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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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GALLIPOLIS -:too soon after the state
decision .rul~ng Ohio's form o~ funding
pubhc,education unconstitutional to start worrymg about
mcreascd taxes, an area legislator said.
.
"Firat .we must d~terr,?ine whai constitutes .a thorou~h
and effic.en' education, State Rep. John A. Carey sa1d.
. Carey,_ a :Wellston ~epubli~n representing_t~e 9~th
House Dtstnct of Gall,lll, Me1gs and Jackson counties,
and eastern' Lawrence County, said numerous ideas on
better funding for schools arc floating around, including
. eamarklng the stale personal income tax or sales tax for
primary and ~condary education.
"Many people are speculating that this will result in a
tax increase," Carey sai4. "I believe it is too early to
address. the lax component of the question."
Supr~me Co~rt

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Saturday's action

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Gallipolis commission
continues search for
new city manager
GALLIPQLIS - Gallipolis
City Commissioners met _in a
closed-door session
with a

4WD, air, AMIFM, 4 door,
Asl.oWAs...

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no action .
they returned to public session.
' ill~ can(lidat~ met with the
commissioners for nearl'y an hour
in the city manager's office during
a special meeting. To date, the
commission has conducted four
in-i&gt;erson interviews with possible
replacements for th~ post and several telephone conversations with
other candidates.
Since City Manager Matthew
W. Coppler departed Gallipolis.on
Jan. 31 to assume a similar position in the Canton area suburb of
Louisville, the commission has
received more than 70 applic;a·
lions for the job - down si~nifi·
cantfy from the reported 300
received when the position last
became vacant.
In a previous interview, Com·
· mission President Carol O'Rourke
. · said the commission was "closer
· than we were before" on selecting
a replacement for Coppler. Of the
three, candidates personally interviewed by the commissioners
before Friday, two are from Ohio
and one hails from Nebraska. ·
After Coppler announced his
· resignation last December, the
city advertised in state and nation,
. al publications for a replacement,
· as it did when ·Glenn..A. Smith
resigned as city manager in July
1994. O'Rourke said the applica"
lions received in the latest search
have ranged froiD around the
country.

Good Morning
Today'• CU..~
1l Sections • 1 Pages

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11197 Ohio Volley

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By .KEVIN KELLY
. Tlmea-Sentlnel Steff
GAWPOUS -A concentrated
effort to win national accreditation
for the Gallia County Local School
District's two high schools has paid
off.
. River Valley aft\! South Galli~
high schools were awarded recogni·
·
tion · by the
North · Central
Assilciation of
SchQols
and
Colleges during
· its annual meeting
month in Chica·
' is for one year,
liS.
. ,asq he
their status.
"We're
with what we have
now,•· River 'Vallley Principal Pat
Stout explliined.
work is really
.only beginning."
While North Central . accredita·tion· 'i~ ccinsidered impot1ant when
graduating 5eniors begin applying to
~liege, it actually demonstrates that
the schools have held themselves to
a higher '·educational standatd, 5ald

control:
Local agencies team up
to .combat illegal dumping

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lum director.
computer''
aerCharla
Evans, the district's curricu· on
Tllylor
w.orkiMI
.
one qt the
Oallla High School
"lt's a voluntary participation, vlcae for
and as .educators and professionals, In their ll'lorta
.ye1r to wli1
the North Central Allaocletlon pf
it shows you're taking the extra step Sohcibla IHid Colleg...
to provide a higher !eve(' of programming for stuhents,• she said.
"The committee acknowledged the fact transportation has
The push to achieve accreditation began al few years ·ago been a problem, one o~er which we had no control, and they felt
when the district launched a curriculum upgrade' in such areas as It shouldn't be an Insurmountable barrier beeause everything else
new textbook acquisition and more access to computer inslruc· met their standards," Evans said .
tion and usage.
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. Evans said tbat South Gallia's accrel!itation is "very ·com· ·
.On the basis of those requirements, River Valley could have mendable that they achieved that goal in such a short amount of
qualified for accreditation at any time since it opened in '1992, time.".
.
Evans said. ·
"For a new high school to receive accreljll,tion js unheard
The •goal was stymied by three factorS'~ t~nsportatlon, the · of, • Princ:ipill.nm Scarberry said._"We~· pa_~~~~~Y, pr~~d of
instructional day being 30 minutes shorter tha~ North Central's thaL •
standard, and the amount of long-distance learning students got · . Self-evaluation, resource inventory, filling out reports and
at, area universities through the postscqondary ~ducation option. . application was started last fall at the buildings in the h()pc of .
But due to the district's improved curriculum, the Ohio North getting accreditation this year. Stout and home economics
Central committee took those conditions into consideration, teacher Connie Bradbury were the team supervising the wor~ at
Evans eXplained. The opening of South Gallia as Gallia County ·River Va.llcy, wbile Scarberry a~d guidance' counselor f;ody
·Loc:_al's seeond. hi~h school last fall al&amp;o spurred lhe drive to Boothe d1d the same at ·~outh Galha. · ·· ·
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ach1eve ~ccredJtahon for the 1996.97 School year.
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Continued on page A2

. POMEROY - The Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment arid the Gallia, Jackson, Meigs, Vinton Solid
Waste Management District
have teamed up, forming an
· alliance to combat illegal
dumping and
issues. ·
·.-This·
.!he
District and'
Department allows (or
agencies to provide
more effective en1'orcem&lt;ent'
operations, according to
Scott Copley of the district. .
In their cooperative
efforts, the distri~t provides
$10,000 in funding, and the
Sheriff's Department dedi·
cates more than 16 hours
weekly toward investigation Deputy Ben Devldeon
of each illegal dumping or lit·
ter complaint. Deputy Ben Davidson is the litter/dump•
ing investigator for the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment.
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Enforcement/Health Information Coordinator for the
Solid ·waste District, Jim (3cckner; said "this relation·
ship with the Sheriff's Department allows the District to
have a more intense, investigative process against illegal
· dumping and littering."
"We are pleased with our ag~eemcnt,:•. Beckner said,
"and 'Deputy Davidson is doing art excellent job in
Meigs County."
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Beckner said thai illegal dumpin11 is a serious crime,
anq violators will be proseculed. Residents wishing to
file a complaint about illegal dumping or littering · ·
should contact the sheriff's department.
The GJMV Solid Waste Management District is a
multi-county agency, governed by the boards Qf county
commissioners of Gallia, Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties, and is dedicated to recycling/waste reduction,
enforcement against illegal dumping and public educa- ,
tion/awarcness of solid waste issues.

Coalition sees 1building assistance proposal as .'retaliation'
By AARON.MARSHALL

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COLUfiU3US - ~e Oh1~ ,Coalit~on for J!!q!Jity and A~equacy' of Sdlool Fundmg had 11 s day m court in ~arch gch1ng
the Ohio Stipr.eme Court to toss out Ohio's schodl funding systern.
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Now, it ~pears they will gel their tum in front of a guber·
n~torial tllirfton:e formed lo recommend the ne+ system that
w11l be piil'Tn place.
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Coalition execitlive ditector Bill Phillis confirmed Friday
that he and other coalition officials will _appear Tuesday in front
of the Ohio School Funding Taskfoi:ce. Phillis said the group
will ~sentially .present the coalition's solutio~, which w-.
unveiJed.on Apr1l 15.
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"Our feeling hasn't.changed," he said."We .are about the
concept that all children in Ohio have the right to 1a quality edu. cation." 1'
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: WASHINGTON - At first glance, helping regions
f,Ccover from natural disasters would appear to be an
.issue safe from controversy in Congress.
; : Think again.
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: : As the cu.mulative price tag,for the suffering nature
.ball brought m the 1990s grows, questions mount about
~!"hether the money is beina spent wisely.
·
•• A strin&amp; of flboda, tornldoes, hurricanes, earthquakes
' and other calamities has hammered the nation with Jn
. ·unprecedented ID!ount Qf property damage, u well u
considerable human tragedy.
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· This year the atory baa been the devutatina floods in
the Upper Midwest and along the Ohio River, u well u

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against the measure in the Senate, said he is
concerned the provisions will result in the
forced consolidation of smaller rural .districts.
"I'm afraid they are going to turn around
and say it's not practical to have a school (listrict less than· wilh 700 or 800 students ... "
During floor debate on the bill, Watts
defended the clause saying thai il provides
"accountability" for taxpayers. He said the
commission study of alternatives is aimed
Shoemaker
more at urban districts that should be forced 10
consider sharing buildings with neighboring districts.
Under the legislation, the Ohio School 'Facilities Commission would consist of the Director of Budget and Management,
director of Administrative Services, Superintendent of Public
ln.struction, and four nonvoting legislative members to ad minister the prosram instead of the State Board of Education
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;· $5.5 billion relief bill stalled in Senate

toma!loes in Arkansas and other s.tates.
· Year after year, the di. .ers have
resulted In a continual demand in Con·
, gress for special spending ~ills to deal .
with them.
Frolll 1986-1996,the Federal Emergcncy Management Agency, the main
source of federal disuk.r aulatanoe, dla·
Jiensed more tlian .$18.5 billion in disu- len. O.Winl
ter assistance.
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. This year, a $5.S billion !lisaster-relief bill remaiDI
stalled In the Senate. ·
FinaiiiCiion on tbil year billltu beea held up uniil
· next week, when the Ho ,Is 011pected to pus. Its ver·
sion.
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Meanwhile, on another school funding front, Phillis blasted
a portion of Senate Bill102, a propqsal aimed at "fast-track·
ing" $300 milliOI! in state school building assistance money .
that passed the Ohio Senate 21-12last week. .
·
His comments were directed at an amendment inserted into
the bill in committee by State Sen. Gene Watts, R-Columbus.
It requires the Ohio School Facilities Commission to evaluate ·
the practibility of meeting a ·school district's classroom facility ·
· needs through such m¢ans as split sesaions, year~round classes
and the joint usc of school facilities with one or more school ·
districts.
·
"I think what this ill about is retaliation for the court's deci·
sion," Phillis said. He added,that if hypothetically "the subut·
ban ciunmunities were in need of stale building assistance .for
their school buildings, 1 guarantee you those hurdles wouldn't
be in place."
· State Sen. Michael Shoemaker, D·Boumevillc, who voted
.

~awmake~s split ,over dlsastet.fundi
By PAUL BARTON
Qaroi'lelt Nlwa Strvlcl

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The court has given the ·state a year to draw up a bet·
ter funding formula. The issue is currently being tackled
by a task force under Gov. George .Voinovich .
The court deciding against the state's appeal in the
1994 Perry·County school funding case, noted that the
funding system should not rely on property taxes alon~.
Carey sai~ the decision won't necessarily mean a
reduction in property taxes. , .
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"It does mean that if you are in a low-income district, .
your children will not be denied a thorough and efficient
education in a safe and healthy environment," he said.
Because the justices found the School Building
Assistance Program' underfunded, It waa also deter·
mined to be unconstitutional. Carey countered that "nlil·
lions of dollars" have been appropriated for building

Gallia schools win accreditation -L itter

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5spd, v6, power steering, 4wl1fel intiJoCk brakes, As IDw.As...

in school building assistance to Ohio's
poorest school districts," he added.
Carey noted that the Legislature has
worked for the past several years to
eliminate disparities in funding between
urban, suburban and rural school systems·. The current two-year budget pro·
posal earmarks $213 million for low·
asaistance by the
wealth ,systems. .
.
Legislature, but
, 1'We need to c;Ontinue to build on our
has been held up
·prior measures," said Carey, now servfor "bureaucratic ~ ~~~f~i;j,~'fi.r
i!lg his second term in the House. "The
reasons."
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public has placed high expectations on
When Ho~
the Legislature to properly answer this
members found
.question so the state can do a better job
out the funds
ldi'I,I'J: · o( providing our children with a quality
were- not being
'ectiJ;~
education .
utilized in a
"These expectations, however, are
speedily or effi· .a;,:;_;.....;;...;.;.,;....;;:t.....:.;...;ti=""-'-'-.:_..::.......:::.:....-'--,.:l.:J not limited to legislators ... ·Our state's
cicntly, a propos· ·
, . Cj(ucation problems ~ only bq fixed if
al was designed to expedite the releaSe of the funds and there is a cooperative effort that includes the communi· ·
get needed repaira done, Carey said. . ,
ty, educatoq;1 and most importantly, the parco~ an4 stu.
"It is safe to say that you willsce ~ significant increaSe dents," he a~ded.

'It's too early to address tax component of question,' says Carey

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Vol. 32, No. 13

·Se:hool•funding options:

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Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasant • May 11 , 1997

' bill got boged down as the Republican majori·
The
ty, lnsleld of dealin&amp; with disaster relief as a separate
,i..UC, soupt 1o combine it with controversial measures
to prevent future government shutdowns and chan11e
Census Bureau sampling techniques for the yeai 2000.
Some think Congress should do a better job Qf plannlng so that' it doesn't have to draft a special bill each
lime a dlaajer occurs.
"It ought to be bucJaeted,'' Jaid Rep. John Boehner of
Obio, the cbaifll\lll of the House Republican Caucus.
"Every year there 1~ going to be a natur•l disaster
soinewbcrc in the country and we 0111ht tOo budget for
them."
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Meanwhile, a growina n~mber in dingresa question
the way FEMA diatributes lid from lllte to stale.
·

Sen. Kit Bond, R-Mo., contends that FEMA expendi·
turcs are "out of control." Bond is the chairman of the
Senate subcommittee that oversees FEMA's budget.
Some in Congress, including Sen. Mike DeWine, R·
Ohio, also question whether FEMA applies the same
rules for assistance in every state, especially when· local
matc~ln11 funds are required. "It's a little bit too subjec·
tive," he said of disaster assistance.
Similarly, a 1996 General Accounting Office study
found ''decisions made in determining eligibility followin11 one disaster are not ... ·codified or disseminated
10 FEMA personnel to serve as a precedent in sul)se·
quent disasters."
But Bun.ting insisted the qency does apply assistance eligibility criteria consistently.

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Regional
Accreditation.

NEW MEMBER SCHOOL- River Valley High
School was awarded accreditation by the
North ,Central Aasocletion during the organlzallo.l 1 annual meeting In Chicago last month.
Dr. Emma Baas, aacond from left,'NCA's 1119697
chair of the commission on schools,
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. pre-

Conllnuld from ..... A1
"At the beginriing of 1M year, I
was handed aa aa:mlltinJ book and
told, 'do all this. You can't go
wrong,'" Scarberry IIOied.
"This is something we plln to
maintain for the future," Stout said.
"I think tile community should .be
very proud of.our effons, because it
shows we're trying to reach a little
higher. It _!ISO tells them we arc
being evaluated from the · out,side
and compared to other schools
around the country. •
Maintaining ai:creditation means
ongoing evaluation and searching
for improvement,.Evans said.
"Nonh Central is moving somewhat away from the concept. of
desks, chairs and buildings toward
student
performance;"
she
explained. "in the coming school
year, we will be deciding what students can achieve at a single time,
such as in writing skills, or in doing
a better job of making connections
with the communjty and the world .
of work:"
All four of Gallia County Local's
high schools had North Central
accreditation by 1987, but panicipation lapsed during the period of the
district's indebtedness to the state
loan. fund, which led to the closing
of three of the buildings. The distriCt
paid back its loans in 1995, allowing
it to direct money toward improved

· sented a membership plaque to Charla Evans,
curriculum director for the Gellis County Local
Schools. Flanking them are, from left, RVHS
Principal Pat Stout, home economics teacher
Connie Bradbury .a nd guidance counselor Ron .
Twyman.
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curriculum.

Jury recommends
death for Rogers

WINS ACCREDITATION- South Gallla High
School was awarded accreditation by the
North .Central Association during the organl·
zatlon's annual meeting In Chicago last month • .
Dr. Emma Bass; second from left, NCA's 1996·
97 chair of the commission on schools, pre-

. sented a memberahlp plaque to SGHS Prlncl·
pal nm Scarberry. Flanking them are Charla
Evans, left, curriculum director for the Gallla
County Local Schools, and. SGHS guidance
counselor COdy Bootha, right.

Healthy economy shrinks welfare rolls
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
booming economy is responsible for
almost half a dmmatic drop in weifare numbers nationwide, a White
House report concludes. It poses the
obvious question: What happens
when the economy inevitably slows?
The report released Friday by the
Council of Economic Advisers ·also
credits states that e&lt;periment most
boldly with welfare changes, partie ularly those that punish reCipients
whci don't . participate in work
requiremcnts.
"This study is further proof that
welfare reform works," said Bruce

IUSPS 515·800)
Publishetl coch SundaY. 825 Third · Ave ..
Gallipoli5 1 Ohio; by the Ohio Volley Publi ~ hing
CompanyfGunncll Co .. Second cia~~ po~ta~c
Gollipoli~. Ohio . 4S~JI . Entered a~
~ccond cla ~ s mailing matte r at Pomeroy. Ohio,

pni d nl
Po~ l

Office.

Membtr: The A.~~ocitued Presli. and du: Ohio
New~papcr A ~soc intion .

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D•lly •nd Sunday

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lfl!lldt Galiia County
·
13 Week 5,................ ................................ $2J.JO

26 Weeh ..'.... ......................................... $ll.82
~2 ·Week~ ..... .......... ....... ......... ..... ........ $10!\.56

Aarts Outsidt Callla County .
13 Week~ ............................................. ... .$29. 2~
26 Wcek~ ............ :.................................... $56.68
~~2 Wee k ~t. , .....'., ...... ...................:.. ., ......... SI()C), 7'2

Reed, President Clinton's chief
domestic policy adviser. " It isn'tjust
'the economy, stupid.' It's welfare
reform as well."
But the economy is responsible for
44 percent of caseload drops, accordmg to the analysis of unemplo:)lment
rates, welfare policies and casetoad
changes. It concluded that policy
_ c!Janges enacted by slates under federal waivers account for 31 percent of
the decline.
The other 25 percent was unac.:ounted (or, .althougb· administration
ollicials credited policies such as
expansion of a tax credit for the
working poor.
Low unemployment means more
job chances for people leaving welfare. and the current economic expansion is already the th1rd longest in hislory.
Welfare rolls juniped during the
1990-91 recession and hcgan to fall
as the economy strengthened in I99J
and 1994. So what happens if the
economy turns down'' .
"'We ·did not pretend when the
president signed the bill that there
were enough protections in an ceo·
nomic downturn ... said Donna Sha·
lala, the secretary of Health and
Human Services.

But she pointed out that federal
payments to states arc hased on caseloads at their peaks. meaning stales
will have more money per welfare
recipient than ever before. Many
states arc saving that money for an
economic rainy day. she said.
The report comes as states. freed
from all hut a few federal restrictions.
take responsibility for crcatin!! wei·
fare programs. The six-decade fcdcr·
al guarantee Of aid for the poorest
Americans disappeared when Clinton
signed the welfare l~w iast summer.
States begin the task a step ahead.
The number of people on welfare•has
fallen dmmatically since peaking in

Enroll in an tllet't!~ Career-oriented Program
Administrative Office Assistant, Agricultural, Recreational &amp; Diesel
Mechanics, Auto Body/Auto Collision Technology, Auto Mechanics,
Building &amp; Grounds Keeping, Building Trades, Community Services •.
(Hospitality/Child Care), Computer Aided Drafting, Cosmetology,
Diversified Health Occupations, Financial Management, Food
Preparation, Industrial Electronics, Industrial Maintenance, Marketing
Education, Occupational Work Ex,erience, Patient Care Technician,
Security Senlicca/Law Enforcement, ~lding
Telk to your High 8chool Guidance Counlllor or call tht Student
len1 c• 0t11ce It 111011• Hilla car..r Cemtr (114) 24H334.
"
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1994 - .20 percent nationwide a~d,
more than 4tr percent in states such ,
as Wisconsin and Oregon.
But no one knows how long that
will last -or whitt has happened to
penple who leav~ the rolls.
"The key question ·is, are we-pushing more people into poverty? We
don 't know," Shalala said.
The report notes the relationship
between economic conditions and ,
welfare is not perfect. For instance,
welfare rolls in Virginia dr(JppCd 2G
· percent although unemployment was
above average between · 1993 and
1996.
Robert Rector, who analy7.es wei·
fare for the conservative Herita~c
Foundation. argues there is ''virtual·
ly no relationship" between the cconnmy and caseloads. In the booming
1960s. cascloads rose as welfare was
expanded. and in the early 1980s,
cascloads remained steady during a
rcccssio.n because eligibility standards were tightened.
The study also ~red its . welfare
policies including the effects of state
experiments.
.

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) .:_A man sus·
peeled of killing four women in four
states should be sentenced to death
for stabbing a woman and leaving her
to die in a motel bathtub, a jury rec ommended Friday.
Jurors who convicted Glen
Rogers, an ex·carnival worker born in
Hamilton, Ohio, earlier ihis week
took just three hours toreach the conclusion that Rogers should die for the
November 1995 slaying of Tina
Marie Cribbs, 34.
The jury said it voted 12·0 for
death. A simple majority vote would
have delivered the.same verdict.
State Circuit Judge Diana Allen
has' the final ilecjsion. She set sentencing for June 20. Under Florida
law, there are only two sentences possible for first:dcgree murder: cxccutio~ ,or life in prison with no parole. .
~rosecutor Karen Cox had urged
jurors to recommend the death penalty. saying "'the hands thatt~istcd that
knife arc the hands of evil."
. But de'rcnsc auorney Bob Fraser
. said jurors should keep in mind that
Rogers. 34. had · mental problems,
was an alcoholic and had a deprived
childhood. "The only thing surprising is that it took this long to get
·-here," he said.
Rogers also is charged with
killings in California, Louisiana and
Mississippi while on across-country·
crime spree . .He is also suspected in
the death of 71·year-old roommate
in Kentucky.
A week after Ms. Cribbs was
killed. Rogers was captured in Kentucky after a spectacular . I&lt;» mph
chase. He was driving her car.
Rogers' brother Claude Rogers Jr.
testified Thursday about growing up
with an alcoholic, mean-tempered
father and a punishing mother in an
abusive household where no love was
displayed.
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local internet access
with a smile.
http://www.eurekanet.com

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AccuWeather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

---Tri~Oounty

I

MICH.

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an

The person · responsibile for coordinating this organi~tion's
nondiscrimination compliance efforts is Phillip I. Miller, V.P.
Administrative Services:·Any Individual, or specific class of
Individuals, who feels that this organization has subjected
them to discrimination may obtain further Information about
the statues and regulations listed above from and/or file a
written complaint with this organization; or the Secretary, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250; or the
~mlnlstrator, Rural Utility Services, Washington, D.C. 20250.
Complaints must be filed within 180 days after the ail$ged
discrimination. Confidentiality will be maintained to tha extent
possible.

I

,
By ODIE O'DONNELL
He warned the audience that the audience "that you simply do not
retailers
who will take the biggest hit go head-to-head with these outleL~. so
T·S ~pcwMilnt
. GALLIPOLIS - "Strategies for at the beginning would be groceries, you must re-think your way of estabtaking advantage of discount mass auto pans stores, clo\hing. hardware. lished business practices that may
merchandisers,"a program heard by and pharmacies. plus several other have been successful in the past, but
over 85 business people from Gallia. retailers who do not prepare in could be a di~advantage in the
·Meigs and Mason counties, was the advance . for the establishment of future."
•
The speaker noted that in the laM
highlight. of Thursday night's quar- such a business.
terly after-hours seminar at the GalBased on his studies in the states de9ade there has been a great pro! if-·
lipolis Holid~y Inn. ·
ofTcxas and Iowa. Stone also empha- eration of discou}lt ge neral merchanDr:Kenneth E. Stone, professor of . sized '"that it is possible to co-exist dise stores such as Waf· Mart, K
Economics at Iowa State University and even thrive in this type of en vi· mart, Target and several others. In
in Ames, Iowa. updated local mer- ronment, but you must extend your addition. there has been a great
chants on the good and bad things hours, sell singl~s instead of pre· expansion of membership warehouse
that accompany a discount mass packaged groups. have complemer· clubs, such as Sat;n 's, Pace. Cosco
merchandise store into an area.
tary merchandise, clear your store of and Price Club, but customers must
Sponsored jointly by the Gallia items that are 'dogs,· establish a 'no· buy a membership card purchase
County Chamber of Commerce and hassle' return policy, free delivery anything at these stores'.
the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Asso- service, and teach your employees
Stone also mentioned the ra"pid
ciation, Stone used the hypothetical .product knowledge .of all of the lines expansion of"category killer" stores
effect of a Super Wal-Mart store in · you sell."
·
· such as Circuit City. Office Depot
·Gallipolis, and its impact on estabStone, who has become natfonal-· andToys-R·Us. The net result of this
lished retail businesses in a 40-milc ly known for his knowJedgc of deaf. rapid expansion is the saturation of
radius.
ing with mass merchandisers. warned

Youngstown
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•lcolumbusl7oo

Smoldering bag.found In building

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F,.;rrles

Snow

Ice

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V;l. VA.

Showers T-storms f!ain

· GALI..IPOLIS -City police and officials are investigating why a bag
of smoldering materials was left Friday in·a storage area on the second
.floor of the Municipal Building.
Police said a smoke odor was detected in ,the building around 9 a.m.
Following a che~k by officers a0d· city employees, the bag was fo~nd .in
the storage area near the police investigator's office and the rear entrance
to the Municipal Coun.
Contents of the bag were not revealed, and it was removed from the
scene and extinguished. No damage wa.~ reported by officers.

•~

Students can apply for summer school
.GALLIPOLIS - Galli a Academy High School students can make up
one credit through a three-week summer school .at Buckeye Hills Career
Center. June 16 through July 3, 8 a.m. until 12:20 p.m. each day. A fee
will be charged.
Bus ttansportation will 'be provided from GAHS and the Spring Val·
ley Plaza. The GAHS guidance office will have' applications available
sometime aher May I5, if parents arc interested in having their student
make up the credit.
The courses are for general course credit and no college preparatory
credits will be issued through summer school. Anticipated co·urses incl~de
junior high English, math, social studies and sciece. and senior high English, math so~ial studies and science.
·
For more information. contact the guidance office at 446-3250. or
BHCC at 245·5336.

·'

Sunny Pl. Cloudy Cloudy

Via Associated Press GraphicsNel

Warmer temperatures
will greet Mother's Day
The record high tcmperatu1~
By The Associated Press
Saturday
at the Columbus weather
· A high pressuresystem will move
to the cast on Sunday which will station was 94 degrees in 1936. The
allow a cold front to push into Michi· record low was 25 fn 1966.
Sunrise Sunday will he at 6:20. ·
gan and Indiana by Sunday evening.
Clouds will increase across the
nonh and the chance or showers will
develop in the late al\crnoon hours. ·
In the south. though, partly sunny
skies can he ¢xpectcd for Sunday.
Afternoon highs will be warmer.
dimbing into the lower 60s in the
northeast to the lower 70s in the
Member New York Stock Exchange
southeast ·
Me!Ylber SIPC

SOU'titW:tS't
'tCU'R
JUNE 21-06, 1997
Escorted By:

Bob Sigler
13edt of the th.Jedl
15 nights
18 meals ·

Meigs native wins promotion
\

OFFERING:
•Stocks
•Corporate Bonds
•U.S. Treasury Securities
· •Mutual Funds
•Insured Tax-Free
Municipal Bonds
•Insured Money Mar~et
Accounts
•IRA's
Contact:
Jay Caldwell
John Miller

.

. IRONTON - TrOoper Michael R. Gore of the Ironton Post of the Stine
Highway Patrol .has been promoted to sergeant by Col. Kenneth B. Marshall, the patrol superintendent.
·
".
·
. Gore will transfer to Jackson, where he will assume duties as assistant
post commander.
.
: Gore joined the patrol as a dispatcher at Jackson in August 1986. He
entered training in April 1987 as a member of the I 16th academy class
·and received his commission the following September. He has served at
Ironton since then and has been selected once as the post's trooper of the
year.
' Originally from Rutland, Gore graduated from Meigs High School in
:1979 and earned a bachelor's defll"ee in English from the University of
Rio Grande in 1983. He and his wife;Charmain'e, reside in-South Point
:with their 2-year-old daughter, Elaine.
·

:July 4 parade theme announced
: GALLIPOLIS - The 1997 River Recreation Festival Independence
;Day Parade will be held on Friday, July 4. ·The parade theme is "Pianti·
ng for the Future of Gallia County."
: , Parade marshal will be Brig. Gen. Geoffrey D. Miller.
: · If anyone is interested in panicipating in the parade, they are encour-.
.)lged to call the Galli a County Chamber of Commerce at446-0596: Parade
:entry deadline is Monday, June 23.
.

441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

••

(614) 446-2125
1-800-487-2129

OFF

STOREWIDE!

Monday, May 12 thru Saturday, May 17
20%.oFF Our Everyday .Price
QUALITY- 'fop Quality Name Brands ··
SERVICE -,Special Order, Adjustments, etc.
PRICE- C0f11p~titive Price Structure,
lower Prices On Most Unes

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-,•

:POMEROY - Units of Meigs
Emergency Services answered nine
calls for, assistar1Ce on Friday. Units
responding were:
. CENTRAL DISPATCH
9:27 a.m., to State Route 248.
Ethel Orr to .Holzer Medic~i Center:
I:50 p.m. , to S9uth Fourth
Avenue. Middleport. Gladu Davis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital :
3:29 p.m., to County Road 10,
Troy Durham to VMH;
5:50 p.m., to Broadway Street.
Lawrence Seymore to HMC:
6:59 p.m., to Rocksprings Reha·
bilitation Center, assisted by
Pomeroy: Jessie Jarrell to VMH.
' . RACINE'
4:24 p.m., to Hill Road, Carroll ·
White to Pleasant Valley Hospital .

Hospital·news
V~tKaa~M..ort.l ,

•Cirollna
•DoubleH

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Mason County man injured

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Meigs
EMS un·i ts log nine calls
.
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Beglhnlng.our 24th year of serving our customers
In Meigs, Mason, Gallla and surrounding counties.

\

~eaves .

TAWNEY STUDIO

Middleport, OH

•Juttln
•Tony'Lam•
•LH

One•ca·r crash

Yellowbush Road closing Tuesday

Anniversary Sale

•Chic
•HingTtn

'

ACHIEVEMENT RECOGNITION -Academic achlevare on tht
high school tavelln Meigs, Gallla and Mason counties
l'ec·
ognized for their accomplishments this pall week by the Benev·
olant and Protective Order ol the Elks Gallipolis LOdge.107 durr
ing National Elks Week. The lodge honored the scholars In a ceremony May 4. Gallipolis City Commissioner Bill Davia, left, presented a proclamation recognizing the importance of academic
achievement to Nelson E. Dray, ertalted ruler of the BPOE.

(Mount Tabor).
lkuo Karasawa, 24, was south·
bound, one-tenth of a mile south of
Raccoon Tpwnship ~nad '559 (Deercreek) at I a.m. wbcn his car went off •
. the right side. of the road in an right ·,
curve, and went through a wire fence. ,
The car was · slightly damaged.
according 10 the report.

Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. according to
the report.
Damage to the minivan was mod·

crate and slight 1&lt;&gt; Justus' pickup
truck. troopers said .
The patrol cited a Rio Grande man
· fo&gt;r failure to control and expired registration following a one-car accidCI)l
early Saturday on Gallia CR 8~

:rwo area men are placed In jail

gas spill causes accident

20%

.

RUTLAND- A Mason. County, ed in a creek, according to the report.
The car was severely damaged,
W.Va .. man was injured in a onc·car
and
Durham ·was cited for driving
accident Friday on County Road I0
: GALLIPOLIS- The Galli a County Health Depanment will offer free
(Jacks), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the under the influence, driving under
suspension and failure to control. ..
immunizations at the following locations this week:
State Highway Patrol reported.
. Troopers investigated an accident
; • Wednesday -Woodland Centers Head Stan, II :30 a.m.- I p.m.
Troy M. Durham, 32. Mason. w'l-'
in Gallia County Friday that resulted
~ • Saturday. May 17- pr. Samuel L. Bossard Memorial Library. 1·3 • transponed from the scene of the 2::50
p.m.
p.m. crash' to Veterans Memorial in a citation for assured clear.distance
for driver Ronald J. Justus. 39, 8203
: Childre'n in mied of immunizations must be .accompanied by a parent
Hospi'tal by the Meigs EMS .
. ;md bring a current immunization record with them. For more inforn\a- .
Troopers said Durham was south- . SR 554, Bidwell .
Justus was wcsthi&gt;und on 554 in
tion, call 446·4612, extension 292.
'
bound, two miles north nf State
Springfield
Township at 7:40 p.m .
· Route 124 in Rutland Township,
when
he
was
unable to stup in time
when his car went ntf the right side
: GALLIPOLIS- City Police placed a Gallipolis man into the Gallia
of the road, and struck a sign and a and struc~ the rear of a minivan dri '
County Jail Friday on a churge of domestic violence.
·
·
vcn by Charles A,.. Pcrroud . 43. 322
bridge.
: Edward L. Harrington, 40, 3965State Route·588, was booked into the
The car then overturned and landjail at.8:22 p.m .. according to jail records.
·
Also on Friday, officers cited Charles P. Lewis. 2~. 2974 Kerr Road.
:Bidwell. for public intoxication. and early Saturday. they ticketed Amity
l.. Hill , 27, Vinton , l'or expired registration. .
• Booked into the jail by Gallia County sheriff's deputies at 10:40 p.m.
WELLSTON (AP)- A police officer was shot Friday while' trying 1&lt;&gt; Sklp
:Friday was Kcnng~h.J. Wi~c. 65. Cheshire. on char~es of cont~mptof co011.
two men from stealing trees from a cemetery.
.speeding, no operitior's hccnsc and operaung a veh1clc wtthout hccnsc
Ofticcr Rick Pendleton was shot in the chest but suffered only hruises
~- .
because he was wearing a bulletproof vest. police Chief Mark Ja.:obs told
The Athens Messenger.
·
·
: JACKSON - A free threc·day carc.cr assessment and job-seeking skills
Five trees were found uprooted in Ridgewood Cemetery. said Randy
;workshop for all veterans and their spouses has been set for May 20-22 · Jarvis. cemetery superintendent. They were hcing replanted.
·
in Jackson .
.
The trees arc among 30 the southern Ohiri city bought wuh memorial dona·
: The seminar is sponsnrcd by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services . Lions from individuals and planted this spring. Police had increased patrols
and will take place at the Disabled American Veterans Chapter 45· Hall.
in the cemetery after some trees were stolen in April.
;170 Pearl St:
Pendleton was on patrol early Friday when he saw someone running
·· For more information and class registration, call the veterans employthrough the cemetery carrying what looked like a tree·.
.
ment representative atthc' Rio Grande OBES office, 245-9509.
He chased the man and wrestled him to the ground. He was ready to apply
handcuffs when a second man jumped him from behind. Jacnhs said.'
The two unidentified men kicked Pendleton. then ran away. When tbe nfli·
cet started after th~m . nne of them fired a .22-caliber hand gun at him. and
. RACINE __:_ Ycllowbush Road in Sutton Township will closed on Tucsthe buflct hit him in the chest. Pendleton shot hack.
~ay for paving. weather permini.ng. The date for ~losing bas been changed
from Monday ·due to a change m the contractors sche~ulc.
Lat us c:opy your
Oil~
family photos. Spec:ia:
: REEDSVILLE -An oil and gas spill on Success Road caused a mmor
~ccident on Friday morning. .
·
·
2-5x7's tor $14.95.
•. According to Meigs County Sheri IT James M. Soulsby, Sherry L. Vance,
$19.95. SAVE $5.00. We
28, Parkersburg. W.Va., was westbound when she lost control m a curve
also do passport photos,
:ind went otT the right side of the roadway.
·
.
; According t'? Soulsby, the county highway depanment was en route With
Identification photos and
•and for the sptll at the time of tbc acc1dcnt
photo finishing. "
: There were no injuries or citations. Minor damage was reponed to
Viln~c·s 1988 Buick.
·
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992·3684

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· 23, 1995. Authorities allegedly took
patient charts. narcotics records
sheets, providers, papers and a com·
puler.
According 10 the federal indictment, Westmoreland illegally pre·
scribed drugs in order for his wife to
profit from her business, Our Fami·
ly Pharmacy. which was 'located on
the same property as the Westmoreland ·Family Care Center. ·
He .is also charged in · several
counts with distributing prescription
drugs within I,000 feet of a school.
His office, as well as his witi)'s former pharmacy building, is located
next door to Wahama High School.
Prosecutors for U.S. ·. Attorney
Rebecca Deus have asked the U.S.
Distric~ C&lt;!~li to strip Westmoreland
of.2.7 acres he owns .in Mason Coun·
ty With deeds &lt;;&gt;f trust totaling more
than $309,000.

.Employment seminar set by OBES

The Meigs Cdunty .Department of Human
Services and Gingerbread Preschool. ·will
be offering a summer fun program for any
Meigs County child between the ages of 6
through 10. The program will run June 17
through August 21. For more information
call Chris Shank at 992-2117. Space is
limited, call today for an appointment.

290 N. 2nd

MASON, W,Va. -The trial of a
Mason physician has been changed to
August, according to a spokesman for
the U.S. Allorney 's office.
Dr. Danny R. Westmoreland, 41 ,
was,indicted fcdetally in February .on
37 charges, including defrauding the
. federal Medicare system and allegedly prescribing and dispensing drugs
to support patients' addictions.
Westmoreland was to go on trial'
on the charges on Tuesday, May 13.
but the U.S. Attorney's spokesman
said the trial date had been moved to
Aug. 12.
·The indictments followed an
investigation by the U.S. Drug
Enforcement Administration; the
. Wcsl Virginia Medicare Fraud Unit,
the U.S. Postal Service and the Ohio
Medicaid Fraud Control Unit.
A raid was conducted on West:
moreland's Bend Area ofijce on June.

Wellston officer wounded while
trying to stop memorial tree·theft

FREE SOMMER
FO" PROGRAM

many retail markets that will eventually lead to a major shakeout that oiay
involve large chains a~ JQuch or
more than local merchants.
In liis introduction of the keynote
speaker, Tommie Vaughn, president
of the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association, ·announced the creation
of a scholarship at the University of
Rio Grande fur a student wishing to
major in business management/com ·
munity development toward a bath·
clor's degree .
Gary Roach, president of the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce . .
cxrended the welcome and updated
the group on community development that includes new business
operations set to open soon in the
downtown sections of Gallipolis.
They include a women "s clothing
store, a bath and body sto.re and ·an
antique mini-mall.
·

Area physician's tri.al
now_slated for August

:Immunizations set for this week

· Account Exec11tives

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.

GALLIPOLIS:- Following an executive session on personnel Friday.
the !Jallipolis City Commission returned to open session and approved
an ordinance to buy two riding mowers for use by the parks and cemetery depanments. •
.
The commission acce'pted a bid for the mowers from Jividen's Farm
Equipment &amp; Service, 3137 Ingalls Road, Gallipolis. The ordinance passed
unanimously and no further action:was taken during the special meeting.

IToledo I 69" I

EUREKA NETWORKS, LTD

BUCKEYE RURAL' ELECTRIC .COOPERATIVE, INC., 4848 ·.
State Route 325 South, PO Box 200, Rio Grande, OH 45674
is the recipient of Federal financial assistanc;e from the Rural
Utility Services,
agency of the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, and Is subject to the provisions of Title VI of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964, as amended; Sectio[l 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act of 1973, as amended; the age
!..Discrimination Act _pf 1975, as amended; and the rules and
regulation!! of the ·U.S . Department of Agriculture which
provides that no person In the United States on the basis of
race, color, national origin, age or handicap shall be excluded
from participation in, admission or access to, denied the
benefits of, or otherwise be subjecte(l to discrimination under
any of this organization's programs or activities.

Expert tackles
impact of mass merchandising
.

Commission ·OKs mowers' purchase

Let our friendly staff help. you get on line today.
.

STATEMENT OF NONDISCRIMINATION

Briefs:

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OHIO Weather
SundiiJ, May 11 • ·

·Friday admiuions - none.
Friday dischaiJes - Martha
Bums,
·

REEOSVILI.E '
I0: 12 a.in .. tn Umberger Ridge
Road. Edith O'Dell to HMC.
.
.
RUTLAND
3:29 p.m.. to CR 10. Pany 'Shane.
not transported.
TUPPERS Pt.:AINS
I I:59 a.m.. to SR 7. Lisa Fugcl·
song to Camden-Clark Memorial
,Hospital.
I - • '"

.WANTED!/!
P.eople to loee weight
*100% Natul'll ~

..~

Hearing loss can occur at any age. It often occurs so
gradually that the person with the hearing loss is the
last to realize there is a problem . .

'
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tsi~~ns of heating loss:
• p eop l e seem . ~ •••••••••••••
"1-"I.!L.J!..l!!...IL.!U!::J![:!!!;
•'i
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to mumble or : Fret y, hour
. sp·e ak too
1
softly .
: no·obllgation
• Frieuds or
I consultation

fnmily
members sny
they need to
repertf thing.~

l;~~~hlnk you

rna). be

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with coupon by
a professional
audiologist.
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LISA KOCH,
M.S., C.C.C.A.

Coupon expires
: 5/31/97
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Hi, I'm your new State·Farm
Agent ·Please see me for any
of your insurance needs.

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nffi.woA.For A Limited Time Only!

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GuarardM

Savings ·

Bank

,, ••, 4tl;.ltl2

d~ONo

.500 'IJrird Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

(614) 446-0315

The Bank Who r.are~ About You!

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~, p ,omtnentary
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iunhitv 'arimo· imtitu!
'Est1l6lisiJd itt 1!166

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825_Thlrd ·~· Galllpolle, Ohio
1114 441 2342 • Fu: 446-3008
111 Court St!Ht, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-192-21111• Fu: 992·2157.

.!l,
A Gannett Co•.Newspaper
ROBERT .L. WINGETT
Publl8her ·
·Hoben Wilson Jr.
lac\ltlve Editor

.,

Margaret Lehew
Controller
·

·.,....._
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tn. «1/tor hom ,...,_ on 1 biOMI ,..,..
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"""'""" s~ • .,,. ",.,. .• •,..,.,.,..
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"'FAX.......- , _ - ... ""'"'' .,.. rnkomH , _ , , . . , from ·our

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·

Impact of volunteerism
$ummit not yet felt

IIJ.JAMES HANNAH
'feoclatecl Preu Writer
:'DAYTON- Some people hope that the spirit of volunteerism to help
needy children will spread like wildfire after last month's Presidents' Summit for America's Future.
However, area social service agencies are still waiting for the phones to
rine.
·
·
During the·summit in Philadelphia, delegates were told their efforts should
inspire people around the country to embrace the summit's goals: to give
ullderprivileged children mentors, health .care, safe places to play, marketable
skills and a chance to.perform community service of their own.
Among the speakers: first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, former Presi :...; detM George Bush and retired Artny Gencnil Colin Powell.
·:;, . '"I can't say that we've seen a change yet," said Kipra Heermann, exec~ uikoe director of Daybreak, a shelter for runaway and homeless teen-agers.
"'i "iut we certainly look forward to anyone who is interested."
,,mte 100 volunteers at Daybreak bolster the 30-person staff. The voiUJi~ teen "'ork with the teen-agers, answer the telephones or do clerical work.
:!--:
shelter can house up to 16 runaways at a time. Workers try to get
~ the children back home or into foster homes.
.
,
ii: J •ts . Heerman said many natural candidates to be volunteers are married
~ cq~~ples who do not have the time because they both work.
·
·~ .:'Or tltey have children of thcir·own they are taking care of,." she said.
~ ·)s~eila Bush, executive director of the Melissa Bess Day Care Center, said
~ volunteers are not yet banging down her door.
$j T,he center primarily serves working or student parents. Many of its childt'CII are underprivileged. Ten paid staff members and 22 volunteers care for
.. , I ~children.
.
·::: ''We have to have the volunteers," said Bush; adding that the center has
:'.;! bcii:ome more aggressive in seeking them out, sending people into the com~· riuinity to promote the center and the need for help . .
Bush said some people do not ha~e time to volunteer because they work
or do not have the flexibility to leave their jobs for a few hours during the

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:;The

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·"In some cases, I think there has to be incentives to free up their time,"
shC said. "We also have to have a very meaningful thing for.them to do so
they feel they are contributing."
.
.
.~he said most of the center's volunteers find the experience rewarding.
,"They feel they are making a contriliiition tO-the children's development."

~~-

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Michelle Threatt, case manager for the Dayton Urban League's dropout
p~ention program, said she e)(pccts to see a surge in volunteerism as people determine which organization they want to help.
· i!rhreatt's program serves 30 teen-age mothers and has about 10 volunteers who work as tutors and mentors.
"Thcv help out our youth program a lot. We can always use go_od role
rhpdels." she said. ,

Today in.history
By The Associated Press
. ·
'fl•iay "Sunday, May II. the !31st day of 1997. There arc 2.\4 ,Jay, left
in the yr.a1 This ls·Molher's Day.
·
,
1hday\ Highlight in History :
·
·
·
On Ma) II , 1946, the tirst packages from the relief agency CAKE (Cooperative f&lt;lr American Remittances to Europe) arrived in Europe. all .~ Ha:vrc,
.ffiUiL:~ .
thi ~ date:
· . ln. 11147 . Peter Stuyvesant arrived in New Amsterdam )&lt;l hccoruc ~over­
nor
In 111;8 . Minnesota became the 32nd state of the Union.
·tn 1888 songwriter Irving Berlin was born Israel Balinc in Tl'rnun. Russi«.
.
·,In 1~94 , workers at the Pullman P.alacc Car Company in II,! in"'~ w~nt on
mil~ . ('The American Railway Union. led by Eugene Debs. sul"cqucntly
began a tlcrycoll of Pullman that blocked freight traffic in and ~mt uf ChicaFl
.
·
In 1'110. Glacier National Park in Montana wa.' established.

, Ou

Berry's World

Sundliy, y_, 11,1117

a fortune . And no financial institution banking issues with the president, $1,000 to the Clinton(Gore camstands to benefit more !han Ow-lotte, and, more m:ently, atiCnded one of paign. Once Ointon was elected,
N.C.-based NationsBank, whose the controversial fund-raising coffees McColl gave the maximum allowable
president and CEO, the wily Huah held at the White House during the donation of $3,000 to the
McColl Jr., is ·largely credited with 1996 campaign.
.
Clinton/Gore transition team.
engineering this quiet revolution.
Back in the summer of 1992,
It's impossible to know euctly
Since 1997, McColl, a former sup- · when the Bush-Clinton-Perot presi- what was said althe breakfast meetporter of both George Bush and dential campaign was in full gear, it ing. Suffice it to say Clinton, who had.
Ross Perot, has forged a close rela- . would have been nearly impossible to previously hedged on interstate
tionship with President Clinton. The predict the relationship that would branching, has been an ardent sup- .
president has been the banker's main develop ,between McColl and Clin- ·porter of the banking legislation eyer
aliy in pressing for major banking ton. During those .summer month~. since. And McColl. in tum, has been
legislation, such as interstate bank McColl made phone calls to several a devout supporter of the president
branching, which passed in 1994.
select individuals, encouraging them
McColl declined to be interviewed
McColl was once called "the . tu support Perot. the previous spring, for this col~mn . But NatibnsBank
most enlightened banker in America" the influential banker, who had been · ·spokeswoman Lynn Drury told us she
by Clinton. Banking sources have an· occasional dinner guest at . the ·was "not aware" of the October '92
re(erred to him as ."Clinton 's right Bush White House, donated $1 ,000 breakfast meeting between Clinton
hand," "an 800-pound (gorilla)," and to the Bush/Quayle campaign.
and McColl. She did acknowledge, .
"the first person" Clinton calls when
It wasn't until October of 1992, in however. that the · two discussed
he "wants to talk to a banker."
the final weeks of the campaign, that banking issues during the campaign.
With McColl's persistence and
. McColl has made several visits to McColl became a Clinton supporter.
the White House, shared a sky b1&gt;x After a breakfast meeting belwecn Clinton's support, interstate bank
with the president at the 1994 NCAA th~ two thai m(lnth, the banker gave branching was passed by Coripress;
championship · basketball game in Clinton. an lith-hour endorsement. then controlled by Democrats, and
Charlotte, stayed up, according tu Accordmg to the Cente~ for Pubhc signed into law by Clinton on Sept,
·
mammoth national banks will make Clinton; "half the night" discussing Integrity, McColl quickly donated 29. 1994.
"Interstate banking would have
happened eventually, but it happened
sooner than it would have without
McColl. " said one banking source.
Some in ' the banking industry
. have charged that McColl was con~ulted every step of the way while the
legislation was being drafted.
"McColl wrote (the interstate branch·
in g) bill," Ken Guenther, executive
vice president of the Independent
Bankers Association of America, tol&lt;;l
uur associate Aaron Karp. "Betwc.en
his connections with the White House
and (members of Congress), everything was cleared with McColl ."
NationsBank spokeswoman Drury
had this response: ''I'd be interested
to know how Mr. Guenther thinks he
knows that," she said. " Mr. McColl
.did not write the interstate banking
legislation .... It's pan i&gt;r the respon. sibility of the banking industry to
consult and give information to the
legislature -- and that would include
the president-- when laws arc being
written. So the fact that (Clinton)
might ask (McColl) what he thought
about something, or ask for
(McColl's) · input on something,
would he pan of the process. "
Jack Anderson and Jan MoHer
are writers for United Feature
'
Syndicate, Inc.

We must remember the role each parent plays
' A very important choice. and a ,
wise one al that, is the choice of our
parents. At that marvelous event
called conception the matter of who
we arc is determined:
%
The
color of our eyes.
'k

Whether we will
be short, tall, or
average height.
The color of our
skin.

'if Whether we will e~pericncc
early baldness, or our hair will be
curly,
''h If we will be an early candidate for breast cancer or a hcan
attack.
That choice also may involve
whether nne parent will abandon the
other parent. or if we arc-considered
· to he an "inconvenience", and it
becomes a cho1cc of life or death .
Obvio.us!y, we had no choice in
any of these i.mponant matters. They
were made for us hy the Creator. and
later by our parents. While we cclchrate Mother's Day today, it is vital
that we also remember the role each
· parent plays.
Wc received a call from our son
Paul in Georgia about five years ago
and he said "Dad. Stephanie and. I
arc pregnant." We were pleased with
this information. D&lt;)t ·only that we
would be grandparents. but that he
understood his role and rcsponsibility.
Raising children in this day and

.

By Joseph Sptlr

1

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c;s• i'1117 brtitr
.a
te, ....
"HI. lherel My ""me's Tom. I'm caught up In ~
ap1r1t of volunteerism, and.- um - I - ah...

