terrairl tires with· cast alu_j When a franchise relocates in your town, you also inherit its ownership. put the ball in the end zone, with
'lbese are the same people who were willing to break the heans of fans in quarterback Joey Boggs going the
minum wheels, limited slip rear
~ir old city for the almighty dollar. As Indianapolis suggests, they will also final 7 yards. Jay Blankenship's
de it if the price is right. Fan loyalty always suffers when faced with the cold' extra point kick made it 7-0 with .
axle.
· htrd'.facts ' of the business world. .
' ·
.
only three minutes gone in the game.
Wllion. Ph.D. le an aeaoelate profauor of history at the Unlverolty of
Following a gdod return on the
Rp Grande. An avid fan of all op- - and a near maniacal follower of baskat·
ensuing kickoff, the Blacks had
b8tl,.... he lo 1 nllliYe of Gary, Ind., and o graduate ol Indiana University- which good field position at their own 38
•
a!Jould tell Noden aomelhlng about where hlo head (and Hooaier heart) Ia.
. yard lin,e. Again, the Big Blacks
showed !heir ability to move the .foot·
ball, .advancing the pigskin all the
4 cylinder engine, 5-speed
way to the Jackson 19. But, 'the dri·
transmission, rear step bumpve stalled and the subsequent36-yard·
• MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP} basketball, we would have worked field goal attempt failed and the Big
er, power steering, air condi·
,:._Fonner Ohio State and West Vir- with him."
· Blacks had nothing to show for·their
tioning, AM/FM stereo.
lfinia basketball player Greg Simp·
:¢&gt;n skipped a sentencing hearing on
'{domestic violence charge to play '
. ~ bas,ketball overseas, court offiCials siud.
·
.~ - Simpson apparently would have
As 'I have campaigned throughout the county,
R.ceived probation if he had
a'ppeared recently in Sandusky
I've visited your homes and met with many nice
Municipal Coun in Ohio.
people. I know it is virtually impossible to meet
• Probation officer Bill Kimberlin
4 cylinder engine, s.speed
siu.d Simpson could face a more seri- f"l.Ch and every voter, so at this time I .would like
&amp;us sentence.
·
·
transmission, rear step bumper,
"
apologize
if
I
haven't
called
on
you
personally.
·
• "I was under the impression be
power 'steering, full vinyl. bench
I ask for your suppor,t and vote on November
..t.as in school in Morgantown,"
ltimberlin said. "I even set it up so
seat. Good work truck!
5th.
ljis probation assessment could· be
Sincerely,
&lt;fone down there. If he had informed
'!S he was going to Thrkey to play

•

tt1:\-COU.nt..

.

t/.cmt ·

"J'

1\JtoolEPOR\ • 0"'

~

414 SUPERCAB ·

. .
ts.m

1997 FORD RAIDER 4X2 7RDCK

Simpson's legal woes get
ftlckier aft~.r leaving USA

TO THE CITIZENS OF
.· GALLIA COUNTY:

I

$EOAL games .•.
•'

(Continued from B-5)
a' i&gt;ossible playoff benh next week.
WllfTen was ranked sixth in their
Oivision II region this week, but
~ould need hdp from two teams
ranked in front of them in order to
ei&gt;.rn a spot in the playoffs.
! Todd c;::astin's 10-yard run and
Shane Richards' kick put Warren up
1..0 early in the contest, but the Tigers
dune right back to knot the score on
· Niall Boley's two-yard run and a kick
ftom Jim Goeller for the extra-point.
: The Warriors quick strike offense
s~rafed the Tiger defense for 27
points in the second period as Shawn
'l'ay lor scored on two shon runs, and
completed touchdown passes of 87
yards .and 37 yards to Brandon
Church and Earl Tidd.
, They added 13 more points in the
third stanza on a 19-yard scamper by
Rob Callihan and a one-yard smash
lly A.]. Nuzum.
· · Warren rolled up 390 total yards,
·including 144 rushing by Todd
Oslin, wtu1e the Tigers collected 195"
t~t81 yards.
· ·

'

Qyartcr 12t111

Warren Local
ljfarieUa .

7-27-13-(};47
. 7-0-0-0=7

I

Logan 32 Athens 0
, At Logan, tailback Ryan Butcher
c;losed oul an otherwise dismal season for the Chieftains by scoring four
touchdowns and churning out 227
~ards ori 31 shots at the Bulldog
defense. Logan closed the seagon
with a 3-7 record and tied Marietta
"it\1 a 2-5 league mark.
, Clint Crago got the other Logan
touchdowtr on a two-yard run, which
..:SS.$1111dwicbed in between Butcher's
s&lt;;oring runs of 21 , seven, four and
four yards. Drew Thomas kicked two
extra points.
Athens managed 22~ total yards,
169 coming on a I 4 .[or 28 passing
nisht for Joe Sparhawk. The BullrloJI, who in the 1996 campaign tal'
lied a yictory over Wellston in 10 oulittgl, were winless in SEOAL com1

~

KENFARMER

'

Athens
Logan

•

CHDROLE'I'.

COIIftUB GL

RE-ELECT

LUMINA

4 Dr.. 4 cyl., auto. trans.,

XHAROLD M. SAUNDERS
CANDIDATE FOR

GALLIA COUNTY
COMMISSIONER
I pledge continued support to our Law Enforcement, Emergency,
SenlorCltlzllna and Veterans Services. Since I was elected In 1993:
• 11 ~ Shllrtft's crulura
, 4 New EMS Ambulances
• New EMS Rescue Squ.cl
• New Veterans HandiCIIP Transport Yen
• Computerize Veterans Service Office
• Funding for Senior Citizens Kitchen Rehab Project
Paid lor by the candidate, ~073 State Route 2t 8 (Clay Township)

'

TO THE VOTERS OF GALLIA COUNTY
Since getting into the rac.e fot County
Engineer, I h11ve been"able to meet many of
you. However, my opponents were able to
delay my entry Into the race for seven
months, making It impossible to meet each
of you personally.'
I do not .believe the opposition ever
they could keep me off.the ballot,
but they thought the delaying tactics would
make their efforts worthwl'tile.
I appreciate the effort made by all qf you
on my behalf and with your help we w11J.b8
successful on Tuesday, November 5.
t am looking 'forward to serving you as
your next Gallia County Engineer.
Glenn A. ~ith

power windows, locks and
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cruise,. AM/FM
stereo cassette, air, · rear
window defroster,
low
miles.
.
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AM/FM · stereo cassette, till,
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Dr., . V-6
automatic, power windows &amp;
locks, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
stereo cassette, ABS brakes,
air, rear defroster
·

I-MERCURY
SABLE 8L .

4 Dr., 6 cyl .. auto. trans .. PW1
PL, P. driver's seat, AM/FM
stereo cass., air, rear defroster,
keyless entry, dual air bag, ABS
brake system, cast alum.
wheels, tilt .&amp; cruise, PM. Low
miles. One owner.·Sharp!

ftWICAR ·

4 Dr., VB automatic, power
Windows and lock~;, power
driver's seal, lilt, cruise,
AM/FM stereo cassette, air,
rear defroster. Extra clean!

CRRYILD

8 AVIIUE

•&amp;T1111

Candidate

ror

(Utllla

According to Ohio's DOW,

MERCURY

COUGAR
2 Dr., VB automatic, power
windows and locks, air, tilt,
cruise, · AM/FM
stereo
cassette, · rear defroster.
Sharp!

•••

CIIIIOLE'I'
CIOftiUCK

4 Dr., VB automatic, leather
interior, ·power window and
locks, power driver's seat,
VIS automatic custom; rear
cruise, AM/FM . stereo, air,
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bumper,
AM/FM
rear defroster. Extra clean!
cassette, new tires.

"

'

Foreign demand revives interest in .trapping

~

By JOHN WISSE

l
•

'
L

.:

Dlvlalon of Wildlife
COLUMBUS- The Ohio Division of Wildlife says an increased
demand by some foreign countries
has led to rising prices for raw furs
and a renewed inte.rest in tral'ping.
Most of Ohio's.fur trapping and
hunting seasons open in Nov.. The
beaver trapping split seasons open in
lille Dec. and early Ian ..
An estimated 60,000 people participate in some aspect of Ohio's fur
trade, which generated $750,000 in
primary sales during 1994. Ohio
annually ranks among the nation's
top five producers of raw furs. Ourina the 1994-95 rep •:ting period,'
Ohio fur dealers purcl'osed 349,961

continue to market their farm-raised
fur pelts, the second highest stnce to nearly $50.
1987.
"We have seen fur prices climb furs, the world demand for wild furs
But what is sparking renewed the past two years along with a new is wlw is providing better pelt prices
interest this year in the fur market is foreign demand for Nonh American and renewed interest in trapping.
"It's hard to accurately predict the
an increased demand for Nonh wild fur pelts. The really good news
American raw furs, generated large- for trappers in Ohio is that we con- future. economic impact of the fur
ly from buyers in Russia, Korea, tinue to ha~e a high abundance of industry as it stands today, but the
China and Greece. As the world's furbearing animals," says Michael opportunity !s here now to recapture
interest in trapping in Ohio. We feel
supply of raw furs has diminished in Dudzik, Division of Wildlife chief.
recent years, more demand for new
The Division of Wildlife says we have many good trapping opporfur stocks has created some signifi- Ohio's raccoon population has tunities and the need is there to betcant price hikes at raw fur auctions. increased 800 percent 6ver the past ter balance some of our furbearer
·
In Feb., the Nonh American Fur 15 years. Beaver abundance has populations," said Budzik.
Auction held in Canada' resulted in also increased over the past decade,
Ohio fur
the sale of nearly all 700,000 fur while prices paid for beaver pelts
pelts brought io the auction bloi:k. · have more than doubled from 1994
tnpplaa ~easons
Fox, opossum, skunk and weasel
The average price of furs sold was to 1995.
$23.09. The average top price, which
"Trapping remains an imponant · Nov. 9 through Ian. 31.
Raccoon and mink - Nov. 13
is paid for the highest grade furs, rose management tool for helping to balthrough
Ian. 31.
ance forbearer populations ip.Ohio.
Muskrat
· .Nov. ·13 through Feb.
A gradual decline in trappin11 partic.,
ipation and harvest during the 1980s 28.
Raccoon,
muskrat
and mink (in
and· 1990s, however, has led some
Erie,
Ottawa,
Sand~sky
and Lucas
furbearer populations to expand out
Counties
east
of
the
Maumee
River)
of control In many areas. This in turn
.
Nov.
13through
March
15
.
The firearms deer season will be has resulted in more complaints
Beaver (NE Ohio zone) • 1an. II
open statewide Dec. 2· 7 and closed from landowners and added concerns through Feb. 28.
to all but deer and coyote hunting, regarding public safety," Dudzik .
Beaver (remainder of Ohio) •
Ohio's split waterfowl hunting sea- said.
Dec.
28- through Feb. 28.
While far from the high fur prices
sons do not include these days. The
fiteanns deer season is open an addi· trappers enjoyed some years ago,
Furbearer
tiona! six days Dec. 9-14 in 67 coun- today's fur market appears to be
huntlllg
seuon5
ties, which includes all but 21 west- recovering because of increased {or· ·
Fox • Nov. 9 througlOan. 31.
em .and nonhwestem Ohio counties. · eign demand and a diminished sup·
Raccoon, opossum, skunk and
Ohio's statewide primitive deer ply. And while domestic producers. weasel • Nov. 13 through Jan. 31.
season is open Dec. 26 through Jan.
2, except on Sunday. ·
Coyote, woodchuck and fox hunting is permitted on Sundays during
the open season, except on Dec. 8,
. GALLIPOLIS -The ~ig Blue the clinic will hold sessions at 10 and
, ,
1996. Fox hunting season is open
Basketball Boogie, an event put on II am.
Nov. 9 through Jan. 3l, ,while there
by GalliaAcademy's varsity ~asket· · The clinics will run through
are no closed seasons for coyole and
ball teams, will be beld on Saturday December.
The cost is $12 per hour. Theseswoodchuck.
from 8 to I0 p.m. at Gallia Acadosions
are limited to 10 per clinic.
Under the new regulations this
my High School's gym.
year, small game hunters must comAmong the activities will be a according to Gallia Academy varsiply with Ohio's hunter orange
half-coun shooting contest and ty boys' coach Jim Osborne.
For more infon:nation, call·
requirements when hunting in any
three-point shooting, free throw
.county with an open deer ·gun seashooting, hot shot and timed shoot- . Osborne at 446-3212'or 446-9284.
ing contests. There will oo shootouts
son, ahd during the statewide primAt Cheshire. the Rive; Valley
itive deer season. The Division ' of involving the GAHS faculty ' and ·
Wildlife says hunters should conadministrators and spectators. .
A\hletic Boosters Club will hold its
sider always wearing some hunter
Admission is $2 for adults and $1 regular meeting on Tuesday, Nov. 12
orange to increase their visibility
for students.
at 7 p,m. at River Valley High
·
afield even when it is not legally
There will be a sock hop from 10 School.
required.
to II p.m. Eric Lloyd, the brother of
Daily bag limits for squirrels (4),
Blue Devil senior Greg Lloyd, will
South Gallia High School is sellrabbits (4), bobwhite quail (4), ;,be the deejay.
ing three kinds of basketball tickets
·pheasants (2), and ruffed grouse (3)
-· fortbe 1996-97 season.
remain unchanged this }'ear. Quail
In Gallipolis, the weekly GalRed tickets, which grant admishunting is open in 18 southern Ohio
lipolis basketball clinic for all stu· sion ·to all varsity boys' h~ games,
counties on all public hunting areas
dents in grades 1·6 will continue·to are $20 each. White tic~ts. which
and on private lands where written
be held at the Oallipolis Oevelop- grant admission to all varsity girls'
permission has been obtained.
mental&lt;:enler on Saturdays from 8- home games., are $20 each. Gold
9 a.m. and from 9-10 a.m..
·
· tickets, which grant admission to all
home games played by either team,
·._(_c_on_u_·n-ued_fr_o_m_B_-6_l_ _ _ _ _Th_e_••_c_ep_u_·o_n_is_lhi_·_s_w_e_ek_._w_he_n are $40 each.
.
Stadium seats with the Rebels
imprint (an image of lhe Revolupass was intercepted and the lronmen scoring drive with a 2-yard run. The
went on a 3-play, S4 yard scoring dri- two-point conversion was good wben
tionary War Minuteman) will also be
ve capped by Boggs' 5-yard keeper · Micah Dale Shinn passed to Jerel!ly
available.
to malce it a~().() game. Blankenship
Buskirk.
For more information, call 256added the PAT.
"We knew this game had the
6379 between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m.
The rest of the half saw a mirror potential to be a blowout by either
image of what had already transpired. te8m," said Salford. "Emotioris were
Children MUST be aa
Point moved the ball well, only to running very high on both sides of the
turn the ball over and Jackson would · field and that can lead to a one-sided
familiar wHh
take the ball in for a score. The half . game. We ended up on the shon side
TECHNOLOGY as they
ended with Jackson on top by a 28· of a bad score, but we ·didn't really
are pen and paper. They
0 count
·
play that badly. We made a few.misWolfonl's 76-yard intetteption takes and Jackson is a veteran team
need your help to
return gOI the lronmen started in the that capitalized on those. We'll just
prepare them for the
second half and the subsequent extra have to put this one behind us and
21at century.
pOint made it 35-0 .
start getting ready for Roane CounThe Big Blacks finally got en the ty next week. That. game is going to
scoreboard with 2:38 left in the half be a: big one, _now," concluded Saf·
when Brent Rollins capped a ~6-yard
'

Hunters get more chances
for·harvesting upland game
By JOHN WISSE
Qlvl1lon of Wildlife
·· COLUMBUS- The Ohio Divislori of Wildlife this year· has created more upland game hunting opportunities by expanding seasons and
easing restrictions on ;ome legal
hunting hours.
Two significant changes in regulations this year for the first.time permit upland game hunting during the
second week of ·the firearms deer
season and during the statewide
primitive deer season' The second
change in regulations· this year permits rabbit, pheasant and quail hunting on public areas from sunrise to
sunset during Nov..
Ohio's squirrel hunting season
was also expanded this year and
~mains open through Jan. 31. Squirrel hunting seasons have usually
closed on Jan. I or .2 in past years,
, Hunting seasons for rabbits,
pheasants and bobwhite quail open
Jllov. I.
' "We felt we could safely expand
rabbit, pheasant and quail hunting
o~rtunities on public hunting areas
this year. It really is the fair thing to
do llecause our expanded deer gun
and statewide primitive deer seasons
· u~derprevious rules would have talcen more hunting days aw~ from the
upland hunters if we hadonot made
these new changes," said Patrick
RMble, executive admi~istrator of
.~ildlife management and research
f&lt;jr' the Division of Wildlife. ··

'

Local sports notes •.•.. _: .

$ig BlaCkS•.
1

f~rd.

'
Jeremy Whittington led the defensive unit, recordin~ S solo tackles, 3 ·
a$sists, and knocking down a Jackslln pass attempt Steve Thomas had
3: solo stops and a like number of
a$sists, while Jermyn Queen had 4
solo tackles. Rob Wilson also
enjoyed a good game with a pair of
$Qio tackles, including one for a loss, ·
and 4 assists.
: The Big Blacks will close out their
~gular season next week when they
. eptertain the Roane County Raiders
at Sanders Memorial Field.
I
:
Pt. Pleasanl Jackson
!\lash attempts
57
31
Yds rushing
249
233
Plus auempts
I7
7
l'pss completions
8
2
Yards passing
68
31
llltmeptions
3
0
T!lt offense
317
264
Firat downs
21
12
~ya!ds
7-65
9-80
1

Tprnovers

Punts/avg yds
~yds

6
3-27

PLEASE VOTE

[lJ

"YES" .
•WAIUIAGS
• DOMfS

2

2-34
146

104

sCan b7 Quarten:
0 0
Jec:ts0n
14, 14
~ Pleaslnl

8 0 8
7. 7 4Z

:. ·
SCORING: .
J ~Joey Bo8gs 7 yd.run PA kick Jay
~ip
.·
J . • Shane Wolford 78 yd run PA
iGclc Jay Blankenship
.
J '." Joey Bous S yd run PA Jay
•
Biankeftship tick
J:. Jolin King 3 yrd run PA Kick
I.y Blankenship
'
I •. Shane Wolford 76 yd intercepliOn PA kick Jar Blankenship
Pr -Brent Rollins 2 yd run PA ~
Jeremy Buslcirk from MiCah Shmil
I:. Craig Cusick 6 yd run PA kick
J•y Blankenship
•

