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Friday, September 13, 1991

Sunda~

AHA, Meigs groups team up
for annual Food Festival

RECORD BREAKING NIGHT - The Middleport Church of Christ had a record breaking
night at its youth group kickoff recently. The
theme was ''World Record Night" and 121 children attended. Total attendance was 154. There
were cookie, animal cracker, cupcake, hot dog

Birthday observed

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A binhday party was held
recently for Scou Authcrson in
observance of his 13th birthday at
the home of aunt and uncle on Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy.
Cake and icc cream were served
to Rebecca Authcrson, Kirk Lcm ler. Anna Lemley, boris Lemley,
K1mberly and Crystal Lemley,
Amanda Autherson, Jason Autherson, Richard Warencke all of
Pomeroy; Laura Authers~n. Roy
Buchanan. Tuppers Plains.
Sending a gift was Dewey
Autherson. Winston-Salem, N.C.

and pie eating contests, as well as bubble gum
blowing and hula hooping. To top the evening
o~f, a record breaking seven-foot by four-fool
p1zza was made. Richard DuBose is the children's minister. Youth groups med every Sunday from 6-7 p.m. for children ages three
through high school.

Hymn sing slated

SCOTT AUTHERSON

Rev. James R. Acree Sr., invites
the public. Those attending should
bring a lawn chair.
The church is located off Route
7 on Route 143.

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FRIDAY
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will hold revival through Saturday at 7 p.m. nightly with Jimmy
, Stewart, Albany, the evangelist.
· Pastor Steve Reed invites the pub. lie.
FAIR PLAIN, W.VA . - The
· Libeny Mountaineers will perform
· at the Jackson County Jamboree in
: Fairplain, W.Va. on Saturday.
, CHESTER · Dr. and Mrs. Glenn
• Irwin, missionaries to Papua New
: Guinea will appear at the Chester
: Nazarene Church on Friday at 7
: p.m. The public is invited to attend.

'I

. POMEROY · The Pomeroy
. Senior Citizens Dance Club will
: have a round and square dance on
· Friday beginning at 8 p.m. w1th
: music by the Happy Hollow Boys
· of Athens. Admission is $2 and
: those attending should bring snacks
, for the snack table.
POMEROY - The Return
: Jonathan Meigs Chapter, D.A.R.,
; will meet at the Episcopal Church
· Parish House on Friday at I p.m.
: for a reception followed by lun' cheon at 1:30 p.m. Officers bring
: white gloves.
MARlETTA - The annual meet; ing of the Sons and Daughters of
: Pioneer Rivermen will meet at the
· Lafayette Hotel in Marietta on Fri; day and Saturday.
. LONG BOTTOM - There will
· be a dinner at the Faith Fuli Gospel
· Church in Long Bottom on Friday
; at 5:30 p.m. The church will be in
: revival until Saturday and the evan: gelist is Jimmy Stewart. The public
; is invited to auend.
SATURDAY
DARWIN· Modern Woodmen
· of America Camp 7230 will have a
: potluck cook out on Saturday at
: 6:30 p.m. at the southbound park
: on Route 33 ncar Darwin. The
• camp will furnish hamburgers, hot
: dogs and condiments free of
: charge. Members bring a covered
: dish. The public is invited.
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. ; Square dance and clogging al the
' Senior Citizells Center, Second and
Main SU'eet, from 8·11 p.m. Music
· by Bluegrass Revival, with West
· Virginia State Fiddle Champion,
Bobby Taylor.

DANVILLE. Weekend services
at the Danville Church of Christ
will be held Saturday at 7:30 p.m.
· and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W.Va.,
will speak. The public is invited 10
· auend.

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RUTLAND - Descendants of
. James and Bertha Cremeans will
have their annual family reunion on
: Sl\h,lfday at Forest Acres Park. Din·
!..cr will be served at noon.·AllHam•
',jly and friends are invited.

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
Township Fire Department will
have a chicken barbecue and tractor pull on Saturday with dinner
from 1-7 p.m. Tractor weigh-in is
at 5 p.m. and the pull starts at 6
p.m. Classes for 12 horsepower and
over and 12 horsepower and under
arc: children, 800 pound; and adult
classes, 900, 1,000, and 1,100
pounds.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 will sponsor at car
wash on Saturday at Plcaser's
Restaurant beginning at 9 a.m.
POMEROY - There will be an
outdoor hymn sing at the Hillside
Baptist Church in Pomeroy on Saturday at 7 p.m. The public is invited to aucnd.
HARRISONVILLE - The Harrisonville Lodge No. 411 will meet
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. for work in
the master mason degree. Refreshments will follow. All master
masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT · Shirin Nuggud, administrator of the Gingerbread School, will begin a series of
creative fun art classes on Saturday
from 9:30-11 a.m. at the Middleport Arts Council for children age
three and half to seven. The cost is
$4 and the class will meet once
each month with the dates to be
announced. A program for children
ages 7-12 is also in the planning
stage. Call Janette Thomas at 9925696 or Susan Baker at 992-7733
for information.

Hysell and Oscar Hysell family
reunion will be held Sunday at Fort
Meigs in Rutland with dinner at
12:30 p.m.
RACINE · The Gideon and
Artcmcsia Roush reunion will be
held Sunday at Star Mill Park in
Racine beginning at I p.m. with a
basket lunch. Relatives and friends
arc invited to attend.
PORTLAND - The annual
homecoming of the Morse Chapel
Church will be held Sunday. Regular morning services will be held
and afternoon services begin at 2
p.m. featuring the Conquerors of
Ripley, W.Va. Rev. David Curfman invites the public.

Learning how to read food
labels, prepare low-fat foods, plan
nutritious meals without give up
good taste, and recognize and order
low-fat , low cholesterol meals
when eating away from home arc
some of the Food Festival activiLics.

"The typical American d1ct is
rich in egg yolks, fatty meats, butter and whole dairy products. These
arc the main sources of cholesterol
and saturated animal fat," according to Blake. "They tend to raise
the level of cholesterol and contnbutc to the development of fauy
depos1ts along the lining of your
arteries (arthcrosclerosis), a root
cause of heart attacks and strokes."
She went on to say "what we cat is
important. What we don't cat, or
cut out, can· be equally important in
our efforts to prevent heart dis case."
During this annual education
week of Food Festival the American Heart Association has suggcsllons on ways you can reduce the
inventory of high-fat, high cholesterol foods in your refrigerator.

WWI
veteran gets
Purple
Heart

Dairy products
Substitute one percent milk (27
percent calories from fat) or skim
milk (zero percent calories from
fat).
Buuer, cream and ice cream
have even more fat than whole
tnilk. Substitute products lower in
saturated fats, such as margarine,
evaporated milk and low-fat frozen
yogurt.
Eggs
It is a good idea to limit your
egg yolk consumption to three or
four per week.
Meat products
The American Heart Association recommends a total of six
ounces of poultry, fish or lean meat
per day. Choose lean cuts and eat
them without the skin or visible fat.
Chicken and turkey are excellent
choices of lean meat, if the skin is
removed. Lean cuts of veal, pork,
beef or lamb arc also acceptable, in
small portions, if the visible fat is
trimmed.
For more heart healthy suggestions. contact the American Heart
Association atl -800-282-0291.

Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Reeves and
Kaylie, Kingsbury Rood; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reeves, Brandi and
Robbie, Chester; were Sundoy visitors of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Mrs. Danilcl Worley, Stacy,
Daniel and Stephen, were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Chorley Smith were Mrs.
Daniel Worley, Stacy, Daniel and
TAMARA HAYMAN

Vol. 26, No. 32
Copyrlghled 1991

Tamara Hayman, Syracuse, a
junior at Southern High School, has
been accepted by the Who 's Who
Among American High School
Students.
Only five percent of the students
in the United States arc honored in
Who's Who each year.
Miss Hayman is one of less that
half of one percent who have been
honored for two or more years.
Her biography will appear in the
25th silver anniversary edition of
Who's Who Among American
High School Students.

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POMEROY - A 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA office 117 West
Second Street in Pomeroy.

SUNDAY
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
will have its annual Rally Day on
Sunday. A potluck dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m . and the afternoon program will begin at 2:30
p.m. with the Gospel Notes. The
public is invited to auend.

MONDAY
POMEROY · "Crusade for
Christ" revival will be held Mon day through Sunday at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
at 7 p.m. nightly. There will be different singers and speakers nightly.
The crusade is sponsored by the
Mcigs-Gallia-Mason counties Crusade for Christ. Pastor Glen
McClung mvitcs the public.

EXPLAINING BEES - Fred Purdell, in the
bee-keepers hood, and Steve Little, Gallia County Bee Inspector, explain bee facts to six-yearold Scott Saunders at the ninth annual FarmCity Day held Saturday at the Boggs Family

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities has
been ordered to provide adequate
services to Meigs MR/DD clients.
while the Ohio MR/DD board has
been ordered to provide any necessary funding to the local board.
Those provisions were made by
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W. Crow III in
light of a civil trial held in June.
The order in the case of State, ex
rei. Joan Cottrill versus Meigs
County Board of Mental Retardation Developmental Disabilities.
and others was filed on Thursday.
The civil case was filed last last
spring after the Meigs MR/DD

• Washers • Dryers
• Dishwashers
• Aehigerators

'

Partly Cloudy
Partly cloudy. High today In

mid-90s.

A Multim edia Inc Newspaper

By MELINDA POWERS
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Four Gallia
County music teachers were denied
a court inJunction Thursday allow ing them to return to work after
being laid off.
Gallia County Common Pleas
Judge Donald A. Cox refu sed to
grant the order sought by the Gallia
County Local Education Associa tion and four of the district' s laid·

off music teachers in a hearing
Thursday at the courthouse.
Two of the teachers, Hayden
Lloyd and Winston Sheets. had
been re duc c d ~ in ~ force (R.l.F.'d) in
1990, bu t were returned to work
wh en an arbitrator rul ed that the
board could not lay off teachers to
sa ve money.
Th e GCLEA' s attorn ey ,
Mi chae l 1. Hunter. told the judge
Jhat th e teac hers were, again .

wrongfully R.I.F. 'd when the board
cut mu sic pro gram s earlier thi s
year. Hunter told the judge that the
group was seeking the injunction to
"maintain the status quo" until an
arbitrator's hearing Sept. 24.
In a related matt er, Jud ge Cox
stepped down from hearing a second class action suit fil ed by the
GCLEA against the board. Because
Cox has a sister who teaches in the
Cnntinued nn A-3

board announced that it would lay
off 12 staff members in light of
financial difficulties . Several
aucmpts to pass tax levies fof the
program have failed, and Program
Superintendent Lee Wedemeyer
resigned from the program during
the summer.
Voters in Meigs County will
again be faced with an MR/DD
levy in November.
"The MR/DD board did prove
that it was in need of additional
funds and took all reasonable steps
to secure the funds necessary to
comply with the mandatory duties
owned to the MR/DD plamtiffs,"
Judge Craw's 17-page entry reads.
"The services provided to the
plainttffs which were eliminated

RACINE - Lawrence Adam s,
expansion chairman for Ruritan' &gt;
Ohio District, will be in Racine
Tuesday, Sept. 17 to meet with citizens interested in forming a new
Ruritan Club. The meeting is set
for 7 p.m. in the Racine Village
Council chambers.
The national civic-service organization is trying to form a club in
Racine at the invitation of it s
mayor, Frank Cleland.
Cleland said Ruritan has more
than I ,300 locallv-affiliated clubs

Jhroughout Ohio and tlle country.
"Its purpo se is to foster a beucr
under standing among peopl e
through volunteer community se rvice," Cleland ex plained.
The Ruritan slogan is "Fellowship, goodwill and community scr·
VICC.''

Dean R. Kenny, club buildin g
speciali st from Ruritan National' s
Dublin, Va., headquarters, will also
meet with local officials and residents and proscnt a videowpc presentation, "1:hifl. is Ruritan." during

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the 1-1/2 hour organizatiOnal meetmg. Letters of invitation to allcnd
the meeting have been sent to more
Jhan 20 leading citizens, Cleland
said, who signed the inviwtions on
behalf of the community.
The mayor noted that Ruritan is
America's leading community servi ce organization with more than
37,500 men and women members
throughout the country.
"I feel Racine is a rural commu nity that needs a civic service club
Continued on A-3

after January, 1991 were necessary
to meet the basic health and welfare needs of said plaintiffs, including basic hygiene practices."
"These represent fundamental
needs of the plaintiffs," the order
continues. "The state (by law) has
created for the plaintiffs an entitlement to receive programs and services in accordance with their Individual Habilitation Plans. While
the state may elect not to iniliale
such programs, once they have
been established, they became
rights of the MR/DD plaintiffs
which must be provided ... "
Specifically, the entry orders the
Ohio MR/DD to provide the local
board the sum of $275,000 as sup~
Continued on A-4

• Microwaves • Ranges

• TV's!Stereos
• VCR's!Camcorders

IT'S OFFICIAL . The new Bank One sign was in place on the
300 block, Third Avenue, Gallipolis when Rank One, Athens, N. A.

opened Saturday. The conversion from Central Trust occurred
between 2 and 3 p.m. Friday.

Open house planned for officials

TAFT VISITS MEIGS COUNTY • Secretary of State Bob Taft, foreground, attended the
district meeting of the Ohio :4.ssociation of Elections Officials which was held at Royal Oak
Resort on Friday. Taft discussed several elections issues in a "questions and answers" for-

mat. Pictured next to Taft is Meigs Board of
Elections Director Jane Frymyer,' who serves as
the secretary or the group, and Chairman Evelyn Clark. (Times-Sentinel Photo by Brian J.
Reed)

Secretary of State Taft encourages
voter participation November 4

Come Out On
TUESDAY, SEPT. I 7 at 9:00 P.M.
And Enjoy The

INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR MEN
It's all in good fun!

SMIT'l'Y'S IN POMEROY

.....
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• Freezers • Compactors

LADIES!

The Place: SMITIY'S of Pomeroy
And you can bring your camera to this one.
The Cost is $10.00 ·Tickets on Sale at

Dairy Farm. The display case allows people to
watch 7,000-10,000 bees at work. The glass sides
or the case keep the bees conveniently inside
where they belong. (Times-Sentinel photo by
Jim Freeman)

MR/DD ordered to provide serv~ces
for clients; board must provide ·fiinds

POMEROY - The Meigs County Genealogical Society will meet
RUTLAND · The Leading
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs Creek Conservancy District will
Museum.
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
RUTLAND ·The Charles Reed office.

ATTENTIO N~

..• ..

Ruritan to organize in Racine

• Vacuum Cleaners

home-appliance and electronics Items
IN·STOCK In our store• It's simple! Come
11110 our store. choose from super brand names --'""---,
at great low prices. and take $1 0 to $30
off INSTANTLY

;_

15 Sections. 112 Pages

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, September 15, 1991

Stephen, and Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp. ALso visiting was Harley
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp
Michelle, Amy and Ashley, and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp and
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp enjoyed
a w1cncr roast at the home of Kail
Knapp and Tonda Salser, Dexter.
Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah and
Mauhcw , were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.

WILL MAINTAIN REGULAR HOURS
BEGINNING MONDAY

Get an extra $10 OFF••.
$20 OFF... up to $30 OFF

···-

Four Gallia teachers
denied injunction

RACINE -The James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore reunion
will be held Sunday at the home of
Larry and Pauy Circle. Carmel
Road in Racine. Basket dinner at I
p.m.

POMEROY - "Noah's Animals" and "All the Money in the
World" will be shown at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 2 p.m. The movies
will be shown at the Middleport
Library on Monday at 7 p.m.

Majestic moored in Cincinnati; visited
here often in 30s, 40s • Sands ·A· 7-8

Along the river .............. BI-7
BusinessJFarm ............. D-1-8
Comics . ........................Insert
Classified ....................... D3· 7
Deaths................................ A3
Editoral............................. A2
Sports............................. Cl-R
Weather . .......................... A-3

Iowa 29 Iowa State 10
Pittsburgh 26 Temple 7

•
lmts

THE
PRESCRIPTION SHOP
IN MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
WILL CLOSE SATURDAY
AT 1:00 P.M.

Hayman
recognized

Tennessee 30 LJCLA 16
Central Michigan 20 MSLJ 3

Ohio State 23 Louisville 15
Michigan 24 Notre Dame 14

When time comes, ex-newsman wants
it done his way · Beat of the Bend • B·3

B-1

POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington, Gallipolis, will be the guest
speaker at the Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
II a.m.

POMEROY - The annual homecoming of the Mt. Hermon U. B.
Church (Texas Community) will be
held Sunday. Sunday school will be
at 9:30; worship service at 10:30,
following by a dinner at noon. The
afternoon service at I :30 p.m. will
feature the Grubb Family of Gallipolis. Rev. Robert Sanders, pastor, invites the public.

College
Scores

Weekend visitors call

An outdoor hymn sing is
planned by the HillsJdc Baptist
Church on Saturday at 7 p.m. on
tho church yard.
Singers include God's LiLLie
Lambs, The Joyful Hearts , Linda
Jones, The Redeemed Quartet, and
The Children of God.

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weU in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

The American Heart Association of Meigs County is teaming up
wit Meigs High School and the
Meigs County Cooperative Extension Service to help individual s
lower their cholesterol levels with
the annual American Heart's Food
FestivaL
The American Heart's Food
Festival, scheduled Sept. 23-28 is a
national nutrition education event
designed to increase the awareness
of the relationship between diets
high in cholesterol and saturated fat
and diseases of the heart and blood
vessels. High blood cholesterol is
on e of the major risk factors for
cardiovascular disea1c, the nation· s
number one killer, according to the
American Heart Association.
This year Meigs High School,
under the supervision of Margie
Blake, and the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service,
under the supervision of Cindy
Oliveri, will participate in a variety
of informative activities to show
that good nutrition is worth cclc-

75 cents

2WAYS
TO SAY

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"CHARGE
IT"

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locally Owned and Operated By Bill Haptonstall
788 North Second Avenue
·
Middleport; OH.
992-2178

I

By BRIAN J. REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Secretary of State
Bob Taft (R-Cincinnati) attended
the disll'ict meeting of the Ohio
Association of Election Officials
on Friday afternoon, when that
group met at Royal Oak Resort
near Pomeroy.
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard E. Jones and Board of
Elections Director Jane M. Frymy•

er joined forces to welcome and
introduce Taft to the audience,
which is made up of directors,
deputy directors and board members from Boards of Elections in
several Southern Ohio counties.
Frymyer serves as secretary of that
state-wide organization.
Frymyer, in introducing Jones,
credited )lim 'With the idea of hold·
ing the meeting at the resort, mak•
ing it possible 10 host the associa-

-~

Lion's members at a Meigs County
location.
'
Among the counties represented
at the mCC'ting were Meigs, Gallia,
Lawrence, Noble, Washington,
Ross, Athens, Vinton, Jackson,
Hocking, Monroe, Muskingum,
and Pickaway.
In addition to {'3'1icipating in a
general diseuss10n of election
issues, Taft encouraged voter parContinued on A-3

Ry CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - Eleanor Thomas.
retiring executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging,
and Susan Stewart, the new director, will be honored at an open
house to be held next Sunday from
I to 3 p.m. at the Senior Citizens
Center.
The open house is being held to
give residents the opportunity to
extend retirement wishes to Mrs.
Thomas and to meet the new director. Mrs. Stewart comes to Meigs
County from Williamstown , W.
Va. with an extensive background
in working with the elderly, as well
as expertise in securing program
funding.
Mrs. Thomas retired in August
after 19 years in the position of
executive director. She saw the
program· go from a one-room
upstairs office to a spacious modem facility , from a staff of two to a
full-time staff of 30, and from the
very minimal to a broad range of
personal, health, social and educational services to Meigs County's
elderly residents.
Under the leadership of Mrs.
Thomas, the senior program has
shown continual growth and development since it was started in
1972.
The center opened in 1973 in
the old Pomeroy Junior High
School buttding and then in 1980
\.

moved to the lower level of the
new Meigs Multipurpose building.
Highlights of the years for Mrs.
Thomas include the construction of
the $1.4 milliOn county-owned
multipurpose fa cility, and the 42
units of subsidized hou s1ng adja -

ce nt to the center lor low 1ncome
elderly and handicapped.
The former executive director
played an 1mportant role in sccur~
1ng direc t services to senior citizens
and the funding for those services.
Continued on A-3

Efforts begin to bring
Christian radio to Gallia
Ry KRIS COCHRAN
T-S News Staff
GALLIPOLIS · The Moody
Broadcasting Network of the
Moody Bible Institute of Chicago,
Ill., ha s begun a project that will
provide the mini stry of Christian
radio to Gallipolis, along with the
efforts of two local individuals.
Mike Zirille, former resident of
Youngstown and Holzer Clinic
physician, hopes area residents will
join together and bring Christian
programming to Gallia County.
"When I lived in Youngstown,
there was a Christian station in
Cleveland I would li sten to," said
Zirillc, a member of the First Baptist Church. "' I moved to Gallipolis
about a year ago and I began lo

miss it."
Assisting Zirille in the project is
Kenny Coughenhour, director of
the Black Lung program at Holzer

Clmic.
Accordin g to Zlfillc, MDN can
he heard worldwide, featuring
hourly rciJ gJou s newscasts, tradi -·
tiona! hymns and children's programs. "I also feel this could be an
altcmallvc for teens," commented
Zirillc.
The cost of the Gallipolis project is $25,000, which includes the
purchase and installation of a transmitter, professional servic(\s for filing the application with thd Federal
Communications Commission
(FCC) and administration expenses
and the first few months operating
expenses . The radio signal is
received through a Satellator, pro-·.
viding 24 hour listening enjoyment. : ·
Bringing Christian sounds ..
across the airwaves of Gallipolis ·
will be up to local individuals and :·
organizations.
"'We have until June 1992 to ·
Continued on A-3

�..

r,

September 15, 1991

·;~ommentary

and perspective

OHIO Weather
Page-A2
September 15, 1991

A Dlvislon of

~~MULTIMEDIA, INC

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825 Tblrd An., GaiUpolls, Ohio
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PAT WHITEHEAD
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Exec:utlvo Editor

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LE'I1'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wilb

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name, addre,.. and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be
published. Letters should be in good tas te, addressing issues, not
personalities.

, Cleveland, Berea wrangle
over Browns' income

I
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•

WASHING TON - George
Bush's tenure as U.S. ambassador
to China revealed him to be highly
susceptible to a disease that !he
State Deparunent calls "clientitis"
- a diplomat's blind devotion to
the foreign country where he or she
serves.
Bush personalizes his foreign
relations , narrowing his view to
individuals instead of looking at
the global view. Throughout the
unsuccessful coup in the Soviet
Union and Lhe pre- and post-coup
turmoil , Bush has shown a new
strain of clientitis- "Gorbyitis."
Bush likes dealing with Mikhail
Gorbachev, and desperately wants
him to continue as a superpower
counterpart. Bush has personalized
U.S .- Sov iet relations and reduced
them to Bush-Gorbachev relations.
As a result, in the months leading
up to Lhe unsuccessful coup, Bush
wanted to hear that Gorbachev
would prevail and would continue
to lead the Soviet Union down the
road to reform at an orderly pace.
The president's advisers obliged
by telling him what he wanted to
hear. These are some of the warnin gs that Bush and his advisers

By RICH HARRIS
Associated Press Writer
~
CLEVELAND - Two of Cuyaho11a County's major municipalities
arc fac ing each other across the bargaming table, trying to decide who
wi ll get what cut of income taxes paid by the Cleveland Browns.
The matter puts Cleveland and suburban Berea at odds over the issue
. for the first time in years and is a wrinkle in an otherwise fairly quiet and
cooperative relationship, Berea Mayor Stanley Trupo said.
" The only issue that ever existed between us is the airpon expansion,"
Trupo said, referring to a long-delayed plan to enlarge Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport. The airport, south of Cleveland proper, is just north
of Berea.
Berea property owners and residents in other communities oppose the
f ex pansion. fearing the noi se associat ed with additional fli ghts and
'c hanges in flight paths will drive property values down.
! "Other than that. we ' ve had a good relationship, and even on that we
U ave opposing views, but no animosity or fighting," Trupo said.
Still , in these cash-lean times, both sides are anxious to hang onto tl1e
taxes paid by the team 's players. The Browns - with an estimated player
ayroll of $2 1 million - play !heir home gam es in Cleveland Stadium . in
owntown Cleveland, but practice at a new camp in Berea.
Players are taxed on half of their income. since only hal f their games
are played at home.
Under an informal agreement that had been in effect since 1969. the
cities split their cut of the players' income taxes, with 60 percent going to
Cleveland and 40 percent to Berea.
But when the Browns moved their 44-member front office staff out of
Cleveland and into the new $13 million camp in Berea, Cleveland lost
ose ·taJt dollars.
·
Cleveland Finance Director Steve Strnisha could not be reached for
comment. A secretary said she didn' t think Strnisha wanted to discuss the
negotiations.
l.ast month, li\e Cleveland City Council's income tax review board
voted to change the iax-sharing agreement.
··
Trupo said iit the time his city would fight the move. "We are not
going 'to lei the giant beat up on the little guy, '' he had said.
,
However, he said this week that Cleveland and Berea are still friends.
"I didn't mean that (remark) in a derogatory manner, " Strupo said. "It
f was a big city versus a little city."
~
Talks between the cities continue, the mayor said.
~
" We' re doing what any good business would do, negotiating to both
sides' mutual satisfaction," Strupo said. "Then, if we can't negotiate,
Recently I heard from attorney,
then I guess there is an issue. But at this time I don't see one."
John Epling, formerly from Gallipolis, now living in Cincinnati.
John is now practicing law under
the firm name, John Epling Company, L.P.A. Law Offices. 621
Mehring Way, Ste. 318, Cincinnati,
Ohio 45202.
John informed me that he has
By The Associated Press
had
some bad lucie in Lhe last few
Today is Sunday, Sept. 15, the 258th day of 1991. There are 107 days
years.
First his wife, Christine, died
left in the year.
in
1988.
Later he had a stroke
Today's Highlight in History:
.
.
on Sept. 15, 1917, Russia was proclaimed a republic by Alexander which affected his right side.
Apparently John is recovering
.,Kerenslcy, the h~ of the provi~ional government that came to power folsa ti sfactorily from his ailment.
Jlowing the abdication of Czar Ntcholas II.
.
Rece ntly th ere appear ed in th e
il On this date:
.
.
.
Cincinnati Enquirer an article about
I' In 1776, British forces occupied New York Ctty dunng the Amencan
John whi ch was written by Tony
evolution.
In 1789, the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was renamed the Lang. In Tony's article we qu01e in
pan as follows:
Department of State.
.
.
"Epling, 60, is the first U.S .
In 1821 , independence was proclatmed for Costa Rtca, Guatemala,
lawyer to establish a joint venture
Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
.
.
In 1857 , William Howard Taft- who served as prestdent of the Umt- law partnership in Kazan, capital of
the Tatar Republic, U.S.S.R. He is
ed States as well as chief justice - was born m Cmcmnau, Ohto. .
In 1887, the city of Philadelphia launched a three-day celebrauon of negotiating a joint venture between
a Cinc innati builder and a
the JOOth annivorsary of the U.S. Constitution.
. ..
In 1935. the Nuremberg Laws deprived German Jews of theiT ctuzen- Leningrad "developer " who pro poses to build three model homes
ship and made the swastika the offi_cial symbol of Naz1 Germany.
In 1940, during the Battle of BntaJn m World War II. the ude turned as initially and eventually 200 to 300
Ameri can style single family
e Luftwaffe sustained heavy losses mfltcted by the Royal Air Force.
_ In 1949, " The Lone. Ranger," based on the radio show of the same homes for sale to Americans and
name , made its television debut on ABC with Clayton Moore as the other Western managers coming to
do business there."
~ask ed hero and Jay Silverheels as Tonto.
Thi s article also mentions that
I
John has attended two different
conferences in Moscow where he
met Gorbachev briefly. John gave
Gorbachev
a watch which wa s
•' ..
given to John by his mother.
•
John also has an office in Kazan
in the Tatar Republic, U.S.S.R. and

either brushed off or misread:
Last February, th e Defense
Intell igence Agency warned that
units of the Soviet Red Army and
the KGB were training for a coup.
In March, the National Security
Agency interc epted a KGB alert
advising agents to prepare for possible civil war.
In June, the Central Intelligence
Agency learned that three men
(who would later be among the
coup 's " gang of eight") had prepared a secret repon on Gorbachev
and delivered it to the Supreme
Soviet. Th e report charged that
Gorbachev had stopped reading
unpleasant intelligence repons and
was refusing to meet with top KGB
officials.
In Jun e and July , th e CIA
reported that the KGB was spying
on Soviet reformers and reporting
their acti vities to members of the
Supreme Soviet.
Again and again. intelligence
sources warned that something was
in the works in the Soviet Union.
But those warnings were disregarded by both superpowers. In
Moscow , Gorbachev believed
blindly in his fri ends . And in

Washington, Bush believed in Gorbachev.
Now th e sam e advi se rs who
misled Bush before the coup are
still telling him what he wants to
hear - that Gorbachev has recovered and now has a steady hand on
the helm.
Since Russian Pres ident Bori s
Yeltsin' s first visit to Washington
tw o year s ago , he has been dismi sse d by th e White Hou se as
inconsequential. Back then, he was
not granted an offi cial visit with
Bush, and White Hou se advisers
labeled him as a buffoon. Yeltsin
was Gorbac hev 's rival, and that
made him an outcast at the White
House.
Now that Yeltsin has emerged
as the hero of the new Soviet revolution , th e cl ique around Bu sh,
including National Security Adviser Brent Scowcroft and Sec retary
of State James Balcer, still refuses
to believe that Yeltsin is a stronger
player th an Gorbach ev. Now ,
instead of calling him a buffoon,
they call him a demagogue with an
inflated ego.
RUG RUNNERS - In spite of
sporadi c guerrilla fi ghting in

I

I

I

r
II

i

Afghani stan, th e fabled Khyber
Pass to Pakistan is opening wider
for traffi c - traffi c in rugs, not
refugees.
When the Sov iet Union ended
its ill -fated invasion of Afghanistan
in 1988, Afghanistan was selling
$433 million wonh of goods a year
ro the USSR - 86 percent of its
ex pons.
some
of
Bac k then,
Afghani stan' s fabl ed handm ade
rugs were being smuggled through
Pakistan for resale in the United
States. Now that the buying power
of the Soviet ruble has all but vanished, this gray market in rugs has
multiplied.
Since Pakistan has most favored
nation status with the United States
and Afghanistan does no~ the rugs
are filtered through Pakistani middlemen and sold as Palcistani rugs
in America. But the subterfuge has
fool ed no one and works to everyone's advamage.
The Afghans, with a proud
1,000-year tradition of both rug
making and smuggling, get reasonably sound Pakistani currency or
sometimes even Western currency
for their handiwork. And the Pakistani merchants take a handsome
cut
The American consumers pay
less than they would if the rugs
were imported directly from
Afghanistan at higher tariff rates.
And the U.S. governmen~ by winking at the trade, is able to help the
hard-working rug weavers to reap a
little good wiU in return.
MINI -EDITORIAL - President Bush set the tone for the 1992
presidential campaign last week
when he refused to speak out boldly against a sleazy ad promoting
·supreme Coun nominee Clarence
Thomas. The ad , oaid for by the
ul1Ja·right, dredges up din on three
members of the Senate and implies
they are not fit to sit in judgment of
Thomas. The ad does Bush and
Thomas no good . But instead of
pulling his considerable strings to
get the conservativ es to stop it,
Bush sent them a weak message
carried by White House Chief of
Staff John Sununu . The president
"wished" they wouldn 't run the
ads. We can ' t imagine Bush using
that term on something he feels
strongly about, as in , "I wish you
wouldn 't serve broccoli."
Copyright, 199 1, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Stories about John Epling, Victor Genheimer and El Slobbo

I;Today·in history

.

~
'

Berry•s World

DRA\M, FILL OR
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have ever seen. Rupe, John is quite
a showman.
Victor Genheimer stopped at the
office the other day and he stated
that he believed that he is the oldest
driver of a vehicle in the state of
Ohio. He was born May 28. 1896
which would make him 95 years of
age. Victor also stated that he is
still active and that just last week
he mow ed three ac res of grass at
his property at Peach Fork. Rupe,
do you know an yone who is an y
older and still drives a car at age
95. At any rate, Victor should be
proclaimed the oldest living driver
in the state of Ohio until some o~e
comes forward stating otherwi se.
Good Luck Victor.
Dear Fred: The other day I was
talking to a friend of mine and he
called me by the term, El Slobbo. If
thi s man had not been a good
friend I would probably have
slugged him. To me thi s remark is
insulting. What can you tell me
about it? Signed Don R.
Dear Don: After reading your
letter I too am somewhat in the
dark pertaining to the meaning of
the remark, El Slobbo. So I con tacted noted historian , Ish McKibble, pertaining to this matter. The
following is what Professor McK ibble told me . "The phrase, El
Slobbo, is a remark si milar in prestige to one being called a Prince.
Earl, Dulce,. Lt. Colonel, General,
Banker, Judge, etc.
In shan, it is a word denoting
high honor. It is so used by the

By Fred W. Crow
Upper Slobbovians when one is
designated as an outstanding citizen." Professor Ish McKibble also
indicated that an important female
could be called El Slobberina. A
Mayor is always called EI Slobbo.
Professor McKibble also points
out that the usc of the word Slob is
not one that is ordinarily used as a
mark of distinction. The dictionary
deftnes a slob as "being a sloppy or
coarse person." Professor McKibble also pointed out that the meaning of this word probably originated in Lower Slobbovia here most
of the people are considered trash.
Finally, the Professor advised
that Upper Slobbovia and Lower
Slobbovia comprise one country
and is located somewhere near the
Balkans.
Furthermore. Don, since you arc
distinguished by being the greatest
fi sherman this side of Shade River,
then you arc entitled to be called El
S lobbo. Congratulations, Don, give
your friend a stringer of catfish
instead of a slug. What do you
think of this, Rupc?
Carry on.
(Long-time Attorney Fred W.
Crow is a contributor or columns
for the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Readers wishing to applaud, criticize or comment on any subJect
(except for politics or religton)
are encouraged to write to Mr _
Crow in care of this newspaper.)

By Chuck Stone

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

TODAY

''•..

has made many contacts in Russia
which he feels will help him both
in the legal and business contacts in
both countries.
Earlier, John had been on the
faculty of the Texas A. &amp; M. University's College of Architecture.
In addition to holding membership
in the Cincinnati, Ohio State and
American Bar Associations, he also
holds membership in the International Bar Association, US-USSR
Trade and Economic Council,
World Trade Association, Ameri can Society of International Law,
American Arbitration Association,
American Institute of Constructors
and Rotary International. Also, he
is affiliated with the Presidium of
the College of Adv()cates, Tatar
Repulllic, USSR.
John learned to speak Russian
during the Korean War when the
Air Force trained him to intercept
communications between Soviet
MIG pilots. He has made many
trips to Russia during the last three
years and has wriuen many articles
on Russian trade. He indicates that
he is in a position to help both his
country and clients in geuing established in the new Russia.
John is very accomplished in his
sin ging and his one man shows .
believe that I can safely say that I
have never heard the Lord 's Prayer
sung better at a fun eral the one
time I heard John sing it. He was
also an accomplished one man play
actor. John has the ability to arouse
an audience as well as an y person I

Women advance in newsroom

WETL~~DS

!

Sunday, Se pt. 15
Accu·Wea ther~ forecast for daytime conditions and high

~

Newspaper junkie that I am, I
read nine newspapers a day. All of
them are published in the East
That's not to suggest that a few
of the nation 's more distinguished
newspapers are not located west of
the Hudson River. It's just that I
grew up in Hartford, Conn., comConed by Lhe intellectual superiority of New England, educated about
the founding of the nation iri the
East, but unimpressed that the
founders were all white males.
None of this holds true today .
As Bob Dylan melodically philosophized, "the times, they are achangin'." New England no longer
dominates America's intellectual
underpinnings; genius has become
more dispersed. And white males
are under accelerated pressure to
share power.
Nowhere in America are these
. changes talc:ing place more drarnati-

cally than in newspapers. I reflected on this recently as I was reading
one of my nine newspapers , the
Raleigh (N.C.) News &amp; Observer.
(I also read !hat city's weekly Carolinian, a black newspaper.)
The News &amp; Observer
announced three new editorial
appointments - chief of the copy
desk, editor of the features section
and deputy copy desk chief. All
three are women.
The change was even more
amplified by the fact !hat the features editor's predecessor was on
maternity leave.
Are these changes influenced by
the fact that the News &amp; Observer's managing editor, Marion Gregory, is a woman? Not really. In
the nation 's 330 journalism schools
an4 departments, two-thirds of the
students are women.

I noti ced thi s while teaching
journalism at the University of
Delaware. Seven years ago , my
classes were 50 percent male. In
the last couple of years, the demographics had shifted to 67 percent
female. The shift was also noted by
two journalism professors, Maurine
H. Beasley and Kathryn T. Theus,
in their book about women in journalism education , "The New
Majority ."
Consonant with these changing
demographics, the American
Newspaper Publishers Association
earlier this year elected Cathleen
Black, publisher of USA Today, as
its president. Three years ago, the
American Society of Newspaper
Editors elected Katherine Fanning,
then the editor of the Christian Science Monitor, as its president.
Although at present women

co!llprise only 32 percent of news
staffs, more and more women are
moving into high -level editorial
and executive positions on major
newspapers.
As the female presence in journalism mcreases, have you noticed
any change in the high quality of
your newspaper? I doubt it. Professionally, it goes about its job as
dthgently as ever. It igforms, educates and entertains. It exposes
charlatans regardless of race, creed
or gender. It enables you to stay on
top of the world' s sometimes kaleidoscopic changes.
I
This is not to imply that the millennium in journalism is at hand.
But women journalists are increasingly making their impact felt.
If you don't believe it, ask my
syndicate editor. Invariably 'she's
right.
•

e

PA.

IMansfield I 89° I•
IND

•IColumbus I 90° I

~

W . VA .

~.~,~, ~ -·
Showers T·sforms Rain

F/um·es

Snow

fee

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Cloudy

C 19Q1 Accu-Wealhef. Inc.

Via AssoCiated Press GrRphicsNet

Weather
South-Ce ntral Ohio
Partly cloud y and warm with
wide ly scattered showers and thun~ers t orm s . Hi gh today 90-95.
Chance of raw is 30 percent.
Extended forecast:
Mo nday through Wednesday:

A chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday. Fair on Tuesday and Wednesday with a cooling
trend. Highs 85-95 Monday, 75-85
Tuesday and 70-80 Wednesday.
Lows 65-75 Monday, 60-70 Tuesday and 50-60 Wednesday.

E!!0 rts ... _c:..:o--nt_in_ue_d_rr_o_m_A-=·1_____________
Included in the long list of programs listeners can enjoy are,
"Back to the Bible," a 30-minute
broadcast of Bible teaching and
sacred music; "Bookshelf," a
Christian drama for children; and
"Campus Journal," a two-minute
communi lies. "
Moody's Christian radio broad- devotional geared toward high
cas ts began in 1926, only a few school and college students.
Anyone wanting more informayears aft er broadcas t tec hnology
emerged in th e United States. tion about MBN, or would like to
Today, Moody is a leader in Chris- make a donation to Lhe Gallipolis
tian radio, owning and operating 12 project, can contact Zirille at 4465137, or 57 Steele Rd .• Gallipolis:
commercial- free radio states.
or Coughenour at 446-5330.
ra ise $25.000," said Zirille. "But if
the goal is not reached. those malc•ng donations will receive a refund.
But the good Lord willing, I know
we ca n make it. I think we can
brin g Chm ti an radio into small

Betty Nitz

Gertrude Zumbach

POMEROY - Betty Jo Nitz , 48,
1620, Lin coln He ights , Pomeroy,
·.vho died Tuesday, Sept. 10, 1991
at Pleasant Valley Hospital, is also
survived by a dau ghter-in -law .
Peggy D. Estep Nitz. The daughtertn·l aw·s name was unintentionally
omitted fro m Mr~. Nitz's obituary
on TMrsday in The D aily Sentinel .

TUPPERS PLAINS - Genrude
G. Monroe Zumbach, 83, of Tuppers Plains, died Saturda:r. morning,
Sept14,1991 , atherhome.
Born June 22, 1908, in Spencer,
W.Va., she was the daughter of the
late Har vey and Minnie Reger
Monroe.
A long-time Meigs County resident, she was a former member of
the Christian Church in Long Bottom and was retired from the Eastern Local School District where
she served as a cook.
She is survived by: two daughters, Beulah Zumbach and Nancy
(Herman) Schul of Tuppers Plains;
a daughter in law, Eva Zumbach of
Lancaster; six grandchildren, five
great-grandchildren and four stepgreat-grandchildren.
Also surviving are five sisters:
Letha Kibble of Vienna, W.Va.,
Faye Graham of Tarlton, Virginia
Reid of South Bloomingville, Irene
Beavers of Lancaster, and Betty
Drake of Newark; four brothers:
Denver and Harry of Grove City,
Wilbur of Frankfort, and Gerald of
Chillicothe and several nieces and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Jacob; a son, Roben:
a great-grandson, Joshua Colyer; a
sister and two brothers.
Services will be held Monday I
p.m. at the White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Joe
Hoskins officiating. Burial will be
in the Coolville Cemetery.
Friends may call Sunday 3-5
p.m . and 7-9 p.m . at the funeral
home.

Lucy Young
TUPPERS PL AINS - Lu cy
Surn mcrfield Young, 86. of Tuppers Plain s, died Friday morning,
Sept. I:l, 199 1. at Veterans Memori al Hospi tal in Pomeroy.
The daughter of the late David
and Cordelia Cobb Summerfield,
she wa s born Jan. 22, 1905, in
Spe ncer, W.Va.
She was a retired bookkeeper
for the Caperton Insurance Company in Charleston, W.Va., and was a
me mber of the Success Church of
Christ.
She is survived by a nephew and
tt is wife, Harry and Jo Anne Summerfield of Westervill e, and several other family members.
Preceding in death were her hus·
band Kenneth in 1972, two sisters
and three brothers.
Services will be held Sunday at
I p.m. at th e Whtte Funeral Home
in Coo lvill e with the Rev. Jo e
Hoskins offi ciating. Burial wtll be
in the Success Cemetery .
Friends may call Sunday from 9
a. m. 10 I p.m. before the funeral .

(LTS P

~t:i-800)

Pub lls hf'd Pach Sunday, 82-"i Tll lrd AvE' . .
Ohio. b.v the Ohio V alley Pub lishin g Compa nv ; Mult l m£'dl a. In c. Se-rond cla ss po.o;lal!f' pa i d at Ga llipol is.
Ohio -1 :163 ! Entt-&gt;rf'd as second cla.l!.s
mailin g ma l lf'r at PomProv . Ohio. Po!': t
Ca lll poli ~ .

O ff i C'~'

Mr&gt;mhr&gt;r . Thr AssoclatC'd Press. I n ·
l and D allv PrC'S S Assoclaflon and I hE'
Ohio N rw.spapN Assoclat ion , Na tiona l
Ad vf'flls ln!:! Rf'prPSenta ll vt&gt;, Branha m
NPw spap{'r Sa i£&gt;S. 733 Thi rd AvE'nUE',

, N ~,- York . NPW York 10017.

SUNDAV ONLV
SUDSCRIPTION RATES

By Canl er or Motor Routt
OnP WC'ek ..

Onr Yra r

. ..... ...... 90 Cen'ts · ·

.. .. .... ...... .. $46.80
SING LE COP Y
PRI CE

.. ... 75 CPnl s

Sunda y .. .

No subscr iptions by ma ll p€'r mltted In
· ar('fl s wherP m ol or carrli'r S('rv ii'£&gt; Is
ava il able.
T he Sundav T lmes -Spn l ln t&gt;l w UI nol be
reo~pons l bt t&gt; ror advance payments
made "to ca r riers .

MAI L SUBSCRIPTIONS
SundRy Only
On('Y('3 r .............. . . . . . .. ..... $47.84
Six month s ..........

.. $24.70

Dally a nd Su nday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln!lld e County

13 Weeks .......
. .. ... $21.84
26 Weeks .... ... . .... .... ...
.... $43.16
~2 Weeks ........ ... .... .................. . $84.76
R al et!l Outlldd e County

. 13 Weeks
.. $23.40
26 Weeks . . ......... ... ...... ..... $45.50
52 Weeks .... . .. .... ........

. .. ..... $88.CO

__

______

,___ trom A-1
Continued

PLAN OPEN HOUSE - Eleanor Thomas, left, retiring executive director or the Meigs County Couocil on Aging, and Susan
Stewart, the new director, will be honored at an open house Sunday, Sept. 22, I to 3 p.m. at teb Senkor Citizens Center.

~

KY

Run'tan ...

Sunday Tlmea Sentlnei-Page-A3

to help pull the people together and clubs also work with FPA, 4-H,
to help the community leaders get sponsor Scout II'OOpl. provide llld
what they want accomplished supervise commuruty recreational
through volunteer community ser- pro~rams, sponsor Liuie IAaaue.
vice," Cleland said. The overall get mvolvcd in anti-liuer projoc:u,
purpose of Rwitan is "to make ow and help the sick and needy in the
community a better place to live commWlity.
and work," he added.
"Only 16 members arc needed
"At present, our village has to form a new club," KeMy said;
acquired for parlc purposes the park "If you like people, and working
area of about one acre plus I I acres with others in the community,
to be developed and operated for you'U lilceRuritan."
park purposes," Cleland continued.
Those residents wanting funhcr
Ruritan can be of great assis - information bout joining the club
tance in the erection of playground may contact Cleland al Racine Vilequipment, shelters, ballgrounds, lage Council chambers or call 949concession stands, as well as main- 2071.
tenance and repair of facilities as
part of its community service projects, the mayor explained.
Adams said that many Ruritan

MICH

Anderson
Bush afflicted with , Gorbyi.ti•S, ByandJack
Dale Van Atta

'

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

rrom A-l
Open ···-Continued
-- - - -- -

She with the suppon of Lhe Council
have solved some of the transponation problems of a rural community. Through their effons, the routes
have been expanded and today the
center has four buses traveling
thousands of miles each month.
Special health programs and services, both in-home and at Lhe center, have continually expanded over
the years, as has the nutrition program . Home -delivered me~ls,

Warm, muggy weather
expected to continue
Scattered showers and thunderBy The Associated Press
storms
are likely and highs on SunA nearly stationary warm front
day
could
be in the mid-90s in
stretching across Ohio will be
some
parts
of
Lhe state.
respon sible for continued wet ,
The
National
Weather Service
warm and muggy weather through
some
relief
from
the hot and
said
Sunday, forecasters said Saturday.
humid conditions is possible by
Monday.
Around tbe nation
Thunderstorms pounded MinContinued rrom A-1
ticipation in the upcoming Novem- neapolis-St. Paul Saturday morning
and a Canadian cold front was
ber election.
"I really dislike the public's ten- expected to bring the season's first
dency to refer to this as an off-year snowfall to a mountain range in
election," Taft told the Sunday eastern Montana.
Thunderstorms dumped hail
Times-Sentinel. " I feel that this
term tends to discourage voter over Ohio and West Virginia on
Friday evening. Strong winds darnturnout."
Taft refened to the large number . aged trees and power lines and
of local tax bond issues and town- blocked roads in Jaclcson County in
ship and school district races on tap southeastern Ohio,
Rain was forecast Saturday over
for the November 4 election.
Wisconsin,
Michigan and northAccording to the Secretary of
State, a campaign to privately fund west Pennsylvania. A band of thunthe "I Voted Today" sticker pro- derstorms stretched from the Great
gram is about to get underway. Taft Lakes to Texas.
stated that the issuance of those
stickers has proven to be a strong
incentive to get voters to the polls.
The stickers are usually issued
only during major elections, but it
is Taft's hope that local officials
There is still time to
and others solicited for funds wiU
help to fund this program ror the
November election.
Taft also reponed that he would
be traveling to Washington D.C.
Prepare for an excHing careernext week to testify before the
House Ways and Means Commit• BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
tee. Through testifying, Taft hopes
• EXECUTIVE SECRETARIA~
he can help exempt poll workers
from recent legislation that requires
• MICRO COMPUTER/DATA
Social Security withholding from
PROCESSING
all workers.
Taft also stated that a task force
• MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
is being formed to work with the
FALL QUARTER BEGINS
Ohio Bureau of Motor Vehicles to
SEPT. 23
improve notification of local
boards when a voter moves.
finanrial Aid
Approved f11r The
According to Taf~ most citizens Available To Those
Training Of
visit their local BMV at least once
Who
O~ab~
Veterans
everv four years. and he hopes that
through increased cooperation ,
boards of elections can be notified
by the BMV of any addre ss
changes. Failure of voters to notify
the board of address changes is one
CALL TODAY 446-436711!
of the major problems facing local
CCAAmed~ed
Reg.I90-0S-1274B
board operations.

Four
...
Continued rrom A-1
county district, he could not hear
the case because of conflict of
interest.
In the suit, the GCLEA is asking
the board to make good on the
teachers' contract and go ahead
with a scheduled 8-pcrcent salary
increase. The board had voted Aug.
19 to obtain a judgment on the
legality of not giving the pay
increase.
The GCLEA filed their suit a
week after the vote.
The State Supreme Court will
appoint a judge to hear the case in
the cominR weeks .

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Gallipolis, OH.

Secretary ...

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We are the only deaners in the area which offer:
•Smoke, Mildew, and Odor removal through the use of
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•REMEMBER, We clean BAND, FlAG, MAJORmE
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·If

Meigs Chamber
to host course
POMEROY - "Stan-up Basics,"
an introduction to starting a business , will be presented by the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, Small Business Development Center and Management
Development Division of the College of Business at Ohio University
on Tuesday from 6:30-9 p.m. at the
Chamber office, 200 East Second
St. , in Pomeroy. The cost is $15 per
person and pre-registration may be
done by calling the chamber offtce
at 992-5005.

chore programs, and homemaker
services have made it possible for
elderly residents to stay in their
own homes. Pilot health projects,
family suppon networlcs, mtergenerational program, a variety of educational opportunities, and social
activities have been initiated by
Mrs. Thomas over the years with
suppon from the voiWlteer Council
on Aging.

N
A
Mouse In Our
Back Yard.

OF FUN AND SUN •.-------.

II'!P•P.'8

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•aroDu

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TOLL I'M!E U.~: 1(IIIIIINJII
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S.lil"iili. !IIINI - - -

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• .. Page-A4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

r~~~ Inservice

h:

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

September 15, 1991

program slated Monday for teachers in all Meigs County schools

POMEROY. Staff development
•.:•: through techniques toward improv:·: · ing curriculum will be the empha·
•:..: sis of the Meigs County Staff
:.:. Development Program to be held
~ ::: Monday at Meigs High School for
:; ;, all teachers in the Meigs County
r schools.
'
Classes for students will not be
held Monday.
Forty-six segments on instruc••• tion using local teachers and super·
visors as well out-of-town presen,,•• ters will be featured in the in-service program.
I
Meigs County Superintendent of
Schools John Riebel will give the
welcome and introduce Dr. Ronald
Sinclair who will give the keynote
address entitled "Parent Involve ment and Ownership in School
Disciplined"
at 10 a.m.
,

From 10:15 to 11:15 am. con·
current
will be held on

alternative d
emp

teaching
seekmg

sk ills, improv
content

reading in the
new

mathematics curriculum , gelling
communication back into the curriculum, rural school-university
collaboration, tactics for thinki ng,
sc hool and business partnerships,
science fairs for elem entary and
junior high school students. There
will also be a special program for
kindergarten teachers and a lcg isla·
tive update by Sen. Jan Mrchacl

Long.
The 12:30 to 1:30scsStons :rn.i
th e 12:45 to2:45 scsmms wi ll ill' .1
repeat of sc vcr:tl ol the workslt up ,
alon g wi th hands-on work in ~~~ ~1111
sc ience. crcalivily ancl writin g ~u•d
language arts . Intervention srr:o tc·
goes wrll also be cx pl orccl duru1•
the program wh1ch co ncl udes"'
p.m.

Personalized
Hand-Painted Stonewear
by Village Traditions

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-- case.
In that statement, Eblin states
that the appeal could "be lied up in
court for years."
"We do not anticipate receiving
any supplementary funds from the
state until after the appeals process
is completed and a ruling is made
in our favor," the statement reads.
"The Meigs County Board of
MR/DD and CSMI/EA has worked

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September 15, 1991

PRESENTED CHECK • Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division recently donaled $450 to the Salem Center Township Volun·
teer Fire Department. John Merrif'ield, right,

e

safety and health manager for Southern Ohio,
presented the check to Fire Chief' Richard Lambert who noted that the donation will go into the
department's equipment purchase fund.

"'··~··...!

Group recommends area district
WELLSTON -:- The Highway Users Committee of the South·
eastern Oh10 Regronal Council recently passed a motion recommcndrng that the nmc-county region consisting of Galfia, Meigs,
Vmton, Jackson, Lawrence, Athens. Hocking, Pike and Scioto
counues wrll be defrned as an economic development district by
Governor Voinovich's "new" Department of Development.
Rcprescntauves from the nine counties stated that it made sense
to band these counties together because they had common socio·
economic characteristics, similar strengths and weaknesses and represent cohcsrvc retarhng and JOb market and is already organized
behmd a reg ronal hrghway corridot improvement agenda unique in
the state.
. The group expressed concern that it would be divided up into
drstncts that have nothrng rn common except that they arc poor and
pan of Ohio Appalachia.

very hard together to obtain more
funds from the state to provide
state-mandated services for persons
in our county with Mental Retarda·
lion and Developmental Disabili·
ties."
"We hope," Eblin wrote, "that
the citizens of Meigs County will
recognize our efforts by passi ng
our three-year operating levy in
November. Funds from thi s levy
are what will keep this program
operational while we wait out the
appeals process."

s~

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vwrr~

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EMS units receive 5 calls

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Of'.Aiff

TAWNEY JEWELERS
422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.

WELLSTON - A charge of reckless operation will be filed
Monday 10 Jackson County Municipal Court against a 79-ycar -old
Scioto County man whose car went out of control at the Ohillco
Days Grande Finale Parade Saturday night, injuring nine people,
according to an article in Friday's Jackson Journal -llera/d.
Wellston Acting Police Chief Tim Ackley confirmed Thursday
morning that charges would be filed against Francis Laner of South
Webster. Ack ley said the car- a 1985 Pontiac Grand Am- had
been taken to a motor vehicle maintenance specialist for examina·
tion as lO whether there had been mechanical failure involved. He
sa id none was found .

5tru,t !Books

93 Mill St.

POMEROY · Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to five calls for assistance on Friday and early
Saturday.
On Fnday at 9:28 a.m. the Middleport unit went lO Overbrook
Center for Sta nl ey Roush who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The Syracuse unit went to Third Street at 2: 10 p.m. for Helen
Wil liams who was transported to Veterans.
At 5:50p.m. th e Pomeroy unit was called to Route 7 for Alma
Eppl e who was transported to Holzer Medical Center.

Reach agreement
NIL ES, Ohio (AP) - A tcnta·
li ve agreement was reached early
Sat urday that co uld end a twoweek teachers strike in this north·
cast Ohio cit y, unton officials sai d.
The 177-member Niles Classro om Teac hers Association was
sc heduled to vote on the contract at
~~ rn cc tin Saturda afternoon.

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The Rutland unit, at 6:38 p.m., went to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Wayne Spillman who was taken to O'Bicness Hospital.
On Saturday at 5:44 a.m. the Tuppers Plains unit was called to
the Arbaugh Addition for Gertrude Zimbach.

Deputies probe 2 mishaps
POMEROY · Two accidents have been reponed by the Meigs
County Sheriffs Department.
The first accident occurred Thursday evening around 5 p.m. in
Rutland Township on Dye Road. Charles B. Williamson, Dye Road,
reported he had been in the woods cutting firewood and as he was
coming down the hill and pulled onto the roadway a deer ran into
his path. He swerved and the edge of the roadway gave way. The
report stated that his vehicle, a 1983 Ford Ranger, went over the
embankment and went between two trees damaging both sides of
his vehicle. Williamson was not injured.
The second accident involved a deer, and occurred at 8:45 p.m.
on Friday. According 10 the report, Julie A. Wandling, Vance Road,
Pomeroy, reported that she was traveling west on Route 68I in a
1987 Chevrolet and struck a deer that was standing in the roadway .
The deer was killed. Heavy damage was listed to the vehicle.
On Friday evening deputies arrested Brian K. Bowers. 25. Tup·
pers Plains, on a charge of driving under the influence and reckless
operation.
Lorraine P. Aeikcr, 41, Pomeroy, was also arrested by deputies .
for driving under the influence.
Both are scheduled for hearing in Meigs County Court.

Eastern board hires teacher
REEDSVILLE · Mrs. Mary Owens was employed as the kinder·
ganen teacher for Chester Elementary at a special meeting of the
Eastern Local Board of Education on Thursday.
Mrs. Owens employment resulted from the large kindergarten
enrollment. Kindergarten classes will being Tuesday morning .
Attending the meeting were Ray Karr, president; and members,
Bill Hannum, 1.0. McCoy and Jim Smith.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlner-Page-A5

A Prayer
From My

K-9
Friends.
Treat me kind/\-. mv belor'erl friend. for no heart in all rht•
world i.'l morf' /{·r atP}ul for kintlnl'.u than thl' lrn·in1( hf'nrt of
me .
Dn no break mv .&lt;pirir 11·ith a ..ril'h . for thou/(h l .• hould li•·•·
.v our hand hetu:Pen hlou•s. ~· our pntit•tH'f&gt; and undt•r.'ilmulin1f
will more quick/~· lf•ach mt• thr thin /{·" ~· ou u·nulti hnn• mt•
lt•arn .
Speak to me often. for _yuur t 'otCl' i.11 tht• u_·orld'.~ .u~: t•rt• '·"'
music. os you mu .,l knou· b7' lht•/it•rcj• IVfJI{j(inf{ojmv tail Lrht•fl
vour frwurep fall.• upon mv wnirin11 f'Or .

PI east• take mP in.~idt&gt; wht•n ir i.11 fold anrJ 1n•r. fur I am a tloanimal . no lon/{Pr O "(' U .~IomNIIn biller t•lt• mPnl .~ .

mP.Uicaterl

and I a.'jk n n /{reatt•r f{lor _v r hnrt rlu&gt;pri t · i/e/(«~ o J, iII irtfl nl ·' our

feel be.• idt' the hearth .
K&lt;'ep mv pan filled with fre.&lt;h lf'aler. for I cannot tdl mu
u·hen I .&lt; uffer thir.&lt;t.
Feed m e clean food , thai I mav .&lt;tnv well. ro romp andfJim·
and do ~our biddinl(. to walh bv vour .• ide. and .&lt;land readv.
will in/( and able to protPCt you with mv life. s hould vour /if•·
he in dan/(er.
And. mv friend. when I am •·••rv old. if God .• ee.• fir to deflrin•
me nf m~ hl'alth and .~i/{hl . dn not turn me au..•ay from ymL
Rather-. 11we that my tru .~tin!( life i.~ taken ~en fly. unly by our
Lord. and I .•hal/leave knowinl( wirh the la.u breath I drau ·
rhar mv fate wa.! always safe.•t in JOUr hands .

Support your County Humane Society. Be kind and pleose
have your pets spayed or neut•ed.
Sponoored by the Meigs Co . Humane Society. P. 0 . Box 682.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

Court news

Six ty-six others forfeited bond.

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lice nse.

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, O.H-Polnt Pleasant,

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••

. . . - - - - - - -:Local briefs--------.

GALLIPOLIS -Three people
we re fin ed Thursday, and five Fri·
day in the Ga llipolis Municipal
Court of Judge Joseph L. Cain.
Receivin g fin es Thursday were:
Scott A. Bush, 27, of Gallipolis,
S7SO plus cos ts, 10 days jail, one
year li ce nse suspension, driving
under the inOuence; Jerry G. Kack·
Icy, 25, of Ga llip oli s. $450 plus
costs, three days jail, 90 day opera·
tors li ce nse suspension . driving
under the influence; Thomas D.
Hill. 30. of Bidwell, $750 plus
costs, 10 days jail, one year license
suspension, driving under the inOu·
cnce.
Sixty -fou r others forfeited bond.
Receiv ing fines Friday were:
Bi ll y D. Harden, 24, of Vinton,
S150 plus costs. three days jail, no
opera tors license; William R. Russe ll , 36, of Ga llipolis, $150 plus
cosL&gt;, three days jail. driving under
suspension; Chad Kent Hackley,
19 , of Ga ll opoli s. $5 plus costs.
speeding; Mable Chick, age unre·
ported. of Ga llipoli s, $50 plus
cos ts, thr eate nin g; Edwin R.
Hodge , 23 , of Mt. Alto, W.Va.,
SI 00 plus costs, expired operators

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Man to be charged in parade mishap

;t MMIRD ...