What this CO!Jntry needs. Newt
keeps saying, is.the resurrection of a
good, old-fashioned sense of shame. .
- Hio-fellow Republicans. had best
· pray he does not get his wish, lest
their partytollapse in spasms of guilt.
For nearly_ a year. Republican
stalwarts and straw bosses have. been
pounding the Democrats with charges
of campaign finance malfeasance. If
they could market the oil that has
oozed from their pores durin~ this
. time, they might put Wesson out of
business. A drip pan uitder Haley
Barbour's .'chin alone would've produced enough to fry a month's worth
of McDonald's spuds ..
As the Republiean National Committee Chairman, Barbour blasted the
Clinton crowd for sleazy fund raising,
and accused them of trying to "cover-up this well-organized scheme of
foreign contributions and influence
peddling" and trying to "shake down
foreign businesses and governments
· for money." You wouldn't catch
high-minded Republicans doing such

·. ,

too many decades back, men held a
Since the electronic media views
standard for that mother to prefer her these id9as as old-fashioned , outto themselves i~ every social seiling. dated, and repressive of women, it
The thnu)!ht of strikin~ her or abus- may be necessary to. unplug the teleing her in any w~y would bring vision. Since libraries have removed
wrath upon the offender.
from · their shelve~ hundreds of
· The partial quote above from the books depicting males and females ·
wisdmh of Solomons writings car- in traditional roles, parents may
rics in the original a meaning not have to seck hooks on parenting
often understood today. As Chuck from ·other sources. Parents may
Swindqll explains, that portion .. .in need to screen and discuss the uni.the way he. should go " refer to the sex dogma now· taught in today's
"benl" of the child. Look at any fam· classrooms. These arc just the added
ily and we can see they are not all difficulties today's parents have in
wired the same. For pare'\16 to seek addition to earni.ng a living and carto fulfill their own dreams, unful.- ing for the home.
filled in their own lives, through
How fortunate we have been to
their children is not· likely wise. !)ave had parents and others who
While piano lessons may be good loved us and helped develop our
for all children for a time to develop potcn~ial. We especially hoqor our
some skills, nol all children arc gift- · mothers tnday for their life, for their
ed enough to become professional sacrilicc for us, fur their loving care
musicians. While .engineers may · and nurturing through the years.
have a high pay scale, not all chi!Moms, thi' is ·your special day!
drcn arc 'bent' toward science and We may ,not have always lived just
mathematics. If the Qod·given the way you would have wanted us
potential is not present in that man- · to Jive, hut yet you loved us. Thanks
ncr. we arc to raise our children with ·for tcachinli us right from wrong.
consideration to their gifts.
Thanks for being there for us. We
When · societies reach a state of had no problem with self esteem
crisis and approaching collapse, because we saw how important we
'deviancy shoWs a marked rise. We were to you. May your example help
sec this all around us today and this mothers and fathers of young &lt;;,hii -emphasizes why there is an dren today to tx: the best parents
Increased difficulty IC&gt;r parents who they can be. May your e~amplc help
arc raisin),! children. Cbil~ develop- us m live by the best values and premcnt and sexual identity arc so serve the· family for generations to
important und life experience como,. Whetheryou arc iri this life.
unlocks this potential. This is why or the next, we honor you today.
both · parents were given to each · Bob Weedy is 1 c:ori:'CSpondent for
child for modclin~ as well as' train- the Sunday Times-Sentinel.
ing.
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things, no sir. , . •
. : .Responsive Politics. ·.arc militant
Well, gues.~ what til)l,e fll&amp;ga2inc Sikhs whose goal is to create a sepjust uncovcred'16ur Haley, ~less his aralc homeland in India. Two of Buroleaginous .so~l. set up a think tank · ton 's contributions came from Sikh
in 1992 with GOP money and repaid temples and arc apparently illegal.
the parry with a $2.2 million lqan
Bunnn has been an Jldvncate of
guarantee by a Hong Kong business- the Sikh cause for a decade. He · is
man who funnel~ it thrqugh a U.S. also a habitual champion of Pakistani
subSidiary whose only known asset is interests. Last year, according to .the
an apllttnlent in the tony Georgetown Wa.&lt;hington Posi, Bunon complained
section of Washington. And guess to the Pakistani amhussudnr that one
ho~ Barbour.lubricated the deal with of hi.s lobbyists was not contributing
the benefactor? He arranged face enough. A top aide to then-prime
time with Bob Dole and Newt Gin- . minister Bcnazir Bhutto faxed the
'grich, and 11\: took his Hong Kong agent demanding an explanation, and
friend and patron on a trip to Beijing the lobbyist (a former Democratic
to meet the Chinese foreip minister. Pany activist) re~pnndcd thusly:
Oh dear. Righteous Republicans
"I have worked in Washington for
did that? Read on:
over 25 )lC8I'S and have never been
Rep. Dan Bunon, the Indiana shaken down by anyone before like
fire-eater whll is in charge of the pri- · Dan Burton's threats. No one has
mary House investigation of Demo- · ever dared to threaten me into con·
cratic fund-l'llising practices, himself tributing money, and no one has ever
gathered 84 percent of his campaip followed through on such threats by
funds during the Jut election cycle contacting OIIC! of my clients."
from sources outside . his district.
FBI is now lookinJ into the
Among his most enthusiastic sup- matter. Burton, the principled invesponcrs, aceordins. to the Center for tigator, is aghast that anyone would

The

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.· _Mail Pouch barns becoming rarer as generation
~.· of painters retires ·and few carry on with '~rt'
By NANCY NUSSBAUM
· in CHEW," J.e said. l11e "W" foiAisoclated Preu Writer
lowed and tl)en the "CH."
. PLINY,' W.Va. - Harley Warrick
Only pne side, the side with the
· " was the IIISt, and now his work is sign, was painted:
"Once in a Vihile, instead of pay•' ·slowly fading into the browns and
' . greens of barnyards and pastures in ing the .farmer the lease .money, we
backiuads America. No one, it seems, would paint the whole bam," Warrick
· wants to Carry on as the Mail Pouch said .
1., bam painter.
At first , Warrick painted six days
Warrick, 72, has painted some a week and mixed colors in five gal; barns as a free-lancer of sons since Jon kegs on Sundays. He earned $32
he retired four years ago to Belmont, a week. His pickup truck would averOhio, near Wheeling. He even tried age .about 90,000 miles every two
to break in a new Mail Pouch painter. years.
Warrick taught the rookie how to
"You ))ad !O pay all your ex penspaint over rough, dry, splintered es out of that," Warrick said. "We
barns with blacks, whites and yellows stayed in rooming houses and cheap
to restore the signs of another time motels."
· ·and another place: CHEW MAIL
With . a helper, who filled in the
. " POUCH TOBACCO. TREAT black background, Warrick painted a
" ·YOURSELF TO THE BEST.
sign in about six ·hours, sometimes
. "He didn'tlast," he·shrugged.
. doing two barns a day.
But perhaps he didn't give it
Barns were retouched every four
· enough time. Warrick' gave it 50 or five years and Warrick could do .up
' , years, painting or · retouching more to five of those a day.
~than 20,000 barns in Appalachia and
· "We lllways .started just as near
the Midwest.
after daylight as we possibly could
• "The first thousand were a little and you worked until you couldn't,"
.:.rough and, after that, YOIJ got the he said. "There was a lot of lifting
•·~hang of it, " Warrick said.
..
.and tugging and climbing ladders and
. • He was once among ·a dozen men · whatever. It kept you in shape. You
"over t~e years who fanned out, some- didn 't have to go to a health center 10
·.;.times for months at a time, in teams gei your exercise."
·. "'f two.
His first marriage ended because
,.... "They were like cowboys," ·said he was rarely home .
'Danny Fulks, a Marshall University
. ''The first one gave me an offer to
'professor who has written articles on change jobs or change wives. so we
:Appalachian history.
· paned ways," he said. ''!liked thejnb
' "It's part of Americana. when better than I liked her."
'Things were booming, ... said Craig
He remarried, had four children,
~Nickerson, director of human .and managed a five-day week.
" resources for Swisher International
"My wife had the hardest job," he
' fnc., which owns the Mail Pouch said. "She was hercltaking care of tiJC
''company.
children and· getting them through
" ''It's just -another part of our his- college and whatever."
: , tory lhat eventually w)ll go away," he·
"I have to give Harley a lol of
· · said.
credit for doing as long as he did,"
In 1'946, one of the painting teams Nickerson said. ''It was a real tough,
' came to . Warrick's Londonderry, diny, hot job,"
Ohio, home to repaint the Mail Pouch
About 10 years ago; Warrick
signs on each end of his family 's retouched Smith McCausland's barn
· dairy barn. Warrick was 2l,just two . in this Mason County hamlet ahout
days home from the Army.
· 25 miles northwest of Charleston. It
'·' "I was just talking away with was built by McCausland 's grandfa: them and they· said we need some- ther. Confederate calvary Gen. John
· body on one of our crews," he said. McCausland.
'
Jobs were scarce . He took them
The yellow lettering on either end
· up.
.
, is &lt;;.~lipping aw~y. while barely legi·
"i thoyght 'That's better than ble whiie paint has faded to grayatop
milking 27 head of jerseys every warped planks. A steady train oftrac, night and morning ,"' he said. "I did- tor-trailer trucks kicks up dust along
n't have any civilian clothes. I paint- two-lane U.S. 35 just a few feet away.
' ed in my unil'onn in the first week
"We' ll probably never paint over
until! got.somc clothes.''
-il; bu_t &gt;it wi)l weather away,'"
Warrick says he has worked 13 McCausland said.
· states from Michigan to Missouri to
In 1969. Bloch Brothers, now part
·· New York. Another contractor paint- uf Swisher International , stopped
· cd barns in California, Oregon and repainting b.arns. It kept Warrick
- Washington. About4.000 were paint- working, for the barns' historical val. cd, beginning early in the 1900s.
uc. until he retired . .
Warrick painted by eye. starting at
But the end really began in 1.965.
when the federal Highway Bcautifi, the center.
'·You always started with the : E' cation Act prohibited outdoor adver-

, "A lot•of people ~re just letting
them go. It's rea:lly sad . The day will
come 'when the barns will rot and
· deteriorate," Nickerson said .
It wa.• about the turn of the ce ntury when Aaron Bloch · suggested
painting the company 's message on
barns. Other companies advertised on
barns, too.
The Mail Pouch sign "reminds us
of a time · whcri life was simpl er,"
Fulks said. " Barns in the farms of
long ago were social centers . Men
liked to chew tobacco and' cuss and
drink a little whiskey. Barns lent
· them5elves to that atmosphere." . .
'The company paid farmers a ·
token, $20 a year to McCausland. or
traded tobacco supplies and magazine
subscriptions to paint the ~ide facing
the r(Jad. Eventually, everyone was
paid in cash. ·
·
McCausland. 73, said he would·
like . the company to maintain the
signs for their historical value. He
said he can't do the job.
"It's an art," he said.
Doug Hudson, a worker on ·
McCausland's I ,000-acre cattle and
grain fann, said people stop and 'take
pictures, especially in the summer

, .By The Associated Press
· worth $250. The 5,35!1 with three of
The following numbers were. the numbers arc each' worth $10. The
. selected in Friday 's Ohio and West 49.407 with two of the numbers arc
, Virginia loucrics:
each worth $1.
.
OHIO
The Ohio Lottery will pay out .
Pick 3: 7-5-0
$514,189to winners in.Friday 's Pick
Pick 4: 3-)-6-1
3 Numbers daily game . Sales totaled
Buckeye 5: 3-9-12-15-29
'"$1.514.914.50.
.
No Ohio Lottery player came up
In Pick 4 Numbers, players
with the right five-number combina- · wagered $426.!127 .50 and will share
tion in Buckeye 5. so no one can $213.300.
" claim the $100,000 prize. the lottery
Thcjackpot for Saturday\ Super
.. announced Saturday.
Lotto drawing was $24 million .
. Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
WEST VIRG.INIA
;, $397,169.
·
Daily 3:0-5-4
:: · The 234 Buckeye 5 game tickets
Daily 4: 8-7-5;4
: with four of the numbers arc each
Cash 25:2-4-10-11-21-23

Sunday, May 11

II"'" II /

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VANISHING SCENE - Smith McCausland
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ths chewing tobacco's f!lmillar, but by now van·

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question his integrity. Clearly the
charges are poli~ically . mnlivatcd;
says ·the man who once . vowed tO:
probe the cosl~ associated with Socks
the first eat's correspon&lt;lencc, and
who still maintains that Vince Foster
was murdered and once , re-enacted:
the crime in his back yard by firi!lg;
a pist&lt;~ through a "head-like thing."•
. Here is the point: Pany is 'inele-!
vant.' Politicians routinelY' peddle'!
pieces of themselves for money.,
Democrats, Republicans -- with rare
exception, they all do it. It is a way
of life in Washington, and especially
on Capitol Hill. They sleep. cat, drink
and belch fund raising. They ha~~~
written the laws so that most of their
ac.tivitics are legal, but that doesn't
mean that the butt-bussing; Inn~
twisting arid h&lt;nc-ttading that g~·
on at receptions, dinners, golf out~
ings, ski lri~ and dinlctly ader !hi
dome don't stink. Indeed, the !:IIIII~
paign finance mess is the bluest,
· !Migoing scandal of our' lge.
•• :

tlsiqg within 660 feet of a federally
funded highway. Existing signs were
not affected, Nickerson said, but further restrictions and costs doomed the

[·.

.

.1

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,.

.f;a~ing into landscape

By Jack Anderson
and ...n Moller
WASHINGTON :. America's
banking industry has undergone a
near revohition during the Clinton
presidency. But hardly anyone seems
to have noticed.
So it's rather appropriate that June
. I, 1997-- the day landmark interstate
bank branching laws will become
effective-- approaches with little fan- ·
fare. Interstate branching will allow
banks to shed the restrictions of state
lines and expand nationally. Financial
institutions will be able to operate a
single, national bank rather than
independent branches in each stale.
With branches already in place in
multiple states across the country,
several bank holding companies are
poised to l;&gt;ecome lucrative "nationat" banks when the new law kicks in
next month.
Whether or not this will be good
for consumer$ is still open t&lt;i debate.
What is cert~in , however, is that the

age is more difficult than any time in
the memorable past. There. are more
competing ·forces at work. jn our
society whic!) distract from . the
opportunity to "train a child in the
way he sho~ld go. While much of
thattraining.still falls to the mother, '
she also often is expected to, or
forced to, work outside the home.
More and more training to some
degree is falling to grandparents.
Training a .child is an awesome
matter, and no training manual came
with the. new arrival. While it was
taken for granted .in previous generations, today a prime consideration
is to teach children that-the sexes arc
of equal worth, but very different
from one another. Girls should krlow
that they are girls; and boys should
know that they arc boys. There is no
more sure way for parents and others to impair the psychological
development of children than to
ef(eminize boys and to masculinize
girls. Our failure to preserve the wisdum of the ages is wrecking havoc
in far too many lives tcxlay.
The thought of a man staying in bed
with the covers over his head wl)ilc
his wife goes to confront an intruder
may be amusing to s0 mc. but in real· ity is an unacceptable role reversal.
Sending women into combat, simply
because they can pass the training, is
a similar example of confusion .
Children must be ·viewed as our
most priceless possession and must
be given our highest social .priority.
The woman who conceives becomes
a mother at that point and dcse.vcs
In be held in the highesl re@:lrd. Not

' • :JIIIr11, 1117 .

•

Bill and Hugh rewrite the bankin-g rules:

By ROBERT WEEDY

Ohio/W.Va.

•

. Shamelessa~tions by both parties in the capital

.l;
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,

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!leeS may noo ""panoopaling ••

'"' orstwo 01 ,..-·

MIY....
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7

s...,uy, May 11, 1111

• Mkldlaport • O.lllpDIII, 0H • Point PIN18nt, WV

I

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Gallia County court news

Kenneth Ryan Curry
GALLIPOLIS- Kennelh Ryan Cwry, son of Mark and Becky Irwin Cur·
ry of B1dwell, was shllborn Tuesday. May 6, 1997 at Holzer Medical Center.

Surviving in addition to his parents~ two brothers Joshua David Cur·
ry and Caleb _Christian Curry; a sister, Jan~ Ashley Cu~; maternal grand·
parents, Melvm and ~thryn Irwin of Gallipolis; a paternal grandmother, Car·
ol Jane Curry of Galhpohs; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was prece~ed in dealh by his paternal grandfather, Kennetjl E. Curry.
Graves1de erv1ces we':'l conducted Thursday, May 8, 1997 at 3 p.m. in
Mound H11l Cemetery, Wllh lhc Rev. Donnie Scoggins offic1ating.
Arrangements were by the Willis Funeral Home.

Kathryn 'Kate' Finch
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- ~thryn "Kale" Finch, 97, 814 Virginia St.,
Ravenswood, d1ed Friday, May 9, 1997 in the Cedar Ridge Nursing Home.
Sissonville, W.Va.
·
Born Feb. 2. 1900 in Milo, W.Va., daughter of the late James M. and
Kathryn Sherry Starcher, she was a homemaker, and a member of the Nonh
Umted Methodist Church in Ravenswood.
Surviving three daughters, Gwendolyn Anderson of Ravenswood, Wan·
da Guinn of Cape Coral, Fla., and Kathryn Lyons of Long Beach, N.C.; lhree
sons, Bob Finch of Nitro, W:Va., Ellis Finch of Teays Valley, W.Va., and
Harold May of Ripley. W.Va.; 17 grandchildren and 26 great-grandchildren;
a sister, Freda Rinehan of Teays Valley: and several -nieces and nephews.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Cecil Finch; and an infant
son.
Services will be II a .m. Monday in the Roush Funeral Home.
Ravenswood, with the Rev. Larry Crawford officiating. Burial will be in the
Independence Cemetery. Sandyville. W.Va. Friends may call ·at the funeral
home from 3.-5 p.m. Sunday.

Andrew 'Jack' Gibbs
LETART, W.Va. - Andrew ."Jack" Gibbs, 66, of the Fairview Community. Letart, died Thursday, May 8, 1997 at his residence.
Born Aug. 21, 1930 in the Fairview Community, son of the late Dewey
and Willia Edwards Gibbs, he was a retired constructton worker and coal
miner

He was a member of Fairview Bible Church. the UMWA, VFW StewanJohns0n Post 9926 in Mason, W.Va., the Black Pearl Vets. and a U.S. Air
Gorce veteran of the Vietnam Contlict.
:: He was also preceded in death by three brothers. William Gibbs, Danny
l?ibbs and Rolland Gibbs.
·
' Surviving are his wife. Donna F. Barringer Gibbs: two daughters. Diane
~eft) Lew1s of Langsville, and Vickie (JefO DeWeese of New Haven. W.Va. ;
a son, Jaclue Michael Gibbs of Letan; four grandchildren and two great·
grandchildren; six sisters, Elizabeth Johnson of Broad Run, W.Va., Maysel
Zirkle of Mason, Dorothy (Clyde) Fields and Grace (Donnie) Goodnite, hoth
of Hanford, W.Va., and Janice (J1mmie) Goodnitc and Sandra (Johnl MacK·
night, both of New Haven; and many nieces and nephews.
: Services w11l be I :30 p.m. Sunday in the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason,
with the Rev. Rankin Roach officiating. Burial will be in the Zerkle Ccmctl,ry Calling hours _were conducted at the funeral home Saturday.
: Military graveside rites will be conducted by the m1htary.

Owen .L. Thivener
GLOUSTER- Owen L. Thivener. 74, Glouster, formerly of Columbus,
died Thursday, May 8, 1997 in O'Bieness Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Son of the late Fred and Nelhe Thivener, he was retired from the Norworth Convalescent Center as the head o( maintenance.
Surv1ving are his w1fe. Helen Lucille Thivcner; two sons, Owcn.Ray (Carole) Thivener of Westerville. and Ronald Gene (Tiffany) Thtvener of
Glouster; three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren; two brothers. Fred
Vernon and Larry Thtvencr; two ststers. Patncia (Roger) Sm1th and Carolyn
(Ri chard) Terry; and many nieces and nephews.
He was also preceded in death by"a Sister, Ernestine Bunce.
Serlitces will be II :30 a.m. Monday in the Rutherford-Corbin Funeral
Home. 515 High St., Wonhington. Burial will he in the Fairv1ew Memorial Park. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday.
·

Kenna l. Thompson
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va. - - Kenna Leroy Thompson. 63, 603 Sycamore
St.. Ravenswood . died Wednesday. May 7. 1997 in the Cleveland Clinic .
Born May 29, 1933 in Red Sulphur Springs. Munroe County. W~a .. son
,,f the late Samuel Price and Ada Lively Thnmpson. he was a supervi or with
Ravenswood Alummum Corp .. and a U.S. Army veteran of the Kor an War.
Surv1vmg arc his w1fe. Joyce Ruth Bowers Thompson; two sons, Kenna
L. "Red'" Thompson Jr. of McArthur. and Jonathan D. Thompson of
Ravenswood: a hrother. Marion Thompson of Manassas, Va.; two sisters,
Nancy Parker Of Blaine. Mtnn .. and N&lt;Jrma-Dnvis of Ravenswood: a brother-in-law. Howard DaviS of Ravenswood : and several i11cccs and nephews.
He was also preceded in death hy three bru!hcrs.
Scrv1ccs w1ll be I p.m. Sunday tn the Roush Funeral Home. Ravenswood.
with Dr. Wallace Wilson ofticiating. Burial will be in the Jackson Memory
Gardens. Conagcville. W.Va. Friends may call at the funeral home on Sunday one hour pnur to the service.

M•Diclpal
GALLIPOLIS - The following
cases were r«enlly resolved in the
Gallipolis Municipal Court:
Craig D. Durham, 36, Vinton,
charged with disorderly conduct, was
fined SIOO.
Larry M. Nolan, 18, Bidwell,
charged wilh driving under the influ·
ence. was fined $450, three days jail.
one year probation and 180 days
license su'spension.
Donald C. Wray, 18,46-112 Court
St., Gallipolis, charged with underage
consumption, was fined $1 SO. one
year probation and 80 hours com·
munity service.
Kineta L. Burns, 30, Cheshire,
charged -with DUI, was fined $500,
three days jail. one year prob~tion
and 80 hours community service.
Charles H. Daugherty Jr.. 28.
1602 Graham School Road, Gallipolis. charged with DUI, was fined
$450, lhree days jail, six months pro·
bation and six months license suspension.
Larry K. Lit~hfield , 38, Hender·
son. W.Va., charged with reckless
operation, was fined $225.
Shawn M. Plumley, 23 , GlenWQOd, W.Va., charged with DUI.
was fmed $450, five days jail, two
years proballon and 180 days license

·

~uspension .

Sandra K. Cordell, 40. 122 Founh
Ave., charged with oOcnsive conduct,
was fined $100.
Gary L. White, 61 , Gallipolis Fer·
ry, W.Va. , charged with DUI, was
fined $750. 30 days jail and one rear
probation.
Matthew J. Eurcll, 21, Bidwell.
charged , with possess10n of drug
paraphernalia, was fined $150, one
year probation and 80 hours com·
munity serv1ce.
Ryan. M. Fuller. 20, Vinton,
charged with DUI. was fined $450.
three days Jail, one year probatton
and 180 days license suspension.
Aaron D. DeWitt, 20, Poinl Pleas·
ant, W.Va., charged with underage
alcohol consumption, was fined
$150, two days jail (credit 'time
served), two years probat1on and 40
hours community service.
Brenda K. Bloomer, 34, Bidwell.
charged with resisting arrest, was
fined $150, one year probation and
80 hours community service.
John F. Hill , 22, Gallipolis Ferry.
W.Va .. charged wilh theft. was fined
$150, two years probation and 80
hours community service.
Danny C. Bates, Camp Conley.
W.Va .. charged with DUI. was fined
$450. three days jail. two years ·probation and 180 days license suspen·
sion ; charged with no operator's
hcensc. he was fined $100: charged
with tmpropcr lane usage. he was
fined $25.
Bench warrants 'have been issued
for those who failed to appear at ·
recent show-cause hcarinl!" :
Jesse Johnson, Robert Woods.
Ronald Johnson. Margaret Smith.
Emmit Smith. Patrk1a Brillnn. Fred-crick Bennett. Jennifer Carman,
Ronald Rogers. Rickey lambert.
Cory Mayle . Alma Polls, Rena
Sowards. Michael Cremeans. Susan
Chapman. Kathleen Chapman. !lob. by Hersman, Timothy Hill. Janet
Jones, Wylie Collins, Brad Bowman.
Tnston
Long.
Christopher
McClaskey, Craig Plants. Chad Soin·
mervillc. Jeremy Williams, Paul
Glassburn .
'The foilowmg defendants were
scheduled to appear at show-cause
hearings on Monday. May 5.
Tcm Donnet. Wayne Donovsky,
Ryan Dum. Susan Doss. Charles
. Dozier. Sheila DoliCr, David Draper,
M1chacl Draughn. Nancy Drennen,
Sandra Drennen, Sam Drennen. Fred
Dresbach. Teresa G. Dressier,

Edward Dreyfuse, Laurel Drollinger,
Joe Drummond, James Drum!llond,
John T. Drummond, Kenneth Dnim·
mond, Samuel Drummond. Glenn
Dubios, Larry Dudley, Larry E.
Duke. Anthony Dunaway, Diana
Dunaway. Carl H. Duncan Jr., John
l. Duncan.-John R. Duncan, Roben
Dunn, Steven R. Durham, Ma~y
Anna Durst. James Duty. Darlene .
Duty, Pamela Duty. Mickey Eakins,
Lindsay Easton. Shane Easton. Eli
I;:bersbach III, Brian Eben. Dav1d
Eben, Dina Eblin, H!irley Eblin Jr..
Phillip Eddie. Michelle F.dge. Carey
Edwards, Buddy Egnor II, Samuel
Eisnaugle. Kevin Eldridge . Greg
Ellen. David B. Elkins. Timothy
Elkins, Max Ellcessor, Kensey
Elliott, Nanette Ellion. Charles P.
Ellis, Richard E. Ellis Jr.. Wallace
English, Heath Engle, Lonnie Eplin.
Barron Epling, Brent Epling ,
Clarence Etheridge. Jay Evans. Mtl·
ton Evans, Den Everett. Donald
Eubank. Karen Ewen, Troy Facemire,
Gordon Factor, Hobie ·Fairchild,
Randy Fairchild, Glassco Fairrow,
Larry Fannin, Patnck Fa~or, William
Featherstone. Darre_ll F:ellure, John B.
Ferrigan. Charles Ferris, Michael
Fetty, William R. Fetty, James W.
·Fielder, Alan Fields, Kenneth R.
Fields, Melvm Fields, Gregory Ftfe,
Leah Fink, Chad Fielder, Daniel
Fishell, Aimee Fisher, Daniel Fisher,
James Fisher. Jason Fisher, Jeremy
Fisher, Mark Fisher. Trisha Finley,
Charles Fitzko, Dorolhy Flint, Douglas Flinner, Dwayne Fitzpatrick.
Jeffery Fitzwater. Jerry Flora,
Michael Foley, Mark Foocc. James
Foster, Gregory Ford, Zina Ford,
Russell Fonh, Marc Forshee, Terry
Foster, Michael Foster, Jeffery
Fowler, Donald Fowlkes, Arhe Frye,
Keith French, Jason Freeman, Rocky
Frazier, Connie Fr,azicr, Michael
Franz, Terry Franklin, Sheldon
Franklin, Edith Franic, Daniel Fugett,
Harold Fuller, Kelly Fullct. Michael
Fuller, Jacob Gaither. James Gal·
lpway and Eilene Galowiak.'
· Bench warrants were issued to lhe
following who failed' to appear a
show·CIIUSe hearings on May 5. 1997:
Phillip Eddie. Michelle Edge,
Carey Edwards. Buddy Egnor II,
Kevin Eldridge, Greg Ellen, Nanette
Illliott, Daniel Fishnell, Aimee Fisher, Daniel Fisher, James Fisher,
Trisha Finley. Dwayne Fitzpatrick,
Jeffery Fitzwater. Jerry Flora. Micahe! Foley, James Foster. Greg Ford,
Russell Fonh. Marc Forshee, Terry
Foster, Jeffery Fowler. Arlie Frye,
Keith French, Jason Freeman.
Richard Ellis. Heath Engle, Wallace
English, Lonnie Eplin. Barron
Epling, Brent Epling, Donald
Eubank, Ken Everett. Karen Ewcn.
William Feathcrsto,nc. John Ferrigan,
' James Fielder. Alan Fields. Kenneth
Fields. Melvin Fields. Gregory Fife,
Michael Frnnz. Terry Franklin. Danny Fugett, Harold Fuller, Kelly
Fuller, Jacob ' Gaither. Eilcnc
Gajowiak and Brenda Gandee.·
Common Pleas
GALLIPOLIS - The following
cases were recently lilcd in the Gallia County CoJllmon Pleas Court:
DissolutiOn granted -Tanya D.
Clickenger and Matth~w S. Click·
enger, nb addresses available: Patri·
cia S. Casto and Charles A. Casto.
both of 2167 Georges Creek Road.
Gallipolis; Donna G. Foster, 20 II
Lincoln Pike, Gallipolis. and Jack R.
Foster, 5733 State Route 588 . Gal·
hpolis.
Divorce filed -,Jodi L. Shaffer.
451 Jackson Pike. Gallipfllis, from
Richard Shaner, Crown City:.Pamcla
F. Price from Kevin l. PriCC, both or
2092 Johnson Ridge Road. Gallip&lt;&gt;·
hs; and Tammy J. Lemming frot;n Jcflrey L. Lemming. hoth of 13598 SR
7. Qallipolis.

~ rettc4

All Ohio

~A NEW COlONEL - Gallla County Probate-Juvenile Judge
Thoma• S. Moulton, right, became a recipient of the Kentucky
Colonel Award. The award, extended to thole for their community Involvement, waa prnentad by ~aughn French, left.

Bomb th~eat suspected in robbery
BYESVILLE (AP) - A $150.000 hond was set for a man act used of
telling an employee at a savings and loan that he had a bomb and then
demanding money.
William Judy, 44. of New. Philadelphia was charged with aggravated robbery following his arrest Thursday. Judge John M. Nicholson of Guernsey
County Muntcipal Coun presided over his arraignment Fnday and set Judy's
bond .
·
'
Police arrested Judy as he stepped outside of Cambridge Savings and Loan
branch office in this cast-cen!ral Ohio rown. No bomb was found and no'one
was injured.
The Guernsey Ceunty Sheriff's OJfi~e said Judl( walked into the savings
. and loan,. sllowed a 'coolt-lx&gt;x lO a teller and said ir con rained a bomb. He
allegedly demanded money and the teller gave him an undisclosed amOunt
of cash.
.
Jud): left lhe box in lhe buildinJ. saying he could detonate lhc device by'
remote control, authorities said.
.
.
A bomb squad from Dayton later blew up the box, which had been locked.
It contained a sandlike substance. •

ROBERT M. -HOLLEY,
.JAIIILY PRACTICE' .

PAIN .CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
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,•

By PAUL QUEAAY
Associated Press Writer

••

~cptums

HEBER SPRJNGS. Ark. (AP) Whircwater ligure Susan McDougal
wants "a license to lie " in exchange
for telling what she knows ahout
President Clinton and his wile's
financial dealings, Whitewater prosecutor Kenneth Starr said Saturday
"That's not a request that we, or
any other 1~quiry pursumg the truth.
can seriously emenain." Starr sa.d m
remarks prepared for his address In a
meeting of Arkansas newspaper cdi-

or unusual jaw structure can

population may suffer from a med1cal also have sleep apnea.
condllion totally

u~rccognizcd

.

15

Uncli.: Joe, nu dc'.1uht, has or may

years ago . Not only r-ras the
condition unrccognilcd, but the

dcv~:lop, other medical prot'.lcms

' \

'I

which can nc related to sleep apnea.

path!nts suffering rrom this' disorder These mt.:dical prohh:ms maY be the

have hcen the suhjecl of many jokes resul! of the dangerous falls in blood
and much laughter. We now realize
tha,t untrcatt.:d, this condition cari have
S\:vcrc health' com~cqucnccs.

The condition is Sleep Apnea. As
the name suggests, tht: probl..:m lies in
the stoppage or reduction of hrcathing
during slucp. The most common
parkers for this disorder arc soUring
and daytime sleepiness. It is 1hcsc
symptoms which hav..: al:ro caused the

ow.ygcn during the · nighttime
hreathmg pauses. Som..: of the
associated medical c.·ondhinns tncludc
high bloud pressure. strukcS. h..:art
dtsca~ and sexual dysfunction .
The diagnosis aqd tn:atment or
patu:nts with sleep apnea is best done
h¥ a physician with expertise in sleep
disurtJers. Curcful 'IUestitJning or
the patient and a bedroom ohs..::rver is

Uncle Joe to learn about sleep apnea.

Positive Airway "Pressure (NCPAP),

. "Sawing wood "nor s~t,.ing is a
sign of an unstahle upper Y1r passage,
Which has a ti!ndcncy 1o narrow nr
actually "close during sl~cp .
.
•
.
•
S11oru•~ u n ltllfll of""

or commonly known as a C·PAP. The
C·PP is a gentle stream air directed
intn lhe nose tu pn:.,.cnt air passage
closure. Surgery to correct airway
allnnrmalilics is also an optinn for
some patients, howc~cr. the success
r~lc is' •uhstonlially lower than the c.

.,

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...
••o't

1991 OLDSMOBILE
CALAIS

surviving."

The 211-page repon documents
"one of the greatest thefts hy a government in history, .. the conliscation
by Nazi Germany of $580 million in
gold from central banks - around
$5.6 b11lion today - "along with
indeterminate amounts.in otHer assets
during World War II," Eizenstat said.
Beyond the economics arc the
races.
.
"These goods were stolen from
governments and civilians in the