RUSHING

BALLOT #125

• HEATERS

~~~~=~;.,.~rllliR:~~

~

Our children are
worth it/

'II CAIIIIY, LOOP LOC WIFf COYUS

HOLIDAY POOLS INC • .
2173Ptt!DIIOIITAO.

Paid lor by United lor Cllildron, Buldlng lor
the 2tat Century Cindy Hunt, Troaouror,
230ShawnteU!ne G
a Olio

I

To the Citizens of Gallia County:
"Politically motivated fa,lte allegation~, frivolous lawsuits, character
auaninations; negative political ad&amp; and. irrespo111ible journalUm does not
build'·a ·community nor did they buUd you 120 million dollars wo.rth of roads
and bridges the last eight yean. As ODOT District 10 Director and Gallia.
County Engineer~ I am very proud! was able to build them for you!"

PRICE

1990 CHEVY CAVALIER H238, WhHe, A/C, A/t, Allifll, cloth
Interior ····-····....................................................................... $3185
1992 DP0E DYNASTY 16239, Red, V-6 eng., AJC, A/f, AII/AI
Clll., till, crulll ...............,_,,,_,.................... :.....................$6570
1994 ~AD ESCORT S1W 18221, Gretn, A!C, A/T, A11M1
caM., luggage rack, rear dlfroltw....................................$7131
1995 GEO METRO 16150, A/C, A11M1 cauittt, 27,1100 mlln,
balance of factory Wlfl'lnty................................................S7350
1992 NISSAH NX 16183, Aid, 2 Dr., AM/FM cwetta, A/C,
cloth lntlrtar......• ,.................................................... ~............$717'1
1983 PONTIAC SUNBIRD 161$9, Blue, 2 Dr., A/C,
AMIFM *Hltt.................................................:. ..................$7122
1995 FORD ESCORT LX 16228, Red, A/C, AMIFM Clll., cloth .
lntertor
.
1983 FORD PROBE 16232, Red, A/C, AIIMI, cloth
~rMM~•.~~- ...~ ........................................"...... ~~
1994 GEO PRIZM 16220, Whl1e, A/C, AII/FM clu.,
cloth Interior....................... ,..........,.....................................:
11191 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 16174, WhHtlblut lllther ·
lnt, v.a eng., A/C, A/f, AM/FM, tilt, crulu, dull P. Hils,
power wiM~, power~~~.. ~·~~"':'""""''"~..............~........,......~
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 18094, White, A/C, A/T,
AMJFM CIIL, tilt, crulu, P. wiM~ &amp;~Ut;~t.................... -111
1990 UNCOLN CONlltjENTAL 16113, "LIItlllr,Pkg.•
Loadtd .............................................................................. _,$1411
1993 PON11AC GRAND AM 18205, Whl1t, A/C, A/T, AII/FII

caM, tilt, crulae, rear defroster .......................................... •14
1983 DODGE INTREPID 11101, Dark pewter,A/C, Alf,AII/FII,
tl"' cruise, power wlndowllnd locka ............................... . . .
1994 CHEVY CAMARO 16225, Whl1e, A/C, AMJFM CUI., tilt,
dual mltrora, cloth lntartor.........:......................~...._....,..$10,847

1994 PON11AC GRAND PRIX SE, Red, AIC, A/f, AMJFM call,
V-6 eng., tilt, crulu, P. MMowsand lockl ................... $10,911
1995 CHEVY LUMINA 16090, Blut, A/C, A/f, tilt, crulu, AIM'II
cass., sport whetls ............................ ~.............................$10,Sill5

1995 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA SL 16204, WhHt, A/C, A/r, ¥-6

eng., P. wind~ &amp;lockl, tilt, cruise, air bag,

AM~Mca............................ ,............ ,.....,.......................... ~~u~~
1983 SATURN SCII6216, 2 Dr., 36,000 m11111,
cruise, ~FJA_ c~~llllt_e... ~~ ..:~"-''"""""~""""''""':'"""''"$111,800
1983 PON11AC GRAND GT 16178, Green, 2 Dr., V-6 eng,
AJC, Atr, 1port wlteell, Ult, crulll, P. wlndowe llacki.$1MOO
1985 OLDS ACHIEVA UMITED GOLD 16213, 2 Dr., AJC, A/T,
AM~M caas., tilt, crulu,llr bag, 20,1100 mllll, PW, Pl., sport
wltetle, ballnce of feclory Wlfflnly..........................:..$10,862
1992 HONDA ACCORD 18.245, 2 Dr., Ex. red, A/f, AMIFM
cau., tilt, crulee, P. aunt:OOf, PW, Pl., anti-theft eystem,
wlleela, rear defrostet, dull mlfl'ort:...................;..............$111,700
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 16255,
1983 CHEV. CORSICA 16254, Blue, 36,1100 miles, A((,
AM/FM case., Uit, crulll,

1990 CHEV. 8-10 16248, 2-IOnt paint, V-6 eng., Tahot P
re.~OIW ... ~ ........ ~~"""''"~~,~~~···""'"""""""'··~ ....~..... ~... ~~~

1991 CHEV. S.10 16210, AM~M cau, sport wheel1, duel

mlrrort,
'"'S.10
ltlp 16'
b~;~~·~~i::·i~ng'~;;j:'ii:t;;;·p;i~~~1·
1992
CHEV.
eng., long bed,
AM/FM cau.; eport wlteele, rear elld•er......:......................$721
1990 CHEV. S.10 16141,AII/FM can., ftlnlltltr, lfiOrl
whMII, epoit ltrlpts ............................................................ $8413
1989 FORD F-15016241, V-8 tng., 8' bed, llltomltlctrlns,
sport wheels, ruming bolrda ............................................
19931SUZU TRUCK 18160, AM!FM can.,~ wlttlll,

s-.

dual mlrrora..........................................................................$7661

1983 FORD RANGER 16142, AM/FM, aport whttll,
custom strlpea .....................................................................·sa1993 CHEV. S.10 16209, Tahoe Pkg., green, V-8 eng, A/C,
AMJFM Clll., eport wheels, running boards, 33,1100 mi.,
cloth lnl ................................................................................S8925
19111 CHEVY.S..10 18252, Red, A/C, AM/FM can., V-6 eng.,
sport.wheels, Tahoe Pkg ..........,.........................................:$5115
1994 FORD RANGER SPLASH 16234, AM/FM cau., lporl
wheels, Ton11111u cover, rear lllder ................................... ,

-

1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16240, Whhe, A/C, A/f, 7
pass., V-6 eng., UH, crulu, P. Mndowe &amp;locka.......:........$7995
1992 DODGE .CARAVAN 16196, A/C, AfT, AMJFM, V-6 eng.,
air bag, rear delroster.:....:................................................$7415
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16222, Dove GfiY, A/C, A/f,
tnt. cruiH, 7Pall., AIIIFM Clll. ........................................$7780
1992 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 18.230, tit, ctulle, AMJFM
cass., 7 peu.,alr bag, cruise, tllt.......................................$8831
1993 DODGE CARAVAN 11229, A/C, AfT, 7 passenger, V-8
engine, blue.... ~.............................;.... .. .......,......................$9683
1983 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16141, Gren Yin S.E., A/C,
A/T, AM/FM cass., V-6 eng., tilt, CNise, PW, PL,
Clolt\lnlerlor........................."-·········;.............................$10,172
1993 DODGE CARAVAN SE 16233, 40,000 milts, ¥-6 eng., 7

pasa.,

crulll, A!C; AfT, AM/FM ca11.,

rear ~e~,~~:~·:..~:·::·::"":·~·:·:~·..:~·::~·~~"""'":·:·- ..........:.:$11,1160
1993 DODGE CARAVAN· GRAN VAN 16214; Blue, V-6 eng.,
A/C, A/T, 7 pall., IIH, cruiM, power wiMowe &amp;loeb,
AM~M cassette, rear dtll'olter, clolh lntellor ................ $9515

•

Pr • Jet:emy Rickard 15-95; B J
Ondy 15·74; Dusty Higginbotham
8iS8; Jeremy Buskirk S-2S; Jermyn
Queen :Z..B;.Brenl Rollins 12-11
J~ . Shane Wolford 10-113;
Jllhn Kin&amp; 6-4 7: Shannon Smith 430: Joet Boggs 7-25; Craig Cusick
casey Chamberlain 2-2

. .

X

414'1

.

1995 GEO TRACKER R4X416224, AM/FM call., slllpel,
aport wheela.....................................................~ ................$10,m
1993 GEO TRACKER 4X416252, A11M1 call.,

2t2o:
i.
I,

PASSING . .
• Brent Rollins . 13-5-3-42;
y Haii4-3-0-26
.
oey Boggs 7-2-P-31
.

Gallla

~onnty

ENGINEER

'.

.. i! ,

RECEIVING
l'P • Jeremy Buskirk 2-29; .B J
&lt;DIY 3·16; Mike Anderson 1-13;
Youns 1-8; Jeremy Whit·

~.flU~ .

~on .

Our!tr lllllla

•••

FORD

Paid for by the candidate, 70 RiVer Street (Gallipolis Twp.)

!

Outdoors

November 3, 1188

. .0111·2

Co.

J ·• JIIOII Uoyd 1·19; Rodney
pboU 1·12

0.().()..()=0

6-13-7-6:32
l

•

•

'

'

,J
'

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••

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'

•

I

••

•

I

�'au ......Jhuttud

, . . B8. ,.

UNLIMITED DOUBLE
COUPONS!
EVERY DAY UP TO 50 C

With todays .•.

•••
I

•'

Prices Good 11/3 thru 11/9 While Quantities Last

GROUND
·BEEF
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LB.

OSCAR
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·FUN PACKS· oz.

OR MORE

.

BEEF

CHUCK
•steaks
•Roasts
'
eGrt»und
Chuck
'

FOR

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PORK RIBS

COMBO PACK

s .• •

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LB~

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FAMILY PACK

LB.

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SEII·BONELESS

HALF

49

Sunday, November 3, 1111

e

By Bob
Hoeflich

I'm a firm believer in the old saying,
"Quit while you're ahead."
I did that in August when I decided to
resign as photographer of the annual livestock sale at the Meigs County Junior Pair.
Despite my resignation, the world went
on. It always does and I have no problem
with that.
'
I'm now in the midst of another "sw8!1
song". Come Thanksgiving weekend, I·
will be doing my final stint as director of
the musicals of the Big Bend Minstrel
Association. It was a tough call. l!ve
enjoyed the numerous shows over the
years and loved the people taking part.
However,
y9u may not believe it but I'm
POINT PLEASAN, W.Va. · There's no place like
not
getting
any younger. You might say,
home. And if Ed Forbush could have clicked his heels
I'm
getting
older
but definitely not better.
to get there be would have - but even that simple act
Shows
of
the
Big
Bend Minstrel Assowas impossible.
.
ciation began way back in 1953 and the
Forbush 'survived a stroke on Sept. I4, 1994 and
public support over the long years has
from the very beginning of his rehabilitation process
been
tremendous.
was determined' to return home to a life of indepen·
The
association was born as a fund
dence.
'
raising
organization
and that has what it
. Forbush's temporary home was the Rehabilitation
has
been
over
the
years
and it all started in
.Unit at Holzer Medical Center. Unable to perform
Letart
Falls.
Katie
Crow
was president of
normal, every day functions, he started from square
the Letart Palls PTA that year and parents
one, learning things such as dressing himSI'If, personwanted to have a room built onto the
al hygiene t~ks-, transfers from the bed, chair and toi •
·school
so that a lunch Pt-ogram could be
let, feeding an&lt;l swallowing techniques, speech and
established.
Katie mentioned the problem
medical needs;
in
a
conversation
we had and out of the
At one point in his treatment, Ed explored the idea
blue,
just
like
in
a
Judy
Garland movie, we
of going to a nursing' home, however, placement was
, came up with the idea of having a show tb
an issue. With that in mind. he decided to do whatewraise the needed money. And it did.
er was necessary to return home.
Many of the residents of Letart Palls
After months of hard work and help from his compitched
in to take part in that first musicalmunity organizations, his determination paid off. Pol·
-a true minstrel show. Residents of Midlowing an intensive process, Forbush was discharged
dleport,
Pomeroy and other Meigs com~
November, 1994.
munities
traveled up to the Palls a couple
"After working with Ed for a period of time, I
of
times
a
week to rehearse. The first coscame to realize there was only one option for him
tumes
were
created from feed sacks whicn
after discharge and that. was to live at home," said
were given to the group . by the Meigs
Jodi Adams; physical therapist "I felt a nursing home
CountY
Farm Bureau. Women of the com·
would not be suitable for Ed because he focused sO
·
munity
stitched them up into some cos.
h
..
'
~ ·muc h.on retumn\g 9me.
·
REUNION
•
Ed
and
his
friend
Robert
McCalla,
were·
among
the
mimy
gu
..
ta
illendlng
the
HMC
Rehab
Unit
Annual
tumes
that
were excellent.
'
· Because of his determination, his discharge date
Reunion.
Currant
and
former
petlents
returned
f,or
an
afternoon
of
food
and
entertainment
The
show
played
in
Racine,
Pomeroy
was extended and his treatment focus was to do
and Middleport and was so successful that
. everything possible to help him return hom~ alone.
resources were able to provide, Spending. much of his .time at
it became an annual event. In 1955, Olive
, 'The rehab team began investigatiilg1 communoty resources to home, he felt lonely and restricted. Many of the actiVIties, he
Ingraham Weber, who was the fi..St show
assist Ed li few days a week. ·
. ·
wanted to attend were close to his residence, but he was
accompanist, became president of the
"Ed's positive attitude motivated the rehab team to find unable to get to them in his wheelchair. Due to .accessibility
Central
School PTA in Pomeroy and a deal
,the resources necessary for him to live independently," said issues Ed liked the idea of purchasmg a motonze4 scooter.
was
worked
out for the two I'I'A groups to
·
. Ellen Gibson, LSW.
That ~as the one thing left that would provide him with the
share the profits from the show. And that
• Adaptations and mbdifications were needed to make liv- independence he needed to troly be integrated into the comwas okay since .the Letart Palls School
.
•
!
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. ing at home alone easier and ,safer. The last two to three munoty.
.
·
·
,
--mission
had been accomplished.
·t:Wl!Cks .o f Ed's stay on the rehab unit were geared t?ward
Qreg Kaylor of Continuity of C~ helped Ed purchase a7
Over
the years I have worn out a ·11alf
' .; doing treatment in his home, learning 'to .self adrrumster scooter within. his budget. Ed mel w1th Poml Pleasant Mayor
dozen
·
or
more accompanists, and more
' ·insulin for his diabetes and gather,commumty. resources to Russell Holland to discuss accessibility in the community
volunteer
workers--and
they were great-- •
• j,rovide him with a support system. ·
•
·
and took him on a tour. Within a couple of weeks, the prob·
than you can count. Hundreds of residents
The home treatment consisted of mobility in the home at lcm areas were fixed. Ed was free to do most of the things he
participated in the musicals. CI\St mema wheelchair level, transfers from his own bed, shgwer and did before his stroke and began developing new leisure skills
bers
have come and gone. High school
toilet, performi":g kitchen tasks and ma~ng the necessary and interests.
·
teenage
girls took part in the dance lines
adaptations to his apartment to ensure h1s ondependcnce m
and
gave
up their chorus line activities
the safest way possible.
.
.
.
Ed has lived on his own for two nearly years. Because of
when
they
graduated. But that was okay
,
Physical and occupationaltheraposts made num_ero~s tnps its lio:nited durabili.ty and months of activity, the used motortoo
because
there was always a new batch
.with Ed to his home for treatment and to work with IS land- ized scooter needed to be replaced. Por Ed to continue with
coming on.
; lord on making adaptations to the apartment Also during that his life. much effort was · put into justifying the need for a
At one time, the assoc1atton began
• time, .Ed was exposed to activities that he could attend, such .new one. Based on the need, he received approval from Meddoing
musicals at the ,Meigs County Pair.
• 'as howling, Stroke Survivors Group, movies. and the Mason icaid and Medicare to purchase a new scooter. Now he can .·
The
first
stage across from the grandstand
'County Senior Center, as well as transportation resource for continue to go to the grocery store, bowling, movies, parties,
was
ric.kety
and made of wooden boards
·. activities and medical appointments.
•
exercise class, the Stroke . Survivors Support Group and ·
which
were
very unlevel after having
, Thrm.igh the help of the rehab staff, his landlord, Mason attend activities at the senior center.
stood in the weather for many years. How· :county Senior Center's Resources and the Pdot Club, wh1ch
ever,
the fair board took care of that by
'purchased a LIFELINE unit for Ed, he was ready to meet the
"We are pr~ud of Ed and look forward to seeing him at all
building
a sizable concrete stage which
· challenge of living alone. He had worked many hours IP suc- of our senior center activities," said Robyn Hanan, RN, of
NEW
SCOOTER
•
Ed
gets
ready
to
teat
hie
new
served
the
performers over the ~umerous
cessfully integrate himself back into t~e community.
the Mason County Senior Center. "He has inspired us with
scooter with employees from PVH/Contlnulty of
years
at
the
fair very well. That stage has
On his own Ed seemed to be dmng very well, but he his humor and determination."
Care.
since been tom down.
: "would call the ;..,hab unit daily wanting to do more than his
The association was booked for one
night at the fair at first, but tbe shows were
so successful that they were extended to
·two nights as the grandstand attraction-·
· · Thursdays and Saturdays. There was
being temporary, lasting only to the bumper-to-bumper traffic during the early
' By JAMES SANDS
end of the meetings, while others evenings as residents flocked to the fairSpecial Correaponclent
being more · deep-seated, subse· grounds to.eatch the latest endeavor of the
:, Camp meetings fill an ·interesting
quently resulted in marriages. A · association. These were back in the days
; chapter · in Gallia County history
number of families brought their when fairgoers paid tb get onto the .
, beginning with the first such meetings
fond along and spread it on the grounds and then paid another fee to·:see
beld in a grove near Kerr about 1820.
grass, and pften two or more fami- the show. ·The·support was overwhelnung.
: : Regular camp meetings were held
lies would go together and combme Many residents took lawn chairs to the
: in the 1840s near Porter, in·the 1860s
their foo&lt;l and thus enjoy their din- grounds and the race track was made
' in Gallipolis, in the 1880s at Cheshire,
ners jointly. Numerous families had available to them _for viewing the musiin the 1890s at Crown City and
their own cottages and occasionally cals.
Mapleshade and in the 1920s at Camp
I find it difficult to believe that in some
more than one family would occupy
. McCarley (near the intersection of SR
instances, I am working with third and
the same collage."
' hnd SR 218).
,
fourth generation members of the first par,
: ~ .,Perhaps the most successful caii\P·
Camp meetings did have their ticipants. I can think i1f a couple of those
'meeting in the area WI!-• the one held
detrac.tors including many of the oftband. The late Margaretha Wolfe w.as
• along the Gallia and Lawrence Coun· ,
Methodist churches in the south· an early participant; a~ was her daughter,
,• ,ty I&gt;Qrder near Waterloo. Ten. acres of
western part of Gallia County. Kathy. This year's show will display the
land were leased by a committee re11.·
These people ·argued that camp vocal !Oient of Kathy 's dau~hter, Amy Per: ,tesenting seven Methodist churebes
meetings did more harm than good rin. The late Henry Reibel and his son, the
, from Whit Wiseman in 1890. That
mostly by subjecting people to late Donley Reibel, took an active role in
·"summer the committee contracted to ~
unscriptural teaching and religious the early shows as backstage workers; his'
·;have erected on the 10 acres a taber· S·.· ,.,,,,.,
fads. People teaching such fads daughter, Betty, was a performer and her
. nacle, hotel and refreshment stand.
"have an ·acrid hostility to churches daughter, Donna, was a .vocalist who was
'·Individual families put up small cot·
;.~--:::-"7.:-::7"-.::-:-;---;:-:;:::-;::-:;:;:-:;::=:-:::;:::::--i;;:::-::;:::;::~~t,:W,
show mascot in those early years, Thos
· tages and tent platforms. Of the seven
CAMP MEETINGS • The Hall family le shown In thl1 photo taken at the entrance to the Waterloo while displaying uncharitableness ,' year, Betty's granddaughter, Sara Craig, is
· .' churches, three were in Gallia Cou~ty Camp Grande Grounds. Camp meeting• were hedl there every August and September from 1890 to toward all who oppose their fad."
one of the chorus line dancers and she
:. flag Springs, Olive .and ~1. :1';1on w1th about1920. The grounds were located about two miles north of Waterloo.
makes
the.fourih·generatio,n of the family
"The work of holiness is love,
: the other four beong on Lawrence
to
take
part in the shows.
.
joy, peace , kindness , goodness,
·county. ·
· p.m., .a young people's ~eeting at 4 p.m. and tion Party ceased campaigning on the
even
though
"there's
no
business
So
.grounds that he would openly be forced to meekness and longsuffering. It ,is not self- like show business," you can probably
· '• The tabernacle, built of undressed oak · then preaching again at 7:30p.m.
.' lumber could hold I ,500 people, but there
'The Waterloo Camp meeting usually last- campaign for his candidate, Hamson. Then a confidence, uncharitableness, fault finding understand why this year is the "grand
, was ~in outside for an additional I ,000 ed about 15 days in late August and early still older man rose to declare for the Demo- ·in otherS and entire satisfaction with oneself. ·finale" for yours truly.
· 'peapleee. The aueadance on the last Sunday . September. It always began on a Tuesday :crat Cleveland. Many others stood to declare. · A really' holy person will never ·.have· that
Incidentally, this year's presentation
; ·of a camp meeting sometimes reached 8,000 and ended on a Wednesday. There were usu- for the ProhibitiQn candidate John Bidwell." sense of superiority which is so manifest in will~ at the Meigs Junior High School in
At first the Waterloo Camp Meeting was the actionS" and tones of some of those who Middleport on Friday and Saturday nights,
on the grounds.
ally three special days: Temperance Day,
' • The first Waterloo Camp Meeting was Epworth League Day and Old Soldiers' Day. operated on a free will offering basis . When have ransomed themselves into the belief Nov. 29 and 30. I hope to see you there.
On Thmperance Day the fine line between this proved inbdequate, a p1cket fc~cc was that they have auai ned to holiness ." (Letter · Meantime, I hope many of the partici; held in 1890. Methodist involvement With
-the camp I&amp;Jted to about 1917.
.
: religion and politics sometimes was crossed built around the grounds and admoss10n was .!rom a resident of Gallia Furnace, 1899 to pants of past shows can pick up a nice
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune) The Waterloo
: Other aroups held camp here for another as eyidenced from one report from the Oal- charged.
memory of their minutes in the Big Ben~
Camp
Meeting ceased aboot 192p.
·few. years.
.
·
.
lipolis Journal in 1892: "It seemed that the
spotlight. And maybe as a part of the audi. • When it was a MethodiSt camp meeting, hohibition Party took advanced ground and
According to a piece wriuen in the 1960s
ence sometime over the years, you , too,
: the schedule was pretty much the same f':'r some objected that tltey were mixing-politics by Homer Maddy: "Some looked upon the
Jamea Sends Ia 1 epeclal corr..pon· can recall that tbe casts brought you
"•II 27 years. Prayer meeting was held. eve'l' and religion. Their answer was that the more camp-meetings largely as a soc1al home~om ­ dent of the Sunday Timet-Sentinel. Hla enjoyment. Perh8ps, those thoughts can, at
• Jllorning at S a.m. The~ was testimony religion one got into politics the better off lng, and came to see and be seen and· mongle addreaa Ia: 66 Willow Dr., Springboro, least, encourage some of you to keep smil·
. ·meeting at 8 a.m.1 preachmg ·at 10 a.m., a the country would be. One man stood in the with old friends. It was said that romances Dhlo 45086.
, ing.
~ng ·Ht'Vice at I, p.in., preaching at 2:30 . congregation to say that unless th~ Prohjbi- were developed on th~ campground. some ,

•

Area ·man
·survives stroke,
achieves
successful
·rehabilitation

:Camp meetings spiced-up Gallia social life

MUELLER'S
OLD FASHION

EGG NOODLES

c

WIDE &amp;
EITU WIDE

31.97 oz.

16 oz.

BAN·QUET
DINNERS oz.
ALL VARIETIES

REIBER
FRUIT
DRINK
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FOR

6.4·11

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GAL.

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TOASTER STRUDEL
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11.5 oz.

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'

II

C

Beat of
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S]il]

8 LB.

Section

Old .fashioned

407 PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO 45760

OPEN 24 HOURS
7 DAYS A WEEKI

Along ·the Riv!!r

Sunday, November 3, 11MM1

Pomeroy • Middleport • -Gallipolis, OH • Point PINaant, WV.

t

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Sunct.y;November3,1ttii

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

f$unday, November 3, 1996

Pomeroy e Middleport e Galllpoll8, OH • Point Pleaaa'lt. WV.

I

I

. RYAN AND SANDRA EVANS

WILL AND WENDY COON

VanCooney~Evans

Rach-Coon
MARK AND SUSAN VRBAS

Tope-Vrbas
CHRISTOPHER AND LUCIANA ALDERMAN

COVINGTON, Ky. , The Basili- Wendy McLaughlin of Nashville,
can Sf. Mary's Cathedral was the set- Tenn.; Jill Wamsley of Gallipolis;
ling for the Sept. .14 wedding of and Janet Shininger of Bowling
VINTON -- Luciana lanelte Moore and Christopher Skidmore of Susan Chris~ine Tope and Mark Jar- Green. TI1e bridesmaids wore mid·
ret Vrbas . Rev. Stan Puryear of night navy fonnal-length sheaths
Scou and Second l,.t. Christopher Vinton and Jonathan Edwards
Fort
Hood,
Texas.
Bowling Green, Ky .. and ' Rev. John and carried colonial-styled bouqueiS
Aaron Aldennan were mpied Aug.
Brad
Urwin
carried
the
rings
on
a
Jackson
of Gallipolis. co-ol11ciated of varied colored roses with ivy.
3l in Vinton Baptist Church, Vinton.
Serving as best man was Jeffrey
Rev. Marvin Sallee perfonncd satin heart-shaped pillow. One the double-ring ceremony. Readers
Vrbas
of Manhattan, Kan., brother
groomsmen .was in U.S. Army dress for the ceremony were Dr. E.' John
the military, double-ring ceremony.
Luciana is the daughter of Mr. blues while the others wore tuxedos Strauss, step-father of the bride and of the groom. Serving as groomsmen were the groom's brother, Erik
and Mrs. Steven Scoll of Cheshire. with classic style jackets and full Erik Vrbas, brother of the groom.
Vrbas
of Atwood, Kan .; Mathew
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
Christopher is the son of Mr. and tails, .and black paisley vests and
ties.
and
Mrs.
Thomas
E.
Tope
and
Dr.
Woodring
of Bowling Green; Craig
Mrs. Rodney Aldennan of Vinton.
Hardwick
of Chicago, brother-inThe military saber learn included and Mrs. E. John Strauss of GallipoVocalists for the ceremony were
Jim O'Brien and Jennifer Mont- Brian Zuck, Lewis Corry, , John lis. The grOQm is the son of Mr. and law of the bride; and Christopher
gomery. Jean Moore was at the Acevedo, Ken Holmstrom, and Seth Mrs. Ronald Vrbas of Atwood, Kan. Gilligan of Lexington, Ky.
Heather Hastwell Evans of
Margulies of Aberdeen, Md., and
Given in marriage ~y her parents
organ.
Columbus
registered the guests,
Esconed to the altar by her father Jonathan Edwards of Fon Hood, and esconed to the altar by her
with
Andrea
Tope, cousin of the
and given in marriage by her par- Tex"'. They were in their dress blues father, the bride wore a Jim Hjelm
' gown.made of imponcd candlelight- bride, serving as program hostess.
ents, the bride wore a gown fash- and wore white gloves. ,
Following the ceremony, a Din:
The'
bride's
mother
wore
an
ivory
.
ivory s,ilk shantung. The bodice and
ioned with a high illusion neckline
ne:Cruise Reception aboard the
and sleeves. The appliqued bodice tea-length dress featuring French sleeves were designed with inlaid
.
Queen
.Riverboat was hosted by the
was embellished with pearls and lace over satin. The groom's mother pearls aad sequins that embroidered
·
bride's
father.
crystal sequins. The full princess- wore a navy Ooor-lenglh sleeveless the cat!Jedral-length train . Her
matching cathedral-length veil was
The evening before .the wedding,
style tulle skin flowed into a cathe- dress.
the
groom's family entenained with
The
church
.
d
ecorations
included
accentuated
With
scallered
pearls.
dral train.
a
formal
dinner at The Syndicate in
The bride's headpiece was a pearl htan-.shaped candelabra and a unity . She wore her great-grandmother's
Newpo·
n
,
Ky. The morning followand crystal tiara accented with satin candle arrangement decorated with diamond earrings, a gift from her
ribbons and an elbow-length pouf. greenery, gold ribbons and white ·maternal grandmother, Mrs. Marvin. ing the ceremony, the bride's mother
The bride carried a cascade bouquet and navy_ nowers. The pews were Robin son. The bride carried a bou- and step-father entenained with a
of silk white, navy and gold rose- trimmed with white net bows with 'quet of two dozen champagne roses brunch at the top of the Riverview
buds, with gold ribbons, . pearl navy and white flowers, ribbons .and with b'aby's breath •and i-vy accented Hotel, Covington, Ky. Immediately
following the brunch, the newlywed
pearls. The doors featured swags of with llalian ribbon.
streamsllflll English ivy.
·
couple
d'epaned for a honeymoon in
Maid of honor was Lori HardDanielle Scou ·served as her sis- English ivy with Oo!Vers in the wed'
wick of Chicago, sister of tl1&lt;i bride. Sydney~ Australia. The couple will
ter's maid of honor. Bridesmaids ding colors.
Bridesmaids
were Wendi Vrbas of re side in Bowling Green .
Trudy Marshall of Pomeroy reg. were Kari Aldennan of Vinton, Julie
Ouawa, Kail., sister of the groom ;
Skidmore of Gallipolis and istered the guests.
Stephanie McDaniel of Proctorville.
A candlelight reception was held
The maid of honor and bridesmaids at Rhodes Hall at the University of
wore full-length fonnal gowns. The Rio Grande. A buffetpf hors. d'oeu·navy organza gowns featured vres was served. The five·tiered
shirred necklines embellished by stairway wedding cake featured a lit
dilimond shaped pearl broaches, and fountain centerpiece and was
the bodices flowed into full length adorned with navy rosebuds in icing.
01ganza skins.
Arrangements of Oowers topped the
slairs.
·
The bridesmaids carried cascades
of white, navy_and gold flowers with
The bride is a 1993 graduate of
greenery.
River Valley High School and will
· New.Hours
The Oower girl was Beth Payne graduate from Marshall University
of Vinton . Her dress featured g~­ in December. She plans a career in
Open Tues. - Fri. 10 am-~
land brocade and Venice lace. The public accounting.
Sat.10am-7pn1Sun.1 pm·6pm
full length gown had off-the-shoulThe groom is a 1991 graduate of
der styling with white-on-white lace. Nonh Gallia High ,School and a
She carried a white wicker basket 1996 graduate of the University of
204 East Main
Pomtroy ,
decorated with 'pearls and ribbons .. Rio Grande. He is an officer in the
. For the wedding, the groom wore U.S. Anny.
992-6914
his U.S: Anny dress blue unifonn.
Following,· a honeymoon to
Best man was his brother, Ryan Pipestem Resoit , W.Va., the couple
Aldennan. Groomsmen were Jared · will leave on an oversea.~ tout.

Scott-Alderman

or

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.SecondJlnnivers~rg
OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, November IOth I pm to 6 pm

VICTORIAN PARLOR

TUPPERS PLAINS -- The First
United Methodist Church was the
setting for the Aug. 31 wedding of
Wendy Rach and Will Coon of The
Plains.
· Wendy is the daughter of Jerry
and Sheila Rach of Tuppers Plains. .
.Will is the son of·Karin S1reeks of
Golden, Colo. and Larry Coon gf
Athens.
Rev. Tom Hano~er 'officiated at
the 2:30 wedding, with nuptial
music provided by Cris Kuhn of
Reedsville.
The bride wore a candlelight silk
shanlun" gown featuring a chapel
train and off-the-shoulder sweetbean neckline. The bodice and scalloped lace hemline were enhanced
with pearls and sequins.
Stacey Rach 'of Louisa, Ky. and
Beth Bay of Reedsville were the

bride's auendants.
I ared Coon of Athens was
man for his brotheL Abe R&amp;Jcli~
brother of the bride, was us~. ""'"'"'
Coon of Golden, Colo. was
bearer, and Kristen Swiney of
Plains was flower girl:
Bridesmaids wore waltz-len21
princess gowns with
straps . .The rose satin gowns were.
accented with white chiffon scarves
which swept to jugl below the waist
in the back.
·
Wendy is a 1994 graduate of
Eastefll High School, allended Ohjo
University and is employed b~
Kroger. Will is a 1990 graduate of
Athens High School and a student . ~l
Hocking College.
•;,
After awt;&lt;Jding trip, the newlr.
weds will reside at 33 Roy Ave., The
Plains.
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·VOTE

·Jeff Thornton

I

SOMETIM·ES,
it's hard to
be a woman!

be submilled within 30 days of
occurrence.
All binhdays must be submitted
within 42 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to editing.

The HOTLINE receives many calls
from women who are concerned
about symptoms they are
•
•
•
expenenctng,
untque
to
their species.
. . . . . . . II

If you have a medical question,

JOIN US FOR AN
AFTERNOON OF
RECALL THE DAYS
AFT!lRNOON CONCERTS WITH
A SELECTION OF MARCHES,
I'OI'ULAR MUSIC AND SOME
CLASSIC TUNES THAT WF.'RE
SURE nlAT YOU WILL EWIOY.

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... . ' ·:~::..t./
A1 - ll ' :;1(

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SUNDAY,NOV.3RD

2:30P.M.
· STAT£ THEATRE

POIKT PLJtASAlfT, W.V.
THE BIG

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BIDWELL - Stephanie Darlene responding feathered hats.
Sprague of Bidwell and Shawn ' 'The ushers Were dressed in coslV!auhew Howard of Sutton, W.Va. tume of the period . They were
lvere united in marriage Sept I, at Mallhew Sprague and Jerry Priddy..
die Lowe Hotel in Point Pleasant,
The reception was held in the
W.Va. with Rev. Woodrow Bell per- Lowe Hotel's banquet room.
f6nning the medieval double-ring
Music of the period was played.
. eeremony. " '
.·
A three tiered castle cake was
Stephanie is the daughter of Her- trimmed in royal blue and supponed
n an~ Alle~a Sprague of Bidwell. by gargoyles with ivy, baby's breath
awn ts the son of Ronme Howard and lavender roses decorating the
d the late Ona Howard of Sutton. center of the cakes. The bride and
The wedding had a medieval groom topper 'was Guinivere and
ltme. A castle, inoat and draw- King Anhur which · stood on the
b idge was constructed by the drawbridge of the castle top. The
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
b 'de's father. Music of the period cake · was served by Cindy Sheets regards the weddings of Gallia,
$ played by guitarist, Joe -Shields and Matthew, Sprague. Food of the Meigs and Mason counties as news
tibm the Marshall University music period was served.The tables were and publishes wedding stories and
' dlpartrnent.
decorated with ivy, wild flowers, photographs without charge.
· tsconed lo the drawbridge by her candles and cherubs.
However, wedding news must
f er and given in marriage by he~
The bride and groom are gradu- meet general standards of timelip nts, t&amp;e bride wore an antiqu~ . ates of · Marshall University. ness. The newspaper prefers to pubesatin dress with long fonn .fit- ·Stephanie has a bachelor of science lish accounts of weddings as soon as
sleeves which was trimmed in degree in nursing. Shawn has . a possible after the event.
S l~e and gold trim. The over- bachelor of science degree in counTo be published in the Sunday
slbiia it wine ' satln boilice with seling and rehab ilnd a master of sci- , edition, the wedding must have
~pnd c~heted buuons down the
ence degree in safety engineering. , taken place Within 60 days prior to
f4lnt. Th~ long floor-length outer
the publication, and may be up to
st:eves opened to show the white
They will reside in Dickson, 600 wonds in length. Material for
••lin undersleeve. The outer sleeve Tenn.
Along the River must be received by
was lined with gold Iamey and wine · ~

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with crystal and pearl drops. The
li:address was a wreath of wine,
liJack and burgundy flowers and ·
lj&lt;hite pearls pulled together with
ribbons of gold and burgundy, white
~ads and vel vet lace. The front had
. ce work made of twisted wine
d gold cords ad.orned with pearl
ps.
l She carried a bouquet of wildr).owers of yellows, variegated white
l#td pink miniature lilies, purple sta!te and red roses. tied together with
l10ng win.e and gold ribbons. ·
The groom wore a houppelande
'f wine velvet which 111a1ched the
liride's bodice. His houppelande was
1~¢ in purple satin and trimmed in
tietallic gold. His hal was made of
~fine v~lvet trimmed. in gold with a
~ack feather.
The .bride's father wore a black
'Ilk-essence gown with a golden
q&gt;rd belt over which a forest green
'1Jbe With a black velvet collar was
worn, and both were trimmed in
11\etallic goid.
: Maid of honor was · Marla
lfuhlman of COlumbus. Bridesmaids
were Monica Egermayer of Trell~rg, Sweden; Heather Sprague
lfiddy·of Bidwell; and Nedra Davis
Pittsburg, Pa. They wore early
tor style gowns made of
kessense in different pastels and
ed in royal purple with various
tallic trim an4 goiden cord belts.
heir heads were adorned with
wer wreaths highlighted with 'the
ain color of · each bridesmaid's
ess. ,They carried purple and
I vender. carnations with a bullerOy
oaiing on top ·from which various
rple and silver metallic ribbons
reamed.
Kevin Perrine of Sutton was the
' sl man., Groomsmen Were Ron
·ng of Atlanta, Ga.; Gene Holland
Columbus; ..,nd Zack Walker of
uon . .They wore houppelandes of
yal blues and blacks trimmed in
etallic golds and silvers with cor-

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DDUDUDit

MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT
· $TORE

feel free to call the

--

-

HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE

~

t

at

I'

1·800-462-525 5
'

ON THE "T"

A registered nur$e is on duty
6 a.m. 'til 2 a.m. seven days a week.

Middleport, Ohio

992·3148 '
Mon.-Thur. 1o-6
Fri. 1D-8, Sit: 1Q.6

• Please consult your physician about ~edicatlon•
•

Sprague-Howard

(

•

L

I

ters of ,the bride. They wore teal
gowns with lace tops and carried
lace fans with teal mini-carnations
and peach roses.
Mallhew Evans served as his
brother's best man. l)shers were
Dave Wanh and Darrin Wanh, and
groomsmen were Brian Weaver and
Billy Harris.
A reception followed at the Royal
Oak Reson.
A tiered fountain cake with staircases extending to bean-shaped side
cakes was decorated in teal and
peach and featured a bridal couple
on top. Ashton Brown registered
guests and presided at the table.
·

The coup\ll resides in Ponland.
The bride -1$. employed at Holzer
Medical Center. The groom works at
PDK Construction, Inc. Guests were
from Ohio, Michigan, West Virginia
and Virginia. .

-'----Wedding policy. --

If:~.
The bottom of the overdress· r--"";~~;:;;;--.,...-;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;::;:::;:::;,
-tas gold metallic mesh adorned
TO MY

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I·

1

Paid for by candidaie, Fifth Sl, Racine, Oh •

.' I

I

•

~

for Meigs County Com•lssloner
1
I'm asking the voters of Meigs ~
County to give me a chance to be ~
your commissioner- I will work hard .:
and bring results and help-all areas. ~
1
ofMeigs County! ·
.

----News policy----·
In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipo·
lis Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after
60 days from the date of the event. :
All club meetings and other news
anicles in the society section must

••

SHAWN AND STEPHANIE HOWARD

'··
~-.

POMEROY -- Sandra Renea
VanCooney and Ryan Michael
Evans of Ponland were married in
an aflennoqn ceremony Sept. 28, at
Royal Oak Reson.
The bride is the daughter of
Charles and Jan VanCooney of
Pomeroy, and Jean and Wayne
Thomas of Rutland. The groom is
the son of Mike and Sharlee Evans,
Ponland.
David Dailey performed the double ring ceremony at 4:30p.m. in the
hall decorated with teal and peach
bells and Oowers.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore a fonnal gown with
auached train and large bows down
the back. She carried a bouquet of
teal mini-carnations and peach
roses.
Debbie Janda was matron of
honor, and bridesmaids were Candy
Ulbrich and Audrea Harrison, all sis-

I

FELLOW
. MElGS
COUNTIANS•.

!'

POMEROY -- Wendi Dawn Elaine M. Parsons of Pomeroy. He is l
Daniels and Jason Clyde Parsons the gr~ndson of Mary Lee Carthel of;
were married SI(Jlt. 6 in Frederick, Pomeroy, and the late Horace Par- '
so ns of Middleport and Lois J.
Md.
.
She is the daughter of Tammy McGrath of Columbus and Donald
Hysell of Pomeroy, and Jeff Daniels ·sheppard.
The bride is a junior, and the
of Canton, and the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Daniels of Mid- groom is a senior at Meigs High
dleport, and Barbara Miller ·or School,. The couple resides in ·
Columbus.
Pomeroy.
Jason is the son of David L. and

Electromagnetic fields not
hazardous study says
By ANITA MANNING
USA TODAY
People who live near big power
lines face no danger from electromagnetic fields in their homes, says
an analysis of more than 500 studies
representing 17 years of research.
A ' 16-member committee of the
National Research Council reviewed
the studies and found "no credible
evidencf' that low-frequency electric. and magnetic fields generated .
by wires or electrical devices such as
hair dryers or electric blankets pose
health hazards, says committee chair
Charles F. Stevens of Howard Hughes Medical Institute and the Salk
Instiiute, La Jolla, Calif.
'
Some studies have ~hewn that
children who live near power lines
are 1.5 times more likely to develop
leukemia, but Stevens says the cause
must be something other thaQ electromagnetic fields, or EMFs.

He says power lines are usually •
located on busy streets, · often in •
older, poor neighborhoods. "There .
are a lot of things that could be associated with increased risk of
leukemia," he says; ~uch as air qu~l- ,
ity or materials in older homes. i
"!lJe one thing that has been looked .
at is electromagnetic fields (and) so ,
far, the risk factor 'associated with ·
power-lines is not Efv!Fs."
Some ~omes near power lines
have lower electromagnetic fields ,
than homes far away, he says.
"What detennines the field
inside a l)ouse is not power lines, but ,
things like the refrigerator and
where wires are," he says. "If you
measure fields inside a house and .
ask if they corr~Iate with increased ,
risk of leukemia, the answer is no. u •

r-----------------------------------·

'

THIS IS HOW THE CURRENT GALLIA COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS SUPPORTED OUR VETERANS!

Veterans protest

For the past eight years I
have · ser.ved as your
sheriff. When elected In
1988, I made a vow that I
'!ould provide the mos.t ~~,;=========;...~
honest, effective law enforcement and protection
possible. As I close out my second tenn, I know that vow
has been fulfilled.
·
·
·
One of the !)bjectives fuls been to do my ·best to address
and eliminate the drug problems we have fated. Now
production of Marijuana has been greatly reduced.and ·
h~rder drugs, such as cocaine and crack, have, for the
most part, been kept out .of our area. This has been
accomplished by strenuously pursuing growers and
dealers, gathering evidence for convictions and
ultimately se!Jding them to penal institutions. Monies
from siezures have been used to purchase modern
equipment for ,the sheriff's departme11t. This has saved
you and I, as taxpayers, thoUsands of dollars.
We have, in co-operation with other agencies, solved
ni!)re Homicides, Burglaries, and related crimes than
ever before. We have worked very hard to combat
crimes !lf!ainst the family, such as domestic violence. Our
fight .against alcohol use ~tnd abuse among our young
people has been endless. ·
I have sought funding for a new faciUty sorely needed
by Meigs County. Funding for a D.A.R.E. program was
one of my priorities. That program is in place and ha,s
proven to be very successful.
·
Your concerns are my concerns. I have always been
availa!Jie day and night to address and help solve your
problems. I want Meigs county to be a place where we,
our children and grandchildren can live in a crime free,
safe, wholesome. environment. As a native Meigs
Countla~, I know our assets and our needs. Together we
can build on those assets and m,eet those needs. By
placing your confidence In me, I can assure you that I
will not igollre your problems. There Is a slogan In .the
sales profession that "You Gotta' Know The Thrrltory".
I know Meigs · County; I was born and reared here:
Honesty, Integrity and high moral standards are some
required attributes for those who attain public omce. I
can truthfully say that I posess those qualities In addition
to e~perience. Allow me to prove this by electinx me
your Sherin' on November Fift(Jei'~

j'(~/

j/ .. James M. Soulshy
L..._'"'!"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:;P;::;_d. .ld b candidate
I

the •editorial department by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of publication.
Those not making the 60-.dy .
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
!'holographs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be, published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and while or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will not
be accepted. 'Generally, snapshots oi
instant-developing photos are not of
acceptable quality.

Daniels-Parsons. ·

•

ProHcutor steps In to
mediate conflict wtween

county, VSC

VSOout
ofgas
.
Office down to Ia at $1 o tot
tranaportatlon
By KEVIN PINSON
Tribune Nowa Stall

Funding woes:
With budget Issue
under appNI- Gall/a.·

VSC lap off emplOY" ·
By KEVIN PINSON
Trlb~M~o N - Stall Juno 11,11195

cwntycomm/Nion-·-

Veterans commission
votes to close Gallla's
veterans service
office
By KEVIN PINSON Feb.7,1H5
Tribune Newa Stall

·
Trlbwtt photo by Ktvln Pln.an
ABOUT 150 QAWA COUNTY VETERANS protutod outoldo tho cou'lhoulo thlo
mornlne prior lo rMetlng with tM county commlallontrt to dlacuai funding 10r tht
v.t.ran1 Service orne.. TM veterana ctalm the YSO nltdl 1 computer ayatem, 1 ven
for trllniPQI'tldon to v.t.rane Admlnlatratlon holpl..ll 1ncl1nough Iunde to properly

Hrvlce the county's 3,100 "'''''"' •nd lhelr lamlll11. A complete report of the

m..una wiH btl publlahtd In FriRy'a Trtbu1111

·

Veterans set up picket line
outside Gallia courthouse
tsy KEVIN PINSON
Trlbune Nowo Staff

~~--,-c-=-

Veterans services: Judge pushes
quick retaolution of funding dispute
tsy KEVIN PINSON ,
Trlbuntl Newa Steil

,

.,..,. olftce ciON to IM_Pietlng flrat quarter fund•

USING TENS OF THOUSANDS OF
'
.TAXPAYERS
DOLLARS TO FIGHT
•
OUR VETERANS
"This decision witt, In this court's
opinion, rightfully return control to
the Veterans Service Commission
over their personnel, salaries and
service to the vet1rans without
Interference from the county
commission."

PROTEIT - Vttertnt W1M ptcktl algna In front of tht
Gallla County Courthoua• thlt morning. Th" grauf lo
prothtlng the GaUlt County Commlaalon'a reru.. to
IIUpplament the v.teren~ Service. Offlc.'• budp:t.

From Judge JOMph l. qaln'• ,
judgment entry, June 1, 1HS ·

VOTE AGAINST FARMER AND SAUNDERS!
for by

Perry, 2642 Clark Chapel Rd .. Bidwell, OH 45614, wi1h donations from several area veterans.

�.

•

•
~nday,

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

Page C4 • ...... 1 11-.-.-,ldlaol

November 3, 11181 '

SUnday, November 3, 1998

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

Fight over popular doll leads
stores to halt, limit sales

Gallia community calendar .,
Thtl Community c.llfidar Ia
publiahed M a free ~Ice to
non profit f11C111Pe wt.hlng to
8IV10UIICe r11Mt1111f1 81'1d ..,...
cllll-•ta. Thtl ~:~~•idar Ia not

•••

elM"'
*' to promote...... or
funckaiHn of lillY type. 1tama
••• 1

...

...

GALLIPOLIS ~ Common
Cancer SuPP9rt Group 2 p.m. Ne
Life Lulberan Church.

. GALLIPOLIS • GJllia Soccer
Associalion meeting 2 p.m. at
Bossard Library to plan presentation
for school board.

...

•

GALLIPOLIS • Choose to
Diet lGroup 9 a.p1 . . Grace Uni ·
Methodist Church. ··

•••

t

•••

Chevaliers to mark 50th

CLYDE AND UNDA DAVIS

Davises observe 30th
GALLIPOLIS • C11yde and Linda
Davis of Gallipolis celebrated their
30th wedding anniversary Oct 29.
They were married Oct. 29, 1966 by
Rev. John Kimbles al .the Racine

Methodist Church.
They have a daughter, Lis~ (Phil)
Heflin of Amelia.
Linda is lhe daughter of Carrol
and Wanda Neigler of Syracuse.

POMEROY .. Darrell and Nola
Ritchie Chevalier of 4609 Beaver
Run Rd. , Pataskala, both natives of
Meigs &lt;lounty, wiil observe tbeir .
50th wedding anniversary from 2 to
4 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 10 at the honored couple's horne.
They were married Nov. 8, 1946.
They have a son, Darrell (Pam)

Chevalier, and
(Don)' Martin;
dren, Mauhew,
Chevalier, and
Martin.

a daughter, Denise
and five grandchil·
Amanda and Jason .
Derek and Dustin

Darrell is retired from Lennox
Industries,' and Nola is a hornemak·
er.
0

•

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar is
publlsbed as a free service to non·
profit groups wishing to announce
meeting and special events. The
calendar is not designed to pro·
mote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot !&gt;e guaranteed
to run a specific number of days.
SUNDAY

REEDSVILLE .. Revival services, Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene, 7 p.rn. nightly Sunday
through Wednesday. The Rev. and
Mrs. Breu Layton of Charleston Elk
River Church of the Nazarene,
speakers and singers. Church is
located on State Route 124 across
from 'Forked Run State Park in
Reedsville. Nursery available. '

LETART -- Letart Township
Trustees, Monday, 6 p.rn.
CHESTER -~ Chester Elemehtary

J'T(); Moqday, 7 p.rn.
TUESDAY

POMEROY .. ·CHOICE Home
Education
meeting, Tuesday, .
10 a.m., Meigs County Public
Library. Thanksgiving feast with pi I·
grimage dress and potluck. Speaker,
Toni Hudson, former teacher on
Indian reservation. Take. own table
service. For more infonnation con·
tact Tammy Jones, 992·6743.
ALFRED -· Orange Township
Trustees, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, horne
· of clerk Osie Follrod.

MONDAY

JIM AND GERTRUDE ROUSH

·Roushes to celebrate 50th
NEW HAVEN •• Jim and
Gertrude Roush will celebrate their ·
50th wedding anniversary with an
open reception al Bachtel Fellow·
ship Room in New Haven, W.Va.
from I to 3 p.m., Nov. 10.
. Married Nov. 9, 1946 in ·Syra·

cuse;.they have three children, Marlene Radford of Letart; Robert
Roush and Kim .Bush of Mason,
W.Va.; five grandchildren; and two
great-granddaughters.
It is requested that guests not
bring gifts.

After 34 years, woman confesses
to cheating on college exam

I

SYRACUSE .. Suuon Township
Trustees, Monday, 7:30 p.m. in the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

my and
life,"
said inRussell,
.·account
now ·56, for
retired
living
Wash·
ington state after a career in Oregon,
Washington and the Philippines.
Elaine Greene, associated dean of
· students who handles cheating
"&lt;:ases, said this isn't the first time an
ex-student has made such a confes·
sion, but never before has anyone
waited so long,
.There is no statute of limitation
·:on chcating ·offenses at the univcrsi·
' ty. but Greene said revoking Rus:&gt;ell's degree would he too harsh.
Instead, she will write an article. for
·.the student newspaper about . the
~ importance or academic integrity.
.focusing on the corrosive effect of
: dishonesty.
1

: ",Once you chc~l. then you have
· to cover it ~1th a lie,'' said Russell,
~ who

went ori to earn a master's

!, degree. · "In that proces,, you
..deceive all the people into thinking
'1you arc someone you arc not."

..

But the professor surprised her by
simply handing her the exam and
telling her to go finish it. She slipped
into the women's lounge, pulled out
her notes, and passed the test.
For Russell , her confession in
September has ended her inner lur·
moil.
"Truth really does set you free,"
she said.
'

RACINE .. Racine Village Council. 7 p.rn. Monday, regular session,
Star Mill Park. .
LETART .. Letart PTO will meet
Nov. 4, 7 p.rn. at the Letart Elementary School.
POMEROY .. DAV meeting,
Monday, 7 p.rn. a1 the hall. Also
Au&lt;iliary.
RACIN[:: .. Racine Chapter 134;
Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30 p.ll).
Monday at the hall.

. ppt off a

require~

hisiUry course

.:,until her ...cniur year. and then tonk
. an incnmrlclc to avoid takinp the

•,final exam . By spring qu;orter. she
:. C&lt;JUidn't put it &lt;•IT nny ltm~cr.
.,

I

.. I was right on the wire f(,r grud-

uation, " she said. "I knew I had In
. take the cJinm, and hy then I had lnst
' the continuity. I felt in my l•:art I
~t.:ouldn'llloll."'

POMEROY .. Eagle Auxiliary
2171, Tuesday, 7;30 p.l)l Refresh·
WEDNESDAY

POMEROY ·- Regular meeting.
Pomeroy-Racine
Lodge
164,
.F&amp;AM, Raci 0e. Election of officers.
PAGEVILLE •• Scipio Township
Trustees: Wednesday. 6:30 p.m. at
Pageville.
RUTLAND ·- The Rutland
Township Trustees, Wednesday,
6:15 p.rn. at the Rulland Fire Station.

,.
MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport
Literary Club. Wednesday, 2 p.m.
hOme of Mrs. David Bowen, Syra·
cuse. Mrs. Bowen to · review "St.
Joan of Arc" by Vila Sackville· West.

. - - - - - - - - -...---------~----------------·

I Mill Ladder Truck
Replacement Levy

~==-~~~~--~~
• Improved Fire Protection For the City
• Potential Reduction in Fire ln.surance to businesses
and residents irl the City
• Would Last 5 years. Long Enough to Relfre the Debl
on the Purchase.
• Costs·the Average HO!lleowner In the City ot
GaiUpolis Approx. $28.00 Per year.
with
· Appan~tus into

and

What Doea a New Ladder Truck Mean to Why Is It Necessary to Replace The Curre111
.. .
Yo.u?
Ladder Truck?
lmpmvc fire Protection for the Entire City
Hdp M01intain Current Class~ I.S.O. R:.lting
R~,.•,lucc Rclianrt.• nn Surrlltmding Comnumitics
· In P.rnvidc Simil:1r Fire Appamlu!l.
Pruvilk" Versatility in Rl.·srttc und Fin• Surprcssiun

l..ocally Endorsed Hy· ,
• Galliot C(llllll)' Arc:t \h:tmt"ll:r of Cnrunu:·n.\ '
• (ialltpllis Rclail Mcn.·hams Asstx:iminn
• fi:•llipnli!&lt;i Jr. Womcns

U.·:~f.!UC

, • Clalfipnli• Rnlary Cluh

• Age of the Ladd,•r Truck· l~orrhai&lt;td in 19Cl0. the current
ladder lnK'k ha~ ~·umpkll'd ils Jhth year t''lf ~cn· irt to the
rc:sidc·ru ii or th~.· Ci1y.
• Ctll'll~ 111 M;tintolitl· Du" to th~.· u~~..· .nnd ~·urrL'nll'l'l11dititm.
maintcnanl"e "·,•~t~ nr~ higha ant.l n•p;1ir tim.:- lt1ng.:-r.
• Reliability. O"f'Cndahility- Ht.•~.·:aust."tlf ils ag:~ :tnt.l 'ils man~·
yc:ars of service. the likfW.·r trudi. ha." cxpcricnl"l~
l"Xl"l'Mi,;c: dnwn time.
• Other \nnsidcmtions:
· Can ""' he up-(:radcd In meet IIC(.'i.')lo!'ury :ool:md;trds.
- Prc~·nu cum:crn lOr Fircng:htcr·~ saf1:1y

- Comrmmises currcm tire safety.

• fttllifklli s Kiwanis Chih

Pd. for

. 520 2nd Ave.

J

•••

· Monday, Nov. 4

Peters~McDaniel
LORI BAILEY AND

HURLEY

PATRIOT- Mr. and Mrs. Ronald pal Coun.
He is a 1989 graduate of SouthN. Peters announce the engagement
and upcoming weddi,ng of their western High School. He is
daughter, Trisha Lynn Peters to Brett employed by Gudenkauf Corpora·
tered nurse at King's Daughter's . Jason McDaniel, son of Randy lion.
Medical C~nter in Ashland.
McDaniel of Patriot and Margaret · The open church wedding will be
Hurley is a 1985 graduate of Paul Cornwell of Thurman . ·
3 p.m., Nov. 9 at the Rodney Pike
G. Blazer High School and a 1990
Sbe is a 1991 graduate of Gallia Church of God. A reception will fol·
graduate of the University of Ken- Academy High School and Buckeye low tbe ceremony at the American
tucky. He is employed as an eleetri· Hills Career Center. She is Legion in Gallipolis.
cal engineer with AEP of Ohio in employed by the Gallipolis Munici·
. The couple will reside in Rodney.
Portsmouth.

Bailey-Hurley

To The Voters of Gallia County:

PATRIOT - Ted and Linda Bailey
Patriot announce the engagement
marriage or their
.Beth to Michael
Hurley, son of John and Ethel
of Ashland, Ky.
is a 1988 graduate of
High School and a
graduate of tbe University of
Grande, Holzer College of
8utrsing . She is employed as a regis-

I have known Bill Wells
for twenty-five
.
years.
It is my firm belief that Bill Wells will work
•
full time for the people. He has the courage
to make the hard decisions whi~h affect
Gallia
County;
and has character which is an
.
.
essential quality in dealing with·the r - Bill Wells is conscious of what is ha1&gt;penin
around Gallia County and has a cornp1Lilsiion'
to do right.
Bill Wells is well qualified. He will be a
good s(JeritT for the people of Gallia County.
'

A' November wedding is planned
in Gatlinburg, Tenn.
· ·

OFFICE OPENS
Or. Satywan' Chhabria, an Internist .and family
practlcloner, has opened his practice In the Meigs
Medical Building adjacent Jo .veterans Memorial
Hospital and Is alao functioning as a medical staff
.. member at the hospital.
Those wishing Information or to make an
appointment may call 992-3632.

Since~y,

"We didn't want to disappoint
again this year, so we increased our
production and shipped earlier than
nonnal." Mattei spokeswoman Sam
Rosales said Friday. Shipments ,
started in July, instead of September, ·
she said.
:

Ground
breaking
for Letart
Water
Project

Workjng hard to provide more Rural
Water Service .and Industrial
· Development in Meigs County.
Pd. for by Janet Hpward, 674 Mill St., Mlddlepor\, Ohio 45760

f£J19{/9\[Jj !T09{ TJ{T, .•
;J{O£I']J.9LtyS... .

'-)Jw':t r{Jtt~

'

Girry Lewis

•

CHERRY
DINEnE
PEDESTAL

•

Paid for by Garry Lewis. 1608 St. Rt. 141, GallllpollsJ

Dear Gallla County Voters,

With 4·
Side chairs

During ~his election season, mucl:t has been said by all .
the candrdates. Over the last two weeks, I have used a.
series of newspaper ads to tell the voters how I would
address numerous county issues. Now that you know
my position, let me share the principles upon which I
stand.

5

BockChotro

Help is not given to anyone by doing for Ihem those
things that they CAN and SHOULD be doing for
themselves.
It must be leaner not meaner. It must be more cost
effective, rtot more costly.
.
If it cannot reward success, it must certainly stop
penalizing it.
If it will not punish wrongdoing, it must stop •
rewarding it.
· ·
It must allow opportunities for success, not make
excuses for failure.

ONTAXES:

T-:11•-

4 llottd Wood High

ON GOVERNMENT:

S1HI R1 1.111 S)qq

I

1

. HEATHER METTER AND TRAVIS MCCOURT

If you have to pay, you should have a say.
No individual should be thought less of for wanting
to keep )nore of their earnings • instead,
government should apologize f.or taking so much.
Most tax dollars are not "Voluntary Contributions" •
far too much·is taken against the wishes of the
.taxpayer with we.y too li~le to show for it.

6 Solid Wood Hlgh
BockChol,.

Bear~

~ur,

S.:~vc

Independent for Gallla
County Commlaaloner . •

;r, l'1

q~

REG.
$1379.00

S200

·CIIERR1 CHINA
.

'-

r

,

3 Doors, adjustable
--.,glass shelves.

Peoplu Choloe GIGftdpcarHII Tour
•Ohriltmcu At '1111 :zoo•

CHICK THI CWifiiDI fOR All YOUR

Robert 0.
Schmoll Jr.

RPl&lt;~il

s4499s

'

Some of the candidates say they will work harder,
others say that they will work longer - and there is
nothing wrong with this except ... Any individual can
only work so hard and there are only 24 hours h1 a
I believe instead that we mi•st work smarter. We can
this by working together, giving the public more of
chance to let their ideas be heard, l:iy listening,
tiQII'In ·•
good planning, and by using two way c~~~~~~!~~t~A~;J
By dorng this I believe that our county government
then offer the voters good choices, not bad manda1tes.)
We could then do what is needed, and do
quickly, efficiently, economically and more openly.
other words we could do more, do it better, and do it
less .. ·
·
Before you vote, I would ask that you consider whall
each candidate has said, and than take a moment
think • WhO has stated the.ir Ideas, . their Df~~~~~~~
solutions and their basic beliels, and who has n
yu~tl '
only words. If you share th!ISe beliefs, then when vu•••
cast your vote on Tuesday, I'm asking you to give
the
to
these principles to work for you .
Sincerely, ·

2999S

7 Pc. Wood Dinette
Tobie 42x42xS4xM,

Day Care. She is the grand·
Meuer Jr. of Litchfield Township . daughter o( William and Rosalie
.nnounce the engagement of their Waugh of Gallipolis and the great·
9~ughter,
Heather, to Travis granddaughter .of Floyd and Lona
Clary of Crown City.
rccourt.
•
Travis graduated from Buckeye
! McCourt is the son of Boyd and
fu. dy McCourt of Litchfield Town· High School in 1994 and Hocking
College in 1996 with a degree in
.
- jhip.
• Metter is a 1994 graduate of. police science. He is employed by
buckeye High School and a 1995 Litchfield Equipment.
A Dec. 14 wedding is planned at
graduate of Hocking College Nanny
J&gt;.cademy. She is employed by Little First Baptist Church of Valley City.

.

il",

S.tV!' S100

Metter-McCourt

j LITCHFIELD · Diana and John

November 30 - December 1, 1996

RI·Eiect
State
Representative

Bring the grandchildren along, or just join the fun ,
. if you are among the vety young at heartIf
• Overnight accomi'!IOdations at the Blue Ash Hotel &amp;
Conference Center. Bring youf suits for a dip in the pooll

JOHN .·
CAREY

&gt;Dinner and Festival of Ughts at the Oncinnati Zoo.
up close and personal with the animals!

Get

•

• Ohio River cruise, including lunch and
holiday entertainment
• Travel from the Ice age to the space age
at Museum Center in Oncinnati. Lots of
hands-on exhibits and OMNI Max Theatre!

• Working for Jobs
• Fighting·for Education JOHN &amp; LYHLEY &amp;
JUSTIN
•·.Securing Highways
Funds
CJ£ftiNG TBB JOB DONB
FOR SOU2HIAST OBIOl
Pd. for by Chlzens for Canty, Don HOlter, T1'881urer,
196 Oak
Wellaton, OH .4se52

•

\

·.

Mallei Inc., which manufactures
Barbie, contends there are plenty of
the dolls to go around.

Your County Commissioner

TRISHA PETERS AND BRETT MCDANIEL

ON THE JO~ OF COMMISSIONER:

A New t.lldder Truck Would:

• Fur Russell , her dilemma hcg;m
'"' in her senior year. IY~2. when she

MIDDLEPORT .. Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, Tuesday,
Masonic Temple, election of offi.
cers. Refreshments.

ments.

POMEROY .. Meigs · Band
Boosters, Monday, 6 p.m. at the
school. Prepare for apple butter pro·
ject.

.

' EUGENE, Ore. (AP)- Through ·
34 years as an elementary school
teacher and therapist, the guilt
.always gnawed at Linda Russell.
,"In the back of my mind, I always
thought, "If you only knew.""
So · last fall, Russell called the
University of Oregon and confessed:
She had cheated on a crucial exam
~he ·needed to get her degree.
"I realized that one day I would .
have to stand before God and .

,!

CARPENTER
Columbia
.Township Board of Trustees, Man·
day, 7 p.rn. at the firehouse.

CROW: : CITY - Carl Black to
preach II a.m. and 6 p.m: Good
Hope Baptist Church. •
•

,.

Hughes' solution: stop selling
Happy Holidays Barbie. Her district
manager gave Wai-Mart stores the
option of selling the dolls this year.
and the sales staff agreed: they just
aren't worth the hassle.
Further shipments will be donal·
ed 10 terminally ill children at three
area hospitals, Hughes said.

•••

GALLIPOLIS
Communi
Grieving Parents Support Gro
. 7:30 p.m. New Life Luther
Church.
·. :
•••
~~~,
Revival
CROWN CITY - Revival? p.~· ·
Nov. 4 through 9 Mt. Zion Missi • ·
. ary Baptist Church with Ral
Workman speaking Monday anil!
Harry Fannin speaking Tuesdav.

