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•

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
,J'
'

Hooked

Friday, June 26, 1998

on fishing

School system needs to show common ·sense with zero - tolerance drug program
Ann
Landers

1991. a.o. AAJC:* rlfi'ICI
S,..tinac and Crc•ton

Syndic-.

, Dear Ann Landen: You have
printed a few stories about some of
the ridiculous repercussions of the
hew zero-tolerance drug programs at
our schools. Please print this anicle
that recently appeared in the Wateriown, N.Y., Daily Times. I do not
know if good judgment and heroism
can be taught, bull would hope educators could at least be trusted to
recognize and reward a noble act of
citizenship rather than punish it. -Norwood, N.Y.

Dear Norwood: I received at
least 40 copies of that newspaper
anicle, I think what happened was
outrageous. Here's the story:
When a 12-year-old Maryland
student saw a classmate having a
severe asthma attack, she shared her
preScription inhaler, malting her a
hero to the other girl's mother. But
according to officials al the sixth·
grader's school, that makes her a
drug trafficker. And that gets entered
in her records for three years.
"She went from feeling like she
was on top of the world to feeling
like she had done something terribly
wrong," said the girl's mother.
Tile incident happened when a
13-year-old girl suffered an asthma
auack on the bus on the way home

from school. While the bus driver
called for help, the 12-ycar-old
found her inhaler and shared it with
the other girl. "I think she's a heroinc," said the other girl's mother,
who is outraged about -the treatment
from the school. Her daughter is
"fine, thpnks to this girl. This is
what makes people not want to help
other people," she said.
The school principal said she
could not comment on the case. The
12-year-old's mother said the principal did exercise leniency by not suspending her daughter from school
and was as fair as possible under
school rules. "I'm not sure what the
answer is," said the girl's mother. "I
wish there was a Good Samaritan
clause in the school regulation_s [or

this situation."
This Is Ann spealdna. I understand the need for schools to institute rules prohibiting drugs, but
school authorities need to show
some common sense. A distinction
II)USt be made between children who
use harmful substances and those
who give lemon drops to a friend or
save another student's life with an
inhaler.
Dear Ann Landen: Thank you
for being such a strong proponent of
AI-Anon and Alateen for families of
alcoholics. Tile support and assistance of these wonderful programs
is almost impossible to describe.
Eleven years ago, at the insistence of a counselor, I went to my
first AI-Anon meeting. I wasn't sure

my husband was a alcOholic, bull
was in so much pain. I didn't know
what else to do. The first thing AIAnon taught me about my husband 's
drinking was the "Three C's" --1
didn't cause it, I can't cure it, and I
caQ't control ii.
The reason I auend AI-Anon is
not to make my husband stop drinkina but. to find out how to have a .
happy, secure, serene life regardless·
of whether he drinks or not. I have
learned how to stop. being a victim,
how to say what I mean and mean
what! say, and how to do it in a calm
ma»ner.
The only advice I was ever given
in this program was ~~ep coming
back. It works." I am sltll married to
my alcoholic husband, but he started .

going to Alcoholics Anonymous
nine months after I started AI-Anon,
and today, he is in recovery. I. remain
active in AI-Anon because the program gives me the tools that help me
live my life. Please tell your readers
again, Ann, how important these
programs are.-- Grateful in·the USA
Dear Grateful: Thank you for
the opportunity"to remind my readers aboitt AI-Anon and Alateen for
families and friends of alcoholics. It
costs nothing to auend meetings.
They do a wonderful job and ore as
near as your telephone book.

When I turned the curve in our long driveway
after my evening walk, I noted an orange shaft of
light glowing across the pond. Pausing to look at
the beautiful· scene, I thought of the Israelites
being led by God with a pillar of fire . Could it
have looked something like this reflection of the
su n on the water?
God had commanded Moses to bring the people of Israel out of Egypt.
As millions of footsteps thundered through the dusty hoi wilderness, the
people surely needed guidance. AAA didn't provide them with a Trip-Tik.
They didn't even have a Rand McNally map to follow, and certainly no
computer software to plan their trip. Moses didn't have a Road Whiz or
mileage chart. But God had not freed them to desert or lose them in the
wilderness.
Exodus 13:21 explains God's care for them : "And the Lord was going
before them in a pillar of cloud by day to lead them on lhe way, and in a
"pillar of fire by night to give them light, that they might travel by day and
by night."
The Hebrews had something even better! They all saw an appearance
from heaven of a pillar, which ·in the bright day appeared cloudy and in the
dark night, apjleared fiery. God knew their faith was weak and he demonstrated His presence with them in this way. When they marched, the pillar
went before them, at the rate that they could follow. It sheltered them by
day from tlte heat, and gave them light by night. Shadows in the desolate
Sinai Peninsula could have been frightening.
The miraculous pillar never left them until they came to the borders of
Canaan. It was a clt;Jud the wind could not scalier. lllere was something
spiril'!al in this cloud - God himself.
·
I pondered the orange light. The column of fire must have been huge for
all the people to.see. lt made me so curious. And it reminded me that Christ
Jesus is our guide in this life. When we accept Him, He never leaves us.
Would you like to receive a booklet to help you know Him• Write Bonnie,
P.O. Box 951, Xenia, Ohio 45385.
Father, thank You for constant reminders that You arc always with us.
Knowing that is sufficient in. our times of need. Amen.

More than 250 alumni and guests
auended the 69th annual banquet of
Rutland High School held at the
Rutland Civic Center.
Jerry Schoonover, president, wei·
corned the group which gave the
Lord's Prayer in unison preceding
the dinner.
Entenainment was presented by
the Sweet Adelines o.f Huntington
under the direction of Beverly
Wilcox Miller, daughter of VicePresident Raymond Wilcox and his
.wife, Marilyn.
·
Special recognition was given to
Jim Vennari. He was given a plaque
and in response talked about alumni
who played football under him at
Rutland High School. Those who
played under his coaching stood in
his honor.
Joanne May ·talked about
improvements to the Civic Center
over the past year noting that a new
roof has been install~, a new garage
door put in, along with installation
of a heating system. She noted
donations and support of the EMS,
and said that grants covered, in
many instances, the full amount of
the improvement.
·
She reported that the "Come
Home to Rutland" event had raised
$5,000. Tile variety sh~ in April
netted only $204, and the committee
will try the talent show again m
December, it was noted. New talent
will be solicited.
The President announced a $500
donation from the alumni to the
Civic Center.
Suzy Parker Carpenter, chair of
the scholarship commiuee, introduced her commillee of Joan Montgomery Corder and Benny Slawtcr
~:~da~~$~~e!:othe total sc~olarship

the scholarship committee started ·Kissinger, Bill Perry, ,~ally Carstenson, Janet Morris, Carl Morris, Dana
awarded.
Barton, Harve Barton, Hazel ShepThis year's scholarship winners pard, Evan Smith," Alice Davis,
were introduced: Cynthia Caldwell, Clyde Davis, and Clyde Donahue,
daughter of Tommy and Mildred 1948; Charles Amos, llhyllis Amos,
Thomas Donahue; Michael llarr, John Southern, Carl Richords, Carol
son of Margaret and Mi'ke Barr, Peck, 1949.
grandson of Elvira Barr; Michelle
Bruce May, Fred George; Avancll
Dill, daughter of Irene Goff.
George, Paul Pallerso.n, Maxine
A silent auction was announced Dyer, Janet Jones, 19509; Joan May,
along with the traditional "donation Virginia Michael, Lowell Vance,
pol under the bell:" The president Marie Bjrchficld, Shirley Simmons,
related that education costs rose this Rose Patterson, 1951; Vivian Jones,
year 5% and that more students need Bob Dennison, 1952; M;ycia Rusmorc assistance. All proceeds from sell Mullinix, Barbara Van Meter,
the silent auction and the donations Joan Corder, Evelyn Hollon, Nell
under the bell will go to the scholar- Rice Dickens, Phyllis Simpkins ;
ship fund . The 1998 officers led the Virginia Long Dennison, Jim Nelway to the bell with their respective son, 1954; Donna Nelson, 1955; Jim
donations.
Dyer, Lynn Bartrum Bensehoter,
Former faculty members present- Janet Turner Bolin, Joe Bolin, 1956.
ed were Martha Ohlinger ·who
Jerry Schoonover, Raymond
tau~ht office practice at Rutland
Wilcox, Phyllis Rice Grandell,
High School: Manha Chapman who Wanda Graham Vining, Joan Rife
taught third grade at Rutland Ele- Wolfe, John Jeffers, and Kenneth
mentary; and Jim Vennari.• social , Longstreth, 1957; Bill Coy, Sue
studies teacher and high school foot- Turner, Oouglas Long, Danny Halliball coach.
day, Charlolle Harper, Emma Hysell
Aowers were awarded to Gamet Roush, Bob and Stella Smith, Janet
Bachner, the oldest graduate, and Haley Sigman, George Hackney,
Mary Rice Burch, class of 1955, and Tom Stewan;·l958.
who traveled the farthest.
Ronnie Fife, I959; Marjorie PridThe. evening concluded with dy Rife. Joan Look , Stuan Brewer,
·group singing of the Rutland High 1960; Carol Brewer, 1964; Roberta
School alma mater wriucn by Grate Oiler, Lawrence and Judy
Martha Bolton Allier.
Smith, 1962; Dick Lamben, Bobby
! hal 45 scholarships have been

. Alumni
theirBachner,
classes rccognized
were and
Gamet
1922;
Marcia Dennison, 1926; Pauline
Rife, 1929; Virginia Carson, Frank
Young, 1931; Norman Will, 1932;
Eugene Fink, 1933; Doris Thomas,
1934; Harold Rice, 1935; Gladys
Fisher, 1938; Bernie Knapp, 1939;
Robert Hill and Marjorie Rice,
1940; Katy Fink, Maxine Griffith.
An appreciation letter was Jim Lanning, Betty Biggs, 1941 ;
received from Pamela Grate, daugh· Alta Will Cardolph, Ruth Cardolph,
lcr of John Grate, for her last year' s Belly Musser, James Thomas, 1942;
scholarship. A check in memory of Eleanor Thomas, Edwin · Nelso.n,
Claude Montgomery was given hy 1944; ·Goldie Nelson, Delmo Nelchildren, Carrie and Jerry, and a son, Downie Ndson, Carol Pierce,
donation was noted hy John Grate, · 1945; Catherine Sheffield, 1947.
Grate Furniture, Mason. Carpenter
Max Bolen, Vivian Bolen,
reported that in the 12 ·years since Ronald Siders, Wilda Siders, Leroy

.c0 mmUn•1t-y· caIendar.·
The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to non - MONDAY
profit groups wishing to announce
MIDDLEPORT - Open gym,
meeting and special events. The Meigs Middle School , Middleport,
calendar is not designed to nro- . Monday. 9 . to II a.m . for girls
mote sales or fund raisers of any entering 7th or Kth grades. Meigs
type . hems arc printed as space Local School District. Info on
permits and cannot be guaranteed shoot-a-thon to be distributed .
to run a specific number of days.
POMEROY - Veterans Service Commission. Monday, 7:30
p.m. at office. Mulberry Avenue,
FRIDAY
BASHAN - Volunteer Fire Pomeroy.
Department Ladies Auxiliary. icc
cream social, beginning at 5 p.m., RACINE - Southern Local Board
hot dogs, sloppy ' joes, hain, hot of Education. special sc.sion,
sausages, pie, . coffee, soft drinks Monday,m 7 p.m. at high school in
·
and II Oavors of homemade ice Racine.
cr~am. Entertainment.
RUTLAND ~ Rutland Garden
POMEROY - Meigs Local Club, Monday, I p.m. home of
Board of Education, 7'p.m. Thurs- Pauline Atkins.
day, office.
TUESDAY
• RACINE ~ Meeting to offer
input on Southern Local K-8
SATURDAY
CHESTER Benefit for building plans, Tuesday, I p.m.
Shaun Long, Tuppers Plains, acci- Southern High School Plans availdentally shot this spring. Live able for review at high school.
music, food, an auctiorr. Account
established at Farmers Bank with
POMEROY - DAR program
planning
commiuec meeting,
proceeds to go toward paying medTuesday, I p.m. Pomeroy Library.
ical expenses.
All members tnvited to auend and
POMEROY - Eastern OAPSE give ideas on programs for next
picnic, Royai ·Oak Park, Saturday, year.
4to 6 p.m.

Rachel Ashlev awarded scholarship

Rachel Ashley, daughter of Keith
and Emtl)a Ashl~y of Rock Springs,
has been selected as recipient of the
only national scholarship issued by the
national president of the Auxiliary to
the Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil

W~Y.Jacquelyn Johnson, .national presi-

•

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

RACINE - Albert and Eliza
Hall reunion, Sunday, 12:30 p.m.
at Star Mill Park.

Pope. 1963; Rose Mary Pope. Ancil
Cross. Benny Slawtcr. Gerald Saxton, Con icc Siemer. Danny McDonald, Cecil Johnston. Rodney Riggs,
1964; William and Pany Lambert.
Larry Rupc, Judy McDonald. Ron
Taylor. 1965; Beverly Rupc, Sam
Hicks. Jr. , 1966.
·
Larry Montgomery, Dan Gillenwater. Jean Gillenwater, Buck
Vance. Carl Shenefield, Perry
Kennedy, Jim Fink, Carolyn Riggs,
Roger Black, Shirley and Tim Hackworth, Dave Rice, Ron Black, Barbara Black, Sharon and Clcon Prati,
John Wise, Wilma Davison, Phyllis
and James Reed, 1968; Jeff Tillis,
1969; Gloria Oiler, Larry Long. and
Linda Montgomery, 1971.
Other alumni . allend_iy whose
year of graduation was~ot noted
were Christy Lavender, Cynthia
Caldwell, Bob and Lana Goode,
Tammy Lambert, David Lambert,
Dick Felly, .Beverly Felly, Marge
Barr, Mike Barr, Susie Carpen1er,
· Bill Hl(ISell, Leroy and Anna Welsh,
Diana Young, Harry Plumber.
Melanie Duning, Judson Price, John
and Joanna Dyke, Judy Eads,
Sharon Wise, Pauline Tillis, Larry
Carson, John Stanley, Judy Snow- ·
den, Bob Snowden, Margaret Welch,
Robert Smith, Harry Snowden, Kenneth and Norma Wilcox, Lynn
Scratt. Michael Porter, and John
Priddy,

.

Vocation Bible School

-150'" An~irersary
Open House •t the Lodge H•ll
.On SR 124, R•cine, OH .
June 28, 1998 - 2·4 PM
Dinner for ltlemliett_and Guests
Refreshments
tome Out and Help Celebrate 150
Years or·lust to Ask qaestlons.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Senate has unanimously pasaed a
to
·
sites on the Underl·arourtd Railroa~ secret network of back
caves and
homes used to
ter blacks flee.... ,. _,.sl.avery in the mid-1800s.
bill, sponsored by Sens.
Mike DeWine, R-Ohio, and Carol
Moseley- Braun, D-111., authorizes
the National Park Service to link
· produce educational materiand enter partnerships to com~iitc:mo,rate the UnderarQund Rail-

.•---------------------.1

Today'a11'

a-.s..tbDl

m· Pages ·

IAIIDMII

I
I ,HONI HU. .R
I ALLIROIU .,

· .·

I
I
I
I
I
I.

~--------------------------~
RETURN FOAM To CHURCH

Allegations against G~llia judicial candidate outlined in_ c~m_plaint_
•
M 1YS pnmary.

cerned that campaign practices are followed "
h
'
Evans defeated Nuzum
Nuzum and Douthett raised I e ,same
and Douthett for the GOP
objections to Evans' bl'bchure just pnor to
nomination for the couit
the primary, claiming that the brochure conseat. Nuzum is a munici·
rained falsC\ claimS!' of endorsements . of
pal judge in Marietta, and
Evans' candidacy f~om prosecutors, shertffs
Douthett is a municipal
and a judge.
judge in Jackson
Evans said he never claimed he was
"We're bou~ 10 do
endorsed by all 14 prosecutors and sheriffs in
'ud' . 1d" ·
1
0
11
~,:!': ~~~ut~euE~~~~nfai~ Y ~:~1:~: :\!~ P=~ ~~J
Dlvld T.
the,!M;c.:Sit:~~~~~sn't changed," Evans said.
endorsi'ments and ~isrepresented his experi- Huntington (W.Va.) Herald-Dispatch f~r a story '"The~e wasn't an.yt~il_lg w~ng before th~~
enee in a brochure he distributed prior 10 the. appearing in Friday's editions~ "I'm JUSI con· electton and.there 1sn t anythtng wrong now.

GAWPOU S - Probable cause nas bee n
found b an Ohio 'udicial disci linary panel
. that the ke ublica.! candidate fo~a seat on tbe
.Fourth Di!trict Court of Appeals committed
an ethics violation during his primary camai
P
com Iaint was filed with the stale
s
d.urt• Board of Commissioners on
upreme
d 50 • • r e by-Milt Nuzum and
Gnevanees an 1setp m

r·

1

II'IH b BDfWJ
AllnCIItmlll Wll

.
Allllfl M9 PIIIIIE
CI'IHAISE-1

• AIIIDmillc
• Air Conditioning
• POWif Door Loclta
•MWMSaad'IO
• TIICtlon Conlnll
• Will Equipped!

SJ2,950*
• Air Conditioning

• Ls Palage

• .._Anti-Lock Elrlllll ·

• AIIRI Caullaa
• AluiNnum ......
• Wtll Eqtllppadl

.

::

I
f

The complatnt w1ll be asstgned to a three1 th t 'II set a hearing possibly
perso~ pane . a wt
.' .
S&lt;?met!me lhts summer,_ to determme tf any
vtolattons occurred, satd Jonall~~ W._ ~arshall, ~tary of th~ ~a~ ~f mmtsstoners on Gn_ev~n~s an 1setp me.,
,
The dlsctp.ltnary panel may tssue. fines,
cease-and-desiSt orders or sancttons agamst an
at!omey's license, Marshall told the HeraldOtspateh
Evans· is opposed in the No~ election l)y
Demo:crat ~ Alan Goldsberry, a common
pleas Judge m Athens County.
.

1

Rio Grande ·police add substation to enhance community policing effort

II'IM Mrl 1!1 ttfY~ ·
1-lfrlfl IJ ElUIUit ••

I

r--------------------------,
I~

How nat we teelln the aummtr It bued on epparent tefT11*atur•. not llir
-oturo. Apporont tomporoturo ~ - hoi tt IHII on 1M okW!. The
higher the humidity, tht 1111 mollturt evaporltet from -;our akin, making
you toot hottor. A - ot Frldaj'o-ont lomporO!UrOI -~"-country:

Senate unanimously OK•
Underground Railroad bill

"Come See A Miracle"

I

Heat Indexes

: GAWPOUS-Asthefourth
July weekend looms, the State
Hi1ith~vav Patrol is making plans to
full force in one of most
l:criltical enforcement periods. ·
Lt. Wayne McGlone, comman- ·
of the patrol's Gallia-Meigs
· said most of the troopers
j-wtder his command will be workin an attempt to reduce crashes
the area.
Federal funding supplementing
the patrol's budget "will allow us
to work close to our full staffing
level," McGlone said.
The primarf enforcement will
be on speeders, drunk. drivers. and
those not wearing their safety belts
or child restraints, as viewed by
law, McGlone said. ,
· ''Those violation~ will be the
main target, but troopers will .,tso
be watching for violations such as
improper passing and failure to
yield, which are also leading crash
causes," he added.
The patrol at all times encourages people not to drink and drive,
1111d to utilize designated drivers.
"~t's all partner .up for safety
have a safe holiday,"
McGlone said.

12 Sedloas -

• • Yllti Bar ....., ••
• 4 c.,.... Chills
•IIWSofllld
• La adult

July 6·10
6:30 , •• 1:45 , ...

Vol. 33, No. 20

Patrol gears up for
EF.ou1rth of July weekend

· - FREE AND
~~
ACCEPTED MASONS ~

650*
'

pageA6

News Watch

p----------------------..
POMEROY·UCINE LODGE 164

5)5

of thundtrltonnl

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • June 28, 1998

AEP restores full service

liar 1411 .:.rs, Trucks IRII 1111 In

S)g-' 650*

Details on

•

.

Send questions to Ann L~nders, Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century
Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles, Calif.
90045

The Senate vote was late Thurs-

• Powlr Wll\daaal Loella
• AIIIFII C111111

Ate•: l•rHry tllru 6th Gr•d•
SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE
Whaley
reunion, noon Sunday, Forked Run
State Park. Take lawn chairs and
two covered dishes.

Hillh School.

HI: 90s
Low: 70s

·tmes

/

391 Alii StrNt, IIWdleport

RACINE
29th annual
Teaford Reunion, Saturday, Star
Mill Park. Racine. Basket dinner at
1 p.m. Door prizes, games. and
white elephant sale.

uate of

dent, will be present at the Ohio
Dcpanmcnt convention later this
month in Alliance, to award the scholarship to Ashley.
The Auxiliary to the Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War was oxganlzed in 1883 to assist the Sons of
Union Veterans in their work. II is one
of the four Allied Orders of the Grand
Army of the Republic family.
Ashley is a member of the Frost
Auxiliary at Front in Athens County. ·
She is a state Rag bearer for the Ohio
Department Auxiliary. Her eligibility
to membership is hased on two Union
ancestors, Corp. William Ashley of the
·
36th Regiment Ohio Volunteer

ASH STREET
FREE WILL BAPIIST CHURCH

PAGEVILLE - Special meeting, Scipio Township Trustees,
Saturday. 6:30 p.m. at home of
clerk; regular meeting , Wednesday. 6:30 p.m. Pageville town
hall .

Infantry, and Pvt. Levi Deeter of the
I87th Regiment Ohio Volunteer
Infantry.
She is attending Hocking Technical
College in Nelsonville to obtain a
degree in nursing. She is a 1998 grod-

• Ent•rllllnm•nt: Page CB •

• Futured on pegt C1

Rutland High School celebrates wtih alumni gathering
Constant reminders: He Is with us
By Bonnie Shiveley

Movie meteorites
come after planet
Earth ...; again

Page 12

Grandt Polloe
Chief John vance
I

By KEVIN KELLY

a1 COPS PAST pant that's allowed

Tim II Sentinel St.ff

for the ttddilion of another full-time
officer in the village.
"We're lr}'in&amp; to take the old stigma: of a cop an a car you can't talk to
and-change it to being more aceessiblc to the i:ommunlty," explained
Vance. "It's basically our latest
attempt at community policing. to
develop a po1itive relationihip with
the youth up there."
Althouaft the distance between
betwee tile municipal building,
where ~lee deplnment islocated, and tbe aputtnents is about a
mile, Vance said the residents can't
always ac:t to the police office.
Creatina 1. substation, whicb
Vance expects will be staffed two to

RIO ORANDB _A substation at
the Rio Grande Estates apartments is
one way the village police depart·'
menl hopes to forae a relationship
with its residents.
Rio Grande Police . Chief John
Vance said the Gallia Metropolitan
Houaina Authority, the aaency overseeing the 42-unit complex off Pine
Street, ·~ to allow police to uae
an omi::e at the manaacr's unit that
will be statfed periodically through ·
the week 10 residents cim hltve more
direct contact with officers.
Vance said the move is another
step in community policing by the
depanmenl, Q directed by the feder-

three daya a week, opens a line of
communication with the parents and
helps the department's efforts to
have more contact with children.
The majority of the complex's residents are families, he explained.
The department recently spon·
sored a\)icycle rodeo for youths at
the apartments in conjunction with
locai churches. Vance and other officers rq~aired kids • bicycles, taught
them safety principles and set up a
test course in the parkinslots so the
rules could be demonstrated.
'"They're in a tight' little spot
there, and they can only ride their
bikes in the parkin&amp; areas," Vance
said. "We don't encourage them to
.. so out on the road."

By increasi!'g presence, _Yance
also hopes r~tdents can asstst the
department w!th enforcement and
detection of cnme.
"Today, ~ou have to depend on
th~ ~mmun~ty to he!p you out. With
cnmmals bemg as htg_h-tech as they
are, we need the pubhc because ~he
money isn'tthere to add more pohce
offi~rs," he explaine~.
Rto Grande s pohce d~partm~nt
h.,S two full-time officers, mc!udmg
Vance, and thre~ p~rt-umers.
Demands on the .vtllage s b~dget,
such u an upcommg renovallon of
the water tower, have prompted
yance to seek other.sources of fu~mg to • s!retch hts department s
appropnallon.

~ a result, the .department has
recetved $60,000 m grants. from
state and federal sources d:rected
tow~rd current manpowe and
equtpme~t.
.
The Vlll~ge· onee ~0: a m ~rshal
:!"ho back m the 1
w~ set
maybe three calls a. wecl4 Van&lt;7.
note~, .but t~ expanston of the Umve~lly of Rio Grande ~~ ol,loca~ .
busmesses ha~ made a po 1ce part .
ment a ~ecesstl~.
,
•
"We re looking at all kinds of
ways to stretc,h our c;overage t~ 24
hours, but ~e re get!mg closer, ~nd
perhaps ,wtth. cre~llvc schcduhng
and relat1onsht~ wtth the community, we can prov1de,the type ?f service people e~pect, Vance SAid.

9

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�I

Pa. - A2 • ~ • t I • ._.~

1,

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fine&amp; reward .
·in Habitat for
Humanity project

.

i'ortton of Raccoon Road to close

:Ms..

Finally, abank that rewards
you for just being popular.

Honestly, the more friends you hav&amp;the more money you can save.

~

.. .·

: The $3,000 tuition for each stu:!fcnt is paid wit~ grants from aovcrnment and busmess.
: Some restaurants and hotel•
)~reed to reimburse the program for
1t1ition if a student gets hired and

kCCJll workifll.

.

: Each IIUdent gets $6.50 daily for
bus fare 1nd lunch. They attend
ihily ciUICI on topics including
Jlow to handle a job interYicw, perIIOIIal hygiene, food safety, why it't
bttpOIWIIIII lhow up for work on ·
~ IIIII an louoduction to working
la the ltolel indultry.
· • The ClOIIIIC cndl July I 7 after
t.o.11nt "atcmsblpe" witb lilt.._ Jlllillllllndl-oli ~riencc at '
botels, tellltlllllll ad tourill allde- '
tiolll lite the Oreal Lakes Science :

seNog
fRieND
to Peoples Bank

\

•

JIMMY CARTER WORK PROJECT

TURNS HOUSE BUILDER . -

30 votuntltR from till law t1nn
wl1ft lhe warka to build • hau•

In the Hlblllt far Humanlty(Jimmy
C.rter Work Project In Houston,
Ttl!H.

PROJECT VOLUNTEERS - A
hundred hauHI ware built In
Hauatan, Tnaa, recently 11 1 pert
at lllmlnlltlng poverty ~ng.
the million of Hebltlt tor H111111nlty. The Houston canstructlan wa
under till Jimmy C.rter Work Project at Hebltet. Here Prelklent
Carter, rlflhl, and hla wHe, Raeelynri, ere jallllld by three of till
crew IHCiers at till HOUlton pro. ject.

ing others. Yes, it was grueling, but ·
so rewarding."
Asked if she would do it again,
she replied. without any hesitation,

~

II lll•PegeA:Io

CI&amp;SSrCOOmS
~~:;.~~:.'s':att

POMEROY - Meigs Middle
School in Middlepon will receive
four additional classrooms following
the Meigs Local School District's
purchase of portable classrooms
Thursday night.
.
The board, meeting in regular session in the district's central office on
the second floor of the Pomeroy
Municipal Building, approved a resolution of "urgent necessity" and
waived the procedure outlined by
statute in advertising for bids fpr purchasing the classrooms.
. GALLIPOLIS- Aone-car accident Friday on Green Township Road 387
The purchase. for $106,323 from
(fluck ,Ridge) sent five people to Holzer Medical Center for treatment of Modular Buildin~ Consultants, con.injuries, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed.
sists of two used two-classroom
Transported by tbe Gallia County EMS from tbe scene of the 3 p.m. acci- ponabfe units, according to Superin•
·dent were driver Brenda K. Bloomer, 35, 252 Skidroore Roaq, Bidwell, and tendent Bill Buckley. The buildings
passengers Aleshia D. Petrie, 17, Brandon L. Petrie, I, Alexandria D. Petrie, are full-sized, consisting of 670
·:3, and Nathan D. Petrie, 8, all of 381 Buck Ridge Road. Bidwell.
square feet per room, he explained .
None of the injured had been admitted to HMC,. a hospital ·spokesperson
The rO\)mS will be delivered in
Dwayne Roby, lett, uritled ~he rope used to tow a 1986 Mercury Lynx whlll! Jason Stinnett
.slid Saturday.
·
«
July and installed beside the Central
opened the doors to let the water aut es the vehicle waa pulled out of the Ohio River near OWens·
; ~ Troopers said Bloomer was northbound. 75 feet nonh of Green TR .377 Building. he said. The purchase will
baro, Ky., leet-"- Olver Kenny Turner could hear the horn sounding under water as he groped
!Magnolia Drive) when the CBI'She drove went'off the right side of the road, be made with Disadvantaged Pupil
his way to the ca~whlch rolled Into the river at the toot of Frederica Street. "I touched tl;le car
:aitd struck a
and a guidewire.
.
Impact Aid grant money.
1-t·_._J
· ' Th. 1 d
d, ord' t tbe
n Bl mer 'was c'1t
about alii can
When
down there,.It's like
ever seen."
•. . e car wa.• severe y amage ace mg o ·repo · oo
Treasurer Cindy Rhonemus issued
Cd for failure to control, and for s.eatbelt and child restraint violations.
financial reports on food service,
health care. pennanent improvements
• : VINTON .._ A Vinton man wa.• injured in a Friday accident involving .. and athletics. She reported the di sthree vehicles on SR 160, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol trict's food service program was
~pone&lt;t.
anticipating beginning fiscal year
.: Worthy Cremeans, 81 , 10198 SR 160. was tt:ansponed to Holzer Med- 1999 with ~deficit of $28,158.5 1.
'cal Center from the scene ofthe 5:45p.m. crush tly the Gallia County EMS. The district's health care and athletyear's awards, the"amoul)l presented
SYRACUSE - Seven members Zwilling and Rick Ash.
•He wa.~ not admitted to the hospital, an HMC spokesperson said Saturday. ic programs are doing well she
Janice Zwilling was elected as for schol:!rships since the program 's
were re-elected to the board and it
: Troopers said Cremeans was nonhbound in Morgan Township when the reported.
inception in 1981 will have surpasseq
;car Jle drove went off the right side of the road, and struck two parked cars
The boanf rejected a recommen- . wa.~ decided to award scholarships new secretary after John Lisle $51,0011.
;owned by Ginnahatah N. Justice, 308 Frank ROIICI. Vinton.
.
dation by Buckley to adopt a policy totaling $3.200 for the 1998-99 declined another term beyond 1998;
Others attending. in addition to
.' Cremeans' car then struck a tree and rolled ov.er onto its side, uccorllmg requiring athletes to maintain a 1.0 school year when the Carleton Col- which is his 12th year of service in \those previously named, were Larry
io the report. His car and the vehicles owned by Justice were all moderate- (D) grade point average to panicipate lege Board of Trustees held its 133rd · that capacity. Lisle was commended .Fields and John Bentley. ·
.
by .the board for his dedicated service
:ly damaged, troopers said.
in interscholastic athletics. The board annual meeting last week.
Secretary John Lisle reported 15 as se~;retary. Other officers re-elect•n •
then approved a revised policy •
I 0 rOW
requiring all students participating in Syracuse residents submitted appli- ed were .Wingett, preside(\!; Norris.
,: GALLIPO.LIS- Amber L. Dennis, 18, 841 Shoestring Ridge Road. Oal- any extracurriculfll activities, not just cations prior to the June 19 deadline vice presid~nt; and Kathryn Crow,
•
lipolis, was cited for left of center by the Oullia-Meigs Post of the State High- athletics, to maintain at least a D to compete for higher education treasurer.
1
The Investment Committee of .
lvay Palrol following a two-vehicle accident Fr.tday on CR 90 (Shoestring average.
scholarships granted annually by the
In
personnel
m&amp;tters.
the
board
Brooks
Sayre, Norris and Wingett led
board.
·
~idge).
·
••
hired
Mary
O'~rien
on
a
I
().month
• Troopers said Dennis was southbound, 20 feet north of Clay Township
A scholarship selection committee a discussion of finances after Trea.koad 626 (Plymale) at II a.m. when the car she.drove went left and collid- ,contract year as an administmtive compose(! ofTrustees Carroll Norris, surer Crow announced the Board of
~d with a northbound pickup truck driven by M;trlin D. Thompson Sr., 67, assistant at Meigs Middle School.
Milton Varian, Dana Winebrenner, Trustees had a total funds balance of
STILL
Tony
·Deem
was
hired
on
an
11! 18 Ba.~il Road, Gallipolis. ·
Janice Zwilling and Robert Wingett $39,550.82.
month
contmct
year
as
an
adminisIt wa,~ announced that witb this
: Dennis' car was severely damaged. according to lhe patrol, while Thompwill meet in July to review applicaENROLLING
. trntive assistant at Meigs High School tions and select recipients.
~n·s pickup had moderate damage.
FOR SUMMER
with board member R9ger Abbott ·
Re-elected to the 21-member.
QUARTER! I
dissenting.
.board. in which seven tenns expire
• OALUPOLIS ~A Gallipolis man·was injtiJed ill a diving uccident FriNancy· Morrissey was hired as a annually, were John Sauvage, Larry
STARTS JULY 6
at the Gallipolis Municipal Pool. city polict said.
·
guidance intern on a one-year/202 Ebersbach. Dana Winebrenner, John
CALL TODAY
Kennyo.€otdcH, n,. 990 f'()unh Ave-., sufltiiid a minor laceration to the conuact effective the beginning of tbe
Lisle, Emmogene Hamilton, Janice
,follqwina ,the 5 p.m. incident, but refusqt.trea~J~tqnt from P,aramedics 1998-99 school year.
, iftcr the Gallia Counry EMS WBI called to tbe scene, officers satd.
The board approved the following .
.: In other matters, police cited Sandra K. Hill. ~2. Oallipolis Ferry, W.Va., resignations: t;&gt;ennis Eichinger, assisPOMEROY _ The following
. ; for theft on Friday, and Kevin L. Wood, 19, 9ft,J.inwood Drive, Gallipolis,
1-800-114-0451
: for underage consumption and contribulif18 to.lhe delinquency of a minor tant high school principal and athlet- couples were issued marriage licensic treasurer; Mary O'Brien, Meigs es recently in the Meigs County Pro•
· : earty Saturday. .
·
Middle School teacher; and Pam bate Coun of Judge Robert Buck:
Durst, summer schoolteacher. ·
Gary Lee c nte,
'hfi ld 34 ,and Amy
! GALLIPOLIS- The theft l!f a Pomeroy ~dh.an's car from the parking
Tbe·board also approved the tes- Jo Daugherty, 28, both of Albany;
; lot of the Spring Valley Cinema, 1284 Jackson Pike. Oallipolis. is under inves- iination of James R. Sheets, teacher David Eric Peterson, 24. and
·SPRING VALLEY PI...AZA
and high school wrestling coach, for Michelle Renea Pooler, 21. both of
ligation by the Galli a County Sheriff's Depan~nt.
·
ACICS ACCREDITED
Rhonda L. Moon, 1665 Lincoln Heights, ihfonTICII deputies her 198S retirement purposes, and Pete Woods.
RJ'.G.If,.I5-IJ74B
teacher,
boys
athletic
director
and
Fountain
Valley,
Calif.
: Oldsmobile Cutlass was taken sometime between 9:30 and II :50 p.m. Tbu.rsassistant foorball coach.
.: day, according to the report.
'
Also hired was ·Rick Chancey as
assistant varsiry football coach for the
: POMEROY- A"Rucine man was cited following a tWQ:-vehicle accident 1998-99 school year, and Heather
:on West Main Street in Pomeroy early Friday afternoon.
· · Wakefield as a summer school Eng: A 1993 Chevrolet Corsica driven by Adam Bllflon, 18. ran into the rear lish teacher, using grant funds to pay
• of a stopped POII)eroy Village GMC pickup truck driven by James Fisher, . her salary.
The board also hired Ron Logan
: 59, Middleport, causing liJIItt damage to both vehicles, ac~ording to a
a.~ athletic treasurer for the 1998-99
: Pomeroy Police Department report,,
; No injuries were reported and Barton was cited 011 a charge of failure to schooi year: effective immediately, ·
• maintain assured clear distance.
(Continued on A6)

ditc~

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POMEROV•U(INE
LODGE 164
I'

acc1~~~:So•s · ~

J50"' Anniversary
•

Dinner for Members and Guests
Refreshments
tome Out and Help Cele.rate 150
"
.• ears or Just to Ask questions.
II

I

The 8th Annual Howard Baker Saunders Ohio State University Scholarship Golf
Tournament was held on Saturday, June 6, 1998 at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis,
Ohio. This tournament, es~blished in 1990, provides an opportunity to ho.nor the
a.ccomplishmenls of Howard Buker Saunders while creating funds for the education of
Gallia County's youth. Any student graduating from high school in Gallia County and
planning to ~pend The Ohio State University is eligible to apply for these scholarships. '
The winners'~n 1997 were Jill Butcher, Kelly Caldwell, Jill Carter, Jamie Hudson, Stacy
· McCalla, Lori Milliron and Seth Richards.
This event would not be possible without ·the sponsorship of many local businesses,
friends and colleagues of Mr. Saunders and those who participate .in the tournament each ,
year.
The 1998 HBS/OSU Scholarship Tournament Committee would like to extend a
sincere THANK YOU to this years sponsors:

NOT TOO
LATE!

'

: A, body found Friday in a rural sec-

;~ion of Cabell County has been ten• tatively identified as a mi5sing Hunt:.ington TV cameraman.
: The body of Millard Aldridge, 42,
:wa.~ found by search ~nd n:scue
, dogs about one-quarter mtle from tbe
!remains of Aldridge's burned out
: vehicle, said Cabell County Sheriff
•Dallan Field~ . He said the death WBI
:being treated as a homicide. '

Insurance Plus

RiepenhofT Distributing

Chapman Printing

Johnson's Supennarkets

Riverside Golf Course

D&amp; WEstates

Lorobi's

Saunder' s Insurence

Bill Eachus, Atty

-Ju~ge Bill

up to.photojournalist.
"He would stop by my desk and
was beaten about the head and chest. say he really liked it here and that he
Aldridge . was reported missing wanted to do well, to better himself
Thursday by his wife, Patricia, Hunt- . and to be a television broadcaster,"
ington police Sgt. Jim Johnson said. said Don Ray, WSAZ geneml manDetectives .. discovered blood 111 ager.
Aldridge's home. His car also was
A spc)keswoman for the station
missing.
said Aldridge was on vacation this
Aldridge st&amp;rted working at the . week.
stalion's Huntington office 25 years
The body was sent to the state
· ago as a janiror. He worked his way medical examiners offtce for positive
·
· · identification, Fields said.

Ron Ellis

Richard Miller, CPA

Alan Stockmcister

Empire Furniture

Nape Motor Parts

Subway

Family Rentals

Norris Northup Dodge

The Bern

Fanners Bank

O'Dell~s Lu~~ SupPly

The Wiscm1111 Agency

Fruth's Pharmacy ·

Olk Hill Banks

Dr. William 8 Thomes

G &amp; M Fuel Company

One Valley BI!J)t

Toler &amp; Toler lnsunnce

Gallipolis Elks #I 07

Option Care

Tom's Auto Clinic

Paul Divie$ Jewelers

Turnpike

Peoples N~ional Bank

wevb .Big CountrY

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,Meigs EMS runs

liJSPS 525-IN)
AG_Co. _ _

POMEROY :...- Units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
Pllblilllod _, Swlday, 825 Third Ave., o.m,..
recorded seven calls for assistance
Ill. Ohlo by rite Ohio Vdcr Pubtiohlna Compr·
Friday. Units responding included:
:
CorreCtion Polley
Co. s-od dill poooqe prld 11 Oat,. O... .... &lt;a~~&lt;e.. llllllloliailltobe ny!Ounca
llpoiii.Oitlo4~l . !imroda-.ld.,mril·
CENTRAL DISPATCH
~ Jr :JW ......alII onvr Ia I ..
, .......
..,.. a.to .... otlloc.
I
2 42_ _a.m., sou th second Avenue,
" _
• r.
Tho Airotllled rra. rnd rite Ottto
_:
otorJ, catl ... - - It: Gelllt ~~~'
Middlepon, Fred StewarCtreated at
:. C7~ ~ll41; • • llt): C74tl m- """'"~"' ~trdon.
•..
•
Send
.
.
.
c:omc~toor
oo
Tho
•
the scene;
•
.
1 Z155.Wtddleek:JWr ..lllcealloll..
!. .............. ., ............
~~~~ 8251binl Ave., OallipoS a.m .. Powell Street, Middleport,
•
. Catherine Metzger, Vetemns MemoI
News Depeibi. .11
SIJNDAYONLY
· 1 Hosp11al;
·
SUIISCIUmON IIA1TS
, ·na
Galli poll I
11
9:31 a.m., Grant Street, MiddleTloe .... lllilrber .. +16oll41. Deport·
One - .................................St.25
: pon, Carol Manley, Hol~r Medical
! II-*tal&amp;
tl• are:
.
OnoYSiN'Gu'i:orY'PiUC'I'SM.oo
· Center, Middlepon squad a.~sisted;
Utt Editor......................... lilt. W
........ lidllor......................... ltd.lll
!I' CIIJ
Ho =k;'b'j'~jp;;;;.in;d'j;,''~wbo..
S:32 p.m.. Meigs Mine 31, Ralph
lidllor. ................................. ltd. Ill
--·-""'ll,.rllrble.
·
Christian, HMC.
I UM l)ie ......._............................. ltd. uti
Stoodor 11rneo , . _ . wut"'" 11o _ ,_ •
MIDDLEPORT
I !lpena................- ..,..................... litd. U2. . 11to
blefa!ldYI-)IIIJ-oi!deOOanicn.
10:32
a.m.,
VOlUnteer fire denort.
Newt. .................,,,,, .....................Bst. lit
....,_ - t l l o
Ir
. To Send E-Mili
t11o r '' t; do• poriod.
"'""'. ment and squad to Nonh Founh
o...,.
......
..., be l•r· 1 1bJ diiiWina me durllioll or
Avenue, motor vehicle accident, no
pMH
I
1M -lpllontios,..,.-,
·
injuries reported.
·
i
MAIL8IIB:IIPI10N
POMEROY
News DwjMbioenl
-c..~
10:43 a.m., Hol~r Meigs Clinic,
13 Pomei'OY
....._ ....................m.JO
· Enna Cleland. HMC. .
'l1le . . . I . . . . lo ftW155. Dopor1•
76 ...........................'.$$3.12
... •"' hn on: ·
52 ........., ................. SIIll.56
REEDSVILLE
G
r
II
M1 'I r..................... :..&amp;rd.llll
t
--0ocoWoc..~.
H:42
a.m.. Little Forest Run
3 .......................--~
!Int.
.... 11«1
.............;...................:-;; lid. liN
Z6 ~ ....._ .....:.............1$6.611
Road, Norma Coleman, treated at the
_ _; __ _ _ _ _ _ _,....._ _52_
...._ 1_ •_
...._..._..._........._..._..._...J_t_09_
.n_ ___J !SCene.
I

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Reader Scr vices

'

Smith Buick

•
'''

.

Pleasant Valley Hospital

WSAZ-TV in Charleston and

!• junbaJI 'limt&amp;• ~~

Advcst, Inc

FURNITURE GALLERIES

Huntingto~' reponed that Aldridge ·

'~ ·

Pmnt Distributing

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

iHomicide suspected in cameraman's death ·
I HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)-

.......

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Indian Creek Driving Range

.

•~

446-4367
OR

740·441·1992

:Citation Issued In Main ·Street crash

Jaymar, Inc.

Gene Abels, MD

LOSE
WEIGHT
NOW!!!

·

t

Corporate Sponson

Medley

WE PAY YOU TO

Marriage licenses

•

Indivldlllll Spoiuors

fng.erash

:Auto theft reported to dtibutles ,

••

The 8th Annual Howard Baker Saunders
· Ohio State University Scholarship Golf Toumainent; a great success-

Holzer Medical Center

Carleton College Trustees will
review scholarship C;tpplications ·

:pity man Injured in diving accident

osu Scholars'h·lp Go·If ..ournament
H ld sa.,urday·June 6 1998
•

:Crash leaves Vinton man Injured

IT'S

Open House at the Lodge Hall ·
On SR 1241 Racine, OH
June 28, 19.98 • 2•4 PM

.

~-~a~n~d~c~o~u~ld~t~ee~l~tLv~lb~rat:!!l!an~~lh~e~ho!.m~),!:'!~u;!!!ld~l~u~m~a~r~a~ft~e~rw~er~d~.!""=w~a:.!s~d~a~rk~an~d!2,co_l_d_.

.., ts dr:fver • I''
,r a,ro1t'.c"e

~~,.;.,;.,_.;..._:==:===-!:::::::::::::;;:;:::::::::::::~

Holzer Clinic

. . .

One-car accld.ent sends· five to .HM
. C

PalMI'IIy native Sandy Thornaa

(Kom) Goalllby, abovl, waa 0111 at

. Gene Johnson Chevrolet

Merriber FDIC

MERCERVILLE - A pedestrian was taken to Holzer Medical Center after
she wa.~ struck by a car Friday while walking on CR 100 (Teens Run),. the
Oallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol reponed. .
Mary R. Fellure, 48, 34 Rocklick Road, Crown City, was transponed from .
the si:ene of the 7:20a.m. accident by the Gallia County EMS. She was lat.~ r lreated and released for fractured ribs and back ..abrasions, a hospital
•Ookesperson said. •
· .
·
; • Troopers said Fellure was walking eastbound in Harrison Township, threeJDnths ofa mile east of SR 218,' when she was struck by the mirror on a westbOund car driven by Andrew D. Brumfield, 22, 4520 Priendly Ridge Road,
Crown City, as the car passed.
·
,
Slight damage was listed to Brumfield's car.

WELCOME VOLUNTEERS

I

addition of
4 portabl·e

Pedestrian Injured when struck by car

Center, which students toured.
look," he said.
.
hotel hospitality such as a lobby
"I have applications here and we
Graduates will get six credits cobcierge handliitg special gueSt
ARE looking for people," .said sci- toward a two-year degree from · requests or in travel marketing, makence museum marketing director Cleveland's Cuyahoga O&gt;mmunity ing banquet and convention arrangeChris Abood.
College, which taught two classes.
ments.
Only one member of the cll!llll-~ Gilbert said program participants
. "These are the times that are
had been to the museum before the w ld be placed only in jobs witb going to be memorable," she said.
class-sponsored tour.
.
be fits tbat include medical cover- "It may be my job that makes or
Gilbert said th · convention ag Ms. BaUard said she took wei- breaks i)leir experience."
·bureau -staned the coo
fa, , including · government·paid
That's the attitude Gilbert wants
coine entry-level job tu
er that
dical coverage, over low-paying developed. But he said the real test
can range from 30 pcrcen o 100 obs that lacked medical coverage of the program will be how many
percent in the tourist industry.
for herself and her daughter. .
course graduates "will be in a job in
Some people determined to get
The convention bureau hopes to three months, six months, one year."

:tourist bureau.
off welfare simply fil'd tbe first job keep the course going, but Oilbert
"I don't ever want to work for that's available and don't think of a ackrtowleclged that it is a relatively
small effort in a community with a
:minimum wage again," said Ms. career, he said.
:Ballard, 34, a sinaJe mother who
And, Gilbert said, many people 20 percent poveny rate and 33,0011
:lives in suburban Maple HeiJIItts.
tbink of hotel and restaut:ant jobs as families on welfare, down from
. Frustrated. by .years of welfare... .dead.-end. v~ntures, "a $5 hourly 48,000 four years ago.
. and low-paymg jobs, Ms. Ballard burger-fltppmgjob."
Witb the 36-montli welfare eligi;
: w~n a place in tbe Spirit of HospiThat's not always ·the case, bility clock ticking, that number
; tabty program sponsored by the according to a program backer Hetz · should continue declining, meaning
. Cleveland O&gt;nvention and Vtsitors Wachholz, who staned as a S1 au more jobs will be needed.
: Bureau.
.
hour dishwasher 33 years ago and
This year hotels with more tban
. She suppons herself and her 3- · now IJU!Ilages the glitzy Marriott 1;000 rooms will open in Cuyahoga
· year-old daugbter on $279 monthly hotel in Cleveland. "There are sto- County, wbich includes Cleveland.
in welfare, S220 in monthly food ries like mine everywhere you
Ms. Ballard wants to work in
stamps and lives in a ·government- .
:Paid duplex. Under new state ru~ ,..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..._......._...,
1
·she has 30 months of welfare eligi.: bllity left from a lifetime maximum
· :ot36months.
"But I'm going to be off it a lot
:sooner than that," Ms. Ballard said.
:: She is part of a pioneering pro: gram aimed at giving unskilled
-workers opportunities in a local
: tourist trade tbat attracted 8.4 mil: lion visitors and provided 84,000
· ~in 1996.
: The number of out-of-town calls
- for tourist infonnation about Cleve: land grew from 29,000 in 1992 to
· 307,000 in 1996, daring a period
Hyou are thinking about aloan-now is the time! You can become
: wben Jacobs Field, q~nd ""na, and
eligible to qualify for a$20 credit for every new customer recom: the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and
: Museum all opened.
mended by you that opens a new loan with Peoples Bank. Many
• : "This industry is now an andtor
types of pe!SOnalloans, even auto loans are eligible.
: ~a key piece of our economy," said
: David Oilbert, community affairs
n·s easy to keep track when you sign up for a Peoples Bank loan
· director for the convention bureau.
you will receive a coupon book. And with each additional p8ISOil that
;1fe put together tile welfare-to-work
.J:1aa with help from local business· opens aloan with one ol your peiSOIIal coupons you wiH receive a
. a, tc11oo11 and the Urban League.
$20.00 reduction of principal. •
'•: Gilbert kllows of no other con\ICIIIion bureau-sponsored welfareFor more infonnation stop at your nearest Peoples Bank location, call
, to-work training program.
: The first class was picked from
1-81J0.374-41123, or contact us at www.peopl11bancorp.com today.
· ~ applicants, some of whom
flunked drug tests and were disqualified.
: Most students are women on wellare and male ex-convicts or former
Jlllll abusers who are JCitinJ JOV·
ernmc:nt help to JC1 back on tlteir

.

; • GALLIPOLIS - Oallia County Road 94 (Raccoon) will be closed to trnffii: between Shoestring Ridge Road and Stale Route 2 V!. at 7:30 a.m. Tuesilay and for five working days for slip repairs, County Bncineer Glenn Smith
announced.
·
Motorists may use'orher local roadS a~ a detour duri~ this period, Smith
said.
·

Convention burea~-tr8ii1S'';~if~re
,recipients for tourist industry jobs
A!J.er
: three years on welfare, LaDetdra
. Ballard wants to put an ordeal of
:drug and alcohol abuse behind her
: iUKI link her future to tbe booming
: IICCI~ ~f this city's economy - the
,! 10111151 tndustry.
·
: "I want to be an ambassador for
:Cleveland. This is iny town," Siid
Ballard, one of 20 members of
. an maugural 10-week welfare-to: work course sponsored by the city

~

.111M 28, 111118

Po~eroy · native

: .,. BRIAN J. RI!!O
·11mM Ssnllnel Sl8tf
• POMEROY - Wbea it comes to Fourth of July firework.s, consumers
:are oftea confused about wbat can be legally purchased and discharged.
: According to Ohio Fire Marshall James J. McNamee, fireworks are
•for the most part illegal in Ohio, and are considered dangerous - even
Continued from pegeA1
: innocent-appearing sparklers and other novelty products.
the entire project involving more
: Three types of fireworks can be found in Ohio: trick and novelty firethan 20,000 y olunteers.
: works, 1.3G display flfeworks and 1.4G consumer fireworks.
Houston was a Jimmy Carter
. Trick and novelty flfeworks include the novelty items most often
Work Project, an affiliate of Habitat
: associated with children's celebrations of the founh: sparklers, snajls,
for Humanity International (HFHI)
: aJow snakes and smoke bombs. These are legally sold, often in superfounded by MiUard and Unda Fuller
. markets and discount stores, and used anywhere in the state. .
with the mission of eliminating
: Displa:r fmworks su,ch as aerial shells fired from monars require a
poverty housing from the world.
: license for sale, purchase and use.
.
O&gt;nsumer fireworks include firecrackers, 'bottle rodcers, Roman can-President Caner and his · wife,
RosalyM, have been involved in the
: Illes and fountains. These fireworks can be sold only by a licensed manuHFHI program since 1984.
: facturer or wholesaler. Purchasers must be at least 18 bot must sign a pur: chuer form stating that they will not be discharged in Ohio, and that they
Before the Houston project could
· will be takca out of the state within 48 hours, or 72 hOurs for non-residents.
be staned it took nearly two years
· · Firecrackers, bottle rockets and other.consumer fireworks may not be
for the Jimmy Carter Work Project
: legally dischuged in Obio. Even first-time violators arc subject to a
team to select qualified families,
: Sl,OOO fine and up to six months in jail.
,
purchase land, acquire materials and
In addition to the legal questions, however, there are safety concerns · $Upplies, and solicit financial sup: associated witb fireworks. McNamee said that 8,300 people were treated in
pan.
: hospital emergency rooms last year for injuries associated witb fireworks.
In Houston, a family or individ· Half of those injuries were bUrns, most involving the hands, eyes and bead.
ual could qualify for one of the
Healtb and safety expens, including McNamee, recommend leaving
homes if they were first time buyers
flrework.s detonation to licensed expens (Middlepon, Racin~ and Rutearning between $11,000 and
. lind will all include frrework.s in their community celebrations.)
$23,000.
Those unable to anend public, professional displays are urged to avoid
They· were also required to confi(eworks at home. While there are advantages to hosting a Fourth of July
tribute 300 hours of "sweat equity"
, party it home, there are dangers as well.
to help build their home. The houses
"The nciJIItbor may be a great guy, but be isn't a pyrotechnic profes-. were then purchased For $43,000 to
sional," a Prevent Blindness America publication says.
$46,000 with a no-imerest 15-30
The organization suggests these ideas for danger-free celebrations:
year mongage. To each of the new
• Oive children phosphorescent neon glo-stick.s, glo-ropes and glohomeowners, President Caner prejewelry to briJibten the evening.
sented a Bible and posed for a group
• Jiluy novelty flashlights with minors to bounce \he lights and
picture.
changeable colored filters or optic fibers. These lights look like sparklers
When the house she worked on
but are safer.
·
was completed, Goolsby said she
• Use neon and aJow-in-the-d.ark paints to provide an afternoon an
lmooarvkeedleadt. what had been done and
project which become s more dramatic at night.
• Buy explosive-free noisemakers from a pany store.

· lly THOMAS J. SHEERAN
:~lilted PreN Writer
. CLEVELAND (AP) -

Regional
f- .Tri-County Briefs:- Board OKs r-----River .car Wash?-•

Sunday, June 28, 1998

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

. Purchase, discharge of fireworks
: 'for the most part' illegal In Ohio

•

Conloror--

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:commentary

Ohio/W.Va.
Industry willing .t o work with smog reduction

PageA4

June21, 18118

Sunday, June 26, 1998

iunbRJ! 1rimes • ientintl China making U. S., Clinton looking like a fool
T.st~ZDG.stua in 1966

By TONY SNOW
Cnllllors Syndlcale

825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio

614 446 2342 • Fax: 446 3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992-2157

~
GAl\"JED'
A .Gannett Co. Newspaper
Robert L Wingett
Publisher
Hobart Wilson Jr.
Executive Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

::sightseeing Clinton sees
:·value in merely being here
:
:
.
:
:
·
·
:
:

WASI-DNGTON .. White House
mavens have given Rqlublicans a campaign issue for 1998 and 2!XXJ. The issue
is national weakness, and President
Clinton's trip to Qtina will put it on display.
Let us set the stage. The commander
in chief has winged his way to·Bcijing,
where Chinese officials have arranged
nine days of sightseeing and humiliation.
Clinton's hosts graciously placed
him on a podium near Tienamen Square,
knowing the scene would make any and
all grandiloquence about human rights
sound tinny and hypocritical.
They denied credentials to three
broadcasters working for Radio Free
Asia- a twofer snub, since it enables the
communist government to thumb its
nose not onl y at Clinton's administration
but also at the idea of a free press.
They made· it clear they have no
rcmorse about trying to influence our
1996 elcetion·s or pilfering high-tech
secrets that enabled them to huild
weapons which can threaten us more
difC!.11y and credibly.
They askod the president to relax ·

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent ·
XI' AN, China -Sightseeing will take up more time tha n summitry in
President Clinton's China visit. But even tourism, presidential-style. can be
full of meaning as an ancient culture and a young one try to achieve a mod·
ern understandin g.
Clinton will do a weekend's busi ness in Beijing with China's leaders, a
return visit for his 1997 Washington summit with President JiangZemin . It
is a close match, nine days ·now as then, a five-stop tour from the we icom: ing extra.vaganza in Xi'an, pageantry patterned on Tang Dynasty tradition,
• to booming Shanghai to a finale in Hong Kon~ .
.
:
The president is commillcd to ex press his displeasure oyer human ri ghts
: abuses in China. He also is committed to a Beijing arrival ceremony Friday
• night in Tiananmen Square, symbol to the West of the bloody repression of
: a Chinese democracy movement in 1989.
:
The rebuke is a vital political message home; nobody really believes it
~ will change China's ways. But Clinton and his advisers do believe that their
~ contacts with China are the most likely path to progress.
'
Beyond engagement in policy, Clinton 's people believe there is great
t value in his simply being here, sampling the historical tapestry, seeing the
: people and letting them see him.
t In Xi 'an, he will view the thousa nds of life-size terra co tta warriors of
• China's ancient capitab set there to guard the spirit of Qin Shihuangdi, the
: tyrant who unified China more than 2,000 years ago. .
~
His journeys will take him increasingly into the present - into what he
~ no doubt hopes is cen_tral to China's future. Next week he meets new home' owners. builders. mortl!age bankers and young Shanghai entrepreneurs.
t What a ch~nge from President Nixon's groundbr~aking trip in 1972,
.t when Pat Nixon toured a socialist farm commune and found something
: polite to say, talking about how she, too, was once a farrn girl who raised a
• pnzewmnmg ptg.
:
But that change is not enough. from the Western viewpoint . And critics
'of the Clinton policy say his form of engagement is holl ow. letting the Chi- By ROBERT WEEDY
Often we complain about the way
- ,nese do as they choose, confident the administration won't retaliate harshly.
things
an: done or about what is. going
:: : Republican Sen. Tim Hutchinson of Arkansas said the president has
on
in
our
society. but seldom do we
: -llecome the "coddler in chief." a taunting reference to the worO Clinton used
make an ,effort -to '1118ke our voices
·• :i!l the 1992 campaign against George Bush 's China engagement policy.
heard to make a difference. While
::. · In office, Clinton ad?pted much the sam~ policy himself.
::: . China scholar David Shambaugh of George Washington University said folks are more busy now than at any
time in history, it is ihe word lrom the
~ ·tftat with Clinton spending ahout three-q uarters of his time sightseeing, he
·grassroots
that can affect change. Since
• :will need all his persuasive skills te Alake a case that he is working at the
~ relationship. not only playing diplomatic to'urist.
.
. our children, teens and young adults
A;nd so now come the themes - village elections. a changing market are most affected by entertainment and
'
economy. envtronmental problems and prog ress. commerce. construction, the choices of the media, our attention
is directed to an analysis printed in a
even the American way of getti ng a home.
June issue of the Columbus Dispatch.
All wilh a cautious. lnw-cx pcctations summit as the cc m c rpicc~ .•
Don Aucoin, writing for the Boston
Globe.
gives us some insight a.&lt; to the
EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist
inner
workings
of the television indus:
for The Associated Press, has repc11ted on Washington and national pol·
try.
The
dumping
of'Dr. Quinn. Medi·
itics for more than 30 years.
cine Woman', a popular and 'sale' family program, in favor of 'Dawson's
Creek' is cited as an example of a double standard. It i&gt;f not a question of
what the people want to bring into their .
living rooms, but of what advertising
agencies want to accomplish lor their
•r :IIY The Associated Press
·
·
clients. The quality of the progmm and
~:: Today is S~nday. June 28, the !79th day of 1998. There arc tg6 days left the negative influence it ha.' on the ·
~ ~~ the year.
.
·
most vulnerable is of no concern. This
Today's Highlight in History:
in spite of efforts of Congress to pres~:: On June 28, 1914, Austrian Archduke Franci s Ferdinand and his wife, sure the industry to become more fam~ Sofia, were assassinated in Sarajevo by a Serb nationaltst. The event triggered· ily friendly. Capturing the young is
' World War I.
their goal.
On this date:
If you arc over 50 the advertising
In 177g, " Molly Pitcher" (Mary Ludwig Hays) carried water to American agency figures you are a 'free' item.
1 soldiers at the Battle of Monmouth during the Revolutionary War.
Programs you liked are gone because
ln ' l836, the fourth president of the United Swtes, James Madison, died in Madison Avenue doesn) like them.
~~~~ .
.
.
.
.
They arc not trendy and do not appeal
, ; : In 1838. Britain's Queen Victoria was crowned in Westminster Abbey.
to the generation X'ers they feel arc
:-: In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles was signed in France, ending World War important for them to reach.
=~
Of course this is not a new concept,
~;: In 1919; Harry S Truman married Elizabeth Virginia Wallace in lndepen-