Continued from A-1
plementary funds for the 1991 calendar year "to enable the board to
fulfill its responsibilities and duties
to its clients."
The teachers' union at the
MRJDD ~rogram, Carleton School
and Meigs Industries Education
Association, is cautiously pleased
with the ruling.
Stating that they expect the
State to file an appeal the case,
Association President Melva Eblin
prepared a written statement
explaining the union's stand on the

"'

I

A TOTALLY
UNIQUE DESIGN

NO OTHER TRIBUn IS AS LASTING
AS APERSONAUZED MEMORIAl
FROM LOGAN MONUMENT CO. IT
IS AWORTHY EXPRESSION OF
LOVE AND RESPEa.

LOGAN
MONUMENT
COMPANY, INC.
POMEROY
MEIGS COUNTY DISPLAY YARD
NEAR POMEROY-MASON
BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, MANAGER
PHONE 092·2588

VINTON, OHIO
GALUA COUNTY
DtSPLA Y YARD
JAMES A. &amp; KIMBERLY
BUSH, MANAGERS
PHONE 388-8603

It's a ____

If you think electric
cooperatives aren't
looKing for ways to
conserve energy. ..

here's how we're driving
costs into the ground
with Geotherrilal.

Buyer~ Market
NEW 1991 NISSAN TRUCK

_Q~

power &amp; lower proce !hall

Ohio's 28 electric cooperatives are leading the way iri driving heattng.
cooling, and water heatipg costs into the ground by promoting to their
members- who are also their owners- the new Geothermal Heating and
Cooling systems.
lbday·s Geothermal systems provide an energy-efficient, low-maintenance.
long- lasting. and environmentally beneficial advantage. Plus, by installing
Geothermal. you can cut your air conditioning costs by up ro 30%. and your
heating and water heating bills by up to 60%.
A Geothermal system uses the earth's relatively constant ground tempera tures as a supen'or way of providing heating air. cooling air, and water hcallng
1n one package.
But that's how an electric cooperative is different. After all, wouldn't you
take the lead in promoting Geothermal Heating and Cooling systems to help
protect the owner.5of your company from skyrocketing electric rates? Especially
if they were your neighborS?
We do. Every day.

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AFTER
REBATE

NEW 1991 NISSAN 4x4

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power &amp; $2000 Jess Jnan

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AFTER

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4door, automalc. cassetle. power ~eering &amp;brakes

BUCKEYE RURAL ELECTRIC
·coOPERATIVE, INC.

NEW 1991 DODGE COLT

•

Aulomalic, air, cassette, tilt , crurse

$1 0 999 ~~:;E

One of 28 Ohio Electric C:::ooperativea
143 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631 -0279

POWER BY THE PEOPLE,
FOR THE PEOPLE.

I •

If you haven't heard, Central Trust
in the Gallipolis area has become pan
of Bank One. But that means much
more than just us getting a new sign.
Because now you'll be able to
take advantage of Bank One's philosophy of doing "whatever it takes." Its
a way of approaching banking from a
rather unique perspective. Yours.
01991 MNCONf CORPORA. flO~ Mtlllbfr FDIC

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through innovative services like our Blue
Max•Acco.mt Ourjub)ee•vJSa•clv!cking card. Ard o..ri'ways of making l:mlking more convenient with additional
branches and ATM locations. They're
just the kind of services you can expect from a bank with the strength

and stability of Bank One.
There's ore thing that wont~
And its that you'll still be banking with
the friendly people yo\\ always have.
So stq&gt; 00. in. 'Wlllike what yoo see.
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Whatever it tahei

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

Page-A6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

•. . . .

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September 15,1991

,.-----------Local briefs-----------,
Commissioners to meet
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis City Commissioners will meet
jointly wilh the Gallm County Commissioners to discuss the sewerage requirements for !he proposed industrial park wilh the Community Improvement Corporation.
.
The meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 18 m the
second noor meeting room of the Gallia County Courthouse.

County board to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Local School Board will
hold a special meeting Monday, Sept. 16 at6:30 p.m. at !he board
office.
The three items on the agenda arc an executive session, a resolution to accept th e resignation of board member Fred Deel, and
employment.

City board to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City School Board will hold a
regular meeting Wednesday, Sept. 18 at 7:30p.m. at Washington
Elementary School.

Apple Festival starts next week
JACKSON - The popular Jackson County Apple Festival
starts at noon Tuesday, Sept. 17, with the cutting of a ribbon on the
mam stage.
The Apple Festival runs through Saturday, Sept. 21, and features
rides, contests and entertainment The festival feature attraction will

Area Boy Scouts to sell popcorn
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.- The Meigs, Gallia, Mason District
Boy Scouts of America will be selling Trail's End Gounnet Popcom from September 16 to October 18.
Proceeds will provide district units with additional funds needed
to serve Scouting in !he district.
The Scouts will be selling popcorn by th~ bM~ket for $5, fivepacks of microwave popcorn for $5, tins of caramel com for $6 and
12-packs of microwave popcorn (regular or light) for $10.
Trail's End Gourmet Popcorn is sold eKclusively by the Boy
Scouts.

Gallia school bus hits deer
CHESHIRE - A Gallia County Local Schools bus received
moderate damage when it struck a deer Thursday morning on
Cheshire Township Road 633.
According to report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, !he bus was soulhbound on T.R. 633 when it struck
the deer. The deer continued on.
The driver of !he bus, Barbara J. Randolph, 51, of Cheshire was
uninjured in !he accident
The bus received moderate damage to the front-left fender.

Police probe three-car wreck
GALLIPOLIS -No injuries were reportcd in a three-car accident Friday on S.R. 7 near the intersection of Chillicothe Road.
According to a Gallipolis Police Depanmcnt report. a car driven
by Paula Nolan, 25, of Gallipolis, ran into the back of another car,
driven by Freda M. Fannin, 32, of Meally, Ky., that was stopped for
traffic. Fannin's car was knocked into the back of a third vehicle
driven by Angela M. Leport, 26, of Gallipolis.
A passenger in Leport's vehicle, Lacey Lcport, 5 months, was
uninjured.
·
Damage to Nolan's 1986 Dodge Charger was listcd as moderate.
Damage to Fannin's 1986 Pontiac 6000 was li sted as light. and
damage to Leport's 1990 Ford Escort was listcd as ligh t.
Nolan was cited by the respondmg officer for fai lure to maintain
assured clear distance.

welcomed to the ·staff. New board
members and officers were elected
and installed. The new board members are Kay Brown, Shirley
Brown, Elvin Tenney, Ann Trembly, and Gina Wolf. The new officers are Gregg Emrick, president;
Brad Dawe, vice president; Scott
Darnell, treasurer; Carol Barry
Wharff, secretary.
Dr. Dan Wasmund introduced
Robert A. Lynch, Esq., as the special guest speaker. An associate
with Baker and Hostetler, Colum bus, Lynch currently serves by
gubernatorial appointment as chairman of the Ohio Governor's Council on People with Disabilities.
Special recognition awards were
presented by Lesli~ Foraker to

MAJESTIC DOCKED AT PUBLIC LANDING IN CINCINNATI - The Majestic showboat, now permanently moored at the
public landing in Cincinnati; stopped at least once a year in Gallipolis from 1923 untill941 to give a performance consisting of one
play and several vaudeville acts.

Twenty-eight fined in
Meigs County Court
POMEROY - Meigs County
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien
fined 28 defendants on Wednesday.
Fined were: Gerald Donahue,
Pomeroy, speed, $25 and costs;
Ronald Napier, Matthews, N.C. ,
speed, $26 and costs; Vera K.
Pegg, Reynoldsburg, speed, $22
and costs; Sarah L. Becker, Gallipolis, speed, $24 and costs;
Ronald K. Brown, Wellston, speed,
$20 and costs; Billy J. Johnson ,
Cleveland, speed, S23 and costs;
Linda K. Cundiff, Reynoldsburg,
speed, S20 and costs; Esther M.
Shaver, Crooksville, speed, $27
and costs; Greg A. Stephenson,
Columbus, speed, S21 and costs:
Patricia S. Church, Hilliard, speed,
$20 and costs; Bruce T. Hall, Deltona, Fla., failure to control, $25
and costs; Belinda L. Broyles. Gallipolis, speeding, $22 and costs;
Clyde B. Hanson, Lowell, speed,
$19 and costs; Gary Curtis,
Pomeroy, theft, $100 fine and
costs, $70 of fine suspended, three
days in jail , suspended, one year
probation, restitution.
Cindy L. Hayes, Dexter, DUI,
$350 and costs, three days in jail,
operator's license suspended for 90
days upon enrollment and completion of RTP school, $150 of fine
and jail will be suspended, failed to
drive in marked lanes, costs only;
Roben E". Klein, Pomeroy, hunting
without permission, $25 and costs,
hunting without a license, $25 fine,
suspended, and costs; Larry E.
Klein, Pomeroy, failure to restrain
dog, $25 fine, suspended, costs;
Ronnie L. Lambert, Pomeroy, DUI.

Patrol investigates collision
GALLIPOLIS -Three people escaped injury in a head-on collision on C.R. 109 in Morgan Township Friday aftcrnoon.
A report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State H1ghway Patrol

Sue Smith named Easter Seal program director for area
POMEROY - Sue Smith of
Marietta has been named program
director for the Easter Seal Society
of the River Cities which serves
~hildren with disabilities in Athens,
Meigs, Morgan. and Washington
Counties in Ohio, and Wood CountY in West Virginia.
Mrs. Smith's familiarity with
agencies and communities which
Easter Seals serve was a consideration in hiring her for the position,
according to a spokesman from the
Easter Seal Society of Southeastern
Ohio.
She has been a reporter or editor
for The Marietta Times for the past
13 years. It was her reporting about
local social services and issues
affecting people with disabilities
that led the Ohio Easter Seal Society to name The Marietta Times its
Newspaper of the Year in 1985.
Mrs. Smith and her husband ,
Grady, and their three year old
daughter, Bailey, live at 1405
Glendale Road in Marietta.
At a recent meeting of the Socic;ty Mrs. Smith and Kim Tice, a
licensed speech pathologiSt, were

Majestic showboat built in 1923 at Pittsburgh

states a uuck driven by John W. Johnson, 42, of Gallipolis was
southbound on C.R. 109 when another vehicle traveling !he opposite direction, driven by Timothy J. Johnson , 36, of Rutland, failed
to control in a curve and collided head-on with Johnson's truck.
Johnson, Thompson, and Thompson's passenger. Archie D.
McKinney, 20, of Rutland, were all uninjured according to th e
report.
Damage to Johnson's Ford 8000 was listed as light. Damage to
Thompson's 1972 Chevrolet 20 pickup was listed as moderate and
disabling.
Thompson was cited by the patrol for failure to control.

be Phil Uirt and the Dozers perfonning Thursday, Sept 19, at 7
p.m. and 8:30p.m.

Gregg Emrick, Board member of
the year; Marietta Uniglobe Staff,
volunteers of the year; Dr. Wasmund, VIP of the year; Sara
Hoskinson, special youth award;

McClure's
Family Restaurant

•

Marietta Uniglobe, sponsor of the
year; Mix 100, media award.
The 1992 poster representative
of the year, Brandi Lang, of Waterford was announced.

SUNDAY, SEPT.

2 HOT FUDGE CAKES
FOR THE PRICE OF ONE

•

Nomlnol OUIIIH II ol Aug ..l31, 18111
Bid Aolood
Pooploo Boncorp of Morlollo ..................................................................................S 30 34

Ohio Volloy Bonk of Golllpollo................................................ ..................... - ............37

Cltlzene Bank of Logan ............................................................................................215
Filii Nollonol Bonk ill McConnolovllle........................................ - ......................-..105
Cltlzene NatkN\IIBank or McConnelsvll ................................................ ..... ~ ..... ".130
Formero Bonking Co. of Pomeroy..............................- ............................................. 50
Wo orolhl fvromoot blnllllock broker~ In Ohio.
FIRST SCIOTO COMPANY
ti278 Buoch Boutovord
Columbuo, Ohio 432211
Coli Brad Smllh 11 1-IOG-457-BANK

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2 FOR I SALE

WANTED:
BANK STOCKS
P1rk National Bank of Newark. ........................................................................ ........ 41
Hocking YaNey Bank of Athens............ "''''''''"' ''······················· ·········.................... 117 121

u hiend Dsg

MONDAY-SUNDAY, SEPT. 16-22

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:~:·:;~~: ~~~~AF~~~~.~~................J3.19
Gtn. Hortingor l'lcwy
MIDDUI'OIT
614-992-5241

419 Jockson Pike
GAWPOUS
b14-44b-3831

354 Eost Main St.
POMEROY
614-992-6292

$400 and costs, 10 days in jail ,
license suspended for one year;
William J. Cremeans, Middleport,
obstructing official business, $100
fine, $60 suspended, costs, f1ve
days in jail suspended, one_year
probation; Steven M. Cox, Mtddleport, disorderly conduct, $100 fine;
Michael Ray Gilkey, Middleport,
criminal damaging, $50 and costs,
30 days in jail, 25 days suspended,
restitution, assault, 30 days in jail,
suspended 25 days, costs, one year
probation.
David E. Watkins, Middleport,
improper handling of a firearm, 30
days m jail, 20 days suspended,
$100 fine and costs, one year probation, failure to control, $30 fine
and costs; driving under suspension, three days in jail suspended
upon proof of valid operato(s
license within 90 days , $7 5 fmc
and costs; Franklin Jarvis, Jr., Vinton, speed, $21 and costs; Curtis R.
Dalton, Rutland, failure to yield,
$10 and costs; Eric Hankla ,
Langsville, IJCt!Y theft, I0 days suspended to llme served, $100 and
costs, probation of one year ,
receiving stolen property, 10 days
in jail suspended 10 time ser~ed ,
$100 and costs, one year proballon;
Patricia Bissell, Rutland, speeding.
$21 and costs; Carol W. Cline,
Long Bottom, failure to yield from
a private drive, $10 and costs.

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Over 40 Years Of Dependable Seroice

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SUESMITH

Committee plans
to meet Sept. 24
: POMEROY - The regular mcctil)g of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Development Disteict eKccutive commmee w1ll be
held Sept. 24 at 7 p.m. in !he conference room of the BH-HVRDD
offices locate on Washington
County Road 9, Manetta.
: Both the audit-budget committee and the personnel committee
will meet at6: 15 p.m. Highlights of
the . agenda include the 1992
Qpt.ions/Passport Budget, _!he 1992
Aging Program AllocatiOns, and
t~e FY'92 ARC Project Package.

Ulalft Ref'ia.Jilt'tff

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· POMEROY - Mark Boyd of
Pomeroy was hired Friday afternoon as the new Meigs County
Schools attendance officer by the
Meigs County Board of Education.
aoyd will ·begin work Tuesday on a
(our hours a day, five days a week
sl:hedule, with hours to be
increased if needed. He will work
on a probationary basis through
rice . 31, it was reported. Boyd
replaces Otis Knopp, attendance
ollicer for many years, who retired
'!list week.

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said.

ITURE
AS
(614) 742-2511

Owned"

Rutland, Ohio
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•BRAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHEEL ALIGNMENT

I MEIGS TIRE CENTER
JOHN FULTZ - J. MAICUS FUlTZ

242 W. Main

OWNEIS

Pomeroy

tJtJ2-2101

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CBEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC·GEO
308 East Main Street, Po11eroy, Ohio

DON TATE'S 1991 CLOSEOUT SALE HAS BEGUN!!
/L.!'f,:J~.

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Low As SJ9,995

Best Selection
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1991 CUTLASS SUPREME

$11,599

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1991 CAPRICE

where. Someone else would go
through the town passing out handbills. Sometimes a banner would be
unfurled by the post office and one
ofthe~eynolds' II children would
paint wtth watercolors on the Sidewalk:"Showboat TonighL" .
The ~alii ope would begm to
play ag31n at 7 p.m. such favontes
as Maggie, Dark Town Strutter's
Ball, Swanee River, Old Kentucky
Home, and Carry Me Back to Old
Vir~inny . The boiler was on the
MaJcsuc. Steam was made there
and p1ped over to the Atta Boy
where !he 32 copper keyboard calliope was was located.
.
Showtime was 8 p.m. and 1n
contrast to Billy Bryant, the Majestic players always played the dramas "straight." The captain and hJS
wife would usually pick out2 plays
per year for the boat, with most of
the plays having a moral lesson
attached to them. Most small town
showboat patrons appreciated the
plays with lessons, while the "city
folk" would poke fun at such "sim plistic nonsense".
some of the plays seen o~ the
Majestic when it came to GallipoliS
included·Honest Sinners and SaintJy Hyp~crites (about which one
minister was heard to comment !he
play should have been given in his
church), Ten Nights in a Bar-room,
St Elmo, Arsenic and Old Lace,
Girl of the Golden West, and Salloon Girl. Most of the plays were
what the professionals referred to

as 4-3 or 5·3 plays, which meant
they were for four men and three
women or 5 men and 3 women .
Captain Reynolds usually hired for
_the ~on 3 professio~al husband
and wife teams and 2 smgle males.
Some of the Majestic's actors from
the 1930's Philip Pine and Don
Marlow went on to hav e movi e
careers.
The vaudeville pan of the cntcrtainmeilt which always came aftcr
the play consisted of tap dancing ,
singing, musical instruments and
acrobatics. Intermis sio n was
between the play and the
vaudeville and the Majestic sold

A

Y.otz

popcorn, cand~ and soft dri~ks. oat:
Atr co nddltbiOniDJ! f~r/ e. b th
was supp11c .Y a gtan an 10 e
balcony blowmg over 200 pound
blocksofi~.~-~gy ~hruntte~
and to run e 1g tan ea or e
MaJe~tiC tAeater ca~c fr~~ th e
Atta oy. owe~r ~- uo 1 es 1 ~ ·
the II roohms ~s bas IVIng qF
tcrs on t c s ow oat were ur n1shcd by kerosene lam~ s , 011
stoves, and a bucket wuh a long
ro~h R
Ids children made up
an ~ th~~~hestra as well as sell -:
Png refreshments actin~ as crew .
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Continued on A·8

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Rockport®
Several New
Arrivals For
Men and Women.

Rockports make you feel like walking'"
Lafayette Mall

THE SHOE CAFE

Gallipolis

Cjood \llme,

e all

/ha'llf!

Mary Fowler, Peoples Choice Coordinator, has put together an itinerary that has
something for everyone! Peoples Choice members get all the advantages of a first
class travel cluj at a fraction of the cost, because the price of each trip is based on
cost alone. And Mary will personally escort each and every tour.
Our 1991 travel schedule includes:
SEPTEMBER 24. JOANN CAS TIE DINNER THEATRE MATINEE- COLUMBUS, OHIO
Our "Get Acquainted" trip' Attend the matinee performance ofjo Ann Castle, rag-time pia nisi oflhe
Lawrence Wclk Show, at the Buckeye Dinner Theatre. Enroulc home we will slop in Chillicothe for
shopping and dining.
Cost: $49.50 per person. Includes roundtrip deluxe motorcoach lran sportalton, dinner and show,
and some leisure shopping time. Leaves from I he parking lot of I he Peoples Bank in Point Pleasanl
al7:30 a.m. Reservation deadline is Septembl'l' 16.
OCTOBER 22 ro 24 • AunJMN IN THE SMOKIES
Enjoy the beautiful fall foliage enroute to Pigeon Forge and Gallinburg, Tennessee. Visit I he Dixie
Stampede for dinner and a show. Admission to Dollywood and the Fall Crafts Festival is also
included, and there will be plenty of time 10 shop and sight sec at your leisure.
Cost: $212.00 Double, $200.00 Triple, $185.00 Quad, or$275.00 Single. Includes roundtrip deluxe
motorcoach transportation, two nights lodging, Dixie Stampcdedinner and show. and admission lo
Dollywood and the Fall Crafts Festival. $50.00 deposil due by October 1.

DON tATE

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For Home, Farm,
Business and Industry

Boyd named to post

•
• COLUMBUS, Ohio {AP) - A
drove City man became the city's
9Jith homicide victim 6f 1991, surpassing the city's· highest toW for
ail entire year of 97 set.in 1989.
; Mark W. Gostel, 32, was shot
several times early .Saturday after
ah argument with two m~n on th_e
city's southwest side, S3ld homicide Dcteetive William Fineran. He
said Gostel died at I :26 a.m . at
Grant Medical Center.
Police had no suspects or
motives, Fineran said. The shooting
occurred in a known crack area, he

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here arc
the Ohio Lottery selections made
Friday night:
Pick 3 Numbers
0-7-9
(zero, seven. nine)
Pick 4 Numbers
7-1-0-0
(seven, one, zero, zero)
Cards
10 (ten) of Hearts
5 (five) of Clubs
A (ace) of Diamonds
8 (eight) of Spades .

By JAMES SANDS
(Special Correspondent)
GALLIPOLIS- "Showboat Majestie coming to Gallipolis, Saturday, Sept. 19th- presenting "The
Hill Billy Detectives," a four act
detective play followed by 6 acts
of vaudeville.
General Adrnission is 25¢ and
children under
12 years, 15¢. Reserved scats
are 35¢ and balcony reserved
seats are 30¢ .
The doors open at 7. p.m. and the
show starts at 8 p.m.
The. year was 1936 and the
abo~e IS taken. fro~ an. ad &amp;(l_PCarmg m th~ Gallipolis Daily Tnbune.
The MaJestic, t&lt;;~wed by the Atta
Boy, played Galhpolis at least once
a year and sometJmes twice a year
from 1923 to 1941. It al_so appeared
in the Old French Ctty several
times, though perhaps not year IY
from 1948 to 1959.
. .
The MaJCSUe was bu1lt m 1923
by Tom Reynolds, William
Reynolds and Tom Ntchols at Pmsburgh. It was operated by Capt.
Tom Reynolds •. who was born in
Pt. Pleasant, unul 1941. Dunng the
period from 1941 to 1948 the
Majestic was docked at Henderson,
W.Va. The showboat also spent
the winters from 1932 to 1941 at
Henderson.
.
In 1948 Cal,ltatn Reynolds
leased the Majesuc to Hiram College and Kent State University who
together iiperaied a floating theater
for college drama students. I~ 1949
Hiram College began domg tt
alone. The contract between
Reynolds and Hiram College
eKpired in 1958 whereupon
Reynolds sold the showboat to the
University of Indiana, which also
used it for summer drama students.
It was in 1967 that the city of
Cincinnati purchased the Majestic
where it can be found today at the
end of Broadway Street.
When the Ma.jestic made regular
stops at Gallipohs, the boat usually
would get to town in the early
afternoon of that evening's scheduled playing date . As the boat
neared the town, the calliope,
which was actually on the Atta
Boy would play out the tunc:
"Hc;e Comes the Showboat." It
would be followed by a few other
tunes just to alert Gallipolitans that
the showboat was in town. A poster
or two wot!ld be tacked up some·

~AR:- ' ·

Lottery numbers

•Heating and Water Heating
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Dcying and Cooking
•Construction Heating

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-A7.

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

1991 OlDS
CUTLASS CAlAIS

NOVEMBER 10 AND 11- WHEELING FESTIVAL OF LIGIITS
Get in the Christmas spirit as you view this fabulous light show. A private guide will escort our bus
through 300 acres of unique holiday decorations. Cost include~ overnight lodging at Wilson Lodge
with an evening buffet. Following breakfast the next day (also Included), we Will lour the ManSion,
Christmas Shop and Garden Center. En route home we will stop at the St. Clairwille Mall for shoppng
and dining.
Cost: $135.00 Double, $128.00 Triple, $120.00 Quad, or $162.00 Single. $50.00 deposit due by Oc·
Iober 28.
DECEMBER 11 AND 12- COOKING UP A COUNTRY CHRISTMAS
Enjoy a Christmas show with Tenncssro Ernie Ford, Louise and Earlene Mandrell and jerry Clower
at Veterans Memorial Auditorium in Columbus, Ohio. We will overnight at the Columbus Inn,
where we will be served a country Christmas dinner before deP,arting for the show. Following the
performance, we will tour the city to view the holiday dcc~rations before returning to our hotel.
Following breakfast the Qexl morning (also included), we will go to lheContmeni(French Market
- a complex of over 100 shops and restaurants- before returning h~mc.
. .
Cost: $140.00 Doublt, $135.00 Triplt, $130.00 Quad, or $165.00 Stnglt. $50.00 depoSit IS due by
November22.

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DECEMBER 16 to 19 ·A WILLIAMSBURG CHRISTMAS
We will slay at the Patrick Henry Inn in Williamsburg, located only one-half block from the historic
district. The first evening we will enjoy a colonial banquet al the hotel before auending the
Candlelight Ball all he Governor's Palace. The next morning, we will meet our pcrsonalguidc atthc
hotel for a three-hour lour of the historic district. The rcstoftheday will be yours to explore and have
dinner at your liesure. The next day we will travel to Carter's Grove, a plantation on the beautiful
james River. Then it's on to the soap and candle factory, where we will have lunch, and I hen lo
Williamsburg Pottery for shopping. We will travel to the Monticello Holiday Inn inCharlotlesville,
where we will have dinner. The next day we will have lunch at Michie Tavern and lour Monticello,
!he home of Thomas jefferson, before departing for home.
Cosr: $298.00 Doub It, $290.00Triple, $2115.00 Qu•d,or $330.00 Single. This includesdeluxe round lri p
motorcoach transportation, two nigh Is lodging in William sburg, one night's lodging in CharlotteS\; lie,
all breakfast&lt;, lunch at Michie Tavern, two dinners, admission lo I he Williamsburg historic district,
Carter's Grovc,Monticcllo and Williamsburg Pouery, and the Holiday Ball at the Governor's
Mansion. $50.00dcposit due by November 25.
ALL PRICES INCLUDE LUGGAGE HANDLING AND $25,000 TRAVEL INSURANCE

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For more information or reservations, call:

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1989 FORD RANGER auto, air, low miles •••.•••••••••••••••• $7995
1988 DODGE RAM 50 4x4 super clean ••• ,................... $5995
1987 CHRYSLER leBARON ..........................................$5495
•
1985 CHEVY CEUBRITY.............................................. $2995
1988 OlDS. 98 REGENCY

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $9995

1985 NISSAN P/U ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $2495
1987 OLDS CIERA••••••••••••••••• ~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $49'5
1984 CHEVR.OLET P/U ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $199 5

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(304) 675-1121

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Pe~ples Choice. Choice financid! benefits and choice travel opportunities for people
50 and over. To be eligible, members must maintain a $10.000 minimum balance in a
Peoples Bank savings account, CD, IRA, or any combination thereof.

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PEOPLES BANK
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1991 CHEV lUMINA EURO, Red·Yery Sharp.............. $13,995
(614) 992-6614

2ND STREET
MASON

5TH STREET
NEW HAVEN

675-1121

773-5514

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L:J LENDER

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLYWITIIDRAWALOFCDs AND IRA~

(800)-837-1094 (614)-992-6614 (800)-837-1094

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2212 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

,.

HQUS!NG

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Page-AS-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

September 15,1991

~long

Court tells Demise of traditional foe puts CIA at crossroads
•
znsurers
to cover
Majestic ...
cleanups
B~ RUTH SINAI.

WASHINGTON (AP) Auorneys for companies that
created environmental hazards
applaud a federal appeals court
decision !hat in surance compa·
nics must pay for cleaning up
lhe sites.
The decision could mean
insurers would have to pay hundreds of millions of dollars for
cleanups nationwide, the attor. neys said.
But a lawyer for the insurers
said Friday's decision by the
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
for the District of Columbia was
"only one very small piece of
the puzzle." He said it was too
early to estimate its impact
The ruling confonned to rul·
ings in similar eases by the top
courts of several states, but it
upended a 1988 decision by the
8th Circuit Coun of Appeals in
St. Louis.
The case involved the Times
Beach, Mo., dioxin disaster of
the early 1980s, in which the
entire town near St. Louis was
bought by the federal government and evacuated.
This year, the federal health
official who made the evacuation decision said it appeared
the government had over-react.
ed and overestimated the hazards of dioxin.
The dioxins were created as a
byproduct of a manufacturing
process at Northeastern Pharmaceutical and Chern ical Co.,
known as NEPACCO, which
hired Independent Petrochemi·
cal Co. to dispose of the wasiC.

Assocwted Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
CIA .'s at a maJor crossroads: The
dcm1se of the SovJet Umon has
depnved. the agency of the heart of
1ts miSSIOn for the past 40 years
and the congressional budget ax IS
po1sed to cut 1ts resources.
The cns1s 1s c~mpounded by a
v01d m the agency s leadership as a
result of renewed doubts .about .the
role of semor offi~Jals, mcludmg
CIA director-designate Robert
Gates, m the Iran-Contra affau. .
The agency w1ll likely send 1ts
cloak to the dry cleaners and sheath
1ts d~gger, but officials. ms1st the
mtell1gence commumty IS far from

being post-Cold War surplus.
Just as the CIA was born in
response to Japan's catastrophic
surprise attack on Pearl Harbor 50
years ago, the argument goes, so
now intelligence is a vital element
of U.S. defense.
"The challenges ahead of us in
a world of instability, in a world of
real confusion and realignment, are
much greater in many ways than ...
wh~n we had a single, rather
strrughtforward enemy to look at,"
acung CIA director Richard Kerr
recently told a group of intelligence
veterans.
Gates, or whoever is confumed
for the job, will face the mammoth
task of revamping the direction of

" Leadership has to be measured
in tcnns of outcome," says Robert
Woodson, a leading black censervative who is sharply critical of the
Congressional Black Caucus .
"What (successful) caucus bills
can you thmk of that hav e
addressed the questions facing
black America?"
Answers Rep. Ralph Washing·
ton, D-Texas , first elected to
Congress in December 1989. "I
think we represent an ideology
more than an ethnicity, in many
respects.
"The significance of the caucus

lyzi~g intelligence on the Soviet about one-third of its military ana·

Union, officials say.
That figure probably will be cut
by as much as 50 percent over the
next five years. said a senior intelli·
gence official who spoke only on
condition of anonymity.
With the dissolution of the Sovi·
et-led Warsaw Pact and drastic
reductions anticipated in the size of
the Soviet armed forces, the need
for military intelligence is substan·
tia!Jy lessened, the official said.
Already, the Pentagon has
begun to consolidate some of its
intelligence organizations to weed
out duplication and redundancies,
officials say.
And the CIA has transferred

rights bill last year, which Bush
vetoed. A similar measure passed
the House this year but fell short of
a veto-proof majority. It is now
pending in the Senate.
Black members of Congress arc
focusmg on other issues too, and
some
to come up wilh altcma·
··

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Power Equipment

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Fesdval of Lights
Nov. 30-December I, 1991
Escorted by Brenda Roush

Christmas In the Vtllage
December 7, 1991
Escorted by Becky Wood

O.risunas at Dollywood
December 6-8, 1991
Escorted by ]enni Smich

Colonial Williamsburg
December 7-11, 1991
Escorted by Donna Murphy

THE DON WOOD FAMILY OF DEALERSHIPS
BUICK
TOYOfA
·- OLDSMOBILE
-- -· ····--·--- ---·- PON'IlAC CADILlAC
----- . . ·- -·GMC
-- .. 45701 614 5113-e&amp;11

B:

September 15, 1991

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O'DELL$::.~

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FALL SAVING$

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THE PURPLE HEART • First awarded during the Revolution·
ary War In the 181b Century, the Purple Heart was revived in the
early-20tb Century, and now honors both veterans and civilians
who are wounded in the service or their country. The modern
medal was designed by Elizabeth Will or the Quartermaster General's Office in 1931. (Times-Sentinel PhOio by Brian J, Reed)

MADE IT POSSIBLE · Tuppers Plains V.F.W. Post 9053, and
member Richard Coleman were instrumental in getting a Purple
Heart for Marlin Morris, who served our country during World
War I. Members or that veterans group were on hand to congratu-

late their feUow veteran and to conduct the presentation service.
Morris, seated, was joined at the service at his home by his wife,
Ada, (left) and his son, Clyde (right). (Times-Sentinel Photo by
Brian J. Reed)

:ww1 vet receives Purple Heart after 73 years
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By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel Starr

• BAS HAN • Marlin Morris has
finally been awarded the presti·
: gious Purple Heart · 73 years afiCr
' he was wounded in World War I.
92-ycar-old Morris, who resides
in Bashan, served with the Georgia
National Guard in France during
• the First World War, and received
·' a sharp net wound to the head in
:: Sassoon, France in June, 1918.
• He was presented with the Pur·
.; pie Heart ~y members of Tuppers
: ·Plains VP 1W ..Pos't ·9053 on 'Fhurs·
. ·day in the·pn~SC~~ce of Ills family.
·:
Steeped In history
: . . The Military Order of the Purple
' · Heart enjoys a rich, though varied,
history in the world of America's
military.
It bears no name, rank or regi ·
mental insignia on the piece of
cloth. The Purple Heart is what sig.
nified a hero of the Revolutionary
War· when the medal was 'first
awarded. It was awarded to only
tllree soldiers in our war for inde·

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engineer. advance men and bit
playeJS in the dramas.
On December 16, 1959, Capt.
Reynolds left his home in Pt. Pleasant to go down to the Majestic
moored at the mouth of the
Kanawha River. When he failed to
return by 5:30p.m .. Mrs. Reynolds
sent someone to look for him. The
Gallipolis Daily Tribune printed
the next day: "Captain Reynolds
was at the boat that he loved on the
river that he had loved for all his 71
years when tragedy struck.
Apparently the captain had been
trying to slllrt lhe outside crank on
the Atta Boy when he fell into the
river and drowned. His death
came a year afw he sold the boat.
He had been employed to talce caie
of it over the winteJS.

' !j

Wlnterfest at King's Island
December 14·1 5, 1991

GALLIPOLIS

the River

Continued from A· 7

And It's not too early to make your reservation on a AAA
Holiday Tour. Don't delay, limited seating available!

IJifC J1M:1, lMl JOYOTL. C.W. 'II£ IWifHDIISE AT DON WOOOI SHOP
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omo

is our moral suasion ... an ability to
get our coUeagues to modify their
views.''
Rep . Alan Wheat, D-Mo., a
fifth -termer, offers a different
assessment. The caucus, he sa1d,
has _labored w1th few libe~ votes
aga1nst a tide of oppoSJU_on to
soc1al spendmg under Presidents
Rea~an and Bush.
'We have not achieved all we
hoped, but for people to say the
black caucus isn't effecuve, they
just haven't looked at the record,"
he said.
. .
The caucus helped pass a CIVIl

I)lsts from the Soviet section, the
senior official said.

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the intelligence community. And
he'll have a lot less money to do it
with.
At best, officials estimate, the
budgets of the CIA and more than a
dozen of its sister intelligence
agencies will be cut by 15 percent.
But it's likely the cuts will be far
larger.
The reversal in the fortunes of
the inlelligencc budgets - follow ing a 1980s growth of as much as
200 percent by some estimates (the
figures are classified) - will hit
hardest in the Soviet accounts.
About 30 percent of the intelligence community's $30 billion
estimated budget has until now
been devoted to gathering and ana·

Thomas nomination tests bla_ck legislative caucus
By WILLIAM M. WELCH
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - When
President Bush announced his
nomination of Clarence Thomas to
the Supr~me Coull in July, the
CongreSSional Black Caucus was
the fir st major black group to
oppose the black nominee.
With a vote on Thomas soon to
comebeforetheSenatc-andconfinnation increasingly likely - the
nomination is emblematic of the
diffused picture the 25 black members of Congress present: It's easy
to find their rhetoric, but harder to
discern their impact.
Should Democratic opposition
take root and Thomas's nomination
be rejected, then the organization
could rightfully claim to have
helped gal,anize early black opposition.
But should Thomas gain his scat
on the court, the episode may be
remembered, if at all, as one more
misfire for the caucus. The organization is holding its 21st annual
"Legislative Weekend," a fourday fundraising and policy meet·
mg.

,..

pcndence, Sgts. Elijah Churchill,
William Brown and Daniel BisscU,
Jr.
On August 7, 1782, at his New·
burgh, N.Y. headquarters, General
George Washington devised two
badges of distinction to be worn by
enlisted men and noncommissioned
officers. The first was a chevron to
be worn on the left sleeve of the
coat, signifying loyal military ser'\
vice. Three years of service with·
"bravery, fidelity and good con-i
duct" were the criteria fo, for cam-j
ing the badge, with two chevrons
representing six years of such
VIce.
I
The second badge, named the
Badge of Military Merit, was the
"figure Qf a heart in purple cloth or
silk, edged with narrow lace or
binding". That badge was for "any
singularly meritorious action" and
permitted the wearer to pass guards
and sentinels without challenge.
The honoree's name and regiment
were also inscribed in a Book of
Merit.

scr·J

McArthur instrumental
Although a number of private
efforts were made to ha'c the
medal reinstituted, it was not until
January 7, 1931 that General Dou·
glas McArthur successfully re·
opened an earlier attempt to revive
the medal. McArthur's goal was to
have a new medal issued on the
bicentennial of Washington's birth.
Miss Elizabeth Will, a staffer in
the Office of the Quartermaster
General, created the medal's design
from guidelines provided her. The
only difference in her design is that
a sprig appeared where the profile
of Washington appears on the present Purple Heart.
The Philadelphia Mint made the
plaster model for the medal in
May, 1931 and the War Department announced the new award on
February 22, 1932.
After lhe award was reinstated,
recipients of a Meritorious Service
Citation Certificate during World
War I, along with other eligible
soldiers, could exchange their
award for the Purple Heart.
Several amendments to the U.S.

Army regulations have been made
through Executive Order by vari ·
ous U.S. Presidents.
In 1942, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt extended the award to
include members of the U.S . Navy,
Marine Corps and Coast Guard s
beginning December 6, 1941.
President Harry S. Truman
retroactively extended eligibility to
the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast
Guard to April 5, 1917 to cover
World War I.
On April 25, 1962, President
John F. Kennedy extended eligibility to "any civilian national of the
United States, who while serving
under competent authority in any
capacity with an armed force, has
been or may be wounded."
President Reagan later amended
Kennedy's order to include those
wounded or killed as a result of an
"intcrnationaliCrrorist aWICk."
M.O.P.H. group formed
A group of combat-wounded
velerans in Ansonia, Conn. formed
the first chapter of the civilian
organization whose membership
was made up of recipients of the

decoration, giving birth to the body
which had only been limited to a
record on paper until that time.
"The Military Order of the Purple
Heart of the U.S.A." has chapters
throughout the United States. and
reprcscins interests before
Congress, the Department of
Defense, veterans groups and el se·
where.
The Order maintains a full -time
National Service Director and all of
its service officers have been
accrcdiled by the Veterans Admin·
istration. They provide assistance
for all vets, their dependents and
survivors in obtaining their rightful
entitlements and benefits, and all of
their services are free of charge.
For additional information,
intcresled veterans can contact the
M.O.P.H. at 5413-B Backlick
Road, Springfield, Va .• 22151.
Local efforts pay orr
Thursday's presentation of the
Purple Heart to Marlin Morris was
the end of a long process for the
local V.F.W. post.
According to V.F.W. member
Richard Coleman, the group first

became aware lllat Morris was eli·
gible for the award several years ·
ago, when the French Government
asked V.F.W. posts to recognize .
World War I veterans who served ·
in France.
The P.?Sl presented Morris with
the ceruficatc from the French, and
then began to press the M.O.P.H. to
present him with the Purple Heart,
which he earned in 1918 .
After two and a half years of let·
tcr writing and telephone calls,
Morris finally was presented with
the award on Thursday, amid fam i·
ly and V.F.W. memb ers wh o
worked so diligently to presem the
award.
"The Purple Heart is one of the
most beautiful medal s there arc,"
Coleman said at th e ceremony .
"even more so than the Congressional Medal of Honor, and we arc
very pleased to presc m it to Mr.
Morris."
In addition to his honorable scr·
vice in the war, Morris wa s a member of the Honor Guard at President
Warren G. Harding's fun eral.

Racine gears up for fall festival
I

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RACINE - A long-time tradition
in Racine will continue OcL 4 and
5 as that village celebrates its
Annual Fall Festival.
The festival, in progress for
approximately 50 years, was started originally by the American
Legion and was taken over years
later by the Racine Fire Department The Racine Merchants Association took over after the fire
department and that organization
now continues the festival.
A variety of entertainment has
been planned for the.festival which
will begin on Friday evening, Oct.
4 with Russ and Southern Hills
Singers, the Reflections Trio, Darlene and Friends; Kings Harmony
Quartet, the Faith Harmony Boys
and the Joy Singers.
Entertainment on Saturday will
include the Midnight Cloggers,
Twirlers on Parade, Country Blend
Band, Free Country Band, Strictly

Business and a b·luegrass band,
Rarely Herd.
In addition to all of this free
entertainment there will be a pump·
kin contest for the grower of the
largest pumpkin, a pie eating contest and also a parade.
Contestants wanting to enter the
pumpkin contest should take their
specimens to the Racine Home
National Bank where they will be
directed to the place of judging.
The judging will be done late Sat·
urday afternoon on Oct. 5.
The pie eating contest will take
place on Saturday at 2 p.m. and
anyone may enter. A watermelon
eating contest was to be held but
was changed to the pie eating contest.
The parade is under the direction of Kenda Rizer and anyone
wanting to be in the parade should
contact her at 949-2465. The
parade will form at Southern High

School at 9 a.m. and will begin at
10 a.m. A trophy will be awarded
to the best marching unit. Also dur·
ing the parade the Harvest Moon
Queen will be selected and
crowned with all candidates being
from Southern High School. The
crowning will take place in front of
Home National Bank.
Food concessions will be avail·
able and there will also be plenty of
arts and crafts. For information on
spaces to rent, the public may con·
tact Bill Nease at the Racine Home
National Bank. Spaces rent for $10
and the exhibitor should provide all
items necessary to operate their
stands.
All of the activities for the
weekend are free of charge to the
public and will take place across
form the post office in Racine.
Those attending are encouraged to
bring a lawn chair, sit back . .. and
enjoy.

TWIRLERS ON PARADE • This group or
young baton twirlers, under the direction or
Kenda Rizer, will perform as part or the enter·
tainment durinJl the annual Racine Fall Festival

on Oct. 4 and S. The group will perform on Sat·
urday or the festival. The two-day event is sponsored by the Racine Merchants Association.

RARELY HERD - The band, Rarely Herd,
wiD perform a variety or bluegrass music on Sat·
urday, Oct. 5 during Racine's Fall Festival. A

full slate of activities has been planned for tbe'
two-day festival wbich has been in existence for
approximately 50 years.

tions in new laser procedures and are putting their skills
to work. '8&gt; Holzer Medical Center. . . leading the way to
provide the best possible health care, right here.

Holzer Medical Center
Other surgeons certified to use laser technology:

Urology

Thomas W. Morgan. M .D.
Surgery

Montrie ChakSupa. M.D.

Donald E. O'Rourke. M .D.

OBIGYN

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Restitute H. Alonzo. M .D.

U!lurel A Kirk.hen. M .D.

Al ice A . Gricoski. M.D.

08/GYN

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Daniel H. Whiteley, M .D .
Surgery

Margaret S. Harnish. M .D.

Lewis A. Schmidt. M . 0 .

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Surgery

Malcolm W. Lenu. M .D.
Surgery.

Mel P Simon. M .D.

Howard E. Linder. M .D.
Internal Medicine

John H. Vial!. M .D .
Otolaryngology

Urology

Har·

mony Boys, a gospel group
W.Va.,
will perform durlnll Ratll!~s
FaD Festi·
val on Friflay, Oct. 4 durin&amp; the evening. Mem·
i'

· tbe group
'l'im Skaggs, John
Cole, Jerry Ska11gs, and Chris Skaggs. Roger
Comer Is keyboard player for the group.

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Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

-En

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Pol nt

September 15, 1991

Weddings

ements

CHARLES KELLEY and EUGENIA ANSPACH

Anspach- Kelley _ _

(:•I

MIDDLEPORT. Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Anspach, Middleport, arc
an nouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Eugenia Dawn, to
Charles Edward Kelley, Milwau kee, Wi se. , son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill and Leah Kelley, Vinton.
The wedding will be an event of
June 6. 1992 at the Ariel Theatre in
Gallipolis.
Miss
ate of

tI
l I

•&lt;I

,,r

•

~

in Chesh1re and IS attendmg the
Universny of Rio Grande where
she studi es elementary edueatron.
She 1s employed w11h Ponderosa of
Gallipolis..
Kelley IS a 1988 graduate of
North Galha H1gh School and a
1991 graduate of the Milwaukee
School of Engmeenng. He rs a
member of the _Tae Kown Doe
Association. He rs employed wrth
Autoworks of Milwaukee, WISC.

Cox-Bowers
GALLIPOLIS - Nancy Louise
Cox of Gallipolis and Daniel L.
Bowers of Portsmouth, announce
their engagement and forlhcoming
marriage. .
Miss Cox is the daughter of
Charles L. Cox of Gallipolis.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. David L. Bowers of
Portsmouth.
The wedding will be held 7
p.m ., November 15, at the
Sciotovitte Church of Christ, Third
and Bloom Streets, with the Rev.
Art Marcum officiating.

Marsa Oliver and Wendy Long, all
of Gallipolis. The wore gowns like
that of the maid of honor in pink
satin . They carried bouquets of
pink and fuchsia roses with matchmg ribbons.
The groom and groomsmen,
wore silver shadow tuxedos with
tails. Best man was Scott Birch·
field, brother of the groom and
groomsmen were Rick Cade, Tim
Smith and Ronnie Woods.
Taper lighters were Phil
Mitchell and Kevin Mitchell,
brothers of the bride. Registering
guests was Jodi and Becky Birchfield, sisters of the groom.
A reception followed in the
church fellowship room. Hostesses
were Sherry Mitchell , Cheryl
Michell, sisters-in-law of the bride,
Linda Fraley and Lesa Lemley,
cousins of the bride, and Barbara
Raynor, friend of the bride. Coordinators were Joan Siders and Donna ·
Craft.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

OFFER ENDS SEPTEMBER 21
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: For Yl1arS now I've been getting
thpt "He's lost hi s marbles" look
from family and friends when I
m~ntioned tfiat I would like some
a t my fav orite popular s_ong s
played at my funeral.
: In the first place, most peopleundertakers excluded- just don ' t
want to discuss fune'rals. However,
a~ distasteful as the subject is ,
funerals do have to take place. t
didn't 1arrive with a life forever
guaranfcc-and I'll bet you didn't
either- so once in a while I try to
di&amp;cuss the subject.
:The,big "What do I say to this?"
look comes from mo st people ,
however, when t get to the music
part. I explain that I've thrown
to~ether lots of musical shows over
thp years and l feel it would be
mbst appropriate to play some of
the songs from those musicals dur·
in~ my last rites. Now-I do admit
t "Ci~areets And Whusky And
ld, Wild Women" might be a tad
t of place - but there are ccr·
nly many others that should fill
. fill. Stitt- the strange looks.
: However, I finally have a point
in my favor and I hope that some of
~u noted this. During the recent
~rvices for the late newsman,
1f!uTY Reasoner, there was a small
on;hcstra on hand to play Reason·
&lt;f's favorite songs. At the time the
ast was done the orchestra was
ying, "As Time Goes By" . I
't pick up on one strange took
n Harry did it.
" So the point is: tf happy little
bliJ&lt;~b1· r,as fly ber.ond the rainbow,
oh why can t t? And, if Harry
""'"""'~' can do it, why then oh
can't I?
ime docs change things, of
'11""'~ · and perhaps. l' ll get a break
that so those around me can
we.la--wrthout too much cmbar-

I
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~::

rassment -to my request.
After all, I can remember a
when cancer was one of the
tons in the closet If a relative
with cancer you were
secrecy forever-or shipped
you were a big mouth. I
remember a time when '"llino 1lhr
age of a relative was a no,
always felt that must have
because the insurance sal.esr~n
was given a lower age when
policy was purchased and now
the payoff was at hand, the
funds would be withheld
decedent's true age was dis,cto:~.
Somehow, it seemed to be
graceful to get older. If you
found out the true age of the
in your life-and this took a
deal of expert detective wn••--•
sure you could have easily bccol'f
a family outcast by disclosing
information. You didn' t talk
tics, religion or AGE.
Fortunately, we've gotten
cancer and the age out of the
Today, it's no disgrace to get
cer or to get old. The affliction
cancer is now up for free d1sc
sian and cancer viC': tl· ~ns-- m1an1
times undergoing extreme cm&lt;JtiO&lt;\t
al upsets because of the scary
case-at least have the connfor(
love and support of their
and friends. And today, you
even hear a bit of bmgging
age. You marvel that Mrs. Jones
84 and is still so active and
you hope you do as well.
So as the cancer and age
tudes have changed so may
funeral music. After all, what's
problem with "Aic:Y~~o u~~~:i:;~?.'~
Tonight?", "Ain't !'. ·
even "Don't Get Around
Anymore"-played in the
tempo, of course. By the way,
hope you're smiling?

1

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NATIONAL EVALUATION- Discussing
the recent Big Brothers/Big Sister.s eva.luation
are (I to r): Judy Sofranko, Executrve D•rector;

The Sunday Times-Se ntinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeli ness . The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition , th e wedding mu st have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length . Material fo r
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to lhe date
of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos

TUPPERS PLAINS • A homcming· celebration was held
ently for Spec. E-4 Mark Griffin
the home of his mother , Ruth
n Longeneuc in Tuppers Plains.
iffin is home after serving II
. nth~ in tt\e Persian Gulf.
. Attending were his grand parts, Ernie and June Griffin, Long
ttoi'Jl; Clayton, Shirley and Jeff
· nsQn; Kyle Davis, Jeremy Barr, Da,n, Paula, Danny, Johnny
lftd Bti!lll Lantz, Mike, Dot, Traci
aild Mi~habl Lance, Mike , Lisa,
.C~hlcy :@nd Emily Welch, Steve,
ljurill,. Stephanie, Christie and
ljsha - ~arbcr, Donna, Mary Jo and
!Iober! Reed, Don, Wanda and
Iil:lcn 'Spr11gue, Joe and Thelma
ntz, 'lohn Donna, Keisha and
annon Clark. Beth and Dcwaync
ark, Amy and Angie Young,
G:hu ck , Sandy. Shaun and Chad
S)voy, Leigh Anne Rcdovian,
l!ddie, Meliisa, Chns and Mandy
Griffin, Ernie, Susan, Brandon and
(ngcl Griffin, Kevin Foreman.
~lc, Mary, Joy and Jay Swain,

Questions may be directed to the
editorial departm ent from l to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

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Let our family
help your family ...

ADA Awareness
Week
observed
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TODAY ITISCENSORSHIPOF INFORMATIO • •
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1. CMI :~rul wr rle your represenl.:ltr11es in Washington and urge them
to ~n.1ct legisltttioo to reve rse the " gag· · rule
u.s . SentJor Jolin Glenn
u.s. Rtprooontll111 Bob llcE"n

Family Owned
&amp; Operated
THIRD &amp; PINE ST.

GALLIPOLIS

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s.tvlng The AIN For 7 YNnt

446·7283

House Office Building

Washington, D.C. 20515
............: 1111) SIJ.41t3

t••• ,_.:

Washington . D.C. 20510
(IU) 411-1117

U.S. Stn11or H~~td Mtl~tnblum
Sen~te Ollice Bulldino
w,.shinplon, DC. ~10
Clt•riiH """'; (111) IZHl1Z

U.S. ReprntnlltiYt Cflrtnce Mllftr
House Office Building
WIShl.ngton. D.C. 205Hi
•uiiCIIIIr 1'11111: 111.. . llf-1141

President George Bueh

Q

1800 Pennaylnnll Ave.
WesNngton. D.C. 20500
....,: (Ill) 411·1414

Toll Frrr D1al I 800·458·6844

2. Support Planneu ParenthOO&lt;l ol Southeast Ohio so we may
contrnue lo serve women in need by ollering complete reproduc·

live health care.

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1 The "gag" rule mttns II loss of lunn~ lor Sllr"Vic"~ '" POO• woml!n 21nrl
IHn~gers 11 Pftnned Parenthood of Sou tii~ISI Ot11o
I I AM OUTRAGED BY TH£ SUPREME COURT OECISION
I 0 1belln~~ Ill womtnh-.tht rlglltto tamlly Pltnn lng servtces w•tl'lout
I CIOIOflnlp

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I

I

1

EI\CIOI.c3 Is my COf'ltrlbutlon of :

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( J $500

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Nomo - - - - - - -

U 1100

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$30

I

Other ·--.. _._

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Addrtll
City

State

Zip _ .

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-·

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.. ---------- .....'--.-- -·
I

396,Richland Avenue, Athens, Ohio 45701

~.

.. '
.

...

I

.: Adult Dental Awareness Week
was observed la st we ek by the
~mcrican Dental Association.
NJe week was established to
p'fomote the importance of oral
care to adults ages 30-50. To kick
oJf the first year of the promotion,
t)te ADA has joined forces wrlh the
A1ncrican Academy of Penodontc)logy to mise awareness of pen·
o~ontal disease and encourage
pptien1s to talk to their dentist
a~ut their oral health.
• The theme of the week is
"i~ite, America: Treat Yoursc~f t~
a:!Heatthy Smile." Local denusts
oCfices have available for the publi~ infonnation on penodontal drs·
elise through a brochure entitled,
"~urn Disease: Are You at Risk?"
.; For further information on gum
&lt;J¥ase or ·any dental matters, contact your local dentist or the Ameri·
can Dental Association's Depart·
ntent of Public Information and
~ucalion a~J-800-621-8099 .
c

~·

•I

•

Michelle Stoops, Karen, Karl
Kcbler, Todd and Dustin Marcinko,
Roger, Bcrdic, Roger Jr., Jennifer
and Amber Lance, Charlie, Mary,
Erika and Janelle Lance, Pete,
Wendy, Joshua and Katie Ann Wilfong, Jim, Robin, Jimmie Putman,
Betty Sams, Gibb Sams, David
Elkins, Ed, Tammy and Megan
Adams. Tony Hendrix, Jack Gorrell, Tonya, Lance and Derek Grif·
fin.
The band, Free Country, per·
formed during the afternoon.
Griffin, his wife, Tonya, and
sons, Lance and Derek, have
returned to Virginia Beach where
he is currently stationed.
He joined the United States
Army in February 1989 and is a
1988 graduate of Eastern High
School.

ANNOUNCING ...

commendations

GALLIPOLIS - The local Big
Brothers/Big Si sters Ag enc y
received two commendations fol ·
lowing an evaluation conducted by
the organization 's national office_.
Susan Piper, field represcntauvc
for Big Brothers/Big Sisters of
America based in Philadelphia,
said she would make the commcn·
dations regarding Executive Directory Judy Sofranko an d her work
wilh BB/BS.
"Judy is a highly dedi cated pro·
fe ss ional social worker who has
given above and beyond in deli very
of services to the children and fam ilies of this agency. The four-county area is lucky to have her work ing with thi s vital youth servmg
organization," Piper said.
The national evaluation covered
all aspects of the agency's opera·
tions including corporate and program management, and financial
control and accounting procedures.
"We try to vis it each of our
agencie s at least once every two
years," said Piper. "We always
look forward to coming to thi s
Iagency becau se the case record s
bookkeeping arc well orgazcd and effi cient. It certainl y
tmaxes my job much easier."
AI !hough the evaluation is time·
it allows the agency 10
h-up on its busine ss te ch·

bic scholar

omecoming celebration

Susan Piper, Field Representative; and Tim
Snow, President.

BBJBS gets national

Barry-Oshel

Wedding poliCY-----arc not of acceptable quality.

\'

MASON, W.VA . · The Mc1gs
County Retired Teachers Associuti on will mee t Saturday at Ma son
Fam il y Res taurant at 12:30 p.m.
Reservations may be made hy call
Mary Chapman at 992-3887

MARC OSHEL and CODETTE BARRY

GALLIPOLIS ·Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Barry and Marc Sheridan
Oran C. Barry. Gallipolis, and Mr. Oshel.
.
.
The open church weddmg wrll
and Mrs . John S. Oshel, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., announce the be held Saturday, Oct. 19 at 6:30
engagement and forlhcoming mar- p.m: at the Cha!JCl Hill Church of
riage of their children Cadette Chnst. A recepuon wrtt follow at
'
the Senior Citizens Center.

~.

Retired teachers
to hold meeting

,.. ...._ .334.95~

Thru Sept. 30, 19911
FREE MEASURING!
Protessionallnslallallon Available

~

sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--83

:Beat of the Bend....
by Bob Hoeflich

Mitchell-Birchfield
GALLIPOLIS · The First Baptist Church was the setting of the
June 29 double-ring wedding, unit·
ing Bethany Renee Mitchell,
daughter of Norman and Bonnie
Mitchell, to Brian MiGhael Birch·
field, son of Burl and Doris Birchfield.
Rev. Alvis Pollard officiated the
wedding, with singing by Lesa
Lemley, cousin of the bride and the
Lord's Prayer by the bride's father.
Organist was Joe Gulley.
The bride, escorted by her
father, wore a gown of majestic
luster satin and chantilly lace with
a fitted lace over satin elongated
Basque waist bodice. The heavily
beaded front with pearl edged V·
neckline going to a deep V-back.
Slim chantilly lace sleeves
accented with beaded re-embroidered lace and pearl buttons at the
wrist. A full satin skirt enhanced
with cut out appliques at front and
schiffle lace medallions, a ruffle
and re-embroidered cutouts,
accented the lace edged cathedml
train.
Her veil was crown style of
chantilly lace topped with pearls
and sequins with a side spray of
silk white roses and pearls. She.
canied a large cascade arrangement
of white open roses and small pink
roses with pearl and satin ribbons
which topped a Bible.
Main of honor was Lee Ann
Raynor of Gallipolis. She wore a
tea-length grown of fuchsia satin
with white lace lace overlay
bodice. She wore a small spmy of
fuchsia satin roses and pearls in her
hair.
Bridesmaids were Lori Long,

..,. ·•. . .

HEREFORD, England (AP) dward W. Lan e, born here 1n
· 80 I, was a lcucting Arabic scholar
mad e a life study of Egypt' s
-1usr.ulll &gt;, lore and li terature.
etwccn 1838 and 1840 he
a ce lebrated tran slation of
100 I Nights, a collection of
Arabian stories.
His
work was an Ara·
11~ ;~~~R~;• Lexicon, on which he
'(
for 20 years.

1

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS

nique s, Sofranko said.
"It gives us an opportunity to
examine and critique our procc·
dures. As a result we have made
several fine-tuning adju stments in
the way that our volunteers and
clients arc matched and supervised.
"And of course it's always nice
to receive recognition and be told
that we arc meeting, and in some
cases exceeding, the required pro·
ccd urcs," Sofranko said.
The local Big Brothcrs/B ig Sis·
tcrs Organization has se rve d th e
resi dents of the Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson, and Mason county areas
free-of-charge since 1980.
"Susan told us that the most
common problem with all of the
Big Brothers agencies Is the constant struggle for funding", Tim
Snow, president of the local
BB/BS.
"Because of the economy and
spiraling insurance costs, finding
the money to kee p the agency
afloat is very difficult. And in fact
our neighbor, the Athens County
Big Brothers Agency, closed last
year because of lack of funds."
Snow said that the local agency,
however, enjoys a good amount of
support from the four counties it
serves, through donation s,
fundraiscrs and other events.
For more Information on Big
Brothers/Big Sisters call 614-4460170 or write to P.O . Box 1030
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

By Schumacher

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424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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FURNITURE
·955 Second Ave., Gallipolis
IIJII!lll, !AIIillill:;iiiii(l
(6141446-1171

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'.'

Page-82-Sunday Times-Sentinel

-En

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

ements

Anspach- Kelley
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Anspach, Middleport, arc
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Eugenia Dawn, to
Charles Edward Kelley, Milwau·
kec, Wi se., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill and Leah Kelley, Vinton.
The wedding will be an event of
June 6. 1992 at the Ariel Theatre in
Gallipolis.
Miss

in Ch eshire and is attending the
U ni vcrsi.ty of Rio Grande where

she stud•es elementary education.
She is employed with Ponderosa of
Gallipoli s.
Kelley is a 1988 graduate of
North Gallia High School and a
1991 graduate of the Milwau.kee
School of Engmeenng. He IS a
member of the Tae Kown Doe
Association. He is employed with
Autoworks of Milwaukee, Wise.

Cox-Bowers
GALLIPOLIS - Nancy Louise
Cox of Gallipolis and Daniel L.
Bowers of Portsmouth, announce
their engagement and forthcoming
marriage. .
Miss Cox is the daughter of
Charles L. Cox of Gallipolis.
The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. David L. Bowers of
Portsmouth.
The wedding will be held 7
p.m ., November 15, at the
Scio10ville Church of Christ, Third
and Bloom Streets, with the Rev.
Art Marcum officiating.

Sunday Times-Sentlnel-Page--83

Retired teachers
to hold meeting

:Beat of the Bend ....