WILLOW WOOD- Kit Meade to .
speak 7 p.m. at Trinity Freewill Baptist Church with the Hearts Choir
and singers. '
DARRELL AND NOLA CHEVALIER

•••
•••

1\Jesclay, Nov. 5

CENTENARY • Benefit sing for
Richard Short Family 7 p.m. Ccnte·
nary Church with Becky Mahan,
The Short Family, The Peoples Family and The Phillips Family.

.

Alaoclttted Press Writer
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)
- Sick of adulls throwing tantrums
over unmet demand for Happy Hoi·
idays Barbie dolls, some store own·
ers have limited sales - and one
stopped selling them altogether.
"There's too many worries in the
world for grown people to raise such
a fuss over Barbie," said Dee Hugh·
es, manager of the toy department at
a Wal-Mart in Athens.
Hughes said customers have been
· calling at 6 a.m. to see if a shipment
arrived overnight. Sometimes they
harass sales clerks, convinced that
the seasonal Barbies - in their glit·
lery gold gowns, dark velveJ coals,
white fur hats and hand muffs - are
stashed in a back room.

•••

MCARTHI,JR • Engle Construelion reunion from 12 to 4 p.m. Vin·
ton County Community Building.
~

By MICHELLE WILUAMS

CHESHIRE • TOPS meeliaa I
to 11 a.m. Cheshi~ Ulli
Methodist Church.
•••
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.
CQmmunity Advisory Panel of
Nobel Chemicals ~gular meeti
from 7 to 8 p.m. in lile facil'
administration building.

.,.. printed aa epace pennlta
and Cllllnot be gual'lil'lt8ld to
run a epeclfic number of dliya.
Sunday, Nov. 3

·

•

KANAUGA • Gallia Countr:
flune Fellowship ..-ina 7 p.a
AMVETS with Beth Collver s,eJ-.
ina.
; ..

I

• 'l
I
•

RECLINERS

.

• Deluxe motorcoach transportation

STARTING AT

• Full hot breakfast buffet
Cost per penon: $149.50 (two In room); $139.50 (th,.ln room); or
$t29.50 (lour In room). $20.00 non-member fee (lpplles to lllults
.only). Full p•yment due now. Ple•se call Mary Fowler 1t (304) .
675-1121 for noservlllons.

'

,...,.. Clio/co It I d/v/lioft of

Tilt,..,.,

lri of Polrrl f'l

Shop O.lly

9amlo5pm
Shop 'Fri .

9·io&amp;:30 pm
ofrw DellVII'Y

. ofrte Plrtdng
t'ftt

oflnancfng

!.t... libii"FDIC.

l

I

•

�J-aect•.ll

t

........

'!

Sunday, November 3, 1911

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

1

·Proper care: It takes knowledge Remembering Fred Crow~
By VILMA PIKKOJA
· GALLIPOLIS - ln my column last week, I introduced you to the "Herbal First Lady," Lane Fumeax,
from Dallas, Tx .. and mentioned her book, "Heavenly
Herbs."
Today, I am quoting from the book to stan my col-

umn.
.
Lane Fumeax asks: "When will we evu learn?"
And, I am adding to it her herbal prayer:
·
"I pray t/Us day that each be bltsstd
\Vhost life is touched by mine,
Remembering thotl am only helped
To·linJ: our lives to thine. "

'

