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12-The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

;·Where to find old-fashioned boXeers.
ASK ANNE • NAN

By ANNE B. ADAMS and
NANCY NASH-CUMMINGS
. DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I am
1111 elderly man, 70 years of age,
:and have worn boxer-type shorts
~th a small strip of elastic on both
sides, and thnie metal snap-buttons
in front. For the past two years I
have been Wl8ble 10 fmd them anywhere. I am wondering if you can
help me.- W. HUDSON, Council
Grove,Kan.
: DEAR W.: Thank heaven!t for
~he J.C. Penney catalog. The fall
end winter edition features Towncraft triple-snap, yoke-front boxers
- just the ones you're seeking.
They are on page 534, item R5042205B; package .of 3 is $13. To
order, call J-80()..222-6161.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I've
been searching for a simple kitchen
tool, which I used to have not only
in my kitchen, but also in all the
unit kitchens in the school where I
taught food classes. It was called a
Foley Fork, and it was great for
matmg pastry or gravies. It was

made by the companr. which also
sold Foler Food M1lls. Do you
know if thiS fork is still available?
-lONE MEISSEN, Crystal Late,
Ill.
DEAR lONE: Mirro Corp. now
mates the FOley products, but they
have discontinued the Foley Fork.
We're sony.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: I
need some help. How do I clean a
wood-burning stove door with a
glass insert? I don't think it has
ever
been
cleaned.
STEPHANIE
WARNER,
Congress, Ariz.
DEAR STEPHANIE: There's a
product made by Rutland ProductS
called Hearth &amp; Grill Conditioning
Glass Cleaner, which removes soot,
creosote, carbon and other minerals
from ftreplace inserts, glass doors
and windows of coal- and woodburning stoves. It should be available from any store that sells fiTCplace products or wood stoves.
If you can't find it, we know it's

availAble from Lehman Hardware, hole in the center with,a knife point
P.O. Box 41, Kidron, Ohio 44636.
or scissors.... I've made some for
FEEDBACK: DIRECTIONS my ~Jer and it sure mates
FOR MAKING YOUR OWN playmg 'Oo FISh' and 'Old Maid' a
lot less frustrating." .
PLAYING CARD HOLDER Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
Sister Mary Stephen of Wheeling,
lll., writes, "One of our sisters lost P.O. Box 240, Hartland, vr 05048.
the use of her left hand so she uses Questions of general interest will
a holder that is·homemade. It's a appear in the column. Due to the
block of wood with slots in it; the volume of mail, personal replies
number of slots depends on the cannot be provided. • .
number of cards to be held. It's no
•
Anne B. Adams and N10ey
mastt.rpiece but it works."
Janet Wade of Buffalo Grove, Nash-Cummlnp are co-authors
. Ill., writes, "Let's save our pennies oV "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" (Whetand those of our seniors on fiXed abne) and "Dear Anne and No:
incomes some money. Here are the Two Prize Problem-Solvers
instructions for mating a playing Sllare Their Sec:rets" (Bantam).
card holder. Material needed: 2 · To order, call NI00-888-1220.
plastic lids, i.e. margarine tub lills
ATTEND CAMPOUT - Pomeroy Boy Seoul Troop 249
Copyritbl1!194 NEWSPAPER
or ~mething similar, I paper Cas'
accompanied
Pack ~ (WEBELOS) had a weekend eampoat at
Em'ERPRISE
ASSN.
tener, the brass kind that you bend
0.0.
Mdntrye
Park In Gl!llla County the weelteod or Aua- 26, rT
(For
Information
on
bow
·to
hack. Put the lids together, 'bact to
and
Z8.
Attendlae
and pletured were, In ao parlleul.r order:
communicate
eleetronlcally
with
back' so they lie flat.
"lnsen·the brass paper fastener this c:olumnlllt and others, con- Shawn Milt, Monte Hunter, Mike Frymyer, Adam White, P,J.
through the center of the two diSks. tact Anlerk:a OnJJne by calling 1· Ervin, Andy White, Jolm Witherell, Jooathaa WilaoD, Zadt Daril,
Chris Neec:e aad Don Frymyer, seoul master.
You may want to pierce a small 800-827:-ci~ ext. 83i7.)

.

•Featured on ,.ge B-1

HOUR
SALE

A Multimedia Inc , Newspaper
~

~

'ItY GEORGE ABATE

ON
ALL APPLIANCES

AND IV'S

.,.~J'~ 'A. uistant· Proaecntor
' ~ ~~- ~ 115~ d)at
- ~ .w• ;Watchln&amp; televisioil "Jiis

:~dC'!" wbtn his.lif~end tQid

•. IWD ~~was· tig~ling down

VAUGHN lASSEn
BEDROOM SUITE
Solid Pine. Hutch, mirror, dreaaer, door
cheat, night table, full or quun bed.
NOT $2699.98

SUNDAY

$138888
ON SALE!

BEDROOM SUITE
Door dr...er, mirror, headboard frame,
night table, door chut. ·
Black with brasa trim.
NOT $1599.98

SUNDAY

COLONIAL STYLE
2 TO CHOOSE FROM.
NOT$1199.88

SUNDAY
SHELBY JOHNSON

$58811

11995

12 MONTHS FREE FINANCING .
SUNDAY
FREE DELIVERY
19" 1V/Remote, Crosley
LAMP~ &amp;

OAK FINISH CURIO
SUNDAY S199"

:UNDAY $

Contemporary. 1/ vear cover.
NOT 8111111.85
,

..
429
RECLINING·LOVESEAT

18

BLUE.
NOT l1e1111.115

.

GLIDER ROCKER Oak Finish
SINDAY *199"

~

FuR s.ts"_:_., S7tt.9S:-·Iu•D~Y •34995 s1t
, Queen Sets.-101 $999.95-..SUNiat •449 95 sit

·

•

SU.DAY

TWIN SIZE NOT $599.95

SUNDAY

· ,.
599

1

•

SUiiDAY

279
.

.

••

GilSON ,15 CU. FT.

REFRIGERATOR
su.l•aY•48911

11

$269

FULL SIZE NOT $699:95 $

PINE HUTCH
UQht Ftnlah.
NOT.71111.811

lEAN lAG w/OROMAN
SUNDAY *88

Congressional
race debate set

SU.DAY

INNERSPRING MATTRESS

$588

$3333 33

RESTONIC PERFECT REST
PILLOW TOP
MAnRESS &amp; BOX SPRING

MAUVE SOfA

LAUDE BLE
QUEEN SLEEP SOFA
SUNDAY

SUNDAY

Y2JFF

~···

$103995

IY CIESEIIT
NOT $6999.95

MIRRORS

WING CHAIR.or SWIVEL ROCKER

SUNDAY

SOLID ·CHEIRl HUTCH,
· . TABLE, 6 CHAIRS

ALL PICTURES,

SUNDAY $199"

SPRING AIR GRAND AWARD ULTIMATE
95
Twin
Sets-."•'
s6tt.9s-su•aY '299 sn
..
-

First birthday
celebrated .. -

NOT$2899.95

&amp;HOURS ONLY
THIS SUrDAY ONLY

$7444

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

·"FLEXSTEEL" SOFA CHAIR
South Wut Prlnt-Ufetlme eprlng and frame
warranty on both. Sofa: btlge biCkground
whh rust, green, blue print. Chair: blue
w/ruat.

$2.2995

.

SUNDAY

QUEEN SIZE NOT S799.95.

95 sn

From API Stair Reporta

329 In
95

.

'379 95 sn
. Kl NG SIZE NOT $1199.95$
, .
5
.
SUNDAY 519' sn
1 SUNDAY

.

30• Gas or Electric
UNGE.

I'

SUNDAY *279' .
1

FULL SIZE -MAnRESS SETS
Both 1111ttreae &amp; foun-

diltlon, 252 Coli, medium
firm. Fully g~ranteed.

~CUI

An.
Pho11o CC6·1 COS

Kiag SetS_,.IOI $12tt.t5-SUIDAY S$9195 sn SUI~Y

.
GALLIPOLIS -The 8CCODd
debate between the canc!id&amp;tea
in the Sixth Cortgressional Dis·
trict race will be Tuesday at 7
p.m. at tbe Oblo University
Southern Campus, IIKM Uberty
Ave., Ironton.
,
Intumbenl u.s. Rep. Ted
Strickland, D-Lucasville, ud
his Republican challenger, Gll·lipolis businCSSIIIIft Frlllk ~­
means, will meet ia ID open
forum ~by die GJeatcr
Lawrence County Area OWnbrlofCoaUncrcc.
\ ~~~will be the..
site on Nov. 1 for another
debate between ·stridtland a

'.

,,
...

_- ...

... . . .

GALLIPOL,IS - -Thomas E.
W'liCIIIIil, Jntlident of !be dawpo.
lis-based WIIOmu Ageo~y lac.,
has. been choleo Gallia County's
Pmon of the Year, GaDia County
Chamber of Commerce President

