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Page 12 • The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Friday, September 15, 1995

Literacy offers more benefit$ than illiteracy
By RUTH POWERS
and writing; and an aduh can find a
Literacy means that a man is number in a telephone book.
. able to sign his name when he gets
Literacy also means a man can
his paycheck; a man and woman open a bank account; read labels on
waiting on a bus can read the desti- grocery products and add up their
nation sign; a young man can leave cost; comp ut e income tax a nd
the area where he Jives to find Social Security benefits; pass a
work, because he can read street · driver's test; fill out fonns for job
s ign s and maps ; a mother and app lication and Medi caid ; learn
father can read a s tory to their about legal rights; people can learn
child, help with school lessons and to read the Bible, a newspaper, a
demonstrate the values of reading magazme or a reslaurant menu;

More than just a hobby ·c-1

Area high
school football
results

read about one's own heritage; a and women suffer discrimination ;
person lrnows how to use the dic- illiteracy prevents choices of work ;
tionary and encyclopedias, find the prohibits productive income, makes
way around a library, prepare for exploitation possible.
and pass a hi gh school or coll ege
The Meigs County Library syslevel examination, pursue se lf- , tern bas the help needed to tum an
directed independent learning, and illiterate person into a literate perhelp oU1ers to read and write.
son. Help is available by calling
llliteracy inhibits or prevents !he 992-5813. All materials and tutoreffective exercise of human rights ing is free, and the tutoring is done
that are dependent on literacy ' 1lll a one-on-one basis.
sk ills. Because of illiteracy men

Connector work on target. Page A3

TIMOTHY AND AMY HAVES

Wood-Hayes
Amy Michelle Wood and Timothy Paul Hayes were united in marriage on June 17 at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church. Rev. Jan Lavender officiated the double ring ceremony .
.
The bri&lt;le is the daughter of Bob
Wood of Racine and Vickwra
Quillian of Racine .
Guests were registered by
Becky Beegle, cousin of the bride.
Instrumental music was played by
Carla Shuler wilh vocal s by Rita
Kapp and Jean Cleek .
The bride was given in marriage
and escorted by her father. She
wore a white salin gown with a
sequin and pearl bodice . She carried a bouquet of red roses and
baby ' s breath.
The matron of honor was Tina
Woqd, &amp;ister-in-law of the brida.
Bride' s maids were Pe g gy
Caruthers, J ody Harrison and
Angie Connolly, sisters of the
groom. They wore black dresses

and each carried one red rose.
The fl ower girl was Melinda
Barnhart, cousin of the bride. She
wore a black dress and carried a
basket of rose petals.
The ring bearer was the nephew
of th e groo m. He wore a black
tuxedo with a L'lil and black cummerbund, tie and a red rose bouton-

niere.

The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a red cymmerbund, lie with a
·double rose boutonniere . Th e best
man was Chuck Buckl ey. Groomsmen were Charlie Wood , brother of
the bride, and Shannon Riflle and
Tom Barnhart. uncle of the bride.
They all wore black tuxedos with
tails and black cummerbunds ties
with baby rose bud boutonnier~s.
The reception was held at th e
Racine Ameri can Leg ion . The
four-tiered cake was accented by
pearls, ribbons and roses. The cake
!Opper was a porce ta in bride and
groom. The couple resid es in
Racine.

RACINE - Mt. Moriah Church
of God 60th homecoming Sunday,
1:30 p.m. Special guests Patti and
Lennie, and The Ladds from
Grafton, W .Va.
RACIN E - Morse Chapel
Church homecoming Sunday on
county Road 35 near Racine. Dinner at noon with service at I p.m.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Hymn sing in
the Pomeroy Parking Lor Friday, 7
p .m . spo nsore d by the Hillside
Baptist Church.
MIDDLEPORT - CJ &amp; the
Country GenUemen will perfonn at
the old American Legion Hall Fri- .
day, from 8-11 p.m. Admission is
· free. Everyone is invited to allcnd.
LONG BOTTOM - Faith Full
Gospel Church will host guest
speaker ll;ev. Keth Rashan Friday,
7 p.m.
· SATURDAY
LOTTRIDGE - Ohio Hunter
Education Course at the Lottridge
Community Center Saturday and
Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
more information contact Ed Rood
at 667-6348, Bob Pullins at 6673831 or Ed Wigal at667-6657.

Society
scrapbook
will have a special youth night
from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m .. Sept. 27
with the theme "Youth Yardstick."
Brent Baker, youth minister of
Central Christian Church in Ironton, will be guest speaker.
Scott B lout of Old Orchard
Church of Christ in Ashland, Ky.
will be the worship leader and have
special music for the evening.
. For more information call
Denny Cobum at 446-1863 or 4467318.
BOOTH WINNERS
Winners in the Meigs County
Men's Fellowship Booth at the
Meigs County Fair were : Stacy
~rewer, a tape; Ruby King , gift
certificate; and Ben Skinner, a
Bible.

and Their Spouses, Children, Other Relatives and Legal Representatives
and PRICE&gt;'. CIBA -GE/GY, Civ. No. ~4-0647-CB·S (S.D. Ala. l'l'i~).
SE'ITLEMENT CLASS MEMBERS
fUNDAl.' WASA CG.\IMUCIALAGRICl'LU'RAL PESTICIDE WHICH WAS ,\V.RKF.lH) I\
THE l '5. BY NOM ·AM CHt:MICU CO\IPANY. n :NO.o\L · W,\S " OT MARK HEn HIM
Kf.SJU.:NTIAl (JM HOMt: G .~RDEt-iiNG t'SE.

camp and director of camp at Howe lis Mill Christian Assembly and
d1rector of KYOWVA Evangelistic
Association. He has spoke at Ken tucky Christian College, the
Kiamichi Clinic, Ohio Teens for
Ch'!st. and Hillsboro Family Camp.
1 h1s year he went to Russia on a
missionary trip where be taught
and evangelized for three weeks .
He has also been on several trips lo
· Ha111 where he helped build on
orphanage, preached and taught.
He and his wife, Diane, reside in
C hesapeake . They have three
daughters and two grandchildren.

U.S. WORKERS "ITH 0:\·THl-:·JOB EXPOSl 'RE TO FUNDAL' ,\1A~· BE ELIGIBLE FOR FR.:E MEUIC\1.
MONITOJI:l\G AND/OR CASH PAY~IE ~TS L:NDER THIS PROPOSED l.f.(;ALSETILf.Mf.:-11'.

PRICE SETTLEMENT CUSS MEMBER.IARE ALL[.\. WORKERS WITH 0'-THE-JOB EXPOSURE TO
GALECRO,\'"" ~INCLUDING GALECII:ON" AND Fl'NDAL') WHO DID NOT EXCLUDE THEMSHVf-~ F'ROM
THE PRICE. SETII.EAIENt PRJC£ Sf.ffif.MENT CLASS MEMBERS MAY 8£ ELIGIBI.E nlR t'ASH
SUPPI.UtENTS l 1NDER THIS PROPOSED L£GAI. S£TILEMENT.

PLEASE READ THIS ,~OTICE C.UIF.FUI.LV. YOUMAY BELONG TO ACLASS OF PEOPLE COVERED BY A
PROPOSED SETTLBII:NTOF ALEGAl. ACTION !"WOOVW&lt;RV SETTLEMENT'~ THE WOOVH~RI!
SETTLEMENT MAY HrECT YOUR I.F.GU RIGHTS. FOR MORE lNf'URMATION CALL 1·8011·211·691.\

By Order of the Court. a c las~ action ha.~ M«n
condit ion al ly certified for ~c ttl eme nt pu rpose~ . On
Ja nuary 9. lq96 . a fairness hearing will be held ut
the .Courthnu sc. Un1t ed St,Jte~ Dt~trtd Cou rt,
Smfthern Distr ict of Alabama. II ~ St J o~eph
Street. Mobile. Alabama. ~6602. at 9 a.m. Cen tral
Ttm e. so the Coun can d.:tcnninc if the cia'~ ac·
tion should be finallv centfied and if till: Wnod~&lt;mrl
Seulemem. as suminari1.ed in th ts No1 ice. ,hould
be apprO\'ed a~ fair. reasonable a~d udcqu~te. AI·
though participation in th1~ \Cttl cntcnth vliluntary.
all Woodward Senlement Clas~ M e mber ~ who do
nott1mely e~clude thcm..rl\·e&lt;o frnm the l a w~ 1111 wi ll
be bound by the Woml1m rd Se nlcmt•nt tf it "ap·
pro.,.etl .

JIMMY TINGLER
Special music will be provided
by Dan and Joan Shafer. A nursery
w11l be provtded. For more information call Denny Coburn at 446~863 or446-7318.
.

A decision was made for kits to
be made and picked up at the
church, also $5 donations given to
purchase blankets for the festival of
sharing by Sept. 21.
The president appointed a nominating commincc to elect officers
at the next meeting.
It was voted to serve a luncheon
on Nov . 3 to the district superintendent. Jim Waugh, and the Meigs
County pastors at the Rock Springs
Church at noon.
Rev . Keith Rader announced

The new owner, Jrunes B. Sherwood, president of Sea Containers
Ltd . and chairman of OrientExpress Hotels Inc ., said he
planned no changes in the staff.
menu and prices at the midtown
landmark.

(Collectt\·d y "Wtmdwartl Sclllc me nt Clu ~~ Mt:mher~"] . Nolt'.. If mu arl'ran NOR -AM f.'(ptM d
Per.1·1m or ll Ciho Expmt•d Pl'r.\'(111 wu llrt' (J
Woodward Se11/emerrt Cla.u Mmthu .~hrtlh·t· or
no/ Hil l hurt' heen tfiu~no.\l'd ll'trlr "" ill!I&lt;' I 1.
Spmut~. purents. chifdrett. mlrt'r rt•ltlfil'n. Wltl It··
!{al uprestn/uli•·•·\ are Woodward l't•rtlt·melll Clan
Memhn J !mr tht' daim.1 thf\' em• .1'/'rllm)! ltrt• lim ·
llt•d rn thp.\t' urism,.; fmm a NO R-AM F.1p111nl
Pawn vr Cihu E.•r'l!.ll'll Penon\ 1'\fW\tm·

h DEFINITION OF CI.ASS

conlirmation classes will be held .
Sept. 3 for 10 weeks, also disciple
classes will be held on Sunday
evenings starting Oct. I through
February. For more information,
call992-3317.
A thank you offering was collected at the meeting. A Bible quiz
was conducted by Sharon Folmer
and it was announced the next
meeting will be held Oct. 10.
Mildred Jacobs gave the closing
prayer. Founeen members auended.

1

II. l~ti'ORTANT MEDICAL NOTICE
To NOR·AM E.11posed Persons and .clha F.x·
posed Persons (as defined abonl:
You m&lt;Jy havt: an mcre a~ ed ri~k nf dcvcl optng hladder ca ncer if you had on ·thc JOil ex J:Xburc to Ftlhdal"' andlur Galccron~ . Wnr~CI\
c_). posed to Fundal"' ;~ nd/ur Galccron"· should purtt ctpatc m a mL'tlu~a l monitorin g pmgram he·
cau~c carlv detection of bladder cancer can rc·
suil 1n moi-e effc,ti!Je treatment.
II you h~d un·the-job e~pos ure In Fund~ I··
andio r Galecron"". it i ~· recommended th at you
or your doctor calll -800-211-691.1 10 lea rn how
you can o bt~111 funher medical informatton or
enroll in medical monitnnng.

Under the Woodll'ardSeui'ement. Fundal'' ,, de·
fined a~ chlordtmefonn or uny chlnrdimcfnnn·con·1 }
t.atning product, either manufac iUred, fonn ulated.
packaged, di•tributed or ~old b )' or on behalf of
NOR· AM Chem1cal Com pany ("NOR·AM"I or
rel ~ ted part tcs. regardbs of the trade name or the
,product, or an)' metabolite of fu ndal 1'. mclud1ng
the subs tances known as 4·COT or 5-CAT.
Galecron* has the same meanmg as tt d1d m the
PrirP 1·. Ctlw·Cel8\' Corp .. ( t\ , No. 94·0647·CB·
S (S.D. Ala . 1995), Selllemcnt l" Pna Settle·
Ul. PROPOSED SETILEMENT
menn. and ts thus defi ned a~ chlordimcfonn or
The Woodward Senlcmem prov ide~ for the c~·
any chlordimeform·contai nmg produ ~ l. ellhe r
manufactured. formulated. packaged. d1stnbuted 'lablishmem b~ NOR-AM of two fund~ 10 provtde
or sold by or on beha lf ofCtba-Ge1gy Corporatton medtcill bencfib and compcnsoti on to clig thlc
or related pan1es, re@ardle~s of the trade name of Wnod~ard Selllement Cia.~~ Mrmbers or their le·
the product: or any metabolite of Galecronlfl, tn· ga l repre&lt;;entatlve~ . ·This ~ule me m b intended.
el uding the substa n ce ~ known .i~ 4-COT or 5·CAT, where applicable, to work a.~ a complement to the
The Woodward Setlltment Class is definfd a.~: Pncr Senlement
(I J All persons who fa llmto one of the follo w·
The tOial package of benefit, potcn hally avail1ng categories. and who reside mthe Un1ted
able to a ~OR ·AM Exp0scd Per~on ts the ~arne
Stat e~ as of the date of fil mg of the CI J. s~
as the total package of benefit ~ potent1all)· a~· ail ­
ablc tO 11 Ciba E~po~ed Person. Thu~. Wo(Jt/M.·anl
Action Complamt. who ha\C been exposed
Settlement Cl.as~ Member'&gt; may be clir 11C for
1n the ,United States to Fundal 1 only. but not
to Fu nd3.11 and Galecron"' or tn Cialecmnw tue same benefit • whether they were occupatto n·
ally e.11poscd to Funda r~ only, or to Fundal"" and
only (''N OR·AM hpo~ed Persons").
Galecron8 • or to GalecronO\, onl y. ·
a. Fonnulators An mdiVIdual (whether or
not employed by ~OR·AM Chem tcal
(I ) The NOR-AM Medjgl Monitorjoa and
Company ) who 111 the co u r~e of hts or
her employment wa.'&gt;e~ posed to F u nd a l:~&lt; Treatment Fund t"Tbc NQR.AM MMJ FuJMI"t.
while at a plant or .~Jte which was in· If the Woodward Selllementts approved. NOR-AM
valved 111 ml:"lng, blc nchng, packagi ng. will mak.c an mitial de~tl of )).500.00J 111to the
handling or otherw1 se fonn ul atmg pe~ · NOR·AM MMT Fund. and Will thereafter miike ad·
tt c1des which contamed. in whole or m dttional de posit~ on an a~ ·needed ba.'iis There ~~no
lim1t to the amount of money NOR-AM ca n be re·
pa11, Fundal"':
b. AoolJcators: An in diVIdual (whether or qu tred to contribute over the hfe of the NOR·AM
not employe d by NOR·AM Chem1cal MMT Fund , wh~rh will last a mmJm umof 20 yea r~ .
NOR·AM Expo~ed Persons will be entitled t0
Company! who in the course of his or
her emplo yment, was exposed to panic1patc 1111he NOR·AM medJcal monitoring and
FundaJ'Il while 1nvolved m the ~ppltca· 1rcatmcnt progrdm; C1ba Expo ~cd Perw ns may re·
!ton of pesti ctdes which contained, 111 cei~c med1cal monttonng and treatmen t be nefit s
whol e or in part. fi'u ndal". mcluding, only through the Prict Seulement. The NOR-AM
Without 11mitat1on, aerial an d land ap- medical momtonng and treatment program and the
plicators, flag men. mtxers. bl end e r ~. medical monitonng and treatment program provtded
loaders and other tndt v tdu al.~ who through the Pm~&gt; Settlement are ident1cal The
handled such pest1c1de prior to or dur· NOR·AM MMT Fund w1l1 pay for a medical mont·
toring program designed to detect at an early stage
tng the application process; or
c. Other Covered Workers. (i) An indtv tdual the form of bladder cancer alleged to be asSOCiated
employed by NOR-AM Cherrucal Com· with exposure to Fundal"': sprc ifica\1~. pnmary
urothelia\ carcinoma of the unnary collecttng ~Y~·
pan) who, mthe course of his or her em·
ployment, wase~p:&gt;sed to Fundal", (ii) an rem. l.t., renal peJ.,.is, ureter, bladder and urethra.
indJVtdual who worked at Empak, Inc. m The NOR·AM MMT Fund also will pay for all
Deer Park, Te.11as a.OO/or Micro Chemical medically necessary treatment for NOR·AM E., .
in Louis1ana and who 'wa.~ e~posed to posed Person~.
12) The NOR-AM Disease Comoensatjon
Fundal11 m !.he Coune of his or her em·
ployment; {Iii) or an individual who and AdminiSAIJon Fund !"The NOR.AM DCA
worked in a testing or n:search·laboratory IJuld:). If the Woodward Settlement 1.~ approved,
and who was exposed to Funda) 11 in lhe NOR. AM will also make an tnitta l deposit of
course or hisor her employment: .or
$21.1XXl,(XX) inlO !he NOR· AM DCA Fund, up to a
(2) The spouses, parents, children, other rela· required ma~lmumof .$30.COU:ro. The NOR·AM
tives, or legal representatives of the NOR· DCA Fund will mak.e cash payments of up to
AM Exposed Persons described above.
$616,500 oo behalf of a NOR·AM Exposed Person
(3) All memben of the Prict Settlement Class. who, after exposure to Fundal11 only. has developed
The Prict Settlement Class means all mem- or in the future develops the fo nn of bladder cancer
bers of the settlement class certified by the alleged to be associated with Fundal 111 • In addition,
court in Priet v. Cibo-Gtig}' Corp., C11J. No. lhe NOR·AM DCA Fund wtll make cash supple94·0641·CB·S (S.D. Ala. 1995), "eluding ments amounting to 40'l of !he amounts §Cheduled
persons determined by the cour1 to be opt- • for and paid as compensatory payments pursuant to
outs of that class. That settlement class thus the Prict settlement, up to $179,000, on hehalf of a
incl udes persons restding in the ·United Ciba Exposed Ptrson who, after exposure to Fundal•
States who in the course of their emplo~· and Galee ron• or to Galee ron• only, has developed
men t we re exposed to Galecron 41 or to or in the future d_evelops the fonn of bladder ca ncer
Gale.cron• and Fundal* ("Ciba E~posed Per· a.lleged lO he associated with FundaP and Galetron11
sons"); anQ the spouses. parents, children, The NOR-AM OCA Fund will a!~ pay for admin·
olher relatives, or legal representatives of th e isuauve cost&lt;&gt; and das.&lt;i counsel's and administra·
tive class counsel's anomey fees. costs and expe n se~
Ciba E~posed Persons described aoo ...

He said he planned to expand
the interior to provide more space
for dining in the 10,000-bottle wine
cellar and additional banquet rooms
in what now are offices and storage
on the upper floor .
. The price of the sale was not
disclosed.

DAN'S

·"Block Party Special"
FREE Men's Flannel Shirt
with purchase of
men's Levi's Jeans
Sat. 9/16/95 only
Shirts limited to quantity
&amp; sizes in stock- 81 pes.

The Place For Work &amp; Western

=-=--:-:-------,
news

vs. NOR-AM Chemical Company

U.S. WORKERS WITH ON-THE-JOB
EXPOSU~ TO FUNDAL®

SUNDAY
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church homecoming

YOUTH NIGHT

. The Gallipolis Christian Church

(614) 992-6454.
(800) 433-6203

No. 94-0liO·CB-C

'21' Club sold to London-based corporation
NEW YORK (AP) - The
"21" Club, a Prohibition-era
speakeasy that became one of New
York's most popular dining and
drinking spots, was sold today to a
London-based international hotel
and restaurant corporation.

106 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOuTHERN DISTRICT
OF ALABAMA SOUTHERN DIVISION

Rock Springs UMW hold meeting on 'love'
"Love" was the program topic
for the Rocksprings United
· Methodist Women's meeting held
Tuesday at the church.
Scripture reading from Ephesians 3 was given by Pandora
Coll.ins. Prayer and hymn singing
followed the reading . " The Purpose" was read in unison to open
the meeting conducted by Rita
Radford.
Officer's reports were given and
prayer requests were made for the
sick of the community by Lenora
Leilheit.

FLOWER SHOP

IMPORTANT NOTICE OF PROPOSED SETILEMENT OF CLASS ACTION
AND FAIRNESS HEARING

l ack H. Woodward . et al

The Place For Work and Western
290 North Second
Middle ort, Ohio

e.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START
FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES
ON SEPTEMBER 21ST
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE

"Say Love With

RACINE Gideon and
Arlemesia Roush family reunion
will be held Sunday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Pot luck dinner at I

A Multimedia Inc. , Newspaper

Middleporl-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt . Pleasant . September 17, 1995

For More lnforrnnlion
c.. u 992-6839

01.~ dctl!rrmn~.-"&lt;1 hy the Coun "Thl' hltJi uttnrn('y fcc
award to tlC £C4UC~led ""til IIIli CXl'CCd 2W.t nl the
hc ncfi t conferred upon tht du~~ - The hcnclil~ of
the NOR-AM DCA Fund 111111 co nt muc a~ long a~
the NO R-AM MMT Fund contmuc ... nr until the
NOR-AM OCA Fund~~ exhau.-.trd If the NOR.
AM DCA Fund1' e~hau~tcd. NOR·A M rna\' con.
ttnuc puytn£ for L'n mpcn,ah l~ ll.um •. If NO R·A M
dot'" nut ~.:onttnue 10 puy lor the . .(' Ci1 mpcn ~ablc
da1 m~. Wood11anl Senlemcm C ia ~~ Member-. wil l
he uhk to opt -outofthe NOR-AM DCA Fund and
r ur~ut· any legul clamb the) may haYC. c~ccpt li.1r
da1111~ for mcdicul mullllnring. m~.-xl a:L~I. trclll tnc nt.
k ar 11!' i llnc~~ 11r cancer. or 111crcao.cd risk (I( tll nc~'
tlrcant.'cr.
(.11 Other ( 'ondilions. The Stipulation nf
Scnlcmcm pre-.cntly pn,v tdc~ for med1cul nwni hJrtng. treatllll'nt ttnd cu mren~.J tinn payment-. for &amp;rt;un meUtl'id t'llndill{ln\ \('I ronh In thh Ntl!lf.:C !n
tht• CVl'nl. howe•·cr. thnt a Court·apprnvo:tl Epi1..k ·
miol11gy Panel dctc nn lll(' ~ to lt rl'lN\flahlc m.:Jtcal ·
~.:cn am1~ th:~l &lt;~ny nthcr 111l'dtcal cunditllln ~,, c au~d
by Fundal · ur GaleLI'IIO · l'x po~urc. that cooditton
wt lllx• det·met.l 01 compc~o;ahlc da1m. and wi ll he
.:hgih lc for medll'al moni ttmng ril lc;•,,hlc). mcdt·
t.·ultrcutmrm. :~nd eu.•h puymcnh,
l4l &amp;k'is. WrH~ti"·lmfSct t lcn~l Cia~' Member~ who do not exclude thc m,elvc., fmm the
Wr.ood11'!1nf Senlement Cia•~ relea~ all past, prc"'!nt
&lt;Jnd 'luturc clium~ (i) relarm g to the cnvcrcJ medical
cond1tion~ li~t cd at.ovc: and {Ill relati ng to a
Wuodll'urd Senlcmcnt Cia.~.' Memhcr\ eKf'Kh UI't:' to
Fundal ' or G&lt;Ji ccrnn~, including all claim~ allegmg
th.l! tln)' uthcr t.·anL't'f!l. pci'S(mal inJII rie~ nr mk.' ttre
.:au).Cd llycxpmurl! to FundL~ l'" tlr Galee ron ~

IV. CLASS REPRESENTATIVES AND
CLASS COUNSEl.
The Co urt h:~.~ J e.-tgn aiCd the followmg
Wuot/U"urd Sellle me nt C la~s Memhef\. lack H.
Woodwa rd . Alta Woodward. Tom Lof!on. Cindy
Lolt un and Rtta Snow. a., d a-.;~ rcprc-.;c m ut!\C~ to
rcprc,c nt al l Klwd1111rd Scnle m ~ m Cia'~ Mcm·
\leT' The Coun htt:; 11i ~ de~ignatcd a~ Cla"' Coun·
~d the lollnwtng mdi~· t du ah : Timnthy E. Ehlc.
S.C. Mtddlehrooks Ill. (lnd Duvtd R. I:Xmald,on .

V.

RtC;HTS AND OP'fiO~S OF

WOODWARD SETTLEMENT CLASS

MEMBERS
Whodward Senlcmen t Cia~~ Mcmho::L you have the followin£ optto n ~:
tl·J You ma y do no thing and remain a
WmJd~~·ard Settle ment Clas~ Member. If yoU ch~
to take no aCt1on. your interests as u member olthe
Wood~wfrd Settlemcm Clns.' will be rcprc;;cnted by
the CloM Rcprc:.cmauvcs and Clu~-.; Cou n ~ l at no
cost 10 you.
,
(2) You may rematn a WIHH.bmrrl Sclllemcnt
Cia~~ Member and eithrr rl'prc'l'n t your.el f or hire
you r own anomcy to reprcliCnt )OU at you r own co~J.
(]I You. may remain a Wn(){ilmrd Sclllement
Cla~s Member and object to the settlement
I4) If you choosr 10 re main a W()(ld\\'a rd Settle·
mcm Cl~~-.; Mcmber (u nd e r op tion ~ I, 2 or 3 abo\le),
you may rt!Ceive the benefi 1 ~ afforded by th!~ se nle· 1
mcnt within ~i x month!. i1f the (nu n\ Order dt rectmg thi ~ Notice.
151 You may requeM e~cluston from this o;cnlc·
ment.
DEADLINES FOR ABOVE OPTIONS The
dcadl1nc fur liling an Emry of Appeanmce 1f you
c hlX!.~~ to rcprc~e m your~ ) f or retain an auomc::y;
for lti111g ObjCCtlOn~ 10 th b ~C!lle me nt ror filing a
N011ce uf Inte nt to Appear at the fai me\~ ,hearing:
or for fihu g ~ rcque~t to be ~~ clu d r: d from the
Wrmdward Settlemt&gt; nt Cla~s i~ DECEMBER I,
1995. TO LEARN MORE INFORMATION
If you are

J

ABOUT HOW TO Fll,E ANY OF THE
ABOVE ITEMS, PLEASE CALL I·I!OO·ZII ·

691J or WRITE TO: WoodiVard Cia.~~ Aclion,
P.O. Box 974, Charle5ton, SC 29402.

PROOF Ot' CLAIM PROCEDURE

VI.

In order for any Woodward Se ulcment C ia~~
Member to receive any of the be n efi t~ oft hi ~ ~ttl e·
mcnt, he or ~ h e mu st comply wuh the proof of
cla1m procedure. To lcurn how you may receive
beneftts under thi s settlement or to ohtDin a Proof
of CJ.aim Fonn for medical monitoring. medical
treatment or disease wmpen ~lllio n . ca111·800· 211 ·
691) 01 write to Wrmdward C ia~~ Attion, Post
Office Bo~ 974. Charl~stbn. SC 29402

VII.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION

THIS NOTICE IS ONI,Y ASUMMARY. If vou
be heve yo u are a Woodward Sc nlr:me n( cia~~
Member you are urged to'a lll -800-lll-«i913 or
wn te to Wood~&gt;. ·ard Cia.'&lt;~ Action. Pm1Office Bo~
974, Charlesto n. SC 29402 lo obtain Further in·
formation regardtng th1 ~ &lt;.ettlcment. how to exclude
yo urself from the cia~~. and how to obtain ben·
ef1ts. DO NOT CALl. THE C! EAK OF
CQ1LRI wtth que~tton~ abuut this Notice or this
o;culemcnt .
Mobile. Alabama
Dated: Augu st 2!, 1995
By Order of the Court
Judge Charles R. Butler, Jr.

fREQUEST FOR INFORMATION FORMI
1

(Th~s is not an Exclusion Request)

1

hke to ha"'e more deta1led infonnation I
I ofI would
the Woodward Settlemen t mailed to:
1 PLEAJE PRINT LEGIBt.r

I N A M E : - - - - - -- ADDRESS: _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I CITY:
I STATE-::::::::::_:::_-=_-z,-p-.:_,-::_-.:_-.:_-::_-.:_-.:_-:::_
I (lncluding"'a:::,.::,:-:&lt;::::
PHONE
od;r;e:;;):_ _ _ _ __
I Mall rhr~ Rtq11~st for lnfo rmarion m:
1

.L _

\lbod~&gt;.·ard Class AcllOn

P~t

Office Box 974
Charle~I0!:_5~9~02 _

~ _

'

. I

At6:00 p.m.

_j

Vol. 30, No. 32

injured," Warner said. " We hope
this will deter reckless publication
of information in the future."
·
"I am very happy and relieved
that this was settled," Mrs. Montgomery said Saturday.
"It was never an issue of money,
but principle," sbe added. "I felt
that the Nortbups were biding
behind the First Amendment and
imposing on my rights, which were
being violated."
. Mrs . Montgomery sued the
Nonhups in November 1994. alleging that a series of letters to the editor published in the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, and the Tri-County
News and River Currents between
March and April 1994 defamed
ber.
The letters, which appeared on
the editorial page and as paid
advertisements, falsely reported her

annual sa lary at the DHS and
claimed she received her job
because of her relationship with her
husband, now in his second tenn a~
a county commissioner, Mrs .
Montgomery claimed in her suit.
The letlers, which questioned
hiring practices at the DHS, caused
injury to her reputation and caused
her to seek medical care and treatment for a "physical aihnent," Mrs.
Montgomery alleged.
In the letters, the Northups
alleged Mrs. Montgomery's salary
for 1993 was $25,356. She actually
earned $20,356 that ~ear, she said.
The trial began Monday and
closing arguments were beard late
Friday afternoon .
Wamer said the main points of
her case were thai her client's reputation was injured by repeated pub- ·
(Continued on All

By KEVIN KELLY
Ttr... s-Sentln~l StaiT
GALLIPOLIS - A five-day
trial in a defamation action against
local government watchdogs Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis ended Friday when a five woman, three-man jury fined them
$1,000 In damages in Gallia County Common Pleas Coun.
• But because the jury did not
award punitive damages to Sandra
Montgomery, an employee of the
county's Department of Human
Services and the wife of County
Commissioner Harold Montgomery, the Northups' attorney felt
his clients' actions were vindicated.

"I consider this, from the standpoint of my clients, a vindication of
their efforts," Joseph Oths of Wellston 'said. "The imponant part is
that the jury did not find for punitive damages . They were saying
they approve of my clients' eff01ts,
but to be careful with their figures
in the future."
Pomeroy auorney Linda Wamer, who represented Mrs. Montgomery, said she and her client
were "absolutely thrilled" with the
verdict, which came after six hours
of deliberation.
"The Northups were found to
have defamed her and the decision
is recognition that she was

Group seeks
new kitchen
for senior site

,----A day on· the farm

Commissioners eye
energy savings idea
By JIM FREEMAN
Tlmes.Sentlnel Staff .
POMEROY - To conserve or
not 10 conserve?
That's the question faced by the
Meigs County Uoard of Commissioners, who listened Friday to a
presentation by Bill Maynor of
Honeywell Inc ., Cincinnati.
Maynor presented the board
with a study on th e Ohio House
Bill 300 program - which allows
local governments to perform energy-saving building renovations ,
with funding coming from money
saved through reduced e.n ergy
costs.
The program is similar to the
H.B. 264 program for public
schools.
.
Honeywell focused on the courthouse and the Multipurpose Building in Pomeroy, Maynor said.
. Other countr buildings, includmg the shenff s off1ce, mfinnary
and emergency medical services
building, are smaller and more efli. cicnl with less potential for energy
savings, he said.
In the courthouse, Maynor proposed a lighting retrofit - replacing existing bulbs and balla~t~ with
more efficient units - and replacing the existing electric boiler with
a more efficient gas device.
Maynor said administrators at
the Multipurpo se Building have

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Stair
GALLIPOLIS -c- Faced with a
kitchen no longer adequate to meet
the needs of its clients, the Gallia
County Senior Resource Center
aNj the Council on Aging is lookiug for help from the public.
· A ampaign to ralSC $54,000 to
cover the cost of installing a new
meal preparation facility began this
swnmer and will continue into next
year, explained Dr. Howard
Greene, chairman of Kitchen Pro-

jecrCOIJUI\iltee.
"The committee is looking at
this as a community project
because of the benefit a new
kitchen wiD provide to the county,"
Greene said.
The campaign bas notched some
successes in its fund-raising effons
but is still a distance from reaching
its goal, be added.
·The plan is for the kitchen to be
moved from its current location at
the senior center to a site next to
the multipurpose room, Greene
said. Renovation of an existing 450
square feet and building a 750square foot .addition is tabbed at
$150,000, and will include a loading dock, walk-in cooler·and freez er, appliances and cabinets.
Gallia County Commissioners
have pledged $21,000 in block
grant money for 1995 and the
senior center will provide up to
$75.000. Greene rioted that the
Gallipolis Rotary Club, of which he
is a member and its representative
to the Council' on Aging, donaied
$500 this year to the project and
will provide another $500 in 1996.
. The architect on the project is
Ponsmouth-basect Tanner &amp; Stone,
but a general contracting bid has
not been granted. A groundbreaking is scheduled for L1ter this year.
Greene said.
"The deadline to face is that we
need to break ground sometime this
year, because our understanding is
that the county's block grant was
presented with the understanding
the project would start in 1995," he
explained.
The need for a new kitchen ha~
(Contlnued on Al)

BEFORE THE VEROJCI' - While a&gt;\'llltlllfl a verdk:l ""'Liav
In GaiUa County Conunl)n Pleaa Court, WeUston attorney ]OO&lt;tPh
Oths, len, reviewed questions posed by the Jury with his dle1nt.o,
Harlan, center, and James Northup. The Northups were
$1,000 In damages In a defamation suit filed by Sandn Montgomery, a county employee and the wife of County Commissioner
Harold Montgomery. (T .S photo)

Dank s.kles and Intermittent
rain dld not discourage people
from attending Saturday's
annual Farm-City Day activities, sponsored by the Galll11.
Soil &amp; Water Conservation Dis·
trict and several agrlc!llturerelated organizations. Tbe
event, designed to show oir the
latest features In agricultural
production, was held at Rae·
coon Creek County Park,
where various activities were
held. But new developments
used by Gallla County's agri·
cultural community were
shown on nearby farms. Joe
Foster (at left In the above
photo) explained how he uses
new technhJues at the least cost
In raising cattle and tobacco to
a wagonload of tour-goers. on
his farm at State Route 775 and
Northup Road. Back at the
park, visitors were treated to
beverages and f00$1 provided by
. sponsoring groups, as Paul
Shoemaker (right) sliced farmraised beef for sandwiches.
Planners of the event, the 13th
held In Gallla County, said the
day fosters heller understandIng between rural and urban ·
dwellers.

!

already signed a contract with Honeywell to maintain that building's ·
climate control system.
Workers in the building bave
complained about the heating and
cooling system, which Maynor said
had suffered mostly from neglect
and needed only minor work.
He estimated the project would
cost between $80,000 and
$115,000, with savings between
$9,000 and $12,000 a year.
"It's
self-funding,"
be
explained. "The savings pay for the
work that will be done."
The next step is for the commission to agree to go forward with a
project, he said.
Commission Vice President
Janet Tackett said the board had
been considering energy-saving
upgrades .
Tackett said the board would
likely make a decision in two ·
week.&lt; .
Commissioners later mel with
Engineer Robcn Eason and High- way Department Office Manager Dave Spencer to discuss a complaint over t rew Road.
Residents sent the commission a
. letter asking for the road to be
paved. However, the county bas no
conirol over the road , which is ·owned jointly by Chester and Salisbury townships.
(Continued on A2)

August jobless rate falls
in Gallia, up a bit in Meigs
GALi..IPOLIS - Unemployment in Gallia County edged
downward in August, but rose
slightly in Meigs County, part of a
trend that saw joblessness decrease
in more than half of the state's
counties, the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services reported.
Gallia County's rate dropped
from 8. I percent in July to 7.3 in
August, with 12,900 people in the
county's estimated work force of
13,900 employed, OBES reported.
Meigs County's increao;e in joblessness was smaller - one-tenth
of a percent - from 9.4 percent in

July to 9.5 in August. OBES
reported that 7, 700 people out of
Meigs' estimated work force of
8,500 were employed last month.
In surrounding counties, unemployment fell in Jackson from 6.6
in July to 6.2, but posted increases
in. Lawrence (up three-tenths of a
percent to 5.8) and Vinton (also
three-tenths of a percent to 8.7).
Meigs, Vinton and Scioto counties were among eight counlies
with unemployment rates of 8 percent or above during August ,
OBES reported.
.
(Continued on A2) :

Meig~

sheriff's department
patches into data network

GOOD MORNING

Today's Times-Sentinel
16 Sections- 164 Pages

By TOM HUNTER
Times-Sentinel Stair
POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriffs Department has updated
its boOking system, bringing the department up-to-date with the latest
felon information available on a statewide sheriffs network.
Deputy Bob Beegle said the system allows the department quick
access to .felon photos and records via computer. The system also speeds
up the boOking process, with less filing and better access of criminal
·
·
records.
The computer operates from the Links software system, by Integrated
Dctlletion Systems Inc.
.
Links is a. multi-user/multi agency video mug shot system that maintains its own internal database with information available from an e~isting ·
boOking system at the time of booking an inmate, Beegle said.
·
The computer system interfaces with Lockdown, which is the Buckeye
Sberi.ffs Association-sponsored statewide crime network . This allows the
department 10 now download mug sbors arid personal information on
thousands of felons from throughout Ohio in just a m.atter of seconds.
The new computer system consists of a new laser printer, digital camera and lighting equipmen~ a color video monitor, and a color video print- ·
er. The department saved money by loading the booking program onto its
existing office computer, according 10 sheriffs secretary Lisa Roush.
The program also prints wanted bulletins, with prisoner photo and
information, for facsimile distribution on statewide felon alerts and allpoints bulletins.
(Contlnued on Al)

Busin es&lt;.
Calendars

Dl
C2

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials

03-7
Insert·

Local
Obituaries
Sports

A3
AS
Bl-8
Cl
A2

-

A4

Along the River
Weather

·~

Columns

Deputy Brian Holman's photo, lower rlghl, wu
used to demonstrate the booking card printout
the system will produce. (T-S photo)

l

I

on PageA2

Jury rules against North ups
Local government watchdogs fined
$1,000; spared from punitive damages

Flowers From!" ·

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
rally day Sunday with regular
morning service followed by carryin dinner, 12:30 p.m. and prognun
by God's Kidz, 2 p.m.

Christian church to
.hold five-day revival
The Gallipolis Christiar1 Church
will hold a revival Oct. 15 through
19 with guest speaker Jimmy Tingler of Huntington, W.Va. Services
will be 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Mondax through
Thursday.
Tingler is the evangelist for the
.Sixth Avenue Church of Christ in
Huntington and has been serving
the congregation for a year and a
half. His prior ministry was in ·
Raceland, Ky. where he served for
18 years.
He has held rev i vats in numerous Eastern and Midwestern States.
He has also worked .as dean of

HARRISONVILLE The
Zion Church of Christ, Harrisonville Road, homecoming Sunday with services at 9:30 a.m. and
2 p .m . Lunch at noon. Sharon
Hawley, Debbie Grueser and Dixie
S.a yre will entertain with Dave
Lucas as guest minister.

Details

tm.es.-

PORTI.AND - "No Compromise" presented by the Porterfield
Baptist Church at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, Portland-Racine
Branch, Sunday, 6 p.m. Fellowship
will follow .

p.m.

Sunday with basket uinn.er, 12:30
p.m. and afternoon progrnm, 2 p.m.
featuring The Classics.

Chance of
showers

+

-----Community calendar----The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
desig ned to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type . Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.

High: 70s
Low: 50s

I

'

•

Jack Anderson
Fred Crow
Dorothy Sayre
Jim Sands

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

Group seeks new kitchen

OHIO Weather
Sunday, Sepl. 17
A~ru-Weathcr• forcc"sl for dayumc conLiitions a.ud h1gll temperatures

MICH

·~.
IMansfield j72• J•

~

INO

Sunday, September 17, 1995

PA

Youngstown

~
• IColumbusj76 j'

W VA

•
Por ts mouth

(Conllnuod from A I)
been dictated by the increased
amount of food production the ccn·
ter bas provided since the current
kitchen was opened in 1975.
"With the opening of the multi·
purpose room in 1979 and tbe center's panicipation in the Meals on
Wheels program, it is serving two
to three times as much food as it
once did for activities at the center,
and at least 10 times more for out•
side consumption," Greene said.
The kitchen is also health code
upgrades , he added, while the center is looking to prov1de food for
functions in the multipurpose
room, and provide a base for emergency operations - all of which a
new kitchen can do.
Wben the current kitchen was
crafted out of a room at the center,
its production schedule was for 22
on-site meals. Today the kitchen
prepares 50 on-site meals and 220

u

Connector job's most noticeable
changes observed at Fiv~ Points

Meals on Wbecls deliveries, result·
ing in estimated totals of 13,000
on-site and 57,000 off-site meals
annually.
"This unique program is vital to
pur county not only because it fur·
nisbes a nutritious meal for those
who are in need. but it also provides seniors daily contact with
other people," said Greene, an eye
physician and surgeon at Holzer
Clinic.
Also serving on the committee
with Greene are John Taylor, Joe
Stiles, Luther Tracy, Chris Cozza
and Jake Koebel.
Because the senior center is con ·
sidered a 50l(c)3 organization by
the IRS, all contributions to the
kitchen fund are tax deductible,
Greene noted.
More information on the committee and the campaign can be
obtained by contacting Center
Director Jean Niday at446· 7000.

THE]UMBO

Now Open For Breakfast
Come In For Our
·Sausage Egg Biscuit

'

Jury does not fine punitive .

Lottery numbers

MELANIE HASKINS
SBC GRADUATE
WINTER QTR. 1993
DATA ENTRY SPECIALIST
KNOWS THE VALUE
OFA QUALITY
BUSINESS EDUCATION

.•AI.!gust unemployment rate

Energy savings idea eyed .

~ Meigs sheriff's department
·

·

: phone calls. M-8 Systems of Louisville, Ky., provides the inmate phone ·
: service at the jail, and pays a percentage of the profits to the department.
· Roush said the system should be paid for within seven to eight years.
"This will save a lot of time in investigations and booking for the
:
· : deparunent, and will prove to be an imponant tool for us to use in fighting
.
: crime in the county," Beegle said..

'

SEPTEMBER SPECIAL
SWEATERS &amp; LIGHT·
WEIGHT .JACKETS
'

20°/o OFF!!!

Band or Cheerleader Uniforms Cleaned
FREE w/$10 Purchas.e.
Anyone with items over 30 days past due,
please pick up by Sept. 30
OFFER GOOD THRU SEPT. 30, 1995
.

OHIO .RIVER PLAZA, GALliPOLIS, OH.
PHONE 446·9495 .
I

I

BEGIN TRAINING FOR YOUR BUSINESS CAREER.
CALL US TODAY! 446·4367 OR 1·800·214·0452

SOUTHEASTE

NESS COLLEGE

; Business plan writing clinic set
·
POMEROY - A three-session business plan writing clinic has been
· scheduled by the Women's Business Resource Program of Southeast Ohio
and the Meigs County Economic Develop~ent Offl~e.
.
The clinic offers entrepreneurs mstructJon, attenuon and advtce needed
for a .successful business plan. Sessions are ~heduled for Sept. 26, Oct. 3
and Oct. 24 from 6-9 p.m.
.
.
·
The fll"st session helps those attendmg pull td~. and go~s together
before they write; the second session provides pan!Cipants w1th the per·
sonal auention to help them perfec~ revise and discuss the plan; and the
third will allow the plans to be reviewed by hankers and other fmancial
professional&amp;.
Tbe first session will be at the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce,
238 W. Main St., Pomeroy, and the othe~ twowi~ be at the Meigs County
Library, 216 W. Main St., Pomeroy. Reg1strat1on IS required by Sept. 19.
For more information or to register, contact the Me1gs County Economic Development Office at 992-5005.

~ RSVP plans
:
:
:
:
:
-:

JACKSON- The Retired and Senior Volunteer Program, sponsored
by the University of Rio Grande. will be selling soups •. sandwiches . ..
dessens and beverages during the Jackson Apple Festival TuesdaY. .~.
through Saturday.
·
RSVP's concession will be at the Jackson Christian Church, 102
Broadway, from II a.m. until 7 p.m. on the days of operation.

: Two arrested for drug abuse

EDWARDM. VOLLBORN

Gallia farm
agent wins
promotion

&gt; GALLIPOLIS - Two Columbus men were booked into the Gallia
:; Coun!y Jail late Friday on charges of drug abuse, according to jail
. records.
.
:·
WiUiam T. Martin, 33, and Don H. Williams, 31, were cited on the
GALLIPOLIS - Edward M.
:- charges by the Gallia-Meigs Post of tile State Highway Patrol.
. Voll!x&gt;m, who bas served as Gallia
County's agriculture extension
agent the past nine years, )Vas
recently promoted and has .accepted
:
GALLIPOLIS -Cited by Gallipolis City Police early. Salurday were
a post in Jackson with the South
:- William D. Jefferies Ill, 20, Point Pleasan~ W.Va., for drivmg under tbc
Extension District.
-: influence failure to control and suspended operator's license; Kimberly
The district covers 16 counties
: Y. Upch~rcb, 27, 10064 Slate Route 7 South, Gallipolis, DUI an~ no in southern Ohio.
: operator's license; Leslie M. Spurloclt, 25,-26 Quall Creek Drive, GalhJX,&gt;·
Vollbom' s last official day at
· lis, DUI; Sean P. Liberatore, 25, Gallipolis, DUI and suspended operat?r s
the Gallia County E&lt;tcnsion Office
: license; and Jackie C. Dewitt, 41, Henderson, W.Va., and James G. PICk·
was Friday. He was in Jackson Fri·
: ens, 28, 1607 SR 7 South, Gallipolis, each for open container.
day attending a conference.
Vollborn will still be working
for the Ohio State University
E&lt;tcnsion Service. The Gallia
. ·
GALLIPOMS -:- ~e Gaii!P?Iis City Commission will meet at 7 p.m.
Academy High School and OSU
Tuesday in U{e Galhpohs MumCIJ?al courtroom. . . . .
graduate will be a district program.
Copies of the agenda are avrulable at the Ctty BUJidmg, 518 Second
specialist. He will be responsible
Ave., aDd the Dr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library, 7 Spruce St.
for working with farmers and
farmer groups who want to develop
.management intensive grazing sys·
POMEROY - Ozzie Blair, 44, Long Bottom, is being held in the tcms.
Meigs County Jail after Meigs sherifrs deputies, armed with a search
Vollborn said this opportunity
warran~ raided his home late Friday night.
will allow him more time to focus
Sheriff James M. Soulsby said deputies raided the Blair residence on on lbe retention and expansion
Trussell Lane just after midnight Friday. Blair was taken into police c~s­ the livestock industry in southern
tody after deputies found around 90 marijuana plants, over half of wb1ch Ohio, including Gallia County.
were in pots and planters in the residence.
Fred Dee!, Gallia County's 4-H
Deputies also found green leafy vegetation lying on a bed and also o~ a e&lt;tension agent , said a need~
large cardboard box. Several large gr~ry bags were fo~nd fiU.ed w1th assessment program has been set
· green vegetation, as well. Some vegetation was also found m plasuc ~ags.
up and search for a replacement is
Charges will be tiled Monday in Meigs County Court, Soulsby satd.
underway.
Vollborn and his family will
continue to reside in Galtia County.

: City police cite jive people .

· : City Commission meets Tuesday
Area man faces drug charges

Mor~

Puhli ~ h c d e11c h Sund ay, 825 Third Ave ..
GalliPQii ~.

Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publi ~ hin g
Company/Mullimedi o.. Inc. ~ cond cl;m poM·
age paid at Gallipolis. Ohio 4563 I Ent ered as
se cond clas.~ mailing roouer Ill Pomeroy. Ohio,
Po.~ t Office.
Membtr: The Assoc iated Press, and !he Oh10

Newspaper A s ~ oc iation .
SUNDAY ONJ.Y
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

One Week......... ,........................................ $ 1.00
One Yenr .................
.. .. ..... ,.. $52.00

SINGLE COPY PRICE
Sunday ....................... ,..... ..................... $[.00
No subscriptions by mail permitted in areas
where mqlor carrier service i~ available.

The Sunday times-Se ntinel will not be responsible for advance payment! made 10 carriers.

Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
ln~ide Gallla Counly

13 Week ~ ................................................. ~23 . 92
26 Weeks ..................................,.............. $47.{)(j
52 Weeks ............................................. $92.56
Ralu Ourside Gallla County

13 Weeks .......................................... ~...... $25.61
26 Weeks ................................... ,............. $49.66
52 Weeks........ .. ...
.. ............. $96.20

Sunday 10:30 a.m.

POMEROY - The following
couples were issued marriage
licenses recently in the Meigs
County Probate Court of Judge
Robert Buck:
John Franklin Barnes, 22, and
Kimberly Kay Sellers, 26, both of
Long Bollom; Sam Ray Anderson
Jr., 32, Hanford, W.Va., and Tama·
ra Lee Halley, 33, Middleport;
Jeremy Christopher Stone, 23, and
Carrie Rae Morrissey, 20, both of
Pomeroy.

of distinction

The Vega
tilt

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Announcing the
Dress-A-Doll Contest
At The' Farmers Bank!!
Stop by the Pomeroy Office of the. Farmers Bonk,
and pick up YOUR doll for this exciting Contest!

Marriage licenses

Winners will be chosen .rom the
following five categories: ·
I. Prettiest
2. Bridal

3. Character
4. 1904 style dress
5. Crochet

.

The winner from each category will be awarded a prize of $100.00 Savings Bond.
AND Ali five winners of this contest will be entered in our

Grand Prize Contest:
The winner will receive a $200.00 Saving"Bond!

Auxiliary to meet
RUI'LAND - Tbe Rutland Fire
Department Auxiliary will meet
Tuesday, 6 p.m. at the ftre station.

Ali Dolls are due back for display at The Bank on or before November 15th, 1995.
Patterns are available at the B~nk, and Various Fabric and Craft Shops ih the
Community. Or, you may design your own clothing lo create an

Homemakers club
SYRACUSE - The Third I
Wednesday Homemaker's clu.b
wi.ll meet Wednesday, 10 a.m . a1
the Syracuse Municipal Building.
A potluck dinner will follow at
noon. All homemakers are invited
10 attend.
Weight Contrbl
POMEROY The Meigs
County Health Department ~ill
begin a series of six-week we1gbt
control classes, Tuesday, Sept. 19,
6:30p .m. at the Multipurpose
building. Residents should register
as soon as possible, due to class
limitations. For information, call
the health deparunent at 992-6626.
Zoning Board
POMEROY - Pomeroy Zon·
ing Board of Appeals will meet
Wednesday, 7 p.m. in P.omeroy
Council chambers.

ANITA
PETER FISH
IN CONCERT

CaU 992-68:J9

Announcements
(USPS 525-8001

Gallipolis, Ohio

lnformoliml

LCCD cancels boil advisory

Editor's note: Names and addresses are printed as they appear on
official reports. All newsworthy actions will he published wlthoul
exception. .

600 McCormick Rd.

MEIGS CO. KARATE CLUB
WILL START
FALL QUARTER
BEGINNING CLASSES
ON SEPTEMBER 21ST
AT CARLETON SCHOOL
IN SYRACUSE
At6:00 p.m.
For

The most noticeable changes
caused by the project are occuring
now on !be east end, a t SR 7 in
Five Points. Earth moving crew s
have cut d1e hill off UIC point on the
former Krauttcr property, con structing the interchange for the
new highway.
Kokosing Construction Co .
broke ground on the $12.3 million
project in March. The 2.25- mile
section of tour-lane highway , along
wilh the slip repair along SR 7
south of Five Points, is set to toe
completed by June 1996.

Fellowship ·
Baptist Church

POMEROY - Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service logged six calls for assis·
tance Friday, including three trans·
fer calls. Units responding included:
RACINE
8:35 a.m., Yellow Bush Road,
Velma Windland, Veterans Memorial Hospital.
COLUMBIA TWP.
3:57 p.m., Columbia Township
volunteer fire department to
Dyersville Road for brush fire. No
injuries, fire contained at4: !5 p.m.
MIDDLEI'ORT
9:25 p.m .. Stonewood Apart·
ments, Alva Rccci, Holzer Medical
Center.

ot

RUI'LAND - The Leading Creek Conservancy .District has canceled
the boil advisory for customers on State Route 124 from the treaunent
plant to Salem Center.

of three-inch thickness, to go
down," Brown explained.
According to s tate figures.
11,000 tons of the asphalt treated,
free-draining base ha.~ been placed,
in a four-inch U1ickncss, over the
granular base . Brown said 19,000
tons of 302 composition , a more
traditional asphalt base. has been
placed on top of the Uoick base layers.
"When we get finished with U1e
asphalt work, we' II be looking at a
base consisting of over 20 inches of
material," added Drown .

Meigs EMS
units record
three runs

Apple Festival activity

· POMEROY - Tbe scheduled closing of County Road 26 (Aatwoods)
from State Route 7 to County Road 25 (Pomeroy Pike) has been pushed
back one day to Tuesday, Sept. 19, from 8 ·a.m .-4 p.m.
.
During the closure, the Meigs Counly Highway Department w1ll
replace a culven on flatwoods Road.
.

Tile system is paid for with money the department collects from inmate

~ARDINAt DRY CLEANERS

•

.-Tri-County Briefs:_.;..._

Road closing rescheduled

:
(Continued from AI)
.
:
To help in preparation time in investigations, the computer can process
• and print six-picture criminal lineups, based on per.onal features such as
: height, weigh~ hair color, eye color and distinguishing features, within
: minutes.

