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•

Sunday

$1.0()

.

'

Wisconsin., surprises Michigan

Did you
remember to
do this?

'

Inside

Meigs residents' activities catch
Bob Hoeflich's attention __.. :. B-5

Alonglbe river ..............81·8
Bu.sintss/Fann ...............D1-8
Classified ...- .......... -~- ..DZ.. 7
Entertainment ............ - .. B-8

Kevin Pinsori eyes moving as the
bane of modern existence - B-8

Deaths ................- -......A·7

Editoral ....................--.......A.6
Sports .................- .........Cl..S
Weather ...............:...........A·2

Occa....,.t,.ow. Hl&amp;bo35 to 40.

•

tmts-

TOYOTA

94 TOYOTA TERCEL

VoL 21, No. 38

~:

..

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Air Conditioning, AMIFM

$13,995

cassette, loaded!

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94 TOYOTA COROLLA

Issue will give Children in violent homes Levies·
shadow
parks new life are often unseen victims
funding

$9537

Proposal generates support
from groups that rarely agree

93 FORD TEMPO GL

.
Driver's side air bag, V6,
loaded with equipment

By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Neglected
state and local parks could get a
face lift under a constitutional
amendment on Tuesday's statewide
ballot. Voters must decide if the
state should borrow money to do it
Gov. George Voinovich and
legislative leaders propose to create
a permanent mechanism for
improving state and local parks and
natural resources.
Neglected building mainte·
n:ince, pollution prevention, flood
control and other projects are targets of the only statewide issue on
the halloL
· For state pari&lt; visitors, the proposal might mean being able to use
modem flush toilets instead of old·
fashioned pit I.atrines, or camp·
gfll!lllds equipped,~th electricity.
. Local park patrons can look for·
:wm:d' to a new source of maiChing
'grants to develop or expand com·
mWJity parlc:s and l'i:Crealion.
All of it, supporters insist, with·
out an increase in ta'xes.
The proposal has generated
unusually wide support, bringing
together individul!IS and groups
who seldom agree.
For example, the Ohio Environ·
mental Council, a consistent critic
of Voinovich's performance on
environmental matters, nonetheless
backs his parks proposal. Evcn the
Ohio AFL-CIO and the Ohio Manufacturers Association see eye-toeye.
"What we're talking about here
is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to protect, actively and aggressively, these resources lbal arc so
~ital'lo the state," said Donald Van
Meter, public relations consultant
for Ohtoans For Our Parks and
Natural Resources.
The problem is that buildings in
most of the state's 72 parks and 19
state forests need repair and renovation after more than 25 years of
heavy use.
"We have 32 dams in this state

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94 TOYOTA CAM RY LE

94 FORD TAURUS

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93 OLDS .CIERA

16 Secdon 111 Pages
A lluntmedta Inc. nowopaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 31, 1993

Copyrlghlocl1013

93 FORD E·150 CONVERSIONS

$14,495

that have deteriorated to the point
that they are on the verge of .
becoming serious threats to down·
stream homes and other properties." Van Meter said.
The amendment would allow
the state to borrow $50 million a
year. No more than $200 million in
debt could be outstanding at any
time.
Bonds sold to raise the money
would be paid off with about $20
million a year from existing taxes.
Of the fast $200 minion raised,
$160 million will be used to
improve the state system, while
$40 million will be distributed to
local governments.
The Qnly organized opposition ·
has come from Ohioans for
Responsible Government, a group
with fewer than 100 members
headed by Rlcliaid Sheir of Columbus. ·
'
·
·
Sheir said about half the projects the state is contemplating
could be paid from increased park
user fees or charging concessionaires more to do business in the
parks.
He criticized legislators for
spending money that cou ld have
been used for parks to finance spe·
ciallocal projects such as the Gateway sports complex in Cleveland.
Sheir portrayed the proposal as a
question of priorities between parks
and schools.
"We're asked to vote on a park
issue that would increase the dining
hall in Maumee State Lodge ... for
$1 million. And yet we do nothing
for the elementary schools in rural
Ohio," he said.
I' Van Meter dismissed the com·
parison during a recent joint
appearance with Sheir before the
Columbus Metropolitan Club. He
said the parks plan would cost
about $20 million a year.
"That represents a little bit less
than four-tenths of I percent of
Ohio's annual appropriation for
education. II is a drop in the buck·
e~" Van Meter said.

By LISA PETERSON
out." she said. "while liule girls tend 10 internalize."
Times-Sentinel Staff
It may be due to who they are identifying with in the
He comes home from work and there she is, talking · violent sirualion.
on the phone, again. Knowing she has no phone
Teenagers often express anger and become physiprivileges she quickly says goodbye and places the cally abusive towards the mother.
receiver in its cradle.
Malcom Nichols a therapist at Woodland Centers
Amoment 100 late, the shouting begins followed by Inc., a local mental health center, attributes this 10 a
pushing and progressing 10 punching.
learned behavior. "Children wiU handle stress the
Across the room cowering in the comer is a lillie same way they see their parents handle it, by lashing
boy who wiiJlesses this violence and degradation.
out." he said. '"They pick up the same traits even
The effects of this scene may have an impact that though they may sympathize (with the mother)."
could span his entire life.
OveraU the emotional and physical abuse results
While this scenario is fictitious chances are it has in low self-esteem, poor social skills and a lack of
been a reality for many children in Meigs and Gallia trust of society in general, he said.
Counties. The Serenity House, a haven for victims of
"They feel isolated and different from people and
domestic violence, can · attest 10
have feelings of persecution."
Zivney agrees. "They
that.
have a fragmented or incom·
Sixtypen:enlofthewomenwho
rill' 1.1111111 I Snin
plete sense of self." she said. "In
seell refuge in the Serenity House
adults
it is what is manifested as
bring children with them, accorda multiple personality."
ing 10 Director Hilda Tirado.
These behaviors are a cry
"Children in a domestic viofor help. Children are not
lence siruation are generally con·
'"v'JOI .ENCE
equipped with the tools to handle
sideredappendagesofthemother,"
the hostile environments they
Tirado said.
are submerged in.
These children are seriously af.
"They are trying to teD
fected. They exhibit dysfunctional
people they·arein trouble by the
beha.vior.-and-suffer" retanlelJ development varying with their age
way they behave," Zivney said.
COMMUNITY
"The child's behavior is only a
and the length of exposure 10 the
symptom of the whole problem
hostile situation.
(domestic violence)."
Libby Zivney, a psychological
Nichols states, if a child
assistant at Althof and Associates,
a local counseling clinic, stresses that a child that is in is referred to him for behavioral problems it is usually
indicative of a deeper threat, and he will auiOmatia hostile home at any age is damaged.
cally seek out signs of abuse.
Reactions to abuse
Biggest problem: neglect
If a child is very young, preschool for example, she
said, there may be a delay in emotional development.
Both emotional and physical abuse will evoke
They may transgress to sucking their thumb, bed these types of behavior in yoWJg domestic violence
welling, or they may even quit speaking.
victims.
The first and most identifiable fonn is physically
School-age children generally exhibit unruly aggressive behavior, she said. "Lillie boys tend 10 lashContinued on A·2

DOMESTIC

IN OUR

Law would tighten arrest procedure
when they feel a crime has been commiued.
By JAMES LONG
It passed the house with a vote of96-0 in July and
Times-Sentinel News Staff
Stories in the Daily Tribune and Semine/ this is expected to be in senate hearings through Novemweek have shown that police. judges and victims ber, according to state sources in Columbus.
"This bill is a vitally important f1rs1step toward
are refusing to tolerate domestic violence. State
eradicating domestic violence," Sutton said after her
lawmakers want them to get even tougher.
House Bill 394, introduced this summer by bill passed the house this summer. "It establishes a
State Rep. Betty Sutton (Barberton), strengthens statewide law enforcement policy under which ofdomestic violence arrest laws - essentially forc- fenders wiD no longer be able to avoid arrest and
ing law enf01;cement officers to arrest abusers
Continued on A-2

litigation
By JOHN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS - Voters face
239 school money issues Tuesday
in an election held against the
backdrop of a trial that challenges
the state system of financing education.
The Ohio Depanment of Education said 102 property tax levies
would provide districts with money
to finance daily operations.
Another 65 levies and 42 bond
issues would suppoit school construction projects, while 29 districts
are proposing school district
income taxes.
Not all the issues would renew
or raise levies. A millage reduction
plan is at stake in the Three Rivers
district.. Harni110n County.
The election coincides with the
second week of a trial in Perry
County common pleas-court of a
lawsuit that wants the current state
funding system declared unconsti·
tutional.
Primary and secondary educa·
tion is financed through a combination of state, local and federal
taXes.
Local taxes provided 52.2 percent of school money in fiscal year
1992. The state provided 42.1 percent, and 5. 7 percent was from the
federal government
Local money comes mainly
fro m taxes on real estate and from
school di stri ct personal income
taxes.
State money comes from pan of
the general revenue fund, the
account into which perso nal
income, sa les and other tax pro ·
cceds are placed, and from th e
Ohio Lottery.
The Ohio Coalition for Equity
and Adequacy of School Funding
contends on behalf of 500 districts
statewide that the system is structurally flawed.
Districts that lack valuable property must impose far higher tax
rates to raise the same amount of
money that wealthy systems
receive from the identical level of
taxation.

Voters to decide levies, local offices in Tuesday's election
GM·TOYOTA LOCATION
WAS

NOW

90 Olds 98 RegeiiCJ llralgham .... .. $13,995 St2,898 ,
92 Sltum SL 2 Sldaft.. ........ .. .$12,995 $11,888
90 Teyt!J ClnHy LE, V6 .......... $11,995 $10,888
$8888
hllliaC Stllblnh ............... $10,995
IIIIIs Cullm Sullllmt .. •...... .. $16,995 .,4,888
Oldl 11111188. '.' ........ ' .... $17,9,95 .,.,888 '
13 hlitiiC Sdlld Prix tE ........... $15,995 ·at4,8&amp;15 •
13 Cldllc Sedan DeVIe .. ........ $26,995 .,.3,1815
11 ACUII LileM LS .... .......... $26,995 sa3,1I.S

~-

,.
'

TRUCKS AND VANS

FORD LINCOLN-MERCURY LOCATION
WAS

'

89 Pontiac LeMans SE .. . .. .. . .. . ..
85 Mercury tapri, one owner . . . . . .
91 Font Taurus GL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
87 Mercury Grand Maflluls . . . . . . . . . .
87 Nlssan Senlfl : ............ : . ..
86 Olds Cullass S~~p~eme . .. . .'. .. .. .
88 Olds Ciera . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. ..
87 Mercury T•z : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
86 Fonl EICIII. Waton .. .. .. .. .. .. .
.

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NOW

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WAS

NOW

90 6MC Safari Canvlrison Van .. . . .. $12,995 $11,8815
S8888
86 C~evy C-20 4x4 rtckup . . . . . . . . . . $7995

14 Chevy C·1lPickup, automatic . . . $6995
81 Chevy llllzer; full size 4x4 . . . . . $8995
81 ~ CGn1111ioR Van ·. . . . . . . . . . . . $8495
16.Ford Conwersio" Van . . . . . . . . . . . . $6995
91 Chevy S·10 Pickup, 7000 miles .$10,495
-14' Ford f·150 4x2.:' ... . ........... $3995

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1

"Unlls ,aub jectlo pri or sale and credil approval.
All l)riCft InClude applicable rebates and incentives

'

"

•

•

Senior levy sought in Meigs

Judge race Gallia's highlight

By CHA,RLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Village and
township officials and board of
education· members will be elected
and the fate of ei¥hl levies will be
d~ided when Metgs County voters
go to the polls Tuesday.
The polls will he open from
6:3010 7:30p.m.
The only levy 10 be voted on
county-wide is the 1-mill, five-year
tax iss~;~e r~quested. for .l!royiding
and mamtammg semor ctttzens services. That levy, based on current
property valuation, will generate
$235,421 a year.
Funds from the levy, if passed.
will be used to supplement federal ,
state and local monies already
going into senior citizen programs.
Rutland Village will have two
levies on the ballot. Otie is an addi·
tiona! 2.9 mills for current expens·
es for five YCllfS, •nd the other a
permissive tax, .which is listed as
an additonal tax of $5· per motor
vehicle, to be used for repairing
roads and bridges in the village.
Fire levies on the ballot include:
• Scipio Township, a replacement tax of2 mlllf'for five years.
• Rutland Township, an renewal
of .3 miD for live years.
· • Chester Township. a replacement of I mill for five years. ·
• Pomeroy Village, a replacement of I mill for five years. ,
. • Mid9leport ViUage, a replace-

GALLIPOLIS- It may be an
off-year election, but Gallia County
voters will have a variety of choices to make when they go to the
polls Tuesday.
An election to choose a lodge
for the Gallipolis Municipal Coon,
as w~l as seats on the Gallia County LOcal and Gallipolis City boards
of education, in addition to township trustee and village council
races, are to be decided. A levy for
the Gallipo~s City Schools, township fire protection tax issues and a
local alcohol sales option for Rio
GrandearealsoontheballoL
Polls in a11·36 precincts open at
6:30 a.m. and close at 7:30 p.m.
Board of Elections officials said
the only change in polling places in
this election will be for Gallipolis
1-A, where voters will casl their
ballots at the Conner Chuck Collier
Auto Service building at Third
Avenue and Court Street
WilliamS. Medley, appointed to
fill the vacancy on the Municipal
Court bench earlier ·this year by
Gov. George Voinovich, is seeking
a six-year tenn as judge and is run·
~ing on the Republ!can. ticket. He
ts opposed by Galhpohs attorney
and f~er Gal~a County Common
Pleas Judge Rtchard C. Rodeqck
.
Jr., a De~ocrat.
Three mcumbents on the Gallia ,
Local board - Jo~n R: Fellure,
Steve J,agers and Phtl Sktdmore are seeking re-election. FC4lure is

j

'

ment of I mill for five years.
•
Village SealS
Each of the five villages will be
electing four people to fiU council
scats.
The candidates in Rutland from
which the four will be elected are
Judy Denney, Gladys Barker,
Danny Davis, Stephen Jenkins,
Warren Jerry Black and Duane 0.
Weber.
In Racine, council candidates
are Gary K. WiUford, Larry Wolfe,
Alfred H. Lyons, Robert Beegle,
Dale E. Hart, Phebe Robens, J utie
Randolph and Douglas Reese.
Racine will also be electing a
mayor for an unexpired term and
the candidates are Orland Lee
Floyd and Jeffrey L. Thornton.
Jimmie Snodgrass and John C.
Holman are running for the single
seat on the the Board of Public
Affairs.
Candidates for Syracuse Council are Larry W. Lavender, Eber 0.
Pickens, Donald C. Shaffer and
Kathryn Crow. Gordon Winebrenncr is seeking another term on the
Board of Public Affairs.
Racine, Rutland and Syracuse
are all non-partisan contests;
In Middleport, lhe candidates
are Robert Gilmore, Dewey Hor·
ton, Michael Childs and Paul Ger·
ard, aU Republicans.
Running for the foor open seats
on Pomeroy Village Council are
George Wright, John ~usser,
I

•

·
PUBLIC TEST -Ballot countlna equipment was given a
practice run Friday In preparation for Tuesday's election. Here,
Rita Smith; director of the Mel as County Board or Elec:tlons,
watches tlae bii!Iot counter 10 through its paces as Henry Well, a
member ol the lloard, looks on.
• A,

Thomas Werry, and William
Younl!. Retlublicans, and Larry
Wehnlng, DemocraL
'fowuslllp Trustees
Two uustees .will be elected in
each of the 12 townships, with
Chester and Salem also to fill unex·
pired tc:nns. Candida~s are:
Bedford - Robert F. Hawk,

Virgil C. King, Dale F. Brickles,
John E. Martin Sr., and William
Charles Cook.
Chester - Full term, James B.
Hawthorne, Oris L. Smith, Gary R.
DiU, G. Alfred Wolfe, Blair Win·
don and Roger Hayman; unexpired
term, Elmer C. NeweU and Freder(Contin";l!d on A· l)

I·

com pleting his first term on the
board and Skidmore his second,
while Jagers is completing an
unexpired term.
Challenging them are Billey L.
Halley. Mel Carter, David Mills
and Roger Schultz.
For the Gallipolis City board,
incumbents Joan E. Schmidt and
Dr. Timothy V. Kyger are up for
re-election . Mrs. Schmidt is seek·
ing a founh tenn on the board and
Kyger is completing an unexpired
term.
They are challenged by Edward
M. Vollborn, Lynn E. An gell,
Sharon W. Yates and Brad Yoho.
Only three people filed in April
for the three open seats on the Gal·
lipolis City Commission and will
receive complimentary votes Tuesday. The seats will be filled by
incumbent Carol P. O'Rourke, for·
mer city commissioner Dow w.
Saunders and Celestine M. Skinner.
Saunders and Skinner will replace
Wilma Brown and John Taylor,
who chose not to seek re-election.
Tax issues, option
Tax issues facing voters include
a 7.5-mill operating levy for the
Gallipolis City Schools; a 1-mill
renewal of the ftre protection levy
for Harrison Townshil'; renewal of
a seven-tenths of a mtU ftre protec·
tion levy for Raccoon Township;
and renewal of a 1-miU rue protec·
tion levy for Springfield Township.
(Continued qn A·2)

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

Page-A2-svnday nmes

.;:The unseen victims __

eon_tinu_edrro_m_pallie_A·_•- - - - ' - - - - - - -

abuse. But children are also damaged
by verbal abuse and witnessing conflicts between the heads of the house.
"A lot of women don'tconnect it.
Tirado said. Because the perpetrator
smacks them they think the children ·
are not affected, but they are, she
said.
However, Tirado feels the biggest
problem is neglecL Many of the mothers are so involved with their own
plight !hey neglect lhe basic needs of
the children.
. "A child can recover from being
· hit but not from nobody paying attention to them day after day," she said.
Stopping the cycle
Unless this continual persecution
is halted the aggressive and violent
responses these children display will
continue.
The effect is called an
intergenerational transmission processorin layman 'sterms,childabusers breed child abusers or violent
• . adults.
According to Nichols, "eighty
:··
: : : · percent of violent juvenile offenders
: and adult prisoners came from homes
; in which domestic violence oc. curred." They will display the same
traits, he said.
The key to stopping this cycle is
mtervention. A mother leaving the
hostile environment wilh her chi!-

dren is a first step.
The healing process can be seen
within a week after arrival at the
Serenity House, Tirado said.
"The children open up, their personalities unfold and they begin to
laugh.It's because they have structure, no tensions. people who are
always available to listen and they
feel safe."
Though intervention at childhood
can stop the intergenerational process at its roots, it is never too late.
"As for a point of no return for
rehabilitating someone," says
Nichols, "people are capable of
changinganytimewithinalifespan."
Lives affected
(Editor's note: the names or the
people in the following story have
been changed to protect their identity.)
"
Candice a domestic violent victim
of Gallipolis, left her abuser, David,
three years ago after 23 years.
The abuse began for her with her
first pregnancy and continued for the
remainder of their rocky marriage.
Shehasthreechildren,Leslie,26,
Kyle, 24 and Kirby, 17 who endured
the abuse with her.
Her husband, a prominent businessman in the community, physically and verbally abused her, the
children and even the family pel.

Theeffectsoftheprolongedabusive situation are evidenl in all three
of her children to some degn:e.
Leslie has lost eight jobs since
her graduation from school; Kyle is
currently seeking therapy for a violenttemperlhatdrovehimtobea!his
mother twice. And Kirby, though a
healthy high school srudent excelling in social and academic activities, suffers fonn low self-esteem.
The discrepancies in the damage
the children sustained is due in part
to the len~th of their exposure and
their sex.
From lhe very beginning David
didn't want Leslie, Candice said.'
He has an extreme hatred for
women that extended to his own
daughter. Being the .oldest she was
subjected to the violence the longest
and oflhe three children is the most
severely affected.
.
Kyle is now recovering from his
traumatic childhood but at one point
displayed the traits characteristic of
a male child involved in a domestic
violence situation.
He blamed his mother for his
father's abusive behavior and resortedtophysicalviolenceasameans
of handling h~ own stress.
"He began to hit me and Leslie,"
Candice said. "Hisjustillcation was
you're my mother I can do anything

to you I want," she said.
"That was one reason I felt I had
to leave - he was picking up the
same characteristics as his dad."
When she galhered the courage
to leave he was unsupportive.
"Kyle thought it was horrible that
I was leaving him (David). He told
me if you leave him I'll tell everybody he didn't hit you," she said.
Now he realizes these responses
were learned from his father and is
successfully recovering through
therapy, she said.
·
Kirby, being the youngest when
the violence occUJTed, is the most
well adapted of the children.
At lhe time the abuse was occurring he recognized the danger his
father presented and begged Candice
to leave.
"He had an advantage. He saw
how the other two t;urned out and
didn't want to be like that," she said.
And he isn'tlike that. He is successful in school, participates in
sports and is well adjusted socially.
He has put that period of his life
behind him, Candice said.
Candice is doing the same, although ~he admits lhe guilt is always
with her. "I carry it around with me
every day," she said. "He took away
our identity. You know I don'teven
know my children's favorite color."

Haitian military still defiant of U.N. directives
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) appoint a new governmenL
. Even so, pro-army leaders
• · tide was to return to Haiti UN opposed to lhe exiled president's
• ·
' : ·
1 th bel' ed th
off1C1als strug~led to keep ahve return made c ear ey 1ev
e
plans for restonng democracy and U.N.-brokercd accord was clead.
. warn ed the army agamst
. lr)lmg
.. to
More troops than usu al patroIIed
(Continued from A-l)
•. ~ On the day Jean-Bertrand Aris-

u.
•••
Judge Pnce

h

'

-

t e streetsFnday mghL
. R~ynold Georges, hea~ of lhe
nghust Alliance for the L1berauon
f Hati 'd ·
rad'10 1- te .
?. we 1WI•.sa11 't e1101 CaP nme
·
Mn r--:letw,
IBIS we
er
Robert) Mal val in advance that
·

1

Voters in Rio Grande Precinct
- which covers the viUage of Rio
Grande - will decide for or
against approval of alcohol sales in
the village.
Township trustees
Candidates seeking election as
township trusrees include:
- Add1son - Wayne Russell,
Richard Sisson, James Brian Tucker, Fred Burnett and Charles E.
Martin.
Cheshire - Michael R. Conkle
and Roy K. Handley.
Clay - Thomas R. Call, Jerry
L. Haner, Michael Ray Sanders,
David A. Clagg, Donald Ray
Slone, Bill E. Angell, Sherri C.
Baughman and Connie Hemphill.
Ga!Upolis - Gary T. Bane and

Clyde D. BurnetL
Green - Mark S. Mooney,
Tom F. Woodward and Tony L.
Beck.
Greenfield- Henry M. Bartels,
Charles E. Chambers, Keith Allen
Harter, Steven A. Kiser, Don Douglas Lester, Henry D. Sheline,
Ernie D. Simpson, Benjamin F.
Woolum, Leo Carter and James E.
Walker.
Guyan -Roger A. Watson,
Gary R. Woodall, Carl B. Waugh,
Everett 0. Montgomery Jr., Lewis
Sheets and Thomas Watson.
Harrison - Margaret Adkins,
Delbart Cisco. Carl L. Randolph,
Albert L. Saunders, and Ronald
Slone.
Huntington - Jessie J. Collins.

Senior levy... _l_co_nt_in_ued_r_ro_m_A_·•:....&gt;_ __
ick Milton Tuule.
1.0. ·McCoy was the only candidate
Columbia - Granville Stout, to me for the unexpried term. FilTruman L. Grim, Don Cheadle, ing for full terms were Howard
Carrol Woodgerd and Bert Chris- Caldwell, Patsy A. Thoma, Bill
tiari.
Quickel, Robert Barton and
Lebanon -Eugene G. Long, Jeanette Thomas.
Elson R. Dailey. Harry Richard.
Both Eastern and Meigs Local
Don Rose and Robert E. Burdine.
Boards of Education have two seats
Letart - Carl Robinson, Don R. to be r.Jled.
Hill, Michael L. Roush and W.
Candidates for the Eastern board
Dave Graham.
are C. Patrick Barringer. Meuilee
Olive - Chester Wells, Larry Bryant, James R. Smith and J. Greg
E. Baker, Ernest Barringer, David Bailey.
L. Weber, Royal Wilson, John SutThe Meigs Local candidates are
tie and William R. Osborne.
Larry W. Rupe, Scott Walton and
Orange - Bermy F. Upton Jr., Brenda Phalin.
Randy Fryar and Roger Ritchie.
Candidates for the Southern
Rutland- Bob Williams, Oshel Local Board of Education arc
D. Edwards, Lucille Oliver, Nellie Marty Morarity, J. Susie Grueser
Haggy, Charles E. Wiliamson and _and C.T. Chapman.
Charles Barreu Jr.
Salem -Stanley Hutton. David
R. Crittenden, Cecil L. Stacy and
Harold Dannie Lambert, full term;
Clarence E. Might and Richard L.
Continued from A-1
Lambert, unexpired term.
Salisbury - Bernard D. Gilkey. prosecution simply because they are
· Edward W. Durst, Larry R. related to or domestically involved
with the victims of their crimes."
Thomas and Nathan Biggs.
If passed, the legislation will reScipio - Harold D. Graham.
quire
officers to:
Eugene Phillips, Betty J. Bishop
•arrest
abusers when they have
and Bobby R. Arnold.
reason
to
believe
a crime has been
Sutton - Kenneth Wiggins,
· Kenneth R. Guinther, Grover commiued.
•treat acts of domestic violence as
: Salser, Don P. Smith, Ralph J.
: Harden, Otis F. Knopp and James criminal conduct and not discourage
victims from pressing charges.
· Carnahan.
· ·
Sebool Board
•infonn victims that temporary
. Three full terms and one unex- protection orders are available and
piied term will be filled on the give them the phone number of a
Meigs County Board of Education. domestic violence shelter in the area.
•prepare a written report of the
_.JtltbaV 1rmus ~ jteldiltel: alleged crime which documents the

Charles R. Easter, James P:
Gilbert, Kelly Marcum, Flem
Meade, Bill L. Petrie, AJ. Raines
and Michael Marcum.
Morgan - Clarence R. Hash,
Jeffrey Hollanbaugh and Samuel
0. Kemper.
Ohio - Charles M. Martin,
James E. Swindler and Frank A.
Mooney.
Perry - Larry A. Fallon and
Gerald "Jefr' Pope.
Raccoon - Dwight L. Rees,
Charles W. Williams Jr., Richard
Holbrook, Sandy L. Roberts and
Steven R. Swords.
.
Springfield -John R. DeLillc,
William H. Saunders, Eugene
Stevens and Scott Howell (writein).
Walnut- Jefferson M. Baker.
Danny Hall, Donald R. Spurlock,
Randy G. Stanley, Wanda Hively
and Richard L. Ingles.
Villa~e Council
Those seekmg village council
seats are:
Centerville - Connie Jean
Miller, Virginia Ann Daniels,
Robert Terry and Eugene Layton
(write-in).
Cheshire - Herbert L. Clarke,
James R. Neal and Robert W.
McClaskey.
Crown City - Samp Johnson,
Jeffrey Todd Rankin, Herman
Rossiter and Tom White. ·
Rio Grande - Patty Weatherholt, Robert C. Blue, Wilma Rees
and Griff Cook Jr.
Vinton - Timothy C. Bickers,
Verna M. Easter, James L. Burris,
Jeannie Hampton and Marvin L.
Sallee.

wlll ha~.e a new government on
Sunday.
.
. .
Malva! appomted by AnsUde
heads a tr:insition Cabinet that w~
' the,pres1dent's
.
to prepare .or
return
Saturday. Malval_s government has
been powerless 10 face of armybacked terrorism and assassinations, including that of the justice
minister.
"The political class is more and
more in favor of closing off the
ne~otiations" for Aristide's return,
sa1d Hubert de Ronceray, who
heads a11other rightist party that
advocates new elections.

Sunday, OcL 31

Vexed Clinton revs up NAFTA pitch

Accu-Weather• forecast for

...

.. .•..
•

••

•lcolumbusl36'

I

W.VA.

C1993 Accu·Weather, lne.

Snow in immediate forecast
By The Associated Press
Sunday, occasional snow most
places, possibly mixed with rain in
the southeast. Highs 35 to 40.
Extended Forecast
Monday-VVednesday

Monday, fair. Morning 'lows in
the 20s. Highs 40 to 45.
Tuesday, fair and warmer. Lows
25 to 30. Highs in the mid-50s. '
Wednesday, fair. Lows i·n ihe
30s. Highs 55 to 60.

Re·Eiect
LARRY A. fALLON
For
Perry Township Trustee
Your Vote &amp; Support Wul Be Appreciated
Pold For By T1le Condldlll LlrTY A. Folton, 11211 Sloto Rl. 141, Pllrtol, Olllo .tiG58

REFRIGEUTORS
•

-UNGES

as your preside t 'th' th bo
dersoftheUni n WI 10 e r- But we've got to read the agreemore ·obs an~h~taleS can create menL 1be agreement makes those
unless Jsomebod ~ghe~ mc~mes problems better, not worse. And
produce • • he ioldys ~ st we that's the other reasoo I'm for iL"
Gillette
razor Pm:'~~. ~~ '::u.~
Earlier the same day, Clinton
requires us 10 expand
presented a more lofty hne of
kets..
our mar- defense to another Boston crowd,
s'uch talk is aimed 5
1 1 at _the John F. ~nedy Ljbrary. He
countering the argumen~u:CC,1e1j__swd Kennedy s record Illustrates
organized critics - most notabl
the.~eed for NAFTA.
organized lahar and Ross Perot.!..
Jack Kennedy came home
that the trade agieement would hurt fro!" (the) Second_ World _War w1th
American workers and send 'obs a hfel~ng lesson. Amenca coul.~
south 10 lower-wage Mexico. ~uch no.t Wllh~raw from the world,
reasonin~ has been highly effective Ch?.1011 S81d.
in mobilizing grassrootS opposition
V(e must make clear to the
to the pact, which would create the Amencan P_COPle that our success
world's Jar~esttrading bloc by at home rehes on our engagement
removing vmual all barriers 10 abroad, that we must face our probtrade among the United States, lems at home and .reac~ out to the
Canada and Mexico.
world at the same ume.
Appealin~ directly to American
He offered NAFTA as a symbol
workers, Chnton told the Gillelle of America's duty to "reach out
crowd, "I understand the resent- rather than inward" and said
ments, the fears, the insecurities of Kennedy would have supported the
people, pn_&gt;bably a lot of them who pact ":ere_ he still in Congress.'
work w1thm 20 miles of this plant.
Ahgnmg Kennedy from the

Co.

·
•
gravewithN~Aranlclechane.
ln Wuh1nston, Sen. Ernest
Hollings, a Soudt Carolina Democrat who c:ampaipted fm Kennedy
in 1960, toot the ~oor ,of the ~enate 10 challenge Ointoo 1 assertiOn.
"I can tell~ cateaorically that he
would absolutely '!ave opposed it
(NAFTA) bcc!':1M It, does ~ represent chanse, HoUmgs S81d: .
And there w~~- no unammuy
even among the ~vmg mem~ or
the ~ennedy fam!ly, as was evtdenl
~urmg Chnton s speech at the
hbrary. .

As Clinton took note that Rep.
Joseph Kennedy SUpports the ~
pact, Sen. Edward K~nn_ed~ gn·
maced and held up h1s ue hkc; a
noose. The e\der Kennedy, w1th
s~n_g labor lies, has not taken a
positiOn on the pacL

Somali stabbed as troops raze houses
By MICHELLE FAUL
Associated Press VVrlter
MOGADISHU, Somalia _ An
American soldier threatened by a
stone-throwing crowd stabbed a
Somali man who was upset by the
bulldozin~ of houses to bu1ld a
road a military spokesman said
Sa~y.

Newly arrived Bradley fighting
vehicles Abrams Ml tanks and
howitzer; were to drive Saturday
down the road intended to divert
military traffi~ from hostile and
crowded southern Mogadishu.
Warlord Mohamed Farrah Aidid
has denounced the show of force
and warned it could provoke nervous Somalis.

NO REASONABLE OFFER .REI'VS.EDf

DISPOSALS

By NANCY BENAC
Assocl!ttedPressVVrlter
WASHINGTON - With lofty
words about America's role in the
world and straight tallt about the
ho~tom line ror workers, President
Clinton is heating up his late-starting campaign for the North American Free Trade AgreemenL
The president is wasing an
adrmttedly uphill effort 10 push the
three-nauon trade pact through a
reluctant Con~r.ess, . where
Democrats are gtvlng b 1m more
trouble than Repu~licans. A showdown House vote IS scheduled for
Nov. 17- a_nd Clinton says there
IS_ plenty of lime left to engineer a.
v1ctor~, calling the next 2-1/2
weeks 'an eternity."
Clinton wrapped up a threestate, two-day road trip Friday with
a visit to a Boston factory, where
he delivered a blunt argument that
workers stand to benefit under
NAFTA.
''I'm telling you, nothing I do

VVORKING FOR NAFTA- Presldnt Cllatoa spoke to
employees u1 tle Gillette mannfacturlag facUlty ID Soul)l Boston
Mass. Friday oa NAFfA. The president visited the plant following
the rededlcatloa of the Jolla F. Kennedy Librtll'y. (AP)

Sunny P!. Cloudy Cloudy .

leo

DRYERS

N~ation/World

October31,1993

OHIO Weather

LY!

Law takes tough stand
factual considerations used in determining whethe~ or not reasonable
grounds exist to arresL
Sutton said she feels that domestic
offenses are not always seen as true
crimes - by all that are involved.
"Domestic violence offenders are
criminals and they, like any other
violent criminals, are deserving of
serving time and laking up jail space,"
she said in July. "When law, this bill
will make it perfectly clear to offenders, law enforce~ent Qfflcers, prosecutors and victims that domestic
violence crimes will no longer be
tolerated without redress by the criminal justice system in the stateofOhio."

October 31, 1993

Army spokesman Col. Steve
Rausch said the Army would take
no action against the soldier, whom
he refused to identify. It was not
known if the Somali died.
The soldier was _with an engineenng company bu1lding tile road
from the port, Mogadishu's most
dangerous area, to the airport on
Thursday._ .
.
.
U.S. CIVIl affaus off1cers had
negotiated with families ~d elders
there to bulldoze II homes and
resettle t~e families in tin-roofed
houses built ISO yards away.
. Rausch said that while thiee soldiers were helping a familY. move,
a crowd of 45 to 50 SomaUs gath·
ered and began to throw stones.

Santa Ana winds diversion
give firefighters needed break
By MAURA REYNOLDS
Associated Press VVrlter
The whims of the weather
blessed rueflghters with an unexpected delay in the return of dreaded desert wind that fanned wildfires across Southern California.
Forecasters predicted hot Santa
Ana wind, gusting up to 40 mph,
would be back as early as Saturday,
then watched conditions change for
the better, delaying any return until
late Mondar or Tuesday.
''The htgh pressure area over
deserts in the Nevada- Utah area
that normally causes Santa Ana
winds is too far to the east, and it's
moving southeast and weakening, ••
said National Weather Service
forecaster James Ray.
"Today winds of I 0-15 mph
from the ocean will bring moisture
and lower temperatures to· some
fires," he said.
_That meant no alll!ravation of
already grueling conditions facing
firefighters, including some who
have worked for days with little
rcsL
Santa Ana wind, a seasonal con: dition common in Southern California, drove more than a dozen
fires that burned about 720 buildings and charred 152,000 acres of
timber and brush.
So far, rue crews doused four of
. the 13 scattered blazes that raged
. from the Mexican harder to Ventu: ra County, about 200 miles away.
Early damage estimates were put at
5330.9 million and rising.
. Some were only partially contained and the fire in the hills
. above Altadena seemed unstop. pable.
II might not be contained for
· days, and then · may not be fully
· extinguished until the wiJJter rains

set in, U.S. Forest Service officer
Tom -Harbour said. "And then
we 'II have mudslides," he said.
Some 25,000 people have been
displaced' and 62 firefighters and
civilians hurt by the ftres. Refugees
poured into shelters, some wearing
what few possessions they had,
while others fled to hotels, friends
and family.

THE LOOK THAT NEVER WEARS OUt

The soldiers fired warning shots.
A woman approached with a
large stone and a soldier held her
back. A Somali man then
approached the soldier from behind
and put his hand on his shoulder.
The soldier drew his knife and
stabbed the man, Rausch said.
The soldiers withdrew from the
crowd. Under U.N. guidelines,
peacekeepers can defend themselves if they feel threalened.

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Local
JVSD board approves substitute hiring
Sunday Times-Sentinel/A4

October 31, 1993
I

Middleport .
gets new
postmaster

RIO GRANDE - Personnel
actions dominated business at the
regular meeting of the Gallia-Jack·
son-Vinton Joint Vocational Board
of Education Oct. 26.
Employed as substitute teachers
for 1993-94 were John Boyd, Body
and Fender; Charles Bierhup Jr.,
Drafting Occupations; Kelly H.
Kaufer, Social Studies; and Mila
Raymond, Cosmetology.
Brittney King was hired as a ·
non-certified substitute secretary
for 1993-94, while Lisa Bentley

MIDDLEPORT- Rick Burcher was sworn in as Middleport
postmaster at ceremonies held
Wednesday allhe post office.
In Middleport to conduct the
swearing in ceremony was Lovell
McGee of Zanesville, post office
operations manager for 148 offices
in Ohio.
Butcher's career with the post
office began in Rutland in 1981 as
a rural substitule. In 1982 he lransfcrred 10 Pomeroy as a rural substitule carrier, lhen became a city car-

was employed on a contract ser·
· vices basis for data enuy.
In Adult Education, the board:
• Accepted the resignalion of
Richard Potts, Business/Computer
instructor, effective·Ocl. 26.
. • Approved the. following part·
t1me hourly appomtments: Betty
Adkins, Technical Assistance
Grant coordinator; John Arnold,
MRDD specialist; Suzanne Frazee,
business instructor; Roy Jones,
EMT Refresher; Emily Layne, food
worker; Patricia Reese. computer

EMS units respond to calls

rier.

SWEARING IN - Rick
Butcher, left, was sworn in as
Middleport postmaster in cere·
monies Wednesday at the Mid·
dleport Post Office by Lovell
McGee of Zanesville, post omce
operations manager.

In 1988 he was named acting
postmaster of Cheshire, and in
1989 was promoted to lhe postmaster position at Seaman. In 1990 he
went to Crown City as postmasrez,
and in 1992 was named lhe superintendent of postal operations in
Gallipolis. He served m that position until he was promoted to the
postmasler's position in Middleport
in July.
In conjunction wilh the swearing in ceremony, a customer appre·
ciation day was held at the post
office.
Butcher, a native of Gallia
County, resides in Gallipolis. He
has two daughters, Jill, 15, and

Cara, 10. He is a member of the
Plimero~ Masonic Lodge, York
Rite bodies, past president of Dis·
trict II. National Association of
Postmasters of the U. S., a past
state board member of the the
National League of Postmasters,
a!ld president of the board of Gallco workshop.

.---Tri -County.Briefs:____,
Woman a"estedfor DUI
GALLIPOLIS - A Bidwell woman was arresled for driving
undez lhe influence early Salurday, Gallia County sheriffs deputies
reported
.
Taken into cuStody was Ruth E. Welch, 37, 381 Buck Ridge
Road. She was pulled over for failing to maintain reasonable control
of her vehicle and law released on her own recognizance. .
Local aulhorilies arrested five others between Friday night and
early Saturday morning.
Jailed were Andrew W. Schoolcraft, 20, 938 Morgan Center
Road, Bidwell, by deputies for disorderly conduct; Mary L.
Nichols, 36, 1292 Kril)er Road, Gallipolis, by deputies for obstruc·
tion of justice; Cathy A. Stephens, 32, 46 Mill Creek Road, Gallipo·
lis, by lleputies for contempt of coun; and Otis R. Porter, 26, 553
Second Ave., on a municipal court ordered 20-day commitment for
:carrying a concealed weapon.
Taken intO custody was Angella F. Quillen, 29, Bidwell, by Gallipolis police for disordedy conduct. She was laler released on her
own recognizance.

Pile of leaves set on fire
GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis police and volunteer fuefighws are
investigating a leaf fire that was set on the curb of Second Avenue
Friday night
.
Officials were alerled by a driver who claimed to have seen a
man set the pile of leaves on fire. He said he was southbound on
Second Avenue when 1 man crl)ssed in front of him near the
enuance to Johnson's supermarket, stooped to light a pile of leaves
in front of a residence, and then went !Jack across the streeL
Fifteen-fuefighws arrived wilh one truck to extinguish the blaze.
Police and fire officials then went to 720 Second Ave., where the
witness claimed the anonist entered afler setting the fire. According
to the report, a man in lhe house mau:hed the description, but he ·
was not arrested because lhe witness was not present to give a posi·
tive identification.
Officials informed lhe man that a follow-up investigation would
take place.
.
The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department also assisted the
G'uyan ·Township Volunteer Fire Department in putting out a trash
fire Friday.
Two acres were burned of a dump owned by B.D. Halley, 1834
Kriner Road. Twelve ftrefighters with two trucks responded.

pOMEROY - Units of the · Thursday and early Friday.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
At 9:39a.m. Middleport went to
Services responded to five calls for Race Street for Jim Stanley who
assistance Friday and early Satur· was taken to VMH and taler transported to PVH; 5:34 p.m., Tuppers
day.
Units responding were: 10:07 Plains went to State Roule 681 for
a.m., Olive Township and Tuppers Vera Kreimer who was' 1ransported
Plains fire deparments to Brooks to St. Joseph's Hospital, ParkersRoad for a hayfield ftre at the Paul burg, W.Va.; 7:19p.m., Pomeroy
Brooks residence; 10:57 a.m., went to the Pomeroy went to the
Pomeroy to Starcher Street for Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilita·
James Pellegrino who was trans- tion Cenler for Octoca Ward who
ported to Vete111JJs Memorial Hos- was taJ&lt;en to VMH where she was
pital; 2:52 p.m., Racine to Main admitted; 9:42 p.m., Middleport
Street for Sam Williams who was was called to the Middleport marl- ·
transported to Pleasant Valley Hos- na, Page Street, for Christy Lynch
pital; 7; 36 p.m., Middleport to who was taken to VMH.
Friday at I :01 a.m., Middleport
South Second Street for Deborah
went
to Overbrook Center for
Henry who was transported to
Helena
Daniels who was taken to
l:jolzer Medical Center; 3:21 a.m.
VMH;
1:32
a.m .. Rutland went to
Saturday, Rutland to Meigs Mine
Carpenter
Hill
Road for Edward
No. 2 for Robert McCall who was
Makfinczah
who
was taken to
transported to O'Bieness Memorial
Holzer
Medical
Center;
7:42 a.m.,
Hospital.
Syracuse went to Portland Road for
Seven calls for assistance were Debra Henry who was taken to
answered by Meigs EMS units VMH.

Charges pending
POMEROY - Charges are
pending against three subjects for
the Thursday !heft from the property of William Amos on Douglas
Road, according to a Meigs County
Sheriffs Department report.
An old Diamond T stub nose
. truck was taken Thursday afternoon. Upon investigation, deputies
learned from neigbors lhat they had
seen a red and black pickup pulling
the stolen truck.--·
.
Later, the red and biack pickup
truck with three subjects were spot·
ted broken down on State Route 7.
They were ficked up for questioniog. Two o the subjects admitted
,the incident.
Names are being held pending
filing of charges.

company to minimize the dust generated by aggregate processing and
storage, roadways and parking
areas at its facility located a1 I099
State Route 7 in Addison Township.
The information session and
hearing will be at the Disabled
American Veterans Building in
Kanauga. The public information
session will begin at 6 p.m. and
will he followed by the hearing at
7.
According to the EPA, the draft
permit is a preliminary decision
and may be revised based Qn public
opinion. ·
Comments may be made at the
hearing or in Writing. Written comments should be submitted by 5
p.m. Nov. 17. to Ohio EPA, Hear- ·
ing Clerk, P.O. Box 1049, Colum- ·
bus, Ohio 43266·0149. ·The draft ·
permit and other related information can be reviewed at Ohio EPA
Southeast District Office, 2195
Front St., Logan, by first calling
(614) 385·8501.

••

DAYTON- Three teenagers remained hospitalized Friday after
they were found unconscious near a school, apparently overdosed
on alcohol and over-the-coun1er caffeine tablets.
. ~ean Snow, spokeswoman for Children's Medical Center, said
two 14-year-old boys were lisled in fair condition in lhe inlensivecare uniJ,. A 13-year-t&gt;ld boy was in good condition, she said.
Ms. Snow declined to rei~ the identities of the boys at the
request of their families.
· The boys, eighth-~rs at Studebaker Junior High School in
suburban Huber Heights, were apparently skipping classes 81 a park
near the schOQI, according to Superintendent Richard Burke.
·
Police Chief Michael D'Amico said officers found lhe boys
unconscious in a wooded area.
Ms. Snow said the boys were suffering from hypolhermia She
said they all had high levels of alcohol in their bloodstreams.

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Choice na"owed for president

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FAIRBORN- A commiuee searching to replace Paige Mulhollan as president of Wright Stale University has narrowed its choice
tQ three fmalists.
The panel said Thursday that lhe finalists are Dr. Kim Goldenberg, dean of Wright State's medical school; Blaine Browriell,
provost and vice president for academic affairs at the University of
North Texas; and Harley Flack, executive vice president and
provost at Rowan College of New Jersey.
The three men were selected from among nine nominees who
were inlerYiewed last weekend by the 21-member search committee.
Mulhollan plans to retire at the end of June, but has said he
would be willing to leave earlier if his successor were able to start
sooner.

''.

Officer pleads in assault case

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Harrison Twp. Trustee

'J

'&lt;'
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• Lived in Harrison Twp. for 42 years ·
• Dedicated to Harrison Twp.

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• Will serve you fairly!

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P-.1 for by C.~ Rondolph 4H7 T..,o Run Rd. Gl!lllpolt., OH 451131

•

LORAIN - A police officer has pleaded innocent to kicking a ·
:.. • • mllJllas other officers tried to handcuff the suspecled drunken driver.
Daniel Kulas, 24, pleaded innocent Friday to misdemeanor
""
assault. Kulas is accused of kicking Edward Gifford, 23, of Lorain
;-.
early Thursday as Gifford struggled with officers.
Kulas has been suspended with pay. He was arresled after a dis·
""
ciplinary hearing and released after posting $5,000 bail.
Gifford was charged with fleeing, driving while intoxicated,
••
resisting anrest and driving with fiCtitious plales. He was freed after
posting $2,500 bail .

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TIMOTHY V.

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KYGER

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Gallipolis City School Board

Shorter sentence nets opposition

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ELYRIA - The Lorain County prosecutor will oppose a shorter
scn1ence for a man convicled of killing a 17-year-old girl.
Jerry Lee Hayes, 31, was convicted of mllf((er in the 1986 slaying of Lori Taylor. She disappeared in March 1986, and her remains
were found four months later in Grafton Township.
Hayes was sentenced to 20 years to life in prison and will not be
eligible for parole until 2001. He asked for a reduced sentence, saying be has never been 'convicted of another serious crime and is a
good candidate for rehabilitation.
Prosecutor Greg White said Friday lhe court should not consider
the requesL "Generally speaking, there is no authority for the Common Pleas Court to modify a sentence," While said.

•'
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I have served on the Gallipolis City
School Board since September,1992, fill·
ing a vacant position. ·1 feel that quality
education Is very Important for our child·
ren and community.
My wife, Billie Sue, and I have two child·
ren. Timothy Is six years ~ld and In first
grade at Green Elementary. Lauren Is
three. I would appreciate your support In
Tuesday's election.
Sincerely Timothy V. Kyger

...."
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Hospital forced to plan layoffs .
. ~A VENNA - The 285-bed Robinson Memorial Hospital, hurt
by $3.4 million in reduced Medicare reimbursements, will cut 96 of
980 jobs in Oecember.
Ralph W. Kletzien, the hospital's president and chief executive
officer, said Frjday the acwal number of layoffs could be higher
because more than one part-time worker may be filling one fulltime position.
"We sincerely hope the average patient will see no effect,"
Kletzien said. "We are reorganizing responsibilities and functions
to minimize the effect.''

Paid for by candidate, 1881 St Rt 588, Galllpolll, Oh. 45831.

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City appeals lawn sign ruling
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GALLIPOLIS -Paul D. Mitchell, 39, Langsville, was ticketed
by Gallipolis police Friday for driving under the influence and hit
skip.

Cart of goods stolen from Hills

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RGVFD responds to brushjir,e
RIO GRANDE- The Rio. Grande Volunteer Fire Department
responded to a bruSh fare Thursday evening in Raccoon Township.
The fire, on property owned by Brenda Elkins, 229 Bandy Road,
Bidwell, burned hillf an acre and seven hay bales before it was
extinguished.
Fourteen firefighterS were at the scene with two trucks for more
than an hour and used 2,000 gallons of water to kill the blaze.
The probable cause was listed as a trash fire which got out of
contnil.
It was the 40th call of the year.
Editor's DOte: Names, ages and addresses are printed as tbey
appear 011 otr~eial reports.

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DIAMOND SALE

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THE1

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.....30% to 40'/o OFF On AI

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Wedding Bands I 0 &amp; 14K Gold
Closeout Salt on
141 Gold Chains
andlractleh
50% to 70% Discount

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Interest Rate

Tawney Jeweleu Inc.
4-46-1616 .
422 Second Avenue Galllpolll

Roderick

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•1 ,000 Minimum Deposit

PRINCETON, W.Va. (AP)Authorities continued !heir search
Friday for an Ohio ·man and three
others who escaped through a ceiling from the four .Mercer County
Jail.
1 Thomas Lee Workinan, Marcel
&gt;Meyers, Jason Hicks and Earl A.
~ Moore apparently escaped from
their cellbloCk through ceiling light
panels about 2 a.m. Thursday.
Sheriff Don Meadows said.
State police Sgt. R.A. Keaton in
Princeton said the sherifrs depart·
·ment was investigating the possi·
;bility that the four had been in
; Lashmeet, about I 0 miles west of
Pri
. ·nceton.
"We've had numerous sightings. It seems like they've been
sighled in a dozen different places
at lhe same lime," Kt:~~ton said.
"They've been out there all
night; beating the brush, looking
for those guys," Keaton said.
Meadows did not return telephone messages Friday .

r

,.,.,. Lottery numbers
,.

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

Pomeroy Office
Court &amp; Second Streets

"~

Rutland Office
Salem !)tree!

JUDGE

Whatever it takeS.
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Pllkl to, by Roclrllrlck for Judge CommltiH

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·.Evaluate Jib Quallfieatioru

Bank One, Athens, NA
Member FDIC
Penalty for earty withdrawal. M&amp;l!imum deposit of $99,999 per account. Interest rate and Ailnual Pen;entage Yield'
shown In effect as?' November 1, 1993. l~rest ra1e subject to change al rollover. Offer expjnaa Novem11er 30, j993.

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By The Associated Press
Here are the winning numbers in
Friday's Ohio and West Virginia
•' lottenes:
~
OHIO
~
Pick-3: 4-,8-6
::
Pick-4: 3-:z.J-8
~
Buckeye 5: 2-5·8-13-35
~
There was oiJe ticket sold nam~ ing all five numbeQ' drawn in Fri. ~ day's BuckeyeS drawing. The winning ticket, worih $100,000, was
sold in Painesville.
The Super Louo jackpot for Sat~ , urday was $16 miUion. ·
·~ .
WEST VIRGINIA
:
Daily 3: 0-3-8
Daily 4: 1-8-s-7
• ..,.. Cash ?.S: :\..8-t0-14-15-16
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a~Bsp...,.neef

Judge orders breather
in Monroe County talks
A judge excused negotiating
teams for a southeastern Ohio
school district from bargaining Saturday. Meanwhile, teachers in
another district have amended their
strike·notice.
Monroe County Comfllon Pleas
Judge George Burkhart had ordered
talKs between representatives of the
Switzerland of Ohio school board
and teachers to take place from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. daily except Sunday .
The district has 3,300 students and

2j51e8chers.

Board President Val Roxby said
he believes the judge gave the
teams the day off to allow the
union to consider a board offer presented Friday aflemoon.
The plan contains th~ same
insurance and _salary offers as past
proposals and would take effect
Monday, Roxby said. Any changes
would occur in the pact's second
and third years.
Union President Rita Wahers
said Friday the board withdrew
items from its latest offer which
had been agreed to earlier.
"We believed that we were
close on the issues, since we had
conceded a minimum of $120,000
in our insurance benefits package
in previous agreements," Ms. Walters said. "The other noneconomic
issues should have been resolved
quickly."
Roxby said those items were in
a proposal offered Wednesday. The
board said if teachers had_.$igned
the offer that day, it would make no
reprisals against teachers and pay
them for the time they were on
strike. But teachers declined that
offer.
In northwestern Ohio, strike·
related changes in the Napoleon
school district will begin Nov. 8,
said Virgil Bahls, president of tlie
Napoleon Faculty Association. He
declined Friday night to identify
the changes.
Superintendent Michael Russell
said teachers planned to strike from
10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. daily. Substi-

Ohioan among
jail escapees

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Elect

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
"The disruption to the indusuy,
- The Uniled Mine Worlcers and the em(lloyees and their familie s
lhe nation's largest coal operators and the communities involved
will stay at the bargaining table demands that everyone' s best
beginning next week until they end efforts be put forth toward achiev·
a 5 3/4-month-long strike, a federal ing that end," Usery said in Washmediaur said.
ington.
The strike has "lasted too
"I don't know that !here's much
long," said Bill Usery, a former to say. We will, of course, be
lahar secretary whom Labor Secre· there," said CONSOL Inc . Vice
tary Robert Reich appointed to President Tom Hoffman in Upper
resolve the dispule over job securi- St. Clair, Pa., spokesman for the
ty .
coal operators.
Talks broke off Oct. 22 after
UMW spokesman Jim Grossfeld
several lengthy sessions in Wash· called Usery· s announcement a
ington, D.C. Usery said Friday he · positive development.
was calling negotiators back
"Whenever bolh sides are taJJc •
· Wednesday and warned lhem "to ing, there is polential for an agreehe prepared to remain until a suc- ment to be reached," Grossfeld
cessful resolution can be said in Washington.
achieved."
In other strike news, a U.S. disThe UMW went on strike May trict judge in Charleston said Fri10 against selecled members of the day he will fine the UMW up to
Biwminous Coal Operators Associ- $85,000 a day if strikers violale his
ation. About 17.500 miners are on injunction against mass picketing
strike in seven stales.

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tutes will leach before and after the
period.
Teachers had been conducting
hair-day strikes.
The union had filed four unfair
labor practice chaq:es with the
State Employee Relabons Board.
The 134-member 1eachers union
said paychecks had been withheld
for seven full days and at least
three half-days of work.

and threa~ening management work-'
crs.
Judge Dennis Knapp also barred
six UMW members from the picket
lines for alleged threats or violence.
Knapp issued his injunct ion
Sept. 3. Natiooal Labor Relations
Board lawyers said they document·
ed at least 20 incidents of violence

afler the injunction was issued.
Grossfeld said UMW officials
had not reviewed Knapp's ruling
Friday evening.
Eastern Associaled Coal Corp.,
which frequently has accused the
UMW of picket·li~ viotc:nce. W!'S
pleased by Knapp s ruhng, sa1d
spokesman Mike Herron.

To the Voters In the Gallipolis City School
District&amp;:
Once again the Gallipolis City Board of
Education Is asking for a sizable tax levy for the
operation of the schools. In considering how you
vote with respect to this levy one needs to
consider the following:
1. Has the Board of Education and administration explored all available means of
resolving their "financial dilemma"? At this point
In time they have refused to discuss or explore
the feasibility of utilizing the large tax base that
exists In Gallla County. Through consolidation of
the county and city districts no new taxes would
be needed for operating expenses. Most likely
the city district taxpayers would be required to
pay less taxes.
2. Four years ago the voters In the city district
passed a six mill levy. What happened to the
funds generated from this levy? Approximately
90% of this new money was used for salary
Increases. Little, If any, found Its way Into the
classrooms for student use. We all know that
education salaries are low, and we would not
begrudge one of a salary Increase. But the board
and administration need to manage their funda
more effectively.
3. To the best of my knowledge It appears that
the district will have about an $800,000. In the
black balance at the end of this year. Is.there a
need for a 7,5 ml!!s? I believe not when the board
and administration saw fit to give salary
Increases of 3.5% this year and 2.5% next year to
Its employees. Once again they are deserving of
the money that they are paid, but If a district has
made cuts In educational programs, can they
Justify salary Increases while "crying wolfe" for
additional millage.
4. The concept that more money will make a
better school system so as to attract Industry to
the area appears to be a selfish Idea on the
behalf of some the city's "elite" leaders. What the
county needs to attract Industry Is a quality
educational system. We must remember that we
are Gallia County as a whole and not just the city
of Gallipolis. As of yet I have not seen "Joe
Farmer" or "Charlie Wage Earner" come out with
a public endorsement for the levy.
In conclusion If the board and administration
can demonstrate more effective leadership,
management, exploration of other alternatives for
bettering the educational opportunities for our
youth and the Improvement of Gallla county as a
whole, then the taxpayers should step forward
with their support of education.
ONE OF MANY CONCERNED CITIZENS
KEN HANER

will

17 SHOESTRING ROAD, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
Pd. lor by Kon Haner, 17 Showlring Rd., Gollipolio, Oh. 45631

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

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Low•t pricoo guoroniHd. · You
can"t •fford lo, a hop •nywhere

:Divorces granted

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EUCLID- The city of Euclid has appesled a federal judge's
decision striking down an ordinance banning lawn signs.
The appeal was filed Thursday. the same day lawyers for the
Cleveland Area Board of Realtors asked for more than $346,000 in
legal .expenses from the city.
Board lawyers asked U.S. District Court Judge Ann Aldrich to
award them $298,000 in legal fees and $43,000 in expenses. The
lawyers want another $5,000 for researching and writing the
motion.
Realtors sued in December, arguing that the law limiting the size
and placement of signs in residential neighborhoods was unconstitutional.
-The Associated Press

••

G/(LLIPOLIS -An ex-employee and her accomplice allegedly
wallced out of Hills Department Store Friday with a shopping cart
full of goods and did not pay for them.
According to a store manager, the woman was parked just outside the building, which enabled her to leave without being apprehended.
· In another theft incident, officials with Smith Buick-Pontiac,
1911 EasWn Ave .. reported th8l someone took the hubcaps from a
1989 Pontiac Sunbird Thursday night. The hubcaps arc valued at
S83each.

sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

Strike's longevity displeases mediator

By The Associated Pre511

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· Police cite one for DUI

. POMEROY • Four couple~ have
recently been granted divorces in
.. the Meigs County Court of Com•moo Pleas.
.·
• pivorced wore Kalhy J. R1tter·
• ' back from Robert L. Ri~terback,
• Belinda s. Gray from Vmcen! D.
Gray, Linda Capehart from
. William R. Capehart and June A.
• •Powers~ Robert F. Powers.