native and 1976 graduate of Gallia
Academy High School. He atlendcd Marshalf University and the·
Uni~ of Cincinnati, where he
~ m business and insurance.
He was ~ of the co-op program

~~~ :'o~;i~ ~~~fiel~d.itM:::~'::

alan~with boiloreea from other
00 1~1 a the amllll Sold lltleln
Ohio Regioaal Council Person of

Advisory Board at the University
of Rio Grande.
He is also a past director of the
French An Colony, Past president
of the Gallipolis Rotary Club and
last vestry member of SL1Pl:ter' s
piscopal Church.

u............
He joined The Wiseman A&amp;mcy

Wiseman and his1wife, Ubby,
are the parents of three children:
in 19110 and became its pesident in Jimmy, II; Matt, 7; ud Abby,
th.e Year bauqQCt on Thuraday, · 1982.
tlli= mondls• .
NOv. 3 It the Oblo Ullivell1ty 1m1,
On the state level, Wileman is
"Tom combines the ideal qualiAd!el!l.
..
com~lalll u president of ties of a buaineaa,ellecutive and
"It is with real pride that we the IDdependellt lnslDIIce A&amp;enta cc:mmnnlty bder who Jives of his
ume Tom Witl"DDD • Oilr ·~ of Ohio. He was elected to the belt, whatever the challenge,"
CranCIIIL
.
of theY~~ ~Hill Gallla 1Dnl of ~tors at Ohio Valley Clmpbellllid.
County," QIDpMIIIIid. "Wo lot* Dink i111992 IIICI is a cbaner mem.. . . .
. .
In llddidoo. MlrieUa Collele
He IS hi&amp;biY stilled m hia Jn.will 10M u die site for die oaly . b wad 10 1tla IIJOCiiii'OI." CBlthM ~ bet of the Ohio Valley Bane CorTHOMAS E. WISEMAN
Winmu IOlYecl as c.....,_ :porlllion BcllnL
· fession, and both undentands and
.faee-!0-face
president
In
1989-91
ad
bu
WI.mn
IIIMilll
a
direclor
or
lerVCS
die
DOeds
of
1tla
c:ommuni• tea for
1 .the major pirty
Ticto.ts for tbo banquet are
Ohio lieufOIW!t.,vemar.
ICCd~~lli~&amp;~lacllbivl
·. ~' HoberVII!IIIIIISIDC., dloSBORC, , ty," lhudded. "At the-e time . available
at $20 Cach at the cbanl. . ~ NIIICy Hollill«, i
--..--..u ...,.
~iric tho Rio Giude Co~ntioa. the be llllbs it a priority to have qualiber
office.
A 5:30 p.m. reception
comauliity crplludoaa,' ~ ' o•ma Connty Commnalty ty time with his family. We are
Mlri~'• former mayor, ud '
will
precede
the banquet, set for
' . i··
IIDprowement Cuipo111ion llld is a both fortiiWc ~ Clluanclv DIOUd
. Democrat Pllter ,La~J01101 ; bell ~ ,
6:30
p.m.
For
more informa~on,
1'111 e' of S~ Ill 11111110 lmmbet of 'the llmaDI B. Evans ' to have Tom W~SC~~Um be our OaiIwill debllo 011 NO¥. 3.
. .•
call'lbe
chlmbrl-at446-0596.
Harold ..r...,,., """laa'kllf lilt , ICGUOgo oflluineas Manqemeot : UaCounty~ofthe Year."

'

I .

..

'·•
~~--

\.·

ID

11997
' '

.Ex-chamber chief, businessman
named Gallia 'Person of the Year'

mee:J:tween·

Cielli,~lia

NOT$249.~

p.

boundaries are subject to change.
the open pits arid manholes, Budrus
Budrus updated the TRC on the said the corps has come upon a
progress being made at the power- problem. He said there are manhouses. He said the asbestos holes along a sewer line to an abanremoval should be completed this doned sewer plant The line is still
week and the demolition contract being used by some of the property
has been awarded.
owners and it is dumping raw
Bhatt Contracting of Huntington sewage into Mill Creek.
is scheduled to submit its demoliAccording to Budrus, the corps
lion plan ne~t week for the struc- cannot fill the manholes because
tures. According to Budrus, the the line is being usf() illegally.
plans must then be approved by the
"Something has to be done
cor)is and the EPA.
. immediately." Dan~huk said.
Budrus sa;d the corps has
John Mdsgrave, chairman of the
apPlied for a t"'o-acre landflll per- TRC, sai(l the situation was a state
mu to. be used, if the contractor health department regulatory probchooses to do so, to dispose .of the Jem.
demolition rubble from the powerhouses. Th\ .~ontractor could
Peter Costello, WVDEP, said .
choose to give ~..nlbble to private th J state health depanment is aware
landowners.
,
o' the situation, but he did not
Upcoming work plans for the kr ow anything more about it.
corps include wetlands litigation
Musgrave said the TRC should
and red water sewer exploration on l8Jce a role in the situation by workoutfall into the Ohio River, accord- il)g together with the health depaning to Budrus. He said the corps is ment, corps, WVEP , EPA and
now working to get rights Q{ entty et •unty to see about using lhc packonto property where the red water at.e plant from the former industrial
sewer line is thought to be:
p:.rt in the area to eliminate the
In reviewing the worlc done on problem.

By MICHELE CARTER
Tlmes-Seatinel Statr
POINT PLEAsANT, W.Va.The 8,300-acre perimeter of the
West Virginia Ordnance Works
(WVOW) National Priorities List
boundary has been reduced by 67
percent, according to Wayne
Budrus of .the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers Huntington Division.
Budrus told member~ of the
WVOW Technical Review C!l!!lmittee (TRC) thursday that the
proposed new boundaries include
areas of suspected and known contamination from the former TNT
manufacturing plant. .
Bill Arguto, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency's Remedial Project Manager, said he is currently
working pn getting the revised
boundary map locked in as the new
map.
.•
When the proposed boundary
.._....___ __,z,_. map is finalized, it will be disNEW LIFE FOR AN OLD SKILL "- Stan Wbltlna demontributed to the library, the city
llrllted splnlliq woollntolprodacts Bile 110Cks Friday at the Boll
building and the courthouse,
Evans Farm Festival in Rio Gl'lllde. WbitiDg wu one of a number
according 10 Budrus. He said as
or exlllblton dlspllylna1l'ldldolll1 lklallllll cral'll at the ratival,
samplings and clean-up continue or
whk:b ends Suclay. (T-8 P• br Lila Pete...a)
if more contamination iS fOiihd, the

ane -

Tufted back recllnera, All wood, alngle drasaer w/mlrror, 4 drawer
padded back, . no sag chut, full or queen headboard with frame.
springs
and
solid NOT$499.95
hardwood framee.
SUNDAY

YOUR CHOICE

OAK FINISH BOOKCASE

TERMS OF SALE •••

IIMSON OAK FINISH
BEDiOOM SUITE

.RECLINERS

· .·· ~bo".C.:.-Melp County, whlc:b opened Saturday morning, continues from noon (II 5:30 p.m.
SUilay, l'llere are a~ exbllllllln the lluUdinp 011 the Roc:k Springs fairgrounds for viewIna liy vlllton, ud eateiUblment will be pro\lided from Ito 5 p.m. There Is no admissioa charge.
Amlllll the exblllill are utiq• tractors. Astride theln are Paul Marr, right, on his 1941 John
Deere, aDd F.diloB Hollou, Racine, on bis 1931 John Dee-e. (T-S photo by Charlene Hoefticb)

Corps of Engineers to draw new
boundary map for WVOW area

Purchued namn muet be ptlld lor by cuh, poroonol
cheCk, Ylaa, Mulei'Cord, or ac:ceplllble c...t~t application.
FrH delivery and 12 month• ume A eMil financing
avottable. No quantity guarani- except lor
Item. Everything 10 offered on o flm come, llrat bale. Furn~ure and IUmlture retllod ltlme.

Bassett • Reslonic • En~111d • Flexstnl· Coldwell ~ Ccitnapper
Spring Air -Jimson -Corolla Oassics • Zenith • Gibson
Smit~ Brothers • Peters Revington • Quahty • Vaughn/Bas$8tt

~,]( 12 RUGS•••••••••• SUNDAY sa a••
·
6x9 RUGS............. SUNDAY s6811

------- ,.,___. -·

the street.
Harrison waited outside his
house and looked toward the scene
of the dispute, whi~h was two
hou!tCS down and on the opposite
street Terri Thomas was "IJansing
on the door" of a pickul) trudt talking to someone inside, lie said.
"'Give me the gun, Mite,'" Harrison quoted Thomas as saying.
"'Give me the gun.'~ The truck
pulled forward, then backed up and
Thomas ran toward the house.
Harrison said the man insi!!o l!!o
truck then stepped outimdwalked
between two vehicles. The witness
testified that he then heard a fl""
shot and saw a "big ball of fiTC the ·muzzle flash.
Thomas then said "'h my God"
and ran into the residence, Harrison
said. The man got in the truck and
fled the scene.
Tbe witpe~ sai\1 he recognized
the truck ·as Wolfe's because thi
-defendant had lived&gt;W'ith ~ '
, "for awhile" he llad·IOCII it in the
area and parked at her house. ·
Under cross-examlriatlt•o by
(COIIIID.ect.oil Al)

PURCHASES MUST BE PAID- FOR BY CASH~ PERSONAL CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD AND/OR ACCEPTABLE CREDIT '.
APPLICATIONS - ARRANGEMENTS FOR DELIVERY OR PICKUP OF PURCHASES MUST BE MADE AS SOON AS POSSIBLE.

incomplele.

; Shelby Breanna Johnson, ,
'd w..,_ of Robert and Lisa John.iOD. celebrlted her ftrst birthday
· widJ I Jlirt11t MI:Donalds.
: Door prizcl were won by Beth
BUb. Kandice Dougan, and Jen-;Ji;f« HUIIIIOII who were I!Dong the
·24
alt!e!IC!i11g. Shelby shares
'bo!f birthday With her grandfather,
'C:..U Haym111, Sr. , .

:· Bf KEVIN PINSON
•· Tunes-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Following
: eyew:itness testimony Friday, a
. Hunungton, W.Va., man accused
· of murder was bound over to the
: Oct 27 session of the Gallia Coon. ty grand jury.
Gallipolis Municipal Judge
: William S. Medley conbnued bond
· for Michael E. Wolfe, .38, at
· $250,000 cash.
, A""""'nlly confident in its case
agai~rt"Wolfe, the pro~ecl!tiop
opied,to 1:811 a secondarY~itness,
. Roger Harrison of Cro
City,
· who testified seeing the s ooting
:· from acrosa the street.
Another witness, Terri Thomas
·of C,-own qty, was at the scene
: when Eddie A. Ferguson, 41,
: Crown OW, was shot to death Oct
4, but was not called to the stand
Fri!iay_
·: Qbestioaed at the proliminary

BALANCE PAID BY OaOBER 1995.
$599 MINIMUM PURCHASE REQUIRED

NAME BRANDS TO BE SOLD ON THIS LAST DAY•••

The Federal Environmental Regulatory Council held the meeting to
decide if the OMEGA-JVS's preferred route should be allowed. The route
runs north of Reedsville through Ported Run State Part, follows State
Route 2A8, cuts ~ Chester near the future State Route 7 bypass, and
then north oC the county fairgrounds to State Route 143 at Rutland.
FERC must choose one of five lines as the best avenue between the
hydroelectric plant and sizable substati.:Jns. Three of the five routes are
located in West VIrginia.
Rebecca Martin; PERC environmental test monitor, said the meetinjl
was to ready an environmental assessment - which is not a fmal decision, she added. ·

Adraft issue is due by Dec. 15, Ma tin said, adding that a fmal decision should be made by next April. W:itten commenlll from the public
must be received by Nov. 4, she added.
The issues that will determine which route is choseri include geology
and soil erosion, fiSh and wildlife effecL~. visual resources, recreation and
land use, and electromagnetic field ar d public safety issues, PERC's
Kevin Young said.
"This is the very early stage. It's 1101 a dOne deal," Young said. ''The
preferred alternative is the licensee's Jlft .'erred route."
Scott Williams, American Municipal POwer-Ojlio (AMP-Ohio) project
engineer, said the 12-mile-Jong West Virginia lines were not Sought
because of the proximity to higher-dens:ty populations and environmental
(Cootinued oo .U)

,.

OVER 75 LIVIN.G ROOM SUITES, 80 RECLINERS,
40 BEDROOM SUII'ES, 150 END &amp; COFFEE TABLES,
, 30-INEnES • .AND
MAnRESSES, MIRRORS, LAMPS, PICTURES.
ALL ON SALE WITH FREE FINANCING &amp; FREE DELIVERY!\

DISCOUNT
FOR CASH
PURCHASES .
SUNDAY ONLY

a Rutland substation.

jury to_consider - · Showcasing Meigs County--- Commission
backs return
:alleged Gallia murder
of ACS office

NO PAYMENT OR 110 INTEREST IF

FREE FINANCING

Vol 29 . No. 36

~ Grand

FREE FINANCING
5% ''

OcL 3 about the ~ 25 miles of (lOwer lines connecting the plant to

Times-Sentinel Statr
REEI)SVILLE - Beginning Monday, bids will be accepted for the
$50 million Belleville Hydroelectric Plant, officials said Friday.
The Ohio Municipal Electric Gene·111ion Agency Joint Venture S,
which COIIllists of 42 Ohio communities, Nill hameas the Ohio River at the
Bellevill~ Locks and Dams. The entik project should total more than
$1'-5.4 million for this 42-megawatt plantlnd power lilies.
·
: The bid deadline is Jan. 12, 1995, when they will be opened, said Phil
Meier, project manager. The plant ia set fcx- operation by July 1997.
: The project should employ abOut 225 c:onsttuction workers and about
; 12 pennanent emplOyees, according to an OMEGA-JVS release.
: More than 100 Meigs County residerits complained at a public hearing

MONTHS

'•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-PI Pleasant - Octob er 16, 1994

.Group will accept bids on hydro project

I

•
:

12

6 MONTHS .

College football action . Page C1

xmts-

ALL MERCHANDISE IN WAREHOUSE
AND/OR ON DISPLAY WILL BE PLACED
ONTO THE PUBLIC MARKET.FOR
RELEASE DURING THIS ...

By DOUG MELLGREN
Alsol:iated Press Writer
OSLO, Norway (AP) - The
Nobel Peace Prize was awarded
today to PLO leader Yasser Arafat,
Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhat
Rabin, and Israeli Foreign Minister
Shimon Peres.
A member of the Nobel Peace
Prize commiUee said he would
resign in protest of the award to
ArafaJ.
"By concluding the Oslo
accords and subsequently followIng up on them, Amfat, Peres and
.Rabin have made substantial contributions to a historic process
through which peace and cooperation can replace war and hate,"
said the Nobel Peace Prize award
. committee.
The prize carries an award of
$933,000.
.
The selection was highly controversial, especially following tbe
kidnapPing this week of an Israeli
soldier by Palestinian extremists.
Rabin has demanded that Arafat
reign in the extremists, throwing
the peace process into its worst crisis since the peace treaty was·
signed last year.
Committee member Kare Kristiansen, one of five voting mem. bers, said ahead of the 811nouncement that he would resign· in
protest of the award to Arafat, said
committee head Frsncis Sejersted.
Kristiansen has scheduled a news
conference 1a1et today.
Kristiansen, a committee member since 1991, had "made it clear
before the final decision that if
Arafat was included, he would
resign," Sejersled said.
.~
He said the other four voting
members stoOd behind the selection.
· Arafat, speaking in AlelUIIIdria,
Egypt, said: "I have to repeat that
this prize is not for myself but for
IllY people who suffered a lot ... for
our martyrs and for our children.''
: In an unusual breach of !tCCreCy,
·a Norwegian newspaper earlier thlli
week reported tha-t Arafat and
Rabin would share the prize.
. 1be committee had held a fmal
ineeting just before the announcement, but it was not clear whether
they had chanJed their decision, or
; whether the mitial reports were

Met(:hants plan Halloween party. Page ~3

+

INVESTED PARTIES GIVE FINAL ORDERS••• IT'S ALL OVER AT OUR MINUTE PAST 6 P.M. SUNDAYIII .

Arafat, Rabin,
Peres share
Peace Prize

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TV in school~
Stu-aents·-gei ·
an education
... ' ·

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By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Selltlnel Staff
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of CommissioiiCI's
agreed Friday to ~the goal of
getting back Me1gs County's
American Cancer Society office. .
Jim Thomas, president of the
Meigs County ACS Board, asked
the commission to write a letter
supporting an ACS office in Meip
County.
The Meigs ACS office was con.
· solidated earlier with the Gallia
County office, but each county
maintains its own board of directors. The offices were consolidaled
after Meigs County was labeled a
deficit county, meaning the office
spent more than it took in,.he said.
"My goal is to get the Meigs
County offlCC back," Thomas said,
citing the inc6nvenience faced by
those seeking ACS services having
to drive to Gallia County.
Thomas pointed out that he is
seeking suppon from local governments, business associations and
clergy in having the Meigs County
office restored. He cited this year's
successful fund drive as proof that
the office can suppon itself. The
office would provide assistan~e
through tninsportation for cancer
patients, information and screening.
The commission agreed to write
a letter supporting Thomas'
endeavors.
The commission also met with
Larry Lavender and Larry Thomas
representing Pomeroy Masonic
Lodge 164. The lodge ill seeking to
obUiin county-owned land along
Hiland Road .n Pomeroy for a new
Masonic lodge in return for land
the lodge gave to the county about
two years ago.
·'
Prosecuting Auorney John R.
Lentes said a survey needed to
n.ade of the area..allowing him ·to
draft a deed and a resolution before
the property could be transferred.
In addition, the commission
appr6ved money transfers within
lhe following county offices: county commission, $4,500; depaninent
ofhuman services, $4,028.119; cleric
of courts, $10,000; emergency
medical services, $1,291.80. The
commission also approved the following appropriations: part district, $995; emergency medical services, $14,128.29; board of eiections, $2,500.
In other business, ~ board:
• Met with representatives from
Saunders In surance Agency on
health care insurance;
(Continued on .U)

GOOD MORNING
Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections. 172

Pages

BusineSs

OJ

Calendars
Classilieds
Comics
Ellitorials
Local
Obituaries
Sports '
Along the River'
Weather

82
03-7

Insert
A4

AJ
A6
Cl-8
B1
A2

Columns

M'

FredCrow
lim Suds

B2
A.4
B2

Cbpck Stope

Bob Hoeftjsb
C ltM. 0..6a V•laty .....~ Cn..

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Plla•

A2 Sunday nm.-Sent~nel

Pomeroy . lldclleport-GIIIIpoll8, OH Point Plnnnt, WY

. OCtober
11. 181o\.
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OHIO Weather
Suncllv, Oet.16

•

IAICH.

IToledol67" I

Epfcrtelpgmt •

IND.

I

Dry, mild conditions mark

first portion of work week
By Tbe Associated Press
A dry and mild wcatha' pattern
will continue across Ohio into the
beginning of the work week.
There wiD be abundant SIJIIShine
across the state Sunday and Monday with mainly clear skies Sunday
nighL
Highs Sunday will range from
the mid-60s in the northeast to
around 70 elsewhere. Lows Sunday
night will be f~ the mid-30s in
the extreme northeast to the mid40s in the south.
It will be a little warmer on
Monday with highs from around 70

Hamas leaflet distributed Sallll'day.

COlUMBUS (AP) - Both
major candidates for a U.S. Senate
seat frbm Ohio said their campai$,nS had more than $1 million
avwlable for spending in the fmal
three weeks before the Nov. 8 eleclion. ·
Republican Mike DeWine's
campaign reported a caab balance
of'$572,38}.36 on hand SepL 30,
according to reports filed Friday
with the Federal Election Commission.
· Democrat Joel Hyatt reported
having $1,077,876.38 available and
independent Joseph Slovenec had
$6,810.20 On hand.
Although the reports indicated
Hyatt had more on hand than
DeWine, the DeWine campaign
said it actually had more than $1.5
million available. A release from
the campaign said the report did
·not include $982,000 released to
DeWine by the National Republi~an Senatorial Commit!ee after

$1,202,600.72
and
spent
$590,775.44 between July I and
Sept. 30. For the year, receipts
totaled $2,485,119.18 with expenditures of $2,540,276.46.
Both candidates raised money in
1993, some of which they carried
over into this year.
Independent candidate Joseph
Slovenec of Cleveland said his
campaign took in $84,214.01 and
spent $78,211.38 during the most
recent three-month period, with
receipts of $118,18S.49 and
expenses of $112,933.20 for the
year.
Hyatt, a Cleveland lawyer who .
founded a chain of legal clinics,
also~ debts of $260,745.77,
including a $216,000 loan he made
to the campaign c;arlier in the year.
Neither DeWine nor Slovenec
reported any debts. DeWine's
report said a $190,000 loan he had
made earlier this year to the campaign had been repaid.
"We are very pleased with the
peL I.
'· . The reports showed the cam- pace of our fund-raising," DeWine
jlaign of DeWine, the state's Jieu- campaign director Barry Bennett
~enaQt
governor, rece1ved said Friday. "With over $1.S mil·
$1,962,799.44 in contributions lion In caab on hand for the closing
lletween July 1 and Sept. 30 and three weeks, we feel good about
qJCDt $1 ,362,232.11 for the period. . our ability to get Mike's message
:· Contributions to the campaign to the voters."
$ince Jan. 1 totaled $3,4S7,692.19,
with expenses of$3,204,445.47.
·
: The Hyatt campaign received

I
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•

Commission
(Coodnued lrGm Al)
: • Met with Gallia-Meigs
&amp;egional Airport Authority board
member Dan Arnold on a master
plan for a new airport;
·
• Approved a contract between
the Meigs County Department of
Human Services and the Meigs
County Pn&gt;bate/J uvenUe Court for
payment of filing fees;
• • Paid weekly bUis $230,127.26
ctnsistlng of 304 entries.
• Present were Commission Presidtnt Fl'ed Hoftinan, Vice Presidcilt
Jfdlel Howard Tackett, Comm,issl\lner Robert Hartenbach and
Cl«k Oloria Kloes.
•

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w.ant to save and we11automatically deduct the appropriate amountfrotnyour Bank

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Weekly, biweekly or monthly,
whichever you prefer.
" Yourmoneywillearn a .
competitive variable interest ··
rate from the date it's· · ·· :
deposited into your Holiday ·
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fills home with smoke

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PLANNED PIRIN,.IOOD
OF SOU'I'HEIS,. OliO

Police issue DUI citations ·

. Recorder's office

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OFFER 0000 THRU MONDAY, QC lOBER 31, 11M

1502 Entlrn A,vt.
.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Mlatll'card • VIII

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Wluitever it takes:

NATE
COMMUNICATIONS
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" CouniJ Ceiling Ani .

INDEPENDENCE

To start your l;loliday
Savings Plan, stop by Bank
Onetoday.Orcall44&amp;0902.1rs
theoestwayweknowtostock
upon paper for holiday gift·
g~ving next year.

withaHoliday5aYingsPian
fromBankOnedflluwon'thave
toworr}' about having enough
· moneyforholidaytravel,

FROM NATE COMUNICATIONS

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on
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FALL CELLULAR SAVINGS

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(Cootinued Fr11m Al)
.
areas, such as fowl nesting sites.
·
Earlier this year, West Virginia Go", Gaston Caperton vetoed a law
that would have taxed out-of-state po·Ner coinpan1es. This legislation
could be proposed a~.
·
.
"(The legislation) did have an effe.:t on opr decision," AMP-Ohio
President Kenneth Hegemann said.
The other Meigs County route is longer - follo:wing an existing AEP
line south toward Pomeroy - but costs about the same as the preferred
line, Hegemann said.
·
·
But this allemale Ohio route is not the best since it comes close to
higher-density populations in the county he added.
Chester resident Ch~ Knight, amo .lg !hose who voice objections at
the hearing, said he is concerned about :he line since the county wiD not
benefit from iL He said it should be buill in West Virginia.
. Currendy, the company has pm:hated 40 percent of the options for
plopelty right-of-ways, WiDiams said. lurveys have almldy been completed, along with aerial photographs d ·:he land.
An Ohio Power Siting Board will huld a public hearing next Marth,
Williams said The design.of the line ' as set for bidding by November
1995, wilh consuuction betwea~ Fellluay 8l)d December 1996. ~line
and the hy_droplant would be operalional by July 1997, Williams added;

.,.,. ............ Obio

. 11JUQUP11011fiAIU

,•'

•

Arts task force takes aim
at procedures on grants

Ambulance destroyed by fire

•

DR. I. 18DD RIU.

will be handled by the Merchants
GALLIPOLIS ....., A Bidwell
Association, it was decided.
man
arrested Oct 6 following ..
Christmas holiday activities
I POMEROY - A Midnight
undercover
drug buy has beea
; Madness sale and a community
were discussed and it was decided
bound
over
to
the Oct 27 selli~
: Halloween party have been planned
that a theme should be selected
of
the
Gallia
County~
jury.
for Oct. 29' by~ the Pomeroy Mersoon.
Gallipolis
Mumcipal
Judge
chaniS Association.
Meeting with the merchants at
William
S.
Medley
contmued
bon4
the recent meeting held in the Bank
Plans call for stores to be open
for
Donald
D.
Newell,
49,
448
from 6 to 9 p.m. that Saturday
One building were Dennis
Clark
Chapel
Road,
at
$1S,OOO
Eichinger, chairman of the Meigs
while a party takes place on Court
with 10 percent secured.
Local Effective Schools team, ad ·
. '
Newell was charged with drug
Don Hanning, ~hool principal, to
trafficking
after he allegedly _sol4
discuss business partners in Cduca·
3.9
pounds
of
marijuana for $6,500
lion. The program, as explained by
10 an undercover Bureau of Crimi!he school representatives, is
nal Investigation and ldentifieatioD
geared to reward students for their
agent
CROWN C11Y - Unatu:nded grease on a stove was the appar·
achievements.
According to testimony from
ent cause of a frre which gutted a Guyan Township fuefighter's
Eichinger explained that stu·
BCII
agent Michael Pocock, who
home Friday aflemoon.
dents who obtain all A's for a grad·
worked
I!IU'VCillance during the purThree f1re departments were on the scene for four hours and used
ing period will receive a 'old card.
chase,
the transaction took place at
.6,000 gallons of water on the structure, owned by Doug Combs,
Those students who obtalll all A's
Newell's residence.
6907 Hannan Trace Road, said Guyan Township Fire Chief Ronnie
and B's for a grading period will
·
After Pocock's partner showed
Waugh.
receive maroon cards.
Newell
the money, the defendant
The Guyan Township department was the firSt called to the
Eichinger and Hanning were at
left
in
a
silver Oldsmobile and
scene and res~nded with 12 firefighlers and three trucks. Mutual
the meeting to ask the merchants to
rewmed
an
hour laler with the maraid was provided by the Gallipolis defJ8l'IIIICIIl, which responded
give discounts to the students with
ijuana,
the
BCII
agent said.
with 18 frrefighu:rs and one truck, and the Rome de(NII'IIIIent. which
the gold and maroon cards as a
Following Newell's arrest,
Traey Pkkett, eenter, d..abter ~Lewis aDd Judy Plekett or
provided seven firefighlers.
·
"reward" for excelling. .
agents .and Gallia County sheriff's
Letart Falls, was erowned the 1994 Southern HIJb School
Litde water was available at the scene and the fue truCks had to
The need for the school and
deputies searched the residence
homecoming queen at the Southern-Trimble game Friday night.
shuttle water between the scene and Giiyan Township's firehouse,
coml}lunity to work together to
with consent ;md found marijuana
Last
year's
homec:omlng
qu"n,
Jenni
HIU,
crowns
PkkeU
while
which_,was.three miles away, Waugh saif.
·
improve - even survive - was
seeds
and a small bag of mariJuana.
Pickett's
escort,
Kevin
lhle,
looks
on.
A vallipolis fli'Ciighu:r, Shawn Burton, was treated at· the scene
stressed by the school officials. No
Pocock
said
for smolce inhalation.
action was taken by the merchants,
Prosecuting
Attorney Brent
The call was the 6Jst of the year for the GTVFD and the 282od
although several expressed intrzcstSaunders
has
filed
a motion for the
of the year f«r the GVFD.
ed in participsting in the program.
seizure
of
Newell's
house and
Those interested were asked to ·
vehicle
because
of
their
role in the
contact the high school at 992alleged
trafficking.
2158.
Newell was represented at the .
CHESHIRE - A Point Pleasant, W.Va., company's ambulance
A ~ called "Horne Town
preliminary
hearing by attorney 1
Malone
said
the
meeting's
focus
GALLIPOLIS
Improving
the
was destroyed by fue Friday afternoon, apparendy caused by a fuel
Pride was presented by Sarah
John
Allison
of
CQiumbus.
was
to
establish
procedural
guideleak in one of the vehicle's gas tanks.
·
Jijsher, who advised that she has region's scenic location by obtainlines
for
grant
applications
and
for
ing
grants
was
the
first
order
of
A spokesman for the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department said
the Permission of Pomeroy Village
SaturdaY that the ambulance model, a 1986 Ford, had been recalled
Council to start a group whose goal business tackled by the A~chi­ delennining project needs.
Other members of the task force
because the exhaust system had a tendency to overlleat and cause
would be to tum things around and an Arts Task Force when 1t held iiS
include
Stale Rep. Tom Johnson,
fii'SI
meeting
recently.
the gasoline to boil.
start the community toward becom·
Slale
Sen.
Bob Ney, Dan Neff of
Twelve firefighters responded with c:1e truck to the intersection
The
task
force
is
designed
to
ing what it is currently being adver·
increase arts funding to enhance the Governor's Office of
of State Roule 1 and Littfe Kyger ROll( and used 1,250 gallons to
tised in brochures.
extinguish the blaze.
She said that she had picked up •the art$, economic development Appalachia, Mark Weinberg of
The ambulance was not transportin 1 a patient at the time; no
a brochure on Meigs County with a and historic preservation. Funding Ohio University arid Ann Sydnor
injuries were reported.
lady in a hoop dress and a man for specific projects will be deter- of Portsmouth.
Malone and Ney were nam~ ..
The call was the281stofthe year.
' with a top hat, telling about all the mined at 'future meetings, two area
co-chairs
of the task force, while
legislators
said.
shops and things the community
Neff
was
appointed
secretary.
"The
Appalachian
Arts
Task
has to offer and showing craf!Smen
Long
said
he
and
Malone have
Force will pro.vide an excellent
ljlaking things .
GALLIPOLIS ...;_ Two men were arrested overnight Friday on
been
iii
contaCt
with
seveial
organiopportunity
to
help
many
worthy.
"I feel we are getting the carl
bench warrants, local authorities reponea.
zations
that
may
benefit
from
the
artistic,
recreational
and
historic
before the horse," said Fisher, who
Jailed were Jerry T. Martin, SS, Oak Hill, Cor failure to appear to
task
force.
preservation
projects
become
a
pointed out that it's 9nly before a
. serve jail time, aild Roger K. Hutchinson, 57, Gallipolis, for conThe group will meet again on
reality," State Sen. Jan Michael
UFT CHAIR/POWER
celebration or a function of some Long and State Rep. Mark A. Mal- Nov. 5 and it expects to announce
, templofcourL
kL1d
that
even
the
wee'ds
get
cut
Also jailed was Linda Bing, 42, 39 Waler St., Syracuse, on a ·
grant application criteria.
RECLINER
one said in a joint announcement
and the trash picked up.
municipal court ordered· three·day commitment for a previous
For That Added
She ~ that by stressing home
cha!'ge of driving under the influence.
tc wn pride and getting people
Feeling of Self-Confidence
behind die Program. the village can
•V.rlety of Colora
To~ter
bt come a place to be proud of all
POMEROY - ,An accident, a Eads was confined to the Meigs
·In Stock
th: time.
,OALLOOLIS - A toaster was found to be 11\e cause of smoke
car fue, and .a breaking and enter- County Jail Saturday.
•Free Delivery
She laid oul a program which ing were investigated by the
at a local woman's residence Friday, the Gallipolis VollDltcer Fire
The Salem Fire Departtnent and
inclllded trimming and planting, department of Meigs County Sher· . the Rudand EMS squad were on
Department reported.
•3 Year Complete W1rranty
d'l8lling up and painting, renovat·
' Thirteen firefighters responded wi 11 one truck to the Laura
iff James Soulsby Friday and early the frre scene.
•Free Demonatratlon
ing and renting, and suggested a Saturday.
Dowler residence on Teadora Drive. Tc·.e cause of the smoke ll·as
Investigation is continuing by
•Selea • Rental
Victorian theme with shop owners
unknown at the time of arrival, and frr~fighlers searched the resi·
A Dayton woman was charged the sheriff's department into a
in
period
dress,
unique
window
disderiCe for the source.
with failure to yield following an breaking and entering of the Hillplays of bygone days, and then accident Friday afternoon at the top Grocery on Rouu: 124, Coole's
Once the toasler was located, fuefighlers used exhaust fans to
challenged the members to get intersection of Pomeroy Pike and Gap Hill, which reportedly
blow the smoke out of the home. The srnokll was apparently caused
HOMECARE MEDICAL
behind the Home Town Pride pro- the Meigs High School J!!!rking lot. occurred early Friday morning. A
by a piece of/aper which had fallen into the toaster, a GVFD
OL
7283
spokesman sai .
.
Deputies said Ruscllle Keiter, large amount of cigarettes and cash
GAWP 15
~~er
said
there
is
a
need
for
23, pulled her 1991 Pontiac from were reportedly .taken from 1he
Toll FrH ,_.01).451 8844
The call was the 280th of the year.
getting work underway soon, since th~ parking lot into the path of an store.
L..-.::J::;:A.::,CK:;::S:;O:;N,:.2::86-:::;,:7,:41:;4:........1·1
efforts are being made to get the
vehicle
driven
by Jerry
Dtlta Qrutn to stop at the Pomeroy eastbound
Lantz, Vienna,
W.Va.
There
was --~-------------------­
GALLIPOLIS - A PBtriot man was cited for ilriving under the
le tee. Since the·first impression is moderate damage to the left door of
influence and driving left of center follllwing a minor accident Frioften the one that lasts, it's vital the Keiter vehicle, and no damage
day on Second Avenue. the Gallipolis Felice Department reported.
that the changes start before more to the 1973 Pontiac driven by
Curtis 1. Alexander, 40, 591 Mount Zion Raid. was eastbound
people see us as we are now, she ~tz.
a{;ded,
on Vine Street when he made a left tum mto Second, swerved left
There were no injuries.
Confidential Family_Planning Services
of center and struck the year of a vehiclr. driven by Donald F. Love,
She emphasized that she is not
The Pomeroy Frre Department
tr&gt;'ing to put anyone down, but that and the Pomeroy unit of the Meigs
SO, 1274 Wells Run Road, Crown City.
for females &amp; males.
Love was facing southbound and ~ for traffic at the time
sbce nothing has worked so far, County Emergency Medical Ser:
-Medical
Exams
of the wreck. Both vehicles sustained nnnor damage; Alexander's
perhaps the Home Town Pride pro- vice ~ere on the scene of the 3:45
gram might help.
•Pap Tests
was towed f'ror!l the scene.
p.m. accidenL ·
Fisher also announced that she
At II p.m. Friday the depart•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
.
is re~ovating a building on Main · ment respopded to a car fir!l QP
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diS..sea
Street and will soon open The Vic- Route 124, west of Route 325 near
GALLIPOLIS -Two men were cite.! overnight Friday for drivtorian Shop. She said that she and Young's Garage in Langsville. The
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
ing under the influence, the Gallipolis l'l·lice Department~- '
anr employees will be in period 1987 Oldsmobile, destroyed by the
Cited were Kenneth L. Calhoun, 36, &lt;!45 Eastern Ave., Gallipoalllre.
fue, is owned by Todd Eads, 31, of -Methods and supplies for birth control and lllfer sex
Norplant-implant
lis for DUJ and driving a weaving COIJI"..C, and Jonathan ~Whm- .
In the absence of Jim Anderson, Langsville.
er,' 23121'eens Run Road, Crown City, f«r DUJ and driving under
Vice President Jill Johnson con- .
According to the sheriff's
DepoProvera-injection
dueled the meeting.
suspension.
department, Eads told them someBirth control pill
. Also ciled by police were Chad E. Pcpe, 18, 74819 State Route
thing happened 10 the car, that he
775 Patriot, for underage consumption of alcohol: James R. JohnCondom/Spermicide
parked it, and it caught fire.
son' 26, 1609 Bunce Road, Gallipolis, fu driving under suspensim;
In their NFL championship
It was reported that later Eads
Sliding Fee Scale
and' Michael H. Carter, 37, Point Pleasal t, W.Va., for public intoxiyear, 1962, the Green Bay Packers was arresled for domestic violence
We accept Medicaid and private Insurance.
made 36 rouchdowns by rushing.
. cation.
and disorderly conduct. After he
414 SECOND STREET
509 S. THIRD STREET
was talcen to the sheriff's office, he
The
legendary
George
Halas
reportedly
assaulted
a
deputy
.
GALUPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
clos~!d
coached the Chicago Bears for a Charges of assault and resiSting
44$-0166
882-5812
:. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Coim;y Recorder's Office will
record 40 seasons.
arrest are pending, it was reported.
: close at 10:45 a.m. Thursday so die staff may attend the district
: meeting pf the S,outheast Ohio .Recore ;rs Association, Recorder
' Molly Plymale announced.
'
'
; Editor'' note: Names, qes aDd addresles are printed as tlley
; appear on otrklal re~. All ~y lldloos will be pub! Ushed without excepdon•
Those in costume will be
judged in several age groups and
calegories and cash prizea will be
awardeit to the winllm. Cider and
donuts will be lla'Ved to the youngsters from a stand in the min1-part.
The group also~ to cmtact
a Power Rangers urut about coming
in for the celebration. All expenses

Home gutted by fire

I

. I lEW LOCI,.IOI I

Drug arrest ~ ·
bound over
to grand Jury

Southern's queen-

Tri-County Briefs:·-.-

Laugh-:

.

Sunday Times-Sentinel/A3

StreeL

I

'

Hydro project bids...

'

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

l Tbn~SendnelStdf

.

Grand jury

Senate hopefuls' war chests
carrying $1 million apiece

celebration,.sales for ()ct. 29

the H,.,., Ste•

Official pleads to charge

Regional

&lt;lo!nb.t6, 1994

IPomeroy merchants schedu·le

9:30a.m. - Coogregational Singing
"Hamas doesn't allow any faction
10 a.m.- Worship Service with Rev. Frazer
to lay a fmger on ill foUowas.''
Noonllld 2:30 p.m. - The Original BriarlqJpeiJ
Waxman's abduction forced
12:30 p.m. and 3 p.m. -The Breeze
·
Arafat into an unwanled showdown
. 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3:30p.m. -Jerry Weaver Weaver's
with Hamas, his strongest political
GoodtimeJazz Band
rival. In the past, Arafat was relucllllJII., 1:30 p.m. and 4 p.m.- The Rarely Had
tant to crack down, fearing his
11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. and 4:30p.m.- The Midway Cloggen
fragile government might not survive a confrontation in the streets.
Dcgvmett•tlppa ip the Barpwd
But after the kidnapping, Rabin
9:30a.m., 12:30 p.m. and4 pm. -Cow milking, sheeplheirins.
turned up the pi'e8surc, il18isi.ing
.
horseshoelng and llor)1dlin&amp;
that the hostage was held in Gaza ·
and that Arafat wail solely n:sponField eo.itatw epd QCJDDDstrJtiCIIS
sible for the soldier's fate. Pales· 10:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m. and 3:30p.m.- Bradford's Border Collies .
tinians have self-rule in all of Oaza,
but only .a portion of the West
llllJII. - Kiddie Pedal Tracla' Pull
Bank.
2 p.m. - Ccn shelling, cow cbip tossing, apple peeling, hog
In response, Arafat ordered the
calling, feed sack races, chicken scratch and egg lOllS.
arrest sweeps. .
.
Ahmed Bahar, a Hamas leader,
Pond ncmgpstptJou
accused Arafat of surrendering to
11 a.m., 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.- Water safety/Hank Peters
the Israelis.
Lumberjack Show
"The Palestinian authority knelt
before Rabin and arrested our
Hone Arena Demoostraliclas
fi~ters to ~ the Israelis," he
10
a.m.
and
2
p.m.
-The Games People Play on Honeback,
S81d as he paid his condolences to
.by the Appalachian Riding Clnb.
the family of slain kidnapper Salah
Jadalla, 22, in a Gaza City slum.
Honahoe Pltcbllla De11101111ratlons
Yasser Abed Rabbo, informa10:30
a.m.,
12:30
p.m. and 2:30p.m. -Championship '
tion minister in the self-rule government, suggested Saturday thai
Horseshoe Pitchiag
the crackdown against Hamas
would continue.
·
"We will notpermitan~g to.
luam the national security, ' he told
reporters afler the weekly Cabinet
''
meetin~. "The Palestinian authoriZANESYILLB' (AP) - The anjl two. felony charges, •but tbel
ty ... will continue taking measures
pub He service director has other charges were dropped in a l
city's
to ensure national securitf.''
pleaded guilty to owning weapons plea bargain.
In a first step, the CabmCt decidThe charge carries a senr.enc.e d 1
ed to ban the use of mosque loud- with a felmy record.
David Zulandt entered the plea six to 18 months in prison and a I
speakers for political ~paganda.
The PLO also critiCized Israel's Friday before visiting Judge Neil fine of as much as $2,500.
actions, saying the sanctions Laughlin in Muskingum County lin continued Zulandt' s bond and •
imposed after the kidnapping vio- Common Pleas Court. The plea ordered a presentence investiga- I
lated the peace agreement signed in bars him from continuing as ser- tioo.
vice director.
''No me ever told me I was not
September 1993.
The cllarJe referred to Zulandt's allowed to own a flfC8i'm bccauael
"The negotiations should not be
(Coatlaued from Al)
used as a weapon whenever an 1974 convictions on charges of of my conviction," Znllll)dt said in
· courL "So I never sought permis-1
defense attorney Ron Calhoun, ' incident ~urs ... it will jeoJ!!IF~ anned robbery and robbery.
sion to own a ftreann."
;
Zulandt
was
to
have
gone
to
Harrison admitted, "I didn't actual- the .relations ~t~een both s1des,
trial
Monday
on
six
misdemeanor
ly see (the suspect's) face" when Abed~ S81d:
.
.
••
•
the shooting took~ place. ~B\lt I!~
. Palesuman .sources s11d Rabm
.
I
later said he saw the man's build c&lt;.lle.d Arafat late Friday a~d
and hair 'style and was confident F..Jmlsed to.~~ the Gaza Stnp
that it was Wolfe.
. 1ery soon. Rabm told reporters
"There •s no question in my he would co~ tact the ~L~ soon
mind," he said.
,
about r_estarung neg~uauons on
Also called to the stand was expandmglilitonomy m the West
OpiDIDIIIIII
Vincent R. Bee, department chief Bank.
of the Gallia county Emergency
Across town, some S,OOO
would like to notify hla patients that he Ia no longer
Medical Service.
H.was .s~rters marched to the
· located It the office of Cary L. Clarke.
Bee said Ferguson was "basical· e&lt;.ntral jail Sat~y to press for the
Dr.
Ragan Ia opening hla private pi'IICIIce It
ly, clinically deceased at the time" re~ of the detainees.
.
..
of his arrival on the scene. Other
Araf'at. Ararat, hear the ~s,
. 458 2nd Avehue, formerly Dr. George Davia' office.
than the bullet wound near the left the sol~!'5 of Qassam are W81bng
Al:ceptlng Appolnimenta
Nov.1at
eye Ferguson's only other injuries for you~ . chanled the marchers,
'
.
.
. some r&amp;ISmg the Koran, the Muswere very !Dmor abrasmns on his lim holy book.
c~heS81d.
Following the hearing, ProseCut- , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . . . ._, ••
•i
ing Attorney Brent Saunders said
investigators have still not found
the handgun used in the murder.
The prosecutor said Wolfe's coun'
•I
sel has not given them the opportu••
ni ·y to question the suspect about
••
th~ weapon.
"Obviously, we would like to
'
fi'ld the weapon," he said. "But I
•
don't think it will affect the state's
cr.~ (if it is not recovered)."
I
I
Wolfe was arrested Oct. S in
.
•
Huntington, W.Va., after allegedly
•
flec;ing the scene. He was transport•;
•
ed to the Gallia County Jail the
••
next day.

By KARIN LAUB
Aasoclated Press Wrlttr
GAZA CITY. Gaza Strip Moving toward a showdoWn, thousands of Islamic militants rallied·
. against PLO chief Yasser Arafat on
Saturday, and gunmen threatened
to "make Gaza bum" if the arresiS
of fundamentalists continue.
Columbusla7•
The Palestinian self-rule government led by Arafat urged Israel to
resume talks on expanding autonomy and to reopen Israel to Oaza
workers. It said the sanctions
imposed after the kidnapping of an .
Israeli soldier played into the hands
of
extremists.
W.VA.
The hostage, Cpl. Nachshon
Waxman, 19, was shot dead Friday
during an army raid on the kidnappers' West Bank hideout. Waxman's three captors and an Israeli
commando were also killed.
Hamas, the Muslim fundamentalist group which held WalUDan,
warned Saturday that it would kidnap more Israelis unless Prime
Minisler YiiZhak Rabin agreed to
free 200 Palestinian prisoners.
A strike called by Hamas to
mourn the dead kidnappers shut
down most of the West Bank on
to the mid-70s.
. Saturday·
weather forecast·
!he lzzedine al-Qassam
Sunday .Partl to
d.
Bn,ades, Hamas' undergrourid
.
..
Y mos Ysunny. . milnary wing, threatened to
Highs mosdy 70 to 7S.
unleash a civil war if Palestinian
Extendec! forecast: .
police continued to arrest Hamas
Monday ... Fau and conunued activists Under pressure from
warm. Ulws from the upper 40s to Israel d. th
. S
the lower SOs. Highs from the
an e Umted taleS, Arafat
upper 60s to lower 70s.
·
or~ered more than 160 rounded up
Tuesda ... A chance of showers ~IS wee~ as part of the effort to
west hair. Continued dry east. nc,I, the ki~ppers.
,
Lows 4S to SO. Hijbs from the
. lzzedine al-Qassam s,~ns~er
wtU be ID make Gaza bum, S81d a
0~ 60s to lower 70s.
Wednesday ... A chance of showers and thunderstorms statewide.
Lows in the 50s. Highs in the 60s.

•I

:.0

1:

Islamic militants march The 24th Annual
·against further arrests Bob Evans Farm Festival.
of sect fundamentalists Today's
events
.'

Accu-W~ forea.st

........ '1111.
,..... All ;'

.

I

Gallipolis, Ollie
1
•8212

··:,
•

I

~

.~

'

�l

Commentary

Oc:tober1&amp;,1994

sundayTimes-sentincl/A4

Oc•t•o•ber•1•6•,1•994·--~-----------P•o~me~ro~y-~MI;;dd~lepol;;;
- ~ri~Ge!;;;~llp~-CI~III;a,jOHjiij·i-~P;ol~nt~PI~M;";;nt,~WV~-------;S;u;nday
i
nm-~1 Blntll'lll

·•

.~------~------~----------------------------------------------~----------~~----------~--------------~==~~==~====~~----~;•

Daily Special In Our Bakery
fO
until 2 pm 'Mon- -sat.
HotDogs _2/'.1.00 with sauce 3f$1.00 plain

am

Wall
Street:.Ciinton is good for education
1.
.
.

W.(SHINGTON - A recent
report from the equity research
department at a top Wall Street
investtnent house has turned up in
the west wing of the White House,
and it has some presidential advisers buzzing about a "bot tip."
According to a report by the
Morgan Stanley investment finn,
the Clinton administration's political stock is blue-chip when it
comes to keeping its promises on
education refonn.
It' s a nice compliment from an
unusual comer. In the repon, Morj!lm Stanley was actually warning
mvesiOIS of negative impacts arising from President Clinton's directlending Proj!ram for college students. Milhons of students will
receive loans through their schools,
bypassing private lendeiS and ~ving taxpayers some $4.3 billion
over the next few years. Clinton
has privately predicated it will be
remembered as "one of the most
impresslve _single achievements for
this adminisuation'' in terms of
long-term impact on middle-class

A DIYilloa of
~rc
8l5 Third A••~ GaUipOIIo, Ohio
(614) 446-1341

·

111 Cotlrt St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 991-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI
l'llbllsber
HOBAR'l' WILSON JR.

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

Esecutln Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
L.E1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be le1s than
300 words. All letters are subject 10 editing and must be aigned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letterr will be
published. Letters should be in good tute, addressing issue&amp;, not
personalities.

;Deadline for publication
~~election letters-Nov. 2
. The Sunday Tlmes-Sentiuel welcomes leUers regarding tbe. Nov. 8
aeneral election. However, In the Interest of fairness, no electiOn let- ·
Jers wlll be accepted after 12 noon on Wednesday, Nov.l. ·
: Individuals sbould address Issues and not personalities.
• Leuers purely endonlnll candidates wUI not be used.
: Letters sbould be 300 words or less, preferably ty(led. AU letters
Jlre subject to edldnand 11d must be signed with name, address
•Dd telephone number. Te'!Jibone nUJRbers will not be published. No
~nsigned leUers will be published. Leuers sbould be in good taste.

families.
But this means a phase-out of
the Student Loan Madteting ~
ciation (Sallie Mae), whose private

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein
investorS had profited handSomely
from the. inefficient status qllli. In
the future, the Education Depanmentis expected to hold all student
loans.
·
Direct lending is part of a raft of
Clinton education ·reforms passed
by the 103rd Congress. In the past
20 months, President Clin!On sent
nine education-related bills to
Congress - eight of which have
been signed into law. Next week,
Clinton will sign number nlqe: The
$12.7 billion Elementary and Secondary Education AcL Some of the
president's allies believe his suecess on education reform is a textbook example of how _to win leg-

isllitive battles -through coalitionbuilding and bipartisanship:
"I think the Jesson for the
administration is to stand ftnn, do
what you believe in, and then do
the hard work tbat is needed to
achieve a political victory," says
Sen. Paul Simon, D-111., who has
spent years championing the cause
of direct lending.
Simon confesses he felt jittery
that the administration would
retreai when faced with an
onslaught of special interestS and
high-priced lobbyists. "This is one
where Clinton prepared himself,"
Simon told us. •'When he was a
candidate he came in10 my .office
and talked to me about il He clearly knew quite a bit of background
before he lallc:ed to me. When the
lobbyists WCflt to work ... 1 was.
worried frankly that there was
going to be some compromise
away from his really sound position .... To Clin!On's credit he came
down on the right side and stood
like a rock."
The almost disbelieving lOne of

WmJT CAMERib \N THE
COURT~Mi HOW WILL WE

. KNOW IF OJ GElS
A FAIR TRIAL?

.

Observers watch for
fallout from SAFE fiasco

I
.y RICH HARRIS .
~lated Press Writer
• CLEVELAND - Democratic congressional candidate Frank Gaul's
9elf-imposed hiatus from campaigning could end next week, but political
c)bservers say the damage may already be done.
• Gaul, the Cuyahoaa County treasurer, suspended his involvement in
the campaign while lie tends to the dismantling of the Secured Assets
J:und Earnings pro_gram, his ':Ontrov!3ial public-mo~y investment f~.
. ,, Gaul hasl!OI Withdrawn hisgodidacy. ButCI!!!~ ~ . eler
Boyle said the candidate is working at the treasurer s office fuU time.
·, Gaul announced the hiatus on Oct. 7, the day The Plain Dealer reported
that the SAFE fund had made several potentially risky moves.
• At a fund-raiser two nigbts later, Gaul blamed a slumping bond market
ior the program's problems and accused the media of trying 10 destroy his
~.

1

J

.• By Monday, the Cuyahoga County commissioneiS had puUed the plug

tlnnounced they were taking over management o the county's investIJients and had hired Bane One Corp. to audit the program.
• Gaul says he did not see the commissioners' decisions as a slap in the
face.
'
• ·'I do not feel upsJaged, I do not feel put upon at all,'' Gaul said. "In
&amp;let, we asked for any kind of guidance we could get.''
·
; But Sidney Kraus, a communications professor at Cleveland SJatr Uni'{enity, says the cornmissioneiS' moves damage Gaul in voters' eyes. And
the SAFE story comes late enough in tl;e campaign that it probably will
linger in voJers' minds come Nov. 8, Kmus said.
• In contrast, an embarrassing situation for Martin Hoke - his comments about the size of a television prod Jeer's breasts, which were picked
1tp by a Hve microphone - happened i..1 February, so long ago that few
vQteiS recall it, Kraus said.
t Until now, Gaul probably held a sligllt lead in the mostly Democratic
\Oth District, Kraus said.
· , "Now, if I had to hedge a bet, I'd say the race is probably about
cjven," Kraus said.
.
• Ohio State University political analyst Herb AF agreed that the contfuversy probably hurt Gaul.
( "Certainly, something like this corning near the end of the campaign
can'thclpacandidaJe,'' Asher said.
.
.
; Gaul did not return a telephone call Thursday seeking comment. He
lteviously said he was not a quitter, and Boyle said Thmsday that Gaul
11is not even close to giving up."
: Hoke, whose campaign has been subdued, has said he does not intend
, t9 make SAFE an issue.
, "ThC people will certainly be in a ~ilion to evaluate ihe' importance
.Of these new revelatiOns ... on Nov. 8,' Holce said.
1. But Republican stratt.gists are all'blit milckirig their lijJs.
J "Clearly he's out,'' said Dan Leor.ard of the National Republican
Congressional CommitJCe. "He's no lo&gt;,ger a viable candidate no matter
lfhat he calls il Thirty days out from tne election if you're not running
fidl blast you're not a player."
' Bedford Heights Mayor Jimmy Dimtra, the county Democratic chair~ said SAFE need not be a fatal wound And David Dixon, political
ktor of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said.
Gaul " did the right thing .. in suspeOO:nt: his campaigning.
. The lOth DiStrict, which centers on western Cuyahoga County, had
JOn&amp; been a Democrltic SlroiJgbold, unil Hoke unseated PQ!itically vulnaable Mary R'" Oakar in 1992.
.
; Asked wfletber the party was throwing in the 10wel in the district this
' Dixon sai4,
nol"
year,
, •.•Absolutely
,
'

Berry S ·World]

·_Some stQries related to. friends ·
On · one of my walls I have
many, many· pictures of friends, of
which a majority of them are now
departed. Each one is special to me
-and each one has a-5tory.
This past week, I visited with
two individuals who were either
related or .closely connected with
two members of my "Wall of
Fame." One of them Wll$ George E.
Scott who was ihe son of George
'D. Scott. George D.'s parents were
Minnie and Earl Scott and his
brothm were John and Ted Scott,
Sr. Uncle John Scott was married
. to Kathleen Bailey and iheir daughter is Mary Jane Wise living in
Middleport. Kathleen is stiU living
,in MineiSville.
Ted Scott, Sr. was the former
All SEOAL who played center for
the 1930-31 Pomeroy High ~~hool
team. Ted Scott was one tough
hombre. He was the captain .of the
football team in 1931 and led the
team in lllCkles each year. Ted was
killed in World War II when his
plane was shot down over the Adriatic Sea. Among my flies there is a
picture of Ted Scott and our football team of 1930-31.
George D. Scott's son Ted Jr.
also played ball at PHS in the
1950s. Ted Jr.'s brothers are James
. P., who lives in .Kingspon, Tennessee, George E., Morning Star
Rd., Racine, and Rodney Steven
Scott now living in Lancaster.
They are the only remaining male
descendants of Minnie and Earl
Scou now living. One last note pertaining 10 the Scott family. Minnie
and Earl used to attend all ihe foot-

ball games fully equipped with cow
bells. to lead the PHS ·delegatio,n in
cheers.
The second story I wish to,tell

FredW. Crow
coveiS Bnmo Pierotti, a team mate
of Ted Scott's in 1930-31. Bruno
was a halfback and star on the footblill team and also a forwald on our
PHS championship basketball
team.
Bruno J. Pierotti was born October 30, 1914 in Pomeroy and died
October 24, 1944. He was a veteran
of 1World War li and was taken
prisoner of war at Bataan. He was
aboard a prisoner of war ship
which was torpedoed and he was
lost at sea
The Department of Veterans