99¢

BrTOMHUNTER
Tm~es·Sendnel Staff
ROCK SPRINGS - Work continues to progress at a steady rate
on the U.S. Route 33n-77 comJCC•
tor project between Rock Springs
and Five Points, officials said
recently.
.
Dry weather has meant that
crews been able to keep right on
schedule with the project, according to Olarlie Brown, Ohio Depanment of Transportalion proj~CI
supervisor.
A 6 p.m to 5:30 a.m. night shift
has been operating for the past
week, moving va~l amounts of din
on the east end of the prujec~ near
State Route 7 at Five Points.
About 62 percent of the total
excavation work is complete on the
project, or about 1,492,000 cubic
yards of the 2.4 million cubic yards
in the entire project, Brown said.
Embankment work is rough! y
80 percent complete on the entire ·
project, with 955 ,000 of the
I, 190,000 cubic yards placed, he
added .
Asphalt is being ·placed down
· from the center of the project
toward the west end at Rock
Springs.
"The asphalt consists of two or
three different types of materials,
so it's kind of hard to give a com·
plete total. estimate ·on the project.
Probably 45 to 50 percent of the
asphalt base is down, with two
more courses, consisting of a total

The CentervUie Volunteer Fire Department recently lidded a new truck to Its neet of nve vehi·
cles that wiD enhance the department's fireflghtlng capabllldes, Chief Bob Terry explained. The
viUage paid $69,000 for a 1978 Ford with a Pierce body that carries its own generator, apparatus
to spread foam, an 800-gallon water tank and a 1,000-gallon pump. The vehicle was refurbished
prior to the purchase and will ''last us probably 20 years or better," Terry said. Seen wlth. the
truck a.re, from left, Terry, rll"eflghters Jim McCormick, Gene Vanco and Rick Johnson, and fire
Capt. Junior Hall.
·
·