Mitchell-Birchfield

CHARLES KELLEY and EUGENIA ANSPACH

by Bob Hoeflich

Marsa Oliver and Wendy Long, all
of Gallipolis. The wore gowns like
that of the maid of honor in pink
satin . They carried bouquets of
pink and fuchsia roses with ma!Chtng ribbons.
·
The groom and groomsmen,
wore silver shadow tuxedos with
tails. Best man was Scott Birchfield, brother of the groom and
groomsmen were Rick Cade, Tim
Smith and Ronnie Woods.
Taper lighters were Phil
Mitchell and Kevin Mitchell,
brothers of the bride. Registering
guests was Jodi and Becky Birchfield, sisters of the groom.
A reception followed in the
church fellowship room. Hostesses
were Sherry Mitchell, Cheryl
Michell, sisters-in-law of lhe bride,
Linda Fraley and Lesa Lemley,
cousins of lhe bride, and Barbara
Raynor, friend of lhe bride. Coordinators were Joan Siders and ~nna
Craft.
The couple resides in Gallipolis.

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:For years now I've been getting
thpt "He' s lost his marbles" look
from family and friends when 1
m~ntioned that I would like some
ol' my favorite popular songs
played at my funeral.
: In the fust place, most pcopleuqdcrtakers excluded-just don't
want to discuss fun erals. However
a~ distasteful as the subject is:
f une~als do have to take place. 1
d1dn t.amve w1th a life forever
guaran1ee--and I'll bet you didn't
either- so once in a while I try to
diScuss the subjec t.
! The.big "What do I say 10 this?"
look comes from mo st people,
however, when I get to the music
part. I explain that I've thrown
to~ether lots of musical shows over
tl¢ years and I feel it would be
m~st appropriate 10 play some of
the songs from those musicals durin$ my last rites. Now-I do admit
I "Cigareets And Whusky And
ld, Wild Women" might be a tad
t of place - but there are ccrnly many others lhat should fill
Llic fill. Still - the strange looks.
: However, I finally have a point
iii my favor and I hope that some of
~u noted this . During lhc recent
~rvices for the late newsman,
'tmY Reasoner, !.here was a small
OI'Chestra on hand to play Reason&lt;1's favorite songs. At lhe time lhe
ast was done the orchestra was
ying, "As Time Goes By". I
't pick up on one strange look
n Harry did it.
: So the point is: If happy little
tfblcbirds fly beyond the rainbow,
why oh why can't I? And, if Harry
Ifeasoner can do it, why then oh
\\Jiy can· t I?
Time docs change thing s, of
course, and perhaps, I 'II get a break
that so those around me can
'o'ic: ld--~nthtout too mu ch em bar-

•••t t•e

No •after
condition. The legs ••Y
be falling off, springs
popping out; aad cover
wora out. Makes ao
difference.

65°/o OFF

NEW 5 P(. WOOD

DINEnE SET

!

rassmcnt -to my request.
After all, I can remember a
when cancer was one of the
tons in lhe closet. If a relil!l~·e_jl~
wiih cancer you were swo~ ·to
secrecy forever-or shipped t if
you were a big mouth. I lso
remember a time when telling the
age of a relative was a no, il~ I
always felt that must have en
because the insurance sales an
was given a lower age when he
policy was purchased and now at
the payoff was at hand, the bl'ial
funds would be withheld if he
decedent's true age was disclo d.
Somehow , it seemed to be disgraceful 10 get older. If you ever
found out the true age of the adults
in your life--and this took a great
deal of expert detective work-I'm
sure you could have easily become
a family outcast by disclosing lhe
information. You didn't talk politics, religion or AGE.
i
Fortunately, we've gotten the
cancer and lhe age out of the closet.
Today, it's no disgrace to get cancer or to get old. The affliction of
cancer is now up for free discussion and cancer victims-many
times undergoing extreme emotio~­
al upsets because of the scary discase-at least have the comfort,
love and support of their fami ~y
and friends. And today, you may
even hear a bit of bragging abo~t
age. You marvel that Mrs. Jones Is
84 and is still so active and alertyou hope you do as well.
So as the cancer anti age attitudes have changed so may the
funeral music. After all, what's lhc
problem with "Are You Lonesome
Ton1ght?", "Ain' t Misbehavin"' qr
ev en "Don't Get Around Muc~
Anymorc"-played in the proper
tempo, of course. By the way, I d0
hope you're smiling?

. ,.,_ ......•nus tJMM

Thru Sept. 30, 19911

~:~

FREE MEASURING!
Protessi011811nstanalion Available

$229 95

WALLPAPER AND.
BLIND SHOP
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON
GARFIELD AVE. PARKERSBURG

Mon.•Frl. 9-8;
S•t. 9·5:30
Sun. 1·5

428·1065

MARC OSHEL and CODEITE BARRY

Barry-Oshel

pmecoming celebration

..

,•,

Let our family
help your family .•.

"' TUPPERS PLAINS - A homc- Michelle SLoops, Karen, Karl
ming· .c elebration was held Keblcr, Todd and Dustin Marcinko,
ently.for Spec. E-4 Mark Griffin Roger, Berdic, Roger Jr., Jennifer
the. home of his mother, Ruth and Amber Lance, Charlie, Mary,
ri,I.,ongenette in Tuppers Plains. Erika and Janelle Lance, Pete,
iffin is ~orne after serving II Wendy, Joshua and Katie Ann Wilfong, Jim, Robin, Jimmie Putman,
nlh~ in the Persian Gulf.
·. Au~nding were his grandpar- Belly Sams, Gibb Sams, David
ts Ernie and June Griffin. Long Elkins, Ed, Tammy and Megan
ttomi Clayton, Shirley and Jeff Adams, Tony Hendrix, Jack Gornson; Kyle Davis. Jeremy Bar- rell, Tanya, Lance and Derek Grifr, D&lt;1n, Paula, Danny, Johnny fin.
The band, Free Country, per:tid Brian Lantz, Mike, Dot. Trac1
alid Michael Lance, Mike, Li sa, formed during the afternoon.
Griffin, his wife, Tonya, and
.t~hlcy end Emily Welch, Steve,
sons,
Lance and Derek, have
r;iurill,• Stephanie, Chnslle and
returned
to Virginia Beach where
ha Barber, Donna, Mary Jo and
he
is
currcnUy
stationed.
ben Reed, Don, Wanda and
He
joined
tbc United States
len 'Sprague, Joe and Thelma
ntz ,' )ohn Donna, Keisha and Army in February 1989 and is a
annon Clark, Beth and Dewayne 1988 graduate of Eastern High
ark, Amy and Angie Young, School.
Ghuck, Sandy, Shaun and Chad
S)voy, Leigh Anne Redovwn,
~die, Meliisa, Chris and Mandy
Grifftn. Emie, Susan, Brandon and
A:ngel Griffin, Kevin Foreman,
t;yle, Mary, Joy and Jay Swain,

Questions may be directed to lhe
editorial department from I to 5
p.m. Monday through Friday at
(614) 446-2342.

.;

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1. Crt II :JrHI wr ric your renreserrli!!lves in Washington and urge lhem 1 The geg rule mtenaaloss ollune1~ lor s~l"fitf!~ ' " noo 1 wonutn And
I tttnagers II Pltnned Ptrtnlhood of Sou1Mast Ol11o
to f!nilcl leg r s l.~lion to reverse the "gag ,. rule

Family Owned
&amp; Operated

U.S. Sen1tor John Glenn
S'!nare 0111ce BuildlnQ
Washington . D.C. 20510

U.S. Atprtltnllll" Bob McEwen
House Office BuUdlng
WIShlngton. D.C. 20515

lltlelt: (114)411·1117
U.S. Senator Howard Mtlztnbtum

....... ..._: (111) JIJ.tltJ

ClllrMff

Senll!le Olllce Building

· THIRD &amp; PINE ST.

GALLIPOLIS

446· 7283
Tol l frr c D•al I 800

458·68~ 4

WIUih l n~10n ,

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ClmfMI ...._,: jUI) lrl-7Z7l

U.S. AepmtnltUYI Cllftnct Mllttr
House Office BuilDing
Washington, D.C. 205HI
' LIIICIUW l'lllllt: (1141154-1141

Prnldtnl Goorlit Buoh

I AM OUTAAOEO BY THE SUPREME COURT OECISIO"i

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Er.etoaed it my eontrlb~o~tion or:

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conlmue tu serve women in need by ollering complete reproduc·
live heallh care

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1
2. Support Planneu Parenthood ol Southeast Ohio so we may
:::

0 1 t.fiiYt 111 women nMtht right to !amity ptanntno serw•ces w11hool
ctnaortl'llp

I .,.,.,, - - - - -1

1800 Ptnnaylvanli Ave.
Washington, D.C. 20500
"""': 1111)411·1414

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'-"' ' {nrf, Der I

TAWNEY JEWELERS
NATIONAL EVALUATION- Discussing
the recent Big Brothers/Big Sisters evaluation
are (Ito r): Judy Sofranko, Executive Director;

GALLIPOLIS - The local Big niqucs, Sofranko said.
"It gives us an opportunity to
Brothers/Big Si sters Age nc y
received two commendations fol · examine and critique our procelowing an evaluation conducted by dures. As a result we have made
several fine-tuning adjustments in
the organization's national office.
Susan Piper, field representative the way that our volunteers and
for Big Brothers/Big Sisters of clients arc matched and supervised.
"And of course it's always nice
America based in Philadelphia,
sa•d she would make lhc commen- to receive recognition and be told
dations regarding Exec uti ve Dircc · that we arc meeting, and in some
tory Judy Sofranko and her work cases exceeding, the required procedures," Sofranko said.
wilh BB/BS.
The local Big Brolhcrs/Big Sis"Judy is a hi ghly dedicated proters
Organization has served th e
fessional social work er who has
given above and beyond in deli very re sidents of the Meigs, Gallia,
of services to the children and farn · Jackson, and Mason county areas
ilies of this agency. The four-coun· free-of-charge since 1980.
"Susan told us that the mo st
ty area is lucky to have her work·
ing with thi s vital youth servin g common problem with all of th e
Big Brothers agencies Is lhe con organization," Piper said.
stant
struggle for funding", Tim
The national evaluation covered
all aspects of the agency's opera· Snow, president of the local
tions including corporate and pro. BB/BS.
"Because of the economy and
gram management, and financ ial
control and accounting procedures. spiraling insurance costs, finding
"We try to visii each of our the money to keep the agency
agencies at least once ev ery two anoat is very difficult. And in fact
years," said Piper. "We alway s our neighbor, the Athens County
look forward to coming to thi s Big Brothers Agency, closed last
agency because the case rec ords year because of lack of funds."
Snow said that the local agency ,
· and bookkeeping arc well orga . nizcd and effi cient. It certa inl y however, enjoys a good amount of
support from the four counties it
makes my job much easier."
Although the evaluation is time- serves, through donations,
consuming, it allows the agency to fundraisers and other events.
For more Information on Big
brush-up on its bu siness tech ·
Brothers/Big Sisters call 614 -4460170 or write to P.O. Box 1030
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
HEREFORD, England (AP) Edward W. Lane, born here in
1801, was a leading Arabic scholar
who made a life study of Egypt' s
'custom s, lore and literature.
Between 1838 an d 1840 he
·l'ladc a ce lebrated tran slation of
!rhc 1001 Nights, a collection of
tlass ic Arabian stories.
, His greatest work was an Ara·
pic-English Lexicon, on which he
worked for 20 years.

422 Second Ave.
Gallipolis
r t•" ,
.,,q .

Susan Piper, Field Representative; and Tim
Snow, President.

BB/BS gets national
commendations

&gt;·! ,,

,. , . ~ ,

1•··

·•"

ANNOUNCING ...
By Schumacher

100 SPECTACUlAR NEW
FALL &amp;WINTER PATTERNS
Now Arriving
With Savings SQOlO On In Stock
Up To
7C
Patterns

Professional Installation Available
Steamer Rental
$} 000

Available...................

A DAY

NOW OPEN SUNDAYS 1·5 PM

WALLPAPER AND BLIND SHOP
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON GARFIELD AVE.,
PARKERSBURG, W.VA.

MON. THRU FRI. 9·8
SAT. 9·5 SUN. 1·5

428-1065

IN A SUPER.COMFORTABLE U~N..JlOOM"
HIGHUGHJ'EP BY !JNIQtJE TlJ.FTING TREATMENT &amp;HONEY &lt;WC WOOD TRIM!
CASUAL CON1EMPOIARY

i

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS
Ready_In

,,

5 MINUTES
I

j

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

1

OFF

'•

: Adult Dental Awareness Week
was observed la st week by the
;lmerican Dental Association.
~e week was established to
promote the importance of oral
c~ to adults ages 30-50. To kick
&lt;J$f the first year of lhe promotion,
t11c ADA has joined forces With the
A!Jierican Academy of PcnodonL~Iogy to raise awareness of pcrio'jlontal disease and encourage
p•tients 10 talk to their dcptist
a~uttheir oral hcallh.
·
• The theme of the week is
"~mile, America: Treat Yourself to
a (Healthy Smile." Local dentists'
oCfjccs have. available for lhc pubJi~ mtonnauon on penodontal disc~se through a brochure emitled, ·
"~urn Disease: Are You at Risk?"
.: For further information on gum
di;&gt;casc or any dental matters, contact your local dentist or the American Dental Association's Pcpartllicnt of Public Information and
Education a\.1 -800·621-8099.

IOK I ~t · r ~rt ·r •n

Catfilh Festival
llahration!!

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ADA
Awareness
Week observed

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TODAYITISCENSOKSHIPOF INFORMATI
WHAT CAN YOU DO . . .

•HOSPITAL BEDS
•WHEElCHAIRS
•BEDSIDE COMMODES
•WAlKERS
•BATHROOM AIDS

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4-~s

Arabic scholar

Lynn Barry and Marc Sheridan
Oshel.
The open church wedding will
be held Saturday, Oct. 19 at 6:30
p.m: at lhe Chapel Hill Church of
Chnst. A reception will follow at
the Senior Citizens Center.

Wedding policy-'------are not of acceptable quality.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards weddings of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counties as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs wilhout charge
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday
editiOn, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to lhe date
of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos

MASON , W.VA.· Th e Meigs
County Retired Teachers Association will meet Saturda y at Ma son
Famil y Res taurant at 12:30 p.m.
Reservations may be made by call
Mary Chapman at 992-3887

o

FO.KMAL WEAR
...... thl ...... ,....
ILUuorlel . . . . . . . of."

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Oran C. Barry. Gallipolis, and Mr.
and Mrs. John S. Oshel, Point
Pleasant, W.Va., announce the
engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children, Codelle

.'

15,1991

Weddings
GALLIPOLIS - The First Baptist Church was the setting of the
June 29 double-ring wedding, uniting Bethany Renee Mitchell,
daughter of Norman and Bonnie
Mitchell, to Brian Michael Birthfield, son of Burl and Doris Birthfield.
Rev. Alvis Pollard officiated lhe
wedding, with singing by Lesa
Lemley, cousin of lhe bride and lhe
Lord's Prayer by the bride's father.
Organist was Joe Gulley.
The bride, escorted by her
father, wore a gown of majestic
Juster satin and chantilly lace with
a filled lace over satin elongated
Basque waist bodice. The heavily
beaded front wilh pearl edged Vneckline going to a deep V-back.
Slim chantilly lace sleeves
accented with beaded re-embroidered lace and pearl buttons at the
wrist. A full satin skirt enhanced
with cut out appliques at front and
schiffle lace medallions, a ruffle
and re-embroidered cutouts,
accented the lace edged cathedral
train.
Her veil was crown style of
chantilly lace topped with pearls
and sequins with a side spray of
silk white roses and pearls. She.
carried a large cascade arrangement
of white open roses and small pink
roses with pearl and satin ribbons
which topped a Bible.
Main of honor was Lee Ann
Raynor of Gallipolis. She wore a
tea-length grown of fuchsia satin
with white lace lace overlay
bodice. She wore a small spray of
fuchsia satin roses and pearls in her
hair.
Bridesmaids were Lori Long,

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Page-84-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Motivational class offered
at Buckeye Hills Center

SUCCESS CLASS • Designed for single parents, divorced, widowed and displaced home·
makers, SUCCESS (Surviving Under Changing
Conditions · Earnin~:, Skilled, Successful) is

being offered by the Buckeye Hills Career Center from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. The class is a 100 hour
daytime adult class.

:Physical therapists join HC staff
GALLIPOLIS - Lola McKinney
. and Kelly Hocter are the newest
· additions to Holzer Clinic's Physi: cal Therapy Staff. Seven Licensed
: Physical Therapists (LPT's) are
· now in the Clinic's SIRM (Spons,
: Industrial and Rehabilitative
Medicine) Department, based at the
Sycamore Clinic in Gallipolis. Both
. of these ladies arc highly trained,
well-accomplished Physical Therapists.
. Ms. McKinney has been a local
; resident for 15 years. She obtained
. her Bachelor of Science Degree in
: Biology from Rio Grande College
: (University) and graduated summa
cum laude in 1990 from Ohio Uni·
·. versity's School of Physical Therapy. She then practiced as a Staff
P.T. at Lee Memorial Hospital in
Fort Myers, Fla., gaining ex peri -

News notes

I

Ice-locked in Amsterdam during
, the winter of 1572-73, Dutch forces
· mobilized on skates to defeat the
: invading Spanish.
The bartana slug serves as mas. cot for the University of California
: at Santa Cruz.
Writer-humorist-homemaker
: Erma Bombeck has requested that
: her gravestone epitaph read: "Big
· deal! I'm used to dust!"
. The windmill originated in Iran
: in 644 A.D. It was used to grind
· grain.
: Clarence "Taffy" Abel was the
- first American-born hockey player
: to be a member of a Stanley Cup
: team - the 1929 New York
: Rangers .

ence in the areas of acute neurological/neuro step-down, acute onho·
pedics, outpatient ncuro/ortho. inpatient rehab, pediatrics, and well ness.
Experience was gained as a clinical instructor, staff development
trainer and supervisor. She served
the mentally retarded and develop·
mentally disabled in a variety of
capacities.
Ms. McKinney' s professional
specializations arc inpatient rehab,
neurology , research , and program
development. She practices in the
new Holzer Clinic/ Holzer Medical
Center Inpatient Rehab Unit and at
the Gallipolis Developmental Center.
She has three children and lists
sports. reading and travel as personal interests.
Kelly Hocter is a 1985 graduate
of Vinton County High school. She
graduated cum laude from the Ohio
University School of Physical
Therapy this year.
During her course of training,
Ms. Hocter completed clinical affil.
iations at St. Joseph Hospital in
Fort Wayne, Ind.; Health Hill Chil·
dren's Hospital. Cleveland; and St.
Francis Rehabilitation Hospital in
Green Springs, Ohio . She also
received specialized training in
spons rehabilitation at the SL Francis Sports Medicine Clinic in Indianapolis, Ind.
Ms. Hoeler has special interest
in pediatric and obstetrical/ gynecological physical therapy.
Her personal interests and hobbies include singing, guitar, and
creating artistic wedding bouquets
and headpieces. She resides with
her parents in Vinton County.

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

,I'

SUNDAY
ROCK SPRINGS · The Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
will have its annual Rally Day on
Sunday. A potluck dinner will
begin at 12:30 p.m. and the afternoon program will begin at 2:30
. p.m. with the Gospel Notes. The
: public is invited to attend.
POMEROY · The Meigs Coun:. ty Genealogical Society will meet
• Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Me1gs
Museum.

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me

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

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•••
NOODLE SOUP

Nurse of Hope
KELLY HOCTER

Registered nurse Shirley Cox of
the Athens County Visiting Nurses
Association was chosen as this
year's state Nurse of Hope.
The position's aim is to tell the
story of the hopeful side of cancer •
throughout Ohio.
As part of her responsibilities. ,
Cox will attend several committee
mcetins. help promote programs, ·
be active in the local unit, and write
a regular column for the Lifesaver. :
Cox began working with cancer
patients 15 years in California. She ,
said that her work is challenging as :
well as fullfilling.
I
She is the daughter of Dwight
Logan and the late Kay Logan,
Syracuse.

Gold star
Somsung
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Zenith

Funai
Symphonic

KTV
Philco

Emerson
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OUR PLEDGE TO COMMUNITY SERVICE

LONG BOTTOM · The Flame
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom.
Herschel Facemyer, Nitro, W.Va.,
will be the speaker. The public is
invited to attend.
RACINE · The Southern Junior
High Boosters will meet Tuesday
at 7 p.m. at the junior high school
in Racine. School year projects will
be discussed.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

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103/4 OZ. CANS

Our well-trained healthcare staff at Veterans
Memorial H'ospital is pledged to community
service. Members of our staff frequently go into -the community to provide free and helpful
services for ; residents. It's our way of saying
"Thank You'~ for your continued support.

u.s.

CARDINAL

CAMPBELL'S
CHICKEN

C~ris Yeauger of the VMH Nursing Staff ~hecks the blood pressure of a
resident at a recent c~mmunity service activity.

LOCATED

Sunday

Bike-a-thon
GALLIPOLIS - St. Jude's
Children's Research Hospital
announced today that Lori Sanders
has agreed tO be the Ccordinator or
the St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital Bike-A-Thon in Gallipolis
Sept. 28.
St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital was founded by entertain,
er Danny Thomas. The institution
opened its doors to the public in
1962 to combat catastrophic dis eases which afflict our children. St.
Jude Hospital is non-sectarian ,
non-discriminatory, and provides
total medical care to all patients.
At St. Jude, scientists and physicians are working side-by-side
seeking not only a beuer means of
treatment, but also the causes,
cures and prevention of diseases.
The Bike-A-Than Program this
year is dedicated to Brooke Simon,
a six-year-old solid tumor patient at
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.

. SHIRLEY COX

RACINE -The James C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moore reunion
will be held Sunday at the home of
Larry and Pauy Circle, Carmel
· Road in Racine. Basket dinner at I
p.m.
.
:
·
:
·
:
:
:
:

••

SHURFINE
SALTINE

POMEROY · Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis. will be the guest
. speaker at the Naomi Baptist
. Church in Pomeroy on Sunday at
II a.m.

POMEROY · The annual homecoming of the Mt. Hermon U. B.
Church (Texas Community) will be
held Sunday. Sunday school will be
at 9:30; worship service at 10:30,
foUowing by a dinner at noon. The
afternoon service at 1:30 p.m. will
feature the Grubb Family of Gal·
lipolis. Rev. Roben Sanders, pastor, invites
public.

t

{

LOLA MCKINNEY

POMEROY · "Start-up Basics,"
POMEROY • A 12-step AA
a
basic
introduction to starting a
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTP A office 117 West business, will be presented by
Meigs County Chamber of ComSecond Street in Pomeroy.
merce, Small Business Develop·
ment Cneter and Management
MONDAY
POMEROY · "Crusade for Development Division of the Col·
Christ" revival will be held Mon- lege of Business at Ohio University
day through Sunday at the on Tuesday from 6:30-9 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of the ~azarene Chamber office, 200 East Second
at 7 p.m. nightly. There wall be daf· St., in Pomeroy. The cost is $!5 per
ferent singers and speakers nightly. person and pre-registration may be
The crusade is sponsored by the done by calling the chamber office
Mcigs-Gallia-Mason counties Cru- at 992-5005.
sade for Christ. Pastor Glen
POMEROY · The American
McClung invites the public.
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
RUTLAND · The Leading will meet Tuesday at the post
Creek Conservancy District will home . Dinner is at 7 p.m. and
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the meeting at 8 p.m. All members arc
urged to attend.
office.

PORTLAND • The annual
homecoming of the Morse Chapel
. Church will be held Sunday. Regu. Jar morning services will be held
: and afternoon services begin at 2
·· p.m. featuring the Conqu_erors of
Ripley, W.Va. Rev. Davad Curfman invites the public.

"This class helped me do some thing. I was at the most unambi·
tious point in my lie. I had sat
around until I didn't want to go
anywhere or do anything but exist,"
she said.
After some decision making
and ca reer assessment, _Jan e
enrolled at a local college and start·
ed immediately after completing
the S.U.C.C.E.S.S. class.
S.U.C.C.E.S.S. is a (100-hour)
daytime adult class offered through
Buckeye Hills Career Center. This
class is sc heduled from 9 a.m. to 2
p.m. at a convenient location in
your co unty. Anyone interested in
thi s class should contact Belly
Adkins, Displaced Hom emaker
Instructor, at Buckeye Hills Career
Center aL 245-5334.

"

15, 1991

GALLIPOLIS -The GalliaMcigs Community Action Agency
will hold a Public Hearing at the
Gallia-Meigs C.A.A. central office
building in Cheshire on Sept. 19. at
1:30 P.M. to solicit input on community needs for the 1992 Community Services Block Grant.
There will also be an election to
fill indigent vacancies on the Gallia-Meigs C.A.A.'s Executive
Board for 1992. AU interested citi·
zens arc encouraged to attend and
participate .

..........

RUTLAND • The Charles Reed
RACINE · Racine Village
Hysell an"d Oscar Hysell family Council will meet in recess session
reunion will be held Sunday at Fort on Monday at 7 p.m. at the council
Meigs in Rutland with dinner at chambers.
12:30 p.m.
TUESDAY
RACINE • The Gideon and
CHESTER • The Chester CounArtemesia Roush reunion will be cil No. 323 Daughters of America
held Sunday at Star Mill Park in will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m.
Racine beginning at! p.m. w1th a Quarterly birthdays will be
basket lunch. Relatives and friends observed and a potluck dinner will
are invited to attend.
begin at6:30 p.m.

•

Grant hearing slated

Meigs County calendar
....._. ,.

.

September 15, 1991

.

RIO
GRANDE
S.U.C.C.E.S.S. (Surviving Under
Changing Conditions . Earning,
Skilled, Successful) is a program
designed for single parents,
divorced, widowed, and displaced
homemakers. The class offers steps
to help in motivation, self-esteem,
stress management, decision mak·
ing,. values, goals, careerI explorauon, etc.
In the 1900-91 school year,
there were a total of 53 participants, 31 of which entered a vocational class at Buckeye Hills Career
Center, 4 entered college, 8 entered
GED classes, and 6 started new
jobs.
A good example of a
S.U.C.C.E.S.S. is Jane. a 34 year
old divorced mother of two. Jane
states that the S.U.C.C.E.S.S. class
helped her to be more motivated
and more assertive.

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STORE HOURS: DAILY 6 am-12 Midnight • Sunday 8 am-10 pm
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Middleport-\ Ota.'O
992-34t1
Corner of Gen. Haninger Pkwy
and Pearl St.

THURSDAY IS
SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY
5% DISCOUNT ON
ALL PURCHASES
(Excluding Cigarettes)

MUST PROVIDE GOLDEN BUCKEYE
CARD OR 'DRIVERS LICENSE
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Page-86--Sunday Times-Sentinel

Women's Health series continues
GALLIPOLIS · The th trd open
Jlrogram in the scncs or four sc hcd·
ul cd '"the French 500 Room of the
Holze r Medica l Ce nter io observa nce of Women's HcJ ith Month
wtll he 6 p.m.. Thursday, Sept. 19.'
The subject wi ll be "Parenting
Iss ues ," accordi ng to Deni se
l' hclps, chcurpcrson. fcatunng two
&lt;it sttn gut shed speak ers from the
Ms. Phelps, who is a member of
the hospital ' s Women's Health
~ I o nth Planni ng Committee, said,
"In today' s soc iety, with the ehangtn g va lue s, traditi ons, political
ideas and lifestyles, u is no wonder
that parents find them selves inadequate to fulfill that role. Teenagers
arc trymg to find and identify purpose and dir~ction for their lives in
the mtdst of the spl intering pr~s­
sures from society and their peers.
Meanwhile, parents face a lot of
pressures of their own."
Speakers for Thursday' s pro gram will be Tammy Bran so n
Damron, M.A., a nationally certified counselor and therapist/social
worker at HCA River Park Hospital
m Huntmgton , W.Va., and Robin
Harris, M.Ed., director of the Our
House Youth Crisis Center in Jackson, Ohto.
Ms. Damron earned her M.A. in
Coun seling with a dual specialization in agency counseling and student personnel in higher education,
from Marshall University in 1990.
Since that tim e, she ha s been a
Therapist/Social Worker with HCA
River Park Hospit.al. She will speak
on "Single Parenting" and "Balancing Home and Career."
Her work involves individual,
group and family therap y, psycho so cial hi story /assess ment s,
trea tment planning, discharge planning and other case management
duties . She al so fac ilitates a
STEP/Parent Support Group. From

•
ROBIN HARRIS
her presentation. those altending
should gain valuable ideas to usc m
creating a st.able home life, helpful
parenting skills, and tips on arranging priorities in one's life to
achieve the proper balance between
home and career.
Ms. Harris received her Master's in Community Counscltng
from Ohio University, after graduating from the University of Rio
Grande wtth a B.S., Summa Cum
L1ude.
A resident of Meigs County, she
travel s to Jackson County daily to
fulfill her directorship at the Our
House Youth Crisis Center. Previously she was employed as Vocational Assessment Program Coordinator with the Gallia-Jackson- Vinton Joint Vocational School District, where she became active in
leading a number of youth activities including Students Against
Driving Drunk (SADD), Teenage

TAMMY DAMRON
In stitu-te, After~Prom, and Peer
Support Activities.
She will discuss "Depression in
Children," including sign s and
sy mptoms, interventions parents
can initiate and resources available
in our community.
Ms. Phelps emphasized that
although this series of special programs in September is designed to
assist women. in taking care, taking
charge and choosing health, men
are particularly issued a special
invitation for this program on Parenting Issues.
In addition to the two speakers,
and a question and answer period
following their presentations, a
number of take home booklets and
resource ideas will be available to
those attending.
For additional information and
to make a reservation for the free
and open session at the Holzer
Medical Center, call446-5313.

Gallia County calendar
: (Items for the community calendar appear two days prior to an
b •ent. They must be received by
H.e Gallipolis Daily Tribune in
admnce for publication)

·

Sunday, Sept. 15
CROWN CITY - Rev. Charles
(.usher will be the guest speaker at
Victory Baptist Church, at 7 p.m.
: GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Charles
!:.usher wtll be speaki ng at Providence Missionary Baptist Church,
Teens Run Road, at 6:30p.m.
: GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Historical Society Board meeting at
St. Peters Episcopal Church at I
p.m. No program .
: BULA VILLE
Bulavillc
Chrisitan Church will have homeooming services with guest speaker
Jimmy Hi ghcs of Raceland, Ky .
Basket dinner at noon.
GALLIPOLIS - There will be a
kickoff at the Gallipolis Christian
Church at 2 p.m. for ages 4-6. The
event will be a pilot for the new
Sunday evening program called
"U-Be-Ciub." For more informa tion call 446-1863.

MERCERVILLE - Homecoming at Mercerville Missionary Bapti st Church begins at 10:30 a.m .
Speakers will be Charles Lusher,
Jim Lu sher. Singers will be Carl
Beaver, Clarice Waugh and the
Saunders Trio.
CROWN CITY - Crown City
Methodist Church will have Pastor
Fred Shockley prcacing during
morning services and Rev. George
Holley in the afternoon services.
Singing by the Kyger Valley Boys,
Home Choir. Dinner at noon.
~onday, Sept. 16
KANAUGA- The Kanauga
neighborhood watch picnic will
begin at 6 p.m. at the DAY building in Kanauga. Please bring a covered dish.

MERCERVILLE - Hannan
Trace Elcmcnt.ary PTO will meet at
7 p.m. Parents and grandparents arc
welcomed.
BIDWELL - Bidwell-Porter
PTO meeting, 7 p.m. "Meet the
Staff Night."

p.m. at legion hall.
GALLIPOLIS • Churchwomen
of St. Peter's Episcopal Church
(ECW) will meet at noon for a luncheon-business meeting. Marilyn
Shealy will speak on Riverview
Recycling.
Tuesday, Sept. 17
GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette White
Shrine Charter Member Night, 7:30
p.m. at Masonic Hall.
VINTON - Vinton Friendship
Garden Club meets at the home of
Bcuy Twyman at Ip.m.
REUNIONS SLATED
GALLIPOLIS - Descendents of
the late Charles and Mora Walters
family reunion, Sunday, Sept. 22 at
0.0. Mcintyre Park. Basket dinner
at noon.
BlOWELL - Friends and relatives of Edward Kemper to meet at
residence of Otho Mitchell in Bidwell, Sunday, Sept. 15 at 12:30
p.m. Bring lawn chairs for basket
lunch.

WordPerfect
seminar
of£
RIO GRANUC. - Are you

interested in learning how to
arrange newsletters and set graphics into your documents? Would
you like to set columns and work
with various kinds of fonts and
typefaces? A seminar focusing on
the desktop publishing capabilities
of WordPerfect 5.1 software will
cover topics such as these. It will
be presented September 12,1991
from 9 a.rn.-3 p.m. by the Adult
Services Division of the GalliaJackson- Vinton JVSD at their
Buckeye Hills Facility in Rio
Grande.
The workshop is designed for
the WordPerfect user who is
already familiar with the main features of the program. The course
will cover graphics images, graphic
boxes, columns and fonts . WordPerfect 5.1 's new table feature will
also be introduced for those interested. Participants will have the
chance to view laser and deskjet as
well as highend dot matrix printers
produce documents using WordPerfect's desktop publishing features. They will also receive reference training materials.
Students will spend the bulk of
their time in hands-on training.
Class size is limited so that participants receive individual instruction.
The seminar is competitively
priced at $75/participant, which
includes all teaming and reference
training materials. Interested persons may register by sending a
check or money order (made out to:
Gallia-Jackson- Vinton JYSD) to:
Adult Services, P. 0. Box 157, Rio
Grande, OH 45674. More information about the workshop may be
obtained by contacting Adult Services at (614) 245-5334 ._-----.

day, Friday. Sept. 20. Cards may be
se nt to : Mrs. James Bower, 103
Bonnie Circle, 1500 County Road
I, Dunedin, Fla., 34698.

A PERM FOR ALL AGES

Who's Johnny?

PLANNED - On October 4-6,
members or the 19th Supply Squardon, 19th Air
Depot Group USAF, will meet at the Holiday
Inn, Kanuaga, for their 46th annual reunion.
T~e Squardon '!'as activited at Wright Patterson
Fseld, Dayton, tn 1942 and served 29 months in
North Africa, Italy, France and Bel~ium. All

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By MARY MacYEAN
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP)- What' s
striking about public television's
"Eat Smart" is how often the
experts compare a bad diet to
smoking cigarettes: Both not only
can kill you, they can make your
last years pretty miserable.
And so the onslaught of wamin}s continues. Yop' ve heard it
~r and over - cut down on fat,
~l more produce and grains, and
le$5 salt.
: •But "Eat 'Smart," broadcast
tORight 0!1' PBS, still manages to be
inter~$ihg, perhaps because mat~ !If life and death rarely are bori~'
· , And perhaps because it pulls no
~n'ches; Americans are eating
tllemselves into early and painful
IJ1aves, as one expert says in the
sllow.
· ~ "You may be surprised to learn
t~at diet is the No. 2 killer of
Americans," says Dr. M;chael
McGinnis, director of the Office of
l)isease Prevention and Health Promotion at the U.S. Department of
I:Iealth and Human Services.
; -"It's not just how long you live.
lt's the quality of life that's at
stake," adds Dr. Sushma Palmer,

GALLIPOLIS
Ohio River Plaza

Between Hills &amp; Big Bear
(6141 446-SAMS
NO APPOINTMENT

NECESSAilV

If It's Your Insurance,
Wouldn't You Feel Better

With Our Name On It?

: Dear Ann Landers: I discovered

Choosina an ins1rance 11ency is often

i pair of high-heeled

shoes in my
husband's briefcase. After much
questioning, "Roy" admilled thal he
had become rerribly depressed when
liis father passed away 10 years ago
tllld fOund comfott in dressing up in ·
ladies' clothes.
• When I asked him how often he
did this, he said. "Sometimes I've
lone for two months without
&lt;lfessing up."
• I now understand so many things
that used to baffle me. For example,
!loy's refusal to attend family
&lt;)Jtings. His pat excuse was, "I have
too many things to do in the office."
~ow I know the man was at home
dressing up.
_Our sex life has not been very
e,xciting these last few years. I have
tried to teU him that I need more
aaention, but his answer is always
the same, "Maybe tomorrow. Right
now rm too tired."
· I should tell you that Roy is one
of the most respected physicians in
litis city. We have a very solid
tpalriage and he is a terrific father.
But I am confused about what to
Oxpect
in the future regardin my

..,.._. ...

Hlark. Girls' siu•s K'll.:t
R'•Jt. lfUl!t . sal.-14.9!1

N\GKt J\WJ\'1.

GALLIPOLIS ROTARY CLUB

/

Is Sponsoring Its Very First

FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WF:IGHT f.ON~ROL

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-1675,,

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Eaten consistently, it's a diet
that can lead to cancer and heart
disease.
To compare, Woodruff visits
families in China and southern .
Italy, where the incidence of dietrelated diseases is far lower - and
the food is great.
Americans have made meat the
centerpiece of the meal. Americans
see meat as a sign of affluence, and
long have been told that meat will
make us strong and healthy.
It's time to change, "Eat
Sman" argues, and quite effectively.
People are starting to listen to
the advice about diet, though it's
taken some time. The link between
diet and heart disease was found by
Ancel Keys, who developed the
milit.ary's K-rntions and later compared the diets of seven countries
with heart disease rates.
. Other studies followed, and by
the early 1970s, Woodruff reports,
experts had concluded that people
who got hean disease often also ate
lots of saturated fats and few vegetables, fruit and grains.
The effect of what we eat on
how we live and die is just about as
clear as the link between disease
and tobacco, says Scott Grundy of
the University of Texas.

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Sunday Tlmes--Senllnei-Page-B7

1
'

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LANSING, Mich. (AP) - Los
Angeles Lakers guard Magic Johnson is also guarding the privacy of
his wedding on Saturday.
"I don't talk about my private
life, l never have," Johnson said
Thursday during a workout at
Michigan State University's Jenison Fieldhouse.
Johnson's wedding to his lon~­
time love. Earletha "Cookie ·
Kelly, will be an evening ceremony
at the Union Missionary Baptist
Church. Little else is being
divulged.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
Burt Reynolds thinks his
property assessments arc too high.
Make that properties.
The aclOr on Thursday filed an
appeal of the value county asses sors put on the 147-acrc Bun
Reynolds Ranch, a tree house, airplane hangars and the house where
his parents live.
The ranch alone, assessors say,
is worth $2.4 million. Reynolds
says it's more like $1.3 million.
The laX difference is $22,000.
"Bun really wants to get along
with everybody. As a result, he lets
things get a little bit carried away,"
said Reynolds' accountant, Richard
Rampell.

Human resource
management meet
slated for Sept. 18

I

,I'
II

Shown Nontake 's ROTHSCHILD

GALLIPOLIS -The Mid-Ohio
Valley Chapter of the Society for
Human Resource Management will
meet at noon Wednesday, Sept. 18
at the Stowaway Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Members of the Students in Free
Entetprise chapter at the University
of Rio Grande will present the program for the meet ing, entitled
"Turning Point '92."
The Rio Grande SIFE chapter is
one of approximately 200 college
and university chapters in the U.S.
Early this year the SIFE group
earned a first place position in
regional competition in Columbus.
During the national competition in
Kansas City, the team missed
entering finals by two points.
All human resource managers in
the area are invited to attend the
luncheon meeting. No advance
reservations arc necessary. For
more information on the meeting,
contact Sam Hanman, president, at
304-882-2151 or Phyllis Mason ,
secret.ary. at 245-5353.

We know exactly what they
want in a wedding or shower

gtft. We up-date their list as
g1ft&gt; are purchased.
Vis tl us when &lt;hopptng for a
gtft We'll help you select the
gtft that the bride really wants.
We'll gift-wrap 11 . we·Hsend tl.

A~a:/c'

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JtwaMia

40. Stc011d AVt"Ut

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~~~

MARINA

T R 0 T T E R S'

(AP) -

Ann
Landers

Because some days
aren't just 9 to 5.

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Lafayette Mall

Gallipolis

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Effective Sept. 16-28

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GALLIPous, oH.

446·3353

Hair Happe111ng

Love the child .. .
train the child .. .
teach the child.
At Gallia Christian School, we have a unique philosophy of
educatJon, based upon Biblical principles. We believe the first step in
educ~g a chtld •s to love thal child; the second, to train the child and
the thtrd, to teach the subject mauer .
Gallia Christian School offers a traditional curriculum of bolh
college preparatory and generalcotirse studies for students in Kindergarten through 12th Grade, with emphasis on high academic achievement, strong moral slandards and spiritual values. And above all, with
emphasis on love. Because when a child feels loved and is uained in
Christian truths and behavior, greAter .learning takes place.
For information aboutourprograms, or to receive an application for
the 1991-1992 school year,call (614) 367-0306or (614) 367-7475.

GALLIA CHRISTIAN

•

...
___. OHIO .RIVER PLAZA.___..,~ ..'

PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) -A
lawyer Aretha Franklin hired to act
as ~uardian for the sin~er' s mentally til son is suing, saymg she owes
nearly $11,000 for legal bills.
Suzanne Dreifus of Southfield
says Franklin owes her $10,728.
according to the lawsuit filed
Thursday in Oakland County Circuit Coun.
Dreifus was hired in 1989 to be
legal guardian for Clarence
Franklin, 35, according to the lawsuit. A chronic paranoid
schizophrenic, Clarence Franklin is
in an adult foster home, according
to coun records.
Franklin initially paid Drcifus
S125 an hour, but in April said she
would sever the contract unless the
hourly fee was reduced to $50, the
lawsuit said.

husband's cross-dressing. He says what. -- SOMEWHERE IN THE and could be easily rectified
he's been doing it less frequently but SOUTHWEST
Please ask shirt manufacturers
I am not sure this is true. I
DEAR SOMEWHERE: Cross- to put the size and washing instrucsuggested thal he get professional dressers often discover in their tion labels somewhere besides the
counseling, but he insists that teen years, or earlier, that they back of the neck where they irrilale
sharing his secret with a counselor get pleasure from wearing women's and annoy us. It wouldn't' cost
would be dangerous. I can see how clothes. Many of these males are anything and would make a lot
his medical practice would be happily married and are not of people happy. ·- M.H.F. IN
damaged if the word got out.
interested in homosexual relation- MINNEAPOLIS
I also discovered female hormone ships. When pressures mount. the
DEAR MINNEAPOLIS: Sounds
pills in Roy's sock drawer. When I cross-dresser feels the need to logical to me. How about the
asked about them, he said they were escape from his troubles, and shiruail, Mr. Manufacturer?
for his patients. That got me to do dressing up gives him a lifL
Gem of the Day: The problem
more searching. I then discovered
Roy, however, goes beyond with bucket sealS in autanobiles is
some vials of a substance which he dressing up. He seems to be into that not everyone has the same size
says he injects in his face to fiU up needles and pills, which suggests bucket
the wrinkles. I also ran into several that there is more involved here than
LoMso~? Tak charge of your
tubes of bikini wax, a box of home just cross-dressing.
life IJIId turn it around. Write for
electrolysis needles, and catalogs
Since he will not go for help I Ann umdtrs' new boolcler, "How ro
that sell flashy women's clothes, hope you will. Surely there is a Malee Friends and Stop Being
swimsuits, fishnet stoCkings, black trustworthy counselor you can talk Lollt!ly." Send a self-addressed, long,
panties and bras.
to about your recent disturbing busiMss-siu enwlope IJIId a check
I am confused and panicked. discovery. Good luck.
or money order for $4.15 (lhis
Can you explain whal all of this
Dear Ann Landers: The prob- iiiCludes postage IJIId handling) 10:
means? I know nothing about Iem I am writing about is not Friends, clo Ann Landers, P.O. Box
cross-&lt;lressing and any information earthshaking but it creates a IOl of ll562, Chicago, 111.60611-0562. (In
you could give me would be physical discomfort among males CanadtJ, send$5.05.)
very helpful. Also, what should , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
I do? Divorce is absolutelv out
of the question. I love Roy and I
~~
would never leave him no mauer

•
•

TICKETS: 525/Couplt
(allint 446·531 I

'•
•

ElKS
CLUB
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
Proceeds help fund Jll&amp;ny
local Rotary projcts.

Blad1.. Womt•n's si1.1•s ;,.9.
Rf'g. 17.99.sal•15.99.

•

SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER 28
.9:00 P.M.
AT TH£

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

an associate professor at Georgetown University Medical Center
and former director of the National
Academy of Sciences' Food and
Nutrition Board.
Diet is linked to colon, breast
and prostate cancer, coronary heart
disease and other illnesses. The
federal Centers for Disease Control
estimated 434,000 Americans died
from smoking in 1988. Diet is
killing 300,000 to 400,000 people a
year, McGinnis says.
And these diseases arc expensive. Americans are spending $9
billion a year on bypass surgery,
Palmer says.
There's so 'much to digest in this
show: the politics of food labels,
tips on reading them, foods that
may help prevent cancer, diseasefighting designer foods of the
future, the physiology of heart disease, heart-healthy supermarket
shopping, and education programs
that seem to be getting people to
change their habits.
Correspondent Judy Woodruff
takes viewers to visit the Johnson
fam ily. In three meals, none apparently excessive, son Lance's daily
intake of fat is 125 grams, or I, 125
fat calories. He ate just three servings of grains and barely three of
produce.

Wife confused about cross-dressing

1\~CE 1"E,

ROBERT M. HOLLE\', M.D.

were discharged in 1945. On Oct. 4, the group
will tour Jewell Evans Grist Mill, iocludin~ a
picnic style dinner. Oct. S, the group will vtsit,
the West Virginia Farm Museum and Festival,
with a business meeting at 3 p.m., followed by a
banquet at Holiday Inn at 7 p.m.

Wise up and eat smart,
expert after expert warns

~

Exp11es 10-12-91

SHOP HOLRS
M-F:9to9
Sat. 9 to 6; Sun. 12-5

• difficull decision. Us•llr tllert's no
GALLIPOLIS - Montgomery
GALLIPOLIS - American
woy you con tvoluottlht servict you will
rtCIIVI.
Legion Auxiliary 161 meets at 1 family reunion, Sunday, Sept. 22
One u&lt;eption is AlA's Insurance
from 10 a.m. to dark, at 0.0.
A1ency. AAA Insurance is 1 recopiZtd
Mcintyre Park , shcltcrhousc 6.
1111111 you con rtlr on for •II tho q.,litits
Lunch at 12:30 p.m. Bring covered
you •nt in on insurance
dish.
POMEROY- Drive-through national survey, hamburger, pizza
Call our Salol
dining is becoming a way of life and fried chicken arc the top three
~
for many Americans . J uggltng k'lkc-out foods. These items may be
Allgit, !IMlay
Johnny Carson, who became the
work and family demands may high in fat, cholesterol and calories,
for detaHs.
long-time
host of NBC-TV's "The
ncccssit.atc a fast food carryout din- a hazardous combination for those
446·0699
ncr occasionally for the "typical" who want to lower the risk of heart Tonight Show," was a staff writer
for Red Skelton's variety show in
American family.
disease.
As our eating habits arc changThe next time you drive-through 1954 when he got his big break.
ing, so arc the fast-food restaurants. consider the following alternatives: Carson filled in at the last minute
Have you noticed lat ely the
• Opt for lower caloric entrees for Skelton after the slapstick
increased advertising for foods that such as garden sa lads or baked comic injured himself during
arc lower in calories, fats and potatoes instead of the traditional rehearsal.
cholesterol at your favorite fast- "burger and fries".
food restaurant? Healthy choices
• Ask for low caloric salad
arc available today for people and dressing, served on the si de if posfamilies on the go.
sible . You can then control the
If you and your family make a amount of dressing used .
•Try baked potatoes with vcghabit of stopping by the drivc-thru
for a quick and easy lunch or din- ct.able or yogurt toppings instead of
ncr, make your choices healthy tho se oozing in butter, cheese
sauces or bacon.
ones.
•Go for the grill ed r:~thcr than
Many dine -in and take-out
THE
restaurants have joined the hea lth fried meats. and choose smaller
crusade, offering salad bars, pasta portions. Ask them to "hold the
and rice dishes and low-fat prod- cheese and mayo".
ucts . rlowcvcr, according to a

Drive-thru food can be healthful

People in
the news

'1.

. ,.,..

GALLIPOLIS · The 32nd ily present was Mr. Harvey Brown,
Richard Milton Brown reunion was Jr.
Door prizes were won by Mr.
held recently at the 0.0. Mcintyre
Parle, with President Toby Brown and Mrs. Luther Moore, Mrs. Marilla Gothard and Mr. and Mrs. Greg
conducting the business meeting.
The youngest member present Lewis.
Toby Brown was re-elected as
was Erin Moore, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Moore and the eldest president and Abbey Huber was
member was Mrs. Marilla Gothard. elected as secret.ary/trcasurcr.
The next reunion will be held
Members trav~ling the farthest
Sunday,
Aug . 30, 199 2 at 0 .0 .
were Mr. and Mrs. Roger Brown
Mcintyre
Parle.
and the member with the most fam-

P-ERM-

:1rca.

'

Brown families gather

Tucceri named Bake sale slated Card shower
- The EmancipaDUNEDIN, Fla. - Betty (Saunto honor society tionGALLIPOLIS
bake sale will be held Satur- ders) Bower will celebrate a birthRIO GRANDE - Ronald Tucceri was inducted into Marietta day, Sept. 21 in the Gallipolis City
College's chapter of the Alpha Park.
All ~aked goods arc to be there
Lambda Delta national academic
by JO .a.m. Judging will beginat
honor society Sept. 12.
The society recognizes superior 10:30 a.m. Prizes will be awarded.
academic performance by freshman
students. To be named for membership, students must have maintain_ed a 3.5 or hi$her grade point
average during theu freshman yaar,
and have taken at least 15 credit
hours per semester.
Tucceri, who's major is chemistry and f!lathematics, is a 1990
graduate of Gallia Academy High
School. Ha is tha son of Ronald
and Susan Tuccari of Rio Grande.
Marietta Collage is a private liberal··arts college located in southcastarn· Obio. The school enrolls
approximatruy 1,200 students in a
variety of liberal arts and professional studies.

..

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

September 15, 199.1.-

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

,

•'

ScHooL

C1p1n Mon. I Fri. 'til I p.111.1 Tut~~ WH. Thurs. &amp; Sat. 'tl 5 p.m.

.•

P.O. Box 27~. Cheshire, Ohio 45620

•

�. . ..... ·- , ..., ,.,.._
.

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Buller By'not'e scored two touchdowns but 19th-ranked Ohio State
-w hich led 16-0 in the fourth
quarter - had to tum back a lastminute march by Louisville to take
a 23-15 victory Saturday.
Louisville (1-2) drove to the
Ohio State 12 on its final possession, needing a touchdown and
two-point conversion to tie the
game. But a fourth-down pass from
quarterback Erik Watts to wide
·receiver Greg Brohm fell incom plete in the end zone.
Watts, a graduate student making his first collegiate stan after
. five years in the program, completed 22 of 43 passes for 303 yards
with three interceptions.
Ohio State (2·0) led 16-0 when
By'not'e, who had scored on a
five-yard run on the Buckeyes' first
series, scored on the first play of
the fourth quarter.
But Tim Williams' extra-point
kick was blocked by Louisville's
Leonard Ray and Ray Buchanan
picked up the loo se ball and
returned it 80 yards for a two-point
safety and the Cardinals' first
points of the game.
Louisville then took the lcickoff
and went 75 yards in six plays,
scori ng when Watts hit tight end
Jose Gonzalez on a 48-yard touchdown pass. Klaus Wilmsmeycr' s
extra-point kick made it 16-9.
But Ohio State carne right back
on a five-play drive over 78 yards,
featuring a 21-yard pass from Kent
Graham to Brian Stablein and a 34yard run by fullback Jeff Cothran.
Carlos Snow, who did not play at
all la st year while recuperating
from surgery to remove a benign
bone tumor on his hip, capped the

99&lt;

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POMEROY, OH

WHITNEY

PRICES EFFECTIVE SEPT.

PINK
SALMON
14.75 OZ. CAN

$199
BEEF BUCKET

Cubed Steak ••••••••• $249
BEEF
$399
Steak
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T-Bone
LB.

AMERICAN

MIXED CHICKEN

Fryer Parts ............ .. 49.&lt;
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Cheese ••••••••••••.•• ~:·•• $189
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$ 9.
Lunch Meat ••••••• ~:·•• 13

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters ......~~ .. 49&lt;
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$119
Turkey
ECKRICH SMOKED SAUSAGE or
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1
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PASTRIES

11

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U. S. No. 1 RUSSETT

Potatoes •••••••••~.~••• S1 99

GROUND
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FLAVORITE

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• • • • '(X)l.J~' ••• ' ••
•
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PAGE
•
•
•

••
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•
•
••

PAPER TOWELS

3/Sl

Good Only At Powell's Sup• Volu
Offtf Good Stpt. 15 thnl Stpt. 21, 1991
limit 3 Per Custom•

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limit I Ptr C111tom•

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'

,,

Section

C

September 15, 1991

march by running the final 16 yards
with 11:55left for a 23-9lead.
Graham, who completed 10 of
17 passes for 141 yards with two
interceptions, was hurt on a bootleg
on the play before Snow's touchdown and was replaced by Kirk
Herbstreit.
Wilmsmeyer kicked a 42-yard
field goal on Louisville's next possession, but a personal foul against
Ohio State gave the Cardinals a
first down at the Ohio State 13 .
Louisville coach Howard Schnellenberger elected to take the points
off the board and on first down,
Watts hit Fred Jones on a 13-yard
scoring pass and it was 23-15 when
Wilmsmeyer missed the point-after
kick .
After an Ohio State punt,
Louisville had the ball at it.s own
29 with 2:30 left for a final shot at
a tie. Watts completed passes of 12,
19 and nine yards and running back
Ralph Dawkins added an 11 -yard
run to give the Cardinals a first
down at the Ohio State 20 with
1:33 left.
After an incompletion, Watts hit
Brahm for nine yards to make it
third and I at the Ohio State II
with I :05 left. But Dawkins was
thrown for a one-yard lo ss.
Louisville called time out and on
fourth and two with 54 seconds
remaining, Watts noated a pass to
the right comer of the end zone for
Brohm, but it fell wide of the mark.
Ohio State then ran out th e
clock.
The Buckeyes had built their
16-0 lead on a pair of By'not'e
touchdown runs and a 36-yard field
goa l by Williams.
Dawkins led all ru shers with 66
ya rd s on 18 attempts, while
Cothran topped Ohio State with 61
yards on 10 carries. Snow had 58

CHLCKEN
NOODLE
SOUP

99&lt;

'I

Ohio State beats Louisville; Michigan tops Notre Dame

1 LB. POUND

Monday_thru Sunday

..

Sports

ZESTA
CRACKE·RS
STORE HOUts

..

••
;

••

'

12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25

Florida State vs Western Mlchlgan ........ late
Miami beat Houston .......................... 46-10
Michigan beat Notre Dame ............... ~: 24-14
Washington did not play
Penn State va Southern Callfornla ........ late
Florida vs Alabama ...... ......................... late
Notre Dame lost to Michigan ............. 14-24
Clemson did not play
Oklahoma beat North Texas State ........ 40·2
HoustoD lost to Mlaml .......•............... lo-40
Tennessee beat UCLA ........................ 3o-16
Colorado lost to Baylor ...................... 14-16
Nebraska beat Colorado State ............ 71-14
Iowa beat Iowa State ......................... 29-10
Auburn vs Mlsslsslppl ........................... late
Alabama vs Florida ............................... late
Georgia Tech beat Boston College ...... So-14
Michigan St. lost to Cent. Michigan ..... 3-20
Ohio State beat Louisville .................. 23-115
Texas Alli:M beat Louisiana State .......... 45-7
UCLA lost to Tennessee ..................... 16-30
Syracuse vs Maryland .......... ,................ late
Baylor beat Colorado ......................... 16-14
Pittsburgh beat Temple ....................... 26-7
Mlsslsslppl State vs Tulane ................... late

• Played Thursday night

•

•

yards on 14 attempts.
The game was the first meeting
ever between the schools.
Ohio 35, Tennessee Tech 14
At Athens, Ohio, Tim Curtis
scored twice and his 143 yards in
24 attempts paced Ohio University
to a 35-14 victory Saturday over
Tennessee Tech, giving the Bobcats their best stan in 15 years.
Ohio University is 1-0- 1 and
hasn't been unbeaten after two
games since going 2-0 in 1976. The
Golden Eagles, the only team Ohio
defeated last year, are 0-2.
Ohio led 28·0 at halftime and
played second-stringers for much
of the final half.
Curtis opened the scoring with a
19-yard run in the first quarter.
Ohio scored twice in the second
quarter on a two-yard run by John
Clemons and touchdown passes of
43 and 30 yards from Tom Dubs to
Counney Burton.
Marshall Hale's 79 -yard punt
return and a three-yard run by
Anthony Carano in the final quarter
cut the lead to 28-14 with 4:24 left.
The Bobcats' offensive starters
returned at that point, and Curtis
scored from one yard out with one
second to play for the fmal margin.
Dubs completed 14 of 19 pass
allempts for 225 yards with two
intercepted. Burton fini shed with
four catches for 117 yards and
Richard Hill caught five passes for
53 yards. Burton was a replacement
starter for Wayne Clements, who
was on suspension for one game.
Ohio had a balanced attack with
225 passing and 233 rushing yards,
while limiting the Golden Eagles to
124 total yards, 41 of them on the
ground. Alonzo Hamilton with 29
yards in six carries was Tennessee
Tech's best runner.
No. 14 Iowa 29, Iowa St. 10
At Ames, lowa, Matt Rodgers
threw a 46-yard touchdown pass on
Iowa's second play as the 14thranked Hawkeyes scored three
times in the first 8 1/2 minutes Saturday en route to a 29- 10 victory
over Iowa State.
Iowa (2-0) didn't di splay the
offe nse it showed in beating
Hawaii 53-10 a week earlier bu.t
was able to capitalize on Iowa State
mistakes in beating the Cyclones
(I-I) for the ninth straight time.
The Hawkeycs turned two fumbles and an interception by Iowa
State quarterback Chris Pederse n
into 13 first-half points, and they
blocked a punt out of the end zone
for a safety in the second half.
A crowd of 54,469. the secondlargest in Cyclone Stadium history,
saw Iowa take a 17-0 lead after
running just nine plays.
W. Virginia 21, S. Carolina 16
At Morgantown. W.Va., Darren
Studstill, back from an injury that
kept him out of most of his team's
first two games, threw for 176
yards and rushed for SO more as
West Virginia held off South Carolina 2 1-16 Saturday.
The win by West Virginia (2- 1)
overshadowed an 18-for-34, 237yard passing performance by South
Carolina's Bobby Fuller and 119
yards reyeiving by Robert Miller.
But South Carolina (0-1-1) and
Fuller started off the game as nat
as it was in fini shing a week ago in
a tic with Duke.
The Gamecocks gave up 14
straight points in the fourth quarter
of the Duke game and fell behind
21-0 to Wes t Virginia in the first
half Saturday.

Cent. Mich. 20, Michigan St. 3
At East Lansing. Mich., tailback
Billy Smith rambled through th e
Michigan State defense for 162
yards on 40 carries, including a ISyard tou chdown run, as Central
Michigan beat the No. 18 Spartans
20-3 Saturday.
Central Michigan, of the MidAmcrcan Conference, led the entire
game and boosted it.s record to 2-01 by upsetting last year's Big Ten
co-champs in Michigan State's season opener.
Smith's TD run with 52 seconds
left in the first half put the Chippewas up 7-0. Jeff Bender and wide
receiver Ken Ealy teamed up for a
57-yard scoring pass. and Chuck
Selinger's field goals of 22 and 32
yards finished Cen!Ial Michigan's
scoring.
Michigan State avoided a
shutout with a 45-yard Jim
Delv erne field goa l in the third
quarter.
The Spartans couldn't capitalize

on two hrst-quarter in terceptions of
Bender and saw a third wiped o~t
by roughing the passer call.
The Spartans took over with
8:3 4 left in the game, but th e
Michigan State drive stalled when
Miller was called for intentional
grounding , then was sacked for a
loss of I I yards by Lamar Sallv.
Rice 36. Northwestern 7
At Evanston, Ill., Trevor Cobh
ran for three touchdowns includin g
one for 79 yards Saturday and se t a
Rice career ru shing record as th e
Owl s walloped Northwestern 36-7
in a football opener for both teams.
Cobb also scored on runs of fiv e
and 18 yards as he rushed 25 times
for a 193 yards. giv ing him a career
total of 2.063 yards.
Cobb. who carne into the game
need in g 48 yards to break th e
schoo l rushin g record of 1,9 17
yards by David " Kosse" Johnson
set in the early 1950s, broke it on
the second play from scrimmage
with his 79 -yard touchdown run.