U.S.
export
public statement by Premier Jiang
restrictions even
Zemin or some other eminence that
further .. which is
China ought to =ive a free pass on
rather like Willie
trade. This would entail a presidential
Sutton asking
promise to end annual votes on Most
banks to leave
Favored Nation trade status for China
their sat'es open a1
coupled with an immediate grant of
night.
membership in the World Tra&amp; OrganiThey pushed
zation.
for the complete
Presently. China qualifies for neither.
abandonment of
Snow
It hasn't protected civil liberties, as Conthe trade sanctions enacted by Congress g'ress wants. And it hasn' t repealed .trade
in the wake of the 1989 massacre at laws that restrict the impon of American
11enamen Square.
consumer goods, as the WID chaner
Finally comes the icing: As crews d£mands.
were fueling Air Force One in prcpara·
This weird " greeting" is ·a direct
tion for the big trip, Otina urged the product of the administration's genius
United States not to sell advanced lor compromising funda
weapons to Taiwan-- and to make n lor- Yntal national principles._The United
mal statement to that effect in order to SU1tes has managed to observe one key
inflict gratuitous humiliation upon Tai- lilrcign-policy tenet for 50 years. We
wan.
believe in free trade and in engagement
·In short, the world's la.&lt;t major com- through trade.
munist power approached the prcsiPrcsidcnL&lt; Cm1er, Reagan and Bush
dent's visit as an exercise in brinkman- all adopted this approach. But the Clin·
ship. ll didn 't kowtow. it provoked.' It ~ ton cadres added a new wrinkle hy treat·
tested the administration's patience .• ing national s&lt;:&lt;:urity and digtlity a.&lt; lunand, much to its gratification, found the gihk commodities. They swappcd them
Clinton team almost Jot&gt;-like in IL&lt; for- for tiiC moral equivalent of uinkeL&lt; and
bcarnnce.
heads .. as if our safety and pride were
The final nail almost surely will he a cheap and glittery gewgaws.

Flannery said, "I can't help what Corky said or whal Dale ~eydlauff said .
By JENNIFER BUNDY
~ut it."
·
Anoc:lated Press Writer
He did not talk to DeMIIfCo or anyone else in Underwood's office about
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -An industry group's response to a proposal by
six governors to soften a federal smog-reduction plan mirrors one suggest- the industry response, he said.
The members of his group "have been some of the most outspoken peoed by an aide to Gov. Cecil Underwood but that does not mean it was staged,
pie on this issue and we intend to continue to be,"
the group's spokesman said.
The group's support of the governors' plan "i!where we are. If that pleas"While (the governor's ~lan) is more than what we wanted, we're willing 10 work with it. ... We' re..lwilling to support the initiative," Dave Flan- es folks or it doesn't please folks, that's fine."
An environmentalist on Thursday criticized the six-stale plan, saying it ·
nery said Friday. Flannery iN. Charleston lawyer who works for the Midwas developed with too much industry help and the e-mail was proof of that.
. west Ozone Group.
Frank O'Donnell, executive director of the nonprofit Clean .Air Trust, a
His group includes more than 30 companies, trade organizations and a&lt;sociations, including American Electric Power Co. and Allegheny Power Co. Washington, D.C. coalition of environmental groups, did not return a phone
.
.
A June 18 e-mail from Dale Heydlauff, an AEP executive, to dozens of call Friday.
Ohio,
West
Virginia,
Virginia,
Alabama,
Michigan
and Tennessee on Thursother utility officials in several states said Underwood aide Corky De Marday
submitted
an
emissions
plan
that
would
be
an
alternative to an Envito "~dieves it would be most helpful if ... MOO and other utility groups
could audibly grumble about the stringency of the proposal, while acknowl- , ronmental Protection Agency proposal last fall to force 22 states in the East
and Midwest to reduce their ozone-producing emissions from all uti lity and
edging they can probably live with it."
·
DeMarco has said the comment was an off-the-cuff remark and not the industrial sources.
Thursday was the la.•t day for public comment on the EPA plan.
seed of a conspiracy.
" It is a more aggressive proposal than we had recommended," Flannery

i

We can blame the entire mess on~
basic errors IR straregy. Fust, the prest·
dent figured that defense no longer mattered in the jiost-Cold War world, and
thus slashed defense spending to pnePearl Harbor levels.
Not cuntenl with tha~ he decided to
reshape mthtary culture. His ~forms
sapped morale and transformed the
. Anny. Navy and Air Force into bogs _of
social experimentation. By feminizing
the combat forces, the Pentagon has
managed to repeat errors committed and
rebuffed by many of our allies, includi~g
Israel. It also persuaded hundreds of our
best pilots and fighters to quit the military and choose something more
reward ing and challenging.
Nobody doubts we could whip
Chi na in a confrontation, but almost
nobody believes we would engage in
such a tiff without cataclysmic provocation. We don't have the naval fO.Cc to
intimidate anybody for an extended
period of time --·not even Saddam Hussei n. China and others intcrprtt that a.&lt;
weakness on our part. and theY're right.
111C second great cm1r: 1l1C ndministrat ion confused appeasement for
engagement. We always have had
enough clout to pry open intrnnsigcnl
rmtrkcL&lt; - and the president wa.&lt; fabulously successful in pursuing this straicgy during his lirst te11n.
Unl{lrtunately. he now nwcs pans of
his soul to organi1..cd labor, and thus ha.&lt;
appmuchcd free trade with caution. The
result: He lost a crucial vote last year on
i&lt;l&lt;l-trJCk tmde authority and now feels
he can only succeed hy giving China
what it wanL&lt;. no matter how badly its
leaders oct.
Clinton is absolutely right to promote
engagement. Unli111unatcly, he ha&lt; all
but doomed his venture by .Jailing to
rcalit.c that engagement only works
when one operates from a position of
real and perceived strength. The Chinese
think they can make Bill Clinton cry
"uncle." Until he proves them wrong,
they seem determined to make him ..
and his nation -- look like the fool.

GRAFI'ON (AP) - There is lit·
tie the village can do to stop the
planned opening of a private prison
that would house prisoners with
felony convictions for drunken driving, a state lawmaker said.
Slate Sen. Louis Blessing, RCincinnati, proposed the idea for the
500-bed Gmfton prison that is to

.

f,;l"oday in history
r: ·

.

.