Compromise welfare reform
bill wins DeWine's backing

Clouds to decrease Sunday

Sunda y Times- Sentinel/A3

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

KITCHEN DONATION- The Galllpolls Rotary Club recently
presented the Gallla County Senior Resource Center and the
Council on Aging with $500 toward a new kitchen. Accepting the
donation is CouncU on Aging board member Ethel Robinson, cen·
ter, from Rotary President Brad Yoho. Dr. Howard Greene, a
5;~;~,~ T-~t~:n;s Ram Flu·r;tes s;~·~ Ice Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy
Rotarian and chairman of the Kitchen Project Committee. is at
right.
© 1995 Accu Wee!her, in c
Vm Assocatod Press Gtaptm:sNel
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ohio paned Friday to endorse the whole ,......:,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,;_ _ _--,
Sen. Mike DeWine on Friday plan.
endorsed Republican legislation
"There are still myriad prob·
overhauling the nation' s welfare !ems with this legislation," he said.
ny The Associated Press
record low was 40 in 1916.
system and criticized conservatives "I remain concerned that we may
Centenary, Ohio
Mostly cloudy skies will remain
Sunrise Sunday is at 7:14 a.m .,
who want to more closely dictate be passing on a number of unfund·
Sunday morning, but as a front sunset at 7:38p.m.
ed mandates to the states.
how the changes lake rtace.
moves casl, dry air will move in
Weather for•cast:
"I didn't come to Washington
· "While I still have serious conquickly behind it and clouds will
Sunday ...Moslly cloudy with a
7:00a.m.
to impose conservative microman· cerns about the package. the com·
decrease by afternoon. A few chance of showers. II ighs. in the
agement on the states to replace promise is legislation .that bri'ngs us
Beginning September 18th, 1995
•bowers will linger in the east in lower to mid 70s.
liberal mictomanagement, panicu- closer to this goal than the original
1he morning : High temperatures
Sunday nigbt...Ciearing e&lt;cepl
larly ·in areas where we cannot bill or the measure passed by the .
will be in the low to mid 70s.
partly cloudy northeast. Lows 45 to determine what will work and what House," Glenn said.
· Tbe record high irt Columbus on 50.
The Senate's leading welfare
will not work," DeWine, a fresh·
~aturday was 96 in 1897; the
man Republican. told reponers.
scholar, Sen. Daniel Patrick
DeWine predicted the Senate Moynihan, D-N.Y., has warned
will pass the compromise brokered that if the bill takes effect, within
by Majority Leader Bob Dole. It . 10 years, millions of children will
ends the federal guarantee to wei· be homeless and sleeping on inner"This was my first experience
(Continued from A 1)
fare benefits for single-parent fami· city grates.
Ibis
sort
of
thing,
but
I
was
with
lication of false information, and
lies
and trims spending by $70 bil·
Uoat she had been subjected to con- treated very fairly," Mrs. Mont·
lion.
tinual evaluation and harassment in gomery said. "That's all you can
After 95 hours of debate,
iwr job because of herrclationship ask for. I appreciate !be fact the
marathon
back-room negotiations By The Associated Press
jury stayed a week - I just ~c.~er
witll the county commissioner.
and votes on dozens
on
child
care,
. The following numbers were
· Oths argued that the North ups' imagined it woutct ·tast that long.
of
amendments,
Dole said the Sen· selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Mrs.
Montgomery
originally
·F irst Amendment rights were
· Virginia lotteries:
• ·
(hrcatened by the suit, which he sued for a total of $296,500 in ate's vote to send the bill to a coo.
ference committee with the House
OHIO
:tailed "an attempt to silence them." punitive and compensatory dam·
would be Tuesday. The House
Pick 3:5-4-0
ages.
At
a
hearing
Aug.
23,
Judge
.
:: "The prevailing issue is that
Pick 4: 9·8-6-2
· tlarlan and Jim Northup have the · Joseph L. Cain, in response to the passed its welfare overhaul in
March.
Buckeye 5: 7-17-19·26-28
:right of free speech and did not Northups' request for a summary
Moderate Republicans and the
Three
Ohio Louery tickets show
judgment,
ruled
that
she
was
not
a
"After being a homemaker and a mother of two, l decided Ia make the
· ~cfame her," be said. "They are
Senate's
top
Democrat
lined
up
to
the
right
fivc-nwnher
combination
Ia return to college and update my employment skills al
commitment
public
figure.
: ~icc gentlemen with a prevailing
endorse Dole's sweeping blueprint, in Buckeye 5, and each entitles the
Southeastern
Business College. Class time was convenient lor ·my
But
the
question
of
whether
:interest in public affairs .. . They
the cornerstone of the GOP's effon owner to claim a $100,000 prize,
family,
while
l
developed
a great deal of self esteem by completing all
Mrs.
Montgomery's
reputation
had
· were gelling a lillie. too close to
to
return
power
to
the
states.
my
course
work
with
a
4.0
GPA.
the
lottery
announced
Saturday.
been damaged had to be deter·
:some issues.
Gaining
skills
In
compufers
and accounting gave me the knowledge
DeWine and Sen. John Glenn,
: · " If Mrs. Montgomery is salis· mined by a jury, Cain said. which
Tbe
jackpot forSaturday's Super
and
confidence
I
needed
to
perform
well in the business world.
D-Ohio, worked together to add an
Lotto drawing was $4 million.
·iied, my clients feel likewise," set the sL1~e for the trial.
1 would suggestio anyone who has ever thought about returning to
. amendment setting up a rainy' day
Oths said of the decision.
WEST VIRGINIA·
school, to consider the benefits ol a business education. sec gave me
fund to belp states deal with the
Daily 3: 2·7·9 .
the
skills and self 89teem I needed to succeed."
increaSed demand for benefits d.ur·
MELANIE HASKINS, SECRETARY AT F.A.C.T.S.
Daily 4: 8·5·9-6
ing recession.
Cash
25:
5·16·19·21·22·24
·
However, GICfln was not pre·
(Continued from A1)
The office noted 33 employers
The comparable unemployment placed job orders for 51 openings.
·rate for Ohio· was 4.9 percent and . seeking workers in occupations
:the comparable national rate for such as borne health aide, appli;tncc
(Continued from A1)
• Disrussed a complaint against
repair, material handling, fast food
:Augu st was 5.6, the agency noted ..
a
county
employee.
During August, the Galhpohs worker, farm work, bank teller,
Spring Valley Plaza
Present
were Commission Presi·
:ODES oflicc processed 220 new concrete truck driver, yard work,
Gallipolis, OH.
dent Fred Hoffman, Tackett, Com·
and additional claims for unem·· sales representative, accounting
Reg. ~5·12748
missioner Roben Hanenbach and
clerk, deli worker, refuse truck
:ploymcnt compensation.
Clerk Gloria Kloes.
: More than 600 job-seekers , driver, cook, grader operator, gen·
·including 134 first-time registrants, era! labor, electric motor assembly.
: visilcd the job service section last receptionist, waiter/waitress, pay·
:month. New registrants possessed roll clerk, auto mechanic, security,
skills in food service 'managemenl, hardware sales, general office work
:teaching, teacher aide, retail Sides. and H VAC insL1ller/servicer.
·material handling, properly manOffi.c e Manager Tom White
: ngement, pharmacy .technician, advised job-seekers U1at a well-pre·
·. nurse aide, machtntsl, auto pared reswne will a.sist in landing
mechanics, security, construction ajob.
labor and carpentry.
"In the pas~ resumes were pret·
Other skills included registered ty well restricted for use by indi·
nursing, payroll clerk, inspector. victuals seeking professional-type
police officer, .motorcycle repair. jobs," White said. "In Coday's comdata entry, plumbing, IIV AC petitive job market, employers
mechanic, maintenance, social offering all types of jobs use
work, personnel clerk, engineering resumes to screen job-seekers."
·· technician, timber cutter, ca~hier,
Information on preparing an
r.eceptionisl, shipping and receiving effective resume is available at the .
Clerk, and airline pilot.
OB.ES office at 45 Olive St.

~~~4.88 (1- ~

Regi 0 nal

September 17, 1995

original work of art!
After Judging takes place and prizes are awarded, the Dolls will be donated to the area :
:
infirmaries and Children's Homes in time for Christmas!

~w 5trriva£s
f(O((\

\

~temeiitZ

Stop in and see us for further Details!

Your

See the exciting new
fall fashion items.

Bank

Layaway now!

For

Attention Ladies · Stop in to update your wish lists

Life

glH'W

Member FDIC

TOPPERS PLAINS &amp; POMEROY, OHIO

J•wlm

\

Fanners
Bank
667·3161

tOt SlCONO AYINUI • ttt U•?
llllllf·" .u.lii"CI•JI,GI frll 10(111•

'

992·2136

Gt
EQUAL HOUSING

LENDER

I

�/

Pomeroy • Mi-d dleport -• Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Commentary

September 17, 1995

--Area Death-- CasQs filed, concluded in Gallia courts

Sunday Times-Seminei/A4

Pauline Tucker Jones

The tax issue may burn Dole once more
A Divislon of

825 Tblrd AYe, GaUipoU., Ohio
(614) 446-1342

111 Court SL, Pomeroy, Ollio
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT

1'1JbU.bor
HOBART WILSON JR.
EncutiYO Editor

MARGARET LEHEW
Coatrollor

A MEMBER of The Associated Preu, lnlaad Daily Prou
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AsiiOCiation.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They abould

be

leas than

300 words long. Allletten an: subject to editing and must be signed with

name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letten will be
publisbed. Lenon should be in good taste, addreuing iuues, not
personalities.
·

High court case on gay
rights draws attention

WASHINGTON - The issue might once again be playing with
that helped doom the presidential fire on the tax issue. The great
hopes of Sen. Bob Dole in 1988 debate of the primary season will
might come back to haunt him be about federal income tax, as
again next year: laltes.
On the eve of the 1988 New By Jack Anderson
Hampshire primary, Dole refused
to sign a pledge that he would
and
never raise taxes as president. It
was a principled stand by a man
Michael Binstein
who had never been a fan of the
Reagan-era tax cuts. But it was al'o several candidates have already
politically stupid. George Dush proposed scrapping the current sys ..
signed the pledge and trounced tern in favor Of a flat taJt or a COO•
Dole in ,New Hampshire. Once he sumptioo tax.
Dut Dole isn't sure where he
was in tbe White House, Bush con. veniently disregarded the pledge.
stands on tax reform . So he has
Dole isn't taking any chances done what most undecided politi·
this time around . To appease the cians do: He's punted the issue to a
conservatives who decide his "blue-ribbon" commission that
party's presidential nomination, will study the mauer and recom·
be's changed his long-held posi· mend changes in time for New
lions on everything from affirma- Hampshire.
tive action to gay· rights. He's even
Perhaps in an effort to atone for
swallowed his pride and signed the past sins, Dole has tapped his old
taJt pledge that destroyed his 1988 rival, supply-si.de conservative Jack
campaign.
Kemp, to head the commission.
Despite the pledge, however. The two Republicans have apparsenior GOP sources believe Dole ently made peace since they met in

the primaries in 1988 , when the
feud between them became personal.
"Kemp is for tax reform
because he is counting on a tax
break on hair spray," Dole said or
the former pro quarterback as both
men were preparing for the race.
Kemp retorted that Dole's library
bad burned down in a ftre . "Both
books were lost, " Kemp said.
"And he hadn't even finished coloring one of them."
And therein lies Dole's predicament. Kemp' s commission is due
to release its report and recommendatioos just weeks before the New
Hampshire primary. Although Dole
will not be bound by the commission's findings, many insiders
expect Kemp's report to become
the foundation or Dole's "stand"
on tax refonn. But what Kemp has
to say about tax refonn may nol be
what New Hampshire v,oters want
to bear.
Kemp recently suggested that
everything is negotiable in the

By RICHARD CARELLI
Associated Press Wrller
· WASHINGTON - As the Supreme Court prepares to consider a dispute ,over the rights of homosexuals and Colorado, gay-rights advocates
arc e~ pressing an an~iety ftmliy rooted in precedent.
The nation's highest court bas never given a substantive victory to tbe
gay-rights cause on the rare occasions when it bas taken up cases involv·
ing homosexuals.

Washington Today:

EE

.

"The track record isn't encouraging.'.' said Suzanne Goldberg of tbe
Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund. "But win or lose, it's far too
late in the day for anyone to think lesbians and gay men wiU return to the
closet.,
At issue: Can Colorado's voters forbid their legislature and every community within the state from enacting laws and ordinances designed to
protect homosexuals from discrimination?
The Colorado Supreme Coun struck down that1992 amendment to the
state's constitution, ruling it denied homosexuals an equal voice in government. The amendment had been approved by 53.4 percent of the 1.5
million people who voted.
Never enforced, the amendment would have canceled ordinances in
Denver, Boulder and Aspen that protect homosexuals against bias in
housing, employment and pubtic accommodations.
·
Colorado officials say voters have the rigbtto prevent "preferred legal
status·· ' for homosexuals, but gay-rights advocates say such measures provide no special privileges.
The justices, who will hear arguments in the case eight days after the
QcL 2 stan of the coon· s 1995-96 term, have received lots or unsolicited
:advice.
·: Among those friends of the court lining up on Colorado's side are con~rvative "pro-family" and religious groups and seven states - Alabama. California, Idaho, Nebraska, South Carolina, South Dakota and Virginia.
: The opponents include religiously afftliated gay groups, the cities of
Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Los Angeles, Madison, Wis., New York,
eon land. Ore., San Fr:mcisco and Seattle and seven states - Iowa. MarytJJIQ. Massachusetts, Minnesota, Oregon, Nevada and Washingtoo.
Notre Dame and Ohio State
. A notable absentee is the Clinton administration. Attorney General University are playing football at
.llmct Reno decided against filing a government brief in the case.
Ohio stadium ,on Saturday, Sept.
· No side is asking the justices to rule on the morality of homosexuality 30, 1995. This will be the first time
ilr t11e legality of homosexual conduct.
thai Notre Dame bas returned lo
: The coun' s latest word on thaf1ssue was a devastating defeat for tbe bhio Stadium since 1935. Because
eause of gay rights: A 1986 decision upholding Georgia's anti-sodomy ·of the importance of officiating at
fnw and holding that consenting adults have no constitutional right to pri- football games, it was fell that the
f:tle homosexual conduct.
readers would like to note the
· The coun refused to reco~nize gay conduct as a "fundamental right" changes in the rules between 1935
llcserving of the Constitution s fullest protection.
.
and today. This list of changes was
: Now the justices must decide whether the Colorado measure would furnished us by "Artie Foo," a.k.a.
deprive homosexuals of what the state coun called a fundamental right- Bob Burton.
equal participation in the political process.
Years ago, we bad NCAA rules
: The existence of such a right is the key issue because homosexuals, governing high school football, but
nnlike racL'II minorities, are not members of a "suspect class" entitled to now almost all teams have changed
6cightened judicial protection. And the court is not being asked to change to National Federation Rules. Only
Texas and one other state do not
~a~.' What's at stake here is t.he meaning of equality and citizenship," use the National Federation rules.
In the past there were only three
Goldberg said, adding t.hat the case is as critical to gay rjgbts as the con·
~nuing challenges to the military's "don't ask. don't tell" policy.
officials, the referee, umpire and
. "Like the gays-in-the-military cases. this case gets to the heart of linesman. The referee was the only
~quality." she said.
· .
one that bad a whistle. The other
• Steven McFarland of t.he Christian Legal Society doesn't view the case two had horns. After the game, the
that way. "This amefl&lt;\rnent wouldn't take away a homosexual's right to umpire had a pistol which he f1red
~ole, or to speak. What it would do is protect retigious liberties."
to indicate the end of the game.
• In his friend-of·t.he-court brief. McFarland offers two hypothetical situ- Thank goodness my coach did not
ations to make his point;
.
have the pistol after some of my
: - A church-sponsored home for battered women is denied a city grant games.
I!) upgrade its plumbing because. worried that its residents will be
Only two substitutions were
,jxposcd to lesbians, it refuses to put a woman backed by the local gay and . allowed at any one time. They had
to report to the linesman or the
rcsbillll alliance 00 the home's board of directors.
'
- A church-run day care center is deilied an operating·license because, umpire. The umpire wore a red
·ba.'ed on iL' opposition to the gay tifestyle, it refuses to use homosexuals band on his ann for the home team
to report, and the head linesman
~s volunteer helpers.
· ''I"m not at all optimistic, based on experience. that every governmen- wore a green band on his ann for
L11 entity is going to carve out exemptions sufftcient to protect religious the visiting team to rcpon.
ljherty," McFarland said. "This case holds in the balance whether the
Tbe encroachment penalty used
to he called "offsides."lt used to be
state constitutional-amendment process can insure religious exemptions."
Goldberg says usi 0g the Colorado amendment to achieve the religious a ftve-yard penalty for a live ball
protection McFarland seeks "is like using a steamroller to flatten an foul, but now it is a dead ball foul .
Pass interference at the sput of the
anthilL"
foul
used to he an automatic first
The court"s decision, expected by next, summer, is sure to have as
down.
Now it is 15 yards from the
much of a political impact as a legal one.
previous
spot and an automatic first
· ''Most of the public will see the decision as either an endorsement or a
down
.
One
of the biggest things
repudiation of homosexuality," said Melissa Wells-Petry of the pro·
amendment Family Research Council. ''The moral overtone cannot be
denied ...

-t·

....

1-·

.. ........ -·

- -#&lt; •

~.

Be&lt;;il($ HiS 2,131 ST CoNSeCIITiVe DaY ar WORK.

CHESHIRE- Pauline Tucker Jones, 71, Cheshire. formerly of
Rohertsburg, W.Va., died Friday, Sept. 15, 1995 in Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Born Jan. 23, 1-924 in the Arbuckle Creek area of Putnam County,
W. Va, daughter of the late James G. and Hattie Mae Runioo Tucker she
was a member of Cheshire Baptist Church.
She was also preceded in death by two sons, Andy and Juilior; and two
daughtets, Charlotte and Barbara.
Surviving are her husband, William T. Jones; two daughters, Loretta
Blake of Middleport, and Yvonne King of GaiUpolis; two sons, Denver
Ash of Websler Springs, W.Va., and Jay Jones of Cheshire; 15 grandchil·
dren and several great-grandchildren; and a sister, Maude Branham of
Ripley, W.Va
Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Raynes Funeral Home, Buffalo.
W.Va. with Rev. Herbert Duck officiating. Burial will he in the Tucker
Cemetery, Grimms Landing, W.Va. Friends may call at tbe funeral home
Sunday from 2-9 p.m.

name of tax reform -- incl uding
the cherished home mortgage
deduction. ''If we stimulate capital
fonnation, if it brings down interest
rates and creates a broader tax base
with a growing economy, I believe
that you can make up for mlllly of
the deductions t.hat arc in the code
right now," Kemp said.
Even the mortgag e deduction?
"Given the current code , everything's negotiable," said Kemp.
If so, Dole and Kemp will likely
find out what lame-duck Sen. Bob
Packwood. R.Ore., recently learned
the hard way: While the public supports the idea of taJt rcfonn, it can"t
come at the expense of the mortgage deduction.
Defore his recent resignation,
Packwood was pushing a sensible
plan that would have preserved the
deduction for the middle class
while asking high-income earners
to pay a little more. Under current
law, the deduction applies to all
home mortgages up to $1 million.
Packwood wanted to rctlu(C that to
$250,000, sp the gov ernment
would stop subsidizing the ri ch.
The revenue would Uten be used to
pay for a capital gains tax cut.
Packwood's modest proposal set
off a lobbying frenzy :unong home
builders, real estate hrokers and
bankers. This coalition of special
interests sent out dire leiters warning or the "radical dislocation in
property values" that would surely
result.
·
The pressure was so intense that ·
Packwood quickly backed away. If
Dole wants to propose a complcte
elimination of the de&lt;lu ction, it
would put him at instant war with ·
some of Washington's most cherished -special interests. The Nation- .
al Association of Realtor s has
already claimed that killing the
deduction would cause hom e val - :
ues to plummet by 15 percent and
would cost homeowners a whopping $1.7 trillion in lost equity .
It's but one example of ·how .;
Dole is indeed onte again playihg .
with lire on the tax issue . Will he
now have to sign a holy oa th in
New Hampshire that he won't wipe
out the mortgage deduction if elect- ·
ed president?
(Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are

columnist~

O.J. defense's two-killer
theory damaged by expert
LOS ANGELES (AP)- O.J .
Si111pson's weary jurors beard an
FBI experl deliver a shattering
blow to the two-kiUer theory, saying a renowned defense expert saw
, a possible second set of shoeprints
' where there were none.
Obviously wounded by the testimony, defense forensic sleuth
Henry Lee said that despite
requests he return for the next
phase of the trial, he's bad enough.
, "Once a trial becomes a game, I'm
not going to participate."
FI;ll footwear expert William
Dodziak told jurors Friday that Lee
mistook old tool marks and ridges
in the concrete walkway oulside
Nicole Drown Simpson's condo·
mini urn for fresh shoe prints.
Dodzi~ also said Lee belatedly
pholographed olher imprints that
weren't present shorlly after the
June 12, 1994, murders of Ms.
Simpson and Ronald Goldman.
Prosecutor Marcia Clark sug·
gested they could have come from
the shoes of gawkers who flooded
the scene after police left.
Clark bas said she will rest her

Grid rules have changed during past 60 years

•

EDITOR'S· NOTE _: Richard Carelli covers the Supreme Court ,
and legal affairs for The Associated Press.

Today In history

\

By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, Sept. 15, the 258th day of 1995. There are 107 days
left in the year
Today"s Highlight in History:
On Sept. 15, 1789. the U.S. Department of Foreign Affairs was
renamed Ute Department of State.
On this date:
In 1776, British forces occupied New York City during the American
Revolution.
In 1821, independence was proclaimed for Costa Rica Guatemala
Honduras, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
'
'
In 1857, William Howard Taft- who served as president of the United States as well as chief justice- was born in Cincinnati, Ohio.
In 1917, R~ssia was proclaimed a republic by Alexander Kerensky,the
head Of a prOVIStOOal government.
In 1935, the Nuremberg Laws deprived German Jews of their citizen·
ship and made ':'Je swastika the official symbol of Nazi Germany.
In 1940, dunng the Battle of Britain in World War II t.he tide turned as
the Luftwaffe s~stained heavy losses inflicted by the Royal Air Force.
In 1950, dunng t.he Korean conflic~ United Nations forces landed at
Inchon in the south and began their drive toward Seoul.
·

Fred w. Crow
---=:....:.==-..:..:.=-=-=-=-·
below the waist if it was cle:irly in
front or on the side of the player.
But now, any time outside t.he free
blocking woe, you are not allowed
to block below the waist in any sit·
uation. To do so is a 15-yard penalty.
.
.
Then, if you had an injury, it
was a charged time out to the team.
Now it is an official's time out. In
the last 25 years, there has been a
lot of emphasis placed on player
safety and rightly so.
In tbe "not so old" days, a lot of
coaches didn't want the players to
have water during th'&lt; game or even
at practice. This was done to get
the players in shape. How ironic .
Also. salt tablets would he given.
All trainers. doctors, nutritionists
and coaches today must quake at
the thought of no water. How did
we make it? Now it is mandatory
that there will he plenty of water at
all games and all practices. Water
can be brought on the field, if neeessary, for the player's safety at the
discretion of the referee.
At one time in the pas~ once an
eligible offensive receiver touched
a legal forward pass, another offensive player could not touch it until
a defensive player touched it.
Today, any number of eligible
offensive players can touch the
ball.
Players used to wear leather belmets. Paul Brown of the Cleveland
Browns invented the protective

In the past20 years, the width of
face masks for helmets. The uniforms used ·to he of cloth without the goal posts in high school footpads. The uniforms of today are ball has been widened . The football
much beuer made and padding is itself has also changed . It tiscd to
be solid brown with white stripes
used extensively.
A 15-yard"penalty is assessed if all around the ends. Now, the ball ·
a player does not have on all the is brown with half while stripes.
safety equipment during a game painted on the ends.
The coach can go on the field
except for a mouthpiece. It is
mandatory to have a mouthpiece. with his team during a charged"
In high school football, a lield goal time out now. In the past h.c·
. couldn't do this. A free kick out or
kicker must have both shoes on.
The high school games of today bounds is a ftvc-yard penalty. This:·
use five officials because the play- has. been in effect for about 10-:
•• ,
ers are passing a lot, and three offi- years.
Today. taunting is not allowed.:
cials could not cover all of the
fteld. It used to be that the receiver It used to be called un sportsman- ·
,could put all kinds of sticky sub- like conduct. II wasn ' t called too:
stances on his hands and anns to much in the good old days. Today,
help catch t.he ball. Later, manufac· if a person gets a sack and stands ·
turers came out with tacky, coated over the quarterback and sHirts ges- ·
gloves, which are illegal now. ltlring and laughing and saying bad~
Tacky gloves and sticky subsrances thmgs about the qua rte rback ' s.
are not permiued in high school mother, he will be penalized 15.·
football.
yards.
·:
If a player is ejected from a ball
At the high school level, di scre-::
game, that team is penalized 15 lion is given to a player giving &gt;
yards and the player who was eject- tha'nks by prayer. He is not penal.·:
ed cannot play in the following ized.
:·
game. If a coach is ejected, his
Tackle eligible's on pass plays ::
team is given a 15-yard penalty and at the high school level are no &lt;
he cannot coach the following longer permitted. To be eligible, he: :
week. If the coach does this twice must Change to the proper jersey: .
•
in a season, he is out for the year. . number.
He cannot coach any more the rest
In God we trust.~ :
Carry on :
of that season. All these rules are
Fred W. Crow: ;
for the seventh grade 10 the senior
EDITOR'S NOTE · Longtime: ·
playe,!S inclusive.
It ustd to be that if a storm attorney Fred W. Crow is the· :
approached, the players continued contributor of a weekly column:·
playing. Now, if you see tightning, to The Sunday Times-Se ntinel.:;
the game is called temporarily until Readers wishing to applaud, erik:
the storm passes. If the storm stays kize or comment on any subject-:
around. the game is continued at a (except religion or politics), are: •
later date, slarting with the same encouraged to write to Mr. Crow·:
In care of this newspaper.
·
time, positions. etc.

Smaller government: An impossible assignment?

NEW YORK (AP) - The issue
of government spending and how
to restrain it may not just concern
cutting the old but avoiding the
new.
That much is well understood
and widely approved, if you can
judge by the popular commentary
about getting government off the
taxpayer's back, and by congressional rbetoric, which is filled with
promises to do so.
The problem, however, is translating approval and understanding
into legislative action.
At that point, opportunities for
restraint seem to evaporate like
steam from a keule, whde obstacles
condense into impenetrable clouds
that confuse the issues and thwan
those good intentions
Government, one sometimes is
inclined to conclude, must grow in
order to show it is governing. The
evidence seems to lead to that con·
elusion.
Once begun, for example, initia·

lives beget more. Regulations sire
regulations. Laws expand through
interpretation and efforts to clarify.
Bureaucrats seek to protect their

John Cunniff
turf by adding more.
Such growth usually seems rea·
sonable at the time, as in the proposal by Sec~ of Labor Robert
Reich to "target ' private pension
fund investments toward public
,goals rather than the presumably
limited goals of tbe savers.
· ·
As Reich explains it, "economically targeted investments," or
Ells, would benefit not only the
workers who amassed the funds ,
but would bave "ancillary" or
''collateral'' benefits for the economy as a whole.
Such targeting, ,Reich explained,
would not subordinate profit to
social concerns, but instead confer
additional, more widespread bene·
fits on society. Invesflnent deci·

.

rebuttal case "conditionally" when
Bodziak leaves ·the stand, which
POMEROY - The following
could be )\1onday .. Decause 'the cases were resolved Wednesday in
defense has yet to rest its case, the Meigs County Court of Judge
Clark said she wanted to keep open Pauick H. O'Brien.
·
the option of presenting rebuttal to
Rned were: Daniel Will, Mount
any additional wimesses they may View. Calif., speed, $30 plus costs;
produce.
Catherine A. Quraishi, Columbus,
The defense says it plans to call speed, $30 plus costs; Jerry BurFBI agent rrederic Whitehurst. dette. Coolville, seat hell, $25 plus
who has stirred up controversy by costs; Stanley Russell, Chat·
criticizing the bureau's scientific tanooga, Tenn ., speed, $30 plus
procedures and the work of one costs;
agent who testified in the Simpson
Yvonne A. Fife, Middleport,
case.
disorderly conduct, $25 plus costs;
And in a preview of more legal resisting arrest, $25 plus costs, lO
wrangling expected next week, the days jail suspended. two years proLos Angeles Times reponed Satur· bation;
day that prosecutors have turned · Dwayne A. Darley, Middleport,
over to fue defense discovery mate- driving under the influence, $500
rials related to the conduct of plus costs, 10 days jail suspended
police Delectivc Philip Vannatter. to three days, jail and $250 of the
In a statement, prosecutors said ftne suspended upon completion of.
only that the materials related to residential treatment program;
"previously litigated search and headlight violation, costs only;
seizure issues.''
On Friday, prosecutors spent the
~y picking apart Lee's seemingly
invulnerable testimony.
KENT (AP) - A union repre·
senting Kent State University fac·
ulty has rejected a tentative three·
year contract over issues of salary
and grievances. ·
.S. Cleland, Pomeroy, $100 and cost
for disorderly conduct by into~ica­
tion; $100, resisting arrest for inter·
fearing in the arrest of another; Eric
..
W: Paxton, Pomeroy, $100 and
cost for consuming alcohol under
EAST MEIGS - The Ohio
age of21; $100 for disorderly con- University Marching 110, under
duel by intoxication; Douglas A.
the direction of Sylvester Young,
Durns, Pomeroy, $465 and costs, will perform a b~nefit concert at
three days in jail, DUI; Thomas R. Eastern High School at 7 p.m. Fri·
Quillen, Middleport, three charges: day. The Eastern High School
$100 and costs, disorderly conduct; marching band will also perform,
two resisting arrest, $200 each; under the' direction of Susan
Gerald Armstrong, Middleport, Climer.
·
$100 and cost disorderly; Charles
Chris Kuhn, president of the
R. Stewan, Middleport, $465 plus Tuppers Plains Boosters Club, said
all proceeds will go to bencftt the
· costs, three days in jail, DUL
Forfeiting bondsn were Ang.tla purchase or new computers for
Seller, $60, stop sign violation; and Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Daniel R. Stooe. $60, red light vio- Boosters are hoping to raise $4,000
at the concen to purchase four new
lations.
computer systems for t.he students.

OU Band slates
benefit show

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Jimmy L. Barnhart, Athens, no
motorcycle endorsement, $250 plus
costs, three days jail and $200 of
the fine suspended if valid endorsement presented within 90 days;
Randall Carpenter. Middleport ,
seat belt. $25 plus costs; Edwin D.
R'oush. Racine, seal belt, $25 suspended plus costs;
Atishia D. Russell, Mason,
W.Va. , disorderly conduct, costs,
restraining order issued; Kendall.
M. Lemley, Pomeroy, no operator's license, 10 &lt;lays jail suspend.ed .to three days, one year probation , $100 plus costs, vehicle
im~J~obilized until valid OL presented; scat belt, $25 plus costs;
Jon Yowell, Cincinnati, attempt·
ed cultivation of marijuana, $75
plus costs; Phillip D. Wolfe.
Reedsville; failure to control, $30
plus costs; Michael T. Burns, Middleport. disorderly conduct, cosL~;

seat helt, $15 plus costs;
Robert V. Buckland, Evans.
W.Va .. DUI, $750 plus costs, 30
.days jail suspended to 10 days, one
year OL suspension, 90-day vehicle immobilization, two years prp' bation; driving under suspension.
S100 plus costs, 30 days jail sus·
pcnded to 10 days concurren~ two
years probatil'm;
Coral Davis, Syracuse, two ·
· counts disorderly conduc~ restraining order •.costs on each: Beatrice
Dawson, Sandyville, DUI, $500
plus costs, 10 days jail suspended
to three days, 90-day OL suspension. one year probation, jail and
$250 or the fine suspended upon
completion of residential treaunent
program;
Stephanie J. English, Middle·
pon, no OL. S100 suspended costs.
twu years probation. 10 days jail
suspended. 15 days house arrest .

The union, which represents 850
members, sent the contract back
Friday. Doth sides had announced
last week t.hat the tentative agree·
ment had been approved.
The old contract expired Friday
but will remain in effect until an
agreement is reached.
Richard Klich. president of the
American Association of Universi·
ty Professors. declined to discuss
sticking points in tlJC new proposal.
He said tbe union council was opti •

mistic that some or the issues
would soon be resolved.
Some teachers have said the
contract, which offers a pay raiSe ·
of between 'II percent and 13.5
percent over three years, would not
keep up with inflation.

In Memory
Alma K . "Barb" Newland of
Charleston di ed Au g. 16th,
1995 at her hom e after a long
·illness.
Born Dec. 18th , 1917 ,
daughter of the laic Eustice &amp;
Bessie Jeffers. Also deceased
her hu s.band Gerald Newland
one son, Jerry Newland and
two sisters, Opal Perkins and
Freda Joan Jeffers .
Surviving : son s, Ric hard L.
Newland of Nitro, and Roger
L. of Charleston, Daughters
are Judy Eskew of Poca.
Norma Brick of Cross Lanes,
Sandra
Britton, Irene
Wiersteiner and Ailene Harris,
all of Charleston. Brothers are
.J ames E. and Kenneth N.
JeiTers both o f Gallipolis,
Ohio. Sister. Belly Swarney of
Dover,
0 h io .
I2
grandchildren, 8 greatgrandchildren . Burial was in
Floral Hill s Garden of
Memories, Sissonville, WV.

r

POMEROY
Meigs County Display Yard Near
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Kalla Miller, Manager

992-2588
VINTON
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· 155 Main St,
Jay &amp; Joe Moore, Managers

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sions. he said, would remain the departments, agencies and :
right of fund officials.
offices . "
~:
The proposal has provoked as
The GAO says much of Com• •
many questions as reasons for mcrce's resources have little to do ·:
protest. One example suggests the with its mission of encouragi ng,.:
resc Who will dectde what is eco· serving and promoting the nation's &gt;
nomically worthwhile vs. what is international trad e, economic -:
socially or financially responsible?
growth and technological advance- ~;
The fact is, laws now require ment.
,
that trustees of pension funds, as
What is sought in the legisL1tion ·:
well as other fiduciaries, act pru· , is what the private sector ha.~ been··
dently in their invesunents so that doing for several years, which is to .:
the hest interests of the beneficia· eliminate the nonproducti vc accre-.• :
ries are served.
lion that adheres to any large orga- :
To believe t.hatlhe already risky nization by eliminating useless ·
job of investing for safety and prof- activities.
·
it would not he made more risky by
According to economist Joe ' •
adding broader requirements is to Cobb of the Heritage Foundation, a ·
ignore the realities. Multiple goals conservative think tank, the depart- · •
can evolve into conflicting, offset· ment has "20 undersecretary and :·
ling results.
assistant secretary offices, six ::
Meanwhile, legislation seeks directors and administrators and .:
elimination of the Depanment of 262 political appointees.''
•
Commerce. Among the reasons ,
John Cunniff Is a business ::
according to tbe General Account·
analyst
for Associated Press.
'
ing Office, is that it shares "mis·
sions. with at least -71 federal

Our customers
appreciate perhaps the
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Kent State faculty reject contract proposal

MIDDlEPORT - The following cases have been processed in
the Middleport court of Mayor
Dewey Horton
Fined were: Helen M. Williams,
Middleport, $10 and costs, failure
to yield right of way; Elaine S.
Harris, Middleport, three charges:
$25 and costs, boarding and moving a vehicle; $25, no operators
license; $25, no insurance; Charles
McCloud, Middleport, $100 and
costs, open container; $100, disorderly conduct; Shannon Scholderer,
Mid!lle(iort, $100 and costs, open
container; Lela Bums, Middleport,
$100 and costs, disorderly conducr
after being warned; Teresa K. Garnes Pomeroy, $100 and costs, disord~ly conduct after being warned;
$100, resisting arrest and interf~­
ing in the arrest of another; Patr1ck

for Unit·

Donna F. Adkins, Tbunnan, from
Howard W. Paulins, Thurman.
Filing for dissolution or marriage were Douglas 0 . Drown, Gallipolis, and Amy M. Drown, 618
Jay Drive, Gallipolis; William H.
Gauze and Theresa Lynn Gauze,
both of 5023 SR 7, Gallipolis; and
Sandra Lynn Mullen, 36&amp;. Green
Terrace Court. GaiUpolis, and John
W. Mullen, 374 Bulaville Pike,
Ga!Upolis.
Dissolutions were granted 10
Rena Lynn Sowards, 1057 Fourth
Ave ., Gallipolis, and Allen D.
Sowards, 758 First Ave., Gallipolis; and Lori Seigcrt and Kevin
Seigen, both of Vinton.

Andrew D. Parsons , 18 , 23
Berger Ave., Gallipolis, was
charged with falsification and
fined S150, given one year probation and I 0 days community service. He was also charged with
underage consumption and ftned
$150, given one year probation and
10 days of community service.
Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - Filing for
divorce recently in Gallia County
Common Pleas Court were Margaret Mooney, Crown City, from
David Mooney, 13961 State Route
7, Gallipolis; Kevin R. Woodall.
418 E. Bethel Church Road. Gallipolis, from Lydia Sue Kerwood
Woodall, Wilmington; Steven C.
Elliot, Bidwell, from Watcharee
Elliot, Vinton; Chris Musser Grny
from Michael Gray, both of 2145
Eas tern Ave .. Gallipolis; and

County court resolves cases

Middleportmayor's court

ed Feature Syndicate.)

back then was that you were not
allowed to advance the ball after a
rumble, but now you can.
You used to be able to block

Municipal
ed $100 fine, a suspended 30-day
GALLIPOLIS - The following jail suspended, one year of probacases were recently resolved in tion and one day of community serGallipolis Municipal Court:
vice.
Corey E. Armstrong, 24, VinChad Pope, 19, State Route 775,
ton, charged with drug abuse, was Gallipolis, charged with drug
ftned $50.
abuse, was lined $100.
Steven Steele, 26, Ray , was
Okey Newsome, 35, Huntingcharged with disorderly conduct ton, W. Va., was charged with drug
and fmed $100.
abuse and fmed $100.
Richard A. Johnson, 18, 179
Van Kinniard, 24, Bidwell,
Rand Ave., Gallipolis. was charged charged with drug abuse, was filled
with drug abuse and fined $100.
$100. .
Benjamin Hughes. 23, Ashton,
Robert A. Craig, Leon W.Va.,
W.Va., chargCI! with open contain- 22, was charged with driving with
er, was fined $100.
no operator's license and fined
Harold Harper,.67, Park Central $100.
Hotel, Gallipolis, was fined $100
Adam S. Russell, 19. Oak HiU.
for disorderly conduct and $100 for charged underage consumption,
littering.
was ftned $150.
.
Max Snyder, 19, 130 Georges
James H. McDermit~ 19, PatriCreek, Gallipolis, was 'charged with ot, was charged with with no oper·
petty theft and received a suspend- ator's license and fined $100.

.

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�Nation/World

September 17, 1995

1!rinn~s - ~entittti · Section

por.ts

Sunday~imes- Sentinel /A6

J·NATO again warns .Serbs to pull

B·

Sunday, September 17, 1995

hardware away from Sarajevo

DISCUSSING MEDICARE - BUUonalre H.
Ross Perot, right, looked on Friday as HollSe
Speaker New Gingrich, R-Ga~ answered a ques-

lion durbtg a national satellite toWii ball meeting
at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washing·
ton. (AP)

Seniors cheer, GOP razzes veto
threat to Medicare reform plan
the desired savings failed to materiBy DAVID ESPO
alize
Associated Press Writer
Republicans won a House
WASHINGTON- Presidem
majority
last year for the first time
: Clinton is threatening to veto a
in
40
years,
pledging to balance the
Republican plan to slice $270 billion from Medicare, ·prompting a budget in seven years and shrink
sharp GOP rebuttal that Democrats government In trying to fmd large
would let the health care program savings from Medicare, though,
they're tackling a program that
· go broke for political gain. .
·
"It would be more helpful for benefits 33 million elderly- a ·
· the nation if our president would polent voting bloc that could swing
offer a plan instead of a threat." the !996 congressional elections
. Rep. Bill Archer, R-Texas, chair- back to the Democrats .
Republicans won a boost for
. man of the tax-writing House Ways
tbeir
efforts on Friday from Ross
· and Means. Commiuee said Friday
Perot,
whose independent bid for
' ip a s1a1emen1 that followed closely
the
White
House in 1992 won 19
· on the heels of Clinton's veto decpercent
of
the
vote.
: laration.
Sharing
a
Chamber of ComHouse Majority Leader Dick
: Armey, R- Texas, added: "The merce stage with House Speaker
· Democral&lt; have a craven approach Newt Gingrich, the architect of. the
to Medicare, which is to let it go House GOP plan, Perot ·said any
: bankrupt for what l)ley perceive to political leader tackling Medicare
: be short-term political gain. What is "putting their job at risk."
''If you were just being a politi· they fail to realize is that public tol;. erance for demagoguery is at an cian, you would not touch this
thing. It takes a lot of courage to
· all-time low."
· As the rhetoric suggekts, the touch this alligator," he said.
: political stakes are huge for the
Republicans say their proposals
: R_epubiicans, whose pr?pos~l are necessary to keep Medicare solwould try to encourage semor ctU· .venl. Democrats say Republicans
zens to move out of traditional want to use the money to help
Medicare covernge and into cheap- finance a tax cut for the wealthy.
Clinton was loudly cheered by
er, private plan~. Payments to doctors and hospitals ·would be cut if senior citize'l activists who are lob-

hying against Medicare cuts.
Atlacking the Republican plan,
he told the group, "If these health
care cuts come to my desk, of this
size, I would have no choice but to
veto it .... "
"This is not wbat it takes to
save Medicare," he said. "I can't
believe anyone would willingly
damage seniors of this country,
Americans with disabilities, the
children of this country."
The president coupled his veto
threat with a call for compromise,
but that possibility seems rem01e at
the moment
Republicans intend to push their
as-yet-unfinished proposals to
votes in the House and Senate
sometime next month, ·and send
them to the White House. Many
lawmakers believe a compromise
will be possible only after Clinton
casts a veto on the initial GOP p~­
posal, and forces Republicans to
reduce the scope of the changes
they're proposing.
Clinton has Falled for saving
$124 billion from Medicare, but lie
bas not submitted a detailed legislative proposal. Repu~licans
claim the White House budget, to.
hit its spending targets, would actually require $192 billion in savings.

Town expects benefit from bombing trial
LAWTON, Okla. (AP)- Traf- ton would want to capitalize on
fic slowed Friday so people could anyone's tragedy, bUt"it will haptake a fresh look at the three-story pen," Vice Mayor Glen Alford
brick courthouse where the two said. "The reason behind it is not
men accused of the deadliest terror- of our choosing."
ist auack on U.S. soil will be tried
Media organiza.tions already
were snapping up the 1,240 motel
next year.
Residents also prepared to profit · rooms in this town of 85,000 fol- ·
from the onslaught of reporlers and lowing a judge's decision Thursday
others expected here for the May to move the trial to Lawton, 90
17 trial of Timothy McVeigh and miles from the bombing site and
about 35 miles from the Texas state
Terry Nichols.
"I would hall: to think that Law- line in southwestern Oklahoma.

Nichols and McVeigh face murder and conspiracy charges in the
April 19 bombing of the Alfred P.
Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, which killed 169 people
and injured more than 500.
Lawton was carved from the
prairie in 1901 and has depended
throughout its life on nearby F~n
Sill, a cavalry post that opened m
1869 and is now home to 20,000
Army soldiers.

By SAMIR KRILIC
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Bosnian Serbs moved a few
heavy weapons away from Sarajevo Saturday, but not enough to satisfy the United Nations, which
warned of new NATO airs trikes if
more guns aren't moved.
Under a deal secured after two
weeks of NATO airstrikes, the
Serbs agreed Thursday to pull back
their heavy artillery from around
the capital, winning a three-day
reprieve from alliance bombs.
Low-flying NATO reconnaissance planes, apparently taking
infrared aerial photographs to monitor any weapons movement,
droned over the Bosnian capital all
night.
BUl they did not seem to have
any significant movement to monitor. The United Nations said Saturday that the Serbs had moved only
three tanks, five mortars and four
artillery pieces by late morning
from the 12-1/2 mile weapons
exclusion zone around Sarajevo.
"We remain skeptical about the
Bosnian Serb committment to
honor to the. full the undertaking
they have made to remove weapons
threatening Sarajevo," said U.N.
spokesman Chris Gunness. "The
movements we have seen are small
scale, and much more is still to be
achieved."
Gunness said an assessment
would be made Sunday night on
''whether adequate progress bas
been achieved or whether airslrikes
should be resumed."
The American diplomat who
brokered the heavy weapons agreement, Assistant Secretary of Slate
Richard Holbrooke, said the United
States would urge immediate
resumption of NATO bombing if
the Serbs did not fully comply with
the artillery pullout.
Holbrooke was due in the Serbian capital of Belgrade today for
more talks with the regional powerbroker, Serbian President Siobodan
Milosevic.
The Bosnian government is
unhappy with the U.S.-Serb agreement because it includes onI y very
large-caliber weapons - mortars
bigger than 82 mm and artillery
bigger than 100 mm. Previously.
the United Nations and NATO had

insisted on withdrawal of all guns
over 12.7 mm.
A diplomatic source said it
appeared that Holbrooke had been
forced to make concessions to the
Serbs to prop up his delicate effort
to negotiate an end to the war.
The Serbs' agreement with Hoi-

brooke also committed them to
reopen Sarajevo airport to U.N. and
humanitarian flights after five
months and to permit U.N. and
relief agencies to travel on two
roads connecting lhe city to tbe
outside world.

POINT PLEASANT - Visiting
Gallipolis sc&lt;red early and often on
Sanders Memorial Field Friday night
to post 40-13 non-conference foot. ball victory over Point Pleasant.
: Tbe win lifted Coach . Brent
• Saunders' lads to 2.1 on the year.
: Coacb Steve Safford's fighting, but
: inexperienced Big Blacks dropped to
: 0-4 overall.
( "This was a very important win
:·on our schedule, because we're
':going to be facing some really good
:football teams in our league," said
·Saunders.
Safford said, "We knew ali along
that our defense was going to be- a
rJroblem, at least early, and that has
proven lhe case." The Ohioans
rushed for 335 net yards and added
·87 passiilg for 442 total yards in 45
plays from scrimmage.
Offense praised
"I'm glad we showed up with
some offense tonight I was proud of
the way our kids came back after
last week's loss to Coal Grove. We
executed better than we have all year
long . I also understand Point

StayWann
All Wmter For
Just Pennies
ADay.

Teams achange fumbles
Pleasant did not tackle very well
tonight," Saunders said.
Later in the first period, Dailey
Safford, wbo is starting no . recovered a PPHS rumble on the
seniors in the PPHS varsity lineup Blue Devil 40 to halt a Big Black
for the ftrSt time in his long coach· scoring drive. That set up Gallia' s
ing career, felt the turning point second touchdown. Saunders hit
came when GAHS had a fourth and Rucker with a 43-yard pass to the
five at midfteld with 9:23 left in the Big Blacks 18. Stacy meed the final
opening quarter . "We had them 18 with 3:16 left in the period.
stopped on their flfSt series, but that Beaver's kick made it14.().
fake punt play took the wind out of
GAllS lost an opportunity to
our sails and put us jn a hole. We score again in the flfSt period. After
never really recovered," Safford Chris Shamblin intercepted a Jimmy
said.
Hall pass and returned it 19 yards to
On the trick play , Jesse Stacy the PPHS 31. Dailey got 19 to the
took a handoff from quarterback 12. Saunders, on a keeper left, raced
Isaac Saunders and raced 27 yards to goalward bot lost the ball on the one.
Point's 17. After a GAHS penalty, It went into tbe end zone, with
Stacy gill one, Jason Dailey 10, then Point's Steve Thomas recovering.
Dave Rucker, on a wingback
A had pass from cencer on a punt
reverse, romped the flnal16to make attempt led to Galiia' s third score.
it6-0 with 7:37 left in the quarter. T. Punter Matt Young was hauled
C. Beaver's kick from pl~cement down by Andy Betz and Rob
was good. The Galiians were on Woodward deep in PPHS territory
their way to win number 30 against (21-yard line).
31 setbacks in the 66th renewal of
On the first play .of the second
the Ohio River Valley's oldest grid- period (11 :52) Stacy scored his seciron series. Five games have ended ond of three touchdowns on a 21in ties since the series began in 1922 yard burst to make it 20-0. Shane

Wears blocked Beaver's kick from
placemenl
The Big Blacks came right back
following their mistakes. Afler B. J.
Grady returned Casey Canaday's
kickoff 15 yards to the PPHS 37,
Chris Sayre got four to the 41, then
boiled 59-yards on a quick-hitler up
the middle with I0:54 left in the half
10 make it 20-6. Young's kick from
placem~nt was good.
Stacy sels up score
GAHS all btit put the game out of
reach five plays later. Stacy returned
Young's kickoff from his own 15 to
the midfield stripe to set. up the
score. After Dailey got five;
Saunders hit Stacy with a 14-yard
pass, then S1acy raced for 13 more.
Saunders then hit Rucker with a 20yard touchdown strike with 8:06 left
in the half to make it 26-7 . A twopoint conversion attempt failed .
The Gallian~ added single touchdowns in the third and fourth periods.
In the third quaner, Stacy ran 63
yards with 2:49 left and Beaver
(See BLUE DEVILS on B·2)

Meigs hammers River Valley 35-12
By DAVE HARRIS
Meigs threatened late in the half
Tlmes·Sentinel Correspondent
putting .together a 14-piay drive to
POMEROY..:.. Sophomore tail· the Raider 15-yard line . Time ran
back Matt Williams carries 21 times out in the half before the Marauders
for 221 yards and two touchdowns could bit paydirt.
as the Meigs Marauders rolled to a
Cleland returned the kickoff to
35-12 victory over the River Valley begin the second half, 41 yards to
Raiders in high school football the Raider 47 as the last Raider with
action Friday evening before a large a chance to save a touchdown came
aowd at Bob Roberts Field.
up with the Iackie. Williams gained
River Valley received the open· 19 on ftrSt down, Cleland followed
ing kickoff and was forced to punt with 15 to the Raider 13-yard line, It
Meigs put together a 13-play, 72,. took Williams two carries to go the
yard drive for tlie game's flfSt score. final 13 yards for the score. Hanson
Bert Mash gave Meigs the 6-0 lead booked up with ~llins for the extra
with .1:07 left in the period with a points with 10:181eft in the third to
diving caleb, of a Brett Hanson pass give Meigs a 21-0 lead.
from five ' yards out. Jeff Fowler
Jamie Graham gave Raider fruis
added the kick to give Meigs the 7-0 something to cheer about when be
lead. WiUiams and Cass Cleland did look the· ensuing kickoff 80 yards
most of the damage for Meigs in the down the left sideline for the score.
drive, with Williams carrying six Tbe pass for the extra points were no
times for 31 yards and Cleland good, and Meigs held a 21-6 lead
adding five carries for 26 yards.
with 10:061eft in the third.
Meigs made it a 13·0 contest at
Meigs took over the bali afler a
the 6:16 mark of the flfSt half when . squib kickoff on its own 25-yard
Williams ran 49 yards for the score line. Williams ripped off runs of 14,
• the corner on an unidentified River ·
defenderduring Friday to cap a four-play 61-yard drive . ;31 and three yards before Cleland
I night's battle In Pomeroy, where the Marauders won 35·12 to claim Fowler's kick was wide left, but carried ii in from 27 yards out to cap
, their lint-ever victory over the Raiders. (Tlmes·Sentinel pholo by Dave Meigs lOOk a 13-0 lead into the lock- a four-play, 75-yard drive. Hanson
er room at the balf.
ran for the extra points to give
; Harris)

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5

·'

LEFT IN THE WAKE of Eastern quarterback Brian Bowen's
scramble are ZanesvUie Rosecrans defenders Kwame Clark (lS) and
Rob Quinn during Friday night's action at Eastern High School's field;
· where the Battling Bishops won 30-12. (Times·Sentinel photo by Tom
Hunter)

By SCO'IT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Correspondent
ZanesviUe Rosecrans overcame a
6-3 deficit at the half to blitz Eastern
30-12 Friday night in non-league
football action at East Shade River
Stadium.
Eastern (1-2) won a hard-fought
battle in the trenches and took
advantage of Zanesville mistakes in
the ftrst half, bot the overall statistics told the story of the game. The
Bishops rock and roBed through the
second half, ripping huge boles in
the Eastern line the entire second
half to outscore Eastern 27-6.
Eastern's only secondhalf score came as time expired at
the end of the game.
.
Eastern coach Casey Coffey said,
"We've got to learn to play four
quarters of ball. We didn't come out
intense and our intensity dwindled
throughout the game. The bottom
line is we just didn't come ready to
play and we beuer get our act
together and put a win on the board
against Buffalo-Putnam. They're
going to bring a good team in here
and we'd best be ready to play."
Rosecrans (2-1) had 20 first

downs, 13 the second half, wbile
holding Eastern to just four. The
Bishops galloped to 315 yards on 61
carries, while netting another 38
, yards in the air.
Eastern managed only 138 total
yards on a 23-98 night rushing with
50 additional yards passing. Eastern
had seven ftrst downs.
Zanesville rattled off some early
yardage, but the Eastern defense
held, sending Steve Haren onto the
field, where he hit a 30-yard Held
goal at the 5:43 mark or the first
quarter. Eastern threatened, but
turned the bali over on downs. Brian
Bowen punted deep into Rosecrans
territory where the ball bounded off
the Bishop receiver who had signaled for a fair catch. Bowen recovered the fumble . Eastern recovered
at the 10-yard line where Travis
Curtis ran it in to give EHS a 6-0
lead.
' The extra-point kick was blocked
after a penalty had moved the ball
back five yards. The score stood 6-3
at the 11:49 mark.
Eastern's defense ben~ but never
br~ke in the first half. Zanesville
ne~er had to punt the entire game.

/

Holzer Health Hotline
1-800-462-5255
I

,

Meigs a 29-6 lead with 8:55 left in
the third.
The Marauders' next scoring
drive was set up after Graham's
fumble, as they recovered at their
48-yard nne. Graham took a screen
pass from quanerback David Kelley
and and ·picked up seven yards. But
Paul Pullins came up with a big
defensive play for the Marauders as
he leveled Graham to force the
' turnover.
Williams ripped off 31 yards on
first down and Cleland followed
with a six-yard jaunt. After a oneyard loss by Williams , Williams
picked up 18 on the third and four lo
the 28-yard line. Cleland then pulled
in a 28-yard scoring toss from
Hanson with 5:40 to go in the third
period to close out the .Marauder
scoring.
Man Jenkins scored the game's
final points from three yards out,
capping off a 11-play, 61-yard drive
for River Valley. The score carne
witll just4:27 lefl in the contest.
Williams led all rushers with his
221 yards in 21 carries. Williams
left the game with 5:40 to go in the
third period. Cleland added 10 car-

ries for 98, as the maroon and gold
ran up 350 rushing yards.
Hanson, who hit five of 15 in the
air for 50 yards, bad at least three
passes dropped in the final minutes
of the first half. Cleland pulled in
two for 35 yards, and Pullins had
one for 10, while Mash had one for
live.
·
For River Valley, Graham carried
II times for 57 yards and caught
two passes for 24 yar&lt;)s . Jenkins
added six carries for 30.
Kelley was two of five witli an
interception in the air for 24 yards,
with both receptions to Graham.
Pullins had the interception for
Meigs.
"We need to get healthy," Raider
coach Merrill Triplett said after the
game. "We came in here with si&lt;
starters hun. Our sophomores played
hard . We will be healthier next
week . Meigs is a good football
tc3JJ1 •••

''I'm really proud of the way our
kids played tonight," Marauder
coach Mike Chancey said afler the
game. "It was a great team win .
(See MARAUDERS on B·2)

Rosecrans hands Eastern 30-12 loss

,. '

56680

The Holzer Health Hotline staff
thinks all callers are "special".
We try to help you with your health care questions.
A registered nurse is available to talk to you,
from 8 a.m. to 11 :30 p.m., every day of the week.

BUSKIRK STOPPED - Point Pleasant's Jeremy Buskirk (31,
bidden from view) Is stopped by Gailla Academy'.• Chuck Wood (58),
Jason Dailey (25) and Chris Bowman (10) during Friday night's game
al Sanders Memorial Field, where the Blue De•lls beat the Big Blacks
40-13. (OVP photo by Bill Ross or Elite Photography).

but Eastern either took ovet on
downs or a turnover. Eastern put
together its best offensive runs going
down lhe stretch, but they too were
stymied. 1be score remained 6-3 at
the half.
·
Starting off the third frame ,
Eastern started off on tbe wrong
foot, fumbling away the ball on its