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebeugh· ·
Clark Reed

~~~*~:~~14 dr, Quad 4, auto, Burgandy w/maroon

cloth interior,, AC, AM/FM cass, Power
locks, tilt, cruise. rear defrost, 69K miles.
Nice.

•

Susan McDougal

involving the president and first lady
Hillary Rodham Climon.
Mrs Dougal wa.' convicted uf
lors.
Saying his mvcsllgation ·· racl!d u ban~ lraud 10 May 1996. along with
d1ffcrcnt sort ol1mpediment 10 anoth· ex-husband Jim McDougal and forcr grand JUry matter.·· Starr added that mer Arkansas Gov. Jim Guy Tucker.
White House lawyers were "duty· and sentenced to two years m prison.
McDougal rccc1ved a lenient
hound" 10 turn over two sets nf notes
from their meetings wllh Mrs. Chn- three-year prison tem1 last month '
ton. The White House und Starr arc because of his cooperarion with the
Whitewater investigation. He faced
tn a legal baltic over whether the
notes should he protected hy auor· 84 years after conviction on 18
ncy ·clicnl privilege.
fclqny counts.
While Mrs. McDougal has already
" lthink ' it's obvwus lor several
years now we' ve been very cooper- refused tcsllmonml immunity. Starr·
ative anJ will continue' to be. .. Clin- said Saturd•y that "she has refused to
ton said Saturday at a news confer- 1cst1fy unless granted immunity from
ence 10 Barbados. ·
perjury as well. She wants as a con·
The president was asked· ir he dition for revealing what she knows
thought Starr 's comments had ... in essence. a li'ccnsc to lie:·
become " a httle personal. .. He
Mark J. Gcragos. the allomey who
responded. ''Not on my pan."
represents Susan McDougal. SaturMrs . McDougal has ·been jailed day ·called Starr"s comments the
for contempt since. September for "height of,hypocrisy from someone
refusing to testify before a grand JUry who parades around with his own
looking into wide-ranging matters Iicensc to Iic." ·
·

etoo% financing
4t 90 days until first-payment

eloan fee waived for
checking customers
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Crosswo.rd Puzzle Answer

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Prepare for -summer fun now with People; Bank's Spring l.oon Sale.
Whatever your idea of fun-a bo31, home irnprovemcnl, ~wimniing ,
pool-we can provide thefimding!

rl

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r•••

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A~ an extm boniL~, if}00 have a current Pl'Oples checking accoun~ we'U
waive the loan fee. If you Jon 'I have a current acroun~ jll'il open one

"••
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when you apply for the kr.uJ and we·uwaive lhe loan fee. Special rdlffi
may em~ be possible when you~ for aulmrutlic paymems from
your account Afinancial senices representalive ~ provide deJail.~.
.
.
Sony, this offer does not apply to automobile loans.

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·BOWMAN'S

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in 1942
"Gold and silver bars and curren-.•
cy were bought by lhe bank at full 1
value from the SS and small items
like gold rings ~ere sent to lhe Pruss· '
ian Mint for resmelting," said one of
the U.S. repon's key findings .
A 1946 repon from the postwar
Foreign Exchange Depository. which
was set up to return loot, estimates at '
lcas1 S 1.6 million - $16 million'~
today - came from the SS. "It is
hkely that the actual amount ... was.1
much higher," the repon notes. say- ,
ing it fou~d records(or only 43 of 78 ·
Mclmer shipments.
The Germans employed other' '
ways to traffic in victims' goods, too ' 1
"Jewelry and larger items were
sent to the Municipal Pawnshop: '
which sold the better items abroad for·'
foreign currency and sent most of the' ;
rest to the Degussa firm for rcsmch· '
ing:· the report said.
·
Degussa. a large German industrial firm. refined precious mcuils and _
made chemicals, includit;~g hydrogen··
cyanide, the poison used in the gas··
chambers at Auschwirz-Birkcnau '
concentration camp. Today, the
Rfankf~n-hascd firm is the world'~
leading manufacturer of dental alloys.
In the early 1940s, U.S. ofticials
realized Switzerland was accepting ·
gold looted by Germany. often in
exchange for materials the Nazis'
needed to wage war.

I

breathing pauses, it is im('Klrtant to
rc~cat the sleep &lt;;enter uhservation
afler surgery. Other forms of sleep

from deep reslful sleep. puring this apru:il do exist, hut arc not generally
shallow sleep t,he air pa.""'ges reopen. successful in controlling the ~ondl· .
This cycle can occur hundreds or · linn.
.
lime~ each night. Snoring ahm~.
Forlunotcly for Uncle Joe, sleep
,without &gt;toppages in hr~othing, has apn~a Is diagncto;cd and trcatL-d. The
alw been noted to disrupt1hc sleep of maj&lt;&gt;r ohslacle to treatina .slcep apnea
both the snorer and bed pari nor. .
is in educoting patients and their
Sleep disruption is what leads to families. After all, everyone thinb
daytime fatigue. This 1day time Uncle Joe is a good and healthy
. tiredness can range front severe sleeper, he saws the most woOd and
sleepiness to just a sub!lc loss or can si""P anywhere
,.
enc111y andcan amhilion_.
slecpincs•
·alw resultl, InDaytime
I05s of , "'"""~1hl8=~•1=•=•11h~U~p=d=•:t•~~~,'"""=
prochwtivity, auto accidents, dcptes·
slon, and irrilahllily. , , ' .
,Rclurning to our pteturc or Uncle
Joe, sleep apnca .is most a~mmon in HOIIECARE MEDICAL CINTBR
men age 40·60, bul it m•y also he .::.::..:::=~,..;;;I.~IM~.;;I~il~l~t;=::.:.::~
present in women especially ~ftcr
JIICIC*lN. 01110 . _
menstruation has cased. Obesity is
e1...-.1414
,
anolher risk faclor for Sleep apnea.
10,_11A&amp;f
Thin individuals wil~ upper air
OliO 41111
JMIIII" lbllonulltics auc:h 11 larp
tonsils, nasal polypi, deviated '

I

,, ,,

U/latnble 11ir J"'"""lf"• 111laida
hna (, lemfP.Ilt'Y to .'"l.''m" or PAP. Bec~u~ surge~y may _stop the
ncllltlUy clooP. dllrltllf 8'""P·
snoring wnhout 1mprov1ng the.
.
After a shnrl pcrind of clusurc, the
hrain signals the sleeper to awaken

..

DENVER :-:- Security video
showed Timothy Me Veigh at a fast·
food restaurant. Minutes later and a
mile away, he rented the yellow
Ryder truck that was used in the
· FOLLOWING TESTIMONY- Marife Nichols, center, the wife of
Oklahoma City bombing, a body
Oklahoma City bombing co-defendant Tarry Nichols, left the fed·
shop owner testified.
eral courthouse In Denver Friday lifter she testHled In the trial of
Asked to look around the courtle'd suspect Timothy McVeigh. (~P)
room for the man who rented the
truck usmg the name Bob Kling,
Eldon Elhott pomted at McVeigh and name as Roben Kling and turned April 19, 1970, ElliOt\ testified.
sa1d, "Right over there. Blue shin." down insurance, saying "I'm a good McVeigh was born April 23, 1968.
McVeigh, silting at the defense driver.' '
·
April 19 is the same day as the
table Friday, was w&lt;:aring a blue dress . Elliott recalled his parting words bombil)g and the deadly FBI raid in
shin. He showed no reaction.
to McVeigh: "Have a safe trip."
1993 on the Branch Davidian comOn cross-examination , defense
McVeigh allegedly packed the pound outside Waco, Texas. Prose·.
lawyer Stephen Jones sharply chal- truck with explosives, drove it to cutor~ said ·McVeigh plotted the
lenged Elliott's identification of Oklahoma City and parked it outside bombing in revenge .
McVeigh, pointing out that he ini· the rederal building, then detonated
Before Elliott testified, prosecu·
tially described Kling to FBI agents the bomb that ripped apart the build· tors. buill ·a time line of McVeigh's
as 5 feet 10 inches tall with a mcdi· ing and killed 168 people and injured movements the week before the
um' build.
500.
bombing, using cvtdcnce rangmg
"Would you describe Mr.
Authorities traced the truck to Ji·om secunty video to a Chinese food
McVeigh's build as medium?" Jones . Elliott's shop using a vehicle ID num- take-out order.
asked, gesturing to his lanky client, ber found on an axle at the scene of
Jurors saw jerky. stop-action
who was measured in jail at 6- feet· the bombing, the deadliest act of ter- black-and-white security video of
rorism on U.S. soil.
112.
McVeigh holding a fruit p1e and
On cross-examination. McVctgh's checking his watch about 20 minutes
Elliott refused to back down.
responding, "Pretty close to medium, lawyer raised the issue or John Doc before he allegedly walked to Elliott's
No. 2, a man said to have been with 10 pick up the truck.
yes.''
He said he may have underesti- McVeigh when he rented the truck.
The pictures of McVeigh walking
mated McVeigh's height because Elliott remembered a second man but through McDonald's straight at the
, McVeigh was leaning against a said he hadn't paid much allcntion to camera caused some bombmg surhim.
·
counter.
•
vivors and relat1ves to flinch .
The
sketches
of
John Doc No. 2
Ellion told prosecutors Me Veigh
Earlier Friday. a Chinese restau·
walked into the body shop in Junction ·were based primarily on a description rant owner testified that a food order
City, Kan., rwo days before the by Elliott's mechanic. In November, was deliyercd to McVeigh's motel
bombing and picked up the 20-foot federal prosecutors 'said John Doc room in Junction City, and that the
truck. He had reserved it in person No. 2 was 10 fact a soldier who was name lPVen was Robert Kling.
two days earlier, paying S280.32 in , in the shop a day after McVeigh rentOn cross-examination. Yuhua Bai
admitted she did not know who
cash for a one-way trip to Omaha, ed the truck .
McVeigh showed a driver's ordered the fond or accepted delivery
Ncb.
that listed his binhdate as
license
Ellion said 1he renter gave his

WASHINGTON
Robert
Schwartz remembers the (hmly lit
hall. walls weeping with dankness. ·
Ledgers lined the shelves in the
basement of one ~f the few buildings
still standing in bombed out Frank·
fun. ·
The inner sanctum of-Nazi Germany's Reichsbank, 1946.
"]bere laid out before me was rhc
complete tracing or the transfers, bar
hy bar. of all the French. Dut~: h and
Belgian looted gold" - onginal
numbers on the left, rcsmehcd Nazi
numbers on the nght , recalls
Schwanz, 79, then an cx·Marme
working for the U.S. Treasury
Depanll)cnt.
" It was amazmg to sec firsthand
such Gennan efficiency: ·.
The ledgers. shipped to Washing·
ton, were among reams of smoking
gun evidence the United States used
to show the depth of Nazi plunder
and to prove that Swiss banks helped
launder the loot by the tons.
Now, a U.S report provides ·dclinite proof that the Nazis, through sys- ,
.tematic resmelting and a secret bank
account. passed off gold from Holocaust victims as German bars, too.
an'd rradcd them abroad to fund their
maniacal march across Europe
"I don 't think any of us will ever
be quite the same for havmg gone
through this," Undersecretary of
Commerce Stuan Eizenstat said last
week in releasing rhc study. "It really punctuated for us the brutality of
the war and the Importance ol mak·
ing sure that everything 1s done to
provide justice to those who are still '

countries Germany overran and from
Jewish and non-Jewish victims of the
Nazis alike. including Jews murdered
in extermination camps. from whom
everything was taken, dnwn to the
gold fillings of their teeth,.. he said .
The first public hml came when
the U.S, Third Army blasted open a
brick wall in a salt mine at Merkers,
Germany in April 1945. Inside: $250
million in looted gold - worth $2.5
biliJon today - stacks of l&lt;•rcign .:urrency from dollars to dinars. and box·
es and bags of coins. jewelry, rcli.
gious articles and extracted fillings
from Holocaust victims.
The neeing Germans had hidden
. much of their booty. The rest including victims gold in indistinguishable rcsmclted hars - was
tuc,ked safely away m banks in
Switzerland, Sweden. Portugal.
Spain, Argentina and Turkey. There's
no evidence neutral nations knowingly accepted such tamted gold.
Also captured at Merkcrs, Alben
- Thoms, head of the Re1chsbank's
Precious Metals Dcpanmcnt. He told
U.S. officials about rhc existence of
an account belonging to the SS. the
elite Nazi troops.
Victims gold and property were
the main deposits of the secret
-Re1chsbank account named for SS
Captam Bruno Mehner Rcichsbank
Vice President Emil Puhl admmistered the Melmer account heginnmg

Prosecutor ., r
not looking
for witness
'license to lie'

Are You A Healthy Sleeper?
''

Associated Pre1s Writer

Witness says he
saw McVeigh
rent Ryder truck

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio State University music professor David ·•
Meeker. the voice of marching band performances. has died. He was 62. -;.,
Meeker died Friday at his home in Worthington. He suflcred from can· •
ccr, hut the exact cause was unknown.
A funcrul w1ll be Tucsdax at Wnrthingtvn United Methn&lt;list Church.
Meeker was d~rcclor ol': rhe alumni band lnr 22 years. He had been
announcing the OSU's marching hand atl(&gt;otball games and other university events sin.:c 1984.
·
Earlier this year. he received the univcisny's distinguished service award.
Mcckcr.also was asSistant dircctnr of the Ali-Obin Slate Fair Band litr 22
years and was mducted intn .the Ohio Slate Fair i-fall nf Fame.

As many as 5% or the U.S.

By LAURA MYERS

I

'Voice' of OSU marching ...
band dies Friday at 62 ·· ·· •

Uncle Joe whu .. saws wood and cun for simple hut impOrtant observation!;.
sleep anywhere, anytime" is quite
The most common trcatmcrU fur
accunue . Lct•s hxJk at the featun:s nf sh:ep apnea is Nasal Continuous

·' VIII/MC accep4ed

oy

.

humor associated with sleep apnea. critical. This interview may lead tn
The ,image of slightly overweight the patieni sleeping in a sleep cenler

614~441-1050

(b 14) 992-7040
f'OilH'I

a! tty J&amp;nftfnure

90 D•ya same u Cllh flnancing_

Colllpt•tl'J Ouolt'e&gt;

•

'

!s someone playing g1111es with transponed ro anolher lo.:ation. He,(s ~
Mother Nature or is Mother Narure now a resident of the Wood Lawn •
Nursing Home. 535 Lexington Ave.,
playing games wilh us? '
Whatever the circumsiance. it's Mansfield. Ohio 44907 . His sister.
family mem· :.'
time this miserable wcatlltr'comes to Faye Watson, and other
.
hers
would
apprec1ate
your
remem-,
a ~creaming halt. The daY,s should
bnghten up and warm up. lf-it does· bering Willard with a card and in;
n't happen , we'll just !Jave to march your prayerli.
on· Washmgton, D.C. Wby nor?
.'
Members of the Southern High•
There have been marchcs,'f~r lesser
reasons and the weather couldn't be .School Class of 1972-and their spous•
nearly as controversial ~ dl.1. budget cs are invited to a pany being held to'':.
panicularly mark the 25th anniver- ~
balancing problems.
. " ·
sary of the class graduation.
•
'' .
The
pany
will
be
held
Friday.
May
•
llte Meigs County Can~"~; Society
this year will be taking p'fl in the 23, beginning at 8 p.m. at Wolfic's"
Bait Shop. formerly Granddad
national Relay For Life Prttgram .
Sham's
Store. -in Antiquity. Those' ··
The program is designed. besides
atlending
arc to take a covered dish. •
bemg a fund -raiser - · o cause
eating
utensils
and lots of memones. "
awareness of cancer and t~e work of
Class members nccdmg more tnlo ...
the society.
Relay For Life hecamc thC signa· call Dave Graham. 949-2281 ; Dave• '
turc event for the society in 1992. The Crow. 949-2394: or Bill Cleland at &gt;&lt;
event reaches into the community Ill . 949-2379.
bring together ncighhors. "fncnds.
Meigs C(mnty's Warren Black h'\s
work associates and families to celebrate for those who havl! survived been having a tad or so more than hiS '
'
cancer and remember those who share of bad luck.
On
April
14.
Warren
underwent
a
Have not.
The Relay For Life concept five-way bypass hean operation at
involves a team of runners or walk·· the Veterans Hospital in Cleveland :
crs competing against each Nher to and then was sent to the VA hospital
raise the most money and travel the in Huntington, W. Va., to recuperate. \
most miles around a track. The event "
He returned hmiie fnr a 11me. but'":
lasts for an CKtcnded pennd of time. problems developed and he was lak- •"
usually 24 hours.
'I
en back to the Huntinglon hospital, ' '
There arc a number ol" details and then later airlifted hack to the .,
involved in the program and we'll let Cleveland hospital, for treatment of "
you know about them as we get clos- a staph infection. He has undergone
er to the date or the local event, which three more operations as his doctors ',
has tentatively hccn set lor July II. try to get the infection under control. Friday, family members described his "
1
Anyone ever hear of the Ohio Val· condition as poor.
•
ley Cooperative Co.?
.
Warren worked at the Edwin
Agnes Sellers ha.' one share of Davis bus garage for many years. His •'
stock in the company. dated Jan . I, wili:. Esther. is in Cleveland to he
1921, passed along to her from her . ncar him .
~randfather, Phil1p Rusche!. A~nes
The address is Warren Black. "
would apprcciarc any information Cle,vcland Veterans Hospital, 10701 '
you have on the husincss and you can East Blvd., Cleveland. Oh10 441 01 reach her at 843-5153 .
99.
·:
Former Pomeroy Route 3 reSident,
I know she's not your mother. But '
Willard "Bill" Dill. who has lived m it is Mother's Day and you. should ' '
Mansfield for the past several years. have hought her a present. Unless, of "
is having health problems.
course, you especially enjoy over·
Willard has been confined to the .:ookcd eggs and burned toast. Do
Cleveland Clinic. but now has been keep smtling,
.,

Software, Computers.
Accessories, Computer/Internet
Classes, Printers, Scanners,
Repairs, Cruise the Internet,
Public Fax, Web Page Oesign, ..
· GraphiCAl!

DISCOlllltS -.

'Right
over
there'

bY Bob Hoeflich

62 ,illalr .... • ((NIUipEthl, ()!Jill

E3sy P3y Auto
lnsur&lt;tnce
Any Cilr
Any Dnver
DUI &amp; SR-22
•

Beat of the Bend ..

."10 '

. • .•
•, ,fi

Thls.oft'er is subject to credit li(JIIl'IMII.

~

... .
~

AlUlA CODE 1'011 AIL Oma!S UCEI'f lANK-BY-PHONE TOLL I'RI!£ SEIVICE IS (614 I

Belpre
Gallipolis U&lt;;klng County
Athens Baltimore
587-0909
1~374-612.~ 373-3155 593·7761 862-4174 423-7516 446-0902
Pomeroy
Rutland
The Plains IDDOnly
Nelsonville
Middleport
LoweU
753·1955 992~2133 •742-2888 797-4547 376-7123
896-~369 . 992-6661
18tk-By-Pitone

MIM'D

FDIC
CrOssword Pume on Page D-2
•

•

•

~

Mariena

J •

••

' U &gt;

'

....

...
•I

J

�..
SuncMy, ..., 11' 1187'
•••
•
•

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

Ca$es resolved .in recent Meigs County Court sessions
POMEROY - Meigs County suspended to three, restitution,
Court Judge Patrick H. O'Brien restraining order; Tom Arnott,
processed 70 cases in the court's scs- Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $100,
sian last week.
suspended, one year probation,
Fined were: Jason E. Counts, restraining order issued, restitution;
Syracuse, speed, $30 and costs; Brent Robert N. Foreman, Sr., Racine, dri·M. Whaley, Shade, assured clear ving under FRA suspension, $150
distance, $20 and costs; Christopher and costs, five days in jail and $475
J. Nitz. Pomeroy, domestic violence, _ suspended upon proof of a valid
$75 and costs, 30 days in jail, sus- license within 90 days, two.years propeoded to two. two years probation, bation, speed, $20 and costs; Sharforfeiture of weapons; Daron W. lene · Foreman, Racine, wrongful
Yeauger. Cheshire, failure to display entrustment, $30 and costs, three
commercial registration card, $30 and. days in jail suspended;"Scou Barton,
costs, seat belt, $25 and costs; Robert Racine, interference with child cusC. Saltsman, Racine, speed, $.13 and tody; coSIS, two years probation,
costs; Morgan J. Vanaman, Rutland, 'h~ee days in jail suspended; Jody L.
speed. $26 and costs : Amanda M. Honaker, Pomeroy, speed, $30 and
Mounts, Grayson, Ky., speed, $54 · costs.
and costs, seat belt, $25 and costs; . · Michelle L. Bunce, Pomeroy,
Serena Robinson, Long Bottom, speeding, $50 and costs; John 0 .
domest1c VIolence. costs, three days Greuenberger, East Lansing, Mich.,
il\ Jail suspended, two years proba- speed, $30 and costs; Raymond L.
uon; Steve B. Donaldson, Long Bot- Milard, Albany, speeding, $30 and
\Om, disorderly conduct, $100 fine, costs; Richard L. Proutey, J~.. Pl;'fksuspended, costs, one year probation, ersburg, W.Va., seat belt v10lauon.
restraining order issued.
$25 and costs; Ronald V. Jones, II,
Michael J. Mencal, Mason, W.Va.. Racine, operated motor vehicle on
littering, $1 00, suspended to $50, non-designated area of land under
costs, five days in jail, suspended, agreement, $100 and costs; Brittney
one year probation, Lewis T. Taylor, L. Myers, Western Springs, Ill.,
Mason, W.Va .• 1mproperly secured speed, $30 and costs; Benjamin 0 .
load, $20, suspended to $10 and Powers, Coxs Mills, W.Va., seat belt
costs; Ricky A. Metheney, Vinton, violation, $25 and costs; Charles D.
speed, $22 and costs; John E. Part- Ellis, Pomeroy, seat belt violation,
low, Langsv iHe, seat belt. $15 and $25 and costs; Ph1lhp W. Wilkinson,
costs; Sherry McGuire, Leon. W.Va, Hurricane, W.Va., speeding, $30 and
passmg bad checks ( 17 counts). $25 costs; David G. Calhoun, Athens, seal
and costs on each, restitution, three belt violation, $30 and costs.
days in jail suspended on each;
John A. Reed, Jr., Ironton, speedThomas J. Greve, Ottawa, Ohio, ing, $30 and costs; Robert M.
DUI, $850 and costs, 10 days in jail. DeLong, Pomeroy, speeding, $30
suspended to three, 90 days license and costs; David p_ Borah, Bremen,
suspension, one year probation, jail speeding, $30 and costs; John J.
and $550 suspended upon completion Sarginger, Saint Maria, Pa .• scat belt
of Residential Treatment Program violation, $30 and costs; Jackie L.
school, speed, $21 and costs, seat belt Walker Jr., Canal Winchester, speedviolation, $25 and costs
ing. $30 and costs; Mary L. Burton,
Robert W. James. Syracuse, no Huntington. W.Va., seat belt violadriver's license, $100 and costs. three tion, $25 and costs, speeding, $30 ·and
days in jail, $50 suspended upon costs; Timothy J. Sayre, Albany, seat
proof of valid license within 30 belt violation, $25 and costs; Paul D.
days; Gregory T. Hayman, Long Courlas, Columbus, failure to control,
Bototm, disorderly conduct, costs. $75 and costs; Stephen R. Donohue,
one year probation. 30 days in jail failure to yield, $75 and costs; Misti

· R. Chapman. Point Pleasant, W.Va..
speeding, $30 and costs; Marvin R.
Spaulding, Columbus, failure to con1rcil, $20 and costs; Marvin L.
Spaulding, Columbus, seat belt vio· lation, $25 and costs; Earl A. Goude,
Middleport, seat belt violation, $25
and costs.
Jonathan R. Lindsey, Lancaster,
spee\fing, $30 and costs; Bret E.
King, Reynoldsburg, following too
closely, $20 and costs; James L.
Hook, Vienna, W.Va., speeding, $30
and costs; Andrea M. Hudson,
Cheshire, speeding, $30 and costs;
Matthew J. Smith, Marietta, speedin g. $30 and costs; John P. Hurley,
Marietta, speeding, $30 and costs;
Brad A. Harris. Gallipolis. s~ing,
$30 and costs; Michael J. Eblin, Rut·
land, insecure load, $20 and costs;
Victoria H. Morris, New Lexington,
speeding, $30 aad costs; Lisa A.
Byer; Middleport, speeding, $30 and
costs; Charles A. 1)iree, Middleport,
seat belt v10lation, $30 and costs;
Russell W. Cundiff, Mason, W.Va.,
speeding, $30 and costs; Raclynn
Clampp II, Coolville, seat belt violalion, $25 and costs, speeding, $30 and
costs; Bonita F. Cremeans, Albany,
speeding, $30 and costs; Ella -1.
Lesher, McArthur, speeding, $30 and
costs.
~andy G. Starr, Rudaod, speeding,
$30 and costs; Heather McPhail,
Syracuse, assured clear distance
ahe.ad, $20 and c\)sts; Michael P.
Boso, Middleport, speed, $30 and
costs;
Kenneth E.
Combs,
Williamsport, speed, $30 and costs;
Melissa D. Kisner, Middleport, seat
belt, $25 and costs; Brian r. M~Ciin­
lock, Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and
costs; Steven Scoll Powell, Middleport, speed, $30 and costs.
O'Brien processed 22 cases during
the court's April 30 session.
Fined were: Tony C. Annstrong,
Gallipolis, DUI, $850 and costs, 90
days license suspension, 10 days m
Jail suspended to three, two years probation,jail and $550 suspended upon
completion of RTP school, dtiving

under suspension, $100 and costs,
two years probation. 10 days in jail,
suspended to three days concurrent,
obstructing official business. costs,
two years proba!ion, 10 days in jail
suspended to three concurrent, resisting arrest, costs, two years probation,
10 days in jail suspended,to 3 concurrent.
April M. Burgell, Wellston. drivirtg under suspension, $75 and costs,
two years probation. 30 days in jail,
.suspended to 14 days, house arrest,
seat belt violation, $25 aod costs;
William L. Tackett, Racine, consuming alcpbol in a motor vehicle,
$30 and costs; Cof11el W. Childress,
Portland, driving under FRAsuspension, $150 and costs, five days in jail
suspended, two years probation, vehicle immobilized until proof of insurance and valid license, unsafe vehicle, costs only. seat belt violation, $25
and costs, drug paraphernalia, $100
and costs.
" Ruby Nakao, Racine, stop sign,
$30 and costs; Lillie A. McGee, Long
Bottom, wrongful entrustment.T $I 50
and cosls, 10 days in Jail, suspended,
one year probation, falsification, $30
and costs, one year probation. 10
days in jail, suspended; Jack Maines,
Rutland, failure to send child to
school, $100 bond to be posled and

·held, no unexcused absences, bond
will he refunded, if not it will be forfeited, costs; Rachel Maines. Rutland,
fail to send child to school.. $100
bond concurrent with Jack Maines,
costs; Donna LoPr!. failure to send
child to school, $100 bond to be posted and held, no unCJ&lt;cused absences,
bood will be refunded, if not, il will
be forfeited, consts; Timothy J. Salts· man, Long Bottom, no ·operator's
license, $150 and costs, 10 days in
jail, suspended to three, one year probation, jail and $75 suspended·upon
, proof of valid'license within 90 days,
fail to control, $20 and costs, seat belt
violation, $25 and costs.
Walter A. Ellis, Rutland, driving
under suspension, $150 and costs;
Woodrow Richards, Portland, no
.operator's license, $150 and costs, 10
days in jail suspended to three, jail
and $75 suspended upon proof of a
valid license within 90 days; Tim
Wilson, Portland, assault, $50 and
costs, 10 days in jail suspended, two
years probation , restraining order,
disorderly conduct. $50 concurrent,
costs, two years probation; Christina
Holloway, Pomeroy, littering, $250
and costs, three days in jail, $125 suspended upon cleanup of trash; Vicki
McKinney, Middleport, theft, costs,
six months in jail suspended, one year

.,

~

probation.
nde • :
Anthony Roush, Racine. u ,..,
consumption, SSO and costs, SIX
months in jail suspended to five dayJ,
two years probation; Eric DiddJe;.
Pomeroy, disorderly conduct, $IOQ
suspended, costs, restraining ordt;r,
four months probation; Mary K:·
Moore, Rutland, no operator's
license $50 and costs; Michael S.
Morris: Racine, disorderly conduct:,
$50 and costs; Keith W. Barrel~
Langsville, DUI, $500 and costs. 10
days in jail, supsended to three, ~
days license suspension, one ye!ll'
probation, reckless operation, $~
and costs, speed, $50 and costs, seat
belt violation, $25 and costs, resisting arrest, costs, one year probation,
30 days in jail, suspended to 10 conc
current.
'
Lance N. Gates, Eric, Pa., $8s0
and costs, one year license suspen:
sion, 30 days in jail suspended IO 10
days, one year probation, open con~­
tainer, $50 .and costs, possession of
drug paraphernalia, $75 and costs',
possession of marijuana. ' $50 aD:4
costs; R1cky A. Pridemore, Pomcro:i.
driving under FRAsuspension, $1~
· and costs, 30 days in jail. suspended
to iS, two years probation; no license
plates, $30 and costs, no rear light~
$30 and costs.
·'

Scenic Hills Nursing Center,~ Inc.

.

One of the most dillicult decisions for any faJlilly is Placintl a loved 'one in a nursing home. They want the assurance that their
famlly member will be receiving quality medical care and an oPPQI1Wiity to continue tlieir lives wit)! true meaning,
'
!icenlc IIIIIs Nunlna Center, located in Gallipolis at 311 !ltickridge Road. phone 446-7150, was designed to provide comfon,
safety and a home-like atmosphere for the elderly and the convalesceilt.ln the company of companions the same age. your loved
one will have the opponunlty to experience planned daily aaivities and recreational programs geared to their interests and abJI~
ties. Their team of quaHlied professl0113h praride 24-hour nursing care 'and rehabilitative therapy with personalized attention to'
each resident. With a geriatric metical direCtor and spedally ttalned staf, SClenlc IIIIIs NtuslngCeider alsO olfers a specially~
Alzheimer's Wlit to meet the special needs of the Aliheimer's patient with personallzed attention. AI. Saioli: Hills Nwlinl Ceoler,
both private and semi-private ~ or ·Medicaid approved rooms are available. and wonderful home-cooked riieals are
prepafed daily. Special diets are carefuUy adhered to and die facility is equipped with modem 6re alarm systems to enswe the ¢ety
of their residents.
.
·
.
.
SClenlc Hills Nurslall Center invites you to visit their fine facility when you are faced with the decision of choosing nursing 01&lt;
Alzheimer's care for yourloved one.
·

L&amp;L Recycline

Doug Lester, Owner
•
·
'h'ellvily on the minds of Americans today. Roughly 80 pen:ent of the trash generated in America

Recyclinx issues are weiRhiol!

is bwied ln laiidlills, and landliUs ire fdling up at the mte of two a day. AD of us must take an active interest in recydins issues so our

children will be able to enjoy an environmentally sound world.

IJd.lletydjqr, located in Gallipolis atl28 texas Road, phone 446-7300, oll'ers a complete teCfding seiVice lor the area. They
recycle aU types or metals. including alwnlnwn, copper. brass. Iron. scrap metals. appuances. nn. car bodies and all types of
non-lenous metals. Thev serve the residential, conunerclal and industrial needs of the commu{lity with top quality seiVice. Theyr
can also he~_JOur mganlzation, school or civic group start a fund-mislilg project. Recycling drives are excellent money-makers for
any group.
llecyCIIJI8 always pays top dollar for aU of your recyclable goods.
~
• Slanstic8 show that over a lifetime ihe average American tluow.i away 600 times his adult weiaht in uash. We can all Slall ,
maldn£ a dlll'erence in the growing problems America is lacing by visitlng.Udltltcydlnc on a regulatnasis and mal:lng every day
'Earthl&gt;ay.•

r

' \

Special Care Cleiqrlng Service· GaryBany,
Owner
Oeanlna

.

.
:

Accidents do happen, and when they do, the piijfessionals at Spedll Care
Service. located In Galllpcilis atl743
Centenary Road. phone 446-9585 or toll-free l-800-m9585, stand ready to provide fust-aass restoration work at the time when ,
you need them most.
·
·
They specialize In cleaninB up after vandalism. stonn clama&amp;e. oil burner pull backs. other types of smoke or waler damage,
6re dan!age and more. They provide expen aupel and upholstery cleaning and water removid, painting. w;lllpapering. duct
cleaniJIB, Wood refinishing. fight consuuction and more. allowing you to get your home or business up anCI runninli as soon as
~ssible. Every employee ofSpecial Care ClelnlnJ!Servloe has beeil extef\sivelyscreened and thoroughly trained, and die company,
1s fully licensed, bonded and insured for your protection. SeiVinB area residents and businesses lor many yean. this professlonil
company is highly recommended by insurarwe adjusters and the clients they have seiVed. They accept insurance settlements and.
olfer free consultadons and 2•-hour emergency service.
•
When you are faced with choosing a restoration service co~. contaciSpeclalCareCieanlngSemce, and rest BSSIIIed that
your project will be completed as pronlpdy and thoroughly as possible when you place it in their competent professional hands.
Dlacoverlng thalli was Indeed an alligator probably aomebody'a escaped pat- they captured It, brought It to The Dally Sentinel to be
photographed and then dutHully turned their
"find" over to e game warden.

STFJAVED AWAY - This young alligator
looked a little out of place as It moved across
a street In Pomeroy'a Monkey Run Friday.
Duane and Tina Johnaon sew It, drove by,
reflectad, than tumad around to check It out.

Man convicted in bus fatality doesn't want parole
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - The
man convicted in the nation's worst
drunken-driving accident says he
doesn 't want parole.
Larry Mahoney was driving drunk
on Interstate 71 nell!' Carrollton nine
years ago when his pickup truck
crashed head-on into a church bus,
k.illing·24 children and three adults on

board.
He was sentenced to 16 years in
prison for manslaughter, assault and
wanton endangerment. He is confined in the Kentucky State Reformatory in La Grange.
Maboncy, now 43, would have his
first chance at parole this summer.
But in a teller to the Kentucky Parole

Board this week, Mahoney wrote thai ·
he did not want to be paroled and
would not accept early release if
offered.
The bus was returning to Radcliff
First Assembly of God Church from
the Kings Island amusement park
north of Cincmnali in May I 988
when the wreck happened. Forty people survived.

J~E. Morrison &amp; Associates

Developing a secure fmancialluture lor yourself, your family or wur business can be confusing and lime coiiSIIIIIing, Not
making the iiRht decision can be costly, and most or us do not have access to the information concerning the many financial.
options availallle today.
·
•
I.E. Morrlsoo It Asaodates.located in GallipoUs. phone 446-1986, oll'ers a luU line of financial advisory seiVices to benefit
you and your business Their professional staff is well versed In the wide variety of investment opponunlties available and can
guide you concerning which tax plans and investments are best suited for yow individual needS. Financial and management
planmng ser:vices are available as weD as KEOGHs. !liAs. at!Dulties. stocks and bonds. Acomplete proftt development plan can
be established and maintained lor you,lreeing your valuable time fo,r the operation of your business and personal life.
Let this firm take a look at your econonuc picture and pul you on ihe road to financial security. Call I.E. Monlson II
Assodales today lor an appointment and take the fust step into a more secure financial future. James E. Morrison is a registered
representative of and oll'ers securities lhrou;t Walnut Slreet Securities, Inc. Member NASD and SIPC. J.E.Monbon ltAslodates
is not affiliated with WSS. Securities activittes are supeiVised from a WSS office located in Columbus at 3240 West HendersonRoad, phone (61•) &lt;142-3355.

Five Star Morteaee
Corporation.
VIcldeHauidren,'President
lower~ ~ave

.

Today. interest rates.are
seen in years. Many peoJlle are considetlng refinancing their home or buvintl a.
new home with low, long-tenn fixed Interest rites. Thls makes possillle 81Jonlable mortgage pa)'l!ll!nts and, in some cases, tlie
answer to overloaded budgets. With so many companies oll'ering home mortgage assistance, its hanl to make a wise decision"
reganlinsloan arrangements.
'
Five Star Mortpge Corporation. located in GalliPOlis at 10 Myrtle Avenue, rhone 446-4042, specializes in home mortgage
loans. and has been serving the area lor many years. Their professional personne are highly trained and are leaders in their fielil.
They can expenly answer any questions you may have concerning refinancing first mortgage loans. VA. FHA or any of the many.
other programs awlable. Long-term or shon-tenn mortgage loalls are olfered with wrious interest options. They will catefuiiY
explain the benefits of each loaD option. and will'~ !lie lOan best &amp;llited to ~ur family~ needs.
AYe sw Mortpge Corporatlon stays on top Of curmtt marlciiiiJ'ends to olrer their customers the bvest interest rates.
possible. Sooner or Iller. we all need counseling on a home pun:hase. When you are faced with the decision of choosin&amp; a monlllltlt,
companY,Ium tel the one so many !d)ters have come to t.nv and trust-AveSiar Mortgage Corporation. You will appreciate ihelr;,
old· fashioned courtesy and their high standards bf excellence.
.

Foreman &amp;Abbott Heating &amp;Coo.ling
Serving The Area Since 1954
Bran Nrw 1!7 c•ny
Asln CIIVrrllll Yll

1!!7

c•rvy Blmr

Ina• IH7.
Plllllr Cna• AM Sl

• CusiQm Clolh
l1terior

• "-' Door lllcks
• AIMFII Sino
• Custom Clolh

•Aiumin~~nWheels

· lnlelb.

•lo.tod!

TPC Fresll Start Fluadt8

.

• Styled Wheels
• Well Equ!lped

·

s.n.. o... df'dltflloll'tr'!IPII~~- r... ~, modl..but oN)' a r... IJIII'd(111111uml'tdm's "11'UI'rttil181art 1~mnl'l•1&gt; ~t:Wdoll"'·m

. .,..

o:r,lnri ... IOOIIIIIM'Iot '" ... wnl.lllld lhm'sllfi,..OOinflatld prlrt l(r l'nllh Stlrt ~ltloll*ljl. lllllllro8221l·ln IUda~llod lllllol&lt;l'out
m:; l'rt'sh Slart "-*•~
1\lflll-0..~1)· toda~ lllllOIAI\r)wlo IITSII &gt;~~art 111 lhf-IWd loabtiiOTioo~~m•!""

Tom Peden

·

,

WhoistbeluU-servlcecentralairconditloillnKandheatinluPecialistinlhlsarea?Whocanyourelyonlorpromptandreason·
ably priced air coodlllonln8replil' and servicing! J'lcnman It lbbott Haodl'l li Croll• located in ~ at391 Noi1h 2nd
Avenue. phone 992-5!21,is the company many jJeople recommend.
, •
,.
For major and minor·repair problems. annual~~ the complete installation of new central heat and au systems,
Foreman 11 Abboll ~ li C0oJin1 has the trainln&amp;
rlence to do the job properly. They 5fiYe both !llsidential anCt
oonunercial needs. and repair and serVIce almost any niab ~ condidonet They are a Hcensed contractor, and otrer emergency .
services. Al.xwe all. they are prompt and relilble in hlndllna
Now would be a &amp;ood time to have F a - lrAbboll
II CooUns i1e1Vice yoll! mr condl~ and healing system.
This should be done once a year 10 prevent costly wear and tear .to achieW! the DI061 efficient use of your system. If you don'
have central heating and a1t lell'olenlln liAbbott ~It~ quote you a price on lnstaWng • new system which can par~
for itself over the yean. GM! them a call today lor an estimate on a li,ew total comfon systelll'-alld stan UviDg in comfon all yealj
long. (Ucense No. YMD12.3)
"
.
•

= .. . . ·-

Mei2S Memorv Gardens·

;y

· ·

· '

·

. •

k ~ha.,Pen anVtl!ne-to&amp;y. ,tomorrow or a week from nqw ~ If It happens 20, 30 or even 50 )'MI'8 in the fUnri.

- i s the best tlrile to tlbcare of your burial estate.The traliled cp_lllllelor5 11 MeipMIIaoryGirdeill.located In Pomeroy
State Route 7, pholie 992-7440, stand ready to olfer you helpful~ on how you can oblaiD ~of mincL

The advalnages of maldng ~JR-need 6urial ananaemen11 with MelD M1 mtii'Y Gudlllllilclude knowlnnour lowJd
will not have to lace details at a iime of emotional crisis or even be r.cetT with an
\Wdle t
death is never a plj!asant experience, the community-minded oounselors at Melia MemOry
Clll sliowyou how you
1ree7.e escalating burial cost. With convenient terms availllJte, thef tin make it e.!15Y for you to show your flmiiY how very m
you care for them. Their. perpetual care cemetery feaiWIIIIovely arounds thai wiD IIWays be well maintained and caRd lOr.
centuries from now.
.
·
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Isn't it worth it to you to know )'!II! have planned lor what the future wiD hold! Ifyou need informatiOR oo the~
registration for free burial space In - . Memory Gardena. emergency remrd guide,.private ll!lillY estate mluiolewn. in&amp;.~"':
mation on above ground mausolewn, Side by skfe burill. or lust rieed your records updated-Odi992·7440, or man today to
45065 Eagle Ridgelload, Pomeroy. Ohio 45'769.
·
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emergen=:ollliJie·

Country

• 8 ,. . Slltllnllly: " ••• 7 .,.
s...y,.,..7,.

•...,.ofrldllr.9 -

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Section

B

Sundlly, lby 11, 11187

'"

Reader Ala In 11m Sedion
l'lepmed By Conlrali ~ lnr.
CIJ997 AD Righls Reserved.

BUSINESS

Sports
Sports
in brief

Ueberrotb calls small-town
owaen 'Hml·fools'
NEW YORK &lt;AP) - Calling
small-market owners "semi·fools ,"
fanner baseball commissioner Peter
Ueberroth says the sport won't
recover from the 1994-95 strike
until it gets a new leader.
Ueberroth, speaking on an edition
of HBO's •:Real Sports with Bryant
Gumbel" that will air Monday. said
the current leadership of Milwaukee
owner Bud Selig and the 10-man
executive council can't succeed.
"When they get together, that 's a
group that can't organize anything,"
Ueberroth said of the. baseball owners. "Together they're, I think,
impotent. They have a lot of meetings, they accomplish nothing and
they don 't do much for their institution."
Ueberroth, baseball's commis· .
sioner from Oct. I, 1984, through
March.3 1, 1989, has remained quiet
for the. most {)art on the ~port's curL-.;;n-;;:::;~;-;;~;;;;;;:;:;;;;:;-;:;~::-;;~:;:r::::--~::-;:--::::;:;-;:-,;:;:;l:'~;;;;.&lt;;:;:;;:-;~:1::-;:--:-i rent problems-. He currently is coPOST-SLAM RECEPTION .- The Texas tlng a grand slam In
Inth Inning of chief executive officer of Doubletrec
STRUGGLING FOR CONTROL - Atlanta cenler Dikember
Rangers' Juan Gonzalez (second from right) Saturday's game against the Red Sox In Hotels.
Is greeted by his teammtes shortly after. hit- Boalon, where the Rangers won 11-5. (AP)
During the 12-minute segment, Mutombo (55) atruggles with Chicago postman Luc Longley (13)
he said owners have failed to solve for control of the basketball as the Bulls' Michael Jordan (23)
watches In the' first half of Saturday's NBA Eastern Conference
the problems of the small markets.
"The ·only person that can own semifinal game In Atlanta, where the Bulls' 100-80 win gave them
small-market teams is some very a 2-1 lead In the best·of-seven series, which resumes totlay. (AP)
rich semi-fool who doesn 't mind
losing a lot of money for five years
of his life," Uebcrroth said. " He
gets instant celebrity. The smallmarkets are going lo be weaker and
DETROIT score. Gonzalez followed with his slam.
weaker and the big markets stronger
(AP) - Omar
Dan Patterson (4-3) pitched 2''• innings of scoreless and stronger without leadership."
Olivares pitched a relief for the won.
He blames owners for not achicv·'
three-hit shutout
Yankees 5, Royals 2- At New York, Cecil Fielder ing their goal of cost-control during
as the Octroi l singled home the go-ahead run in the sixth inning the labor negotiations that led to the
•••
Tigers finally Saturday as the New York Yankees rallied from a two- strike, even though !hey forced comfound a way to run deficit and beat Kevin Appier and the Kansas City missioner Fay Vincent to resign in
beat Cle vela~d at Royals 5-2. .
'
·
September 1992 to ensure their hard By PAUL NEWBERRY
points in the third quarter and the :
home Saturday,
Still upset with a blown call in Friday night 's 7-5 linewouldn'tbeinterferedwith.
ATLANTA(APJ-Somuch for Bulls held a 71 -68 1cad heading
stopping
the· loss, Yankees manager Joe Torre was ejected by crew
" The owner ~ were afra 1d that the demise of the Chicago Bulls.
the final period.
:
·(ndians 6-0.
chief Rich Garcia before the game after he brought the somebody would come in and foul
The defending NBA champions
That's when the unlikely lwn- :
A crowd of 30,578, most of theni Indians fans, saw lineup card to home plate.
up the labor negotiation,'' Ucberroth regained the upper. hand in the some from the hench took control.
·the Detroit end a seven-game home losing streak to
AJllller (4-2) allowed three runs and six hits in seven said. "Well, no commissioner came Eastern Conference semifinal with Williams got it started, sl;~mming in .
Cleveland with its first Tiger Stadium win over innings, struck out six and walked one. New York's go- up and fouled up the l~bor negotia- Atlanta, getting a superb effort from a follow after J&lt;lrdan 's shot wa.S:
Cleveland since Sept 4, 1995.
ahead run was unearned because of an err()r by short- lion. Did it get touled up? Yes it did. their bench Saturday and rolling to a blocked by Dikcmhe Mutombo.
•
Tony Clark hit a three-run homer. and Bobby stop Jay Bell.
Was it terrible? 11 was the worst in 100-80 rout of the Hawks [or a 2-1
Another reserve, Steve Kerr. fol -:
·Higginson also homered for the tigers, who ended a
Bernie Williams hit a two-run homer in the eighth the h.istory of sports, in the history lead in the series. .
lowed with a three -poi nt er and •
string of 24 ~coreless 'innings as well as a two-game los- off Mitch Williams, the second homer Wild Thing has of most anylhing. So you dido ' t
Atlanta, wh1ch led 52-46 at half- Kukoo; hit hack-In-back threes- lhc '
ing streak.
allowed in 6', mnings this season.
.
.
have a commissioner screw it up. "
lime. scored only 28 poonts in the second a desperation shot from 35 ;
'flle win was the just the Tigers' second in 16 games . Ramlfo M~ndo~:~ (2-1) pllched a career-high e1ght
He said Selig's rule by consensus second half. a franchise low for a feet as the 24-sccond clock was :
against the Indians. The other was a. 2-0 victory May 4 mnm~s •. allowmg etght hns -. . JUSt two after the second can never succeed because of its playoff game.
wmdmg down . That gave 1hc Bulls ·
at Cleveland. .
·
· - stnkmg out four and walkmg one. , .
.,
strl!I:IUre. .
, .
.
. Wi,tl1 ~icha~l lJ!rd,1\f1...pavi,llg an 84-7,2 l£ad and .~ccmcd .to totally
. Olivares.(:z;2) survjvcd .five walks for his tjrs't4J;eer . Ma~~rs 3, Orl~ 2 (11) -;-:- &gt;At Jl'l!lmo!'jl. ·PI~.h- ..
'l!.~rtsinglc 'OWIRlt7'11''ynu • t()J:jk ' 711ll~tl\.C'!' ·'fl~~'ll~Hlm~~ ·~nf}--de~~o.Ha~·•· ..: ·-~··~-1'7"··
shutout and first complete game since last Aug. 8; He hnter Mt~c Blowers .fm.gled m the go-a~ead run wuh theril aside and stlid.' 'In your own -Dcrin1s Roilmnn a nbn --faelor. the
Wtlhams f1mshcd u off wnh a
struck out seven and allowed only one runner as far as two outs m the lith t~nmg Saturday, hftmg the Seattle business. would you have~ commit- Bulls dominalcd t~c !'~&gt;urth ~u~rtcr couple of dunks in the linal minute
second base.
Manners past the Balumore Onolcs 3-2. .
tee run it or are you ~oin~ 10 have a behmd the play ol Br1an Wtlhams while a siZable gmup of Bulls lans
Rookie Bartolo Colon (0-2) gave up two runs on five
EdRar Marunez opened the lith wuh a walk off leader?' they'd shake you and say. and Toni Kukoc.
drowned out those few Atlanta fans
1\ns in his first starl since April 26._'r\tc right-hander Randy Myc,rs (0-2) but was forced at second ~n a 'You're crazy. man. you're nuts.'"
Tha! dun scored 20 of Chicago's who remained at the Omn1. Chicago
stru~k out five and walked three in h1s fourth big-league b?tche~ sacnticc attempt b~ Paul Sorrento. Dan W1lsun
Owners have hired a search 'tirrn 29 poinls in the decisive final period also domonatcd Ihe hoard s. 53-36 .
'
start.
htt a srnglc and Russ DaVIs nted out before Blowers to seck a new ccJmmissioner. hut as the Bulls broke open a ughl game afler hcmg nutrchoundcd on the tirst
Clark's lith homer highlighted a four-run seventh grounded a smgle to lell. .
.
don't appear to be moving very and reclaimed the home-c ourl two games.
that broke the game open agaonst two lndmns rcli ~ vers.
Before thai htl. the Manners were 0-for-11 With run- quickly.
advantage on the hesl -o f-scvcn
Kuknc finished with 16 point s
Higginson hit an RBI smgle befor~ Clark· s drive 10 cen- ners in scoring position .
·
Brazilian wins first
'series. Game 4 is llmight at Ihe and Wilhams. showing no effects of
ter off Steve Kline.
.•
CART pole in Rio 400
Omni before 1hc scncs shifts back In a· knee injury in Game 2. added 14.
Norm Carhon (2-1 l pitched three scoreless innings
The Tigers. shut out in their las1 two games. ended for Seattle in relief of Jeff Fassero. who yielded one
RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil &lt;APJ the Unilcd Cenlcr on Tuesday mght. Jordan hoi only H-of-20 shols hut
their scoreless drought in the fourth when Bob Hamelin earned run , three singles and six walks in eight mnongs. _ BFaziliall' Mauricio Gugclniin
The Hawks pulled olf a shocking still led the Bulls !n scoring.. .
hit an RBI single after Curtis Pride dnuhled .
Seattle tied it agamst rclievef'lcssc Orosco, who thrilled a partisan crowd by wfnning 103-95 upsel at Ihe Un1tcd Center on
Rodman d1dn 1 s1ar1. g1V1ng up
Higginson made it 2-0 in the fifth when he homered came in with a 0.00 ERA. Alex Rodriguez stretched a the tirst pole of his Indy-car career G~ine 2.-Chicagu· s tirst home play- ~". spol 1n I he lo ncup. 1o Jason
jusl fair off the facing of lhc third deck in right. It was seemingly rou1ine single IO center into a double, stole in qualifying Saturilay for the Rio olf loss smce 1995. The Bull s were Calley, and wound up playmg 1u ~ 1
the fifth home run for Higginson. who batted just .192 third and scored on a sacrifice Oy by Ken Griffey Jr.
400. ·
bickering . complaining about six mmules . Thai was long enough
in his previous 23 games.
Brewers 4, "ngels 3 (10)- At Milwaukee, Jose
Gugel min , driving a Reynard- Rodman's anucs and 1hen refusing for him .to pick up, his cighlhtcchni·· Rangers 11, Red Sox 5 - At Boston. ·fuan Valenlin drew a bases-loaded walk from Rich Delucia Mercedes for the PucWest Racing en masse to talk tn the media after cal m sox playotl ~ames with live
Gonzalez hit a grand slam and drove in six runs in the bottom of the lOth inning. lifting the Milwaukee team. had a fast lap of 39.034 sec- their practice Friday.
seconds lelt m the lorSI hall
Saturday, leading the Texas Rangers over the Boston Brewers past lhc Anaheim Angels 4-3 Saturday.
onds. averaging 171 .912 mph at the
After. fallin( hchind 52-46 m the
Rodman was call~~ .',•~r a luul and
Red Sox 11-5.
·
'
Delucitl (2-l) walked three straight bailers after I.X64-mite oval. His ctlorl and that halt , ChiCago llnally hegan 10 look then rc&lt;:ctv.ed a 1
when he
Gonzalez's fifth career slam highlighted a sfx-run shonstop Gary D1Sarcina misplayed John Jaha's of Robert&lt;&gt; Moreno, who went like the team lhat had won four of slapped the hall . away from
ninth inning. He also had a pa1r of RBI singles. in~lud- grounder leading otT the lOth.
.
171.031 in a Swii'I-Ford. made it an the last five NBA championships. Mutomho. Rodman d1dn ' t play at all
ong a hit that made it 5-allon the seventh.
·
Doug Jones (3-0) pided up the victory. his ninth all-Brazilian fronl row l(lr the race And. no. it' wasn' l Jordan or Sconie in 1hc second half, even donning a
Gonzalez began the game with JUSl one hornet and straight since last June 13. with one scoreless inning.
today.
Pippen who played 1hc dcci&lt;long paor ot. sunglasses late m lhe g:o~e
six RB!s this season. The 1996 AL MVP was sidelined
Anaheim rookie Jason Dicks&lt;jn scaticred nme hits in
.
.
. .
when 11 was apparent he wnuldn 1
11 ts only lhe sec&lt;'nd Indy -car role.
hy an injured left thumb that kept h1m on the disahled 6' ' innings. He left after consecutive smgles by Mark event ever held in Latin America.
Jordan dtd score nme ol hts 2 1 reiUrn.
lisl until a week ago Friday.
Loretta and Jesse Levis in the seventh. and Jeff Cirillo
Gugclmin. a 34-yeur-old veteran
Mark McLemore doubled to start the Texas (linth hit a two-run sin2le off Mike James tha111cd it at 3.
who lives in Florida. has hcen drivand capped tbe outburst with an RBI single.
,
Craig Grchcck had an RBI double in the second, Ttm ing well all year. He has been in lhc
After McLemore doubled , Heathcliff Slocurnb .{0-2) Salmon added a run-scoring single on the third and Jim top eight in all II practice and quail.
.
h'
walked two batters to load the bases and then mispf.~yed Ley ritz 's bloop RBI single in the fifth made it 3-0
Brewers starter Scoll Karl.
.
fymg sessions t IS season.
"Rusty Greer's comcbackcr: allowing the tying run to a•ainst
~
His win marks lhc second con'
secutive pole ti&gt;r the IC IOHD engine,
giving Mercedes a one-pomt lead in 1
the manulacturcr's point standings.
.
Moreno led the morning praclicc
with a 3\1.227-second circuit hcforc
his strong sccond-ph1cc finosh. The
great Saturday ( 12-nf-27). hut he
Riu 4bo is just his third start with By BETH HARRIS
Newman-Han.&lt; Racing .
.
. INGLEWOOD . Cali I. lAP)- was pcrlcct in IM lrips tn lhc free By EDDIE PE..LS
It showed late. with Marton la~- 991h lap.
Third-,fastcs't was Bobby Rahal. Karl Malone. coming otT his worst throw line. Russell. who hlnssooncd
TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) - ing the lead after a group of rao:ers
Martin. 'meanwhile. comrlcted an
whose
of 39.337 wa.' identical pcrliumancc in nine years, wasn't in the 1996 playnffs ,, cnntrihuled
Mark Martin pr9ved his slu1np was riued with 341aps let'! .
odd sweep at Talladega. He was the In that time
or
teammate
Bryan Herta. ah&lt;JUI In have two had games in a limcly thrcc-pmnt shootin g. gni ng
definitely over by holding off Dale
After the• pit stops. Earnhardt winnc.r of a Busch Grand National
That
gave
American
s the second· row.
4-nf-ti l'rnm hcyond lhc arc.
j!arnhardl on Saturday at the end of moved from seventh to second down race· here April 26, the day heforc
Slncklnn also improved. with II
M~lonc scored 42 poiniS - a
tlic Winston 500 - 1he fastest ·rncc the stretch, b4t once he was' lined up the Winston 500 was originally row lilf the race.
pnints
and II assis ls. 10 gn with
Report
says
Sanders
vast
imprnvemenl
owr
hi
s
15-point
in NASC.A:R history at 188.354 hchind Marti~'s Roush Racing Ford. scheduled.
Jeff
Hornacek's
14 pninls . As a
close
to
deal
with
Lions
cfforl
in
Game
3
and
sci
an
mph .
he ne~cr had a chance to make a
But two straight days of rain
PONTIAC.
Mich.
&lt;AP)Barry
NBA
record
hy
makmg
IX
straight
team.
the
Jaa
shot
45 percent.
· After snapping a 42-racc winless good move . .'
rushed the race huck tu Mother's
Sanders
is
close
10
signing
a
contract
tree
lhrnws
as
the
U1ah
Jazz
dcfcalThe
Lakers
1ra1led
hy 13 points
"I had my eye on him:· Martin Day weekend. Some drivers spccustreak last week. Martin got his secwith
the
Dctroil
Lions
that
would
cd
t.
h
c
Los
Angcic&gt;
Lukers
II
0-95
in
the
lnurth
quarler,
I
hen
rallied on
o'nd straight win - and second said. "He made a couple of good hrted the delay would-111ake for a
make
him
the
league's
highesl-paid
Saturday
Ill
tak
e
a
.
1
1
lead
in
the
lhc
thrce-pmnt
shunting
of
1110kic
Winston 500 in three years - . by runs at me. But after' a while. I saw more relaxed day' of racing and they
running hack, Tit~ Oaklall&lt;l Pre.•.• Wcslern Cnnlcrcncc scmitinal s.
Knhe Bryan! and Eddie Jones .
.flolding off Earnhardt by .. 146 s~c- he wa.&lt; goin~lo have trouble. By the were right.
reported
Bryant's threc-puinlcr launched
Saturday.
Byron
Russell
added
a
career
onds.
end. I thoug tit would he a surprise
They stayed closely bunched
Sanders
will
be
paid
on
average
playoff-high
29
points
an
d
Ill
nine
straight points that drew the
They were followed by Buhhy if he could muster up a .pass."
through the first half of the race.
between
$5.3
million
and
$5
.5
milrebounds
for
the
Jau
,
whn
could
Lukers
within K9-K5 with 7:02
Labonte, John Andrelli and JeH
Earnhardt '~aid he wanted to push rarely making contact. That resulted
lion
per
seaslln
,
snurccs
lnld
the
advance
w
lhc
conference
finals
remaining
. Jones added a thri!C·
Gordon, who comhined for an excit- his Chevrolet to the lead at the end. in the fir.'! caulioq-frec Winston Cup
ream
and
Sanders
with
a
victory
Munday
nigh!
when
newspaper.
The
point play, then Nick Van Excl stole
ing five-ear,da.sh to the finish line hut never had an opening.
' race at Talladega and bettered Bill
overthc final nine laps.
••If there would have been a time Ellio~t's 1985 record speed of agent were continuing to negotiate the hcst-nf-scvcn series resumes in a pass inlcnded for S~ocktnn and
fed Junes, who hit u three-pointer.
'Martin outlasted them all in the to do it, I W(/.uld have," Earnhardt I 86.288 mph. The race was com- the length of the contract and how Salt Lake City.
bonus
money
would
be
paid.
Shaquille
O'Neal·
had
34
points
Then Ma,lonc tonk over.
Winston Cup circuit's first caution- said. " All 1f.\e cars were running pleted in 2 hours.,39 minutes, also a
D.
a
vid
Ware,
Sanders'
agent,
and
II
rebounds
In
lead
the
Lakers.
After Russell's basket, Malone
free race since Oct: 15, 199::!. It good. We'rc1 ~appy with a second Talladega record.
~echned
to
~ommc~t
on
ncgollawho
scored
the
game's
lirsl
basket
scored Utah's next Ill points to
ca me one week al'ter his win at after all the Jhings that have h'ap"To have a 500-mile race at
Sonoma on a road coune and helped pened to us." .
Talladega and to ~un it in as tight of uons, bu! satd medta reports that nd then played catch-up the rest of keep the Jazz ahead 101-93 with
did 1101 show up for a thn:e- · a
.
.
r&lt;l'-establish Martin's reputation as
Earnhardtl5 wiriless streak quarters as we were and to not Sanders
day minicamp last month to show the way .. He had JUM II potnts less than three minutes remaining.
one of the: circuit's most talented t~nd extended to 37 ,races, bot l)c did take wreck, it's amazing," Martin sajd. his disple.sure about not having a before hemg CJected m the fourt~
Greg Ostertag and Greg Foster
versarile drivers.
his first lead since the Daytona 500 "II was · sheer luck, coupled with new conlniCI were false. .
failed to co~tain O'Neal, who
·quarter of Game 3.
"This means lhat last week and refuted theories thai his best never having one to start with . l.t
forced
Ostertag into two poin1s and ,
"They're two separate issues.
Utah had nowhere to go but up
wasn't a nuke," Mlrtin 511id. "It had days are behind him.
seems like if you have the first one, They're not related at all. Barry has afler.shootmg 28 .8 pc~cnt (1 .4·of- five.fouls and Foster into three •
l)een a Jona. lonl! time since I'd' won
Twenly lips into the . race. · you end up having five."
missed minicamps before," Ware 66) m a 104-84 loss Th,ursday. fouls . But Ma(one's big game, comone and !here were tirpes we didn' t · Earnhardt muscled past the polesit- .
The delay dit!n 't seem to arfect said. "Our talks have not been acri· Malone was 2-of·20, wh1lc John bined with balanced scoring by the ;
thi~k we'd win anolhcr one. I don't ting Ford of AndreJti . Eamhardtlt:il ihe crowd. About 140,000 ~bowed
monious at all. We've been talking a Stockton went 0-for·6. .
• rest of the Jazz, overcame O'Neal . ••
~now if-1'11 win anOiher one now. a 10181 or 761aps, bul couldn't regain up to watch under sunny skies with lot."
Malone 's shoolmg sull wasn 1
bli! the car sure is runnlns peal."
the ·top spol after a pit stop on the temperatures in the mid-70s-

Tig.ers, Rangers, Yankees,
Mariners and Brewers win

Bulls tally 100-80
win over·Hawks
in NBA playoffs

w:

Jazz post' 110-95
win o·ver Lakf3rs
in NBA playoffs

Martin holds off.Earnhardt's
challenge to Win Winston 500

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!!S.!!!.Jr!!!.cl!!!al!!y!!!,!!!'!!!!!!1!!!!1~,~1987!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!P!!!OI!!m!iltlfOY • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

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

I

Smiley matches career high for strikeouts

''Fill"

Reds r~cord 7-2 victory over Padres
By BERNE WILSEIN

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Cancel
those retirement pany plans for John
Smiley.
April's struggles have turned into
May's successes for the left-hamler,
who matched his careq high with II
strikeouts in the Reds' 7-2 win over
the tee ling San Diego Padres on Friday night.
After winning on opening day,
Smiley lost five straight starts and
saw his ERA rise to 8.19.
"I was struggling there in the
month of April," Smiley said ..
"Everything lthre·w they hit. I ·said
to myself, 'When I get beat around
like that every ·day. I think it's time
for me to quit.' "
But then the Reds made a West
Coast swing, and things turned
around.
He threw seven shutout innings in
his previous stan. a 3-1 win at. San
Francisco, and has lowered his ERA
to 5.98.
"I've been throwing the ball pretty good my last two oullngs." he
said.
·smiley likely isn't going to opt
for retirement when this season's
over.

"If things keep going like this, .
I'm going to putlhat on hold," he
Said.
Smiley came to the right place to
gel his game straight. He's 7-1 lifetime againslthe Padres, including 5~
0 in San Diego.
Smiley called his II strikeouts
"impresslve."
· . "I fell really good," he said. " I 'm
not a real big strikeout pitcher, but
. every now and then I can come up
with some."
Smiley (3·5) held th.e Padres hit·
less through 3 1/3 innings, allowing
seven hits in six innings. He walked
none. but allowed homers to Greg
Vaughn and Archi Cianfrocco. who
was pressed into leadoff duties after
Quilvio Veras was injured in the first
inning.
Smiley matched his career strike. out h1gh set at Philadelphia in Sept.
2. 1995.
"We didn 'l have too many ·
chances against Smiley." Padres batting star Tony Gwynn said .. "He's a
·smart pitcher. Against a team that's
struggling, like we are. it makes it
tough "
Brei Boone, Willie Greene and

Joe Oliver homered as the Reds kept
the San Diego Padres in their deep
slump.
· The win was just the fifth in 13
games for the Reds. who drop~ the
defending NL West champion Padres
to lheir 15th loss in 19· games. San
Diego bailers struck out a seasonhigh 14 times.
"This was probably our best allaround game all year. offen~ively.
defensively and pitching-wise,"
manager Ray Knight said.
Boone and Greene hit long
homers off Tim Worrell (2-4).
Boone's first sho1 of the season went
just to the left of the 405-foot sign 10
straightaway center with two out in
the second.
Greene's fourth homer was a
high, two-run shot to right-center
with two r4ns in the filih. Reggie
Sanders was. on boand following an
RBI double.
Oliver also got his first homer of
the season. on a 2-2 pitch from Dario
Veras, who was activated earlier in
·the day from the 15-day disabled list.
Smiley and Reggie Sanders drove
in runs on Padres errors. Both runs
ended up being earned.

Vaughn, who was benched
Wednesday because of a slump, led
off the fifth with a 408-foot shot to
left, tying Gwynn for the team lead
with seven. Cianfrocco hit Smiley's
first pitch 9f the seventh to left-cen·
ler, his second homer in two games.
Worrell allowed five runs and
eight hits in five Innings.
Quilvio Veras was forced out of
the game with a right quadriceps ·
injury after Deion Sander.; slid into
him while stealing second in the first
Inning. He 's li.ted as day-lo·day.
Notes: The Padres retired Randy
Jones' No. 35 in pre-game ceremonies, and also presented him with
a new red Corveue. Jones won the
first Cy Young Award ·in franchise
history in 1976, going 22-14 with a
2.74 ERA. Jones runs a barbecue
stand in the stadium courtyard, does
~ommunily relations work and is
host of a pre-game cable TV show.
... Barry Larkin got career hit No.
1.500 with .~ ·seventh-inning single.
then was replaced by Pokey Reese.
.. , The Pacjres placed &lt;Jutfielders
RICkey Henderson and Phil Planller
on the 15-day disabled list, activated Dario Veras and recalled Trey
Beamon from Triple-A Las Vegas. ·

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Tickets For Family. of 5 '- Free With Purchase of Vehicle
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All Now Baing
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.'

:THERE IT GOES I - River Vallay'a Marte Dllnney (left), having
retur:necl to first baaeln a bid to avoid a double play after Chllllcotha.
right fl~lder Mllty Van Bualdrk, Van Buakirk'a throw get by Cav·
al!ar fl[at basemen Ryann Rumlaek In the aer;ond Inning of Friday's
Division I sectional tour1111ment game In Chillicothe, where the Cav·
allera came from behind to win 8·7. On thla play, Van Buskirk waa
charged with an error, which allowed Denney to make It to aecond.
Denney later scorlid one. of the Raldera' five runs In the Inning.
(Times-Sentinel photo
.
. by G. Spencer Osborne)

Fan support helps Tribe beat.Tigers 5-0
By HARRY ATKINS
DETROIT . (AP) Roger
Clemens. Charles Nagy. Tim Belchcr. Nagy again. It's not hard to see
why the Detroit Tigers are struggling
to score runs.

Those woes were only compounded when the Cleveland Indtans
came to town. David Justice. and
Matt Williams homered and Nagy
tossed a complete-game shutout in a
5-0 victory Friday night.
To make IJlalters worse, most of
the 20,393 fans -the biggest crowd
at Tiger.Stadium since opening day
-were cheering for the visitors.
"That was nice to see," said Nagy
(5-2). "You couldn't miss all 'that
Ch1efWahoo stuff. That's the way it
IS when you can't gel tickets 10
Cleveland."
The Indians have won 14 of the
last 15 games against the Tigers.
They were 12-0 against Detroit last
year. On a personal level. Nagy
1mproved to 11 -4 with a 2.97 ERA
10 h1s career agamst the T1gcrs. In 17
games against Detroit. he has
allowed just 42 runs over I 27

innings.
Nagy. who has pitched into the
sixth inmng in all eight of his starts,
allowed seven hits, struck ou1 a season-high II and walked two in h1s .
first complete game of the season.
Nagy got his first shutout since
Sept. 13, 1995 against the Yankees,
and fell one strikeout short of h1s
career-·high. ll · Was' the fifth time in
his career Nagy has fanned I0 or
more batters .
"You can't explain 11, " Nagy
said. "Baseball is a strange game.
Who can explain half of what happens? Who knows, down the road, .
things can he reversed. The Tigers
are a good ballalub."
Detroit, in fact, beat Nagy last
Sunday in Cleveland. snapping a 13·
game losing streak against the Indians. But that was one. of onlv. two
vtctories all week . The rest of ·the
time the Tigers. were losing to lOp·
flight pitcher.; like Clemens and the
Toronto Blue Jays , Belcher ahd the
Kansas City ~oyals .
"I think it has a lot to do with who
we're facing ," Detroit manager Bud-

dy Bell said. "When you face a lot
of good pitchers right m a row. it can
make you look like you 're awful. I
think we'll get beuer. "
It was the second straight shutout
and third of the season for the
Tigers. whose bats suddenly have
gone cold. Detroit has scored 22 runs
in its past seven games. but 12 .of
those came 1n one game.
"It is frustrating. because we're

really pitching quite well.'' Bell
said. "It's frustratmg that now we're
not hitting."
A.J. Sager (2-2) went five innings
for Detroit, allowing one run on four
hits. Sager s1arted in place of Willie
Blair, whose jaw was broken Sunday
in Cleveland by a line drive off Julio
Franco's bat. ·
Justice, who has homered in three
straight games, connected on h1s fif'(
at-bat in Tiger Stadium in the second.
His 12th homer of the season went
deep into the second deck in right
field.
. Did the short porch in Tiger Stadium look especially inviting?
"l wasn 't looking alit. " Justice

Division I softball sectlonals continue

Ch,illicothe rallies ·
-to::·~dg·e Raiders

said: "I wasn 't thinking about it at
all."
·
After Jim Thome doubled 10 the
sixth off .Jo~n Cummings, Williams
followed with his eighth homer to
put Cleveland up 3-0. '
"It's a pretty cool bal.lpark," said
Williams, another career National
League player until this season.
"There's a lot of tradition here."
The Indians made it 5-0 in the
seventh when first baseman Tony
Clark booted Tony Fernandez 's
grounder with the bases loaded,
allowing two runs to score. It was
only Clark's second error all season.
"Whew'," Clark said. "I hope
this ends soon."
More than 30.000 tickets had
been sold for today's I :05 p.m.
game. That was no accident. either.
The Tigers, knowing tickets arc
hard to come by at Jacobs F1eld, ran
promotional deals with Cleveland
radio stations. The ligers also ran an
ad in a regional edition of Sports
Illustrated, letting fans m northern
Ohio know·there were plenty of seaL'
in the Motor City.

AL standings
F.a"lern Dll&lt;Won

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Cenlral Divi~ion
Mtlw;rukcL'
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CLEVELAND
17 I'\
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K.rn~asCrry
. 17 J'i .'iJI
Mrnncsot:r .... 14 2 1 .400
Chrc&lt;LJ.!.Il .
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. Friday '5 scores
Tcll..rs ~ BosJun I
CI.EVEI.ANO ~. LX-rruit 0
: St:ulllc K, H;altimnrc ~

Turnnl\l 4. MmrrL-snla I
Mtlwaukcl! li, Allahctm ~
Chr ..:ugll Whtlc S..u 1. O.rldanJ 2 ( 10)
K:m~iiS Cit y 7. NY . V:Vlkces 1\ (121

Th•y play•d SaiUfdHy .
CLt:::VELANI&gt; &lt;Cu!on 0-11 nt ()ctmrt
j()ltvarc~

1·21. I U"i p m
Tc11.1~ (AibL'n'o 0-0) .11 Boston (H;~m.
mnnr.l 1-1). I O"i I'm
K.u1s.t.~ ('iry CAI"Jlter 4- 1) at N Y Yan·
kL-cs (Mentllllil 1,-1). IJ~ J'.nl ,
Sc;tlllt' (fa s~c ro 4- 1) ut Bu lt unurc
(K, unicniL'~k • 2 - ll.

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By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
score on a wild pitch. Seconds later,
Times-Sentinel·Staff
I
Peters saw Ward dent the plate after
CHILLICOTHE- In Friday 's Taylor's throw to Flanagan missed
Division I .Southeast District the mark.
,
sectional softball tournament acJion
The Cavaliers offered their first
at Yoctangee Park, Sayre flanagan's challenge in their half of the second.
sevcnlh·inning dash to ihe plate on a,. Barnell's ·one-out, two-run single
wild pitch helped the hos! scored MaKwell and Rumisek. The
Chillicothe Cavaliers bre~k a 7-7 tie next hi!ler, Melanie Butler,
imd clajm .an 8· 7 v1c10ry over River witnessed Barnett make It home on
Valley.
two wild pitches before popping out
' Both teams weathered 40-dcgrec to second.
temperotures. sporad1c rain and 15·
After Flanagan reured the Ra1ders
mile-per-hour winds to play the 1-2-3 in the third, the Cavaliers used
contest, which was originally four walks and three wild pitches to
scheduled for Thursday but get the three· runs they needed to•go
postponed because of heavy rain.
ahead 6-5.
.
Two and one-half innings passed
After a scoreless tirsl inning, the
Raiders' five-run riot in the second without a run from either team.
began with a walk to Marie Denney . River Vall~y had only one base
After Nikki Hollanbaugh flied out to runner - Eddy reached on an error .
right field. riglii ,fielder Mitzy Van in the fift·~ - in that ~P.~n.
Busl(ltft:lriffii to pick off Denney at , Chill'icothe.. stranded.,two in· the'
first fo&lt; the double play . But fourth and was retired 1-2·3 in the
De11ney, upon seeing the errant fifth.
·
,
throw to first, beat the late throw
That changed in the· stxth, when
from catcller Lore Taylor at second. Chillicothe padded its !ead by one
Infield singles by Heidi Shaw and -riin. Bmncu, 'who walked and made
Jessica Griffith .got Denney around it to third on two wile! pitches.
10 score~he game's lirsi run.
scored 11flcr Mcljssa Comer struck.
Third baseman Sarah Barnett. out and junil)r Holly Hash ~ the
who fielded No. 9 h1tter Megan regular first baseman was' working
Mulford's .fioldcr's-cho1~e groun~cr. behind the plate in place · of regular
threw to second to · rcure Gn fltth. hack stop Gretchen Cloak - fired lo
That allowed S~aww sco~e,
first to complete the out play.
· Then lcadotf h1tter Sarah Ward
Chillicothe's 7-5 lead lasted until
drove C~JUrtney Maxwell's J.J pitch Eddy drove flanagan's first i&gt;ffering
into right center field to get Gnffilh ' into right center field h&gt;r a twn-nut
home with thC Raiders' third run.
double that sent Griflith and Mulhtrd
Chillicothe head coach Becky home and tied the game at 7-7. But
McKeever, having seen enough, Hash grounded out to shortstop tn
moved Maxwell tu first , Ry•mn end the Gallians' rally .
Rumisek to !ell and Flanagan to the
In the bottom of the seventh.
pitcher's circle.
.
. . Fla~agan walked, Maxwell strue~
The. Raiders kept the rally ahvc out and Angela Byers. who c•1mc on
when Lindsey Peters. the lirst hatter to pinch-hit for Rumisck, walked.
(See RAIDERS on B-4)
·
Flanagan fac~d, watched Mulford

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CINCINN!\TI7 San l&gt;ll.').:n 2
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('hic,a~u Cubs f'l'l!krnal.''t H- 1~ al S:m
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AUTO, NC, REAR SPOILER, REAR DEFROST AM/FM CASS
MSRP BEFORE DISCOUNTS
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1993 CHEV. BWER 4X~~. BlUe, 4 Dr., AJ,C,.A!T, IIH,
crul•.~, PW, PL, Tahoe-DiU~., 'JIIIrt wheels .............. ;....... $14,910
1991 :~UBARU JUSTV4.i4 GLI6577, AM/FM 4X4........... $3995
1995 GEO TRACKER 4X416582, Green, &lt;1)(4, ~ whaala, .

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1996 MERCURY MYSTIQUE

.,O,WALK.

i'

WE CANHEI.P

games

Nt·.w h·rh·~ :n N Y l{ : lll}!,.r .~ . 1:.'{)
pIll . tl II~H·~s:lry
Uutf.tln al l'hrl;rlh.•lph i:t. 7 IO fl 111 tl

(C. P~n:7. 4-1) :11 l .u~ An~l' ·
h:~ iNonm 4-2&gt;. 4:0$ r m'
CINCINNATI IMi.'t\:kL't 1-\) ,,1 Snn
l&gt;iL'i\11 (1\shb)' 2-:!1. 4.0~ fl nl
Ch1r:01ptl C' ub ~ I Ft)~lcr J-2) al San
Fmn\'iso.:u (G;trdrtL't J -ll. J O:'i 1'-111.

.,.CAl'., AFFORD

No Credit, Slow Credit
Bad Credit, Bankruptcy?

t'riduy's secnnrl-round St:orcs

Munn~:al

·roPAZ

...

:11 u. ,~

lnkrn.rrrun,,ll ..c.r ~ut•

I'HII. AOI:U'HI/\ 1 1 HII.I .I I ~S J'laLt'd
.I.HI' M:m Uccdr mr rlw lli -d;r y 1 lr ~ ortrh:rl
h ~t i\clr\'utcll RHf 1 K..:n l{yoill !rom Ilk·
IS-d.ry lhs.ablcil hsl.

New Yurk K1• m

Atla.nla (Smolt:t: .\ -.l J al l'lll s ttur~h
(('ul)kr.' J·.,). l'.l~ I' lh
'
NY. ML•ts (Mh~· kt U-.l) .tt St l.mm
1Mtrrri~ 1· 1), :!: I~ 1'-nl.

1990 MERCURY

I

al

Tu•sd•y's gam••

Ft:nmn~z -~· 4) , 1;)$ p.m ..

1\n:thi.!IR\ (Fmi&amp;:J 0-2J ut Milwn1dt..:c

Iuiie ollhc

I:.Utn!llllllll:rll'••I•Jr.toltl, 7 · llJllir

(.'LE.VEI,.AND (HelllhiKr )-0) ,,, 0.:trmt tnnmrrson 2·21. 1 : ~ r .rfl.
.

{ ~Cklltm~ll . l ..'~p . m

. Nallunull.cu~-.c

FLORIDA M/\J.I.I.INS. l'l;rlCII OJ'
ClrtT nuyll un thl' 15-Liil) dr~ahkd lrst
Rl-'\:,rHcd OF 'I mid Urmw uu.:ly lruml'!mr·

Munday's ~ma;

l~llllnddphHt ill

· O;akhmd (Telglli?Lier 0-21 at Chrc:~~o
White Smt IDmtlck 2-J ). 7:0:\ p.m
T~trnnfl) t Cit!nr~ns ~-0) ru Man~Mutn
IAldred 1·4). R,O.'i p m

TcltM tl'avlik 2-.\l •II 8o~1on (Qordnn ·
_
K0111~,.• Crty (lhtULhl ~-Ol a1 N Y .
Yunko.'!l (0, Wdlj J.l ). I : 1~ p.nl
Se;~uk!- (0 Maninel ,l-2) :a1 Baltitntwc

]...COl!!UC

N.Y. I&lt;.m)!L:n a1 N~·w Jcr~c)' . ~ p.m
Uuflalu. 2

at Milw:rukL"C

Today's games

Jrum Syrucu~c of llw IIIIL' rB ,Ilwnul

Toduy's ~·m~s
Mrami :u Nl'w Yurk. t::uo 1• m
H Pu~run .11 St.mlll\.!, .\ 11 Hl
Clut' &lt;~)!n ;rt J\thrnm . ." JO J•.m ·

Atl:uua "'"'''•'"

I·]S 11m

Amahc!lm (l&gt;icbun
(Kttrll -:\), 2.05 p.m

60-day hs1. Rcc:tllcd LHP t11ris Carpenter

Chrt'ii)!U U.! Atlanta. !Jr m
Ur.dr :rt I. A l.akrr~ I 'fl p 111

NHL playoffs

They played Saturday
IM l~llt.'r .1· ~ f. 7 0~ 1' m

IJ7 Sc .. ult.• 111 Ht•u swnii!'Oith

2- 1

1: A l.•lkl'f~

l, Cqlmalln I

Hnu ~ rnn

Ht~u~WI~

AL'\JUirctl

I.HI' Alvh1 Mnrman !nun 1hc Hnuswn
A~&gt;llus fur :1 pl,lyl.'r In I'IC n:nlk.'i.l Rck·;~~cLI
KHP Mik!: Gurtltm
TORONTO IJLliE M~S J•l:u.: ct\
RHP Rnlll'll P..:rso n onlhe l'i-J.ty .),, .
ablcd hsl and num..&gt;tl r~k H.111~nn 111 1hc

Mmrm Hit N.:w Ytrrk K-1 · ...:rrcs lr'"·d

Mt:u nr

Friday's scores
llorlll,r ).

Has• hall
cu~vm_,,No JNm/\NS
Amuican LeilKut·

Th•y 'play•d Saturday

Wl!stern l&gt;h'i~llll
('ulnradr l .
21 ' I ~ hlfl
l.t•s 1\II!!Ck.' .
IIJ I I '\1}4
Sau Fr.mt:t~..:o
I 1J 1\
~·J.l
S,rn Dil·gu
. I ~ 20
l?~

Pluladl'lplll .~

1-1

M: ll!..'~

Jo;
~2

NBA playoffs
Friday's second·round sctwes

Di~ision

I1J
I'J

Clrrc:tl!''

11

20

1'

'

10

L e.L

Allanr.1

7' ·

W""*~1111Hwi~on

Sc:rulc

.»:

ltam

a-1

'

NL standings
EIL'llcrn Oivi~lon

A

!

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' .
1992 CHEV. ASTRO VANEXTENDED
,f8625; &amp;.pall., low
miles, V8'11111., AfT, AJC, '~L trim, PW, P.L, PS, crulit, tilt,
Jugg1ge riCk, aport,._ rtlfA/C .. :........................... $11~
1992 CHEV. LUMINA~ 16517, V-6 eng., A/C, AfT, AMIFM .
Clll., tilt, crulaef PW, PL::4;;..........,•••• ,••••••••••••••••,.....................$9915
19115 FORD WINDSTAR VAN 16827, Graan, .A!T, AJC, AMIFII
Clll., tilt, cruise, 7 11111~ V-6 eng., PW, Pl...................,.$11,860
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AMIFM Clll.,
tilt. C"!llt, 7 paaa., PW, Pl, '2 tone :
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WHEELS, CASS., FLOOR CONSOLE, LOADED , 10 TO CHOOSE

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Rockets get 97-93 victory over Sonics

SEE THIS! - That's wh•t
Seattle forward Detlef Schrempf
seems to be aayl11g to Hou.ton's
Hakeem Olajuwon aa he hangs
from the rim after the flrat.quer·
ter dunk In Friday night's NBA
second-round pla!loff game in
Seattle, where the Rockets won
97·~' (AP)

f

.~
')'
t

t

Heat beats
.
'

. ly STEVEN WINE
, MIAMI (AP) - The Miami Heat
!tad no complaints about the ref's this

' . ttme.

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After criticizing the orticialing in
Oame 1, the Heat took advantage of
!lie New York Knicks' foul trouble
~day night to win 88-84 and ev.en
lll¢ir best-of-seven series 1-1.
.
.... , "The ofticials did a terrifte JOb,"
said Tim Hardaway, who scored :0
team playoff record 34 points. His
filial basket. a running jumper in the
!tiRe with .50 seconds left, put the
ftoat ahead by one, and Jamal Mash,f·

.
.
bum hit a clinching three-pointer in
the tina! seconds.
Games 3 and 4 will be ulday and
Monday at Madison Square Garden.
"In 48 hours it could be 3-1."
Knicks guard Chris Childs said.
"It's going to be a grind-it-out
series," Heal coach Pat Riley said.
"It's a war out 'there. It's going to be
tough to get a shot off."
Foul trouble sidelined Pat(ick
Ewing for 1·5 minutes and Larry
Johnson for 16. Miami 's· Alonzo
Mourning, who missed 19 minutes
because of foul trouble iri Game I,

! :Rio Grande to host

·!·AAUgirls' cagefest ·
; on·May's last weekend
.
RIO GRANDE- Amateur Alh- year's competition.
· ~fatic Union girls' basketball returns
"The response has been great,"
.Ito the University of ·Rio Grande said Smalley: "Going into this in '95,
Memorial Day weekend as the Red- . we weren't sure how · many quality
.~omen basketball squad and Bob teams we could gel hecause this is .
' Evans Farms host the Third Annmol _ s_uch a busy time of year for AAU.
. ;Bob Evans Farms/Rio Grande AAU However, this tournament has turned
,Tournament for under-15 and under- out to be very competitive and cntcr16 divisoons. •The tournament is SCI laining for the rJayers and fans
for May 24-26 at the Paul R. Lync alike ."
(:enter in Rio Grande.
In 1995, some 1,500 fans attend- \
Overthe past two yc~rs , thc tour- ed the three-day hoor fcsl. Numbers
1ament has hecn successful in draw- · went up to about 1,700 last year, .
:ing some ol' the top AAU girls' clubs e.vcn with fewer team&gt;'. Sin1ilar
from Ohio and West Virginia. .Both c,rowds arc expected for this year's
::Janie exciting results for fans in
. .jlltendance:
'
~ "We've hecn l'onunatc to be able,
11tract some great teams with' out.standing players to this tournament," .
lillid Red women head coach David
Smalley. "Many of the players that
we've seen come through here over
the rust two years have gone on 't o
·play college ball or will be playing
'&lt;11 the collegiate level in the 0car
future ."
• · Sixteen teams vied for the title in
the 'tournament's maugurul year ol
•lW5. There were 12 partocipants last
rtear and 14 clubs have entered this

'ltslders ...
,
rContinucd from B-3)
After two wild pitches got Flan'agan
to third, Flanagan so;orcd the gamewinning run on a I-I wild pitch
.'uring Van Buskirk'&lt; m-hat.

r.•jDglsliU

Jtiver Valley .. .. 050 000 2 = 7-n-0
Chillicothc .......033 001 I = K-2-3
River Valley Raiden (2·18)

tver-pos.
II!
Uh Ward-cl'. ........ ....... 4
W~ey Pele111-2b ..·.. ....... 4
·. ·Tei't'i'Eddy-p .. ................. 3
,titlly Hash-c ... :·:· .. .. .....4
Jllrie Denney-ss ...... ...... 2
!llkki Hollanbaugh-3b ... 2
M:idi Shaw-If. ............. .3
..,..ica Griflith-rf.. ......... 2
Mccan Mulford-lb ......... 3
Mls
21

tournament.

The under-15 bracket includes the
Hocking Valley Stars. the Lima Bullets, SEQ Personal Best, the West
. Virginia Intensity. Tri-County from
Lesage. W.Va. as well as an under14 squad out of the Chillicothe area.
The under-16 division lcaturcs
Hocking Valley. the Maricua Magic,
the Ohio Players fn im Columbus.
~- .T. Gym&gt; out of Zanesville. lhc
Athens Lady Bulldogs and teams
from St. Albiins and Morgantown,
West Virginia. and Martinsville,

The Knicks then opted not to foul.
and Mashburn wa~ leli wide open for ·
a three-pointer with 2.9 'seconds to
go. .
Mashburn linished with just six
points. .
· /"•
"We gave them a gill," Childs
said. "An early Christmas present,
an early Mother's Day present, whatever you want to call )t. They didn 't .
beat us."
·
. The Knicks lost for the lirst time
in live rnstsea~on games. They had
been 3-0 this season at Miami Arena.

The victory was the I,()()(Mh of
Riley 's o;areer, including an NBA
record 141 in rostscason rlay.
" It was a pressure game for us,"
Riley said. "We felt the pressure . We
played a. little close to the vest.
We've got to go for it. Tim went for
it, Masn went tor it and we got l~c

Burey In to Taka Advantqa of:

UPT048
MONTHS

•

u:~~&amp;o
MONTHs

/0@

$1,000
Cash Rebate

Severa l veh tcle s tn stock . Come tn and make your best
dea l AND take advan!age of thts spectdl progr am!

win ."

HOLE-IN-ONE·PRIZE - The first pereon that
. , MIS 1 hoJe.ln-one on the per-three ninth hole In
.·. the Melge Band Memorial Golf Toumement will
drive away In this. naw 1997 Chevy Cavalier. Pic·

tured with the car Is Brice Tidrick of Don Tate
Motors, which furnished the car, and Meigs Band
field commander B.J. Smith.

.

'

'Kistemaker, Welsh
·. ·&amp;Thomas represent
:.-:~;..Rio on aii-MOC team

0

:.::' sentence
:~;:.!: for probation
: : •~ ·violation
'

Star Bank's is prou~ to announce that now you . will have more
hours to do your banking in Gallipolis. Starting May 1st, we will
be open on Thurs~ays from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday, you can take advantage of drive through banking
convenience from 8 a.m. untll 6 p.m.

"

Clark Reed

6 cyl, auto Whit•
interior,
ready to worl!. Local trade

.

'

Sl!BO
SIJ(

56099

1991 GEO PRISM 4 DR. .

55099

SJOOQ

$5699

$1000

· 4. cyl., automatic, pqwer ateerlng, JIOI!V8r brakes, !lir, AMIFM atereo, rear
window dehosler, ..w.tirea. Good Condition.

Al$0, •• ••• Plltrls ""~'" ntlrcrtft .... h will rectlttltrt ••• ,.,.., ••
ltrt IIHtirllr ,.,.111, ltrt itttf"l filltd .. flf M 4iyJ 1fhr Jttf ,trd!N.
·
Itt 1!0' ""k""""l lolorls '"'" l01 4ololh. ,

,..~

,....~. 1191,....

..........

•
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STAR
Bank Without Boundaries
Member FDIC

.L-2{
- ~.,

reschedule the Diam;md Skills compelitiqn for Wednesday at 6 p.m. at
Ted Perry Memorial Field .
For more infonnation, call 4410622 on weekdays.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gtlllia
County Gun Club will hold a turkey
shoot on Sunday, May I8 at 10 a.m.
at the Gun Cluh's range .

'97

BonneviJles

5.9%
Financing
60 Months
or $1 .2so
Cash Backr
-=::S::I:::n=-s-to:,.:c::k:...l_·-1

'13,500 Price
• 800 Down -

'97 ParK

*12 ' 700 Amount
to
Flnlonce
On A l•li4 Founl1tlon"

* Air Conditioning
*Tilt Wheel

* AM-FM Cassette
* Rear Deck Lid

Avenue

5

1,500

cash sac~!
3 1n stock.

·· Spoiler

SJ'97 Lesabre
. ,OOQ
Cashaackt
II In Stockt

Gene Johnson Of
.Gene Johflson .
Chevy-Oids-GEO
. has announcec;l
that Car.l Sanders
has earned
Salesman of the

1616 Eastern Av• .
Gallipolis. OH
446 3672

......

"--1 AfllU'I\...._fMrtdiiJpUI AnillllltW.,J·Miy II,IWJ.

...,..

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Month for April •.

Riverfront Hontla/Yabama/Polarls
lfpper Rt. 7
Gallipolis, OH

,_,_.......................

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*Extended hours and special offer apply only to Downtown
Gallipolis Location (25 Court St.) and not to Spring Valley or
Silver Bridge Branches

Congratulations,
·Carl :Sanders

::·.: t

•

Gallipolis Office - 25 Court Street

6 4·446·0666

I!:.!\;.

...
~

Don't wait!
Come in and get Star .treatment today!
.

New Construction Poured Walls
Solid Concrete Foundations for
· Residential &amp;Co111111ercial Structures

w1-..

•

Stop in May 5th-9th and see our refurbished offices and enjoy
some refreshments. While you're there open a new checking or
savings account and we'll make your first deposit of$10!

Old

V6, auto., PS, PB, air, till, cruise, power
power locks, AMIFM
stereo cas., dual air bags, cut aluminum wheels, power drivet''s seat, rear
window defroster.
·

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·"St11t Yilt

4 DR. GL .

~

•••

Area. sports in brief.
..
.

- - ROCK SPRINGS - The Divi si&lt;Jil II Northeast Sectional soliball
final between New Lexington and
Meigs . postponed Friday hecausc of
'
'~
rain, will be rescheduled for Monday -'
.· .. ., INDIANAPOLIS (API - .linr- . at Meigs High Sc.hool.
::: ;: 'l)lcr Ohio Stale University quarter: ·· back Art Schlichter has heen senGALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
;;;· 'tcnccd. to lO months in prison for Parks &amp; Recreation Dcpanmcnt and
:: ; ; ~tolatong hts ledeml prohatoon .
the 0.0 Mcintyre Pl)J'k Districl will
::·: • , Schlichter, a former player with
::; ; 'the Indianapolis Colts, was on rro.. • ·; pation for a bank fraud convktion
.:: :... !iJr writing $175,000 in bad checks
•.;. :...,o Las Vegas casinos.
.
;; · • U.S. District Judge David F.
·::; · !-familton, who scnicnccd Schlichter
;•; ;on Friday'. said Schlichter had clear}; -l y "spun out of control."
,
. '!; •:• &gt;'You not only have an addictiun,
:( :1'\!ll what I sec again and.again here
:;•:;hi fraud and deception. motivated in
;::·; • ·Jarge part by gambling. I also ~ce
.!· ·lt!Omeone who has remarkahle talents
:;:·;~iO con people into giving him large
,::.: ·fiums of money."
.... : ~ Schlichter also li1ces an eight- ln
&amp;
lj •I
~ ,.. ~ll)-ycar prison term when he is sen:,.:: !l.tlnccd May. 28 by Marinri Superior
~ ::: lf,ourt Judge Gary Miller. Miller had
!J
,,. "--reed to let Schlichter c"0 to a Balfl.1 PlS
;: .. timore treatment o;enter to get heir :1:(\K:fore he sentenced him: Schlichter
11 :· pleaded guilty in Marion County to
~'' r' ~king $365,880 from Indiurta rcsiil 'l. ents and businesses. .
··
R' ' He was removed Ji·om the treat:' . lncnt program in Baltimore and
• fclumed to Indiana after be began
l tmbling again .
· .
Hamilton called Schlichter's sto-.
1 :
!'1' "one o~ the hesl known on lhts ·
:: ·~oOntry and one of the IJ)OSl trout!; hling." .
·
Schlichter told Hamilton he lclt u
1"·11-&gt;t of pressure as n football star and
::: !fiat gambling helpc~ relicv.c thut
•i.: pressure . ·
·
:;,; ; ~ "For years. I stutl'cd the pain and
:... llfepted it with gambling. 'I felt like
was.a failure," he suid.
•,:: • • 1be former star quarterback, who
;-:led Ohio State to ·four bowl'appearj:·"Clis in tbe late 1970s and early
:·:: i980s, wa.• dr:\fied as the fourth pick
' :: ~)'the then Baltimore Colts in 1982.
(: ;, !:lis gambling activities were pub' I
; .. ~cized in 1983 when he .Sked the
l:.fill for help after gamblers in Bal:
: timore threatened to break his throw~~~ ann it he didn't pay his debts.

1994 LINCOLN CONTINENTAl 4 DR.

Star Bank Downtown Gallipolis Lobby Is·
Now Open 9 A.m.-4 P.m. On Thursdays
Drive Thru Now Open 8 A.M.~6 P.M.
Monday through Friday

•

"'• i

HEADED FOR MARSHALL- Michael Adari'ta, a freshman at Marshall Unlverelty-, will pla!l&amp;oc;cer for the Thundering,Herd in .the 1997
fall seas.o n as a walk·O!'I- A 1996 graduate of Point Plee88nt High
School, he has played youth soccer for Gallia Count)t-based teams .

'

!: l;:i. ~Schlichter ·
.1:: gets prison

See
Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh

[ h 1!1

I

ALONG WITH A GREAT OFFER!

t'l

1/6, ·auto., PS, PB, air, tin, cruise, PW, PL. ·leather int, AMJFM 'stereo cass ..
dual power seats, haK leatheo roof, cast alum. whll!!ls. keyless entry, anti·
lock brakes. Climate 'Control, local owner, 18,130 miles. Excellent condition.
WAS$18,995
•• ,

"It's another gmld l'teldlhis year,''
said Smalley. "These teams arc o;ompriscd of some really tcrril'tc high
sch(xJI rlayers and we're looking for- .
ward to hosting them and their l'amilics."
Daily tickets l'or the tournament
arc $4.0&lt;1 per person il' rurchascd on
s daily basis. Tuurnament rasscs arc
available lilf $10.(Kl each. Children
· under. I0-ycars-old will he ndmillcd
l'rce uf charge.
'
For more irilimnation. cull 614245-7213.

.'E

•

:· , .

Hardaway came into the game
shootingjust32 percent in the playoils. hut went 11 -for-24 overall and
5-lor-8 from three-point range.

1988 FORD E150
WORK VAN

~

n::

0/
A. P.R.

WE'RE EXTENDING OUR· HOURS -•
..

.
.
· RIO GRANDE -Three players He led Rio Grande with 14 stolen
'from this seai!On's University of Rio bases. Thomas was one of two RedGrande baseball .team have ~een . men to play in all 34 games.
named to the 1997 all-Mid-Ohio
Rio Grande finished 11 -23 under
Conference team. First baseman new head . coach Brent Clark. The
Randy Kistemakcr. third sacker Redmen missed out on post-season .
i,.. .Adam Welsh and utility player Joe play despite ·finishing.in a tie for the
'··' i Thomas were honorable mention · ·sixth and final spoi in the MOC tour!;11·:; selections in this year's aii-MOC vot- nament wiih Malone College. Both
!·'I1 ing. .
· · · •
clubs had '7-11 records.
::\; •l •
Kistemakcr. '.a senior from.Lake1-j: _wood, led the Redmen 'with eight
, • . 1 home runs and 30 RBI while batting
l'' I
•• )! • .330. He also scored 28 runs, good
for second jn lhc team slats .
'J: K.istemaJcer played in 33 of Rio
::i' • Grande's 34 games this season.
q : Welsh, a junior from Circlevill~.
.. :··: led the squad with a .365 batting
:~: : average. He knocked in 19 runs and
· ,·; · had eight doubles. Welsh led the
.:f:: Redmen with 29 runs scored. He was
: • .; also 6-for-6 on stolen base allempts.
:: :; .Welsh was walked !I team-high 23
:;, · times. He also led the learn in Mcri- ·
1;:1:: fices with five.
·,.,
· •! .'
Thomas. a freshman out of New
·; · ,London, had a team-bigh 39 hits to
.:•; Ill&gt; a.long with his .358 batting aver: ,,;; age. He drove in I5 runs, had two
:·:;; doubles, three triples and one homer,

.

Pomeroy and Meigs Hi,tl Schools
for 31 years.
To enter a team or for more information, contact toumtullent &lt;.'hairman John KrawS~:zyn at MHS (9922158) or at home (992-6394).

•

•:; ·
:::;:
:·· :
':' ·
': :. ;
::;.

411DDLe

tors from area schools. Past honorees
at this event are James Diehl. Nolan
Swackhamer, James Vennari, Lee
McComas, Howard Kftight and Rita
Slavin.
•
The 199'7 tournament will be in
honor of Preston Gibbs, a teacher at

'

. · ~,

.., SOUTI1 THIRD

•

POMEROY - The Meigs Band
Boosters Club will hosl the seventh
annual Memorial Weekend go! f
scramble on Saturday, May 24 at 9 ·
a.m at the Meigs County Golf Club.
Each year the Band Boosters recognize and honor prominent educa-

'

&lt;tt\~~.nt,p

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Ohio.

I I I
0 I 0
o 2 2 Briggs. dies at 52
0 0 0 .
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) I 0 0
J, Briggs. who played for the
Roben
0 0 0
Kansas City Chiefs. Cleveland
I I 0
Bmwns, San Francisco 49crs and
2 I I
San Diego Chargers in the late
2 n I
1960s and early 1970s, has died. He
1 .6 6
was S2.
PJtchcn
Briggs. a Chicago resident who
*lay (L): 7 ip. 4Ks. 13 Bes, 2 hits,
formerly lived in Tillin, died Mon1 nms (all ER)
~
•
day at Sanibel Island. Fla. The cau s~
Cllilllcothe Cavallen ().15)
or death was not available.
·
H~ graduated from Heidelberg
' ie Butler-cf.........all
.J 0[ .h
() hi() College in 1967 and was drafted by
· . 'liSa Comer· 2b ...... :.. .J 9:.0 I the 49ers. He played for the Chargij11e Taylor-c ................. 2 0 I 0 ers from 1967-70, then went to the
r Snow-ss ............0 I . 0 0
Browns frorn 1970-74 anq the Chiefs
lanagan-lf/p ........2 2 0 0
from 1974-:76. He retired from. footy. Ma~wcll-pllb.2 2 0 0
ball after two knee operations.
Rumisek-lbllf.. ... l I 0 0
Briggs later served as assistant
y Van Buskirk-rf.. ...2 0 9 0
footliall coach at Illinois Benedictine
. _ Barnett-3b ............2 2 I 2 and Heidelberg.
...
.
15823
He is survived by his w,ifc, Lau.. ',•.
1 PJkhm
rie
Jeanne Bloek: three sons: and a
Mlpwcll: I !3 ip, IK, IBB. 3 hits. 5
daughter.
.
(all ER) · 2
·
..
A funeral will be held Monday at
= a n (W) 5 13 ip. OKs, 2BBs. 2
Hoffman-Gottfried
Funeral Home.
._(1 ER)
I

fouled uut with I :29 left, but still had
24 points and 13 rebounds in 43 minutes.
Ewing had 17 roints and II
rebounds in 29 minutes.
"They got all the calls." he said ..
" I was on the bench a lol, and Zo
was playing . But we can't cry over
spilled milk.".
Each of New York's three front!inc starters went to -the hench in the
second quarter with three fouls.
When all three were out, the Heal
went on a 15-5 run.
·
"We could complain about
things, but everyone saw what happened. ·' the Knicks' Charles Oakley
said. "We're not going to complain
Iike they do."
.
The . six-f&lt;xll Hardaway sank an
otT-balance shot over the 7-foot-1
Ewing to give Miami an 85-84 lead.
"He always hits a lot of big sliots ·
for them," Ewing said. "!thought I
made him shoot it too high and too
hard, but it went in."
New York's bid to regain the lead
ended when P.J . Brown blocked a
driving shot in the lane by Childs.

I

Meigs Band
Boosters slate linkfest for May 24 ·
.

final four minutes and no points in
Drexler hit his 1.57f001er over
the last two minutes.
Schrempf. gi~ing HOW&lt;ton a 9.5-93
"We played defense on -them lead ..
like they usually play defense oo
"The coacheS called the play for
us," Barkley said. "We decided me and I had one of my favorite
Sam Perkins and Hersey · Hawkins shots. ~o I l&lt;&gt;Qk it." Dreder saod.
weren'.tgoing to belli lis."
· Olajuwon then blocked Kemp's
Whtle Gary Payton and Kemp inside shot and Barkley was fouled
scored 28 points each and Detlef · by Payton aflcr tbe rebound.
Schrempf had 20; Hawkins was limBarkley weilt 10 the line aad
ited to three points and a sinsle field calmly made the first free throw. then
goal in 40 minutes. Perkins, Seattle's. .gestured and cun;ed at a heckling fan
starting center who played Olujuwon before making tbe second to clinch
toastandoiiinGame2,didn'lscore the win. He ·had II points and 17
and was 0-for-6 in 31 ·minutes,
rebounds.
"You're not going to stqp Gary
Seattle came back from a 14Payton and Shawrr Kemp." Barkley · poi.nt deficit in the third quoner and
said. :·But you can sure make lilc used n 2S-5 nin in the tinal 6 112
tough for Perkins and Hawkins."
minutes of the reriod to ~tkc a 79Maloney helped stop Hawkins, 72 lead into the fourth .
who averaged 16..5 points in the tirst
Seattle led 89-82 after 'two free
two games of the series.
.
throws·. by Kemp with 6:22 to gn
" I tried to deny him the ball and · before Houston began its comeforce him to make soinc decisions back. Drexler hit a threc-rointer with
off the dribble," Maloney said.
5:54 left, Elie made two free throws
Olajuwon led the RockeL~ with 24 34 seconds later and Maloney conpoints. II rebounds, four steals and nectcd on a the last of his live threethree blocks. Drexler. who played the ·pointers with 4:48 to go to give the.
last six minutes with live fouls, had Rockets a 90-89-lead.
19 points.
·

Knicks 88-84 to .tie series

••

previous tournaments have rroduccd..

Fame111 - Barkley. Olajuwon and
Clyde Dreder. all 20.000.point
career scorers - made -a trio of big
plays in the final, 20 seconds to help
the Rockets end a string ·of 10 consecutive postsew.on losses in Seaulc.
h was their first playoff win here
since May 7, 1987.
Drexler broke a 93-93 tie on a
tough baseline jumper with 18 s~C·
onds left, Olajuwon blocked Shawn
. Kemp's ensuing shot and Barkley
iced the victory by making two free
throws with 6.5 seconds left.
h wasn't a surprising Rockets'
win. They were the league's third-·
best road team this season, while
Seaule is now 2-2 at home during the
playoffs in its bid to get back to the
NBA Finals.
Maloney, who scored five .points ·
on 2-for-8 shooting' in Game 2.
bounced back with a 19-point effort,
including three three-pointers in the
final quaner.
· "With their defensive scheme, it's
up to me, Eddie Johnson or Marin
Elie to make some plays from out-.
side," Maloney said .
By winning, the Rockets grabbed
a 2- 1 lel)(l in the series. Game 4 will
be Sunday in Seaulc. with Game 5
Tuesday night at Houston.
On Friday night. Houston held
Seaule without a field goal in the

t

Pomeroy •lllddllport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple••nt. WY

.

ByJIMCOUR
SEATil..E (AP) - How long
ww. it between playoff wins for the
Houston Rockets in Seattle?
Ten yeiifS and two days. to be
exact. Bili'Fitch was the coach then
and Hakeem Olajuwon's teammates
included Ralph Samp$0n. Rodney
McCray, Allen Leavell and Roben
Reod . And rookoe Mau Maloney
was 15 vears old.
On Friday night. the Roc kets
finally won another playoff game in
· · Seaule. Housto.n 's 97-93 victory
gave lhe Rockets back their homecourt advantage in the Western Con'
ference semifinal series that Seattle
grabbed with a win in . Texas on
Wednesday night.·.
" Homecoun is really ·overemp~asized , " Charles .Barkley said.
"When you have two even teams
like this, the team that makes the best
adjustments will win, "
I:louston's trio -of future Hall of

'

•

Sundly, lily 11' Jll7

Poineroy • lllddlep)rt • G81Ppalla, OH • Point Pl•••nt. WV

•

•

I

.....••
•

•

�•

•

Pomeroy•

Sundly,..., 11,1817

Over-worked, .
under-appreciated
.I
• "

1 JJ

I

~'I
t U~

.

'

.J

Sisson stands among five URG players getting all-Moe honors ~·. .-~ :.
RIO GRANDE:- Five players
from the 1997 edttton of the Untverstty of Rto Grande so~tballte~m
were voted to th1s season s.aii-MtdOh10 Conference squad. .
Ftrst baseman Bobbt McGhee.
second base~ an Roxanne Sagle, left·
fielder Meh~a Stsson and center
fielder Shelhe Wemer were second

te~m

honorees and shonstop Billi
McGhee received hono.rable menlion. S1sson, Sagle and Btlh McGhee
are repeat performers from last season's aii-MOC •.earn.
.
.
Stsson, a semor from Rutland, htt
.362 w1th ;;even doubles, s1x tn~les
and one home r~n. She was ·11-torII on stolen base allempts thts se~-

~naF~~

son.
·
.377'and had 23 RBI to go alOng 28RBI . McGheehad ·I2doublesand
"Melisa has been .an outstanding with 45 runs scored. She was 19-of- four triples.
player for us for four seasons," ~aid . 21 on stolen base .illtcmpts.
.
Billi McGhee, also a junior frum
head coach Angelo Fane. "She proWeiner, ·a sophomore out of Doluware,'hit.333 with 21 RBI, five
vtded leadership for .us this season Columbus, hit a hefty .402 and was doubles, three triples and a home
and w1ll be missed both as a player 14-for-16 on stolen base anempts.
run.
and friend. It's ~n a-privilege for
Ba~bi ~cGhee. !l junior from . Billi and · Bobbi McGhee and
me to coach her.
Delaware, hn .387 ,wnh a team h1gh · freshman third baseman Michele
Sagle, a junior from Pataskala, hit
·

Ulmer were named to the
Fa.,tpitch Couches Association all-' '·
region team.
'
"I'm proud of all of these play-"':'
crs and what they accomplished this ' ''l
season," said Fane. "With four oftl)c ,
five coming back next season. our .:.;
future looks bright"
·
"' '

.

}Munoz's children
fshow promtse
~~s f ture prep stars
.

~·

.

.
!
(AP) At 15,
Michael Muno fills the size 15
~hoes of his father, former Cincinnati
Bengals tackle Anthony Munoz, But
so far. they're track shoes, not football cleats. ·
. The ·freshman at Moeller High
School is a top shot-puller and
maybe an offensive line prospect
· He's already 6-foot-6 and 275
pounds; his dad is 6-fooi-6 and
played between 285 and 290 as a
perennial All-Pro from 1980-92.
"When I was his age, I was &lt;,mly
6-foot and weighed ahout215." the
elder Munoz said. "The doctors
said he's going to be bigger than me,
ab&lt;•ut 6-8 or 6-9."
Michael has carved his own niche
this spring with a shot-put of SI feet,
3 3/4 inches, fifth best in Cincinnati.
His father was never a tracltand field
man. having played football and
. baseball.
"He's identified (track) as his
own thing, which I think is great,"
Anthony Munoz said. ''He's. his
·own person. and he has great ~If­
esteem."
·
That's good, because Michael is
saddled with the "Son Of A Famous
Athlete" burden.
"I wouldn't have it any other
way," Michael said. "I love being
his son."
.,
Michael and his sister, ei~hth­
~rader Michelle, are both star athletes. The 5-foot-11 Michelle'sAAU
l)asketball team finished tounh in lhe
nation last year.
· ''I' m sure the kids get tired of
hearing I'm their father. but they
re~lize it's part' of thei.r lives,"
Anthony Munoz said. "As a family,
we talk a lot about it, DeDe and I
work· on encouraging them ..but not
pushing them ."
DcDe Munoz said her children