.

~~~~-~~~.NewYorkGov. AifredE. Smithwasnomirtatedforpresidental ·

• · :~be Democratic national convention in Houston .
• ·: • In 1950, North Korean forces captured Seoul, South Korea.

matter

for

decades. This is
just a . frank
adt~sion of the
policy that is in
efl'cct.
·
Do
adverWeedy
tisers have a right
to spend their money on anything tliCy
want to spend it on'' Perhaps. to "
point. Lowering s~1ndards of momlity
and decency by glorifying in the eyes
of the immature consistent anti-family
themes is costing society dearly. The
'heroes' of these shows do not represent
middle America and mainstream values. Their lives are anything but models of virtue, bunather out-of-control
fleshly lusts and vulgarity. "We will
give you what you like" may sell prod·
ucts but a generation in need of rescue
is poorly scrvod socially by this 'commercial value only' policy.
The crowd that produces these
shows have led the way in drug abuse
activity, unconventional lifestyles, glo- .
rilication of violence and other anli_social activities. Busy parent&lt; have
been at a loss to counteract the power
and innucnce this has upon their kids,
short of unplugging all the 1V sets.
With illegal drug abuse now a dollar
industry a.&lt; large as the world-wide
automobile indusl(y, how arc parents
to protect their children? Children
killing children, even in school, is a

By The Associated Press
The following numbers were
· selected in Friday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
·
.
OHIO
Pick3: 2-2-7
Pick 4: 4-8-6-8
Buckeye 5: 7-9-19-28-36
There were two tickets sold naming all five numbers dmwn in Friday
· night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and each
winning ticket is worth $100,000.
--- -

.

mayor or the
capital _ city.
Indeed, a former congressional staff
member who
is now a business consultant in the city
is
blitzing
reporters with
"Draft Larry
Pressler" litera·
Spear
lure. It is not a
task Pressler is particularly eager to
undertake, he said in u Washington
Post interview. But like thatreluctant
old warrior Ross Perot, it is a duty he
would perform if the people desire.
In Congress, Pressler wa.&lt; noted
for his inconsistent voting record ..
being pro-abonion one day, say, and
anti-abortion a few days later -- but
he could .generally be counted on to
vote the conservative line. ll is that
philosophy, he says, which is dri.ving
him to take on the job of running a
city which is world-renowned for its
potholes, lousy services and rude
bureaucmts.
,
One thing he wants to do is ·issue
vo~cher~ that would allow poor citi-

•

WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 7-9-9
Daily 4: 6· 7-2-6
Cash 25:4-11-12-13-14-21

struclion site about 20 miles south·
west of Cleveland.
The prison will be the first in the
state prison system to be privately
run. The Northeast Ohio Correctional Center in Youngstown is privately
operated but houses inmafes from
Washington, D.C.
There have been at least 13 stabbings - two of them fatal - atthe
Youngstown prison since it opened in
May 1997, and critics are worried the
s,ame could happen in Grafton.
.
· Supporters say the private prison
could save money and would be just
as safe as any publicly run. prison.

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proposal~

said.

.

The governors' proposal, announced by Gov. Cecil Underwood. pledgC:S

certain reduction levels and calls for computer modeling as a second phase.
Flannery said several states asked his Midwest Ozone Group la.~t April If
it would.agree to a 55 percent emissions reduction. It did, but after talkill)l
to EPA officials in May, representatives of the states said the emissions needed to be reduced by at least 65 percent, Flannery said.
A 55 percent emissions reduction would cost American Electric Pow'e!!!
atone $500 million, Fhlnnery said. A 65 percent reduction would cost il Sl
billion,
The group told the governors 65 percent was too much "''d they hopei!
they would not recommend that.
·
·
But the governors did.
.
The six-state plan pledges to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions by .55 percent of 1990 levels by April 2002, and 65 perc.erit by April 2004.
:
EPA proposed to reduce utility emission by 85 percent. emis.•ions from
major industrial sources by 70 percent and those from small industrial sources
by 50 percent.
The reductions were supposed to occur by 2002, but EPA indicated it was
studying whether to extend the deadline to 2004.

Gallipolis, Ohio
1/2 mile south of the Silver Bridge
CC374CL271

Guard~ prev.iously also have said

they ure worried aliout ultimately losing their iobs

Lowell Max Brown
went to . be with the
Lord June 25, 1998. Max
is the brother of Joe
Brown of Brown's
Hardware and Chester
Brown of Brown's
Market and Marceda
Mollohan of Gallipolis.
Services are at
Stevens/Grass Funeral
Home Malden, W.Va.
Visitation 6-9 Sat. June
27, 1998 and 8urial
Sun. 1 pm June 28, •
1998 Special Thanks
to Trinity United
Methodist Church and
White Oak Baptist
Church and all of our
friends and neighbors
for their thoughts &amp;
prayers for Max over the
last 3 years.
TheFamlly

Rec . all the
materials a p ed in
your recycling program·
The more materials we can pick up at each site
means a more efficient recycling program.
Remember, everyone canhelp by recycling.

'fHE ,GALLIA, JACKSON, MEIGS, VINTON
. SOLID
MANAGEMENT DISTRICT
740-384-2164.
853
Funded by the Ohio Dept. of Natural Resources,
Division of Recycling and Litter Prevention.

Thqic is Cnough here to gi vc grc:JI

concern Hi lamilics, the church. ;~ild
society in gell)'ral. Many Americans
hnve nut yet caught on to the ;~dvcr~
impacL kids arc having from movies
and television. For far to(, nu.m·y it is

upon living comrortahly. Most
t"KKllllcrs. having m~ Jstly achieved their

perceived material nccrls. have li&gt;und
this d&lt;&gt;es not sati sfy. thei r deepest

we c;.m have inllucncc hy hnyc.::otting
prndu~.:ls or cnmpilnics. At lcm~t two·

{I

dcsi~nation X, nn
thirds say this is &lt;In cll'cctivc W&lt;~y 1o
unknown quantity, seems suitable for make " point. What we need to do in
their. children, the hustcrs.
the issue above is to put this concept
Since many of the honmers have into practice. We can ea.&lt;ily idcntily_thc
not yet li&gt;und worthy goals to replace sponsor of objcctionahlc, demeaning,
thei r materialistic •1nd pleasure desi res, or ollCnsivc pmgmnls and lei them
what can he c.xpccted ol' their children? know.
Definitely, the search for meaning is
1l1is will be more clfcclive than
still on.
complaining lo our spouse. It will not
To know where the busters nrc in hurt to let the television station mantheir mind set, observe the following agement know how we feel a.&lt; well.
research done by the Barna Research
Programs arc the way they arc
Group: Baby Busters top the list of all because mature citizens arc not speakpeople groups, bei~ most likely to ing up as we should. When -we have
agree to the following:
the experience to know the eiTccL&lt; the
-- Everything in life is negotiable.
garhagc is producing, we also have a
-- They arc the lca.~t likely to say responsibility to keep it out of the
they do not lie.
·
America's living room.
-- Christian Bahy Busters arc more
Robert Weedy is a comspondenl
likely than others to have watched for the Sunday Tunes-Sentinel.
M1V last week.

yearning s. 1l1us a

o·.c. may·o_r?.

• zcns to send their children lo private
schools. He also wants to eliminate
capital-gains and income taxes on
Washin gton residents and thereby
create a " Hong · Kong hy the
Potomac."
He seems unfazcd by the jeers
that have greeted his announcement.
Yes, he is a white man seeking to
preside over u city that is two-thirds
black. But hey, he has always supported Indians, and he attended the.
1963 March on· Washington: No, he
is not a D.C. nati ve, hut he' has li ved
inside t~c beltway sincc·J97 1.
At hrst glance, Pressler would
see m supremely qualilicd Jor any
public position. His crcdcniials
include a Rhodes scholarship. a Har·
liard law degree and a stint in Viet·
nam. He is proof positi"vc, however,
that c rcdenti ~ l s do not a savant
make.
He fought mightil y to keep
YOGURT off school menus as a
meat alternative. He once referred to
Margaret Thatcher as "Elizabeth."
He testified before his own Commerce Committee and ·protested
when a colleague interrogated him
too closely. " I don:t think it's proper
to ask hard qucstmns to members,"

he said. He openly bragged about
how much he resembles Forrest
Gump.
.
In 1·177, the Wall Street Journal
dcscrihGd ·Pressler as a "show
horse." In 1989, Spy maga1.inc chose
him as the fifth "dopiest" lawmaker
in Washington. In 1990, the Wash·
inglonian
magazine
declared
Pressler to he "brain dead."
·
During his la.•l year in niTicc, he
pushed through a gigantic telccommunications hill that, among other
things, wa' supposed to lower cahle
bills. He vowed to "privutize" puhlic
broadcasting and homburded the
Corporation fnr ·Puhlic Brnadcasting
with 16 pages of questions about its
procedures. The response required
several thousand pages nf documents
and cost $92,000 to compile .
Despite his duhious track reco,1J,
Pressler seems to think he is tanned,
rested and ready. "All Americans
cure about the n~lion 's capital," he
told the Washington Post. "And they
think it's just bizarre what's going on
here."
Thus spakc Exhibit A.
J05eph Spear Is a syndicated
writer for ~ewspaper Enterprise
Association.

It's really that simple. On June 15th, Peoples National Bank took on the name of City National Bank.
Other than a new name, you can still expect that good old fashioned service and your favorite bank products.

I

Same Faces. Same Places. New Name.
Peoples National is now City National Bank.

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BANKRUPTCY
AnORNEY
LOUIS W. CENNAMO

.. It is better to get even than to get
mad.
-- Movies and television really
reflect the way Americans live.
.. 'There is no such thing a.&lt; absolute
truth.

their educator, mentor and h;~hy - s itter.
"Giving them what they like" is certainly working against the best overall
interests of the young today.
Amcril::ans on Lhc whole agree that

Pres-sler to rU(I _for

::: In 1967, Israel fo;mally declared Jerusalem reunified under its sovereignty By Joseph Spear
: -following its capture of the Arab sect.or in the June 1967 war.
· ·
Larry Pressler is •• how to say
::: In 1978, the Supreme Court ordered.the l!niversity of California at Davis t~is7 -- a very odd fellow.
· Medical School to •dmit Allan Bakke. a white man, who argued he'd been a
I am cenain .the name is (inging
: ~ctim of reverse rccial discrimination.
·
bells in the back of your cranium. He
: · : In 1996, the Citadel voted to admit women, ending a 153-year-old men- was the three-term Republican sena·
: ~Iy policy at the South Carolina military sc hool.
· tor from South Dakota who ·was
·.: • Ten years ago: The federal ;;overnment sued thelnternational Brotherhood .involuntarily retired i~ Novem~r
: •of Teamsters to force reforms on the nation's largest lahor union. The two 1996 .. the only GOP tncumbent tn
; ~s reached a seltlement in March, 1989.
- the-upper chamber lu..be so dishon; :: Five years ago: The Supreme Court kept alive a "racial gerrymandering" ored..
. &amp;esc. saying congressional districts designed to benefit racial minorities may
Sttl.l don 't remember? &lt;?K: sure~y
: ;..iiolate white voters' rights. The National Commission on AIDS ended its yo~ wtll recall the famous tnctdent tn
: ll&gt;ork after four years, with members expressing fru stra~ion over how little whtch a senat~ got up to leave a
· national leaders !'tad done to combat the disease.
commtttee heanng a~d walked mto a
: One year ago: President Clinton, unable to meet his ow n July 4 deadline for closet, then tri~d to cover up the mis: campaign finance reform, blamed the inaction on Congress in his weekly radio take by backmg -out and wavmg
; address. In a wild rematch, Evander Holyfield retained the WBA heavyweight goodbye to someone who was
• boxing championship after his opponent, Mike Tyson. was disq'ualified for bit- allegedly standing in the darkened
: ing Holyfield's' ear during the third round of their fight in Las Vegas.
· space. That was Larry Pressler.
: Today's Birthdays: Comedian' movie director Mel Brooks is 72. Sen. Carl
Not being enamored ofh1m when
. : Levin (0-Mich.) is 64. Former White House chief of staff Leon Panetta is 60. he was 'a sitting senator, I quickly
. Rock musician Dave Knights (Proeul Harum) is 53. Actor Bruce Davison is forgot about Pressler when he
· : 52. Actress Kathy Bates is 50. Football player John Elway is 38. Record com- became a former on~ _and assumed
; pany chief executive Tony Mercedes is 36. Actress Jessica Hecht ("Friends") he had.moved back !O the home slate
· is 33. Rock musiCian Sa~l Davies (James) is 33. Actress Mary Stuart Master- he cla1med to chensh. I was, alas. .
: son is 32. Actor John Cusack is 32. Actress Danielle Brisehois is 29. Jazz sadly mistaken. Like a grinning jack: musician Jimmy Sommers is 29.
· "'
.
· jn-th~-hox, he popped up in the
: Thought for Today: "More persons, on the whole, are humbugged b~ headh~es ag~in a few days ago. .
· believing nothing, than by believing too much.". Phineas T. Bam urn, Amert· ·
He ts sull to Washtngton, working
: can showmar (181 0-1891 ).
as a lawyer and lobbyist, and he is
'
·
thinking or running for the office of

open next year,
Village officials plan to meet
Tuesday to talk about trying to block
the prison from opening by suing the
state.
.
.
On Friday, dozens of state prison
guards joined a fight to prevent the
opening. They picketed in shifts for
more than three hours at the con-

Ohio, W.Va. lottery selections

It.'s time to take out the trash
recent producl of the typc of programming they arc ted both on 1V and in
the movies. The age at which they arc
committing crimes just keeps getting
lower. Ruincrl lives, from burning out
their brains to lime in prison, is loo
high a price to pay for any society.
1l1is Generation X, or Baby Busters
tis they arc often called, gene rally is
identified a' from 18 to 29 years of
age. 1l1cy arc the children of the Baby
Boomers. These B;~hy Boomers.
essentially 30 to 50 years of age.
placed a greater premium upon their
free time with n growing crnpha:.;is ·

.

Village trying to .block ·siting of private prison

Write Tony Snow, Crearors SYndf.
cate, 5777 We~t Cenful1' Blvd, Suite
700, Los Angeles, Calif. 9004S. ·

the demise of
television pro·
gramming ha.&lt;
been an ongoing

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�Page A6 • , •hu .......,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

tbul

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Jessie Fern Hively
GALLIPOLIS- Jessie fern Hively, 101, Gallipolis, died Friday, June
26, 1998 at her residence.
. Born Feb. 25, 1897 in Harrison Township, Gallia County, daughter of the
late John M. and Mary Catherine DeWitt Hively, she was a.homemaker.
. She was a member of the Old Mount Carmel Church, and attended the
Rodney Methodist Church.
She was also preceded in death by three sisters. Lottie, Alice and Ora Bell
l:tively: three brothers, Cecil. Ernie and Isaac Hively: a nephew, Irvin lear.
and a niece, Mary Raines.
Surviving are several nieces and nepllews, Garland (Helena) lear of Rodney, Francis (Delora) Beck of El Dordo Springs, Mont., Emory (Kalhleen)
Bostic of Newark, Isaac (Doris) Hively of Gallipolis. John (Joann) Hively
of Murrysville, Pa., and R""hel Conway of land of lakes, Fla.
. Services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Charles lee Hively officiating. Burial will be in the
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the fuheml home from
5-8 p.m. Sunday.

Ada G. Hoce
POMEROY- Ada G. Hoce. 88, Pomeroy, died Friday, June 26, 1998
in the Hol zer Senior Care Center, Gallipolis.
Born Oct. 5, 1909 in Meigs County. daughter ofthe late Reese T. and Ethel
I. Keeton West, she was a homemaker.
She was a member of the Pomeroy Methodist Church.
Surviving are a sister. Ruth Thivener of Gallipolis: and several nieces and
nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Raymond Hoce; and four
sisters.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Ewing Funeral Home, Pomeroy,
with Dr. Jerry Neal officiating. Burial will be in the Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.

James Milton Hood .
:: WAYLAND, Texa.~ - James Millon Hood. 56, Wayland, died Friday, June
· 26, 1998 at his residence.
·
: : The son of Freda Hood of Middleport. and the late Milton Hood, he was
: employed with the U.S. Postal Service, and was previously captain as a car: go pilot. He also served in the U.S. Navy. '
. : Surviving are his wife, Lori Hood; two daughters, Jolene and lesli~ of
California: and a brother. John (Crystal) Hood of Pomeroy.
Services will be held in Wayland.

Elizabeth R. 'Betty' Hubbard
. GALLIPOLIS - Elizabeth Rose "Betty" Hubbard, 78, Gallipolis, died
Friday, June 26, 1998 in Holzer Medical Center.
Born Dec. 19, 1919 in Cleveland, daughter of the late Tom and Rose Schell
Hubbard. she was a piano player, and .a member of the New life lutheran
Church in 9allipolis.
She was also preceded in death by three brothers and two sisters.
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the New Life Lutheran Church, with
Pastors John Jackson and Art lund officiating. Burial will he in the Cente·
nary Cemetery. Friends may call at the church on Monday from 9 a.m. until
the time of the services.
Arrangements are by the Willis Funeral Home.

Nancy M. Rossiter
. • GALLIPOLIS - Nancy Marie Rossiter, 84, Scottown, died Thunday,
June 25. 1998 in Holzer Medical Center.
:: Born Nov. 4, 1913 in Gallia Coun(y, daughter of the late James and Cora
:!Ieaver Caldwell, she was a homemaker.
: · She wa.~ also preceded in death by her husband, Ova Ray Rossiter: a spn,
:Carl Rossiter; and by three brothers and two sisters.
·
·: Surviving .are five sons. Merrill Ray Rossiter and Roger Dale Rossiter,
~th of Crown City, Wendell lee Rossiter and Bernanll. Rossiter, both of
(lallipolis. and Gary Dean Rossiter of Bidwell: a daughter, Wanda lou Mohler
·ef Middleport; 14 grandchildren, 12' great-grandchildren and a greal"greatgrandchild; and o sister, Alma Sanders of Crown City.
.
: Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home.
·Burial will be in the lawrence Chapel Cemetery. Visitation was held in the
tuneral home on Saturday.
·

Carol Irene Sow·a rds

wv

Klan, armed blacks
march in Texas town
JASPER, TelUIS (AP) - Whitehooded Ku Klux Klansmen waving
Confederate flags marched Satunlay
in the Texas town where three white
men allegedly dragged a black man
to his death behind a pickup truck.
Black counterdemonstrators carrying guns showed up and pol ice kept
the two sides apart, making one
arrest as the Klan rally ended.
Amid steamy sqmmer heat and
ringed by stale troopers in riot gear,
Klan leader Rick Anderson said:
"Jasper is pan of the ittvisible
empire. Make no mistake about it,
this is Klan country."
The Klan has said it had no
involvement in the June 7 slaying of
James Byrd Jr.. who was bealen and
fatally dragged behind a pickup truck
down a rural road. Three white men ·
charged with murder in the killing
had ties to "!hite supremacist groups,
authorities said.
Roughly 20 Klan members paraded in the courthouse square, with
temperatures reaching the 90s in
high humidity. About SO black
activists arrived and made a show of
unloading riOes and other weapons
from trunks.
·
Shouting "black power," the
counterdemonstrators pointed, shot-

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

.

OU
seeks stop·to mining in forest
•
ATHENS (AP)- Ohio Universi- .
til has asked the state to prohibit mini)lg in a SS-acre old-growth forest the
~~ehool owns in Belmont County.and
I,SO().foot surrounding butTer zone.
: 1'he university said Thursday it
Jtas filed a, petition with the Ohio
9ivision of Mines and Reclamation
that seeks state ~
, tion for Dysan
Woods, which
trees believed to
(!e up to 400.ye · .
• Ohio Valley / CO.I Co. officials
liave said they pl_IUJ.tb ask the state to
a)lprove a permit allowing tlie comP.UIY to mine beneath the forest in
e8stem Ohio. 1be company owns the
mineral rights to a seam of coal
the wood.t.
• "lbe intent to mine beneath the
old-growth forest is of conc:em to
Ollio Univenity because of the deli·

a

I '*neath

cate balance of the ecosystem that
supports Dysan Woods," said Gary
North, the univenity's vice pmident
of administration. "There are simply
no as•urances anyone can give that
will guarantee no damage will result
from· mining."
..

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•

By LAURA MYERS
.
AIIOCieled Preu Writer
BEUJNG - Presidents Clinton
and Jiang Zemin engaged in a spirited, tc:levised debate Saturday over
human rights and the Ttananmen
Squan: crackdown and announc:ed a
string of agreements on anns conttol.
energy and the environment.
lbere were no announc:ed breakthroughs on American human rights
complaints. including Ttbet. but bOth
leaden ~entuated the positive side
. of an evolving U.S.-China relation·ship even as they made clear they
won't shy away from disagreements.
Clinton praised Jiang's government for resisting pressure to deval- .
ue its currency, a move many fear
would wonen Asia's financ:ial crisis.
But they could not agree on terms to
allow ~ina eniry into the World
Tmde Organization, which sets global tmde rules.
It was clear, however, that the
ldent Jiang Zemln took 1 tum lellcllng l"- band
most sensitive issues were human
ss Pre11dent CUnton and Flrlt Lady Hillary Rodrights and the continuing conrroversy over China's decision, nine years hundreds of pro-democracy students told Clinton during the freewheeling
ago this month. to. use force in and other demonstrators killed in the 70-minute exchange, reminiscent of
putting down student-led democracy 1989 crackdown in streets around the their October summit in Washington
'demonstrations in Tiananmen Square. · square.
where Clinton said China was "on
"It is impurtantthat whatever our ·
Ointon reviewed Chinese troops the wrong side of history."
disagreements over past action. Chi- and received a 21-gun salute, the canAmong their areas of agreement,
na and the United States must go for- non tire echoing across the va.•t Clinton and Jiang highlighted a deci.
ward on the right side of history for square, site of pro- and anti-.govern- sion by, both countries to stop targetthe future sake of the world," Clin- ment demonstrations throughout Chi- ing their nuclear missiles at each othton said at a joint news conference nese history. It wa.~ here that Moo er's citi~s. They also agreed to intenwith Jiang after two hour.; of talks at T.o;e-tung celebrated the victory of his sify cooperation on developing clean·
the Great Hall of the People.
communist government in 1949.
er energy sources and monitoring
In an animated miiiiDCr. Jiang said
Back home, Reps. Chris Smith, R- greenhouse ga.~ emissions believed to
die fact that the U.S.. and Chinese N.J., and Nancy Pelosi, 0-Calif., crit- contribute to global warming. .
ICIII!en can disagree publicly is a ics of Clinton's China policies,
Jiang appeared relaxed, somehealthy sign for relations. . .
expressed disappointment in his per- . times laughing and smiling. Clinton,
"I think President Clinton is a formunce.
who appeared tense when he first
strong defender of the American
"He reduced it to a disagreement. brought up Tiananmen, also seemed
interest, and I am a srrong defender It's more than a disagreement," to relish the back and forth exchange.
of the Chinese interest," Jiang said. Smith said. Pelosi said he treated the "I think this debate aod discussion
"But despite that, we still can have massacre around Tiananmen Square today has been a healthy thing an&lt;ba
very friendly exchanges of views and ._, no more than a ''historical
discussion. And I think that is dcmoc· episode." .
r&amp;C)'."
At the news conference broadcast
In warm toasts at a state dinner live across China. including into
Saturday night, the presidents each Ttbet, Ointon directly addressed the
used Chinese sayings to illustrale 1iananmen crackdown.
"For all of our agreements, we
what ~ wanted from the relation·
ship. .
.
stili disagree about the meaning of
"An ancient Chinese proverb tells what happened then," Clinton ·said.
us, •Be not afraid of growing slowly. "I believe and the American people
Be only afraid of standing still,"' believe that the use of force and the
!!48ic loss of life wo.' wrong."
Clinton said. ·
Jiang quoted the ChineSe sage,
liang; countering with the IonsMencius, who counseled: "A good standing Chinese reponse, 5aid the
citizen of the world will befriend the aackdown was necessary 10 maintain
·other citizens of the world."
order and ensure smooth transition
· .. 1be summit began with a short, from a stili-developing nation to a
sOlemn welcoming ceremony outside modem-day economic force.
tHe Great Hall of the People at the
"Had the Chinese government
edge of 1iananmen Square. It was a not taken the resolute measures, then
sPectacle Clinton's critics said he ~e could not have enjoyed the stashould have avoided in memory of .bility that we are enjoying today," he

•

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Your health is better than ever.

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good thing," he said.
Jiang told Clinton that although
their countries have different systems,
ideologies, values and cultural traditions, "They should not become the
obstacles in the way ofthe growth of
China-U.S. relations."

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Page A7 ,·

DETROIT (AP)- Genera) Motors Corp. !legan its annual two-week shut:
down of Nonh American plants Saturday a.~ strikes that have crippled th~ .
world's No. I autornaker sent losses mounting.
Most of the plants scheduled for the shutdown already ha'\&gt;e-been41lle
by walkouts by 9,200 workers at two parts plants in Aint, Mich.
, 1be strikes - started June 5 by Aint Metal Ce~ter workers and joined
six days later by those at Delphi Ainl East- have forced layoffs of aboui
.162.000 other GM workers at more than 100 plants across North America:
Analysts expect the effect of the lost production on GM's second-quar:
ter profit to total more than $1 bi Ilion.
1be automaker said Friday that it is considering cutting off medical cov:
erage for the striking workers and for other United Auto Workers member.;
··taid off because of the walkouts.
,
"The (national) contract says General Moton will fund health care only
through the end of the month in which.they last work. We:re npt required to
.continue that coverage," spokesman Gerry Holmes said.
GM will review the strike situation "week to week" before deciding
whether to end the benefits, which cost the automaker $4.8· billion a year.
' Holmes said. GM has cut off health benefits during past strikes.
· GM has already directed North America assembly plant managers to lay
off workers in nonessential work, trim utilities usage and limit any neces:
sary work to the day shift. Even routine maintenance and updates were unlikely during the seasonal shutdown.
·.

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POINT PlWAIT

675·1675

II r

With no end yet to strikes,
GM starts annual shutdown

Clinton,· Chinese
president trade
views on human ·
rights In Beijing

By The Associated Pr.n
·
.
Fierce thuoderstonns ~wamped parts of six states early Saturday. bri!lging severe, sudden Oooding requiring helicopter rescues. A train der~iled and
spilled fuel in the e!(trcrnc weather that killed at least live people.
In Vermont's Mad River Valley, the mountain river- usually docile in
summertime - li~ed up to its name. jumping its banks to wash out roads, ,
destroy homes and send. terrified residents scrambling into trees toli!scape ~
rising water.
·
.
· -~
·
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'
Two people were felled by a lightning strike. Another man was killed in
Ohio, electroc11ted by fallen power lines, while two other victims were swept
away by rnging rivers.
·
High winds reaching 60 mph downed trees and knoc~ed out electricity
to •tens. of thousand.• of homes. ·
·
.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp;JEFFEISON AVENUE

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Spirited
debate

Severe stor,ms, flooding kill five

People as far away as Canton,
Columbus · and Chillicothe are
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-Obituarr. . :.~} . ).'·

James 0. Swain

.

I-:.:A::cc:.:u:.:.W:.:e::;at::;he:;:r~•.::fo:::r:::ec:a:.:st..:;fo::;r;.d~ay!:t:;im;;;e~co;:::nd::it:::io::n::s.:an::.:d:..:h:::ig::h.:.:t:.:.em~pe::ra::;trur_es---1:

Board OKs addition of ·:

James 0. Swain

I

Sunday, June 28

Cincinnati

~

N5tion/World

Meigs County Court

: GALLJpQLJS- Carol Irene Sowards, 33, Gallipolis, died Friday, June
26. 1998 at her residence.
·
. Born July 28, 1964 in Joliet, Ill.. daughte[ of Wendell Orland Brumfield
af Gallipolis, and Frances Criner McCallister of Vinton, she was a homemaker and a mother.
· : Surviving in addition to her parents are aS'!"· Roy Chri,stopher Sowards
df Gallipolis: three daughters, Chrystal Renee Sowards, Melissa Dawn
Sowards and Amber Nicole Sowards, all of Summersvill~. W.Va.; a broth·
· er. James Wendell Brumfield of Gallipolis: and three sisters, Vicki Brum·ticld and Sandra K. Brumfield, both of Gallipolis. and linda layne of Bid· ·
·well.
· · Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh-HalleY.;Wood Funeral
REEDSVILLE- James 0. Swain, 78, of locust Grove Road. Reedsville,
Home. with the Rev. Ralph Workman officiating. Burial will beci n~he Clark
died
Friday, June 26, 1998 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in ParkersChapel Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeml home from 6-9 p.m. Monburg, West Virginia.
day.
He was born June I 0. 1920 in Long Bollom, son of the late William Nelson Swain and Tressa Coleman Swain. He was a retired equipment operator from B.F. Goodrich. Marietta, a U.S. Army veteran of World War II, and
a member of the Keno Church of Christ.
: REEDSVILLE- James 0 . Swain, 78, Locust Groye Road, Reedsville.
He is survived by a daughter and son-in-law, Jill and Gordon Holter of
died Friday. June 26, 1998 in Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital. Parke.sLong Bottom: a ISOn and . daughter-in-law. lee and Megan Swain of
burg. W.Va.
Reed.• ville: a son, lyle Swain of Reedsville; live grandchildren, Wesley Holter
: Born June 10, 1920 in Long Bouorn. son of the late William Nelson and
andManie Holter. both of Long Bottom, Joy Swain of Reed.wille. Joy Swain
Tressa Coleman Swain, he was a retired equipment operator from B.F. of Pierce. Colorado. and lisa Smith of Reedsville: one brother. Durward
(joodrich in Marietta. a U.S. Army veteran of World War II. and a member Swain of louisville. Kentucky: lhree sisters. Georgie Autherson of Newark,
of the Keno Church of Christ.
Hope Drake of LOna Bottom. and Pauline Primmer of Logan.
·
: Surviving are a daughter. Jill (Gordon) Holter of Long Bottom; two sons.
He was preceded in death by his wife, lleen Swain: a daughter-in-law,
[.ee (Megan) Swain and lyle Swain: ix?th of Reedsv1lle: five .srandchtldren:
Mary Swain; a brother, Bill Swain; aod a sister, Dixie Teboe.
I( brother, Durward Swain of Lou1svtlle, Ky.;, and three Sisters, G_eorg1e
Services will be ~kl Tuesday, June 30, 1998 at 10 a.m. in the White FunerAutherson
of,.Newark, Hope Drake of Long Bottom,.and Pauline Primmer al Home in' Coolville, with Teresa Walldeck officiating. Burial will be in the
.
Success Cemetery, Reedsville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6of
. death by .h.ts w11e,
., II een swam:
. a daughter-m.
: Logan.
He wa.• also preceded tn
9 p.m. Monday, .June 29, 1998.
Jllw, Mary Swain: a brother, Bili Swain: afK! a .sister. Dixie Teboe.
.
. Services will be 10 a.m. Tuesday tn the Wh1te Funeral Horne. Coolville,
with Teresa Walldeck ofticiating. Burial. will be in the Success Cemetery,
Reedsville. Friends may call
at
the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Monday..
.
I

I

OHIO Weather

r'

guns, riOes and other wead..ns in the
air a.~ they marched.
"These men are here to freely
exercise their divine and. yes, constitutional rights after 'building this
country for 400 years to defend ourselves and carry armed and loaded
weapons to defend the black community against this murderous and
hypocritical outfit known as the Ku
Klux Klan." said Malik Z. Shabazz,
an attorney for the New Black Pan-.
ther Pany.
Authorities roped off a two-block
radius around the square near the
courthouse. Texas Rangers. FBI
agents and ' other : law · officers •
patrolled the area.
After a white man in the audience
heckled blacks, law officers rushed in
to prevent a confrontation.
About a dozen armed blacks twice
failed twice to pass through a police
barricade. Former Nation of Islam
spokesman Khalid Muhammad ·
threatened law officen after he was
rebuffed, but later retreated and was
allowed to keep his gun.
An anti-Klan demonstrator was
arrested when a group confronted
Klan members who were leaving the
courthouse square after the rally.

1998 '

By The Associated Press
.
, ·.
A weak cpld front will,drift slowly to the southwest through Sunday, caus;
ing the threat of storms to continue, especially through northwest and central
Ohio.
.
·
,
POMEROY - The following port, $30 plus costs; Jonathan W.·
Air
behind
or
on
the
northern
side
of
the
front
will
drop
temperatures
back
cases were resolved Wednesday in Vance, Pomeroy, domestic violence,
the Meigs County Coun of Judge $100 plus costs, six months jail sus· into the mid 80s and reduce humidity. Sultry conditions will remain in south- '
ern Ohio as highs reach the low 90s.
·.
Patrick H. O'Brien.
pended to three days. one year pro· .
A
break
in
these
conditions
will
occur
Wednesday
as
colder
air
moves
in',
Fined were: Dennis D. Boothe, bation, restraining order issued:
followed by high pressure. After that. it should remain cooler through th~ ·
Rutland. fishing without a license.
Donnie L. Boggs, Coolville, dri·
·
$25 plus costs: Helen Mullins. Rut- ving under the inOuence. $850 plus Independence Day weekend. ..
Weather
fol'el:ast:
.
land. fishing without a license. $25 · costs. I 0 day,s jail suspended to three
Sunday
...
Pilrtly
cloudy
with
a
chance
of
shOwers
and
thunder.aorms.
Hazy.
plus costs: Rick N. Stone. Middle- days, ~-day Ol suspension, one
·:
port. driving under financial respon- year probation, jail and $550 sus· with highs near 90. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Sunday night. ..A chance of showers and thunderstorms until midnight, oth-'.
sibility action suspension, $150 plus pended upon completion of residen.
erwise
mostly clear. Lows near 70.
·
':
costs. 30daysjail suspended to three tial treatment progmm; Robert W.
·
Monday
...
Panly
cloudy.
A
chance
of
showers
and
thunderstorms
in
tlic.
days jail, 60-day . vehicle immobi- Sisson Jr., Cheshire, DUI, $500 plus
.
"
lization; fictitious tags, $10 plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to three afternoon. Highs in the upper 80s..
Extended fol'el:ast :
·
costs: Roben E. Will, Cheshire, days, six months Ol suspension, one
Tuesday
...
Showers
and
thunderstorms
likely.
lows
near
70
and
highs
near.
expired tags, $20 plus costs; Ricky year probation: Kelly D. Winter. 90.
..
W. Schaefer, Syracuse, driving under Pomeroy. DUI, $750 plus costs. 30
Wednesday
...
Partly
cloudy
with
a
chance
of
showers.
Lows
in
the
mid
60s
'
financial responsibility action sus- days jail suspended to three days, one
and
highs
in
the
fllid
80s.
'
·
·
.
·
•
pension, $150 plus costs, five days year probation, six month Ol susjail1lnd $75 suspended if valid oper- · pension; driving under suspension,
ator's license presented within 90 $150 concurrent. costs, 30 days jail
days; Eric D. lamben, Rutland. dri- suspended to three days, : one year
(Continued from A3)
approved' temporary appropriatio~s:
ving under suspension, $150 plus probation, six month vehicle immowith
·
board
member
Randy
for the 1998-99 fiscal_ year in tlie,
costs, 30 days jail suspended to five bilization; left of center, costs only;
Humphreys
dissen
·
g.
amount
of $3,759,405.91.
.
days, five days jail aod $75 suspend- failure to signal, costs only: seat belt.
Hired as t · ers were: Ron Hill.
• Approved student accident insur-'
ed if valid OL presented within 90 $25 plus costs:
severe
be
·
10r
handicapped
teacher
ance
through Insurance Plus Agen:·
days. one year probation:
William W. Wellman, Hamden,
al
Mei
iddle-School:
Kent
Howcies
Inc.
of Pomeroy for the 1998·99,
Cla!ence W. Hatfield; Dexter, fail· seat belt, $25 plus costs; Kevin R.
ell,
ge
eral
'and
instrumental
music
school
year.
·
ure to conttol, $30 plus costs; ~at Caudill, McAnhur, seat belt, $15:p!us
1
teache
at
Meigs
Middle
··
school:
·
•
Approved,
a
contraCt
'
w
ith
11ib
belt, $25 plus costs; Willie Baker, costs; Earl Kauff Jr., Racine, failure
right, elementary school Appalachian Rural System Initiative"
Pomeroy, contributing to the delin- to yield, $20 plus costs; l'flichael l. B
,
·
strumental
music teacher. ·
to provide the district with financia(
quency of a minor, $40 plus t&lt;ists, Hoffman, Pomeroy, failu~ to control,
Also
hired
were
Nathan
M.
and
technical assistance to enhance
three days jail suspended, one year $20 pl~s costs: Michael J. Marcum,
Hansen,
high
school
social
studies
the
leaching
of science and mathe-·
probation; Craig M. Wolfe, Portland. langsville, stop sign, $20 plus-costs;
teacher,
and
Ben
Wright,
pan-time
matics.
:. '
no motorcycle endorsement, $50 plus Kristia~ll C. Hall, Shade, speed, $30
• Renewed a contract with Snouf-'
costs; failure to display license plute, plus costs: Katie M. Gilmore,.Mid- assislllnt band director. David Ramey
was
hired
to
tutor
two
handicapped
•
fer's
Fire &amp; Safety to inspect and ser-,
costs only: Gloria Barrett, Pomeroy. dleport. seat belt, $25 plus costs:
students.
·
vice
fire extinguishers.
·
stop sign, $20 plus cos • Tony W. Richard D. Miller, Rio Grande,
• Approved a ·contruct with th.t '
Dicken, Athens, s
, $31 plus speed, $30 plus coMs: seat belt, $25 . 1be board also approved a medteal
leave
of
absence
for
Rosalee
.
University
of Rio Grande to provide'
costs; James T.
ick, Pomeroy, plus costs: Bryan L. Branham,
Snowden.
·
usage
of
the
Meigs High School com,.
failure to control, 30 plus costs: Racine. seat belt, $20 plus costs.
In
other
business,
the
board:
putel'
laboratory
to the uviversity for
Brandi N. Meadows. speed, Middle·
• Renewed its agreement with the summer quurter at a fee of $2.00!).'
Medical Claims Service of
• Renewed membership with the
'Ravenswood, W.Va. for self-funded Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adcmedical benefits and Vision Plus for quacy of School Funding at a rate o(
vision benefits for the 1998-99 fiscal 50 cents per student.
Also presenrwere Board PresideRt:
Ob!lllllrlee ..,. ~d announcement• menged by r-t tllne!W ·h - year.
• Approved final revised appro- John Hood and board members Scott·
Oiiltlllllte .,.. ~·heel • Nq-.d to eoconlmodllle ltloee ileeirtng more
JntoilllaiiOn than ,. provided In lh4l -penytng Deatb Notion.
priations for tlie 1997-98 fiscal year Walton and Wayne Davis.
'
in the amount of $15,037,623.65 and

:·. :."' ..7·:·:

j

sunday, June 28,

t

•

•" tor*actordcwcriyeligiWtlar .... ,............ .

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

�..
Page AS • ~ ar-..~

Sports

Sunday, June 28, 1998

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

.

* 'A

CElE8RATlMC

Section

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Hingis, Seles advance; fire &amp; r'ain interrupt play
' as a precaution
across the street,
against cascading cinders . After all,
within a few minutes every court
was empty and covered with puddles
on top of the tarps.
Thunder rocked Wimbledon
louder than any applause, and the
prettiest sight was not a lob or a vol·
ley but a gorgeous double rainbow
arching across the sky. It was that
kind of day at the All England Club.
In the interludes between showers
- sev.en or eight, by unofficial
count, that kept the tarp crews busy
- some tennis did get squeezed in
before play was abandoned with
defending champion Pete Sampras
up 6-3, 5-5 against Thomas Enqvist,and Venus and Serena Williams
waiting to play on different courts.
Defending wo men 's champ
Martina Hingis floated easi ly into
the round of 16 , 6·2, 6- 1 against
Elena Likhovtseva, and the No. 6
Seles did the same, 6-2, 6-3 against
Yayuk Basuki.
Former champion .Conchita
Martinez, seeded No. 8. was less
lucky in the resumption of a match
suspended Friday as she fell 2-6, 63, 7-5 to England's Samantha Smith,
~ 26-year-old who had never gone
beyond the first round in five previous Wimbledons.
Martinez called the loss the most
disappointing of her career.
"I didn ' t feel that I could get
ready for a match because the courts
did not open until 10 a.m ., and then
they give you a call," she . said. " I
was rushed the whole morning and
that showed in my whole mood .. . I
should have won that in two sets
easy."
For the exhilarated Smith, the
match was the thrill of a lifetime and
the biggest victory by a British
·woman in a decade.
"I played some of the best tennis
I think I've ever played at the right
time," Smith said. " She got a little
·bit tentative, a little bit nervous, and
I just went for it and took my
chances."
- In men's play, Australian Open
champion and No. 3 seed Petr Korda

deluge at· Wimbledon on Saturday .
At least it cleared the air of choking
smoke hovering above the stadium
from a nat afire.
.
Nor were Todd Martin, Todd
Woodbridge and fans watching them
By STEVE WILSTEIN
put off much by the evacuation of
W,IMBLEDON, England (AP) -·
Show Courl 18, lhe one closest to
Montca Seles welcomed the latest the blaze in a 12-story building

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'· FIRES VOLLEY - America's Pete Sanipres, the defending
Wimbledon champion, fires a volley back to Sweden'a Thomas
Enqvlat during their singles match at Wimbledon saturday. Rein
forced their match, which wea halted with Samprae leading, to be
. resumed on Monday. (AP) ·
·

Major league
baseball

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ROOF COATING
5 gal. Roof

(AP) -

ECONOMY STUDS

Subway Series ha s become an
uptown express apparently headed
for one destination- Sweep Street.
The New .York Yankees made it
two straight over the crosstown
· Mets on Saturday, getting a strong
start
Pettitte and a three-

Underpinning

s

Floor
Jack Post

2X4

Adjusts
4'8" to 8'4"

$1oao

advan.ced 4·6, 7-5, 1·5, 7-5 past
Jerome Golmard, and No . 12 Tim
Henman beat Byron Black 6-4, 6-4,
3-6, 7-5.
On a day when the play was
unspectacular, and the results not at
all unusual except for Martinez' s
defeat, the fire, showers and rainbow
drew most of the attention. No one
was injured in the nintli-noor apart·
ment where the blaze began, but
several residen ts of the buildin g
were treated for smoke i nl)al ation
and shock. No one was inj ured at
Wimbledon , where a picnic area
near the building also was evacuated.
Seles, for one, was relieved to
take refuge after her match .
" I think I had yesterday about I0
warmups when we thought we
would go on, but they said we had to
wait," she said. "Today (we had)
about three or four. And ·with the
fire in che beginning,· it was just so
strange to be out there . I was hoping
it 's OK to breathe the ai r in. But in
the end the rain came , and it was a
good time for that. ' '
Seles said the smell t;&gt;f the smoke
was "pfe tty bad ," eno ugh so that
" both Yayuk and I felt we sho uld
stop. But at the end it was probably
better to ju st go o n becau se il
doesn ' t matter. We've see n everything today. "
..
Sele s reached the Wimbledon
final in 1992, the year before she
was stabbed in Germany, and she's
in good position to mak e another run
for the title this year now that seventime champion Steffi Graf is gone
from her half of the draw .
Seles, who reached the French
Open final earlier this monlh a few
weeks after her father 's death from
cancer, is playing with increasing
confidence and less on her mind.
She plays next against Sari9rine
Testud, who beat her last year at
Wimbledon and thi s year on clay at

part that I'm not where I feel I back like I used to, and that gives
should have been. So that makes it a me peace of mind. I think that translot easier. I just kn ow what my day lates out on the court, too. "
is about , and I have my schedule

the Italian Open.
RETURNS SHOT - Switzerland's Martina Hlngl• returns a shot
"I just have a peace of mind in to Elena Llkhovtseva d"u rlng their Wimbledon singles match
terms of I'm happy where I am right . Saturday, when Hlngls,· the defending champion, won 6·2, 6·1 to
now," Seles said. " I don't hav e
· t th
d f 16 (AP)
doubts and I don't feel guilt on my move m 0 8 roun

° ·

·

·

'·

Yankees whip Mets; Astros top Indians
9--5
in
11
frames
.

...

• '-'' ...-i

Light tar paper. use for side '!
walls over sheathing, under ':" ..,._,~'---.~
siding, etc.

B

Central Air

Filters

run homer from Tino Martinez in a
' 7-2 victory.
.
The much-hyped , three -game
matchup for New York bas~ball .
bragging rights has become a one·
sided affair with the Mets now needing to -win Sunday night 's nationally
televised game to avoid a sweep and
salvage some respect.
.
The Yankees have designs on
winning much more than an artificial city championship, and this
week they've shown they can beat
NL teams as easily as they've
thumped AL ones this season.
Baseball's best team entered its
interlea_l!ue matchup against the
Mets by winning three of four
games against Atlanta, and now at
55-19, the Yankees are threatening
to rewrite record books.
The Yankees committed , three
errors, but they capitalized on two
by the Mets; got the big blow from

Martinez and a solid outing from
Pettine (9-5).
Pettine allowed two runs and four
hits in 6 113 innings. The left-hander
struck out a season -high nine and
walked four . Bobby Jones (6-5) gave
up 'seven runs - three earned - and
six hits in 6 213 innings.
Astros 9,lndla0s S (11)
At Cleveland, Cleveland-killer
Moises Alou hit a:n RBI single in the
II th off Jose Mesa, and Carl Everett
followed with a three-run homer as
the Houston As,tros beat the Indians
9-5 on Saturday."
·
Everett's homer punctuated a
home-run derby that featured six
long balls - three by each team.
Alou, who ·hit three homers for
Florida against the Indians in the
World Series last fall. drove in
Derek Bell with a two-out single off
Mesa (3-4) As thunderclaps rumbled
in the distance. Everett then added

his eighth homer to right.
Reggie Harris pitched th e 11th
for Houston, which snapped a threegame losing . streak and ended
Cleveland's six-game winning
streak. The Indians missed a chance.
for the fir st

time since winning nine in a row in
August 1995.
.
.. Billy \Yagl!l'r (2·2) pic~ed.up .the ii
win. He struck out three in I 1/3
innings, including Pat Borders with
Whiten on second in the lOth .

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SOUD 4"X10'

NICE STROKEl - The New York Yankees' Tlno Martlnaz lrlght)
Ia congratulated by teemmete Darryl S~rawberry after Mert nez'a
three-run homer In the fourth Inning of Saturday'a Subwt1y Serlea
$18rne In Naw York'a Shea Stadium, where the YenkHa won 7·2.
(AP)

·

Jordan says _
he may leave.Bulls in wake of Jackson's exit
GREENVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Michael Jordan says
he's leaning toward not returning for another season
now that Chicago Bulls coach Phil Jackson is gone.
" I don.' t want to start over. I'm pretty sure losing
Pbil is a sign of thai ," Jordan said Satu(day at news
cqnference before teeing off at the Michael Jordan.
&lt;;rlebrity golf classic. "So I can tell you where my
rlfnd is leaning in some respects. :.. I don 'I want a
rebuilding process."
· Jordan once said he would play only for Jackson,
although he recently retreated from that position. Earlier
this week, he indicated a decision to return to the Bulls
aJso depends on Scottie Pippen and Dennis Rodman
c?ining back.
.
.
.
. · Jordan said Saturday wh1lc he mtght be leanmg one
\VIy, he wants to weigh his options and hasn't rea~hed a
•

a

final decision.
" My decision is coming very
quickly . And I know this time I want
to evaluate all options, and I don't
want to make a rush judgment," he
said. " Yes, I' ve said all· along that if
Phil is not my c.oach there 's no way I
can play. And I'm pretty firm ·with
_lhat.
. . " But before I make that decision
·~.. I' ve got "to see what the team is
JOing to do in terms of their choices.
But I've felt strongly, I still feel
strongly about it, but I just don't
want to make a rush judgment or
career-ending decision."

He said he hasn't discussed hi s future with the Bulls
' ' I kQow. that in some point in time my career is
ma~agement since4hc team won its going to be ove r and I can devote I()() perce nt of my
· time toward s them, " Jordan said of his family. " My
sixth NBA title .
· "Once we won the champi : kids are at the age now they need the attention of their
onship, I kind of broke all tics to 'father. and the guidance of their father. My ·wife for so
mentally relax and get away from che· lo ng has carried both mantles, and she's done a good
tension and all the pressures we have job. and now there's a time for me to take over my
dealt with all season long," Jordan own."
said . "And I've heard, and I' vc
He said he looks fO","Itd to hei, IJi~a his childr;ti ,
talked .to some of the people who then homework and laktqthem·to CIUII~. ~
told me sbout Phil and his decision, 1 " My daughter has' a dance recital Sunday' and l've
which is honestly hi s decision and I got to leave here early so I can make that," he said, ''so
can respec,t that."
there's things like that'! look forward to.
"People ~ay I won't have a challenge if I' m out of
Jordan said if he leaves basketball , other challenges will remain the game? I disagree with them. Being a parent in 111ome
- such as parenthood. respects is a challenge."
,

-·

'

•

'.

I

•

TAKEN · - The Houston Aatroa• Darek Bell (bottom) takes
Cleveland shortstop Omer Vlzquel out of the double play opportunity in the sixth Inning of Saturday's game In Cleveland, where the
visiting Astroa' four-run rally In the 11th cracked a 5·5 tie end
helped them win 9-5. (AP)

I

~

�"
Page82•~

'

,.._.~

..

Pomerot'• Middleport • Galll~lls, OH • Point Pleasant, wv

•but

•

.•

Sunday, Ju~ 28,11¥

•
Trlbewlns•.. ~~~oo~•in~~~~~m~B~-2~)------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The NL Ccn!ral-leading Astros .
had won 12 of 19 coming in1o !heir
first trip to Cleveland, bul dropped to
10-14 apinsl AL clubs. The Indians
Improved to 15 games above .500 for
1he first time since the last day of 1he

Clutch rally ·helps
Yankees beat Mets;
Royals- down Cubs
.

i
II

Major league
roundup

•
•

.

: GETS FORCE OUT- Clnclnnattaeconcl blllmtn Brei Boone geta
: the forca out at aecond ball on the Detr'olt Tlgera' Peul Bako before
• lflrowlng to flrat to throw out Brian Hunter to complate the double
; ptay In tha fourth Inning of Frlday'a gama In Detroit, where the Reda
: won 4-3. (AP)
i
·

.;·Reds

record 4-3
:~ictory over Tigers
'

: ; DETROIT (AP) - The ·atmos- finished a two-game sweep of the
: phere was decidedly different in Chicago Cubs.
It seemed obvious 10 Tigers man; Tiger Stadium. So was !he result.
- : Two errors led to the decisive ru~ J ager Buddy Bell1hat his club hod a
: In !he eighth inning as the Cincinnatj(' letdown Friday.
,
"I don't think we came out with
. ; Reds snapped Detroil's three-game
: winning s1reak wilh a 4-3 win over the type of intensity you would
· the Tigers.
expecl after the last two games." Bell
: · The loss came a night after the said. "That's probably my fault.
; tgers, playing before their second- We're learning. We'll come out
· larges1 home crowd of the season, tomorrow and do better."
: took a highly emolional 6-4 win that
(See REDS on B-3)

'.•

2-)1. U 5 p.m.

Baseball

Anaheim (OiivAtet .5.2) ar San Diego ( Hit~hcock

; :AL standings

)),4~p . m .

•

tl.l~p . m .

Balrimore (Muulna 6-4) 11 Monueal (Pn.vaao 1-

EU1em DlvisiM

: ~YotL

Jl

ra.
I~ .740

.... ........... .
• .Bosron .................................. 46 :u .591
• :foronlo ................................. 41 39 .~1:1
: lolthnorc ......................... , ... _'\7 4~ . 46~
~ :raf'I'IPI8ay ........................... 32 116 .410

·.

Ctnlrtl Division

,

·• CL£VELAND ......................46 · Jl
~ MlnntlOI£1 .............................37

41'
• KansN Ciiy ......................... ,:\4 44

: g:~~.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ :

.
Wnkm Dh'islon
• .Anaheim ...............................47 31
~e11u

.591

.474
.4)~
.~10

. J9~

.60:1

...... :.............................46 JJ

. :1~2

Ol*l:and ....... ...................... JS 4.3
• 'Seallle ........... ,... ................... .JJ 47

.449
.41 .'\

4

-

Gl
10

16~

2Ql
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91"

12 ~

1' 1~

1~ '1:

1'•:

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: Atlanta .................................. SJ

ta. !lll

29
• ~ York ................ ............. 42 3.3

.6JH

~

.!'il\1
..l97
.)42

Pbilo.Jclphia ..........................40 :17
• Monu~ol .: ............................. :ll 47
• f:loriWa ..................................17 ~2

. ~60

•.,
9&gt;
19

l.'\'1,

Cftdral Div.._
• Hou!llon ........ ,.......................47

.!'1.32

l;hicago .................... r. ............2 J7

.532

40
"'2
49

.47~

9~~

.W:"'

16

.Milwaukec ........ ....................oll
'! $t. LOOi• ...............................JH
~ PinstuJh ............................ Jtt

: CJNCINNATI ...................... 32
.

~ Sn
· Sa~~

.4111

~

~

H',,

Wttlem Dh'ltion

Dieao .............................52 1R .6!10

Fmnclk-o ... ....................46 J!'i
io Lot Anectcs.......................... ~tt o41
• t'olorado ............................... :l~ 46
: AritoM. ................................. 27 5:\

.I

. ~91

)2
Jfl

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AMI

.4)2
.J.lM

61-,

13 ~
17 ~

1~

Friday'• ocores
(ALvs. NL)
CINCINNATI4. Ottmil J
CWYELAND4, Hnu!1tm 2
Mont~ul 9. tlt~llimnre 4
8oat1..W 6, Aori..Ja I
..
Phii=*IJ!hia 7. Tnmr Bayo
Tnronht 6. A111'111ta
·
'
Nilw:.u~ 2. Otit:a~ While Snx I
,,. · Mia
•a !S. St. Loon I
) ·: ~ .Y. YMII:raK. N.Y. M.:II-4
• • """"- ~ity II.
Cuboo J

rn.

7:05p.m.
Iumn L
Milw...tee (Woodall ~2) at Cbi~o White Sox. 01arkt111: ................................. 6 I .H~7
(Fonlham 1-0). 7:~ p.m.
CLEVELAND ....................... .-' 2 .667
. CINCINNATI (ll&lt;mll- 4-9101 Detm;t (Pow· New Y~k ................... ............ 4 4 . ~
-.u ~. 1~ p.m.
Dctroil .................................. J 4 AltJ
Tmlnto (Guzman •-9) at Arlanta(Madd11• 10.2), Wtu~hinglon ........................... .! ~ .167
, 7:10r.m.
•. ·
Tampa· Ba.r (Arrojo 9-ot) ar "Philadtlrhin
Western Conrerence
(Schiniwa 7-7), 7::\5 p.m.
·
Houston ................ ,................ ~
I HJJ
Chicoao Cubs
8--6) a1 Kan!llls Cily (Rfll'lfl
Pha&amp;:nix ......... .':.. ..................... ~ I .HJJ
7-61. R:M f.m.
St. l...oo11 (Stottattn)ft g•.,) a1 Minl'leiOII·(Mikun I..Ds A.ngelc!. ..... .......... .. ...... 2 4 .JJJ
Uhah ........................................ l 6 . 2~
UI. II:O$ p.m.
Sncrnn-.cntn.........
.. ........ 1 ~ .167
Ooklnnt.l &lt;Ro!tftl·:t) 11 Colorado (IC.ilc 5-10),
8 :0~ p.m.
Friday's S&lt;ores
Stoute (fmucro 5-5) a1 Arizona (8cncJ6-7),
New Yttrk 62. Sm.Tamcnlo 4M
IO:OS J'l .m.

.!lll
1'·:

2'~

J
4'·:

In the only non-interleague game,
Los Angeles. beat Pittsburgh 5-2 in
!he NL.
·
Twins S, Cardinals 1
Mall Lawton and Many Cordova
homered, but Mark McGwire didn't
as hosl Minnesota beat St Louis.
Six Twins pitchers held !he Cardinals to four hits. McGwire, who
leads the majors with 35 homers,
went 0-for-4.
Royals 6, Cubs J
Jose Offerman hil a two-run
homer and Kansas City cooled off
record-breaking Summy Sosa.
Sosa. whose 19 homers in June
are the most ever by a player in any
month, was 1-for-4 with a single as
the visiting Cubs lost their sixth in a
row.
~ronto 6, Braves 4
Carlos Delgado and Jose Canseco
hit two-run homers and Alex Gonzalez had a solo shot as Toronto won al
A1lan1a for its season-high sixth
slraight victory.
Javy Lopez hit two homers for the
Braves.
Red Sox 6, Marlins 1
Pedro Man~nez (I 0-2) limited
host Florida to five hits in eighl
innings and Boston scored two runs
bn wild pitches.
Boston's Nomar Garciaparra was
4-for-5 with two doubles to extend
his hitting streak to 18 games. Reggie Jefferson hi! a·lwo-run homer in
the ninlh for the Red Sox.
(See BASEBALL on B-J)

Natlun1I.HO(kty Lta~~:ur
J

4
4

Lm Angeles nt Huus10n. 4J'!.III.
Ol!tmil al CLEVELAND. 7 p.m.
&amp;krnnll!mn at Churluuc. 7JO p.m.

I : 0~ p.m.

Tnrunto .(CIItJICniCr 4-21 ot),AIIanln (Glavinc 1().
Jl, UOp.m.
r:'
B:dtimore (Drabek ~-7) ar Monln:nl (V~utl J.
6), I:3S p.m.
TMl(\'1. Ba{. (SI'f'ingcr 2·10) nl Philutlt.!lf'hin (Por.
IUJal ~2).1 :. 5 p.m.
.
Chic:ugn Cuh11 (Gonzalez ft.~) ill Knnsas City
(R'I'I' 7-61. 2 : 0~ p.m.
St. Utuis (Butt~!nfidd 2-4) at MinntJOta (Ttwltsb•nJ 4-9). 2 : 0~ p.m.
Milwu'ukt'c {Karl 6-3) al Chicagtl White Snl
(Sirotku: R-7). 2 :0~ r.m.
Oaklund (Cnndiotli, 4-101 at Colorudo (Wriahl 5MI. J ,O~ p.m.
Maule (Moy~,.., 5-bl :at Ari:ona ·(Andenon 5-7),
4 : 0~ p.m.
'
Anaheim (Wa~hbum 3-01 .81 San Dieao CHamtJ.
ton ~ - M), 4 : ~ p.m.
.
Tun.&lt;~ (Stlt 11-4) al Snn Franci~eo (Gardner 63), 4:0:1 J'l.dl.
Boston {U1we 0-t.) 111 Rnriilil (llcnlrstcr 0-41.
4 : .3~

p.m.

N.Y. Y11nkee~ ( Hernnndc7.
(Y, ~ hi i ol-3),lt~ p.m.

und the rights to U KimJmu Timoncn 10 Nti.&lt;~IIYIIk
fOf future CQn~Kk.·mtiun~ .
ST. LOUIS BLUES: Nilfncd John f"t.'f¥-••~un Jr.
gcnero~l manager of Wun;e.~tcr of Ihi: AHL.
SAN JOSE SHARKS: Nourle\1 Bub BelT)' tlllsi""
tant co;K:h.
TORONTO MAPU: LEAFS: N;mJOO P:at Quinn ·
coach .

They played Saturday

CINCINNATI {Parris 0-0) 111 D:tmit (Th{lmpllon
6-li.I :O:Ip.m.
H,O\Iston (Reynolds H-:i) at CLEVELAND (N:tl!-)'
7~)),

N•llon11l FuoeballlA11aut
CINCINNATI BENCiALS: Signed SS Myrnn
Bell to a two-year cufltn.,;L
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS: SignL"tt FB Fri!d
McCrary lu Q OIIC•JI.'l• cunlriJCI. .

LOS A.NGELES KINOS: Trmk:ll 0 Jnu VnJ!it1

Phocni• % . Ut:lh 6.3

Today's games

Footb•ll

Hockey

(T.....,.

(ALvs.NL)

ltlllttn Dh·w.n

Eastern Conrerenco

Botton (Waker~eld 8-3) Ill Aorir:b (Sunc:ht:z 3·4),

I~

: ~L standings

WNBA standings

·

2-1) nl N.Y. Mcts

Today's(ltlmo
l"htll!nix ut W;u;hin}:tun. ~p . m.

Transactions
Base bull
AmtritUIAQUf

NEW YORK YANKEES : Placed kHI1 JeH
Nelson on 1he U ·dny t.li!labled lis1. r~trmt~;tivc In
July 2~ . R~olkd RHP Mike Buddie fmm Cnlum·
bus Of ltM! lnttmalional l.ta(!U~.
,
TEXAS R!\NGERS: ActiYah:J LHP Durrcn
Oliver from lhe I ~-day disablctl list Optinnt.'d RHP
AI Le"ine to Okl~ma of the PCL.

•

· College •

DARTMOUTH: N;•mcJ. Cl1ri~tophc• Schmid1
women's rowing coocb.
DUKE: Nanlt.'d Jnanna Spo•km:r.n uMI Dw11ync
Hani5un uui~lanl llire\:lt•n nf sponll infnrmalinn,
and Rnhyn Hnmcr won'l(n ·, rowing cu;1Ch, Pmmol·
ed Tum Ko!lf!mpa ro ~~~socintc direcl4• of AJ1Utt• inftWR\.11ion.
EAST CAROLINA: Numcd knnifl!r Mitchell
and Tucllt Buch;m;•n wtJmun · ~~o n l~i~t;mt b;ulkclhidl
CO~tl:hi:S.

''
UNHAPPY SOUL - The Cleveland Indians' David Juatlce reac(a
after atrlklng out In the alxth Inning of Friday night's game agaln•t
the visiting Houaton Astroa, who loat 4-2. (AP)

Indians notch 4~2
win against Astro~
.Indians manager Mike .Hargrov.e,
By KEN BERGER
CLEVELAND (AP) - Bartolo who has a chance 10 name Vizquel to
Colon was in the clubhouse watching his first All-Star team as the AL skiptelevision when Omar Vizquel made per. "He's better than Ozzie Smith,
a replay-defying play in the ninth he's bener than every one who's
inning.
played this game. I really believe
If only he could have been ihere · that.·"
With Setui Berry on second and no
jn person. For one thing, it would
have been awesome to be thai clOse outs in !he ninth. Derek Bell sent 'a
chopper belween third and sbon.
to grea1ness.
For ano!her, it would huve meant Vizquel, cheating to his right becauile
Colon was on his way to yet another Mike Jackson told him he was pitching Bell inside, sna!ched the ball with
complete game.
'With Ali-Siar performances from his throwing hand and plan!ed his
Colon and Vizquel, the Cleveland right foot near the oulfield grass. ·
Indians beat Houslon 4-2 Friday
. His long, accumte throw to first
night for their sixth suaight win and was just in lime to gel Bell, who had
highesl margin above .500 since slipped in the bauer's box and had his
1996.
14-game hilling streak snapped.
Colon (8-4), who hod three com"I was amazed, too," Vizquel
plete games in five stans. allowed said. "I didn't lhink I was going to
two runs and five hits in eight innings throw the guy oui."
and lowered his ERA to 2.51.
JackSOil got Jeff Bagwell to fly to
Vizquel,- a five.time Gold Glover, left and struck out -Moises Alou drew a standing ovation in 1he ninth the forrnei' Marlins player who hit
wilh another one-of-a·kind play.
three homers against Cleveland last
"I don't 1hink any shonstop who's fall in the World Series - for his
ever played the game plays the posi- 17th save.
tion the way Omar plays it," said
(See TRIBE on 1-J)

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1997 CHEVY MONTE CARLO V6, auto., air, PV/PL. till, cru~. remainder oifacl. warrS 12,875
1996 JEEP GUND CHEROKEE LTD va, auto., air, loaded, 4x4 ................. •23,500
1996 CHEVY C1500 PU Ext. cab, auto., ajr, ti~. cruise, remainder of fact. warr......•l7,950
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1998 Olds Cutlass GL

1

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cars. TrUckllnd •••• 111

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1998 Buick Regal LS .

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MSRP ......................... $12,944..00
Summer Sell Down

Jo1t1 T. . . Prodlds
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c-y..G-10

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1991 Chevy Metro

$26,943

2-

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Summer Sell Down
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1998 Chevy K1500 Pickup

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bright red. .
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cruise.
MSRP ......................... $16,235.00 MSRP ......................... $15,070.00
MSRP ......................... $18,094.00 Summer Sell Down
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Savings ............................. ~8.00 Savings .......................... 1,103.00
sovlngs .......................... 1 ,241.00
YOUR PRICE ......
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Plus $750 RHatt or
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CHICAGO CUPS: Rccalh:d 3B Kevin Uric
fmm luwa or the PCI .. Pliteetl OF Bmnl Drown IHl
the: 1~-doay a.li5oabkd liM . .
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PiiHith nuuua~:cr of Sun Anltmin nf 1hc 'fcau~

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1998 Chevy Mahbu

•••.

.·

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''

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Onkland Aehlrtics.

Sports Grill, Inc.
The area •s newest and-finest dtntngr

'•

t,·

Tiley plllyod Salunllly
(Peltiu~ K-!1) at N.Y. M4i!ll (1.
J,ws6-oll. I :IOp.m.
~
Hot~tton (limll 7"") 21 CLEVELAND (Gooden

w~'"7-

f

Salt DicJo 6, Atuthdm .1
Ti!J•7. San Fnul\:i~~:~t 3

(ALvs. NL)

We Must Maire loom for rite flew Models
flow It's rite rl111e ro
I Sefedlon
~A!!r•!_!!!!!!.

shot and Will Clark added a solo
homer against his former team as
Texas Slretched its winning streak

!

.1.,.... Ari.,..... 1.1. Seattle H

N.Y. Y"nk«s

Expos 9, Orioles 4 . 'l
R\lngers 7, Giants J
Rondell White wen! 4-for·S with
Fernando Tatis hit a three-run
four RBis as host Montreal snapped homer. Juan Gonzalez had a two-run
a four-game losing s1reak.
. .. White, who also scored three
. runs, hit a three-run homer in the firs!
:and an RBI single in the. third. He
.•lso singled in the fifth and eighth.
Brewers 2, White Sox 1
. ' Bob Hamelin hit a two-run homer
Sports lllllillltc
in the ninth and Jeff Juden pitched
' three-hi! ball for eight inni~gs as Mil,.,_,• It
' waukee extended its winning streak
......
&amp;4000
.'lo five .games by winning at Chicaa...... 9 %,.,.
.go.
' After Bill Simas (2·3) gave up a
TWitt Lttll &lt;natlttt
, pne-out single 10 Marquis Grissom,
Mtt-Rit
, Hamelin hi! a 1-1 pitch over the righlDtlittlr ,.,.
field fence for his fourth homer of the
Diet:
. ~ason. Hamelin wa.• balling .162
Twll Lilt Dill fMI
. coming info the game.
~·Cut,htt
.. . · . Ph ill~ 7, Devil Ran ,o
'lltn Clint 1 ••, Tyler Green pitched seven shutout
. t'wll Lilt lllrW PIMt fMI
" jnnings and Rico Brogna drove in
three runs wilh two doubles and a
H.w"-F•
triple a.~ host Philadelphia won for !he ·
fifth time in six games.
• • • Green _(6-4) gave up only three
• hits to win his third slraighl decision.
: .. Rockies 12, Athletics '
.
·~
AI Denver, John VanderWal and
• rookie Todd Helton hit 1wo-run
: homers. and Neifi Perez and J~ff
' Reed added solo shots for Colorado.
The Rockies hod 19 hits and set a
• seasot\-~igh in runs. Rookie Ben
~ Grieve had four hits and four RBis
for the A's.

base. The ball caromed off Gutierrez
right to Biggio, who threw Thome
bul at first Alomar struck out to end
the inning. ·
Notes: Whiten is 4-for-2 with four
RB!s with the bases loaded. Cleveland had !he bases loaded and nobody
out in the first. bul starter Pete
Schourek retired Thome. Alornar and
Justice without allowing a run . ...
Kenny Lofton. who began his caree(
in the Astros organization. did not
sian. Loflon, the only lntjians player to appear in·every game, came in
as a defensive replacement in the
eighth .... Indians right-hander Jare1
Wright has dyed his hair platinumblonde, a Ia Roger Clemens and
Chuck Finley.

SD MER

Major league baseball... ~(c;:;::on::::tinu=ed::.::fro:.:::.m::..:B:...:-2~&gt;- - - - - - .

tagged oul by Gutierrez in the seventh. Magnan1e walked Thome. but
Alomar doubled to right-center !O
score Ramirez and tie it at 2.
The other glaring blunder came in
the founh, when David Juslice go1
doubled off second on David Bell's
liner for an rally-killing double play.
Craig Biggio gave Houston a 1-0
lead with an RBI single in the lhird.
Brad Ausmus, who singled, scored on
Spiers' double-play grounderto make
it 2-0.
After Ramirez's RBI groundout in
the third, the Astros retited Thome
with a shift that only they use on the
lefl-handed slugger. Thome ground:d 10 shortstop Gutierrez, who was
playing to the right side of second

DON ,.A,.E

•

ChJ.:,.,.

~

er reason lo pick him as· an AII-S_tar.
He waved to !he standing crowd Cleveland's 250th straighl sellout as he left in !he eighth.
"I have no problems with my
arm," said Colan. who 1hrew 139
pitches in his las! slart because Hargrove lost track of his pilch count. "I
feel stronger every time I go to lhe
mound."
The Indians, whose one glaring
weakness is baserunning, ran themselves out of several scoring chances
until Alomar finally. lied il a! 2 wilh
an RBl double in the seventh againsl
Magnante.
Shawon Dunston inexplicably
took off from second on Manny
Ramirez's !!rounder lo short and was

f ·

• - C-12.0okt"""•

I

that loo often, !hough."
Colon is another gem, and he
pilched another one. He walked one,
s1ruck ou1 seven and was cruising 10
his AL-Ieading sixlh complele game
until he ran into Ricky Gutierrez,
who fouled olt 13 of 20 pitches lead. iilg off !he eighlh.
A fruslrated Colon was laughing
on lhe mound before slriking ou1
Gutierrez swinging on the 20th pitch.
"II was no laughing matter,"
Gulierrez said. "I wanted 10 gel a hit
and he struck me out."
Colon, a 23-year-old Dominican
in his second season, won his founh
straighl stan to give Hargrove anoth-

· " Pele Harnisch and two relievers
Harnisch was 0-2 in three sta[ls Cruz . booted Reggi~ ~anders'
stopped the Tigers on four hits as the ~ince his last win June 5. ·He has also grounder to shon.
Reds won their second stmight after '-tleen the victim of three.blown saves
"You don't expect Dei vi to do
ending an 11 -game losing streak . this year.
that.' ' Bell said. "I guess he's entitled
Thunday nigh! againSI the Chicago
"He's pitched so good. he ought Ill one of those, but when it costs you
White Sox.
to have II or 12 wins by now." McK- ·the game you don '! feel good."
Harnisch (7-3) gave up three runs eon said. - "
Casey's bases-loaded, two-run
and four hits in seven innings for his
Danny P111ves and Jeff Shaw each single gave the Reds a 2-0 lead in the
first victory since June 5. H~ struck pitched a perfect inning for the Reds, first;
.
with Shaw earning his 20th save.
Harnisch allowed just one hit
'out five.and walked two.
: "ljustwamedtogiveusachance
DougBrncail(3-l)wasthe loser, through !he first four innings. but a
10 win tonighl, because when you .win allowing ari unearned run and no hits
leadoff walk 10 Luis Gonzalez in !he
one after you lose II and lose again, in I 1-3 innings.
.
fifth set up Paul Bako's .RBI double.
}'ou've still los! 12 of 13," Harnisch,
Detroit's ·Frank Castillo, making Cruz followed with his second
said. "Now we can say we've won his first stan since June 10 and win- homer, putting the Tigers up 3-2.
, 1wo in a row. and go from there."
less since May 15, left wilh a 3-21ead
"I'm not very good at pilching
~ Willie Greene.homered and Sean
after giving up 1wo runs and eight hits with a lead, so I gave that one back
:Casey had a two-run single for in six inni'~gs.
in a hurry," Harnisch said. ·
Cincinnati. Dei vi Cruz hila 1wo-run
But Greene hit a lying homer off
Tigers righl fielder Bobby Highomer for the Tigers. but also com- Doug Bochller in the seventh before ginson said Greene's homer could've
mined tlie decisive error. . . j
the Reds s~ored the decisive run in been ruled an error because it
"11 seems like the first time we've the eighth."
. bounced off his glove as he tried to .
gol)en a break or 1wo," Reds manager
First baseman Tony Clark's error make a leaping catch at the fence.
Jack McKeon said. "It's nice to see helped the Reds put runners on first
"I jumped a lillie IOO far. it hil my
somebody else making an error. Usu- and thirdivithlwo outs. Pinch-runner palm and went over," HigginSon ·said.
ally il's us."
Chris Stynes scored when Dei vi "That's a ball! expect to catch all the
time. I'll take the heat for the loss."

.('

Nlilion•l u-.ur
ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS: Plnccd RHP
Felix RlldrittuCil '"'the 1~-duy tlis~bled li11.
Claimed RHP Aaron Small nff waivcu from lhc

Lta~LJC.

diving lhird baseman Bill Spiers. It
scored Jim Thome. who walked, and
Sandy Alomar, who tied' it wilh an
RBI double.
·
Vizquel had surgery on his throwing shoulder after the '96 season.
when Alben Belle played behind him
in left field ins1ead of Whiten. Withoul the operatjon. the ninth-inning
throw would never have been possible.
"It's practice, man," said Vi1.quel,
who recenlly b!:came baseball 's
career leader for fielding percentage
among shortslops with a1 leas1 100
games. "I don't recommend doing

Reds win... ~(Co=:;;nti;;,;;nued~f.;.;;rom=B-.=.2)..._________...;_______________

3.

PHILADELPHIA PH!LUES: Cl&gt;lled up C Bobby Eslaklla. hom Scranton·Wilke~~o- Bnne of lhc In·
1ernational League . Sent LHP Dnrrin Wlns10n 10
Scmn1on.
PllTSBURGH PIRATES : Si~ncd INF Pelt.'
Ro~ Jr. and 115SiJ!,rk.'d him tn N:tshvilli! of the PCL.

Basketball

p.m.
Texas (Burkett 4-8) ar Slln Francisco (Rueter 9-

J-J), 4:m

1996 season.
·
"If you like baseball, you had to
love !his game," Houston manager
Larry Dierker said.
Somebow, Vizquel made everyone forget about Mark Whiten"s
tiebreaking, two-run single in !he
sevenlh off Mike Magnante (3-3).
Wilh the bases loaded and two outs,
Whiten grounded !he decisive hil pa.~t