Affairs has provided a memorial
marker which will be installed on
the Pierotti lot at Sacred Heart
Cemetery.
·
Bruno was active in high scbool
athletics and starred-in football and
basketball. He graduated in the
Class cif 1932 from Pomeroy High
school and later matriculated at
Miami Univmitv at Oxford, Ohio.
When the war broke out, Bruno
was drafted into the service and
was one of several Meigs Couiltians who gave;up his life for his
country.
Bruno's parents were Columbus
(Steeplejack) and Odella Pierotti. .
H;s brother was Gino and his sisteos were Olga Pierotti and Licia
Ebersbach. They are all deceased
arod there were no children born to

1

'(I

•'

'
• •
.

•...

'

.

'

. · I'll bet anybody $10 10 $1 that
The lOth Amendment's meanthey don't have 10 friends who can ing is clear. If specific constitutiOI)tell them what the lOth Amend- al powers for the states arc not
ment says.
speUed out, .then those ·powers Most well-informed Americans ·
know about the First Amendrnenl
Chuck Stone
All' National Rifle Association
membe!S think they own the Sec- . includin' the·power to aiJt,horize
ond AlnendmenL Subpoenaed sus- appropnations - 111e the sole
·
pects are grateful for the Fifth province of the states.
Amendment. Most lawyers are
But most -membelll of Con~
experts on the Sixth and Seventh believe otherwiae. God ordained
Amendments. And lately the thel!_l to pass bills, .: witbout the
Supreme Court's two Intellectual slightest concern for who must pay
cavemen, J.Antonln Scalia · and 1the piper. .
, , ,'
Clarence Thomas, !Jave had 801110
So, C&lt;HWCsa bas'-~ .,...fing
difficulty interprelinll ihe E_ighth uy state IJld city b!ld8e~J because
o UFM. .
·, _
As .or the lOth AmeQdrnent, it's
Another •$10 to Sl ·bel. Ten of
the Rodney Dangerfield of COIIJti- yoar friends can tell you what UFO
tutional amendments. It don't get means, but none of them has the
no ~l
·
.
vaguest notion what UFM means.
If It did, Congress would not
· UFMs, or ·''unfunded federal
have been raping it for the last SO mandates,'' are those laws or acts
years.
. passed by Congre~&amp; requiring 818teS
"The powers not dele_sated 10 1and cities to enforte them - but
the United States by the Constitu- withont sufficient funds. When it'
tion, nor prohibited by it to the comes to s~ndin'&amp; OPM ~!!tiler
States; are reserved to the States people's mQpcy), Congress acts
respectively, or to·tJt people.'!
like 1 drunk at _a cqnventiop of

Anlenc!'-L

•

·''

..

'•·

,·

I

I

-5; ......

~ .. -

"

I

••

.•

. .

lno.

'

WE ·RESEilYE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD OCT. .16
THRU OCT. 22, 1994.
'

12 PACK 12 OZ. CANS

·89
SPLIT CHICKEN

$ .19

1
.
.
'49(
Quarters ...............
Breast •••••••••••••••••••••~

CHICKEN LEG

~.

$·

FLAVORITE SLICED

-~ aeon •••••••••••LB~ ••••••••••• 119
DlNN£R SLICED
$
. S- 69
.
.
-129

· U:$.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEf ·

Chuck Steak •••••••••••~.

PORK BUn STEAKS OR

_

Roast-••••••••••••••••••••\P•

Bluno pr his brother or sisteiS.
This bianch of the Pierotti fami- T•.ere was a possum on .the floor, :•
ly has died out completely, but . apparently immobile. He was won- ·.::
those who are living, including d~ring whether he had sampled 100 - ~
myself, know that the family was t.uch of the white lightning. In a •
weD respected.
.
scared voice he asked the chemist -:
This plaque was obtained tc look underneath the sink.
:•
through the efforts of Paul Casci,
The chemist discovered tllat ;~
Middleport.
there was indeed a furry animal ~
Another individual who siO~d laying there, apparently uncon- :~
by my office this week was Willie · scious. The chemist grabbed a -:
E. Davis. Thl$ man is now 82 years . pitchfork and pulled the animal ::;
of age. He related to me a s10ry that unto ihe floor. At fii'St the chemist :.
he has never been in a hospital for thJqght the possum was dead. To ·:
an illness and never had any seri- -tt.e chemist's surprise he discov- :•
ous illnesses durin/! his lifetime. ered tl!at the possum was drunk and ::
Mr. ·Davis also indicated that he could hardly move. The possum .;
h~d worked 34 years for the state was lifted off the lab floor and ·•
of Ohio as a mechanic and is now nt atly deposited on the ground out- :
re ;ired but is still helping his son in si .e.
;
business. Now you know what
The· next day \he possum was ,.
chan living will do for you. I con- g.. •ne. Upon exaDJination of the •:::
g1atulate Willie on this achieve- m1sh, it was discovered that the -:'
meril
· .
· ~ , (ll ssum had devoured most of it, .:
A friend of mine, whose n8me I th.JS causing the animal to become ~­
dl . not wish 10 reveal, !Old
the in:oxicated. As far as anvone ~\
fc.!lowing story.
.
knows, the poss~m ~as all right the ~;
· It is about a chemist living in next day, ·but thts was the last time !ihis county who decided 10 cook a that th1s
. chemist ever tried this .,,·~'
bunch of com to produce a batch of experunent.
good alcohol. lf preparedfroperly
So, 'all is well that ends well. If ~:
this will produce 190 proo straight ~ou have stories that you would • :
alcohol Some naughty people use Jike to have pu~lished please send : ;
this alcohol for drinking purposes.
them 10 me. I will protect the ideo- •.
On one occasion, after the alco- tity of anyone involved.
.
~:
hcl was distilled from the com, the
Editor's note - Long-time ;•
lllliSh was deposited on the ground Attorney Fred W. Crow is. tbe •'
outside the laboratory. Shortly contributor of a lll'eekly column ::
thereafter a friend who wanted to for The Sunday Times-Sentinel • •
Sf.Jitple the finished product Readers wislling to applaud, crit: ~:
stopped by the plant to visit our ieize or comment on lllly'.subject :;;
fr,~d the chemisl
(except religi~n or poUtlcs) are "'
After he had downed one or two encouraled to write to Mr. Crow :::
..~
in care cil this newspaper,
~i

·sUPERIOR'S FRANKIE

/

Weiners ••••••••••••••••~.:~
· -~.

1
$

Bologna ••••••••••••••••~••• -

129

99(

111 rol or 10 oz. hnks

•••••••••

'

$149

CHEF BOY AR DE
2 CHEESE
PIZZAS

Potatoes •••••••••••.•••••;~. . .·
VALLEY BELL

0l M.lk . .
2
· 70 I •••••••••••••••••••

$ 189

GAL

51
2
.
Eggs •• ~••~••••••!fl•••••••
4·
$199
$1
Burritos
•••••••••••
::;
••
Dog Food •••••••!~~·........
2
.C.h•1•
.
.
S
9
(
$1
P1zza
••••••••••••••••••••
I I•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
GRADE AMEDIUM

~

liquor manufacturers.
. · OLtrageously silly abuses. For ~
In natiOIIIII salicnce,.mO!t of the i~stance, the Clean Water Act .
UFM laws are next to God, moth· forced Columbus, Ohio; to' ape~
erhood 8nd counJry:.the Americans thousands of dollars tcstlna·its ·
with Disabilities Act, the Cl~an water for a pesticide that is used
Witer Act, the Fair Labor Stan- on1 in Hawaii! ·
·· ~
.dards Act·and the Occupational
~an Conpess be required to ·
Safety and Health Act.
stop sabotapng the lOth ,AiiJend- :t
But they coil one county, ment?
··
t1:
Hamilton, Ohio, $23 million to · Easily, if two bills pen®Jg in ~
administer. A aurvey ialt year of CQngress are J)IISied. S. '993 in the :1
314 cities for the u.s. Cooference :senate and H.k. Sl28ln the House :;
of Mayors revealed unfunded fed- would require Congress to vote II'
emllllandates will COli thole cities sPecifiCally on whethCr to consider 1:
$6 billion. Unfunded meaal eUdly · legist.uon tlult the 'Congressional f!
wb'it It says. ,..,...._.;. did not give ' B Klget Pffice scores as imposing ~
,tbcile cities ~of the lil9ney mlre than $50 million in fedel'll ·~
IIOCIWJd)' 10 nD1 thole llRJIII'8DIS.
. m4Ddatej IDDUiJly On state and ; :
Most Americans appiaudCcl the Ic .:al ~ts.
·
~
pusagc of the federal crime bill.
.The UFM-cure bill has biparti- ~
But a Heritage Foundation analysis ~ supjlarl in lioth boulea. Arnona f::
exposed an enormous financial dis-· · .it: backers in the Senare are Dilf t:
crepancy. In the bill; Congress Kempthome, R-ldaho, and John '•
a11tborized $33 billion to hire Glenn, ll-Ohio, and in the Houae, ~
·1UI,OOO Cl!tra policemen, but only , Bill Clinger, R-Pa., and Con~- S
provided enoUgh funds to the states falonal Black Caucus senior menl- ~
II? bjre 20,0(10. To mak\1 up thJt , · bcr1ohn~D-MlCit.
· ·~·
~y. ~ 818teS will have to
c•aet Stolle li ~-~~~ted '' ~
spend $28 billiOQ.
.
. -.niCer tor Newiplpe,r
. ille
Thci tJIM syndrome has IIODle A!liOCI8tloll.
· . ·. . ,
• ,' 1

·,

LlnLE
RAINBOW
DRINKS

ROLL

: RUSSETT

~

'

$129

BOUNTY
PAPER

MOUNTAINEER BRAND
•

14.750Z.

10/$1

~

Sa Sage •••••

WHITNEY
PINK ·
SALMON

aoz

me

.

49

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

.
s1 ifters he saw a strange sight. "'-:

r •

24 PK 12 OZ. CAN$

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.

Congress passes b:ills. States pay ''em

•••

IAM·IOPM-

.•.•

,,

RC COLA
PRODUOS

s

STORE HOURS
. Manday tin SIRI!Iay

t

.

lin SAFE and promised to refund investors' moner. The CC)IIImissioneiS

thd MIJ'88ll Stanley ·dOcument sug-:• gt8ts even more astonishment that:: ·
the Clinton tea01 didn 't blink on~
eoucation reform. For White House·.
aides, it's a soun;e ofweU-deaervcd:i
pnde. Morgan Stanley notes the ~
lack of "decisiveness" in adlz!inis- ~
tration policies ranging from :;
Bosnia to welfare reform. Even :•
when 'the administration has a-·
focus, according 10 this analysis, it:•
"simply cannot achieve a legisla-::
live solution. But there is one arc&amp;·-:
where--the administration's deci- :·
siveness and ability to achieve its ::
ends is beyond reproach - student-;
lending. The administration knows:•
that it wants to end the federally ·j.
guaranteed student loan program.::
And, thus far, the administration is ~·
bttting a perfect 1.000 in securing ::
le,o!islation."
1
Except for direct lending, when •
R ;publicans sided with the banks :
Bl•d Sallie Mae lobbyists ·over stu- ·
d~nts, bipartisan acc(J'ds have been :
fLrged over education. However, ;
Republicans tried to block reautho- •
ri:zation of ihe Elementary and Sec- :
oudilry Education Act - which •
includes provisions to help the :
nation's poorest children ·- ·on :
school prayer grounds. Rep. Newt •
Gmgrich, R-Ga., has been throwing :
red meat to the radical right by :
atlacking what he calls Clinton's.•
"left-wing secular approach" and.:
~redicting school prayer will be ::
,__ '.1ne of the seminal fights of the :•
re::t Qf the decade." · ·
-:
Education Secretary Richard W. :~
Riley and President Clin!On under- ·•
stmd better than Gingrich why ~
s1 .,,e children haven't had a prayer ;•
o: a cha_nce of getting ahead. Riley :
tr d-us:
...
"We .had numerous discussions :~
o• the history of our region. We -~
b• til were from small, Southern :r
~Lites with large African-American ·:
po.pulations, states that had come ::
li•.oogh very ~cult times, proba- :•
bly hit harder in the Great Depres- -!
sian than any other region ol' the :r
country. Tragically, large portions ::
ol' our population really were ·!
ufldereducated."
,
·
:•
It doesn't take a Rhodes Scholar :;
to realize that Bill Clinton has ·!
earned the coveted mantle of "edu- ;.
cHion pn:sidenl"
:
Jack Anderson and Michael ·:
Blostein are writers for United ·.
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•:

Plgl

.AI..

!

CHATHAM

SOUTHGATE

•
I

·

·

20iz.

·

FLAVORITI

·

FOX FROZEN

·

•

"

1 oz.

RC COLA
PRODUCTS
2 LITER

GROUND

BEEF
, 10 POUND

�,.

Page A8 Sunday 11m11 Sentinel

' '

PoQI&amp;roy.-UJddlepqrt Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleasant, wv

b~:,.----------------~----------------------------------------------~~
~
--------------------------~
0 hiQ/W.Va. ,
·Sunday TUDCS-Sentinel/A7

'i

October 16, 1994

--Area deaths-.- Republican .....--GOP opens headquarters----.
Freda Miller

• . COOLVILLI!- Freda Mmer, 86, Chester, died Saturday, OcL 1~.
· 1994 in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• ·
.
Born Feb. 19, 1898 in Cbesfa:, daughter of the laic Peter and Emma
Cole Betting, she was a housewife and a member of the Cl!cstcr Cbmch
of the Nazarene.
.
·
. Surviving are two nephews, Paul H?ffman of Pomeroy, and Robert
; Wood of Long Bottom; two nieces, Je~Uiinc Hawt of Tuppers Plains,
f and Jan Atkins of Georgia; and soYCilll other nieces and nepbewa.
, . She was also~ in death by her lirlt husband, Val Ellje; her sec: Ond h~d. Charles Miller; two brothexs, Doo Betzing and Roy Betting;
, three SISters, Stella Hoffman, Letha WflOd and Lenore Betzing· and an
: infant brother and sister.
.
'
· Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in the Chester Church of the Nazarene
: Burial will be in the Chester Cemetery. Friends may call at the Wbi~
; Funeral Home, Coolville, from 4-8 p.m. Sunday~ 111d at the church one
' hour prior to the services.

·I ,

Ex~mine ·:Chief Clenies

ch1ef .touts
Ohio races

''

!

.-.-Tri-County ·Briefs:
'jl h h drant

~Hyatt, DeWine cheer
,.ldebate performances
~JSy JAMES HANNAH

De Wine said later that be ·will
I,Usoelated Prell Writer
fi~t to help Ohio families by crei DA\'TON- They lplml over ating jobs and that Hyatt's cc;.onom·
~onomic ~licy, questioned the ic policies would COil jobs. Hyatt, a
&lt;Other's ab11ity to run businesses Cleveland lawyer who founded a
and fildtt crime, and when it was , chain of leial clinics, cloled over, 6otb appeared confident in than ISO ofhis c~ and ~pea­
their perfomwice.
ple out of work while drawm¥ a
Republican Mike DeWine and befty salary for )himself, DeWme
Democnt Joel Hyatt faced off Fri- · said.
lay njpt in a ldevisioo debate at
"I'm not sure that's really the
WHIO-TV, Dayton. It was tbc firat type of sound bUiineu record we
of three in theii' race for U.S. Sea- want to talce to Washington,''
._
DeWine said
.
The two are vying to win .lbe
Hyatt later called DeWine's
Nov. 8 election and succeed Sen. remarks ~sible.
Howard Metzenbaum, D-Obio,
''He was very IIK!se with the
-'· Je---o•
.;,.;...,
·
facts t " said Hyatt, adding that most
WIIU .Q
' ''J .felt very $ood about bow I of diose offices yAle sold to former
did,': IJyatt 111d following the employees who wanted to try to
debate. DeW'me declined to aaeas run them themselves.
~performance, bui he appeared
. Hyatt questioned DeWine's
relaxed and confldenL
cnme figbnog record as a prosecu·
~ · Hyatt said DeWine, the state's tor and lawmaker.
~ aovm!OI'. elaimlto be~
. "Hhe'sbeco so~. ~_!I}' .
triend to working families but is do you feel more afraid of cnme
iWly a l!uddY of big business. He today th~n ~?u've ever .felt?"
said that as a congressman, Hyatt satd. Tho truth 1s, you
DeWine voted repeatedly for haven't been so successful.''
1'tric:kle-down" economic Policies
DeWine said that unlike Hyatt,
that favored the rich and burt he believes the federal govcmmcnt
l'veryme else.
is too involved in people's lives.
"lf'you go back tq the Senate, Hya~ is for ~ federal g!"'crnmcnt
you're not going to vote wearing fundinJ~ abortions. DeWUIC oppos'i~ !!Ow P.laid shirt," Hyatt told es aboltion.
.. .
~:Witte.::., 'You're g&lt;?ing to vote
"V~ ~tired: of pobiics as
wCiring your old SUJl, and your usual, tired of negative campaignvotes in Congress burt working inJ. tired of polfticians wlio are
people here in Ohio. l.-lbink. WOrk- driven more by opinion polli than
fllg people have been trickled on their convictions, tired of broken.
lpiigcnougll.''
promises,'' said DeWine. "In
,.
_ every office I have held, I have
'keptrnypromises.''
·

wo~ef:~~~~~~~n~rowdto

·

Teen gets life
fOr killing family

!

BURLINGTON, Ky. (AP) _A
1eenagcr who entered 8 pies barin which he admitted killing
parents and two sisters while

;World.comes to Columbus
this week to discuss trade

Th Sh

w. COWily.,.....,

Lottery numbers

Flu vaccine clinics ser Oct. 26-27

'4liJI.

:raJ

.!

I·

.. _..

.•

' ~

.

,. . . - ·.• .·

..

.

. _

,

I

iy.Tbe Asloclatecll'relll

· Tb6.follo'f'ing numbers were
in Friday's Ohio and West

~

,~~~0

Now watch television
on a Flex-A-Bed.

,. Pic:ll: 3: 6-3-

Pic:ll: 4: 9-6-0-2

.

BOWMAN'S

F6ur Russians
suspected of·car
thefts In 5 states

I

I

'

'
· Bucte,e S: 13-20-26-32-36
· The owner of one Buckeye S
,wilb die c:omct five-number
biliation may claill\ ~.n Ohio
· . prize of stoo.ooo. the JotllinOunced today.
.
. winning ticket was sold at
·
t Dru.i Mart 31 in Buclid.
' Sal~s in 'Buckeye S totalell
. Z),324. .
·· The 17.1 Bucte,e'1S pmc tictell·
· jth four of the numbers are each
$2SO. The S,284 with three
.l tbc numbers are each worth $10.
~ S4,447 with two of the num'·
. are each worlb St. .
.
The Ohio L.Qttery will~~ !lUI
S3,334.SO 10 winnc:n In Friday's
,3 N~ben cllily pme. Sales
16'· P~k ·. 3 NQiben totaled
11.42Q'.S39.SO.
.
l (n illc ocbCr daily, pmc. Pic:ll: 4 '
umbers playen wqered
. 3,3991J1d.willlhlrc SSO:IOO.
- ' · WEST VIRGINIA
': Diily J: 7~3 ' ~ .
&gt;

. ' tllliiY 4: 6.9-9-5 · ·
( Calli 2$: 1-3-7-iO-l9-24

..

f

•

'

'

I

I

..

BELLAIRE (AP) ..,.. Police
have amfinted a cat which they
believe was stoleo and coanected
to a possible murder in Aliquippa,
Pa.
Police CbicfRoben Wallace
said Aliquippa police c:oatacted his
dqlartmcnt oo Priday concaning a
homicide inve~liption'
.
W-a11ace said he wu told that
one to three juveniles - all
described as armed and dangerous
and possibly involved In an
Aliq~ppa shooling - might be in
Bclfaire:
Officers located the car and
impounded it, but juveniles were
not found. The subjects· are atiU
being aought, Wallace said.

'

Thursday, October 27, 1994 7:30p.m.
Universiry of Rio Grande Cafeteria
Rio Grande, Ohio
Featured Guest:
Marshall T. Reynolds, Chief Executive Officer
Refreshments will be served.
'

•

R.S.V.P. Lori Young at 614-446-8899
or toll-free 1-800-446-0226
Advest, Inc.
416 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

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

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
thcficJwsea in West Virginia have
bcco linked to similar activity in
five states, including Ohio, FBI
ageniS said.
State police anested the four on
Oct. 3 after a high-speed chase
involving three cars on Interstate
79 in Mercet County. Two of the
cars were stolen from Brie, Pa.,
state police said.
. ·
FBI agents said they have linked •
the group to the theft of cars, car
parts and license plates in New
York and Pennsylvania. Investigatm also found licenae plates from
Ohio, Washington, Louisiana and
Delaware at the Erie borne of one
defendant, the FBI said.
Oleg,Slllaabva, ~9, Yarold Kotsyaba, 18, Fiodor Guntik. 19, and
Andrei Tsarouk. 19, are charRed in
u.s. District Court in Charleston
with lnlDSpOfling stolen cars across

Choose an4 term
from
29 to ?9 months.
·Minumum deposit: $ 500.00. This CD i~ automatically renewable. Pen~lty for early withdraw~!.
A.P.Y. is available as of the date of this issue, but is subject to change.

Ohio V3lley Bank

Slate lines.

· Tsaroult was released on
$10.000 bond Thursday. u.s. Magistrate Mary Feinberg ordered
Sblcrabva, Kotsyaba and Guntilt
held without bond in the South
Central Regional Jail in South
Charleston.
The four were ·arrested after a
state trooper spoUCd their thrce-c:ar
convoy speeding at nearly 90 mpb,
said Sean CBssidy, 111 FBI agenL

•

Member FDIC

---

- __.,

Holzer Medical Centet~
and
•
•
Holzer Clinic •
911
• • •
• • •
• •
• • •

( f

invite the reside.nts
of Gallia County
I
to attend two public meetings
to discuss the 9-1-1 tax levy ,i
on the November 8 ballot. ~
The meetings will be held on
Thursday, Oct. 20 at 7 p.m. and
Friday, Oct. 21 at 2:30p.m.
in the Hospital's
~.
French 500 Room •.
9-.1-1 representatives·will be on -~
"""
band to review the system
and to answer any
~:
ques~ions or concerns.
1

I

Meet
Susan J. H:elms

~

NASA Astronaut

•

Thursday - October 20, 1994
10:00 a.m. ·
Fine &amp; Perf(lrndng Arts Center
University qf Rio Grande
. Lt. Col. Susanj. Helms, NA~ Astronaut, will be on cam•
pus to i~re~uhe Ur)iverslty of Rio Grande t·shin she wore
aboard the Space Shuttle Diicovery to university president
Dr. Barty Dorsey' and 10 discuss' her ttlps in space. Project
,CHAMP, spOJll&gt;r o( the event, has made arrangements for
students from several area schools to attend. and the public
is very ~elcome. Lt.Helins will also ~ s.,ieaking infor•
·mally at 2:30 p.m. in the Wood Hall Auditorium.'

Cot

Admission to

been consistent from day one in
.
't
everyone •s
testtmony,
Me:Williams said.

Mark and Bryce Smith cordially invite you 10 an
informal meeting with the management of
Champion Industries to discuss the focus
and future of the Company.

y po ce

e

he no longer wlrtt.d at tbc Moaopgalia Couitty mine. .
'
"Mr. Toth's (involvemeot) ._

- Four Russians being bold on car

muoor.

Fisher names Meigs race manager

HoapHa.I news
.

,

TECHNOLOGY YOU CAN FEEL
Clay Shrout, 17, showe,d n~
1
emotion as Boone County Cm:utl
COMFORTABLE WITH .
.JUdge Josepll Bamberxer sentenced
himFriday. •
Available In:
i The defense reached the plea
oBiack
dell so Shrout could avoid prose•AntlqUII
qution and a possible death senBrown
lalce in the miltders of his parents,
\VaiJer "Harvey" and Rebecca
and sisters KriBIM. 14. and
Uauren,12.
: Police said Shrout wont from
l!edroom to bedroom May 26 to
H U S H P U P P I E s•
, shoot the victims at their borne in
I
lllorence before he went to Ryle
8
08 G 8
- · ~
High School. There, be held his L:Lif:;ay:.;ene;.;;lllll~l.- · ..iiGaliiiHpa-liiile___________...
class h&lt;isiage for about 30 minutts
before he surrendered his gup· to
police. . .
.
1 Shrout said ~ was angry with
his parents because '!'~Y lectured
him and toot away pnvilcges after
· be bad brought a stun gun to school
thee days before thC shootings.

Melg$ EMS runs

Woman hospitalized in acci4ent

The debate, sponsored by the
Dayton Daily News and WHIO-TV
did not include a third cballenger in
the race. Tho Rev. Joseph
S'lvenec, an indepjllldent, was not
inlited.

lhll Toth hid no knowledge~ the
alleged scheme to ateal coal from
Bastcm AIIIOCIIIlecl Coal Co.'s Fed- ·
era1 No. htila betwOCD February
and June 1992. ·
.
"This casc is filled with reasonable rJoubl, •• Mariani told JuJors.
Proiccittora maintaiil Toih was
the mastermind behind the acbcme
that reaulted in the theft of more
than $640,000 worth of coal by
deleting .records of trucks that
hauled coal from the mine near
Blaclalville.
A number of people pleaded
guilty and cooperated with the government in the case.
·
Mariani said one of those peo-

J!fe&gt;:mslept
pnson.bas been sentenced to· • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

Practical nursing program approved

g:·

• Detaile'auomcyAmbonyMiri-

~ ,. &gt;MAKING A POINT- Demoaadc U.S.
CIJMIIdete Joel
~ H~ left, IPde • pcUt • Republklll ...adltl•te Mike De'Wble
f lldeaed frldaJ dvllil • delllteln DaJtoL (AI')
.·

Gore urges voters to reject GOP 'contract' ~

ed mauen. Mariani said ·
But Assistant U.S. Attorney
Robert H. McWillilms Jr. nbted in
his closing statements that Toth
met with biminger early one Sun·
day moroing in a Jlllking lot when

r::J
::.::t: =~ Su?:ct
vehicle
delibelllklls Monday. .
h I b
H

1

DeEf
-

~;~=~

ani ·saicl cluring cloliq lflllliiCIIII

l;

Ex-clerk, inmate"'
facing charges

. -Galli l '

]

•

I

C. Frederick Wilcoxen

Deaths elsewhere

l

WHil8I.JNG, W.VL (AP)- A pic, Jeffrey lliminga', llil up Toth.
·Isiminpr, a mine IICCUril)' IUpiii'Vito do wit&amp;' a scheme to su:.l cOil sor whO weighed ll'UCialas tbey left
from a ~Ongalla Co1111ty min~ the mine, pleaded fl!lty in March
and is bjji.Jig ·made a fall fUY by to one count of mail fraud and one
others who cooperated wtlll the countofconspirlcy.
aovemmcnt.
his attorneY said Fri''Isimin'er made the dell of a
1
day
lifetime WJth the government,"
•
Michael Toth, 42, of Morgan- Mariani said. "He's one of the
town is OD lrial in U.S. Diatrict slickest dealers we've seen in a
Court on charges of Interstate Jona tilne."
•
~ of stolen property,
Conversations of the two men
wiJc ~ conspinl:y, mail fraud. recorded by Isiminger indicating
moneylei!llderingandwilnealtam· . Toth's knowledge of a scheme
pering. ·
.
were manipulated by Isiminger
The jluy'deliberatcd 3-lfJIIol-. when Tcitb was diacussin&amp; unrelat(0111111' IU!Jainterident hid Docbing

COLUMBUS (AP) - The
Republlcao National Committee
sees six conpcssional seats held by
Dcmomts as "opportunities" for
the party to win a majority in the
Ohio delegation, said Chairman
Haley Barbour.
Barbour said Friday the GOP
believes those Democratic seats
and others are wlnerable on Nov. 8
because voters are fed up with
President Clinton and the Democratic-controlled
Congress.
Democrats hOld a 10-9 edge in the
Ohio delegation.
I'
He mentioned the northeast
Ohio
sests held by Democrats Eric
!
Fingerhut and Shmod Brown, both
fust-term congressmen, and Tom
~
SIDNEY - C. Frederick Wilcoxen, 79, 108 W. State St., Botkins, Sawyer. All three are opposed by
• died Thursday, Oct. 13, 1994 in WllaoJI Memorial Hospital.
county prosecutors B!lfbour por' Born ~h 2~. 1915 in Racine, son of the late Fred D. and Faye trayed as tough on crime.
; Busch Wilcoxen, be was a retired employee of thr Y~ Type Setting
Other sesiS the GOP has large!·
. Co .. Columbus. He was a U.S. Army veterao of World WarD and a mem- ed are held by David Mann in
: ber of the Villagc Park Mcthoclist Churcl: in Columbus.
southwest Ohio, Ted Strickland in
: Surviving are his wife, Margaret F. Snelton, whom he married OcL IS southern Ohio and Doug AppleThe Meip Count, Republlcu ~ Headqlllll'lm on Sec:ond Street Ia Pomeroy was oflklaUy
· 19~8; a son, Charles Wit~ of Madison; a daughter, Mn. James (Vir: gate, who is retiring after 18 years
opened Friday mornln&amp; durin&amp; a rillbon-cuttmc ceremony by local, state and federal GOP CIDdl·
. guua) Thompson of Botkins; eight granck:hildren and seven great-grand- of representing eastern Ohio.
dates. The party beadquanen wiD be open aoon to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday; Among tb011e
. children; and eight nicces·and a nephew.
·
But Barbour hasn't put Republiattending
the opening are, from left, ltate senator candidate Jobn KnauiJ, congressional candiHe was also preceded in death by twe sisters and a brother.
cans in the vicldry column just yeL
date
Frank
Cremeans, Auditor Nancy CampbeU, Commissioner Fred HoiJman, County Court
' ~ervices. wilf be _2 p.m. Sunday in the Cromes Funeral Home, 302 S.
"There's absolutely no question
Judge Pat O'Brien, Recorder Emmoaene Hamibon, ltate representative candidate Jobn Carey,
, Main SL, Stdncy; With the Rev. Dennis Baker officiating. Burial will be in they (the races) will tighten up ,
Engineer Robert Eas011, Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer and Commoo Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow · ·'
: the loramie Valier. Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Sun- because the Democrats are trying
m.
.
, day from noon until the bourofthe aervi:c.
to get off the national issues and
: Memorial contributions may be lll8dll to the Senior Home Assistance get this down to hand-to-hand com: Pro~. in ~of the Sbelby County health Department, 202 W. Poplar bat. Also they will get more
s
· St., S1dney, Ohio 4S36S.
of
resorting to negative advertising to
offset Republican momentum. The
COLUMBUS (AP) -Vice Southern Hotel in Columbus.
als and crimefJghters like Lee Fis!G
Democratic National Commillee. President AI GQrC used campaign · He said Gingrich, R-Oa., report- er managed to persuade enough ia
Anaast F. Cralttree ·
21 years before being elected the said last week it would buy $2 mil- stops in Dayton and Columbus to. edly called on lobbyists to con· C~gress to vote yes ... we went
GRAFTON, Va. (AP) first full-time vice president of the lion in television time nationwide urge voters to reject the Republican triburc to the Re{'!lblican campaign fmally able to pass a historic m~
August F. Crabtree, creator of a KEA in 1986. He held that post to run ads in states with competi· agenda.
commillee while telling them sure that is by far the biggest crimdl
collection of 16 minialur:c !lbips on until he was elected president.
live races, including Ohio.
·
Appearing Friday on crutches Republicans would kiU campaign fighting
bill m AmcriCIII history "
display at the Mariners' Museum in
Carl Shanmlth
.
"Their negative campaign is a because of a tom achilles tendon, finance reform and lobbying Ooresaid.
.
•1
Newport News since the 19S0s,
SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -Carl $2 million admission that they Gore spoke to about 200 people at reform if the GOP toolc control of
-1
died Thursday at the 180 ofS9.
Sharsmitb, the nation's oldest don't have anything positive to say. the Dayton Convention Center dur- Congress,
Crabtree, who began his carving National Park Service ranger, died They never mention Bill Clinton ing a fund-raising reception for
"l want to call on Mr. Gingrich
career as a child, needed 28 years Friday at IJ8C 91.
because the last thing Democrats Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohio. He later to make public the provisions of his
?
to,.complete the collection on disSharsmith 's career began in want to talk about is Bill Clinton traveled to Columbus to campaign contract with the special interests
'
0
pl,&amp;y at the Mariners' Museum. 1931 as a sessona1 ranger-naturalist and his policies,'' Barbour said. for Attorney General Lee F'JShcr at and the lobbying communitl so w.e
Some of the wort is 10 small and in Yosemite •s Tuolumne Meadows. "Democrats have been running a $250 a person fund-raiser.
can see all the provisions, ' Gore
CIRCLEVILLE (AP) ·- ~
inb'icate that a magnifying glass is He retired in 1973 - but was like scalded dogs from Bill Clio·
The vice president used the said in Dayton.
Pickaway County grand jury has'
needed to see all thC deiai1S.
rehired 20 days later as a sessonal ton." .
occasions to cri~cize Rep. Newt
He. told audiences in both towns
indicted a prison inm~ and a filii•
In the 19SO! he sold the eollec- pur1t ranger, a status he maln181ncd . 'Mike C8se , spokeSman for ibe Gin~'ch's "Coiltmet with Amen- . !lw the Clinton idiiiliiiSirition his m~r stille employee accu~cd· Qf
lion to the Mariners' Museum for until his death.
Democratic Congressional Cam- ca.'f!Republicans had signed the bcco successful in foreign affairs. usmg taxpayer mformauon tq
$75,000 and began a career as an
Francia X. Welsh
paign Committee,. said Barbour is contract promising to consider He said the ''illegal rulers of defraud ~phone companies.
'2
artist, lecturer' and guide for the
·NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) overselling the Republicans' within the first 100 days of Haiti" left the counll)' Thursday.
Indieted Friday were Gay Ran1
museum.
Francis X. Welsh, a 44-year velcr- chances of winning congressional Congress as many, as 10 proposals..
"In the same 48-hour period, som, 41, of Columbus, a former
Crabtree also carved miniatures an of The Timts Herald of Norris- sesiS.
including a balance bud~t amend- Saddam Hussein, who thought he data cnll)' clerk at the Ohio
of presidents of the United States town, died Wednesday after a long
''The Republicans face a field mcnt, tax cuts and term hmiiS.
was going to mass his troops and ment of Taxation, and Garne
that were about one-fourth of an illness. He was 62.
of strong, savvy campaigners in the
''Do we want to continue to threaten Kuwait again, toolc a look Holples, 3~. an Orient Correcti
ihch tall.
Wels!J began his career in 1949 Democratic delegation from Ohio. move forward or talte a radical a! the instant response of our com"
inmate. The State Hi~'
Marnel Moorman
as a copy boy and library assislanL These are people who serve their right-wing U-tum?" Gore asked mandt.r-in-chicf and said, 'Ub-ob, I Institution.
way P.atrol ch.rge4,,bot~ , WJt
: CAMPTON, Ky. (AP) - Mar- His first writing jobs were covering districts well." Case said.
about 300 supporters at The Great believe I'll change my mind and go eJI,&amp;J'IDgJP; a p~l,!lf!l·lof c;ptrll
•
y
'
back north~ ... GOre said.
Jlel Moorman, president of the scholastic spcxtS. At the time of his
ac'liv1ty, unauthorized use of col ,
state's largest union, died in a car retirement in 1993, he served as
puter systems and aggravated ~t.,;
accident Friday. He was Sl.
associate editor in charge of police
: Moorman, the first black man and religion newa.
"There's no one who radiates
elected as president of the KenHe served as a Jlll.blic intormaintegnty and character and dcdicalbcky Education Association, wu lion officer aboard the ailaaft ear'PO IS t 0 US
Y,
S
lion the way Tony Hall does," said
on his way to a board meetins.. rier uss Leyte during the Kinlll
GALLIPOLIS - The city of Gallipolis will be flushing fire
Gore.
when be lost conlrol of his car on -Conflict, leaving the U.S. Navy in
hydrants from 7 p.m. until midnight OcL 17-19, sewer and mainte' Outside the convention center,
an eastern Keilwclty highway and ' t9S3 'as a Journalist lhird Class
nance supervisor Danny Jones announced this week.
Hall's Republican opponent, David
~9llided with,lll !Incoming coal Petty Officer.
·.
Residents may experience tern~ discoloration of their water
Westhrock, staged a demonstration
)n.Ck.
.
Welsb is survived by his wile,
and low pessure dunng these penods, he said
with about a dozen supporters.
~ ~ Moorman taught math and sci- .Helen; a son; a brother; an!f two
ONLY RocK OF
The following is the hydrant flushing schedule:
Westbrock accused Hall of
ence in Shelby County scbools for sisters.
Oct. 17- The Maple Shade. ares and First, Second, Third,
being a "yes-man" for Clinton
AGES
Fourth, Eastern, Vinton, Neil and Ohio avenues.
while at the same tim~ trying to run
OcL 18- State routes 7 (downriver), 141, 218, 588 and 160 to
away from his record of su~ng
DEALERS HAVE
the U.S. 35 bypass, Neighborhood and Texas roads and Green
the )li'CsidenL Weslbrock displayed
RocK OF .AGES
Acres.
a IQ~foot-long pole he said Hall
OcL 19- U.S. 3S West and McCormick Road.
arn[other Democrats could use to
MEMORIALS..
distance themselves from Clinton.
By PAUL SOUHRADA
UN delcsates at tbe summit
In Columbus, Gore gave Fishci
WIK"tlillunc~totn...-.nor\;.kone ,
IAsloclatecl Prell Writer
have an agenda that will include
some of the credit for the recent
namc~IUl(L! ln~y "1"111: H•x.-k of
RIO GRANDE - Full ~al by the Ohio Board of Nursing
; · COLUMBUS - Trade minis- trying to hammer out the Columbus
passage of the crime bill.
l'lfla o..\y ll..l.ooi\s&lt;ooJimlhe
has been granted to ljlc Practical Nursing School at Buckeye Hills
it.crs, mayors and business execu- Declaration on trade effiCiency.
· .~Because good attorney gcner!itm.p IJC11X.1U.'ll W.vTOVMV
Career Center for 1994-9S, Rebecca Stump, the program's acting
' lives from 128 COIIItries will be in
Separate summit meetings wiU
o'Ul,~. Antlut~yAIIAuti-.M... J
coordinator, said.
town this week to cut the ribbon on be held for mayors and business
Rcx""'"'~'\'l' ()c;dcrlt~llofi~,-,)1-M.I
Full aJ?P!Oval means the prograin is meetin' current standards
loaders, and a trade show will
,a global electronic .trade highway.
ti'IC!fP'ilnill', lhct·mli!!.nlOut!da~),lii'MI
and reqUirements for nursing schools detenmned by governing
i .The city will play host to more showcase the newest and flashiest
d'Ct,'latuoml\.'! 11"'' make lt.k:k tf
agencies, Stump said.
ithan 1,000 delepteS from Albania computer, telecommunications and
1\f:."l~ what il ls:lhc unclispulctiiC~~.
"
ll:OMEROY- Three calls were
io Zambia during the five-day infonnationtechnologics.
.
CcMne r« u."l'"'-1 ":C11 11l.owyuu~
an(wered by units of the Meigs
Gu.vantmL
World Summit on Trade Efficien- ' Bannister has been working out
Cotinty
Emergency
Medical
Sercy. The United Nations sponsored the logistics of the event since midPOMEROY
viq,Friday. They are as follows:
POMEROY - Maureen Hennessy of Pomeroy has been named
iSummit is lilned as a prime oppor- January. On Friday, an estimated
.... County Dl8piiiJ Ylld . .
·
SYRACUSE
Meigs
County
manager
for
the
re-election
campaign
of
Attorney
~ty for,small- and medium-sized 1,000 volunteers were dispatched
P...-oy" anlddgl
10:36 a.m., Syracuse to Riggs
General Lee Fisher.
tlusinesses to crack the internation- to shepherd the dignitaries around
K8tle ....... u
Crest
for
Betty
Lambat,
transportHennessy,
wbo
served
as
Fisher's
1990
manager
in
Meigs,
is
a
'alllllllketplace.
and malce sure the summit runs
UJ2.2SII
ed
to
SL
Joseph
Hospital
in
Parkspeech
pathologist
in
the
Jackson
County
(W.Va.)
school
system.
UN Sccrctary-Gcncrat Boutros smoothly.
ersliurg.
She is president of the Pomeroy Elementary PTO, a Girl Scout
J)outros-Ohali will be there. So will
.' But the sailing has been anyVINTON
POMEROY
leader
with Brownie Troop No. 1271, is a member of the American
Ylld
p,s .. Commerce Secrewy Ron thing but smooth, so far.
Speech and Hearing Association, the N'!lional Education Associa·
3:~1 ~.m. Pomeroy, to Pomeroy
ttrown. Preliclcnt Bill Clinton •d
Lasbutka has had to defend the
111111111 ...
Pike acc1dent of Ruscilli Keiter and
lion, the West Virginia Education Ass ICiation and the fust ward
IVice President AI Gore were invit- ci·:y's investment in the summit.
""
•
.loelllooN,....
Jl •
commiueeperson fOr the Meigs Democntic Party.
Jerry Lantz, no one treated or transed but have not indicated whether The city' gave $500,000 to the UN
311 •••
~they will allend.
IC pay delegates~ ~peoses. SecuriSALEM
t . Columbus Mayor Greg Lashut· ~couldrunanywherefrom$1 mil·
II:SS
p.m.
Salem Fire Depart- ·
'l ill'\ " .u T tt nIt·· ~ r. ~~~
ta says !be event will be a"defin. hon.to $1.5 million, but the city
GALLIPOLIS - Flu vaccine clinics will be conducted later this
mcnt
to
State
Route
124 for fJre of
IJ r. o\ I, r. •
lilg moment for our community." wIll try to recoup some of it from
month by the Gallia County Health Department.
Todd Bads .vehicle. Rutland squad
Skeptics an! calling it a $2 minion th~ federal government.
The clinics will be conducted Wednesday, OcL 26 at the Gallia
also on the scene, no treatment ·
coc1tail puty.
"Some would like to nitpick
County Junior Fairgounds from 9-11:30 a.m.,l-3:30 p.m. and 4-6
Org~r~izers say the summit will
r.;rtions of this, •• Lashutka said.
p.m.; and on Thursday, Oct 27 at the Gallia County Senior Citizens
Ilea~.
·
·
'But I would rather encourage
Center from 9-.11:30 a.m. and 1-3:30
~ "I think it's far exceeding any- people to look at this holistically
Flu vaccine will be administered
to Gallia County and Galtpe's expectations," said IDimbeth ar.d recogoizc what a broad impact
lipolis city residents age 18 and older.
Shelton, a U.S. State Department it 211 have.''
Dr. Gerald E Vallee, the county health commissioner, recomofTJCial WboischairingthnummiL
In the .shm-tcrm, the summit is
mended that the vaccine be taken by the following ~k:: those 65
"Amcricin busineacs have an expected to pump $2 million into
or older, lhose with chronic lung disease, those wtth chronic renal
~
eiccUent OIIII011unity to meet with lbe loc:al economy, ac;cmling 1o the
disease, people wilh diabetes, chronic severe anemia and other con·
~ign leaden, !Jiayors IDCl busi- Greater Columbus Convention &amp;
ditlons which lower immunit~. ·
•
execuljllos"to form strategic Visitors Bureau.
Due to the clinics, there will be limited nursing services available
alliances and trading relationMore important are the longat the health d@lr1menton0cL 26-27.
ships,' ' Ms. Shelton said.
term effects, said Jonathan York,
. The health department plans to traVI"l to clinic sites throughout
1-},'Therc hasn't been a meeting pGclcnt of the Greater Columbus
the county .during the first three weeks ,,f November. The schedule
Ulfe this ouiSidc of New York or C.wnber of ComiDCICC.
for those clinics will be announced as soon as the second shipment ·
Qineva in cioae .to 40 years,"
"B~ all th!lt expertise and
of vaccine arrives from the Ohio Deparb lent of Heaith.
._,...,
ailded Rick Bannister, .summit CUJIBCIIII bclpful," York said. "If
coordinator. "They'D d.iJc;uss bow o w1're going to be succcsstul, we're.
"
hJsiDNS 8nd government Clll work
J&lt;·ing to ltavc to learn how to get
\ . ~ to mab trade mcxe cffi. u.10 lbo pmc."
.
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis woman wa admitted to Holzer
,.
ctllilL" , .
Medical Center Friday after she was striJck by a·car on State Route
&gt; 'A centerpiece of the event wiD
141 at Centenary.
. '
be the prwntatioil of lbc Global
Hazel Massie, 81, 3413 State Route 141, was in stable condition
with multiple trawna, an HMC Sjdespeiaon said.
Trade Point Nctwodl:, a computer ~
two( ~ _ . . inCcnla- •
, The ~Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol said Mallie
was crossmg the road on foot at 6:SO a.m. when she was llruck by
expertilc and
VETERANS MIMOJUAl.
lida of
.lnJdinii*IIWWI in
an
easlbound car driven by Ronald L. Trout, SS, S673 State Route
Friday admiaions - William
st» cities worldwide..
·
32S, PBtriot.
;
'
.
•
Kina.
Middleport;
Talmactae Stew. Colilniu it home 19 the coun- art, New Haven, W.VL: Freda Fer·
'Trout ~pted to stop but was unable to avoid striking Massie,
Gallipoli~ 446·7283 ·:
troopcJS said
I
~··
North Amctic:lll Trade PoinL
Racine.
V(fb the netwolt, a .llloc manuflliMassie was lalccn to HMC by the Gallia County Bmergency
Jackson. 286-7484
.OMICAitE ltltlDIC.tL SUI/PLY I
1 - ill Columbua, for example, ~~-SusieW'mService. Tije accident remains under investigation, trocipers .
dou,
Hilda
Harris,
Peter
Arthur,
C';ild ....... cllllrillutor • BosoToll Free
Gary Dill.
'ti:. ~aBf'!J,Iler..:d. 1

m~~~~~uS:~~emocrats

kn()w/edge of scheme

both events i~ free.

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Nation/World

October 16,1994 .

..

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP)

- ~dtlll Jean-Benrand Arillide
n~blllled SIIIIIJ'day after llmle yem
in exile, ~ biggest slep in a U.S.

Ex-jurors in top·~ri~ls .
warn of 'hell' loom,tng;
for panel ·h1 O.J. case1!

Caucus.

Atop trucks laden with sacks of
rice, jammed aboard rainbow-colored "tap-tap" buses, by dirtcaked car, on foot, Haitians
streamed ·into central Port-auPrince and to the airport to greet
the relllming pesidenL
.
"He is our savior!" shouted one
old man 10ting a picture of !he little
bespectacled Jl!iesL
By late Fnday, Aristide supporters were stRiaming onro the lawns
and roadways of the Champ de
Mus part for an overnight vi!lil
before the domed, brilliant whtte
presidential palace. Some S ,000
danced past midnight to a band
playing a hybrid of Creole·rooted
music with rock 'n 'roll.
Duffault Duvemois, 22, seuled
in on a flagstone walkway with
some water and three fellow students.
"I haven't been able to sleep
since Father Aristide left the coun·
try," he said, thcit smiled. "But I'll
be able 10 sleep ton~ht''
A line of dancmg, boulU'.ing
'Haitians passed by, singing joyfully, waving a flag, waiting
the
new dawn of democracy in their

effort 10 resrore democracy 10 his
impoverished land.
' The plane touched down. at
12:12 p.m. EDT, and a host of dignitaries lined up on !he runway 10
gR~etthe priest who became ~·s
ftrst democralically-electcd Ieider.
11Jousandol of people outside the
National Palace cheered as the blue
and white Boeing 700 despended
toward the airport.
It was ·a day many Haitians
thought would never oome 10 their
country, terrorized for llmle years
. by army leaders who ousted Aris·
tide on Sept 30, 1991 in a bloody
coup. It took U.S. military muscle
10 clear !he way for his return after
a host of diplomalic attempcs failed
10 dislodge the dictators.
U.S. soldiers guarded the air, plane and dignitaries; including
U.S. Amabssador WiUiam Swing ·
and Aristide's cabinet, &amp;,:ted
Aristide as he delceoded
the
r:;:,:md toot his ftrst steps on
soil since dte coup.
Accompanying Aristide were
5ecmary of S~Bte .Wamn Christo- country.
But many Haitians were ner·
pher and Sens. Christopher Dodd
ilod Torn Hlrldn, as well• mem- vous, 100, on the eve of Aristide's
bers of the congressional Black homecoming.

for

Rostenkowski loses first round
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
Dan Rostcnko'Wiki has lost the first
round in his attempt to win dismissal of a p-count Indictment,
.but his lawyas say they'D appeal.
u.s. District Judae Nanna Hoi·
loway Johnson on Fri:J.:med
down Rostcnkowlti's ·
to
the indlclmCot. ruling that the
stitution does not protect the 18tam Chicago Democrat from prosecution 011 oonuption charges. 'Rostenkowski bad argued the Hous.c .

g,::_

Perry finds
threat of war
decreasing

should decide whether he behaved
improperly.
.
The court could not find "a sin- ,
gle case in which a court dismissed
a crimiDal indictment" on grounds
that Congre~s alone could judge
alleged acts of corruption, the
judge said.
f{ostellkowsti was indicted May
31 on charges he converted
$636,600 in federal funds and
$56,267 in campaign funds 10 his

JlClB0!!3! we.

.

.

Rostenkt&gt;wsti, now seeking reelection, has pleaded innocent and
denied wrongdoing. Under House
rules, he was forced to step aside as
chairman of the Ways and Means
Committee until the case is
resolved. .

in

' 'We intend to appeal," said
Howard Pearl, an auomey for Rostentowsti. "There 8RI significant
constitutional issues presented by
the nature of this indictment
because it is based on·violations of
House rules and not on criminal
staiUtes."

The U.S. attorney's office had
no immediate comment.
Rostenkowski 's appeal of that
ruling could delay any trial for severa! months, and more than a year
if the matter goes 10 the Supreme
Court.
Judge Johnson turned aside
defense argumeniS that the government's case was an unpRICedentcd
intrnsion on Congress' constitution~ authority 10 police its own

legal battle
rules. She also rejected Restenkowski' s claim that he was
bein~ improperly prosecuted for
off'lciallegislative acts protected by
the Constitution.
·
The judge acknowledged that
members of Congress have limited
constitutional protection against
prosecution ICSUiting from speeches, debates and other official legislative acts • .
''But precedent seems to be
lacking for the proposition tllat
immunity attaches to a congressman's decision 10 bini employees
whose duties consist of pho. tographing his daughters' weddings, mowing 'the grass at his
summer house or other persollal
dulies," Johnson said.

By JOHN DIAMOND

.

1

.Ai11oe1111e41 rr. Writer

KOWAIT CITY, Kuwait The threat ol
in the Persian.
· Gulf is r«:eding as elite .Iraqi
trocips a:z:: lo be ·prepanng to
leave 1101
lllq, ~ensc Secre- '·
11ry William~ said Satunlay.
But, Perry said, _u.S. troop
~1110 dlo replll will con• llnue, and KuWait llld other Gulf
. lllllions have COQIIIIltted to providing rmancial support.

war

l

proadcast rlews':

By NIKO PRICE
' policemen charged '!ith .violating
Allodated "-Writer
Rodney King's civil rlg,hts, all
LOS ANGELES - Judge phone calls were monltoi'ed aqd
Lance Ito says lie isn't loolti!'i for family visits were allowed only on
hermits to serve as jurors m the weeltends.
.
OJ. Simpson murder trial, though
"For seven weelt~ ·fOII·,~ev~r
the people he selects &amp;Rilikely to had a private conversatl!lR, wd
feel hermetically cut off from the Barbara Rasmussen, whose busworld.
btnd wasajuior: '
··
~e former jurors sequestered
.In the Denny case, o.ne juror
ill high-profile cases say the ordeal so frustrated about being aw11y
"translormed them iDIO aanky, iSJ)- from ber boyfriend that abe urgqd
latcd prisDnas who rushed to aver- ctlleagues 10 declare themselves
diet j,ust 10 get bact to their lives.
hope~eSs~r deadlocted. One nis!1t.
'Yoti'RI giving up your family, jUIOIS wd, she ran down a hoWl
friends .and life. Yo!'# have to be hallway, screaming.
.
prepared to face heU,' aaid Chris"We jqst see her cllll'ging, cr.Y·
tine Herman, a member of the ing and she just started sayillg, 'I
sequestered jury in last year's c~'t talco thts no more,' cuss~s.
Reginald De~uty beating trial.
ar.d saying ... she wants to to
lto has said be would rule on horne " Herman.said.
'
sequestration after he sees how
Whether they cracked or not,
much potential jurors have been sequestered juiors said the cases
exposed 10 the publicity around iL consumed their' lives.
,
Last week he began conducting · •'·In the sequestered life, you
interviews to select 12· jurors and had one focus: rescb a 'verdict;"
eight alternates from the nearly 300 said Jen~miah Cole, the 52-year-ol«&lt;
people still in the Simpson jury foreman in tile 1989 New York
pool.
·
City trial of Joel Steinberg, w~o
Jurors could face ~ seques- was convicted of beating his 6tration, In which !hey 8RI sentiO a y•a--old daughter to death.
~
hotel during deliberations, or total
"There were just the living
sequestration •. whi,cb lasts ·th.e a;.rangements aro~J!ld that""- get·
whole murder trial. Sun~. 47, IS - ti.1g food and getnng sleep. ~l
being tried for the slarm&amp;s o.f ex- w IS your whole life fol"that pe'nwife Nicole Brown Stmpson and oc.."
her friend, Ronald Goldman.
Prosecutcrs have requested 10181
sequestntion, which could mean
up ro six months of shuttling jurors
between the courthouse and a hotel.
What is remarkable, lawyers and
former jurors say, is that all the
prospective jurors have told the
Judge tber. mt~t be able 10 do it
"You Rl lining up for a cruise
ship ·that's going away for two or
lhRie months, and ~le
lining
up for tickets," said Boston criminal defense lawy.er Tom Hoopes, a
former prosecutor.
But former sequestered jurors
RIC8II their time as anything but a
vacation.
Bailiffs would switch the television channel when a news brief
tame on, and jurors would get only
· ~of newspapers. ·
.
• Prisoners have it much easier
than we do," said Herman, 23.
."They get 10 waleil '*vision; we
didn'i. .They ict to liSe J)le tel~­
phone somewhat privately; we
were monitored. ·They 'et to
bRialhe ~sh air; we were atroCOIIditioilcd mining, noon and nighL"
In the . federal trial of four

~~:Vunior ~igh students learn new.-,
~ Jjkills in closed circuit television .
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RACINE - While some students may study in the· c~t1:ss·

I

·:,:·FpOm ho!' a television news program worts, some students at
&gt;louthem Junior High School in Racine are taking the lesSon a step,

~-Seyond. ,. by producing their own closed circuit news program in
~CIIe

school.
WSJH-Channel I, currently broadcast twice weekly from
~riis studio in the school's .study hall, serves as a source of student
· •'1iews and .announcements as well as providing a platform for the
:: school's quiz bowl. competition which will be televised live every
;rwo weeks.
.
.
Morning news sessions include pertinent announcements,
·: :,
·i»e Pledge of· Allegiance. interviews, a weather forecast, sports
'lli'oadcasts, art and music appreciation and~edited cuts of games,
weetings and other events.
.
.
.
According to SJHS principal Michaela Kucsma, the pro- gram iS'the first of its kind in Mejgs County.
:"I'
However, Kucsma is not the only person enthusiastic about
- ·
. ·tpe new ·closed circuit television station:
: ~.:
"I like it ... it's fun," said anchorwoman Ashli Davis. "It's
\helping me .not to be netvous around people. ·
··v ;
Davis, an eighth-graclcr, said .she likes talking in front of
-.. i\eople and thinks the funniest part of the program is learning what
~ · people think of the broadcast afterwards.
.
:~ r.
Cameraman Ty Johnson mirrored Davis' enthusiasm for the
::Closed circuit pr~gram and said he has !~ned at least one stiil
:~rough the program:
· .
·
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;:; · "Uilte it... learning how to·run the camera and stuff;" he
: s~id.
·
···.Johnson acknowledged \hat !Jie job carries a lot of respon;
ility .involving expensive video 'equipment and said skills
: ~ned now may help him get a jo l later.
· .
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.The ·students' comments a•e keeping In line with program
·jectivc's earlier pointed out by Kucsma. The program is designed
.' acllieve several different objectives including: developing a
.r14e of leadership, instilling a sense of responsibility, allowing
si~hand experience in a career field and fostering an understandg that "what is learned in school really applies tO life."
The stud'ents, who serve as reporters, editors .and in other
.sitions. work' under the careful guidance of teachers who have
luntecr to supervise various activities', Kucsma said. Teachers
nna Norris and Charisse Knight are in charge of WSJH-Channel
. • N11ws Station. Knight coordinates lhe newspaper staff with the TV
· ');taff to provide an intesrated news. concept. Teacher Debbie Rgy3h
'.,upervises aiid coordinate the quiz liowl program.
•·,
Funding for WSJH.Channel ·t has come from several
· ::Sourcjls jncluding the Rural Demonstration Mode_! Grant, the
: -~.isen~ower Math and Science Grant, tbe Southern Jr. High Booster
::(irganization, community donations, in-kind financing, and
· _..artners in Education, Kucsma said.
: ~ _ . In addition, the program also receives support from spon: }.ors including Racine Home Natio~al Bank, which also provided
::~SJHl-shirts, and Cablevislon l·f Point Pleasant, W.Va. wljich
. ~L\l'ttit{cl )e&lt;;hriical assistaru:e aod luow·how.
,
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· ., ' ' Th~'program, Kucsma saic, is actually a continuation and
liipansion of former rural dtmonslration grants and other proJects
'tiieludin&amp; the school's honicwott hotline and intervention classes.
·~,
"It's been building since 1991," she said, but the station
have ~tot yet met i1s full . potential with pos.sible future proi:t~~~:lc~ including science and' .other experiments, in-home
::;:
and 4~monstration vide,JS.
~t

&gt;

are

Now

AvoDablt
At-

The Shoe

Cafe

·Stories and photos
by Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel staff

"I believe we have been successful in clcterring the war with
Jraq," Petry IOid U.S. Army troopS
at Kuwait City airport before
clcJ!IIMinl! for a three-day visit to
China. ' One of the leuons we've
learned from all this is prepared- ·
ness works and is tbe ltey to
rcsponcling npidl.y to ground forces
in an emergency."
Perry · said the decision to
respond 1D the dJreat from Iraq l?f
dcployinJ ~ ~ ~ Wllltlng for an invllion was cntical 10
avoiding war.

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RETURN TO POWER - Haitian' President Jean-Bertrand
Arlsdde, foUowed by Secretary of State Warren Chr~r md
William Gray m, the· president's special adviser on altl, left,
took a ftnal salute 81ld prepared 10 bom'd a U.S. Air Force plane at
Andrews AFB Saturday for a re,turn 10 his cwntry. (AP) .

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)\long.the ,R iver

Sunday Timcs-Sentinel//4.8

'Savior' Aristide
~eturns to power

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'CLOSED' NETwORK NEWS - WSJH·Cbamtei 1 at South·

era Junior Hlab School In Racine provides students with bands-on

Jason AileD and Jerrod Mi1111 watch 011 as CllllleJ'81111D Ty J~­
films kindergartner J,R. Hupp giving the Pledge of AU~ee.
Behind the desk are andlllrperiiODS Troy Hoback and Asbll Davill.

NEWS CREW - It takes a large crew to run a televisiou statlou. WSJH crewmembera ioclude, from left: bottom - Josh