Teens hospitalized for overdose

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ELECT
CARL RANDOLPH

Comments sought on permit
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
will hold a public information session and a public hearing on Nov. 9
to accept comments on a dj'aft air
pollution control permit issued to
Jaymar Inc., Gallipolis.
The draft permit requires the

Ohio News in Brief:-

• Approved the program budgets
for EMT Refresher and Peace Offi.
ccr Training.
• Approved the employment of
Diane Hamilton, Business/Computcr. as a substitule reacher in the
Adult Services program for 199394.
·
• Approved Board Policy 3401,
Adult Instructor Salary Schedule,
as a second reading.
The board also granled perrnission to acupt the Technical Assistance Grant for Sex Equity, Single
ParentandDisplacedHomemaker.

instructor; Marl: Roush, computer
instructor; Melissa Staten, CSS
clerk; Tonia Slover, nurse
aidetrCEP program; Sheila White·
Icy, Elements of Mechanics; Etta
Williams, adult clerk; Betty
Adkins, Clyde Beasley, James
Howard. Shirley Jeffers, Mike
Martin, John Marshall, Linda Nibert, Clint Pauerson, John Pelers,
Dave Redecker, Gregory Shrader,
William Wells, Etta Williams and
John Yates, all peace officers;
William· Wells, pesce officer com·
mander.

Ohio/W. Va.

October31, 1993

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--- ------- --OFFER GOOD THRU NOVEMBER

1983

SOMETBlNG NEW!
Now at Carl's Shoe Store we
Juave added a new section in
the llae• of our store
We now haw
Basellall eards, Bas•etllall
eards, Footll,.ll cards•

�Commentary

October 31, 1993

October i)1 , 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A6

Work on NAFTA raises Kantor's stock
A Dtvialoa of

825 Third Avo., Gollipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-:1342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L WINGE'IT
Publlsber
HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
ControU.r

A MEMBER or The Associated Press, and the American
Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
publishe~ . Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
personalities.

Jobless woes will still
;be around for awhile

WASHINGTON- The real
comeback kid of the Clinton
administration may be U.S. Trade
Representative Mickey Kantor,
who is coordinating lhe administration's uphill bailie 10 win congressional passage of lhe Nonh American Free Trade Agreement. The
agreement may sink, but Kantor
has shined.
"The president thinks he (Kantor) has done an extraordinarily
good job," said one senior White
House offiCial. ''I lhink this guy is
very savvy. He's a Bob Strauss
kind of negotiala'. He knows how
to show people lheir self-interest.
He brings a lot of lhe skills of politics 10 lhe negotiating table.''
During a recent interview, Kantor was surprisingly measured for a
man who has been under constanl
rue from anli-NAFTA demagogues
such as Ross Perot. Yet Kanlor
resists matching Perot's panicmongering wilh what would be an
equally absurd claim lhat NAFTA
will be a panacea.
"We can't continue lhe status
quo with Mexico," says Kantor.
"The rules are stacked against
Ame(ican workers. This is what
confuses me about (lhe critics')
position. Why wouldn't you want
to change those and make them

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP S~dal Correspondent
WASHINGTON- President CliniOil's inlemational jobs summit has
. been put off until next year, but it can wait - nagging, chronic unem. ployment wiU still be lhere, a shared problem lhat can be politically per. ilous.
While the U.S. economy is improving, Clinton said lhe olher day, lhat
ucnd can't be assured in a global economy when other nations are lagging.
The jobs summil was proposed 10 deal wilh such questions lhis fall. It
Slill is planned, but delayed, probably until February.
• When it is held, the big seven finance and labor ministers who are 10
confer will be taking up issues lhat can lose and win elections, as in Canada and, indeed, in Clinwn's vicwry a year ago.
The president pointed .10 "lhe remarkable si~il~ties" betw~n h!s
1992 campaign and lhc 1ssues of Jean Chretien s L1beral landshde m
Canada last Monday. "People want a job-generating stralegy, and lhey
want ~deficit brought down,'' CliniOn said.
The conservative prime minisler whom Canadians defeated had
blamed a 11.2 percent unell)ployment lllle on world economic probleJI!S
beyond lhe control of any one govemmenL That may be good economtc
theory, but it is 1101 good politics. George Bush had said much the same
thing early in his losing 1992 campaign for a second term.
Bush also suffered politically for his optimistic appraisals of a slu~gish
economy, and lhat lesson isn't lost at lhe CliniOn White House, e1ther.
The economic growlh rale is up, and Clin10n said Thursday lhal "we arc
beginning 10 see real progress.''
At the same lime, be said !here's a lot more 10 be done 10 improve lhe
economy "in ways lhat average Americans can aciUally tell" are improving lheir lives.
The unemployment rate is 6.7 percenl, down a point since lhe 19901991 recession. But faciOry jobs are at lheir lowest point since lhe mid1960s, and Iong-tenn unemployment is a persistent problem. Congress
has been struggling for a monlh over a $1.1 billion extension of unemployment compensation 10 more lhan 1 million people who have used up
their 26 weeks of benefiiS and still don't have worlc. The hangup is about
how to pay for it wilhout worsen in~ lhe deficit, not whelher to do it.
Consumer confidence ratings climbed wilh Clin10n's election, but have
been slipping again in recent moilths, according 10 lhe Conference Board,
a New York organization lhat conduciS monlhly surveys.
Rupe and Rupettc, do you ever
Tha.t 's happened while the economic indicators have been improving, wonder why time
so fast and
but statistics aren't as convincing as what people see and hear every day, how the days and monlha pass so
. and CliniOn acknowledges lhat lhe economy isn't working well enough 10 rapidly? It is doubtful whethea' you
·. satisfy many Americans.
can tell what you did on a given
The president also said that despite lhe improving U.S. economy,long day unless it was a holiday or spetcnn recovery can't be guaranteed in a global economy wilh "very slow cial event. In short, Father Time
growlh 10 no growlh in Ewope," where unemployment is more severe, · has a way or passing quickly and it
and problems in Japan.
is little wonder that we forget
That's where lhc jobs summit would fit. Proposing it last summer at where we were or what we were
1he economic summit in Tokyo, Clin10n said lhe induslrial democracies doing on any given dale. The purhave to find ways back 10 work for people left behind in lhc new world pose or this column is 10 have time
economy. The Tokyo ~ummit leaders a~ and it was 10. have been held pass slower than nonnal in order
in die United States m November. The wm, Chn10n said then, was to that we can enjoy our remaining
search for causes and answers 10 stubbornly high unemploymenL
days and nij!hiS more fully.
Olher problems 100k precedence, lhough, and it has been crowded off
After lhinking about this matter
the calendar until next year. Clmton had been concerned lhat he might be for a long ~od of time and confquhcd for the delay, but lhat hasn't happened. It's not an action confer- sulting a friend, who is a Sllldent of
ence anyhow, except in the sense lhat talking aboullhe common problem Einstein, and my chief malhematiis aclion of a son.
cian, Abbie Stratton, we have
" It is fatuOus 10 lhinlc lhat any significanl advances are going to decided to increase each hour of
comc"out of a brief meeting of busy political officials already heavily the day by adding 20 minutes 10 it.
commiued 10 specific policies," says Herbert Stein, lhe Republican eco- This surely will slow down time
nomic elder and presidential adviser. Even so, Stein sees potential bene- somewhat because in the average
fits in the effort.
day you will have 1920 minutes ·
Stein writing in "The American Emerprise," said such a conference instead of 1440. As a result each
could ~gin a _valua~lc, I~g-lel_m I~ a1 lhe impacl and lessons of eco- day would pass at a slower rate. To
nomic and social policies m lhe •ndustnal states.
begin our new calendar, for all my
They won't answer lhe questions, he said. "But lhey could advance readers who feel time is going 100
our understanding a biL"
.
quickly, we submit lhe following:
For the years 1994 through the
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colum- year 2000, commencing at midnist for The ' Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and night on December 31, 1993, our
··national polities for more than 30 years.
first New Year's Day would last
until 8 a. m. on January 2, 1994.
New Year's Day in 1995 would be
from May at 4 p. m lhrough May 3
at midnight. New Year's Day in
1996 would be from 4 p. m. on
.
By The Associated Press
August
28 to August 29 at midToday is Sunday, OcL 31, the 3041h day of 1993. There are 6I days night; 1997
New Year's Day would
left in the year. Thts is Halloween. Daylight-Saving Time ended at 2 a.m. begin at midnight on December 29,
locally; clocks should have gone baclc one hour.
1997. At Ibis point we see lhat we
Today's Highlight in Hiswry:
have
slowed down time because
On Oct. 31. 1517, Manin Lulher posted lhe 95 Theses on lhe door of New Year's
Day in 1997 is almost
the Wittenberg Palace church, marlcing lhc start of lhe Protestant Refpr- a year late arriving. New Year's
• mation in GenD811y.
Day in I999 would begin at midOn this date:
night on April 301h and end at 8am
In 1795, English poet John KeaiS was born in London.
on
May 2. In lhe year 2000 New
In 1864 Nevada became lhe 361h state.
Y
car's
Day would be celebrated
In 1887; Nationalist Chinese leader Chiang Kai-shek was born in from August
29 11 4 p. m. lhrough
: Chekiang Province.
August 30 at midnight. There
'. In 1926, mqician Hairy Houdini dio:d in Detroit of gangrene and peri- would be no New Year's Day in
• tonitis tesulting from a ruptiiCed appendix.
j · In 1941 the U.S. Navy destroyer Reuben James was IOrpedoed by a 1~8.
Groundhog Day in 1994 would
.' ~ u:ldl olf Iceland. Jdlling 115 people, even though lhe United begin
Febru:y 12, from 4 p.m.
, StaleS WIS not at w•.
·
. throughon Februll}'_
13 at midn•ght.
•. ·In.J9S6,lleal' Adm. OJ. Dufek became lhe flrsl person 10 land an 1111'· In 1995 Groimd Hog
day begins at
the Soulb Pille.
.
.
Sam
on
June
14
and
ends
at4 p. m
•
In 1959 fOI'IIIU U.S. Marine from Pm Worth, Texas, announced m on June 15.ln 1996 October
8
·:;. Moscow
he would never return to the Uniled Swes. His name: Lee a.m. to OciOber lllh at 4 p.lOih
m is
'
Oswald.
day. we would celebrate GH
•. "i:r967, Nauyen Van Thieu lOOk ~oath of office as the rll'SI presi- GH
day in 1998 ~ February lOih at
•. dent of South Vietnam's ICCOIId JepUbhc.
4 p. m. 10 Fe'bruarv lllh, at mid·, In 1968, PIUidert L~ B. Johnson ordc;ted a jlalt to all !J.~. bomb- nighL In 1999 GH day would be
. ' ln.1 of North Viemim, saymg he hoped for fnlitful _peace nego~ns.
' . In 1984 Indiln ~'rime Minlllcr Indira Gandhi was assas'!lnated near Iiom 4 p. m. on June 12th to midnight on June .131h. There would be
''1 bCr
by IWO Sitb ICICurity guards.
~
Tea ·ye.n qo: Ill die wake of the U.S.-Ied invasion, of Gre~.- lhe no groundhol clay in 1997.
Memoriafl&gt;ay in 1994 would be
' Defea1e ~~ ilebowlcdged lhat·a U.S. Navy plane had mistakenon July 18th ai 4 P• lil.l9 Jitly 19th
~ I Qll*f• dVilllli
at midnight. In 1995 we would
; 1 Five ~uao: 111·~ the kidnappers of Terry Andel'lon released observe Memoria! day from
• • • • 1111Wbich die .•IIOCI""' Pn:U conespondent lead a statement November 17th at 8 to 4 on
~iq dlo Requ ldmlnislrllion of blockina his release. Anderson was November Ullh. The 1996 Munot iieeilln ~ 1991 •.

bettetl What is it about 80 percen1
of the loaf that's not as good as
zero?tt
Kantor and White House offl-

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Binstein
cials Icnow they are still well short
of the House votes needed 10 pass
NAFTA on Nov . 17. From the
start, anti-NAPTA forces have
been better organized, more vocal
and more diversified in lheir critique ~;~f the pact. Clinton didn't
begin pushmg it until early
September, by which time NAFTA
was trailing by more lhan 100 votes
in the House.
The White House began by
adopting a divide-and-conquer
strategy: Approach each undecided
member, fmd out what was bothering lhern about. lhe agreement and
address it personally. The closely
guarded White House vote counl
lists by cateJ:?' what is required 10
w.oo undec ·
members - including "district candy" (read pork
barrel spending), "vice presidential
appearances" and "calls from

Cabinet members." But poor coordination between lhc White House
and liS congressional allies almost
created a backfire.
"The problem we had for 10
days was that we found out whal
lhey needed and lhcn 'the administration wasn't delivering it,'' one
House Demoaatic leader !Old us. If
a member mentioned organized
labor as the reason for voting no, it
was regarded as a lost cause. "I
lhink you can probably look 11 lhe
(Federal Elections Commission)
repons of everybody, and if lhcy're
getting over half lhcir money from
labor, they're gone. If they're not,
maxbc they're willing to stand
up, ' says lhe House DemocraL
Wilh the loss of Hou8e Mlljority
Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.,
10 lhe anti-NAFTA side, attention
is focu~\ on Rek.ad~~nry Waxman, D 'f., lhe
· g environmentalist in the House, who is
undecided and could lake as many
a dozen votes wilh him when he
makes up his mind.
There have been some unsetlling moments for pro-NAPTA
members of lhe House Democratic
leadership. One Democratic leader
recalls getting a call from Treasury
Secretary Lloyd Bentsen asking for
his vote. "I said 'Lloyd, I'm wilh

--Area deaths--

.•

course.''
Kantor has studied the battle
over lhe Panama Canal treaty.during the Carter administration as
almost a precedent for what he
thinks the administration faces and what he hopes the outc.ome
wiU be.
"When the Panama Canal treaty
rust came to Congress, one week
after it carne, the polls show~ 50·
percent of Americans oppose!~ it,
29 percent were for it. Th~ .rest
were undecided." he said. "You
couldn't have gotten the Pan~ma
Canal treaty lhrough lhe Senate at
lhat poinL Just a few short months
later, tlie polls showed 62 percent
for it and 38 percent agam.st it.
Why? The White House did a good
job in communicating."
. The Panama Canal treaty ulti•
mately passed the Senate by one
vote. NAFTA promises 10 he lhat
close.
·
Jack Anderson and Michael·
Blnstela are writers for United·
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
•,

... AND IN THE (;NO
THEY LIVED HAPPILY

EVER AFTkR.

Slowing fatlier time _ _ _ _ _ ____,_
flies

.'

~ Today

'. p-"

in history

a

that

raiiiCDCo

4

= .

rial Day has been moved forward
to Marth 161h, 1997 at 4 p. m. 10
March 171h at midnighL In 1998

FredW. Crow
Memorial Day would be on July
16th at 4 p.m. to July 17th at midnight. November 151h at 4 p. m. 10
November 16th at midnight would
be Memorial day in 1999. No
memorial day would be observed
in 1996 as we know lhc year 1996.
July 4th in 1994 would be celebrated from September 3rd at 8 a.
m. 10 September 4th at 4 p. m. In
1996 July 41li would be celebrated
from January 2nd at midnight to
January 41h at 8 am. In 1997 we
would celebrate July 4th from 8
a.m. on May 2nd 10 4 p. m on May
3rd. In 1998 July 4th would be on
September 1, at 8 a. m. through
September 2, at 4 p. m. July 4tb
w.ould be observed from Sam on
January lst 10 4 p. m. on January
2nd in lhc year 2000. July 4th will
not be celebrated in 199 5 or 1999
as we Icnow lhese years.
Thanksgivin~ in 1995 would be
on Marth 141h at 8 a. m. lhrough
March 151h at 4 p. m. July lOth at
8 a. m. lhrough July lllh at 4 p.m.
we would celebrale Thanksgiving
in 1996. In 1997 Thanksgiving
would be from November lOth It 4
p. m. 10 November 11 at midnight.
In .1999 Thanksgiving would be
from March 12 at 4 p. m. 10 March
13 at midnighL In lhe year 2000 we
would celebrate Thanksgiving on
July 11th at 8 a. m throulh July
12th at 4 p. m. There would be no
Thanksgiving in 1994 or 1998 as
we Icnow lhese years. Thanksgiving
days are figured as falling on
November 2Sih each year.
ChrisbDas in 1995 would fall on
April 23, at 8 a. m. lhrough April
24th at 4 p. m. In 1996 Cbrislmas
would be on August 19!11. 8 a. m. to
August 20th at 4 p. m. In 1997 we
would celebrate Christmas on
December 20th at 4 p. m. to
December 21 at midnight. Christmas in 1999 would last from April
21st at 4 p.m. 10 April 22nd at
midnight and in lhe year 2000 we
would celebrate Christmas from
August 20th at 8 a. m to August 21
at4 p. m. No C1uislmU in [994 or
1998.
-. .
All computations are based.. on
slandard time. To figure exact time
of bolldaya oc:c'urrinJ durina Daylight Time, lldd ono hol!r to aiven,
flllftl (for Memorial Day liJd July
4th.) Four traditional y~ars ire
slowed down to llttee ye8n under
the calculations herein.
·
R upo, I realiZe th•t there are
many lldvan~ in havinaa calendar sucb Is this. One advantage is

that a person would feel younger
because his age would be less.
One disadvantage is that all
clocks in the world would have 10
be scrapped and all new ones manufaciiRd. However, this turns iniO
an advantage since it is estimated
lhat there are fifty million clocks in
lhe world. PreSident CliniDil should
be excited aboutlhis new development since it would create more
jobs to replace the jobs we are
shipping to Mexico.
One small disadvantage is lhat
your day may start in the n1ght
which could cause some unrest
among people who have definite
sleeping habils. Rope, in the interest of our economy, I think we
should try to adjust our sleeping
habiiS. If you are in favor of lhis,
• you should write to your Congressman. He may tbink you are nuts,
but if you sive him the true faciS he
may want to join this new way of
life. But again, he may IIQl
Acconling to Einstein's lheory
of relativity and lisht, there is no
doubt lhat we can change our lives
10 malce them more enjoyable. Our
expert on Einstein tells me that
lhere is no problem in changing
'time. Some of our Meigs County
sailors have been lhrough the equawr and tell me lhat lhey adjusted
very easily to time changes.
A baby born on December 31st,
1993, under today's calendar,

would be 20 years old in the year
2013. Under the new calencla(lhis
baby would only be IS years old in
2013. So you see, Rupe, by ad!&gt;pting lhis calendar you would aeiually be slowing down time as it:~ow
exisiS. Rupe, you may ask ~.rs­
tion, as 10 what effect this
dar.
would do 10 Ibis person's life?. To
answer you, I feel that anybody
who lhinks lhey are younger lhan
they arc will feel younger and·
heallhier. In short, lhis would be. a
psychological bombshell. A IQi or
people do tbings according to ll;leir
ages.
Our computations are based on
twenty more minutes in each hour;
Please credit Abbie Stralton ,Vith
all lhe computations herein. Wilhout her assistance we would have
been unable to slow down your.
life.
The moral of this siOry is, ..!hat
each one of you should slow down,
enjoy life and treat aU as -;,-ou
would lilce 10 be treated yoursel~.
In God We TrusL
Carry on.
•
Editor's note • Lon1-tlme
Attorney Fred W. Crow Ia the
contributor or 1 weekiJ column
for The Suada:y Times-SentineL
Readers 1flablnJ to applaud,.Crlt,
ldze or coDUDent oa an:r autiject
(except rellalon or polltLcs)•:are
encouraaed to write to Mr.
Crow, In care of this newspap_er.

Berryls World
1. S~'ff~CE '(O\) "{'O A.
t'l(tSoN "f'ISRfv\ Of foc.JR
~SEOJ-r11JE \.lf'e.
s~,.~c.es

I

~·

~
'
'

...

\\Ot DOG!
l'i-1. ~ 0\)\ I M
00

RIO GRANDE - Learning
how to educate elementary and
high achool students in the wise use
ofcredit will be lhe subject of a
conference set for Saturday. Nov. 6
at the .University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College.
A one-quarter hour graduate
credit will be awarded 10 teachers
who complete the course and lhe
follow-up assignment which
includes documentation or classroom application ,'according 10
Jerry Gust, director of Rio
Grande's Loren M. Berry Center
for Economic Education.
Successful ap~licants for lhe
course will receive a complete
teaching manual lhat includes all
teaching strategies, methods and
materials to effectively teach in lhe

•.tl Dcpanment of Highways, a timber worker and a Protestanl.
• Surviving are his wife, Genevieve (Baker) Campbell; four sons,
,
Campbell, Dallas Campbell and Denzil Campbell, all of Leon,
•·•''•W.Va., and Tom Csmpbell of CottageviUe, W.Va.; two daughters, Belty
of Leon, and Carolyn McCoy of Syracuse; a sister, Marie Miller
Evans; two brolhers, Clarence Campbell or Leon, and Melvin Dono·•hllw of Evans; and 10 grandchildren.
•'~~•r ' . Services will be 1 p.m. Monday in lhe Casto Funeral Home, Evans,
~;:q~:~e~l:h~;e/Rev. Harless Cook officiating. Burial will be in the Creston
:c
Friends may call at the funeral home after 2 p.m. Suntlay.
'

ack Huser

~:, · GAL~JPOL:IS "7' Jack Huser, 69, Kirtland, died Saturday, Oct. 30,
••lMI993 while VISilUlg m Fernandina Beach, Fla.
. ' !I! · He is 'survived by his wife, Noreen Long Huser, and children Susan

.;:.h~

:·

'

::Cioradean M. Shockley
~ -, , GALLIPOLIS-;- Cloradean M. Shockley, 96, Gallipolis, died Satur: " u~ay, Ocl SO, 1993m Csta!pa Manor, Day10n.
.t.u-1 Born Jan. I, 1897 in Gallipolis, she was a chaner member of Triedm:swne Baptist Churcli. She was preceded in dealh by her husband, Harry
,!~%;~bur Shockley; a daughter, Louise Wilson; and a son, Harry W. Shock-

.~!!'.:-.: Surviving are lhree daughters, Mary Jones, Alzona Holmes and Bessie
-~::Wyema Graham, all of DayiOn.
'-"· •&lt; AJ:rangemeniS will be announced later by the Waugh- Halley-Wood
-~·~ •Punel'al Home.
3.m:_1

=~· -·William
'~~!'::

F. Sorden Sr.

., MIDDLEPORT- William F. Sorden Sr., 86, Long Bot10m, died Fri-

·••1 day, Oct. 29; 1993 al Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant after an

·'extended illness.
Born Nov. 25, 1906 10 the late Daniel and Lola Bent Sorden, he was a
·-:'former coaJ·miner, a retired eleclric power lineman, a.O.S. Anny veleran
''r."of World War II, and a member of the Tuppers Plains VFW, lhe Drew
WebSler Pos1 of lhe American Legion, and tl)elDEW union.
'i::W • Surviving are his wife, Mona Sorden of Long Bottom; a son and
"?''~daughter-in-law William Jr. and Mary Ann ·Sorden of Middleport; a
•'"' : 'l(randson~ Mark Sordcn of Gailhersburg, Md., gtanddaughlcr, Dianna
J ·ILinn Martin of Atlanta, Ga.; four step-grandchildren; four great-grand::C·:'fhildrcn; four slcp-great-grandchildren and lhree nephews.
".o,&gt;. · He is preceded in death by a sister, Ruby Orr, and a brolher, Clarence
"'"''Borden.
,;.• .:01 Services will be Monday at II a.m. in lhe Fisher Funeral Home in
r.!r.Middlepon, wilh lhe Rev. William Middleswanh officiating. Burial will
'fl""'be at Chesler Cemetery, wilh military graveside services by lhe Drew
"' UWebslcr Post of lhe American Legion. Friends may call Sunday from 7-9
~Gdlp.m. at lhe funeral home.
;:-a·

::it ; •

a

4Mir :

John W. Brown

MEDINA, Ohio (AP) - Former U. Gov. John W. Brown died
Friday of pneumonia. He was 79.
_
Brown, a Republican, was lieuJenant ~overnor and president of
.W'U.e Otiio Senate from 1953 10 1957
Y.t!l.lu\d from 196~ 10 1975.
"" ''"' He was governor for 11 days in
;l'!~~nuarr 1957, after Gov. Franlc J.
-·~El.usche, wl]o had been elected to
·v;)M U.S. Senate, resigned so he
"":~bold lake his Senate seat early.

He is survived by his wife,
Helen; son, John Patrick McCrory;
daughters Susan Simpson and
Tracey McCrory; and siste~ ·Beth
Tyson, Floyce Bridges and Carolyn
Kreutzer.

,., ...

l}ti,i/ • •

1:.LCal Koonce
o.-o•·

HOPE MILLS, N.C. (AP)'"' '·Cal Koonce, a relief pitcher for lhe
~· ..ri969 "Miracle Mets" learn that
~iT :won lhe World ·Series, died Thurs" "~y of lymphoma. He was 52.
Koonce played in the major
.w ~eagues for a decade with the
·"'i.t!hicago Cubs, New·Yark MeiS and
••''l!oston Red Sox. He compilyd a
·•"147-49 record wilh 24 saves lifetime
J'•~ afld was 6-3 for lhe '69 Melli with
:u~ seven saves.
Koonce later coached baseball
""''bt Campbell University and was lhe
-••"'first general manager of lhe FayctJ,•oteville Generals minor league base·
. bl.nteam.

r.11Afaurice

Lewis Jr.

:&lt;It' ; TOMS RIVER, N.J. (AP).,.,Maurice M. Lewis Jr., a long-time
,Jwreporter for th~ now-d_efu~ct
...~l!lhiladelph•a Evenmg Bulletm, d1ed
:tclfdonday of emphysema. He was

':---nli!.
...~ Lewis began his ·journali$m
.. i'.£11Ceer in 1943 as a copyboy for lhe
Camden-Cherry Hill Courier-Post.
He later worked as a coiTCspondent for lhe Courier-Post, the Bulletin and The Philadelphia
Inquirer, before rejoining the Bulletin as a reporter m 1951. ..
During the next three decades,
he covered southern New Jersey,
Philadelphia City Hall, lhe arts and
other bealS for lhc newspaper. His
last job was as a rewrite man.
He is survived by his wife, Marilyn; son, Mark; daughter, Laura
Lee; and lhree grandsons.

MONROE, La. (AP)- Vernon
"Bodie" McCror~. a onetime
paper boy who rose to become
chainnan of The News-SttJT newspaper, died Thursday al age 63.
McCrory's first newspaper job
was delivering diem in Pensacola,
Fla., where he grew up. After a
shoulder injury ended his dream of
Iiecoming a major league baseball
player, he went to woric for lhe
Pensacola News.
·
Allhough he never finished high .
school and had no fonnal journalism iraining, McCrory worked his
way up 10 sports ediiOr, then managing editor before being named
editor of The News-Star and the
Monroe Morning World in 1979.
He was named ediiOr and publisher
in 1982 and chairman in 1987.
ll

IN THE SPIRIT -Many Meigs County businesses got Into the·
spirit or Halloween with employees coming to work In costumes
Friday. Here are just 1 few: Debbie Can of The Daily Sentinel,
who came as a pirate, Judy King, a rourtbouse employee, an Indian squaw; Janet Simpson ot Fruth Pharmacy, a ghoul; and seated,
Marlyn Wilcox of Bank One, rostumed as Jane Hathaway of ''!'be
Beverly Hillbillies." Bank One carried out the Beverly Hillbillies
theme in deroratlons throughout the bank and employees took the
identity of characters In the popular television show. (T-S photo by
Charlene HoeRich)

LARRYWEHRU
FOR

Bill would ban public smoking
WASHINGTON (AP) - Two · Henry 'Waxman of California,
Democratic lawmakers and a coali- chairman of lhe House heallh and
tion of health groups want 10 out- environment subcommittee.
law smoking in every building
So are lhe health groups: the
space that at least 10 people regu- American Lung. Association, the
larly enter as infrequently as once a Coalition on S rooking or Heallh,
the American Academy of Pediweek.
The legislators are veterans of atrics~
the war on smoking: Sen. Frank
They've picked up support from
Lautenberg of New Jersey, falher the Building Owners and Managers
of the law lhat made domestic air- Association International, which
line trips smoke-free, and Rep. manages or owns more lhan 5 billion square feet of North American
office space.
.
But Walker Merryman,
POMEROY - Five were rmed spokesman for lhe Tobacco Instiand lhree olher forfeited bonds in tute, accused lhe lawmakers of trythe court of Pomeroy Mayor Bruce ing to "radically alter the social
landscape of America. Clearly it
Reed lhis week.
s
hould be soundly rejected by
Fined were Kevin Lemley,
Congress
and the public."
Pomeroy, $313 and costs, destrucMerryman
described the bill's
tion of property, $50 and costs,
penaky
for
those
who do not comdriving without insurance, and
$163 and costs, recldess operation; ply - a fine of $5,000 a day - as
Larry Mitch, Middleport, $88 and "outlandish."
costs, consuming alcohol under age
21 ; Donnie SlOne, Pomeroy, $213
and costs, petty lheft; Randy Robbie, Pomeroy, $100 and costs, consuming under age 2I; and Shawn
Plumley, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
failure 10 appear.
Forfeiting bonds were Glenna
N. Smilh, Shade, $63, assured clear
distance; Teresa Lasseper, Gallipolis, $83, expired registration;
William Carswell, Pomeroy, $60,
speed; James Holman, Middleport,
$63, stop sign violation.
,._ f•IIy ciOIIWolt: W. DnW

Pomeroy court

W. David
Graham

for Letart
Township
Gr.._

POMEROY VILLAGE COUNCIL
Your Vote &amp;
Support Appreciated
Polcl for by 11M . .Kiidooloo, Larry Wehrung,
1661 Uncoln Hla~ I'OIT.woy, Oh.

liD OF
CLUIINCE
93 WHEEL
HORSE'S STILL IN STOCK

CHESTER

BAUM LUMBER

Your Vote and Support will be appreciated

Vote For
Nellie Haggy

Can Chiropractic
Help Me ... ?

Candidate for Rutland Township Trustee

HOW MUCH WILL IT COST?

Pd. by Nelhe Haggy, Rt. I P.O. 261, Rutland, OH

Vote For &amp; Re·Eiect

GARYR. DILL
FULL·TIME TRUSTEE
Chester Township
Your Support and Influence Appreciated
Paid for by Gary A. Dill, 48190 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH

classroom.
Co-sponsored by lhe Berry Center and lhe Ga!Ua-Jackson-ViniOn
1oint Vocational School District,
the course costs $70. Par the rmt
2S successful applicaniS, $50 of lhe
cost will be waived through the
courtesy of lhc sponsors.
Faculty members for the course
will include staff from area banking and credit institutions and at
least one representative of a bank
or credit office in Columbus.
Teachers in Gallia, Jackson ,
Meigs, ViniOil and•Lawrence counties in Ohio, and Mason County,
W.Va., can pre-register by phone
by calling (614) 245-5353, or tollfree (in Ohio) 1-800-282-7201 and
asking for the Berry Center or
Graduate Studies.

IE· ELECT

Re-elect

:~r.:neaths elsewhere

Vernon McCrory

S1&gt;&lt; t/P~S.

,.

!l

EVANS, w_.va. - Golden-Delbert Campbel~ 82, Evans, iiied Friday,
·•,'!1!''0&lt;
. :t. 29, !993 m Elden:are of Ripley following a lenglhy illness.
.•.
~om m Mason County, he was a son of lhe late Julius and Mamie B.
, -~M•IIer~ Camp~ll. He was a former employee of the Wesl Virginia

ilh-!J Huser, Marie Huser, Bronwyn Barricklow and Meg Rescola.
q.1m• Surv.iving relatives in the area include Enna Evans, Tim Evans, Merrill·
0'~"1i;vans, Eva Mills, Bob Evans, Bess Grace and Mary Ann Bowman.
.-hru ArrangemeniS were incomplete as of presstime.

Sentinel-Page A7

Wise use of credit topic
of teacher conference

Golden Delbert Campbell

you,'" the member says. "They
(lhe tldministration) are not functioning. Somclhin isn't clickiJ!g:'
Pass or fait,lanwr's peilor•
mance on NAFTA marks the end·
of a per10nal ~back. Kanlor's
stoct' hit rock bouom last yea-after
Clinton 'a election. Some Clintonites accused him of a power·
grab in trying 10 lake lhe reins of ·
the presidential uansition. That,
combined with press rqlOrtS ellolll.
his lobbying activitiea, left Kantorout in the cold for lhc White House
chief of sl8ff assignment he reportedly soughL
·
.~
When Clin10n offered him the
trade post, KaniOr thought aboulturning it down, according .to.
friends. Kantor was advised·,that.
trade would be one of lhe lOwering·
issues of the year. and he wguld
find himself 10 the thick of the
action. Between NAFTA and lhe
General Agreement on Tariffs.~d.
Trade, Kantor is doing what he
does best - negotiate.
"It will be a major blow IO.U.S.
prestife in Mexico (if the pact
fails),' KaniOr says. "We will IQSC
credibility in all of Lalin America:
Most important, lhe vacuum lhat's
going 10 be created wiU be filled by
somebody else. Who is the most
aggressive uader in the world?
Who has the resoun:es to invest
there? Who is already the second
largest investor7 The Japlinese, or

Sunday Times

Pomeroy-Mlddleport-Ga11lpolls1 .0H-Polnt Pleasant, WV

We are often asked, "What's the best way of finding
out whelher or not a dociOr of chiropractic can help my
problemr·
We believe the answer can be found in a complete
chiropractic consultation and examination, including X·
rays.
And, 10 help you find out for sure, we do a complete
chiropractic examination, including X-rays (procedures
that normally cost $128 or more) for $35.
We will make this special program available until
November 18, l993. The only exception to our offer
involves personal injury cases (worker's compensation,
auto accidents) and public assistance (ADC) in which
case lhere is no charge billed directly to the patient for
the rust visiL ·

985-3301

..

.,,,t,

v: I(

f·
Dr. N. P. Klme &amp; Dr. N. W. Robinson

Regular $128 Program

"Me? Become a foster parent?
No Way!"
Believe it or not, this was once the feeling
of many people who are now and have
been successful foster parents. Making the
commitment can be difficult. But it can
lead to many rewarding experiences- and
the knowledge that you're doing something
that really matters.
.•
The Meigs County Department of Human
Services ne~ds caring adults to provide
temporary homes to children of all ages.
Financial reimbursement, training, and
case management are provided by the
Agency.
(

Help us . make the most impo~tant
investment we can- our. children! Call now
at 992-2117 for information.

(Offer Expires Nov. 18, 1993)

· YOUR INITIAL VISIT WILL INCLUDE:

[;21 A private consultation wilh the doctor
[;21 A thOrough spinal examination including on.bopedic &amp; neurological tests
[;21 A confidential report of our findings
[;21 An explanation of our treaanent procedure if we determine chiroprnctic can help you
[;21 Areferral 10 lhc proper specialist if we determine chiropractic can't help you
[;21 X-rays if necessary
To AIISICtiOnl Of tho

H••d

•na Jl'au

To Tnroat
To UPHr LlrnDa
To HUI'1

To Lunt•

To Stom•ft
To Llvor
To Gill 81a•••r

To fU•n•,• - - •
Too ... ,,"
To ••••••
To Appontll•
To Qultlla

r .......,
To Lo•or Lhftllil

OFFICE

HOURS
Mon.-Wid.-Frl.
9:15 l.m.-6:00 p.m.
TUes. 9:1 S-5:00

Thurs.
9:1S-12:00

THESE CONDITIONS ARE SOME OF THE
DANGER SIGNALS OF PINCHED NERVES

Gll Headache

IZJ Fatigue
IZJ Thnsion

liZJLeg pain&amp;. numbness

IZJWbiplash

IZJ Arthritic pain by stiff neck
llJ Loss of sleep
~ Backache
liZI Scoliosis
liZJ Arm pain &amp; numbness
IF YOU ARE EXPERIENCING ANY
OF THESE SYJfPTOMS, CAU OUR OFFICE
TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT

MEIGS COUNTY
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
963 General Hartinger Parkway
Middleport, Ohio

992-2168

MIODLEPOR

CITY PARK

�S.ection B
. October 31, ,..,
,:

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!Formerproprietors oftlie 174-yearoU tavern kgep an eye on tlieir
· business from 6eyond tfiegrave.

.•

-.~ our

I BELIEVE CHILDREN ARE THE FUTURE OF GALLIPOLIS
I PROMISE TO FIND 5 FRIENDS WHO BELIEVE WE CAN MAKE
ADIFFERENCE
I PLEDGE VOTE YES ·FOR THE 7.5 MILL GALLIPOLIS CITY
SCHOOL LEVY

.

~

Dale Adkins
Debbie Adkins
• Kathy Adkins
. Roberta Adkins
Jeri Allie
Jim Allie
Cr!llg Barnes

Sonya Cowles
Garolyn Cox
Danny Cox
Kelly M. Cox
Dan Davies
Jackie Davies
Jodie Davis
Michael Davis
D~Barnes
Cheryl Basil
Susan Davis
Dwaln Beaver
Kevin Dennis
Sandra Dennis
UndaBeaver
Kay Dey
· Amy L Bennett
Mike Dey
Becky Bennett
Harold Dilley
Betay Bergdoll
Karen Donnelly
-Jan Bergdoll
Kyle Donnally
Russell Bergdoll
Beverly Dunkle
Shari Bergdoll
Lucy
Earwood
Todd Bergdoll
Kevin Eastman
Wayne Bergdoll
Susan Eastman
Jan Betz
Drew Easton
Tim Betz
Janeen Easton
Bob Blue
David T. Evans, Atty.
. Judy Blue
David P. Evans, M.D.
Charles
Bodlmer, Ill
Ken Farmer
Patti Bodlmer
K. Lee Ferrell
Dianna Boggs
Don Flsco,M.D.
· Mary Anne Bokovltz
Pat Rsco
. Matt Bokovltz
Leonard Ford
UndaBorton
Carl E. Fowler
Sua Ann Bolitlc
Dixie Golden
Kelly L. Bosworth
Jeff Golden
Larry Boyer
Bess E. Grace
. Evelyn Brandeberry ·
Louise Greenlee
Keith Brandeberry,M.D.
Bill Griffith
Roger Brandeberry
Kitty Griffith
Amy Brown
George Haffelt
Ann Brown
Teresa Haffelt
Doug Brown
June Halley
G. Richard Brown
Ron Halley
Judy Burdell
Bonnla Hamilton
Jayne Burger
Robert Hamilton
Jeff Burger
Julie·Hardesty
Rhonda Burllle
Sandra Hardesty
· Robert H. Bu(llle
Roberta Harris
Barbara Burnett
Cindy Harrison
Debbie Burnett
Emily Harrison
Blrbara Caldwell
Mark Harrison
Ginger Caldwell
Frederick J. Hastwell
Jay Caldwell
Hannah Haatwell
Laaa J. Caldwell
Bonita Hilton
David Carman
Claudette Huggins
VIta Carman
Lori Hull
LoraiN Carmichael
Wendell Hull
Robin Caudill
Unda Humphreys
Unda M. Chapman
Paige Humphreys
Staveven B. Chapman
Ronnie
Hutchinson
William P. Cherrington, Atty.
Carl Jackson
Beth Cherrington
John E. Jackson
Carl Clark
Michelle Jenkins
Judy Clark
Rob Jenkins
Jim Cochran
Bill Gene Johnson
Pearl Colmer
Antonia
Jones
Cheryl Cook
John Jones
Emerson Corbin
Karen Jones
Kim Cornwell
Charlene King
Robert Cornwall
Douglas Cowles, Atty.

w.

Cindy Wilson
Scott King
Penny Roush
Dan E. Wirth
Linda Sager
Saundra Koby
Shirley Wirth
Jim Salyer
Bill Kuhn
David Wiseman
Marilyn Kuhn
Bill Saunders
Tom Wiseman
Timmy Kyg11r
Brent Saunders
Libby Wiseman
Gary Lane
Clnda L Saunders
Carl Langford
G. Juanita Saunders Charles Withee
Mary Withee
Carol Langford
Herold Saunders
Marjorie Wood
Haskell Saunders
Doris A. Lanham
Hayward C. Saunders Jackie Woodward
Jeff Lanham
Donald B. Wothe, Jr.
Kay Saunders
Mary Lou Lanham
Kennison Saunders Pamela G. Wothe
Phyllis Loveday
Sharon Yates
Walt Loveday
Nell Saunders
Steve Yates
Terry L. Lucas
Pat Saunders
BradYoho
Terry Lucas
Ron Saunders
LynnYoho
David Schoonover
Jessie Lyons
Gall Belville
April Magnussen, M.D. Robin Schoonover
Christina
Williams
James Magnussen, M.D. Charlotte Seamon
Rebecca Wilcoxon
Craig Mason
Dave Seamon
Judy Dodrill
Dwight Shamblin
Missy Mason
Steve McGhee
Terry Shamblin
Sherry Maxwell
Karen McGhee
Mary Bell Maynard
Sheryl Sheard
Billie Sue Kyger, DDS
Robert Sheard, Sr.
Kathy McCalla
Larry W. Priest
Ed Slagle
Nell McMahon
Kay Bryant
Carla
Shirley-McMahon
Jane Ann SlaglePeg'gy L Johnson
Bryce L Smith
Tom Meadows
Chandra Shrader
Karen A. Smith
Judge Bill Medley
Diana Woodward
Anita Marry
Mary Smith
Carol Quimby
Charles Miller
Mike Smith
Cindy Calvert
Nancy Smith
Jim Miller
Rebecca Elliott
Jeff Snedaker
Rosalie Miller
Marvin McKelvey
Vera Snedaker
Dana E. Mink
Atty. Brent A. Saunders
Carroll Snowden
Ann Moody
Eric L Saunders
Verna Snowden
Jay Moore
Connie Jagers
Ralph Steinbeck
Melissa Moore
Norma Halley
Teresa Steinbeck
Rod Morgan
Barbara Donnally
Sharon Morgan
Kim Stout
Donna Shato
Frank Naskey
Kristina Stout
Sherry Fraser
Katy Naskey
Alva J. Sullivan
Joan E. Schmidt
Kathy Sullivan
Brad Pal nter
Jane Steele
Lynn T. Sweeney
Jack W. Payton
Keith Williams
Wayne Sweeney
Marcia Payton
Roy Saunders
Norm Swindler
Charles Perroud
Ruth Saunders
Sandy M. Perry
Dr. Bill Thomas
Darla Merola Niday
Linda Phillips
David M. Thomas
Diane Smith
John Pierotti
John M. Thomas
Kurt Dailey
Lester Plymale
Karen Thomas
Howard Linder, M.D.
Molly Plymale
Keith Thomas
Lynn Rees
Marvin L. Pullins
Debbie Tipple
Kent M. Shawver
Star Pullins
Rosie Tolliver
Lou Ann Shawver
Jodi Unroe
David Ratliff
Sue Priest
Jan Ratliff
Chris Viall
Mike Miller
Lizzi Vlalll
John R. Richards
Edward M. Vollborn Nancy Graham
Annie Roach
Pat Sheets
Sue Vollborn
Dick Roach
George E. Woodward, Jr.
Gary and Annie Roach D. A. Walker
Rodney Stapleton
Sandy Walker
Hoberta Roach
Karen Stapleton
Bill Wamsley
Laura Roberts
Beverly Lewis
Linda Wamsley
Jeff Rocchi
Bill Beegle
Jolene Rocchi
Linda Ward
Debbie Beegle
Dick Roderick, Atty.
Kenneth Wheeler
Garnet Chapman
Marty Roderick
Diana Wildman
Hayward Summers
John P. Roderus
Michael Wildman
Pam Massie
Ginny
Turner
Willis
Julia Roderus
Tim Massie
Mary Willis
John w. Rodgers
Brad Graham
Matt Willis
Gayne Roush
Drema Jividen
Mark Roush
Raymond Willis
Bruce Wilson

Jerry D. Davis
Sherrl Sayre
Jeannie Williams
Roger Rees
Patricia Brenneman
Noretta Gllle!lple
Mary J. Hout •
Melinda LeMaster
Ellen M. Barry
Kay Stowers
Ka:enWonn
John H. Viall, M.D.
Sandra Roach
Rhonda Burris
R. H. Alonzo, M.D.
L. J. Yodlowskl, M.D.
J. A. delamerens, M.D.
D. E. O'Rourke, M.D.
Thomas P. Price, M.D.
Ann Wickline
Paula Saunders
Becky Rothgeb
Brenda Weaver
VIrginia T. Garber
B. Canterbury .
Michael
Perry
I
Dianne Wheeler
Ann Sickels
C. A. Duncan
John Halliday
Morris Haskins
April Gordon Adkins
David Shaffer
John Cornett
Todd Fowler
Kim Sheets
Tim Maxwell
Bill Jenkins
Sue Moulton
Marty Cornett
Carolyn Anderson

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• •

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...~ (ba·
•

When the s1eps approached the
By'KEVIN PINSON·
tried (o dismiss the
Tlmei-Seq!liiel Staff
experience with logic - it could third time, the aciOr - who knew
'
have been an echo up the alley of the tavern's history- said
. ; GAU.IPOL!S - The tavern which runs beside the tavem, she aloud, "Okay, Henry. Everything's
fine. I'll settle up wilh you in the
~ner. clcad for more than a centu· said.
1
•
-cy, still ~slabs on ·his_guests alld · "You can always 1ry to think up morning."
The footsleps did not disturb his
ofleil ~his legs in the coun- something that sounds logical, but
sleep
anymore that nighL
&gt;'hrd before turning' in for the night Henry walking up the back yard....I
,
Gbostly l&amp;tberinllll
. ijis sister, though never seen, don"l know."
'
·
The
long-dead rroprietors also
lel!vea cvidenfc of~ .presence Henry's walk
,jl)c smell of lilacs, sunilar !"a perKemper said several people seem to be fond o hosting socials
their olher-worldly acquainrume * ·was f~ of wean!Jg._ · · have reported seeing the short, . for
1 H~~ry Cushmg,and El_
lzabetb heavy-set Henry sb'Olling through tances. Volunteers once heard the
Cushm,g ..-~ ~ aJIPIII~~Y so the walled-in courtyard behind the sound$ of a party in the tavern's
upstairs ballroom - chairs scuff•
.proud of the 18~ they established lavern
I!' the,fOWlg ~ernent ofGallipowemng a green coat, the for- ing on the floor, music and a
lis ~· not e,..en death could keep mer owner usually strolls "the yard woman singing.
The .words to the song were
lllem from watching over it. .
around midni,ptt - as if winding ,
clear enough for the volun1eers to
··~ Barbara Kemper, cwator of the
-· _ __
. make out, Kemper said, and a litde
Our House museum, First Ave.,
investigation uncovered that the
Clallipolis, said s·he believes the
lyrics belonged to a sqng popularbrother and sister left some work
ized by Jenny Lind, who performed
unfinished when they died and
at th~ tavern in 1854.
IJ]ust continue watching over the
The pheuomena are usually wit174-year-old lavern.
nessed by just one or two persons,
· "Poor Henry and Elizabeth can't
rest," she said. "Until it gets done,
mllkinjl il difr.cult for some people
to lieheve the incidents were not
thcy"U continue to walk."
·: The Our House lavern wa5 built
the product of ovezactive imagina·
lions or out-and-&lt;lut hooxes.
i~ 1819 and was the cenler of the
cpmmunity's. social life for 8Imost
Kemper said the ghosts have a
l)illfa century.
.
.
reason for not making grand
.; The three-story brick structure
·. appwances bC:fore large groups.
houses a taproom, public and pri"They fu it that way so you canvale dining rooms, a ladies parlor,
be called crazy," she said.
tjlree bedrooms and a divided baliBells l'rom beyond
I'I!Om. A free-standing kitchen was
On at least one occasion, howbUilt in the courtyard.
ever, an incident was witnessed by
; Kemper said she has never had
six or seven volunleers.
any face-to-face encounters,
Jack Hudson of Gallipolis was
afihough she has heard the apparihis occasional visit to
one
of the workers taking inventory
lions 1001ing around.
the courtyard, atrwy was also _once
of ilems on display in the lavern's
: "I'm okay as long as I know the seen ill the kitchen. Kemper SBld.
s!bries but if I actually saw someMr. CuStting
.before a attic when he heard the sound of
thing I don't know if I would come former curator an a couple of visi· lilT)' bells ringing.
Hudson said he was the only
!lick."
·
tors. He appeared upset that the
one
who heard the sound at first,
·; Phantom. footsteps and the visitors were in the tavern, Kemper
but
the
others heard it as well once
sounds of someone running down · said He then disappeared.
he
drew
their atlenlion to it.
ttic stairs .are nol unusual at the . · After the experience, the curator
"It
was
an eerie, eerie feeling,"
n!)Jseum. ·
talked with the visitors and learned
he
said
&lt; Phantom visitors ,
they were descendants of a family
. The ghosts oflen fool volu01eers Henry didn't p1111icularly like.
i!!,lo thinlcJ!lg Iiley ~av~.visi~rs at
For·lite mcist pin~. tK1we·ver-, the ·-··"~~
th'e front door. Kemjler said .she happenings do not smu&lt;e
1\!)d others are "forever running to House volunteers as the "Ami- 90 ~~~iunteers were the only
ttie door" because they hear'it open . tyville Horror" brand of haunting ones in the Our House 11 the time,
ciQse and the sounds of some- - they see ·tl)e tavern owners more
in the lObby.
·
as a couple of Caspers.
and all of the doors were locked,
, 'It sounds like someone comes
"It's Gl!sl) Henry. an~ Elizabeth Hudson saiJiber oddities
i~" she said.
"
making sure everything IS fine and
.
,• Working alone at the museum well-run for our guests." Kemper
Others claim to have seen ghost·
&lt;li\e day, Kemper said she thought said
ly figures peering out of the lav·
Jl h
d
·
h
ern's
windows, rocking chairs
s~e . ear someone come m t e
A couple of years ago. an actor which rock themselves and por·
frilnt dOor.
staying in town for the Civil War
;: She came down the stain to the re-enactment told volunteers he traits which smile at visitors.
fi1&gt;nt room. No one was there, but believed he had a one-sided con·
One woman said she enlered the
the sound of foot steps indicated versation with Henry whUe camped tavern to retrieve a forgotten purse
someone was walking around the out with other soldiers in the coon- and found the place covered in dust
"" 0oor.
and cobwebs - as if it had not
niSI
yarcl.
been touched in decades.
:~ Kemper followed the sounds
The actor reported he was awakWhatever the explanation, Our
ll'irough several rooms, bul when ened three times by the sound of House's famous inhabitants are
she caught up with the invisible loud footsleps approaching lhe spot quile a draw for the museum. Many
HENRY'S HAUNTING GROUNDS - Tbe
v'\sitor, the footsleps stopped.
where he slept.
courtyard
tbe Our House Museum, pop·
.: "I wasn't scared so I iflink it was
Others camped in the yard were visitors come just to see the ghosiS, ulated withbehind
long dark shadows after nightfall, is
a:triendly ghost," she said.
sound asleep and could not have Kemper said.
.
'"
made the
sounds,
Kemper
said.
\

Estlvaun Mathews
Carol O'Rourke
Pam Matura
Karen Berklch
Mary Lou Morrison
Letty Willis
Rick Howell
AI Early
William Myers
Shirleen Wiseman
Kent Shawver
Pam Snowden
Henny Evans
Ron McDade
Charlie Adkins
Bob Daniel
Tlm Hennessey
Herb Schuette
Green Elementary P.T.O.
Washington Elementary
P.T.O. Board
Gallla County Bar
Association
Gallla County Democratic
Party
Rio Grande P.T.O.
Gallla County Republican
Party
Gallla County Chamber of
Commerce
Gallla County Medical
Society
Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Organization
Gallipolis City Schools
Business Advisory Board
Gallipolis Junior Women's
Club
·
Gallipolis Business &amp;
Professional Women
Gallipolis Rotary Club

::fpeared

1

CONTRIBUTIONS TO C.A.R.E.
Dr. Gene and Genie Abels
nm and Jan Betz
Dr. Reid C. and Liz Brubaker
Sharon Cain
Dr. David Carman
Jim and Becky Dailey
Clyde Evans
Dr. Donald Flaco
Charles and Gladys Grant
Mike Harrington
Robbie and Michelle Jenkins
James and Nancy Mullins
Dr. James Orr &amp; Hank
Jack and Barbara Rlcharda
Eric and Karl Saunders
Earl and Rosathyl Tope
Mary Warehime
Kathryn Wiseman
Brad and Lynn Yoho
Gary and Anne Roach
Tom and Ubby Wiseman
Shirleen Wiseman
Winston Saunders
Cindy Saunders
Bill and Am~ Jenkins
David Evans
Dan Davies
Jackie Davies
Tom an!! Sue Price
Jim Salyer

.

Allee Salyer
-!ohn Milhoan
Jane Milhoan
Dr. Reatltuto Alonzo and Glesala
Dr. Keith and Evelyn
· Brandeberry
Major General George Bush
Carl and Mickey Cameron
Griff and Deanna Cook
Stephen and Bev Elberfeld
D. Dean and Henny Evans
Todd and Robin Fowler
Dr. Sigmund and Alex Harder
Roger Hood
nm and Pam Massie
Donna Nibert/Nibert &amp; Assoc.
Nancy Reed
Dick and Marti Roderick
Max and Maybelle Tawney
Harold and Betty Walker
David Wiseman
Tom and Jackie Woodward Ill
Kenneth and Gloria Kyger
Ron and Loretta McDade
Dr. Oscar and Susan Clarke
Steve and Sharon Yates
Bob and Jan~ Woodward
Tim and Billie Sue Kyger
Kim Sheeta
Herb Schuette

reported to be tbe favorite stomping grounds of
the cbost of Henry Cushing. (Times-Sentinel
photo. by Kevin Pinson)

13y

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~ Hauntings
'

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~
.,
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9{eacf{ess
;pedestrians,
: phantom
Jba6ies tfiat
;j cry .in tfie
:: · ntglit,

7

~:

a s~u{{

~~ amonE

·

~:

tlie

roc~

ant! a
:~ fiauntetf
:. liouse.
f

••

IT'S STILL NOT TOO LATE TO TAKE THE
PLEDGE AND VOTE YES ON NOV. 2ND·!

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tll

;~neigs

(;ounty lias
~~ts .s/j4re of
auntt.ngs .
· too

\

Paid for by the Concorned Area Residents for Educatlo~ Col!lmlttee.
Honorary Chairpersons: John Halliday. Bill and Beth Cherrington;
Honorary Treasurer: Morris Haskins; General Chairpersons: Gary and Annie Roac!); '
General Trees.: April Gordon Adkins, 451 Sec9nd Ave., Gallipoljs,Oh. 4563'1,

1-'

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at the bend: Spirits of Meigs County Jim :Freeman,
T-S staff

Most co01Illunities have at
leaSt one mysterious place...
the creepy, old house that
prompts children to hurry past
with fear in their eyes or the
dark, cool spot on a deserted
road in the woods that for some
re8$()n makes the hair on the
back of your neck stan!! UJl and
makes your eyes open JUSt a
little wider.
MeigsCountyisnoexception. Two men, one who used
to reside in the county... the
other who s~ does, recently
recalled experiences from therr
youths involving the unknown.
Portland, for those u11familiarwiththearea,isa~CCJ?Y·

Price recalled that when he
was about 10, the late Elza
Birch told him a story conceming the third bridge.
f!lear the bridge, which
crosses Laucks Run, was a hole
in which neighborhood boys
wouldswimorcatchfish,Price
recalled.
"It was
a deep hole
and
the
Mormons
used it for
their baptisms," he
said.
" W e
were i.iiterested in the
creek because we'd
flshfromit,
c'atching
chubs with
bent pins," he said. "We'd be
out there almost every day in
the summertime and the Btrch
kids, who lived neatby would
come out and play."
Birch told Price a baby
oncefelliiltothecrceknearthe
bridJ,e and drowned.

little bedroom comJJiumty
along the Ohio River on the
eastern edge of Meigs Coul)ty
and is hardly the· place one
would suspect of barboring
restless spirits. ·
However, Portland resident
GaylePricerecendyrecounted
· two stories which focus on the
Portland area.
A traveler heading north
out of Portland on State Route
124 would soon find the junetion where Bald Knob-StiverSville Road enters the hig)l• Jf~wanttohearag!lost,
way from the west. ·
J · • ~ • the /biiby ~~ evmv niglit at
According to Price, the :l'nidnight," Price sili'd.
traveler would cross three' _· " ~&lt;1 went- out one night,"
bridges· thethirdbeingaoout Birch remarked; "and waited
a mile off State Route 124.'
for midnight."

}'

"When you are SJtnng found in a crack among the
alone in the dark you hear eve- rocks in the draw.
rything, but I never did hear
"He was supposedly murthe baby."
dered for his money,' Price
''I did hear some screech said.
owls - orwhatithoughtwere
A fellow by the name of
screech owls."
Clint Birch said he once saw a
Price also recalled a fellow man wearing a white shin
by the name of Clint Cochran walking across the road. While
who lived above there is nothing too unusual
Portland in a about that, the man Clint saw
little, old house had no head.
"If Clint said he saw it, it
with his wife. ·
The tale is that was the truth," Price said.
rijlht after the
"I've been there after
Civil War, when dark," Price said. "If you go
many peo.p le out after dark with the wind
traveled thenver blowing, you can hear everyon flatboats thing."
(Jluilt largely of
Even the sound of limbs
their own cargo: cracking together in the wind
logs) an oldman makes an ominous sound.
by the name of
George Lynn Beegle, forCrowelpiloteda merly of Meigs County and
flatboat down now of Crystal River, Fla.,
the Ohio and MississipJ?i riv- reported on a house that used
ers to the Louisiana c1ty of to give him the creeps. .
New Orleans.
Beegle indicated he used
Oowel was supposed to to live in the house located in
come back but was never seen the community ofDorcas, near
again, Price said.
Racine. The house (he did not
Just south of Portland, elaborate as to its exact locaalongtheOhioRiver,isaplace tion) was built over another
. where the leveltloodplainrises house that had burned down.
through a gap in the siutourtdIn a letter addressed to The
ing,hi!ls- a cool, dark place · Daily Sentinel, Beegle wrote
the sun only teaches at mid~ that his grandparents died in
day, Price noted. Eventually a the house and were brought
skull, reportedly Oowel 's, was back to the house for viewing.
•l

'

"I can still see the coffins
at the end of the living
room, ' he related.
Beegle, a psychic reader,
wrote:
"As long as I can remem- :
ber I had always been scared in
the house. Many times when
my mother and I were there
alone there would be sounds of
chainsrattlingandglassbreak- .
inginthebasement. We would ·
investigate only to find nothing was there. I had, on occasion, witnessed ghost-like figures both upstairs and downstairs.
"My father worked on the ·
Great Lakes and would be $One ·
for several months at a nme.
My mother would lock the
doors each night and each
morning they 'would be unlocked. There were times when
we had the windows closed ·
that the curtains would blow as
though the windows were
opened.
·
"When my mother would ·
be off with my father, I would ·
stay at my aunt's place; there
were times I would have to go ·
to the house for more clothing.
I would rather have a spanking
then go into that house at night..
"Even though I have been:
away from the house for many ·
years, the house is stilt'
haunted."
•
restin~

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OH-flolnt Plnaant,

•

Watson family gathe.rs. fo~ :. weeJ( to~g ~euniori ,.: ~
0~

~sic,

ra:::/

·Tile
and
frlcnlli.Uthe MOoldcn
Oer·
~e (ClarY) \YIIIOD !Jeld their 7th.
annual ·reunton_v.-:atlon ~ ~e
Hope State Park Zaleski, Ohto

• '.