solo home runs !hat put th!: Mets
ahead 3-2 in the firth, but the Yankees
tied it in the sixth on Scott Brosius'
RBI single.
In Olher interleague games. it was
Montreal 9. Baltimore 4; Boston 6.
Florida I; Philadelphia 7. Tampa Bay
0; Toronto 6, Allanla 4; Milwaukee 2.
Chicago While Sox I; .Minnesola 5.
St -Louis I; Kansas City _6, Chicago
Cubs 3; Colorado 12, Oakland 6; Arizona 13, Seattle 8; San Diego 6, Anaheim 3; and Texas 7, San Francisco

Scoreboard

•

:

By The Associated Preaa
.
The Mets got no relief in !he opener of their Subway Series with the
Yankees.
-Paul O'Neill hit ·reliever Mel
Rojas' first .pitch for a ·three-run
homer in ll)e seventh inning as 1he
Yankees rallied to beat their New
York rivals 8-4 Friday night before a
sellout'l:rowd of 53,404 at Shea Sladium.
"h was exciting," O'Neill said. "I
think when you add 50,000 people in
New York, whether it's at Shea Stadium or Yankee Stadium, it's a lol of
fun. This is becoming a neallinle lradition."
Rojas enlered the game with a 43 lead after Mets starter AI Leiter
walked Chuck Knoblauch wilh one
ou1 and !hen slrained his left knee
covering first base on Derek Jeter's
infield hit.
O'Neill gree1ed Rojas with a
homer to left-center, selling off a celebration by his Yankee teammates.
"I'm glad we played here because
that ball isn't out of Yankee S!adium," 0' Neill said.
The Mets' iargest crowd of the
season saw the Yankees win their
third straight and halt the home
learn's 1hree-game winning streak.
"This is the fans' game," Yankees
manager Joe Torre said. "It is pretty
special when you have the fans try- '
ing to ouldo each o1her."
X-rays on Leiter (9-4) were negative, but Mets manager Bobby
Valentine said the pitcher is "real
questionable" for his next Sian.
Ramiro Mendoza (5-l) earned
the victory with 2 213 scoreless
innings in relief of Hideki lrabu.
Mariano Rivem got his 191h save,
reliring Edgardo Alfonzo on a foul
popup with the bases loaded to end
the game.
Brian McRae ·and Alfonzo hi!

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

Sunday, June 28, 1998

,.
I

�..

\

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Page 84 e Jlaubu attmes-Jt~l

••

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

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Werry-Noe quartet wins title
~n Gallipolis Lions' linkfest

Gallipolis·boys' b~sketball
~-amp draws 92 participants

lty ODIE O'DONNELL
:OVP Correspondent

'

: GALLIPOLIS - Despire tern·
.peratures that soared into the mid 90s
lander a hazy sunshirie. the 80 golfers
_who competed in the third annual
Gallipolis Lions Club Golf Tournament on Thursday enjoyed several
par-breaking scores and consumed
many bon les of water.
The greens and fairways on the
;18-hole Cliffside Golf Club layout
;played long and fast producing an 11)lnder par effon by the winning four;-..ome of Bob Werry, Clyde Jarvis,

George Davis and Ron Noe.
Their combined score of 61
enabled them to squeek out a victory over.two other teams that finished
the day with a 62. Second-place honors went to the team of Gary Harri-·
son Sr.. Rodney Rankin. Norm Snyder and Andrew Adkins.
Also posting a 62 on the leader
board was the foursome of Don
Swisher. Brent Sims. Herman Massie
and Tina Meadows. ·
Tournament chairman Terry Lloyd
presented Tee-shins and crying towels to himself, ..John Cunningham,

Bob Hennesy and Cline Jenkins for
shooting a nine under 63, but good
only for founh place.
Shelly Haskins took the day's·
individual honors for recording an
Eagle on the par-four 14th hole
while David Russell's shot came
closest to the pin on 13 and Kevin
. Smith closest to the pin on 15.
Ron Jackson won the prize for the
longest drive on the fairway among
tbe low-handicap players in the A and
B group, while . Norm Snyder
matched him with the longest drive
for tbe C and D higher handicap players.

GALLIPOLIS - A total of 92 Station. The Shake Shoppes. Zides Burnett, Mason Smith, Donnie Johnboys who will be enrolled in grades Sports Shop and Pepsi Distributing son, Shannon Shipley and Joel
4-9 this fall panicipated in the week- for their sponsorship suppon o11he Elliott.
The crab walk contests were won
long basketball camp conducted by camp.
Jim Osborne. bead varsity boys coach
Individual winners of the free by Jaymes Haggerty, Kun Fenderat Gallia Academy High School.
throw shooting contest include: J.P. ·bosch, Mason Smit)J, Cody Caldwell,
Assisted by varsity players, assis- Sebastian. fourth grade: Jared Bur- Brandon Vansickle and Joel Elliott.
Earning top honors in the team
tant coaches and guest coaches, nett, fifth : Kyle Hudson. sixth: Nick
Osborne directed the campers Craft, seventh: Shannon Shipley, shooting contest were Kenny Dyer,
through seven phases of fundamen- eighth; and Kyle. Mooney. ninth Malt Caldwell, Alex Kyger, Todd
Woodall, Tyler Handley. Greg Baktal basketball, as well as learn offense grade.
Topping the I on I events were er. James Haggeny and Travis Stout.
and team defense.
Champions of the bump 0111 conThe .camp concluded on Thursday Jaymes Haggerty. Kurt fenderbosch,
with one-on-one, free throw shooting Mason Smith. Tom Frazier. Shannon test were _Jaymes Haggeny. Jared
Burnett. Mason Smith. Nick Craft,
and ihree-point -shooting ehampi· Shipley and Bob Jones. ·
Winners of·the three-point shoot- Cliff Wbeeler and Kyle Mooney.
onships.
All of the contests were conduct' Osborne expressed thanks to lhe ing contest were Jamie Merry, Cliff
ed on a daily basis with prizes to the
Ohio Valley Christian School for the Wheel.er and Joel Elliott.
The double elimination COJitest winners and all campers receiving a
use of its gymnasium on Thursday
· and to The Sh'"' Cafe. The Movie winners·were Jaymes Haggeny, Jared Tee-shin and basketball at the con-

.

·:Area sports briefs ...

The succe ..ful futid-raising tour- •,A.r . \.~
ney was directed by Cliffside pm
Bobby Kincaid. Lion member David
ment to be eligible for the award, Tawney, who served as head cook,
.. : S.unders wins pool tourney
to right are Ron Noe, Bob Werry, George Davis
WINNING TEAM - Thla quanet captured the
. · GALLIPOLIS - Veteran pool which will be determined by a point was assisted by other members who ·
championship
In
the
Gallipolis
Lions
Club
Golf
and
Clyde Jarvis. (Times.Senllnel photo)
:player Haskell Saunders earned the system. ·
.
worked in. the shelter house and
Tournament that concluded last week. From left
All entries must be hand-delivered maintained a water/food shunle ser·Championship in the monthly pool
:tournament at the Gallia County to the host course by 5 p.m. on the vice to tbe hot golfers spread out over
: $enior Resource Center on Thursday. Wednesday prior to the tournament or the IS-hole course.
· :: Saunders' victory came against six mailed to T-SJGC. P.O. Box 945.
A total · of 46 sponsors were
: 91hers who not only c&lt;•mpete in the · Proctorville. Ohio 45669 two days offered thanks by the Lions Club with
:monthly tournaments, but spend prior to the tournament.
special thanks going to the major
: inany hours of practice in tbe center's
All tee times will be published in sponsors including Bob Evans
· games rooms honing tbeir skills.
The Herald-Dispatch of Huntington. Farms, Pepsi, Burlile Oil. Smith By ROSCOE NANCE
Jamison says. "It's re·ally going to three-year contracts for nrst-round
. Gene Wellington earned second W.Va. on the Thursday before the Custom Cabinets and the board of USA Today
draft choices with the No. I pick
hurt us."
· place behind Saunders against the tournament. The host club can also be directors of Clifh-fde Golf Club.
VANCOUVER - A lifelong
Players drafted Wednesday can't receiving abOut $10 million total.
: effm:ts of Joe Phillips. Ira Panerson, called for tee times.
dream came true Wednesday night sign with their teams before the
The union h:1s proposed a five· Charlie Skeens, Harry Pugh and JerEntry forms are available at Cliff- Lyne Center slate
for thqse ·58 players chosen in the lockout because their salaries won't year rookie scale with a lounh-year
. ry .Phillips.
·
.
side Golf Club in Gallipolis.
NBA draft.
count against the salary cap. until July salary at $8.7 million and a fifth· year
: · A special thanks was issued to the
Here are the dates of, the remainBut
that
dream
in
all
likelihood
I. Also. teams wouldn't want to sign at $21.8 million for the No. I pick.
RIO GRANDE - Here is this
· Women's Association of the First ing tournaments.
will
be
put
on
hold
for
who
knows
their
rookies because they, don't The league rejected the proposal.
: presbyterian Church in Gallipolis by
July 10 - Bellefonte Golf Club. week's schedule for events at the how long as the possibility of a play- know what the terms of the rookie
At this point. Wednesday's
University of Rio Grande's Lyne
. : Center Director Jean Niday and all of Ashland, Ky.
er
lockout
increases.
wage
scale
are
going
to
be.
draftees
are more concerned about
(See
.
: ihe pool players for the donation of
July 17- Riviera Country Club, Center.
"The
year
I
come
out
is
when
they
The
current
scale
calls
for
. Fitness center, gymnasium
· two custom made cue-stick racks for Lesage, W. Vn.
have it," says Antawn Jamison,
and racquetball courts
: ~se in the game rooms.
July 24 - Lavalette Golf Club,
picked by Toronto and traded , to
Today - 1-6 p.m
: · Prior to receiving the new racks Lavalette, W.Va.
Golden
State. "Ari unfonunate situMonday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
· iwo long cardboard boxes had served
July 31 - Guyan Golf and Counation. but things like I hi~ happen."
Thesday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
· its storage for the cue-sticks.
try Club. Huntington. W.ya.
Owners are expected to impose a
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
For more information, call circuit
·.
P&amp;R lo hqld day camps
lockout
at midnight Tuesday if the
Thursday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
: · GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis director Ed Wilgus at 886-8910.
league
and
players association are
Friday~ Closed
Note: Soft spikes arereQyjred to .
· Parks &amp; Recreation Depanment will
unable to reach a new collective barSaturday - Closed
. : ~old day camps from Monday until play in the Riviera and the Guyan
gaining
agreement (CBA). The sides
Sunday, July S - 1-6 p.m.
: Friday from 9 a.m. to nootaily at tournaments. The other courses rechave
been
negotiating since April I
Note: Gyms available around
: the Haskins Park sbelterho . e.
ommend soft spikes.
but
have
made.
little progress. Talks
spons camps.~
""~-·,. '·
.
· : The cost this week will $20.
Gallipolis swim news
broke off Monday, and no bargaining
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
: : From·more information. c II P&amp;R
sessions aie scheduled.
Pool .
: director Brett Bostic at 441-6022.
Municipal Pool will offer swim
Once the lockout is imposed,
Today- 1-3 p.m.
.'
Cage tourney Friday
lessons at the following dates and
players
will not be permitted to use
Monday- 6-9 p.m.
· : GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis times:·
team
facilities
and teams can't negoThesday - 6-9 p.m.
July 13-24 (Mon.-Fri.)
: Parks &amp; Recreation Department.
tiate contracts with players. including
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
• 9-9:45 a.m. for all swimmers at
: Coaches Corner or Gallipolis and
draft
picks. There will be no summer
Thursday- 6-9 p.m.
· Deneral Nutrition Centers of Gal- least five years old
leagues
or training camps until a new
Friday - Closed
: )ipolis will sponsor a three-on-three
• 10-10:45 a.m. for all' swimmers
agreement is reached.
Saturday - Closed
• 7:30-8: 15 ·p.m. for parent-child·
: basketball tournament on Friday at
"BasiCally, we· re on our own,"
Sunday, July S.- 1-3 p,m
: :10 a.m. on the Public Use Area near sessions (live months to four years)
.
Aug. 10-21 (Mon.-Fri.)
· · the Gallipolis City Park.
Notes
' . : : Male and female participants will _
• 9-9:45 a.m. for all swimmers at
• A Lyne Center membership is
: compete in separate divisions ('12· least live years old
required
to use tbe facilities. Facul·
: :and-younger. 14. 16, 18, 20. 30. 40
• 10-10:45 a.m. for all swimmerS
ty,
staff,
students
'and administration
. :and 40-plus). The top two teams in
The cost for each session is $25
will
be
admitted
with
their ID cards.
: •each division will receive awards. All per child. Each class will be limited
• Racquetball coun reservations
: :team members will receive aT-shin. to 20 studems.
can
be made one day in advance by
,' : All teams will consist of four
calling
315-7495 or 1-800-282-7201.
: ;players. The entry fee is $50 per · 'Fhe Gallipolis Swim Team will
• All guests must be accompanied
: •team.
hold practices from 8 tp 9 a.m. ·on
by
a Lyne Center membership hold: : The registration deadline is Mon- weekdays. Any swimmer six to 17
er
($2
fee).
• :day.
years old may join.
.
: : The tournament times and pair·
The cost is $25 per member for
6To
Sponsors
:
·ings
will
be
available
on
Thursday.
the
summer.
.
~~rom!
'
Amy Beth Can:1day and Ben cancel Capital
: : From more information. call P&amp;R
·:director Brett Bostic at441-6022.
Barksdale will be the team's coachCity Classic
.
Rotary Mile Run
es.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Poor
sel for Saturday
advance ticket sales have led sponGALLIPOLIS - The Rotary
Each Tuesday from 7:30 to 9:30 sors to cancel the Capital City Clas: :Mile Run. sponsored hy the Gallipo·
: ·lis Rotary Club, will be held on Sat- p.m is Family Night. Admission is sic scheduled to be played .in Ohio
$1.50 per person . Only during this Stadium in early September.
: :urday.
The game between two histori· : The race. which wi II start at time are rafts. noats, innatable balls
: ;approximately 10 a.m.. will stan at and fun noodles allowed in the pool. cally black colleges wa• to have been
: ·the Shake Shoppe on 90 I Second Only during this time can parents a fund-raiser for the King AnsCom-t&amp;NSIA
plex, which provides workshops and
: :Ave. and end at the main stage on the take children down the slide.
41'0
For more information. call 446- exhibitions focusing on black culture
· :Gallipolis park front.
Ctux~ ~'rom!
DIVE.
'
and an .
. '
· · There is no entry fee for the mce.
: · w~ich is open to 1998 high school
: :graduates and younger mnners.
· : All runners ·must complete and
: :return the registration and consent
: •form to any Rotary official at the
: :shake Shoppe at 9 p.m. on race day.
· : All panicipants will receive com1!1!11 Dll£11111111 U Slllll
I!IIPIIIIItiiiiUUIUE
111'0
: ;plimentary Rotary Mile T-shirt. Tro15To
•llllw
lot
•3110.\lf
•
P.
DIMr'l
Soli
: •phies for the top two runners in each
• 31100 V-6 • P. DMr'1 Soli. wnt,lcdll """"""" From!
From!
..V.WM ca..W'tl ~ • ~ l.oldecl UJUUil!V
•Aim! co And c...
: :age group (I 0-and,younger. 11·13
· :and 14-gradUale for the hoys' and
: :girls' divisions: this tot.1ls si~ groups)
: ·will be given only to Gall in County
· :residents.
·.
All-star tourneys plannt!d
: · JACKSON - There will be two
: :all-star hasehalltoumaments planned
: :fnr July.
: The lii'St is a week-long minor: ; league (9-10 year-olds; no player can
: ·be II as of Aug. I. 1998) tournament
: ' set to stan on Monday, July 6. The
..: second is a 10-day Little League tour: nament ( 11-12 year-olds: no player
: can be 13 as of Aug. I. 1998) slated
-: to stan on Wednesday. July I5.
· . For. both tournaments. the entry
1!1!17 HIIC~ S~ylll'll
: .. fee is $60.
291'0
•AI*lmllc
•AO- cu.-d 9
, · Both tournaments will be played
Ol&lt;x~e ~rom!
•NIIFM C8uelltl• CNIIe CUt1lld
(])oo)e From!
·: on the High Street fields.
,
:
For more information on either
' : tournament, call Chad Jenkins at
. : (740) 286-6583.
Llnklesl rtsiiiDtl July 10
PROCTORVILLE - The 16th
: annual Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit
: will resume play on Friday. July 10
: with a tourn1men1 in Ashland, Ky.
9To
· Tbere will be competition for
From!
(])oo)e
:Jolfersintbe 10-12,13-ISand 16-18
RIDE THE BEST
:year-old divisions. All ages will be
' counredasof June 12,1998.
COMING IN .iVLY
415Soolh Onm:h Stm:t· Ripley, WV 1-IKI0-822-0t17 ·372-2844
: Only lbe 10-12 year-old division
~·1.11.-lljl&amp;•
.........
:will be: limired to nine holes. All oth·
; ers will play 18 holes.
438 STATE ATE. 7 N.
(740) 448-2240
GAWPOUS '
: A player of rhe year will be
I
· ~elected in each division. Players
'must play in six of lbe seven touma-

..

~-sports

NBA rookies face delay· of glory
as -chance of lockout increases

~

WINS SKILLS COMPETITION -Jeffrey Gold·
en (bottom), the son of Jeff and Dixie Golden of
Gallipolis; trev11ed to Clnergy Field In Cincinnati
:: to participate In the Fleer/Reebok Regional Dlil·
'• monel SkiDa Competlllon. The Green Elementary
Reda
,• third-grader, shown .with three Clnclnnlltl
.

·LTD

Diesel

-8,950

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'' Lockout...
(Continued from B-4)
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s9,ti50 .

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From!

•

•
•

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Wash·ingtOfl Wizards player Juwan Howard
has filed a $20 million lawsuit against
tbe woman who accused hirn of sexual assault, saying her allegations
have irreparably harmed his reputation and image.
In her complaint that also named
Howard's then-teammate Chris Webber. tbe woman contended she was
sexually assaulted during a pany
April 6 a1 Howard's suburban Maryland home. A grand jury did not hand
down an indictment. and now
Howard wants his name cleared.
Golr
CLifTON, N.J . (AP) - · Charles
Coody made eight birdies en mute to
a 6-under-par 66 to take the lead after ·
the first round of tbe Cadillac NFL
Golf Classic.

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·: becoming familiar with tbeir new
; teams' systems than finances.
"It's going to be tough because we
; won't get a chance to go to presea; son camps and l~am what tbey want
; from us and leam the system."
• Orlando Magic pick Michael Doleac
; says. ")l's going 10 be IliOn: diiTICIJII
: for WIIO adjust quickly once lbe lock·
: out is over. Hopefully. I can learn
• stuff from other guys.··

IIIII nOif Pl'·lill

I

N.Y. Liberty get 62-48
win over Monarchs

-NEW YORK (AP) - .After winning their la.'ll ·game in tbe final live
' seconds, the New York Ubeny took
care of this one early.
Kym Hampton scored 13 points a.~
tbe Ubeny beat tbe Sacramento
Monarchs 62-48 Friday night and
reached the .500 mark for the lirsl
time this season.
•
·
The Libe\'fy (4-4) never trailed
and scored the first II points of the
secood halftoe.tend their lead to 4124 and send Sacramento (1-S) to ils
fourth straight los.~ .
' "We knew we had to get on (bern
. early because they're a hungry
. team,"' said Hampton. who hit the
: game-winning layup in Tuesd:1y
• night's victory over Cleveland. "We
: cim' t go out and play sloppy bec:mse
· ;. tljat's wben , you commit turnovers
, and lose games."'
. The Ubetty·s biggest lead wa.' 5833 and it came on a three-pointer by
' Coquese Washington with 6:36 to
' play. Sacramtnto closed tbe game
1 with a I S-4 run a.~ Adia Barnes and
' Thngela Smith each Scored four
.
• potnts.
Rookie Ticha Penicbeiro had I0
. J)oints to lead tbe Monarchs, who
: .were playing without tbe injured ·
: Ruthie Bolton-Holitield.
'• · "We knew coining in that New
~ York is a great team .and without
~ Ruthie people would ha\'e to step it
~ up. •• Penicheiro said. "But tonight we

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players (Eduardo Perez Ia behind Golden, and
Scott Winchester 11 It the right; the other play·
er was unidentified), competed agalnat participants from Ohio, Kentucky and lndle_n e and won
the 7-8 year-old division title.

; : ; GALLIPOLIS - Here are tbe Tavern 23
Match 8: Sn,rkle Supply 19.
: 1atest Cliffside Men's Golf AssociaD&amp;W Homes 2i
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Match 9: Smith's Custon Cabi;~sulls.
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nets
16, Norris-Nonhup 19
• • Mlkb 1: Ric!Wd Millet CPA 23.
Plltyen
of the week: Bill
:i!artsBaml7
Tawney 34. Gail Snyder 36. John
: : : Match l: Star Bank 29, Smith
Patrick 36. Ron Wright 39
·'Buick 11
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_
Standing~
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Matc:h 3: Toler &amp; Toler 35. Elks
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Division:
Carmichael
Farm
: 5
&amp;Lawn 145,EiksLodge IIS.D&amp;W
,
Match 4: G&amp;M Fuel 18, Tom's
Homes 100, Brown lnsurdnce 86
• Aulo Clinic 22
Green Division: G&amp;M Fuel 137,
•
Maldl 5: Paul Davies Jewelers
Johnson's
127, Old Brick Tavern
: 30, Johnson's Supermarkets 10
Match li: Carmichael Farm &amp; · 125, Nonis-Nonhup 113. Lombi's 96
Fairway Division: Davies 141,
Lawn 30. Brown Insurance I 0
Pans Bam 137, Richard Miller CPA
Match 7: Lorobi's 17. Old Brick
- 136, Smith Buick 82 . ·

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ORLANDO, Fla. (AP)- Charles
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· two children's programs to settle
charges tiled after he was accused of
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.Zvereva defeats
:Graf; Davenport,
=(Rafter also win
no one could discount her chances
after seeing her drop only two match·
es at Wimbledon since 1988.
By STEVE WILSTEIN
"Fraulein Forehand," as she came
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)Steffi Graf cracked the thinnest of to be called here, had been playing
imiles and shed no tears, though the Wimbledon nearly half her life since
bun was plain on her face as she the age of 15, and she knew Centre
Court better than anyone.
.
)"eighed whether her loss Friday And if anyone was going to run
the first in 18 matches against
her
out, the la.•t person who figured
• Natasha Zvereva - marked the end
to
do
it ·was Zvereva, the. zany
·Cifhtr luminous Wimbledon career.
Belarussian
who splashed through
: "I definitely couldn 'I say right
: now," the seven-time champion said the puddles on Centre Court last year,
after falling 6-4, 7-5 in the third who ·rook doubles more seriously
!ound on an ominously bleak and than singles, and who had never forgusty afternoon that gutted the sched· gotten her first humiliation against
Graf- 6·0, 6-0 in the 1988 French
· ule once again.
: : No. 2 Lindsay Davenpon, the only Open final.
Blessed with talent and athleti· OCher women's seed to finish a match,
cism.
Zvereva is famous for letting
: ~vanced to the fourth round with a
her
mind
and game wander in match-6-3, 1-6, 6-2 victory over Maria Ale- ·
es.
She
doesn't
bother with a coach,
jandra Vento.
. : Among ihe men, No. 6 Patrick' sticks a few pins in her untamed hair
Rafter reached the round of 16 by before going out on court, fools
kating Magnus Gustafsson in four around more than she practices, and
·iets. and No. 14 Goran Ivanisevic goes out to have fun. She may be the
c;ompleted a fout-5et. third-round most popular.player on the women's
tour, and everyone knows that on any
.win over Andre Medvedev.
Graf will tum 30 a couple of given day she can beat anyone except
weeks before Wimbledon next year, Graf. Until now.
"I don't know if this was.the 18th
41ime in life to consider whether she
or
20th
or 25th, but I've done it,"
•~anl~ to start a family. A year from ,
Zvereva
bubbled. "Wow! I don't
now, her surgically repaired knee will
know
how,
but I've done h."
lle that much older. and the new wave
She
did
it
by keeping her coneen-Qf players will seem that much
. !ration throughout the match for a
.younger.
: "It would be nice to play again change. keeping the pressure on Graf
-4nd, hopefully. be in different shape and never yielding on serve. In the
and enjoy myself," said Graf, wtio ·locker room afterward, the other
offered a quick wave with her left players teased her mercilessly about
fiand a.&lt; she walked off Centre Court. how she finally kept her focus from .
start to finish.
~But I've learned enough to take
"I had to go down on my knees
what's coming up next (as it comes).
and
crawl into (my cubicle) because
.So I don't know."
· : She had come back, she said, for they were giving me so much funny
'one more bowl of strawberries, one · looks and stuff," she said. "It was
.more chance to hold the silver salver quite embarrassing."
Graf l:ame out on this gray, dtizaloft as champion. Only two other
zly
day feeling tight and nervous.
·!!layers have won Wimbledon more
Rain
delayed the match about an hour
~ Martina Navratilova (9) and the
and
45
minutes: and the warmup was
_liite Helen Wills Moody (8) -and
shortened
because of the threat of
· Oraf knew her time was running out
more rain. Zvereva won the toss and
to catch them.
elected
to receive, a wise choice since
: Graf was so emotional over this
obviously
wasn't quite loose
Graf
_1l:tum that she wept at a news conyet.
~rence after her first match Monday
Zve'reva broke Graf right away
.as she recounted how close she had
and
held serve throughout the rest of
·OC.me recently to retiring.
the
set
as Graf sprayed returns long,
: She had missed a year and played
wide
and
into the net.
·&lt;!nly four other tournaments this seathe
first set, my return of serve
·"In
S?"· but was given a No. 4 se~d. Yet was terrible,"
GJ'af said. "llle first

1
l
. By Andrew Cartar
i
"Everything rises and falls on
leadership."
It's an old adage that aptly applies
' lo the U.S. national team's uneven!·
ful and premature dismissal from
World .Cup 98 in France.
' 'U.S. Soccer.the official governing
body of the game here in the States;
' and U.S. soccerfans expected a much
better performance from the Red,
: White and Blue.
However, the absence of firm
: leadership, in-fighting within the
l'llllks of the old guard of U.S. play' ers and the inability to put the ball in
the back of the net combined to
undermine any chances of moving on
to the second.round.
·
Steve Sampson, the beleaguered
head coach of the U.S. national
team, stated that this squad· was
more skilled and better
to

I
I
'

"
t

1

compete in this World Cup than the
'94·team was under the leadership of
the crafty Bora Milutinovic. who ~·
now directing Nigeria's "Sup~r
Eagles" into the "knock-out r:ound.l'
I would agree with Sampson tn part;
the overall talent of this year's team
is better than that of the "94 club, b1,1t
the team chemistry and approach to
the game is nowhere near that of the
the boys who took the field four years
ago in· the land qf the free .and the
home of the .brave.
Key veterans failed to provide onand off-field leadership fl)r the
younger group of players who had
never participated at this level Qf
competition. ln particular. forward
Eric Wynalda. the national team's all·
time leading scorer, and defend~r
Alexi Lalas. a mainstay of the ·~4
club, proved to be more of a detriment than an asset to the '98 club. ·
Wynalda, albeit only a short time
(See CARTER'S on B-7)

Carter's

TOUGH TIMES were In atora
for Germany'• Stllffl Graf, who
cleara her noaa durtng a brt111k In
her Wimbledon alnglea match on
Centre Court against Nataaha
Zverava of Balarua. Zvareva
dahNit8d the saven-tlma Wlmbledon champion 6-4, 7-5. (AP)
few games, I didn 'I even get one
inside."
They played on serve in the second set until Zvereva broke ag~in for
a 6-5 'lead and a chance to serve out
the match. If ever Zvereva was going
to falter, this was the time. She'd
done it before. and Graf had dug her
way out of similar jams.
Graf drilled a backhand that
Zvereva netted for 15-40, but there
was still no sense that .Zvereva was
folding. She had a ~onlidentlook in
her eyes, and Graf still seemed edgy.
Graf then slugged a return long to
waste one break point, and Zvereva
saved the next with an overhead.
Zvereva ripped a paS.•ing shot for
match point, but couldn't capitalize
on it. But she got another right away
with a volley al the end of a brilliant
rally and closed ouuhe match with a
service winner to Graf;s backhand.
Graf's lack of matches coming
into Wimbledon are "probably one of
the reasons why I' ve·been quite ncrvous and anxious to be out there,"
she said.
·

Discount ......................... ~HI!
STII9800970

·illY BARRY WILNER
- · PARIS (APl- Romania's blond
·lirigade - dyed. of course - and
t:ngland's suddenly creative squad
moved into the second round of the
' World Cup on Friday, hours after the
Americans fired final salvos at each
Qther.
· Romania tied Tunisia 1-1. enough
:.0 not only win GroupG for the east. ~m Europeans. but dropping the U.S.
· ~am right to the bottom of the 32- .
team tournament. The English dominated Colombia. the only Latin
!merican team not to advance. in a
· ~.o victory.
. American players and their coach
·eouldn '!leave France withouttrashihg each other once again.
: "My viewpoints and his viewpoints are at PQlar opposites on how
jlayers should be treated," veteran
ilefender Jeff Agoos ·said of coach
.,!!teve Sampson. whose conu·act i~ up
later this year. "He ha.~ to respect my
&lt;ipinion a.• well a.• his."
· : Sampson struck back at all the
P.faym who mouthed off about the (}.
j mark, saying they would be fined;
·: "Maybe there's a sense of frus. ~tion that international careers are
coming to an end and they needed a
!W:apegoat," Sampson said. "It's
1infair ·it was pointed at me, the indiV)dual who stuck with them for a
long time."
: Japan coach Takeshi Oka4a was·
n't sticking around after his team lost
~Q Jamaica 2-1. When the Japanese
jcined lhe U.S. squad a.~ the only(}.
;1 teams. he resi!!ned.
· : In Friday's othet' game. Araentina
~ged CI"DDIIia 1-0 to win ,Group H.
: · The matchup!i for the knockout
Nund of 16 have Chile against Bflllil
1.).d Norway vs. Italy on Saturday:
~igeria vs. ~nmark and Frani:e
:ap;nsa Paragu~y on Sunday: the
;Netherlands playing Yugll!llavia and
&lt;iermany facing Mexico on Monday;
Mel England v~. ~rgentina following
.:R0111111ia.Croatia on ~ay.;
• : All second-round pmes will go to
::JJ) minutes of !llldden-dellth overtime
l~ we of ties, followed by a !hootout

·To get a cu"ent weather
· report, check 1he
6unbap
:tEimts- 6tntintl

if no one scores in extra time.
Douglas Knittle. head of a U.S.
ticket agency that claimed thieves
took l.SOO tickets from its Paris
office on June 17. was placed under
formal investigation for fraud. one
step short of being charged.
,
World Cup officials investigated
and found owners of PSI tickets were
attending matches. During questioning, Knittle contended he forg!ll to
tell authorities that not all the tickets
at the office were stolen.
Three other PSI employees arrested in.the case were released without
charges.
England 2, Colombia 0
With nearly 2.000 policemen in
the lrns area. SO fans were arrested
for drunkeness and throwing bottles
and cans at officers. There was no
rioting like occurred tw11 weeks ago
in Marseille Jlround England's game
with Tunisia. or similar to last week's
scene in Ltns before and after Ger·
many's game with Yugoslavia.
Darren Andertnn and David Beckham scored f~&gt;r England.
.
"It may not have been one of my
best goals," Anderton said. ·"but it
was the sweetest."
Romaaia 1, Tunisia 1
1be Romanians vowed to dye
their hair blond if they won their
group. The 1-l .tie with Tunisia was
enough to achieve it. Coach An&amp;Jtel

Gordon claims pole
for Save Mart-Kragen

By MIKE HARRIS
picking up a little bit. When Mark
SONOMA, Calif. (AP) - Jeff (Martin) ran, I had my fingers
By SAil WILSON
Gordon's first-ever road course pole crossed. When I saw him go ofT the
TIIMI S1ntlnal Comepondent
was never really in doubt.
track. I knew we had a real good shot
· We have a treat today. Andrew Caner, Mr. Soc·
The two-time and defending Win- at it."
cer, has fmally gotten over his mourning and decidston Cup champion was the second.of
No one was able to get closer than
ed to write a column on the World Cup. Naturally,
4'7 drivers who made qualifying rookie Jerry Nadeau. who ll(as 0.148 . :
I can't resisl giving you some of my own observaattempts Friday in the opening round seconds slower than Gordon's
tions on this spectacle.
of time trials for today's Save Mart- DuPont ChevrOlet, turning a lap of
I have discovered that regardless of the faults I find with this.event, it is' Kragen 25B-kilometer race at Sears 98.506 10 gain his best career start.
Slill better organized and more exciting than that bowl nonsense which Point Raceway.
Nadeau's best previous starting posidecides the NCAA Division I national football champion. At the very least,
Gordon got around the reconfig- tion was ninth.
the World Cup is won on the field!
ured 1.95-mile, I I ·tum circuit cut
Martin. the defending race winner
But in order to appreciate World Cup soccer, a fan must forst have an through the rolling hills of' nonhero and the odds.on favorite to win the
.astute understanding of the game. !Jtherwise, the game's intricacies could be California's wine country at 98.71 I pole. was the 40th· driver to make a
lost 011 the novice soccer fan, or appear boring. Believe me, tlie World Cup mph. Then he waited impatiently (or qualifying attempt. He carne up far
Is an)1bing but boring.
·
.
more than 2 tn hours to claim his short after·pulling three wheels off
The World Cup, however, Is not like the NBA playoffs. You can't ignore fifth pole of the season- all of them the track on the n~ chute.
'the qualifying matches and expect to un~tand the excitement and strate- coming in the last seven events.
"It was that new part Qf the race
gy of the game.
·
"It made me pretty nervous," he track," said Martin, whose lap of
What becomes evident is ~ is not the way to sell the said. "I thought maybe the track was 96.371 wa.• only 3_8th.
game to Americans. Al!IO, the boast that the U.S. would have a legitimate
·shot to win the cup in 2010 is more than a bit optimiSiic. We still have a long
commentary~. ~Continued from B-6)
·way togo!
Team stratesies in these matches are too defensive for the novice Ameri- removed from a nag~inll knee injury,
Major League Soccer, now in its
can fan to understand or appreciate. Some teams, at times, are attempting not showed none ofthe skill, class or nair third season of operation, is experito lose a match instead of trying to win it. This tactic Is unacceptal&gt;le to most he has provided in the past. Lalas, encing some growing pains, but has
American sports fans.
who I felt should have been left off put a better product on the field each ·
;•; For example, in Group B, Chile has advanccd~nd round with- the team altogether, was vocal in the · season. That will continue to be the
;:out winning a single match. How can a team not win a mllth and be allowed press about his dislike of the new sys- carrot for young American players
;:io advance? This Is an aspect we Americans, with OUt emphasis on winning, tern and Sampson's coaching style. aspiring to a career in the pro game.
:• Dave diffiCUlty appreciating. Our fmt inclination Is to outlaw tics by insti- This did nothing to boost team
Collegiate soccer is alive and
~: toting sudden death.
morale following the losses to Ger- ·well, with ihe NCAA championships
\; • Understand that a team is awarded three points for a win and one for a tie. many and Iran.
drawillg such huge numbers of tick!: l::hile ac:cumulated three points on three ties.
Other than the match against Ocr- et requests that, after the 1998 sea~.
;. : Spain, which was in Group D, will not be advancing even though it won many, U.S. forwards had numerous • the Final Four is moving from Rich; one match and· tied a second. Paraguay was able to avoid defeat by settling excellent opportunities to score goals, mood, Virginia, to the vast expanse of
~ for a tie in tWo games and defeating Nigeria on. Wednesday. Consequently, but were unable to tickle the twine. 80,000-seat Ericsson Stadium in
. ; by playing a more defensive game, Paraguay was able to best Spain by one Three shots off the post against Iran Charlotte, North Carolina.
; pc)int and advance to the.second round.
· and one more against Yugoslavia
On the local college .scene. the
~
Spain won, and they're going home. But Cbile, which didn't win~ si~gle proved that the Americans were able University of Rio Grande soccer
' match, is advancing. Americans see some problems here! We don't hke lies! to put themselves in positions to program. under the leadership of
: . Iran's victory over the "Great Satan" was the result of the brilliant defen- . Score, hut the finishing touch just was Scott Morrissey, moves ever closer to
; •sive strategy devised by their coach. The Iranians had only three actual scor- . not there. Only a brilliant header by its goal of not only reaching the ·
• ang oppottunities during the game, and took advantage of two of them. They Columbus Crew forward Brian NAIA national tournament, but also
:;knew the U.S. had difficulties puning the bBII back into the net, After Estlli's McBride against Iran kept the U.S. bringing the elusive prize home to the
~ goal in the 41st minute, the Iranians just packed the defense back and wait- from beinl! held scoreless in France. school's friendly confines adjacent to
: ·~patiently' for their opportunity to win.
.
So where does this leave soccer in Bob Evans Farms. The highest level
· : This strategy is not consiSient with American sports. We install the 24- the United States? Was the "failure · of soccer currently being played in
: iiccond clock and outlaw zone defenses to incicase scoring in the NBA in France" the death knell for the southern Ohio or West Virginia kicks
: :Hockey and football bave sudden death rules to prevent ties. In each of these game in America? Heck no.
off August 28 against northeastern
: sports, the rules are continually altered to allow more defense into the game,.
It's a blow to the national team to power Houghton College of upstate
because that makes it easier to sell to the fans.
be sure, but not for soccer overall in New York.
Fns come to see Sammy Sosa hit home runs, Brett Hull score, Kobe this country. The fair weather fans or
Youth soccer at both the ~lub and
, Bryant dunk and John Elway throw touchdowns. Defense, with few excep- the casual obl;etvers may fall awaY. high school levels continues to boom.
· lions, doesn't pack fans in the seats. ·
·
·
•·
·
until the next upset or Brazil or some According to a 1996 repon issued by
: The problem is, you can't ~;;ire such rule changes in soccer. In tile other world power, but the core the Soccer Industry Council of Amer: NBA and NHLplayolfs, scoring is also down when compared to the regular group or American soccer fans (like ica, the state of Ohio ranks fifth in the
: season. Teams, just like those in the World Cup, stress defense. The old Sam's Army, the official U.S. Soccer nation in the number of soccer play: adage that "defc~ wins championships" is true; however, we are familiar
fan club) will look forward to World ers playing at all levels. Over 962,000
· with these other sports. Consequently, American fans are going to bavc to Cup. 2002 with renewed hope of Ohioans play in organized leagues.
: first learn the game of soccer before we can fully appreciate the World Cup. greater things to come.
As a lifelong fan and student of
: Ir we caa get to use wild cards in baseball, we caa understand soccer. .
Interest in the int~mational game the game, I'm extremely encouraged
: a.n .._, Ph.D. r. .. 111 aalltt 111 ormar oUittary 811he Unlwrlltv 01 will remnin high as the U.S. women's at the .level of soccer now being
• RIO GrM!cle. An liVId ran Ol .. lfiCHII-IIICI• - - 11 cJtlclausw oriiMkelnational team attempts to regain the played in the United States. More and
!IIIII- lw Ia • rtlllhle 01 Gwy, lnd~ IIICI •ll'8dlllle of tndl- Unlvlnlty- whlcll . golden chalice it captured in 1991, more young Americans are current, 1lmM Ill Nldii'IIUI!IIItklg....,. whWe
IIMd {IIICI HoaJIW '-II ta:
bul_lostto Norway in 1995, when the ly playing for. or being sought by,
Untied States hosts the FIFA foreign clubs for their skills and abiiWomen's World. Cup in 1999. Mia ities. with several current national
Hamm. the undtsputed Godde~s of -team members among those ranl\5.
World Soccer, ~cads her national
Like any · other sport, the game
.
teammates in therr quest for the cup. comes under criticism, mainly by
World Cup 99 should serve as the those who have never taken time to
: : FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP) - Rod school announced Friday.
~ostcr, 37, was an assistant coach perfect showcase for the women's understand it or learn its intricacies.
• Foster, who starred at UCLA before
: playing for the Phoenix Suns, has for Athletes in Action the past two game on the international see~ with Sometimes even I am disappointed
''The Tragedy of 1998" for the men's with what I see on and off the field;
; been hired as an assistant men's bas- years.
He played at UCLA from 1979-83 ieam bowing before ''The Triumph of however. it remains for me· and bil; ketball coach at Wright State, the
•
and
was the Bruins' all-time leading 1999" as the women's team once lions of others around the globe, sim••
.ply, "the beautiful game."
free-throw shooter, shootinl! 88 per- again conquers the world.
·Akron coach stays cent from the line.
Foster led UCLA Ill a 72-68 win
·out of Bosley fight
over Ohio State in the 1980 NCAA
Issue with pollee . · West Regional. The Bruins lost to
Louisville 59·54 in the national
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Universi- championship game. ·
Foster played for the Suns from
ty of Aknm basketball coach Dan
1983-86,
leading the ieam in threeHipsher said Friday that he won 'I discipline guard Jami Bosley for taking point shooting his first two seasons.
"Addina Rod Foster to our coach·
pan in a brawl.
ing
staff is a huge bles.~ing for our
~, · The light occurred Sunday night
during a softball game between basketball Jli'O!!ram." said head coach
jJolice officen .and a Massillon team Ed Schilling. "His experience as a
· college star and professional ba.~ket­
Bosley played on.
· Two officers filed complaints ball player with be beneficial not only
apinst Bosley, saying' he a.•saulted in recruiting, but ai!IO in dealing with
lhem "after a verbal altercation our current playen."
became physical." An internal police
investigation was trying to determine
-~ports briefs What happened.
Boxln&amp;
: Bosley sai~ one of the o~JC~rs w~s
NEW YORK (APl- A day after
fiWnting him about a 1996mcidentm filing suit to sever his ties with Don·
which he .pleaded n~&gt; contest to a King. unbeaten IBF champion Feli~
~barge of attempted lh~ft after
Trinidad Jr. announced he had signed
authorities said he broke IIIlO COrs an eight-light deal with rival proWhile playing for Ohio St~te .Uni- moter Dino Duva. The first of the
venity, He eventually was diSmtssed eight lights is expected to be a
from the team.
November middleweight Iitle uni fi,
Last year•.the 6-foot, 22B-pound cation bout against Ike Qunrtey. The
, Jlosley wiS Akron's .~• valu~ble c:Ontract calls for one pay-per-view
~1yer and led the Ztps m sconng,
fight and the rest to be televised on
·
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~ Wright State appoints Foster
..: as
coach
-. assistant basketball

.:Romania ties Tunisia;.. U.K.,
·Argentina; Jamaica ·also .win
World Cup soccer

.I

I

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

Understanding
World .Cup soccer

7

Wimbledon

I ,

Sunday,June28,1998

U.S. men's soccer
team's quick exit
!PUts end to dreams :

•

I

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Pomeroy • ¥kk11eport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

.!

lordanescu shaved his head, but wore
a white baseball cap to hide the evi·
dence.
"I'm responsible for the poor
game organization, because we tried
to rest !lOme of our standout players,"
he said. "lbose who replaced them
laeked ambition an4 freshness; they
didn't show they were worthy to play
in our t~am."
Arpntlna 1, c.....tra 0
Argentina won the group on Hector Pineda's goal in the 36th minute.
It became the only team to go
through the first round without yielding a goal.
"Our defense keeps getiing better
and better organized each game,"
midlielder Malia.• Almeyda said. "I
hope it lasts through the final."
Jamaica Z, Japan 1
In the matchup of World Cup
newcomers, the Jamaicans' win was
the first by a Carihhean nation since
Cuba beat Romania 2-1 in 1938.
Theodore Whitmore scored both
soals for lhe Reggae Boyz.
"It gives hope for all of Jamaican
football,'' said Fitzroy Simpson said.
Japan will be co-host of the 2002
tournament with South Korea. Both
teams leave France seeking new
coaches.
"When a coach fails to achieve
what he sets out to do, he should '
quit," Okada said.

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96 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE lf7357, A/T, AJC, till, cruise,
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96 SATURN SU lf7371, 4 Dr., AJC, tilt, crulie, cassette,
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Outdoors

I

Along the River

June2B,111N

Washington state, Canada enter pact on salmon c

ervation

By TIM KLASS

could be implemented for the first
time since 1993.
The last round of treaty talks collapsed in May. Since then, bilateral
negotiations for interim agreements
have gone nowhere.
.
Also Friday, governmellt, Indian,
environmental and utility groups
agreed to cooperate to protect
Columbia River salmon and steelhead.

Anderson said. "The governor and I
have chosen to put fish first ."
Under the plan. Washington
state's non-Indian catch of
Cariadian,bound coho salmon would
be cut by 22 percent, more than onefifth, while the Canadian catch of
chinook headed for Puget Sound
will be slashed by one-half.
Canadian fishing closures this
year sho uld spare 14,000 Puget
Sound chinook, proposed for listing
under the Endangered Species Act
Additional chinook protection measures tailored for Nooksack River
runs are set to take effect next year
in Canada.
The plan drew early praise from

groups, but was attacked by British
Columbia Premier Glen Clark, who
accused Anderson of selli ng out
Canadian interests.
"(Anderson) has literally given
away our heritage, " Clark said .
''I'm shocked by it. This is a stun·
ning giveaway of our interests."
For the most part, salmon fishing
from northern California to southeast Alaska has been governed by
Canada off British Columbia and by
the states ~f Washingto.n, Oregon
and Alaska in u~ s. coastal waters
si nce 1993.
The deal also includes plans to
develop selective sport fisheries tar·
geting hatchery-produced salmon on
various trade and e nviro nme ntal both sides of the bonder to make up

, SEATILE (A P) - Saying they
put fish Jirst, officials from Canada
and Washington state reached a
short -term agreement to protect
Pacific salmon runs - a step toward
settling a long-simmering dispute.
Gov. Gary Locke and Canadian
Fisheries Min ister David Anderson
announced the deal Friday: a conservation tradeoff involving chinook
and coho s ~ lmon .
"This agreement establishes for
the very first time shared, common
conservation goals between Canada
and Washington," Locke said.
"There is no deal possible thlt
would please all the stakeholders
and co ns o;.rve salmon stocks,"

. some of the loss from closures to
protect wild runs.
The agreement hinges panly on
negotiation of a separate deal to
make up for the lost coho by
increasing the U.S. catch of sockeye
bound for the Fraser River, British
Columbia's principal salmon-producing waterway .
The proposal is a long way from
a renewed Pacifi c Salmon Treaty,
which would address catch quotas

for all salmon species off th
West Coast, including fish in
and Oregon.
Canada has long accused the
United States of violating the treaty
by catching a disproponionate share
of fish spawned in British Columbia.
William Ruckelshaus and David
Strangway, special envoys from the
United States and Canada, said this
week's agreement improved the
chance that the 13-year-old treaty

ty to study course materials at home
at their ow n pace.
The traditional co urse held in
classrooms around the state, mostly
in late summ er through the fall ,
must meet for a min imum of I 0
hours and usually is held over a
period of two to. four days.
Once home st udy materials and
worksheets have been completed,
home study hunter ed ucation stu dents must attend a four-hour re view
session and pass the final test to
receive their hunter education cards.

DOW posts dog training areas
By JOHN WISSE
Division of Wildlife
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hunting seasons are still some months
away, but it's not "too soon to begin conditioning hunting dogs.
The Division of Wildlife has established dog training areas on some of
its wildlife areas. Dogs may not be trained or exercised on state public hunting areas May I through Aug. 31, except on the designated areas.
The designated areas are on parts of the Auburn Marsh , Berlin. Caesar
Creek, Delaware, Dillon, Fallsville, Grand River, Highlandtown, Indian
Creek, Killdeer Plains, Lake La Su ~ n . Resthaven, Rush Run and Spencer
wildlife areas.
--.\
People who are training dogs may not ·carry firearms during the closed
seasons ·for furbeari~g animals such as raccoons and foxes . These hunting
seasons are typically open November through January.
Young hunting dogs shopld first be taught basic obedience, which can
take place in a back yard or other small area.
Early morning is generally the best time to exercise dogs, to avoid the.
heaf of.the day. Extensive exercise and training should be combined with
fun activities that are designed to instill confidence and ability in a dog's
performance. Consulting with a professional trainer or buying a book or a
videotape on training hunting dogs .can help provide basic knowledge for
beginning handlers.

the.,......

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RACINE- According to the American Spontlon~ manager for Johnson Worldwide
fishing Association, more than 90 percent of today's
Associates (JWA), Inc., an integrated,
·anglers started fishing before they turned 18. Further- global outdoor recreation products com'
more, the trade association's researchers say that if a
pany: "First," he says, "you need to sim·
boy or girl isn't introduced I&lt;! fishing by the lime he
ply spend S()me old-fashioned time with
or she is 13, the chances are good that they'll never
your kids. And that might mean coming
take up the sport.
home from the office early or cutting
And that would be a shame, because fishing offers the Saturday morning golf game. Sec·
a lifetime of fun that can impart and enhance values
ond, fishing is supposed to be fun, so
such as sports·
don't be concerned
about the techniques of
manship,love
and concern for
IU
fishing or the values
the outdoors,
o~,•
that can be gained by
responsibility,
(ishins these wm come
relaxation, being
H~re 1 ,.. lOme quloll flctl lbout klda lnd
later if your child wants
with friends and
fllhlng according to 1 111N ltudy conduc:tld
to learn more about
family, and as
by the American Sportfllhlng AIIOClltlon:
fiShing.
many anglers
•Anglera 18 ye1r1 ilad youngll' mlkl up
"Third, to really hook
know, patience.
more thin 1 qu1rt1r (28 percent) of todly'l
a kid on fishing, •
Besides, if you
truhw111r fllhlng populltlon.
Heaton adds, "they
haven't seen the
•There 1r1 1n ..llmi11C111,010,000 1nglere
need to experience the
face of a fourthroughout the Unltld States bltwlen the
thrill of catching lots of · POPUI.AR FISHING SPOT- The tal/water below the Racine Locks and Dam Is a popular fishing spot for
year-old C(ltching IIIII of 4 lnd 17.
·
fish. Little ones, big
trl-county anglera. Hera, Scott Wicker and company. from J1ck1on County, W.Va. try their luck. One good
· "85 percent of todlly's frelhwltll' llllllllra
onea 1'1 doesn't matter
hi' s or her first
.
·
began flahlng before tilly were 13 yure old.
'
... thing about (llhlng In the Ohio River Is that you never know what you will catch, he observed. (T·S photo
bl ucgtll,
then you
'48 percent of lngllrl 1111 24 yelre or lell, any fish will do. Just · by Jim F'"man)
don't know what · lpenl 20 or more days I yslr fllhlng.
catch in' them is what
leeches, shrimp and
pure, unadulter•Only a pereenl of today'l frelhwlttr
counts when kids are young. •
waterdogs at your nearby
ated sunshine is.
1nglere took up llahlng11 1dulll, 1ge 11 or
Heaton says there are very few
bait and tackle shop, or
Locally, fish·
older.
things that can match the joy of
. pretending you~e in
lng is a favored
•More than 80 perc1nt of Amtrlcen1 lllhld
watching a child catch a fish. He
search of Moby Crappie
pastime for
It lealt o.nee II • child.
·
knows well of what he speaks.
young and old
•Molt angllre were Introduced to lllhlng by Grandfather to Austin, age S, Heaton or Catfish.
• Use reliable equip' the
lnldult.
'
t· shOwn
th'm...
"•fih'.
,o.con·
alt'kc and ts
•Stverellnd ndenf
ltudlll hive
s mg IS a grcaI
way
ment. Quality fishing
subje!=l of several thlt kids who
, hunt llld blrdwltch hlvl ·
nect and bond with a child. rThat's
equipment is importani to
regional fishing
much higher ilawlldp llvela about
because you have to talk and play
ensure that everyone has a
derbies and tour- ronment, 1 n muc:h deeper acologlcel under·
with your child,• he says.
positive, frustration-free
naments.
standing, th kldl whO don't pi111clplllln
And it's easy too. For less than S1.5, experience. Sometimes
In ,Meigs
th- ICflv~.~
you can purchase your child a simple
Jldl!lts ean become more
County, poeular
·
,
_ rod,JQd reti.GQmbinatioa,..aJlOuple
frustrated with their kids'
,__ •II" n.hina 1Jiota lncludil!i IOI!IIions along the
btbbe~~· fc,w ~ S()mC sipke.,..and ·within no
equipment than the kids
River, Forked Run Lak~ ncar. ~dsville, and
lime, ai 1111. jo fiilhl~l· As for belt, a can of com leerthemselves, and that's not
ponds and creeks too ltumerdus to mention.
qels or some worina from your backyard garden will
good,
because kids can
Scou Wicker of Ripley, W.Va. recently fiShed tli
do just fine.
.
·
•Another thina parents need 10 keep in mind,' says quickly pick up on that
Ohio side of the Ohio River at the public ac:c!!SS area
downstream of the Racine Locks and Dam. It was his Heaton, "is they do not ~eel to be an expert to lake a frustration. Even an old
first time fishing in the location, and he and two com- kid fishing. If you don't have someone In your life · reliable cane pole would
be better than a IO)'&gt;'· qualipanions were repeatedly hauling in and releasing carp who knows fishing, that's okay. What matters is that
ty
fishing combo. For a
!'llught on lead spoons and heavy tackle.
you've introduced a young person to a sport they can
safe bet, try the Johnson
"I tell you what ... it's all right. All right as long as
participate In for the rest of their lives.
Junior Pro spincast reel
you catch 'em, • he said.
•Johnson Reels makes products like the Johnson
combo.
Johnson's been
0Qe good thing about the Ohio River, Wicker
Junior Pro that literally has everything a kid needs to
~aking strong, reliable
noted: "You never know what you'll catch.•
have fun in one package a rod and reel, sinkers, bob:
fishing reels for beginning
. Charles Swigger of Pomeroy, retired pastor of the
hers, a stringer and basic instructions. It's an easy
anglers of all ages for
Rutland Chufch of the Nazarene, was downstream
way get you and your little one started." And Heaton
more than SO years.
fishing nearby with his wife, Janet, and grandson
should know. He's fished and guided professionally
• Attention span. It's a
Chris Miller.
for more than 3~ years, and has helped hundreds of
•
fact
of life. Kids have
Mr. Swigger was using small minnows to catch
parents introduce their kids to fishing.
short
attention spans. First
while bass near the walkway, and seemed to be hav·To lind out where the fish are, Heaton says just
lng all the luck... even though it was Chris's birthday. place a phone call to a nearby bait and tackle store or off, plan ahead. Check the
forecast for had weather.
As for how to introduce your child to fishing, keep your city park board and ask for suggestions on
Look for .a spot that has
three things in mind, says Sam Heaton, field promo·
where to take a child fishing. Many cities and towns
easily accessible rest
- - - - - - - - - - - , throughout the country have
rooms and a nearby playDISPLAYS HIS CATCH - John Webb, 12·yeara-old, from West Jef·
mated special areas where
ground Bring snacks and - feraon, spend.• several weeks a year on a farm IHI owns In Ald. While
parenta qn take their kids
l!laybe ~me toys. Se~nd, visiting In Gall/a County, Webb comes to 'l}'coon Lake dally to try his
fishing.
don't make the mistake of luck at catching blue g/11 and Clltflth.
In anticipation of National forcing your child to fish for hours on end. Some·
new skill.
.
.
Fishing Week, here are some
times a child will be happy fishing for 15 minutes
. • Cap~ure the memorie~ . Wh~ther your chtld sttcks
more little tidbits of fiahing
and then playing for tin hour along the beach.
wuh fish1ng or not, only ttme wtll tell. But for now,
wisdom from Heaton and
• Handling the fish. If a child catches· a fish, don't
what matters is capturing the memories so they have
,John10n Reels that you may
force him or her to take it off the hook, or to touch
something to share with their friepds, family mem·
find useful when introducing
the fish. Do it for them. After all, imitation can often
bers, and ultimately, with their kids. So take plenty of ·
your child 10 fishing:
be the best teacher.
photos and save any other little reminders, such as
Hooking Kld1 011 Fllhlng
• Quick success. With youngsters, a little sui:cess,
fishing licenses, the package of their first real fishing
- ud Making It Fun Tool early on, will hook them for a lifetime; So, as you
lure, etc. Maybe encourage your child to start a photo
• Have fun. Don't worry
plan your fishing outing, make a point to find some
• album _or to frame a picture of them~lves, you and
lbout tcc:bnique and don't be
spots that will quickly reward you and your little one their btg catch for all to see and adm1re.
coilcemcd 1bout Cltching lots
with fish. Kids don't care about size, but they do like
• Show them your best. Finally, fishing is an
of big, trophy-size lis~. To a
to catch fish, even if they're little on.es. So, stop by or excellent opportunity to teach your kids how to be
young angler, a small bluegill
make a quick call to a nearby bait and tackle store to
kind, caring adults. Children imitate the adults they
or crappie caught with a simlearn where they're bitin'.
·
love and respect. So, show them your best and make
ple hook and bobber is a major
• Safety first. Whether it's a big river or a small
a good impression. Taking the lime to be with your
achievement. For some chil·
neighborhood pond, water needs to be respected.
children and sharing in the excitement of the outdoors
dren, a bli liah miaht be ecary. Show your child how to act safely around water, in a
will pay big dividends in years to come.
• Keep It simple. Don't
boat or on a dock. Use your
~ake your fishing outing a big
fishing outings to teach and
production. Kids ~n only lake re6earse what they should do if
tn so much information at any
they get in trouble with water.
liven time. The more compli·
• Love the !&gt;Uidoors. It's .
catcd you make It, the more
never too early to show your
frustrated they'll pL You don't child how to love and apprecineed fancy equipment. You
ate the outdoors. While you're
don't need a boat; fishlna from fishing, take this time to
a pier, dock onhore will do
observe other matures such as
just fine. Keep it simple. After birds, ducks or squirrels, and
all, your child just wantalo
talk about simple ways to keep
spend time with·you.
the outdoors beautiful, such as
• Make It 111 adventure. ·
properly disposing fishing line
Like any great adventure,
or picking up candy wrappers
plannina it Ia three-quarters
and soda cans.
the fun. Fishing is the ume
• Catch, release, praise•
.way. Even if the fish aren't bit- Don't
worry about catch and
ina, you can have fun buying a release. Better yet, let your ·
family fishing license; studychllcl milke the decision. Give
.ina a map of w.here you're
him or her the opportunity to .
aoJng; reading magazines
take their catch home t!&gt; show
about fishing; exploring the
friends and relatives. But do
lake or strelm, or the nearby
teach your child how to care·
prairie and forest; diaaJng for
fully and respectfully handle a
FAMILY PASnMt!- Charlet SWigger of Pomeroy, retlradpator worms; stopping off at the
fish for the day when they do
A FAMILY AI'FAIR- Jeremy Evan•, age 13, and h/1 father, Jim,
of tfla Rutland Church of the Nazarene, 'INI It ttl• Raolne 1.oc1r1 loCII c:;afe for an "angleta
release them. Whatever the deci· of Gall/pol/a, flail 011 Tycoon Lake In the l)ICOQn Wildlife Area
and Dam fl•hlng with h/8 wife, Janet, end ,.ndaon Cltrla IIH/er. It breakfast;" making a picnic
/ocat«&lt;ln G•llla County. Evans ••Y• he ,.,. to flah aa meny tim.•
• Will Chris' birthday. (T..S photQ by Jim F,..,.,)
ltinch; lookinaat the minnows, sion, don't forget to heap on
plenty of praise for learning a . a week~· poa1lble for the /ake'a blue gill.

Qu/"ck .#acts about
k1"dS and ·llSh1ng
•

year.

Smce Ohio enacted a -law man:
dating education for every first-time
hunting lice nse buyer in 1979. near·
ly 700,000 students have successfully completed a hunter education
course.
" We embrace the responsibility
of ·teaching people about the proper
use and handling of firearms . along
with the principles of wildlife management. safe hunting tec hniques,
wildlife law s, and field care of
game. Our agency also supports the
ri ght of people to own and use guns
responsibly in continuing to suppon
the heritage of our hunting and
sho ot ing sports," · said Michael
Budzik, chi ef of the Division of
Wildlife.
For th e first time, the wildlife
agency is offeri ng a 2 112-day
course that leads to certification as
volunteer hunter and trapper educa'
tion instructors. This special academy is being held July 31 through
Aug. 2 at a Jackson County youth
camp.
In Gallia County, the hunter education courses will be offered at the
following days and times:
Aug. 18 &amp; 20: 6-9 p.m. at the
Gallia County Coon Club, Kriner
Rd., Gallipolis
Aug . 22: 9 a.m.-3 p.m . at the
Gallia County Coon Club.
· To register for the August ses·
s,ions. call256-1961 before Aug. 17.
Sept. 17: 6-9 p.m. at the Kyger
Creek Employees Club, S.R. 7,
Cheshire
: Sept. 19: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek Employees Club.
To register for the September sessions, call256-1961 before Sept. 14
The free training academy is
expected to provide training and certification to 40 rtew volunteer
instructors.
In past years, hunter education

'

I,. • • ,

••

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•

A good way .to
introduce kids
to great outdoo

instructor training consisted of a option gives students the opportuni-

one-day course that left some volunteers still in need of more skills' to
teach hunter .education . This new
academy will require more· time and
commitment from participants, but
will provide them better skills train·
ing.
There are nearly 1,300 volunteer
hunter and trapper education co urse
instructors in Ohio.
Later this year, the Di yision. of
Wildlife will "implement a statewide
home study program for hunter education students. The home study

C

Sundly, June 28, 19911

•

Ohio DOW claims 9o/o increase
in hunter ed course graduates
By JOHN WISSE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- The.
number of students successfull y
completing the state 's hunter education course increased 9 percent during the past year.
.
The Di visio n of Wildlite said
22 ,009 students completed hunter
education courses from July I, 1997,
through June, an increase of 1,864
st udents over the previous year.
There were 772 courses offered
during the past fi scal year period,
compared with 685 in the previous

Section

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

.;~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wv~~~~~~~~~,~ma.~:u~~~~~·~"~-,:•~~~bM~l·~P~a=g~e=c~~~
sunday, Jurie 28, 1998

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

-

'

Beijing's largest Protestant church awaits Clinton ·

Mr. 1nd Mrs. E1mle McCoy

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Sandy

:Couple tc;&gt; mark anniversary
EWINGTON - The family of
Earnie and Myrtle McCoy will host
a 50th wedding anniversary celebration at Bob Evans shelter house, Rio
Grande, on July 4, from I - 5 p.m.
The were married at Edo, Ky.,
. Jply· l8 , 1949. They are the parents
· of Lauchey and Pauline McCoy,
: :Lawson and Lois McCoy, Don and

Loreua Keeton and Ken and Loraine
Kiser.
Mr. McCoy (aired from Grant
Trucking. Mrs. McCoy is a homemaker.
Friends and family are invited to
share in the celebration. The family
requests .that gifts be omiued.

Annive~sary

is observed

LANGSVILLE - Eugene and
Jeanie Sandy of Langsville are celebrating their 35th wedding anniver·

Johnson of Langsville; Susan (Bill)
Powell of Columbus, and Cynthia
Sandy of Langsville, and a son, Rod
saiy.
(Teresa) of Breman; six grandchilThe 'couple was 'married on June dren, Cory, Amanda; and Todd John29, 1963, in Volga, W. Va. They . son, Anisa Howe!, Nikolaus and
have three daughters, Beth (Rocky) ·Tiffany McClellan.
·

:Avoiding falls.takes common sense planning
ROSEMONT, Ill. (AP) - Falls they are elderly people w~o · live
: can be bad for anyone, but they're alone.
: most serious for older people.
For the older person, a fall can be
. They're the leading cause of fatal a life-changing event, leading to
· and nonfatal injuries for people 65 decreased mobility and indepen. and older, says the American Acade- dence, hospitalization, or nursing
my of Orthopedic Surgeons, which home admission. AAOS estimates
estimates that about a third of all that in the United States, the annual
senlpr citizens has fallen in the past cost is S20.2 billion annually.
~. And fall~ most often (60 perInactivity is a risk factor, because
cent ofthe tim~) occur in that friend- it weakens your muscles, the organi·
liest of envin,nmenis, the home.
zation says. Regular exercise car•
The orgarization has launched a help you maintain or improve your
campaign, ''l)on 't Let a Fall Be gait, balance, agility and posture.
Your Last Trip," to help older peoThil'ly minutes a day for physical
pie recognize the risks and learn to activity is achievable for most ·
prevent falls.
seniors. It doesn't have to be gung·
: Keeping physically fit is one of ho: try walking, dancing, housethe ways to cut the chances of a seri- work, biking, gardening, and similar
ous fall. Eliminating !Jazards at activities. The Chinese martial art,
home and adding safety devices is Tai Chi- taught at many communianother. .
.
ty organizations - can help you ·
. . Among those at greatest 'risk are gain self-confidence and balance.
·. older women, especially Caucasians
When you wake, sit on the edge
? and Asians, says the AAOS. They.. _of the bed to make sure you're not
: also are seniors unable to stand on dizzy before rising. Once up,. eat
: one leg for more than five seconds; breakfast; skipping meals can make
~ they are usets of multiple prescrip- you dizzy. Use· a cane or. walker if
•· tion and over-the-counter drugs; and you're unsteady.
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Additions that will help you (and
younger people, too) are handrails
on both sides of stairs, light switches at both ends of the stairwell, grab
bars in tbe bath (both bathing and
toilet areas), a plastic seat in the tub ·
if you're unsteady or can't lower .
yourself to the floor of the tub,
nightlights along the route between
bedroom and bathroom, and a stepstool with handrai lo to reach shelf
items in ~e kitchen or at storage
areas.
Your clothes are important, too.
Make sure they fit; you could trip on
skirts, trousers, bathrobes, or coats
that are too long. Select comfortable, l9w-heeled shoes, preferably
with non-skid soles. If new shoes
have slippery soles, take them to a
shoe repair shop to · have them
roughed or have n&lt;ln-skid strips
added. Avoid shoes with heavy
soles. And keep your laces tied.
·
For a free copy of the AAOS ,
brochure, "Don't Let.a Fall Be Your
Last, Trip," call I (800) 824BONES.

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Anderson's

".

Cfloor Covering Sale

•
•
•

NO ·WAX
.•. ROLL VINYL
•
FLOOR .
•
••
•,
·COVERING

TRACKLESS CARPET

..•.

j

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Get a physical and eye exam
every year, too.
Now, take an analytical look at
your home.
Don't leave clutter or objects on
stairs or Doors. Keep electrical and
telephone cords out of your walking
pathways (but don't put them under
a rug). Pathways should be clear of
obstructions like low coffee tables,
planters, magazine racks, and similar furnishings. Arrange your furniture. to create clear pathways
between rooms. Keep drawers and
cabinet doors closed when not in
use.
Floors and coverings are a major
concern. Avoid patterned, dark, or
deep-pile carpeting on stairs; solid
colors show the edges of the steps
·better. Don't put loose area rugs at
the bottom or top of the stairs. If the
risers are bare wood, install nonslip
treads. If you use area rugs, they
should be secured with double-faced
tape or slip-resistant backings. Keep
throw rugs out of the kitchen. Loose
Ooorboards or tiles should be
repaired immediately.

• Thick, heavy pile

• 100% nylon

17 Patterns I n Stock, 12 F1. Wiele

~ ••••

•

• Scotchguard
• 32 colon

II

Sq. Yd.

•

= ~-----------------------------+-----~
BERBER CARPET

••

SCULPTURED CARPET

••• • 12 or 15 ft width
•

:•
•••
••••
:•

• 100% Nylon
• 12 Et wide
• 9 colon

• Scotchguard

• Oletinlnylon Blend

8
....

DD

8

Sq. Yd.

Sq. Yd.

·Quality Carpets at
Affordable Prices
• Free No Obllption Qqotes
• Satisfaction Guaran~
• Furniture &amp; Appliances Moved Free
• Free removal of old carpet

Sq. Yd.

llofeHoUra ..
Mondly tllru IMurdly
. t:30-a:OO
'

Pomeroy

.
'
derson s.
8t2-3171

•

Silver ann ·· ... rsary noted

.

MIDDLEPORT -'-- Myron and Michael Franckowiak of MiddleRemalce Franckowialc of Middle- port.
port will celebrate their 25th wedMyron is the son of Eleanor
ding anniversary on Tuesday.
Franckowiak of Wilkes-Barre, Pa.
They were married on Satutday, and the late Matthew Franckowiak.
June 30, 1973, at St. Joseph's Remalee is tiM; daughter of the lllte
Monastery in Wilkes;Barre, Pa.
·Dorothy Barsotti Shaeffer and FranThey are the parents of Heather cis Shae.ffer of Pomeroy.
(Jay) Humphreys of Middleport, and

By RENEE SCHOOF
Associated Press Writer
BEIJING (AP) - No steeple
marks China's largest Protestant
church, where President Clinton will
worship on Sunday. The squat gray
building is reached by walking
through a hotel parking lot and a row
of brick shanties or down narrow
lanes barely wide enough for a.car.
Yet on a typical Sunday the humble sanctuary of Chongwenmen
Church draws overflow crowds of
worshippers who spilt into a
cramped basement to watch a television feed of the service or sit in a
courtyard sheltered by shade trees.
. Urged by American religious
.leaders to appeal for more freedom
for China's Christians, Muslims and
Tibetan Buddhists, Clinton has
promised to convey the message that
all believers should be allowed to
worship when and where they
choose, free from government interference.
,
During the radical days of the
Cultural Revolution, from the mid1960s to late 1970s, churches in
China were closed ; many were
destroyed. Chongwenmen did not
reopen until Christmas 1982. Then .
about 700 people gathered each
Sunday, compared with 2,500 to&lt;;la~.
Christianity has been growing
quickly in China, says the Rev. Wu
Wei, the 36-year-old senior, pastor of
Chongwenmen.
.
BIBLE READING • A Chinese Christian reads his Bible at the Chongwenmen Church • a ~hu.rch so
"Society is' going in a direction
Mr. and Mrs. Seth Montgomery
of diversity. People can choose their large-that overflow worshippers fill the basement and spill out ol doors. President Clinton wtll VISit the
church on Sunday.
own beliefs," Wu said.
Beijing, a city of 13 million peo- members with a year or two of theo·
pie, )las eight Protestant chu.rches logical training. ·