have handled dad's fame well .
"It's been a· privilege to ·be their

. parents." she s.aid. ·" J k.now that
sounds kind of weird. but they're
neat·people."
Michael is freshman dass president, an honor student and also
plays basketball. He took up shotputting and discus. throwing this
spring. and has thrown 135 feet in
the discus - not among city leaders
but good for someone learning the
ropes. •
"There's more technique with the
discus." said track coach Jerry Kom• brinck. "Imagine how good he'll be
when he learns all the footwork..
"The great thing about track is
there's no pressure on him like there
might be in football."
Michael has played both guard .
and tackle. when allowed to play
football. The Moeller freshman team
. was his first full season of foothall
because he had always been too big
for age-group teams.
Football coach Steve Klonne,
who has coached several All-Amer· icans and eventual NFL players, will
not predict whether Michael can be
the next Anthony Munoz.
"As a freshman he was a very
dominating player because of his
size, and he's fairly athletic." Klonnc
said. "He's going to be a very good
player. hut we're just going to take
it easy with him. I will say this, he
has a competitive streak that bums."
· He has yet to reach the varsity.
but like many youngsters, he·has prn
dreams.
"The NFL is my goal, but I can't
expect to make it there. on my
-father's name." he said.
Michael was born in I':IKI. the
year the Bcngals went to !heir first
Super Bowl. Nearly 16 years later.
Anthony Munoz is finally eligible
fur Hall of · Fame induction and
Michael is eligible for the Moeller
varsity.

Former Nebraska
coach, athletic boss
Devaney di~s · at 82
Nebraska and pride in JiKJtball the
By J .L. SCHMIDT
same,"
said Gov. Ben Nelson . u
LINCOLN. Ncb. (AP) - Those
Nebraska alumnus. "He helped
who knew Bob Devaney rememNchraskans believe that we could be
bered him a.' the man who helped
number one i'n whatever. we did .··
turn Nebraska football around Dcv.ancy'S health prompted him
giving Cornhuskcrs fans so.methi.ng
w be proud of with two national lu resign as alhlcliL: t.lircL:tor cmcri ~.
tus in June 1996. He had a slight
championships in the 1970s.
stroke in March 1'1'15 ;ind u heart
His successor. Tom Oshnrne, who
allack this year. He was released
took. over the team in 1973. called
May I from Lincoln Gc~cral HospiDevaney's passing 110 Friday tbe
"end of an era.'"
·
tal . ' where he was rcL:uvcrin£. sim:c
···Most .cverything I kn11w about
ttlc March I ':I heart attack. He aiS&lt;J
cm1ching I learned from h1m ." sa1d . had pneumonia while hosp)tulized.
C)sbc.lmc'. whll was nflcnsiVC ~m&gt;rdl­
·Those who played Jl1r Devaney
nator under Devaney and hand- said he was more than a coach.
picked hy him to.take over as coach
in.f97:1.
Devaney died of cardiac arrest at .
a Lincoln retirement home. He was
&amp;2. Family spokeswoman Marilyn
Mecham said Devaney was with his
wife, Phyllis,·and SOil. Mike, at his
sid~. Funeral &lt;~trangemc~ts were
pending.
. Devaney bcllltn Nebraska's winning football tradition in the 1960s.
and Oshorne maintained it, winning
national championships of his own iff
1994 and 1995. Devaney took over
as Nebraska's athletic director and ..
saw the school win national titles in
men's gymnastics and women's vol- ., ·
· lcyball :
"(Devaney) made pride in
BOB DEVANEY

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:J'oday-1-3 p.m. and 6-IOp.~ .
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1997 CAD. · "'•' ·1997 GEO
.. ' -TRACi~R

SEDAN DEVh:LE.·

By SAM WILSON
nm• Slntlnll Corn lllondent
They're underpaid, under-appreciated, overworked and lite fust to blame whea something is
wrong. No, not the Univenity of Rio Grande faculty 1 ~ staff, but your second choice, the Pittsburgh Ptntes baseball team.
This team has the smallest payroll of any professi01131 li:anchise with the exception of the MLS
and the new women's professional basketball leagues~ are young, hungry, fi:tndamenlally sound and talented players who have to be the surprise
team m baseball so far this year. ·
· But try and name t.wo pitchers on their starting ~taff. How about their
manager?, Granted, they may not be above .500 when the season ends, but
they have proven that they're not to be taken lightly
,
~ith the e.xce~on of Jason Kendall, and veter~ns Kevin Elster and
Manm, the Ptrates players are vinually unknown. But under new manager
Gene lJ!mont, lite ~ucs have fasl!ioned a young pitching staff led by Steve
Cooke, Jason Schmtdt and &amp;teban Loaiza into an early season contender. At
~S:.nt, the~ are less than two gamc:S out of first and six games ahead of !be

i

.·WE'RE NOT.CLOWNING AROUND!!!

87

•

. ::"'On.e oftheir m?St remarkable accomplishments was having four shutouts
t(lhetr first 16 Wins. Just last Th~ay, Cooke was ins!rutnental in defeating
t~ MarJ;ns, a~d ro"!'er manager J1m Leyland, by a 4-0 margin. This .victoded Flo~da s e!ght-gamc home winning streak and continued a sucful road tnp for tbe Bucs.
·
.,. c of Lamont's biggest ·worries as the season began was that their
. OI!ICnse would struggle. The Pirates have been outscored by their opponents
. t!IJ season. During the first 20 games they had been outscored 98-66 but
tltlr defen~ an~ pitching has kept.the111 in most 81!P'es. Not bad for a ;earn
starling hneup makes less money .than either Albert Belle or Gary
ffield.
.
·
,. .
{)ver tile winter, fans criticiZed Pirates manage ent when they traded
do M~~ to Toronto, and Jeff King and Ja:,:, Bell to. Kansas City. It
_ ed. to ,be JUSt .anOther fire sale which hilS plagued small market francliies m the '90s. It. Is especially disheartening when fans in Pittsburgh
r4i\ember how the Ptrate's dominated the National :t.eague during the first
y rs cf this decade.
.. . ;r·
··
. mall ~!!arket fans in Pittsburgh and Montreal ~a~e a nght to be disene .. ted wtth suC!' moves. B~t give their front office people credit Both the .
pas and the Ptrates ~ave received.blue chip talent for their veteran play- ·
. Yes, they are playmg a higher stakes game willt limited resources, but
have. shown what a~tute baseball people they are with the players they '
.
e recetved.
They sho~ld at least be ~edited with being great judges of talent. More ·
nantly, •.f yo~ take the time ,to watch one·of their games, you will find
t t they are tndeCd fun to watch.
·
.
;Yes, ~~reed, ~~~ a~d Bell were good players, but the Bucs .weren't
~l'!'g to Wt~ the dtvtSIOn 1f they stayed. But look at your sports page and see ·'
MPntreal ~ttcher Pedro Maninez dominating tlte National League with a
nlcroscoptc ERA, and the .Pirates an early season contender. I imagine the
cf~go Whtte SoJI, Cubs and the Cincinnati Reds wished they were doing
a-.well as these bargain teams.
.
::.Orantetl, no one likes to lose talent the way small market teams have in
tiJ;past few ,years. But their players play hard and want to win: They are a
bfath of fresh air in a spon were greed has been tile-defining tenn over the
Pf.t few years.
'
'
Pfhese players' names might not be well-known today, but you will
+me more familiarized with them in the future. Unfortunately, they will
i'f}?ably be with pther teams by then.
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Logging threatens .Northwest's.forests·,
By ERIN KELLY
Gannett Newe Service
WASHINGTON ~ The coastal
forests, rivers and streams of Washington, Oregon and Nonhem Cali- ·
fomia are among tbe 200 most outstanding wildlife habitats on Eanh.
but logging is threatening to destroy
them in the 21st century, the World
Wildlife Fund said.
The.environmcntal group worked
with hundreds of scientists throughout the world for three years to compile a "Global 200" list in an eiTort
to focus limited conservation dollars
and government efforts in the places
they' II do the most good, said the
group's president, Kathryn Fuller.
The list includes 24' sites in the
United States - seven on the West
Coast.
"These are the regions that we
need to fight the hardest to preserve," said Eric Dinerstein, the
fund's chief scientist. "If we save
these area•. 'we can preserve 80 percent or more of all the species on
Eanh.''
Many Americans don ' t realize
that some of the richest biological
treasures in the world are right in
their own backyards, said Jim Leape,
the group's vice president.
"We tend to focus on exotic
places like the Amazon rainforest
and forget that we've got the world's
richest conifer forest in the KlamathSiskiyou Forests of southern Oregon
and.nonhcm California," Dinerstein
said . .
Intense commercial logging and
clearcutting arc the greatest threat to
the West Coast's forests and waters,
toppling the region's redwoods, '
cedan;, pines and spruces and clogging streams and rivers with silt, the
environmentalists said.
The West Coast sites on the
fund's list include:
- Klamath-Siskiyou Coniferous
Forests of Oregon and California.
They provide a refuge fpr the cobra

lily, the Port Orford cedar and the
Siskiyou mountain salamander. ·
- Pacific temperate rain forests,
which stretch fr9m Washington
down through northwestern California. The forests are home to redwoods, folding trnp-door spiders, and
the giant salamander.
- Pacific Northwest coastal
rivers and streams. This includes the
Sacramento/San Joaquin River basin
in California, the Klamath River
basin. and the .coastal streams and
rivers of Oregon and Washington.
'These streams and rivers host· the
richest variety of temperate freshwater species i'n the world, including ·
the Shasta crayfish, king salmon and
red-bellied newt.
-California current located off
the coasts ofO(egun and California,
this area supports sea otters and gray
whales. Threats include ovcrtishing
and coastal development.
- Sierra Nevada region of central-eastern California and Nevada,
including Yosemite National Park.
One of .the most diverse conifer
forests in the world. ·
- · Sonoran and Baja deserts.
The dcsens extend from southeastern
California across two-thirds of southem Arizona into Mexico. They are

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·CIECI Ill CWSIFIEDS FOR AlL .
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The prOCfte of putting clay on a wheal
shiplng
It Is called "throwing," above. 'Cutting• the clay 11
done lifter It hal dried euttlclenUy. Smlddle, right,
kneade the ball of clay to allmlnete ae much air 11 pos·
elbla from the clay he plena to t"row.
·

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§mlddi•
.
few who enjoys hi- work. In
. fact,he has :
.
\lito a profitable an&lt;! enjoyable
professjon: "throwing" pottery - making ·wads of clay into
tableware 'and decor~live items that are sold all Over the
Eastern United States.
·
"Smiddie,' as he is known to his friends, is admittedly
bohemian. In fact, this amiable craftsman says he was a
hippie long before it was fashionable. A native of Harlan
County, Ky., his family 'later moved to Tennessee. He has
spent time in Peoria, Ill. and Cleveland before settling in
rural Meigs County with his wife, Beth Amoriya and his
.son, Kyle. In fact, it was while selling pottery in Marietta
that Bob fell in love with Southern Ohio, and decided to
move here.
.
He has been making pottery for 30 years altogether, but
he has been doing nothing else for 20, he says. It was in
Tennessee, at the State Fair, that Bob first saw a potter at
work at the wheel.
"I thought it was the neatest thing I" Smiddie said with
laughing eyes. "I'm still fascinated by the process. ·It's like
. magic.•
Butit wasn't until later that he tried his hand at the craft,
and several years more before he roalized he could make
his hobby into a profession. ·
·
'!!.had a job in Cleveland that was very stressful," Smiddle said, 'so this was a good hobby. As you get better,
though, you accumulate stuff and realize that pe.ople are .
willing to buy it,"

•...,.. ' ' ' .,...."~.:.

The final etep In
. creating pottery 11 ftr~
lng It at extremely
high · temjleraturee.
Smlddte place• a
completad plate Into
the kiln tor '" HCOnd
tiring. Then, II wm be ·
ready for 181e.

.Following. ~he cou. nty's·~raditions on Mother's Day
..,

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'By. JAMES SANDS
uation exerases. Some of the high ·
~Specllll Correepondent
sc~ools in the county had tradition· The origins of Mother's Day can ally held graduations '!n the second
:be found in at least two dire~tions, weekend in May. The Mother's Day
.the town of Grafton,' W.Va. and the observance did not see111 til ~ch the
city of Philadel- Qallipolis churches until later iti the
· , J910s. We note·one sermon li!Pi&lt;; for
:phia, 'Pa.
The· fit'St Moth- Mother's Day at one .of the Ga111poer's Day celebra- lis churches as "Greed (or Gold.r
tion was probably One would assume tbat the serrnOil
about 1906 or , w~~ not direCted at honoring mOJh·
1907. By 1911 era.
'
., · · ',
1
Ohio · Governor
Especially would this be so w~cn
Harmon ·declared 'we note from an editorial of that
May' 14; 1911 as Mother's Day. He · year from the Daily Tribune which
'.called on all religious, social, fra- said;' "Poveny 'and love to tbe true
ternal; civil, military and other orga- woman arc superio. r 10' wea!th and
nizations to pay respect and homage indifference.• Tile editor, M!. Sibley, ·
bt every proper way. to the ":'others di~ later write a ,4iscl~imer when he
of the state .by weanng a whtte car- · sa11I, 'Few husbands, ,undc~nd 'the .
Ration." Harmon also ordered that INc woma~. • Later· 'itr· 'thJt ·essay
tjll flags be·displayed on that day.
Sibley explail)cd how tl!e wome~ of ' .
: 'fhe origins of Mother's D~ty in 19~6 thoupt; or . M·~I.e~t hilw he
t.lallia
County are not so clear. '"'e
beheved true..womeri tltllltn~
. '.
Y
•"
, ..."
oarliest celebrations we have found
' 'Men ·do' 119t seem lo, realize .that
The nation'•
were 'thoie held in 19H at Ohio it !s the little things Jn life ~.hich go
Phllldl,lph..
(;hapel, Eureka, Clay Chapel and so far to~ards makin&amp;'up the suta of
Bethel Methodist Episcop.. church- human happincas, they· do not . arnwr,'no bad&amp;e of distii\Rtion Just a
is ·and ·at Harrisburg Baptist Cburch. rem~mber .thaH few w.ordl'ofalfe!=- plain, ordin~ry, evecy!lay drc$5. Her
the pastor at the !at!Cr ~hurch was tion, a clasp of the hand, tbe allah!· d{CIIIIS of youth are fortlotten in the
WJ. Fulton.
est cares&amp; is to a woman the~ martyrdom of motherhood. Now all '
Many communities ,in Gallia thing in the world,' ~Sibley) · .
' they _d~ llxlut is the lover-like
County did not ob$crve Mother's .
'She is 1 VC!')' IJ!It~ni(!~nt, hero- •tt•ntion from the man, the Qne
· Day because it conflicted with grid- ine • this 11101her. Site' wean . no man. • (Sibley) ·

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Chair,"."Some Bible Moth- store urged the coosumer to:
·. '
ers," 'Mother's Day," . "Remember Your First Sweetheart,
"Mothers of Famous Men," Your Mother." The store· recom"When I Grow Up' and · · mended the latest Marie Dressler
"For Mother's Sake .... Those ·.dress.
.
,
reciting included: Mar.In 1930 the Ewiltgton Church of
guerite Scott,. Florence Tay- Christ in Ch(istian Union instituted
· lqr, .. Emmet · Shuler and · the all day Mother's Day. There was
Grace Scott.
Sunday School at 9 a.m., worship at
That same year the chil- 10:30 a.m., a sandwich lunch at
dren at Olive Methodist noon and "services in the afternoon
. Church' had a program that
as the Lord may direct."
included a pantomime entiBy the 1930s the traditiop of hon- .
!led, 'Dreaming of Home oring the oldest mother, the mother
and Mother.' Songs there with the most children, the mother
· included,
'M-o-t-h-e-r," with the youngest child and so forth
'Mother, Dear Mother" ' and began. It was also in the 1930s that
'My Mother's .Prayer.' churches
began ·
having
T~ose participating were mother/daughter
banquets,
Alice Clyse, Ruth Evans, mother/daughter teas and so forth .
Dovie Bostick, Chauncey At one banquet in 1935 at Rio
Ey~ns, Paul Van Pelt, Grande the daughters predicted what
·
t0
·, Gladys Clyse, Gertrude · their mothers would be like in 20
O~IIMII11!1
~ hloIn.C
~ Evans
Clyse • years. T.hen the mothers were given
·klrlnll
oelebrltlo!l
Oahlt1
_ • Edna
Day Wll probably the one Avanelle McCarley, Gla,d~s the opportunity to guess at the future
Cheatwood and Bess1e of the daughters. Organizers of the
v
•
Bostic.
Rio Grande banquet in 1935 were:
· In·many N?J Gallia churches the
One good thing about Mother's Anna Mae Evans, Gertrude Earles,
Mot~er's Day program ,was put on Day in the early years in Gallia Eleanor Brooks and Mrs. Smith.
l!Y the children. For instltncc in the County was that most advertisers,
Jar:n•• Slpdl 1• a apeclel
1919 PfPiflm II tlld.K:yFr 'tbe chil- · out of respect for mother, refused to reapondent of the Sunday
dren IIIIJ, "Rally for Mother's ~ay' · use sentimentality toy;ard mother to Tim•• Sentinel. Hie lddi'HI 11:
and .. My Mother's .Bib'"." Rocita· build up sales. Ads began appearing 85 W111ow Drlv•, Springboro,
tio.. given were: 'The Old Arm · .in mass about 1935. One department Ohio 4SOM.
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:,.;' Doling•lit~~til!ht years of I,lvillg
ih a suburb of Portland, 1 nev~ visited The Grotto. I al~ays intenlled to
do so. However, I so enjoyed'Powell's in inclement weather and hiking
in the Columbia Gorge, or one of the
parks, in good weather, that I never ..
made my visit to The Grotto. Several years ago, on one of our trips back
to.Portland, George and I were staying. at a motel near the airport and
decided to walk to The Grotto. I
can't remember having been more
impressed by any tourist attracti~n .
The grotto is a cave in a rock cliff
surrounded by huge evergreens.
Pews are arranged in an arc for outdoor services. The altar in The Grotto is decorated with flowers and candles; and piped in.voices of chanting
monks waft through the air. In the
center of the grotto s a niarble· replica of Michelangelo's "Piela."
Throughout he mostly evergreen
forest are huge rhododendron bushes, other shrubbery, and flo\V1:rs.
One spring blooming shruti-. (I've
tried to djscov~r its name for years)
permeates the ~ir with a· sweet fra grance for several . months. Bronze
, plaques of The Stations of the Cross
are scattered along a nature trail. A

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4ND COO.LING INC. TOQAY AND·RECEIVE

·ull!pt.at Ill tM p.uddf l!frulli llloitlt- w•lh il /JIIII,r!M'' rJI Sl OOO
.., cash 0t ~tfled lund::; Trtt t\tlorna! ,,, lrw&gt; ~&gt;s-·.. (1ro0$1f
111By IJf! paid wtlh ~I C'lf(1; Qf t:rl'Oif C,W -- ~~ ,ICJOII'IIJf'·
Ill 50"o 01 ~ P,.IFCI\1 $t' PfL'f! '' dill'~ r!IOr M il lli'UI'
Qo~Ntrr ....m ""'bdl.lllcP IIUf' "'' 01&gt;11~1''~ 111 c.~h "' r ..,~llt'O
/tJM5 At! Pflt;(l5 '""FOB R«&lt;lv 1Woirr11 NC. c,!rl /::It&gt; .!lh!WIK'
A~IP "1 tt1f' IWtllfd rO·',. W~r $ fl!..rl.,ll'rl ,.ril Of' .ldW

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WWF issues report

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01 CINMIBd h.Jflts JWI&lt;Ift"d tD l)ld .25•',, rl

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By DOROTHY SAYRE . .
Portland has many wondrous
parks, gardens, ihe zoo, and other
exciting places to visit. !,!owever,
many are only to be toured seasonably su~h as the Test Rose Gardens
in Washington Park, or the Rhododendron Gardens in Milwaukie
(suburb of Portland). Two places 1
never like to miss when in Portland,
though, can be enjoyed no matter
what the -weather: Powell's Bookstore on lOth and Burnside in doWntown Portland; and
The Grotto; the
National Sanctuary
of Our Sorr11wful
Mother, on Sandy
Boulevard, not far ·
. from the l!lrport.
Powell's started
as . a uS&lt;;d book
store in an old
building in the
warehouse district
.
on west . Burnside. It · has evolved /
into a city block of us~d. new, rare,
and antique books. If Powell's doesn't have it, they can find it. Before
computers, I remember how know'l. edgeable all the clerks y;ere in their
departments. They appeared to personally know.e.ach book. Now, Powell's is on the world wide web ' at
. www.powells.com. In the late.
1970's, Powell's was the third largest
bookstore in the Uniied States. The
other two larger bookstores were in
Boston. One of the two Boston
stores burned, leaving Powell's the
title of second largest. The present
day ranklna is unknown, but it is
huge and so very enjoyable. I cannot.
tpake even a brief visit without buying a shopping bag full of books.
This year's vish was no exception. I
am always so hurried and so excited
about -exploring other ·sections for
. more books, that I haven't taken the
time to enjoy their tea room. S~ver~l
years ago, the store opened a reading
section with tables and chairs, coffee
and tea counter service and some
deli items. Scones, muffins and
cookies seem to be the favorite purchases of readers and the aroma of'
the wonderful brews is very entic- ·
ing. Nothing could be .more·fun than
spending an afternoon at Powell's, .
. no ptatler what the weather con~Ji-

~

HOME PACKAGES WITH
SELLIN Clll-_;_------,-

To

Two 'must
visit' places in
Portland, Ore .

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C

Iunday, May 11, 1te7

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C&gt;
$S 0()000

Section

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--__,;,-~----Outdoor shorts---:""':-----Tentsllow
NEW YORK (AP) - That practi'"l home-on-the-go. the tent. is
subject of National Design Museum
exhibition June 24-0ct. I'! in New
Yurk City.

e.River

WILLY PIKE'S OIJTDOOI LIFE

Jigs &amp; twisters catch
saugeyes, white bass
near Gallipolis Dam
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
mouth bliss.
Here is the weekly fishing report ·
HARGUS LAKE - Most craP..
provided by the Division of Wildlife pies here measure seven to eight
o(the Ohio Department of Natural incbes bur provide a fair fishing
Resources:
opportunity. Use minnows beneath a
Ohj&lt;)River
bobber fished at depths of three to
Anglers are using Jtgs and . six.feet in areas with shoreline covtwtsters fished. along the bottom m cr. Channel catfish contin~c to prothe Pike Island and Gallipolis Dam vide improved fishing opportunities.
ta1lwaters to take saugeyes ranging this year.
in size from 14 to 16 inches. White
Northwest
bass up to 12 inches have also been
BUCYRUS RESERVOIR I &amp; 2
caught below Gallipolis Dam. A new - Winer conditions are clear and
boater safety zone became effective normal with temperatures at 56
May I in the Willow Island tailwa- degrees. Good fishing action for
ters which . reduces the restriction channel catfish has been the norm
zone from half a mile to 600 feet during early morning and evening
below the dani.
· hours. Anglers arc using chubs and
·
Southeast
night crawlers. Fair crappie fishing
WILLS CREEK RESERVOIR is being reported by anglers using
- Crappies ranging in size from I 0 minnows suspended beneath small
to 12 inches can be caught on min- bobbers.
nows when fishing in tbe area above
CHARLES MILL RESERVOIR
the marina. Saugeyes in the 14to 18 ·- Crapp1clishing is cxc.ellent. Uso .
inch range are being taken on min- . white and hot pmk tube jtgs fisbed
nows in the spillway along with oear submerged cqvcr dunng the
some crappies.·
day. The mouth of the Black Fork .
WALHONDING RIVER River and the Mud Lake region arc
Anglers are doing well here in catch- two good crappie fishing locales.
ing small mouth bass on jigs; espc~ Channel · catfisl) arc being taken
cially in the area of Six Mile Dam. oorth of tl:&gt;e state Route 430 bridge
Smallmouth bass measuring up to 18 at night along with some saugeycs.
inches arc being caught on .crank
Northeast
baits in the Kokosing River as well.
CHAGRIN. ROCKY RIVERS
Rock bass and channel catfish can be - Anglers arc fishing along the bottaken in both rivers.
tom with minnows and night
Southwest
cmwlers in both rivers and having
CAESAR CREEK . LAKE
great success in taking smallmouth
Fish in the wooded bays with min- bass. Walleyes measuring 17 to 21
nows and bobbers when seeking inches arc being taken occasionally,
crappies. Largemouth bass up to four cspccialfy below the state Route R2
pounds may be .taken on small spin- dam.
ncrs, crank bai!s and six-inch plastic
PYMATUNING LAKE
worms. Check upstream for move- Walleyes arc being caught lake wide
mcnts of white bass chasing baitlish on Rapalas and jigs tipped with minalong the surface. Some white bass nows at all depths. Bluegills are
.will measure 'llp to· IS inches long.
being caught in shallow waters,
. LAKE LORAMIE - Many while crappies seem to be hitting on
· btuegills mea,uring live to eight · . minnows suspended beneath a slip
. · incbes lire present. Use larval baits bobllcr. A limit of six walleyes per
. and small worms beneath a bobber person may he taken daily from
fished at depths of two to Six feet for Pymatuning Lake, which shares
. best results. The brushy shoreline resource management with Pcnnsyl-.
. areas and those with emerging lily v~nra .
Lake Erie
; pads are go&lt;id places to catch crapFrequent cold . fronts passing
pies.
through the region have made lishCentral
GRIGGS RESERVOIR- Nirht ing conditions unstahlc at best.
lishing along the cast shoreline is Anglers arc having some good sucproductive for channel . catfish cess in taking walleyes suspended at
anglers. Usc cut baits, night crawlers depths of 20 to 35 feet. Use trolling
or prepared baits fished along the - boards. and snap weight' littcd with
bottom for best results. THe upper spinners and night crawlen;. Walleye
end of the reservoir north of the anglers have landed a few nice
island·is a good area to fish for large- perch, but perch action will not he gin
to peak until late summer.

Alon

118y11,1~

�Sunday, May 11' 11K17

'

Sunday, May 11' 1187.: .

Pomeroy • Middleport • o.lllpolla, 0H • Point PIIW''nl, WV

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaeant, ViY

Naomi .Church to .mark 100th anniversary
age of 12 years ,.--~--------.,-­
did her first playSentinel Ntws Staff
POMEROY -- The Naomi Bap- ing or the organ
tist Church of Pomeroy will cele· at Naomi as
brate its I OOth anniversary Sunday, Naomi did not
have an organist.
May 18.
Rev. Arius Hurt of Forest Run She came froin
Baptist Church will be speaker for a Cheshire, visiting
II a.m. service which will be fol- her Aunt Alice
lowed by a dinner. Featured at the Ginn and fur2:30 .afternoon service will be· the nished the music.
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr. GfMt. Moriah As she was too
Baptist Church in Middleport. The · short for her feet
.public is invited to join the congre- to reach the .treagation in the cente nnial observance. . dies, Mrs . .Robert
The church .building was erected Cousins would
in 1853 and was first occupied by sit beside her to
Freewill Baptists. On Sept. 8, I 896 help do the treadas
she
the congregation became Mission- · ing
ary Baptists and the church became played."
known as the Naomi Baptist Church.
In 1929 DeaThen in August 1897 the Naomi con Reuben Ware
Baptist Church was received into the and son Reuben
...
Providence Regular Missionary Jr., designed and
. .. ..
built the pulpit.
Baptist Association at Gallip6lis.
The first deacons of the Naomi· That same year
Church were Lindsey and Frank with the assis--·~" "' ''" '"" .. ...... ::: · :~:
Mitchell and Henderson Morton. tance of Trustee .
·······" ,.,,.........
. "'. .
...........
The first trustees were Joseph Jones, Allen Hampton
.. .....................
,._.., .....
Deacon
Florence Qualls, and Maggie Lewis. and .
................... ··"''"
. .. ,.,,.,.......,
.
.•..
...................
In 1901 when the Rev. James H. James Banks, a
'"' ..... .-•• v .. ,
"'" '""'
•·· ·· ..... . "
:::· ::~ .. ::::···. ,: -~- . ..
· Faris was pastor, the Iaie William second door was
.... .. ...... ... ... .
....... · .. -Lewis .moved from Middleport to added to the
and
Pomeroy, joined the church, and was basement
ordained as deacon the ne xt year at also a kitchen
•... &gt;.
W.as built: In
'. . .....
18.
According to the church history, 1952 · Deacon
',.
Lewis,
chairman
some of the other members at the
time were ·Alice Ginn, . Maggie of the deacon's
Lewis, Gert, Leona and Tom Bibbs, board for 59
Essie Ginn, Oscar Qualls, Mrs. years. built the
Roeert ·cousins, Sarah Lewis, wife vestibule.
In 1954, the
of Deacon Lewis and his brother,
kitchen
was
Harvey.
NAOMI BAPTIST CHURCH
A mortgage of $100 for a roof enlarged. a new
was being held against the church at ceiling was put in the dining room, after its first pastor, the Rev. Rick· . Essie Ginn, Sarah Lewis. Susie Venthat time. The history says that Dea- new sidewalks added and pillars man, were Rev. James Faris, Rev. able, Rosie Brown, and Huldah
con Lewis, his wife and brother, were placed under the pulpit by .RJ. Rodgers, Rev. Seth Winston, Bryant. Other deacons have been
Harvey, "worked faithfully going Deacon Lewis, Trustee Allen HaiJlp- Rev. A.R. Brooks, Rev. P.P. Samuels Frank Jackson, Reuben Ware Sr..
over hills, hollows, and dalt;s gather- ton, Thomas Miller and Campbell (from Africa), Rev. A.M. Diggs, James Banks, William Moss, Henry
ing chickens to have socials to raise Harper. 'Ibis work was done without Rev. ·A.A. Bass . .Rev. Pete Price, . Royster and Saul Johnson, while
expense to the church. Funding from Rev. EJ. Woodard, Rev. C.J. Car- other trustees have been Allen
money to pay off the mo~tgage."
It continues: "As we know, a hun- the pulpit area came from the Mis- penter, Rev. J.C. Davis and Rev. Hampton, Floy!l Burney, Grntlc
dred dollars iri those days was a Jot sionary Auxiliary led at the time by H.E. Harris. Rev. Jackson pastored Brown and Aaron Buffington.
the church 32 years, from 1959 ·to
Located near the banks of the
of money. The mortgage was burned Callie Banks.
Ohio River. the Naomi Baptist
Rev. Samuel Jackson of Colum- 1991, the year he died.
three years later. Two burnside
Since
then
different
preachers
Cl)urch has endured many .noods,
. stoves heated the sanctuary. Those bus was called to he pastor of Naomi
have
be.
e
n
in
the
Naomi
pulpit,
but as the church .history says "tl\e
who came from Mt. Moriah Baptist in January 1959. Under his leader·
Rev.
Eddie
Buffington,
structure
might be leaning, yet she's
including
Church in Middleport for the occa- ship a new bell tower was put In
sion were Mrs. Kate Hudson, grand- place, the church was carpeted, Rev. Robert Jackson, the late Rev. still standing ..... shc was included
mother of Mts. Helen 'Harper and restrooms and a new entry to the William Ward, and Rev. Arius Hurt. nearly 2000 years ago, when Christ
Lui a Hampton. a member of the said to Pater, 'Upon this rock, I will
lower auditorium was built. ·
Mrs. Bell Bates.
church
for 60 years, is the current. build my Church and the gates of
· "h has often been told that sister
Among the ministers pasloring
Bertha Jackson of Mt. Moriah, at the the church before Rev. Jackson and clerk and others serving in that posi- hell shall not prevail ag~inst it'."
'
tion
the
·have been

CIKITI

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH

MONDAY
,
POMEROY -· Pomeroy Villaae
Couft(il, special session, Monday;
6:30 to discuss Slanlwhecl Festival.

;.
RACINE •• Racine Board of Pub'

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. lie Affairs. Monday, 10:30
Municipal Bullding.

LONG BOTFOM ·- Revival services, Faith Full Gospel Ch~rch,
May ·11-16, Dave Dailey, evangelist.
7 p.m. eai:h evening.. ·
.

a.ni;

Pre....... ly

ART SCHO L

TJ)ESDAY
•
POMEROY ,. Meigs Coun;f.
Chamber of Commerce·, luncheon;
Tuesday, noon Trinity Church. Kay
Rowe of ACCESS/Head · Stari,
speaker. Rescr\rations, 992-SOSS.

MAY 17I 1997 _AI 8:00.p.&amp;(

ncklts $51n Ananct and $6 At tile Door

Call 441·1988 For Information

1ou'll •e her ·Prince Chatmlng
In a tuxedo from.~.

Book returned to Harvard .
University after 233 years::.
.

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Page· Williams

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of the 5,000-volume collection.
About 250 books that were ~ing .
kept in storage were spared. Another
144 were out on loan, including·one
from the ·origioal bequest of John
Harvard, after whom the university
was named.
That book, "The Christian Warfare Against the Devii .World anq
. Flesh," by . John Dow name; was
returned by an undergraduate who
was profusely thanked and then
expelled for having borrowed it
without permissiqn.
About SO of the 144.missing vulumes were eventually returned. and
the other I0 thought lost .
The univer5ity replaced the "History of England" with a later edition.
But when a Harvard history professor was shown an ancient copy hy ·a·
rare book dealer, he immediately
recognized the Oyleaf stamp that ;
· identified the hook in Latin as the
. property ofHarvard University. · · ··
The professor, Mark Kishlansky.
called the calfskin-covered antique ·
"an exquisite old book."
·
· It was purchased fur the universi'
ty hy an. anonymous donor for a ·
price officials won't disclose.

JOSEPH AND MELISS~ NICHOL,SON

.. Wh· a. I· ey-.N..ICh0 Ison

95

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V,izle_s ,!l1:t~e.an~

·ware, ~u~qn. ~s . of

~: ~Ma·son

.·,.urnetlur
. ·e'.~·-··S·pr···

Spring has arrived ... We Need Your Help on
room for
reducing our current stock to
NEWARRIVALS!!

170 PINECREST DRIVE- GALLIPOLIS, OH.- 446·7112
Pinecrest Care Center, 170 Pinecrest Drive, will be C:elebratlng National Nuralng Home
· Week, May 12·17. The theme for this year Ia "joy In Caring". Pinecrest has scheduled
many special events this year to celebrate the.week and honor the Residents and Staff. ·

NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY!
· Six months same as cash
Extended terms &amp; Lay Away Available

BEDROOM·SUITES,

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Olde Tyme Chorus brings a lot of smilesJ :
to our residents. .
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s399 au,

a

BEDDING

LIVING ROOM.SUITES '
399
699

Twin Size Sets •••••••• 148
Full Size Sets ......... s175
Queen Slze Sets ..... '225

DINETTE SETS

APPLIANCES

Pinecre~ Care Center maintains a philosophy of Caring .for our residents using a holistic approach.
This ensures that person's Social and Emotional needs are met as well as the physical and medical
needs. · ',
.
·
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;.
above Is Nicy Bass, Don
Pinecrest Is licensed by the State of Ohio and certified by Medicare, Medicaid, and the Veterans
Fa•~nliM!1 1 111d Nellie Daugherty enjoying
Administration to provide ·long term care, Registered Nurses are on duty 24 hours a day, assisted by both
LPN's and State Tested Nursing Assistants:
an
pkalc in our enclosed court
. .
.
.
·
.
.
favorites.
Pinecrest has a Physical Therapist, .Occupational Therapist and Speech Therapist who provide
services 5· days a week. Th8 Flhysicai .Therapist is assisted by two Rehab Aides and as a team they '
rehabilitate many of aurresidents so they-fl'lay return home. Pinecrest also has a Respiratory Therapist 5
days a week.
Pinecrest has an excellent Activities. Department with a full-time ActiVity Director and two full-time
assistants. They offer a wide range of activities from religion, therapeutic, recreational and out-of-facilityactivities such as picnics, van rides, and community activities. Pinecrest has an
court yard with
two picnic shelters and raised flower beds for families and residents to utilize. They have an QUtstanding
volunteer program with more then one hundred voluirteer'S who provide both Individual and group
activities for the residents.
'
The Dietary Department has a registered Dietitian who meets with eaqh resident, reviews th8ir chart
aild develope a Dietary Plan for them. we have a homelike dining service with table cloths ~ china for
those residents who are able to utilize them.·
·
..J
, Pinecrest has a beautician who is available for barber and beauty needs two days a week. Pinecrest
has a full-time Social Worker with a part time assistant, who provides tours and assists In providing
. information for persons wishing to enter our facility as a resident. The SoCial Worker allo works will
Community Agencies ·to help residents who are able to return home.
. Plnacreat Care Center's MediCal Director, Dr. Balusamy Subblah, is In the building on a dally basis ·
overseeing the cars and monitoring ~ Medical Staff.
Joa.. Welllactoa will preHal tbe
invite the community to attend our epecial events during National Nul'ling Home Week and
Mtllaer•s Day Proan-. tlae lau beea experienCe the living and actMtlee that occur at Pl.leCI'elt. It II a COf1llllllnQ experience and one that can
.,..._.. by tile Reslckat coaadl for .tile change the long held notions about long·term c.e. AnYone wanting more lnformallon about Plnecrelt
can call 448· 7112 arid arrange for a toyr.
·
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p8116yan.

Reductd
From

$169

RECLINERS
&amp; OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS

•

La·Z·Boy; FlexstHI
Others

encioled

News policy
·'''

EDWARD AND ROBIN WERRY

Bur'hem•Werry

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we

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~OMEII,OY •• Mr. ~nd Mrs.
Ro6ert Bumem, Racine, announce
the' marriage .or their daughter.
R~. 1o lldwlrd ''Tate" Werry, SOil
of ~r. and Mn. Phillip Werry of ·
Chiller: •
•
1'he !lllrriap IO&lt;ik place April 12

al the Smoky_Mountain Laurel Weddtng Chapel tn Gathnsburg. Tenn.
An open reception to celcl!rsle
~if weddins will be held ~rom 2 to
4 p..._.. June ~ at the Metp H•Jh
Sehool carecena.
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$2

v.. u

ACTIVITIES AND EVENTS SCHEDULED FOR NURSING HOME WEEK

I

T••••• Rentel•

Tt•·

PI ECREST CARE CENTER
Sunday, May 11
2:00 p.m. Mother's Day Reception with Joan Wellington
Monday, May 12
2:00 p.m. Olde Tyme Chorus
7:00p.m. Cross Roads
Tueaday, May 13
. 11 :00 a.m. Rehab Reunion
2:00p.m. Special Church Services
Wednesday, May 14
12:00 noon Resident/Family Picnic ·
1:oo-3:00 Advance Directives with Amber Johnson
2:00p.m. Bingo Championship Game
Thuraday, May 15 ·
.
.·
t 2:30 a.m. Church of Christ in Christian Union
. 2:00 p:m. Identify Residents in their Yot.ith
10:00-1:00 Bloo&lt;fPressure and Glucose Check
Friday, May 18
2:00p.m. Children~ Day .
2:00 p.m. Special Stall Sundae Bar
Sunday, May 18
10:00 a.m. Worship ServiC'.e
2:00p.m. Faith Valley Church

Ctm~lete

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - taupe evening suit, highlighted with
Startl•l At:'
Kenneth Eugene Williams and Kelly a peplum waist jacket.
,
Erin Page were united in marriage
Following the ceremony, an hors
, POMEROY ,. Melissa ·Coleen 1
Bridesmaids carried a small bou- March 8 at ChriSl! Episcopal Church d' oeuves buffet reception was held
Whaley and Joseph Samuel Frcder- quet of red and white miniature in Point Pleasant.'W.Va.
in the bimquet room at the Holiday
· ic~ Nichols'?n were . united in mar- roses with ribbons lied in loveHe is the son ot:Cccil .and Patricia Inn. The wedding cake was heartri~ge Saturday, April 19, at the knots. Christy. carried a decorated Williams df Point Pleasant. She is. shaped with basket weave. The
the daughter of James and· Vema seven tiers Were decorated ·with lilac
Reedsville
United Methodist lace fan.
Ch••••
·&lt;;nurch.
Connor and Caitlin Swartz, chit- Page. also of Point Pleasant. ·
and buttercup roses and orchids.
Freml Ph11 '"" 1SO eel. . The double-ring ceremony was dren of John and Carla Swartz, sec'
Rev. James Bernacki officiated Cutting and serving the cake were
"' In
C•m•erhn••
pqrformed by Rev. Charles Mash.. ond cousins of the bride, served as the candlelight service. In keeping Sandra Duke. aunt of the bride and
&amp; V11t1 11 Seltof frem •
music was · provided by Dorothy ring bearer and flower girl. Connor with the Episcopal tradition , com- Grella Colandros. reception coordiChaney., 'with Donna Wolf as soloist. carried a satin and lace heart-shaped munion was shared by the couple, · nator.
Ert•..•• Stere Htlrt
, The bride is the daughter of Don- pillow. Caitlin and Kate Nicholson, bridal party and guests. Instrumental
Following the reception, the cou- ·
•• lelt
aid "Eddie" and Coleen Whaley of sister of the groom, carried baskets Music was provided by Anne Fisch- pic left on a seven-day honeymoon
...1••., ........ till
Pomeroy. The groom is. the son of of red and wl)ite rose petals: Both er, which included a musical inter- cruise to the Western Caribbean.
Diane . Nicholson of Spraggs, Pa., nower girls wore matching dre sses Jude previous to the service. Jennifer
Pre·nupitial parties included; an
mll••l•
and Joe and Gladys Nicholson of of white taffeta with double rows of Rose and Allen Icenhower provided · engagement party given by . the
It ••••• .
Marietta.
black. taffeta ruffl es encircling the ' vocal music . Musical seleciions bride's parents, two bridal showers,
• Chrletl1a Dler
·The bride was given ·in marriage · hemline and rising to the waist.
included "Always." "Endless Love," as well as a. rehearsal dinner at the
• Perry Elll1 .
by. her. parents and escorted to the
Guests ·were reg.istere!l by "Colour of My Love." "Through The · Lowe hotel , given ·by the groom's
altar by hei father. She wore a gown Desiree Clemons. Pages were Aaron Eyes of Love" and "Household of parents. One shower was hosted by
• Ch1p1 .. R1lp• Lluren .
of white satiri with a s·weetheart · Nicholson, · brother of the groom, .Faith". .
Tricia Knight and Sandra Duke, in
neckline • and ·tapered ·waist. Cas- and Chrisiopher Neece, cousin of
The church's stained-glass win- Teays Valley, ·for faniily of the co.ucades o.f seed pearls and iridescent the bride. ·
•
dews· were decorated with beeswax pie. The other was hosted by Sharon
The Phone
sequins began at the puffed sleeves
Chris Neece. uncle of the bride, , ·candles, greenery and white stain Barnctie. Barbara Dunn , Marsha
Callis
anp tapered down the sleeve to served as btist man. Robert "B.J." bows. Bouquets of fresh spring Finley and Edie Legg, at Christ
FREE
~ints at the wrist.
Workman and Larry Willis were flowers, in various shades of lilac . Episcopal Church, for friends of the
•
§
_ _ _
1 800 560 5384
The heart-shaped key-hole hack ushers and groomsmen. All grooms- and buttercup, were placed behind ;c:o:up:l:e~
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..!:::::;:::::;::::~==;======~
was draped with strands of dangling 'men wore black tuxedos and si ngle the alter. White satin ribbons and
seed pearls and crystal bugle beads. red rose boutonnieres. Both fathers greenery decorated the reserved
iridescent_ sequin
.single white., pews.
.
?
alll!~tques\-e~ctrclcil&lt;the h.emhne and ,, roses. ·· .... •.. ·- ·
!:. The bride was escorted by her
•
r~ie lip the front of the ball gown .
The groolii wore a black tuxedo father and given in marri~ge by her
.
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sklrt to (he waistline. A bustle of lace with matchirie .black vest and bow. . parents. The bride's gown was (ash.I
· ·
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·
·
ce
nledallio!\s . and . iridescent sequins . tie. He ·wore (d'?uble white ros~ and ioned with a bateau ,. neckline, an
f~D fnli!l jhe back. waistline. The ._ b~y:s breath~l!outonniere tied with empite bodice and c~p . sleeves, all
c,.thedral-length tram· featured seed · red nbbon.
fully beaded with iridescent sequins
p~arled .and iridesce nt sequined
The bride and groom presented a and pearls. Its princess line skin of.
s~hillli lace medallions.
single red rose to each mother after white silk chifl'on nowcd to a
f: She wore a headed crystal and. ·thcollghtmg of the umty candle.
'chapel -length.lrain.
s~ed pearl tiara headpiece with a
· A luncheon featuring a three- . Her headpiece,. a band of irides- ·
~ake
r~inovable linger-tip veil and carried . tiered fountain cake decorated with
cent crystals and pearls, held a founa;;bouquet of cascading red and red roses. bells and doves was · tain veil of sheer illusion. · The
v.(~ite roses, ivy, bab)l's breath and
served.at the reception .following the bride's bouquet was colonial in style
. . .
\1/,hitc satin ribbons. The bride's ceremony. The tw.n ·groom's cakes and included three dozen fresh, ·
neeklace was a wedding gift from carried the same design . Hosting the t white roses.
th¢ groom, and her earrings. a gift reception was the bride's mother r· . The matron of honor was Heather
fr,qm the groom's grandmother.
assisted by Terry · Neece and Janet · Holland. She wore a gown of lilac
:·Maid of honor was Christina Peavley.
silk chilTon, with matching roses in
Neece; co.u•in of the hr.ide . BriqesThe hridc will- graduate from · her hair. She also ·wore pearl" car'
m~ids Y(cre Heather Whaley. sister Meigs High School this month. Her . rings. a gift from the hridc. Heather
or·the bride. ana Sandi Gilkey. The , husband graduated from Eastern carried fresh lilac tea roses.
bfidal attendants Wore ,floor-length · Hig)l SfhiJOI in I '190 and works with
The bridesmaids inc luded, Mareg&amp;,whs o,f, while taffeta with lace his gramjfnther at C.L. Heating.
va Endicott, Tricia Knight and Haybi1dic~s . fa.~ hioned with empire
They honeymooned in Washing- Icy Johnson . They als9 wore silk ·
4 Piece S•l•••
~isis and black taffeta skirts with ton, D.C. and plan to reside in Flori- chiffon; however. their gowns were
bhlck ·chiffon overskirts.
.
da.
·
huuercup. in co lor. They carried
t'
fresh tea roses. and each wore a
matching hcadpfccc and pearl earrings, same as the matron of honor.
The. flower- girl. Rebekah Dunham, daughter of Greg and Rachael
Dunham of Leon, wore a white dre ss
1
with an empire h&lt;&gt;&lt;licc. similar in
.
.
style ·w the bride's dress. Amanda
1
2
Piece
.............
from
Smith . daughter of. David and Susan
Smith of Point .".Pleasant. was the
3 Plece............. from 1
junior bridesmaid. She wore lilac
and yellow dre ss and carried a ·hou quet ·of lilac and yellow roses.
1bc best man was Darrell Pear&amp; IV
sun of Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va . The
All with special price tags·
AH 3, 5 &amp; 7 Piece Sets
groomsmen were Gary Colton,
Supe~ Savi~gs!
Jimmy Wilson and Rick Knight,
L.--....:..-..-.;;;....--...~
brother-in-law \1f the groom. The
ushers were Chris Page of Columbus. hruthcr of the bride and
••
,.
Jonathan Williams . son of the
groom. Honorary ring bearer was
Joseph Holland, son of Phil and .
·~ .
Heather Holland. All wore . hlack ·
tiH&lt;edos with black vesl!i.. ·
The. bride's mother chose a tea'.•
length
dress of '!'ink, silk chiffon .
. ~~
&amp;
with beads and sequins at the
bodice. The groom's mother chose a

o.,., ao

-.

"WHEN CARING &amp;
COMFORT ARE
·IMPORTANT"

·Haskins-Ta

KENNETJ1 AND KELLY WILLIAMS

.

By JON MARCUS
Assoclatlld Press Writer
.CAMBRIDGE. Mass. (AP) - A
book about the history of England
has heen returned to Harvard University - 233 . years after it was
checked out.
No one knows where the thick,
leather-covered "Complctc ·History
. of England with the·Lives of All the
Kings and Queens .Thereof. Volume
. 3," has been. It was one of only a
few books that survived a fire at the
university in 1764, thanks to ·an
unknown borrower who failed to
return it.
" It's remarkable that if s come
back," said Roger Stoddard, curator
of rare books in the Harvard College
Library. ·
The book itself is a relatively
undistinguished .volume of history
that was wri\len by Bishop White
Kennell, printed i~ London in 1706
and given to Harvard hy Thomas
Bannister, a Boston minister, in
1709.
It was one of 404 books that
escaped a fire in Harvard Hall when
the building bum.cd to the ground
during the college's winter vacation
on Jan. 25. 1764, destroying the rest

11
.

AT THE UNIVERSin OF RIO GUIDE

DARWIN -- Bedford Township
POMEROY -- Big Bend Farm Trustees, Tuesday, 1 p.m.
Antiques ~hib. Meigs High School .
MIDDLEPORT •• Middleport
Library, 7:30 p,m. Monday.
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM. special session,
RACINE •• Mt. Moriah Church ·Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. work in mastet
of God, Mile Hill Road. Racine, mason degree . .
revival services, Sunday through

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CHILDHOOD
MEMORIES

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In an effort to provide our readership with current news, the Sund,ay
Times-Sentinel, will not accept weddings·after 60 days from the date of
the event.
Weddings submilted after the 60day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
articles in the society section must
be submitted witllin 60 days of
QCcwrence.
All birthdays must tie submiued
within 60 days of the QCcurrence.

$199 &amp;Up

MASON .fU,RIITURE
CO.
.
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"Seroing the Arecuince 1950... With many more years to come!!"
2nd Street

(304) 773·5592

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Mason, WV

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sund8y, u.y 11, 1187

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpollt, OH • Point Plllaant, WV

Sundlly,..., 11,,1987

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiiiP9Jia, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

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Gallia community calendar :
The COmmunity Cllendar'• publlehed •• • ..._ 111Y1ce to IIOnjltoflt
groupe wtahl.. to II1IICIUIIH mMttnga and apeclll
The Plllllndar ·

-•Ia-

•• not dlllgned to prOmote 111111 or fund-rlllllfl ot any type. !tame ,,.
prlntad •• ..-=a permit• and cannot Ill gua,.ntHd to run • apeclflc
numblr ot dap.

,

Sun4lay, May 11

•••

BIDWELL - The Grubbs to sing 7 p.m. Springfield Baptist Church,
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GALLIPOLIS - Headed Home singing 7 p.m. Bell Chapel. -

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GALLIPOLIS - Southern' Gospel with Joyfulaires I I a.m . French City
Baptist Church.
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Monday, May

12

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·CHESHIRE - TOPS,meeting 10 to I I a.m. Cheshire '-lnited MethOdist
Church.
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.POMEROY - Mcig~ DAV and Ladies Auxiliary meeting 6:30p.m .
GALLIPOLIS • Gailipoli~ Ch~pter #283.0ES meeting 7:30 r m.

•••
Thesday, May 13
•••
GALLIPOLIS - B~ssard Library Trustees to meet 5 r m. at the
•••
•

CHRISTl COLLINS AND JOHN LISLE ·

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

Collins-Lisle
SYRACUSE -- Bob and Ruella
Crow of Syracuse and Ronald
Collins of Orlando. Fla. announce
the engagement and upcoming marriage of their daughter. Christi Anne
Collins.• to John Todd Lisle, son of
John and Janice Lisle of Syracuse.
AMY CLONCH AND CHRISTOPHER ALLEN
· Coli ins. a I 991 graduate of
Southern High School. received a
bachelor's degree in education from
Allen is a I 993 graduate of Galli a . the University of Rio Grande in
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Curt Clonch of GallipOlis ~nnciunce Academy High ·sch,ool and will
the engagement and upcoming mar- - graduate this year froln the Univerriage of their daughter. Amy Jo, to sity of Rio Grande with a bachelor
Christopher Joseph ·Allen, son of of science degree in mass communiKathy Stewart of Gallipolis and cation and minor in philosophy.
RACINE -- The wedding uniting
The open church wedding will be Aimee M. Lemley and Jason D.
Charles Allen of Columbus.
' Clonch is a I 994 graduate of Gal- 5:30 p.m., June 14 at the First Shain will take place Saturday, May
li a Academy · High School and Church of the Nazarene in Gallipolis · I 7, at 4 :30 p.m. at the Racine First
attends the University of Rio Grande with music beginning at 5 p.m. A Baptist Church, Racine. with Rev.
reception will follow 'the ceremony. Jessie Windgrove of Antiquity Bapmajoring in business management.

Clonch-AIIen ·

•••

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In spite of all the 'stories about
beleaguered mothers today, moms
overwhelmingly say they arc happy .
with their Jives and with their partners, says a poll from the Pew
Research Center for the People &amp;
the Press.
1 ThCif greatest source of joy is the
lieople they care about - spouses,
c)lildren. their own parents, friends

+ not work.

i Virtually all (95 percent) mothers

aj-c happy with life in general: Those

-tith children under 18 arc either
vX:ry satisfied (46 perce.nt) or mostly
· shtisfied (49 percent). with the ir
hvcs.
' The poll was conducted for State
nf the Union , a series produced hy
P.BS with the participation of USA
TODAY. " Mother 's Day Special. ..
the second ,in this series.• airs today
or Sunday on PBS (check li st1n gs).
Forty perce nt of working mom s
with husbands or partners say their .
jobs arc very important to them. But
careers come at the. bottom of the
heap: after relationships .
About ·half (51 percent) of moms
with kids under t8 say their relationship with their children is the single
most important contributor to their
perspnal happiness. When the kids ·
are ·grown. husbands or partners (44
percent) bring the most joy.
t. Whether their children are yo ung
·'V grown. only I percent of mothers
t jobs or careers at the very top of .
eir list of what's important.
" Most Americans look to their
~milies first for what gives meaning
their lives." notes Andrew Kohut ,
rector of the Pew center.
, One quarter (26 percent) say their

.

arc much more optimistic.
The poll·retlccts a strong belief in
traditional'farnilies. Overall. women
(66 percent) think most couples ·with .
mothers at home and fathers at work
. can do a good job parenting. Coupies with both 'parents working full
time rank with single moms as can· didates for good parenthood -: 29
percent and 28 percent respectively.
About half (54 percent) say most
couples in which dads work full
time and moms work part time can
parent well .
. .
Overall, 4 I percent of women say
working while having young chi!drcn is bad for society ; 37 percent
· say it doesn' t much matter.
The toughest part of being a
working mom is balancing rcsponsi bilities, say 27 percent of moms who
&lt; work filii time . The top stressor for

In Memory of our Mother, Ruth Buffington

You are missed so much every day of the year.
· Children, Grandchildren
. · Great--Grandchldren

t

. DEBBIE MciLWRAITH AND BRUCE GHEEN

Mcllwraith-Gheen
SHA,DE -- Debbie Mcllwraith Nelsonville where she majored in
and Bruce Gheen of Shade accounting and COIJlputing, a~d
announce their engagement and ' received a state vocatic.:tnal certifi upcoming marriage.
cate. Gheen owns and operates his
Mcllwraith is the daughter of own painting business. · Rembrandt
Hugh R. Mcllwraith of Stoneham, Painting and Decorating.
Mass. and Chrisrinc A. Green of
The outdoor wedding will be
Pomeroy. Gheen is the son of C. 1:30 p.m .. Sunday, May 25 at the
Vincent Gheen of Pomeroy and home of Mr. and Mrs .. David Riggs.
· Carol M. Riggs of Pomeroy.
Pomeroy. A reception will be held
~ Mcllwraith graduated from Tri- there following the ceremon~.
;county · Adult. Education Center in

......
•••

•
tist Church officiating.
The custom of open church wedding will be observed. A reception.
will be held following ihe ceremony
in the church social room .

those who don't work outside the
home is di sciplining children, 20
percent.
The poll of 1,101 women
includes 457 mothers of childre'n
under 18. The margin of error is 3
percentage points for women overall
and 5 points for . mothers with kids .
·
under 18.

In Memory Of Eva V..Barrett
A MOTHER'S DAY WISH
If It could be yours what,would It be?
As a mother, I wish I could hold. my mother on
Mother's Day. Tell her things I didn't get to say.
Tell her .she's the greatest In the whole wide world
and give her flowers. Sit down with her for a
Mo~her's Day meal and watch her as she smiles ..
Hold her hand and listen as she prays. But we
only have her memories. She left us 11 years ago.
Sadly missed, .but not forgotten, (by her children),
Written by
Daughter, Betty Caldwell

155/BOR13

• MIDDLEPORT -- Mr. and Mrs.
:William Nicholson of Middleport
••'announce the engagement and
:upcoming marriage of their daugh•ler, Mirand·a, to James D. Spangler.
:~on of the late James Creighton
: ~panglcr and Mildred Eileen
: llaynes of Lancaster.
·; Nicholson is a I 992 graduate of
.: t-Jcigs High School and a 1994 grad:~atc of Hocking College's R.N.
·liursing program. She is employed
: )'ith the Hick orr Creek Nursi ng
:~enter where she is a treatment

155R~2

175/80A13
185/75R14
195/75R14
205!75R15
235/75R15

27.90
30.50
31 .10
34.50
38.65

165R15 ·
175!70R13
185!70R14
195!70R14
2_05!70.R 14

Staal Ballad Radial

t

area.

185!70R14
195170R14.
205!70R14
225!70R15
255!70R 15

185/70R14
i95170R14
. 205170R15
215165R15
205165R15

GRAND
WASHERS • DRYERS
DISHWASHERS-• RANGES
REFRIGERATORS .

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DUAL SHJ~NNEl
EXCEPTIONAL
WET TRACTION

3. AlltiOfH prices InClUde the atandlrd Mlylag warr1nty.
4. T1rm1 ,,. 10 daya ume 11 Clth for quiiiHIH ~·- VIN and Dltconr.,..
~t.cl.
.
S. OUintltlu .ad c:Otor lltfRtlon m., bt limited on 10m1 IIHWMitlnd proc~uctl. Fl,.t
come - ttm lrf'ld.
IS. NG de ...... Of' wflo!.....,t - pMaMI
7.
Mt'Vk=e ...... tht Hie.

FORIIftll

Wild
plrlt
Radial
-· MPT
.

1. All new M•vt-u• will bt ttgg" wflt\ a Sale Pdc:t.
2. FrH d•lwry, lnalsllltlon (except bultt4nt) and ~oval of Olelapplllntlin limited

1 WEEK - MAY 12 THRU

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IRIT AQUA FLOW

IMPROVED TRACTION
· AQUA CHANNEL DESIGN

CQNDITIONS OF SALE

w..,.,

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43.25 •
45:35
48.35' · .
55.45
62.75

30x9.5R 15 C
31X10.50R15 C
LT225!75R16 C
LT265/65A16 C

LT235185R16 BL E

P~5f75R15 OWL

' 81.10

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,r.;'

82.65

88.45
89,70

LT235185R16 BL E

..........

65.70

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THE

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Wicker Buggy

91.1 0

271 N. 2nd, Middleport, 992-5205
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. We hCMI GREAT gl~ for MOMI
· j"rugift wtifiu.tu awanfd on 1"~11

IMPORTANT:
. , . _ - c11ea1t
oo••~ll "Truul In U.lllilf"
Mdpeoutdl n 'Ra Ill «orra•u•••culltciiiJ_...._. ·

10-5 Monda thru Saturday
• •

•Ac.tC.WCWO.*

loOop"*Cioofoi-

• •

•

~

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

••.-.••••a•••••••~••••• . •-••••••

•

31X10.50R1SOW(c· 86.70
LT235!7SR15 C
77:45
LT24sf75R16 E
9il. 70
LT~5R16 C
811.50

' 85.60

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DONNA LONG AND ROY HERON

Long-Heron
l

;: The · Sunday Times-S~ntincl
Those not making ihc 60-day
r~_gards the weddings of Gallia. deadline will be publish_cd in the
Meigs and Mason counties as news daily papers as space allows. · .
niid publishes wedding stories and
Photographs of either the, bride or
PJ~otographs without charge.
the bride and groom may be pub'} However, wedding news. must lished . with wedding stories if ·
Jriect general . standards of urnelt- desired . Photographs may be yithcr
ness. The newspaper prelim to pub- black and white or good quality
llsh occounts of weadings as soon as .. color, billfold size or larger.
possible after the event.
Poor quality photographs will not
To be published in the ·Sunday ·he accepted.' Generally, snapshots or ·
e!lition. the·. wedding, must h~ve instant-developing· photos ~re nor of
taken place withil1j 60 days p~ior to acceptable quality:
Jhc publication. and may .be up to · . All material submitted for publilll&gt;O words in length. Material for cation is subject to editing.
~long the River must be received by
Questions may be directed to the
I ilic- editorial department by Thurs- editorial department from· l to 51
. day. 4 p.m. prior to the date of pub- p.m. Monday tllrough Friday at 446Jii:ation.
: ·
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2342.
·

175!70R13

Carter-Edwards
MIDDLEPORT - Cindv D.
Carter and Russe ll D. Edw.ards
ann&lt;Juncc ·their cng.ag~mcnl aild
approaching marriage.
·
Carter is the daughter of Robert
S. and Frances Parker of Middlc port. She is employed by First
National Bank of Nelsonville. ·

VISa, MC. Layaway

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

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Edwards is the son of Douglas ;
Edwards of Hartford; W.Va. · 1111d ~
Diane Hayden of Hartford , W. Vat:
He is employed by ROOD Con' ;
struction of New ·HtrVent W.Va.
'
The wedding will be June 2 at the ~ ·

Church of Christ, Hartford.

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Polt no surprise to morns):
By KAREN S. PETERSON
USATODAY
.
Poll statistics showing women
rely on -families more than work for
happiness don't surprise Mimi Gan,
40, Seattle.
'
. .
The co-creator of a local award winning TV show for chil\lrcn, Gari
loves her job. But her enthusiasm for
it didn '.t keep her from going parttime when her daughter was born a
year ago. " Before I had' Grace, I
think my whole life revolved around
work," Gan says. " It is still important to me. I need that balance in my
life. But work is jus! not the priority
that it used to be. My little girl. my
. hu.s band and my friends .- they' are
my priority: I will have them for
life. "
·Gan is a member of USA
TODAY's Baby Bwmcr Panel, a
group of 45 selected to comment on
variou~ issues.

parents work .'' says Myers, 37, an ''
attorney in West ford , Mass. "11lcy '
... hire people to do some of the ;
chores" and then "focus on quality :
:
time with their children."
Gari applauds many single moms. :
"1 know single women who an;;.
excellent mothers. Being single or in :..,
· some other classification doe•n"t •
affect your ability to parent."
.:;

·-....

-~----------~--~~:
~'l'
.
Not-so-empty sky
.
:

Interstellar matter. clouds of gas '!
and dust, were first observed in ::;
1914; indicating that space between ..;
the stars is not as empty as .had been
SU,IJPOSCd.
.
•

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•

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:
GRADUATION :..

r----~-----------

SUPPLIES

·Announcements .
• Banners
• Center Pieces
• Plates
·Napkins
• Table Covers
•Balloons
• Crepe Paper, Etc.

•
•~

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-~

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•

· LETART -- Sandra Long of
Letart, announces the engagement
and approaching marring~ .o f her
daughter, Donna Mafic. to Roy Russell Heron of Michigan .
Long is also the daughter of th.e

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late Elson Long.
The open church wedding will he
2-:30 p.m.. Saturday, .July 19 .. at the
Faith Baptist Church in Mason ,
W.Va. A reception will follow at the
Hartford Community Building.

~~ ·
a~Jaas
The Shoe Cafe.
'

Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis
"Falcon" Running .
446-4222
Mens &amp; Womens
a..;;....;.;.._____.-._____~----------.1

If babies could
only tell you •• ~
Everywom~

doesn't nee(l a
babyBut every baby
needs a mother.
Many things have changed - but not babies.
They are just as helpless and demanding in
the 1990s as tliey were .in the 1880s.1bey
need "quantity. care" around the ~clock. ·
They don't adapt to "wome~'sliberatioli".
constantly changing "care-prt»vtden." · · ·
;

The role of motherhood requires love,
dedication, hard work. and long houn•
The rewards are love, fulfillment,
achievement, and a stake in the future.
A woman's life expectancy today is 79
years. Tlie role of motherhood m~n• llivint
your baby • home - with a ~other in it - fo.some of those years.

~'&gt;f)
GALUA COUNTY RIGHT TO LIFE
446-2896

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JoAnne Myers says naturally
women put family first. But she and
others strongly disagree with findings that say dual career couples and
single morns arc not good candidates for parcnthond. " 1 lluvc so
many friends in ·couples where hoth

..

. ·.__·--Wedding policy-----'--

.Southwestern

PATRIOT - The
School Alumni Assodation
~ill hold an alumni banquet for all
,.!!dents. guests and employees from
~c class of 1958 through the class of
992.
The doors' will open ·at 6 p.m..
ay 24 at the Southwestern Elc,
' tentary School (next to the high
hool ). The evening will 'begin with
inner prepared by the ' Alumni
ssociation. at 6:30p.m.
Roscoe Pierson·. Class of 1962.
fill present special music. Dawna
f~ (Walker} Kiesling. class of I 970.
'11-ill be guest speaker for the
' ~vening
t.
' d'mg
. ·
All . atten
dlumni ·will receive a special gift.
tcservations are $6 per person and
· IJI&amp;Y be sent · to Mary Crews. I00
Ij;ucas Lane, Patriot, Ohio 45658
before May 14.

nurse. Spangler is a I 992 graduate
of Penn View Bihlc l,nstitute in
Pennsylvania arid also attended
Union Bihle Seminary in Penn sylva~
nia. He is employed with HamiltonParker.. Columhus. as a wotrchousc
foreman .
The open church wedding will be
June 2 I at the Bradford Church of
Christ. Pomeroy. Following their
h(&gt;neymoon in the Caribbean the
couple wiil res ide in the Lancaster

.•..

Whitewall

outhwestern
lumni to hold
anquet

~igh

Nicholson-Spangler

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CINDY CARTER AND RUSSELL EDWARDS

Other panelists who arc rnoms
agree with Gan. "Women have
made such great strides. fighting for
the opportunity to have careers,''
says Michelle Raimist. 33. Frederick, Md. "Now that the doors arc
open and they can do anything they
want with their lives. they arc realizing that family still gives the most
satisfaction." Raimist. an editorial·
consultant. works from home to
have more time with her son, Evan.
2 1/2.

MIRANDA NICHOLSON AND JAMES SPANGLER

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RACINE -- Curtis and Sharon ·take office mid-summer.
Holter Rifne of Eagle Ridge Road ,
Davis is a 1989 graduate of LibRacine , announce the engagement erty High School in Clarksburg.
: and upcoming marriage of their W.Va .. ·and attended FairmontState
daughter Greta Lynn , to Christopher College in Fairmont, W.Va. where
· Andrew Davis, so n of AI fred and he graduated magna cum laude with
Charlotte Spring of Bristol , W.Va . . a bachelor of science degree in sociand David Davts of Martinsburg, ology. While at Fairmont State,' he
W.Va.
became the first West Virginian tO be
Rifne is a 1990 graduate of East- named to the All USA College Acaern High School. She attended Ohio demic First Team in 1995. He also
University where she graduated served as a Judith A .. Herndon Legsumma cum laude with a bachelor of islative Fellow in I 994 for the West
arts degree in political science in Virginia Legislature. . .
Davis is a second-year law stu1993 and a 'master of arts degree in
. political science in 1995. She is a dent at West Virginia University in
second-year law student at West Vir- Morgantown where he has recently
ginia University in Morgantown and been elected as vice president of the
has been hired by the West Virginia · Student Bar Association . Davis is .a
Public Defender Services to serve as ' Public Interest Advocate Fellow and
ari intern in the Fayetteville office.
will begin working in the Public
She has also been elected to Defender's office in Beckley. He is
serve her class as a representative to alsd pursuing a master of public
the school's ethic council as the administration at West Virginia Uni interim chair... Rifne is also a mem- versity.
ber of the . executive council of
Bethel #62 of the International
They wedding ·will be July 26 at
Order of Jobs Daughters in Middle- the Bradbury Church of Christ. The
port. She has been appointed as couple
. . plans • reside in West Vir- .
Grand Thifd Messenger and will gmt a.

Appalachian Tire

Happy Birthday and Mother's Day
·
May 9, 1923
We cannot send a Birthday Card or Mother's Day Card,
Your hands we cannot touch,
But God will send our message to the one we love so much.
A Silent Thought, a secret tear
Keeps your memory ever diar.

Riffle-Davis

ENO- Eno Grange #2080 meeting 7:30 p.rn.

Today's .moms say they're happy with their lives
husband or partner is a source of
happiness all the time ; their children
under 18 arc a con&lt;tant source for 35
percent. But work provides happi ness constantly for only 9 percent of
working women .
More than half (56 percent) of
women overall think today 's moms
of kids urider I 8 are doing a worse
,iob of parenting than moms 20 years
ago; 27 percent think today's moms
do about th e same as yesterday's.
Still , 35 percent are very satisfied
with the job they are doing now as a
parent: another 62 percent arc mostJy satisfied . ,
- ·Pollsters say that often when
asked a "global " question , such as
about mothering in genera!'. rcspon dents reflect the ncgat1ve headlines
they read . Asked about their own
mothering practices. howe ver. they

GRETA RIFFLE AND CHRISTOPHER DAVIS

GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose. Diet Class 9 a.m . Grace United
.
Methodist
Church.
1996. She is employed as a substi•••
tute teacher and works part-time at
GALLIPOLIS - PERl Chapter 58 meeting 3 p.m. Senior Citit.en Center
. Powell's Super Valu in Pornewy.
Lisle graduated from Southern with Mary Beth Carlisle from Medi-Home Health Agency speaking. · .
I
.
ll&lt;ot:*
1-iigh sc hool in 1989. He· attended
GALLIPOLIS - Homemakers Club of Gallia County to tour BlennerhasOhio University and ts employed by
sett Island. The group wiV he 8 a.m. at McKenlic Building on Gallia CounPDK Construction in Pomeroy.
The wedding will be 4:30 p.m., ty Fairgrounds. Everyone welcome to go.
July 12 at the United Methodist
•••
Church in Syracuse. A reception will .
GALLIPOLIS - La Lee he League meeting 7 p.m. children·, room of
follow at Royal Oak Resort.
Bossard Memorial Library.
·

Lemley-Shain

.By KAREN S. PETERSON
USATODAY
.

libmry .

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�Sundly,May11,1117:

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpoll8, OH • Point P!Munt, WV

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Sunday;..., 11,1187
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Potter.. _.:...------~-------___:.--1'
Continued from' page C1

MOM OF THE YEAR - Ruth H. Canter of Syracuse has l;)een
named the 1997 O~lo Mom of the Yaar by Mom USA of Huntln!Jton,
W.Va. She was nominated for the award by her daughter-ln~law, Jennie Canter of Syracuse, .who sa.ld slle just •wrote what she felt"
when she made the nomination. "She's the closest thing to a moth•
er 1 have," said Jennie whose own mother Is deceased. Mrs. Canter
was sent a sash and a letter of congratulations from Mom USA.

Must see Portland ...
Continued from page C1
· visit can be made to the beautiful
indoor Chapel of Mary, and gift
shop, before taking the 110-feet elevator ride to the top of the cliff. At
the top, the remainder of the 62-acre
retreat surprises everyone with its
beauty. Huge trees of fir, cedar, redwood and other evergreens shade the
landscaping · of rose gardens; religious sculptures including a· lifesized bronze of St. Francis of Assisi;
and beautiful streams, ponds and
gardens. The stone Servile Monk
. Monastery looms up out of the forest. A walking tour of the Seven Sorrows of Mary are depicted in wood
carvings. A. meditation chapel with a

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180 degree vista perches on the edge
of the cliff. Windows from floor to
ceiling provide panoramic scenes of
the Columbia River, Portland, the
snow-capped mountains, and the airpon. Leather chairs are provided for
quiet meditation. The mood of that
room transcends all religions; it is a
truly spiritual experience.
Portland offers many surprises,
but Powell's' and The Grotto .should
be on the list of "must visit" attractions when in Portland.

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Dorothy Sayre and her husba~d
George, formerly of Meigs Counly,
moved back about and nowreside In a
house facing the Ohio River just below
Syracuse.

steady hand ud a knowledge of
hoW the clay ahould be nwtipulateil.
Smiddie started selling his plates, The lwdesl part of thic fascinating
cups, bowls and other dishes at flea procea, ac:cordiaa ~-Smicldie, is
markets, out of the baclc of his vehi- centerina the clay on the wheel, so
cle. Next, it was on to craft shows: that the final product comes out
Now, he's a wholesaler, who gets · even 11uthe way lfOUIId.
more requests for information than
nNISMNG
he cares to answer. His studio is
After the a~p, vase, pot; or plate
located in a bam, next tO' the Smid- is formed at the wheel, it is.carefuldie family's rambling antebellum ly set aside, until it has dried to a
farmhouse.
·
leather-like consi~ency. 11ien, the
ClAY MAKING
item 'is trimmed at the wheel: rougb .
The transformation from ball of edges. arc smoothed, and ~ bottom
brown mud to decorative pottery of the piece, called a "foot," is·
takes skill , patience and artistic formed. The final step in this finishpanache on the pan of the potter.
ing stage is the arti.st's signature. ,
Smiddie starts by .mixing the
As Smiddic noted, people who
. clay. The base for the clay comes buy a handmade item like to see the
from a bag, much like a bag of craftsman's name on it. Smiddie
cement, to which water an.d ·~rog,' or places his unmistakable scrawl on
ground ceramic material, are added. the bottom of the pot, and then the
He uses a power mixer, attached to a pot goes into the kiln for its first firdrill, to mix the clay in large garbage mg.
·
cans. Next, the mixed clay is dried in
Temperatures in the kiln ·can
the sun until it can be handled easi- reach a fiery 2,300 degrees, and the
ly.
items remain in the kiln (or as long
The n'ext step involves "wedg- as 24 hours. 1be items take two days
ing/' or "cutting" the clay, so that it to cool, Smiddie said, and must
is of a consistency suitable for remain in the kiln until the items are
"throwing." Much like kneading complt~ely cooled and safe to hanbread dough, the idea is to eliminate die. Smiddie uses an electric oxidaas much air as possible from the lion kiln, made with a special, light
clay, since air pockets could cause and porous insulating brick.
the creation to explode in the kiln.
Removal from the kiln takes the
Repeating this "cutting" process 28 most steady of hand, because the·
times ·actually mixes the dough one dried but unfired pottery is very .
million times, Smiddie noted, ~ fragile.
'
because each· time the dough is
After its first firing, the piece. is
turned, the combination doubles.
dipped in glaze, which is a s~bstance
"Cutting," "Wed.ging," "Throw- · stmt
· 'I ar to g1 ass. However, the glaze
An g." Ir the tenns involved in Smid- must be mixed so thai it doesn't run
die's ,craft seem foreign, it could be · when the piece is fired for the sec-.
because the art of pottery making is ond and final time. This is the step
so basic - as old, vinually, as civi- where the glaze, the clay and the
lization itself. In these days of decorative paints are bonded togethassembly line manufacturing, the cr.
1
•
work of the potter appears to be simIt is with more than a little pride ..
pie art, and yet involves complicated that Bob reveals the formula for his
calculation and concentration.
glaze. It is one that his teenaged son,
"Clay making 'is all attention to Kyle,.developed for a school science
detail," Smiddie noted. "You have to project.
be aware at all times of the weather,
DECORATING ..
the temperature and so forth,
The paint that Smiddie uses to
because it all affects the way the . decorate his pots is actually an
clay turns out"
oxide: made of either copper; cobalt,
"THROWING"
or iron, depending on the color
The next step in creating a·piece desired. These colors change when
of pouery is that with which most of the pottery is fired. This decorating
us are familiar. The ball of clay is phase is what gives Smiddie's prodplaced on a wheel, and molded by ucts their distinctive appearance.
hand into the desirabli!lshape. This is Flowers are the predominant theme .
the process that the potter calls of his work.
"throwing...
..
A basic blue flower, painted with
It looks so easy, and yet anyone a sponge, is the most familiar feature
who has tried it knows that it.takes a

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpollt, OH • Point Plelttnt, WV

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•w•PegeC7 .

Dolls and bottles: What's the value?

of his work. This 'line• is whit gallery $hops at the Smithsonia.n:
makes his product recognizable lo Institution in Washington, D.C.:
the shopkeeper iml Cf'lllector. He LocaUy, his pottery is sold at ~
·
says, though, that he is Cllfrently try- Street Collection in Athens.
A$
a
member
of
Ohio
Designer.
ing to vary that basic look to include
more color, and a more diverse Craftsmen, a trade alliance. Smiddie
is also able to sell his pottery.at "A ;
appearance.
"I go for an impressionist look," Show of Hands." a chain of five '
Smiddie said. 'I like for a flower shops throughout Ohio featuring :
l'roducts
made :
garden effect, be.cause I don't have a hand-crafted
throughout the state. This organiza· ;
flower garden here."
.
· . His paintings are. in fact, remi- lion also issues a magazine to dis- :
niscent of a Morici painting. The tributors, which allows Smiddie to :
•
shapes are recognizable as flowers, advertise to potential retailers.
The
market
is
there,
but
Smiddiei
·but the .style is unique. Hci dabbles
paint over the pieces .o f ·pottery, is not interested in ·expanding ·hiq
unconcerned about drips or errors in business. The inquiries about hiC
his work. Tht;se only contribute to . pottery come in almost every da~
the look.that he's going for. Smidd)l but he's content to work at his owe
occasionally uses. a household spray ·comfortable pace, shipping what hE:
He has no idea how man~
bottle to put a backgrOund of paint can.
on his pieces, before~ · adding the items he ships out, or how many ~
flowers, birds or other flower garden throws away. There is no complicai:,1
ed computer inventory system, nilS
features.
assembly line and no real scheduled
SALES
Smiddie is a wholesaler, shipping Smiddie simply works at a steady;
;;
his products directly !ll the retailer. pace,.creating what he likes.
Maybe that's why Bob Smid'di~
His pottery is sold in sliops.in Cape
· .::;,.
Cod, New York City, and, at one still enjoys his work. ·
time, was offered at one of the
' .

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By ANNE B. ADAMS lind
who yoli feel want your items "for rece1vtng a lot of feedback on
tancy Nah-Cummlngs
nothing" -- you' ll realize only about "home remedies" for leg cramps.
DEAR ANNE AND NAN: My 50 percent of the item's appraised Our readers have sunested everymother passed away a ye.ar aao. Our value. The book is $29.95 -- expen: thing from eating two tablespoons of
recreation room is covered with her sive but worth every penny.
sul!ar when the cramping starts to
things. There is a small collection of
STUMPED: Edna Yarker of large daily doses of vitamin E. Howporcelain dolls (not old, but expen- Homos&amp;Ssa Springs, Fla .• · writes: .ever, the majority of you have writsive), old Avon bottles, salt-and- "We saw a . toilet advertised in a ten that in their case cramping
pepper shakers, jewelry and a lot o( magazine that you can usc in a base- seemed to be due to a potassium appear in the column. Due to the •
odds and ends, such as small clocks, ment. It connects to the existing deficien·cy and that eating a banana
volume of mail. personal r~p1ies :
vases, bottles, etc.
upstairs drainage system and can be or two once a day took care of the cannot be provided.
:
We live in a small town, and I flushed UP rather than down ." problem.
'
cannot sell these for any value. Flea~ Readers: Evet heard of this inge- ·
Write to "Ask Anne &amp; Nan" at
Copyrlght1997 NEWSPAeER l' ,
P.O. Box 240, Hartland, VT 05048. ENTERPRISE ASSN.
market vendors want them for noth- nious plumbing fixture•
i
ing. I thought you might be able to
FEEDBACK:' We've . been Questions of general interest will
'
recommend how to go about selling
these items. •• PLEASE NO NAME,
Somewhere in Pa.
DEAR PLEASE: We tliink your
first move is io lind out if your
expectations regarding the value of
· your items are realistic. To that end,
we suggest you visit the largest public' library in. your area and head
right for the "Collectibles and
Antiques" section . You'll be able to
find a variety of guides on the
'
shelves that will give you some idea
'I
.; I
of what you have.
.
.
~
.,
For · instance, Avon bottles can
v
occasionally be extremely valuable
'•
_,
as can old salt-and-pepper shakers.
If the porcelain dolls are not part of
••
a Franklin Mint (or simih11) collec·''
tion, they may have more value than
you think.
We also recommend that you
either-borrow or buy a book called
"Hyman's Trash or Treasure Oi.rectory of Buyers 1997-9 (How and
Where to Easily Sen Collectibles.
Antiques and,Other Treasures Found
Around Your House and Neighborhood)," by Dr. Tony Hyman (Trea'•
sure Hunt Publications, .P.O. Box
302~-Q . Shell Beach."CA 93448; 1800-549-7500).
The book lists over I ,o&lt;io buyers
built.on-your-lot, completely finished on the
Jim Walter Homes ofTen 100% financing with
of everything ·from miscellaneous
OU!Side, and built tO any Stage of completion on
No Money Down and 8.5% APR Fixed-Rate
accessories (which you seen\ to have
a lot of) to railroad itenis, There is an ·
Mortgage Financing* to qualified property owners: the inside.
index at the back of 'the book thai .
lists all the "Things You Can Sell,"
We invite you to visit and experience all [he
All you need to do to get started is choose your
,,
plus· page refer~nce numbers for
possibilities
Jim
Walter
Homes.can
offer!
home from the more than 30 models, traditionallybuyers of the items. In most cases.
'
.I
you can write or call the buyers for a
!.
free estimate.
·
As we've mentioned before·, 'if
'
you . sell to a ~ealer -· and that
includes · the flea-market vendors
OW" 320,000 BUILT SINCE 1848 .

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

Start Building Your New
Jitn Walter.Hotne
With ·No Money Down and ·
8.5% APR Fixed-Rate Mortgage ·Financing*

Roushes mark 50th
' POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Dale and Jean Faudree-Roush of
P(lint Pleasant, W.Va. were hr,mored
fqr thejr 50th · wedding anniversary
Saturday, April 19 at the St. Peter
Lutheran Church fellowship hall.
The event was liosted by their
son, Ronald Dale, his wife, Barbara
and their grandchildren , Brandi
A:nne . and Bradley Dale ·of Mary-

land.
Those attending were from Ohio.
Kentucky and Maryland, as well as
local relatives and friends. Flowers.
cards at'il mementos were received
from Georgia, Nebraska, Florida,
Arizona, Kentucky, Ohio and West
Virginia.
Assisting at the reception were
the St. .Peter Church., women.

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J/-~shsr HDMEB

·-----·
ro
1
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I FRUTiPHi".Mi(Y I
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·Call us Toll Free at 1-800~492-5837 extension 60
for a free brochure or visit our model home center.

LosE 10 Las.
· IN 3 DAYS ·

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AJtNetu..t c.H. 2001

IIONEY BACK OCIARANTEE

GIIIIpolla, OH

BOB AND ETTA MAE HI!-L

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Hills to celebrate 50th
)

RACINE -- Bob and Etta Mac Racine and the late. ·Clarence
Hill of Racine will celebrote .their Shields. They were married at Ash50th wedding anniversary at an open ' land Kentucky. May 19. 1947.
They have three sons and daughreception Sa!Orday, May 17, from 6
ters-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs . Philip Hill
to 8 p.m. in the social room of the
and
Mr.
and
Mrs. Jay Hill of SyraRac.ine United Methodist Church.
cuse.
and
Mr
. and Mrs. Pat Hill of
· Bob is the srin of Ora Hill of
Racine and the late Albert Hill. Etta Pomeroy. and I0 grondchildren.
is daughter of Gladys Shields of

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Fraleys to observe 50th

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Motiter's Day

BIDWELL - Bill and Reva Fraley of Bidwell will celehrate their
50th wedding anniversary May 16.
·They were married May 16, 1947
at the Grace Methodist Parsonage.
Gallipolis. by Rev. W. Scott Westerman. They are the parents of two
daughters. Karlene Bunke of Powell
and Marlene (Tom) Davis of Gallipolis. 'They also have four grandchildren, Stephanie and Kyle Bunke
of Powell: Misti Minton of Point
Pleasant; W.Va.: and Melissa Davis

Special.
Double your mirtutes

•

on .rate plans of
$24.95 or
ltiglter witlr
an 18-molltll
contract.
1 montlr free ·
access on rate

Your mom would like
11otfti11g more than
lrer very own cellular
p1to11e for Mother's
Day. And wlten you
come i11to United
States Cellular,'' we'll
ma_ke sure she gets
tire riglrt calling plan.

U~ITED STATES

CELLULAR

!

WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS .

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of Gallipolis.
.
Bill is the son of the late William
and Lula Fraley. Reva is the daughter of the late Hallie and Anthony
Murray. They arc both memi&gt;crs of
Grace United Methodist Church in
Gallipolis.
· Bill is retired from the Gallipolis
Developmental Center and due to
his health is con lined 10 their home.,
Anyone wishing to help them cclc- :
bratc may, send cards to P.O. Box 4.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614.

I

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plans lower tlran

.!I .
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one-year contract. ·

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$10 activation fee.

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Annual Bend Area GOspel jubilee
..

Friday, May-16_&amp; Saturdlly, May 17, ~997
.

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.i••••

''

l'wt
I
. 111 I a lllllt tee

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40t9 llhodii/Nt. I
416-t72t • 111101824-1775

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The Rumors Are True••.After so Years of Serviee to the Area

R
D.FUR I'DRE
IS CLOSI G 'S DOORS,
PER
E
r!
.
·once Our Stock Merchandise •• Gone, So
'

TIME IS
RUNNING OUT

.

Are We. So Hurry In For Best Selection!
· Still AGreat 'Selection Of:
· ·

.· Everything Sold."ls·ls~
Cash &amp; Carry, Dtlivery.Awailablt

· Air Conditioners
Beat rhe Beatff

Th e way people ral~ ·

aro111rd Jrcrc:·

$24.95 .with a

, Ul8120.

•

5,000 BTU . 110 Volt... ........ $299
8,000BTU 11 0 Volt... ........ $399
9,000 BTU .110 VoiL ........$469
12,000 BTU 110 VoiL ......... $539
15,000 BTU --110Voh........... $619
18,000 BTU 220 Voh.,;....... $599
22,000 BTU 220 Voh~ ......... $739
25,000 BTU 200 Voh .......... $829

Recliners
Glider' Rockers
Bean Bags
Coffee·a End
Tables
. . .
Televisions
Mirrors
.
.
Curios
Lamps
Appliances

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TWIN, FULL, UEEN
BEDDING AVAILABLE
Good Selection

RECLINEAS DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. KITCHEN AND DININO
ROOM SETS STILL AVAILABLE.

Even the Pictures
on the Wall

Mason Coamty Jyzlrgrounds·Polnl Pleasa.nt, WV
rALENi: Fridtq, 6;30 p....~ arid Sahmtay, 2:30p.m. .
Over 30 sOloists and$inghtg groupslndlllltng

'II

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, TICkets: Free Admission. Love offerings will be taken .
DON'T MISS! YOUTH IN GOSPEL MUSIC, Saturday,
Mey 17, 5:00
~Toll. youtt18tld tellllg8f8 through 15

..r.::~.:
llltglng. Allin or

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on:,~.!!=~
~gciod
lheiiW). For more Information,
••

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Pt i111itive Quartet, Melody 1Ho, Connors,
Billy Fields, joyce Igo, and more. .

.,.m.

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------~ --------------------People
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The course is tougher this year. So is Cindy
·crawford.
"Last year my goal was just to finish," Crawford told The Associated
Press on Friday, eve of the 4th Annual Rev Jon Run/Walk for Women, which
has raised more than $3 million over three years for researth on women's
cancers.
"I never used to run, and I started running to train for it like two months before it.
So I just wanted to not embarrass myself and
to run the whole way, " .the supermodel
recalled.
,
The star-studded 5-kilometer event has
become 'a huge draw. This year it has moved
from the streets of Century City to the
sprawling University of California, Los
Angeles, campus . Aboot 35,000 runners and ·
walkers are expected.
Last year's experience got Crawford
into running and she's kept at it.
"My goal this year is to beat my time
from last year, which I think was around 3 I
·minutes, so I don't think I should have any
'"--'""-'""--" problem. Although this year it's probably
Harrison Ford
going to be houer 'and also the course is
tougher this year because it's at UCLA and
o'it's more hilly there."

in the

news----~~--~~------------

too.
The makers of his new,Columbia Pictures' film , ~ 'Air Force One, " got a
July 25 release date.
But Ford has watched with dismay as rival studios eyed the same date for
their blockbusters. Among them: "Conspiracy· Theory," a Mel Gibson
thriller, and "Titanic."
So Ford called some executives, including Jonathan Dolgen, chairman of
the Viaeom Entertainment Group.• which owns Paramount Pictures - maker
of " Titanic."
"Harrison was definitely irritated," said Patricia McQueeney, Ford's
manager. "It was a friendly phone call. But Harrison did say, 'Jonathan,
what the hell are_you doing?"'
·
Dolgen agreed with Ford, but he and the other studio executives haven't
made their decision known yet.
McQueeney said she and Ford had a similar conversation with Bob Daly,
chairman of Warner Bros., which is making "Conspiracy Theory. "
She said Ford gets involved in every as)iect of· his· films, including the
business side. "And it's bad business· to open two movies Oft the same date,
much less three of them."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Larry King loves 'to interview the stars -,- and
now he's joining ,them.
King, host of CNN's "Larry King Live," received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He arrived for the unveiling Thursday in a Jurquoise
and white 1957 Chevrolet convertible.
· The 40-year-old car was a 's ymbol of his 40 years of broadcasting~King
~d .

LOS ANGELES(AP) - Harrison Ford is good at playing a movie exec,

.
.
.
"I am thrilled to be here today, especially to have rny star next to Arthur

heart.\'

,

Performing in the lounges meant

Collin Raye
working six night a week and doing
four sets a night.
At the same time, Raye was
dealing with terrific personal problems. His wlfe, Connie, went into a

coma due to complication~ during
her second pregnancy. She recovered but had to learn to walk and
talk again. The baby, Jacob, was
born with cerebral palsy and wasn't
expected to Jive.
"We're Catholic and at one
point the priest advised us .to have
Jacob blessed. and we did," Raye
says .
Miraculously, )acob Jived. Now
he's I I and doing fine. "When he
runs you can tell he's got a little
problem, but he can do most everything."
· In 1990, Scott Wray decided to
leave the band and· teturn to Texas
· where the brothers were raised. The
band 's manager . helped Collin
make

some

connections

in

Nashville.
In Nashville, Raye struck gold
and platinum.

With his success came a different set of pressures. "There's pressure to keep your standards up for .
your audiences," he says. ·"I don't
want audiences to go away disappointed."
Being a superstar isn't the goal ,
he added, but not measuring up to
his own standards is important
"And there's always incredible
pressure from the record compa·
nies," he says. "They want every
release to be a hit. If after several ·
platinum hits, you go gold, they're
already disappointed . They're saying, 'he gets one more chance and
that's it.'
"They don't stick with people
long enough. If that had been the
case 20 years ago, there would be
no Reba McEntire, no . George
Strait.
To relieve the _ pressures · of
recording and concert work, 'Raye
tries to take his children and escape
to some place peaceful. "I spend a
lot of- time at home (near Dallas)
with my children, but I'm still busy
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there. My favorite escape is Hawaii
where I take the kids and thoroughly relax. Bin I can ' I do that too .
often because it''s expens.i ve.,

Although Raye is now .divorced,
he Jives near his ex-wife and their
two children - daughter Brittany ·
is,now 13. "We are partners in raising the kids," he says. "She has
them and when I'm not on the road,
I have them. I spend as much tirne
as possible there. Childhood goes
away and I don't want to miss it."
He's working on another album,
he says, and it will include several
songs written by brother Scott. He 's
also doing some material written by
his friend, songwriter Tammy
Hylar,
Building a meaningful career is
a top priority for hjm. To do this,
he '·s prepared to take a few chances
with his music, to try different
things.
"I want to carv.e out a career that .
will mean something musically in
20 years.'.' ·
·

OVS to perform Mozart, Chopin and Brahms
GALLIPOLIS · The Ohio Valley
Symphony 's concert 8 p.m., Satur·day, May .17 will feature the works

century, saw the prOdigious musical subtlest vocabulary and blazed trails
talent in young Wolfgang and which lead directly into the 20th
dropped all other personal ambitions . century.
.
to devote . himself to · · Gan.z has appeared as a soloist
his son's musical edu- and won prizes in piano around the
cation and elihibltion. world. He was one of two pianists
And, of course, awarded First Grand Prize in the
the dream became 1989 Marguerite Long Jacques
reality, and Mozart ' Thibll!ld International Competition
continues today as awarded biannually by the American
one of the immortals · Pianist Association and in 199 I was
of musical composi- awaided a silver medal in the Queen
:'. lion, even though he Elisabeth of Belgium International
died a pauper at35.
'Piano Competition . He has '·perHis · well-known formed in concert hall.s from Japan
ovenure to Tl1e Mar- tp most of Europe. Often heard on
riage of Figaro, National Public Radio's "Perforunder the direction of · mancc Today" show, Ganz is head of ·
Maestro Ray Fowler, . the piano faculty and Musician-inwill open the concert. residence at St Mary's 1College.
The concert will . In contrast to Mozart and Chopin,
feature the work of Brahms - although certainly of the
another · prodigy, same genius :- lived to be a senior
Frederick Chopin, citiien. ·That gave him time (20
played by Brian years to compose his Symphony No.
Ganz, Chopin's Piano I) to be more reflective on his goals,
Concerto No. I in perhaps. In presenting Symphony
Brlafl Ganz
Minor, Op. I I, was No 2 in D minor op. 73 (composed
composed when he in just four months).
of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozan, was just 20, even though he was
The concert will also continue the
Frederick Chopin and Johannes already ravaged by tuberculosis and subscription campaign for sales of
Brahms
would die at 39. Chopin gave the season tickets for the 1997-98 OVS
. Mozart's father, himself a noted Romantic movement of the early program. Those who renew or
music composer of the mid-18th 19th century much of its richest and become new season ticket buyers by

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LOS ANGELES (AP) - Forrner "Baywatch" star Pamela Anderson .Lee testified
that she doesn 'I consider a movie deal done
until she signs on the dotted line . .
. "I only worry about my signature," she
said on the stand Thursday.
Private Movie Co. sued· Lee for backing
out of a made-for-cable movie called "Hello,
She· Lied.'' The lawsuit, on trial in Superior
Court, chums losses of at least $5 million for
the Showtinie cable television movie.
Lee testified that sl!e never signed a contract for "Hello, She Lied.''
. Private Movie attorney Adam Miller ~d.
however, several people were present at a
November 1994 meeting in which the actress
orally committed to the film.
Lee claims the 'deal was incomP.lete Pamela Anderaon Lee
because Private Movie refused to delete simul~ted sex scenes and nudity.
"Hello, She Lied" was later made with model Kathy Ireland and w
released by Showtime under the title "Miami Hustler' '
·

By MIKE CLARK
USA TODAY
Here's ''Fathers' Da/'. (three
starS out of four) opening on Mother's Day weekend, which happily
isn't the only amusing by-product 10
come from a dream-teaming of
Robin Williams and Billy Crystal.
No masterpiece but undeniably
h
1 h h
· ·
eavy on aug s, 1 e movie ts put
over by the buffed, lubricated
dynamics of two ·leads who subs tan,,
tially transcend what is otherwise a
borderline tepid -dose of family values.
This is an uncommonly palatable
entry from an iffy genre: the Hollywood adaptation of a popular French
farce (a two-decade movie blight
from "Buddy Buddy" to· "Jungle 2
JuRgle" ). Specifically, "Fathers'
Daf' retreads uLes Comperes," a
1984 Gerard Depardieu comedy in
which a married mother tricks two
ex-lovers into trackin;; down her
runaway son by telling each ,that
he's the father. In this versio~. Crystal is il'thtice-wed lawyer and mille~
rial success, . while WiiJi!llllS is , an
unwed professional flQP. and flake.
You wouldn't think they'd ever be
destined'ro' meet, except. perh:ijl!, In
a fender-bender,
·But they do, thanks' to the surprise reappearance of a mutual onetime lover to whom time has been
kind (Natilssja Kinski, dillo). Her
·teen-aged son (Charlie Hofheimer)
has fled home in pursuit of an apparent rOck-groupie wannabe for whom
he has ill' directed puppy-Jove. Pur,
suing him as well is Kinski's husband; who himself may_be the boy's
biological father. It's ian undeveloped side issue that probably should

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nave been scrapped . _
.
:
. Indeed, the narrattve ptcks up
steam as it goes because obligatory
story threads get relegated to second
place in hour two. Crystal and
Williams locate the. boy fairly,quicl(:,
. Jy, ,whereupon the movie becomes lt
primer in contras!ing comic styles.
Williams' character is manic, artsy,
and a lousy dresser ·with myriad
phobias. Straight-man Crystal is'
.,
droll ("Cheese is no longer my
friend," he tells a waitress) and vei'J'
Jack Benny-like.
1 ·~ ·
"Fathers' Day" delivers its modi,
. est goods. Take mom, and she';ll
chonle. (PG-13: profanity).
~

In an effon.to provide our reader- ·
.ship with current news, the Sunday ·
T!mes-Sentinel will llot accept wed.
dmgs after 60 days from the date or
the event.
·~
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Weddings submitted after the 60-' ·
qay deadline will appear during-the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Dally· 'tribune. · ·•
All club meetings and other newS'
articles in the society section must
be submitted within 60 days of
occurrehte :~ · ..._...
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All .birthdays must be submitted
within 60 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publiis
· ·
NEW CHAPEL OPENS~ James Acree, right, Is the manager of
:t he neiN Pomeroy Ch11pel of the Fisher Funeral Home• He Is pic·
tured In the new chapel, ~ated on Eaat Malo Street, with Bruce
Fisher, President of Fisher Funeral Home, Inc.
•

. POMEROY · The Pomeroy
Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home, Inc.,
is now opeti, according to Bruce R;
Fisher, President.
· The new facility is located at 590
East Main Street, and features over
9,000 square feet of space. including .
t~ree visitation rooms, an office, a
well-appointed lounge with a seperaie smoking area, a preparation room.
casket selection room, storage area
and garage facilities.
. The interior and exterior of the
new building were designed by Fisher. The new chapel is completely
handicapped-accessible. The lot prov:ides parking foF over 70 cars, and a
canopy which provides parking space
for the hearse and family vehicles
during inclement weather.
.·
The full-service facility will be
managed by James R. Acree, Jr., a
licensed funeral - director and
embalmer, and ' graduate of Mid•
American College of Mortuary Sci-

SAINT
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
STARTING FRIDAY
TIM ALLEN IN

JUNGLE 2 JUNGLE
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

niation. ·

. Tickets are . also available ,in
advance at Haskins-Tanner Men's
Store and That Special Touch in
Gallipolis, Engraving Plus in Jack- ·
son, The Milton Bank in Wellston,
Clark's Jewelry in Pomeroy, tile
Middleport Depanment Store, and
~~~~;;G:i~fts in Point Pleasant.