On a recent television show that I only halfhearted-

,Jy watched, C-Span kost Brian Lamb was interviewing
two ge.ndemen who were connected with an exhibit on
the health of past presidents.
Under discussion was "How much should we know
about the president's or the candidates' health prob·
',!ems?" And, "How ir portanl is the detailed knowledge of pre-existing, 1' ·•·threatening conditions" of the
one human being who is responsible - or could be
,responsible· for the future of the whole nation?"
: To the question: . "What about
•President Kennedy'sAddison's Dis:e&amp;se?," both gentlemen -specialists
;on presidential health 'Jlroblems •readily admitted they lacked any
!medical background, both being
.
'l'b
.
• 1 ranans.
,.1 ·
: Nev~r the less, they were ·quick
·
: ~o pooh-pooh Mr. Lamb's question. ~ut, what got my
,.full attention was the answer one of the gendemen
;gave when he off-handedly turned back the question
;with· a comment something like: ".Oh, that myth of
•Kennedy's Parkinson's Disease," displaying his comignorance by calling Addison's Disease Parkin~so1n's. In so doing, he o'l'erlooked a life-threatening
:coondition I should know about:
J llmost died of it in 1972, just as President,
~tid in 1947. We both were suffering froin
Disease, a chronic insufficiency in the pro·
of hormones by the cortex of the adrenal
mysterious - and relatively rare affliction · that
/ibtrou:gbt I.F.K. close to death in the fall of 1947.
condition was covered up in 1959. The denial
was made by ahending physician, Dr. Janet Travell,
""'ho would play an active role in the cover-up. The
factS are, that if not for cortisone, the future president
woold not have lived.
The right diagnosis saved his life by giving him the
~~~'::!!~ medic'me when it was needed. My question is:
I·
many people have lost their .lives because the

treatments were kept a political secret?"
Ask me, and I'll tell you! In 1972, I was operated on
in Cleveland and my gall bladder was removed. There
was nothing wrong with my gall bladder.
I was weak, I was vomiting constantly, my skin
turned dark; and, after the operation, I went into shock.
My left lung collapsed.
It was a wrong diagnosis and I became a piece of
medical machinery in the intensive care unit.
Only the fact that one of the medicin&lt;!' rotninely
administered was cortisone saved my life · temporarily.
When I woke up there were two pastors at my bedside: Pastor Fisher frOJil New Philadelphia and Pastor
Lund from Pomeroy.
I
'
I was ·brought to Gallijx&gt;lis an(! ended up in the old
Holzer Hospital (probably one of the last patients to be
cared for there). ·
I again became an extension of tubes and pumps
that breathed for me and kept my heart beating until
one doctor, Dr. Sigismund Harder, recognized my condition and prescribed the medicine that has kept me
alive since 197.2.
But, it took knowledge. lgnoraace would have
killed me.
I finish with another Lane
Fumeaux quote:
"Express you thanks by shoring
· your great adventure with some. ·_ : one. "

Wax plants; Hoya carnosa; Hoya
bella. Today I am presenting some hints on how to care
for hoyas. Choose the spot carefully; Hoya likes to stay
in the same location.
. If out of direct sunshine, the leaves stay dark and
beautiful. It blooms in the spring or summer.
. • They need plenty of water misting; and, more
.
water while blooming.
• Toward the fall, cut the amount of .water; and,
water sparsely in winter, when the hoya is in its rest
period.
.
• Support the leaves with ttellises and dust the
leaves with a damp cloth.
The young hoya needs reporting more often than
older specimens. Early in the spring, before the plants
stan to grow again, is the best time for repotting.
Hoy a is.very easy to propagate. Cutting ~s best done
in the spring or in the summer.
March through September is a good time to buy a
Hoya. Hoyas can live to be very old. The star-shaped,
· wax-like flowers hang together in beautiful clusters.
They loOk almost unreal!
. VIlma Plkko)a Ia a life-long gardener and a
founding membar of tha Gallla Area Heblll Guild.

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

I'm As•int .ror·Your vote
Nov. sth and If I Have
Missed Seeint laeh Of You
Persoull' At Your .Door,·.
1·Apolo1iu.

By DOROTHY SAYRE
because we knew "ihal was Fred."
Although a year hu passed since . He, undoubledly, wu so engrossed
ihe death of Frederi_ck W, Crow, Jr., in some project he was working on
known to most simply as "Fred at the present, he was oblivious to
Crow," I still expect the church's the hour.
•
front door to bang shut ten minutes
With Fred, died the code of genafter services have started and Fred !Iemen's dress. Fred always dressed
to appear. He was always repentant and acted the perfect gentleman .
for his late appearance, but clocks . Whether he called us to go have dincould almost be .set by his delayed ner at Shoney's or at Crow's Family
arrival of ten minutes. When Fred, Restaurant, or wherever, Fred
who was as milch a part of Suncjay always wore a bow tie and jacket.
services as the sermon, arrived the Several times we'd tell him dinner at
congregation sll)iled as if to say, o~r house was casual. (Casual to him
"Now we know it is Sunday and it's still meant a tie. (I believe I saw a
time for church."
picture of him in the paper iiuring a
I feel honored to have been frog jump contest where he had an
included in Fred's large group of open· collar because the temperature
friends.· He was one of the first in • wu nearly 100, but that was highly
this area to welcome my husband, unusual.) I admired his discipline in
George, ana me to souiheastern dress, because I find I'm as guilty as
Ohio. Even with his .busy schedule most everyone else in today's world,
(and Fred had more irons in the fire we sometimes dress like slobs; Fred
than 10 people) and law practice, he never did. My grandmother ·would
went the extra mile to make us feel have approved of hitn.
part of the community.
. .
Fred was supportive of my writ·
To me, Fred was like a breath of ing. A few months before his death,
spring. No one ever knew what was he gave a copy of the latest play be
going to pop out of his mouth next, had written to me to read. He had an
but it was always in good taste. He endless creative bent. I wish he
was interested in and curious about could have finished the book he had
everything. He had an endless sup- staned to write. I'm hoping his faroply of stories to tell: locally, from his
days at Ohio State, and from his
years with the FBI. Throughout
' thos.e stories, I never heard a bad
word about a soul. I don't think I've
. .
ever heard anyone speak more
pfoudly of their family than Fred
did, also. He talked of the accom.
plishrnents of his · three children
often;· and talked of his brother,
Richard. He was like a small boy
delighting ·in teasing 'his beloved
cousin, Grace, during coffee hour
after church services. Theirs was
more of a brother/sister relationship
with deep caring on both sides.
Although his appetite had failed
some by the time we moved here, he
enjoyed coming to our house with
his special lady friend f~r dinner. He
jokingly t!Jid all of his lady dinner
hostesses that they were such good
cod.s they should open an all-youcan!eat restaurant and only charge
. $1 so he could eat his meals there.

N Ic0 l E

ily will pursue it.
He wu, u I've .aid. interested in
everything and everyone. George
and Fred enjoyed
talkin1 sports and
current events.
There was always
a lot of laughter
from 'everyone
when Fred was
around. He was
an ideal guest and
friend, and a geil- ·
de soul.
.
During our · relationship
Fred, he wu a very modest man.
failed to mention to us d)e ~~
mqnanimous and generous d•
he had quietly and, often, anony·
mously achieved for the good of the
community or private individuals~
We only learned of some after his
death.
D
, I wish we could qain hear th\1
church door close at precisely · te~
minutes into the Sunday worship
I
service. We miss you, Frc;d.

-:---------------People in the ;n e w s - - - - - - - - - - - - MONTVALE. Va. (AP)- Fifth-grader Jason Gardner ha.' been de~ied a

o:econd helping of Rush Limbaugh.

For t~e second time in live IJlonths, a Monlvale
Elementary Schoolteacher has taken away a copy
of the conservative commentator's writings from
Jason, who lost last time he challenged his his
tc.acher's authority, in court.
The school insists· it has the right' to regulate
rending material in the classroom, even during
free periods.
But a legal group says the. teacher is guilty of
Orwellian crimes for snatching the June copy of
the "The Limbaugh Letter."
·
"In essence, they've turned this into a 1hought
crime,'' Rutherford Institute lawyer David Melton
Ruah Limbaugh
said Friday
,.
· .
In May, Jason's teacher conliscaicd a copy of
Limbaugh's ~st-sellm~ book .:'The Way Things Ought To Be" because the
boy W~ r:&lt;ad~ng ~ sec.·~n on "condom bungec-jumping." a parody of con·
dom dtstnbullon m rm:.hc schools .
.

SyriCUN.

I

"Bullseye"

• When confronted with Baz
Luhnnann's wild new version of
t'Romeo and Juliet," Shakespeare
O:aditionalists may indeed ask
!'wherefore 1111 thou, Romeo'!"
: After all, this tale of "star~rossed lovers" takes place in a
~odem, lurid .fantasy world of guns,
frogs and rock.'n' roll.
1 Quaint, medieval Verona is now
Verona Beach, a seedy resort town
\"here roving Montague and Capulet
fangs blast away at each other with
nical abandon. And towering over
two sides of the imagined city
· e' skyscrapers, adorned with giant
tiers, spelling out the names of the
ity's "two households, both alike in
ignity.:'
.·
Hot teen · stars Leonardo
Caprio and Claire Danes play the
e characters, and Shakespeare's
·
at romance has been reimagined
a new generation of filmgoers
.}..ho . look to music videos and
Quentin Tarantino to define style
&gt;!ttd energy on the ooreen. ·
• Tile narrator is a TV newscastet,
opening-brawl takes• placo at a
statibti, and the famous, romanbalcony encounter now occUrs in
a swimming pool.
·
· But here's the kicker: The origiOal Shakespearian language remains
intact. Some of the original play has
ken cut or rearranged, but the dia·
t:&gt;gue is definitely Sliakespcarian, in
tvery thee and thou.
·
·
• And the language worts specifi~ally because Luhrmann places the
(l.te in an imagined modern world---:
is is no real Califomi.a or Florida
ach town. Think of it more as an
temate universe - a place with
~ars and guns where people talk In
thees and lhous.
In other words, this is no "West
Side Story," .loosely interpreting a
Shakespearian.play for its own ends.
ather, it is "Romeo and Juliet,"

Available in
Black &amp; Brown

ea.~e

Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

il • •

ann your heart with a home.

are celebrating National Home Care Month
with a Coloring Contest!
PICK UP • DROI' OFF your entry at the jollomng locatigns:

•

E

/If you are thinking of purchasing a home, the

I

Ohio Housing Finance Agency can help!
/Potential home buyers can apply

fi Mortgage Credit Certificates (MCC's)

for the mortgage credil certificates

.to help Ohioans realize the dream of

through participating lenders in your

homeownership. MCC's

Pomeroy: Kroger, McDonald's, Farmers Bank in Tuppers Plains,

thereby reducing

Home National Bank in Racine, Pomeroy Public Library.
'
.
Gallipolis: Kroger, McDonald's, Bossard Memorial Library, Holzer .
Medical Center Volunteer Office.

the federal income

-, A.J. FLICK
caon Citizen
; The women of Nashville have
(leon enjoying well-deserved kudos
Cately, but none of them more
4eserving than PattY Loveless. .
Loveless, a ·native of ,Pikeville,
y., grew up in country music.
Though she tried other fonns of
6tusio, she made a permanent com·
~itment to country about 10 years
'go, and it's paying off now.
, On Oct. 2, Loveless was named
Female Vocalist of the Year by the
~ountry Music Association . Irt a
backslilge press conference, she said
ker voice, as well as her-choice in
6tusic, has matured over the past
(ew years.
,
"I
in some ways, I'm just
lroowirn' up, in the songs that .I'm
4hocsirn' to ~se," she says.

your normal loan

federal tax liability,

'
k

application. ••

tax you have .to pay.

Mason:

Mason City Library in Mason, Mason County Library in
Point Pleasant, McDonald's.

,.

Wellston: Kroger, Sylvester
Memorial Public Library..

4P.M.•9P.M..LY

1

.'YOUNG LOVE • N:~~~:~ ~agalnst one another Leonar!lo DICaprio and Claire Danes play ttie title
characters In "Romeo and
directed .bY Baz Luhnnann.
uprooted into a new setting .for a co Zef(irelli's popular 1968 versiqn, .color schemes, ·stunning costumes,
and viewers can argue forcefully for eye-popping' settings, and cleverly
new generation. .
That may explain why Luhm1ann eilher the innovative 1996 style or choreographed violence, to capture
had the nerve , to title his
the uhra-tr.aditional ,medieval style the attention of a young audience.
"William Shakespeare's Romeo &amp; of the 1968 film. But !he superior
And once they're paying atten· .
Juliet." As Luhrmann boldly states · lead performances in the new ver- tion, I' II bet Shakespeare will open
in his introduclion to his published sion can't be denied Danes and their ears ~nd hearts to his timeless
soreenplay·: "We're trying to make DiCaprio leave Zeffirelli's teen tale.
. "for never was a Story of more
this movie rambunctious, sexy, vio": lovers in the dust.
TI1e new supporting cast reflects woe than this qf Juliet and her
len!.,. and entef(aioing tiv;._)l&gt;'_ax
Shakespeare might have if nc had the film 's imaginative, eclectic, ROmeo."
color-blind approach: The ·battling
Rated PG-13, with slrong vio·
been a filmmaker."
On all four goals, Luhnnann suc- young turks of the families -. Tybalt lence and implied sexual situalions.
ceeds. This "Romeo &amp; Juliet" is and Mercutio arc played, for e1tamWILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S
uucr~y audacious, an explosive romp
plc, with gre.at attitude and pizazz by ROMEO &amp; JULIET (PG-13, strong
through Shakespeare's tale of.blood John Leguizamo and Harold Per- violence, implied sexual situations)
Three and One-Half Stars (Good-tofeud, passionate romance, misguid· rineau.
ed hope and intimate tragedy.
Brian Dennehy and Paul Sorvino Excellent) Baz .Luhrmann's wildly
Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire arc the warring patriarchs, Pete imaginative interpretation of the
Danes couldn't be better malchcd Postlewaite projects both Father classic romantic tragedy, set : in an
than as this most famous of all ado· Lawrence's playful h~mor and de,,p imagi,ped modern world where the
lescen.t lovers, ,as .they express the pain, Miriam Margolyes offers warring families battle with guns.
impatience and idealism of youth, · comic rCiief as Jutiet's nurse, and M. The language, though, is pure
and their ftustrat.ion with the ancient Emmet Walsh does his trademart Shakespeare, and the lovers are
enmity of iheir families. Danes is slimy thing as Verona Beach's. resi ~ \\'Onderfully played by Leonardo
DiCapro and Claire Danes . This
especially a wonder, giving fresh, dent drug dealer, the Apothecary.
Lohrmann, the inventive . Aus- adaptation will s~ock traditionalists.
honest breath to Juliet's oft-quomd
lines, and a scrubhcd-faced, youth- tralian filmmaker behind "Strictly but might be just the thing to draw
Ballroom," holds nothing back in teens back to the bard. Twentieth
fullp9k to the role.
- Luhnnann's " Romeo &amp; .Juliet" lhis extravagant adaplation. He uses Century Fox. ·113 mins.
can't escape comparison with Fran· every possible camera · trick, wild

film

SAMPLE

She recalled her first time going
to the CMA awards with her brother,
Roger, her singing partner. At age
14, her musi~ had caught the car of
country mus•c legend Porter Wagoner.
"Porter took a real intercol· in
some of the writing that I was doin '.
And at 14 years old, you're lookin '
at LeAnn Rimes and I'm thinkin' mY
God! It must have been something
else for her to be open in' ihe CMA
Awards because I knew the feeling I
felt when I attended."
It's been a bitiersweet year for
Loveless. Earlier thjs yem·, her sister
died. Tioen her 'husband-produce r,
Emory Gordy Jr., was stricken with
pancreatitis.
"I was scared to dealh I was
gonna lose him." Loveless said at
the CMAs.

'

Oak Hill: FoOdland, Oak Hill
City Library.

Jackson:

Jackson City Library,

Kroger.

•

For more information on the

Contest.is open to kids
age 12 years and under

Mol'tf5llge

Credit Certificate

program,. potential home buyers

'

can contact

Deadline for entries is

Saturday, November 16
Judges for the 3 contest areas are:

1-888-643-2636.
'

•• Creditl •ta no ~r awaillble (or rt~~kleata in the foUowi"'

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424 SECOND A~E. - GAU.II'OUS

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PUCTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

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Pannett News Service

E

the form ·

•

BOSTON (AP) - David Leuennan kicked off a series of road trips with
a visit to the hack yard of his rival -Jay Leno.
Tite " Late Show With David Letterman" arrived' Friday in Boston , the
site of Lena's alma mater, Emerson College, and south of his hometown of
Andover. .
· Fans linl&gt;d up to atter.d tile (aping at Boston University's Tsai Performance Center. Segments of the show were also taped around Boston in Lei·
terman ,s search. for '"The Big Man on Campus."
..

HAVE,RFORD , Pa. (AP) - Retiring Rep. Pat
Schroeder may be going back to school.
The Colorado Democrat is a finalist for president of Haverford t:;'ollege outside Philadelphia.
Schroeder, 56, a Harvard-educated lawyer
known for her sharp wit and liberal politics, taught
law ai 1he University of Colorado and at Regis
College in Denver before being elected to Congress in 1972.
Mel Tlllla
Haverford, founded in 1833, was an all-male
school for most of its existence.
,
It may .appear an odd fit at first for the founder of the Congressional
Women's Caucus, but in 1980 ihc school admilled its first fully coeduca~
ti ona! freshman class.
;
:

and One-Hall Stars
(GOod·to·Exeellent)
Ely JACK GARNER

Fred and
tookthen
napsstayed
during
upthe
untilearly
the
evening
wee hours of .tlie mo111ing. Several
limes, during what seemed like the
middle of the night to us, the phone
would ring and, it would be Fred
·wanted to chat about something.
Aftc!t the initial fright of worrying
something was wrong with our kids;
it was a relief to bear Fred's voice! It
was never an intrusion at such hours ·

/Money is still available in

W~ dnesday.

A lot of thought apparently went into the decision to go to BOSIOil.
" I went to college in Boston and this is my way to try t~o back and aet
all the girls who wouldn't go out with me in col·
lege to go out with me now,'' said executive pro·
ducer Rob Burnett.

Th~

,
•

Your Vote Is Appreeiatedf

The Home Health Agencies of
.
\
.
p
5
yw,7.-f.
Holzer Medical Center
'IQ&lt;~s.
Oak Hill Community Medical Center · 1
.Veterans Memorial Hospital

BRANSON, Mo. (AP) - Mel Tillis is playing with dynarnile - Little
Miss Dynamite, that is.
Brenda Lee, who got her nickname because of her diminutive, 4-foot-1 1
stature, will perfonn about 400 shows with Tillis during the 1997 touri st season in this countiy.music mecca.
The Branson gig is a kind of homecoming for Lee. She got ber start on
Red Foley's Springfield Ozarlcs Jubilee TV show in Missouri. ·
The two will work the Tillis theater, which will not change its name to
relleet Lee's arrival. That's because "I pay the bills," Tillis explained

Modern
'Romeo and
Juli.et' keeps
classic charm

Dorothy SayN 1nd her hulband OeorJI,
formerly of Melp County, moved Nck
•bout lhrw r•r~~ ago 1nd now tMkle In .,
ho... loclng tho . Ohio Rlveo luot -

'7-he Shoe

Entertainment
'

Nouembar S, 11M

Gordy watched the CMAs from
home.
''I'm sure he 's thrilled; he's ~cry,
very thrilled," she said: "To tell you
the truth, I could see ot on h1s face, he
really wanted to be here tonight.
And I felt badly about leavin' him at
home."

that it takes in this business. Because
sometimes you're siuin' oul 'there
every year and you're wonderin' if
you're gonna. b~ nomina~ed and
you're wondenn' 1fthe muSIC IS gcttin' the attention il deserves. And I
feel I owe it all to the good Lord ."

TO ACCOMODATE·THOSE WORIIII PEOPU,
. WE IRE OPEII 'TIL 7 P.M. 011 TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

.•.............•••..•••.....•.

Loveless literally .thanked God
for her t:ontinucd success.

I

COLONY THEATRE I!

l/-~-~

"I feel like tbe good Lord has
given me a voice to do something I
love and has given me the .patience

·25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AYEIUE
POINT PLWAIIT
(304) 675·1675

FRI. THRU THURS
JEFF DANELS IN

. FLY AWAY HOME ..
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

...

446-0923

I:

(~~
..

....

Handmade Holiday Treasures"XII
Craft Show

=" · , . ~ (j~'T'lJI(j "Tlm'N:J(')'CYU!'
'To a([ of my''Dear :Jriernf.s, f..QVti[OnM, my doctor's &amp; Jl[[ of tlidr
Staff.
.
'J1.bntS am never aaequattfy d'escri!Je my freartjelt atufs(na~ rlillnk§
to a[[ of you for your prayers, Wve, cari"ii, CJlrdS, atuf tlie calls of
support ~ /Wve ,rueivea since I fiave 5etn on llidica{ f.eaflt.: I will
a[ways 6e truly atuf er.ernaffy gratef~l toM.£. 01 ryt}Ui ?.fay ijoa
'Bkss'eadi arrif ~ryone of you with tfte very 5tst of fU.a{tft, liappiness
atuf a([ of 6fe's ricftest '1JfLssi"9s!
.
.
May I f.eave.you wit!. u!iat I fed is a ~important tliougfit; j{
SIYtT~'}{_ is o~{q out for tfte future with ftumi6ty, IUIIf
·· a PO£.l'TICI}{'}{_is ont rlillt (Qo{q out for tfte t~ ekciUln. I eiiUJUrage
you to cast your vote, atuf rentDIIMr upon casti"ii your VOlt, tliat it
affect.&lt; tJJdi anievtry one of us atuf out county. I pray tliat (joi will
'lJfess O'!CCounty atuf eadi atuf evtry citi.un.
..
ltlia.s always 6an agrrtJt lionor, joy ~tufprivi{pg!. to 6e l!bk to mut .
you; fiefp in ""!! wag tliat'I couf4 witft goa's 'lJfLssi"iis, I will6e a6k
. 10 return 'to my rw'*.11.tuf CDnnn~ to fee£ tliat if I lia~~t fiefptJf evtn
ont person, tften my trWs atuf tri6ufJJIUlns 1Jii{1 not lia'llt 6em in win.
I ao miss Stii"i/ you!
~a in, 'miJy (joi 'Bftss you atuf yours, as we([ as our grrtJt County, .
State IUIIf 'lt[piUln.
Sinafefy atuf!R.rsptctJufl!J yours,
·
jantt'Pyfes
.IJ51ourtli Jtvmue

November 9 1996
10 a.m. - 6 p.m. Saturday
Noon· 5 p.m. Sunday
National Guard A.rJnory
Route 62 North
Point Pleasant, WV
Sponsored by:
Malton County Extenlkln Homemaken
Wilhama ~School Huiiii!"'Econ a. I I
GFWC Point Plea1111t Junior Woman'• Club

\

I

•

'

•

•

J •

••

�,

•

•.

II

,c

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Polrit Pleasant, WV.
1 p.m.
w~"",:",:1:-y-7p.m.

\pu..,tulit·
I.Mtr...As

r

"'-: Chari.. Bilchfleld
.t milea N. Rl. 2

Sllllday momi"'. 10 a.m.
Sunct.y cvenin&amp; • 7 p.m.
Wodneaday . 7:30p.m.
Clooodo ., J - Cloriot A........
Vanbndl.t Ward Rd.
Pastor: Junea Miller
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
W-ip • 7,30 p.m.
Wcdneoday • 7:30 p.m.
Apoatollc: ~ Cll•n:•

1812 Eastern Ave.

Pu lor: Willud Blankenship

Sllllday Sdlool · 10 a.m.
WDflhip - 7 p.m.

Wodneaday • 7:30p.m.
Apottolk Cllorcb of Bkl,..ll, Ob
,
Fairview R.otd
Pu\or: Sbclll'lall A. Johnson
Sllllday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 12 p.m. {Noon)
Wedneoday • 7 p.m.

Calnry Cbrtstlaa C~ater,

l~~t.

553 hckson Pike, Gallipolis, OH
446-6308

Pastor: Rev. T.W. l.t .;renee
Sunday School - l;. • a.m.
W
. orship • 6 p.m.
. ·W.edncsday - 1 p.m .

.._

Cll' Soootloara Baptist
......, Charles Stanobeny
35~ Sl. Rl. 160, 446-3331
Sunday Sdlool- 10 a.m.
Worlhip- 11 a.m. A 6
Wednaday- 7:00p.m.

P.m.

Wordlip • 11 a.m.

· Wonhip II a.m. and 6 p.m.
'lb !Ida B"bl Sud 7

Plnlllapllat Clloodo
Third Ave .• Gallipolis
Pastor: Dr. ·Archie Conn
Sllllday School • 9:30 a.m.
·'
Wor~hip- 8:.30 a.m., 10:30 a.m. $. 6 p.m.
Wedneoday-7p.m.
·

.'

GoDJa Bapllll Cb11rt•
Dry Ridf:.:• Oallia
Puoor! ·
Halley
Sllllday School-10 a.m.
. ServJOCS·11 :1Sa.m.
Wednesday Pnyer Mee1in1· 7 p.m.

...... Mboioo1arJ1 &amp;apdll c•an:b
Vinlon, Oh10
·
Pastor: Rev. William Minnis . '
lat .t 3rd Sundays
Sunday Sdlool - 10 a.m.
Worahip -II a.m.

VtatO. Baptilt Cburcb
Nain Sl., Vinlon.388-84S4
PaSIOI'·: Marvin L Sallee
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
' ~ednesday ~ 7 p.m.
Cuaoa M-..,. Baptist
St Rt 218
Pastor: Rl:v. Garland Montgomery
S.S. Superintenant • Carl Halley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.,
• Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wedncoday • 7:00p.m.
Faltlollapllat Chodo
3615 Jackson Pike, 446-2607
Pallor: Rev. Jim Lusher
Sunday Sehool - 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:45 a.rll. &amp; 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday · 7 p.m. .
Men:enDie MllllcooAry 8apllal Cbaodo
So. R1. 218
Pastor: Olarlie Cremeans
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhio. 7 p.m.
Wednelday-7:30p.m.
Good Hope Ullllld Baptlat Cb....
S1. Rt 211f
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhlp • II a.m.
Wednellday .t Sunday - 6:00·p.m.

l l l o - Camu7 Baptill
P-: C. Hor.oc:c: Bn:lo(onl
· Sllllday School • 9:30a.m.
· Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wlallc Ook Bopllll Cll....do
Nibell Rd., GallipoliJ
P•to" Carl Ward

Sllllday School - 10 a.m.

Wollhip- I 0:45a.m. 4 7:30p.m.
Yolllh Seovk:ea 7:30p.m.

M.;:!:;:-

y - Bible Sludy 7:30 p,m.

v......,.
8apllll Clulrtb
Victory Rd., Crown Cily

Putor. Gary Warner
,Suncbly School.· 10 a.m.

Rio Grande, 245·9321
Sunday ~hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Hli'I'IJ!Ioplill
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday· 7:00p.m.
PaSior: Melvin 0 . Freeman
Sunday School-9:15a.m.
Worship- 10:45 a.m.
· Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rev. Bill Little
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship· It a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m.
Thursday · 7:30 p.m.

The Cbun:b ol God or l'ropb~y
Just off Rt. 160 North, White Rd., 446-7900
Pastor: Paul Chapman
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship- lla.m.
Sun. Evangelistic Service. 7 p.m.

Clark Chapel Cbun:b
Clark Cburch Road, PQrter
Pastor: Rev. Steve Rollins
Sunday School • 9:30 dn.

Slvor Momorlal FnowW Bapllsl Cll11rtb
Pastor: Rev. Andrew Panon
',
Sunday School-tO a.m.
Worship • 6 p.m.
ThlU1day • 7 p.m.

Cllun:b

Th• Rodney-Piko Cbun:b or God
Rodney-Pike, 446-9471
Pastor: Muk Reed
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - lla.m...&amp; 6 p.m.
Wednosday • 6 p.m.

Trlrdstont Baplhlt Church

Silver Run FreewW Baptist Churcb

7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Worship ~

The Eureka Church of God
Past01: Rev. Robert Smith
· Sunday School .· 10 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wednesdav " 7 o.m.

MIDa Cllapel Mls5ion8ry Baptist Church Neighborhood Road
Pastor: Bruce Unroe
Sunday Sebool • I 0:00 am
Sundlly &amp; Wednesday Service 7:00 pm
._

No Fifth Sunday Night Service

Sl. Peler'o Eplscupol Cbou:dl
541 Second Ave.· 446-2483
'Redor: Rev. John M. Oood
Holy Communion, Rite I - 8 a.m:
Holy Communion, Rite JJ- 10:'30 a.m.
Daily Momin1 Prayer (M-F 7:45a.m.)
Sunday School· 9:15AM

( 'nl hnlic·

Add!Joa FnowW Baptist
Pastor: Richard Barcus
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m.
Thursday - 7:30 p.m .

New Ute Vldory &lt;;eater ·
3773 Geor&amp;es Cree~ Road
Pastor: Bill Staten
·Sunday Services ·10 a.m, &amp; 7 p.m.
Wedne!iday • 7 p.m. &amp;. Yoltl.b-3 p.m.

Coaltrpollll FnowW Baptist
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 7 'p.m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
Pastor: Robert Holbrook
Okl Emory Fr«wlll Bapllll
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship • 6:00 p.m.
Friday - 6:00p.m.
Cbnblre Bopllll
Pastor: Harold Tracewell
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday· 7:30p.m.
Pastor: Rev. lim Chapman
Sunday School· 9:45a.m .

WOrship- 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday -7:30p.m.

Fallb Valley Cban:b ol
Cbrbt In Christian Union

ProYicloace Mllllonal')' Bapllll Cbun:b
Pastor: Rev. Melvin Mock
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship -11 a.m. &amp;. li:JO p.m.
Bible Study Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Rockie Jeffers
Asst: Paslor: Junior Preston
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Thursday • 7 p.m.

Provkl&lt;ll&lt;e MIJIIoul')' Ba~ Cban:b
Pastor: Rev. Edward Buffington
Sonday School- 9: IS a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Prayer Meeting
&amp;. Bible Study Wed.· 6:4S p.m.

Ftlnlew Cbun:h or Cbrl!l
In Chrlltlan Union
·AiiceRd. 1
Pastor: Rev. Denver McCarty
Sunday School - 9:30 a.l)l.
Worship- 10:45 a.m. .t 7:00p.m.
~ednesday- 7:00p.m.

Northup Baptist

ED...,...... Baptist
· Pas1or: Carl Basham

l'roa]IOCI

Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
Worship-7:00p.m.
Wedneoday • 7:00 p.m.
Good N10W1 Solltloeru Bopllll Cburcb
Putor: Clifford Curry
Oeorse"s Creek Rd.• 446-0188
Sunday School - 10:00 a.m.
Worship· 10:55 a.m. .t 7 p.m.
~ednesday - 7 p.m.

C•mpotp Fnowii!Baplill Cbun:h
Putor: Rev. Charles Hively ·
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
'lbunday • 6 p.m.

. Fallb Vtllty Cbrlstlan
Union Cllurcb
Bulavllle-Addison Road
Pastor: Rev. Jack Cooper
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wo111hip • 10:30 a.m.·&amp; 7 p.m.
Thursda.Y -7 p.m.
Ewlqbt11 Cbun=ll of Cbrbt

In Cbrilllaa Unloa
Ewington Road
Pastor: Rev. David Marhoo\ler
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wor&gt;hip- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6:30p.m.
Wednesday - 7:30 p.m.

Sprllolft&lt;kl Mlllloatl')' Bapllsl Cb~n:b
Rev. Ed Mollohan
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo111hip · 6 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

·.

Pakltloo Uatled Bapliii'Cbun:b
Sc:ouown
Pastor: Rev. loren Wilson
. Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- Thumlay &amp;. Sunday 7.p.m.

''

Vlllon FollowJblp Cloapel
Keystone Road, 388·9041
PISIOr: Paul Ring
Sundlly SchOOl- 9:30.a.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
. Wedneoday - 7 p.m.'
Full Gospel Jesu Sans

4687 Keystone Rd. Vinton
Sund,ay School - 10 a.m.
Worship· 7, p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

••••••••••••••••••••

McDaniel Crouroadl Cbrcb
Paslor: Rev. Manuel Aldridae
Cadmus Rd., Cadmus
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Worship Sun. &amp; Wed. 7 p.ril.
On Fin For God Crusido Cbar&lt;b
. 3003 Mo. Olive
Pastor: Rev. Harry Fannin
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.
Worship- li:OOa.m.; 7:00p.m.
Wednesday - 7:00p.m.
Batley Cbun:• ·
Sl. Rt 218
Pastor: Rev. Wayne Harrison, ·Ir.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.
Btc Four Cban:b
tfannan Trace Road
P,astor : Charles Quuen
Sunday School. 10 a.m.
WorShip - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday. 7:30.p.m.
Dobblo Drive Cbapel
Pastor: Jim Patterson
off So. Rt 141-(Meadow Look Subdivision)
Sunday Schooi!O:OO a.m.
Worship- II a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday Bible Study - 7 p.m.

F.Uowlblp Baptist Cburi:b
600 MeCormick Rd. ,
Paslor: Joseph Godwin
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m. &amp;. 6 p.m.
Wedneld!y. 7 p.m.
Door CrHk Fmwlll BaJ&gt;IIII Cbon:b
Koontz Sailor Rd., Vmton, OH
Pastor: Rev. Mickey Mynard
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- II a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednes4ay - 7 p.m. ·

Now Vln!GD Full Gospel Cbon:•
418 Main Slrcel,
Pastor - Forrest Blevins
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship ·11 :30a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Friday Youlh Meeling 7 p.m.

Cbapel HID Cbun:b or C•riSI
c:;toapel Hill Dr., 446-1494
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30a.m. &amp; 6 p.m_.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.
C..n:b or Cbrlalla Cbrl!llaD Unioll
2173 Eastern Ave.
P~tor: David Hopkins
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship ·- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m .

G•llipolls Christian' Churth
St Rt. S88 &amp; Mitc:hell Rd.

Pastor: Denny Coburn
Spnday School . 9:30a.m.

Sunday WorshiP. ~ 10:35 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday B1ble Study· 7:00p.m,
WJEH • 990 AM 11:55 a.m. Mon-Fri.
Uttlc-Kyger Congngational
Cbristlaa Chul'(b
Little Kyger Rd., Cheshire
Pastor: Rev. Ric:hard L. Vinson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday - 1 p.m.

PiDe Grover Holbltti .CIIurcb
off'Rt 325
Putor: Rev . ,Odel Manley
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship- 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m .
Wednesday· 7:30p.m.

·Gartl,.dAve.
Gllllpolll
448-92t5

SMITH'S
· GMC
'

NoboC•urcb .
Pastor: Rev. Gomer Jenkins
Sunday -7 p.m.
Morpa Ceal&lt;r Cbrl!liu Hollaeaa
Cb•n:h
Putor: Roben Hersman

Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship - 7:30p.m,
Wedneoday • 7:30·p.m.
WalaaiRkll&lt; Cban:b
Pastor: Rev. Larry Hall
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m. '
KIDp C~apol Cbw:&lt;b
Kings Rd., Crown City
Pallor: Rev. John Jeffrey
Worship -10 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m.
Tuesday· 7:30p.m.

•

AT.35

J.D. NORTH
PRODU~E

CO.

"Large eiiOUgh to sen&gt;e you,
srrra/1 enough to care"
COMPLETE FARM SUPPLIES
110 VINE ST.
. 446·1933

Tho Uolled MelilodiJI Clloon:b
Pasoor: lock Belly
·
'l'rllllly
mtetla&amp; at Porl.er
_;;
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
)
Wor&gt;hip. 9:15 a.m.
-'
Sun. Evemng • 6 p.m. 2nd &amp; 4th Sunday Ol 'l
the month
Wednesday Prayer meeting · 7 p.m.
I
Bidwell

Sundlly School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Crown Clly Uolled Melbodlal
Pasl'on Rev. Fred Shockley
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship -1 p.m.
Btlbel llnlled Melbodlll
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship · 7:30p.m. ·

.

Belbesda llnlled Melbodlal
Rt 775
Pastor: Arland King
Sunday School-10:30a.m. ,
Worship · 9:30a.m.

Simpson Cbapol Uolled Mrtbodlll
Lake Drive , Rio Grande ·
Pastor: Jack Berry
Suriday School • 9:34) a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m.
The Thul'mlla Cblorcb
"ne Churcll of the Ope11 Doer"
P~tor : Rev . Russell Bu1ti
Broad S1reet, Centerville

Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.

John Gee African Molbodlst Cban:b
48 Pine Slreet
Pastor: Rev. James Hanis
Sunday Schooi!O a.m.
~orship I I a.m.
Patriot Unlled Mrlbudlll Cban:b
Patriot Cadmus Rd. Patriot, Ohio
Pastor: lane Ann Miller
Sunday School: 10 a.m.
· Worship II a.m.
S nd E ' W nh' 6 30

:\;J:~:a••••nc•

Rl. I, Crown City
Pastor: Edna K. Draper
Worship · 11 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
'lb ada 7 •

11te Flnl Pnsbylerlaa Cbun:b

448-4060

BOWMAN'§
HOME~ABE
Hospital Suppllet For Home Use ·

GENE JOHNSON

70 PINE STREET

446-2342

CIIYIOLIT-o&amp;IS..fiO

GALLIPOLIS - Communicalions
•personnel from the Ga!lia County
Emergency Medical Service and the
· ~alii polis Police Department comJeted a 40 hqur cours~ of specialized
· aining Friday afternoon in preparation for the activation of Gallia
County's new Enhanced 91 I System.
Personnel received inslruction in
handling fire incidcnls in progress,
covering fire department dispatching,
crime l11cidents in progress, covering
aw enforcement di spatching and
mergency medi cal di spatching. The
raining was designed to improve the
dispatchers' performance and to meel

51 Stale Slreet
Paslor: Albert E. Earley
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a:m.

St•\ t•nl h-Ua.~
\th t•nlisl

Fo:!}o~=:~~~

Visitors welcome
Sa1U:rday Meeting
Sabbath Sch?OI-S.at. 9:30a.m.
Sabbath Worsh ip · Sat 11:00 a.m.

:

•

\\t•sl4•.' an

Morea• Center Waltru Cb•rdl '
Pastor: Rev. Michael (Mike) Thompson 1
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
•
Worship -1 0 : 4~ a.m. &amp; 7:30p.m. · '
Wednesday · 7:30p.m.
•

trained more than 32,000 go vernmental personnel in the United States
and aboard.
Skills learned by communications
personnel in P owerPhone's training
have been credilcd for saving numer.
ous lives during emerge ncy situa-

lio ns.

EMS Director Bob Bailey related
that the communicaJions equipment
is currenlly being placed in the new
county 91 I building . Amerilech•. the
telephone company serving Gallia
Counly, is sti ll in the process of
installing compuler programs on !heir
end of the system !hal are required for
Gallia's EnhaQced 911 System · to
operate.
Ameritech is working diligenliy in
Gallia County as Well as ~everal other Ohio counties prepming their 911
systems for stan up according to Bailey.
·

By,-di;,NNIFER BYRNES
GADI-IPOLIS - Because of the
~ery we! spring. many producers
were unable lo soil test p~or to plan ling. As a result, some fields thay have
been under or over-fertilized, or not
fertilized at all. The consequences of
this heavy rain are raising questions
·aboul soil nulrient predictabilily.
Some soils will be subject to an
unusual amounl of nulrienlleaching,
'due to the excess water we experienced. The fall of the year is an ideal time for producers to investigate
the nulrient requiremenls of their land
fn preparation for the next plan1ing
. Conducting a soil test over crop
and forage land. every two Co three
years is !he best way to determine
what the sojl needs. Convenience and
financial benefits are good incentives
for producers co chose chis method
for determining nutrienl deficien·
cies. There are several faclors to consider in soil ferlilily: · The primary
nulrients, nilrogen, phosphorus and

potassium (N-P-K), are the elements
with which producers are ·usually
most concerned with respect 10 crop
and forage yields. Recommendations
fro m soil tcsl results will allow producers to apply exactl y what is needed lo their. fields. t~u s eliminaling
guesswork and overspending. Soil
Jesting will provide infof!llation such
as present nutrient availability, pH
, level (soil acidity), and fertilizer and
lime recommendations. Testi ng now
'will allow .growers 10 buy fertilizer
ahead of time, at off-season prices.
.
More importanlly, the fall. is the
best time lo correct acidi c soils by
applying lime. Soil pH measures the
acidicy of !he soil,.which affects how
available lhese primary nulrienls (N.1'-K) and other secondarv and micro:-~ulnenls arc to the plant. often the
' necessary nutrients are present in a
field al adequate levels, but 1he plants
cannot utilize them because t)ie soil
is Joo acidic. For example, on acidic
soil s-~ reaCtions- involving iron and
aluminum will decrease the avai l-.

ing cement In ihat area In the near lutura. A
majority ot the work Is now being done lnalde
the huge complex. The new facility IIi expect·
ad to be completed by sometime In early.1997

CEMENT POURED • Tha first cement waa
poured last week aa construc:tlon on the naw
Gallipolis Foodland atonl continued. Workerl
have cleared equipment and supplies lrom
what will be the parking lot and will be pour·

Soil tests eliminate guess work

season.

• Residential
·
• Commercial • Farms
Audrey F. Canaday, BrQker
446·36~

sis communications train ing and has

-

t

Crown 01y Waloyaa Cban:b
Pas1or: Rev. George Holley
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
W-ip -10:30 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
W~dnesday -7:30 p.m ~ ,

Canaday Realty

· critical safety needs which are not
fully nddressed in typical lraining
academy programs.