.
with a combined membership of
Chongwenmen has three minisGALLIPOLIS • Candace Hope cascading around the bottom.
about 30,000.
ters and several lay leaders.
Brumfield, daughtec of Mr. and Mrs.
Lauren Pernestti was the flower
The nation, with a population of
Founded by U.S. Methodist misRoscoe Brumfield ofGallijmllis and girl. She is the daughter of Larry 1.2 billion, has about 12 million sionaries in 1876, it was burned
r.Seth Michael MontgQmery, son of · Pernestti.-of Lawrence Co. and Kns- Protestants and a roughly equal down in 1900 by the Boxers, rebels
Reverend· and Mrs. Garland Mont- ten Pernestti of,Charlotte N.C. She number of Catholics, based on gov- who attacked converts and mis.sionN Board Certified Obstetrician &amp; Gynecologist N • •
: gomery of Crown City, were mar- wore a 'fellow dress with white lace ernment figures and estimates by aries across north China, killing
_1• ried May 2, at the Elizabeth Chapel
and canied a white basket wnh rose Western scholars.
thousands of Chinese Christians and
-Office•· Church In Gallipolis.
petals. f
.
The nondenominational Chinese 250 foreigners.
·.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
The candlelit double-ring cere· . Tbe' groom and his groomsmen Protestant churches must register
The present church was built in
Medical Office Building
wore cutaway tuxedos with ascot with ihe government before they 1904, in the waning years of the last
1: mony took place at half past five in
. Suite 214
' ·the afternoon. The bride, escorted by ties. The ,best man was J.D. Lafon, a legally can hold senlices.
dynasty. It was· named for its toea·
:. her father, was given in'maniage by friend of the groom. The remainder
Rights groups say independent, tion near a gate of the city wall. The
2520 Valley Drive
! her parents.
•
·
· of the Jlroomsmen included: Rodney evangelical Christian leaders have gate was destroyed in the 1950s. .
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
, She wore a fonnal white gown Rickard', Matt Williart)son, and Greg been jailed and haras~ed.
Since China began opening up.
- Appointments ·with pearls, long sleeves, and a v- Montgomery.
Han Wenzao, president of the with· economic reforms 20 years
: ~eck line. She carried a cascading
Nathan Cox was the ring bearer. official China Christian Council, ago, churches likewise have forged
(304) 675-3400
: boquet of white and yellow rosea: He is th~ son of Chad and Jennifer acknowledges there have been proli- ties to the outside world.
.
· with baby's breath and ivy.
·
Cox of-Gallipolis ·
lems. Every day he receives letters
The Rev. Billy Graham- Pastor
- Office Hours · The maid of honor was the bride's
Nathan wore the same style tuxe- from churches around the country. "Bay-li" .in C~inese . ha~
Monday . Friday
sister, Amber Bru!Jlfield. The do as the groomsmen and canied 8 and some complain about unfair preached tw.ice at Chongwenmen.
Accepting New Patients :
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
treatment by local officials of the The Archbishop of Canterbury
remainder of the bridesmaids white lace pillow. .
included: Janie Basil, Angie Dillon,
Willie Church sang "Butterfly government's Religious· Affairs George Carey and Christian tour
an'd Gwen Montgomery. The allen- Kisses" as the bride w~ giwn-a~ Bureau he said in an interview.
· groups from Hong . Kong, Taiwan .
dants wore long, yelllow chifon by her fathe"' t-ater in the cerem,o~if) The ~ouncil investigates and goes . and the United States also have visHospital
~owns . :The maid of honor canied a the groow sapg "~e and You" to his thrqugh government channels to ited.
·
small boquet of yellow and white bride. ·
l
.
resolve cases of local officials who
2520 vane,. Drive at Point PleaJOnt, III'V • 875·4340
'
roses with baby's.breath and ivy,
The,rbptiin was h ld at South violate the rights of Christians, Han
. The bridesmaid's canied .small Gallia High School.
said.
candlelit ,lanterns with yellow and ·
The couple now resides in Gal"China being so vast, one cannot
white roses, baby's breath, and ivy lip9 r
expect the provisions could be
_ .
rs. ,
implemented
everywhere the
same," he said.
.
· ·
·
.
At Chongwenmen Church, Wu
By The Associated Press
.
said his congregation had not surFOREST PARK. Ohio (AP)- Does this make any se nse? A woman who fered government interference.
was five weeks overdue paying I cent on her taxes must now fork over $100
"In Beijing, in our ·church, we
for a late fcc.
,
·
. feel our beliefs and lives are not con. Wanda Vesper, 52, said shy was late in paying the penny she o~cd th1s strained in any way," he said.
·
Can he preach without fear of
Cincinnati suburb on her 1997 earnings taxes. When she went to Crty Hall
10 pqy, she was told she owed the city a $100 l~te fee.
·
,
censure' "Of course," he said.
.•
"They said it was a Hat rate fee. Whet~;r 11 ~as a few weeks late or mnc
L~adcrs of China's Protestant and
months late it was a Hat rate fcc of $100, she smd Monday.
Catholic churches say one of their
City Manager Ray Hodges said most people ~ouldn't be charged the flat · biggest problems is lack of clergy.
fee if they owed a penny. "if they are charged S!OO 11 would be on the bast.~
Nationwide, there is about one
that they have failed 10 file not once, but they have repeatedly far led to file.
Protestant minister for every 8,000
Hodges said.
.·
.
.
,
believers, church officials say. Many ·
He said he could not d1scuss specrfics of Ms. Vesper s case.
of China's 2S.OOO legally registered
Ms. Vesper said her taxes were due April30.,but she was late filing them house churches are lead by lay
because her father's death forced her to be out of the state.
·

BRUMFIELD-MONTGOMERY

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rnrl Pleasant Valley

a great outing we had a few,weelcs
Columbus, Obio, wben our grandchildren
other "Youna at Heart" members joined
for a special tour entitled, "How do they do that?"
We learned how they put the balls inside whistles at the tour of the
Whistle Factory, how they put cherries inside candy at the Candy
Factory, how the people on thC Santa Maria Ship survived the-long
journey, and finally how the animals are cared for at the zoo. In
addition we enjoyed a different atmlllphere and tried new foods in our
private dining room at the Kahiki. I think the kids, big and little,
enjoyed the flaming volcano deaserts. Activities on the motorcoach
included games, coloring books, movies, ·snacks, and before ~~~~::~
into our hotel'for a swim party, ow local tour guides took the 4
down to Oerman Village for a visit to Schmidt's restaurant for creme
puffs. (Adults enjoyed this too.) Before retirilll! for the night at
host hotel, the children were given stuffed aaimals to sleep with since
they were in stralll!e beds. We bad a great time, as we always do with
the children on our annual pndparenta tour.
·
We are preparing to attend the outdoor drama, "Tecumseh" this
week in Chillicothe, Ohio. Thii evening tow will fealure a backstage
tour showing how the sets are designed, makeup 11pplied, weapons
demonstrated, etc. We will then have a chance to tour the museum and
gift sbop featuring Indian jewelry; arts and crafts. We have
reservations (or a buffet dinner followed by the play. A fall
motorcoach is looking forward to a fun evening!!!
Coming up is our 11 day Moton:oach tour lo Nova Scotia and ap1in 1
we have a sold out motorcoach. Our lint nigbt wHI be spent in
York State aad enroute we will atop at Niapra Palla. Then it's on
Maine for stops .at Boothbay Harbor and Bar Harbor where we wHI
board a three bour ferry to Yartnll!lth, Noya Scotia. In JWifax we will
attend the' lntet'liatlonal Military Festival known u Tattoo which
fealurcs various countries in marching, muak:al ntimbera, d10cing, etc.
Nova Scotia which means "New Scotland" is represented by clans,
wearing the colorful plaids and doing lbe various trad~ ~­
• Then it's 111110 Pegy's Cove, one of the 111011 pbotograpiJed flahin1
vHiagcs in lhe world and a haven for artists. Tbe Post Office is a
lipthousc: and perches on a hill of natural ~k which is fun to climb
and mail a letter. If you know anyone goina on this trip, uk tbem to
send you a postcard from Pegy 's Cove. Did I mention the shopping is
great??? .
Crqssing again by ferry, we arrive at Prince Edward Island for a
at the beautiful and reluing Stanhope by t!Jc sea. A Lobster
awaits us that evening arid the next day we tour the island which is
flctionaJ home of Anne of Green Gables; A dinner thea!R that evening
will show ua lhe muaical venlon of this mudl loved story•
Crouina over the newly completed, 8 .mile Confederation Bridge
that connects Prince Edward llland with NeW Brunswll$. we continue
on with a llop at Campbello, IIIIDDier borne of President and Mn .
Franklin ROOIICvelt. He wu here visitlnJ when he contracted polio
aad the neipbon quickly constructed a m•Jrnbl~ JIIJIICY 10 W'l)' him
down to the shore, piece him 011 a bolt beaded for the bolpital. Tbat
prncy, along wilh·many photoJnphl. plpell, etc. 111111 display. In the
muaeum, over an old ovallhaped radio, the unforacttable boc1111lngl
voice of his announces that wu hu been cleclared followilil
bombing of Pearl Harbor. Since 10me of ua villted Pearl Harbor
two of our trips to Hawaii, thil ties history toaelher for ua all aad
be a somber momenl to remember.
ContinulnJ our journey home, we spend 1 nlabt at Saint JOb• Bly
and vlait a LL Bean outlet for lhipplnJ, of coune, and then con11in114e I
put Boston and through Pennaylvanla for an overnight atop at
l-ater, h11111e of the Amiah. We will have a woaclerful Amish
dinner before overaightlliJ at the beautiful Eden Rnort Inn. Next
morntna we wW tab a tour'Of the Amlab COIIIIIrylidc before mumlna
bome. We ue int111d looklqfolward to a peat time!! .
Hope lhi1111mmer II aoJaa well for JOtl. Take time 10 relax,
11110J1 die 101C1, llld Jei .OUt IIIII..:

I

LET11fE 0000 TIMES ROU.,

"'--··-·a.,--.
-fllC

lf&amp;l

'

On e cent tax bill ends up costing $100

UST

.·

; ~mplete trust. It's a quality that needs to be
iearned, and earned. Each and every day.
· Complete trust is the cornerstone of skill~d nursing care. Just
imagine being cared for by someone you did not trust. It would not
h~ppen. You would not allow it. Ever.
·

The Arbors at Gallipolis is built on trust. Each day
we .must earn the trust of our patients. And their families.
'of the community we serve- your neighbors, friends
and family. It's wh!lt makes us different
... and makes you special. ·

r:M Pleasant Valley
11:11 Wellness &amp; Rehab Center

.,

Lflfut

.

(l(M} 675-7222

•
MAllY FOWLER, PI!OPU!S .' •
OIOICB CO-ORDINATOR

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You can see ~hat trust in the faces of ·
the Arbors at Gallipolis~ Take a closer
look. Then decide. We invite you
to come see us. Face to face.
'

. . ..

...

ARBORS AT GALLIPOLIS
Skilled Nursing Center
170 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(6~4)

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ARBOR'

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446-7112

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�. Page C4. JJuubav 'G!imH-.Iihntiml

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

Sunday, June 28, 1998

Sunday, June 28, 1998

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

·- ~~~~;::.:...--==~~~~~~~~~~~~===~~~

Beat of th~end .....

Engagement

'

Porter Academy, ·run by Presbyterian missi-ona-ries, served community

..

bration Tuesday in the air condi- sity of Rio Grande. She has a major the fronl porch-you know just like
tioned Racine Library, a branch of in history and a minor in anthropol- those oullines that you see on the
who done it ielevision shows.
the Meigs County District Public ogy.
Jim and his wife, Susie, gave no
· Laura lives on Enterprise Road
Library.
Located on Tyree Boulevard, wilh her husband, Chuck, and !heir further thought 10 the project and
went to a ball game.
library personnel will be staging an · two sons, C. !1. and Cabel.
When they returned home they were
open house from 12 noon to 4 p.m.
Being a conscientious homeown: adv ised by neighbors that their
Tuesday to mark the first anniversary of the opening of the branch. er, Meigs Sheriff Jim Soulsby decid- home had been the scene of numerResidents across the county are ed 10 paint the front porch al the . ous visitors in their absence. Some
slowed their vehicles to get a good
invited 10 stop by. Refreshments Soulsby home on Union Ave.
Thai wenl well until Jim decided look al the police tape and lhe body
will be served and m2 p.m., lhe Big
he
bad a problem in f1guring out · outline and some even stopped for a
Bend
Cloggers
under
the
direction
By Bob Hoeflich
of Mrs . Vivian ·May will be enter- how to keep visitors from wa lking closer look.
Apparently curious and especial·
on the fresh paint. Being resource·So we 're having a heal wave. . tain.ing.
ful , Jim decided 10 place that yellow Jy since it is the home of the sheriff,
You can probably look forward lo a
balch of anicl~s nQw 1elling you
Another ·Meigs ·Gountian has plastic police tape in front of -the 1he lookers apparenlly 'thoug~t that
how 10 keep your cool in this proven that it's good 10 hang in painted area- you know, ,lhe vivid some tragic incident had occurred in
warmth and lhey'll probably make there.
·1
tape !hal indicates !here has been fronl of the Soulsby home.
The tape is now gone and ·the
about as much sense as the barrage
She is Laura Ohlinger Elli s, some sorl '9f incidenl and supposedof information you read at lhe fim daughter of Phil and Carol Ohlinger, ly keeps people from cnlering the cxcilemenl has died down. Howev·
of every year on how to save money Ro5e Hill. Laura graduated from area taped off. Jim mung the tape er, Shannon and Casey ·were · so
on your income !axes. Those ani- Meigs High School some years back belween IW O uccs in the fro nt yard pleased wilh the result of their chalk
arllhat they now have decorated ·the
des never see m to work for me bul has been anending college off and moved on wilh confidence .
ei ther. Guess we' ll jusl have lo grin and on lluough lhc years in search of
Lillie did he know tha11wo of his Soulsby driveway wilh a number of
·
and bear it-the weather and the that degree.
grandchildren, Shannon and Casey, drawing~ of body outlines. A good
taxes.
Well, las! Sunday was the payoll'. were going 10 lake up chalk an. The rain will lake care Clf them .
Meantime, do keep smiling.
Laura received her bachelor' s children crcmcd an exccl leru otn linc
You 're in viled 10 a birthday celc- degree in ceremonies at the Univcr- of a body on the sidewalk leading lo

By:
James
Sands

"The village of Poner is located ten miles
. from Gal]ipolis, and one mile from
Bidwell Station on the C.H. V. &amp; T.
R.R. It is on a high plain. well
watered and possesses good hygienic surroundings. The people of
Porter, unlike · many towns of its
size, are a quiet, peaceable, philanthropic class, who encourage morality, religion, and education. It has
roads leading toward all directions,
thus .afTordir\g a wide field of busi·
ness. The young people have their
'literary organizations and are wide
awake to the march of a progressive
age. The people are regaled every
evening with choice music by the
Porter brass band. This band excels
any in lhe county."
The above comes from an 1893
Gallipolis Journal newspaper. Poner
was 'laid oul as a lo~n beginning in

Meigs Community
Calendar
•

The Commun ity Calendar is published as a free service 10 ·non-prolil
groups wishing to announce meeting

Shelley Coen and Steven Amburgey
'

COEN-AM BURGEY
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. ·
· John . and Shirley Cocn of P•il !ll
Pleasant , W Va. , an nounce the
engagement d'l!Vfoftbcoming m;n
: -riage of lhw daughter. Shclky
· Renee Coen, 10 Steven Ed" ard
: . Amburgey, son of Ralph an d C.1rl.o
: ·Amburgey.
· The ceremony will he 5· 311 J' 111
· · s~turd ay , Jul y 25 , al 1he J'iN
Church
of the Nazarene, Gallipol".
Shelley is a 1993 gradualc ul
Poim Pleasanl High School and J

)lJ 4l7 ua~lu,1li.: Ol!\''~'!

"'""1 1n 1\.11\kalcc.

rcnll'... cnr·llfrJ In pllarmacy sdwol
\inncrs it y ond i ~
dolll_:! anlnt~rH.,JHp at R1tc Aid Pharm4K,. in l\11nt PkJ5;.mr.
.. '~IC\t:n ~~ iL 1Y92 graduat e of
Pvmt Pit: 1 .1111 liH!h School and
ltJ 11 tlt-adU&lt;.tll' tlf\V(!t; l \'1rgin1a Uni 111 \\t:~t . \Ji,~Hua

SUNDAY
REEDSVILLE -- Whaley
reunion, noon Sunday. Forked Run
Slate Park. Take lawn chairs and IWO
covered dishes.

cnmlled in the gcn logy gradLLil'c pro!'I':Jill , t \\ VU and is
t'llipluycd f&gt;~' NAPAAut0 Parts m
l'utnl Pl \! a!'&gt;anL

HENDERSON
The
Birchfield reunion, descendants ·of
Sam and Melvina Birchfield, Sun day, a1 the Henderson Community
Center. Carry-i n dinner alnoon with
relatives and fri ends.

Edward James Olmos promotes Hispanic
photographs to educate American s

RACINE -- Albert and
Eli za Hill reunion, Sunday, 12:30
p.m. al Slar'Mill Park.

'MIAMI (AP) - Edward lame;
Olmos wants America 10 have a
vivid pic lure of Hispanics.
An exhibit being prepared by 35
of the nation's lOp pholOgraphcrs
will portray Hispanic• raising lhclf
children , wiling al work, even relax. ing. There will be no movie stars. no
· .star athlclcs- no fam ous His pan ics
·· at all.
· "We' re 1rying 10 give a ditfercnL

vcr.;lly 111 ~ J or~~mto\\ll

He.

IS c ur-

1\.'lltl~

mwg~:,

hn:a!.. th · stereotype,·· the

'· Mmmt Vill' . • act,lr ~Hid Th ur sday.
1lle plKHtl collcclt(lll. whic h will

he par!· ol an cxhtb!l that wt/1 travel
to _-\2 ~o. lt!0 "1 .111d 60 ~.:nuntr i cs, wi!(
rcprc~cnt ·'the cont nbut ions of
Anu:ncan . . nj Lal!n ancestry to the
.Amcritanc!tlturL' •· \i-lld Ol mos, who
wa" 111 IO\VIl lor a inectmg of the
A.'J~n ~.-tauo n
)t)Uf11Jil'&gt;t\,

NatiOnal

To

WANT
-'

Na1nrcnc Uni Il l She i&lt; cur-

and special evems. The ca le ndar is
nol designed 10 promote sales or
fu nd raisers of any type. Items are
printed as space permits and cannel
be guaranteed 10 run a specific number of days.

of Ht!) pamc

Service Commission, Monday, 7:30
p.m. al office, Mulberry Avenue ,
Pomeroy.

:: irha Communlly Calendar Is pub·
: ·1lahed aa a free service to non·
wishing to
: :Rrofll groups
· ·announce meetings and special
: tlven\s. The calendar Ia not
' designed lo promote 11111 or
; fund-ralaara of any type. Items ara
prlnled as apace permits and can' not be guaranteed lo run a apeclf·
lc number of days.
·

RACINE -- Southern Local
Board of Education, special session ,
Monday, 7 p.m. a1 high school in
Racine.
RUTLAND -- Rutland
Garden Club, Monday, I p.m. home
of Pauline Aikins.

...

TUESDAY
RACINE -- Meeting 10
offer input on Somhern Local K-8
building plans, Tuesday, I p.m.
Southern High School . Plans available for review iu high school.

Sunday,Junel8

•••

POINT PLEA~ANT - Nar.cotics Anonymous Tri - County
: ;Group meeting 6!1 Viand Street,
: 7:30p.m.

POMEROY -- DAR program planning committee meeting,
Tuesday, I p.m. Pomeroy Library.
All members invited to anend and
gi\~ ideas on programs for next
year.

THE SHOE CAFE
LAFAYETIE MALL
GALLIPOLIS

*

THE TAX
GRIP?

•'
••

5 Piece Group
.. $1135.00

Let us show you ways to:

RELAX WITH YOUR MORNING COFFEE .
On Our
Vintage
Wicker Gro.up

I

Let us help you put more ofyollf interest earnings where they belong . . . in your wallet.
tbk at any, local branch, or call for an appointment.

I

MARKETING ONE SECURITI ES, INC.
registered broker-dealer, member NASD and SIPC.
located at PEOPLES BANK
Court &amp; Second Street
'

; ".

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-992-2133
800·374-6160

$

i'O~&gt;IBI.E LOS~

•••

Of PRINCIPAl. AMOUNT INVESTED.

..

•••
GALLIPOLIS - Waller reunion at

is

•

446·3045

' Items. SubJKt to
.Prior Sale

Saturday, July 4
GALLIPOLIS
Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
Group, St. Peters Episcopal Churc~ .
9p.m.

...

•••

CROWN CITY - Vacal ion Bible
School at Good Hope United Baplisl
Church Jujy 13- 17, 6:30-8:30 p.m.
For more informati on, call 256·
1.527, 256-1251 or 256-6325.

...

Revival
OAK HILL , Emory Free Will· ·
HENDERSON, W.Va. - Western Baptist Church will hold a revival
square dancing at Henderson Recre- · June 29- July 4, 7 p.m. nightly. Pasation Building, 7:30- 10 p.m.
tor Jeff Simpson to conduct services,
'*'
special singing and guest speakers.
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce RecovCARD SHOWER
ery Support Group, Nazaren'-.
Church, 7 p.m. Nursery provided.
•••
GALLIPOLIS . • Bethel Ladies
'Aid to meet at Christ United
. Methodist parsonage, noon lunch, ·
meeting at 1 p.m. Br&amp;'
n covered
d1sh.
·

**'

Vacation Bible School

A card shower is .,rlanncd for
William "Bill" Barnell who turns 88
on June 28. He is a former resident
of Cheshire. Cards may be sent 10
him at 3891 Georges Creek Road ,
Gallipolis 45631.

••••

•

.uN

1:15,1:211, 521, 7:11
AFBi &amp;111111111 ~ 1:26, 4:26, 7:25
II. -.mu l"&gt;q1:30, tali, 6:40, 7:4&amp;
IIIIPf R1W1 ~"&gt;li 1:11,4:11,7:10
11111 • mn ~ 1:45, 4a. 1:11
I:M'T.., IWJ ,,.,.
4111

PORTER - Clark Chapel Church
wilh Tom Schnoover preaching, 7
p.m. Tom and »ife Jean losing.

...
...
...

Thursday, July 2

ALL AGU,' ALL TIMU S4.00

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. •
Narcotics Anonymous Tri -County
Group, 611 Viand Street, 7 :30 p.m.

***************

[8 BIG ''"'"' ""'"''""''

•
t-740-753·3400
~lovtes M,,,,n,..,, nrRroAr·

BIDWELL • Garden Of My
Heart · Holy . Tabernacle weekly
prayer service, 7 p.m.

••••
•••

Friday, July 3

Iii

1·9·9·8

1·9·6·3

GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
Anonymous meting. St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.

....

PORTER • Bible ·study at Clark
Chapel Church. 7 p.m.

..

...

Raccoon Creek Park. Lunch at 12:30
p.m.

,

KYGER
Brad.bury-Jcnkins
reunion, 12 noon, Kyger Community Building.

...

GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
Anonymous meting, St. Peter's
Episcopal Church, 8 p.m.

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Choose To Lose
Diet Group, 9 a.m. at Grace United

•••
Andy Griffith's childhoon home for sale
MOUNT AIRY, N.C, (AP) The boyhood home of Andy Griffith
in the town that inspired TV's Mayberry is going on the auction block.
Carl and Geneva Griffith bought
the two-bedroom house in j 935 here
in the foothills of the Appalachian
Mountains. Andy Griffith based the
fjctional towt• of Mayberry in "The
Andy Griffith Show" on Mount
Airy.
'
, 1 The Griffiths sold the house in
, '1966. Its most recent owner ,died in
•. November, and real estate agents
: have had inquiries from around the
•
t,p{,
•
,• ' .counu
7•
· : ' : The auction is set for Saturday.
; :irhe hmise • has been appraised at
: · ~59,000.

•" , 8 •
IOIIItt

yourbotfr.

··
. .

.

GOLD
WEDDING BANDS
·. 10 or 141 Gold

30%·40o/o OFF
Tawney Jewelry

It's the 35th Annu;tl
Mountain State Art &amp; Craft Fairtime to be delighted, awed, entertained and
intrigued by over 200 artisans, craftspeople,
entertainers and food vendors.

422 SicOND AVE.
GAUIPOUS

Come5ee
our large
clspliyor
call todJyl

News policy

HOURS
DAILY9TOS
CLOSED
THURSDAY .
FRIDAY 9 TO 7:30

•••

•••

•:

I

-'

•••

0

.

INVESTMENT RISKS INCLUI)INGlllf

•••

''

Northwest Territory Life /nsum nce Agenr): h1r Is" subsidiary of The First National Bank of Southeastern
Oblo, a Peopli!s Bimcorp, Inc. iJiflllate. Insurance /Jmducts aro offered lry Northwest Territory Life Insurance
~ Inc. Securll/eo 11re offered by Marlll?tin/1, Une 5ocurilies. Inc., an unaffiliated registered brokeNieaJer.
membfr NASD and
5/PC ll!FSE PRODl ·crs ARE NOT FDIC INSUR£0, ARE N&lt;Jf DEPOSITS , OBUGATIONS OF.'
.
OR GUA.ItANTEED BY THE PEOPLES BANKING &amp;TRI :!-oT COMPANY ORANY CYTliER BANK; AND INVOLVE

Methodist Church.
•••
Wednesday, July I
•••
POMEROY - Narcotics Anonymous Living in the Solution Group,
Sacred Hearl Calholic.Church, 16 l
Mulberry Street, 7 p.m ..

,
***

•••

. . itartlnt.A• 399°
Sofas
··.·
·:,

Dianna Lawson
Registered Representative
Market(ng One Securities, Inc.

***

•••

Excluding Umbrella

It's time to take control.

NORTHWESTTERRITORY UFI::
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

***

CROWN CITY • The Swick
Family will sing a1 Good Hope United Baptist Church ; II a.m.
•••
BIDWELL - ·Prospect Baptist
Churc~ communion and foot washirig services . Sunday School at 10
a.ffi. Basket lunch at noon . Rev. Carl
Basham speaking in the afternoon,
Earthen Vessel to sin-g,

•••

SALE$575

• Reduce your taxes
• Build Assets .
• Keep peace of ,!Jlind

~&lt;:curiue'

PUT ·A
BANG!

In Lloyd Flanders
AII·Weather Wicker

Marketing One Securities. Im· located at Peoples Bank has tax-advantaged investments that
may help you lower your taxes and arc designed to give you flexibility and peace of mind.

KANAUGA ·Worship service at
Silver Memorial FWB Church, 7
· p.m. with Rev. Dennis Parsons.

•••

·By the Pool •••

If you're like many investor~. yotl 'n: ured of the IRS taking up to a third of your financial security.

***

· GALLII'OLIS - "Loaves and Fish·
CROWN CITY - Big 4 Church es" free meal at St. Peter's Episcopal
songfest, 7 p.in. ·with Diane Glad· Church, noon.
man and Swick Family. Preaching
PORTER , Clark Chapel Church
by Charlie Johnson.
with Tom Schnooyer to teach SunGALLIPOLIS - Heartline - edu- , day School, 9:30a.m.
calional and interactive support
group - meeting, 2 p.m. French 500
Monday, June 29
Room, Holzer Medical Center.
Speaker Dr. Joe Anderson, topic
"Keep Up the Beal wilh. PacemakNarcotics
er." Open lo public, refreshments . - GALl-IPOLIS
Anonymous Miracles In Recovery
Call 446 - 5000 for information.
Group, St. Peters Episcopai 'Church .
•••
, • PATRIOT - Homecoming at St 7:30p.m.
·Martin's Lutheran Church, Gennan
CHESHIRE - TOPS (Take Off
Ridge
Pound~
Sensibly) meeting, al
Road, I p.m. Potluck.
Cheshire United Methodist Church,
BIDWELL - Songfest at Garden 10 - II a.m. Call Janet Thomas at
Of My Heart Holy Tabernacle, I 367 - 0274 for information.
•••
p.m. Bennie Simpkins and Logue
MIDDLEPORT - Oh Kan Coin
Family to sing.
Club regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
ADDISON - Preaching service al Middleport Arts Council Building.
Addison Freewill Baptist Church,
7:30 p.m. with Rick Barcus preachThesday, June 30
in g.

*
IN YOUR JULY 4TH CELEBRATIO
RELAX

.

PORTER - Clark Chapel Church
services wilh Don Karr, 7 p.m.
•••
CHESHIRE - Poplar Ridge Bap·
tist Church services with John
Eiswick, 6 p.m.

' ***

Veterans

LoosEN

· Stop by the Marke ting One

•••

BIDWELL • Popular Ridge Free
Will Baptist Church evening services, 6. Re\1. John Elswick assisting
·: church through July. Singing by
: :· Marty Short during evening scr. · "vices.

..

be many new poultry yards . "Five
preachers will make a splendid market for chickens."
Rev. George Aten, the Methoilisl
pastor at Porter in the 1890s was
known for eating, but he was better
known for performing a lot of marriages.
After one such marriage the Jour·
' nal remarked: "We're sorry 1o· see a
lass wed a lad and entangle him into
a muss; for the honey moon's gone
and his heart is made sad, when she
raises a thundering fuss."
The newly married man was
Robert Lawless, who had put away
the "'pedagogic rod" and -assumed
the role of clerk in tbe business
establishment of I.M. Grover. II is
interesting lo nole !hal allhallime, a
The home of Dr. Nelson Sisson was built in 1886 at Porter. Dr.
clerk in a store was a much more SISBon was the Sunday School Supt. and leader of the Epworth
highly acclaimed profession than League In Porter as well as a practicing physician, businessman
school teacher. Most men school 11nd farmer In the 1890s.
teachers remained in teaching only Poner.
He said !hal possum cooked cor·
three or four years.
To lhal end the league conducted rcctl y with !ripe and onion s was a ·
The Epworth League of the public-meetings and held fiuld rais- dinn er fit for a king
Porter Methodist Church was active ers . Oyster suppers were held in the
. Perhaps the codger's tnslc was
in the 1890s. The League (lhc name fall and public litcmry cnlcrtain- ahnmrnal.duc 10 hiS Jove of radishes.
of the youth work in the Methodist · mcnls were held in lhc spring. One He once grew a nearl y live pound
church then) ·had as one of ils goals old codger suggested !hat t~c league radish !hal was lwo~ c l long.
for 1893 to creel slreel lamps in hold a possun dinner.

Gallia Community Calendar------=-

'

~¢: t
'

The grounds were still used in the
of the other villages in thai part of 1890's, but mostly for picnics. One
the county, Porter had a strong New of the biggest picnics of the year was
England and New York flavor.
the Union Sabbath School picnic put
on
by the churches in Springfield
;fhe Porter Academy, run by
Presbyterian missionaries from the Township. An organ was brought in
east, helped to contribute to that fla- and used by the following; Katie
vor. One such missionary was H.R. Davis, Carrie Summers, Sally Watts
Howe who ·was ,bofll in Staunton, and Jennie Waddell .
Vermont in 1798. He was trained al
The Porter Brass Band played
Ohio University and Hampton Syd· and Rev. Purley Baker gave an
ney College. Upon graduation he address in which he said: "The man
was offered churches in Marietta, ' who uses tobacco, has no books in
Ohio and Richmond, Virginia.
his library and refuses' to allow his
He chose instead to come to wife to attend the camp meetings is
Porter (o work in the academy. a mean man."
The Porter correspond~nt .to 'the
Howe also conducted Presbyterian
worship every Sunday in the acade-' Journal remarked that since he was
my. Rev. Howe outlived four wives. nm married and had plenty of books,
In the 1820's the Methodist he was sure thai having passed two
Churcr established a major camp of the tluee criteria, lhe Lord would
ground near Poncr. Here several forgive his daily cigar.
By 1893 Porler'.s importance was
weeks of meetings were held every
on the wane, due 10 the development
summer.
The grounds were also used for of ils new neighbor, Bidwell. One
political rallies, lhe 'most noteworthy Porter resident staled !hat Bidwell
being lhe Harrison rally of 1840 and was.growing so fast that by ] 900 il
a rally in the 1870s for James A. would have five preachers living
Garfield: In 1893 Congressman there .
Another predicted 1ha1 if the firs!
Hezekiah Bundy spoke at lhe camp
prediction came to pass, there would
grounds.

... ..

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT -- Open
gym, Meigs Middle School, Middlepen, Monday, 9 10 II a.m. for girls
enteri ng 71 h or 8th, grades, Meigs
Loca l School DistricL lnfo on shoola-lhon to be dislribuled .
POMEROY

"1he 1820s and 1830s. Unlike many

In an effort to provide our readership wilh current news, the Sunday .
Times-Sentinel will not accept wed·
dings after 60 days from the dale of
the event. ·
.
~
. · Weddings submilted after the 60·
day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Senlinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
·
All club meetings and other news
articles in lhe society section must
be submitted within 60 days of
•occurrence. All binhdays musl be I
submitted within 60 days of the .
occurrence .

WEDNESDAY, JULY I
THROUGH SUNDAY, JULY_ s

• CcHtcllwoils
~dCIUifons

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crvfbortdart
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t.vcffriDnaf to _,.,.lh/"1

July I through July 4
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· Sunday. july 5
I0:00 am - 6:00 pm
ADMISSION
Adults - $5
Children 6-12 - $1
Children under 6 - free
Senior·Citizens
(60 and older) - S4

-

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_,_

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0

For more /nformm/on, coli (304) 372-FA/R or I BOO CAll WVA.
'

l

·,

•

�.

I

Entertainment
not the movie you·were expec.ting.

I

Sunday, June 28, 1998

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

June 28, 1998
•

'Armag~ ~r ~~

on'

cular action flick.
Gannett News Service
If the multiplex theater was an
Hollywood is determined to tell amusement park, "Deep Impact"
: the story of a giant asteroid on a col- would be the merry-go-round,
: lision course with Earth . Maybe, if •· Annagcddon" would be the toller
· they keep trying, they 'll get it right. coaster.
·
The latest version is ·· Armagcd·
" Armageddon" is a typical Jerry
; don ," the heavily hyped, $1 50 mil- Bruckheimer film . He's previously
; lion, big-bang version, with Bruce co-produced such .testosterone• Willis trying to save humanity.
, fueled sagas as "Top Gun," "Days
:
It 's this summer 's explosive Hoi· of Thunder," "Bad Boys" and "The
: lywood cherry . bomb, being lit iq Rock."
• time for the Fourth of July.
" Armageddon" opens dramati·
·
"Armageddon'' arrives while its cally - a stunni ng meteor shower
: most mcent p&lt;edecessor, "Deep destroys . many of Manhattan's
: fmpact," is still showing in many notable landmarks. NASA officials
· .markets.
·
discover a bigger asteroid "the size
· . Though both films tell similar of Texas," heading for earth.
: stories - and arc tioth quite flawed
. NASA chief Dan Truman (Billy
: ·- they're not the same movie.
Bob Thornton) decides our only
" Deep Impact" takes a touchy· hope is to dispatch a crew of oil. fcely
humanist
· approach, drillers into space .to drill a hole in
: .. Armageddon" is a big, loud, mus- the giant rock, so they can jam a
• By JACK GARNER

: Murphy offers a new 'Dr. Dolittle'
: By BOB THOMAS

I

, II

I

: ·Associate&lt;) Press Writer
.
In 1967, Twentieth Century Fox released an overproduced version of
: ·•nr. Do little," complete with Rex Harrison talk-singing highly forgettable
: songs (except for "Talk to the Animals," an Oscar winner). Even li ttle chi!• dren didn 't like the movie.
·
Now Fox is offering another " Dr. Dolittle," which bears even less resem: blance to the charming Hugh Lofting stories parents have read to their children
: for generations. The lilm was obviously tailored to the extraordinary comedic
· talent of Eddie Murph·y, who gives one of his less manic performances.
·
Dr. John Dolittl.e (Murphy) enjoys a busy practice as a physician, has a
loving wife (Kristin Wilson) and two young daughters. He and his partne rs
are on the verge· of consumm ating a pig"money deal to be taken over by a
giant HMO. His money-mad fellow physician (Oliver Platt) is pushing hard
: to fina lize the contract. Then something peculiar happens.
:
Daydreaming, Dolittle hits something while driving. He looks back and
: to his horror sees a dog lying in the street. The dog rises and saunters away,
· remarking, "Why don't you look where you're going, you bonehead'?"
:
That's not all. Dolittle gets into a dialogue with his daughter'sguinea pig.
: A couple of rats in a trash barrel tOss sarcastic cpmments toward him. Cats,
: pigs, goats, even an ailing carnival tiger converse with hi~.
•
When his family and .assD&lt;;iatcs notice him speaking to animals, they are
: perplexed, then alarmed. The good doctor is shipped off to tl)e funny farm.
: Platt is panicked that his partner 's weird behavior will spoil the HMO deal.
:
Thanks to special effects, the · animals talk convincingly, and .they are
. -amusingly. voiced by such actors as.Albert Brooks. Chrts Rock, Julte Kavn. cr, Garry Shandling. Ellen DeGeneres, Norm MacDonald and John
Lcguiz~mn. Too bad the script (by Nat Mauldin and Larry Levi n) doesn't
match th~ir talents. ·
If your notion of comedy runs 10 bodily odGrs and toi let jokes, then "Or.
Dolittle " is the movie ..for you. But it seems unfortunate that the gentle fan·
tasy of Lofting's stories has been junked in favor of nasty little jokes that
kids snigger about in kindergarten.
Murphy employs all the right moves to respond to the various predicaments, and the reliahle Platt has his momerus. Also, Jeffrey Ta,m_bor, the
obnoxious sidckitk on "The Larry Sanders Show," does a funny stmt as an
overbearing veterinarian.

nuclear bomb 800 feet inside its
core.
The gang of misfits is headed by
· Harry Stamper (Willis), who ·acts
like social chairman of a college fraternity.
.
His gang includes the young,
over-eager A.J. (Ben Afllcck), who's
been pursuing Stamper's daughter
'(Liv Tyler); the brilliant but warped
geologist Roekhound (Steve Buscemi), and the cynical, gambling
addicted Chick (Will Patton).
They're the most unlikely heroes
-imaginable, which makes them perfect for Hollywood. (" Armageddon" .is "The Dirty Dozen " on an
asteroid.)
At any rate, after less than twO'
weeks of training, the oil-drillers are
blasted into space on twin shuttles to
try to save the '\'&lt;Jrld.
And if you h\iven 't already been
giggling 'at the endless improbabilities, wait till you see the crazy
goings-on in space.
But direGtor Michael llay tries to
drown out any skeptical questions
With a numbing parade of explosions, slam-bang action, quick-cut
ediling; jerky hand-held camera
movements, and a host of other
high-tech distractions.
For the film's exhausting two-

.

4th. of )uly ·Specia·ls
•

.

and-a-half hours of running time,
Bay never gives you a chance to
catch your breath - or to apply
logic to the plot.
Still, I managed to wonder about
a lot of things. Like, why is a space
shun le outfitted with guns'/ How can
a space shuttle make a horizontal
take-off from an asteroid when there
isn't even a hint of a runway?
As you duck flying 'debris, you
also may not notice that all the
heroes arc men, all but one is white,
and they're all Americans.
In classic jingoistic fashion, you
see several shots of the -poor,
deprived, unskilled and timid folks of
Europe, Asia and Africa, praying for
the brave Yanks to save their butts.
And the film's only woman of
note is Stamper's young daughter
(Tyler), standing by nervously on
Earth, awaiting the return of her
father and her boyfriend.
Displayed behind her in several
shots is the biggest U.S. flag since
George C. Scott addressed the
troops in .. Patton."
Willis and most of his co-stars
speak in the whispery monotone
that's become de rigueur for movie
actio'n heroes; only Billy Bob Thornton and Steve Bescemi rise about the
restrictions of the form.

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·'GWTW' trivia is no trivial matter
Gannett News Service

'.

"Gone With the Wind" has generated enough trivia to fill volumes. Here
are a few of the choice items:
The role of Scarlett O'Hara was the most sought-after ro le in Holly.wood history, and took more of David 0. Selznick's pre-production time
•than any other concern . Among the 2,000 women considered were .

I
l

usiness

Sunday, June 28, 1998

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

' Norma Shearer, Joan Crawford, Frances Pee, Loretta Young, Jean Har;Jow, Jean Arthur, Claudeue Colbert, Carole Lombard, Ann Sheridan,
·.Jrene Dunne, Tallulah Bankhead, Susan Hayward, Katharine Hepburn,
and, yes, Lucille BaiL
Lucille Ball had the last laugh, years later, when she bought the
Selznick lot for her.own Desilu Studios. Her office was the same office
~ n which she had auditioned for Scarlett.
The burning of Atlanta was the first seq uence filmed,. even before an
actress had been &lt;.ast to play Scarlen. A stunt double played the role for
distant shots of Rhen .and Scarlen, fleeing the flames.
Selinick met Vivien Leigh that night. She was among the celebrities who
~ gathered to watch the controlled ctmtlagratipn.on-the-old RKO -Jot. Watch: ing Lt;igh in th&lt;7 red glow of the fire, Selznick reportedly made his decision.
· The burning of Atlanta, by the way, gave Selznick a chance to clear
away'old se!s. The objects in fl ame incl ude the giant wooden fence, gate
·and vi llage of ·'Skull Island " from " King Kong."
George Cukor was the fi rst director on "GWTW," and was muchliked by the women in the cast. (He long had a reputatio11 as a woman's
director.) Clark Gable, though, was worrjed that he'd get lost in the shuffle, .and reportedly. pushed fo r Se lznick to di smiss Cukor and hire his
friend. Victor Flem ing. ·
'
Fleming took over, leaving another legendary production, "The Wiz,
ard of Oz ... a few days from co mpletion. ·
·
·
After f leming was hired, Leigh and de Hav illand reportedly spent
wee kends with Cukor at his home, gett ing help for their performances.
Fle ming. meanwhile, collapsed from exhaustion near the end of the
. shoot, and was briefl y replaced by Sam Wood.
Though Flem ing is the only di rector credited on "Gone With the
·wmd." it 's really a moot point. "GWTW" is the epi tome of a producer 's
pict ure. David 0. Selzn ick was involved in every detail, big and small.
If "Gone WJth the W~d " ha.&gt;Uill auteur, it was Selznick.
. About a ·dozrrhoo,- w o rke~ '·Gone With the Wind," th ough
Selznic k eve nt l1lt lly settled on a version oT11u:Jirst script he. had commissioned, by Sidney Howard. (F. Scott FitzgeraRI-was-ol\e of the writers, tho ugh he mostly worked as a script editor, cuttingJj)le more florid
passages.) Howa rd never saw the .film. He was killed in a tractor accident on his New England fa rm as production ended.

Gannett News Service
"Gone With the Wind" :Wasn't
Holl ywood's first epic - ··Birth of
a Nation," "Intolerance" and the
first "Bcn-Hur" were among those
that preceded it.
·
We all know it wasn't the last
epic. Or haven 't you heard about

event. Both ·murcd a charismatic,
fictional romif e that captured the
hearts of romantic viewers.
Both films are more than three
hours long, and feature elaborate
visual effects and ric hly evocative
theme music.
Both swept their respective !)scar

''Titanic' ' ?

ceremonies. ··Gone W.ith the Wind" ·

·' Go11e With the Wind" remains
ltoll ywood 's most enduring epic,
probably because it's also its most
endearing epic.

won . eight out of 13 nominations,
" Titanic" won I I of 14.

The passionate saga of Sc~rlctt

O'Hara and Rhett Butler, played out
against the backdrop of the Civil
- War, generates more romai'IT:c, hts=
toric drama, and deep emotion than

so beautifull y green.
wide screen.
Digital technology has been
The soundtrack, including Max
applied to "erase" scratches . and Steiner's wonderful mustc, has been
blotches in the fi lm.
digitally remastered.
The film is being reissued in the
In sum, "Gone With the Wind"
original, appropriate screen ratio. has never looked or·sounded as good
Some editions in the '60s and '70s as it does today- perhaps even on
lopped off the top and bottom of the &lt;he day of its initial release.
·

•

nominated.

The "GWTW" encore is
deserved, for the following reasons:
Ted Turner's New Li ne Cinema
of the 1 93~ fi lm is back where it (the film's current owners) have put
.be longs; on the big screcn, -rcclaim- the fi lm th rough a rare th ree-strip,
ing its.title as the long-time champi- dye transfer process whi ch myans
on of the U.S. movie palace.
the fi lm is in new, true Technicolor
"Gone With the Wind" may have for !'he fi rst time in generations.
come in fo urth in last week's Amer- · Indeed, the ski es over burn ing
ican Film Institute top !00 Jist, but Atl anta haven't bee n thi s vibrantl y
it's usually No. 1 in popular surveys. red si nce the original release in
· More im portantl y, '·Gone With I939, nor has Scarlett 's stun ning,
the Win.d " remains the benchmark
by which all other Hollywood epics
a dozen lesse r films.
· · And now a spiffed -up m:w pr in t

For exa mple, many viewers and
commentato rS called "Titanic'' a

·"Gone With the Wind" for a new
generation . It's an apt description:
Both fil ms were considered di saste rs in th e making, as .bot h· went
wildly over budget and months over
schedule. "Gone Wi th. the Wi nd"
was considered Dav id 0. Selznick's
" folly. " "Titanic" was considered
"the ship that'll sink Fox."

ATT-ENTION LANDLORDS
..

.The . Meigs MetropC?Iitan Housing Authority Rental· Assistance
Program has Section 8 participants in ' need of safe, decent. and
sanitary rentals. If you have a ·unit or units you would like to
place on our rental listing, please call our office at 992-2733
Monday through Friday, 9 AM to 5 PM or Fax us at 992-7908.
For more information about the Section 8 Rental Assistance
Program and . your rights and responsibilities as a landlord,
please contact Jean Trussell, Executive Director, at the above
number.

ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY- Have japanese bee· ,
ties start£d to eat your favori ie plllll(l
· It is the season for ildult japanese bee·
ties to emerge from the ground and
feed on leaves and flowers:ihe first
emerging beetles seek out acceptable
plants to eat. Some favorites include
roses. rqse of sharon, plums, azaleas, ·
mountain ash, elms, lindens and
hibiscus. Pick offthe8e initial beetles
and place into soapy water. They will
chemically attract, using a self-produced pheromone. all the rest of their
MERRILL
family and friends to your favorite
plants.
The adult beetle we are seeing
now is just part of the life cycle of
litis inscc:t. It's life cycle begins in late ·
July and August a5 an egg is laid in
the ground and quickly becomes a
.
tiny grub. The grub feeds on organic
mlllter and young plant roots especially srass roots. This feeding con·
•• iri their lots to enter into tinues until late fall. As the soil
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County feeder cattle
becomes cold, t~ grubs buni&gt;w to a
cattleman Merrill Evans won it all at the· show. ·Southwest Kansa.~ ·
4-8 inch depth. When :soil temperathe recent 1998 Beef Empire Days Reseat'Ch &amp;
Live and CQrCn.~s Show in Ganden
Extension Specialist Lance Huck ture increases to 60 degrees _in April,
the much larger STUbs begin eating
City, Kansn.•. The event, considered said, "This feature really gives the ·
again until they transfonn them·
the heart of the two-week long Beef cattlemen the opportunity to do what
selves into a pupa (transitional) stage.
Empire Days, provides an ogponu- our judges do--estimate whether or
Morphologically, the grubs !=ftanges
. · nity for feedlots and cattlemen to not the cattle they are bringing will into' the adult japanese beetle below
· showcase their talents and end prod· produce 8n outstanding producL"
the ground in the pupa stage and
·ucts.
With over a million cattle in the area
emerge in a few weeks a.~ adults.
• The highlighl of the awands cere- to choose from , competition for These adults SUt:Vive only a few ·
. mony was the presentation of the Earl selection is stiff. Evans Cattle Com- weeks, in which time they eat, mate
C. Brookover Memorial Trophy pany alsci had a steer selected which and reproduce the next crop of eggs
·made . to Evans Cattle Company,. placed .23rtl in the competition. ··
whi~h begins the cycle again. Their
-owner, and Brookover Feed Yand.
Evans was presented Wltll silver ·
ability
to fly allows them .to enter a
feeder, for the highest placing animal trays for Reserve Champion Live aiKI
.in both the cnrcn.qs and live judging. Carcass as well as show Grand ·yard that had no previous grub pop:'
,
The
· Grand
Champion Champion over all. In addition a ulation.
Control
measures
using
cultural,
'Charolais/Angus Cross heifer had replica of the traveling Earl C.
biological,
mc&lt;:hanical
and
che,nical
previously won Reserve Champion Brookover Memorial TroP,hy has
Live and Reserve Champion Carcass found a home on Evans' wall. "But methods are fully listed in Extension
but scored enough points to win the best of all for a canleman in these Fact Sheet 2001 "Japanese Beetle",
show's highest honors over three tough days," Evans . said; "wp the · obtainable from the extension office.
hundred other steers and heifers for $2,500. c~h award that the heifer Foliar sprays, such as Sevin, Dursban
or Malathion may temporarily miniEvans.
sent home."
mize damage to plant leaves. Be sure
The 1998 Live Show judge was
. Evw owns aild operates Evans
to
follow label directions. Keep lawn
Dr. Tom.Carr, professor of ineat sci-. Cattle.Company from his fann locatence at the University of Illinois, ed in Springfield Twp.. He has been areas dry in August to reduce the surwhile the Carcn.~s Show judge was in the.cattle business for 50 years and vivability of eggs and small grubs.
Dr. Jim Wise, meat marketing spe- has been using feedlots ·in weslem Biological controls such a$ insect par·
cialist will\ the USDA.
Kansas to finish many of his cattle foro ~ites, ·~~lky . Spgre",. di~ase and
ttemalodei are on the·market. Proper
. 'FeedJOI ~Iliff decides whic;h oft~ · the pasl five years.
application and fresh stock are

Local cattleman ,,
Merrill
Evans wins
.
·it all in Kansas

are measured.

ON All INDOOR FURNITURE
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COMFORT SHOWCASE
•Sectionals •Sleepers •Sofas
-•Loveseats •Chairs ·
•Rocker Recliners
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Tuppers Plains, OH 45783
(740) 667-7388 • (BOO) 200-4005

.' .

D

SUnday, June 28, 111911

Japanese
beetles
emerging
from ground

·

In both cases, the popular leading
men were ignored. Clark Gable was
nominated, but upset by Robert
Donat (of "Goodbye, Mr. Chips");
Leonardo DiCaprio wasn't eve n

Section

l-aughter re$11y
s=~=~~a~~~b~!~
-. d ··c •. ne
I. s good m-.e

j•

I

'

I
'

GALUPOUS Clty-Schoollellchers get a first
hand report on operatlona at the Ohio Valley
Electric COrporatlon'a Kyger Creek plant from
Jim Slone, lett, operstlona department. Othera

In photo lett to right are Aliena Sprague, Lynn
Swain, training coordinator; Gordon Baker,
Dwayne Forgey, Letty Willis and Martha Rod·
erick.

I

tuchera tour Roc:kwttll
Automation to gat a first hand report on oper·
atlon• to relay to atudanta when thay return to
ac~ thla fall. Lett to right ara Suunne Durst,

Local sducators visit area
business, i . dustria/' worksites

RIO OR~
• rough t .
entors to the teachers. Each partieFirms suppo.rting the BHCP
participatio!f in the · Buckeye Hills pant of this program ~ad the oppor- Extemship program were American
'nity to visit three of the 10 work· Electric Power (Gaven Plant. ·Quckquickly becomeafull .timejobasyou Collaborati~e Partnership Extemship
mtiy empty tile baJseveral times dai· Program, 3S teachers from GaiJin, s es. ·
·
eye Rural Electric Cooperative, Holzly. Make sun: you keep the )rap 4(). Jackson and Vinton Counties will
,
During this tine, participants wit- • er Medical Center, Ohio Valley .ElecBy REBECCA COLLINS
findings as reported in The New York SO feet away from susceptilile plants return to their classrooms this rail nessed firsthand the skills that are tric Corporation Kyger Creek Plant,
GALLIPOLIS • It's no wonder Times. Lat~ghter is a universal ~ocial as you will be attracting the neigh-, with a better understanding of applied required of students entering the and Rockwell Automation, all of Gal·
that a good belly laugh makes you .· act. Babies sta11laughing at 1wo or botltood's supply of beetles. Ifchem- academics.
workforce in' various business/indus- lia County and the .Ohio Bureau of
The Externship Program is a try ¥ 1!ings. feel so good. Accordins to dozen.~ of three monlhs old ·and their rate of icals are being used remember that it
Employment Services, which '
is easier to kill a small grub in late . Scbool-;ro-,-Work initiative.
Following
the
worksite
visill;,
the
includes Gallia, Jackson, Vinton and '
research studies, a hearty laugh does laughter lo~rea.- until the age of six July or AuguSI than a lllrJ!e one in
School
to
Work
involves
both
participating teachers collaborated Meigs Counties.; Industrial Timber
a lot of really good things for us.
or so, whel} the average child laughs April. Dursban and Merit are two
school-based and work based learn- in groups to establish ways in which and Land Company. Vinton County,
Laughter increases the blood cir- 300 times day.
h · 15
d 10 k'1ll
culation, works your abdominal musContrasl. that to the rate of adult c .emtca app te
young ing activities.
they could apply what they learned Shell Chemical, Mason County,
cles, raises your bean rate and gets laughter which is aboul IS to 100 · grubs. Remerilberto apply chemicals
Ten business/indusry 'iiites sup- from their experiences to their class- Southern Ohio Coal, Meigs County
paned the program by acting as room curriculum.
and TS Trim, Athens County.
the stale air out of your lungs.
times a day~
Continued O!l D-8
But that's n01 all. An hour of
The ability think in funny and
laughter lowers the levels of the stress
original ways often overlap. Laugh
hormones cortisol and epinephrine. It consultants (yes, companies actually
st.iengthens .the immune system a.~
pay people to get their employees to
'
.
well. After an hour of intermittent
laugh more often!) Have even perprecautions.Itis impossible to
Tobacco: Poust just received · a
sure.
laughter, the body's T cells, antibodsuaded some companies of the finan- By JENNIFER L BYRNES
Many
situations
deserve
some
c._
cover
all
the
weed
problems
in
this
label
in Ohio for use on Tobacco to
ics and natural disease kiliins ~lis all
cial value of a good laugh session.
GALLIPOLIS • All the rain over
resean:h
of
the
best
chemicals.
The
'
article,
but
the
following
information
'control
post-emergent annual and
show signs of increa.'led activity. '
Laughter is conlagious. Have you the pwit few weeks kept the farmers
That could mean that your body may · ever noticed that when you beQr out of the field' and fon:ed them to Ohio State University Extension · WJdresses some of the more common Iperennial gmss weeds such as crabgrass, foxtail .and Johnson grass . .
more easily fight off colds and illsomeone laughing, it makes you wal!:h the weed~ invade crops lhat Weed Control Guide is available at problems this week:
Corn: Accent is a- commonly
Peppers: Unfortunately, Poast is
nesses.
wanl to laugh? LaiiJlhter is sponta· were sel prior to the wei weather. the Elltension office for minimal
cost,
and
provides
a
complete
review
used
h~rbicide
for
contml
of
gr.t.s
the
only herbicide labeled for postLaughter also works on us emo- . neous and ~irnes han! to contain. Most pesticide U.'ICrS kJIOW !hat tim·
tionally. It helps gel those creative
Remember a time when you had the ing is crilical in the application of of herbicides for com. soybeans, weeds in com such as Johnson gmss emergent weed control in peppers
. juices flowing.
·
giggles during'the sermon at church? post-emergent herbicides. However, small grains, and forages. Each and foxtail, a.~ well as a limited num- .and works primarily on the grass ..
After a bard laugh, studies have
It takes lOis of abdominal control and the wet weather did nOI even give review includes a list of the weeds ber of broadJ~ves. Many reports of weeds.
·Forages/Alfalfa: Gramoxone
~hown that people report a better
willpower to keep from laughing.
producers the opportunity to be time- · controlled (and control weaknesses), yellow nutsedge ~watrantthe reminder
problem solving . abilily and a
Just like ice cream .and winning ly, and now some weed infestations .the chemicals.that may be tank mixed that nutsedge is' not coMidered a Extra may be appl ied to al fali'a
stronger sense that •everything is the lottery, laughter can have a bad are larger than recommended for with that particular herbicide; the rec- grass and' therefore will not he con- immediately after cutting to control
ommended weed heights (ilf best trolled by most grn..s weed herbi- annual gmss and boadleaf weed•.
going to be ok," Finding humor in a side. Jeering, malicious laughter'and effective posl-emergence control. ·
sticky situation can help people cope ·humor at someone else's expense can
Weed height recommendalions control, the crop's recommended cides. Pursuit is labeled to control Increase the spray volume to control
and get through. Looking at life's ups
be very hurtful. Laughter can also be vary with the chemical and the weed. growth stage, and tips on bow to yellow nutsedge and is' also labeled larger weed~. Do not delay applicaused to exclude someone from a con• Some weeds should he treated when avoid. crop injury and. get etl'ective to tank mix with Accent. Soybeans: tion of this chemical beyond 5 days
and.downs with a sense of humor can
provide perspective and helps keep
ve..Sation. Hav~ you ever been with they are between 2-4 inches tall and · result•. It is very important to know The few producers with Round Up of cutting alfalfa. For more detai led
things iri balance when life seems · people who have Jots of inside jokes Olher weeds may be cont~led. up to yoor crop's stage of development Ready soybeans are in a better pDSI' information about weed control ,
unfair. Humor and . laughter ore u that don'l involve·you? L.aughtet can 24 inches tall. Even thoush produc· before you apply any herbicides. lion to kill large. weeds than those please call the OSU Extension office
source of power, healing, and surulsn get you in trouble • especially . · et'll can e~pecl les.~ effective control Post· e111ergent herbicides applied at with standard soybean varieties. I at 740-446-7007 or stop by ·to purvi val. We oftep forget this when we're
when you laughat people in positions of weeds that ire larger lhan recom· the wrong time can cause &lt;erious .Ba.•agran with Poast is a good com- chase a copy of the weed control
caught up in the troubles and trauma
of power (like your boss or your mended, the altemalive of no weed ·crop injury. Therefore, read the label bination to kill both broad leaves and . · guide.
Continued on D·8
of life. Bill Cosby says, "If you can
mother-in·law),
··
control may cost more depending on carefully ·and completely for in for- grass w~ed• in those standand soy- ·
find humor in an'ytlling, you can sur- · So along-with ealing a high fiber the situation and expected weed pres- mation about crop size and other nee· ~Jean vanetoes.
vive it" Using humor in difficult
~ietunddrinkingplentyofwlllere1JCh
times can be one of the smartest ways duy, dish up a healthy serving of
of coping with them, en.•ing our worlaughter.
'
ries, and gelling on with life. ·
· Rebecca .CoiiiiL~ IH Gallla Coua· By RYAN SMITH,
advanlage of the
an e fficient portfolio, asset classes income from your invested capital?
GALLIPOLIS , This year, differences in
that have lower correlations should Are you able to put your money
For all these reasons and of ty'H E•tell!llon Agent In ramlly
course, lhe fact that laughing is jwil
performance
of
invosturs have been an a bumpy
be included to help rcd~ce volatili- away and let it grow long-term for
plain fun to do, he~ are some other
ride as the markets have continued various asset
ty and potentially sta11ilize the port- use at a lat~r date? Keep in mind.
·
folio return.
to nuctuatc. Because of the recent classes.
The
that as your life's needs change,
hi addition 10 combining asset your portfolio may need to be
volatility, many analysis and pro- relationship
the
classes effecti•·ely, your ideal asset rell'lila~ced to keep you on track.
fessional ponfolio managerR on between
allocation
mi x will also depepd on Therefore, it helps to review your
movement
of
GALLIPOLIS ~ The Southern lowing the tour, the participants will Wall Street have behe.n re-evaluating
your
time
horizon,
liquidity, tax sit- holdings at least once . a year with
asset
classes
is
Ohio Hay and Pasture Day will take he •
k
k 0 Pa 1 . and rebalancing t e1r asset niiiiCaTu
d
J
30
ar
•rotn
eynole
spea
er,
r,
u
tion
n:tommelidations.
'
uation
investment
expectations
and an investment professional to
know.n as corre·
1
pl ace on es ay, unc. • at· PetetlOII, Exletlsion fonie Spec:illl·
Smlttl
Asset allocation. is dividln&amp; your . l~tion .
ri sk iolerance. Conventional wis- ensure. that _ yo~ will meet your
Asset
OARDC's Jackson Branch located~ .·ist from Vi'linia 'lecll.
dom
tells us that the more time you financ1al obJecttves. Quarterly is
classes
with
high
csrrelations
tend
Slate Route 93 in Jackson County, ,
This event is free and open to the investments ainong various asset
have
to ·save, the more aggressive even benet.
to
move
more
closely
together,
The bay de~n~trations will .begin at public and sponsored by the Ohio · classes (ie: stocks, bonds and cash
you
can
be; moreover, the more risk
Contact your investment profes3 p.m. and will mclude mowtng, bal· Agricultural Resean:h and Develop- · equivalents) to maximize the return meaning that they tend to respond
you
can
handle,
the
more
you
can
similarly
to
market
fluctuations
.
sional
to Jearn more about how .P.Cr. ina, and wrapping hay.
mentCenter and The ohio State Uni· , · andminimizt t~e risk of yourportinvest
in
equities
and
the
higher
Conver!l'ely,
asset
classes
that
have
sonahzed
asset allocation strategies
·-·Refreshments will ~served at S . versily ,EIIIj:nsion, For more lnfor. : f~ho. .By holdtn,s a po~foho of
your
returns
might
be
over
time.
low
correlations
(i.e.
stocls
a.nd
can
help
.you
attain financial sucp.,m. and participants will bave the mation pleue call lhe eJttension . doverstfi~ as~t classes, mve.stors
It's
al
so
important
to
be
clear
on
cess.
0fl11011Unily to review the exhibits at office al-446-7001, or Ed Vollbom at' . can eff~t11k~y re~uce the level of bonds) can reduce volatility of the
Ryan Smith is a 0 assoclale
,llils lime. From 6-7:30 p.m, the~ will the Soulh D'slrict
office 11 740-286- · ris~ and Vll;lllblltty of returns of .combined portfolio, because when what it is yoll want to achieve. Do
1
you
have
a
specific
savings
goal?
one
;asset
class
is
down,
the
other
with
Advest, Inc., in its Gallipolis
be 1 branch tour featurins secdins.
·
the1r ponfoho.
'
Do
you
require
a
steady
flow
of
omce
SO,i~ aeration and pasture topics: Fol· :M77.
Efficient asse! allocation takes · my be up. To that end, to construct

years·. Trapping lldult beetles C:!lll

.

, · in conjunction with the

Black Lung.Program
&amp;the

a

Ohio Department of Health

r

Control weeds before they get too tall
'

"

Testing is being provided at no cost to the patient. Costs not covered by patient's insurance will be.offset by the
Ohio Department ofHealth Black Lung Grant.
·
'

.

.

19-.5 million Americans .suffer from some sort of
Pulmonary Disease. If you are concerned about .
· the condition of your lungs, the Pulmonary .
program at Holzer Clinic niay be able to help!
Hol~ Clinic Pulmonary Rehab offers state-ofthe-art procedures, and is the region's leader in
Plilmonaty diagnostic testing and evaluation.
· There is limited funding for this program. Please
call now to schedule an appointment...

Asset a/IDeation: The

••

HOLZER CLINIC .....Here For YQur Health, RnM'.n

.

-

'

•
-

to a successfulportfotio

Hay, pasture day set June 3o

( 6:14)446-5.3 53

'

k~y

••d

•

-.

,,,.,

"\

,~
\

•

.

j

•
•

•

·.

I

�Page D2 • ~ ' 1....._,, ttlal

1

Sunday, June 28, 1988

Pomeroy. • "'lddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleaHnt, WV

·~r-------------------------------------------------------------------------._--,
--The House of the Week - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Grains, soybeans fall sharply on forecasts for hot weather
ly CLIFF EDWARDS
AP lu.l.-a Writer

Indiana and Iowa are expected to
result in growth spurts for crops that
previously have been hindered by
cooler than normal temperatures and
excessive rainfall. Traders said they
expectlhe U.S. Agriculture Depart·
ment next week to report improved
crop ratings after two weeks of
declines.
Wheat futures were pressured by
news that Iraq had purchased wheat
fromU .S.competitorsandaheadof

Grain and soybean futures prices
retreated Friday on the Chicaso
l)oard ofTrade amid perceptions that
hoi, jlumid Midwestern wealher will
benefit young crops before a cooling
trend occurs.next week.
On other markets, natural gas and
sugar futures prices advanced.
Temperatures in the 90s this week
. inthekeygrowingstatesoflllinois.

.I
I

active harvesting this weekend of the
winter wheat crop.
Wheal for December delivery fell
6 112 cents to $3.09 1/4 a bushel:
December com fell 2 3/4 cents to
$2.64 112 a bushel: December oats .
rose 3/4 cent to $1.44 1/4 a bushel;
November soybeans fell 6 cents to
$6.36 a bushel.
Natural gas futures contract rose
on the New York Mercantile
Exchangeamidstrongdemandfrom

utilities needing to power turbines
that generate electricity for air conditioners.
With temperalures soaring into the
90s in the key Midwest and North·
eastern consuming regions. and util·
ities straining under the demand, natural gas investors expected consumption rates to rise sharply.
Investors said the gains could be

•

Bruce Babbitt.
· The sugar program's opponents
want to reduce the government's
loan rate for sugar cane from 18 cents
to 17 cents a pound and from 22.9
cents to 21 ;9 cents for sugar beets ..
High fructose corn syrup - used
mainly in soft drinks - would not be
directly affected, corn growers
oppose the change because they fear
competing with a much lower world
sugar price of about 8 cents a pound.
The House on Tuesday delayed an
overhaul of the government's Depression-era milk-pricing system and
spared peanut growers from a cut in
their federal price supports.
" It's too bad that we constantly
attack farmers regardless of what
their crop might be,," said Rep.
Thomas Ewing, R·Ill., defending the
peanut program.
.The bill would put off any changes
in the dairy program until October
1999, six months later than had been
planned under the 1996 farm law. .
The Agriculture Department is
working on some market-oriented
pricing reforms. But the six-month
extension, which the House upheld
on a voice vote, buys time for defend·
ers of the current program, which-has
broad support in Congress.
A Minnesota federal judge last
year struck down much of the pricing system. which hurts farmers in

By GEORGE BRIA
POUND RIDGE, N.Y. (APJ - If
- your-soil frus~you. don't despair.
You can buy good stuff. For, as the
poet-farmer Virgil said long ago, " not
every soil can bear all things."
the Upper Midwest while artificially
Soil for sale is a brisk business.
inflating milk price!lin other regions, Yellow Pages and Web'sites offer a
according to consumer advocates.
galaxy of dirt ranging from potting
But the program is "vital to the soil for house plants to truckloads of
long-term liv~lihood of dairy farmers to~ilthat will generate entire garthroughout this entire country," said dens.
Rep. Gerald Solomon. R-N.Y.
Wanting to start a vegetable gar· The p'P6gram was designed to den, a neighbor of mine found her
stimulate dairy production in areas ground too soggy in an otherwise
where it wasn't 'economical. The fine, sunny location. So she decided
result is that farmers in the Upper to buy topsoil and' do the garden by
Midwesl receive up to $3 per hundred constructing raised bed e~losures.
pounds of milk less than producers in
Worried about the kin of soil she
the Southeas1.
might get. she shopped und until ·
The House approved an amend· she found a purveyor who created an
ment waiving the Statute of limitation organic blend to · her liking. She
for black farmers to make discrimi· bought nine cubic yards of it. at a
nation claims against USDA. The total cost of $279 plus a $60 charge
government admits that there was for delivery by truok to her place. She
discrimination but most of the farm· then filled the rectangular encloers are barred from receiving cash sures with the soil and sowed her
settlements because of the two-year . seeds.
time limit on filing lawsuits.
A surprising variety of plants may
More than 1,000 fanners could thrive in a seemingly quite shallow
benefit from the waiver, said Sam raised bed no deeper than six inches. ·
Taylor, a spokesman for an organi- Years agb, my son and I used a load
zation of growers.
of topsoil and railroad ties to create
such a bed atop a hatd surface of
Four names
gravel on a side of our garage.
ERLANGER, Ky. (AP) - This
We intended it just for flowers. but
northern Kentucky residential com- as time went on shrubbery gor plantmunity is part of the Cincinnati met- ed there, too. Now it is home to a
ropolitan area. Before its incorpora- sturdy magnolia bush and a 20-foottion in 1891, Brlanger was known tall holly tree as well as seasonal
successively as Timber Lake, Green- flowers. We surmise the tree roots
wood and Silver Lake.
worked their way downward through
the original gravel bed. We keep the
surface constantly regenerated by
mulching with deitd leaves, which
decompose into soil.
For smaller jobs. topsoil comes by
the bag. too, so you don't need to get
mittecs begin considenUion of annu- a truckload. Just this year, I made a
al agriculture spending bills.
raised bed within my vegetable gar-

den to grow some alpine strawberries
from seed. So, at $3.SO per bag, I
bought five 40-poilnd bags of topsoil
from a nursery, ·which amounted to
just enough cubic feet to fill the
raised bed enclosure.
It's just dirt but merchandisers can
get cute in their marketing hype. My
bags featured a big picture of a cow
and the legend "Green Mountain
Moo Dirt, U!lderly the Besl." Pro- ·
duced by Vermont Natural Ag Prod·
ucts Inc., of Middlebury,Yt .. the con·
tents' were described as being made
from composted cow 111111ure, forest
by-products, peat humus and sand.
. · Starting mixtures are a popular
item for g.-deners who like to aim for
faster starts as they rai5e things from
seed. Most nurseries and cataloss carry them. Gardener's Supply Co. of
Burlington, Vt., (800-863-1700)
offers a germinating mix composed
of sphagnum peat and vermiculite,
advertised as "pH adjusted and
insect-l'nle," at $4.9S for a nine-quart
bag.
The company also offers what it

.

·. In New England. the compact has
raised consumer milk prices by about
20 cents a gallon, according to the
-privllle groups. The ~ is still ~ percent below what consumers elsewhere pay, according to government
figures cited by backers. They say the
compact has also increased fanner
income by 6 percent.
"It is giving farmers a fairer
rerum and it is ensuring the Northeast
has an ongoing stable source of milk
production," said Sen. Patrick Leahy,
[)..Vt. "The compact is doing what it
is supposed to do."
Opponents, however, say the
incRased prioes hit the poor the hard·
est, especially children who vitally
need calcium provided by milk. The
· compacts also will cause a sharp
boost in dairy production leading to
surpluses that are often .,.;n:hased by
the federal government at taxpayers'
cost, the opponents say.
Dairy processors say the increased
costs will harm them.
:·we're in 1 very competitive situation," said Connie npton, senior
vice president of 1he International
Dairy Food~ Association. "We find
ourselves in the milk indu.,try losing
money to other beverages."
Congress could consider expand· ing dairY compacts as early as this
week when House and Senate com'

•12% Saddle Klng·llorse Fe..
Ito IM...........~......................" ...'1 0.25
•Shade River Cattle Feetl
•
110 Ill. IISUUIIIJIIIUI~illll ~IJIIIIIIIU '9.75
~ .Shade liver Cteep Feed .
100 lltt.. ....................................•10.25
~ .,.Salt ·~---..- ........ $4.25
•

•

Add a 2nd line for
just $U5 a month.

VIII I MC Now kc'llflcf

SHADE RIVER
AG SERVICES
- 't·-..... --. -

_,

1-13

-

Cindy J. Rhonemu1,

Treaaurar
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD OF

giveaway, 7•0·

Kittens, nine weeks old, variQJJS
colors , male and lamale , Iiller

trained, 740-992·5579.

Kittens: 8 Weeks Old , Black
Male, Yellow M8.1e, Gre~ Female,
Multlcolred Female, Litter Trained,
740·446·3769. '

60 Lost and Found ·

FOUND: Small dog on Pleasant
Stroel, Poinl Pleasant on Thursday afternoon. Call for ldenllfl&lt;a·
lion. :lo4-67S.3485.

"

Found: Young F'male Pitt Bull pn
State Roule 554, Near Kyger,
7-40·367-7202.

-LO_S_T_:M-a-lo_c_oc_k_a_ue-1.-3-1-,2-yrs-.
4yrs old, Reward. 304-675·7423
ask tor Lori.
-------Lost: male Collie. looks llka Las·
sle, answers to •Mall", Letart vi·
cl'lity. 740-247-4700 .
LOST: Norwaglan·Eik Hound.
blackJ&amp;IIver, white-spot on chest.
neutered , medium-brown eyes,
sny. Missing since June t5.

PH (740) ti82·56SO Black/brown/white beagle, 1 e.ar,
7 14, 21, 28,4 tc
neutered . Missing since June 15.
1

back or the room, French doors lead out to a rear porch. The dining room
ac\Jolns the living room. The ramlly room and country kitchen anchor the right
side or the home, where a laundry room offers access to the garage and storage