ftrSt possession after crossing midfield. Adam McDaniel made a big
sack to put Z-R in the hole, but some
big gainers put the Bishops in a
fourth and one situation. Tbey went
for the try and succeeded, then converted the bid into a 62-yard scoring
drive.
Jerry Burnette hit paydirt on a
six-yard run, but Steve Herons kick
went wide. The dri\ve ended at the
7:50 mark, tbe score 9-6.
On their next possession, Joe
Mattingly completed a 57-yard drive
in which Eastern's defense did not
rally. The troops got pushed off the
line and the 'C rans ate up huge
chunks of yardage. Mattingly sprang
in from six yards out before Heron· s
kick was good for a 16-6 tally.
·
Coffey ciled this a crucial point
"We had some breaks early, but

didn't take advan1agc of them . We
needed a big play here, we just
didn't maintain intensity and let it
(the game) slip away. "
Jason Sheets had some big runs,
and Travis Cunis bad a couple good
carries, but Ihe Bishop line pushed
EHS out of the trenches and botched
several Eagle plays. A torrid pass
rush took Dowen out of his nonnal
passing game as well.
.
A real killer came at the 10:25
mark when Scoll Shawger intercepted Dowen's pass as Bowen let if fly
under intense pressure : The result ·
was a 32-yard drive that culminated
with a Mallingly two-yard touchdown at the 9:01 mark. Heron's kick
was good to make the score 23-6.
Eastern wa~ still in it, but turned
the ball over on downs. Mattingly
had a six -yard carry and Clark had a
15-yard run that set up a 10-yard
Burnett score at the 4:40 mark .
Heron's kick was good, and the
score stood at 30-6. '
Eastern marched into Zanesville
territ,ory, but stalled at the 25-yard
line on four downs . The Eagles got
(See EAGLES on B·l)

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:Ohio State downs Washington 30-20

I

.. By RUSTY MILLER
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) •Eddie George ran for 212 yards and
!two touchdowns and Bob Hoying
!added a pair of scoring passes as
·lOth-ranked Ohio State lOOk control
'early to beat No. 18 Washington 30:20 Saturday.
. Ohio State (2-0) bad been idle
•for 20 days - the longest in-season
!tayoff during its 106 years of foothall - after opening with a 38-6
:Victory over Boston College in the
;Kickoff Classic.
. The Buckeyes showed they
.weren't stale by building a 23·7
:tead at the balf as George piled up
:149 yards on the ground and scored
once.
· George's 212 yards was the sec·
ond bighest total of his career, as
was his 36 attempts. He accounled
for 98 yards in two Ohio State
drives in the second quarter that
wmed a two-point lead into lbe 16point advantage.
Hoying, also a senior, compleled

J8-of-26 passes for 192 yards and
scoring passes of 22 yards to Nicky
Sua_lua and six yards to Terry
Glenn.
Washington (1-1), which ·had
beaten PAC-10 rival Arizona Stale
23-20 lwo weeks ago, needed two
fourth-quarter touchdowns to make
things interesting.
Obio State had to punt on its flfSt
possession, but then scored the last
four times it touched the ball in the
opening half.
The first.score was set up by
Ryan Miller's interception of a
Damon Kuard pass. His 18-yar:d
return gave the Buckeyes control at
the Washington 21. Three plays
later, Hoying avoided a heavy rush
and lofted a 22-yard scoring pass to
Sualua. Jason Cborak blocked Josh
·Jackson's extra-point attempt.
After lhe kickoff, Leon Neal
went 27 yards on ftrst down from
the Washington 31, but the play was
brought back because of an illegal
block. The Huskies were nagged

for 98 yards in penalties by the Big
Ten officiating crew in the ftrst half
alone and finished with 101 yards
in penalties to eight for Ohio State.
Neal, who gained 101 yards on
seven carries in the opening half,
came right back with a 66-yard gain
after cutting to the right sideline.
Three plays later, Rashaan Sbebee
scored the touchdown on a 10-yard
run. John Wales' extra-point conversion gave the Huskies a shonlived lead.
Neal finished witb 135 yards
rushing on 15 attemp!S.
On Ohio State's next three possessions, the Buckeyes played keepaway witb George grinding out
yardage. Tbe senior gained 40 yards
in a 79-yard drive that was capped
by Josh Jackson 's 19-yard field
goal.
George ran for 36 of the yards in
a 53-yard march that ended with
Hoying hitting a wide-open Glenn
for a six-yard touchdown.
It was also George who provided

the biggest surprise of the day, setting up in the slot and then coming
back for a lateral on a fake field
goal on fourtb·and-1 I at the
Washington 24 . George gained 12
yards to set up Glenn's touchdown
ca!Ch.
·
After another Washington punt,
George accounted for 62 of lbe
drive's 78 yards - finishing it bim·
self with a seven-yard touchdown
run - to put Ohio State ahead 23-7
at the half.
George added a 16-yard touchdown run in the third quarter, one
play afler a wild punt snap was
recovered by Ohio State's Rob
Kelly.
Washington added some suspense with two late touchdowns, a
31-yard pass from backup quarterback Shane Fortney and a sevenyard pass from Damon Huard to
Neaj.
Huard compleled 19-&lt;lf-26 passes for 192 yards with one interception.

block,

,•..,.. 0 U settle.•
·;deadlocR''i ,.
Kent'• OJ, Santlpgo, bloeked a (leld .
to play.Salurdayi ~J'VIng a ~·
pla.yl•og their Mid·Amerlcn
own 26 to the Kent 11
~be !lrlve •talled/fordng Scott
ii:Z:~y••l'll fflellll goaL ,The·snap was low. and the~· ·
lta!)d on lbe kkllo
' . ·
for lbe Golden Flashes (1·1·
. on a U-yard 'pa .. (rom ~b.rc
.
runa o( j2,,,60 and aiM\ ~7 '
)'ords'ln l l rarrtes;
for 11 eareer·hlgh 168
and connect;
· covering 60
othtor
plcl~Up or H fumble
u ... ,.,....

1Ol yardJ bt 24 carries, but did

�Page 82 • J5amltav ~u.....~entinel

By beating the Indians 6-3,

B~Sox br~ng

Sunday, September 17, 1995

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

fort Fry~ records 33-0 victory in bout with visiting Southern

.

AL East flag within closer reach

By CHUCK MELVIN

''I'm real happy for Mo," HanCLEVELAND (AP) - This son said. "What I tried to do was
was not Bostoo vs. Cleveland. This not let them break \t open. Then
was Mo Vauglm vs. Alben Belle.
Mo did break it open . That was
Belle homered twice for tbe grea&amp;. ••
JNiians on Friday nigh~ but it was
Belle and Murray started the
Vaughn's three-run shot in tbe Cleveland ninth .with consecutive
eighth inning that made the differ- home runs off Aguilera. It was
ence as the Red Sox won 6-3. •
Mwrny' s 17lb of lbe Year and lbe
The Boston victory, coupled
wilb New Yorlc's loss at Baltimore.
reduced the Red Sox's magic number for clinching the AL East to
four. .
kicked the point after to malce it 33Vaughn's home run during a 7.
·
•
five-run eighth inning temporarily
In the fmal period, Dailey raced
tied him wilb Belle for the league II yards wilb 7:03 left in lbe game
lead. But Belle pushed ahead again and Beaver's kick made it 40-7.
in the ninth inrung with his second
PPHS scored its final toocbdown .
home run of the game and his 39th with 4:17 left in the game when
oflbe year.
Jermyn Queen blasted over from the
"That's good for both of us, one. A run for lbe two-point converbecause it keeps us both swing- sion failed.
ing," Vaughn said. "The thins is.
Warren Local nut
I'm glad we won the ballgame
Gallipolis will host Warren Local
because now our magic number is Friday in the 1995 Southeastern
down to four. We're close, but Ohio League opener. The Big
. Blacks will host Winfield.
we're not there yet"
Belle· s 39 holllers arutthe most
by a Cleveland biller since Rocky Score by quar.ttrs
Colavito bad 42 in 1959.
Gallipolis ............... l4 12 7 7 = 40
The sellout crowd of 41,833 Point Pleasant... :......O 7 0 6 = 13
pushed the Indians' 'season attenStatistics
dance to a franchise-record
2,634,139, surpassing the mark of Department
G
PP
2,620,627 set in 1948. Jacobs Field
Ftrst downs ..................... 20
10
bas been sold out 52 limes this 8eaYards
rushing
..............
.347
224
son, including the last47 in a row.
40
Lost rushing ................... 12
Erik Hanson (14-5) gave up five
Net
rusbing
...................
335
184
bits in eight innings as the Red Sox
9
won for only the second time in Pass attempts .................... 7
Completions ..................... 7
3
their last eight games.
In~rcepted by.,................. 1
0
Hanson allowed one run, suuck
Yatds passing ................. 87
26
out five a~d walked one before Total yards ................... 422
210
Rick Aguilera finished, yielding Plays ............................... 45
48
ninth-inning home runs by Belle · Return yards ................... 88
103
and Eddie Murray.
Fumbles .... :....................... !
4
"You never really know with Lost fumbles ................. :... !
I
this ballclub," Cleveland manager
Penalties
......................
9-75
4-20
Mike Hargrove said. "That's what .
Punts .......................... .1-22 4-127
malces Ibis ballclub so special. You
Individual rushlnl! • PP :
know they're never going to lake it Sayre, 7-76-1; Buskirk, 6-62-0;
for ¥ranted and just play the string Grady, 9-47-0; Queen, 6-12-1;
oul '
1
Young, 1-1-0; Rollins, 2-( -10)-0;
Belle put Cleveland ahead 1-0 Whittiugton, 1-(-2)-0; Hall, 7-(-5)when be led off lbe fourth inning 0.Totuls • 39-184.
with bis 38lb borne run.
GAHS - Stacy, 12-180-3; DaiThe Red Sox tied it against ley, 8-74-1; Rucker, 3-20-1; Hurt,
Chad Ogea in the seventh on a two- 3-13-0; Bowman, 1-11-0; Shaffer,
out single by Chris Doonels and 2-2-0; Davis, 2-5-0; Humphreys, 2..
Mike Macfarlane's RBI double.
23-0; I. Saunders. 5-7-0. Toluls •
Reliever Alan Embree (2-2) 37-335-5.
then started the eighlb by walking
Receiving • PP - Buskirk, 1-22-0'
two batters before Vaughn drove a Wl)ittington, 1-3-0; Wilson, 1-1-0.
2-2 pitch into lbe stands in right for Totuls • 3-26-0. GAHS - Rucker,
a 4-1 Boston lead. It was lbe sec- 3-70-1; Stacy, 1-14-0; M. Clark, 1ond of Vaughn's three hits.
11-0; Daileym 2-(-8)-0.Totals 7·
Jose Canseco followed wiJh a 87-l.
· single that extended his bitting
PIIJISing • PP - Hall, 1-5-1-1-0;
streak to a career-high 17 games, RoUins, 2-4-0-25-0. Totals- 3-9-land.after Willie McGee doubled 26-0. GAHS - I. Saunders, 7-7-0him to lbinl, Carlos Rodriguez sin- 87-1. Totals -7-7-0-87-l.
gled home a run and Macfarlane b_it
Recovered fumbles: GAHS: ·
an RBI groundout.
Dailey.
PP- S. Thomas.
•
Scoring. GAHS- Rucker, 16.
- - run.(Beaver, kick); Stacy, 44-run,
(Beaver, kick); Stacy, 21-run,
(blocked); Rucker, 20-pass from 1.
Saunders, (run, fail); Stacy, 63-run.
(Beaver, kick); Dailey. 11-run,
(Continued from B-1)
(Beaver, kick); PP - Sayre, 59, run,
River Valley played hard and didn't (Young, kick); Queen, 1-run, (run
give up. We need to stay focused
and come back and have a good
week of nractice and get ready for
Wabama.f' -The win was tbe first for the
Marauders over River Valley in lbeir
third attempt Meigs is now 2-1 on
the season and will host Wahama
next Friday evening. River Valley
(1-2) will host Athens for homecoming this week.

475th of his eareer, tying him wilb
Stan Musial and Willie Stargell for
161b place on the career fist.
Ogea enhanced bis bid for a
postseason job by pitching seven
stronj! innings, allowing one run
and Stl bits. In his last live appearances, including four starts, be is 30 with a 1.91 ERA.

~ BEVERLY-:- Jason Duskey
.scored two touchdowns on t~e
.ilround,
and
Dusun
.Handschumacber added a seven;y~rd t~ucbdown run, as Sonny
;BtdweU s Fort Frye Cadets defea1ed
.the ymtin~ Soulbern Tornadoes 33Fnday rught
·'
: Mike Kloes Tornad~s came out
.~trong, and boldmg thetr own early
;w1th the Ca~ets. Fort Frye posted
·Lhe fust pomts o,f the ntghl on
l:landschumacher s seve~-y~rd
:~ouchdown run. The cxtr• pomt ktck
-.by Seth. Prater was good, and the
fadets led 7-0.
Mmutes later, Sout~ern took
advantage of lbe weak stde of the
fort Frye defense. Jam.•e Evans
buste~ loose on an opuon play,
marchmg 70 yards for. a Southern
touchd~wn to lie the score.
.Unluckily, the Tornadoes apparent
lymg touchdown was called back on

The Indians have 12 pitchers efigible for the playoffs but are likely
to keep only.ll.
Notes: Vaughn has bit 24 home
runs on the road, two away from
Ted Williams' team record of 26
set in 1957 .... Canseco bas bit
safely in 33 of his last 34 games.

:?

8 Iue De viIs win .. •(!:::Co::::nti::.::nued::::..:f::..::rom::..:B:.:..:.·1)~------

Marauders
beat Raiders ...

fail). .
This week's games- Sept. 22,

·Warren Local at Gallipolis. Winfield at PL Pleasant.

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

Area football standings
- • SEOAL teams • League

Iwn

W-L
Jackson ...................... ... .....0-0
Warren Locai ....................0-0
GALLIA ACADEMY ...... 0-0
Marietta .......................... ... 0-0
. Logan ................................0-0
Athens .. ............... :........ ,.... 0-0
RIVER VALLEY .............0-0

n:

rA

0

0

0
0
0
0
0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0

Overall

1Y:L
3-0
2-1
2-1
1-2
1-2
1-2
1•2

w

Miami Trace ......... ....... .... ......................... .3
Meigs ..................... :................................... 2
Fairland ...................................................... 2
Coal Grove ............................................. .... 2
Ponsmoulb ..................................................0
Point Pleasant• .................... ......................0

rA

6
49
50
52
70
86
93

n:

.L.

0
1

100
63

I
I

64
85
47
61

3
4

IS382, Green,

t/Q;a
461 SOUTH THIRD

92 FORD RANGER XLT
15294, Blua, elr, AM/I'M
cassette, rear defroster,
cloth lntarlor.
$8410.

..i
....
..•
..

..
!i
z

..
...
~~AHS

$147/1110
93 FORD
RANGER XLT

91 PONTIAC
TRANSPORT SE

15300, White, automaUc, air,
wheels, dual mrrrors. AM/FM, un, cruise, power seat.

115199, AMlFM, rear shde,
~port

$8789.

153/mo

5

92 DODGE CARAVAN
11533 1, Blw\ autorrld!rr. ,lfr

AM,.FM

UcJJI ll'lrr•;r:;

wYldows &amp; 19&lt;1&lt;1. 110,835.

.$190/mo

1_1.1 :.P, ;.Ill t:;Hj

$8955 •

$158:mo

92 DODGE CARAVAN

•
•'
••
•
•~
•"
0

J7(HICK 1~1 ClAIIImDIIOA All YOUR NIIDit

0

' HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Gallia Academy's golf team edged
fairland 164-165 Thursday in a
four-team match at Lavalette Golf
Course.
.
' · Behind them were BuffaloWayne (176) and Wheelersburg

..

Fish For Pond Stocking

. 92 GEO STORM
15187, Air. AM/FM

cassene, rear defroster,

· 4 .dr, auto, blue with ivory
interior, A/C, stereo cass, pwr
windows, .pwr. locks, pwr
mirrors, clock, rear defrost. 51 K
1
Nice.

&lt;;loth interior.
$6995.

PARKERSBURG NISSAN'S

s1181mo
94 HYUNDAI ELANTRA
15238, Air, AMIFM
$9950.

S176Jmo
90 NISSAN 240 SX

$9649.

S199;mo

15206, Automatic, air,
AM/FM cassette, cloth
Interior. $4895.

OTHER PRE-OWNED
AUTOS

89;mo

5

'94 FORO Fl50 2X4 TRUCK

VB. AUTO , AIR. CJD

XL

'96 ALTIMA GXE'S with Air, Cruise,
Power Windows, and Door Locks,

automatic

transmission,

miles, local owner.

Passing yards ................ .38
Comp.-att..................... 2-4
Interceptions !brown ....... I
Fumblesllost... ..............4-2
Punling-yds .....................0
Penalties-yds .............. 7-85

7
23-98
50
6-12
I

2-1
5-180
3-35

transmission,

air automatic transmission, AM/FM

cruise , all power rear defroster. power locks, rear defroster

9,995

Slk # 4156201

8

PRE OWNED
NISSANS

JUSTY

3,995

8

12,995

1985
C::IIEVROLET
C::t\Vi\LIER

1993 SUBARU

1981 BUICK
Li\SABRE
LIMITED

2 DR, 4 cyl ergine, 5 speed
transmission, air conditioning , 4 DR , 4 cyl. engine, power Power sleering. power brakes.
AM/FM stereo cassette. local steering,
power
brake~ . automatic transmission , AM/FM
one owner, 29 ,778 miles, extra automatic transmiss,ion , local
stereo cassette. good tires. local
clean.
car.
trade in.

'9NISSAN OUEST G.lCE VAN

SpPr•lol

1994 FORD
EXPI. .ORER XI. .T

1993FORD
RANGER
'96 MAXIMA GXE's, SE's and OLE's
Unbelievably Sale Priced At

Over Factory Invoice

Pickup long bed. XLT pkg., 4 cyl

power

steering, power

*9' 995
.

TAURUS Gl. .
stereo cass ., air conditioning , tilt.

brakes . p. windows &amp; locks.

5

•

;*Civic 24 months, 24,000 miles, $l400 down, 7,1% resale value, ·
· ~ rate ~clot .00248 p!us 1st pay,mert &amp;sepurily deposit.

.

,

~tHEN$1: [•]: l•i!l'~CARS
~:, . :-. ",..rr'I/ie !Jiapj/y Jionif_a~Peopfe~' ·
lt1Q..E.- S~ATI; ST. -.AT ... EN$, OHIO
.

~.

': . Phone 594-ssss'·.-.· · , .

NO DEALERS PLEASE ON THESE UNITS!

'
•
•

NO PAYMENTS 'TIL JAN. 1996

PARKERSBURG
NISSAN INC.
1627 Murdoch Ave. • 485-8451 ·

8

21,495

5

12,995

1993 FORD
TAURUSGL

Dr:, 3.8 V6 engine, p. steering,
4 DR, 3.8 V6 engine , power
p. brakes, aula. trans .. AM/FM 2 OR , ·v6 engine, p. steering. p. steering,
power
brak.es,

4

cruise. dual air bags, ant. lock

Payments figured with down payment of $1 ,000 cash or ltade plus tax &amp;title.
See salesman for ~etails.

wheel drive , 4 dr, 4.0 V6

1992 t'ORD
F-150 XLT

engine, power · steering, power
brakes , automatic transmrssion,

1994 FORD
TIIUNDERBIRD
LX

1994 FORD
All Remaining '95
4x4TRUCKS

4

*6 9 5

4X2, 8 loot bed. 302 v8 engine,
p. steering, p. brakes. auto.
brakes. 5 speed trans , air
trans . air cond ., AM/FM stereo
conditioning, AM/FM stereo air conditionong. AM/FM stereo
.. tilt, cruise. p. windows &amp;
cass
cassette , tilt, cruise, power
cassene. rear step bumper.
locks,
sliding rear window, bed
windows, p. locks, luggage rack.
linner. chrome rear step bumper,
All terrain tires.
A-t condition.
engine,

•

E

,

8

(Continued from B-I)

rust downs ... .......... ........20
Rushing yards ........61-315

automatic

15,995

Eagles lose ...

::~;atistic~

air

conditioning, AM/FM stereo conditioning. AM/FM stereo stereo cassette, ·tilt, cruise, air
cassette. rear defroster. 23 ,000 cassette. leather interior, lilt, condi1ionmg. power windows,

MSRP
'18,703
DISCOUNT -$2.708
YOUR
5

1987 MERCURY
.GRAN MARQUIS

4 DR . 4 cyl. engine, power 4 DR. V6 engine, power LS, 4 DR, VB engine, power •'
steering,
power
brakes. steering,
power
brakes, steenng.
power
brakes,

Dual Airbags, AM/FM Slereo

PRICE

PE"R'"Mo~24" MONTH

1991 BUICK
PARK AVE.

1994 PONTIAC
'
SUNBmo

Casserte wrth 4 speakers. Plus ~uch
much more!

M

1

Be Sure To Check Out Our Used Car Inventory

SEPTEMBER SALES EVENT

91 CHEVY
. CAVALIER RS

5249 61

Customer's capitalized cost reduction of $1 ,000 plus Ford Rebates lolal are used to redu ce actual
acquisition cost of vehicle. •
Total Customer Cash Required of inception = 1,000 cap reduction
Total ol payments= 5996~
249" 1 st payment
Purchase of lease end for t 0.089"
~" Deposit
1499"'

UNBELIEVABLE

cassette, till, power
windows, cloth Interior.

15179, White, automallc,
, air, AM/FM cassette,
· sunroof, cloth interior.

LEASE FOR

Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, September 20
Gallipolis - River City Farm Supply
. 4:00- 5:00P.M., Phone (614) 446-2985 .
.
Min'imum order of 25 r, sh
WE FURNISH YOUR HAULING CONTAINERS
To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call : 1-800-247-2615
.
(ord~rs do not have to be placed in advance)~
~
FARLEY'S FISH FARM
'·
;-'
CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

Leading lbe Blue Devils (34-8)
was Drew Dunkle, who shot a 38.
Behind him were teammates A.J.
lohnson (41), Stephen Roderick
(--42), Ryan Canaday (43), Aaron
!&lt;piing (44) and Aaron Bickle (45).
;-. GAHS will play llle rest of the
~oullleastem Ohio Albletic League
~t:ams Monday at Cliffside Golf
€curse in Gallipolis. ·
•

$217/mo

See

1995 Contour GL 4 door Vibrant White Clearcoat, 2.0 DOHC, 4
cyl, P.E.P. 236A- full length console, 'AM/FM cassette, air
conditioner. rear window defroster, power heated mirrors, light
group, power door locks: speed control, automatic overdrive
nsmission. P185/70R14 SSW tires, front &amp; rear' floor mats,
power side windows, Retail Price $16,315

SOUTHERN SENIORS - Souther•'• seniors make up a strong
nucltus for this year's club. Pictured a~e (L-R) Jennifer Lawrence,
Jonna Manuel, Jennifer Cummins, Sammi Sisson, Beu Lisle and Tassica Cummh...

wins
non-league
~off match

l

15332, ~ewter, 7
passenger, V6 engine,
automatic, air, AM/FM,
dual mirrors.
$9700.

Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

.

. $178/1110

r)I'St.downs ......................9 1
16
Saimmage plays .......... .47
55
Rusbingan.-yds .....39-120 41-350
'Passing yards ................. 24
50
Total yards .................. .l44
400
C001p.-an....................;)24-12
Interceptions !brown .. . ..
0
Fumbles-lost .......... ...... -I
0
Penalties-yds .......... ....6-45
8-55
Punting-yds.............. 3-102
2-48

•

l

. '

Team statis.tics

lbe ball back on a Sheets fumble
recovery and scored on a two-yard
Sheets run wilb a gOod block from
Curtis. No extra points were tried, as
time ran out.
Mattingly was 29-173 yardS and
Burnett was 12-55. Eastern's Sheets
was 11-58 rushing and Micah Otto
was 3-24 receiving.
Eastern tacklers were Otto with
IS, Steve Durst with 11, Curtis with
eight and Eric Hill willl six.
Eastern will host Buffalo-Putnam
next Saturday as the Ohio
University 110 comes to perfonn on
Friday night at EHS.
Owarttr 1ullla
Rosecrans ...............3 0 13 14 = 30
Eastem ...................o 6 o 6= 12

·.

PHONE 99 2·2 t96

,cassette, rear slider.

Ih.l! week's m.tf
Friday: Warren Local at
Gallia Academy; Athens at
River Valley; Jackson at
Marietta; Logan at Watkins
Memorial; Coal Grove at
Miller; Portsmouth East at
Fairland; Wahama at Meigs;
Miami Trace at Franklin
Heights; Winfield at Point
Pleasant; Portsmoulll at Ashland
(Ky.)
.

.

air, AM/FM

River Valley ...........0 0 6 6 = 12
Meigs ...................... ? 6 22 0 = 35

.KY.

=

ttt\-COUlJt_p

92 FORD RANGER
SUPER CAB XLT

Ou•rfer .ls!lBJs

Dspartgnt

We need to go back and
reestablish . ..
ours.~lves
fundamentally, he sa1d . . Thts
week, wtlb homecommg commg up,
we need to set our stghts on Hannan.

Sma. [[
Deportment
First downs ..................... .5
13
56
Total plays .....................40
Rushes-yards .......... 19-(-6) 48-186
39
Passing yards ................. 31
Comp.-all ................... 5-21 _ . 3-8
2
Interceptions !brown ...... .3
Total yards ..................... 25
225
Fumbles-lost ................ 1-1
0-0
Puntlng-yds .... .......... 5-105
2-75
Penalties-yds .............. 3-15
7-95

169/mo

94 DODGE CARAVAN

(614) 667-3350

e~up.

Team statiStiCS

5

37
18
42
82
114
148'

15266, Silver, V6 engine,
automatic, air, tilt, crul$8,
air bag.
$11,995.

42945 State Rt. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

We've got to have a good week of
practice and come out ready 10 play
next Friday night. We also need to
get our kids wilb nagging injuries
healthy . Those are the keys to a
victory next week."
. Homecoming for lbe Tornadoes
wtll be Friday against the Hannan
Wildcats at Adams Memorial Field.
Kickoff is 7:30p.m.
OuarterWlaJl
Soulbcm .................O o 0 0 = 0
Fon Frye ................ 7 13 6 7 33

rear nip seats. $9515.

rA

~85).

Rt. 7 North ttuu Tuppers Plains .

•

were Je~emy Johnston and Jamie
E~ans ~·lh seven tackles each, Matt
Dtll Wtth five, Jay McKelvey wtlb
live tackles .and one sack. and Jesse
Maynard wllb four tackles and one
mtercepl.l"?..
.
r Kloes satd hts troops need to

92 FORD RANGER
SUPER CAB XLT

$9960.

'Just 20 Minutes Drtve Straight Up

for the touchdown The extra-point
kick failed, and Fmt Frye led 26-0.
In the fourth quaner, lbe scoring
concluded with Duskey's second
touchdown of the .night 3 four-yard
run. The extra-point kick by
Handschumacher was good, and the
Cadets capped off a 33-0 victory.
Jamie Evans was the rushing
leader for the Tornadoes with 10
carries for 21 yards . Mike Ash bad
two carries for eight yards, and
Jason Writesel had two carries for
minus-eight yards.
Tornadoes' quarterback Jesse
Maynard was five of 19 passing on
lbe evening, for 31 yards. Maynard
was picked off twice by lbe Cadets
defense. Jason Writesel was zero of
lbree passing for zero yards. and one
interception.
Receiving leaders for Southern
were Jay McKelvey (2-12), Matt
Dill (1-6) and Brian Pagel (1-5).
Defensive leaders for Southern

· 4110DLEPORT, Q\'\

• ..:.. Point Pleasant will begin SEOAL play in the 1996 season
Friday's E!!m
GALLIA ACADEMY 40, Point
Pleasantl3
Meigs 35, RIVER VALLEY 12
WaYerly 50, Alllens 24
Jackson 20, Vinton County 0
Zanesville 33, Logan 0
St. Mary's 18. Marietta 6
Warren Local 43, Parkersburg
Soulb 27
Wheelersburg 37, Coal Grove
20
Fairland 14, Wayne (W.Va.) 8
Miami Trace 39, Logan Eim 6
- Columbus
Mifflin
50,
Portsmoulb 21.

an offensive motion penalty .
Soulbem eventually turned the ball
over on downs.
In the second quarter, Fon Frye
found paydirt twice on long,
consuming drives. Nate McLaughlin
busted into the end ·zone from five
yards out for the Cadets second
touchdown M lhe evenmg. Prater's
extra-pomt k.ick was good, and Fon
Frye led 14-0.
Fon Frye scored it's final firsthalf potnts late in the half, when
Jason Duske y ram~led in from
lbree-yards out. The kick faded, and
lbe Cadets took a 20-0 lead mto lbe
locker room.
.
In llle second half, IL was a better
defens1ve half for the Tornadoes.
Southern l,'layed solidly on the
defens!ve stde of lhe ball •. but just
coJ¥dn t getlbe offense rolling.
Fon. Frye scored midway through
the thtrd quarter when Anthony
Warren broke m from one yard out

15375, Black, air, 1111. cruise,
power windowt, sport wheola,

- • Non-league opponents* -

il!!m

H

117
89
64
19
21
80
50

Pomeroy • Middlep.ort • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, September 17, 1995

12,995

brakes, auto . transmission , air automatic

transmission ,

air

conditioning power windows .&amp; conditioning, AMIFM stereo
locks, lilt . cruise, rear defroste r, cassette, tilt. cruise, p. windows
&amp; locks .·
AMIFM stereo cassette .

8

12,995

'8

10,495

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING
·Bring In yoar bat cltal on a.Mew Car or Truck and wv
will try to mftt or Bnt the DIGI.
·

FOR fl GOOD DEAL..

SEE JACK ROUSH, VlaGR fiRMS or BOB ROSS

OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.-FRI. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
·
·MUFFLER SHOP MON.-FRI. 8--5; SAT. 8-12
· ~ NEW HOURS IN SALES MON.-FRI. 8--6; SAT. 8-3 P.M.

�•

Page 84 • "unbq ~im..·"tnlirttl

.
Sunday, September 17, 1995-·

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

Braves use Smeltz's arm to tally 3-1 victory over Reds
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (APl- John
Smollz is one day closer to his
favorireseason: !he post-season.
Tbe leaves arc ruming, there's a
chill in lhe nigh! air, and there's a
lor at stake when he takes the
mound.

Smaltz thoroughly enjoyed him·
self Friday night al the expense of
the Cincinnati Reds. He dominated
and heal them for the third lime
Ibis season, leading the NL Eastchampion Atlanta Braves 10 a 3-1
viclory.
All hough the Braves already

have clinched a ~ivision title and
have the best record in rhc NL,
Smaltz saw a 101 of significance in
his start . The Reds lead the NL
Central by 12 games and arc one of
the reams he might face in the playoffs.
"I like my chances no matler

who I face in the playoffs based 011
my las! three years," said SmoiiZ
(11-6), who allowed six bits and
fanned 11 in eight innings. "I'm
just trying to get in a groove and
mechanically right for when lhe
post-season comes, and !ben 1 want
to do my !bing.

"I enjoy that part of the year.
I'm looking at the three teams I
polentially could face . For me,
lhey 're good march-ups . That
doesn't guaranree anytbing."
Smaltz certainly has given the
Reds reason for pause. The right·
bander is 3..() in three staru against

.

Baseball

Ohio H.S. scores

Major leagues
AMERICAN LEAGUE

Akron Buchtel 11, Akron Hoban 7

ll': I.

Bo~: t on

.. , ........ 78
New York .....
67
Balwnore ............. 60
Detrml ........... ... .,56
Toron to ........ ....... 51

SI

.605

£d.

!a

63
70

.SU
.462

ll ..S
18 .S

13
78

.434
.400

22
16 S

Central Divi.ton
I-CLEVELAND ...90 40 .692
Kansas Ctty ........... 65 63 .501
Milwautu: ..... .......62 61 .481
Olicagu ................. 59 69 .461
Miooeaola .............. 48 79 .371

24
27,5
30

-40.5

Wt~ltrn Dlvl-iun
Califotnia. ............ 71 58 .SS-4
S~tl e .................... 6K 62
.523
Texas .................... 66 64 .SOl
Oak.land ................. 62 68 . ~n
,;-clin~hed dJVts iorttitle

4
6

10.

Friday's scores
B~on

6, CLEVELAND 2

Detroit 3, Tna.s 2
Seaule 3. Clucago 2
Baltimore 8, N~:w York I
Milwaukee S. Toronto 1 ( I~)
Kansas City 5. California 0
Dakland 6, Mione50la 5

They played Saturday ·
Bofi1on at CLEVELM'D. I :OS p.m.
Milwau.kee at Toronto. I: 3S p.m.
Minne50ta at Oakland, 4:0S p.m.
Texas at Delroil, 7:05p.m.
Ncw York at Baltimore, 7:05p.m.
Sealtle a1 Chicago, 7:05 p.m
Kansas Ci1y 11.1 Catirornia, 1~ :0 5 p.m.

Today's games
Bo~ton (Mllddux 3-1 ) at CLEVC·
LAND (Milninrz 10-5). I :05 p.m.
Texas (Pavlik 8-9) at Detroi1 (LirTU 27), 1:15 p.m
Milwaukee (Givens 5-4) at Toromo
(l.A!iter 10-9), 1:35 p.m
New Yort (Kn m l~ni('cki 5-5) Ill Baltirmre (Dmwn 7-9), I :35 p.m.
Seat11e {Bosio 10·8) at Oucaao (Sirotb 0-2). 2:05p.m
Kania~ Cily (Jacome 4·3) at Calirorrua
(Langston 15-4), 4:05 _p.m.
Minnesota (Rodriguez 5-6) at Oakland
(Va n Poppe! 3·7), 4:35p.m
·

NATIONAL LEAGUE

:wm

E ll'j ttrn Di'l'iliion

w

X·AIIanla.
.... H2
Alilal.lelptua .......... 65
Montreal .
.... 6!
New York.
... .59
Florida ...
.. 51!.

I.

48
65
68

70
70

£d.

.631
.500
.473
.457
.453

Crnlral Uivl~iun
ONONNATI ..... 7K ~I .605
Houston ................ 66 63 !112
Ctlicago .... ···'· ... 64 64 .500
St. Louis ... ., ........ .56 73 .434
Pitbburgh ...... :. J2 77 .403
Wulun Dlvb!un
Colorado ............... 69 59 .S39
Los Aoaela ........... 69 61 .531
Snn Die go .............. 62 67 .481
San Fr.mdsco ........62 67 .481
x-~li n c hed dl-,.ision title:

16
E1.1did 14, Mealor 7
Fairborn 13, Tecumseh 10
Fairfield 24. Milrord 14
FaU"field Union 37. Liberty Union 27
Fairland 14, Wayne. W.Va. 8
Fairmont 35, W. Carrollton 14
Fairport Harbor I&amp;, Newbury 12
Findlay 34. Bedford, Mich. 23
Firelandl 34 . Collins Weiitern Re.erve

Abno Covtlltry )3, Rinma.n 0

E•trr11 DlviAon

1&lt;1111

E. Pai~:Stine. 13, Mioeral Ridp: 0
Eastwood 21. FOil.oria 51. Wendelin 6
Elida 20. W~pakooet.a 12
Elmwood 20, Hopewell Loudon 12
Elyria CaUl. 31. Cle. John Hay 0
Erie (Pa.) Prep 28, Austintown-Fitch

Monday's game
Pmsbllr&amp;)l. a1 Miarru. 9 p m.

11
20.5

22 5
23

12
13.5
22
26

I

1.5

·7.5

Friday's scores
AUanta 3. ONC(NN ATI I
)iew York. 4. Philadelph1a I
Colorado 6, Aorida J
San Francisco 4. Pittsburgh l /1 0)
Los Angelea 7, St. Louis 6
Houston 7, M on tr~l 3
Chicago 6. San Diego 2

They play&lt;-d Saturday
Philadelphia (Greerte 0· 4) at New
York. (Telgh«lcr Q. J). I :40 p. m.
AtJanta (Maddux 16-1) at CINCINNA"n (Por1ugal9·9), 2:15 r .m.
Florida (Bonks 2-5) at Colorado
I(Saberhaaen 6-6}, '3:05 fl. m.
• San Francisco ~teti 0-(1) at Pittiburgh
(Neajle 11-7), 7:05
Housto n (Brocifil 4-3) at Montreal

plm

(hrez. l0-6). 7:3S_p.m.

Lm Aogdts (fapani 3·~) at St. Lruis
(PetltoY!Irk 6-5). 8:05 p.m
Olica11o (Trachsel 6-11) at San Diego
(Ashby 9· 10), 10:05 p.m.

Tnd:.ay's games
Hous ton (Drabek 9-8) at Montr ea l
(Martinez 13-8), 1:35 p.m.
San Francisco (Brewingt nn 4-3) at
l'itt'lburgh (Leiber 3- 7),_ I :35 p.m.
Ptii1adelphir;~ (W ilh.am&amp; 2·2) at New
Y.:.k (Cornelius l-6) , 1:40 p.m.
Lo~ An]lele!i (Val dez II -II) 31 St.
Louis (Walson 6·7), 2:15 p.m
Fl orida (Rnpp 11 ·7) ul Colorado
(Rebr 4-3 ), 3:0S p.m.
01icago (Fo5te r 10-10) at San Diego
(Valenzuela 6-3). 4:0S p.m.
Atlartta (O iavinc 14·6) at CINCIN NAll (Smile y 12-3), 8:05p.m.

Akron Ellet 17, Cuyahop Fall•7
Akron Muche&amp;l.tt 34, LaBrac 26
Akron Spribi- 23, Louini lle Aqutoo&amp;

1

Akron Sl.V ,-Sl M 35, Firestone 0
Allen E.. 48 , Ada 7
Al lianc e Marlinjlton 27. Warrco
Champion 0
Amanda Clearcreck 46 , Cot Independence 0
Amhent-Sterte 42. Vermlltoo 7
An50llia 43, Tw1n Valley South 20
ArClJdia 28. Ubeny Benton 20 (OT)
Arcanum 41. MiHJSj:inawa Val 20
1\sblaJld Cre:&amp;tview 28, I.JJcll.5 14
Ashtabula Edgewootl46, Al;ht4lbula 7
Avon 41 , Columbia 0
Avon Lake 40, Lorain Admtrul KIDg 0
Aymvile 33, Pwtway 20
Badin 14, FAiCWood 7
Barbertoo 41 , Aboo Ke nnuc 6
Bay 43, Cle. Kennedy 6
Beallnille 9, Shiidyside 1
Bedford 42, G..-fle ld Ills 0
Bellaire 41. Rtchmolld Edison 20
Bellbrook: 21. Midd l ~ o wn Madi~o 13
BellefonUiine 27. Marys-,.me 3
Benjamin Log:~rt!O, lml ian [...ak~: 1
Berea JJ. Stow 7
Bethcl24, Natkloal Tr.ul 6
Blufllon 29. Sr('ncerv1lle 22
Bowli ilg Green 25, Napoleon 12
Brookfield 16, ColunJbiaua 6
Brooklyn 20. Keystone 0
Brook:ville 21,Eatunl3
DruM wick 4(1, Elyna 14
Bw;krye Central46. Plymouth 9
Buckeye Local 10, Oa1: {W .Va.) Glen
1
Burton Berbhire 52, Kirtlaod 0
Caldwell40. Belpre 14
Canto n Glc nD-.ak 20, Worthington Kilbourne 14
Canto n Timktn 19. Akron E. 6
Carey J8, R1dgedale 0
CeO;u-,. ille 26. Cm . Summ11 Cou ntry
Uay. 19
Celirta 42. Ot:tawa-Gian1lorf 16
O.•tJterb\lrl! 18 , New Albany 12
Cbamberla1n 34, Nordoma 7
Chatdon71. Cle. Lincoln-Wesl 0
C'he.sapeake 46, SymiTle$ Val. 21
Cin. Aiken 21. Cin. Taft 14
Cm. Andmon 34, Cin. O:lk !lilts 0
Cin. Colerain 19. Centerville 6
t"in. Country Day 20, B ~hei -Tate 0
Cin. ~r Parll 24, C1n. Fioneytown 6
Cin. Elder 21. Cin. We~;1ern Hill&amp; 0
Cirt. Glen E.!;te 25, Cin. McNicho las 12
Ci11. Lakota 21, Ci n. Princeton 18
Cin. LaSalle 33. Cin. Mt. ltealthy 0
Cin . Marie mont 40. Cio. Indian Hill14
Cin. Purcell-Marian 9, Day. Dunhar 6

0
Fort Frye 3), Racine Southern 0
Fort Rttevery 55, Cin. Landmark 21
Fo11oria 14. N. Cuton Hoover 12
Fremont Roc• 19, Sandusky 16 (OT)
Gahanna. 34, Walnut Ridge 1
Gl!.llipoli• 40, Po1nt (W.Va.) Pleasant

1

Hannibal River 26, Magaolia, W.Va.
14

Hardin Northern 42, Van Bu ren 7
Heath fi, UtJca 0
Hebron Lakewood 14, Bloom-Carro ll
3
Hemlock MU!er 29, Hunt ington 6

Hilliard 3, Massil!ou Jat.·laon 0
Hillsboro 42. McClain 25
Holland Spring. 37, Oregon Clay IS
Hubbard 3.5, Tnt. Sci:llt 6
Huber Hts. Wayne 19, Cin. Winthrow
14

Indian Creek 11. Weir, W.Va. 6
1odlan Val. 25, Tuscan1was Val . 20

!bern this season with a 1.88 earned •
run average. In the last two slartS
covering 17 innings, Cincinnati bas
managed just one run: Barry .
Larkin's solo homer Friday night .
"They have a lot of ri~ht-han- •
ders. so I kind of like that' Smaltz ·
(See REDS on B·S),

By GARY CLARK
Sports Correspondent
MASON, W .Va.- Although
!be visilinB Ravenswood Red Devils caJIIe away wilb a 28..0 football
triumph, It was coacb Ed Cromley's Wabama Wbire Falcon courageous Bend Area gridders who
~ame away with the real victory
when the two rivals met Friday
civening before a large turnoul at
i!Je Mason County establishment.
. The Red Devils, behind a threell&gt;ucbdown, 179-yard rushing night
from Ryan Ward, needed two late
seores to put the game away and
~nsure tbe Class AA Jackson
.County ~ of its fourth straight
win on the 1995 gridiron season.
Wahama dropped ils second bome
contest of the year and fell w 2·2
on the current campaign, bul not
ticfore putting up a valiant effort
against a heavily favored
Ravenswood squad.
: "We traded blows with them
apd took lheir punches, and we
were still there at the end," a cont~nted 'Cromley stated following
the game. "I won't say that I'm
pleased because the score didn't
end up in our favor. However,
when the game was ever, I asked
eight or 10 of our players if they
did their best, and lhey all
a)lswered 'yes' and I can't ask anymore from them than that."
: Wahama fought tooth and nail
tbroughout the entire grid
encounter and were down by a
mere 14-0 margin before
Ravenswood capitalized on some
good field position to score its final
1wo touchdowns in the final five
ll}inules of the coolest. The Red
Devils, in the opinion of many,
showed some poor sportsmanship
i~ the game's final minute by keepi~g its first unit on the field and

London 23, Sprino , Northeastern 2
Lorain Southview 14, Broolaide 3
l..oudollvi llt4 1,Hillldale13
Lou.inille 21. Massillon Perry l 3
lAWellville 23, Sandy VaL 0
Lucasville Val. :W, Zane TrBCe 0
Madison 17, Ashtabula HarbOr 0
Mansfield Madi1on 19, Mount Vernon

14

0
0

o

Margaren.a. 22. Kao1a5l.akota 12
Marion Hardin i 29. Galion6
Manon Pleasant 44, Colonel Cl'lllwfonl
Marion River Val. 31, New Richmond
Marion-Franklin 46, Col. Broo khaven

Marliogton 27, Warren Champio n 0
Manilla n Washington 21 At.ron
llarfield 1'4
'
Maumce 25. Sylvania Northview 7
McComl;l20, Arlina:ton 6
McDonald 17. Y~ung. Liber1y6
Mectlanicsbura 14, Goshen 6
Medina 33, Wadswortl17
· l C'-' ' Ri
M~185_
3 . ucw•ll'e verVal. l2
Mtanu Trace ]$1, Lo gan Elm 6
Miamisburi 21 Vandalia Buller o
.
p ' · ' 24 c· N C
M td
dletown enwt ca. , 111. . olleae Hill 7
Mid-view 22, Elyria w. 20
Milan F.dtson 42, Wellington 7

14

·

;; .

Minerva 14, Cople~ 7 (01')
Mopdore 28, Smithville 21
Mohawk 12. Riverdale 3
Mo111oe Central 13, Tolsta. W.Va. 12
Monroeville 40, Seneca E. 12
Montpelier 27, Patrick. Heary 14
Mount Gilead 14, EIJin 7
N. Baltimore 33, Oibionbwg:O
N. Ridaevllle 21. Lyndhurst Brush J 2
N R0yal
10 Olrnmdfall 6
'
N.· Uniontoo
42, Cardington.
8 '
New Miami 15, lten.ry (Ky.) CouqlY

Sidt'Jt)' 45, Xenia 29
Sidney Lehman 21, Minster J-4
Solon 32, E:utlalle N. 1
Southpoln122, Boyd Couoty, Ky. 14
Sparta Highland 1-4, Fredericktown 13
Sprina. North 18. Trotwood Madiso n 1
Sprina. Shawnee 32, Graham 7
Spri_rl_&amp;b:Jro 21, Lebanon 14 (2 OT)
St. (W.Va.) Marys II. MarieUa 6
St. Henry 42, Ltma Ca.lh. 6
Steubenville 35, CaJq)bell Memorial6
Sleubcon.villr Cath . 13, Martin&amp; Ferry
10

N p lad 1 · 38 W
3
ew hi e phia ' ooster
Newton Fall1 t:a. Waterloo 12
Nile&amp; McK.J.nley 23, U 1bon Braver 16
Non.hmont 16, Beavercreek 14
Norto n 32, Canal Fulto n Northwest 0
Norwood 6, Amella 0
Oak Haroor 10, To!. Stan. 7

Strasbw-B l'f, E. Knox 0
Strongsville 35, N. Olmsted 0
Tallrmdge 28, Moaado~ Field 14
Tiffin Colunil ian 62, POf1 O inton 1
Tipp Cily 23, Gteenon 1
To!. St. John'• 42. lDdianapolis (Ind.)
Cathedral I

Tri-Va!ley 2~. Morpa 8
Triad 21, RidM,eJOOot 14
Trimble 55. Fraakila Furnace. OreeD 8
Troy 48, Tol. Roitf16 .
Uhrichaville Claymont 35 , CanoUton 7
Union Local 21, M~o wbroolr; 7
UnJon~n La~e 12, Alliance 6
United Local II, Toronto ,0
Unioto 20, Wellston 8
Upper Arlincton 9. Mansfield Sr. 0
Urbana 16, Berne Unioti 1
Valley (W .Va.) Wctu\7 . Frontier 6
Val ley View 57, Oi\ie 0
Van Wert 18, Lima Shawnee 14
Venaillee: 20, Coldwlllef 6
VIDCtnt Warren 43, Parw.bura S. T1
W. Brnnth 21, Caafield 0
W, Jeffenoo 34, Madi&amp;on-PlaiDI 0
Wallh Jesuil49, Young. F.asl 0
W.-ren Hardina 31, Cle. South 6
Watreo Howland 1.5 , Yauna. Wilaoo

Oientangy 14, Buckeye Val. 7
Orrville26. W. Holme.s. l3
Oxford Talawanda )4, Cin.ltarriwn 7
&lt;&gt;
•
Paden (W .Va.) City 8, Ftde.tal Hoell·
ing 7
Painenllle Riverlide 20, Painesville
Harvey 8
•
Parma Padua 34, Bedford Clumel
Peninsula Woodridge 24, Cresto n Norwayne I 3
Pmr 21. Orwell Grand Val. 0
Perrysburg 55, Woodward 7
Pickerington 16, Groveport 0
Pilleton 26, McDermott Nortltwe.st13
Piqua 21 , Tot. Bowsher 12
Poland 40, Spring. Local 0
Poland Seminary 40 , New Middletown
SprirtJ. 0
.
Preble Shawnee 41, Northndge 14
~
Ravenna 27. W. Geauga 7
' Revere 20, Brecb.,.ille 10
Reyooldsburg 29, Newark 9 ,
Rtchmond H111 . ~4. Pymatuntna Val.
20
R"d __ , 44 w,. rf n1 0
~ gew':""""
·
e o _
R1ver Vtew 21, New Lexmgton 14
Rocii.HiJJ20 Oall. H"IJ
1 12
.

0

12
WarreD~ ville 38, Akron CCDI..·Howcr 6
Washingto n Courl House 33, Wilming1on 13
Waverly .SO, Alhen&amp; 24
Waynedale 1.5," Triway 1
WayneniUe 49, Blanchester 14
Weslerville S. 26, Westerville N. 1
Werilfa1121 .Circh: ville 17
WesU~ otii, Cle. Rhodes 6
Wheelel'llburJ 37, Coal Grove 30
Wheeling (W .Va.) CcntraJ 28, Cadl%9

•

Rocky Rtver 1~. Purma Normandy 1
Salem 21, E. Lt-,.rrpool7
s·
·" h p k' 42 N l' ,16
auuus.., er tns • orwa ..
Sandi..L'IIcy St. Marya 35, Tirfin Calvert
Sheridan~] .

II 14

Cin. Read ing 46. Cin. M.adeim 14.
Cirt. Thrpin 42, Mawn 0
Cin. Walnut II II Is 17, Cin Roge~ Ba·
COD 15 ·
Ctn. Win1on Woods 23, D;~y . Colonel
White 8
Cin. Woodwo.rd 13 . Cw. Hughes 7
Cirt. Wyoming 42. Cin. Ta)·lor 20
Claymont 35, Carroll ton 7
Cle. lleightJ 21 , Cle. CoJJmwood 0
Oe. Independence 36, llawk~n School

Jiunbav ij!;m..·"•nlinel • Page

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Acade·
my High School'·s · Blue Imps
reserve football ream defeated vis;
iting Point Pleasant40-0 on Memorial Field Saturday morning lo
improve their season record ID 2-0.
The Gallians, in winning their
ninth straight game over a two-year

giving the baiiiO highly wuted col- yards for the scae. Donohoe's kick
lege prospect Ward on four stralgh1 was true and the Red Devils led by
running plays, to score its final a 21-0 margin with 5 minutes left
loucbdown with just 19 seconds in the contest.
remaining.
The final 10uchdown came afle'r
Ravenswood scored following Wahama failed on a fourth and 16
ils first possession by marching 83 si luation at their own 42 with
yards in 12 plays behind the run- Ravenswood taking over with jusl
ning of Ward and fullback Eric over a minute to play . Cromley
King . Junior quarterback Chip flooded the field with substitutes
Donohoe capped the series with a on the White Falcon defense, bul
seven-yard run with Donohoe also Ravenswood cominued to play ils
booting !be point afler, ID give the first learn players for what would
Red Devils an early 7-0 lead with be its fmal possession of the game.
2:58 10 play in the opening quaner.
Ward carried the pigskin four conCoach Fred Taylor's charges secutive limes with tbe last rushing
made it 14-0 wilh a short 34-yard attempt being a six-yard touchfour play drive with 5:16 remaining down run wilh 19 seconds remain~
in lhe half when Ward skirted into ing. Donohoe nailed bis fourlh
the end ~on e from nine yards out. straight exira-point kick to make
Donohoe again split the uprights on the final tally 28..0.
"We played hard all night long,"
the extra-point kick but lh e
Wahama defense kept it close as Cromley said. "We challenged a
the first half concluded with the few of our defensive personnel and
White Falcons trailing by a mere they all responded. The defense
played prelty well, especially dur14-0 score.
Wahama continued to bang ing the second half.' We just gave
tough as third period action them some exceptionally good field
resumed with the Bend Area position and they lOOk advantage of
defense holding lhe visiiOrs 10 just it. Ravenswood is definitely a playone yard during the Red Devils· off caliber team and Ward is a real
first two possessions of !be second running back. They just wouldn't
·half. Ravenswood began what let.us get anything going offensiveappeared w be a march to the end ly all evening long."
Ward emerged as the game's
zone on ils third series of the quarleading
rusher with 179 yards in 28
ter, but Gahe Scon met Ward bead
on at the one-yard line, forcing a carries, while Dale Johnson led
fumble with Mau Roush coming up Wahama with 60 yards in I 7 lries.
with the loose pigskin to ball the Ravenswood racked up 256 yards
in tOial offense while limiting
scoring opportunity.
W ahama was still hanging lOugh Wahama to just 115 yards on the
on into the fourth canto before ground and through the airways.
Ward returned .a Falcon punt 16 Leading tbe charge for the White
yards to the WHS 28-yard line. Falcon defense were Tim Jordan,
Five plays and four Ward carries Gabe Scott, Dale Johnson and
larer, Ravenswood had found the · Chris Roach .
Wahama must face another
end wne for the third time on the
evening with Ward rambling seven formidable opponent in its next
ou1ing when lhe While Falcons

take its 2-2 record across lhe Ohio · Wahama-David Mitchell 2-8·2i
River to meet a talented Meigs yds-1 int: Joey Mayes 1-1 -26:
team next Friday. Ravenswood will Jason King 1-1-8: lotals 4-10-55- 1
lay its unbeaten siring on the line irlt.
against Chapmanville in its next R'wood-C hip Donohoe 4-9-37- 1
encounter.
inl.

Receiving
Wahama -Lane Young 2-26: Jason
King 1-26: Ray Ohlinger 1-3:
totals 4-55.
R' wood -Jason Romeo 2-19; David
Hood 2-18; &lt;otals 4-37.

Statistics
Wabama ~
First downs 10
16
Yards ru shing 40-60
43-219
Yard.s passing 55
37
Total yards
115
256
Passing
4 - 10
4-9
Interceptions
thrown
I
I
Fumbles/lost 1-0
1·I
Penaltieslyds 3-20 ~ 5-75
Punls/Avg
7-27.8
4-38 .7
Off plays
57
56
Score by quarters:

I
Wahama 0
R'wood 7

2 3 4
0

0

Total

0

0

7 0 14
28
Scoring
R 'wood· Chip Donohoe seven yard
run (Chip DOnohoe kick).
R 'wood- Ryan Ward nine yard run
(Chip DOnohoe kick)
.
R 'wood-Ryan Ward seven yard run
(Chip DOnohoe ki ck)
R'wood- Ryan Ward six yard run
(C hip Donohoe ki ck)
Individual statistics
Rushing
Wahama-Dale Johnson 17-60;
Jason King 7-17 ; Chris Roach 1-4;
Gabe Scot! 1..0; David Tennant 1-(1); David Mitchell 13-( -20); totals

SPORTS CLINICS OFFERED - Holzer Clinic, which stao•ted
Saturday sports clinics for area athletes suffering fron injury sustained during practice or competition on Sept. 2, will continue the
clinics untU Nov. 4 from llo 3 p.m. In the urgent care center. An ath·
Jette trainer will be on band to provide follow-up treatment, schedul·
lng for rehabilitation, home instruction and return-to-practice guidelines. Thio io a continuation of lhe care for area athletes provided by
the Clinic, as shown by Dr. Mike Zlrille during a sports physical
examination of a University of Rio Grande athlete.

40-60.

Ravenswood-Ryan Ward 28- 179;
Eric King 8-30: Josh Hupp 1- 14:
Chip Donohoe 6-(-4): totals 432 19 .
Passing

period and 27th out of 30 over the
past four years, scored early and
ofren.
Mike Shaffer ran 35 yards and
T.C. Beaver kicked the point after
10 give GAHS a 7-0 lead in the first
period. Later, quarterback Chris
Bowman tossed a 45-yard touch-

down pass to Greg Lloyd with
Beaver again adding !be point after
10 ll!3i&lt;e it 14..0.
Shaffer rambled 21 yards and
Beaver kicked the extra point to
make it21..0. Lloyd scored another
on a 40-yard pass interception runback to make it 27-0. The lry for

point after was no good.
Shaffer scored again on a 15·
yarder. Beaver's kick made it 34-0.
Jason Hurt's 75-yard gallop completed !be game's scoring.
The Blue Imps return to action
next week when they travel to
River Valley for a coolest

1993 LUMINA EURO

said. "But at the same time if I
leave sliders up, if I don't make the
pitches, they'll do damage. Forlu-.
nat ely, I was .able to bear down
with men on second."

The Reds had four scoring
opportunities tbat ended with
strikeouts and a double-play ball.
Smaltz struck out Beniw Santiago
twice with runners on second, then

got him 10 hit into a double play in
thesi:xtb.
SmoliZ lilso fanned Bret Boone
three limes, the first two with runners in scoring position. Santiago is

1994 OLDS. 98 REGENCY

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seats. ~w. PDL.
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Open 7 days a week for your shopping convenience.

• Gallipolis ..... 392 Upper River Rd ..... Call: 446·9335
TOLL FREE t-800-822-0417 •372·2844
344-5947 • 422-0756

See puzzle on page 02

!)j~ starts Sop1ember

17 ano runs 11\tu SeptemDer 24. 1995.

.

I

#34100, "34200. Limit 2.

SALE

remC&gt;te

$17 000

7

Oe.' Sl. fgnati UJ 20. Tol. St. Francis 3
CleM Fork 20, Ontario 0
Clearview 43.LDrain Calh. 14
Clt'fmont NorthleOlitern 30, Cln. lock land 20
Cly de 16, Bellevue 8
Col. Drigasl7, Col. Weitl3
Co l. DeSales 28. Col. Bcuhcrofl 7
Col. East 6. Col. South 0
Col . HMie~ 21, lfamillorrT\vp. 0
Col. Li nden · McKinley 33, Marion
Calh. 13
Co l. Miffi in 50. Porumoulh 21
Co l. Northridge 12, Millt:11iport 1
Co l. Ready 10. Ca\131Winchester 19
Col. St. Chwl t:~&gt; 3 I. Co l. Northland 20
Colurnbiau Cru tview 35, S. ~nge 6
Co lumbu' Gro-,.e" 14, DelphnA Jefferson 0
Cononon Val. 38, Newcomrntown 13
CortlaOO -Lakeview 42, Ginrd 13
Cory-Rawson 23, Vanlue 1
Covi ngton 28, Tri -County N. 7
Cre!tl irte 28, Nurthmot 1
Creslwood 9, Fairvtew 0
Crools ville 37. Philo 1
Cuya hoga U\s . 12, Duyle,town
Chippewa 1
1
Da nville 19, S. Central 0
Day. Cha minadc-Julieo nc: 24, Day.
Belmont 14
'
Day . Meadowda le 32. Sprinl!l . South
27
.
.
D~y. Oak. woo d 20. Carlis le 15
IY.Iy. Stebbti\S 17. Franklin 14
DeO rarf Rtvc rside 13 . S. Cha rleston

BS

Blue Imps get ninth straight win over past two years

QUICK SILVER
WHEEL CLEANER

(OT)

Tuday's games
DieKo al Philadelrhia, 11un
lodiiiJlaPOiili at Buffalo, J p.m.
Oakland IK KanWI Cily, 1 p.m.
CLEVELAND at HW51on, l p.m.
St. Loui1 at Carolina, I p.m.
Atlantn at N~w Oi-leans, I p.m.
Arizona at Detroit. I p.m.
N.Y. Giant. at GrunBay, I p.m.
New England al San FtanciloCO, 4 p.m.
CTh"CINNATI a.l Sealt1e, 4 p.m.
Jacbonv il h:: al N.Y. Jet., 4 p.m.
Wa~hingto n at Dt-nvtr. 4 p.m
Oikago at Twnpa Bay, 4 p.m.
Dallas al Minnesota, 8 p.m.

::~.i

~~JI·~

Football
NFL slate

14

6

Groerubura Grun 43, Canton,S . 0
Greenville 47, Milton Union 6
Grove Cily 24, Frankl in Ills. 14
Hamilton 35, Middlelown I 3
Hamilton Badin 14. Ed."ewootl 7
Haml llon Ross 34. Cin. Northwestern

"

Ironton 12, Otilllcothe-7
J~tboa 20, Vinton Co. 0
Jacklon-M ilto1120, Windham 14
Jeff~ 54, ConDeaUt 20
Jonathan Alder 48, Col. Whet.stooe 6
Kenston 17, Mayfield lO
Kenlon41 , SL Marys iS
Kenton Ridge 33, Spring Catholic 23
"Kettn-in g Alter 33, Day. Carroll 0
K.inp 21.Lovr1and 19
Lakewood 24. Shaker HtJ. 2
Lakew ood Sl. Edward 9, Cle. Dentdictine 7
l....aocaster 63, Cle. East 0
t..;p&amp;ic 28, Pandora-Gilboa 20
Lick..ing HtJ . 21, Col. CeDtennial 7
Licking Val. 34, Co&amp;hocton II
Lima Bath 24, Deftuce 13
Little Miami 19, Clinton-M••ie 7
Lodi Cloverleaf 21. Medllla Buckeye

13

Garaway 41 , Fairleu 6
Geneva 31, Ashtabula S1 . John 0
Genoa 34, Millbury l..a.ke 14
Golheo 42, Wuttrn BrO'o\' n 14
Granville 17, Grand-,.iew t5
Groeneview 30. Spring. Northwestern

...

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

Ravenswood blanks Wahama 28~0; Falcons fall to .500 mark

•••l

~--------------~~~~~----~~------~~~--------~~~~'"~~~~~~

ScQreboard

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Monday • Saturday: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunday: Noon • 6' pm

�Page 86 • Ji}unllav 'alimts-Ji}ontilul

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

Sunday, September 17, 1995

OutdOOrS

september 17,1995

sundayTimes-Seminel/B7

,·~~~~~~~~------------~--------------------~~==~==~~~~------------------------~~~~~~~~~------

Ohio fishing report

·

Worms and spinners best for landing Fox Lake largemouths
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing repon
provided by tbe Division of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources :
Southeast
FOX LAKE Use night
crawlers, six-inch plastic wonns or
small spinners to take largemoulll
bass. Traditional baits used along
lhe bottom at night produce good
catches of channel catfish. A fishing pier was built near the boat
ramp in 1992.
SALT FORK LAKE - Fall
weather keeps many anglers returning to this lake. Smallmouch and
largemouth bass , channel catfish,
musldes and walleyes continue to
provide abundanc fishing this
month.
Southwest
STD..LWATER RIVER- The
Stillwater offers some of the

region's finest fall smallmoutb bass
fishing . Access may he limited in a
number of areas, but bass fiShing is
rated good to excellent lllroughout
much of the river system. Use soft
craws, jigs and minnows, and .hellgmmiles for best results.
EAST FORK LAKE,- Fish
with live shad, creek chubs and soft
craws al depths of eight 10 22 feel
when seeking hybrid striped bass .
Use a medium-acljon •. bait-casting
rod wilh a six- or eight-pound test
line. Largemoulh and spotted bass
fishing should he good !his fall.
Ohio River
The New Cumberland Pool
includes 1,970 surface acres of
water in Jefferson and Columbiana
counties. Use spoons, spinners and
twister ·ail jigs when seeking
hybrid striped bass. Rocky shorelines along the main river chrumel
and near stream connuenccs arc the

most productive areas in which to
lish for smallmouth bass. Use small
jigs·tipped wilh minnows .
Central
DEER CRREK LAKE - This
1,300-acre lake south of Mount
Sterling offers good fishing for
channel catfish, while bass and
saugeyes. The Tick Ridge area is
the top spot for white bass. Fish
with cut shad in lhe creek channel
atlhe upper end of the lake to catch
channel catfish.
DELAWARE LAKE - Fish
with minnows near the deep dropoffs that contain stumps or olller
cover when looking for crappies.
These same areas, along with Ule
submerged creek channel, are good
spots to fish for bass. Night fishing
with cut bails and soft craws produces good catches of channel catfish.
Northwest

Check with area bait shops lo learn
the hcst spots and tactics used for
cacching bass.
HIGHLANDTOWN LAKEBluegill can still he taken on larval
baits and small worms in shallow
water from most shoreline areas.
Use minnows fished in deep water
with or without a bobber IO take
crappies. Rases are protected by a
15-inch minimum lcnglh and offer
good fall fishing.

PAULDING RESERVOIRThe walleye fishing ouliook is
excellent. Drift weight-forward
spinners lipped wilh night crawlers
or shiners near lhe bottom for best
results. Channel catfish offer good
night fishing. Use traditional bait
fished along the bottom.
OXBOW LAKE - Most largemouth bass range from 12 10 18
inches. Fish during the early morning or evening. Anglers may want
to· cast bass plugs into area.• along
the edge of vegetatiou or use live
bait fished at deplhs of two to 12
feet.
Northeast
GUILFORD LAKE - .Early
fall remains a good time for cacfish
anglers. Traditional baits and prepared baits can he used to land catfish exceeding 25 inches. Tbe outlook is good for fall bass fishing.

1986 FORD F 150

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marv1n Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

~j~IJ~f... ~~~o_n,_in~ue~d~fro~m~B~-2~----------~------------------------------------FINISHES THIRD- Bidwell finished third in
the Ohio Valley Athletic Association T-hall tournament, which was held at Hannan Trace Elementary in July. In rront are (L-R) Leah Cummood, Ryan Shini.tte, Malt Moore, Brandon

Shupo and Rns.• Sharett. Standing teammates are
Breit Unroe, Tyler HulcQmh, Ashley Neville, Eric
Caldwell and Brillany Smith. Behind them are
head coach Mike Smith and assistant coach
Dwayne Caldwell.

T-BALL TOURNEY CHAMPION
~ddaville won the Ohio Valley Athletic Associahon T -ball tournament championship, which was
held at Hannan Trace Elemen
In July. In
front are (L-R) Corle Westfall,
Woodall,
Allie West, Andrea Russell, David
and

race again. Dave replied, "Why
should I when I've got a driver like
that!"
Sarah chuckled, "Yeab, I'm
going to be the Steve Kinser and
he's going to be Karl from now

Brenton Fisher. Standing teammates are Jason
Jones, Jacob Saunders, Holly Taylor, J.D.
Sanders, J.D. Bing, Bryan Morrow and Chase
Davis. Behind them lire assistant coach John Runand coach Jim Morrow. Absent was Brandon

on."
Realistically, Sarah knows a lot
bf seat time and a lot of work Ues
jlhead, yet she is a fast learner and
a smoolh, very smooth, fast runner.
The third place in full blown
sprints carne in only her sixth night
out. Her comments also rrflect ber
confidence and respect for her
father' s· mechanical skills and rac·
ing know-how.
Crewman Denny Smilh chimed
into the conversation, saying,
"Yeah, Dave just doesn'tlike to
finish second."
Dave quipped, "That's right!
Especially, to her I'd never live it
down . I'm going to have enougb
trouble gelling her home tonight
(after the third place finish and
winning a 4-foot l.(ophy)."
In the recent Nationals at Daytona International Speedway, she
look a second and third in her

Fisher's outlaw sprint car
racing follows family tradition
By SCOTT WOLFE
Times-Sentinel Corre.•pondent
CHILLICOTHE - At a time
when most young girls are trading
in !heir Barbies and vanity 5\!ts for
real cosmetics and cheerleading
atlire, 15-year old Sarah Fisher
made the jump from racing go~arts to outlaw sprint cars.
A student at Teays Valley High
School near Columbus, lhe rookie
sprint car driver has proven !ha t she
is not just a novelty or some circus
sideshow. There are no gimmicks.
Sarah Fisher is the real lhing - a
fast learner .and an authentic outlaw
.sprint car driver.
As che daughcer of a former
championship sprint driver and the
niece of sprint car innovator Charlie Fisher, Sarah Fisher has no
desire co he anyone but herself and a winning sprint car driver!
Sarah is lhe daughter of sprint
car driver Dave Fisher. a fonner
sprint car builder, Ohio State University graduate and degreed engineer, who now owns and operates

Fisher Fabrication out of his Com·
mercia! Point residenc e near
Ashville.
Fisher Fabrication fabricates
pneumatic and hydraulic machin·
ery for industry, providing components and complete units for such
operations as presses used 10 mold
automobile pans co the hydraulic
lifts and compressots on a sanitation compact truck.
"Arter working all my adult life
as an engineer for the Harsco Corporation, a Fonune 500 Company, ·
I felt I was never going to gel anywhere. I was already an engineer
and there wasn't much money left
over to operate a first class race
team, so at age 38 I just quit and
went into business for myself. I
built sprint cars for a while, but that
wasn'tloo profitable, so I decided
co put to use the skills I did best
and Ulfgeled industry for my clienccle," said Dave Fisher.
Since 1980, the. name Fisher,
winning and sprint cars have been
synonymous. Brothers Dave and

Charlie, already life-long go-kart
champions, decided to go to the
races al Atomic Speedway (now KC Raceway) near Chillicothe. Said
Charlie Fisher, "I saw Charlie
Swarlz driving lh'"e Lorella Lynn
sprint car .and just new I had 10 do
lhis sluff. If il wasn't for thai one
nigh!, I'd still he racing go-kar~&lt;'
Charlie· soon came out in a Scanlon Chassis #5 wilh a Fisher engine
and Dave followed in 1982 wilh a
light blue #9 Nance Chassis. Like
Dave, Charlie too is an engineer.
For a shore lime, another brother
George was an up-and-coming
sprint car pilot, bul has s ince
re tired afler several bad crashes.
Charlie's son James made his debut
.,
this year and is an excellent sprint
car pilot, currently running sixth in
points al K.C . Charlie, the 1993
e:·
We ...
KC champ, leads the title race
TAKES
SECOND
again in 1995.
Cheshire look second In the Ohio
Known in sprint car circles as Valley Athletic Association Tthe ''Innovator", Charlie previously hall tournament, which was held
worked for Gambler Chassis Com- .at Hannan Trace Elementary In
pany and developed the fifth coil July. In front are (L-R) Nick
suspension and contributed to the Steven, Elizabeth Keaton, Buddy
popular down tube chassis. be and Higginbotham, Josh .Peck, Ryan
son James both drive Fisher Chas- Clary, Tyler Canaday and Sean
sis's of Charlie's design. After his Sands. Standing teammates are
first car, Dave always drove a chas- Kristin Hitchcock, Daniel Hill,
sis of his own design before driving Jeff Hopkins, Matthew Nibert,
a Gambler his final season.
Brandon Burnett, Ashley Baker
Now back to the point of and Scott Ward. Behind them
focus-the newest Fisher. Sarah is
not exactly a newcomer lo racing races she entered.
as she has hcen involved in racing
Steve Kinser (World of Oullaw
for 15 years and has hcen driving Sprint Clu!mp), step aside. Well,
for eleven. She began locally in perhaps .not yet. However , .t he
quarter midgets, moved on to the record stands strikingly llle same as
go-kan ranks, then advanced 10 go- the sprint car King's WoO record.
kan racing's premier division and
AI a recent sprint race at Ohio
ultimate challenge: the World Kan- Valley Speedway near Parkersburg,
ing Association's Grand National West Virginia where Sarah finished
Division. There Sarah became third behind Uncle Charlie and
champion three out of four years, Jason Dukes, she laughed w~en
winning some 150 races and Dad Dave was asked if he'd ever
approximately 70 percent of the
(See EISHER on B-7)

HOLLEY BROTHERS
CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
New
Firewood

Now
Available

245-5316 or 446-2114
7398 St. Rt. 588

Rodney, Ohio

Tftcho]sTMetais
108 Pomeroy Street
Mason, WV

304-773-9173

Control leaves wich
versatile Stihl blowers.
Handy for cleaning

·Due to the closing of Twin City Machine Shop, NICHOLS