The trainiqg was held in the meeting room of the new Galli a County
911 building and was presented by
Power Phone of Madison CT. PowerPhone is an intemalionallcader in cri-

~

Gallla Sennlii-O.y Adnlltlll
meeti_ng on the Lord's Day (Sabbath) at
St. Peter's Episcopal Church

4.S·a:IOO

St. At. 7
Gallipolis

matarlallncident. It wes part of a 40 hour com·
muni.c ations class completed by Gallla dl&amp;· ·
patchers In preparation for the start up of Gallis County's new 911 system.

insurance and that insurers are to
period.
, Ohio drivers are required to show notify the BMW if, wilhin a five-year
proof of FR to law enforcement at the moniloring period, the policy is canscene of a .crash, when being issued celed or not renewed.
Brown also noted lhat if a motorist
a tJaffi c cilation or during a vehicle
safely inspeclion. This is in addition . does not provide proof of insumnce
to showing FR proof during a lraffic upon the request of law enforcement
court appearance and when submit- or the court, the BMV sends a leuer
ting an Ohio Motor Vehicle Crash stating the person has 30 days from
report which is required when the date of the leuer to provide FR
involved in a crash causing injury, proof for the date of lhe violation. If
dealh or over $400 in property dam- it is not provided, the BMV begins
the suspension process.
age, regardless of fault.
· Accordin·g to the Ohio DepartFR proof can be in the fomi of an
aulo insurance ID card, a copy of the men! of Public Safety, the number of
au1o insurance policy's declaration uninsured drivers involved in crashpage, or a surety bond or certificale es and found at-fault are on the
issued by the Ohio Bureau of Motor decrease. In 1995, 3.5 percent or ·
VehiCles.
· 23,241 of the 669,653 total driven
"Mosl Ohioans comply with the ·involved· in crashes were uninsured
law through the purch115e of aulo and at-fault.In 1994,just under 4perinsurance," said Daniel J. K,elso, ·cent of drivers involved .in crashes
president of the Ohio Insurance Insli, were uninsured and at-faull (25,582
lute (011). "All auto insurance com- of the 647,885 total drivers involved
·panics now provide insurance ID in crashes). ·
cards with new and renewed auto
For a free infonnational card out-"
lining Ohio's financial responsibility
in~urance policies."
· Kelso added thai besides losing law, residenls m,ay write 10 the 011,
· their driving privileges, FR law vio- PO Box 816, Columbus. 432I6.
lalors are also required•to carry auto ..

Cbriu's PenlecostaJ llouse .

No" Ulo Lot""n• Cbun:b
1210 State Route 160 446-4889
Pastor: John E. Jackson
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 8!30·10:30 a.m.
Nursery at10:30 Service
Bible Study-Prayer Wed . • 7

1-800-569-2618
Teleflora
"FLOWERS THAT SPEAK
FOR THEMSELVES"
VIsa &amp; MasterCard

tbe date delivered, the quantity oflhe
wood delivered and the quantity
upon which the price is based, the
price of the amount delivered and
identification of the firewood species.
Hardwoods, such as hickory, black
locust, sugar maple, red oak, white
oak, apple and beech arc excellent
woods for fuel. They can be difficult
to lighl, so you may want the purchase.some kindling wood like lulip
popular, cedar or white pine. Minimize the use of pine, spruce, and fir
in tbe fireplace as they contain resins
that are released in burning and may
cause flammable substances to build
up .in the chimney.
.
Harold H. Kneen is the A&amp;rl·
cultural Agent for Ohio State Unl·
versity Extension • Meigs County.

Gallia dispatchers complete week of
_ppecialized training for new system
l••·••sh.' h••·iom

Free Estimates

"Qua/iry Clothing
Since 1866"

INSTf'UCTS PERSONNEL - Kevin Tappe of
Power.Phonelnatructa personnel from the Galtil lla County EMS ahd Gallipolis Pollee Depart~ rnent lt'J the proper handling of a hazardous
to

. .

I .ullu••·au

388-8852 .

POMEROY- It's becoming even
ri skier to driv&lt;; wilhout insurance or
other means of financial responsibility (FR) in the Buckeye state, according to slalistics released by the Ohio
Bureau of Molor Vehicles (BMV).
In its firs! year of enforcement,
Ohio's stricter financial responsibility law resulled in !he suspension of
7 I ,405 drivers licenses.
Of lhat number 145 were from
Meigs County and 271 from Gallia
Counly. ,
"This law identifies lhose who do
nol meet the obligations of being a
financially responsible driver and
takes swifl action against them ,"
said BMV Registrar Mitchell L
Brown. "A~d there are no driving
privileges for violators during ·lhe
mandatory suspension period, ranging from 90 days to a year:"
The enforcement provision of the
FR law went into effecl Oct. 20,
1995. Statistics maintained by the
BMV since Jan. I, 1996, show lhal
drivers in Cuyahoga, Franklin, Summil, Monlgomery and Stark counlies
had the highest number of license
suspensions lhrough this nine monllt

.'

Thr Cllurcb of Jcsu1

~y BUG FLORAL
BidweH. Ohio

how firewood can be sold so buyers
could more easily compare Advertised unbundled firewood can only be
sold by volume (in cords) or by
weight in Ienos of price per ton. A
cord is defined as the amounl of
wood lhat is contained in a space 128
cubic feet (i.e. 4 fl. width x 3. 7 ft
height x 8 fl. lenglh) when the wood
is stacked in a line or row with individual pieces 1ouching and parallel to
each other. If offered as "seasoned
wood" the moiSiure content must be
50 percenl or less.
If you receive unpackaged firewood, the vendor musl give you a
delivery ticket or sales invoice con. taining !he following infonnalion:
name and address of the vendor, .
name and address of the pur&lt;hase.r,

Fin.ancial .responsibility law
enforcement nets 145 ·Meigs,
271.·Gallia drivers in first year

Flag Spriag Molbodllt Chon:•
StRt141
'
Pastor: Rev . Paul Baldwin
Sunday -tO a.m.
Saturday ~ 7 p.m.

Cbrlll ol Lattrr·D•1 Sololl
St. Rt. 160, 446-0l90or446-7486
Sunday School - 10:20 • II a.m.
Reliel Sociely/PtieSihood-11:05-12:00 noon
Sacrament Service- 9-10:15 a.m.
Homemakins mee1ing, 151 Thurs. - 7 p.m.

compounds produced are transported
to the crown of slems and subsequently support roo1, rhizome,. and
tiller growth. Lawns fertilized during
early November are greener in fall
and are earlier to sprout in the spring
. compared to unfertilized lawns.
The most appropriate lawn fertilizer for this time of year's application
should have a high nitrogen to phosphorus &amp; pot!l'sium ratio, ranging
from3-1-2to5-1 -2(suchas 15-5-10
or 25-5-1 0). One lo lwo pounds of
actual nilrogen per 1000 square feet
should be spread over the lawn while
!he grass is still green and temperatures \)Ver 55 degrees Fahrenheit.
·
Arc you buying firewood ? Since
1989 the State of Ohio has governed

'

Colvll')' Cbrlsllan Crntor
434 Jackson Pike
Pastor: Rev. T.W.'i..awrcnce
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
; Worship- 6 p.m.
Wednesday· 6 p.m.

ML Zloa Mlalnnll')' Bapttsi chan:•
V11Jey View Dr., Crown City
Pastor: Todd Bowers
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 6 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.

D

Sunday. November 3, 1111

Rodnoy lJnlled Metbodul
Rl. 588
Pastor: Arland King
Sunday School- 10 •·Ill·
Worship· II a.m. &amp;. Youth 6 p.m.

SPAING ~ALLEY OFFICE
441·1Ut

Galllpoll•

OAWPOUS,OH
446-7283

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship • 9. a.m.
NOR111 GALUA.CHAllGE

Ccnfcn•ry Ualtal Metbodilt Claurclt
Sl. Rl. 141
Pastor: Larry Lemley
Sun&lt;Jay School- 10:30 a.m.
Worship-9:30a.m. '

Gard&lt;a or My Heart Holy Tlb&lt;roado
Minis1er : Rev. Charles Glassburn
1908 Fairview Rd., Bidwell
Seryices Sal. 6 p.m.

By HALKNEEN
grow under a awning or hang undered in 7 to 8 weeks ,
POMEROY - Is your Thanksgiv- . Blooms can be pink, orange. red. neath a.lree.
,
ing or Chri stmas Cactus ready to · while and even yellow and all shades
Christmas Caclus, bolanically
bloom? Blooms of these cacti are in between. However, if'room tem- speaking, belong to the Schlumbergtriggered by bolh temperalure (oighl perature is less than 55 degrees a era genus of planls, but have been
temperal.ure s 40-60 degrees) and . tinge of lavender or pink may show sold for years under the name Zygo, caclus. Tirey are lender, (not less than
light (reduce to less titan twelve up in light colored blooms.
For
best
growlh:
keep
the
plant's
hours). Lighl has a grealer effect, as
35 degrees Fahrenheil) perennial
even a few minutes of light in lhe root system pot bound. Fertilize spar- planls thai can live up to twenty years
evening can delay or prevent bloom- ingly with a ·20-20-20 soluble fertil - ifprop~rly cared for. For lhe garden ing. To maximize blooni, allow no i7cr until one month before bud set. er who wants .the unusual, look in lhe
light on the plant for at least 12- 14 then use only plain. water until after next couple of years for Chris!mas
hours per day (use a cardboard box blbom. Avoid over watering, water Cactus witb fringed pelaled flowers.
or cl~set) an(keep nigh! tempera- only when soil is dry to the touch.
It's time to apply fertilizer to 1he
tures between 40-60 d~grees. It only When replanling use a well drained lawn! If you apply fertilizer only once
lakes 10-20 days of such treatment high organic (peat) and parlayed soil a year lhis is the time most crilical for
before flower bud initiation should be 'mix to help prevent rool rot diseases. a lawn: Research has show n that
•isible. Once budded, you no longer These cacli prefer light levels of alth ough turfgrass planls are not
need to worry about planl exposure 1500-2500 foot candles, bui need actively growing, they remain pho_Co light, full bloom should be expect- proJection from direct sunlight, so tosynthetically active. The sugar

Ky1&lt;r lJDIIed M&lt;&lt;llodlol

Guyu Ttbrroade
St Rl. 218
Sunday School· 10 a.m. Worship· 7 p.m.
Thursday . 7 p.m. .

44&amp;-0IG

446-2532

~

OHIO VALLEY

w':"l·

•Worship Service- 11 :00 a.m .
Sun Evening Bible Study - 6:00 p.m.

BAIRD'S 24 HR. TOWING
AND BO[!Y SHOP

GALLIPOUS
3ADAYENUE

Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
6 p.m.
Wed
y -6 p.m.

Jubll« c•rllllan Coal&lt;r
, George's Creek Road
Sunday School · II a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wedneoday - 7 p.m.

DaavUJe Holiness Cburch
Rl. 325
Pastor: I. b. Young
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:35 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednosday - 7 p.m.

Section

Thanksgiving, ,Christmas Cactus tips

Fair Hnea UllitN MetMdlat
Kaoaup,Ohio

lorouRTSTREETOFFICE • SILVEA IIRIDG£0FFIC£

GALLIPOLIS

332 Sec:ond Ave.

448 1771
81. ""'· 141
G .,IIII,OH

Fatlb Comlouo111 Cbapel
R.:idney Robcr1s, Teacher
Sunday School • 10:00 a.m.
Worship • 7 p.m.
Wedneoday ·7:30p.m.

!Farm/Business

Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Woo: hip • I 0 a.m.
Wednesday -7:30p.m.

THERE 'SA STAR WITHIN YOUR REACH
Member FDIC

in a lwrry.•; TRY

SI.FFEI ·
FilE ISIFm
StLU IIIIVICE

Btlltlebrm Cburcb
Rocky Fork Rd. ofr218
Pastor: Russell Taylor
Sunday- 10 a.m.&amp;. 6 p.m.
Thursday· 6 p.m.

•

a

4ddlepe Udell M... tk'

STAR BAN

TRUCK CENTER
1~ PINE ST.
Jt:t. Rt. 35 &amp; 7
446-4119

Sunday Seivices ·10 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Thurs Se~ice • 7:00p.m.
Saturday Service-7:00p.m.
Elhabrlb Chapel
St Rt 218
Pastor: Alfred Holley
·Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:35 a.m. &amp; 6 p.m.
Wednesday -7 p.m.
.

Cbrl!l Ualled Molbodlsl Cbun:b
St Rt 7
Pas~r: Thomas E. Hite
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship -10:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00p.m.
. Wednesday - 7:00p.m ..

Gallipolis, Oh
State Rt. .7
446-0842

GAS I,

Sunday Schooi·IO:IS a.m.
Worahlp ·I I : IS a.m.

MI. Calvi')' lodrpeadenl Cbun:b
Rt. 2, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va.
Pastor: Charles Willeti .
Sunday SChool· 10 a.m.
Worship · 7:30p.m.
Wednesda~. 7:30p.m.

152 Upper River Rd.

LP

QaiUn Ualted Mzll 1' ' CIIIIII"CCI

Worahip • 7 p.m.
Wednesday - 7 p.m.
Ubtl11 Cllapol
Crown City
Pastor: Rev. Waiter Wood
Sunday School -10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
'lbursday - 7 p.m.
Cbapol C-ally Cbon:b
Pastor: Rev. Truman Johnson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Sunday &amp; Wedneoday • 7 p.m.

Ma«&lt;&lt;oala Commaolly C.. n:b
Macedonia Road, Pastor: Wayne Queen
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- 11:15 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
· ' l)lursday • 7 p.m.
:

DODGE INC.

Now With

Sunday School- 10 a.m.

- The Gnoo Untied Metbodlal
Second &amp; Cedar Streets
PaSior: Re\1. David C. Hogg
A~iate Pastor: Rev. Leland W. Brehm
Sunday SchOOl -, 9:30 a.m.
Worship- 8:30 &amp; 10:45 ,a.m.
Youth· 6:)0 p.m.
Chapel Bible Sludy · 6:30p.m.
Chapel Vespers WoBhip- 7:15p.m. ·

NORTHUP

BURLILE
. OIL CO.

CHI!SHIU CHAIIGE
l'ulor: 0 . G. Da•io

Edu Cloapel Cbon:b
Teens Run Road
Pastor: Harry Fannin

Paslor: Rev. Roonie Lemley

Okl Kyll&lt;" FreowW Baptist
Pas1or: Rev.-Rober1 Thompson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
• Worship· 10:4S a.m.
Evening Worship- 7 p.m.

&lt;Jage
Paslor: Rev. Ronald Nicholas
Sunday Sc'hool - 9:30a.m.
Worship ·10:40 a.m. .t 7 p.m .
·Wednesday - 7:30 p.m.

Sundt.y Olilcken'a alurch - 11 a.m.

Pastor: Marc A. Sartell

Now Hopo Bat&gt;llll Cbon:b
Rt. S54
Paslol: Rev. Moses CUffie
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worsl'lip • 11 a.m.

Dldct1Cioao&lt;l
Hannan Tr.oe R.ra~
P.-: Jeaait !elfers

Boll

Trtati,Baplill Cllan:b

Wednaday·7p.m.

Sa~m Baptist

Llbort)' Alltlllbt1 or Gqd
·
.Rt. 1, Duddinfl.anc, Ma10n, WV, across
!tom Rovegide Golf Coune
hilur: 6Rpy A. Joh1110n, 773-SSOl
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

ML Co.-1 Baplill Cllordo
Bidwell
Putor. Rev. Gene A. Arms1rong
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:45 a.m .
Wednesday. 6 p.m.

hlllt Crttk R 1 In .......
833 '!bird Ave., 4-46-0954
Pulor: bv. Dennis Hun Sr.
Sunday S&lt;hool· 9:15a.m.

Poplar llklat FnowliiBopllat
Sunday School • I 0 a.m.
WorJhip • II a.m. &amp; 6 p.m. Sunday

"'*'""'')'

llaf&lt;lsl Chr&lt;•
PJatrorm. Ohlo
Puaor: l.Hiie Boas
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:40 a.m.&amp;. 6:30p.m.
Wednesday · 6:30p.m.

Goyu V...,.

••

SUnday, November 3, 1996

ability of applied phosphorus. Under- growth. In addilion, soil test results
standing the relationship between often rccomJllcnd lime lreatments in
fertilizer and lime is very importanl, · two applicalions . Therefore lesling
because many applied fcrti li.zers will now will allow for one lime applicagradually cause !he soil to become tion in the fall and one in the spring.
Producers who plan to soil test this
acidic, thus tying up nutrienl s and
preventing their ulilizalion by the fa ll through the county Extension
plant Applying lim e will neutralize office may .wan! to consider the folthe soil, increasing !he availability of lowing procedures and guidelines: To
those nutrients. Most nutri'ents are at test the soil in one specific crop or
their greatest availability at a pH ol forage area - take samples in at leasl
6.5 . However, lime , like fertilizer 10 different parts of Che fiel,d to ,make
should be applied on !he r ecommen- one reprcsent;ttivc sample. 1lle samdation of a soil sample, because rais- pling deplh should be 8 inches. Proing the pH too high may cause ele- ducers wiil also be asked.lo provide
ments such as iroll , manganese, cop- infonnation about what crop will
per, and zinc to become less avail- planted lhere next, as well as ·what
al)le. Therefore, it is importanl to crops can hi' anticipated for that area
maintain the soil in the appropriate · in !he second and third planling seapH range for lhc crops being grown. sons. 111e process should be repeatTo neutralize the pH (raise it ed for a 0y additional fi.elds, and kept
from an acidic level), the accepted separale from any other samples. Soil
practice is to apply one of lhe many samples are accepted by the county
liming agents such as hydrated lime, extension office all year round, at the
or carbona1e lime. Lime needs more cosI is $7.50 each for agronomic
time than fertilizer to react wilh !he samples and $10 for lawn and garden ·
soil and become beneficial for plant
Contin11ed on D-2

Gibson to head ORWA
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Rural
Waler Associalion (ORWA) has
announced lhe appointment of Anita
Gibson as executive director.
The nonprofit association assists
waler and sewer utilities throughout
the State with on:site technical assisJance, education and regulatory compliance issues. ORWA- HJIS helped
hundreds of water utilities with managerial, financial and technical concerns.
"This. is really a tremendous
opportunity for lhe association.'' said
J.C. Walker, ORWA Presidcn!. "For
over twenty years lhe associaCion ]jas
served the needs of the Slate's rural
water syslems. We are fortunate to
have Ms. Gibson's experience guide
us toward lhe next 20."

There are a number of very
exciting issues facing the association.
·starting with implementation ·or the
Safe Drinking Water Acl. I am anxious to get to work," Ms. Gibson said.
Ms. Gibson brings 16 years of
experience in nonprofit management
to ORWA. Most recently she has
worked with the Ohio Association of
Chiefs of Police, Law Enforcement
Foundation, and the Cen1ral Ohio
Heart A'ssociation. She is one of only
thirty Ohio association executives
who has achieved lhe status of Cerlified Associalion Executive.
The Associ ali Qn selVes all water
and waste water systems in Ohio
including local systems in Rutland,
Syracuse,
Racine,
Pomeroy,
Reedsville and Gallipolis.
11

Farm Bureau
names three new board members
.

RIO'GRANDE- The Qallia Coun,ly Fann Bureau held ils annual meeti~g rec.ently al Buckeye Hills Career
. «;:enler Rio Grande.
• Larry Shong, nominaling chairman, announced the election of three .
new board members for 1997. They
are Bill 3udeson, Vickie Powell, and
Charles Withee. ·
Policy Development Chairman

C.A. Duncan explained !he current
policy resolutions. A vole of accep- .
tance was then taken.
Ken Fanner, Gallia County commissioner spoke ori the 911 qucsli onnnire to be se nt to each rcsidenl
of llje county. He asked !hat care be
given in completing the fonn.
Organizational Direclor Kim Harless, presented star award!; to the fol -

lowing commiltee chairmen : Jackie
Graham -safety; Katie S~oemaker,
women's; Eleanor FadeJey, Edie
Bostic, and April Duncan-information; Connie Massie, advisory counsel and Vickie Powell, membership.
Harless also thanked President
Paul Shoemaker for a job well done.
He is going off the board afler serving two full tenns 1lle gavel was lhen

passed to the new president, Vickie
Powell .
Prior to tbe program, President
Shoemaker . welcomed the group,
Ihen ,introduced the Gallia Academy
Madrigals who entertained t (luring
dinner. Special solos were perfonned
by Seth Mon1gomery and · David
Stanley

'
I

NEW BOARD MEMBERS • Paul Shoemaker, preeldent, left, of
·!he Gellla .County Ferm Bureau, welt:ornea naw bolrd lllllllben
VIckie Powell and Bill Buraon. AbHnt- Charlie WHhM.

•

t

'

�Sunday, November 3, 1~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point Pleaeant, WV

Custom studios can
reproduce old tiles
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features

Ceramic tiles are a beautiful
accent in many old homes. Whether
decorative or plain, the richness of
this material commonly lends an air
of grace and charm to old entranceway floors, baths and fireplaces.
Like everything else in this world,
some of these tiles may beCome damaged over time and need replacemenL
In most cases the answer isn't as easy
as a trip to the local home center or
tile store."The difficulty in finding
. matches for old hand-painted, printed or carved tiles is ob· 'ous. Differences in the way tile'- were made

years ago make most · of today's
mass-produced tiles · inappropriate
replacements for even plain field
tiles.
Color variations were common in
the glaze of many old tiles. Two glaze
variations that were typical of tiles
produced 50 years ago are picture
framing and crazing or crackle glaz.

ing. Picture framing occurs when the
glaze puddles around the edges of the
tile, outlining or framing it. The latter situation appears when the glaze
doesn't actually fit the body of the tile
but shrinks at different rates, causing
cracks to occur in its face. Today, the
pair would be considered color flaws.
Fortunately, both can 'be reproduced by some of the custom tile stu-

d1os catering to this type of work. The
first step in this process is sending the
studio a good sample piece of the tile
you're trying io replace.
·
'

Tile reproductiog is a costly
process, the major e&lt;pense being the
research and development for the
•laze and clay body.

.Wheat reports due Nov. 15
By JIM HERRELL
GALLIPOLIS - Producers who
plant wheat this fall are encouraged
to file their report of acreage by Nov.
15.
Even ,though the new farm bill
made many changes in USDA programs and this report of acreage may
no longer be a requirement, the Gallia-Lawrence Farm Servioe Agency
will accept a report to keep it on file
for any possible benefits in the future.
In Lawrence County, wheat is an
insurable crop. If you wish to obtain
crop insurance on wheat in 1997, you
must report the acreage and pay the

$50 administrative fee by Nov. 15.
In Gallia County, wheat is not an
insurable crop. Any relieffrom crop
loss because of a disaster could only
be received under NAP (Non-insurable Acreage Program).
An acreage report is required to
file fot losses under NAP.
Contact the ·FSA office at 4468686 or 1-888-211 -1626 (toll free)
for additional information.
·.
Jim Herren is the county executive director of the GalliaLawrence Farm Service A1eney.

Saber saw is versatile tool
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
.For AP Special Features

To saw a wide ·variety of materials, making both curved and straight
cuts, consider a saber saw. Although
a circular saw is best for a lot of fast
straight cuts, a saber saw - also
called a portable jigsaw- is more
versatile.

'\_

Fitted with the apJlropriate blade,
a saber saw can make straight or
curved cuts in wood, metal, plastic,
ceramic tile, leather and other materials. It can rip a long piece, crosscut
a 2-by-4, or start a cut in the middle
of a plywood panel. Saber Saw
Motion
A saber saw has a motor-driven

shaft ihat moves a blade rapidly up
and down that pushes the teeth into
the work on the cutting stroke a~
away from it on the return stroke.
This helps clear away chipnnd lets
the saw cut faster and more cleanly
Saw Power
A saber saw is rated according to
its power (generally between 2 and 4
112 amps) and the length and speed
of its blade stroke (the distance the
blade travels). The length of .blade
stroke generally ranges from one-half
to I inch. The longer the stroke, the
.more teeth are engaged in the cutting
. and the faster the cut Blade speed is
measured in strokes per minute
(spm). A ~aw · with adjustable speed

let~

you regulate blade spee&lt;! to •uit
the job
·
Blades
The more teeth per inch (tpi) in a
saw blade, the more smoothly- and
slowly - it cuts. Wood-cutting
blades generally range from 3 to 14
tpi and metal cutting blades from 14
to 32 tpi.
.
To make the most of a saber saw,
choose the right blade for the job. Use
a narrow scrolling blade to cut sharp
· curves and a taper-ground blade for
ultrasmooth cuts. An e&lt;tra-wide
flush:cuttlng blade will make cuts.
right up to a wall or other obstruction:
A double-sided ·blade can back out of
tight spots.

IHomes:

.•· Slacks • Tops
• Jackets • Skirts
·• Vest
• Sweaters

LEVI'S
• Bendovers • Jackets
• Slacks • Vest

,.

Jantzen

Slacks . • Tops
• Jackets • Vest
•Skirts

ew Shipment of Ladies
Cotton House Dresses
DreBB up instead of down!

Questions and answers ~•

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special r:..turea
Q: I recently replaced the old galvanized storage tank from my well
pumping system with one that has an
air bag to separate the water from lhe
air. Since then, whenever
I tum on the
.
water faucet, 01r spUrtS out of the
·spout along with the water. Oo you
know what's wrong?
· A: In all probability, you did not
remove the snifter and the drain aod
Y-fitting from your well system when
you switched to the new tank. These
valves were installed on well systems
that used submersible pumps and a
water storage tank with no membrane
separating the water and air in the
tank. These valves introduce air into
the tank to replenish the air lost
through turbulence and absorption.
An air cushion at the top of the
tank acts hke a sjmng. and as water
is pumped into the. tank, the air is ·
compressed. The. compressed air
forces the water from the tank to the
spout. Without the air cushion, the
tank is waterlogged and the pump
performs as If no tank were used,
wearing it out prematurely.
In a properly operating system, the
pump isstopped by a pressure.switch,
and the smfter on the check valve
opens, allowing air into the pipe. The
water slug between the check valve
and the drain andY-valve drains into
the well. When the pump is activated, the air slug is.forced into the tank. ·

When a storage tank with an air
bag or diaphragm is used, the water
and air are permanently separated, so
it's not necessary to introduce air into
the tank. Since you did not remove
the snifter, every time the pump is
activated a slug of air
. is sent into the
tank. The excess 01r escapes every
time water is drawn.
Remove the snifter and see if that
solves the problem. Back out the
snifter with a wrench and replace it
with a p,ipe plug. lf.this doesn 'I work,
remove the drain and Y-fiUing. However, because the drain andY-fitting
are 7 to 20 feet below the well's top,
you may need to hire a professional
well installer to ·remove the fitting.
Q: I have a TV room in my basement. The room is hot during tlie
summer months. We have a dehumidifier in .the room, so we thought
the room should be cool. Could you
please tell me why it's hot down
there?
A: The room is hot because of the
dehumidifier. A dehumidifier is basically a small self-contained air conditioner. An air conaitioner discharges the heat removed from the
circulating air and from the compressor to the outside, but a dehumidifier dumps that heat into the
room.
•
If the TV room is small and the
dehumidifier runs continuously, it
discharges enough warm air to heat
the room. It makes a room more com-

.

.-

To submit a question, wrl~ tq':'
Popular Mechanics, Reader Ser·
vice'·Bureau, l24 W. 57111 St., New .
.:·.

Soil tests ·1:
Continued from D-1
r
samples.
Results are known within two
weeks at the very latest, and help it
available at the office for interpretini'
the results of the sample. This service';·
is already widely used by growers ;~:­
the area, and can benefit anyone con~· .
cerned about the fertility of their land.
For more information about soil fer: ·'
tility or soil sampling procedure{'
please call the Extension office at'·
446-7007.
.
Jennifer L. Byrnes Is GaUia'.
County's extension agent, llllricul~
.
'
tore.

1 Pursue
6 Bottle part
10 Showy·pertormers
14 Disliked a lot
19 Batman's sidekick ,
211 King and t..add
22 Official·decree
24 Famed Texas
25 Collect
28 Nobleman
27 landed estate
28lawful
29 Ending lor song or
gab
30 Stair post·
32 Ethical · ·.
34 Liver secretk&gt;n
35 Place for a bird's
nesl
39 His and her
41 Went back to again
43 Laws
45 Command
47 Obligations
48 One-- million
51 Swell
53 First king of Israel
55 Zodiac sign ·
56 Lawyers' org.
59 Curved bones
61 Redding or Skinner
62 Cut short
64 Timber
66 Religious images
68 Rod lor roasting
· 70 Stages
72 Nepal neighbor
73 Tranqullize
75 Function ·
77 Ease off: 2 wds.
79 Additional
80 Say again
82 Drizzles
64 Wisdom
86 Matured
88 Sits lor the camera
90 Molten rock
91 Listened, poetically
95 Restrict
·

1 Kind of union
.2 "Odyssey" poet ·. :1
3 Degrade
'
4 Mother superior
5 Print measures
6'$eize
7 Ardor
8 Insert mark
9 Technical skill
10- and haw
11 Firsl man
12 Asia13 Made points
14 Actor Holbrook
IS Excuses
16 Implied but unsaid
17 Writer Zola
18 Was oiler1ond
~ t Derisive look
23 Go places
31 Boxtops
33 Defame in print
36 Vat
37 Miscellaneous
. mixture
38 Animal skins
40 Ex1end to .
42 Fat
44 Skids
46 - free delivery
48 Eye part
49 More pleasant
50 Dwelling place
52 Willow rod
54 .Misplaces
56 Monastic head
57 How a tavern smells
58 Commedla dell' 60 Break suddenly
63 Orchid part
65 Actress Rogers
67 Sirloin or T-bone
69 Snare
70 Thoughtlul
71 - and spice
74 Avid
76 Stringed instrument
78 Prepares a way
81 Male singer
83 Partly: prefix

.,...

,,
.,,

'I "

:

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
TRUCK FOR SALE
The Board of Truo- of
Chaohlra Townahlp, Oallla.
County, Ohio, offor for oala
one .(1) 1887' Ford pickup
truck, F250, 4x4. Serial
number of the truok to
1FTEF26YIIHNA75100.
Mileage of the truck to
approxtmlltllly 56,000.

..

If''~

,,

''l &lt;!J

,.,

j' 'f

•'•'"

'·l'''

....-..
;

ANNOUNCEMENTS

!+...

-

&amp;~:!!!!~~~~~-----!

~

30 Announcements

,.

We proce11 dear, makt.lllckory
smoked hams, trail bololjlna, pep.... sausage.
Peroni, jerky, sumni·•
Cooler ~&lt;ant, clean, sanltarv. Hunt.,
,...,.
tng aupplloa, llcenoe &amp; "•me
•
check station. CRAWfOAD'3 Henderson WV.

'' I'

...

Giveaway

40

2 Kittens , 4 months old, very
preny, yellow, to good home
only, good with children . 304 ·
675-«150.

' ''

"•'

2 Kittens, 6 months old, fema les,
vellow/wh ite, GOOd _wlchildren,
house pats. to good home. 304 ·

675-4650.

·'

614·843-5258.
Stot8n : Grea1 Pryanese Solid
White 100 IDs. Taken On Oct
18th From Oak Hill $500 Reward
Pending Conviction,· 614·682 ·

70

McCarty, Keith Handley or
Mike Conkle.
carolyn Holland, Clerk
194 Stingy Creek Road
Cheshire, Ohio 45620
October 17, 25, 1996

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

90

and Auction

Ciiialllpolls. Ohio
··3 9-2 20.
AUCTION : Monday 6 :00pm. Rt2

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

NIJo!lcho Rd. Pl.

Pleasant

304·675·5965.

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

Wanted To Buy : We Buy Auto's
Any on d'111on, 614 •388 · 906 2 ,

c

How·

ard Beasley 1#470 , Will be selling
new &amp; used mdse. store inven·
tory, for Harold Clark.

Furniture Clolhes, Dishes, Pots,
Pans, Nick Nack's, Misc . 64 Sy ·
camore Street, 10131, · IH2 . If
Rain,..., Days.

7

Signs Up, 9;)0 ·5;)0 ~M .

Chow Male CinnamOn Colored,
Very Friendly, To Good Home
Only 814·2 47·2032 Evenings,

A&lt;&gt;

614-4~·

Christmas Auclion SaiUrday Nov
2nd , noon-midn ight, Tha t's r ighll
12 full hours111 at Ml Alto Aucfjon,
Rl 2-33 ·crossroads·. Several
truckloads new guaran teed mer·
chandlse . TV's, home shOpping
merchandise, dept sTore catalog
merchandise, electronics , porce·
la in dolls, !ots more. ~Drive a lit·
118, save a lor. Ed Frazier #930 ,

"'

.·

luzzy. 3!)4-~7fi.450tl.
Puppies, J Wtekl Gld, pan Ger·
man Shephard &amp; part Chow, vet~
adorable and plaVIul. 304·675·

' ·6494 .

.

To A Good Home, Fe~ale Border
Collie. Sla~ .. White, DOG HouN
&amp; Cllain Goes Also. 614·388·

6962.

60

.

Lost and Found ·

4

whi"' BOliO A Tor·
rter, red collar, 8 nswers to the
name of ~a~,~cfdy" . l .aal in the vi·
cinit~ ot 2200 block of Lincoln

LOST: Bla'*

Avo. 304-1175-1776.
LOST:

Gold chain brocelo~

·285 Mulberry, Ponieroy, Novem ·
~ 1, 2&amp; • . 9am-4pm.

SLUG MATCH
FORKED RUN
SPORTSMAN
CLUB
SUNDAY,
NOV.3
12 NOON

Rick Pearson Aut: tion Company,
lull lime aucT\oneer, c omplote
auc1ion
serv1ce.
licensed
#66,0hio &amp; West Virginia, 304 ·
773·5785 Or 304· 773·5447

Card of Thanks

Clean

Late Mode l Cars Or
Truc~s . 1990 Models Or Newer,
Sini th Bui~;k Pontiac. 1900 East·
ern Avenue, Gallipolis.

All Yard Sales Must 88 Paid In
A.dvaoce . Deadline: 1:OOpm the.
~ay before the ad is to run, Sun· J &amp; 0'!1 Auto Parts. Buymg salday I t-tonday edition · I :OOpm vage va,hiclea . Selling parts. 304773·5033.
Frida~.
"Closed in carport sale· No... ember
8 ·9 . F irst mob1le home behind
Me1gs la irgiounds. (!hristmas
items and more.
Indoor&amp;· Frida y &amp; Saturday, 9am4pm. Pomeroy .Higll gym by Cl!y
pollee dep:~rtment. Lots of stuff!

senti·

mtnllll value, REWARD. 304.·

Card of Thanka

578-4010.

. · Laslle Armatrong • Miller

· 30 Ann~ments

CENTENARY
UNITED CHRISTIAN
CHURCH SUNDAY,
NOV. 3, 7 P.M.
,BENEFIT
SONG FEST
To help on lunentl of

See answer on page AS

Bro. Richard Short.
Sineer-: Phllll!M
Family, Short Flllllly,
PeoplM F•mlly, Beoky

Mlyllem ~ otheN.

God Is our refugo end strength, ~ very
We era trusting In the Lord with all our
own understanding.
In all our

as He directs our paths.

~

:~·:

and tamlly of baby Leslie Elaine, extends deep
lor all or your acts fJf kindness, love, prayers, flowers .
donatkM'le, cards, food, and words of consolation
loss of our pradous loved one.
thanks to the membtra of MI. Carmel 8ap&gt;lili~s1~ ;!~~''~i

1

Rev. Gilbert M. Craig, Jr., for hiS lnsplnng "
the staff and our co-workers at the University
Lucent Technologies In Columbus. the Ohio Valley

I

·

AI~. to Dr. Josepha Cranen and
Children's Hospital, and lor the e~ecellent and comlortlng

the Ohio.Valley Bank.

111Yk&gt;oo provided to us

by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home.

church and every lndlvid~l In our surrounding
and counties whote namtt are too numerous to
love and concem will never tfe lorgonen. God

Cleno, Elaine, &amp; PhKipArmltiong

'•

PART
·

o•

30 Announcements

Abso lute Top Dollar: All U.S. Sil·
ver And Gold Coins , Proofset s,
Diamonds, Antique Jewelry. Gold
Rings, Pre- 1930 U.S. Currency,
Sterllr~g, Etc. Acqulsklons Jewelry
• M.T.S. Coin Shop: 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 6~ 4·446·284.2.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Mull pupa, 8 weeks old, fat &amp;

...

Per D1em AN 'S and LPN's needed for Pleasant Valley Hospital.

wookly. Yea• &lt;o,nd posl!lon~ HI•·
ing both menJwomen . Free room
and board. Will train. Call 7 days
407-875-2022 ext. 059SC43.

Contidentlal Interview, Call Jim
Ryan • Monday g A.M. ·3 P.t.A. AI
1-800-257-lt353 ExL 2.

Camden •Av.e.; Pt ,Pieasanl WV
25.550. Allehlion: Vitu&amp; Hanley,
Jf., Chaiff118n. .
•

Local Vendir,~g Route For Sale, Be
Your Own Boss. Big Cash Week·
ly. Call Now 1·800·371·8363.

BULLETIN BOARD

Wanted to Buy

Top dc llar - antiques, furniture ,
glass, china, clocks, gold, silver,
Yard sale, November 4 &amp; 5, Tr e7 coins, warches, estates, old stone
Sandridge P:d., misc. items , jarS, 91d blue &amp; white dishes, oid
clolhes, games, toys.
wood bo xes, milk bollles, Me1gs
County Advert•semenl, Osby
80
Public Sale
Martin, 614·992 -744t ·.

Yard Sale

ALL Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE : 2 :00p.m.
ti'le day before tile ad is to run.
SUnday ed1tiof1 . 2:00p.m. Friday.
Monday edition • 10:00 a.m. Saturday.

Weekends.

"
.

People to work durmg detr l&amp;l·
s.on. No expenence .neceuary.
Apply al Crawford'a, Henderson
wv 304-67S.5.404.

Nurse Aide Tratn ing ProgramRoc;ll.apnngs·Rthabllltat lon Centtr
will be ofler'1ng traln~ng clatses m
the momh of November. Apphca·
uons are now bemg accepted at
36759 Rockspr1ngs Rd, PometOy.
Class s•ze 11 hm11M Three refer.
ence papers are ret:~uile&lt;l w•t11 ap·
phca1 1on . Apply 1n penon bet·
ween 1 m &amp; 3pm M·F. Students
that successful ly complete the
TCE class will be eligible for employment. Absolutely no phone
calls. EOE

Qnvera.flalbed

Help wanted

the sale, contact one of the
following trustees: Homer

76911.

"
.·

0 ce

wan1eo ro B"Y -u,eo Moo•'•
238
:6:·;_-----------1
Wedemeyer's Auction '"''"c••··' Homes . Call : 6 14 ·446·0175 .Or
614 7 7

.lng•
week old kinan 1 male to good
home If lntMested pleasa•call af·
ter e p.m. 614·4.o48-7880

c

Township. ·
To view the truck prior to

Black &amp; while rabbii to a good
home, 614-992·2219 or 614·992·

"';)

110

November 3, 6, 1996

Lost and Found

Gar&amp;@ .Sale: November 4th, .5th ,
355&amp; ROchly ~ike, Bidwell, Jewel·
ry, King Woodburner, Extra Nice
Ckntlea, Oeeor, 4 Family HiU -Neal

2 t&lt;lnens, 814·44,6· 4987 Evan-

u

Ia" with no Warranties or

Lost: rriale Bassen nound, Wed·
n~sday, CR 35 vicinity, answers
to *Bubba·, reward, please call
10

'I

Public Notice

Thja pickup truck will be guarantees expressed or
oold at public auction to the Implied.
hlgheot bidder, on Saturday, · The Board of Trustee• of
November 9, 1996, at 10:00 Cheshire TOwnship reserv·e
a.m. at the Township the right to waive any
Building In' Kyger (Located lrreg u Ia r ltleo and/or
to reject
at 100 .Kyger Cemetery
ROIId),
Board of
The truck will be 19id "ao

60

Personals

005

·.

·~·

Help Wanted

.

...

85 Hidden supply
87 Removes. In
printing
89 Scene
91 A Greatt..akli
92 Battery terminal
93 Hindu quee"
94 Lure for game
96 Ballroom dance
98 Feels poorly
99 Preceding
100 Boutique
101 Big book
103 •- Marner'
1o5 Lots and lots
107 Let it standi
109 Many times
111 Flaming light
113 Broader
t 16 Sjng a certain way
119 Granular snow field
123 Heads 01 cities
125 Mr. C9ward
126 High-strung
127 Morning moisture
129 Ice-show performer
130 Nullity
•
132 Duos
• 134 Not broad
135Wished
136 Put to rest
137 Discontinue
138 Toe or finger
140 - -may-care
142 Elevate
143 Wet suH wearer
144 Toboggans
147 Welshman or
Irishman
149 Bristle
!52 Letters
154 Understand
156 Baste
157 JFK's predecessor

DELIVERY
DRIVERS
fltx
Schedules. All lwe!s Of Expenence Needed. Eam S8 ·110 fHr.
Cash Pa1d Daily. Apply AI Galli·
polis, little Caesars.

'r·

...,.

DO\YN

110

Help Wanted

IIEWPayPoc:Ugol
Contact Personr'lel Department at
$1,000 Sign-On Bonust Monthly
hunger are already taking a toll, one says Lee Changho, minister for polit{304)875-4340. AAIEOE.
Bonus Program! Need CDL·A &amp; 8
USA Tacllly
that will worsen during the ·harsh ical affairs at the South Korean
o
..
Mos. OTR Call TODAY For ,De·
• This is a story about death and Korean winter.
Embassy in Washington.
mils! ECt&lt;Miller 800·&amp;11-6838.
Seeking Registere&lt;l Long Term
jiplitics.
~.. . -P-OS_T_A_L-JO~B~S-..-,--U.S. officials say th~t some in
,,
"The second year of a famine i~
Care Nurafng Anislants lof InterEDITOR, REPORTER .
mediate LO"Q Term Car• Nursing
~ The deaths are happening secret- always the worst," says Natsios, Seoul were so angry that they urged Sta!l $12.08 IHr Plus Benetils , Manag •ng Edi!o r, General News
Facillt~ . Rotating shifts, part
For EKam And Application Into
Re po 11 e r Needed At J a ckso n I ;;;;i;;;kc;;;;,~"1iiO"b.d time . Must nave West 'V1rgin1a
w1thout wrenching cab1e televi- recalling Ethiopia. where I million striking back at North Korea. That Call
2.19-794 •0010 EM!. OH200, 9 Vlmon Journal Herald, Respond It
Center, a 100 bed
swn pictures, in the bleak alld isolat- people starved to .death, and Somalia, could have drawn the 37,000 U.S. A.M . To 11 P.M. 7 Days.
To Ed•tor, P.O. Bo11. 270 , Jackson.
care facility, irt the Ohio cenilir;ation. Contact Jil l Bum ·
OH
45640.
Village
of Middleport. Ohio I ~~• de;;~~·,,r.R:~N, DON, Point Pleas~
forces
in
the
South
into
another
war.
~ country of Nortb Korea. The pol- where 300,000 died. In the ' second
·ATTN : Point Pleasant' Postal
1
&amp; RehaDilitatlon
Ia accepting applications far a I'~ 1
North
Korea's
economy
has
been
i!j~s involves North Korea, South year, people start dying of typhoid,
PoSIItons. Permanen t lull ume tbr GymnastiCs instructor, lu11 or part DONIAOON caliber registered -·"····-····Route 62. Route 1,
P,.,;,.,,. west
in free fall since the end of the Cold clerk/sorters . Full Benefits. For time, a1 Willpower Tumbling. 304· nurse. The candidate must have