Davia, Stacy Lyo•s, Autumn Tbomos, Josh Rowe, Jason Allen,

Lena Yoacham, Derek Warden, Cbri., Randolph and Kyle Norris;
top - Rob Card, Jerrod Mills, Troy Hoback, Chris Reibllire, Paul
McBane, Ashli Davis, Ty Johasou, Jody Hupp, Tiffany Curfman
and Melissa Norman.

experieute Ia the world ol television J!ewl. Here, video lechnicialls

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•i&lt; ~~~~'.v~el

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off the Kuwaiti coast S&amp;tunla~rry said U:S.
troops wiD DOt be wltbdrawu
the gulf u•tn
Iraq pulls ill ftlhtinl torces far·from .K-alt's
northern border. (AP) .

NO PULLOUT YET ~ U.S. Secretary of
Defeue WDllut Perry, teuter, adJusted lals
o• tlae bridge of the cralser USS uyte Gul ,
accomp&amp;!lied h)' Sen. ,Jolla W_..r ol Vlrgillla,
left, durlDg a v1a1t to u.s. uYal roms ou ablps

G=

caf.

:warner.

Sen. John
R-V~.• who
is trave:f with Perry, Slid that
Kuwait
odl!'t
allies
have COIIIIIIilled to
fmancial ~ for tile U.S. military

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Referrilll Jt! diacussions with
• the Kuftld ear Satunlay and earJ,Ier ta11t1 between Pmv and Saudi
leaden, Wfi1IIJI said that Kuwaiti
pfficiab "pve the secretary and
me ihc 8ll1ll'llice that this nation
.
widi Ill otbei' Gulf l18lials
~help 10 delray 'VCfY subs11Ul. ~ the COlt of thia opciation...
· farlier Saturday Perry told
· uoops of the U.S. Army's 24th
M«:llaaized Division in Kuwait
. that . the Iraqi Army unit that
ttowed in iu withdrawal from
. iouiflem Iraq doel not appall' to be
. jligiag in dangerously close to
·~
.. ..... mak
•. "'lbc cnc~omprnent M..,y re . . .. in&amp; rilb.t now, ~cording to onr
~

1 , m,e&amp;'. loOitS 1lte a ~Y

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rather than di~
, in."
. 10111·tho
• "It
slniplyu:riina for the
: ~~~OD they neecf to talte

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mission m the Olllf.

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-\NCHORPERSONS - Tbe aac:llorpeno•
OJIU1 televialon statiou -bas tlae tou1b Job of

.

•troat perioa• for the whole production. On
WSJH.Cbalmel 1, It's a Job currentl:r occupied
by Troy Hobllck and Asbfl Davis. ,

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oFl.U..YGUARANTE!'D FOR AS LONIG ·~S~

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YOUR.HOUSEEXISTSI '
oCUSTOM~ .

ilrSV'f OUT( viNYL
•TILT.W a.EAN~
,1
~RT INSTAI:.LATJON
eENEAOY BA.Sr ·
&lt;U:JNEf~;~

.100" FIN..CIH • lOW,

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. · · QUIZ BOWL -Ia addHJ. to student news,

·iWSJH·Cbannel.l televlaes the scb,.Jol's qub
bowl c:ompetitiou. At left, Joaatbu .&gt;mitb and
Stacy Wllloa perfOrm 1 trial ru 011 tile acbool's
qui&amp; bowl equipment. Above, c:omm:aalty support Is i111portant to DIBDJ' sch.•r•• opera-

tlous. Here, G•ry Norris, vice president of
Racine Horne NatiODal Batlk preseau a c:llec:k to
WSJH-Cbauel 1 secretaries Melissa Noraa
and Tiffuy Curfman. The blllllt abo pnrcUied
T-shirts for yOUDpters putidpatina ..11 the pro.
gram •

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Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pte·unt, wv

Library staff exchange ·bookmobil~ ideas· · ·' r

·Southeast Ohio.AmeriCorps positions need .fiJled \'
· 8nd.~c:clln IIJI8)1, rural c:olmnu- ,
The P,ojects in which Ameri- nidel through outreec:h, educalioo,
CorpsmcmberswiDwcnarc:
trainin_g and ~rtation. Six
With Childhood Immunization · . . , . . are'
in Alhenl for
Program a team will provide free the ·vroject sponsor~d by Rural
immunizations to c:llikhn through- Acli(i!l.
out tbe region. One member is
ApPalachian Access and Sue·
needed for. the project in Athens ce4sT~ an outreach p~gram to
sponsored by Ohio University Col· youtb .and parents to 1mprove
. Jcgeof~cMedicinc.
rcponil hip! school students' P!lf·
Senior Companions Program ticipetion m higher educ:alion. Six
will provide in-bome aervic:cs and members are nccdec! in Netcompanionship to home-bound sol!ville,~ · St.
Clairsv!lle,
eldedy in rural areas in an cffon to l"orumouth,
. Zanesville,
postpone institutionalization. Five Steullcnvlllc and R1o Grande f!lr
members are needed in George- theJiroje~t sponsored by ~h1o
town, W. Union, Caldwell, Appa!~h1an Center for H1gher
Steubenville, St. Clairsville and Bdu.cation.
·
Piketon/Hillsboro for the project
.,Ready to Learn (RTL) is an OUt·
sponsored by Corporation for Ohio reach and training ptog~am for
Appalachian
Development prcscbQ91/daycare staff to unprove
(COAD).
school readiness of children
. HcalthCorps Collaboration will tl,lrougb usc of educational televidevelop a pilot project to improve $ion. 'two members arc needed for
1
access to health-care information
graduate

ATHENS • Appalachian
Ac:c:ess, part of the new AmeriC~ _natiQII81 scrvic:c program,~
recrwUng. JDembers to fill 23 poa·
lions open for six regional projects
in Southeastern Ohio.
. The projects focus on improving
access to hcallh care and education
in Appalachian Ohio and arc S{IOD·
sored"by Ohio University, Marieua
~oUege, Shawnee State University
and Wastiinston State Community
College along with 20 community·
based organizations.
In exchange for one or two
years of servic:c, ArneriCOipS mcmbers will receive educational
aw~ to finance their bipet educabon or to pay back their oolle~e
loans. Each member also will
receive an annual living allowance
of $7,662, health insurance and
child care (if needed). Applicants
must be at ~cast 17, a U.S. citizen
or legal resident and a high school

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thO Alben project~ by
Ohio University TclC!lOIJIII}UnicationJCentu.
Child~ ReiOuri:aNO&amp;Tfork
(CCRN) will provide. OUII'eiiCJI' ,00
training to impro~e 9JII~
availability of Child ~ . •
Three members me ~~«· die
~ Maricua ~ ind
·
th ~by CM!ora·
don f« Ohio AP!JIIaclt~iDOvelopment(COAD)
'. ·
.
. Review of aPPii!;alioli~ :llelan
O:t. IS and continues u!lti1 all
m'mbers arc selected. ·Miia!ben
,w:ll. wcJ'Ic Nov. 28;·~PJalce­
m, 018 10 lhe AP{!alacbian .Aci;tss
PI
arc fulf-dmc ' · ~ \ ·
11.::e needing more· !riformar;, 0 or an application Diay :~
.
lh~ Center for CommunitY S&lt;:!:vicc
at Omo Univehity 033 B8liiit C.CO·
te , Athens, Ohio: 45701·2~8 .or
c1.J 593-4007.
; ·

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Samuer L.
Bosslrd Memorial Ubrary 8ootmobile staff attended the Ninth
National Bookmobile conference,
· ~ by the. Sllte J,l1nry of
Ohio, OcL 2 tbrouah 4. ·
More tblll 1:;() libnKy state and
administrators from the United
StAtes and Canad• met in Columbua Ohio to diac:uu bookmobiles
and their global impact.
Tile National Bookmobile Con·
Jerences showcase methods of
improving services and new models of b0okm9bile vehicles. The
Ninlh Nalional Confcrcncc focused
on bookmobile programming
around the world, tecbnoologic~
devcloprncnts and their.impact and
the future of library services.
Speakers from Yorkshire England
·and Kingston, Jamaica Cliscussed
the role of the bookmobile in their
c:oimtrics, lllid showed photographs
of the many sizes and IYJICS of
vehicles used for the var1ety of
mobile services in their countries.
· Conference panicipants were
able to view 10 bookmobiles on
-display and discuss them. in detail
with company rcprescntabves.
"The bookmobile has a long history of -Berving citizens with ibe
greatest need and the least acc:ess to
libraries. The Bookmobile Confer•.
ences allow 'library staff from
around the world to meet and share
ideas about imJI!Oving bookmobile
scrvic~s." sa1d Betty Clarkson
Bookmobile Program Supervisor at

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- - - - - Gallia community calendar. ---~:... ..
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Tbe Community Calendar Ia Dave Samples.
CHBSHIRE • Scott family 7:30p.m.
.published as a free senlce to
•••
reunion 1 p.m. Kyger Creek club
•••
•1 •
non-pront gronps wishing to
CHESHIRE • HomecoiDing house
POINT PLEASANT•.W.Y,f.. •
announce meetlags aad special with Wade Webb 9:45 a.m. Old
·
•••
Narcotics Ano!lymous Clcail and
events. The calendar Is not ·Kyger Frce'Will ~p Church.
Monday, ()ct.l7
FChr~!.gr.oup 7:30 p.m,· ; ~~~~_ ac:op.a.l
deslaned tci promote sales or
••
-~h
rundralsers of any type. Items
GALLIPOLIS • Grace United
CHESHIRE • MRJDD Gallipo...
· ,. · ·
REBECCA WOODAFID.AND SAMUEL THOMPSON
art printed as space permitS and Mclhodist Women will mid a tea 2 ~~,Sit_r ft~~~-. 7 p.m. at Guidin___g
GALI:.IPOLIS - Aleoh~1ics
cannot be guaranteed to rna a . II! 4 P·l!!...._
cec
· - .- - - ·--~-~..,..,df:S~,""'
.
--~-Anonymous-8pm;-St. ~,J!pis-.-.specific number~.,.._•••
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copa1 Church.
·
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POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. •
CADMI,JS. Democrat meet-the•••
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County candidate night 7 p.m. Cadmus
RI!YI\'81
NEW HAVEN, W.VA. ·. Mr. ber of SIIZanna Freewill Baptist
Sunday,
Oct.
16
Group
7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.
Elementary School.
and Mrs. M.P. "Bill" Woodard of Church and is attending Marshall
•••
•••
LECTA -·Revival 7 p.ni. Oct.
Milton announce ·the engaaement University School of Nuning.
GALLIPOLIS
Jim
Sands
GalPORTER
•
1'lle
StaplctonS
will.
•
G~LLIPOLIS
•
Community
of dleir daughter, Rebecca Cather16 through 23 Lccta Christian
Thompson is a 1991 graduate of
inc to Samuel Robert Thompson, Wahama High School. He is a li&amp; County Historical Society meet-. sing at Clark Chapel Church, 7 · Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New Union Church with Rev. Dave
Coalgrovc.
son o.f Mr. and. Mrs. Ronald member of Faith Baptist Church ing 2:30 p.m. 430 Second Ave . p.m. Pastor Steve Rollins, speaker. Life Lutheran Church.
Thomp8011 of New Ha\'CII,
and is an education Jllllior at Mar· Board meeting 1 p.m.
BIDWELL • HeaVenly n-cnTuesday, Oct. 1
CHESHIRE - Old Kyger
Woodard is a 1990 graduare of shall University.
dants
6 p.m. On Pile for God, 3003
RIO
GRANDE
-·Calvary
BapF1eewill
Baptist Church 7 p.m. Oct
Milton High SchooL She is a mcmThe wedding will be May 20,
tist Church "Harvest Sunday" Mt. Olive Rd.
GAI.;LIPOLIS • American 17 tbrouab 22 with Billy Calhoun
1995.
10:45 am. wilh Jackie Gmbam and
Legion Unit n ~uled meeting ofBcctley,W.Va.

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Woodard-Thompson

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room.

LETART FALLS -Letart
Trustees meeting 7 p.m. Monday at
the office buildini.
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fcrcnc:c room.

MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist Church revival 7 p.m. Sunday
lhrough Wednesday, Rev. Orville
Gtiffith speaker.

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Deem-Davis
;
MIDbLEPORT·- Roger K.
• Deem of Middlepon, announces
: the engagement and approaching
; marriage of !heir daughter, Teresa
c Marlene, to Bart Andrew Davis,
' son of Mr. and Mrs. Wyllis Davis,
Jr. of New Haven, W.Va.
'.
The bride-elect is also the
daughter of the late Rhea A. Deem.
She is a 1991 graduate of Meigs
: .high School and is employed as tax

SALE'!

MASON, W.Va.- Women
Alive meeting 7 p.m. Monday in ·
Mason. Call 992-2952 or 992-2469
for more infonnation.

administrator for the villa'ge of
Pomcmy.
The prospective groom is a
1988 graduate of Wahama High
School and a 1992 gradual~ of
West Virginialnstitu\C( of.Technoiogy. He is employed with Ohio
Power at Gavin, Cheshire.
A winter wedding is being
planned.

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JODY .SMITH

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1~ Smith-Lilly
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POMBROY--" Robert and Bar·
: bara Smilh of Pomeroy annollllce
• the enpgement and fonhc:oming
; marriage of their daughter, Iody •
£ Rcricc, to Dllc Lilly of Shade, .
~ · He il th.e son of Denzil and
4 ~Lilly, and the late Belly ~
'LillY ~ Sluldc.
,
- 1'bc ~ wiD be Dec. 3' 111 1
· ·p.m. " die Saaed Hean Calholic:
CblidtlnPc&amp;eroy.
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Those not making the 60 day
deadline wiU be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
puiJiished with wedding stories is
desired. Photo~ may be either
black and wh1te or good qnality.
color, hillfold size or ~lager.
Poor quality photographs will
not l!Q accepted. Gmcrally, mapshots or instant-developing pboros
arc not of accCI)tablc quality.
All material submiitt.d f« publication is subject to ~tin~.
Questions may be duected to
the editorial department from 1-S
p.m. Monday through Friday at
446-2342.

The Sunday Timu-Sentin~l
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason Counties as news and Is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs wilhout charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event
To be published in the Sunday·
Cllition, the wedding must have
taken I?lac:c wilhin 60 days prior to
· the publication, and may be up to
600 words in lenglh. · Material for .
Along the River must be received
by the editorial d~partment by
Thllnday, 4 p.111. pnor to lhe date
of publication.
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ROBERT M.

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FIMILY·PUCTICE

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M.D.·

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PAIN·CONI.OL"CiiNIC :
·WEIGHt CONIROL ···

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Trlbune 446!2342

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his wife, Kalhryn, Middleport; his
and sister. Howard Knight.
~ Ch~ster and Nola Will, Can11l
t Winchester; Woody and Bobbie
WU1on, Venice Fla.; Curth and
r Marilyn Wilson, Seven Lakes, N.
Sc., btothers and Jisten-in-law of
( Mti. Knight; Sharoll and Cllarlea .
~ K~gbt, Chester; Janet Pennell,
~ c Jllllltius: Vicki and 1o1m Nicmir ~K~ai Marietta; nieces and nephews
~of the honoree; Brad · Halley;
: YIIIICie, Ind. lnd his friald. Katie
. c~. Cbqrin,,F~ ~ the hoatl
alod ~ ~uglll«, Paige Halley,

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. S4T.~N:301 SUN.-i2-4
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LAST DAY AND FINAL
6 HOURS THIS
SUNDAY!!!
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12'

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MONTHS

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6 MONTHS
FREE FINANCING
ON
ALL APPLIANCES
AND TV'S

5%
DISCOUNT
FOR CASH
PURCHASES
SUNDAY ONLY

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OVER 75 LIVING ROOM SUITES, 80 RECLINERS,
40 B.EDROOM SUITES, 150 END &amp; COFFEE TABLES,
30 DINERES - AND
MARRESSES, MIRRORS, LAMPS, PICTURES.

ALL ON SALE WITH FREE FINANCING &amp; FREE DELIVERY! .

PURCHASES MUST BE PAID FOR BY CASH, PERSONAl CHECKS, VISA, MASTERCARD AND/OR ACCEPTABlE CREDIT
APPLICATIONS -ARRANGEMENTS FOR DELIVERY OR PICKUP OF PURCHASES MUST· BE MADE AS SOON AS POSSIBlE.
NAME BRANDS TO BE SOlD ON THIS LAST DAY...
lassen • Restonic • Engl111d • lleuleel • Caldwell· Catnapper
Spring Air ; Jimson • Corolla Classics • Zenilh • Gibson
Smith Brolhers • Peters Revington - Quality • Vaughn/Bassell

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SUNDAY$

Purch.aed names ·· mus1 be p111d lor · by

Tufted tlack recliners ,
padded back, no 118
springs
and ·
aolld

hardwood 1ramea.

SUNDAY

6HOURSONLV
THIS SUNOAY ONLY

$22995

. YOUR CHOICE

) /

_ _ _ _... WIIIG CHAIR or SWIVEL ROCKER
/2 OFF
11
1
SUNDAY 168
...__ _ ___,
9x 12 RUGs. .......... SUNDAY 188"
CLAUDE GABLE
MAUVE SOFA
6x9'RUGS ............. suiiDAY s68''
QUEEN SLEEP SOFA
~:;~·;:::.;=.:::· ;;;9..

sa a••

RECLINING LOVESEAT

INNERSPRING IIATTRES!l

SUNDAY s

- oAK FINisH BooKcAsE
SUNDAY f74 44

- - - - - - - • r ' " o • s o • "·•;UNDAY

COLONIAL STYLE
2 TO CHOOSE FROM.
NOT $11119.98

LIQh1 Fl.('lah.

NOT '70&lt;&gt;0S

SUNDAY

IEAIIIAG w/OnOMIN
SUIIDAY 18811

58811

~

'599"

PINE HUTCH

GLIDER lOCKER Ook Finish
SUNDAY S199"

SOFA &amp; CHAIR
SUNDAY$

BLUE

"FLEISTEEL" SOFA CHAIR '

SOUtn West Print-Lifetime spring and tra~
wilrranty on both. Sofa: beige backirouoJ.
with rust. green, blue print. Chair: btu~
w/rust.

NOT $2899.95

12 MONTHS FREE FINANCING
95
SUNDAY 5119
FREE DELIVERY
19" IV/lomoto, Crosley
ALL PICTURES,
SUNDAY 1199"
LAMPS &amp;
OAK FIIIISN CURIO
SUNDAY 1199"
MIRRORS

11
SUIIDAY $681

'279 91

GilSON 15 CU. FT.

REFRIGERATOR

SUNDAY 1489"

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SUNDAY

tS

SOLID CHERRY HUTCN,
TilLE, 6 CHAIRS
IYCRIUM1
NOT $6999.95

$3333 33

SUNDAY

RESTONIC PERFECT REST .
PillOW TOP
MAnRESS &amp; BOX SPRING .
TWIN SIZE NOT 5599.95

SUNDAY 1269 95 sn

FULL SIZE NOT $699.95

SUN DIY $3 2995 Sn

QUEEN SIZE NOT $79Ul

SUNDAY
Kl NG SIZE NOT$1199.95

449 ·su
·bg SetS---lOT Sl2tt.tS.-SUIIIAY 159995 SIT
Queen Sets..

M . . .,

Sttt·••'!'--SUUAY

I

roun-

datlon, 252 CoM, medium
llrm. FullY _.ntted. ·

NOT$241.15

SUNDAY

5

379u Sli

· SUNDAY.S519

30,. hs or Eloctrk
UliGE

8oth mtttrt-M •

$1 039' .

12 MONTHS FREE FINANCING!

SPRING AIR GRAND AWARD ULnMATE
91
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S29'9 t5
SUIIDAY 279
Twin Sets ..._...., mus....-suND&amp;Y
· ·su ,.......,..~~~...,
r ••• Se
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,s
fULl SIZE
"' · ts.. _......., s7".ts._...suua' 5349 su MAITRESS sns
. S

persona~ .

item. EYet"ything ia offered on 1 lirsl come, firs! serv
basis. Furniture and furniture related items .

All wood, single dresser w/minor, 4 drJwer
chest, full or quetn headboard with frame.

NOTS499.95

usn:

check, Visa. r..sterC~rd , e» acceptable crKiit apPJiuticn .~
FrH df!l tvery end 12 months same .n cnh tinencin
available. No quantity guwenteu except for one advert!
~

JIMSON OAK FINISH
BEDROOM SUITE

RECLINERS

138811

TERMS OF SALE ...

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BALANCE PAID IY OCTOBER 1995.
$599 MINIMUM PURCHASE REQUIRED

•

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•
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FREE FINANCING

0

BLINDSHOf '

AdinJIOII;r·
.
JCniaht's ~and tlieir

ePP

NO PAYMENT OR NO INTEREST If

NOT $1599.98

JABOTS
WALLPAPER .• ND

.'f:l.
wavaieiWned toMiddleportforaa

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H·OUR
SALE

BEDROOM SUITE

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~e .t~.
Cerrijied Professional Plwtographer

ALL MERCHANDISE IN WAREHOUSE
AND/OR ON DISPLAY WILL BE PLACED
ONTO THE PUBLIC MARKET FOR
RELEASE DURING THIS ...

,Door dreaaer, nHrror1 htadbolrd fr1mt1
night llblo, chHl.
Block with brill trim • •

SWAGS ;&amp;

t

Open Tuesday Thru Friday 10 · 5
Saturday &amp; Evenings By Appointment

234 Broadway Street · Jackson, Ohio 45640

STORE HAS MARKED DOWI TO
PREPIIE FOHHIS WI AND FINAL
DIY. DOORS OPEII SUIIDIY 1 PM

NOT $26Dt.118

w;, Now Speclalliti In .

1blotlier

(614) 286·6767 or
Toll Free 1·800·316-LEAR

PHOTOGRAPHY

cheat, night lllble, full or quHn bed.

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Wallpaper, Borders
and Fabric ·

gt~ were Mr. Knight and

Call Now For Your Appointment

.1111

Solid Pine. Hutch. min'O.r, dresser, door

·Horne Decorating

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1299

COMING SOON..,
~AURA ASHLEY

MIDDLEPORT - A surprise
91 lh birthday party honoring Earl
: 1: 1ight was given recently by his
d: ughter and son-in-law, Sue and
ID Halley, at their farm ncar
t Arhcns.
• Following a dinner acVCIIII tribu e.s w_ere given to the honored

11;,

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$

Bordm, Wal~r,
Pllu:e Mats, Chair Pads,
Shower CUrtains &amp; Morel
All 1st Quality
AI.L IN STOCK!

Knight turns 90

··' ··: ·; ; :t , . ;, . ; .
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Bookmobile service has ~n
offered in Gallia County sjnce
1949. In 1982, Gallia County was
the recipient of a Federal Grant
which allowed staff to design a
new vehicle and service for the
county, utilizing new technologies.
Gallia County was the first
bookmobile in the country to try

.K ITCHEN&amp; ·
BATH SHOP

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~~~•• M••~lal:lf•fiftti·
~·.o;..
~t ·

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L£

Bo~Ubrary.

PERSONAUTY

CONTEMPORARY

TRADmONAL

YAUGHI BISSEn
BEDROOM SUIIE

Large Selection
Prices
Start at

*~to pro~~;z

=~,:.':visions and trailer
courts throughout tbc .w.......
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SUNDAY!!!

Now Available

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· Seniin~l m~ztss ..

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Veteran.S Memol1al, Your :HO,ni~town Hosptt:J¥. has tlnnly
in place a Home Health eat;e Semce ready to seiVe you,
, Through this servtce, establl~he~Jn ~pt~mbet, \97.1, .
well ove_~ .20 years ag~~- ,Yo-li c~ -~cure :~~tance with ;y;~'P" .
health ,problems In JJte comforts,, of your own hpme.
Regl8tere4 nurses, ._ur8tng aides·. 8Qd pllysica\. tbe~pt~t&amp; .
.are available to help.you..A r~rd 30.994 vistts tQ loeal .
__ Jt&lt;).mes -~re -~e::W,, t-~:u~. 7aem~ . 1~ )993 .poin~t ~p ;I ts· ,
successful
operauon
.. ·•,)~l
, .. .
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, . ·. ,. V~terans Memortal's· Ho~e. llealth Care lS 'aVaJl8ble .tQ all :...
persons within a ref&amp;onable - distance . to the · hospital, 1·
.,.relanJless of age, race,.religton Of socJo-econotnle -status';' i ·
• Answers to any' 9.u~tlqns. you · h've m:: regard to itl).c ~.
~cecanbe~~ ..~:'9:92~323t.' ..

News Hotline
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meet1ngs

: GALLIPOLIS • ijolzcr Medical
... Ccntet' and }iolzer Clinic arc spon·
; soring two public meetings ,to dis: cuss the 9-1-1 tax levy which has
~beCn ~on the Nov. 8 primary
r election ballot.
Th~ meetings wi,ll be 5 P-~­
- OcL 20 and 2:30 p.m. Oct. 21 m
• the hospital's French 500 Room. 9:-t-1 rcprcscntativcs will be on hand
: to discuss the 1/4 of one percent
• sates tax levy, as wcii as the sySiem
• 'and its operations.

DID YOU KNOW?

ave a ot news ttpo
or ·
st9ry suggestion?
;
Call the

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OPEN t:3N:,OO
liON.-lAT.

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Qjul[ity Servia Portraits fo-#lJr,e "Cfass of '95"

ALL GOODS LIQUIDATED
TO THE PUBIC

FABRICS

fsponsor pu~lfc

BlHO
R CLOT.HIER$

0

HO~LEY,

i Hospital, Clinic WAVERLY

YzPai~E ·

Wedding policy_-- -

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AJ,l, LONDON
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· was the si&gt;n of the late Dr. and Mn.
Silas Alfred McCullough .
Mr. and Mrs. McCullough have
two children, a daughter, Ann Star·
ling McCuUough Cooper of Houston, Texas, and a son, Silas Alfred
MC:Cullough II, deceased; five
grandchiiiJren, and two greatgrandchildren.
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£OATS .AND .JAQmTS

.POMEROY- VMH Women's

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OFF·

Large Selec.tlon
. All 1st Quality ,
Ptepastecl V-inyl·
- Scrubbable a

RACINE - Home schooling
meeting for parents meeting 7 p.m.
Monday at 28471 Basban Roa4,
~J!;s~ei:.or more infmnation,

· cd at the confercacc."·
The Gallia County~
se vice provides 35 hoGn oflillily
service each week to~ll of
G tUia County. Two booltmobilel

U:Z

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Yt..ar, and will be shariq 111,111)' l'f
the new ideas lhcy saw dernonsllll·

INVESTED PARTIES_GIVE FINAL ORDERS ••• IT'S ALL OVER AT OUR MINUTE PAST 6 P.M. SUNDAY!!!

: By JOHN CURRAN
piece of garbage and a couple of
.. Alsodated Prtllll Writer
strands of string, or you can ~lid
:
WILDWOOD, N.J. (AP) a couple thouiland dollars on it;"
! More thl!n 240 years ago, }Jen said Martin Lester, a British
~ Franklin used a homemade kite to designer known for making kites
~ demonstrate that lightning is that~ like something else.
t nature's electricity.
·.
Lester baulcd 18 mph winds to
'~&gt;
On Friday, some 700111C1Chants, keep aloft "Brian"- a 32-foot~ competitors and ":wind pilots" long kite with the torso and out~ froin the United States and nine stretched anns of a soccer player,
,., other Cl)untries gathered to ccle' · -complete wltb soccer baD suspend·
: brate the ;.;itc's less praaical appli- ed above his hands.
:. cations. ·
,.. Tnose aucndinll the 17111 annual
"Everyone lias Down a kite as a
~ American Kitefl1crs Association child, IIJKl there's still a little child
;: convention say half the appeal is in us as adults," Lester said.
~ that kiting doesn't require electriciMike Dallmer, a U.S. Depart·
., ty.
·
ment of Agriculture worker from
;: "No motors, no mechanical Philadelphia, brought along a
devices. It's all up to thew~" · stuffed toy bear lhat he called his
* said Jolmna Doyle, 27, of Hamden, inspiration - Bear Franklin. It
"' Conn.
wore a tri-cornered bat, wire·
: The beach 111 this ~ resort rimnied bifocals and a ruffled shin
~ was filled with brightly colored wi\11 lacy white cuffs.
.., kites of all kinds, shaped likc blow~ fish, dolphins, octopuseS and pigs. ·
..
of a
... "You can make a kite out
.

TO

FALL RED TAG

Also attending were their grandchildren, Christi and David Hesg of
Parkersburg, Michael Hoffman of
C.harleston, Alyssa of the home and
Mrs. Buckley's mother, Lola Barber of Overbrook Center, Middlepon.

; Kite fliers compare creativity

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WALLPAPER
l BORDERS
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MONDAY
. RACINE·...., Racine Villa~e
Council meeting Monday 10
recessed session 7 p.m. at Star Mill
Park.

..

Mr. and Mrs.
of Richmond,
~ Va. observed theu 60th wedding
"" anniversary on Oct. 12.
~ They were married on Oct. 12,
: . 1934 a&amp; Grace Episcopal Church in
~ Pomeroy. Slie was the former
:I" Charlotte Nyc, daughter of the late.
~ Mr. and Mrs. George Blair Nye. He

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anniversary observed

McCupou~h

SALE

POMEROY Veterans
Mcmcillal HQIPital AI!XiJjlry, 1:30
p.m. Tuesday in the bolpital COD·

MRS. GEORG.E.BUCKLEY

=
POMEROY .. Roy p.

COAT·

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TUESDAY
RACINE -Alpha Delta Kappa
wiD observe Founder's Day and 1ts
30th anniversary at 7:30p.m. Tucaday at lhe Racine United Methodist
Chwth;

SUNDAY
RACINE - Morningstar United Methodist Church homecoming
Sunday. Worship services at 10
a.m., Sunday school at 11 a.m.,
potluck dinner at 12:30 p.m., and
afternoon aerviccs at 1:30 p.m,

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~ 60th

LADIES

Auxiliary meeting 1:30 p.m. Monday In the hospital conference

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_' REEDSVlLLB - Mr. and Mrs.
'. George Buckley of Reedsville celc. brated their fiftieth wedding
. anniversary wilh a dinna' 111 Scbas. tian's in Parkersburg, W.Va. hosted
: by tllcir daughter and son-in-law,
:Pam and Roger Hoffman.

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar Ia
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wlsblag to
announce meetings and special
events. The cale,dar Is not
designed to promote sales or
rundraisers of any type. Items
aFt prlated as Sl*t permlta ud
cannot be guaraateed to run a
specific number or da,s.

r

50th anniversary celebrated
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tbe usc of a fax machine on ill , result of the county's use of tech·
nQlogy, inclu~ing a. _,hot«?Copier
grant. Although the fax mac:bine and a computerized cuculation syswas t10t c:ontinucd on the boc*mO- · tetn: ·
.
bilcbecauseofthepoorqualltyand
"By sharing idcu with other
inc:onsistency of radio traDIDliJiion bookmobile propams, we 'have
tluoughola the COIDity, other bootbeen able to ~as
~w ~
mobiles throughout lhc country for ~lllg, sc uling, vebihave made fax macllines a regular clc design and aervice as we have
panoftbcirboolabobilcllei'ViccJ.
11een able to ouer." said Clarkson.
The Gallia County boolanobile "Rhonda McGuire and Lack Mowprogram wu featured atlhe first ·ery of the Bossard bookmobile
duee boobnollile conferences as a 1taff auended the c:onfcrcnc:c this

bookmobile, made pollli'* by the

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Sentinel

-The House of the

Week---------------~-

Desi~ Boasts Both Luxury and Economy

AN ARCHED window adele lo tile clualclam oflhla three-bedroom home.
ByPATWKAS
(For a more detailed, scaled plan
AP NI!Mfemurea
of this house, in,rJuding guide' to

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The cla88ic lines of this home ·
include some of today'a moit luxu·
rlous design features. And this is
an contained in 1,367 square feet
Design F-17, by HomeStyles
"Source 1" Designers' Network,
reflects a homey appeal inside and
out. Despite its Initially compact
size, its square foota11e doubles
· when you fmish off the standard
basement
Within the covered front porch's
columns and railings you find a
place to loun11e any time of the
day. The facade Is further distin·
11uished by an arched window,
accented by a gabled roofline and a
round louver vent
Just past the sidelighted front
door a vaulted ceDing rises ·to 11
feet. greeting aU who enter. The ·
spacio.ua living room Is flooded
with light from a central skylight
and a pair of French doors that
opens to a backyard terrace. A
heat-circulating fireplace ·sits
between the French doors, radial·
ing warmth throughout the room.
111e It-foot ceDing Oows into the
nicely sized dining room, which
olfel'll views to lhe front porch.
The adjoining kitchen boasts
plenty of co.unter space, a laundry
closet and a well-lighted sink. A
sWIDy dinette has a sliding glass
·door that also opens to the back·
yard terrace. The kitchen has ronvenlent access to both the full
basement and the attached two-car
garage. A service door in the
g8Jlllle opens to the backyard.
The muter suite's aleeping area
atuns with a wall of,windows that
bathes the room in light An adja- ·
cent dreaalng area, with two handy· •
cloaeta. Is further expanded by a
Jarae walk-in cloeq.
The master bath Ia a soothing
retreat, offering a whirlpool tub
and a separate shower. Glass
blocks above the dual-sink vanity
maintain privacy while prpviding

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light

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The two remaining bedrooms at
the front of the home share another fuD bath and a nearby linen closet The larger of these additional
bedroomi boasts 1 dual·closet, an
ll·foot-high ceiling and an arched
window.

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Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Plerunt, WV

·Good picture, bad idea:_~
~ : CO/lege editor is fired- - .·.

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Enclosed Is $4 for plan No. - - - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4.95 each for the booklet(&amp;) _ _ _ _ _ _ __

--------~-------------------City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

State ~tP&gt;-----------------

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BACK SCUTCHEIS NAil TIPS •35 sn

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Call TodiiJ For lllppolat•at614-949·2117

J3.0 •10-6
·•

. I CftiBOII
RACINE, otiO
Nail Tech- AI- HOI Jem~ll
Open Dally Mondlly-$1tUrdey

IIIIICURE $$~50

MAIN FLOOR

1'· 17

TilE LIVING room Ia imprc891vc, with a ~kylll(ht, French dqono and hcat-clrculatl!Jg·llrcplace. The
master bath oft'en botJl a whirlpool lub and a fiCilllmlc olumcr, as well ae a dUll-sink van it)'. lllgh cell·
lnga grace the ilvllltl room, dining room and one of the ~ms•

•Exceft Department 56, Thomas
Stab Artwork and Sale (term.
SELECTED ITEMS

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... · - · • • -~ .... --~.~ . ~ _. ••• •...,. ... ..

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Under a 19!10 federal law, toy
makers can sell n:aiistic toy guns as
long as they are equipped with a ·
cap or cork at the muzzle or an
orange mark 10 show they an: 111ys.
But the caps can be ~emoved and
the guns~ to look real·

oSpolta Mldlclne
•AdultFIIMII
•Wort Aec:owry
oCardlac Rehabilitation

lnlt.trtiiiCe,

Worlc8r'e Compenaatlon

lfMEMIEI TO IIEICISI YOUR liGHT lO CHOOSI YOU
PHYSICAL lHEUPim
1102
Margaret Johnson, as, PT
Herman
PT.

••k•re ....

MlchMl

Dolores

AT

R.N.

GAWPOUS-MIDDLEP.ORT

GOLD •s• BAR

DIAMOND BUCELEI

$199

Total

REG. $299

Weight

1 Ct. Only
R-o. $6111

BRIDAL SET
Swirls of Dla•onds

,

% CARAT t.w.

... ....
REG. $4411

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SALE

499

DIAMOND PENDANT

7 DIAMOND MARQUISE
ANNIVERSARY BAND

7 Dllmonda Set In Gold

Set I• 141 &amp;.141

Yz Carat t.w. $699

REG. ....

•379

y. ct. tw

REG.

Ill

REG. t111

ONLY

$89

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Hundreds of Beautiful Christmas Ideas -AU On Sale!

Mg.
Rt1811
T.W. Ia total diamond night

")

· Jtcquisitions !fine Jewe(ry

ft" PLEWNr

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*Penonallz8d Tn111b1•tta
*Thenplata 1nd Athllllc T111lner ....w
o- ~ y•111 or combined etperlence
*We accept llecllc:ar., Medicaid, Pilva

Pre-Holiday
SaviniJs

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
(614) 446-2933 '

.'11ie qift of a Lifeti-me

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760 FIRST AVE.

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12-4

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Phyalcal 111e111py s.mc.

1WO LOCATIONS
151 Second Ave., Gallipolis

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FULL SERVICE Sl&amp;I.ON

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428·1065

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spokesman S1ephen Pagnani said

Shelves.
Bradiee's Inc., a discoun1
depar1men1 store chain based in
BrsiniJCC, Mass., said montlu ago
il wouldn 'I order toy guns for the
Christmas shopping season.
And Troy, Mich.-based Kmart
Corp. stopped seiling ICBiistic toy
guns about 10 mon1hs ago,

y. Ct.

Designers

AND ·

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YlCQV.ISifJ109{S jJ9{f, JT/WEL~

11562, Chkogo,/U. 6061UJ562. (In
COIIIJdD, sellll $4.45 .)

%apmiograpfiy

t'

Great Selections of:
• Trees • Ornaments • Lights
• CoUectibles · ·

lff•l..... ~

SAT. 9·5:30,

Asl&lt; Your
Doctor To
Choose Us
For All.. Your
Therapy
Needs

Alcohol, clo AM Lottder&amp;, P.O. Bo1t

WALLPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

th'-lfliCial ocmiM. •

. c

.Jo#Jg, bUiitiUNiU tlllltlope 111111 Q
check t1r IMMY ()rtkrfor $1.65 (tlil
wludes postore 111111 '-dliltg) to:

Sale E~de Oct. 31, 1994 .

and~ary~for

.

them lw:ause the Jcpl fp would
·cost more, tl1an I have. P1eise tdl .me
what 10 :clo. -· DESPBRA1E IN
BUFFALO, N.Y.
DEAR BUFFALO: You have no
basis for a laWIIIit The8e TV and
radio pJC~ChciS promised to pray for
you. not heal you.
It might make you feel bcacr to
know you are not alone. Milliolll
have been taken in as you were. The ·
only TV preacher I would vouch for
is Billy Graham.
Is alcolloll'llillblg yolll' life or 1M
life of a lo11td oM? "Aicollolilm:
HOWl to RecoJIIiu It, How to Deal
Wilhlt, How to COlli("' · It" CQ/IIllnl
thlllls OTOWIIJ. &amp;11/Jaself-6/Jdrtlsed,

.I.::
•••

• Umited·l!dltloll DaD • $51 Gift Cntlflalle
Frarned "All Aboard" Limited EdltiOa l'libt by TIIOiua
•
I 6'n Foot Sllmllne Tl'ee
.

FREE MEASURING
I'FREE INSTALLATION

tuxldoa to~ from. We . . . .
lafVIIIIMIIIon of I he ll!lllllylll ·.

•

•·:

REGISTER TO WIN
.DOOR PRIZES

With Each VertiCal Blind
Purchase

Kyou are pi6hn~g 1 wedding,
than you ahould c - 111 111 at
.
._kN·Tamtr. .
You wi hive over 110 etylea of

SPECIAL
CARE

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

.?. ge»,tllltilti. . [#atrrell:~
. .

FREE.VALANCE

'" :

Salmonella causes nann vom·
iting, cramps, diarrhea, fever an4
headaches. Symptoms are most
severe in infants, the elderly and
people with weak immune syaems.
The CDC said the confmned
cases came froni IS states: Col·
Ollldo, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois,
Indiana, Iowa, Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, New York, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, South Dakota,
Washington and Wisconsin;

Need

Ann
Landers

. :•'!, .~

30%-75%' OFF

~ogm~'tio~

~

;; , DEAR CORPUS: I have always
•~. l*a 'upfront and vocal about my
: · llllliln'ence of violence against both
::' iexcia. I am more ronoemecl about
'; the abuse of women, however,
!· ba:lnll' a great many more females
:.iei beaten up (and killed) by males
•
•'

EVERYTHING

in
to 3526 Nei •
, Gallipolis, 0 io

far

"Because so many kids are car·
toy ~s
the !C8I thing.
' If it saves a c:ouple kid's lives, rying real guns, for kids 10 carry
I lhigk it's a good thing," said realistic-looking toy guns is incred·
Sieve HJmse1.1 as he shopped Friday ibly dangerous and incredibly
at the Toys "R" Us in stupid," said Cheryl Brolin,
Lawrenceville, NJ. "Actually it's spokeswoman for Handgun Control
a COIIIli800US move. They're going Inc., a Washington-based 11011-prof·
it oqanization.
to lose business."
Other retailers already bavc
The store's shelves wm: a arnot·
gasbord of toy guns Friday, some pulled the toy guns fro'm their
realistic and some not Buyers had
their choice of AK-47s, M-16
rifles, double-barrel shotguns,
When You
rifles, pistols and Uzis. ·

e

:. 11!XAS

·%oFF

i ~~i~~~-~A19card
shower
for Mr.
and

5,000 suspeded ~·

FOR APPOINTMENT

· Oct. 15th-23rd

~

teria in samples of
iCe .
cream from people wbo got ill
The federal Centers for Diseue ·
Control and P~evention liil 400
c:onfumed cases of saimoneiJa from
Schwan's ice CfC4111, and 3,000 to

COMING SATURDAY, OCT. 22

-pen Hou

Card shower

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) Health officilla bave lnlced thouaanda of auapected cases of
ulmonella in It least 35 states to
.ice aeam produced by a Minnesota
COIIIJ*IY·
Now they're trying to find the
soun:e of the bacteria.
"We'~e looking at everything
from the ingJ'ediebts to the mixes to
the transportation system to the
plant,'' said Jackie Renner, a
lpObswoman for tbnllte AgriculIIIJ'e Department.
Schwan's Sales Enterprises,
based in Marshall, recalled its ice
cream last week after the first
reporta of food poisoning. Investi·
gators have found aalmonella bac·

--

'

HIIRSIYLES ON VIDEO

14th ANNUAL

•

~

world's largest toy retailer
announced it will stop selling toy
guns in its U.S. stcaes. The c:ompa·
ny, based in Paramus, N.J., will
cotltinile to sen the guns overseas.
Kay-Bee Toy Stores, based in
Pittsfield, Mass., said it would
immediately begin ~emoving and
destroying all realistic toy guns
from the shelves of its 1,000 stores
nationwide.
The announcements follow two
recent shootinj!S in New Yiil'k City
in which police officers mistook

Have You Always Wondered What You
Would Look.Uke With
Long H~r Or Short Hair?
No PrQblem, Now You Can Find Out With

POMEROY - Numerous rela-''"" Misty Morrison, Debi Brockert, Jan
-~ tives, neighbors and mends visited
and Jac:ob Nitz, Mary Porter. Glo·
; Susie Fischer on Oct. 5 in celebra- ria Michael, Stacey Theiss, Mark
·• flonofher99th birthday.
Porter, Maxine Tucker, John and
; . Mrs. Fischer has three surviving Henrietta Bailey, Billy Downie,
Diana and Sam Carpenter, Karit
: daughters, Mary Porter, Gloria
; Michael and Hilda F~ecker, 11 King, Anita, Paige and Wyau
t
d h'l
Musser, Brenda and Tiffany Hick'
'
d hildr 13
, gnm c
en,
grea ·grmt c 1 • el. Tori Wolfe, Carol and Mau
• drert, and seven great-great grand·
: children.
,. Theiss, Gary and Lynn Michael,
•.
Dennis Michael, and N(l'a Nitz.
:
Among'those visiting her was a
: group from the Syracuse PresbyteShe also received calls from her
• rian &lt;.:r1un:h including the Rev. Kris sister, Elizabeth Hogue of North
: Robinson and ·her husband, Jeff, Olmstead, her dau~hter, Hilda · .
; Della Starkey, Margarel Cottrill, Frecker of Painesnlle, and her
~ Helen Diddle, Naomi London,
grandchildren, Roger and Debbib
Doris Wilt, and Esther and B~;&gt;b Michael of Virginia Beach. A dec·
Harden.
·
orated cake and ice cream were
E . Others there were Vicki and served.

~

LPT.
Physical therapisls help 900.000
indivtduals daily to restore health
and aUeviate pain. Working with
people of all ages, physical thera·
pists treat children in public
schools who arc disabled or need .
special atlemion,·senior citizens in
nursing homes suffering from
arthritis or hip injury, as _well as
athletes JCCOvcring from injury and
employees of industrial plants
injured at the workplace.
.
According to a 1992·93 repon
STAFF MEMBERS • Pictured are members or die Holler Med·
by the United States Depertmcnt of
leal
Center PbJIIcaiTIIenpy Depmmeat wllo bave beellmebrat·
Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics,
in&amp;
Natioaal
fbyslcal Tbenpy Moalll durilll Oetober. Fl'wt are
physical ihcrapists comprise the
Y
ester-and
Alva Joi!•IIMI; back, Sberry Sallllden, left ad
Sbellll
fastesl growing health care occupa·
CaroiJac~
tKJn.
.

i

"SPECIAL"

'IWO~CWI'.

reduce fatigue and muscular sttain,
and promote mover8ent efficiency
and endurance," said Carol Jacbon

Dear AlllliAadera: You n:cenlly than the other way I!OUDCL Anyone
puNished sewralleUers taking you who does not know this is
to task for writing about wife completely out of touCh.
bearers ani! for totally ignoring the
Alc:ohol and drug abuse, by the
fact that an utonisbing number of way, are often responsible for acts
women beat up their husb8nds. A of brulllity, including murder.
few days IMcr, the cnclolc9 article
Dear Ann Landers: I am
appeared in the Corpus Christi ashamed to admit my foolishneSS,
(reus) Caller-Times.
·
but I need your help. Over a 10Tbe statia!ic• repofJC!I in !!!~ , year m!&lt;xl.l !!l!~ gi~ !II~ l!t&amp;n
artlc:le show that half of all women $14,00&gt; to vtlrious divine htalal
mllfdcred In tho United Stales and miracle worl:ers I saw on TV
81Ulually Jill killed by a current or , and listened to on the radio. The8e
forma husband or boyfriend. A · people led me to ·believe that if I
woman in the United States is mo~e sent them money, they would offa
: likely to be usaulted 111d injured,
up special prayers and heal me of
: raped or tilled by 1 male panner or homosexuality and a variety of
• ex-partner than by 1!1 ~typeS of psychiatric problems.
,
• • •ssai!Mts c:ombineil.
When I ftruiUy became disillu·
The article mentions a woman sionod-11111 realized that I hid been
• . whole boyfriend stabbed ber '!-7 flooced, I wro10 leUen to Ill lheae
~ times with IICICWdriver and left her ·bcalcrs uldng for my money bact. I
• to die in a dill:b. Thea there was the 10111 them c:opica ol my c:encdcd
:C elderly woman whose husband, cbDcb 10 tbey WQiild bow I bad
: wearing sreel·toed boots, kic:ted her ewJcn:e lhll the c:hccb waec:asbed.
: mertilessly IIIII ripped11andfuls of I did not receive a single
" hair from her head.
•
· l'CipOIIII',IcUione a refund.
~
Nationahlalistics show that aman
Is my money loll fOI_'eVel? I am
: talll a woman every 12 to 15 out of work IIIII c:ould rally IIIC
: seconds. An estimated 2 million to IOIIIC financiaJISiiltance.lCIII't. : 4 million women are baaered every
• - year.lf 4 million minority men were
baucled every year, there would be
a hU&amp;C oula'y.
.· ·
The article also says injuries
llllstained by bltlacd women these
• ciiys are more severe, since our
::'society 1!88 grown more violent
: • Tbere 8CeDIS to be no shame on the
:' part of the ~r. and injuries are
·' no longer htddeiL
:· I was disappointed .to Jee you
: · back down in such a cowardly
·' fashioli when readers pointed out
: that men are also beaten by spouses
: and sweethearts.
Yours is a powerful voice, Ann
CALl
l..andci1. Women need YQUI' help.
: Plelf!o publish this information,~
: let the ·JCCORI speak the truth. !: C.E~·PH,P., CORPUS CHRISTI,

Street

.

Ice cream·now
blamed for illness
in at least ·35-states
Scbwain
-

R.eader admonishes Ann for cowardly
position on violence against women

....

:1

•

ByBRENOANSCHURR
Associated Preas Writer
.Parents, police and gun-control
advocates are praising lhe decision
b)' two n:tailers to stop selling Je81.
istic-looking toy guns.
"Police officers have to make
split-second decisions," said New
- York City police Officer James
: Davis. "We don't have time 10
lllink, 'Is il real, or is it Memorex?"'
.
Davis was at•the Toys "R" Us
headquarters Friday when the

Nam•------~---------~---

,. --,
: J!-..
,' L,-.Jj

Sunday Tlmll Slntlnef Plgl 1.5

Two .retail toy stores to take realistic l~oking t9y guns off ·shelves

Clip this order and return label

i• Fischer marks 99th birthday

'

. . GALLIPOLIS • Staff in the
- Physical Therapy Department at
... Holzer Medical Center have been
cdebrating Nalionil Pbysical Ther·
apy Mondl, which is spomored by
tbe Am~rican Physical Therapy
AssociatiOn.
Sl*ff members include Alva
Joh118011, Pr aide; Sherry Saunders,
secretary; Sheila Yester, brace
tech; Jdson; and Larissa Horner,
LPT, wbo will be joining the stalJ
later this month.
· 1be theme for the month-long
observluice, "Posture Yourself For
Good Health," ernphasiles the )lOS·
itive effect post111e can have on
ovaall health.
"Improving your posture,
whether sitljng, slallding, walking
or lifting can prevent chronic pain,
.

Full study plan information on this house is available in a $4 baby.~
. blueprint. Four booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How ,
to Build, Buy or Sell It Ranch Homes. 24 of the most popular from this·
feature; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common ,
problems; and. A· Frames and Other Vacation Homfis. a collection of 24 ·.
styles . Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this ·
label to : House of the Week, The Sunday· Times Sentinel. P.O. Box 1562.
New York, N.Y. 10116·1562.
·

esign F-17 has a living
room, dining room,
kitchen with dinette, dining room, three bedrooms and
two baths, totsling 1,367 square
feet of living space. There is a
standard basement that, &amp;n~hed
off, adds another 1,367 square
feet of living space. There is a
storage area and a two-car
garage. French doors from the
living room lead to the rear ter·
nice. There is also a front porch. ·
The overall dimensions of 50' by
33'10" don't include the garage. mE UVING ROOa, hae a convenlelit acce•• to the terrace,
The garage adds a further 21'4".
l!liiJIIIIdbc llvlng apace to the outdooril.

· Pomeroy llddleport Galllpolla, Ott Point Plnunt. wv

Therapy
Month celebra·ted

I[

To Order Study Plan

18, 1894 .

~hysiqal

By LARRY McSHANE
"On Sunday ,afternoon,". it
AasGdited Press Writer
read, ••SP.ectator EditoMn.~hlof
. NEW YORK (AP) ~ A pictlll'e • Ruth Halikman·Dblled a ~ fire
may be worth a thbusand words, alarm in Flllll8ld HaiJ · to ·faCill~a~e
but the edit« of ac:ollego newspe- the taking of a ~otograplr of th~
per js hoping they don't include fue departments new .,U,.c:lt as ·II
these ~: You'~e under arrest.
.arrived at the scene." ? . ·
Fire inanhals were on tho trail
Engine Co. No. 47:• newest
Friday of Ruth .Halikman, who as pi~ of equipment respilnded as a
editor in chief of the Columbia photo~er shot away. Word ~t
. Daily Spectator aUegedly pulled a Halibnan had Iaten the IICY(I mto
f81se lite awrn at Columbia Unl· her oW11 hands spread qu!ctly, and
versity last Sunday so a photogra- shji resisned ~ a i!\CCUIIg 'of the
pher could get shots of a new file paper's mllll8gll!8 ~
. •·
truck.
·
"We discUssed the problem and
A. photographer did snap the Ruth dQCidcd that the best way to
shots when the truck responded to deal with the issue 'WIIS to resign,••
the alarm. .
said managing editor Mike Stanton.
Halikman's next assignment ''She said sh~·~y didil't under, was typing up a letter of resigna- stand what the. consequences of
tion on Monday.
pulling a fiR: alarm were."
Fire Department spokesman
Associate photo editor Rich All·
Jerry Sanford said that the Ivy man, who took the pictures, alilo
League student COI!Id also b~ agreed to leave the payor but
charged with falsely rtporting an denied knowing about Jlle -fal.se
incident, a misdemeanor punish- alarm. ·
·
able by a fmc 10 be decided by a
Halikman could also face disCijudJ!e.
plinary action from the SChool. IJtit
flalikman was out of town Fri- Columbia spokesman Fled ]Cn)l~
day and could not be reached for said the umversity does 'not col!.':
comment
ment on such mailerS. ·
•
A Wednesday editorial in the
A4 for.. the pictmeS of die ~
Spectator detailed how she was •'they wi!J definitely not run,~;·
burned.
Stanton said.
.,..

_l_. =v

estimating cost'S' and financing,
send $4 to House of the Week,
P.O. Box 1562, New York, N.Y.
J0116-1562. Be sure to include the
number of the plan.)

~oller

91 Mill Street, Middleport

VAllEy Jk)SmAL .

JM .bnlly -~

.

&lt;.- _ .
• ,. , _ _ _
'

·!

.
•

WV_CIIMI6~

In Store Repair
Member Jewelers Board of Trrde

FREE PARKING
' FREEGIFT
WRAPPING

·Diamonds
•Gold Chaine
•Selko WatChes ·
•CrossPtni
•Rare Coins

\

�•

Page B&amp;

Sunday nmea Sentinel

Pomeroy-.....Middleport-Galllpolla, ~oint Plllllllt, wv
"

.

I

•~~~~~;:~~~-of Paula
Jamea Lee
and
Robert

CLYDE AND LOLITA MORROW

Wedding vows ·renewed
GALLIPOLIS • Lolita Maria
Morrow and Clyde F. Morrow
renewed their wedding vows in a
double ring ceremony Aug. 13 at
the residence of Mrs. Beny Clark:
in Rio Grande.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry E. Casto Sr. of Gal·
lipolis.
A medieval theme outdoor wedding ensued as pastor John Wood
officiated.
Given in marriage by her falher,
the bride wore a long renaissance
brocade satin gown with a sweetheart neckline edged in double
pearl roping. The !eg-o-mutton
sleeves were detailed with inset'
pearl adornments and finished with
a point over the hand edged pearls.
The gown had a Basque waistline
wilh a deep v in front, edged with
matching pearl trim and a sweep
. train of matching brocade.
She wore a twisted pearl head·
pieee and earri~ a grape vine and
ivy spray of plum roses and baby's
brealh. •
Lisa Smith, sister of the bride,

served as matron of honor. She
wore an ankle length medieval
style dress in a plum floral pattern
and carried a grapevine heart wilh
ivy, plum roses and baby's breath.
Bruce Smith served as best man.
The groom, best man, father of the
bride and guardian of the groom
wore black Parisian full dress tuxe·
do~ ·wilh plum rose boutonnieres.
Tbe bride's molher wore a street
length ivory dress with a matching
brocade satin jacket.
A reception was hosted by aunts
of lhe bride immediately following
the ceremony.
The bride is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and Rio
Grande University with a degree in
education and fine arts. She is
employed at Eastern Local High
School.
The groom is a graduate of Gallia Academy High School and Rio
Grande University with a de&amp;!'CC in
line aris. He is employed by North
Star Satellite and TV.
The couple reside in Gallipolis.

parasols.

Women tell government .
they're·ov_erworked, underpaid

.

Bridesmaids were Melissa Dai·
ley, Susan Swain, Tammy Cow·
dery, Sheryl Landon, Lori Chap·
min, Dob Russell, Abagail Cauthorn, Tracy Sanders, and· Ruth
Bissell. They wore gowns of identi·
cal design to the matrons of honor
in lhe wcilding colors, wilh cameO
necklaces, and carri~ rose heart·
shaped grapevine wreaths, accented
with wine and mauve roses, bows
and streamers.
· Best man was Tom Chutes, and
lhe groomsmen were Jimmy Nut·
ter, Jeff Cowdery, Gary and Travis
Phillips, Tim Creeger, Michael

By ROBERT N.t;YLOR Jr.
m.Jr~ than two-thirds of single
AP Labor l'Vr~r
· •.
wmting motbers.
. .,
WASHINGTON (AP) _ VerWom~n also complamed of
Jette Allen recalled thai
bett~g pmd less than me~ _a11d of
:-lfSt became a radio ecc:lini!;lln for havtng fewer opportuntttes for
Washington's subwti9 syltctll "the advancemenL
.
fellas just didn't think 1 could do- _ The La~or Department sa1d
iL"
.
'.
w.Jmcn typt!3lly earn 71 cents for
That was n yean ago, before ever doi'!D' eartted by a_ man. The
she started a suppoJI f,roup for -, problem ~ even w~ for ~omen
· w&lt;imen who wort 'ill 1ed trades. from ractal and ethmc miJIOrity
•'Every day yoli have 10 prove · gJOUps. Black women earn 63 cen!S
yourself," the aingle mother of for_ every dollar the average mill tS

when she

·By DAVID MOORE
Assoc:ilted Press Writer ·
NEWPORT, N.H. (AP) - The
Corbin Covered Bridge had conne~t~ north Newport with the
mun part of town for 158 years
until vandals destroy~ it with fiJ'C
a year llld a half ago.
The loss of the bridge divided
the town. but united'the communi·
ty.
While fallen timbers still smol·
dcred in the Sugar River, towns·
people began Colleeting money and
planning to rebuild the historic
bridae.
.
· This weekend what had been
one of New Hampshire's oldest
c~vered bridges will be replaced
wtlh the state's youngest
"What started out as a real com·
munity tragedy has turned out to be
a reaf community builder," said
Daniel O'Neill, Newpor.t town
manager. "It's been kind of lite a
giant bam-raising."
Though there have been disagreements over how to rebuild lhe
bridge and.how to pay for it, almost
everyone in this western New
Hampshire town of 6,100 agreed
the brid$e should be rebuilt,
O'Neill SBid.
Insurance will cover about
$400,000 o~ the e_xpeeted $470,000
cost, O'Netll smd. The Newport
Historical Society and other groups
will raise the rest.
·
Last year, voters at a special
town meeting overwhelmingly
rejected state money that would
have. giv~n the state control over
construcuon.
They voted to raise the money
themselves to keep the new one·

ROBERT AND PAUI..A
CREEGER
Landon, Steve Soulsby, Kirk Reed,
and Jo~n. ~oen. They all wore
black VICIOI'ian style tuxedos, pink
ties and mauve boUtonnieres.
The groom was in a black tuxe·
de with ivory vest, wine satin and
la.:e tie, handkerchief and boutonniere.
Jade Nutter, niece of the bride,
was flower girl and wore an ivO!y
and lace satin dress with' matching
pantaloons and high top granny
bc,ots. She carried a drawstring
se.tin purse filled with rose petals.
Jt elan Lee-James Nutter and
Christopher Cowdery, nephews of
the bride were the ring bearers and
they were also in Victorian style
ivory satill knickers with knee
socks, ivory .shirts, wine ties, and
wine boutonnieres They carried
ivory satin and lace heart-shaped
pillows trimmed in wine and
mauve with streamers.
Guests were registered by Mrs.
Ruth .Nutter and Mrs. Connie
Rockhold.
A rece.,tion was held at the
ct urc.h wuh Dolly Reed, Jill a
Hamilton, and Marlene Putman as
hcstesscs. A three-tiered ivory Vic·
torian cake on a gazebo was
f1::.nked by side cakes in rose garlands. A caamic wine heart edged
with ivory lace and engraved
'·J aula and Bob, .Aug. 13, 1994"
w .IS featured on the first tier, a
gJ~n parasol on lhe second and a
m3Uve fan on lhe third. The gazebo
was topped with a rose bouquet and
Victorian bride and groom. High
topped wedding boots were used
on the side cakes. The cake
urines were made by the bride s
mother.
The Co~Jtl!e reside ill Reedsville.
The groom is employed at m in
Alhens.

JCPenney

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
Boned &amp; Insured • Quality Minded St8ff ·