:METALS is ready to serve you when you need:

sidewalks.ROtthes.

gardens and oiher hardto- reach _places. Both come

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·

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NICHOLS METALS business philosophy: To
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satisfaction is our LIFE-LINE. You can depend
on NICHOLS METALS, family owned, with 20
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STIHL®

Worth more because it does more.

BEST ON EARTH
eE A RESPONSIBLE RIDE~. Remember, ATV~ can be ha.zan:Jous to op&amp;Jate . For your .alety, alwaya wllar a helmet,
e~e p1otechon 111-.l protecltvo dothrng. and IW!Yer I1CIII on p.ovod surfoces. HorKia r&amp;eommenoa that all AfV ndol'!l
takO a training eouru and reacllttorr ownor's ITI81lUIII!homughly Thv FourTf&amp;l! Foreman 400 18 mcommended only
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436'SR 7 NORTH
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

#HONDA

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
State Route 248

Chester

985-3308

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)For the first time in 19 years,
hunters in Ohio are allowed 10 stalk
mourning dOves.
The season. which opened Friday, will he divided into three segments. The first segment will end
Oct. 21.
The .other segments will run
from Nov. 3-25 and from Dec. 23Jan . 1. .
The state first approved hunting
of the birds in 1974, said Mike
Buirley, an education officer of the
Ohio Division of Wildlife.
Lawmakers removed !hem from
che game bird list in 1976 after
groups complained that doves were
seen as symbols of peace. he said:
Last year, the Legislature passed
a bi!IIO add the stale's estimated 4
to 5 million mourning doves - so
nam6!1 because their coo sounds
moumful ~ 10 lhe game bird list.
Supporters said dove hunting
would promote management of a
natural resource and help the econ·
omy by keeping hunters in the
slate.
Opponents said the hunting
would increase kills of similar
species and take away from stale
wildlife management programs.
H unling is limited 10 the hours
between sunrise and sunset and is
prohibited on Sundays.
There is a daily bag limit of 12
birds, and hunters can possess no
more than 24 birds at any one time.
the Wildlife Division said.

$)-V

CASH, ARKANSAS 72421

Just 20 Minutes Drtve Stralgnt Up
Rt. 7 North thru Tuppert; Plains

lure Signs, Fisher Fabrication, and
Fis.h er Motorspons.
For Dave Fisher. the days of
driving of driving sprint cars are
behind him. He says, " I quit for
two reasons. Number one, 10 help
Sarah; and number two, because
one night I was racing and realized
lhe car was in tum four and I was
still in tum three. I said to myself,
"Now's 'the time!" 1 had to
acknowledge thai it was time to get
out while I could."
Does he miss driving? "only for
a split second, during the times
when Sarah gets in a tight situation.
For that split second I wish I was in
lhe car to correct lhe situation, U1c
get right back out. That's the only
time I think about it."
For a guy thai won 30 to 50
sprint car races in a 10-year spru&gt;,
including several big invilationals
and an All-SUIT show on the asphaH
at Columbus Motor Speedway, it
. just didn't seem natural to just walk
away. But Fisher already had a
plan in mocion; a plan that would
some day put Sarah in the driver's
seat.
Dave hired rookie Mark Good. flcisch and honed his mechanics
skills, trying 10 anticipate what a
rookie driver might need to correct
his car .
This season, after slinl!l mainly
on road courses with IOOcc/17
horse , Yamaha engines, Sarah
moved IQ the dirt ovals with the
same type Yamaha engines. There
she got the same feel of a sprint car
' with the hig -horsepower, low
weiglil ratio t ,, allowed her to
break 1~e wheels Ioos on acceleration. I
The plan continued co unfold
)'lith a debut late in che sprint car
season. Dave fell il wa.&lt; important
for Sarah 10 gel some seal lime in
10 menially prepare lor next year.

Gee

42945 State Rl. 7
Coolville, Ohio 45723

{614) 667-3350

300, 6 cyl, 5 spd, stereo,
AJC, tool box,· gray with
blue interio.r, chrome
wheels, runs great.
Looks

Focus on your
,family's future •••
See what State Farm Permanent Life
Insurance can help you plan for!

• Mortgage loan
protection

• College education
• Retirement
• ·Emergencies
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·DON TATE MOTORS, Inc. ~

308 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO 1-992-8614 • 1-800-837-1094

'••

1994 GEO METRO

-...

Auto, air, stereo, rear defog. Remaind"'r of Factory Warranty

.

Last

summe•

$6999 .

1

149 Down 1149 Per Mo.

10 in stock. Perfect for work car or back-to-school.
,....,...8,-.;e first for the Best Selection!

93 PONT•.GRAND PRIX Auto, air, 6 cyl, stereo, tilt, cruise ....................... 58995
92 CHEVY ASTRO MARK Ill Conversion Van, 49,000 miles, 1 owner loaded.... 515,495
93 BUICK CENTURY 23,000 miles, I owner Hurry ............................ s10,995
89 CADILLAC BROUGHAM I local owner, loaded, leather, 45,000 miless11,99S
91 CADILLAC BROUGHAM loaded, leather, V8 ................................ s13,495
88 CHEVY BLAZER V6, auto, air, 4x4, shorp ..................................... 58,995
88 BUICK ESTATE WAGON Loaded, V8, Must See ...............................53,995
86 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28 V8, red, runs and looks great ..................... 56,395
'

· A sale so succe•••u• It'• Been
•xtended Through september Sothl
• Every mower has full factory warranty'
• some oemos. some floor models!
• No Payments Until '96 With
APProveCI snap-Credit"
• see the Yellow Pages fOr
vour ne~rest snapper Dealer.
• Ends Septemoer 30,1995.

All Used Cars &amp; Trucks Must Go.
MANNING K. ROUSH

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SRVICE
POMEROY, OH.

204 CONDOR ST.

. PHONE 992-2975
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment Is Our Buslne~s. Not A Sideline

•

•

Already, she has done what
some drivers have never done iri an
entire career. The Fisher team is
frrst class, but yet not extravagant.
The team could usc a big-lime
sponsor. Dave maintains and
finances the car himself with the
hefp of several key sponsors: Racequip, Boggs Custom Shop, Signa-

Fish For Pond Stocking

• Mushroom Compost
• River Gravel
• Bank Run Sand ·
• Sized Limestone
We Deliver or Pick up at Plant

'·

RIVER FRONT HONDA

career.

By JOHN WISSE
majority of wildlife agency revThese two federal aid programs
Division of Wildlife
enues, a fact that is oflen over- get their money through a collec. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) looked by the general public," said tion of special excise !axes on the
Outdoors enthusiasts spent $526. Bill Page, license and permit sec- sales of fishing and hunting-related
million nationwide last year on
iion administrator for the Ohio equipment.
fishing, hunting and trapping
Division of Wildlife.
"License fee increases of course
\icenses, pennits and conservation
State wildlife agencies rely pri· may vary from time co time in each
stamps, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife- · marily on license fee receipts for stale, bul they do reOecl lhe ever:
their operating revenues. Agencies increasing cost of doing business
Service said.
Tbe agency said last week thai also receive money lhrough the and providing services lo more custhe 1994 amount compared with
Federal Aid in Sport Fish Restora- turners , including those who do not
cbe $492 million spent in 1993.
tion and Federal Aid in Wildlife fish or hun~'' Page said.
There were 15.34 million Restoration programs.
licensed hunters and 30.24 million
licensed anglers in the United
~tales last year. The 1993 ligures
included 15.63 million licensed
Delivery Will Be: Tuesday, September 19
bunters and 30.18 million licensed
•
anglers.
Pomeroy - R &amp; G Feed &amp; Supply Company
Ohio was ranked sevenlll with
· 12:15· 1:15 P.M ., Phone (614} 992-21.64
1.16 million licensed anglers and
Delivery Will Be: Wednesday, September 20
eighth with 534,000 licensed
hunters last year. Increases in
Vinton - lsa&lt;~,c's Feed
license fees :md pennils are credit2:00- 3.:00 P.M ., Phone (614} 388-8880
ed with the increase in overall
license expenditures nationwide
Minimum order of 25 fish
last year.
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• "We've seen a large growth of
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~terest and demand for services
among those persons who do not
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~\mt or fish. The license-buying
!p&gt;Ortsmen still provide the vast
~
FARLEY'S FISH FARM
~

are assistant coaches JeiT Ward, assistant ·coaches David Sands;
Paul Higginbotham and Vince · Brian Peck, John Hopkins and·
Hill, head coach Matt Nibert and Tim Burnette.

First segment
pf Ohio dove ·
$eason underway

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Charlie Fisher powerplant. Says
Dave, "She's noc ready for one of
those big boys (a410 cubic incher)
under the· hood just yet. That's
somewhere down the road. We're
just looking for a lot of seat time
right now."
On her second night out at KC,
mechanical problems sidelined the
car after a third place beat finish .
On the third night out, sbe again .
cracked the top 10 at ninth.
Sarah is confident and friendly,
fiery and skillful, petite and cute;
not all the typical traits of an outlaw sprint car driver. She is also
very wiuy and has a great sense of
humor; a combination of
qualilies/slcills. !hal are sure to take
her in great strides 10 an illustrious

Feds say outdoor enthusiasts spent $526M
on licenses, permits and stamps in 1994

: FLYING HIGH- Sarah Fisher or Commercial Point is shown at
full spoed at K-C Raceway In Chillicothe, where she bas competed the
past three weeks. She drives the family-owned #9 wrenched by her
l)&gt;lher Dave, ¥ popular sprint car chauffeur. She has finished In the
top 10 all three limes she has started, while one night a mechanical
problem kept her out of the race. She also finished third at Ohio Valley Speedway in Parkersburg, W .Va. Typical speeds at K·C are In the
!20-IJS mile-per-hour range.
.

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* Fabrication - from trailers. truck racks, hand.railing,
window grilles. entrance gates, we can be cost
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* fngineering &amp; Drawing Services- available when
needed.
* Welding Supplies and Equipment
* Field Welding - portable welding unit brought to
your site with certified welders.

enduro karl on lhe high banks of
the famed super speedway. That's
right, the same high banks that
Dale Earnhardt and another youngster Jeff Gordon, climb every
February for the Daytona 500. The
same place where karls reach
speeds of over 120 miles per hour."
Sarah entered the sprint car
ranks with lhree practice sessions;
two at Skyline Speedway, a short
.3/8 mile clay oval near Athens,
Ohio and at Southern Ohio, a fast
half-mile near Portsmouth, Ohio.
From successful practice sessions
evolved real racing at Lirnaland
Speedway, where she ran wilh the
Sprint Bandit Series. an aggressive
and highly competitive 360 sprint
series in Nonhem Ohio.
"My flfSt ride in a sprint car was
my greatest moment in racing!
There was nothing like i~" said an
exci led Sarah·.
From there it was on to KC
Raceway's high banks and the full
blown sprinters, where she finished
8th in her first night oul, despite
her prelty blue #9 Schnee Chassis
being equipped with just a 360

Lake Erie
Perch fishing continues to be
very good in many areas . In the
Western Basin, the top spots
include Starve Island, Mouse
Island and Raulesnake Island. In
lhe Central Basin, lhe area two 10
six miles offshore from Edgewater
Park and Wildwood Park are good
areas. Fish spreaders tipped with
minnows or small night crawlers
along the bollom for best results.

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All paymenls subj·ect to credit approval

• All prices Include
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.

Page 88 • Ji}unb"' ~inue-Ji}entiml

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

In major league baseball action,

College
'football
scores

Sunday, September 17, 1995

·

Indians, Mets and Blue Jays notch

By The Associated Press
East
Boston Univ. 40, Maine 21
Bucknell28, Fordham 21
Columbia 28, llarvard 24
Delaware 28. Villanova 1
Dulce 23, Army 21
Georgetown, D.C. 27,Iona
14
Hofstra 26, Lafayeue 0
Lehigh 20, Colgate 9
Massachusetts 51 , Holy
Cross 0
Monmouth, N .J. 34 , St.
Peter's 10
Pace 17, St.John 's, N.Y. 1
Penn 20, Danmouth 12
Penn St. 66, Temple 14
Princeton 24, Cornell 22
Rhode Island 10, New
Hampshire 7
Wagner 28, Stony Brook
27
William &amp; Mary 32,
N ortheasiem 0
Yale 42, Brown 38
South
Appalachi an St. 3H, N.
Carolina A&amp;T 31
Arkansas 20, Alabama 19
Cincinnati 16, Virginia
TechO
Maryville, Tenn. 28,
Davidson 21
Michigan
St.
30,
Louisville 7
N.C. Central 37, Howard
32 ,
VMI 37. E. Tennessee St.
23
•
Virgima 41, Georgia Tech
14
Midwest
Dayton 38, Towson St. 0
Illinois 9, Arizona 7
Iowa 27, Iowa St. 10
Kcnlucky 17, Indiana 10
Miami
(Ohio)
30,
North western 28
Ohio 28, Kent 28, (tie)
W. Illinois 41. Delaware
St. 14
Wis.-LaCrosse 14, Drake 7
Southwest
Texas A&amp;M 52, Tulsa 9
Far West
Colorado
66,
NE
Louisiana 14
Wyoming 52, Hawaii 6

CLEVELAND (AP)- Jose
Mesa set a team record with bis
44th save Saturday, and the Cleveland Indians banded Roger
Clemens bis first loss in eight
starts. beating the Boston Red Sox
6-5 .
Boston's magic number for
clinching the AL East held at four,
pending the outcome of the second·
'place New York Yankees' game at
Baltimore later.
Jim ''1110me homered and Eddie
Murray matched his season high
with four bits for the Indians, winners of seven of the first 10 games
on their 11-gamc bomestand. They
arc 51-17 at Jacobs Field this year.
Mesa worked a scoreless ninth
for his 44th save in 46 chances,
surpassing Doug Jones' team
record of 43 set in 1990.
.
Clemens (8-5} allowed six runs.
one of tbem unearned, and nine hits
in 5 113 innings, easily bis worst
outing since Minnesota chased him
with eight runs in I 113 innings on
July 23. He had gone 5-0 wilb a
2.37 ERA in seven starts leading
up to Saturday.
Mark Clarl&lt; (9-6), who is trying
to keep a spot on Cleveland's playoff roster, held on for the win afler

·
barely making it tbrougb the Red
Notes: Canseco wem 0-for-3. entb time in II games.
Sox • s four-run tbird inning. He ending bi5 career-high 17-game bitLenny Webster and Charlie
gave up five runs and six bits in 7 ling streak.... Murray played in bis Hayes bit solo borne runs for the
1/3 innings, walking two and strik- 2,808tb game, tying bim witb Phillies and Mark Wbilen drove in
ing out two. ·
) Frank Robinson for 14th place on tbree runs.
Cleveland scored lbree runs in !be career list. ... The Indians put
Dave Telgbeder (1-1) pitched
the second inning on Herbert !0,000 remaining tickets to each of five innings. giving up three runs .
Perry's RBI single, a sacrifice ny their Oct. 3-4 plaxoff games on Jobn Franco worked tbe ninth for
by Jesse _Levis and an e·rror by sale by lelepbone s'aturday morn- bis 25th save.
Tommy Greene. (0-5) was
Boston tlnrd base!J!an Cbns Don- ing, and they sold out in 1wo boors.
nel~. wbo !brew Wildly to second ... Six or Clemens ' 36 career chased during a five-run second
try1~g f~r a forceout on Alvaro shutouts came against Cleveland.... inning. He gave up just two bits,
Espmoza s grounder.
Boston was beld without a borne but walked six in !213 innings.
After Boston took a 413 lead in run for tbe first time in seven
Blue Jays S, Brewers 4 (II)
the top of the third, Thome put games. The Red Sox had toraled 12
At Toronto, Ont., Lance Parrish
Cleveland ahead to stay m the bot· home runs over the previous six siq,gled over Milwaukee's drawn-in
tpm half wilb a two-run homer, his games.... Cleveland second base· outfield in the 11th inning Saturday
23rd of the year but only his_ third man Carlos Baerg a missed his and the Toromo Blue Jays beat the
smce July 26. Espmoza fimsbed fourth straight game because of a Brewers 5-4. ending a s~ven-game
Clemens witb an RBI single in the sprained left wrist. ... Giles made losing streak.
SJX!b.
his major league debut and got his
Toronto tied the game with a
The Red Sox scored four in !be first bit, a tbird·inning single off run in the ninth, then won on Parthird on an RBI triple by Bill Vaugho'sgloveatf~rsl
rish's fly-ball single. Milwaukee,
Haselman, a single by Mo Vaughn,
Mets 10, Ph lilies 8
which began the day 5 1/2 games
At New York, Carl Evereu bit a · behind Seattle in the wild-card
a sacrifice Dy by Jose Canseco and
a double by · Mike Greenwell , three-run double and Rico Brogna · race. has won only four of its last
Haselman's popup fell in for a bit his 20th home run Saturday as
18.
John Olerud started the II th
triple when second baseman Billy the New York Mets beat the
Ripken and right fielder Brii,ln Philadelphia PbiUies 10-8 for their
with a single off Bill Wegman (5Giles collided.
fourth straight win.
7) and was replaced by pinch-runVaughn singled home another
The Phillies, who started the day
ner Michael Huff. Howard Battle
run in the eighth for his major four games behind Los Angeles in
walked and Shawn Green followed
league-leading I 19th RBI.
the wild-card race, lost for the sevwith a single that loaded the bases.
Brewers manager Phil Garner
brought in right fielder Matt
Mieske and positioned him
between first and second for a hveHome athletic events
tors are admitted with their ID man infield. After Carlos Delgado
Wednesday Soccer vs . cards.
popped up, Mieske returned to
Shawnee State at 4 p.m.
Racquetball court reservations shallow position in the outfield.
Satu~day - Soccer vs. Malone . can now be made one day in
Parrish hit a 2-2 pitch over
at 2 p.m,; fall &amp;aftball classic, TBA
advance by calling 245-7495 local- Mieske's he.a d for the winnin$ hit. .
ly or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,'
· Giovanni Cat.Jrra (2-4) patched
Notes: The pool will be closed extension 7495:
three
innings of scoreless relief for
to complete the renovation project.
All guests are to be accompathe
victory.
A Lyne Center membership is nied by a Lyne Cenler membership
Braves-Reds game
required to use the facilities. Facul- bolder and a $2 fee.
gets late start
ty. staff, students and administraAt Cincinnati, the Braves-Reds
game started Saturday at 5:30 p.m.

- - - - - - - Lyne Center s l a t e - - - - - - RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of Sept. 1724 at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
Fitness center,
gymnasium
.
and racquetb'!II.courts
Today-:- 1-3 p.m. and 6-11
p.m.
Monday - 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Tpesday - 7 a.m .- II p.m.
Wednesday - 7 a.m.-It p.m.
Thursday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
}'rlday - 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, Sept. 24- 1-3 p.m.
and 6-11 p.m. ·

a

•

WinS
afu:r a rain delay of 1wo hours, 29
minutes.
Rocldes 8, MarUns 7
At Denver, Dante Dicbette bit
bis 37th bomer, a two-run sbot in
tbe sevenlb inning Saturday !bat
lifted !be Colorado Rockies over
lbeFioridaMarlins8-7.
The victory kept Colorado
ahead in tbe NL West. The Rockies
began !be day with a one-game
lead over Los Angeles.
Bicbeue, wbo drove in three
runs, leads tbe NL in borne runs
and RBis (115). Larry Walker l)lso
bit a rwo-run homer for Colorado,
his 31st.
Andre Dawson and Charles
Johnson bit two-run homers and
Terry Pendleton and Jesus Tavarez
had solo home runs for the Marlins.
The Rockies set a· team record
wilh six straight hits during a sixrun !bird !bat made it6-3. After
Florida came back for a 7-6 lead,
Joe Girardi singled wilb two·outs in
the Colorado seventh against
Yorkis Perez and Bicheue homered
off Terry Mathews (4-4).
Steve Reed (5-2) pitched I 2/3
innings for tbe victory. Druce Ruf·
fin got his lOth save.
Athletics 6, Twins I
At Oakland, Mark McGwire bit
a three-run homer and John Wasdin
won his lirsi major league start as
the Oakland Athletics beat tbe
Minnesota Twins 6-1 Saturday.
Wasdin (1-0) went six innings,
giving up four hits and one run •
with no walks and one strikeout.
The Twins los( their fourth in a
row.
The A's took a 5-I lead with
five runs in the third. Geronimo
Benua· s two-out double down the
third base line drove in Stan Javier
and Rickey · Henderson. who both
drew walks from Brad Radke (10·
13).
·

Along the River

MerCruiser
Penta
OMC

Volvo ·

Pomeroy native Mike
Roberts, Sr. bas long been a
collector of sports memorabil·
Ia. His collection of major leaguers from Meigs County was
featured In a recent article by
Jim Sargent for the national
publication, Sports Collectors.
·Digest. With Sargent's per•
mission W&lt;&gt; reprint his story
about Roberts here. The
accompanying pictures were
provided by the collector, son
of Nonga Roberts, Pomeroy,
and the late Bob Roberts.
By JIM SARGENT
POMEROY · Which major
league baseball players came
from your hometown? What are
the odds of six big leaguers .
growing up in one town of
fewer than 3,000 people? Or,
what is the likelihood of nine
major leaguers coming from. the
same county?
.
Collector Mike Roberts, Sr ..
presideilt of Rubber Polymer
Corporation of Akron, grew up
in Pomeroy. In talking to friends
from Pomeroy a few years ago,
Mike discovered that several
fonner big league baseball play.
ers came from his hometown .
After doing some research, he
found that three more players
came from the surrounding
Meigs County.
Norman . A. "Kid" Elherfeld,
Benjamin M. "Benny" Kauff

and Harry R . "Cy" Morgan,
once prominent players who
enjoyed good careers in the
early 1900's, were born and
raised in Pomeroy. But so were
Harley H. "Lefty" Dillinger.
who pitched in II games for
Cleveland in 1914; Thomas C.
Williams. who hurled se.ven
'games for Cleveland of the
National League in 1892 and
1893; and William H. Wilson, a
relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Pbillies from 1969 through
•1973.
In addition; Ralston B. "~ol­
lie" Hemsley. perhaps bestknown of the county"s players,
came from Syracuse. and caught
in the major leagues from 1928
through 1947 . Thomas W.
Thomas, also from Syracuse;
pitching ring 1899 and 1900 for
St. Louis of the National
League. And Walter L. "Mother" Watson son, who pitched
two games for Cincinnati of the
American Association in fS87,
came from Middleport.
Syracuse and Middlepon are
close to Pomeroy and all three
towns are situated in Meigs
County.
Anned with this knowledge,
Roberts set out to obtain autographs, signatures, and related
memorabilia, including baseball
card.•, of the nine men.
While he has succeeded in '

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obtaining numerous signatures,
pictures an~ cards of Kauff,
Elberfeld, Morgan, Hemsley and
Wilson , Roberts bas expanded
his horizons. Now be is collecting signatures of all living former big leaguers . Already he
has written to abnost every living major leaguer who began his
rookie season before 1966.
He was asked how he got
started collecting autographs
and memorabilia of his hometown heroes.
"I have been collecting historical artifacts for years and I
enjoy reading classical history.
But in talking with some friends
a few years back, I was told that
Benny Kauff, Rollie Hemsley
and Billy Wilsori - a friend of
mine in high school - were not
the only big leaguers to c9me
from Pomeroy," he said
"Kid Elberfeld was also a
local boy. I got out my Baseball
Encyclopedia. paged through it
and came up with three others
from Pomeroy and three more
from Meigs County.
"That really excited me. ·SO I
set out to collect as many signatures, photos and other memorabilia of the nine as I could find."
His story started with Benny
Kauff, a famous native son of
Pomeroy who first made· the big
time in 1912, playing five
games for the New York Highl.anders (later the Yankees).
After being ignored by New
York the next season, Kauff
jumped his contract.
In 1914, he signed with Indianapolis in the new Federal
League. In 154 games, Kauff bit
a league-best .370, with eight
home runs, 95 RBI and 120 runs
scored. He also paced the circuit
with 85 stolen bases, which led
to the nickname, "The Ty Cobb
of tlie Federal League."
In 1915, Kauff swi tched to
Brooklyn, also a Federal club.
In 136 games. he balled a ·
league-leading .342, with 12
homers, 83 RBI, 92 runs. Again
he led in stolen bases with 75.
When the Federal League was
forced out of business by the
major leagues after that season,
the New York Giants signed
Kauff.
The fleet outfielder enjoyed
five seasons in Gotham. He
peaked by hitting .315 in the
. war-shortened 1918 campaign.
Benny's stats are very good: in
an eight-year career spanning
859 games, he averaged .311,
hit 49 home runs, knocked home
454 runners and swiped 234
bases. Kauff fan s in Pomeroy ·'
were justifiably proud of bis
achievements.
1

KID ELBERFELD

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Sunday, September 17, 1995

Local man collects
memorabilia of Meigs
major league players.

Pool
Through Sunday, Sept. 24closed
Free-weight room
Today-6-11 p.m.
Monday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Tuesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m:
Wednesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thursday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Friday - 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m. ·
Sunday, Sept. 24- 6-11 p.m.

Section C

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ROLLIE HEMSLEY

Roberts researched Kaufr s
career and found that, in adilition to his baseball prowess,
Kauff was a showboat and a
high liver. In 1916, for example,
one Pomeroy resident observed
that Kauff had "enough money
to buy a bank."
According to Roberts,
"Denny was fond of big rings
and flashy gold jewelry. He was
also given to rasq statements."
When Kauff switched to the
Giants in 1916, he boasted that
he would "send (Ty) Cobb back
to tbe bush leagues. Cobb never
returned to the minors, but
Benny's brashness got him into
more than one scrape."
"Kauff was accused in
1920," Roberts wrote in a stocy
for his hometown newspaper,
"of txj_ng pan of a car theft ring.
He wa:~ acquitted by the jury.
However. he had lon g been at
odds with the stem. legendary
Gianis manager, John McGraw.
With the inlervention of the new
baseball commissioner, Judge
Kenesaw Mountain Landis,
Kauff was ousted from baseball
in spite of his innocence."
. With his appeHte for local
big leaguers whetted, Roberts
read further about the careers Of
the others. He began with Norman 'The Tabasco Kid" Elbcr·
feld, a descendant of the family
which still owns Pomeroy's
Elberfeld (today Anderson's)
Department Store.
A shortstop who was versatile enough to play either 'second
or tbird base, the hot-tempered
Elberfe ld broke in with
Philadelphia of the National
League in 1898. His 14-year
career includdd 'sti1its with
Cincinnati ( 1899) , Detroit
{1901-03), the Highlanders,
where he was a team catalyst
from 1903 to 1909, the Washington Senators (1910-11 ), and,
after a two-year hiatus. 30
games with the 1'/ational
League's Drooklyn club.
Elberfeld batted .276 lifetime, scored 647 runs and collecled 535 RBI. Standing 5 feet
7 inches an'd weighing about
135 pounds, he hit only 10
homers . But the Kid played
aggressive baseball. lie often
dared runners to come at ham
with the spikes and he dished
out the same treatment.
Elberfeld was famous for
being hit by pitched balls, setting an AL record w1th 25 bean·
ings in 1911. A wm-at-any-cost
player, he .argued, even fought,
with umpares and wath other
players.
Once, during the 1906 pen nant race, the Kid became so
incensed by an umpire 's call

--

RENNY KNAUF}'
that he had lo he ejected from
l11c g:unc. Enraged by the ump,
Elberfeld was twice dragged
from the field by police. after
repeatedly trying to Ieick and
spike lhe official.
· ~The Kid's na,ly dis\1osition
is attested to by my husincss
partner, Doug Vca7.cy," Robcm
said. "Doug· s fath&lt;;r. Norm,
· attended Elbcrfelu's· training
camp in Chattanooga in the
1930's and the Kid signed Norm
to a minor league contracl.
Elberfeld also managed U1c Fulton, Ky .. minor league team to
which Nonn was assigned."
"Two years later, the Kid cut
Norm from the roster while the
team was on the road , Elberfeld
refused to let Nonn ride home
on U1e bus - he had to hitch hike."
"Norm signed the next day
with the rival Mayfic'lc.l, Ky .,
team . Fulton and Mayfield
played a day later. Nonn got a
little revenge hy producing the
game winni11g hit in the ninlh

inning.··
Roberts has also checked on
the careers of the oUJCr Meigs
County athletes, including
catcher Rollie Hemsley. In his
19 seasons, Hemsley was a top
defensive catcher, with a career
fielding average of .978 . lie also

became a five-time 1\11 Star.
llernslcy caught for the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Chicago
Cubs, the St. Louis Browns,
Cleveland Indians, the Cinc innati Reds, the Yankees, and
finally, the Phillies in 1946 and
1947.
Catching 1,495 games, the ·
durable Hemsley balled a solid
.262 lifetime . lle handled some
of the best pitchers o( his era,
including "Rapid Rohert" Feller.
Roberts went lo high school
with Rollie D. Hemsley, the
major leaguer's nephew.
Harley Dillinger was born
Oct. 30. 1904, in Pomeroy. He
died Jan . 8, 1959, in Cleve land.
The infamous gangster, John
Dillinger, is reputed to have had
relati,vcs in Meigs Counly. If so,
perhaps he and Lefty Dillinger
were related. Unt.il · further
research is completed, I know
only that' Harley was a lefthanded pitcher and appeared in
1 I games for the Cleveland Spiders in 1914. His only decision
was a 1088. His ERI\ was 4.54.
Middleport's Walter "Mother" Watson was bum June 27,
1865. He died at 33, on Nov. 23,
1898, in his hometown. Meigs
County's first major leaguer
pitched in only two games, for
Cincinnati, in 1887.
Continued on C-S

�Page C2 • ~iutllav 'Glimes-~omiiUI

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

Enga ements

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be· guaranteed to run a

Sunday, Sept. 17

•••

CROWN CITY ·Rev. Ralph
Workman speaking II a.m. and 7
p.m. Good Hope Baptist Church.

•••

PAMELA ALLEN AND DAVID CALDWELL

Allen-Caldwell

Chapman-Williams
· ALBANY - Kimberly Faye is a 1990 graduate of Meigs High
:chapman of Albany and Carl School aM a 1991 graduate of the
:Anderson Corbin Williams II of · Nashville Auto Diesel College. He
·Rutland· will be united in maniage is employed at Louigino's of Jack:oct. 14 at Pearl Chapel Church on son and owns and operates A.C.
:Sand Ridge Road, Albany.
Arts Custom GraphiC' and CarShe is the daughter of John W. toons.
The double ring ceremony 'will
l:hapman and Carolyn F. Chapman
:or Albany and is a 1990 graduate 2:30 p.m. with music beginning at
of Meigs Bigh School and a 1992 2p.m.
The reception will be at the Sci·
graduate of Hocking College where
pio Township Volunteer Fire
~he took accounting. She is current·
ly employed at Seaman's Canlinal Department following the ceremoIn Athens.
ny.
.
The couple will reside in
· He is the son of Charles E. and
karen S. Williams of Rutland and Albany.

GALliPOLIS • Pamela Jane
Allen, daughter of Lowell and Sue
Allen and Dean and Joann Circle of
Gallipolis and David Caldwell, soo
of Earl and Nelda Caldwell of Gallipolis announce their engagement
and approaching marriage.·
Allen is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and of the
University of Rio Grande Holzer
School of Nursing . She is

employed at Scenic Hills Nursing .
Center a• a registered nurse.
Caldwell is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and is
employed by the General James M.
Gavin Power Plant
The open church wedding will
be 4:30 p.m., Oct. 7 at the First
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis.
An open reception will follow in
tbe church social room.

•••
•••

Meigs community calendar
The Community Calendar Is
published as a free senice to.
norr-prorlt groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
speclnc number of days ..

lowship hall. The Conqueror's
Quartet of Ripley/Charleston.
W.Va. will sing in the aftemoon.
POMEROY Pomeroy
Nazarene Church will host singing
group "The Lauds" from Grafton,
W.Va. Sunday, 6 p.m . All welcome.'

Monday, Sept. 18
GALLIPOLIS · Community
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m. New
Life Lutheran Church..,/

•••
•••

Tuesday, Sept. 19

GALLIPOLIS - Lafayette White
Shrine Ceremonial 7:30p.m.

•••

.....

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. . Peter's
Episcopal Cbutch.

•••

MERCERVILLE· Homecoming 10:30 a.m. Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Narcotics Anonymous Clean and
Free Group 7:30 p.m. Episcopal
Church.

BULA VILLE - Homecoming at
Bulaville Christian Church with
covered dish dinner at 12 p.m. and
speaker afterwards.

BIDWELL. River Valley Band
Boosters, 7 p.m., Bidwell-Porter
Ele!{lentary. Discuss ongoing projects and upcoming events.

GALLIPOLIS - Homecoming
with Patty Simpkins singing and
Paul Taylor spe~ing in morning
service at Debbie Drive Chapel
Church.

Revival
MORGAN CENTER · Revival
7:30p.m., from Sept. 17 to 24 at
Morgan Center Christian Holiness
Church lwith Mike Thompson
speaking.
•••
WILKESVILLE • Gospel meeting with Lowell Kibbler 10 a.m.
and 6 p.m. Sept. 17 and 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 18 through 22 at Church of
Christ.

GALLIPOLIS • Kemper family
reunion at Otho and Libby
Mitchell's home.

•••

••••

•••

CROWN CITY - Danny Beaver
speaking 7 p.m. Victory Baptist
Church.

•••

CENTENARY -Montgomery

By DOROTHY SAYRE
. It bas been about a year now
smce Mabel died. Mabel was one of
those personahttes that
added much
color, adven·
~ure and JOY
mto, ev.ery·
ones h.ves.
She was a btt
like a butterny, comt~g
.
. . wto one s
sphereofhfe,dehghungyou wuh her
presence, and then fiymg off suddenly. But, you knew she would soon
return and be JUSt as full of hfe. She
was forever dro. ppmg off an. nem she
had JUSt ma dc. a Jar of w1 ld strawberry preserves, a cmft of some sort,
fresh vemson. or produce from her
garden. She always had the latest
news about everyone,, too. and was
thef~rsuobeatanyonc sstckbeds1de
wtth food or help.
ShOo passed away less than a
mhonth beforchedr~~th ~lfthday. Whenf
s
e.. was aroun u&lt;C young age 0
JAMES AND EDNA RODGERS
94, she entered a foster home. Unul
that time, she had hvcd alone and
cared for herself. It was her daughter,
GALLIPOLIS • James and Edna 1945 by Rev. Scott Westerman . Maxme, who called me on a .lovely
Loman-Rodgers of Gallipolis cele- They have five children James fallday,totcllmcMabelhaddted.As
brated their 50tb wedding anniver- from Chattanooga, Tenn. ; Fred
Mabel and I had. co.rresponded for
sary at a buffet reception held in from Vienna, Va.; Lois Snyder
their honor Sept. 9. It was hosted from Gallipolis; Marsha Rohrs of many years, Max me and I have kept
by, their children at the American Avon, Conn.; and Nancy Crowell lheconUnllltyoflcucrsflowmg. Years
Legion Hall on Bob McCormick of Columbus. They also have five and mtles cannot break the bend~ o~
Road.
grandchildren and two great-grand- nearly · ~ century ol two famthes
fnendsh1p. Our famdtes go back to
The couple was married at the children.
1903. My father and Mabel were m
Methodist Parsonage, Sept. 13,
. tile first gmde together. Their lives
and friendshipcontinucd through their
marriages, children, grandchildren,
With the family reunion season
. .
.
..
. kl
h'
.
be
cauon
ts
subJect
to
ed1tmg.
and family
great-grandchildren,
11
QUIC y approac mg, many WI
.
•
_
dealhs.
until
death
parted
them.
submitting articles of family activiMymother'sandMabel'sfriendties for publication.
' _
UP
To ensure prompt publ(cation,
10
•
, ship spanned over 60 years. They
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
were in Eastern Star and
toThe Da'ily Sentinel requests that
AU Natural C.H. 2001
. articles be neatly typed and double
With Chromium Plcollnota
. spaced for easy editing. Reunion
MONEY BACK GUARANTEE. ··
.
. items should not exceed 300 wo~
($•.oooFFcouPON.uMrrl)
and must be submitted within 30
' FRUTH PHARMACY
days of occurrence.
~alllpolla
·
448-8620_ .
All material submitted for publi- • 1111!1 - •

•••

CHESHIRE • Pete and Margie
Parsons family reunion at Kyger
Creek Shelter.

....

Paying tribute to a lady named Mabel

KANAUGA- AMVETS square
dance lessons from 1:30 to 4:30
p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - American
Legion Auxiliary Lafayette Unit 27
meeting 7:30 p.m."post home. Election for the office of second vice to
be held.

•••

50th anniversary celebrated

•••

SUNDAY
ALFRED - Alfred United
Methodist Church homecoming
Sunday with basket dinner, 12:30
p.m. and afternoon progrrun, 2 p.m.
featuring The Classics.

•••

---Reunion policy_ __

•1

p LOSE
- • • 10- LB$ ·
·I

I
I ·

GEVEII11
II
c&amp;JSSII . 8

~ou'\\ s2~$'

cosn vV
·~~

RACINE - Mt. Moriah Church
of God 60th homecoming Sunday,
1:30 p.m. Special guests Patti and
Lennie, and The Ladds from
Graflon, W.Va.

I

, ,.

RACINE - Morse Chapel
Church homecoming Sunday on
county Rood 35 near Racine. Dinncr at noon with service at I p.m.

IN 3 DAYS

I

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If you are plannit&amp;B a weddins •
then you aho1«ld come .see w al

I

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I

t

SHERYL THOMA AND MICHAEL THOMAS

Thoma-Thomas
: RUTLAND - Guy and Ellen
Titoma of Rutland and Paul "Buck"
and Frances Thomas of Middleport
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their children, Sheryl Renee Thoma and
Michael Todd Thomas.
· Thoma and Thomas arc both
Jiraduates of Meigs High School
and Hocking Technical College.
She bas an associate degree in busiaicss management and is employed
l)y Farmers Bank, Pomeroy.
. lie bas an associate degree in

Society
scrapbook
CARD SHOWER
GALLIPOLIS • A card shower
will be held to celebrate Homer
Smith's 84th birthday Sept. 25. He
ls-a former resident 'of Gallipolis
alld the son of the late Marion and
Dora Rife-Smith. Cards may be
sent to P.O. Box 511, Meally, Ky.
41234.
:: WOMEN'S WORKSHOPS
: GALLIPOLIS_ • Marking
September as Women's Health
Month, Community Assault Pr~­
vention Services of Jackson, Galha
ind Meigs Counties will be sponll(lring !WO workshops.
: The seminars w11l be 6:30 p.m.,
Sept. 28 at Bossard Library in Gallipolis. Refreshements will be
icrved at 6 p.m.
.
·: Bettina A. Hughes w1U speak on
jro)s and self-esteem.
: • .She is executive director for the
Jilckson American Red Cross and .
U an HIV/AIDS counselor and
educator with the Jackson County
!list site.
.
.
. · For more 111format1on on the
y;orksbops call 286-6611.

telecorrununications and broadcasting and is employed by United
Conununications in New Concord.
' The open church wedding will
be I :30 p.m., Sept. 30 at the Middleport United Pentacostal Church, ·
South Third Avenue, Middleport
with music beginning at I p.m.
. A reception will be held after
the ceremony at tlte old American
Legion Hall in Middleport on
South Fourl11 Aye nuc .
The couple will reside In
Zanesville. I

no·

Besides gardening, canning .
hunting, and fishing, she loved to
make crafts and do crocheting. Win(Dorothy Sa yr. and her husters found her house looking like band, George, formerly or Meigs
Santa's toy shop. Her pantry and County, moved here about three
frcezerwerealwaysoverflowing wilh years ago and now reside in a ne\\•
her
and orchard harvests. l house racmg
· the Ohio River· just
believe
could have fed an army below Syracuse.)
..- - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .

The Public Is Cordially Invited to HeaJ: ..

JOHN M. BROWN
OF
FLATWOODS, KENTUCKY
IN A SERIES OF GOSPEL MEETINGS

.;fti'
L

•'?·lf•

Sunday Evening Through Thursday Evening
September 24th · 28th
6 pm Sunday Evening
7 pm Through The Week
.

CHAPEL HILL CHURCH OF CHRIST. ..
'

' 234 CHAPEL DRIVE

Haskins-Tanner.

(Just otT Bulaville Pike)
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: 446-1494 or 446-9549

You "'iJI have over 190 style• of

Quality Fonnalwear at
Affordable Price5
Rmg

Day

Sept. 201h
Doy(sl ~

3pmto6pm
nM~o·-

HARRISONVILLE - The
Zion Churtb of Christ, Harrisonvilie Road, homecoming Sunday with services .at 9:30a.m. a;ul
2 p.m. Lunch at noon. Sharon
Hawley, Debbie Grueser and Dixie
Sayre will entertain with Dave
Lucas as guest minister.

ii

with only 15 minutes notice.
After 1 was roamed a!ld moved
about40 miles away, she would stop
whenever she was passing nearby·: l
remember one such visit when I
tJC e.d a brmsc on her 82-ycar-old Jaw
hne. "Mabel, what happened?" w~s
my first reaction. Mabel who w:lS
bcauufully au ~red, her hair in its usual
per~ ttstme,anddrivinganothcrnew
car d ratlter sheepishly, "My .. ~.
sh gun kicked me." Yes, that was
c eryone's beloved Mabel .

thU apecial occn•ion.

Class

/

·
·
Mabel was a uny lady, shm ~nd
about five feet talL She had beauuful
featur~sand her skm never seemed to
age. y, hethcr she was m heqeans.alld
,boots oul hunll~g or garden mg .. or
adorned m a lovely sutt, hal and htgh
heels; she had an erect, royal presence. She ~as always the one ~~ wt~
door pnzcs or drawmgs, too. I have a
copy ?f Rurahte magazmc Wl~h
Mabel s p1ctureadommg the cover as
a pmc wmner.

BOY'S
HALLMARK

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs United Methodist Church
rally day Sunday with regular
morning service followed by carryin dinner, 12:30 p.m. and program
by God's Kidz, 2 p.m.
·

..

gether. Theyquiltedtogether cooked
for community occasions ~gether,
andcar-pooled to social events. Iloved
to go to Mabel andJohnnie'shouseor
trnvel overnight with them. l will
always associate autumn with hunting with my brother and Mabel 00
Mabel's property, and Trick or Treat
at Mabel and Johnnie's house. As
children, we enjoyed the walk and
wau:hingfortheglowwormsthemoist
ground brought out. The mile walk
was worth it, too, as she always had
special treat bags for us.
Mabel was a wonderful cook. No
one could make such delicious blueberry, huckleberry or wild blackberry
pies as Mabel. My mother always
~d Mabel made the best coffee she
h~d ever tasted, too, and many of her
other dishes and baked goods were
the very best. To this day, my mouth
waters at the thought of the homebaked French bread sandwich Mabel
made me with fresh venison back
strap and lettuce from her garden . 1
know that is the wrong time of the
year for deer season, but when the
deer started eating Mabel's garden ... .
Mabel's signature (besides al·
ways arriving early) was a pair of
large, diamond-stud earrings. 1asked
her about them one day. lt seems that
many years before, Johnnie had told
her how nice he thought women
looked with pierced.earsandearrings.
She told him she would have her ears
pierced if he bou~ht her diamond
earrings.lneversawherwithoutthem.
Johnnie died a few years after
their 50th wedding anniversary, and
Mabel remained in their secluded
home at the end of the county road.
When she turned 80, part of our Camily was in attendance at her party,
given by her nephew, in our former
family horne which my dad had built.
When my dad had his 80th birthday
party a few months later, Mabel was
there.

tuxedot to choo.e from. We have t1
large •elettion of (he late11 11tyles
tulll complimentary acceuoriea for

RACINE - Gideon and
Artemesia Roush family reunion
will be held Sunday at Star Mill
Park in Racine. Pot luck dinner at I
p.m.

234

·

TAWNEY JEWLERS INC.
422 Second Ave. Gallipolis, Ohio

-·

PORTLAND ....,. "No Compromise" presented by the Porterfield
Baptist Church at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saints, Portland-Racine
Branch, Sunday, 6 p.m. Fellowship
will follow.
.

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MINERSVILLE - Minersville
United Methodist Church homecoming Sunday. Regular morning
services followed by carry-in dinner from noon to 1:30 when the
afternoon program will begin.

BOWMAN'S
ffO\t£C.fRE MEDICAL SUPPt:f

70 Pine St.
Gallipolis
441;.7283

POMEROY - Mount Herman
United Brethren Church homecoming Sunday with a dinner at the fel-

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C3·

River reveries

family reunion 10 a.m. to dark at
Raccoon Creek County Park sheltcrhouse #6. Covered dish dinner at
I p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Chris Broyles
to speak 2:30 p.m. at Gallia County
.Historical Society meeting at the
headquarters. A meeting will he
held at I p.m.

~unbau 'aiime•-~•nlintl • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea11ant, WV

Gallia community calendar

specific number of days.

KIMBERL V CHAPMAN AND CORBIN WILLIAMS

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Dr.
Faro received his
Doctor
of
Podiatric
Medicine Degree from the
Ohio College of Podiatric
Medicine, Cleveland, In
1986 alter which time he
served
a
two
year
residency at the Central
Medical
Hospital
in
Pittsburgh, Pa. He did his
undergraduate work majoring In pre-medical studies at
Grove City College in Grove City, Pa.
Born in Rochester, N. V., Dr. Faro has practiced in
Gallipolis lor the past four years. He is board certified
in foot surgery and is a member of the American Board
of Podiatric Surgery and of the American Diabetes
Association .
Dr. Faro will be in his offices at the Veterans
Memorial Hospial Outpatient Clinic in Pomeroy from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. every Tuesday. Appointments may be
made by telephoning 992-3632: ·

WINFIELD
SHOWROOM
2982 Winfield Road
Next to H1gh School

586·2863

Cbnpel Hill Church of Christ
. OH 45631

446-1494

�Sun~ay, Sep.tember 17, 1995

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

Sunday, September 17, 1995

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

W i Ilia m being buried. He shot his girl friend-,
slipped
the
Howard
Taft and she collapsed dead into the grave
tracks in town.
spoke 10 several on 10pofhermothcr's casket. He theO
There was one
lhousand from the shot himself.
house on Fourth
back of a train that
There were several murders at
Avenue that was
stopped in Gal- the saloons near !be depot. One in. ~
so close 10 the
lipolis in 1908.
valved a man who shot anotl1er mal)
tracks that it was
Many ac- who had run off with his wife. Th~
sideswiped nine
tors that played second man and the first man's wife
or I0 times over
Gallipolis remem- had gone off to Pittsburgh. But the
the years by railhered walking 10 woman soon decided this rnan wa~
road cars.
!heir
hotel from the not any beucr than her first man (her
In 1903
depot. Props for husband); so she returned to him. The
there was a big
coil ision near
shows at the opera second man came back to town to
· house had to be retakethewoman.Thehusbandpromthe depots. It
was night and
unloaded onto ised that if the second man came on
wagons from the his property he would shoot, which io
the Hocking
Valley train was
train. Some of the what he did. The second man die&lt;! ,
heading
to
beautiful women and the husband took otT running.
who came to Gal- Bloodhounds tracked him all over
Pomeroy. At the
lipolis with show town. An all male jury found thl:
same time the K
people, like Anne husband innocent.
and M was
Kellerman ,always
In about the same era there was
backing into
LOCAL DEPOT. Usuallylrainsarrived at the Hocking Valley passenger depot in Gallipolis but during
drew a big crowd an old west gunfight in the street in
town. The only
the nood or 1913 only boats got to it. The train depots were exciting places in ·the hey dey o fpassenger trains
r~ult was a big
at the depol.
front of the saloon in back of thl:
(1880 Ia 1920). The Gallipolis depot pictured was torn down in 1964.
crash that could
0 c c a - passenger depot.
he heard all over
sionally scounThe passenger depot was tot;t
town. No one
drels and con art· down in 1964, but the freight depot
was seriously injured. There were a
M's orders were to pull into a spur
railroad cars. The first big circus to ist.s would arrive here, like the man , remains. Regular passe nger service
number of bumps, bruises and Cantu·
line that ran from the railroad bridge
come here by train was the Sells who promised to rid the town of all of to Gallipolis ended in 1950, blltthcrc
sions. Orie young lady who was inane
west a mile or so. When the HockBrother's Circus that featured trick it.s rat.s for S500, payable of course in · were a few fall excursions run to here
of the tipping cars jumped from the
ing Valley passed, 1he K and M shooter Frank Butler who later mar- advance.
as !'ate as about 1961.
car and fractured an ankle. Usually
would back into Gallipolis, pick up
ried Annie Oakley. With Sells in 1881
There was a man who came by
James Sands is a special conethe Hocking Valley had the right of · passengers, and then proceed.
were hippopotami , rhinoceros, ele- train from around Cheshire, went spondent oflhe Sunday Times-Senway on the tracks into town. The K
As to c ire uses that came here
phants. camels, horses, polar bears directly to the Pine Street Cemetery tine!. His address is: 65 Willow
and M paid forthc privilege to use the
·by train, perhaps the biggest was
and other assorted animals.
where his girl friend's mother was Drive, Springboro, Ohio 45066.
Hocking Valley tracks. The K and
Barnum and Bailey's. It came in'92

--Wedding policy ,.;......__-

Meigs DAR celebrates
Constitution Week
POMEROY - The Return
'Jona than Meigs chapter of the
Daughters of the American Revolu\ion, with Pomeroy Mayor Jobn W.
:Biaettnar have issued a proclaina:tion designating Sept 17 lbrough
-23 Constitution Week in the village
:or Pomeroy.
Constitution Week is a celebm:lian across America of !be 2001b
~1nnivcrsary of the signing of the
-&lt;::onsti tution.
: The proclamation reads as foiJows: Whereas !be President tradi1ionally proclaims September 17
:through 23 as Constitution Week, a
;:special time for the Nation 10 focus
&gt;Ollention on the Constitution. 'Citi·
:Zenship Day, September 17, com)ncmorates !be signing of the Con~titution (1787).
; Whereas !be Corrunission of the
ilicemennial of the United States
:Constitulion encourages the obser-

vance of Constitution Week.
Be it therefore resolved thai the
week of September 17 lbrough 23
is proclaimed to be Constitution
Week in the Village of Pomeroy.
The highlight of ConstiiUtion .
Week i&amp; a ringing tribute to lhe
Constitution entitled '·'Bells Across
America," to be held 4 p.m., Sunday, Sept 17, the time of !be Signing of lhe Constitution. Individuals
and groups across America will
simultaneously ring hells for 200
seconds and release 200 red, while
and blue balloons.
CONSTITUTION WEEK - Roberta O'Brien, l•ft and Pat
Pat Holter of the Return
Holter,
right, of lbe Return Jonathan Meigs cbapt•r of the Daugh·
Jonathan Meigs chapter' of the
len
of
the
Amerkan Revolution watch as Mayor John Blaettnar of ·
D.A.R. asks lhat all area churches
Pomeroy
signs
a proclamation designating Sept. 17 through lJ
participate in Ibis celebration by
Constitution
Week
In the village of Pomeroy. The Return
ringing their church hells at 4 p.m.
Jonathan
Meigs
chapter
of the D.A.R. asks that all area churches
today for tbe observance 'Of tbe
ring·
their
bells
at
4
p.m.
today for 200 seconds, In observance of
20Qth anniversary of the signing of
the
lOOib
anniversary
of
the
signing of the constitution.
the U.S. constitution.

' F~~~~~

GALLIPOLIS - The nrst Galli a County Historical and
Genealogical Society family picnic
will he held Sunday, Sept. 24 allbe
Racooon Creek County Park from
noon pnlil 4 p.m. at Bluebird Shelter 4.
Special recognition will be
giveq to society volunteers.

Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center

The picnic will he potluck, with
rolls and drinks provided by the
society.

Formerly Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
36759 Rocksprings Road, Pomeroy, Ohio (992-6606)

A committee consisting of Sue
Murray, Lola Mae Suiter and
Molly .Plymale encourages members to bring their families aRd
friends.

Invites you to celebrate the

Grand Opening
of our 3500 square foot
therapy addition
Date: Sunday, September 17
Tune: 2 to 4 pm

• Open Registration for
Fall Quarter
• Monday, Sept.18
12 Noon to6:00 p.m.
E. E. Davis Career Center

Location:
·s 5o ";).

• Call toll free in Ohio
1-800-282-7201

•

TheVault
Will
n
Monday,

SeptemlH 18.
See
t's
Inside
ForYs:&gt;Y!

carried a white basket with white
roses and ivy.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
with a black vest and lie and a
while boutonniere. The best man
was Kenny Estep. The groom's
men were Dave Carlisle l\lld lames
Brace Jr .• brother of the bride.
They wore black tuxedos with
royal blue vests and ties. The ring
bearer was John "J.l." Lee. He
wore a black tuxedo with a black
and blue vest and tie. The bride's
father wore a black tuxedo with a
royal blue vest and lie.
Special singing was performed
by Dionne Anderson of Dallas,
Texas.
A reception was held at the
church following U1e ceremony.
The couple took a seven-day
Caribbean Cruise for their honeymoon ami now reside in Arlington,
Texas.
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: BIDWELL • Susan Hightower,
•
prevention coordinator for .
.:
FACTS/New Alternatives in Bid·
\
\veil and Jackson, has been named
as an Ohio VIP for Alcohol and
Other Drug Prevention by the Ohio
\
I
..
Parents for Drug Free Youth orga::- nizalion in Columbus. Parents is L~....!li':__ _.~_!L_.....,
the sponsor of !be Ohio Red R\J!·
bon Celebration •. which organize~USAN HIGHTOWER
•
prevenuon actiVIties m schools and
Hightower is also a member of
commumties each Oc10her, as.well !be State Media Project Committee
as ot~er preventiOn act• vtlJes of Ohi!J Parents, which is developstatewide lbroughoullbe Y~·.
ing radio and TV ads for alcohol
The VI~s acts as ha•sons and other drug prevention. Locally.
hetwee~ lbeJr areas of the state a~d
she provides prevention presenta·
the OhiO Parents Headquarters tn lions for schools, parents, businessColumbus.
es and otl1er organizations in JackThey have access to many spe- son and Gallia. Counties
from Ohio
Parents.
cia!
resources
including
materials,
training,
leg-,
islative information and technical
assistance with projecl~ . They are
responsible for organizing local
Red Ribbon Celebrations, provid·
iJig parent training seminars, distributing prevention materials and
meeting with the stale project
·director. YIPs provide feedback
and ideas on various prevention
projects underlaken by Ohio Parents and other local substance
~use prevention age'ncies.

•
"' •

"I caught Billy on occasion he
said. "He was a fireballer ~nd
always Iert my mitt hand bruised
regardless of my paddinR. Wbe~
we were growing up, he was usually called by his nickname,
'Wormy.'''
· "Billy was a handsome, popular
three-sport athlete in high school.
Later, he appeared in 179 games
for Philadelphia. In 257 innings
pitchc&lt;l, all in relief, he had a 4.36
ERA, won 9 games, and lost 15.
"But Billy was troubled by an
unusual medical condition in which
one half of his body would not per ..
spire. This. I believe , negative!;
impacted bolb his perfonnance and
the length of his career. After baseball, Wilson was troubled by alcoholism and money problems.
Sadly, he took his own life in
1994."
Thinking over the nine big leaguers, Roberts observed that Kauff
and Elberfeld were rated in the top
500 players in the I 992 edition of
Total Baseball. None of the others
· made that elite category, but they
did make the major leagues.
"I challenge anyone," Robens
said, "to uame a community anywhere ·as small in population as
Pomeroy whicl1 has produced six
major leaguers, or a county with
Meigs· population, which has produced nine major leaguers."
Further, there are several fanner
big leaguers who ca01e from within
five miles of Meigs County, inclu&lt;ling Mel Clark (Letarl, W.Va .),
Clyde' Goodwin (Sbade) and "Hermie" Layne (New Haven, W.Va.)

GALLIPOLIS · As a part of
Holzer Medical Center's ongoing
observance of Women's Health
Month, a program addressing stress
reduction will be presented Sept.
20 in the French 500 Room at
Holzer Medical Center.
Vivien Newbold, M.D., on !be
staff of !be deparunent of emergency medicine, will be !be featured
speaker during two sessions, 10
a.m. to l.a.m. and I p.m. 10 2 p.m.
Dr. Newbold received her M.D.
and B.S. from the University of
Edinburgh, Scotland in June, 1974
and 1971, respectively.
Participants will learn how 10
identify stress factors, such as codependency and carrying others'
burdens, as well as utilizing lecb-

News policy
In an effon to provide our readership with current news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of !be
event
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
musl he submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
be submitted wilbin 42 days of the

..
Final Clearance

1"'-------··-~--------------

Roberts prefers to oblain baseball autographs on 3 by 5 inch
index cards, bm he likes all kinds
of memorabilia pertaining to his
favorite players. Today, bis total
colleclion includes more !ban 2,500
signatures.
If readers have additional informali on about, or pholos and/or
autographs .o f Roberts' local
heroes, he would be happy to hear
from them. You can wrile to
Roberts at: 6R2 Springwater Dr.,
Akron, Ohio, 44333. Also, he can
be reached by telephone at (800)
860-7721 or (216) 666-3659. But if
you call. he sure to sL1te your interest in baseball. Give Roberts' secretary !be magic words: Pomeroy
heroes.

PLANNED PAREN.,HOOD
or SOU.,HEAST OHIO
Confidential Services
for females &amp; males.
•Birth Control Exams
•Pap Tests
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•Methods include:
• DepoProvera-injection • Diaphragm
• Birth control pill
• I.U.D.
• Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
414 SltCOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992-5912

UNWANTED HAIR

niqucs on how to deal with stress,
including stress reduction, mcdila·
lion and improving relationships.
For more information about !be
program and other Women's
Health monlb activities, call 4465313 or lhe Holzer Health Hotline
at 1-800-462-5255.

.
, ...,

0~\o river 6e0, to

I

r

Unwanted or abnormal hair growth is a disorder many women are
experiencing today. There are two types of hair· vellus (light) and terminal
(dark). Most veil us hairs are soH and downy, sometimes they become
accelerated meaning they grown longer. terminal hairs are dark, course
and deep sealed in the lollict.es of your skin.
If you have a hair problem be very careful what you do to the hair. Light
hair can be stimulated inlet dark hair by tweezing, waxing or using hair
removal creams on your body. Waxing is ;ust a faster way of tweezing.
Even .it yell have dark hair and you tweeze, wax or use creams you're in
for a . nightmare of hair and skin problems. Tweezing or hair removal
creams will irritate the skin. The only defense the skin has is lo grow
more deeper hair, and maybe more hair than you had before. Stop anct
think about the hair removal creams. If they are strong enough to take the
hair off your face, what is it doing to your skin. Creams and tweezing can
also lead to ingrown hairs that are infected and can scar the face or body.
If most of the people had the money they spent on devices, creams anct
waxes, they could have invested il.inlo electrolysis treatments, the only
permanent hair removal method. The devices you buy from magazines or
department stores- do they slate they are sterilized (meaning germ tree)?
As an electrologist I hope this information helps you with your hair
problem. As a compassionate person who had abnormal hair growth from
an adrenal deficiency at age 14 that led to a beard, mustache and
·
sideburns on the lace I know exactly .how you feel .
If you have unwanted hair, electrolysis can 'help rid yourself of the
problem. Our equipment is the best that is available · our treatments
almost painless. If yollr treatment at this office hurts then you can leave
without paying. The old late of electrolysis no pain , no gain isn'ttrue. Our