0~~ B~y ia~Joi .

· Donna·Gaye
David, Riia'
and JiU Massie, Jasoc:tand Jessi~
Carter Stanley (O~ne) and ·Lucy
Earwood, Freddy and 1!&gt;Ann
Wood, Mary C Myers.-Ronme and
(rQilt.O¢ 13 10 Oc:t. 20.
.
Sheryl Slone, Cris Fitch ~and friends
· Sc!mC of the IIPI!Cial events were or Oallijl!)l.ls; :.
. ~ Pr!~Y mo!aina breakfast at Andy and Dorothy Hunt and~
·Lucy • Ian . and • five pr_on&amp; Evans of McArthur; Matt ThOmaspitcl!lort weiner. roast on Fnday,

ovenln&amp;.

, Tbe family reunion wu held

' Sal!li4ay with a weddins abower
held for Eric and Lisa Evans of
Slllyrna, Tenn. in the evenin&amp; in the
· $~ room 11 tho Lake Hope
· Lodf~· Sixty people auended the
' teun!'ll' ll1d shoWer.
·.. 11IOie -odin&amp; uleast one day
or the Weelt long c:elebration were
CarabeiiThomu of Reynoldsburg;
Ra)' Haner of Jackson; Harofd
(Bqddy) and Pauline Watson,

·-·

wltl '• .

: J5

: !1 ~

United
fund drive
to begin

Toby It · ·
Fol'lllll"ly ol Kunp, 11M
dollble .... trlllllplut , _ • eolldllloa caW , .....
llne••mtoa. aecordla1 ~ u article Ill t11e Oct.
ol Tile Daly Jtlrtr-d•. Slle Is tbe daupter ol Bever•

et Cballlre ud llu tlaree _ , Toby, C.G. aud Bl'llldoa.

. · ~ Uves 11 Llldd l.audl Trailer CD1111, 8060 Dozer Rd. L!Jt, Cam-

:. flrldae.

l/jealth department to
:_b,ffer weight loss classes
: ::,OMEROY • The Meifs Counit.lfealdl Department y.rU begin a
)e'ries of six-week classes for
weight control next week. The
C:tasses wUI be held on Mcnday and .
,-_hursday evenings from 6:00 •
1'·~ will be a choice of nights
·for die classes which are free 10
: ~eiss County residents. Allen· )larice 1s raquiled at only one two-hour session weekly.
: Classes will include nutrition
·education, weekly weigh-ins,
:recipes, exercise techniques and
:adler thinss which contilbute 10
-weishltoas and conuot.
: There will be a limit as lC the

number of people who can be
adl'!'illed to each sefi:es of classes
whiCh are 10 be held m 1!'0 conferonce room of the muht-pu.rpose
building, Mulberry He1ghts,
Po~~~ents should register as
soon as possible due 10 class ·size
limitation~ by ~allin&amp; .992-6626.
lJpon re,ts!ennJ restdenu are
ask.ed 1.&lt;! mdicste a preference for
wh1ch m&amp;ht they wantiO llllCRd.

MIDDLEPORT • The kickoff
for the rust fund raisina campaign
for the United Fund for Meigs
County will take place at S p.m.
Monday at Dave Diles Park in
Middleport.
Music for l}le kickoff will be
provided by ilie Meigs Marauder
Band, Middleport Boy Scouts will
raise ,the flag, and there will be
short speeches by the Rev. Frank
Smith, president, Nancy CampbeU,
speaking on behalf of government,
and the Rev. Sharon Hausman,
speakins on behalf of community.
1'he Rev. Mark Morrow will give
the invocstion .and benediction.
Refreshments will be served by
die Middleport Arts Council. The
public is invited 10 join in the short
kickoff ceremony.

~·

n•val architeCt ' fatbcr from 1863,
blind fmm the struc:tion of lar&amp;Q'

~i'
~~

WE'RE PUTIING A LID ON

RICHARD
RODERIC:K

Pre-Holiday
Savings

Munklpal CoU.r l Jud"
The "Ho•e tow•r ...
Who Has
To Gallla
NATALIE TROMM

Tromm-Tevis
•

I CAUTTWI

Anita is from Thurman and
Russ is from Gallipoiis . He is
. employed by the Gallia County
Children's Home as an activities
director. The open church wedding
is pla~med for Feb. 12.

49 DIAiloiD

COCKTAIL RING
' .
REG.$818

•499

......
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1\1·-•o
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: POINT PLEASANT • A
be at the Gos~el
gfest
hthouse Church AT 7 p.m. with
Grubb Family and Sounds of
se performing.

WITH 14K GOLD CHAIN. '

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GALLIPOLIS • Jack Parsons
;$iliil pe preaching morning and
!Cvening ·services at Debbie Drive
~hapel.
·

•:149·

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of Beautiful l;hristmas
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41on1 ch.ree Accounta

"From Mig. lli99- ~H .
T.W. lal~l dlllmond ...ght.

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MkkiJjport,
Pomeroy, 'Maaon,
01
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AND

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MATH 'LESSON #2

POMEROY · A bridal .shower
was held for Susan Houchhns in
the social rooin oC the Heath United
Methodist ChurcJt recentlv.
Hostesses were Angela Perkins
and S~phanie Alexander, si$ters or
the bride-elect.
. Games were played and prizes
gtven.
Attending were Nick an(j Jessie
Alexander, Melanie and Ashley
Graham, Vicki Houchins, Amy and
Chris Rouse, Missy and Milurish,a
Nelson, Amy Garner, Kristen
Slowter, Darci Wolfe, Julianne
Buck , Tara Humphreys, Megan
Dc.rrow. Nora and Angela Eason,
Kns and Amanda Eason, Gladys
Riggs, Joan Johnson. Linda and Jay
Warner, Kine Byer, Mary Warth.
Sending gifts were Katie and
Carol Alexander, Karen and
George Tripp, Jennifer Buck; Mary
Price, Verta Casto, Abby Blake,
Jenny Warth, Jan, Judy and Stacy
Alexander.. . .. ·

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Roderick Family
THE CANDIDATE WITH THE BEST QUALIFICATIONS:
• OVER 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE AS AN ATTORNEY
~ 6 YEARS

AS A FORMER GALLIA COUNTY COMMON
,PLEAS COURT JUDGE •

• A FORMER GALL1A COUNTY ASSISTANT PROSECUTING ·
ATTORNEY
• FORMER GALLIPOLIS CITY SOLICTOR
• OVER 200 HOURS OF TRAINING AT THE NATIONAL
JUDICIAL COLLEGE AND THE OHIO JUDICIAL COLLEGE

Pd. for by the ROderick for J.udge Commlnee John E. Halliday,

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KING . 3 Pc. Sat Sa" S699 Reg . $925

WITH COUPON $599

SERTA DU_RA-PEDIC CLASSIC" WITH COUPON
TWIN Eo. Pc.
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Reg $150

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FULL Ea. Pc. Sale SH4. Reg. S225

WITH COUPON $1411
QUEEN, 2 Pc. Sat $4811. Reg. S550

proveCI rny

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.....
'
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Houchins bridal
shower hosted

=

'

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'

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cashiers checks. """"""'
,
tllm oonvenient brardllocations .
througtrut Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana.

.

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...

•••

EWINGTON - Ewington
Church CCU will hold a rev ival
from Oct. 26-31 nightly at 7:30
p.m. and Sunday services at 6:30
p.m . Singing will be provided by
Beacon Light.

I mustreply to Dick Thomas's mathematiqal criticism of one
"" WELLSTON • Plans for
of my statemenls beforE! too many people are misled into
litpanding the "Reading and the
buying a pig in a poke. Dick, you are mathematically 100"/o
toung Child" grant currently in
correct. You have, however. fallen victim to one of the •games
G!Ogress to libraries in Athens and
· ,Nickson Counties, and to initiate a
politiCians like to play" - thai' of making a .substantial lax hike
Jo!lJ'lllll in Athens, Hocking, Jackseem inexpensive. I appreciate your math lesson, but you used.
n, l,..awrence, Meigs and Pikes
simple arithmetic to solve a problem.that requires more.
qnties tq increase awareness of
Allow me to continue the math lesson and use your
ildi'eri' s Service staff 10 children
cslculations
to. prove me correct. Let the magic (and math
With disabilities were approved by
lesson 12) begin!
!be Board of Trustees of the Ohio
You state -quite emphatically. and correctly that 7.5 mills
ialley Area Libraries recently.
represents an increase of only $7.50 lor each $1,000 or
•· . The meeting was held at the
~ystem Headquarters in Wellstcn.
assessed value. -A fact indeed.
~ The Board approved the armual
I qiginally slated th~t 7.5 mills will add about $180.00 for
!()Mo Library Association (OLA)
eac~ &lt;$.1 ,000.00 no~ paid. A 6itter pill to swallow, but one that
s :tandards Survey conducted .by
remai® long alter the sugar'c»ating has disappeared.
~¥ AL. This survey asks the memLet) me prove my point )Yith the following example (Volar
er libraries to indicate their
math
rltsson 112).
·_
·
·
thievement of standafds for public
Suppose we own a piece of property in Gallia County
(lJtary service set by the state
valued - for the purpose - at $23,800.00. Let us further
ibrary association. This year the
'embers have achieved 74% of the
llSsume that total curr:enl millage Is 42 mills - about what it
LA SUUldards.
really is for. Raccoon TwP•\ city school dil5trict- where I live. (I
~ · They accepted the resignation
realize there are some roll~c':ks,but lor clarity of calculation I
J?f Cynthia Newsom of Oak Hill
will
avoid them. They are ~eilded anyway as my contentions
who worked in the•Books By Mail
Department for three years. The · are based on the bollorri.lfrie ,of taxes currently paid.)
Let's proceed with the math.
floard ratified the hiring of Debbie
Step 1. $23,800.00 (current appraised value) x .042
lowe of Jackson 10 ftll the vacanay. A minor change in the OVAL
(current millage) $999.60 (taxes now paid)
j?ersonnel Policy was also
Step 2. New millage at $7.50 per $1,000.00 appraised
4pproved.
. (directly from Mr. Thomas's math class) = $7.50x23.8 =
:· The quarterly member cvalua$178.50 in new taxes. , ,
~ons were· accepted by the Board.
See? About $180.00 in new taxes lor each $1 ,000.00
~lso approved was a contract for
currently paid -just like' I said to begin withlll
tomputer support services provided
~y OVAL to the McKinley MemoMr. Thomas, thank you lor helping me prove my point about
fiat Library in Niles.
political games and tricks, and how careful the bureaucrats are
;: The Board approved the
to feed the public true, but misleading facts, when it is to their
(cplacement of computer mode111s
advantage. You know, concerned citizens like you and hard to
Jt.ohich operate the interlibrary loan
sell thinkers like me need to combine forces. I believe we can
hctwork. This computer system,
have superior schools and lower taxes when we, together,
which provides for the delivery of
cease to fall victim to politicsl chicanery and to demand moral
ltems requested by citizens of one
l)tember library by the other mem· . and lipancial r&amp;!IPOnsibility from our elected officials. I hope I
bcrs, was ·installed in }9~?.· 'f1le
hilve
point, Mr. T~omas, and furtHer more 1would
l1eplacement modems Will mcrease· · now h&amp;ve your support Should'l'ever nin for Office.
·
~e capabilities of the system and
·
Thank you again,
i)lduce cost.
Robert D. Schmoll
:• OVAL is the only state funded
Oh.
Thurman,
6:gionallibrary system in Ohio. It ,
Before
Tax
Have,
After
Tax Have Nol
f.eryes the citizens and libraries of
it.thens, Hoclcin'g,' ' Jackson,
.
~
'.
'i.'· ; {
'
l;.aw,rence. Meigs , Pilce1 Ro~s.
Lei rna add a Post S~ ;-r l~ urge voters to"call the auditor's
cipco, atf\1. Vin'!ln Counties w1th
office a~ compare yOUr;~,~ ...,iaaJ.to ~1'• upcoming.~ 94
rogR!,ti1~~
.'o, .:serv1ces developed by
Do thts before you ,vote ;. Mine Is !:'P ab&lt;M 50%, guesa W!lat
.. li
'
. ose
s.
that means even without addiilonalliivieei??
~ Wltitt• ·Ebliti' serves on the
VAL 'tl~ as a reorcsCiltative of
Peld pal. 1111 lly AoiMrt loltmoll Jr., 111-M, OIL
Mel~ .Coooty PubiiC Library.

t1 Disoounts on loons1 credit cards and home
equity line of credir.
·
·
·tl N()-fee traveler's .b.J.ft money &lt;l'ders and

T-----

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•...•

Star Select Checking le~ you select the checking (JlXXJUnt that's r.ight.for you.

.1. /VV\ A....:~-1 n.._.L
t/. oJI.&lt;
0;uuu l'I&amp;UUI:1'.IUII ~Ill JJ.II!W1:1liU:.
. Sa.
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t/Automotive
.VITU"'
..
tiJnsuraire FilingAssistanoo.

•••

GALLIPOLIS • The Friends of
the Libr!U}' wiD hold their monthly
mcetln$ at 7 p.m. at· the B'ossard
Memorial Library.

frant expansion

&gt;·

t1 NQ nmthlv IJl8int.enahre fee with
mmimum llalaiQ requirement.
t/24 Inn- autmlatl!d customer
!11!1".U and ATM bariking.

•••

pvAL meets for

. ·. oQII!II~nda
. oGo'". :·ch·""-·
.
lmt. ·
FREE PARKING ' ' . •··· .,.,'-Iilli.,. '·
, . , .. ,. .
oSelko'" ·•'Ches
FREE GIFT
oCroaa.Peria .

TWO LO.CATIONS

••

Jehovah's Witnesses, Middlepon.
Natalie is. a 1990 graduate of
Meigs High School.
She and her fiance are both
employed by David White Services
of Athens.

•••

YLcquisitioTJ,S :fine 1~711eliy

WffilOUT PUITING
A LrD ON V4LUEI

tl Overdraft~*
tl Canlined statements.

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.the week. GARS students whould Ball Association.
bring their recepts 1Q pick ·up the
•••
book before school or during the
GALLIPOLIS
Alcholics
lunch perioo. Graduates arid other Anonymous will meet at Woodland
members of the community may Centers multipurpose room at 8
pick-up their copy from Mrs. p.m.
Richards in Rm I 05 between 10; 30
•
a.m. and 2:30 p.m. schooldays.
Revivals
Please J;ling your receipL
·
CROWN CITY • Crown City
Wesleyan Church will hold a
GALLLIPOLIS • Community revival Nov. I through 7. Mon.
Cance{•. Support Group meeting 2 through Sat at 7:30 p.m. and Sun.
p.m. New Life Lutheran Church on at 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. with Rev.
Rou.te ·160. For information call Denver McCarty and the Sissson
446-3538,4464895 or446-8657.
Family.

GALLIPOLIS • N11 rcotics
Anonymous Just For 'I;oda~ Group
•••
CENTERVILLE • Centerville . will _, "iret at Grace 44nited . (}ALL!POLIS • D,ickey Chapel
Chlirl:h at 7 p.m. '
Church will hold a revival Monday
oog~ 3~1 j willliold. friend~hip Mctliodist
,.,.
mner at '1:30 p.m. ·All ·mason and
with Roben Hershman and various
on masons in.vited.
LOGAN • Narcotics Anony• singers at 7 p.m.
'"'~mous Courage to Change Group
PORTER - Clark Chapel
EUREI&lt;iA · Edna Chapel will will meet at First Church of ·Christ Church. Rev. Keith Eblin. Oct 27· ve speci/11 preaching with Gene at6:30 p.m.
31. Special singing. Services begin
•••
ill man ai'6 p.m.·
?p.m.
t
. •••
Tuesday, Nov. 2 · ·
GALLIPOLIS · Haunted Manor
"'
Monday, Nov. 1
at the French Art Colony, 530 First
::t GALLIPOLIS ·The 1992-93 VINTON • Vinton hotdog and Ave. in Gallipolis, Oct. 25· 31.
Clallian will .be distributed through bake sale at Mrs. James Bush Old Open Mon.-Thurs. 7 to 9 p.m. and
Logan Monument for the Vinton Fri.-Sun. 7-10:30.
·.

...,..~~TouchLot) ·
' • '

-···

CROWJII CITY • Rev. Gerald
reen and wife from the Christian
w fou,n.~ation will .speak at
anaan Mijs1onary Bapust Church
the•momin'g ·services.

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Prlcee
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.POINT
PI:;J:ASANT · Narcotics

;;:lnonymous Tri County Group will
~old a meeting at 611 Viand St. at
::30p.m.

Y.ci. tw "-~-• '2'( 9 ...

RUTLAND · Albert and Marjorie Tromm, Rutland, announce
the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter; Natalie, to Will Tevis, son or Jamie
Tevis, Athens. and the late Walter
Tevis.
The wedding will take place on
Nov. 14 at the Kingdom Hall of

.. ·- · GalFa community calendar

••

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7·-

REG. $248

Do you feel you are oaytng too much lor
your pretertptlons? then you should be
shopptna with us. With the cost of medica·
tiona conatantly on the rise, we feel It Is
ow mpontlblllty to offer our . .
cuitom~ ,ave'!l; •.d~antMII ~lble.
You IIH, we'Ve mt~llt It i point to'kltow
when aenertc equl\&gt;alents are available.
· 1'hen, worklitg-band:lll"hand with yow. Glll;ror; i¥11 on yoU!; prescription, exactJv
as ordrrred. tlid 'lji)U 1111ve Iii tha process.

ness.

ELECT .

.

,.

boyhood,~

t~'I'JS) l coma, llerrcsb9ff
Amet.iCaa built model shij)s.

~

: POMEROY .· The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Aacncy will be
:distributing potaroes, fruit cocktail
11nd butter to persons holding a
·l"ood Commodtty Cards on Tues)lay, Nov. 9 at the foUowinglocs·
-lions:
MEIGS COUNTY • Meigs
County Fairsrounds, Tuppers
Plains Fire Station, Paaeville Town
'Hall and the Racine Fire DcpanDistribution wiD begin at about
~:30 a.m. and last until noon or
41ntil the supply is exhausted,
:whichever comes rust.
· GALLIA COUNTY • Gallla
Count~ Fairsrounds, Oallco in
Cheshtre, Mt. Carmel Baptist
Church in Bidwell and the Crown
City F"tre Station.
: Distribution wiD begin at about
noon and last until 2:30 p.m. or
'until the supply is exhausted,
'whichever comes rust.
• Persons picking up for others
much bring a si~ note from the
person in addition to their Food
CQ.nmodity cant.
:. .The Agency asks that pe_ople
:iKe their own bigs or contamers
:Cor the commodities.

. '

.

In

:....,.&lt; Jobil

~~.£vlrz1&amp;l{SJfJ~ Jf£

Food distribution

ment.

~ ~. ~t. Smynlll:

Hunt of
' Eric andl.'iia' ...
Dylan..ndHayden,TI)'torM•;eo# Tenn.; Myroa Dale~~
Delew.,C, OlwkFrieda Ervin and WatsOn Scqit--anil BCth ZOdy'T'IRl
Greg Dar_,. us of .pt; M).'~ Fla.; . WatsOn· oCRe)'nol~; B!*' and
Jennifer·DeVere of Sambel FJa • Brooke Watson of Ptckermitcn;
Nola Kilg!XC of Captiv.. Fla.: Mfi: Tom, Kelly, NicholaS and facob
Robin (Pete) Whl~ ot;,Pnion· WatSon OfLancliSter; · town, PB,; Ida LacboWSkY)!Iy and
CabinS have been reserved ·for
Barbara Duncanson' of-COlumbus· the reW1ion in OcL 1994.
•
,

WITH COUPON $318
1\lNG, 3 1'1:. Sal Sale $&amp;59. Reg. $689

WITH COUPON 14St

&amp; Snyder furniture Co.
AVE.

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446-1171

.,

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October 31, ·1~

Sunday Times Sentinel.

OH-flolnt

·court forbids Sa.int:Laurent,; .~
ta sell .'charripagne Per[um.' .

wv

· Meigs community cal{(ndar

1
.•

'

PARIS (AP)- A Paris court
has fGrbidden fashion designer
Yves Saint·Laurent liom using the
name "ChampaiPle'" for .his latest
perfume and ordered the scent's
corlc-shaped boUles deslroycd wilh·
in a l)lonth.
The designer will haw to pay a
fine of lhe equivalent pf $~35 for
each bottle sold after lhat·period, it
said in a rulintt issued Thursday.
The perfume has been on the mar·
ket smce September. · .
Presiding Judge Lydie 'Dissler
ruled that using lhe label risked

Detroit court
cracks down

•'weakening" !lie reputation of ~
bubbly wine that made it fainp,u~
and could lead consumers •to
believe !hat champagne makers 'arid
lhe designer were in a joint projet.t.:
The ruling was in response to ~
law suit ~y famous champagn ~
makers.such. as Moet-et-Chandon,
the Intetprofesslonal Committee of,
Champagne Wjne and the instill\te;
that oversees "appellations .d'O!jg•,
' •
inc" regional trademarks.
Elf-Sanofl, which .QWDS Saint-'
Laurent, Sl\id it would.llppe;li.
·:
Champagne makers jealouslr;
~uard their trademark against
mtruders and, in their suit. al,O:
complained .about the bottle .cc:llt-:
taining Saint-Laure~t'ucent . ;:

;~~Oth anniversary celebrated:
· ~ · GROVEPORT • Kenneth and nia Shoe Cmpomtiori.
•Betty Circle Krider celebrated their
Family members attending were
50th wedding anniversary on Oct Linda Bohner, Amy Bohner,
:24 with a lunchc:on and reception Michael Bohner, Mr. and Mrs.
. •Riven by !heir family at the Grove- Matthew Jlqhiter and daughters
.-pan Town Hall.
Nichole and Emily, Evelyt! CiJtle,
· •~ They wen: married on Oct. 24, Mr. and Mrs. David Clfcle and
·1943 at the Avondale United daughters Melissa and Laura, Wen·
Bretheril Church in Columbus , dell and Anna Cir~le Cle'iand,
' where they still reside.
.Rosemary and Wa~ Circle RaUS.
They have one son, Gary Ken- Mr. and Mrs. Erit Raas an~ daugh·
. 'nclh Krider.
ter Jessica, Matthew and Valerie
• · · Kennclh and Betty both gradual- Garnet and children Megan. and
, .. ed from Racine High School. Ken- Zachary and Andrew Ratts. The
. "nelh is retired from lhe Commer- celebration was also attended by
cial Motor Frehr:ht Companv. Bettv many friends and neighbors.
is.re!Ued liom the Joyce of Califor-

on dress
DETROIT (AP) - No $hirl, no .
MR. AND MRS. JOSEPH SHULTE
shoes: no justice.
That's the edict in Detroit's 36th
District Coun, where a dress, code
POMEROY • Dena Rae ·Jewell ell, Minersville, step-mother of the for!Jids shorts, sandals, blue jeans ·
and any skirt more than 2 inches
. and Joseph John Schulte were unit· bride .
above
the knee.
Best man was Jason Joseph
ed in marriage on Oct. 22, 1993 by
"They
come in here in Levis all
Rev. Charles Norris at a ceremony Schulte, Soulh Gate, Mich., son of
ripped,
clothes
or shorts up to pracat the home of lhe bride's father, the grooni.
tically
their
crotches,"
said Paul
The bride wore a two piece
Harold R. Jewell, Minersville.
Music was provided by Della ankle length dress with a long- Kanan, a court administrator.
sleeved fitted jacket and carried a "You've got guys coming down
Jewell, aunt of the bride.
The bride is the daughter of bouquet of pmk silk carnations here dressed with their T-shirts
Harold R. Jewell, Minersville and trimmed in pmk and purple ribbon. showing off their big chests, and
The home was decorated in the judges don't want that.
Henriena Jewell, South Gate,
"This is a courthouse. We want
dried flowers, hanging green plants
Mich.
respect"
The groom is the son of Mildred and a fall wreath.
The dress code, spelled but on .
The family members attending
Schulte and the late Frank Schulte
placards
posted this week at the
enjoyed a buffet supper and the
of Sciuth Gate, Mich.
entrance
to
each courtroom, applies
The bride was given in marriage wedding cake.
to
spectators
and people ~g
The couple will reside in South
by her father.
m
coun.
Matron of honor. was Betty Jew· Gate, Mich.
I~ doesn't apply to !hose being
arra1gned, except for prostjtution
suspects who must follow the, 2i nches-above-the-knee rule for
skirts.
Legal briefs are still OK.

Beat of the Bend...

Jewell-Schulte

~

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~· · ~ ,. .

:~~:i

MR. AND MRS. MARK KREIGER

Sloan-Kreiger

::••.• POMEROY • Angela K. Sloan,
:&gt;' :Pbmetor. and Mark P. !Veiger, Jr.,
~ ::ctartsvllle, Tenn., were united in
" marriage in a double ring ceremony
:!- al the Rock Springs United
·! Methodist Church by Rev. Keith
:: Rader on September 18.
•.
The bride is the daughter of Bob
~ and Karen Sloan of Pomeroy. The
~ groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
~ Rober Kellough of Fairfield and
-: Mr. and Mrs. Mark P. Kreiger, Sr.
:· of Colorado.
.
-:
The bride was given in marriage
:· by her father. Bethany Mayer
'j1h!yed the keyboard,'Dtane Ash
was soloist, and Jackie Metz was

Maid of Honor was Shannon
S Iavin, Pomeroy. Bridesmaids
were Molly Sloan, Rockenhausen,
Germany, sister· in-law of bride;
Kim Kemp, Dallas, Texas and
Lorie Sheridan, Sierra Vista, Ariz.
The bridesmaids' dresses were
emerald green tea-length gowns.
They each carried an arm bouquet
of carnations and wild flowers.
Rower girl was Jamie Rae Bailey, Mason, W.Va. Train bearer
was Darby Gibnore, Pomeroy.
Best man was John Page,
Columbus. Groomsmen were Paul
Ballou, Dwight Charvala, Mike
Petticrew, Rob Gilger, Dave
Shaver, Matt Tibbs and Chris
Sloan, brother of lhe bride.
The reception was held at Meigs
High School. The bridal cake was
made by the m\)lher of lhe bride.
Laura Cobb registered guests.
The bride is a gmduate of Meigs
High School and Ohio University.
The groom is a graduate of Circleville High School and Ohio University. Both are lieutenants in lhe

u.s. Army. .

-

The couJtle will reside in
Clarksville, Tenn.

'

By T.A. BADGER
Associated Press Writer
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) The people of Barrow, the nation's
northernmost city, will patrol
streets this weekend to make sure
children out doing Halloween
tricks don ' t end up a polar bear
treat.
Up to half-a-dozen bears have
been sponed around the Arctic
Ocean community in recent weeks,
drawn by the aroma of seven
butchered whales captured in this
fall's hunL
Residents have shot two bears
recently, one after it got uncomfo~~
ably close. to villagers working
through the night to carVe up the
last two whales.
·
"'"'ai was a life-threatening sit·
uation," Harry Brower, a
researcher with the North SloP.e
Borough Department of Wildhfe
Management, said Friday. The
bear's sudden appearance on the

beach sent people screaming and
scrambling toward their cars for
safety.
This Halloween, parent Karen
Burnell said she's going door to
door with her children, a 13-yearold boy and a 10-year-old girl.
"We've had a bear under our
window and didn't even know it till
we saw the tracks the next night.
They've been coming that close,"
she said.
Brower said police, wildlife personnel and volunteers will roam lhe
streets for the Halloween bear
walCh.
"We're just trying to keep lhe
bears separllf:lld from lhe kids," he
said.
_

carry our own

acc:ounti.

IDG.AN

"

MONUMENT
CO.-,
·- -8 Eaat Broad Sli wt,
SulteiOO

Columbus, Ohio
1-800118 OLAW

.,

'·

I

VOTE ·
'

••

BERNARD D. GILKEY

-e,~;r~
PHOTOGRAPHY
PtofeBiional Wecfdlng PI!OIOI/raphy

Salisbury Township .Trustee~

(614) 446-6700

SAUSBVRY rDWN51f.tP DUDVU ..
OHI Ff1LL TIJO l'JIUS1'Uf

!4.cquisitimts FINE JEWELRY

TO THE VOTERS OF SALISBURY TOWNSHIP:
I am a candidate for Township Trust!l&amp;. I fully Intended
contact you personally, however sometimes people are:
difficult to reach, so I ~ publishing my resume of:
experience. I feel I am the best candidate for the office of
Township ·Trustee for the following reasons:

CONGRATULATIONS
To Our Grand Opening

ISSUES OF CONCERN:
.

,

!

•

1{

•1 --------------------------~
On November 2nd Elect

"'•

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&gt;

MARK S. MOONEY

Pilei Fot BV The C-11 Marte S. Mooney, 92 Dogwood Dr., Gali!Jolls, Ohio 45631

ROB_
ERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACDCE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

Shown From Left: Mildred Riley, Em11111 J•ne Paugh,
and Betty Sayre

1) Mildred Ailey
2) BeUY Sayr,e
3) Emma Jane Paugh
4) Donna Carr

'300 14k Gold Chain
1150 SeikoWatch
1 100 14k Gold Earrings

•so Savings Bond

..

. The response to our grand opening was
overwhelming! Thank-you very much. We promise"
to offer you a great selection of fine quality jewelry ·
at UNBEATABLE Prices.
You Cannot Afford to Shop Anyplace Eisel

.9loquisitions ·
FINE JEWELRY

.RE
. (POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp;.JEFFERSON AVENUE

•

. '-.,l,

.

..

, ,Two locatlona:
11 Mlll&amp;trwt
' ;M!ddl!IP&lt;Ht. Oh
112..260 '
151 Second Ave.

tStelilng

..... . .
•w.tchH
•

"MtmbW of Jnteralloaid ofT....

-

•

POMEROY • Pomeroy Church
of Christ will be having a revival
Oct. 31 lhrough Nov. 5. Services
will be at 10:30 a.m. on Oct. 31
and at 7 p.m. on week ni'hts. There
will be a special hymn smg at 7:30
p.m. Sunday. Danny Evans will be
the evangehst

POMEROY • There will be a
revival Nov. I · 7 at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel on State Route 143 at
7:30 p.m. nig·htly. Rev. Kenneth
Hooper from Soulh Dakota will be
the evangelist. There will be special singing.
TUESDAY

MIDDLEPORT • Fall Hallelu-

MI,DDLEPORT • The regular
stated meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F. and A. M., will be
held at 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the
Masonic Temple. Election of officers will be held.

Pentecostal Church from 10 a.m. to
I p.m. There will be games, prizes
and t.ree lunch for the children.
Free bus ride to and from are available by calling 992-7748.

POMEROY • Fmtemal Order of
Eagles Auxiliary will.have sausage
sandwiches at 7 p.m. Members are
asked to bring a dessen or salad. A
meeting will follow at 7:30p.m.

RACINE· Racine Chapter #134
Order of Eastern Star will have initiation practice at3 p.m.

CHESTER • Pomeroy Order of
Eastern Star#l82 will meet at 7:30
p.m. at lhe Chester Masonic Temple. Officers wear street dresses.
Refreshments will be served.

iatl pany will be held at the United

DEXTER • Dexter Church of
Christ will celebrate its homecoming with dinner at noon in the basement and an afternoon program.
Former pastor Charles Russell will
be lhcre. Everyone is welcome.
MONDAY

POMEROY • Pomeroy American Legion will hold their annual
oyster stew dinner. Members are
urged to pay !heir 1994 dues before
January. Dinner will start at 7 p.m.
followed by a meeting at 8 p.m.

MIDDLEPORT . Kickoff for
the 1993 United Fund for Meigs
County will be held at 5 p.m. Monday at Dave Diles Park in Middleport. The Meigs Band will play,
there will be flag raising by the
Boy Scoutsc, and the Rev. Frank
Smith, Fund president, will be
joined for shon speeches by Nancy
Campbell and the Rev. Sharon
Hausman. Refre~hments will be
served by the Middleport Arts
Council
'

RUTLAND · Leading Creek
Conservancy Disttict will close iL&lt;
office at noon for election day.

POMEROY • The Meigs Band
Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. in lhe
Meigs High School band room .
Help is needed with peeling apples

·-~ llost Clmnf hlteml

after the meeting.
RACINE R J
•
f
· egu ar meetmg o
R acme
· Ch apter o
d
f
E
. r er o astern
Star. Initiation ceremony. All past
ffi
ed
d
o tcersareencourag toatten.
REEDSVll.LE ·Eastern Athletic Booslers will ·meet at 7:30 p.m.
in the high school cafeteria.
MIDDLEPORT · The Middlepan Garden Club will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Presbyterian
Church.

·D @ D Pholo8raphy
Weddf18s@
6pecial Occasions
' 67?-2514
, . .HALLOWEEN ACTIVITIES • Mrs. Walton's ftrst grade class
• at Wasblngti&gt;n Elementary with the help or ber homeroom parent
:· volunteers painted Halloween shirts. Other activities included
.; ~~Jaking a rail wreath, writing Halloween stories and making spi·
ders:
· '1
.J

'

EXPERIENCE:
•30 years of·publlc service Including:
2 years as County Commissioner
5 years as Superintendent of Melgs·County State
Garage for O.D.O.T.
•Township Trustee for 13 years
.4 years as su~rvlsor With Middleport .an~ Meigs County
·· · Utt~rOont{ol :~· ·... ···"··,~~ .;~~;?.-~·,..I t:··..::· 11. ,
AFFILIA110NS: ' ·' . •, ... · . · .•..,
.
.Ohio Trustee and Clerk's,Assoctatlon •VFW Post 9~~6
•America~'! Legion Post 128
•Veteran of wn,.tf.
. •Meigs County Senior Citizen
' .
·w•r n ·
•D.A. V. Chapter't53
•FOE 21
~·,_

oOI•mollda
oQold Chlllne

RACINE • Racine Village
Council will meet at 7 p.m. at Star
Mill Park. '

Silver anniversary celebrated ·
GALLIPOLIS • Mr. 1nd Mrs.
Loder Steinbeck celebrated !heir
50th wedding anniversary at lhe
Stowaway Oct 9.
The party was given by !heir
daughlel' Becky Lahna and family.
A buffet lunch was served to guests
from a table cenr.cred wilh a thn:e

tiered anniversary cake and a center piece of yellow swecthtart roses
with yellow and whirc Clllllllions.
The couple was married Oct. 7,
1943. by Rev. J. Edward Hakes at
the First Baptist Church.

2,- Elect
PTO to sponsor James Gilbert for
H1ntlngton Tow
.
. talent show
Trustee. The caldi•ate
GALLIPOLIS • Hannan Trace
PTO will be sponsoring a talent wh will work kar~
contesl/variety show Nov. 12.
year round i11prov .
The contest to be beld at 7 p.m.
is open from ages S through 14
roadways
and
with different categories to be
determined according to the cemetery maintenance. ·
response of entries.
Two special guests will be perExperienced ami
forming at the variety show, lhe
Dependable
gospel group Sin cere and country
On

Nov~

to

music singer Lynctta Blankenship.
There is a SS entry fee. For
more information contact Mark
Irwin at256-1519. ·

Paid for lty tilt m I Jilt
P.O. Box S19, Vllltl, Oltlo

ANQJIORDER

SALE!
• WAVERLY
• IMPERIAL
•SUNWALL
• WALLTRENDS
• MAYFAIR
cuR.,,. 40ro 50% OFF
IN STOCK
W•llpapet &amp; Bonier
Prices Are Now
An Addifio1111l

20°/o OFF
·s.;:'' 60·70o/o
Now Thru Nov. 17, 1993

MDIORIAL IIIIDQI-CIICIII
IWIFIIUIAVl. P A R -

MON.·FRI. 9-9:
SAT. 9-5:30 SUN. 1·5

428-1065
No
..-!

AD s.a.Rua

lftr.&amp;rMor F-*

Medical Oxygen

SupplieS ~~lnecare

All Types 01 Relplraloly Equipment For Sale 01 Rent
-oxygen Therapy Equipment
•Oxygen Concentrators
•Refills
.,

MR. AND MRS. LUDER STEINBECK

SUPER
WALLPAPER

WAL:LPAPER AND
BLIND SHOP

•

•

POMEROY, • Pomeroy Church
of. the Nazarene will be having a
homecoming with regular services
at 9:30 a.m., potluck dil)Jler at
itoon. Special singing wilh lhe Bissell Brothers at I p.m. will be followed by evening services at 6 p.m.
Pastor Glen McClung invites the
public.

.

· . _.The voters of the Vl!lage of Middleport and PomeroY.:!!
do' not receive direct services from Salisbury Tn\.m.,htrl:
Trustees. However, many use township roads in travel
and have family membei:S .interred In township cemeteries.
Keap·thls In mind, please remember and vote for Bernard
Gil~ey on Npvember 2~ 1993, so that Salisbury Township
'can continue to teeelve 'these. services.
'
"

I

.~.:rn ACCOjMMODATE THOSE.WORKING PEOPLE,
. ~.. ·,11 , WE
OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS ,

.

SYRACUSE • The Sutton
Township Trustees will meeL at
7:30 p.m. at lhe Symcuse Municipal building.

RUTLAND • Rutland Free Will
Baptist Church will have a revival
from Nov. 1 through 7. Rev. Marvin Markham will be preaching.
Pastor Paul Taylor invites the pub·

. Fire and l;merge(ft:y Squad ..; I feel that our Fire Ann' .'"
Emergency Squ"d unitS · · are among the · best
Southeastern Ohio and we should support them In
way posSible to help tl\em upgrade their units
Other way that would be of ~ervtce.

'

For
Green Township Trustee
Candidate For The Community

'

'

'

CHESTER • lzaak Walton
League slug shoots start at I p.m.
at IZ84k Walton Farm. Smoolh bore
or rifled barrels, no scopes.

LETART FALLS · Letart
Trustees will meet at 6
p.m. at the town hall to discuss
adopting the solid waste plan.

Cemeteries - The cemeteries are a high priority.
need to be cteaned and mowed whenever necessary and·
kept free of trash and litter. When I was formerly a
we Installed a dusk to dawn light at RO&lt;:ksJ&gt;rin!~~;J
Cemet~ry. It stoJ)p~ a lot of trespassing and var1da.llsm
and I thin~ 1! also ~~ows respect.
·

PARTY CREATURES • Party goers relax berore the Halloween
Party held Oet. 22 at the Gallia County Children's home. Resi·
dents and staff were treated to a ''Mystery Dinner," party and
bonfire organized by Tammy Schmidt and Elizabeth Stewart.
Michael Phillips and the Alpha Mu Beta Sorority also built a
haunted house ror the oceasion.

HOBSON • Special singing by
the Rev. Dennis Weaver Family
and preaching at 7:30 p.in. at lhe
Hobson Christian Union Church:
Evcryo.nc welcome.

SUNDAY ,

Towns~ip

•

'

lie.
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port, Arts Council will be orfering
the final series of classical Chinese
Tai Chi Ch'uan classes from 7 to 8
p.m. on the f1111 thn:e Mondays in
November at the Arts Council
Chambers on North Second
Avenue. No martial aru experience
is necessary. Participants should
ware loose clothing and soft-soled
shoes. The cost is $15 and Is
payable lhe f1111 night of class.

.

, long-time Syra· daughter of Dale and Marjorie
and I do mean long- Walburn of Middleport, wrQIC' the
her J03rd bjrthday winning essay in a recent contest
•
· '
staged by the Lincoln Times·News
,
As a part of the observance, she in Lincolntown, N. C.
' was taken to di-nner at Craw's
The contest was staged by the
; Steak ~ouse by Judge Fred Crow, newspaper as a part of a program to
; 1\iswife, Cathy, and their son, Lit· encourage young people to say
: lie Will. And !hey weren't given "no" to drugs. As winner, Brittany
• your ordinary every day ueaunent received a nice prize besides the
! at the' steak-bouse. Vera Crow who honor of having her essay pub: manages lhe .establ~hment P!'Ovid- · lished. It goes like this:
- ed curb serv1ce taking lhe dinQers
"How I Stay 'Drug Free"'
: for lhe four to lhe car and provid"There are so 111any highs in life
; ·ing ~x~ellent ~ervice .. Ver~ had who really needs drugs?
., never:~ne~ Marc18 and smce 11 was
"Drugs are a substitute for the
: · a special occasion, lhe dinners were pleasures of true living.
::on lhe ho.use. Judge Crow, by the
"I stay drug free by finding
• . way, is Marcia's ftrst cousin, twice plenty of rewarding activities to flU
' removed.
up my free time. I take dance
•
Later t.he group. went to the lessons and I involve myself wilh
• home of BtU and Twila Karr Buck- school activities which give me an ·
: ley in the ~latw.oods area to deliver opponunity to socialize as well as
: an old family pteture V.:hi~h Marc•a participate and learn. I involve
- wanted to present. Comctdentally, myself with church activities which
: Mr. imd Mrs. Buckley:s so~. Bran- help me spiritually.
"I enjoy being drug free because
: den, was observmg hts btnhday,
. the 14th, on the 27th also so there I want to have a clear mind to learn
: was a big family gathering on hand all I can at school. Each year is a
: and everyone had tl!e. opportunity little tougher so I don't want drugs
. for some real good VISIUng. Memo- clouding my chances of getting the
: ries are made of this.
most of my education.
"I know I may not know all lhc
,
Nan MQOre. , long-time teacher in answers b t hen ut"ven a cho'ce
· h ·her
u tw drugs
" · no N 1 ·
• the Middl'eport schools wtt
: later years bein' spent ai the Mid- my answer o
IS
• o ts
•
such a small word but lhe impact is
illepon High chool where she ~reat. I .have PC?tential tQdo so
~!tied to teach Some of us·lhe fonda- much, wtlh my hfe. No drUgs for
t, mentals of English and literature, me. 1 m o.k. the way I am. I also .
• will mark her 93rd birlhday on Hal· have to b~ a good example, you
:: loween, Sunday. OctJI.
.
see, because r have three.,little sisc At the present time, Nan is con- tees who look up to me and parents
:. fined to lhe extended care facility who love me".
~ at Vetemns Memorial Hospital in
Well pui. Confratulations to
•p
·
ti fro
•. omeroy recupem ng m s~ery Brittany from al of her Meigs
:; after receiving a fractured hip m a County friends.
:- fall near her Middleport home . . By the way, the Waiburns' son,
•, She's basically doing fine. Thurs- Capt. Steven and his ~arnily arc sta·
' d af
h
· th h ·
•. ay• bea.
temoon·· hs e was m
·
he ospth · tioned at Fon Sill, Okla. Their chit11
I
&gt; ta s
uty ·s op ge mg er atr dren, Summer and Tyler, love the
·. done so that's some indication that slow pace of Oklahoma living.
:· she'sprogressing.
·: Nan loves to hear from friends
Jim and Becky Anderson must
:: and former students and her daugh- have discovered Charlie Brown's
:·ter, Elizabeth, reports that.cards do Pumpkin Pall:h. What a great idea
·: help so much. Cards will reach her to stage that jack-o-,lantem contest
:: at Veterans Memorial, 11 S East They not only provided the pump:· Memorial Drive, Pomeroy.
kins for contestants but also some
'•
nice cash prizes. Whadda deal.
. . Brittany Carpenter, daughter of Things like lhese help all of us to
: Jill and Todd Carpenter, and gmnd- keep smiling.

10% deposit and
balan&lt;e In Co~~W­
nient low montbly
payments.
Convenient
credit terma - We

Barrow fears costumed kids
could become polar bear treat

. . by Bob Hoeflich

,Community Caleudar Items
appear two daya before aa event
and the day or that even,J. Items
must be received In advaace tp
assure publication In tbe c:alen:
dar.

Free Del~. Set.Up And

Instruction

Individual and
Family Services
for Adults
Adults ranging in age
from young to elderly
How can we help?:

Woodland Centers employs a group of energetic, dedicated and caring mental health prolessionals to ensure
that every client receives appropriate services. The staff
work intimately as a team to provide you with the most
suitable services to meet your unique needs.
Why should I seek help?:

Each and everyone of us, al some time in our lives, may
need someone to share our burdens with ...to help us
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Services Offered:
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2. The Residential Crisis 4. Adult Communily Training
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5. Case Management

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Hours: 11:~:00 M·T-Th-F. Others by appointment.
. 593-6586 or 446-2327

YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT

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•

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS ·
• }

~-

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••

gril-

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Woodland Centers, Inc. ·
A Private, Not for Profit Agency Working .
Hard to Serve You in .
:
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Woodland Centers, Inc . .Ia funded in part by the
Gallia.Jackaon-Melgt Board of Alcohol,
Addiction &amp;Mental Health Services.
.

;

••

�•

•
October31, 1993

:. ~:'

•Y
•'

Page-B&amp;-Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

'

Pomeroy Mlddl(tport Ollllpolla, OH Point Pleuant, wv

October 31 ,

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

. Sunday Tlmee SanUnel Pegt 17

It's dissection day for rats

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20 PACK. 12·OZ. CANS

Monday thru Sunday

s

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•'

.•
•

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD OCT. 31 THRU NOY. 6, 1993

•

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MASTER BLEND COFFEE :: : :

., 299

34.5 .

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Good Only At Powell's Super Valu

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. ·'-' . l'tl:l!dni·T~er.
You,.,, h.;,.t'~r 189atyles 0t
tuxta 10 cliciote'from: We have a
l8rve ~ olt~ lat•lt ltvte·

erl!! CO~)!!~~ itt~; Will •fCCOJ!liJ!Cnd
exR.mding· Head 1Start 10 re.ach low·
inc:f~mc· famiiies with babies and
to&lt;ldlccs and that·services now
0~ rp .~y~,oJ4s be improved.
acdxding to adraft repon.
,thc'r48-membcl advjsory com·~1--

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offjcials, Head Start pioneers, .
ad~ lind cady ch,jldhood·educati&gt;n ex~. iS'to · m~ ·~y ·
to cf!scuss die draft and complcti: its
rini!lql011 fl)( Health 1i!nd Hpman
Sl\Wices Secrewy Do!!1ia Shalala. ·
· ~halala announced , the task·
fo~in June anfproi!liaed it
· w Iii co=·- ' top!tll-b'O.t'tom
re . of · · ~tart" a(iJ.Ir;.O!ili"
toi\'t•adminisuatton was :Pressmg
Coi&amp;ress,.!O expand .the 'mogram ,
an4 increase fundmf for the
ptcfChool program by 10 billion
ovf!l the next several years.
lt ~ '~e time, in~ajors
ror. ~~s ~10rg ., , . Vfet'e
releasmg·a ~ ofre!lo.!'JSl:n~ of
earJer expansiOIIa aDd the qilality
of ipme local Head Start programs.
The draft report.;obtalncd by
Th( Associated ·Press, seeks to
imP,i'ove the quality of Head Start
w.htlc responding to ·th~ needs of
tomy·s working parcllts by offering fuiJ·da:t and r~-round ser~.
vi · · ~nd. ail~pding programs •to
inc.~dO ji\f~ts ,ind toddlers ff!lm .
birth 10'3.. '·
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Seaci 'Start was created iii196S
as 4cornp~ehensive. child.ciOvelapmef·l pro1ram' for some of the
co.qJtrY'• poorest 4-ycar-olds.•
Si~ then, i.he face of poverty '!as.
chailgl!jlto include .many moro angle
'ts. .
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. .a ··, 72l.•OPO~~~ildren lllld, ~!if
: ~ . iies in 36,3!l!l•cJaui'odjna .nu:
' m ·. ·lhan 500 ~ Viliting pro~s.
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$3 biUiiin foi the flacal ~ that .
be
OcL l, 111 incr1 ·e of $350
ml on fnJni Jut )1llr but lela ~
1110 · t4 bllUon ~by PIWdeOt .
. · . Mlin.t · !hit Head

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A Few Of Our Homes Standard Features
• Andersen Wmdows

• Suinlcy Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 16 In. On Center
• Annstrong Solarian Floor Tllc
• Kitchen Compact Cabinets
• 8 Foot Ceiling
• 2x10 Floor Joist, 16 In. On Center
• 52 Gallon Water Heater

* Carriage Carpets
• Mastic T-lock Vmyl Siding With Lifetime Warranty
. • 25 Year Wammty Asphalt Shingles
• 10 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Vlewlaa Roan 1:00-5:00 p.ill.
Tue-Siit. or bJ appollltaat Call 614-!m-U71

WE HAVE SOMETHING TO CROW ABOUT!

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OLD. .. . , APPLE
BIJi•J'IR DIY

. Apple·lutt•r~ CO.k:etl In I Copper Iettie
·
Over An Open Fire

NOVEMBER 6th
,Sta~~g At 6:00 A.M~ .To 6:00 P.M.
AYIU.AILE
IN PINIS AND QUillS
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Fill SIIIPLIS D~ of S.le
:. . •' .fill IOWL OF liD SOUP

.'' c.eked ... an.e,.., fire.
·111o nalltltle.Hardy ~-~~ Mu•••

After having undergone an under-the-magnifying glasc oosite
survey by tbe Joint Commission on Accreditation of Bealtbcare
Organizations, accreditation for Veterans Memorial Hospital
has been renewed for another three y~
We requested this on-site survey of our facility by tbe Joint
Commis-;ion which is composed of members from the American
College of Surgeons, the A~erican CoUege of Physiclam, the
American Dental Association, the American Medical
Association · and· the America Hospital Association. Our
accreditation was renewed following tbe intensive on-site
inspection.
The Joint Commlst~ion judges every fadlity it visits on a set of ,
criteria which has been approved by tbe Comm~ion.
Renewal of our Joint Commission accreditation Is firm
evide~e that your hometown hospital, Veterans Memorial, Is
continuing to provide quality patient care in a safe and pleasant
environment.
.
Our statr Is proud of this prestigious endorsement.
At Veterans Memorial we DO have something to crow about.
'

··Pu..-!ld.ns, Indian C•rn,
·
Apples and Cider.
Greenllouu Hoursz
'

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Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Hospital

'

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.GREENHOUSE
.·~

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992-2104

. , ~ ~ommondl ~1ren4t!lenlng

.:r~~J!IOnt·pi'AAUC:OI~~nd

Pomeroy, OH

,_,-

·OREN'S GREENHOUSE

'

Model Home («ated 8t
IDteneetioa oiRtL 7 II: 33

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TRUTH
OR
CONSE·
QUENCES, N.M. (AP)- Jane
Fonda and. Ted Turner hope 10 let
their buffalo 11111111 on a SOO.squarcmile ranch that comes complete
wi!h two mountain ranges, an
extinct vo1c;111o, bat caves and a
Civ.il War battleground.
The ,-\nnendaris R111ch, whicb
adjoins the couple's I add« Ranch
in southern New Mexico, is oa the
auction block in bankruptcy proceedings· by Oppenheimer IndusCorp.
been appraised
million. Tum·
H. Mayer, says
determined 10

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YELLOW

Buffalo land
to be acquired

ead Start

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FAMILY HOMES

" The 21st.century can be our
century if we llpJJIOII:h it with the
vigor, the determination, the .wisdom and 1ho s11eer confidence and
joy of life that John Kennedy
brought to America in 1960." Clioton said.
1n his remarks, Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., referred to the
now-famous image of Clinton
shaking hands with the president
three decades ago.
•'Of all he did, my brother
would take a lasting pride in the
teens he inspired, especially the
young man from Hope (Ark.)."
Kennedy said.
"My hope is that a generation
QPOII,UP free tndc wtth Canada and
from·I)Ow IIIIOihcr yoiDig pn:sident
Me~~A sy mbolizcs
the ...._.
. will honor. you as you have bon·
. - __.. """"" 1!! ...-oted Jack.
"reach out .rather than inward,"
Clinl!Xl said

by TV
· chronological

·-i

PEAS
17 ox.

homage to JFK

most vis! tors to the ~ibrary !lnd
museum m the Don:heSier netghborbood soul~ of downtow.n
Boston w~ren t .born when her
falhCI'was mofficc.
''November 1963 was not the
end," ~he said. "There are ~p
many thinJS that need 10 be done.
. Sh.e Said she looks for;ward to
bringmg her own three chi!dn:n to
the museum to answei thell' queslions abOut their grandfallt«.
Clinton spotc of Kennedy's
activist Jeg~cy, then plugged his
ow~ acuvist•agendi 10 rc~onn the
nauon 's bealtb care system 111d
pass the Jllorth Americ,an Free
Trade·Agr~ent, _whi&lt;;h would

,

'"-------1,..
ARMOUR TREET '. '

KELYS

.

order the. story of the Keiuiedy
admini~tioo, from the campaign
!hr'bugb,ihe assassinalio.n to his
tnfluence on those who ca~e of
age in the 1960s. Some cubicles
focus on the optimism that gave
bifth to· the Peace Corps and .th.e
spJICC prpgram, others on CIVIl
rig!us lil)d ,the harrowing Cuban
miSSUe aisis.
·
The assa!sinalion is left until the
neit-to' last stop, a dark corridor
where five smaU televisions disjllily
f1~~o~f~TV~~cov.cragc· from the
sb
· hiSJUJielal .
room

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FISCHER BR~ND

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" By DANIFL BEEGAN
AlaOt:lllted " -:Writer
~e~iN (AP). _
"young
Hopc," whosl: life
after shapnj.P,Jesldent
in' tlie'Rose Oarn:JQodelcd
Ubral:y •aimed
generation of

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1.29
Style Ribs •••••••••••••••••
PORK BUTT STEAK OR COUNTRY

YOUR FULL TIME CANDIDATE

ne

~a.. .

LB.

Your Vote WUl Be Appreciated!

lf.he 'Youpg m~n from Hope' pays

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

S~LI! .

•••C••IJ
hard of Educatlo•

c8rry acconling to l=ir·
from 16 to 20 persons.
fnt,bus was ~ in the
scable on State SiRetbut each
wo!llll come out in front of the
CeniQl, Hotel. It lOok passen. to tbC t.llroll!t'depoc'rrom the
·~-~·-·· 3 major hotels in 1904-Park
cdJtral, U1samer and Riverview.
bus was opaated by a stoCk

F&amp;P
TOMATOES

69

$.

LL

99

h

Chuck Roast ••••••••••~••• · ]
USDA CHUla BONELESS Bill

HONEST· UPDDNCD
VOTE FOR

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�Entertainment

,

October 31, 1993

1rimts- ~entiattl

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

In the Top 25,_

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October31,1~

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No. 3 OSU beats Penn State 24-6
2

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2
3
4

Xscape. lust Kir:iin 'II
llealloaf. l't.l /}(} An,yi!Jing lor kve
Jazzy Jeff. fjqqml S!Jale t!Je A'fJOm
Zhane. HeJ Jlr. D./
Tag Team. T!JfJOmp1 T!Jere II Is
Mariah Carey. Dream kver
'l'wo- Pac. I Cel Around
Ace of Bass. All T!Jal S!Je Tanis
Tony'Toni'Tone'. Annirersary
inner Circle. Slreal

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TOP 10 POPULAR ALBUMS
B

Reba McEntire. Creates/ J!Jts'.f!
Nirvana. In 1//ero
Garth Brooks. In Pieces
Meatloaf. /Ia/ Out of Hell: lladr Into
Mariah Carey. Jlusir: !lox
Billy Joel. JO'rer of Dreams
Blind Melon. Blind Jlelon
Janet Jackson, lane!
Rod Stewart. 1/npluged J Sealed

2
1

3
4
6
9
7
15

· Reba llcEnlire, Creates/ J!Jls 2
Gar th Brooks. In Pieces
Alan Jackson. /,()/About livin'
George Strait. &amp;Js,y Come &amp;is,y Co
Vince Gill. 1 S/Jll Beliere in You

I
2
3
4
5
6

3
1
4

2
5
6

Wynonna Judd. Tell Jle T!J,y
Billy Ray Cyrus. II Tont 8e t!Je !.as/
7
John Michael Montgomery, /.lie's a /Jance
8
Brooks &amp;Dunn . Hard TorJJiJ"Jian
9
· d .-.. "--' , n ,., d iO
Confederate Radroa , Lonm;era,e n'fil/1'08

B

13
12
11

Moving presents headaches and labor
I'm moving.
I just thought I would let my
fans know so they don't firebomb
the wrong apartment.
Moving is one of those life
experiences that I would just as
soon fast forward lhrough.
There's something humbling
about seeing your entire existence,
all your possessions, reduced 10 20
Fruit Loop and Geritol boxes.
I'm not sure which is worsepacking or unpacking.
Packing methods are divided
into two categories- yo.u can
either spend one very long day
packing and moving or you can
spread the task out over sev~ral
days
• 1~ anolher words, you have your
choice of either one killer 24-hour
migraine headache or a small
annoying headache for an entire
week.
1 chose lh e 1atrer. The d'ffi
' 1c ut ty
with packing gradually is deciding
what your going 10 need and what
you can pack away.
These decisions are usually corrcct about 30 percen t of the u· me.
The surest way to guarantee
you'D need an item is to place it in
the bouo m o f an em y box, cover
h 10 Or 15 Ot er ·Items an d
11 Wit
~.A
I''d c10&gt;«~.
the
tape
If after an hour.you still baven 't
s turnbled across a s1'tuau·Qn where
you need . the bur•'ed 1'tem, stack
several boxes on lOp of the first one
•• you 'II
and ww't haIf an hour. now
't
...
A
need 1 - guaran=u.
To mBke the whole experience
even more fun, I didn't bother to
label any of my boxes. My packing
theory_is to maxi~ize space by
crammmg as many 1tems as possl·
ble into each box. Even if it ends
up weighing 97 pounds.
To accomplish this, I didn't imitate intelligent, orderly people by

• f
A L d •
nn an ers
Advice rom
• IS
• Sale
.C
sex
masturbatlon

·
EBRA
HALE
By D
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) _ Ann Landers' endorsement of masturbation
as a safe, realistic alternative for
Cvc·ryone, from teens to lhe elderly,
is winning more accolades than
even she cxpecled.
And that, said the advice col urnnl.s•~ reflects a changing society.
Ten Or 20 yearS ago, ") WOUld
not have g otten this kind of
said. "People are
response. " s~e
'1
·
e lightened and
bccomm~
n more honest.
'
also they re· lll0re
becoming
And I th 1' nk that AJDS has got a lot
to do w1'th this,IOO."
The 75-year-old Miss Landers
made the recommendation in her
nationally syndicated newspaper
column Sunday.
"In this day and age of unwantcd pregnancies and children being
born with no fathers and young
people geuing in all kinds of tiouble 1 felt this was a good solutio~ " she said in an interview
Thu;sday. "This is a cheap. easy,
safc way to do iL"
Judith Seifer, president-elect of
the American Association of Sex
Educators, Counselors and Therapists said Friday that Miss Landers
has :'done a great service to the
young adults of this country and
certainly to their parents who won't
talk about (masturbation) with
Lhcm."
.
Miss Landers said she's already
received about 220 leuers and calls,
wilh about 75 percent to SO percent
being favorable.
.
She said the readers are saymg
things like "'Hooray for you,'
'Good for you,' 'Wonderful that

you prinled it,' 'It was one of !"e
most courageous coIum ns You ve
wriucn.'
"I expecled to hear from many
clergymen and the far right co~plaining bitterly about _my ad~1ce
and that I was surely gomg Straight
to hell," she said. "But to my surprise I received (only) a few. a
hand f•u1, of neg au· ve Ietters"
.