Northwe stern , see kin g it s first
open ing day wm since 1975. was
se t back repeat edly by penaltie s.
und turnovers. Th e Wildcats fum ·
bled th e ball away six times. three
by quarterback Len Williams, who
also threw one of intercept ions.
Taylor 17, Urbana il
At Urbana, Ohio, Brad Oliver
kicked a sc hool re cord 50-yard
field goal in the second quarter a$
Taylor beat Urbana 17-0 Saturday.
Oliver, a se nior, broke hi s owg
record. a 48-yard fie ld goa l from
last year.
Tay lor (1 -0) led Urbana (0-2)
I Q. 7 in the second quaner on a 35yard interception return by safe ty
Mike Garty with seven seco nd s
left.

Taylor's final score came on a
two-yard run by Erik Sechrist.
Freshman tailback Terry Rogan
led Urbana with 41 yards rushing
on 14 attempts.
Matt Widdoc s rushed for 76
yards on 17 carries for Taylor.

ESCAPES CARDINAL- Ohio State running back Butler By'not'e (right) es&lt;;apes the
clutches of Louisville defender Kevin Gaines for

a 15-yard gain during Saturday's game at Ohio
Stadium in Columbus, which the Buckeyes won
23-15. (AP)

HEADING UPFIELD - Michigan cornerback Lance Dottin (22) heads upfield after intercepting a Rick Mirer pass in front of Notre .,
Dame tight end Derek· Brown (bottom right)
during Saturday's game in Ann Arbor, Mich.,

which the Wolverines won 24-14. Here
Anderson (bottom 1£ft), Dottin's teammate, puts
a block on Brown to help Dottin break the tackle. (AP)

Part I of 1991 Bengals-Browns
feud to start today in Cleveland
By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (AP) - Boomer Es ia so n and
Bernie Kosar make television commercials toget.her.
They play golf toge ther. They've known each other
throughout their professional careers, which they've
spent at opposite ends of the same state.
Unlike the ugliness that tarni shes the rivalries
between some AFC Central Division teams, today 's
game between Esiason 's Cincinnati Ben gals and
Kosar's Cleveland Browns ren ews a rivalry built
very much on mutual respect.
That doesn't mean it's any less intense. Quite the
con!Iary, says Kosar.
"This is my seventh year playing against Cincinnati. It's the same with a lot of the guys on their
team," Kosar said. "You know a lot of those guys. 1
think when you're playing guys you know and you
like, and a lot of them are friends, you real ly want to
play better. You get more excited about it because
you like to do good against guys you know.··
In a Cincinnati-Houston game, late hiLS and personal fouls are commonplace, and you shouldn't be
surprised to see a losing player shouting obscenities
into the TV camera after the game, as was the case
following the Bengals' 30-7 loss to the Oilers last
today night.
In a Cincinnati-Cleveland game, the hitting is just
as hard, but it usually occurs legally, before the whistle blows.
"I think there's a difference between this rivalry
and the Houston and Pittsburgh rivalries," Esiason
said. "I know a few of the players up there (in Cleveland). We play basketball against them . There's a
greater respect between the two organizations and
their players 'lhan we have for Pittsburgh and Houston. , Those are games where you just hate the other

learn.''
Twice a year, the football game between the
Browns and Bengals rekindles a long-running feud

between residents of the two cities : Cleveland is
always a fa vorite target of radio personalities in
Cincinnati, but even more so during "Cleveland
week."
"1 think players on both teams get pressure from
the local community- ' Hey, you've got to win this
game,'" Esiason said. "There's all kinds of Cleveland jokes going on down here now . That's Lhe way
it is every year.
"It doesn't really matter what Lhc records of the
team s are. All the chart stuff. all the sizes and
weights and speeds go out the window, because the
guy that runs a 5-nat now all of a sudden runs a 4.8.
It just seems like everybody steps it up a notch."
The Browns-Bengals rivalry was a na1ural from
the moment Cincinnati joined the AFC Central when
the AFL and NFL merged in 1970. Not only were tbe
two teams representing rival cities in the same state;
they also had both been built from sc ratch by Paul
Brown, who founded the Bengals in 1967, five years
after he'd been fired by Art Modell as coach of the
Browns.
Brown died Aug. 5.
. .. " 1 think the fact that PB is not here physically
docsn 't really make a difference," Esiason said. "A
lot of us still feel very strongly about this rivalry. I
think a lot of that stems from the fact that PB made it
.
a priority for this team."
The Bengals have swept the two-game senes each
of the past two ye.arS, and they hold a 22-19 advantage in the a!l-~e series. The Browns haven :t beaten Cincinnau smc~ Oct. 30,1988, a 23-16 dcc•s•on at
Cleveland Stadium.
Esiason is 9-4',as a starter against the Browns.
Kosar is 4-5 againSt Cincinnati.
But Kosar claims he has the edge on the golf
course.
"Boomer doesn ' I concentrate as much on his
golf," Kosar said.

New York posts 3-1 victory over Boston
NEW YORK (AP) - Boston
fumbled away a run with a triple
error in the seco nd inning and
stumbled a bit in the AL East race
Saturday as Scott Sanderson led the
New York Yankees over the Red
Sox 3-1.
Pitcher Joe Hesketh, first baseman Mo Vaughn and left fielder
Mike Greenwell combined to give
the Yankees a Little League-type
run in the second, and New York
added two run s in the third as it
stopped an eight-game losi ng
streak.
Sanderson (15-9) increased hi s

career record against Boston to S-0.
He allowed three hits in eight
shutout innings, struck out two and
walked two as he beat Lhe Red Sox
for the third time this year.
Hesketh (10-4) lost for only the
second time in nine starts since
July 29, a span that includes six
wi ns. He allowed all three runs and
ni ne hits in seven-plus innings .
Blue J ays 6, Athletics 0
At Toronto, Tom Candioui sca ttered five hits in seven innings and
th e Toronto Blue Jays beat the
Oakland Athletics 6-0 Saturday to
increase their AL East lead to 4 I!2

games over second-place Boston.
John Olerud hit a two-run double and rookie Eddie Zosky hit a
two-run single in the fourth inning
and Joe Carter and Candy Maldonado later homered as Toronto won
forthe eighth time in 11 games.
Candiotti (13-11) lowered his
leag ue-leading ERA to 2.26. He
struck out five and walked two, and •
relievers Duane Ward and Mike
Timlin each pitched an inning in
th e team's major league-leading
15th shutout.
Bob Welch (11-12) gave up five'
runs on six hits over six innings.:
He suuck out two and walked four.

�,..

! .Page-C2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 15, 1991

Is, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

By RICK SIMPKINS
Sports Correspondent
POINT PLEASANT - "Tough
don' tlasl-lough people do."
Those were the words of ·PPHS
coac h Steve Safford Friday

night just moments after hts Big
The Blue Devils built an early
Blacks had dropped their third con- lead and then coasted lhrou$h the
secutive game, 31-0 to the Gallia final two quaners 10 posttheu thud
Academy Blue De.vils. The contest consec uuve wm. .
.
also marked the thtrdslralght week
Quanerback ClmiDavts was the
thai the B1g Blacks faded 10 score.
sparkplug for the VISitors, complcl·
ing 5 of II pa~ses for 122 yards
and three touchdowns . Gallipolis
rushed for another 164 yards for
286 total yards in 50 plays from
sc rimmage.
The Big Blacks, on the other
hand, picked up 117 yards rushing
and 31 passing enroute to their
biggest offensive showing of the
season with 148 total yards in 48
plays from scrimmage.
GaUia Academy scored quickly,
picking up a pair of touchdowns in
the first quarter and that, according
to Safford was a big fat:tor in the
contest
"We felt that we had lO keep
1hem from puning poims on the
board early," commented Safford.
"I f we keep th em from scoring
early, we can work our offensive
game plan, which was to control
the ball by utili zing both of our
running backs - Mall Neville and
Barry Pearson. Unfonunately, they
got on top early and that forced us
to change what we wanted to do. I
guess Murphy's Law took over in
the first half because every thing
that could happen did, and it was
all in their favor," added Safford.
The Blue Devils struck paydirt
midway through the opening quarter when Davis found Larry Howell
behind the PPHS secondary and
•jj ·
ONE-ON-ONE • Gallia Academy's Paul Sturgill (73) battles
Howell, a cat.quick 135 pound
· :Point Pleasant's Aaron Wamsley (65) one-on-one in Friday's 62nd
junior outran everyone to the end"grid renewal at Sanders Memorial Field. On right is PPHS' Ja~on
zone 10 complete the 56 yard scor' -Safford (80). The visiting Blue Devils won 31-0.
ing
play. Tim Slone added the exua
;.~ ... '
point 10 give the Devils a 7-0 lead.
Until 1hat point the Big Black
defensive unit had held their
ground against the much more
experienced Blue Devils.
II did not take long for the Gal·
lians 10 add to their lead. On their
next possession, Davis again went
. •
OhiD Hl&amp;h School Football
Kcuering Alter 3¥, Day. Catroll 7,
10 the air and this time the senior
f
By The Allotlattd Prw
L.akewood V, Bay 1
Akt01 Ccmnl·Howcr 20, Tallmadgc6
LanCHtt:r 41. Col. Waucrson 0
quarterback found Aaron Seamon
Akron EUca 35, Cuyahop FallJ 0
L..eb.lnon 20, Sprinahoro 40
open at the Point Pleasant 25 where
Akron Kenmore 21, H~ 1
Libeny Union 21, ~aitfield Un..ion 0
Akroo MaDChMCr26. LaBrac 6
Lim• Bath 47 St. Marys 13
he hauled in the aerial and then sur·
Akron N. J, Akron S~ V-SL~ 0
Uma Shawn~ 21, KenlDn 0
vived
a big hit from a Bill Black
Alli111ec II, Now P!lilldelplti• 7
l.ocldaod 32 Cin. 1-WJI)&gt;a 12
defensive back before divmg into
Amherst ll. VamilioniO
Loaon27.~.o.s.t.. tl
Archbald 14. Otsego 33. OT
Lon.in Clcasvicw 28, Lorain Ceth. 14
the end zone for the second score
, Ashluwl 3, Shelby 0
Loudonville 20, Hill&amp;dalc 6
of the evening. Slone again added
Asllubula St. John 2S, GeneVI 7
Louilvillo 33, WintcnVillc 13
Aust!ntOwn Fitch ?6· Youngstown East 0
Louisville Aquinu 50, Clc. Hay 0
the extra point to stake the Devils
Loveland 46, Qn, Madeira 6
-, Avon 35, Colum~~• 6 ,
to a 14-0 lead.
.f Aycnvillc27, Enc (Mich.) Muon 8
Lowdlville415, Southington 7
BarbcJton 21, Mansfield 13
Madilon 35,Aihtabu)J Edgewood 18
The 14 points were not enough
Beachwood 30, E. Canton 7
Malvern 29, SUiusbura 6
for the Blue Devils, however, as
Bed!«d 15, Oarfidd Hta. 14
Manafield Madiloo 43 ML Vernon 0
8~
. l(,W......,uloS..W.\4
M•plcHu,15.An~yW•yneO
they tacked on another pair of
B
' ' , ~y.·~"f!ood 0
.
Mapleton 29, New l..ondoa 23
touchdowns in the second quarter
Bel
. ran~41, Alliance Marlington 6
Musaretu 7, Willard 0
Berea 15, Cle. ~coln·Wert 0
M'U}'fviUc 2..4, BdJfontainc 0
to ex tend their lead to 28-0 at the
BC!tahire 30, Kirtland 6
Musillon 60, Akron Garfield 13
half. Big Gene Garnes, who led the
Big Walnut 20, Oelawm 1
MuWlon lackaon 35, W001tcr 0
Blue Devils with 48 yards rushing
Bowling Green 42, Napol~n 13
Mathew• 20, J....cct.,nia 16
B~eld 19, Jackson· Milt.on7
Maumee 14, Sylvania Northvicw 12
in 10 !rips, scored next on a one
Broc:;..lyn 9, Fa~~w Pu:k. 8
McOtrmou NW 20, Piketon 15
yard run . Several Point defenders
Brookville 27, Di..ue 0
Mc;;Don1ld46, Mingo lunctioo 7
Brush 43, W. Geauga 13
Mcdina21 Wadswonh 3
had a shot at Garnes, but the 5-11,
Buckeye 15, Lodi Oovetle.af 13
Mentor ro,' Cle. Villa AngclaSt. Joseph 0
205 pound senior would not be
Buckeye L..oca11.9, Beaver Local 0
Miamisburg 20, Vandalia-Butler 0
denied the end zone. Slone added
Bucyrus 2S, l..c.Urla\On 6
Middletown 28, W. ChcatCJ" l...&amp;ka.a 0
Caldwcll3S, Ridgewood 14
Mid view 7, Elyria Weal 0
the extra point for a 21-0 score.
Campbell Mcmorial38, YounJ. Wihon 0
Millbury Lake 35, Genoa 1
The scoring play capped a short
Canal Fulton NW 13, Ooylcnown 12
Miller 23, Fodenlllocking 22
Canal Wlncheatcr35, Col. Ready 19
Millersport 6 Adena 2
drive which began in Point PleasL..~onfield 7, Y""'1&amp;- Libaly 0
Minem Ridge 19, Ne"""" F.U. 14
ant territory after one of five Point
_.Canion McKinley 20, Br&lt;de, W.Va. 14
MirtetVa 36,Faitleu 6
~~nlOn Timkcn 19, C~loo S. 8
Mogadore 37, Wood.ridgeO
turnovers on the evening.
~1'tdinr.on ~· N. Un1on 0
Morgan 17, Slteridan 6
Just minutes later, the Devils
Carey 28, Ridg~e6
.
N. Bct~d Taylor 22, Cin. Finneytown 6
Cedarville 13, Cin. Summtt Country Day 0
N. Can1.0n 21 , Masa.illon Percy 0
added their fourth and final touchChagrinFalli 20, AUJ'OI'_t 7
N. Gallia 19, Rictunood Dale SE 0
down of the evening when Davis
Champic.t43, E. Pal~.I.Uie 6
N. Olmacd 28, Oc. Collinwood 0
connected with sophomore end
Chardoa 9, Cle. Olen.ville 6
N. Rid&amp;eville 36, Oe. Weat Tech 6
Chcupcako 12, Symmaa Vall 6, OT
Nellawille-York 46 Meigs?
Chad
Barnes on a 10-yard pass
Cin. Anderson 48, Cin. Northwcct 7
New Alban' 32, ea;tabui'J 8
play. Slone added the extra point
Cin. Bacon 19, C~ . Walnu~ Hills 0
New Mianu 19, N. CoUege HilliS OT
Cin. CAPE 26, Cm. Wyonung 13
New RichmCXtd 21, Muoo 7
for the 28-0 advantage. The Blue
Cin. CounlfY Day 34, Bcilicl·~ale 0
Nonhmont 17. Day. BclmMt 0
Devils mixed the run and the pass
Cin. Elder 14, Cln. ~eaten J:lill.a 6
Nonlmor 22. Cf!lltline 19
Cin. Glen £ate 35, Cm. ~cNtcholu 0
Nonhwood ll, Ottawa Hills 7
very effectively during the scoring
Cin. Jndian Hilll4, Reading 0 .
Nottm !I Akron Springfield 14
drive with Davis doing the throwCin. Mariemont 21, Cin. Dec:z Puk 7
Norwood 2a Amelia tb
ing and Jason Kopack, Jason Math·
Cin. Moeller28, Trotw.ood·Madilal 0
Oak Harbor 34, Norwalk. 0
Cin. ML lleollhy 14, Cin. lA Sllle 7,
Obe&lt;lin 22 Luthenn W . 20
eny, and Garnes providing the
Cin. Princeton l4. Lima S~. 0 .
Olmlln&amp;Y 2s. Duckcyc Vall. 14
rushing yardage
Cin.. Purcell- Marian~. Can. A.iken 14
Olmai.Cd falli 7, N. kay alton 6
Cin. St. Xavier 38, Cm. 0~ Hills 0
Oregoo Clly l1 Ptnysburg 10
The only scoring in the second
Cin. WinlOn Woods 41, C~n. Taft 6
Painesville lla~cy 21, Ashtabula Harbor 3
half came on a school-record 41
Claymont 12, W. Holmes9
Painaville Rivet1Mie47, Jefferson 18
Clayton Northmont ~·Day. Belmont 0
Pazkcnbug, W.Va. 6, Muielta 3
yard field goal by Tim Slone. The
Clc. !!a•t.8, w,nensville 7
Pazkway 8, Adamt Ccntnl,lnd. 7
junior place kicker had a perfect
Cte. St: IanaLi.w 24,~lc..-eland Ha. 6
Parma Holy Name42. Normandy 14
evening hilling four of four extra
Clwf'ork 17, Ontano 13
Palriot Southwestern 20, AlcJ.andcr 14
Clyde1J,U~ S •WU.yOill 5 14
Pc.D.insi4, Dcllewe6
points and the field goal for seven
Col. IJeeci!CIO·~· 2 1 , cst.c:v e ·
Peny27 Gr~ndVall 16
poin ls. Randy Amsbary held the
CU. Dfl)Othlven49, WmcrvilleN. 13
Pleuant,21 Col Cn'w!ord 6
Col. Earunoor 24, CoL Lindcn· McK.in..ley 0
Plymouth 20. A~land Crestview 0
longest GAHS ficldgoal mark prior
Col. llulley 38, BC11ey 0
Polond 31, p....,bu'l Springfiold 0
(See GAHS on C·3)
Col. Northland 34. Col St.. O.arle~7
Po~tamoulh 32, Gnawp Counw. Kv . 9

rFriday's prep scores
•

Col. West2J,Col. B~ W

R
12
Columbiana 31 , ~
tcr estern cactVc
6
6
Columbl&amp;ne.Ctelt.Vlew 1 • S. Range
0
Cont'lellut 14, Af:btabull
Copley 36, Orrvillo 1~
COf)"'Rawson 35.• -';rlinaton 15

Coahoclon 27, W.ckins,Vall. 24
Ctoetarille 11, Maysville 13
Cvyahoga H~a. 2!, W. Salan Nonhweatcm 18
DallO!' 21, TullaW 0
Danville 42.• Buc:i.ey~ Cc:nua 18S'd
Day. Chamuaado-Juliaule I 9 • 1 ney 11
DefianceS33 Jam•
Ouawa-Giandotf
7 Perry 14
39 Crid ville
Delphol I..C·-- "' o'
Ctl
Dover 14, UIUUton
Dublin 23. ReynoldaburJ 7
C\in100ll Bt.nch ....,6
! .. ..-...t ~ O·" Glen W_
Va 14 OT
E.. '"'"'~r:JN,
a&amp;
•
·•
•
Eatoa '7 , .Preble Shewnee 0
Ediaon4l,Fuda.n~ 0
EIJin 14, MOWll Gilcad 0
Elid~ 22. Van Wctt.19
Elyna 28, ToL !Jpwaher.O
Elyria Calh . 6, S~pville 0
Euclid 3!i, B":J"'wtc.k 14
0
Fairpol'l Huchng 39C,o1Newbb~
F01toria 63, Tiffm
urn tan 0
Franklin Furnace Oreal 20, Guyan Vall. , W.Vt .
12

e

•

'
11
I '
r

·I

I
I

I
-~

FL f.rye 10, Vincent Wam:n 0
Gah&amp;Ma 33, Col. lndepcndenu 2
G•lioo 19, Marion Harding 8
Gallipolil 31, Point Plcaum, W.Va . 0
Galloway Wenland 27, Whitdlall 7
Ganway IS, Norwayne 14
Ginrd 17, Cortland Lat.eview &amp;
Goahen 38, Clennont Northeasi.Cm g
Granville 25, Onndview 14
Greenfield 27, Huntina!Of! 2A
Greauburg G~ .5S, Tal. Libbey 14
Grove City 25, Fnnldin Hu. 14
Groveport 16, Pic.kerinaton 8
Hamilton 6, Fairlield 0
Hamilton Badin 20, Edaowood 0
Hardin NorthW'i 17, Arc-adia 7
HuriJon 21 ._.CLn. Turpin 20
Jhwkcn 2S,lndc:pcndc:ncc0
llicillvUlc 14, Wayne Trace 12
Hilliard 41, Col. Miffii.n 6
Hillib«&lt;«l, Olillieothe Unioto 0.
HGUtnd Springfield 3S, Tol. Rogm 0
Jndi1n Lake 6f, Mechanicsburg 0
Indian Vall. 19. Tuscarawu Vall. 0
Ironton 32. Athland. Ky. 6
Jacluoo 35, Woan.er 0
John Glem 21, Rivet View 19
Johnstown Notthri.dae 35, JoMaown 7
Jm.alhan Alder 33, E. Knox 6
KcnJton 32, Mayfield 6
KcniR(IOIICYdl 55, Aboo E. 0
'

.

;

POfUmoulh E. 22, Paim Vall. 19
PorumoulhW 7 Fairland3
Pym11urting V~u: 27, Sebring McKinley 10
Ravcnn• 31, Bowl111d 8
KecdsvilleEnlcm 33, Wahama, W.Va . 12
Rev~ 14. Brecksville6
Riuman 35, Covenl.ty 6
River Vall. 13. WynfOfd 8
Riventale 14 Mohawk 7
Rock Hilll9: Oak Hill 18
Rocky River 41, Medina llighland 0
Roou lown 22. Garrettsville Garfield 1S
Rossford 41 Eutwood 9
s . c hu1cston' SOl.ilhc,utcm 20 , r·1i.J"N;~
· -"· 14
S. PoLOt38, Col. Walnut Ridge 6
Sv.lcm 47 ae Soolh M
Sandusky' 7 Fremont Ross 6
sandy"v.u·
n
ill 6
• . , rrulhv e
Solon J1, Shaker Hts . 7
Spuu Highland 15 Fredericktown 6
St. Ourmlle 17, Edison South 0
St. Muys 47, Ouh 13
Steubenville 55, Young . Raycn 6
Saow 20, Abon Firestone 19 OT
SltUlSboro 19, Ravenna Southc.ast 6
SLruthcn 19, Hubbard IS
Sylvani• Southview 20, Pon CW,ton 13
Talawa.nda 37 Cin WOO&lt;Jw1td 22
Thomu Worthin k.n 27, Newark 7
To\. St. John ' 1
Findlay 7
Tol. WailC 14, Orcgoo Su"it.eh 12
To!. Wh.iuner 35, Tot. Centnl 29
Tol. Woodward 34, Tol. Sart 18
Toronto 38, Soolhem Loca16
Tri-Valley 26, New Lexington 3
Tri•d 47, Waynelfi.eld-Goshen 0
Twlrubural6. Eutlake N. 12
UniGntown Lake 17. Canton GlenOa.k 7
Uni~ l...oca126, Conotlllr\ Vall . 14
Upper Arlington 33, Zanesville 21
Utica 48, Healh 0
Vinton County 12., Dclpre 6
W. Branch 41 , MulinJLOn 6
Wabh 1CfUit26, NGn:lonia 0
Wapd.onetl 3, Celina 0
.
Wamnllarding 19, Akron Buclttc\16
Wa~erford 22, Kyser Creek 13
Waterloo 21, Crt.~twood 16
Watkins Memorial21 , Logan Elm 0
Waverly 26. Athens 8
We.llst.on 26, Twin VaU. South 12
WCilem Brown 21, Hamilton Rou 14
We~tlake 14, Cle. Marshall 0
Wheclcnburg 21. C01l Gmvc. 14
Wickliffe 29, Willoughby S. 14
Williamsbura 24, Ointon·Mauic 0
Wirtdham 39, Mog•dore Field 0
Won.hingtm. 27, Newall. 7
Won.h.inatm. Kilbourne 34, Col. Whcu1ooc 0
Young. Ursuline48, Toledo Sco~t6
2'..anc Tncc 39, Lucasville Valley 12

s·

2l,

SEO grid standings
(SEOAL, Opponents)
(Overall)
Team
W
Portsmouth ......... ... 3
Gallipolis ............... 3
Logan ................... .3
Jackson .................. 2
Coal Grove ............ 1
Col. DeSales ..... .... !
Marictta .. ........... ... .o
Athens .... ...............0
Point Pleasant... .....O
Warren Locai ... .....O
Meigs ....................0

L TP
0 79
0 89
0 50
0 112
2 33
2 41
3 21
3 16
3
0
3 50
3 21

...

~

September 15, 1991

~

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

Sunday nmes Sentinel-Page

C3

·Southwestern stages 20-14
comeback win over Alexander

allipolis remains unbeaten
•th 31-0 victory over PPHS

Col. South 20, Col. ~t 0

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

OP
28
20
19
42
44
64
34
92

74
69
109

Friday's results
Gallipolis 31 Pt. Pleasant 0
Waverly 26 Athens 8
Jack son 23 Circleville7, game
called at half, due to storm, resumecd at I Saturday.
Logan 27 DeSales 13
Parkersburg 6 Marietta 2
Fon FryeiO Warren Local 0
Nels· York 46 Meigs 7
Portsmouth 32 Greenup 9
Wheelersburg 21 Coal Grove 14
Sept. 20 games
Portsmouth at Gallipolis
Coshocton at Athens
Waverly at Jackson
WCH at Logan
Cleveland JFK at Marietta
Meigs at Miller
Warren at Parksburg South
Coal Grove at Tolsia
Cin. Mt. Healthy at DeSales
Ports West at Pt. Pleasant
I

STOPPED BY POWELL • Gallipolis' Dar·
rin Powell, (84) 190-pound sophomore, stops Pt.
Pleasant's Jason Shinn (32) on fourth down on
the Blue Devil seven late in Friday's game at Pt.

Pleasant. 1n foreground is Point's Gary Peck
(23). On right is Gallia's Jim O'Brien (80).
GAHS won 31-0 to remain unbeaten in three
starts.

Ohio River bass in backwater areas,
pools prefer jigs, night crawlers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Depanmem of Natural
Resources:
Southeast
OHIO RIVER - The pool s,
embayments and tail water areas of
the Ohio River offer plenly of good
fi shing opporlunilies. Use jigs or
night crawlers 10 take bass in deeper pools behind lock a~d dam structures. Sunfish, freshwater drum and
flathead catfish offer good fishing
in the tail waters.
SENECA LAKE - Use small
pieces of night crawlers or larval
baits to take bluegills averaging six
to eight inches. Use night crawlers
or chicken livers fi shed along lhe
bouom during evening hours to
take channel catfish up to 33 inches. Fish wilh minnows suspended
beneath a bobber to take crappies.
Southwest
ROCKY FORK LAKE - Try
around weed beds in the lower half
of the lake for largemouth and
smallmoUih bass up to 20 inches.
Troll large crank baits at depths of
eight to 20 feel to take muskies.
Live night crawler rigs and trolled
crank bails are besl for laking
walleyes around the south beach
and Kelleys Cove area.
PAINT CREEK LAKE - The
tail water pool is an excellent place
to take channel and flathead catfish
when using traditional bails. Try
deeper water in areas with submerged structure to Ullre crappies
up to 15 inches.
Central
ALUM CREEK LAKE - Use
jigs tipped with minnows and
fi shed near the bollom around the
dam to lake saugeyes. Troll a night
crawler harness or weight-forward
·spinner in the same area to take
walleyes. Shallow water areas and
drop-offs north of Stale Route 36
are good places 10 take largemouth
bass.
RUSH CREEK LAKE - Areas
containing flooded timber or submerged brush piles are good places
to take largemouth bass. Try usmg
top water lures and fish in the early
morning or evening for best results.
Use night crawlers fished along the
bottom to take channel catfish.
Northwest
DEMPSEY-SANDUSKY BAY
ACCESS - Yellow perch averaging 7-10 inches can be taken here
by anglers fi shing with shiners.
Crappies averaging nine to 12 inches can be taken on minnow s.
LAKE LA SU AN - Excellent
opportunities are present here lO
catch largemouth bass and
bluegills. Special harvesl regula tions apply. Good fishing is also
found in the west branch of the St.
Joe River for smallmouth bass,
rock bass, largemouth bass and
crappies. No permit is required for
stream fishing.
Northeast
TAPPAN RESERVOIR Largemouth bass averaging 12-2 3
inches can be taken here in area
with fall en trees and submerged
bru sh piles. Try using rubber
worms, minnows, night crawlers
and lOp water buzz baits for best
resulls . Usc night crawlers or
chicken livers fished along the battom at night to take channel catfish.
LADUE RESERVOIR- Yellow perch averaging less than eight
inches can be taken when fishing
with shiners on spreaders. Largemouth bass average eight to 2.2
inches and can be taken from shal·
low water areas containing submerged structure.
Lake Erie
Walleye fishing in the central
basin is reported excellent with 1
some limit catches being taken.
The top SJl&lt;&gt;ts include and area 6;10 .
miles north-northwest of Conneaut, ·
and six to 12 miles north-northwest
of Fairport Harpor. Apglers are

fi shin g at depths of 35-45 feel
using down riggers with spoons ,
wire line and flat lines with

bombers, and other deep-diving
lures. Fish arc averaging 22-28
inches.

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four Southwestern and five Alexan:
der possessions (two of the Spartans' second-quarter series ran consecutively after McCartv mufferi
Rob Wilson's punt at the Southwestern 32 and the Spartans recovered the fumble) came and went
before the pivotal punt return ..
"(Steve) Davis had the ball, but
il was kicked," said Highlander assistant coach Steve (Plug) Rawlins
of the return, which fell at the
Southwestern 36. After the ball
went high in the air, McCarty
grabbed the ball and took advan tage of the Spanans racing for what
some of them had 10 have though
was the loose ball. By the time
enough Spanans headed upfield to
try to slOp McCany, McCany had
taken enough advantage of his
blocks to make catching him en
route to the end zone harder and
harder. He made it, and with his
two-point conversion run, the game
was tied at I4-all with 4:53 left in
the third quaner.
As instrumcnllll to the High landers· victory as the touchdown
runs was the defense the Cadmus
Cornhuskers offered, as they shut
out the Spartans in the second half
and in that time frame, allowed
their guests to run only one drive
(out of eight) - a six-play march
late in the third quarter that ended
in a punt - longer than five plays.
"They tried (lo take advantage
of the Highlanders" zone defense),
but we adjusted fme," said McCarty , who as a safety joined cornerbacks Davis, David Foster and
Haislop in keeping the Spartans
from having anyone open downrange and forcing Rob Wilson to
throw shorter. That played into the
hands of Gilbert, who caught two
interceptions, and ends Tommy
Lambert and Kevin Slaten, who
had one each.
As they had 10 start the game,
both teams killed their drives that
immediately followed McCarty's
touchdown. Then Alexander punt·
ed. Southwestern fumbled (the
fourth quaner was underway at this
point) and Alexander threw an interception (Gilbert's second). Then
Southwestern lost the ball on
downs, but the Spartans lost the
most fatal of their four fumbles
when on second-and-13 at their
seven, one of the running backs
fumbled in traffic, and Hamilton
recovered the ball at the Alexander
five. Gilbert knocked on the door
lhree times before liOlting in from

one yard out with 4:30 left in the
game. The two-point conversion
pass was incomplete, and the 20- I4
score eventually srood as the fmal.
"We were all aggressive ,"
Gilbert said. "Every time they
scored, we just got madder."
The Spar1ans would have the
ball twice more, onee starling at the
Southwestern 41 bul advancing
only 11 yards, and the last time
starting at their own 10 and ending
there when Rob Wilson threw an
interception to Lambert.
"We've got a lot of work 10 do,"
said Spartan commander Dave
Boston Jr., whose troops also suffered through 80 yards of penalties
to Southwestern's 45, including at
least lwo flags for having 12 men
on the field.
McCany led all rushers with 72
yards on 10 carries, and in the pass·
ing department. was 3 of 7 for 30
yards and one interception (byChris
Barnes). Gilbert ran 21 times for 58
yards and his two touchdowns,
caught one for six yards and threw
one pass- a 16-yarder to McCarty. Also catching passes for the
Highlanders were Lonnie Simpson
(I-13) and Haislop (1-11).
Elmore paced the Spartans' run·
ning game with 37 yards on six
carries. Following him were Sieve
Wilson (7-35), Rosier (6-30) and
Rob Wilson (3-9). Rob Wilson was
5 of 21 for 87 yards and four inter·
ceplions. Wes Whiunore threw one
pass for a three-yard loss. Catching
passes were Steve Wilson (4-64),
Rosier ( 1-11) and Mike Hire (1 10).

On this week's agenda. South·
western, 2-1, will begin the SVAC
portion of its schedule at home
against Eastern, while Alexander,
1-2, will start the TVC part of its
slate at home against NelsonvilleYork.
Score by quarten
Alexander
6 8 0 0 " 14
SouthwesiCrn
6 0 8 6 " 20

Statistics
Department
Alex.
First downs ............ ........ I 0
Total yards ................... l95
Yards rushing .............. 111
Yards passing ................84
Comp.-alt ..................6·22
Interceptions thrown .... ...4
Fumbles-losl ................4-4
Penallies ................... I0-80

SW
7
176
130
46

4·10
I
4-4
5-45

North Gallia blanks Ross SE 19-0;
Waterford beats Kyger Creek 22-13

Call or stop by

FIBEHGLAS

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times·Sentinel Staff
GAGE - "That game was
swcc t. .. tota l tea m cffort ... they
d1dn'1 panic ... when they played
hard, the knew good things would
happen" were the words South·
western mentor Jack James used to
describe how hi s Hi ghlanders re·
spondcd 10 the chall enge Alexander' s Span ans offere d in Friday
nigh1's non-league finale.
Th e Highlanders, victims of a
28-8 pounding by Ross Southeast·
ern the previous week, shook a I4·
6 dcficil in lhe third quarter and
lied the game at 14-14 before tack. lc Dwayne Hamtllon recovered a
fu mbl e and se t up th e go-ahead
lo uchd ow n !hat gave the High ·
· landers a 20- 14 viclory.
· The first quarter saw bath learns
fumble on their first possessions,
·wi th the Spartans short-c ircuiting
.their drive after two plays and the
hosts killin g theirs on the fusl play.
But when Hi ghlander tailback
Wi ll y Gilbert , who for reasons to
be seen later would be one of the
many heroes in the game, fumbled
on the fir st seri es. that gave the
south west Athens crew a chance 10
march 65 yards LO the end zone in
I 0 plays. The capper on that drive
was a six-yard sweep 10 lhe lcfl
side run by tailback John Elmore at
lhc 6:56 mark.
With Alexander hav ing 10 setlle
fo r a 6-0 bead beca use the twopoint conversion pass following El·
more's paydin run fell incomplele,
lh c Ga ll ians we nt ri~hl to work.
Gilbert carried lhrce umes in their
five-p lay, 65-ya rd drive thai
ach ieved I he bulk of its distance on
a 17-ya rd pass from quarterback
'Aa ron McCarty to wideoul Abc
,Haislop and lhe successive 47-yard
romp by McCa rty that put the
}lighlandcrs althe Spartans" sevenya rd lin e. Two runs by Gilbert,
wi th hi s second a four-yard run for
!he prize, rcsuhcd in a 6-6 tic with
4:37 lcfl in act one after McCarty's
~ nd -zo n c interce ption by Spartan
sa fcty/quancrback Rob Wilson.
: Af1cr th e Spa rtan s sc ored a
!ouchdow n three seconds imo the
second quarter on a three-yard run
by fullback Man Rosier (that compi c led a four -play , 63-yard drive
that lail b&lt;Jck Steve Wilson charged
up with a 38-ya rd gallop that
moved lhc ball 10 the Highlanders '
three) and tac ked on a two-point
Co nv ersion run by Rob Wilson .

Point Pleasant, WV

RlCHMONDALE - North
Gall ia won its lh ird straighl game
in as many Slarls with a 19-0
shuloul vic lory over Ross Soulh·
eastern Friday night
The Pirates got on 1he scoreboard first on their first possession
when junior quarlcrbaek Charles
Peck capped an eight-play, 58-yard
drive with a 17 -y ard touchdown
run . The extra-point kick was good,
and North led 7- 0 with 6:42 left in
the first quarter.

Following a scoreless second The extnl-point -auempts following
quarter, the third quarter almost Nonh's last two touchdowns were
followed suit until Peck fired a 16- no good.
yard touchdown pass to wingback
Staton rushed for 67 yards in 20
Dave Dobbins - Peck's only com- carries, and Peck picked up 65
pletion in three tries and Dobbins' yards in five attempts. Teammates
lone catch of the night - with 45 following them in the rushing de·
seconds left to conclude a six-play, partmenl were Darin Smith (I 063-yard drive. In the final act, se- 60), Dobbins (6-49), Brad Fuller
nior fullback Casey Staton powered (3-7), Todd Bryant (1 -3) and guard
his way in from the Panthers'
(See WATERFORD on C·4)
lhrce-yard line for the last touchdown of the night with 6:52 left SVAC grid standings

GA HS beats Point ... _--l.:&lt;C~o~nu=!!!·n~ue~d!!:fro:!!!m,_,C"-'·2..,)_ __
. to Friday , ki cking one 37 yards
agai nst Portsmouth West in 1986.
Although the Big Blacks did not
·score, they had several opporluni·
·lies. Point began drive deep in Gal·
lipolis lcrritory at the 23 yard line,
bul after pi cking up a first down at
the 10, the West Virginians lost 14
·ya rds on 1hc ncx 1 two plays on
sacks by Bob Mabry, Davis and
Matheny 10 put them 10 the 24 yard
·lin e. Two pass plays fell incom 1JICIC from there and the Blue 'Dev.ils took over. In the fourth quarter.
:the Blacks had a couple of chances
10 break their scoreless streak. but
agai n th e offense self-destructed
and they were nol able to pul the
ball in10 the end zone.
Offensively for lhe Big Blacks.
Barry Pea rso n emerg ed as the
game's leadin g ru she r with 80
yard s. Mau Neville picked up 37
on eight carries while sophomore
Jason Shinn added II yards on four
carries. Brcnl Smith complc1ed one
pass in eight attempts, good for 31
yards. Sop homore Kevin Miller
caught the onl y pass Smith completed.
Gene Games led a large coolingent of Ga llia runner s with 49
yards. Jason Matheny added 40 for
the Dev ils and Jason Kopack had
42. Davis was 5 of II passing for
122 ya rd s and four different
rece ivers ca ught passes for 1he
Devils. Larry Howell had one for
56 yards and a touchdown. Chad
Barnes caughl two passes for 21
yards and a lou chdown, while
Aaron Seamon also caught a 25yard louchdown pass. Bryan Hall
caught the other pass, a 20 yarder.
Jcb Hockenberry led the Blacks
defen sively wiLh three solo tackles,
two for losses, and added six
assis ts.
Seamon, Brian Ours, F. J. Hastwe ll and Rob Drummond recovered Big Black fumbles. Will Pearson and Jon , Beattie recovered
GAHS babbles. Na1han Miller had
a pass intcrceplion for GAHS.
Friday, th e Big Blacks will
ent ertain Portsmouth West, a 7·3
winner over Fairland Friday. Gal-

lipolis will host unbeaten
Portsmouth, a 32-9 winner over
Greenup, Ky .
Score by quarters
14 14 0 3" 31
Gallipolis
Pt. Pleasant
0 0 0 0= 0

Statistics
Department
G
First downs .................. 14
Yards rushing .............. 199
Lost rushing ................... 35
Net rushing .................. J64
Passes attempted ........... 11
Passes completed ......... .... 5
lnterccpiCd by ........ .......... !
Yards passing .............. 122
Total yards ................... 286
Plays ............................... 50
Return yards................ 38
Fumblcs ...........................4
Fumbles losl.................... 2
Penalties ....................6-67
Punts .......................5-182

(O&gt;erall)
Team
W L
Eastern .................. .3 0
NonhGallia .......... J 0
Southwestern ......... 2 I
Southern ................ .! I
Oak Hill ................. l 2
KygcrCrcek ........... l 2
Hannan Trace .........O 2
Symmes Valley ......O 3

PF
93
47
42
47
48
27
8
14

PA
12
15
54

I

By DAVE HARRIS
T -S Correspondent
BUCHTEL -The NelsonvilleYork defense limited the Meigs offense 10 only five first downs and
93 total yards as the Buckeyes
rolled to a 46-7 victory over the
Meigs Marauders Friday night
The win gave the Buckeyes a 21 record overall and 1·0 in the
TVC, Meigs falls to 0-3 overall and
0-1 in lhe TVC.
Coach Dave Boston Sr. and the
Buckeyes jumped out to a 7-0 lead
in the fusl period when Chad Inman scored from 45 yards out with
9:01 left , Justin Gail split the uprights and the host's held a 7-0 lead
at the end of the first quarter.
Meigs hit paydirt with 11:55 left
in the first half when Frank Blake
scored from five yards out, Chris
Hall added the extra points and the
Marauders had tied the score at
seven.
Nelsonville took the lead for
good with 5:44 left in the half
when Casey Nungester scored from
two yards out, Gale made it a 14· 7
game. Glen Flores made it 20-7
wilh 8;22 left in the half with a 12
yard run. the kick was no good and
the Buckeyes went iniO the locker
room at the half with a 20-7 lead.
Flores scored again from the one
yard line with 8:22 left itt the third,
the pass for the extnl points failed
and the Buckeyes held a 26-7 advantage.
Nungester scored his second
touchdown of the evening with
I :38 left in the third period from a
yard out, Malt Eckles hit John

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when J uslin Gale scored from 14
yards out, the pass was no good
and the Buckeyes had posted a 467 victory.
Flores led the Buckeyes on the
ground with 95 yards on 25 carries,
Nungester added 92 in jUS! 13 carries. Quarterback Matt Eckles wu
four of I 0 through the air with one
interception good for 44 yards,
Odenthal pulled in two passes for
30yards.
.
(See BUCKEYES OD C-4)

Is Pleased To
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38
59
33
67

North Gallia 19, Ross SE 0
Rock Hill 19, Oak Hill 18
Southwestern 20. Alexander 14
Chesapeake12, Symmes Valley 6

eCOOLING
eCYLINDEI TANKS

Odenthal with the pass for the extra
points and the Buckeyes were on
top 34·7.
Tom Snyder made it a 40· 7
game with 18 seconds left on the
clock in the third period when he
picked off a Jeremy Phalin pass
and ran 27 yards for the six, the
kick was no good and Nelsonville
went into the final 12 minutes with
a 40-71ead.
The Buckeyes closed out the
scoring with 3:08 left in the contest

Farmers Bank Customers
YourBankfnJi...

0
31
They played Saturday
148 Southern atlroniOn St. Joe
48
102
This week's slate
5 Eastern at Southwestern
4 Hannan Trace at North Gallia
3-25 Kyger Creek at Oak Hill
5-178 Southern at Symmes Valley

•HEATING
•HOT WATER

I

Nelsonville-York downs Meigs 46-7

scores
pp Eastern 33,Friday's
Wahama 12
6 Waterford 22, Kyger Creek 13

145
28
117
g

•

for a game-tyln&amp; touchdown an the tllard quar·
ter and Gilbert scored the winnln g tOIICIIdowa
th~t helped give the Highlanders their seco11d
victory in three tries. (Times-Senlinel phoiO by
G. Spencer Osborne)

AMONG THE HEROES In Southwestern's
20-14 victory over visiting Alexande~ Friday
night were quarterback Aaron McCarty (left,
with ball) and tailback WUiy Gllbert (41, head·
ln11 for the handofl). McCarty returned a punt

"The Farmers Bank Travel Club"

Your Bank~~...
Fo

Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

WHt IHOnd St ..It
........
. . ._ v 211
.¥Fan.=P. 01OX 128
Pomeroy. OH. 411789
114-992-2138
Member FDIC

Route 7

@

--

~(t.OU

P. 0. Bo• 339

Tuppen Plains, OH. 45713
614-667-3161

..

·'

.

�·~

.· Page-C4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

September 15, 1991

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

unbeaten Wahama White Falcons
in a big way by a 33-12 score in a
non-league encounter at the East
Meigs school.
Coach Randy Churilla's Eagles
proved without a doubt that the
1991 edition of Eastern football are
for real following the Eagles first
win over Wahama since the gridiron rivalry resumed 10 seasons
ago. ''This was a very big win for

us," an emotionally drained Churil·
Ia said after the victory. "It made
me feel so good I actually had
goose bumps. Wahama has a pretty
good football team and I have a lot
of respect for coach VanMeter and
his staff and anytime you can beat
the caliber of team that Wahama
has then you've accomplis hed
something," added Churilla. "We
arc a family, and when you sti ck

together good things will come,
and tonight we stuck together and
won as a Learn."

Bissell, arguably the most dominating running back in southeastern
Ohio, scored on a pair of 14-yard
runs before capping off the Eagles
scoring with an 89-yard jaunt to
finis h with 186 yards rushing on 20
carries. The senior running back
had plenty of help from his teammates as Savoy tossed a 59-yard
touchdown pass to Mike Newland
on the games first play and a 41 yard scoring strike to Mike Smi~1.
Savoy fini shed the evening with
fiv e comple tions in nine attempts
for 146 yards and two touchdowns.
Howe ver, despite the Eagles inspir:ng offensive showing the contest
was actually won in the trenches
where the veteran Eastern frontline
was simply superb.
" I' m convinced they (Eastern)
beat us on the line and that proved
to be the difference," said Wahama
head coach Don VanMeter. "That's
not to say our line didn't play their
hearts out because they did. Their
ex perience showed and our inexperience was evident as well. Eastern
started nine seniors while we had
but three sen iors in the lineup and
its hard to overcome that much experience. I believe this is the best
team Eastern has ever had and they
came ready to play and it showed
ton ig ht," added VanMeter.
While Wahama was on the short
end of what appeared to be a onesided contest the games final statistics revealed the non -leag ue affair
wa s much close r th an the final
score indica tes. The White Falcons
had two running backs to top the
I 00-yard rushing plateau in senior
ta ilback Brent Larck and junior
runni ng back Rocky Stewart. Lar·
ck, nursing an injured foot, failed
to get the starting nod for the second straight week but entered the
game in the second quarter with his
first carry being a 73-yard run that

Waterford wins ... _(~Co_n_tin_ue_d_fr_om_C_-_;3)_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
&amp;colt Oiler (I -2).
: Also in the passing category,
Smith completed one pass in four
attempts for II yards, which went
to tight end Rob Canady. On defense, the Panthers' three interceptions were grabbed by Dobbins,
Fuller and Smith.
Southeastern's individual stats
.were not available.
This week's calendar has North
Gallia hosting Hannan Trace on
Friday.
Score by quarters
North Gallia
7 0 6 6 = 19
Ross SE
0 0 0 0= 0

Statistics
·'oepartment
NG
.First downs .................... 10
Total yards ................... 280
:~ushing yards .............. 253
Passing yards ................. 27
' Comp.-au ..................... 2-6
~nterceptions thrown ....... 0
.Fumbles-lost ................ 4-3
: fena!ties .................... .4-35
1&gt;unung ....................... 1-22

SE
5
86
56
30
2-8

3
10-2
3-40
3-43

·· Waterford 22, Kyger Creek 13
• . At Waterford, Kyger Creek
tblew a 13-6 lead in the third quar..ter of a contest that was delayed for

... ·
Buckeyes
. ,.
)

.
wm...

and the followin g two-point con version pass was completed to give
Waterford a 14-13 lead. The hosts
got the insurance points they needed when Thatcher ran 30 yards for
the score with I :56 left in the game
and followed that with a two-point
conversion pass.
McCutcheon, who pa ce d th e
Wildcats with 50 yards on 10 carries, was followed by Thatcher (6·
38) and Smith (13-32) . Rhode s,
who led all rushers with 60 yards
on I 0 attempts, was followed by
Bradbury (15-41) , Adam Denney
(7-21) and quarterback Paul Cove y
(7 for minus-7).
This week will sec Kyger Creek
commence the SVAC portion of its
schedule with a matchup against
defending co-champion Oak Hill
- a 19-18 heartbreak loser to Rock
Hill - on Friday.

more than two hours because of
thunderstorms. giving the host
Wildcats their first victory of the
season after consecutive losses to
Eastern and Southern.
The Bobcats, 1-2, drew fir st
blood in the first quarter on the
strength of a five-yard run by senior running back Phil Bradbury.
Bradbury 's extra-point kick gave
the Gallians a 7-0 lead at the 3: 15
mark.
Waterford, winning it s first
game against Kyger Creek since
I988, got on the board when Brad
Thatcher connected with Tom
Looney for a 27-yard touchdown
pass play. The extra-point kick was
off the mark, and that kept the visitors in the lead, albeit a one-point
advantage.
Cheshire took a 13-6 lead following the opening kickoff of the
second half. Waterford's punt returner muffed the return, and KC's
Man Rhodes recovered the ball and
returned it 30 yards for the touchdown 40 seconds into act three.
Bradbury's extra-point kick was an
off-target boot, and that prevented
the possibility of a tie that would
have resulted from the Wildcats'
future offensive project
With 6:17 left in the third quar·
ter, Eric McCutcheon returned a
punt 62 yards for the touchdown,

---

Score by quarters
Kyger Creek
7 0 6 0 = 13
Waterford
0 6 8 8 = 22

Statistics
Department
KC Wat.
First downs ............... .. ..... 7
4
Total yards .................. .11I
157
Rushing yards .............. I I I
130
Passing yards ............ ....... 0
27
Comp. -au..................... 0-4
1·8
Interceptions thrown .......0
I
Fumbles-lost ............... J-3
2· 1
Pcnalties ..................... 4-20 7-50
Punting .....................6-166 4-169

(Continued from C-3)

For Meigs, Frank Blake picked
. 'liP 42 yards in ll carries, Phalin
· ,was 3 of 14 through the air for 93
yards and three interceptions .
, Kevin Musser pulled in one pass
• Jor 37 yards.
, · , Meigs will travel to Hemlock to
play the Miller Falcons next week.
..;Miller defeated Federal Hocking
. ~3-22 on Friday evening. Nelsonville will travel to Alexander to
. tangle with the Spartans, who lost
, 10 Southwestern 20-14.

··.

,,·Score by quarters
Meigs
0700=7

Nelsonville-York 7 13 20 6 = 46

resulted in six points for the White
Falcons. Larck fini shed with 138
yards in only eight attempts while
Stewart had his second strai ght
100-yard game with 119 yards
rushing in 18 tries, which included
a 67-yard touchdown gallop.
Eastern built a 12-6 halftime advantage and weathered what most
likely was the turning point of th e
game on the Falcons first series following the second half kickoff.
Wahama took the kick to open
third quarter action and marched
inside the Eagle one-yard line one
an apparent 23 -yard run by Stewart, but a crucial 15 yard penalty
negated the long gainer and forced
Wahama to punt the ball away with
Eastern taking over at their own
three yard line. The Eagles, behind
the running of Bissell and Terry
McGuire, marched 97 yards in 11

8

plays with Bissell capping the driv,•
wllh a 14 -ya rd run . Savoy hit
Smith for the two point convers ion
to make 11 20·6 and on tile Eagles
nex t offensive ser ies Savoy fou nd
Smith once again on a 4 1-yard

y ~ERRY KINN~Y
Assoc•ated Press Wnter
CINCINNATI (AP) - Jack Armstrong, the AllStar
a year
and a Class AAA sal-

·
vage project this season, thinks he's finally found the
key to success.
"There's no sense in trying to be Nolan Ryan
with
· " said
who won for the

MORRIS CONGRATULATED- The Reds'
Hal Morris gets congratulations from teammate
Mar iano Duncan after Morris scored during
Friday night's game against the visiting Houston

were
bed 13-2. Morris, the
National League's leading hitter as or Friday
night, went 2 for 4 in raising his batting average
to .321. (AP)

touchdown pass wi lh Smi th s pnn s -

mg free down tnc ncar sideline 01&lt;
an excellen t block by Mike New
land to·all but put ~1e game on icc.
Bisset's H9 -yanl touchdown ru n
and Rand y Kay lor's 1',\T ki,· l
made it 33-6 with 9:40 r.:nwinin c
before Stewa rt co mpl eted th ~·
night 's scori ng witl1 a 67-y;llll rlln
for Wahama at tile K:5 7 m:uk ol ti ll·
final peri od.
Eastern ro ll ccl up 4~(, ya rdi "'
total offense wi1h 300 )ards ru sh·
ing and 146 pa ss1ng wtlilc Wah:ul LI
totaled 276 yards rushing clnd 1.'
pass ing for a net total of Jug yarck
(See EAGLES on C-5)

~·
FALL SAVINGS

O'DELLS

299 95

39995

List 369.95

List 469.95

SAVE

SAVE

S70

SJO

Scoreboat·d
•4 fiP commercial grade engine
•14-gauge stool deck
•21" Cut, staggered
wheel

•4 HP Commercia l·
grade engine
•14-gauge steel deck
• 21 " cut. staggered
wheel

In the majors ...
1\ATIONAL LEAGUE
E 11s t ~ rn

St. l ou1s
Chicaso
i"cw Yurl

Statistics
N-Y
I8

(3 LO
61 Vine St.
Gallipolis
446-1276

72

346
302
44
4-10
1-7
5-20
1-1

L

SERVE YOUR)
b34 E. Main St.
Pomeroy

en

Pet.

.. SA

57 .5 96

73

6 7 .S2 1

10.5
15
15

' (,9 72 .4&amp;9
69 72 .489
6lJ
... .. 62

75

.4 68

7S

.443

\\"e.strrn Di"lslon
Tu m
W L l'ct .
Los Angde.~
81 61 .570
Atlanta
KO 61 .567
San D1e~o
.. . 72 70 .507
Cl""\CL\\ATI
69 72 .4&amp;9
San Fran mco
64 77 .454
!lowtoo
57 84 .404

IR

.5
9
11.5

16.5
215

C inrinnati IJ, ll ouilto n Z

l)lltsburgh R. Philadelplua 6
Los An~clcs 5. Allanta 2
. .
Sew Yurl4, St Louu 2, 10 uuungs
San D1 tgn 13, San h•ncisco 2

( \ l )l"rs 6-12), 7:05 p.m.

.
.
Pmsbwgh (Smile)· \1 -8) at Pmhdclphia

Montr e al (ll uncs 4-6) at Chi cago
(HuskJc o\.8). R05 p.m.
!':cw York (Cnnc 12 - 12) at Sl. Louis
(0LI•;tres 8-5).11 05 p.m

Today's games

RIFLES

Pltul&gt;urWt ( romlln 8-5) at Philadelptm
{G rccm: 10-7).1 35 p.m.
Los Angck.l (R. MatWlCZ 16· 10) at 1\t-

OVERALL I
HUNTER/HIKER

Crmweanc..,t . . ~
-~too.

6

519999

W...._los los

to.R.w,..

CAMO SPORT BOOTS

GIIEEN CAIIO or III)WN

COIIIIIUCibn; paddodankleool~do&lt;ille

st•ched "ffon suade ~r : speed lacklg wllh 7 eyo1o1s ard 0 mg.,bMhed
trixlllinlfll; EVA cushkln midsole wilh
moitug Mrd nl&gt;bor solo. CcmiOIIBble.
water resistant 8 in. naigtt.
GREEN or GREY CAIIO

Eora stability in toe and heel UgttW81Qh1 EVA midSOie, hard rubber mini
lug otmole Upper i! constnx:ted of
suede leather ard ~20 Denier nybn.
St&gt;eocl ~d"l svstem. Unq1.0 aclilles
s!4lport system. Its sehd~1ing , adds
comtort and Sl4lPOI't
ORE~

.Woigl!t u~ hL

Store Only
Stalnl•a Stalker
Reoelver and ballet macllined of solid slainless s181lt. Matlt llilllar11ray finish
on exposed metal surfaces. Black graphic-fiberglass composite stock.
Without sights., drilled and tapped lor scope mounts.
AU
CAUIIIS

$

aTAINUSS
miL

357 MAG. 6• IRL

.. •239"
~

99

49

SATIN

FINISH

New, Improved Remington
THUNDERBOLr 22s
High-Speed Long Rille Canrlllges

«•,."

· ~~

lh•l'•l e!teipl ' ......

$6 999

BROWNING "HIKENS"
Pt. Pleasant
Store Only

SHOTGUNS

LAKE FIELD ARMS MARK II BOLT ACTION RIFLE

Toronto

....

Detro•!

_

Boston

• Or.a ...,. ....-a. .. wet

,._..,._.,_

Spirit
19x27 ln . welded, ex.panded aluminum

l.hhirnorc

c u : v ELAND

Pt. Pleasant
Store Only

Team

"LOCK ON'

PORTABLE
TREE STAND

SUPER BUY

---

219 99

$

$89

99

GREE'N CAMO

Tcus
Oaklarld
KouJ5as City

~Lnn csota
CIU~ago

Sc.idttle
Cahlonlla

• '"~

b~ u ~e d

THOMPSON/CENTER BLACK POWDER GUNS

"NEW"
IYNITE STOCK 50 CAL

5

219

99

TRADIDONAL RIFLESCOPES

N0111 • PtiJ .l.iltn
W1tJJ OUr N_, ........,.,. ClMPI• Card
REVOLVING CREDIT LINE UP TO '1500.00 .
•N.LAPPI.ICATXlNS ARE SUBJECT TO CREOIT Af'f'fiOI"
41DST APPliCATIONS PliOCESSt:D WITHN I HOOR • EXCEPT SA~AYS NfJ SUIC!AYS

123455
John C. Public

Exp. 1-91

Pet.

606

.. 70

33
CD

.5A5
.52 9

R5
1l

.528

11

5 14

l1

.500
7 1 .496

15

155

no ~ton (J [ciketh !0 -3) at r-.;ew Yorl

4x32
POWER

3x9x32
POWER

5

39

99

$5999

SCOPES
MOUNTED

(i\ppicr I 1·9), !I OS p m .
O..:tro!l (Aldred 0· 3) ;~t MJw;~u.kcc (Pie·
uc 1-6), 8:35 pm .
MmneM'Ita (l:.knJ l · l l 1t Teus (ll oyd
1-5), 11.35 r m

ONLY

$800

AND

Today's games
C l c~~.&gt; l and (K1nx 5- 10 ) at B» ltlmorf
( ~h od cs

0·2), 1:35 p.m.

Oakland ( Mo otc 13 -8) at Totont o
(WcUs 14 · 111), I:35 p m.
.
Dctrot t (T an ana 11 · 9 ) u MilwJuk ce
(Wegman 11 ·6), 2:)5 p.m.
.
Seattle (DcLuc 1a 11 - 10) at Kansu Cny
(BociJid. er 11 · 11 ). 2:35p.m .
..
Mm nesota ( An de r ~o n 5 -8 ) 11 lc xu
(Jose Guuntn 11 -5), 3:05 p.m. ,
Chicago (llou sh &amp;-8) at California (K .
Abbott 0.1 ), 4:05p .m.
Boston (Clemen• 15 -8) 11 New York

CAMO
1SO LB. LIMBS

(Plunk 2-4), !1:05pm

Major league leaders
1\alional League
BATTi f\G _ Monlt, Clnclnn a ll,
.321; T . Gwynn, .San Diego, .317; Jose,
St. LouiJ, .314; Pendleton, Atlanll, -~14;

239.99

J?.cmin.t!ton.

I.
56
65
66
67
68
.. 70 70
W

86
78
74
75
72

19
20.5

Oallwd {Wel ch 11 · 11) H Toronto
{Candwtll 12-11). 3 p.m.
C hica go (A l"cma nda. 8· 12) aLCa!Lfur·
nla {Langston 17 -7 ),3 :1S p .m .
.
Clc"r land ($1-\oinddl N-14) a l H~lll ·
rnur~ (\tiladd 9-8), 1:35 p.m.
Scanlc (Kwcgcr 10-7) al KansJS C11 Y

5

,.-n'=:ln."'t':J":'•

.4 t 8
.329

12.5

(SarHtenOtl 14-9). I :3 0 p.m.

FOXFIRE 11.-:::~~.~~.................... $1 59.49
STARFIRE 11 ................................. s2 19.99

LIKE IT ... BUY IT!

35
5.5

They played Saturday

-..\·_ ~

PER C.

59
46

.539
.525
.4 75
.429

Turon\0 7. Oakhnd 6
Kansn C11y l, Se.aale 2, 12 11\l\lngJI
D~lloll 3, Mil waukee 2
Mmne5ul.il7 , Tcus 3. 10 innings
Chic ago I, Califomi• 0

. "NEW MASK"

PUll

60

GO

friday 's scores

BORESIGHTED

HUNTER
CAMO·TRAC
150 LB.

80
16
14

Pet.
.563

Boston 5, 1\'cw York 4
1\alllmore S, Cle11eland 4

HORTON
\'cw f.ngl:.ndN K~ n i iL', Stoc k('d Hifl('
· in. barrel i ~ 2 •n sho n er than woud s1oc ko::d n Oc S1andard har •t·b

L

62
65
67
73
80
82
94

WNII:!r n Dlvldon

base with open a luminum g r ating.

llxl3 in . camouflage seat . Chain includes for attaching to tree. Folds nat.
Tested to 800 lbs.

.. ..

1\"cw York

Cl7o:s..o -n&gt;-'·

• o(XO -

w

y,

MJ.l waukcc

~t$9Q99

MOD!I. RR Pt ' MP ACTION SHOTG( ' NS

SALE

BOLT ACTION
CUP FEED .22 10 SHOT

~--·1(1)'\
~ IOcn-la ...... biXN

REG. 1109.99

$3.99 BOX

.