~orca and its ally, the United States tuberculosis and other diseases.
exam,
application
and
salary
into
675-6762.
two
years
&amp;Iperience
in
a
long
in an imbroglio that is getting more
Despite th is forecast, foreign War. There is growing concern .fhat call (708 )906 · 2350E11.3670 .
term care management setting
dangerous as the numbers facing donors are not lining up. In the past the regime may launch a strike of its Bam-apm.
HOME COMPUTER USERS with experience in MDS+ and
NEEDED. $45,000 income po - quality improvement programs.
J..e.ath from hunger and disease rise . year, the United States has provided own across the world's most heavily AVON l All Areas l Sh 11ley !entia!.
1·800·513-4343 Ext. B· Overbrook Center has an active SUMMER CAMP DIRECTOR
, Long known as the hermit king- only enough to feed North Ko'rea for fortified border. Last week, North Spears, 304·675·1429
9368 CaH For Details.
rehablliratlon program includ ing AND PROGRAM DIRECTOR
POSITIONS Anl!able For 1997
dgm, North Korea is still one of the one day - 13,000 tons of grain for Korea alarmed outsiders with prepaHOME TYPIST. PC users need· physical, occupational, speech,
Camp Season. Must Be AI least
and
resplratQry
lhera~i
es
with
an
world's most opaque societies. But ?3 million people compared with rations to test a Scud· type missile in Able AOJon Representatives ed . $45,000 income potential. establ ished vent ilator un ir. The 21 Years Of Age. Boy Scout EIC·
ne~ded . Ea rn money tor Christ · Call! -800·513-4343 E•t B-9368.· . candidate must De licensed lo
perlence Helpful . E .M.T. Position
foreigners allowed in recently fear 165,000 tons for 2.1 million refugees the Sea of Japan .
mas Dills at homeial work. ~ ·800·
And Other Positions Available The United States on Friday sent 992-6356 or 304 ·882·2645 , ·Ind. INSPECTORS : Male/Female to practice nursing ln Ohio and hav~ Minimum
that food shortages caused by two in Rwanda and Burundi . No signifiAge 18. Write Tri·State
inspect
residential
properties
in
&amp;lcellent
communication
skills.
a strong message to the North not to Rep.
Area Council, 733 Seventh Aveyears of floods, the end .,f Soviet sup- cant food aid is in the pipeline.
area . Pholps, diagrams. and
nue, .Hun1ington , WV 25701 Or
carry out the test. But American pol- Alaska Jobs ! Earn Up To your
port and 40 years ofm;;managernent
The reason ? Politics.
perimeter measuremerHs . Mu!H OOJerbroak Center orters a com·
Call 304·523-3408.
sa~ry and a benefit pack·
petitive
icy
toward
the
Nor)h
has
been
con$30,000 In Three tJOnths Fish.ng have a car and a 35MM camera.
are turning lethal.
Republican presidential nominee
is
available.
J;tesumes
with
Sa:fmon . Const,uct•on. Cannenes, Send resume to: Property In ·
"What I saw is what starvation Bob Dole has criticized U.S. aid to tradictory, experts say.
history should be submit- 180 wanted To Do
Oil Fields, More! 7 Oa~s 407 ·875· spections, P.O. Box 370, Dunbar,
to
Oavid
·Snyder, Admlnistra·
"Do
we
know
what
we
want
to
. t9?ks like in an isolated countr)i," North Korea - as w~ll as a program
W.V. 25084 All! Jennifer Wilson.
BHQysitling My Hem e All Hours
2022 Ext. 0526A42.
OOJerbrook Center, 333 Page
Cheshire Area, 614-367· 7849
•!.Ys Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio. Fiall freezing North Korea's nuclear devel- happen there? No," says Stephen An Ohio oil company needs ma- Maw re , non-smoker, 17yrs or
Middlepor~ Ohio, 45760. EOE
'\'ltnessed the first U.S. food aid opment in exchange for energy assis- Linton, a Korea expert at Columbia ture person now in the POM ER- older, r~eeded 3·4 evenings par (.!...:..:....:..:...:.:...;..;;_-'.c..,_.:..:...:.:.:~ George; Po~!able Sawmill, don'l
R.N. &amp; LS.W.
haul your logS to the m1" just call
arlive in August. He says he saw chil- t.ance - as rewarding North Korea University. He referred to projections OY area. Regardless ot experi- week, for 3 school age boys and
ence, write M.M . Read, P.O. BaM 1 mtant. Musl have own transpor304·675·1957.
North
Korea
can
be
brought
or
thar
ctt'en with ''hair reddened by lack of for bad behavior.
tation an"d 11ve i n, Pt Pleasanl. Full time clinical staff p'osition
696, Dayton. Oh 45401 .
.
304·675-5761. •
available lor the Registered Nurse Housecleaning &amp; Ollice Cleaning,
North Korea, ambivalent after bribed into the community of nations,
nutrients, bellies 1\istended ... rickets.
::_:.::.:_:..:;.::.:__ _ _ _ _ _ , or licensed Social Worker in the Call6~4-256·t274 .
An
Ohio
Oil
Company
Needs
Ma
·
I felt the cough of a bone-thin toddler years of preaching self-reliance, is a the so-called "soft landing" theory. ture Person Now In The GALLI · Needed 5 Ladies To Sell Avon , Marietta oHice ol the Area AgenMAID JUSTFOR YOU
on Aging (PASSPORT) Pro·
ra_ule deep in her lungs and saw her hard country to help. When South The greater fear is of a "ha\d land- POLIS Area . Regardless Ot EIC · Call614 -446 -3358.
rience, Wr ite M.A . Read, P:O.
The individual hirep may be Houseclean ing Services, 614 ·
gtandfather's shoulder blades nearly Korea sent a ship full of grain a year ing," a collapse of the food distribu- pe
New Formal Reslauranl Opening required to work throughout the 441·0327.
BoM 696, Dayton, OH 45401.
poking through his thin shirt. I don 't ago, the Pyongyang regime briefly tion system that could send refugees
Ekptrienced Waiters, Wa itress eight coLJnty area as the agency
CIRCLE MEl
Hostess. Bartenders &amp; Cooks. serveS as ·an eldercare agency Wi ll care for the elderly h1 the ir
see how some of the people I saw detained the crew and forced the ship streaming across its borders.
Get A Head Start On Chr istmas. Send Resumes to : 615 Main St. provid ing alter!'1atives to nursing llome, 614-247-2961 .
·equid make it until October, much to fly a Nortb Korean tlag. Then last
Apply Today, Sta rt To morrow. Pt. Pleasan~ WV 25550.
home placement through assessWi ll Do Babvsining Monday Thru
ment and managed home care Friday, 6 A.M. To 6 . P.M. In My
le~s . survive the winter."
month, a submarine from the Nortl] .
"We have a hard-landing and $240 -$325 Week ly. Call Lis·a At
888·432· 7378.
Position available· THe ~ason ser.vices for qualified elders. Re · Home, In Bidwell A.rea. Call 614According to the U.N. World carrying 26 commandos ran aground . soft-landing policy.aHhe same time,"
County Public Service District. Quirements include either a AN or
Driver s needed lor re- which provides water service to Ohio LSW and at least one year 441·0602 Alter 5 P.M. ·
.Food Program, which delivers and 'in the South.
· Linton says. "We are tcying 'to bring ·Company
gional OTR flatbed and van carr!· the rural areas of Mason County, at geriatrics or home neallh ex·
Will Do Hom·e, Office Fall Or Holi·
The. two Koreas , which fought a the North to its knees by maintaining er. (010 pacKage available also.)
monitors aid, government rations are
WV, is seeking a general man·
day C~aning. 304-675·6328.
Home most WeekeMs ·
agar far ils water system, which perlence.
d?wn to 7 ounces a day - barely a bloody civil war in 1950-53,. still trade sanctions and at the same time
Satellite Communications
covers most of the county, with Base Salary: $23,006 . R"egula'r
howl ofrice- or 600 calories. "You have no peace treaty. A hesistant rap- subsidize them 'with oil and food.:"
Late model conventional tractors
FINANCIAL
some 300 miles of main line hours and excellent benefits.
. need 1500-1800 calories to keep an . prochernent began two years ago
Quoting a Korean saying, Linton
Paid weeki~
serving 2.eso customers. Responsibill!ie&amp; include overall op- Resume musl contain references
aljult alive," says Andrew Natsios, after strenuous American diplomacy. says, "We're giving them the disease Be~1efits include:
Hospitahzat•on
eration, supervision and admin- and will be accepted through No- 210
Business
v)ce president of World Vision U.S. The North agreed io halt a nuclear and)he medicine ."
Disability Ins.
istration.
vember 13, 1996.
Opportunity
401K .
EXpenence in water sys1em
program thill seemed headed in the
Secretary of State Warren Christo"•At 600, you simply waste away."
Fuel &amp; Performance bonus ·
management I S preferred. At
INOTICEI
; Nortb Koreans, used to hardship, direction of producing weapons in pher has urged both sides to avoid M 1n1mum qua lifications : Good least five years of e•perience in Send resume to: P.O. Bo• 729·36.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
"provocative actions." This only fur- dr •v•ng record, 23yrs of age, 2yrs administration is desirable. Nee · Pom.,oy, OH 45769.
are scouring the countryside for return for oil and two reactors.
recommends that you do bus•·
or dnvmg sc hool w1th essary &amp;kills 1nctude personnel
Since South Korea had agreed to the' infuriated Seoul, which thought e~penence
ness with people you know, and
greens and trading what they can on
AN
EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EM·
1 year expenence. Applications leadership and the abil i ty to
NOT to send money through the
the black market. The situation ·is build and largely pay for t!Je reactors, the comment equated its young ta~en daily, Monday -Friday, communicate and work with. the PLOVER
mail until you "have Investigated
·public . The individual must have
expected to ease slightly soon, thanks it was outraged when it discovered · democracy with one of the world's 8;00AM to 5:00PM:
the offering.
·
SALES. INDUSTRIAL
H &amp; W Trucking Co. Inc.
a ,broad knoWledge of civlllenOJi· Local Career. QpportUn liY With
to aid frOm China, a barter deal with the submarine, President Kim Young few totalitarian states. Relations were
~Q. Box 40
DealershiP Available STeel Build·
ronmental en.gfn•erlng in the wa The FaStest Gro'wing Industrial ing Sales Are Booming Big P'roflt
· 633 Fudge Creek Rd.
Syria·and the annual harvest of rice •Sam; himself geapng up for a re-elec- strained further whep the :United
ter utility field, as ·well u know!·
Company In Our Industry. First Potential From Sales And · tOr
Ona, WV ,25545
edge ol. applicable satety/e~vi·.
and com. But U.S. officials expect lion campaign next year, demanded States arrested a Korean-American
Year Earnings Jn ExCess 01 532· Construction Call For Ava il able
1-800·826·3560
ronmental
I i
Federal/
35,000. Our Products Featufe
the harvc.s tto fall short by as many an apology and put the breaks on aid. Sept. ·24 on charges of passing mili Markets 303-758·4135 E•t, 6800.
Stali) water
Advanced Design , Energy Sav"The recent atmosphere keeps tary secrets to the South's embassy in
as 2 million metric tons. And the
regulali0(\1
. !~c.:~~~~~.',\:~. ings And Environmental Benefits,
Compt.Jter Users Needed . Work dardt.
i Stylist, Be Your Own BDss , I
A degr;&amp;e in
Repeal T~pe Business With Jn . Have Stations For Rent, Cell Carcumulative effects of two years of any relief activity from taking place," · · Washington.
own hours. S20k to S50k-/yr , · t6cl'lnicaf training or
novalive Benefit Package, And ol King, Finest Styling Salon, 6"14·
adminiattaJion 1\ dOtlred.
Extensive Training Prooram . No 44&amp;·8922, 614·367·0612.
Send re!Sume to: Mason County Evenings. No Weekends . For A
=========:-r-==~:;:~~=-===r==~;;~~;:==~r-==::=.=.;:=::=::===~
~0-348-7186 x1508.
··
p bll N tl
Cruise ship jobsl Earn $3001$900
Public Service Ofllricl, 101

SUNDAY PUZ.Z LER
97 Summaries, for
short
101 Fish in cans
102 Functions
104 Very Important
· 106 Jerseys
108 City in Maine
110 Sayfrom .memory
112 Sufficiently,
archaically .
114'T.S. or George
115 Change
117 Fl~ alone
118 Profit
120 Painful spot
121 Qpp. of WSW
122 Mr. Selleck
124 Knitting essential
126 Gave silent assent
128 Soak. as tlax
129 Car type
131 Extent
133 Playing card
135 Trite
139 Perceived with the
ears
141 Prizes
145 Genus of olives
146 Sound reasoning
148 Dwells
150 Marsh bird
151 Dish
153 Storms
155 Travels aimlessly
157 Go by car
158 Artist's stand
159 Set of steps
t 60 Holel-room option
161 Gave, as medicine
162 Tinters
163 Diminutive suffix
164 Colet 65 Pitchers

' PARH1ME '
Position StDckinljl Magaz•ne&amp; &amp;
Books In Gall1pohs Area Super markels , MuSt Have Own Trans
&amp; A Flex Scl"led. t.A -F No OeliOJerleS Or Pick· Ups Reply To Galli·
plis, P.O. So~ 310. Columbus, OH
.o4321B.

Jlv BARBARA SLAVIN

~--------------~------------------~------------~ ·

ACROSS

110

Help Wanted

SSOanctrsS$ Med extra Xmas
cash . SoulhfOIII. Showbal, Pt
PleasanL WV, 304 -675·5955

l)lix in N. Korea's closed society

fortable hy lowering the relativ~
humidify.
n
You would be better off with C
small wall-mounted air conditioner.
This unit also lemoves excess humid.:'
ity and cools the room. Even thougl\'
the TV room is in the basement, a .
section of the foundation wall is gen.: '
erally above grade. If it is a concre~ '
block wall, an opening can be cut i~.:
the foundation for an air conditionin~ .
sleeve, or an air conditioner can be• .
installed in a basement window.

York, N.Y. 10019.

110

~olation, famine make deadly

..

mission

Alfred Dunner

i

Sllndlty, November 3, 1996

I

We the family
Vermont Marltins would
like Ia thank .friends and,
ntlghban lor their
kindness, load, flowers,
cards and prayers, and all
who helped cart for our
1110thtr at Extlll!llld Care
at Veterans who were so
kiltd ttttd loving Ia mother,
grandmother, and great·
grandmother. Aspecial
tltanks to Rev. James
Acrn attd Rev. Mike
Willet foi their wards of
comfort, the singers, The
Wtls Sisters, aranilson
who wert pallbearers, Lir.
WltlteraU &amp; otker
physldals at VMH, Ewing
FuMral H0111 and the
movrt to the ctlttllary
by P011eray police. Your
klndaess wiH nenr be
lorgolltn.
God lim You All.

SHQP AND $AVE NOW!

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATIRESS OR BOX S~RINGS
Parts repaired, replaced, rebuilt.
Regular ............ ........... ....... $85, pvc,rys replaced. Need your piano
Firm :... ........................... :...-$95.
or restored? Call Bob Grubb
614-446-4525 Gallipo)ls, OH
Extra Firm ....................... :.$10~
Queen Size Sets .... $295 &amp; Up
THE CANDLE COMPANY
Size Sets ........ $350' &amp; Up
"We Make Scents•
Mattress ........ .. $48 &amp; UP,
(614) 446·1603
Bed Frames ...... $25-$35 - $50
Hours: Mon.-Fri. 10 am·3 pm
Water Bed Replacement Mattress.
Sat. 10 am·3 pm
Mon . thru Sat.
New Scents: Hot Apple Pie,
3 miles out
il
Sunflower (refills onlyh),
Peppermint (refills only).
NEW ARRIVALS: 6oars (mink, mouton,

FOR SALE
LOCUST POSTS
256~6011

curty mohair) , Wooden votiVe &amp; taper

All Ages, All RifikS •
We try to insute
everyone!
AUTOHIO InsurancE;!
· Phone (614)446-6111

TURKEY/HAM DINNER

YouTD
VOTENOV.5

$50.00 OR MORE PER GAME.
$1000 STARBURST &amp; GROWING.
BEECH GROVE RD., RUTLANO

For Info. Call 446-9130

I

675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

.BINGO
RUTLAND A.L. POST 467
MON. &amp; WED. 6:30

SR-22 , ,
Cancelled/Rejected .'·r
• DUI • No Prio,r •.
Insurance , · ..
1

FUR~ITURE

The. Riverside Study
Club, GFWC Reminds

GaNiti

Auto Insurance .
Low Down
Payment (
•

$499.00

baskets. Ra1ired Longaberger baskets.

pots, oak Noah's Ark, Hanging spiral 6
votice holders,
·Ribbon" &amp;
Ughthouse~ candles, Basket garter &amp; reed

ANNUALTURKEYSHOT
GALLI A CO. GUN CLUB
SUNDAY, NOV. 10

,

FLAIR

$59.00
$19.95
$99.00
$49.95
$299.00

Southern High School
November 3r(j
Adult $4.75/Child $3.50
Sponsor~d by S.J.H.S. &amp; S.H.S.
11:00-2:00. Tak&amp;·Out Available

lamps w/e1ched globes, Wooden weed

located next to To,lef &amp; Toler Insurance

Day Dreams&amp;
M-F 10 to 6 pm Sat. w/appt.
614-441 "1611
Gifts for all Dreamers Port!llaln,
Glass, Bath &amp; Body Oils, etc.,
·All below Retail prices , ·

Serta Mattress
Bed Frames
Recliners
4 Drawer Chest
la·Z-Boy. Recliners
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite

10f.M-?

..

Thanks Congressman
.Cremeans for letting the
Gallipolis Shrine Cll!b
use his tractor and trailer
to haul our fire truck to
the parades this summer.

·.,

Eastern Band Boosters
Annual Arts and Crafts Fair
Saturday, November 9,
1996 9:00 a.m.-4:00p.m.
Great variety of crafts,
' · delicious food.
Ente.rtainmenls will be ...,.
provided by the award
winning Eastern Marching &amp;
Concert Bands.

Gallipolis
I'

.

Call446-2342 or
i ,9~·2156
'

FOR MORE INFORMATION

'I

•

�•

Page D4 • _..... 1 • ._.JI HIMl
210

Pomeroy • Middleport •

Buslntu

Mo,blle

Opponunlly;._-j
3b.clrcom, bltt'l, hv fng rcom wJ
1'\ardwoo&lt;l lloora. kltc;Mn &amp; dining

35 Local &amp; E••~ished Sttea

E"'n Up To$1 .500 Wk~

ar•a tooertltr n.w roo! gerage.

1·800-69&amp;-4080
We pay S2 00 for ~try envelope
you INff II home Send I tell·addrened stamped enYtlopt to
A WJ Enterprises PO 8011: -408,
Temple Hills. UO 20748 (Pay

""""'mailed .-y Friday)

230

on Rr 2 304 -875 •139 or 304 875-7328 after 1!1 30

GOV T FORECLOSED Homot
For Penntes On $1 Oel mquent

Tax, Repo's, REO 1 Your Area.

HARTS MASONAAY • Block
brtck &amp; stone work, 30 years ••
per1ence, reuonable rates 304

895-359, ahet 6:00pm, no JOb to
sm~l. or to BIG. WV-021206

Hou.. And LOI For Sale·
2 Betlrooms , One Bath, $600
DOwn, WAC Euy Terms, 1-800.
4-48-«15108, Alk For OaYicl
Oh10 Valley Bank has a 2 ator~.
Sbr home for sale .n Mason
County Call 814 -441 -0890 Sen
ous lnqutras Only

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY,
WITH HOUSE, 727 FIRST AVE·
NUE. GALLIPOLIS, 181.500,
814-44e·711 z.
Snr. room home 1n Rac1nt w111replace new Ymyl stdmg and roof,
front parr: .... : ack deck,I garage
614 949 2213 days or 61•·379-

N. , . . . _ ad&gt;Mrtillng In
tNt nt~tr'IC 111 IIIUbjecl tc

to -IO'Inyproltrenoo,

-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

limitation or dlac~rmatlon

73 t&lt;1rkwoocl, 2-3 bedrcoma, total

baled on race, color, religion,

eltctnc:, on• acre land, appro~~: 5

miles out SR 143, $12.500, 614·
91)2 3195

sex famlllalltiiUa or national
oo1Qin. or a!'Y Intention to
motce any aucl\ prelorance,
limitation or dlacrlmlnallon.'

12x60 2 Bedrooms. 1 Bath, Excellent Condmon, $3,500. 3016 -736-

7295

Thll-wllriol
knowllnQti accep1
adverttaements for rwellllala
Which II In violation ollho taw.

Our- a,. htroby

12x65 Mob1le Home 2 Bedrooms,

New Hot Water Tank, Relngeratar,
Stove, Priced Very Reasonable,
Must Sell Call Anytime, 61,.•388-

04&amp;1

lnlom\od lhol olldweUingo
tldVtntMd In this Olit1papll'
are • ..,._.. on an 8QUii

31 0 Homes for Sale

$15.900. 81H4S.5l1811.

1983 SChuh% 14x70 With Expando, 3 Bedrooms. 2 Baths, Nice

KIIChtn. CA. HMI Pump And Alol

Morel 514--245-5811.

Bedroom Ranch With full
:Basemenr Vmyt S•d•ng 2720 Sq
.Ft Anached Garage A~r Condi·
. t1onmg, Gaa Heal 2 F~replacea
-{Wtth Wood Burner) In-Ground
·Pool Large Lot, N1ce Location,
: out• Gallipolis. Roure 588 Ctty

....dtng, close to school, pnced to

"'3 Bedroom, fu ll basement, car)Jort, large lot Call Somerv•lle
_Really 304-875 3030 or 304 675-

'

Nice 1 112 Story Hous•. With
"6u1lchng, 32 9 Acres, Locatton
; state Route 7 Sou1t1 e 14 258~

:81178
..3·• bedroom,

heat pump, kitchen
-appliances, 1 car garage, n1ce
:neighborhood, 614·982·31 19 or
81~-092-6451

A-frame 3 · 4 Bedrooms. 2 Full
8a1hs, Laundry Room. Large 2
Cat Garage, $48,900 Gall1poha

.Area. 614-256-6928
,
Chrilly's Family Living
,. In Rulland· a~ beO'oom nouse,

New homes startmg a1 $170 per
month With only $770 down Call
Russ at1 eoo 837·3Z.l8

- -

Lived In , Free D ~ll very
1ST TIME BUYERS E·Z Fl· Never
And Sei·UP. CaH 1 800·251·5070

NANCINQ 2 Or 3 Bedrooms,
1200 PIN Month, Free Delivery &amp;

Set-Up. 1-800-251-5070 .

1-lt Time buyers, E Z r1nancmg 2
Qr 3 bedroom, around $200/mo,
free delivery and set up 1·600·

251-5070

8 112 Acres Wl1h Mobile Home,
Excellent Condlbon. On Raccoon
Road, 1 Mile From Stale Route 7
With Boat Dock, Will Sell AU Or
Divide Into lots, 614-446-6565

New Repos only 2 left never
hvEtd m free del.very and set up
1 800 251 5070

NEW I Sank Repo a, only 3 ten.
still under warranry, free delivery
&amp; &amp;ei-UP, 304·755-7191
Two bedroom tra118r 1n M1ddleporr,
excellent condition, 614 992·6060
leave massage

wv 304-755-5885

MUST SELL 1981 14x70 With ~r&amp;­
place Need to sell fast Call RE-

GINA all 614·385 2434

MUST SELL ,981 1-4170 with
fireplace Need to sell fas1 Call
Regtna a1 6, 4~2434

In

, Acre, Water, Sewer, Footers,
Garage, On Possum Trot Road,

$18.000. 814-388·8971

And this past
neverl-ned
II~ngl1111 In our hea!rts.l
111hat emne the day
lreallzed that we mwttl

I dwell apart. And
long as your
lmemo~:y

lives our
"You carmotl
For In our he1111lal
lvon'n living still
pau!ng years go by.
Very !llldly missed

recentty renovalld, CIA, new ~r·
" port. doora. new lid1ng outbullcl
• lng. $28 000 OBO. 81(-992.. 514

In Memory

In Loving Memory of our Belovect
Nola Florence Adams Brammer
Birthday • November 3
Departed thlallfe ·November 15,1987
With each November sorrow retums, to bring
once more release of tears, As recollection
dawns, with bated breath, and shared
moments of unbeaten fears.
The years go by in unbelief • You, my loved
' I em e. so long gone, and yet In dreams, my
• • &lt;&gt;rmc outstretched, I draw you closely to my
breast.
I murmer, "Peace, my heart, be still", You'll
never leave me, never will, for deep within my
heart, I hold your love complete, a centerfold.
I know that I will never see you again in this
life; or hear your patient, gentle voice again.
But I still feel your presence here with me,
loved one, and I know that you will be etemal.

Deeply loved and missed by all her
family and loved ones,

E. GENIEVA
NUNN
Who left us 1

yr. ago today,
~ov.

2, 1995

saw your ]Ndll fJIUI knew tMt ;!014 wen
getting tired, for a e.,. wa not to be, 10 He
wrapped His llf7fU IW14M ;!014 fJIUI whlsptred,
cottU with me. T1u ,U. of plll'tillf goodb]e will
remain with '" 1411111 we Ilk, wlun.1r we go,
whalever we do, l«ked I# 0111' luartr are
memories of:1011.
lhqrly lo•d fJIUI W, mlr•d
clllldn• fJIUI

Call For Ua~s &amp; Owner FinancIng Info 10%: Down + We
F1nance Balance 10% Off Ca&amp;h
Purchases!
Three lots on Spr1ng Avenue. Po·
meroy, $2500 negotrable, 614
742 1343

360

New Develo~ment· Riverbend Estates, scemc Iota, underground
utillti&amp;S, 2 mles from Ravanswood,
304 273-9773 or 304·273-3052

Memory

Real E;state
Wanted

10 To 20 Acres, Level To Rolling
Lan.J. Within 10 M1les 01 Galhpo·
ha Some Pasture Reqwed, Pond
Dea lrable Will Pay To Survey
Split Would Con11der Land Contract Call 814·848-8328 AlterS

PMC¥W..kencla

2 Bedroom Furmshed House No
Inside Pets, Countv Water Fur nished $4501Mo, Deposit &amp; Ref·
erences Requlfed, Of! State Roote
850, 814 -446 41 11, Evemngs,
614 245-Cl380

On Mollllay, Oc1ober 21, 1996, Helen~. Canaday passed
away The family WIShes 10 acknowledge lhe many
offerings provided for this most difficull 11me A special
thanks 10 Faye Hammond al Holzer Hoap11al for her
unprecedented care and concern. Gratilude ts expressed
toward the nu~ and doclors at R1vers1de Hospllal for the
care of Helen while she was sitU wtth us Words can not

deacribc lhe emotion cherished from lhe numerous
individuals who overcame lhe long line at lhe calling
hours. Your perseverance pnmded slrength for the family.
If tbere,could be such thmg as a mce funeral, Ibis would
have qualified. The service provided by McCoy-Moore
was praisewonhy, the eulogy provided by Reverend Jack
Barry was touching; and we also WISh to thank the R10
Grande Police and Fire Depanmenls for lhe escon and
traffic conlrol to lhe cemetery. Thanks to Anna Mae
Perroud and Ruth Wh1U for the preparatiOn and assiStance
al the meal served following the funeral. The many gifts of
food, flowers, and paper producls were greatly appreciated
and very helpful. Please conlaet the fam1ly 1f any dishes or
difficull period within the hves of Helen's family and we
can not express our gralttude enough.
Though our hearts an! saddened wllh our loss
As Helen we will miss
We must cherish the memones of this ~r sweet lady.
One of Happiness. Joy and BitS!
Helen's Farruly
110

Help Wanted

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKER
OR REGISTERED NURSE

atw600pm

mo

Referencea, secunty depoSit

requtred. 304 882-2221 .

Nke 3 Bedroom HoltM. Equ1llt)O&lt;I

Immediately Available Modern
Bnck Ranch, 4 BR. 1 112 Baths.
Newly Remodeled, Located Con·
vementfy Near Holzer, Ctty
Schools No Pets, Completely Re
modeled W•thm Last two Years
$575 Pet Month Secutlty Depot·
It, CaR 614-4.WS·2055

Agency on Aging. Applicant MUST • BE
LICENSED IN THE STATE OF OHIO AS A
REGISTERED NURSE OR LICENSED SOCIAL
WORKER.
Poaltlon
Involves
providing
comprahanalve asaeaament of aarvlcaa naedect
by elderly cllante, arrangement of aervlcea, and
case me1111gemant Of cllent'a needs end
MrVIcae. Muet have ability to acceaa clients'
" - · Travel required. Poaltlon baaed In
Scioto County Annualized salary: $23,000 plua
excellent frlngee. All Interested qualified
par80118 ahould aubmlt a resume, proof
llcenaura, college transcript and raferencea, no
Jeter than 4:30 p.m. on November 11, 1996, to
Arae Agency on Aging District 7, Inc., MSC·
F32, Unlvarally of Rio Granjle, 218 North
Col'-ge Ave., Rio Grande, Ohio 45874-3131.
EOE
WANTED: EMERGENCY RELIEF COMMU·
NITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR needed to
teach community and personal ekllle to
adults with learning limitations In their
own home In Gallla .and Melge Counties.
HOURS: Ae echeduledlas needed; must be
able to work evenings and weekende;
muet be able to stay overnights. High
school degree, valid driver's license, three
yHrs licensed driving experience, good
driving record end adequate automobile
Insurance coverage required. Salary:
$5.25/yr. to start. Training provided. Send
resume to: P.O. Box 604, Jackeon, OH
45640; ATTN: Cecilia. Deadline tor
11/6196. Equal Opportunity

410 Houus for Rent

«O

440
Very

In Galhpollt Effect $175 1 Bedroom S255 2 Bedrooms, 1260.
e1• -388· 1708

Mu:tc:lltpot t. N 3rd Ave 2bedroom,
furnished apt Depos11 &amp; refer.
encet. 30-4·882 2S66
New Haven, 1bedroom turn i&amp;hecl
apt Deposit &amp; reference&amp; 304-

882 2566

l;~~t::=:::~':•q

aanellta:
• Full benefits Including madleal and denlaf Insurance alter
90 days
·
• Retirement plans. vacations and p81d holidays
.
• 5 dey wor1&lt; week
• Fast promotions possible lo $40.000+ average Income
An Aldl representative wHI be available for you to apply In
person from 8.00 a.m. to 2 00 p m on Tuesday.
November 5 at
Aldllncorporated
176
River Ad.
-Gaillltolla, COH

Chrlety'• Famlty Living
In Rutland· a 4 bedroom house
rocenny renovated, CIA, nf!NI carl&gt;"\ doo&lt;' new skiing. oulllulldI"Q. S&lt;OO ~"' depoolt pets
children are welcome, available
November 1

a

ln PDnwroy 121t2furrnhed
room acceaa 10 appliances,
kitchen, battl, laundry &amp; all unh
ues weekly or monthly rates
modern &amp; roach tree, can 614·
992·•514 Qam.11pm
For Rent In Po1nt Pleaaant Area
6 Room House, 3 Bedrooms, 2 112
Batha, And F•mily Room, 2 Car
Garage, $550/Mo , Ptua Deposit,
o Room HouM. • BedtOOmt, 1 t/2
Baths, 1 Car Garage, SSSO/Mo.

3 BHroom Tra iler 614

t_ btdroom

I
l

SEASONAL SALES

s!~~n?w~~~~~~al

Radio
Sales
Associates. We ofter above average
eaming potential and flexible scheduling.
Prior retail experience preferred.
PfBSSB contact
MONDAY ONLY 10AMTO 6 PM
JOHN ELLIOTT 614-446-2124

RADIO SHACK
AN EQUAL OPPORnJNITY .I.FFlRMATlVE ACTION EMPLOYER

$
$$
$

'

I

I

Apanments
for Rent

~ Bedroom Townhouse

Ha1

the Snap-on franchise program and earn you attractive
financing terms toward bccormng a Prancbiscd Dealer.

510

Household
Goods

4 Pc. living Room Sutte Wood

With Cushions Like 61 ... 256-1332.

$235 oo.

Fab11c, By The Bolt, 10% OVer
Wholesale No Evenmgs..Pieaae,

..

Beveled both ends •

styn&gt;1oam lnoulallon board $5 95 ea or 27 pc

Siuda $1 25 H or 250 pc 1111 $1 10 eo Taka all $1 00

19.

~ Room 1 Bedroom Apartment •
'lth Sto~e &amp; Reh1gerator Fur-

loll -

3Wx•·xe· sa edge o sa

Beard S11 .95 ea or 48pc lift

$10 95

mahed, 814-448-2583

Twm

RMirl Tower, now accepting
application s for ,br HUD subsicf.
~ed apt for elderly and handl-

llpped EOH 304 675-6879

181 Th~rd Avenue, Carpet, Refrto·
tor JSIO\Ie, Out11de Storage, 2
drooms, $275/Mo Montt]'s

E

eposn. 1114-245·9595

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Orwe
flom $244 to S31 5 Walk to shop

Position Ayailabjll

• mOVIII Call e 14· 4•8 · 2588
~qu~ Housing Oppo&lt;lunlly

Saturday, November 9 at 10:00 .....11· •
Owner has moved and no longer has a need for these 1
~811)8:

Aladdin ftoor lamp (electnc fteld) old radios,
kerosene lamp w/ white glass shade. dazey churn1
marked dazey on glass (small crack in jar) Ferttodi'l
white hobnail basket. depression glass
Carnival. Hull, McCoy. Chelk items. misc. glassware
Coms: Buffalo nlckles, V-nlckles. 1814 bust a1m,e,;~
1849 seated liberty dime.
D1nnette set glass top 4 chairs. 4 .drawer ~n••~• · ~
microwave oven. lamps, misc. boxes books. Ke1nmor•1l
washer. misc. box lots, household items &amp; -~oc&gt;,~,~~~~
undercounter slide top beverage cooler,
(capacity) Due to short not1ce. we don•t have time lor a
complete listing. Located In Pomeroy. Ohio. Rt. 7
from Gallla to Jet 143 closet M1zway Lounge &amp; Cai1&gt;"Ail
Upohlestry Shop.
Cpme over and check us out.
Finis (Ike) Isaac auctioneer
Ucensed &amp; Bonded State of Ohio
Not responsible for accidents or lostltArn" .,,,t

AUCTION

bUplex 848 Socond Avenue. Gal·
llpolls. 3 Bedrooms, L.A .• D.R.,

Thursday, November
at 7:00p.m.

$345/Mo., One Year Lease, Ref~_rences Required, $345 Depoal~
1&lt;ey Available, Tope's Furniture,
40-5 61 .. ·448..()332

7, 1

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
at Patriot Auction Barn
From Gallipolis, take route141,
then left onto route 776, tum right
onto Patriot Road. Watch for signs.

Fum~thed 2 Bedroom .&amp;.partment,
l'.croas From Park AC. No Pets
ftelerences, Deposit $3501MO
13t4·4A6·8235, 614·446 0577

Furn1shed effiCiency all ut1i111es
pa1d Oepos.11 reqwred 304 675
]7ff.!

Truckload

of Everything

EVERYONE WELCOME

~urn1ahed

Somellhlr1g lor every member of the
Checks
Posntve

Ell1c1ency All Ut1h11es
Pa1d, Share Bath 1145/Mo, 919
~econd Avenue, Gallipolis 614·

)146·3945

:'

ANTIQUE
AIC,.IOI
SAT., NOV. 9, 1996
10:00 A.M.

Hutchinson Auction Inc.
Estate Auction ·
·
at

Saturday, November 9
11 :00 a.m.
Take US 50 West of Athens approx. 3 miles end ax~
Into Rolling Hills and go to 15 Bennlla lane. Signs wtll
be posted
Wa will be auctioning the personal property of
late Anderson Burton (Andy). Andy resided at Rolling
Hills lor 22 years and died at the age of 82 lind was
carpenter by trade. Items to be auctioned have been
wall cared for
Cherry bedroom sulla; Maple bedroom sune w/twlf!J:
beds; living room BUtte; 6 pc. maple dtnlng room
w/hutch; large quantity of power and other tools; 1""~
F150 pickup; 8 speed wheelhorse mower; dep•rellllon
glass; carnival glaas; lenlon; pots end pana; ""'"';).!
listing many other collectibles and househOld Items.
Terma: Cash or check w/poaklve ID. Food av-~abl•s.)l
Outdoor auction come dreued for weather.
Auctioneer M1rk Hutchinson

tftflliimfd10~ ·
11~ just IUuf a 6irtfufay

LOCATED ON RT. 33 AT THE AUCTION
. CENTER IN MASON, WV.

J4JII{ tiiJW liMs 5011

Beautiful massive carved oak sideboard, nice 2 Pc.
dough cupboard (plenty of drawers), 48" Hooaier type
cupboard, Early 6 tin pte sale, Lg. sp1nnlng wheel, oak
flat wall cupboard, Tiger maple poster bed, 3 Pc.
pineapple B.A. sune. mahogany table, 6 Rose Back
chairs, round oak table, 4 press back chairs,

'lff1fmmv

-"./"""'-'

'lJI'lf,:;l!J{'DJt'Y

1

EE~~~[==

614-698·6706
Licensed and Bonded In Ohio
Partner Frank Hutchinson

614-592·4349

Attorney Paul J. Gerig
Administrator Jerry Burton
Athena County Probate
Case Number 961240

'.R.fJqE$,!

1

!Jlapp!J16tli
' 'Birtliiay
Ma'!Janna
£t1W,

It

k.... :v...,,.,.,~~·li"""l"'
•.., 'V&lt;Itli

.

\'

:

••

•

'

••

II

Couch W11h Ma tchUlg Chatr
1300, 814 446..W79
Country Furntture 304-875-6820
Rt 2 N, Smiles, Pt Pteuant, WV
Tu&amp;I·Sit 9..fS, SUn lt ·S.
Used Furn•ture 130 B ulav1Ue P1ke,
Gal hpoll1 Mamess Seta Fu tl
Waterbtd Mattress. Full Beelroom
Swue Manreues, Bed , Chest .
Vanuy Bench, S250, 8 14- 446 -

&lt;782
Used Furmture, 130 Bulavdle Pike

Washer &amp; gas dryer S25ea
875--4558 ah&amp;r 8:00pm

30•·

Would You ltke To Gtl Great
Tastmo Water Out Of Your Ex•at
lng Water Supply? Remove lead
Chlonne And Odor For Only 1!3
5e Per Gallon Don t Delay Ca tt
Todayl614 245 5634

Household
Goods

Henry E. Oeland Jr..992.-Zl59

Full m•nresa &amp; boll apr.ng1 150
19" Col or tablt model TV SSO
Both In oood cond1tlon 30• 675
4861 .,., 5pm

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

GOOD USED APPLIANCE S

Kathleen M . Cleland 992-6191

Wuhe ra, dr yet s reh 1gerators:,
range~ Skaggs App liances, 76
Vme Stree t, Call 614 448 7398,
, 800 499 3499
Kenmore Washer Was $150 Cut
To $12 5 Kenmore Dryer Was
$95, Cut To S75, Whtrtpoot Dryer
While 195, White G E WashEtr &amp;
Dryer Set S205 Each, 1 Ye ar
Warranty, G E Electr~c Range 36
Inch Was $75 Cu t To $150 AI·
mond Caloric Elettrlc Range 30
Inch, $175, AlmonCI Ca tone Gas
Range 30 Inch Very Nice S175 ,
Fug1dait e Ha rve st Go ld Fr os t
Free Refngerato r Was St 25 Cut
To $95 Skaggs Appli ances, 76
Vane Streer Gathpolls 614·446
7398 , ·800·499·3499

layaway- now lor Ctwtstmas
Potly's New and Used Furmture
2101 Jellerson Ava , Pt Pleas

an&lt;
New Speaker Bo• $35, 3 W1ndow
Air Conditioners S~5 Each Sew
mg Mach1ne In Wooden Stand 1
Case $35, 81-4 24&amp;-5100
Tappan Eleclrlc Range CopperGood Condition, $65
1
Bike$10 614-441 0615

Office.......................... 992.-Zl59

OFFICE 992-2259
NEW LISTING · McNickles Road • Owner
has Reduced Price as an mcentive for YOU

TO BUYII Their Loss · Your Gam Very
Private Locat1on. Approx. 31 Acres with a
1996 . 28" X so· Skyline Modular. Home has 7

room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, bath In Master

Bedroom has a garden tub, double smk,
shower stall, lots of storage space, ceram1c
top bar, Island range, thermo payne windows,

CiA. alec heat wnh gas heater for backup
1o· x 15" fronl porch. new well. appliances.
gravel dnveway and large parking area
.tiOrJ.estly lhts Is a really n1ce home, Great

locatiOn
LET US SHOW YOU THIS
TODAY. PRICED AT $69.900111

mahogarty
bookcase,
Viet. oak
walnut
ladles
desk,
ladieslrlple
oak Sdoor
curved
roll·top desk,
dressers,
high boY,S, cedar chesl, Early cradle, Seth Thomas •
Sleslons • GHbert &amp; other clocks, lg. selection of
glassware. American Fostoria. Fenton, pink
depression, Jewell T tea pot, McCoy Mammy cookie
jar, McCoy Mammy w/cauiHiower cookie jar sells
wlreserve, Shawnee com casserole. Watt pottery
pitcher apple 1116, Lg. Hull pftcher 113·7, Hamlnon &amp;
Jones jug, rocking horse, Lg. copper pig, chalt Black
American boy &amp; watermelon, weather vane, Coca·
Cola sign, 1950's J.C. Higgins gi~·s bike. 1950's John
Deere peddle tractor, several lots of coins. Very pertlal
list - more coming ln.
A

AUCTION CONDUCTifD By .

. RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON ...

773-5785

PUBLIC AUCTION
SPECIAL CHRISTMAS AUCTION
November 6th 7:00 p.m.
Bidwell Auction House sponsored by Mr.
&amp; Mrs. Frank Call, Toys &amp; Dolls, Tools.

A Complete Christmas Auction.
Something for everyone.
Come early to get a seat and parking.
Auctioneer CM Stanley

RACINE • One Floor Older Remodeled Homo
wtlh vmyl stdtng, has 2 bedrooms, kitchen,

SYRACUSE · Beautiful one ftoor Brick na•l"''' .l
Home 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. ulllity room,
F.A N,G heat/C A . carpet/vinyl flooring d1n1ng room. knchen with bar. bu1R In range,
Garden space Real n1ce home ASKING oven. dishwasher. lo1s of cabinet space
Abllndance of closel$ Attached 2 car garage,
crawl space, anlc area. cement porcl1 &amp; Patio,
cement driveways and walkWays. 2 addKional
3 car garages In very good condnlon Want
dlntng room, hvmg room , 1 bath, lots of closet
space laundry room with washer and dryer,

More?? There's also an additional 4 room
home with 1 car garage In basement TPC

&amp;Auction

16' tmrtl.nd wood grain wood siding Grey S25 00 sq or 9

•

Sto~ Sl 00 Vd
WoUoha11 Carpet a, 814·44&amp;- 7•44 ..

Carpel &amp; V1nyl tn

Point Pleasant, WV

Public Sale &amp; Auction

112"l&lt;4lc8" 0 S.B Board $7.95 H or 50 llC IItts $7 50 aa.
t.lalal oldlng and roofing • patnlad and galvlnlze • by bundles

llnces. $380/Uo, 614-446 4928

1

MERCHANDISE

13 Round and Square Aluminum Porch Columna. 8' ttvu 12' tong

~ Bedrooms, 5 Court Street. Gal6·
4oht, Kllc:hen With Stove, Aelngerator. No Pets, Depoa1t, Refer

Successful perfonntlllOe as a Sales Rep may lead 10 acceptance

Mobile Home Shea for rani Call

9tM11/2price

3711 EOH.

mto

460 Space for Rent

38" Colonial Cedar Spindles $1 98 ea
11 Door and Window Trim 08J&lt; and Pine 1/2 prloo off reg marl&lt;e1
12 Wood and Hatt1 Board anti Bath PIUIOIIng From $3 99to $19 95

e• x

7795.

4782

10

14

Appllancta .
Re~ondiUoned
Wath«a, Dryers, Rangea, Refrf..
gratora, 80 Day Guarsnttet
Frtnc:h City Utytag , 814 -445·

Sleeping rooms wnh cook ln$1
Also trailer space on nver All
hook ups Cell alter 2 QO p m
304 7~5651 , Mason WV

&amp;Uaa.

4bdrm aptt • total electriC apphancea furntahed, laundry room
faclht1ea, close to school tn town
4,ppltcatlons available at Vtllage
Green APII. 149 or call 61 4·992

510

HousehOld
Goods

Bunk Beds /Mattresses. $ 150 Q(l
Couch/ High Back Chairs/ Ouo
man S t 50 00 Tables, GUll, t.tl
crowave Carr, Beds 614·U6 ·

pair
•
9 38". 42". 411" Weatem Rod Cadar Balaste10.

q1··--DOOII .

510

Galllpolll, OH •

Rooms for rent . week or mon1h
Starttng at S~ 20/mo Galha Hotel
814-448 9580

1 Aluminum WltldOwl from $12 95 to $88 95
2 Aluminum Slorm Doorlantl scroen Oooro $19 95 10 $69 95
3 Flborglool ~and Tub~. S75 00 to $1119 95
• F1oQ Aclyl~ Tube and Whirlpcol From $69 95 to 1995 00
5 CornOON • 1 pc and 2 po Handicap Colen and While $-49 95 to
$191195.
8 11100-e"x9'VInyllntaldRUQO·S795oo or2for$1500
7 HMvy Dl.1y C8tpel Tile- HMvy Au- Back 18' x 18' and 2•"
x 2•" 5 yard bo1 $29 95 Olecounls oo large quanutles
8 Ex1er1or Shunera • LauvenKI and Panel 6 $8 00 to $17 oo

Refrigerator Furn11hed, Owner
~~YI Water, Sewer, &amp; Trash t
war Lease, S~951Mo, Plus DepbSit, For More lnlormauon And
A~1cadon Call 61~·«6·0006 Or

We're seeking enterprioing men and ...,men wh&lt;! are really
looki111 IOwan! owning their own business in the near future. We
are offen111 time-limited (approximately one yeet) employment
scllina the loadina producll in the profe11iooal tool and
equipment lnduslry from a sts-f-lhe-an showroom-van.
Dwinalhis ''test drive" you will receive a salary, commiasion
and health benefits And, he given . full, comp1Wcosive,
company·paid traimng

Circle Motel, New Ownerah1p.
Newly Remode led Efhc 1encr
Room&amp;, HBO, C1nema1, Shcr.vtime
Weekly, Monthly Rates 614·4•6
2501 , 614 367.06,2

(614) 384-3645

Washer &amp; Dryer Hook-Up S1ove

Route ~V&lt;lllilblc 111 111c Gilllia '" ca

Furnished
Rooms

Building Supplies - Closeouts • Buyouts
Penn's Warehouee, Wellston, Ohio

i304·875-25-48
Bedtoom apt, Gall1pohs Ferrv

SALES
REPRESENTATIVES

450

YEAR END CLEAN UP

$ewer, Garbage Furntshed Rei
trances &amp; Oepas1t, Requ1red
6) ....448-0234

:

R1tc:hit Bn~ m OhiO Cort'91e1ely
furt"'llhed With washtt dryer d1Ml
washer anCI large ki!Chtn Wlll"' all
apphances. N•ce blth w•th large
tf'lower large matter bedroom
Wl111 a worki ng fl re~l ace llv1ng
area has lots cf room At $490
per rmnth With unlinea •ncluded. A
depoll1 or S•OC IS requtred For
more lnformar1on ca ll 61 • ·843
5343 and lteve menage