Far AU Your - · ·
"'
VfdcoN••dsf
·Weddings, l1strance, ·
Special Events.
Let us put tjlls on
Vltleo tcfe.
446·6939 or
!Jf

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By HALKNEEN
POMEROY- Butterfly and Hummingbird-Gardens are "hot" items for
the yard. Perhaps this Morner's Day,
a collection of plants to attract these
sippers of flower nectar can be a welcome last minute gift!
Nectar composes the majority of
the diet of adult hummingbirds. To
attract h4mmingbirds to your garden,
remember to plant lots of red tubular
flowers e.g. perennial cardinal flower,
red penstemon, bee balm, coral bells,
red columbine and .trumpet creeper.
Annuals you can plant include such
varieties as ·Scarlet sage, impatiens,
flowering tobacco, verbena and
phlox.
Insects provide a high protein
source which is especially needed
when hummingbirds are being born.
Baby hummingbit'ds' diets are made
up of almost exclusively insects such
as aphids, thrips, flies or gnats.
Provide hummingbirds with shallow watering areas that they . can
bathe in and plentiful resting perches. Trellises and branches near the
hummingbird garden will be greatly
appreciated.
Hal Kneen Is Melp 'Cpunty's
extenlloa.agent In agriculture and
aatural ftSOUrces