~ MODELSOO SUDE ACTION SHOTGUNS
-.... 5~ ._,
SONLY
Combos

....

Eill.'&gt;lcm Division

Team

•XOp ......... ,....,_

or GREY

RABBIT &amp; SQUIRREL
LOADS

500rds.percarton•50rds.perbcx
Made in U.S.A

:

Alt-season venatility. Model 500 shotgun with both
a choke band and a r!lle-stghl&lt;:d slugotcr band

A!\'IERICAN LEAGUE

McGee, San Franc i•c o, . 308; Bonllla,
Piwburgh, .3~; Sabo, Clnclnn•tl, .lOS.
RUN S _ Butler, Lo• Angelel, 101".
J ohnsoo. New York, 96; Sandberg, Olea·
go, 91 ; Bonilla, Pituburah. 88 ; J. Bell,
Pttuburgh, 87; Gant, Atlanta, 86; Pendleton AtlanLa, 85 .
.
IOl
Ji111- W. Clart. San Francas~. . :

CREDIT LINES
TO $1500
WITH APPROVED
CREDIT!

Johnson, New Yor:k, 103; Bondi, Pi.n•·
bufih, 99; OawiiOI\ Olicaao. 92; Bonilla:
Pirubursh. 91; 'Mc0riff, San Dlea,o. 91,
Gant, Atlarna, 89.

••

National Lejf~f
PHIUJ)EI.PHIA Pill
S - s; 1nod
John K.Juk, (1111 bueman· ou_tfieldu, to •
three· year contriCI eucna1on lluouah

t994 .

Basketball
J'liallunal Bukclball A.uoclatlon

PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS Signed Lamont Strolhcrs, glllrd, to a
year conditional contr.ct .

Francis co, 10-4, .1 14, 4.1S; l!uut, San
Dicso, 15 -7, .682, 3.22; Smiley, Pitts·
bllrs h , 17:8, .680, 3.39: DeJesus,
Phihdclph ta, 10-5, .667, 3.34; Mitch

Williams, Phibdelph.ia, 10.5, .667, 2.29.
STRIKEOliTS - Cone, New York,
191 ; G. M1dduJ. , Chicaao. 17S; Olavinc,
1\tlanll, 17 1; H1m isch, Hou11on, IS3 ;
Gooden , New York, 150; Hurst , San
Dic&amp;o, 140; Hena, San Oieao, 139.
SAVES- Lee Smith, St. Louis, 39;
IJibble, Clnclnnal~ l9j MiLCh Williams ,
Philadelphia, 26; Franco, New York, 25;
Righcu.i. San Fraocaco, 22: Lcffe.ru. San
Diega, 21: Il . Landrum, Pittsburgh, 17;
Dave Smith, Chicaaa. 17; Berengut!r, At·
lanLa, 17.

Americ•n League
B·ATTING- Franco, Tens, . 341 ;
Boggs, OoSlCrl, .337; Molitor, Milwaukee,
.331; Pucl.cu, Minnesou, .328; Thomu,

Chic1go, .327; Pa1meiro, Teus, .327;
TarubuU, Karuu C!Ly, .325.
RUNS - Molitor, Milwsukee, 112;
P;~lmciro. Tcxu, 102; Carucco, Oakland,
102; Sierra, Tcus, 101: White, Toronto.
98 ; Franco, Tcus, ~S ; 1lumul, 0\iCIJO.
Fielder, Detroit, 121; Cansoco,

Oa kland, 105; Thomu, Ch ica&amp;O, 103;
Sicru , Te1as, 100. Carter, To~oot~, 100;
Juan G onzalez, Telu, 95; C . R1picn,

B•ltimorc, 94.
HITS - Molitor, Milw1ukee , 1&amp;8 ;
P.J.lmciro. Texas. 182; Puckett, Mmne.tioll,
!80; C. Ripkcn. Ba ltimore, 1&amp;0; Siern,
Tc 1 u, 179 ; Franco, Teus, 178; Boggs,
Boston, 1(,7; Su, New York. 167.
DO UBLES - P•lmei ro , Tcus. 42;
K.:.n Griffey Jr., Set ttl~. 41; Sierra, Texas,
39; C. R ipk~ n. Dal11m ore, 39: Cuter,
Toronto, 38; Whi te, Toronto , 37; ilOBCS·
Doswn, 37
TKIPLES - R. Alom&amp;r, Toronto, l l;
L. Johnson , Chingo, II; Molnor, Mtl ·
wallkee, I I ; McRae, Kansu _C11y, 9;

White, Toronto, 9; Gladden, Minn~o.t l,
9· l)cvc ~ U.I., lhltimore, 8; Mack, Min ·
~ota, 8; Polorua, California,&amp; .
.
HOM E RUNS - Fielder, Dcuon, 40:
Caosc:co . Oakbnd, 39; Carter, To ronw,
32 · Th omu. Chi c1go, 30 ; Tatllbull,
Ka~u City. 28.: C. Davis, Minnesota . 28 ;

c. Rirkcn. lh lum()ft. 28 .

STO LEN BA SES- R. B endc"on,
Oill;~nd SQ Raines, Chicaao. 4 &amp;; R. AI~
mlf, To;Ofll~, 45; Polc:nia, California. 39:
Cuyler, Detroit, 35; White, Toranto, 32:
ru.nco , Tc.u s, 2R
PITCIIU\G (l J decisions) - Hed.elh,
f)oston, 10-3, .769, 3.37 : Eriduon, ~ ­
ocsota, 18·6, .750, ) . IS ; Langsloo, Cali·
fom1 1, 17· 7, .70S, 1.11; G11llicbon. De·
troll, 18· 8, .692, 4. 15; Jose Guzr:'an,

Teus, 11 · 5, .6g7, 2.85; Ftnlcy, Cali for·
ni 1, 17 ·8, .6t10, J .60; Clemens, Uoston,
15-8 . .652. 244.
STR IKEOUT S - C lemens, Boston,
204 : R. Jcimson. Seaule, 197; M c Do~Vell,
0\icago . 179: Ryao. Tcus, 172; F1nley,

California. 15~ ; C1nd1oui. Toronto, !53;

t wl)o

Football

HOME RU'l\S - Johnson, New York,
34 ; Mut Wil li1ms, S•n Fnncisco, )0 ;
G•n1, Atl1nt1, 29; t.kGriff, San Diego,
21; K. Mitchell, San f rancisco, 27; W.
Clark, San Francisco, 26; Dawsoo, Chica go, 26.
s·mu:N DASES- Ntxoo, Atlanu, 7 1;
Grissom, Moouul, 65; DeShitJds, Mon ·
lrCII, 52; Bonds, Pittsburgh, 40; Coleman,

93 .
ROI -

Box of25

SALE$11.99

SHOULDER GUNS

San Diego (Ro. smus.sen_ 6 - 11) J t San
Francisco (Burkett9 · 10), 4 05 p.m .

... ..,...,..,.,..llllcJ'.-.

Remington
GAME LOAD
Shotshells
12, 16, and 20 Ga.

BRICK
500 ct.

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(Suk:liffc 5·4), 2:20p.m.

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$34.99
BROWNING CENTERFIRE RIFLES

.

Mon lreal (M. Gardner 8- 10) at Chic1 gn

flunflng OOtnlot1

,..,...ttrJW........loctos....,..w..t
l9t woi;1l hl&lt;e~ laatu~ hoavy d~y

(Cormier 2· 3), 2.15 p.m.

ftiJ'S .,.,pt'OCJ Ond
breol'klbleo b'

....... ""'" wiiii .... -

Tht ~ril c:orn.cttdof 10000eniar
Conlin. F"Yiilodond nuatlll Pod·
clod cotllr. W•0111ft101 bottOOI wlh gum
, _ OLhOio. 2011 Cllmt TN-•
with rtmOYibll IlNce inlole.lmer mm1011 ~guont . 8 0)'1101. 10 ln. hoighl

nati (R ijoiJ-4), 2:15p.m.
.
1'\cw York (Schoure.k J. J) al St. Low&gt;

Duai-Walerpn~of"

lo..t. wbl nW..
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lluustnn (C. Gardner 0-1) at Clndn·

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GRADE 50 cal. ONLY
BROWNI
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A-BOLT BOLT ACTION

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~BROWNING,

DOUBLES - OooiU1, Phuburgh, 40;
Jose, St . LouiJ, )8; O'Neill, Clnclnnlltl,
3S; Sabo, Ci ncinnati, Jl; Morris,
C lnclnnall, 31; Gant, Atlanta, 30; J. BeU,
Pituburgh, 30: McReynolds, New York,

New York, )7; Butler. l.ol Angeles, J7 ;
Lankford, St. Lou.is . 3S.
·r trCIII NG (13 decisions) - Rljo,
Cincinnati, 1).4, ·".5, 2.48; Carpenter.
St. Louis, 10-4, .7 14, 4.23; Downs. S1n

(Ashby 0· 3). 7:05p.m.

BROWNiNG:

go, 154.

GO

Th •J played Saturday

TOP LINE BOOTS

the ccrun.a. of Aloru.o Powell, outfielder,
from Calaary.

Gwynn, San Diego, II ; Finley, Houston,
10; L. Gonu 1et, ll ouston , I ; Griuom.
Monu-eal, I ; C•nd1ele, Jlou.aton, 7; V•n
Slyke, Piusbur,h, 7.

l. os i\nl!.dts (Uclchcr 9 · 8) u At1anu
(Smolt r 12· 13), 3:05 p.m.
SJn D 1egn (Benes 12· 10) 11 San fun ·
.
, lid' (! lc rc&lt;ll~ 0-0), 4:05 p.m.
ll o o ~ ttm (l'orluR.aiiO· K) :.at Cincmnali

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SALE PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU SEPT. 28, 1991

HITS - T. Gwynn, San Diego, 168;
Buller, Los Angela, 162; Bonilla, Pius .
burgh, 158; 1\:ndlcton, ALianta, 158; Jose,
S1. LolliJ, 156; Gnce, Chic•go, I S4;
Sabo, Cincinnati, 154j Sandberg. Dlic. ·

21.5

Friday's scores

992-SSOO

LAWN AND GARDEN
150 Upper River Rd. (Auoss from kmort) • 446 -782b

I

01"1sion
W

Tr am
P1tLSburgh

PtuJadclphJa
t\·1onlrca1

Department
M
First downs ...................... 5
Total plays .................... 45
Total yards ..................... 93
Rushing yards .............. .. 42
Passing yards ................. 51
Comp.-att. ................. .3-14
Interceptions thrown ...... .3
Punting ....................... l-50
Penalties .................... J-25
Fumbles-lost ................ 5-4

Sunday Tlmes-5entlnei-Page-C5

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

Cincinnati pounds Houston 13-2; L.A. beats Atlanta S-2

Eastern beats.Wahama 33-12 Friday to remain undefeated
By GARY CLARK
Sports Correspondent
EAST MEIGS -Tim Bissell
ran for a game high 186 yards and
scored three touchdowns Friday
'night while Chad Savoy tossed a
·pair of touchdown passes as the
host Eastern Eagles claimed its
third consecutive victim of the
'YOUng 1991 grid campaign as the
Eagles soared past the previously

September 15, 1991

"

t-ialloo•l footb•ll Le•aue

CLEVELA~O

DROWNS- Plactd

Randy Kirk, llnrbacker, on Injured reurn. Slped Brian IOnchtn, ll&amp;hl rnd.

Hockey
Nlllonll Hockey Lt:aaue

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS -

Ro ·

leased John Spoltore IUld Bruc::e MeDon·
•ld, cenlen: Glen Wi~ser 1nd Dill Gtll,
right winas; 1nd Jmue Baker, defense·
mm.

Scioto Downs results
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Scioto
Downs reaulu for Frid•y , Sept. I 3.
Wcathcrelcar, uack fut.
F111t Racc-$1.400 Claiming Pace.
Tell Me I..iea (Holland) 4.40, 2.40, 2.60;
Tru Sheik {DY Miller) 2.20, 2.60; Jlmct
(Dailey) S.OO. Time · l :58 4 · 5 . Aho
Rated -Erinl Dearie, Joy ' s Sllm, Mud
Dauber. Scrubbing Bubbles, Tri fi"c
Dlrd, ConfiL Scratch· Stylith JO&amp;Cphine.

Trifoct• (l-4-10) $86.60.
PerfOCI.t (5-41 St0.211.
Second Race-$1,800 Condition Pace.
Nakiu Bay (Hoskinson) S.60 , 3.60,
2.40; Adorable Fllcon (Ov Miller) 3.80,
3.00. Pelu De Soie (Holland) 3.00. Tme·

t513 -5.
Also Raced· level Beauty, Special Jock·
ey, She'• Hero, Third Call, MOlhen Worry, Violin.iat. Smnch-0 Honey.

Trifoct• 16-l·l)$98.211.
Pcrfo«&gt;(6-l) $17.40.
Third Racc-$1,800 Oaiminf Pice.
Loci.cd In S'yle (Ro.nzong} 9.60, 4.80,
3.60; Fritz.ie Shilo (Oinalcdine) 7.80,
4 :60; Mi&amp;ht)' Sum (Dv Miller ) 3 .20 .
Tune-1:584-5 .
Also Raced·H•PPf Au Lark , 0 K
Hook, Thom11 1, fnaky'1 L 8, Dill y

Bronch, Set The Hook . Best To See You.
Trifect• (1 -6-8) $692.80.
Pufeou (1·61 $18l.60.
Fourth Race-$4,000 Condition Ptce.
Farmer's Girl (Justice) 18.40, 6.00.
3.80; T•Uy Alrn•hurat (Fout) _3.20, 2.60;
OYJliY

Pa.ris (Lcdfotd) 3.20.

Tltnc-1 :561 -

5.

Also Raced-Splendid NOlion, Down ·
wyn Virginia .

Trifcc" (1-4-l) l3t6.60.
PcrfccUI (1-4) $87.60.
Fifth Raco-$3,000 Oaizning Pace .
.
ScoLCh Doe (Foot) 7.40, ).80, 3.00: lit·
tie Boogie Blue (l.edford) 4 .2.0, 2.80;
Charmina Pacu (Dailey) 4.40. Tunc-! :58
J .S .
Aho Raced -Do D1 D•y. Pine Lane
Sauy, Supet Plw, Nero'• Padait, Darlina
Frisky. Sen~.th · Sct The Time..
lfl hllfTwin Trilccta (7-2..-1) $77.30

Pufeou (7·21 $29.00.
SU.\h R.u-$4,000 Condition Pace.
Lotta Tomar (lcdford) 7.80, 4 .60, l.tO;
Stylish Dec (Fout) 3.40, 2.60; Katie U

Good (Trou~.t) 3.10. Time- I :S7+-S.
Also R.sccd·R1ppin Ruby, 11ryana Drat,
J illllm•seTrifoct• (l ·l-41 $254.40.
Pufo&lt;t&gt; (l · l) $41.20.
Seventh R•ce·$3,000 Oaiming Pace.
Edgewood Rtgd (Dv Miller) 9.20,
S.20, 3.60; Lady Byrd Ira (foul) 4 .40,
3.20· Ju1t like Dined (}Ianners) 4 .00.
Tim~ I :SK 2-S.
Abo Raeed·Ennine, Sandy Sue Style.
()JD S~l. Tar;ao In ~ Ni&amp;ht. Harvo
Jeannie C,

lncroaible De.liQ.hL
Twin Trifocu (l -6-2) Sf.196.00.
Trifect• (l·6-2) $11 1.20.

Langston, CaWomia, ISO . .
.
SAVES - lhrve y, Caltrorma , 39;
Aguilera, M)nne.sou, 39; Eckenley, Oak·
land, 39; Reardon , Douon, 31; llenk e,
T o ronlo , 32; Thigpen, Chicago, 29 ;
Montaomuy, Kan•a• City , lll

Eighlh Racc·$1,800Condition Pace.
Ira's Girl (Fout) 14.60, 4 .80, 3. ~0; .Bl
Fame (Dv Miller) 3.60 •. 2.10; OciJ&amp;nltl8
Lady (RoutZOnR) 3.00. T~me· l ;39 I·S .
A.IJo Rtccd·fonnion. lli lleclin, Iii Lan
Time, B J R01e, Ayina Fant11y , It'• A

In the NFL...

Kin. S&lt;:nldH•·A·J.oap.
TrifOCI.t (3-l-6) $254.60.
r.rreou (3-l) $71.00.

Today's games
Miami II Dcu-oit, I p.m.
New EnaJ•nd n Piusbur&amp;h. 1 p.m.
New Yotk Gianuat Chicaao, 1 p.m.
Philadelphia at D•Uu. l p.m.
Phoenix at WuhinglOn, 1 p.m.
Tampa B•y 1t Green Day, l p.m.
San Francisco 11 Minneaot.a, I p .m .
Cincinnati at 0e¥eland. I p.m .
SU~ule 11 Denver, 4 p.m.
Atlanta at San Diego, 4 p.m.

Dutralo at New Yodt Jcu, 4 p.m.
Indianapolis a\ l..ol; An&amp;c.lCI Raiders, 4
p.m.
I
Lol AngeiCI Rams 11 New Orlctns,

p.m.

Ninlh Raco-$3,000 Conditi«WW Pace.
Shear Plc.asure CR Thatpt) U.20, 6.60,

5.60; Rocky'• Awewme (Dv Milia) 6.80,
5.80; Chulie'• Zinaer (Mouser) 6.20.
Time--1:57 4-.S.

Also Raeed· Pinc lane Katy, Stormy
Wyn Rae, BriJht Eyed Lil. M I Trudy .
Reality Almahunt, Blaflwty Sue.

Trifca• (3-l-41 $1,001.40.
r.rr- (3-l) $10.211.

Tanh Racc-$6,000 Filliea A Mtrel
Open Handicap Pice.
Rella H1novct (Coven Jr.) 4.40, 3.20,
2.40; Anna ElWbah (Foul) 3.40, 2.60;
Crown Time Chccrio (Atcr) 3.00. Time·

a

1~4

3-S.

AI.., Roced·l.ol• Jun. Pinehill.llatio.

Monday's eame
Kansas City at HDWim, 9 p.m.

Transactions
Baseball
American Lcaaue

SEA TILE MARINERS- Rcultod
Dave FlemlnJ, pitcher; Chri• Jlowatd,
catcher; Rich Amnal, inricldcr; and
Patrick, ~on. outfielder, from Calauy

Trif- (l-3-l) 164.80.
Paf"" (l-1) 113.80.
Elevonlh R...SI,«&gt;&gt; a.intin1 Poce.
Elmloi Princo (R Th•rpo) 11.40, 7.60.
4.40; Tdl The Truth (CunrUnah•m) 7.40.
4.60; Sunbw Tndbion (Dv Milia) 2.1Q
Time-! :51 4-5.
Alao Raced- B~~atcMil Bull. Ray Kni.,nt,
Woody Hill, Gritlton, OB'a F111t Olcacc.
F-'• Adv""'&amp;•· 0Q Kirk.

Supafec" (1·2·10) $5,472.40.
Perf- (1·2) $9l.ll0.
Anenduce - 4,,.$9 . Handle $401,231.

.
.
. .
.
ftrSt bme smce July 2 as ~e Cmcmnatl Reds routed
the HOUSton Astros 13-2 Fnday mght.
"I've always been a 'stuff pitcher- throw your
bes,t, stuff, hard as you can, .every pi!ch.
That worked for a while. That s what I was getth at
· away WI'th ear1y 1~t year. But I' vc rea!'zed
tmg
t
the key 1s ~owmg strikes and how you move the
ball around.
All S beak las
Armstrong was 11-3 at the - tar r
t year
but fmished ~ith a 12-9 record. .
.
.
.
He lost hts spot ~~ the Cmcmnau rotation thts
year, spent some ume m the bullpen, then was sent to
Nashv1lle for s1x starts.
.
. He had two complete games w1th the So~nds, and
m 37 1/3 mnmgs struck out 28 and walked JuSt five.
An~. he l~ed to pace himself.
.
.. .
I don t want to be a half-year pttcher, satd
Armstrong (7-ll), who snapped a personal five-game
losmg streak Fnday. .
.
"I've learned that a 90 mph fastball wtth movement and location is more effective than a 93 mph
fastball that's straight down the middle.
.
"That's an adjusllllent I had to make, and I think
.
it's going to be for the better."
Against the Astros, Armstronj! allowed five htts
and struck out three in seven innmgs. It helped that
he had the support of a 17-hit barrage by the Reds,
including a five-RBI night by Paul O'Neill and three
apiece from Hal Morris and Chris Sabo.
•'These games happen once in awhile," said
O'Neill, who went 4-for-4 with three doubles and a
home run.
"I've had good streaks and really inconsistent
streaks. I've been hitting around .250, so there arc
still a lot of things I have to work on."
.
O'Neill, a career .265 hitter, raised his average SIX
points to .262 with his perfect night. His 25 home
runs and 84 RBI are career highs.
"Everybody on the team was doing well tonight,"
he said.
Against Houston, which has the second-fewest
wins in baseball, the Reds equalled thetr btggcst
inning of the season with a six-run second, and
matched their season's high-water mark for run production.
Rookie Ryan Bowen (4-4) was victimized for
eight of those runs.
" He struggled from the beginning," said Astros
manager Art Howe. "He was in the upper pan of the
strike zone and got hurt. He just wasn't sharp."
It was the sixth straight loss for the Astros, who
scored in the second on a home run by Luis Gonzalez
and in the fifth on a sacrifice fly by Mike Simms.
Cincinnati scored twice in the first on a throwing
crroThrane dRedsadothubel~ ~n?'l~e~iters to the plate in the

second. Mariano Out can and Hal Morris had RBI
singles, both of them scored on O'Neill's _second
double, and Chris Sabo followed With hts 24th
homer.
Jim Corsi faced eight batters in the th11d when the
Reds scored twice on a single by Morris and once
when Sabo grounded into a fieldefs choice.
.
O'Neill drove in two more '" the fifth agamst
Dwayne Henry with his 25th homer.
O'Neill, who also doubled in the seventh off Rob
Mallicoat, has 26 RB!s in his last 33 games.
"It's pretty easy when things are going right,"
said Armstrong. "With II runs. (after thrcc . ~?nings),
you just throw a strike and say. Here. htltt.
In other NL games, it was Los Angeles 5, Atlanta
2; Pittsburgh 8, Philadelphia 6; New York 4, St.
Louis 2 in 10 innings; Montreal 3, Chtcago 2 and San
Diego 13, San Francisco 2.
Dodgers S, Braves 2- At Atlanta, Darryl Stmwberry picked the right time to pick on Tolli Glavme.
The Los Angeles outfielder, who was hitting .091
lifetime against Glavine, got three of hts four h1ts,

.

including h1s 24th home run, off the Atlanta Braves
left-hander Friday night as the Dodgers took a halflead · the NL West with a 5-2 victory.
g~-~ d n·'1nthink about the way 1 hit certain pitch·
crs .. S~wberry said. •'Tonight was one of those
. 'h
h 1 on the banlc "
ntgHets w
w
alsoeresilenced
a se llout. crowd of 45,769 th at
taunted him with chants of "Dar-ryl, Dar-ryl" from
the start in the opener of a three-game showdown for
the d. · · lead
0
..;v~~~tmad~ a couple of mistakes and he took
advan~ge of them ," Glavinc said.
"Just because we lost this game, don't expect us
to roll over and play dead," Glavine said..
:
Atlanta had been awaiting the arnval of the
Dodgers for the first September series of significance
in the city since the early '80s. It resembled a foot ·
ball crowd in the early innings, chanting "Beat L.A ,
Beat L.A ... before turning its attention to Strawber·
'
ry. His homer in the sixt.h inning lifted the Dodgers
into a 2_2 tic and the Dodgers took charge in the scventh when Mike Sharperson doubled, went to thlld
on Strawberry's single and scored on Eddie Murray' s
sacrifice fly. Strawberry then scored from first on
Kal Daniels' second double.
"Strawberry's been hot for a couple of weeks
now," Atlanta manager Bobby Cox said. "He's been
carrying the club...
. .
.
The victory enabled the Dodgers to mamtam thc11
mastery of the Braves this year. Los Angeles has won
nine of the 13 meeting s, including six of seven in
Atlanta. The Dodgers also snapped the Braves'
seven-game winning streak, their longest this year.
As for the taunting fans, Strawberry says he:s
used to them .
"They boo me, I love it," he said. "It was kind of
exciting."
Pirates 8 Phillies 6 _Steve Buechele's two-out,
two-run d~uble in the ninth inning off Mitch
Williams (10-5) snapped a tic and carried Pittsburgh
past Philadelphia at Veterans Stad1um. The P11a~s
reduced their magic number for chnchmg t.he NL
East to 12 .
.
Reliever Stan Belinda (6·5) worked 1 2(3 innings
for the victory and Rosario Rodriguez got the last out
for his fourth save.
Mets 4 Cardinals 2 - Kevin McReynolds' tworun home; in the lOth inning off Willie Fraser lifted
New York past St. Louis at Busch Stadium for its
fourth straight victory. Howard Johnson also hH ..a
two-run homer for the Mets, his 34th, and now has
.
103 RB!s .
Tim Burke (5· 7) worked two innings of one-hit
relief for the victory.
Expos 3, Cubs 2 - Gilberto Reyes hit a ticbreaking single in the ninth as vtSttlng Montreal won
for the l2th time in 14 games .
Chicago reliever Bob Scanlan (5-8) wallccdLarry
Walker in the ninth and Andres Galarraga smglcd
with one out, sending Walker to second. Reyes then
got his third hit of the game.
. . . .
Dennis Martinez ( 14-9) allowed stx htts m etght
innings. struck out five and walked none. Barry Jones
finished with a one-hit ninth for h1s 13th save.
Padres 13, Giants 2 - Benito Santiago had a
career-high r1ve hits and drove m five runs as the
Padres beat the Giants, who were wtthout manager
Roger Craig, hospitalized with chest pruns earhcr: m
the day.
.
Craig, who underwent an angtoplasty llroccdure..IO
clear blockage in his coronary artenes, •s cxpcclfd
back next week. Bench coach Bob Lillis managcd~n
h' pi
IS Ri~~- Bones (4-3) allowed two hits in six shut
· t
innings for the visiting Padres, who have won e1 I
of !0. Trevor Wilson (10-10) gave up s1x runs , d
six hits in 1 213 innings.
.:

Fans may now
express school
loyalty in
the hereafter
By The Associated Press
Die-hard college football fans
can take their loyalty with them
into the grave, now that a company
has come up with caskets w•th the
school colors of Alabama, Auburn,
Tennessee and Georgia.
Loretto Casket Co. will drape a
S2,000 casket in the colors of the
deceased's school. Team logotypes
arc in full color on a white velvet
panel that fits inside the lid.
"The reception has been
tremendous," said Ken Abercrombie, company owner.
Company officials got the idea
early this year while prepanng new
lines of caskets for a Tennessee
funeral directorS convention. Abercrombie, after talking with the convention planners, decided to marlcct
an orange casket with a white lin ing.
. .
He knew Alabama morllctans
would be at the same convention,
so his company, which is about 25
miles from Florence, Ala., produced a ned casket with an Alabama logo.
"They immediately thought of
instances where these would be
appropriate," Abercrombie said.
Auburn and Georgia coffins
soon followed. For Auburn fans on
their last flights, Abercrombie recommends his blue model with the
orange accent stripes on' the sides.
It too has a white velvet interior.
· CaSkets for fans of other Southeastern Conference teams will be
produced as licensing contracts arc
approved, Abercrombie said.
The company has sold more
than a dozen of the coffins, with
the Alabama model the most popular by far, he said. Although he has
not heard from families who have
used them, funeral directors have
told him the caskets are a drawing
card for their businesses.
Rainsville Funeral Home, near
Fort Payne, Ala., put an Alabama
casket in its showroom about a
month ago. So far, 25 or so of the
curious have dropped by for a look,
said Kim Horton, offrce manager.
She said she thinlcs the crimson
casket is fitting for the right person
although it may be a bit bright for
the elderly.
"It's very pretty, 100," she said.

HARD-NOSED ACTION was what Friday night's Wahama-:
Eastern game offered, as White Falcon defender Mike Maltox (23)•
puts the wraps on an unidentified Eagle runner. The Eagles came:
out of it with the better half or a 33·12 decision.
:

.•

Eagles victorious .. ~ContinuedfromC~)
•

Wahama, now 2-1 on the season, will return to the Bend Area to
take on visiting Ravenswood next
week while the unbeaten Eagles
enter Southern Valley Athletic
Conference play on the road at
Southwestern.

Savo)l)

Score by quarters
Wahama
0 6 0 6= 12
Eastern
6 6 14 7 = 33

RUSHING
:
Wahama- Brcntl..arck 8-138;
Rocky Stewart 18- I I 9; Carl Kili}l
9-29; Jimmy Ingels 1-5; TravJ:s
Johnson 1-3; John Johnson 4-(-ISj;
Totals 41-276.
.,
Eastern -Tim Bissell 20- 186;
Terry McGuire 9-80; Mike Halfman 9-42; Mike Newland 2-?;
Chad Savoy 2- (-I 5). Totals 4~300.
.:
PASSING
:
Wahama - John Johnson lll.32 yds., I int; Lynn Black O·t
Totals 3-12, 32 yds., lint
~
Eastern - Chad Savoy 5-Y,
146 yds ., 2 TDs, 2 int; Ter~
McGuire 0-1. Totals 5-10-146 ydt•·
2 TDs, 2 int.
~
RECEIVING
'
Wahama ~ Tommy Mayes
19; Travis Johnson 1-16; RocJc.\Stewart 1- (-3). Totals 3-32 yds. :
Eastern - Mike Newland t•
59-1 TO; Mike Smith 3-58-1 TQ;
Jeff Durst 1-29; Totals 5-146 yds~

Statistics
E
Department
W
15
First downs .... ................ I 2
300
Rushing yards .............. 276
146
Passing yards ................ .32
446
Total yards .. ................ .308
Comp.-att. ................. .3- I 2 5-10
2
Interceptions thrown ....... I
1-0
Fumbles-lost ................ 2- I
Penalties .....................5-60 9-100
Punting ............. ........5-165 3-127
55
Plays .............................. 58

SCORING SUMMARY
Eastern - Mike Newland 59yd. pass from Chad Savoy (run
failed)
Eastern -Tim Bissell 14 -yd.
run (pass failed)
Wabama- Brent Larck 73-yd.
run (kick blocked)
Eastern- Tim Bissell 14-yd.
run (Mike Smith pass from Chad

·

:

Eastern - Mike Smith 41-y~ .
pass from Chad Savoy (pass fuilc¢)
Eastern - Tim Bissell B9-yd.
run (Randy Kaylor kick)
:
Wahama- Rocky Stewart61yd. run (pass failed)
:

•

t.

TDs.

·•

I

�•

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

September 15, 1991

Boston notches my5-4 win over New York

··..
·.
·.

··..

PLAYING LEAPFROG is what Cleveland Indians second baseman Carlos Baerga and Baltimore's Luis Mercedes seem to be
doing as Mercedes tries to break up the double play in the first
inning of Friday night's game in Baltimore's Memorial Stadium,
which the Orioles won S-4. (AP)

By The Associated Press
The Boston Red Sox couldn't
lose. The New York Yankees
wouldn ·t let them.
Pinch-hitter Phil Plantier hit a
three-run homer in the sixth inning
and surging Boston beat New York
5-4 on Friday night, sending the
Yankees to their eighth straight
loss and keeping the Red Sox 3 1/2
games behind Toronto in the AL
East.
"That's the kind of game that if
you're going bad, you don't win,"
Red Sox manager Joe Morgan said.
The Red Sox, playing without
injured Wade Boggs (bruised
ankle) and Ellis Burks (sore back),
sti ll won for the ninth time in I0
games.
In other games, Toronto beat
Oakland 7-6. Detroit beat Milwaukee 3-2, Baltimore beat Cleveland
5-4, Minnesota beat Texas 7-3 in
10 innings, Chicago beat California
1-0 and Kansas City beat Seattle 32 in 12 innings.
With two outs in the ninth, Don
Mattingly hit a drive that sent right
fielder Tom Brunansky to the
fence. While Mattingly staned his
home-run trot, Brunansky went
back, leaped and hit his head on the
padding.
Brunansky said he stuck his
glove above the wall and knocked
the ball back into play.

"Once I hit
head, !lost it,"
Brunansky said. "It hit the backside of my glove. It was out of

Juan Guzman (7-2) struck out a
career-high 10 and won despite
allowing six runs and eight hits in 6
here.''
1/3 innings. Tom Henke pitched
Mattingly wound up with a dou- the ninth for his 32nd s;tve.
ble. After an intentional walk to
Dave Stewan (11-9) had his secMel Hall and an unintentional one ond-shortest outing of the season,
to Roberto Kelly, Jeff Reardon got giving up five runs and eight hits in
Randy Velarde on a popout for his 3 1/3 innings with seven strikeouts.
38th save.
Tigers 3, Brewers 2
It was a fitting end to another
Bill Gullickson ( 18-8) got his
dismal night for New York.
career-high 18!11 victory, allowing
The Yankees left a runner at six hits in eight innings and Jeff
second base in the fourth inning. Kaiser pitched a perfect ninth for
They had first-and-third with one his second save.
out in the fifth and did not score.
The visiting Tigers, who came
They put runners and second and back from a 2-0 deficit, went ahead
third with no outs in the sixth and in the eighth off Mark Lee (1-4).
came up empty.
With a runner on third, Jim GantThen they left the bases loaded ner let Dave Bergman's squibber
in the seventh and stranded another roll by and the ball bounced off the
runner on third in the eighth before third-base bag.
leaving the bases loaded again to
Orioles S, Ind.ians 4
end the game.
Pinch-hitter David Segui singled
''We did some dumb things, and home Tim Hulett in the ninth as
paid for it," Yankees manager Baltimore overcame a 4-0 deficit at
Sturn!' Merrill said.
Memorial Stadium.
Mtke Gardiner (8-7) pitched
Gregg Olson (4-5) was the winfive-plus innings and won for the
fifth time in six decisions. Rookie
Jeff Johnson (5-11) lost for the
eighth time in nine decisions.
Blue Jays 7, Athletics 6
Kelly Gruber drove in three runs
as Toronto overcame Jose
Canseco's three-run first-inning
homer at the Sky Dome.

ncr and Jeff Shaw (0-5) was th e
loser. Albert Belle had three dou bles for the Indians, who turn ed
five double plays, one short of the
club record.
Twins 7, Rangers 3
Kirby Puckett hit a go-a head
single in the lOth inning for the
visiting Twins and Kem Hrbck fol lowed with a three-run homer.
Terry Leach (1-1) was the winner
and Kenny Rogers (9-10) was th e
loser.
White Sox I, Angels 0
Bo Jackson singled home th e
game's only run at Anahe1m Stad&gt; um and Jack McDowell pitched a
four-hitter for his major leagueleading 14th complete game .
McDowell (16-9) struck out six as
he outduelled Jim Abbott, who had
won his previous seven starts.
Abbott (16-9) pitched a six-hitter.
Royals 3, Mariners 2
Bill Pecota tied the game for the
Royals with a two-run single in the
ninth and Mike Jackson (6-5)
walked Kurt Stillwell with th e
. bases loaded in the 12th.

:; Andretti takes pole at Pioneer Electronics 200

l
'

By MIKE HARRIS
AP Motorsports Writer
LEXINGTON, Ohio (AP) ·. Michael Andretti got the point Sat: urday. and so did everybody else as
,• the streaking second-generation
Indy-car star moved closer to series
point leader Bobby Rahal in the
championship battle.
Andretti and his Chevrolet-pow.cred Lola were overpowering again
as he mastered the 2.25-milc, IS turn Mid-Ohio Sports Car Circuit
to wrap up the pole position for
today's Pioneer Electronics 200
and break his own track qualifying
record.
The 28-year-old racer, the
defending champion here, came
away with his seventh pole of the
season, again earning one point for

taking the top qualifying spot and
cutting Rahal's series margin to
157-155. AI Unser, the defending
series champion, is third with 143.
An~retti's fast lap of 116.589
mph was clocked at 69.475 seconds, the first time any driver has
been under 70 seconds on the hilly
central Ohio circuit. That easily
broke the mark of 115.652 that he
set here last September.
He had won the provisional pole
on Friday with a lap of 115.230 and
never lost the top spot, although
there was plenty of shuffiing going
on behind Andretti on Saturday.
"My fast lap came on my third
lap after I got tires (late in the 30minute session,·· Andrctti
explained. "I had a lot of fuel in
the car because we wanted to be

able to go the final nine minutes
without stopping.
"Really. I felt like we had some
more quick laps, maybe another
three-tenths (of a second) left, but
we caught up to traffic and I never
got another clear lap."
Rick Mears, who was fourth
after Friday's qualifying, moved all
the way to second with a lap of
115.704. while Rahal, who was
way off the pace in seventh on the
first day of time trials, cut his time
by a 1.6 seconds to move all the
way to third at 115.491.
"We made some real improvements in the car," Rahal said. "All
I can tell you is we're ready to race
on Sunday."
Asked if he was feeling the
pressure from Andretti, the twotime PPG Cup champion said.
"We just go out every race and try
to win the race or get the best finish
we can. I've been here before, so I
don't think anybody.' s going to
force me into domg anything stupid
- at least I hope noL"
Scott Pruett, who was a surprisfor owners George Segal and Brian
ing second on Friday in a JuddMoniessen of Chicago.
Others expected in the Jug field powered car, stayed in the hunt, but
include Easy Goer, Nuke of Earl, fell to fourth at 115.418, followed
Start the Fire, Silky Stallone- the by Emerson Fittipaldi at 115.295,
winner of the first crown je wei, the Mario Andrctti 114.830 and Unser
114.425.
'·
Cane Pace- and Arcane Hanover.
Leading the pack in the J ugette
Michael Andretti, who now has
will be Shady Daisy and Big 14 career poles, also has won a seaBloomer.
son-high five races in 1991, includShady Daisy. a Falcon Seelstcr ing the race two weeks ago at Vandaughter, has $260,610 on her couver, British Columbia on a tight
papers from nine victories, two sec- street circuit that was nearly imposonds and three thirds in 17 starts. sible to pass on without taking a
She took her I :53 3-5 record at big chance of crashing.
Scioto Downs.
"I enjoy the street races a lot,
Winner of a division of the but I enjoy these regular road
Reynolds Memorial and the Lady courses a lot, too," he said. "At
Maud, Shady Daisy is owned by this point in the championship, it's
Ronald Jackson of Powell and nicer to be on this kind of a course
Tamela Bauslaugh of De Leon because you have a little margin for
Springs, Aa.
error. At the street circuits, those
Big Bloomer, by Big Towner, walls arc all around you all the
won three divisions at the Pennsyl- time.''
Mears, who has two victories
vania Sires Stakes and an elimination of the Scarlet O'Hara at this season, including the lndi- .
Scioto. Big Bloomer is owned by anapolis 500, is fourth in the points
Canadians Tony Delmonte, Paul with 125 and still has at least an
Pryne, Don Murray and Phil Coole. outside chance to win the title with
The Delaware Grand Circuit four races remaining. But he
session, the only one staged at a doesn't mind being overlooked in
county fair, also hosts the Stan- the speculation.
"We just go out every race and
dardbred 2-year-old colt pace and
do
the job and see if we can win
trot, the Walnut Hall 2-year-old
the
race," he said. "It doesn't do
filly pace and trot. the Old Oaken
Bucket 3-year-old colt trot and the you any good if you can't win the
Buckettc 3-year-old filly trot.
The Delaware track, which has
most of the half-mile records, has
replaced its hub rail with plastic
foam stanchions. More than I ,500
scats have been added through a
new addition to the grandstand
The track has been weatherized
to ensure racing under almost any
conditions.
Post time today, Monday and
Tuesday is I p.m., Wednesday 12
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
noon and Thursday, Jug Day. 11
ADMISSION $1.50
a.m.
446-0923

race to try to drive at 125 percent
and knock off a comer of the car.
You've got to try to finish races
and get points.
''The complexion of these
things can change very quickly.
Obviously, we still have a shot at
it. Our Penskc cars always seem to
work well at these final races, so
we have what I like to think of as a
period of opportunity."
The first opportunity will be
today's 89-lap, 199.3-mile race.

SPRING VALLEY
446 4524
BARGAIN

~INEMA

~TllfEES ~TURMY

BAll~ IN

Sports briefs

liymnastics
INDIANAPOWS (AP) - Kim
Zmeskal of the United Slates upset
defending champion Svetlana
Boguinskaia of the Soviet Union to
lake the women's all-around title in
the world championships. ·
Zmeskal, a 15-year-old from
Houston, finished with 39.848
points to become the ftrst American to capture a medal in the allaround m the world championships. Boguinskaia had 39.736
points and Romania's Cristina
Bon1as was third with 39.711.
Betty Okino of the United State
was fourth and 14-year-old American Shannon Miller was sixth. The
best previous American performances were seventh-place finishes
by Julianne McNamara in 1981 and
Brandy Johnson in 1989.

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•
•
NFL, not just Niners, IS
seeing lack of quality backup QBs
By DAVE GOLDBERG
ningham) or the Cardinals (Timm
AP Football Writer
Rosenbach), who have lost their
A month ago, the San Francisco starters for the season or the Sea49ers looked like one of the few hawks, who at least had a veteran,
teams in the NFL who were quar- Jeff Kemp, to step in when Dave
terback rich. Then Joe Montana's Krieg broke his thumb in the opentore a muscle in his right elbow and mg game.
Steve Young stepped in.
But few teams have experienced
And what happens if the Niners backups at quarterback.
lose Young, who risks hi s body
Ok, maybe the 49ers (befor.e
every time he scrambles out of the Montana's injury); Giants (Phtl
pocket?
Simms behind Jeff Hostetler - or
Well, there's Steve Bono, who vice versa); the Bills (Frank Reich
in six previous NFL seasons has behind Jim Kelly); the Bucs (Chns
appeared in eight games and has a Chandler behind Vinny Tcs40 percent completion percentage taverde).
... And rookie Bill Musgrave, cut
Then add teams with backup
by Dallas and working with the experience if not star quality - the
49ers' developmental squad.
Redskins (Mark Rypien-Stan
Welcome to the 1991 NFL, Humphries-Jeff Rutledge; the
where almost every team is just one Packers (Don Majkowski-Mike
hit away from disaster and there's Tomczak); the Saints (Bobby
hardly anyone left in the floa ting Hebert-Steve Walsh); the Cowboys
pool of experienced reserve quar- (Troy Aikman, Steve Beuerlein);
terbacks that seems to exist in most the Vikings (Wade Wilson-Rtch
years.
Gannon); Rams (Jim Everett-Mike
Ask the Eagles (Randall Cun- Pagel); Broncos (John Elway-Gary

Patriots to face Steelers today
By ALAN ROBINSON
AP Sports Writer
PITTSB\]RGH (AP)- Here
are some encouraging words for
New England Patriots quanerback
Tommy Hodson, who hasn't many
of those lately : Ten touchdown
passes in three games.
Hodson's thrown only one himself as the Patriots have split their
fiTSt two games, but he plays today
against a Stcclers' secondary that
has been shredded for 10 TD passcs since its final regular season
game last season.
Sure, Jim Kelly's capab le of
throwing six touchdown passes
against almost any secondary but Cody Carlson? The Houston
backup threw for three in the Oilers' 34-14 romp last December,
and the Stcelers' secondary hasn't
been the same since.
"Maybe we're not as good as
we think we are," safety Thomas
Everett said.
San Diego quarterback John
Friesz must be aslcing himself how
he managed to throw for only one
touchdown in the Steelcrs' season· 26 20 ·
opemng
- pass
vtctory.
The same
defense that was
top-ranked in the NFL last season
is No. 24, a VICtim not only of
Kelly and Carlson. but. according
to cornerback Rod Woodson, of
complacency.
They allowed only six touch down passes in their first 15 games
last season, but Kelly accounted for
that many all by himself last week.

"We probably had big heads,"
Woodson told the Pittsburgh PostGazette. "Last year, we came out
and had the No. I defense in the
NFL and we're thinlcing that all we
can do is get better."
It's rarely gotten worse for the
Stcclers than last Sunday, when
Kelly threw four touchdown passes
to Don Beebe in the Bills' 52-35
romp, the third-most points ever
allowed by the Steelers.
"Hopefully, that slapped a lot of
people in the face," Woodson said.
New England (1-1) got a slap to
the ego, losing 20-0 at home to
Cleveland in a defeat that seemed a
perfect summation of the Patriots'
problems of late: no offense, no
defense, no chance.
Losers of 15 of their last 16
games. the Patriots have won just
seven of their last 34 games and
were widely regarded by many as
the NFL 's worst team until upsetting the Super Bowl champion
New York Giants in the final preseason game. They defeated lndianapolis 16-7 in their opener.
New England's new head coach,
Dick MacPherson, probably got a
more realistic indication last week.
of where his team is, and he certainly didn'tlike what he saw. Or
at least what he could bear to
watch.
"We were thinking this was a
game we couldn't let get away, and
we did" MacPherson said·. "When
that h~ppens it should infuriate
everybody a little b!i more."
·

Kubiak)· Oilers (Warren MoonCody C~lson), and Falcons (Chris
Miller-Billy Joe Tolliver.)
In fact, most teams are lucky if,
like Philadelphia, (Jim McMahon),
San Francisco and Seattle they
have backups with as extensive
starting experience.
Phoenix is 2-0 thanks to
defense, not Tom Tupa, who has
completed just 43 percent of h1s
passes subbing for Rosenbach.
Unlike previous years, when experienced guys seemed to be there for
the taking, there is hardly anyone
out there this year.
"There used to be a pretty good
pool," says Dielc Steinberg. general manager of the New York Jets
and one of the NFL's most candid
talent evaluators.
"Now, there's almost no one.
Why? I think it's because most
teams are keeping three quarterbacks now that you can dress all
three. There used to be a lot of
teams that had only two and there
was always a pool of experienced
guys."
True enough. As recently as
1988, when the season started.

there were 14 teams that had two
quanerbacks on the roster: 14 others wi th three. Now just about
everyone has three, meaning that
14 guys ar en't out there to be
signed.
So who is.
Steve Pc llucr, the ex-Cowboy
cut by the Chiefs this summer:
Chuck Long, once a first-round
draft pick of the Lions who was cut
by the Rams; Cliff Stoudt, cut, resigned and cut again by the Cowboys: Tony Eason, the ex-Patnot
and Jet and Turk Schonert, Lhe exFalcon and Bengal who was in the
Jets' camp this summer.
But Schonert falls into another
category.
.
"We signed Turk last spnng
just for that reason," says Steinberg, who has second-year-man
Troy Taylor and rookie Browning
Nagle behind Ken O'Brien. "We
told him he cou ld come to camp,
learn our system, then go home and
be relatively prepared if anything
happened to Ken."
That's pan of the problem.
When a quarterback goes down,
it's best 10 sign a veteran, who

either knows an offensive system
or can learn it relatively quickly.
Philadelphia, for example, left
with the brittle McMahon and
rookie free agent Brad Goebel,
opted 10 pick up 36-year-o ld Pat
Ryan, who hadn't played since
1989 and has bad knees. Why?
Ryan had played under coach Rich
Kotite's system when Kotite wa s
the Jets' offensive coordinator.
The same is true of Schonert,
34. He spent most of his career
with the Bcngals, when Bruce
Coslet, now the Jets' head coach,
was offensive coordinator there.

But the Eagles' tum to Ryan is
symptomatic of what has become a
real problem.
For example, the World League
of American Football was supposed to develop players for th e
NFL. But only 10 WLAF players
arc currently active on NFL ros ters
and fiv e of them arc punters or
kickers .
Moreover, Stan Gclbaugh. by
far the league's best quarterback.
has been unable to find a job Mike Perez of Frankfurt, cut by the
Giants, is the only WLAF quarterback in the NFL and he' s on the
Chiefs' practice squad.

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MIGHT TlJESDAY.

Top 3-year-old pacers to
race in Little Brown Jug
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) While there will be no 1991 Triple
Crown Champion, all of the top 3ycar-old pacers of the year will
meet for the first time in the
$600,000 Little Brown Jug this
week.
. The Jug, the third jewel in this
~ason's tiiple crown of pacing, is
the highlight of the five-day Grand
'Circuit program, which also features the $250,000 Jugette for
sophomore pacing fillies and the
$500,000 Ohio Breeders Champi1lnships.
: The Jug will be Thursday at the
:Delaware County Fairgrounds'
'half-mile track.
: Top contenders for the winner's
share of what may be a record Jug
·prize are Canadian-owned Precious
:Bunny, Die Laughing and Gene
Riegle-trained Artsplace.
: Precious Bunny, a Cam Fella
colt owned by R. Peter Heffcring
of Port Perry, Ont., has won 14 of
17 starts this year. with three seconds, and earnings of $1,636,207.
Precious Bunny is the only
horse to win· two $1 mill ion races
in one year - the North American
at Greenwood in Canada and The
Meadowlands Pace. His I :49 4-5
mile in the Meadowlands Pace was
the fastest ever at night.
The bay colt is driven by the
season's leading money-winning
i:lriver, Jack Moiseyev.
: Die Laughing, a No Dukes offspring, captured the $603,000 Prix
ii'Ete in Montreal and the Messenger Stake, the triple crown's second
jewel, at Rosecraft Raceway.
' Owned by the Val D'Or Farms of
Saddle R1ver, N.J., and Alnoff SIJIblcs of Jericho, N.Y., Die Laughing
has seven victories in 14 stans, and
fl second and a third. He won
$980,120.
Artsplace is trained by Riegle,
one of Ohio's finest trainers. The
winterbook choice shows th e
Dancer Memorial, the Terrapin and
the American National among hi s
10 victories in 14 trips, with a secpnd and a third.
The colt has. earned $850.000

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SERENITY BIRCH .......... s11.99
UGHT BROWN
MASONITE PANEL... ..... SJ0.9S
LAKELAND
.
BIRCH PANEL................. S9.49

NOW

$1295
Sl Q75

$705

ALL IN 4x8 PANELS
Many More To Choo$1 Fro~!'

BAUMCHESTER
LUMBER
985•3301

•

KITS

Round ot rectanauYr. Clear or
amtJer 18001K. 8002K or 9002K.

f2BB

�"""""'_________
Page-C8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

·J

I

the dressmg room."
Ryan demed the charges, but the
two conllnued to trade msults.
Aner the !990 season •. R~an
was fued after a d1sappomtmg
pla~off loss and replaced by Rtch
Ko~~te.
.
..
Th1 s 1S a tremendous nvalry,
Koute sa1d. "All the games arc
hard- hutmg and very compe!l11ve." .
But th1s Sunday. the focus wlll
be more on the field than on the
s1delmes.
.
Wnh the season-endmg knee
injury sustained by Cunningham in
Week I , the Eagles and Cowboys
may end up in a battle for a wildcard spot.
The bad feelings between the
two team s continued ~hen the
Cowboys lost Aikman With a separated shoulder last December in a
loss to the Eagles. Lmeman Clyde
Simmons drove Aikman into the
ground w1th a legal tackle. Losmg

Aikman may have cost the Cow-

bo~~ a playoff spot ,

Fortunately, we ve seen some
of that (Phaladelphta) style of
defense, some agamst Atlanta and
some agam wllh the Redskms,"
Johnson sa1d.
.
In losmg to the Cardmals la.st
week, the Eagles made s1x
turnovers to spo1l a decent performance by McMahon, who was 19for-34_ for 173 _yars.
Phlladelph1a w!ll have to stop
runnmg back Emm1tt ~m1th to have
a chance at controlhng the ball.
Against Washington, Smith had his
second sua1ght 100-yard rushing
game with 112 yards on II carries,
including a 75-yard TD, and caught
eighl passes for 42 yards and
another score.
Elsewhere in the NFL on Sun·
day it's Miami at Detroit: New
England at Piusburgh; the New
York Giants at Chicago;Phoemx al
washington, Tampa Bay at Green

Bay; San Franciseo at Minnesota;
Cincinnati at Cleveland; Seattle at
Denver: Atlanta at San Diego; Buffalo at the New York Jets: !nd1ana polis at the Los Angeles
Raiders: and the Los Angeles Rams
at New Orleans. On Monday night,
Kansas City visits Houston·.
With a wm against the Lions,
Don Shula would become the only
NFL coac h other than George
Halas to reach the 300 mark. But
Shula would rather be on the pracLice field or in the film room than
bask m an!lclpat•on of has achacvemcnt.
"Now as not the ume for me to
enjoy it" he says.
Ther~·s 100 much work to do· at
61 Shula remains one of the most
m~nse and organized coaches in a
lcaj:ue known for them.
'He's such a hard -work ing
man " marvels receiver Jim
Jens~n. the senior member of 1he
Dolphws with II seasons under

Rio runners race strong at Ohio University meet
ATHENS- If Un1vers1ty of
Rio Grande cross courltry coach
Bob Willey was looking for
1mprovement from h1s runners after
the first meet of the season, he
found it Saturday in the1r second
outing when the men's and
women's teams competed m the

Ohio Umversity lnvitallonal.
finished tlmd m the men's race.
Not only d1d Renee Peck wm
Peck, a junior from Baltimore,
first place in the women's race, Ohio, finished the 5-K course w
squeez1ng out competition from 18:36, followed in second place by
OU, Marshall University and Bowling Green's Chen Triner w
Bowlmg Green State University, · 19:00. Cline, a senior from Chillibut top men's runner Mark Chne cothe, was third in his competition
at 15:23. OU's Sam Chamberlain
finished rust m 9:54 and the Bobcats' Dan Dunlap was second at
10:80.
'
The teams were scored individu·
ally against each other. The Red·
men had 43 points to OU's 20; 43
and Phil Hovatter a 45.
to Bowling Green's 20; and 35 to
TVC standings after five malch- Marshall's 22. The Red women had
es show Meigs with30 pts, fol - 45 points to 18 for OU; 43 to 20 for
lowed by Alexander with 25, Bel- Bowling Green: and 43 to 20 for
pre with 19, Nelsonville-York w1th the Lady Herd.
16, Wellston with nine, Federal
Also placing for the Redmen
Hocking with eight and Vmton were Brant McLaughlin, 29th,
County w1th two.
46:99: Hugh McLaughlin, 30th,
20:07; Doug Horne, 31st, 43:08;
Dave Fcmbacker, 32nd, 26:82; Jeff
Roberts, 32nd, 38:46; and Courtney
Hutchinson, 32nd, 38:83.
RIO GRANDE - The acli vi lies
Finishing for the Redwomen m
schedule for Lyne Center 1s as fol- addition to Peck were Debbie Gray,
lows:
21st, 21 ·36; Tma Kelley, 23rd,
Gymnasium hours
Sunday- 1-3 p.m., open recreation; 6-8 p m., college recreahon
Monday- closed
Tuesday- 6-8 p.m., college
recreation
Wednesday - 6-8 p.m., colBy DAVE HARRIS
lege recreation
The Meigs Marauder volleyball
Thursday -closed for volley- team picked up 1wo more wins this
ball vs. Cedarville, Concord and week to raise 1ts record on the seaAlderson-Broaddus 6 p.m.
son to 9-0. Meigs defeated Soutem
Friday - 6-8 p .m .• college 15-4, 15-4 on Wednesday evening
recreation
and on Thursday evening they
Saturday - 1-3 p.m .. open defeated Belpre 15-8, 15-5.
recreation
Tricia Baer led Me1gs in the
Sunday, Sept. 22- 1-3 p.m., sweep over Southern with s1x
open recrcauon; 6-8 p.m., college points, five aces and six ass1sts,
rccreabon
Misty Butcher, Kim Hanning and
Nikki Meier al so added six pomts
Pool hours
each with Hanning leading the way
Sunday - 1-3 p.m. , open with seven kills. Meier added seven
swim; 6-8 p.m., college sw1m
assists.
Monday - closed
For Southern Marcy Hill and
Tuesday - 6-8 p.m .. college Angie Swiger had two points each.
swim
Southern lost the services of
Wednesday - 6-8 p.m .. col· Tammy Buckley '" the second
lege swim
game with what appeared to be an
Thursday- closed
ankle mjury. Buckley was transFriday - 6-8 p.m., college ported to VeiCrans Memorial HosSWlffi
pital by the Racine Emergency
Saturday - 1-3 p.m., open Squad for x-rays.
swim
Meigs won the reserve game 15Sunday, Sept. 22- 1-3 p.m., 10 and 15-6, Sarah Pullins led
open swim; 6-8 p.m., college swim
Meigs with nine points, Billie
Butcher and Amber Blackwell
Home athletic e•ents
addede1ghL
Saturday Sept. 21- Soccer vs.
Me1gs made it 7-0 in the TVC
Malone, 3 p.m.
with a 15-8, 15-5 win over Belpre

Marauder golfers win two
matches to post 34-0 record
The Meigs Marauder golf team
remained undefeated this past week
w1th two more TVC victories. The
Marauder golfers now hold a 34-0
record and lead second place
Alexander in the league standmgs
by five points.
In the first match hosted by
Wellston at Fairgreens Country
Club, Meigs posted a team score of
148. Alexander came in second
with a score of 162, followed by
Nclsonvdlc-York (197). Federal
Hocking (209), Belpre (215), Wellston (218) and Vinton County,:2J:
Ph1l Hovaucr continued hit-:?ot
play with a two under par 34,
including four birdies and two
bogeys. His efforts overshadowed a
fine round by Chris Casto of
Alexander who finished with a 35.
Adam Krawsczyn carded a 37
for Meigs, followed by Jay Harris
wllh a 38, John BenUey with a 39.
Jason Hart had a 43 and Jay Cremeans added a 46. The team score
of 148 shot by Hovatter,
Krawsczyn, Hams and Bentley
was only four over par and is
believed to be a course record at
the Fairgreens course and also is a
Meigs record for a par-36 course.
Meigs picked up another TVC
victory on Thursday at The Elm
course with Alexander being the
host team. Meigs finished with a
!58, followed by Alexander with a
162. Nelsonville- York carded a
186, followed by Belpre (197),
Federal Hockmg (201), Wellston
(208) and Vinton County (214).
Chris Casto of Alexander was
the match medalist with an even
par 35. John Bentley led Meigs
with a 38, Adam Krawsczyn a 39,
Tim Peterson a good round of 40,
Jay Harris a 41, Jay Cremeans a 43

Sports briefs
Golf
COAL VALLEY, Ill. (AP)Leonard Thompson fired an Sunder-par 62 to take a one-stroke
lead over Paul Azinger after the
second round of the Hardee's Golf
Classic.
Thompson opened the tournament with a 67 and has an 11-under
129 total on the 6,796-yard Oakwood Country Club course.
A2inger shot his second suaight65.
First-round leader Greg Norman
(67), Peter Jacobsen (66) and Steve
Lowery (66) were at 9-under 131.
Blaine McCallister (66) was alone
at 8-undcr 132, followed by Curt
Byrum (67), Lennie Clements (6B).
Michael Allen (68), Larry Silveira
(68) and Perry Arthur (68) at 7under 133.
PGA champion John Daly (70139) and defending Hardee's
champion Joey Sindelar (67-139)
missed the cut.

LEIAL NOnCE
The Public UUIItaes CommiSSIOn of

Ohio has set lor public heanng

case

No. 91·102-EL·EFC. to
review the fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus
Southern Power Company. the
operation ol its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related matters Thas
hearing is scheduled to begm at
10:00 a.m. on September 16,
1991, at the offices of the Public
Utilities Commission. 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio

43266-0573.

All interested parties will be given
an Ofii!Orlunity to be heard. Further tnformation may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at
the above address.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMIS.
SJON OF OHIO By: Gary E.
Vigorito. Secretary.

Lyne Center slate

Shula. "He's so ded1cated to the
game. It's mcred•ble, the work
ethic that he transmits to the players and the other coaches."
The Rams (1-1) meet the Saints
(2-0) in a game between NFC West
rivals Sunday night. The Saints
have won seven of 10 meet1ngs
with the Rams since Jim Mora took
over in !986; six of those 10 have
been decided by six points or less.
The Jets (1 -1) arc faced with the
task of trying to slow down the
Bills. Buffalo (2-0) opened the season with 5B2 total yards against

:

Farm/Business

Miami and 537 against Pittsburgh,
which had the stingiest defense in
the league last year. No team ever
had consecutive 500-yard offensive
outputs to open a season.
Jim Kelly threw six TO passes
last week in a 52-34 victory over
the Stcelcrs. Pittsburgh gave up
only nine touchdown passes all of
last season.
"You could have said anything
you wanted to last week," Kelly
said. "I would not have believed I
would throw six touchdowns
against Pittsburgh."

on Thursday . Baer led the way
once again w1th 10 points and
seven aces. Hanning and Chrissy
Weaver added five points each,
Meier four, and Chrtssy Weaver
and Yevette Young three each.
Weaver added three kills and two
blocks.
The reserve team went to 6-2
overall and 4-2 in the TVC w1th a
15-12, 10-15, 15-4 win over Belpre . Amber Balckwell and Lee
Henderson led Meigs w1th eight
points and Erica Robie added
seven.
Meigs will host Jackson on
Monday afternoon at 5:55 at Meigs
High School.