a Auction

I Bedroom Apartmenl. Water

$

MAINTENANCE
Applicants must have a strong mechanical
background, knowledge of and experience in a
manufacturing env~ronment. A working knowledge
of pneumatics and hydraulics.
Musl have
knowledge of power circuitry capable of using
ltes1llno equipment. Ability to perfonn repairs. P.M.'s
and
Abllily to troubleshoot on all
I runA• of equipment. Two years as a maintenance
I moAd1Ani~ or equivalent education In a·mechanical
'
Positions on various shtlts. Pay rate $8.75 to
per hour, depending on expenenca.
intt~res~ed
send resume to:
THE
COMPANY
2403 Pennsylvania Avenue
Wellston, Ohio 45692
Attention: Human Resources • EL

for "-nl
n~t• ground ttoor apartment

61H79-2768

992·2218

If you arc: mte~ted m this umque career- opportunJty, please
wnte, call or fu: Bob De Lauroplll, SoajHID'I'oolll Compoy,
67 Me- A&gt;e., Berpollold, NJ 07621; Pboae: (1110) 3760965; tu: (8011) 3711-4967.

A~ts

1·800-837.3238.

One bedroom apartmenr 1n Pt
Pteaaan~ 614-992·5858

t and 2 bedroom aparunents, fur·
"1shed and unturn11hecl, secur~ty
hposit required, no ~ets, 614

$

Electricians
Immediate openings lor Individuals who have an
electrical background, working knowledge and
expenence in a manulacturing environment, ability
troublashoot 240·480 volt power dlstribulion
equipment. both AC and DC motors, motor starters
with 115 llolt control, and control devices such as
photo eyes and proxlmtty switches. Must be able to
read electrical schematics. Knowledge of PLC's Is
~esirable.
Should have completed one year of
algebra. Must possess 2 years electrical experience
or 2 years equivalent education In electrical lleld.
Pos~ions on various shtlts. Pay rate $9 50 to $11.75
per hour, depending on experience.
II mterested. please send resume to:
THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
2403 Pennsylvania Avenue
Wellston, Ohio 45692
AUenlion. Human Resources· EL

Nice two bedroom apartment In
Pom&amp;ray, no pels, 614--992·5858

or Rem Or Sale 1967 1•xso 2
room&amp;, No Pet1, Very Clean One bedroom furntshed apart
14--258-608G
In Middleport call 614 ••s
61-4 992 2178 or 614 99 2
Nice 2 Bedroom Tra1ler No Pets
$300/Mo, $200 Depos•l. su .
Small One Bedorom, E•cellent
a56-188ol
ConditiOn, Washer Dryer, Stove
Lice 2 Bedrooma, $225/Mq , 8 Refr igerator
Included
No
Miles Down 218, N•ce, Relerenc Smokers, No P&amp;ts, $300 Oepo51t
fs, Depoth Requtred, 614 448 $350JMo Centenary Area , 81-4
f172, 614-256-8251
o448·2205

ro

1
as well as database experience.
Please send resumes to lhis address:
COST ACCOUNTING
PO Box62
Jackson, OH 45640
•

N1ce 2 Beelraom Furntshed
Apartment Galhpohs laundry
Room, Atr, No Pets $365 /Mo ,
Plus Depos~t 6141 446-lm

v;uded, No Petl, 614-256-1489

:~;~r\~~:~~g experience, have Lotus 1

•

New upstalrt eff1c1ency whh private tntranc&amp;, completely fu r·
l'ttlhed, qu1et surroundings, ttlree
m11es from. the Ravenswood
R1tchnt BrldQe Ill Ohio If you are
looking, 1t'1 a must see Irs $390
per month, l.lttll!les are 1ncluded A
$300 deposit 1s requued For
more mlorma110n or an appoint·
ment call ~,. 8•3· 53413 and
lwve message

fwo Bedroom Trailer, In Mason,
USQJMo Plua Oepo•n. Ulil1t1ea

forecasts and annual plans as well
a computerized standard cost system.
Candidates should posse~s a
Degree In Business, have two or more years

.... 5pm.

Help Wanted

hom~~

I Bedroom Uoblle Home, Total

:;~~;~They w1ll also assist tn the preparation

New provincial sofa • wtnged beck chair, new oak
• mehogany wall clockll, 4 Cherry ladder beck
caned chalra, walnut drop le8f table • 4 cllaln •
buffet, 4 pc. waterfall bedroom aulte, hand loomed
ruga, hl!ndmade quilts, chlflerobee, oak •
e--ta of drawers, baby cradle, 1940's baby
stroller, roc.ldng chain, VIctorian sawing stand,
Vlt:torlan sheet music, cabinet, pretty occasional
tablea, old white kitchen cabinet with gl... doora,
porcelain top white cabinet, large uaortment of
gl...wara, lampe, pictures, Chrletmee omamenta,
floral arrangemente, wreethe • swage.

mob1le

Jaclne. no peta, 814 992 5856

POSmON AVAILABLE
Local company has an opemng fn
Accounltng.
The person in this position will compile,
summanze and rev1ew labor and material us11gE1r:
labor and material
and produce various rnatnage;ment f

2:Kl4.

New 3Dedroom, 1 112baths m
cpuntry $4501mo 30• 675 2864

•6

f722. 8,... &lt;16-7788

flocrlc. No ~II. 814·388-93211

Plulllo!&gt;oai\ 304-675-7873

Rte. 7, Cheshire- Ph (614) 367·7999
Hours: Mon. &amp; Fri. 2:(1()..6:00;
Tues., Wed., Thurs., Set., Sun. 10:01)..4:00

EEOIAA Employer

• Middleport •

In qu •tl ~u rroundt ngs loc:ared
ttvM mites from the Ravenswood

• Price Memonzatlon
• Administration woli&lt; Including ordering. SCheduling, sales
budgeting. cash handling and mise book wor1&lt;
•

:::.:=:::.:..:;::=::::_-:-:-:--

Cere A8seseor/Can Manager position avail-

able In the Home Care Dlvlalon of the AI'BII

HelpWanted

ALDI FOODS
STORE MANAGER TRAINEE POSITION
$211,900 AVERAGE PEA YEAR
Aldl oilers a last paced ad aggreoalve hindi
management training polllllon leading to the responslblllly ol
a grocery rolail operallon Pooltions are IIVIIIIoble In lha
Galllpols area
QuoiiiiCilllona:
• Must have high school diploma ot GED
• Willing to perform physical woli&lt; Including stocking.
cleaning, cashiering. maintenance worlc wHh or wllhout
reasonable accommodallon

2b&lt;. Hogg Sl . PI PINUnt. I2VO/

The -ChCAJhire Cat 1\ntique 8hop

$
$
$
$
$
$

SUnday, Novetnber 3,1196

2 Bedroom house, no pets, refer .
ences &amp; deposn 30C 675-•556

years ren1 against rhe sale pr1ce,
two bedroom Pomeroy, lot fer.cecl
on two aide&amp;, phon&amp; 61•·992·

o Houses for Rent

11 o

Helen I. Canaday

110

For rant ar aale, will apply lhe fi"1

RENTALS
41

410 HousH for Rent

K1tchen, 12.( K1neon, Gathpolta,
Central Air, No Pets, References I
Deposit. 8H·••e 2158, 81~ 4-48
0603

Years

4970

utensils arc unfortunately not returned Thts ts a most

Three beelroom hous&amp; .n Syra cuse, 614-992-6315.

•

Meigs Co Less Than Lot Rent! S
-'cres $6, 500 $1 ,000 Down +
$101 90 Per Mo + Irs 'lburs In 6

68 Acres ( + ) 5 Miles from Oak
Hil l Oh10 $43,000 30•·675-

In Memory of
. Helen Hicks
who passed away,

Nov.2, 1995
Since you we11t
away, It seems
. School OiSII1C1. $89.500. 814 .. &lt;6·
nearer than belron,,l
7438(Evonngs)
We cannot toneh vonrl
3 Bedroom, eff1c1en1 home, new
root, v•nyl siding convlen}IOCI· 1nano, and yet VOIJ'l'j!l
non
with us more
.2 Bedroom, new w1nclowa, ~myt
...... 304-875-5162

New homes starnng at $170 per
month w1th on ly $770 Down Call
RUSS at 1·61-4·385-0698

NEW REPO'S ONLY 2 LEFT

In

·lot br anw.H pnce 304.-882·2583.

~3

1

3 64 Acres On Graham School
Road 18124 Barn Water, Eleelrtc
Ava llatlle, Cleared Off Green
School D1str1Ct. 614-4•8·1778

Pump And Lola Of Extraal

Btlhal Rd Alk1ng $35.000 304·
675-711&lt;16

3238

1VV7 Ooublewlde, 3 bedroom, 2

YN 30•·75.'&gt;5885

6&lt;W11

New 1997 1•x10 3 brm 1neludes
delivery, se!Up, skirting , steps,
blocks, and 6 Months FREE lot
rent Only $206 16 per month w1th
$1025 Down Ca ll 1 800 837

1997 18x80 3 bedroom, 2 bath.
$1 ,325/down, $218/mo, free alr,
With approved creelll 1· 800·891 ·
5777.

only at Oak Wood Homes, N1tro

Three acre• with pone! tor hJiurt
home 11te oft Sr 180, gr•t lOCI·
tlon w1th homes under conttruc·
uon, resrrtcted, $25,000, 814-H2-

1-800·251 5070

8777

1997· 2 &amp; 3 Bedroom, $995 down,

Wldt ll"'qUII'el piH.H)

New 1~7 14 Wtdes. 2 bedroom,
$15,225, fr" det•very and set up

New-1997 1• Wide- 3 bedroom, 1
bath, 1799/down, S150/mo, with
approved creellt Call 1·800-&amp;91 -

bath, S 1,595/down $235/mo, free

Parcel&amp; an Rayburn Ad Watet,
paved road , reeaonable r••tr ic
t10n s 30.. ·1575· 5253 (no 11ngle·

ROOMS $15 225 Free Oel1very
Set Up 1-1!00 25 1 5070

81•·992-2987

a1r, w1th approved credlr 1-800691-8777

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

WIDE 2 BED·

ltmlted Olferl 1997 doublew1de,
3bt, 2bath, $1799 down, $2791
monrh Free delivery &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro

2 Baths, New Carpe:t, CA, Heat

..

1e91 14x70 SkyUne, two bedroom
two bath, total elactnc $15,000,

U87 14

1982 14x58 Brookshire 2br, total
alec' heat pump, se,soo 304-

Factory Expansion, 3 Bedrooms,

2 Bedroom, e mtlea from Pr
: Pteaaant orr Sandhlii Rd. on

NEW

3-5 Acre Trac1aleft $500 DoWn
$150/Mo, County Water On State
Route 160 NMh, tl14·669·3-462..

1983 Schultz 1-4x70 With rx21'

:z
Bedroom wlbaHment, close 10
. school In New Haven, on small

):)4 755-5885

HUGE , 4170 3 brm Wllh expando
Will take care or moving Call 1·
814-385-9621 anCI ask Jor MIKE

576·20&lt;6

11 Acres 3 Bedrooms, 2 Balhs, 2
Barna, Pond, Ctty Schools, 81 4·
~ 370-9238 Leave Message

ter 4 years lree set up &amp; delivery

new carpet, new 52gal water
hearer, new wallpaper, great
cond $-1.975 304·675-5708

675-4689

REAL ESTATE

New 14x80 Only make 2 pay
ment&amp; &amp; move 1n no payment a1

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

1976 2bedroom, mobile home,

'

1990 Sun&amp;hlnt AC , Large COV ·
ered porch, Storage bU!Id1ng, 2
t.throoms, 2 t.drooma, convem
ent locauon, $17,500, 614-388-

For S1le Or Renr t98SI Mobtle
Home Gateway 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths All EleCtric, State Rou te 7
S Across From Oa~. 7/10 Acre,
814-256-15t0 After 3 PM

t9U F1scher 121180, 2 bedroom,
very good COnditiOn $5,000 30•·

• ClflPOI1Unlly boall.

3431

6-&lt;-U&amp;-6789

22~26~9_!!~!!1!-~kend~·~--~ $195/ma Free dehvery &amp; set up,

lho Fodaral Fair Houa1f11 A
ol 1968 wtolclunal&lt;oo Hlllop••

Need to &amp;ell 1mmedia ti ly Ntce
1985 1W0 bath 14170 Call Mike at
6 14 385-962 1

Toll Free 111 800-898-9778 E11. 0460
H 2814 For CutTIIrlt Uanngs.

Professional
SSrvlces

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

11141 1~x70 Skyll"'&amp;, 2 8 t OO.TII,
2 Balho. 1 Aoo. $26.000 Alto 7

- · Avaiablo

Galllpo~II~··~O~H~•~P~o~ln~t~P~Iea~sa~nFt~,~WV~·~=~~~T!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~S~u~nd~aEy~,N=o=ve=m~ber~!!!!3!!,!!!!1~.

.

Auction Cantar (304)77N447
LUNCH
MASON,WV
TERMS: CASH or CHECK WITH POSfTIVE
IDENTIFICATION
Not ~nelble for 1001dente or lose of prclpeny.

ANTIQUE AUCTION
""GIGANTIC 2 DAY*"
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER II, 1111111, 10:00 AM
SATURDAY,•NOVEMBER 9, 18111110:00 AM
Sale Locat1on: Activity 8utld1ng. Gallia County
Fairgrounds, Gallipolis, Oh1o. Just off Route· 35, at
Route 150 ex1t, stgns posted 90 miles south of
COlumbus, Ohio, 50 miles north of Charleston, West
Virginia
Mrs. Katherine Walker has ,been collecting Jnd
dealing tn ant1ques lor nearly 50 years Havtng sold
her home. we will sell at auction her outstanding
collectiOn of ant1ques and collectibles
ANTIQUES/COLLECTIBLES
Oak dresser w/mlrror, pme kitchen table, oak library
table. two (2) matching pine mantels. round oak table,
music cabinet. bent arrowback chair. plank-bottom
cha~rs. square-front china cabinet. p1ne cupboard,
cane and split-bottom chairs, several old mirrors,
piglon·hole cabinet from post office, spltt hickory
rocker, three (3) organ stools w/metal base. over 200
pes of stoneware Qugs. jars, crocks), salt ana butter
crocks. yellow and brown spongeware; large
collection of Victorian pictures and frames; gas lights
(brass/frosted). several wall otllamps, Aladdin lamps.
several hand painted shades, art pottery (Hullart,
Weller. Stangles lamp base). ten (10j D1etz lattems.
also Dietz scout, flve·llghl crystal chandelier. cast iron
Items, graniteware. twanty (20) sed Irons, country
store ttems. advertising items (all country store
related). Tom Moore c1gar picture. ant1que lools.
This sale also has one of the f1nes1 collections of
kitchen ant1ques I've seen. Also. farm-related
antiques. railroad locks (B&amp;O, C&amp;O), brass
candlestick phone. blue enamel washboard. marbles.
sheet mus1c (early 1900"s show·tunes), vintage
clothtng. super collection of children's books (early
and mid· 1900's), several boxes of books 'many from
1800's). Teddy Roosevelt lamtly calendar (1908),
catalogs from early 1900's (Sears, hardware,
Remington cutlery, &amp; others), McGuftey Readers, very
early pincushion and bisque dolls. butter molds
(!lower, acorn, strawberry. pineapple). ttn types. hat
pin collection, drugstore and other old bottles. ntce
variety of toys (D1sney. Roy Rogers. more) qu1lts and
comforters; beaded and leather purses, small oak keg
marked "Point Pleasant". brass tlems. VanCamp
hatchet head, eighteen (18) books 1n miniature (plays
by Shakespeare). washboards (Old Kentucky Home.
others), 1DO's of 1tems s1111 packed and too numerous
to ltst
GLASSWARE
Several art-deco lamps. several pes of occupied
Japan, Nippon, Majolica, Victortan china. Carntval and
pattern glass. Fenlon. beer steins (Germany),
country-store candy jars, glass dippers. over 150 pes.
of depression glass (ruby, cobalt. Adam. Colomal
block. Pnncess, Old Cafe. Ins. several other patterhs),
Loy Nei·McCoy vase, spatterware, Royal Bayruth.
Limoge, Cruet collection. collect1on of salts. German
and Austrian chma. paper weights, several decorated
lampshaeds. slag glass. It ts 1mposslble to list lhe
100"s of pes. of glassware 1n th1s sale.
GUNS, MISCELLANEOUS
Remington Model1100 12 ga. magnum w/scope. like
new, Remington Model 581 22 cal nfle w/scope, 12
gas. dbl. barrel (doublehammer, fancy engravings.
American Gun Co., NY). thirty-five (35) pocketkptves
(Cas~. Baker, others), Case XX butcher knife. thirtylour {34) straight razors.
ITEMS OF SPECIAL INTEREST
Two (2) calling card cases (Ivory, sterling s11ver).
political badges (national. state, many are early).
advertising badges, outstandtng collection of paper
items. Chinese MahJong game 1n case (1vory or bone
pes), Indentured slave art1cle (1836) lor purchase of
slave named 'Adam··. Seller- John Grey, J~cob lutz;
Buysr- Morns Morgan, Gallipol•s · Pomel~y-Pomt
Pleasant, paper 1tems, sliver certificate (1 917-$1 00).
Confederate $20 b1ll. slag glass lampshade (25" diam,
13" hi w1th multi·colored glass, decorative metal trim
shows woman at dock waving to man In boat. lower
panel has shoreline scene and log house). stlverplaled and sterling silver flatware in several patterns,
other Silver Items. cast iron mechanical bank
(Professor Pug Frog·s great b1cycle leal) pat date
Feb. 2, 1892.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE· We hope this ad has
aroused your curiosity. It has only scratched the
aurface.
AUCTIONEER: LESLIE LEMLEY (614) 446-6241
Uceneed and bonded In favor of the State of Ohio
OWNER: KATHERINE WALKER
Terma Of Sale: Cash or Check w/porper 10.
Food Available
'Bring lawnchalrs. Building has limited seat1ng"
Unhealed building - dress accordingly.
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS DR LOSS
OF PROPERTY,

walor and Syracuse water. Approx. 6+ acres.
Very Oulet • Pretly sonlng beautiful hornell
This Is It make appo1nlmen1 to see this onell
Asking $100.000 00
RUTLAND . Recently remodeled 1 1/2 story
fram home Vtnyl exterior, 2 3 bedrooms,

bath. appliances. plaster walls, wood flooring.
attic space, basement with washer &amp; dryer

MIODLEPORT · 2 Story Office Building with
apartments CiA, garage apartmonll, Good
location, prevtousty used as Doctors Ofnoe.
Asking $99.500

Large living room w1th atr1m doors that open
onlo new front covered deck Home Includes
calling fans and new ceiling light fixtures. BUCKTOWN ROAD • Very Nice level de
Cute homo · small lol Immediate that contains lhreo lots. Paved road. TPC
Possesslonll Reasonable offers w1ll be water available Nice building or Mobile
Home Silo with a River Vrew ASKING
conslderadll Asking $25.900
$6.500

RACINE · AP!lrox 1 873 Acres. ground with
a 14' K 70' mobile home 2 bedrooms, bath,

fronl porch. deck. ceiling fans. appliances
B B. furnace TPC water lmmedlalo
Possesslonll PRICE REDUCED $25,500
Small farm located near town . Just off SA 7 .
Lays 30+ acres with one story frame home
wltb 3 bedrooms, bath, cellar, 2 enclosed

porches. CiA. Woodburner. ffowors. fruit
lrees. &amp; barry vines. Price Reduced $38.000

•·.

BLIND HOLLOW ROAO • Approx 2 acres
vacanVwooded ground. electric and TPC
water available ASKING $5.250
Trying to sell your home??? Trying To
Do It On Your Own??? Feeling Uke You•re
All Alone?? No One calling On The
Phone?? We Can Halpll And Take Awrry
The Worry, Call Todayll Right Now...
Hurryll We Have Buyers •
We Need Ustlngslll

BLACKBURN REALTY
514 Second Ave., GaUipolis, Oh. 45631

Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
~ Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111
Helen Boyce 675-7873

NEW LISTINGIIII - This bnck, ranch
home sets on 2 15 acres, m/1 w1th1n 5
mins. ol town. There is 2 bedrooms,
w11h an unfinished room upstairs, lhts
can become your third one. The living
room has a floor to ce11ing fir.eplace A
pertect place to spend your wiQter
months ahead. The walls of th1s home
has tong-an-goved walls. They are a
rich honrry brown color. Your equiped
kitchen has ah eye level oven,
dishwasher, and counter top range. In
the d1n1ng area there IS a large picture
window that looks out on a pond where
the ducks swim Your part1al basement
is l1nished. The same rich wood is
located 1n th1s area. There ts room lor
storage and your office In this area 'The
storage 1s abundant In th1s house With
a new roof, new gas furnace. new
central rur. new carpet. and a black top
dr1ve there tsn•t much any one can do to
Improve thts home Call us today.
$116,900

NEW LISTING· 2 bedroom, 1 bath
located on 127 River St Roof 5 yrs.,
double pain windows, large storage
building 2 lots each measure 50x1 50.
Call us today. $52,900.00
NEW LISTING OF VACANT LAND·
located on Lake Dnve Subd in Sec. 27
RaccoonTwp. this lot measures 100' x
1oo·. The water and sewer lap is
available. $12,000
WANT TO OWN A HOME?
NO MONEY? GOOD JOB?
GOOD CREDIT?
CALL BLACKBURN
REALTY lOD~V.

NEW USTINGIIII • This home Is
located at 10317 St R(. 7 only 6 miles
from town. There Is 7.66 acres m~. The
home ts 8 room, 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath.
You have a fireplace to keep you warm
this winter. There Is 5 76 acres of
pasture land a 25x30 barn. The fuel oil
furnace is 3 years old. The stove and
relg will slay. You have river lrbntage
to go along wtth lhls property. $87,900

HUNTING TIME IS AROUND THE
CORNER. · You and your frienda can
enjoy th1s hunting retreat. $34.900.00
20 ACRES MIL OF GOOD HUNTING
LAND Th1s hunting land Is oft of Jones
Road. Any hunter would love to own
his own foresll Whh hunt1ng season
just around the corn~r. gtve us a can.
$19.000.

Thla property le located oH Gerflei"
Ave. There is 50' of lots #11. 12, 13.
14, 15. all of lots #16. 17. 18. 19. 20.
There is water, electric, and sewer lor
this property. You can bu1ld your dream
. home here and have lots of room
around you. $20,000

Located on Garfield Ave. there is an
older home w~h 2 305 acres along wtth
this Is a beautnul view ol the river.
$49.900

We are mortgage

LET US HELP YOU WITH
YOUR RENTAL NEEDS. YOU

consultants. You may be

WOULD BE SURPRISED

SURPRISED at what you

.THE AMOUNT OF
HELP WE CAN GIVE YOU.

can

Call

614-446-oooa

•

I

'

�•

,;

54!1

Sporting
Goods

Mlsctlllneous
Merchandise

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Compund Bow &amp; Sightt $80, 614· Ettclflc Cook Sto~t. Gat Cool(
4&lt;6_.9&lt;U
SIOYo, Solo l Cl1ao, Uvong floom-

Heav~ duly utility tra1ler,

540

Cl"x8"

Chatrt, Swtnl Rtcltnar, Seara
Uod 700 Remington, 308 e~~hblf, Portabtt D11hwasher, Ch•at Of
mint condtlton. Padded cammo Drawers , Drtlltrt, ~ Pc Btd·
sUng Wtth qutck reLease swtvels, room Suttt, Color T.V 18,000

bed, 2' aldet, aol1d metal w1
ramps. 5 lug wheels 1500 304-

Redfield 319t40 tcOpe Wltn •
BTU W.ndow Air Condlhoner, 2
caps, 3 boxes
pacido;ll Seta or Kttchen Sett , 814 ·379 -

Modal MAC-1155 $75 304-895-

cammo eau, at new,

tl14-992·191171eave rr..sage.

Jhot, new, sttU In boll
.bten &amp;hot 304-875 2475

530

Electric CraltmattC bed , adjutt·

AERATION IIOTOfiS
Repe•rad, New &amp; Reburll In Stock.
ca• Ron E~ans, ,,eoo-537 9526

60,000 BTU ·$785, 60.000 BTU S885 100.000 BTU -S995 Tha

An11ques

s1so 304-m-5888

JET

6 po p m 814 992-2528, Russ 446-6308, t-800-291-0098
MOoroowner
Fall Special New SeptiC Tank
Aera tors Mc1ora Compete $399
pl~i tu installabon $35 p!u1 matenal614 446-4782

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Firewood Mi Med Hardwood Full

2 Braakhl11 Sets $80 Each; What
Ndt Stand $15, Entertain:"'""'
Centtr $40; New Coveralls Stze
•2R S15, New 40 Channel Mobile
CB Rld!o $35, Side By Skie Rafriterator Freezer, $200, can 814-

Cord (3 Stacks t6• Avarag~ . 4
HrQh 8' Long) 614·388·8879

-446-092•.
2 Sofn, 2 Chalrl. 1 Sofl Sleepe!'

For sale Barnett Commando sell·
cockrng crossbow wrth arrows &amp;

Allar SP.M 11514-44&amp;8·«197
22 cu~c foot refrigerator, white,
$150, couch &amp; ctw.ir, $100, 11hp.
laWn tractor, $175. queen s•ze
waterbed, 1100. everything verr
goodcondition,814-7422829
AutomatiC Whirlpool washer,
worta good, 150 080, 814·992·

6897

Flute, $SO, 8 gallon humldilrer,
used, $40. Juruor suede JScket
$30, 614-992·2472

broadheads, new ~alue $400 ,
sale pnce, $199, Remington mod ·
el 700 wrth black stock, 243 cahber new cond•tron list pnce $529
se lling pru;e $"'00, w1th sheila ,
Wrnchester model 1200, factory
deer gun 12 gauge, excell&amp;nt
cond•ton, $17,5, 61 4-742·1123
For sale Sega CD System With
appro.1umately 30 games, $300 ,
304· m-5305 arter Spm.

Babybed, awmg, hiOh-chalt, car I f,;;;;;;-i;;;;;ii,";;;i;;';;;d~2CQ-;;;
seat, stroller &amp; walker. 304-675· ('I
Deef, grarn led, $200 per
4548
(luarter, cut, wrapped and froze,
e14·992·2143 or 51 4-992· 6373
Boots By Redwing, Chippewa, (lionie)
Rocky, Tony Lama. Guaranteed

l1ft Cha1rs, Electnc Wheelchairs ,
·Stall Ufts, Van Uhs, Scooters,
New !Used Bowman's Homecare,
614-446-7283
OAK &amp; t-IICt&lt;ORY firewood S40
load , must p1ck- up 304 -675
6494
Proneer 8 D1sc: CD Changer wrth
wrr&amp;less remote control, 1350 call
alter Spm, 614 949 2909 or ,6t4
687-0941
Prom Gowns. Black &amp; Green
Beaded Size 8, Dragon F.ly Green
Beaded Size 57 814 446 49£14
Refngerators, Stoves, Washers
And Dryers, All RecondltiOfled
And Gauranleedl $100 And Up,
Wrll D&amp;ltver. 814-669·€1441

Sohd Oak Drning Table 4 Chairs,
Pard $1,800, Make Oiler, 112 Carat Pear Shape Dramond Patd
$1 ,100 Askrng 1800, 3 Rolls Fl
Charn length Fence Appro• 150
Ft $150 614 2!45-5006 leave

e

:JQ4-578-2753aflor4pm.
Combat boots, army camouflage
clolhlng, tnsulated coveralls by

S,ndyvllle PoBt Ollloa

Sam

S¢merv•lle's
Fnday-Sunday,
Noon·S OOpm 304·273-5855.

*

Of/

'-"'~~ ~.
"

,,._
M.. OJJb·JII""U

WATER WELLS DRILLED
FAST REASONAaLE SERVICE
814·886·7311
Wolle tannrng bed, nP.W bulbs &amp;
startms S1,000 304-882 2066
Woodburner With Slacks 1200,
House Furnace 75,000 BTU W1th
5 Rooms Of Duct Work $200,
Trailer Furnace $100, Glass
Shower Doors, $25, 814·256·

1722

550

C~mplete Culligan Water Flltranon JPurltk:alion Sys~em For Sale

b-~

v.J,d
C&amp;'
1 "f::JJ«lf#

lJL«IUISt

~OIJG4UI4

560

5~60~~Pe~ts~t?or=sale

Pita fQr S81e
cHRISTY'S PETS

27, N S.concl Awenu•
Mlddl1p0r1, ~
614-992-4514
Monda~ Saturda~ 12arn-8pm
Groomng, kennel pets, supphea
AKC reg1s1ered dogs, puppt&amp;l,
repllles , sprders, rish, m ice,
aquanums $9 99, 25 lbs cat ijner,
$2 19 Wrll hot1ot school dis·
counts tO% d1s co unl Wtth S25

"'""

TMank you, Ch rrsty
Coupon

560

Pttstor sale

c;.II;,.IJJ.OIND•ml

$4,000 New, Wll Sell For $1,600
0~0 Call «114-448·4447 Even-

JACK SKIN BALM: AI· ;
Spots And Scratching ,,,
IProm1&gt;tt1 Healing &amp; Hau Growth ~~
&amp; Cats WrtMout St•r· _
Full blooded Dobetman pupple1
NORTH PAOOUCE 814- ....
1s1 shats &amp; wormed, ntady to go
) .,
S100 304 675 4508
..
Look Beaulllut Pupp~e!i, Purebred • :
HAPPY JACK MANGE MEOI
Stb&amp;rtan Husktes. Some Snow ,."
CINE Promotes Healing And Half Whitt SOme Black &amp; Sr l ~er Has Growth To Severe Mange, Hot Had 1s1 ShOts, And Wo rmed , \1"'
Spots , &amp; Fungi On Dog a I
Great Buy S100, 614·256 6444
• ..
Horses WHhoul Stero ids. J 0
• ,1
NORTH PRODUCE li14 446
Pets Plus , Sliver B"r 1dge Plaza , ,
1933
(10% Oft Every Thing, Every Dayl) •
614-441 ·0770.
v""

'•••'
.,.

Real Estate General

AKC RegiS tered Beagle Pups, 7
Weeks, Shots Askrng $60 Each
Steve Stapleton Work 614 -446
4172, Home61ol255 1619
•

Publrc Nouce STEEL BUILDINGS
New Wrth BluepMts MaJor Steel
Bur ldrng Company l rqurdatJng
40x60J12
Was
Bulldrngs,
$15,500 Now
50~~:100x16
Was
$17,990,
1,000 Now
1-800 406

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
E•ant Enterprises, Jackson, OH

Devil Uprtght Sweeper $50;
Color T.V Wttt't Remo1e

st5, 814-&lt;148.. 579

:Real Estate General

AKC Registered Sable Colhe, Female, 8 Weeks Old 614 · 446
7644

620 wanted to Buy
Standing timber , pulp wood or
land Wtth tll"'tber, c:all eYBnlngs alta. 6pm 614 ::S70 2909

630

Livestock

15 Cows &amp; Hailers 1 Polled Char·
ola1s Bull, 1 Whne 8 Month Old
Colt, 614·245-5812
17 Year Old Horse Great For
Trail Rldlng 81&lt;4·256 -9364
~

l

2 •mo Crossed Club Calves, E~~:-

ceKenl For 4-H 614-388-9771

Simmental Buns For Sale, Exc&amp;l
lent Bloodlme Call eu -256 6402
Or 614 446-1158 Alter 5 30 P. M

..

640

Hay

&amp; Grain

g~!~~~!;~~~~~:ooc~;,~~~ t~~:~~~~i~:l Affalra Hay Rolls-Storage and de-

2063

hver~ available

Morgan Farm

f.~·:~::.x~~~~~::~·.·~~~~ 1 30.·93J.2018
TRANSPORTATION
Horse

Tra,cto&lt;s. Husqvarna
Weedeaters Etc
lme Ol livestock
11
Groomrng &amp; Show
Also Have A Van et ~
Equrpment lncludtng 5 Round
ers, Gr.nder Mixer, Trac1or1 Etc.
See Ua For A Complete Lrno
Partl &amp; 5ePIIC8
Compare The Oualtty ):)rice &amp;
T1mel~ Matter in Whrch We Do
Our Repair Work On Any
OJ Equtpment &amp; See II You
Fully Satlsfredl
W• Appr.el11e Your Butlnesst
614-446-1675
Jlvlden't Farm Equipment
31371ngalls Rd
Dalllpolis, OH 45631

882·2407

Th1s 4 bedroom house has an awesome all new
krtchen and bath. Central atr, replacement Windows,
basement. Extra lot for garden or children's play
area. Nicely landscaped with lots ol perennials. Ali
this for JUSt $49,000. Low Interest financing
available. Call todayli You can be m your own home
before the Holidays.

Want to Find an
Athens Buyer?
List with Usl
Member of
Athens Co:
Board of
Realtors

New Holland 66 Square Ba ler,

''
"LIST WITH &amp; BUY FROM THE PEOPLE THAT CARE"

11014 HOW ABCIUT THIS Perry Twp, Green
Schools, 3/4 bedrms. Bi-levei, kit. w/range &amp; ref.•
Dining rm., family rm., Pat1o, 2 car garage. Extra lot
for mobile home w/septic &amp; water Reduced to
$69,900. VLS 388·8826/446-6806.

Call Weekends Onlr, 814-7422457

71

o

Autos tor 5ale

88 Cavalier Z24, 5 apeed, runs
exc:ellent, blue, aharp, $2995,
814 742-3802.
1973 Mustang w•th good engine
and 1ransmt11ion, 17DO 080,
1984 CMevy van with chair lift,
only 94,000 miles, $5000 080,
614..Q8~3956

.:__...:..:c::...:.:.:.::______ l
1978 Ponliac Catalina 4 Doora,
301 C I Engtne Good Body, No
Rust, $800 614·440.&lt;4579.

1980 Chovy Impala, 53,000
mrlos, gDod running cond $800
304-675-2714 or 304·875-15n
1980 Oldl Omega $700 614-446·
0519

't1 Ciwly Suburban 414, 350 au

by FBI, IRS, OEA. A¥1illble your

1885 Otcll 111 Roooncr PW, PDL.

Chftane Oltaal 1\182 S1 Miles 1
Gallon 1475 Or Seal Offer, 1514·

1988 lroc Z-28, 305 TPI , Stpd,
4 10 pOSI, SIC, pohsh8d alUminum wneela, tint, great anap•t

Asl&lt;lng $8,900

~575-5335.

1988 Pl~mourlt Sundanc:e High
Mileage, Very Dependable, $800,
614-245-9239
Must Sell 11189 Hyundat, 4 Door,
GL, Sunroof, AMfFM Cassette,
AutomatiC Trena, Red With Grey
Interior, Good Shape With 71,000
Mtlea, Lots Of New Parts, A Great
Deal Below Book Pnce $1 ,400,
614 446 8795

1990 Grand Prtl SE. red, auto,
pw, 1)1 sunrool, lumbaf compull
SBfV ICe center, V8, 83,000mi.,
tully loaded, $8 500 304 8754013
1992 Ford Festrva, 55,000 mllea, .
4cyl, 45mpg , 2dr, Sspd, e1c
cond Askrng $3,000 304-8Q5-

3598
1993 Ford Mustang LX. nearly all
factory options 4 cylmder, ver~
good m snow, 30,000 mtles, very
good condition $6500 OBO 614992·41,
1993 Red RS Chevv Cavalier, 4
Cyllnd&amp;r, Auto, Arr 33,000 M1les,
$8,500Fim1,fl14 446 7127
1993 Saturn GL2 Sunroof, lealh·
er, loaded, S12,50Ct, 1996 Uuatang A1r, Auto, Spoiler 11 K Mlle1
$16 ,500, 614-448 -4564 leave
Message.
1995 Neon Sport Coop Low
Mll&amp;a, Excallenl Condrtiol'l, Sacrl·
flee For $9,4013 Under loan Val ·
ue, 614·367·5044

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

tomaric, air, tlereo. high Mihtl,
tNOO. 1514·192-4111

Ul78 CJ-7 Je•p 304 eng1ne
3spd, new .,.fla , manu11 llttr·
hard top, runs &amp; looks good

•no.

Credit Problema? E-Z S.nk Flnanctng. For Used Vtt'tlclea No
Turn Downa Call Ruth 814·448·

t3000 30o-87S.tl888

Budget Pw;e Tre.ntm lstlOns.
Used r Rebutl t All Types Ovef
10,000 Trartsmtsstans Clutches
Flywheelt, Overhual K its, 814
245-5677
New glt tanks , 1 ton 1ruck
whetls I radiators 0 &amp; R Auto,
Ripley, WV 304 372 3933" or 1

2897

800-273-9329

GM c:ar, 4 spted trantm1t110n,
hl:a every thi~ lot a cha~ O~ef
but poddles. $375,614 992·5388

790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

Gtntral Home M11n·
tentnce· Paint1ng , vrn~t sldrng,
carpentry, doora w•ndOWI, baths.
mobile homo reparr and more For
free utimat&amp; call Chet 814·992·
8323.
Col!tna ConstructiOn bUildrng and
remodeling, awr 10 years e~~:pert·
once Free estrmates 614 992·

SERVICES

1i19iQQ~:JFF;o,~dEE~-1ii5iOo~v;;.n;;:,s,;;;,-;;;l

810

Home
Improvements

Convoralon. Shorp, ;,o:·~=~~:~----:BA=sE"M"'E"'N::T-'-~:5~ Ulloa, $18,000 81
WATERPROOFING

840

Punch 200 ' car amp SC'fund·
stream SPL 12-tnch tpeakers in
a box, $400ea, $750 togott'ter

350,

I 78tl
A ld

304-575-3882
SEIZED CARS F&lt;om $175

Porschtt, Cadlllacs. Chevya,
BMW's, Corvenes, Alto Jeeps, 4
WO's, Your Area Toll Free 1800-898·11778 Ell:t A·2814 For
Currem listings
Wanted to Du~- 87 or newer Ca·
prrce CIBIBIC, !!1USt be 4 door, V
8, loaded , Bfougham or LS, 614

742-3802

!

BSOO

24.000ml,. $17,000
1742

•n•'·"'''·'

~5~.(l4 17, ml AIC AMI
FM attteo 614-446·7380

740

Motorcycles

Appli ance Parts And Serv1ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Veers Ex penence All Work Gua ranteed.
FrencM Cr tr Maylag , 614 446
7795

-'.:::._------'--

Appu.lachun

Lo1

h11 been a
I !o:ocd•cl' ln the los home
1111a011t ry for over 15
I ••••·•· Choose from ov«:rl
I

w.•n

cullom dctign

you.

Heat Pumps, Air Condrtlohlng, II
You Don'! Call Us W&amp; Both Lose I
Free Esumates 1·800· 291 ·0098,
1314·446 -6308. wv 002945
Aestdenua l or commercral wrnng,
servrce Ot repa~rs Mas1er l1·
censed elec trtCiln R•oenour
Etectrn;:al WV000306 304 675

c 11

1

RSES CERTIFIED DEALER
LAWRENCE ENTERPAI~ES

r~o~ot~c~o~n~d,~l~n~ll~dt~~=~~ 0870
a 1 Or
e 11800
h 287a os (614)
44fi·
S17,000
76 Rogers
Waterproofing
190.4 Chev~ 2500 4X-4,

&lt;

de11p arc a few of the
or,c&amp;IOnl why 2.000
r1omJili•• wm build a
I h1&gt;me thlo year!

Electrical and
Relrlgeratlon

"'iii3ji;;;;dc;;;.;;:;;,;u;:;;.;;l
Unccf)druonat hlel+me guaranlee
1903 Grand Cherok&amp;e
Local reltrences furnrshed Es
I btl h d 9

lenc•ror cllicicoey.
ldur•lhili,ty and OcKibility

DRYWALL
Hang, firush, repatr
Ce1lrngs te11ured, plaster repa1r
Call Tom 304 675 4186 20 years
expenence

Uuat Sail 1~83 Jaguar 82,000
Mrles, New Painr, (Compl&amp;ta) New
lntenor, N•ce Car, Alot Invested
W1ll Sacrafice $6,SIOO W1l Consid·
er Trade 814 446 8795

5opd,

LOG HOMES

!IillO

0015, wv 304-578 2398.

Mull Sell 1982 BMW 3201, Ro-

8795

Home
Improvements

Ron 'a TV Servrct , spec:1a11z•ng In
ZeMh also servlcrng most other
brands House calls , 1 BOO 797 ·

Menu Drag Cit 377 Powet Gl1da
513 Dana S9,50D, Tum Key, 15.50.
118m Afur'15PU 614-258-138&amp;.
burlt Motor , New P11n1, AMIFM
CaSMtte, Sunroof, Sport Wheels,
Has Good Start On Complete
Restoration, Runt Great, Will
Sura flee AI $1,100 4!114·446-

810

Comfort, «:onvenieaec,

Y8fy l'liee,

e 245-5100

256-&amp;&lt;59

760

tapper. 15000,

area now C1t1 1·800· 513·4 343

E"- 5-9388

P.M

-,·1

perts, .. tv.,, with
814-il82·52-411

I U-4 Thunderbird, lora ol new
pot II. ~75- 7233

PS, QOK Ulles , Very Nice Car,
$3,200, 41-t-2,5-5887 After

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
~.,:-:7-:'N~,..-n.•-wo,..,..,--.....,.~-,ong-...

rure. •ieclronics, computer• tiC.

Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc.

new

Dept. -GOT,

P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV 25271
1-800-458-9990

C
u.
es entta 10 r omm&amp;tCia 1 ., 1rlng, New Servrce Or Repatrs Li·
C&amp;t"'led Elec:lnclan Welsh Elec·
Inc 61 o4 446 9950 Galhpohs,

Oh10.

.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

---..!-------......II.....---

'

Real Estate General
t04t15 HonOa 300, '·wd, lass
20 hours. III:C c:ond $4,C00

578-2871.

720 Trucks tor S81e
1992 Ford )(LT p1ckup, tra1ler
package, 302 engrne, one ownef,

Condrtion.

$8900, 81&lt;-~2-3184.

730 Vans &amp; 4-WDs
'79 Dodge Van, runs oood, $900
080, 614·g49-241 1

. ~-;-.

-~~-·- --·~&lt;:~

Real

1998 Ford Ranger XLT, 11,200
mtles long bed, auto, a~r
$12,800 304·675·7669
Must Sell 1990 Geo Storm AM!
Sport Wheels ,
Strrpe Package, 4 Cylinder, 5
Speed, 79,000 Miles, Lots of New
Parts , Well Mamta1ned, Super
Nice Car, A Steal Below Book At
$3,800,614-446-8795

FM Cassette

"" .

"

"

OFFICE 992-2886

'

48 Chevy 2 dr Sedan, good
shape, $2,400 , 89 Grand Prix, 2
dr , auto, n1ce, $3 ,SI50, 2 large
show cases, good ahape, 61&lt;4·
949-2045 ar 614 949-2836

. . .•
~

HAYES REAL ESTATE

.•~·•
•••
..

Jack W. Carsey, Realtor
382 E. 2nd Sl., Pomeroy. Ohio
Office
Home
(614) 992-2403 or 992·2780

EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNliY

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

®
u-•

RUSSELL
Cheryl

D. WOOD, BROKER [H
.

742-3171

,.,.,.,.

FOR THOSE IN THE KNOW
Has Everylltlng, 3 bedrooms, 1'/, baths, ranch style, large
beHment, 2 large outbuildings, 2 ACRES mil State Rt.
141. Call Now To, See This Property.
t757
LOT- SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Ona large lot approx 101'x171'. City water, city sewer,
natural gas, elect~c. all are available at this lot. Prepare
NOW to build yout dream home In this pleasant, quiet
'lind nice subdivision just a short distance out of
Gallipolis. Lot 117. Reattor owned.
1731

PHONE OfFICE 446•7699
KENNETH AIISBARY, PH. 245·5855
WILUS LEADINC~HAM, BROKER. PH. 446-9539

t

~;;;;;;;i;R;e;a;I;Es;;ta;t;e;G;en;;e;r~a;l;;ii;;;;;;~. . . . . . . . .r.~
BIG BEND
rY, INC.
~

........

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

.111

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

~

S!

•

~

NEW USTING
expenelve - Close

The 2D's Still Uve . Great
to starter or Investment. 3
Downtown! Located on a bedroom, 1 1/2 bath mobile
qultlter street In the town, home In excellent condition
affordale ranch has an situated on a nice sized 101
ljftbeatable location. Offers Live comfortably for now and
!lYing room w1th fireplace build your dream home later
qpen to the kitchen and Priced at $22,500 tso_s__-1
~lnlng area, 3 bedrooms,
"
liath, oversized 1 cer garage
ljn a large unspoiled lot close
lo tha schools Convenience
fllus priced at $74,900 lffl15

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER

446-4618

Judy De Will
J Mernll Carter
Rulh Barr. .

154 Uta Drive • Come home
and telax on the front deck
wh1ie watching the Ohio River
rOll by, or take a ref1esttlna
In the lnground pool or
take a break In your
spacious home Home -,·--:;:_.- Investment Opportunltyll
bedroorns, 3 baths, LR,
id8ally located at 809 Second
OR, eaten ktlchen,
Avenue, this 2 story brick &amp;
basement and 2 car
frame gives you the auto and
Also, a detached
pedestrian traffic needed for
pool house All this Sl~~~!~~
any type business. Approx.
3 9 acres, m/1. P
2200 sq " olhlrs 5 rooms &amp;
$87,000. 11435
bath downstairs, 3 rooms &amp;
bath upstairs, partial
basement and a new roof 20
x 22 cont:fete block garage It
will be $worth$ your while to
property. $125,000

•
47158 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Aluminum sided 1 1/2 story
home, living room, kitchen, over sized detached 2 car

garage FA electric furnace. Addhlonal mobile home hook·
up Must callloday for an appo1nlmentl 11551
AnRACTIVE CORNER LOT • THIS 3 BEDROOM
RANCH style home. Uvtng room, kitchen, laundry and oauq
Partial basement (Immediate possession N877
USE YOUR IMAGINATION. This butldtng has alot of
potential. It currently houses a grocery store whh a IIUte bit of
everything from great cuts of meat to hardware There IS a
large second story section that would make a great craft

barnl So much for a really great prlcell Call Cheryl for
detallsl W861

Canaday~
25 LOCUST ST. • GALLIPOLIS

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446·3383

Y~:~~h~;~~;~feel
IT "Homo"l
'
pervades

this Inviting bnck ranch.

Extra sized rooms Includes
living room , kitchen, 2
bedrooms &amp;
more.
Breezeway attached to

gara,e. Over 2 5 acres. and
a 30 x 40' barn Plus more

Closs

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Allen C. Wood, Reattor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ReaHor/Broke:tiG-0971
1745
Jeanette Moore, ReaHor·
Tim Watson, Reattor-256-6102
Patncta Ross, Realtor

•cr"

1&lt;&amp;001 Twa
mJI wrm a
14x70 Mobile Home, out bl~ ,
fruit trees Priced ifllhe low 30 a

COMMERCIAL- Ptrlool lor Auatlc One atory, wilh two
ollrt .. touol.,.... Block Bldg bedrooms, altuated on a
t 4600 oq ft 100 fool road lol, &lt;arpet tnrough Out,
frontage, nice size gravel datad1e&lt;f ll'trago. City School
parking Jot, Ideally located. Olotrtcl Upper 30'1 1132
M5000
12001 • VACANT ACREAGE · Moatty fl-.t and some wooded, approx. 2 5 acres Pubf!G Utrlitlea

Available

NEw USTING • 12001 • 124 acres
lnfOffflalJon

m/1, mostly rolling, publiC Ull!Uea available Call for more

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800-894-1066

HUNTING/REC.

· Really

446-1066
REALTORS:

•

•
Then

YOU WON'T OUTGROW THIS HOME! 10 ROOM
HOME HAS 6 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS .. LARGE
LIVING ROOM AND FAMILY ROOM BOTH HAVE
FIREPLACES. FORMAL DINING .. EAT IN KITCHEN,
PATIO, BASEMENT.. 2 CAR ATIACHED GARAGE
PLUS ADDITIONAL 24' X 20' GARAGE .
APPROXIMATELY ONE (1) ACRES .. GALLIPOLIS
CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM.
NICE COUNTRY
SETTING .. $95,000. CALL SOON!
LOOKING FOR A HOME IN THE CITY? WE HAVE A
VERY COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROOM... WITH LARGE
LIVING ROOM. EAT IN KITCHEN, UTILITY ROOM,
CARPORT, GAS FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR AND
FENCED BACK YARD. ALL FOR $58,000111
TWO STORY FRAME HOME .. SPACIOUS LIVING
ROOM, DINING ROOM. ONE BEDROOM AND BATH
ON FIRST FLOOPI. TWO BEDROOMS AND BATH
ON SECOND FtoOR .. LOTS OF STORAGE SPACE.
IN GROUND POOL... CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
S!)ONI PRICED LOW AT $39,000111
BEAUTIFUL LAND . OVER 300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR WAYNE NATIONAL FOREST AREA ..
PRODUCTIVE FARM, DlJDE !'lANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT OUTDOORS. 3 BEDROOM HOME. 3
BARNS. OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND,
TOBACCO BASE. THERE ARE' VERY FEW FARMS
THIS
ON THE MARKET. DO NOT MISS OUT

amenities 1875

why not consider this

extra nice cabin that can
easily be moved to your
location, or would make a
nice office, etc
Nice
woodwork, balh, kitchen,

cornea
with this 3 bedroom ranch,
dining area, kitchen, living
room, apprOJCimately 24' x
30' garage with furn'*(e &amp;

1tv1ng room, bedroom, 12x

water prus a

16 fronl porch. Let us litO)¥
cute . New price

butld1ng Call for Iota mqre

24'

K SO'