· Special Ratea By Contract .

..

FREEESTIMATES

·

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fl. _

NEWTON'

ULTIMA II

. .

JanHortal Service Dally, Weekly, Monthly I
or OM lime Periodic Cleaning
..
. Floor Maintenance: Strip, Wax and Buff
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Toll r=ree Ohio &amp; WV 1·800-990-7272

FR.EE

presents

(!Your 'Day f[o 'Be .91. Star"

A parallel scientifiC 'survey of
your fashion PORTRAITS as you by
1,200 women was conducted for
comJJ.Irison.
•
variety of wardrobe looks.
''America's working women are
exhausted," lhe rqiOit concluded.
"I don't think we ever felt the
concern with this amount of force
behind it," Karen Nussbaum,
director of the Labor Department's
Women's Bureau, said in an interview with The Associated Press.
*MAKEOVER
-PLUSShe said the stu~ showed that·
* HAIR DESIGN
women are angry ' at not geaiDg a_
$25 WORTH.OF
fair tlcll."
*
PHOTO
SESSION
ULTIMA
II
•. Mrs: Clinton said the repon repINSTANT VID'EO .
COSMETICS ,
resentS "what the Clinton-Oore
adlliipisllation tries to stand for,
VIEWING AND THE
*FREE 10X13
and· that it listenlns to people;
OPTION·TO
'
PORTRAITS
· undentlndin&amp; what happens in the
lives· ordinary hard-working
PURCHASE
($70 v~lue)
AniCritans lhat 100 often does QOt
ADDITIONAL
Pierce through all the cluttct that
tl
iumlunds this city.''
'
PORTRAITS
lite report said most wanen are
"a~· aetregated in low·payins.
~Y femllo jobs in clcrical,
· salol and aervice oceuJIItiou•." .
'
'~
•
, , , . ,I'1- ' '
Women who bold 'ptole•alc,,nal ' · •
po•itions are "still du1tered in
litJids lite ediiCallon, social. WOrt
andnunina.~wueaare'much
·
1'1-~
lower than in- ~.law,.ensi·
.PI.ppointments are umi.t~
neerin1 ·and· otlier prof~ulona
- JCPen
· ney
'l¥hele.mell Jll""bit....l '
s~res~ wat t11e most-mentioned
H tingto M II
. f'Oblem'
. clteil by 60 percent the 1

.

OMNI
·The styling may be

·1'or$29.95 you'{[ receive

Early American but the
captivating comfort of
this recliner Is modern· .
day rehixation. Stretch
out and enjoy the soft,
rolled arms, and the
thickly cushloOed seat

*

*

~

OG!IOblr 11,1184

Gallia CounJy of.old topped
state in p~oduce
harvested
.
.

.

·.

revive it.
1be t;OIIIIty was lmown in the
19201 tcra VII)' Jqll'l•lpple called
the "GaWa Bc:Ety."

bJJa.Salldl

SpecWCorrup_..l

WlbUioralimoMrelai

IMfl!tCD,iD1907-s,ooo~

WIIRIIhifP!J in U
llain cailoldll in oae day m Novem~ b1lct walallll

ber.
.
Farmenhldtltreewayatoremove
tboe awful p'Cell·yellow ltulls: tiiC .
anold~mlll..ueeacorn sheller or
have IDICII pull a dra&amp; over the nuu.
Wtlliam Milia' and W.A. Kellcr
NORTH PRODUCE - Nortll P.rodace oa Vine Street bqu
were bi&amp; buycn of walnuts around opentloas In Galllpolllln 1930, ltuclliing prodiiCe for ..ree ar foar
Gal1ia. AlEDo. B.M. Rupe bought up decades before awltcllling to jut fe.ds aDd supplies. Gallipolis
walnllll and in Walnut Townahip it bound tllree or foar 1111 produce horses from 1900 to lite middle
wasl!melt Bogp.
ot tbb «Diw'J.
MOlt of the bllct walnuts from
the county were IOid to Gallipolis
James SllllllllasJI"d''- ·
proclu(:e dellen who in un IOld on
spmclrDtGitlteSacfaJThr lin·
the PitllburJh market:
tlllel. Hll lllldral Is: 65 Wlluw
Another wtusual carb aop for
Drive, SprJnaboro OH 4!066.
produce dealers - SIISSifnts. PUhlps-tbc last"'profcssiooal"l8slaftas
dealer in Gallia hiltory - John
White who lived on Neil Street.
. White sold his mots door to door.
He wulmown for hia a!!iJity to find ·
the mldest roots. It -believed the
redder the root, the better the sassafras. Some GaiiianJ even into the
1950s believedlllllfras wuthe beat
blood thinnrz and tonic on the market:
Ia the Cldy 19001, every drug
store aad grocery carried sassafras.
But by the 1950s, it was available
only in a few suna. Grocers complaincd thlt they Cl9JI)dn 't buy any as
the only Otiea then who still dug the
mots preferred to sell dOor to dilor.
In the early 1950s there werelllill
four or five door to door
sa1csmcn lefk in Gallipolis. The P'q, .

Lloyd to
cheer at
Aloha Bowl
CROWN CITY - A·L-0-H-A
spells 'IIIICCCss for Ashley Uoyd, a
jilnior high c~eader !'1. Hannan
fnlce Elementary SchoOl. Attend·
ing a S\llitmer cheer camp, Lloyd
hU been. seleeted to cheer in the
lialf-time s1J9W ci the Aloha Bowl
ot\ Otristmas Day. She was nominited by'a representative of Eastern
~Association.

St. Paul
Lutheran Church

.

'· The half·tirne show is sponsored
~- All~ Cheer and Dance

wrth cheerleaders from 34 states
chosen for the honor. As well as
ctleering at the game the Uoyd will
~cipate in a cheerleading com·
Mition. ·
' She is scheduled to leave
Hlwaii Dec. 18. and will need to
""'"" $i1?00 for her trip.
~~er sponsors include· Hannan
traCe PTO and Athletic Associ&amp;·
Goo,~ Dr. William Thomas, Ohio ·
- ~alley Bank, Sander's. Shell Sta·
on, Harold Montgomery, Haf·
lt~a Carpet, Tawney Jewelers,
lite Photogtaphy, Central Supjlly,
emo's, Stowaway Restaurant,
$1ichael and Friends, Elliott's
~ppliance.s.___~18 ll_&lt;!~d _Ma!~
~oacli 's Co~r. Noms-Nortliup
Qodge, Johnson's Mobile Homes
tnd Empire Furniture.
.z Lloyd is the daughter of Dwight
loll Becky Uoyd.

tpreserts t

an evening of entertainment with

BRUCE STONE

Beat of the Bend .. ;
.by Bob' Hoeflich

It hasn '•t been all that many
months-1180 that Fred and Marcy
Thompson and their children,
Matthew and Karyn, WC(e living
£(ldate lives In Mcills Countydoing the routines lhat we all seem
IOdo.
Then the family mov~ to Hen·
dersonville, N.C., and before you
could say, "Jack Robinson" got
•
inv·olved in "show biz." Karyn
auditioned for a: role in the little
theater group in Hendersonville
wlticll was gettin~ ready to go into
rehearsalS for 'Anme." Well,
•
Karyn got a part okay but into the
barpin
Fred, who was employed at
~ervice
Veterans Memorial Hospital &amp;efore
WASHINGTON (AP)- They leavingJ'•feigs County, was~
sldlltered the stereotype of m!J.~· . into auditioning for the role of
tlma as ~~ for a "~·IJ!''il "Daddy Warbucks" in the i!IOdllc·
JHod elite. For that, lnstituuons tion. -He waa chosen for tbe role
It( Florida, Ohio and MiSSOIJ!i are _ and the show was a smashing SUC·
lObuters of the rust ttBiional tlwanl cess With all four members of:Jhe
q,t muSeum ~ce.
· ·
family taking pans.
•.".'Our muee~~ ~one of our
Mrs. Sally Owen, Marcy's
IN-kept secrets, DIBIIC Frankel, mother, recently loaned me a vi!leo
cOiect«.Qf.t!le Institute of Museum made of "Annie~ and it is excel·
S'etvices, slid Friday. "Museums lent All of the'1bompson famPy
• liv!'Jy, vital places and they members are prominent in the
~ ticcOme eitgasing for people video and of course, especially
ofa11 qcs." •
Fred in one of the two leadiqg
;. Prankcl .said many of the parts. 1 think ypu'd l!cjleased at
n.tion' s 80,000 museums are how well Fred ·playe "Daddy
"tetlehina out to new.audieoces as Warbucts." He voice was effective
olver bercp'.' and lhat the awards in getting out to the audiences
~ will shine a national spell· apparenUy-it carri~ well. Into
~ton their individual successes
the bargain Fred had his head
: ·~It is a symbol of the achieve- shav~ so as to resemble more the
ll(ents of museums throughout the fictional "Daddy Warbllcks." He's
c6untry thaJ are making a differ· the son of Bob and Alice Thompe6ce," she said.
son of Pomeroy, you know.
&lt;.The winners, chosen from more
Well-lhc Tliompson family
1)0 nominations, are the apparend)' fell in love with the thetner Nature Center in Troy, ater and Karyn has one of the lead-.
; the Cllllmer Museum of Art ing roles in the cwrent production
Ollldens in Jacksonville, Fla.; which is "A Mid Summer Night's
~Missouri Historical Society Dream" and all of the family is takt; .J;,Wls.
· ing part. Next, lhey are going 10
ifti-Jil4y Hijlary Rodham Clin· work ·on "A Christmas.Carol" and
· . p,fliflli(f museum officials at a Fred is growing a beard for his role
· · · .!Jl!use ceremony Thursday in that Marcy, Matthew .00 Fred
f · .usili.ll their collections and will be taking part. Karyn won't be
· · ,io reach citizens from all able too. She is going IQ be busy
' · tlflire, particularly children. with !he leading role in her high
. ~Ill.~t years, art museums sehool play.
iniugsled to find wars to
11, out to a broader audtence
·thaD to a narrow, privileged
elte," said Henry AdaJns, director
~Mueeumof Art aad

Phio museum
wins
national .
•

-...cr..

Long-time Middleport resident,
Beulah White--thanks to yohad such a great 93rd birthday at
Overbrook Cetiter wllere she is a
resiilent. ·
dayHer
Beulah
for the
a long
familyhas
saidhad
it was
best
while. She reeeiv~ gifts, 47 cards,
members of the Busy Bee Sunday
School Class of the Middleporl
First Baptist Churcll threw her a
birlhday party and on top of that
she had and enjoyed other visitors.
All of the action took place on her
birthday which was on Monday,
Oct 10.

•ot

FALL SPECIAL

' -The .!lructner Nature Center

'.

•

l

j.

otovid~ environmental and ot!l· ~
ed~ ·J!f!&gt;gr&amp;rns to more

17,000 ~htltlfen last year,
them'about environmental
.rt11 the liVes of pioneer

i

October 20-22

cal! totfayl

~ -~ts. Ne.~y

,

or

line-quarters

. of wome«a jn lheir 40s wbo hold

'l&amp;mf._kmlllld
iliod it aa;~ 6ilp
~·IIi did.
,.......,..jobs

un

·

n a

or phone 733-0088-E.xt.' 269
Ask fo.r Karen
•

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~-"--oa~F~~~RY~
· .· RUTLA.ND
CREDIT TEAMS .•

.IO!lojs~\!1~ .
l.ay·Awop ~.

7

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No Payment Ul)tll April
with ApprOY8d Credit

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FURNI'TURE

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MAIN STREET • RUTLAND, OHIO

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POMEROY, OtiO f ...2214

OPEN t TO S Ji&gt;NDAY 1HAU SATURDAY

\

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THE FABRIC SHOP

II

. Warehouses

. ,...

~;:~~~~~;;,;~ ;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;;:;;;,;.;;,;,;;;,;;=~
~3E=!i~[!~~~J
~

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1) Comfort, support and durability Ill the
IJIW1UIIeed lowest prices...or it's FREE!
1) Free cloU•ory, 1ft 'lip and l'ftlloftl ol old
b&lt;ddiq with qwtliliod pun:"-!
3) We spedallu in beddilll! We.., the siHp
' experts and hove been since 1983.
4) Froe finaocina for J monllu 1o 1l montlu!
See llton: for details.

Oops! The Burlingham resident
who needs rugs and a heating sys·tem since his were ruined in last
Ajlril's flood is Kenneth Doty and
not Kenne!h Kern. Sorry 'bout
th~t. U you want to help, please
call his mother, Mrs. Betty Kern at
992-7764.
I don't know what 'l!"}'ve done
IQ get all of this beautiful weather,
but I suspeet.a of it is due to the
fact that you keep smiling.

on Octobet: 16, 1994
beginning at 7:30 p'.m.

Admission is FREE and opei)1to the public!
(A freewill offering will be ~eivea)

Former Meigs C~ty resident,
Kenny Larkins, who now lives in
Plain City, was one of several people written about In a Columbus
Dis~atch newspaper column in
conjunction with the American
Quarter Horse Conaress·which has
been held in Columlius this week.
I...arkins is quoted as having said
tl)at being a cowboy was all.he ever
wanted 10 do aad lived his dream
by ridiniJ IJu11s on the rodeo circuitfor 12 yeari The article slates lhat
Larkins would like to be continuing
his rodeo circuit feats today at the
age of 33 but is unable physically
to handle them. Larkins works a
regular job these dsys but can't get
the rodeo business out of his system. So if he's not riding bulls at.
weekend rodeos, he's a lhe fair·
grounds coliseum helping herd catde for a cutting competition, the
ntwspaper article states.

"f

'

I ~

iDplltt••n"crinOIIIiaBottllty For

1

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Comton surrounds you from
the tufted back to the thick
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professional photographer w1ll then create
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Rest yourse,lf on a lush,
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buslfeback, padded
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discover the updated
way to settle down in
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and

. lane,~e as close to .the ~
· as possible. One RIIISOI): Newport_ s
to~rl ~ is a replica of the Corbin
bnd,e.
' We weren't about 10 c~e
lhe town seal so we had to re .~
lhe bridge as it·originally itood,
O'N~ Sll\d.
.
f
The Corbin bridge is on~ o
nearly · SO in New Hamp~ure,
which has more covered brtdges
than all but four states. · ·
The two-la!le road leading Ill thef
bridge begins aboilt a mile riorth o
town near a highway matlte! com"
memoratinj! lhe oldest survtvor of
the Amertcan Revolution, Joel
McGregor;-who.died in Newpo~
on Halloween 186111t the age o!
101.
Travelers disappear into a tunnel
formed by the boughs of Jarg11
white pines. Less than a mile after
it begms, Corbin Road stops at~
· fieldstone abutment. The rust-rot•
ored water of lhe Sugar River slips
over a gravel bed below. .
Several charred wooden·
guardrail posts are the only..
reminders of the fli'C.
.;
Residents began clearilig brusb ·
and debris at the site in May.•.
Arnold Graton, lhe nation's onlf.:
full-time covered-bridge builder.began construction of the new..
bridge in August
. , ·;
The 100-ton structure was built
on blocks that will support it as a,
team of oxen hooked to a capstai!.,
w·nch inch it into place thil; weel\1 .
et.d - just as Wl!S done in 1835,:
Gtaton said.
.
·: . ~
The work be,gan Fnday. A cel6.' .
bration that features artisans, per·"
formers and 18th-century demon-~
stratiotis will run thr00gh SundaV, .

ALL-BRITE

fi'.

said~
Ftiday,
•. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
athree
newsdaughters
conf~
·theduring
Clin- ·..;p•a.•d
I'
ton administration uiivolled findings from a balionWide fiUMI)' that
' shows women· feel .u overwotted
and underpaid as ever. ·
Ftrst lady Hillary RoiDwn Clinton. Vice President AI Oore and
Labor Secretary Robert Reich
released results of the "Working ,
Women Count" survey, in which
250,000 women expressed opinions
about juggling job and family
responsibilitie,s.
:
"This is no1 your typical government tellin$ people, ~this is government listentng," Reich said.
More than 1,600 businesses,
unions, newspapers, magazines and
community service organizations
help distribute lhe surv:ey, which
Feel like. a fashion model as. our beauty ·
the White House announced in
consUltants develop your personal
May with much fanfare. It soltlht
women's opinions on job satisfacMAKEOVER and HAIR DESIGN. Our
tion, pay, benefits and opportuni-

OCtober 1&amp;, 1994

.
...' r: '' .

Old-bridge was mo~ument
to past,·new bridge IS
symboJ of town's future .~

Cowdery""Creeger ,
Reedsville, llld
Crccger, son of Dennis and Sue Creeger, &lt;;oolville,
were married S:30 r .m. on Aug. 13,
the bir1hday of the bride's molhel,
· at the Faith Gospel Church, Long
Boaom.
Rev. Steve Reed and Rev.
David Dailey performed the double-ring ceremony following a program of music by Jenny Nutter,
vocalist, and Julia Gallagher,
pianist. Brian and Missy Dailey
had a duct accompanied by Ruth
Bissell, and Tracy "Sanders and
Missy Dailey read poems.
A Victorian rose garden theme
was carried out in decorations of
the church. Wine. mauve and ivory
roses accented with strings of
pearls, mini ivy, and wine bows
and streamers were used in the
windows. Pews were acb'ned with
antique ivory satin and lace wilh
lhe wine and"mauve· color accen(4,
the altar featured a fence with
climbing ivy, roses, love birds, and
pedestal vases of roses and ivy, and
the decora'tions were repeated in
· the unity candle j)esign.
Given in marriage by ·her parents and escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a candlelight
ivory satin Victorian gown fashioned with an overlay of matching ·
lace. The bodice was accented with
heavy pearl beading with !eg-omutton fun length fingertip sleeves,
and the skin llowed into a cathedral ttain. The satin and lace bustle
featured a butterfly bow studded
· with pearls. She wore Victorian
ivory high·b\itiOn wed~ing boots
tied with lace bows and topped
wilh rullled lace anklets.
The bride's veil was calhedral
lenglh and was attached to a pearl
beaded and lace cap, made by the
bride's mother. She carried a cascade of wine rosebuds and mauve ·
baby's brealh With ivory stteamers.
For something old, she wore a v;c.
torian ·pearl choker wilh matching·
earrings, for something new, a gold
and diamond warch given to her by
her parents. The six pence in her
shoe was bouoiied from her sister.
Carla Phillips and Jenny Nutter,
sisters of the bride, were matrons
of honor. They were in floor length
mauve and wtne floral gowns with
butterfly bows at the waist, lace
.collars and short !eg-o-mutton
sleeves. They carried matching

.

..
'··'

Budget Extn finn

Lllxury Extn finn
&amp;up.rfkm

�,,

-·

'

. .}
•&lt;'

.. Sunday ~Sen~ /B8

I" •

I

.
. ;-'V:.£.
,.,,~

'

·-A
Ia ed
lUlU p Y

"My.._.,_
Dav~· ta"""t me a
UIUUJOI
"
"6"
chard and the first time I hell! down a
chord and I didD'i mullle it, well, I
justsattberc with my ear on the wood
evenafterthesounddiedfoclingthe
vibtations.Fromtbcre,itwasmc.sittingtbercaloncinaroomsingingtoa
wall." musician Jolm Prine recalls.
• Aild what 'about his very first

audience?

.

I

tone, 'Hello In
There' and 'Paradise' and people .
..emed 10 like it_".
Including the club owtlCr who
promptlynlferedPrine8job.Aftcr
askingoo;longhe'dhavetoplayfor,
he went home and wrote tbc rest of
wbal was to become ·his self-titled
debutalbiun. ·
tl
It wun'tlongbeforc a lit e guy

..

iL .."~~~~w~~~
,,_ eye and ,,_ -'---'-n'c under'""
'"""'""--~..
statemenL

That wall his an awful lot in
common with the countless people
Prinehastouchcdwithhissoo"-Ke's
ceruinly come a loog way smoc he
lllldc his lint~ at The

Wes;':=:'=u~~!'~

MallOn Prine llld his wifo Vema
Valentine Hamm, be was third in a
fam~four.
'ob Wl'th thea~.! inomtbcocscrvJCCbe':_ andPrinea
J
nMI
'"'~
~mmakeJC.
"ru·~ atpuba dcbar:butfucatlcdan
liclocal'

...,....

•

..,..

byafcwbccrsllldtbeknowledgetbat
he colild do it ~ than everyone
•- "·'d
... ~
•
e...,'"' seen u~~a e~.
"Thae...l~ all these amatcurs
!bat wae ~·8 up." Prine recalls,
"andlbeyweretan'blc.Solstarted

"'"'-•-·
--~ ____ ..;.,..... and ..._
nJWIU&lt;&gt; DIU """YQW.
""""
wore ai!IO tho men humCXOUJ dfer·
ings which povcd !bat Prine could
fmd the irony in it all "Dear Abby,"
"S•...• · · ..... "TwinCid AI •
..n;r~~ even-a:...:in
Priaon. •
.
,
B·ul John ....:...• special
... ....,
and J)eiSOIIIl integrity- something
whichallnlctedBeiloMidleriOcover
:n~:~=:v~= "Hello In There." Bonnie Raitt 10
adopt .. Anael From Montgomery" as
rrienda!!well&amp;Sbeingrcsponsiblefor herown,llldthenumeroulcountry
brill · Kris KristoffelllOn . to The artills IIUch 18 Gail Davies, Tammy
&amp;rt~Oid TowtlC to see Prine, a w~ and JolmJiy Cub 10 re1eue
move which would result in Prine's tbeir vmiOns of "Unwed Fatbas" •
gaininganationallabcldeal.
wasn't besuervedby the big labels'
From tberc, Prine went ·from way of doing b;usincss·
being a local singei'/SOngwtittz 10
He hadhis foll~l· enou~
bcinlaVJS
.. 1 an srustWI'th. :!,!,.natiOnalfrom' en~~ people 10 tocp all of his retcaaes m
Jhcd
r·....., print but there had to be !IOIIIelhing
around tbe countrr. Throughout elaciOmatinlm:onls. ·
·
Prine's major labclnugrations, which
So John ~called it quits with
wouldcvcDtuallycovereigbtalbums tbe big~ llld took some
and two ~· he cootinucd time to re-think what he was doing.
refining his voJCC and altracting fans Out of that soul searching, Prme, the
wtionalhoil!'!.~hootincl';l"l_y with his enio- singer/!IOIIgwriler/and even ~~-.1"'
g.
player,decidcdtoputoo_IIIOiherhat
"lt'slipatfeelingwhenyollpul rccordcompanyexocllllve
110mething m a !1008 and other .......le • Af
·
N h.ville he.
r-r
ter IIIOV1III to as
•
saytbat'sCliiiCilyhowlhe)'feel. Thai's decided to start mUing I'CCOids his
the most gratifying thing aboutsoog- way. To !bat .cOil Prine fonncd Oh
writing for me: it's always beellarcal Boy R~. 1 ~ture that was ere., outletforme-beingabletoputtho91 atcd Wllh ~e .manaser tJ

.Jeaseof,Aimlessl.oVC,hiSfirstindcJ)ii~U!Cnt iilbum for the Los Ang'eles
hlsedlabct, "ltgotlothepointWben
........ 1couldn'
.
1Will!" tbe·.
twutto

8fn

I care
made
.
fCI' tlucc, ~years " nu..,rCI' ,me,
was a (IOIJiive move. We wercn t at.
tltQCildofourropc.Butwc'dtalkto
laltis iiDd itjustdidn't-IOmake
any.,nsebcc 8nseljlutdidn'tfitin
With •
they do. 'Illey're used 10
~'·
kindof
· andl
001
one
mll$lc
radio.
,cnnk out 80ilp fCI' the
. ·'ThcGrammynominatedGennan
AtWmoou CXJDiinucd !bat philosoplly,
applying Prine's less-isIIICRpinclple.ThemuslcofPrine't
IOCO!Id· 011 Boy release 8III8Cks of
Appalachia,withacousticiilstruments
buoyin his - t y v~•.· As al• ways, ~ tyria.l ~";"'~ 1 and
thestoriessimplcyetmoving.
Next came Jolm Prine Live, a
two rccon1 ICt that captured one d.
America's best loved storytellers in
r.!tf(llii.CuJlcd'-ct
,,__-:fu:P. yfromPrinc'a
d .,..._
1988
::ipmg
~u""
IIIID •11 ....,
C:O.:hHousemSan '*'Gapistrano
Calif., the clink of glas918 and genii~
laughter (IIUICIUite SOIJ8S iiDd stories
thai span tbe length of his nineteen
yearcsrcer,anc!lietpedcamtheacclaimed songwriter his second
Onunmy ·Award nomination in the
Best Contemporuy Folk Recording
category.

V1110118.
•

1

OSU beats Michi9!_nState; Notre Dame falls' ·

B. Ub·u
,.,_,....
__•lncvef--:"---10-"'
,..,.
on the olcL Most ~tly., he I boell
~llldrcccrdingii!I!Pforanew
album.m Los Angeles wtth pod~
Howic~(cilToml'eqylliCIThe

: . BAST LANSING, Mich. (AP)- Eddie George · held to an llliCIIIic 76 on the IIOUIId w~ fletling 198
: racked up 219 yards on 29 carries, including a 76- through tbe air, with 121 ofthat t:0111mg m tbi first
· yard IOUChdown 1'!1!1. and linebacker Greg Bcllisari half.
•
• •
. returned an intcn:eption 35' yards for a toUChdown
After a sc;orelc:s~ first period, ~.a JUDIOI' colas Ohio State downed Michigan State 23-7 in Big lege ttansfer s~ng only his sutth game for the
Ten acdma Satmday.
·
SpartanS. got Michigan State out of a deep hole early
Belllsari's sccre came QDly 29 seconds after q-- in tbe ~quarter.. .
.
te~back Bobby Hoying staked the Buckeyes (5·2
. Demetrtce Marlin ptck~d off a Hoymg p~ss
overall and 2-1 in the Big Ten) II? a 16-7 ~on a mtendcd fCI' Joey Gallowa)' m the end~ to pvc
1().yard keeper off tbe left side wub 6:59 left tn the the SpartanS.the ball on thetr own 3-yanllint.
game.
.
.
B~ ~ five yards '!" a keeper, then on rollThe S~s (2-4 and 1·2) ~ st;art!ll8 to drive outs lUt Mill CoiCIII!ID for piCkups of 1 ~• 16. an~ 12
after Hoying s sc~re when Bel.hsan ptcked off a yards on tlucc of~~~ four pla:ys.
.
..
Tony f!anks pw mtefl!lcd for ught end Josh Keur Coleman put,Michigan State m sco tog (IOS!Uon
and ~ted untouched mto the,end ZOJK;;
•
when '!0 hauled m a Banks pass fCI' a 2f -yard gun to
His sccre ended tbe Sp8d811 s hopes .or 8 mllliCie
the 0!00 State 12.
fmish, which bepn when they bloc lee 1 Josh Jack·
Tmlbac~ ~e Goulboume capped the 97-yard,
son's kick after Hoying',s IOUChdoWJ!.
13-play cl!ive wtth a 2-y~ touc~,
.
~ore~ ~:Juckeyes 13-poin! blitz, tne game was
run off nght tackle. Chris Gardners !ride made 11 7D181nlf a gnndin~, groUJI!l-pounding aff811'.
0. .
.
.
. Ohto Stale finished wtth on~y 99 yar:-L~ through the
Ohto State countered wtth a 33-yard Jackson fiCid
811' and 278 on the ground while Michtgan Stale was
goal.

~a;;touton=-~ ~-) PrinChlsbeeA

.,.ill_

::.!:,::::::.et;~ feelin~;"~':n~~PrincptMed BIJ!ICIIBandhisiii!IOC~DanEin-

'well,ifvoutbinkyoucandoitbeltbr at this time wae sucb classics as · stelll.
.. 'lsaid r(COukt'andlgotuponstage . "A-- Don'tBuryMe,""FIShand
"~'~""'""
As !Je oottd shortly after the leo

JOHN PRINE

att~!oBelmoiUMIIllnBioom=,
Indiana lilckina ''"'"'" fCI' · · ·
' From Orace. the-;;:::-nmlnor Jam

u.•t--film' m' ,oz;:".:;;:T_ ..,_
........,._,"'
• "UJWJ"'""''!"""

llasf!:!aft::J:S'te.He.:~

Enl own..._,_ ··•·-'-'. - 11110 , _.......
pi08l'8lll. consisting d. four one bour
~epne~~u, eumlaea d!e IUIY. faocl
of c:on~ponry country music, and
featurcsli~perf~bya vlri·
etyd.spoclalguest~.milddltiQII
•

toperf~by~
So no~ Prine~ it both ways, a

"!yalf~illld~llbleto~

his,musu;hiswsydoingwbalewrhe
believes 11 best f« d!C 80118'.-

~tmustbeworking,criliCifroql

RollingStaleto't:JICNcw :Vott~
"! Pco!?lc MaP,zii,IC ~ to S!lll
his (IIIIIC8, beliCVJ!II that be a doini

~~work.. of~~llill·~l!

~-thing lhou8JI, uuuu101o
him "I'm J..W.:n&amp; for a '59 Boone~·
. •
~~
·
·.

ille ,conVCIIible m good ~ ~ I
can.' seem to find, one. At. this PD!DI.
I m11h1 even consider a hanl~q~.
.

.

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;

Prince of Bel-Air," which srars Will Smith.
.
In the show, Abdul·Jabba' aendsagolfballlhrough lhe window oftbc
Banks' family home,prov«*ing tbe wrathd.funily p8lriarch Uncle Philip.•

s:ries

..__ _ _ _ __,
Quentln Tarutlno

""""""y Fridly.

Alongwiththestar,Babrrcocivcda~lcgramfromWhoopiGoldberg,

r-·

involving nJobsrm, tillelll,
Willis, HarveyKei~landiolmTravollll.ltwon thePalmD'
Or award• tbeCannesFtlm Festival and openod

'

lo'P!' '

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·

.·, •. ~, Major,. co:Ueg.e footba~l· s~ore~

.... atthe '

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,...--~--Haunted yil,age------.

The famous "immaculate reception" ,(IllS for tile Steelers In a
\972 playoff game covered 60
yards.

JT~JS

_Silent Boo-vies':
Oct. 28 &amp; 29, 8 p.m . .
Discount if costumed
·
Nosferatu
&amp; Phantom of the Opera

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Pinson)

OVB's 1995;

•

Bestselling
books ··
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ROSES .·

· ~QVERftCTION .
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', 1'. ''Iniom~" Stephen)Gns

Clan-

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Cleveland Indians. Civic leaders
That decision also meant the ·
quickly expanded the venture to Coliseum would not be competing
include an arena.
for shows with the new Gund
Tbe Gunds sealed the Ar.enL The Gund family will pay
Coliseum's fate when they $14 million over 20 years to have
annbunccd in 1992 that it WQUid no their namo on the facility.
longer be used for concens, ice
shows, the circus or other entert
tainmcnt shows once the Cavaliers

A number of alternates have
Gordon Gund has hinted the site
been floated for the Coliseum, might be donated to the adjacent
including demolishing it and build· Cuyahoga Valley Natinnal
ing homes or converting it into a Recreation Area. The preserve
jail, shopping mall « factory outlet
mall.
' (See NEW HOME oo C-8)

left.

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Savings Pl1.1s .

FREE

Celestine Prophecy,"

The 1994 high school footllall season, which will owners of Meigs Ccunty's best rcconl, will have as
enter its ei&amp;hlh weclt f« all Ohio aod fCI' some WerA. their homecoming auest th11 club that spoiltd
Virgini!! IC!!!Da, baa aoea a win alreak of I= SoudMI'allomeccnina pme Friday DialiL
· staDdlng end and a .-o In danger of 1o11iJ1a the
The Meip Mllaaders, havlnJ. lost to Tri-Valley
lllinl of ill ileMon 10 ateacben" lllrib.
COIIieteiiCC powerllouse Nelsonville-York, will cto..
The Glllia Academy's Blue Devils' 13 game- their three-game home stand with Point Pleasant's
winning streak carne to a hall in Friday night's Big Blacks, who are still seeking their fli'SI win ol tbe
Southeastern Ohio Athletic League bout with , year. .
Logan's Chieftains, wiJI play tbdir final11011-leaguc .
Homecoming Night in Mason County resulted in
contest of the year at Portsmouth against Curt one thriller in Ashton and lopsided decisions
Cliflord's Trojans.
.
· ei..wherc. No matter where, tbe home teams losL
River Vallcy's Raiders, after having left Ohio's
So Wahama's White Falcons and Hannan's
first setllemmt with lbcir fli'SI win over a Division I Wildcats will do as the Big Blacks do and hit tbe
ballalion and their 9ICOild as a homecoming J.uest. road.
·
face an UI1CCitain future with tbe teachers' strike in
Here is a glimpse at who will do baltic with whom
tbe Gallia County Local School District due to begin this weelc.
.
Monday. Will the school hoard allow the Raiders to
llrlday: Gallipolis at Ponsmouth; Trimble at
finish tbe slalc? God only knows, and at last repor1, Eastern•; River Valley at Warren Local (maybe);
he wasn't available fCI' commenL
Point Pleasant at Meigs; Miller 81 Southern; Wahama
Eastern's Eagles, wbo assured themselves of at Duval; Hannan at Symmes Valley"'
getting at least a break-even seasm in becoming the *-homecoming •

The Cavaliers',new home

Christmas
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IUYOII
·UTOD .

(v~~allos." Arme Rice ~f) ' ·.

• 3. .

'(;:m,

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Rio Crude. Tbe bauntlilg bepn W. weekend
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This week's gridiron action

llcr the latest local blgb sd1ool ·rootballac:tion, start on C-2.

RICHFIELD: Ohio (AP) _ donated to an adjaocnt nalitrc pre·
Cleveland's new Glteway spons
complex leaves tbe Coliseum, for· scrr~e Gunds surprised rural
· mer 'home of the NBA's Cleveland Richfield, located 23 miles south of
Cavalien
· fu
Cleveland, llld thrilled Cleveland
~
~~-the boosters when they announced in
Cavaliers and Colf.,um co-owner 1990 that the Cavaliers would
. 'widt his bn!ther. George Gund m. move to Gateway.
has hinted that the 20-year-old,
·Gateway had originally been
20,273-seat building migbt be conceived as a new hqme for the

Join

and continues Oct. 21·23 '!lid OcL :t8·31. Tbe
toWD Is open to tbe public beglanin1 at 7 p.m.
.Fndays and Satw'llllys ll!!d (I pJD. Sunda:JI Pd
Halloween bay. ('11mes-Sent1Det photo by Kevla

t1oa llaetoey's T~ Tcnm haunted

. No. 23 Wiscoosin 27, Purdue 27 ~At Madison;
Wis., Kevin McGrew's 47-yard fumble return set up
Brad Bobich's. 32-yard field goal with 47 seconds
left, giving Purdue a 27-27 tie with No. 23 Wisconsin
on Sarurday.
Wisconsin's John Hall, who missed a 50-yard
f~eld goal'jliSI before halftime, was wide left from 53
yards with 2 seconds lefL
·
The fie almost certainly killed an; hope that Wisconsin (3-2-1, 2-1-1 Big Ten) had o returning to the
Rose Bowl. The Badgers capped a l 0-1-1 season last
year with a 21-16 victory over UCLA in the Rose
Bowl.

Gund brothers prov1de Cavaliers new arena 1n Cleveland

Celli 446-AIT.

at Adamsvllle oil tile Bob Evans llarm In

I

SL 16; N. Cerolina SL 34, Wake Forest 3; Nonh
Carolini 41, Maryland 17; S. Carolina St. 28.
Bethune-Cook:man 26; Troy St. SS, Charleston
Southern 20; VII1Cicrbill43, Georgia 30; Virginia 24,
Georgia Toch 7; Virginia Teeh 27 ,Bast Carolina 20.
Midwest: Ball SL 16, W. Michigan 13; Brigham
Young 21,. Notre Dame 14; Butler 31, Dayton 24;
Dr1kc 23, Valparaiso 3; Dlinois 47, Iowa 7; Kansas
41,1owa SL 23; Miami, Ohio 31, Ohio 10; Nebraska
17, Kansas SL 6; Ohio SL 23, Michigan SL 7; Penn
Stale 31, Micbipn 24; SE Missouri 24, S. Dlinois 14;
W. Dlinois 38,1ndiana SL 17; Wisconsin 27, Purdue
27 (tic); Youngstown SL 2(l, Kent 14
Soutltwat: Alkanaas 31, Missisaippi 7; Houston
39, Soutbem Melh. 33; Texas A&amp;M 41, Baylor 21
liar Wed: Weber SL 20, S. Utah 14

As they leave Richfield Coliseum to an '!.ncertaln future,

o-.., .......
-'llliohat~• o nr •••,Oil

tile
viJlqe

.

i.

llonla.

TERRO. TOWN ....:. Jessie&amp; Parsons and

(,.

Ella: Arml_!~29; BoRin Colle&amp;e 45,
r:tC!IIl(ile 28;
. . U. 35, N~ 14; lrown
20, Holy Cross 18; Cent~ Collneellcul St. 24,
Sllrinafield 20; Cmlell 29, BKimdl 28; l)lallliCMII
14, Yalo 13; Harvard 3S, Colplil-27; lona 31, SJ,
Peter's 14; Maine 3S, Connecticut 31; Marilll6,
Dqquesne 7; Navy 7, ,Lafayette 0; New Hampshiro
42, Lehigh 10; Pean 12, Columbia 3; PritiCebln 27,
Fordham 20; RufiCI'J 14, Cincinnati 9; SL 1o1m's,
N.Y. 34, Canisius 22; Wagner 38, Robert Morris 21
Soatll: Citadel 52, Funnan 44; Davidson 9,
Methodist 6; Delaware 28, Ricbmond 3; Pub 19,
Clemson 13.;, Howard 35, N.C. Central 19; James
Madison 31, Villanova 23; Massachusetts 23,
William &amp; Mazy 14; Middle Tenn. 63, Mcnbead SL.
6· Miasissippi Col 20 Samford 12; Missisli(!Pi SL
4 Soulh C8rolina 36; 'N. Carolina A.tT 26, Mcrpll

6o1£L·. .

Sarilb Walloil flip terror willie Marqldla Livi!lss::'.J..rJ!C:tlees her wldted Wlkll rul!!!i fllr

Rnlwrt Shareldl (2)
the open
durlna Saturday's Big Ten contest at East
Lansina, M,lcll., w~ere· the Buckeyes won 23-7.

INTO THE OPEN - Ohio Stale tallbaek
Eddie Geor1e (rl1ht) aels pasl Mlehlaaa Stale
cWellders Dutlan Ma111011 (31}, Mlttt CbrlstmMn

LOS ·ANOELES (AP)- TV cop Yaphet Koao found him.,lfin I
SUJlllOrlinl role in a real-life J!Oiicc dramL ·
·
. Kouri, who plays a Ballimole lieutenant in "Hanlcidc: life on the
Street,"wasrelllmingwiththegenuinenclefromacommunityOUireaCb ·
program when tbeir (JIIIOI carw_as called iJWO service 10 cha91 fleeing drug
•..,ct.~.
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~\
. ' Ollliflre was.exchili&amp;ed 11M;! tbe .-poets were me.'tect.' '~
' · ·"

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ca ' TIIebmerNJiA..Piaysbimlelfoo~y·sepUO&amp;ot"ThcFieah

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WGEPOTS s12.95 &amp;s14.95
ASSORtED COLOIS IIILOOM
·
'WINTERING
OVER
ROSES•
. .
1 .,
•
J
Don't clip any ro$8S a~!r October 10th. Roaes
need to start going donnant.
..
"
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Mid November ,cllp ~ee ~o about 24Jnch,ts:and
. defoliate (remove
all leaves).t
··
· ;,· ...· .
•
.
•
wltti dOnnant oil.spray or lime sulphur. ThiS
. keeps blaCkspot from attaching Itself.to me canes
duitng the winter months.
·
·
Put a rose collar around the rose and fill H with
. sterilized top soil or mushroom .compost mixed
, •

Forever," ,.
Mill'iow) ·
of Madi.On
James W~ler
..

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. Chris~as Savings _Plus has ~ever been easier. Sign .up at:any OvB .
-office t~ have your.Christmas Savings Plus deducted from one of your ·· ·
.. existing OVB accounts; _and if ~ou wish, the dedllctiop will be c~ntinu­
"~ous; which means you won't have to reme~ber to take the .time to'sigri
up every year. . .•
· ' ,
· 1•
•

,·Spray

wHhsand.

·

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" . ' f

....

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Love."

· lllllalxrurontberun-iaanBnD~

LOS~ (AP)-A onetime king ofllastetbaU picks up agolf
clubNBC
IIIII wilda up """''in• a(Jrince. Afairy tale? No, Kareem Abdul,Iabblr
,
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ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- Deland McCpllough rushed fa a career-high 206 yards and Miami of Ohio' s
dclenae pitbd off fourJIIUCI in a 31-10 vicloy overwinless{)hio University Salunlay.
Ohio, now ().6 overall and 04 In tbe Mid-American Conference, had almoa as 111811Y passes caught by
Miami as by irs own receivers. The Bobcat quartatB:ks wae a mnbined 6-fCI'-26 passing fCI' 36 yaids.
Ohio took tbe'lead f« the first time this season on Scott Roberts' 19-yard first-quarter field goal But tbe
feeling only lasled ss seconds.
'
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Brie Henderson rerumed tbe ensuing kiclcoff 46 yards to the Ohio 48. McCullough gained 36 and t1ucc
yardsontwonms before scoring untouched from tbe nine 10give Miami (3-3-1,'3-1 MAC) tbe lead for good.
After an Ohio punt, Miami took over a1 its own 32 and needed just four plays and 1:19 to make it 14-3.
This time McCullough gained 2S yards on three carries with Neil Dougherty hilling Jeremy Pauason on8 37yard touchdown pass.
.
Miami buill tbe lead to 24-3 on a 32-yard Chad Seitz field goal .and a 15-yanltouchclown pass from
Dougherty 10 Henderson.
Miami's David Wilson, a senior defensive back, scored the first touchdown of his cOllege career when he
returned an interception 60 yards in the fourth quarter to eta.. the scoring.
.
Ohio's only touchdown came on a five-)'!1111 pass from backup quartelback Bob Bees to Dcwight Pickens.

who is honeymooiiiQg with new husband Lyle 'liachtcnbcrg.1he ldegram
said: "Bravo!! lit's about time. Love, Wboopi." .
B_..,'s hits indudc "(living You the Best That I Got" and "Sweet

~crime 1111p -

Brigham Young. stopped Notre Dame twice inside
the 10 on the way to beating the 17th-JaDked Irish
21-14 on Salurday.
·
The Irish also missed three field goals and were
held to liS yards rushing by an aggressive BYU
defense that produced four sacks for 45 yards, recovered one fumble, had an interceptipn and seven tack·
les !« 21 yards in losses.
Brigham Young (6-1) overcame near disaster at
tbc stan of the game to defeat the Irish (4-3), who
hadn'tlost so many games this early in a season
since going 5-6 in coach Lou Holtz's first season in
1986.
Walsh moved his team 77 yards in 13 .plays for
· the winning score with Jamal Willis plunging over
tbe middle of the line from two yards out. Walsh !ben
hit Hema Heimul with a conversion pass.

Miami Redskins down OU 31-10

Troubadour Conoctt
8 ·p.111
,OcL 27. Tlckelseanbe"""'balcd._;;
calling (606}324-3175.
~~

"No way did I expoctto beD~g down the.
freeway at sucb terrific~ with helicopters
overhead," Kouo said. 'It's one thing doing
that in tbc movies. It's another thing doing the
real thing."
.

LOS_ANGELES(AP)-Anili_Bakcr, whosingsofstronglove,found
he.rself With weak tnees as she unveiled her star on tbe Hollywood Wallt of'
Fame. ·
.
"I Wlmt 10 ~all my friends~ my husband for helping me stand
here today," she sa_id Thursday. '1'his IS a weak momcntfCI' me."

. A 35-yanl punt return by Coleman late in tbe seC·
ond half gave the Spartans excellent field position,
with the ball on thCII' own 45. Banb and Coleman
teamed up for a 27-yard gainer on tbe CDBUing drive
!bat saw Coleman fake out Marlon Kerr er, then gain
about 20 yards before he was brought down by Tim
Patillo.
.
In other Top 2S acnon:
No._&amp; Auburn 36, No. l Florida 33- At
Gainesville, Fla., Patrick Nix threw an eight-yard
touchdown pass to FJaDk Sand~rs with 30 seconds
left and sixth-JaDked Auburn stunned No. I Florida
36-33 Saturday in a see-saw game to extend the
nation's longest winning strealc to 18.
_ Florida's Danny Wuerffel cam~ off the bench in
the second half and threw three touchdown passes,
including a 28-yarder to Jack Jackson that put the
Gators ahead 33-29 with 5:51 lefL
But Auburn's Brian Robinson interocpted his third
pass with 1:20 remaining to set up the winning drive.
The Tigers (7-0; 5-0 Southeastern .Conference)
drove 55 yards in seven {llays, and took the ,lead
when Sanders made a leapmg catch in the end zone
between two defenders.
· Following the kickoff, Florida took over on i'ts
own 11. But the Gators (5-1, 4-1) couldn't move the
ball and saw their 17-game home winning streak in
the SEC come to an end before a record crowd of
85,562 at Florida Field.
,
BYU ll, No. 17 Notre Dame 14 -At South
Bend, Ind., John Walsh passed for 216 yards and

~;:s~~=

People in the news
LOS ANGBLBS (AP) - If 11\e rambunctious
gaale of c:haracters in "Puup Fiction" seem
real, it's beta"., screenwriter-dilector Quentin
Tarantino believes they are.
TUIMitino, 26, ~ be simply let the challlcters
develop, lle8ling them as real people whose des·
tinics 1ft in lbcir own balllls. And he's im·
Jli'C&amp;sed with bow they turned OUL
"I wish in real life I taltod tbc way my challlctcn talk." be said. "To me they're so witty. It's
l'f:IIIY ~ Wbcnl'm writing\ my vocabulary

Section C;

&lt;atimts-Jmthttl

Entertainment -.
.John Prine makes
m\,Jsi~· on his ow(l·terms··-r
·s s •

October 16, 1994

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P.-a•

C2 SUnday lim•

sinanet

Pomeroj-Middleport--Galllpolla, OH Point PIMUnt, WY

·-· At the Tigers' homecoming game,

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winless Marietta in the Tigers'
homeComing pine Friday aight at
Doo Drumm Stadi1111.
"My line did a helluva job,"
said Haislop, who go~ his third
100-yard-plus pme of the cam·
paign. "Their nm defe~~~e wasn't
wba it oecdeciiO be 10 slop us. We

.. -

Selltblel Stllr-· . ·.
MARIBTrA -River Valley,
lrlillng by IS poiniS at balftime,
touc:hdowns from IOIIior laiiAbe Haillop in CICh of lhe
. following two quarten 10 lead lhe
IWdera to a 22-21 shocker over

·f:t

''W8\ttuck to what
we did' In the first
quarter. We Just
played mash-mouth
football." - Abe
Halslop on the
efforts of the
Raiders' offensive
line and the back·
field en route to
their second homecoming victory of
the season.

got lhe Tigen to lhe Raiders' 48,
. The first quarter ,saw Jaclt five more plays, which llllldwiched
James' IWders Sl8lt lhe pmc with the
of the IOcOod.quarter,
• 11-play, 73-yard man:h thausw couldn't get them any cloaer than
sophomore .fullback Steve JbeRaiden' 42.
Hammond IIIOYC lhe bell'31 ya'ds,
River Valley took over on
ci which 23 came on a run tbal got downs It'ill own 47, but moved lhe
die Raiclen ICIOSI midfield before bell only eight yards before Jeny
biS final two In lhe drive IIUCit lhe Bnmmer's_pui!l got in10 die hands
bell In the end moe. However, he of split encl/lll'ely Shane Jolmson.
pobablf. wouldn 'I have gallelllhe Jobnaon toolt the tJall, WCIII to his
c:lllncc if junior quartaback David left llld sprinted put the Marieua
Kelley's fourth-and-five pass from sideline 011 his way to ICOring a
the Tigers' 33-yard line hadn't touchdown from 88 yards away.
found the mark, namely lhe hands Mark Unroe' 1 extra-P&lt;»int kick
of senior wide rece1ver Doug pvelhe'ligersa7-61ead.
Uoyd.
River VaUey sot two of the IIClll
Marietta's first possession, thnl6 JIOIIICisiMs. but neithet 1e1111
which started at the bollS' 23, got closer than the other's 3!1
I1CielllCd to stan on a pair of foudh· hefcn Johnson'i intcrcetf!: set
down occasions, but Tiger tailhaclt up. shop for the 'lisen ll · own
Blld KroCt saved his mates the fiqt 2S
lime with a four-yard sweep run to
Though Kroll's eiJht-yard run
die left si~ Theil the~ were and ~are q!W1el'blclt Adam
found guilty. of a roughmg-the- Covalt s eight-yard pass were cru·
lticket penalty on a founh-and-21 cial to the T1gers in that they
amMion stthe Marietta 37.
moved the sticks, what helped
Despite the fact that the penalty - them die 111011 was aiQII8hius-the-

that clme betWeen the aforementioned lint-down gainers. That 801
the )1gen from their own 40 10 the

comma

In other SEOAL action,

.

~!If-,... end z.ooe,leaped

mfrmtofRaiderlineblc:terTravis
SJ*lll - he bacia pair of fll'-losi
llcltijl earlier In the frame -on
the -~ Cltdr and did the lliiiC In
float rtl Lloyd on die second.
\J11roe'1 extra-point boots after
both'catches put Marielllahead·
21-6.
.
Marietta. wouldn't have hacldle
chance to get· the second paydirl
pass if the Raiden hdl't fumbled
at· their own 23, whea Jason
Caato'a fumble recovery pat the
nserutlheRiverVilley20.
Tile co.ehek bealu
Marielta, pulng the tllinl-quarter kicltoff Ill ill own 15, sot to ill
. own .23 befare a penalty lOOk the
ball bact 10 the point of oriain..
Theil Kroft's 44-yard ~at- it
wu the Tigers' lone lticlt of Ibis .
Yiriecy llld only the second of the
· niaht - went ont of bounds stdle
Raiclen' 41, but the cilic:iala pvc
the Raiders the ball at their own
· 23.
No apparent proteSt was rendered by the River Valley brass,
but the credo "Don'I cry about iL
Just play• must have beeo what
kept die Raiden
Haialop

passel penalty against the Raiders passes of 34 llld 20 yards 10 jwlior.

just played mash-mouth foodlall."

Raiden' 4!1.
All that let the stage for
Covalt's last-minute touchdown

back J Sauls, who lined'
fJI'J
up at split en4.
Sauls, TlhO had
three to ·five yards. of CUJhion on
both 1imillrly~run plays to the left
'

J'UJIII)IIg

(See RAIDERS c. C!l)

"On the last drive,
we beat them down
physically. ·we were
a little bit quicker,
and we .wanted to
win this game a lit·
tle bit more." Jiremy Ford on the
Raiders' first vlcto·
.ry over a Division I
team.

=:1; •

.

: ~ c~ Jason enltins were
· the sole ~ rams on this 13-

. Jackson still unbeaten: Athens loses.llilllaaain
;
The Sbulheutan Ohio Athletic
· ~ has a new look today fol• JowiD&amp; Friday's acti011 thai saw the

AIJacbon, the teams ballled 10
a 26-26 deadlock in regulation, but
a 20-yard field goal by Ryan Hall
in ove~me ena~led Jackson~
escape with the viCtory and re1D8DI
Ulldefeated In lleYC1I games.
Warren falls 10 4-3 ovemll and
0-31n leque plsy.
. .
The Ironmen, ranked nanth m
the Associated Preas Division 11
poll this week, saw a 26-6 lead
"""""""" In lhe second half IS die
scored on three long
plays to lie the pme.
Wam:n opened the scoring on a
PDC yard run by Patrick Walsh, but
a two-point conversion pass failed.
TaiJ!Jic!t Joey Bogs ti~ the game
on an eight-yard run, wath the extra
pointlticlt failing.
.
In the second period, quarter·
back Ge9ff Matthews found 1iavis
Hughes with a 47·yanl IOOChdown
pass befare Halt ti~ the

OlllipolisBlueDevilsfallfromlhe

; ranb of the unbealen in a 14-13
loa to die Lopn Chieftains.
Lopn's c:rucial win iway from

,.
•:
:;
,•
,:
:;:
,..
::
·•·:
::
''·

home, combiDed with the 29-26
victory by Jecltson over Warren
Local sets the lronmen and
Olieftains at the lop of the heap
with no·,..,.""" loues. Jackson is 40 and J...oii'D-3-0 wilh the Ironmen
headed to Lo~an this week in
must-win sihali!WI for both leanls.
· In other action Friday the River
Valley Rliders ecJsed Marietta 2221 to move into fourth place in
SHOAL standings while Athens
mm•lned winless for lhe season In
a 22-10 loa to Vinton County in a
non leque Nule.

::

Warra Lotai26JOT)

;:
:~

:•

wmion

Jatc._ 29

~-

Area
footba ll standings
·
·
- • SEOAL teams • -

Iaua

·

n

Jeck.................................4-0
Lopn .......................,........3-0
OALLIPOUS ...................:J-1
RIVER VAU.EY .............2-1
Wam:n Lotal ....................0-3
Athens ..............................0-3
Marietta............................0-4 .

a~

110
109
149
39
40
.21
49
.

-

.

lt:Lr.

26
7..0
48 ' . 4-3
28
6-1
90
4-3
88
4-3
131
0-7 '
176
0-7

.lY.

Mianli 1iace ..............................................6
Pair181ld.......................................................6
Portsmoudl.................................................4
Meigs .........................................................3
Cclal Grovc.................................................3
J3\lint JJieasarlt ............................
0
000 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

El:lda.U alii

Lo1an 14,GA!l.IPOUS 13
RIVER VALLEY 22, Marieua

21•

VlniOII County 22, AlheDIIO

Jacltson 29, Warren Local 26
(OT)

.

Nelsonville-York 43, Meigs 6
'Coal Grove47, ~ 30
Fairland 2!1, Roc;t . 0
Oreenf~eld McClain 2S, Miami
Tace 22
Sissonville 56, Point Pleasant .,Portsmouth 20, Lexington (Ky.)
Dunbar 19
•-homc!:91!1ing pme

234
109
126
38

ss

64
139
43
244
1'37
260
27g

OVJ1cr
W1m11 Loca1 ...6 0 6 14 0 • 26
JICbon ,_........613 7 0 3 • 29
VlaiGil Couaty 22, AIHDI 10

At McArthur, the winless
Bulldoa went for the ..-c. IIkins
a 10-71ead Into the fourdt psiod,
but die dcfCIIIC pvc up IS points
10 the Viklnp In die final two miD·
uta.

qlllltaB.

Midway in the final period
Shawn Taylor connected on a IS·
yard pass to Josh King and Ryan
Nichols passed to Shawn !aylor
for th~ two point conve~s1on_1o
make at 26-20. The Wamon ~
lhe PI!1C on Frye's seva~-yard run
two mlftutes later, but could not
convert the extra-point lticlt.
In overtime, Jackson w-011 the
ross, but elected to P!aY d~fense .
and slopped ,the Warren drive st
lhe ms·:to yaJd line.
·
The lronmen drove from their
20 10 the Warren three-yard line
from where Hall drilled the winning field goal on a fourth-down
plsy.
S!aristics show Jackson rushing
for 30S yads, Jed by Joey Boat'
3S ~for 247 yards. MatttieWs
completed five of nine passes for
another 94 yards. Frye carried 28
times for 2S4 yards, while his tea·
mites accounted for another 96
yards, completing nine of 22 passes.

•

In tb second quarter, Doug
Willill!ls•liwned with f)usty Went
on a 61-yard touchdown 1J8S1 with
Kevin Caudill kicking th~ extra
point far a 7-0 lead.
Athens (0-7) answered IS the
half expired when Kahieem
MaxwelliiCOOJICCI up a f1111ble n
raced 88 yards l~ydirt. Nick
Palmer's kick ti the score at
~e.

.
This dMdloclt IIOOd Wllil early
In the fourth quarter when Palm~
booted a 21-ylnl field goil10 lift
the Bulldogs lniO a 10-7 lead. The
Viltin&amp;s scored twice In the fmal
two minutes on a pair of touchdown runs by Jason Waugh coverina four and S7 yards.
Vinton Coon~ (4·3) nelled 219
yanls ruslllng, wilh Waugh getting
12!1, and -ax~ 13 JIUICI for 130
yar~s' Athen.•' ib0i'~4 ,64:yards '·
rush!Dg and 44 passlftg, but had
one Intercepted and lost three fwn- '
bles.
Ouarter .&amp;lltala
Alhcns ...................O 7 0 3 = 10
Vinlm Co............0 7 0 15 = 22

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first scrimmage play of the third quarter willie
Halslop u· ~lng grabbed by Tiler del'enden Scott
Lumbatis (71) and Mark Uaroe (85)•.-Mao tryiDg
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Total yinla ...... _........241

rtt\-COU.Qt.~

en

unexpected happens to

RV

Departnant

THE EYE of the storm at Marietta's Don
Drumm Stadium durlag Friday nlxht's bomec:uming game saw Rl\ler Valley's orrensi"e line 1111d
backfield turniDJ the Marietta froal ."our around
lonx enough to let runninll backs such as Abe
Halslop and Jasoa JeDitins kept .., xround attack
rolling along. Raider center Paul Pokyn ('9), who

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. ~

•

Rcture this: Something

Team statistics

· BACK OFF! - As River Valley ctllter ~ul Polcyn JlaMeS by on
left, and the Raiders . the left, Raider wide reee~ver Mlet.ael Speace (rlabt) llloclul ••
rl'lver·• •w.- 11: .
Ullldelltilled Martea. del'ellder OD a ru plale!: the Wnl quarter o1
by I penonal• Fr1c1a Dlabt'l SEOAL p11e iD Marietta, w
the Raiders claimed
aot the ball to a bw!rle 22-21 wiD. (TIIIIea-Selltlael plloto by G. Speaeer
Olborae)

LO
LO
N

FrldaJ: GALLIPOLIS II
Portsmouth; Logan at' RIVER
VALLEY; Warren Local at .
Jackson; Marietta at Athens;
Point ~I S1 Mei&amp;s; South
Point at Coli Grove; Flirland st ·
BUffalo-Wayne; Cincinnati
Nonhwest at Miami Trace

(J.ionJentins run), 4:28 3rd qtr.
River Valley: Haialop 10-yd.
run (Hiislop run), 2:56 4th qlr.

1111

A

llallllfl

· · ·. you or your spouse.

tbeir OWil 46, tha Raiders, wi.o behind victory in their ~·s hisusec1 up !1:46 on this drive. Clldod tory.
their 13-play, 82-YIIII man:b.to 111e
"'n die last drive. we beat diem
promised lind with Halalop\1 10- dOwn~~.~ said Ford. "We
yard riaht·hancl sweep run to the .were a )IIIIo bit quicker, and we
west eiMl zone. Hailloli'l two-pOint wanted 10 win this game a 11n1e bit
COII'IIersion run, whicb CDC on I
11101e.•
pltchout, finished erasing
·
Marietta'• lead and put Rint
This weet'aiiChedule has River
Valley ahead 22-21.
Villey ~· to VincCIIt 10 take on
"We IIUI:It to whll we did in the Warren LoCal's Warriors, while
first qillriK," laid Hlilql. who In M8rieaa will head., The Plains.,
this grouncl-hualnl cliiw &amp;ainecl play Athena in a bout that will
44 yads, while Jenltlns hacll8.
decide wllo wiD win its first glll!e
After Johnlon'• ticlt raurn sot of the-.
the the ball to the Tigers' 34, a Ogertcr.IIIIIIIJ
Kroft run and line Covalt's J1111- River Valley ..........6 0 8 8 • 22
es, all of which went 10 tight end Marietta .................O21 0 0 • 21
Aaron Sears, got the balf'to 'the
Raiden' 41. But Covalt. who was Scorln'J •ummary .
downed for a four-yard lo11 by
Raider defensive tacltle Jeremy
River V~lley: Hammond 2-y~.
Ford before the sophomore's last run (Jlass·failed), 7:0!1 111 qtr.
COI!lpletion, threw two Incomplete
Marietta: Jolmson 88·yd. pu11t
passes despite hii line's contain- return (Unroc ldclt), !1:08 2nd Qtr.
ment of the Raiders' front four,
Marietta: Sauls 3.f•yd. pa~s
with Kroft dropping a fourth-and- from Covalt (Unroc Det), :!14 2nd
eight pass 10 give lhe Raiders the qtr.
ball on downs.
Marietta: Sauls 20-yd. pass
Then KeUey put the knee down, from COvalt (Unroc tick), :02 2nd
111d the Raiders ran out the cloclt 10 qtr.
secure the largest come-fromRiver Valley: Haialop 3-yd. nm

~

J!QD. -~Ill ~··llo!l&amp; WC!I4

l'E . . lA
248
.9S
19!1
94
90
171
162
17S
174
177
49
193

L

Sunday llm11 sentinel Pial Cl

_ _ _ _ _--"-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

: play, 77-f':ld drive tbal CODSIIIIed
· S:29. Haislop scored from three·
: yards out o.n a no-frills, up-the- ·.
: middle run that, combined with
· Jentlns' two-point conversion run,
: cut Marietta'slead to 21-14.
: In this ground-huggiag drive,
: Haislop gained 49 yards, while
; Jenkins had 28.
'
. . The 'figen moved the ball 22
: yards to their own 43, but a hold: mg peualty and Kroft's five-yard
, run on a fourth-and-17 situation
: killed half the yards gained that
: drive and pvc lhe Raiden the ball
on downs at the Marietta 40.
' . River Valley had the ball only
.two plays, wilh lhe second result·
ing in a fumble on the first play of
the fourth quarter that Marietta
·lineman Scou Lumbatis recovered
st the T"~gers' 48.
. Marieua got runs of seven and
three .yards out of Kroft before
·Covalt's 34-yard pass 10 Johnson
oo a third-and·five lllliation got lhe
ngers more than justa first down.
It got diem Inside the Raiden' red
zone. From the River Valley 19,
. the - . moved the bell six yanls
on runs by Jobnson and Covalt
!i,,bef&lt;~orelpl·tl)ey decided on a field-,Pl
c.
on a fourth-and-four atua-

en

- • Noa-leape oppciilella • -

Ialll

=

m Ovi.f

point. Five minutes later Mall
Robbins piclted off a Warrior pass
and raced 42 yards 10.1 touchdown
to give Jackson a 19-6 halftime
lead.
This lead swelled 10 26-6 In die
t~ird quarter when Matthews
flipped_ a five yard~ JI!IIS
tO'Kcvin Woltcrd with HaliiOClllS
the extra poinL Warren IIIIICt bad:
quicltl.y on a 7S-yant run by Justin
Frye to make it 26-12 aft« three

Pomeroy-lllddllporl Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleeunt, wv

·Raiders·triumph ... ~(Conlin~·~
aedfrom~C:!'L·2)

River Valley rallies_:_~o get 22-21 ·triumph over Mari.etta.
~G. SPENCER OSBORNE

October
.... 18.1894

DRIVEl ·..

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~~~::~r~1~~1:1M:~~~~~~~Q~~~~~~==~P~o~me~-~~~~d~dl~epo~~~~oe:•~n~~~~~OH~~~~~M~A=•:'"=:~~wv~~~~~~~~~&amp;~~::~~,~- n~m::•~s:•:n:a~n:•'~~=~a:•;·ll~ ~
-.

GALLIPOLIS -

Ohi9Leaaue.

~ACINE ~ S~rlng 16 third- .
period
anJ:f:~!:Cs !ri:r~.!,~~
- exp .
....., ""
.._,
C~'NJII8 their way to a 31-0 llwtoul
v•ctory~jer Southern durl~ I!Je
TOIIIIdoca bomemcomlng 11 Rogl:r
Lee. Adams Memorial Field in RacmePridaynigbt.
/
Dennis Osborne paced the
Tomcats (3-4 overall &amp;:. U in tbC
Tri· Valle)' Conference's Hocking
Division) with 79 yards on 20
carries, while pmcring a five-yard
touchdown run and a two-p()int
conversion. JJ. Azbell was 4-43
with two touchdowns, while Brian
Cainechis was S-23 with a
toucdown.
Southern (1-6 &amp;: 0-2) was led by
Jamie Evans with 28 yards on 13

seconds lefL Logan then rsn out !he

Visiting

Lo!ran jumped off to' a 14-0 first clock.
hall' lead, !hen held on for dear life
"It was an epic battle," said