Concerts

MEATLOAF
Meatloaf will perform at the
· cenCleveland state convocallo!l
tcr Nov: 21 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets
went on sale OcL 23. thet can be
purchased by phone at ( I 6)2415555 in Cleveland and at all Tickcunaster locations.
CYPRESS lULL
Cypress Hill with speciall!':'est
Rage :Against the Machine Will be
performing at the Agora Theatre in
Cleveland Nov. 27 at 8 p.m. Tickcis went on sale Oct. 22 and are
available at all Ticketmaster locations or by phone at (216)2415555.
AIMEE MANN
Aimee Mann ex-vocalist for 'Til
Tuesday will perfonn at Peabody's
Down Under in Cleveland Nov. 21
ut 8 p.m. Tickets went un sale Oct.
22 and are available at all Ticketmaster locations or by phone at
(216)241-5555.

encompassing all periods and styles including contemporary,
Arrlcan-American gospel and spirituals, classical and Baroque
music. The chorus has performed extensively throughout tbe midwest, east coast and the state ot Obio. For more inrormation, call
the Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre at 446-ARTS.
·

CHORUS TO APPEAR • Tbe acclaimed Central State Univ,rsity Chorus or Wilberlorce, Oblo wiD be appearing at the Morris
and Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre on Nov. 6 at 7:30 p.m. Tbe
concert will be under tbe direction or Dr. William Henry CaldW:ell
and Is tree and open to tbe public. Tb.e chorus has a repertmre

rc

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COLONY THEATR E
FRI. THRU THURS.
MACAULAY CULKIN IN

If they weren't having so much
trouble with disgruntled postal
workers, I'd bust in and do my disgruntled poslal customer routine.
Kevin· "U-Haul" Pinson, Is a
stall' writer ror Obio Valley Publ~hing,

HIKE • ancl
REEBOK
BLOWOUT!

What we need is a mediator to
get door manufacturers together
with furniture manufacturers and
say, "Hey, listen. We've got to get
together on these sizes, people.
Either make bigger doors or smaller furniture." ·
Another annoyance of changing
habitats is that everyone in the free
world has to be informed of your
new address.
The bank, the credit c;u-d companies, Pla:yboy magazine, the student loan officer (I was aempted not
to iell hlrli) 'arid the pOst office.
So ·I spennme entire,evening
filling out those little change-ofaddress cards. Toole me six hours
and $50 in stamps.
And I'll be danged if 1 didn't
open my .new mailbox Friday to
find a letter froni the post office
telling me to inform everyone I
receive mail from of my new ZIPPlus-Four ZIP Code.
.

packing related
box, nor did I
at a time.
Nope, I ran from room to room
scanning for items which happened
to be the ri~ht size for fitting into
!hat last avwlable space in a nearlypacked box.
If I had labeled my boxes, it
would have required listing every
single item on the side, which
would have taken 100 much time.
Unlike intelligent, orderly people,
labeling my boxes "kitchen," 'Iiving room," etc., would have been
inciTective.
The onJol'·labels
I could have
,.
given my boxes are "swff," "junk"
and "assoned crap."
· Besides, unpacking will be J'ust
like Christmas. I'll never know
what's in a box until I open it and discover my cologne 1ca ked
and ate a hole through six .--·
..,.;,.. .of
underwear.
Th b
h
e oxes are t e easy part
when it comes to moving. Furmrure
is anolher matter entirely.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446·4524

' '

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All '
Mens,Womens
and childrens
Reebokand
Nike

$5.$60
'

' tiff!
The Shoe Cafe
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

7

Central St.
Un.Wersity Chorus

Sat., llov. 6
·7:30p.m.
Adml•lon FIM
Morrll and Dorothy HukiM
ArllllhMin
426 2nd Av.., Gdlpollo, Oh.
c.tl446-ARTI lor morelnlo.

ELE.
CT
.
EDWARD-M. (ED)
VOLLBORN
.

Senlot Portrait Specialists
(614} 441-6700

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GET

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Galhpolis City School Board

CELLULARONE®
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Auto or Health Emergencies- ~eniors &amp; Spouses Traveling Alone$tudents... makes an ideal.Christmas Giftl

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Dear Friend:
./
I ask for ''Your'''vote on Nov. 2!' An education that prepares studenb to
be successful in life is a priority for tlJI .ot ~s. As a parent of thiee '
teenagers, schools are prob~bly 1$ ~w~t to me as., they will ~ver be
my lifetime.lt.is m{hope duitas t school..board
member,
I. can -make
.
.... '
"
" .
informed decisions that are linan~ally ~ccountable and fair to everyone. ,
The past few weeks have gon!' reaDy faSt. A special thanks to those :Who :
took time to discuss the issues I met you. Continued communication is '
Jmportant, I invite you to .call my home (446-8997). ·
Thanks,
~

·- -

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•First Month's AC::Cess·Fee FREEl (save from $29.99 to $288.001)
•FREE CALLS for Emerge,ncy Road Service Oust dial •AAA)
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oQSV· Quality-Service-Value Guarantee .

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Call 1·800·294-I.A.J..A ~o sign upl
I

WILL BE APPRECIATED!
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P.Jdl for lbv E~ld- 11. VoAbom, -PIMcMt Dr., Bldwll~ Oh. 46814
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio State running back Raymont
Harris is nicknamed the " Quiet
·Storm." But there was nothing
quiet about his performance in a
s10rm Saturday at Ohio Stadium.
Harris rushed for a career-high
151 yards and a touchdown as the
third-ranlced Buckeyes beat No. 12
Penn State 24-6 10 remain on ttack
for their fust Rose Bowl bid in nine
years.
The win kept Ohio State (8-0, 50 Big Ten) atop the leagu~ standings and virtually eliminaled Penn
State (5-2, 2-2) from title con tention.
Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin
are tied for second at 4-1. Ohio
Stale has games left against Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan.
Penn State took a 3-0 ~ when
Craig Fayak kicked a 29-yard field
goal on the game's opening drive.
But Ohio State quickJy countered
with a four-yard touchdown run by
Harris and led the rest of the way in
a game played in snow flurries and
gusty winds.
The Buckeyes increased their
lead to 17-6 at halftime on a 22yard field goal by Tim Williams
and a 25-yard touchdown pass
from backup quarterback Bret
Powers to Joey Galloway. They
added a four-yard touchdown run
by Butler By'not'e in the third
quarter.
Meanwhile, Ohio State's
defense limited Penn State 10 a pair
of field goals by Fayak, who
became the Nittany Lions' career
scoring leader. Entering lhe game,
lhe Lions were second in Big Ten
scoring with a 34-point average.
Harris, who carried 32 times,
topped his previous high of 118
yards a11ainst Purdue last week and
Illinois m 1990. It was the senior's
fourth 100-yard game of the season.
Penn State's Ki-Jana Carter,
from nearby Westerville, also had a
big rushing day. He gaiJled 123
yards on 24 cames.
The victory ex tended Ohio
State' s regul ar-seaso n unbeaten
sb'eak to 14 games (13-0-1). It was
the second sttaight defeat for Penn
State, which had a week 'off after
~sipg to Michigim on Oct. L6. .~·· .
It was the fmt Big Ten meeting
between the aeams and fJ.rSt of anr.
kind since the 1980 Fiesta Bow .
Penn State, playing its fmt season
in the Big 10 after 106 years as an
independent, had won five of its six
previoJJS games at Ohio Stadium.
Penn State scored on the ~arne's
opening drive when FayBk s kick
hit the left upright and fell over the
crossbar. It was the first time Ohio
State trailed !his season.
Ohio State came back and lOOk
a 7-3 lead on Harris' short touchdown run with 10:03 left in the
quaner. The Buckeyes have scored
on their first possession in every
game this season.
FayBk's 49-yard field goal midway through the period cut it 10 7.fJ
and broke Lyden Mitchell's school
record of 246 points, set from
1969-71.
Sparked by two long, thirddown passes from Bobby Hoying
to Chris Sanders, the Buckeyes
gained a first down on the Penn
Slate 10 late in lhe quarter. But the
drive.stalled and Oh10 State settled
for Williams' field goal on the
opening play of the second period.
Powers, a senior transfer from
Arizona State, replaced Hoying on
Ohio State' s next possess1on and
threw the touchdown pass to Gal-

toway that put lhe Buckeyes ahead
17-6. After faking a handolf, Powell rolled right and hit a sliding
Galloway in the end zone.
The drive started after safety
Walrer Taylor intercepted a pass by
Kerry Collin.s at the Ohio Stale·36.
No. 1 Florida St. 54,
Wake Foreot 0 ·
At Tallahassee, Fla., top-ranked
Florida State survived a scare Saturday when quarterbac.tc. Charlie
Ward was knoclced out of lhe game
with a rib injury, lhe only diffiCulty
for the Semmoles in a 54-0 victory
over Wake Forest.
Ward's roommate, freshman
tailback Warrick D'unn. took up
much of the offensive slack, running for 162 yards on eight carries
and toughdowns of 63 and five
yards. The Seminoles tied a school
record with their fourth shutout,
and have allowed only 38 points
this season.
Florida State (8-0, 6-0 Atlantic
Coast Conference) clinched at least
a share of its second SU'llight league
title and tied an ACC record with
its 15th straight victory. Maryland
set the record in 1975 and 1976.
Wake Forest (2-5, 1-4) failed to
avert the shutout midway through
the final quarter when Bill Hollows
missed a 27-yard field goal.
Team physician Dr. Tom Haney
diagnosed Ward's injury as bruised
ribs and said Ward's status for-next
Saturday's game at Maryland
would be evaluated daily. Ward,
who was 13-of-20 for 125 yards,
was hurt in the final minute of the
half with the Seminoles already
ahead 34-0.
No. 2 Notre Dame 58, Navy 27
At Philadelphia, Pa., unbeaten
Notre Dame, trailing at halftime for
lhe frrst time since 1991, rallied for
three touchdowns in the third quarter Saturday and went on to blow
out Navy 58-27.
For at least a half, the Midshipmen (4-4) appeared ready 10 spoil
lhe Nov. 13 confrontation at South
Bend, Ind., between No. 2 Notre
Dame and No. I Florida State.
No. 4 Miami 42, Temple 7
At Miami, Fla., Ryan Collins
threw for two touchdowns and
scored on runs of SI and five yards
Saturday to lead fourth-ranked
Miami in a sloppy 42-7 victory
over Temple.
Collins had three potential
touchdown passes dropped before
he departed midway through the
third period with Miami leading
28-7.
No.8 Tennessee SS
South Carolina 3
At Knoxville, Tenn., Charlie
Garner went 60 yards for a touchdown on Tennessee's second play
and the- ei~hth-ranlced Vols rolled
10 a 55-3 v1ctory over South Carolina, avenging last year's narrow loss
10 the Gamecocks.
Tennessee (6-1-1, 4-1-1 Southeastern Conference) ran up a 38-3
halftime lead over South Carolina
(4-5. 2-5). which had poor field
position all dav.
_
No.9 Auburn 31, Arkansas 21
At Fayetteville, Ark., Brian
Robinson returned an interception
35 yards for a tie-breaking touchdown and James Bostic ran 12
yards for a score on the fmt play of
the fourth quarter as ninth-ranked
Auburn remained unbeaten with a
31-21 victory over Arkansas.
Robinson, who made the interception when tight end Kirk Botkin
slipped, made it 14-7 a minute into
the second half. Arkansas (3-5, 24) failed to take advantage of

Orlando Watters' interception at ended a nine-game losing slreak tO
the Auburn 38 and Bost1c's run Michigan, setting off a wmulluous
celebration at chilly Camp Randall
nushed itl024-l4.
Suidium, where the game-time
No. tO Florida 33, Georgia U
At Jacksonville, Fla .. Errict ternpenturc was 32 degrees.
Sevaal fans were injured during
Rhett rushed for 183 yards and two
touchdowns and Judd Davis kicked . ·the immediale post-game celebrafour field goals in sloppy condi- tion that lcnoclced down a retaining
tions Saturday to lead No. 10 Flori- fence, and at least half-dozen
ambulances were summoned.
da 10 a 33-26 victory over Georgia.
No . 24 Michigan (4-4, 2-3)
The victory was the fourth
to capitalize on numerous
failed
straight for the Gators (6-1, 5-1
Southeastern Conference) over chances in the second half after
falling behind 13-3 at the half.
Georgia (4-5, 2-5).
Moss, who had 128 yards on 26
Eric Zeier's bid to give Georgia
carries,
became only the ftfth playa chance to win in the closing secer
in
Wisconsin
history to rush for
onds fell two yards short. TBking
1,000
yards
in
one
season and the
over at his own 36 with I :36 to
fmt
since
Larry
Emery
in 1985. He
play, Zeier completed six passes to
has
rushed
for
I
00
yards
in seven
move Georgia to the Florida 13
sttaight
games
and
has
1,079
this
with six seconds left.
season.
An apparent touchdown throw
The Badgers look their halftime
to Jerry Jerman was waved off
lead
with a late 80-yard driv e
when it was ruled Florida had
by Terrell Fletcher's 12capped
called timeout. Then, on what
yard
run
with 38 seconds lefL
would have been the last play of
But
Michigan,
held to 10 firstthe game, Zeier completed a throw
half
rushing
yards,
moved the ball
out of bounds only to get another
up
and
down
the
field
in the second
opportunity from the two when
half.
Florida was penalized for pass
The Wolverines moved from lhe
interference in the end zone.
two
10 the Badgers 15 in the third
The game ended with Zeier
quarter
before Ricky Powers fum throwing slightly behind wide-open
bled
at
the
Wisconsin 13.
Jeff Thomas in the Gators' end
But
on
the next possession ,
zone.
Michigan
quaraerbaclc
Todd Collins
Zeier, who was 36-of-65 for 384
completed
a
fourth
down
pass of 25
yards, got most of it after the Bullyards
to
Marc
Burkholder
to the
dogs fell behind 13-3 and abanBadgers' seven. Two plays later, he
doned attempts to establish a run- hit Derrick Alexander for a !Ouchning game.
down with 2:06 left in the third
quaner. That made it 13-10.
No. ll Wisconsin 13
The Wolverines drove 10 a first
No. 24 Micbigan 10
At Madison, Wis., Brent Moss down at the Wisconsin 32 early in
went over 1,000 yards rushing and the fourth before Jeff Messenger
Wisconsin slOpped a late Michigan intercepted at the 17.
Michigan got in position again
drive at the 21-yard line Sawrday
as the Badgers beat the Wolverines for a go-ahead score. Collins hit a
13-1010 stay in the running for the 17-yard pass 10 Amani Toomer and
Ed Davis carried twice for 20
Big Ten title.
No. 21 Wisconsin (7-1, 4-1\ yards. -

In other college football games,

OU beats Akron for third straight win
ATHENS, Ohio (AP)- D.R.
Robinson scored two touchdowns
and passed for a third Saturday as
Ohio University defeated Akron
21-13 for its third:.IIJ!Iilbt victory,
the Bobc8tS' longest winning streak
since 1982.
Robinson had two one-yard
touchdown runs and threw a scoring pass to Chris Jenkins on a play
that covered 65 yards, all in the
first half, as Ohio improved 10 3-6
overall and 3-4 in the Mid-American Conference. Symeon Floyd and
Marcel Weems each ran one xard
for touchdowns for the Zips (3-3,
4-4).
The Bobcats' defense played a
big role in the victory with six
sacks and two interceptions, both
by Tim Norviel. His fmt interception in the end zone halted an
Akron drive midway through the
·second quarter and his second
stopped the Zips on the Ohio 40
with 1:17 left and enabled the Bobcats to run out the clock. Ohio's
Benny King had 16 tackles, and
Jabaar Thompson had 14, while
Phil Dunn had 14 tackles for
Akron.

The Zips' DeShaun Brown was
the ~me's leading rusher with 10
carnes for 177 yar!ls. Tim Curtis
had 75 yards in 18 attempts for the
Bobcats, with 61 of those yards
coming in seven carries on the
opening 10uchdown drive.
BGSU 30, Miami (Ohio) 25
At Oxford, Ohio, Ryan Henry
passed for two touchdowns and
safety Steve Ayers returned an
interception 20 yards for a touchdown as Bowling Green, co-leader
in the Mid-American Conference,
beat Miami of Ohio 30-25 on Saturday.
.
Miami took a I 0-0 lead m the
first quarter before Henry hit Dar·
ius Card with a 25-yard touchdown
pass and Ronnie Redd caught a
one-yarder for a score to give
Bowling Green the lead for good.
Henry was 14 of 32 for 214
yards.
Zeb Jackson carried 29 times for
123 yards, including a 33-yard
touchdown run, for Bowling Green
(5-2-1 overall and 4-0-1 in the
MAC). Bowling Orten is unbeaten
in its past 21 conference games.
Gordon Benning caught touch. down passes ·of 88 and 52 yards
from Danny Smith for two Miami
touchdowns. Deland McCullough
had a one-yard touchdown run for
the Redslcins (2-6, 1-5).
Chad Seitz kiclced field goals of
26 and 39 yards for Miami.
Mount Union 49, Otterbein 0
AI Westerville, Ohio, Jim Ballard passed for four touchdowns
and \ICI a sillgle season conference
record in total offense as uridefeated Molint Union beat Otterbein 490 Saturday.
,
In the first quarter, Ballard
.threw SCQring passes of 20 y:ards to
MAKING A mn'AWAY- Wisconsin running back Tei-r'eu
Ed Bubonics; 22 yards ·10 Mike
f'lelcher (41) 1"- away f'rom Michigan defender Buster Stanley (60) · Sirianni; and 19 yards to Rob
oallls WI'! for a I!«&lt;OId..quarter touchdown lbat spelled vlctol')'·for
Atwood. Bubonics scOred on a 17the holt Badgers; wbo won Saturday's Blil Ten ma~bup by a 13·10
yard pass from Ballard in lhe secD!uglli. (AP)
ond quarter.

'· I I

'

LION-HURDLER - Obio State nanker Chris Sanders (top)
finds Lion-hurdling - in this case, Penn State cornerback Brian
Miller - an enjoyable pursuit arter catching a pass In tbe rwst
quarter or Saturday's Big Ten contest in Columbus, where tbe
third-ranked Buckeyes won 24-6 to bolster their case ·ror a Rose
Bowl bid. (AP)

Ballard reached 2,893 yards for tory over Heidelberg.
the season, surpassing the Ohio
The scores were on runs of five
Conference record of 2,858 set in and one yards. Mike Barbetta
1985 by Shane Fulton of Heidel- added a 32-yard field goal for the
bera; 4',t-"., ,;,
•• '
'
Yellow JacteiB (7-1 overall, 6-1 in
Ballard completed 20 of 29 the Ohio Conference).
passes for 268 ~ards against OtterGreg Lehrer caught a four-yard
bein (4-4 overall, 3-4 OAC). Jim touchdown oass from Steve Manle
Gresko led Mount Union (8-0, 7-0) on the game's opening drive for the
in rushing with 161 yards and one Srudent Princes (6-2, 5-2).
The Baldwin-Wallace defense
touchdown in 17 carries.
Luke Hanks completed nine of sacked Maple eight times, inter:&lt;:i passes for 130 yards for Otter- cepted three passes and blocked
bein. G~n MoiJick, a senior run- bolh a pun! and a field goal.
Maple completed 23 of 42 pass
ning baC•&lt;, went into the game as
OAC le~ding rusher averaging attempts for 203 yards, with Lehrer
122.4 yards a game but was held to catching II for 94 yards. John Koz
of Baldwin-Wallace was 16 for 28
23 yards on II carries.
passing for 125 yards. Teammate
Westminster 34, Tiffin 13
At New WilmingiOn, Pa., Andy Lance Yandell had seven catches
Blatt rushed for lhree touchdowns for ffJ yards.
Allegheny 59, Denison 7
and caught one of Sean O'Shea's
At Granville, Ohio, John Iozzi
two scoring passes, and Wesuninster's defense forced three had five touchdowns, including
turnovers in a 34-13 win over three in the first quarter, to lead
Allegheny 10 a 59-7 victory over
NAIA rival Tiffin on Saturday.
Denison
in !he North Coast AthletWestminster (5-2), which
ic
Conference
Saturday.
entered the game ranked No. 7 in
lozzi'
s
first-quarter
runs were
NAIA Division II, converted two
for
three,
six
and
one
yard.
He also
of the three turnovers into scores
scored
on
seven-yard
runs
in each
against Tiffin (7-1-1), which was
of
lhe
second
and
lhird
quarters.
ran1ced No. 5.
Allegheny (7-1 and 6-0 in the
Blatt scored on runs of I, 40 and
NCAC)
scored four more touch5 yards and caught a 17-yard scoring pass from O'Shea, who com- downs over !he first three quarters.
pleted II of 15 passes for 127 They led 32-0 at the end of lhe fmt
yards. O'Shea also threw a 15-yard quaner.
Denison (Hi, 2-4) scored in the
touchdown pass to Matt Sofran.
Tiffin's Brian DiLiberto rushed fou·nh, on a 16-yard pass from
37 times for 176 yards, including a Jason Bell to Steve GametL
Gators quarterback Paul Bell
four-yard touchdown run. Tiffin's
Ron Gerdes kicked field goals from completed four of seven pass
attempts for 107 yards, with one
30 and 33 yards.
For Wesuninster, Matt Buggey interception and one touchdown, a
six -yard pass to Rob Gardner.
rushed 15 times for 102 yards.
Harry lzbicki completed 5 of 8 for
Baldwin-Wallace 17'
94
yards with a 16-yard 10uchdown
Heidelberg 6
to
AI
Kaufman for Allegheny.
At Tiffin, Ohio, Brian Bickerton
Jason
Bell completed 10 of 23
scored two touchdowns Saturday
for
109
yards
for the Big Red.
for Baldwin-Wallace in a 17-6 vic-

Ashland 50
Northwood (Mich.) 0
At Ashland, Ohio, Todd Corbin
had eight carries for 79 &gt;:ards and
two IOUChdowns to help Ashland
beat Northwood 50-0 on Satwday
m the M1dwest Intercollegiate
Football Conference.
It was Ashland's seventh win a
row, helping the Eagles improve to
7-2-0 and 6-2-0. Northwood
dropped 10 3-5-1 and 2-5-1.
The Eagles had 451 yards in
total offense.
Northwood wide receiver
Robert Jamerson had five catches
for 39 yards. Jim Kurlinski was 927 for 93 yards and two intercepuons.
Youngstown St. 38
Buffalo St. 12
Ar Youngstown, Ohio,Tamron
Smith had three touchdowns to
lead Youngstown State to a 38-12
victory over Buffalo on Saturday.
Smith helped the Zips (7-1)
jump out to a 14-point lead in the
first quarter after scoring touchdowns on blocked punts from Buffalo (l -8).
With 2:5 1 remaining in the rust
quaner, Darnell Clark scored a 13yard touchdown and Jeff Wilkins
made his lhird kick.
The Bulls then went for a fourth
down on their own 16-yard line
They failed, but Mark Mozrati
kicked a 51 -yard field goal.
Another blocked punt in the second quarter led to Smith's third
touchdown. Wilkins made the Ieick
to bring the score to 28-3.
Cliff Scou lhrew an interception
which led to a 28-yard field goal by
Wilkins, and the half ended with
Youngstown State leading 31 -3.
In the fourth quarter, a safety by
Doug Lindsay of Buffalo made it
31 -5.
(See COLLEGE on C-11)

AP Top 25 scores
How the lOp 25 aeams in the Associated Press' college football poll fared !his week:
I. Florida State (8-0) beat Wake Forest54-0. Next at Maryland, Saturday.
2. Notre Dame (9-0) beat Navy 58-27. Next vs. No. I Florida State, Nov. 13.
3. Ohio State (8-0) beat No. 12 Penn State ~-6. Next at No. 21 Wisconsin, Saturday.
4. Miami (6-1) beat Temple 42-7. Next: at Pittsburgh, Satwday.
5. Alabama (7-0-1) beat Southern Mississippi 40-0. Next: vs. LSU, Saturday.
6. Nebraslca (8-0) beat No. 20 Colorado 21-17. Next at Kansas, Satwday.
7. Arizona (7-0) at No. 15 UCLA. Next vs. Oregon, Saturday.
8. Tennessee (6-1-1) beat South Carolina 55-3. Next vs. No. 17 Louisville, Satwday.
9. Auburn (8-0) beat Arkansas 31-21. Next: vs. New Mexico State, Saturday.
10. Florida (6-1) beat Georgia 33-26. Next vs. SW Louisiana, Saturday.
II. Texas A&amp;M (7-1) beat Southem Methodist 37-13. Next: vs. No. 17 Louisville, Nov. 13 .
12. Penn State (5-2) lost 10 No. 5 Ohio Stale 24-6. Next: vs. No. 23 Indiana, Saturday.
13. West Virgiilia (6-0) at Syracuse. Next: vs. Rutgers, Saturday . .
14. Oklahoma (6-2) lost to No. 25 Kansas Stare 21-7. Next: at Missouri, Saturday.
15. UCLA (5-2) vs. No.7 Arizona.'Next: at WashingJon State, Saturday.
16. Virginia (6-21ost 10 North Carolina State 34-29. Next: vs. Wake Forest, Saturday.
17. Louisville (7-1) did not play. Next: at No. 8 Tennessee, Saturday.
18. North Carolina (7·2) did not play. Next: vs. Oemson, Sa~y.
19. Washington (5-2) at Arizona State. Next atOregon State, Saturday.
20. Colorado (4-3-1) lost to No. 6Nebraska 21-11. Next: at Oklahoma State, Saturday.
21. Wisconsin (7-1) beat No. 24 Michigan 13-10. Next: vs. No. 3 Ohio State, Saturday.
22. Michigan State (4-3) lost to No. 23 Indiana 10-0. Next: vs. Nonhwestem, Saturday.
23. Indiana (7-1) beat No. 22 Michigan Stare 10-0. Next: at No. 12 Penn Stare, Sawnlay.
24. Michigan (4-4) lost to No; 21 WisConsin 13-10. Next: vs. Purdue, Saturday.
25. Kansas State (6-3) beat No. 14 Oklahoma 21-7. Next: at Iowa State, Saturday.

'
,

�.
Page-C2-Sunday Times Sentinel

October31,1993

.

October 31, 1993

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

Friday nighL
.
Gallia Academy dominated the
contest from start to finish, piling
up 386 total yards (45 plays from
scr.im~age) w~ile permitting the
Ch1eftauls 169 an 48.
. .
The Blue Devils, a;ww 4.0 ms1de
lllc Southeastern Ohao League.and

CALDWELL, BARNES STOP COS·
GROVE - Gallla's Jamie Caldwell (22) and
Chad Barnes (11) stop Logau's John Cosgrove

8· 1 overall, clinched a\ least a
share of the 1993 conference championship. They can claim all the
marbles Nov. 5 with a triumph over
v~siting Jackson _on Memor_ial
F1cld. Jackson kept,lts SEOAL. ~tie
hopes ahye w1th a ,26- ~4 dec1S1~n
over Manetta Fnday 10 amprove 1ts

line of scrimmage In Friday's SEOAL
game at Logan. GAHS won 35·8. (Barry MiUer
photo, Logan Daily News)
'

(27) at the

league mark to 3-1.
GAHS scored early and often
(the Blue Devils had two TO runs
of 58 and 10 yards by QB Chad
Barne.s calle~ b!lck becal!se of
pc.nalues) m packing up theu firSt
gn?. tnumph at Logan SIDCC 1~85 .,
It was a great team effort, SBid
Saunders. "The defense played
great We felt we ~ould move the
ball on offense,. We didn't think it
would be that easy. Logan has a
good football team. Our speed and
quickness was a big factor," Saun·
ders continued
"Our hallba~ks (Jesse Staey and
Jamie Caldwell) ran hard. Heath
(Hutchinson) had his usual good
game, and Chad (Barnes) made
some big plays out there tonight.n
Up front, the Blue Devils line
simply outplaY.ed Logan's "Monstcrs of the Hilltop." Junior tackle
Dylan Evans had what Saunde~,s
called, "his best game of the year.
Besides a blocked punt by
Evans, Galli a's Ryan Barnes
returned an intercepted pass 31
yards late in the game. Terry
Qualls tossed Myers for a six-yard
loss early in the game. Troy Duncan and Jamie Caldwell, along with
Mike Doimally stopped John Cosgrove 'repeatedly, limiting the highscoring Logan ace to to 31 yards in
13 carries. Cosgrove failed to score
Friday.
After holding the Chiefs on
game's the initial series of downs,
G AHS took advantage of a poor

Logan punt and marched 39 yai'ds
to payd1rt in five plays.
Barnes hit Hutchinson with an
18-yard strike to open the Blue
Devils drive. Four plays )ata Stacy
raced 15 ~ards on~ mside reverse
to make 11 6-0 wath 7:22 on the

clock. Brett Cre!"eens kick from
placement made at7.0.
,.
Following an exchange of punts,
Barnes streaked 56. yards to· the
Chiefs 16 as the penod ended. He
was hauled down from· behind by
(See GAHS on C-3)

(Overall)
Team
W L TP
GaUipolis ...............8 I 294
Point Pleasant........? 2 184
Logan ....................5 4 , 197
Coal Grove ............ 5 4 249
Jackson ..... ............. 4 S 160
Portsmoulh ............ 3 6 176
Marieua .................2 7 126
River Valley ..........2 7 77
Warren Loca1 ........2 7 135
Athens ................... ! 8 104
Meigs .................... ! 8 97
·
( SEOAL Dilly)
Teaa:n .
W L
P
Galhpoh.s .............4 .0 140
Logan ..................3 I 107
Jac~ ........ ,...... .3 I
97
Marieua.............. .l 3 32
WarrenLocal ...... l 3 65

Athens ........... ..... .O 4
46 92
TOTAL
12 12 . 487 487
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 35 ~gan 8
Jackson26 Marietta 14 . 1
Warren Local 21 Alhensl2 ,
Coal Grove 501 River Valley 14
Pt. Plea5ant41 RoanneCOUnLy'20
Miami Trace 27 Ports~outh ·t~
Vinton County 35 Me1gs 7
Nov. 5 games:
Jackson at Gallipolis
LQgan at Athens
Marieua at Warren Local ' ·
Pt. Pleasant 111; Milton
Wahama at Raver Valley
Meigs at Belpre
Coal Grove at Rock Hill
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth

Re·Eiect
RICHARD SISSON
For
Addison Township Trustee

Jackson, Warren Local other SEOAL winners .
Heading into the final week of
the regular season the Gallia
Academy Blue Devils sit alone at
the top of the Southeastern Ohio
:Athletic League standings
: following Friday's 35-8 victory
·over the Logan Chieftains.
· · The Jackson lronmen earned a
share of second place with the
Chiefs in a 26-14 win over
. Marietta, while Warren Local sent
·Athens into tbe league basement
with a 21-12 triumph.
Jackson 26, Marietta 14
At Marieua, the lronmen scored
. twice in the fourth quarter to rally
from a one point deficit to capture
(he win over the Tigers. Jackson is
now 3-1 in the league and Marieua
fs 1-3, tied with Warren.
No scoring developed until llle
·second quarter when Jackson's
swift quarterback, Geoff Matthews,
scored on a one-yard plunge. Greg
Woolum kicked the extra point

The Tigers hit paydirt with just
57 seconds left in the half when
Bill Binegar hit Shane Johnson
with a 69-yard strike and Darrell
Shuss toed the conversion for the
halftime deadlock.
Early in the third period
Matthews tallied his second
touchdown on an 11-yard run, but
the conversion kick failed. The
Tigers took the lead with only 44
seconds left in the third stanza
when Shuss banged over from the
four and then kicked the extra point
for a 14-13 Tiger advantage.
Tailback Kevin Wolford scored
twice for Jackson in the fourth
quarter on runs of nine and one
yards, with Woolum kicking one of
two conversions. Wolford topped
the lronmen rushers with 19 carries
for 120 yards while Matthews
added 54 yards on II carries and
completed six of 11 passes for 158
yards.

For the Tigers, Shuss carried 14
times for 104 yards. Binegar
completed 11 of 17 passes for 154
yards. Total yardage favored
Jackson 363-321.
Quarter totals
Jackson .................0 7 6 13 = 26
Marietta .. ,............. 0 7 7 0 = 14
Warren Local 21, Athens 12
At the Plains, sophomore
Kahieem Maxwell ran f01 137
yards, but it was not enough to
offset a balanced Warrior rushing
game that netted 245 yards to keep
the Bulldogs winless in league
play.
Warren got the game's first
points in the second quarter when
Ryan Alloway scored on a one-yard
pi unge and Brian Pinkerton kicked
the extra point. Athens came back
to score in the final minute on a
six-yard pass from Nick Toth to
Bryan Wharton, but failed to

Ohio u~~s. football
Adenl 39, Unioto I
Akron Hoban 29, ElyN Cadi.. 26
""""' - 2 ' 1 , Sandy Vol. I 3
, Akron Sprinafi.dd 21, Marlin~ 23
~ Ale.utwiCt 22. RlciM ScMhcm 7
·
~ Amanda-Ce• ctcek 31, Tcaya Val 0

• Jtahtabula 36, Conneaw. 26

: · A&gt;hlobulo·-:!6,PoloooWioiW'Icyl2
Aw.rora S4, Riduaand Hw. 6
· ·Aunintown-Flkh 20, Wuren llatdina6

• · Mon 35, w~ 31
: :Baldwin, Pa. 7, ..fum SLV-St.M 0
• .Dirberem 10, Ravcma 9
• • Da~avi114, Cin. Madeira 8
•' •Da~ t6,Av011 J...ake 13 (an

· : l!..n.villo 14, BuciiCJ&lt; Tnlll2
'

BeaverLocaJ 19, WelkYWe 14
• Bo!M&lt;rl 21, Mo&gt;fid4 20
Bedford, Mich. 27, Sylvania Nanbflow 0
· · ' nclldoaWne 30. Tccwnldl. 21
• ' ocnewe58,0alion 13

• ·B..uhite41.nu-~~atoooco
• •Ocme Unioo 26, N"cw Albany?
• • 'R&lt;thcl2ll, Anooniol'l
' . 'Dilhd·To!e32. Wolliamabural9

Hillia.nl28, Uppc2 Arlinaton 'J:1
""'•"· 29, Antwap 12
Hollancl Sptina. 9,BowlinaGtoen1
Huntinatan 3S, Richmond bale SoulhC~Mm 11
HllrOft 31, OU: Harbor?
~once :U,

Kuwu l.lkou 1s, EaawDOd

' , Canal WU1c:helter40, Hamibon Twp. 0
' .. GanC'teld 15, S•lcm 20
: ~ 'clnLOn Olc::nOak 19, New PhiladclphH 14
, • .Cinton McKinley 21, Y
Boudman 0
.c.o~;....,. 43, Norlhno&lt;l
• ' &lt;C1rey
Franoru SL Ja.cpb 7
• ' -&lt;:olino 21, EU.h I0
~ ~Ctnterburs 7:1, Fabblnb 6
CeNCn'iUe 56, Dty. Failbam 7
'Gturdon ll, w. Gu~· 0
6

fNiflf

r

: - ·ChillicoUlc 17, Wonhinpn K.ilboumo 1
. • Cin. Andcnon 7:1, Cin. W~wud 0
. : C'an. Col~in 7:1, Cin. 00: ~ 0
· .. ·Cin. Harru.cn 36. an. ~Nidd811
• • ·Cin. lncli•n Hill '17, Cin. F~.~Uteytmm 6

• . ·oih. LaS•lle 12, Zane&amp;vWc 7

K - 50. Sprin&amp;- Nmth 32
Kirtu 16, Gooh... 7
K..ir\Lnd 34, Newbury 6
l....akevicw 14, Young. Ubeny6
Lakewood 20, Clc.. Hcildlt118
LakewoOd St. Edward 4"2, Mcn1.or 0
Lc.ipsit 29, Arcadia 22
Lemon-Monroe 23, Day. Edgewood 16
Liberty Cent.et 21, Bryan 16
Liekin&amp; Val. 19, Johrutown 0
Lim• Bath 20, OU..wa.Qlandorf 0
lima Sr. 31, Cin. S)'Cimon 0
l..iu.l.cMillTli 28, Hamilt.on Rou 21
lAndon 23. Be&gt;tley 15
Lor1in Midview 37, I...orain So1.llJ\'Iiew 15
Louisville Aquims 30, Dover 13

a..cuvillo Vol. 34, Ook Hill 22

-..v.

• • -Qo.
w.a.-t..~t... ll
• · 6 , St. X.vier42,1...tnc:Mw 14
• .. 'Oift. Walnu~ Hills 43, Narthwettl2

a

Kc:N.on Ridp 47, NonhweJtan 16

Lou~~l4,W.B~I2

. "Cih.l...ockland 57, Cin. N. ColleiDHlU 1
; ~ Muiemona 13, Lovdand lll
.. .cin.Moeller49,Cin.Eldcr13

• .. ·an. Twpin 41, em. men F.ae 33

Braoldyn 7

Indian Lako 19, Ri'leaide 0
Jacbon 26. Maridlll4
JCN\han Aldc:r 11, W. Jdfmoo 10

•: CambridJe 12, OlymG~t 7

• : ·t!ift. Taft 21, Amelia 16

o..c..n 7, Sprifta- ShoWMC 6

H..,tkat 21, Col. Academy I

· ' -D.roc*sidc 21, KcyiLOnD I
• : 'RNnswick 39, Mcdi.u 6
' ~ ' Bikkeye Ccn1.11.l 20, Cn~~tline 13
: ,B\Icicyc ~.56, Editm 6
, OIKkc:yeVal34,RiverVal.ll
• · ·A!.ICfN136. Tiffin Columbian 22
• ' ·0\lll'alo,. W.V•. 14, Ch-~ I
• . Caldwoll26. Waurlord I

\

Gftnvillc 44, Healh 14
Qreeneview 40, W•ynM"ilJe. 13

Gmvepo• 49, GohiMO 26
HIMibiJ River21, Uoioa Local 0

Lima""""

•

Oilmour 35. Cardinal2l
Otahtm ; 3, Day. 6 (2 0'11
Orand Val. 35.l..odaemonl6

Grccnvilloll, w. CuroUton 6
Oron C:ily 34, Moun1 Vernon 14

: • 'nipom.CaaoU 42. Losan Elm 14
•• ~!Umm 20.
7
• • [JjOOkfield 7, Hubbard 0

t•.

Premont Rm•42.. Na!KilCIOI"I 0
Golllpolio 3S, Loam l
Garfidd SS, Winaham 15
Garfldd Hu.. 44, Wureruvillc 20
a.muoville sa. Windlwn u
G1Les Milll Gilnu:ur ,35, Middlefield f'..ardina111
Geneva 16, Aaln.abula Sl. John'• 7

Orcenlbur&amp; Orecn 49, Hu.ckon 21

' • ' DiJ WalnUllO,Oimlanp 11

•·

Euclid So&amp;, Willauahby S. 14
Fairfield 31, Milfci.nl 7
Fairfidd Union 28, Citclcville 21 (01')
Fainnarn SO, Sprina. Nri 32
Hndl•y 20, NeWati 16
Fon frye 23, Shal.andDih 0
Fottori.• 21, Tol Whitmer 12
Fnnklin 21. C.y. Caai&gt;llll
Frutklin Furnaeo Green 24, Syrnma Val. 0

·

' • Ciit. Weatan Hills 36, Cin. Aiken 6

• • :c111. WiniCII Wooda 39. CiD. Hll&amp;h• 6

• ' .Cin. Wycmin&amp;34. Cin. Readina.l7
• ' ·CJe. Olen ville 40. Cle. Lincoln W. 34 (2 OT)

•, -ae. H•y 3i, ae. Collinwood'

.. , t:JC.. Manhall27, Oc:. East Tech 6

• •:CC..r fork 34, Lexitii\M 14

: .. .ctinloo·Musie40, But Oi.n1.011 0
• • Cloverlear 71, Berea 20
· • • "C)ydCi 39, Sandu&amp;lcy PakUla 6
r ; ~I Grove .50 Chclhite River Val 14
• : Col. BriiP 3i Col. CenlMniall4
.. • "001. Dl!Sillet 31,Col. Eall14
, ~ Eoo\mOO&lt; 36. Col. Bcoclo=ft 0
: • ~: Uartley 3S, ~c:u 0 a~•
• Col lndcoOndonCO 25 Col ,_,,.... 1
:".Coi Nonh1and 42, cc:i. Unden-McKinley 6
,. ..c;,r RMd)' tl, Jrm~ton Rack Hill t-4
SouUt 41, Cot. WalnUl Rldao 15
' , "COl. Wat 29, Col. lnd " idco1ce 6
' , )ldumbuo em... ll,t.uat E. 0
:0 .G&gt;noO..,Vol.li, NoothridJ07
, • ~RaWIOIII-4, J...ibelty ~ 6

Lyndhurst BNSh 30, M!P!e Hll. 12
Maclilon 50, Aohtabula l!dpwood 0
MancheaterZ1, Sandy Val. 13
MtMI1dd Sr.l'l, Montficld Mtclilon 26
~..... :14, Miltn llditon 6
MlriM 1Wdin1 21, Aohland 7
Marion Loca132, New BJ;M~M 21
Marion Plaoant 12. Ridacdtlc 6
· Marion-Franklin 13, Col. Wheutonc 3
Mattl.nt Ferry 28, Bunavi.lle 0
M.UiiJlon 63, Youna. F.u16

·.

Plld lor by tho candlcll• Rlchlrd Sluon 211 M'Cutly Rd.

Mahilloo Pcny 31, SteubaiYillc 13

Mi.lmi Trace21, Paturnculh 19

Mi.amiabl.q 35, Lebanon 0
Middic:&amp;own20,Hamilton 14
Middletown Madilon 16, Culillc 3

Midpm 4:1, B...uville 13 .
Midview 33, Lorain Southview 1~
Millcrlport49, Ucking HLI. 20
Mincrv• 35, Canton S. 21
Miuiuinaw• Val. 47, Twin ValleyS . 24
Mog•dore 42, Moaadore Field 33
Monroe 23, Edgewood 16
Monroeville 35, Mapl.e&amp;on 21
Manrpelict41, Evapecn 0
Mount Oilead 41, N. Uniorl 0
N. Can10n 41, Ca.nlOJ'i Timkcm 6
N. Obnllcd 13, Oimmd F•lls 9
N. Ridamllo S4, Lorain Admiral Kina o
Heltonville-Yolk 21, Belpre 21 '
New Landon 54. S. Centnl 0
New Miami 29, Cle.nnonl Northeastern 26
Newccmcn:town 29, BcUaire SL John 11
Nilea 22, Howlll\d 7

Nortoni9,Coploy9
Norwalk IS, VP(N;I" Sanduak.y I
Norwalk S• Poul33, Pl)'llloulh 3
Norwood 35, Sotingboro 0
Oak Cilcn. W.'v'a. 22.lnd.ian Creek 1&amp;
Obhlin 16, F'udandt 0
Ontario 17, Wynford 13

ORngc 14, Chlgrin Falll 6
~on Clay 28, Day. Madowda:le 0
Osleio '¥1, Ocn01 6
Odord Talawmda 34, Middletown Fenwick 0
Ptii.villo Ri'lcnldo 11,. JdTcnon 6
Plndon·Oilboa 41, Atlinaton 7
Pukway 26, Spmcarville'1
Ptona 26, Medina Buckeye l3

Panna Hu. Holy Namo 32, lWlord H". Otanel. 7
Patrick Henry 42, Fai..Mew 0
Port)' 31, Pymo...U... VII. 14
Port)'-- 21, RotGonll 3
PikaGD 1f, ZaneTr~~:e 7
pj,qu1 26, Sidney 0

Po!tncll4, Comobcll Memaritl13
Pu1omoulhE.4l,Minfon!20
R.avCMa SE 13, Crcttwood 10
Recdlville £utem 31, Hc:mlock Millc:6
Reynoldlbura 34, WalkiM Mcrnorial6
Ridpwood 14, Malvcm 13
Rock)' RiWir43, Flitview Pt.S 36

RooutoWn 20. Wa1cdoo 14
S. Rana.o 1.4, MtDon•ld 3
Sanduoky 21,Eiyrio 7

I
••
•

I

••
•
'•
••

''•
,I
I

Gllltpolto, OH 41831

•
•

. BARNES ON TilE GO • Gallipolis' Chad Barna J'DShed for .
6l yards aad passed for an additional 43 to help pace GAHS to a
35-8 SEOAL grid wiD over Logan at Logan Friday uieht. Barnes
had two TD ruu of 58 and 10 yards caUed back because or penal· ·
ties. (Actio• photo hy Barry Miller of Logan Daily News)

Re·Eiect
~-.

TONY L. BEC
FOR

GREEN
TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
Your Vote &amp; Support
Appreciated

Paid for by the Candidate
Tony L Beck, 2951 State Rl. t41, Gallipoli1, Ohio ~1

Springfield Locti32,Jod&lt;o..,·Miltoo 0

.,

s.. Muys U. Van w.. 7

GAHS wins ...

Slrcetsharo 33, WoOclridge 20

' S~37,N. Royalton

13
Struthen 16, Oimd 14
Sylvani• Swthview 22, AnlhonyW•yneO
Tallm1dgc 2.2, Mcdin1 HiahJ.and 13
Toi. Roo"' 35, Tol. Bowihcrl4
Tol. Sl John'a 38, ToL Wli.to 12
Tot SYtt48,ToL Woodwud 8
Toronto 39, Cin. Summ.ll Cauntry Day 7

12·16·20 Gl. ,
IUIIHTO.. SLUHII
IIFLiD SLUG LOADS
5·SHOT PICK

Tri-Cau.n1y N. 46. National Trail13
Trimble 14, Federal Hacking6

Triw1y 34, Black River 22
Troy49, Tmtwood·Maru.an 18
Tu.cm.wat Val33, Akrm Coventry 14
TwlnoburJ 25, Kmotm 19
UniootownLake16, 'Mauillon Jack10116
United 31, Seebrin&amp; 0

$199
~--==- ~ r,

UpperSci.010Val J8,Acl•ll
Vllloy V1ew SO, Bellbrcd: 3
Vcnniliml 39, Lenin Sr. 21

W/N{HfSTIR

Vmaillea 22, TippCily 12

Vincatt Wanat 21, Alhaw 12.
Vintm
35, Meso 1

c"'"''
W. Holma 27, LaudonYillo 26

~ ~.

HOUOWPOIIT
RIFUD SLUIS

Wad1worth 14. Revere 7
Walsh JC~Uit42. Kcn1 Roosevd1 8
Wapakoo~ 35, Lim• Shawnee 12
Warren Ol~ioo Sl, LaBnc 12

Wau100n 40, Archbold 21
Wa..,erly 73, McDertnou NW B
Wayne34,8ea~ 3

.$199 '

WarneTr~cc 14,1!dgcrton 0

WmrlOn, W.Va. 26, E. Liverpooll6
Wate.m Brown 29, B1anthaalCr I
We11eMllo S. 21, Waaland 7
Wcufall 20, Paint VaL 6
Wa\Jake 16, Amhcm 13
Whoclcnb"'' 39,1'ootamoulh w.. 6
Whiteford, Mid\. 19, Ouawa Hilll 0
Whitehall 21, Piekerinpm 14
Wilmina10n n, Muon 2A
Woodmom 26, Elmwood 0

12·16-20GL

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'•

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•

•

'•

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cruls~ control

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP RAP

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303
316
182
164
91

106

77
170
159
298

"We DeB"MM' and·Spread UlineltoiM"

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•Shredded
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•Pea Grave!
•Drainage Tile
.Culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block and Mortar Mix

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'E. C..""' 19, Tliolo.,l6 ,,..., , _ 6
• jl. Co. Sh0.,49, ......
' .iUnoa 21, Codl~3
· ·
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• •lllp41 ; S,.na~ 21
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V-, •-.;

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4.3 V-6, standard transmission,
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air conditioning, box bed liner,

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•I •:!*rille
"· ,,..._... 0
• ..iJiiy ~..Jo;Juu.oto 17,~JAJ""7
: " .o~r: Hlrirncd 11, Vandllia·ll&amp;lw3
'- I)Oy Ook- :zo.- · - 1 4 (al')
·; 'lliol: ,......., 25. Oar. -22

' ~20.11orwoJ1101

'94

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•• . - ••

FULL SIZE

•

..,'••

• ; ~~lito. 21, Columbio 14 (OT)
•,
on jl, lUamlll 0

HM
Departmeut
RE
9
First downs........ ..............9
Rushing au.-yds.....37 ·152 27-94
70
Passing yards ................ 22
164
Total yards .................. 174
9-23
Comp.-au. ..................2·11
4
lntereepi.\Ons thrown .......3
4·3
Fumble.t-lolt ................ 2.0
4-20
Penalties-yds............... .l-5
2-70
Pwits-avg. ............... .3-111

1·800·462·5255
•Illness or i'n jury

•

•,•

• .Dolia 10. s - 6

W

VOTE FOR

'•

-::-r::-r-::-r::-t-::-1

Statistics

FREDERICK M. TUTTlE

•
''•

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

Miller (0-9, 0-4) travels to
Trimble, next Friday. Eastern hosts
Alexander Friday.
Quarter 101a1s
Eastem ................ l2 19 0 0 ~ 31
Miller ............ ........0 6 0 0 ~ 6

Vote For

..-•"

Shelby 41, Willard 0

Shoridan 40, Tri.Y.Uoy 6
Solon 21, Wicililfo 7
Smnheanem42. Mldilon P1Un• 7
Spring. Catholic S6, Millon Union 0
Sprifts, N..,.... 21, U.t&gt;tno 1
Sprina. South IS, Xenia 14

Kaylorfmishedwith lOtaeklesand
two inrercepcions. Golden and Jared

Ridenour each had nine '-ckles.
Baekley added ~ht tackle• and
Mike Llughety
sevmstops for
Eastern.

C'·

downs carne on Blue Devil penal' Cosgrove.
Four plays later, Hutchinson ties.
Logan dropped to S-4 overall
blasted over from the one to make
it 13.0 (10:38). Cremeens kick was and 3-1 inside the SEOAL. The
Hocking River Dlvlslou
Chieftains will play at Athens Fritrue.
Alexander ................................ 5
4
4
o 220 174
Hutchinson stopped a Logan day.
EASTFRN ...;...........................6
3
3 · I 105 97
drive midway in the second period Score liy quarters
Trimble .................................... 5
4
3 1 ll8• 214
by recovering a Jim Myers fumble Logan.............. 0 0 0 8 = 8
SOUTHERN ............................ 3
6
I
3 145 162
on the Blue Devils 23. The Gal- Galli polis ...........7 7 14 7= 35
Federal Hocking ......................2
7
I
3 108 253
lions marched to Logan's 39 before
34 296
Miller
.......................................
0
9
0
4
losing the ball on downs. Just Statistics
before halftime, Evans blocked a
Friday's scores
This week'S rmales
G
L
Jordan Jackson punt on the Chiefs Deputment
Nelsonville-Yor1t 27, Belpre 21
MEIGS at Belpre
First downs ............... ! S
II
19.
Alexander22,SOU1HERN7
Magnolia
at Nelsonville61
Gallipolis reached the Logan II, Yards rushing .......... 351
Vinton
County
3~.
MEIGS
7
York
19
but a 35-yard field goal by Cre- Lost rushing ................ 8
EASTFRN 31, Miller 6
. Wellston at ViJ.!IOn County
42
meens fell short just before half· Net rushing ............. 343
Trimble
14,
Federal
Hockliag
6.-..Xle'iarilldat
E'ASTERN'
Pass attempts ..... :........ 6
23
tirne.
Greenfield
McClain
34,
WellSOUTHERN
at Federal
13
Gallipolis marched 65 yards in Completions ............... 3
Stoll 6
Hocking
0
five plays to make it 20-0 with 9: 19 Intercepted by ............. 1
Miller at Trimble
left in the third period. Barnes hit Yards passing ............ 43 127
Hutchinson with a 17-yard pass to Total yards .............. 386 169
45
48
set up the score. Stacy rambled the Plays .............. ...
In Africa's Kalahari Desert,
138
final 36, bouncing off two would· Return yards ............. 31
1 lions, leopards and cheetahs surFumbles ...................... !
be LHS tacklers along the way.
I vive on the body fluids of their
Caldwell's 58 yard sprint set up Lost fumbles ...............O
the Gallians' fourth touchdown. Penalties ................ 9-91 2-20 prey, while desert antelope that
That put the ball on Logan's six. Punts ..................... 3-92 4-114 never need to drink derive moisture
(I blocked) from vegetation and juicy tubers.
Caldwell took it over from the six
with 4:10 left in the period to make
it 26-0. Hutchinson ran the twopoint conversion td make it 28-0.
•
Logan got on the board with a
11-play, 74 yard march, aided by a
IS-yard pass interference against
the Galhans. Myers bulled over
from the four with 10:36 left in the
game. TQm Price ran the two-point
conversion.
Unexplred·Terna
Hutchinson scored Gallia's final
TO with 8:431eft on a five yard run
following a 26-yard scamper. Cremeens lcicked the point after.
Pd. for by oucl ~...: F'n ~ loll II. TUttle,
Substitutes flooded the field the
3&amp;8111 TlllWI Ad., Po__, OH. m•, Ph. ~111
remainder of the game.
Hutchinson led GARS runners
with 101 yards in 14 trips; Caldwell had 85 yards in seven trips;
Stacy 72 yarils in six carries and
Barnes 62 yards in five carries.
Barnes hit three of six aerials for
43 yards. Hutchinson had two
.
catches for 3S yards.
Logan's Bnan Miller completed
11 of ·21 . pusses for 94 yards. Two
Candidate for Gallla County
halfback option passes by Erie Cox
and Cosgrove gained another 33
. Local School Board
yards for the losers.
·
GAHS had IS first downs,
.- Logan 11. Three of Logan's first
Pllld for

• • ~ 31, Jolon Olao! 7
• • · •""'- F.U. 3'. Ncwdonil 0

· · ~··-2A.~3

Tum

,.

SandUaky St. Maty~35, Pcm Oin1.0n 0

Sbtdyaido 24,BridlcpoJ1 0

Bis~~v:rr:c:l::a~. ~~~

when the senior co-captain broke
loose up the middle for 34 yards.
Five plays later, Heath Hudson
scored on a counter play from six
yards out. Peterson carried three
times in the drive for 53 yards. Jake
Kennedy's kicl~ was
and the
Marawders held a 7.()
.
After the Marauder kickoff, the
Vikings drove 68 yards in 10 plays,
with Jason Snider scoring from
three yards out, Snider's kiek tied
the game at 7-7 with 4:42 left in the
period.
Vinton COIDity scored with 9:28
left in the first half when Bucky
Spires scored from three yards out.
Snider once again added the extra
points and the Vikings went into
the locker room with a 14-7 lead.
(See VIKINGS on C-4)

Ohio River Divlslou
Overall
League

DAVID MILLS

Wooddidd 32. frontier 6
w""""" 3), Allion&lt;e 2A
•
Youn .. 0\anoy 20, Onvi1lc 1.4
Young. Mooney :14, Y';'"J;,Rayen 0
Youn .. Unulino :zo. B
W.V1. 6
Youn&amp; Wilson 48, Newtm Falla 0

yards•.Miller'• rushing leader was
Cook with eiJhtcarriel carrie.t Cor
32 yards. Jones added eisht ·carries
for 24 yards.
•
Robert Reed was 2 of 8 passing
for 22 yards and had three
intercepllons for Eastern. Brian
Bowen, who also l'llll the Eagles'
offense, was 0-3 passing and had
one
interception.
Miller
quarterback Chad Cook was 8 of 22
passing for 66 yards and had four
mterceplions. Jones completed his
only pass for four yards for Miller.
Easlern's receiving leaders were
Scott Golden and Ryan Buckley
(both 1-11). 'Miller's leaders were
Jerimiah Keller with three catches
for 16 yards, and Jones had two
37
catches for Yards·
·

TVC football standings

Chester ·Township Trustee

" WIICIImiiiPII·I ·

Sunday Times Sentinel Page C3

\).

Nelsonville-York.....................8
Vinton County .........................8
Belpre ......................................5
Wellston ...................................5
MEIGS ..................................... !

(Continued from C-2)

u

SL XIYiC'J' 42. LanCIIUir.13
Stn•1w.fa 39,lewett·Scio 0

, : "'(GI:

.. IWianc» 31 ~ 1
' , Dolo..,. :J~. Mounl V - I I
• J:loltilioo- r/, ~· 0

.

.

Warriors
14 points
on The
the board
in thetacked
third quarter
on ..- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
a one-yard run by Heath Graber
and Joe Greenwalt's 11-yard
scamper. Pinkerton kicked both
extra points.
Athens scored late in the third
quarter when Toth and Wharton
again teamed up on a three-yard
scoring pass. The following
conversion run failed.
The Warrior attack was led by
Justin Frye's 96 yards, Alloway's
56 and Phil McGraw's 55 yards.
Graber completed just one of four
passes [or four yards.
Athens finished with 170
rushing yards and saw Toth
complete five of 10 passes for 44
yards and a' pair of touchdowns.
Quarter totals
Warren Locai ........O 7 14 0 = 21
Alllens ...................O 6 6 0 = 12

team male Ryan Buckley. Buctley
went on for a 79-yard kick ~IUm
touchdown. The two-point
conversion run failed, and Eutem
led 25.0 with 4:2S left in the halC.
At the 3:2S mark in the leCOnd
quarter, Newland picked orr a
Miller pass and returned it72 yards
for his third touchdown of the
night. The two-~int conversion
run failed, and
tern caooed off
the night's scoring. Both' teams
were sco~less in the second half.
Statistics
The rushing leader for the
Eagles was Newland with seven
carries for 93 yards. Arbaugh
finished with nine carries for 32

VI.nton County gets
35-7 Wl·n over M' et·gs
By DAVE HARRIS
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
POMEROY - Vinton County
exploded for 21 fourth-period
pomts to break open a close game
and defeat the Meigs Marauders
35-7.
The key play came with II: 12
left in the contest and the
Marauders down 14-7. Meigs (1-8
overall, 0-3 in the Ohio River
Division) was facing a fourth and
one at the Vikings' 33-yard line,
but a Brett Hanson pass fell
incomplete. Four plays later, Jason
Waugh broke loose on a 43-yard
touchdown run to break the game
open.
Meigs fullback Scott Peterson
showed the Vikings (8-1, 2-1) that
they were in battle on the first play

conven the extra-point kick.

S.. Cloimillo 54, -dowb.... I
St. Heruy 42, Coldwater 7:1

Md:t.m 34, Welluon 6

.

••.