electrologists technique and equipment using sterilized instruments offers
you the best treatment in electrolysis today. The only people that come to
our office have a hair problem. The electrologists on staff at Candy's
Electrolysis have all experienced their own battle with unwanted hair.

10% off First Office Visit
PROGRESSIVE EPILATION

204 'J{, 2ruf., 9vfilfrffeport, OJ{

HOURS: Tuesday· Friday 9·7 Saturday 9·4
Certified Professional Electrologist by The
lnlernatio~al Board of Electrologists, Licensed in Maryland.
.
Candy Cox, L.E .. C.P.E.
'

992-405510-5 'Mor1. tfiru Sat.

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS

occurcncc.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to edilling.

of well-known former minor leaguen; from Meigs County, such as
"Dutch" Herb, "Dinty" Moore and
Tom White.
His interest in memorabilia of
the nine Meigs County big leaguers
led him to bis current project,
which is writing 10 all living major
leaguers to oblain their signatures.
In lhree years, be bas collecled
more than 2,200 autographs.
.
Currently, Roberts is working
on players whose rookie seasons
began during 1966-1969. He writes
five or six leiters each morning
before going to work. In this fashton, he hopes to avoid U1e biggest
ob•tacle of Pomeroy .and Meigs
County players: those who were
not famous died without leaving

We acpept Medicaid and private ·Insurance.

Seminar to
address stress
reduction

6000 Grnad Central Ave., Suite 1 Vienna 295·4533

All Summer Items

$5-$10-$15
Spring Valley
Plaza

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Without 'lite ~lilt"

qhis !Js What 211e'llf

JUNIORS • MISSES • ETC.
CASUAL APPAREL I

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find /lutomaticll( &lt;lh'leads ([he .Needle

NOW IN PROGRESS
Stop

CLOTHES
VAULT
)04/675-7816

•

CROWN CITY · Teressa Brace
and James Shelton were united in
marriage July 15 at the Crown City
United Methodist Church with
Rev. George Hall.
Tbe bride is a daughter of James
and Judith Brace of Crown City.
The groom is the son of Mary Shelton of Arlington, Texas and the late
Glen Shel10n.
Tbe bride was given in marriage
and escorted by her father. She
wore a white satin gown headed in
pearls and sequins with a cathedral
length train.
The maid of honor was Dionne
Brace, sister of the bride. Bride's
maid were Maria Kimmel and·
Traci !)lack. They wore royal blue
satin dresses !llld carried bouquet.s
with blue and white carnations with
ivy, The flower girl was Ashley
Ripley, coli sin of the bride. She
wore a royal blue satin dress and

Conlinued rrom C·1
At that time, Cincinnati was
playing in lhe American Associalion, a major league, before rejoining !be National League a1 a later
date. Walter was 5 feet 9 inches
and slender at 145 pounds. His
ERA was 5.79.
Harry "Cy" Morgan was born
Nov. 10, 1878, in Pomeroy. He
died on June 28,1962, in Wheeling,
W.Va. He stood 6 feet tall and
weighed 175 pounds. A right·hand·
ed pitcher, he accumulated a fine
2.51 ERA for his 10-year major
league career.
Morgan came up with the Sl.
Louis Browns in 1903 and played
!here until mid-1907, when he was
traded 10 the Red Sox. In 1909, be
went to the Athletics and finally
finished his caree• in I 913 wilb
Cincinnati. He won 76 and lost 75
games lifetime.
Thomas "Tom" Williams was
born Aug. 19, 1810, in Pomeroy,
His date and place of deatl1 life not
known. He was a pitcher for two
seasims with Cleveland, tl1en in the
National League in 1892 atKI 1893.
H.e CO!flpiled a 4.36 ERA, winning
two games and losing one.
Thomas "Savage Tom" Thuma,
like Rollie Hemsley, was born in
Syracuse on Dec., 27, 1873 . He
died in Shawnee, Ohio, on Sept.
22, 1942. Thomas appeared in nine
games for the St. Louis Cardinals
in 1899 and 1900, finishing with a
3-3 record and a 3.16 ERA He was
a big (for those days) right-hander
at6 feet4 inches and 195 poun&lt;ls.
Finally, Roberts knew Billy
Wilson personally, as they were
classmates all through school.

SAVINGS THROUGHOUT Tim STORE

100 MAIN STREET· POINT PLEASANT, WV

/

Brace-Shelton

named VIP for.
drug free youth
organization

Refreshments
Therapy Exhibits
Personal Tours
Remarks and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
by Representative Cremeans

JAMES AND TERESSA SHELTON

.Hightower

during childhood !bat, in varjing
degrees, hinder or complicate a
healthy mature growth process. He
will provide insight into these
behavioral situations.
Barrentine will be. in Gallipolis
working with professional therapists and psychologists and has
offered his service 10 interested
individuals free.
The workshop is open to the
public.

You'll Come Up Aces With
The Classifieds

Historical society plans picnic

Thursday, 4. p.m·. prior to the date
of publication.
Those nol making the 60-day ·
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of eWter the bride
or the bride and gf()Otn may be
published wilb wedditig stories if
desired. Pho10graphs may he either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold size or larger.
Poor quality photographs will
nol be accepted. Generally, snapshots or instant-developing photos
arc not uf acceptable quality.
All material subq\iued for publi·
cation is subject to editing.

Therapist to conduct
childhood trauma seminar
GALLIPOLIS - Ben Barrentine,
a masiers level lberapist wbo bas
worked iii lhe field of addictions
and dysfunctional behavior for over
ten years, will offer a workshop on
"Childhood Trauma: A Lasting
Legacy," 7 p.m.,' Sept I 8 al First
Presbyterian Church in Gallipolis.
Barrentine. wbo is a therapist at
The Meadows, a treatment center
in Wickenburg, Ariz .• will discuss
traumatic experiences which occur

CONSTITUTION WEEK - GaiUpolis City Manager Matthew
C?Jipler, left, signed a proclamation Friday declaring Constitution
W4ek Sept. 17-13. Barbara Jones of tb• French Colony chapter of
tbe Daughters of the American Revolution observed at right. Area
ch1Jrches will ring lhelr bills ... part or !be observance al 4 p.m.
Su11day.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason cou.nties as ne)YS
and is happy to publish wedding
stories and photographs without
cbarge.
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 he. published in !be Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place wilbin 60 days prior to
the publication, and may he up to
600 words in lenglb. Material for
Along the River must he received
by the editorial department by

HOURS ,
TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY · lOAM . 6PM
MONDAY · lOAM - BPM

CS ·.

Meigs major league .... -------:----:::---:----:---Roberts aiSQ collects signa1ures many signalures.

_Busy Gallipolis train depots attracted all kinds of excitement
Jly JAMES SANDS
,Special Correspondent
From 1880 to 1920 the. most exciting places in Gallipolis were the
train depot.son Third Avenue and Olive
Street On any
given week one
would
see
freight hauled
here from all
over the country as well as
theater stars and
even circuses.
Adding to
ihe excitement were the saloons and
restaurant.s that grew up ncar the de. pol,. During the 40 year period men;tioned, etght passenger trains arrived
; and departed daily and there were
·always excursions of one sort or an:other departing from town. For in:stance in the fall of 1898 the Rose
:Commandery No. 13 K.T. had an
.excursion toPitt.sburgh . They lx\arded
:at Gallipolis ,rode the K and M across
'the nvcr to Point Pleasant, W.Va.
;where they boarded the Ohio River
:Railroad.
, . Arriving by freight and unload;ing here iu a two week period in the
·fall of 1894 were 87 coal cars, 29
:tumber cars, 14 brick cars, seven fer;tilizcr cars, four cars of sugar and
·single cars of lime, roof slate, cement,
:fireproofing compound, oil, beans,
:fruit, bee( and salt. Someumes the cars

~unbag Glinu•-$•ntinel • Page

By ForA
Demonstration

In While Selections Are Grate!

The Fabric Shop
110 West Main

992-2284

I

•

Pomeroy, OH

�•
Page C6 • .jiunbag 'mimn·.JiJtntiml

Sunday, September 17, 1995

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

LAS VEGAS (AP) - Golfer Chi Chi Rodriguez
Chi Chi Rodriguez
sees nothing funny about lhc hit comedy "To Wong
Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar."
The 59-year-old Rodriguez has sued lhe movie' s production company and
Universal Pictures over a dra g queen character named Chi Chi Rodriguez.
The golfer's lawyers said that the character, played by John Leguizamo,
"engages in num erous disreputable acts and is portrayed as sexually promis-

cuous.."
A spokesman for Universal. Alan Sutton , declined to comment.
Rodriguez, who li ves in Florida but has business interests in Las Vegas,
.wants to stop showings of the move with hiS name.

•

The comedy is about three drag queens who become stranded in a small
Nebraska town while traveling across the country to Hollywood.
NEW YORK (AP)- First he became an editor. Now the formerly media·
shy John F. Kennedy Jr. is on TV.
Kennedy plays himself and pljt&amp;S his new political magazine, George, in
a 90-second cameo on the se~ premiere Monday of CBS' "Murphy
Brown."

Murphy, the TV newswoman played. by Candice Bergen, mistakes the
former New York City prosecutor for her latest short-time secretary.
"I guess the whole lawyer lhing didn 't workout," she says. "That's a tough
break. Could you file this for me? "
She tllen opens a gift from Kennedy - a copy of the political magazine
with her face on the cover.
"That 's it?" Murphy asks .
"No, no, !here's a one-year free subscription wnh the card," he says.
"Gee, I hope you didn't have to sell the compound," she says.
"OK, fine, if that 's your attitude," Kennedy responds, stalking off. "But
don't come cry in g 10 me when you have to pay the full newsstand price."
NEW YORK (AP)- Decked out in th eir best Western clothes, a misty·
eyed Roy Rogers and Dale Evans we re honored at City-Hall for nearly six
decades in movies, rodeos and television.

Rogers and Evans, now 83 and 82 respectively, were in New York to
receive a humanitarian award from a Bronx medical center. A children's um t
named afterthem is to he dedicated there in June.
Evans, who wore a sea-blue dress with a
Western-style tunic and hell buckle at Thursday's
City Hall ceremony, fought back tears as she said,
"I feel very humble to accept an award for something I enjoyed doing."
Rogers, wearing a Western-style suit, string
tie, 10-gallon hat (white, or course), and boots,
added: "Now you know why we're togetherfor 47
years. She's always heen a great mother a nd a great

Magklons Penn and TeDer
will be appearing 8 p.DL, Sept.
lei at tbe Keith Albee Theatre
In Huntington, W.Va. Tickets
may be purchased by calling
the Marshall Artl~ts Series
box office weekdays between 8
a.m. and 5 p.m. at 696-CiCiSCi.

tuguese music which has not only
ignited tbeir careers, but taken facto
from tourist traps and gas-station
discount tape racks and put il on
top-10 lists.
It's a revolution whose fruits
likely will fall only to women,
because of the great vocal range
needed to master the soaring
melodies born in the dark, twisting
alleys of Lisbon's oldest workingclass neighborhood, the Alfama.
"There's a whole treasury of
music to be recovered and re·writ·
ten, " said composer Guilherme
lnes. ' 'Portuguese girls have a lot
of work to do."
Fado songs are simple and
repetitive and generally melancholic . They were originally
African slave songs, transformed
by Portuguese sailors to express
their own ache from the loneliness
and danger of a life at sea.
"Portugal is a place lhal every-

body with a spirit of adventure
passed tbrough in the old days, and
that sense of ad ve nture is in the

music," said lnes. " You don 't
need to he Ponuguese to feel it.''
As wilh lbe blues, a listener has
to be sensitive to the spirit and subtle variations to appreciate fado .
Many first-timers listen once and
never again; but true fans often
travel from Madrid and Paris to
hear fado decanted in smoky Lisbon backrooms.
That was bow Salgueiro, the
vocalist and inspiration for
Madredeus, Portugal's most
acclaimed group, was launched.
Gui'tarist Pedro Ayres Magalhaes heard a skinny 17-year-old
trying her band at facto in a small
bar and instantly identified her "as
the archetype of Portuguese poet·
ry."
Besides a . soulful voice,
Salgueiro has misty-eyed good

wife."

LOS ANGELES (AP) - He r breakup witb
Clint Eastwood has apparentl y done wonders for ~~itQiPJii!ri _.....J
Frances Fisher's career:
l
. Since last winter, when she realized her relationship with Eastwood was over, she's done four film s a nd a TV series.
One of the movies, "The Stars Fell on Henrietta," premiered Friday, as did
the TV se ries, Fox's "Strange Luck ."
" I don't quite understand it," she said. " I guess God has his plan."
The 43-ycar-old actress appeared in the Eastwood film "U nforgiven" and
played Lucille Ball in lhe TV movie "Lucy and Dcsi: Before the Laughter."

SWAP SHOP NOW OPEN IN CHESHIRE· Dave's Swap
Shop, SR 7, North, Cheshire, is now open ror business. Owned and
managed by Dave Neville, hours or operation are Tuesday,
Wednesday, Friday and Saturday, rrom 1 p.m., until Ci p.m. Tbe
shop Is FFA (Federal Fire Arms) Ucensed, NevUle said. The shop
will be selling guns, name brand tools, toys, glassware, knives,
radios, and ftshlng equipment. Phone number is 367·7i0Ci

GALLIPOLIS • Amencan _a ll ing the title role in "The Life and
tbe way ts a _good way to descnhe Times of ~alcolm X" at the Amer· the next Oh1o Valley Symphony ICI\" Mus•~ Theater Fesllval pr~or
perfo~ce. .
.
.
to tts pre~er at the N~w York C1ty
Coupling with, bar1tone ~eg•,: Opera. HIS repertmre m both opera
oald PmdeU the All Amencan
and cancer~ bas included roles in
show will mclude U.S. com~ser "The Magic Aute," "Three Penny
Aaron Copland's 01~ Amencan Ope';;!,""~ Bohem;;" "Porgy and
Songs, Morton Gould s ~encan Bess and Carmen. Most recent·
Salute and Charles Ives Hymn: Iy be pdrformed wilb the American
Largo Cantabile.
Pops at Universal Amphitheater in
All three of these composers Los Angeles with conductor Peter
were Pulitzer Prize winners for Nero.
their music, which celebrated
The concert will cubninate with
the fourt~ annual "Ma.e stro for a
Americanism and its folk cultures.
Gould's whose music runs the Moment" ·r ace between candidates
gamut from conc~rt work, music Nancy Pennington and Robert
for theater, televtston and f1lms, Daniel. The winner gets to take
Broadway musicals and ballet~ · baton in hand and direct the full
Copland's first compositions succumbed to French innuence, then ·
to American jazz and finally to
FRI. THR.U THURS
American folk tunes and rhythms
KEVIN COSTNER IN .
creating such ballets as "Billy the
WATER WORlD H-U
Kid," "Rodeo" and '"Appalachian
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Spring."
44~3
Soloist .Pindell is a native of
. Baltimore who is known for creaJ·

orcbes~ra m a rend,I,tion of Stars
and Stnpes Forev~r.
The cone~ Will he 8 p.m., Sept.
~3 at lbe Moms and Dorolhy Haskms ~el Theatre. ,
.
T•ckets are avrulabl~ at HaskinsTanner and That Special T'?uch on
Second Avenueo! at the Anel Theatre box office.
.
Five regional symphony ticket
outlets have also been established

q,

Ill

~TIMt£5

av~ !1' 1 r!UU!IU~ul

/HJIIAIIPriiAI~LUL!HI&lt;II&lt;IIil

DAlLY

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SAT/SUM

1 : 20, J zl0
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Twin Mattress Set

$399 95

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Solid Oak Stereo Stand
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·

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ODDS
95

NOT

Early American Green
NOT 5119995

'1099" 0NLY $399

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Spring Air

Fiexsteei

Queen Mattress Set

Wing Chair and Ottomon

NOT '1199"

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Plaid Colonial Sofa

2

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Metal

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s199
Flexsteel Chair

NOT '599"

F=uil Mattress Set
NOT ' 599"

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Blue
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'1099"

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Restonic Full
Mattress Set NOT 1999 95

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•

NOT

"Rust

' 59995

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Plans office in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS • Buckeye Horne Health wiU celebrate the opening of a new office in Gallipolis with an open house and ribbon cutti.ng on Sept. 19 from I p.m. to 4 p.m. at400 Second St. in French
Square.
Besides offering affordable h001e health care, Buckeye Home
Health also provides psychiatric and maternal/child home services.
For more infonnation call441·1355 or 1-800-322-1317.

·

ONLY $249 95

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Solid Wood

Brown Leather Sofa -

Light or Dark Finish

Chair - Ottomar:1

Cherry Finish Bed, W/rails

Area farm/business briefs

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NOT

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1119995

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Earns medical assistant certification

2999"'

NOT 1
ONLY

3

POMEROY· Kimberly Amold-Fetty, CMA, Pomeroy, received
credentials as a Certified Medical Assistant by passing lbe June 30
American Association of Medical Assistants' certification exarnina·
lion.
She is a graduate of the medical assisting program at' Hocking
College in Nelsonville and is employed by James P. Wagner, 00,
in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

$119995

Piece Entertainment
Center
NOT

Solid Oak

ONLY $799

Wing

Spring Air

No Lay·A·Ways
First come First Served
l·Week Only
All Items
To Prior Sale

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pc Bedroom

Cherry Finish King Head

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: Articles of incorporation filed

$299 95

95

3 Tables
NOT
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Floral Print
5

p.. sense of community pride

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95

Sofa • Loveseat - Chair
Queen Anne Burgandy Floral
NOT '1399"

Solid Oak 10 Gun Cabinet
NOT '1 399"
ONLY '799"

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Solid Cherry Bedroom Suite
Vaughn-Bassett 5 piece
NOT '5999"

Empires New Hours
Monday &amp; Friday 8 am ti 7 pm
Tuesday · Wednesday - Thursday
8 amti 6 pm
Saturday 8 am til 5 pm

ONLY $2899 95

.

1599""

Cherry Finish Drop Leaf table &amp;
4 chairs
NOT '999"
ONLY '499"

.

:
MIDDLEPORT · Articles of incorporation have been filed in
,. Columbus for Ruby Rentals Inc. of Middleport by Richard W. and
· Ruby A. Vaughan, according to Ohio Secretary of State Bob Taft.

Sofa - Love Chair -

10 Gun Cabinet
NOT 5 139995

Seafoam Green Chair
NOT '499~
ONLY '199"

Multi Color

&amp;

inette &amp; 4 chairs
NOT '799"

ONLY $299

95

5

'99"'

ONLY $199 95

·en &amp; Cherry Finish

Hunter G

NOT '249" ONLY

NOT 1549"'

$399 95

~----~------+-~~

ONLY $149995
Country Blue

Queen Only

' 1399"

All 3

END LAMPS

NOT
s379995
•

TV-VCR Cabinet
NOT '599"
ONLY s199"'

Washed Finish

ONLY $499

Sofa

95

ONLY $599 95

Swivel Rocker .
NOT '1199"
1
95

ONLY $499

s1699

&amp;

Style

Desk W/top Lite Pine

Almond Dinette Table
4 green &amp; beige stripe chair
NOT '1199"

ONLY $399

$11995 set
SAVE

Solid Oak Drysink

Sofa · Chair

Flexsteei
· i Blue

NOT '799"'

Mattress

ONLY$899 95

•

! Rt

1:~0,9:20

. NOT ' 449"

Restonic

Not 5 1799"'

equal opportunity health care pro'li der.

THATBINDS

CASH &amp; CARRY SPECIALS
Bring your truck &amp; save! Delivery available with
~o~~~~rob,r.q~
small charge. Air listed items subject to prior
q,0.,: ~-~~~&lt;i)
sale. All sold As Is- No Returns
~~q,~~~·
/'--------~--~~~~~----,-~------~~~--~--------~
'li
Plaid Wing Chair
Swivel Rocker &amp; Ottoman

Pastel Strip

BelheMia Hospi tal iun

~SENIOR
TRIP

I ' j&gt;l
L.'·:.JI

this season to hetter accommodate
OVS patrons from surrounding
areas who want their tickets prior
to traveling to GalliJ!Olis. They are:
Engraving Plus in Jackson, The
Milton Bank in Wellston, Clarks
Jewelr in Pomero the Middleport department /tore and Vi's
Creative Qifts in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

Sofa - Loveseat - Chair

The Open House will be held
Tuesday, September 19, 1995
II
at French Squa{~ .
400 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
from 12 to 4 p.m.

Tl-IETIE

,t"'
&amp;~\A,q,~·~/.

ONLY $499

of Buckeye Home HealthGallia County.

Investment Viewpoint
eve n if you created a will.
• By JAY CALDWELL
A will only describes how you
:
GALLIPOLIS · If you've ever want your assets distributed after
• wondered about tbe importance or death and thereby guarantees that your
, estate planning, keep reading-this estate and your loved ones
•
article is for must go through probate.
you. If such Taxing Issues When Valuing an Es·
•
thoughts have· 1 tale
n 't occurred· to
Under current federallaw, every
',you,alllhemore person in the United States receives a
reason you may $600,000 exemption from the estate
want to educate taJ&lt; - the taJ&lt; on the right to tran sfer
yourself about property to olhers at the time of death .
e state plan · The amount of federal estate taxes
ning- and why owed is directly related to the value of
it may not be a choice, but a necessity one's estate, potentially making it one
in your life.
ofthelargesttaxesa family may ever
have to pay.
Estate-P!anning Basics
An "estate" refers to the value of
For instance, if your estate at the
all assets you own, including securi- time of your death is valued at less
, ties, real estate , bank account~. per· than $600,000, there will he no fedsana! property and the value of life eral estate tax due. Conversely, if
ins urance policies. Retirement bene- your estate is valued at more than
fits, such as a company 40 I (k) sav- $600,000,federal estate taJ&lt; rates start
ings plan, can also be pan of your at 37% and quickly rise to 55S on
estate.
every dollar over the amount of the
An estate plan provides for exemption. In addition , state govern managing your assets while you ,are ments may also impose taJ&lt;es on an
alive and distributing them after your estate.
death . Typically, an estate plan conAnd while !here are no federal
note s something !hat will go into ef. estate taJ&lt;es levied when one spou se
feet after you are gone. In reality, dies (because of an unlimited marital
j however,properestateplanningdeals deduction) and leaves lhe estate to
'-Withtheeventualityofdeathanddeath tbe surviving spouse, keep in mind
.! taJ&lt;cs as well as the possibility of thatlhisismerelyapostponementof
:disability during a person's lifetime. tax. There will be a tall paid on the
While the process of estate plan - estateofthesurvivingspousewhen it
:
:• ning forces us to confront the finan- eventually passes to others. If the
•! ciai and emotional consequences of - estate continues to appreciate in
!death, death taxes , and disability, value, estate taXes may he paid at a
_; pro~r planning can also prevent higher rate atlhe death of lhe surviv• anxiet~ .
· •
mg spouse.
~
For instance, without a written
Creating an effective estate plan
~estate plan, state law will dictate how requires the involvement of a variety
~your estate will he distributed at your of professionals. The estate planning
;:cteatb.
Furthermore, process often includes anomcys, taJ&lt;
:Should something happen 10 you dur- advisers and invesunent advisers.
'ing your lifetime, a proper estate plan Your invesunentadvi ser can coordi~ould keep your wishes and · your nate these professionals on your
~eirs in charge of your estate, and behalf.
:tould prevent" lhe often unpleasant
(Jay Caldwell is an Investment
~xperience of probate court. Without Rroker for The Ohio Company in
'l!n estate plan, the court (not your their Gallipolis office.)
lleirs) takes charge of your estate-

f&lt;;~l(.~·~

Set

celebration

:.Estate planning ·
•

'All American' show, Maestro for Moment . to share stage

I "

•

looks and a Giaconda allure that
convinced German filmmaker Wim Os-Montes'" ("Behind lbe Hills").
Wenders to cast her as the love She traveled into the Portuguese
interest in his recent fibn ·~The Lis- backcountry, up by the rugged bill
bon Story." Madredeus also pro- border with Spain, lo capture the
harvest songs of the bill women.
vides the soundtrack.
Ne Ladeiras tapped into a differ- •

IJ.;~~~d'J

Section D

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Ohio Farm Science Review set
Sept. 19; writer says 'goodbye'

duo .Music makers: New Portuguese singers find their fate in fado
By
CHRISTOPHER
McDOUGALL
Associated Press Writer
SETUBAL, Portugal (AP) They were pretty, bad charm and
sang like angels. But their singing
careers were going nowhere fast
until the day they crossed paths
wilb what the Portuguese call fate .
Dulce Pontes' first album of
rock tunes still sits unwanted in
record store bins. But "Lagrimas"
("Tears"), her second album, sold
like hotcakes, and 10,000 copies of
a live recording were sold on the
first day .
What made one record sell and
lhe other languish was fate- in its
Portuguese translation, "fade" which is also the name of the coon·
try's hoary, simple, bluesy folk
music.
Dulce, along with Teresa
Salgueiro and Ne Ladeiras, is leading, a revival of lfaditional Por-

~imes-imthttl

artnlllusiness

People in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - Barbara Walters has landed
the first interview with Christopher Reeve since he
was paralyzed.
The interview, conducted at the New Jersey rehabilitation center where the "Superman" star is undergoing therapy, will he broadcast Oct. 13 on "2020," ABC said Thursday.
Reeve, 42, broke his neck in May when he was
thrown from a horse during a riding competition in
Virginia. He has no movement below his shoulders,
needs a ventilator to breathe and speaks with diffi culty.

J

I

By MICHAEL J, KAUFMAN
' GALLIPOLIS • Three weeks
ago I came to Gallia County f~ the
lltst time to train as a county executive director for the Fann Service
Agency.
; As I drove toward Gallipolis on
State Route 35, I noticed the nicely
trimmed, well-kept properties nestled among the tree-covered hills.
The rolling pastures dotted with
cattle and fields , bordered by
fences, creatred a picturesque setting.
I was impressed by the care
local residents demonstrated by
keeping their properties neat and
. clean.
As I was introduced to various
community members, I witnessed a
warm and friendly attitude from
local residents . Waitresses, busi-

nessmen, and employees, all exbib·
ited a genuine bospitality and concern for me as a visitor.
This friendly atmosphere generated by tbe Gallia community is a
great asset for attracting future
businesses. Companies looking to
relocate desire .the community spirit and pride seen here in Gallia
County.
This combination of pleasant
attitudes and well-kept neighborhoods makes a powerful first
impression. Positive. rust impres·
sions act like a magnet to new busi-

nesses.
The local residents are to be
commended for their upheat atti·
tudes. Property owners are encouraged to continue the good work by
displaying attractive frontage that

Continued on D-8

ByEDWARDVOLLBORN
GALLIPOUS · The Ohio Farm
Science Review starts Tuesday,
September 19 . The " Review" is
sponsored annually by The Ohio
Sate University. In recent years the
event is held at the Molly Caren
Agricultural Center just off 1·70
west of Columbus near London.
Many local farmers choose to
travel cross-country through Mt.
Sterling to see more farm operations and avoid the freeway traffic .
Farm Science Review began in
1963 and bas since heen a favorite
one-day vacation for farmers fr001
throughout the region. The centnal
exhibit area will have more than
600 commercial ·exhibits . For a
period of time, during my college
years, I was a student employee of
the Farm Science Review . My job
was mainly a weed cutter or rock
pick up crew member and occa·
sionally a plot planter.

Farm Flashes
My memory is that the penna·
nent staff are dedicated to a year
long process to make the Ohio
Farm Science Review one of the
other "weed-cutters" from the lat~
1960's, Craig Fendricks has been
the manager for the past 15 years.
Advance tickets ftll be available at
tbe County Extension Office
through Monday afternoon .
Tbe daily industry will launch
the largest advertising campaign
·ever undenaken in support of fluid
milk sales this week. The "Got
Milk" campaign was originally
developed by the California Milk
Processor Board. the campaign is
expected to reposition milk as a
lifestyle item.
New Bio-tech seeds will bit the
market during the spring or 1996.
At least three companies will have
limited supplies. Both "Ciba
Seeds" and Myogen Plant Sci·

ences" will have a few hybrids with
built-in European com borer resis·
tan~e. According to "Doanes" these
will be prices at a small premium. ·
Asgrow Seed Co. will have six
varieties of round-up ready soybeans at about S3·S5 per unit above
its top conventiona varieties
I have chosen to accept a new
job title starting this week. I will ·
still be working for OSU Exten·
sion, but will be filling lbe newly
created position, Grazing Leader,
for the South Extension District.
The Soulh District covers 16 counties in Soulhem Ohio, with the Dis·
trict Office heing located just east
of Jackson.
I will be responsible for working
with farmers and farmer groups
who want to develop Management
Intensive Grazing Systems. This
opponunity will allow more time to
focus on lbe retention and expansion of the livestock industry in

southern Ohio. Mosi economists
agree !bat tbe cyclical nature of the
cattle business plus record total
meat s upplies w ill cause so me
rough financial times in the next
few years .
I feel reduced cost, sustainable
systems can be a big part of the
solution . If you have Grazing qucs·
lions, my new numbe r is (614)
2862177. A special thanks to all
!hose devoted "Farm Flashes'" readers. I have been pl easantly surprised over the years by the wide
scope of readership lhroughoul tbe
region. Your comments about some
of my remarks have helped me stay
hetter informed.
A special THANKS to the "S unday rimes-Sentinel" for nine years
plus of space. An apology to them .
also for several "late deadlines".
Edward Vollborn is Gallia
County's extension agent, agri·
culture.

Computer makers suffer from own success
By RICK GLADSTONE
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK - Two famous
computer makers sufrered from
their own success. Techno-swat
teams collared pornographers and
backers in a cyberspace sweep.
Japan Inc. took an expensive hath
in midtown Manhattan.
A look at bow lbe week in business and the economy went:
ffiM and Apple, Sounding Like
Your Local Mechanic: We Can'l
Get Parts
They used to fear a supply glut.

Now they're scrounging through their s hares , sending IDM and larize the desktop computer said
the wanehouse to satisfy demand.
Apple down sharply even as the chronic shortages of components
for its MacintOsh machines mean
International
Business brooder market kept rising.
In JDM's case, scarcity of a crit· earnings would fall signific antly
Machines Corp. and Apple Com·
puler Inc., two of the most recog· ical pan known as a power supply below projections. ·
The announcement came at an
nized brands in computing gear, is hurting the company's producunfortunate
time for Apple; which
both delivered the good-news, had· lion of mainframe computers,
used
to
enjoy
an advant!tge us the
.
news message that shortages of · which account for about half the
·maker
of
easy-to-operate
personal
components would delay shipments profit of lhe world's biggest comcompUicrs.
But
for
many
buyers
of
of uew machines, translating into puler maker.
PCs,
that
distinction
has
blurred.
weaker revenues and profit•.
IDM said it expected the delays
Investors who had amassed to be resolved within a mauer of Rivals arc rapidly arming their lat·
c.st machines with new Window~
stock in technology companies dur- weeks. l'or Apple, the problem was
95 software from Microsoft Corp.
ing the spectacular summer Wall more serious.
Continued on D-8
Street run-up reacted by dumping
The company that helped popu-

USDA says Ch~le in NAFTA
would offer competition ·.

GRIMM RETIRES· Lowell C. Grimm, maintenance
supervisor at the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger
Creek plant, retired Sept. 1,
1!1!15, after 40 years or service
with the company. ,He joined
OVEC In 1955. A n.atlve of
Broadrun, W, Va., Grimm
served In the U. S. Army rrom
I958to 1960. He is a member ol
the Loyal Order of Moose
Lodge No. 731 ln. Pt. Pleasant
and the Ldayette American
Legion Post No. 17, Gallipolis

WASHINGTON (AP) - U .S.
growers of fruits, vegetables and
other horticultural products should
suffer relatively tittle harm if Chile
were allowed lo join the North
American Free Trade Agreement, .
an Agriculture Department analysis
says.
Most com modi ties already are
allowed to enter the United States,
and U.S . tariffs are low on most
commodities, the department's
Economic Research Scrvke says in
a recent analysis. Some commodi·
ties enter the United States with no
tariff at all, the analysis said.
The United States , Canada.
Mexico and Chile are discussing
Chile's participation in the trade
liberalizing agreement, which
requires countries to eliminate tar·
iffs or phase them nut over a specified time period .
Chile would have to end its II
percent tariff on all U.S. imports
and lower sanitary )Jarriers that
have basically closed Chile ,to U.S .
fruits and vegetables. Those
changes may provide opportunities
to increase U.S. exports to Chile.
· The analysis noted; however,

that Chile has expanded production duct ion.
Chile has not become a supplier
of horticultural products, mostly
for export, over the past 15 years of fresh vegetables to tbe United
and could expand furlher if markeL~ Stales because Mexico has the
become available.
advanmge. Chilean import~ of U.S ,
'"This raises questions about winter vegetables would compete
further expar1sion, especially into with Mexican supplies and those
processed commodities such as produced in California ru1d Florida.
canned fruit , fruit juice and tomatoes that might occur in Chile
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
should it become part of NAFTA," European Union will spend an estithe analysis said.
mated $317 million in fiscal 1995
Chile accounted for more th!UI 6 to subsidize the export of fresh
percent of U .S . horticultural fruit, vegetables and olher horticulimports in 1994, with fresh fruit the tural products, the Agricultural
most important product. Grapes arc Dypartment says.
the single leading export from
The amount is the second-high·
Chile. Chile is the main U.S . sup- est this decade, with $336 million
plier of imported fresh peaches, spent in 1993.
plums, grapes and kiwifruit. Chile
Analyzing EU Commission .
also provided half of U.S. avocado data, the department said subsidies
and pear imports.
for fresh fruit and vegetables, such
Because Chile's growing sC.1SOn as table grapes, apples and peaches,
is opposi!C from the Uniled SL1tes' , account for 60 percent of total
grapes, peaches and plums enter appropriations.
the Unilcd S1a1cs when supplies are
The $188 million for fresh prodlow·. However, imports of apples, uct subsidies is the highest this
pears, kiwifruit, avocados, dry . decade ..
onions and processed conunodities
Spending · for wine and similar
such as apple juice and tomato products is expected to account for
products compete with U.S : pro· 30 percent.
·

Cotton hits 2-month high as
$peculative rally gains steam
Helming Consulting Services in
By DAVID DISHNEA U
Kansas
City, Mo.
AP Buslness .Wrlter
He
said
spinning mills and other
Cotton futures prices rocketed to
a two-month high Friday in specu· cotton .users were mostly steering
lative buying unleashed by declin- clear of tbe.volatile market ·its spec·
ulators het on furtber crop losses
ing production prospects.
October delivery prices have that could put the crop helow last
soared 9 cents a pound, or II per· year's record 19.7 million hales.
Next month's crop report is
cent, since the Agriculture Depart·
. ment stunned traders Monday by more likely to contain a lower cot·
chopping 1.5 million hales from its ton estimate than a higher one,
because the USDA estimates are
1995 U.S. cotton harvest estimate.
The rally was abetted Friday by usually conservative, said com ·
distant fears that rain from Hurri- modities broker Keith L. Brown or
cane Marilyn could reduce cotton Keith L. Brown and Co. in Moulyields in the Mississippi Delta trie, Ga.
"The market is saying yes, we
region if the storm moves into the
may have a record crop, but we
Gulf or Mexico.
On otber markets, strong gains don' t have it in the bam yet," be
in soybean and com futures helped .said. "You still have the threats of
push the Commodity Research hurricanes in the Southeast and
Bureau's index of 21 commodities early frost in West Texas."
Weather experts said it was too
up 0.68 point to 242.39. The index
soon
to say whether Marilyn posed
is .at its highest level since October
a
danger
to the U.S . mainland. The
1990.
hurricane
was aiming on Friday for
Cotton for October delivery on
St. Croix in tbe U.S. Virgin Islands.
the New York Cotton Exchange
If tbe storm brings heavy rain to
soaned 3 cents, tbe permitted daily
the Southeast or the Delta, it could
limit, to 89.95 cents a pound. It was
the highest daily settlement for
burt lbe quality of cott()ll with open
bolls, said David Branden, cotton
near-tenn cotton deliveries since
specialist, with Smith Barney Inc.
July 7.
Cotton prices blasted off Tuesin Memphis, Tenn.
"Any rain over 2 inches in cotday in response to the USDA report
ton areas would be unwelcome,"
and haven't looked baclc. On Man·
day, the USDA cut its production
be said.
'forecast by 7 percent to 20.3 ·mil·
Soybean and corn futures
lion 480-pound bales from the
climbed on the Chicago Board of
August estimate of 21.8 million,
Trade on forecasts for an early frost
in the Midwest late next week.
reflecting losses from dry weather
and insect damage .
Soybeans rose 6 cents a bushel
"ll was a shock to the market to
and rom gained more than 3 cents
on private forecasts for frost in the
lose 1.5 million bales in one
month," said analyst Sid Love of
key states of Iowa and Illinois next

·'

"In central Illinois, there arc
weekend, possibly as far south as ·
the Iowa-Missouri border.
still some areas wbere the heans are
"If you believe that, it would
totally green, and those aren't
end the growing season in a lot of going to mature in a week . It's
the central Com Belt," said grain
probably a small percent as far as
analyst Dan Cekandcr of Fimat
production ·loss, but you could get
Futures USA Inc. in Chicago.
into some quality problems,"
Crops in some areas, especially
Cekander said.
soybeans, are behind the normal .
November soybeans jumped 6
, development pace because they
cenLitO $6.31 314 a bushel; Decemwere plant!!!~ late due to wet spring
ber com rose 4 cents to $3.03 3/4 a
weather.
bushel.

ATTENDS SESSION - John Carmichael or Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn was In Augusta, Ga., la&lt;t week to allend the worldwide Introduction or a new trador from John Deere. The 73-horse.
power 5500 Trador L• Deere's newest model. Ills another model In
a line of John Deere tractor&lt; ranging In power from 15 horsepower
lo 73 horsepower lhal are built at the Augusta ractory. Cormlchael
Is pictured above be.&lt;lde the 11ew tractor prior to a banquet, He
was one of 150 dealers In North America lo receive an Invitation to
the event.

•

•

�Sunday, September 17, 1995
Pom•roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

County kitchen graces hillside home

Sunday, September 17, 1995

By

use them to bold something with
light pressure. They can be reposl- tioned quickly and easily. Most
have plastic-coated lips to protect
the item.
- A pipe clamp comes in a kh
to fit on a one-half or lhree'fourths•
inch galvanized pipe. The length or
the clamp is determined by the
length of the pipe. At one end of
the pipe, a sliding jaw operates
with a spring-locking device. At
the other end is a middle jaw that k
moved by a screw with a T-handle
mounted on a third, fixed jaw. the
sliding jaw moves the work'agains.t
the middle jaw. and the T-handle
on the screw is turned until the
work is held tinnly.
- A band-screw clamp has lwo
parallel jaws operated by t wo
threaded, opposite handles. Each
jaw works independently. allowi ng
them to angle toward or away from
each other, or to remain parallel. "
- Other clamps include ba nd
clamps, web clamps, quick-rei
bar clamps, edge clamps and more.
Ask your local hardware dealer for
advice on the best clamp to use for
a specific project. ·

READER'S

DIGEST able jaw that grasps the item.
Clamps come in many sizes and
BOOKS
For AP Special Features
styles. Some have specific applicaA workshop would not be a tions but most can be used in a
worksliop without a variety of good wide array of situations.
quality clamps. The more clamps Types of Clamps
- A C-clamp is named for its
you have. the better. Buy clamps in
C-shaped frame. One jaw is fixed.
pairs or sets of three.
Whenever you need extra hands The other jaw has a metal screw
to bold pieces together temporarily. (threaded rod) that you can tighten
clamps will do the job. Use clamps to hold the-work against the fixed
to grip parts while driving nails or jaw. Change the size of the opening
drilling boles for screws. Or use between the jaws by tuming a Tthem to test-fit pieces before gluing handle on the screw.
- A spring clamp operates with
them or to brace a freshly glued
hand pressure to open the jaws.
assembly until the glue sets.
Although both jaws are The jaws close and grip the work
adjustable on some c lamps, most when the handles are released .
have one fixed jaw and one mov- Keep several in various sizes and

I

II

'
I'

A WINSOME counuy facade ia tht' ts..lhn..-k ol thl11 cozy home that featuree open IMna space. and in~rior highlight. not normally fOund
ma home of Its •iu·,
ar¥1 a breakfast nook nestled Into
By BRUCE A. NAlliAN
. F-67 STATISTICS
a bayed window. Laundry faciliAP Neweleatures
ties
are
hidden
near
the
nook,
A country kitchen t-nhances the
'e sign F'-67 has a great
light basement, crawlsp ace orwhich also offers acce~s to the
interior of this hillside haven,
s lab foundation . The daylight
ro o m , dining room.
two-car garage.
while spacious rom1al and inror·
basement foun dation provides
kitch e n and breakfast
The fo rmal dining room feamal UvinK areas provide an envi·
ano ther 1,400 square feet of
noo~ . three bedrooms, two ful1
ronm ent for lodily's bu s y tures a bayed wihdow, which
space . An alta~hed tw o-car
baths and one half-bath, totaling
adds ambience to me als. A door
lif..tyles.
garage and adjOining storage
2, 181 square feet of living space.
to the kitchen ensures silenCe
A coey entry allows inum•diate
The plan is available with 2x4
space provide 561 square ~eel of

exterior wall framing and a day-

space.

'
Name
Street

--

City

. .........

"·
~1

.'

•......,._.• ..,.,

.. ....... .

-•

State (ZIP)

.n-o...

'·

su N DAY

-

ACROSS

. • ...:.:v:__

TilE ENTRY spill~ .inlO lhe family room, " 'hich ha!4 sliding·ftla!JI·

door acces1 lilt the rear to a wood deck. Past a 'hall bath, the
M"cluded master bt.-droom has a private bath. The walk -through
kitchen is adjoined by a breakfast nook and laUndry area. A rormal
dining room Ia dote by. The upper Dour has twn secondary bedrooms whh donner windows and roomy closets. A aplit bath aer·
vices the bedrooms. At the end of the hall, a storage room pro·
vldes additional spa('(',

fireplace . At

8

Clip this order and return label

t • .... ,. •r

11

Clamping Do's and Don'ts
Don' t rely on clamps to ull
together a poorly fitting joint. Iue
and pressure may hold thin gs
together for a while, but in the long
run the joint will fail. Plane and
sand pieces until they fit properly
before gluing and clamping them
Before applying glue, test-fit the
parts. Practice putting the pa rts
together in the time recommend ed
by the glue's !abe). Decide what
clamps to use, how tO use them and
in what ·order. Then preadjust thC
clamp openings so they're ready to
go on the work and apply pressure
with just a few twisL,.

'

Enclosed Is $4.95 each for the booklet(s)

.........

.......

the reAr. Fnonch dnu111 OJ)t'n 1.n a wvod df&lt;"k.

ease

Enclosed Is $4 for plan No.

nCM

nt:£ SPACIOUS ramify room basks in tht glow from

II

Full study plan information on this bouse is available in a $4 baby
bluepront. Four booklets are also available at$4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sell It, Ra·nch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
feature; Pract1cal Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 co mmon
problems; and, A;Frames and Other Vacation Homes. a collection of 24
styles. Send check or money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box t 562,
New York, N.Y. 10116-1562.

D

during dinner
access into the sprawling great
Tht- main-floor master s uit e,
room of Plan. F-67, b}'
impress ive for a liome of this
HomtStyles Designers Network,
size, leat uri's a majestic master
wh ich has 2.181 squart feet of
bath with a corner Rarden tub.
IMna space.
two walk-in c\Ost' ls and a dual·
Th r home's front porch, donn·
sink Vllll ity with kn et' ~pact" .
ers anfl shu tiers cornplt·h• ils
Upslairs, two more good -sized
couniiy·slyle exterio r and corn·
bedrooms await. A dormer winp&amp;ement ils comforubl«" interior.
c\ow in each lets in naturallir,ht.
The central portion of thf' home
Both bedrooms have private
consists of thf' large grea t room
acct'ss to a split bath. At the end
that lends i"tSI"Uto both large gathof the hall, a large storage area
erings and ifll:imale e-ncount{'rs It
has a firf' place and accts·s to a
providrs space for off-season df'Cbackyard deck th rough French
orations ami family ht'irlooms.
If tht• daylight basement fOundad......
ju!lt off the great room, the · tion is chosen, it can be modified
to plrase lhe wholt' (amity . A 6r(L'
walk-through kitchrn is high·
11lace can bt' addrd .
lighted by a sunuy window sink

To Order Study Plan

·

·fFora mo,., detailed, sco ftd platt Qjthis hou.se, inclwdi~~g Kttldt.~ to tstimat·
ing costs tHrd finall(ing , se"d $4 to Holl!e of the Week. P.O. &amp;z 1562, New
York, N.Y 10116-1562 Be sutt to rnclwde the ttumber o/lhe pla11.J

Getting the most out of your heating dollars
By POPULAR MECHANICS
_ you should check the burner plates water tank. On gas and oil water
For AP Special Features
to see if the unit is firing properly, heaters, be sure 'to keep insulation
An energy audit of your home is because gas ports can become away from the pilot Ugbt and conone of the best ways to insure that clogged with rust or dust. If you trol~. Repair faucet leaks as soon as
you're getting the most from out of have a furnace, clean or replace air they occur. Finally, consider
your beating dollars. Your local filters once a month during heating installing flow restridors in shower
utility company can assist you in season.
heads and faucets,
trncking down energy wasters. but
if you have oil-fired equipment
there are many items you can check you should have the equipment
yourself. Here are some imponlun · tuned up and its efficiency checked
checkpoints and additional energy annually. If the burner is not a
saving tips:
flame retention bead burner, conOne way to check for wall insu- sider replacing it. You should perilation from the indoor Uving area is odically inspect the burner fQr oil
to remove a switch plate on an leaks.
exterior wall. Shine a flashlight
Have your water beater - - .the
around the swilchbox to see if lhere second largest energy consumer in
is insulation present. Better yet, the home-· - drained periodically
make a small bole in an exterior to remove built-up sediment. Insuwall (in a closet or other bidden late the bot water pipes and the
location) and measure the insulation. Then patch the hole.
Adding insulation to the walls
1993·CHEVROLET
of an existing home is costly and
·difficult to do thoroughly. A contractor uses special equipment to
blow in insulation from holes'bored
in the walls. However, if you plan
to re-side your hous.e, installing
rigid board insulation before apply. log siding is cost effective.
See
Insulation on the foundation of
Jerry Bibbee
the house, whether you have a
Marvin Keebaugh
basement, crawl space or slab foundalioo, is often overlooked. InsulaDoc Hayman
tion applied on the house exterior
20 Mlrut9s Drlve Stra~t Up
tt cover the exposed foundation
PU, V6, 5 spd, AM/FM,
At.
7
Nonh lhru Tuppe,. Plains
and to extend I foot below ground
Maroon with red cloth interior
level is effective.
42945 State At. 7
Other energy conservation meaCoolville, Ohio 45123
with matching topper. 20K 1
sures for the foundation include
caulking the sill plate where the sill
(614) 667-3350
owner. Good looking truck.
meets the foundation blocks in a
basement, and insulating the header
above the sill plate.
If your basement is unheated,
Insulating the ceiling would make
the floor of the first story much
warmer, reduce heat loss and conFAMILY PRACTICE
serve fuel. If you do this, you must
also insulate any heat oa water
pipes in the basement.
The energy efficiency of your ·
home depc:nds to a large extent on
efficiently 'operating heating and
.., . . • OFFI~E HOURS - ~ , .·:
cooling systems . In winter you
should keep the thennostat constant
1
at 68 degrees Fahrenheit during the
day and 60 718 degrees F at night.
However, the elderly, infants and·
&amp;
people who are ill will require
higher temperatures. A clock therRfrt PAflfllfS'· WAIK·IIIS WflCDMi .
mostat, which automatically lowers
the heat when you're in bed and
TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
raises il prior to your rising in the
morning, aids in y9ur comfon and
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
convenience. Check radiators or
registers to see that they are free of
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICALCENTER)
dust and DO' ~bstructed.
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
·
If you .. ave gas-fired heating
POINT PLEASANT
equipment have the unit cleaned
every two to three years by a ser(304) 6~5·1675
vice tecbnician. From lime to time

Your

1 Vacillate
6 Boutique
t 0 Richard Roundtree

97 Stolen
98 Oklahoma city
100 Particulars
102 Colored

t 5 Slender candle
20 Wonde~and gi~
21 Brass instf\Jment
22 Male singing voice

109 Funeral sang

24 Fat
25 Egyptian goddess
26 Agassi of tennis
27 Juicy fruit
28 Where Warsaw is:
abbr.
29 MUSIC variety
31 Soft mineral
33 Untidy state.
35 Attention
36 Summit

110 Litigant
111 An ocean:. abbr.

t 14 Wander
116 Cripple
t 1B Wriler Deighton
119 Diplomat's forte
120 Nobleman
121 Eel
123 Abilities
125 Bundle
·126 Lukewarm
127 Condition
128 Oolong, pekoe, etc.
129 Reject a lover
130 Suave
131 Kind ofjump or lift
133 Rich patterned

37 Hoisting device

39 And so forth:
Latin abbr.

4t Beat
44 Sailors
45 Dramatic 'conflict
48 Theater worker
53 Make suitable·
54 Goods
55 Movie set time
57 Balance
58 Venus de59 Flute-like instrument
60 Mink, e.g.
61 New York team
63 Scheme
64 Snaky fis~
65 Football kick
66 Locations

76 More recent .

79 Rock star - John
8t Lascivious look
83 Lasso
87 Occurrence

88 Harvest
89 Foray

fabric

136 Give·off
137 First man
14t Flepeat
144 Metallic element ·
145 Pierce with a knife

146 All - - sudden
149 Find
t51 Concerning
t 53 The Beehive State
t 55 One of the
archangels ·

•.

t57 Beast
t5B - Dame
t 59 Very little bit
160 Eat a little ot
t61 Car type

•

51 Birthright seller
52 Housjng ex:pense
54 Time ot year

55 Attractive
56 Spinning round
59 Enjoyment
60 Snow field
62 Go by boal
65 Omen
66 Came to a halt
67 Germ-tree
71 Yard divider

72 Steady and sober
73 Connery and
O'Casey
75 Tire surface

76 Actor Beally

...

117 Actress Farrow

predecessor
· 46 Precious stone

69 Kitchen appliance

Homet

home
I08 Victory goddess
110 Season
t t 1 Insect stage
t t 2 Related by blood
t t 3 Yield by treaty
It 5 tJoily

42 Miss Adams
43 Plummet
44 Wilson's

50 Hawaiian city

..

106 Scarlett O'Hara's

41 Woman of rank

162 Prevent from acting

1

86 Playing card
90 Conclude
93 Thailand, formMy
95 Motionless
96 Endorse
99 Extreme
t01 Greek war god
103 As - (up to now)
t04 Jacket parts
tOS Cheer

38 Sweet potato
40 Mug

47 Salem's St.
49 Drench

'•'

85 -Maria

37 Remove the rind

163 Government agents
(hyph. wd.)
164 Swords
DOWN

82 Fix fraudulently

9 Lea
tO Delay
1t Therefore
t2 'War- Peace"
t3 Shape
t4 Sapling
15 Rocky hill
16 Asian servant
t 7 Glass square
18 Rim
19 Rex or Willis
23 Pillar
30 Cereal grass
32 Hin and Pacino
34 Elected oHicial
36 Melon

107 Mouotain lake

77 A Gabor
78 Cyst
80 - bygones be
bygones
84 Annoy

7 Outer covering
8 Kimono saSh

104 Museum's contents

23 Hair preparation

70 Ump'scry
71 Type assortment
72 Wall and Main
74 Wild disturllanca

4 Old French coin
5 Refuge
6 Adhere

94 Gratuities
96 Burn superficiall y

role

68 Homed animal

2 Palo3 Str!nged instrument

'

t t9 Chat
t20 Obligation
t 22 Word of assent
t 24 Drug letters
t25 Cookie, BritishI style
126 Forced payment
t 29 First mo.

•

itself the "World's First Laptop."
Ohio Art, the maker of the plastic pop culture phenomenon, estimates it bas sold more than 100
million Etch A Sketches in 67
countries.
There are at least 20 other artists
who display their talent on the Etch
A Sketch, said Lisa Daniele. a
spokeswoman for Ohio An.
She said most artists specialize
in their drawings.
George Vlosicb, a 16-year-old
from the Cleve land suburb or
Lakewood, ske tches sports stars.
He has even met some of ·his
heroes.
''Cal Ripken was one of the
best," Vlosich said, referring to the
Baltimore Orioles shortstop. "I got
to meet him on the field.''
Tim George begins his latest
drawing in the middle of the gray
screen . Slight turns of the knobs
create a semicircle. He then traces
a line to get back to another starting point. Tracing is the most difficult part.
" It takes total concentration to
do a drawing ," he said. " What
people forget is that thi s is all a
continuous line.''

When be completes a work , he
removes the glass scree n to preserve the image.
He says he wasn't too talented
as a child.
"I could make staircases, but
that was about it," he said.
· George discovered his artistic

side in 1988 at the age of 37 while
siltin!l. in a hospital waiting room.
His 4-year-old daughter, EUie, bad
been scheduled for heart surgery '
and George needed something to
calm his worries.
" I picked up this Etch A Sketch
and wondered if you could real Iy
draw on this thing," be said . A
nearby new spaper provided the
inspiration as be drew a rough
image of Snoopy.
He sbow.e d it to his daughter
and it brought a smile.
His daughter, now II, recovered
but George continued doodling on
the Elch A Sketch. He took some
of his work to a community art fair
and was overwhelmed by the
response.
"The reac tion was unbelievable,'· he said.
A year· later, Ohio Art discovered the budding artist. The company, based in Bryan, asked George
to provide drawings for its 30th
an niversary calendar that was
released in 1990.
Those drawings of scenes from
1960 were displayed at the Capital
Children's Museum in Washington,
, D.C.
His work has been displayed at
art shows and on national televi sion. He has spoken to art classes
·and made appearances at toy stores.
· But it's the smile he can bring to
a sick child that keeps him going.
George visits local hospitals
throughout the year, explaining
what he does and then giving away
his sketchings .

ETCH A SKETCH - Etch A Sketch artist
Tim George pose.&lt; amidst a collection or plastic
glass and aluminum powder children's toy masterpieces on the Ooor or his Colum.bus home

recently. George creates mainly animals and
Americana such as Peanuts cartOon characlen
and Michael Jordan In fllghl (AP)

lawyer named Lisa Lanes, to apply civilization has done to the enviPy ROCHELLE OLS6N
for clerkships in small, Southern ronment.
Associated Press Writer
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Leon ipino natives until he was finally
Carter's second book, " 1974
THURMOND, W.Va. -From towns. She landed a job in nearby
Beck has proven he can persevere.
liberated on Jan. 29. 1945.
Motorized Classic," a science ficwhite-water rafting, to a voyage Beckley.
He did it when he escaped the
He received his basic soldier
The couple, who have since tion story about a man who wants
through the chilly North Atlantic in
Bataan Death March in 1942 and pay for his ·time in the jungle. But
a Viking ship, and even to life in a married, moved into a $250-a- to travel in space iQ his camper, ba~
hid out in jungles as a guerrilla he believes he's due compensation
remote mountain town, Hodding month house, close enough to the yet to be accepted for publication.
lighter for three years.
for food and lodging as I"Omised in
"Westward Whoa's" advenCarter seeks the challenge of the New River to sec the water
And he's done it since 1953, enlisunent contracts.
sparkling and hear the screams and tures commence with Carter and a fighting the govemment to try to
unknown.
A 1942 federal act provided up
friend departing after lunch at a St.
"I like to be In situations that I laughter of tourists rafting.
recoup the money he says he's to $5 a day for active duty service"Sometimes I feel lik e I'm Louis McDonald's . They ponder owed for rations and sheller during men who did not receive food and
have never real Iy handled so I can
stuck
out here and other times I'm the golden arches as they drift on the war .
see what happens," Carter said.
lodging from !he military .
...
'Thank
God I' m here,' ·' said the Mississippi River.
About a year ago, Carter moved
"There's a principle involved in
That would come to $5,125 for
from Boston to Thurmond, a nearly Carter.
Beneath the hu'nior, Carter this," Beck said. " I fulfilled my Deck. He also want s 3 percent
Carter, a graduate of Kenyon probed life's larger questions of contract with the Army, now they intcrcs~ bringing the total to more
abandoned coal town of about four
College
in Ohio, was Thurmond's mortality and purpose.
dozen residents in the rugged New
should fulfill their contract with me th:m $23,000.
posunaster
until the job was elimiRiver Gorge, an hour's drive and
"I want to be able to think dif- as an individual and an American
In denying Beck's reque st in
several single-lane bridges east of nated last spring with federal cuts. ferently. I want to be able to come soldier."
1953, the U.S. Anny said soldiers
Every morning for a year, he up with a new method that
Charleston, West Va.
At 73, he remains proud of the had to have written orders to be
He came to write books and brewed coffee for residents who wouldn't have occurred to me, Bronze Star he oorned. And he sat guerillas, something Beck never
raise goats. He served as the town stopped in for chitchat.
never having found myselr'in a in the front row at President Clin- got when he rolled off the road durThe 32-year-old Carter has whirlpool in the Atlantic Ocean." ton's speech during recent V-1 Day ing U1e march, hiding in the brush
postmaster, sent his second book to
publishers, joined the City Council unkempt, past-the-shoulder curls , he said.
ceremonies in Honolulu . But there until the Jap:mese p:L&lt;scd.
and worked as a part-time while- and wears faded jeans and a half"He had to have orders to act as
In 1997, Carter plans to retrace a is still the little matter of 1,027
water rafting guide.
buttoned shirt, the uniform of a Viking trip from Greenland to days .
a guerilla to obtain this particular
mountain man who spends five Newfoundland. He !&gt;'fS begun planThe goats have not arrived.
That's how long Pvt . Beck of , funding," saic..llclUI Marie Ward, .a
''It was probably a city-boy fan-- . hours a day alone writing.