HOLZER CLINIC

Sports and Rehabilitative Center
Announces The

SATURDAY MORNING SPORTS
MEDICINE CLINIC
8:00A.M.

Sycamore Clinic in Gallipolis
Seturd1ys, through NortmHr 2
Reglstratiol Requlrtd by 8:30 A.M.

AClink Physklan, X-Ray Te&lt;h and
Nationally CertHJecl Athletk
Trulnen Are On Duty For Early
Dlagaosls and Treatment of
Friday's Injuries

Coaches, Athletes, Parents CaD 446·5244 for Details!

logw Grimm, IN, ATC
Lori Wri ATC
ledty Irwi11. IT

DON'T DELAY IN GEI'I'ING YOUR
A'DILEI'ES BACK TO PlAY!

EARTH MOVING - Work still continues on
land located along Route 7 in Gallipolis. ProperlY located along Airport Road is being leveled to

_.,People come to me
for good rates.••
they stay for my

By JOHN CUNNIFF
forecasting at a generally upbeat
organizauon.
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) -The conBut MacReynolds 1S quite pos•sensus econom1c forecast of 70 uve about his asscssmcn1. He says
prominent private forecasters is for ll again: The consensus forecast 1s
1992 growth of 2. 7 percent, a not possible to auain.
med1ocrc recovery performance but
The reason, he says, is that there
slall a refreshing improvement over 1s s1mply not enough growth in the
1991.
money supply to produce the ceoBut there is a b1g problem with nomic sucngth expected by the
at , as expressed by economist forecasters. He adds there is little
William MacRcynolds: "The prob- evidence thai the Federal Reserve
lem 1s that the forecast is not only will change things.
amprobable, it is just not poss1ble to
As a consequence, he says, and
3ChJCVC. ''
he emphasizes his conclusion in a
Th1s might s~ like a harsh paper for Chamber members, "The
assessment, coming as it does from most real GNP could pow in 1992
an economist employed by the U.S. is 2 percent." He isn t necessarily
forccastmg that either. He merely
Chamber of Commerce MacReyqolds is the director of says it is the maximum.

Good Neighbor senice. ' '

CAIOLL SIIOWDEII

Cornor of Thirtl Avt. &amp; State St.
GaliiiOiis, Oh.
Phone ••6-42'«1, Home U6-4518

Farm Flashes
UUUUMCI

Stale

CALL ME.

'

Farm Science Review begins
Tuesday, September 17

sun, ...

A

make the area more marketable with the hopes
of attracting an industrial site or sewer prOjC(I.
(Times-Sentinel pboto by Jim Freeman)

Tlte irrational concensus forecast

•

farm

carbohydrates !rom the stalk can
EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
aggravate stalk rols. Everythmg
Gallia County
added up pomts to a big potential
Extension Agent,
for com lodging during the fall of
Agriculture &amp; C.N.R.D.
GALLIPOLIS - There's plenty 1991.
A reminder to beef producers
to sec and even more to learn at the
1991 Farm Science Review. When that nommation formS arc currently
11 comes to Agr•cultural supplies, being take for the 19~1-92 Ohio
tractors. hvcstock, seed, etc .. if 1t's Bull Test Program. Theoomination
no I at the Farm Sc1ence Review, its brochure contains information on
probably not available. This years ' both the traditional Belle Valley
review will be held Tuesday, Bull Test as well as the WashingS~ptembcr 17 through Thursday, ton Court House Test. Forms arc
Saptcmber 19 from 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. available at the County Extension
at' the Molly Caren Ag Center ncar Office or 1nformat10n may be
London, Ohio. Advance tickets are obaamcd directly from Jim Clay,
a~ailablc at the Gallia County Ohto Bull Test Chairman at 614292-6791. Nominations arc due by
E~tension Office until 5 p.m . on
September 20, 1991.
,
Monday.
The Gallia County Pridc-n: corn producers should check
fi~lds regularly for evidence of Tobacco Association Annual Meetstalk rot. Pinch the lower 2 or 3 ing has been schedule for Thursstalk internodes or push the stalk 8 day, October 10 at 7 p.m. at the
· 12 mches from verucal to check Senior Citizens Center. Plans arc
for lodging. Early harvest may be underway for a good evening of
nrl:essary to avoid loss from lodg- food and fellowship. Tentat1vc con'"S· High levels of European com firmallon 1s that Mr. Rod Kuegel of
borer and dry weather stress w1ll Owensburg. Kentucky will be the
col!tr•bute to stalk problems. Euro- featured speaker. Kuegel is the
chairman of the newly organized
~n com borer wounds can cause
suilk breakage and serve as infec- "Burley Tobacco Advisory Comti'tJ s1tes for stalk rot fungi. During mittee' that was appointed by the
dry weather, often carbohydrates U.S. Secretary of Agriculture to
recommend policy for the Burley
ar~ mobihzed from the stalks to the
dercloping grain. Excessive loss of industry.

Jn~rJnc.:c u.,mp:lOil."'
Home&lt; )ffkc... Blc~umtnJtlon llhflln'

1••~ a flOOd n&lt;'lj.:hllc r. Stalt' Farm is tht:re

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For ,.,., s..

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from J.D. North Produce
"Why Buy Retail, We Sell Wholesale"
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1987 DODGE OMNI, Aulo, Air, Cruise Control
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1987 PONTIAC FORMUlA, lo11ded, T·loJI!. Sharp Car
1987 OLDSMOBILE CUTlASS SUPREME BROUGHAM, Sunroof, V-8
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1986 DODGE600 TURBO, Nie Car, LDroiTrude
1987 CHEVROLET ASTIO (-ION MINI VAN, T.V.

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--· - - --- --~----------------------------...,;if

CALl
nGER SAYRE
OR
RICK TOUIVER
NOWI

:POMEROY- The week of Sept.
15.-21 is being observed as Nationa! ',Farm Safety Week and accordm~ to the National Safety Council,
agricultural work accidents, nahanally, resulted m about 1,300 deaths
and 120,000 d1sabling injuries m
1990.
,The Meigs County Farm Bureau
sutgests takmg the following steps
t&lt;l•make your farm safer and more
p~uclive.
' Make it routine to inspect all
e&lt;J,uipment and facilities for haz·
arils, then correct them without
dcJay.
:-Keep lights and reflectors clean
all all equipment. Replace burned
oUJ bulbs and lamps promptly.
:· Make sure slow moving vehicle
cniblems are clean, bright and readil~ visible from the rear. Replace
f41ilcd emblems.
·:oe prepared for each activily.
Keep fit respect your limitations
a~d seek: proper care for health
p~blems.

I

1-800-964-3673
'\

__...___.; .;__

Section D
September 15, 1991

Stocks fall Friday despite
move by Federal Reseve

Meigs volleyball team wins
twice to boost record to 9-0

ON THE SPOT FINANCING AVAILABLE!

.

22:04; Ginger Smith, 28th, 24:25;
and Ang1e Cress, 28:07.
"I think both the men and
women beat some people who had
beaten them a year ago, so you've
got to be pleased with that," Willey
commented. "We're running well
and running hard, and our young
people are getting their eyes
opened to the reality of college running against Division 1 schools.
That's good, because if you want 10
run in our district, you have to be
strong because the competition is
tough.
"Renee ran a very smart race,
well within herself against some
outstanding competition these past
two weeks." the coach added.
"Mark also did very well and gave
h1mself a chance to be strong at the
end. Debbie Gray has improved to
where she's a minute-and-a-half
faster than her Lime a year ago, so
when you see improvement hke
that, you've got to be excited."
The teams return to lCLion Sept.
21 in the Centre College lnvitalional in Danville, Ky.

..

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

September 15, 1991 .

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

Dallas-Philadelphia match up to ·headline today's NFL slate
By The Associated Press
Th1s ume, Dallaf head coach
J1mmy Joh~son won t have Buddy
Ryan to lock around .w hen the
Cowboys play the Ph•ladelph13
Eagles.
.
Of cour se, that s not the only
d1fference w1th the Eagles. For the
sec ond stra1ght week, 11m McMahon w11l be the staru ng quarterback.
Last week. the Eagles (1-I) lost
26-10 to Phoemx and Washmgton
beat Dallas (I-I) 33-3 1.
After a 27-0 loss to the Eagles
on Thanksgmng Day 1989, Johnson cla1med Ryan had a $200
bounty out to mJure k1cker Luis
ZendeJas and $500 on quarterback
Troy Aikman
"I didn't think a head ~&lt;;&lt;&gt;tball
coach would stoop th1s low, Johnso~ said at the Lime. "I would have
sa1d somethmg to Buddy but he
wouldn't stand on the field long
enough. He put h1s fat rear end mto

........- ....,. . . . . . ..,....--.. . -:-"Mr.......,...,...,.....,...._,..,....,........,.....

..,~--'!"'"

.•Be sure workers and family
111i mbers are trained for the jobs
th~y do.
•Keep children and non-workers
o~ machinery and out of dangerous
areas.
Ko~:ep machinery sheilding in

place. Turn off the power before
unclogging or attending to operatmg problems.
,
If your tractor has a rl)ll-ovcr
,protective structure wear your safety belt to stay protected in an overturn. If 11 doesn't have ROPS, ask
your dealer 1f it can be fitted.
When applying pesticid~s. heed
label directions to the letter. Wear
protective gear. Store chemicals in
their original containers in a place
protected from children.
Be prepared for emergencies.
Equip your home with smoke
detectors and practice a home rue
escape. Learn first aid and post
emergency numbers at every telephone.
.
.
.
Read and follow dlfecuons m
operator's manuals and on product
labels.
,
Take work breaks to 1 fight
fatigue and extend your encr;y.
Pauline Aikins, safety ch~rman
for the Meigs County Farm Bureau.
said National F~rm Safety ;:-vcek
was estabhshed m 1944. Aci!VIUCS
held in conJunction. with the .~bse~­
vance conunue to. mform the agncullural commumty about safety
and health problems and encourages the use of effective preventive
safety measures. ~

By CHETCURRJER
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Stock pnccs
dropped Fnday 1n a wary response
to cuts m key Federal Reserve and
commefClal -bank interest rates.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials fell 22 14 po1nts to
2,985.69, f1n1shing the week w1th a
net loss of 25.94 pomts. The average rose 20.80 on Thursday.
Dccllnmg issues outnumbered
advances by about 4 to 3 on the
New York Stock Exchange.
Btg Board volume came to an
estimated 167.84 milhon shares as
of 4 p.m. EDT, against 160.31 mlilion at the same pomt Thursday
The Federal Reserve lowered
the d1scount rate from 5.5 percent
to 5 percenl, putting the charge on
loans to pnvate f1nancial mstllutions at llS lowest level in more
than 18 years.
Many maJOr banks followed
w1th reduc11ons m their prime lend1ng rates from 8.5 percent to 8 percent.
The cuts ca me m response to
s1gns of pers1stent cconom1c weak-

ness, as typ1fied by the news Fnday
that retali sales fell 0.7 percent m
August.
In add1l10n , auto manufacturers
reported weak domcst1c car sales
for the early-September scllang
penod
Open-market 1nt crc st rat es
dropped •n early bond tradmg, but
later turn ed upward . And stock
traders showed somcthmg less than
unbndled cnthu s1as m over th e
news.
Analysts sa1d the Fed's act•on
had been w1dcly an11c1patcd fo•
some 11me on the Street In add •
110n, they S3ld, all the day 's news
tended to rem force womcs aboul
the prospective sucngth and stay·
ing power of the economy 's bcd to
recover from the reccssmn .
Marion Merrell Dow led ah c
acuve lisl, down 8 1/4 at 29 3/4.
Speculauon that Dow Chcm1cal
would make a bid for the 30 perce nt of Marion Merrell 11 doesn't
already own was deflated when
Dow Chem1cal sai d 11 would
redeem for cash an issue of secuntics called value ri~hts.

The Dow Chem• ca l r1ghts
Jumped 4 7/8 to I I m heavy Amcr •can Stock Exchange tradmg
Ove r th e fus t four sesSio ns of
1he week Manon Merrell shares
had nsen 4 3/8 pomts and the Dow
Chem1cal nghts had fallen 2 7/8 on
th e behef the Dow would make a
d1ffcrent cho1ce
Intel, traded 1n th e over -th e·
counter mark et, tumbled 6 3/4 to
43. The com pany S8ld 1ts sales and
earn mgs for the f1scal quarter end1ng Sept. 28 wou ld fall short of
e•pcclat1ons.
The nppl es from the JOlt m Intel
h1t many other OTC 1ec hnology
•ssucs Appl e Computer fell 2 to 4K
5/H and Sun Mccrosystcms dropped
I 1/4 to 30 1/X
At the B•g Board, TektroniX fe ll
4 to 24 1n the aftermath ol another
car mngs d1sappomtmcnt.
The co mpan y, wh1 ch makes
clcwomc products for uses m such
f1clds as sCience, com mun1cauon s
and computer graph1cs, said proflls ·
for Jts latest fiscal quarter came 10 ·
33 cents a share, agamst 32 cents a
share in the correspond cog penod a :
year ago.

NRC shareholders approve
takeover by AT&amp;T Friday

He concedes that the Fed rccen !·
ly has taken steps to increase the
growth of the nation's money supUA YTON, Ohm (AP)- Shareply, bul it isn't enough.
To correlate money supply with holders who watched NCR Corp.
expectations of the econom1sts, he draw llS last breath as an mdepensays, would mean the Fed would be dent company said 11 pained them
compelled to increase the growth to see an era end but that NCR's
of money by more than 8 percent in future as an AT&amp;T subs1 d13r y
the next mne months It won't hap- appears bnght.
The results, wh1ch were expectpen, he says.
MacReynold 's cenamty about ed, were made public Fnday at a
th1s is bolstered by a knowledge of s pec ial shareholders mecung at
economic equauons and formulas NCR headquarters.
NCR Chairman Charles E.
that might mean little to those outSide the economist world. But there Exley Jr. called the merger "a new
chapter in our corporate h1story."
is an inclmat1on to believe h1m.
"Th1s is by no means the end of
Fust, there IS a tendency,
allhough one that has become the NCR story, but the bcgmnm g
mconmtcnt m the past few months, of a new cooperative relationship
for busmess organizations to cheer 1n wh1ch we, along w1th AT&amp;T,
along any s1gns of cconom1C have an opportumty to shape the
improvement.
Secondly, computing and communicatiOns
MacReynolds has nsked h1s repula- technologies of the next century."
E&lt;ley srud.
tion.
George Haynes, NCR's ch1Cf of
Seasoned forecasters usually
mternational
operatiOns from 1962
protect themselves when addressto
1976.
called
11 "a sad day." But
ing the future. They create fallback
positions, and they might even drop he satd he voted for the merge r.
"In order to conunue to suc in a contradictory phrase that might
be used later in salvaging their rep- ceed, I think AT&amp;T has what NCR
needs - f1nances," sa1d Haynes.
utation.
If he as correct, there will be "And 1f they don't try to mtcrfcrc
many disappoinlments to come, too much wath the way NCR's
since corporate profits, employ- always been run , then lthmk we're
ment, take-home income, and other all headed for some remarkable
direct measurements that affect results."
Under the agrcemcna, the Daypockebocks won't improve a great
ton-based company w1ll become a
deal from thclf Sickly levels.
Stocks and bond s could be subs1d1ary of Amencan Telephone
affected, s1ncc many of today 's &amp; Telegraph Co. NCR will reta1n
pnccs arc based on expectatiOns of separate management and run the
earnings and econom1c cond•uons combmcd computer operation of
thai might not be poss 1ble 1f the two companies.
AT&amp;T oflicl81S have said NCR
MacRcynolds' contentiOn 1s corWill
retain 1ts name and mam1a1n 1ts
rect.
The impact could be pol•t•cal headquarters in Dayton.
Charles Russ, NCR 's v1ce pres•·
too. Already, there is disenchantdent.
secretary and general counsel,
ment w1th an adminiStration and
said
53.4
milhon NCR shares were
Congress that brought h1ghcr taxes
voted
1n
favor of the merger ,
and that arc viewed as having done
179,400
against,
and l97,l81
too httlc in the domcsuc economiC
abstamed.
Two-thuds
- or at least
realm.
43.3 mlilion shares- were needed
to approve the merger.
4-H Achievement

The vote 1S expected to be ccrt•f,ed Monday and the merger completed by Sept. 19, NCR and

KRISTEN SHEPHERD

AT&amp;T s3ld.
Under the all-stock transawon,
NCR shareholders wlil be g•vcn 2.8
shares of AT&amp;T stock for eac h
share of NCR stoek they hold . That
1s based on a $110.74 value g1vcn
to each NCR share under the merger agreement.
AT&amp;T stock fell 37.5 cen ts a
share to $37 87 l/2 Friday on the
New York Stock Exchange. NCR
shares fell $1.25 to $107 on th e
NYSE.
The two compan1cs have been
combmmg operauons smcc May 6,
when NCR' s board of ducctors
agreed to the merger after a bitter,
f1vc-month takeover battle.
NCR , the nauon 's fifth-largest
computer company, employs
56,000 people worldw1dc The
com pany was founded as the
Nauonal Cash Reg1ster Co. 1n 1884
by John Henry Patterson and nearly
cornered the markel m cash rcg• stc"

Receives promotion
GALLIPOLIS - The Crcd•t ProductiOn Company recently
announced the promotmn of Knstcn M. Shepherd as Manager of the
Cred1t Bureau of Galha and Mc•gs
Counties.
Mrs. Shepherd IS ceruf1ed by
both the ASSOCiate d Crcd1t
Bureaus, the American Collectors
Assoc•al•on, and vanous other
mdustry s'hools. She also rcCClvcd
a sc holarsh1p from the Assoc1ated
Credit Bureaus of Ohio to attend
the M1dwest Managcmcnl Institute,
conducted by Indiana Umvemty m
Bloommgton,lnd., where she graduated wllh honors.
Mrs. Shepherd has been wtth the
Credl! Bureau smce 19a6. She 1s a
graduate of Rock H11l H1gh School
and currently res1dcs 1n W11low
Wood w1th her husband, Tom.

OVB's third quarter
dividends announced
GALLIPOLIS · The board of ,
dJrcctors of Ohio Valley Bank have ·
dec lared a thlfd quaner dlVldcnd of ·
$.43 per share. The dlVldcnd wdl :
be pa1d fo r shares owned on th e
record date of Scptcm bcr t , 199 1.
The bock value of OVB stock as
of J unc 30, 1991 was $33 49 per
share, which 1s an increase of S1.35
per share from the December 31, '
1990 book value of$32.14.
Oh10 Valley Bank, wllh off1ces
m Gallipol1s, Jackson, R10 Grande,
and Waverly , 1s an Ind epe ndent ,
community bank wuh assets of
5260 mlll10n.

night slated Monday
GALLIPOLIS - The 1991 4-H
Achievement Night w1ll be held
Monday, September 16, at the Galha County J umor Faugrounds.
The activ1tics will slaT! at 7 p.m.
All 4-H members, parents , and
advisors arc invited to attend. Each
4-H club 1s asked to bring two
do~en cookies for refreshments.

Western -Southern
Insurance moves
office in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - WesternSouthern L1fe Insurance Company
is moving the Galhpohs office to a
new locauon
Accordwg to a recent news
release, the company's office will
be open for business on Oct. 3, at
10 Airport Road, Gallipolis. Formerly the company conducted
operations at 530 Second Avenue,
Gallipolis
"Western-Southern 1s making
the move to beucr serve its many
policyholders and fnends in the
Gallipolis area," sa1d Walliam-J..
Williams, the company's chief
executive offacer. in a news
release .. The new office offers
ample off-street parlcing.
The office is headed by sales
manager Terry A. Shirley, LUTCF.
He is assisted by sales representatives George E. Crump. Carl E.
London, James R. Pierce, Mark E.
Sauerfteld , Richard 0. Sexton,
Roger D. Shinn and office cashier
Janice Wedemeyer.

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, featured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
in the weekly contest may do so by guessing tbe
farm's owner. Just mail, or drop otT your guess
orr to the Daily Senlinel,lll Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825
.; third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may

"

win a $5 prize from tht Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned in to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
eacb Wednesday. In case of a tie, the winner will
be chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallia County
farm will be featured by the Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation District.

�.:.·

PomeiOy-Mio_Oie pon -G al li pOiis OH. ..,t' 'JCI · n..,~·

ASTRO-GRAPH

1·:/ •.

'

Public Notice

BRIDGE

wa y to •un ; n ~....r s nr: . . ,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) i&gt;a~ a del1n11e
11ne o r dem -1rcat 1on between :r·o ur bu sine ~s a11d soctal ac t1vt ttes

tod ay _ tf you
try to turn a fun even t 1nto a sales ,a u.
yOL won ~ l1k e I he resu lt s

PHILLIP
ALDER

Sepl. 16, 1991

1987 GMC Jimmy S16,
Serial

NORTH
!·14·91
t 10 9 6 7 6 I 3 2
.AK
+AQ9

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) IndiViduals
you have a good rapport wtth SOC ially
could be of more help than usual at t h1s
t1me 1n o ther areas o f your li fe, es pecially where bustness 15 co ncerned . Major
Changes are ahead tor Vtrgo in the c omtng year Send tor V•rgo ·s Astra-Graph
predic t• ons to c1 ay. M a1l $1.25 plu s a
long . sell -a ddressed . stamped envelope to Astra -Graph , c/o this newsp aper P 0 Bo• 91428 . Cleveland . OH
44101 -3428 Be sure to slale your zOdiac s1gn
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In si tuat1on s
o r developmenls that affec t your per sonal tnlerests today. 11 •s best to indirec tl y manage ma tters rather than as·
sume dtrec t co ntrol. A proper htnt here
and there w1 11 do the tnc k .
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) Thos IS a
good t tme to tnt11ate new proJects or endea'llors . es pec1a 11y 11 they are o f a
uniQue or unusual nature Progress belongs 10 th e bold p•oneer.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There
ts th e str o ng posstbt ht y you will rece•ve
a happy su rpn se at th1s lime where your
l1nanc es are con ce rned Don't b e int•mtdated by Sttuat1on s that dea l w1th
numbers larger th an those to which
you·re accustomed
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) If you
have some spec1al type of endeavor
you ·ve been wan tmg to tnitia te. this
cou ld be o ne o f the best days to d o so.
You're in a favorable cyc le. provtded
you don ·t let too much time el apse .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Your pnmar y conce rn tod ay ts likely to be for
the well are o f those you love. and thi s is
a nobl e 1nchn ation . The less you want
tor your self , the more you·re apt to
rece tve
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Yo ur prob-

Sepl. 15, 1991

Be ater1 tor btgger and better break s
wh ere your career ts co nce rn ed in t he
year ahead 11 mig ht t&gt;e w tse to begtn to
prep yourse lf now lor a top spot. eiJen
though it may be several rungs up the
ladder .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sepl. 22) Be1ng 100
self-tnvolved today cou ld prove to be
counterproduc ttve. You may worry so
much about the tmpressiOn you 'll mak e
th at t he ac ttons you 'll take wtll be ineffectrve. Vtrgo . trea t you rself to a birthday gift. Send tor Vt rgo·s Astro·Graph
predtCI IOns tor the year ahead by m ai ling $1 .25 plus a tong. self-addressed .
stamped envelope to As tra-G raph. c/o
th iS newspaper. P 0 Box 9 1426. Cleveland. OH 44101 -3428 . Be sure to sta te
you r zod tac stgn
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You m1ght be
to rn betwee n a res p onsibility and
some thing you ·d really like to do today
Find a happy mea ium . because you
won ·t be a t ease with either ex treme .
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 22) It m1ght be
pruden t to play things close to the vest
financtall y today . Your extr avagant im.
pulses are sltrrmg , and diSCipline w111 b e
req u•red
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Try Ia
operate wtth 1n areas where you feel sa fe
and com fortable today. both m soc1al
and bUSiness se ttmgs. If you ventu re
mto unch arted waters , you mtgh t have
to sw1m amo ng the shark s
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Those
you 're closely invo lved w1th today m ay
be more genero u s toward you than you
are toward th em If you gtve as well as ab thlt es l or su ccess are su b stan ti ally
take . you 'll like the face in your mirror a enha nced today ow1ng to the coo perawhole lot better .
l•ve sp1nt ot q ther s All your friends
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Keep a want you to succeed
fight reign on expenses rel ated to lf~• ­ ARIES (March 21-April19) Opportumsure or non -essentral activities today
ttes perta1nm g t o yo ur ca reer m1ght
The best things in Ide aren 't measured start off small . bu t they cou ld blossom
by lhe1r pnce l ags.
mto someth1ng prop1t 1ous awfully fast .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) If you want You can expand upon Lady Luck 's
to move up in the world tod ay, give handtwo rk
credit where c redtt is due. Taktng bows TAURUS (April 20-May 20) II you have
tor another"s eff o rt s is the m ark of a the proper a tt1tu de today. eve ryt htng
chump , not a champ
you touch should go r ather smoothly.
ARIES (March 21-Apri119) Try IO keep ll"s 1mpera!t\le you thtnk and ac t like a
an open mmd today and be recep ttve to w•nner
sound sugges tions. rega rdless ot who 1S GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) Even though
t he aut hor . Just b eca use you diSlik e your met nod s mtght not be easily di s·
ce rtatn people d oesn ' t mean lhetr ideas cer ned by ot hers today. they should
are bad.
produc e th e end result s you desire. UnTAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) II you base o rthod ox procedures won ·! be any less
your expecta tions on an unrea listic pre· efleCIIVe.
mtse today. you're lik ely to be di sap - CANCER (June 21-July 22) You m1ght
pointed . Be m indful of the odds: The not be the o ne who orig in ates new con·
long-shot od ds are high because the" cept s today. but you will be the one who
chances are law
m stinct•vel y kn o ws how to make good
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Making an ideas betler. Trade on your talents .
1mportant dec ision today tn order to ap- LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your financial
pea se another could create complica- prospect s look Qui te encouraging . both
ti ons fo r bo th pa rties. First . to thtn e own today and tomorrow Im p rovi ng your
self be true .
monetary pos it to n should be your area
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Thing s may o f loc us. You should be happy wtth the
st ill work o ut fo r you today 1n spite o f result s

.." ~~.
~

•.

•

...
WEST
• Q5
' 94
+K 2
.KQJ9 843

EAST
tAKJ
• J 10 6 2
+63
.A 10 6 2

·-·

•n

+

3.

North

Pass

7 t ('l

Pass

Pass

Pass

Wes t

East

Jt

Obi.
Obi

Openmg lead: •

Q

L----------...1!

15, 1991

September

#1 GHT61WZJV216622
19BB DQ,dge Daytona

The Home National Bank
reserves the right to bid a1
the sale an~ to remove any
or all vehicles from the sale
at ay time .
In order to inspect any of
the above named vehicles
prior to the ule arrangemenu may be made by cal·
ling 949·2210 .
(9) 16, 16. 18. 20. 4tc

Public Notice
estate has filed an account
of his trust . A h earing on the
account In each case will be

venue Bond s 7 .625% due
October 1, 1999 and de·
signaled below have been
celled for redemption on Oc·
tober 1, 1991 at par value

hold al the dote and time
shown below. The court is
located at the Gallia County
Court Houae, locust St . •
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
Wayne B. Smi1h, Case
#16,487. Oct 16. 1991 .
10:00 a.m .
Margaret M . Hardin . Case
W16,679, Oct . 16, 1991 .
10:00a .m.
John M . Preston , Case
#18,041, Oct. 16, 1991 .
10:00 • ·"1 ·
Marjorie l. Boggs, Cue
#18,167, Oct . 15. 1991 ,
10:00a.m.
Kelly
Miller, · Coae
#1B,195, Oct. 15, 1991,
10:00 a.m .

together with ac crued inter·

est to October 1, 1991 .
Payment of the redemption price will be made upon
pretentation and surrender
of the bonds with coupons

due October 1. 1991 and
subsequent coupons
attached, at the Corporate
Trust Offices of The Huntington National Bank, Corporate Trust Bond llo Cou pon, 41 South High Street
- HC1 027, Columbus, Oh .
432B7 .
Coupons due October 1.
1 991 should be detached
and collected in the usual
manner. From and after October 1 , 1991 . interest on
the bonds called shall cease
to

i

Adeline

Davis,

checks will be mailed in their
usual manner.

$6,000 BEARER BONDS
CAllED : Nos. 1353, 1440,
1445. 1477. 1507. 1516.
1660, 1678, 1610, 1613,
1615, 1620, 1626, 1707,
170B 1760, 1812. 1814,
1 B22, 1828, 1831 ' 1 B42,
1846, 1 B53. 1887. 1892,
1894. 1910, 1933, 1935,
1946. 1956, 1957, 1972,
1973.
FULLY REGISTERED
BONDS : R-387 at 5.000
City of Gallipolis. Ohio

lucy lewis,

Cue Number

1B,742. Oct 16, 1991,
10:00a.m .
Goldie
Swisher,
Caee
#1 8,825, Oct. 16, 1991,
10:00a .m.
Cecil E. Rice.
Case
#1 8 .897. Oct. 15. 1991.
10:00a.m .
Ruth Casto, Case Number
19,079, Oct. 15, 1991 .
10:DDa .m .
Anno
Bradbury, Coot
NuA&gt;bor 19,162, Oct. 16,
1991. 10:00 a.m.
lno Faye Phillips, CaH
#19.166, Oct . 16. 1991 ,
10:00 a.m .
louis

G. Marchi, Jr., Case

#19,292, Ocl. 15, 1991 ,
10:00 a.m .
David W. Jones and Gar net
M.
Jones.
Case
#19,328, Oct. 15, 1991 ,
10 :00 a.m .

6

'

'

•

.

-~
•
• •
•

•

•

to

Puzzler

3 Succor
5 Devoured
6 Identifying
symbol
7 Monday or
Tuesday
6 Go astray
9 Japanese
measure
10 Pigpen
11 Proofreader's
mark

12 Sharpen
13 Bitler vetch
14 Near
t 5 Writ ing pad
16 The Kingslon 17 Tatlered clolh
18 Guido's low note
19 Farm struclures
20 lnstrumenls
27 Wire measure
29 Hebrew month
. 31 Free
36 Comply
37 Per 39 Clever
40 Clan
41 Headliner
42 Deal secretly
43 Arabian garmen1s
44 Af1er-dinner
candy
46 Pronoun
48 Journey
4g Inspires with
wonder
50 Source ol waler
51 King of birds
52 Raf1
53- greens
55 Places lor
worship
56 Slrong wind
57 Tibeton priests
58 Be
61 Dinghy
63 Slupid fellow
64 Healthy
68 Authors
70 Agents ; elements
7 1" - - olthe
Action "
73 Cowardly
74 Winter
precipilation

While mate cat In vlclnlty of
KHbough-Follrod Ad. Childs
pet. Reward . Call614-985-4463.

Julia Garlic. Case No.
19,016, Oct . 15. 1991 .
10:00 a.m .

7

Gallipolis

SEPT 15, 1991

3

Announcements

LITE &amp; RITE: No ...,.. dieting ·
weight lo.. programi 100%.
natural. 614 -371~40 atler 4:30.
Now Open, Pomeroy Car Wash,

will do handwaeh, wu &amp; ctanlng.

Wa Mall• Grut Matc:hH. Carol's

Slngloo, P. 0 . Bo• 58411, Athens,
OH •5701.

4

Giveaway

Z groy Angoro kltttnl, I Wkl
old; good homo only, 114-4407340 after 5:00.
C1t1: 2 Milt, 1 Ftmlll, 8 WHkl
Old To Good Homtl lt4-44ti-

aduhe who with to Improve
tholr oklllo. HIOCJ.e42·2170 or
304-117Wtl18.

Youl "NoUIHpcinoiblo For Ac·
eldonto.•
ALL Yard Saloo Must Bo Pold In
Advaneo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before the ad 11 to run.
Sunday ldhlon - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00
p.m. Saturday.

good

Kltteno, Litter Tralntd To Good
Homoll14-446-23tt.

2

Molo groy llripod kllton, to good
homo, :104-117$-St 10.
In loving Memory Of
R,EV. lEROY HIETT
Who Passed Away
. Sept . 14, 1967
Just a prayer from
those who love you;
Just a prayer fond and
true .
As long as ~fe and memory last,

13g Farm building
140 AcademiC
subjects
144 Thai woman
145 African antelope
146 Newl
147 Ocean
148 House e&lt;ldition
149 Suitable
151 Cracker st .
153 Spanish article
155 Behold!
157 Three-toed sloth

'

l

My family and I
would like to thank
Dr. Vallee, the
Medical Plaza
Staff, Dr. Lentz
and his steff, Dr.
Sholtis and her
staff, and the staff

..

of Holzer Medical
Center for the
excellent medical
care given during
my recent illness .
We would also like
to express our
appreciation for
the prayers.
flowers. cards, and
food . All the
concerns and
words of hope and
encouragement are
sincerely
appreciated .
Elva Jean Coulson

5

Serv1ces

11 Help Wanted
~S4"'o"'o""w~M...,..,kly:....,O,..r"'M::-.,-,-51::---cuH"'In-g
Envelopes At Home. Rush $1.00

S.A.S.E. f10 To: D&amp;A 9uppllo~ 1
P.O. Box 1443, Falrl&gt;om, 0~
45324.
ACTIVITY DIRECTOR

100 Bod Nurelng Foclllty. Educational Prep.orlllon And Ex·
portonco In Activity Prc&gt;grommlng In A Hoalth Care Facility
Preferred. Excellent Written And
Oral Communication Skills Easantlal.
This Potlllon Offers A ComptJII·
live Salary, Unique Benefit

Program, And Opponunity For
CarHr Growth. "For Prompl,
Conlldontlal
Conoldoratlon,
Pleasa Forward Resyme, lnch.KIIng Salary History To:
POmeroy
Nursing
And

() 199 1 Oy NU. 11'1(

14

Help Wanted
experience

....

Piau . Call Today, 81~ -436711
Aegllteratlon •00-05--1274 B.

MOfiTGAGE LOAN ORIGINATOR

_:1:,8___:W:,::a::n::;
_!:::e_;d _
;to
.; _;:_
D.::,o_ _

Exporlonco Prolorrod But Will

Child Care Available In My
Homo. Call 614-44tl-ft63.

a

Odglnato FHA, VA,
ConvonIIOrioi loans In Gaillpotlo And
8¥hvundlng Ar- Ani Com.,.hlvt Progrema And High
cctmmiHion Schodula WMI fn...,. Your F.-un In Thla Excitlrtl !lu.ihou. Sand R..ume To:
llir1gago Ont, P.O. Box 29172,
Columliut, 01143229.

Sal. 1:001m-5:30pm. 114-ltZ2237

Plrt l1mo Bobyohlor Nlodod In
W.ohlngton School Dlllricl. 1
Hour Before And 1 Hour After
School. Ralorenc:o Roqulnocl.
Phonol14-"tl-210t.
Pa~41mt

carina lor partlllly-

homo.

lncludoo

houatkH~ng .

AVON I All A,..o I Shirley
Speare, 304-1175-1429.
Avon-Start your own Bu1lnen
for Chrietmas. Racalva $20.00

FrH Avon Glftol Coil 114-111184370.
CaM Manager, Full-Time, Wort·
In Gallla And Jacklon
Cciuntlea.
Minimum
Ouallllcatlono, High School
Dlptome, Experlenct DHired,
Bonollto Onorod. Sond R..umo
To: F.A.C.T.S. AI. 2 Box 273-A
Bldwoll, DH 45514. By Saptom:
bor 27th, 19111. MIFIH, E.O.£.
lng

EARN MONEY Reading Bookll

$30,000/yr. Income Potential.

Ootollo. (1) 805-962-8000 Ext. y.
10189.

account managemel'll_ end

ac-

counting. fa&lt; lmmodllll oonoldoratiOn, contact Tina ~
ot 614-9112~ 11. EaiiOI ODDor·
tunlty Ernptoyor. lii-F-H. ·11onSmoking ond Drug·F- En-

Goorgoo Portabla Sawmill, don't
hau1 ~: loa• to the mill just
call
75-1~57.

House clunlng or oftice clean·
lng, call 614-9112-354t.

dally at 614-11411-3057.

•,'

perience And References. 6t4-

448·ZII46.

light

72t-D, lhe Dolly Sontlnel,
- o y , Ohio, 45711.

For rank Limon.

,_-----------

2.-------

12. _ _ _ _ __

1- _ _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ _ _ _ a.-------------- 13. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ _ _ __
14. _ _ _ _ __
5.

10.

TELEMARKETING lrom your
homo 120/ltr. or mono -lblo.
· succooa Moy" lncludod. Ootalll
24/hr, 211-1155-3213, ut. 1111-3.

J. Merrill Carter
379-2184

------

' MAGIC.

CASH ONLY. MAlLO I! PLACE AT OffiCE.
Pr-inl one word in each space above . t:ac h Initia l or «J"O Up of ftprr•

~o urHt •~

1 word . Count nsrne

and add reu tlt phor:~ e numher if uaed . Deadl inf: Sr ptember30, 1991 ,
~A.\1[

• If

______________ COLUMN OF AD,____ P H O~r. ____ _ __

(aU •"• appnr U1 : G•Uf'LI• Duly Triburlc, Pt. Ple.tanl ll ~u1n , •nd l'~;~mer'f u~~.t y5enund .J
1

THEY WORK LIKE
D~[ Y lRIIlU~£

111[

825 THIRD AVE~'IiE Ill

D~~ Y&amp;1!11NtL

GALLIPOLI!, 011

CO~RT STREET
POMERO\, 011

446.2342

Call992-2156

Coli

'\

'l

1

j

'

1
-~ r 1...

Mobile Homes
lor Sale

675-6416.

12x 65 mobile home , needs
so me work, 304..4l58·1670.

J bedroom house on 10 acres,
400 h. frontage, on Bradbury

1972 Flamingo 12x50 2 BR, gas
lurnace, carpeting, good cond .

Rd. 7.62"4 possible, $29,500.
216·395-2399.
3br A Frame On 1 Acre Wooded

Lot. $27,500 Will Consider Land
Contract
With
Reasonable
Down Payment. 614-256-1989,
6t4-256-t505.

S3BOO. 614·368 ·9724 .
1973 VanOyka 14x70 Mobile
Homo, 6t4·388·9054. II No
Answer 614·388-9606.
1976 14x70, 2br. Jan, Appli ances, Block, Sklr1ing , Porch,
Total Electric, Reducad , $7,500!

New 1992 14r:80 three bedroom .
2 lull baths. shingle root, vinyl
s1 ding,
sh utters,
carpeted
throughout , all drywall lnterlo1
and ~ - bay window. $t7,997.00

Caii1·800-n9·4045.
New Clayton, Sharp Ae /4. Tack,
14 x70,
3
Bedroom,
Total
Elec tric, $13,995. Nowhere Else
But Elsea Home Center. Call 1614-m -1220.

74

Motorcycles

614-388·8361.

Salesman·1111st have experience, neat
appearance, friendly attitude, S days
a week 8:30-6:30.
Must have some ability relating to
automobiles. Call675-3331
ASK FOR LON
Poor Boys Tire, Inc.

GOVERNMENT HOMES From Sl
(U Repair). Oollnquont Tax
Property. Aeposstsalons. Your
Aroa (1) 805-962-8000. Ell. GH·
1018D "For Current Repo list.

HOUSE FOR FREEl! Must movo
olf lot In Middleport. Fill In
bosomont, tHd and straw. Mus!
sign contract! 2-BR, laJgo LA,
OR, Bath, has new roo! and guttor, new copper and PVC plumbmtrclai-Homl
Units.
from lng,
some work. You pay
1111.00. Lampe, Lotlonl, Ace,. tor
movlngl Only sorious
IIOrito. Monthly P~mtnll Low l eo,lllorsl Call 614-992-2 01'1 aher
At $18.00 Coil Today FREE
Color Catalog. 1-800-228--6292. 1c.:_:..:::__:__ _ __ _

6

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

lB

446-6824 .

(at y

ray

Jeannie France

4411-4255

4411-80011

REALTOR·

Tommie DeWitt

Shirley Boster

' 446 -6624

4411-12110

Sam Ho

man

379-2449

Patti Hawk

4411-19117

Wontod motlvatod oaiHpo.....,,
121,000, to $12,000. flnt yoar.
Training provldod, oxporlonce
,..,.,,..., Sind ....,,.. to Box
p.s, % Pt. PH. Rogl•.~•!o 200 Main
51., Point Ploaoant, wv. 25550
Wantod motivllod oaiHpo.....,,
121,1)0.$12,000 11t yoar, training
provldod, uporitnco ,..lornod,
111nd ,..ume: to Dally S.n11nel
PO Box 7291 Poonoroy, 011
4176t

·._
BETIER BUY AT $55,000
Attractive ranch locatod at Jay Drive oHers 3
bedrooms, lamily room , newly remodeled eal-in
kilchen , t -t/2 balhs, attached 2 car garage, city
schools' Call for addilional inlo and appt.
12932

Wantod: "otlvatod Saloo Poroon
- $21,000 - $52,000 111 Yoar Toolnlng Provldod. bporloi1Cod
Preferred. Sand Reaume To:
Bo• CU. otO, c/o Gallipolis
Dally Trlbu!!' 1825 Third Avonuo,
Golllpoll•, "" 45131.
12

390 BlUE LAKE DRIVE
What can we say but well maintained! Very nice
2 bedroom mobile home , ex tra large screenedin porch overlooking lake. slorage shed. com·
plelely underpinned. Lake lronlage with fioating
do ck. Must see to app reciate !
#2931

SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HOME
Very attractive 3 bedroom , lar~e living room,

family room , dining room and kitchen, recenlly
remodeled, 2 full balhs, 2 car qarage . Over 2
aero. Situaled at BuN -Morton Road jusl oH SR
35. Call
Immediate possession. 12914

Situation
Wanted

Dodrlll'l PriVIIt Home Cere:
H . A
I II H
F
lVI oom n Y omt or 1

Eldorty llan And 3 Eld::.:/l
LldiM. 111C-311-1113, 114121t.
Fomalt Would Llko To Sharo
Home With Samo Or Wl\1 ~=~
Caro fa&lt; (ldorty Lody. 6 4
11101.

Peroon or ponona lnt-tod In
Uvlna on farm • hoiplng with
chorM; S,ond roply to: Box
CI.Aot1, olo Galllpollo Dolly
Tribuno~l,25 Third Avonuo, Ga~ ·

THE

TO FIND!!!

If you have been looking for acreage plus a
nice home. well here it is! Approx . 23 acres , 3
bedroom ra nch , barn s. cell ar, shed &amp; pond
Addi tional mo btle home space . Privato setting .
Priced 10 sell QUICkly al $39,900 . lmmed~ate
possession t
#2928
ONE OWNER LIOUIDATION
Raccoon Townsh•P
Raccoon Townsh•P
Huntington Towns hip
Hunting ton Townsh1p
Hunllngton Townsh1p

VACANT ACREAGE
188 Acres
123 Acres
19 Acres
12 Acres
60 Acres
Hunl!ngton Townshtp
50 Acres
Oh10 Townsh1 p
t33Acres
Harrison Townshtp
81 Acres
Call today for loca110n and more dela1ls

Organ1za110ns
SiteS
maiNng MM.
Let ue cfo • tol'
...-. O u r - I C • •

•wvc

. , . «JitfltiHirMI

anct reuoniiDty prtcecl.

16 ACRES MOREILERSS
Located in Hun ting ton Towns h1p 12 acres m/1
$7,ooo. 4 acres
$3.700.
113700

The French City Press

mn

WHAT MORE COULD YOU ASK?
FOR AT THIS PRICE! $32,900
3 bedroom ranch homo w1th li vi ng room , eat -in
kitch en, uttlity and bath N1cc fenced in law n
and attachad carport. Withtn minut es of Holzer
Hospital. Call today
#2875
WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING
YOUR HARD EARNED MONEY IN RENT
When you could be paying lor this remodeled
home. Uving room, balh, forced a1r, gas heal,
newer deck . Located among shade trees on
approx. t acre lol.
*2920

=~

32

Mobile home lor ule ot rani .
vary mea, unfurnished, 14x70
w/81128 upando, deck, under·
penning, central air, Included .
Private 102 Gallipo11e , Ohio, 304·
576-2312.

UTIIJTY COMPANY JOBS
$7.80 ~o $15.711Hour, This A..a.
Mon Ai1d Wontorl
ExporitnCI
Nocoooary.
For· No
Information can 1·900-370-4562
Ext. 1952, I 1.m. To t p.m., 7
Doyo, 112.95 Fot.

GALLIPOLIS DAILY
TRIUBNE OR THE DAILY
SENTINEL CLASSIFIEDS.

15.

Jacuzzi , $59 ,000. 614·245-i295.

Homes far Sale

Looki ng For A Deal? Consider A
Bank Reclaimed Mobile Home.
S500 Down Wilt' Approved
Credit ! Groat Selection! Frat
Set-Up And Del ivery! Call El11a
Homa Center, 1-800-580-5711 .

JUDY DEWITT, BROKER .... .. .. ..... 446-8147

WITH AN AD IN THE
I I . --------------

LR, Llrgt Fr. Or, 1 1f2 Baths,
VInyl Slalng, 2 Car Ga rage, CA,

1986 14x70 two bedroom mobile
homa. 304-675-7988

738 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS

"ABRACADABRA!"

·----------------

614-446.()038.

$11111.00. Lampa, Lotlont, Accntorloo. Monthly Paymonto Low
Aa $11.00 Call T~ REE NEW
COkH' CAtalog. 1
2-81W.
WOLFE TANNING BEDS · Com·

~

exam end appllcetlon lnto 1 can

YOU DON'T! MOVE YOUR
MERCHANDISE FASTER
THAN YOU CAN SAY

$3.33

Nice 2 Story House, Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, 2 Baths, Now
30x30 Block Garage, With Chain
Link Fence. Closalo Everything
In Town! Re ed y To Move lntol

lor Sale

SOUTHERN HILLS
REAL ESTATE . INC.

Phl!maclot - · Port41N.
Boulhom Ohio Aroo. lrwhutional
So~lng . lmmocllato ()paning.
Call Of Writs: Pherm~cy Forcoo
Inc., 200t3 ThornpoGn Road,
Laurelvllla OH 43135. 114-332·
190Sj! 114-M7·Z181, Ext. m. Aak

NOW YOU SEE IT, NOW

ONLY

614 ·2 55·6~55 .

Rio Granda, 3 Bedroo m, 3 Lots ,

Real Estate

Real Estate General

resume,
lflCII.Idlna _ NfltencH, cJo BoiC

.'

3 Days • 3 Newspapen • 3 Lines
YOUR CLi\SSIFIED i\D

Babysit In My Home, Juat

Oft 160, On Bultvllte Pike, Ex-

F ral e rna l

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY,
HYLLIAII

WOLFE TANNING BEDS. Com·
merclai-Home
Unite.
From

Rusona~a r11u by the to ,
have raterancH. Call J'O't
Clunl ng S.rvlc•, 8am~pm

:•~lr~on~mw»
~~-----~========~l:lpo1::1:•·~""~4::~31.

Still alive and
got the drive
at 557

Locol Pay Phone Routs. Big
$$$. Prteod Right. 1-1100-695'
1111.

3

Send

T.V. REPAIR, Ml41mo, OX•
pariti1Cod on11, pay negotiable
$7.00hr, min, HEC 3111 W Main,
Po...,.y, OH

Weaver 304-882-2645.

Low AI $11.00, Call Today FREE
NEW Col'"' Catalog. 1-800-228IZU

In Galllpolla: Nur Schools.
Beautiful Interior, Basement ,
Garage , Fireplace, . Possible
Financing. Will Cons1d11 Trade!

Mobile Homes

•mbulatory lderly women In her

Attonllonf Eam Up To $500
WHkly Roodlng Booko And T.V.
Scrlpls At Homo. Many Roadora
NHCiodl Full/Part-Time 1-601·
484-7000 Ext. 261, 24 Hour11.

AVON • All arooo, Call ...rllyn

304-671-2784 or 304-525-7638.

Wm

New Commercial, Home Units,
From $1QO.OO. Lampa lotions,
Aecet.sorl... Monthly Paymantt

32

WANTED

Dozer tor hlrt, call Asy Preston,

.Need aomeone with experience Hou-loanlng. windows, loll
to Work with oldorly lady, llon.- yard work end car clantng.

SHOW DIRECTOR
Notlonol Rooort MorQtlng Firm
S.elut Motivated Perwon For
Booth At CATFISH FESTIVAL,
113-833-8371, 833-9447.

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excollont
Pay,
Bonofho,
Tronoportatlon,
407-2g2-47117,
Ext 571. k.m.-10p.m. Toll
Rolundod.

Retrain
NowiiiSouthustam
BuslnHI College, SPtlnl Valley

$11.50/ltr. For lnlormatlon, call1·
eoG-137-8262 , 1rtenslon 8952.
8:00am-9:00pm, 7 days, $12.95

Tt.ln. Aggrooolvo Individual To

WOLFF TANNING BEDS

Homes lor Sale

I 989 HARLEY DAVIDSON
1984 Schultz 14r:65, 2 BR, all
king $90,000. 614-446-9280. 304· elec tric, underpinning, 2 por·
CUSTOM SOn TAll,
ches, outbu tlding. Mu st be
3br HouH And Buolnou. ln6:75-::..:5=8 06::.--o---,-..,-,---.,--- moved . 614-446-1223.
WI MOTORCYCLE fRAILER .
Spring Valley Ar11 . Business 7 room, 1 Bath, 2 Car Garage. :J
WUI Make Your Payments! A•· Lots &amp; Half Acre, Bidwell. 614- Bank Repo! 80x14 fireplace .
1,700 miles - $9000.
klng $90,000. D14-446-1280, 304· 446.0138.
17&amp;-5101.
.:.:.::..:.:::.::._________ cathedra l cei lings. Must sa il
immodiatoly! Ca lf 1~00-466-76 71
b 14-992-11244
Attentlonl Styllnft Salon For Flatwoods AreaL Pomeroy. 2 ask tor A.r1 or Todd .
Story Home. NIW Kitc:han,
Salel Prime l.oc:a on. Call 614· Bathroom &amp; Carpeting . 17
44«1-11803, 614-446-4355.
Ac ros. 614-445-2359.
11
Help Wanted
FOR
SALE:
CHRISTIAN For sale by owner, 3-BR home
BOOKSTORE growing, ,.ward- with carport, 18x33 above
lng bueinesa. Par1y ralocallng. ground {)OOI, 10x12 storage
014·384·2275, arter 5 &amp;14-384·
tdg .,~, cham link fence on Laurel
2362.
Cliff Hd. Call 614-992-6396.

Training

necessary.

local Vtndlnl Route. For Sale
Choop. t-800- 55-0354.

3br House And Business. In
Spring Valley Area. Bu siness
Will Make Your Payments! As·

Business

CABLE TV JOBS
No

D&amp;A Suppllot, D.l . Or A.C. Harvey, P.O. box 1443, Fairborn,
Ohio 45324.

Lordy, Lordy! lining
good pllc:e to 111 ~.
Are you Hlf mOIIvated, aMr•
ond onloy dolling with
King Tut Is tlvo
-''? A , - n t - h y
ond good phorlt •kllll are •
mull. Roopontlbllhlot lnclForty!!!
tcllvllloo oolatod to crodH, oaloo,

.-

nus with people you know and
NOT to send money through tho
mail unHI you have Investigated
the offering.

1-218-1117·t537 71m·10pm 7ooyo.

FrHinformatlon, Wrltt:

Business

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rwcommands that you do busl-

11

31

2 bedroomt, full b..ament,
enc lostd porch, garage, 2220
Lincoln Ave. 304~75-5301 or

Opportunity

Amozlng Monty Making Plan By
PASE corp., Inc. Allfre In 10

HAIRSTYLIST
NEEDED:
Gourantlod $170 Wook Plus
Morel Paid Vacatlona. 114-4467267.

Happy Ads

21

Business
Opportunity

31

Financial

Pomoroy POSTAL JOBS St1.78$1UO/hr. No up. nlodod. For

1

..

Will Babyalt In My Home Or
Youre,
Anytlmot
GalllpoiiiiiKygor
CrNk
Ar...
Referencu Avellabll . 51'-'458264, or &amp;14-441-1121.

Rehabilitation cantor,_ 3679
Rocklprlngo Road, I'Omtroy,
Ohio 4571i9. Altn: Bill Bill.

Join 1 winning tum u 1 laadlr
In the Financial SanlcH Arena!
Baing a member at our con·
aumer fiNmce tum means

•

•

•

Employment

Monthll

1

,..._,

remember you .

Sadly missed by
daughter. son·in-law
and grandson, Phil,
Shirley ond Don Wise

l

6 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
Before, after echoof. Drop.lnl
wlleomo. 614-4411-8224. Now lnlant Toddler Core, 114-4411-1122l

&amp; Auction

Energetic And EnthusiiStk: In·
dlvidual Needed To Coordinate
The Actlvltlu P~ram For Our

lnMemery

We will

Mia a Paule·, Dey care Center.
Saft, atfOJdabll, chlldcare. M-F

Public Sale

Friend! We Will Be Looking "For

GIYnw•y: 5 Month Ktttena, 2
Gny Whho Longhair. 1 Alloctlonato Bilek Ai1d Wltlt, To
Good Hom ..l 114-44ll-0317.

75 Uncanny
77 Pry sneakingly
78 Soft drink
80Space
81 Offspring
83 Priest's vestment
84 Clemen!
87 Boredom
89 Maltreated
90 Nobleman
91 Babylonian hero
92 Localion
93 Auction word
95 Labor
96 Joints
97 Judgment
99 Rabbit
101 Skillful
105 BoUle stopper
106 Meat dish
107 Cut hair
t 11 Comedian Marlin
t 12 Small factory
t 13 Former Russian
ruler
115 Hidden valley
116 Vessels
118 Narrate
119 Norse god
121 Burst forth
123 Math term
125 Spirited horses
126 Wet
127 Handles
129 Flower
130 Eagle's nest
131 Series of games
132 Rubbish
134 Pismire
136 Gel up
137 " Oon'l Drink
the_ ..

VIcinity

All Yard Sales Mutt Be Paid In
Advance . Deadline: 1:OOpm the
day before the ad Is to ~n
Sunday adlllon- 1:00pm Friday:
Mond ay
edition
10:001.m.
Saturday.

8

21

Wanted to Do

Aotoo. No Job To Smolll 814·
3'111·2142.

Numeroua To Llstl Note: Terms:

FFM private rNdlng 1aaon1 tor

K-hound, 1-yr !lid,
watch dog.114-lt2-3~

&amp;

Sunday Times-Senunei-Page-03

Polnt Pleasant, WV

8u1h ~ S1rvH:1. A1a.anebl1

Wedemeyer'• Auetlon SerYic•,
Rio Grande, Ohio 114-245-1'152.

C1sh. All Stloa Final, No
Rolundsf
Wodnosday
All
Remaining ltoma Will Bo Sold At
Half Prlcol Como And Bring A

Jit70.

18

Middleport

Yard Sale: Seplombor 16th, 11'1h,
1Bih. 7-7 In Konauga Across 9
Wanted to Buy
From Supor Amorleo Station AI ::----:-.,----:---...:..-Resldlne• Of Dana Ralke. Drive Complete houethold or btatMf
Caratully, 1 Hlavy Traffic Areal Any lypa of furniture, epSigns ' Will 'Be Potted. Parking pllances, antique's, ate. Al.a
Will Be On Lawn Of Home. appralul•vallabM. 114~245-5152.
"Eorly Birds" Wolcomo - Will
used
bicycle,
Have CoffM For Youf hema To Boys good
Be Sold: Display Unlla, Lamps, elfenlngs 614-247-2813
...ny Poporbackl (Ho~oquln, Wanted all Junk end ecr1p met·
Romance, A Few W81llma, al, 304-895~38 .
K«.;bon ltomo, Ulonolla"-' Many
Are Ntw!), Pctii'Pena, tupper. Wantod to buy, Standing tlmbor,
ware, Stemwlte, Glauware, Bob Wllllomo &amp; Sons 114-9112Dlshu, Plastlcware, Decorator 5449.
Pl1tos, Clothing, Group Naw
Sockl (l,adiHIMons), Cornor Wantld To Buy: Junk Autos,
Sholl Modlclno Cablnot, Small Scnp Molal And Froa Romonl
File Box, PIJStlc Buckelst Nice From Weat VIrginia. 114-441·
Mens CoatiiVetll, Mena ..Ieana, 0013.
Flatware, Bud VaHaiFiower
Top Prlcot Paid: All Did U.S.
Pots, Books, What•Nots Pic· Coins,
Gold Ringo, Sllvor Colnl,
lures, Soma Jewelry, Mlscal·
Col
no. M. T.S. Coin Shop,
Gold
taneoua Ho~sehold Goode, And 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis.
Many
Smaller
ltema
Too

Announc e m e n ls

WriRhl

lull time auctionHr, ~plate
auction 11rvica. LICMNd Ohio,
Woat Virginia, 304-773-li~.

&amp; VIcinity

Probate Judge

I.

•

~

Rick PoarsoJ Aucll011 Company,

Yard Sale

Charles Edward Burgou.
Case #19,098, Oct . 16.
1991 , 10:00 a.m .
THOMAS S. MOULTON

.

.

Found

Buick Electra. Wtll otter a
reward tor tt It taund! Please
cal l 614·992-5712.

m.

KIT ' N' CARl. YLE ® by Larry

Pomeroy,

LOST! 15" hubcap tor 1963

on ·c -7

4 " Dr._ ..

&amp;

/

llpolls, OH-

Giveaway

Lost

I'

15, 1991

Miniature Oachttnmd, Mt l•,
FrN To Good Homel 614·2455826.

James
Homer Phdtip s,
Case #19, 347. Oc1 15,
1991 , 10 :DOo .m
Emerson E. Evans. Ca se
No. 19.3B3, Oct 16. 1991
10:00 a.m .
·
Sharman
A.
Par10n s.
Cue #19,407. Oct . 15.
1991 , 10:00 a.m
Fannie GtaslbtJm . Case
#19,596, Oct . 15. 10:00 a.

Case

#18,442, Oct . 15, 1991 ,
I O:OOa .m.
Timothy E. Siders, Case
#18.513, Oct . 1&amp;. 1991 ,
10:00o.m .
Au l.add Rucker , Case
#1B,5B2, Oct . 15, 1991 .
10:00a .m .
Elmer Arthur Finch. Case
#18,617, Oct . 16, 1991 ,
10:00 a.m.

accrue. Fully registered

4

Public Notice

SUNDAY PUZZLER

• • •
• • • • • • •
• • • • •

• •

September

Public Notice

By. The Hun.tington
In 1986 my friend Dennis Spooner
Na1lonal Bank, Trustee
died at 54. Though he began his adult
Public Notice
Cleveland. Ohio
life as a professional soei:er player in
Augull 30, 1991
London. he is much better known as a
SEPT. 16, 1991
NOTICE OF
scriptwriter lor television drama seREDEMPTION
ries such as Jason King , Hart to Hart,
City of Gallipolis. Ohio .
Firll Mortgage Hospital
The Avengers , Sting Ray, ThunderPublic Notice
Revenue Bonds 7 .825%
birds - the list goes on and on.
Doted
Decomber
1,
1969,
Spooner, who played a sound game
Due October 1. 1999
PUBLIC NOTICE
ol bridge. also wrote an amusing, sellCUSIP No . 363847CG7
TO All PERSONS INTER·
deprecating column called "Diary of a
NotM:e Ia hereby given that ESTED IN THE FOLLOWPalooka ." Today's hand is taken from s 1 80,000.00
principal ING estates pending in the
one ol these.
amount of City of Galllpolia Gellie
County
Probate
Look al only the South cards. With First Mortgage Hospital Re - Court. The fiduciary in each
both sides vulnerable, you hear the
dealer on your left open three clubs.
Your partner I who has shown herself
to be an overbidder) comes in with
three spades, and your right-hand opponent doubles lor penalties. What do
you do?
Most of us would pass and, in this
deal. be relieved to see partner bring
home the contract. Some would at See Answer
tempt to show a red two-suiter, either
by cue-bidding lour clubs or (in kami- ACROSS
88 Narrow opening
ka ze style) by redoubling, ·expecting"
89 Assistan t
partner to treat it as a request to be
1 Goddess of the
90 Under
rescued . Spooner did none of these
nunt
92 Nets
things - he bid four diamonds. His
6 Pitchers
94 Shoe polishers
partner raised lo seven diamonds.
t 1 Defraud ; swindle
98 Tiny particle
After East doubled, North said. as
16 " In God We - "
99
Lease
she tabled her hand, "I must have the
21 Simpleton
tOO TV's Severinsen
right cards." As you can see, she did.
22 Earn
102 Admirable
Spooner ruHed the spade lead. drew
23 Chief artery
103
Opp. ol WSW
trumps with the aid of the winning fi24 Propor1ion
104 Uncooked
nesse and established dummy's spade
25 Spread for dry1ng
105 Household pels
suit.
26 Glowing piece
106 Window lrame
East was unwise to double three
of coal
paris
spades. II he had passed. that would
28 Advenlure
108 Family member:
probably have been the final contract.
stories :
But I don't suppose he expected the opcolloq.
colloq.
ponents to bid and make a grand slam
109 Printer ' s measure
30 Ship's prison
when he held two ares.
110 Running
32 Behold!
111 Additional
33 Tantalum symbol
112 Scholar
34 Kind
114 Conducted
35 River in Scotland
116 Footlike part
36 Mixture
117 Essence
37 Mountain pass
119 Pronoun
38 Ancient
120 Clamping device
40 Winter vehicles
122 Deprive of oflice
42 Small rug
124 Antlered animal
43 Under lhe covers
125 Presentation
44 Army meal
126 Leave
45 Female sheep
128 llluminaled
47 Substance
129 Cloy; satiate
•t
J
49 Encourage
131 Cease
50 Emerge
132 Sailor: colloq.
victorious
133 Rustic
51 Result; outcome
135 Adage
54 Three leet
138 Moray
55 Not at home
139 Tavern drink
56 Soft; soothing
140 Limb
59 In music. high
141 Writing
4
60 Vat
implemenl
62 Puzzles
142 Sun god
64 Slop
143 Allernate word
65 Cu11ing IOOI
144 Detest
66 Proceed
145 Blue-red
67 Quarrel
147 Declare
69 Conspiracies
149 River island
70 Tumble
150 River in A !rica
71 Friend, in Pari s
152 Depressions
72 Song
154 Armada
74 Trap
156 Fall into d1suse
76 Guido's high note
158 Long lor
77 TransacliOn
159 Watery snow
78 Health res.9rts
160 Frogs
79 Endless times
161 liquid m easure
82 Daze; stupor
DOWN
84 Damp
85 Noose
1 Aloresa1d thing
86 Jog
2 Model

..: ~

• •

Serial

Cosh.