Your Vote Will Be Appreciated

s~ores-----

Maumoo 33, Millbun' Lllto 6
Mavaville 32. Philo 1

OP
36
65
73
87
134

with Alexander (4-0 in the TV C). conversion run failed, and Eistern
The title race will be decided next led 12-9.
Friday as Eastern hosts Alexander
In the second quarter, Eastern
in the final game of the year.
continued its offensive dominance.
Eastern busted out of the gates . Wes Arbaugh scored on a HI-yard
early, as Newland founil the end run with 9:00 left in the half.
zone from 37 yards QUt at the 9:08 Kaylor's extra~.:Okick was on
marie in the farst quarter. The kick the man: to put
ahead 19.0.
. Miller came storming b~~:k, as
by Randy Kaylor failed, and
Eastern led 6.Q.
Chad Cook hit J&lt;tOJones on a 28·
' The Eagles struck ~gain at the yard pass with 4: left in the half.
4:35 mark in the first
as The two-point conversion run
led a 53-yard
to failed, and Miller cut the score to
.
'f..h( '
19-6.
On the ensuing kickoff, Miller
lcicked the ball directly to Newland.
Newland mishandled the kick, only
to have it recovered by Eagle
-

' B)' TOM HUNTER
Tlma:.Sentlnel Contrll!utor
HEMLOCK- Senior speedster
Pat Newland scored three
touehdowns as the Eastern llagles
posted all their points in the fust
half en route to a 31-6 Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking River
Division victory over the Miller
Falcons Friday evening.
The victory by Eas~m (3-1 in
the TVC) keeps them well
distance for a sllanl
TVC
Rivei Division

1993 grid standings
OP
74
83
189
239
188
178
237
323
223
245
297

wv

Eastern grounds Miller 31-6 ,to stay in TVC division title hunt:.

GAHS whips Logan ·35~8, ~arns share of SEOA.L cro~~~
J.OGAN- "They deserved to
wm. The boys really worked hard
ror that one n said Brent Saunders,
head Galli~lis football coach.
Saunders was referring to the
Blue Devils' 35-8 victory over host
Logail' before 3,400 spectators on
Bill Sauer Field at Hilltop Stadium

Pomeroy---loflddleport GaUJpolla, OH Point Pleuam,

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· October31,

nmes-Sentlnel

es
Coal Grove erases early deficit
to hand River Va~ley 50-141oss

: October 31, 1993

Sunday nmes Sentinel Page

••
•'

Alexander notches 22-7 victory
over Southern to lead division
•

By SCOrt WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
RAC~- Great running from
the Alc;xandcr backfield and a
strong fourth quanc:r allowc;d the
Alexander Spartans to break open a
close 13-7 contest late in the fourth
quartet, when the Spartans scored
nine points to defeat the Southern
Tornadoes 22-7 Friday night at
Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field.
The final score was not a· true
indication of the game's closeness,
as the contest was decided in the
last five minutes of the game.
Alexander, clinching at least a
share of the tiUe in its division, is
undefeated in the Hocking River
division of the Tri-Valley
Conference and 5-4 overall.
Southern drops to 1-3 and 3-6
overall.
The stage is now set for an
Alexander·Eastern showdown for
the league title next Friday at
Eastern.
'
Matt Ross, the Spartans'
sophomore tailback, had a career
night, rushing 22 times for 180
yards and one touchdown, wl!ile
senior fullback Matt Rosier carried
I 0 times for 26 yards and a
touchdown.
.
Senior quarterback Eric Wagner
was 4-9 passing for 53 yards and a
touchdown connection to Chad
Ashley. Wagner .also kicked a field
goal that took some steam from the
Tornadoes midway \hrough the
fourth quarter.'
Alexander took the opening
kickoff, but S.outhern 's defense
stopped the Spartans. A couple
tradc:d-posseSSions followc:d, then
Alexander put together a drive near
the end of the first frame, hitting
paydirt when Man Ro,ler hit the,
endzone on a one yard run at the
3:2S mark. A Wagner kick made
the score 7-0.
Just moments later, at the end of
the first frame, Southern put
: toge,ther a drive that resulted in a
· score by Aaron Drummer, the SHS
workhorse, on a one-yard drive.
Eric Jones booted the extra-point
kick through the uprights, and the
score was tied at 7-7.
· .
Alexander had ils next drive
fizzle, givil)g Southern the ball
deep in their own territory.
Southern took over, but a Fred

.

Boggess interception stined the
play and Alexander took over
again. On the second ~lay from
scrimmage, Wagner h1t Ashley
with a 16·yard touchdown
reception. The kick attempt was
blocked, and A.lex led 13-7.
A defensive struggle highlighted
the rest of the half, and Alex held
the six-point lead.
A scoreless third quarter again
saw good defensive play from both
sides.
However, Southern
continulilly kept Alex in the hole.
Several costly Alexander penalties .
also plagued potential runs out of
the gate, and Sauthern took over
several times within the 25.
Southern had a fourlh .and one,
but a penalty toOk the wind out of
Southern's sails and the Spartans
took over, proving to be a deadly
penalty for the Tornadoes.
At one _point, Southern had a
second and goal from the seven, but
a fUI\ and two pass plays failed. An
Alexander penalty g•ve ·sHS

another chanCe, but that Jlli;SS also
did not hit itS targeL Qn thtrd down.
Billy Jones caught what looked to
be a touchdown, but came down
well out · of the end zone
incomplete.
One Southern drive resulted in a
fumble, which was recovered by
Bobby Meeks. That Alex (!rive was
thwarted by the SHS defense,
however, it set the stage to get the
Spartans away from its own goal
line. After the SHS defense held
again, Wagner drilled a 33·yard
field goal at the 5:18 mark in the
fourth ftame.
An aborted Southern possession
resulted in a punt, then Ross
rambled fourty yards to set up his
own score five plays later. It looked
as though the SHS defense would
again hold, but this time Ross
jaunted six yards for the score at
the 2:59 mark. The two-point
conversion run was no good, but
Alex created the fmal score.
(See SPARTANS on C-5)

.'
TOO FAR AWAY- Southern receiver BIUy Jones (32) reaches
to the heavens to eatcb Trenton Cleland's pass, but nnds the ball
too far out of hisl'each as.his feet tickle the back line of the end zone
durin&amp; Friday night's contest against the visiting Alexander Spar·
tans, )Vho won '22-7.

'

Vikings .win ...
(Continued from C-3)
Both teams threatened early in
the third periocf&gt;only to tum the ball
over on fl!mbles. The Vikings
drove 10 ~ Marauder 32-yard line
at the start of the half but Petetson
pounced on a loose ball 10 end the
threat. Meigs then drove to the
Vikint~ IS-yard line !lut Hanson
• was h1t hard and coughc:d up the
football with Snider recovering to
end the Marauder threaL .
The fourth period started with
the Marauders on the drive, sparkc:d
by a great leaping cau:h for a 19yard gain by Hudson the Marauders
. drove to the Viking 33. But Meigs.
· came up empty on the crucial
· fourth down play and the Vikings
, took over on downs.
.
Four plays later Waugh scored
from 43 yards ouL Waugh carried
all-four rusbing plays in the drive
p(ckin~ up 61 yards. in the drive.
. Snider s kick made it a 21-7 Vikng
. lead with 9:20 left in the contest.
· Dusty Ward pickc:d off a Hanson
· pass four plays later and returned it
:30 yards. After a clipping penalty
:on Vinton gave them the ball at the
Meigs 37-yard line, Ward scored
. five plays latet from 22 yards ouL
. Snider added the extra points to
: give the Vikings a 28-7 lead with
&lt;5:29 lefL
:· Meigs turnc:d the ball over on
,:lhe first play after the kickoff when
.Ward came up with his second
'interception of the evenin~ on a
pass by Israel Grimm. Nine plays
· later Snider capped off the scoring
: from five yanfs out, Snider. addc:d
· the extra points with 26 seconlls
:left to give the Vikings the 35· 7
·win.
.
; Scott Braden led the Viking
' ground game with 13 carries for
:: 114 yards. Waugh added 110 in 12
carries. Blllden was two of five for
seven yards. Snider caught two
passes for seven yards.
, Peterson led the Marauder
•P,OUDd auact with 9S yards in I t
; carries. Grimm added II for 34
: yards. Hanson was eight of I7 in
· the ait for 94 yards. Chad Duncan
·: caught three passc:s for 4S yards, ·
' IIIKIDavid Petty pulled in three for
·: 21 y.-ds, while Hudson caught two
l eaiChes for 28 yards.
• The Marauders will travel to
: Belpre next week to end the season
: with the Golden Eagles. Vinton
·County will bost Wellston.
; (lua~r totals, .
·
!'Vintm County ......? 7 0 21" 35
·•Meigs ....................? 0 0 0• 7 •
~

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:Statistics

. . . . . . .... .

VC

~ ~-wna.
14
' Rillhing ylids .............336

Pillinl yal'dl ..................7
TOCII yards·..........,.......343
.Comp.-atL .................... Z-6

o

·: In~ thrown .......

• Fumblea-lolt ................l-1

M
12210
94
. 216
' 8-18

2

·t-1
3-30
l'untl'yda. ....;............ .2-15 . 3-101

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.
d~rlng Friday night's.TVC Jlame at Ra~,_wllere ~
the Spartans expanded the1r threadbare halftime ~
lead to win 22-7.
\
'

)

WE GOT HIM! - Two Alexander players
converge on an unidentified Southern ballcarrier

Kinnison among winners
at V:inton Raceway\
.

Sports briefs

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OTIS. . F. 'KNOPP:
'

.....
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For

Horse racing
LEXINGTON, Ky . (AP) Navarra, $13.80, surged from next
to last going down the backstretch
to beat Classic Reign by a nose in
the $46,375 Dowager Stakes at
Keene land.

~

,.

SUTTON TOWNSHIP

TRus-·""rEr.oE

•
•
'

BrinlsYou
s. Experience

:t. Strong Leadership AbUity

•

,.•
3. ·aonesty and Sincerity
•
4. A •GenUine Caring
U Re-Elected Mr. Knopp will
..
continue ~ . serve the people
S1_1tton Township With h4)nesty •
and carin~ His experience and •
leadership a.,IUtles ensure that . .:
the needs and Interests ol the ; .
residents ·ol Sutton Township
wllll»e served.
•
Paid lor by Otis F. Knopp •

ol

that's what
State Farm is

a1l

about.''

,
Southern head coach Scott
:,: Wickline said, ''The kids played as
, : well and as hard as they could .•
:!• They pu} forth a great effort. The
:Lstilre was not a trQe indication or
···oow close the game was."
Ross had 180 of the Spartans'
; - total 259 yard~ . Jim Nicholson
. caught two passes for 22 ·yards,
: Rosier caught Qne for 15 and
1 Ashley
had the touchdown
I
'
1 reception.
'
Drilmmer led_Southem with 20
carries for 100 yards; and Williams
had seven for 35. Cleland added
four for 10. · ·
· i Trenton Cleland passed 30 times
! and completed six for 64 yards.
The Torandoes' leading
receivers were Jones (2·18),
I Drummer (2-16) and Cass Cleland

.fARM

Indians
release
Ojeda

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Life Insurance Company

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CLEVELAND (AP) - The
Cleveland Indians on Friday
declined to pick up a one-year
option on pitcher Bob Ojeda, the
., ~ sole survivor of a spring training
: . \ boating crash that decimated the
':,! • Indians pitching staff.
.,.. Ojc4a, 36, declared himself a
~ free agent. The Indians can contin;: • ue to deal wilh Ojeda through Dec.
~i' , or through Jan. 8 if they offer
...; arbitration.
The Indians' decision was not
:'.surprising because Ojc:da - who
~ has not yet said whether he will
~ play at all in 1994 - would have.
~. made 51.6 million in the option ·
t; year.
•
Indians officials could not be
" ·reachc:d Cor comment .on the decision. Calls to the team offtces were
" unanswered Friday evening. Mes, 1 ages were left' at the homes of
, pokesman Bob DiBiasio and gen!1 ral manager John Hart.
Ojeda mi$sed most of the 1993
cason while, recovering from a
. vere acalp wound sufferc:d when
•• 111 fishing boat'llanimed into a dock
t ~ear the Indians' spring training
~ ~acility in Wintet Haven, Fla.
·
:! Tile March 22 accident killed
~ i!:Cllcvers Tim Crews and Steve
oo; Olin. Olin was to be the Indians'
1 l:Ioser, while Ojeda was slotted to
~ ~the No.·2starter.
~ 1 Ojeda said he serio~y cpnsidil' ~red givina the ~e up af~r the
!!: llooldent, but ~jollied the Indians in
~ly AujusL
·
•

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BYPASSES VIKING- ~elp running back Heath Hudson (U) ,
bypassell a Vinton County defeader oa his way to gaining some
rushlna yardage during Friday night's TVC game in Pomeroy
'
wheretheVikingswon3S.7.
·
•

Department
Alex.
F'lfSt dbwns.................... l 0
Rushing yards .............206
Passing yards ................53
Total yards ..................259
Comp.-au....... ,....... .. ....4-9
Interceptions ...................0
Fumbles-lost ................2-1
Penalties-yds .......... 12-130
Punts-yds.................4-120

BLAIR WINDON

$189 99

Statistics

Drummer led the SHS offense
with 10 lackles, while Jamey Smith
, h;ld nine and eight each by Jamie
' Evans, 'Jonald Shaffer and Cass
Cleland. Sam Shain and Craig
Knight each had seven. Smith,
Ryan Adams and Tucker Williams
each had sacks and Drummer a
caused fumble, and Shain the
fumble recoverr..
Soulhem w11l travel to Stewart
to face Federal Hocking for this

INIUUN(I

CAUME.

week's season fmale.
Quarter totals
Alexander .............7 6 0 9= 22
Southern ...............7 0 0 0= 7

t (2·32).

342Sicond•we.
hlllpolls; Oh.
Phoiii446-4UO
IO!It 446:..45 II

A

., Spartans win ...

24·yard gallop along the River
Valley sideline as the catalyst, to
get into the end zone. Covey went
in from II yards out on a left-side
sweep run that preceded Jenkins'
two-point conversion run. River
VaHey led 14-0 with 4:04 left in the
opening acL
The Hornets' next possession
bore only one similarity 10 their last
one - brevity. From their own 34,
senior fullback Don Honaker ~ke
through the Raiders' line and lDto
the clear for a 66-yard touchdown
play that preceded sophom(lre
(See HORNETS on C-'l

Vote For

HORTON

GALLIA COUNTY
BOARD OF

(Continued from C-4)

·

CAROLL SNOWHN

11~11

IN THE GRIP - River Valley quarterback Paul Covey (13)
' nnds himself hip-deep In the grasp or Coal Grove defensive end
:: Jason .Fields (88) in the &amp;econd quarter of Friday night's gridiron
battle.pn the Raiden' Cheshire Tow)lshlp field, where the Hornets
walked away with a S0-14 win despite Covey's passing for a tou~h·
down and running for another. (Times-Sentinel photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

the red zone. B utlhe Raiders shook
off a two-yard loss on Jason
Jenk ins' run at the Hornets' nine·
yard line when quarterback Paul
Covey dropped back and found a
wide-open Mike Cook in the end
zone for an 11 -yard touchdown
pass play. Covey's two-point
conversion pass to Cook was off
the mark, and River Valley had to
settle for a 6-0 lead.
Coal Grove stung itself on its
fi rst possession with a fumble on
the second play that the Raiders
recovered at the Hornets ' 34. It
took four plays, with Abe Haislop's

Bow Hunter Spedal

PHILIP
·SKIDMORE

.

&gt;

''life Insurance
that's·right for you...

By G.SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Staff
CHESHIRE - River Valley's
Raiders controlled the flfSl quarter
of Friday night's battle against the
visiting Coal Grove Hornets, but
the Hornets stung deep and often en
route to a 50-14 whitewashing.
"They dido 't do anything we
didn't expect," said Raider boss
Jack James, whose troops lost their
fifth straight contest overall and
their seventh consecutive 'home
game.
"We made some adjustments
after spotting them 14 points," said
Coal Grove mentor Dave Lucas,
whose crew won its third straight
game and cracked the .500 plane.
The Raiders were Within 21
seconds of using up half of the fttSt
quarter on their first drive, a 12play, 56-yard march temporarily
delayed by a pair of negativeyardage runs, one of which came in

RE-ELECT

.,

"'

Raccoon Township
Fire Levy Renewal

Golf
MADRID, Spain (AP) - Des
Smyth, without a tour victory in
five years, shot a 4-under·par 68 10
open a two-stroke lead in the
Madrid Open.
Smyth has a 36-hole total of
133.
Wayne Westner fired a 6S to
share second place with Mart Roe,
Barry Lane and David Gilford.

.,.
Bobby Bailey and .George Adkins. Hog 4-1)1. rllce Brian Bailey won:
The feature. was won by Ginny . over T1m Combs and Patrick:.
Adkins ·in the T-1 over George Shafer.
•
Adkins in the A-I, and Bailey in
Doris Maynard won~ Powder;_
the B-1, all ones. . · • ,
Puff ahead of season eliampion•
Brian Bailey
claimed.
the
Road
Tina
Cotterill
and Cindy·Col)ley.
''
.
.
"'
. .....:
.

VINTON - Last Sunday, the
Vinton Raceway Park concluded its
racing season with vetetan driver
Donnie Kimison claiming the feature win 'in his 7-up car over Brad
White in the V-8 Modified Bomber
class.
Other feature winners were
Conard Newman, Road Hog V-8;
Ginny Adkins, Four-Cylinder
Bombers; ·and Doris Maynard,
· Powder Puff.
The crisp fall day didn'tcool off
red-hot Donnie Kennison, who
claimed a clean sweep for the day
by winning the heat and the feature. In the heat, Kinnisoo was followed by Delmas Goff, and
Howard Miller.
In the feature, Kinnison defeated
White, Keith Hicks' #15, track
champion Todd Smith of Pomeroy,
and Howard Miller. Goff's car
went up in a cloud of smoke as his
engine blew due to the racers' hard
driving styles in the final race of
lhe year.
Newman, last week's modified
winner, claimed the Road Hog fea·
ture this week, scoring a clean
sweep. Newman won the heat over
Scott WiUiamson, and Donny YosL
Ben Cotterill claimed the second
heat over Tony Jacks, and Don
Ratcliff.
In the feature, Newman won.
over Cotterill and Jacks.
In the Bomber 4-Cyl. heat,
Ginny Adkins clairnc:d the win over

gain in the first quarter ot Friday ni1ht'a· aame·
against Coal Grove, which the Hornetuvon50·14.
Haislop's run set up tbe Raiders' second touchdown, which Covey scored. (Times-Sentinel photo
. by G. Spencer Osborne)

Before Coal Grove's Jason
ean get a betier grip on Rlyer Valley
Paul Covey, Covey Improvises this
runnin&amp; back Abe flalslop, who takes
_!!round the rlgbt end for a 14-yard

Pl'fCIIIOtiiT -

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Vote
ONE-HANDED CATCH- Meigs receiver Chad Duncan goes
,air])orne ~o make this one-handed catch of a Brent Hanson pass
during Friday night's game against the visiting Vinton County
VikiD&amp;S. who won 35-7.
.

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ComptroDer or the Currently 4th
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~

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5

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Cub and balances due from depository institutions:
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Securities .......... .. .. ........................ .................... .........................................: ................................... ,...... 4,006,000.00
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. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ....... . . . .

26,63!,000.00
PremiJea and fixed usets (in&lt;ludiD8 capitaliz91leasea)..................................................................... .... 268,000.00
Olber roat eslate owned ................................... ................................................................ ............. ..... ...... IOS,OOO.OO
Other usets ..................................... ............................................. ....... ......................................................52l,OOO.OO
Total u ... IJ ......................................................................,. ,..............................................., .. ............... 42,958,000.00
Total u""IJ and loa,., defmed punuant lo l2 U.S.C. 18230) ........................................................ .42,958,000.00

Automatic.air,
stereo ,

blue ,- AM/FM

89 POHTIAC GRAND PRIX
2 door, automatic transmission,
stereo.

·

$148.31 =-=
~ · ~·

I

91 CHM CAVALIER

91 BUICK SKYLARK

AS . silver, automatic transmis·
sion , 4 cylind~r.

Blue. autori.atic trans)'Tlission,
air, AM/FM.

$180.64 Per Mo.

SJ98.28 Per Mo.

90 HONDA ESCORT

89VWGOLF

Automatic transmission, air conditioning, stereo.

5 speed transmisslon,air condi;
tion ing, stereo.

*166.71 Per Mo.

$159.37 PerMo.

vt

Ill

....;::

I::::;

Depooill:
In domestic of!'tces ............................................................... ........................................ ................... 38,007,000.00
Noninlerelt·bearing .................................................................................................. 3,0 t2,000
Iitteroot-bearln&amp; ........ ,...... ,...................................................................................... 34,995,000
Other liabilitieo .............................................. ................................................. ............... ........ .................. 300,000.00
Totalliabililieo .............................................. .............................. ,, ...... .....,.... ..................................... .38,307,000.00

a
5 ~=~ .~~~:::::::::::: : ::: : ::: :: :::::: ::::::: ::::: ::.: : : .:.: :: ::: : :.: .: : ·: : ·: : · : ::·:~:::::
" ' Undividod profill and copital reserve .................................................................................., ................ 4,40t,OOO,OO

1: ·~==~:==·~·i;;;;·;i;;d'""'""''""'''""'""''""''''"'''""''''"'''"''""'"'''"''......... . ........... 4,6Sl,OOOOO

I

Ill

~~~~ .:;;..~~r~·~·;d·;;q;;i~·~i;L

...................................... . .. . ...... .......6st.ooooo .

and lot,., defened puriuant to 12 U.S.C. 18230)......................................................................... .42,958,000.00
I, Ouy P. Norril, Cubier of lbe obove-IIIIDed bank do heteby doc:l.va lhll this Report of Condition il true and
correct to lbe belt of my knowledge and belief.

a_, P. Norrio, Cuhler

"NEW ARRIVALS"
1990 HONDA CIVIC Dl

$

699 5
1990 HONDA
S
·
4 door, 5 speed,air, gray. ... .................. ..................... 799 5
4 door,gold, 5 speed ...................... ...........................

10126193
We, lbe underlianed dlm:lon, aa..t !be comcliiOU of tbillllllemellt of reooun:eo and liabililieo. We declale that
it bu been elllllined by 111, ...t lo tbe boot of Ola'lmowJodie and belief bu been prepared in conformance with
tlie illltrucU0111 and II true and ccrrecL

Jolla·T. "Wolfe

. Doole1 Yl. Pox ~ Pirocton

.,.....,.CARS
'THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State St. • Ath•n•, Ohio
584 8555
UHd Car 584-2114

\

�Page C6 . Sunday llmaa Sentinel

October31, 1813

Pomeroy-Middleport-Qalllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleaiant, WV

Big Black train stays on playoff track with 41-20 Wili
By Dowc Host
The 14111-ranlceil Point Pleasant
Big Blacks mllltbed into Roane
Coun'6:rday ni""t, lind. they m_ar·
ched
out J'th an tmpreSSIVC
41-20 victory over the Roane
County Raiders. ·
Thi
did t 0 smoothly for
Point
first quartet
though. Roane received the openin$1rickoff and immediately starled
driving. It was nor a textbook drive.
The Raiders were penalized three
times while Point was called for
one as well.
The Raiders, who did more shift·
ing (in their offensive fonnations)
than AI Unser Jr: does in the Indy
SOO, seemed 10 have the Big Black
defense off balance on their opening drive. Big Raider fullback Anc!Y
Kinder (5·9, 190) was ~......
mam
focus as he picked up 48 y... .., on
the drive, buUing his way ahead on
runs of four, five, and ten yanb for
some of it. Then on first and 10
:: from the Big Black 13 Kinder tried
the right side and was siOOd up by
145 pound cornerback Matt Rieger.
Then after two big defensive stops
by Jason Safford, one a 10 yanl
sack of quanerback David Wit-

~~t~ ~

=!_~

down

~34 It~

Iiams, 1111fa delay of game penalty .
it was Shinn again following
the Raiders faced a f~ down the blocking on into the end zone
--.102
lind 2.5 sih!lltion fran the. 27 Ylnl for a four yanl toilchdown run. ltealm Ylldl
188
line. As Williams blctpedlled wilb Hill's extra point was dead center
three Point defenders bearing lind the Big Blacks wa-c oo lOp 7-6
SCORE BY QU"r:~: 4 TWI
ddown on him. he lofted a scrcea with 2:581efl in the lint quarter.
Point
41
14 7 13 7
JliiSS over the middle to Kinder,
After Hill's kickoff Roane star·
Roone
6 6o 8
20
who suddenly had room to run. The ted at thcir own 42 yard line. On
Raider fullback got rolling into the lint down halfback Joe Udy took a
SCORING
Bis. Black SCCI.)ndary and rumbled pitch left and was caught by a
Team· Qtr
on mto the end zooe for a 28 yard clwiinil Joey Warner in the back·
R0111e · I
touchdown. That made the lead 6-0, field. Wanier stripped Udy of the
~ Kh1det
from David
which is how it would stay after ball and after' a mad saamble
W'olli11111 (kick 110 I l
Santeri K01pinen's extra point Point's Chad Roush came up with
r~ Shinn five yard run (Hill kick)
sailed wide left. That was lhe last the recovery and the Big Blacks
pp •
1
time Roane would see the lead.
were back in business.
Jason Shinn five yard run (Hill kick)
After the 11 play over six minute
Rolne . 2
loog opening drive lhe Big Blacks
The 14th-ranicCd Big Blacks · Jobn Undetwood 39 yord pus from
CIIDC back with an answer of their raise their record to 7-2 with the
David Williams (conversion failed)
own.
win and wiD visit the Milton
PP • 2
Wil
1
1llilback Jason Shinn got things Greyhounds next wei:k for the last
~l~~kF yard put from
going with a 10 yard run, ·uTwo game ever at Ball Field.
PP.
3
plays later quarterback Will Go hit
Oany Peck 79 yard tickolf rc111111 (kick
wide out Ryan Roush on a slant
good)
110
patlem good for 17 yards. That
pp. 3
moved the ball to the Raider 26
STATISTIC:....,1 RoaDe
Juon Safford one yard run (HiD kick)
yanl line. Then a facemasking Finl Downa
12
18
PP · 4
H ki ....)
penalty on Roane moved lhe ball to Ylllda Ruahina
40-186 40-112
Brent Smith duee yard run ( ill ....
the 10 Yard line. Shinn took lhe first Ylllda Pauing
42
187
~"';' -~ one yud run (Chris
down carry behind his right tackle Tolll Yacls
228
tO~ DlosiiCf pus frOm David Williams)
and found room enough for an
Pu•in.J
2-7
INDIVIDUALSTATISTICS
3
eight y8fd gain. Then on second Inur. Thrown
0

28 Y":Jj'

~- !':i't!

R~

7~..:L~ li-0. 11·3 !r;:::
i.-

187 2

: Chad
Point •
7 Will ow •
_ : JUlll Salford _,.:
r-·· ,..,., ....... 1 1..-3 oa
9;59 _. Smilh l -l;13 ..,. Peck .4 ; 111 ,.....nDI
8 R . 2- . Tulall40oll6
23
3Derdc
0
R-trilol
3
tto- -~ Kin.t.r 23-96; David Point • R)'lll R-h 2-42: Tatall :z...u
William&amp; ·a.a; Joe Udy 7-6; J01011 Jeu ~- • John Underwood-S.SB; Arwly
2-2: TbiUI._lU.
Kh1det _ 9:, Olril . _ .30: Mike
8 a ·1871 A.
I'IIIIDII
· 35
Point · WiUiam OiU 2-7-42 yds.; Tolall
l-ID; 1blala 1,... J-

~lll'd

Your Support I• Crei.tly Appreciated

ELECT

William "Bill" Osllorn•
OLIVE TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

::
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.,
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.,
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,•
·.
;:
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:;
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•
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..

-•NHL•EASTERN CONFERENCE

AUulkDIWL T ,._
l'hnt·· ···-· a 2 o 16
New~····-· 7 1 0 14
N.Y.- -- . S 5 I
II
5 1 o to
- - - · · " "' 3 5 J
9
N.Y.lolaadcn... 3 1 I
1
T.npaBIJ -· ..·· 3 7 1
1

T-

w.........,,....

.
.·..·
,.
...
'
'

•'

GPGA
44 n
33 11
31 36
:11 41
31 33
31 42
XI 30

-

N•U•al ........
.
COLORADO ROCKIES ' Sian..
Marvin Fracman, pi~ell•, lO 1 oac·ycar

1 :!946
7 30 .,
43344

Butralo........... 371 '
Hud'ord ............ 3 7 1
Oaawt . ........... l62

..

Deparbnenl
CG
RV
First downs......................8
12
Total yards ................ ~ .373
159
Rushing atL-yds ... ..41-336 31-65
Passing yards ................ 37
94
Comp.·atL .................... 1-4 10..26
Interceptions thrown .......0
I
Fumbles-lost ................ 3-1
1-1
Penalties-yanb...........4-60 4-45
Punting....................... 1-30 3-126
Punt blocks ...................... !
0

A i!LF •
W

\01 IFF

"

~-/00·~ 0 \

Statistical leaders
Coal Grove Honets
B.ushln&amp; - Honaker 13-148, 2
'f)jf. Smith 8-65, 2 TDs; Brammer
8-46; Cade 3-32.
·
Passing - McDaniel 1-4, 37
yds.,l TO.
Receiving- Fields 1-37, I TO.
Interceptions cau1bt Brammer(!)
Fumble recoveries - Fliehman
(1)

River Valley Raiders
Rushing- Haislop 5-32; Cook
7-23; J. Jenkins 9-23; Peck 1-2;
Fuller 1-1.
Passing- Covey 10-21, 94
yds.. 1 TO, 1 int.; Kelley 0-5.
Recelvln1 - J. Jenkins 5o36, 2pt. conv; Cook ·2-30, 1 TO; T.
Campbell 1-11; Simpson 1-9;
Haislop 1-8.
· Fumble rec:overles - team
recovery (in traffic; no player

--

~..-t} ·

................·. ........ ..

. ·. •."

•.·

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

.,t.. ·~ '1:

w·

2
2

t
I

~~r sources

may need to rest every 20 minutes
or half hour. 1n hot weather, carry a
wet bandana 10 cool your face and
neck. And pay auenbon to feet for
developing blisters.
• Cook the evening meal before
it gets 100 dark, and store yopr food
in a sack hun!! from a tree limb at
night to keep It away from marauding raccoons, skunks or ~ • AlwayS carry a firs1 aid kit and
be prepare&lt;~, with some first aid
training. Leave a schethile and a
map of your route with someone at
home.

Vote For

Elmer C.
Newell

Chester TowtshiD Trustee
Unex~red Term
Ending 12-31-95

P._l• ~y _....., L ....... 46221 !nolo
Dr. p,..;.y, OH fts-3537

Yoto For 111d Rolli•

·ORIS SMITH
Chester Township Trustee
Your Vote and Influence Appreciated
Pd. lor by .....ndldro... Oria ....,., .... E!lllle Ridge Ad.,
Long Ba•aRI, OIUI7.g,

Ph...._..

out. .-

•

•

:~

•i
,.•,
•i

.,"'·

.,

::
'·

544 RICHLAND AVE. • 593-8697

$

7 Day Anniversary Sale

~

• Know what you can carry and
how long you can carry it withont
straini11g yourself. The pack
shouldn't weigh more than 25 percent of your weight, so lake only
what you need.
• Plan meals carefully. Packers
consume 3,200 to 3,800 calories
per day and need high carbohydrate
foods, proteins and fats such as
peanut butler, trail mixes, instant
oatmeal, pastaS lind dried fruiL
• Eat a high ~orie breakfast 10
load up oo energy and don't underestimate the need for frequent

Prices

On-The-Spot Financing
as low as

5.99%

........·slashed

with test

drlw
all Mltkl

Monday - Thanclay ....___.... Great Deals

FREE
Food &amp; Drink

Despite show
of support,
'Cartwright
·wants wins

FREE HAT

Register to Win

FUE

Saturdcly&amp;
SandciY.

VIdeo Playen

all week
long!

AC&amp;OCo~

KENT, Ohio (AP) - The ath·
letic leadership of Kent State, with
the l~gest. current losing streak in
!: Qivjsi!)n, 1-;\· (o6tball, has: llet~
·! given a·vore·of confidence by uru·
;; .,~ ;versity ~icle;nt Cm'~?~'Cattwli~L '
;1\ , . B\lt ~ght Slid her SUJliX&gt;.It
.; ~of ath1et,ic duector Paul Amodoo
!r..... 11nd football coach Pete Cordelli
few basic de:nands.
perfecdy well whal·
.. Cartwright said
see Ws out there. We
1'::.'\\•ant:.a competitive program and '
warit beuer attendance. Those
imponant goals. Those goals
noo unusUal."
The Golden Flashes have lost 12
&gt;traight 'football games, haven't.
a winning season since 1978
have had only eight winning
since 1960.
said
:;
;,

'i

FoolbaU

GFGA
.:1 lO
..
33
&lt;16 42

EXT. VAN. I cyl. eng., PS, PB, 1Uto.
triria.~ dUll 11r front a rMr, AMIFII
ltiNO CMHttl w/•r phonea, tilt I
cruiH, GMt aluminum whell•, I'Mr
window defroster wHh wiper 1nd

l:

wuhw.

35 %1
31 34
~ ~

14
14
14
6
5

2

::

&lt;,

There's only one lhio&amp; lbat can aive you a cozier foelina than a durable,
bigb-efficieocy, eneqy-&lt;:Oooervillg 1l:- boat pump: a1iaoe bHl (IUIIIIi
witb a cub rebate. And remember, a beat pump cools u well u it beats. So
to1k to your participating Trane dealer llld
get • Ilia, warm feeling, In more ways lban on••--It~ Hard To Sli&gt;p A ~--no
.,,...,

, .... Dl...loo

Ctlpry __ ....... 6 3
LotAn.......... 6 5
Allaloobio ......... 2 7
Stn ! ...._...... 2 I
~ ......... 2 · 9

:!

•:
::

::

~ ........ 4 s 2
10 35 34
Dolroil .......... 4 1 0 . I .:1 49

Vancau..w ····-" 7 2 0

Pay attention to where the
are located and make
sure you keep boltles filled in case
lbe next source is farther away than
expecled.
·
• Don't be fooled by cooler temperatures or·the fact that yo'u don't
feel thirsty. Your body can~ off
moisture quickly, resulting 10 dehydration. Drink up to four quarts of
liquid per day.
• Losten 10 your body. It's not
unusual to slOp often for a rest and
drink of water. Depending on the
terrain and the te"!perature, you
1

.,.,:: snacks.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
CtolnllliTWL T Plo.
T.................. IO 0 0 20
n.u.a................ 6 3 2 14
· SLJ.ouia ........ 6 2 I
13
W....... ,. ...... 6 4 I 13

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~~~~~;;;;;;~~;;;;;;::::~::::::=:::::::

identified)

r

~: ~ tit

Basketball

NoU.tl-lt_.,.
C:UCAOO BEARS, Walvocl Votnice
Smilh, pad. AcliYaiOd llyaa w......,,
ur•tn&lt;~,- iho-._.t.
. NBW YOIIK GIANTS, Pit ... lliko
Sherrnd, wide receiver, oa injured

~

Statistics

Natleul '•*""I A 1 '"'o-

~ .• _ ..,.... ,

42

RV: Cook , ll-yd. pass from
Covey (2-pt. pass failed), 6:21 1st
qtr.
RV: Covey 11-yd. run (Jenkins
2-pt. run), 4:54 1st qtr.
CG: Honaker 66-yd. run (Smith
2-pt. run), 4:04 1st qtr.
CG: Smith 10-yd. run (Brammer
2-pt. run), 10:25 2nd qtr.
CG: Fields 37-yd. pass from
McDaniel (Shelton kick), 2:08 qlr.
CG: Smith 8-yd. run (2-pt. run
failed), 9:40 3rd qtr. .
CO: Honaker 31 -yd. run
(Shelton kick), 3:44 3rd qtr.
CG: Romans 8·yd. run
(Newhouser kick), 7:23 41h qtr.
CG: Cunninsham 17-yd. run
(Newhouser kick), I: I 14th qlr.

TEXAS' RANGERS; llano4 ~
WUamat~u. eatcbet, to • coatnct. :-slh
OtJa•oma Chr of tho Amen~an
Aaaec:iation and invhod hlm Ut 1pn111
uainirc • a non·~ pl.a)'CI'.

MIANI IlEAT' llel111od Kuot Loe,
Pl"l· tnd Mtdt ......... r.xw....

:5 ~5 lI g
~
II .:1

Scoring summary

82yards

Na1h riM..._
M..._L ........ 6 J 2 I&lt; 36 T1

~~.::::::::

Finale week will have the
· Raiders (2·7) hosting Wahama and
the Hornets (4-5) taking on Rock
Hill at Pedro.
Quarter totals
Coal Grove ...........8 15 13 14 = 50
River Valley .......14 0 0 0 = 14

~: Backpaclf-in_g is an enjoyable
way to ,expenence nature and
..,..,,.access reJ!IOte terrain. The rolla at
,:~ .Camp l)ails offer the following
tipsoto help you get started:
.
•.Study .~ map or guide to know
"ihe terrain you' II be hiking an.d
estim~te tiJe time it will take to
arrive ill your destination. Pad yout
estimates with extra· time to
account for delays.
.
• Obtain necessary (iermits and
reserve camp siles in advance, and
!!heck 1'&lt;&gt;9111 regulations to avoid
fines.
·
'li
Know lhe area's weather pat: terns and ~ommodate for time of
year. Always be prepared for the
~worst ~Y~er. ,
• Remember, it's very easy to
]lersplie, .hen in t)le winter, so
dress apPropriately in layers' and be
:• prepared for chll,l)ging conditions,
.: tempcratluC changes at higher alti:; tudes, and.evenings. Avoid wearing
:; jeans pi cotton clothing. Wear
:- polypfopylene, wool or other
•: breai,hable materials that wick
:. moisture away and dry quickly.
:: Always pack rain gear.
::
• Get 10 know your gear before
•, heading out Seam-seal the tent and
:: familiarjze ~ ·outself with its design
:: and &lt;$et-uprLearn how to OpeJ'8!e
:• your. SIOvpj so you're not caught 10
;: t11e ~-lif the rain .trying to figure

L
r

----------:-----

The Hornets· defense, despite
committing a pair of 15-yard
~ties (unsportsmanlike and pass
mterference) on the Raiders' third
possession of the rust frame, kept
their hosts 12 yanb from midfield
and took the ball back 24 seconds
into the second quarter. On the
!bird play of their drive, Smith,
wbo put the Hornets in business at
the Raiders' 29 on a 52-yard punt
return, followied up on two
Honaker runs that netted 19 yards
by scoring on a 10-yard run to tie
the game. Brammer's two-point
conversion run put Coal Grove
ahesd 16-14.
River Valley, which ran eight
plays in the rest of the quarter,
moved the ball 14 yarda and lost 12
on three possessions, which ended
with a punt, a fumble and the end
of lhe half.
In the second half, Coal Grove
ran 27 plays for 224 yards in six
possessoons and scored on four of
them. River Valley, held scoreless
in the second half for the fourth
time this season, ran 31 plays for

Sunday Times-Sentinel/c:!

::;'Study of maps, tools, regulations .necessity for first-time campers

1

Hornets win ... __&lt;c_on_tin_ue_d~_rom_c_-5:....&gt;

Dusty
Smith's
two-point
conversion run lbal cut the hosts'
lead 10 14-8.
"Dusty is a sophomore thai's
come on for us m the last few
games," said Lucas, who also
added that Smith is closing in on
the !,()()()..yard mark (his 7.5 yards·
per-carry average has put hom 73
yards from it). "We're a trapping
team." said Lucas in his
explanation of Smith's and
Honaker's success with the
Raiders' front seven.
That wasn'tthe only success the
Hornets had with their hosts, as lhe
larger Coal Grove squad, under lhe
auspices of senior linebacker Heath
f'leihman and freshman defensive
end Mohammad Romans, cut off
River Valley's outside running
game - no Raider got more than
50 yards rushing that night - and
foreed the GaiJians to come inside
if they wanted to run or pass. Such
pressure netted them, among olher
things, Fliebman's second-quarter
fumble recovery and Brammer's
third-quarter pickoff of Covey's
pass.

·Outdoors

·

WAS

$11.HI

24 39

5 31 44

••

FrldaJ'IICGI'OS
N.Y. Itllnded.,T..,.Btl2

Lot~.., w...,;~"~'

8olltlo6,-J

can

w.......,..s.-2
They played Saturday

Philadolphilatlfow J..,., 1:35 p.m..
5I lAWn-. 7:0! pm.
N,Y, IUnpd • llatlfood; H5 p.m.
~
7'3Sp.m.

.. PiG.,.

Doooil .. ~. ,:15 ......

T...,. a., .. -

..,.,, p.m.

Tota1110a~I:OSp.m.
Oaawa &amp;l Dallu, I:G!,....

_

.. Ctlcar7.1"""'"'

. ,.. "v....... t:as,~.

W.......... tt S..I-IIkl:ll'm.

Toalaht'a pmH (limes EST)

v•.

••

N•• Jert•J
N.Y. lanaen aL
tlalirao,N.S.7'351'-m.
C.tauY" w....
~:G!p.m.
PhiladOlphi· at •
1:35 p.m.
San JOM 1\ ~ I · p.m.

- • Transactions • Baseball

,

••
•

,

•

'•

•

I

•'•

COMMISSIONER'S
OFFICE '
A_....., dial Sal Anlap hat .-ipod
u F •• .,..
of tM Adz.ana FaD ..........
.._Cobb
, . .._...
Pi tnd_...
.
cPL 111 •'
to vic• ,... l«&lt;t•n ot lilt A
.. no\lncM he will . ....... lu.ll
1

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N.:... Spec Rld!lllllan AFL _ .......

r.. iho .....,_ &lt;l ihora••i Iiiii rip far Re,Mido ~
~horutop, to daa New York MMa;
E4Ubono
plicher, to tho

--c..ua..
A_._
o...,..,,

C...-1 ..., ....
-

.... i h o - - --

BALnMOIII! ORIOI.£3, AnOCM·IIC*I
~· ,..ipation of Lany Lucchhao,

•'
••

. ~PO~NIA ANGELJ, Ea...Uod
•elr itM opci 011 • • Chili Davia,

•

Wllf1'! SOX: ADMII to
. _ , - 1 CCWIWCI whh lon ~•

••
~

••

..

ouctl ....

CIUcAoo

a ~ JNDiANS, llaclloiod to
- - 1994 ...... •Bob Ojodt.
:t n.iiOrf TIGERS' Ntmod T-

I•-Ua ••••a;T:IOD
or ...
.
~;;o:;
••• -IMJIII:
cl-cllho
.
. .

••
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fit••• lu'IM ~uiaa

.

• MILWAVUE auwas, Doollnod
... ihoir· 1994 ......... ,Dictio

..,.., .iolloWor

·o-'.Y.A'P_AnaJmCI' lamlood

'

llialri~--Wia. ........

i'L.....;.'~·...
::::,;_........"'. .;...·_ ___.

•

'•

As • soldier, I proudly
nrved my country when It
needed me. As • 40-ye•r
employ• of the Jocll Buick·
Pontiac d11ler, I eerv~
meny ,.sldents of Meigs
County when they nllded
my help with their automobile services. As the
Comm1nd1r of Disabled
Alllll'lcln Vet~n• Polt 153
llld • 1111mber of the Meigs
County Service Commission, I try to serve the needs
ot lll!lnY locll vetlrlill llld .
thllr fllmlllla.
I 1m
1sklng to Hf¥1 my
ntlghbora In
Slllabury township • your •IICW Trqatlll. H you Wlnla
Trustll who knows how to !Ill• job done, who ... b11n 1
working m11n 111 hla lite ind who reilly oam IIIIOut the
IOidl and pro.,.rtlla WI UH IYery Uy, then plelll ~

302 V-8 eng., PS, PB, IUto. tr1na.,
AMJFM ltereo CMHne eliding rMr
window, a foot bid wlbldllner, rMr
atep l!umper, cab llghta, c11t
•lumlnum wh11la with new white
lettered 111 tlrn1ln tlru.
··

••
IBINRD

WAS$8,8e&amp;
•

.,

.8 cyl. eng., PS, PB, &amp; apeed tnlna.,
8 foot bid, AMIFM aterao
caannt,alr cond.; rear ttap
bulllpll', out llumlnum whnla,
13,000 mllaa,llke new.

IPICIIL

now

tor:

NATHAN BI.GGS

on a Now C. or T,ruck and we
•

Brlnlln your belt dool

Clnill.lte for

- wau'cry to nl•,t' •

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

t.'esday~ Nov••..r 2ad ·
Your Vote WIU Make A Difference
Plllclforbyu.t,C.ndl Ia
1

I

'

Boat the De•L
FOR 4 GOOD DEAL.
.
SEE TON MII•TIAD or BOB ROll.
Our Service Department 11 Ope.1 Mon..f=rt. •s; Sat.. 8-12
. Muffler Shelp MOn•.frf. H; Sat.. •12 '
...
New Houta ln . ~lel Mon..frf. a.7; a.t. W p.m.

~::;:!!!!

97
'1

•

••

Athens

,,'

•

�..

Fartnll l·usines.s

Wirt CountyWahama stats
STATJSfiCS
Wahllma

F'1111 DoWIUl
Yuds Rushing
YudsPusing
TOll! Yuds
Pus ina

Jnw.Thrown
Penalties-Yuds

Punts-Average

9
34-84

11

45-207
71
278
6-12
2
0
3-30
4-37
6-33 .3
4-30

•'

candidlitcL
·
,
-~ Mike. Hughes is a landowner In Addison Township. He has served on

Team- Qtr
Wm - 1
Eric Boud lhree yard run (Dan in
Seeven kick)
Wlrl - 3
Ryan Cale 10 yard run (Eric Board pass
from Ryan Cale)
Wirt - 4

.

Farm F. lashes

(run failed)

Rusblng

Wahama - Dale Johnson 7-28; Tommy
Mayes 7-26; J.C. Albright 2-16; Chris
Roach 5-13; Joey Mayes 2-6; Jason
ICing 11-(-5); Totals 34-84
Wirt - Eric Board 19-118; Ryan Cale
11-54; Josh Corbin 10-25; Patrick
Whib: 2-6; Aaron Hill 1-4; Billy Bevel
2-0; Totals 45-207.

C_uy J?aY hav~ been hoSted on die farm in the past few years. Hughes and
h1s wife Debb~ _havci'two children.
Mark Jividen is a landownct ,in c;tay and Harrison townships. He raises
tobacco and recently has been Wcnlng on stream bank stabilization on his
pro~rty . .A spring developfl\ent was installed in 1988. In addition to
rm:m10g, he works construction. Jividen and his wife Dreama have three
children.
,
Dale. Lamphier is _a landowner in Harrison Township. He is retired
from P•nec(est Nursms .Home, whe~e ~e wor~ed in the maintenance
dep~ent. Now, l..ampbier devotes his tune to hiS tree farm. He is active

Passing

Lyne Center slate
RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule planned for the week of
OcL 31-Nov. 5 at the University of
Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
Gymnasium
Today- 1-3 p.m. lllld 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday -12:30-9 p.m.
Wednesday- g a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
· Friday- g a.m.-5 p.m.
Pool
Monday - 1-3 p,m. and 6-9
p.m.
. Tuesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
· Thursday~ 6-9 p.m.
Friday - closed

-The local ASCS Office has

received funds to ,IS_Sist farmers in
developing alternative water systems filr livestoCk. In order to qual·
ify, a producer must prove that during last summer's drought the
availability. of water was severely
reduced for your livestock.
These are emergency type.funds
and action need~ to take place
immediately, but practices should
not start until f10al approval.
The ASCS is also administering
an emergency feed _Program as a
result of last summer s July-August
drought. Basic qualifications are to
Have experienced at least a 40 percent crop loss. This program is
very complicated. Call the local
Ascs office at 446-8686 for
details if you Utlhk you might qualify.

Fitness Center
Today- 1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- g a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday -8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- g a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- g a.m.-S p.m.
2 Dr. Hatcltbaclt, CUstom Clo1h But*el Saa1s~,AM!FM
Stereo Radio wltlt SeekiSCiVl\ Rear Window uefroster,
Power Blakes, Body Side Mo dings.

.

'

u~~:. 1788
8

Home athletic events
Tuesday - Volleyball vs.
Cedarville, 7 p.m.

--

MYSTERY FARM- This week's 'mystery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soli and Water
Conservation District, is Iilcated somewhere in
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mall, ·o.r drop off your
guess to the Dally Sentinel, Ut Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, &amp;25 Third Ave,, Gallipolis, Ohio,
4S63t, and you may· win' a $5 priz~· f'rom the

··}
.
·.
By MARGARET SCH.ERF , ·
~lated Press Wnt~
WASl;JINqTON- Trymg to
pretty ~.,th~ 1mage of the,bu!gy·
eyed, bewhiskered catftsh m1ght
sound hke a lof!g shot, but
researchers are w~g on 11.
They 1are hopmg to enlll:fge tb_e
market for the humble ftsh 10 Callfomia and New York. staq:s where
catfish ~asn'! tr~ditionally b!!en
popular ·!1esp1te 1ts tender, m11dtaS~ng ,fiSsb_. ·~
:
_
·TIM areas are bemg targeted
~

GloiiC RrsiTI'"' 8U)Or

/IICIII/1" (lr CJ/Ia/ifllrt)......... ·HIIO

rom- Ols&lt;.. ............ ~/292
Fo:JoiY R.o.l!.................. ·SUXXJ

Ull'2a2

Rta•...an

man..

"

.
22 8

Auto, PIS, P/8, Air, P!WindoM, Pllloor Locks, PlllriYII &amp;
Passenger Seats, Trailer Towtng Package, Rear Window
De~oster;Umlllld SUp
,
I
Dlllerenllal, AMifM Cass..
Loaded!
.

~·

ftll

.

'

.

• • H'MI-11-IUDI.
~

Whttl Drive. Air, PIS, P/8, AMtfM Cassette,Tilt. D~ay \\lpera,
Back Bucket Suts, Spare Whell &amp;Tare Canier,
Will Equipped.

as new territory,'' say~ Charles
I.:angley. director: of qual•t~ mspect1on and. techntca~ serv1ces for
Delta _Pr,~e. a 73tflsh p~ocessmg
ope~auon tn llxhanola, Miss.
'.But we have to ch~nge ca~fish s unage m. those reg1ons so ~t
c_an eo~pete w1th ot!ter.~ore trad1!•onal _seafood ~1es, , he added'
m a report m thiS month ~ Agncull~ral Research ~agazme, pubhs~ed by the Agncullure DepartmenL
.~

'·

In many areas of the country,
catftsh is found more and more on
themenusoftrendyreslaurants.
In 1992. about 460 million
pounds of the fish were processed
in the United States, almost five
times the amount 10 years ago, said
Donald w. Freeman, a food technologist for the Agricultural
Research Service.
Catfish ranks sixth among the
kinds of seafood consumed in
America, with tuna being frrsl
One effort to increase ils popul

'

'

.....,..

'k

t; ~-

larity involves delaying the onset
of rancidity.
Oxygen seeping into stored
frozen. processed fillets causes the
breakdown of fats in catfish, as in
most seafood. When that happens,
byproducts called aldehydes produce rancid flavors and odors.
"Delaying the onset of these
harmless but unpleasant flavors in
frozen catfish products is a major
concern of processors," said Freeman . "They've told us that thev
'

,.

Mulch, compost eliminate leaf problem
By PATTY DYER
Information Coordinator
GaiDa County Farm Bureau
GALLIPOLIS - With the bite
of autumn in the air, thoughts turn
to fall colors, hot drinks and of
childho6d days when you spent
hours playing in huge leaf piles.
Leaf piles are still on people's
minds, but it's no game when the
time comes to dispose of leaves
and other lawn materials, according
to the GaUia County Farm Bureau.
Many landfdls are facing a critical space shortage and will no

longer accept this type of debris.
Fortunately, leaves and grass clippings make an excellent fertilizer
when mulched or composted.
Cliopped leaves make good material for a backyard compost pile,
according to the Professional Lawn
Care Association of America
(PLCAA). It suggests sprinkling
some 10-10-10 fertilizer and a
scoop of lime on each layer and
cover with dirt to generate a lowodor, continuing supply of enriched
soil for houseplants, gardensor

landscaping projects. PLCAA recommends turning Ute compost regularly and keeping it moist.
Mulched leaves also make a
good material for a decorative border around trees and shrubs,
according to PLCAA. Mulch
decomposes quickly and releases
nutrients back into the soil. A circle
of mulched leaves around a tree
also makes it easier to trim without
scraping the bark, which is the
largest cause of tree injury .
Everyone should learn about
compostin~ and mulching before

they ·arc forced to because of landfill problems.
It's estimated Utat by 1996 half
of the landfills will go out of service because of lack of space, and
with tough new regulations in the
works.
Leaf and grass composl.ing and
mulching works well year-round.
Fanners have been composting and
mulching on their croplands for
generations. It's a way of life for
us . The same concept works
around the home, 100.

Small stocks
speed
ahead
in
market
finish
ValUe

Annual
neW record
P

2 Dr. Sport Co'upe, P/B, 5 Sp. Manual Transrnssloo ,
Custom Cloth Bucket Seats, Steel Belted Tires.

Ohio Valley Publishing 'Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone tails will be accepted. AD
contest entries should be turned In to the newspaper ofr~te by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case
of a tie, the winner will be thosen by lottery.
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be featured by the Meigs SoU and Water Conservation
District.

By LISA COLLINS
GalUaASCS
Count)' Executive Director
GALL!POLIS - The Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service will be mailing burley
tobacco marketing cards on Friday.
Nov. 5.
Before a marketing can! may be
issued, the operator of each farm
must file eligibility and
sodbuster/swampbuster certifications. If your marketing card is not
received shortly after Nov. 5, Utere
may be missing information on
your farm - con!act ASCS at 4468686.
Producers should note that burley tobacco sales are slated to begin
Monday, Nov. 22.
To be eligible for price su~.
producers must retam beneficial
interest in any tobacco for which
they receive an advance payment
or other financial consideration.
The regulations also list criteria for
determining if a producer loses
beneficial interest in the tobacco

and penalties for not complying
wiUt these requirements.
·
Producers will be considered 1.0
have lost benefiCial inten:st and the
tobacco will be ineligible few price
support if there is no writtcD agreement executed on advance; a written agreement is executed and parties fail to comply with the agreement; or the average advance price
per pound is equal to or more than
the average net sales price per
pound for the farm for the entire
marketing year.
Producers and persons malting
advances will be jointly liable for
refund of all price support received,
and for payment of any marketing
quo1a penalties assessed on tobacco
ori which beneficial interest has
been losL The tobacco warcllouse3
are aware of the changes in the program and are executing advance
agreements with producers. Burley
tobacco producers may contact the
county ASCS off'ICC for more irifor'
mation on the· requirements fo r
advance payments.

Industry hopes to bait diners with 'refined' catfish

Several p&amp;Sons have been con(r,n-6e
cerned about large numbers of lady
uU1
beetles gathering 011 the side of
OStS
houses. Dr. William F. Lyon says
·that at this time of year (mid-October to November), adult lady beeBy MARYBETH NIBLEY
tles often hibeinate in large aggreAP Business Writer
gation in leaf Iilier. under loose
NEW
YORK - Stocks of some
baric, logs, rocks, eiC.
big
name
companies stalled while
Some counties have reported
many
smaller
1ssues moved ahead,
thousands of these beetles on the
producing
a
mixed
finish for tbe
sides of houses, wiUt many getting
market
Friday.
· indoors. SinCe lady beeiles are very
Blue chip issues idled in neutral
benefiCial, feeding.on aphids (plant
for
much of the session. Profit taklice), scale insects, eggs and larvae
ing
and a late selloff in one compoof injurious insects and mites,
nent
of the Dow Jones indusuial
insecticide co~J~rol is not recomaverage
depressed the wideiy
mende!J. Lady !Jeetles cari be swept
waiChed
indicator
and it closed orr
up or vacuumed, using a clean vac7.27
at
3,680.59.1t
.advanced 31.29,
uum bag. Remove the beater bai to
points
in
the
week
and
preven1 crushing beetles. Collected closing highs twice. reached new ,
beetles can be dumped away from
Advancing issues outnumbered
the
,
declines on the New York Stock
house in the garden area or in other Exchange where abolll 1,190
leaf litter around trees and shrubs . stocks rose in price, 813 fell and
' to aid in overwintering successful- 666 were unchanged.
ly. Apply caulking compounds and
Vofume on the floor of Ute Big
screens to .el(clude these beetles Board slowed to 266.60 million
from the lio!Jle.
shares as of 4 p.m. from 297.14

.......

in the Farm Bureau and is president of the local council. Lamphier's wif;
is Betty Jean and they hove grown children.
Victor Niday is a landoWner in Green and Harrison townships. He formerly operated a dairy. He is currently running a eow calf ~011 lllld
selling feeder calves. Niday raises tobacco and in his spare ume drives a
school bus. He and his wife Mary have grown children.
Plan ~ attend the banquet and enjoy a delicious meal of food produced, raised, grown, or processed in Gallia County.
We are promoting GaUia County Agriculture at the banquet lllld what
better way than to serve food from our county! Tickets are $5 and can be
p~hased at the. district &lt;;&gt;llice at Ill I ackson Pike, Suite 1569, Gallipolis,
Oh1o. For rnpre 10fonnauon contact Ute office by phoning 446-8687. ·

Burley tobacco marketing~
cards to be mailed Nov. 5 ·

. "

ByEDWARDM. VOLLBORN
Extension Agent
Agrlcultpre &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS - ·Where's the
heefl The USDA's October Cattle
on Feed report showed an uneven
pattern on geographic placements
of cattle \)!1 feed during the third .
quarter: the southern plains reported high placements, Texas was up
22 percent and Oklahoma was up
18 percent.
· The flood ravaged states of the
western com belt were panicularly
low because of the ooncern over
the availability cir feed, according
.to Dr. Chris· Hun, Extension
Economist, at Purdue University.
Heifers ·lri feed lots were up I 5
.percent on Oct. l, while ihe number of steers was up only 6 percent.
Dr. Hurt sees Ute lafger peitentage
of heifers in feed lots as an indication that fewer heifers are actually
being withheld for replacements.
The July I report had shown a 2.5
percent increase in beef cow numbers. Dr. Hurt sees modest increase
in prices during November, but
December prices to once again be
weak.
Price -levels for the winter quarter are expect¢ to range from $73
to $74 in 1al)uar1 uP to highs of
about $77 1.0 $78 m late March and
early April.'''·• •-

Wahama - Jason King 3-10-36 yards;
Tommy Mayes 2-6-14 yuds-2 int; Dale
Johnson 1-l-13 yards-! TO; Totals 617-63yda.-1 TD·llnt.
W1rt - Ryan Calc 6-12-71 yda.; Totals
6-ll-71 yds.
Recelvlag
Waharna -J.C. Allrigbt 4-39-1 TD;
Chris Roach 1-12; Todd Roach 1-12;
Totals 6-63 yda.-1 TD
Wltl - Eric Board 2-22; John Nicolai&amp;
2-26; Josh Corbin 1-14; Patrick White
1-9; Totals 6-71 yds.

· (Continued from C-1)
Anthony Scott then caught a
five-yard touchdown pass from
Cliff Scott for the Bulls' only
touchdown of the day. Youngstown
State had a 31-12 lead when Corey
Scarlato ran 27 yanls into the end
zone with one second remaining.
Ohio Wesleyan 15
Case Reserve l3
At Delaware, Ohio, Joe Buckley's second quarter two-point conversion put Ohio Wesleyan ahead
for good in a 15-13 victory over
tase Western Reserve in North
Coast Athletic Conference play
Saturday.
The conversion made it 15-6
after Jimmy Clark's 10-yard pass
b! Prrestt Strickland with IS seconds 10 the quarter.
Spartans quarterback Brett RamseY completed 13 of 25 throws.
Including one for 17 yards in the
·second quarter and one for 14 yarda
li(lbe founh, both to Joel Gabele.
111c Spartans are 2-6 and 2-4 in the
NCAC.
, Dayton 38, Valparaiso tO
· : At Dayton. Ohio, Judd ~ntz
nln for thtee touchdowns and
c4ught two touchdown passes as
Dayton beat Valparaiso 38-10 on
Saturday to ~linch the Pioneer
J,ague C118111Pionsbip.
· , .•
It was tile 45th consecutive regular season win for Dayton (8-0
overall, 5-0 in the FOnference).
wiUcll has not lost Jn· 55 consecuiive regular season games. ·
•
. MU111daplll45, Hiram tJ
• · At New' COIIeord, Ohio, Jody
SIOidt rushed few 15? yarda, i,nclud·
. ing three touchdOwns. and broke
!he scllool's cmer ruahing recold
in teadlnli MIISkinpm to a 45-13 ·
viel!lll Sltunlay ova- Hirlm.

.

the board. sint:C 198S. Hughes.uses no-till planting and crop rotation meth-

0&lt;!5 on hts farm. He a1Jo raiJcs IDbacco. County Soil Judging and Farm

'

Wirt -4
Eric Board 23 yard run (kick wide)
Wah-4
J.C. Albright 13 yard pass from Dale
Johnson (run failed)
INDMDUAL STATISTICS

College action ...

Ding for SWCD board

Uneven
pattern
in beef
loc·
a
tions
.

Josh Corbin 28 yard interception rerum

' Notes: All facilities will be
closed for quarter break after 5
p.in. Friday until Saturday, Nov.
13 . A new schedule will be pubilshed before classes resume on
Tuesday, Nov. 16.

October 31; 1M

....

~

!ly CONsTANCE S. WHITE
. ...._..,. Adminlstl'llior
.
•
· v~"'cania swcD
O~LI$ - Four landowners irl·Oallia County arc candidates for
lile two ~DQ!lllto be filled ori the Oallia SWCD Board or Supervisors.
!he elecuon WIU ~e ~ during the annual meeting and annual aWards
banquct,on Thursday, ~oy. 41 ¥the Bu~keye Hills Career Center at 7
p.m.
. . ..
.
'
.Board.c:andidal.es are~ Hughes, Mark 1ividen, Dale Lamphier and
VIC~ Niday. The following are brief biographical sketches about these

SCORING

•c&gt;---

.

.

SCORE BY QUARTERS:
I l 3 4 Total
6
Wahama
0 0 0 6
Wirt
7 0 8 12
27

Racquetball courts
Today -1-3 p.m. and 6-9 p.m.
Monday- 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
· Tuesday- g a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday- g a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday- g a.m.-5 p.m.

'

ot~:r Jandowners ·i n

Wlrt

63
147
6-17

;

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·'

Section I)

..

million in the previous session.
The Big Board swept past
another milepost Frida_y. It set a
record for annual tradmg value.
with a full two months left to go in
the year. The value of all NYSE
trades amounted to $1.882 trillion,
exceeding the previous record of
$1.874 trillion reached in 1987.
according to the exchange.
Market watchers said stocks
appeared stuck in a holding pattern
with investors reviewing recent
evidence indicating the economic
expansion has gathered momentum.
Investors sold to collect profits
in sOnle issues Utat recently gained
such as General Motors and
refrain~ from making major new
commuments to stocks while
awaiting additional information
about the economy.
Among the reports due next
week are the National Association
of Purchasing Management's reading on the manufacturing sector
and the government's report on Ute
job marlcct situation.

- New government figures showing U.S. personal income rose 0.2
percent in S~ptcmber while con sumcr spendm~ rose 0.3 percent
appeared consistent with earlier
reports.
The Dow industrial average
ended near its lowest level of !iJe
day due to some heavy,late selling
of International Paper. It tumbled
2-1/4 to 59-1/2 as reports circulated
in the market that a brokerage analyst who tracks paper and forest
products companies made negative
comments on the group. Georgia
Pacific also plunged, sinking 2-1/4
to 64-1/4.
Among Ute standout performers
were initial public offerings and
stocks of compani~ _wiUt comparat1vely low capuahzauons.
•,
A new offering of Exide Corp.,
a banery !Raker, was the second
most heav1ly NYS~ s_tock on valume of about 3.9 m1ll10n shares. It
closed ~t 26-7/8, well above its
debut pnce of 20.
On the Nasdaq electronic ~arlcet, technology a,!ld commumca-

tions stocks were the stars. Their
strength helped the Nasdaq com posite climb 5.77 to 779.26. The
mdex ended the week 6.58 h1gher.
Broad market indicators maoaged to eke out modest increases.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500 stock index
edged up 0.10 to 467.83 and rose
4.56 in the week.

can't store their fillets beyond
about six months."
Extensive flavor -testing of
inventories can be difficult because
most processors rely on tasting
panels to check for si~ns of rancidity - and tasters get ured.
Objective alternatives such as
gas chromatographic (GC) or thiobarbituric acid (TBA) analysis can
detect rancidity at levels below a
taSter's threshold .
Freeman and a colleague conrll111ed in a 1992 study that rancidity occurs mOre lllf)IWy 8nilllban·
dantly in catfish fillet dart meat
than in white meaL
By samplin~ only dark meat,
Freeman sa1d, 'we've developed
an approach that correlates very
well with taste panel flavor
scores." Based on recent tests,
"GC or TBA analysis can account
for over 90 percent of the rancid
flavors that people detecL"
Such objective tests wiU let food
processors know how well antioxidants, new packagin$ and better
handling methods mamtain flavor
in catftsh fdlets.
U.S. almond output in the 199394 season is forecast at 213,200
tons, down 14 percent from last
year's crop.
The Agriculture Department
said in its horticultural products
review this month that • nut sets
are tighter this season, but nut quality - both size and weight - is
reported w be excellent"
Healthy domestic and foreign
demand for U.S . almonds have
eaten into almond stocks in recent
years. it said. As a result, U.S .
almond supplies have declined for
the third straight year, dipping w a
forecast 272,708tons in 1993-94.

Redn~ ~gh

17

8
..
un._ ·

peoples . Ba~~orp

,

···'

,,.,' '

~~

;,1.

I

1 ''1

I

'i.

•

'

MARIETI A - Peoples Bancorp Inc. has announced net
income for the ftrst nine months of
1993 of $3_,741,000 compared to
$3,270,000 fpr the same period last
year.
Primary earnings j)er sjtare IOUII
$2.12 eomPIIfed to $2.491n 1992, a
9,2 peteent Increase and fully-diluted earnings per share 'increased 17 ·
percent 'from $2.(29 to ~2.68 for the
nine mOI)ths Cllded Sept. 30:
. For i~e quarter,'hodl'primary
and fully-diluted earnings per share
ate 97 cents, repr~ntlng a 14.1 .
percent in~ In prim~ .e&amp;f!l·
IDgs and an ~8.3 percent nse 1n
. fully'diluted earnings perlhare.,.

••

.

share earnings post increase
.

All ~r share information and
Total assets are $467,611,000 at
other rcl'erellces io net income arc SepL 30, 1)193. Return on assets is
presented ilfler the cumulative 1.07 percent for the nine months
effect of accounting changes adopt· ended Sept. 30, 1993, a 13.8 per·
ed during the flfSI quarter of 1993. cent increase competed to 1992.
A)ll992 per shale mfonnation has
People~ ll.ancorp paid a third
been adjusted due·to a 10% stock quaner div~dend of 26 cents per
dividend issued to shareholders on share: Dividends j,er share for the
April IS .
nine months ended Sept. ~0. 1993
Net ioterest income increased are up 7 ~rcent from .last year.
from $14,499,000 for the• nine Cash dividends increased from
months ended Sept. 30, 1992 to S329;000 for the third quaner of
SlS;IiZo,OOO at SepL 30, 19S!3, an , 1992 to $380,00Q ,in 1993, a 15.5
ina:eue of 4.3 percentd\loh-lnter- percent rise. ,Tl!rough Sept. 30,
est ineome is alSQ contributing 10 1993, cash tpvidends·C!eclared were
incr!llsedeamings, rising $428,000· $1 1102.000 a 16.6 ~rcent increase
to $3,0311000 •for the .first three rrom the ilan!C )ieriod last year.
quarters 01 1993: ,.. ·
_,
'
Peopl~s Baf'l~ also reports the

'I

completion of a five-storj addition
and renovation to Ute existing historical structure at the Putnam
Street office in downtown Marietta..
The project in now completed and
an open house was planned for Sat·
urday, Oct. 30..The increased space
will allow Peoples Bank-to better
serve our customers and their
needs.
.
Peoples Bancorp Inc. is a Southeastern Ohio balik holding eompa·
ny with headquarters in Marietta.
Banking-offiCes are also in,Athens.
Belpre, CildweU, Chesterhill, Low·
ell, Mc&lt;;:onnelsville, Middlepon,
The' Plains and NelsonviUe.

NAME TREE CONTEST WINNERS - Tbls year' a bit iree .
conteat wlaners are Charles and Thelma Shaver o1 2021 Stat(
Routa 7, GallipOlis. 'ne Sllavers' blasycamore tree Is 21 • 1• Ia dr- ·
tumrerence, till' bill!, and bas a trowa spread of about its•. Tbat
gives tbe tree a total ol 384 points accordiac to the 1989 edltlcin o1
Ohio's Book ol Bla Trees. Ohio's bluest sycamore tree has allital
of.737 polall. The Shavers will be presented a plaque, made or'
wood from a S7.;amore, II the 49th Annual Soil and W11ter Conservatloia Dlstrk:t 88llq~t at Bud&lt;eye Hills Career Center Nov. 4
at 'J p. m. Ifyou. woald like to partk:lpate In next year's conlelt JOU
may call tile 0.0. Mclatyre Park District at 446-4612 or the Gallla
Soli and Water COIIllervatlon District at 446-8687.
.

lr

�I

•

..

'

. • 1993

~-

nearthed evidence reveals
.

.

.

~·

s~et·qsor.

or

pire kiiJini.
The eo~, .f~nd ia a coffin
bearin1the tntUals "JB," w•
round in die W~ton
ce1114"
lllf}'
Griswold,. burial
dllil
had been aa:idealllly •
by a

:1!::

or

.
. . ~, ..
FLU
A IDtltl of 910 ftu . _ ".ft!rt
givea ~daJ · by...peiiUDael ol the Melp
-

'
'
SHOTS ~

c;-t,

Health Departmeat at tilt SeJIIor Cltlleu Cea·
ter. Here, Madtlille "''at"
ol Middleport
2ets her shot f'roll T.C. EniD, R.N: WM1e llie

Neece

•

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)- A~
Grasso hu served nearly two
Lime murderer wbo waoted to be years behind ban in New Yart and
cucuted Ia Otlahoma ratber thin Oklahoma lnd is eligible for parole
spend 20 years in a Now York in 2011.
·
prison hiS seen hla "wont night·
Johnie O'Neal, Grasso's attor·
mare" realized, a prison official nor.,llid he would appeal for Gras·
Slid..
so s retum.
·
Thomas Grasso wu eo route
GfiSIO hiS been at the c:enter of
Saturday from Otlahoma to New an inltlSIIIebaldcthatpiuedOkla·
Yart to MIYU 20-year-to-life ten· horna Gov. David Walters, who

LAKE BRIE MONSTER - Marlaa operator Tom Solber1

WI&amp;

••Qt

•a:Qu

-·

•J•u
••

•n•u

ss.

....

m-.--·

:.!.

·

'"tbeor

Are six trumps
better than eight?

=. .

••Y

ACR088

1 Hale

8 llland oft Ireland
10 L8mb-

211, Wlll.e cup '' .

HURON (AP) - Lake Brie beast must weigh at toast -1,000
tn
perch fuberman Charles Doualll pounds and be atleaat30 feet long.
.QUI
~ -knew aumethina ami11 wben
And he has recruited retired
IWT
·::Jie tbraded hil boat utJ to 30 mph. Ohio State University marine
· Wbasever WIS followmg him was rcsean:her Chari" B. Herdoudorf
kccoing up.
·
10 judge any reward claim.
·
tQJI
"1 think I saw .102 in the Wiler
. _but it could sw~m:r. aid the
~~~~rc::~ in
IOU!II
·~ear~ service lllllion open!Or.
this lakea~ community of 7ti!Jj ,
•7u
:'r • BQilina 10 milet off Vamiliun likes the laenlion die lefend has
•uu
'"dllrinalhe Founh of July weekend, awacted and is ...,..,..,,...,n1 buai·
tAU a
. 'Doullll - heading nOrth toward DellOliO think
~ ncb fiahina giounda alonB the
The resulll include a ratltiJ'IIII
:.,y:s.-Canadian border wben he offering "a monstrous view" or
· 'sbmctltina daik. about 30 fcc:t lonl the Jako, a plumber able 10 handle
·.nt movlnf quicldy.
''minnow or monster aize' • probNtrll B:.a
.:....Could 11 have ~een the Lak.e lemslnd a ear dealer'a "blowoUI
t1l
~
~
1
...llrie Monster, C!JUJUI to the mylhi- mOlliter
;cal Loch )'leu Monster and the
The mavnr has,g::;
· laimed the .
n..-•·cleld:
•J
·'..,.bominableS_.....?
,.......,
, ,. "At.~.,, _ _ ..WUtia 00;.,.1 · city ia· northern , bio·flalfway ·
.- bolwoen Cleveland and Toledo IS
•
• ... "''"' "~
,;,f'"wasn't thinking molliter," said the "National Live Capture and
'1;1ou&amp;IIS. who 1oubu he aw a real Control Center" for the IIIUIIIICr.
. '1ila IIIOliSIOf and uted 10 keql the
Not ev
hiS taken the btaiL
· Cue:&amp; location or his businols secret
Doug
who has studied
1&gt;ocnnao "people think you're nuu Like Erie marine liCe for 20 yean
'When you see Something UIIUIUII."
· b'
.~.
~. Twice, Douglas ••unned his ustor)'
a • - aqUillC 10
ays • ., ._ - . - AWer
the iiiOilllcr is lilt that- a -· • ·:J~Iine and steered his boat toward
. ~e dark figure. Twice it disap· s · b1.,.,..1' ,_,__ - · - he•h••
Bin 1i tDII~Ir daai f~ tile JHa
ftl..red F f I that he might h1't
- - ...., " ' - " •..,. . • ae ; '&gt;nmrl llpa Ia JlldeD..
·,..,.. · ear u .
seen was a 6-Coot, 110-poanillllif· r 1 , Wlat ..........-. ftla tilDe tile
-.Ometbing submer~e;!~ouglas seon_that wuhed up on Kell.eya
'
1 , _ ; . ; - " - llei&amp;Iam
)~ted die search and
IICX1b. I.siaild.
\...,~
, • "I can't actually
it was
SDOie people believe the 'Liike
·'l'lie Dlldl Jiad a
•Jile aaetloa 10
.~:li:.: :C:Stl:ift&amp;W: I~ . 'Erie Monster may be iiOthing ~ . llle I M •hJt. I -.t of liZ 11e1rt1.
.
•-~ ••~•..t.., ..:.o Dou 1_.
than a ICbool or 6-fOOC IIJUpOIII .JoiSJL,,tM dleltiw, !1lttlliC Jl(artb,
•na us .... - - · ....
• - awimmi.nl toe-to-head_in Ulidulil· iiiiDIUold IMIIIIIL Be -~~~~ flnt
:-.who lw .been O!lt on the lake more inl fllhion.
. : lltli ila .....,...- ONr Wolit'l
;::lhln 25 tuneS lhil year.
But Johnson doean 't buy lhat, 1!111. ·Molt 11a elllllld 1111 llelrt killl
: . For~· boaters have ~ld 110- either
.
·
a 11aut to diaaw.f'a - . Be
. riel o tltei~ en~ou~ter wuh the
"l.really think it'a very impaob~tr• 41C.1111t If lleltad llllrt8d
, monster, WhiCh IS Slid to be dart _ able," said Jolullon. The lliiiJOIIII . . IIIIJt-Q 1/11.,. frqallud, lie
or .brown, 30 ree~to 40 feet • abo·-._.._ he-'..
, _..~wlteiD.IIl;IFt.Ia.tiMWt
:'onJ and appcan 10 wv!nl..C. While 11 - · · · - · - ·
~ ...-to'llll Nldel;
-'IWUDmina. No one hal reported
1111, hill• _.. ~
:sceinl ill head or all of ill body
1111 - 10