to edfC Gallipolis 14-13 in a brutal
defensive SlruJigle on MemOrial
Field Friday ·mght before a large
Plrenta' Niglu crowd..
The defeat snapped Gallia
Academy's two-year, 13-gamc
winning atreak, and left Brent
Saunden' Blue Devils 6-1 ovcrall
and 3·1 inside the Southeastern

Trimble. blanks Southern 31·-o in homecoming

-_,

Amyx, whose Chieftains best the
· Gallians for !he first time in three
years. "We should have scored
a~ in the fmal period, but Gallia
could also have pulled it out in !he
closing minutes. It was justa great
ball fllll' to watch. no matter who
won. ·
·'
The Logan mentor praised Gallia's line play in !he second half
ar1d the hard ~nning of Hutchin·
sm.
Slllllldm was proud !he way his
boys came back fu !he second half.
"We just made too many mistakes
asainst a good ball club," he said,
referring to a lost fumble, two pass
in..erceptions and costly penalties.
The Blue Devil mentor praised
Logan's defensive play and the
o' erall performance of quarter·
GRABS PASS • Gallipolis' Ryan Banes. (10) picked up 13
back Chad Zimmerman in the first
yards
on a p• from Eric Humphreys with 7:00 left In tile fourth
half. "They are a well-coached ball
period
of Fr. .y's GAHS·Lopn gam= on Memorial Field. Lopn
c!Jb." he added.
edged
the
BIH Devill14-13 to rmap the GalUus 13-game, twO-year ·
Portsmouth next file
Gallipolis will play a non-league . jwlnnlna streak. (TinJes-Sentlnel photo by Roger. B_rwnfleld)
gune at Portsmou!h Friday.
Sc01;lng • LHS : Cos~e, 20· (10:32 third, Cremeens, kick);
Score by quarters
run (0:00 fii'Sl, Thomas, kick); Cox, Hutchinson, 3-yard run (4:04
Logan........
7 7 0 0 = 14
44 pass from Zimmerman (1:34 fourth, kick fail)
Gallipolis ................O 0 7 6 =J3
second, Thomas, kick); .GADS Nest ga111e: Oct. 21, at
Hutchinson,
47
-yard
punt
return
Portsmouth.
Statistics

The loss also knocked GAHS
out Qf a first place tie in the
SBOAL with Jackson. The IronII1Cil wac a 29-26 overtime winner
over Warren Local Friday night
and improved to 7-0 and 4-0..
Dale Amyx's Chieftains
improved to 4-3 overall (3-0 in
conference play) and will host
Jackson Friday mght in what could
be the 1994 SEOAL championship
fOOiball game 11 BiD Sauer F'IC!d.
In order to sein at least tie for
!his year's league crown, Gallipolis
~ wins over Jackson and River
:Valley on the road Oct. 28 and
~ov. 4, as weli as a Jackson victory
~« Logan !his weaend.
:
AbnCIIt pulled It ont
f The Blue Devils almost pulled it
jlOUt of the rue Friday night, but it
·:was not to be.
·
• Aft« the Devils' defensive unit
~iued i!B first touchdown. of the Department
G
L
~ear in the initial period (0:00) on a
F'II'St downs ..................... tO
10
;Q().yard scamper by Jolm Cosgrove YanJ., rushing ...............l48
Ill
~Drew Thomas point after for a Lostrushing .....................4
12
!7·0 led, the Gallians marched to Net rushing ...................l44
99
~·s 37 yard line with 7:S8left Pass lltempiS ................. .IO
17
~~-half
'
Coinpletions .....................5
8
• After an exchange of punts, tnren:eprcd by...................o
2
:Cosgrove intercepted an Eric yards passing .................49
99
"umphreys pass on the Chiefs' 40 Total yards ................... 193 198
~o set up Logan's second score.
Plays ...............................45
48
Following a 15-yard JICi'sonal foul Return yards ...................86
12
nail}' against OAHS, !he Chiefs Fumbles ............................ 2
I
ot two first downs, then Chad Lost fumbles ..................... !
1
mmerman hit Eric Cox with a Penalties ..................... .S-45 3·25
90rfect 44-yard strike to make it Punts .........................4-138 6-258
113·0 wilh 1:34 left in .the half.
Individual rushing· LDS •
(homas, a 100-pound sophomore, Cosgrove, 16·62; Evans, 8·21:
kicked what proved to be the · Zimmerman, '6-9; Cox, j:1; TO·
e's winning poinl
TALS 31·99. GADS • Hutchinson,
Gallipolis came out sizzling hot 17-93; Stacy, 8-25; Dailey, 4-9;
the third stanza. After stopping Hill, 3-14; Humphreys, 3·3; TO·
rugged Chiefs in !heir tracks, TALS 35·144.
eath Hutchinson returned a Jeff
Receiving • LHS - Cox, 8-80-1;
tdaibach punt47 yards to paydirt to Phelps, 2·19·0. TOTALS • 8·99.
the deficit to 14·6. Breu Cre· GAHS • QuaDs, 1-9-0; Stacy, 1kick wi!h I0:27 left in !he 9-0; Hutchinson,l·3: Barnes, 1•23.
llllllc it 14·7. Logan.
Dailey, 1·5. TOTALS · 5-49..0.
Punting outstanding
Passing • LDS - Zimmennan 8Following a brilliant punting 17-(0)~99·1. GAHS • Humphreys, clime by Maibach and Cremeens, 5-9-(1)-49-0; Hutchinson, 0-1 (1)GAHS lost the ball on a fumble 0. TOTALS 5·10·(1)-49..0
wi!h Logan's Tim Bookman recovRecovered fumbles: LH!;: Tim
ering on !he GAHS 26 to end !hird- Bookman: GAHS: Troy Duncan.
q~play .
.The Chiefs moved to Gallia's - -1':"!~~:-~-~~~--~:---.
nine in seven plays. On fourth and
six at !he nine, Thomas aUcmpted a
26-yard field goal at the 8:59 mark.
It hit the cross bar and bounced
away. GAHS regained possession
on !he Blue Devils 20.
.
,Eleven plays and 80 yards later,
Hutchinson blasted over from the
three with Burt Wood throwing a
kef block on the play. Cremeens's
pomt aUcmpt was wide to !he lefL
It remained 14-13, Logan, with
4:02left to play.
On' the lint· Logan play followina Gallia's score, Troy Duncan
~vered Eric Cox's fumble oli !he
Logan 25 yard line. It appeared
GAHS was going to pull it out, but
a 15-yard personal foul penalty
against !he Gallians moved the ball
back to Logan's 40.
Gallipolis managed to get back
to the Logan 25. On fourth down.
Cremeens attempted a 42-yard field
goal. It was short and to the left
with 2:02 lefL
Last chance
Gallipolis had one final chance
!U pull out a viciory, but a booming
43-yard punt by Maibach went out
of bounds on !he GAHS 39 wi!h 57
seconds lefL
After one GAHS pass fell
ir::omplete, Cosgrove wrapped it
111 for the visitors by intercepting a
!Wfl)ack option p~ss from Henth
Hutdlin80n to Ryan Barnes wi!h 44

SCORES TWICE • GAHS fullba!!k Heath Hutchinson scored
both Galllpolilllltlebdowns Friday night on rims or 47 yards (punt
return) and a three-yard blut through the line. Ia pursuit Is
Logan's Rudy Brandt (61), Logan won, 14·13. (Times-Sentinel
photo by BW Roa).

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HEADED INTO THE STORM - • Southern quarterback Je11e
Maynard (15) banda olrto an unidentified running back headlnK .into
the teeth of Trimble's defense during Friday night's TVC coatest at
Roaer Lee Adlllll StadiQIII. The TOBicats won 31.0 to band the Tor·
nadoes their third straight defeat. ·
·

Cullass Calais S. gray. air,
automatic, NNFM cassena.

. r

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94 HONDA

liDL

Ina hiday night's hontecotlliDI game at Radae, '
where tbe Tomcats won 31..0.
-

Home Office: Bloomif181on, llhnois

RsltJBrs•••

RIUiq- Haislop 2~106, 2 .
TDs; Hammolld ~-34, 1 TD; Jason
Jenkio119-20; Xclloy 1-7.
1 Plllblt - Keley 2·5, IS yds.,

DOWN HE GOES -Trimble defender Jamie
Morris (67) and two of hli teammates·conspire to
brinK dOWD an unidentified Soutbefn runner dar·

State Farm Mutual
Aulomobile Insurance Co!!!J&gt;any-

.....:--,........,--.-....,---'"'1"'---

(Continued from C-3)
Rulbilla Ja.-yds....48-227 31-59
~yams................IS
141
Comp.-att. ...................2-5 8-20
lnlcn:cptions thrown ...... I
0
F1111bles-lost .........:....3·3
0-0
Pcnlltiea-yanls... _ ...A·SO 8·80
Puntlng..........:........... 1-44
1-44

De ElegMce. air. 1 o -.

AC:cord. silver, 4 door. rear
spoiler, CO pi~yer.

Southern was very much in the
pme at die balf, 8-0. ·
.
With Souihem pun~ ill
own end zone, Trimble
· the
kick and recovered for a safety at
the 10:23 mark d die ICCOIId me
(See TORNADOEs oa c~
.·

·

On its f1111 possession, Soaihcm
~ to be close to a first down,
but came_up_short. Tbc T~oeJ .
went for the lint down, but came up
a fraction of an inch abort, giving
Trimble the ball on the Tornado 35yard line. Trimble gained two rust
downs, claiming one on a 22·yard
Osborile run to Jhe eigh~·yard line.
On the next carry, Osborne 1111 to
· !Ire lllfee, then Sou!hrm tuunmered
the mighty Trimble back 11 the line
of scrimmage. Faced with a third
and five for !he touchdqwn, Trimble
gota break when SHS wandered
offsides, .placins the ball half the
dislance to.!he goal, w~ Sou!hcm
rose to the occasion and repelled the
Trimble assault.
Southern's senior tackle Steve
Edwards caught Osborne for a-fiveyard loss and SHS took over near
the seven-yard line. A fired-up Joe
Hemsley beckoned his Tornado
·troops to establish some morneniWn,
and to builil on Edwards' big play.
The glory was short-lived.
On the third play from
, scrimmage, Joey Wright and Nathan
Angle hammered.SHS quarterback
Jesse Maynard, knocking the ball
loose for an Angle recovery at the
eighL
Southern wi!hstood Trimble again
as. the line came together and
Edwards made 8IIOlhet big play for
.a loss of_tardage. The first period
_eiiiled scoreless it 0-0: _ . - Southern regained possession in
•what appeared to be a defensive
standoff.
For the second straight time, an
omen for. the remainder of the
evening, Southern's offensive line
leaked like a sieve. The storming
wave of Tomcat jerseys lapped at

.

There's a great way to supplement
your group medical policy to cover
extra hospital expenses.

~

canies.

the 'beets- and 10111etimes in the
faces - of the Tornadoei all
evening lcng.
Most of die Maynard llld BVIDI
running effliltl wac in vein during a
night the TOIIIIdoca rushing OUipUl
was nesatlve 72 yards. Still,
.

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OCTOBER
1

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•

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* Monttily· payments based upon $1000.00 down or equal value in trade-in and b~lance financed thru lending
lnllllltutiorll taxea, fees not included.
.
.
·

1

81 0 E. STATE .ST. • ATHENS,.OHIO _

*15n

1991 MERCURY GRAND
MARQUIS LS

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1985 CADILLAC DEVILLE
4 DR, vs. loaded . . I
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C8 Sundly nm• Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-Micldleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Plla8nt,

I

"
October 18, 1894

wv

Eastern wallops Federal Hocking in 33..15 decision .· .
STEWART- Jason Sheet• Sheets scored on 1 three-yard run. yard run. Oilders ran In the
Bissell led Eastern with 14
carried 24 tiiDCI for 106 ...-.. ' one, Lit«' a 28-yard recqJtiod 1111 up that conversion and lbe ICOie stood 27- tacldes Adam Mcl&gt;aluel bad nin"'
touchdown and a
ICOI'C.
. IS.
Sheets' seven, Micah ouo, Travii
0011~ He 1110 1111115 yanla on
With 8:58 to 10 Ia the third
Federai boichcd an onslde Curtis and Matt Bowen each had
: li lciclt-olf re11m a.tle JlllleU IIIII qUarter, Charlie Bissell scared oo a attempt on the cnsuinf, ldclt as the five. Bowen was credited with
· 68 yards on 16 carrlea and two · "two-yard run. The two-~int ball only traveled on y six yards. playing a good defensive game. Eric
: touchdowns. Rym Buckley IIIII 11 conversion was no good. yan Barr won an officia.ls's conference Hill had a sact.
carrie&amp; for SS ~arda and a Bucldey'a 40-yard kick-off return when a penaltr was called on the
Barr said, "'We didn't have many
touc~down. Mike mltb bad two set ~the SC&lt;R"as Eastern pounded . &amp;la/c for illegally touching the !:all sacks, but 1believe their quattablclt
· carr1e1 for 44 yards and a it on to the end zone.
e ore It went I 0 yards. Tbe felt our presence. we had 1 Jot of
toucbclown.
Federal cut the score 10 12-7 on a officials were going to a11ow people putting pra'SIIUIC ~ the~·
For Federal Hoelting, Na~D J .R. Springer touchdown pl!SI to Federal 10 re-ldclt, but Barr c~ed . In general, I'd falce to praue o..- kids
Gilden who carried the 14 timel for Jeremy Ford. Lee Meade'altidl: wu lime to request a conference.
for a good dTort.
.
40 Eastern
Y8llls. receivers were led by good
at
the
5:40
mark.
the
meeting,
Easlern
took
over
"We
had
very
few
mistakes
With I :28 to go in the third, its 46 )'lid line.
, ·
· -, - · · · and

t~;"polnt

U.:

Liter with
for 28 yards
BrianBissell
and
one one
for ei~ards:
Gilden CIIJiht three for
for
· 24yants.
Easlml qalned possession and
wentiO work on a 12-play drive
downfield
The game'1 fintiCCR with only 29
IICCOI1ds left in the half when J111011

Bissellacored.
on a four-yard
run
before Sheets added
the two point
conversion for a 20-7 Eastern lead.
With 4:39 left in the game,
Bucldcy sc&lt;Rd on a one yard run
and Bnan Bowen's lriclc was good
for a 27-7 Easttm !tad.
With 1:10 10 play, Gilden put
Federal on the board with a two-

Buckley
a slin.ger
his
shoulder
and got
had to
leave thein
game,
but Saturday was ~ In good
health for next weeks game.,S'mitb
came in and SC&lt;Rd with 29 IICCOI1ds
let\ on a 29-yanl' run. The rim was
stopped, but Easlml had secured a
33-IS win.

New York Giant linebaeket
Micluld BIOCD bas ICYCII biolllcn
and six sisters.
' .

a,_

no turnovers which 1 think ·wasa FedlniHocltlnJ••O 0 7''
15
big key o.i kids came out in the
·
-' '
seconctilllf, picked lip the iniiNit}" Team ltadSIICI ,,. , •
and CQIJiinued 10 eucwe our-·.
'~
plan, and CIIDO up with the
Qcgvtmm&amp; ·
I .
IWii ~with • defelllively. Flistdowns ................... .20· lJI
11
We macfiiDDe mllllkes here, but Rusblna yda. ................301
72
we 111o made IOIIIC lmp-oocmentln Passing yds....................36 ·
86
Ibis Ilea 100.1 give our kids a Jot of Total yards ...................337
1S8
credit for their effort and ~u~ / Comp.·IIL. ................2-6
lk!wn on dleir menta,! and pllylica1 lnlelceplions 11wwn .......0 1·1S
0
m•stalter·defendvely.
Fumblos·lost ............0-0 ,
2-0
Clpe1cr f111111.
hnatlies ................:.S.(i()_ 8.(i()
Easttm...... _,_,.,o 6 14 13 • 33 11unts ...............-......2-32
4-39

Team staUstiCSw
/

It"'
.._..............Ill.
......
::2:2"
'i
fi6
TOCIII fllda..-H-·H-·.Sl7

bia-;;;;:

Rntbing IU..·yda. ....43-343
Paalol yll.'da................173
Comp.-au. .........;.... 10-11

1

ln~dwwn .....

.o

Fumbles·lolt ...............().()
Penalliea·yards ...........7.(,5

31-28
38
3-9
I
2-2
2-20

Tornadoes
.
___
,_,...,,,.-OII--,C,..·5)::---.:..._-----....-I
I.#all. •• -~,..,...._-.-:-1
1

4

\,.. __ _

1

.

I

five with two usllll:
Team staUstlcs
Tlto of Soulhcm's main cogs,
Jolin Harmon and,Travis Lillo did Dcprtmcnt
I Saa.
not sec action Fnday. Lisle has F'ustdowns .................... 12 • ·.
S
possible ligament damage in his Plays...............................66
S3
wrist aft« last weck'spmc.
. Rushing yank .......&lt;46-1~· 32-(-72)
Sol1tbem 101 good field position ,
~'using YlldJ .................36
60
w1a1 EVIIIIIiad a 2S-)'IId return.
Southern will host Miller Ibis Total yds. ....................23S
-12
Southern's gain In that aitualion wecldn Racine.
Comp.-au. ..................3-13
7·13
eroded on the ensuing ser1ca when Ouartcr iiiiiJa
.
lnterceptioas thrown ....... 1
0
Maynard wu twice sacked, once a Trimblo .................o 8 16 8· 31 Fumbles/lost................. I· I
1-4
16-yard loss by Joey Wright. Soulhem ................o o 0 O• o Penallies ..................... 7-S7
S-38
Southern apln pmited from decD.In
Pllnts-avg.. ~ ..............2-70 7-196
its own territory, but 0!1 Trimble's
second play Brian Pagel came up
with a big inteiceplion at the -six
yard line.
to mate the sc&lt;R 2-o.
After a couple traded
possessions, Trimble scored on a
five-yard Osborne nm. SHS stopped
the exttas for an 8-0 SC«R.

Eric Jones caught a 23-yn pass
to bring the ball to the 3S on
Southern's second play, but again
Trimble stopped Southern. The ·
SC&lt;R at the half stood 8-0.
At halftime, 1993 Homecoming
queen Jenny Hill crowned Tracy .
Pickett as the 1994 royalty.
EVIDI gave Southern some new
life 10 111art the aecond half, but a IS·
yard loss on a sack, a I 5-yard
pma1ty aplnJt SHS, and a 10-yard
aack lou moved SHS steadily
. backwards. Trimble. had the
momentum.
At the 9:39 nwt, RUIICU added
a 10-yard run for a touchdown and

Mart Patton added the extras on a

Buffalo.Putnlm .....o12 14 6 • 32
wahama ................o13 612. 31

After a lost Southeril possessioa,
Russell found th&lt;: endzonc:: !!&amp;!!I!!.
this lime a 40-yard scamper with an
Osborne run for the PAT 10 make
the score 24·0 at the 6: IS marie of
the third frame.

Dcll'rtmm•

Gauley Bridg.e edges Hannan

J

!

while our Motor Bank
is temporarily closed for renovation.

,
'•
'

' )

•I

'

for .the PAT was no good and the

•BJ'na ti11

Ill! ·

$8,495

li

F'ltltdownt .... ,,....;.... v ... l7
17
To181 yaids ...................373
344
Ruabing1U..-yds .....43-302 45-134
Passing yank .................71
120
Comp.-IU.. ....................3-8 10-18
lnleicepti0111 thrown .......0
I
Fwnbles-lollt ................6:3
2-0
Penallies-yards ...........S-45
3-31

1eore was knoUed 6-6.

8)10111 COnespoadenf

86 OLDSMOBILE
TORNADO

NEWYORIEI

2 Door, loaclec:ll Cle•n local
owner.

I

i

)

H2o6861

' ~Il l

*10,899

owner.

tr-... •·

8t....o, . ~ -

4 Door, loaded. ' Elltrl niCe.

tory out of the "paws" of ihc
Local owner.
Webeme
· Wildcats.
.
Ron "''Um" Pike n:turned lhe en,Dye, a second team All State
Rusbln1- Jobnsorii7·8S; King
In . a same tblt neither. suing lcickoff 27 yards to the ~. defensive baclc last year. made a 13-40; Mltclle1114-21.
~ aholild have klet and tlotb teams and Hannan, after a yard loss and diving interCeption of a ~~ pass,
ra.Jag- Mltcheiii0-18, 210
" deserved to win, the vlsiling an incompletion, faced a thif4 an 10 seal the victory for lhe VISI!'J.rs,
yds.,l ID.tl int
~ Gauley Bridge Travellen beld oa 10 eleven situalion.
Unofficially, for the VISitors,
Recelvlq- Scou 5•97: King3clown the Hannan Wildclls, 2l-18,
Ba1cet was sacked, but a 10 yard Ronnie Coleman picked up · 88 36; Johnson 1-63, I m; Young I·
. In one of ·the best pmes played in face mas1t pcnslty against Gauley yards oo 26 canies while Wesley 14.
JCCCDt memory.
.
Bridge brought lhe bail out to the Dye was 9 for 13 passing, good for
, .QauJey . Bridge coach Randy 49.
144 yards and two'toucbilowns.
, Bllick, 'who i8 also' a Methodist · Ba1cet then ralilbled SO y8f!ls on ' For the. Wildcats,' Ben Baker
: lllinisl«, ·said aftrt the game, a keeper, down to the Traveller one. picked up two touchdowns while
• "1'beeo two teams were evenly On the enxt play he again, caield lugging the ball 15 times fcir 78
IIIIICbed. 1bcle were 110 losers his own iwmhei and sneaked into yards. Pilce (7 for 68 yards plus 44
· IO!Iight. All ~ tbele boys, oo both the endzone with 44 seconds sliD · yards on returns), Long (12 for 64
tc:am1, are WIIUIC!II.
remaining in the opening quarter. A yards) and Joe Kimble (4 for 13
~· ~.. 'edroppinU
·0-g _ ~ pass for -the two point cooversion yards). Baker w~ 3 for 9 passing, ,
...., " 10 ·8 ~· u., Wll$ In~. but the Wildcats, good for . 74 yards and one
AQUIIIED 01 UILE &amp;A
· -C8IJIPIIIII
OIU!Cy Bridge lm· · plaYing Picture perfect bail were touc:lidown (2 intercepts),
proved 10 2-6.
out In front 12-6, much to the
Pike snared two passes for 11
UDWS AI IEIUW PIICE
The Wildcats 1oolted as if they delight of the homecoming crowd.
yards while Jason· Holton grabbed
might lnlt their los1ng slreak
Neither team could do any one for a 63 yard touchdown. On
• Sale Ends Oct. 22
wbcn q•leibM::It Ben Baker hit damage to the other in the second defense, the 'Cats were led by JOhn
J11011 HoiiOil on. a 63 yard '_'San(&amp; II8DZa, and the first half ended, Chapman .wilh 13 tackles, while
CJaua" pus bomb oo the third pia)' with .the 'Cats smelling a victory, Ben Baker recorded 13 stopS and
1
oftbepme.
--..
·
. 12-6:
Mike Sturgeon,ll and a sack.
The "sift" bill bounced out of
(l)uriilg the halftinie ceremonies,
The Wildcats will be back in ac·
two defenders' hands .befO!II an ·Amy · Barker was crowned Miss lion next Friday when they travel to 1
alert HOlton· ~·· it in ~- Dill- · JW1i1in Wildcat -1994.)
W'lllow Wood, · Ohio 10 ,l:atde lhe ·
_ _. 111c · ~"' Into· the pay off · · ....,,;" in the third quarter, winloss. bit dangerous Symmes
Ill the7:ai nwt.of the open- neid:"~ could move the ball Valle Vikin .
mg ,..,.,....
.
. .·
until Ron "Thrn" Pike cut 1oiJse on CAT ~AUSIF
.
.
Th;"tiek for the point after was consecutive nms of 12 and 32. yards _ This weelc's "Wendy's Wildcat
blocbd but a packed houae of 10 move the ball to the Gauley of lhe Week" award goes 10 Ben
~ Wlldca ~~ ' (~_ Bridge 20.
Baker on offense and John Chapeo..r.~-., •
...., ..,..........,
AQUAIIIIr
iimaled at SOO J)lus) saw the11 team : Jeremy Long then took over with man on defense.
eow.r.d .., •Guilty ....... , ••,
liD
'Wi
Jll.ll
Uump out ata6-0iead.
c:onsecutive runs of 8 and 10 )1ll'ds
PJ9l/70R r• 1 uo." $ 9t,:M
•
":fi
=:c
i Gauley Bridge came right back to lake the ball to the two, where
PlOl/60111• T 131,,. $104.24
PI75/70RI3
"-" 70A9
f'lll/6011U T 142." $107.24
.jand lllOiillted I 14 play touchdown Balcer punched it into the endzone,
PI85/70RI3
91." 74.24
•Speaking of wendy's - welPI85/70RU 103." 77,"
1'205/601115 s 145." 1'09.49
drive, culminated by a two Ym:d for a Wildcat se«e.
come- aboard new manager, Paula
f'lll/65Ril 5 147.9t ll0.9t
PI95/70RU 101." 11.74
ltouc:bdown plunge by Roome
Balter's pass for lhe PAT was in· Somerville', who says she Is happy
P225/70Ril T 150.9t 113.24
P205/70RU 113." ISA9
P215/70RU 120." 90.74
1'215/601116 $ 151.9t ,IU.9t
!coleman at ~2:28 nwt. The Ieick complete, but~ 'Cots were ~11- 10 back the 'Cats.
P205/55RI6 5 163.9t 122.9t
P205/70RI5 120,"
90.74
•Ms. Margaret Forth was pmcnslate
i~ victory, With 1:57 let\ m the
1'225/601116 5 .,,.,,. 117.74
. P215/70RI5 125," 94.49
ted
award before the game for
' ,,
third, 18-6.
_...
P235/l5R16 s
Olt.-~~~l{d-·.,.....,,.....
The Travellers came right back Wildcat Fan of the Year. Corsages
: RIO GRANDE - Here is the
II
mounted a 7 play touchdown for Margaret and her IIIOiber were
lchedule for the ~ of Oct 16- and
drive. QB Wes Dye hit wide out furnished by the Point Pleasant
23 at the · Uaiversity of Rio Ben Nicholas for 20 yards and then FlowuNClok.
Grande's Lyno Center.
·
*Eight seniors · took their final
connected with Vince Dumbow
In front of the home folk ·last
!
~--.
rougkietiman on a 2~ yard
night:
Hoolecoming queen, Amy
touchdown toss.
QC1 raeqaeelllll-111
Dye COMected ~ilh Nic~las, Barker, who is also a cheerleader;
, T~ 1·3and6-llp.m.
again, on the two pomt convemon, Band field c0111111811dtz, Brandy
I. M
-7 LJD,•ll p.m.
and lhe Travellers had narrow~ the Mayea · and gridders Joe Waugh,
' TaadaJ'-7LM.-llp.m. I
REG. PNCI . . . c:.P
gap to 18-14, wilh 10:04 left m the Roger Scott. Je~a~~y Lon'g. Ben
SQE
PEA 11M -TIM
WedaeldaJ -7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Balter,
Ron
Pike
and
Jason
Holton.
lle.lll
THE ORIGINAL ALL-SEASON RADIAL + P181/70R14 17s.JJ9
game.
·
,
; nunda,- 7a.m.·ll p.m.
+ P195/70RU 171.18
...
•sure
gonna miss you 'Cntsl
After
a
stalled
Wildcat
drive
that
.TIEMPO
P205/70R14 1117,1)9
1111.1)9
; PrldaJ -7 a.m.-9 p.m.
•Last night's ''Zebra Crew"'
en4ed at the G-B 3S, the Travellers
P195175R14 . ...
...•
' Saturday - 1-6 p.m.
P205/75R14 • .•
. ..•
(refs) wert lhe ·best I've seen in
put
together
a
10
play,
6~
Y~
! Sunday, Oet. J3 - 1-3 p.!D. march for the score that \I:'Oul~ da~
+ ~~ • .•
151.24
P205/70R15 182.1)9
. ..74
lind 6-11 p.m.
.
P215/liJR1~ Slue
sn.1•
appoint the Wildcat loyals. .
eon...,_ .............. ..._UIIIJI
In
1993,
Tiburcio
Vasquez
was
..
Coleman, carrying the ball 011
•
Pool
ALL SEASON HIGH
seven of the I0 plays, moved the the honoree in a local contest to
j Toda1 -1-3 and 6-9 p,m.
riame a new high school in Agua
PERFORMANCE
RADIAl
baiiiO
the
Wildcat
12.
' MCIIIdaJ - ciOICd
$39...
Dulce~ Calif., winning out over
Dye's
pass,
which
was
tipped
~y
: Taada1- 6-9 p.m.
IMiU 11+4
S41.5e
a Hannan defender (many fans, m- sucb 5TheC candidateS as Jobn
~ .....I WedaeldliJ- 6-9 p.m.
$43...
AEQ. IIIC( . . . . ,
Wayne
and
Magic
Johnson.
cluding
lhe
writer,
at
first
t11ought
1 nunc~a,- 6-9 p.m.
SIZE
PSI 11M -11111
• • • • "..::.l)"
$47.1.
Vasquez
-was
an
outlaw
whose
·
+ P21WOR14 5110.111 . $113.2&lt;1
, PridaJ -6-9 P·IJI·
. the ball had been interce)!ICd) was penchant for caUle-rusdin~ and
S4e.5e
1'205.a15 $145.11
$1CJI••
cau8ht .by Nicholas for a 12 yard
' i S.tudaJ -1-3 p.m. '
P215/15A15 5147.11
&amp;110.IIJ
P20S/7GII14
$53.5.
stagecoach-fobbing
earned
him
the
touchdown
with
1:12
left
in
the
+ P21111!R15 1154.111
$111.24
1 ~..daJ, Oel. 23- 1-~ p.m.
P2011!71H114
.
.......
.
ts1.H
dde
of
'"Sc!lurge
of
California."
He
P19!/l01n5 1137.11
11411.•
game.
·
~6-9p.m.
• P225/lOA15 1157.11
51...
P2ti/75Rt4 ....
liac&gt;: Burford tacked 011 the PAT was hanged for murder in 1875.
P2C&amp;/551!16 1183.11
SU2JIJ
P101!70Rtl
....
..
..
P2l5/eOAI8 1151.111
l11ltl
1'00111
with a perfect boot and the Gauley scvml campaigns. They were ri~
. . ..... ~. · o....--u...
P201!75Rt5 •.• .. .•.
on
top
of
everything.
I
don
'I
think
Bridge
TravcUers
had
ballled
back,
I r::J.-.6-up.m.
P2t5/70R15 ....... .
a.. ... . . - . - - - ·
when their backs were against the they bad 11 quesliCllllblc call the
1
1- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
ON OFf ROAD TRACTION fOR
P2t5!7SRt5
....
...
.
whole
game,
wall, to "steal" a homecoming vic.
1 TueadaJ..-3:30-8:30p.m.
MULTI -PURPOSE VEHICLES
PIH/751115
·I · WedlleldaJ- 3:30-8:30p.m.
P131/71R1S .....•..
'I nlll'ldl1 - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
~ J#rldar - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Sallirill} ;;,. 1-6 p.m. NEW FROM GOODYEAR!
I Sllllda,,Oct.23-6-Up.m.

.,

Brian Camechls added a twoyard IOuchdowa at the 8:40 mark
with Azbell booting the Irick to
make the liC&lt;R 31-0.
.
Pagel had an Interception, Jason
Barnette a fumble recovery, while
Evans was the leading tacltler with
II solos and four uslata. Edwards
bad four, three assists and a sack;
Paul Floweres six, and Niclc Smith

OMI

r.~ Pkg., ltd.

AM/FM

Team ·statistics

)

Office, Banking Center &amp; Motor Bank
97 North Second Street • Middleport

93 CHEY. 1-10
TRUCK

2 Dr, 32,000 mil••· auper nice,
one owner. Muat See Thla

I;

Race Street.
I
Walk. up Window ~ =
is OPEN
I
.

92 FORD
THUNDERIIRD

0adcr 1111111

run to make the score 16-0.

,.

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WHEI YOU IUY IIIREE

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·426 VIAND STfi'EET

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w be made one day in
b)' cal1ifta 245..'7495 local-

.

POINT PLEASANT

toll-tree. 1-800-282·7~1.

lt~t.;·ln~..byaLyneCIIIW~~.:.":~ 10 be acc::.rrp
.
. . ¥dd21ee: .

'

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~uetlllll court reacrvatiCllll

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Nelel:, ~ LfDC ceneer memberIs~
tbc facilities
.
tu iiafr; llidntl and adlllln.l.otalon'" •
with 1hcir m
~

J;nt..

30+871-12U
,
.
. f

.

1, Oct. 2l - IOO.inning
10 a.m. '

·~

HIGH ·EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp;FURNACES
•11 OAK HU JID.
.
'
CHESTER, 011 4mo
pt PLEASANT, WV 25110

R&amp;G FEED &amp;' S.UPPLY CO.

399 w. ..

II

i
lloale aWede efta~~
: Tlltldll1 - volleJblll vs. M1.
fL J~ .t. Weat VirJinla Wes6 m.
e•daJ - aoccer vs.
3:30p.m.
S.~- baiCblll va. alum·
, I p.mi; VolJe)ball va. Wlllb, .l

-.,,....old,_
.,......,..Oftlhcneafllpt. .

-.
The sro,. With
Kinds of Stuff'" for ~ts, sr.~~~ea,
L.,.. • lmell Anlmall, Lawn•• Glrden•

''

........

I

lra ... juotllld&lt;lhll.,.... ........ - - - - - . , . . . . ,.
lulbbdoto"""-· - - aflhc _ _ _ ., __
0\lllhc fOO&lt;IIhal oppcolo- 10 . - . . . . -. ..._.yellow
lhcm, 110 ~bini-eM . Wldllen, cudlnalo. ond 1111ny moto.
Come 1ft IU1d uk 111 obou1
octllllly bdp IOU lllil&lt;t 11t1maouo-.... oped~~.
Purllui Bini Scedo. Then sec

•u

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~Seedslldp AbtA Wider Vllrlety OfBilds.

-·---...
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Crouword hade OD 1 P~ D-2
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N-Y hands Meigs .43-61oss
oftq Witla 66 Yllda ill 16 ~

Total YanJs...................468
tiMI ~
Casa Cleland llldcd duee Cllriea for Comp.-au. ....................s-9
· POMEROY - Justin Gail IS yards. Beot.Hanaoo wllo aeemed .lnlen:epliou lhrown ......:0
lalbod 27 limal ·fer 356 yanSa .s· so tb1owios under peauro aU aiPt
dlree IODchdOWDI IDd added I ~lilt five of 21 ill the lir
fourdl 0111 7~71"1 tlctoft" ..... ill fer 37 Ylr Mike MlnbaU CIIJ&amp;bt
loadlnJ the Nelsooville~Yort duee JIUICII for 30 yardsllld Plul
Buckeyes to a 43-6 victory over Pullinl two forac~ yanls.
Mel&amp;• in Tri·Valley Conference
football actioo Friday evenin&amp; at
Nel100ville will boat Wellatoo
Bob Roberts F"ICid.
next ftriday even in&amp;. while the
The win pampa the Bucteyoa, Maraudera take a break from the
who went Into the contoat u the TVC action when they host the
state's seventh noted team in PbiJit Pleasant Bi&amp; Bllcb.
Dlvilioo m. to 7-0 on the ICUOII o..:ta: 1111111
and 2-0 in the 1VC'a Ohio Dmlioa. NebOilvillo-Yen ..7 l3 21 2- 43
MeiJI dropl to 3-5 ovenllllld 0.2 MelJa ;...................0 6 0 0.. 6
Ia the Ollio Dlvisloo.

·

.

119
S-22

0..0

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·b~ t.t\aYIE18
NIBLEY , ,
ferent.~r~~~~~etiooa.vary from· fndus.
~=rtt.-.,_h ind
try IP ~.
;,

,

.

-

"....,

t=.co~'if

...=

""[!

overnment
urities are
safe bet

w.. ,""' .,.....,

WHEN YOUR BOAT NEEDS SERVICE~D•••
Winterization Special
Now·In Prolress ·

fr'fv:a::r ~o~!J'la~.;'!
(Continuccl from C·l)
ft01hman Matt Williams made a abuts the 300-acre. Coliseum
llelutiful move to avoid • ba and grounds 011 three sides. ·
,.,._ Iran thrcc yards ODl with jlllt
u.S. Park Service officials have
b48left in the half.
exPressed alarm that the Coliseum '
· : On the ensuin&amp; tlctolf, Gall might be conveltcd into a shopping
~the squib tlct loci bobblecl it mall or' other attnction brin&amp;ing
~or u illa~L The ,6-foot-1, 190 cllily traffic into arlllticarea fealur·
tomaddial ':I:~cwplc ing hitillg trails, a canal towpath
ou IICklea. an wu
~ • ~ loci Jllcaty of deer.
..
•v ylida for the ~· !'tcmbrinlr.
The Coliseum's $420,514 in
milled tile e~ua poua wide Jeft but annual tu paymentS to Richf10ld
die Buckeyes held . the 20·6 Township and the Revere acbool ·
advaolqe with 1:481eft m the half. ·district may be in ~y. clcpencl·
After a M:!fi• ~uot gave ing on the building s future. But
Nellon:villc the
at til own 28· bec:auic pioperty lilies • pid ooc
,n line with 21 llllCODCis left, Gail year ill arrears Richfield Township
off nma of 29 and 14 yards, will have uodi 199S bef&lt;n having
· Jbe BuCbwl the 1!all at .the to dell with any cut iiiiWL
elJI 29-yud line. Nelsonville
Service businesses in li&amp;htly
coach Kevin Meade called on developed Ricbfi
. teld also m~y be
S&amp;einbriot 10 try a 47-yard field affected by the'Cavaliers' pullout.
1oa1. which fell abort u the half However, SClllle bulint:arllft. IIIIR
coded
•
dcpcndcnt on 24-hour traffic from
. Nellonvillc toot the ICCOIId half ~Y intcrstata 77 and 271 and
tickoff and ICCI'CCI five illays the Ohio Tums;:.c,:tt•n evening
when OalliCIOftld from 4l ~ oot. evcoia It the Co
Sleinbriot'a tick ma~e 1t a 2~-6
"It's nota~;·~ aid Mike
1ame with I 0: IS l~ft m die th1nl Thomp10n, who liiiDI&amp;CI a scnice
station near one of the Coliseum
iJerpi. 8 t
ad .
. ne . uc eyes m .e It a 34••6 entnnec roads. Few Coliseum Yisi·
JIDIO With 4:28 left In the third tors SlOpped at biJ buoinea IJIOil Of ,
jlerlod when &lt;¥ IICuecl flom ~ them hurrying to act inU)d; parkin&amp;
fudl out, Stcmbriot once a~a10 lot before pme time and quietly
altle4 the tlct for tile exlla pomts. returning to the interstates afler
Gall ~ a 14-)'lnl touchdown run eventS, be aid.
In the·drive cal1cd bact because of a
Dan Emmett, a trustee in die
boldinJ ~· .
·
1,900-resident townahip who Uvea
. Nellclrti1le lliCI m d tile ~ to on a abeep farm adjacent to the
41-.6 witli 10 aec:onda left tn the Coliseum said the community
tbinl ~ when Quartclback Seth
•'
·
ColliN Wt Steinbrink with alO-VII'Cl
I 9th centDI)' will•·
paa on a foudl and two. · "The Coliseum is gone.
SteiAI lak'a DlaeelN'It once apia Clcvelllld klat the ltCel mills, Akron
wu vue. J.lf;lloDville added the loll the rubber pllntsllld we lost tile
. . . - final two poiDII when Brent Coliseum " said EmliiCIL
llaDSOD bad a aoap uil over his
'
1111111 lD p111t fOIDIIIioo and out o f - - - - - - - - - -

CJNeJa Witla Us 'For Daall.t -

WI:O!RE~

·~

MARIN_E..SERVICES·

Karr St.,.Just OH Rt. 124,

OH

house.

i$.

=::,:e

.
·

be. th L...-L·' lack f
to ·.
.e -·~
o
-·f
. or mreey just !lOW· This, of
; cbsne. could c•ge m • .heartbeat.
- tut ~ovemment secunties will

.: ~·::;::eutc-:r:.
· ~

84 Month

FINANCING*

Chicago Dl-A free offer
.' . ·
of spec1al mterest to those
who hear but do1not under·
·
stand words has been an. ·
nounced by Be~tone. A
non-operating model of QQe
Sports deadlines
of the smallest canal hearne Gallipolis. Daily TrtbiUit, in~. aids i~ America today
Tll4 Dally SellliMI and t11e Swtday will be g1ven absolutely
Tj~Ms..St11fiMI value the contribu· free to anyone requesting it.
uons thetr readers mate to tli~ . . It'
fi the as'·:"'
sections of thciC ~ ,..a·- , s yours or
NDg,
will continue to be~ : $a send for it now. It is not
owevcr, certain cfoadliliCI. fCii'
1h ·
·d b ·
!lllbmislionswill beobacned. _ ·- '· a rea eanng a1 ,. ut 1t
The doadllno for pbo~ ancl · will show yoU how tiny.
related articlea for football and bearing help can be.
other fall aport1 Ia the Saturday
The · .odels
free
Wen tll!I.S vr BowL
~
.
se m
are
, so
,., ....,no~ forl~otos •lid ·call or write for yours now.
Benefits of hearing aids .
fill ~ ~ iptiq 11111· ~ vary by type and.degree of
. . _ cfoadlii!C)'aod .otller winter hearing loss noise environ- .
· ~part~' Ia die ia4l day of the NBA
. •
•
fil!al4· ne dla~no for aubmil· ..ment, ~uracy · of hean~g
· liODI otlocalllauball- and so~. evaluabon and proper fit.
bill so' I f 1Jboa llld rclalcd arti·
·
· c111. flom 1-llallso t11e Jbt,jcn..a Phone J -8QO..S3.S-7001 ·ot ·
~ u 0111e1
aacloammer sel)d your name, dat~ Qf _
·~:J::t: the .... JIIIIC birth, address and phone
me in place to number today to Departallow confribu~:e tillie::: . ment ·18900,· Beltone
-='S==~ Electronics, .4201 West
ot
.to ~ tl!e
Victoria 'Street, Chicago,
~ ~-=-~=
sporiS. · Clltol,lolloo!-c.,n.
Dlinois 60646-6772:.
.....,..,.. ' .
'.
.

::.•=::.r:.=nt::r"ct:;

:.:.:res

..

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....

:/.:~,&lt;

inevitable~

GaUia County native inducted Fruit,-· tree.::.~· .
into Ohio 4-H Hall of Fa.me
nut value :: . '.·
down In' ~99. ·'

COLUMBUS • A successful
businessman w~ continues to support llis native Gallia communitY.
·haS been honored with a place in
the0hio4-H Hall of Fame.
Stanley Hanison, 63, of Great
Fall,s. Va. was inducted Oct. 5 dur·
ing the SOth Annual 4-H Volunteer
Recognition Program at the Ohio
S!JIIe University
in Columbus.
.

.

WASQINOTON (AP) ...-·. . . -"
icans are .oatj!'g m~ nut(~ ·
~s - especially almoociS, ·~·
ch10s, hazelnuts and ~. .
- but the popu~ty of wall;hlts .
and pecans has slipped, ~A~­
culture Dcparuncnt rqiorts.
Annual tree nut consuniP,tioo
· rose from an average 2.2 ~ per person in the 198~ to,:2.36.
pounds per J)erson so 'far 'i!ll~
1990s, the Agriculture ~
said in a rqJort last IIIOI!th.
. .: .
Comparing the ·decides: qHI'·
sumptioo of almonds, '·pistacbloi,
hazelnuts and macadamia - increased, while ~nswu:~
walnuts and pecans bali . · ,
the department sai!l . _ ·~..: ·
Increasing ~pt.ion fiat..led
to an increase in ·ovmll valiiei,filr
most nut crops, the dejlut~nent
said. The 19!/3 valuc or tree riuiS
j~ped 21 pelCCilt 10 Sl.7091jjl;

.

Aa a youtli, Harrison was an
active member in 4-H. He
attributes much of his professional
success to leadership skills he
developed through these programs•
After Hanison receivw bache·
lor's and master's degrees in elec·
trical engineering, he served four
years in the U.S. Air Force. In the
40 years since then, he. hus been
with such companies as Battelle
Institute in Colllmbus, Sandia
Corp. in New Mexico and the Mar'
tin Marietta Corp in Baltimore. He
recently retired as president and
chief operating officer from The
BDMCorp. in McLean, Va.

lion.

Recon\ crops

walnuts, in addition to a cteecnt
almond
croJI. mc.t with atiol!lll
H-ARRISON NEW INDUCTEE • Slallh!y Hartllml, left, was
demand
at
hOme ind abroad,. J1U1i1i=.
inducted illto tbe Oblo 4-H Hall of Fame Oct. 5 during the 50th
ing
the
value
up. Pistachio ·valac
aanual 4-H Volunteer ReaJgllition program at Obio State Univeralso JQSC due to a W.pcr crop;ial
sity in Columbus. Left to riabt are Harrison, Keith Smith, director
high J?rices locked in by groMia
of OSU's extension department and Smeltzer Rose, Harrison's forearly
m the scasoo. Only !lie -valac
mer 4-H advisor.
of pecans feU as the nel!l'·rec:oid·
'1--",
to our programs and serves as an Hall of Fame, which honors those · crop fon:ed prices clown.
outst~~ding role model for our
who have given a great pan of.their
~"(f:.!'~~e 8t~;,~e::_~! youth.
WASHINGTON (f.J?) .:.i·,::_,
. lives to helping young peo\'1e
County+H
Declinin$
cibUs prices ~ ~.
Since ·.)917, 66 Qhioans have
-E?ttenSion.&amp;gent "Stan adds valuc been 'inducted into the Ohio 4-H become responsible, product•ve for ·a Slsght overall "drop fi( lfii!
and self-guidilig citizens.
value of fruit and tree nut produclion last year, according to the
.
A
Agriculture DepartmenL
:.
Jl1
;:,~
Overall fruil and tree nut pro.
duction in 1993 fell to $9.845 billion, down slightly from the recoid
$9.851 billion set in 1992, the
department said in a report relcsscd
year's stocks because of the with the barley acreage reduclion laslmonlh.
By LISA MEADOWS
..
GALUPOLIS ' The Dcpanment prospeciS for a large 1994 crop. The percemage in order to be eligible
U.S. citrus production value
of Agriculture has announced 1995 higher ARP should keep carryout for price suppon benefits and pro- dropped more than 18 pc:lCalt fr'oni
Acreage Reduction Program stock from reoching burdensome gram payments.
1992 to $1.966 billion. An inc:reQe
acreage reduction percentages levels.
'
The 1995 feed grain ARPs Oust . in cibUs production, particularly in
(ARPs) of 7.5 pm:ent for com, up
This year's ARP levels for grain be annOWlced by Seprember 30 and Florida, combined with a worid.
from the zero-percent level in sorghum, barley and oats are final revisions Oust be made not wide expansion of orange jui~
1994, while maintaining zero per- unchanged from 1994. Grain later than November 15. Other supplies led to the decline in OV«·
cent for grain sorghum, barley and Sorghum and barley slocks going 1991 feed grains program provi- all value, the department said. · 1
into the 1995/96 marlretin~ year are sions will be announced later. . ,
oats.
Citrus value has followed 1 '
Corn stocks going into the expected to be near histoncally low
Lisa Meadows is tbe County downward trend since the record
·
1995/1996 marketing year are levels.
Executive Director or the Gallia high set in 1989, when prices··
Malting barley producers will Agricultural Stabilization and peaked following a freeze in Flori··
expected to be about 777 million
bushels higher than the previous not be exempt from compliance Conservation Service.
da.

;::et!'~.)111 re~

(Por Information on bow to
communicate electroo,leally with
this columDist and others, eon·
tact America ODllne by eallillgl·
800-827-6364, m. 8317.)

ish the risk inherent in growing
native plants in the extreme tern·
peratwes and I'UJied terrain of the
area. In an interview Wednesday.
Young called recent interest 10
native seeds "a pan of the enviroo·
mental revolutiOn.''
"Because so much of the nnge·
land is public land md .there is so
much interest in maintaining it,
peOple ... (think) that we should
have the nadve species out there,''
The trict,. Young said, is ·to
restore a balance · of "grass,
broadleaf, herbaceous species ariel
Ulidergrowth. Our level of science
isn't good enough to restore evcrythinJ but we're working on supporting all levels, birds down to
.
. "
miCruoi'JlKUSIIIS.

Lower prices take joy out of current harvest·

Extension Economist at the UniverBy ED VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS • Much lower ;;ity of Illinois, recovery :r. ~;t ::a::
prices for inost of the agricultural prices wiD r:equire crop production
commodities this fall has taken the concerns.
joy out of current harvest. Peak
selling pressure for corn typically
isn't felt in the llllltet until harvest
reaches about two-thirds complere.
Feeder calf marketing season
This happens when on farm storage has been enatic as sales reacb their
starts to become filled. Several JlC!I)t time period At a graded sale
locations throughout the Midwest during the fust week of October,·
are currently quoting the cash com steer calves weighing an average
price undec $2 per bushel. Current 531 pounds sold for an average
'cash soybean price has already price of $71.32 per htmdred. Steer
dipped below the 1991 low of calves at the same sale a year ago
$5:17 per bushet
weighing an average 530 pounds
• =
On tile bright side, lower price sold for an average $86.58. That
has stililulated larger export sales amounts to.about $8lless per bead
.· j7
- . tinucd moderate
pres· of soybeans. AJ of September 20, this Ytar for steers. Heifer calVes
331 million bushels of soybeans sold for an average of $63.68 per
, The Feileral Reseive'f DIOil ro- sores remain good .
.
have
sold for export, com- hundred or $13.30 per hundred less
·~tmove iorailcniiCI is aoodiiOWI ~boody
occurmarlccwidentratz~uc· pared been
to
only
90 million last year. than last year. Heifer calves lhis ·
~tile bond mtrbt. kdemooatrala - UWI
· itizealin~. .
~isbei"'dclayodby-- According to Dr. Darrel Gpod, year avera~ed 60 pounds heavier. It
iDg to Clllb W1a.
tainty about the futiR course of the
lbt. Wblle bOnd .
· dollllr. Thedollarhlls&amp;oppccbo•Ji!lly
may flaY in
6 percent since the beJianioa or this
a pcrcCntto8.0
year.
entitled ''Purchasing and lnsl8lling
A weak c1olW il,clilcounptg ByHi\LKNEEN
Jl!lmllllranaeow:r
fi
·
from
·
•
·
u.s
G--"-use
""-•~rs
remember
"
Your Smoke DeleCIOr". So, Jiv.e ari
. . balance of lhil
OlelpCll
IJW13WI''&amp;
•
'""'~"' . vr-o':"'
early
ChrUbnaS gift, purchase and
ytar; ill 1995 the
· · ~ securitlea Wblch must to attend thiS ":eek s G~nhouse
illstall
a smoke detectnr for those
bilodlllllketcould
· .
..._.,if the federal JOVUIWICft is Growers Se.ss1ons, bemg h~ld
&lt;eflio! asipitqntllllywidltllelonl toliillncoitscurreotbutlptddlcitof Thursd.ay n1ght at the Racme
; ~yield d!!IPPial'to a level liP' : ~y $200 billion. .· ,' .. Meth~t Church from ?:9:~0 p.m..
..J1.....t.;ft., 6..5-..,._,.,- •,
We beliove ·1 liiOre lflble dollar , The topiCS for the_evenmg iilclude you really care for. .
' .,~._ ..-:""".'·
.
.
Greesihouse Crop Nutritiooal Prub~The small Multicolored Asian
.: r The scaJDCI qlllltcr real GI;&gt;P may oecw DOW thai a panill aareo- lems and Testing, Tho Plant and
Lady
Beedr&amp; will soon be migrat-·~doiiH!IticJioduct)JlOWthwill Jllelll on U.S •.JIIPII' lrD Jill been Pest ~tic Clinic; Your Valu- ing towanls
buildings in an effort
• ~lyprovelllbetlle~b ~. providio&amp; die U.S. wllh able Resource, and It's Basically
: i6c ,._, The lhlrp run-liP iiiiiiCIIl· access to '!'CI'C Japanese lllllktU. Light in the Grecnbouse. All the ~r::J ~~=dessi~
J'IICiia 11avinf a iiioderllloa . · : BondyieldaCURaltly~~eaboula resollltCpenpnsf&lt;x'thesciJi'cseota;·ctoC1 on llOualDJ.
far allove lhort-tem ,_.11 IIley lions iR: facUlty members of The not bite, itina or carry human dis·
nor feed on wood. clothin.r or
J Al dle1. . . , . . _ dleec~PYDic -•tllelrPIIIIbiJ!l~~~917.' Q11io s~ Uni~.. llis a .wt ea1es
food;~ 'I'hcle ~ inaects feed·
-:~ulna alfO! .... to ~.reft. The .no inthw ea tbit belpyieldl .world that ~· of the presenters, on blrtnful aphids and some scale
-~· ii DOW in tile pat. · ·! . . revene CODQD lind decline lllhoiO J)r. J18tMd,falldn's aneeaton were
i~"Jhat (ccd on IRes, shrubs,
· 1 'Jblionotimcltimnlul_.teclin _timOI made::llllltuw••icpowtb =~;ouoty natives from the ' roacs,
1obacco and other crops.
· .:_':P Jiow1b &lt;If dornoltic vdd_de aalea and alllblllpdm d.,..., J1!11- - · ina.
Sweep up \he beetles, tab them out
:~ ·~liuiJ'o.~~
; · ~appe.to~faiii!I!R-~ - · FirePrOVCIIt\011 }\leek has just to the woods and bury them under a
.:~•l 'lbOietiCbl,pluldle.rec:entfW·· · Bxcept·fer 1990, WJ,;. 1inQe . eadcd. HaVe you P,urc~ascd that · few. leaves. For more deJails,
·•
tilb~ lby .tile Feel, have · 19$2hunapdbetli11D,l.tpcrccnf sm~ ~·ctor that.you .~ve ~ · inquire at the eXteDSiOII 'Office and
-~ lll'tboclaratioo ill em!!QIIIIc (19116)' 104.(!~
.
(1989}.-Fortlle put11Dg oft? 'Thuc 1s no.ume lite asK,for .Home Yard &amp; -Garden fact
::·aowtbo*tlle.....,ofdlis.,... pail 12. ~ inflalion lanalnin&amp;.· the presenU 1be Sxtenston office sheet #2158. •
, .,.,
:: .lb-,..nam, Ji'osPects for CCII' .· .
·contlnued,pn o-2
. has m excellent fact sheet 11690.3,
Planning
to
sow
~s
seed
yet
~
.
I

MARKs~

.r.. !.
fQl hazelnqis ·.ac~ ,,

Locally, Harrison has assisted
with improvements at Canter's
Cave 4-H Camp, the Elizabeth L
.Evans Outdoor Educa1ion Cooler
and other various programs.
"With Sian's guidance and
·
·
·d
insight, we planned a distnct·WI e
citizenship camp at Canter 's Cave

USDI announces 19!nJ: CliO'J)
feed grains program provisions

•
(SeDd your questions to.
Slllart Money, P.O. Boll 503,
Elrers, FL 34610. Questions of
&amp;eoerallDtereet will be amwered
1n future columns. Owing to the

~~.an' ~~.;:.

fa!

· ~n Fied&lt;~l,'OIIllia

;.,. :fiiv' .. '

w~

. ·.. ,

The urge to .merge .among hospi- change is
industry
atick
....
tals and the Idee, wsth the in test insideu want to be ready to capital· mcot to·be lle:q~ ~· B~. · ., .
example. being National M~i.cal izeonii.
· Noohemfor$2.5.~ji't&lt;·~)-.•:
Enterpnses Inc.'s $3.3 bdhon
The railioad indusiry has been
Recent,deals .tq: t!i~.-cp~r· ·)
intended takeover of American COIIIOiidating for yean; .IJI8Irin8 the mem arena._ incJudini,I-.e··
Mcdi~ ~oldin$S Inc., refteciS a remaining rail compasilcs _such beinJ .launc~ by tJinle 11iJ u.y; :it
consolidation uruque to lhc health
Santa Fe atiiiiCiive JlRlDCllies wood executives - h•ve, ~
care field ~at has also infected
other acquisition-minded carri- motiva~· by th~ de!!Ji'~/.
P.harmaceuttcal fmns and others. It en like Union Paciflc,and Burling• from J.!ie emersms ~nfo~OA· , ·
illustrates an industry in a phase of tG.t Northern Inc.
·
superhighway. . · . : ·. ,: ·~ ...·,:'.,.
cont~a:tion:
.
.
On Thursday, the threo-way bat·
Producer-diroc;to! ~te~ .f *"'·
Compebtors are JOCkeymg for tit intensified as Union Pacific the· 1x rg, ll'Wid cxecuuve ~ill.~~ .:
position hoping. io be '!II' in front in m.ti&lt;Jn's largest rail carrier, .said it ft~ and former l&gt;i»!I~Y :s
· .~i91.
a ··
the race to wm busmess as the plans a proxy fight to win control cLsef Jeffrey Katzcnberg p · ,.
health care Industry evolves. ofSantaFe.
· · flnna~w~~niaki)IJ ' '. ,' · •
Regardless of whether Con~ess
Santa Fe has rejected Union ~ and)1ve 4cti.on.fllms . ~&lt;ii':Y. ,·
renews reform efforts, radtcal Pacific's $3.2S billion bid, saying it . . . Continued on.p;a;.,; ~,: • .· .

Farm Flashes

Investment :Viewpoint

•

· • WellE~

~

3lso appears that lower prices may great kgourrl" year. A lot ot shapes,
have caused fanners to sell earlier. SIZCS, and colors add to their ornaMore .numbers going through the mental value, I've had a lot of can
system tends to complicate the
about how to cure them. Preserve
market situaiion causing· further
gourds by first washing them with
price slides. Fanners selling during
warm soapy water and placing
this "snowball" down cycle can
them on layers c;&gt;f newspaper to dry
experience major losses.
for about a week. DuriDg this time .
Despits-very weak cash hQg
the outer skin hardens and the
prices, Doane's Agricultural Report
face color sets. Replace the newsindicated this week that they don't
paper with fresh sheets and allow
believe that there will be a big herd
the gourds to dry for an additional
liquidation this fall or winrer. With
three to four weeks. Drying should
this year's large com crop and next
lake place in a warm, dry, dark area
summer's hog futures still above
such as a closet. Properly cured
$40 per htmdred, they say the hog
gourds can be used in decorative
and com price ratio will prevent
displays for three 10 four months.
major liquidations: The avernae
Applying shellac or varnish can
230 pound market hog that would
prolong
lhis period for several
have sold for around SUO a year -tfllore months
as well as give a
~-o w_ould have sold for around
shiny
exrerior.
.
.,.Sthicw=.
Ed
Vollborn
is
Gallia
Coua·
Enough bid news! It has been a ty's Extension Agent, agriculture.

sw:

Racine to host Greenhouse session Thursday
Extension Corner

• Wei &amp;1ulppedl

I'

-= ll:·

'

. t WASHINGTON (AP) - The
: :t.grlculjme Depanmcot haS a solu·
-·fon for the more thin 3;S million
of bumed 1ant1a in the West:
-.~~ve seed cultivation.
· ·~ .Jim Young, a range scientist
ftith the 1)SDA 's. A&amp;ricultural
_Jesearch Service in Reno, Nev.,
•as found tbat l)rops of native
'plants can restore life to laJ!d·
ifcorthed by fsre. .
~ "Fire is a natural pan of the
~logy on most Western forests
- lnd rangelands," he said in a
· J!ecent article in Agricultural
~esearc:h m&amp;Jazine. "Br manual
~acedia&amp; (wtth oativ~/laots) we
: .c;an reduce erosion an speed up
_ ·: .;ec~ve~r of slow·growin&amp; ·
- ~Yes. • __.. . • dimin'
-- ·1• oung S '""""'"" IIRIS
. to
- •

:.5,;;{/ ·:t..~· ..

ind~

Inc. ,to
cOlossus,
Corp.. for mstance, probably ·II
ine~vant to Union Pacific Corjl.'s
stubborn courtship of Santa Fe
Pacific Corp.
.
.
. Through the~~ llliJIC!IIIIIll
this put week, Microsoft atms to
strenathen i~ on the 'world
market fQI'·pc
oomputt.r software by broa~enin&amp; its base in
financial products.
. .
•
The pfanned.$1.5 billion acqwsiti!m of Intuit, a far·smaller~pany that makes the best-sellmg
Quicken .program, will help
l"fi~soft ~e its~ dom·
tnation of a cutting-edge industry.

nfT£:f1!1111per_
· ,
· '

SDA's native seeds
~.relieve .burned lands

:::t
· n-..,....,.
' •

,-~--· ~· 11 ,. ~

~

......,
t

don't II'USt'thcJD. On the other hand,
if doesn't hurt to keep an eye oil
them. :- R.C., Portaae, Mich.
DEAR R.C.: Your statement
that you receive periodicaUy from
fO!:l£ bn*cr should pve·you aU the
mformation that you require. 1.
don't know what discreti9nary
powe.rs you have granted to.the
.brokerage.
In other words, did you adthorize them to move your invest·
meats liom ooc vehicle to another
without your specific afflm)lllion of
U. uansacti0111? If they have this
ability, there is always the possibility &lt;i churning the IICCOIIDt to ere•
a.te more conunissioos. Under most
conditions, with relatively moclest
amounts of money involved, this is
not goin&amp; to happen.
In any case, you can look ·for
that activity on your~~ On
· btJanc:e, if you are dealing w1th a
mtjor brolccrage house, you have
little 10 concern '!ourself with,
other than their ahmov to "ick solid
-, r
vl'hicles for your mvestments.
\\lben in dOubt, you can, ta1cc control of your accOunt yOurself, and
llllr!IUe 1 v~n~ative course.

could explore _ _

·
CB would .:L.
DEAR BRU : 1
. ....., to
· .if the ~e ~g my
A mvestnlents 1s bcmg com-·
etely honest with my funds. How
· I c:heclc them out71t's not that I

Mil VIRGINIA'S URGIIlCINVIRIIIN Vlllllllllllllllll211ll CIIDII fRill

to

com1JietiODJ for 59 yards. Jason
Wic~•n caupt one pass for 16,
Aathoay Polley one for 11 and
1'rlvil a-cr. SleiDIIriot llld Brian
Billlla each Cllllbt OIIC fer 10 yards.
Williams fed the Marauder

.E

.ihc~~'11it"
!lilparity·
CJfincl~tniiCI

Jive the Buckoyca You're Never
l.:t;-.=::~:mroo Old To
carrioa. Shawn North added four
:.~t:-:.~m~.~!!': Hear Better.

: : : : . IIOIIC

L'"'eas
~·

Even .as I write,
JOVCI'DIIDODt securities is
It may well be that
.consider Treasury
Clearly, the lonaer
go out, meaning for bOnils
or notes, the hi&amp;her tho in&amp;erest.
··you can ~uy these .directly f~m
• ~ Fed· wtthout paf~l a oomiiiiB·
. on, !'r .at most, a very mOJ.Iest
mRillllon to a discount brolccr·
-around $50. ,
Bither
com
'
.· way, your money IS
•
\ely.safe and your r~tur.n on
estnl~'l,.twould be a bt~ ~1gher
yod' are ciD'ICIIdy reccsVIJI8, or
f._mpared to the~=~~~

l:r""

' "

OCCIIIOR)y-wide fon:ea domiiuile.the

markctP,lace and c;reste.corporate
.
. or so are you ,
~· ' Slid Geoffrey R. Brooks,
. .a:ny,.~n.e o~ tho above, you re aaocllle IDIIliJI'IIIODI professor at
. )Yiil!ll~ jjldging by this past WCClk'a the University of ~syl,vani!l's
~· , b .
.
WhariOo School. I don t thmk
~ · "'nc:~ca s usmess visio!Wl~S that there:s any oommon,~ of fac.
~ :~re ·1eo1ng merger potential 1.n un, that~ theiC deals. .
.
• ipd~ IIJ!IIn&amp; frOm tho tradi· •
'I think the deals provide eVJ·
: :~. J!ke raifioads, to the highest dencc of iodiiStrics in the proce~s
.: ~tiMiD hi,ah-tech
. of cbssip. The . - a for. each IS
1 .: ,
7:.c· on.t oo-. aor a common industrY-~ific.",
' .
:._ .t !bmmator In these. corpora.te . Tho justtficallon f~r )o1~in~
.
• The reasons behind the dif. fmancial software specialist liltwt

Yllda on 19 carriel- belli by Jmy
N Y•J . Gail
cr·...a·
Polley apinst McArthur on ScpL
• : 1111;10
...,. nm. ..
13, 1968.
·
Stcillllrinlt ~) S:2S, • qtr: .
The~ werelblc to play
. N-Y: Gail4-yd. run, (Stemlmk
......... •
,_ half ..... Gail._._ kiclt) 11:29 2nd qtr.
c.._ m
Mcip: Williama, 3 yd. run (tick
the Manuders. lllct with the 76- bkic:Ucl) l'Sll 2nd •
•
~off
rc,tum ~or 1 touchdoo with N-Y: G'aiJ 7~yfkictorr ICIDnl,
1.48 remaiDiJIJ m tile half.
• (Steinllrinlt kick) 1:48 2nd qtr.
Aft«
an
Cllcbanp
of
111r1mcr1 m
.. ....~ run, (S
· '-'-L
tile &amp;It pCiiod, ·ille Buckeye~ hit tile • N•y : Gail _.,_
. tcinuo
.....
scoreboard wldl 5:25 loft in the kiclt) lO:lS ~nlqtr.
• .
period when Gail broke free on 1 • N-Y: Gail.3-)'CI run (Stemlmk
26-yard acorioa scamper. Ted kiclt) (~:28 3~ qtr. ·
Sll:inbrlnt llkiDcl the CID'I pointS to
N-Y. Seeinbriak J().yd. pus from
AWAY from Nelsonville-York's Natlum
(lower
give dlo Buctcyoa tho 7-0 load, Seth Collills (Steinbrint tick) :10 left)GE'ITING
Will
a
suecessrut
venture
for
Melp
retelver
Mike
Manball
dur·
which il how lllc fil1t period ended. 3nl qtr.
Ina
Friday
nlabt's
Ohio
Division
game
1_D Pomero;y. However, the
The fint period encle4 with the
N-Y: Safety, 4th qtr.
Buckeyes roBed to a 43-6 victory. (Dave Harris photo)
Buckeyes on die move and Gail l1 am tatl tl
ICOI'Cd hilleCOIIII touchdown or the e
a s cs
evenlna with a four-yard run two
p~ ~o the second ~riod. lkllldlllal
1 lllldc it I 14-0 J1D1C with f"lllt downs ...................H.21 lrl7
S
11:29lllft ill the fil1t half.
/Scrimmaae plays ...........60 S1
Mei&amp;l put toicthcr I beautiful Rlllhin&amp;IIL·yda. .....51-411 28-82
drhe 10 cut the Bucbye lead to 14- Pasain&amp; )'lnii .................S7
37
6. Tile Manuclei' defense hail held
the Bucb,ea on fwrtb down at ibc
.
.
maroon and gold 30-yard une.

=r

.'~There~yntiJI!Ciwhen

ustry

~ t ~!D. tile 1~~