'area. Three bedrooms and a, run bath share the upper ftoor with the master
bedroom, which has its own bath.

; For AP Special Flltures
Q: 1 am building several outdoor
'. projects wilh pressure-treated wood.
: I've been told that the wood should
: be stained. I was under the itnpres: sion that . pressure-treated wood
· would la.~t in its natural state for years
: - just the way it comes from the
; lumber dealer.
'
A: Outdoor or pressure-treated
: lumber is treated with chemicals to
: resist decay and insect artack. This
, procedure permits the consu~r an.d
• forest industry to make use of mfen·
: or grades of lumber, rather than
increasing the demand for redwood.
• cedar or cypress. But unlike species
; of timber that are naturally decay:
• and insect-resistant. these lesser
: species have more pronounced grain
: and are more prone to splinter and
: crack · than redwood or cedar. So.
• even though the wood is treated. it is
! best to apply a stai~ - or at least a
: water repellent .- as SO&lt;!" as ~our
• ; project is dry enoQgh t~ take. slam.
• The first tip for wOrlung w1th pres·
: sure-treated lumber is to let it dry
: before using it. Other woods such as
• redwood and cedar are dry when you
: buy them. But lumber· that has been
! treated ha.~ been injected with mas: sive amounts of chemicals and water.
• For wood that will be in ground con: tact, these liquids penetra!C the wood
: completely. · .
·
' 1f possible. handpick your own
Swood at the lumber dealer.; Select
' lumber that looks straight a'nd true
and is lishter and drier to the touch.
: These pieces have less water content
• and will be ready to use sooner. For
: very heavy lumber. unde~ th!l'
: the extra weight you feel t.s ~u1d
· weight and will evaporate out 1n ume.
:sud wet lumber on a filii surface
;such as,a driveway or patio, usc spac·
•,
.:

Promotion

Also,- IN lrilil- oiDOf
Woi-Mift lacltieot:
Ch!licolho. Now Boston. Jochoo. Wovt;rly.

J

...........

Southern Ohio Comm.lnicllions
Hilltop Center

2415 SciOJo Trarl
21§.5000

Q: I am concerned abour a possible a.•bestos JliOblem in our ceiling.
home w~ built,around 1969 and
it has a type bf ceiling finish known
in this area as popcorn•. which contains asbestos. The ceiling has
become dirty and needs to be repaint·
ed. Can the ceiling be repainted or
should it be deait with by some oth·
ermeans?
A: First. have the ceiling materi·
attested to see if it contains asbestos.
Just because asbestos was u~d for
ceilings at the time your hous_c was
built doesn't mean that your ceiling
contains asbestos. Testing is recom·
mended because of the expense
involved in properly correcting the
problem if the ceiling contains
asbestos. If it does. then whatever
action is taken is not a do-it-yourself

Our

sure. Painting would be considered
encapsulating. Howe~er, prior to
painting, the ceiling would have ,to be
cleaned. This can cause particles of
asbestos to loosen and fall.
Also. several asbestos consultants
with whom we discussed this problem recommend against encapsulating a ceiling because they were concerned thai the weight of the layer of
encapsulating material would cause
the "popcorn" to loosen and drop
from the ceiling.
The decision· for removal of the
popcorn or enclosing the ceiling is
one that should be made by a certified asbestos abatemeni consultant
Abatement companies can be found
in the Yellow Pages of the phone .
book. Most abatement companies
offer a free estimate.
It's impditant that you correct the
a.•hestos problem, not only for your
own health but if you ever intend to
sell the house, you can be sure the
asbestos ceilings will become a negotiating item.
To submit a question, write to
Popular. Mechanics,_Reader Service
Bureau. 224 W. 57th St., New York,
N.Y. 10019. The most interesting
questions will be answered in a
future column.

liVE ·
PSYCHICS
1-0N-1

FOR RENT

http://WWWthehotpages.c
· om/ps/1399683ps.htm

(740) ,441 ~198~.

Five room house
FURNISH~D.

Near down town.
.No pets.
Call 446-1956'

AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Smith Buick-Pontiac Gallipolis

Gene Plants · Sons
Air Conditioning
· Sales-Service
Installation Heating~
Plumbing
30 Yrs service
Free Estimates
Fourth Ave.

3oo

I

446-1637 .

can be ordered lhrough RetaH
Merehanls As&amp;Oc. *20"

446·0596

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
restaurant row. •
Openings from May thru Sept.
·446·2206 Mon thru Fri
446-2734 Eveilings &amp;
weekends

cJasslf1eds.

Air Conditioned Building
suitable for receptions and
reunions, reasonable, also
pool rental
Old Town Campground •

July Summer Special
by Kara Beaver ·
at Lissa's RiverView
Facials &amp; Pedicures $15
Color $21, Hair cuts $5.
Call or walk-ins Welcome .

at 446-4660

Cattle Hoof Trimming
Baughman Farms
Friday July 3rd
Please call

740-256·6535
Auto Insurance Monthly
Payments Problems with ..
your driving record; OUI's
speeding lickets, etc.
Same Day SA-22's issued.
Call for quote.
Brown Insurance Agency · .
446· 1960

a

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence
•
call 446-6752 or
1-B00-942·9577

near

Joanne's Kut &amp; Kurt
47 Westwood Drive
"will be closed· July 111h-21 sl"
until then. Perms $30 Hair Kuts $8.00
2nd strett pat Foochnd. on Jackson

Sale and Home
Oecorllllng OPEN HOUSE
Wed &amp;Thurl. JUly 1 &amp;2
·a am • 7 pm Keith &amp; Gloria Ollar
31645 SR 325 Llng8vllle. OH.
740-2076

For~orelnfonnation

•.;

.,.

Performing Arts
C~mps and Craft
Camps at the Art
School for ages 516. For more
information Please
" Call

·Cats Meow

l&amp;u'l be floating on acloud wlrh
' the buys you'll (kid .. the

'•.·

Fraternal Order of Eagles
Auxiliary #2171·
dues need to be paid no
late than July 1, 1998

Empire Furniture
&amp; Appliance Has
Air Conditioners
&amp;
Refrigerators
in Stock

Lafayette Mall Btlildlng

JaSk.
.
The procedures for working with

asbestos-containing materials fall
into three seneral categories:
removal, encapsulation and enclo-

Must sell today, new washer and
dryer Included, owner financing
available, Call (606) 324-8455,
Leave messge if no answer. I'll
call yOU back. ASAP

Plke&lt;1416-9488

•

•
••
,,

•

ers berween boards to let air circulate,
and check the wood for weight and
by touch for mOisture. We have let
pressure-treated lumber sit for four or
more weeks in 90 degrees F weather
until it was dry enough to use with· ·
out shrinking.
When the wood is dry, it may be
too hard t~ nail. ~-drill holes for
nails to avmd sphttmg the lumber.
Use·consdtlction adhesives and J\let'
·ai connectOn to reduce the number of
naiL• or screws needed. u~ only galvanized nails' or coated screws for
assembly.· ,
Apply stain or water repellent to
the "do)Vn" side ofthe lumber before
you nail it in place. Joists. braces and
the underside of deck boards will be
hard to reach and finish whtn you
have nailed them in place.

Look Look

15.00

BEYOND THE FRONT PORCH, the entry unfolds to the living room. At lhe

; By ~PULAR MECHANICS

35537 St. lt. 7 ltllr C..ster
40.915·3131
~

,

·Homes: :Questions and answers

&lt; t---------------------------------------~------------~~~--~--------------------1

II

..... ..

LMNOIOOM
r

Backhoe &amp;
Dozer Work
Licensed &amp;
Bonded
20 yrs exp.
740-388-9515

:: L.----------------------~-----------------------------------------------'

·.

285·5001

'

•

around hert~

CloSiic P11D1
408l. Huron

.

•

.... . •i•'

J

n~ way p~oplt taft

JICIIIN

I i i o IJ l

..

WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS

SOUIIIem Ollio Communicllions

ONNG

~·
••
'•

CELLUlAR~

t084 N. Bridge St. .

All envelope• mual be
CLEARLY
MARKED
according to the type at bid.

EDUCATION

••
'•

UNITED STATES

NewllosiGft
United Stotn Cellular
New Boston Sllojlping Cenler
4010 Rhodes A••·
456-8722 or (8001124-7775

the llld Baird.

P.O. Box 272
Pomeroy, OH 4570 ·

..•••

Come ;, muf get 600 a11ytime {10111/S miuuics tluriug our Summertime
J nviugs Eveut . .we also llavc grrat tlrals 011 t'liours. Offer.
nvnilnMe 11011' tbrou~li Suutfil)' ollf)'.

•

.·

740-368-85-16.

Honeyb~es lo

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
TIM Melge Locel Board of
EduCIJIIon wlahee to·r..,elve
blda for the following:
l!lread/Bakery
and
Ullk/I)IJiry proclucla.
All blda ahlll be fiiCelved
In, and bid apeclflcallona
may ba obtained from,
TREASURER'S OFFICE, 320
E. Main Strwt, P-y. OH
45711, on or before 1:00
P.M., Monday, July 13, 11118.
....... Ma,_ Loc81 Board ol
.....
•••
Education reaervee the
right to raiiCI any and all
blda, lncl the IUbmltllng Dl
any bid ehall lmpoee no
liability or obllgallon upon

Accented by exposed beams and
warmed by a fireplace, the family .room
is suited for informal get-togethers. A
pair of windows that overlook the front
porch are just the right finishing touches
for this casual living area.
Just off the kitchen, a laundty room
provides access to the garage and storage area.
(For a more detailed, scaled plan of
this hoUse, including guides to esrimat·
ing costs and financing, send $5 to
House oflhe Week, P.O. Box 1562, New
York, N.Y. 10116-1562. Be sure to
include the plan number).

Golden Retr iever, Pretly Spade
Female , 4 Years , Good Comj:lan·
ion Dog, Ra ised Wllh CnUdren.

; """=---

I UTES:

$1.4.9; A MONTH GETS YOU
1/J5 AIINUTES A MONTI-I
FOR ONE YE~.

775-4141

t'

flank the fireplace and a set of French
doors opens to the porch. The adjoining
dining room flows from the living area,
creating a large space for entertaining.
Tlte country kitchen offers plenty of
room for the family that cooks together.
The space offers an island workstation,
a pantry closet and a window~~ sink,
and adjoins the family room.

•'

BULLETIN BOARD

e
Special Sh areTalk

Zane PIIDI S~ Center

By BRUCE A. NATHAN
AP Ncwsfeatures ·
The wraparound porch in plan 1-13, by
HomeStyles -Designers Net"'ork, helps
give this two-story home old-fashioned
country appeal. The plan prpvides 2,464
square feet ·of living space.
Inside, the entryway leads into an
expansive .living rOjlm, where windows •

•

SELECT HAND-HELD OR BAG
PHONES ARE .lUST $9. 95 .

Unilld S'-!n Ctllllr

Giveaway

992·5626.

Public Notice·

'•

5

wl!h the dossifleds

)'OU -

.

PLUS:

c-.:....

rou·· build Q big nest err when

'

sse

' *We carry Farnera Formula from Ufe Data Plus
· , all your animal and agricultural neecte..
ttoura: ~~on."'"· w:». s.t. ..1z:oo noon

40

44Hl135.

8hMt (211.3 Sq. ft.)
WHITE
TAN
BLUE
'IN STOCK COLORS

600 BO US

.

3419.

· Free kittens , lame, 2 Cslleo. 740.

•Ufetime limiled warranly

Now th.rough Sunday

JIJLY SPICIAU

wanted: Lady Companion To
Live In , Free Board, Must Be
Able To Drive, No Smoking, I Am

, no engine,

•Reduces noise
•PrOvides added insulation

·$114.t..
_32_1n_

l•

Lambert, Judy AIV.Is, Jerome

May, Gary Sizemore. Georgia to-- ·
gan . Please Contatl: Janel
Spencer Ollar. Or Paul Ollar
Phone : 740.388·8899. After ~:00
Or Leave A Message.

~I)

•

v

•

Trying To Locate Classmates
t958 : Aot:lln GabrltJ. Edith /Joan

A Olnbled Veteran , 740-446-

•Fasl, easy lnslallalion
•Goes directly over old roof
. •Won't rust or corrode

age I~'CCIIt·a-gallon increased cost
of expanding the agreements by
as~uming . thlll the current Northeast .
compact floor price- now $16.94
for every 11.6 gallons ~ would take
effect
in the other areas beginning in ...- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -....
October.

·states.
· The agreements, known as dairy
compacts, are mten~ed ~o boost
1ncorne for .fanners. Dairy pnces havebeen saggmg for months and the
1990s h~ve seen~ 35 percent drop in
~ number ~f dany fanns. ,
· But Pub.hc Votce for FOod and
' Health Polley, a consumer. ~P·
released a study Monday est1mat1~g
.'!'at consumers ~ould pay $400 m1l·
·hon more for mille over a year from
:~ew England to the Gulf of fvledco
.1f &lt;?,&gt;•g.ress allowed ~ore compac!J.
, . ~1s wasleful milk tax, and 1ts
:npan~lon: must be rejected by CDf!·
gress. ~d Thorn~;~ Schatz, prest·
dent of CJUzens ~gaJnSI Government
· • ~asle, a~ot~ pnvate group th~ has
JOined w1th mdk processors• .~tailers
and manufacturers m oppos111on.
Maryland. New Je~y and possi·
·, bly New .York WaDI to )Otn the North:east ~n~tate Dairy Compact: in
.p11ce m SIX New England states s1nce
:July 1997. Eleven state~ are consid·
:eri~g putting together a Southern
:Da1ry ~ompact; ~labama, .A~sa~,
.Geora1a. ~umana, M1ss1ss1ppl,
:North. Carohna, Olclahom~ . South
:Carohna. .-r:ennessee, Virg101a and
.West Virg1n1a.
. .
The compacts, wh1ch must be
approved by Conpess, put a floor
price on .milk for famien~
Public Voice eslimated the aver-

Sarv·U 81H45-8-434.
wanted- couple with camper to
go woll •• Comt&gt;lr'l'. leaving July
&amp;lh or 7th, 740-2-47-4901.

ROOFING SALE

Compacts would up milk prices
15 cents a gallon, organization says
WASHING10N (AP) - Gov·
emment watchdog _groups and dairy
processors are banding IO(Iether to
fight possible e~pansion of regional
·marketing agree(!lents for dairy fann:~rs. which
say would
raiseinmilk
:prices
by they
IS cents
a gallon
21

9:00.5:30.

$2 .89 Per Min. Must Be 18 Yra .

.,

calls a "transplant mix" containing
sphagnum pellt;- perlite and vermi·
culite, with a coarser texture than the
germinating mix. This comes at $6.SO
for 30 quarts.
A houseplant gardener who has
the time and the interest can create his
own mixes. Indeed Elvin McDonald,
former secretary of the American
.Horticultural Society, suggests doing
just that.
· In his book, The New Houseplant," (Macmillan 1993, $40 h~­
cover) McDonald says "one reason 1s
thai working widl your hands in the
varied textures of different ingredi·
ents is highly satisfying. The other is
that by adding certain ingredients to
packaged mixes you can get better
growth responses."
For begonias one such mix could
·be three parts commercial organic .
compost with one each of quarter·
inch 'bark chips, perlite and leaf
mold.
Patience and expertise are
required, too.

Sale ·

,
•

Quality clothing and household
ilem&amp; . Sl .00 big safe evvy
Thursday Monday thru Saturday

Internet TV Sei·Up, Learn How
To Watch iV Stations worllfwide
Over The· Internet On Your Com·
puterl 1-900·329-1293 EKt. 9960

Getting the good stuff--real dirt

House cuts money for c~yote
control, spares dairy pro-g ram
WASHINGTON (AP) - In a
victory for ·animal-rights activisL•
and opponents of agricultural subsidies, the House voted to cut by a third
·a federal prograi:n that paYS for con·
' trolling coyotes and other livestock ·
predators.
, · The $10 million reduction repre. sents the amount that the Agriculture
Department would spend in fiscal
1999 on shooting arid poisoning
predators. The rest of the program
goes toward education and non-ledlal
control measures.
"The Congress has appropriated
the hard-earned tax dollars of Americans to kill the public's wildlife. It's
morally and fiscally unacceptable,"
said Wayne Pacelli, executive vice
president of the Humane Society of
the United States.
• The 229-193 vote Tuesday was a
rare ~ictory for opponents of farm
programs, who try each year to cut or
eliminate federal subsidies in
USDA's annual spending bill.
Today .the House was to debate a
redi,ICtion in price supports for sugar
growers. Critics say the program
costs consumers SI billion a year, and
· candy manufacturers have long
sought to do away with it.
. . The coyote-control program is
·peanuts by comparison, although it
· ~as had some high-profile beneficia·
: ~es, including Interior Seoretary

30 Announcements
Now To 'lou TMft Shoppo
g W&amp;SI StimSOn, Atheni
740-592·11142

ANNOUNCEI\1ENTS

005

All-American Country Home

Witll 111111Ysupr producers pre.
dieting record harvests and declining
demand in Asia, sugar prices have
fallen rapidly this year. Bu1 several
counlries, including the Ukraine,
have reponed declining inventories
and are taking advantage of low
prices to stock up.
.
October sugar rose .41 cent to 8.81
cents a pound.
•

shon-lived: temperatUres are expect·
ed to rerum to normal next week.
greatly easing demand.
.
Augusl natural ps rose 2.9 cents
to $2.423 for each 1,000 cubic feet.
Sugar prices rose. sluuply on the
Coffee, Sugar and Cocoa Exchange
in New York as importers took
advantage of prices that recently fell
to 10-year lows for bargain shopping.

Jhdaa att.n-.-mtbul • Page 03

Pom roy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PleasaJ'lt, WV .

Sunday,.June 28, 1988

I

446-2342 or 992-2156

First of season will be

· selling across from
Big Lots Monday,
June 29, 10 am

•

�....

•
Page

04 e Jhnbq ~-•-)lrnhntl

60 Lost and Found
Found 1/2 Grown

Hlmalayn

90

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH e Point Pleasant,
11 o

Wanted to Buy

J ppatach1an Commum1y Vlsttlng

VIcin ity Porterbrook Subd1vislon

ver And G )IJ

7~139

DIII~Oil\i5 All I LA8

Nurse Assoc1at on Hospice and
Health Servtcas Inc Is seekmg

A ng1 Pre

9

70

Stertlhg Et

\

Yard Sale

MT~C1

712nd 7/3r d 9 5 539 Fourth
Avenue (2} Girls B•kes 1 Boys

81ke Chtld s Guitar Etc

1 -4 I

Anlu'lutl"i ~ .... p p •cr:•s p j 1 R liP
.ne An IQ 1% PomtH
o~
Au ss Moore w er 1-10 99~

2526

AI11!QUil~

Be Pllld In Advance

e 1'1

&amp;

Wli I' 1'1
hou~ah

AU Yard Sllet: Muat

I

l"p

AvenJe CaJ.I tJ

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

'"'P

f'l

P

1"1 I

lu F

r

'

Fit&lt;

1 Ot

0

992 65 "5

OliAQL!NE 2 00 p m

lho doy

mpP.rt Re-gistered Nurses to pro
11

.J

before lhe ad

BUYING TIMBERLANDS

11 10 run Sunday

nJ~

We ,m

.tltlon • 2 00 p m

Friday Monday ..ltlon

; top priers fur "

berland
11
LoJ1Y 1
or redav lv u 1 1~ o~
cr mbP &lt;! 1 ~ 1 r.h

• 10:00 1m Saturday

July 1st. 2nd 9 M 1es Out 218

btlAn C
I rtlt"i&gt;r (

Clothes Furn tture Household
'Steam Cleaner Childrens Items

rfl"'£:11111( "t\n
11~ ~ u p F 1f

torm&lt;1

~

n Call Toll Frra

obt gat
234 o wr

Moving Sale 2601 Patnot Road
7/ •&amp;t 712nd 8 4 F urn.~ure Bed
ding Home Interior Otshes
Clqthlng Tools Porch Swmg

e

, aoo nc a
P 8 1 8 Jhl

1

1
~

Core lln.: t60....,urr
V''V o:.ti05\

Mise

Aaln Or Shme 6/28 th 10 AM
Home lntenor Cratt Hems Furnl
ture Mise Clothes Off St FH 233
On Dry Ridge Road 2M Tratler

On Righi 740 379 2386 Or 740
379 2905

Clean Late til 1
Trucks 1990 /o 4f'lr1e
Smith Buck P'nt.,
ern Aver, o (,;Jill

"

d plo"!'la or G E 0 reliable tran s
purtauon telephone n the hOme
a &lt;1 w hng to work weekends &amp;
ltol days Must oe motivated and
I S:t:Lble Experience In provldmg
o rect care or working with older
ad .. ts a plus W II train St ate
le-'!lted nursJn~ assi-stan ts en
courag ed to apply A.ppllcatlons
are available !1t the Meigs County
Mu!lrpurpose Sen or Center Mu!
h&lt;&gt;r y He1ghts Pomerov OH .t. n
1:.0£ Employer
-\rbor:.

at Galltpo s •s curre ntly

8~11 1

~

1

10s

applic ations fo r AN s
ana LPN s We. are looki ng for
'depenoa ble applicants Mus t
have a valid Ohio AN or LPN 11
t ensf' Expenence In Long Ter m
Care 1S prefe rred Sene11ts are
a . . allable If you have any ques
t1onr:. please contac t Lisa Short
at 7 40 446 rtt2

72/8

Inside sa le Large movmg sale
June 27th &amp; 28th 405 Spr mg
A\le Pomeroy Look for yell ow
srgns Man y tlem s Se ct1o nal
sofa "'llvm g room suite dressers
lamps c ollee tab le kitchen
table refrigerator washe r dryrtr
freezer kmg stze walerbed d1sh
es kitc henware pi oneer stereo
sys tem b!rds Tand y computer
1986 Dodge Coli 1987 Chevy
Cavalier large pop up camper
porch swing to~s game s boys
clothes (s1ze med large 28 to 34
pants) women and girts clothes
and large mise For add 111onal m
fOrmation call740 992-6914
July 1 2 one m1le south of Tu p
pers Plains on SA 7 M sc Items
bar stools clothes
Ram or sh ine SR 124 Por tland
Oh io across from Portland park
June 25 ? New treadm 11 $225
good co lor TV $125 3x l 2 pool
solar c over an d oll 740 949
2065
Three ram11y garage sale ra in or
shme Tuesday 6/ 30/ 98 Wed
nesday 7/1 /96 formerly Jo s Gift
Shop Syracuse 25" Zemth color
TV excellent condttton new
dresses w1th tags c heap baby
clothes some l1ke new what nots
lamps toys good ladies clothmg
and cn.tdren s clothing

".?.'::".(,&gt;.:f,

,'

...._..,.

110

Career Opponunltlel

;r :"

I'

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES ,'

'\''

.A

-

Hl"!lpWanted

Arbors &lt;tl (
ac ep111 a 1il r
1. t)n lor tate
tested !HI !&gt; Q a&lt;..~ -,tants We
are took n 1 I r rlAprndot'lle ap
pl1canh B ~~~~am a~J1Iablfl
11 you ave un~ quest ons
pled!&gt;"' r Ia 1 l ;&lt;;&lt;.! ;,hart ;;I 4()
446..,.11&lt;'
Aroors At G l f"l!' 1s I c. Cut Pntl~
Accep tmg Appl at1br'ls Ftt AN
And LPN s WeAR LCOH'"'G For
Oependab to' 4rpl cant"- Must
HaveA VdldOhuRNO LfNl
cense E11.pene r;~ In l nJ "~ r
Ca re Is P e'" "
BF&gt; ft '" An~
Ava lable f You havB Any 0 J!'e;
IJons Pleasf' cor:ta
rl
At74(}446-7 tl.?
l"u r n y
Arbors AI Gn11 po 1::;
Acceptmg Appl c;;t ons F ~'""'
:rested Nu s no A
1
~t.~~
Are LOOki ng Fo, De per J 1t P p
pi cants 8 ,net 15 Are A\ :1 Jble If
Yo u Have Any Q Je~r qr
ifl1 A
Contact L Sa Short A! 10 146

7112

In Memory
In memory of

Cu18arr

Yard sale In Bashan across !rom
fire depanment Ju~ 1 4

on h1s B~rthday
June 28

Auction
and Flea Market

Oaa',

flo. wu-e adi'"Oirj "'M

A ck Pearson Aucti on Company
lull t me auci!Oneer complete
auc t1on
ser v1ce
L1censee1
166 Oh io &amp; West Vt rgl n a 304
n:J.s7as Or 304 n 3 5447

wtti t~lep
floa Cat&lt;jit "'"' to /au
a f'ea!w~,.v,

KnowtedgeaOie And Expenanced
lndtvtduals May Ha\18 An
OoportuMy F01 The FollOWing
Pas hans
• Account Representative (Galli
pots)
• Laboratory Information System
Specta 1st (Galhpol s)
• Cardwlogy Echo Tech (Galltpo
! s Jac~son )

• Rag ~lered Nurse (Gat11po Is)
• c;omp ter AppliCa tion Analyst
• 8 nijJu ler Tra n ng Coordinator
Employef Offers EKcellent
Benefits And Work
Envtronment Only Qualified
App teants Need Apply
M Equal Oppor tunity Employer
Send Resumes To
Human Relations Depanmenl
90 Jackson Pike
Gall1pahs OH 45631 t562

Ohio740 379 2720

Wanted to Buy

t'U'INCf

15 20 Acre s Along Slate Route
35 With Acces To H1ghway 740

Carleton School1Me1gs lndusules
seeks a subsrltute Health Servlc
es Coordin ator (RN or LPN) to
work with studants and adult&amp; with
developmental disabilities Must
be a reglsterad nurse or licensed
practical nurse currently licensed
m the State Ql Oh!o Sand reSume

to

m

In Memory

Call AI 740 2.45 5514 Ask For

John Or Kathy
Otlvers .QTR

SIISIISISISSISIISSISSSSSI
EAST OF
STLOUIS I
TEXAS
Home-IW-&amp;1
RUN

Great Pay Great Mile&amp; Full

Steve Beha Executive Director
Carleton School/Meigs lndustnes

PO Box 307
1310 Carleton St
Syracuse Ohio 45779
CHILO COMMUNlTV SUP
PORT PROGRAM WORKER I
CASE MANAGER 20 Hours Par
We ek Seeking Pe rson To Pro
v tde lnte ns1ve Case Manage
ment Services To The Mos t Pro
loundty Senously EmotiOnally Dis
tu rbed (SED) Children This Is A
Highl y VIsible Pos11ion In The
Communlry
Mini mum Ac c ep table Ouallllca
!Ions Bachelor Or A-ssociate De
gre e In Soc al Work Mental
Hea lth Te chn ol ogy "'urslng Or
Closely Related i=1etd Preferred
Atullty To Work Responsibly And
Independentl y As Well As In
Co ncert With A M1,1ltl Otsclpllnary
Clinical Team And Support Stat!
Ability To UtiliZe Gu dance An d
Super viSi on Vahd Dnvers Ll
eru;Eb-GoOd Driving Record And
A
ltable Vehicle For Transpor
Ia !ion
Beneflls Inc lude Paid Vacatio n
Paid Holidays 401K Retirement
Plan And More Sand Resume
And Letter 01 Interest To Judith
Smtih D•rector Trl County Mental
Health And Counseling Services
3t3 112 West Main Street Me
Arthur Oh1o 45651
Companion to l1ve In with elde rly
woman In Gallip ol is for room
board and wage prefer non
smoker non dnnker Relerences If
possible Please call 740 99:?

7572

Coupons for cash Earn up to
S200 per week clipping coupons
at home Free mformat1on 1 BOO
466 92'22 ewt 8865

.·•

It's verf hard to understand why some things have lobe
But in Ills wisdom God hal planned Beyond our
power to see
You are always in our lhoughls, dear son
Our gnef and !ears will never cease
Because we love you so
,\Jay God bless you and Keep you In IUs care
Loved and missed by Mom, Dad and famUy

9n Coving
}Vlemory
of our son

t;jaryCe
earter

11 0

Help Wanted

STNA's

on his 471h birthday
June 27'h

Veterans Memorial Hospita1 S~F Unit
1s looking for caring, dedicated

Always in our hearts
«thoughts

Apply in person at:

tnd lvtduals. STNA's preferred.
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Human Resources Office,

Dad dC jVIother

115 East Memorial Drive,
Pomero 0

~~

JOB OPPORTUNITY
In memory of Edgar

In

Hawks

who left us june 23, 1992
tbe stillness of the nlghl and day, we miss

you very much, but we fill your presence
every which way! I know we aU would love to
walk thru the door at home, and see your
bright blue eyes, and th at sneakJn' little grm
of yours layed back m your lounge chau-.
Buj we all know you're in a better place, free
&amp;om

all tbe pain and suffering you

went tllru.

•

But you held your head high, and still walked
and talked to your family, and friends till the

••

last day. And we know you are resting in

peace with our "Lord Jesus" And we

can

feel

you looking and smlling down on us, and
watching over all your family &amp; loved ones

•

•'

~

•

So Happy Birthday "Edd"June 27, 1998
Love &amp;om you wife Christlne~a wk.~ an~

ail of your family

POSITION
Community
Economtc
Development D1rector
QUALIFICATIONS : Degree 1n fields of public
adm tntstratton, busmess admtnlstratlon,
community planmng, commumty development,
applied economtcs or closely reliited fields
preferred Demonstrated ablhty in applymg
commumty economtc development process to
the solutton of commumty problems, espectaliy
1n rural area Success 10 wbrktng with a wide
range of clientele and orgamzaliOns, preferably
tl.- o ugh demonstrated management,
networking and collaborative skills Abthty to
communicate effectively, orally and In wnling
Candidates must be willing to work flexible
hours under mimmal supervision and as an
effecttve team member Preference wtll be
g1ven to candidates w1lllng to reside tn Meigs
County
SALARY $30·$40,000
Application Deadhne no later than July 13.
Refer Interested parties to the OBES off1ce ~
445 Buckeye Hills Road , Thurman, OH 45685
740·245-9509

; ~----------------~~----------------~
'

drlni&lt;O&lt;S ~7!5-1 704
SUIIMITTRANSPORTATION
Cll)onmgs For OTR O!IVOrs
• .291 Pwr Milo
• $12 50 Per Hour
• Unloading &amp; Drop Pay
• Poroonailzod Olopalch
• HomoWookly

Holiday Poy

• Medical Insurance

tSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS$$
Earth Tech One Of The NaUon a
Top Environmental Consulhng
Engineering And Remediation
Companies Is Seeking The Fol
IOwtng Temporary Full Time Peal
lions For Conalruc11on And Mine

LABORER • Manual

Companion to live wllh eldertv
woman for room 6 board Nan

Call 800 876 0680 Mon Fn 900

IIOO-Itl-4712

La~or

On

Construction Prolect Must Be
Able To LUI Up To 80 Pounds
Construction Experience Pr e
!erred But Not Required Some
Travel I ncluding Weekends Re

AMTo500P.M
Teacnlng positions available at
Carleton School Full lima and
substitute opportunities lor teach
ers w1th current Ohio Oeparrment
ol Educauon Teaching Certtlicate
To be considered lor tull11me em
ployment appl icants must also
have or be eligible to obtain Oh io
Department of Education multi
hand~apped

cerllllcatlon

Send resume by June 30 1o
Meigs Coun1y Board of Men1al
Aalardatlon and DeYelopmental

q&lt;Jred

Dtsabllnas

PO Box307

EQUIPMENT OPERATORS Er

Syracuse Ohio 45779

perleneed Equipment Operators
For Oemol!tlon Conarrucuon And
Excavation Removaf Laborer
When Needed Minimum 3 Years
Experience Operating Scrapers

LOCKHEED MARTIN UTILITY
SERVICES INC

{Self Loading Pan) D 8 Dozer

And 330 J350 EKcavator Con
structlon UI1Mty Or Roadwork EK
parlance Preferred Some Travel
Including Weekends Required
Drug Screen /Physical Required
App ly In Person On July 14th To
The Ala Grande One Stop Em
ploymenl &amp; Train ing Center Lo
caled At 445 Buckeye H1lls Road
Rio Grande OH 45674
Easy Workf Excetlenl Payl As
semble Products At Home Call
Toll Free 1 BOO 467 5566 Ext

12170

EKp Dependable D1esel Meehan
lc Wllh Own Tools Benefits Pro
v1ded Se nd Resume To ME
CHAN IC PO 80)( 109 Jackson

OH 45640

EKperlencad Auto Body man
Send Applications to CLA437 C/o
Gallipolis Oa11y Tftbune 825 Th1rd

Ave Gallipolis

Ohio 45631

Expenencecl In Residential Con
srruct10n Siding Framing Aooflng
Etc Own Hand Tools Phone &amp;
Transportallo n Call 740 38 8
9385 For Info References Re
qulred
Needed Energellc KIM And
Dedicated AN s And LPN s Inter
ested In Caring For People In
Our Progressive Long Term
Care Facility Must Be Sensitive
To The Needs Of The Elderly
Please Apply IN Person At
Scen1c Htlls Nursing Center 3t1

Buckrldgo Ad Bidwell

OH 45614

Oak H1ll Ohio Trucking Company
Looking For Experienced Sem1
Tractor l'raller Onvers Excellent
Pay &amp; Insurance Package 740
662~ 1

Part Time Olflce Worker Needed
General Office Skills Reply To
CLA 438 clo Gallipolis DallrTrlbune 825 Third Avenue Galli

pohs

Lockheed Martin Ur1111y Services
Inc The Operating Contractor
For The United Slates Enrk:hment
Corporation At The Gaseous Oif
fusion Plant Piketon Ohio Has
An Opening In The Following
Area

MEDICAL DIRECTOR
Direct The Actrvll1es 01 The Site
Health Services Center Whic h
Offers Preventive Med1clne Pro
grams And Medical D tagnos 1s
And Treatment In This Capacity
You Will Supervise A Med ical
Stafl Laboratory Technic ans
And Administrative Stall Perform
Some Clln cal Functions Control
Budget And Monitor Oual lty And
Compliance With Regulations
A MD Degree Oh io State Ll
cense And 10 Years Or More 01
Med1cal Practice (W1th At Least
5 Years In Occupational Medl
cine) Are Required Proven Man
agement Ski ll s And A Demon
strated Abil ity To Interlace WHh
Orner Managers And Community
Leaders Are Highly Benel cia!
Cerllf1ca11on In Occupattonal
Medicine Is Preferred Ce rtlllca
lion In Internal Medicine Or Fam
ltv Practice Medtclne Is A Plus
This Position Requ ires A DOE
Security Clearance Or The Abll tly
To Obtain Such Clearance Utthty
Services Offers A Compe t itive
Compensation And Benel1t s
Package Send Your Aesume To
Lockheed Marttn Utility Service s
Inc Attn Anlla Dever MS 113 1
P 0 Box 628 Piketon Ohio
4566t Lockheed Martin UUI1 ty
Servi ces Inc Is An Equal Op
po rtunlty Employer Committed To
Building And Maintaining A Ot
verse Work Force

Fast paced salon hlnng ln all 1.,..
eat10ns Athens store ttlrlng now
co smetologist &amp; recepUonlst cell

740 592 9707

Roofe rs and Sidin g Installers
Needed For Imme diate Employ
ment Apply In Person AI Chris
tlan s Constructi on 1403 Eastern
,-.ve GallipO lis OH 740 446

451 4

The University Of R10 Grande Announces An Openi ng For A
Twelve Mon th Part Ttme Po sl
tl ons As A Hall Dtrector Position
AvaJl able July 1 Responsiblllllas
Include T.he Provlsto n 01 Super
vision AI The Open1ng And Clos
lng 0 1 Re si dent Halt Of Ea ch
Te rm Enlorcement Of Provisions
OF Flesldence Llle Co de Main
tenance Of Records Of Students
Inven tory Of Roo ms And Ac
co un ting Fo r Hall Keys Super
wlsran 0 1 Resident As sistants
And Co nd ucti ng Week ly Meet
lng s To Monttor H ousekeeping
Mamren an ce And Safety Items
Repor t ing Housekeepi ng And
Main tBflance Problems Approval
Of App ropriate Fines And Dam
age Assessments For Hall tncld
enls Implement ation 01 Ap
proved Emergenc y Pro cedures
Designed To Prot ect T he Heallh
And Safety Of The Resi dents And
Serve As A Member 0 1 Tl'le Res
ldence Hall Judiciary Board Must
Have A High School 01p oma Or
Equivalen t Some College Pre
!erred Must Be On Duty E\lery
Fifth Weekend 01 The Term Oth
er Appropn ate Full T me Employ
ment ReqU1 r&amp;d Remuneration Is
In The Farm Of Apartment In The
Ae s1Cience Hall Including Cab e
Water Electric In ternet Access
Local An d L1mlted WATTS Line
Phone Service No Beneflls Inter
ested Ca ndida tes Must Complete
Off tc lal Unlvers1ty Aqpll catlon
Availa bl e At Th e Hu man Re
sou rC es Olllce Loc ated In Allen
Hall Applications Wlll Be Re
celved Unhl The Deadhne 01 July
6 App lications Must Be Sent To
Ms Phy lis Mason PHA Director
01 Human Resources University
Of A10 Grand e Campus Post Of
l1 ce Box F27 Rio Gra nde OH

45674 Far 740 245 4909 And E
Ma1i pmason@urgrg cc cdu EEO/
AA Employer

Sunday, June

1998

OH 45631

.11 0 • Help Wanted
ATTN: LP~s, RNs,
Reaplratory
Therapllta and
Paramedical
Become an AN or BSN
graduate and mcrease
your mcome wtthou\
gmng back to school! To
schedule your 1ntervlew
ln
Huntington
call
Robert Tallman by July
15 1·800-737·2222

no

HVAC
Installers
Needed
Send resume
or
apply in person:

Warner Heati~g
&amp; Cooling
P.O.

Box 8

Chester, OH

-

45720

Help wanted

DENTAL HYGIENISTS

Overbrook Cen ter

333 Page

For A Full Time LPN !Shifts 3 00
PM 1130PM&amp;IIOOPM
7 30 AM) Mull Be Senolllvo To
The Nood&amp; OF Tho Elderly
Plean Apply In Poroon AI Tho

992-e472 EOE

Front Desk Between 8 30 A M

Buckrldgo Road Bldwen OH
45614 IS Now AcctpUng Appllca

lions For Part Time Laundry And

Housekeeping Aides Ploatt All

ply In Pers on AI The Front Deak

Bolwoon 8 30 AM ·4 30 PM No
Phone Calls Plea..

P0

BQ• 216 Ganopolls OH 45631
POSTALJOBSTOS11.36/HR

WANTED- EQUIPMENT
MECHANIC

Inc Benellls No Experience For

App And Exam Info Call I 800
813 3585 Ext 6474 8 AM 9
PM 7Days Ids Inc

2546
OhiO unlverelly is an equal opportunity employer
High priority Is placed on the creation of an environment
supportiVe of women. mlnondee veterans. and persona WJth
dlsabiiHies

Seporote Garege Secluded Noar

Hotzl&lt;
0132

A&amp;~lng

195 000 740 441

3br home In New Haven 1230
tq rt Excellent 1tar1er home,

4 Bedroom Brlek VInyl Fenced
Yard Wal ~ Out Basement At
tached Garage 1/2 .ttcre lo1

740-245-9e20

Charming two atory home two
bedrooma corner lot fenced all
around two car oarage located In

Mlddloporl. vary good condition
80000&lt; 740-992 3041

Ewperlenced In Heavy Trucks

Equipment And Hy&lt;lra!Jico Sal

once Call Monday Friday From
8 D0-5 00 At 1 BOO 339 6518 For
Nt Appolnlmenl

Ohio River Clu&amp;
Lam&amp; Claulc

EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
WILDUFE JOB&amp; TO $21.10/HA.
Inc Benefits Garno Wordona
S..urlty Malntenaca Park Rang
ora No Exp Needed For App
And E•am Into Call I 800 813
3586. Ext 8475 8 A M 9 PM 7
Daytlds Inc

Saturday,

July 11, 1998
MEIGS COUNTY FAIR
GROUNDS
Pomeroy, Ohio
• Weigh In·

140

Buelneu
Training

Double wide 3br 2 bath only

$1 325 down $205 per month
• 800-69t.sm

Excellent neighborhood two bed
rooms Anderson tilt In windows
central heat and air (Lenno~~:)
front and back p!;)rthea lot size

147xB2 112 lmmodlalo occupan·

cy call 740.992 3041 or 740 992
3557

t.

GOV T FORECLOSE11,_ Homes
From Pennies On $1 Delinquent
Tax Repo s REO s 'Your Area

Toll Froo (I) 800·218 9000 E•l
H2814 For Currant Ullllngs

House for sale at 37!9 Salem

Stroot In Rutland 5 rooms &amp; bath

with garage and half buement

ENIIOLLfNG NOW

Out of 111o flood area call at 740.
742 2085
In Mlddl•porl· new kllcnon oak

BUSINESS

cablnels dishwasher disposal
heat pump three bedrooms bath

SUMMER QUARTER
STAATS JULV t
SOUTHEASTERN

9:00·11 :DO am
* Show Starts
at 1:00 p.m.•

'
1

COLLEGE

and 112 can 140.992 3465
1100-21+0452
July I·~ Large Vard 3 Bedrooms
ACICS Accredited
2 Baths !5 Minutes From Rto
Reo 190-05-' 2748
Grande 706-864 3493
SCHOOLHOUSE ROCK GOT Loaded 28x80 3~r 2 112 bath
YOU STARTEO But Your Em
an opllons only $2 499
ployor May Demand A LIUit with
down
1362 per month Fr.. .Or &amp;
More Let Us t&lt;eep You Learning
Train AI N1ghl Take Adult Train &amp;klrl 1·888-691-6777
lng AI Buckeye Hilla Career C.n Lovely Country Home On SR 7
740-446'4387

Entry Fee-

$10.00 per lamb

•Only form of permanent harr removal
•Safe and effecttve
•Major med1cal jOurnals document success
•Works on all skm colors, hair colors, and
half types

tar Let Us Know Your Interested

Fall Reglalrallon 11 Open In July
Stop In Or Call For A Brochure
740·245·5334 Financial Aid
Available To Those Who Ouallly
1~

Free ltlltlal consultation Contact:
SANDRA MCFAR'LAND, Llcenaed Electrologist
760 First Avenue, Galllpolla, Ohio
446-1991/888-441·1900

Sc 0011

South With A Breatl'ltaklnQ River
View Very Private Silting On 2 II
2 Acres But Only 10 Minutes

From Cl.OIIpolil 3 -4 Baclrooms 2
112 Balhs Hardwood Floors 2
Fireplaces New Heat Pump, New
Kitchen Many Extras Wont Last

Ina ruction
Longll SII o000
LOOKING FOR JOB But Call Virginia L Smllh Really AI
Short On Skills? G In Skllll In 740 446 8~08 Or Call Cora AI
One Yea r Of Tral lng In The 740 245 9430 For More lnforma·
Evenings Buckeye 1111 Career
Center Continues 1 Its 22nd

~

Year Of Operation Tral
Adult Maaon modular home 2Bx70 on
100X100 tot three bedrooms two
Basic Educalion GED To
SUo Office Technology. Welding lui baths living room/ dining mom
o fam room/ kitchen comlnduatrlel Maintenance Peace
Officer /Correction&amp; SUCCESS b uUIIty m. working fireplace

710 Autos for Sale

FOR SALE

Auto Technology Air Condition

lng

&amp;

Nurse Aide) MRIDD Pro·Em·
ploymenl Trftlnlng And More

can 740 245 5334 For Cllalog
And Information

180 Wanted To Do
ANYOOOJOBI
Shrubs &amp; - s !rimmed ..,lch
lng flower bods landscaping
sidewalk edging. mowing
etc

Free Estimates Call Bill

- ~75-7112

Circle ·N Convalescent Home

Public Sale and Auction

Hao 2 Openings Elderly Or Hand

lcapped Person In My Home

740-44' '536
CUSTOM FIT BUILDERS

AUCTION
LEMLEY'S AUCTION BARN

Mark Cronk. Owner ,.,.o 671
1376 Windows Siding Doors
Roofing Llcen&amp;ad and Insured

8580 St Rt. 588 (Old Rt. 35)_Galllpolll, Ohio
740·245-9056 or 740-245-9886
We have a sale every Friday night at 6 30 Items to
1nclude household glassware furmture, tools
ant1ques miSe 1tems Every week has something
different! Lots ol fun come &amp; enjoy our smoke-free
bUIIdmg G1ve us a calld you have somethmg to sell
We also qo estate sales
.. 2nd Fnday mghl ol every month IS our enltque sale!

cen

, privacy fence

two

car

Healing Farm Butlnoaa oarogo appllancO&amp; lnclude.d 740

Pl1nntng Anel~als Computer
Specialist Cuatomer Centered
Healthcare Technician (Forrn~rly

1996 Chevrolet 5·1 0 4X4
Pickup with extended cab and
third door. Loaded with
bed liner. $15,000.00.
Call 740·992·2136 and ask for
Sheila or Desiree.

Ex~rlenced carpenter will do remodeling deeka vinyl aiding
plumbing Free estimates C1!1
Jl"1 Sh~ll 304·675 1272 Rafer

OncMuponroqulll
Furnnure repair refinish and res
toratlon also custom orders Ohio

Valley Rtllnlshlng Shop Larry
Phillips 740-992-6576

Jfamllq ~~mn-Jtmtimi• Page 05

WV

payments 2br, 2 bath financing

M llablo 304-758-5566

FREE OOUBLE·WIOE
Slop by Oakwood HomO&amp; of Nl
tt OakwoOd

Homeo ol Nllro, WV

Huge 28r80 3BR 1 112 bath
Starling at ONLY $39 999 Many
options awallable

3426

1 888 928

Grande ArM ' 706 804 3493

3 Bedrooms Wltl'l Basement

(ATTENTION DEVELOPERS,
CAMPGIIOUND

COUNTRY ESTATES)
36 28 Acres Approx 8 Aero
Lake. Mo~lle Homo Willi Largo
Add On Gallll CUy Water And
Eloctrlc $125 000 More Acroogo
Available 740.388-8878.

r--------~ I

Country Soiling No Pols $4751
Plus Oeposl\ 740-446-1062
3-4 br hou.. localed In Pomeroy

Mo

PRIME LOCATION
414 Third Ave. Gallipolis
Beautiful two story Colomal has 3 BR, 2 1/2 bath,
LA &amp; FA Formal dtmng room wtth hardwood floors,
oak (loors &amp; trim Ftreplace, 1 1/2 car garage
Close to cny schools Elig1ble for. tax abatement
$175,900
1·304·273-2940

WOOD
BEALTI', INC
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS OHIO45631
Alleq C Wood, Broker 446-4523
Ken Morgan, Broker 446 0971
Jeanette Moore, • 256·1745
Patncta Ross
740-446-1086 or 1-800-894·1066

co

1147- GREEN SCHOOL DISTRICT 3 bedrooms 2 bath
full basement w11h nice lot

RENTALS

410 Hoo- for R~t
2 Bedrodm Cottage On Bulavllle
112 Mile From Parter NO PETB,

Water Traoh Paid 740·388·
1100

1141- Spacious home overlooking beaullful Ohio River
situated on approx 54 acres Call about lhls one
120011- Price H11 liMn Reduced to $23,000 oott on this

10 N.re Tract of Land w~h approx
available mineral righls

9

acres wooded Ulll

14004- 1987 Clayton mob1ie home 2 bedroom t bath
C8H for more InformatiOn

Large selection of used homes. 2

or 3 bedrooms Starling at $2995
Quick delivery Call 740 385
11621
LIMrrED OFFER

IIKJ06. PRICED REDUCED
great 1nves1men1
opportunity· 3 one bedroom apts a 2 bedroom mobile
home· easy 10 rent Check on this property

1998 Ooublewlde 0 Down $295
month Free delivery &amp; aet· up
no land needed Only 1t Olk·

111001 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY In town locatln
Comm Bldg Apt Bldg. 2 house s Get all four for one

prtcel Call for more Information

Nhoo, WV 304-755-

3BR/2BA

1145- Home located 1n city schools 3 bedrooms 2 bath.
ranch home

New 14 or 18K80 Only make 2
payments to move In no pay

mentsahor4yrs 304 755-7191
TAX SPECIAL
New 3br $999/down $189/mo

School&amp;

Free Set up &amp; Delivery Only 3

LeiU Only at Oakwood Homes Nl

""wv 304 755-58~

Dream Catch
BUSINESS

Pomeroy, SA 124 beaulllul river
view home •with wrap around
porch pi cturesque setting de
acrlbll this three bedroom one
and 112 bath with basement and

PROPERTY FOR
LEASE
,
modern log structure
wnh SA 7 frontage
between Chester end
Tuppers Platns, OH
epprox 1000 sq ft
Oftlce/retatl Space Large
Parktng Area
Call 985-3324
Evenlnge

Ill'• 740-247 3844
Three bedroom spill level new 3
car garage with a one car garage
In basement lamlty room laundry:
pantry In tJasemenl many new ex
tra• Very nice hOme moving be

cause of wor1&lt; 740-742-4000
Two bedroom hOme In Middleport.
huge very nice corner tot 740

992

AnthOny Land

350 Loll &amp; Acreage

304-75HW

polnlment 740-992 5243
NEW COHaTRUCTION eeau
t"ullWo Story Colonial 414 Third
Avenue Gampolle Close To
Moro Homt Ellglblo For Ta•
Abatement $175.900 Call 304
273-29&gt;10

tion on Main StrMt pt Pleaaant

tro WV &amp; register to win free
doublawidt no gimmicks Only

Stt Up On Lot Taka OVer Pymfs
304·736 7295

Room Oak 'ftlm Flreetace Much

~~ac~roorn

740-441 0772

Middleport beautiful two story 3
br 2 bath large I r &amp; lr oak
doora A trim Smiths custom oa k
cabinets Jenn air range dish
w11har detached garage by ap

Bath&amp; LR &amp; FR Formal Dinino

choice 11&gt;01 Roady tor sin
glt wide double wide or build
homo One milt from Ohio River
Boat Romp on 124 - 10 For1ced
and .. ,up Only $187 OB per Run Start Park price reduced
month with $ t 075 down Cell 1
7&lt;40-66Nl222
1100-637 3238

New 1998 I 4x70 three

Includes e months FREE lot rent
Includes skirting delu~~:e 11eps

Real Estate General

3 Btdroom1 2 Bath HouM 11'1 AIO

0

wood Homoa
5885

2 112

,
• ,,2 aeTII water elec:rrtc and

320 Mobile Home•
8 acr81 or 2 acre loti on Bethel Newly remodeled with new carpet
'
for Sale
NEW BANK AEPO S Only 3 llfll Ad wv No slngtewldes 30 -4 and kitchen cabinets $450 per
under warranty owner fl· 175-1948
month and security depoalt 74o71 Buddy "allor 12x&amp;5 w/12x26 Still
available
304 755
992-ll914 antr lij&gt;m
add on $5000 OBO coli HO nanctng
7191
lAUNER
LAND
6&amp;7 6251 or 740 667 3884 allor
3br house off Rl 67 behind Old
7«1-441-14112
5pm
New Doublawldo 3BR 2 bath
Good "rlmu Tavern $200 mo
SI 325 Down &amp; $205 per rno I Meigs Co Rutland Whitea Hill $100 dapoalt 2br mob1le home
79 Uberty 1 4K70 three bed
888-9283426
Rt 87 bosldo Old Good
rooms fireplace $8500 call 7o40.
Rd Roady To Sell! I I 6 Aero&amp; oil
Tlmu
992.4l)2()
$14.000 Or 9 Acres $12 ooo 458 1869Tavern $125 mo 304
Pomerov 4 bedrooms a/ref
newly rodocoralad HUD oo pelt Danville SR 325 Nlca Wooded 9
OAKWOOD HOMES
SID small yard/ patio 740 992 Acret Sl 7 000 Clly Walor Dyes
I •5 BEDROOM HOMES FROII
Racln Sellabratlon 0 Down 6 99
ville Hunters Vary Remote 11 +
14,000 Local Gov 1 &amp; Bank
8886
APR 304-736-3409
Acres $10 500
Ropo a Call ' 800 522 2730 x
Slnglo Partnl Progrtm Special
1709
12xeo Trailer Good Condition
financing on 2 3 &amp; 4 bedroom !Jollie CO Gefllpollt Neighbor·
$:! 800 740-448 37Qe
homes Plymentl as low 11 hood Rd Nice 10 Aero Building
'TWo bedroom house Front Street
SUIO
CBII
now
;J04-75S.5885
SilO
$19
000
Or
22
Acru
W
ith
M11on
wl fence in yard tur
14 x70 3BR $999 Down &amp; ONLV
$21 500 Cash Price nial'led with refrigerator stove
$179 per rno Froo air &amp; !roo skirt Specie! 16x80 3BR 2 ~ath Pond
Friendly Ridge Nice 19 Acre•
washer &amp; dryer Oeposl1 required
lng ' 888-928 3426
It 325 Down $205 Mo Frao air $18 000 • S2 000 Down + $2121 No plla Ronl $300 month -Call
Mo Or 8 5 Mel $7 500
304 n3-56()olafter 5OOpm
14x70 3br $999 down $198 per &amp;froo tklrtlng 1-800-691 .em
rno lree all &amp; skirting 11100-691
&amp;PAINO SPECIALS
Two bedroom In Pomeroy $300
Call For Free Mapa + Owner Fl
e1n
t4ttDawn
nanclng
lnlo
Take
10%
Off Listed per mont11 $300 deposit pay own
ttFlxacluiiiiUes no pelS 740-992 2381
Prtcol On Coli&gt; PurchaiiSI
"x70 Champion 2br new bath
11t&amp;'Mo.Paymtnll
~ l g living room CIA $4 500
Sl7.lttlon 3Bll
Lot for 11le 1 2 acre• In Syra
304-675-7117
-DollverylSoloup
cusa $12 000 740-992-4!5411
420 Moblla Homes
OnlyAIOiilwocJd18x80 3b&lt; 2 bath Sl 325 down.
Nibo. Wll 304-7&amp;WNII
LOt lor sate 1 5 acres located In
for Rent
$205 per mo Free air &amp; aklrl ,
Syracutt Village on Roy Jones
888-691-Bm
12x65 Trailer w/1 acre of la nd
Rd 19000 740-992-4561
14x70 trailer w/2 acres of land
1983 Champion 50x12 l wo bod 'TWo 2 bedroom trailer• 10x50 &amp;
L.ot tor sale· Gallipolis sox 172
Wlll ..ll or rent 304-576 2890
rooms 199o4 Spruce Ridge Sky· 12x65 1tove and refrigerator
nlct neighborhood qultl 740
line 72x14 two bed {ooms two gas New Lima Rd must move
2 a 3 bedroom mobile homes
448-4722
740. 7'12 2803
balhl 740-1143-5327
$260 S300 sewer water and
1987 14x60 2 Bedrooms Good Obi IWD I Bought Won I Fll My Lata tor aale~publ l c water a ltW· traah Included 740-992 2167
Shape 6x I o Dee~ Vinyl Skirting Lot Must Sell Will Deliver &amp; Set tr double wldea ONLYI no aln
2 bedroom mobile home In
glt-wkfea 304-773-5944
8xl0 Oulbulltlno Asking Price Up I 1100-363-6862
Raclno 00 polS 740-992 5656
18 500 740-446-3409
Racine- Dorcas/ Greenwood Ct·
330 Farm• for Slle
motery RdJ Oa~ Grove Rd I 5
2 Bedroom Trsllor ClOse To Gal
1989 Clayton Mobile Homo 2
II acres 740 992-e542 or 740· llpolls 740-2!16-6574
112 Acrea Houaa Workshop
Bedrooms 18 ooo 740.3811-9675
Outbuildings Wulern Gsllla 949-2•99
2br $250 month no pets refer
County $95 000 Equipment
1995 14•50 2 Bedrooms 1
encao required 304-675-6984
Available Separately 61•·239·
All Electric With Stove &amp;
360 Real Eetate
orator
lin cluojod, 8658
Air conditioned two bedroom
Must Be
Wanted
trailer on Front Street In Middle
340 Buelnlll and
258-6040 Or
port ready to move Into Call to
Caah P1ld For Lind In Gailla
Building•
apply al 304·892 2399 ask lor
1995 Clayton 14x70 all oloclrlc
County Blackburn Really. 740· Aimee Conlnletor welcomolf
excellent condition call Tom An
Commerclai·Oitlce or Retail 87
oWB-0008
derson 740-992 3348
Mill Sl Middleport 1.450 Sq Fl
$400 mo Corner Building 740 Small HOu.. Or Troller In City Of
ABANDON HOME Make 2 pay 992
6250 Acquisitions lntxt Gallipolis Close To Stores, For
men1s assume loan owner fl
RHionablo Prlc&lt;i 30-1-675-7743
door)
nanclng available 304-758-7191
We Buy Land 30 ·500 Aerts
Divorce Forces Sales Take over Commercial sala building w/3
We Pay Cash I 600.213 1315
apts lower end of business sec

949-9004

3 Bedrooms

Sale

7493 anytime

12015- Vacant land 2 75 acres more or less located orr
Stale Routa 218
Draetlc Price Reductlonll • NOW $79,90011
410 Hedgawood Drive· Cozy and Comfurtablell
New listing offers 4 bedrooms, aqulpped kitchen,
washer &amp; dryer on ma1n floor, garage and one
carport Formal dining room Ntce royer area on
2nd floor. This would be a wonderful home to
rettre In or to start your new family close to
downtown shopping and schools Give us a call
fur your personal showing. 1404

12012 Ap~rox one acre lot located on Island Ave ,
Gallipolis
TAKING APPUCATIONS FOR NEW 2 SEOROOM
APARTMENTS IN GALUPOUS CITY SCHOOLS, NEAR
HOSPITAL CALL FOR INFORMATION

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
(740) 446·3644

Georges Portable Sawmill don t

haul your logs to ll1o m~l just call
304-675-1957
•Painting. Plumbing Remodeling
Any And All Odd Jobol Froo Ea·
llmaiOI 740-245-5151
Professional Tree Strvlce Stump
Removal Free Estimates! In

suranco J!ldwoll Ohio B14·388
61~ 367 7010

Will take care of the elderly In
their home Experienced Refer•

1111C817-~

FIN ANCIAL

HOUSE FOB SALE
A little country In town large restored VIctorian home
Private setting but within walking distance of schools.
churches and Middleport bustness dtstrlct Brick
circular drive wtlh 12 acres of land Asking $149,000
but will conSider any offer
only1

210

Buelneu
Opportunity
tNOI"ICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO

wtnged Gnff1ns oak bookcase, oak oval library table,
oak dressers, ball &amp; claw stands. lincoln rocker, feint·
1ng couch. chopp1ng block, mahogany chest, VIctor
VIctrola table top model• (needing workl, and
more• II
LAMPS: COLLECTION OF OVER 100 OIL LAMPS
INCLUDING Rayo Aladtn f1nger lamps, miniatures,
Camphens. shlps lamps, PoliCe lantern, several whale
oil lamps, bracket lamps, mtners lamps, Sunshine
lights St1ck Lights. depression &amp; lots colored pale pur·
pie from no magnestum &amp; morel! I Just great collection
TRAINS. Marx Seaboard, American Flyer 11342,
Ltonels #490., 666 400, 242, 1060 plus more. Also
smgle cars, Uonels #804, 805, 806, 807, 654, 655,
657 1680 1682, tenders &amp; more Track, swHches,
books otl cans, swttch light lanterns, Otler, transform.
ers &amp; morelllll
MWC.; Datsy Buck Rogers B B Gtn, fishing equip·
ment. baskets, cast tron kettle w/splder, sapak sktllet
wttndtan fancy p1cture frames. Dazey churn,
stoneware old tools, AcCordion; drum; dytstrrw, lots
moemtsc

recommenda that you do bull
ntll with peopll you ~now, 1nd

NOT 10 oond money through the

mall until you l'lave 1nveatlg1ted

' 1111 of(orl~

FIIEE

1-800-536·1146

CASH

GMNTSI
CO!ege SCholarahipa.

e..-MedlcatBIIfl
-rRepay.
C.V1blfrM
1too-21flo9000 Ell G- 2614
HOIIIIIV 1101/TE

• Earn Up To $85K Par Year Part
• Time Aulocklng Local Storea
• Willi Namo &amp;rend Ladll&amp; Hoalory
No Sailing Aooounlt Provldtd
Your 114 100 lnvtat Ia Saoured
By lnvl Call 1 &amp;D0-758·41181 An
ytttna

Old store counters from Kerr Hynler Hardware atgra m
I

•••••••ee••••••
IIEOICALIILUNO
1'/ork On Your Computar FuN Or
Pari nme Procatalnq lnourance
Clalma For Doctor&amp; And DeMilio
~ltalnlnll.

CUINTI l'IICMOEO

SOI)oi33.1108 Ext 28ol

(NO
JUST GREAT MEAiC~INDISEIII "
Terms Cash or check w/pos
no credit cards,
phone bide accepted
REFRESHMENTS AVAILABLE
Welcome to come early and lookl

2Acrea With 3 Bedroom House

Immediate occupal1cy 7.40 742·

•~Y Commensurate With Experl

THIS

310 Homtl for &amp;lie

Seenlc Hills Nursing Center 311

By July 8 1996 To Gallla County

Albans Oh1o d1smanlled years ago &amp; been In J(orage,
some poplar boards approx 13' long 11' wide
Wonderful lumber &amp; morel

for
Modern HOme In Vinton. With VI·
nyl Siding AC HP Nice CarptU
Finished Bo..ment On 2 Lola All
$55000 740-596-1929

430PM
Scenic Hlllt Nursing Center 311 ready 10 mcwo In All appliance•
Buckridgo Rd Bidwell OH 4!541 14 135 ooo 304o882·3n2
Is Now Accopling Appllcalions 3br 2 lull bath&amp; UR LR DR
For Friendly Outgoing And De large kitchen fully equipped
pendablo STI'IA a Please Apply large foyer, 2 car attached ga·
In Pel1on AI The Front Desk Bel ;~ Gallipolis Ferry 304 675
......,&amp;:lOAM -430PM

Position Open For Part·Time Hu·
mane OftiCir For Gallla County To
lnveallgale Anlmel Abuse Ne
glect And Cruelty Caae&amp; Sue
ceuful Completion Of Ohio
Peace Officer a Training Valid
Driver's License And Dependable
Transportation ReQuired Must
LOY&amp; Animals Preference Will Be
Gtyen To Candidates With Prevl
ous E~tperlence And /Or Knowl
edge Of Ohio An im al Cruelty
Laws Pay By The CaH Plus Mile
age Liability Insurance Provltted
If lnlereated Please Submit Re·
sume Including Three Aelerences

Full time (4 Day Week) and
part time position
Public Sale and Auction
available. Excellent salary,
HOWERY'S ANTIQUE
benefit and bonus
AND COLLEt::TmLE SALE
package. Up to date office.
Store Ftxtures
Trams
100 011 Lamps
Fvrmture
For more information
Sunday July 5 1998 at 11 00 am at the Howery
AuctiOn House located..f;l mt W of Athens, Oh10 on Rt
call
50 &amp; 32 S1gns will be Blbng highway
FURNITURE, Oak Dough kttchen cabmet oak flat(740) 592-1483 or
walls super tall oak Hotel Washstand wgh claw feet,
laney
oak stdeboard 4 drawer oak file cabinet. walnut
(800) 923·7329.
vtctonan washstand mahogany couch wtth large
CASE MANAGEMENT COORDINATOR
PosmoN Case Managemenl Coordinator (Approx
24 hours per week)
Ohto University College of Osteopathic Mediclne
SALARY· $16.000 $18.000 plus excellent lrmg
benefits
AVAILABLE lmmedtetely follOWing search
QUALIFICATIONS R N and bachelor's degree
required, professtonal certtllcation as Case Manager
strongly praterred Required axpenence Includes a
minimum of 3 years as AN. case management
experience preferred, utilization/quality management
preferred Must have excellent mterpersonal and
communication skills. Compu18r experience In word
processing, database management, and a mall
required Occaaional travel required
BESPONSIBIUTIES: Coordtnates medical care and
services for injured workers, develops end monitors
medical treatment plans, evaluates &amp; implements
treatment/services wtlh phystcians, ects as !Iatson
between community healthcare provlders Injured
worker and employer revtaws end evaluates diagnosis
coding, performs quality assurance of medtcal
records staffs utilization review committee, conducts
on-site Interviews and assessments, other related
duties
APPLICATION DEADLINE. BY JULY 15, 1998,
please submit a resume wlth&gt; names/telephone
numbers of three profeB&amp;Ional leferences to Antle M
Kochis, Human Resources Admmlstrator, Oh1o
University Collage Of Osteopathic Medlclne, 015
Grosvenor Weet, Athens, Ohio 45701 (740) 593-

REAL ESTATE

Ia Now Accepting Applications

time and part ttme STNA post
tlons available for all shift&amp; an
yone Interested please atop by
and rill out an application 740

Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

~iiiiiiiiii~~~~~O~H~o~me~e~kw~~~~~~~3~~~M~®~I~Ie~H~om.~~~~~3~~-~L~==~.~A=c=~====~4~10~H=®=_.==f~«~R~~t~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Scenic HHio Nurtlng C.nl8r 311
Buclcrldge lid Bidwell OH 4!54114

SlroOI Middleport Ohio hU full

Animal Welfare League Inc

28, 1998

Help Wanted

110

ELECTROLOGY fACTS

3 Betwoon 85

\

•

Sunday, June 28,

..,o, K -vacatiOn

Benefila COL A&amp;
1 Yr om Aoq

Reelamation SilOs

In Loving
Memory of our
son,
Larry Beaver,
Jan. 15, 1954 to
June 28, 1996.

''!Jaa;lr.tet&gt; /ff/JI'"y •

696 2128

fu ll and part t1me poaltlons Paid
vacalloo and hoMavs If Interest
ad please apply In person Mon
day through Friday 9am 4pm
Write attn Georg1a Bose R N
D 0 N 200 SOuth Rllchle Avenue
Ravenswo od WV 26164 304
273 9385 EOE Glenmarkl Genl
11sl Eldercare Faality

WOt'

"!t fotiu1~.. a¢l'ft,J'J'

Available I 740 379 2720

A11l1t1nt1 Ravenswood VIllage
Is no w accepting appliCations lor

The family of Marvin T Grlfftn would like
t o thank everyone for their prayers,
flowers, food and cards In the death of our
husband and father We also want to thank
Dr Bashar AI·AIIe, Dr Mark Walker, Jan
Holcomb of Hosp1ce, and the nurses of 4We st of Holzer Hospital, the Reverends
Danus Underwood and Charles Mash, the
smgers, Margaret Ftnn1cum and Dessie
Holco mb and the Cremeens Funeral
Home May God Bless All of You.
Wife, Betty Griffin;
and children Vick1e, Bec:ky, 'Teresa,
Charles and

arw.t t.tiJJirp'&amp;
I a.r ro ;r~atlJM• Wt/'"e

Complete Household Or Esta1es1
Arry Type Of Furniture Ap pllanc
es Antiques Etc Also Appra tsal

110 Help Wanted
110 Help Wanted
AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Orlvor N-d For Local Compa
Spear, 304-sn;.t429
ny Class 8 COL Tanker license
ATTENTION Certified Nurolng Requ ired If Interested Please

Card Df Thanks

,.,..,tMJ.,.,"! to Je
ttm! a~tl!fdlf~tt't0.,.
(~ lrfo.

Wedemeyer s Auct on Ser v ce

90

Appltcat ons are ne1ng accepted
1or In Home Careg vers Apptlc

.~cr-ofln9

All Yard Selea Must Be Paid In
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
dey before the ad It to r un
Sunday &amp; Monday editio n
I OOpm F~day

Gaii~Jolls

i'IIF-w r
t.,n

Wanted r.. (l" 1 Any ~,..;anoH n
Call 74 1H8 q 1 Z C ~40 446

810 So ut h Secon d Middl eport
June 27 thraugn July 4

80

l

Jo$ D A I '
· w ecKeo,A" ~atv~yeO
304 773 f 0:13

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

vrde cnre lo c tents 111 the11 homes
-111
hou rs {evenings e!nd wee
k~t&lt;'1 j~J Cua1tf1ed AN s must have
" m n mum ot one year or recent
~.; mJCaJ exper ence 1n a home
r:Me or acute care seHmg excel
ent commumcauon an d problem
"' 1J1ng skills and tlexlbiiiiV Con
tac1 Barbara Allen Human Re
&lt;=c urces 01rec1or at 740 59 4
82Z6 w1th mqutrles or send your
rpsume to P 0 Box 768 Atne ns
Ofl ( 45701 EOE

ants should nave a h1g h school
r

wv

~~1~1~0~H:;:e:;:lp:;:W:;:a:;:nt:;:ed:==~11~0~H~e;lp:::W:;a:=n:;ted7=~11~0~H~el~p=-W~a=-nt~ed7=

Help Wante

Absolute Tor.; D 1 a

Male

•

••••••••e••••••
MYPIIOIIII,IIOK/Yt

Lowell Prlcat Local SHu Avail·
rt111a ~7U2Uirt

230

Frola11lonal

MEIGS COUNTY
BLAST FROM THE PASTI Stagecoach laycMit'-lJ
converted to 6 day carry-ouVdrlvelhru •Plus 2 apt&amp;
Call Shaula 992·5054 833-M
•
ACRES Cook Rd
Shaula 992-5054

Huntlng/homeelte

II()

Call

LOT OF LOTS· 9 building lots approved septic
and Tuppere Plains Water available Call Shaula
992·5054 623-M
Frae Oat.• 2 BR. 1 52 Car garage, pond, acreage
Call Shaula fur lnfD. 992-5054 624·M
BEAunFUL LOG HOME, convenient locat1011
near stores, hospital, and major highways 610·M
Call Shaula 992·5054

S.l'\icH
Llvlngsron 1 buement

water

AUCTIONEER: AODNEY HOWERY

proofing an baaamanl ropalrt

1 ~00 264 6390 or 1 740 698·7231 or 1-740·594·31;40

guaranleo uyra on lob ••pari
- 304-615-2145

done, fret estlm1111, llftllmt

3 MORE ACRES- SR 33· Mobile homa plus 10
acres Meigs tax:B&amp; with Athens convenience 615·
M Call Shaula 992-5054

•

•

'

NEW LISTING· ON THE BANKS OF THE OHIO
AND FROM THE KANAWHA RIVERSI
This home features a Front Format Foyer Entrance
that Is tiled and hB8 Contemporary Euro Ughllng A
Library/parlor w/recessed callings Formal Dlmng
Room w/Oak Floors Bedroom Sutle shows a
Recessed Octagonal Ceiling w/fan French Doors
leading to a PRIVATE DECK, tiled main bath Walk In
closet. FAMILY ROOM has FRENCH DOORS
leadlng to the back patio with lots of windows A
modern Euro Kitchen w/lsland connecting the
Breakfast Boom to the kitchen 2 skylights An oak
stairway leads to the Upper Laval three Large
wtwalk In cloeata. Lg Tiled bathroom
and an exercise room. Basement
anct a flraplace 2 Car Garage. 2 G11
2 heat pump1. Security system Lar11e back
river deck Shaded front lawn w/loll of pl11111. &amp;
City Schooll
USTING- Fairview Rd Springfield Twp 2 714
Acree Beautiful Horne Site. All. 01018 to the new
IndUstrial park "

WARRANTEI).. Well·bullt
Very Good Buy! Th1s 2 story home
4 yrs old Nice size rooms
BR, 2 baths. LR, DR offers 1400 sq It on a noce large lot Located on
kit w/handmade oak Laurel St This Is the one you ve been wa1t1ng
I
utility rm Great nver view for· Ava1lable on a land contract to a quaiHfed
front porch

RACINE· Comfortable home located on 4th St Closa to school bank. post off1ce This 2
home oilers 3 BR. Bath. LR, OR, Kit w/etove &amp; OW V1nyl siding Porches Some
araO.. &amp;strewberrllll
niCe yatd In good neighborhoOd

'

$111,000 l'llrtlefd Centenary Rd. One IICre more or
1881 Modular homes acc:epted and Secllonal Hom111
No Single Wldlll
$21,000.00 BUHL MORTON RD 5.88 Acree
Surveyed Wooded Modular Homsa Accepted and
sectional Homes.
5 ACRES PI-"' Hill, can be dMded Great home
anes Moatly flat
4 CITY LOTS- Home ella or Duplex
USTINGS NEEDED- Thinking ol eelllng your home·
give us a call Todayl .A.IIk what we can do lor youl

•'

Don t know tf you Cdil ~fford to buy a home?
Let 11S P'&lt;'-qlt.tllly youloclay' Caii1-740·992·24D3

�•

.

Po~eroy Middleport~

Gallipolis, OH •

•

· 420
·

Mobile Homn
lor Rent

Nice Two Bedrooms. 2 Baths, All

Eioetrlc. Central Air, Oel&gt;osit And
Reterences Required No Peta,
7~ L - Nulri&gt;tr,
Three bedroom mobile nome In
Po1111f01', no pots, 7~992-585&amp;.
Trailers lor rent 2br &amp; 3br, quailIllS lot HUO. J04.n:l-5944.

TM&gt; bedroom troller wtth expand&lt;,
closed In porch. In Tupper&amp;
Plain&amp; , $275 month plus deposit
and udtltlts. 7~987-3457 .

440

450

Room a
Sleeping rooms with cook~ng.
Also trailer space on rlver 1 All
hook-ups. Call after 2:00p.m..

304·n3-!!113t , Meson wv.

460

. 992·2218.
1 Bedroom Apartment For Rent In

Rio Grande, 740-245-0114 After 6
P.M.

-

2' Bedroom Apartm8nt In Gallipo·

lis, Oeposlt , No PaiS, 740·388·
8826.
2bdrm. apts .. total e!ectric. ap·
pllances furn ished, laundry roorr
· lacllltles j Ctose to school in town
Applications available at: VIllagE
Green Apts . 149 or call 74o-992·
3711. EOH.
,_;___;__

____

- 3 room, partly furnished, down·
· rown Pt. Pleasant, deposit &amp; ref·
erences reQuired. 740..44 1-on2.
Apartment For Rent: 76 VInE
Street, Gallipolis, Ohio. 740-367·

Space Approx. 718 af Wltn Plenty
Of Parking Located : 26 Cedar,
Gollpoila. 7~256-8881 .
Mobile nome site available betWIIn Athena and Pomeroy, call
7~385-4367 .

MERCHANDISE
Household

Appliances :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges. Refrlgralors, 90 Day Guarante61

Frenoh City Maylag , 740·446·

- 7195.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers , dryers. re! rlg aralors ,
ranges . Skaggs "ppl\ances, 76
VIne srra·er, (fall 740-446-7398 ,
HIOCJ-499-3499.
Used Furniture Store Below Holiday Inn, Kanauga.. Beds, Couches , Dressers, Tables. Desks,
Lamps And More! Summer Hrs .
Monday Thru Frida~. Hrs . 10·6,
7~446-4782 .
Used Wlridow Air Conditioning
Units, Different Sizes, Guaranteed,

Country Side Apartments : State
Route 588, 2 Bedrooms. WID

Hook-Up, CA. Cenlral Heal $3651
Mo ., Deposit. Required, 1· 888·
840-Q521.

Furnished 3 Rooms· &amp; Bath,

Available July 1st. 740-446-9279:
Graoious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
aparrmantS at vmage Manor and
Riverside Apartments In Middle·
port. From $249-$373. Call 740·
992·5~4 .

tunlties .~

Equal Housing Oppor·
.

Now Taking Applications- 35
West 2 Bedroom Townhouse
Apartments $295/Mo .. 740-446·

oooe.

River Bend Place now accepting

applicallons for HUD subsidized
apts . for eldarlylhandtcapped or
disabled people. EOH. 304-882·
312t or 304-882·3274.
Tara Townnouse Apartments,
Very Spacious. 2 Bedrooms. 2
FloOrs, CA, 1 1/2 Bath, Fully car-

ATTENTION: Wt'\1- PAY YOU
TO LOSE UP TO 28 Poondo, 47
People Needed lmmodlallly Oher
Explroa, 719195. CALL 740-4411982.

740-888-()1)47.

520

Sporting
Good I

7~379-2400.

G.E. Washer StOO; Whirlpool
Washer S~ 00 ; Whirlpool Drver
S85; Mortsg Cryer $85; AI Wh.O,
740-4-48-9066.
. •
Grubb's Plano- tuning &amp; repairs.

Antiques

Hotpolnt washer SSO. 13" Color
TV wlremote .$50. Steamer trunk

$40 . Compound Bow $60 .
Tlres(2) 235160R15 S20. Tlrea(2)
235/70Rt5 $30. Home Stereo
Speakers-Fisher $50. Mlrac&amp;e-Gro
plan1 food 10·1 t/4 lb pako w/
feeder $15. Free 8-8 pane wind-

Buy or sell . Riverine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Street, on Rt. 124,
Pomeroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 6:00p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

6 :00 p.m . 740·992· 2528 , Russ
Moore owner.
Mlacellaneoua ·
Merchandlu
"COOLQQWNI•

Central Air CoodiUonlng. Free Es·
tlmatesl If You Don't Call Us, We

ows. 304-1175-5244.

JET.
AERATION MOTORS
Repaood, Now &amp; Rebulil in S10cf&lt;.
Call Ron Evant, t-800-537-9528. ·
JVC Compact Camcorder Cost:

$1 ,000, 5811: S375, 740-44&amp;-2529.
Ludwig Drum SOt Willi C1111 Call
7-7496.

Both Lose! 740-446-6306, 1·800·

28Hl098.
1/3 carat, round dlamol)d solitaire.
size 6, pakl $800, will take $550;
Marquis weddlnO set 1/2 carat ,
size ·Y, paid $1400, , will take
$1250; wedding gown with veil
size 7, paid $700 will .lake. $300;
740·367-Q288 or 740-949·2481 .

Willi SIKKENS THE HAl11'Y 18
IIORE THAN I!KfN OEEP.
Your deck Ia the center or your
entertaining and tiCteatton actlv,ltlea. So don'1 J•ot glvo It a 'lintan•. Give It a quallly Stkk•n•
finish wttn the Cttol DEK or Rub'1&gt;01 DEK &amp;yltOml.
fWNI' PLUS (304)1711-1014.

APT AVAILABLE NOW

ence, evening appointments
available, 650 Secol\d Ave. Gat~
ilpolla, OH. 7-1528:

Per 100; 1' 200 PSI

Purebred Siberian huoliy pupplto,
alx -ka old, IWO rod &amp; while, five
black &amp; while. St 25 eaoh, 740·
376-64011.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Jac:klon. Ohkl. 1-800-537-9528
Building
Supplies

Schnauzers· miniature puppies,
AKC, also adul11, two lemalll
and one champion aired stud,

Block, brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude Winters,
Rio Grande, OH Call 740·245-

7~7·3404 .

FAR f,1 SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

5121.
Pole Building Spodals: 24'x42'x9'
wllh two t O'x8' overhead doors,
one 3' entry, Insulated roof &amp;
Jeamlasa gutter, erected price

610

S5946. 30'x4S'll9' wilh one 14'x9'
sliding dOor, one 3' entry, seam·
loss gunor, orec:tld price $7385.
Proc:illon Post Frame Builders
lne. 1-800-396-3026. 7~9925416.

Hera Powell Driving Hammer

Farm Equipment ·

French Alpine Goat, suck , 8
Weoke Old, Weaned , S50. 740·
992·7779.

$23.000; Ollioe: 740·543·2300,
740-M~2915 Ahor 4 P.M.; Ahor
5 P.M. 740·543·2844; Fu : 740· . Full-Blooded Jer11y Cow Due To
M:J.tlm.
Fraahen Wllh 2nd Calf 7112 .
Mltll)' Ferguson Model 1010
.4xo4 Oitael Tractor, Excellent
Condillon, 7~4-48-1943.

Mltoublahi 370 Cteail .With
Woods 4 Ft. Bolly Mower Exoal·

le50. 7~256-8230.-

ConditiOn. Now nu Now Brii&lt;Oa.
Now Muflier. S895. 74CJ.256-8226.

1987 BuiCk CtniUry SIBiion Wagon, 7~6-8253.
1987 Oldsmobile Della BB, Good
COn&lt;ltlon, N:-, Tlll. Cruise. $1.500.
Or Best Of1er. 7~725.

1:00 pm-3:00 pm

Llveltock

6 Year 6Ji(i~auar1or Morgan Riding Mare, Good Trail
Horto; 8 Week Old Gurole Gated
Slud Coli, 740·367·7875, 740·
:167.0183, 74CH41-Q.I25.

Upton Uaod Cara Rt. 62·3 loti leo
South of Loon, wv. Flnanolng
A'IOI-. 304-458-1069.
'_- for .,_
720 llrucNt
'iiCI 18
~
apa·•
, 980 C700 dump
•~. 5
~
w/two opaod axle, t 4' bed, air
brakes, neW tires. big blOck Chevy, no rus~ 74CJ.378-8278.

1982 Cutian Suprtrne, 2 0 , 280
V8 . Good Condition, 11.800 Or
Boll Ofltr, 740-9112-451111.

1882 'IQ&gt;yolo SW Runa Good
OBO; 1VBS Oida Caiola
Aunt Bu1 NHdl Motor, 740-441-

"u

1883 Chevy Monlt Carlo, No
Ruot, S2,3e0, 7~37&amp;-2874.

1981 Chevy half ton ahorf bad
1983 Mustang 4 Cylinder, Au- ~ uc k , V·8 3 apotd, Ius than
.s 00 0 miles on engine, new dual
klrnltie, teeS. 7~.
exhault, now urea, $2500, 740·
1965 Morcodeo 190 E. 4dr. high. &amp;92-5!29.
mlleoga. $4,000. 304-875-1651 or
1982 Fora Piok"Op $900; 1984
• 31J4.e7W197.
GMC 740-367-7299.
1985 Morourr Morqula S500:
1988 Ford F-150. 3/4 Ton Plot·
· 1985 Chryslor Cirrua, $1 1 500
• 7~24H3113.
• • Up, $2,400,740-446-3510.
1998 Ford Rongor. s opted, runs.
S575, 740-e98-1310.

: 1993 Buiok LeSabrif llmltod,
• Loadtd, Clean, 73,000 Milos
. 19.000. 7-2795..
'

1988 C30 H.C. 1 Ton Truok 4
Spaod, 454 Engine, 10 Fl. Flat
: 1994 Pon1iao Sunblrd, V-5. 5 With Racks, Goosanoek &amp; Rttll
• Sptod, 21,000 Mlito, Rod, S5,300
' OBO, 740-256·1252, 740-256- Hl1ch SUOO, 7~~7 ·
. 1618.
1989 ChevroiOI Suburban 2500,
314 lono 2·wheel drive, ex. cond.
1994 Toyota 4 Runner, 8 Crllndor. In &amp;out, no ruat 304-1175-3523.

Owner will look at offers!

For Reoldonlial And Commarolal
.Lawn Equlpmant Compaet Utility
Tractors From 20 To 39 HP. ~~~
Sizaa Of 4 WC And 2 WD Farm
Trai::tora , Hay Equipment, John
O.tra Skid Sltlr Loaders. Check
With Ua ~bout Flnanolng Aa low

630

1-eoo-522·2730, X31101.

1083.

Your Area Johr. Deere Dealer

AI 2.9% On Lawn Tractors And
Low Rate Flnoneing On Now And
Uaed Equlpmaat. Carmlchaet'a ·
Farm &amp; Lawn Gllllpolls, OH 74CJ.
446-2412 1-800-$4·1 1, .

'fludla. 4x4'a, Elc.

Clean Car, Automatic, New Tires·
And Cold Air, 7~6-1759 .

OPEl BOUIE
Sunday, June 28th

LOCIIIyThla Monti.

•soo

Real Eltate Ganerel

1992 Cllovy lumina LS, 3.1 Mutt!pori V-8, power windows, air,
erutto, tilt, loldod. uco11tnt.,.,.
- .S3250, 740-992-8824.

1980 ·11101Mka FvrSIOOill
8oizld And SOld

1991 Chevrolet C1Yaller, Nice

Milton, wv. We do vacuum
pac:l&lt;ilg. 304-743-MOO . •

...

~-

seeo.

~

Partt. Rotary Cutters, Loaders,
Tlllets, Finish Mowers, Etc . Car-

INO ·1 NO HOMDA CAll&amp; fOil / 1991 Ponlloe Grond Am, ak. Uh,
•100 Bolzod &amp; SOld Locally This oru111, oharp. S2800 firm HO·
9112-8824.
'
Montn. CaU 1-too-1522-2730 E~

1986 Oldamoblll Cutlass Clara.
OBO. 1~ ~~58 Aile&lt; 5.

e years old: approx .
gallons mHk par dar. $350, 740- . 1991 Dodge Daytona Shelbr T~r­
bo Fulir Loaded. High Miles, E•·
94tHf79.
oa1tan1 Condition , $4,000 , 740·
Nelson's Custom Procanlng 379·2547, lt!MI MeSI8ge.
'
now open . Formerly Jones custom, 2573 Yatoa Crooslng Road,

Jersey cow.

=
----Your Area Bush Hog Deater FOf
michael's Farm &amp; Lawn Midway
Between Galilpoll' &amp; Rio Grande,
Ohio _On Jackoon Pike 740-448·
2412 Or HIOCJ-!594-1 111. .

Sale

Perfect Condition, AU Accesso-

rlea, 117,500, Blue Book Value
$23.275. 7-Mn.

38240 Succen Rd.
Rt. 7 south of
Plains to
Success Road· Tum left, go approx. 3 ·112 miles·
• signs posted . .
Host: Jo.e Griffin (304) 428·9895
Directions:

t

Credl1 Probfemt? We Can Help.
Eaoy Bank Finanolng For Used
Vthlclea, No Turn Downs, Call
Vlcldo, 740-44&amp;-2897.

se.soo.30H$2·3&amp;S2.
muea,graat
truck,s $2995,
t99t s-to. v-e.
apoed, 740·
tow
992-61124.

Soizad Cara From St 75. Poroeh·
. u, Codlllacs. Chevyo. BMW's,
Corvettea. Also Jeepa, 4 WD's.
. Your Area. Toll Free 1·800-2 18·
9000 Ex1. A:28U For Curran!
~ listings.

Roas-Hibba and Assoc., Inc.

1991 air,
FordaliF150,
long
bad,olean.
6cyi,
powar,
super
5-sp,

•

R,~!!GoodFord !::.!.•2.41xMod44iffldSpeoFord,
-·

•--

11. S2,000, 740-2!56-1318.
11188 Bronco 11 XLT, 4 wo, Auto,
All Powor, Rune Good! Body E•·

ootlont Condition! S3,800, 740·
44H313.

s'!!~ Toyo ta

4&gt;' Plok-Up. 5
.. ~. 110,000 MilOt. 740·4464279.

1991 Goo Traokor Blaok, Stan·
dard, Air, AMIFM Cauatta ,
$3,650, 1-888-840-0521 .
Dod
1993
Ql Caf'IV'an Factory Inololled 5 Point Child Safety Sya- .
tam, 70441 _1528.

740

Motcln:ycln

1980 Yamaha xs. 1100. 9,300
miles, lt,000. 080orlra&lt;fe. 3045'15-5113.
1981 Kawa11ki 250 Strul Bike,
gOOd oond. $400. firm. 304·882·

2888.

1984 Honda Aapencade Too

Many EJdrao To llatl 'Show COn·
dillon' S4,950, 740·388-.9780 AI·
tar 5:30P.M.

*

Yamah Timbor Wolf
1998 ••
250
'".900
.. · 7~:!S&amp;-9851 AfWII7.
750 B

18

'92 X2 Jot Ski, ·~eolitn1 OOOdi·
tion. StOOO 7•• - 7••7
• ~-- - ·
20ft NorrlaCrah bills boa~ 200hp
Mtrcurr molor, trailer, tackle/
luras, other •••-•30•.
•• s•,soo.
•
•
875-3560 io8IIO mouage.

SUOO. Mornings &amp; Evenings
74().245-54311.
I.H. 254 4 WO, llaelor 25 HP F.E.
Loodor 6 Ft. Finish Mower Blade.
620 Hours, $9,000, 7~245-5978 .

LOT·SP- VAI.LEY
8UIIOM8ION

-·-gao.-·

One
ilrga
lol
101'•171', Cl1y - · el1y

wl181a

all
ora . . . - otlhil lot. Prapero

wm aave you.
In · town close to
older hOutein
with 3 bedrooms, 2
room and more.
deep lot with an

Canaday tit
Realty

NOW 10 buill your d.-n homo
In lhil plolaant, quiet and nlc:O
IIUbdivlalon julia ahorloul of Galipolle. LOt 117.
Broker owned.
1731

I If your time Ia

_,

we're here to

NRow gas mnkl &amp; body par1s. D &amp;
Auto, Rlploy, WV. 304·372·
3833 or t-800-273-9329.

1964 Evlnrudo Swotti 15 Trl haul, .

790

1978 1811. Trt Haul boat 70hp.
motor &amp; trailer w/oome aeoono·
rles Boat &amp; •o1or In real goOd
shap·e Askl '"s3 300 fo
'"
no '
rm. 7"'v·

1986 19 112ft. Cuddr Cabin, ex.
eond . new 11ereo, prop •. battery,
4 ·3 V· 6 OMC In/out board, trtHer
5241
- · SS.SOO. J04.n3·
2•1995 Kowaoakl 750ss wave·
Runners wldoublolrailer, great
shape, garage kept, low hOura,
S8.000. 080.304-875-1216.

FOR

SALE

House on At. 7 Gallipolis, 300ft. Rd. frontage m/1
.72 of acre. with huge garage, upstairs apt. 130,000
6-10 pm cell 446-7014 or (740) 885-2877

7~448-1511

--

IB

~·
.

Electrical and
Refrigeration

Residential or comrnefj'ial wiring,
new 88rviee or repair&amp;. Masler Licensed
Ridenour
El
w
1 1electrician.
875
e
eu
oe
,
V000306,
30&lt;0·
·
1788
·

7795•

(}{
·
• .

~Wd

*

•

I~~~~~~~!!!_....;=:;:~
II ,_PRIME LOT 2.3 Ae MJ\.
~~~~~~~==:

;'a";,

1995 Jayco Designer Serlea 34'

____1

011 Charotalo Lake Rd on Lake
VIew Ct. Rd. Now Pr1co $19,900
12141 SPACIOUS QUALITY
CONSTRUCTED HOllE 11atian
Ioyer, eothedral celllnga, balconr
above the LR

wnoo

121117 REDUCED PRICE! I AC
MIL, 121 CHAROLAlS LAKE
DRIVE This 14 room mutlfpioc:o
Is available bec;ause the ownO&lt;'o
are empty· nesters. Offering a
formal entry, living tm,

fireplace,

equip kit, breakfast rm. wlbay
window, ote&lt;eo tnrougtlout, 1&gt;&lt;111
fixtures, 2 car garege, attic
1 orage, "'oonod baok porch,
much more. New roof. Home is

lleht

maintenance free. Call VLS 388.

w/woodburnlng fireplace, family

and game rm w/double open

8828$149,000
12187 DIIEAII A LITTLE

fireplace. Baaullful equipped
kil:chen. oak cabinets by Smilh,
plus work island~ pentrltt. Enjoy

~,:e':~~vouTt~ 3'1:i~.
111

1

2 1/2
tha, LA, DR, eal·
trl'-In ·~t.
k", lam
rm w{WBFP
2

nature from the l&gt;Oiarium. Formal

dining room with a view. 01. .
encto8ed back porch, First floor

leurldry. 4 bedrooms, 3 bathe,.
area In 1he flnl1hed
2 cat ga~a;.e
storage .. AttiStiCU'f
wfth many treee

•

, ...,..a

II

a

. All these e&gt;C1101

• · Smith

Martha Smith ......:............................ 441·1919
Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742·3171
Dana Atha .........................................379·9209
Ke1111eth Amsbary............................. 245-5855

blllhO,
w/lg windowl, loodl of eobinola a

otorage, full divided buement, 2
woodburnlng flreplacaa, fenced

ylld, gar &amp; carport, 811lc 11orage,
1 ao m/1 fronting on lhe beau111ul
Ohio River. City t&lt;hoolo &amp; very
- 1 0 town. VlS «e-seoe

, ----

CHEAP CHEAP $211,100.00il
Alloolable. Thla one r. one
111111 you can afford to
do some WOtk on to
awn tastel · 2

OOUNnW RANCH B~
home with 3 bedroom•. 2
baths, full buement which
Includes 1=/rec. rooms.
LarQfi ana
carpon AND
THill IS NOT All there Ia
over :14 acre8 of land which
Ia Ideal lor !loran, etc. llOnd
&amp; misc. .barnS/sheds. Mual
see this one: Really Nlcel
11014

IMPRESSIVE BRICK... 168
Magnolia
Drive.
low
malnt~ 3 bedroom · 1
112 batll home that le In

12817
COIIIIERCIAL
8UILDlNGS AND APARTMENTS
Lot to sell cars ate. bultdlnga ean

p~

Ot»ortunlty. Price Reduced to

=. co:n,":.

be used tor bOat storage. Oreal
loealion

L•ahlpecl Cedar ranch with
view. Cuatom
made kitchen cabJneta.
dining area with Skyflghta,
large master bedroom, 4.
ba1hs. walk-out ba8ement.
lnground pool, .much morel
Approx. t aere lawn.
Purchase 39 additional
- - that has ponds &amp;
bam. 11022

on Bulavlllo.Rd. VLS Big

$90,000 Exeelient Bargain.
· WOODED Land in the Cheshire
are. Call Virginia 388-Bl12614468S08.

family room. Uving room,
rarnodalecl kltc:hei1, 2 car
attached garage. lnground
_pool that will be great for
anterlalnlng
IIlia
hOI
·IIMMl81. Nice comer lol. Be
one of the llr8t to aee IIlia
horne.ld Iaiii 11011

QUALITY 8111CK RANCH
with full basement. Home Ia
7 years young with 3
bedrooms. 2 badil. laundry,
living room, dining room, .
kitchen, extra large deck
approx. 14' x 40' on rear.
Concrete drive. Large
detached 45' x 32' building.
Over 3 8Cift. 4918 Bulavtlla
Pike

~ '-lt. .