Vulnerable: Bo!h
Dealer: West

• •

• •

#1FABP41E6HF214627
19BB Corolca 4 Dr.

guarantees.
The term a of rhe sale are

•

t

#1GBDM15ZXGB167689
1987 Must•ng LX 2 Dr .

1B3CA44K7JG326739
All vehicles will be sold
''AS IS' ' with no warranty or

'Q8-'75J
+JI08 754

I

Serial

Serial

SOUTH

South

#1GKCT18R9H0516446
19B6 Cadilac El Dorado
Serial
#1G6EL67B6FE676877
1986 Chevy Aotro Von

Serial

•

•

•

PUBLIC NOTICE
On Saturday, September
21. 1991 ,at10 :00AM . The
Home National Bank, Racine, Ohio, will offer for sale
at Public Auction on the
Bank Parking Lot the following Vehicles:

ThP ye ar aheao •S n o t hkely 10 be run-ol thc -m•ll lor you Numerous. exc tllng
eiJen ts could oe 111 tne o fftng . ot wh tch
mo st should be hen ehc•al

&amp;'Your
Wcmrthday

wv

. ,·' " t't: ~~S I

' '"le:r,oa s .t, :t d.:j tJ it' ~ ':' .J C:.orn::&gt; 1·sn 1 our
g oc~ . s Nf' ve n''·P.I e s-:. 1n 1 ~ .~ '101 a smart

BERNICE.
BEDE OSOL

Po1m Pleasant ,

.

PEACEFUl &amp; PRIVATE
And comfortable living is whal you'll find in this
attractive 3 b edroom ranch, 3 baths, formal din ing , family room, equipped kitchen, 2 car
garage and a detached 23 'x36' garage .
Enclosed sunporch over 4 ac res, pond and
more. Cily schools.
12926

9-1
He's just HAPPY

be alive
Cuz this

NEWI - NEW! - NEW!
Th1s modular is only 9 months old and Situ ated
on over 1-112 acre , 3 bedrooms. 2 1ull baths.
living room, sludy, tormal dining, lamily room,
study with shelving , allached 28 'x30' garage.
Elec tric heat pump. Make an appointment
today to view this beautiful home with every
ex tr a possible . Immed iate po ssess1ont Rt o
Grande area
¥291 9
FARM
49 acres of land includ1ng lwo developed
homesiles. On e 1979 mob1le home t4 'x70'
purchased by present own ers . The olher home
sit e has electric. runn ing water and aerob1c
septic system all in place. Farm cons ists of
appro•. 17 tillable acres, 15 pastu re acres . 17
acres ol woodland , tobacco base and stocked
pond for recreation . Let us show you this one .
12903
THE REDMAN
Located on SA 35 near Rio Grande. Busi ness
only includes complele inventory. pool !abies .
1uke box, eq~ipmen l . and other bus1ness chal·
tels. Lease includes a 2 bedroom apartment to
assist with m onthly rent. Poss ible owner financIng . Call now for an appointmenl at th1s super
opportunily.
*2699
HAVE YOU BEEN OVERlOOKING
THIS ONE?
Then call today to see this ex trem el y nice, 3
bedroom, 2 baih ranch . Full basemen t, fam1ly
room . eleclric heat pump. App ro• t acre lawn
And so much more. Call toda y to see this onel
#2905
ACREAGE
13+ acres. Green Township Lisled al $10 .000
Lots of development around lhe area. Some
land is wooded. Small stream runnmq across
property and has a small pond Homesile is .
graded oft. Has electric and rural water avail able. Call us now.
•2927

YOU CAN AFFORD TO TAKE A LOOK
AT THIS HOME - ONLY $22,100
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
J bedroom ranch. eal-in kitchen. balh . ut1lity
and more . Approx 1 acre lawn. C;ill to take a
peep at !hiS one!
N2930
CHEAPIE, $4,000
1972 Schull mobile home wlexpando. 3 bedrooms, living room , 2 porches, situated on a
renled lot lor $75 .00 per month.
12910
LOCATION IS IDEAL!
Super building lots . Approx . 6 acres each. level .
12933
rural water available, ci ly schools .
PRICE REDUCED! MULTI- PURPOSE
Excellent locatio n . Residential or commercial
propeny. 35 Wes l area. Vinyl sided 3 bedroom
ranch Over 1 acre lo t and appro x. 1,100 sq. h .
comm ercial bu ild1ng
12909
BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
With thts 2 or 3 bedroom home . Remodeled
v1nyl si ding. s10rage building, 1-t/2 acre plus
excell ent gardon area Tobacco allolment
Raccoon Townsh1p Unbcal.lble P"ce $29,000.
Call today .
12895
ACREAGE - 35 WEST AREA
Ideal development property Over tOO acres .
Land lays well , panially wooded Call lor com·
12882
pleie hSIIng .
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT
IMMEDIATElY!
To vtew thi s 6 acre m int-farm Remodeled 3
bedroo m vi nyl s1dod ran ch sty le home w ith
garage, in-ground po ol , larg e barn and
numerous ou1build1ngs. Soveral leet of road
12907
fronlage .•Beaulilully ma,nlained
OWNER MUST SELL!!!

You must make an a ppointment to see this nice
3 bedroom home localed 1n tho heart ol Crown
Cily. Above -ground pool with nice deck area.
Pr~ced in the $40's.
t2i34

To

WANIED! NEW LISTINGS!

BIRTHDAY
Makes him

561

. -·...

~ ~·-

., ...... -...... .

·- - - ~- --

... . . ...

_..... ··-- _.. . . ...

· · -~ - · - -

~ - · · ·~

.

- --. · ~

··-

~

.

~

.. .. . - - -

· ·-· - .... ·- --

--. ..---. . . ...... ___
~-

. ~· ~ ·

..........