~~~~=~ ~PURCHASI

A NEW MOBILE HOllE?
Why pay a higher price for a
new one, consider thla
almost new 1995 14' x 70'
home "'ith Iotti of oxtrae.
Skylights &amp; french doors thllt
compliment the master
bedroom
and bath.
Addltionul bath, cathedral
collings In living room end
THE
OF ROONEY • Uke new 14' kitchen which fs equipped
x 70' mobile home with 22' with lots of ca91ne1 space,
BlCpando. llvlng room, range &amp; refrlg Underpinning
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 &amp; deck Included Call for
baths Like new 30' x 40' mpto~r~e~~d~ot~a~lla~. lmmo~lati·
1 Lo-ed price
metal garage with a $:
clearance of 18 feet. Used
presently

for

••
•••
::

••
•
•'

''

•

••

that

you

wli•

tractor,

ltke

1171

atDGET • Strotclterl Cozy 3
bedroom home! Vtnyl Bided,

on nlte size lawn. Modern
kitchen , L-Shaped dining
area &amp; living room. Attached
carport 1821
COMMERCIAL· Presently
used as the Foodland
building situated betw8en
3rd &amp; 4th Avenue. Plenty o1
parkmg

can Russell tor

complete ' details I
1157/1858
$10,000 REOUCED PRICE
for this 7 acre mil tract of

Pulyour
special touch88 on this warm
haarted one story homo.
Large living room, dining
area &amp; kitchen

One acre

level lawn. Call quickly

Anyone would be proud of this
home located at 258 Carman
Drive Large family room, 3 or
4 bedrooms or have thai ofllce
you've been wanting, 2/2
-··"""' baths, dining room, equipped
kllchen, two car altachod
arage w/opener. Owners have
mainllined home nicely Quiet
neighborhood wHh small lake
Cell lor appointment N~01

•'

'•
•' •

•

==--......,

Landscape Artists &amp; Nature
Lovers will appreciate thla
outstanding piece of property
Located 011 40 acres, mn, of
grandeur,

more butldmgs to fit your

needs Priced at $149,900,
better hurry end ceil
Carolyn for more details 1809
~ou

HARRISONVILLE· Here equid be a nice family home. Lots
of large rooms, 7 In all. Prelty woodwork and a stained
glass window In the living room Downsta1rs there's a living
room, dining room. kitchen, bath and laundry room .
Upstairs there's 3 good size bedrooms and a 1/2 bath,
wraparound enclosed front porch 811d-a couple of
oulbuildlngs one has a cellar In it. All sitting on approx 1/2
acre
$21,100

LOVETT AD.· 25 ~88 of land a 14x70 mobile home with
a 10x26 addition Home has 5 bedrooms, H you need
plenty of room this Is the place for you. has a 2 cer garage
with a beautiful apartment overhead, Ihere's a 1Bx30
basketball court, 6x10 corn cnb and a 1Bx20 outbuilding.
Must see.
~.900
Here'• 1 nice .t1rter home, retirement home or rental.

Kitchen, living room, 1 bath, and 2 bedrooms d-lrs.
Could be 3 more upstairs. Sasemenl with a seperllte frutt
cellar. Nice view of lite river from the Iron porch. $11,000
POMEROY· Uocoln Drive- A 1 1/2 story home thai has
been completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms. one
bath, dining room, and a nice front alttlng porch. Has
central alf and H eeems as H tt IS In the country. Quiet end
on a road with low lrafflo Great place for a family. S45,000

.

PORTlAND RD· Racine- Very nice modular sitting on
appro•. 2 acres of flat ground Home has cathedral
ceilings throughout. 2 skylltes, garden tub. fireplace,
eetelllte, heet pump and centralatr all for.
WAS "\:000 NOW $84,000
I_~IARIRIIIOIIVIWi· A 1 1/4 acre parcel of flat l..d and I
f 4x70 Nellltua Mobile home Has 3 bedroomo. large b111t.
big muter bedroom, newer vinyl flooring, sateiiHe dllh,
central air, large bacl« deck, and a front porclt.
$30,000

Make uo ., offer. $20'o.

11ft

HORNER HILL· A flve acre wooded home site that he5
electric end weter available Two lots available for t7 .ooo

•
•'

-h.

•

land situated at tho edge ol
••
Gallipolis.
W844
t'
COMMERCIAL
l
•
R..SIDENTIAL PROPERTY!
Includes 2 dWelllnge on and
Ave which are zoned
commercial office and 21oll BROKER
OWNIDI
on 3rd Avenue zoned SpiCiouo 2 1t0ry brlclt hamel •i
residential. All hu toto of 3 bedrooms, 1.5 batho, lui, '
potenlial poaalbllltleo. Call bateme~t. garage, largo
for more complete detaiio. cov.,ad front porch, ioto
11M
more. Loclll1 StrOll.

...

this

redwood raised ranch offers
formal LR, cozy kHchen with
nawer appliances. large rec.
room wHh pool table &amp; hot tub
area, Florida room, 3 BR, 2
balhs Other ameniti881nclude
a 2 BR log home, huntlni
cabin, stocked pond, garage
workshop with 12' cellfnga
accomodatlng up to 4
vehlclea, horse bam plus 3

· owners need sold now·

IMIIEDIATI POIBI!IIIOIII
2 story roomy home that hu
4 • bedroome, bath, \living
room, dining room, kitChen,
two nice level Iota each
being appro•. ee· X 1M' &amp;
more. Call todaylll78
3 ACRIB 11/LI $6.000
County water available!
County achools. Nice place
for a mobile ~or pi- to
build
a
home.

DEXTER· A very private setting with a 1 1/2 11ory 3
bedroom home sitting on one acre plue 4 loti Has storage
building and many fruH trees.
$311.000

CLELAND HILL RD.• A nice country setting ·A ten year
old ranch style home with wrap around porch, heat pump,
3 bedrooms, 2 1/2 car garage, and bam sitting on approx
33 1/3 acres. Partly wooded and partfey pasture $75,000

wooded

machinery &amp;
some
automobile repair. 3 Acr88 of
beautiful land. This Is one

lol Newer•
windows .
available. G1ve
1862
NEW USTINQJ RENT NO
MOREl Planing 14' x 70' 3
bedrooms, 2 bath mobile
home w/ lots of amemties
Equipped kitchen, catheral
clellngs , vinyl underpinning,
front &amp; back parches
Blacktop driveway 1 Car
garage Over 1.7 aero lawn.
$30'st814
LOTS FOR SALEI Wooded
&amp; private lola 20 to choose
water
from . County
ava1lable C1ty scltoolsl Oh'
such as pretty view ol Gallia
County. Raalrlctedl Home
Owners Assoc. For corttplete
details call July. 1145
$13.100 ASKING ~RICE'.
FOR THIS 14 x 70 llobllo
Homo • thai Ia extra nice,
lncludoe remodeled lnlerior,
3 bedrooms, bath, living
room, kitchen CaP today for
an
appointment.

4 Bedrooms for the Price of
3111 Spacious a yr. old walk-out
ranch with generous room
sizes and storage. Ideal lor to
growing family, lhls home
situated on 3 lots. each
approx. 100 x 300, features 4
bedrooms. 2 baths and an
above ground pool Some
finish work needs to be
on this house, so If you
handy, lhts could b"eokilng I
bargain you've been 10
for. Priced lo sell quickly

N506

.. 441-0262 Tammie DeWttl..........................245-0022
.....379-2184 Martha Smith ................................... 441-1919
...... 446-1093 Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742·3171

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

LET US WORK FOR YOU'
CALL US TODAY!

WI.

~~~~=~::::1 For SAle qu 1ck huch p low and
Ron We ller Pups, At&lt;C Regil· drsc lor Farmall 100, $175, Leer

H"drau
rrc Oil $12 5:~-:ild•~~~~::l brown
Chicken
a 614·985
for sale,3956
white 50J,
,
75(,
Siders Equipment,
-.;WV 304-875-742t
Fifteen brocl Holstein heileu, very
111C8, 814 992·2623

10gal tank set up spec1als F1sh
Tank &amp; Pel Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave Porn! Pleasant. 304·675·

hlrl Clean, lnlld&amp; And Out
11,400, 81.t 370-21545.
•

t987 Cutlass Ciera 72,000 Mrles
On Engine, Askmg $2.000. fJ1C-

614 ·0~2-7421 .

Brg Dog Sale Adull Breeders &amp;
Puppres , Chows Dalmauons,
German Shepherds, Pomera
nalns, Husky, Poodles, Yorkres, &amp;
Sorne Samoyed Puppy Palace
Kennels, 614 388-0429

•L!o!!T!!~~!Y1H~MJ!C•
·

CROWN CITY OHIO,

CI'RS FOR l1001ltucks, bOall,
4-wheet.t'a, motor hOmat. lurne·

der, Auto, PS, P8. Crultt, Till. N;,

Autos for Site

Real Estate General

; NEAR RIO GRANDE

.

510 LonG Tractot Good Ti1e1
Wetline PS, Low Hours, Good
Shape, 814-258·1274

1$84 Olds CuiJUI C1trra 4 CyM-

Purebred Srbenan Husky pup room1. 2 Baihrooros, Updated
pies, white, blacks, grays, blue Home, 2 large Barna, Reduced
mask, wormed, $ 125 . ToS169000El14 256·6943

'78 John Deere 2840, 82 np ,
1657 hra with 148 JO endloader
bucket and forks, $13,500, calf

AKC S1bertan Pups Rare Colors
Blue Eyes Very Intelli gent Pet
Pr~ce $T50 To $275 614 446

205 Filth Slreet
New Haven

t99tl GT42 ATV Bush Hog 4
1.4ontha Olds New Condition
S1,100, 814 448-8015
'

71 o

t988 Pon..c 5,000 STE Exctilont
Cofl(jbofl, $3,200, 814-245-5752

610 Farm Equipment

%omesteaa r.Beruf
882-2405

1\175 Ford 5000TI'8CIOf', Wtlt'1
New Farm ~nd loadtr, 1514-371·
9381

710 Autos for S81e

LOEVELY F4RM
118 Acres Mostly Level, 4 Bed·

2728

0

)lery clelln 1 I&gt; o1ofy 3

- - l l l n g•• 98Cre
io~ high, overlooking
Jleccoon Croek. Avell..,le
, lmrnecll1181y. 2198 Cree
Ylow Drive elut Corajl,demavllle Road. Owner
~II conolder financing.
prtce Reduced. $39.900.
1 NEAR B!QWI!LL
~ llory dWellng on 1 ecre
l::omer lot. 63 WoodamiM
j&lt;laod end Sl. Rt. 554.
priced
$31.900.
Nice
IHtllng.
' Cell tor additional
lntonnetlon:
'
CORUM REAL
'
ESTATE COMPANY
814-2211-0027

042i
Purebred Cocker s~anre l pup
plea, tatls dor'lt, n1ce blonde male
lelt, t'tousebroke, loves chrtdren,
S110, 61&lt;4 992 5144

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

tl

luning &amp; repairs
Need Tuned? Call the
61&lt;4-446-4525

Puppy Pal•ce tcertn ..l, Bo•rdmQ,
SIUd Servrce PUPPtet. Groonung,
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade All Breeds
Pajmenu Welcome 814 ' 388

AKC Regtstered Male Cqcker
Spantels, Both Adults, 1 Black &amp;
Wf111e 1 Bull &amp; Wh1te Wllh
Champion Bloodlrne, 614·379·

ol

Recliner Chair, 614-446·

:!404

Shih-Tzu puppltt , AKC · regll·
tertd, call alter 5pm 304 6757499

tj!00-537-9528

zo• G.E

1

Poadl• puppies, (iny ttlcupa,
while, At&lt;C, Shott &amp; wormed, elsa
minlaturt Schnauzers, 814-887

814-245-0433 Afier 5 ~M

AKC Reg•stered Datmauan, 1
year old, female, house braiien
S75 Good With childre, 304-882
3733

8827

Building
Supplies

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

tared, Champ ron Bloodfrne, OFA ftt»erglau topper lor thor! bed
Cerlrfied Sire, 11t Sholl &amp; Ranger, $180 , 22' long 1-beam,
Wormtd, Ready 1 t/1198, $350, caM 614-247·2961

CAROLYN THORNE, BROKER 862·2447
SANDY EUAS 88?·2221

concret:e &amp; Plastic 5epdc Tanks,

Dirt

~560-::-_Pe_t_s_tor_Sa.....;,le__ 610 Farm Equipment

"

Female Goldt'l"' Retr!B'Ief Pup 111
Shots &amp; Wormed,,~,? Weeks fi!d ,
$75, 614·258- 14~

1f111L

Ciallsman lawn Mower Wllh
Wagon &amp; Trller, Green House
Flbts 606 &amp; 808 Pate Pllts Anrmal
chges, Truck Topper, Windows,
Siorm Wtndows. 15 Ft. Tr~-Hull
B~at And Tratl8f t&lt;eroltne Htal·
8P'S, 814·258-«1915

•·;

Real Estate General

.,._.OI'u-44UIII

IU Cr.tf C.., R~

AKC Male Boxer, 4/mo old ,
tnots, wormed &amp; shan ta1f, very
good pe~ $110 304 675-7869

Gas Heater, 20,000 Hourly STU
Input 7,500 Uimmum BTU Input,
S75 614·446-4705

STORAGE

~

-

low Monthly Payments FREE
Color C1talog Call TODAY
1.fl)Q.642·1305

Warm Mornmg Stove Nalural

Upright, Ron
Jackson, Ohro,

Real

~/

A Groom Shop Pel Grooming
Featurrng Hydro Bath Don
Shuts 373 Georges Creek Ad
814 446 0231

Venlleu gat heaters, kerosene
heaters &amp; wood stoves In stock
Srders Equlpmem 304-675-7421

Cale, II;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~I

lipolls.

Lowest Pnc:81 At Shoe
Gal·
Coal or wood trove, $50 Kawasaki 3 WhHter 250, $500 1984
Plymoulh Voyager S2.0DO 080

Block bnck, atwer pipet wmdows, lmtelt, ttc Claude Wrnu~rs ,
Rro Grande , OH C1ll 1514- 2455121

Tan At Home
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl
Corrrnerc.aiiHome Untts From

St99 oo

Shop the Pomeroy Thnlt snap we
buy &amp; sell Jeans, baby Item• or aU
kmd&amp; toys &amp; lurnllure, 1514·992·

3ns

Building
Supplies

560 · Pets tor S81e

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

400

550

Suburban coal &amp; wood burnrng
ttove W/lhermosta.t &amp; blower

never ------:=:-::=~--.,.... . Krrg Wood And Coal Stove With
FALL SPECIAL
Blower $350, 1985 Dodge Cara
92'"4 Htoh Etltciency Furnace. ~an $1 ,800, 614-446-76 ) 6 Attar

Above Prtces Are For Furnace
Bu~ or sell Riverme Ant•ques , Only Free Eatlmate To lnttall
t12o4 E. Matn Street, on At 124, Furnace, Duel Work, Etc 5 Year
Pomeroy HOUr$. M T W. 10.00 Warranty All Parts Lrfettme War
a m to 8:00 p.m , Sunday 1 00 to ranly On Heat Exchanger 614-

540

Inter lhermal furnace lor salt

3755

2c· bauet, 7mm Rem. Mag 4· 5388.

Studio Couch &amp; Ch11r. G•rl's 10
Speed Bike, 55 Gallor), Fiah Tank
W1tt'! Hood 814-448 4944

815-&amp;348

2720 AFTER e P.M.

Remmgton Modal 700 ADL Syn able,ewa long length, coat
ethic bolt action, center tar rtfle , $2700, atk tng S-400, 614 992·

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Sunay, November 3, 1996

~~~;No~v~em~ ber 3, 1996~·.

;P~age~~D6~·~~~~~~~~~=~~~~.P~o~m~e~ro~y~·TM~I~dd~le~po~rt~•G~al~llpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV_
520

••

SR 33. ApprOK 112 acrt• with a 2 story home thet has 3
bedrooms Alao .home has central air and equipped
kitchen.
$80,000

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
BROKER - 446-9555

CLELAND AD- LangaviNe 80 acres of lovely rotling lend 7
112 acrea of MIn hey- many beautiful homnhu oome oak
and walnut- all mlnerll rights Included.
$80,000

DOTTIE TURNI!R, Broker..........................ll2-8182
JERRY SPRADUNO ................................ MN13t
CHAAMELE SPRADUNG...........................MI-2131
BETTY JO COL.Liftl8...................................clt2·2JI3.
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................II2·1271
OFFICE ................................................ "''''''II2·2111

11031 NEW UITIIG -WHAT A
GlliAT HOMEI 3 BR, 3 bath
Frtmo I Brlclc spill MI. roal
I hilt pump In 83.
hellor, t.R, DR, Fom. Am .. Roc.
nn .. ldt; rm .. large tot In kltdttn

-hOt-

w/1011 of storage apace, flniahed

b

n nent

Thia Ia a mUll i881 Cal

Patty for = r private showing

lodly!H5
4,
no:ll LOCATION! LOCATlOIII
G- ln'Mtmlnl or hOmO. Mlko
an appointment Ia He lhis 3
bedroom 1 112 bltha, full
biiii'I'I8UI wllamlly nn &amp; 112 bllh.

1Jv1r4J nn ,

!It...._

""*'9 nn , ldt.,
I ClfiiGII. Localt«&lt; In Dtl
Clly
01 &lt;lllltpotll
QUiet ·
Mostly
retiredon • niiQI'Ibort.

-

--NOI.

AFFORDABLE CIIU. VLS SH·

•

�;

Ohio Lottery .

Sunday, November 3, 1911

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea.. nt, WV

·Bengals edge
Ravens In road

. Super Lotto:
15-16-17-21-37-42
Kicker:
9-3-2-2-7·1
. Pick 3:

match up

0

•
Vol. 47, NO. 121
011118, Olllo Y1lley Publlohlng Compllny

.

'

.

''-

The FDA?

No

Washington Bureaucrats?

No

1 Section, 10 P11111 35 cento
• A Genn1tt Co. Nowapeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 4, 1996

'

~Dole, Cli·n ton scurry abo.u t in r~ce's
·
final
hours
.

,.
·.

' By CHUCK RAASCH
.
·GNS Political Writer
' WASHINGTON- The 1996 C'llJlpaign rushes to a biuer and frenzied
:~lose with signs that the boule for the presidency is tightening in some key
:battleground slates, as wavering Republicans come home to Bob Dole.
• Bill Clinton's internal polls still show him with a low double-digit lead,
:and that trend was backed up by some public polls released Sunday.
• Yet in some states, including electofally important Ohio. polls showed the
·mce much closer. And Republicans said their internru polls showed Dole grun:ing in the South, pulling states such as Tennessee, Louisiana and Kentucky

~ UAW

'

within GOP reach; and ·more traditional Republican stales like' South Dako•
ta and Nevada leaning more in Dole's favor.
The real battlegrounds are in at least19 tight Senate races around the counlly. many in small slates. And. in about five dozen congressional districts,
light struggles will delennine control of the House.
In the final hours, Dole and Clinton concentrated on many of these small:
er places. Although it has but thiee electoral votes, Dole stumped in South
D~kota Saturday ni.ghl allll Clinton wiii blitz on Monday to campaign in the
tight race between Republican Sen. Larry Pressler and his Democratic chal,
Ienger, Rep. Tim Jollnsori. Other states that usually don't see a presidential

candidate after Labor Day - t.j.aine and New Hampshire, for instance, are getting late-minute visits by presidential campaigns beca~se of their close

Senate races'.
DemocratS did not dispute Dole was closing in some states, but said Cli~­
lon still is well-positioned to be the first Democrat re-elected since Franklin
Roosevelt . The bigger question may be whether he rushes in with a mandate
or limps in with less than 50 percent.
Nationally, the polling picture looked as it has for weeks. The exception
may be that Ross Perot, who has 'hammered Clinton 's ethics, seems 10 have
(Continue&lt;! on Page 3)

local continues ·strike
;at GM's· Wisconsin facility

NASCAR? ·No

.'

No

Other Sports Events?

· Cloudy tonight, lows In
the mid 40s. Tunday,
partly cloudy. !llghs In the
lower 60s .

Pick 4:
4-1-4-7

•

1 ren
Protect
From To acco Pro ucts?

•

~1

•Sport8 on Page 4

ou

••

'

.

~ Indiana plant

ment Saturday evening. hours after the possibility of a strike there still
GM and the UAW settled on a tenia- remained. Local talks continued Sunlive national contrB;Ct in .Detroit.
day, and Burkh'llller said the two
Under tenns of the Indianapolis sides were deadlocked over health
contract, OM agreed to hire 200 more and safety issues . .
employees for the plant, retain exist- . · · GM sources had said a Pontiac,
ing sertiorily ,.,..les and give workers Mich.,. pickup plant likely would
lens of thousands of dollars in back close today. And of the five GM lightpay.
!rUck plants left operating, tWo More than 1,000 af the plant's Oshawa, Ontario, and Aint. Mich ..
. · By JR ROSS
: Associated Preas Writer
2,750 UAW members voted on the -depend on Indianapolis parts.
INDIANAPOLIS- Workers ala contraci, union officials said, with 94
Despite the Indianapolis • vote,
: metal stamping plant here ended a 'percent ·voting in favor. Upon heating Morrissey said a temporary shutdown
; five-day strike that had crippled pro- the news, workers immediately began in Pontiac was still possible .
· duction of General Motors pickups stuffing picket signs into burn barrels
Regardless of accords at individ: and sport utility vehicles wbile a at the plant's gates.
ual .plants, the national agreement
: walkout Over working conditions
"Obviously we're ~leased that we now goes to the UAW-GM council of
: continued at a Wisconsin plant.
· were able to reach a fair and equitable local presidents for approval Wednes•• Workers a\ the Janesville, Wise., agreement. We're go,·ng lobe call•'ng d ay. ""'
. to membe
' rat,_.,ore gomg
. rs .or
plant- which produces lhe popular people back as soon as possible,'' said . ification.
No details were immediatelY
Chevrolet Taboe, GMC Yukon and GM spokesman Pat Morrissey.
' CbeVY.rGMC .Suburban- sail! they · ·Employees .began returning to released pending Wednesday'sl)ieet·.:.
were·Qptirnistic that Sunday's SI!Uie- 'work Sunday afternoon '!lld.all work- · ing in Chicago. But OM-chief negomenl between GM an!( the . l~i· · ers were expected to be back.today, tiator Gerald A. Knechtel said the
11/'lapohs work~rs would bode well for Morrissey said.
deal followed the pallern established
lhe1r negotiations. Wllh the automak-- - Morrissey did not know how long in the national pacts the UAW signed
er,
it would take for GM to resume oper· earlier with Ford Motor Co. and
don'tlhink we're top far behind ations al four asserribly ·plants that Chrysler Corp.
now," said worker Brad C.Sper. "! were idled by the Indianapolis strike.
· Those companies guaranteed to
think they',l~ concentrate on gelling us
Fort .Wayne was the first plant io maimain at least 95 percent of their
..
.
shuldoWnbecauseoftheslrike. hran UAW-cove•edjobsforthenextthree
.back now.
The 4,800 Jan.esv1lle worker,; who out of parts Wednesday night, idling years, with exceptions for an induswalked off the JOb early last week · 2 250' workers.
· try do)Wnlurn and jobs replaced by
claim that management has hired loO
• On Th~sday, the strike idl~d impro•ed productivity. GM was
few people to handle the w~rkload. 3.500 workers at a plant in Moraine. seeking broader e&gt;.ceplions that
They satd they were requtred to Ohio. halting, production of Chevro- would allow it to trim itS work force
work at least 10 hours ~f overt•~•· a let Blazers and GMC 'Jimmy ·spon .' by tens of tl)ousat)ds of jobs.
The UAW said its national barweek. and had been demed vacauons utility vehicles. And' Friday, GM
and lime off hecause of labor short- idled 4,700 workers at assembly gaining committee endorsed the pact
ages.
plants in Shreveport, La..• and Linden, arrived at . early Saturday unani"Our big issue is manpower. N.J ·
mously. It was to be submiued to the
We're shon of workers ," Casper
Fort Wayne Local 2209 president UAW-GM leadership council of local
· Joe Burkhamer said Sunday that GM presidents for approval Wednesday
said..
Negotiators in Indianapolis had notified workers that the plant oofore going 10 members for ratifireacbed tentative contract agree· would reopen Tue~day morning . But cation.
·

:accepts terms
.:of new pact
.:with automaker

'

Yes

State Laws.

Yes

Local Law Enforcement.

'

'-,•,

.'
'

'

Yes

Schools.

'

,'

'

'

~

Yes

.

Families.

,,

:·1

a

Families?
Yes, above all others.

,•

•,

...

-Students learn court system___,

&lt;

FDA Regulation of Tobacco
Is Wrong for Our Families and Our Farms.

Gab·inet-·-m·em·b.· ers····.·
boost Strickland
campaign in M~igs
'

lion, which are directly ~ffecting
By'TOM HUNTER
southeast Ohi&lt;&gt;," Riley said.
Sentinel News Staff
Two. U.S. Cabinet inembers
Riley commented on effons,
included Pomeroy among their stops spearheaded by Republican House
duiing a weekend tour of southeast . Speaker Newt Gingrich, calling for
Ohio, as they c'llllpaigned for Demo· major changes in the structure of the
· cralic qmgressional candidate Ted 'Department of · Eoucation and the
Strickland and Ohio House candidate elimination of college financial aid
Jeff Fowler.'
·
programs. such .as the Pell Grant
U.S. Secretary of Education funding for students.
Richard W. Riley and U.S. Treasur"Education is the defining issue in
er Mary Ellen Withrow address\1(] a this year's campaign. President Clincrowd of Democratic supponers at a ton wants all people to be on that
rally along the Pomeroy downtown .'Bridge to the 21 sl Century,' which he
riverfront Saturday afternoQ~&gt;.
has talk!'~ aboutduringhis campaign .
Riley, a South Carolina native and Education is crucial l&lt;t his goal of
1993 Clinton appointment, said that having all Americans' on that .bridge,"
Slricl9and was the most outspoken · Riley said.
.
.
.
and involved legislator on education
"This· administration has positive
issues that he has evei worked with. education"· proposals on the taole
1
"Teq worked closely with me on which will be implemented during.
the House Education ·Committee this second tenn. Ted Strickland is
wi)en he served in Washington. His still very much respected in Washinsight and presence have been sore- . ington fbr his work lo,ward improvly missed on that commiuce during ing education in this country during
the lasttwo years. We hOpe that the his first tc·rm . We hope Ted will be
· people .of the Si&gt;lh District will given the opportunity, to return to
return Ted to Washington to fight for . Washington and continue his figbt for
imponant issues, inc ludi ilg educa· these issues Tuesday," Riley said.

y

I

· COLUMBUS (A.P) .,.- Environmental regulations aimed at purging
Ohio's polluted industrial .land are so
confusing and costly that they might
actually impede cleanup, business·
leaders said.
.
.
Environmental interests also have
complaints, but they say the. propos·
als don't go far enough.
'
Businesses from across the stale
have wriuen to' ihe Ohio Environmental J'rotection Agency, v;hich is in
charge of inlplem~nling lbe plan. The

'

·''

•

You Decide, November 5th.

Richard Riley

•

Wi1hrow said that the economy is
lhe best it has been heading into a
presidential election in sever~l years.
"Last year. the U.S. ·Mint produced more coin and currency that
they ever have. It's a very interesti'ng
time as far as the economy .is con&gt;erned. Interest rates are up, as well.
as new housing starts. The Clinton
administration has done an ~xcellent
job in this area," Withrow said.
''I'm counting on Ohio to pull
Pre&gt;idenl Clinton over lhe lop on
Tuesday. I feel that this area of the
state wiil play a big role in electing
the president. and will ele&lt;;l Ted
Strickland to another tenn in Con•
gress and Jeff Fowler to a term in the
statehouse," Withrow said.

environmentalists take aim
at Ohio's regulations for site cleanup

'

. ',
"

Meigs County
Lentea and Melga
. Malson.

~ndustry,

.\

\

surer and current U.S. Treasurer Mary Ellen
WHhrow spoke to a crowd 1t a Saturday rally
In downtown Pomeroy. Behlnt;l Withrow a,re,
from left, congreaslonsl t;endldate Ted Strick-

1.

.

'

•

General Assembly, a~thorized it two
years ago.
"Thc. o~erriding concern is that
lhe statute that was intended to
enhance urban redevelopment may
now impede it," Richard M. Frankos·
ki, manager of environmental propenies for BP America Inc ., said in a
l~uer to tHe Ohio EPA.
. The program, kn,own as brownfields recycling. is an auemptlo spur
voluntary cleanup and n;develop.menl of idle, polluted industri.alland.

'

The Joint li:ommillee 'on Agency
Rule Review, whic~ includes legis· lators and appointees from the ·governor's ~ffice, must ,approve the regulations before they can go into
effect. The commiuee has set a hearing for Nov. 19.
·
Some of the ·complaints raised in
the' leuers were that the regulations
are confusing, vague and expensive;
. require tests for contamination
· w~elher they are needed or not; and
rely ?n. outdated lesting procedures.

'•

Burley Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association, Inc.
Lexington, Kentucky

Athens Halloween bash yields 211- arrests
I,

'

\

The Burley Co-op, founded in 1921, now represents over 155,000 family farmers
· in Indiana} Kentucky, Missouri, Ohio, and West Virginia.
·

''
'
;'
••
'
'
~

l

·.

tMnw

Trial
from Melga County's th,.. hlah •eohoole ~rtlclpated In the second annual Melg•
Cojlnty Mock Tllal program Friday It the Melg1 County Courthouse. The progl'lm, organized
by the Melal County proeecutor's olflce, teachel1tudents 1bout the crlmln•l court eyet.m and
·tfiem with eJll)erlence In 41 oourtr- environment County Judge Robert Buck and
IIIINY attorney Charles Kn~ h8lll'd Frlday'e ca.... OHiollll from the Meilll County School•
offloel Judged studetoll durll)g their ptllenllllonli, ch-lng Eutern High School'• II teem ae
outatandlng trill team. "Thli fs • terrific program. Thlt provldee tire kldl with a real learning
axpartence,
• uld
Melg1 County Superlnterldlnt of ~e John Riebel.
'
.
.
'

=:!vldH

,I
I'

'"'

'' .
'
'
ATHENS (AP) - Police in l.jlis
southeast Ohio
mad,e 211 arrests
during an annual Halloween .street
party whir.A attracted alioul'30.000
people.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said
. most of the arrests Saturday night and
· early . Sunday were for disorderly
conduct or underage possession or
consumption of alcohol. Among .lbC
, other cFrf~$ were eight felony drug

citY

counts, three counts of indecent
e•posure,'two counts of theft and one
count of burglary. ·
· Police reported that I 09. people
were arrested Friday 0ighl as partygoers in town for the 'weekend
wanned up for Saturday's event.
No liquor l'etrnil holders were cit·
ed for violation• on either night
Although no major problems were
reponed, Mayer said he continued to

..

have safely concerns about the event.
He said. he would like for the party to
begin and end, earlier and for the city
to hire addi tional officers instead of
relying on outside agencies for assis-

tance.
The event began around 3 p.m .
Saturday. Police had cleared the
streets about 12 hours hiler.
· Police made 184 arrests during
last year's Halloween party
.
'

.

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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