~~~==te ~ Scoring summary

New home•••

. ; •·.' ,, ' l.· ..~;j'~·

Section;; ··-..

, , ... ~UoOk tor cOrrirri~n~.hhominator in corpofate

4-40

1

',· . .. . . '"'t . ,' .... •r

'

•

~A:.IWUUS

.

1

I·
.

,..

....

--. - . - ----· ......._. - ·- ·-·.

-·

-

··-~~·--;..;......_

___._ __
.

.

·aae

......

:0

this year? Your days are numbered the sod and penniUing some wstt.r
according to Dr. Bill Pound, Turf. and nutrient absorption during the
grass Specialisl for the Ohio State frost-free periods.
Universily Extension. It Y.our yard
Interested in dealing with 1111111·
is just now ready for seeding, seed
with a pereMial rye grass mixture. ing opportunities and proble!ns as
Late October plantings of blue- '· well as land manage111Clll practices .
grass, fine .fescuc and tall fescue ~ enhance wildlife habitat? The ;
seeds in a lawn will cause some Ohio Dept. ofNanual Resoun:cs,
frustration. The seed will either .Division of Wildlife personnel will1 ·
start sprouting this.fan and then die ' be prcsentinll a program as to
due.to a lack rl a Wd1 estaNisbcd
they have to offer the lanciOWni.', J
root system or remain dormant
This presentation is spo~·llf •
until next SllrinC·
The Southeasl Ohio WoO'a)IIHI,•
An al&amp;ernabve i~c to sod your .Interest Group(SOWIG). Pial to'
lllwn. This is a more cxptnoive way
attend this open meet1na ~ 1!6ld•
to have a green lawn. Sod can be on Tuesday, October 18 at 1:'30 1
illstalled up to .four weeks before p.m. at the Athens County Elltclathe ground becomei frozen. Norsioo office,
·
!•
mally grourid doesn't freeze UDtil
early December in southern Obio.
1bc four week period will pemit
the development of vertical secondary roots to llilat iR, 'IIChorin&amp;
.

.

"'-1

�.

.

.-

. .'

-. .

~

.

.. ... . . . .....• .
~

.

\

(

'• '

Page D2 Sunday n...........sent ·

Pomeroy llddlepol1

11,1184

PolntPIJ

· look•••
~-Melvin Mock passes Don
Contlnuacl from

!certification exam ·

GALLIPOLIS • Melvin W:
successfully C4!1J1plet.ed
·the National Board for Certification
:in Hearing lnstrumcpt Sciences
:national competency examination.
; Passing this cum grants the
:hearing aid specialist the design&amp;·
· tion of board certified in hearing
: if!S11'11111ent sciences.
· . To become board certified in
-hearing instrument sciences, a
· hearing aid specialist must have
· two years practical experience,
: includin~ 100 hours ofhands-on
: traininl! m the testing of hearing
·and fitUng hearing instruments.
: Once this criteria is met, a hear: ing aid specialist may take the
. national competency exam. This
exam measures an individual's
skills against a predetermined level
:of competency.
: NBC-ms JS a certifying agency
MELVIN MOCK
·fully accredited by the National
:commission of Certifying Agcn- for crec!entialing professions and ·
·cies in Washington. D. C. The
commission is the nation's only occ~.emptoyed with lnhear·
organization that sers, applies a,ld ing, 4 35 Second Avenue, Gallipopromotes comprehensive standards lis.
,

~ Mock has

~Dr.

K. -K. Le~ joins
Holzer Clinic staff

. GALLIPOLIS • ~ciln K.

~· Lee, M.D., -tly joined tbc

Holzer Clinic's ~ clcpenment. Dr. Lee brings with him
more than IS years of medical
p~ticeex~. ·
·
· A graduate of Chonnam Uni;versity Medical School in Korba,
Dr. Lee and his family have lived
~in the Nonheastcm Ohio area since
;1974.1-lis rotatiDg
'
internship was completed at St.
FJizabeth=in Youngstown.
:He then
•
a one-year gen~ eial practice tuiclellcy tnining pro; gram at Euclid General Hospital
and went 011 ID compJe!c his pcdi·
atric resiclellcy tnining program Ill
Tod Babies and Children's Hospi-

PUBUC NOTICE
123 lOll of
mlecellariiOIIJ property lor
oole by ileo1od bid by the
S'-e of O,hlo. Maintenance
eguljlmant, furnltura,
eaiortel' nardwofo'' llllilt',
ICIIp matll pile, ~nd /more.
Golllpolia Dl.vel!lpmentel
canter, !''llldt.(lg aoot.
lnapectlon Qetobtr 17·
October 21, 1:00 ' e:m. to
3:00 p.m. Bide due In
Coiumbue by October 26.
Octobllt&amp;, 18M

sJlows, inauj!urat.e a n=cord label
and start an m~e~active mcclia uniL
D-:als such as theirs are hallmarks
ot liD industry in an expansion

.

.

To Louis Lowenstein, a corporate finance professor at the
Columbia University School of
Law, the excitement surrounding
tbe .star-studded partnership
announced this {last week resem·
bled the fanfare ihat accompanied
tt.e birth of the commm:ial airline
business in the 19211&lt;1.
''People were terribly excited
about the prospects of the airline
ir.dustry ," he said. "But some of
It ~ prospects were more exciting in
tt ~ anticipation than in the const.mmation. History tells us that
rr my of the exciting prospectS that
p ople see neve% matcrialize.''
One thing today' s mergers,
aliiances and ventures do have in
cummon is they all indicate a
di.J!!te of economic optimism.

sales pograms..

Investment...
. Continued from D-1
at2.9pm;ent,belowtbe 1926-,-1993
average of3.1 percent.
·
Even that number is ovcnlllled
~ 10 tbc Bmau of Labor
S. .tics which estimates that the

....,

.J
A millioa II.- I've .....t.f

you.
A millioD II.- I've aied ·
U Love could llave awd ·;

EIP TEAM ·l'llllp Span Plut's:employ·
meatlavol¥tmnt -prlmal1 (EIP) teui'l iaala
parpoae II to pnmde I Dl.ril•lm 1,o eiiCOUI'IIp
Ill Ieveii ol emplo,.S 1.0 1dlyely bilprcwi tile
opendoD ~tile coapuy. Sli«aa Ill coapllllel

durlDI Ule_llat ceDlDfJ wiD

depellcL-aLmalll~

taiDIDi tuatolller roc-. red•ee opera-= toetl,

}'011

ud elllaDce ..-vice quality, I plut
I Ill'
said, Voluat.eerla&amp; for tbe aervlee1 40 -llelp
ICCOIDPlllll dlole pall ue, left kl rljllt, Rick
Carter, Dmd Joaes, BID Shaler, Lora Neal,
BlU MlrtiD ucllll!l!! ni!Upl.

Public Notice

PUbliC NotlCe

PUbliC Notice

PubliC NoCJOe

NOTICE TO BIDDE~ Sealed propoaalo for tho
turnlahlng of all malorlala
and performing all labor lor
lht erection of:
Olllce Renovetlon For
Tuppera Plalne-Chaatar
Wator Dlatrlct, 311561 811 30
Road, RHdavllla, Ohio
lido will be IICtlved by
Tupper• Ptalna-Cheator
Water Dlotrlct 11 3t561 Bar
30 Road, fleedevllle, Ohio
45772, until 2:00 p.m.,
prevailing IOCII time,
Wedneadoy, Novembt'r 9,
t994, and opened publicly
immediately thereaftor.
Proposal•· may be delivered
or matted. II matted, und
,via registered mall In lima
lor the bid opening.
.
A alngte propoaal witt be
received lor the entire

project which wHI .Include
the work of all tradoe.
Eotlmatod Total Project
CoaL ... $45,000.00
Blddoro to dealgnate on
tho onvelopo thot It Ia a
eoalod bid. The , noma and
addreao of the--!!litder end
the name of · flit. project
ahall aloo t&gt;e·indtcated.
Drawing a · and Bid
Do'tument; ~. &lt;b~ y be.
9btained fro!n the 'Architect
at326 Front Strtot,-Merletta,
Ohio 45750 tpr ~ rttundable
depooit of $10.00. Franklin
D. Lto (614) :1,73-8841.
All propoeale muot
contlin a 1111 of propooed
aubcontractora, end be
occompanled l!y bid
iecurity In tho fc!lm of a
aurety bond or c8-rtlllad
check In the amount off 0%
~~ the bid. Failure of any

oldder to entor Into · and
execute a contiacl lor tho
work covered by the
propooal he hll eubmltted,
ohatt cauae the bid oocurby
to become lorleltod by the
bidder to the ewner ae
liquidated damagea and not
11 a penalty beceuoo of
ouch failure on tho par! of
the blddtr. lido may not be
withdrawn leoe than 45
day• aftor oubmilttd:
. Each bidder ohell, In the
event he Ia the accopted
bidder. furnloh performance
and labor and material
payment bonde, In a form
oallolactory In the owner, In
tho omount of 100% of tho
contract
amount,
g u ar a nteelng
the
aucceoalul completion of
the work bid upon and.
payment of all obligation•

arlolng thereirom. ·
Blddera are •dvlood that
lhia prOJect II IUb)ICt 'to
. prevailing wage rates and
the payroll reporting
requirement• of Section
4115 of the Ohio Ravloed
Cod~
baaed on ' the
eatlmated coat ' ·of
·renovation.
,
The Owner II,IIIVII thl
rlghfto icC:t(lt ~~; bid, to
welve -'"Y · . :P!
all
lnf~rmtlillel ln,!&gt;ldt endfor
to re(ect any ,or· tlt,1!11de at
their dlecretlon.
· H•rold H. Blaclcaton
Preoidant 01 tho B~rd of
Directoro
Tuppera-Pialne.Chol!lr
Wotar Oiajrlct
(tot 14, 16;24; 3t; (fit 1; lie

pc:ltellttoldlectqualitycbangeslike

or--

you.
But yoa clidll't ~£~abe. :
Pw port
wtdi ;

you

Tbe day God lOOt you

.

bomo.
Sodlyaill!d
Diu lila'- "-le

8

(

Harless honored

••

Helen

Timetable abbr.
81 Dirty
82 Tell jOkes
83 Precious metal
80

117 Desires
89 BUii'OWIIIg •
creatureS·
'
90

3 Senior ·
4 Move back and

',. lonh
S Lean-to
6 Maylm Bialik TV
~,

"Whatever
Lola--...•

91 Adhesive
92 Nimble
93 Newman and Anka
94 Bring about
95 - Levin wrote
"The Boys of Brazir
96 Singer Home
97 Spheres
98 Carried
99 Relinquishment
102 Most attractive
105 Dull
106 Put down
107 Soil
108 Flies high
109 Snake poison
110 Oa~s cousin
113 Taward the left.
on a ship
114 Hai~ess on top
115 French mountains
119 Pub drink
.;.•
120 Rough calCulation

,'(23 Sends

125 Triumphant cry
126 Beauty parlOr
128 Love
121! Put together ·
130 Henry - Lodge
132 Commence
133 Taut
134 Poker stakes
135 ,..e expiation
136 Sight organs
137 Wise men
i 38 Web-looted birds
139 ExposesDOWN

2 ·--Lucy"

rOle

7 Wealthier
8 Comelnl
9 Matured
10 Small round .ll)8rk
11 Sorrow for I
wrongdoing
12 Juicy fruit
13 Moisten with
d"-'
.,...lngS
14 "Believe -" - noll"

15 All's oppos~e
16 RiCh
17 Lair
18 Coup19 Cut
24 Farming need
31 Atmospheres
32 Lunches an~
dinners
33 Asian attendant
361ntend
38 Conneiy e,nd Penn
40 Pantry
42 Greek letter alter pi
43 -in (con!ributest
44 Restaurant of a kind
45 ·- - a kick .. .'
46 Borders on
47 Donkey
48'Renovate
49 Took an oath
so ··Good-" ,

51 Speak eklquentiy
52 Walks back and
forth

Pitchers
55. Faith
56 Concentrate
59 Seat
60 Confection '
8t Breathe rapidly
63 Psychie:s ability:
53

~r.

1

Manserva~t

64

Word used with

Dozer &amp; Backhoe
Work
Reasonable Prices
Licensed.&amp; Bonded
20 years experience
614·388-8030
614-388-,9991

•

DISCOVER FLYING
Set. the beautiful
fall colors.
Plane rides
. ··'
· Flight instruction
Plane rental
Gallia-Meigs Airport
446-9004

65 Chimes •
66 Boxing matchlls
69 "Enemy-•
70 Flavor
73 Tardy
74 Marv Levy '~~~~~~75 Common - ~
76 Breakfast ~am
77 Overcharge lor

'

"'K"

78 Pilot's
79 Ofaheep
81 Uneertainty
82 Short trip
84 - branch

.

'

11• lofll wlh '

EntiCes
Precious ones
88 Filled with joy
89 Swamp
90 Cautions
93 Bard
94 Woo
98 Raucous a'ound
99 Gi~ in "Peter Pan·
100 Mil. address part
101 "-La Douce"
103 AbiiHies
104 Angers
105 Footwear lor babies
106 Get siCk again
108 Not dense
109 Esteems
110 Go by
111 Equipped with
-wings
112 Put off
113 Surrounded by
114. Davis of "Dark
Victory"
116 TOil
117 Call
118 Gluts
121 Makes lace
122 Notion
123 Descartes
124 Strikebreaker
127 Crude metal
129 Droop
1'31 - - standstill
85

examination, cancer SC188111ng, oducatk&gt;n
and birth control supplies. Women and men
may taceiV8 18111 ana tretmnent tor oexually
transmitted dlleiH ana anonymouo HIV
Sliding FM Sc:ale; Private Insurance
and · Medclid
era accepted. Planning

- " " ,ilnlnlondod pregnancy. For an
appt call (8 t 4) 446-01116

SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111

' Gallipolis
REVIVAL Gospel Tabernacle
Oct..17·22 7:00 nightly
Bert Flora Preaching
Singing Nightly
Invite a friend and come out
Everyone's Welcome

Join Gubernatorial
Candidates
Sen. Candidate Joel Hyatt
Sen. Jan Long
Rep. Mark Malone
Auditor Ron Canllday &amp;
Commissioner Candidate
Gary Bane

Democrat Ox Roast
Sat., Oct., 22 3 pm.

\

,..

~
nWiltllll a
2piiiGW8

*399'J_·
'

contldentlat tamHy planning oorv1cao to 600
Gellla County ruldenll each yeetr. Birth
Control Sel\lfceo Include e phylk:lon

Auto lnsuranc.e
Low Down
Payment

86

.

Sugg.IWIIIIIISOO
S.V.$100

r''-. ~ '
~~!: t~

Free Admission
Gallia Co. Jr. Fairgrounds

, Hair &amp; Tanning Salon'
1391!
Ave., ,44!1 am

_e..,m

. Don11tt Winlir get 'you down put
some .aunahlne in yoilr life feel
good,thil Wlntel' with:

ILIDEI .
ROCIEI

· 12 Tanning See1k1n1 ~.00
Sculptured Nefll40.00 '
Spiral Penna :19.9511111:1.111 Reg. -Pelme 25.00 &amp; up
' Kid Cull (8 &amp; undei') 4.95
Get 1 jUmp ot1 'firing come

, -UI..

Call446-2342

I

.

(

, I

I

'

' '

company coming into area.
are a Fitness Center
ld:~~~~ to the needs of todays
1~
. We provide tanning
aerobics, weight loss
ltrAininn physical fitness training.
~~~~i~!~~and private instruction
11
also child care facility. facility is open fDr women
For more information can
~eduled to open

Did you know lhat ... Planned Parenthood of
Soutlleast Ohio In Gallipolis ptovldet

· at the

'

Hunt.~ • farmen.Bullder8-Subdlvldera
lt1AI:. J.:lcaon Co. F•nn • W~~p~ Nort'l Forelll

Employment Serv1ces

QHeaSize
IIDI·IWIY

',.,

PUBLIC AUCnON
..AnENTIOW*

blood and sweat

tickets

li

Public Sale
&amp;AuctiOn

BULLETIN 'BOARD

SUNDAY PUZZLER
77 Selout notlc!l: abbr.

·:

You - • would llave dladla life I loved you deody, :
Ia clellli I .._you llill,. ··
Ia my J1eir1 you llol4 I (li.TIIat DO OM eloe CU ftD.
It brob my btlrt to bo

\

Robbins &amp; Myers
closing plant in
Kyle Davis Joins . New Jersey ·
construction firm
f

grandchildrefl

Sept. 35, ""'

dual air bqs in ~tomobilcs. Using
tal in Youngstown.
tbc adjustment, inflation is cnmntly
Dr. Lee is a Diplomat of the 2.3 percent ~ die real niO of
American Board of Pediatrics and a return 5.5 pm;ent (the 7.8 pment
F.ellow of the Am.mcan Academy yield-to-malllrity on tbc ~w 30 1/4of . Pediatrics. Among other year U. S. T!euury less 2.3 peroenl).
ACROSS
achievements, Dr. Lee was
That is bisiOrically hi&amp;h, weD
appointed to the clinical faculty of above
the old bcnclulllrk r/3.0 per1 Looks at
the School of Medicine Case West·
cent.
That
is anodlc:r reason why in6 -and butter
em Reserve University. He is also
11 Baiman's sidekick
a certified provider and a regional flation should remain low in the foreseeable
future
and
now
is
M
cxed16
Ukelihood
ins!nlctor of neonatal resuscitation.
lent
time
10
buy
filled
income
aecuri.
20
God,
In ISlam
Dr. Lee will base his pediatric
21
Jargon •
ties,
medical practice at Holzer Clinic's
22 Muse of poetry
Investment strategy for invesiDIS
Main Facility in Gallipolis. It is
23 Rinds
also anticipated that he will provide in this prospective market environ25 Cabin
coverage at Holzer's branch facili- ment shOuld be to focus011 JII8IUrilics
26 Group of eight
of up to 10 years. A bond portfolio
ties.
27 Stonecutter
Dr. Lee, his wife, Libda, and having an avenge of seven-year
28 loollen a knot
daughter, Laura, reside in the Gal- maturitieswouldeajoyaaureatyicld
29 First WOinan
- lipolis area
slightly gJealQ" than 7.0 percenl per·
30 Went quiCkly
32-Expos
ccnL
34 Expert airman
As this year )JI'OIIIa8CI and the
35 School period
piclUreOflhedollar'lllallllbcc:omcs
37 Employer
clcan:r, invCBtorS might Willi 10 ca&amp;
38
Wool fabric
sider gradually lengthening bond
KYLJDAVIS
·
39
Liquefied
maturities.
41 Mistake
As with any invcsllllent purchase,
43 Discontinue
it is wise to consult with vour inYesl44 Sin!W Ross
mentadviscrtoBSSU~e tbat'yourport·
46 President Lincoln
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Rob- folio is struc:trnd to meet younpo49
layered rock
: POMEROY .:....Kyle Davis has
bins &amp; Myers Inc. said it will close
cific
investment
galls.
50
1984 Clint
its valve factory in Lumberton,
accepted emplqymeat with ConEastwood
lilm
tech Construetian Products, Inc., as NJ., in Marth 199S.
54
-Aires
The plant employs about 30
ii producbOII CD8JIICCI'·
·
55 Schwarzenegger/
people. About 10 management or
· He is a grac!~t.e of Ohio Uni·
Oev~omovie
COLUMBUS - The Ohio
versity's Russ College of Engineer· administrative employees will be
56
Nol coarse ·
tranMerred to other jobs within the Farm Bureau Federation's Senail!g and Technology. and~ ~Ids
57
Sketch
spokesman Hugh BeckC% tor's Award wasgiveilto Kim Har·
a degree in materials engmeenng company,
less, OFBF organization din=ctor • 58 Colfee·filled VeSsel
saidWcdnesday.
.
fWm Hocking Tccbilical COllege.
59 Cuts abort
The plant mikes valves used to for Athens, Gallia, Lawrence, Jack• Davis began his dliti~ 011 OcL .,
60 Celestial body
at the Topeka, Kansas plant. control liquid now through lines in son, Vinton, Pike and Scioto coun61 "Give - a chance"
is the son of Bob Davis of manufacturing and sewage ueat· ties.
62 It follows ahoe or
presentation occUJicd dllr·
Road, Po~. and ~y ment plants. Production will be ing The
family
a
recent
meeting of the Ohio
shifted
to
the
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
of Bcl{n. He is the.grandson
64 Cat abbr. ,
Farm Bureau Board of Trustees,in
plant in Springfreld.
·
Don DaviS of Dunbar, w. va.
85 Speedy car
Columbu,
s, according to Glenn
The company said it is consolithe tate Mary
Davis of
88 Trade
Pirde, OFBF vice president for
dating opcralions to cut coSts.
67 Scatters seed
.
Stout
of
Robbins &amp; Myers makes and field services.
68 Faciitate
1~:=~~~~' and.andMary
Ute 'late
FreeThe Senator's Aw.-d is an Ohio
sells .valves and other fluid man69 Arithmetic word
70 Weight un~
agement systems used in industry, Farm Bureau·achievement awllrd
reco~g Harless' pemnallead~
71 Letter for plurals
minin&amp;, and oil and gas recovery.
72 Braid
The company's stock is traded ershtp and strong ability ID work
74 Ties with cord
011lhc·NIIICIIQ Stock Market undet willa people, m:ruit new leadlnbip
and
consistently
exceed
orpDiza75 Fry quickly
the symbol Jt0BN.
don objectives during .1994.
•

wife, children ~
. blAmllll ryfl ,1
CIIARU::YnnMUI J
..........
. .J

n~bersbouldbereducedatleast0.6

DR.K.K.LEE

Sadly missed bY:

UVDOIIMS

Musgrove new
airport manager
GALLIPOLIS • Jim Milsgrove
!!Ssumed duties rc~endy as new
manager of the Meigs-Gallia
R ·onal Airport.
~usgrovc also opei'IIIC5 Ptf cl M
Fleet, Inc., at 126 Solar Drive in
Gallipolis.
Musgrove takes aerial color
photographs of business and industrial firms, bridges, rues, floods
and construction projects, along
with general aerial photos for use
as a supplement for advertising or

..

In Lovjng~ ,,. .·
'M
. emo!]" ··· • .
.of Granvil (Jack),
Wamsley · .,. .:
·I
who pasSed away;
Oct. 20, 1992 ., ·

Approxlmll~

D-1

pti&amp;Se.

Publcllle
•Auction

8

11

Help Wlntlcl

· at,OOD -.oGO FIRIT 'lUll

I'IIDCDLI
, DIIVEJII TIWNIICII
II You Drln l'or A
eo....., 'IIIIIToCon
. . . You
Anii'Y·'-!Ir
~ Cal
Our ._..........., MiJNI4.
All To lot lk A,_ 1o

'-II• ole&amp;

Eddie A. Ferguson

PROFESSIONAL
AERIAL&amp;
COMMERCIAlPHOTOGRAPHY
Construction, Homes,
Farms, Business,
Other
446-9814

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Englneer........................ $49.00
Wellington ......... ,........ ,... $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50·55
Harness ........................ $59.00
Carolina-Georgia·H~H

Insulated, Sa~. Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
All U.S. Made

Family Tradition Craft Sale
Garner Ford Road
l

Rio Grande, Ohio (tum on'
gravel road at Bob Evans Farm
Canoe Uvery, 3rd Farm on left)
Saturday, October 15th
Suriday, October 16th
10:00 am · 4:00pm·

to weryone
who g•v• flow•r•,
e•rde, food end ldnd
word• during the
llln- •nd duth of
Paul~h.

•

Specllll th•nka to
McCoy Moor. FuDe111l
Home, .Dr. ll1rk Wlllwr, Nura.. on 4-Eaat
1nd I.C.U., Holzer
lladlc1l Cen..r, V.F.W.
Poet 4484, the ICtlve
•nd retired pollee

department, women It
Frenchtown Apllrtmenta 1nd Bob 1nd
Ker.n Donnelly. Our
love to 111.
Evelyn,
Conn.. a Jerry
Sheiii. a Br1ndon
Todd, U.., Slth, Kyle,
Brlllnne, Nlttiii.

8

He was my brother
He was my friend.
But all too soon,
It came to an end
He was known by
many
And loved by few
But he loved me.
And this I knew
An act of violence
took him from me
But in God's care
He 'II forever be.
!loved him in life
l'lllove him still
Someday I'll see him
in heaven
I know it's Gods will.
Sister
Nancy L Mullins
The family of Eddie
A. Ferguson wish to
thank each and every
who helped in any
way during the loss of
· our loved one. A
special thank you to
the Gallia County
Sheriff Dept ., E.M.S.,
St. Mary 's Hospital.
and Willis Funeral
' home and any one
else who helped in
any way.

PubllcS.Ie
· &amp;AuctiOn

Shooting Match
Kanauga Sportsman Club
Proceeds for
Bob "Bubbu" Gordon
Sunday Oct. 16, Noon
Win a Ham or Turkey
Factory Choke Only
Food &amp; Refreshments
Available

Video Transfers
614-446-6939
: 614-441-1168
For all your Video needs

Area
Lots of Frontage- Timber- Tillable- Abundant·
Wildlife
·'
SATURDAY, OCT. 22, 1804 12:00 NOON
'
LOCATED on Route 327 North· 1 mi. off US Rt!·
35, 8 mi. Soulheaat of Jackson and 13 mi: '
Northwetlt of RIO Grande. DIRECTIONS from.;
COWMBUS, OH; take US Rt. 23 SOuth tc):!
Chillicothe, OH, then take US Rt. 35 to St. Rt. 321'!
North. FROM DAYTON; take US Rt. 35 through''
Jackson, OH, to St. Rt. 327; turn on St. Rt. 327j;:
go approx. ·1 mile and watch for sii1Js. Thll';
contlnuout 601 acre farm, currently being':
surveyed, will be offered in 44 tracts of acreage.
ranging from 5 ama to 120 acres. This farm h11
frontage &amp; access !tom blacktopped roads St. At,;
327, Twp. Rd. 152, Co. Rd. 9 Keystone Fumace:Rd. &amp; Jur:te MarshaM Twp. Rd. 153. County Watef.
available from 11101t accesses. Property comprised;'
of tillable ground currently in com, standing timber; .
paature &amp; woodlanda. Owner will be giving free
hayrklea lhru the valleys l over the hiUs on SUN. '
OCT 0 (Noon-4pm); MON. OCT. 17th (4-6 pm) &amp;
SAT, OCT. 22nd (lt-1 1 am) or call Mr. Cartwright ·
for a personal lnlpeciiOn. TERMS: 10% o-n;.'
balance I poiNIIion upon defewry of e Deed;,
sold free &amp; cliar of lens or mortgages.
CALL/WRITE for FREE BROCHURE
Conducted for RODNEY CARTWRIGHT
(614) 887-2626
STANLEY a SON AUCTIONEERS/REALTORS
126 East Foullh Street, Chillicothe, Ohio 45601

(614) ns-3330

..

ESTATE
AUCTION
SATURDAt OCTOBER 2J, 1994
10:00 A.M.
Located 81 11 8 5th St. In New Haven, W.V.. The
81181e of Anna 'Buater" Roush will be sold.
ANTIQUES
Oek clr....r. Bentwood baby bed, ..rtv walnut chelt
2 drawer wash atar.d, oak dreaaer w/diamond mirror:
walnut tavem type table, fancy wicker chair, platform
rocker, fancy oak press back chair, early plink bonom
chair, walnut table, several old child's rocke.-, claw 4
ball organ stool, early sewing rbcicer, iron bed, metal
bed, old bakers cabinet. round table. drop leaf table ·
Ice cream stools, fancy wicker rOcker, wicker love aeat:
wicker flower pot, KIM R.R. lantem
'
MODERN FURNITURE
BeautHul 2 pc. Early American LR. au~e. maple table
&amp; 4 chairl, 3 pc. B.A. tulle, 25" Sylvania ramote·
control color TV, 1~ Sylvania remote control colornt, ·
coliN table, rocker, metal wardrobe, wicker megazlne
rack, doN cradle. Kenmore electric range, Admil'llaide
by aide refrigerator like new, Tappan microwave,
Maytag waaher &amp; dryll', Maytag wr1nger washer, Lg.
Unlco cheat type freezer, Gibson chest type freazer
5000 BTU .W cond
·· '
GLASSWARE
8 pl. aenlng Engllah Garden China. l..d cryat1l
Stafford Shire dlah mid winter, Lg. Banquet atyte ~,'
Gone With The Wind Lamp, Iota of blue glua
Carnival glaaa candle stick holdara, mini ball fruh
aah &amp; peppar ahakera, Iota of presaed glaaa'
Oapruaton, Homer Laughlin, Fenton, milk gl811,
of v...a. matching pair Fenton coin dot clear v collaction of roostert, Han on Nesta, 3 footed ~
diah, wash bowl &amp; pitcher, glue bella, lilt &amp; pepper
ahakero, Mc:Coy P•cher, atpne ware pitchera, oU
~. matching pair marble tampa &amp; more.
•
HOUSEHOLD
Wash boardl, coliN grinder, rooater &amp; other
wicker baaketa, copper boiler, old plctu111 frlmM
c:r..m can, Christmas Decor811ona, Iota of jewelry,
Home Interior, Tupperware, amall kitchen -w!llnca.,:
20 cup coffee maker, new blankets, linena, c:loillea,
c:eramlc manger HI, uwingiTIIIChine, eleetri: hllltara,
old bookl, lana, baaket1, cement awana, um, l
•
east Iron big um, 3 wheel bike, awing, glider, old t
chelt, aome old tools, 32 ft. ext. ladder, slllp ladder 1

jar

'*

more.

'

VEHICLE: 1882 Ford Granada, WhMe, VII, 4 clr, IUio,
PS, PB, lir, AM1FN radio, 24,558actuel milia.
.
AUCTIONEERS NOTE: A very large aU dly 1uc:tion,
~~quae 1a lui,~ a 1fP111C1 the~,
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICI PEARSON AOOION CO.

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
EXECUTOR ·CHARLES ROUSH ,
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773-6786
TEIWS: CASH OR CHEa&lt; WITH 1.0•
...,.,..,,MIIIIflrauld rtlwlaeaoffll 1 !\
Uuued llldllollllad Ill ONe, ftall&amp;alqj 1
WetiV.ralla..
•'

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nm11 SenUnel
•

..

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~

' Ott Point ,._nt, wv

11

you get

.
Canad.ay
.·

.

tht cflolldtt'fg'~
..----.::.__-....,
VIRGINIA

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

........
'· •

"'.~:"

3 Bedrooms, l
1/2 BaJhs, Full

~ 11':::.' :: ... - "*'=

-··=Tho
P.O. a.
41111.

~T.

-Dollr
. . . ...........
. , Clhlo

.....................
..... __... .......... ..

.

lmll*nwdsw•••.,.,
_llmlll_or_

Dllld on,.., OOIDr, 111g1on.

_, ..... .,._.,.,
clw•••lllti:ln..
....,.
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our-.. ..

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---------------

HappyAds

HELPWANTm

13

Immediate need for a Speech and Language

Pathologist and an Occupational Therapist.

Cape Cod compkte
with Dormers,
Foundation, anQ Two
Car Garage

11111

Insurance

••'

Happy 21

·"

.-·.

~

WI IIIII

~-

number of December occupan cy dates. Please call or.

HOIIEOWNERI a' AIITO
COUNTI
UFEaHEALTH

stop in if you w&lt;&gt;uld like to be in your new home for the
holidays'.
Mod~l Homes
Model Homes
Open Dally
Located Just
Mon-Wed-Fri 12·6
South of The

Q cf{

F1nancial

IOta• tm

Pomeroy, Ohio
for 11m Miller, N.H.A., or Karen Hudson, AN,

NEW LISTING! APPROX 83 ACRE FARM WITH .
CROP &amp; PASTURE ACREAGE , OUTBLDS .,
FENCED, POND &amp; TOBACCO BASE PLUS 3
BR RANCH STYLE HOME . ON BULAVILLE AD
&amp; PRICED TO SELL.

OUALITY HOMES

Tues-Thur 12_8
Sal10·5 and Sun 1·5

MASON. WV

by Appolnlment

Position Available:

&lt;

,
·"'
••

1.!!.1

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

Imagine celabraling the holidays in one of the~e or ·
another of our beautiful new Quality built homes.
Restheduling has enabled us to open up a · ·

AMERICAN NATIONAL · JN.
IURAHCE
VlCIUE CAITO AGENT

Contractual agreement arrangement In
progressive long term care setting.
If interested pleue oonlact
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Extended Cere Unit

•

''

~·

_ -·
......,

~

~

304-773-5001

___
....
=-Wood -

Youngest Son!

tor881e

Executive Secretary, Galli~ County Chamber. of
Commerce Offers An Opportunity To Work In An
Active , Community Involved Organization . Must
Have Com pute r, Writing, Book keep ing, Publ ic
Rel ations And Organi zational Skills. Be Able To
Work With The Membership And The Public. Will Be
Involved With The Chamber, Retail Merchants And
Community Improvement Corporation. High School
Education Required . Advance Education Preferable,
us Three Years Experience Working With The
Public And/or Organizational Responsibilities. Salary
Negotiable, Based On Skills And Experience. Written
A'pplications Will Be Accepted Until October 17,
1994. Send To :
Gallia County Chamber Of Commerce,

Hot ..... Hoot~!, "1:d~

.,...,.,. 1

~~~~~~~~ ........... -

~32 Mobile Homel

Real Estate General

.,.

•••

I

Real Estate General

Henry E. Cleland ...... 992-2259

,,
"'·
,._

-"·

Tracy Brinager........... 949-2439

"'-·

Sherri Hart ..... 1.,.......... 742-2357

ft4.

=

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For ,... •

-

a .... ,.

Drive, a Mllll 2 141170' trollar, rhwhw:t, - l o t
l
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,
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----·
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..... tf4..a4'J:.aGO.
1142 tR 141. 1 1110 .... Out, a 114 _
....... ......., 2 111c1o
loclroonw 111,. MI,GOO, Coli -MdZ n:o1111o 1:omo Will
-=LE~
~~~ton, l14-4* -ton.
,_In 111 - . Now- Rw1rr:w: 1U14, 2 HOIIJ- :Mil:.....,.., 11~~ .,......... IJr ... A_
• ;;;;;::::.
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...
S • • - w-o a 2 Cor -_,.. lot
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t:.,II~!V
~~~Into-On
!1!1&gt;. ~
IM-311.m0'
I!N.IIaatoa or Coull.,._
ra.-,
For IIIII
In Vllloae.,_
01 ~~-·
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- _,.
.....,- 114TERIP.II.
_,_,,
tt111010r._7lll

,.. 11o-.e

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R~al

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.,.

REDUCED! EXTRA NICE 14 X 70 MOBILE
HOME ON · RENTED LOT. MOVE RIGHT IN
CONDITION. DRAPES, RANGE, REFRIG.
WASHER &amp; DRYER INCLUDED. ELEC.
FURNACE &amp; C/A, NICE BIG COVERED FRONT
PORCH &amp; STORAGE BLDG. REDUCED TO

Bull11811
Bulldlnga

· -

.... . ~ ~

... -. c

111111 a
Tlollor
1frl0...,.-21rlro- 1oo
AI••••••
n .......
Now
Colllol.
....
Dohw¥,
KMoueo,Cihlo-'1117&amp;.
IT,IIIO. I::IiiiHioell11i~

Real Estate General

:t:

.

ponlt, ........

114-liUIII&amp; · ·

...........,. "

.., ............... •lir

Mlllllnllor rtvolllll.......

--..;;;~=---1

....... for Sale
31 · .Ho,
_

::;,.=-=-=

........ hrrl

·. forSaJe•

RPi11 EstatP

Love,
lun
Mom&amp;Dad
-~·--·
P. 0 . Box 465, Gallipolis, Oh 45631
...._.,
rDowo
:!-«, Y l o ...,._111ft:
- &amp;a~· D
:=====:l======T-=======~1 ...,__
lrnllrnl!-.

-·

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TI,.C Jv!AKES THIS ONE SUPER NACE. WELl,.
MAINTAINED-a BR RANCH WITH HEAT PUMP,
FURNISHED KITCHEN &amp; LARGE COZV
FAMILY ROOM. ROOF &amp; WINDOWS LESS
THAN 4 YEARS.
,,

...

32 Mobile Homea

""
-c.•
.....

~

lmlllon.

992-2104, Extension 250.

.,...... '

-

......Jtflnlhllnl''.,..,

Happy 24-tla
Birdulay
}BPP M"BLRO'Y
We'-e 'You.
Debbie &amp; Ryon

, ., ,...~

.....

lrtlormocllhllol-.

.
'.

• '!'!'

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-3383

•a•
._
441J11 · - •

no_ _
__
__. tn_. . . ..

· PLYMOUTH

.__ toe ,.-, ... u .....
11t•as·

......

25 LOCUST ST.- GALLIPOLIS
· Sales -Appraisals - Relocation
Residenrial- Commercial - Farms
Investment Propenies

~OI'II'f-lo

TvDina ...................

I

I 88Ity

·lo_......,....._ ,

Basement

.

llloclll, .............. ....,

..-.lorliinllo .....-,;,

::=t.~ J'ei~GW,.:::
-

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Far RoN.
)uot
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Pt.
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Couotlioui.
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=-.. ~ -~r~

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...... - - lot
..-' """""
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='·;;rr. ... liiiiitl. .,...
: 36

$16,500.

JUST LISTED! 8 YR OLD 3BR. RANCH STYLE
HOME SITUATED ON A BEAUTIFUL ONE
ACRE LOT ON ST. AT. 160. ADDITIONAL
ACREAGE AVAILABLE . HOUSE &amp; 1 ACRE
PRICED AT $42 ,000.

TWO HOMES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE'
APPROX. 1.5 ACRES W/2 DWELLINGS . 2
·sTORY HOME HAS 3. BR, _1.5 BATHS ,
FORMAL DINING , NICE OPEN FOYER .
PORCHES, GARAGE SECOND HOME HAS 3
. BR. , FAMILY ROOM . LOTS OF : SPACE ,
CORNER LOT IN THE VILLAGE OF CADMUS.
ENJOY THE VIEW FROM THIS DBL. WIDE
ON APPROX. 1 1/2 ACRES &amp; RENT OUT THE
EXTRA M.H. HOOK UP. FURNACE , ROOF &amp;
FtOORS ALL LESS THAN 4 YRS OLD. 3 BR, 1
1/2 BATH, NICE 2 CAR CARPORT AND EXTRA
ROOM FOR BR OR FR ADDED OFF
CARPORT. CHECK THIS ONE OUT AT
$49,000.

Real Eltate

' .,··

wanted
-...,.....,.;.;,;;.;.;.;.:......,_...,..
-:· iiruot
,_, .._

Real Eltate General

c:r

Real Estate General

'· 1llillll!-. 11M!, .......
~ ll•.olll&amp; nn•ar1bll ....._

.....

Re11!Jio

._,

. r l =, _~
....
.,...,..,

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110
••..,... ~ ...
10H7WJ11.
•

Estate General

.~ .

~

~·•·
....
i..., _

Henry E. Cleland

,.
*-...: .
...

lll992-~191

Kathy Clela:"d ........... 992-6191
Office .................. ,...... 992·2259

......

"

•KeyatoM Bulklfttf • to the D~wntown
Buolneoo Dlllrlcll HeN"• an oppotiUniiY to own
one c1 tie lugoll bullclnga 1n the r-t of the

~

...
.....
...;;.
......•
~·­

,

of:'.
t"'

downtown buoinell dlotrict· The Luptoatn
Building. 3 retail unHt and 3 ,.oidentl
eparlmtltll piOVide excllant . _. Acoelland
to 111 the ronlal unlll 11om the IMf alley
munlclpll parldng lot Call Dave for mo,.
1221
Information.

~

...
.....

144- STAlE AT. 121- S. of Rio Gllllde,
11.48 acNa, mil, $17,1100. Celllorclrochuol
dollllo.

Ul't1Ml3· At lall, Alfo!dable TCI'MI
Property o-elont eondtlon. Localod on a
double lo~ lhla home Ollell 4 bedrooma, 2
batlla, lovaly formal LA I DR, lamllylllttlno
room, kik&lt;hen with bNaldut nook and launc*y
arM and t oar garage iwth WOikohop ._,
Extenoive remodeling done Iince t 813
Including plumbing, wtrinq, roof and
hoalnci/COalila ayiiAim. flomeo m town, in llio
concitiOn, at thio price do nal avaleble
-1)' day. Prioed at SSS,OOO. You betlor buny
and ell todlryl
...

.

.

&lt;

t4t• .IOHNSOII RIDGE ROAD- Addloan
Twp., 31111-talm, 3 pondo, ._ball,
4411100 bun will\ - - loon. ....,
COIIIidlrlpk (578)
'

1422·0LD CHEVY-ot.DS BUILDING.

l.

1410--tf2,800, 17.5 lWp.,

'*-

llr!e. -.~!lot

mil., Gl8anllold
Poaa RD. and .lacl!oon Co.

420' front on Second Avenue and 62'
frontage on Grape .

o....

1411- t5t - . ·more or leoo,
llold
lWp. $47,500, comer of SR 233 and
Klnnioon Rd.

RIVER VIEW • $56,900 • 946 1sl, 3
BR's , LA. kitchen, shower in lull
basement, garage, fenced-in yard, vinyl
siding, immeo;lia1e occupancy Ideal
starter or. retirement home .

11432 - 11011
114011- FOUR LOTS- 4 BR home, reduced·
I SALE - Small restaurant wrth two rental to $44,000, 2 baths, LA, DR .. lull basement,
houses. Property Is located in Oak Hill. Call ·
heaVcent. air. Corner lots ..
lor more details.

•

11452 - RIO GRANDE - 1'/, story brick

heme oners 4 BRs, 1'/, baths, LR, FA. DR,
lull finis)led basement, attached gal'age. Call

--.

........
..,
;,..

for more details .

REDUCED PAICEII Brick RanGh In Mint
Concltlonl Very ... ca..d for home olllll ...
IamAy everything It could need. Featu..o
Include J111111UM llooro in anti)' and clnlng room,
3 '**-nl, 2 U balho, hing room, aar.t1ve ·
kltchon and 2 car::,:· Large bllc:k patio. ,
Farntt orianlacl ~ 187,800 1222

..

NEW U8TING- Don't Nix I~ Fix ldll Thlo home
.looalod In town neede - e work, but at a
prloo ol.15,000, you'*' do the~ Ollero 2
bldloom1, 1 ball, large IMng room, nice u
kilchtn and large ,_,. you can u• u clnlng,
tam~ or bedroom dopendlng on your famlly'o
nNdl.
todayl
...

11411 - LOOKING FOR YOUR OWN

PEACE AND OUIET- This could be it. 49.66
acres, Andrews Rd ., 8 year-old home with 3
BRs, 2'/o baths, LR, DR, FA , heat pump, 2
car garage plus 24x48 detached garage.

~£afora ~tml 2!Istaie

11473. BEAUnFUL COUNTRY CAPE COD
offers 63.75 acres, mn, mostly pasture,
tobacco base, 40x50 barn, 22x44 block milk
house. 750' road frontage lor possible bldg .
sHes.

River Valley School District, 3 BRs, rnastet
BR &amp; bath w/gardeo tub , 14&gt;&lt;21 LA, k"chen,
plenty of cabinets I closets, HP.

218 E111 Second S1IHt
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

See"

f1437 - NEWER HO.IIE AND 1 ACRE -

11428- OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICESThat's whallhis 3,000 sq . ft. building offers.
Lbcated on SA 160 near Holzer. Ideal lor
many uses. Call for more information.

(614)992-3325

11476- HEAD ROAD-6 acres, m/1, 3 BR. 2
balhs, kitchen, family rm .. lull easement,

LARIAT DRIVE· Nice ~. Quiet.
Clo111D holpllal and lhapplng. 3 bedroom brick
ranch It campleao llllth eat-ln ldlchtn, IMng
room, 2 belle, tam11r roomllfld mo... Nloo patio,
Jarvo .llalloL
Prlood at f77,1100.
1200
.

.

8trt11Gh the Valua .

.Ill tiLL .ERR'fRIFFU:
.... Agent
SaiiiAglllt
11UIUS21 lt+MN540

aurprloilngly llfollllble 3
IWIOh on a Iorge level lot

malnw-ID a mlnlmlln.
beever and Gall t.or.tta today.

COURT STREET RESIDENCE - Older home
has 2 sep. units or could be converted back
to 1 family dWelling. Faces city per!&lt;.

(OIIicf)

t58.500.

We An P1110od ID Offar .._ ~
12.t2 ..... Mil, ...... . . _
• claooy,
qualily bull btldt IWIOh ~ appac. 2,570
oq. ft. olllvlna arM lila on OM of the moec
bMutilu ..... ., Glllla County. t..ov.ly altlciMd
pond and 23 epeoiM o1trMa complemant the
groundo. Featu!H JncUW lonnal antry, llvlna
room, clnlng room, 007:1 family room wttli

v-.

, ....., PriaM tor
FMol._· TtwM
bodtoom, 1 112 bell IWidl with family room,
Nt~n kllchan and Hvlng room w1t11 ft!Wplace.
Localaclln GIMII Townlhlp, .tNo home oll111
lmmeclall po-llion. c.a Lol* IOdav lor •
an appolnlmanl to - tNt·allordablo home
ptlood at t48,000: '
1500

fi,._, lalat modlm ldlcMn wllh lnakfut
noalt, .-c. llliiin, 3llodnloml, 3112 bd1t plua
put~~~~ ·~ baulf*lll ccUd go on and
on about thle 'lluiY -~ftli*IY, but I
- * I prWt"' tall ydu paiN ,, Cal Canltyn
lor OOU!j!loila ...... ·
1
'

I

'I

'

·446-3644

f

...,.\

,.

'

I

,.Car.ayn W1sch • 441·1007

mn.

.