=

.. .,.,

I

York, Grass~ was sent 10 Okla·
huma, whore ho wu COilvicted ·of
murder. At his request, Gruso was
seii!Cneedio death.
J ,. .
Grasid had .been scheduled 10
die ,Oct. 19, but before Jhe execution could tie carried ·out, Cuomo
deni.nded that Oklaliilma return
Grasso &amp;o' se..Ve his sentence in
New York, which dOesn't have a
death penally. A federal judge
backed Cuomo.
·
C1101110 said an intcrsta~· asreo·
mont silfl¢ by New Yorlt; Okla-.
hll!lll and 46 olhef'SIIIes, require!~
,_.
'; ' e.-. ..·

•

'

"I

J

•

l

Oklahoma 10 return ~rasso.!Jeca•"l" ;

he was first convtcted ·•n New,.
York.
. .
. .;
.Meanwhile, O'N~ cil~lflll~..
Friday thala comJl!am.t aplllSt biJn.
hiS been flied wtlh, lhe Qklahoma .
B!lf AssociatiOn beesuse he .tlianecL
a movie deaJ ·for the GrillO atory. '·
Auorney Richard O~Carroll .
allefed that~·~\!~ vi'!fated professtonal etbtc~ m s.iamna a contract guarantoemg hun pan the
profits !ro"!! any bciOb or movi~
about hts cltenL

not' treat you in the same manner today.
There 's juslifjcation for your ire , but don'l

make II a big deal
AQUARIUS IJan. :ZO.Feb. 19) There is an
easy ,way to do things and there is a hard

way to do !hlngs. Unfortunately loday you

30MUI
32 Mlttlke
33 Clinton or COsby
34 Ginger-

35 Small amount
37

11

-

Trek"

39 DOE opponent
40. Journey forth

41 Sholhonean
Indiana
42 Twill
44 E]llcta In a jet
46 Rll...lnga ·
47 Eteapect
., 46 Attitude
50 "~Wiki"

87 "Walt0111" Iter
89 Brooklyn ending
112 Pon...,..Prlnce,

printing
Period of time

arm: abbr.

a--•

U8 Separated
101 Mo.et competent
1o3 ·EraM: preritlng
.1D4By-ntof
106·Golf crY
108 Mickel tymbol

'1iiT -...n·ID ··•·
108 Pterce ;
110 FrwOI .

111 llaby!onlan deity
112 Dlwrilty
113 Small rug~

&amp;Tell·
10 Complete
12 Aftctent•...;
13 Po loy 10
14·Eielray · "- ·
15 T~ of cross
. 161.¥ded .
propertla.

·•-

18 Klnda 01 C¥VW.
20 '18nd•·

23 Bal!ed clay
25 T;S. Eliot play
27 :t•• front

121 GaveappriMI
124 Den ' ·:
128 Dilpalched
127 ··o.-~·
130' Abound ·

GOddua
of ,. ·
. ,.

57 Poet 10

137 au.rr.t
139 High mountain

41' Aiobber ....
43 Wan1

140 Auction word
141 "Under-"

48 Sniall

80 Thai man
82 Inlet
84 Arrow

80 Jupiter's satetllle
80NMr
88.GMtlc
70 ~It -

110UP .

71 Evfla
73 Tall structures

75 S.A..anlmils
77 Violin part
7B Publlc'llorehouM
80 "King Sokllnon's
. •

... .

81 OioCIII
82 Fixed points
of ltmt
84 Unproductlft

80

er... protecton

d,l tcjlrd

38:8PIC;e

45 Arbiter

47 cohnaaratl!&gt;n
.48 Tidy
61Curee ·

146 ActreU Alicia
1'f6 Motllld

52~e(back,

1~Eu._

53:~":'HOMES

civilrylnen

. 15Q•Ftm ' .

84

1s2 ·Mike angry
15;!, ~ lyrlnt
164 Olaturbenoe
166 ~ li'lto vtew

15N'!einu!J~. -

166 'So tie Ill

1511 Small ...ley

180 Molllflea
DOWN

,

40' Alh''nmb. ·

143 Court order

'

SWing'•

56 ~UI!lll8d

c8mel.' ...

~~~~ ·~k· ·
:.!10 ~ atteotlon, · ' '

' 1

87W~i ~

.81

.

'

·.

~ " \•o:.:~~' ..

63 Coiton slate
es ~~- Peeka"
87 F.ornnMr'of CIA:
89Prlnl¥''ameuura
· 7D'Su clad
72 Extra •

,

.

· ...83~~
&gt;Ill......

Mary Kliy free Facial-Skin Care
Class-Makeover
, Beauty Consultants
Sandy Henderson 992-3647
Carolyn McCoy 992 .. 5082
' Products in Slpck

62 Olive St.

Gallipolis
We have enlarged our Shoe
Depart. over 1,OOO·pr. on display.
All U.S.made Several brands
western Boots ........... _'45 &amp; '55
Harness Boots .. .................... •so
Logger Boots .. ..... .. ..... '45 &amp; '55
Welling)on............................. '49
Engineer ..... ..... ..................... '49
' Insulated &amp; Safety

.... ....,...,.,..prefix
•

Turner ·

100 eor-illng '
102flli!h • .
105 Delum
1081(. . .

oH.iabte

WANTED TO BUY:
5 tiCKETS FOR AN
OHIO STATE GAME .

(614) 446-9209

· 11&amp;·:roni

118 .~tii

1;io CA;.i;oapee
122 Miler

1231illracted
125 Mende

Post 4464

128 Salty

1211:Hindu garment
131'()iierate.

;

132 .c.nd.~
1~, l!urr~ng

;

. '•J34 .aun.to

138' ~

.

'

Urges You To

. ,;~~..

Vote

' ..

.. )

~
~:......:: 1
1•1.....,n
.... '"' ~' .. ' .
.. ·142 $Mkwornri·r

''

' 144 .,,1.:,J'~I t

·' '

.

614-446-0687

'

New Shipm~nt of Peavey and
Crates amp- Good selection of
'
Guitars, Pianos, Band
'
Instruments
' Lay-a-way now for Christmas

. ''

'

'

LIFE
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
CRAFT FAIR
Rejoicing Ufe Church
.500 N. Second Ave-Middleport
Fri. &amp; Sat.. November 19 &amp; 20
Time: 10'5 Some Table Space ·
Available Contact; Carolyn Riggs
6t4-742-3181

Ohio

..

148Thuun ·

165. Tetlurluln ayrntlol

RE~OICING

BRUNICARDI. MUSIC INC.
330 Second Ave. Gallipolis,

... 14T ·.. ~ 'MIIII!'IOII"
148 o;... border
151 HytOri·
15;! ~~~lum tymbol

Monday thru saturday Friday 9:30 til Bpm

930!115pm

11111m81 . i

.

· 138 _,..,.,.,ry-·"
· 1:40 81~ mrilkldte
....
'

'

Gift Certificates Available
THJ; DOVE'S NEST
ANTIQUES
Antiques • Col!ectables • Sewing •
Alterations
336 Second Ave. 446-8776
Gallipolis, Ohio

Auxiliary to VFW

121-FflQi

. 127 Halr11U

I

.,_., it .Wy or slimy.
Solbotl 1 Sl-year:old
aelf iiJpoillled
~&amp;air"Monster~toO

r""fom
"' · J\* 1M

~ ckirinl -·weadler IIOiltba
..-...... "

• .... .,....., ......

colapt~a

H~m

rabllure -:-

'C,IJ!''f:·~lto ';o;J: ::·=

POMEROY __: Two
roc:enlly rec:el~ marriap lk ["•· .'1'1111.. 1111111. ·IIMI u IJIIIIiiMable
from the Me111 County Pro!tate ·.. CIIJ _ r ! llld. ...,... 11a ~to
Court.
'111_lwd' r t llltfhil«er•h•t.
Jay A. HoiJiRier, 19, • • •'t'l ·-..~~~~~)d.
Rocdlville, andtl.ain t,1. Plylr,.l!l, · !If~
1D llllld 104llld
Syracuse, rec:etved a 'lcoaio A11u Jill_
.IIINL
1

II' -&amp;,..:::':a.:;-,ry t:eeeiViniiJi~ W.O}eoaud
~~ .,., ltu chirina Ihe lut rout c. Mlllcr, 37, Hanfonl, w~v-.•.~
9
~ mlppCCi 24 reported Jl&amp;hl· Rutb Ann ¥Jill; ~ !,~¥

..•

!*li -

and Turkey Dinner
sponsor~~ by Racine
E:lemen)ary ,I;' TO at
Southern Aigh School
Sunday Nov. t 'trom 11·2
'
Adults $4.00
Children .$3.00
'
Carry Out W~Jcome
Thank you for your SUP(lOrt

1

...

=_

..._.. -zar..at ,..

Eoitlfiill

c..on-. &amp;.,._
2

lilA

Corpol ...........

.,.. on With OWn Toofl, RII,_.M:el

Fu!~Time Office ..S.!oa Poal!ion
WHh a-tta, Some T"'vol R0:

Gallipolis

qulrod. -

&amp; VIcinity

To:

Reaume

CLA

Fmanc1ai

:aa,
o1o Oallpo!le t'.'r. r - .
125 Tllird Avanuo,
pollll, oH

Family ~ Sole: a.?
Friday 1115, Maanolla Drt.... S.411
..~:n.==-...,;,=,..-,.,--hlncl 9pr1'!11 "Volley Cinema. =

3

21

Business
OpportunHy

Biby Clolbu~_l"!!nt, FULLER BRUSH. Make your
ot~a. t:adlee, Mana ...,...a, Chrtttrnaa Fufl•lhio y-. Elm
Toya.
$200/mo., - a dma. 304-415-

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

HIGh Earnlngll Pan /Full Time

OliO VAIUY PUBUSHIIIO CO.
ree~
tl'lll rou do ...._

llatorn!ty,

10110.

Plo-lng

RIA

-- · No E.-nee. OWn
1-!0144&amp;-11044. . 24

1:::::::

HOUSEKEEPINO SUERV!SOR

P I _ , C... Cenlll Hoa ~
0ponlng
Fat A Woolllng

==.. .~ttl:;

··

t;l:...... '

01

INOTICEI

••••nda

mall ......

. ;
~ v.no1ng SJ,3t10 A
Wooll PolentiOI.- - · 1 -

-·

,

• •t••mrt · ·

~~

Professional
Services
s.ve v-. And ......,

The Some tlo!Ya- coO.ualcpne,. JPta.a tlon Poe-o
tlb!e. Aaaly In AI

will be opened
Mond•y, ·November 81h, ••

2:00 p.m. ol the .Oiatrlct'a
office foaled IUal on Route
7 at 3i561 Bar 30 Road,
whooe mailing addre .. Ia
39561 Bar 30 . Road,
R...tavllla, Ohio 4sm. Tho
Dlatrfct ,_.,.. lhe right lo
wolve any lnlorll!ell!ln and
to reject any/and all bids.
Tupper• Plalno-Chaater
Water District
By: Harold H. Blackaton,
Prealdent of the
B1111rd of Dlroctora
All
(10)27, 31 (11) 4, 7; 4TC

Pl-'6:00 A.M. To 4:00P.M.
Woollday&amp;ECE.

Lit. IMUI'Ince Nlee

wanted

In

~y &amp;

an

.........

ooeuaMy- lull

Mlddlepon
&amp; VJI?Inlty

High Income Pdantla!. No
Trlvol Or OINC:t Setae. 1-214:!n-31111.

Yard So!ea II.,. Be Paid In
lhe Raal Eata1o Cer-. Ploloealonal
Raal 1:-!, . .!J.roker.

Bocklo

Stein,~,....._

Surfloo mlr.w naedocl tor out·

of...Me work. OpemDN nMCMd
far and loldor, ahovo!, dragllne,

3 Announcements
k,_!nfl

·a.a·. -

driller,
- · -r..._.
-·
and c ldol•,
- mochanlc.

tha

Real Estate
31 Homes for Sate
2 Story-~4 B o d - FuM
a-mont. In ""'"ncl Pool 1 112
Ac,.. Lot, 114-251 1580. '

28oci--With .....
mant Ofl 588, AU Clly Utl!n!oo,
$311,500 Firm. Flnailw, Call
Larry, 114-441-1117.

lotion, - . board J!fOY!dod,
c:rr.l1,112.00 inekiJ. 1.-...a.

_ ... - ......

- - of DaVId FeoTy
~or !O!Oiher, tn3-4224Woelloollact.

Can,
- Tho
Talk To WooMn

On
- Rellnoncfng,
Mortilaaa
WHhoul
Cli!I1118U8011 FOf Oo\ll!jjf

MANUFACTURERES REP Natlonei.Jewolry Co.-. Rep To
Cell On AccOun!o In Your Ana.

Pomeroy,

training. ERA Town • Country

Anyone

23

pef'IOn

or pMt time. training proJ/dad,
drnr agalnal ,..,..;,alon far
flrwt 3 montha. s.nd r.ume to:
A-..itar, P.O. Box 1071,
Marietta, Ohio 457110.

Announcements

SURFACE MINERS

Raal Tillnalff

.UV.Itl 1-tllo.

For Out

Surfloo Ill,.,. State WooiL

288.t1Tt, Ext BOOS, $3.81 Per
IIIII. M... Ia 11 y,.. p,_y Co.

Operotora
- F o r End~. - o l

Of

IH-

llna!IM, Drfl'"!t.-, c..tlri0il
1 hanlc.
Wolfdar, And

IOM!J4..ll420.

Tr-atlon. R-,

And

Board Prvvldod...J':Z. 11,112.00

Woollty. Col! 1

Mt7.

TeOehor Naada Babyolnar, Muat
Have RefWinc.. ,6~1 .

""·
- · 115.000 flrm. ,....._
458..17211.
.,...
5 bedroom brick e-, \, 112
blth,
flnlahecl
bn•~lt,
Metric heat and 1lr, 2 l ...,

4
Truc:k Company In Oak Hll,
Ohio Ia Sooldng Experience
Somf Tnootor ITiall• Orf--. FOR SALE· 2 bed- hoUH,
&amp;c:o!lanl
Pa~
&amp;perloncocl 112 ocra In country, Racine - .
1M... Only. c.lt &amp;1W82·7773. new pone till-In ,llf,.
Truck drl.,..-, over tM road, 1 rr
11pera.nc., home WMiwndl,
IOW7W57U.

garaga, nice Mighbo..,

~ 1;'

nleo level lot. Fo&lt; eppt. e14 .
1387.
;••

-lng, -....
-~
1 outbul!!J.
yto haat,
clf. _ $21,-. &amp;14-MWMO' af.
~ -•

ter 5:30p.m.

.

SeeN:,~

L.agat

Wan!od:

GOVERNMENT HOliES F....;,l1
IU Rapa!r). lla!!nq'*IJ Tu
Property. R~LI ulQiia. Your
P I - Rogllt'Zs:: M•ln St., Ar.a (1) -~. Ext. QH.
PJ.-.wv
10181 FOr Cumin! Repo u.t.,, .
WILDUFE .10'il?"SERVAT!ON 1y Gwnera: !121 Fou~h
Qome
Wardono, S.Curtty, A_,ua, 3 -~·

,.,.rtrM*I
required .
NMifM to Bo1 A·25, cJo Pt.

--ry.

Malnlena""!o. .. Eto.

No

E•f.·

·0111 21•'JM..001o
Ext For
mo.In o
'
NOW Hiring.
A.ll. To I

P.M, 7 Dap.

t"~Schoolw..,Ceo!tra~~-·
114 41
0315,114 ••• 11510.

~~$4~1,100.~~~4~44~l~1471,§~~~J&lt;~•
..

Woman lo do light wOfk
and .,..ndl thi'M afternoona 1

~

OI:Jf.

.

..: ,

..

1

•

All,..., ...... aa.ertlo!ng ~) .

Old MaiO, WhMa Cal

Heir l!ua Eyw, 114-30'

18

no_.,.

Wanted to Do

Bebyotnina

In

My

Ts
-.

_

ChalhlraA'raa,~7MV.

~.,

EIA ·TREE SEaVICE.
.• Trf~ TIM - . 1 .

.... ,,
• 11
'~."~/.'

\,

Trfo!Mn.,J;P,· Fr• EaUmaJoef
311' Aft11 4p.m.

I~ I

~ •

or·992·21S6

I

this
II aulljed tci
the F-1 Fair Houofng Ai/1 •
of 11188wlik:h.,... llleg'll'
to . . . . . •..wyp~~t~eewqf, 1
lmllattonor 1 ~·•-.e1
-.-...~n

- ..

..,. famlhl

-~· ~ iioltjo~'

ortgtn, or llf1......,.1oi.i to ~#
IMkt 111ft MfCf'l PN*wlbit~ ..

lmHMtonordiQ•n••~·' "

·, FOit ..l6R1 uiFORUiloN
'

ad

theolfwtng.

=~'tL..-:.~L'="::e
..m.~nt Sta", And
I!IIJ On

e Month

~

~

you-··-

.-wlhpeopleyou~;;:,:­
NOT 1o-....; t
the

' - - -·

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

. .~~r~·

.

'

4 y- OICI ......brod K . . - ,

' ;.-

.j

Hou,. Flea:lb'-, 11~247.

"""" ............ "fotnc!Jr; 4yr.
;:, 'mfnlat~ collie, amM,
1

'

•

"'=.,..
&lt;-. _Y_a_rd_S_a_Ie---1 FuN a Pa~·nme Manager a
7
Slyflal, Fat RapUISolon, tmmedlata Openlnga

-.114-M2.a7M.

.•

-A veblcle'riWI-·

.~be opea1111 wllb hla bniWi · ina
33 ,JIIu tieer ·Prl·
1"· Millo.
. .
day.
.•: "I've·lllked 10' a lot of p;eoplo
·,.
~Ito llave 10111 IODiedllaJ· tbey , -~:z;:e 10'
:OC*I'tex•llin."
.
"'
,. , ife llll •• .SIIP 'lO "'••I 111 . hit a deer. '
i£10 blidt hl~'IOO -111'11 Cor lbe of lhe Cll',
~ive cap&amp;IIM of aay prevloaaly atbnend
~~~ Lite Brie maque. To
The
'·jUred.
plfy
Cor dlil reWIId, .the a11JC1ue1
wo 1101 a,

~···

:;.

~:tJi

can't 1eJ1
)'011 tor sure w~~~t'a
Vehic'e
hJ4-.,
~eer' ·.
· ~'!P.:,
n.Dt •"-"
'00:... lgfu ~ 1111
I&lt;
~~~ UJ
~~-h:i""~c.::d on • ;;;;.-:t tbo

Mfu Paula'a Oily Core Centar
11-F I AJI. .a:30 P.ll. a...ty
AVONI All • -· NMd . extra 1.ow1na earw For All atl6iao
money or wM'It 1 ClrM!i....lllthlr Our 11 GaoL PM•.,_, Tlml FetS.~nceAnl 0'1
• .,......., Marilyn. 304 ... Clill Ff,j titloiiiMIIuii Or Vlll.lno011-800 - 13$8.
.. '

TREASURE CHEST
317 "'ain St;, Pl. Pleasant. WV
New &amp; Used MDSE. Nov. 1-6
$,1,00 Clothing Sale
Buw2-de1 1 Free BooR Sale
Spi)ias &amp; Flavorings- $1.00 ea.
Now In Stock indian.figures,
picture!~. 3 baby ~ds/inattresses,
table ~chairs. occi c;,~alrs ..tables,
wiCker hea11ti0ird, toy!, 'gill ilems,
' · ho~·
' 1,. \•nt . it~ms , curtains,
draf!llQ ;·bedding, Lois of Misc.

"

. :arccn

:;:&gt; :.~~=.::t~~

Ro~~· Baden·

Giveaway

4

PIJ!)IIc Notice

successful results are

~

I'

::=::0:::

estimate.yourself loday regarding what you
have to offer. If you have to take a gamble
on your talenls and abilities, do so.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) h's important !oday
that you and your mate are in accord where
critical Issues are concerned. Where har·

PH. 446.0322
3 MILES OUT BUtAVILLE PIKE

Swain Furniture

...-w

M I · , _ · '.-.
arr age licenses ......

ning combination and it w"l arouse enthusiaSm in co-workers to also do their best.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Do not undar·

¥ON. THRU SAT. 9-5

441 -1700

..

. 91 RtdiCia '
92' . .
.

~~sound

•

•

. flrat Boy Sc:o!lt troop was founded by Lord
Powell, an English general in 1908.

NEW SHIP~ENT
OF BUSHLINE
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA &amp; CHAIR ·
s795oo TO '1 09500
,FREE DELIVERY

Mary Kay Consultant
Kim Christopher
.Inventory in Stock!

88 Lamb'a.pen neme
' 89 ''T-il"•....,...
:) &lt;
''"90~.• !111111·':

114 World-

:)8

134 Large ,. ' .
135 - of _liJproval

peo\atty
79Sea.INIQie
83 Stenrt of muaic
85 Rumor .

113

52 Baker's producta
53 Spen"" ~lcfe
55 Sow

bo!h parties in order to succeed. Neither
should lum back 0&lt;1C8 commined.
TAURUS (April *M•r.20). 11 Yl'" feef .your
wort&lt; pertormance warrants ~. tf1is is a good
day to latk with an authonty figure about
adclit1onal benefits. Base YQUr presentation
on your record.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You 're both
resourcaful and practical today whore your
work or career is concerned. This iS a win-

LAYNE FURNITURE
.

446-4119

monetary

1.12 w-....lndtcator

132 Domliiltcate
133 11eer lnar8dllnt

58 Depollta
59 Sallont: COlloq.

78 Dlphtloong
771mpoted

28 Sott

'
'31"Knocka ·

128Step~

ble, but it will require bold m9asUresJfrom

changes are ahead tor Scorpio in _the com-

Empire• LP Gas Ventless
Heater on Sale!
Comfortable heat at an
affordable price.
Burlile Oi Co.

·~~7~ancl

' unateadlty

120~

ARIES (March 21·Aprl119) Ajoint van!ur8
In which you're presently involved ia 1easi-

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

..

'

74- garde

9$'UI... n

17 W-'k!ld ·

119 Bone .

on you .

at 1·704- Wooto Bj Yard Or By Job, T..,;
'241-4213 collect, ., 304-&amp;15- FumM~n, 151 SocOnd Av.._
2280. .
Oa!!lpo!!a, -~332.
.

aen..~

dliotder
11. German tttle

115 P!'tPOiitiOn
117 ,.._opening

m1ght no! follow the course you originally
oulline for yourselt.
.
PISCES (Fob. :ZO.MIIrch 20)
hal
recently given you some very
information. yet you mighl not know Its
wMh. Today its value mighl begin to dawn

......_, 1 o~fitnale. ·TNT
Oc:l. D. John ~ If!

....•
....

-'I'

7 Bittaln's air

girl

..

ments for vou. yet your route to sUCcess

Loel:',

6 $1._ symbol

88 Egyptian dancing

"

SAGmAAIUS ,(Nov. ZHHI;C. 21) Try to
stay in ·control of thiOO. 'IOday, b&lt;rt dQ to
without toruilng aHanfiol\ oo'youiulf. You'll
function beat 11 the powef bthind the
throne,;
CAPAICQAN 1!*:: 22-.llln.' 11) !!everal
friends who_haven't been 100 friendly or
coopenl!lve lately could undargo a com.·
pie!o revision of their Qltltude beginning
loday. This may occur unbeiqlowriat to one
another.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb. 1t) Thla,could
be a day of ralher outstanding achieve·

flnl noddler I'M ••
CHR!STIIAS At
WorlcOr_A..,..II-$14 School, 114 ... •
'
Owner 01 Friendly l!ocll Lab - , . PI,. fMII..... Io D!oPup, Qorllold A - Ana, - f -T~ Op41ona!.
P I - Colll14 ,441 4141.
1-~. ·

._

5 $tleckl

86 Railroad station

Monday, Nov. 1, 19113. · ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. ·22) You're likely
to do beHor loday lransforming Y9Ur ong\nal
ideas than you will do by taking the ~a,s of
o!hers and trying to revise them. Major

·:• ..
. ...,. ·

or

3 Mlttake In
4

IOf

AVON

Crosnord PUzde AnBwe~ on Page C-2

24 Eccentric
28 VCR button
28 Milk• lllln-

·The Lake Erie Monster:
::is it real or just a log?

.· .

,,,, .

23Pieg-

, the Hal'OII 11- rad~ ol tilt a.Jo city o1 H.,., Solllerl
- Is the Nlf-appolllted fi .
of tills m;y1bleal beaat. (AP)

roL::.

favors the death penalty, against
New York Gov. Mario CUomo,·an
ardent opponent of. capilli punishmenL
After bein1 sentenced in New

14 Cublc~er
19 Fright
21 F•tlve
22 Beatt.. film

. rows put 1 replica or tile "Lab Erie MHIIier" a l'rlnd erected 1111

.ue."

.. .

'

•

IRIDOI:

sl!&gt;illly ~ riiqt&gt;t reject
mat!Qn loe!IY fy~t because fi .
tne source. This could be i,
wllere
you cui.oil your nose to spite YQUr f!ICII.' i
AAit!S (Meidl 21·Aprtl 1t) Wl\ether ~
business en,.a. minor or majOr a&lt;:ate todily,
be mar. eiutious and watchful than u~pal.
Wllat )s· $po~'~ could be as imponant.as
~is pin i!J.writing.
'
TA~fiU-Ii (A~fll. 2G-May 20) Your mate's
Idea.'&gt; might~ more numerous than yours
ioday, b~t th;,i does not necessarily make
t~em mQrt supenot. Analyze tf1em individu. ally, not 88&lt;1 group.
GEMINI (May 2t.june 20) Be ve,Y careful

1

Convicted killer will serve N.Y. sentence first ,.

tence. For aece:~· authorities
would not say
y where Gras·
so wiS headed or when he would. ·
arrive. His 1,400 mile drive began
Friday.
Grasso, 30, wanted to die in .
Oklahoma by lethal injection for
murderina a Tulsa woman. But
New Yart foujbt 10 baye him first
serve a prison ileliiCiicC for murderins a New Yart City man.
"Gruau's wont niahtmare ljas
been ,a,iml " New Yart correc' apo!rei"MU' James
Lions deplninent
l;'laleau said Friday. "He y.ill have
to spend 18 yean among ~Ions IS
vicious a he is."

.•.

~·

tlonl f~ay, Mall .2~ tnd 1 long, MK·
addiauad; atamplld 11nvelo~ 10 AotroGraph. do Ibis oenpep«. P.O..Box 4-486,
t ~i~~t
,Yot_~'~..V,. 10183 ~ ~ lti:~Je your

in the year ahead are today you dO not fumish others with lnstruc·
' s!icated and,compiex.
' '
lions on !)llw Ia do things about which you
sophl.
In the past . YOur risks , ki\Ow little. or nothing. If you do, you could
. but so could ~our make !rouble',jor them a~d yourself.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be optimistic
,.
24·Nov. 22) Agrliaments regarding today's lfGveiopments. but don't
test of time If tf1ey are not lie. unrealistic: OlsaP!)Ointmen(is possible if
today. Make sure you don't . yo ur ~valuat;qps are ba~ on wi!hful think·~
you should no I take · ing ins1ead !)f facts.
.LEO
(Juty1,3-Aug.
22)
l')'anti.
P
g
things can
!he other guy. Scqrpio, \feal
provide
the
motivation
necessary
to acquire
a birthday gift. Sand for your
them.
Toda¥·
however.
there's
,a
chance
Astro'Graph pr~dictions tor the year ahead
yoy
may
wan!
somelhlng
tor
tf1e
wrong
reaby ma.tting s,t .25 and a long, self·
son;
and
no!
be
happy
~
you
succetid.
addressed; stamped envelope to Astro·
Graph, c/o this newspaper, 1&gt;,0. Box 4465 , _ VIRGO (Aug. 23-SepL 22) If you•are undu·
New York, N.Y. t0t63. Be sure to slate ly cnlical of othom today don't be aurprtsed
if they start pointing out your flaws . You
your zodiac sign .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 2t) Try to be won't be happy with what they say·and they
helpful lo olhers today,,but don'ttake on won1 be happy with you.
1 .
more respdnsibilities than yo~ can manage. ~IBRA (Sepl. 23·0ct. 23) Parsonal f~nds
II you get O\'erloaded, it won't be good for should not be mixed with onler fund~ 'today,
especially if you're involved in a joint venthem or you.
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan. 19) Someone ture. It could create serious bookkeeping
you recently treated quite generously might problems.

.mu

appeltlll-:e

•

~

BE:lUj!CE .

bim up IIICf 10 niuuwe be wal
dcld by JelllllViallhe lkull.
. Slodzilt Slid bls rmn ell llbowl
iuch h!IWJ wm: cmunnn in New
~Mille 1892.

~ -WU atill flesh, !hey would
remove it and burn u. Or they ·
would remove1he bead. In the
Americ:aD uaditlon, just causing
iOme,clilniJ?!iun 10 tile body was
IIIII qy 10 kill 8 vampire.••
··
·

.. '
'

I

'Published VIDI{Jire II:COI)IIU
C~ J!Rijec:L
•
pllcel die f~ wilbin die S!cdzik said when be elllllliDed ' L1111e frame 111d.loc:atioa u JB,"
JB, 11 wu clear die remala• 11i11 said Slodzlk. Ho aaid other
been diiiUrbod IOIIIdimc aflcr·llae ~ bave lllo ftlllllted findbody had IUmOd 10 a ste'o'oo.
ma bodies from lhe era that were
The lona bones of the upper lei mlllilaled. ,
had been plaeod Oil die c:IICIIIS ..
"Wilen IOiiiCOile died of COil·
'X'Ind the lkull had boon Jelll!)ved · ::Jlion, il was believed they
and pllcod on die 101 bot
.
p!IIIIIIU from the deld .00
Tho effect wiS 10 form a
drain the life of dleir livin.R rclaand Cl'lliSbota.
dvo," uld Siectzik. "In order 10
. In lhe IaboraiDI)', Slcdzik ~- atop this, family members would
mmed that die bon" bore le110111 10 iaJO the aravo 111d somehow
from tuben;ulosis. JB alao bad I -..-&gt; aaemptto ldJl the pc:uon again. If
hunched. and crooked ahoulder,
from an 1111PJIOPCf!Y heUod collar
bone break, a cnpplod lea ·•nd
proba_bly what was an open and
rcstcnng woun~ ~ his fOOL The
man ~ had mtssma Croat ~·
. "In I.ife, JB ~d ~ve beer! a
fnghtemna f~, wd SJed••k·
Memory of this seary
could have prompted some 10 dig

1'/hil~

' PISCH, (1'111.10-March

~~arly vampire-killili~ ri~lials
87 P.\l,IL RECER
:A.P $t' ce Writer
~ · WASHINGTON- P.nicked
·~ New Eni'•Dden. d Jfcnte to end
l: )ttacts from beyond the lfiVe,
: OIIU uneartlted corpaes and (IU·
:: 'formed Y~ft~Jii!Hillinl riluiiJ U1 I
;.. .-,ariPIJII&amp; die lllidcnd It's 1 cca.;: wry-old tale of Hallowml horror,
:. now ctdb•ned by ~eienlisu.
:: · Dr. Plu1 Sledzik the Nalional
; Museum of Heahh aod ~cine
~ said Friday thal bodies from 18dt
; ·aod 19th centwy p-aves in scvaa1
~ locations in New :;:rtand sbow
,. ·~vidence thal dley
been disin·
:i terro1 within • few mc'!llhs cw ~
·: of delth. and then muhllttd or dis~ rupiCd in 101110 way.
::; .: Jounlllists' accounts. publialled
;: • ~tly 189~, he ~cl, support
"",the belief that this ghoulish limper·
~&gt; ring witb ~was prompted by
:: :the i~ of • lcilling" the undead 10
: stop them from suclting the life
• :force from the Iivin1 •
;:. Sledzik panicipated in 1nalyz· :::· ina corpses from a cemetery near
•.,Priswold, Conn. and found one
.· .that clearly bore the sign of VIlli·

and

m!QhtUM

the moot
expedlll®s.

.

dri.;;..._..,.

~

••

...

t

'

,,...

•

'

,,

�•

-•
•

•

•
•

•

OH-Polnt Pleaeant, wv

nmes-Sentlnel
31 Home: for Sale
Hou..

Far !.nto.-.

=

SOlo

• ...l.oallln!l . .... ......

Unl-

t1 k.rt1'n;;.
~~'=Far
You Moy Won! To

Cou:lldM TNI er:erdtd. LAw
• 1111,.....,_, Rutile Ceder Wllh
' An:hllecl Ooolanod Poolvo - ·

S

' Roam ~oi On sa Waadod
Z Ac- 112 IIIIo F""" Clly 01 001~ Jlpollo. 1Pl\10 Sq. 1'1., M
' .,...,_o, 2 Bothe, • lull-In

t ~-=.·~i~T.!'.":.~~
• Goroge, Fruit T-, 0~ AT-

1

: bo&lt;. f n l - Portltio

Mobile Homes
44
Apartment
_ __:.fo;:,;r_;Sa:.:..;.le_ __
Rent
1
1 bod-, lurnllhecl ~

~:&amp;:Col

; (1141441o34U0r(ll141441 233.

: 'Nice 3 Bedroom HolM WHh At·
' llehod 1Wo Cor Oorogo,
• To Gal-lo 1110 01 M Acre,
' ,:el4 44U8711 Or 114-2!58-1487.

homt warrenty, only 4 teftl .... 1bdnh. '.-11mtnt.
.......
7SS-1Me.
Annuo, PGOMroy. ~_:;
t1001dop., no po11, .,....,...,..

35 Lots &amp; "•·reage
"

oftorspm.

SEVERAL 7· ACRE PARCELS:
llolca Count ......,
II5Gt ocro.
..
lend; - . , pooluro hll...
Col "" good mop. 1-114-SfiS.
IMI,AihOno,OH.

IEAIII'IFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON
a~
•--·
ESTATES. 531 Jocban Plb
_,_, wtoppllonce~ """' 12011/mo. W.lk to •
:.~~n.'::"~.,:;"·~.
Colll14 448 2518. EOH.

41

HOUI8S for Rent

~ · - .. 1117.

mo-.

•

~~~·~;.;~·A;.;ii;"iiE,;;,;;

2 Btdroonl Rench. 21 EYIIn•
Holghlo, t300111a. UOO Clopaol,

Ro'"'- I" Dopoob Roqulrocl,

• 1 1 Solo Fronch Daon~
r Stairway Go.e From ~ronl

TD ft....- .. , Rt,:~~!MooqUJ-~•.
2nd Floor ___.,
, ... .._
r.u
~ , Flroploceo, llull Soo To Apo No Polo, 814o44e-3548.
; procllolo, Shown Br Appalnl· 2br. houu, Now Hoven, wv.
•' mant Only, Call 614-446--0041 Or 30C-882~3752.
,. ,.et4o446-5i7'i.
~.:::;:.:::.:::::.,.....,-,-_ __
• "'·•
3 8odn&gt;anW In Golllpollo, 114•; .,.uc:ad 151000 Nlco 3 Bod- 441-2003, Or 814o44S.1401.

1•

• .• rooiM

Anocnod Gongo 2 AC,

c-

to town, dock.

fireplace, 2 ctr carport._ gaa
Front•g• 4 Bedroom hNt, centml Jlr. S425. 614--4U: · B~ck, 114-446-7157 Aftor 8 P.M.
.;:158
::;:,.5o::n.::nl.::ngo=-=-,.....~3 IBR LG.
Kllchon, Oo~

: · ..488.f608.

-m

• : River

p.partment

fQr ~ent
dop. 304471-2181.

,muctlwatarlnthebody. "You've never
drank water In your life," the pal answafed. "I flnow," the drunk agreed."
it muat have betin caused by MBLTING ICE."
45

Furnished
Room1

Cd oftor a:oo p.m.,
..........
_WY.

Cornplolly Fuinlohod llllllolle
hamO, 1 mile ~ Clolllpolt.,

46' Space for Rent

bod-

8

lportmenlo,

:r,:~monto, ~~Poo~m~IOI~"'~y,;I1M;~It2~5~851~.J'Md~
-·. 1 - 2 .

H•ncllcepped 1 a 2 -.edroom bedroom
'P"'Imlntai
In
Unfto. Ronlo i•od On Adluolod Pomoroy, Ia •-. $115lneorno. FIIHA Suboldlud, HUD S250, 114-1182-4333.

45

Furnished

,

Rooms

:TIIne:.:..:.:.:,::bod-:--roo-m-:h-ou..-.-u-ntu.,-r·

•·

nl1hed, .. ewe 1nd rlfri"ll'lllor,

a

Tools and Men Misc.

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 6, 10 A.M.

,...,..,... and dopMa r.
qulrwt., no lnlldl pOlo, 814-192·

--::=......:~~~~:--­
::lion, Prlvoto Yord, S250/llonlh,
Wolor Pold 114o44e-1055.
a aodraomo, On 141 Prtvolo Lot,
1200/lla. AC, Pluo •ollron-.
Oopoob, 114-14e-7754,

5

Sole~SI00~~814456'~~1~04~4~.ma~bod~-~~·~Con~V~In~ltnl~~l.«o• ~$1~,100~0~

Looking Goc1d
Feeling Fine
But No Longer "39"

Happy 4QTH
Mary!

.....
c••••••••, .~.·. 16
s~.·n ~

Heppy BlriW•v
C!fstll

ltN

.Pillows, lamps, pictures, clocks, Mr. and Mrs.
Claus sets; indians, Religious items, Christmas
paper, ceramics, collectable dolls, (Brinns,)
Jeweler, Dish sets, cookware sets,
· : capodomante, plant stands, and much, much,
more.

MI8C

·
.•
.:
·
:,.

... Something for every member

ot the family.

Up to $50.00 Door Prize.
Positive 1.0.

,

Cake Hyd. Press, woodburner, W. M. ga• ~eater, 8l;,

I

kind.

••

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

•

LARM~~~~ON

·£statt .Aac:rtion

SATURDAY NOYEMIEI . 10 A.M. .:

Saturda~:vember 6,1993 at10:00
ldt Centenary United

Methodist Church
Take Route 141 From Gallipolis, Ohio.
Approx. 3 miles .
Estate of Raymond Hartless
Household and Misc.

gla&amp;S doot ~net, ahadow box, 2 butter molds, 2
oak cheats of drawers, rotJnd table whh 4 chairs,
treadle sewing machlna, Iron bed, 2 pair quitting
Zenith color tv console with remote, only 8 rnnr&gt;tho
frames, Oil lamp, wood111 rocker, milk can, stone jars,
I
coffee table and end tables , r.. ~tin,,
ball ~rs. kraut cutter, single shot stevens 22 cal.
pa~1aS&lt;mic microwave, bookcase headboard bed
pistol, at least 4 exceptional, hand made quiks, 12 pl.
dresser whh mirror and chest of drawers, Zertith
setting of chin!!. antique glassware ' and china, II color tv whh remote control, drop leef tabla
Includes camiv11l and Ienton, (too m~ch to list)
II c:halrs, singer treadle sawing machine, oak be&lt;~ room·
HOUSEHOLD
.
suhe (bed, chest of drawers, double dresser w~h
Four piece aectlonal, end and coftae tables, 2 living
whet-not sheH, inirror, night stand), bissell carpet
I,_,;.;;; rockers, 1 recliner, pair matching table lamps,
machine, hoover sweeper with attachment, 4 pc.
pple lamps, odd lamps, 2 console tv's, 1 portable tv,
maple bedroom suits, hurricane lamp, lamps,
electrophimic stereo, bearcat scanner, 1 fiv• piece
pictures, am. mantel clock, fireplace screen, floor
and 2 three piece "bedroom su~es , electric blanket,
lamp, tupperware, k~chen appliances, pyrex dishet,
lots of good clean bedding, 5 piece dinette, desk and
cooker, kerosene lamp, dish towels, wagner and
slow
chair, atlas electric sewing machine, variety of fans,
griswald
Iron, skillets, yellow depression bowl, set
books and book cases, 4 electric sweepers, huffy
english
garden
china, clock radio, night stand,
exercise ·bicycle, kenmore auto washer, hot point
walker, adjustable potty chair,
telephones.
Adjustable
dryer, magic chef gas range, 17 signsture frostless
milk
glass,
oscillating
fan, patchwork
some
refrigerator, tappan microwave, kitchen cabinet,
pots
and pans, misc.
comforters,
blankets,
what-nots,
roaster oven, 2 mixers, sears blenders, coffee maker,
dishes,
linens.
boxed set of stainless tableware, ~~chan utensils,
Guns: Remington BaH action 22 single shot.
curtains, drapes, slap stool, porch chairs, large norge
New Murray Elec:tric start twin 16 HP. Riding lawn
chestlreezer. 7 ot. pressure canner, crock pot, elec:tric
mower,
craftsman super pull-lhe starter 5 HP 22" cut
skillet, canister set, gas heaters, christmas
power
front
drive lawn mower, montgomeroy ward-3
decorations.
speed
power
reverse dual stage 26' 8HP. snow
TOOLS AND MISC.
blower,
10
Ft.
alum.
extension ladder, B &amp; D sander,
Lawn Boy seK propat,led lawn mower, lawn cart,
mllwakey
drill,
trouble
light, brace and b~. bailey
gas water heater, house flowers, mechanics tool box,
plane, sledge hammer, post hole digger, lots of proto
lawn and hand tools.
and craftsman tools, assortment sockets, wrenches,
CAR
hammers and etc, tool boxes, alec. hedge trimmer,
1970 buick lesabre 2 door hard 1op to sell at 12
rubber tired wheel barrow, folding lawn chairs, king
noon.
woodburner with fan, 2 ton jacks, level, porch glider, 2
An exceptionally nice clean sale. still finding more
porch chairs, and much, much, mora.
nams.

LUNCH BY REEDSVILU • UMW
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR LOSS:
EXECUTOR: MARGERET GROSSNICKLE
378·6171.
AUaJONEER: 1.0. •MAc• MCCOY
614·985·3944
CASE NO. 27917

Auto &amp; Truck•
Studabaker needs work, 1968 Ford Ranger (Run
good), 1972 Chev. Pickup (partly restored), ehev:·
Pickup lor parts, Oldsmobile Cutlass Engine.
•
Owners • Roger &amp; Janet Thelss
·· ~

Real Eatate General

8

Ruth Davidson Exect., Case 1931114
Cash
1.0.

Eats

Marlin Wedemeyer
Auctioneer
Lie. 3615

614-245-5152
"Not Responsible lor
accidents or loss of property",

, .•

Real Estate

·~ .:

..

-

Real Eltate General

-.. \\ !