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

~~~~~~~----- ~----:

�'

'

Page-04-Sunday T•mcs-S en t,ne .

34

Pom e, oy-

I '

Business
Buildings

44

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE on
2nd Ave., Galllpollo Clooo 10

Apartment
lor Rent

44

Apartments For Fklnt, 614·446·

8221

Court House 1 room, 2 rooms
3 rooms, 4 rooms All nlctly

decorated,

M•oa, e po n - Gall •polls OH - Pomt Pleasant ,

Cottage, good for 1, Clrpttld,
stove rtfng, bath quHn eize
couch, AJC, total elect, 304-675-

air

conditioning
your Wlter &amp; HWir billa,. p11d
Make your choice now No

6042.

quot• over the phone, you

446~8531

44

Apartment
lor Rent

Gracious living. 1 end 2 bid·
room apartmentt at Village
Maner
and
Rlveraidt

In Mlddllport, From
$1116. Callli1HV2-7787. EOH.
Apa~monlo

New 1-BA, lumlehed aptrttnent

In Mtddloport, 614-192-6221

mult ... tham Phone tor an
oppolnlmenl I14-446-711Gi day,

Nice clean currently a\lalleblt
apt, 1 bedroom for elderly, handicapped and disabled River
Btnd Plect, 304·882--3121 E.O.H

tvl

B

wv

One Bodroom Apo~mont Living

Room Fumlehltd, Complet•
Kitchen Shower In Bath, Gas

Heat, Air Condlllon, Wntler And
Dryer, Gooc:l Neighborhood
Reftrtnct And Dtpoalt Re·

qulrld. 614-448-1370 Aftor Sp.m.

Small ,br Apartment, 7 Court
StrMt, k.ltehen Witt'! Stove
Aefrlgerato~ $185/mo Plui
Dtpoett, i.ltmu... A•f•r•nce

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Four lola 100x150, city water

and .. puc system. pi•••• call
Somerville Really, 304-675-3030

or &amp;75-3431

· Lolo I A&lt;1rogo For Solo. Lond

~ Contract

&amp;pm
~ Morcor

614.'M7.!104C

ahr

Bollom Sub-division,

one acre Iota. Rt 2 kontaga,
price reduced, city water, 304-

'
'
:
•

57&amp;-2331.
O.J. Whltl Rood, 2 Aeroo
Woodin Building Lot, Rtody To
Build On. Aulrlelld $7,1100.
114·246-115111.

14170 thrM bedroom trailer

AUCTION

large country lot, Bud Chanlr1

Ad, Polnl Pluunl, 304-67S-

350i after S·OOPU

11111, 14x70 mobllo homo 304-

&amp;'IS-n&amp;l

'

THURSDAY, OCT. 3

2 BA mobllo homo $245 mo.,
pluo ulllltiH, $125 dopooh In
tho country 614-446-38fig.
2br Mobile Horne

From Rt.

Rafarencta

And Dopooh Aoqulrld. &amp;14-2561022.

7 take Rt. 218

about

2 miles

Kriner Rood. Turn right on Kriner, go

to

H.

1

mile and watch for sale signs.

3-BA mcblle home epprox. 3-ml

SMITH

DAN
Oh1o Uc. "57-68·1344
W. V. L1c. "51 S

ITEMS ALONG WITH A FEW GUNS AND

3llr Mobllt Homo. Rotoronco
And Dopoolt Roqulrld. &amp;14-446-

TOOLS

0527.

SA

2br Unfurnlthed Whh Stove.
, DepoehL Rtftrencee, In Gel-

llpollo. NO Polo. Coli 8-12, 4-1
' 614-446-2410
'

143, &lt;Ill oftor llpm 304-882:

SALE

CONDUCTED BY R. E. KNOTTS, SR.
OWNER AND AUCTIONEER 57-63-0776

2i04.

UnfurnlshM

ajMrtment,

2nd

No pet•. Refertnoe and deposit,

614-802-2275 oltor 1:30pm.
682-2566
North 4th Mlddloport, Ohio 2 Very Nlcl Garag~ &amp;p8rtment
bodroom furnished apt, dapaalt
and reference required, 304.8112·

2566

B

lneludu
Garage,
$240Jmo:
Deposit Required 814-44&amp;.2174
BtlwMn 6p m And 10p m
'

Pome roy - M ,oa. e po " - Ga l,pol, s OH - Poon t Pl e asant ,

Apartment
for Rent

54

Completely Furmehed Small
Hou••· No Pete, Ytrd, Plus

Ullllllos. $2~mo

45

614·446~338 .

Furnished
Rooms

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

C AUCTION

AT lETA FETTY RESIDENCE
33184 Maloons Run, langsville, Oh1o
DIRECTIONS From Pomeroy Oh take SR
124 West thru Langsvolle First gravel road to
rogh1 after lea Jong Langsvtlle (approx 2 mo )
Sogns woll be posted
VAN 1981 Dodge Ram Convergon Van 360 Auto Runs
and looks good New ball101nts
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES Exira noce old wockeo
rocker stra~ ght chair and table. Depressoon 4 pc bedroom
su1te. oak rocker oak flatwall cupboard . armed rocker
noce wool throw rugs, carved hall round table oak record
cabo net. 4 donong chaors, dres song screen. Sellars tea and
coffee cann1sters. pictures. 1933 World's Faor kn1fe
w/M1ckey Mouse. cheese preserver Houston B1v 1ce
pock. 15 gal stone far mmoature duck collection. German
ste1n collection, pewler stem collectoon. wall mmor, Uno
versal 5¢ m1lk bottle
COINS Walking loberty Halves Solver Domes (mcludong
1898) Silver Quarters. 15 00 and $1 00 Silver CertifiCate
1944 U S 20 Centavos
MISC Franklin fireplace. G1bson Rototoller. 30 ~al gas
hot water heater dishwasher elec111c range. "new' head
ers for 350 Chevy, 2 hospotal beds, hllngcabonet. stereo.
pots, pans. m1sc. dishes wronger washer, mosc cha11s .
cannong 1ars. large bra1ded rug Home 1ntenor.large selet·
tton of nuls and bolts Plus lois more nol unpacked from
aunt s estate

FETTY

and Others

AUCTIONEER: Col. W. Keith Molden
b14-742-2048
lie. Ohio 4318- W.V. 8113
APPRENTICE: HANK ClElAND, L~&lt;. Ohoo 5028

CASH - POSITIVE I.D.
lUNCH BY RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

614-446-VIiO.

Slllplng room• with cooking
Also trall., apace All hook-ups.
CaH 1fter 2·00 p m , 304-773-

2010-John Doer Bulldozer &amp;·way
blade, $6900 614-247·4861,

614-742·2562

675·2619

27U gal luel 011 tank 304·773·

5651, Mooon WV

46 Space for Rent

Guns, guns, guns, 304·675·6132

'

Country Mobile ~orne Par~.
Route 33, NOr1h of Pomeroy
Lots, rentet., perts, ealtt Cell

614-n2·7'17V.

Treiler Space For Rant · 614-446-

1052.
Merchandise

D. C. Metal Sales, Inc,
Cannelburg, Inc 45719
Spec•ahz•ng 1n Pole
Build1ngs
Des•gned lo meel your
needs Any SIZe
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Build•ngs and
Package Deals Save
Hundreds, even Thousands
of Dollars
Local Sales Represen1at1ve
DONNA CRISENBERY
E S R, Box 166
Gall1pohs, Oh•o 45631

Household
Goods

1i cu ft. Gibson refrigerator
deluxe tutu,.., 2 )'I'll ofd Cor~
bin &amp; Snyder Furniture 614-4461171.

-

County Appliance, Inc Good
uNd appllancet, TV ttts Open

8 o.m. to 5 p.m Mon .Sat. 614446-1890, 127 3rd. Avo Galllpollo, OH
Fill StHI eofl, chair, I0\111111
$600. OuHn olzo box oprfngs &amp;
moltroM {brond now) $300. »4675-1431.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

For Sale 11171 Mobile Homo,
Very Good Condllionl Asking,

5877

51

54

2 14' Rally Whtals S-15 S-10 2
15 x7' Rally WheBI~ G M' 4 New
General T1res, 195·75-14 Frame
Tra1lar H1tch, 5·15, S·IO Bumper
Guards, S-15, S·IO 614·446·2415
Morning, Evonlnga

27' ton spead blko $75 21 cu 11
ratugarator $425 Water Sof.
taner $145 Salt propel mower
$45 Cantral a1r cond $475 l04·

Floom• for rent • week or month
Starting It $120/mo Gallla Hotel

SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 10:00 A.M.

Not responsible lor

44

44

Apartment
for Rent

floor, Pomeroy. 4-Rooma. bath.

OWNER: LETA

CASH
POSITIVE ID
REFRESHMENTS

2 Bedroom, Ewlngton ArM. 614· For 1111 or rtnt tnller a 3 acres

388-8710.

OWNER:
B. (Benny)
PERRY

AUCTIONEER:

SELLING MISCELLANEOUS HOUSEHOLD

from Pomeroy or Middleport.

41 Houses lor Rent

free.

1:30 PM.

114-IIV2-5811

Rentals

LOCATED IN CHESTER. OHIO, JUST OFF
ST. RT 7 TAKE ST RT. 248 TO BOY
SCOUT CAMP RD . WATCH FOR AUCTION SIGNS. MR. PERRY IS NO LONGER
ABLE TO STAY ALONE.
HOUSEHOLD Kelv1nalor gas range wood lableand6 ch a&lt;r s
Shake and Bake reclme~ coffee and end labl es l&lt;vm g room
su11e Arm slron g 20 000 BTU aulo healer 8 000 BTU 110
aor cond111oner 3 pc John son Carper bedroom su1le 8/ W
TV chest ol drawer s, base cab1net stack shelves p ~elure s
electnc applian ces m1sc d1 shes pot s and pants and Imen
slands Hoover convertible sweeper reel mer wood c ab~n e t
servm g cart etc
CARS 1981 Cougar and 1971 Cutla ss Supreme 2 do01
75 000 m1les
MISC 2 horn trad•s, l T 10 Seen r1d1ngmower, new grGss
catcher, W1u:ard shrrdder, miK. tools, Chrntmus l1ghh and

44

bedroom lurnlshld tpt, retertn·
cea •nd deposit required. 304·

PU

10:00 A.M.

September 15, 1991

North 3rd St, Middleport, Oh1o, 1

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SAT., SEPT. 21, 1991

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Apartment
lor Rent

814-446-4021

PUBLIC AUCTION

8

44

Apartment
tor Rent

September 15, 1991

PH. 614-256·6518

$4,000. 814-256-6237

Outen wood cook atov•
$200 00, wood burner $250 00
mtn'a lovl'a S01 alze 30w-321,
~omt

Honda Power Plant EX-1000
Sako 30.06 Rlflo, $700; Sav1g1
22 Magnum, $150; Boar Com·
pund. 614-446-8111.

approximately 300 previously
v1awad movl11, 614·'M2·2903
Husky Home Lite and MeCul·
loch chain sawt marked down
Sept . Salt. Siders Equipment,
Henderson, WV. 304-675-1421.
little glr1l clothing. Large
•75 u
I ransm I51Ion. 304"" · t4- ·
On• Antique Ubr1ry Tablt, $100,
One Antique Drop Ltat latua,
$75; ona Antique Srall Bed,
$400, One New O.humldlller,
Navar Used, $50, One New Shop
Vac Never U11d, $50. 614-367-

7401
Reconditioned Washer~, Oryora
Guaranteed prompt aenlce for
all makll, mod•l• Thl Wsaher
Dryer Shoppl 614-446-2G44

Real Estate General

•'

.·

OHIO TOWNSHIP - 53Y, acres more or
less, very n1ce ranch slyle home offers 314
bedrooms, LR, k1lchen, bath, lull basement,
carpet, deck, garage, s1d1ng Tobacco base
and tobacco barn Addibocal land

OFFICE 992-2886
HOME 992-5692

STATE ROUTE 218 - 1 263 acre roil Very
noce home offers 3 BAS, 1 bath hvong
room, kitchen range and refngerator,
fireplace. c1ty water basement, c1ty

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
_ MIDDLEfORT. OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER•
RT. 7 - Approx 16 acres land w11h an 8 room 4 bedroom
farm hOuse, drilled well, and TPC water Located near the
Eastern H1gh School
$30,000

sthools
VACANT LAND 4 SALE ...84 A , MIL, Sect
34, Morgan Twp. $27,300, some farm land
EXTRAORDINARY - 112 A mil, beauulul
large log home, 4 BAs. 2il balhs, LA. kitchen, DR, FR. 3 !~replaces Call for more
detaols

FIVE POINTS- A DREAM HOME- Thos beautolul stone
house has a glgantK; hvong room woth a fireplace, a dimng
room w1th a fireplace, and a lull basement with a foreplace, bar, and dance floor Large bedrooms wolh cedar
lined closets Comes wuh range, refngerator, compactor,
dryer, and washer Tho approx 4 acre yard woth a large
lake, weeping wonows, and mce shrubbery looks hko a
park Also has a 2 car garage, decking, and much more
This,. a must see homo
$128,000

ROOMY HOME- V1llage ol V1nton, 2 story
5 BR, LA. DR, FR kitchen carpet, ctly
water 2 rm bldg lormerly used as oH1ce
Shelter house

POMEROY -The buSiness world could be opened to you
you purchase thiS commercoal bulid1ng on Maon s~eet It
has large spaaous rooms on the forst floor and plenty of
atorage space on the second floor Also a now tumaco
and carpebng
ALL FOR $30,000

n

COMMERCIAL LOT IN VILLAGE OF RIO
GRANDE -All ut1htles ava1lable. great place
to start new bus1ness 85)1150 m/s

CHESTER - Scout Camp Road - Cute and feels l1ko
home wtth two to throe bedrooms, beauhlul old lash&lt;on
woodwork, and fireplace, two enclosed porches,
detached one car garage, and maontenanco lree sodtng
$21,000
POMEROY PIKE - Talk about a beaub!IJI voow w1th seclu1100, you should see th1s 1979 2 bedroom Uberty trailer
that's really been taken care of, then you should see thos
41 acre dream Has 7 pasoure acres, 7 fenced acres and
14 bllable acres Has lois of storage buold1ngs, and two
car garage It's really n1C&gt;! Th1s one won'llast long Even
has a satellite dish
JUST $35,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Rutland Soreet - A mce 2 bedroom
12x60 mobole home Sitting on a 126 x 200 lot. It has a
niCS porch and small outbu11dmg
ALL FOR $15,000.

EVERYTHING YOU COULD WANT - Th1s
sect1onal home os located fJJSI a low
mmules from Green Elem School, 4 BAs,
2 baths, LR, equipped kitchen, DR,
loreplaco, central aor, 16x32 pool wlhoater,
covered patio, 20x24 sheller house
CONVENIENT LOCATION - COMFORT·
ABLE HOME -Just at tho edge of town thos
homo offers 3 BRs, bath, kitchen, LA, DR,
24x30 garage Noco shade trees Very well
kept
NICE STARTER HOME -Located JUS I at
tho edge ol town ThiS home tealures 3
bedrooms bath, hvong room, kitchen, d1n1ng
room and a full basement F1ve m1nutes to
downtown

restnctJons

36 ACRES, mil, Sec 22 Spnnglleld Twp,
old Rt 160 mobolo homo on property
MOBILE HOME and 82 acres mil,
$14,500 2 BAS, LR. k1tchen wlrange,
relng , washer and dryer rural water
6 49 A , mil, Seclion 34, Raccoon Twp ,
lronls on SA 325 $25,000
BLOCK OF SECOND all land lyong
&amp; Thord 2 bldg on proper·
lol has been cleared recondy

MIDDLEPORT- Powell Street - Pnmeland pnme area
What more could you ask lor 4 52 acres ~~ mostly flat
land that could be used lor resodenhal or possoblo com
meraal purposes
ASKING 527,900.
REEDSVILLE - Co. Rd. 50 - Approx 45 acres of nrce
laying land Approx 2 acres hllable, 10 acres pasoure 35
aaes timber Water and eloclnC available
$25,000.

..

_.... ....__...._

...__

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

..._

~

~-

"---

·--

66 acres

m/1,

Hamson

Twp . 16x24

equopped shed, 8x8 shower house, county
water and electriC, some farm equtpment

CHILLICOTHE ROAD - Ranch style home
offers 3 BAs, bath,kotchen w/range, relnq,
washer, dryer, laundry rm Gas heat, crty
ullhbes PRICED AT $29,9001
NEW LISTING- 3 BR, all bnck ranch woth
lull basement and t 25 acres, mil Green
Twp Just a lew mmu1es from town on SA
141
MABELINE DRIVE - Half way between
town and hosp1tal Very mce home offers 3
BAs bath, kitchen, LA, FR lull basement, 2
FPs, c1ty ulihtoes
VILLAGE OF VINTON . . . PRICE REDUCED ... 4 BAs, 1· 112 baths, LA, DR, unattached 18x29 garage North Gall1a school
diStnCt

WELL KEPT RANCH STYLE HOME Oilers 1,382 sq It 3 BAs, bath, kitchen, LR.
FA, elec hear Altached garage Very

GOOD IN-TOWN LOCATION - Just a
block from grocery store N1ce home offers
LA, kttchen, BAs, bath, large front porcfl

attractive

VILLAGE OF CENTERVILLE- N1ce 2 s!ory
oilers 3 BAs, bath, LR, kotchen, DR, gas
heat 2 foreplacos S1tuated on 1 850 aero

29.8 A., mil Sec 32 Morgan Twp , lronts
on SA 160 and Wilder Ad . n1ce home s1tes
or tra1ler Site $16,900

SMALL HOUSE AND 3 LOTS- Located on
B1dwell 3 ' BAs, LA, kotchen, bath, carport,
$21,000

161 ACRE FARM - Largo bnck homo 6
BAs, 2 baths, LA, kolchen, FR, elec heat,
carpet, property lronls on Raccoon Creek
and Lottle Raccoon, tobacco base can be
purchased w1th more or less land

WALK TO ALL THE HOME FOOTBALL
GAMES- Very n1ce home 1ust a lew blocks
from downtown, 3 BAs, 11, baths, LA, OR,
gas heat

or retirement home

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSI·
NESS- Plus laundry Located on St At 35

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP- Beautoful home
Slluated on 3 605 acres m~ Four BAs, 2Y.
baths, equipped kttchen, DR, LA, FR, cant
vac system, large stocked pond, beauutul
deck work Call lor more detarls

HERMAN NORTHUP RD. - Green
Township, 3 tracts approx 20 acres each
1 traer approx 5 acres Call per pnce
HOME ANO 17.6 ACRES MIL, GREEN
TWP.- Home offers 3 BAs, bath, LR, k1tch
on, attached 2 car garage Noce pauo

21 69 ACRES m~. Sugar Creek Ad , Ohto
Twp - Home offers 3 BAs 2 baths
kttchen, 2 car garage, new barn
'
FAMILY SIZE HOME - Attractove home
located at Centenary offers 4 BAs 2 baths
kllchen LA Atlached garage and """' lawn'

Hot Point diehw11her, OuHn
Ann 110ft, good cond, antique
deak, 614·'742·2524.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

CONCRETE BLOCK GARAGE IN VERY NICE RANCH STYLE
VINTON - 28x32 Concrete floors, 220 LOCATED ON STATE ROUTE 160--3
olectnc servoce, lorced aor fuel oil furnace, BRs, LR. kitchen w/range, refrigerator, one
car attached garage 100x300 ft lot
two 7x9 overhead doors, one walk-on door

JUST THE HOME FOR YOUII Very mce all
bnck home located on Kalhy St., JUSt off SR
35, new kitchen, 3 BAs, LR, din1ng, 1Y. bath.

RIVERVIEW FROM YOUR OWN BACK
YARD - Very moe all bnck home offers 3
BAs, LR w/hreplace, eqUipped kitchen. full

s

30 5 ACRE MIL
ct 34 R
bar~. pond, ~early n:w fenoos.accoon Twp •

____...._.........____ ...____
_..

-~......!--·-·

1506.

Reglatarad Black And White,
liver And White, Dalmatlon
Pups For Sale. Roady October

61 Farm Equipment

304~75-1&amp;58

180 MF Tractor, Sherpl With 6
Foot Bu1h Hog , 14,6SO, 50 MF
With New 5 Foot Bush Hog
13,195. Owner Will Flnencel 614:

Grade Holstein Halters, SDOO
Each Bred To Llmoualn Bull

286-6522

1984 500c: International Dozer,
Nnl good, 6-way blede, winch,

3rd., 614-446-1756.

614-912·2384, or 092·3959

Registered
bl•ck
poodle,
tamale, 2 112 yra old, stlots, eall
1fttr Spm 304-8S2·2904

For Sale· Corn Plcktl'll 1 1 And 2

Squirrel dog, 304-675-6132

Musical
Instruments

Row Whool Dloko, Pickup Disk,
Whoot Drlllo, Square Boloro,

Utility Trailer, ~orso Trailer,
Standard Brtd Colt, Howe's
Farm Machinery, Rt. 124 And
Mayhew Road, Jackson, Ohio

'

614-245-0625.
Pure bt'Hd registered Llmouain

cow

a

celt pa!rt,

cows

holloro. 614·992-61go

&amp;

Band aqulpmant, Bundy Alto
and shoos (81/2 womens) 304-

675-2112

Plano, $25 614.:188-9017 Ahor
5pm
Selmer Clarinet &amp; carrying caso,

1 yr old $2SO, 614-698-e129.

M3-6380
1979 Cadllloc El Dorodo. Good
Condition S800
Ahor4p m

814-258.e278,

1979 Chrysler Cordobl 360,
aulo, new everything, $1400

64

lint Ponllac l..tmans, 301, V-8 ,
good condition, call ener 6pm

Hay &amp; Grain

,.,.--,-...:._ _ _ _ _ __
Hay for salt 40-451b bales
mulch S.iO, grass S1 00, ml~:ad
S1 10-1.25. Cell614-74~ 2083

614-~9-23711

1981 Mercury Couger, must Ht,
good WOrk Clr, c;.aU 1nc:t IIIVt

ma.. agt 304-675-5811

Transportation

1082 Oldt Cutl111 $1,750 304·

675-S301

614·1112·2675.

tractort &amp; Implements. Buy,
1111, tradt, 8.00.5 00 Wllkdaya,
Sat. 1111 Noon

1977 Ford LTD1 good mechan1·
eel cond , gooa body, $400, t14-

days 614-992·2155. ohor S 30pm,
call 304-675-6055

T 0 Farguson tractor, good
tires, In good condition, $1600,

Jlm'o Form Equlpmom, sA 3s,
W•st Galllpolia, 614446·V777,
Wide stltetlon new &amp; used term

•liver/silver,

R1g1sterld Morgan stud horse
cen 614-446-6078 wa~kends
only.

614-286-5944.

Sax, books, whit• pants, gldva1

Corveltt,

1983 Camaro, 11-6, auto Floor
lumact, Flrepl1et Insert 114·

:::71::::--;:A-:u-:-t_o_s,l~o,..r7S,a_le_ _

992-7184

1973

good 1984 Cam oro Z-28 T~opo
air, oil powor, Supor Shorp Carll
614-742·2357 or 1112-23116

1970 Falrtane 500 2 Door, 302
Automatic, $700 614-245-9495

$1000 00, 614·992·

MOB

7870

Real Estate General

'

1983 Camtro, runs I

look•

Real Estate General

c on ven 1en ce plu s pres t1 ge and pl easure 1n

places avadablr l or th1 ~ pr •c e m good rond d10n

a bn ck and c edar

l1ome Greal room • 1ma 1 w1nd ows 3 bedr ooms 3 bath s 1g
cl osel s lam11y rm . , wei ba r and horses hoe bar and stools
2 car gara ge 3 ac m/1 ol wood '"d lawn THIS IS FOR THE
CHOOSY fAMILY

$5.47 WNk, Swivel

Rockor, $3 63 WMk.Bunk Bid
5&lt;'mploto $8.41 WMk, 4 Drawor
"hoot, $3.26 WHk; Poollr Bod·
room Suite, 7 pc., $11.67 WHk,
lncludn Blddlng.Country Plno
.Pinette With tllnch I 4 Cholro
$10.V8 WHit.OPEN: Mondoy
ThN Soturdly, vo.m. 1o lp.m.
Sundoy 12 Noon Till Bp.m 4
Mlloo 0" Aouto 7 On Roull 141
In Cantonory.
'

PERFECT
HOM£ IN THE COUNTRY'
Very well buill and attra ctiVe ru stiC slyl e ran ch
I hal s perf eel lor Ihe small family Fea1u1es '"
elude 3 bedroom s I lull balh altraciiVe eat1 n
kitchen w1lh oak cabml sand l1vmgroom w1lh l1re
place Very well10 sulated Deck !Ia I top and sepa
rate L car garage w1th workshop area shed and
rlog kennel Farmer s Home loan looker s You
can I beal lhtS one al $48 2001"
#208

62

Olive St , Gallipolis. New &amp; Used
furnllura, heaters, Western &amp;
Work boclta. 614-446-3159

PRICE CUTTO $79.900'

TIRED OF LOOK ALIKES?
We ve gal a one ol a k10d home 101 you 1h1&lt;
eye appe alm g ru s11c con1empo 131y home has so
melhm g lor I he enlrre lam1ly Master beduXlm ha1
ad,acenl Ioff and ample room lo1 lhc mo sl com
plete b e~room su11e l1v1n g 10om w1lh ca lhedr• l
ce111ng and lorepla ce w111 welcom e your guesls 101
) OU full basemen! lh aiiU S
I won I qu1l has posSI
b&lt; lll .es lor a 4th bed10om and more lnground
pool Large oulbuildmg w1lh pole nl ~a ll o becom e a
guest house I 5 acre lot w•l h a ~• ew 4 c ar st or
age GIVe us a calllo' an appo•nlm ent You ve gol
eve 1vth1ng to gam and n ol h~ng 10 lose $t 25 000

Real Estate General

Solid oak chine csblnat w/llghts
Glass shel\111. 1 year old. $800.
Oak pie safe, 1 yeer old $300.

Ahor 4pm 614-446-6000.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

REDUCED TO $61,
FIRST ClASS QUALITY HOME
Buill back wh en lh ey pul real mal e r~al s '"
houses lh1s well conslrucled home will g1ve a
g r eall eel~n g ol pnd e from hardwood floor s to the
cloerry panelm g Ia I he wa1 m l11eplace Th1s 11 a
home you can en1ov Full oasem enl knotty pme
lamil y room 3 bedroom s largeeal •n k1lc hen al
lraci&lt;Ve new deck on bac k
#504

R 129,900 11
Qu1el counlry surrou ndings make lh1s 3 bed1oom
home attracl 1ve l ocated close l o shopp•ng rea
lu res 2 1ull balhs lar ge I1V1 ng room ea110 k•lchen
and d1n1n g area Plenl y ol parkmg Nol many

CHAROLAIS LAKE AREA- E Belhe' Churc h Rd DeSigned
lor Happy L1v 1ng and ve ry seclud ed You I l1n d chMm and

Choir, $11.10 WHk,

1 hom es lor Ihe pnce ol one Bol h hom es hav e
been extens1vely re mod eled Ma .n home has lar ~P
Pal •n k1I Chen ver y a!Iracl1\le l1v1 n g room i'l nct !11 n
10g 10om 3 bedl oom s 2 balhs pl us lull base men!
2nrl hou se perl ec l lo1 renlal 01 1n .aw s 13 acres
oil arm grou nd lor th e par! 11m e I arm er Very ntCP
barn also Call Dave ltday !01 an app01n1m en1

#211

#204

VI'RA FURNITURE
614-446-3158
LIVING ROOM: Solo &amp; Chair,
$199.00;
Aocllnor,
$149 00,

I

I

Swivel Rocker, $99.00, Cottn &amp;
End Tables1 $89.00 Set DINING

ROOM· Table With 4 Padded
C:holro, $149.00; Country Plno
Dinette
Chal11,

W1th Bench And
$299.00; Matching

TOO PERFECT FOR WORDS"'
Thai s why we 1nv1fe you Ia see lh .s 3 bedr oom
home S1ll1n g prelly on Ne•ghborhood Roan One
look and you II he hooked on •n eme11culous hou
se keepong l1ke new carpi'l ea11n k1l chen w&lt;lh ap

3
2

Door Hitch, $349; Or $589.00
Sol, Oak Toblo, 42x62 With I
Bow

Back

Choirs,

QUIET COUNTRY lOCATION
Beautiful ano Imma culate briCk home resls on a
spac1ous lol w1lh open s urround~n g s 3 4 bed
room home leatues attractiVe oak fl oor s large
family room d1n1n groom IIV10 groom 3 balhsand
much more Ou ldoor en1oymenl IS o 1overlooked
Wilh large de ck and lenced yard Green Sc hools
184 900
#7D6

$629.00. BEDROOM Postor Bod·

room Su1t1 (5 pc ), $349 001 4
Drawer Cheat, $44.95, Bunk

Bod, $229; Cornploto Full Man
Sot, $105.00 Sot; 7 pc Cadar
Bodroom Sunt, $899 oo.OPEN:
Monday Thru Saturday, 9a m. to

~p

m , Sunday 12 Noon ·Till
5p.m , 4 Mlleo On Aoulo 7 On
Route 141 In Centenary.

53

pl1an ces

DOES A LARGE LIVING ROOM w1!h a ston e 1
place spaCIOU S k1lch en lull basem ent sound
good' Well IS so we have lhe home 101 you
loc alcd 1u st mmutes from Iown You will al so gel
cent ra l a11 sem11ined cedar closel s ex t" la rge
lamliy room and all al a very allo1dabl e pnce
$45 900 Call lor your showm g lod ay1
#G06

1

1
j
I

bath 1n ma ~ l e r bedroom water sol

lenet lull hou se a111c fan and a lull basementlora
weallh ol slora ge spa ce or a lulure recreahon
, room or workshop Th 11 home" a bell 11n gon gbar
ga1n al only $53 0001Wa so mgr on Elem enlary/ G
A H S school s
#814

Antl~ues

Bu~ or sell

Riverine Antiques,
1124 E Mal11 Stl'llt, Pomeroy
..Hours· MTW 10 00 am. to 6 00
p m , Sunday 1 00 to 6 00 p.m

614-902-2526

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

16 Inch G1rl1 B1eycla, Purple
Whitt, Naw Tires, $25 00
304-e75-1433 Atter Sp m
~nd

1951 John 011re
Aabullt, Excellent

I

Model B,
Condition•

ALMOST COUNTRY

Trailer Axlll , &amp; Trailer Bed 614·

446·2359
51x27 Plcturo, $10; Plaid Ou sz.
Sl11por Sola, 175, 2 Gr Volvot
Chalra, $25k
· Br. Ltalhor Chair,
$40; 7 112 P Soaro Outboard
Boot Motor, $300. 614-446-3063.
BabY, Swing, Baby Wolkor, High
Char, Call 614-441..0020.
Cluster Ring, 1 C1r1t, Diamond,

CRAFT SUPPLIES

-·

MOHON
IUaOINGS, INC.
...Mieiltfl('f"-o"'in• ,. ICJO'

13233 S.R. 110
Ashland, Ky. 41101-lqJ9
Call Toll fr• Morton, Ill. I
1-100-447-7436
I

FOR SALE
OLD HOUSE
&amp; LOT

TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE'
Counlry Dulch Colomal Pr~c e redu ced lo
$11 2 500 111 Owner s a~r very an&lt;~o u s l o sell lh1s
very altraCIIve 2 story home 4 bed1 oqms 2
balhs ealm k1tchen plus lorm al d1n1 ng 10om
I am1ly room w1th wood bu rn10 g llieP la ce lar ge IIV
mg 10om and basemen I Also deck mground pool
and over 3 acre s New carpel 2 new heal pumps
new Andersen w1ndows W"l 1oo long anrl 1l w1ll
oe SOLD"
#S02

Happy II'VIrl~ \ IJ II5 he re •n th1s Nell cared !or

Hystor 4 Stag• Fork Lift, 3

446-2917

....

Rat Terrier puppies, 304-675·

Real Estate General

1977

$6995 614-247-4361

'

V1·ra Fumhul'l

I.E. ICNOnS,
SR.

-~-~_

304-675-:1526

57

Livestock

I

ONE STORY RANCH STYLE HOME- Located on R1ggs
Crest Manor Features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car
anached garage, elec FA heal partoal basement A
REALLY NICE home' ASKING $42,500 Owner w1ll
.ccepl reasonable offer
NEW LISTING - 2 story !ramo home, 5 rooms, 3 bedrooms completely remodeled, Includes mosl appliances
and central atr plus a 16 x 24 garage and deck ASKING
$37,500

see

TAKE A LOOK AT THIS! II - Located on
Second Ave, walk to store, church, school
and shopping 2 story home offers kotchen,
LA, DR, FA, 3 BAs, 2 balhs, gas
heaVcentral aor

••ling
rabltta
Burnann Aabbltery,

YOU'LL INSTANTLY BECOME A
COUNTRY GENTLEMAN''
Stop and se e I hiS recenlly buill home neslled on a
3 67 ac re lan dsc aped lot Very well built home
wolh over 1700 'o Q II ol grac1 ous well decoraled
lovmg space w1th e&gt; lra s like hardwood floor s ch
erry k1tchen cabm els lar ge spac1ou s 1oom s and
large country l1replace You lllall1n love qu1ckly
Out~de en1oyment can I be beller w1th brick and
concrete pat1o s breezeway and large comfortabl e
front porc h all secluded from lhe world by trees
Call Sonny lor an appomlmenl
#707

304-675-21188.

97.457 A m~. Clay Twp , Sect 21 and 27
$30000

malt, 1 yr ~d $200. 614·367·
7926
·
AKC Registered Apricot Mal•
Poodle Pup. 12 Weeks Old $100
61 4·38&amp;.9811 A her 5p m.
Beautiful Boaglt Pups, 7 Weeks
Old $25, 3 Malas And 3
Females. 614-446-4958

63

.32 Dairy Caltle, Edl aon Mayes

Real Estate General

bedrooms Includes shed barn shop , cherry orchard,
garden space and lru1t trees on 43+ acres Add1t1onal

LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - AI' bnck 3 PRICE REDUCED BY $6,000 .... 16 acres
BAs, LR, kitchen, bath, IIJII basemen!, gas plus n1co Cape Cod style home w/4 BAs
forced aor attached garage, coty schools
bath, kitchen, coty schools .
'

Groom •nd Supply Shop-Pot
Grooming. All btotds, styles
lama Pel Food Doa!er Julio
Wobb Call 614-446-0231, 1-800·
352-0211.
7 Puppies!
112 Australian
Shor.herd, 112 Australian Blue
~ea er From Working Parents
$50 Each 614-446-1157 Aha;
4p m
AKC Chihuahua tiny 3-112 lb

and

(dr~&amp;sodl

24S-5193

1011 Lincoln 4dr Town Car~f.olr
Condition, $1,200, Or Boll unorl
614-446-11104
1977 Corvon, 1V82 Oldo Dolto 88
011111, 814-441-4283

Woodburntr with triple liner
pipe Jeep back seat Rowing
machine ~04·675·3939 .

Hand Made Craha
.
Slrew wreathl, dried flowers,
baskets and mora. Trl County
Sports Shop, Polnl Pleasant,

3 A., mil, Charolats Acras along SR 160,
near Holzer Hosp1tal $16,500

Pate

Toba eco St icka For Salt Shar·
penod 1 End, 22 Ctntt Eech.
Both Ends 25 Cents hch 614-

1974 Corvotll Stlngroy 350, High

decodor, 614-992-8173

17.5 A., Mil Perry Twp , Symmes Creek
bottom land some hill tobacco base
$9,000
'
'

APARTMENT COMPLEX FOR SALE Good on vestment Call lor deta1ls

Aoklng $100 614-446-6152

Performenee Engine, 4 SpMd,
T-lopa, New Tires, Whitt On
Black 44 000 Mil.. Good Con·
dltloni614·367·181M

Used satellite equipment, in·
clud1ng whole sys11m with
decoders, receiver, dish &amp;:

Concrete &amp; plattlc septic tanks,
Ron Ev1ne Enterprltal, Jack·
son, OH 1-800-537-0521

$21,000, 1y, LOTS - Chestnul St, 2 BRs,
bath, LA, kitchen, aty ullhhes

For Selt· Female 2 112 Year Old,
Toy Jloodle, All Shott, Neutered

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

JO 2010 Tractor With New Bush
Hog $3,250, 1365 Otlver Dltstl
With Plow, Trenspor1 Dlac And
Buah Hog $5 ,950, Owner Will
Fln1nce . 6"14·286-6522

Autos lor Sale

docodorl 614-992-6173

CORNER LOTS - Very noce home offers 3
BRS, bath, kitchen, carpel, fireplace, t car
detached garage

35 A., m~ Clay Township W1lhams Hollow
Road, approx S m1 from Clty, older hs. two
water taps $15,000

For S.le: Blut HHitr Puppl..,
Two Monthe Old 614-256-1335

614 4411 4012.

24 K Gold. $500 614-446·3040

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1 4 A , m~.
248 !ronlago along SR 7, 1ust across from
Oh1o R1ver Plaza

noW

71

Olshwtshtr,
With Hatco Electric Water
Heater UnH, Rev Mike Smith

Near Town

I '

I

MEIGS CO., 240 A , mil, Bedford &amp; Chesler
Twp . old ongmal log home woth add1hon
added, dnllod well, county waler
ava1l . has been owned by same family for 4
generauons

THIS COULD BE YOUR UTILE FARM -

SANDY BUTCHER .. .........................................992•5. ~1
SHERYL WALTERS...... ...... ................... .. ...367-0421
DARLINE STEWART... ....................................992-6365
BRENDA JEFFERS ...... .............................. .. 992·3058

I... •

LOTS TO OFFER - Th&lt;s property IS localed
IUSI at the edge ol town on AI 160 and has
lour tracts, pnced separately One features
a 2 BR home w1th gas heat Three
add1t1onal lots for sale - Call our otf1ce for
deta1ls
MAY BE WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR
- Newer all bnck home 1ust live mmules
lrom downtown 3 BAs 3 baths, great
room, famtly room, 2 car attached garage,
heat pump/cent a&lt;r, coty uhhlles

OFFICE BUILDING LOCATED AT 250
SECOND - Office down and 12 BR
aoanment upstaors Very mce buold1ng Call
tor dola~s

DEXTER - Corner Lot - Approx one acre la~rly level
Could be a mobile home Site Electric ava1lable $1,500

I

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONE I
- Largo log home can be purchased with
162 ocros or 2 acres Thos home offers 4
BAs. 3 baths equopped kitchen, LA, FA, 2
!treplaces, heal pump/cant aor (backup system), overSized 2 car atlached garage
Frontage on Raccoon Creek

ATIENTION - Very mce home on Graham
School Road - Ranch With 3 BAs, LA, FA,
kitchen, bath central aor 2 loreplaces, coty
schools

Call for m 1nformat1on

5 ACRE LOTS, Green Townsh1p Fa1rl1eld
Vanco Rd and W1lson Bosttc Rd

NICE HOME FOR THE GROWING
FAMILY -Green Townsh1p near Centenary
Bo~evel homo oHers 4 BAs, 2 baths, LA,
kotchen woth range, refng , OW, d1spl . oven,
FR, gas heal, attached garage, sotualed on
approx one-half acre

RIO GRANDE AREA - 2 87 acres mil
lovely 2-story home w11h 3 BAs, 1» baths
Kitchen, LA, odeally localed near new
h1ghway

EXCELLENT COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
- Presently used as R1vers1de Marme steel NEAR HIGH SCHOOL- Large older home
buildong w11h approx 3,000 sq It, 1 057 offers 5 BAs. 4 baths, LA. kitchen sunroom
aae
w!woodbumer, corner lot
98 ACRE, mil, (Hoban D1llon Subd 1),
along Raccoon Crk, great tor a mobole NICE RANCH STYLE HOME localed on
home. three s1des have large trees for pnv· Kmeon Dr offers 3 BAs, bath, LA. kitchen
lull basement, gas heat N1ce stanor homo
acy $12,000

CROW'S SUBDIVISION - Five Polnla - A mea one acre
lot woth water and elec~oc ava~lable A greal bu1ld1ng lot
woth a pnce you can't beat
ONLY $5,000

·'

CLOSE TO TOWN BUT SECLUDED
SETIING - Located on Neighborhood Ad ,
1Y, story home offers 4 BAs, bath,
equoppod k1tchen, LR, DR, part basement
Block bldg woth 3 nns , and carport behond
house Situated on t 75 acre mil

FRONTAGE ON THE RIVER- 3 BAs LR
equoppod kotchen, fuel 011 furnace cent a~r'
iiJII basement, attached garage 3 'acres
'

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

61 Farm Equipment

'HotNI.rt Commerelel

Reclln~r,

640 FOURTH - 1Y, story home offers LA,
kitchen, dmong rm , bath, mce back porch,
gas heat close to elemenlaly school

Canning Poochoo now ovolloblo
aleo Bartlen Purt and Prunl
Plt1111 lltor In Auguot Call 1·
Point Ploasonl, 304-175-2063, 100-447·3780 tor pilcoo. B08'9
lull llno Tropical tlohl birdo, MARKET, Maoon or Galllpollo
emellanlmlll and aupplll
DH.
'

Fi1h Ttnk, 2413 Jack$00 Ave

Sunday T•mes- Sent•nei-Page-05

Uppor Rlvor Rd. Bosldo Stono
Croll Motel. Call 614-446-7398.

Sola I

HOME AND 17.6 ACRES MIL, GREEN
TWP. -Home offers 3 BAs, bath, LR, kitchen, attached 2 car garage Noco patoo

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Siamese and Himalayan kittens
614-446-3844 after 7 p.m.

245-6121.

Six 111 11111 bldgs Ftctory
deale Must Hll now C1n
dallver. Will erect Two 30x40
2,40xtiO, Two 50x100. Call
and reserve 303-743-4860

wv

Waehtra, dryere, refrigerators,
fling•. Slulggs Appliances,

PICKENS FURNITURE
Now/Uold
Hounhold lumlohlng. 112 ml
Jorrfcho Ad. Pt. Pllaunt, WV,
Clll 304-675•1450.
AENT20WN
114-446-3158

THE PLACE TO BE - Lovely all bnck home
on SA 35, eo x 450 lots, 4 BRs, equ1pped
kitchen, LR, DR. heat pump wlgas furnace
carport and garage
LOOK NO FURTHER -A dream of a place
Twp , M1ller Road Beaulllul
'
home offers 3 BRs. 2
,
FA, DR, lull basement, 2
li~e~~~c:es, wrap around deck, log garage,
barn spnng and pond on properl)', all
fenced, on Wayne NaMnal Forest
CLOSE TO TOWN BUT SECLUDED
SETIING - Located on Neighborhood Rd ,
1-112 story homo offers 4 BAs, bath,
eqoJip~&gt;ed kotchen, LA, DR, part basement
bldg w1th 3 rms and carport behmd
Sotuated on 1 75 acre mn

58

Pets tor Sale

Dragonwynd Conery Porolan,

Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, ete Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grandt, OH Call 614·

Used satellite aqu\pmtnl, In·
eluding, wh~• syatem wlttl
d.coders, receivers, dish an~

2548

ond Middleport 1-2 bldrocm
2br, Kllchln WMh Slovo And Call lrom 0 lo 5 114-902-2403.
: Refrigerator No Pitt Rtfwen• coo And Dopooll. $215 Pluo Apo~monll tor tho Eldorly. Golllo Manor Apo~monlo. 155 Buhl
Utllftlll. 114-446-4021
Mo~on Road Dlllgnld tor tho
Smoll lbr SIOVI &amp; Rolrlgerotor Senior Chlzon t62 l otdor! ond
Fumlshld, Woohor &amp; Oryor Handlcoppld poroons. Equal
· Hook-up,
1225/mo.
1200 houolng
opportunhy.
Ap• Dopool1, 6 Monlho Loon. 142 pllc•tlone m1y bl picked up et
· Fourth Avo, Golllpollo, 614-446- Spring V.llly Pllza, 5211 Jackaon Pike or cllll14 448 4630
: 38fi7.
: VlfY nice 3 bedroom homo, hut BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
.· pump, gorogo, $400. month, BUDGET PRICES AT 'ACKSON
• rererence, no petl, Homntua ESTATES 531 Jocklon Plkl
· Alllty, 304-I'IS-5540 or 304-a82· lrom $182/mo. Wolk to shop &amp;
. 2405.
movlu. Calll14-446-2118. EOH.

56

Building
Supplies

Used Satellite Equipment. In· AKC Reglstortd Airedale 8
eluding. Whole Systemt Wltl'l Week Old Puppies, Wormed,
Decoders, Reell\ltrs, Dish &amp; And Shots, 614· 388-8692 Bill
Race, VInton
Decoders 614-092..&amp;173

La. sola-bod, good cond.. $40.
6lit-'JII2·3021
loVIIIII, llkl now, 304-682·

· RNr 238 Flrlt l\ltnue, Small

55

Howard Showcaoo Commorclal 56 Pets for Sale
Froozor 49cu. ft $2500.00 Also -:-_ __;._ _:..:.._:..___

Complete home furnishings
Hours: Mon-Sit, 0.5 614-446032'2, 3 miiH out Bull'llilll Ad
FrH Delivery.

Apirtmente lor rent In Pomeroy

I

'

HEMLOCK GROVE - Ranch style home 6 room s 3
farm otoms negotoable 1n sale ASKING $54,900 Come
make an oHer

CLOSE TO TOWN - Wtth Room 10 Move - InSide and
outl 2 story frame home w1th 6 rooms , 3 bedrooms on
3 68 acres Carpon, garage, barn, garden and paslure
space some fenced ASKING $29,900
,
DOWN RIGHT CUTEI- 1-112 story frame home on 112
acre Has 2 sheds, cellar, heat pump, sew1ng room, 2·3
bedrooms, 1 car garage, drolled well Wllh crty water avail·
able, beauhful oak trom ASKING $29,000
WHEN 'S THE BEST TIME TO SELL? ANYTIME IS
RIGHT IF YOU CAN GET THE PRICE YOUR HOUSE
DESERVES. WE HAVE PEOPLE CHECKING
EVERYDAY TO SEE IF THAT CERTAIN HOME HAS
BEEN LISTED, MAYBE YOURS! SOMEONE COULD
~UST BE ACHING TO OWN THE HOME YOU'RE
IN....NOWI IS THE TIME TO LIST AND SELL WITH
USI
HENRY E. CLElAND .........................................992-6191
TRACY BRINAGER ..•..................•...................949-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL., ............., ........... ................. 949·2660
JO HILL............................ ..................................985-4466
OFFICE.•.•.•..••.•...•.•...•,....................... .............. 99~-2259

lhree hed1 00m b11ck ra nch llo ere a~e 2' barhs a
2 ca1gdla ge and a la&lt; ~e healed workshop for I he
er ali sman '" lh r lamdy 1ake a look loday
$64 000
#507

SMALL BUT SNAPPY
[xcepl&lt;nn&lt;ll y clean and un cluttered 3 hcd10om
~a nc1 No hone, do pro1ects herE Oo n 1m1Ss ll111

one -

c al

1

!or an appomtm ent

bel1 eve the pme ol $) 7 900

FINALLY A STARTER HOME you don 1have lo I~&gt;
up" You w1ll need Ia see th1 s 3 bed room 'Nith re
cenlly rep laced VI nyl S1d1og roof and guttnn g
plumb10 g 200 amp elecl nc se1~ ce and new gas
furna ce lo. ge lamily 100m 2 1ull bathS COnVeOI
ent laund1y room and pr~v al e pal10 fh1 s oppor
1un1ly IS only m1nu1es lrom lown on St Rt 14t
C•lv sc hool s $49500
#818
14 SB ACRES
Seclud ed part~ally wooded acreage w1111 small
pond and !r ncP.s N1 ce build1n g 01 rn ohdtJ hom e

IIIC $14 900

tod a\ You won I

QUIET COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS'
Very niCely decorated ~anch home perlecl lo•
slartln g loc aled at the end Jl a QUiellan e IhiS 3
Dedroom home 1S ready lo move ,nlo fu ll,

#505

$49.900 will gel you everylhmga country boy
wanls 61 acres mil lo1 all you r hunl1n g and
larmm g needs l a~ ge 1em ooeled barn plu 1healed
110rage budd1ng Newly renovated hom e o ller~n g
3 bedr oom c, 1 ba th l1 v1n g room d1n10 6 room
hand ma de ca b~n el s '" k&lt;l chen Aff ord abl e coun
lr 1 l1v1ng al '" besl
#611

equ1 oped eat 1n ~li c hen r11n 1ng roo m l1v1n g room

w1lh altra c11ve l11epla ce a11o 01 ce large lawn all
mak e IhiS lh e home lo1 vnu Pnced al $59 900

ms

MAKE A HOME FOR YOUR FAMILY'
Do wn lo earlh IIVabil&lt;ly descr,bes Ill •\ 3 beoroom
all br~ c k ran ch Large llv1n g room w1lh ! ~re plac e
niCe eal1n k1tcn en I' b.1!hs lull basem en! Ver y
01CC lol •1lh oploon lo IJuy add&lt;I IOnallot F11endly
ne&lt; gil b01liood •,e ll~n g lo1your I am11 y C1l yschools
$59 000 or $69 000 w1lh ex Ita lol
11612

RIO CENTER ESTATES
Build your home among lhe lrees on one of these
sem1 secluded loi s I 1011e we st ol R10 Grand e
Loi s range 1n s11e hom 11 acres to 5 acres Res
lr~ ct1ve covenanls lor you 1 protect1on Pn ces
range lrom $6 500 lo12 5 am s,ze lo$10 3001or
select 5 acre parce l Co unl ry waler avatlabl e Call
us lor more mlormalmn
#336

A GOOD PlACE TO START111
N1ce t983 ManSion mob1l e home on 80x230 m/ 1
n•cel,lan dsca ped lol lhlshomeoller sniCeealln
k1lchen lrvm g room 2 bedroos I bath Can be
bought lurn &lt;Shed at $14 000 or unfurniShed al
$1 2 500 Call to makeI hiS allordabl e home yours
#608

N503

START FROM SCRATCH
An d you ' perl ecl home can happen wh en you
bu 1ld on on e oll hese 5• acre par cel s Co nve01
en!ly loc aled near Rl 35 '"Gr een Town l h&lt;p C1ty
school s
#600

t'

f·

I

,, ~i~

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644

David Wiseman, Broker, 446-9555

--------------~~~~~~~~~----------LORETTA McDADE, 446·7729
8. J. HAIRSTON, 44~·4240

CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
SONNY GARNES, 446-2707

•'

�•

Page-06-Sunday Times-Sentinel
71

Autos for Sale

1963 Oodga Arlu, $700, good
work c•r, call between 3pm6pm, 614·Vi2·5803.
196 :1
Nla..n
Stan.u, New
13rilkea, New Exhaual, A1r, Till ,
Cruise, PW, High Miluge. $1,000

0 80, 614 ·388·4575
1984 Celebrity, 4dr, AT. AC, PS ,
PB Extra Clean! $3 ,250. Call AI·

lEtt Sp.m. 614-446-1244

1984 Chelletta, a1r cond , cas·.el! e player, sun root, a good
work car, $700.00, 614·992·2!XI3.

1984 Cvllass Calais , loaded,
great cond, asking $3,000. 304·
~ 76-2 131

1!184

CIJtla:ss Clara Diesel,
Loaded,
69 ,000
M11es,
All
Onginal, Super Clean, Asking,

S2,100. 614-446-2306.
1

1984 Plymouth Conquest, 2600
Turbo, 5 Speed , Approx . 50,000
Miles, Slick With Grey Interior.
ei 14-446-4436.
1985 Camaro lroc, BIJrgundy
Wi lh Red In terior. $5,500. 614~
388-6353 After 5p.m.

71

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Autos for Sale

71

1985 Ford Tempo GL, Runs
Good, Body Good Condll lon!

675·5306

198S
Oldsmobile
Cutlass
Supreme Brougham All Extras!
Low Mileage! Excelle nt Condllion! 614-4!f64053.
1986 BMW 5351, 6 Cylinder, 5
Speod., All Power, Leather Interlor, SIJnroot, 75,000 Miles, Excel·
lent Cond ition! $11,500. 614-446·
1642 Ext. 221 Days, 614 ·593·5081

Evemngs.
1986 Pont1ac Trans Am, 25,000
Actual Miles, Excellent Condi·
tl onl Asking Price, $7,900 614·

256-1;742, 614-446-8834

1988 Omnl Automatic AMIFM
c ....n,, s2.too: 1983 Chavetta,
4 Cylinder, Automatic, $450 . For
S,ale Or Tradol614-256-1270

$1,000. 614·388-11047.

1987 Olds Della 88, 62,000 Milas
All Power, Air, Excellent Condl~
tlon. 614-446-4225, Aher 4p.m.

72 Trucks for Sale

198a Cimero RS, Blac k ext,

grer. Int. 37,000 mll11. All pwr.

1975 Peterbih conventional 400
cummings amall block Road
Ranger, 13 speed trans., 411
rear-end . 614-388-9621.

opt ons, transferable 6 yr
60,000 mile warranty. Trades

accepted. $5850. 614-446-0381
or 614-445-8'194

1988 Chovy Borona

$3 895

1989 Nissan Sentra n:295 ; '1997

1978

4283.

Pontiac S!Jnblrd, $2,29!; 1989
Chevy C.teb&lt;lty, S4,29!; 1987

Plymouth Horizon, $1 ,995; 198g
Ctlevy Cav11ltr, $4,595 ; 1986
Ctlovy C1vallar $1,495, 1984
Chevy Camaro t1,ns; 1986
Chevy No11a $1,695; 1985 Ford
Exp $'1,595; 1983 Chevy Cavalier

SW, $1,195; 1982 AMC SW $1195,

1985

1983 0/ds Cutlass $1,895,
Chevy Cavalier, $1,295, 1984
Renault $695; 1976 D1tsun 280-Z

$89!. B&amp;O Auto Satos, Highway
160, North. 8t4-446-8665.

Olds Cutla&amp;a Supreme
57,000 Mil11, 1 owner, AMIFM
Stereo/Cassette, 4-Naw Tires,
Excellent Condition, Asking,
1988

1985 Dodge Shelby Charger,
l urbo, 5 speed , 70,00 0 miles, 28
mpg . sharp, sporty, $2,850. 304-

72 Trucks for Sale

Autos for Sale

$7,500. 614-361-11649.

Scouy'a Used Cara, New Havon,
WV. 304-882-3752. 1986 Ponttac
Fire Bird $3,595. 1987 Blazer 4x4

$6.850. 1935 Flhh Avanuo
$3,500. 1985 S-10 V-6 long bod

piekup $3,100. 1982 V.JJ Chevrolet Caprice Classic 42,000
original miles $1,500. 1966 Cut-

tau Corrlo V-8 S2,69! 1984

Olds Cutlass C.rri1 $1,995 . 1989
BIJiek c~ntury lim/1ed $5,500.
1983 Dodge 400 convert Jabla
$2,895. 1974 Coachman uc
cond, $3,500 1981 Olds

98

Ford Explorer, 614-446-

1981 F-150 Ford XLT, standard , 6
cyl,

eriJise,

•ir,

loaded, exe

cond , 304..S82-2042
1986 Chell)' S-10, 68,000 Miles, 4
speed, 4 Cylinder, Rally Wheels,

614-379·2428, 30H75-1645.

1987 Nissan 4x4, black low
miles , lake ovor payment~! 614-

992-!347

1987 Toyota, 2 Wheel Drive
57,00() Miles, Air, Topper, Bed
Liner, $6,000. 614-256·1203.
1989 lsuzu PU, $3,695;
Chevy S.10 P.U. $3,595 ;
Ford F-150, PU, $2,695;
Ford Ranlor, PU , $4,7'95 ,
Ch9vy S-10, 4x4, PU $3,195;

1988
1985

1989
1985

1985

Chevy S-10 PU $1895· 1985

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
1889 A1tro van, loaded, color
t.v., vcr, cb, mini bUnda, many
extra s. Must ste to appreciate.
aell lmf)'1ediately. No
Must
reasona ble otter refused. Evil,

Condition; New 4 Wheeler 350

4x4 w/460
motor, high mileage, tleady duty
supenslon, btd liner, dual
tanks, good tight truck, $7,000.
1985

Ford

F250,

1987 Rlnkor 20 112ft. opon bow,
175hp OMC attrn drive, trailer
f85oo, et&lt;~-m~ea
•

76

30H75-5306.

1987 Chevy Silverado, PU, 4

WO. 614-446·3813.

Evelrudl

Excell•nt

I

446-4283.

1981 Honda 900 Custom . 614·

454 Marine Engine, New, Other
Marine Par1e, Sf-.ns.6647.

19,82 Honda V45 Magna, 1,600
m•les , exc shapo, $1,200. 304-

Budget Tnnsmlaalons , UHd &amp;
rebuilt, st1rtlng at Sgg; Auto

tires,

mat ching

helmet,
onglne,

1986 Kawasaki ZL 600 street
bike, now tiree, batlory &amp; 1une
up, exc cond, 304-675-6858.

Pano. 614-245-!lln, 614-3711-

:=:r=:ls==l==I==I~

372-3933 or 1·1100-273-8585.
Wanted To Buy: Good Uood

1

Hardtop For JHp C J 7 614-446-

2306.

'

I

Real Estate General

MINIFARM

o(All 446·2917

•R. E. KNOTTS SR.
•

N E wE

I I 1I
9

•

Ron'• TV Service, specializing
In Zenith also ltrvlclng moat
other brands. Houst calla, also
some lppllance r1p1lra. WV

304-676-2393 Ohio 614-446-2454.
Septic lank Pumping $90, Gall Ia
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jackaon, OH 1-1100-637-9528. '
Stw-Vac
Service
Georgu Crtak Rd . P1111, auP:
pfiH, pickup, and dtllvery. 814-

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
uncondltlonof llfotlmo guorontoo. i.Qcaf rotoroncoa IUmlohod.
Froo ntlmotoo. Colt colllct t·
614-237-G4811, day Of night.
RoglfS Booomont Wotorprootlng.
Comt&gt;loto Mobllo Homo S.t-Upo,
Aapal,.; Commerlcal, RuldenCtolmo Ai:coptod.I14·2!1·1B11.

.-

Curtll Home Improvements:
v.. re Experience On Older &amp;

struc:Uon, 814-381-8086, FrH Et·

tlrnotoal

..

Ahead. we'll .... you------ !"

Will build patio covers, decks,
ecreaned rooms, put up vinyl

oldlng or traltar
245-6S5l

82

okl~lng.

&lt;

614·

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Carter'• Plumbing
and Healing
Fourth and Prne

Relax and renew yoursell m !hts 3 bedroom home overlook·
mg I he nver 811ck and vmyl extenm will !eep matntenance
at a mtnt mum Other Ieat ures tnclud e lam tly room. 2 baths. 2
car ga ra ge and satellite dtsh Callloday lor an appotntmenl
lo see lhts one Pnced al $54 ,900
#500

85

Real Estate General
Here
a stately
home . Thts
sq. ft. of I
space, With living room,
room. kitchen, office or den, 4 bedrooms,
baths , 32x40
stainless steel pool. 2 patios. two car garage and a large
stocked pond. The 40x60 stables have SIX box stalls and a
tack room . Other buildings include a 40x60 pole barn and
other sheds. All this and muclt more are here among the t02
acres mA of beautiful rolling hills Priced at only $157,900 By
appoinbllent only.
N362

'

General Hauling

E l R TREE SERVICE. Tooolng,

Will hi" oond, grovol, dirt ond
Trimming, Tr• Removal, kedge coot. 304-10!-3641.
Trimming. FI'H E11ima1111 1143&amp;7-nGT.
87
Upholstery
JET
Aeration Motor~, repalrtd. Ntw
I r•buln m01oro In otock, RON

'HS

Complete the chuckle quoted
by ftlltng in the misstng words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

Mowrey's Uphollterlng MtViolng trl county aru 28 yearw. The
best k1 tumllure upholstering.

EVANS, JACKSON, Olt t-tooCall 30W75-4154 for !roo n!37·i528.
tlm.t•.

- let your
home pay lor itselll Th•s house
has 2 apartments . Downst81rs

1s a ~mlortable 2 room apt &amp;
garage. UpstBJrs a n1ce 2 BR
apt wl balh , kit . &amp; LA See
today. Pnce Reduced

RUTLAND - lhos lovely 2
story home has 3 BR, 1 ba(h,
room . There are also truit 1rees
on the property Call us loday

I I I I lvn4 I I I I I I
c

vtnyl stdm g [no upkeep) . Galha Rural Water System small
yard [no wor!). and a front porch. Thts four rooms. two bed·
. wtth bath and a shower m tub. Ideal for a retired
couple or a young couple tust startmg to buy their first home
[not paytng rent). See lhts home now.
#696

for.

..St· b

Real Estate General

AN ACRE with thiS 1 lloor

ranch, LA, DR, k1t, 3 BR , 2
baths Th1s home IS well
insulated &amp; located on Cook
Ad (Hemlock Grovo) 1n a
beautiful COIJntry set!lng
Priva1e Pr1ced lor Ou1ck Sate

DOWNTOWN POMEROY -

OOI:JWVI:J

l:l'v'3H 11.aM ·pea4v IJB:) 01 paaN
ON s,aJa41.. :sJa&gt;IO!IS Jadwnq J!941
JOj pajupd uefio1s S!41 pe4 p004Joq
-461au Aw U! do4s J9illnw 841

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446-7699 or 446·9539

Real Estate General

.. i 8NIV'l0:J noA

to loaf( a11his house I S25,000.

DNWVOJ nolf l:JV3H
3;)N3HM
1HfJnOB
3/BWOZ

..•

S137·WVI:J:JS

..

0/H;Jl:JO
:JI1l:JV9

•

••
••

Ol S113MSN\f

'

.·'
.·
.·.·.•

Real Estate General

·.·,

23 LOCUST ST., GALLIPOLIS, OH 446-6806

IWI.'r';;~:

REALTOR'

·.·.
·.
·.

.'

FOR SALE
Nestled in the middle of 5 acres, this beauttful 2 story
brick &amp; cedar house offers the following .
3800 Sq. Ft.
Central air featuring two heat pumps
4 bedrooms
3Y. baths, 3 showers, 2 lubs
Large foyer with Bruce hardwood floortng
L.A., D.R., Den with woodburning fireplace
Large kitchen with solid oak (Schmidt) cabinets
Featurtng the Super Pantry
Jenn·Aire cook top, double ovens, trash compactor
Kitchen Aide dishwasher
Completely finished basement area with full bath and
brick woodburning fireplace, complete 2nd kitchen ,
great lor summer canning , or family gatherings .
Tastefully landscaped front and back featuring large
patio area.
City schools- Washington Elem. Must see to appreci·
ate. OuaiHied &amp; Serious buyer only please

Phone: 446·1423 After 6 P.m.

but With plenty of privacy I The
lower level w111 hol d 4 cars
plus I Ups tairS · II BA, 1 baltl .
lR. DR. 2 nice porches with
terraced backya rd Beaut1ful
woodwork l
~ us1
see•
Ofastlcally RediJced .

BEAUTlFUL

2

SlORY,

Vtctonan Decor w/carpetedl ·
hardwood floors. LA. DR. kit .
3 BR. remodeled heat piJmp
wla .c. Well 1ns1Jiated. Pr1ce
redu ced for a qu1ck sale In e
40's . 180 E 2nd , Middleport

SR 881 - 1'1\o mllta weal of
Darw1n. This t 11ory house
also has living quarl&amp;fl on the
basement level IDf a lOlBI ol 5
BR, 2 baths, plus 2 garages,
workshop, pool, many x-tras . A

LOVELY COUNTRY SETTING

ABSOLUTELY CHARMING
home on double lot LR&lt; DR&lt;
1 v, bath, kil. wlbar, utility rm .
11.11g closets . Full bsmt garage ,

~87.

PRETENTIOUS -

RAMBLER.

ranch home sttuate d o n 4 7 ac res, tht s home
leatures 5 Bds . and or otf•ce . playroom. 2'1~
baths, uttlity room. cathedral ce•hngs over hvm~
room. d 1n1ng room and k•tchcn, c onversabon p1t
'" hvtng room and stone ft replace, lire and
secunty alarm sy stem . fm tshed fami ly room
with fire place . tl eat pump and cen tral a1r. 2 car
garage, cove red p aho . barn . stoc ked pond

Home has app 3.000 sq It hvmg space and
mary oth e r
1n format1on

ame n!lt es

Ca ll

for

#718 CEDAR &amp; STONE RANCH- Every1h1ng's
~c1al about 1h1s la sh1onab~ comemporary home
armon1zed LR. OR , 3 bedrms, 2 baths , lg master
bedrm loads of cabme1s m kit , new !amdy room
w1 th a V1ctonan lOIJCh Wall IJ M b1J1It m wlbar atea
and exua storage Back door pauo and garage
large lot w1th trees m a lovely ne1ghb0rhood . ThiS
home 1s ol superb quality

CHAROLAIS LAKE AREA- E. Bethel Church
Rd . Designed for Happy Living and very
secluded You'll find charm and conventence
plus prestige and pleasure in a brick and cedar
home. Groat room, w/many wtndows, 3 bedrooms. 3 baths. tg . closets. family rm . wlwet
bar &amp; horseshoe bar &amp; stools 2 car garage, 3
ae. m~ of wood and lawn. THIS IS FOR THE
CHOOSY FAMILY.

mor e

1734.
- Less than t yr. old.
Very lg rms. throughout Deluxe Dayton
doublewide, master bedrm . wtbath, familr bath,
3 bedrm6 ., formal dining, loads o pine
cabtnets. 1 car garage. Hard to great price!
$40,000.
SPECIAL
$39,900 - City water, sewer and
3
bedrms., vinyl ranch, t 'h baths, tiled kit., din .
area, cozy living rm., hardwood tloors,full
basement with family rm. and woodburner and
outside entry. AC Shaded deck with carport.
26x23. garage. Excellent to work on your cars.
Storage shed Treed.

Excellenl concrete

40x 98

from Pom. Make an offer . PriCII
Aeduood .

BIOWELL
we have a
house with 2
bedrooms and bath, family room, kitchen and living room ,
12x20 m~ ouibutlding, 1 car detached garage All on over 112
aero . Asking only $19,500 Call for more informatton
1365

BUILDING
LOTS
2 acres- $7,500
4 acres - $7 000
6t acres- $3B,500
1'h Acres - $6,000
4'h Acres - $8,500

rn

HAYES REAL ESTATE
Jack W. Carsey

ll lAliO I

Realtor
Cell end list with uot

382 ~- ~-

#V78. FOR YOUNG MODERNS - AHordable 34 bedroom ranch wnh LR . FA. 1 bath , eat-in
k1tchen, range, ret . u~l rm . carpel. gas heat.
CIA, carpet
approx t ac mil Call for
location and

1679. PORTERBROOK SUBDIVISION. A
qutet neighborhood 1s where you wtll be il you
buy lhts lovely 3 BR ranch with LT.
kitchen/dinette, t 'h baths , large fam1ly room,
range, dtshwasher, ref., disposal, utility rm ,
elec BB heat. aly scltools on Y. ac mA. Call

COLONIAL CHARM
FRONTAGE. Immaculate
condition . 3
bedrooms. 1Yo baths. kitchen. LR. DR with
woodbuming liroplace. This home is well eared
lor and located eonventently to town and
shopping. Very good garden spot . 1 car
garage You have no idea what a nice homo
until you see inside. ~41l,OCJO.

11737. CONFIDENTIALLY WE SAVEO THIS
ONE FOR YOU &amp; YOUR FAMILY: Owner has
made repairs &amp; painted inside and out. Lovely
3 bedrm. ranch w!large eat-in kit., LA, bedrms.,
balhs, uttllty rm., 1 car attached garage &amp; many

to see

ground pool, 2 e·xs· butldtngs, large barn,
shed , and cellar house Call lor more
mlorm atJon

GAVIN DR.- 2 WAYS TO BUY - Stratght out or land con·
uact. 3 bedroom home, moe fenced yard , n e w carpet. newly
painted ins1de and out, lamily room and more $34,000 N339

$21 .:X•O.

#356 UPCREEK ROAD - 67 acres mil Good building sues Rural
RIO GRANDE AREA- Three tracts of land I) 22 acres mil. water avarlable Some t1mber Road frontage Call tor more
*290
2) 20 acres m'l 3) 100 acres. or buy all three wtth 40x60 Information
horse barn, 14x60 implement storage shed All have road
frontage on Tyn Rhos Rd Va.,ou s prices Call tor more tnfor· CHESHIRE AREA - 12 9 acres mil of vacant land Not
matton.
#359 restncted Has two story barn Some ttmber and 700' road
Frontage on Stor{ s Run Ad Call for details Askrng lor
.STARCHER HAMRICK RD - tO acres mil of vacant
$16.550
1335
ground. Lots ol pine trees . Call for details Only $20,000.

LEGENO BLVD.- Good bu1id1ng s1te tn n1ce neighborhood
City water available. Call today lor details
1373

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sawm1ll and sevoral p1aces of farm eqUipment plus remo-

deled home w/4 bedrooms, I1V1ng room, bath, and lovely
eat-in kttchen wtth walnut cabtnets, secluded sentng. Call
today tor details. REDUCED
1388

CROWN CITY AREA - Is thts 2 bdrm home with lrvtng room , 124 ACRE Mil FARM - Located on Lincoln Ptko and this
din;ng room, kitchen, bath, above ground pool on over 1-112
style vtnyl sided home With 4 bedrooms . 2 baths, family
•c:cr.. Only $27,500 Call today for your appomtmenl #358 ranch
room. dtntng room and ktlchen, fireplace. 36x48 approx bam,
new fences, tobacco base, so me tmp lements Asking
NEW LISTING - 1987 14x65 Clayton New pen mobile home ,
1277
2 bedrooms, t bath, total elect In ci ty school dismct For only $69,900. Call for your appomtmonttoday

GALLIPOUS AREA - 19 acres mil Ctty water available
with oil wells . Gtve us a call for locatton . Asktng $17.500.
1326

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1749. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY. 3 ae ol Hat
land mn. Enjoy living tn a country hom.e very
close to town. Large 2 story w/4 bedrms bath
ktt., dtning rm .. LA. 2 cement porches b&lt;irn and
bldgs, large trees and a good gardpn spot
AHordable price . Mid $40's
1724. NEW LISTING. CHOICE LOTS. Each lot
over 112 plus aero for butldmg houses or for
mobile home. Check these out. Call lor more

11704, NEW LISTING -IDEAL FOR LARGE
FAMILY - 4 bedrms., 2 baths, 7 ac. mil ol flat
land. Cozy LA with fireplace, extra fg. kit., with
bar and eating area. Full basement, and above
ground pool. 10 miles out;ot town . REDUCED.
#725. NEW USTING. ACREAGE- 72 acres
mil (70 mil pasture). Very old house, small
barn , pond, 3 springs and all mineral rights .
Call

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shade trees 1n the yard tmmed1ate possess1on

A very line home. Low $40's

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11709. LOT FOR SALE- 1 acre lot lor sale
1n Addison Township. Call for price and

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locatton

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information

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1619. THIS HOME is located on 1 ac. mil
foaluring 3 bedroom with family room, kilch·
en, bath, covered carport, large. storage
building . This home is an excellent staner
home priced in tho 30's . Call for more
information

d1sh and auachments, 8 ' round above·

Canada!! Realty

'

1702. NEW LISTING: Ranch style home
wtth 1-t/2 baths lamtly room, dintng room
new carpets, new windows and doors appx
1384. sq . fl. ot ttvtng space Call ior a~
appotntment

1714. NEW
i
ranch 2 BR.
t bath , LA with d1mng area, eat-in kitchen . On
42 acs. m~ .
#748. 15 ACRE FARM MiL This property ts
located just past the Galila County line tnto
Jackson County. School District IS
Southwestern. Home tearures 3 bedrooms.
2 baths , appx. 1152 sq ft, bottle gas heat,
atr cond., 2 car detached garage. Satellite
#696. CLOSE IN - Home with LA, Lg . BR, 2
baths . oat-1n kilchen. luel oil heat, basement
on I ac m~ M!H pad also. Also extra 11 .9 aes.
m~ wh1ch can be divtded for added price. Call

z

1355

,;

OWNER WILL TAKE TERMS
,
1660. OVERLOOKING THE BEAUTIFUL
OHIO RIVER - Cozy and warm bungalow. 2 or
3 bedrm. eat-tn kttchen, range and relrig .,
sunporch, full basement, oil and woodbuming
furnace, well insulated Ntce lot and 1 car
garage

1726. NEW LISTING INVESTORS make yourself some money, 300 acres mA with four very
old houses. 3 barns, approx . 36x48 each, tim·
ber, and all mineral nghts. Call for more
information

~76. LOOK WHAT S37,500 WILL BUY!
older home w/LR, DR, 3 BA, 1. bath. kitchen ,
luel otl heater. new rool, 2 ouibutldtngs Call lor
appt

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M712. KMR. 3 bedrm., 1'h story home situated
on 2 lg. lois and basement, close to shopping
centers. Well kept home and large 2 car

1741. MIDDLE,ORT ANYONE? $28,000 Will buy thts exceptional nice 3 bedrm ., 11;
baths ., 2 sty. home. Lovely new carpel, range,
washer &amp; dryer. 1y, car
Neat and clean
homo located

Real Estate General

CITY SCHOOLS - And thts nice 3 bedroom bnck ranclt tn a
well kept neighborhood This homo 1ncludes t -112 bath, lrvtng
room. dining-kitchen combo, full basement, heat pump, cen·
trol air and ear garage Asktng $64.900 Call tor your show·
ing.
1368

RIO GRANDE AREA - 9.2 acres mil and new home with
livtng room , 4 bedrooms. 2 baths. kitchen, laundry room,
barn, cellar buildtng , and small house Only one mtle !rom
Rto Grands Call for more 1nlo
13n
BULAVILLE PIKE - Is thts 2 bedroom wood Stded home
w1th bath, kttchen, large liVIng room and laundry. heat with
natural gas, wood or coal, lull basement, 2 car detached
garage and 16·x20· butld1ng All on over 2 acres . Only
'36,000
11381
FARM- t48 acres mil wtlh large tobacco base, newer

IN CITY - 2 yr old all bnck condom1ntum w1th 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths. equtpped kttchen w/custom oak cabinets, dtmng area, livtng room , laundry with washer and
dryer. This well built home oHers heat pump, carport,
large walk-In closet, wall to wall carpet and much more.
Call for tnfo Asking '58,500
1378

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garage . Treed lot. lmmcdtalc posscss ton .

11675 TAKE A LOOK AND YOU WILL BE
SURPRISED TO FIND THIS doublewide ranch
to be more than lust what you are looking for.
Pertecdy harlnon zed in every way. LA/FA. OR.
3 BAs, 2 baths, k1l w/bar, range, dishwasher.
woodburning fireplace, elec H. P., CIA, on
approx. 1 ac. MIL Call today

'I

acres and
remodeled
home with living room, 3 bedrooms, 1·
bath , largo
combination famtly and dtning room. heat pumplolectnc
tumace, Nral water, also horse bam . All for '54,000. 1375

block bldg . wlconcrete noor,
carpe ted Many good quatili es
Call us for info. SR 124 , 5 min

.
11609. READY FOR OCCUPANCY
NATIONAL REGISTER Victorian, excellent
condtllon Down by the Ohio Atver e rin
Gallipohs. OH VERY ELEGANT !urn-of-the
century homo. 4 bedrm , 3 baths, library, useful
attic and complete basement. 5 ltroptaces, gas
heat wtth central atr, garage Romantic gazebo, patios, beaubtully landscaped. All lovingly
matnteined . Potential bod and" breakfast or
remain residential.

1380

A
BLUE
RIBBON
INVESTMENT - 4 ,000 sq . h.

Bus!ton 1614) 992·2403
losltftO&lt;ol614)992·71&amp;0

Real Estate General

..

' '62,000

fen ced yard. LOW utilities ,
por ches N 2nd Middleport.
See •t toda,- . Great Price.

Raduood .

HMs
n E F t' E f

RIO GRANDE AREA - Conventontly located on 826
acre IS thts spacious well · ke pt ranch with 3 bedrooms,
d1mng room, huge famtly room , and 2 car attached
cas heat, ce ntral a~ r, 1acuzz1 . deck You need to

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YOU'LL LOVE IT -InSide and

cull Floor plan bu11t homo LA,
2 or 3 BR. bath . utiltry room .
garage, maintenance free,
lanced 1n yord. Good iocabon .
Mulberry Hts ., P Make ua an
offer Price Reduced.

Pnce Reduced.
- Ranch style built home,
LR, ea t-m kit , 3 BR, 2 baths,
FP, 2 car garage , pond, wood s,
12 plus acres, on SR 143 out
of Pomeroy Pn ce Greatly

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Real Buy 5 aaes mil .

Or can leave

11730. PEEK AT WHAT'S NEW - Look f~r a
bnghl future tn this bright new home. Great
room w/stone ltreplace, cherry cabinets.
Jacuw, 2 baths, 3 bedrms ., super farge
master bedrm wtwalk-in closet, in-ground pool.
1 ac. mil. Immediate possession . A great
bargam. Make olfer.

bi-level with family rm , hvmg rm , eat-in ktlc hen . &gt;I• """'"'•

room. Elec heat pump, c~n1ral atr. 2 car attached aaraQe.
patio with privacy fence. All o thrs on two lots Extra lot has
water tap. Asking only $69.000
• 6•

304-675-

Electrical

GREEN ACRES SUBD.- Is lhts lovely 5 bedroom. 2 bath,

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446-3644

Gatltpotle, Ohio
614·446-3888
HEAT PUMP S.loa 6 Servlco ,
304-1175-3099 or 6"-446-8308.

Ridenour
1788.

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LIFE'S TOO

Nowor Homeo. Room Addltlono, 84
Electrical &amp;
Founclotlon WO&lt;k, Roollng,
Refrigeration
Wlndowo &amp; Sldln;. Froo Eo11motoaf Aoloron&lt;e~, No Job To I::--,.,....,.,.,.....:.__.;___
81 Or S 111 814_.41-'"'225
RHidentl_.
or
commercial
8
mil
-v
·
wiring, new MrVIce or repalrt.
D I E ConltNCtlon General Muter Uc.nHd eleclriclan.
Contractor, Roofing, Concrete,
General Repalre, General Con·

i1

448-11294.

LA&lt; kit., large porch , u11 l1 ty

woods , fruit trees. barn for horse. completely
fenced . a 30'x40 ' garage . Just what you 're looking

Real Estate General

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Or

Improvement&amp; Including:
Ptumbl~, &amp;a.etrlcai. ln1ur1nce

I
1 0
10

Banery

Home
Improvements

Rest Estate General

OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER
Co1y and economtcal to ltve m. like new shmgled rool, whtle

SEE TO BELIEVE - This 3 bedroom home ts
located on 62 acres wtth I 'h acre stocked pond

cH

Camper,

tlal

The muffler shop in my
L.--1--L-J.........l_J..---l neighborhood had this slogan
printed for their bumper sticA RM0 R 0
I kers: "There's No Need To Call

53371 S.R. 681 East, Reedsville, OH.
SUDAY, SEPT. IS, 1991
1:30 to 3:30 p.m.

FOR SALE
•7'/a ACRES
oON PAVED ROAD
•5 MILES OUT
•RURAL WATER
•RURAL ELECTRIC
-GOOD SPRING
oON SCHOOL BUS RT.
•SOME TIMBER
•SOME CLEARED
•NO BUILDINGS
•PRICE $14,000
oOWNER FINANCING

IIIII

81

Eleclrtc. Excailen1 Condition!
$800. 114-388-0818.

81

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z0 B E

tinental

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-07

Davie

T uB H0 G I
I--,I-TI-Iro6_:;.1_:::_-rl--1
I

2263 .
Now gaa t1nka, one ton !ruck
wheels, radi1tor1, floor mats,
etc. A &amp; R Auto, Ripley, WV. 304·

M
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5

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Services

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1989 4.3·Vor1ec engine and
trans. out of S-10 4-whHI-drhte.
12,000 miles, exh1u11, radiator,

79

1911 t7 ft . Soil Conlolnod Con'

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Motorcycles

now

.

POLLAN

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Spokt Ctltrry Truck WI1His,
$80. 614-245-11405.

1,800 miles, reb\Jllt
$1,900. 304-675-1118.

•, .

Tank
814-367·

1989 Chevy 4x4, 314 ton, 350 $1000, 614-742-267!.
engine, 4 speed laurus 9mm 314 Ton Chovy Roar End 411
plslol, satin nlckle, 304·675- Gea,., $65; 8 HP Riding lawn
6864.
Mower, No Motor $30: 4 Wtllle

74

WOlD
GAM I

I

R Ac I l G

15, 1991

September

Mocor And

condition!

304-675-2440 .

Real Estate General

I

for Sale
12 Ft. S.are Boat And Trailer

S HP

CLAY

15, 1991

Rearrange the
scrambled
words below to make
simple words. Print lette rs of
each in its line of sq uares .

75 Boats &amp; Motors

1986 Dodge Caravan LE, 7 passanger, every option, 90,000
miles, nice cond, asking $5,95().

Dodge Rampage, PU, S1,495.
B&amp;D Auto Sale , Highway 160,
Nonh. 614-446-6865.

====./

Editod

6244

7921.

1!il84 Honda Interceptor YFSOOA,

1990 Ford F·150, XLT Laria1, 4x4,
pw, AMtFM stereo, dual gas
loaded truck, 17,000 ml, $950d

1080 H•rlty Oevldton Custom
Soh Tall, wlmotorcyclt trailer
17,000 mlltl, $9000. 814·892~

304-45lf·1522.

675·5979.

Chevy S·iO, PU, $1,695; 1982

'

September

T:~~:t;~y S©R~1J-L££~Ss
by
R.
0
6
6

Motorcycles

614·441!-1037.
Wl1h Stall. Prlco: $400. 514-441:
1980 Joep CJ-5, $2,800, Good 0819.

Real Estate General

e u~

FO&lt; S300

CMC Jimmy Blaz'er, $3,195, 1983

$~1,~49:.:5::_.----=----~':''m:·:6:14:-9:9:2·:52:2:5:.

1987 Horizon $2,100. 1985 Me rLymt $800. 1985 Cavalier
$90 0. 1984 Trans Am $2 ,500.

Now, $522. Will Soli
614·361-7927.

Yamaha Warrior, 614·25~1020 .

1979 International Transstar II
sem i, model 40708 400 Cum mins, exc cond, $6000, 614·9a5·
3394 ahor Spm.

74

8ft. Fibarglase Topper Bought

wv

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1710. 30 ACRE FARM MIL' wtth tobacco

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base and bam. 2 story lrame house with 3
bedrooms, bath, living room, utility room
Call for price and location.

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1727. NEW USTING: 32 acres mA, (6 aes. mil
woods. 26 acs. m~). tdeal for building houses.
Call for more inlo.

1723. NEW LISTING. 16 'ac. mlf farm with 14
ac. mil paslut'll and older house has 3 BR LR
kit. and bath. Also 66x75 bam in good ccindi:
tion, corn crib, macltinery shed ana workshop.
Mid 40's.

t729. NEW LISTING. RIVERFRONT
PROPERTY - 14 Acs . m/1, choice land lor
butldtng homes or for mobile homes. River
entrance.

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DEBBY DRIVE- 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH BRICK RANCH,
LARGE KITCHEN, DINING AREA. BEAUTIFUL BIRCH
WOODWORK FULL BASEMENT WITH SPACE FOR
FAMILY ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE. CENTRAL AIR
COND.I $73,500. DON'T MISS SEEING THIS HOME!
WHY RENT? 3 BEDROOM RANCH CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED IN RODNEY VILLAGE II LOOK AT THIS
LON, LOW PRICE. $23,000
CENTERVILLE - ATTRACTIVE HOME HAS VINY L
SIDING, 4 BEDROOMS , FAMILY ROOM, LARGE
KITCHEN, t CAR GARAGE APPOX. 1 ACRE LAWN
OUTSTANDING BUYAT$28,500 .
845 SECOND AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS - 2 STORY
VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTlY USED AS A 4
UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY
RESIDENCE. $55.000 .
RESIDENCE AND MOBILE HOME PARK -VERY NICE
4 BEDROOM. 2 BATH COUNTRY HOME ON APPROX
23 ACRES. BACK PORCHES. 2 CAR GARAGE, 8
MOBILE HOME LOTS WITH MOBILE HOMES AND 5
MOBILE LOTS. ALL PRESENTLY RENTED .
EXCELLENT LOCATION . CALL FOR COMPLETE
DETAILS.
MORGAN TWP. - 67 ACRE FARM. 3 BEDROOM
FRAME HOME. 2 BARNS, FENCED PASTURE . VERY
PRETIY LAND. $38,000
RACCOON ROAD - 39 ACRES. MOSTLY WOODED.
WATER TAP, 2 SEPTIC TANKS, ONE TRAILER SITE
PRESENTLY RENTED. $25,000.

I

$1 500. NICE WOODED LOT WITH BUILDING WOULD
MAKE EXCELLENT HUNTING CABIN.

I

C14I~~~!IR~ T?~~R~~M- APPAOX. 25 ACRES WITH

I

#621. PRICE REDUCED: Great s1af1er
home teaMing 3 BR, bath. kitchen, ltv. rilt.
with app. 1000 sq. ft. olllvtng space. Call lor
appt. Priced in the $30's.

HOME TO
ON A TOUR OF THIS
. FRONT ENTRY
BRIDAL STAIRCASE,
REAR ENTRY HAS A WINDING 3 STORY STAIRWAY
THAT TAKES YOU TO WHAT ONCE WAS THE
SERVANTS QUARTERS ON THE THIRD FLOOR
THERE IS A BALLROOM WITH MARBLE FIREPLACES.
LIVING ROOM AND ENORMOUS DINING ROOM,
KITCHEN AND STUDY ON THE FIRST FLOOR. SEVEN
BEDROOMS ON THE SECOND. MUCH, MUCH MORE.
YOU WILL HAVE TO MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE
ALL OF THIS HOME. ONLY $72,000.

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HOME . NICE COUNTRY

OLO FASHIONED CHJ,RM
HOME BUILT IN THE 1890's IS
AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS. PRESENT OWNERS ADDED
A ROOM AND BATH IN 1981 AND ALSO DID SOME
REMODELING IN t976 MAKING THIS A VERY
COMFORTABLE AND SPACIOUS HOME . 3
BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS, DINING AND FAMILY ROOMS,
LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, LARGE LOT WITH
RIVER FRONTAGE. BETIER CALL SOON! $65,000
COUNTRY ESTATE: GIVE YOUR FAMILY THE
PRIVACY THEY DESERVE! 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS.
FAMILY ROOM. PLUS RECREATION ROOM . LOVELY
FORMAL LIVING ROOM WITH FIREPLACE. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING ROOM, REAR DECK,
SECOND FLOOR BALCONY ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP,
NATURAL REDWOOD EXTERIOR. 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE . SURROUNDED BY 9 BEAUTIFUL WOODED
ACRES. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT $t25,000 .
LOOK AND COMPARE! 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS ,
COMBINATION KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM AREA
WITH FIREPLACE LARGE 2 CAR GARAGE,
CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST OFF AT 35 THIS
HOME IS A BARGAIN AT $58,000
NEAR HOI.ZER HOSPITAL - SPLIT FOYER DESIGN
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINING AREA, ·EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR, FIRE AND SECURITY SYSTEM. GAS FORCED
AIR FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE $65,000
ALL OF THE CHARM AND STYLE OF FAMILY FARM
LIVING 9 ROOMS, 5 BEDROOMS. LARGE FORMAL
LIVING.AND DINING ROOM, NICE ENTRY WITH OPEN
STAIRWAY SUMMER KITCHEN WITH CELLAR
HOUSE LOVELY SHADED LAWN BARN AND CORN
CRIB CONVENIENT LOCATION JUST MINUTES
FROM RIO GRANDE $89,000.
OAKWOOD DRIVE - CITY CONVENIENCE. COUNTR)
TRANQUILITY. ONE OF THE OUTSTANDING
FEATURES OF THIS LOVELY HOME IS THE
ENORMOUS LIVING ROOM WITH A COZY FIREPLACE
AREA 2 LARGE BEDROOMS WITH SPACE FOR A
THIRD. FAMILY ROOM, DINING ROOM, AMPLE
STORAGE COVERED PATIO. LOTS OF TREES. WE
WILL BE PLEASED TO SHOW YOU THIS LOVELY
HOME. CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT I $79,000 .
THE VIEW WILL CAPTIVATE YOU, AND YOU WILL
DELIGHT IN THE PRIVATE SETTING OF THIS
SPACIOUS HOME WELL BUILT RANCH WITH
APPROX. 1800 SO FT. OF LIVING SPACE SITUATED
ON ONE ACRE MIL. PRICED TO SELL AT $60,000.00 .
AUDREY

F.

CANADAY

BROKER
ROBERT BRENNEMAN
REALTOR 446-21~4

LINDA

G.

SKIDMORE

REALTOR 379-2686
HART r. FLOYD
"REALTOR 446-3383

HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
2~ LOCIJS7 ~TP.~~T GALLIPOLIS . OHIO 45631

(:3)
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STARCHER RD. • POMEROY • is this lovely well kept 1·
1/2 story sided homo with 4 bedrooms , bath, dining room,
d en with woodburner, h11109 room and kttchen, parbal

basemenl. detaclted 2 car garage . 20x30 barn 8x30
covere d porch All th1s and much more on 82 acres mil

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Asktng only $75,000 Call for more dota1ls
'

1387

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POMEROY AR.EA - Character. style, country charm Thts home has 11 all. Older home, completely refurbished
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Wrap-around porch. Several butld·
mgs . Sttuated on approx. t -1/2 acres . Rock Springs
Road. Asking $59,500.00. Wilt take MH for down payment.
1345
ROSE HILL RD., POMEROY - Is flus aluminum stded 1·
112 story. home with 4 bedrooms, bath, dining room. kilclt·
en and liVing room . Full basement on 1

aae conven!ent

to downtown Pomeroy. Only $28,000. Call lor details
11372

NEW LIMA RD - 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large spacious
kitchen with island range . Home has had lots ot care
Look this one. Only $35,000
1361
NEW USTING - tn Pomeroy. Thts home was built in the
1940's and shows the character and quality of the era
Four bedrooms, largo living room, dtning room. full basedrive-in garage , in-ground pool Asking

t37e

WHY PAY RENT - When you can own this heme Only
$20,000. Nice ranch homo sitting on t/2 aero mil, 3 bed. ,
I trees, grapes and raspberries Call for
1357

dou,blll'l•ide with 3 bed·
car attached
livtng room,
mora information.
1371

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�Page-D8-5unday Times-Sentinel

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

September 15, 1991

Sludge seen helpful in
cutting lead levels in soil
WASHINGTON (AP) - Spil in
urban gardens and yards may contain dangerously high levels of
lead, but an Agriculture Department agronomist says mixing composted sewage sludge with the contaminated soil may reduce the danger.
Rufus Chanev said he has found

Campaign being
well-received

•

RESERVE CHAMPION DULL- Whites_ton~ Farms, Aldie, Va., Champion Farms, Galhpohs, and Edward Tillman, Powhatan, Va., all
shared ownership of this reserve grand champion bull at the 1991 Maryland Slllte Fair Angus

show in Timonium. First named the reserve
junior champion, the bull is Whitestone Potential 071. He is an April 1990 son ol" Jacs Hudson.
(Photo by American Angus Association).

Farmers to make less money this year
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farm crs w111_make sli ghtly less mon ey
th ts year th an 111 rcco rd- sc um g
1990. the Agn culturc Department
reports_
.
USDA srud Wednesday that net
~ash mcom c for 1991 IS forecast
down 5 percent from the 19 90
record of nearly S60 b1ll1on. whdc
net farm 1ncomc IS down abou t
onc-temhfrom $50 b1111on . Unl1kc
net cash mcomc, net farm tncom c
tncludcs dcprcctauon costs for farm
butldmgs, equ1pmcnt and machm cry.
.
. .
USDA blamed the d1p 1n farm
carntn gs on lower gra1n cas h

receipts for farmer s in drought - many parts of the Com Belt.
st n cken area s, and on slump ing
But corn prices have jumped,
datry pnccs. Datry rece ipts will be the department said, and should
dow n an cst1matcd 12 percent. it compensate for yield decreases.
sa1d .
Wheat cash receipts, however, arc
Th e forecast for government expected to fall 16 percent from a
support payments remain s at S8 year earlier because production is
bdl,on to S9 btllton.
expected to decline 26 percent.
Total crop receipts arc forecast
Total livestock and dairy
at3 percent above the 1990record.
receipts arc expected to slip 3 pcrU.S gra1n supplies ha.vc tight· cent from the 1990 record, USDA
cncd considerably from midsum- said.
~n c r fore casts, USDA said. Corn
Led by labor expenses, shortand soybean producuon forecasts
term interest expenses and seed
arc well down from earlier projcc- costs, this year's production
uons, due mamly to the drought in
expenses arc forecast up 1 percent.

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
U.S. Meat Export Federation says a
worldwide campaign to stimulate
demand for U.S. beef is being well
rc cc i ved by foreign buyers as
domestic caulc prices continue to .
han g below 570 per hundred
pounds.
"In virtually all markets , we
were able to intensify trade contacts and promotions already under
way," said the group's president,
Phii"Scng.
Seng said U.S . beef and veal
exports, including variety meats,
were up 21 percent in the first six
months of 1991 compared with the
same period a year earlier.
The federation's steps to promote beef include a meeting with
the Korean Livestock Products
Marketing Organization. a quasi- ·
governmental buying agency for
South Korean beef imports.

Greg
Smith
Says:

New shortening developed from soybeans
WASHINGTON (AP)
Efforts to develop new uses for
soybeans have resulted in such
products as a new vegetable shortening made entirely of soybean oil
and soy-based printing ink.
The new shortening appeared
last December on the she! vc s of
li ,OOO stores in California and it
could be available nationwide nex t
year, says the Agriculture Department's Farm line magazine.
Ten stat es have legi slati on
passed or pending that requires the
usc of soy ink on all printing jobs
contracted by the state. the magazine said in a recent edition. Thev
arc Illinois, Minnesota. Missouri.
Ohio, South Dakota , Wi sc onsin.
South Carolina. New Jersey. Iowa
and Arkansas.
: Roger Tclschow. president of a
printing firm in Silver Spring, Md ..
tllat uses soy-based ink. said it benefits the environment in th ree
~ays : it is non-volatile. wh1 ch
;ncans it will not evaporate and
fclcasc toxic ch cm1cals; it is a
l"encwablc resource. unl ike
:jlctroleum
which forms the basis of
,..
~

tooking for something
J,ew to munch on?

..
•·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Lookffig for something new and different to munch on?
·: Not to worry. says the Agricui Jural Extension Service at the Uni1/crsity of Tennessee Institute of
1\gricuhure.
:. Coming soon to your groce ry
90rc arc hot dog rolls navorcd wilh
mustard and fruit-Oavored iced tea
in wide-mouthed boulcs. Flavors.
(~c extension service notes. incl ude
lemon. orange. raspberry . lemon mint and tropical.
· Also showing up soon will be
antelope meat, which th~ extension
service notes has only I 27 calories
and 2.3 grams of fat in a threeounce serving. And there's going to
l!_C microwave popcorn in six colors
-:-but only one color to a bag.

.-

'hi::
i1'''
''·"""·
. . :,,JJ.&gt;
''f .

~,

&lt;·

.

ATTENDS SESSION Gary L. Darry, Gallipolis, .
recently returned from Jackson Hole, WY, where he spent
three days updating his
knowledge and experience as a
_senior carpet inspector. Barry
is the owner or Special Care
Cleaning &amp; lnsurance Repair
service ~allipolis . •

other inks; and it washe s out of
paper easily when it is recycled.
Soybeans arc one of the nation's
most important crops, earning
$10.93 biii10n for U.S. farmers in
1990, compared with $13.62 billion
for corn and $6 .84 billion for
wheat.
But th e American Soybean
Ass ociation says that in the last
seve n years , U.S. soybean farmers
lost more than S2 billion in annual
revenue to export competitors.
Soybean promotion efforts may

that when recycled sludge is mixed
with contam inated soil, it " binds "
lead and prevents its absorption by
plants.
The mi xture lowered lead
uptake in lettuce, a vegetable particularly vulnerable to soil lead, by
as much as 64 percem compared
with leuucc grown in soil wnhout
com posted sludge, Chancy said.
"This may be a rare opportunity
to have one wasiC product ncutmlize another probl em," he said
Monday. ··or course. the sludge
used must have only low levels of

lead. cadm1um and other metals.··
Chancy . who works at a l~b 111
Beltsville, Md., said, "It's iron ic
because I began the sludge research
concerned about the dangers of
lead and other metals in the sludge
itself. I ne ver expected sludge
could make soil safer."
Before choosing a garden spoi,
he said, urban vegetable gardeners
should ha vc the soil tested. Don't
plant leafy vegetables - in which
lead tends to conccnuatc - in soil
that contains 500 or more parts per
million of lead.

Truckers leaving Texas
asked to check for killer bees
WASHINGTON (AP ) day .
Truckers leaving the Rio Grande
A dozen Texas counties arc
Valley of Texas arc being warned quarantined to prevent the intento check their cargo for unwelcome tional movement of the bees out of
hitchhikers: "killer" bees.
the area where they have been
Swarms of Africanizcd honey- detected.
bees, unlike domestic honeybees.
Almost 140 swarms of Africanarc known to "abscond" in late izcd bees migrating from Mexico
summ er or fall , or, Texas agricul- have been trapped and destroyed in
ture offic1al Paul Jackson describes Texas since October 1990. Most of
it, ·'just pick up and move.··
the swanms have been in Starr and
The bees· tendency to flee Hidalgo counties along the Rio
threatens to help push the species Grande. More than 1,400 traps arc
north ward from South Texas, said set up across South Texas.
Jackson, chief inspector of the
Texas Apiary Inspection Service,
an agency of the Texas Agricultural Experiment Station.
In the last month. two swarms
614-221-0888
of the bees were discovered on
tr~cks ncar Corpus Christi, Jackson
ATTORNEY·•·LAW
sa1d.
8 East 11'1104 Strett, Suite 900
One of the swarms came in on a
Coluntus, Ohio
natbed truck, hidden ncar the spare
w e; the other came north with
some cotton-picking machinery.
992-6417
" If you find bees around a
II\ POIIIIfly With
truck, the od~~ arc ltlatthcy may be
Afncantzcd. Jackson said TucsllTTORNEY D. MICHAEL MULlEW

BANKRUPTCY
LW.CENNAMO

LOCAL CONSULTATION

'

Page4

'92 Model
Buicks and
Pontiacs Now
On Display.

ATHENS. Ohio (AP) - South ·
cast Ohio could attract big landfill
developers who would have free
rein if a waste management plan
isn't in place by June, said the hc:td
of a solid waste management district in the region .
Lance Wil son said south east
Ohio's wide open spaces and rela tively cheap land arc attractive to
landfill developers. The di strict
covers Athens , Gallia , Hocking,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton coun ties.
"We could really sec this area
being prostituted for mega -land ·
fills," he said.
Athens County Commi ssioner
Roxanne Groff said her county
wants to pull out because the plan's
financing is inadequate and reli cs

Point Pleasant

SO MORE

USED
CARS IN
STOCK!

INTERESTING SOUVENIR - Pat McKnight of Pomeroy is mighty proud of this replica Turkish loom. It was presented to Pat and
her husband, Leon, by Meigs County natives

David and Mary Hayes, who, until recently,
served in the U.S. Air Force in Turkey. The
loom is personalized with the McKnight ' s
names.

Report calls for overhaul of
child support system in Ohio

1991 PONTIAC GRAND AM LE
SEDANS

1991 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE
CONVERTIBLE

Auto . trans .. air cond. , stereo. cruise. tilt
wheel, rear window del. Bumper to
bumper warranty at no extra charge .

Auto .. air cond., p. windows, stereo .
Loaded . Bumper to bumper warranty at no
extra charge.

$8888

$10,900

1990 CADILLAC DeVILLES

1991 BUICK REGAL SEDANS

Leather interior. power sat. both sides.
door locks. loaded. Bumper to bumper
warraty at no extra charge.

Air cond .. cruise, tilt wheel. power
windows, stereo, fully loaded. Bumper to
bumper warranty at no extra charge.

$18,900

$12,900

1991 PONTIAC Le MANS

1991 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX
SEDAN

Auto .. air cond .. stereo . Three to choose
from . Balance Factory Warranty. Bumpet
to bumpr warranty at no extra charge .

Power windows. locks, cruise. stereo. tilt
wheel. Bumper to bumper warranty at no

$7,900

$11,900

1988 PONTIAC FIREBIRD
GTA
Local car. 37,000 miles. Showroom

1987 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
ROYALE SEDAN

condition. Bumper to bumper warranty at
no extra charge.

extra charge.

Power windows. locks. cruise. 92
Roadmastet trade. Bumper to bumper
warranty at no extra charge.

$7995

$11,900

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near 70. High Tuesday In mid·
80s.

Landfill plan a must
before June: Wilson

DIANA CHENG
(304) 675-2337

I

t Section. 10 Pages 25 cents
A Mulumedia Inc. Newspaper

Vol. 42. No. 93
Copyrighted 1991

Direct Shipment To The Orient

soon be funded under soybean
checkoff legislation in the 1990
farm law, the article said,
The Soybean Promotion
Research and Consumer lnfonnation Act included in the law provides for 50 cents out of every
SIOO of farmers' soybean sales to
be checked off to pay for promotion and research programs. The
money will be shared equally by
mtc soybean organizations and the
new United Soybean Board.

32 percent, according to USDA's
New England Statistics Service
Division. The stale produces about
40 percent of the world's cranberries, and growers there cultivate
approximately 12.500 acres.
"A cranberry bog full of ripe,
red berries SCI against the surrounding upland foliage is one of New
England's greatest vistas," said
Jeff Carlson, executive director of
the Cape Cod Cranberry Growers'
Association.
In New Jersey, the crop is
expected to be up 16 percent,
which would set a record for the
state, the third-largest producer
after Massachusetts and Wisconsin.
And in Wisconsin, the crop is
ex pccted to be up 6 percent. Wisconsin growers devote approximately 10.000 acres to cranberries.
According to USDA's Agricultural Statistical Service, this year's
harveSt is expected to total 1.8 million barrels in Mllssachusctts, 1.47
million barrels in Wisconsin,
375,000 barrels in New Jersey,
205,000 barrels in Oregon and
162 ,000 barrels in Washington
state.

Pick 3:363
Pick 4: 0716
Cards : 9-H, 6-C
2-D;A-S
Super Lotto:
11-16-24-32-44-46
Kicker: 636626

FOR
WILD
DRIED
GINSENG
ROOTS

This year's cranberry
crop looking good
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cranberry producers have begun harvesting thi s year's crop and may
bring enough berries out of the
bogs to avoid last year's holiday
shortages.
Th e Agriculture Department
forecasts thi s year's crop will climb
17 percent to more than 4 million
barrels. A barrel weighs about I00
pounds.
Production over the last couple
of years, however, has declined by
about 17 percent. so this year's
in crease brings the cranberry harvest back to the levels of the late
1980s, said David Farrimond, general manager of the Cranberry Marketing Commiucc in East Wareham . Mass., a part of USDA.
Extreme weather reduced Massac hu scus' crop last year by about
30 percent. Supplies were very
light at Thanksg1ving and virtually
non-existent at Christmas.
The shorta ge had some irate
consumers trying to guarantee supplies th1s year dtrectly with farmers. Farrimond said Wednesday.
Thi s year' s Massachuseus harvest, however. is expected to be up

Ohio Lottery

Browns
defeat
Ben gals

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Several steps are necessary., includin!f3'filster way 10 establish paternity, in Ohio's efforts to overhaul
its child-support system, the Chi!·
dren's Defense Fund says in a
report that was to be issued today.
The report recommends fi vc
steps that Defense Fund Director
Mark Real said were specific and
practical and would address the
growing problem of poor children
born out of wedlock. Some of the
steps would require legislative
approval. he said.
One of the recommendations
would be to simplify voluntary
paternity by making it a one-step
process outside coon. and allow a
signed birth certificate to serve as a
way to establish legal fatherhood.
The report says Ohio's current
process requiring a court appearance is cumbersome and deters

many fathers. Legally establishing
paternity is a prerequisite for
obtaining a court order for child
support.
Also, paternity units should be
established in hospitals in all counties with doubie·-digit rates of outof-wedlock births, the report says.
Those units would include paternity education in pre-natal, nutrition
and teen-parent programs. The
units should be established first in
the seven urban counties in which
62 percent of the state's out-ofwedlock births occur, according to
the report.
A third step would be to provide
genetic tests, which are 90 percent
federally reimbursed, for contested
paternity cases in child-support
enforcement agencies and couns.
Another recommendation would
be to decide contested paternity
cases in administrative hearings

Thomas says he wil_l
uphold death penalty

and allow court appeals only after
the administrative process has been
exhausted.
The fifth step recommended in
the report calls for immediate computerizing of local child-support
enforcement agencies. State agencies. especially the Ohio bureaus of
Employment Services and Workers' Compensation. should be
required to establish computer links
with local child-support agencies
trying to locate debtor parents,
according to the report.
The report comes at a time when
Ohio's record in collecting support
for an estimated 1.4 million children is called one of the most
pressing issues confronting the
state.

Youths invited
to participate
in contest

Southeastern Ohio young people,
grades six through 12, arc once
said. "Philosophically, there is
WASHINGTON (AP)
again
invited to submit entries for
Supreme Court nominee Clarence nothing that would bother me per- the 1991 Appalachian Ohio Peace
Thomas said today he would sonally from upholding (the death Prize Anthology. a regional art and
uphold the death penalty in appro- penalty) in the appropriate cases."
Thomas was nominated by Pres- writing project
priate cases.
Teachers and principals of 15
ident
Bush to replace the retiring
Thomas' comment, on his fifth
counties
arc receiving information
day of testimony before the Senate J usticc Thurgood Marshall. who and instructions for submission on
Judiciary Commiuce, means that opposes the death penalty under all thi s year' s theme "If You Want
his confirmation would give the circumstances.
After grilling the conservative Peace. Work For Justice."
high court, for the first time in
Ten of the original poems, stodecades, nine justices with no abso- judge for four days last week. sena- ries.
essays, drawings and music
lute objections to capital punish- tors still don't know "what the real arc selected
for publishing in the
Thomas
will
do"
on
the
Supreme
ment.
anthology.
Each
of the ten authors
Court.
one
key
committee
member
Thomas. in response to a quesor
artists
will
receive
an award of
tion by Sen. Arl en Specter, R-Pa .. says.
$50 and be recognized at an awards
ceremony on Dec. 8, 1991.
This is the eleventh year for the
project. which was begun by the
Athens Friends Meeting (quakers)
and is conduc tc~ thi s year by th e
Appalachian Peace and Justicc NetThe annual popcorn sale of the Mcigs-Gall ia-Maso n Distric t.
work.
Boy Scouts of America, got underway today and will continue
The Appalachian Peace and Justhrough Oct. 18. Proceeds from the sale will go into general operattice Network is a grassroots organiing expenses of the district. The scouts will be selling buckets for
zation, promoting nonviolent ways
$5, microwave packages of five for $5, caramel tins for S6. and 12
of solving human problems, servpackage microwave, regular or light popcorn for $10.
ing schools, churches and community groups throughout southeastem Ohio for the last six years.
Everyone is invited to participate through contributions for the
Investigation into the death of a Point Pleasant man that apparproject, $10 for individuals and $50
ently commiued suicide sometime Friday will continue, according
for organizations, and by encouragto a spokesperson with the West Virginia State Police.
ing youth to panicipaiC their origiJohn William Long, 20, died Friday of a self-inflicted gun shot
nal interpretations of the theme.
Contributors will receive an antholwound to the head. He was discovered in the TNT area by an
ogy. All money contributed to the
employee of the McClintic Wildlife Station Friday evening. accord ing to the spokesperson.
Peace Prize Project will be •used.
solely for the projecl
Foul play is not suspected, the spokesperson said .
Entries and contributions should
Long s body was transported 10 the West Virginia State Examinbe sent by Oct. 31, 1991, to
er's Office for autopsy following positive identification by his fami ly.
Appalachian Ohio Peace Prize, 18
North College St., Athens, OH
Long was a pan-time guard for the Mountaineer Power Plant in
45701. For more infonnation conNew Haven.
tact Bob Gridley at 592-2608 or
Continued on page 3
Don Dudding at696-1055.

too hcav li y on revenues fr om out of-s tate wa ste. She said Ath ens
Co unt y's recyc lin g programs arc
more advan ced than others in the
distri ct
" We're not putting any blame
on anyone or pointing fin gers. But
we JUSt feel we arc not going to ge t
3 full y impl emented plan," Ms.
Groff said .
Wli son said th e Ohio Environ mental Protec ti on Age ncy will
dec ide whether Athens County can
pull out and form its own wa ste
distri ct.
County official s have failed to
reach a consensus on the in gred ients of the plan to regulate waste
disposal and landfills in the area.
The proposed plan calls for:
- Developm ent of three land -

fill s wi thin th·c d1str1Cl. Th e AthensHoc kin g Reclamation Center ha s
proposed an cxp:msion of iLS land fill on Ohio 33 in Athens County;
Mid -American Wa ste Sy stems
wants to build a landfill north of
McArthur in Vinton County. and
Sand Hills Coal ha s proposed a
landf•ll outs ide Well ston in Jackson
Co unty.
- Implementation or ex pansion
of seven curbside recycling program s with 17 drop-off sites. Four
or fi ve employees would be hired
to implement a rec ycling education
program .
- Financing for the plan from
landfill tipping fees. Proposed perton fees arc $1.25 for waste from
in si de the di strict, $2.50 for Ohio
waste from outside the di strict, and
$3. 75 for out-of-state was te.

Air raid sirens are heard in
Zagreb first time since WWII
ZAGREB. Yugoslavia (AP) Air raid sirens wailed in the Crootian capital for the fir st time sin ce
World War II, and fighting th at
continued into the night left more
than two dozen people dead.
The pounding of Croatian positions Sunday by Yugoslav tank s.
uoops and planes followed Croat ·
ia's blockade of federal garrisons.
The blockade marked a dramatic
escalation in the fightin~ that has
claimed more than 400 ltves since
the republic declared independence
June 25 from Yugoslavia.
Croatia claimed Sunday that it
had seized thousands of army
weapons. It expressed impatience
with efforts by the European Com munity to end the fighting between
Croats and ethnic Serbs guerrillas.
who arc often aided by the federal

arm y.
J cts st reaked ov er Zagreb on
Sunda y. prompting the air raid
sir ens and police to clear th e
streets. An all -clear sounded two
hour s later, and Zagreb officials
said the aircraft had been reconnai sance planes . More planes were
heard higher over the city laiC Sun day night
Extra steel barricades were put
up around Zagreb's government
buildings, and tank traps and other
barriers were fortified. Older residents recalled World War II bombing raids, and some remained defi ant
"We arc not afraid. When you
are in your own home you can't be
afraid," said Nikola Pribanic, the
37-year:old watchman at a house
on Mhanoviceva Street, as he

rushed people into an air raid eel·
lar.
The Croatian Defense Mini stry
reported air raids on small airfields
1n Scnj. 75 miles away on the Adriatic coast; Varazdin. 40 mile s
northeast of Zagreb, and on the
Adriatic island of Hvar.
The Yugoslav air for ce said it
had destroyed 18 small planes that
it claimed were used to smuggl e
arms.
Throughout the republic, at least
26 people died in a 24-hour period
ending Sunday night.
Croat forces - after weeks of
se tbacks in fighting with federal
troops and rebellious Serbs living
in their territory - claimed Sunday
to hav e captured more than 400
federal soldiers and a large cache
of arms.

Athens city workers go on strike
ATHENS, Ohio (AP ) Garbage collectors and other city
service workers went on strik e
today after union members rejected
the laiesl contract offer.
Robert Turner, a representative
of the American Federation of
State, County and Municipal
Employees, said union members on
Sunday voted down the proposal
39-6.
Turner said the city wants the
right to fire any city worker after
30 days illness. 60 days on a leave
of absence or 90 days after a work related injury.
He al so said the city wants all

employees in certain departments
to have a commercial driver 's
license even if they don't dnvc city
vehicles.
The union represents about 50
city workers , includmg parking
attendants and employees in th e
street repair, water and sewage
treatment departments.
A representative of the city was
not immediately available for comment today. A message was left
with the mayor' s office.
The Athens County Transit bus
system says the system shut down
bec au se of the strik e. It say s its

drivers won't cross the lmc s of
striking workers.
Police Chief Rick Mayer said in
a statement parking meter en forcement and other parking attendants ·
duties would continue.
The workers' contract with the
city expired Friday. Negotiations
began in early August. A State
Employment Relations Board official mediated during bargaining
sessions.
Private garbage collectors will
be hired if the strike lasts more
than a week. and supervi sors will
opcraiC water and sewer treatment
fa cilities. c•ty official s said.

r---Local briefs-____,
Scout popcorn sale begins

Foul play not suspected

COMPARE
OUR
PRICES

ANYWHERE

Our Service Dept. Is
e1ulpped wl.tli the
atest technical
equipment and
factory trained
service fechnidans.
. Compare!

NO MONEY
DOWN
TO QUALIFIED
BUYERS!
On r7re Spot l1111k Ftnanclnf

11

31 YEARS 01 DEPENDABLE SERVICE!'
BUICK-PONTIAC

SMITH

1

1900 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

SIGN OF THINGS TO COME - This pic-.
turesque sternwbeeler, moored at the Pomeroy
levee late last week, is expected to be at the Second Annual Big Bend Sternwheel Fesiival in
October. The Princess Margy and Captain Pete

Grassie of Dunbar, W.Va., were homeward
bound from the Marietta Sternwheel Festival
and took lime to visit Pomeroy, where 22 boats
are scheduled to arrive October 12 for the local
festival.

•.

•

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  </tagContainer>
</item>