--' '

I'

•'

11461 - EXCELLENT LOCAnON, DAIRY

BAA BUSINESS - All equipment !Slays,
bldg., approx. 624 sq. II.. 3 ha~ baths. elect
heat/cent. air, city water.
1421- CHERRY DRIVE- jull at tt:e odge ol
· 2 SRI, 1 ball:, LA. kitchen. Gu heat,
•tor, good irwellmenl

11.WS - VI~TON AREA - Very nice brick ~­
home.• LA, FA, kilchen, DR, HP. cent. a11,
LARGE BUIL.DIIIG WITH LOTS OF
3 BAs, bath, LR, kitchen, large unanacl:ed garage and unattached garage. Rental house
i.:AND CONTRACT TO QUAUFII!D IIUY'ER garage. qrters a lot of privacy and peace I
on property..
.
SPACE AND GARAGES fo'OR
- Nice starter home, 3' BAs, LA, kltcMn, aulet.
1100
FORMER
CLOTHING
STORE\
- Frontage on Third Ave. end
bath ~. garage. City School District.
$27,
'HILL
OHIO
racks
and
Grape
S-t.
Cal lor details.
•
111,100, 41 acres, m/1, Harrison Tiwp., ~N plaOAK nits siay corn~~ of SR 93 and 84acrea, m/1, Comer of Woods Mill and
EllottR~.
·
.
M'!t Y u
- '
·
SR 554, has a really n:ce homes1te old
.EX;CUTIVE BUILDING LOTS , .. 5 bam, Jots of p~cy yet close to school
M,IOO, 108 acres m/1, Morgan Twp., minutes from Holzer. all ~ acr4f!; or and other activitieS.
·
approx. 74 acres woods, ~3 ,tillable.
more.
$31 ,500, 84 ACRES, Morgan Twp.,
10.U 1crea, m/1, $4,ooo;· Raccoon $24 100 43 acres m/1, Se'-1. 21 Morgan vacant land. Possible farming land or
Twp., call for details.
,
TwP.
'
1, recreational land.
1'1(0 LQTS, Oak Hill, $12,000, 9x56
rental on property.
33 ACRES, m~. comer of SA 325 11nd $20,000 Jots just off White AY81lue,
BLAZER ROAD- Ranch hOme, 3 BRs. ,.,, · 1.121 ICrH.
$8,900., CIBft Chapel Woods Mill f!load, recreational land only Garfiel~ Avenue · area. Call for plaf of
·
property.
kltche~. t6x28 garage. River Road, land and mobile home $1~1900. $16;500.
It 431 - APPRO X. 5 ACRES wlih frontage
on RaCOOOII, .baautilul shaded lot, house has

1.

'
LIVE
IN ONE AND HAVE THE INCOME
FROM THREE MORE - Each unit has 2
apartments. Facing city park with all the
conveniences of in-town living.

loll;'. .

�·· -~ -~-~

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Page D8

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gelllpolla, Ott Point Pleuant,

wv

FOR SALE
Constant +wheel dr.
20 HP Onan engine
Hydroltatlc Tl'ln8lllll.alon
Power steering
Rops

48 Space tor Rent.
· ' :MaiO . _ llulldlnD l"er
Renl Coli 11f.'mo4341 Clr .,..
241il•tEVIIIInge.

'

OftlceluiiiWIIh

Tollol In lloclom Fh
"""" llcla. Col .............
N Ul 261 Or 114 441 Uta.

can

KIT 'N' CARL\'LE® by Llrry Wrlabt

Tri County .Recycling··

1993 Sr.ll• Trador MHel420

72

Articulated frame
Two-point Quick-Hitch
AuxHiary hydraulk:a
Hydi08tat control

Not Just A Lawn Tractor
Peopl• Bank of Pt. Pleasant

Gooda

PUUUI

l'oonl.!'":l!!.,II! .......
~...-.- 71

-

AliCe Paltll

I

56 Pelt tor 8ale

I

HAPPY oiM:K TRIViiiiiiCIDE:

'

.

....... -.-..
Recognll ' •to 1 -

Coli

t:=J: .:=t·meC
-· "'""''r •.,....,.. ............. .._ ;r::

~oii!!llii-·-~iM!i I

~~~::::=:::,.:::..:::~ '-,:4*":"11_10.
_ __,.-.,..--OV..IOPatteme Kl.._ C.rpot
In Stock. :10 PlltorM V1nv1 In
81~-....., Cupola, Fft• .,
H., I
'IW4.
PIOK':'::!:ITUAE

-

:mo AFTIR I Nl.

•

aIW~

AUCTION
FURNITURE. 1:1
Olive II.. Gllllpolle.,... • .,....

;::::::::::::::::r::::::::::::::::;

VIRGINIA sMITH. BROKER .................. 388-8826
. WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR .........441·0632
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR...... : .....;......446-1897

rc::.=-.....-e
AndA~-·--llelrlgoooiON

•

'Wa-0,.,.
-

Don,

lion. .

54

lion. • SM. H wed. H;
I'Orgll OUr AEPO. -

11858 CAMPER'S DELIGHT, 22 loGI . . _ -~~~~~ .,.,q 011 lolln Big Fool Pill!. IIIII only
15500.00
•

m

~~--­
=tt:-=--.
.....

. ,_

4

.._1 " - ,._

~1~~

14d4 ...... Troll• ,..,. 138,

-·

Window Von, U ·
Dlloll:CIIIC
Good . Condllon, Air
Caolllll .................
11t 311-·
. m oa1on Fuol 011 no'*- -.

...,.log_,.,._ ... low

lOok

ranclo II on 4 ·pMII441.oe:J2.

on25-wlhlolool _
...... ol $38,000.00.

.-10-.
.
-·--

&lt;II-

lfMIIrlol'
a
'

.73 OWNER WANT'S 80ID NOW, you MICIIO

IIIII IOVtly 14170 Redmln. a - - N
. . n. 011 IICIIi lot _, a 2 cer ...,...

·-

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER rliiiJ.=
Cheryl Umley.............. 742·3171 ~

=.

NEW LISTINGS WANTED!

-NEWTANBLEWOoo1·
-,1....,.,1n011fCI
... ....._ .
· - P*llol ... ~ lin .........

p!Ddlolll(lilitrhUnyand

IHbldrldrcic0011111m, 2 balho,lcmiJ ....... - lugo pond and 2 oullulldlrvo ... 3 - .

...

.

Experience Makes The Difference! CaU
Cheryl Lemley; For a Full Time Meigs
County Agent For Over 17 years!

1·800-585-7101

a'

LOOKING .FOR p.. NICE
ONE OF THESE:

NEW LIIIT1Nii, IMI!r.+li ...._. - 2
I • DRill onll-ln a lowly RDIIIe 7, - . . . llllllouo lo ... 10

ll+a1-

·11
112

13
14
15
16

""*

M7 ONE OF THE AREAS IlCEA FARIII. 100
- . . , 2 bamo, pond_, •
IIIMIIIII
=~-~·.!!:a_lhcwa.
~bib
....
- • - - - • In ... E.......,.
-.caiWirnolora""*loctoy.
-..-•

lltl8 INVESTMENT PROPERW all 3 for $76,000 ·
plus 2 ac. m/1 2 bedroom heme, full living room, kttcen,
utility, 2 enclosed porches {big enough for extra rooms)
2 garages beautiful landscaped plus 2, 2 b!!droom

11182 RIO GRANDE HOME, $40,000.00 for tho 3·
bedrm, 2 bath 1 1/2 s!Ory, full basement home. Gas and
wbod heat, village water &amp; sewage. Patio &amp; 2 car
garage. Also ·1973 Champion mobile ' home &amp; lot

rental units, pay for your home with the rentals . Approx
2 miles tiom University of Rio Grande, all blacktop road,
city schools, a r:nust to see.

$20,000.00

~ompl"ted .

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......

3

POMEROY-RIVER J:RONTAOE- Need b~·l~':.eo~~~~~"l·:·rl
Great location. Has approxlmatolr, 375 feel of
west Main Street, Has a ~lg build ng .thai could ba used tor
busile&amp;8 or lear down and build your own . .ONLY $1311,000

A•

o

. .J•, '

..

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.

.

.
t-

- ....-,g corntorl•
ita, ~ LilTING· HOMe alll\tlmiENT • Con

~·11,1100

•

'

'

. •.

.,

' POMIIIOY• Uurel Cliff ~oacl- Have you always wanted a
mini 1arm? Will, here ~ Is, approx. 17.34 acre Iarin with
1er.~ HOllY Park 14x70 mobile ho.me wnh 3 bedrooms, 1 t/2

bailie
iltd Bim:
'I

·

·

POMI~Y· Bailey Run Road- Approx. 53 acres with free
gee and royeltlea. A one story 1111)811 house, ancl,a one car

garage. .

,

r

.

REDucED $21,800
•.

.

rental units. A 2 bedroom apartment dGwnslalrs lhal ne8!ts
some work and a one bedrOom apartment thati nice

.

Upstairs.
rl

.

. '

.. ~

•·

_,}

HEMLOCK GROVE· Approx. 6 acres with two 1970
c:empera- one 16 fl.-and one 19i fl. and 2 more hooK ups.
~ has concrete block John, electric on site and witched

for well.

all covering,. beautiful new carpet throughout

-

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•

•

.l

I .

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·

.
SCENIC
SURROUND THIS
CHARII41NG H9ME,
FT. LIYJ!'JG RM., INVITING KITCHEN,
tei:Piill~$ Qt-4 THE FIRST FLOOR, FULl. 811-SEMENT FINISMED IN 2
RM~•. 1/2 BATH,. UTILITY .AREA CLOSETS . •ENI~LCISJFiO,J
P.ORCH POOL W/BATH HOUSE, PARTY HOUSE .
I
sroeKeo. PO!IID. 2 CAR GARAGE, 21 ACREs MORe oR LEss. Tuo:~•
Hm~E SET'TING IS BACK FROM ROAD FOR PRIVACY, OWNER MAY
TERMS TO A QUALIFIED BUVER. .
'

01 $JiiiMSNV

l*e la¥el. Pltoad •14;000.' CALL

ACAEAIII FOR IALE· 11 ·.or ta. locatod
Cloae Ill IUo Grande. PRICED AT 184,000.00 Raallor
Ownad.
loGatld on
Bab ~Rd. Cilltormolll Wonnallan.

VN:Rfr LAND • Appf'OidniUIIy 10 -

Serv ices

~ FOROUfl~cc:.m:::rv I'D .
liiil
UDO •t 1011
· 1:11
1

FOR ..FOAIIA'JI!)N ON OUR ENnAE USTitGI

Plumblngl

'

WARRANTY! Low
fllllnli1- 11omB (bmnd MW). One . .ry
IWICIII
. • lllrDt bldrooml, dnlng IQOIII, Mia
UNDER

. : ldtaMn, ....... Oiling. 2llllla •
........... Over I jaw~~. Elaotllo heat

pump.

.

tiCE WORKABLE· FAAMI Over 70 - •· 2

I

I

0

·-·

•

.LOOK • . , _ OR lllllle an otllr. "'¥aiding

-

horne ooi I lin&amp; ol 2 beclftlollll,.ll¥lnil - ·
llall,ltltf:lllan. Nfilllla!C pD1'GII. LM lllln.

GAGEl
-Caunw
Gecngaa CIMk

**"•
...... ,.ond,

bltlll horne ...... - '11
-llzwj I - dtte;liecl ...,.. Mlnt.r
CIIIDr your p11v.ta lhlitRte

. _... .-n.

...,.,

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'

'

ohecl,

'""'

WOULDN'T rr BE NCE TO HAllE SOMEONE
ELSE PAY YOUR IIORTGtiGE PAYMENTS?
Thon lei flem, buy IIIia home with an additional
mobila homa IIIII hu an 81celonl view of the
Ohio Rivar. Fram41 home has newer gao
lumanca/cantral alr conditioning , 14'x70'
mobila homa will 2 badmoms and 2 lui bllloa,
nioe dad&lt; aoid 2 •.age buikings. Appn&gt;x. 112
acre lol, minuteo lrom lown , city ochootol
Un?iolr.·oaHe price ol $37,900.00. Calllodayl

LOT WITH MOBILE HOllE W?TH EXTRA
HOOK..UPI App&lt;OlCimately one acre, county
wator and oeptic. City ..tloolal
H71
CHECK OUT THIS PRICE? aM,OOIUIOI 3

badroomo nutc:h, _ , roof l vinyl windowa,
living room, ~'""' kitdlan. Concr.le drive, 1
car carport. Slor.ga builcllngl Calf lor your
appolooment IDdayl
141110
OWNERS LOWERED PRICEI TO ...7 ,800
Remcl~lld 1 112 •l'f 11omB COIIII-*'11 ol 3
beclroojmo, 1 112 batho, living room, dining

""""·lum
ldtchan
andNioa
- quiet
· Over
and
pond.
. -41. -Ill live, .,.,.,
oell
IDdly lor an appoin....,H
1112

FOURlHN PUll ACIIEII Loll of dearecl ..
wodld lancl. Road llanlllgl, rnilllnll IW1 .
. Included. County water_....
..

• •. ,

UICI A COZV ..,_ WITH A UTTU!
QU1DOOIIIMCit HeN 1a a a ••
2

.•

4fh!ll¥

1611

. . .LV IEAUTIFUU Rally nloa 10+

. ...

RDid. . . . . . . . . ole 1111111 ·

WT7 AmNTIONI PIIICIIIEDUCJI) 10 59,1100, Will , · •
pun:hMe a lOwly 3 bedroom i1nc11 w/ U llllieflllf't 2 ·
car gngo. Also 2nd home~ wM ~· Thla '·
can ba great lnc:omt pojlllly, Locllod ln1toWn. 0u1c1t
Sill Needed.
.
. '
'1

~

barn, 111'l142'
mllchouN, plll aeva..t oller buildlngo.
Fencing, pond, - · .... of laecl fnlnt.ga.
Neal2-3 bednlom homa. ldaallocdon. ..,.,

Siloe,

RACQOON CREEK FRONTAGE I to LOlli
0w111r • oonaldar aa11no on land oonnct 111
quallhd IMIY•r. County water avallalllel

11 ~OF VACANT

·.''!

Upholsteiy

fJ7

· Healing

,..

. WBIIr _ , t11, •1 ' • erl

(

3~1ll't/

Al8WnN

FOA IALE· 1AX100 ~water

..

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•I

0011'1/.1
ElNidld

GARFIELD AVENUE· 3 blctllom1, lvtng IQOIII, ldlchln
and bato, lflfltMn wdclng d#nce of ...... ~one~ achooiL
Cal loaM.

av-. .

·

AllSVl
13S't/3M

S.l31-W't/~:::lS

·

CO~ABLE AANCHI Roomy llvilg IQOtll
l ldtchan, 4 8A, 2 Ball. Home II appiQX. 2
r-n. old. Over 2 - . la'IW'I. CION Ill Flo
6IWitll, city ICihool
1m

11111. LAIICII NOME IN wnotl-·5
ocorioo
LR, OR kll. lam. nn., . . - porch, 3 bulcflna, 811oi
.olllce. extra bulfcllng, 18nced, DlaclciOp driw. &amp; polio. ·

SI,IIOO

APPOINTMENT1n

Ill IDWIIIocdon•

- .:2-

•'

HOUlE, BUILDING I I ACIIEI IIORE OR LEU,

1ooa11c11n L.aw~-.101 eo.. 2 bednloma, llvtnQ 1110111, c1n1na
11101n, ldtchan, bath. lg. gar.ga 2•x40. CALL FOR

!algi cullom brlclt I'IIICh on a larga 1.25 lot. • becnoma, lonna! dnlng livilg 1110111, . .
llnl~ ba-nl Ralax In lhe hot tub
llltualld on a 1h:ll1 clack. 3 car Qlllll!l. Cloaa

l

(

new

windows lnslalled. SpaCious khchen wHh cherry ca.blnet.
Island for Jenn-Air range. Only private showing will docldi
the value Is hero.
CALL VIRGINIA l SMITH 446-6806 or 388-8128

· NOME W/lleiiTAI. UNIT. Arlo
pedo
10 .ono lg. lan)lfy homo. sFi
::..Coli~·- lnlorm.!fan fiii)Joo.oo. ~·

•,eoo

122,500

LOOK ntll ONE OVERI A very nice homo
buill In 19n. Ful two llory a 2 lui bethL A
nice lltllna will a yud Ill enjoy. MOll of Ill
land Ia t1a1i1a aftil wll ..t• llfiOd CIIIPI- Hu a
labacoo baN and Imber lot. Sllol*l blallfiOCI
hunlnll ..... u ..... ~ Nellonal FoiMI
rota of-land cioN by. County water lor
llo1.- and a alnJng ..,_, lor farm. Calloday
rare lhowlng.
17111

ha• huge family room w/flreplace, bedroom, exerciH·
area, laundry room and storage room Thla hof11e 11 of ·
supotb (Jlallty aa the plumbing has been roploCod AI new ·

2-

-

._ '*' De -

LOT 10 AIVER- ·A 12 x 115 Mobile 11omB, 3 bldiiiCIIIt,
1 balh, 1 car caar.. llant l beck pon:h. Priold at

REWARD YOUR IUCCESI with IIIia extra

1147. NaW LIIT1NG • ICING 8IZI PI!IIL'I' 110111 or
II!Mihfloupw nlco ~ bedim lOr I'RI\IIrt1; HOlliE CME . ,
3 tillhl, 3.ao. mJI, ~'- lloltlhill1,121o r. :~

·POIIMoY· E. Main ' Street- Ne8ci rentar p;operty? H~ 2

.'

&amp;

H30cho.~NT ILDO..• 7 Units. Well maintained
. ~ location ov-lng lhe Ohio River.

De liouilhltouolll'e&lt;. 3 bodnn. rwoch homo wJIIUge
nno., ~· bilck fronl, charming LR, din. nn., t.lge
nne. thibughout. loado of oak cablnetl In ldl.,' 2 car
g~~~~g~, 2 ac.INI, w/hOmo.
;
.
., .3 LARGE I~LEVIL 3 bt&lt;lrm1:. 2 112 tla1ne. eai·ln '
k~. Lower leVel Oilers family rm ., kh .. bedrm .• laur,dry tm ..
1 garage. ucre $49,000.00, .

....
ooo
·
.,.,..,,

FOR APPOINTMENT.

....

waH of the extra large ki(chen . Breakfast room •
powder room . Second floor offers four ~· lind
bath. Bedrooms are king size, carpet over hardwood
floors, bath 11M all new flxturas and Love Tul!. B"limonl

POUR IEAUTII'UL ROWNG LOTll 011 Whhe
Rd. Ill utftltleo ·~· ·2 1/2 ""· m/leach make your
oowt Build your dream homo In lhe cOunloy and

2·3

-a. men or tau. CALL

1Wta a peek at . . horne, larga lvtng - ·
ciNng anclldtDhan .... ol nice Olblnllll
2 -lawn IliON ar llaa, loll ollnilftM. Cal
llldlly,
llnmedlat•
ponnalonl

ELECANT ALL BRICK IEAUTY
Two I!OfY flome, full ~mem and hal a gtNI
deel to offef. Designed for"graat living. FlralliOQ( hal
formal entry with open slalrway, formal living room w101
fireplace, formal dining room, Cherry cabinets lloe .,.

trucking terminal, storage lockers tKl~t storage, or
=:.~dance hall~ can be a rwal ~

apace heater$, vinyl af61~g. and

5,000
10,000 .
6,000
11,000
7,000

HOllE ON RACCOON CREEK FOR IALE· 2
bldnJomt, a bill, 2 diQica, IIIW raof, 11ec:1J1c hilt, 1 1/2

I WANT IOIETHNQ A LIT1U DIFF&amp;AENT'P
.

11113; LAR&lt;H! STI!II. BUILDING w/t5,750 sq. 11. M/1.
balh, snack bar, loading dock, fenced, B ac. MIL Well
water, county water available. Propane gal hia1

. . . .,
·-1100

Oliver Str-.1- A one story homa•with

~o.pm.,, ~ ~am.

. carport.
'·\
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100. VIrginia 388-8128.'

I.AfiOSVi..LI· A 1,. 1/2 IIOfY frame home with 4 blilrooms.
· ~ ·room, family room with fireplace, abow IJrourld pool,
'-Ue, rur lltc:ll'~ · - front JIOiclllldpr,'io'me _newer
·-"""'!"f'"i'"lo

oozv HOM~- $38,800: 3 ail, carpel, vtnyl sldlng,

1135. COMMERCIAL BUILDING · 940 sq. ft., quarry
tile noor. new rubber roof, 200 amp. 3 phuO elociric
clltYe thru - · 5 ton heating &amp; cooling unn. Will self
"' 1011!1""" lease. Vlrg'"" 388-1828.

UNUIUAL·LOO HoMI • wl42 1\c. mA. ;Thll
hOme Is 10 euy to caie lOr Ito like being on vacalton.
3.181 ~ft. m/l.wtlh on Olk wrap-around deck. Rooms
• I doors are 8Kirlla&lt;Qe to li!:COmm-lhe hlhdtcap.
· lim and building, renee for a horae, ete. Garden apot,

'

8,1100

CALL TODAY

•

1133. HOM&amp; 'AND INCOMi .... Oouble wllh Mmfng
power. You can live In one unit and rent lhe other.
Close to ochoclo, lhopjllng &amp; churcheo. Call lor full
lntormallon and an appol~nl. VL Smith J88.8828.

1144. NEW USTINO • PRIIE POTENTlAL CORNER.
2,110 sq ft., bloCk bldg. bath t ac. m/1. EqUipment o&gt;C1l'fl.
~ed on SR. 388 8828.
·

lla1l1llfl ....... IIIII .......

I

good root, hot water lank; fumaco. Lovely eBblnets lrl
kllchen. l.ocated In lhe cily. Vllglnla 388-3828 .

bedi'OQml, 1 bath, new cat&gt;neto In kll., good
Qlfden. Born &amp; garage. 4 ac. Tlil wilt be a good
liJd to start or retire. $45,000:

CoUoll ....... lllr .........
8llllflli ... OIO,IIf.IIOI

'9,000
10,000
9,000

S,JB9A M9N
JnoA SB 6UOI SB lSBJ S&amp;tqnOJl JnoA
na Aew. 'etdnoo Adde4 &amp;4l Ol JSBOl ·
S!4l &amp;1188 pua sset6 S!4 PQU!I uos
Aw uaw }saa sv ·p~e!JJ lS~q s,uos
Aw jO 6U!Pp9M 94l papuaue P84 I

'

1111. COUNTRY HOMii/OREEN TWP. • 3 bedrooms,
1 112 story home, garage &amp;.outbuildings. 5 acres all
fenced. Remodeled w/IOVIIy khchen cablnela, lg. LR &amp;
DR, new heat pump &amp; QOll!l root. ,

1171. LAND CONTRACT - Make a deal here.
Older home with some work

4. 702 ac:rea m/1
3.881 acrtB mil
4.190 acrta mil
5.442 ac:rea mil
6.148 IC:rtB mil
10.320 acres mil
7.253 acres mil

THEN CONSIDER

.ISNOI1nlOS3~

====

breakfist room has a lg. window, stereo speakers
ttvoughout, brass llaht fixtures af'ld much more. 2 car
lllaclled garage, l!ltlc .storage, 2 acres m/1. This house
Is maintenance frea of bast quality. Make your
appointment and see Hyou don1 agree.

LAI&lt;EVIEW ESTATE. BUY NOW TO BUILD YOUR
MASTERPIECE IN THIS OUTSTANDING
NEIGHBORHOOD. 5ACRES MIL ALSO 2.341ACRES
MIL. CLOSE TO SHOPPING AND HOLZER
HOSPITAL. AU. LOTS SUBJECT TO RESTRICTIVE
COVENANTS.

..,'

119

4.507 acres m/1
4.615 acrea niil

L.oi'?

llf1l!lllmo~~~, ~ achoaiL

1141- .
epaclous homo
county. Italian tile foyer,
calhedral ceiling wllh balcony, 3 BR. 2'/; balhs, living
room wllh woodbumlng fireplace, equip. kllchan.

1114 NOTICE: ONLY I LOTS AVAILAILI IN

the chuckle quoted

· by filling In the missing words
• you davelap from step No. 3 below.

SNOI1nlOS3~

HOlE FOR IALE· a blctiiOIII homa, ltBrdwuod 1ocn,
Cl!liiO flnl. ... (IICI lllll tn.t. 20 X24 gantgl and

PICK UP 11tE FREE QUALITY HOIEI
BAOCitURE AT IOIE OF 1HE LOCAL BANKI,
' · RETAIL ITOR!I, IUPEAIIAAKETI, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

most unusal finlsh.l d In baaullful wood. The LR hes
cathedral callings &amp; loft. The wrop around decl&lt; Is a
great place to owing &amp;. rock. 2 car garage &amp; blllldlng.
1173. OLD PLANTATION HOME • BuiH-in 1800's
walling IO be .-vd. Largo bam &amp; lhed. 117 NJ. M/1.,
crop land &amp; paelure &amp; wooded. Close to Holzer. All
utllltleo available.
.
1141. 1R 1110 - Con110nlent lo lhe F-a~ 3
bednna .. ranch w/new kH. &amp; bath. Lg. family ;,,
w/woodburnlng fireplace. On acre m/1. Only
$45,500. 388-8826.

MIDDLEPORT· Broadway Street· You need to see this
gorgeous home In town but on a large lot having 4 spacious
bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, dining room, buln-ln dlshwashe~'flldi~IQr. , 3/4 basement, deck, garden $pol, carport, storage
~
. . and low maintenance aluminum Skiing.

.

17
18

CUSTOMIUILT HOME- Very neat 3 bedroom,
1 1/2 81ory home w/2 balha, 3 ~. rnA. The Interior Is

•

G Complete

1_ •I . I_
.J I_ 1
•
11

rr1arrrrrrr1

B1G BEND REALTY, INC.

&lt;11150 NEED EXTRA INCOIIE8 you .., aom I Will
1111 3-...., 2 llory homo Will I 2 C1r llllflllie
and a 4 100111 new garago ....,._.. 1111 11ayo
Nnlod-raund, In Ill Allar¥-

8PORTBIIAN'8 DEUC»ff', 3

-

T1 .!11 spo rtJ! IO il

.-""·~·
. hoo- -- .......~-.....-

--..-fOfyou
...belllr,.._
.....
rool, ~ ... a
lllhla

Evlr9on-.

home with a fantasllc view. Has 3-4 bedrooms, 2 fireplaces,
3 1/2 baths, family room, formal dining room, finished
satellite
basement, ln·ground swimming poOl, solar
dish, 2 car garage, and lots of pilvacy, sitting on

1141 GREAT POSSIBIUTIEB NI/E. AIMIL• E
HERE, ¥llh thla 4000 ICf. ft. OOiiWIMalll . . . . . .
~-ric
lll...ctl.,..

F 8PI!&lt;CE 18 WEAT YOUR 1.001&lt;NJ FOR
THEN LOOK NO FARTHER. tltll4 -..om 2 IIOIY

AOU.JN(J lAND, ..... 4 ........ """'liiiUii .. ..
~lorlloof_..__, ~In Ill

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
~------------------~--------~
POMEROY- Bet!Ch Slreet- A 2 story
year old colonial

·-1011&amp;

'"

·

111111111111

Branch Office • 446·6806 •.
23 Locust St . .
· Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

-

1038 50 ACRES OF L m L TO SLJ(JHT\.Y

MIIC81181110UI

~Mod

--

n.._..,ra;· . . . .
~

P~TRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

.

a Ton
_.._o..F--.
....
ll...llon . AVIIIoble. -

Allan C. Wood, RaaltoriB!oker 448 4623
Kin MotgBn. Raaaorllllolwr-446-01171
~ c:.n..bury, Realtor 448 3.08
JeiMb Moore, Rador· 2641-1746
11m Wltron,.Raalldr-448-2027

W.IUII .. ~ . . • -

......

•

Merchandise
1

446-1066

Main Offict·388·8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614 '

LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR ..................446-6806

•

llangN

Qd.,.nc.

ty,

Phont

Qr

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

OFFICE 992-2886

C)uollly Howohold Fumlohlnao

•

I had attended the wedding
!of my son's best friend. As Best
~Man my son lifted his glass
SLAWEE
;'and gave this toast to the
10
9
,.
ohappy couple, "May all your
'
... troubles last as long as your
r-.-V--AL-L-T-S--.1 New Year's • - - - - - - - - - -!"

..

32 Loculi Sllllt,

Real Estate Gen....r·_,..•·:,

Real Estate General

t-~1-'""1~,...--.,...,.7-,....8--r

Real Ellate General

Suppl1 cs
&amp; Liv es tock

131Now-...,plollor,-'

,f,: sl:!, ~

4MI. . OUt Rl. '141
114-4414111

..

I

I

TOTAOT

Real Estate General

rum~~..., ":':":it :•om '
w""'a
VI'IIA FURNITURE

I'DOIIII

AutOa tor sale

Farm

IJI.Im
.

. No . , . . _ Hauu- luri __..;__ _ _ _ _ _~114=:111-=1110.=====::.
~ Vol mi. .lenlcho Rd. Pl.
10W71-14110

........
wv....
e14 4te iltu.

71

And,._._

=

.

.

~llaund P•
Dlli.
lillie AI 61 Fann Equipment ; :~
a.tndlo,
ChocMd
· - 1 Row """ Com ~ _F.!f
dnolod I Vol
WOflllld,
t1icl Each,
...., ..._. wagon, """"!"
114-Mf.11114.
4lllt, 11WSII-1177.
:

And Olin,..... f100 And Up,
W l l -. 114 •• Uft.
-. /Cool IUIMf a

-·o f100 E8oh, IIWll-

-

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. at

l::::lc.::;;:.:u

Rtlriaonl- · - Anclllryo... All - -

. . . ..h I
-~ I -""" old, lu
,_,1711. 11W4N171.
LMng

..

..

l!lf 1a Dfntl In doll I cat&amp;
A¥11111111 0.T.C II Aa&lt;J FEED I
IUPPLY,11441Z-21M.
PrafltiiDIW Dog Orooml,., AU
lrMda. R••nnible
oo. No
~Mu'o, Your
~-- • .,... &amp;.
H No

;

I..._--L-G-'1-P-'-P-1..1...--N.L-..11

II&gt; • •,

Musical

I

TERTAI

LIV81t0Ck

..... .

Instrument•

--p

.

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111T DAILY

;:.r:.1:.

Open 7 days a week for your ·.,-:; .
convenience
· ·;:·
Mon-Fri 9~6 Sat-'Sun 9-3 · ·~·
Paying today 45¢ lb. for clean, :~
dry aluminum cans
..•
1¢- 5¢ bonus per pound for ;·~
flattened cans
··:
We buy all non ferrous metals ;
Call for Current Prices
:::

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'

BEATTIE BL VD,TM by Bruce Beattie

~-·

·October tl, 181M

_OCtober 11, 19M

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(-.ot amount of 1C1W1111 to b1 cllllennlned
by lliMY), pond and 111112 14'X70' Manllon
IIICibll homa which conll# ct3 blidtocwna 1 2

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AFFORDABLE

FOR

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2 LOTI ALOHO RACCOON CAEEKI Acca•
ID boat ramp. Nica camping Iiiia, c:ily achoolol

Colfty wator available

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HEALTHY INCOME· io ..caNed ftom ttlio
Income pro&lt;b:ing property. Two • 2 bedroom
. . , . _ pluo IRil - · AI unite PNaenlly
. IW!IIId. CION Ill downtown a,., Corner of
Cedar and Third. Cal .., mo~~~ inlormelon.

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118 pluo- ..... 1in
hnl w.w. pond
ap
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hot - apprax. 5 yeara old, IIDM a vinyl
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..UV • ,~ IIIICII,.., -.IIIICI1flfhklpool lib,
2 112- gantgl. i.Ng112'll41' dade willlowr
lawl10'138' palio. Cantnl air. MUST SEEI

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PLANIIIIG ON BUILOtNG THAT NEW
t101E11MIII- ·-orl!l'!tllt 1 I
Ill a- 'tiMIINp. ~ . . . .

.

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aUter ICII ..G FOR THAT' NEW HOIEI
Nloe II1Mtg lot IPPIIIJdmately 100'11100'
County watar available, f7,01llll.tlll

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ldMI .., many lrPel ct truanaaa IJfllne tDo
f'UIIIfiiUI ID m.ilctn ~ 1111 Btl CIIIDr -

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D8 SUnday Tim• Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Getilpolls, oH Point Plelllnt,'Yiv

..

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}

OctoJ)er 1&amp;.198i .

I

WASHINGTON (Ary ~ The
Agriculture Deputmelltu propos·
ing to amend its resulauons to
allow horses with swamp fever to
be transported direcdy to alaughter
from Slate to Slate without having
to be blanded.
Under the ~· horses that
have tested positive for .equine
infectious anemia, commonly
known as swamp fever, would be
moved by permit in .sealed trailers,
the USDA said in a Sl8lelllCnL
The USDA said a proposed
4J11Cndlilent, published Ia the OcL 6
issue of Federal Register, would be
"an alternative to the horses being
officially identified prior to .tbe
intersla!C movement wllh a hot iron
.or chemical brand, freeze-marking

r

or i,ir.taUOO."

' This proposed ch1111ge in the
regulations would provide owners
of equ!ne infectious anemia reactors w1th an ..altemalive me&amp;Qs of
handling their aniJIIaiS while pre.

MYSTERY FARM -This week's mystery you ma7 wia a $5 prize from toe Oblo VaHey
farm, featured by tbe Meigs Soil aad Water Publisb1ag Co. Leave your aame, addrCSII ud ·
CODSCrvatlon District, is located IOIIH!where Ia telepboae aumher with your card or letter. No
Melp County. Individuals wishing ;o partici- telephone calls will be accepted. All coolest
pate Ia tile weekly coolest may do 10 by guessing eatries should be turned Ia to the r•ewsr.per
tile farm's owaer. Jast mail, or droL) oil' your Olr'ICe by 4 p.m. each Wedaesday. ID case 0 I de,
pas to the GaiUpolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third . tbe wlaaer will be chosea by lottery. Next week,
Ave., GaUipolls, Ohio, 45631, or Tbe Dally Sea· a Gallia Couaty farm will be featured by the
tlael, 111 Court SL, Pomeroy, ~lo,_ 45769, aDd Gallia Soil aad Water Coaservadoa District.

~

v~nting '!tC spread of this commarucable d1sease."
The revision defmes an ~uine
infectious anemia reactor as 'any
horse, ass, mule, pony, or zebra"
subjected to an official test and
found positive.
The proposed change in USDA
regulations was developed in
responae to concerns about brand·
ing·complicalions. Branding can
cause distress to the h!&gt;rse •s skin,
and freeze-marking cin take up to
two weeks to become visible wuting time and endangering neg·
alive-testing horses that could be
exposed to the disease while the
brand sets.
A blood-borne viral disease of
animals in the horse family, swamp
fever is charscterized by sudden
fever. swelling of the legs and
lower body parts, severe weight
loss and anemia. It is spread by
horse flles.and other bitin$ insects.
No treatment or vaccme exists

I

~'

f!JI' swamp fe¥~,'.11111 about 1; n,UI;
lion of the 6 million to 10 ~
horses in the United States are •
ed annually for the virus. The
USDA said typically under U1
percent, or fewer thll) l,'lOO, Qf
domestic horses Lit4ied test ~
live.
c

Ohio Lottery

Bengals
•
·-rema1n
winless

Ag department has new propos~1 ·. ~
for handling of swamp fever horses ·l
•

·

Pick 3:

239

Pick 4:
'0792

Super Lotto:

11~'18-20-3045-46 .

Page4

Kicker: ·
296245

en tine

;

Those wishinsto comment 011
the proposal C&amp;r) send an origilllil
and three copies of wriuen rcmlllkl
referring to docket number 94-0(IIJ
1 on or before Dec. S, to Chief.
Regulatory Analysis and Devdop;
ment, PPD, APJUS, USDA, ~
804 Federal Bldg., 6SOS Bel~~
Rd., H.Y!';sville, ~· 20782. Any1
one w1shmg to rev1ew commenlf
already sent to die agency should
call 202-690-2817 to arrange tAl
visit the comment readin~qi
(1'141) of the A~culture ·
:;
ment's South Building in W ' . ·
ton. D.C.
:

Vol.41,110.1tl

Capyrlghl t•

1leotlon, 10,.... • - -

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 17, 1994

AMIIllrlleclalno. Nw p .. u

.Showcase

Malone,
Carey ·
debate

Annual event shows o«
best in Meips arts1 crafts
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentlael News surr
The exhibits were .in!Cresting, the music wu lively, the food w~ laSty,
the.weather wu wonderful. and the people came - hundreds of them for
1994 Showcase Meigs County.
.
·
Brin&amp;ing the Rock Springs Fairgrounds alive for the weekend were ·
activities rangins from a cruise-in to craft displays, from pioneer skill
demonstrations to school exhibits, antique farm machlaery to artistic
flower arrangements, model traills ta"mighty ttactors, and hand-woven
baskels 10 hind-crafted bird houses.
There wu something for everyone.
It was the IClCOIIII year fa Showcase, co-8p0llll0red by the Meigs County !;'art District and the Meigs County Extension Service.
.
Its purpose was to display the talents of local artisans, musicians,
craftsmen and coUectors.
While the goal wu to iet outsiders ir.. to see wbal Meigs County has to
offer as a tourist destination, the reality of the weekend attendance was
that most of those there were local residents.
There was only a sprinkling of out-of-county and out-of·state cars in
the parking lots,
I
•
Dan l)leff, ~tor of the Governor's Office of Appalachia, came in for
the ribbon-culling ceremony to kick off Showcase Saturday. He w&amp;S '
. joined for the ribbon cutting by State Rep. Mark Malone, Commissioners
Fred Hoffman and Janet Howard Tackett, Meigs Extensioa Asent Cindy
Oliveri, and Park District Director Mary Powell.
• ·
Oliveri and Powell extended greetings and introduced county and
other officials auending. The ribbon cuUing was followed by a reception.
A program of Appalachian music wu presented as a pan of the opening ceremony by Roger and Mary Gilmon:.
That wu the beginning of music, ~..hich contiilued both afternoons
and included The Hillside Baptist Churcil. Denver Rice, Joy Singers. Middlebranch, Mountain Top Singe~$, and tne Dailey Family Singers on Sat.urday. and music students cl Sharon Hawley, the Church of Christ youth
choir, Dee and Dallas, and the Church of Christ barber shop quartet, -on
Sunday, The Orda' of the Arrow Indian dancers also performed Sundsy,
.All of the entertainment
in ··~~~t at midwaJ_ CCIIte!

Barrick, assistaat director, 4-H youth developmeat'. Toay Puscarich, president, Cravat Coal
Co.; Graham and Tlay McComb, presldeat,
Oblo 4-H Fouadatloa. The awards were doDated
by the Cravat Coal Co., Cadiz.

GRAHAM. HONORED • Glen Graham
(seeoad from ril!ht) of Patriot was hoaored for
35 years of 4-il voluateer work at the 50th
aanual 4-H Volunteer Recogaitioa 1'rogram
Oct. 5 at Ohio State University ia Colualbus.
Preseatlag tbe awards were (left to ript) Kirby

.

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Candidates clash
over authorship
of education plan

RUG WEAVING DEMONSTRATIONAmong the pioneer skills demonstrated at Show·
case Meigs County over the weekeall was rug

weaving by Doana Davidson, Rutlaad, oa au
antique loom.
·

took=
· r#9'~~~Peop:c'Bi.i7Mi~~·~ -·
· In' the log cabin, die Mei County Historical Society displa Cct zommemorati've items fcx- the 17fth annivcnay of Meigs County
outside
served cornbread and beans.
the ~ Citiuns Center codt.cla(Jple bulla' in a copper keale over
ail open
groups of boys and girls Jifayed soccer, pioneer skills were
demOliSirated, and the peaang zoo proved a a popular place with' youngsters.
AD kinds of crafts were for ssle and there were also educational
exhibits by several civic and sodaJ orgarizations.
(Coatlaued oa Page 3) •· ·

m!J

rae,

McGuire, River VaHey; Secretary, John Fllgett,.
Oak ·Hill; Treuurer, Kevla Mallaa, Oak Hill;
Reporter, Roy Luady, Oak Hill; Semtlael, aild
Herchel Wilcox, Wellstoa. Studeat uvlsor Is
Keaa7 Staley, Oak Hill. The lastrudor Is Tom
Jeak1as. Left to right are Mahan, Staley,
McGuire, Bowers, Fugett, Luady aad Wilcox.

FFA OFFICERS ELECTED· The agrkul·
tural, recreational aad diesel mecbaalcs· pro·
gram at Buckeye Hills Cueer Ceater, Rio
Graude, receatly elected FFA omcen for the
1994-95 school year. They are: Presideat Jasoa
Bowers, River Valley; VIce Pre~ldeat, Ben

Business briefs-

BBVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
-Three of Hollywood's moguls
are teaming up to start a new SIUdio
in one of the industry's biggest
ccimbinations of l8lent since Char·
lie Chaplin, D.W. Griffith, Douglas
Fairbanks and Mary Pickford
founded a movie empire.
Directiil' Steven Spielberg, film
and recordlag enttepreneur David
Oeffen and· former Disney studios
chief Jeffrey
Katzenberg
announced Wednesday they are
joining forces to produce movies,
TV shows, musi~ and interactive
media.
- The line said they will be equal
financial and managerial partners
in the stilHmnamed company,

..

expected 16 OJ?Cn at an undetermined location In early 1995.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's farmers are posting a stunning recovery from last year: s .
floods and drought, harvesting
m:ord crops of rom and soybeans.
The Agrlcullure Department on
Wednesday forecast the com bar·
vest at 9.6 billion bushels and fiJY·
beans at 2.46 billion bushels.
The bumper crops will knock
down prices received by fiii'JilCFS,
mising the prospect of higher govenunept spending 10 maintain farm
inl:omc, but the bulging bins sbopld
ha_ve no rn$r impact on
, consumer
(AP)_ or;- scramb~g -·
to shore up Russta s econom1c
recovery President Boris Yeltsin
fired Finance Minister Sergei
Dubinin and asked lawmakers to

7o"scow

.sadt Central Bank chairman V~
Ginshchenko for letting the ruble

collapse.
The bank moved Wednesday to

proP -ujJ the Russian.currency aft.ec
1ts ailirming 27 percent·plll!lge on
"Biack ·Tuesday." The ruble regained 4.8 ~reent of its value
after a nearly $90 million bailout
the bank on die Moscow. in~"·
exchange.

WE'lL GO
TOE·TO-TOE WIIH
ANYBODY

. from lhe tint timt you Nip them on.

ftlfLMI fllftU

111 Wll'fW

.. .. . .. . .

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JoiAINI'Isl

- - -- - - ---- - 280 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT

:

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17!! : ...... ILU.

· liCit ol Broda Stai!ICJ Peld·
. . wbo will lie repraelltml

· tk compuJ Ill MelP Coallty.
' CeUalli'OJie bas I Vlrletr of
~wire...,

· ·" •Yleea

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c:oamulcatloa ser·
aacl prodaefl; raql11

,_Yalce_to~ .

'- ;; bacia;,171teaa. A aatlve o~

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MiillfC;!.'Er~
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Sutton &amp; Cheater Policyholders who are In need of
pOlicy or clalma 11rvlce wiJI please contact:
r
Sally Lambert
·

Lambert lnsuran~ Agincy ,
115 East Second Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio 45760

,_eel

'-::1f7!
II AtheJII.
;: Slie CUI be
at CeUa. ...o.i, JJII 1100. · '
. ·

'

The Sandy &amp; Beaver Insurance Co. has
acquired the Sutton &amp; C~ester
Farmers Mutual Insurance Co.
'
effective Sept. 1&amp;, 1894•

JOINS FIRM - Cella·
Jar()De 8lliiOIIIlCfll the empioJ·

B7 BRIAN J, REED
Seatlael Correspoadeat
Sweeping education reforms are
at the top of the agenda for the
Democratic gubernatorial ticket,
and those reforms were outlined by
the party's candidale· for lieuJCnant
governor at a Meigs County Democratic l"arty function Saturday.
Peter Lawson. Jones of Cleveland was the keynote ~at the
party's annual fal! dmner at the
Meigs County Multipurpose Senior

.Phone 992-6641

Jones wu introduced by longtimefriendEnosSinger,recentpast
president of the Democratic Party
m Washington County, as well u
bein&amp; a Meigs County businessman.
"1 was in Pomeroy 18 ~ears
a$1)." Jones said at the beginrung of
his ~- "I was a pan of what
was called the 'Peanut Brigade,'
and we engaged in old-fashioned
campaigning with leaflets in batbershops and beauty salons and
icical businesses in small towns like
this one." .
Jones wu referring to his wOJt,
primarily as a speechwriler in the
1976 campaign of Jimmy ~arter

and Walter Mondale.
''The Democrats had good fortunc the last time I was in
Pomeroy. and there's no reason
why we can't do it spin."
On the issue of education, Jones
inUOduced a theme by ssying that
"somebody's in the governor's
mansiou, but nobody's home."
Jones emphasized reform by
S!lying "it's not going to happen
through the lottery, or through an
inheritance tax."
Effective education is directly
linked 10 economic development,
Jones said, and the Rob
Burch/Pelec Lawson Jones ticket is
proposing a plan 10 lake a countyby-county survey of educational
needs, followed by the development ofa fair funding method.
· A primary ,key in reforming
· education funding is 10 reduce the
reliance on real property taxes,
Jones said, and the Democrats are
proposing a 50 percent reduction in
the real estate tax burden toward
education over a five-year period.
That reduction would take place
in annual 10 percent increments,
and would be replaced by sales
taxes, state income taxes, or the

closing of loopholes in the current
tax system. Jones em~ that
this rep~ment funding would be
determined by a ballot iSSI!e in May
should the Democratic ticket is
elected.
Jones said that lottery-generaled
income for schools could be
increased to 55 cents per dollar
from the current rate of 40 cents by
a cut in merchandising and promotion and other overhead expenses.
"It's tirne In nul &lt;:nmP.O"" in thai
gc.vemor's mansion who knows the
needs of the middle class, lower
class and the poor, because the
affluent need government less than
the rest of us," Jone~ said. 'That's
the kind of leadership that Rob
Burch and I can offer."
Jones announc!ld that he and
Republican opponent Nancy Hoi·
lister would debate Nov. 3 in Mari·
et:a. He also auacked Gov. George
VJinovich •s unwillingness 10 agree
1G debaiC Burch.
"It's a ttagedy that there weren't
m•&gt;re debates in this campaign,"
Jones noted. "So many candidates
OJ;t out of debates for frivolous rea- ,
sons, and that demeans and
(CooliD~ed on Page 3)

Meigs residents advised to take
care before firing up furnaces.

RE&lt;~
• ··
. . .· .s·. ·

· ANIOUN
'·

'

Meigs County Commlssioaers Fred Holl'maa
aad Jaaet Howard Tackett, Dan N~f1~ director
day with a ribboa-cuttlng eeremoay. Takiag or the Goveraor's omce or Apval61chia, aDd
part were, from left, State Rep. Mark Maloae, , Mary Powell, Meigs Park Distr1t1. Showcase
Cindy Oliveri, Meigs Couaty Exteasioa Oftice, took place oa tbe Rock Springs Fairgrouads.

Lieutenant governor candidate
outlines reforms to Democrats

Center.

.
Onlv Red Wing makco hoot• like "'""'A,.,lid stt..:lsl1ank. Oil and w.oter
mistan" And. fit that'scomfonable

RIBBON.CUTTING CEREMONY- Show·

case Meip County wu alrk:iaUy opeaed Satur·

87 GF.()RGE ABATE .1
Seatbael News Starr
~ bomcownen who are f1rinjl up furnaces for the fJCSt time
this year should beware, area health
officials said.
Last winter, an eiderl)' Lol)g
Boaom couple dled.la dle1r home
from carbon monoxide polsonlag.
This yea-, people should take a few
precaulions lo proteCt their fsmilies, laid Zane Beegle, WliWian
with tbe Meigs County Health
~llriCIIL
.
H aomeone thinks they have a
~lem, cbeclt It out quickly. It
C8ll kill you. The biaselt problem
Is the .burning cham6er," Beegle
said. "A Crick will form 1111d the
byproduct of bumlas natural gas is

PETTING ZOO POPULAR - Four-year-old Meliada BarDhart, daughter ol Tom and Barbara Barabart, Syracuse, was quite
likeD witb "BaBa," an African pygmy owaed by Leora Salser of
Raclae. Tbe petdag 7AIO at Showcase Meigs County had a variety
or aaimals including peacocks, turkeys, guinea pigs, goats and
dogs.
'

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
The fmt face-to-face meeting
between the two candidates for the
94th House District seat found
incumbent State Rep. Mark A.
Malone and challenger John A.
Carey Jr. mostly in agreement ·on
the issues - until they clashed
over the aulhorship of Carey's education plan. ·
Malone, D-South Point, afld
Republican hopeful Carey were on
hand for a swiftly-paced debate
Sunday at the University of Rio
Grande co-sponsored by the university an~ W_MGG-FM/WJEHAM of Gallipolis.
·
Toward the debate's end the
candidates were allowed to ask
each other a question. Malone,
apparently stun$ by criticism of his
voting record m Carey's closing
stalement, asked Carey if the education proposal Carey unveiled a
rew weeks ago was his plan or the
work of "Columbus bosses."
"It is my plan," Carey rel0r1ed.
"I kind of resent this theme in your
campaign , •. 1 CID IWMt011 my own
and 1 don't need anybody to teD me
what to do."
As Malone and Carey shook
hands, Malone spokesman Ian
James exhorted media representa·
lives with charges that Carey's plan
is a rehash of other Republicans'
ideas and produced a packet of
newspaper articles to bact his
claim.

"This plan is a fraud," James
said. "I think John Carey should
apologize to the voters of the 94th
District for this kind of misrepresentation."
Carey later acknowledged that
the plan came from Republican
sources, but said he backs il ,
because he feels it will work for the
district
"It is a Republican plan, I sup.
port it, and I make no apologies for
it," he said. "Mr. Malone bas in the
past issued the same news releases
on issues that Mary Abel has, so
that doesn't necessarily mean he
doesn't believe in wbat her releases
say."
· The flap provided the oaly frre·
works surrounding the debate,
which focused mainly on the candi·
dates' positions on education and
jobs.
Both were in agreemenl
'increased fun'tling is required 10
solve problems in the stale's educa- ·
tiona! system, although Carey felt il
was a "shame" it lOOk a lawsuit and
a ~ecent court ruling on equity
funding to stir the legislature to
SL;ion.
Malone countered that $1 SO
million is being poured into the
state's neediest school districts to
relieve funding inequity and more
will be coming,
He added that he was against
Gov. George Voinovich' s decision
10 appeal the Perry County equity
rnling and that the legislature
(Coalinued oa Page 3)

t

Detection cards have been availcarbon monoxide."
Carbon monoxide is so haz- able for years, but since no sound is
ardous because it is colorless and made when triggered they may go
days without being noticed, accord· odorless, Beegle added.
But if one smells natural gu, ing to ~ release from the Ohio State
University.
this may indicate a problem.
Carbon monoxide is easily
• U &lt;;OJK:enled about the JII'O,ISIICCt
for this hazard, residents should absorbed into the skin and can
crack a window to eire~ fresh cause lieadaches, dizziness, oausea
air, be added. During the time it and fatigue, said OSU' s Richard
tak~s for a beatia&amp; specialist to Nelson.
•
"Low levels of exposure that ·
arrive, if t~te window is cnJCked,
build up over time 11e more danthe residents should be ilafe. ·
"U later you say thefve stiD not . JCIOUS than short-term, hif.h-level
solved your problem, we'll get the exposure," Nelson ·said. 'Lethal
Ohio Health Departmeat ~tor levels of gas in the blood system
to look," Beesle uld. Sophillic:atod can be reached within minutes and monitoring equipment read levels symJ!IOII'S npldly grow more seri·
of carbon mQIIOllide, carbon diox· . ous.
..
ide and oxygen.
(Cootlaued on Page 3)

SHS HOMJ:COMING COURT- Tbe 1994
Soudlem High School HODiecomlng Court cooslated or tbe followlar, from left: .:aadidate
Keadra NoiTII aad escort Maloa FisLer, caadi· ' ·
date Braad7 Rouih aad escort Brian ,\udenon,
cudldate Erkl D..P. aDd escort Graal Cirde,
eapdldate Courtaey Roush aad escort Matt

Morrow, 1994 Hoaecomlng Queea Tracy Piekett ud escort Kevin· lhle, Jualor Attendant Jea·
niter Cummiu ud escort JISOII Shuler, ~
more Attea'dant Amber Tllomas aad eaeort
Adam R011sh ud Freshmu Attendaat ADela
Maitord lad escort DIDDJ Sayre. Allin, sbowllll
ftower girl Adelle Rice and crowa bearer Joey
I,
Eakins.

"

•

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="31674">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="31673">
              <text>October 16, 1994</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4503">
      <name>wilcoxen</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