]1 I

"
#57·68·1344
.•
RheH Milhoan ·Apprentice 1¥5926'
'
Cesh Pos~ive ID Refreshments
'Not Responsible For Accidents Or Loss 01 Propertys_"

Frtllk ""chlnsolt

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

con&lt;!hloners for trailer, Bicycle, puah inower, TM;K
loJlP!Ir, lawn ehairs, patio tables, garage door openet
Windows, doors, paneling, CB radio's, books of alt

Dan Smith - Auctioneer

614-698-6706
Lke1sed aiad Bollded In

PQ&amp;

Misc.

bed, roC:ker, library table, office desk, sweepera,.
dr&amp;Saer bas•. B&amp;W lV, ·Washer &amp; Dryer, Kenmo ·. ·
dehumldffer, metal ~lnets &amp; ~e:S, air condklon"';:
dishes, pots &amp; pans, piCtures, twm
s, &amp; act.
·,r.

Auctioneer Mark,Hutchlnson

Real Estate General

•

Hou..hold
• "· •
3 Pc. Bedroom su~e. nlahl stands, lamps, roll-a-w&amp;Y,

Tenns: Cash or check w/positive ID.
Footlavalla&amp;lt. Out of state checks need bank letter.

Stacy &amp;

Tricycle's, bicycles, remote and radio control
. · toys; American plastic and metal toys. dolls,
· plush toy~, and much, much, more. Toys for .
· every age group.

~ulpi'Mirt
•
Tractor T035 Fergerson, Oliver Crawh{J
Tand1111aple Tralletl cult &amp; front blade lor Farman A;,
mowing machine, 1ft poles, plow, MF disc, ceme!it:
mixer, tiller, AC riding mower, Gravely w/Grave ·
engine, tiller &amp;. mower, Log splitter, Bolin · gard•~J·
tractor, corn plantar, water lank on wheels, dump
&amp; ec:t.

Joan Hanson hat sold her home and will, offer lha following
auction as well as conslgnmenulrom Olhers.
The auction will be held at Hutchineoo Auction Inc. Take US
a 32 weatlnd exit:onto 50 west towards McArthur. Aucdon
Is quarter mile on left. Signs pos18d.
New matchl~g couch and love188t; new matching
and chair: upilght freezer; complete
bedroom tulta: modern hutch; Ho\llrt
engin81 sell propelled and oM mowers;
porch furniture: lg . coffee table: entertainment
lamps; huskavarus chain saw; homelile challnsaw:
sel of encyclopedias; records: weed eater: bi~;.C::~~:b'.:~
IDols; corn sheller; gas grill: push cart; stands; s
alum. extansion ladder; big little books: small conactibles
many misc. items.

Love
Ronnie, tsUil.l

Crula' l111a

· ·Lots and Lots of Toys;
Truck Load

~~.

Located on St. Rt. 124Eashf Rllllnt; Ohio, '.:
Watch for sign. Moved fr.om bnlto "WI:'
SO IIIISI sell the folowllg.
'',

AUCTION INC.
HOUSEHOLD AUCTION
WED. ·NOVEMBER 3 at 6:00 p.11.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

.
SOcket -iets, hammel'll, screwdriver sets, men
.. pocket watches, tapes, gloves, socks , gun .
· racks, pellet guns and much mote.

·PUBLIC ·AUOION

Spaces Inside 25.00 ·
Spaces Outside 15o00

Bod- 3010

:: All Eloclrlo Wllh All',
;.. Flioploce, w.o, Now Undorl&gt;inr' nina Now Corpol Fumlohod
r' Whfi Porch, t13;000i Al.a,
•: Lowrey "Gonlti" Oraon, Lillo
'"
''
r,

Partial listing: 6 pc. cedar bedroom su~e. oak . ·
hall tree, oak curio hutch with curved glass, . :
living room suites, khchen table and 4 chairs,
· recliner,, swivel rockers, and much, much, :
. mote.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

contn~ct, 1400/mo., no pete. 114-

;: '32 Mobile Homes
' IH4 "Norrto' 14110

$23S. 3Q4.

...... lpm.

Pomeroy tor ,..,, or nl• on

1118·7244.

for Sale

living,_. ouHo..-r good

~5;- blogo,

Fri., Sat~ and Sun. 9 a.m.·~ p.m.
Collectibles, Used furniture, Misc. Items.

er...-

•·

ns,

Hutchin$on Auction Inc. on SOW

: · Tlmeeharw - WMk 7 (Doyl0n11 $27!1 dtpoah, no pet-, 614-..
2885.
.
' · !100) Ocoonolod "VII"
~=--:--:-:-..,--:---,­
,. Btoch, Flo. SIMpo i • Living Nlco 2 fll 3 bedroom houoo In

' 114 44H5to.

Thursday, November 4, 1993
. at 7:00p.m.
From Gallipolis, take Route 141,
•. tum left onto Rt.
TUm right onto .
Patriot Road. Watch for signs.
All New Merchandise
Furniture ·

FLEA MARKET

, : Auction NovemMr 81h, 81.(..245- Nk» 2 bedroom home, M~le
'• •'5203,
Street, Pomer~. $275/mo. u1

.;:; ·

3pc.

•

Flrol
Holzor Gall polio. 114- Th- bodo GGrm
Socand
441-1800 Avonuo,
Sonlor, Dlooblod, •

: Slotoly
RHidonco
Or IIPQIIo DmHo. Porllll Utllbleo,
~ ... A,.rtmenta, Olrav- ADenmenl, s:I3~~~~1W~a~.,!:lt~l~44!!8~,8~23!:·-,-­
, ' 'FUll l.ol. 84 Grape, CalllpOIII, . ::

~ ·fi'Oom, Dlnl~ Room, Kttchen
f tYl..,lundry, 2 8idrooma. 2 Bathe.

~uction

Ott-Point

Public Sale
&amp; AUction

2 miles west ol reedsville, ohio on state 10\ite 681. wiH
"II tha pt110nal property of the late mildred opal
harris as lolows:
AH11QUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Oak bullet with mirror, glass door china closet. small

·climtaas

Goods

•

~- lnclucleo Ulllltloo, t!OO
-IO'IIy dopooll, no polo; t14provol, 3*773-134t, 114-tt2· H2-22!1.
11181.
Th,.. bedroom ·~rtiMnl In

twnlt N.

• .·

Hounhold ·.

a-.. lor ront otortlng ot
1811ma., 114-112-2117.

&amp;Auction

ESTAn AUO'ION
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 6; 1993
BEGINNING AT 10:00 AM :

r,1erchandl5€

AIMilnilior - · AH hoolc-upo.
304-'Tl'S-

a

PubliC Sale

'

1fT wanted to Rent •
Wonting~ lOIII• 2 or 3 bedroom

........ raome with co~ldng.

Pome~y--Middleport---Galllpollt,

'

The drunk told a pal that his doctor
told hinhe h8d hydrop1y, which Is too

Nice,-· a .... llpl~mMII, Wid
hook-up, rol., dop., no polL-.
171o1112., .

avorlaaldng - · ~. No
Peta. CA. Helt.ll14 448 0338.
a-h SlrMI, llldd'-&lt;1, 1
room
etncl.nqo 1partment, One bedroam .,..,.,....,.. on the
UlllbiH pold, dop. &amp; rot. 3Q4. ~-. .. Ulllftloo lumlohocl,
812-211841.
ww-., I'I+IM..asat.

Corllllc:olao Aecoplocl llf.441.
1BOOI Equal HoUolng Oppar-

8

houH, In-n and~­
Ill, Vomon Avo, vory nice ornd - " " ront -- o r monlh. lion,
~ privolo ~ 114- .
lumlohod oportmonl In duplti., . .rtl.... ot tl20/rno. Clollllo Halo!. 112.au&amp;.
H no ~~ ,._..
1br., no ....., no HUD, nt. • 114 •••sao.
·IMwmrlugeonfMIOhiM. _

2bdnn., unfumlahed, no ,.e:a. Ono

1,;..:,::;::==-:.::::.:.:..:=-3 BR homo

44

downtown New Hlven, WV. AIIO
comrnerellll apac.. HUD ap.

l

' :.llfL NO Aroo Now: $57,500, 114-

2br., llloloclrtc,o~ fur·
nlthed, cloee to Khoola.

Aplo., Now Hovon. 304-182-31'11.

::_11:::1.::11=1=1::_:114:,:._ _ _ __
Lovely a Bodraam

Stell.,

collll14.ft2-3711. EOH.

ot.,., &amp; ehurci)H. Lawllond

i'"Dining RQQIII, KHchon'- Ll!unclry llanl Walking Dlllonco To Staro,
t •

2bdrm. opll., tGiol -trlc, 01"
plllnceo lumlohod, '-'dry

~- boo~ :':;..':'=/c!=
•:.::=
01: VII- ·o,_ Aa&gt;lo. Ml or

• :.FlOor Patio, 5 Larva Bodroamo, ~-•z
112 llotho,
Floor, Room.
Larva "'"i;;;;;~;;ui;"ijk;"L;;;:
:' -•·
-Living
Room,2na
Ftmlty
~ 81droom Rtnllll, Ntc. Loca-;' 'Room, Ubnuy Or. 81h - - .
, .~ce Anoe, Full Both 111 R-.

INDIGO
DIGEST
LATELY
OMELET
HEROIC
VAINLY
MELTING ICE

NEW lANK REPOI
In lllddlopart, l148t2131M "'
,.,.r lived In, Mill hove ,_ .;,114;.;,;;H2=-122=5.~-,.--::--:­

c:-

; ; Polnl P-.nt: IMUIIIul Oldlr
t • 2 Slary Homo Full Choln Unk
1 Fonce, Woll ilaiinlolnod, Larva
; ·~Now RGGI, Now HVAC, StHI
t '8.l
• 8t0fll'l Wlndow8, Garage
, With Sloroll! Roomo, Carport,
• ,..B~ck Porch, BtllefMnt, DrtPM
' · • ,....,., Fully Corpotod, 2nd

TO ' eG~lA-4~M

tor

...

1993

R1al Estate General

II 1!Ill \\ :II I \l :

i~ \ ,, I! I
I_

Real Eltale General

I' I 1" '

I

R1a1 Estate General
• •

'VI'RA FuRNITURE

OFFICE .992-2886

• , _.. Or114-Ms-4428

' Lordy, Lordy
Look who~

"40"

Happy
Birthday!

Middleport. ·

Mom, Connie, waaj,,J
Kathy, Jackie; M.. rrilrii

Card of Thanks

..1 wish to thank
e'veryone
who
helped me so much
en I fell
. The Syr,acu:se
Emergency Squad,
ll&gt;r. Hunter, the
Veterans Memorial
Hospital for all of
the phone calls,
cards and gifts I
have
received.
I am so late
every thing is
God Bless you all.

Emma Adams

2

In

•"fart H. Dean
God never sends
the winter without
the,Joy of spring
and 'lhougtl'today

: your ~eart may
··cry; tomorrow
.· It will "sing".

' Plsi;ei:l Away
' NJ:Jv.
Mrs.

t979
Dean

11

Help Wanted

SUPERVISOR R.N.

YDDLEPORT· Level laying lot on BI'OIIdwlly Ave. Lot 15

Look ..........,. __
and a yoar
the charm
. contemporary ..,ch
fall in love with tho cho•ny'CUon.ltS, .ktnn.Aiir
rango and cerami:
oountartopo.
filling
/dining room combination oftlara a
~uming firwpl-. bult-ln hookcaMt lnd
a marvelous vlow u wan . 'Thorw arw two Ml
bathe and • two car carport lor your
convenience. Sottor hurry on 11111 one. Priced
at $88,000.
1500

orpprox. 5011125.

Pricod to eell at SIZ,OOO.DO.

POMEROY-Mulberry Avenue· Thle 8 room home hao 4
badroomt, dining room, family room, ond.prwtty lcilchon. Hal
ooma beautiful woodwork, french doors, llrwplace with
bookohaivao on either lido, and a bay window. Aloo hao •
lull buarnon~ 1 113 batha, and no- vinyt oiding. $41,000

NEW UBnNG- Hlndled With ca,.. Prideful
older home in Middleport, lovi~ mainlainod
by partk:ular WD!Wir. '\,argo comer lot, 2 car
garage, onclotad front porch and nlca
basement with oulside entrance. Call today Ia
sao this one priced Ill $55,000.
1507

a

Pinecrest Cart Canter hils an opening for·
Day Supervl10r, excellent · 1upe.rvlslon and
communication lkllla·

Include aupervlalng a ~
unit
and all day shift LPN'S. Mull have a residant
pen~pacllve and able to handle emergency
11tuat1ona. Apply In paraon, 1:00 a.m.-4:30
p.m., -kdaya at Plnecrnt Care Canter, 170
Pinecrest Dl:lvl,

. .

EOE

INSTRUOOR OR' ASSISTANT
PROFESSOR NURSING
The University tf Rio Gnlllllt 11111011ncts • oponl11
for 1 full t1111 - . Track poslft,n II the College ef
N1rslng aYIIIa~~ for Winter Guartar 1993-M IIi
November 15, 1993.
Tlte succndul candidate will IH respons'lt for
teochlng t...ry, Rills labs ancl supei'Yislon of clinical
uperloncts far first year ltnllftd/« second year
ltnl NLN accrtdlttcl Associate Dt~rtt Nul'slna
Proaram: work • Ualvenll'f and/or Cohtt of
Nursing c....lltn; and SlrYI as anls« to nursl•
stullonts.
Gillllklft.s for the position lnciU.. aiSN dlflrw,
Master's Dear• In Nursing ancl a cwrent OW. RJC.
LktRit I'IIJ*ed. Consldmllon will H llvtt1 tt tllese
currently enrol1d In a ••ttr's Dlai'H Ia N~l"
proaram IIIII . .,. clmpletlon. PreviHs ttocllfat
uptrlllu II • Associate Dtaret Nmlla P,.,...ls
W.hly .slrab'- tlld prtftmt Chnkaf uptrloncl II
ICutt · care seHing for at IHst oitt year as I;N.
f9lllllrtt
..
.
·.
hrtirtsttd ptrstns shtuld s111d a
1f
.,lbttett,,......,'llldudiel tilt IIIIMS, Mclre,..:d
1111 teltphla a J' n ef tlu1t ,.ttrtacn .
.ilftW.strtCIII.._.ts . . . . . dli.• t
........,s, 1"3:
\. .
.
.... ,..,... Mast:, PHR; Ptrstatl OHktr,
~ tf Rle Graa••· PJ). lt1 969, IIi~011 45674
.
. , .. .
I
1lle iwYirslty tf !!It GrGvM Is a 1.-1 OJrpMiintty
A!fll•tln ActJo. Empilytr

.

NEW USnNGI MOBILE HOME PLUS!
Lois ol extras. 14'x70' 3 bedroom mobile
homo. 2 o1Dry 14' x 22' unfinished owenlng.
Two exira outbuildings. Over 1 acre lawn.
$20'1.
11101
NEW LISTING! 2 PLUS ACRES
SITUATED AT EDGE OF GALUPOUSI City
utilities, 2 bedrooms home willl kitchen .
dining, balh, living room, FA gas heall 1600

.

.

.

NEW USnNGI RANCH I A
BIT OF
LANDI Home consists of 3 bedrooms, living
room , 1 112 balhs, baseman~ front porch,
2.494 acre lol. Won1 believe lhis

CHEAP! CHEAP! CHEAP! $15,000! 2
Bedroom home, nice level lol. Kitchen,
living room, back &amp; lronl porch!
1588

NEW USnNGI Sol!ulilul Bi·Lavai-Harw'o a
very comforlliblo homa you wm'l have to do a
thing to. Immaculate homo lnlida ·l nd out
laaturee 3 b&lt;M:Iroomo, 3 lull bathe, large lving
roOm, oat-In kitchen with cherry cabinota, largo
family room with attractive brick firwplace.
Located only minuteelrom town in city oohoola.
2 car ga,rage. 2 acm plue. $125,000 Call Dave
for morw info.
1224

,;

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

,IIIMI •

•PICK@IS RJAHITURE

.

...wNMd

.Nao .• ,..... lumlohlng. 112 mi.
.• rloho~· Rd. Pt. ,........, wv,
:11111 ~_.!!:'!. rohlgonoiOl l .
: L':.:u,'i~ Gold, ,f100.-

-

·iJOie ond .aliitr with nctiMr In

..........
....
:= .iibo. · I·· '
OlllltioNo.' IMIUiral

:~

eoioN, 1. . ,_, 1110; I
Ulod),

~· ~

IWAIN
-.NICTIDN
RJRMiTURE. 12
·Oift ""
•~:W
'luinlluro, - . . WMiom •
:,-~LIU 1fi :n...
Orvw, llolrlgoroiOl,
..Y. FnOur, All Can'
oGNionor, ... 114-251-

-·

brick ranch convanlanUy locat.d. In town.
Foaturwo include 3 bedroom•, 1 112 bath1, oat·
in kitchen a full buement with family room .
Gas I.a. hoat and oentr,J air. I car gora(ja lnd
slorago b~ildlng. Situat.d on a IIOXIOO lot.
Priced at $77,500, Cal today to -1
fZ05

:--'r.
~"'f231. ~

Building Latin Spring Volt.y. 100X200 lite
on Maple !llrHI. Near and of lltrwt. Gat,
~ G...1 n-,...
'"""'bom·.......
• ~ :-.
on 500
• actric ' wawr.
Call
oa
..
tor
morw
inlonnation.
·
1220
'
.
Comlnarclot Praparty- Localld comer of Rt 7

&amp; Rt 5541n. Chethl~. Thio p~lly hula: of

Pat tor morw dotah.

.

POMEROY· Commercial Proportr.·Fonnerty II• Excelaior
Salt Wotb. A vary IIIIJIOI buiding with over 20,00 oqJIINIMI
of walk opace. Lots of parldng ~ with this property.
Included Is a 2 b&lt;M:IIDCXII homo and 8ppiOX1 3 acrwo of land.

NEW LISnNGI 1016 SECOND AVENUE - Low
$30's 2 story home, 3 bedrooms. living room,

IVRACUSE· CloH In, But Soctuclad- M oiilar :Z olory home
with a - r hoal pump, newer 1001, lnd a&gt;rnplaloly rwdono
lnolde. Home has 3 bedrooma, tun room, dining room.
wraparound porch, patio, and a now dock. Two of tha
·badtaome arw hugo.
.
. ASKING S45,000

side porch. 011 street park•ng.
11586
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! 40'x40' 3 car
detached melal garage wilh concrete floorong.
One story 3 bedroom home wilh washer/dryer,
some furnrture , appliances included. Tractor w1th
blade, plow, bush hoi included. Call loday. 1536

mom, liylng room with a beaullul
view. Hao o 3-4 car go~~go , Tobacco .!lOrn• lnd a 4,200 lb.
Tobacoo baoo. La1110 yard lnd 31 112 ..,...
171,5011.011

7.5 acrH on

lha Rlvorl With a omall . ~!'da:' l

~i::r;n L':t!:~11omR~" 7,~oID~:
an ."t;;;ii-1
David lo •·
I
1
'mo,rw 1norma
n.

· 12111 ,

,.,

'

..

"446~3644 .
'
o'AVID WISEMAN, BROKER - 446-9555
'

;'

'

·~·

Straal· C1oaa '1o IChoOI
and lit a nice
1·· =~=~Union
· letlio3bedtaomhoma·
l !ill--c:wplll

'

I

L.-r•tta McDade· 44'6·7729
Patrick Cochran· 446·1655
'·

;

•

PERFECT BUILDING LOT~ Approx . 1.207
acres. County water and electric available.
Situated ala paved road . Asking $11 ,000.
t5lle

Meigs County

I

0

0

.
J

I

C

:

t'-'

A HOME OF TtiE PASn Beautiful older 2 story
home 4 large bedrooms, den, dining room, IIV·
ing r~m . 2 balhs. laundry and mo~el Beautiful
oak woodwOrk throughoUII Nice . - of rr;er.
Stocked pond. Must see il!
11562
REDUCED! NOW $57,500.00 - 4 Bedroom
homa situated at Eagle Ridge. Extra nice I '/•
slory home. oversized 2 car gatage. Extra
mobile home hOOkup. Owner wants 'an o~

,,

'!

-

NEW USnNGI VINYL SIDED, 4 BEOROOII
HOME. Large living room, dining room &amp; k~chen.
1'/o balhs. Nice level lot Partial basemen!, beck
porch &amp; more. Priced $30's.

kitchen, dining room . Ni~ shaded front porch &amp;

...ooo

.WE N'EED.LISTINGSI!I
· .·..
WISEMA'N REA)) .ESTA.ffi, iN€
,'
.

to own this newer brick home. Nice river view.
Large great room including living room, dining
room &amp; krtchen. Family room, 2 baths. High efli.
ciency electric heat pump &amp; more. 8 years left on
tax abatement Callloday for an appointment

OVER 39 ACRES (OWNER WILL DIVIDE INTO
LOTS) wilhin minutes from town. Level trailer
pad eKists with wafer and electricity &amp; sewage on
site, lois of nice building silos. Call loday for
complete lislingl.
11575

-.ooo

GO INTO BUBINESB- With a lillie know how lnd a lot of
lniativo you can bocorl• an Entrepronour.(Butinau Owner).
Own a Soplic Tank Sotvice thlll haa bean In bulila" !or 28
years. Coma• with o 11178 Fonl F500 will 35,200 aclllil
mileo that hu new nodiala, new paint job, 2 yrw old pump,
now hoooo and 3 j&gt;orlll johno. SorvH oovorwl counliao.

TWO HUNDRED SIXTEEN ACRES 11/L
Vacan1 land. Mobile home pad on property.
Spring. Sev«al wooded ac:rea, crop and
pasture land. Owner wiiNng ~ Mil on land
conract!
IST7
BACK ON THE IIARKETI Now is your chance

COMMERCIAL BUILDING &amp; OVER 8
ACRES. Lots of great .polentiall Presendy
used as sn auction buSiness. Metal buolding
is approx. 70'x225' totaling apprnx. 15,750
sq n For more detaHo caU an agent today!
..
1591

clack, 4 badroomo, fllmily

11504

~~tilul

11303

110,000

laundly room. One bedroom apartment
indudad.
11557
NEW USnNGI$13,500.00. MOBILE HOME
&amp; LOT· Cenlenary area (SR 141) 3
badroomo, living room, kitchen, bath. Lol
approl .. 75 """'· City schools!
415111

Near AU.....a Caunly· sand R~ Road·A l 112 Story
Cape Cod with 3 Dormot*, Vinyl lklng, Wgparound pards,

NEW USTING- 38 acrwe, more or leu.
rolling lind oil AI. 110. Perfect tor
building one hciuoo or o wholt tubdlvlllo".
Mull-to apprwclllla. ~.ooo
.fttl

1
::::
·:!.~~·,::!1fw."'?:an 'r.
purchaoed with or wilhout mobil• home. Call

.

...

.

·
·.
GO FISHII Anytime/au want! 14.77 acrws,
m'l,
bad witlt ·~
olli ' pon . 'Thorwlo 11110 a 1892, 3
room m lo hom~ to llva In willie building
your drwam home. Call tpday. Prtced at

$32,500.

.

Rl 321- Spo!lrnan'e Paradioo· Aoh, dear ond turMy hunt on
approx. 95 acrwo. Gorgoouo Undolground home with 3
badroome, larga living mom, 2 bathe, lnd a latge 2 car
dotachad garage with loft. Hugo aluminum buildi, A muot

a low

nice kilchen complete wilh applili1C8a,
room, fllmlly room, 3 bedrooma, 2 bathe,

~

Catolyn Wa•cll•441•1007. '.
Son•y Gar~~~~6,.~7o7. .,

e5KI80 I~

raom and a 24x32 garage. 'Silting on appmx .
ASKINO'S32_.000

DOTlJE'fUANEA, lltokar.~--·--- --:....eealeta
I,...,AJEFFEAI..- -.... - ....·-----··--- IMI
UNDVIUTCHEA ...
aAIW IPRADLING-----·---~(3041111
OFFI.CE................ _."......... __._. ___,__........

-----------..a7t
a•

1-800-585-71 01
(614) 446-7101

HOME I 80 ACRES· Salem living room ,
dining room, kilchen . Bam &amp; miac. oilier
buidings. $40's,
1580
REDUCED! IMMEDIATE POSSCSSION!
48630 Eagle Ridge Road- 1 112 atory
brick/vinyl tided home with 4 bedrooma
bath, family room, dining room with buih·i~
hutch, kitchen, living room, newer heal
pjump. BulklinQ wilh fruit c:ellar. Approx. 2
acre lawn, aldlbonal mobile home hack-Up.
1572

lola of care!
Three bedroom ranch
full basement 50%
finishes. Oelached 24'x24' garage and
basement garage also. A must see! Asking
$65,000.00
" 111711
ATTENnONI DEER HUNTERS! Over 119 acres 1us1 wailing lor you. Lots of wooded &amp; pas.
ture land. Septic &amp; well on property.
IUt

.

Ru1aell D. Wood, Broktr .. 448 451a..
Phyllla Mlller....................... 256-113e

J. Mtn111 Carttr .................. 37So2114
Timmie Dewltt ................... 441-1S14
Judy Dewitt ......................... 441..-a
M1rtha Sllllth......................'371-2a:t~
•. c.rti1YJWF'Iy......................... 4411211
Cindy Drongowaki ............. 24S 1&amp;1/
chtfyt ~1ay ....................1a-31n

�OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Times-Sentinel
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
Buojl Stovo Modlum Uood, 2
Soooona, $550, 614-24S-5500.
Callor ID box, blond now,
~
$39.95, 61C·n2-1uu.
Co mo.pa Int, pone hoo, N0 Hunt·
ing aign1. Palnt Plua, Pt.
PiNHnl. 30~~.

..

Cloth Car Cov1r For Corvette Or

Similar Slzod Cor, Good Cond~
tlon; $!00, 114-441-112011.
CONCRETE

SPETIC

TANKS,

54 Miscellaneous
'
Merchandise

56

doyo.
OuHn IIZI water t..d, complltl
with bookohod headboard, dork
plno Rnloh, $100, 81Wtl5-4315.
Roolllo11c car otoroo _ . , o~
:S~~ttt, lib new, *45, IW.
Suitable

e a. cordo, $65, 514-256·1521.

Pets for S81e

Groom ond

Ouooor modo1 co1of TV,
noodo repolrod; 1-11-21111

Showcau
..

For

Sl!&amp;r.:,

7,;~;=.::..=~:;.::~:::::--::

Pu-.

d ~.,V 2 blUe

AKC R:L,iLo"-•-· Rllrlo- block,
- t14-•2·
II"PI_, yo
and

load, $35 delivered, 614-992·
6112.

Bom:

1111fllll3

Now

Heavy Duty $150;

25 .. Mountain

Woodbumar For Sale: Excellent
Condition, Call 614-446-3488, Or

614-441-0233.

Call 614-446-2857.

Chal~ $50, Locotod 55

Building
Supplies

In Gallipolis. &amp;14·2o8-6855.

One Used Lenox Natural Gas ::6;--loc-:k, -:-br""lc""k,..:.oow..:._o_r...,..
olpo-.-,wl...,--nFurnace 100,000 BTU; One 30 dows, lintels, etc. Claude Win·
Gallon Gas Water Heater; One tars, Rio Grande, OH Call &amp;14-Fk)w Gas Furnace

~-800·287·6308.

245-5121.

'

F;mn Supplies
&amp; Ltvestock
~

61 Fann Equipment .

o.-

1818 John
lo toctory PS .
3 point, llvo - · · ~14-1112-33M
WMkdlyo,
· • 114-1112-3020

..
;;~onl;::::ngt,-;7,-'""7.'::=---:-7-:-::-:::-:---

HydraUlic oii,OO gal tf21. Slclora
~on,

WV.

Land, approx. I mi. from city limits wlboat-up houM &amp;
bam._ City wator avllllablo, pond, ·Iota of build,. oltai, com·
morcial uHo, lnvollnllJnl You dacldo 1\t!at you Mill fD
usa it lor. Close to clly &amp; city Wilier available.
1707

Floh Tonk, 2413 Jackoon Avo. 304-'75-"'21 or 1-.m-3tt7.
Point Ploooont, 304-675-20e3.
10gol. tonk oot-upo, IIUU. POLE BUILDING SPECIAL.
Young
Parakooto,
$14.9U. . 30'x40'8'. Pllntod SIMI Sldo•
Homotoro, · $2.11G 6 $U9. Gotvolumo Stolt Roof, 15'Jtl1
Evorydly low prlcM.
Sl•l llldo• 3' lion o-.
SUtfl. ERECTED. Iron H Bultcln t.aoo-312-1045.
For oolo or trade- AKC Rogfo.
fonod Slborlon Huoky pupo,
Grodor, To~ St~ppo;,
mala and flma .., 614-VI2.aG73. ·
I Grodoo, .OV!M' 200
An HoiW, 114-3flt.92t2
Roglolorod 2 YNr Old lltolo
Dlolrlbutor For Supor
Am•la.n Ealclmo Spill, Good un~aor.
Watch Dog, $50_. Toppor For S.
10 Truck $50, 8~

BUSINE!IS OFFicEI I 8ALEIROOM FOR.IZASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE, CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

.

LEADINGHAM REAl ESTATE
Pi.

or 446"'539
Real

General

\

.

.

E~S. ~D

dOC?tor~himhehadhydropsy,

Which IS too much water in the
boclv. "You've never drank wa-

ter ln your life," the pal an1-""T
. C;-:;Hr-O;...,;.;R:...;E;.·..:I~-1 sw'ered. "I know,• the drunk
a.
9
agreed, "it must have been
~~:;:~;;:;::;=~ caused by -- -- - -- - • -."

_L I V A N 'f

t--f;...;;:-:-~;;...-=-or--l
10

0

Camplete the chuckle quoted
by fllllflll In the mlalnll warda

you develop from IMP No. 3 below.

..•

Real Eetete General
72 Trucks f6r Sale .

73' Vsna &amp; 4 wo•s ·

Dow Hunlor'o 1-'ol: Fun,

·----·--1111 I"'""" N JILT

t*t.

auta.. tt»Doml., $1'100 •
tll8-ft30oft•lprn.

D. C. Metal Sales, Inc.

Cannelburg, Inc. 457!9
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed lo meet yo ur
needs . Any size.
CHOIC E OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Po siBuildings and
Package Deals. Save
Hundteds, even Thou sands
of Dollars.
~oc a l Sales Represenlalive
• DON NA CRISENBERY
'
11366 S. St. At. 7
•
Gallipolis, OH.

So11oConta111"!!1• : ~ 112 FOOII
- ompo
- r , l --In, Trucll
C

ft23. MRS.

81

The drunk told a pal that his

lnV19Sttme:nt Property: Pomeroy uu1J1e.~~1
lci!Jse to town and schools, let th
pay for itself.
Thank you for all the help you've given us Meigs·
jiUOun:ty. Please con_sider us when selling yot~r. ~oroiier
Dale E. Taylor (Broker)

T

•

137 Blttenlf Ave•••
Potllfoy, OWo 4$769
(614) 992-5333
IPn,,..,.,.;.,v. 6 rooms: 3 bedrooms,
pump, private loc.aticm
icon1sidj~r owner' financing.
Wddi8Dolrt: Nice and cozy-2 BR ho~nif.'l
GFr·AWAY
finW~clng w/down pay·
yard. Great cstarter home
mont, opprox, 7 mi. from GllllipoHa. ldNJ.Iocation.
nt family has outgrown. Only lll,=illll.l
Excollont cond., ov•tlook• Blue Lako &amp; Raccoon C11Nk .
ft. travel trailer, iundtc:k, Nrlll walar, ooptio .oyotom &amp;
olec:. Filhing, boating,hunting or jual nolaxing.
15U
l~t»m9roy:. 3 bedrooms, 5 rooms.
arge sundecks with a view of the ""··-·
SAFFORD SCHoOL RD, - IG ACRES PLUS VacMt

Apptoo. full Off AI. 143, one milo
- ' h ol Cor!M!nt.r. Rod and
Goklon Doilctauio opptn: Open
Soturdoyo only,

ECI"I-,

Clmpefa&amp;

Motor Homes

100421-3341.

'

79

37114NI.

$225. 614-388o8008 Aftor 3P.M.
AKC Roalot- Chow PuOIIIoo,
Washar a Dryer Kanmara 114·25&amp;-14e1 Aftor 5:30,P.II •.

Woodon High Chair Antiquo
Over 50 yn,. Old $30, 614-446K\tc hen Tabla Four Chairs $30, _121_2._ _ _ _ _ __

Used,

f

cn.ort•, EKcellant Condition, Avolloblo. 814-379-2728.

614-446-0560.

ao,ooo Down

.U

FOR SAi.E: SPINET .coNSOLE
PIANO Wontod, Root&gt;onoJbte
Portr To mou Low Monthly
Poymonto. $II locotty. Col ,.

Tolling

379--2967.

Ll•lng Room

Musical
lnetrumenti

Clorlnoi11447W72t.

.cot.....r

Blko Hull}', 10 Spood, $40, 614Auotrollon Shophori! Club 01
245-52211.
F1rewood For Sale: Pick-Up
America R,totorod Puppln, t
Load Or Dump Truck Load, We WATER LINE SPECIAL: 314 Inch Woeko Old. 5 llol•!r2 Fomaln,
Dallver, 614-446-0959.
:ZOO PSI $19.95; 1 Inch :ZOO PSI t150 Eoeh :iOU75-2260.
$32,50; Ron E.,.n• Enta~rla..,
Firewood: All Hardwood• Split Joekoon,
Baby Chow Chow Puppln, For
Ohio, l.aot).531'9528.
Oallv ared S40 Pic k-Up Load.
Sole, 150; 114-44HT/2.
614·2SS.P18 Or 614·367·7025 WATER
STORAGE
TANKS
Evenings.
AboVII And B!llow Ground FDA BooU!Itut, full btooclod : Chow
App""'od For . Potoblo Wot•.
For Sale: 250 Gallon Fuel 011 "on Evan• EnterpriHI, Jack· Chow pupploo, porento on
prwmlan, 1100, DopooH will
Tank $25 , ~hone : 614-388-9147.
~n. Ohio, 1-800-137-9528.
hotel, tM-IIU·75111.
G.E. M lcrowa~• Built In Type,
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
With Exhaust And Ught, .c New Commtrclal, Home Untt1, • - • Rabbh dogo, ol ogoo,
Works PerfPCtly, $100, 614-245From $19111.00. Umt Lotlone, good hunto.w. -~MI.
9681.
Accaseorln. Month P-rmenta Drogonwynd
CaHo!Y: ·. CFA
Gas Heater 30,000 BTU Works Low Ao t18.00, Coli Oday FREE Slam... Klttane. &amp;14-446-3844
Good For Oulck Sale $50; 614- NEW Color Catalog. 1-0011-4112· AHor 7:00 p.m.
·
9197.
Gas Mo1 Water T8nk; Gas
Siegler Wall Furnace; Bathtub,
Sink: Storm Windows ; 36"
Range Hood ; Othar Items, Call

.57

3034.

Woodburowr Oopoeho, R - In Tlmo For
With Stovo Plpo, &amp; All· Chrtotinaol Slua Sorvlco Aloo

Firewood tor sale by the truck-

·-hi

..Oioo, ~":::t

t.m.IM, $250, 1'14o9a-5347.

, •
11111-.• r.y C&amp;AY I. POUAN - - - - - - : • Redrrana- the 6 xrambled
wOrds, below to make 6
~;..le WordL . Plllnt letter's of
~
IICICh In 1!1 .line of .ICIUOrH.
•I'

c-o, Colvoo.

~

~©Rdl~-l&amp;£!rS~

Tbof lntr~gui{tg Wore/ GQme with a Chuckle

· - eoa1o:
Aoeolllfna'
dHtonod
Coltlo p~!';;;
'I8o!viCe
n Door 01 - A'iWtoblo.
:rlna
llllRIETTA UVDTOCK IIALE
COIIIPANYWoohlow. Phone t14L. !tort, Jt. Mgr.
2 Block Anauo lui Colvoo, too
Pdo, Con h Rogllloiwd, t14-

-

Couch, Chair, Llkl New, Table,
Chairs, TWin Bed Small Couc h,
Stand, 614·
Chair, Portable

446 -3224.

Bull_..,_ColvM

=::;=-:::::.=::___,,..-..,---:
·...,AKC Chow pu~ liom Oot.
3rcl,

.~

Livestock

~With~8olo: Y­

Hngo I Stock

AKC llooton Torrlor
7
Old,
t14-w.am
Aftert P.M.

sao.

QH-.Polnt Pleuant, wv

1111
' FALL SPiCIAL SALE
Tuoodoy .• Nov 2- 1:00 P.ll.

1.::::;:1. ~ ~~~~~~~~!:..!~~~

w-.

83

LivestOCk

63

Bhop.Pol

Solnet Plona Whh Bondi,
Blonde Flnlah; Aa.G, Fumltwe AKC Roatot•od Amorlcon Plllf
Roflnlohln• Equlpmont tM-448CGckor Sponlolo Toll
3898.
•
•
Dockad, Dow Ctawo, R-vod,
Morning

Pets for Sale

56

1,000 Gallon. S!25: New JET B.t
{No Sand
Fltt1r Required)
$1,495; Ron Evan• EnterpriHI,
Jackson, Ohio 1-800-537-9528.

Tv.

1193

lb....

llumll Truok Ono TOft 111M Fon1
, _ - 4UOO lllloo, I Ton
EJoctdQ l,lft,
Condition, ~'· ..,4001 Con · h
Soon AI: :..rt:- llvonuo, Or

CLEAN UYES .HERE - 3 BR homo wltn

small acreage. ClOse ln. LR, ee1·in kitchen, lg. FR. bath, 1

74

75 Boets a. Motors
tor Sail

V...
_. 1fllll 8looll Craft Jot loot 4U
-IIMiorocl.... 080, tf4.
24W31t.

Mototcyc!H

Alum.=':.:~
.,400.
' Ill,-·

1882 Hondo CIIOOI' llupor• 76

8p01t, ......... oonclllon, a.tom point, ohorp, f1200. ,,.._

Auto Parts &amp;

AcciiSOrles

Call14 441 45U

c. garage on 5 acres m/1. Thts home Is just right for a

3 BEDRooMs, 1% BATHS, FAMILY ROOM IN BASEMENT COUNTRY HOIIE. ..BEAU1Fut. IETTlNG.. LOTS OF
HAS FIREPLACE, DOOR FROM FAMILY OPENS ONTO LMNG SPACE. THIS HOME HAS A KITCHEN ON THE

LARGE WOODED LAWN. CARPORT. IN THE COUNTRY BUT MAIN FLOOR PLUS SECOND KITCHEN NEAR FAMILY
NOT TOO FAR .OUTI $47.900.
'
ROOM IN BASEMENT.. BEDROOMS. HAVE WALK IN
CLOSETS... 12'X24' DECK. . CARPORT. LAWN IS
THIS HOME HAS SlONE EXTERIOR AND STONE COVERED (WITH TREES INCLUDING APPLE
FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM • 3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS CHERRY, PEACH AND CHESTNUt .. GARDEN SPACE'
CARPORT, PLUS DETACHED APARTMENT WITii GARAGE GALUPOUS CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM. NEW USTINGI .
RENT FROM APt WILL HELP MAKE YOUR HOUSE
•
PAYMENTI .64 ACRE LEVEL LOT. APPROX. 3 MILES FROM FOURTY EIGHT ACRES. MIL RIO GRANDE AREA ..
GALUPOUS. (AGENT OWNED)
MOSTLY WOODED HILL SIDE .. CALL FOR MORE
DETAILS!

young family .or a retired couple also. Make an appt. to
see. Cell EUnk:e Nlehm today 446·1897.

Real Eatatl General

Real Eatate General

PH ..614·256·1633
Real Estate General

i.

~~

-

HENRY E. CLELAND...- 992-6191
'
TRACY BRINAGER.....-949-2§39
SHERRI HART ..............742·2357
HENRY E. CLELAND 111 .. 992·6191
KATHY CLELAND ...--.992-6191
OFFICL....- ....._.,_.992·2259

:newer 1 I 12 Story Frame . Home
Approx. 2 Yrs. Old 3-4 bedrooms ,' 3
baths, Appliances, Elec. HPIC.A.
1ncludes an additional home on the
property with shed, pond. lree gas,
]rUit trees. ASKING $165,000. •Gotta
)See Th is One'"
•

.-..-.. gil.
-

COULD THIS BE WHAT YOU'VE
BEEN WAINnNG FOR?! Acreage,
Great Location, BeautWui" Home and ·
morel This llstng offers newer 13
Bedroom Home whh 2 Baths, Patio;
Deck, Appliances, Newer Elec.
HP/C.A. lPC water. Therma Payne
windows, Full Basement wlllnlshed
Family room Woodburner Hook·u~
Utility Room. Also lnclused 2 Cargarage, Wood Shed, 22.04 Acres, Ori
pave&lt;l· Rd. Quite Setting Close to town,
ASKING $79,900.

~

~;;

gftlllild pool; .3 b'tdtoomi, .2 ba.... '
two OUliJulldlnal, city ichool, loc:lllld

c.I!D-·

·•I 12 ac..a· mo.. or leN. Wa'-r .&amp; ,
Located on .'Bu'*ric:lgo
Road. PitCe
.

.

.

,.
.

Huntlngbn Twp. Homo on property oh11 5

BR1, bath, LR. kitdlort, now fu~. IIOOd
burning - · aiding, now cal!*e.m on properly. CALL FOR DFrAlLS.

..'r.

'RACINE· Just off Bash an ' Rd. :. 1989
:Modular with 3 bedrooms,- 2 112 baths,
ily room wmreplace, rooin addhion
I on, porperty also Includes extra
'I~·"•' mobile home. 2+
2 TPC
;,.,,,,.,hook-ups, largeASKtNGjai

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION· 2 story
home on SR. 7 offers 2·3 bedrooms
bath, utility room, CIA carport,, large
front porch, around 3 ecres Ownara
anxious to sell before cold weat~er,
ASKING $35,000. May Aa:opt otter! ,''

IICU,LUD..

1171. HAVE A IIEAUTII'UL COIJNTAI' UTATI!
- Build 'fOAl' ctroam home overlooklnQ a largo

HUtm~G SEASON IS UPON
Wouldn't you like a "Hynting retreat at
your own?! Here's a 3 room cabin whh
Elac1ric $ water on Ita 16x20 addition
wlwoodburner, insulated, steel dQ9rs,
. shutters, remotely tucked a:ti&amp;l( o_~ 27+
11cres.
ASKING $29,901);

'

.'

;._

locar.ct on Bob

church camp, camping grOunds or subdivide.
LOng ROOd frontage.

biatha, 2.25 -

land.

...
'

'

I

A LOT OF LAND rFOR A LITTI!f'

MONEY· Located In Bedfcjrd low!tllliP.'
.115+ acres al vacant ground, No
bUilding' 01 mlnnil•r•lilclucled with
tllla prQPa[!Y. Ho'W&amp;V8f IU II 1 .
·auliltilntlal jllece of g!Utmd sulU. tor
building orflumlng. ASI&lt;IfGI $21,100

COI•ERCIAL BUILDING •. Main St.
Pomeroy, Reli81ed at Reduced PrlceQwner wam• to 881!1 2 stotY llljlwtlng,
many ~alble UMS, Malh St. Ai:xle11,
.' Rivar View. NOW ASKING I $12,008.

.

- . VACANT LAND- Sp~ oglleld Twp. 511 acr·
ao m~ acroa trorn H6iZor Hoapltal.• Groat toealion ror )alga tJOmn on'-~ hiR"
~ .' •.. '
~r

.

t

I

•

.
.
liiEAimFUL HOII! · wnw IPLEJII)I)
~OF TJ1E OIIO,RlVEIL Home o1eta
3 . ~~ LR; FR. DR. 2 1/2 balll. ,..

• 1HI! FIIIT I'Aim.Y It 1118 NEW
ltDIIE· 3 SRI, 2 "--htt, LR, ~ gu
-~ cant air. Cool lor men doWL

RACCOON CREEK FRONTAGE ON THIS
liCE PECE OF PROPERTY AND HOME
3 BRa, LR, ltilcltan, &amp;6111, Iorge unallachoci
garaga w/concnotelloor. ' -5acrao m/1.

_ ~-·lin IIIII, oenl llr, 2 ......... 31J11111M
Ml.lcblc op.llefl, garden epot !If tfvor

\

'

men or

2 car gantga and contn11

111211. v,t.CANT LAND- CioN ln. 5 acres IDling

R0rl4N,D- Def&gt;!J! Sl.· Com!otlable '1
story. hoflle with newer siding and
fel?airs throughout, 2 bedroains, bath,
uttlit)\ room, handmade csbintts, ·att;
WorkshOp, Oat. 2 story block garag(! ·
al~;e~a 10xSO Mobile Ho""·R1r1tal
on kit.
' '
ASKING $.'15,000'
•
MIDDLEPciRT· Older 2 sto,Y home
wtth 2 badrooms, Neads repairs,
Qwnar ready tD sell. ASKING $8,000,
MAY ACCEPT OFFiER.
·
\

..•

-lake. n· ocrel mil of rolling ianlj, clooi&gt; aild
mowed, wlill a bit or WOOdtond, 8 oc: of tokes
.m/1. Thlo propooty has many ~· 11o
pment !ll8 I~ a paid !iShlnQ lake. ·Groat 10r a

'
YOU!

•

.

''

OWNER WILL 8PUT ACREAGE. 31.50
· ACRES m1 near Ty&lt;X&gt;On Lob. 28.5 A. in
Racooon Twp and opp!DX. lOA. in

Clillor IPPOinnonL

. ·:)

·

~

~LAKEYI!W SUIIDMSION '• "'CHOICE

I TO ~ILD - 2 tv 5 """"' inono &lt;fi·losa.
Dl1v8 to White Rei. to Chototalt Ulc&amp;· Dr. to
Lok- CL Offirintt 2 1141 to rolling loj!, a var.
illY of,.,... and booutlful vieW of the lake, Ali

'P

amenities'
otoc:triCity,

Rosl!fcfiVII

-oblo. Rural
aerator

water. underground

ayotama

acoeptallte.

CHERII'I DRIVE· 2 Bra. I baih. LR,
knchen. gu IIMI, City water, used u rental
property. $29,000 (888)

convenants apply. Clooo to Hotz8f
and ShOpping.

R0U:rE 1llil - 3 ac. lOt rn/1,
$15,000.00. C - HUio.

lfl72. STATE

. Mra: PA~ ·nf.OP¥ENT LAND - .Lind

. layl ..... Otdor 2 otory ltllme·.wrih 4 ~.,,
11111 IIUikllrigo. HOmo In ,_ of rej&gt;llr, 117 oc. · .

m/1.

Col""-..

JOHNION RIDGE · ROAD - ADDIION
TWI'· - 3811 fiCf8 farm, 3 poncll, tobKco
tiMe, 44lC'f QO
with COt ICtllt floora. Mar
c:otllldor aplt. (578) .

'*"

'

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-

MITE OAK AD: loc8tlort. 30 ·rn/1 •
lind tinbM, mlnorol ~. ~
llllid ~· Bomo- lorid. . .oeio. '· '

·'

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OWN . YOUR OWN ._NEll- F!tlta
Grandi on St Rt,
Well Hllbhhect,
luldtomotlllto goenlfl

n.

•

... lulldfi,g ~· Addlton ..... Coli.

-

-

·Lot · - Tho City_Lknlll. ptlood to ... Cloll

.. 24$-11070. $2,000.00
. . lluttdtng Lot
on
. Clooo -to lown. Old ~ln.-otfWIIIt.ftO,OOII
'
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.
, . , ~ luHdlng build that drMtl1 homo
...., on lhla 7 aorn 'thot 1o
thO city llmltl, coli

.

Wllmut 2~1 8070.

""'*'

.

'

.

.

.~

OFFICES, OFFICES. OFFICES... Thah
what th11 3,000 II. bulking oloro. Located
on SR UIO near Holzer. ldaal for many
uoot. c.J lor t'fiONinlofmation.

4M ACAI!I, t.!IJ., Hunltigtlln lWp,. comer
ol SR 321 anti ~ Roa4 ·Cttll tot mOIW
......

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NEW LISTINGS
,

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·A. CALL

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'

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,

I ACRES, lA, DAVIS AOAoo Ohio...._
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�.•

Page-Ds:-5unday 11mes Sentinel

.·-.. ·-.' ...

- - T' .....

•

r·

•

October31,1~

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

By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Candy is
dandy and so are beer 11nd hard
liquor in the new Russia, judging
from their places on the list of U.S.
consuma foods exponed there.
The faslest rising such exports
are chocolale candy, with sales of
$25 million expecled in 1993; beer,
$15 million, and vodka. $9 million.
said a report in this month's edition
of Trade Highlights published by
the Agriculture Department
For comparison purposes, the
United States exporled $3 million
in chocolate candy to Russia in
1992; $4 million in beer and $5
million in vodka, said the report by
the Foreign Agricultural Service.
Next on the li st of U.S . consumer food exports were inst,ant
coffee, $7 million, up from less
than $1 million; and sofl drinks, $5
million. up from less than $1 million.
"These imports are viewed by
many Russian consumers as highquality luxury products," the
teport said. "They are sold mainly

through kiosks, Western hotel
chains and lhe growin~ numba of
modem comer grocas. '
While most of the nearly $1 bil·
lion in U.S. agricultural goods
exponed to Russia are governmentassisted shipments of wheat, com,
soybean meal, and butter, "U.S.
exponas are becoming increasingly successful in the small but growing Russian consumer food market," the report said.
And while some recent studies
suggest bulk commodity shipments
may decline as Russian agriculture
strengthens, demand for consumerready food imports should continue
rising.
' 'The number of consumers that
can regularly afford imported foods
is growing and is now estimaled at
I million," the report said.
At present. the European Community "is firmly established" as
the top s~ppUer of consumer foods
to R~ss1a, wnh. sales last year ,
r~~chmg $650 m1lhon, the report
said.
.
. U.S. consumer food shipments

to Russia lhis year are expei:;ted 10
total well over $100 million, which
would place the former Soviet
republic among the lOp 10 markets
for such products.
Despile some advantages for EC
products because of proximity and
other fac10rs, opportunities for U.S.
exponas are expected 10 continue
growing.
"U.S. exporters have discovered
that U.S. prrnl,ucts carry a highquality image in Russia and are
often priced competitively against
other imports, •• the report said.
Many U.S. exporlers consider it
important to build brand loyally
now among Russian consumers.
Some U.S. brands already popular in Russia are Snickers candy
bars, Miller and Budweiser beer,
Baskin-Robbins and Ben &amp; Jerry's
ice cream and Keebler Elfin cook·
ies.
"While lhe majority of Russia's
consumer food imports are retailed
in Moscow and St. Petersbufj:.
other opportunities in Russia
indude the Far East, where

a growing ability 10 pay" for lhem,
boosted by rising returns from the

exporters are discovering pent-up
demand for high-quality foods and
c

0

Flood aftermath: Valmeyer doesn't live here anymore

GREGSMITH SAYS:

·

By SHARON COHEN
extinction. .
.
.
Still, some say solidarity means · Some lost businesses. Some lost
Associated Press Writer
Valmeyer. •s movmg up m the more than boundary lines.
homes. Some lost crops.
vALMEYER, 111. ·-. Mayor world, to a h•lltop a mile away. Its
"As long as the 10wn is l!ack
Valmeyer lost it all.
Dennis Knobloch zips around in homes, shops, church~s •. scho~l together ... we can be whole
Nearly three months after the
his 'blac.k Chevy pickup. town a~~· of course, most of Its ID~Id again,'' said lifelong resident Char· levee broke, unleashing up to 16
records piled on the front seaL The Citizens, wll! stan over on. high~r lotte Gartzke, whose home was feet of water in the streets ,
truck is his City Hall office. For -400 feet higher- and drier soil. desll"Oyed. "That's what mailers."
Val.::Jcr is a ghost 10wn: Mud·
now.
.
.
. "It's the OI!IY ~ay we can m&amp;!'e
Valmeya is the only town that enc
homes sit~· ~Mary Kay Richards spends her thiS town sumve, ~ !fiBYor said. plans 10 move entirely, but more casses of rusty wushing machmes
days in a trailer. Her nights, 100. "There's no doubt It WIU never be lhan SO Midwest communities aod and torn sofas squat on lawns.
One is her WQI'kJllace, the olher her the same. But we can try to .get counties- an unpreceden!Cd num· Gnarled playground equipment lies
home. For who knows how long.
some s,em.b~ of order baclc mro ber- have asked about aid or gov- next to a school.that was. totally
Welcome 10 Valmeyer, A.D.. peoples live:'.
'emmcnt buyouts of flooded land, submerged. A s1gn outside one
after the disaster, after the Flood of
A new, •mproved Val mey~r according 10 the Federal Emergen· waler·slained house reads: "Round
'93 that ripped apart homes, roared won't come fast or cheap: It Will cy Management Agency.
2, Down But Not Out" .
across farm fields and ravaged this cost about $19 million, take three
Many of these IOwns along the
But it will lake more than grit
tiny town, forcing it to make a years and uprool many folks from Mississippi and other rivas stiU arc and gumption 10 resurrect Valmey·
choice: find h new home or risk the only place they've ever hved. reeling .from the summer floods. er, which flooded in August and

"CHECK OUT TRESE
PREMIUM QUAI•Ii'Y
PRE-OWNEDCARSf''
1987 BUICK LESABRE
Unbelievably low 28,000 miles, 94
LeSabre trade. Barely broken ln.

Maine's 70,000
beavers keep
biologist busy

SAVE

•&amp;,897

GLENN ADAMS
Associated Press Writer
SABATTUS, Maine (AP)Maine's prolific beavers are busier
than ever this fall, slopping up
streams, clogging culverts and
flooding f~elds and woodlands.
For stale biologist G. Keel Kern·
per that means about a half dozen
phone calls a day from residents
complaining about those clever
beaver dams.
It' s Kemper's job to keep the
walerways open, but with minimal
disturbance to the beavers' intricate
·structures.
Beavas are especially active in
the fall, when they build' homes and
gather food - tree bark and wood
- for the winter. Kemper, howev·
er. rules out relocating beavers in
the fall, since that would force
them 10 re-start their home-building
process and could, in effect, sentence them to a slow dealh.
To Kemper, Castor canadensis
is 100 valuable a·species 10 dislodge
and send packing just because the
beavers ,follow. their .instincts to
dam up waterways.
"1bere's no question the beaver
is the nicist important animal to all
other animals, ·because he can alter
. habil!lts.' • said Kemper. "If I move
..-lliOJ,..cill.wit ii\O.lJlM,) 'Jll. jllStffillY.::
ing my problem down lhe road."
Killing beavers is not an option.
Maine's policy· is to avoid killing
nuisance animals unless it's a last
resort.
Oveihunting in the 19th century
nearly wiped oul the beaver in
Maine. Later, trapping regulations
helped lhe slow return of lhe pantailed builder. Over the last few
decades, a sharp drop in demand
Cor beaver furs and forest-culling
practices that create good forage
have sent the stale's beaver population soaring IOward pre-Colonial
levels.
Maine now has an estimated
70,000 beavers, about the number
it can adcqualely support. Signs of
nature's most ureless builders are
evident along many of the stale's
waterways.
At Jean Praue's spread in Sabat·
tus in southern Maine, a 6-foothigh dam made of gnawed sticks
and branches tightly packed with
mud spans a 30-foot·wide stream,

1989 CHEV.IROC·Z
T. Tops, white, 54,000 miles, loaded,
showroom condition.

1991 OLDS ROYALE
Sedan, loaded, local owner, 39,000
miles. Expect the best.

$11,900

River Valley FFA first in judging
CHESHIRE - The River ValIcy FFA won bolh the rural and the
urban soil judging contest at the
Rob Massie Farm recently. The
contest, sponsored by the soil and
waler conservation district. consist·
cd of both lhc rural or agriculture
soil judging plus the urban or non•
agriculwral judging.
.

The rural ream placed first in the
county and seventh m the District
I 0 coolest at Washington County
Career Center. Team members
were Staci Davis, Chris Queen,
Jerry Lambert and Josh Watson. ·
The urban soils ream placed fii'St
in the county and fifth m the District 10 contest. Team members

were Jamie Graham, Jeff Nonhup,
Jeremy Ford and John Greene. The
urban team will compete in the
stale soil judging contest Oct. 30.
Both teams will be honored at
the dislrict soil and water conservation banquet Nov. 4 where they
will receive trophies and individual
award checks.

1991 BUICK·LESABRE
Local ' trade, white, clean as a pin,
34,000 low, low miles.
WAS $11,900

NOW

$10,900

'•

1992 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX .
2 Dr "Sport Appearance Pkg,"
Loaded, Orig. Ust $19,126. We sold It
new, 25,000 miles. Sharp.

$13,497
1994 BUICK SKYLARK
Includes

Dlr, anti·
' lock
brakes, air
bag, tilt,

cruise,
cassette,

t

'

lncludM dual air bllga, bylna
entry,.al!'cblc ..trKIInlf,·auto
~hilghl mlrrar, llghtlld Ylaor'
vanity ........,, CQIIC!ert aouncl

lplabrt, lnatrumant

tach "

gaugaa, Remlnc!lf, P"''' pwllldowl, power doOr ,loeb,
Cllliaata COntrol.

·. ~

ONLY A F'EW 't.3's REMAIN •••
CLEARANCE PRICES!!
.

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Serving

Sund,y

No

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Shoppers
Welcome.

Mon~y

Tri-County
Area·for
40 Years~

•

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Cpme and

Do.wn 'with
Approved
Credit
'

Browse.
'
3 IUN·D NEW·'93
BUICK-LESABRES·
'
.Ar I'Ac.TOBY DlVOJ,E!

By DAVID WILKISON
Associated Press Writer
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
Virgie Dorinzi has little faith in
"living wills" and other documents that sa~ her aunt should be
allowed to d•e peacefully if her
fragile heart SIO~ beating.
But a new 'Do-Not-Resusci·
tale" card, signed by a physician,
is comfoning thousands of people
in West Virginia and 16 other
states that they or their relatives do
not have 10 be revived when they
are close 10 death.
"If you call 911, lheir duty calls
for them 10 resuscitale. You can't
·stand bact and say this woman has
a living will and you can't do
lhat,'' said Dorinzi, 43.
Dorinzi's aunt is 64 and deaf.
She communicates through sign
language. She has a long history of
heart !rouble; her doctor has rec·
ommcnded apinst resuscitation.
. "I'm not sure that it's going 10
be an easy or difficull choice, but
· you ·have 10 do what the patient
wants. and She doesn'l want life on
a ·
,'' Dorinzi said.
·
fU"JI introduced in
1991 in Montana. allow people 10
decide whether they want to be
revived should they stop brealhing
or go inro cardiac amst.
People ·can make their wishes
knOWn in Uving wills, but emergeft:o
cy crews are still required 10 per·
form lifeuving leefiniques. l'l!c
cards, however, J.lC:lllllt crews 10 let
the patient.die w•thout leplliabili·

~da.

FRAMED BY LEAVES • Adrlane Comb.;ll, ot Flat, Midi.,
.11 framed by taU leavet aa be completa a mt from • yard to the ·
sidewalk
recently. (AP)
,
.
'
.

'I·.

,j

.''} '•.