. .......,

a gorgeous

.

. , • ._.

,{-'~

- J '•

~-

:··,w:~

1

.,~~~'*

BRAND NEW...CAN YOU
IIEAT THIS PRICE OF
. .,11110.00 Home alii under
c:onllrudlon. Qualily buill 3
bedroom 2 bath L·lhapecl
ranch with attachecll8' X 24'
garage.
Heat
pump.
Warranties. Nice overeizad
1.8 acre nVJ lol. Really nlcel
11011

CllY LIFE CAN BE NICE ... IN THIS ROOMY 2
STORY HOME... ENTRY HAS ROOMY FOYER WITH
OPEN STAIRCASE. LARGE KITCHEN, FORMAL
DINING ...THIS HOME IS A GREAT BUY AT $50,000.
I ALMOST FORGOT TO MENTION ...THERE IS
SPACE FOR A GARDEN IN THE BACK YARD.

13 ACREI-11\"1 iltat incfudel
lenc:ecl-ln putUre that would

..

HOSPITA8LI!...~
remodeled 1 112 story 3

litiDIIUlioRr- North 2nd- A one lliHy r_,uy .-d5IU
home with 2 bedrooms, one bath. and a part b•8ment.
Gnl81- horne or a retirement horne.or a rental. tzuoO
W. Ol&gt;n't

11.--

API'ROX. ONE IIlLI! abo11e Racine on 338. Come lit on . .
IICIIB11ed front porch and walch • river from higher ground.
A 3·4 bedroom, 1 bath hOme with plenty ol palldng. ONLY
S17,100

to CIIMHJ

n. La allloi'i. .. In tt. COU'*Y or

to ._,_ IAI'o 0111 " bolhl
Thle well buift 4 bedroom home

'
.

'

'

-lorcook-outl or&gt;d Tho 1.7 oero lol hoe •• 1ho rompln'
room

w-ou"U

ever

~.aRTY LANE· In town bullikelhe c:ount1y r.

County water and electric

'"""" room upll8lr8 and ""' kitchen and bath Ia down11811e.
a 3 bedroom mobile home. All smlng on apprc»t. 314

Alto

acre. po,ooo

THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING AT
CONSERVATIVE COST. SPACIOUS UVING ROOM,
3 BEDROOMS. EAT IN KITCHEN ... UTILITY
ROOM ... GI\S FORCED AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL
AIR COND ... CARPORT... FENCED BACK
YARD...CONVENIENT LOCATION ... PRICED TO
SEW

.

AACINE· 8AitiAN 110. A newer manulaCiureclllome 111111
has 7 I'OIJIN, There are 3 bedroOmS, 2 baths, family room
w111t llrepiKe, living room, dining rolOIII, and an equlfll*l
ldtchen. Hu cathedral ceiNnga. a full l)alament. 2 car
and an above ground pool. The twO! acres hal becll and '-ldocapiiiQ. $71,11110
.
PLUM IT· A 2-eto&lt;y horne with ehake shingle aiding lhal hal

I 1/2 Am 11\"1...$10,000.00

eeMce IIVaifable. Lot hal

r_.av been cleared and
drive nllllecl. ReatiV to build
on.l1023

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171

'*"--

l

==~~=~m=ecland
kik:hen
livingAlso
room,
2 t/2and
ballll.
hal2aeucloaecl
one-car

ft9

(740) 446-3644
E-Mail Addren:

.

wlseman@zoomoet.net

!iL
~
·.

DAVID Y&lt;JSEMAN, BROKER,GRI - 446-9555
Loreltl McDade- 446-7719

Carolyn w~ . 441-1007

. · Soll•y Ganes ~1701

...

• :·

DOl 1111UIIll!R, Btok«...- ...·"·-·""'""812 1112
-.,;v
~-·-·····-········
..····· ...a"tSt
CHMMS
I Sf'IIAIIUNG,'"_....... _ .....--.a'IS1
• • if.JOM I MuooHooo•n••-u•••••-•n•n•• . .
• ...oA: .JIPPDI......................... _............, ...

I
f

AIII!IIICM HOME with 3·4
beclrOoml large living room.
dining arellfamll~ room
combO. Equipped kitchen, · llOP RIHTINCII Look what
large e1tc11 on rear approx. 2
13,500.00 down will buy,
acr". PRICE REDUCED!
You
milling .• good
IMO .
deal. Remodeled home
'
172 ACIII!I approl(. road ollerw niCe kl1char'l with IOMI
frOnlag•, l•ge 11110Unt ol of cablntll and 10 muc:h
lmmedltt•
Clalrtld land and wooded mort.
Plllll
ulan.
Let
" ' " - k 10
land. 1 1/2 .. .ory llome and
you
....
mlac. theclt and bl!rnt
Included. 7 Farm ponda.
Approx. 11 mllea from
Alhent. Call for complehl
llllng......

LIITINQI

X

---·

t

3884.

38353

KINGSBURY

ROAD ...
$64,100.00 New 3 beclloorn, 2
t.fh home. Vlnyl81ded ranch,
central air, front and rNr
pon:hea. Nice lllzecl lawn lor
the
lnwnecllala

100: l:Omplllt

u-•

w/utlllllft, 24' x 30' frame
•tllchecl 12' • 2CY

'

•

•

~,-

Ialii REDUCEO PAlCEI
HOUSE 18 GETTING NEW
ROOf AND NEW AIR
CONOI'TIONEA. Brl~k ranch
w/flnllhod ank: on ~R 598. 4
8A't 2 . . . fiJI
!Mit. Nloe
pordl. Huny, 11111 Ia a
nul-~ P - M. HlytJ4-48-

J

•

...

EXCELLENT
INVEIITIIENT PROPERTY, oldtir
well meln1alnld hOme wtrn 3
eJCtra 1011 In Middleport 4 BR, 1
1/2 bllfl. living room. 1ormal
dining area, family rm with
flteplec:t end hardwood noor, eatl
Witma or o.c. to aee tnia cnarm.
11034 Fifty ooro m/1 of prime
development l.nd. Patric1a M.

LOTS: Eallll baing approx.

IICr

r

•atiO

122 MULBI!RRY HI!IGHTII
158.100.00 Comfortable 2
lleclioom Ranch Homt With
Living Room Kltctlen, Bath

NEW

--..
t

just minutes from town, 3 BR'
rancl'l with 2 car .garage on nice
sizelol, Wlm. ex O.C

Anti IAundly. 1 Car Aa.checl
Garage. Lots 01 Cloeet
~- Pavecl.drMII1003

are

rD WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. 9

•'*

cor
Or 3 .,..oonia, 2
bednlom horne that Ia bright btllhs Addison Tllimship
and c:IMfful with the lanilly 1101r
·
In mind. 2 1/2 bathe, toyer,"-~ _
"
living room, kHchen w/nk:e . R'"M:H wmt PLENTY OF
cabinets. L.oada morel Lawn
TREES • EL80W
approx. .83 acre ASKING 1100111 Over 4 liCIW come
...,IOO.OO 11013
with IIlia 4 bedroom. 3 bath
IMPRESIIVE IRICK- 168 ranch. Ful bUemenl. IMng
Magnolia Drive. Low room. dining 11M. kllchen,
malntenancli 3 bedroom 1 nice ltd oe1c hardwOod
, 1/2 bath home that Ia In !loin, anached 2 cat garage
excellent condHion. Partial pful delachecl24' x 32 alum.
.basement complete with siding. Let Ill allOw nto you.
family room. Living room, 11028
remOdeled kilchen. 2 car
.
anachecl garage. lnground OWNU REDUCED PRICE
pool that will be grea'm!l_Of tNa 51 acnt 11\"1 1rac1 of
:.-=:::'~~the lallilllr$155,11110.00 2 County
first to see this llome. ld taps. Quia! c:ountJy
fasll 11 011
llllting. Lola of road
frontage. 1111110 .
ACREAOI;...Lots of road
fronlage... approx. I 00 - ·
Rio Grande area. Quia! dead
and road. OWner wanting to
sell In on tract. 1172

MEI'GS COUNTY

a.-;
..

LOOKING FOR RETIREMENT INCOME? CAll US
FOR DETAILS ON THIS RENTAL PROPERTY.
LARGE TWO STORY HOME, ONE! STORY ~E.
AND MOBILE HOME. All PRESENTLY RENTED.
LARGE LOT. LOCATED IN THE VILLAGE OF RIO
GRANDE.

LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS NICE FORMAL
LIVING ROOM. FAMILY ROOM, 1 1/2 BATHS.
SEPARATE GARAGE. LOCATED ON ROUSH LANE
ll.l~EA.R .CHESHIRE. HOMES ARE ScARES IN THIS
ARE:A. BETTER CALL SOONI

NEW LOT IJSTlNQI AIJpmx.

UNtON AYE· A one story frame home with 2 bedrocima and

.

BEAUTIFUL PROPERTY LOCATED ON STATE
ROUTE 688. COUNTRY SETTING J~ST A FEW
MINUTES FROM TI-lE CITY. 8 RENTAL
UNITS.•.PRESENTLY FULLY OCCUPIES. PLEASE
CAll SOON FOR MORE INFORMATIOI\l AND AN
APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THiS PROPERTY.

I'OIEtOY· Spring "'"· A beautiful 3 bedroom 2 story
horne .nth •larve backyard. Jutt waiting for a familY to rt1CMI
ln. ONLY ••,liDO
lhls approx. 9
acre parcel w1t11 a lrellt doDd area lhat lay. nice, Also has
_111 older one story horne with 3 bedrooms.I2Q,IIIIO
,

need.

M a l - froo brick. Priced 10
. _ ot f11UOO. 113:1

NEW ON THE MARKET! YOU WILL THINK YOU
ARE ON VACATION IN THIS BEAUTIFUL 3
BEDROOM HOME. POOL .. SCENIC LOCATION ON
LOWER ROUTE 7.. :A STEAL AT $65,0001

.

~

ohrl 2 full bettaa, living room.
dining "'"· 111-in kilohon and full
blltment. L.at'ge diCk on beCk ot

be perfect for. a hOrse or 2.
38' x 28' lhed &amp; misc.
·bulldinJi. 1992 Century 18 X
80 mobile home thai

sHAoE

-llliciiteri, and one bath.
a one cat garage tlitting on an average

'

840

•
J ~~
_
_~ ~-rL'*
_
446 6806
Branch Oflk:e

1987 37 Ft. Yukon Wiiderne11.
Travel Trailer Self-Conlained,
Ltrga Bedroom, Ouoen Siza Bod.
Furnaoa Ml
A 1
'
crowave , "'n ng ,
740
Cerpet, Upholsiery,
' 357'
·

1-8oo-585-71o1 or 446-71,1)1

"446-3636

•11

THE COUNTRY. NEAR POMI!IIOY· e
old contemporary home. Excellent
3-4 bedrooma. 2 balha. large
great room. equiP!*~ kitchen.
and deCk, alllilllng on one acre
You can't· build 1111• for

6323.

BIG BEND RE ft.LJ
A T rry INC
J. ' f ,
•

K.athleert M. Oeland 992-6191

1.IIIDEII

C&amp;C General Homo Main·
lononco· Painting. vinyl aiding,
eorpentry. dooro. wlndowo. blllha,
mobllo homo rtptlr and mora. For
fret ostimole eeil Chel. 740.992·

Appliance Parts And SOrvieo: Ali
Nama Brands Olltr 25 'faars Exporlenco All Work Guaranteed,
Fron&lt; h Ci •r Mortag . 740-448 ·

blgbend@eurekanet.com.

Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

(!)'

·~

$3.400.- 7 after 8pm.

Kawasaki STS Jt1 ali, 11111 undtr
warranty, three seater. 83 hor,.
power. bough! new Julr of '97,
three matohlng Kawasaki ski
vasls and lraller all go with it.
S5000,
., 740-949-2203 or 740-949204o, will conalder trade for a

Henry E. Oeland Jr ..992-ZZS9

Office ..........................99:Z..2259

M

1980 Fleotwing wi111awnlng 17ft.
1972 Arla1o&lt;:ra118ft. t973 Smoky
1511. 1899 Bob MoCormlck Rd.

Improvement~~

Reel Estate General

otor Home•
1973 23. _""""" co·--r•·, gaS/
" ..."""""' '""" uv
oleclrlc heal, mk:rowa... double·
door refrigerator, 16ft. carefree
owning, king alze bed, now tires,
~ .0 One-gonerltor, runo greet:

446-3466.

IASEIIENT
WATE.,RPROOFING
Uneondltion llletlmo guorente.
Loool roltroncoo furnished. Eotoblilhtd 1875. Ctl 24 Hro. (140)
-~!2~00-287.0571. Rogt11 __.,.._.ng.

Campen &amp;

•mall us for Information on our

· 7~441 -5896 , 7~441 -5167 .

I.

Accenorlu

90 hp. E\llnrude motor, Evtnrude
1n111er, 7~742·2!80.

··•

1352.
Wltdorna11 camper troller 32' ,
"'etllant eondlllon, S7500, avon·
lngo after 5:00pm 740.742·2070,
dartlme unlli 1:30pm, 740-742·
4308.
-. ,

raul

llr----==;:;;~;;~;;~=~~~=~~~==:..

Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
.· Mary P. Floyd, 448 3383

Furnlahed
Rooms

~~~~rA~~~~~~'::~~!flo-~

Auto ..__. &amp;

Reel Eltlte General

)&lt;

,,..

760

24 Fool Trevll Trailer, Slaopo e
r•

Home

Improvement•

1998 30ft Sprinter travailroilor.
lull awning, CiA &amp; hut Used 4
.304-875-31123.

1887 0 SAC~E
6
Mtrerut::.'t",!,.: ~~.~ ~~~:
dtop·V w/trollor, lifo jocklll &amp;
bumparo. 740·445·· 3814. Meko
ofltr.

0111
otora
1or&amp;,~
'!'f'

RUSSELL D. :WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy DcWitt .............................. 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter.........................379-2184
Tammie DcWitt......................... 245-0022

Hauling Small Dozers &amp; Tractors,

Motor Homn

for Sale
35 Horto ._or Johnoona G··•
• ·~
~
~~3~ 8otwoen 1 ·5
·
·

t996 Ylmaht WarriOr, OOOd oon-

~~!~n . 2•800 · OBO. 304 ' 578•
· -·

camper, like naw, kilohen/ living
1991 Honda 250r 4 Whee~r lots
room aide-out, queen bed, center
:Of::.:Now=~S::1u11t::,:7::4lH4:::;:;1::·1=41=9=.==.JLg:':'d:pon=toon==boaL=====:J~b~o~th~,~·~ldo~·~br[·sl&lt;la,
prk:ed to sell,
· 7-7-3222.

Brok

Good U11d 4 Whet Trailer. For

Ltl~~jt

730 Vane &amp; 4-WDI

1995 Ford Rang•• XLT. 19,000
miles, 4orl, Sap, loaded $7.500.
304-875-4849.

shape. 7~985-3902. ·

4 Yr. Otd Rtglalerod Fornolo Box·
er. Good Markings. Never Bred

tte7 Dodgo cakola 4 Cyllndor
loltgnum, 5 Spud, 14,000 Milos,
Noado Minor Work On Bod,
S7,500, 080, 7~25&amp;-1233.

1992 Ford Explorer ee.ooo miles.
$8,000. 080. ~7~ .

BN Ford tractor wtth 4' brush hog;
400 Farmall , both In axcellenr

Pets for Sale

S75, Firm, 740.441-0818
Moosage.

Boordl, $3,000 A PilOt, R40
Oitdlwttdl Witn eoo Hro., S7.500:

Arabian gotdlngo; one Aegllltred

Auto• for

Jh*l GU••Jhsdlwi• Page D7

~~~=.7~~~~~~~~~==~==~~
720 Truclla IQI' Sale
'r40 Motorcyclla
750 Bolts &amp; Molora ·
780 Campen &amp;
810
Home
810

25LOCUSTS~-GAUUPOUS

eapped. EOH 304-675-6679.

. Construction Workers Welcome

Aott Wellers,

NOTICE
Fronch City "-! Gr-dng
-Optnl
Profenlon·al Grooming by Appolntmenta . Over 15 yrs .• experi-

presoion Fittings In Slook

560

~egl stered

2961.

$37.00 Per tOO: Air Brass COm-

550

quarterhor11 mare; 740·7o42·
2050.

Four hoata· one Registered

'

Twin Ri\lers Tower now accepting
applications for 1br. HUD subsld·
!zed apt. for elderly and handl·

. Circle Motet lowest Rates In
· Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
'.Cinemax, Showttme &amp; C i sne~.
: WeeklV Rates, Or Monthty Ra1as.

S2t.9~

.

Misc . Weter Tanka, Mite. St.. l
Beams. Concrete Barrter: Anoa

Golden Retriever Puppies, AKC
S200, Shott /Wormed, 74().379-

Waterline Special:· 3/o4 200 PSI

GE Window AJC. looks &amp; works
$100 304-675-4331

1986 Aril6 K Car Dodge G'aod

AKC Rogioltrtd Lob Pupplu.
Bled! &amp; Cho&lt;Olatl, vet C - d.
tot Shott, Wormed. S250. 740·
4&lt;8-0229.

S-IS.OOO; Shoop Ft. R-. Doulllo

Four tema!t Hlmalayan-llittena far ~ lef'ltlr~ .•
sale, v-et checked and wormed. ·Tractor &amp; Equipment, 740-256·
7~742-1019 .
1526.

9787 For lnlo.

Anguo bull, 4rra old, seoo. John
Ohllngor. 304-882·2422.

n.soo.304-n:J.!IOI!t .

Tenneuee Walker gelding ; two

Now Open Sundlrs H . Mon-Sat
11·8. Fish Tank &amp; Ptl Shop,
2413 Jackson Ava. Polnl Pleas·
ant, 304-1175-2053.

Used Furniture .:for Sale: Cotlee
Tabla Wllh Matching End Tables,
4 Place Dresaer Set, School
Desk, Single Furon, Dllelle Set
Wilh 4 Chair&amp;, T.V. Stand 4
Wheals, Make Offers, 740·446i

G.E. Air Conldlllonar 110 Volts,

Straw Blower, NTK Vlbrlltor, Flta
'18 BaCkup; •27 Chtvy Motor:

710

•

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

710 AutOI for Sale

710 Autoa for Sale

8yr Okl Reglatlrtd PIIOmlno,
quarter horae, gelding, ltklng

Drum , 48 Inch , 13,200; 553
SliMp Ft. Roller; 30 Ft. Viboeling
Skrted $!5 ,000; Fuel Tank&amp;,

Australian Shep'herd Puppill. 1
Male Blue Merle, 1 Mare TrlcoiOftd, 7~6- 1032.

l'jkoo labll, $20; oail ,.0-9492379 between 8pm-9pm.

ty, Needs CIUU:h &amp; Otnor Repairs
$400 080, 740·379-2655

Lotuintr Grader $7,500; Rtnko

Uvntodt

AKC Englloh Springer Spaniol
Pupa, 6 Wtokl Old, 1st Shoto,
Wormed, S150, 740·258-6935 ,
Afllf 5.

ReadyTo Go 8126/V8. 2·Milas, 3

Swlngael, $70; girl's bicycle, 20•.
excellent cpndjtion, $65; Little

plano Dr. 7~525

675-5856.

540

Thr•e Seta of TrUck Lnt Forks
$100 . To $125 .00 A Sell Used
Yale lift Trod&lt; 3500 Pd. Compasi-

Problems? Need Tuned? Call the

Ping driver and three wood with
steel shalt and regular flex. The
driver has a wooden head with
, 10' loh. $100. lor bolh dubs. 304·

530

304-117~548 .

630

Fllf'M Equipment

8x30 Tool TroHtr, St .700: 40 Ton

Females, 740-358-9788.

WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Tan AI Home
Buy Ciroet and SAVEl
Gommon:iaVHome Units
From $199.00
Low Monllliy Paymenu
FREE COlor Calaiog
Ctl Todey 1-1100-71 Hl158.

610

Sunday, June 28, 1998

TRANSPORTATI ON

Lima Truck Crane. 100 Ft Boom,

AKC

Scooters, Ela4flrlc Wheelchairs,
Sales : Rental. Trade. New &amp;
Used, Bowman's Homecare, 740·
446-7283.

Dressing table, stroller, awing,
playpen, baby bed, &amp; car seat.

: paled. Aduil Pool &amp; Babr Pool.
. Patio, ~o Pets, Lease Plus Secur·
lty Deposit ReqUired, 740-446. 3481 , 740.367-Q319.

450

model with ftoaling dod&lt;. variable
~. opprox. one yt~ar ol&lt;l. COal
over S500 now, will lake $250 ,
7~742-2820 or iiiMI measago.

~logllder $50. 304-875-5054.

.........

7~«e-023t .

Proform treadmill, spaCe saver

Brand Newt Great Giftl CO/VIdeo
storage unit . Black and cherry.
Never out ot box. $125. Holds up
to 940 discs, also holds tapes.

..........t

Fnturlng Hrdro Bath. Don
Shttts. 373 Georgeo Crett&lt; Rd.

7~992-ans.

' Brown plaid couch &amp; chair wl
matching full·slze sleeper. $400.

; Goods

A Groom ShOp · Ptt Grooming .

etc. Tuoadar through Frldar. One
lrtt TY (amali) Beanie Bab)l wtlh
every S2S or more purchase,

tOft. 150. lor all . No nallo, no
painl J04.882}43e·

Pets lor Sale

560

Items, walkers, toddler car uats,

COo &amp; tapas OOIIndudod.

51 o

Mlacelllneoua
M&amp;rchandlae

Pomaroy TMh ShOp now buying
Jargo outside toys and babr

125-CFM gaa compreaaor, call
o1t1r 5pm.

7~992-7545

Call 740·892·8638 'after 6 pm.

7e&amp;6.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
hom $279 to $358. Walk to shop
a movlu. Call 740·-'46·2568.
Equal Housing Opportunity.

540

Mlacelleneoua
Merchendlu

Antique pine lumbar from 411.·

Space for Rent

For Ronl E&gt;ccelltnt Olllc:o Or RotaN

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 t&gt;e9room apartmer;tts, furnished and unlurnlshed, security
deposit required , no pets , 740·

540

Fumlahld

~lnt ~Pie~asa~n~t,~WV~=====~::=::::::;::::;::::::::::::S~u~n=d~ay:,:J:un:e:2~8:,~19 ;:8

�..
Sunday,June~,199B

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

Modern day rainmakers seed clouds to increase ·rain
gerous hail by infusing clouds with
silver iodide so they make raindrops.
"We aren't rainmakers," said Jim
Sweeney, vice president of Weather
Modification Inc. of Fargo. "We
can't make it rain where there isn't
any. We're rain enhancers."
Started in 1961 by two western
North Dakota farmers uying to proteet their own crops from hail, Weather Modification has grown into a .

multimillion-dollar busi 11105s with its
own fleet of nearly 30 airplanes, 32
pilots and clients around thf= globe.
"We used to have to sell our
(product) • really hard," said Pat
Sweeney, ~ company's president
since 1990. "But with the inform&amp;·
lion and data out there today that
shows this really worlcs, it's much
easier selling the idea."
The company's specially equipped

..

from late July and Agust to be mo5t
effective. Research is ·being complued to review several new gf'lb,
killers expected to be coming.llJ(the \
market that are effective and more
environrnentally safe.
Are you interested in producing
small fruits like strawbemes, blueberries, an~ raspberries either commercially or in the home garden? The
Ohio State University's Piketon
. Research &amp; Extension Center is planning a Horticulture Field Day on
Tuesday, July 7 from 3-7 p.m. especially for small fruit ~~:rowers. Topics
to be covered include: "Full-field
Strawberry Production and New Vari-

ely Update", "Blueberry Water and
Nitrogen Managernenl", "Planting
Bluebeflies on Raised Beds: How We
Did lt", Blueberries: Too Mulch or
Not To Mulch, That Is The Question!", and "Fall Raspberries: Is Earlier; Better?". Admission is free and
open to the public. Light refreshments will be provided. For more
information call Tom Wall, Piketon
Research and Extension Center, (614)
292-4900. The center is located at
1864 Shyville Road, Piketon. Ohio
(one mile ea~t of U.S. 23 and State
Route 32 interchange. enter at Piketon Uranium Enrichment Plant
entrance).
Make plans to attend the Southern

Control weeds...

· The Atmospheric Resource Board
has budgeted about $570,000 this
summer to have the Sweeneys' company seed clouds in six western
North Dakota counties, and tile company has contracts with ei_g~t other
agencies or private assoctanons to
provide cloud seeding this summer.
In Alberta, Canada. Weather Mod•
ification is involved in a five-year
pilot 1proj~ct to . reduce urban hail

7

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

ey JIM FREEMAN

95 DODGE INTREPID
Fully equipped, white,

Onl..

----+----'--------~
97 BREEZE 4 DR.

Here at Norris.
·,,Northup we're
having a
"No Hail Sale"
NO DENTS
JUST DEALS!
Come See the all
. ,.New Chrysler
300M Sport Sedan

.

July 1Q

· .GALLIPOLIS • Ronald R. Toler
.
of Gallipolis. has qualified for the
siKth consecutive year as a member
of the International Forum, (fonnally known as the Twenty five Million 1------~M_em_..be,_r."':O~h~io:OO~rth~o~pae~d...;,lc~ln..;s...,lil.,ut;,;,e_____--1
Dollar Forum) and is the only multiJoint connection•
· year member representative of the
Total Joint Rl!plac•mllflt Support and lnlorml!lon Group
West Virginia Life Underwriters If you have had. or are considering having a total joint replacement, jqin us
Association. There were no other at our Joint Connections meeting. Joint Connections is a support and
members from Kentucky or West Vir- education program for those interested in learning more about joint
ginia and only 12 in Ohio in 1998 of replacement, For meeting times and location call (304) 525-7388 or (304)
529·4617. To schedule a medical appointment or speak to a medical
which on IYfi•ve 0 then; had 5 or more 1 professional please call Joinllmplanl Surgeons at (614) 221-6331
years of consecutive membership.

Call (614) 221-6331 for Appointm.ent Times

---~----

--

---

-

-~---

IIEW 91 RAM 1100
4X4, auto., VB, tilt,

SUNDAY PU.ZZLER

252 Upper Riv,r Rd.
(614) 446·0842

25 Bolt

.

.

72MakasWMry

73Cudgel

74 Com IPfke
75 UnmiXed
: 78 Bar legally
78 FlllnCh a~icie
79-nolre

-

-

- - ----- --

------ ----

-- -- -- ---

---

4"!18tora, poetiCally
5 Sticky fruR
6 Of the 1.11ivarae
7 Car
8 Colorado Indian
9 Farming n8ad
10 Ac:lor Flynn
, 11 Part of FBI
12-Baba
13 Gearteelh
14 Long stories
15 Mrs., I~ Spain
18 Owel
17 Worll by Pinder
18 lloldnass
19 Judge's mallet
20 Rain icy lllin
31 Shoestring

name

101 Favorite
102 Ointment
105"... man-.
mouae'l"
107 Klnd·of en8lgy
109 Cow sound .
110 CalltMid 10 go
112 Doctrtnes
115 Gaw a gratuity to
117 Unaccompanied
118Ba~

119Scorth
121 Kind of JJriJ•

--- --------

-o'-lhllntar

35Fiowans
38 Dreary routine
40 Nolle
Medicine

129 Eecepade

122 Mr. Guthr1e

46 BibliCal vessel

124 Eloquent speaker

47: Holiday drink

132N~tima

134 And otlllls: Latin

49

abbr.
t36 Calm pellod
137 Will ,
141 "-Golas.cr.t"
142 Boult
144 Part ollhe 8Y"
146 Stop up
146 Puture

51 Seven52 Peine

1114 E•pont ·

Waterlosged rivers and· streams
go! another heavy dose of rain today.
following weekend storms that left at
leaSt eight dead in Ohio and forced
evacuations throughout the state.
Nearly half of the .state will be
utldcr a flood watch through the rest
ofthe day. Counties in central and
southern Ohio were hit hardest.
•The povierful stono that swept
thtough central Ohio early today
dUmped aq much as s to 9 iliches of .

Good Afternoon

t7 Polntad 1001

Today's

Sentinel

1 Section - 10 Paaes
Vol. 49, No. 47

140 Facllllatas
142 Ralead

....,

75 I.Nnlnli..,.,_.
locllt
7&amp; Mlffll!
77 Stage
79 Poil!on

Sttper l:.olto! 3-18-30-31-43-45
Klcke'r; 2·4-1-S-9·7 .
Pick 3: 3·7-3; Pldl4: 0-6-4-5

llilllr 3: H·7; DaiiJ4: 9-2-2-2
0 111911 0t11o Yollo)' l'lltoliolilfta Co.

••

81,..,... rock
-

-

-

- -

--

By BRIAN J. REED
· Sentinel News Staff
With the Ohio River still on the
rise. at R8cine and Pomeroy, the
National Weather Service was
'expected II presSiime to modify its
prediction of when and at what level
. the river will crest later today.
According to Larry Circle, lockmaster at Racine Locks and Dam,.the
river was still rising this morning at
·a rate of tw()otenths of a foot per hour.
Al9:30 a.m.. the lower gause at the
locks read 41.5 feet.
Circle said that the NWS predicted that !he river at Racine would crest
at 2 p.m., at a level of40 fee.t, well
below this morning's level, and that
he had been told that the agency
would modify its prediction later
today to a crest of 42 feet.
Those predictions place the estimated river crest at Pomeroy at 45
feet, jtL•t below the flood level of 46.5.
feet. That crest, according to current
predictions, will lake plate at approx •
imately 6 tonight. Circle, however,
said thai the new 'predictions will
likely place the crest nearer to flood
level and later this evening.
.
Circle said that .the Racine Locks
reported four inches of rain last
night, and that Belle.ville Locks.
located upriver a1 Reed.• ville, n;poned an overnight rainfall of 5.5 inches. At Willow Island Locks and
Dam, locatednear Mariena, a rainfall
of just over an inch wa.• reported la•t
night.
Those overnight rainfalls are·panty responsible for the increase in
anticipated crest levels and the later ·
estimated crelll time.
Circle said that both Belleville and
Racine locks were !ieeing high levels
of debris passing through their gates.
The Racine Locks, which is equipped
differently than the facility at
Belleville, has been pa.&gt;~.~ing iis debris
through its auxiliary lock, while
. Belleville pas.-.es debris through the
gales of the dam.
MOIOitloali, boat docks and even

rain in Madison, Union, Pickaway County on Saturday. The tornado was
and Franklin counties, according to blamed for one death and had winds
the National Weather Service. More of up to 157 miles per hour.
rain is expected today.
Alxiut30,000 people were without
• An eighth death was being blamed power in parts of the state late Sunori' r.he storms today. David Rushin, day. said Nancy Dragani, spokes16, was setting up a tent when he was woman . for the Ohio Emergency
struck. by liahtninl Sunday night in Manaaemenl Agency. She said pubBelmont CQunty, said David Wilcox lie water systems in wa,hington,
of the Somenon Fire Department. Noble, Guernsey and Muskingum
Rushin was pro11ounced dead II Bar- counties were not working, IDII&gt;~
nesville Medical Center.
ten were opened in
cou ie
· Southeast Ohioans were monitor- to c:are fcir people hose homes
ing rising rivers and creeks.
· were evacuated.
"You ·can hear it. It just sounds
Dozens of roads were shut·down
like an ocean down there," said Bar- _today, includina a stretcl) of lnterstate
bara Fabian of Cambridge, who5e 77 between Noble and Tuscarawa~
Guernsey County ci1111e fano includes counties and part of 1-71 in Franklin
a tributary of Wills Creek, which was COunty 110111h ofColumbus.l-70 wa~
9 feet above flood Slage early today. reopened early- today iii Muskingum
"I'm surrounded by water," •he County. ·
said. "We hove Cllltle, but we haven't
Four of the dead were rrom Noble
seen them for two days. They're up County in ea,tern .Ohio. Authorities
in the woods somewhere in hiah there said anocher person was reportground, where I willh I was."
ed mis.,iq. The other deaths were in
Weekend stonns dumped · more Fairfield, Melas and Washington
than 18 inches of rain in eastern and counties.
southeastern countiei. J'rees and
Steve Gaot. 47, lives on a hill in
power lines snapped. Roads, hOmes Belle Vliley about thl'l!e miles from
and bUsinesses flooded. ' .
a Noble .County trailer· wheill a
Gov. George Voinovich today put woman - killed by the IOmlldo. He
BelmontandJetfersoncountiesunder ~-!'!!Suwintlafe,YM·ary, surveyed the . ·~an
a state of emergency, brinaina thci -·...lrfll
total to 18 counties andallowina t11a1e
"It just looks like pieces of metli
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) agencies to help those areas. The and clothina s1n1n1 all over the hill· A Cabell County man has confessed
threat of more stonnt and impassible . side," he"uld. "You couldn't e¥eo . to killing a Huntinaton television
road, acunled Voinovich's plans to tell where II .was suppoeed to be."
cameraman, and police have identitour JN1115 of the flood-ravaged c:oun,Julie Schoeppt•. 4$, of Belle Val- · ·fled aweldina hammer as one of sevties today.
·
ley, Noble County, Hid Wiler hid eraiJilurder wettpoM.
'
The Nalionll Wather Service In risen In the main area ofiOWll, flood.
•Mitchell Vickers, 40, of BarPittsburah confltmed duutlellt one ina . . lllliola, 1 lt'OCer) and other boursville, called the county's 911
tornillo touch~ down In Noble • buslneua.
center ~atUrday and liked to speak

SECURING BOAT DOCK - Thl!' boat dock at the the Middle-

port lev" flipped onto Ita aide Sunday afternoon In the rising

· Ohio River, creating 1 po~~lblllly that It could break loose and float ·
away. In an effort to avoid that, Middleport fireman Don Silvera
and Jay Buaklrk want out Into the water In an attempt to eecure
II by roping the atructure tightly to th' Pill"'•·

FLOOD SCENE - Oft Stale Roull 7 lOuth of Eaatem High
School Sunday afternoon, a barn floated onto' the roadway, and
a van and a car were nearly submerged In water. A road 11rader
of the Melga County Highway Department, capable of going into
del!) water, wn on the sc;ane to asslat. One rnldant reported that
11 Inches of rain fell in that area from midnight to 6 a.m.
a pickup truck with a camper top
were seen passing by the Pomeroy
municipal parking lot this morning.
At presstirne, the river wa~ quickly overtaking the parking . lot in
Pomeroy. ~ riverfront amphithellter

~~~;~~~~~::rS:~l~~~ :=
.

•

•

I~

lower end of the lot, near Farmers :
Bank &amp; Savings Co., was quickly :
flooding. · '
These areas are traditionally the
firsnireas in Pomeroy to flood, fol lowed by areas of East and West
Main Street, at Rite Aid and Farmers
Bank, respectively.

'•'

confesses to killing· Vl""eo
.gr~nher
Ul
I G I"

143 Twi~
145 HM Wth 1111! hind
147 Seizl!
150 The "I"
152 Conclualon
154 OlheiWIH called:
abbr.
158 Lawyers' org.

71 A!:q\11

I

.

By NANCY NUSSBAUM
Ataoc!Med Preu Writer

t33 Century plant
. 135 Britlah elevators
138 Communlori table
139 Web-footl!d birds

85 Funtlw
&amp;7 l'olbli7acf
CornnW1d to a dog

159 8101tn. ·

Rain-weary Ohioans await
possibility of more flooding

128 Burstyn and othera
129 Branches
130 Of birds
131 Backward: prefix

112 ShOwy lklwlr
114 Nrrrt 11011

ee

.

126 Armed conflict

skirt

81 Angry

155 Appl lUI
157 Frtlghl boll
158 Olllhalp

1112T..,.
1&amp;3 Boxta '

I

58 Dough-riser
58 Toole a cruiH
eo Not tipsy

153 Bit ohnow

-

120 Hila the sack

53 Special pleasura
54 Unger

148 Bjlhop'l 114h1Nitdlltl~151 Cine~~!
.

63 P~chad
85 Scatel!r

Hlghlande~a

-

114 Auction
116 Smail dog, for short

.,244Seucy

180 Dlgrllde
1&amp;1 Nl!t lor 1111! hair

116 Cigar reaidue
87 Sllndtud-

33 -

-

122 Olcars and Emmya
123 Blsmarck
125 Went..,., quiefdy
127 Uke atVttwad

80 Hair ulon WOfker
82 Obese

----

2 Nimble
3 Name for a hound

Rogers the linger
Viper .
Oral, Julia or Eric
100 Edllon's middle

11 t LeU ttandl

59 Iran, In dayl! pal
63 Ecc:anlric one
54 OigM
116 Old Roman fighters
: 88 Animal group
89 Shipe
10 Summer mO.

.

IEARCHIHG -A raging flllh flood wiped
out homM along lmllh-8alter Roed In Olive

82 Air circulator
84 Tear
85 Ceremonial
garment
87 Parts of llowers
89 Legal wrong
90 Struggles for air
91 Ne plus92 Use
· 93 Seaweed
94 SWHI potato
95 Steer cl8ar of
98 Peet
97 Turbine part
98 Fashion
99 Fully satisfies
101 Tip .
100 Parcel of land
104 Light fabric
107 Edinburgh native
108 Coral ridge
110.Go bad, as milk
111 Kills
113 Secludad place

1 Sl. Jqhn's bread

Jetlyfru~

32 Show excessive
affection
34 extam
36 The 22nd letter .F

55 Keep afloat .
57 San - Obilpo

-

lorl!ign
Weight un~

106 Depot abbr.

48 Observe
50 Church part
52 ClOthing

-

89
90
93
95
98

27 Start to eat: 2 wds.
28 Livellneaa
29 Cry at a bullfight
30 Tickle Me -

45 Bushy-tailed animal

.

DOWN

104 Beget

43 Sell-out algn
44 H~

.Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page B-6

- -- -

88 Wold wilh first or

37 Ice maBS, for sl!Oit
39 Intentions
41 Fat for cooking

.

at 45 feet

Gallipolis, Oh.
Or Toll ft.ee 1·800·446·0842

-

..

280x

••

Pome~foy

Township Sunday morning. P1opte a,.llhown

------ -

'ground, above, to gauge lhillmpact at Ill height. Seen In the background are construction t,.lll!ra for the building program underway at EHS.
·

·R iver's
level may
crest in

.... Ullng a bacld1oe to lUrch dabMoflilraJI-

hnchad
24 Petfect

~

.

NORRIS NORTHUP DODGE, INC

16 Yeams
21 Greek place of
assel11bly
22 External
23 Run off to gel

..

'

You'll Ulre Our Qaalft» WG)f of Doinl Buslnessf

1 Had concerns
8 Bring about
11 Turns toward

I·

{

SWAMPED - ...,.,. ftoodlng atruck the en11m 11C11on of
M1lp County over lheWMkltld followlllt a aerlel of ltormalhal
napt tlwouah the -and Into Will VIrginia. Flooding clOIICI
Bllta ~tat Eaa.,n Hlgh'8chool, and raeldtltll atooc1 on high

Come
Mike Northup,
Pete
AI Durst,
Neal Peifer, nm Conwell, Jemie Adamson, Jim Hamilton, Joe nms

ACROSS ··

.

s.ntlnel News Stiff
. Torrential ruin swept through northeast Meigs County early Sunday momi·na. leaving signifiacnt damage and one death in il$ wake. ·
The rainfall, up to II inches according to unoffM:ial reports, turned onlinllrily placid streams into raging torrents, destroying homes, damaging property and isolating ponioos of the county.
Dead is Doris Ellis, SS, West Union Street, Athens, who was visiting a
friend, Carol McWilliams who lived in a trailer along Smith-Baker Road near
Success Road in.Olive Township.
The current destroyed the llltlbile ho~ c,ilntaining the two women, scat·
tering debris for miles along the small crecltlwhich feeds into the Eas.t Shade
River.
'
"There was no warning, • said McWilliams, who said the first hint of dan·
ger was when !he water ~red the windows in the mobile home. The water
pressure eventulily destroyed the trailer. pushing the two women out into
the dark tonent.
·"I had hold of her hand ... and she slipped from my grasp," she said
McWilliams credits God for tlie factors contributing to her own survival.
She eventually found refuge in a sycamore tree, grabbing onto a branch and
awaiting the arrival of rescuers. • ' '
·
Abouta half-mile downstream, McWilliams' son Bill Nutter and his family were standing on the eon:h of his home, isolated in the rushing flood.
. "We slood on that porch and prayed for an hour," he said. "We weathered
it out on the porch in the dark."
.Thci force of the water flowing through Nutter's block house and blew out ·
(Continued on Pqe 3) .
·

Iris, cruise, tilt, ·

·South Point Family Medical Center

.

•

94CAUVAN

; lEW 91

.

Hometown Newspaper

tf lood sweeps
Athens woman
to her death

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

--

.

Fully loaded, green,
· 20,000 mill~!;~

GALLIPO·
LIS
Kara
Beaver, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Roger
(Janel) McClelland, Gallipolis.
is
now
licensed cosmetologist.
A 1998 gr. d·
uate of Gatlia
Beaver
Specialized Care for Tota l Joint RepiJccmcn t
Academy High
School and Buckeye Hills, she
For Initial evaluations or follow-up vlsHs,
received her license from Buckeye
(\...-"" we offer monthly office hours at
Hills last spring.
She is now employed at Lissa's
Riverview Salon of Beauty, StateRoute 7 North.
55 Township Rd. 508 Oust off Rt. 52). South Point, Ohio

-

Meigs County's

&lt;\anlliJle.

8

Onl..

Receives license

.

High: SO.; Low: 70s

70,000 miles:
_con_tlnu_ed_rrom_D-_1_ _ __

Abandoned plants in these environ·
AGNEWS
BLUEMOLD
FORECAST: ments will serve as excellent hosts for
There are still no reports of blue mold blue mold. Keep up your good spray
in Ohio, however the disease has . patterns now that the tobacco is in r.he
been confirmed in Maysville, Ken- field.
TOBACCO:: Mark your calendar
tucky, just over the border from
Brown Coanty. University of Ken- for the annual Tobacco Twilight Tour,
. tucky officials assume that blue mold Tuesday, July 14, beginning at6 p.m.
is indeed active in Ohio, but still on the farms of Mike and Edie
undetected. As you get back into your Bostic and Vert in and Joanne Swain
fields and resume cultivation, please on Route 7 in Crown City. Parking
scout your plants for signs of di~ase. will be available on Sugar Creek
Also, it is extremely important to Road. The tour will feature demondestroy left over plants in green- stration and research plots with
houses and outdoor float systems. Admire. Spartan. and the new variety,
TN97. There will be a tobacco cuning
demonstration with a 4-Star Tobacco

Toler qualifies again

..
tomorrow: Rain likely

Reds
turn
things around
with 4th win
Page4

.

can do.

.\Japanese beetles..........
con=lioued~rrom=D-=-=-1

Building the Islamic bomb, Page 2
Gordon wins Save Mart 350K, Page 5.
News of local servicemen, Page 6

Today; Pwtly cloudy
~h: ao.; Low: 70s

skepticli," he said. "We're very
gradually starling to get a lot more
reliable data about what this process

planes fly alongside cUmulus clouds, been seetlc&lt;l. The studies also found
seeding tllem with tiny aystals of sil- a 7 pen:ent to 14 percent increase in
ver iodide. The particles serve u rainflil in the same areas.
nuclei for the w11erdroplets swirtina
In a study conducted by Geo!J!e
in the subfreezing tops of potential Bomar, a meteomtoaist with the
rain clouds..The developing ice crys- Texas NIIUral Resource Conservation
tals melt as !hey fall through the Commission, rain volume in seeded
clouds, making raindrops.
~louds increased as much as I00 perThe company uses sophisticat.ed cent over clouds that had not been
radar, its own staff of meteorologists seeded with the aystals.
and expertly trained pilots to pinpoint
Bruce Boe, director of the North
the best clouds to seed.
. Dakota Atmospheric Resource
Studies by the South Dakota Board. admits he was skeptical of
_ __
School of Mines and TechooiOIY and cloud seeding's effectiveness when
North Dakota Stale University show . he first heard of it several decades
a
45 percent reduction in crop losses qo. Ohio lfay and Pasture Day. Tuesday,
.
June 30 from '3-9 p.m. at the Ohio to hlii nn areas wheil: clouds have
·"As a scientist. I'm trained to be
Agricultural Research &amp; Development Center- Jackson, Ohio branch
(located on State Route 93 South).
The program consists of Hay Demonstrations from 3-5 p.m., Exhibit
Reviews from 5-6 p.m., Research
Field Tours 6-7 :30 p:m. and keynote
speaker • Dr. Paul Peterson, Exten- .
sion Forage Specialist from 7:45 - 9
p,m.. Jackson County Caulemen's
Association will be manning a food
booth concession. No registration is
needed, admission is free and the program is open to the public. ,
Hal Kneen Is the Meigs County
94
Agricultu~ &amp; Natural Resourte~~
4 DR.
94
Agent, The Ohio State Unlvenity,
Gold, 4 Dr., A/C,
White, loaded, nice luxury,

Sports

JUM2t,

Weather

.

.

By JOHN MacDONALD
Auoclated Preas Writer
FARGO, N.D. - Brothers Jim
and Pat Sweeney have never liked the
term "rainmaker." It always conjured
up the image of a charlatan preying
on a fanner's desperation with claims
he could pull water from the sky.
Their. company can't do that, but
il can increase the likelihood of rain
and decrease r.he probability of dan-

•

'·

-

I

•

with the State Police. sayins he was
Mayo said he and Trooper Brett
the man they wanted for murdering Simmons were waiting when Vickers
Millard Aldridae. a WSAZ· TV earn- arrived at the rural section of the
eraman. said Senior Trooper Scott . county that had been selected.
Mayo.
"We saw a white lniCk drivins up
A Stale Police dispatcher asked the road. and he said, Tm the guy
Vickers what he looked like, what he you're looking for for murder -I'm
. was wearing and where he wanted to your guy," Mayo said.
meet.
•
I

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