· GALLIPOLIS - Phil A. Bowman • He is also vice president of Davis Attends conference
GALLIPOLIS - Paul W. StackJac:kscln was recently elected to Trucking Co., l!)C. ·
house,
Sidwell, director o.f Holzer
the board of direc,Bowman is chairman of the Holz.
Family
fharmacy, Gallipolis. attendtors of Ohio Val- er Hospital Foundation Bo~ .. He
ley Bank.
has also beld ffices in the · Ohio ed the II 9th annual conference ofthe
Chairman and · Mining and Recllunation Board and Ohio Pharmacists Association April
Chief Executive the Ohio Society of Mining Engi- 4-6 at the Greater Columbus Con-.
Officer James L. neers Section #155. In 1992 be vention Center, Columbus.
The association, established in
'Dailey made the received the "Obio Coal Man of the
announcement at Year~ award. 1'1\is year he earned a 1879, represents more than 4,000
'he ·Ohio Valley· position on thehoard of directors for pharmticists, pharmacy educators,
Bane Co'V. annu- the National Mining Association. and pharrnacy stude~ts throughout
a! meeting.· "Phil Bowman is also a member of. the the state.
has been· a customer for a long Jackson Elks Lodge.
Burleson new member
time," Dailey commented. "We are
A graduate of Oak · Hill High
GAU.IPOLIS- Hannah Burleson,
excited · to welcome him into the School, Bowman g{aduated from
Callipolis,
is a new junior member of
OVB family.''
Colorado School of Mines in 1967
the
American
Angus Association.
I · Bowman is,the vice president of as a mining engineer.. From there he
Junior
members
are eligible to regisWaterloo Coal Co., Inc. His grandfa- attended the Uni~ersity of Te~as
!her, C.A. BoW1!lan, started the com- with a masters jn business adminis- ter cattie in the American Angus
P,.ny in 1934. He is the .president of ' tration. He and his wife Diana reside Association and take part in associatile R.A. Eberts Co., Inc. ·which in .Jackson .- They have three sons: tion-sponsored shows and other
national and region~! events.
mines coal and limestone.
Denton; Morgan and Beau. ·

11'-ltK"'
34'-$1U5M
OVAL POOLS

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Phil A. Bowman narilEld .to
bank's board of directors

VIDEO
TUNSFERS

llll ',1/IS

Hot item
·fot the yard

ence. The staff will share the opera. tiona! responsibilities at the Middle- .
pcin Chapel of Fisher Fneral Home,.
Inc., as well as the Pomeroy Chapel.
Fisher is a I984 graduate of the
Cincinnati College of Mortuary Science, owner/operator of Fisher Funeral Home since 1989, and President of
Fisher Fune~til Hom~. Inc., since
1994.
In order to' meet the needs of the
bend area, pre-arrangment counseling
. service will be available by a licensed
funeral director.
"By opening new doors, Fisher
Funeral Home is better able to serve
the entire bend area," Fisher said.
"Our high standard of service is complimented by ,lhe new facility's location, accessibility and convenience."
An open h9use for the facility is
planned for Sunday, May 25 from I
io 5 p.m. The · p~one number for the
Pomeroy ChaP,Cl is (614) 992-5444.

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446·1310

IN".IIII:K•

New. funeral horne
opens in Pomeroy
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May 21 are eligible for a $10 savings per subscription. Tickets will be
available in th~ Ariel foyer before
the concert, during intermission and
following the concert.
During the linal concert sponsors
of potential new members may also
purchase guest tickets at a two-forone price while tickets l.ast. Call the
Ariel box office at 446-ARTS or
Mike Brown at 4460925 for infor-

'

_;_News policy-.

EVERY tUESDAY tiiGHI
4 P.M.·9 P.M. ONLY

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su.-y, 111ay 11, 1117

By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - here appears to be
widespread concern from parents
and homeowners about the presence
of snakes in the'yard. It is certainly
disconcerting to be surprised by
snakes that have moved in on 1Jroperty, too close for comfort. This situation tends to reach a frenzied state
when there are young _children wanting to play outdoors in the spri.nf!
weather.
It is . un~standable that many
people are ul;lset by snakes, howev- .
er, keep in mind that in this area, most
snakes are non-poisonous. At this
time of year, snakes are beginning to
come out of hibernation. They may
stick close to their burrows for the
time being, until the nights are
warmer. If theSe burrows ~ ~lose to
your home, then you may .see some
snakes arouno;l the house from time to
time. As the nights get warmer, the
snakes will venture farther and disperSe out away from the homes.
· GAWPOLIS ·John and Loralee Carmichael, plaque for display, a cuatotlHiealgned blazer,
Many of these concerned homeownowners of Carmichael's Farm &amp; Lawn In Gal- a lapel pin and an lncentiva award trip.
"It's gratifying to be recognized for business
ers are alarmed by the fact that they .
llpolls, earned special recognition In tha John
excellence
and tor Increasing our sales,"
have never seen ·snakes around the
Deere Circle of Excellence award program tor
Loralee
Carmichael
said. "Our clealership
ho!Jse until this year. The 'upset of
surpassing difficult sales goals for commercial
team
pulled
togethar
and · worked hard to
habitat by recent flooding has bee~
and consumer ·equipment. The Carmlc;:haels
·
achieve
this
honor.
And
it's even more gratify·
were recognized at a special awards banquet
.named before as a possible explanalng
to
know
that
ao
many
customers put their·
tion.
·
In Monte Carlo, France by Mark RoatvQid,
trust
In
our
people
and
our
servica. This has
A genuine concern, especially of
senior vice president, of the John Deere
,
been
a
graat
year."
· ·
,
of snake, and
Worldwide Commercial &amp; Consumer EquipParents is the ty""
John
Carmichael
said
he
will
wear
the
blaz,..
ment Division.
.
whether it is poisonous or nonpoiso· Roatvold said that the Carmlchaela Won thia er and lapel pin with a sense of pride·and humil·
nous. When homeowners see snakes
·· honor by qualifying for the Million Dollar Clr· lty • pride In accomplishment tempered by the
close to their homes, the general patcle. "It takes a lot of work and time to ea;n realization that a lot of people helped make the
tern of reaction thus far has been to
recognition at this level, • Roatvold aald. "It also recognition possible.
Pictured frcim Jelt to right are Jeff Gredvlg,
destroy the snake, but oppose the idea
takes careful organization, attention to detail,
of close inspet:tion. In which case, the
teamwork and leaderahlp to meet challenging general manager, John Deere Commercial &amp;
Golf &amp; Turf Products Group, Lora lee and John
OSU Ex.tension office will identify
bualneas goals and to aatlsfy customers. •
snakes as poisonous or non-poisoThe Carmichaels~ who qualified for the Mil· Carmichael, and Roatvol.
noils if they are brought to the office
lion Dollar Circle, received a specially designed
in a coniainer. For those who do·not
'
mind i~despecting snake features, some elation ri)owed closely, especially seal all cracks and crevices in the begin to watch this section of the
bps to termiile poisonous or non- around buildings, 3.) Remove rocks; · home. Repellen"ts are not proven to be ·paper for the blue mold forecast and
poisonous are:
boards, and debris lying close to the consistent, there are no regi~tered update. As of the latest report, blue
1.) The shape of the pupil: Non- ground. 4.) Control any mice and/or toxicants, or fumigants, trapping is mold is active on multiple farms in
poisonous snakes will have a per- rat problems. S.)
.
possible, however usually not practi- several counties in north Florida. This
fectly round pupil, and poisonous
Recognize that snakes are attract- cal. Non-poisonous ·snakes are pro- strain proved to be sensitive \O Meta·snakes will have an oval or egg- ed totlrewood stacked directly on the tected by law unless they are about to Jaxyl (Ridoinil). High risk growing •
shaped pupil.
ground, old lumber piles, junk piles, cause .personal injury or 'property areas are still limited to Aorida,
South Texas, and parts of Mexico.
2.) The underside of the snake nower beds with heavy mu.lch, gar- damage.
Do not wait until the last minute,
below the vent: Non-poisonous dens,basements, shrubbery growing
Thus, non-poisonous snakes
the OSU Extension office for
call
against foundations, and barn lofts. should not be destroyed indiscrimi- ·
snakes will have IWQ rows
your
blue mold control plan 446of scales, and poisonous snakes These locations usually offer cool, nately. By the same ioken, poisonous
10
7007
.
.
~ve just one row usually down the damp, dark areas in which snakes are shakes are out there, so use caution
CAITLE PRODUCERS : Ohio
ttpof the_lall.
.
.
. accustomed. Most snakes feed on if you come in contact with any
Cattleman's
Asso~iation members ,
. .3 .) P~ts l!f!he &amp;ide of~ the, ~ad: .•yP.lJIJLr.Q!I.e~,~·- s,l!ch· as mice, . rats. . sna)c~- If,a)ite~c~_rs, see.k llllmediare
invited
to
their !)pen House and'.a;
Pili~QII~III·llllk:~a'IC~.Pttotf chipmunks, and aiso bit:ds and bird ·'· ate mediGal attent1on •regai!lless of
Dedication
Ceremony
on June 3,
eac! Side of the head, . mtdw~y eggs. Thus, high, uncondollect'rodent whethe~ it is poisonous or non-poi1997,
2
p.m.-6
p.m.
in:
Plain City,
bet_ een the. eye and the nostnl, populations, offer abundant food sup- sonous.
while ~on-potsonous sn""es do .not plies.
For more informatiun on snakes Ohio. Also, mark your calendars for
·have this ptt.
.
.
The Ohio State University, The please call tbe OSU Extension office the Summer Round Up on Saturday, •
The OSU Ex.tenstOn ~ffice offers United States Department 'of Agri- at614-446-7007.
· June 28. For more detljils on either of .
these events, contacrthe OSU Ex.tena handout on . controlling ' snakes culture and Gallia County CommisAREA AGRICULTURAL
sion office.
around the home, however, the most sioners' Cooperating
NEWS
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
pract1cal methods are 1?: 1.) Keep all · Unfortunately there are no quick
TOBACCO/BLUE
MOLD'
posstble food sources, mcludmg dog
.
.
·.
UPD•""' .,. b
d
I
County's
extension agent in ag~·
and cat food picked up 2.) Keep veg- and easy solutiOns. It 1S advtsable to
ru ,..: 10 acco pro ucers pease
culture and natural resources.

- GALLIPOLIS - Holzer Clinic is home. It is clear .that laser surgery
introducing excimer laser refractive will be the main method for correctOhio and ing the focusing problems of myopia
Northwestern
(near-sightedness).
In the future, it will also provide
West Virginia.
correction
of focusing errors for
The
surgery,
photo refractive those who are far-sighted or have an
astigmatism. The ·role of radial ker- '
keratectomy, ·
·known as PRK, is atomy for · near-sig)ltedness is
·
an FDA approv.ed already beginning to wane."
method of corAccording to FDA guidelines,
recting the focus- PRK is provided for patients 21
·ing problelJIS· of years of age or older. PRK uses an
near-sightedness. especially safe laser to trim and flatThe procedure can improve visual ten .the c&lt;irnea which i~ the clear area
acuity in up to 95 percent of the on the eye's su!face. The surgery can
patients. Howard Greene, M.D. , . correct mild near-sightedness and is
Holzer Clinic ophthalmologist, has a relatively simple procedure to perrecently undergone special training form. It is also considered relatively
to provide this surgical service to safe becaus~ , the laser removes
patients who meet · the FDA corneal tissues 111000 of an inch at a·
timet
t
approved guidelines, ,
The long-term visual outco.me of
Dr. Greene, a board certified oph- .
thalmologist, has undergone training the procedure is equivalent to that of
in PRK .at the Cleveland Clinic and radial kerato)'lly. However, radial
Grant Hospital. Holzer Clinic has keratomy requires no deep knife
supported the expansion of this clin- cuts .into the · cornea. These are not
ical service by providing s~ate- of­ necessary in PRK.
More information on . photo
the-art equipment for care of refractQry surgery patients. According to . refractory keratomy . is available
Dr. Greene, "My commitment is to from the Holzer Clinic Ophthalmolprovide high quality refractive ogy Department.
surgery to our patients near their

-...

Family Nighlls
Back.•• O,nly Beller!

D

·Homeowners
State-of-the-art eye
.---Carmichael's
honored---concerned
~urgery offered by
about wildlife
Gall.ia's Holzer Clinic·

Godfrey, who I revered as a child when I listened to his radio sho~, " King
said.
.
About 100 fans were on hand for the ceremony on Hollywood Boulevard.
King's star is No. 2.09~ on the famous walk.
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'Father's Day' is
·~
heavy on the laughs ~

Collin Raye rides ·the high country
By G~YE DELAPLANE
. fleno Gazette-Journal
Learning the craft and sticking
to a goal is an important pan of
Collin Raye's philosophy.
In fact, he'd advise any performer starting out to be. prepared
to hone the performance skills.
" It's not enough to like to perform.
Some people . do ,become an
overnight sensation," he says, "but
when they get (to the top) they're
not ready. I always think up fast,
down fast."
Study, practice and plan on getting a Jot of experience, he says to
youngsters wanting to find a career
in music. "And then, if you like
doing it and you have gotten good
ai it, stick with.it. Don't let anyone
talk you out of it."
The record chans might indicate
that Raye;s rise to the top as a country singer has been meteoric. But
Nevadans know better.
He's paid his dues, spending
years developing his song list, 1\is
stage presence and attracting an
enthusiastic following .
"I had my lirsl band when I was
IS ," he says from Nashville where
he WaS Wrapping up the release of
his "Greatest Hits" album.
"I've played every kind of beer
joint imaginable .. . sometimes. I
even doubled as the bouncer.''
But he loved music, loved
singing and he was determined to
do it well.
Although Raye is only 36, he
was already a seasoned musician
when he signed his first record contract in 1990. Nevadans remember
him as the lead singer with the
Wray Brothers, who played the
lounge c(rcuit lrom 1985 to 1990.
His brother Scou Wr:iy, an excellent guitarist and songwriter, and
three other musicians backed
Collin's vocals.
·
Willis Allen, entertainment
director at Reno's Peppermill,
worked with Raye (k.nown as
"Bubba Wray " during those years).
He ·recalled that despite Raye's tender age, he was always a ·professional. "He stood out above most
entertainers on the circuit," he says.
"He always looked good, sang well
and knew how to handle himself on
stage. Besides that, be was on time,
well-rebe8rsed and had a great song
selection Jist. He was a real sweet-

Farm Business

Entertainment

SUndtly, U.y 11, 1997

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- Members of the River
. AnEND
· ValleY FFA
the District 10 FFA
banquet at Logan
Prior to the banIn officer training
quet, members
Maalons.
district raportar,
gave a presentation on keeping accurate
record books. Beth Walker was named District
'10 treasurer. River Valley members receiving
awards were Hudson, first place, ameli animal
care and second place, aqulne science; .Beth
Walker, flrat place, extamporaneous apeech
and second p(Jtce, greenhend quiz; Rashel Fill·

Are your farm records
GALLIPOLIS - With tobacco
leasing in full swing and,planting of
·corn underway the Gallia-Lawrence
Farm Service Agency would 'like to
encourage you to check with the
office and see if your farming interest are correctly recorded in the FSA
office. If you have purchased/sold a
tracl of land please let the FSA know.
These transactions can take a while
to properly complete the farrn
re·cot-ds. If you rent a new farm or.
drop a farm normally rented, FSA.
officials need to know so they can
correct your farm records.

Foreign investors who . have
bought or sold agricultunil land in
Gallia and Lawrence counties are
reminded to report the transaction to
the Farm Service Agency within 90
cjays.
· The report is required by the
Agricultural Foreign Investment Dis- ·
Closure Act,·and t~ who are late in
reporting, or who (ail.to report could
face possible fines. FSA is responsible for monitoripg how much agricultural land in Gallia and/or
·L~wrence County is 'owned or con,

{{

r

lon, fourth place, reporters book; _Andrea ·
McCully, flret place and Kendra Walker, fourth
place In ag aales; Jerrod Ferguson, first place,
speciality crop, first In diversified crop, first In
diversified livestock, ilecond In dlverslfl!KI beef
proficiency, second In swine pfoflclancy and
second In forage and second In home and
farmstead Improvement. Pictured. left to right,
front row ere Beth Walker and Leslie Hudson •
Rear, Andrea McCulty, Reshel' Fallon, Kendra
Walker, Jerrod. Fei'gii!On and Sasha Shriver.
,

~orrect?
trolled by foreig~ indi.viduals or
interests. Loc~l government offices,
realtors, attorneys, and others
involved in 'real estate transactions
are askecl to inform foreign investors
of this reponing requirement.
The Gallia-Lawrence FSA 'is a ·
United States Department of Agriculture Office located in the C.H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center at I I I
Jackson Pike, Room 157 I, Oallipolis, Ohio. Phone 446-8686 or 1-888211 -1626 (Toll free in 614 area
code). ·

�Page 02 •If• t

a• ._._.

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gallipolis, OH e Point Pleassnt, wv

•bod

.

A Striking Facade

ELEGANT TRANSOM WINDOWS and impresslvP rorner &lt;Juciins combine lo crealt' a slrlklng lllcade.
r11111ll 111 •p•r~. Slidiug gla~s, d11urs
"I"'" 111 11 t:nve•·ed pati11 lhul pru·
npliunul wt•l lwr •. this cut.y SJHH't!
vi des " view ur the bat·kyard uud,
i!ii ju s t 1 ht- ~put fur rt•ndin~,
in w1u·m w~••h~r. t·un b~&lt;:ume uu
unwiudint: ur surfintt; tht'
~•tt·usiun11r the l'omily rnom.
lnh·rnrt :
The lurmal diuiug r11um . .whit'h
l•'~'illlll'iiiJ,: H Slllllllill~ fil't•pfilt 't' , . '"" 11 12-I'IHJI •·eiliug, is id~•l l'llr
. nun r pl~lll t.:omhiru- In t' rt'lllt• a
hiiVt:'ll bolh fur n:huirtg nnd
lhr hllf;t' t.'t'llh'ul fnmily room will
rlrguul dinu~r purties.
elllt' !' IHill in g.
hHmllt' lur~r J!;Uiht'rin~s with
011 ~ willg~t" l"eil:uinr wuk~·up
\'all iu th~ hrighl, ilayed breakfast
-r----------et'----------1111111 k, and the eiTident kitdlen
simpline.• meul prepurulilln.
· Tw 11 ,.;,.11 ;1dury bedrumns aud a
full bath are ucr&lt;&gt;Ss the liall ·r,. 11 n
th~ kitchen ·und hreai&lt;JaRt n&lt;Hik.
On Ihe nppnsile side 11r the hume
aud seduded' frnm the 11ther
sl~~ping quurl"rs is lh~ nuist~r
bedrn11m whieh has • private
••ntrn111·e t11 lh~ hal'k polio. The
hath f'eutur~s • lurg~ walk-if•
du~el , " separute tub and shuwrr

By DRUCE A. NATIIAN
AI' Newsf.-alures
Plan C -52, hy llum~Styl~ s
. llr sig ners N~lwork.~ nll't•rs 1,_869
~q uare fr r l nl' li\'ing spnt;t" . lis
inviling ranuJt' Ultd Wt"ll-dt' ,.;i~llt'd

~· rum tht" f'oyt'r, dt•lll&gt;lt' dourl\
upt·n lo a dt'll or swdy. With an

apd a dual -sink"\'Hnily.

G-5Z STATISTICS

D

--

G-52

runm, dining rcm111,
kitt·hen, hreakfa~l nnuk, ·

framing. The twn-t.·ar garage cov-

. ~rs 470 square reel ohpa&lt;:e.
the royer, whit•h louk.,
slruight into .lhe iarg~ family ruom. ~lanklug Ihe l'uy~r are a d~n/study
un the Iell and the furmal dining r&lt;H•m 1111 the right. 111~ kiu·hen, dirr('t·
·~NTH¥ intrndut:~s

auc~ssibl~ l'rum the dining room, shar~s a snat.:k t:ni.mll:-r wilh the:
bay~d breakfast nuok, A utility· roont nearby lends \II the ·lwo -rur
gnruge. Twn 's~enndury b~dn)l)ms on this side of tht&gt; hume shun- u l'ull

ly

·

access tu lht! rt"Hr t·ovt-r~d patiu. On
Ihe utht·r sldt" o~ lht&gt; hnmt&gt;, the muslt'r suilt" indudes a lur-se bt-drnnm.
a walk-in d~Jset and a t:mnpar1mt·ulalizt'd lmlh.
buth and a hallway that

provid~s

(Fur a nwr~ dtlailt•d, -~•uled p't an
tfllhi.~ house, im:l~ditl~ HUidr.s 111
t~timaUilR t.'OS/S t.Hid }iiUlllf:ill/l.

smd $4 In /lull'" rrf llae H·i11•k, 11.0.

Ntui J'ork, N.Y. f{)lf~ ·
I 5~2. /le .&lt;urltn im:ludr il&lt;e p/1.111

/lor

IJ~2.

!lumber. ·

Homes: Questions·and answers
By POPULAR MECHANICS .
For AP. Special Features
Q. We recently had a lavatory
installed in our base'ment. Because
, the sewer pipe is overhead, we had to
ins1all a sewage ejector pump: We
now have a problem whenever lhe
pump goes off. There is a rather loud
bang at the e nd of the ejection
process.
We have had two pluntbers look at
the problent, and neither one of them
seems to know the cause. Also. we
had lhc noor of the garage dug up.
and lhe sewer pipe straightened since
we believed .that was the cause. We
· still' have tlic banging noise. Do you
have any advice'?
A. This is a fairly contmon prob·
lent with sewage ejector puntps. The
noise is caused by the dosi.ng of the
check valve .
A check valve is one thai allows
. flow ·in only one direction. ·It is used
with ejector systcnts to prevent back·
·now or' sewage into .thc basin alter
each pumping cycle. This extends the
pump's life by preventing it rrom
cyd ing too frequently.
You will not be able to clintinate
the noise cmnplctcly. hut you can
red uce it. Where local plunthing
codes penn it. you can install a sectiun
of flexible hose in the piping as a
vibration and sound isolator. To further reduce the noise transmission. try
wrapping . a rubberi1.cd material
mound the section of the pipe under
the hold·down dantps.
Finally. the valve 's installation
effects the amount of noise. Some
pump companies recomntcnd that the
valve be installed in a1lorizontal posi·
t1on with the hinge facing up. This
will prevent solids from lodging on
top of the flapper. prevent in~ it from
llpening again on stan-up.
,
Q. I installed a circulatinc ounto
in my hot-water system·as described
in lhc September '94 Homeowners
~linic . Now the hot ·water is rusty. I
have a timer on il so when we first
tum on !be hoi water. it's very rusty.
11 never completely clears up.
Before installing this circulation
pump, I cleaned and n.ushed out the
water healer,. which is I year old.
How do I gel rid of the rust without
having lo buy a new water heater? ·
·A. lbere are·two possible sources·
for the rust. The 'tank itself is usually not one of !hem. Most of today's
water healers have a high quality ·
glass lining, and it's very rare 10 have
a lining failure significant enough 10
cause rusty water.
The rusty water is either caused by

'

the circulator pump or iron-rcdu.:ing
bacteria. If the puntp has a cast-iron
housing, rather !han, a brass or bronze
housing. lhis could be lhc problem. If
the problent is not caused by the
pump, then I would suspect iron·
reducing bacteria.
Unlike other kinds of water-horne
bacteria, this kind is not harmful. It
is common in water-distribution pip·
ing in which soluhlc iron exceeds .2
parts per million. Soluble iron in the
water provides food lpr the hactcria.
and the rusty discolored v.:ater is the
end resuil of the bacteria-feeding
process.
.
The pump is probably stirring up
the bacteria's waste products which

.r--·--.---·-· .
.

!
'

can be used and the metalized coating is much lighter. It's possible to
sputter me1a1 in , a layer one-hu~- ··
dredlh the thickness of a human hau.
Different metals ilre chosen to
subtract specific bands of radiation '
from the solar spectrum. The result is ,
a hi&amp;hly reflective layer with very Iii·
tie mirror effect, heat absorption or '
color shift Because spultering is
·more expensive, 'these. films occupy ·
the high end of the price range.
While the performance character· .
istics of dyed and metallic films are
generally distinct, theie is some over· '
lap. Heal-absorbing dyed films are
somewhat refleclivc, and metallic ·
films do absorb some heal due 10 !he ' ·
mass and coior of the metals · !
involved.
To funher complicate the issue, : : :
many films contain both dyes and • :.
reflective metals. By combining dyes :. :
and metals, the negative effects o( : : :
each can be reduced without sacri· • ;
ficing perfonnanec.
••
A popuiar exlintple is a gray dye ; :
and n titanium coating. If used alone, • :
the antount of dye needed would sig· ; •
·nificanlly darken the window. while ; :
the titanium would produce a highly •;
mirrored surface. When • paired : •
together, less of each can be used , •;
resulting in a film thai is relatively ·
bright and nonreflective.
This point is significant. if only
because il quells the notion that the
darkest films reject the most heat. In
most ..cases. dark film s arc chosen ·
because .they offer greater privacy. . "

.

GALLIPOLIS ·The Holzer Clin· ited laboratories nationwicie. The
ic laboratory was reiss\led a two-year CAP Laboratory Accreditation Pro- _ A. Gallo, M.D., work togelher to
accredilalion by the Commission on sram, begun in the early 1960s, is supervise a staff of more than 40 indiLaboratory Accreditation of !he Col- recognized by the federal government viduals comprised of highly trained
lege of ARJCrican Pathologists (CAP). as being equal to or more stringent lechnicians and suppon staff. "We are
Accreditation is given only to labo- than the government's own inspection proud of our capabilities. The staff
ralories who apply rigid standards of: program. Inspectors · eicamine the and !he facilities are as good as you
quality in day.to-day operations, records and qilalily control ofthe lab- can find," said Davis. "Our accredidemonstrate continued accuracy in oratory for the preceding two years; tation is proof t)lat we meaSure up to
very high slandards." •
the perfonnance of proficiency test- as well as the education and qll"l ifiThe College ofAnterican .Patholmg and pass a rigorous on site cations of !he total staff, the adequa- ogists
is a medical society serving
inspection.
cy of the facilities, the equipment, more than 14,500 physician members
In a leuer 10 Laboratory Director, laboratory safety and laboratory manDavid P. Althaus, M.D., CAP advised agement to detennirie how well the and lhe. laboratory contmunity
throughout !he world. It is lhe world's
Holzer of !his .natiomii recognition laboratory serves the patient ·''
largest association composed e&gt;&lt;cluand congratulated the laboratory for
Stephan Elberfeld,' director of lab·
. "excellence of services being pro- · oratory and branch operations, Susan sively of pathologists an&lt;) is widely
vided." Holzer Clinic's laboratory is Davis, taboratocy manager, patholo- considered the leader quality 'assurone of more than 5,000 CAP accred- gists David P. Allhalis, M.D. and Roel ance. 1be CAP is an advocate for
high-quality and cost-effective med·
ical care.
•'

-;;:;;P;;;u;'b;\illc;;N;;;o;;;tl~ce;ic·;;;;-·I ~40-_G_Iv8awa_.....;Y_ _ 1 90 wantid to Buy

accumulate al the bottom of the hoi·
water' tank. Correctin·g lhc problem
will require chlorinating the water
heater and all of the hot-water system
piping. If lhe waler heater has a
severe iron bacteria infeslalion, more
than 'one trealll!enl may be ~equired.
To submit a question, write to
Popular Mechanics, Reader Ser·
vic~ Bureau, 224 W. 57th St., New
York, N.Y. 10019. Thcl mosi inter·
estlng questions will be answered in
. a future column.

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

In 1925, Amc;ican writer F. Scou
Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby"
wns published.

.

SEE

.I

ACROSS

t Beal·up car
6 Talks hoarsely .
11 Dollars and 16 Becomes liquid .
21 Adored
22 Haired
.
23 Role in "The
Tempesr
24 Not hidden
25 Change lor the
bener
26 ·-Doone"
27 Pearly substance
28 Craze
29 Preacher's talk:
abbr.
30 Holler
32 Toboggan
34 Clapton and
Sev.areid
36 Get' brown' in lhe
sun
37 Cooking vessels
39 Submissive
41 Den
43 In the pas!
44 Ship part ·
45 School classes
48 Group of players
50 "Hunchback of
Notre Dame" author
52 lmpiOl'es
55 Certain grades .
57 Radius limes two
abbr.
59 Rest
63 Dipper
64 Make like new
66 Playwrights
68 Vaulted church part '
69 Prohibrts
70- -fault
72 Catches
73 Pet tor many
74 Golf necessity
75 Denomination
76 Invited one
78 Opp. of S .S .W.
79 Underground
chamber
80 Oval

82 Have a late meal
83 Term ol affection
85 Tiresome lalkers
86 Furrow
87 loudness; abbr. ·
88 - excellence
·· 89 Wager
90 Dye

93 Field or Struthers
95 Spot on a card
96 Search thoroughly
too Portent
·
101 Short swim
102 Kind of bOOm
104 Harbor town
105 Tried lor office
106 _Male lheep
t 07 Beauty parlor
t 09 Beginning of lhe
work wk .. for some
110 Bedouin
1t 1 Ollice note
112 Glow-in·lhe·dark
substance
115 Scanty
· 117 French pairiler
118 Fool covenng
119 Slipped
121 Niche
122 Parts of llowers
123 Western St.
125 Fat
127 Come before
129 Wen! down
t 32 Poinl a weapon
1.34 Lunch or dinner.
e.g.
t 36 Before tong
137 Drink
141 Psychological self
142 SaYO&lt;y jelly
144 Air Pollutant
146 Do a job around lhe
house
148 Exist
149 The Nile, e.g.
151 Cily of lhe Seine
153 Mature
·
155 Many limes
t 57 Group of ships
158 ·Acllike a ham
159 Chiis -of tennis
160 River in England

161 Puis on lhe ntarkel
162 Kitchen gadget
t63 Informative
164 Painful spols
' DOWN
1 Embrace
2 .Famed lover
3 Avoid
4 Playing card
5 Whirlpool
6 = skating·
7 Young person
·8 Knightly Iiiia
9 Plays on weirds ·
10Tiny
.
11 Like some yams
12 Notable time
13 Agreeable
14- firma
15 Vehicle wilh runners
16 Some parc~ls
17 A Gabor
18 Stow. in music
19 Courtroom even!
20 Tolerate
31 Ausiralian birds ..
33 Break a fast
35 Brave.y
38 Series ol Iones
~0 Holds on lo
42 Fo:uay
44 Pueblo Indian
46 Poem
r
47 Ocean
49 A planet
.51 Acquires
52 Dish
53 Jackel part
. 54 Failed Ford
56 - - and lake
notice
58 Way
60 Jack Klugma~ role
6 t Barret part
62 - Park, Colorado
64 Conies! of speed.
65 Fish eggs
67 lois of
69 Finest '
71 Cigar residue
75 Goad

:.
.,
· ·
·•

.

.·

1

76 Seabirds
n Subject
79 Portable beds
81 lnllexible
82 Costa del 84 Short. sleep
85 CrOOked .
87 Gaseous
substances
89 Pointed remark
90 -de ballet
91 City in Nebraska
92. Juicb·filled lrult
· · '
93 Farm structure
94 -Kippur
95 Evergreens
. 96 Laugh very loudly
97 . Place of contest
98 Dromedary
· 99 Tangles
101 Flowers
103 - de plume
.104 Impostors
t 07 Pole on a ship
108 - and void
110 Greek assembly
111 Spouses
1.13 Pierre is Its cap.
114 Thailand, formerly
1 t 6 High mountain
117Ciub..
120 Bureau
122 Writ1ng implements
• I
'
124 Fastening device
126 Water barrier
128 Slate division
129 Slaves
130 like a gymnast
131 Work offielion
·133 - Dolphins
135 "Yesterday. Today.
and Tomorrow" star
138 Irrigate ,
139 Goddess of peace
140 Fellows
142 liberal 143 Galorreialive
145 Donate
147 Children
150 Moray ·
152 Native of: suffix
154 Church.seal
.. '
156 To and.'
"~ .,
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ro-•

==,.,---

....

Frid-r. MondiJ.edhlon

005

Personals
• 10:00 .... SoiUrday.
~...------....:--~
- ---::==,_-:...-1
ATTENTION
Uay 131h. And May Ulh. 4186
1-tao Your Uoirlago Or D~fll!l.on1 ·1 Butavlllo Pike, Gallipolis, Turn In
lhip Gol Up &amp; Wetr, Sto'p'ln PrJn. .SIUineCiubOfiveway.
ceu Video And Rant 0na 'Of Our
Adull VIdeos. 1380 Eallern Ave·
Pomeroy,
nuo, Gatii.,OIIs, Or Call 814·446Middleport
8922.
&amp; VIC. lnlty
IIATE8~111

1·;oc).718o415418XI287e
. S2.991min 8+
s.v..u-e1g.6415-8434

~

~lng.

loner; Pleoaol Send reoponso ID:
Box CW•7 c/o Point Pleaaant
ant WV.25SSI.

.'

·

. 301-223-t185. '

Wedemeyer's Auction Service,
Gallipolis. Ohio 814-379-2720.

.

.

YOU CAN FIND

YOUR sPECIAL

IOIEONE NOWfll
Hloo-825-7!170, ElL 3388, $2.119

.

'

. '.
,. .

.

Skle

'
• I'
'

F8rm King compact implements have the niiQIIld
standards of reliable value tlult have won the confiderial
of commercial fanners throughout·North America.
They're built t.o brina a wide 8IXJill! of UBefuJ taeka t.o any
tractor make or moclel with a PrO and a 3 pt. hitcll. ·

•,

I

. ,.
'

.FJIRM KI\IG
lllriiD'I FIIMIIPPLY
815 CenterpOint Rd.
.

(114) 245-5183
I

Patriot, OH

GlveiWIY
1 0 - old end I - old kll·
ltnl; 81~-4110.

.. .'
•

.,

'."

'-

3

·s -

-

old puDt&gt;lee mlxod

T.n. and a.gle, ohio 8, - .
.old klniM 111r nlned. call

7--olplt\

-

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page A-7.

.

'
. ',.
'

.'

Permanenl, Full -lime $13 /Hr.,

D&amp;li worker/cashier needed. Must

"POSTAL JOBS ••
Wilh Govarnmen1 Benelill. Apply
Today For Clerk /Carritf Applicalion Info. Coil 9 A.M. To Q,P.M .. 1·
800-270.8015. E•L95.
Avon $8 ·118/Hr, No Door ·ToDoor, Quick Cash, Fun A Relaxing. t-800-736.0188indlllllrep,
Bab~sitter needed, full or part
time, musl be able -to tlarl May
,3, 1997, 814·992-7302.

-

old, rltole. 1101-875-

Cola 8nd I l l - 10
ntllee, ' -

7101.

ttl¥-·
I
114·1112·

.... call

We Are Saekln$1 A Oirec:tor For
Our Social SIIVICes Oepartmenr.
Rasponsibiliti8s Include lnpatienl
Hotpilal, Long Term Care Unit,
And Home Health Services.
Qualifltations Include: M.S.W.
From An Approved School, Plus
L.S.W. Oulies Will Include Home
Health Evaluations And Ser~ices.

Oesignalod Holida'y Pay, l 011181' 45658.
BenaliiS. Qualilied Applicant Will EOE
Retelve A Bonut 01 $100 For .:.:..=------,--'---.Approved Full Time Work &amp; $50

For Part Time Wcirk. lnlereated
Patties Should Send Resume To:

P.O. Bo• 214, Chooaptako. OH

LPN J,madiate home health asllgnmenl in PomtrQW" area, ~0 to
30 hours a week, salar~ 1 ben•

800·341-7188 X150B.

•a. AndQue"1,

Etc. Also AppraiMI Customer Service Represanta·

Avllllabtoi814·3J8.2720.
Absolute Top DOllar: All U.S. Sll·
vor An'b' Gold Coinl, Proofstll,
Diamonds, Anli&lt;jUI J-.y, Gold
Ringl, Prt·1830 U.S, Currency,
Slilrling, Ell:. Ac!lulllilionl .to.1ry
· II.T.S. Co~l:J:op, 151 Stcond

"-.Gal'

.

814~:11142.

AntiQUII, lurni&amp;ur•. glall, china.

coins, toyo, tempo, guno, loola,
iollaloa; olao oppraioall. Oabf,
......, 814-fll2·744t.
And&lt;tUH. IDp prlceo peld, Alwr·
tne Anllquoo, PomtrOJ, Olllo,

r.,..,

owner. et:C-882·

.

:::::v·;.n~· ~-ea.,.
.

·M, l'llrHimt Fla•iblo

fi.t11. llu'ylng oal·
1101·

Howl. 2-4

MED.IOENTAL SALES

$500 •$2,eoti!Monlh
ProUt Fram lf!troa To Providera

You Know. No Rlllk No COIL SaY!I

·vaur Provider Conrec1 Big S$.

Modlcal Satea El!P. Roq. 100·297·
2877.
•

~~!:.' T=~o~J~~~~~ -

Taking Applicalion1· AI Dam·

fict Skills Nttdta. Call For An
AppolnlrrW(l~ 814-44&amp;-2284

lno't Plua in rhe GalllpoHt and
~ Areas only i&gt;r: llrlvlfL

Drlvor

OVetbro·ok Center, Middleport,

and lull tlmo LPN
NEW OPERATION
CAADINAL FllliiCIHT
PQiitiono IVIIIebla ~~ 7·3 &amp; 3· \1
WI are t•P8ftdin0 our Ol)ffltion lhlfll. E•ptrlence fl'Oitrred, if in·
In r•ur ereal Need driver&amp; fOf lertstod pleaoe come In end fUI
VAN lfPII!!tlon ...Cion lA) COL, =pllcalion. No pliOM calls,
mln.1Jr OTR t•P &amp; good driving
PIH- v.tiiJ Hosplult II look·
=-~Dep
lng tor 1 Bul4nels Office lla..g....1K
.,, Mu11 H abl• ro direct, 1¥11·
.,.. +CCL ·
Ulll, IUP.«¥ile lnd Coordinate
·acas
Mod. 0en111.• Vllllon
•Loed/Unlood Pay, SIOpll.e,...r all actlvlllts or ~~ bullinolo ol·
flee. Butlnno Admlnlolfa&lt;lon
,.l'id,...tfon
dagiM 01 ....end • mini·
1ldoo Plogrom &amp; IIOIW:J,
mu.m al thrH rear• of euper.
and _,..., ..,_.nl
rMdng ta tt.lth care Itt ,.,
,CifiiiiiJd:-221).:1121
~ Send ,..,. . 1D BIN 111111·
COL (A) a41azlltl ~
or, H20 VdiJ Drive, Pt. I'IMI·
EOE/IIIIf

-r. ':.:.,eo..=-=

Cloon Lilt llodol Cors Or
tHO Matlelo Or

- . peril.

I

be 18yf8. old. Apply a1 Cftlwlord'o
_in:-H:-e_nd-::erso:-:-::n,
':W\l:-=-.==-==
1DIRECTOR .OF
SOCIAL SERV·
I.CES·

Cemetery Sales, every bodv
neodal~ 814-992·7440.
M.D.S. Initial And Follow·UP For
CNA
Long Term Care, And S~perv!s ·
lng 01 The Hoapilal's DeparllllOnl
If you Are A Loca 1 L'1censed . Competitive
Salary And BenefitJ.
c;NA, And Wanl TO Work Flexl· Please Send Rosunie To: Oak H~
b6e Ho,u~ E1ther Full Or ~rt Time Community Medical Center, At·
1 Rece1ve Vef'r Compettllve Sal·
. Brenda UcKenzie 350 ·
arv ,Wa·Have The Job For You. 1en 11on.
- ' ou
we Offer lnsutanct, vacalion, ~harlotte Avenue, Oak H1 11 , /'

\'(Mttd to Buy ' Coa!Miologlall Noodod Full Ani/

~

Blue lltrla Ailawalllln Slltpllerd

..

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
.Regu1llar ............ ................ ,.$85
Flrm .................. .'............... . $95
Exira Arm ........................ $105
Queen Size Sets ... . $295 &amp;Up
King Size Sets ........ $350 &amp; Up
Bunk Mattress .......... $48 &amp; l,lp
Bed Frames ...... $25-$35 • $50
Water Bed Replacement
.Mon. lhru Sat. 9·5 p.m.
3 mites out Butavllle Pike

. eook your
entertainment with
All American
Sound System
Wedding Party or
Wedding Reception
or even Birthdays
FREE Limousine
Service
Call (614) ~67-7177

hal

652 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis
·. 446-4848
Miniature Roses - Clematis
Hybiscus- Ornamental Grass,
. Assorted Perennials &amp;
Annuals Garden Ferns
Opsn 8:30 • 5:00 Mon-Fri

COME CELEBRATE
Nat'l Nursing Home Week

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BOOTS
. All Leather Western Boals
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00 ~
Large Stock
•
Englneer........................$49.00
Wellington ............. ....... ..$49.00
Loggers ... ...................... $S0. 55
Harness ........................ $59.00
Carolina-Georgla·H&amp;H
· Insulated, Safety, Go11ex
SWAIN FURNITURE
' 62 Olive Sl. Gallipolis

WANTED

Mercerville/Hannan Trace
Annual Alumni, Years 1925·1992,
May 24, 1997
Doo.rs open 4 p.m., Dinner 6:30
p.m. Hall(llln Trace Elementary
SchOOl. Reservations: Kaile
Mullins, Sec'y-Treas, 8446 Stste
Roule 7, Soulh, Gallipolis, OH
45631· 614-446·7379 '

Home to buy in

Rio Grande area.
Phone 446-8924
SPRING CLEANING?
Call Captain Steamer
Carpet Cleaner ·
Deodorizlng,.Scolchgardlng,
Free Estimates
. .675-1304
NEEDED: Good equip. operator,
backhoe &amp; dozer. Must have 5
years experience. Pay ..
negotiable. Also need
experienced labor~.
61 4·446·8427 Aller 7 pm

Pet Shop For S.ale
Great Location
Owner retiring soon ·
Serious inquiries only
REMINDER
GAHS Class of 1972
Resarvatlon Money Due
for reunion ASAP
Contact Joy 256-6870

LB. Cantina Mexican

Resta1.1rant
Gallipolis Ferry, WV
Scenic Hills .Nursing Center
MOTHERS DAY
Monday, May 12 at
FIESTA ·
10:00 am
Opening ceremonies
Sunday, May 11
and Balloon launch with . Mom's Meal Half Price
Congressman
Open at 11 a.m;
at

Ted Strick,land '·
. Come join the fun at
Scenic Hills!!
The Public is invited!

(304) 675-7115

CHANNEL MARKER

Monday is ·
"Hat and sunglasses" day

Morgan Center Chrislian
Holiness Church ·
May 14-17, 1997
Preaching by ·
Rev. James (Speedy) Arthur
Singing Nightly
Service Starts.7:30 p.m.
Hofl)ecoming May 18
Lunch al NoonServices at 1:00

CRAFTERS
WANTED
. "Potpourri by the
River" ·
June 7-8
Gallipolis'Cify Park

I

can

446-4199'for details
RACCOON TOWNSHIP
.CLEAN UP DAY
MAY 17, 1997
. If Raccoon township
residents will clean up .
trash along their roads .
and bag it, the Township
Trustees will collect the
bags for disposal. Only
paper, bottles and cans •
· No large.items. If you
have a pick up, ·
please call the
· Trustees or Cleric
Ruth A. Millhone
Raccoon Township Clerk
Phone 245-5820

vi..,

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Gallia County
Gun Club
Sunday, May 18th,
10 a.m. til?
· Turkey Shoot
··Pri:res - All .
•
I
Shotguns Welcome

Condo Rentals
N. ,Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Sleeps 6
$650/Wk
Dates available in months of
May thru September
July 6·12 avail!lble

446-2734
Weekends after 5
446-2206

Spring Home
Improvement Specials!!
•Vinyl siding available in an
assortment of.colors $39.95
(white, b~ige,: yellow, blue,
clay, ivory, pearl)
•20 yr. Owens-Corning
Fiberglass shingles $18.95 ·
square
.
-7/16" OSB Waferboard 4x8
sheet $3.99

Brown's Trustworthy
Hardware
St. At. t 60

Bidwell

. 446-8828
CASHIER NEEDED
Send name, address, phone II, &amp; las!
3 job references to: Help Wanted.
P.O. Box 818, Gallipolis Feny, WV
. 25515 by 5/12/97.
Job ia for 20·36 hours week .
We will conlact you.
ExtermHal Termite &amp; ·Pes! Control
for fast guaranteed service
. For all your pes!