ning to build the Viking ship repli- the 31st Infantry Division spent in spokeswoman for the Financing
tasy," Carter said.
His first book, "Westward ca and will take ab9ut nine people· the Philippine jungles after he fled and Accounting Service of the
If his name is familiar, it is Whoa! In the Wake of Lewis and along for the 1,200-mile vpyage, the death march. where thousands Defense Department . "And the
because his father, who has the Clark,'' was a humorous account of which he hopes a publisher will of his fellow soldiers starved on the Anny said, 'Sorry, you didn ' t have
same name, was a State Depart- his and a friend's attempt to retrace finance .
70-mile trek to a Japanese conccn- the orders.'''
ment spokesman during the .Iranian the steps of explorers Lewis &amp;
Carter has written for Esquire tration camp.
Beck says that's preposterous
Clark seeking the Northwest Pas- and the now-defunct M magazine.
hostage crisis in the late 1970s.
Beck says he waged guerilla because no higher-ups in U1e Anny
Carter's road. to Thurmond sage.
warfare against the Japanese with were going to give him written
But, he said, "I wanl 10 write my
The book also examined what style for someone else, not confonn other escaped U.S. soldiers and Fil- orders to escape durin g the .death
began when he urged his fiancee, a
1 to their style."

march. What's more. his superiors ·
were prisoners too.
·
Yet, Beck says, soldiers were
always told it was d1eir duty to try
to escape if captured and to continue to resist the enemy.
The Anny also told him he was
ineligible for t11c money because he
was not in physical custody of the
enemy.
"There were no roads, no airplanes, no way to get away," he
said. "I was confined to an island,
there was no way off. •'
Rep. Duncan Hunter, a California Republican, m,ade several
unsuccessful attempts in recent
years to win Beck's compenSl\tioD
and now he's drafting a bill. ·
"This is a new Congress, new .
leadership,"
said
Hunter
spokesman Harald Stavenas. "and
Duncan thinks we can get somathing done."
'
·
1
Though walking for him today
is painful because of poor circulation, Beck isn't slowing down in
his fight.
·
He zips around his condo in an
electric wheelchair and shows off a
yellowing .binder of military documents and letters he has written to
every president, the Pentagon and
members of Congress.

130 Actress Thurman

132 Ship part
134 Sky blue
135 Papal headdress
136 "- Frome"
137 Word of woe
t 38 Finished
139 Amino140 Mother
142 Cards held

...•
.'

143 Orchestra member

145 Glul

EDITOR'S NOTE- What
weird web of circumstance
allowed It? A single airplane, a
bomber; a single slrudure, the
Empire State Building. The
bizarre collision happened SO
years ago. The writer, a rormer
AP reporter hOW retired, was at
the chaotic scene. His memory is
undimmed.

146 River in France

147 Elaborate party
148 Beery drinks
150 Get brown in the
sun
152 Mel of baseball
t 54 Mr. Selleck
156 Knock

...

.."

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL........,,_.,......

M,•da,J •d Thursday 1:30 a.m.•':OO p.m.
. lutsd!J, 8:3, ..... ·7:00:).... . .

.~.

Wtdttldiy Friday, 8:30 a.m.· Ilion

I

By JOHN SEEWER
Alsoclated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Tim George easily carries on a con"ersation as be creates another
drawing . On bis "canvas," tbe
familiar outline of Snoopy from the
Peanuts cartoon strip takes shape.
His artwork is created with neither paint nor brush . He uses thin,
black lines over a fuzzy gmy back.ground. It's Etch A Sketch.
• George says ~is movements are
almost automatic, even though a
f.lig bl turn of the white plastic
knobs here or there can he the difference in making Snoopy look like
Lucy.
" It 's like playing an instrument, " George said. "You just
,l)ave to get the feel or it. "
_ George creates detailed pictures
ef animals and Americana on the
popular toy that has frustrated and
,~used children and adults for
!!lote than three decades:
Elephants and zebras come alive
on the Etch A Sketch's glass
screen. Another favorite is Mount
Rushmore - with intricate detail
right down to Teddy Roosevelt's
mustache. A soaring Michael Jordan may be his most popular work.
· · " I realize this is a little bit off
the wall, but it's still pretty mainstream," George said.
Millions of people around the
world would agree .
The Etch A Sketch is celebrat.i.ng its 35th anniversary. It calls

Empire State Building struck by airplane 50.years ago

•

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

•

.world with an Etch A Sketch

Bataan death march survivor wages
Writer escapes to the mountains 42 year battle for compensation

PUZZLE R

91 Assist
92 "-With Wolves"

,:iunhag ~im..-,:iontintl • Page 03

~Columbus man shakes up art

Clamps are invaluable shop tools

House of the we.ek

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

.See answer on page 84

'

•

.

By FRED KERNER
For The Associated Press
NEW YORK (AP) - One day,
the doomsayers mused, an airplane
is going to crash into that building!
When the Empire State Building
was completed in 1931 -an architectural achievement whose 102
stories point skyward 1,248 feet
above Manhattan - such notions
were voiced by many New Yorkers.
The Empire State Building was
then the tallest building in the
world, a source of pride in the engineering genius of Americans
despite forebodings many felt
about this "ninth wonder" of the
world.
.
·
The latter-day Cassandras were
proven right 14 years after the
building opened. The skyscraper
sat right in the path of a plane that
strayed from its intended flight
plan. The fateful day : July 28,
1945. Despite the iragedy that took
place that morning, perhaps the
fates had been sparing - it was a
Saturday.
·
The day began wet and dreary
throughout the northeastern United
States. Americans were slowly
starting to recover from the war in
Europe thai had ended almost three
months earlier. In little more than
two weeks - though few realized
it would happen that soon - the
Pacific phase of the war would
come to a swift conclusion as well .
A handful of people strolling
along the rain-slick sidewalks of
Fifth Avenue near 34th Street
moments before 10 a.m. became
suddenly aware of an unusually
loud roar or an airplane's engines.
It had the . unmistakable throb of a

bomber , a 'sound recognized aviation machinist' s mate. Alben
instantly by anyone w)lo had expe- Perna, looking to hitch a ride. He
rienced it or seen the theater news- just made, it.
The moment Perna climbed
reels.
The reverberation rattled display aboard, the plane taxied out an~
windows or posh department stores took off. It is doubtful whether
Perna had a chance to introduce
along Fifth Avenue.
"Climb! Climb!" Stan Lomax him self to the two-man crew, or
remembered screaming to himself. tell them he was en route to BrookLomax, a sports reporter for radio lyn to be with his parents who 'd
station WOR, was driving down · lost another son two weeks earlier
Park Avenue on his way tn work in a naval battle off Okinawa.
About the same hour, 18 workand he unconsciously idcntili cd d1e
ers of the War Relief Services of
source of the roar.
About a mile uptown, Patrolman the National Catholic Welfare ConAlbert A. Schneider of Manhat - ference were reporting for extra
tan· s Midtown Squad replied to his duty on the 79th floor of the
partner' s uncann y comment· about Empire State Building. Lookin g
low-flying planes that never out their windows, they could .not
seemed to hit the city's skyscrap- see the towers of Rockefeller Cente r a mile to the north. They
ers.
couldn't
even see 34th Street some
"Some day they will," Schnei915
feet
below . The fog was too
der said cynically.
thick
.
A moment later there wa' a loud
Most were secretarial workers,
explosion . Then wreckage, glass
some
volunteers, helping with lastand masonry tumbled through the
minute
details for a pair of NCWC
low-lying cloud that shrouded the
.
executives
leaving for Europe to
top of the Empire State Building.
'
oversee
the
agency's war relief
Instantly, oily black smoke hitAmong
them was Lucille
program
.
lowed toward the street.
19
,
who
had
given up the
Bath
,
Some two hours earlier at an
first
day
or
her
vacation
to help out.
Army air base in Beqford, Mass.,
She
and
her
husband
had
planned
Lt. Col. William P. Smith Jr. , had
go
to
the
beach.
·
to
bade goodbye to his wife, Martha,
In the next roo m was Buffalo
and her mother.
reporter Paul Dearing',
newspaper
Smith, 28, had flown 54 combat
missions in Europe. He held the who_donated his Saturdays to the
Distinguished Flying Cross and relief operation, and· John B.
other honors. He was about to pilot McClosky, one of the two Europea twin -engined B-25 bomber to bound executives. He came in to
Newark, N.J ., pick up a group of complete some tasks and left a few
Air Force officers and deliver them minutes before 10.
to a base in Sioux Falls, S.D.
Elsewhere, the 79th floor was
He was joined by Sgt. Christo- empty. There were iome Saturday
pher S. Domitrovich, 31, a Granite workers in other offices on lower
City, Ill., flight engineer whose war floors, perbaps 1,000 in all.
record was just as impressive as
About 50 sighL=rs had paid to
Smith's and who had flown in with visit the two observation decks.
the pilot two days ~arlier.
Two of the111 were on the 102ndThey bad completed their pre- floor balcony, along with a guard;
flight preparation of the B-25 the rest were in the observatory on
Mitchell bomber - "O ld John the 86th floor . They, and two
Feather Merchant' ' she was dubbed employees of the Caterpillar Trac- when an aircraft tug sped tor Company working on the 80th
toward them from the Navy hangar floor, were the only people in the
across the field .
building above the 79th story. The
Aboard the lillie vehicle was an floor below the War Relief office

was empty, too.
At La Guardia Airport, the control tower received a radio call
from a plane somewhere in the
overcast. Col. Smith reported he
was 15 miles south of La Guardia
and asked about the weather at
Newark Airport. Victor Darden.
one of the mqst experienced controllers at La Guardia, told Smith to
contact Newark .
Suddenly, a (ew moments later,
the La Guardia tower controllers
saw a B-25 at an altitude of 700
feet - barely beneath the ceiling.
Barden contacted Smith, gave him
wind speed and direction and
directed him to a runway on which
to land.
"We'd rather land at Newark .
What's the weather there ?"
Newark tower replied by phone
suggesting the B-25 be held at La
Guardia because Newark' s ceiling
was only 600 feet. But Barden had
to clear this with Army Advisory
Right Control. Permission denied.
Barden radioed Smith that AAFC
had said that Newark had, in fac ~ a
1,000-foot ceiling and 2.25-mHes
visibility.
Smith decided to try Newark .
Barden warned him to return to La
Guardia if he didn't have three
miles visibility. And . the controller
added, underscoring the risk, ''We
are un able to sec the top of the
Empire State Building. ·'
" Roger," Smith replied. The
plane banked toward the Manhattan
skyline and into the fog. The next
two minutes sealed the fate of the
bomber.
Each person who hea rd the
plane overhead had a different perception o( "what really happened." Some said, with chagrin,
that they duck ed instinctively.
Some thought the plane was heading for an emergency landing in
Central Park , 1.5 miles north of the
Empire State Building. Lomax, the
spons reporter, sensed the truth and
prayed that the pilot would climb to
safety. Patrolman Schneider said he
had nighl)nares for month s afterward .

No one know s what went
through th e minds of the Army
fliers. Had Smith caught a glimpse
of the East River. mistaken it for
the Hudson River and thought he
was flying over New Jersey? One
thing is certain. lie was trying to
climb. The plane's impact raised
the ceiling between the 78th and
79th floors by some 3 feel. He also
had tried to barlk toward the 11cft.
In the 102nd-floor observatory
of the building, Lt. Allen Aiman, a
veteran of the air war in the Pacific,
was sightseeing with hi s wife,
Detty. He said later he was "flabbergasted" at the sight of "a plane
flying below' you" in New York."
Witnesses said they heard a
sharp thunderlike explosion fol lowed by a deafening rumble as
fuel tanks exploded. The plane
struck the north side or the building, punching a hole some 20·by20 feet through steel and concrete.
four women and a man were
killed ncar the point of impact. The
three scrvi&lt;:cmen aboard the plane
also perished instantly. Hitchhiker
Perna's body was not found for
days. Be had been jettisoned from
the plane and carried 1,000 feet
down an elevator shaft to a subbasement where it wa s buried
under one of the plane' s engines
and other wreckage.
Dearing, the Buffalo reporter,
was blown out a window. His body
was found on a ledge on the 72nd
I
Ooor.
Lucille Bath, who gave up a day
at the shore, was trapped by flam ing fuel. Her body was identified
three days later from denial charts.
Three other women burned to
death outside the office of Joseph
Fountain, a 47-year-old department
manager. Fountain, himself, was
trapped in a sheet of flame but
responded to the calls of a fellow
worker, Catherine O'Connor, who
encouraged him to walk out of the
inferno.
He followed her and five other
women into an unaffected office.
They managed to get the door shut

and a window open and waited
there until they were rescued.
·
In the Caterpillar offices on the
Ooor above, two men investigating
an escape route were startled when
an elevator opemtor they knew as
Mary ran in screaming1 her clothes ·
in names. She had been blown out
· of her parked elevator and was
badly burned. Realizing they would
be unable to get thmugh 'the office
doqr to reach the sL1irs, they found
a hammer and hacked a hole
through the wall into the next
office. They lifted Mary through
the opening. and then made their
way to the stairs and down 30
flights to a first-aid station set up
there .
By llOW, alarm boxes all over
the area had sounded and firemen
and poli&lt;:e swanned to the scene,
Also responding was Mayor Fiorello La Guardia, a confirmed fire
buff. lie later pointed out the many
times he had warned the Anny that
planes were flying too low over
Manhattan.
At the plane 's impact, debris .
rained on the streets below . The
plane's axle pierced the roof of a
taxi ; both the driver and passenger
fled. An engine crashed through a
sc ulptor's penthouse studio and
turned the 12-s tory structure into
an inferno. Henry Hering , the
sculptor, was playing golf that Saturday morning.
Some elevator cars were
charred, their operators seriously
burned. Others were undamaged
and useful , getting the injured out
1 and the firefighters in. Heroes were
plentiful. ,
·
Also resourceful. One, 17-yearold Coast Guardsman Donald
Molony of Detroit, was on leave in
New York from a training station at
Groton; Conn. , . where he bad
trained as a hospital apprentice.
Molony waited a moment for
debris to stop falling then ran into a ·
drugstore, carne out with its supply
of dress ings, distilled water morphine and syringe s and w~nt to
work .

/

�•

,
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis,

Hot dry summer takes its
toll on pumpkin patches
By The Assoclaled Press
Pumpkin growers m Ohto are
frellmg over whether tbeu crops
w1ll surv1vc th1s summer's heal,
d1sca.e, bee mfestauons and nlConSISlenl rams

"Maybe one of lwo of these
lhmgs Will affecl your crop one
year, bul not everythmg all a1 once,
saJd Kathy Rhoads of Rhoads Fann
Markel, wb1cb supphes pumpkms
for the annual CICCievllle Pumpkin
Show
II IS loo early 10 detennme bow
pumpkin pnces will be affected by
the crop shona~e, but Larry Secor,
owner of Secor s Nursery 10 Perry,
sa1d he w1ll mcrease the pnce of

15 10 25-pound pumpkms from $2
loS3
Secor has suffered h1s worslcver pumpkm season and has lost
half hiS crop - about 10,000
pumpkms wonb an esumaled
$30,000 Dunng a normal year,
Secor harvests about 20,000 pumpkins
Ms Rhoads sa1d she bas lalkcd
10 pumpkm producers m e•ghl
Sl31CS from Arkansas lo Massachusclls, and the problems are
Widespread
Rober! Precbeur an ex1cns1on
crop spccmhsl al OhiO Sl~ U01
vers1ly, smd lhe Norlheasl, w1th 1ls
worst drought m 30 years, w11l

OH • Point

80

Pleasant,

Public Sale
and Auction

11 o

lmmed1are Pos 110ns Open Fe
1 Full T mel PN

Rec~ Pearson Aucuon Company
lull t1me aucttoneer corPp l ete

ASSIStants

:..=.=--=..:...::..:.._:.:..::._:;:.:.:,_:_ 1 4 Full T1me State Tested Nurs ng
aucton

ltcensed

serv1ce

166 Oh o &amp; West V r.g n a 304
773 5785 Or :xl4 773-5447

have a parucularly bad crop Some

nalrng blossoms

Decorated stonewa re wa ll tele
phones old lamps old thermcme
tars old clocks ant que furn ture
Rver ne Ant ques R uss Moo re
owner 614 992 2526 We buy

- August rams flooded pumpkms patches m parts of OhiO
- August heat m the Northeasl
and paris of the M1dwes1 caused

estates

pumpkms to mature early, long

be '

lOfC

Octobe sal
f

J &amp;

es

0 s Auto Pans Buyng sal

vage IJeh cles Se 1ng pats 304
773 5033

Wanted To Bu~ Junk Autos W th
Ot Wrthcut Mo tors Call Larry
Lr11el~ 61 4 388 9303

~lddleport

3 Month Old Puppes 614 367

0539

Thelma
SWF age 29 seeks SWM !or
lr1e nd companton and poss bly
more Reply lG PO Box 182 Porn!
Pleasant WV 25550

30

Announcements

Wa n!ed To Buy Motor Scoote
Send Aepl es To CLA 307 CIO
Gal1pol1s Da1ly Tnbune 825 Thtrd
Avenue Gall1pohs OH 45631

Pomeroy,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

BeSl

&amp; Vlcrnrty

6 Mo nth Old Black lab M ~
H ousebro~en Good W th Ch Ia
ren To Good Country Home 614
446 1621
7 tree krnens tong S short ha red
black gray &amp; wh te 614 441
0135

AdvertiSe on the Inter net w th
IMALL classrf1eds FREE Cleta l s
304 675 5205

70

110

A l Ya rd Sales Must Be Pad In
Aovance Oeadl ne 1 OOpm the
day belore the ad ts o run Sun
day eo tron 1 OOpm Frrda~ MGn
day ed ton 10 ooa m Sa!Urday

Lost and Found

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d n
Adv ance DEADLINE 2 00 p m
the day before the ad rs to run
Sunday ed tlon 2 00 p m fr My
Monday ed 1on 10 CIO am Sat
urday

Wante d Fu I T me Truck Dr IHH
COL Class A L cense Neede d
Gallrpo s Aeduc11on Co Rro
Grande OH 614 245 5514

Usrng the Cltmifmls
Is as Easy as

In Memory
In Lovrng Memory of
CORNELIA BUNCH
Who Passe_d Away
September 14, 1988
lAM THE WAY
So JUSt follow ME
Though the way be
rough and you
cannot see
I AM THE TRUTH
WhiCh all men seek
So heed not "false
prophels ' nor the
words that they
speak
0
I AM THE LIFE
and I hold the key
That opens the door
to ETERNITY and rn
this dark world
I AM THE LIGHT TO
THE PROMISED
LAND WHERE THEA
IN NO NIGHT'
Sadly Missed and
Deeply Loved by Your
Gnls and Grandkrds

September 18 h 19th 20th 8 4
On Route 7 2 M les Nor h 0!
Crown Clt'y

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
BOOTS
All leather Western Boals
Reg $14900
Sale Pnce $59 00
Large Slack
$4900
Engmeer
$49 00
Wellinglon
$50 55
Loggers
$5900
Harness
Carolina Georg1a H&amp;H
Insulated Safely Gortex
Swa1n Furn1ture 62 Olive St
Gallipolis
All US Made

Real
Classes
446-4367
1-800-214-0452
Rooftng

20

Yrs Exp

Free Est1mates

614-245-0904
Call and Save

LAYNE FURNITURE
NEW SHIPMENT
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp; CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $1095
lANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Men lhru Sal 9 5 p m 446 0322
3 m1les out Bulav1lle P1ke
FREE DE IVE Y

Carmichael's
Farm &amp; Lawn
614-446-2412
1-800-594-111

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

REVIVAL
Where Morgan Center Chnsl1an
Hoi Church Morgan Center Rd

All Ages, All R1sks

SR-22
Cancelled/ReJected
• DUI • No Pnor
Insurance

11 o

17th lhru 24th T1me 7 30 pm
Preaching by Bra M1ke Thompson
Spec1al s1ng1ng mghlly
Pastor Robert Hersman
614 388 8728 Public Welcome

Please Apply At
Scene Hill Nur~ng Cemer

Eas~

Wcrkl E•cellem Pay1 As
semble Products At Home Cal
Toll Free 1 800 46 7 5566 Ext
313

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT or
RECTOR For EconGmc Develop
men! Programs In Jackson
County Employed By Otno State
Umvers ty Enens1on Salar~ Ne
gotrabte Dependrng On Exper
ence Masters Degree Preferred
fn Approp rtate F eld EEO Em
p layer Contact Daney Jackson
Drstrrct D ~rector Oh o St~te U n
versrty Extens1on South D str ct
017 Standp pe Road PO Box
95B Ja ckson O H 45640 Tee
phone 614 2BB 2177

In Memory

In laving Memory of
Rev. George F. Kelley
who passed away an
September 19, 1993
It's hard Ia see
tomorrow when
saNea1e we love Is
gone, and It's hrder
still Ia realize that
our life will still go
an.
But me11ory has a
magic way of keeping
a laved one near ••
ever close In mind
and heart Is the one
we hold mast dear.
We never lost the
one we love, for,
even though he's
gone, within the
hearts of those who
care, his memory
lingers on.
Sadly mined by
wife Jewell; sons
Norman and David;
daughters Clara Jean,
VIvian, and Rita; and
their families
Card of Thanks
The family of Earl
Burnette would lrke
to express therr
gratrtude to the ~&gt;nes
who gave them
support and !herr
prayers at the loss
of therr loved one
Thanks to all our coworkers, neighbors,
fnends and church
famtly
Sadly m1ssed by hrs
' wtle, mother,
daughter, sons
brother srster and
hrs grandchrldren

Help Wanted

Two pari-time postllons, worktng

We try to 1nsure

approximately 20 hours a week,
eventngs and weekends

AUTOHIO Insurance

If tnterested call 614-992-2104,

Phone (614)446 6111

237, or send resume to Radiology Dept

Gallipolis

11 0

110

Help Wanted

Ollrce/Marlo.et ng Au stant need
ed for bus~ Pt Pleasant In
surance agency College des red
Send wo rk ex per ence per sonal
references &amp; salar~ r9Qu rements
to PO Box 367 Scou Depot WV
25560

Appl

ENVIRON MENTAL SE AVICE S

SUP£RVISOR

Become a member of a ra prdly
expandmg rnnovat ve health care
organ zatron Po tnt Pteasan!
Nurs ng and Rehab1lrtat10n Can
tar a 68 bed sk1lled nursrng taclll
ry seeks the r1Qhl nd1vrdua 10 d
rect 11s housel&lt;.eep1ng11aun dr~
and mamtenance opera! ons The
successful candrdate Will be re
sponstble tor mamtarnrng the !acrl
rt)" 1n a clean sale a nd san tary
manner and super\tiiSe the da~ to
day aut as ol the mamrenance/
housell.cep og and aundry de
partmenls 1n accordance w th
current federa l stale and local
standards gu1de mes and regula
tans Prevrous exper ence 5 a
plus We wrll pravrde on the JOb
tr~ n1ng If you are nterested 1n a
reward ng career please can 304
675 3005 or wr te Pont Pleasant
Nursrng and Rehab lltat on Cen
ter At 1 Box 326 Pornt Pleasant
WV 25550 A Glen mark Fa c I tty

Overbrook Center has pan trme
position tor LPN s &amp; part time &amp;
lull ttme pos1tron lor CNA s an
yone mtereste d contact Jan Ehas
AOON Overbrook C e nter 333
Page Street M1ddlepor1 Oh 0
45760 614 992 6472 E 0 E
Part Trme $9 !Hr Answer Tete
phones Ftex. bl e Hours JLoca
Area No Expene.nce Necess ar~
Ca1t1 809 474 4290 E~~:t 116
Part 1 me tax preparers needed
!or busy tax office Pomeroy toea
non We WJII tratn Send resum'e
to The Dati~ Sentinel P:O ft Bo~
729 13 Pomero"t Oh10 45769
Real Estate Career Professtona l
tr arnmg ERA Town &amp; Counfry
~eat Estate Broker Beckie Steie,
304 675 5548

EOE
Executrve D ec10r Ga li B County
Ct11 dren s Ser vt ces Bea rd Has
Opened The Search For An Ex
ecutwe D1rector Th 1s Pos rt en
Req urres A Masters Degree Or
Equ 11atent In A Related Ftefd And
SuperVISOr~ Exper ence Mus! Be
Knowledgeable In Management
Of Stall Ope a11ons 01 A Group
Home Grant Wr 111n9 An&lt;l County
Servtces Must A so Be Ava table
For Out Of Town 'Travel Mus t
Ha lle E•cetlent Commun1cauo n
SkillS

Sem1 tr(Jtk dmer COL licens-e
class A at least 5 ~rs or morn
experrence 614 992 3220 after

5pm
Someone needed to stay With al
derly gentleman 1n h s home (Neo~t~
Haven area) e\lenrng!!l &amp; n1ghts
on l y 12hr sh ths 5daysrweek
Send wage reqwements &amp; Relet
ences Box R 15 %Pt Pleasa!'1t
Reg ster 200 Mam St Pt Pleas
am WV 25550
Tank drrvet wllh CDUHaz Mat
1yr eM per ence Phone 304 675
4393

Salaty Range $30 000 $35 000
Plus Benet ts Offered P lease
Senp Resu mes B~ September 22

1..:.:=--------

1995 To

180

Wanted To Do

Me Tabor
Chr dren s Serv ces Board
83 Shawnee Lane
Ga! rpclls OH 45631

Ace Tree Serv1ce Complete tr~e
care 20~rs e•p &amp; rnsured !rile
est mates 614 441 1191 or\
800 508 8887

Job Oesc rr l)lro ns A11a rl able Upon
Request 0~ Cal ng 6 14 44 6 4963
Or By Wr t ng To The Above Ad
dress

Dozer Work S35 rH Free Eslt
.m_•:..:'•:..:•::.6:..1_4_:3:..:79:..29=.:22.:._:___

1

General Ma ntenance Pa nt1ng
Yard We k Wrndows Washed

"OSHER VEAL PRODUCER

Gulters C eaned l1ght Haulmg
Commer~ca l Res1dent1al Steve
"
Lookrng ~or Expenenced Feeder
4 44 6
1!. Manager Of Mod ern M1lk Fed
_ :..:
VEAL Fac1h ~ 614 245 5588
Georges PonableiSawm 1 don!

1·":..'_ :..6::66::'--------

Veterans Memonal Hospttal, 115

Ex
E

Memonal Dnve. Pomeroy Ohto 45769

ATIENTION
New Guns and Bows 10% above cost
Low pr ces on al hunting sup pies
Hummg l cense &amp; new Deer RegulatiOns
Deer Processtng and Smoked Dee1meat

CRAWFORD S GROCERY
HENDERSON WV
Dresden
Home of Longabergerc Baskets

Sept 26 1995 Seats st111 ava1!able If
nterested Calllmm edtately tor

more mformallOn
Independent Brand Advisor

Godwm 446 3427

"Super Furniture Sav1ngs"
MATIRESS
$59 00
FRAMES
$19 95
RECLINERS
$99 00
4 Drawer Chesl
$49 95
La z boy Recliners
$299 00
Sofa, Loveseat &amp; Cha" $599 00

Help Wanted

X-Ray Technologist
Two part-t1me pos1t10ns,

20

hours per week

dunng Urgent Care hours -

5 to 9 p

m

Monday through Fnday

1 to 9 p

m

on Weekends

Competitive Salary, good benefits
Send resume to

Human Relat1ons Department,
Holzer Clin1c,
90 Jackson Pike, ,.
GallipOlis, OH 45631

SALES
REPRESENTATIVES
WANTED

FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry,
Go1ng Out

of

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST

c;om1ng on L1fe Cha1n

Experrenced medrcal transcrrptronrst needed
rmmedrately for the evenrng shrft wrlh weekend
and holrday rotatron Dutres rnclude transcrrb1ng
medrcal drctatron proofread reports and rsolate
errors before drstrrbutron Verrfy pa1 1e n1 and
physrcran rdentrfrcatron on all report Medrcal
termrnology course requrred Anatomy and
Physrology courses and prevrous experrence
preferred Excellent wage and benef1t package
Contact
Ros1e Ward
Dlfector ol Human Resou1ces
Holzer Med1cat Center
100 Jackson P1ke
GallipoliS OH 45631
(614) 446 5105
TDD (614) 446 5106
EEO/ADA EMPLOYER

1st

Double Lounge
Karaoke • Thurs 14th
County Roads Band
Fn 15th &amp; Sat 16th
Pool Tournament Sun 17th
6 30

Bus1ness

Sale
V1llage Wear

m R1o Grande
40%, 50%, &amp; 60% off
all summer

Expenenced Screen Prrnter
Wanted Immediate Pos11ion
Senous Calls Only
614 446 2388
Ask for Chns

WV

announcements

Oct

&amp; fall

CNA HHA PCA

selections
Sale Days

Full-t1me

Sept 20-23 11-7 pm

&amp; Part-ltme postltons avatlable

1n Galha

&amp; Me1gs County

Wtll do bab~SII\ ng rn my home
reasonable rates tlex1 ble hours
close to sct-ool 304 675 2784

bath 4 bedroom tamrl ~ room w1th
firepl aces 4 car garage 85 loot
porch 2 he at pumps out ol s1ght
~--.,._:..:---_ _:_::._:...__1 VIeW $95 000 614 949 2055
Wtl! Do Inter or Extenor Patnllng
Reasonable Rates Experrenced House 2 apts Corner lot 304
6 75 5
References For Free Est1mates ~~__•..,o•---,------­
Call614 245-5755
locate;d Hedgemom Drwe Fur
ntshed Basement 1 t 12 Baths
Fireplace CA Garage Carport
FINANCIAL
fmmed1a1e Possess on S72 000
614 446 31 H

21 0

Business
Opportunity
'NOTICE
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
~commends that you do bus1
ness wtth peo'pte you know and
NOT to send money thrcu9h lhe
ma1l until ~ou have mves11gated
!ho oflenng

Own your own appare l or shoe
store choose 1ean1sponswear
brrdal lrnger e westernwear a
d1es mens large srzes nfanll
preteen pet te dancewear1aero
btc matermty or accessor os
store Over 2000 name b ands
$25 900 to $37 900 n11entory
trarnmg I xtures grand cpenrng
etc C an open 15 days M
loughhn 1 612 888 6555
!;lice ten! Retat Space Available
lala~ene Mall 513 922 0294
Newly Es1abl shed Bus mess 01
fnteresl To Women Selling Due
To Med•cal Prob ems Only
'SerJc u s l ~ Interested 614 446
6842A!ter630PM 9PM Prce
NegDUable

All real estate advertiSing m
thts newspaper tS subject to
the Federal Fa1r Housmg Act
ol 1968 whtch makes 11 llegal
lo adve nlse any preference
I mltatton or dtscnmtnatton
based on race color retlg1on
sex lamthal stalus or national
origin or any Intention to
make any such preference
I mltatton or dtscrlm nation •
This newspaper will not
knowllngly accept
advertiSements for real estate
wh1ch IS In vto!ahon of the law
Our readers are hereby
informed that all dwellings
advertised n thiS newspaper
are avatlable on an equal
opportumty basis

1995

10:00 am.
Havmg rust gotten married I w111 sell my home and
the follow1ng personal property Located from Sl Rl
7 1n Tuppers Pla1ns Oh10 lurn al M E Church F~rsl
streel on leH 1st house on nghl
Household
2 pc liv1ng room SUIIe w/ footslool pecan coffee &amp;
end tables, roll lop desk d1netle set w/6 chmrs all
recovered by professional lwo q pc bookcasa
bedroom ~UIIes melal wardrobe slereo m1crowave
cart kitchen slool ul11ity cart lloor &amp; lable lamps
mise dishes linens new hassock p1clures etc
Antique or Collectors Items
Pecan gale leg drop leaf table w/ extra leaf 5 cha"s
small stands and tables paiT of tear drop lamps elc
Mise
110 6 000 BTU a" cond111oner b1rd balh melal
garbage cans wash lubs frUII 1ars yard &amp; garden
lools molors hum1d1fier large Samsomte luggage
elc
Owner - Edna (Harmon) Warner
Dan Smith - Auctioneer - Billy Goble
#1244
#6769
Cash
Pos1t1ve ID
Refreshments

o.»" "
f&gt;.&lt;'' ,¥-,f""

'

For con~•derallon please call
(800) 775-7652

Excellent

Salary Health &amp; Life Insurance pa1d
Company will tratn employees wtlh Htgh

Call446-2342 or 992-2156

School 01ploma, GED or 1 yr Exp 1n

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Contact Health Management Nursmg

canng for elderly
762 Second Ave Gallipolis

Restavrant Equipment

'llo~~~'" PUBLIC AUCTION

Thts ts a ume~hmlled one year posn10n that serves as a tram~
mg and mulual evaluauon penod for our franch1se program
and other pos1t1ons "Sohd performance may lead to spec.al
financmg lerms for a Snap 3n franch1se
Snap~on Jnrorporated,

Snap-Lin
INCORPORATED

Positton Announcement

Secretary II
Adult and Continuing Education
Posting Date September 8, t 994

The Un1vers1ty ol R1o Grande announces an
opemng for a Secretary II for !he Drreclor ollhe Adult
and ConlinUing Education Program
Respons1b1rotres ol lh1s full 11me lwelve month
pos111on Include the secrelarral dulles of typ~ng data
enlry, hling and answerrng lelephone for D~reclor o
Adull and con11nu1ng Educa11on and Acllng Director ol
lnsiiiUIIonal Research
Oualihcahons for lhe pos1t1on mclude effecl 1ve
orgamzahonal Skills, flexlbilily of schedule 1n order Ia
reg1sler studenls lor evemng conllnumg educalion
classes good spelling and grammar excellenl wrillen
and verbal commun1cat1on sk1lls, as well as
experrence Wllh or ab1hly to learn compuler software
~ograms such as WordPelfeci!Word (DOS and
&gt;ndows), spreadsheels usmg Lotus and Excel
(DOS and Windows) and Dalabase us1ng D-base
(DOS) and Access (W&gt;ndows)
H1gh School diploma or equ1valen1 reqwred
Assoc1a1e degree preferred AI leas! three years
prev1ous Office expenence 'requiTed
lnleresled candidates should send letler of 1nleres1
and resume before !he deadline of September 25
1995
Ms Phyllis Mason, PHR
Director of Human Resources
UniverSity of Rio Grande
Campus P.O Box F27
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
UmversJty of Rto Grande!RJo Grande
Commumty College ts an Equal Opportumty A"trmatwe
Ac~on Employer

"' Q
'9v. ~c

ro"'~

Surplus Equrpment from Noah s Ark An1mal
Farm Inc 1527 McGrffrns Rd Jackson Ohro,
Sal Sept 23rd 10 00 a m Noah s Ark wrll offer
for sale the follow•ng
Woodm1zer LT40 3-phase elec sawmrll otrgrnal
value $14 000 00 used less than 50 hrs reserve
b1d $7,000 00 30' Buss No 88 Dbl face planner
reserve brd $8 000 00 New Holland model 250
skrd loader reserve brd $2 500 00 All addrtronal
rtems wrll sell to lhe~r absolute h1ghest brdder
Antrque lndustrral wood workrng tools 2 4 srded
moulder planners. 30 J A Fay planner sen feed
gang rrp saw 36 Band Saw 14 !able saw, B &amp;
9 steel cui off saw 12 craftsman table saw band
8aw blade welder 5 HP snowblower, 3 t 12 HP
f.olohller 1987 Ford Van &amp; 1988 Ford Van (For
j)arts). 12 2 horse trailer EZ go electrrc cart
~idlng mower (no engrne) 3 4 wheel wagons,
!:1es1aurant equrpment donut fryer, donut rcer,
SiS donut glazrng table on wheels cake donul
l!lropper 2 sis hoi water or steam 60 qt cooker, 1
sis hoi water/steam 40 qt cooker. Taylor model
?50 Ice cream mach1ne Dbl head electro freeze
tee cream machrne CTX 70 Dbl deck elec
Conveyor 6 oven, gas copper kettle carmel corn
~ candy maker m1c model G50 shortenrng filter,
refrrgerator compressors, sleam hot dog warmer,
~ough roller, meal slrcer bunn coHee machrne,
~aper lowel drspensers candy drsplay off•ce
equrpment
IBM typewrrter Scrtptamalrc
~pewrrter cannon typewrrter Kroy letterrng
machrne, bookbmd1ng machrne 2· prtney bowes
~oslage machmes panason1c vrdeo camera
~lbatterres &amp; VCR 2 Krtchenette ref stove s1nk
aombos, Mtsc 2 full body mounted deer, deer
antlers brg fiberglass cowboy. Reddy kerosene
~eater, Ready L P gas heater 2 Kerosun
~eaters platform scales, 5 H P G1ant Vac kn1fe
&amp; shear sharpener sm p1ckup trud• cap, fuel
tsnks patro set 12 prcn•c tables lg metal
$arlboat upholestry fabrrc 5 10 yds /roll, scrap
1J1elal plus many more 1tems
• Terms Cash Ohro check w/1 D or cert1fred
~eck

•

•

,'

•

AuctiOneer: Terry L

Lloyd

(614) 286-1229
Licensed
•

Ipolls, OH • Point Pleasant,

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale
lmHed Offer• 1996 doublew rde
3br 2bath 1 1695 down 12591
month Free delver~ &amp; setup
Only at Oakwood Homes Nnro

wv 304 755 5885

l m1ted Olfert New 14•fKl No pay ..
ments alter Ayrs Only make 2
pa~ments &amp; move m 304 755

5566
New 1996 14x70 rncludes sk1rt
rng step~ blocks one year
homeowners msurance and stll
months FREE lot rent Only $ 1025
down and S207 17 per mon th Call
1 soo 8;n 323a
New Bank Ropes Only 4 lett 304
755 7191
Pr~ce

Busler r New 1h70 2 or

3br Only $995 down S1951month
Free de rver~ &amp; setup Only al
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 304
755 5885

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

1977 12dl5 Federal 3bedroo m
Call 304-675--1954 alter 5pm

5 Ac fes For $12 000 Located
Between V nron &amp; R o Grande
Sailor Road 6 14 388 9731

1980 Wrndsar 1411:70 E~~:cellent
Cond 1t on 2 Bedrooms 1 Bath
lerge K !chen Large lrvrng Room
10xt2 Ut1!Jty Bu ld ng $10 500
614 245 9431

Charo la1s Lake Beautrlul 2 25
Acre lot Ourel Oe sr rable Ne gh
borhcod Restricte d $24 500 304
273 0136 304 273 2940

368

9362

1995 C ose Out Sale All 1995
Models Must Go Sa'o'e $1 000
$ 1 500 On Stngles And $1 500
$2 000 On Secuona!s Buy Now
And Save At French Ctty Homes
Inc Gall1po lts Oh o 614 446
2acres 1984 Spr ngb rook mabrle
home 3ml At 2 N on Rt 62 304
B75 6986
K ck 011 Sale Brg Sav ngs On All
D1splay Models Save $1 000 To
$2 000 On A I 1995 Dr splays Call
Cathy Or Sandy At Mountain
State Home.s !n Pt Pleasant
W VA 304 675 1400

&amp; bonded

in Ohio

Small house for renr no pets
304 713 9192

420 Mobile Homes
for Rent
12x65 2 Bedrooms 2 Baths
Cathedral Seemed L1v ng Room
Large Bed rooms large Bath
W• th Sunken Tub
AC
In
Che~h1re 614 367 7671
2 Bedroom 5 M• South At 218
Galhpol s 1 200/ Mo $100 Oeposrt
11'1 cludes Water 6 14 256 6769
614 256 133 7
2 Bedroom Mobrle Home $3 001
Mo Plu s Ut It es Oepos1l 614
3677750

2 Bedroom Mobr e Home On 'Bob
McCorm ck Road Ga I pol s 614
446-9669

2 Bedroom Open Kitchen L1v ng

2bedroom tra 1!er References &amp;
deposrt No pets Also tra ter lot
At 62 N Locust Rd Pt Pleasant
304 575 1076

14x70 2bedroom mobtle home
2baths Cat 304 675 4420

Four lots near Rac rne app rox 1
112 acres ~ach start ng at $5000
cat 614 949 2025
REMOTE beautiful r dge top
land 3 mrles south o! Carpenter
Oh10 Mt Unron Ad One 9 acre
parcel $8347 7 acres for $7086
Owner trnancrng Call lor good
map 614 593 8545
Scenrc Valley Apple Grove
beau t lui 2ac lot s pubtrc water
Clyde Bowen Jr 304 576 2336

RENTALS

2be droom w1central atr w11h nrce
p vate lot Ga I pols Ferry area
no pets 304 675 1225
3 Bedrooms 2 Full Baths Depo s t
Requr red Vou Pay AI U11 1t11es In
Po \erA ea 614 3889162
Two bedroom mob te home on
one acre 12x60 all electt1c $275
per mo $200 deposrt references
lead1ng Creek 6 14 742 1301
614 992 2772
Two Bedroom S250rMo Pus Unl
111eS Oeposrt Referen ces Ae
qu red R1 218 Alter 6 PM 614
983 4607

440

1 and 2 bedroom apanments fur
n shed and unfurnished secunty
depos 1 teq u1red no pets 6 14

House to r rent on Sla te Route
338 one m1 le !rom APP. e Grove
carport cellar house Ollerloo~ ng 1
Oh10 R1ve r Hud accepted 304
372 5686 or 614 247 2120

Hutch1nson Auction Inc.
Ant1que Auction
Sunday, Sept. 24 at 11 :00 a.m.
Albany, Ohio
Take US 50 &amp; 32 West ol Athens, Ohro and
exrt onto 50 W towards McArthur Srgns
Posted
Qualrty antrque furnrture and collectrbles to
be auctroned Cons1gnments pnor to auctron
welcome Full ad tn Sept 18 antrque week
Terms Cash or good check w/ posthve ID
Food Avarlable
Auc!IOneer Mark Hulchrnson
614-598-8706
Lrcensed &amp; Bonded rn Ohro
Partner Frank Hutchtnson
614 -592-4348

Bedroom New E.:tra Nrce A1r
Condrt1 oned Near Holzer s $259!
Mo + Ut1l11es Dcposn Requrred
614 446-2957
!bedroom E;.:tra clea n utl1tres
garbage p1ckup ac cerlrng fans
garbage disposal rotrrgera tor &amp;
stave !urn shed 304 773 5352 or
304 882 2827 a...en ngs

I

440

jiunbag ~tmu-~rntual • Page
Apartments
for Rent

2 Bedroom Upsta rs Apartment
$325/Mo Uuhlles Included Reier
ences Requtred lnqu1re At 300
Foutth Avenue Ga ll pa l s 614
446-3437
2bdrm apts total etectr tc ap
pllances lurn shed laundry •oam
lacrhltes close 10 schoo m town
Apphcat ons ava1lable at V Iage
Greer1 Apts •49 or call 614 992

37ll

4 Rooms &amp; Bath Unlurn shed No
Pets Water Pa1d 91 Cedar
Street Gattrpots 6t4 3881100

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

Ver~ Clean 614 446 2404 614
446 0001

490

2

1

For Lease

51 o

Household
Goods

App liances
Recond 11oned
Washers Dryers Ranges Rein
Qralors 90 Day Guarantee
French Cny Maytag 614 446
7795

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

2566

Bu ue rnut Avenue apa tmenl
par!lalfy !urn1shcd 2 bedrooms
deposr! relurences &amp; utrht es no
pe ts 614 667 6205 HUD ap
P&lt;OVEI&lt;l

Furn1shed 2 Rooms &amp; Bath
Oawnsta rs Ut1 1 es Furn shed
Clean No Pe s Reterence De
posi!Reo,ured 614 446 1519
Gractous 1v1ng 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at V1l1age Manor and
Rrvers de Apartments n M ddle
~r1 Fro m $232$355
Cal 614
992 5064 Equa Hcusmg Opper
tumtres
tn Pont Pleasant WV La ge .At
tractrve 3 Bedroom Unturmsh ed
Apartme nt Ups1a s $325/Mo -+
S325 DepOSit W lh Referenc.e
614 446-004 t After 6 PM
One bedroom fur n shed npart
ment n Mtdd epo t ve y cloun
614 446 30g1 614 992 2178 or
614 992 5304
Tara To wnhou se Apartm en ts
Ver~ Spac ous 2 Bedrooms 2
Floors CA 1 1!2 Bath Ful f ~ Car
poled Adul t Poo l 1!. B a b~ Poo l
Pat o Start $340 / Mo No Pets
lease Plus Secunty Oepo sr t Re
qu rred 6 14 367 7650
Twtn R \lers Towet now acceptmQ
apphcat1ons lor 1br HUD substd
rzed apt lor elderly and handr
capped EOH 304 675 6679

450

Furnished
Rooms

1 7 b thrust troll ng motor S300
304 675 7690

530

Rent or lease 100% loc al on
store room 1600 sq 11 Po rnt
Peasant opposue the post ottrce
Call :)04 675--5733

Beech St M ddleport 1 &amp; 2bed
toom lurntshed apts Uullt1es pad
References &amp; depos 1 304 882

Sleeptng rooms wtth cookmg
A so Ira l er space on r1ver AI
hook ups Ca ll after 2 00 p m
304 773 5651 Mason WV

2 Bedroom Furn shed Apartment

1

304 27 3 2038

Carpet &amp; Vmyl In Stoc~ S5 00 Vd
&amp; Up 60 Paner ns Of K1tchen Car
pet In Stock 011er 35 Patterns
Vtnyt In Stock Mollohan Carpets
614 4ll6 7444
tl

2 Bedroom Apar tme nt In Down
Gall1potrs Centra A r K tch
en Appliances A 1 Rooms Car
peted S4001Mo Ullllltes Not In
eluded 614 886 7174

2 Bedroom Apartment Trash
Water Sewage Pad S295tMc ..
Depos t 6 14 446 2481

Sporting
Goods
Wanted House Fo Rent 2 3 ~~
R-ug-.-,:-,-:",-m-a-gn_u_m-su_p_e-,-::B:-Ia7
ck
Bedrooms Galhpol s V cm ry Be
h k
1 $27
r
h bo
rng T ans!erred
~dulls Chr d
aw Pl Sia
5 10 t Jo n at

ESfATES 52 Westwood Drrve
from $226 to $291 Walk to shop
&amp; movres Ca 614 446 2568
Equal Hous ng Opportun.ry

Room5 for rent weok or month
Start ng at $120/mo Ga Ita Hote
614 446 9500

~own

520

MERCHANDISE

2Rooms Plus Bath Lafayeue
Mall No KrtchenJ A I Uh lieS pa (j
S 175 00 Mon!h Depos t ReqUired
614 446 7733

05

470 Wanted to Rent

EOH

2 lbr apts n PI P ea.sant $2501
mo 1 month dcpos1t &amp; references
BQUI ed 6 14 446 2200

Washers dr~ers refr gerators
ranges Skaggs Appliances 76
V ne Street Call 614 446 7398
I 800 499 3499
LAYNE S FURNITURE
Comploto homo !urn sh ngs
Hours Man Sa 1 9 5 614 446
0322 3 mrles out Bulav le P1 ke
Free Delivery
Queen stze wat er bcd padded
che y rarls and cherry hea d
board lull wave $250 Ca 1 304
675 6650
Sale Th s Wool&lt;. Only!
Relr gerator F GSl Free Was
$150 Cui To $125 Refngerator
t. ke New Almon d Frost Free
Was $350 Cut To $295 Relrrg
o ala 2 Door $95 Washer Was
$150 Cut To $125 Wa sher
Whirlpoo l $95 Washer Kenmore
$95 Drye r $95 30 Inch Elecl 1C
Range $9 5 Skaggs App ranees
76 Vrne S treet Galltpolrs 6\4
446 7398 Or 1 800 499 3499
Stove Fre ezer Was her Dry er
Aefngerator 614 256 1238
SWAIN
&amp; FURNITURE 62
Olrve St Galhpol s New &amp; Used
tu rn1 tur e heaters Wester n &amp;
Work boots 614 446 31 59

AUCTION

VI RA FURNITURE
614 446 3158
Oually Household Furn rure And
Appl ances Great Deals On
Cash And Carryt RENT 2 OWN
And la~away Also Ava lable
Fee Deilvoty W11h1n 25 M1les
Walnut Armorre Wardrobe S 150
Gold Sta r 19" T V Wrth (Instant
On) &amp; Srand $150 Kenmore
D1 st1washer $50 Sound Oes1gn
Stereo Wrth 8 Track Convertor
$35 Bookcase $10 614 367
7123

Antiques

~~----,....,--;,_,:--:=:-::::::
Bu~ or sell A1verrne A.nt 1ques

1124 E Mo n Strevt on At 124
Pomeroy Hours M T W 10 00
am to 600 pm Sunday 100 to
600 pm 614 992 ?526

540 Miscellaneous
Merchandise
13 000 OTU Vented Gas Heater
2 'fears Old Good Cond1110n
$100 614 44&amp;-4705
17 Cu f-t Re! ge•ato• Frost Free
Ver.., Good Cond ton Ha rves 1
Gold ReasonaOie 6t4 367 7169
1982 Dodge Ca go Van $900 11
HP Dynama,k. R dmg Lawn Mowe
$325 6 4 4.:J6 8568
1987 OMC Cob•&lt;~ seats 8 6cyl
4 3 lite $3 sao as rs Ktng srze
watE:~bcd S95 304 675 4615

Real Estate General

LOG HOMES
Comfort, convenience,
energy
efficiency,
durability
and
OexibUity In design are
a few or !he reasons
why 20,00 famUies wUI
buDd 1 log bome lhls
year I
Appalachian
Lac
Structures has been a
leader in !he fog home
industry for over IS
years. Choose from
over
70
standard
models or we'll cwrtom
design one for you.

Call or write ror more
infomatlon.
Appalachian Log
Structures, Inc.

Dept. GOT,
P.O. Box 614

WV :Z5Z71
1-800-458-9990

Ripley,

Real Estate G!ineral

460 Space for Rent
2 Tra iler lots Fer Rent McCot
mtc~ Road $125/Mo Water Paid
614 446 4491 614 446 3888
Tra11er lot on Braod Run Ad New
Haven $601mo 304 773-5881

*1015 STOP LOOKING THIS IS THE HOME YOU
WILL BE PROUD TO OWN' BEAUTIFUL NEW BRICK
RANCH Cathedral ce1lmg 3 Bedrooms 2 full balhs gas

AUCTION

heat centra l a1r large ktt chP.n With lot s o f ca btn et space
dtshwasher d1sposal walk 1n closet 2 car garage 28 x
48 butldtng w/large work s hop area 1 063 ac m/1
Cement dr 11eway Buy thts beaultful home today and
move tn tomorrow Close 10 hasp lal and new freeway

Saturday, September 23, 1995
10:00 a.m.

TOO CUTE FOR WORDS!!!!!!!!

DrrecllOn from Gallrpolrs south on At 7 3 mrle to
218 turn nght go 3 m1les Wrllmens Holler Rd
Watch for s•gns
12 car and trucks 73 toyota land cruser wrlh
powertake wrench 68 Volkswagen dune buggy
wrth f1ber glass body
M1sc 2 exerc1se b1kes 5 elec water pumps
large alum1num scaHold wilh wheels 2 troll1ng
motors Sears 10 alum1num boat new yard
lounger cast rron charcoal gnll metal roofrng
alumrnum ext ladd~r 24 small yard drsc 50 gal
piastre drums 14 x 70 house 1ra1ler frame dusk
to dawn l1ghts all krnds of eleclrrc w1rrng 4
lloresent bulbs piastre lrghl scrounds tra11er
axles Culbert 14 1/2 x 3/4 x 25 2- I beams 12 x
18 smalllrarlers, 3 axle low boy cable sp1ndle
1acks yard swmg 2 I beams 12 x 9 scrap
metal scrap alum1num warm mornrng wood and
coal stove, stackable chaiTS hosprtal scales
a1ustable hosprtal beds truck roll bar gravely
tractor snow blade lumber treated poles 40 It
storage tra,ler 32 It storage trarler 100 It 4 0
entrance w1re fuel tanks wife cable d11f s1zes
used concrete block sta1nless steel tank slep
ladder on wheels lire bnck or block 11 hr
murray ndmg mower large rce maker
mtcrowave firewood, rarlroad Ires step ladder
metal tubes for paontoon boat or dock, porch
glider truck tool box cham saws sk1ll saws
weed eaters, foldrng cha•rs tables gas stove TV
Tools Tool Boxes of tools old champron
blacksmrth forge 100 lb anvil l1ncoln porlrble
welder on wheels ant1que gas leadhdle corn
sheller alf car 1ack hydrulrc bumper JaCk engrne
horst 4000 lb gasoline a~r compressor heavy
duty batlery charger tool boxes lincoln 250 elec
welder srngle phase 200 50 ton porta power
prpe bendrng machme elec drrlls heavy duty
charn falls large heavy duly mrg welder wrth
argon batlle cable cutters engrne ho1st car tow
behrnd car engine dolly shop carts on wheels
portable shop lights, weld1ng road he1ters large
beam trolleys weldrng rod
.
Farm eqtJrp new seed planter on wheels brush
hog 2 bottom plows, set of d1sc 3 pt hitch
scrapes blade ad1uslable heavy duly 7 fl heavy
duly yard roller

Thts 3 bedroom 2 bath one and a half
home offers Western Red Cedar stdtng
and beaut1ful hand craft wood work
Sttuated on 5 acres m/1 11 IS nestled

story new butlt
on tlae outs1de
on the tns1de
m a grove of

Reduced Don t be sorry la1er lhat you d1dn t 9rab th s
one when you had 1he chan ce Call Pany Hays 446
3BB4 Let me
I

hatdwoods 3 miles from S R 35 on S R 160 11 has a
24x32 m etal detached garage/storage bUlldtng w1th heal
water and a 112 bath for the handy man Extras mclude
Anderson double pane w ndows 30 year sh1 ngles and
total electnc heat and a1r condttton Prtced to SELL at
$93900 Thts home won llastltlltll

RANNY BLACKBURN, BROKER 446-0008
JOE MOORE, REALTOR 441-1111

#I 054 NEW I
IN GREEN
close Ia
Elementary School' 3 BR ranch home w th plemy ol yard
space Imm acul ate I
Large deck tn back

Full basement wtth a fml shed room
Thts 1s a mus1 seeJ Call Patty Hays

for all lhe de1a1l s 446 3884

Best of bolh worlds town and --' "',try? Have
both' Close to town but wijh country lrvrng 3
bedrooms 1 1/2 baths, 2 car unallached
garage full basement, convenrent locatron
Beller see thrs one before rt rs gone #749

HARRISONVILLE New lrma
Upper evel otters 3 BR ? bat
I R DR Eat 1n k t wtap'&gt;
11
uea closers and deck w/~ hot
off tho master BR LOV¥"or tovel has
2 BR 1 Mth famrly room u!r 1ty
and 2 ca gat ago 10 acres
a pond 30 x 50 molal bu~dmg
wrth an oH1ce (1 4•20 Mated)

53 Ac:fRES

NEW LIMA RC

Hau sonv lie Thrs property olfots
a pond creek some meadows
some woods barn and a 3
bedroom Ira ter wrfh porch and
ca tpo n Fxcellent hunt ng or
bu d ng SltCS

MULTI-PURPOSE BUILDING
Many uses - Church Communrty ~:~~·
Storage Bldg Etc You decrde your "'
Located on Matn Hrghway and Reasonably
Prrced #712

Auctioneer David Boggs

L1censed and bonded tn the state of Ohro
Phone Number614 446 7750
Lrcense 4596
Cash or approved Checks
Nol responsrble for accrdenls or loss of property

PHONE OFFICE 446-7699
KENNETH AMS8ARY PH 245 5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM BROKER PH 446 9539

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
I

\

Apartments
for Rent

992 2218

41 o Houses for Rent

wv

~

Newly Remodeled Small 4 Room
Collage No Pets Porter Area
614 388-1100

2 Bedroom Tta1ler $250/Mo Plus
Deposit 614 44 6-4110

12x65 Conco rd 3 Bedrooms Gas
Heat New Carpet Excellent Co n
duon $7950 6144460175

1982 Wmdsor Mob le Home 4
Acres Approx 3 Bedrooms 2
Baths All Electnc Heat W1U Sell
On land Contract Move In tm
medrale y l 513 390 9856 614

410 Houses for Rent

Room FP CA Wi D Partly Fur
n1sned Rele rences Depos11
Rt218 614 256 1044

1 Acte 2 Beclroom Tra1ter Deck &amp;
Porch Se e To App 304 576
3288 Applegrove W VA

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Note: House and lot for sale by owner
(extra nice)

• Salary Plus Comm•ss•on
Full Heallh'Benefits
Valuable Trammg Provided

for Sale

9340

Not responstble for acctdents
or toss of property

Snap on u an ~quai opportunrty employ~

Watch for

Sunday,

_____

Sat. Sept. 23,

K......... Wl

Fam1ly and Fnends
Charles and Mora Walters w1ll
hold lhe" annual reumon on
Sept 24 1995 at
0 0 Mcintyre park
Lunch served at one o clock

Nice 8t1ck. Ranch 4 Bedrooms 2
3 be.:lroom house m Bradbury 2 Baths Frreplace In l A Full
bath above ground pool heat Basement Carpet &amp; Paned Fam1
pump appr o• 2 acres prrce to
ly &amp; Rec Room 3100 Sq Ft L1v1ng
S&amp;lt 614 992-6190
Space 2 Cat Garage tnground
3 Bedrooms Bnck 1 112 Baths Pool W tth Deck BeautifUl Land
Full Basement Central A1r 1 1 16 scaped For Prtvacy Large Stor
Sunsvt Dr ve Gall pelts 614 446 age Bu ildmg 3 Acre Wooded lot
Near Green Etem School Prrce
1626
Rub &amp; Scrub Cleaning Servtce
Reduc&amp;d $,25 000 3616 St Rt
dustmg moppmg wmdows and 3 Be&lt;!tooms State Route 141 10 141 6 14 446 1025
more Complete servtce Ot touch Mi les Ou! Galltpohs 24 x 32 Ga
ups References on request call rage New Hear Pump &amp; Furnace Property for sale secluded 110
Terry at6U 992 4 23 2 or 6 14 In Ground Pool New Satelllle acres w th pano ram •c v ew rn
992 4451
01sh Ga Ira County Local School Northup area log home wrth
three !teld stone I replaces
Sun Va l ey Nursery School Dtstr ct 6t4 379-2410 Alte r 5
$16 7 500 call 614 992 3267 alter
Ohtldcare M F 6am 5 30pm Ages ~P:.OM"7-:------- 7pm tor appo ntment
2 K Young Schoo l Age Durmg Duple" Apa rtment And Trarler
Summer 3 Days per Week Mtnt Wtth Pa~Jed Dnveways A nd ll2 Ou1e1 countr y home two bed
~mu:.:m:..:..:6.:.14:..:4,_48:.:..::36::5:..:7---- - - -1Base me m C a 11 6 1 4 2 56 1 59 1 rooms and bath basemenr gas
well and fu rnace satellite d1sh 38
Wanted To Buy Junk Auto 6 ;30_4_6_7_5_25_79
_________ acres
call 614 985 4243
Any Condtt!on 614 388 9062 Or Fo sate by owner 3 br home 3
:6:..:&gt;4.:.44-:::-6:..:P:..:~R:..:T::___: - : - -I ourburld1ngs prrme comDl land Three bedroom home tn country
Wh tes H II Rd Rutland one ba!h
Will C lean Houses Or Qtf rc es owner mo\Jing must sell call 614
Weekly Or One Time References _9:-92_630
__0_ _ _ _ _ _ __ n ground pool 614-992 5067
Ava~lable 614 441 0870
·
320 Mobile Homes
:;::::::=.:.:..:~.:..::::.:
1 House tor sale 3 actes g room 2

Public Auction

each workmg

310 Homes for Sale

Proi&amp;SSIOn&amp;l Tree Servrce Com
pla te Tree Care Bucket Truck
Servtce 50 Ft Reach Stump Re
moval
Free Estimates! In
surance 24 H r Emergency Setv
1ce Call And Savel No Tree Too
Btg O r Too Small I 8 1dwell Oh10
614 388 9643 614 367 7010

Laborers To ln s1a 1 Telev stan haul your logs to the mrlf rust cal
Cable Out Of Town 614 256 1_30
__4_6_75:..:1:..:9.:.57________
1~
6153Aiter5PM

11 0

Pomeroy • Middleport • Ga

31 0 Homes for Sale

992 7287

Harrsty rsl Day &amp; Evenrng Hours
614 446 9496 l ues Sat 8 5 For

--- REAL ESTATE

180 Wanted To Do

Help Wanted

New !aktng appl cat1ons lor del v
ery dr ver neat appearance
lr endly relrabte rnsured vehocJe
and ~nowledge of Racme Syra
cuse and M nersvlle. area All a
must Contat:l O&amp;M P1zza 614

Glass Installer Needed lmme
!llately Expertence ReQu ir ed
Auto Commencal Compe!lt ve
Wages Send Reptres To CL A
357 clo GallrpcliS Da1ly Tr tbune
825 Tn rd Avenue Gatl1polls OH
45631

~unday, September 17, 1995

Sell lhe moSI respeclcd products '" lhe tool and eqUipmenl '
market from your mobtle showroom van

X-Ray Technologist

everyone!

Near Vtnton

2 Lots rn Ohto Valley
Memory Gardens Veterans
Sectron spaces 3 &amp; 4
$400 for both
446 0581

Auto, ruck
Tractor
A1r Cond1t1on1ng
Service

CUSTOM MADE DRAPES
• Custom Drapes • Fabrrc
Selectron • Vertrcals •
Shades • Blrnds • Sheers •
Bed Spreads
Wallcoverrng wrth
Matchrng Fabrrcs
Total Decoratrng Shop
614 286 6298

Help Wanted

Ex per encEl'd Screen Pr nter
Waned
lmmed ate Posrt on
Serous Cal s Only 614 446 2388
Asl&lt;. For Chns

Fr day S,llturday Sunda y bunk
beds mrsc furniture m1sc kn ck
knacks Route 143 d 5 m les from
Ha sonvte

Yard Sale

AKC 4 Ye ar ')ld Female Rott
We l e Spade 614 256 6887
614 256 6209

Do you have room n yo ur heart AKC Reg stcred G1ant Schnauze
and home for a needy ch td? Be
Black Yqar Old 614 4116 7537
come a Profess onal Treatmen t
Parent !Jna JOin our tean Fre e
Champagne be ge Sh h Tzu
tram ng 24 hour support com
g oomed sho s neu e ed 304
pet t ve reimbursemen t and the
6 75 4650
cpportumly to make a d tference
rn the hie of a ch1ld Want 10 l&lt;.now Co re Typ e PUppy
51 o s
more? Call Pt Pleasant AYC Worm ed F ee fo Good Home
FAMILY RESOURCE CENTER at 614 ~' 9389
304 675 1324 or 1 800 835 5277

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Three Barred Rock And Th ee
Wr. te Rock Young Roos ers
6 4 256 1399

60

1 PartTmaActNtlesPoSittOn

damaged some pumpkin biOSSOffiS es Anttque s Etc Also Appraisal Earn 18 $15 /Hr AI Work Home
befOre they COUld be pollinated
Available 614 379 2720
0 JSCOuntsl No Inventor y Or Door
Door lnd /Rep 1 000 742 4738
- Bees, dunng extremely hOI c ean la~e Model Cars Or
th
b
f
Trucks 1987 Mod els Or Newer AVON EARN US at home at
wea er, were USy anmng hlYCS Sm1th Bud: Pont1ac 1900 East work AU areas 304 882 2645 1
to keep them cool mstcad of polh- ern Avenue Gat1po •s
ooo 992 6356 tNOtREP

U se d furnl!ure ant1quas one
prece o r complete es!a!e s Osby
Mart n 6149927441

I Am Look ng Forward To Tne
Dey We Can Meet Hope Fot The

1 FuttTmeActvutesPoSitOn

of the problems were
311 Buci&lt;r~~&gt;ge Road
Bldwall Ohto 45614
- A wet spnng threw off !be
planung schedule for some pump-9__
o...,...,w_a.,.,n_t_e.,.d_t_,o...,...B.,u:..y_ •voN , All A&lt;eas , Sh'"•Y
kins
:::
Ccmplete Household Or Estatest I1..S:::po="'.:'_:3::04:.:::67:.:5_;&gt;_::42&lt;1::.:..,_.,-,.-- Ram, and someumes, heal Any Type 01 FurMure Applanc
AVON CHRISTMAS SALES

Top Pnces Pa1d Old US Cor n5
5 11 \tle( Gold 0 amonds AI 0 d
Collec ti bles Paperwe1ghts Etc
M T S Corn Shop 151 Seconc
Avenue Gallrpols 614 446 2842

4 Border I ne Coli e pupp es 7NM.s
0 0 304 1375 6204

Help wanted

Wedemeyer s AiJCt10n Serv ce
Galhpohs, Ot'110 614 379 2720

Land Sac res or more 304 562
4198

Personals

Sunday, September 17, 1995.

ALZEIHMERS UNIT

Junk cars or tNI I prck up g veawa~
cars 614 992 6069 anyt me

005

WV

Execu1 ve
type
mtles from Parkorsourg
from Pomoroy on SR 7
of pnvacy 4 DR 2 112 baths
w1fp F R wlfp DR OR! rn k 1
gar stg bdgs pool many
amenrl es Make Us An

PRICE REDUCED $8 5001
Syracuse lovel~ oldet home
located on a co nQr w 11h 3 1011
N ce pat o oil k t and big shady
trent po ch Eat f1 krt w/app 3
BR 1 112 baths gorgeous ba't'
w ndoW m LR FA or OR bs.mt
s1g bldg ONL V $38 000

�Page 06 • $uttllaa ~unta-$uttuul

Pomeroy • Mtddleport • Galhpohs, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV

"s544to~M~Is~ce~l~la~n;e~ou~s~-F~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~
Merchandise

540

1995 Ranch K ng A dmg Lawn
Mower W1th Match ng Wagon
$700 1970 Chevy Nova $ 1 000

614 367 7901

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

8 129 SR7N Cheshl e
Guns tools toys g assware
msc 614-367 7106

Car scat $50 st oiler $25 walke
$ 15 mlant earr et $10 playpen
S10 Pr ces nego1 able 3011 675
2980 afte Spm

$125 614

Co leman Gas Furnace 56 000
BTU s $200 OBO Tra e Frame
12x65 Feet $100 080 6 14
256 1092

ece set of wh re T Fat
coo kwa e new st I n bo ~ new
k ng s 2e crantle ry qu lted bed
sp ead tw n s ze wh te and goh'l
Fr ench Prov nc at bed w th mat
tress bo • sp ngs and frame sot
1d pjne tr pte dres se w th 1gh ed
hutch on top mauve col ored sw
ve roc ker m nt g een w ng back
cha blue fl owere d Broyh I e utl
char fo ur ptec e oak 11 ng room
su te 25 Mao nav ox TV s x
drawer dresse 61 4 985-3595

92% Furnaces 100 000 BTU
$1 250 Installed 1 800 287 6308
614 44t! 6308 Duct Systems And
A Cone! 1one s Fee Esamares

540

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

R£tpa red New &amp; Rebu In Stoclo.
Ca I Ron Evans 1 BOO 5.37 9528
L'8wn Ch el Ad ng Lawn Mower
36 Cut 11 HP Far Cond Call
Ralph 0 le 614 38B 8472

570

Pets for Sate

560

Pets for Sale

Groom Shop Pet G oom ng Fea
tur rg H~dro Bath JJf e Webb
Ca!llit4 446 0231

SUNOUEST WOLrF
TANNING BEDS
Commcrc at Home Un ts F om
$199 00 Buy Facto y D rectA a
SAVE Cal TODAY F-o NEW
~RH: Coo Ca a1og
180011629 91

2 AKC Regs e ed Boston Te
es 20mos od mae &amp; femae no1
rei a ed $1 75ca 304 675 2074

Beagle Pupp n 1 Ma le 2 Fe
malas Had 1st ShQtS And
Wormed Mother 8. Father Can Be
Seen S75 Each 614 446 9564
B rds Iguanas Tarantulas m ce
F sh Tan-. &amp; Pet Shop 2413
Jackson A11e Pont Peasant
304 675 2063

Peavey JI:R 100C m le 7 m.cs 2
Peavey 112 PS Speake s
Pea
vey PV m c 2 JVC TOW 03
casset es dua decks cable
used ve y It e e~ce en cond
ton$ 5001rm61498:r448;.~

Hu

570

446-1066
32 LOCUST STREET GAl LIPOLIS OH IO 4~631

NEWLY LISTED

2 story

h6me located n V nton lt
has been remodeled It ha s 3

NEW LISTING"' NEWLY WEDS lrrst
home located at 1737 112 Chatham Ave

Garage s1yle home 3 bedrooms 1 112 NEWLISTING"' S1 R1
baths

1 c a r garage

v nyl s d

ng

$34 900 00
WATSON ROAD
house

160

'Vnton

R a nch 3 bedroo m all car p e t s m all tool

shed $49 900 00

8 dw ell 2 bed oom

slaner home $39 900 00
GREAT HUNTING LAND 20
acre s
$19 000 00
KEYSTONE RD VINTON AREA 5 acre
lois $5 500 each close lo lhousands ol
acres ol hunl ng land On ly 2 lefl Call
Ieday
54 ACRES mil n Morgan Twp Gall a C1y
Rural Water sept1c system 1o r tr a er
hookup

small butld ng on stta

Can b e

purchased on land conlracl $65 000 00
OWNER FINANCING

108 acres tn

Guyan Township mostly wooded Tobacco

Base $29 000 00

33

RACCOON CREEK

acres

SE E TH IS NOW" PR CEO
RIGHT #101

PORTER AREA

2 ACRES PLUS

S ect anal h o m e tn very good cond111on

LR 17 x 30 cathedra ce ling M B R

has

tub and show er s eparate double s nks
kttche n features c ounter top range
d o ubl e o ve n and r ef 19 c o vered p at as

$72 000 00

Coch n 8 ahma Cross C h ckens
One Ro osre F1ve Hens Plus
Seven Young Ones $20 1 Pr Ar
aucanas $6 1 P Black Suma

'""·:.::•..:S:6:..:'::'::
'.:.2::
56::..:;
13
:•;::•:._____
-

640

s e ed Quarter Ho se Ge ld

Seven month old purebred S m
mental bull 614 949 2822

t 99 4 Ho nda C v c EX Coupe

S1 S2 Round bales Auto A r Loaded 17 500 M les
l15ea 304 675 3960
Cam Red Ask ng $13 850 61 4

b ed oom s an d a garage
Located on Ro ute 7 n the
Ga l p o t s C ty
Sc h oo l

Postt1oned on 3 112 acre s
more or le ss It ha s 2
garages
a
carport

OPPORTUNITY
2 homes
located n downto wn
nton
Lve 1n o ne and ent the

v

446 8910

TRANSPORTATION

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME
CHAROLAIS LAKE DRIVE

n the ng o und poo l a t th s
beau t lui 4 b edroomt,..i~;] h
home ~a~.a~tMce
po et!
p r vac y

lone!!' ON T MISS OU T ON
THIS EXCELL ENT DEAL
CALL
TODAY

.,, 2
VACANT LAND
Approx
7 3 acre s n Green Twp Crty

workshop shed and a 2 olher $75 000 CALL TO water ava Iable
room couag e YOU MUST SE E
#114
RIGHT
SEE THIS ON E' #1504
#2002
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800 894-1066

(

·-~­

60x 153 m I live on o ne and rent the other
curr ent cas h flow s $200 per month

S1orage bu ld ng Pr ce $21 900 00

OPPORTUNTY

451 LINCOLN STREET' 2 Slory alum srded home
lrv ng room drnrng room wrlh burlltn ch na/bulfe1
krlchen den 2 balh s cenlral arr &amp; morel
#758

131 Oak Dr ve Approx 1892
sq IT home n good condrt on
N ce oak k tchen 3 BA s 2
bath s full b asement plu s
lov o y deck &amp; pat o $98 500
f 211

245 9697

PRICEI

HUNTERS PARADISE• Owner