'!,·

Do-not-resuscitate cards
proving popular among elderly

"'t

••

$25,995

,,l:c;~

Music Makers: A punk band
for people who don't like punk

'

'

-

Seplember. Heavy rains iwamped
streets and homes this fall, just as
cleanup had begun.
Here, in this town 35 miles
south of St. Louis, misery has company. Plenty of it Consider.
-Com and soybean farmers are
out millions of dollars, their crops
wiped out More than 56,000 acres
of Monroe County were flooded.
-Town business is conducted
from a ramshackle .green trailer.
Students arc bused to their
makeshift school - a row of !railers- nine miles away.
-Residents live with friends,
relatives or in nearby towns. Less
than 10 families in this town of900

raising the water level of an extensive marsh by more than three feeL
The edge of the marsh and a
nearby woodland are marked by
stumps efficiently gnawed by
razor-roothed beavers.
Across the marsh, a yellowish
tinge on sof1wood trees provides
evidence that the high water is tak·
ing a toll on the evagreens.
Pratte, afraid the rising marsh '
would destroy up to 40 acres of
commercial timbO", called Kemper
for help.
Kemper arrived with an assistant, a canoe, several lengths of
perforated pipe .and waders. The
two went right 10 work.
CLEARS PATII • Steve Saucier, a techni·
maine, recently. The pipes help keep the water
Balancing himself in a canoe
cian
for
Main's
Fish
and
Wildlife
department,
level
constant without creating a major distur·
with the grace of a tighlrope walkdigs
a
lrough
on
top
of
a
beaver
dam
in
order
to
bance
to lhe dam's intricate slructure. (AP)
er, the wiry biologist swung a
a
series
of
now-through
pipes
in
Sabattus,
set
sledgehammer 10 drive several sleel
stakes inro the stteam bed about 10
feet from the head of the dan!.
After attaching five, 6-inch
diameter pipes to the stakes, he
rested the 20-foot-long pipes on top
of the dam. The perforated pipes
prevent the beavers from undoing
Kemper's work by blocking the
By KIRA L. BILLIK
"I've never been a nihilistic cncing musicians in the Los Angeintake end.
punk
Press
Writer
who thinks, 'Desll"Oy every- les punk-alternative scene for the
Associated
Kemper and his assistant. Sieve
PHll..ADELPHIA
The
semithing,
somethinjl good will come last 13 years, started Epitaph for
Saucier, then went to work with
ou1
of
il,'"
he S81d, even though his themselves, but have recently
nal
punk
band
Bad
Religion
just
pickaxes and their bare hands, digmay be the punk band for people writing stresses "the concept of signed a five-album deal with
.gj,~&amp;-~~!!jh~~qto ~he top of the
Atlantic .Reco•. which .has reisdam. As they placed the pipes who don't like punk-bands;Jiut .extinction.''
then
again,
punk
1sn
't
an
exact
def·
"There's
a
whole
body
of
lilerasued
"Recipe For Hale." (Epitaph
through the openings, water gushed
inition
of
the
group's
music,
says
ture
on
anarchy
and
I'm
not
up
on
still
houses
olher punk-allemative
inro the sueam below the dam. The
singer-lyricist
Greg
Graffm.
it.
You
have
to
be
an
anarchy
bands
such
as
Rancid, Pennywise,
level at the high-water side
He
calls
the
term ''nebulous.''
10
be
able
to
quote
that
Claw
Hammer,
and Down By
scholar
dropped a half· inch witliin an hour.
stuff
intelligently,
and
as
you
probGranted,
each
song
on
the
Law.)
The dam remained intact.
band's latest album, "Recipe For ably could guess, I spend my time
Graffin conceded that his acaIn the last year alone, Kemper · Hale" gallops along at an almost reading a lot of other stuff," he demic
research has slipped while
said, lhe state put pipes lhrough 48 - thrash lem!"l and there's plenty of said with a laugh.
he's been introducing Bad Religion
beaver dams and gave equipment
That
"other
stuff"
is
biology
loud,
grinding
guitars,
a
style
much
to
the major-l~bel masses, and said
to dozens of other landowners to do
textbooks and lab reports.
like
their
contemporaries,
Social
that
evenruall{ lhe band is going to
the job themselves. The federal Distortion.
Graffin
is
working
toward
a
have
to decide which of its memgovernment pays for the pipes
in
zoology
at
Cornell
doctorate
But
Graffin
has
a
superb
sense
bers'
careers
lakes priority.
because it endorses Maine's straleUniversity.
where
he
also
works
as
of
melody.
making
each
song
sur"Bad
Religion
is the way all of
gy to preser:v,e freshwaler wetlands.
a teaching assistant. He holds a us make most of our money," he
prisingly
tuneful
wilh
lhe
addition
The beaver dams preserve
master's de~ree in geology from said, "and as it gets bigger, it's
marshes, which are a crincal habi- of guitar and vocal harmonie$.
''I'm proud of where we came the University of California, Los logical that unless we want to go
tat for a whole range of creatures
Angeles, and specializes in paleon- backwards, we would spend more
from worms and grubs to ducks, from," Graffm said in a lelephone tology, or the study of fossils.
time in Bad Religion.
nongame birds, raccoons, skunks, interview. "I was 15 when we
He's not lhe only band member
started
the
band
and
we
were
in
the
·'This year, I took a year off
deer and IJIOOSC.
leading a double life. Guitarist-lyri- from leaching ... in order to have
L.A.
punk
scene,
but
10
still
call
us
Of course, beavers don't always
cist Breu Gurewitz owns the indechoose the right places to build that ... maybe it's anachronistic, pendent label Epitaph Records . some free time to promote Bad
dams; one of their favorile places, almost. because if you lislen 10 our And bassist Jay Bentley serves as Religion. It's those kinds of Uttle
decisions thai we're going 10 have
for example, is in culverts under music now, there's a lot more to it the label's production coordinaror.
than
the
punk
of
the
early
'80s
and
10
make, but I don't foresee any of
highways. That's when Kemper
The band, which has been infl n- us abandoning our other lives."
lhe
late
'70s.
hears from town road officials.

and more.
Automatic.

1994 BUICK' PARK AVENJIE SEDAN

Ocl0bef31, 1113

-

Custom, new trade this week, 43,000
miles. Immaculate.

who captured 1st place In tbe county soli judg·
ing contest and (back row) Jamie Graham, Jeff
Northup, Jeremy Ford and John Greene, who
placed rm place In the county urban §Oil judg·
ing contest.

Section ·E

Far Eas1 Russian fishing industry,"
the repon said.
.

1989 BUICK LESABRE

· : SOIL TEAMS -· River Valley High School
: · Future Farmers of America recently captured
.. : nrst place In two soil judging categories. Pic·
: · lured are, left to right (front row): Stad Davis,
· Chris Queen, .Jerry Lambert and Josh Watson,

ews

eneral

Candy's dandy in Russia ·as U.S. exports .Of 'luxury' soar ·

1\

ty.
"They've already made a deci·
sion about what they want to have
done with their own body and it
doesn't have to be a court or someone that doesn't know them maleing the decision," said Stale Delegate Brian Gallagher, sponsor of
the West Virginia legislation.
In the past two years, the cards
also have been approved for use in
Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia. Illinois, Maryland, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania,
Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah,
Virginia, Washington and
Wyoming.
Arizona has the most liberal
program in the country, according
10 Dr. Ken lserson; direciOr of the
Arizona Bioethics Program at the
Universily of Arizona.
Although some states like Virginia Iimil the recipients 10 termipally iU patients, anyone in Arizona
can have a card, including children.
Iserson said .the program has had
broad suppor1, Including among
hospices and nursing homes.
"We used to get three 10 four
patients fran area nursing homes a
week in our hospital who were
cleatly dead. It was clear they
wpuld ·not have wanled resuscita·
lion llltd yet ~ brought in," laer·
son ..Ud. "We·haven'l bad one of
th~· types of patients come in the
pul year."
Ann Fade, director of legal ser·
vices for New Yodi:·bued Choice
ln,.I&gt;ying, said her agency recom·

mends the cards for terminal
r,atients, frail, elderly patients and
'anybody who's in poor health."
The national not-for-profit
group, an advocate for the needs of
dying patients and their families,
does not recommend lhe cards for
healthy people wbo could survive a
heart attack, for example.
''All the states require that a
physician sign the form and that's
really going to force people to talk
to the doctor and make sure they're
an appropriate candidate for it,"
Fade said.
The cards resulted from emergency medicalleehnicians and others on ambulance crews forced to
resuscitate people who clearly
would not benefit. said Drew Dawson, chief of lhc Emergency Medical Service Bureau for the Montana
Department of Heallh and Environmental Services.
"Do-not-resuscitate" orders
have been used in hospitals for
some time; however, the paper·
wort could only be used at the
facilitY.. A living will could only be
used ·~ a dociOr were ,present and
delermmed lhat the person wus not
likely 10 recover.
James Hoefler, assistant professor of political science at Dicldn·
son College in Carlisle, Pa.. and
author of a boot due in February
on right·tO·die issues, said the
cards clearly outline lhe paticn1's
wishes, something "living wills"
don't always do.

\

have returned. Most can't because
their homes are beyond
·r
After 84 years ~me cr
doesn't live here anymore
Y
"When you meel someone from
Valmeyer, you don't say 'How are
~ou7 you say 'Where are you?'"
JOke~ Mrs. G~tzkc, who has an
apartment in anolher town Her .
year-old IIIOiher who alsO lost 17
her
home, live&amp; upsburs.
Lite Mrs. Gartzke's, two- or
three-generation families are common here an added incentive for
staying rogether.
"Rather lhan this being a
town " the. mayor said "it's more
like~ family."
•

Travel:
Foreign
•
attractions
By Tbe Asloclated Press
16th Century Mnlco
Mexico's colonial cities - 16th
century relics of 1he country's
Spanish past - abound with
baroque architecture, cobbled
streets, and monuments 10 its struggle for independence from its European rulers.
Visiwrs C8ll cova many of lhese
in a loop beiWeen Mexico City and
GuadalaJara - Mexico's old min·
ing cap1tal and its second largest
city. Several of them have been .
designated nalional historic sileS.
They include Dolores Hidalgo,
where the Mexican independence
movement was born; Gua_najuaiO,
scene of the first battle for independence and a city honeycombed
with narrow, cobbled lanes and
gardens ideal for walking tours;
Morelia, with an imposing baroque
cathedral and sel in scenic mountain terrain; Patzcuaro, a village
with 16th century whitewashed,
tile-roofed houses, churches and
monasleries; Queretaro, the center
of colonial art; San Miguel de
Allende, an artists' and writers'
colony and retirement home of
many Americans; Uruapan, an
agricultural center famous for its
avocados; and Zacaleeas, a mountainous city with colonial arthileeture built with its wealtb from silver mining .
For more information, call I
(800) 929-4555.
Harem Rooms Re-Open
The suite of rooms in Istanbul's
Dolmabahce Palace where the
Ottoman sultan's concubines and
children lived. closed for the past
70 years, has been re-opened 10 die
public.
The rooms served as family
quarters for Sultan Abdulmccit,
who did not officially marry. The
palace was built in 1853 on his
orders.
After the Ottoman Empire collapsed and was replaced by the
Turkish Republic in 1923,
Dolmabahce was used by Turkish
President Kemal Ataturk on visits
to the city. He died there in 1938.
Dolmabahce has a marble
facade nearly a quarter-mile long
and a lhrone room with a 3 1/2-IOn
crystal chandelier.
The palace is a key sightseeing
stop on visits to Turkey arranged
by Naggar Tours, I (800) 4436453.
Copenhagen's Golden Age
A retrospective of lhe flowering
of DaniSh culture in the 19th century is being observed this winler and
next year on both sides of the
Atlantic.
Called lhe Golden Age, it was
the time of Hans Christian Andersen, Soren Kierkcgaard, and
August Boumonville; during the
same period, Denmark became the
first European nation to outlaw
slave ships, enacted democratic
rule which included full rights for
Jewish citizens, and abolished
press censorship.
To start. '.'~~ Golden Age of
Danish Pamung IS on exhibit at
the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art through Jan. 2, then moves
the New York's Metropolitan
Museum from Feb . 10 through
April24.
The exhibit sets the stage for
c~lebrations in Denmark, starting
w1th the Golden Age Festival in
Copenhagen next Seprember and ·
further events during the next two
years.
Chiu Tbeme Park
The Splendid China park al
Shenzhen, China. offers visitors a
look of the whole country - in
miniature.
Billed as the world's largest
minialurc theme part, Splendid
China features replicas of the Great
Wall, the Foroidden City, the Qin
Shihuang Mausoleum With its lifesized 1erra c01ta warriors, and other
atttactions from around the coun·
try. All are well detailed - the
mausoleum includes models of
thousands of miniatllrc IIOidien and are placed in geographic perspective.

�Times Sentinel

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

How to take cate ofthatPo_insettia,
blii

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COMMUNITY WAY OF UFE DYING· The
village or Baine Harbor ID Newfoundland, Canada, is shown ln. this recent Associated Press
p"oto. About 200 people live there, 40 or them

fisherman and 20 more work in a small processing plant. No that the riSh are nearly gone, an
entire way of lire is dying. (AP)

'Guest workers' start at
bottom of economic lad.der,
work their way to the top ,

.
'l

By TERRENCE PETTY
Associated Press Writer
DUESSELDORF, Germany
Back when Huseyin 'Kuru was a
young man sttuggling to get ahead,
a nei!hborhood of Germans vetoed
his attempt to buy a house. They
told the home's owrier they didn't"
want a Turk on their block, so Kuru
was turned down.
,
But Kuru never let bigotry stand
in his ·way. Now he's a wealthy
man, captain of a big impon-expon
business. And he has a house far
grander than the one denied him 18
years ago.
Kuru is a former "Gastarbeiter," or "guest worker." The ftrst
guest workers arrived in Germany
more than three decades ago with
litde more than a train ticket, a suit·
case and 'uncertain chances bf
improving their lives in a country
with a racist past
But some, like Kuru, are now
powerful people in big business,
the arts, academia and other fields.
, Germans are starting to realize that
these immigrants are a force to
reckon with.
Guest worker. It sounds like an
honorary title. But it often meant
accepting jobs too menial for most
nalive Germans.
About a million Turks were
invited by the West German government to come and work between
1961 and 1973, filling a labor
shortage created when Communist
East Germany built the Berlin Wall
and stopped East Germans from
seeking work in the more prosperous West.
Spaniards and Italians were
invited as well. But Turks, who
arrived in greater numbers, have
come to symbolize this hard-toiling
class or immigrants.
, The immigrants' Slandard of liv·
ing is generally lower than Germans' and their jobless rate is high·
cr. Thousands live in run-down
nats in big-city ghettos.
One neighborhood in Berlin is
known as "Little Istanbul"
because that's what it looks like.
Turkish grocery st6res line the
streets. Women wear head scarves.
Their husbands duck into the local
mosque, rempve their shoes and
bow dutifully toward Mecca.
Many of the immigrants especially the more recent generation - arc closing a prosperity gap
.that once yawned between the first
guest workers and German natives.
They're becoming doctors,
executives, lawyers, scientists, novelists, intellectuals, painters, sculptors and television stars.
Others have founded construe·
tion companies. clothing factories
and travel agencies, frequendy irritating their German rivals by showing more ambition and offering
lower prices.
''Turkish business in Germany
isn't restricted to a little kebab
stsnd anymore," says Cigdem
Akkaya, a researcher at Essen University's Center for Turkish Studies.
More immigrants are on their
way up. About 12,000 Turks attend
Gcnnan universities.
A popular view among Germans
is that Immigrants are economic
sponges who have no interest in
mating a life-time commitment to
Germany.
·
,
•Harald Schumacher, author or a
: book titl~d "Immigration Land
, FRO ~Federal Republic of Germll!ly)," say~'lll!l''s patendy f~St!;
' : "They (liii!D'grants) pay COIISid· .
. ·erafltr. more m taXes and welfare
: , contnbutiolls than they take from
, the state,' Schumacher says.
: "Econolnitally speaking, Germany
, can't do With6ut them."
, Immigrants are helpins fuel
O~rmany's ,econo11_1ic engines.
There 11re 35,000 Independent
Tllrklsli businesses in Ge(many,
employing more than 125,000 peo-

'

pie, a third of them Germans.
Their annual purchasing power
is valued at $30 billion. They especially like status symbols. A new
survey shows that 20 pen:ent of all
Turk1sh car owners in Germany
drive a Mercedes, 'mOstly of the
used variety.
The economic barriers between
Germans and their Turkish
"guests" are falling. But racial
canyons seem to get wider.
Immigrants sec nco-Nazi violence that has rocked Germany
since unification as a big setback in
their march toward upward mobIIity.
"When I was a schoolboy in
Turkey, we learned that Germans
are our only true friends because
we never had a war with them,"
says Kuru, now 40. "This was a
very emotional thing. It wasn't
France, England or some other
country. It was Germany. I fear this
view no longer holds."
Nine Turks are among 49 people murdered by right-wing
exlremists in the past three years.
Stories abound of police officers
muttering racial ep1thets and pub
owners barring immigrants. Everyday citizens have cheered as
extremists besieged asylum shelters.
Germans tend to sec the Turks'
Islamic faith as getting in the way
of assimilation. Turks, on the other
hand, accuse Germans or rejecting
them just because they're different
Another bone of contention is
citizenship.
Most of the Turkish immigrants
can't vote because they're not Ocr·
man citizens. Many would like a
German passport, but not if that
means g1ving up their Turkish
ones,
They say they deserve dou blc
citizenship as a reward for their
three decades of toil.
But Chancellor Helmut Kohl is
reluctant to give them dual citizenship because'that might create connicting allegiances.
Kuru was only 15 when he
arrived in Duesseldorf.
At times it seemed like the
doors to success were permanently
deadbolted. But that didn't stop
Kuru. He pulled until the doors
opened.
His expon-import concern puts
olives, goat cheese, spices and
other Turkish specialties onto people's tables across Germany. He
started the company jn a concrete
shelter the size of a one-car garage.
Now his goods fill w~ole warehouses.
'
Kuru has more creature comforts than many Germans, includ·
ing a cherry-red Mercedes sports
car worth about $70,000. He also
owns a grand home.
Kuru was born on a farm ncar
the Dardanelles Strait.
Sitting in a roomy executive's
chair at his Duesseldorf headquarters, Kuru thinks back on his youth:
a plowshare scrapes through the
moist Turkish soil, lambs bleat
sweetly, the sun slants through a
grove of olive b'ees.
Kuru's fami Iy was poor. His
parents used a cow for plowing
because they had no ,tractor.
Hoping to end their penury,
Kuru's father went to Germany as a
guest worker in 1965, leaving his
wife and four children to tend:the
farm.
The father labored away in a hot
German steel foundty. He returned
to Turkey four years later to
relrieve Huseyin.
The younger Kuru's first job in
Germany was loading structured
steel onto big trucks for about $45
a week. He lived in a cramped
apartment with I! other Turks.
Some Germans scoffed at the boy
when he spoke of rising above the
lot that was often assigned to immigrants.

He usually got up at 5 a.m.,
worked until 4:30 p.m., attended
classes at night to learn computers
and to get his high school diploma,
and returned home at about I0 p.m.
With the encouragement and
tutelage of some Germans who are
still dear to him, he landed successively better jobs. He became an
eleclrician at a Mercedes-Benz factory in Duesseldorf and later
worked for a local engineering
company.
Kuru eventually saved up
enough capital to start his current
business. ,
Renan Demirkan was a nobody
to Germans when she arrived with
her parents in 1961. Now the Turk·
ish ommigrant is recognized nearly
wherever she goes.
Demirkan is a novelist, a lead·
ing intellectual, a voice for Ger.
many's women's movement and an

actress in German movies. plays
and television dramas.
Demirkan's father wasn't invit·
cd to West Germany, so he had. to
find work all by himself. But that
gave Renan an advantage. Since
the family didn'tlive in segre~ated
housing, she was forced to mmgle
with Germans. Her assimilation
into German culture was relatively
painless.
Dcmirkan, 37, will never forget
her first day in Germany. She was
only 7. A train carrying the
Demirkans smoked into Munich.
"As we were cluu,lging trains, I
couldn't get over how big the Germans are," says Demirkan,' who
has deep-brown eyes and a probing
intellect
Renen learned German quickly
and now speal&lt;s it better than her
native tongue.
"Germany is lilie a mother to
me. I'm somehow closer to it.
Turkey is like an aunt. I have no
friends or big connections there,"
Dcmirkan has never been taunted for being a Turk.' But there have
been some awkward moments.
When she was a 14-year-old
schoolgirl in Hanover, a German
boy came up to Renan and said he
thought Germany should deport all
foreigners.
He. didn't mean Renan. The boy
saw her as being German.
But she was still offended.
"I reminded him I'm a foreign·
cr. He said 'No you're not You're
one of us.' So I called him a racist.
I lost my repu!ation because of
that."
In 1991, Demirkan published a
best-seUing novel called "Black
Tea with Three Cubes of Sugar."
The book was acclaimed as a
landmark contribution toward help·
ing Germans understand the Turks
who live among them.
. The novel is autobiographical.
The main character is tom between
her Turkish heritage and an attrac·
tion to Western ways.
She rejects her family and falls
in love with a young German. The
, pair travels to Turkey for a holiday.
They avoid the woman's striCt relatives because tlrey would shame
her for her intimate relationship
with a non-Muslim.
,
These days, Demirkan is intensively involving herself in campaisns to wake11P Germans to the
dangers of xenophobia.
,
Kemal Sabin is known as lhe
richest Turk in Germany.
Sabin, 37, teijlnS over a cloth·
ing-making kingdom called
"Sahindler Holding,"
His 'headquarters in Aachen is
built like a castle, complete ·with
battlements. His royal coach, a jet·
black Jaguar, awaits in the parking
loL

,

.

PHOENIX (AP) - Although
poinsettias have been the country's
best-selling polled plant for years,
most are purchased in the six
weeks befon: Chrisunas.
Which brings us to the annual
question: how do you fmd the best
quality for holiday displays and
, keep them flourishing in the home?
First, remember the colorful
pans aren't flowers but modified
leaves (bracts) that tum color only
when the length or the day decreas·
es. So select only plants with fully
mature, expanded and colorful
bracts.
Avoid those tinged with green
around the bract edges. Unlike a
rosebud that blossoms after culling,
an immature plant seldom reaches
its color potential once removed'
from a commercial greenhouse.
This will be true whether you
prefer traditional red, by far the
biggest seller, or the whtte, pink,
peach, yellow, marbled or speckled
colors that seem to increase in popularity each year.
Next. check the ttue flowers the tiny yellow or green berries,
known as cyathia, in the center of
the colorful bracts. Make sure they
are tight and fresh appearing. The
secondary bracts surrounding the
cyathia shou1d be fully colored. If
they're not, plants will fade and
lase color quicldy in the home.
Look also for an abundance of
dark, rich-green foliage that is
dense, plentiful and unmarred to
the soil line. This is a gq¢ indication or healthy root systems.
If the plant loolcs wilted, this is a
possible sign of irreversible root
rot. If the growing medium seems
overly wet, it's safer to make a dif.
ferent selection.
, Be careful also of plants displayed in paper, plasuc or mesh
sleeves. This may seem as convenient as cellophane-wrapped produce. However, experts say the
sleeves are for shipping only and
should have
removed once in
the store.
Plant hei~ht and pot size are not
significant 10 themselves, accor.ding to the Paul Ecke Poinsettia
Ranch in Encinitas, Calif., which
supplies the cuttings that develop
into most of the U.S.-grown poinsettias.
However, the Ecke experts say
it is important to look for plants
that are balanced and attractive
from all angles. They call the relationship between plant height and
pot size critical.
"A plant that is 18 inches in
height m a 4-inch pot will ap~
too tall and rangy, but in a 6-mch
pot will look just righ~" suggests
Ecke. "In general, the best height

been

'

range for a good q~ality 6-inc~
usually _is ~nough ~tecbon
branched-plant pOt will be approx1- for a short tnp ~ a ~ sure to
mately IS to 19 inches."
remove the covenJ!g P'""'ptly-r
Usually, the larger and more
Then start with a th~rough
developed the plant. the higher the watering. Saturatt the growmg area
cost. But since the estimated SO so water seeps through the dtaind
million sales are so concentrated in hole. Discard execs~ :water an,
time there should be many bar- nevet allow water to Sit ,m a plants
gainS.
8aucer. Check dail&gt;: an&lt;! water only
One caution: protect the plant if the growing mediiJIIIIS dry to the
when bringing i~ home. Chilling touch..
.
winds or temperatures below 50
Pomsemas are best grown
degrees are pocential tillers. Plac· where nsturallight is bright enough
ing the plant inside a, 11lrge paper
Continued on E4

....

By JULES LOH

~.

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SIGN AUTOGRAPHS. Jim Rose, center, is
shown with his troupe ot performers from the
Jim Rose Circus Side Show at an autograph
. signing ror the new video In Seattle, Wash.,
recently. The troupe includes, lert to right: Matt

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"The Tube" Cmly, "Bebe the Circus Queen,"
"The Enigma," Rose, "The Tqrture King" and
Mr. Lirto.'' The show is in the midst or an 18·
city tour that began Oct.161D Denver. (AP)

Star Watch: Acting ,couple/
beating the 'Star is Born' syndrome
By BOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES- It's a Hollywood story as old as "A Star Is
Born, •• but the tragic overtones are
rnissing in the ease of Kathy Bates
and Tony Campisi.
In the 1937, 1954 and 1976 versions of "A Star Is Born," the
theme was the same: wife becomes
more famous than husband, and he
can't deal with it. The pattern
seemed ready to fit Bates and
Campisi. The lovers were strug·
gling actors in New York until
1990 when Rob Reiner cast her as
the psycho fan in "Misery." The
result was an Academy Award as
'best actress and a flood of offers.
The disparity of their careers
never has been a problem, Bates
said in an interview. "He doesn't
'Understand that way of thinking.
Many people have mentiont~~~ that
to him, but he thinlcs it would be a
real problem if we were both out of
work. (chuckle) I don't know if we
would still be together.
"I hope when people see him in
this film, they will recognize his
real talent, and that wall he has
peen bullin~ his head against all

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these years "will give way a little
bit,.
She was referring to the
Gramercy Pictures refease, "A
Home of Our Own," in which she
stars as a single mother or six who
pursues her dream of building a
house for the family in rugged
Idaho.
Her boss at the bowling alley
snack shop is a tall charmer played
by Campisi. After a brief courtship,
he proposes a one-night stand.
When she balks, he beats her.
"The good pan about that scene
is that it happens off-screen," said
Campisi. ',' I think that's important.
You see the relationship start to
disintegrate, and the next time you
see her, you realize what happened.
I think the audience can nn that in
for themselves.
"Originally the script was written so (the beating) takes place onscreen. I talked to the director,
Tony Bill, about it, and he agreed:
'It's even stronger if you don't see
iL'"

By Campisi' s calculation, he
and Bates have been married 2 1/2
years and have been "together" 15
1/2 years.
During their early years, both

were scmmbling for suige work in
New York. He appeared on Broad·
way in "The Nerd" and "Pvt.
Wars," and off-Broadway in
"Frankie and Johnny in the Claire
de Lunc" and "The Caseworker."
Bates won critical acclaim in
"Crimes of the Heart," "'night,
Mother" and "Frankie and Johnny." Then she saw the-characters
she created cast in the film versions
with slim, glamour types - Diane
Keaton,.Sisiy Spacek and Michelle
Pfeiffer. Weary of losing out to
movie "names," Bates moved to
Los Angeles in 1985 and found
supporting roles in films and television.
"Misery" changed that.
"I'm very pleased with the way
things have gone for me," she said.
"It's been a bit or an adjustment
dealing with the publicity attendant
upon winning ari Oscar, with fan
mail and people leaving scripts in
my mailbox. But I keep telling
myself it's a nice problem to have.
"It's tough, though, because I
am by nature a very private person,
and I prefer to keep it that way. My
focus and my interest has always
been on my work."

AP Special Correspoadent
MIDDLETOWN, Conn. - If
you want to summon in an instant
m~es of childhood at its happies~ JUSt mention among any group
of Americans from 1to 70 two
words: Weeldy Reader. Someone
will smile.
When school started this year,
Week7 Reader entered its 6Sth
y_ear o publication. Three generalions. Today's schoolchildren and
their parents and their grandparents
- one survey says 75 percent of
all Americans - know the Friday
joy of opening their own newspaper on a classroom desk.
" I even remember how it
smelled," said a middle-aged former reader from Illinois. "Before I
read a line I held it to my nose."
Linda Carlson, who is managing
e_ditor of the 5th- and 6th-grade ediuons. says that when she identifies
herself over the phone to check. a
fact or get information, "I usually
hear something like, •Ah, yes ,
Weekly Reader. How can I help
you?' Everyone seems to have fond
memories of Weeldy Reader. ••
That's certainly true of at least
one bunch of former classmate~
Back in 1930, Weeldy Reader,
just2 years old, beld a contest for a
class project. Miss Louverne
Richards' third-graders at Northmead School in Patterson, Calif,,
elected to build a house . They
made miniature bricks from clay,
fired them in a tiny tin oven on a
hot plate, mixed their own mortar,
built the house and won the prize:
Five dollars!
They used the money to buy a

tree. Miss Richards chose an evergreen seedling. a fir. Her 38 optimistic pupils planted it in the
liChoolya•d.
Last summer, 63 growth rings
later, the teacher (now Mrs. Lou- ,
verne Richards Soults , age 86)
managed 10 locate 18 of her former
pupils. Their assignment Meet her
under the tree for a picnic. None
was absent. They affixed a brass
plaque to the large and healthy tree
saluting their teacher, themselves
and Weekly Reader.
Over the years, the little newspaper's growth has been almost as
steady as the frr ttee's.
Since its frrst edition, on Sept.
21, 1928, Weekly Reader has
spread not only to every state in
America but to nearly every city,
Lown and village. It reaches 30 percent of the nation's elementary
school pupils with eight separate
editions from preschool through the
sixth-grade. Its weekly circulation
is 8 million - down from a peak
of II million in the '80s when
school budgets were looser, but
climbing once again.
Weeki y Reader carries no
advertising, and so 'Nhen school
budgets don 't cover the cost, par·
ents must ~ a liule over $3 for a
yearly subscription. In many cases
teachers themselves pay up the $90
or so out of their own pockets as
their gift to the class. They fmd it
not only a valuable teaching aid but
also realize it might be the only
printed matter to reach a child's
home.
If you were among its rrrst two
generations of readers you likely
remember it with (as you learned in

the fdth'lf8de) a poaessive ad.iec·
live: ~y Weeldy Reader, and yout
memory is accurate. During a
moment of modernizing in 1976,
" Mr,'' gotnrqxoffthenwthead.
, • It's sUIJlrising how many propie I meet who remember specific
stories in Weekly Reader," says
Sandra Maccarone, executive editor.

"I dOn'L I don't really mnember Weeldy Reader as a pupil, but I
know I read it because I found
some in my mother's attic that I
had saved. But I do remember very
well using Weekly Reader as a
teacher."
Maccarone (dull's Ma..car-own,
as WR would observe) taught elementary school in Haddon Township, N'J., then got into elementary
textbook publishing and, with the
exuberance of a schoolgirl, joined
Weekly Reader 18 months ago.
"It used to be that when I told
people what I did I would ,have to
explain it and they would say 'Oh.'
Now, when I say I'm with Weeldy
Reader faces light up and all sorts
of wonderful mcmones pour out' '
Maccarone does not mention
that her baclcground is the same as
that of Weelcly Reader',s founder,
Eleanor M. Johnson, who died six
years ago at age 94. But she does
point out that her guiding principle
remains precisely as Johnson laid it
out: to give children the news in a
way they can understand it with
"fanatical attention" to accuracy
and balance. The aim, Johnson
said, was "to teach yOtmgsterS how
to think, not what to think."
Over all those years, from JohnC011tinued on E-4

GOOD PEOPLE, GOOD PIODUC IS
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r•· Alts,.,.

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At lOO,·retired investment broker
:i s -independent, and still sharp

'

older, cogent and still live independently - the third of Georgia's
centenarians who aren't institution·
alized.
Begun in 1988, it's one of a
handful of attempts to understand
the lives of our oldest old. France,
Sweden, Hun11ary and Japan are
conducting similar projects.
The nation's 54,000 centenarians survived the Depression, two
world wars, the creation and
demise of the Soviet Union. Some
drank the first Coke in 1892,
popped lhat new wonder drug
aspirin in 1899. They went from
the horse-and-buggy era to cars to
space shuttles.
It's enough to boggle any mind.
Then add that they've outlived
relatives. and that their own life
expectancy at age 100 is only 36
months.
But are Poon' s centenarians
depressed, anxious, overwhelmed?
No way. They're optimistic, philosophical, opinionated. Mostly,
thefre satisfied with their lives.
'Their findings are, conftrming
a lot of impatant !hings" about the
role of psychology on well-being,
Ilene Siegler of Duke University
said.

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
troops go off to the Spanish-AmeriAssociated Press Writer
can War.
ATLANTA -The year was
And he's one of a select few
· 1908, the Cubs were playing the whose lives hold a secret the world
Giants and 15-year-old ,Phillip craves to know: Why do some cen, Robinson was in the stands.
tenarians never lose theii quality of.
;: Eighty-five years later, he life?
·remembers it clearl'y, reciting the
Psychology, answers Dr.
starting lineup, recounting the Leonard Poon. Early results from
inside-the-park home run. For the his $3 niillion study indicate that
, record, the Cubs won 3-1.
optimism, the abili!Y ~ cope: ~d
"I remember it very well, how it religion or some S1m1lar gmdmg
,was so exciting," Robinson said. philosophy link the healthiest, most
'.'They had the best double-play inde~dent centenarians.
lineup, Tinker to Evers to
' They are the ultimate sur·
Chance."
vivors," Pocin, a University of
Robinson refutes stereotypes Georgia gerontolo~ist, said. "They
·about the eldetly. At 100. he's have seen two lifeumes."
independent and sharp, with a
The Georgia Centei\arian Study
memory that stretches back to is an in-depth look at more than
when he was a meres and watched 100 Georgians who are 100 or

Guest workers... ContinuedrromE-2
Germany.
Sabin says Germans and Turkish immigrants should spend more
time together.
Older Turks often socialize
, mainly with other Turks. Some
,become incensed if theii offspring
: mix 100 closely with Germi!JIS.
, "I don't mean we should start

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instead of mosques," Kuru says.
"But we must integrate into most
aspects of this society."
Sabin offerS this advice to Germans: "Ther must accept that
nearly 2 million Turks who look
different from them live here. The
days or racial purity are over. ~·

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�l'age-E4-Sunday Times Sentinel

October 31,1•

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

...,

'Like Water for Chocolate~ . easy bo~k . to ~ead
be near her publisher, Doubleday,
By JOHN BARBOUR
she has taken an apanment on St.
AP Newsfeatures ':"riter
Marks Place, a busy, eclectic street
NEW YOR~ - Wtll success on the edge of Greenwich Village
rum Lawa Esqutvel7 Not likely.
in New York.
.She has J';'SI enJoyed ':"ha! IS the
Across the street, the St. Marks
wnter's eqwvalent to wmnmg the Hotel offers rooms for $25.61 a .
lottery.
night and her neighbors are a comic
Her first novel, " Like Water for book salon and a store called " The
Ch~olate," has printed 550,000 Condom Explosion."
cop1es m the Umted States,
At borne in Mexico City, Laura
500,000 of wh1ch have been sent to still wakes early to get to the mar·
booksellers to fill orders: It has ket when it opens and to chat for a
bee n on the best-seller hsts for couple of hours before there are
almost six months.
many people there She says
. The movie of the same name, through an interpreier that _she
d~tected by her husband, acwr ·'really likes to go, to let thmgs
Alfonso Urau, h~ grossed $18 !'Ill· h
n so that every day will be a
lion, approachmg _$20 m~lhon , so~~f adventure· so she is sort of
which would make 1t the h1ghest- seduced b what's going to hap·
grossing foreign film in U.S. histo·
Y
0 ..
ry. It appears on 122 screens.
pe Attractive, brunette, more an
The Spamsh vers1on of her book unwitting and shy seductress than a
has 42,000 cop•es m pnnl
seducee, she savors both the people
Yet she sull drives her trusted and the food spread out for sale.
Fo~d 9.h~ an~ has no P':!"S to trade Both must be touched, savored,
u m. It s b1g enough she sa~s. smelt
Her 17 -year -old daughter sllll
Food plays a large part in this
drives a prc·sllCcess v.olkswagon..
drama of Ufe; even the title is a ref·
A~ut the only ~1fferences m erence 10 the temperature water
her hfe are concess1ons - faxes
h
before a boil to melt
and answering machines and letters . r~ ~~ S0 tOO the te;,.perature
and interviews, all begrudgingly ~fe~otio~s. '
'
tolerated.
.
. .
h0 me after shopping
She is movmg her flll!lilY mto a
She return}
hours of highly
somewhat larger home m MexiCO for three or ou~ .
Sometimes
City, and conceding to the need to concentrated wnung.

can I. .
.
explam ... Butllts !lot.~omethmg
She likes her new tf temporary · that is broken so eastly.
neighborhood in !'lew . York
w,_ben sh~ is cooking or bat!'~g
because of the proh~er.attQ.n of or just walldng, she feels she ISm .
green grocers th~t mtmtc hof!~e. contact with these ele!Dents !lJat
She loves the cuhnary exploration move her and she finds tt very illu·
here, most recent bemg an adven· minating: She finds that her con·
ture into Afghan food.
cenl!Biion is fairly intense in these
The Esquivel style of writing moments.
refl~ts. her background ~nd her
"I find in every ·activity th e
upbnngmg. Before she_wntes, she energy and 1 can connect myself
appeals to the four basic forces of with each moment"
nature, much as ~ farmer does
In the waning pages of the book,
before sowmg h1s crops. She and in the final scenes of the film,
appeals to air, ftre, water and earth.
there appears the image of Nacha,
She says.this ritual i~. n~ some- the cook who ~e a mother to
th1~g s.~e mvented. It s very T1ta (much as lhe liD&amp;ge of her real,
anc1ent.
.
tyrannical mother appears earher)
So when your characters are m a long after she and the natural moth·
serene state or a state of grace, you er have died.
have to feel that way too before
If these appearances seem
you .c~.~te about it?
supernatural, to Laura ES&lt;JU!vel
• s_..
.
they ar~ as real as ~he ongmal
It IS less !I" ~~tellecbtal process incarnauons. Conf!OI!ling Ute ghost
than a "feeling one, she says. Is of her mother, Ttta IS able to face
she almost in a trance when writ· old fears and deal ;ovith .~m. She
mg?
sends her mother s spun away.
She unde~sta_n~s the question saying she no.longe~ has to obey
and agrees w1th 1tm•the sense that her, she has~ life to hve. Go! . .
she feels when writing she enters
In the ~l'!ma!C scene the ~plllt
into a separate state of meditation.
of Nacha IS Ughnng up a mulbtude
But isn't that a fragile state, cas- of candles in the bridal chamber,
ily shattered by a ringing tele· once ca_ll~d the "d~rk room"
phone?
where Ttta. s mother d~srobed and
"No. No . It is difficult to bathed to h1de from prymg eyes.

when wnter Esq':"vel fc:els stuck,
homemaker Esquivel rettres to the
kitchen where she does all her own
cooking.
.
. .
Her work .m progress ts sctenq:
fiction, e_nt1tled ':The Law of
Love." Wuh a bile like that, som~one says, it is redundant to call It
science fiction. She laughs.
. Her best-selling novel , I 2
monthly install.ments each begm·
ning with a recipC, allows the 5el!·
sonal rituals to brin.,8 in th~ tradi·
lions that interact wtth the hves of
three sisters , the youngest of
~hom, Tita, js forbidden to marry
smce the culture re817"es h~ hfe to
serve her mother until sh~ d1es. The
tale is her escape from th1s slave~.
The story is woven by a fmc
gauze of mysticism totallr alien to
most ~ntemporary Amencan best·
sellers, but not ,un~ommon m the
rest of the world s hterawre.
Laura Esqu1vel used to devote
her .afternoons "? needlepomt and
sewmg, but that IS now punctuated
with answering fax messages and
lettt;rs.
.
. .
. • I really rece1ve a 1!11 of mvua·
uons, and the worst thmg 1s that I
feel guilty sometimes because I
can't ~?swer all the letters," she
says. I would hke to have the
time to go everywhere. But I

•

.

.

Dolphins
defeat
Chiefs

"It was a ~~ry tmpor!ant
moJIIent for me, Ms. Esqut vel .
says. "In the sense-th~tsu.ch a castrating m01her won t .c!tsappear
very easily, these ~~~ons do '!'?t :
disappear very eastly etth~. Traili- .
lions that have to deal w1th love,~
sacred traditions cannot disappear :
very easily."
She is truly surprised at the suc- •
cess of both the book and the
movie in this country, but she has a .:
possible explanation.
. .!
She thmks that the Unued •
States having industrialized early,;
ha_s t~t conf!!Ct with _land, wi~ life, ~
w1th trad111ons, w1th emotions . .,:
Which may be why her boo~ ~nd:
film have had such surpnsmg ·
appeal in this country. Other bookS.:::
have struck the same chord, Amy"'
Tan's "The Joy Luck _Club" and ~
" The Bridges of Mad1son Coun- ~
ty,' • for instances.
.
.
"They deal with the sudden:
recovery of certain spiritual values-;:
and sensibilities ... Amy Tan has.,..
also tried to recover "these fwnily:::
sensibilities, and a)l those things ·,
that deal with feminine health," ,:
she says "This society has de val- ..
ued terribly this kind of thing."
•:.
And yes, she does see ghosts. ·
She even talks to them. Sometimes ;·
she invites them to supper.
·

specials about the former president,
slain in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963,
are scheduled for November. Here
are some projects competing for
viewer attention:
"JFK: Reckless Youth," a fourhour ABC miniseries based on Ute
biography by Nigel Hamilton, will
air 9 p.m.-II p.m. EDT on Sundsy.
Nov. 21 , and Tuesday, Nov. 23.
With Patrick Dempsey starring
as Kennedy from age 15 to 29, the
miniseries concentrates on h1s
Continued from E2
school days, World War II experi·
to read fine print. A sunny spot ence and political baptism.
near a window is great. They need
Kennedy's romance with a forabout six hours of bright, indirect eign journalist who was suspected
light daily. Keep out of direct sun by FBI head J. Edgar Hoover M
and away from drafts, radiators and being a German spy also 1s
hot air registers. It's best if temper- detailed. But producer Judith A.
atures do not exceed 72 degrees m Palone says while the film is sexy,
the day and 60 at night.
it is not sal&lt;~tious.
While they seem to disappear
The intent, Palone said, was to
after the holidays, like fruitcake show the forces of family, person·
and eggnog, they will thrive in a ality and events that combmed to
home year after year w1th proper shape Kennedy's life.
care. The green foliage is quite
"This miniseries is not a black
attraedve.

Poinsettia...

and white depiction, as I think you
see in most Kennedy pieces," she
said.
' II think these are full depictions
of the Kennedy family - and the
Kennedy world. I think we really
created the Kennedy world from
his childhood right up through poli-

5.9°/o
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' View.

Funding said annual per-pupil
spending ranges from about $3,000
to $12,000.
Schools are financed through a
combination oflocal, state and fed·
era! tax money.
Local taxes provided 52.2 percent of school money in fiscal year
1992. The state provided 42.1 per·
cent, and 5.7 percent was from the
[cdcral government.
Local money comes mainly
rrom taxes on real estate and from
school district personal income
taxes.
State money comes from part of
the general revenue fund, the·
account into which personal
income, sales and other tax pro·
cccds are placed, and from the
Ohio Loucry.
The coalition said districts with
low property values must impose
higher tax rates to raise the same
amount of revenue geneJated by
identical rates in wealthy districts.
The Ohio Deparunent of Educa·
tion said 102 property tax levies on
Tuesday's ballot would provide
districts with money to finance
daily operations.
Another 65 levies and 42 bond
issues would suppon school con·
sLruction projects, while 29 districts
arc proposing school district
income taxes.

Eleven killed on Ohio
highways,,ore'Y'Wl!l!kend

I

Violence,
fear mar
Halloween
parties

INSTALLING HYDRANT ·The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department assisted by Blair
Windon who donated and operated the backhoe,
recently lmtalled a dry fire bydrimt in the Her·
·she! McClure pond in Chester Township, Dry

.

fire hydrants are composed or a strainer tbat
goes Into the pond, a hydrant bead, and various
lengths of six inch pipe. Installation or tbe dry
fire hydrant will shorten turn around time for
filling tankers on their way lo fires in the area.

Clinton says he still ·
needs votes for NAFTA

WASlDNGTON (AP) - As the
push for an unpopular Jhree..nation
Mqrray, 211. hometown unavailable, trade pact begins its frenzied final
al~ ~ta~ Pr~ ·
days, President Clinton says he has
Two.double-.{atahty acc:1dents in a single-vehicle accident on U.S . 'won the hearts and minds - but
.
boosted Ohio's weekend traffic 20 in Conneaut.
CHILLICOTHE
Edward not the votes - of the lawmakers
death .!Oll ,to 11, the State Highway
to pass it.
Jerome Br'O.wn, 29, of Cleveland needed
Patrol said.
"I believe we will do it," ClinThe patrol counted traffiC deaths Heights, an~ Robert L. Harris, 37, ton said in preparation for this
·from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight of ClevelanCI, when their car struck week's public relations blitz for the
another car on Ohio 104 north of North American Free Trade Agree·
.Sunday.
Chillicothe..
The dead:
ment. "But it's going to take all
CLEVELAND - Todd Stucin, hands on deck."
SUIIIDAY
GREENVILLE - David L. 18, of Cleve)and, in a one-car acci·
The call to arms was starting
liuckingham, 45 •. and ~mily BliCk· dent on a Cleveland street.
today with remarks and a question·
BEA VER:CREEK- Lorinda L. and-answer session at the Chamber
ingham, 6, of Uruon City, m a twoSmith,
22, of Dayton, in a one-car of Commerce. Businessmen at 210
car collission on a Darke County
crash on a city street.
road. SPRINGFIELD - Tara A.
MASSILLON William
Valentine, 19, of Dalton, when he Davis, 18, of South Vienna, driver
lost control of his car and it flipped in a two-vehicle crash on a Clark
County road.
over along a Stark County road.
'DELAWARE Jane L. FRIDAY NIGHT
URBAN~ - Ricky L. Sum ·
Brabender, 71, of Erie, Pa., in a
two-car collision on U.S. 42 in mers, 18, Springfield, a passenger
in a one-vehicle accident on Ohio
, Delaware County.
The Meigs County Council on
55 in Champaign County.
SATURDAY ,
Aging celebrated 20 years of ser·
CONNEAUT - Steven L.
vice to senior citizens at a reception
ai Ute Multipurpose Senior Center
in Pomeroy on Sunday afternoon.
The council on aging , which
serves as the governing body for
the senior center, was formed in
March,
1972, and services to
Charges are pending against three subjects for the theft of a truck
seniors
began
through the agency a
from the property of William Amos on Douglas Road near Har·
year
later.
•
risonville Thursday, according to a Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
Susan Oliver, the council's
ment report.
·
·
executive
director, called yester·
The old Diamond T stub nose truck was takeQ in Ute afternoon.
day's
reception
a "milestone, rec·
said Sheriff James M. Soulsby. Upon investigation, deputies learned
optizing
20
years
of providing ser·
that neighbors had seen a red and black pickup pulling Ute stolen
v1ces
to
the
older
adult population
truck.
of
Meigs
County.
•
Later, the red and black pickup truck with three subjectS was
"When I was thinking about
spotted broken down on State _Route 7.. They v:-e!C picked ~p for
what
I' wanted to say today, I start·
questioning and two of the subjects admllted to thvolvement m the
ed
to
make a list of individuals I
inciden~ said Soulsby.
wanted
to thank," Oliver said. ''The
Names are being held pending the filing of charges.

sites throughout the country were
lakin~ part. ·
H1gh-profile endorsements from Nobel Prize winners and former Cabinet secretaries, among
others - will be trumpeted Tuesday. After talking about health care
on Wednesday, Clinton plans to
travel outside Washington on
Thursdsy to promote NAFf A.
The House is scheduled to vote
Nov. 17.
" That's an eternity," Clinton
said last week at the Wall Street
Journal Conference of the Americ·
as. It was the first of lwo speeches
that set the foundation for this

week's promotion.
Clinton claims he has already
passed the "first threshold" by
convincing a majority of legislators
that passing NAFT A is the right
thing to do. He says the trade deal
would pass by secret ballot, a boast
that draws jeers from foes.
"I believe we won the secret
battle," Clinton said.
To win the real battle, aides say
Clinton must convince lawmakers
that they can vote openly for the
unpopular pact without being
thrown out of office.
Opponents, from fonner presiContinued on page 3

Council on aging observes 20
years of service in Meigs County

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list got so long that it would have
taken the rest of the afternoon. I do
want to express appreciation to the
agencies, organizations, public
officials, churches, Ute news media,
volunteers, past and present board
members and funding agencies for
their support and assistance
throughout these 20 years."
"Special recognition goes to
Eleanor Thomas, who spearheaded
the agency for 18 years," Oliver
said.
Oliver read excefl&gt;IS from the
minutes of the MCCaA's first
board meeting on March 2, 1972,
when the agency was formed.
Clarence Struble was elected president; Mrs. John Moon, vice presi·
dent; Mrs. Hugh Custer, secretary,
and Genrudc Miu:hell , treasurer.

Two entries from the journal of
Leafy Chasteen, a 20-year employ·
ee of the agency were read to the
audience as well. Oliver recognized
Chasteen, Joyce Bunch, Wanda
Vining. Jeanne Braun and Alice
Wamsley liS 20-year employees of
the MCCoA.
Oliver also urged the passage of
the MCCoA 's one-mill levy, which
appears on Tuesday's ballot county-wide.
"We have served for 20 years,"
Oliver said, "and with your ' yes'
vote on Election Day for our levy,
we will serve ror 20 more years."
State Sena tor Jan Michael Long
(D·Circleville) said that he understood the imponance of the agency
because of the panicipation of his
Continued on page 3

No injuries were reported following a deer-car accident Friday
on US 33 around 9:4S p.m.
According to a report from the Meigs County Sherifrs Depart·
men~ Cary R. Clay, Albany, was northbound when he struck a deer
th'at entered the roadway. The deer hit the left-front of the car,
flipPeil up and sln!Ck the windShield, breaking it out, and then
rolled ovet the top of the car.
Damage to Clay's 1986 Subaru was listed as moderate.

Athens police arrest
120 during celebration

Vehicles damaged in wreck

HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9:()0.8:00;
,·
SAT. 9:0-4:00;
,
SUN. 1:oo-5:00

I

Miner damage was inc:umd to both vehicles in an accident near
Jhe intenection of Mulberry and West Second Friday.
l'lxnt:nty police said tltlrDanjel Leonard, 24, Pomeroy, driving a
Mejgs County Slterilf'a Department car, was pulling off Mulberry
onlb Welt~ when lhe vehicle's right frorit bumper caught the
driver'a door on.a car driven by Margaret Bissen, 75, Long Bottom.
'l'heie wen Ito ckltlpns.
.·
Dollar General reported Monday that sometime over the weel:·

.

·'

Cln.-OLDS.·CID.•IBO
.

•

.

'

end thc·store'a front door window \VaS cracked•

OPEN ·

•

•

: Two cited for DUI

SUNDAY

·•

Two tlten w~ ~ited for driving under the influence early Sunday morning, the Oallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
rej)OI1clicl.·~.

'

.

~ . · Paul D. Mltr;heU, 38, 33930 I acks Road, Langville, and Paul V.
; KitzmiUer,34, 43~ Slate Route 141, Racine, were both cited for

-om anc1 drivJnslefl of cen~er.
,..

..
.

''
r

..

By The Associated Press
Real fear edged out the store·
bought variety in some cities this
Halloween .
In Los Angeles, gunmen howling "trick or treat" fired into a
church Sunday night, injuring a
woman standing at the altar, police
said.
" Many people started crying
and praying," said Rosa Basquez,
a pari shioner at Verba De Dios
church.
The victim, 47-year-old Maria
de Jesus Garcia, was in serious
condition after surgery for a stom·
ach wound, police Lt. Earl
Pa ysinger said.
In Fullerton, Calif., two 9-yearold girls out Dick-or-treating were
struck and killed by a pizza deliv·
cry van Sunday evening.
The cousins were just a block
rrom home when they were hit,
police Sgt. Neal Baldwin said.
The accident was under investi·
gation, and the girls' names were
not immediately released pending
notification of relatives. Police
were considering whether to file
charges against the van's driver •.
In Denver, a ·teen-ager etcorting
youngsters on a trick-or·trelll out·
ing was taunted and then shot in
the head by suspected gang members.
Carl Banks, 18, was in critical
condition early today •' Denver
General Hospital, a nursing supervisor said. He was declared brain·
dead two hours after the Sunday
evening shooting. Pollee said they
had no motive in the attack.
In MassachusetJS, wary parents
in two communities kept costumed
children on a short leash - if theY:
let them outat aU.
In Sturbrid$e. where 10-yearold Holly Piiramen was kidnapped
in August and found dead Oct 23,
"People are leery," said Red
Denault. "They're taking their kids
down to the parade at the common
rather than the trick«· treating."
And in Bridgewater, trick-ortreating was canceled after two
killers serving life tenns escaped
rrom the Massachusetts Corrcctionallnstitution. The search for Robert
Dellclo, 51, and Joseph Correia,
38, continued early today.
A church in the southeastern
Texas community of Nederland
offered an alternative version of a
haunted noose. Actors depicted
scenes of abortion, drug use, suicide, Satanism, and the crucifixion,
while another playing an angelic
Christ told visitors it's time to
accept him as savior.
"This is real life," said Sylvia
Oliver, a member of the Triumph
Church. "Overdosing. Suicide.
Alcoholism. Abortion."
Two Boston mothers caught the
lightheaned side of the day they
dressed their youngsters up as Elvis
Presley.
"They've got the body fat.
Look at the cheeks on that tid "
said Kate Robins, the mother
one tiny, pudgy King.
"Elvis took this toddler-like
shape as he got to the end of his
life," said Janet Steinmetz, mother
of the other toddlin' rocker.

of

Deer-car wreck reported

,,

Low tonight In lOs. bear.
Tuesday, sunny, high In mid-50..

2 s.ctiona. 12 " - 35 _,..
AMulllmocblnc............,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 1, 1993

: He said voters would be moro
:willin~ tO approve higher loCal IJIX
:rates 1f they saw improvell)ents in
•education quality, a reduction in
:the dropout mte, and better results
:rrom proficiency testS.
; Tuesday's election c~m~s
against a backdrop of a mal m
Perry County Common Pleas Court
or a lawsuit that contends the current state system of paying for
·schools is unconstitutional.
About 500 school districts that
make up the Ohio Coalition for
.Equity and Adequacy of School

5

1994 CHEVY S-10 PICKUP

Kicker:

, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - .
.Taxpayers would approve more
;school levies if they saw better
•results from the money already
:being spent on education, Gov.
:George Voinovich said.
· Voinovich offered that assess;ment in advance of Tuesda)"s elec:tion that finds 239 money 1ssues at
:stake in districtS statewide, Ute low· '
:est number in a general election
·since November 1988.
: An average 44 percent or such
:proposals won approval over the
:last four years.
· "The problem in Ohio today is
:people don't think they're getting
:the result, in many instances, for
:Ute dollars they're invesdng in edu·
;cation," Voinovich said in an inter·

Auto., V&amp;, air, aterao, llr bag.

ON

33-34-35-43-45-46

Governor: Ta~payers
want school results

1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT

AVAILABLE

9495

Super Lotto:

:Mullin oclolno.

5.9o/o
1994 CADILLAC SEVILLE SLS

Pick 4:

:Vol. 44, NO. 1:12

Weekly

.

317

865310

rural Virginia during the 1930s and eventS as the Dust Bowl devasta· tion of U.S. farmland and to the .•
'40s.
HindenburR aviation disaster.
Continued from E 3
The movie, airing 9 p.m.· II
p.m. EDT Sunday, Nov. 21, is set
•••;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
in 1963- a time of change for the
' 'A new mine IS bemg started
Waltons and, in the course of a
near
Larder Lake in Ontario, Cana- ·
brief, violent moment in Dallas, for
da.
The
rock is asbestos (as-bes·
the nation.
tos).
We
can use much more
Lics."
Author Earl Hamner Jr., who
asbestos
than
we have been able to ·
Those working on the project created the TV series and who lent
get."
felt the weight of depicting a U.S. his riel\ voice to it as naJTator,
A 1960 item in the fourth-grade
president who still evoli:es strong explains why the reunion movie
issue
on road building:
•·
feelings for many Americans, chose to focus on that time and on
"The
superhighways
built
today
:
Palone said.
the president's death.
will
mean
fewer
traffic
tie-ups
•
"In any biography you have to
He said the film's writers, Claire
when
you
are
ready
to
drive."
•
take some creative license," she Whitaker and Rod Peterson, felt
A prescient piece from 1930: •
said. "But the words (dialogue) . that 1963 represented a year when
"It won't be long before we·-;
come from text and speeches and the Walton characters would have
shall
have a moving picture on our ·
the book. Much of this was said by pr"ogressed significantly in their
radios.
" A more recent issue ·
these people.
lives.
delves
into
TV violence.
~
"We didn't sit down and write a
"And also, as we had so often
From
the
start,
Editor
Johnson
.,:
fairy tale."
done in the series, we could show a
ordained that, "Ours shall be a :
CBS brings fiction and fact representative American family
positive philosophy of optimism" ~
together in "A Walton Thanksgiv- weathering a national tragedy,"
and
in its early years Weekly Read·:
ing," a new TV movie starring Hamner said.
er
tended
to gloss over news that ::
original cast members of the popu·
He noted " The Waltom" series
might
have
been unsettling to chit-:
tar 1972-81 series about a family in had included references to such
dren.
.....

HURRY, B-E,AT, TH)E- , GOBBLINS TO THESE DEALS
AND SAVE, SAVE, SAV'EI

Pick 3:

Page4

Miniseries, movie, specials will recall JFK's assassination
By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - The light
and shadow of John F. Kennedy's
life and death are the focus of a
variety of television programs
marking Ute 30th anniversary of hiS
assassination.
·
A miniseries. movie and news

Ohio Lottery

VETERAN EMPLOYEES RECOGNIZED
• These women were recognized at the Meigs
County Council on Aging's 20th Anniversary
Reception for their 20 ~ears or service to the

Meigs County Senior Center. They are, 1-r,
Joyce Bunch, Wanda Vining, Leafy Chasteen,
Jeanne Braun and Allee Wamsley. (Sentinel
Photo by Brian J. Reed)

ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - Police
&lt;trrcstcd 120 people durin!; the
annual Hallween celebration in the
city streets late Saturday and early
Sunday.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said
the number of arrests was consisent
with past years. Most arrests were
for disorderly conduct and underage drinking.
At last year's event, 101 people
we re arrested.
About 20,000 people took pan
1n the celebration, but poor weather
held down the wmout, police said .
" I continue to believe this event
is a strain on the community' and
the police department," Mayer
said. "It is a time bomb."

'

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