Call446-2801 .

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Paddle Boat
3 Seater $125
Upright Freezer • $95
Fridge· $30
446-0505
SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Salta Mattress
. $59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Recliners
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49,95
La·Z·Boy Recliners
$299.00
4 pe. Bedroom
Suite
$499.00
FLAIR FUf'INITURE

675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry,

WV

SFSTRUCK
PARTS
• Engine machine shop
• Truck repair
• Manufacturers of
Dump beds ·
We make up air &amp;
hydraulic hoses
Located at:

·2150 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh .
(614) 446-0351
LARGE YARD SALE
571 Northup Rd .
Fri, Sat, Mon
Clolhes of all sizes, jeans,
McDonald Toys,
. Movies, Books

The Candle
Company
"we make scents"
SALE at
FR 500 Flea Market
1/3 • 1/2 off All Candles
while they last!
We're not the only
"candle·people" at the
Market anymore--Be sure .
to look for our signs and
, our labels!!

Happy Mother's Day!
GALLIPOLIS CONVENIENT MINI
STORAGt:
109 Flamingo Dr.
Spring Slorage 'Speciai. .. Pay 3
· months and get 4th monlh iree.

446-8592
SOCK HOP
Gallipolis Shrine Club
Friday, May 16, Social 6:00
p.m.
Eat 7:00 p.m ..
Members &amp; Invited Guest
Welcome ·
Dress Casual
DJ • Dance to the oldies ·

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Free Estimales- Quick Service
'I'

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ptrl dme

..,wv-.ANEOE.

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UNIQUE EXPRESSIONS

Sl.

full time auclioneer, complete •5610.
fill dac::uued at interview at Mar1uctlon
Mrwice. llceneed
EOE
Jtlla. Criminal background Jnves·
188.0hlo &amp; Well Virginia, 304· Compu••• Users N:eded. work · ligation raquireG. call Anita at t773-5785 0r304·m·S44 7.
• own hou11. S20k to $50kly&lt; 1· 801H!01·1389 br lnlllf'riow. E.O.E.

alltr llflFtl (814)4'._
Black ntolliY C'- mix puptlloo,
ewt&lt;o old. 304-8l5-78DO beNoon · Au11 Moore
2Slltl.

"

Pleasant Regiotor 200 Main
PI.PleasaniWV 25550.

40

Blacll, 3 Block &amp; Whlio 8
Waeko Old, Malt , Killona To
Good Homo, 81·245-5710.
.

j

Atton~onGallipgis

Oomplelt Houalllotd Or Etllleol Paii·Timt Guorantetd Wagoa
Any Trpo Of Furniture, Applllnt·· l'lliG I'Kalion~ 814-446-7287,

2 Yeor Old Black Lab 1Be1101
Ml•. Nouterod, And snot1: 814·
&lt;148-11118i.
.

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Free Hltlll-432-7378.

90

• ·LI

• 1 ... 1

Cable Connpta Or Kirby, Etc . litillatlon Paraleglll, Degree and
TIMES HAVE CHANGEOI Sm. exp~rience
·•
Sa 11'118 o·11 h11 · • e· s I
preferred, some typ·
te
"re lg el en. ing, Word Perfec:t 6. 0 ~ Microsoft ·
Great Opporlunltv Awaits You In Word and Windows 85 . Send re·
. Salsa IMantOgemenL Call Ron To~ sumo 10 Bo• G- 30 C/o Poinl

Per Min. t.luat Be 11 Vra. Serve·

u. 8111-&amp;15-U34.

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Public Salt
ant' Auction

Single mooing olher singles. l'!t
can holp. For !folllla wrllo DATA·
MATE Dopt. PP P.O. Bo• 1052 ,lemley'a Auction S!!uvice, Laslje
Lemley, Auctioneer. Household,
BalboursviJe, WV 25.504. ,
E1tata, Farm Sales. Phone 814·
WANTED: 71 PEOP~E IERIOUS 388-Q443.
ABOUT WEIGHT LOSS, Eorn
while rou toea. Call Wendy at Rick Pearaon Aucllon ·Compony,

...

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80

Roglllor 200 Main SL P1. Pleas·

.

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Iunday- &amp; Monday- edition1:00pm friday.

danc,lng, looko nol imporl· mower, and rn.~ch more.

ant, Integrity Ia. Photo, ptaone,

• &lt;

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All Yard SaiH Muat Qe Paid In

Advance. Deadline: 1:00pm the
'day betore the ad 11 t.o run,

Retired, llncera", petite, romamic
lady, lonelyu not dctaperale,
•••kl old·fllhioned country Mav 12~ 14. 9am-5P;m. bne mile
gentleman, 60's earlr 70'1, no up SUvet Ridge.Rd. f_rom Eastern
VICII, IOYII home life,. animals. High. Stoves, refrigerator, chest
togelttemeu, flea marktll, rrav: l)'pt froozer, loiS of olclaluH, lawn

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Uiedlybatorelhetd
lolo nm• Sun"....,.
lldhlon ·2:00p.m.

AN NOUNCEMENTS

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NOTE ISSUE
Five fliOn!h old mate ShiiZUI Terri- Wanted To Buy: Standing Timber llrlwlf11
PUBUC
or mli, 614-1192-7488.
Or Vocanl Proper!)' Wllh Timber.
Home Ever~
..PROVEMENT
e14-388-9tl011.
Notice, It hereby given Five p(elly puppltl to good Wanted: IMian Motorcycle Any
Weeki
Home Moll
that on ,J\prll 1, , 997,. the home;814-0.D·2911 : ·
Condllion, Need Nol Run Or Mo·
Weokandal
City Commltlton ol the
Free kl11an1, liner trained, 81'4· tor Scooter, MoiDr Bike 81•-••eol
Oelllpolle,
Ohio
1192-3078. _ _ _ _--:-""7 3373 Ho.238.
Top Pay I Benefits Good Ullee.
paeaed
Ordinance
No. a._,.., , ,~..;.:_..;_
Friendly F11ighl. 85% No Touch
euthorlzlng
etreet F1te To Good Home .1 G,to~t · Wanltd: Used Hardwood Flooring Fralghr, Soma . Drop &amp; Hook,
In
Good
Condilion.
Call
614-245e q u 1p,m 8 n t
. b 0 il d Done &amp; &amp;Iliad Silephord &amp; Lob
401 K. 1 Yoar TIT E•p., CDL·A
5887. .
anticlpetlon notu of the Pupa, 614'2se-1Z40.
Roq. Call Ken 1'800·395·1 045
Wookendo IEvonlnga 1·800-893·
City lor the purpOilt of Freft'Zer &amp; llir c::ondltlaner, nHdt
87112
EMPLOYMENT
peylng pen of the coet of froon. 304-882·2110:l
acquiring etreet atrlplng Fui~Biooclod .FIIllllo Chow, 814·
tlrii'Ofl -Ftalbed
SERVICES
equipment. Such note• are 256-11210.
$1,11110 SIGN-ON BONUS!
NEW Pay Packagol Monthly Bo·
to be In tht prl.nclpal
nus Programl Need CDL·A &amp; 6
tmount of $10,0001 dated • Giveaway: 1 Freo Spay and 1 110 LlAip Wanted
Mos OTR ECKMitler 600-ett ·
""'
ol May ;10, 1997, numbered Free Nautar For Call Or Daga In
Of Bo Kind To Anlrijal
•"' AliA GREETING CARDS ••• 8636 owner Operator&amp; Also Wei·
•• requeated by the Honor
Good Only From May·m.
come.
pure.....,, and In · the Week.
15lh. Send Name, Addrou, Ttfii. Potonlitl, $45K Pari· limo Or
denomination of $10,000: phone Number Jo: Gtllia Co~nl)' · S110K Full Time Servicing Local Earn $1,000 Weekly SlUffing EnSuch notee mlllure on May Animal Welfare League, P.O. Box Stores. No Selling, Accountt ln· velop11 At Home. Start Now. No
...
ct~dod. Your $8,950 lnvoOlmonl E•porjonce. F1te Supplies, Info.
211, 1•, and bear lnteholll 218, GaiiPQ~I. QH 45831.
Socuftd By lfWtnlory. "600·171· No Obllgolion. Send LSASE To:
at a rela not exceeding llx
Male
cat,
10mo1
old,
neuteie·
d
.
3141'
ACE, Dept: 1351, Box 5137, Oia·
per cent (tl%) per annum
7:::::.::--:-:7"-:--'-:--:::-:-:_,_mond.;..:..:.Ba:..:'
·:..:CA.;..:.9_,178-=-75.-:---peyablt' al maturity. The 304·875-3422.
A~ON I All Aroaa 1 Shirley ::lowaat price at which any Ouoen Size llattftll, 814·245- Spoa11, 30&lt;H75-1429.
E•perlonced Hair Sl)'llSI Needeq
For Joann's Kut &amp; Kurl 814·448·
portion ol lhe note·a not 0525.
100 Potn10 01
9496,814-4411-0214.
lllklln by lhe tlnklng fund
lruttftt of the City will be Saara· Automatic: Washe;, 61,4Malta Frlanda For life While Pro- Experienced Roolert &amp; Carpent·
.
ollered lor ule It 100% of 258-1313.
motlng GlObal Harmony. Become ers 3 Years Experience, Musl
the principal emounl ol the
An International Exchange Coor· Have Hand Tools &amp; Transporta not.. , and propoeele to
ainator (IEC) Wilh EF Foundation tion, Call Uike Marcum 814·245purchlo.e euch notee will be Found: Sn\all 8ri&gt;wn Dog, V~lnily: For Foreign Study, A Non-Profil 0437.
eollclted by the city Auditor Clllk Chapel Rood, Call Allar 5 High School Foreign E11changa
·
Organization Dedicated To Fu'r_. Hair St~lisl Wanted Rent Your
in euch manner and from P.M.614-3fl8..0143.
thering Cultural Awtlltnon. HelP OWn Slatton, Or Malol$10 To $15
eueh purchal8rt •• the Loot: ca~ black wilh gray •~lpea. To
Place Student• From Around An Hour, Call Carol King. 814·
ahall 'determine, el)CI eueh Vine Srroel, Middleport viclnlly,
The
Worla ·Wilh. Families In 1•4_441-_119.--22_._. - - - - - notu will be told to the malo, 8t4-ll92·3781.
•, · SoUthefn
fu\d Central Ohio. Work Honie Health Aida needed for
propoae( ., offering to
With ·Exchange St~dents. Ulgh adult cases in Gallipolis area. Pt .
lost
Cellular
Bag
Phone
Vicinity:
pureh..e the notea at the
Schoolo, And HoOI Families. This shlflo available. Plouo Call: 1·
lowtat role . of lnterut S.R. 1aQ Ba-n Ke11 l PollOI, Poalllon II Not Paid, Ellp.,nses 8QO.StS..2213
Please Cal 814-4411-3845 RIIWIIrd Ate Reimburaad, Ttavtl Opporlu· 1 - - - - - - - - - Within IUCh limitation 8t that Ofloredl
nWoa, For Moll lnformanon Con· HOME TYPISTS,
price. The not.. will be
tecl Cathy Brucketl AI 1·800· PC uaara needed . $•5,000 In ·
payable et meturlty at lite 70
_Yard Sale
871·25211 Or 513-874·'7541.
come potential. Call 1-800·513·
principal office of a benk or ===;=~6::::==:#:
34
truat company determined
Gallipolis
Able
Avon
Roprosa~lallvos
.•_
_3_E_Ift~B-::9::388,.,.
· ::·
1
•,
needed.-Earn· money ror Christ·
INTERIOR wooo ·
by the City AudiiOr.
mu bills a1 home/at wor)l. 1-800PRODUCTS
Written quotee m~et be
&amp; Vlclnhy
01 304·882·2845. Ind.
received by 12:00 noon on 3 Family Yard Sale: Friday, M~y 892·8356
E;stimator!Marketing Represent&amp;·.
Monday, May 19, 1997. Bide 9lh, .Sa1Urllay, 10lh, Sunllay .1111, Rap.
live for the lnlerlor Wood Pro·
can ba faxed to 1114·441· And Monday 12lh, 1997, 8:00 Actninistrative
ducts division of an established
2070, mailed or hand A.M. till ? 1 Milo Nollh 01 ,Billing Entry
area company. Qualified indi~id·
delivered lo 518 Second c;heohtfo Ohio, Turn lefl Off Of full lime or pari time.
ual must be experienced 'in the
Avenue, Galllpollt, · OH Rou10 7 To Rouah Lane (Follow • Exciting work doing Invoicing area of wood products maasure45831 to the attention of the Signa).' Antiques, Collectablts, ~~~lentlneome:
.
ments and sales . Candidate
Houseware Items (New &amp; .Used)
lnveetmanl Comml-. ,
•flexible schedule.
must be a self-starter and highiW
l Girls Clolhing And Adu(lf •Knowledge olwindowa helpful.
Deborah L. Hughet Bo)lll
dependable. Salarw phis com·
And Furr¥ture.
'
3:14-675-2734 or eoo.39 s- 881 t .
mission, flexible work schedule:
City Auditor a Clerk of the
a1. Yard S.lH lluat
Send resume with compensatiOn
City Commlulon
Be Paid 1n Adnnce; ,
ATTENTION
hislory 10: 2824 US Rl 35 S.
May 11, ·16, 1997
DEADLINE: 2:00p.m. Former Outside Salaa Reps. Like J-Sc-ulh~Bid:' _ewv
__25~1-87_.-::--~-

.

Advance in warfare
In 1915, Germany buill lhc
Fokkcr, the first plane wilh an inter·
ruptcr mechanism allowing machine·
gun fire between propeller-blade
rotations.

BULLETIN BOARD

mmers Coming

dt~u/siUI.Jy.

201 • . zt2

A CO LUMNED J.'IIONT

inglmellllizina) and sputterina tech·
nology (advanced melalizing),
deposit a layer of metallic particles on
the film, givina it a Riflec~ve coali,ng.
In each case, a second layer of film
protects lhe coating. melalized films
reject heal by reflecting it. by bouncing it back before it can be uansfened
through the glass.
In deposition technology, the film
is drawn· through a lank containing'
metal ingots - usually aluminum or
nickel-chroine, and occasionally,
copper.
.
A vacuum is created by reducing
the pressure in lhe lank. the lank is
then flooded with argon gas and !he
ingots are heated: The heal causes the
metal lo give up particles. which·
migrate to the film's surface. The
density of .the metal deposition is
controlled by the speed of the film
through the chamber.
While deposition technology
works well and is relatively inexpensive, il has ils limits. TQ be effeclive, the melalized coaling must he
fairly thick, as lhe panicles arc comparalively large. Whatlhis ntcans at
a practical level ·is a darker. more
highly mirrored surface. And se&lt;:·
ondly, lhc ·list of metals !hal can be
deposited evenly is fairly shorl.
which means fewer product options.
· Spuucring technology is more
COI!Iplicated. Spuuering is also done
in a vacuum chamber. bu11hc metalizing is achieved al the atomic level.
In brief, electromagnetic fields direct
streams of ions, from a chemically
inert gas- usually argon- toward
the metal . This ion bombardment,·
which is often described as "atomic
billiards" cause~ groups of atoms 10
dislodge in small bursts and scaucr
uniformly across !he film.
The practical bencfiiS of spuner·
ing arc !hat 25 10 30 different metals

SUN.DAY PUZZLER

esign C-52 has a l'umlly

three ht"dnwm,lii, lwo
rull bltths and a utility room , lntnl·
ing 1,869 squar~ re~l or living
~pin·e. This plan indudes a slah
foundation and 2•4 exterior wall

,

.

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Splclel , . . _
· Most homeowners are fiiRiliar
with me benefits. or window film to
control sunlight, but few know the
technical story behind this product
. All window films slart with the
film, of course, which is always poly·
.. ester, 2 10 7 ntillimelers thick. Quite
often, several thin layers or film are
bonded together. One side is coated
with either a pressure-sensitive or
water-activated adhesive. The
e•pdsed surfaces of ntosl films are
Olso lreated with a hard, scralch·resis·
lanl coaling.
To filter out ullraviolel radiation,
chemical UV blockers ~re incorporated. If the film 's only purpose is to
provide UV protection and shatter
resistance. no other ma1erials need to
be added.
From there, three separate tech·
nologies are ,applied 10 achieve dif·
ferent performance "characlerislics.
The ·first is simply a dye, which
absorbs ·heat. Because most films are
, applied 10 the inside surfaces of win·
. dows. il's easy to imagine !hal the
·absorbed heal would disperse
indoors. In facl. the heat rejecle&lt;!, by
the film isstored largely i~ttbe glass.
and is drawn away by external air
movFrnenl.
A tiny percentage docs bleed
inward. but because the average
speed of external air movement is so
much greater- the daily average is
15 miles per hour versus a half-mile
per hour indoors- the ratio is 30-toI or bcuer in favor of outdoor heal
dissipation.
Because double-glazed windows
don't allow air movement between
pains, interior dyed films should not
be used on thermal glass.
The second two processes, called
dcpo~ition technology (vacuum coat·

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

HoiJer ~linic lab receives accreditation

The techniques behind window ' film

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - J

Sunct.y, May 11, 1887

Sunday, May 11' 1187

,,

Call446·2342 or 992·2156
FOR MORE INFORMATION

I

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'Sunday, ...,. 11, 1917

Sunday, u.y 11,1117

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

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ott • Point Pleaaant, WY

•
110 Help Wentecl
• Paa!ll :.0.. 3 Paaltlono Available. No Exporionco Hacoooary,•
Forln.....,.don, Call 1·118·780·
I011EliU013.

110 Wtnted To Do
24 Hour ~ Homo Caro For E-·
lr Or Handicapped, 814·441·
c":.:».:.~;_________

-

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I'IUPfiMt.WP "I

Jockoon o-.1 Haopltal, Riploy, WV 21271 hat on oponlne
. lor 1 FT Staff "'-mociaL Campod d. . 11l1ty a benolll pack-

., •o•
Prevloua
experlenca pret.rred. Submit resume
hoa~llal

to· PO Box 720, Rlploy. WV
25271 or COlli 304-3n-2131 txt
• 314 fat .. oppllclllon. EOE. •

INAt1CIAl

210

Business
OpportunHy
INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that wou do bus•·
nan wnh people you know, and

NOT to send money through the
mall unt1l you have Investigated
1l1o offo&lt;lng.

, Wonted: ill "*&gt;ppo LaM 18 -25
Pounda In Ttt. Next 30 Daya
Natural, Gullarll•ocll 1·800-880· Drastically Reduced Ohio River
, 22115.
Campground, 11 Ac;res, Brick

Building Wllh Apanmen11 &amp;

•WANTED: Aaalotant Director ot Rooms, 24 Hook-Ups, Flood
Nuralng lor 138 long ttrm care Damago. Will F1nance 175.000,
~ unit. AppUc•nta muat po1111 814·HG·2528
BlcMiort Dogiee or e~~driCIIUon
' aa gerontoklgical nutae. Please 230
Professional
l retpond b¥ $120117 tot Donna
Services
Northup, DON, Lakin Hospital,
304·875-01110,
12• Lakin HARTS MASONARY · Block.
Hospo!lll II an EEO """""""
bn~k &amp; atone work, 30 years ex
perlence, reaso nable rates 30•wanted To
8PS·35~1 alter 6 OOpm. no job to

/rltltlolttll /rlurslltg Ho1tte Week.
9t's time to visit an ola fr1enct or to
make a new one in a nursmg home.
Ove,.,I'OM e..... f!ellter jn
Mlctctleport. Ohio Wllll?e hosting a
Health ]air on ]riclay. May 16th anct
woulclltke anyone interestect m
helping With the fair or volunteering for
other activtties to gwe them a call at
614-992-6ti12.
'Ihat's Overbrook Care Center. at 333
Page Street m Mihctteport
1

·special Care ]or People Who 1'/re Spec1al to fdou •

••1.

·1ao

oo

9n M emory of
'M omm'J·

amall or to BKl WV-021206

ANY ODD JOBS: E•IOnor patnt·
shrubs &amp; weeda tnmmed l1vlngtton'1 basement warer·
~ landocaplng, aldewolka edged: proofing. all basement repalfl
free est•ma[eB, lifetime
r lawn cora, etc. Call Bill 304-675- dona,
guarantee 10yrs on job experl·
r 1112.

; mo.
I"

enca 304-675-2145.

'

care In my home, rolerenc~ Ol Mrtable, 814-11112-6842.
~ Child

REAL ESTATE

u Eliporienc~ carpentry and remo-

pdallno

Inside and ou1s1de,
: deeka, ¥1nyl aJdlt'l(l, add-on add!·
r tlone, cab1nar refacing or newly
... rebuilt References-Free Eall ·

: -:ma_r_eL_Jim-::-Sh_u~II:-:304--:8-7S-_t2_7_2.__.:_

... Georgaa Portable Sawmill, don't
~ haul your loga to dla ~U juarcall
.. 304-675--1957

310 Homes for Sale
1972 Moblle Home 2 Bedrooms,
Gas Furnace, Remodeled, $5,500
OPTION, lOI Ava1lable To Rent.
Cheshlfe, 614 367..0415
2 Bedroom Cottage 1 Ac:re On
River AI Rac1ne Has All Ap ·
pl1ances $30 000 W11l Fmance,

:, _
=LII'_
M'1:..:...:.:.;cara:...:.:,..:8..:14-446---3-103.___
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 81.·949·2526
· Professional TrM ServiCe, SlUmp
.. Removal, Free Eat1mateal In·
; auranc:e, Bidwell, Ohio 61-'·388·
~ 9&amp;48, 814.o387·1010.

·=~-:-~---,..-• W1ll Do Landscapmg &amp; Grass
: Mowing, Very Reasonable Call

' 304-875-1 115
1: W1ll haul junk or trash away $351

I,---------2 Bedroom !I, 2 Bath House, On

central a1r, partial buement
Priced to SeUI304-882 3772

L1ke To Watch Your
Far Summar, Galhpahs, tenance Free loca[ed
"Good References, Nece Vard, Tawnsh1p 814-446-&lt;1792.

... Would

~ Chlld(ol

Add1son

~ 614 448.{)605

~ Would like To Watch An Older

~,.

..
~
t

~~

~
~

•

BINGO
POST 467
MON. &amp;WED.

6:30P.M.

Homes New or used

j)U~chi&gt;.es: Ael1nanc1ng. B&gt;ll con-

solidauon,l.Bnd contracts. No
application !ae All ~19 ol credit
Celtoday Jor a free anal)'s1sl •

800-129·, 4021814-592·4006

Beautiful three bedroom 2 112
bath log home for sale, large hv·
lng room. cutt kitchen, full rmlahed basement exquisite wood·
work, lol:t, large whirlpool tub, skyIIQhl, heat pump, C.A, satellite,

2252 sqoateleet, 177.000 OBO.

814 742 2561

Beautiful three bedroom 2 H2
balh log home lor sale, large l1v
mg room, cust kitchen, full fin·
1ahed basement. e~~;qunute wood
WOtk, loll, latge wh11lpool rub, sl&lt;y

'· STAR BURST

light, heat pump, CA. satelhle,
2252 square feet, $77,000 OBO,
814 742 2561.

$1500.00
$50.00 or more

For sate, 1 bedroom home '" Pomeroy, w111 sell on land contract,

per g1111e

814 992 585a

and 1/2 baths, LA, DR, family
room, oak kitchen, new c:arpet full
basement, electrtc furnace/heat
pump, 1wo car g~ra~e (28.~~:32)
one and 114 acres. nice, 614·992·

5175
The famtly of uc1ram
, Dtll Hook wtshes to
express our deepest
gratitude to our fnends,
family and netghbors
for therr prayers, phone
calls, cards, flowers,
food, and comfortmg
words expressed to us
after the loss of our
husband and father
We would hke to
thank the nurses &amp;
doctors at Holzer
Medical Center who
provtded
such
compasstonate care
during his last days. We
would like to thank the
Mason YFW and
Racine
American
Legion
for thetr
military salute A
special thanks to James
Acree and everyone at
ftsher 's funeal Home
for their devoted
excellent care' Most
especially, our thanks
to father Walter Heinz
and everyone from the
Sacred Heart Cathohc
Church who comforted
us m our mourmng
Words wtll never show
how
we
deeply
appreciate everything!
May God bless you all!
Irene, Jerrena,
De Wayne, Lee &amp;

In Jtttmory of our
"Sranny ·
Jt11ldred l'trgm10 'lVIII
On Jttotliers 'Day
II s bun ont ytar a9a

iotloy
Sotliao~ )'&lt;'U

by tlie liand

'To JOin li15liost of angels
'To ln1t m liravms land
!:fltliougli '" m155 you

grratly
'lCJrtfi patience WI! wrll wmt
/'for t6t day wt re reumted
'By lfie .C..ni allieavtns

9atr
Sadly ml5sed by '!'a,
'Bud and coo~tt

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homes

Syracuse- three bedroom, one

Card of Thanks

"Auntte"
September 17, /926May 11, 1995
The W&lt;&gt;rld ha1 to. t II
warm and lovins
penon 1vho made a
specoal difference
every day, yet aU tho.e
seed• of love so gently
planted leave blo..amo
that wall never fade
away.
Sadly mis~~ed b
Hu•band, Jamaly &amp;
frilmd..

For Pennies On S1 Dellnquem
Tu Repo'a, REO s Your Area

H 2814 For Current Usungs

'

Vytice M. SeUers

In .Memory of
Jl'tt111 9nmm
on .Motlitr5 'Day' ,
'Wt ~ow tt5fiard at rfi'!
Nme of year to be wtfiout,
a motlier we mm and
lovt so dear a :Motlier5
lovt cannot be rtplaced
J-fer memones and low
IS our lasting embrace
youw 1lied many a tear
and liearlaclirs for us
your liearl re1gns ofgold,
yeor after yrar
'Rtmembu you are
always, /lit motlirr we
liold dear J-fappy
.Motlier5 'Day 10
Jrfotfier of the yrar'
Loved 6- mtsstd· 'By
clitldren, grandc!i.ldren
&amp; great grandchildren

.

Toll Ftee (1) 800·2t8-9000 Ext.

. BEECH GROVE
ROAD
•'

On M other s Da11
Dear Sweet M omm!J
How we wrsh !JO" were
here to love f10" to
holtl !JO"
'Co fill LJO" wrth cheer
!Jut we know'!"'-' re m
Heaven
Smli1nq dow11 from
abOve
No pam and 110 sorrow
OniLJ feeltl'lqs of love
Sadi'J mrssetl b!J Pa.
!'Jucl &amp;111d f10Ur 'SISS!J"

3 Bedroom house 1n New Haven,

Bedroom Ranch Style Home
,. '::-:--:--:-::----~:::-~~ 3With
Garage &amp; Barn MBIR·

• The Crown City Or Galllpolla
.·Am. 814-256-1035.
•
ANNOUNC EMENTS

lfltfll """" o-...

1D Acral located At Sowards
R1dge Road. Crown CUy Available
To Buy June 1st, lnquines Call
814-256-1559

·. plclcup load. 304-875-5035.

:Person Each Day At Needed In

In Memory

In Memory

In Memory

In Lat&lt;n!J :Memory of
my mothrr
'-&lt;'ona 'I.Mn
It &gt;ban str (6) long
1110TIIfi:t lUift yol/ II'L'lll

amry and I nus, you so
bmll)•bn Afolh&lt;•rs dll)'
I 1014' you
'Daughl&lt;'r
)\'omy .Afoul£-v
'

.

eleoenlb
9t Sa!ms tiS lhougb
juJf yesferdt~y
tDe said our It~
leo&lt;-xlbifG, eoen !bough
had no idetJ if tzJOuld
the last lime lht~f
lm,o;Id see you smile,
your ht~nd in
lo fell you hotD mucb I
looe you
']jou tDere my lifo
tDere 'my
9totD hDrd ff IS
I ba/W fo /10 through
ltDit,bout yoo ']jou
proud of me.
thouah 9 did
"''•MI DccomplfshmMfs.
you tDere DI11.1D.IJ·SI
of your
lanmdc:hiiGfren Dnd
proud lo bt~oe
lbefr art~ndmother
holD tDfl looe you.
my moi/)Qr
I CbllnCfl 9¥1!J hflst frl~na1
choke!
/Dil!V

May 8, I
March 23, 1990
Mother's Day IS a
special time
That ftlls our he-rts wtth
Prarse
for we thank Ood so
much for you and all
your loving ways .
Sadly missed children,
Grandchildren, great
grandchildren &amp; friends
Mother's day

CJrlommy tzJ/)qn ""' IIX!rQ
!JO'{ng ""' dldn I knOtzJ
hotzJ Dflf!J. ""'!J lucky ""'
""'"' lo baoo JtJch a
loving caring moiiMr
"7J.J~ didfl I folly
appr•CJal~ liM a;/Jdom
/JQhtnd your 11XJTds, afld
JIM looe behindyour
ac/lons "7J.Je look II for
granl•d !hal you ""'"'
a/a;ays l!x.TYJ for us 9/nd
tD&lt;I dtdn leoon slop lo
lhink you mlghl be pulling
your oa;n drrJams on hold
lo mak• JtJrelhal ours
camelrw 'Buleoon
!hough""' dldn 'l
comprrJIMnd liM d•pih of
your deoolloo ""' loood
you tD!Ih a childltkelooo
Dndyou TJ)Qr• iho c•nlor
ofOIIT axJTid 'lind /IX!
tzJDnl you lo knorD
mommy ihtJI a;/lh •oo'!J
~tJr our looo for !JOI!
, k~J grotzJmg tJJ ""'
undersland morrJ folly and
compleMy a;bal a
1D011derfol molhor and
friend you IIX!r•
oadly miJJ«i by !J.Oii'

310 ttomH fOr-Slit
... r•• af1lid rfiM b&amp;lOOIT\

ono ond 1J2 bUI homo In . . _ .

pori. ,, • 1182 ........ !pn.

320 lloblll Homes
for Sell

~ ,.., -

edllll1i&amp;lng In
lt1la ,. · - .. IUiljoct to
. . F - F1lr Hoo11W10 Ad
ol 111118
t o - "'liY pnllo.......
-lion ordloc&lt;illlllllon
bUed on race, cdot. rt11g1on,
•• ..,...latarul or rw.donlll
origin. or any IIUnllon 10
meke any 8UOh prolerence.
limitation Of d/lollmlnallon •

Ux70 thrH bedroom, one bath,
1H5 Skyline, on reniH lot, new

which-......

heat pump. 117.500. 114·182·

31181.

1g74 Schultz 80•10 With 1.52

Arn,l14-3711-211~

11111 Skyline Sa bit 14xn 31&gt;r, 2
bath, large liVIng room. laland
klachtn, halt pump, porch, own10x12 building, axe cand 30~ ·

875-SUI or loave

lllla newspaper wll not
knowllngly accept

mo-.

Green Thumb, Inc. a Senior community Service
Employment Program is now looking for
workers to fill positions. On-the-Job Training is
available if needed or assistance with Job Search
Training. You can earn income and develop new
skills or tune up the old ones while in the
workplace. You must be 55 years of age and
qualify with regards to income. If you are
interested in more information please contact
Field Operations Coordinator, Mary Anderson at
the regional office, 614-286·6242 or State Office
toll free 1-800-338-7032.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Public Sale &amp; Auction

Consignment Auction
Saturday, May 17, 1997
9am
Located on Sr. 124 In Portland,

Ohio
DAN SMITH· AUCTIONEER
Ohio #1344
Cash, ositive ID &amp; refreshments.

The Auction Barn will
reopen Saturday, May
24th &amp; will be accepting
• consignments at Noon.
Tile Patriot Auctl~n Bllrn
will then be open eve.-,
Satu~

at 7 p.m.

Marlin Wedem.eyer,
Auctioneer. Uo. 381&amp;

814-378-2720

'

Ohio
Mldd.'-rt,
._,
Satunley, May 17th, 1H7
10.a.m. to •'" p.m.
Artll and cran. by ANa Craftsmen

:r.o70

Uooo

par

;l!WIIIablo to help you purchooe a
roplacom•nl home Call 1·800·
·488-7871 to tot appointment lor

Appalochian Los
Structure• hat been •
leader in the Ius home
andqatry for over 15
yean. Choutc from over
70 lto,.dard mmtcls ur

FACTORY DIRECT.

,
NO~~~~
•,Oakwood Homn •Ia the only
;t!eat•r In tho lrl·otato lfta tho!

••II•

~omea For
a.ullda
andfactory direct
theirprices,
own

for you.

P 0 AKWOOD Ho uEs. Nt-

Overbrook Center ~ 992-6472

between 9-4 M·f

li~~~:i~;;;;;;=s:;;=:;;;;;;;.~~::!,

,WY,304-7S5-58115.
.Firer Time :.::r,•11·Eooy Finane·
~I 2 I 3
room around 1200
,por month Freo dallvory &amp; oat·
,up. Westwood H011101 t-800.251-

Call or write for mort!
infuriDalinn.

Appalachian Log

,5070.

(trs BIG 1907 4BR, 2BATH
•DOUBLEWIDE.
s ,049 DOWN,
•,s3181110. FREE 1DELIVERY
&amp;
•·y
•?
O'KWOOD
ON
'SETUP
• "' "
!HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304· 755·

Structures, Inc. ·

Dept. GDT,

P.O.

Free Table Space Available
For More Information
_........ Mike Crites at
PI..H ,CVII
. . . .,
,

:dltalll.

we'll cuStom design nne

Box614

;saas. Urrited Otfer

• Lart~• aaloc1lon 01 uaed homo. 2
•
i'!' 3 bediOOtlll. S!llrtlng at $3405.
;Oulck dollvary. Call 1·800-837132311 •

Ripley, WV 25271

l-800458-9990

Umited Offerl1997 doublewado,
3br, 2bath, '1798 down, $278/
month. Free dehvary I aetup
~Only at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
WY. 304-755-5885.

Public Sale &amp; Auction

~

PUBLIC
AUCTION

New 1gU714x70 three bedroom,
lncludea 6 months FREE lot rent.
Only t181.88 per month with

S1050 down. Call 1·800·837·
,32311
;Now Bonk Repo'ol Only 3 left,
owner t'"an,lng available. 304·

755-7181.
'Ono 2 Bedroom Mobile Home

&amp;

One 3 Bedroom Mob1l1 Home,

•Flood Oamag~ $1,000 Each,
814·941-2528
•Own ya.. own homo nowlll Brand
·new HUD ~ homo• ready
far lnatant dalhlory. Trade-In wet·
:come. Your choice: 2BR, $850
, down. only '1 7Simo. 3BR $1,050
•down, only '190/tno •uoneter
Size Spacial' 18x80·Youro for
:only 11,450 dawn $235imo. All

. homellnc;luda delivery and 181·
• up. 1·5yr warranty, 1~r. of home' owners 1n1urance pald In full
: Plut If you call nt'IN, your choice
, of free 1k1rllng or 8/mo free lot
, tent 0 park of your choice No
application refused II Phone In
; your free application for pre-ap.

, proval lXI (8081473-8813. II' no an·

, awar leave name and number on
l machlno

i$PRUCE RIDGE, 1992, MUST
' SELL I Excellent condition, two
bedroom, one bath, canual air,
waaherldryer, cathedral

1

~ deck,

coiling, aet up 01 Spnoodlng Oaka.
'$12,500. 814·582-33111.

.330

Farms for sale
'1337~4 Long Run Rd , Long Balylom, OhiO· three bedroom, one
&lt;balh home, two car garage, barn.
~ 58 wooded acroo CaH Ran Polsky

,. lor plat al OhM&gt; Valley Rill!)', The
Plains, 814-797-2021.
•37987 Vance Rd. Melgo County·
:rour bedroom, two ba1h houM Willi

.

_10 acres or up to 150 ac:re1.

·OWnor wolllntJID land contnlct Call
'John, Ohio Valley Realty, The
: Plair11, 8 t 4-797-202 1

, :340 Business and
Buildings
.land and Bulldeng Crawford's
"Grocery, Henderaon WV. Priced
\On Jntpeclion c_.,ll 3Q.t·875·5C04
,llf304·875-1408
.·:, ~ Lots &amp; Acreage

35

•(OWN 'YOUR OWN LAKEI
:43 2tl Acres Excellent For Build.lng, Hunting, F11hing, Camping,

•Approx 10 Acre Sprln~ F~ Lako
·With Island ... County Water,

-~~lecrrlc On Black Top Road 3

-.Bedrooms, 2 112 Both Mabile
iHome With Add-On 10 Mlloo To

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

440

Auction Conducted by
Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Owner: Becky Bowen
Residence: 304 773-5785 or
AuctiOn Center 304·773·5447
Terms· Cash or Check wilD
Not Responsible For Acc1den1S or Loss of Property

ESTATE-SALE The Estate of Samuel Zeigler who restded at 40705
Park Road Shade, Oh1o (COunty Mobile Home Paris),
and Passell away Sept. 30, 1996 wtll be Auctioned at
the Howery Auction House Monday aven1ng 5\12\97,
at 7:00p.m.
Due to short notice the trailer will be open to
inspection at 40705 Park Rd (County Mobile Home
Park) Monday afternoon from 2:00 • 6:00: The Actual
Blddmg for the tra1ler will take place at the AuctiOn
house dunng Eslate Auction.
•
ITEMS TO BE AUCTIONED
TRAILER· 1972 Llberly Caravan House Tra1ler
(12x60), 2 bedroom completely restored wtth new
wtr1ng, new Miller Brand f~.trnace Installed 5112/96,
Trane Central Air Cond, underpinning, Porch, Awning,
&amp;; 1Ox12 wood outbuilding to go wtth tratler (ALL
EXTREMELY NICEJ.
AUTOMOBILE
1990 Oldsmobile Eighty-Eighty Royal 4 Or. Sedan,
Extremely nice with complete Power, Air Cond &amp;
Works. Car has 101 ,642 Miles but kept Extremely
Clean with 1ov1ng care. Burgandy color, new tires.
JUST GREAT CAR.
COMPLETE CONTENTS
. RCA Color TV., GibsOn upr1ght freezar.I/Yillrlp601
Ref, Hardwick gas range, love aaat malcflft1g chair,
matching coffee table &amp; end tables, small kenmore
washer • dryer, recliner chatr, round oak pedestal
table, 4 bentwood chairs, 2 hollywood bedframes
:wlfoundalion &amp; mattresses, 2 1 drawer chests, cedar
chest, night stand, lamps, sweeper, pots &amp; Pans,
llnene, etc.
Misc. Toole from out building Including push
lawnmower, ladder, grinder, garden tools, viae, ftllhlng
equipment, and more. Also 2 guns - one New
England 410 Pardner Shot Gun &amp; other 22 Hawea
Fire Anna Western MarWII Plato!.
Come early to view Auto and COUIWIIII
PLENTY f1AAKJNG
REFRE$HMENTS
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W\POSITIVE J.D.
ATTORNEY: CARSON CROW, CASE 128818

EXECUTOR: DEBORA TAYLOR

Information
., .
Call a.7231 or 1-800-264-6390
For More

I

~or

elm era, 11• momhs old, cost

Orentrl, Couches Tabla /Floor
Lamps, Rackals, Burll Bed, Book·
casaa, Collectables, Much Morel

814·448·4782 Hrs 10-&lt;1 We Buy
;U;:Md::;_;F.:;u:;;r~:.::"':;;'":::..-----1
520
Sporting
Goods

pllancea furmshed, laundry room
tacilldes, close to sc:hool 111 town.
Applicaliona available at· V1Uage
3711 EOH

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

LAND CONTRACTS!

l;

Call tor FREE mapa &amp; datallsl
_ANTHONY LAND CO., LTD

Rolo T1ller. Troy bllt, pony model,
good condition, $450 f1rm, 814·

1-800-213-8365

11112-3548
RoiOtJHar for sale, W1zard reartin'l&amp;

AOHA 85 Gelding With A CAll
DO ATTITUDE . Quiet &amp; lla..•

j"
J

Tra11 Rldtl A PltiiUtt, ShOWn
f
Sutcesafully Would MaU Nice
4 H Horao, IS Sorrot Willi F Liane I T1al, $2,100 080, .,_.. ..

1

....---___:_---....,

Sofa Bed Oi1ve Greon With Burgundy &amp; Blue Cover S250, 614·
446-0957,814-446-8423

SPRING SPECIAL: Central Atr

condllioners· 2 Tan $1,195 2 112

Ton ,1,285, 3 Ton $1,395, 3 112
Tan 11.595; 4 Ton 11.895. P11ces
Above Include Normal lnstalla·
tlon. Full 5 Year Warranty ~u You

Buy or sell Rivenne Annques,

Storm Windows, Windows, W1nd·
ow Awning&amp;, Before 9 P.U 614·

am to 800 pm, Sunday 100 to 446·4838
8 00 p m e t 4-992·2528. Russ
WOLFFTANNING BEDS
Moore owner
Tan AI Homo
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl
540 Miscellaneous
ConmarciaiiHome Urnts From
$199 00
Me~handlse
Low Monthly PaymeniS FREE
Color CatalOg Call TODAY
t Sears Riding Lawn Mower 38
1·800·711·0158.
Inch Cut, 1 Tabletop Singer Sew·

1ng Machine, 1 Cabinet Top Late
Model W1th Saw1ng Machine,
Good Shape, Oresur, 7 Drawer
Wl1h 81g Muror, All Woo.!f, Call

&amp;

814-446-3794.

12 Horu PDwer, Wheal Haru.
Work Horst, Runs Good '400,
814·24!!'&gt;-Q851 Ahar 5~M

18 bushel compost rumbler, used
only once, lna1rucdona Included,

$345, 814-HG·2t79

1~72 Lima Truck C11no 145,000;
1gee Hara Plio llr~&gt;lng Hemmer
S32,000i 1172 Grader $7,200;
1~~~ Cat 553 Rollor, Doublo
l)rum 48 lndl ShMpS Foot Rollor
13,300; 1182 GMC Fuel Ttuck
12. 750; Two John Doere A's
12.200, $1 ,400, Two Olllco Trtll·
ora ,4,&amp;00, 12,500: M1oc. Sleet
Batmo From 12 Ft To 57 FL 814·
843-2300, 814-843-2818, 014·

menta, in ~iddteport, ale,
equipped kltchonL ro-co, doliDtt. one Diu• acre. No rtltrlc· po11t requited, phone 81AI·SISI2·

lwl! Rd. llliga COUrtlY· buNdlng

7833 oltlr epm
Nice 1 Bedroom Unlurnllhod Reo
~~
lrlgonotor, s-, Gao Hoe~ ~-~
Ytud EaoltiJ1 A.. nuo, U751Ma.,
1250 ~~ 2 Rolt1IIICOI. 814.
Nice twe bedroom aportmonl .,
- · UIIO .-rth pluo utilltlol
and dapoal~ ... 814-8112- •

1;-=---...,----

••

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprises,

Jackson, Oho, 1·800·537-9528

1124 E. Mam Sueet on Rt. 124,

•duced To 124,000 Green quloed, 814-4-411-t518.
;Sc:I&gt;Oola. County Wattr, Friend!~ Furnlllhld AperD11Ant 1 Bedroom,
rAidgo, PriniO 10 .a
5 Acreo ,7,500, 8.5.18,000.
Acroo 8311 So&lt;ond Avenue, Galllpoho,
48,000. Groen Schoola, county S21151Ma, Uulmes Paid. 814 448'Woter T..na Run lld , • (3) 10 t3=8:.;4.::4·.:.;A;;:IIer;;.;.7.:.;~.:.M;_...;.._ __
.,.,. Pon:oia. ,10,000 +.
,
GIICIOUI ltVIMQ. 1 and 2 bedroom
opartmtntl at Village Manor and
llolto Co.: Noor Attt.na Co Rlnrstda Aporunento In Mukllo·
Jlordor • Romott 10 Acroo port From '238 11304 . Col 814·
11,000. Only $1,000 Down+ $108 992·5064. Equal Hou11ng Oppor·
A llo. Aloo, In Sarno Alee, Nice tunitiOL
Homo &amp;Ito On 5 Acr11 17,500.
('e- Sct.lo.
In Point Pleasant; Unfurnished,
Spocloul 8 Plua Rooms, Rolor•
C41t Todar For ' ' " "apa &amp; en" &amp; Deposit, 8H· 448~041,
iiWnar Flnohofng Into. To.. I~ Alllr8 ~~~
1!11
Uotad Prlcoo On Coah Pur·
.....,
Modern 2 &amp; 3 bedroom oparl·

+117-11121.

10% clown

Barbie 304-875-4941.

for Both. 614 446 1724

Pomeroy Hours M T W 1 DOD

::0~~ Futntlhed 3 Rooms Bath, No
•cat ••e.ooo or 22 Ac••• R•· Pel' Reference And Depolll Ro·

. . . . -.-·1
e•s.-.

lilt of counties. lt'a Eaay with

Don't Call Ua We Both Losel'
Freo Estlmate\1 Add On ~eat
8x10 tent and separate screeneq. Pumps Only SIIQhly H1gher. Call
room, 150 FIRM, 614 992 5053
Us Today 1997 Is The Twenty
Seventh Year In The Heat1ng &amp;
530
Antiques
Cooling Bu11nassl 614-446-6306,
1053 Chrysler 4 Door And 1986 I -i00-2111.0098
Lmcoln Continental 4 Doors, Bplh STORAGE TANKS 3.000 Gallon
Very Restorable Pnca $2,200

Green Apta. 140 or call 614·11112·

Downtown Gallipolis. Modern 1
Bedroom, All Electrac, Carpeted,
Compte!&amp; K•tchan. Electric Heat 1
Air Coodno,.ro. 814-446-43fl3,Furnished 1 Bedroom, 1 1/2
Baths, All Uulltleo Potd E•capt
Electric P11vate Parking Cloao To
Grocery, 814 446-2802.

.,._ 11111 et.ctrlc
Aaklng
Coli
Ollie Yaaey ..-airy, Tilt

·.Ohio, Kentucky, &amp; Indiana, call for current

upo~~a.

$2000. 181111500• 614 992 3981
Used Furniture 130 Bula'f'dle P•ke,

.Attn Huntora 1 Fishermen. 15
'Berea rolleng hills ~ wooded ar)u l pond. 1Smtn from Hotze,,
~lqae to Vinton oroa. Beautiful,
tlf,000.30H75-l'8011.
BRUNER LAND
814.775-ll73

AtoM, llefgo Ceunty- tl

Jackson, Rou, Plkt, ~thena, Melga, Eastern

I

Equal Hou•'"ll Opportun•IJ
Baech Sl. Mrddleport 2br lut·
noshed ap~ ubh1.,. pa1d. depaall
a reloronceL 304-8112-2568

..... mobile homea ..Icome.
end eloclrlc on toiL Ap...... lol aepdc, 110,000. Colt
Ohio VaHey Realty, Tho
...... 114-1t1'·2021.

1111.

~

c &gt;llt4-~574
-5 Acrea m11 Rayburn Rd No aln"Ia wkfe -l~a. Call 304·875".7853.
··•

.,_*
Jolon.

.4

----------1

Sale c;&gt;r Trade. 40 acrea 5 ESTATES, 62 Westwood Dreve
'7.,.1111 From Gallipolis, on State from 1280 to $334 Walk to ahop
~outo 218. WMI Sell All or Par1o I mov101 Call au 448 2588

::=~~~~,:!,~:~~~·;~

2412. Or uoo

Runs Looks Groatl $3,250. Or
Wt"'ed tO .....
620
Bast Ottr, 814-388-9327
•..
-·

1

2~s-51158

8 Acree Georges Creek Area,

5 FL Buah Hog,

REALTORS:

....,., 1 295 acres In Bodford Town· 1:....:....:=:.....---"------ ship, pnce $a000, call 814·742· 2bdrm apt&amp;, lOlBI alectnc, ap·
«

'¥,

Lota lrom 3 acrti/Up, ltlrtlng .t $5,000 In

Ju-

446-1066

tbath, cable, citr water, out build- 2 Bedroom Apartment, AdJacent
304-570·25-'1 . $27,000 To Umvarslty Of A1o Grande
Campus. Available 6/1/97 614·

"
Altere P.M 814-448·7188.
:'J~ lots Available, Rudner 11
wlf5,000 Eadl, Make Oiler On All
. Four.814-245-5928Affo&lt;5P.M

IC-

..
,..m. $50 FIRM, 8t4-11112-so53.
Baby bod, high choir, cor soot,
aiiOIItf &amp;owln~ 3044175-4548.
Bantam 3 Flohln~ Boac, Sot Ot
Golf Clubs, 814-448·712:1
Boots
Rodwtng, Chlppowo,
Rocky, onr Lama Guaranteed
Lowell Prices At Shoe Cole, Gal·

Ford 800

CALLUS

Bull! Hot .,._ For:

Wood Realty,

;~_!1g~

""13508 ahar Spm.

••IO tont and _

Baoa, Galtla County, 814·448·

0825.