really wants to sell Modern
home bultt 1978 This has
been a small farm Borders
Wayne Notronal Forest Pr ced
has bee:n reduced SlOOOOOO
M9ke us an offer #710
229 Carm an Onve
Grand
co lo n at oilers 3 BA s 2
bath s formal DR and 2 car
garage Deck $119 500 #510

~l

!'
I ,
~

UPPE Rl Newer 3 bedroom 2
bath home Over 9 acres; lot
pa r1 ally wooded $1 a 000 00
#781
WHAT A SUPER PIECE OF
LAND Great v ew comas Wllh
th !I 29 acres of land Just a
few miles of Gallipolis corp
I m ts Terr I c place to build
Land has already been
surveyed An ex cellent pEnce
of land to dtv de nto lots Call
1oday
M794

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

BASEMENT
WATERPAOOFNG
Uneondu onat I let me guarantee

1990 Dodge Ram Van 8 250
72 000 M les $6 000 Can B e
Seen At Gall po s Da lyo li bune
825 Th rd Avenue Gall po s
OhiO

17 1 2tt MFG 140hp 10 w th fu ll
cove s &amp; tra ler open t&gt;o w good
cond 1 on asM nQ $$.000 080
304 88 2 2326 after Spm
{

1992 Tracker~ ~ ~~ 24 000 M les
614 446 3773 $7 500 00

1970 Troran 28 Ft Cab n Cruser
260 HP Chevy Engme &amp; Tra le
$2000 080 6 14 379 2220 Alter
6 RM

1993 Gee Tracker 4x4 Good
Cond non $6 900 19 76 Chev ~4
Ton 4x4 $ 1 600 6t4 446-6958

760

740

Motorcycles

92 Kawasak KX 250 excel ent
cond 1 on ready lo race o ts of
new pa ts $2000 614 992 3672
979 1000 Suzuk motorcycle for
sa e lot of new part uns excel
lent 6 14 992 6069 call anyt me

1987 Bu ck Somerset e11c work

Two 1979 Chevy Full S ze For
Sa e Or Trade For Gun s 6 14
368 0009

$1 500 080 3a4 682 2221

,

Qf'
~·

35 WEST AREA
Lovely Brrck Ranch 3 bed
rooms ltvtng roam com
plele krlchen wiappl ances
Lg laundry room 1 1/2
baths 2 car garage lol
106x 165 Ctly schools Only
one mtle from the hosprlal

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555
Lorena McDade

446 7729
Carolyn Wasch- 441·1007
Sonny Garnes 446 2707

PRICE SMASHED ALL THE
WAY TO $50 000 00 On 1hls
ranch style home N ce large
lawn E11tra ntce oversized two
garege garage H(\me has 3
bedrooms both Hv ng room
kllchen &amp; dmmg aree one car
car,Port OWNERS WANTED

~ ~1k4 VIRGINIA
SMITH BROKER
WILMA WILLIAMSON

roomier a bus ness of you
Bldg 46x96 Overhead
&amp; 1 acre m/1 Great
2 apts for rental 1 store
1 mob e home pad

Realty
GALLIPOLIS

SPECIAL $18 500 for a
&amp; clean mob le home 3
bedrooms 2 bathS k 1 &amp; LR buy
.&amp;_ build later as all the ut hUes are
'here located close to Hotze Lot
Js more than acre

~

-LENDER

~ 'EUNICE NIEHIA

Branch Off1ce

SOLD

YESTERDAY

We

suggest you make an offer
you might be surprized! #740

COMERC IAL SITE ON EASTERN AVENUE
CORNER LOT PLU S 2 ADJOINING LOTS 2
DWELLINGS PRESENTLY RENTED GREAT
LOCATION FOR BUSINESS

820

Appl ance Parts And Se v ce All
Name Brands Over 25 Years E~~:
peraence Aft Work Gua anteed
French C ty Maytag 614 446
7795

Freeman s He a ng A.nd Coo ng
l ns ta at on And Se 11 ce EPA
Cernfied P:es dent at Comme c a
6 4 256 1611

Campers &amp;

840

Plumbing &amp;
Heatmg

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT ASSURED DE ALER
LAWRE NCE ENTERPRISES
C&amp;C Gene al Home Man
tenence Pa nt ng v n~l s d ng
carpentr y ooors windows baths
mobde home repa r and more For
tree esllmate cal Che r 614 992

Hear Pumps A r Cond on ng II
You Don t Cal Us We Both Lose
Free Est ma es 1 800 287 6308
6 ~ 446 6308 wv 002945

6323

DRYWALL
Hang f n sh repa r
Ce I ngs textur ed pl aste repa r
Catl Tom 304.675 4185 20 years
ekpenooce

your
Walch lhe ba ll games
back ya rd No after game traffic to
deal w lh Plus your chrldren can
wa lk 10 school Very nrce o lder 2
slory lg lamoly room wilots of glass
and beamed calhera
3 lo
4 bedrooms Ktlchen w/ ~~iflll~~~~~~

OFFICE SPACE
For sale excel len I condo 1
Lois of parkong space 4
es wa1hng room slatf roLmqre,l
Large bacl&lt; decks cenlral
one car garage

Execut1ve Home 4 m1 from Holzer Hospital
SR 160 F1ve bedroom 3 bath great room
w/cathedral ce1ling &amp; fireplace spa &amp; plant
room formal dmtng room huge country
kttchen 3 000+ sp It Quality home sol1d
;vood cabmets tnm doors Equ1pped
wl central vacuum system heat pump pool
Overstzed 2 car garage PRIVATE RETREAT
super v1ew mcely landscaped wooded on 2
s1des overlooks SR 1..60 and stocked pond
$259 000 Senous mqwnes only
Call614 446 6189 or 614 388 1803

35W.LEX
U!ed rooms
each un rl
rage

OFFICE 992-2886

2 un rts

rldtng srles Call

388-8826

2116-0036
446-1897

Shern L Hart

446-3864

Kathleen M Cleland 992 6191

742 2357

Office .....................

11046 Located 1154 &amp; 1154 112
2nd Ave 2 1'1omes Very n ce 3
bedroom bath kit &amp; LA &amp; DR full
basemenl 2 car garage Also a 2
bedroom comfortable cottage to
rent New kit carpel w ndows
Call for ful nformal on

1849 A TOUCH OF CLASS The

.f964 OUTSTANDING 5 acres
track bu ld your masterp ece on
one of the last lOIS 1n Lak ev ew
est 5 acres $33 000 2 348 acres
$25 900 4 lots on Wh te Roj
Sub1ect to estr ct ve covenants

1873

992 2259

remarkable spao ous hom a w th
v ew of the county Italian t le foyer
catl'1edral ce hng w th ba cony 3
BA 2 1/2 baths 1vmg room w th
wood burmng firep ace equ p
k !chen breakfast room has a lg
w ndow stereo throughou t brass
1959- COMMERCIAL BUILDING l!ghl fixtu es and much more 2
n c ty 30x80 bock bld9 w/approx acres mfl
This house
s
3 900 sq ft 110 8 220 elect 16 ma ntenance tree of be st quatty
door $45 ooo VL Sm th 388 8826 Make your appo1n1menr and see f
or 446 6806
you don agree

1964 LOTS AVAILABLE n a
l'le gl'1borttood w 11'1 CLASS Buy 5
acres more or less for $29 900 or
2 1/2 m/1 acres for $15 900 or
corner lots for $, 8 900 Lakevtew
Estate has only 2 chO ce lOts 5 Ac
for $33 000 and 2 348 acres
25 90P Rest net ve covenants
apply to protect your nvestment

11020 COUNTRY CHARMER

11022 ENJOY A WONDERFUL
All BRICK RANCH 2 BAs
great hOme very neat k !chen
ut1hty rm extra storage rm 2 car
anached garage Also a rental
home w/garage Just r ghtlor the
mothe n taw

grapes

$69 500 00

REDUCED

1874- CHESHIRE 3 bedroom
ranch 2 fireplaces full basement
AI comlol'tabte llv ng room 2 car
ga age Rental home also 3 Acr
mfl $70 ooo
EXECUTIVE HOME W th a b t of
woodtana Huge 4 bedroom 2
story wth 2 t /2 bal M forma 11vng
room &amp; dnng roorn 15 x 23
lam ly Lo ads of cab nets n an
equ pped ki!CI'1en w th breakfast
nook large u1lry room seNes as
an off ce pan al basement heated
pool oom 31 x 53 wth lovel y 18
k 36 pool att ached garage 25 x
29 Home can be bought w th
small ac eage or at 115 ac m/1
The land Is beautiful roll ng &amp; treed
w lh 1 a Is throughQut
Owner
planted appro• 25 000 p ne trees
W dt fe Abundanl
Virg n a L
Sm lh 388 8826/446 6806

SR 7 TUPPERS PLAINS 1+ Acre Nrce
remode led 1 t/2 Story Frame Home 4
bedrooms 2 baths 2 car garage screened
porch Skylights Ce11tng 1ans N ce knchen
w1th dishwasher for those who love To Cook
TPC water Cable garden are a Woodburner
electnc B B hea t N ce clean home Excellent
Lo catron Make Appo ntment to See Th s II

MIDDL EPORT S 2nd Ave A very well marnlaoned 3
bedroo m home th at has alot of extra s You ve got to
lake a loo k at th 1s 2 st ory home W th 1t s open statrway
v ng roo m w th I epl ace and h ardwood floors

$69 000 00
App le G r ove Dorcas Ad Approx 6 acre s ol
y ard and a one s to ry r an c h With B rooms 1
o r more be droom s f3m ly ro om d ntng room
save k1tc h en Ar so a detached 2 c ar g arage

WOODS In Meigs Co w1th a 4 5
ready fo r bu ldlng on and 1'1 as a 2
b(tdroom tarm hOuse pond and a ught just $40 000 and has 1 1f2 bed room rental call W lma
acre
2
bedroom
ranch
w1th
large
tra1ter pad with sept1c system 103
rooms
al!res m all call W1lma ror a peek
11028 RENTALS FOR EXTRA
INCOME IN THIS 1 large 3
11034
50
ACRES
tor
pr
me
11012 GREAT PLACE FOR ALL
bedroo m home 1 duplex and a 2
pasture
tand
or
tor
l&gt;u
ld
ng
on
a
IN THE FAMILY: !hiS lovely 4
bed oom ranch a 1being rented at
bedroom ranch Is very roomy must to see call Wilma
the p esent t me
large rooms throughout w th
basement and 2 car garage m mce
lf1038 GREAT FOR COWS OR
neighborhood call W tma tor 11050 ONE OF THE NICEST HORSES you w I want tO see t1'11s
LOTS FOR BUILDING AROUND
ctetals
farm with 80 ac res pond 3
won 1 last so hurry and call W ma bedroo m ranch and 2 other homes
11017 ACREAGE FOR A NEW tor all1he deta Is
that are rentals for that ex tra
HOME 9 acres 1n all JUSt off
lrlCOme call W ma today
11030
LARGE
SPACIOUS
L1nco ln P ke and pnceoj at only
MOBILE
HOME
3
bedrooms
2
11 500 00
11 D41 Lots on the r 11er beaut ful
1\'o4s.. SECOND AVE Vacant lot baths on 3 acres n the A o Gran de homes be ng bu1h all around won t
area call Wilma for all nlo
48 X 148 $10 000
l ast so better hurry on thts one

n1ce lay1ng
112 bath 3
and a step
work shop

and aNached shed $80 000 00

AFFORDABLE Great location on Level lot
o n Oute t Street m Syracu se Feat unng th s
o ne owner 1970 12 x 60 Pa rkwood Mobtle
H ome Includes 2 bedroom s pati O b nds
appl ances ut l ty room outbu1ldmgs ca blo
hook up Pav ed Street Own er relocat ng ha s

REDUCED PR CE on th s Home lo

HERE s

A F XER UPPE R'

woodwork larg e room s w th h ard w oo d
fl oor s N G furnace an d large b a th w th
unrqu o cla w lo ot tu b Ju s t a l e w ol tho
assets olth s 2 story h ome loca ted on Eas t
Ma n St Pom eroy Has Beaut ful V e w o f the
Oh a R1vc r
outbu.ld ng and garago

$1 5 000 00 Come Check Th s One Out'

P ome roy l aur el St A 2 s tory hom e w th 6 rooms Three
to four b edro om s large lot 3 porc hes newer Wlrlng
altrc f an some n e w er w ndows Just $20 000 00
Sa le m Cent er Co Rd I A ttl a over I 0 acres of really
be au trfu l la y n g cf ea ed la nd all ttll able or cou ld be
p astur e and a tw o sto ry home wnh 4 rooms and a bath
down a nd 4 rooms up A 2 car g arage and two other

ouobu ld ngs $46 900 00
R•c ne Apple Gro'e Dorcas Rd A 1993 Skylr ne 14 x
70 mobrle hom e w th 3 bedroom and 2 balhs Very
eHc ent I v ng expen ses and mobile home ts 1n good
sh ape all Sitting on a h a lf acre lo t wtlh a , 2 x 16 storage

bu d ng
Po meroy M ulberry Ave A 3 bedr€1am Double Tratler on
a large lot Has a sh ngled rool a large I v1ng room air
co ndtt1oner new c a rpet and lot s o1 storage room Also
h as a bUtldtng for a ntce shop and lots of parktng space

r

$27 500 00

'

I

Syracu s e A large 112 Acre lot w1th a ranch style house
that has 3 bedrooms b1g hvlng room family room Sun
Room and 2 baths Has. a 3 car detached garage wtth a
One bedroom ap artment above Some fruit 1rees and

acres close to new I eeway
hOsp tal shopp ng clr Water gas
sewer M JO n ng P necrest Nurs ng
Home

M1Cl09- BRICK RANCH ooateO In
3
bedrooms
LA
$eaullful 9 rm home w1th Addison
ttemlock Sid ng 4 bedrooms 3 wllovety carpet equ1pped k tchen
batl'1s 2 complete k tenens fam11y lull basement covered patiO
rtn LA w/fireptace lovely catpe! anached gara~;~e 2 car bam 11044 NEW LISTING Hurry and
build ng 3{4 ac mfl
lake a look at th s Immaculate
t~roughout Wrap a round deck
1986 dou ble w de on a lou ndaiiOn
Only 3 years old 5 112 acres mil
Th1S beau! ful hOme has 3
'fh s s superb country I v ng Cal 11027 58 &amp; 62 OLIVE ST
Come of 3rd G eat commerc1al bedroo m~ 2 lull baths LA DR
tOr more 1nformat on 8 show ng
f
budd!ngs Can be sold separate k tc hen w/new carpel self clean ng
oven refr~g &amp; d shwasher U llty
Ca for mfbrmahon
11036 15 Evan s He ghts
room wtnew v ny! floor Lo1s ol
O:onven en! comfo rtable and
c:tose to town Full basement 11048 NEW LISTING Shoat Ck closet space 2 ca garage w th
Crown C tyi ATIENT ON sto age
She d
ojDg kenne
above ground pool (opt anal) Rd
Garage Apt or workshOp Nice HUNTERS! 4 BR 1 bath ranch covered dec ~ 1/2 acre mil Cal
nome wth 12 acres m/1 Natura PaMy 446 3884
large lOt all for only $58 000
sprmg wate r ava tab le 2 000
&amp;1004
R o Grande corner ot gallon s1stern 2 po ches smal NEW USTING
lresh on t~e
meta bu ld ng &amp; equ pment Cal mart&lt;e1 th s 3 bedroom double
~ n ed commerc1a1 3 oH1ce rms
Pany
Hays
446
3884
for
details
storage rm UNDERGROUND
wide wth 2 car garage and 13 1/2
acres call W tma
1'JINKS HAVE BEEN REMOVED
11015 STOP LOOKING THIS IS
$60 000
THE HOME YOU WILL BE ROONEY VILLAGE 3 bedr oom
11052 QUALIT"f ALL BRICK PROUD TO OWNI BEAUTIFUL with arge lenced n !lack yard
F(ANCH Over looking the Oh o NEW BRICK RANCH Cathedra great for the smat k1ds or pels
River Lois of w ndOws m the great ce hng 3 bedrooms 2 ful l&gt;alhs
r&amp;am for a v1ew 3 4 bedrooms 3 gas he at central mr Ia ge k tchen M1035 VInton Ave (Agent
1011 baths kitchen with cherry w th lots of cab nets sp ac e Owned Oamels) 2 BA home n
disposal wa lk n
c ~b l net5 full ba5ements 2 car d shwasher
town Recently remodeled New
garage Heavy 1nsuta11on Let me closet 2 car garage 26 )( 48 carpe t upsta rs Own h s hOme
build
ng
wflarge
workshOp
area
g!ve you tl'1e KEY
TO
cl'1eaper than you could rent I
t-fl'PPINESS ThiS
s very 1 063 ac m!! Cem en1 dnveway Good qu et neighborhood Prrced
Buy
this
beaut
ful
home
today
and
dfl ghlful dwell ng Call V rg ma
1o set at $43 000
move n tom o row Close to
316 6826
hosp ital and new f re eway
1)049 NEW LISTING 2 S Reduced Don t t5e sorry later that 19Sl SPLIT LEVEL WITH
Mad son Ave 3 bedroom I tlat h you d an 1 grab 1h s one when you FANTASTIC VIEW th is b1 level
o" 2 tots Full basement Needs had th e cha nce Call Pany Ha ys w II g ve you a I the space you
446 3884 Let me show you lh s
~a: TLC Call PaMy Hays 446
need and a mce woOded lot close
beaut lui house
to town call W lma for lull dela1ts

1032 HIDDEN RETREAT

Henry E Cleland Jr 992-2259

446-680t!S

LYNDA FRALEY

23 Locusl Sl PATRICIA HAYS
Gallipolis Ohro
45631

11021
REMARKABLY
SPACIOUS
4{5
BA home
des1gned for p est g ous 11v ng
Great room w/cathedrat CBII!ng
and wood burn1ng fireplace plat
rm k tchen hasJmany cab nets Bo
an 1stancl work area break fast
nook overlooks a pond formal
din ng rm 6 ac mil ca I Vlrg nla
368 6826

Just a great neat &amp; clean place for
a family Oak cabinets rn the k t
roange rerr g OW wh te carpet n
t.R Garden Tub &amp; shower bath
~4x24 detached garage Above
ground pool 2 AC mfl

LOOK AT THE NEW LOW PRICEr OWNER HAS
JUST REDUCED THE PRICE ON THIS 3 TO 4
BEDROOM HOME TO $29 000 LOTS OF LIVING
SPACE
2
BATHS
FENCED
BACK
YAF.!D LOCATED IN THE CITY

LAND FOR SALE ON ROUTE 160 BUSINESS AND
RESIDENTIAL SITES CALL SOON WHILE THIS
PROPERTY IS STILL AVAILABLE JUST LISTEDt

0488 Rogers Waterprool ng Es
rabl shed 975

PROFESSIONALSERVICE
IAAKESTHE DIFFERENCE

•
11011 FARM WITH LOTS OF 11018 Happmess s ownmg your t995 NICE COMMERCIAL LOT
own home and th s one Is priced
18 000 00 Approximately 14 55
acres more or less Cell for
comp ete 1 srmg 1791

New gas 1anks one to n tJuc-.
whee s rnd a tors lloo ma s etc
0 &amp; R Auto R pley WV 304 372
3933 0 I 800 273 9329

Root ng and gutters com ne c at
and resaenral mno epa s 35
years ex per ence 8&amp;B ROOF
lNG 614 992 5041

I

ff'f .,;
\:::1~

RIO GRANDE country
3 bedroom 2 bath 2 car
garag1e large barn 2 small
OuilraonrlS all on 17 acres m the c1ty
dlstr ct Don t wet cart

FARM FOR SALE OVER 300 ACRES
LOTS OF TILLAB LE ACREAGE SOME WCio[iEO
AREAS 3BARNS 3BEDROOM HOME ACREAGE
LIKE THIS IS HARD TO FIND BETTER CALL
SOON I NEW ON THE MARKET

Local ref erences fu r n shed Call

1614) 446 0670 Or 16141 237

Electr c Ho1s Incase d In Bumper
For Van Or P ck Up 61 4 367
0240 Be tween 10 AM &amp; 1 PM

790

•

OWNER WILL DO SOME
FINANCING ON THIS TRACT
OF LANDI OWNER ASKING

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

986 Hond a CR250 never aced
Motor Homes
exc cond S1 600 1993 Vam ah a
Wa r or 350
dden very
tle
1972 Prowl er Camper 22 F !
exc ccnd $2 800 30 4 675- 5815
$2 500 614 379 2220 Aft er 6

656

*

LOW MAINTENANCE BR ICK RANCH ON LARGE
LOT NEAR CITY 3 BEDROOMS NICE KITCHEN
DINING AREA OPEN S ONTO COVERED REAR
DECK BEAUTIFUL FRONT PORCH PARTIALLY
FINISHED BASEMENT
HAS
FAMILY
ROOM SNACK AREA FOURTH BEDROOM GAS
FURNACE CENTRAL
AIR COND ATTACHED
GARAGE PLUS
S EPARATE
GARAGE/
WORKSHOP ACRE
LAWN SHOWN
BY
APPOINTMENT ONLY

LOOKING FOR A FIXER

1986 Jeep Cherokee •h4 Good
CondiT on low M tes 614 446
96e4

Home
Improvements

1989 Ford F 350 Ranger Lar at
480 eng ne au tomate c u1se 1 t
stee r ng a r cond1t1oner factoty
I at bed tee·se h tch dua l fue
tanks I fth whee hookup excel
len cond ton phone 614 698

Main Offrce 388 8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd
~ Brdwell Ohro 45614

COUNTRY! 3 Bedroom 2 batt'!
ranch home w th lots of oak
woodwork &amp; cust o m made
k1tcHen cabtnets
Walk m
close! off master bedroom
Additional bu1td ng could be
fmtshed mto an
&amp;
garage

A GOOD DEAL!
$34 000 Ranch w th 3 BRs
concrete drive 1 car carport
newer root and vinyl
replacement w ndows with n
approx
5 m nutes to
Gallipolis Lawn approx 46
aere #680

810

2615

-4 21 3

199 3 GMC Serr a 1 2ton VB
auto ac ps matc h ng f berglass
topp er low m reage exc cond
304 682 3202

446•6806

NEW LISTING!
SURROUNDED BY PURE

PRICE!
$63 ~00
Super
locetron 2847 SR 141 at
Centenary 4 bedrooms 2
baths paved dnve skylights
tn kitchen 1 car garage Large
front porch and tot approx 4
acres lawn #778

SERVICES

Ear l s Home Ma ntenance 11 nyt
s1d ng oof ng e~~:rer or pant ng
powe wash ng Free Est mates
614 992 4451 or 614 992-4232

1986 Ford 150 302 Automat c

'1 986 Dodge Ares K stat onwag
pn good t es no rust $650
~ 1984 Chevy Celebnty stabonwag
'On good work car $600 614
7-42 1400

~

245 0022
379 2651

LOWERED

A r 2 W1D Sho !bed 614 446

,.--)/
'--'P'U

INC.
74 2 3171

1994 Yamaha YZ250 6t-4 367
7539 After 3 PM

Worhl61 4 448 1400

Real Estate General

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101
414 Th rd Avenue
Pr ce
reduced to $49 500 ' B g
restorable home n town Lots
of potent at fo r the growmg
fam1ly 3 4 BA s 2 bat hs
Beautrlul open s ta1rway
Conven en1loca11on #50 1

Motor Auto Trans m sslon Good
Banety Good 16 5 T res On 8
•lug Wheels &amp; Cargo Cage 614
~87-,0240 Between 10 AM &amp; 1

COMERCIAL LISTING
1;L.•r110 apt bldg w/2 unrls also

Stop by or call for a quality homes in color
booklet for addttional hstmgs!

REALTY~

,

1986 Ch evy S 10 V 6 Auto
Good Cond to n Run s G eat
4 9 000 Or g1na l M les $2 500
61 4 379 28 54

&lt;•

WOW• SUPER LOCATION• ROCKSPRINGS ROADt
Wei m a ntamed ranc h home 3 bedrooms one car
auached garage plus addrlronal delached garage
N eal &amp; c ean ' Wr1h lh s localron lhos lrslrng won I last
long '
$57 500
#792
LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONDISER ONE OF
THESE
#1
4 507 acres m/1
$9000
#2
4 615 acres m/ 1
10 000
#3
4 702 acres mi l
9 000
#5
4 , 90 acres mt l
5 000
#7
6 , 48 acres mt l
6 000
II$
, 0 320 acres m /1
11 000
#9
7 253 acres mi l
7 000

446-

1975 26 Foot Hoi day Vacauon
Camper Good Shape Everytl'1 ng

Home
Improvements

386-ll353

1982 Olds Cutlass Au1omat1c
~er y Good Cond t on 2 Year Old
.Pant Job S1 500 614 379 2304
'6 14 379 9885

#746

3363

1992 Yamaha Banshee E~~:cellent
Cond ton S2 500 614 379 2561
Evenngs

Honda TRX 125 4 wheeler good
cond $ 1 200 oao 30 C. 576

home 3 bedroom s hv ng room d1mng room k !chen
c omple te w /relr gerator &amp; ra nge 30 x32 garage s1ti.Jaled at

Audrey F Canaday Broker

810

1986 Ford Bronco 6 Cyl nder Au
tomattc 4 WD $4 799 Johns
Auto Sales 614 446 4782

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION for 1hrs 1 1/2 story

25 LOCUST ST

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

790

1973 Fo d F 250 390 Automat c
Colo ra do Tru ck $3 500 61 4

1982 Ford G anada PS PB 6 Cy
&lt;4mder Auto 4 Door S900 080
'6 , 4 446-0208

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

1984 Chevy Blazer V 6 4:.,4
Auto Trans H ghest B dder Con
tact Harold Geo ge A1 Hotze,
Medea! C«tte 614 446 5347

Motorcycles

,PM

#776

Mary P Floyd 446

BIG BEND

1968 SS Camaro sharp $5 50 0
675 7453

304

•1976 Ford Van W th New Starter
New Exhaust Good 300 Cv In

PR CED

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS RETAIL STORES,
SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS

1965 W ly s 4x4 Very N ce
$2,850 614-256 1093

740

720 Trucks for Sale

• 1Q74 VW Bea tl es Excellent
,Condtion $2 750 614 256 10~

ca ll todayl

College Avenue

Vans &amp; 4-WDs

•

liD

1419
JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD
Add son Twp 386 acre f arm 3 ponds
tobacco base 44 x 100 barn w1th c oncrete
floors May cons der spll (578)

Autos for Sale

1974 Dodge Four Door $350
•1979 Plymou th W ndow Van
'$600 614 44&amp;9782

1 f!IIA&amp;.TO«'

TWO LOTS IN CHESHIRE Ohro lois are

730

~M

71 0

ST AT 124 RACINE Lo vel y 3 b ed room home w th
han de af1ed hardwood tloonng Detached 2 car garage wth
ov e rhead apanm e n t
C a ll to
see thts one

bedroom s and a garage NEW ON THE MARKET
and sky I ghts MUST SEE
PRICED R GHT' #113
Spend th ose coo l n1 9hrs by $172 000 #104
VACANT PROPERTY 21 8 a warm fireplace n th s
a cres more or less
t 1s lo vely 2 story home lt has 3 JUST LISTED Ta ke a sw m
located n Gall a and Jackson
county
bo r d e r n g
L1Hie
Raccoon Creek EJC ce llent
hunttng ground $ 250 per

L e t C heryl show thts one to you

__ , 1993 Mercury Topaz

Square bales

RUSSELLO WOOD, BROKER'(!!}
742 3171

1

1993 Ford Musrang 4 ely auto
b IQhl r ed almos t all opt10ns
25 000 m !es very good cond ron
S8 000 6 14 9924111evenngs.

Te al Green
Hay for sal e round bales Cruse A
AM /FM Cas sene
Goo d Cond r on
150Dibs $15 squa e bales A lalla Autom at c
$ 2/bale straw $ 1 50 bale Ed W S7 800 6 14 44 1-0235 A. f ter 5
Uanox 304 675 1487 call! om PM
12 2
.:.::._.:.::.__ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ ( I 994 F reb rd Lo aded New Con
dt on Pr ce $13200 6 1-4 446
021 9 61 4 446 31 11

Real Estate General

$25 000

Hay &amp; Grain

~..:...,.....:..:.::!...=...:.:.:.::.:._

47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD' Alumrnum s ded 1 112
story ho me hvtng room ktt c hen over s1zed detached
2 ca r garage FA eleclrrc furnace Addrlronal mobile
home hook up Must cal Ied ay for an appo nlmenlt
#558

located o n app o x 2 78
acres wrth s u~ room h ot 1Ub

0 S1roc1 PRICED TO SELL
acre CALL TODAY Reallor #m
Owned #2003
COZY MOBILE HOME
INVESTMENT

1 1/2 baths new furna c e w1th
a r Th s home w1ll make a great

2862

#797

more or less wnh c ounty
CALL TO
NEW USTING ApproJC mate y 3 water sa l e I te
12 m les hom Holz er Hosp ra SEE
$14 000 #1502
];{;;i ,' ·o"'··• ,,,i(\;1(@
Located n G een ow nsh p 1 s
s ruared on 1 12 acres mo e o
les s Exuavagan 3 bed oom 2 NEED
MORE BRAND NEW HOME Ta'
ba th anch home has a I replace BEDROOMS?? Th s one abateme nt Realto r O wned 3
bedroom 2 bath s Lo cat ed
and a 2 ca ga age Th s home
also has a Home B u~ e s has 4/ 5 b edroo m s 1 b ath
n the c ty $52 000 #109
loca ed on o ne acre COME
Wa rranry #1 15

199 1 For d Taurus SW Power
Every th ngl Seal s 8 Excellen t
Cond ton 614 446 3200 Arter
4 30 P. M

2 Year Old Angus Bufl 614 379

ng 19 Year'S Old 61 4 4461763
Alie 630PM

more

1989 Mercurv Grand Marqu1s V
8 Automat c Loaded Excellen!
Cond ton 73 000 M ~s $4 900
614 441 0 4 14

Livestock

Massey Fo o H &amp; othe s
S de s Equ pment Co Hender
son WV 304 675 7421 or r 800
277 3917

Cheryl Leml ey

Autos for Sale

t991 Dodge Sha dow 4 Door Au
to mat c AC AMt FM Casseue
Rear Spo ler 88 000 M les $3 800
080 614 256-6169

NEW LISTING! 33739 BUCK WILCOX ROAD
$55 000 00 ov er 3 1 acres &amp; a 1/2 slory fr ameibr ck 3
bed o om s 2 baths I v•ng roam famtly room &amp; so much

LOCATED IN
WALNUT
TOWNSHIP Mobile home
w1th 2 b edroom on one acre

mil $49 900 00

630

~eg

~~

Al le n C Wood Reallor/Broker 446 4523
Ken Morgan Realtor/Broker 446 0971
Jean ette Moore Realtor 256 1745
Trm Watson Realtor 446 2027
Patrrcra Ros s Realtor

R anch home loca t ed on B ulav1lle P ke 3
bedroom cen tr al a r two large butldmgs
o n prop erty Basement ca n b e ftntshed lor
a 4th room 10 m nute s fro m town 2 acres

Two b g salag wagons NH chop.
pe &amp; blower JD gt nder m xet all
n good st'lape Other larm eqwp
ment 1 sold m; canle Ed W Mat
IOJ:30~ 675 1487 call from 12 12

(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

LET US WORK FOR YOU 1
CALL US TODAY

lA c Call pull s 0~ 1&gt;63 1

REDUCED TO SALE

New 6 pull type brush hOQ $650
3 p h1ch potato plows S15 614
843 5216

0 scount farm tracto paIS or

[1J

o

1988 4 Do or Shad ow t1SI 000
Miles $1 200 1992 4 Door Ply
mout1'1 Sundance 70 DOD M tes
Automauc $5 000 OBO 6u
256--1539 6U 256-123.1

tmo

BIG -BEND REALTY, INC.

wL~O~~ T!E!~R1!V: H~~~c.

71

Sp ec at f all Feeder Call Sale
Thur sday Septembet 21 s1 AI 7
PM Came Accepted Sta
Ar
4 PM Wednesday Also Earl y
ConsfQnmem Or 60 Head OJ L m
ous n X Bred &amp; 15 Head 01
800 Pdrs Yea hng Cattle Con
s gned Fo r Th s Sale Th1s W
Be Are Orny N gh Fall Calf Sa el
Haul ng Ava1lable 61 • 592 2322
614 698-3531

MEIGS COUNTY

REALTORS:

NEW USTING""
Jone s
Road
Hunt ngton TWP 5 rooms 3 b ath s 1 car
anached garage New barn 30 Jt: 40 front
porch full length ol hou se 2 pond s
adjjoir1i11n£ 1housands ol hunt ng and

c

JO •so
Dozer ROP Wrench 6
way eu u e 8044 Plus 1800
Seres Road Tracker 1 ~76 l ow
M lage

1951 Case VAC w h 3 po n1
h tch 6ft mow ng mach ne 51!
blaoo s ngle bonom plow 3 lur ow
pow and Sh 3 pon t d s-. 304
882 2419

MUSICal
Instruments

Livestock

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

• ATHENS LIVESTOCK S• LES

4 Horses Fer Sate For lnlorma
tcn6! 4 388 8356

Real Estate General

Ill rck l urn llr kcr l'h om (611) 116 OOOH
Jw \1 t)( rt 1\ s&lt;:.oclatC' 411 ! Ill

r)

630

610 Farm Equipment

247

BLACKBURN REALTY
Jl1 Sc11 1

Conn trumpe~ e•c cond $350 1f
21i.ara d omond cluster r ng $250
304 675 5726

Bundy II AlTo Sax Very Good
Cond 1on 614 245 5820 AI ret 5
PM Days 614 44 6 4612 bt

Real Estate General

~

9655

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

AKC Ba sse 1 pupp es seven
w ee~s
o ld
rs1 shors aM
wo med $110 61116673856
FA Benedum
AKC Reg ste ed Chow Cno w
Pupp es 8o n 7 1S 95 Papers
st Sho s Wo med $250 Each
Pa on s On P el"'\eS s 6 4 245
0613

Conn Trumpet $100 614 388

3506

2 male b ac'- AKC Cocke p~.;ps
champ on b ood nes $ 150ea
304 937 2733

R91r 9e a to s Stove&gt;s Washe s
And Dr~e s A Recond ored
And Gauran!eed $ 00 And Up
WI1Delve 6146696441

Bundy II saxophone excellent
coM ton used verv li!tte S350
f rm 61' 7•2 2373

T umpetlor sale S250 614 742

Bundy I Alto Sax good cond
$500 304 675- 4 60

Hea\ly Duty Compute Desk W th
Top Shelves P nte Sto age A. nd
Keyboard Pul Ou S de D aw ers
Ex ce HentCond 1on $1 50 614
388 1803

Musical
Instruments

AKC Reg stered Coclter Span e

Puppes $ 50 6141 379 2728

TREADMILL Seas l esty e 8 0
5 HP Moto Auto lncl ne F
ness Montor Ore Yea Old n
Exce lent Cond on $350 Cat!
6 4 446 1537

Fr Q da rc 8 000 BTU A r CoM
1 oner 5 Montns Oto Ask ng
$225 19 Color TV W r Remo e
$140 614 446 0792 Alte S PM

560

Sept c Tank: Jet Aerat on Motors
New &amp; ~ebu l t Installed Call
Johns JoM 614 446 4782

JET

AERATION MOTORS

Building
Supplies

550

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gat on
Up ght Ron Fvans (nte pr ses
Jackson Ofllo 1 800 537 95.(8

Mov ng Sate Upho!sm eel loung
e 8 Ft Long Sola Tulted 011
Wh te 6 4 446 0809 Between 5
9 P M Only

_:.:..:._.:..:.__:.:..:._______ 1

E gl"il p

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

DD-;.;,.;;,!sl.w;;a~p;"SS;;h;;:op;-,:n~o;w:-;,;;;;-,,1 H• Ett&amp;c ency L P Or Nalu al Gas

4 New Goodyear Aad1al P2151
75R 16 MIS T1res 2 200M tes
E ectr c hosp tal bed S250 f m
6t • 44 1..0149 Aftet SPM
etectr c Ill char $325 1 m e:.cel
8pc Manna Srewart k ng s ze col lem cGnd 1on 304 773 5038
lee! on bedd ng mutt tlo al $75
Cab net ste eo works $50 304
675 5022

Concrete &amp; Plast c Sepne TanKs
300 Th u 2 000 Gallons Ron
Evans Enterpr ses Jackson OH
1 800 537 9528

540

Sunday, September 17, 1995

Sunday, September 17, 1995

CHECK IT OUTil 2 Slory Fram e Home w11h
I 1/ 2 bath s 3 bedrooms dtmng room famtly
roo m k tch e n full ba sement O uts de
woodburner (Very Eft c tent and econo m cal)
Appro x 4 75 A cres full o f FR EE F re Wo od
TPC water ne w 2 c ar carport c;cmc nl w alk
way a; nd p a t o Som e re model ng compe ted
wtl h n e wer roof wlf ng a n d p lum b ng
Garden ar ea a httfe TLC tht s coul d be a Real
y et a Cou n try
Beautyn Cl os e to town

Feel ng ASK ING $33 500 00

Owner

re toca t ng and Ready to Se ll
Thr s Hom e Has It Alii Lo cated 1n Pom eroy! ln
a good ne ghborhood on a paved S t ee t lt
has 3 5 bedrooms 2 bath s k !chen hvmg
room dlntng room and lam1ly room Ha s
olectn c 8 B and wood heat featu res a deck
patiO hreplac e applian ces 2 car garag e
wtth a workshop over top The Owner Re ally

Wanls To Sell And He Has REDUCED THE
PRICEII CALL FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT
TO SEE THIS ONE I
NEW LISTING

1 1/2 S1ory Frame Hom e

located on Salem Sl ~ sR 124 tn Rutland
Home conta ns 3 bedroom s storage area
Home ne ed s some repa r S tuat ed on large
level lot wrth Flowers and FrUit Trees

ASK ING $20 500 MAKE AN OFFER"

'

MAKE AN OFFER

S1ory and Hal l Hom e

Loc ated n Ra ctn c
3 to
Country Ch arm lntcnor Ia ge
fr ont c rcutar se t! ng P.orch
an d garden sp ace Could

5 b ed rooms
ea r n K tchen
g arage shod
be a Cla .. s c

Home ASKIN G $30 000 00 OWN ER
WANTS TO SEL L'
NEW L MA ROAD RUTLAND

Cuw 0 dr.r

I 1/2 Storv H omo w th 0 nale w oodwork
Ha rdwood Car pet Floonng Wood burn ng
F rc Place Cen t~al A rfHeat Pump 7 rooms
4 bedroom s appl anccs all c space n cc
level yard a nd garden area on rh s 2 9+
Acr es Al so rncludes a 1969 Holly Park

Mobile Home ASKING $36 900 DO CO ME
SEE THIS ONE
PEARL STR EET

MIDDLEPORT

1992

Modula r Home on Double Co rner Lot wtlh a
beau t ful V1ew ol the Oh a A ver I 6 Rooms
2 b a th s 3 bedrooms. Level lot Land scaped
New Lcnnc JC H P IC A N ce P ace AS KIN G

$61 900 00
LET US BE YOUR HOME TOWN
REAL ESTATE CONNECTIONIIt
LET US HOOK YOU UP TO A
BUYER/ SELLER TODAY"' WE
NEED LISTINGS' '

M dd e port 7th Ave A 2 s tory home With beautrful
h ardwoo d floors and f an c y open woodwork between
I v ng ro om and 1am11y r oom Fo ur rooms down statr s
and 3 b e droo m s and bath up sta rs $39 000 00
J ust out s de S yracu se on St at a Route 124 A 19 93
K entuck an Mobtl e home th at s we ll n sulated that h.as 1

112 bath s 2 Br
Ac

&amp; equrpped k 1chen Has approx 21

a 2 story b ar n o r s to rag e butld1ng nver v1ew and

may have some lrm ber $45 000 00
Mrddlepon

S Thrr d a 3 bedroom 1 1/2 balh 2 s1ory

homo w th lamr ly room p e w er sh 1ng le$ and f tre place
w tt h bu c k stove 1n s de

Rulland

New L ma Rd

A I 112 slory home wrlh 3

bedroom en closed ba c k por ch full basement al so a

log home 1h81 s not I n shed A large 101

$30 000 00

B eech St M1ddlep o t An a1fordable 3 bedroom ranch
ho me w1t h an equ pped k tc h en and he at pump Has
ch am I nk f enced back y a rd w lh B x 1 0 outb u1ldtng

$39 000 00
D ex ter
Have you always wanted t o m a nag e a httle
country st ore? W e have JUSt the one Approx 32 x 30

DOTTIE TURNER Braker ..............
992
BRENDA JEFFERS ..... .............. ............... ...... 992
JERRY SPRADLING
(304} 882
CHARMELE SPRADLING
(304} 882
OFFICE
992

5692
3056
3498
3498
2886

I

�•

Sunday, September 17, 1995

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

in energy waste and possible inter·
GALLIPOLIS - Rather than
waiting for cold weather to bit nal damage . Filters can be purchased at local hardware stores or
before discovering your furnace is
from a service representative.
in ill repair, Steve Yates of Yates
3) Visually inspect the blower
Heating and Cooling, Rio Grande,
compartment
.before each heating
recommends you lake steps now to
.
Usc
a
vacuum to remove
season
insure your borne' s beating system
any
dirt
or
dust,
which can result in
remain healthy this winter.
improP,er
performance
and low"Proper care of furnaces and
efficiency
operation.
beat pumps can keep a unit running
4) Check the area surrounding
efficiently throughout the winter
the
furnace for materials that could
and help avoid cosdy repairs," said
easily
bum. Remove boxes, lumYates. "Operating a furnace while
ber
,
rag
s, furniture, papers, etc .
dirty can result in an unnecessary
This
is
a
nrc !Iazard!
loss of efficiency and can damage
5)
Occasionally
check the chimthe system. Approximately· 38 milney
and
nue
pipe
connections
for
lion gas furnaces are currently
operating in U.S . homes and most tighmess. blockages or loose connections . If you think it needs
are only 66% efficient . It's not
uncommoo for utility bills on these clearoed or repaired. call your serJess effiCient systems to cost up to vice representative.
6) Set the •hermostat on
$730 annually. ConsUJllers generally don't realize they play a vital "HEAT" and move the selling
role in making sure their beating above room temperature. Listen to
systems operate at peak perfor- the furnace for any unusual sounds
mances to maximize borne comfort and call your service representative
if you suspect problems.
and money savings."
7) Check into low-cos~ prevenAlthough it's best if a qualifoed
service technician handles major tative maintenance agreements .
maintenance tasks on your furnace Most contractors, such as indepenor beat pump, Yates says there are dent Lennox dealerships, offer
a few procedures you can do at the some type of "planned service"
beginning of each beating season to agreements guaranteeing regularly
scheduled, year-round equipment
ensure a more comfortable winter.
·
I) BEFORE PERFORMING maintenarice.
"These agreements make sense
ANY MAINTENANCE. BE SURE
TO TIJRN OFF TilE POWER TO for homeowners who want to
TilE UNIT AND WAIT FOR THE ensure they receive priority service
should an emergency occur," said
BLOWER TO STOP.
Yates . "In essence, they're pur2) Always begin. each new heating season with a clean filter in the chasing piece of mind, while maximizing their equipment's perforfurnace and check filters monthly
mance, product life and energythroughout the winter. Dirty fillers
should be replaced or cleaned . efficiency. And that allows consumer to save money."
immediately to prevent equipment
from working harder, which results

HONORED • Carman
Mayo, a Gallia County native,

received .. Associate of the
Quarter'' award rrom National
City Bank of Columbus recent·
ly. Carman Is M graduate of
North GaiUa Hlgh School, Ohio
Stale University and an Ohio
Valley Bank 4-H scholar.

'

I

a

.

Computer makers.~~ntinued
, making them as user-friendly as
the Macintosh.
Pollee Prowl Cyberspace's Sleazy
Swamps
.
Federal agents seized at least a
dozen people in a lTusade against
child pornography lraiTicked via
on.line computer links. A two-year
probe of cyberspace smut transmit·
ted through America Online Inc.
and other services led to raids of
more than 120 homes and offices.
largely oo lhe East Coasl . America
Online, the nation's most popular
on-line service. with more than 3.5
million users, cooperaled in the
probe.
It was the second major crackdown on computer-assisted crime
in a week. Earlier, Secret Service
agents arrested at least six backers
via a sting operation to catch ' peddlers of stolen cellular telephone
codes who were trying to sell them
through a computer bulletin board.
No Yen to Play This Game:
Japanese Landlord Quits Rocke·
. feller Center
The most prestigious address in
America requires a lot of upkeep.
That might sound obvious, but it

A sense of.

from D-1

only became clear to the owner
after years of heavy rental losses
and a four-month odyssey through
bankruptcy court.
Milsubishi Estate Co., a big
Japanese property company that
acquired 80 percenl of Manhaltan's
Rockefeller Center during Japan's
U.S. investment binge in the 1980s,
abruptly surrendered the keys to
the property's biggest creditor, ·
calling the price of keeping lhcm
too onerous.
The move by Mitsubishi partly
reflected the painful humility felt
by other big Japanese investors in
America, who have lost billions in
ill-fated ventures ranging from golf
cou!lics to lloll ywood studios.
It also incited a scramble among
big American investors with
designs on the An Deco array of 12
buildings, borne to Radio City
Music Hall, a world-famous skating rink. the Fashion Cafe and hundreds of shops and offices. The
main contenders were a troika led
by real estate magnate Sam Zell,
Walt Disney &amp; Co. and General
Electric Co.'s NBC broadcasting
subsidiary, vs . a group led by the
Goldman, Sachs &amp; Co. investment bank.

POMEROY • Obio Valley Publishi~t announces the addition of
Tom Hunter to its eaitorial staff.
Hunter will be a general assignment reporter for The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
Hunter, a Meigs County native,
is a 199 I graduate of Eastern High
School. He bas attended Ohio University, and Washington State
Community College.
Hunter was a contributing sports
reporter and photogmpher for the
Daily Sentinel and Sunday TimesSentinel from 1990-1994.1Iunter's
work has also appeared in the
Marietta Tunes.

Business briefs

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

Fun for the
~ -whole family!

IIAQUlCII.

HOLIDAY" POOLS. INC.

)UST fiititiVED
1987 GMC

1992

WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
oilseed production for 1995-96 is
expected to be 7. 7 percenl lower
than last year, according to a new
forecast by Agriculture Department
economists, who put this year's
total at 73.2 million tons.
The soybean crop forecast of
62.2 million tons is larger than last
year's crop, offsetting smaller
peanut and cottonseed crops.
Se;15on-average soybean prices
are $5.50 to $6.50 per bushel, the
same as lase month. And soybean
meal prices are unchanged at $165
to $195 per sbon ton. Soybean oil
prices also are the same at 24.5 to
29 cents per pound.

CINCINNATI (AP) An
appeals coun has scheduled a hearing Monday on an auempt by the
publisher of Business Week to
overturn a judge's order that forced
the magazine to pull an article on a
corporate legal baule.
U.S. Districl Judge John Feikens
barred Business Week from publishing information obtained from
sealed coun documents in a S195
million lawsuit by Procter &amp; Gamble Co. against Bankers Trust Co.
The magazine is challenging the
order on First Amendment
grounds.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The .
Agriculture Department says marketing allotments for domestic
sugar will not be necessary during
the first quarter of the next fiscal
year.
In declining to set allotments,
Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman said that both sugar producers
and consumers will benefit from
"the free now of U.S. sugar in the
domestic marketplace."

Hill attends conference
Hin bean! inspirational speaken;
and attended leadership workshops
that focused on working with people or different personalities and
sharpening interpersonal skills. Tbe
group also toured Buckhead Beef, a
Certified Angus Beef distributor,
and a Certified Angus Beef
licensed retail grocery store in the
Atlanta area.

BIDWELL -Sarah Hill, Bidwell, was one of 87 young Angus
enthusiasts who attended the third
annual LEAD (Leadelli Engaged in
Angus Development) Conference
held August 5-8 by the National
Junior Angus Association. Junior
Angus members from 31 states
were on hand for the four-day
event in Athens, Ga

This car has it
all. Leather
interior, pwr.
sunroof,
steering wheel,
touch controls,
Pwr. seats on
both sides.

everyone benefits in the end.
Congratulations, and keep up
the good work.
(Michael. Kaufman is a Farm
Service Agency trainee.)

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC.
133 Pine Street
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614-446-2532

6~5·2780

Point Pleasant
\

Rainfall
dampens
'95 river
festival
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
Tbe Middlepon River Festival
didn't come off as officials bad
planned Saturday, as bad weather
hampered the event for the second consecutive year.
A decision to cancel all of Sat·
urday's festival activi.ties carne
before noon Saturday, according
to Tom Dooley of the Middlepon
Community Association festival•
commiuee.
Tbe inclement weather did not
have the chance to affect everything, however, as the annual
queen' s contest was held indoors
QUEEN CROWNED - Crystal Holsinger, left, chosen the
at Dooley's home Saturday.
1995 Middleport River Festival queen, was crowned Saturday
Seven teenagers competing for
afternoon by JC}C}4's 'lueen, Melissa Dempsey.
the title of River Festival queen
were judged by out-of-town
daughter of Daphne Young of
runnerup. Fink, 16, is the daughjudges on poise and personality.
ter of Roger and Deborah
Chcster.
Crystal Holsinger was named the
Stacy Stewart, a Meigs High
Dingey, and Danny and Donna
1995 River Festival queen.
School junior, was named MISS
Fink.
Holsinger, a junior cosmetoloCongeniality. Stewart, 16, is the
Other participants were
gy student at Meigs High School,
daughter of Benny and Donna
Sammi Sisson, 17, daughter of
succeeds Eastern High School
, Spears, and Kelly Stewart.
Ernie and Joyce Sisson, Syrasenior Melissa Dempsey as
Anna Fink, a Meigs Higl)
cuse; Jeanie Newell, 17, daughter
queen. Holsinger, 16, is the · S'chool junior, was named first
of Elmer and Darlene Newell,

McARTHUR (AP) The
American Civil Liberties Union,
which recently asked Vinton County Commissioners to remove a
cross from the roof of the county
courthouse, is trying to identify
Ohio counties that have erected
monuments bearing the Ten Commandments on government property.
Before it sues, ACLU attorneys
write leiters urging officials to
remove offending religious symbols from public property.
The Vinton County cross and
other religious symbols violate the
First Amendment to the Constitu. tion. according to the ACLU,
which has a long list of court decisions to back it up.
The First Amendment prohibits
government from establishing a
religion.
"Unlike many countries, there's
no official religion in this country.

CHEVROLET

• GEO

•

OLDSMOBILE

STATES

POINT PLEASANT COOPERATIVE

I

Pomeroy
merchants
note work
on project

FESTIVAL COURT- The 1'}'}5 Middleport River Festival
queen's court Included, seated, Queen Crystal Holsinger, and
back, from left, Miss Congeniality Stacy Stewart and first run·
nerup Anna Fink.
Pomeroy; Crystal Barnett, 16,
daughter of Maria Walding,
Racine; and Rachell Davidson,
15, daughter of Nancy Pcnit,
Pomeroy.
·
Singer Kim Batey went on
with her show, as scheduled,
enterlaining lhose who stayed

lhrough the rain with a blend of
country music favorites.
Dooley said that there are no
plans to reschedule the I 995.
River Festival. P.lans for the 1996
festival are incomplete, with the
hope that good weatbcr will be
av'Jilable for next year's event.

parade to be held Thursday, Oct. 5.
The theme of the parade will be
"Days Gone By" and participants
are encouraged-to submit entries
depicting the time period between
1850.and 1960.
"Any old-time items and cos-

stemwbeelers 'were first made in
tumes can be entered," said Judy
the 1850s and phased out in I he
Williams, chairwoman of the
I 930s," she said. "They were actuchamber's tourism committee.
"Titink 'Roaring Twenties,' Victo- ally used through the I 950s. Thererian Era, the Fifties, pre- I 920s and ' fore we can allow anythin~ in lhe
parade (dating to) pre- 1960.'
pre-1900."
Williams said people wanting to
"Through research we found
enter the parade can call her at 992-

All religions are considered to be
equal," said Bill Sale.~. a staff attorney for the ACLU' s Ohio chapter.
Saks said the ACLU also is
looking into a sign on municipal
land in Wellsville, in southeastern
Ohio, that proclaims Je.~us Lord of
the town.
"I think Wellsville is worse,"
Saks said. "The cross is a symbol
of Cbistianity, 'but saying 'Jesus is
Lord' is a more explicit endorsement of Christianity.''
Vinton County Commissioners
initiillly indicated they would comply with the ACLU's request, but
officials now say they may fight it.
The cross, which sits on the
counhouse in McAnhur, about 60 ·
miles southeast of Columbus, is
believed to have been erected in the
early 1950s. Some say it honors
fallen soldiers; others maintain it is
a memorial to several prominent
1

5182 or 992-5866, or lhe chamber
office at 992-5005.
In the event of rain dale will be
Oct. 7 at 10 a.m.
One even! guaranteed to warm
up cool October days is the annual
Chili Cook Off. set for Oct. 7 s~m­
(Continued on Page 3)

The Pomeroy Merchants Association met recently to discuss the
ongoing downtown revitalization
project.
Dianna Lawson and Mike Stroth
reported that bids for the promenade project were to have beeen
received by Friday, Sept. 15.
Money is available for businesses
who have already completed their
projects.
The association also discussed
advertising for their group.
Todd Young, a representative
from Radio Concepts USA, discussed image advertising for small
communities. He expressed the ·
importance of music wilh jingles to
prQmote small communilie.,.
Kalhy Malcsick of WMPO has
worked with Young on two proposals for mdio advertising packages.
After their presentation, the associalien decided to have Association
President Jim Anderson contact
other members of the association
about their feelings on the proposals.
Bob Atwood of The Daily Sentinel also spoke to the group about
its advertising in conjunction will!
the upcoming Slcrnwhccl Weekend.
In other matters, Anderson
reported the association received a
thank-you note from the Meigs
Counly Chamber of Commerce for
·
its donation.
Anderson atso noted the success
of the three work sessions held to
re-mulch the area by the parking
lot. George Wright said there was a
need for one additional session to
complete the project.
(Continued on Page 3)

families:
During the commissioners'
meeting last week, about 200 people crowded into the cburthouse
lobby to protest removing the

cross.
Commissioner Joseph While
said the panel is looking al options
to keep the cross visible.
"We're looking at all the
options to see if I here's a way to
satisfy the ACLU and the religious
people of the counly and still keep
. lhe commissioners out of jail,"
While said.
.
He said he has contacted the
American Center for Law and Jus tice in Virginia, and an auorney
who is researching lhe issue .
"If there's no way we can keep
the cross up, then we'll take it
down," White said. "Bul if there is
a way to keep it, we will fighl for

it. •.

Manufacturer to open Mason County site .

RACK DEER BLOCKS ...................................s599

'

.

ginia.
"If you lose this battle, the state will start lo look like lhe rest of the
Kosunayer, who opposes both projects, was fired earlier this year after country and the reSI of the country is gelling uglier every day."
·
Gov. Gaston Caperton, and Sens. Robert C. Byrd and Jay Rockefeller,
BoU1 Mayes and McKinley said they do not believe Parsons &amp; Whineboth D-W .Va., complained about him .
more, parent company of Apple Grove Pulp and Paper, is anti-union as
"You are making the proponents of the pulp mill in West Virginia and some union officials in West Virginia believe.
in Washington very uncomfortable," Kostmayer said. "The temperature is
Mayes said when Ken GO&lt;Ward, Parsons &amp; Whittemore CEO, visited
getting too hot for them."
Mason County, he said he didn't care whether the people who built the
Kostmayer and other environmentalisls say the mill would release plant were union or non-union, as long as lhey knew what they were
dioxin into the Ohio River. State environmental officials say the mill doing. Mayes said he fell it was time to trust Parsons &amp; Whittemore to do
would be prohibited from doing so.
what they say they are going to do.
Kosunayer !old the small crowd, estimaled at more than I 00 people,
Mayes, a union carpenter, said be bas had liiUe work lhis year, earning
not to worry about the low turnout.
only $5,900 for two months' work.
"It wasn't a majority when the war in southeast Asia was stopped. It
Diane Bady, llirector of the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
\vasnUt a majority in the civil rightS movement. It wasn't a majority when (OVEC), sponsors of the fund-miser, said she doesn't think the pulp mill
women won the right to vote.• he said. "It was a small minority of hard- . is a long-lenn jobs solution.
1
working dedicaled Americans.
·

ACLU targeting more religious symbols

NU TWIST BARBED WIRE lSY, Gauge •••• S19

1519 Kanawha Street

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 coni&amp;
A Multimedia Inc. ·Nowopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 18, 1995

From AP, Starr Reports
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. -Opponents of. the Apple Grove pulp mill
staged a gathering in Riller Park Sunday called "Pulpstock '95," an event
intended to raise funds for their cause. What the proteSters did not count
on however, was protesters protesting their protest.
Confused yet?
Two Mason County men, Larry Mayes and Ben McKinley, out-ofwork union employees, parked their pickup truck outside the amphitheater
with signs inviting the pulp mill to Mason County and suggesting the outof-state environmentalists go borne.
Inside, a fonner Environmental Protection Agency official predicted
two major development projects in West Virginia will never be complet-

wheel Festival in Pomeroy, set for
Oct 5-7.
This year, in conjunction with
the event the Meigs County Cham·
ber of Commerce is promoting a

Local trade in
with RS
Package, tilt,
cruise, AM/FM
cassette, air
cond and
custom wheels.

. Low tonight In SOs, clear. but
fog early ln th~ morning .
Tuosday, sunny. Highs In tho
70..

Pro-mill backers protest 'Pulpstock' talk

Plans are underway for events as

99

.

Vol. 46, NO. 99
Copyright1995

part of the annual Big Bend Stem-

This little car is
showroom
condition with

•
Herb Smith

884807

Activities planned for annual Sternwheel Festival

-ON&amp;AUNOW-

~ SOUTHERN

Kicker:

'

;:.ontlnued from D-1

demonstrates community pride.
Everyone can contribute in
some way to the enhancement of
Gallia County. When neighbors
work together in cooperation for
the bettennent of the community,

PageS

"

N ANY SPA
WASHINGTON (AP) - Farm '
INSTOCIC..
LARGE
prices for rice should be higher this! .
2973 Piedmont Rd., HuntlngMn (3114' ';:S-4788 .
year than last, pushed up by fore-; ...
Mon.-Fri. 9:30-5 Sat. 9:30-2
casts for a smaller U.S. crop and i;o.·&lt;
record world import demand, the • · ··
Agriculture Department says. ·
. The U.S ~ rice crop this year is
expected to be about 8 percent
lower than last year. For the year
that began in August. the U.S. rice
crop is projected to be 5.9 million
.tons, milled.
World import demand is seen
Nice locally
growing by 16 percent this year to
owned truck with
a record 18.7 million tons, milled.
350 VB engine.
According to projections, the
Auto trans with
overdrive, air
largest buyers will be Indonesia,
condilioning. lilt,
2.2 million tons, and China, 2 mil·
cruise, and only
lion tOns. Thailand is expected to
60.658 miles.
be the world's largest exporter,
shipping 5.5 million tons, followed
by the United States, at 3.1 million
tons.
Nice little car
The 1995-96 season average
farm price range is projected to be
berween $6.75 and $7.75 per hunair mlnrlitinrlinn
dredweight, compared with last
power steering,
· season's $6.74.
AMIFM stereo.

NEW YORK (AP) - Officials
of Time Warner Inc. and Turner
Broadcasting System Inc. are hopeful they will be able to submit
Time Warner's proposal for buying
the cable network owner to their
boards early next week. .
.
Cable mogul John Malone, who
controls a big Turner . stake,
appeared to be satisfied with the
terms of the deal after two weeks ·
of tough negotiations aimed at get- ·
ling his support, sources close to
the deal said Friday.
They cautioned, however, that
nothing had been signed.

. 1089
Super Lotto:
5-13-19-34-36-41

Peter Kosbnayer, a fonner regional director for the agency, said citizen
pressure will (orce officials to scmp plans for a proposed pulp mill in
Mason County and the Corridor H highway in nonh-central West Vir-

~SIILAY

OVP news $taff

Pick 3:
260
Pick 4:

~

SPEf;l.lL
DISCOUN1S

Remember, safety comes
Hunter joins
first at harvest time
increasingly merge together.
Through Ohio Farm Bureau's
Advisory Council program, it was
suggested that driver education
cL1sses need video that speciftcally details the particular hazards of
driving on iural roads. So the Ohio
Department of Public Safety in
cooperation with Ohio Farm
Bureau developed. "Sharing tbe
Road with Slow Moving Vehicles."
The video tells the story of three
teenagers, a truck driver and a
farmer who meet at a diner while
waiting for an accident to clear on
the highway. Each learns why it is
important to unde!litand the othe!li'
. perspective while dri~ing in ruml
areas.
Statewide, more than 800 videos
will be distributed free .to high
-school and commercial driver education classes.
Safe driving is something we
can never be reminded of too
much. We hope that with these 800
videos and 90 .billboards the ·
reminder will be that much more
visible . and that much more effective in preventing accidents.
(Kim Harless ls area organlzalion director for the •'arm
Bureau.)

week by the Food
Agricultural mer, R-N.J ., that reduces subsidies
Policy Research Institute, based at and gradually ends acreage controls
the University of Missouri and would cut farm income and limit
production. the Minnesota Group
Iowa State Urtiversity.
The institute projecled that study said.
It criticized Roberts' proposal
income would average $45 billion
under Roberts' proposal - about for basing payments on past pay·
$I billion a year less than if no cuts ments rather than past eligibility.
or farm program changes were As a resul~ wheat growers would
made . It did forecast that income get 28 percent of the payments
would begin to rise after seven although wheat represents just 18
years, reaching $53.6 billion in percent of the value of crops pro·
2004, as the overhaul of farm pro- duced.
gramstookbold.
.
Roberts ' bill is HR2195,
That study used outdated eco- .. cochran's measure is Sll55 and
nomic projections that did not the Schumer-Zimmer bill is
reflect the current crop shortages HR2010 .
and high expected prices, contended John A. Schnittker a noted farni
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
economist and fanner Agriculture Republican lawmaker from WisDepartment official who was co- consin wants to end the federal
aulhor of the Minnesota Group dairy program and the fee that pro·
report.
ducers pay tO!fUR it.
His report also raised the total
Rep. Tom Petri said the current
acreage planted to as high as 266 prog'ram "creates artificial
million acres planted to the major demand" and reduces supply while
crops, compared with 255 million purporting to support the price
in the institute study.
farmc!li get for their milk.
A proposal by Sen . Thad
Petri is proposing legislation
Cochran, R-Miss ., that retains that would end federal price supmany currenl programs would ports over five years. Multi-state
result in lower income if the same federal marketing orders that regu·
budget cuts were included. late the movement of milk would
Cochran's plan calls for about half be repealed Jan. I. I 996.
the spending cuts sought by Lugar
The measure has been eodorsed
and Roberts.
by the International Dairy Foods
A rival plan by Reps. Charles Association, which represents milk.
Schumer, D-N:Y .. and Dick Zim- cheese and ice cream processors.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Sepa·
rate farm bill proposals by tbe,
cbairman of the House and Senate
At!riculture commiuees would
result in healthy farm income,
according to a swdy commissioned
by a farmland coosertation group.
The artalysis by the Minnesota
Group of economic consultants
said net farm income would rise to
$50, billion in the year 2000 lDider
the "Freedom to Fann" bill by
Rep. Pat Roberts. R-Kan .. chairman of the House Agricult~re
Committee.
A proposal by Sen. Dick Lugar,
R-Ind., chairman of the Senate
Agritulture Committee, would produce similar results, the economists
said in the repon released Monday
by the American Farmland Trust.
Both proposals would cut farm'
payments by $13 .4 billion over
seven years to meet the balanced
budget target set by Congress .
Roberts' proposal would wipe out
most major crop programs in return
for a guaranteed payment to farmers that would decline over seven
years.
Lugar's plan, not yet in bill
fonn, would cut spending by dropping expon subsidies and the target
price used to detennine subsidies
for corn and other feed grains, cotton, rice and wheal
Tbe income projection is higher
than one in an analysis released last

Smaller
••
nee crop
forecast
TOM HUNTER

Dy KIM HARLESS ·
.
GALLIPOLIS- Harvest time is
upon us, so that means it's time for
your annual reminder to be especially careful when driving on
rural roads. Tbe usual reminder
cou1es in the form of just what you
arc reading - a newspaper article .
But this year, Farm Bureau hopes
to make the reminder even more
visible.
Keep an eye out (just one eye,
teep the other on the road) for billboards with a slow moving vehicle
(SMV) e10blem on them . The, bill·
boards serve as a reminder that
when you see an SMV emblem on
the back of equipment on the ·road:
. slowdown, don't drive too close,
only pass when it's legal' and be
patient.
.
The billboards are being sponsored by the Local County Farm
Bureau, Nationwide Insurance and
Ohio Farm Bureau. Over 90 billboards distributed in 65 counties
will be toweringover Ohio roadways this fall. •
Driving on rural roads 9bviously takes some special considerations. Teaching new ·drivers this is
becoming more and more impor·
tant as rural and urban areas

Braves
sweep
Reds

Proposals would raise
-iuuJ farm income

Hints for keeping a heating
system healthy this winter

Ohio Lottery

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

1616 Eastern Ave.

•

Gallipolis

614 446-3672

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Gov. Gaston Caperton today
announced that St. Louis Cold
Drawn Inc., which manufactures
steel products used in the automotive industry, will build a new production facility in Mason County,
creating as many as 50 jobs.
Capertton was to formally make
the announcement in a 1:30 p.m.
ceremony today at the Point Pleasant Moose Lodge.
Construction on the $5 million
finishing plant, to be named West
Virginia Cold Drawn, is scheduled
to begin in late fall.
"TI1is is a top-of-the-line opera-

tion - a quality automotive parts
manufacturer - in which I am
proud to say is the best place anywhere," Caperton said. "Automotive suppliers from all over the
world are discovering West Virginia's strategic location and available work foroe."
St. Louis Cold 'Dmwn manufactures steel bars used in a variety of
automotive applicalions, such as
shock absorbers, struiS, axles, pistons and electric motor shafts .
Major customers include General
Motors, Gabriel Ride Control,
Emerson Electric, Delco, M ouroe,
and the Dana Corp.

"This is great news for Mason
County," said Jqbn Mu's grave,
director of the Mason County
Development Authority. "It is gratifying to see our effons fall into
place. We recognize the suppon of
the governor, the West Virginia
Development Office, the Mason
County Commission, and the local
community in helping to bring this
project to the area."
St. Louis Cold Drawn ln(i. is a
23-year-old family business,
employing more than I 00 workers
at locations in Missouri, Tennessee,
and Oklahoma. The company is
also an exporter of steel.

SHS PROM CANDIDATES- One of the
young ladles shown here will be crowned JC}C}S
Southern High School Homocomlng Queen Friday during halftime a( SUS's homecoming game
against the Hannan Wildcats. Candidates are,
back row, from left, Jyl Matthews, daughter of
Charlie and .Rila Mathew• or Racine; Samml
Sisson, daughter of Ernie and Joyce Sisson of
Syracuse; Jennifer Cummins, daughter of Todd

and Peggy Cummins of Racine; Jonna Manuel,
daughter of John and Megan Manuel of Racine;
and Kim Cornell, daughter of Bill and Patsy
Cornell of SyraciL'ie. Attendants are, front row,
from left, freshman Jody Hupp, daughter of
Steven and Laura Hupp of Racine; sophomore
Jayme Miller, daughter of James and Denise
Miller or Portland; and junior Amber Thomas,
daughter of Jim and Darla Thoma• of Syracuse.

'

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