Hun11ng R.ti'Ntll,

Your -

ilades. BIDtleu. C'"'*' Flnlali
Mow.,•. LoaMtl, EIC. II CAt·
michool'o Farm &amp; '--· •to-

=24=~=a=h=~=4=pm============~3:7:~:~:32.::::::::::::::~.:

)."blo 1135.000, 014-3811-8678
Pets, Depa111 ReqUII~. HUD "P·
~:!:t 35 Acru 24x65 trallor ~br, 2 pr!lved. 614-446-Jl358

,,;ceo

Apartments

4" hHvy co"ugoted plpo, lOOft.
roll, 121.1111. PAINT PLUS HAROWARE.3044175-a4.
5Pc. Sold wt&gt;ad Dlnotlta s.. l!iO;
2 End Tabloi aso. sttrao sot 1
~ht SPilker. S35, 814-448·

For ltlle; 173 Lbl Tobacco

bllor, 5 hp., ulld wry h111o, belind
- ' - - - - - - - - - - 560 Pets for Sale
Rutland Furniture. call 614· 742·
560
Pets
for
Sate
lor Rent
BOTTLED WILL POWERI LOSE
1 AC a 2 AC loto tor sale In _ _ _...:,;;.;.,,;,;.;,;;.;_ _ _ 1 up to 30 pounds. 30 DAY MON·
AKC Golden Ratmtver Puppies, Rayistered H~n\alavan blue nn 1n1
Scenic Valloy SubdiVIsion. 12 s.droom Apartment, $395/Mo, EY BACK GUARANTEE I Natural, Males
$200, Females $250, Plus
'
•Wedgo Realty, Broker 304·875· . .SIOO Dopaolt. All UUilal Pa•d. No Doctor Rocommonded, 11 4.441- Stud Service
Adllable 61 ,.. 379• ma a kitten, also stud aervlce 2722
Patl, 814 -446-3437
11182, Freo aemptoa.
2639
Shellla, Hlmala~an Shit zu. 614
~~~~~--~---19_9_2·
~-7--,..---------­
Primo Acreago 3-1 acre porclala. 2 Bedrooms tn Gallipolis, No Cardiac gilder ••erclaer, 175 AKC Golden Rttrlevera Puppies Sr• -mamature
1e pups, full
••collont building altos In Ma· Pall, Relerencao, Water Paid Caolo liallolze keyboard $150. 1200 each, Vol Chocked, Shots, blooded. 1 5Con
12 each, 614 742
aan. Seotoua Inquires onlY&gt; 304·I;I2501M;::::;;o.:.;,8:,:1::.0-3118-.::::-'.:.708::=-:-:-- Gibson 8,000 BTU air candltianet Wormed 814-3711-2961
882·3772.
:-::::--:-:::---:-~-:-::----1 2050
Potllally lurnlahod !bedroom, 1100 304-875-5728
Scout Camp Road, Cheater Twp. ulili!IOI paid. 304-875-2722.
Cheat lroezor, aet ol bunk beds· AKC male Shelae mlruarure Ca111e,
112, Chester, Ohio Ten aerea
double bottom, cheat &amp; dresser
:~:!:S~-sO~te, all ahats. mo. 570
Musical
with watar and electric on rood, Rokltcohomnl~tbare~•-1 13 ~~00hllm~ ;,h~r.~ Rolrl~erator. 304·875·882llaltor
-:-A-::KC::-:R:-e-'g'-P:-o-m-e-rl-a-ns-.-.-h-ot...,a- ,-1
Instruments
32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4S631
no building rollrictlona Call Ron
• "'
..,. epm
Foloky lo• pta! at Ohio Vaney Ra- 12 Alter 3:00pm
..:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
aliy, Tho Pla~no. 81 ._797·202t
:::.:;::::.:::::::.:::..._ _ _ _ _ ( Concrote &amp; Plastic Septic Tanks, -'wo::'r::-med.:..;:-·.:.304:..:...:8.:.;75-:..2:.:1~83=:-:----l 112 S1ze V1ohn With Case In Ex·
c:ellent Condition, $18:1, Child Size
Small lurnlahod oparlment, 1br, 300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ran :
Allen C. Wood, Reaijor/Broker-446-4523
AKC RegiStered 5 Month Old Guitar Woth Case. 335, 614·441·
•-·on~ • ·-- p Ideal for 1 peraon, no pets, no Evans Entor~loea Jackaon OH Laaha
Apaa
$250,
814-288-0007
Ken Morgan, Rea~or/Brokflt-446-0971
17,;'~
smokers. reletencea &amp; deposit l-800-53~·gs28. '
'
0423.
Jeanette Moore, Rea~or· 258-1745
romato, beautiful land, Melga 300-875-2051
Coun(J, Scipio Township, SR 8~2 =.=::.::::.:.:------1 Farm Lumber appro•. 8001!. per AKC RegiStered Chow Chow Slat Guitar, Cheshire, Ohio· lass·
Tim Watson, Realtor-258-61 02
Oust off SR 1431 OWner financing Tara Townhouu Apartments, bundle $120 a bundle, random (pi~UPP~Ies~Two~F~em-a-les_._~_,_75_F_•_m_ ana and mstrument.., pi&amp;!'¥), gul·
Pa1nc1a Ross. Realtor
~14)188
8136
taranddrums,614367-o302.
Cali fat good map, 814-583-8545
Very Spacious, 2 Bedrooms, 2 length I random wodlh. 304-773·
FloorS, CA. 1 112 Bath, Fully Car- 5080 01 1·800·11118-7683
AKC Regtotored Labrador Re·
Our professionals here
trlaver E~eellenl Hunter, Great Wlll glvd plano lesson• m my
360 Real Estate
pet~. Adult Fool &amp; Baby Pool,
S
home
to
begannen,
advanced
at Wood Realty have
Patio, St~rt $3-'0tMo No Pets, Gas heating atove wJblower &amp; tan p
All, 225, 8 lack, $325 Cho· students and adulls. also teach
Wanted
Loan Plus Securrty Deposit Re- $50 Double set ol waahln~ tuba colate,
JUSt about sold
614-258-8038.
chord1ng and transposmg Olfferqulred, 61•·387-7850
15 304-8112-2803
everything.
We have
15·150 acre• with or without
AKC Toy Poocflt Male 4 Months ant arrangements and rhythms II
buyers
look1ng
for lhat
buildings, Golba or l.lalga coun· Tw1n Rivers Tower, now accepbng Grubb"• Piano· tuning &amp; repalra Paper Trained, All Sholl, Interested call6t4 992 5403
certa1n ptece of
Ilea. 814·992·8737 or 814·~~2· apphcationa for 1br HUO subs1d· Problema? Need Tuned? Call the Warmed $200 Neg. 814·258·
WHV RENT WHEN YOU
580
FruHS &amp;
property. It could be
3041.
ized apt lor elderly and handt· pilnD Or 81.._..46-4525 1
8904
CAN OWN THIS THAll
capped. EOH 304-875-11679
yours!
If
you
have
Vegetables
BEDROOM, two bllh Mobil I
::::.::.:..:;...:;;;...;;....:.:.:..:.:...;__ _ 1 Hot lubo· aak about scratch &amp; 10gal tank ott up apoclalo. Fish
been th1nk1ng of
RENTALS
home• For the price of
Two bedroom apartment In Mid· danr and tactory IKDnda. AI low Tank &amp; Pat Shop, 2-'13 Jackson
putttng your house on
$34,500 With two ICIIO mil
deport, no peas, 814-992-5858
aa S191111, 304-2115-11~85
answer
Ave Point Pleasant, 304·875· sand,
the market, or possibly Enclosed porch, Iaroe lhed.
2083
leave
massage
410 Houses for Rent
looktng to buy, gtve us Call lor more detailll450
Furnished
JET
R
AERATION
MOTORS
a calf. Let us handle
2 Bedroom hou11 In New Hawan
FARM SUPPLIES
your real estate needsl
S2501mo. Contacl Hom111~ad ,.,...-.,.....,....,oo:...;.m_;a-:---:-·l RepaiAid, New &amp; Rebuilt In SIXIck CFA Homalayan 1 Weeko Fomale,
King&amp; Motel Loweot Rate&amp; In Call Ran Evans, HIOQ-537·0528
Seal Polnl, Flat Face $150,814Really 304-882·2405.
&amp; LIVESTOCK
Town, Newly Remodeled, HBO,
258·81104
2 Bedroom housj in New Haven
Showt1me l Disney JB Kiln, kiln dried hard woods CFA Register~ Siamese &amp; CFA
S2501mo 304-875-8197 Call aftet Clnemu.
w..kly Ael81, Or Monthly RaiDS, competitive PIICOS St At 62, R
5pm
Conatruct1on Workers Walcol'r\8 weat Columbia wv 30•• 773 _ eg•atered Himalayan &amp; Pers1art, 610
IN TOWN CDNVENIENCE81;;:0..:4;;:41:.·=89::22.::.::'.:..14-..:04.:.:.:.1·.:.51::8.:..1_..,..( 5080 or 1-IIOQ-998-7883.
Ready For Mother's Day I 814·
Withln walking dlatance to
2 Bedrooms, 2 Bath Houaa, On :.
387-7705
shopping
Two bedroom
18 Acres Located At Sowards Sleeptn!jl rooma with cookmg MTD R1dmg, 14 Horae Mower 1--.:.:.:;________
ADVANTAGE TO BUYER!· home, f5x12 room could b4l
RldQO Road, Crown Ctty, Available Also tratiJ&lt; apace an 11ver All Front Blade &amp; Cart Paid $895, HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICIDE:
PriCe ha9 been lOwered, very !hat third bedroom, kRohtn
,To Buw June 111, lnqulnea Call hook-ups. Call alter 2 00 p.m , 614·941-25211
Recognized Sale &amp; Ellact1ve 1895 New ldoa 4845 10und baler,
charming Ranch offers three and dlmng combln~. fulll
814-256-15511.
304·773-5851, MasonWY
Agalnsa Hook, Round, &amp; Tapebedrooms, khchen, dining, 1
1130'a 11:14
Nancy lopez Gall clubs and Bag worms In Dogs &amp; Cats Available 4x5 bale. tw1ne or net wn:t.p, bale
living room, fam1ly room
monitor
•&amp; controller, baled less
Small house In Clifton, clean, 460 Space fOr Rent
L Shaped deik (8141446-21178
0· T·C At !IROWNS TRUST· than 500 boles, l1kl new; AC180
w/ftreptace New Pf~ IS In the
quiet, no poll, $275/mo. $200
WORTHY HAROWARE 181•·
§D's
1127
dleeelloadet,
dual
remote,
new
deposit 304-713-9192.
Downtown llrst lloor alfice spece Need Lumber l Tin Rool? Old 448·8828 &amp; J D NORTH PRO· rear tlfaa, excellent tractor, 814·
aJr conditioned New carpet Call House Needs To Be Torn Down, DUCE/614-446-1933.
949·2830
Two bedroom haute, mce and (8141 446-4383 8 am.-Sp m man- 814--78.
c•n, no lntide pe11, deposit and day thur lttdltf
Pet Shop For Sale Great loca·
COMMERCIAL • BLOCK
references requ~red, 81-4·&amp;92Nordic Trak Pro Model Uaed liOn, Owner Rehnng Soon, Sanoua 4810 Ford Diesel 1fl0 HOUII 8' 3
BUILDINO- Located on
Pt
King
Cuner
BrUSh
Hog,
Wag3000
Two trall11 spaces fOI' rant 1n S~r- Very little, $300, Call After 5 P.U
lnqlJir~s Onlyl614 446 7507
Jackson Pike with good size
on Post Hold D1gger, 814·379·
par1&lt;1ng lot. Start up your own
aeuse, r~~er lots, 100•60, ram1ty 814-256-1367
-420 Mobile Homes
camp, water, electric and aewai8
Pets Ptu s S1lver Br~dge Plaza 2748
buslnesa1,...ylr.tllltl
t-oolwp, 814-992·5958
Fomeroy Thrift Soop- now buying 814-441.0770
for Rent
AlliS
Chalmers
4
Row
No
Ttll
Air
furnltU(I, children's summer
clorhea, mate;nlty clothea, baby Pomeraman For SIUdt, Very Plantar8!4-446 2412
2 I 3 bedroom mobala homes
MERCHANDISE
uems and large toys Call 61-4· Small Proven For lnlormauon,
o!llrtine at '2110-$300. MWOt, waFA111111RE SERVICE
ter and tralh Included, 814-992992·3725
614-446-3049
Tractol, bocl&lt;hoo, s~dder. mobile,
2187
510
Household
-P-ro_·:.:Fa.:.l:;.m_A-rc--:-S-,-o-::C-ra_o_o-:T~ra-:-ln· Purebred Siberian Husky pup- aerviCil. New &amp; uaed tuea and
lngSyslema$100,814·256-1313
pies, bluo eyoo, whlto. gtay l wheel• 61-'·198·3438, 814·898·
GOOdS
Hat Iota ol Potential·
2 Bedroom Mabile Home, 12251
or 8'l9t1ings 614·593-8942
.,....,.---~-_,.,......, 1
while, preny masks, 3 meloa. 2 te- 6471
COMMERCIAL· In ·town
Mo, +Deposit. 814-387-0832.
,AGRJCUL
TURAL
LIME
SERVApplif,nces·
Reconditioned Ouean SIZe waterbed w/book· males, ready now, $140 &amp; S120,
location, has office apace,
ICE
RANCH• With a storage and warehaule Call
2 bedroom, located near Mason Washers. Or~ers, Ranges. Refrl· case haad board wlmlrror, good call614 992 5144
"private selling• 3 bedrooms, 1 for more lnformauon. ISO's
rators, go o•~ Guaranreal heater, new mattress, mattress
Co Falrt~roundL 304-875-69114
cover and 1 aat at sheets. Atk
112 bath, full bSml, attached 111001
rench City Maytag, 814·448- lng $125 but wm nagoUate For
Real Eetate General
3 Bedrooms, 2 Batha, Very N1ce,
garaga, extarlor Is vinyl skiing
mora Information call 304·882Stove, Rltfr~erator, Water &amp; ms.
w/brlck, abOve giOUnd pool ftOOIIEW usntio. PlantZ
Trash Paid. $300/t.lo .. Pluo Oe- Couch &amp; chair, set of end taliles, 2997
$80's 1131
aubdivislon, vacan• lot
pos.t, Also 1 Bedroom Very Neat set of hunltr green lamps. l RCA dlgltaJ satellite dlsh, $700
measures appro• 110 x 80,
$1751Mo., Plus D"""sit, 814·388· pieces $588 Polly's New &amp; Us~
woul!l mekl a greel apot lor o
FurO!Iure 2101 Jefferson Ave. p1 080, wood heating stove, $100,
8371
naw home $8,000 00
PleasanL
614·949·7700
Balomy llrlve $230/Mo , Including
Remodeling Sate· Maylag Wash·
Water. For Apptlcatton 814-441· El ectr Ic srove, do.u 01 e oven, er
New LtiTINGI • GREEN
Kttchen 'Aid Dishwasher Built3840, 814-446-0957.
good eond Elactnc hot water
TOWNSHIP • Vacant IICINQO
'tank, 40gal Electric house fur· In ~en. Vanity Sink Cabl'let SIKI·
10 acres m/1 appro~~: 9 acrea
nace. Antique white bathtub 304• 1ng Glasa Ooo,. B1-Fold Doors
440 Apartments
is wooded, mineral rlgh1a,
n3-S270.
Various Anderton W1ndows
for Rent
6t4 446 4474
priCed 1n the upper 20'a ~
USED APPLIANCES
1 ond 2 bedroom apettmonta, fur· GOOD
Washers, dryers, relngerators, Sam Som&amp;tvllle's Army Camou,
Three bedroom rench with large
nlsh~ and unturn11hld, securliy ranges. Ska~ga Appllanc 01 , 76 llage by Sandyvrlle P.O lor wild
deposn requ1red, no pels, 614· Vtne Street, Call 814·448·7398, turkey season Noon -Spm fu·
kitchen, equipped with etove, Mfr·lalll~rat•or.l
9112·2218.
1-1100-&lt;199·3498.
Sun. 304-273·5655.
dishwasher and diBposal, also formal dlnl,ng
l Bedroom apt, upper level, fully Kroahler couch, white/hunter Sega System, 2 Paddles, B
furnished, 1n Pmnl Pleasant 304·
groan plaid, 1wk old, 1200 Pa· Tapea. Supe• Nlntendo, ·2 Pad·
875·2 144 be1ore 4pm-alter 4pm pasan chair, hunter green cush· dies, Mouse Pad, 5 Games, 6~4 304·675-3653 Deposit &amp; refer
lon, 1wk old, $50 Call304·875· 44H793Aher330.
oncas required. NO pets.
7429 aher 3:30pm.
Snow Princess Barbie, Spr~ng
1 Bedroom Fum11hod Apartment, Three ptece l A sune wnh s re Bouquet Barbie, Autumn Glory

;i'Galhpollt More Acreage Ava11 - 218 Condor Street, Pomeroy, No

•

'

we.: ___,"'"_

WE HAVE
Country building loti, WHkand getaweya,

¥home In 'dllltter rellel Iunde

MONTGOMERY MACHINE
&amp; FABRICATION
206 Watts Blevins Street
Jackson, Ohio 45640-0247

READTHISI
Bonk Repo'o Dou-·o &amp; Sinalawlde'o Frea Dohwy &amp; Sol-Up,
Call The Finance Uno, 1·100·
: 251-1070.
·au, In ...,, No IHIJmen!ll 111 Au• 8'111 ot t7. Fill Dati..., I Sat·
•up.
Homoe 1·100.251·
.wo h••• •1000 to

FABRICATORS WELDERS
Experience required, preferably job
shop environmental. Welders must
be able to tig. Several positions
available with growing company.
Company offers safe working
conditions, 401 (K) plan with
matching, 100% hospitalization plan,
life insurance, paid holidays and paid
vacation. Bring or mail resume to:

Saturday, May 17th

IhniH, Julia, s,.,. &amp; CiMr

Locks on rtght.
P11. 614-247-4881

LOOKING FOR LAND?

home thU yc•r!

COMMUNITY
SKILLS
INSTRUCTORS
WANTED: Two ltve-rn tnslruclors (weekdays/weekends) needed lo teach commun1ty and
personal sk1lls lo one adult wrlh learn1ng
1tm11attons tn Meigs County
(1) 40 hrs/wk· 3 pm Sun. lhru 8 am Fri ; sleepover reqwred; dayttme hours off; SICk/vacalion/·
holiday/insurance benefits
(2) 32 hrs/Wk: 8 am Sal. thru 8 am Mon.; sleepover required; sick/vacation benefits.
Tra1ning prov1ded. Informal setting. High school
degree, valtd driver's hcense, good dnvmg
record, three years ltcensed dnving exper.ence,
and adequate automobile tnsurance coverage
reqUired. Salary: $5.50/hr., to start. Send
resume to P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640·
0604; ATTN: Cec111a. Deadline for applicants.
5116197; please specify which postlion apply1ng
for. E ual 0
rtunity Employer

will be closed

Cut my life-line Wlu!n drifa"6 tltru
space
AU tlu! mountairu haVIl floated away.
•crou an ocean I drea.med her name.
Sins a liut. •ons of lonel0ne11
Sins one to make ""'•mile.
Arwtlu!r round for •~~eryo"" I'm lu!re far
a liukt while.
Now I'm woUuns Tin. llreel on my own.
But slu! ~ wilh ""' Ewrysu/u!,. I 30. ~
I knew on a"6"1- llt1101e1 lu!r place. J co.n
only thanlt God I can 11ill- lu!r face .

Jult above Recine

1

CJ&gt;tJIII

Card of Thanks

•Hanging a.alketa
•Bedding Plants
•Vegetables
Plants

1888 Oakwood 14•70 2br, 2 ba1h
advertlll8IIMII1Iolor ,.,.lestato
8x 12 deck, on rented lo~ opt.,iiil 1987 14d0 2 or 3 Bedroom,
whlcnls In vtolatlon ol the law
10•12 atorago building. 304·875· S9t5 down, I10Sima. Only at
our-.. al8 hereby
eostL-moauge
Oakwood Homes. Nitro, w~ 300·
Inform~ llullah -lings
111112
Cilyllln
Mobllo
Homo
14•78 755-&amp;886.
advoallaed lnltlla"-r
3 a~•••,.•. 2 Bltha, 117,500, 1897 1411:80 3 or 4 Bedroom,
are avalleble on an llqUal
114-367·7281
11,3511 down, 1221/mo. Fr" air,
opportu!Oiy basis
10D3 1•x10 Vtr'i Attractive, Ptl· lklrong, &amp; delivery Only 11 Oak·
Yilt Ranlod Lot, Uko N.,,, Many wood Homos N1tro,WY. 304·755Extroo, Will Tako Pay OU, 814· 5885.
310 Homes ror Sale
~1.0701
1997 t4xiOS8Rr28a
WaeheriD~ 0iohWoehtr
Ono Mile From Cliy Llmll 01 GaiN· 111M Clayton Bayporl mobile
F- Dot 1 a Bot-up
polls. All Now Kllehon, W1ndow &amp; homo, 18•80. ttv.. bedroom, two .1110
Down.Qt711o 372·3400
Sidtng, 135,000, 614-387-!1403.
both, 814-992·8889 days or 814·
387·7251 ahtr 5prT1 or wee1oe1 id:l.
tat T1m1 Buyers Easy flnanc:ing
Three bedroom ranch In Mtlgo !988 Oakwood Tra•lar $2,5001 2 &amp; 3 Bedrooms Around $200/
County, one and 112 barhs, can· d
d
Ma , Free Oatovery &amp; Se!·Up, Caa
rral alt. large garage, beautiful ~~!~ 7=m• payments
1·800-251·5070.
country MIUng on one 1cre, Red
Hill Road. Danylllo Shown by ap- 3 Bedraomo, Bolh 112, Now Car- 3 Bed•oom Mobile Home Blith &amp;
112. To!lll Electric On 5 Acres, on
pam/mont only, 614-742·2337
po~ 814-388-9281
Addoaon
Pike, Very Nice, Pr~cod
-:-=..:.::.:..____!.====~--:-- To Soli I Call
After 4 30, 814·U8·
8822.
110 Help Wanted

cblldrrJn. &lt;J?OfJ&lt;!r cSandy.
'lJonnD Ohfrky &amp;

"I dreamed you /•ow your face.

&amp;GredLDist

Corplort. eoavenicnee.
cncrsy
efficicacy,
durability end nexibility
in deoipt are a few of the
rcuon1 why 2,000
ra,..ilic• woll build a 101

ing, skirting, concrete aaeps,

huslmlld C8ob alld

In Memory Of
Florence Mal'ie Spires

PerryHIF-

LOG HOMES

1103-- Aller I ~M

'r

Women• SeNko Gold Watch, &amp; 1-'
Carat Gold In Diamond R1nga 7

Earrillga, All Very Nicol 614 441 1118

550

Building
Supplies

Block, btlclc, ltwlf' p1pe1, wmd·
awa, lintels, ere Claude Winters,

R1a Grendo, OH Call 614·245·
5121.

Grav11111 ' " " ' p1pe Siders

Equi.,... 304-875-7421 .

560

Pets for Sale

2 AKC Rag Alrodalo 1·111110, l·lo·
malt, 17mo&amp;. old. •300••· 3D•·
743-0384.
2 llola 'tbrkahlro Ttrrioro, 2 112
Year Old Provon Stud 1350; 7
llonth Pup 1250, Bluo !Gold,
AKC Alglli .. lld, 814 311 11323.

ltOS Yamaho 80 Badger vory
ll!&gt;ocl cortdltoon S1.850 1115 En- 8 month old ternole Ronwollar; 3
closed utility !~lor 8•12 bock yaar old mole R a - (Buddy),
loading .. mp 11,800. Amish k..nol l daghoua• Included,
built solid oak, entenainmant

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY ts hard
lind but you have 7 66 acres MIL
thts 2 story farm house W1th 3
1 1/2 bath, ctly schools and a
• v1ew f1t for a klnlJ all located just
mtnllJIO!S from Galltpohs, you should
wnhout a look.
this flow

RACCOON CREEK
Ftmsh this beauty and return to
qUiet and peaceful llvtng Th(s 1 112
story semi·Chalel offers 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, overstzed
equ1pped kitchen, sunken hv1ng
room, heat pump and much more
You must see the 60 to 900 ft. creek
v1ew 'trom thts 6 acre tract
$1!9,000 OWNER WANTS ~
OFFER

1800. 81~137

•

- · pold •1,000 111 fat azs. A Groom Shop •.,., Groemlng
304-8112-2184
Foaturlng 't'.,ra Both. Dan
rgoa cr..k Rd
2 ..... or girls clOthing, llmoo. - - 313
114 4410231 .
., trrw-130 llrm. 304-875-~

• EnJOV your
~!~~: n1j ~ fishing &amp; watchtng the
h
float by This like ~ew
eyecatcher Is empty &amp; ready to
move Into. Spectal features are
approx 1.8 acres, 2 car garage,
large cedar deck, secunly system &amp;
located approx 4 .mi. south of the
Eureka Dam. $69,900.

51

EXTRA NICE BUILDING• OR
MOBILE HOME LOT. Mature Pine
Trees on the three sides. Acclll88 to
Raccoon Creek. Located in Hoba~
Olllon.Subd. $11,900.
PROPERTY
INVESTMENT:
This
paclcage
consists of 2 houaas and 2 single
apartrnenla. The Income from this w11
more lhlln make your payments.
They are Joo alad In lhe Vllage ol
RENTAL

CORNER LOT· at SR 141 &amp;
Uncoln P1ke. 1 1/2 story cottage is
tdeal lor small families &amp; features 2
BR's, plus new carpet, heat pump,
vinyl siding &amp; a full basement.
$35_.900
IF LOCAT.ION IS IMPORTANT
THEN LOOK AT THIS! Locateil on
river street tn Kanauga this beauty
offers 2 BR: 1 Bath; central air all
located on 2 lots. Plus a Mobile
home to either rent or sell. Call
soon to reserve your pnvate
view1ng. PriCed at 52,900
COIIiiERCIAL LISTING
Rio
Graride area. 1.6 acres~ locjtted on
the NE comer ol U.S. 4 lane 35 and
SR 325, lots of potenllel $49,000.00

_.GRAIN F).RM • Mostly creek
bOttom. Ewington area· no houaa
broker owned • $88,000
LAKE DRIVE SUBDMSION - RIO
GRANDE • Close to Unlveraily • Lot
121 has water, sewer &amp;. alec.
available. $12,000

RIVER FRONT LOT • 1.368 m/lloclted approx. 2 mi. 80Uih olh

Eureka dam. Greet po&amp;tfllll Ill
$19,900.

.

\

�.

.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolla, OH • Point Pluunt, WV

~Su~n.~d~ny~,
-~
·
~11~,
:1117~~~~~:n~~
Pomeroy •lllldcllepart • Gelllpolls,~OH~•iPol~nt~P~Ie~eu;nt,~WY~~~;;;~~=ii~~~·~:..
~~=~="
~~~·
:PIH:r;;D7;
~
tor
720 "ftUUka Sell
730
I 4-WDI
74'0 llotprcyclea
750 loltl&amp;llotorl - 710 c.mpera &amp;

710 Autol for Sell
eo• bo, trail horae; 54" gon~.
broke mart; hora~
one
-.good~; 11
7244.

101'

t - COYolitr Convardblt 2.1 Ve multi-port, auto. ac, 25mpg,
lllcing $2,1150. 304-875-8440.

tVIIO Ford Bronco Full Sir•. 302
Mo.,r, Autamalic. All&lt;lno 13.500.
Bt4-388-«121.

1500 Pounds, Call Alter 8 P.M.
81 4·251Hl350.

'87 Camara RSS dtag car. race
rNdy, $8!100. 814-247-41101 alto&lt;

1886 Ford Escort GT, runt I
looks good, ti.de tor good full
lllzt ur, 814-V4V·3005.

New acklll western udcle., nwer
tioon usad. 004-875-5040,

·ea

Registered Gtll&gt;\llth Bull, polled,
15mo old. 1100. Registered
Goi&gt;lllth Heiltro (3) S450ea. 304·
578-2128 or 304-578-2211.

'89 Camero Z-28. original 302 DZ.

:e:ow-.

Black Angua Bull 3 Years Old,

Riding Horses For Sale Child
Broke, Baby Quarter Horu 61&lt;4·
446-4110.

8pm.

Camara tlrao car. 355 Cl,
rubbed $7900, 814·247-4110t altar8pm.

$14,000, 614-247-486t after apm.

'78 Dodge atalion wagon, clean,
ti«a I"'8W rubber, 318 engine, &amp;BOO,

------814-949-2806.

Rug Umousin Bulls Red, Black,
Polled, I To 2 Yeat1 Old 114-367- t936 Chevy t.'laster Coupe; 1938
Chevy Parts; t951 Dodge Coro7600, 6t4-367.0507.

nel Sedan: 1951 Ponnac Chiiftan

Yearling ShOrthorn oon and vear- Sedan; t968 CIMWy Camaro Conllng Angus bulls. Steve Dishong, vertible; 197o&amp; Corvena T·Top;
6t4-448-26t9, R" ng Ridge Farm. 614-44&amp;--8630 Mer 6 P.M.

640

&amp; Grain

1982 Lincoln Conllnenl81 Signature Series good c;ond.
Hay Square Bales Second Cut· Nerl bars , adjuslabla, chrome,
ting , Moted $2.00 Bale 614-682· 3ln. 4 Orig1nal wheels till Ch~y
5-10.
. .
3956, Cen1erpo~nt Arfl/8.
Call before 12:00 or alter 5pm.
304-875-7012.
TRANSPORTATION
1983 Crown Vic. Fair Condition,
Askin~ $800 OBO, 45,000 Origi71 Autos for Sale
nal Miles On Rebuilt Motor From
Factory,
302. 8t4-446- n59.
1984 Reliant SW. Runs Good,
$500 OBO, 614·992-4568.

Hay

o

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Bids will-be accepted up to and including
May 30, 1997 for a 2.92 acre tract along
with building owned by Columbia Gas of
Ohio, Inc. at f?45 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631 . This tract is described in Deed
Volume 317 Page 51 GaUia county, Ohio
Recorders Records. ·

Excellent Condition, Loaded,
12.950, 814-446-2801 .

1988 Grand-Am. t978 112 Ton
TN&lt;k: 304-875-5e2t.
1988 Ranger 89,000 Actual
Mjles, Runs Great, Must Seal
$3,400 OBO, Must Solll 8t~

8827.
1989 Rally Sport CavaHar, Auto.
AIC; 1989 Cavalier 2 Doors,

Auto, AIC, Cruise, Till, Cook Motors,6t4-446'-0t03.

1990 Uirsubiahi Precis 5 sp., ate.
ruri1 very good, 30 MPG, new

tires, 97K, St975, 6t4-98&amp;--43118.
1990 Pontiac Fireblrd, 63,000

Mile!, T-Top!, loaded. 2 Year
Warranty, $6,800 Ot Trade For 4
Wheel Drlve Truck; 1979 Camero
Runs Good, Looks Good, $600
Firm, 614·379-2854.
1991 Chevrolet Caprice Station
Wagon, Loaded, 84,557 Miles,
614-448.()924.

t991 Dodge OynaSiy 82,000
Miles, Air Conditioning, $3,000 Or

Michael F. Sucharski
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc:
Southern Region • Land Services
· 939 Goodale Blvd.
Columbus, OH 43212
SELLER RESERVES THE RIGHT TO
REJECT ANY AND ALL BIDS.

1992 Ford Thund8rbird All Power,

V~ 6, Auto, AMIFU Casseue, AC;.
Runs, looks Great $4,750, 61:4·

«1-1116.

.

1993 Camara (new style) at,
loaded, 35,000 miles, BJU;:. cond.
$1.3,100 value-sell lor $11,300
OBO. 304-1175·3087.

YOU CAN BUY THIS FARM WITH OR WtTHOUT
THE FARM MACHINERY.:.APPROX. EIGHTY
ACRES ... LARGE Bl·l.EVEI. HOME ...BARNS... CORN
CRIB ...TOBACCO BASE ... R~DY FOR SPRING
PLANTING II CALL SOONI

I .

.

BEAUTIFUL l.AND ...QVER 300 ACReS LOCATED
N(:AR
· WAYNE
NATIONAL
FOREST
AREA ... PRODUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
G'REAT OUTDOORS. 3 BEDROOM HOME, 3
BARNS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND,
TOBACCO BASE , THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS
THIS SIZE ON THE MARKET...DO NOT MISS OUT
ONTHISONEI
THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING AT
CONSERVATIVE COST. SPACIOUS LIVING ROOM,
3 BEDROOMS, EAT IN KITCHEN ... UTILITY
ROOM .. .GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL
AIR COND. , .CARPORT... FENCED
BACK
YARD ... CONVENIENT LOCATION ... PRICED TO
SELLI

~~~n.WINDS· 4 building sites
re
This area Is really bulldlrlg
lots of beautiful homes. They'll
be gone. Some restrictions.

11771 fM 114 . .,.

tNIC!Iofr . . . . . 4~ .......

!:i.~i.t~~'t.l:""~·C::,

ptendH
-~
.................
111....-7
•
- .,. no Nil,
Y·l •••· ao, l!fl'l Nlllf.::noua 11t4 Foftl
~ Ctllr,
- · aMjng ~ 4 • 100 •
~ 71- ....... 'U I ........ CO. ptayet, air,
-·
' 1111. crulot, po- occ..aorrot,
liN IIMr, hllch, 110,000 rnn...
11'- - tl71 Fanl FIIO, 480, A.l., tO' .11.~~-~·=~~~=·=-~-,----1
-.~-. ·· 1 - Podgo Ram 1100 414 SLT
otUentOMChankod,l4181,caU .._.., Nlor Rlrno Anii:IS' Tiel.
~1 88,00Cilc 117,000, 11417f.28t4.
tll2 International dunrp 1tucll.
air ..........5110,
'""
1-·
114-1112-411t.
Runo
11a tniamadonat, 1 112 ton

"""'*

tile Monra Carlo llltlllf load-

11183 Commodore Clipper 14x70
On a rented lot. • 2 bedroom, 2
bl!th, Master Is a glamour bath,
sunken garden tub, lighted vanity &amp;
mirror and stand up ShOW!Ir. Plus a
skylight. Complete kitchen w/all
appliances Including a new
dishwasher. Large separated
laundry room. Oak faced cabinets
with etched glasa. Build In stereo
system . Very nice home. a must to
see. 2 1/2 ton lntertherm heat
pump.

WINDING CROSS ROADS. Only 5
building sites remain . Located
between the new proposed high
school and the Industrial park . On
Cora Mill Road. Some restrictions. ,
Two beautiful wooded lots·.
Remaillder flat to rolling.

"""tlaoli104-87-

...,_11 .............

Crldlt Pro-? a.u-.od Fl·
nancfng, 1K DOMI,
Aa Low Aa 1110 P o t - No
lllrn DoMIII C.lt IIIIth 114--441-

•u•••t.

2SI7.

tn01no ..._,, 4n Cl, ..,
ldan, 11~
Nd...., groy ET 'at t30 mph; race -dy.
rlor,
010, 114-742· tt7,tl00, et4-247-1 - .....
uniUprn, ll4-l4t 7'10
sEIZED CARS From t1 71.
Atotd A Car' No Credh, Bad Prtracha1, Cadll1llc1, ChftJI,
c.dlr, lllnkru@icJ? W. Can Help IMWo, ~ AIIO JHpl, 4
Rf.E1tablllh Cttdltl Muot Molle WD'o, Ylrur '-'"· Toll Fr,~_ 1·
S~ Weak Take Home, 15-. 800·218-8000 Ell. A-21t4[For
Dawn On C11h Or Trado To cu.- Liltlnga.
OO.IIIy For TIH Bank Financing.
Ni Crodt Turn Downollt4-44t- Upton Ultd Carl Rt. 82·3 MUH
·01111.
,South ol leo~. WV. Flnonclng
-blo. 304-488-1011D.

au-.
u.'iioo

-+--------=-~-~---....,...,..

l

Real Estate Oen1111l

750ao.la1Motors

tor Sill

RUSSJLL D. WOOD, BROKER

446-4618
Judy DeWitt ............................. 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter.................. ,... ...379-2184

Martha Smith ...............,................... 379-2651
Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742-3171
Dana Atha .............................. :..........379-9209

Tammie DeWitt. .......... ., .. ... .. &lt;.~&gt;::IJ'

=" CDIHfl~on

11 FL 8w C..ft V-Boaom. Fill&gt;'"-· All TM E111UI Trdtt 1ft. PrO 1211 t2 FL lou BaaL T..U.,
clu-. 114-245-VIIt Alttr 5 3.1 HP MOIO&lt;, Bau.ty Chatgtt,
PJ11
~oorlta. New, N..., Uaod,
lt.
lt,DOO,er4-441H325.
11 Gl8111on boot I trallor,
t5Dhp Mtrcuty ou.,..rd. 11,soo.

304-812-32:37-l!pm.

780 Auto PartS &amp;

AccelltiOI'JeS
t888 Bornbtr Filii I Ski Ball
Boll~ 111 HP. u.rtntr Moror, 31 till Trona-Am Parra. &amp;10·388·
Pda. Marlnor Tr-'11, u 0·~. La· 11147
·~
• ··
wrenco Dtpth Ffn or. Ski Bar,
O'brian Tuba, Duti.LIM Wolll; t l " Nlllan S.ntra lor partl,
Vtry Good Condldon, 114-441- good • · 304-185-$113.
qza
Budget Prlct Tranamllllona,
lllllbtd, rryd. 1111 o•t•, " ' '
41p., taw
Navy aurplua,
t18t 11Ft, Stratoa 8111 Boat Sl8rllng at M.OO !lnd Up. Uaacll
H.OOO. 114-1111:1-4111. .
Willi Tralltr 70 HP Johnoon Mo- R-11~ All Typoa, Ov11&lt; tO,OOO
10 12124 Vol 1 n u
a...w Tnanamlaalona, Acco11 Tronalar
r
t ro ••tor ·-, Cuto l Rtar Enda, &amp;14-2451011 Hlrlw o..ldoon Lcrw Rider
304-e75-8322, 8877
ID85 Docltt
Charger, 3tl,' 23,000 Mlloo, Loti 01 Eatra•a
olr, PS, .P8,. run, aoo&lt;l, 11300 · ti2,000 Firm; t~71l Honcla Gold· ~~~~;_,----.J
080,111815 t25e.
wing Nlco Bike, 38,000 Mlloo, tVV4 Maradl t8 foot Open Bow, f1aw gao ranko, 1 ton tiuck
wllh Sun Dock, 4.3 Utar VI, liar- Whtela l fldleiDrt. D I R AutO.
$1,700,
1111-2!il.,tt817 Forti Bronco II XLT V-8, po,
crulaor, with Am Fm Ca~tano. Rlplty, WV. 304-372-3ga3 or t "" ""' iliiiD. ....... ~ cohcJ. 18110 Hondo CR125 -Top End lnd Ski Accuaory. 114-251- 8CJ0.273-1132D.
790
*&gt;n.ea.OG0.--21&amp;7.
. Looko And Runo Good $t.200, 13Q3 .
mpers &amp;
11110 Toyoll Corolla; 114·441· lt~7t01,8t4~737l

mil••·

ao•.

[:;!'1!'4!0:0,

Ram

'

ca

--·P.M.

.

Motor Homes

, aa•

Nlttan

mini motor holM,

aiHpt 4, al0¥e, oink, rtfrio. cab
air, dual rear wheels, 20mpg.
82,000. ;104-t75-284fl.
.

810
Moine
,
--~~===~~-

1172Modt!CI-1111,1n
call 814-288-

1171 CoaclrrMn 32 Ft. Motor :~:~~:O:ii
Homt Ch... Chaolio 22,17t·
MIIH, 111,100: 1171 JantborH
24 Ftllo.,r Horno.DodDO, Cha•
ala 50,400 .Mttoa, h,e85, lt4· ........ nco Patti And •• _ 1, 1 . ·.,1 •
•••t724
~.....~··' ..,
-~~-:-·-·---~--rN•ma a,.nda OVer 25 Yeara Ex- •
till Prowler 22 fL AfC And P«ltiiCo All Work Guarantttd, ·
Awnlno: tD 71 WUdemtll 20 FL French Cit, Ma,tag, 814-441Wllh Awning; 1875 Mlilatd 27 FL l'7V5.
Wllh........,. 24 F ~--- - . ..,...,.;
t. ~-· - t CIC 0-ol Home MainWith Tralltr, t818 McCormjck
~I 1
1 1 ld'
Ro.ad, 814·441-1511 Gall.lpolla, tontnc.- ~· nt ng, v "' 1 lng, OhiO
car...,.ry. elDora, windowa, balhl,
·
·
mol!ilo homo ropU and mere. For
tiM TioOo llonlllna. H IL,Iolcl- ho tlllmo141 caN Che~ 6t4-DD2od, aiHpa 111, lull bath, quHn II3ZI.
'ilRYWAt.L
olzo conrar btd, loti olaiDrlgo,
tD,OOO miloo,
will cqt- Hang. finillh. ropoir.
older trade In ol pontoon boor or Ceitfnga 1txtured, plaster rep~~lr.
van. Can bo aaan at 38 Hudoon Call Tom 304-875-4186. 20 yoara •
Stritt, Ulddltporl or call 814l·
Dll2-4t03.

balow-.

Aaauma loon, no money down lor
qualified buyer. 1VV8 t8ft: Dutchmland, luhlllw lelf contained. inC U 1,1
ICh I electric brake.
304..7!\" 5522•

Winnobago-ITASCA 27ft. motor
homo, Mil conlllnod, air lurnact,
aleep1 I, Qtnerator, 18,4G5 .·
304-175-4e22. Mt. Vtrnon Avo
Pl Ploaant WV.

black tap, law miiHge, auto, 4418408.
aporll - · l ti&lt;tl, OIC COnd.
cal- !pm. 304-175-!1110.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

••parlonct.
--..-----,-..- .•
840 Electrical ai'td

•

R~rlgeratlon
Resklentllt or t:;OrM18tcial Wiring, . ,
new aorvlco or repaira. l.taatar Ll- •
censed electrician . Ridenour
Electrical, WV000301, 304-6 75- .
1768.

Real Estate oer-.1

BROKER .............. 381 1121

Looking In the
Don~
ovlftook 11111 quality home.
Very con~r~nle~t location
dole to town. Euy to care
for exterior siding and small
yard
mean
Ills
111alnta~ance, work and
expenae . Very attractive
Interior with rich woodwor1&lt;
and colonial decorating. Qak
kitchen. formal dining room.
living room with fireplace, 2
bedrooms and t beth. Full
bUement with 1 cer garage.
reduced to $63,900

t:::.·~~

~I

•

JJ.!:lti......
t

'',

'

0.

:~

..._

•

J~·

Bl(; .BEND REALTY, INC.

a

~;;.e::.~21J1KIIf

Rldoro -1811 Boa11 -Johnaon
Mo ... "''"· .......

Ou-"'
...................
_
11

titS Yomaho Warr)or, Good

Rial Estate General

1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101

MoW Homll
11's-,....,,- - .,
, ...PI 1, rafl out ..nl"ff, 114·
1111:1-2157.

11.3 Jeep Wrongltr (td bod,, Condlrlon, $3,200 Or OBO.eu:

General

Real Estate General

tor Sell

--GafllgOn- -AQualron Bolla ·Cutty C.blno -Bow

...,,,2,

a•oo Mno. 11.000 M1H. goor1 1 -

'•

LARGE COUNTRY HOME ... lO ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM ... FORMAL DINING, LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. BASEMENT..•2 CAR AITACHED
GARAGE. PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' GARAGE.
APPROX. ONE ACRE.

Rt~al Estate General

!B

~

-.

3 BEDROOM CLAYTON MOBILE HOME, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS ...APPROX. 1.55 ACRE LOT.
SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS .'.. $24,000.

Inquiries can be made by -calling:
Henry E. Hatfield
· Columbia Gas ol Ohio,lnc.
614-286·8567

•

needed. .

~. ~'":'.:':.:'.:.~.::l
1111111

-.,._JIIAIO.
.... _........,litO. ....

Fairfield Church 7 acres In one
tract and · .m ore acreage can be
bought. This area Is starting to build
with new homes, pick the amount

creek frontage, 18 acres more or
less , some flat and some
woodland. Would make a ' lovely
spot for a summer collage or a new
home. A summer hide-away for lots
of fun and boating.

446-3636.

949-2528.

Best Offer, 6t4-256-1233.

Sealed bids will be accepted by LETTER
ONLY and mailed to:

s

25 LOCUST ST.Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 448-3383

1988 Bonneville Evtrwthlng
Worka, Good Tlrea. $3,000, 6t4-

1989 T-Bird Navy New Stereo, 4
New Tires, All Power, Clean,
Good College Car $3,800, 6t4446-8025.

Real Estate General

~RA~CC~OO~N~C~R~E~EK~.-7~3~1~---ol~

:sso, v-a, Tin .~ J1D 11oeon . . . DrM.

.Orwtrolen, loW mllol, utra O•IY78101idu110rMnAMI!r.To
8111 Tom Anderaon, IU- Oott,2111,080 ,,...._.,.,
111 ........,, _ , . , ~
•
· · ..
-

117181110 tll•nlllllloiNcll.

-~
Aiiil

·446-4206

~.

1ll87 Toyota Supra, 5 apaod.
loaded, very clean, prlct $3200
cai814-9D2-2906.

1988 Ford Tempo LX , 4 Oaort,

a 10 IE STUTES REAtTf)Rt

m
e_
a
y
...
R It

tll87 Ford TtmpO DL. 5 lpeed,
air, new lirea, ahlfp, high milea,
but r~na groat, S11l50, lt4-gaa..
4389.

t1188 CIMWy Coralca It ,500. 304B7S.8843.

tiN a.., Von,

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~anaday

VIliS

t1 Oe3 • 4 BEDROOMS, 2 t/2
bath.~- ~ovely kitchen wJeat In
brea~m~Bt area, formal dining rm,,
sunken livtng rm. w/f•replace,
family rm., new furnace, attached
2 ear garage, detached 2 car
·garage, inground pool a pool
houee. Lovely treed yard
wJgazebo, decK in the rear,
lericed yard.

12001 RAMBLING TR~LEVEL
PERFECT
FOR
THE
EXECUTIVE 4 bedrooms, 2 t /2
baths, lormalllvl[ltj rm. w/gaak&gt;g
stone fireplace. Formal dlnlng rm,
very nice cablnets In the kltcMn,
Huge entertaining rm, master
bedroom Ia ~Really u:.:k Ultra•.
Approx. 4500 sQ. n.,
In the
rear. 2 car~ge. 1 ac. Mil-lev!O
lawn. FREJ: GJI.S. Call Virginia
for· an ~intment 388-8828.
1173 PRIME DEVELOPMENT
LAND 117 Ac. MIL Cloao to
tnieway &amp; hos~ltal . Old homo
and bam. Galfia Co.
12848 SPACIOUS QUAUTY
CONSTRUCTED HOME Italian
lfYier, cathedral callings, balcony
atiove the LR, W/log r[replace,
equip kit., breakfast rm w/ baV
WindoW, stereo throuai'IOl!t, brass
light fbctures , 2 car attached gar.,
af1ic storage, screened tfaek
porc::h, mucfi more. New roof the
home Is maintenance free. Call
VLS 388·6626.

. Hen!)' E. Oeland Jr ..992-2259

Ouallty...V -... Acreage...h's .
'All Herall Spacious brick
ranch can be purchased with
or without acreage. Located
in the ·Addison area, 11
features a huge kitchen with
rows of Rutland style
cabinets, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, maintenance free
extarlor. Free gas lor heating,
cooking and a large pond.
Lots morel! Call lor your
appllinf111ent. 1401

New Listing! 1021 Seconcl
Avenue Not So Small luxury
at a Not So Big Pricell 2 StOry
home ollerlng 3 bedrooms, t
bath, living room, dining
room, oHice and eat·ln
kRchen , OH street parking
with a 1 car garage .
Convenient town location at
an allordable price of
$49,900. 1Hi21

. SHADED LOT, lots of trees!
Nice comfortable ranch home
that has an oversized 2 car
garage, large living room, 3
bedrooms, nlced sized
kitchen with dining area that
has paflo doors that led to a
covered . deck . on rear of
house . · Cantral
air
conditioning. Quiet location,
not
from grocery, church,

205 North Second Ave.

NEW LISTING • THIS
H 0 ME
H A S HAD A
FACELIFTI Charming older
home with lots of remOdeling.
Nice large kitchen with dining
area, large living room, 3
bedrooms, nice level large
lot. Barn. Really nice. Let us
show youl Priced at $49,900

WHAT A DEAL! An Excellent Condition Mobile home
Only. A 1990 14x70 Royal Cove by Skyline . Has 2
bedrooms , 2 baths. calhedral ceiling in LR , Garden Tub,
beautifully decorated. $16,000

POiiEA:OV:

'

Lincoln
been completely remodeled and
bedrooms, one
bath, dining room, and a· nice front sl111ng porch . Has
cenlrpl a11 and It seems as H n Is in Jhe country. Quiet and
on a road whh low traffic. Great place for a family. $42,000
POMEROY· Willow Creel&lt; Road- Have you always wanted
a hol)te 1n the country, yet Close to town- this is the one to
take f look Ill· A 3 bedroom, t 1/2 bath home, large living
room, heat wmp and a detached 2 car garage. 155.000
RACINE· Applegrove Dorc8e· Rd. Approx. 5to 8 acres ol
vacant land. W1th water and electric available. 110,000
THIS Home has old world charm inside. Large rooma.
BeautHul woodwork. Glasa pocket doors between L.A. &amp;
D.R. 4 bedroom• 2 betha, 1 car garage In Pomeroy.

$38.qoG

.

NEED A F~ WIATMER IUIINESB- Great oppotlunity·
Own your own "Sno Biz". Everything you need, IUCh aa
fixtures, equipment, etOCI&lt;. supplies, and building. Jul111ep
in and take over. Owner will give all the training rtMdecl.

137,500
414 IROWN ALLEY· Pomeroy- A nice lot comes with this
home. Three 'bedroom home just waiting for you to make it
youns. 130,000

DOmE TURNER, Broker..........................992·5682
JERRY SPRADUNG .................................. 941-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG............................948-2131

CARED FOR .• N1ce cheertul
home with lots of charm and
appeal. D1ning room with nice
harwood floor, bright living
room w/newer carpeting
kitchen, bath, lull basement,
enclosed front porch. Large
oversized deck on back, that
Is great lor barbequeing this
summer. lenced·in side lawn.
Must see to appreciate,
1110tivated sellers. Call tOday
lor. an appointment, you will
be soldl 1919

You'll 'Say "yes" this inviting
light &amp; airy 3 bedroom, 2 bath
home. Living room, family
room, dining area . Rear and
front decks that over looks
pretty landscaping, approx. 1
acre lawn. You will like lhis
floor plan. Callt0daylllll12
NEW LISTING!
LOTI
Approximately 112 acre,
septiC/leach field already In
tact, county water available.
Frontage along SR 160.
Good site lor mobile home or
_
house. $ 5•500 .00 ......,
NEW LISTING! 1 acre
lots, each with apprOlrimately
t50' of frontage. County
water/eleclric available,
Driveway for Iota heve been
lnsialled along with home one
cleared. $7,000 per 101. ft22
NEW LISTING! Mobile
Home, Onlyl t4' x 70'
Clayton, 2 baths, 2
bedrooms, living room, dining
area &amp; khch.,n combination
(island kitchen) Included In
sale 2 decks, 2 storage
buildings &amp; more. Really nlcel
Asking $13,500.00 1124
CHEERFULLY COZVII Put
down roots In thla easy to
JOVe 3 bedrOOm ' ranch ,
Kitchen &amp; dining room
combination, living room;
den, 1 car aItac hed garage.
Nice sized 101 w/lenced-ln
beck lawn. And more with a
comfortable . price of
$48,!500.00 11111

mn

8E'nY .10 COWN$...................................112·2313
BRENDA JEFFERS.....................................992·7275

HEliE VA GOI Nice sized
ranch home wHh plenty ol
elbow room Inside and out.
Over 8 acres of land, county
water.
Hme
ha'
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, large
kitchen, attached garage.
and so much more including
lots ol privacy. Call todayl

PRICE REDUCTION! You
are missing a great deall
Qualily brick ranch horne that
has over 2.5 acres &amp; only ;ust
a hop, skip &amp; a jump from
town, almostl large sized
rooms. Anached garage and
a 30 x 40 pole barn. Lots
more call lor more info.
WANTS SOLDI

DR
HORSE FARIIII Over t40
acres land almost brand new
hOuse was constructed in
1995. 3 BR, 3 baths, approx.
·
d
1
3 ,800 sq. n., 1ngroun
poo
lor those hot summer days.
Large bam approx. tOO x 96,
machinery shed, pole barns
&amp; more. 1831
IN TOWN LOCATION!
H•ndy to . lUll I bout
overythlng. Save gasl
Family sized 3 bedroom
home. Nice sized living room,
kitchen. dining, basement.
Flnlshad attic area. Covered
front porch . Detached
garage. Broker Owned.
1
d t
1 1 Call
mme Ia e possess on
Rueaelllor-milre details!

LOOKING FOR ACREAGE
AROUND CHESHIRE?
Over 8 acres of land and
1984 14'x70' mobile home
that conlliUI of 3 bedlooms
and 2 baths, Island kitchen
with dining area, garden tub
in master beth. lots Of white
pine trees
planted.
Priced to

GO
1.5
acre rnJI that has road
frontage only 2 roads.
Excellent lor re'sidenllal or
commercial. Could split lot
into ·aeperate tracts.
Included Is a 14 x 80
home, 3 bedrooms, 2
heatpump, underpinning,
d-~ &amp; morel ,_1
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NEW USTINGI UPDATES,
ALREADY. DONE FOR
VOU on this home elluated
at 25·Riverview, Mlddleportl
Ranch with 3 bedrooms, 1
balli, living room, kitchen,
newer furnance &amp; central air
unll, roof, windows/doors.
. Wood deck on rear. Call
Cheryl to view this
. 1920
,

NEW USTINGI TERRIFIC
VIEW OF THE OHIO
JIIVER from this hamel
A"ordably priced at
''
$25,000.00. Older 2 story
with plenty of . room,
. I dl
4 bed
15
InC u ng
rooms, .
IDEAL HUNTING LANDI baths, living room, dining
2.35 ACRE- TRACT OF room, kitchen. Lot approx.
LAND? You might be 59' x 122'. Lat ua allow It to
surprised! Aaklng price Is you. 1121
$55,000. Ideal hunting laitd. 150 AIRUNE ROAD·
Ohio liownsh~p
'
$38,000. 3 ac11111 mare or
w•n
loss comee with this
u•CANT LOTI Buy Them AN spruced up mobile home.
...
RemOdeled. 2 nice gardttn
lor $t4,900.00. 3 level loll. spots. 1 car d•t!'Ched
County water avallabl•. garage. Loll of Info. Cell
Coupty IIChoolll IIICIII
today! 1113
THIS COULD a1 THI
111,000.00 IS THI ASKING PERFECT FINDI EiiOuDh
PRICE OF THIS 20 PLUS · land lor the m1n of tlie
acre tract ol land. County house and a IU~Ice
water available. Count• ~ ~z' .~·

-.uc

T

IChoOia. 11M
• •LOT • 7,000 ..,_
...••r .. ._..,
County water available.
WOOded,...

. ranch and enjoy the huge
rae. room, area lor workshop
and wealth Of storage 'space
h oilers. Upstairs you'll find a
tasteful redecorated home
with a larg~ living room,
dining room, eat~n kitchen, 3
lull bathrooms altogether.
Oeck off back of houae lor
outdoor BBOs. Daylight
baaement as large patio
BIBS. 2 car garage. Including
basement, there'a over 3,000
aq. ft. plue 2 car garage.
Priced to move at $107,!500.

..!!

.....
m-•• .... ,
WN ,......
bam. Uke , _ IJPICia'• 1
1/2 otory home with 5
bedrooms. 3 blttht, toyer,
LR, Dr &amp; eo muctl 1110re.
Close to Holler Hoep(lll.

You wtll bit Imp t 111d at all
the quaHty 11t1a hon'tl ollln.

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BRIGHTEN YOUR
FUTURE WITH A WONOERfUl.
FAMILY HOME located In a
subUrban areah like new 3!4
bedroom ranc , bath, cozy
Uvlpgroom, very neat kltchel'!
w/lbtS of oak cat:iinets, basement
wf.family rm. &amp; bedroom, outside
eft6Y to an above ground poot
Storage bldg. 2 car attached
lllit!go. VLS 388-882el446-al06.

12035

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-~ TAKEADVANTAGEOF

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THIS EXCELLENT
OPPORTUNITY.
We are ollerlng two
resllu'ants for llale. One
In Syracuse end · on'a In
Middleport. Everything II
set up ready lor a new
owner,
building,
home
has equipment and Inventory
but the molt .Included In 881!11 prlca.
Is ·the 'Both
' curreniiY
In
s I m pi Y' opereiiOn and thtrl Is

10

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lllfMI!!II'JIIIT '-. :
'

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--~~...:.· .. ,...,~t&gt;

1221

:::M111te

~11;an'yciu~ ~

band~rafted kltcl'len mobile home hook-up.
f&amp;bln$ and Qak ·tnm 1 Muat cell todly lor an
~lao,
there ie a ~ttl IIIII

E

m

$48,000 Like new 4

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'WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

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(614) 446-3644

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E-Mail Adclrell: wlseman@zoomnet.nat

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER, GRI .; 446-9555

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mall ua far lllfomiiiiOn on our lllllnga:

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Make A Home For Your
Famllyl Down to earth
liveability describes this 3
BR, 2 bath ranch perched on
8 &amp;er88, rtt/1. When you walk
In, you wil ba Impressed with
the openness ol the living
room with cathedral ceiling
and fireplace, dining room
and nice kitchen that's buiR to
usa. Enjoy ihe summer
averring from either the front
porch or large covered back
porch. Send the ~Ids or the
husband out to the added 19
X t4

..,.,_t-fll05

BARGAIN 1PRICEDI

for your allowing. bedlbom, 2 balh home.
7
.
Nice level Jawn being
~a 4 A - mOrB or 1111 approx. 1 acre. CINn
.uatld at Eaton Road.. ' and ready to move Into.
ftloidlll$48,000.00..,. Immediate Occupancyl
0

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With a $1,000 Price
Reduction .... this "best little
ranch around" just got easier
on the pocketbook. Freshly
painted and new carpel
throughout most of the home
makes- this 3 badrooms, 1
belh ranch bright, cozy and
very llttractive. Add a lamlry
room with beamed ceiling and
fireplace, nice living room and
uloln kltchert ~ld on a
large 11111 101. cloH to town
with a ~ Of $47,1100, you
.can 'spring" Into being a-

room, -.ctttc ...,_,_AddiUDnll

4etached 2 car garage..
fo many
arnenltlel we
't mention them aJI.

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$29,ooo.oo·

111 n g

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view of ""'" room
18
Ohio
You :;: ;
wake up In the . boaal Call ~~ t~l
in~,mlrKI looking it the 1902
'
.
HOMI!I Nice
. lunch looking A MUIT
the v1ew. or slmpty kltohen, 3 bedrooms.
In the living room located at 842 Pearl
the vlaw. The SJreetln Mlddtepon cloee
pwner utilized this view · to shopping and achoola.
lo the fullest extent. Priced 11 only
there
ara
many . ,...
·
·
jvonderful features 47151 EAGLE RIDGE
fUCh as a full finished AOADI Aluml~um ~ 1
· l)asement with kitchen 112 ttory home, living
araa. A lovely stone room, ltlk:hen, over atzed
treplace In lhe fonnal dellcltecl 2 cer garage. FA

n1~•er. ·

Investment.
Ideally located
Avenue, thle 2 story
frame g~ves· you the auto
pedestrian 1tafllc needed
any type business. .Approx.
2200 sq. ft. offers 5 rooms &amp;
beth downltalrs, 3 rooma &amp;
bath upstairs, partial
basement and a new roof. 20
x 22 concrete block garage. It
wiN be Sworth$ your while to
view this property. $75,000

can

,· (614) 742-3171 or 1·1100-585-7101
-,.RlUSSl~LLD. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley..............742·3171

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Yrla, You
own New
Home without the haasle of
building .
·ouallty
conatructlon. comfortable
family living and a bliautilul
setting ia what you'll lind
Country Ranch .Here'a a
when you view this lovely 2 What can I Say... First time
•
story COlonial home. You will on the market, very nice brlcl&lt;
nice home to ralae
Jtome
with
3.6
acres,
rn/1,
on
family. Loti of room
be impiBMed as you walk In
and out. Large family room i
the formal entry. lovely BijlaVIIIe Road. Large two car
lower level has ,...t ber and formal living room &amp; formal detached gara·ge, concrete
plenty of room lor recreation. dining room with wOOd floor, drive and petlo. Deck on 'back
of home. Full basement just
Aleo lltcludu 3-4 bedrooms, nice kitchen with eating
"
large living room. very open to oozy family room walling to be used, large
anracllve eat-in kitchen and 3 wllh gae tog fireplace waa kitchen with plenty of·
fuM betha. Outsld8 apa1:1 le buiH with a family in mind. 4 cabinets. Corner lol. This
plentiful with large yard ·(part BRs, 2 1/2 baths and the home Is only 6 years old. Call
013.78 ac. lot, rtt/1) and deck. convenience of an upstair• lor your personal showing.
Private location cloae to the 111undry room (no more 1402
clinic. Price reduced to carrying clot~as. up &amp; down t-----------1
12t9
ihe stairs) will make you
.....;=;..o.--...,.j want to make this home
yours. Maximum comfort,
style and quality to
numeroue to mentiOn in this
ed for $196,900. Call for your
private viewing.

. BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

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Office ...;...................... 99~2259 ·

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e-mail ua for Information on our llatlngt:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

OfFICE ....................................................... ."912·2111

, ..

,.Ka,thloeen M. Cleland 99%-6191

~:::~:~;~~-·
the
IN
. ,this 4tobedroom

KYGER· A one story double w1de w1th 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, dining room with built-in hutch, central air, storage
bldg , and silting on approx. 1/2 acre . $40,000
SNOWVILLE· Pageville Rd - A newer ranch thafs never
been lived in. Has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, and a heat pump.
Well lnsula1ed and si11ing on a two and one hall acre
woOded lot. $59;900

. B.R ICK HOME
SyrBQiaa t .43 acr• m/t with
"""'l!on18ga, 4 BR, Lr/Fr, Or, 2
botho, Elf-In kHchen, patio &amp;
heat pump ~w/lir. A new rool.
WARRANTED HOMEI C.ll lor
·on IDCQintrnen110dayt PRICED
TO SELLI OnlY $9t,SOO
.

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Big Hou6e, Little Price Over
1800 sq. ft. Of living space In
thla Older 2 story home on ,
corner lot In town. 3 large
bedrooms, dining room or
~~~~~d:~~u~~~~lamlly room and 1 ,car
ICl
attached garage are some of
the features that you will
Priced at
tarrtllvl

·' Sherri L. Hart ....~....... 742-2357
Real Estate General

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Lanni McDade· ~7729

Carolya Wadi- 441·1GI'7

. .., Ganet446-2707

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�Obio Lottery
Super Lotto:
4-7-9-20-40-43
Kicker:

8-0-2·1-6-7
~pcm

Pick 3:
4-1-8
Pick 4:
2·1-8-8

on Page 4

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Partly cloudy
a
chanca .of
ahowera
tonight, Iowa In the l 40a. Tueada~. partly
cloudy. Hlgha In the

eoa.

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· \'bl. e, NO. 11

Ohio,...,. Publllhll.

.
.:Hollister:~ ponders run

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 12,1997
~a!!t~.!';-.:: :
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01a.7,

Compq

.---Rating Eastern's

bes~-----.

for congressional·seat·
COLUMBUS (AP) - Lt. Gov.
Nancy Hollister is reconsidilring her
decision to run for secretary of state
in· 1998, Tile Columbus DisJllllch
re~ Sundayc ;
,
Last November, Ms. Hollister said
Site would seek the R~publican nomfuation for secretary of slate and
would spend the next year raising the
$3 million sbe thought would be
needed for the campaign.
But the newspaper reponed that
the Republican political ~cne is in.
such flux that sbe may consider running for another position.
"In politics, until you file peti·
tions, you don't rule anything out. I
will make my decision this summer,
regardless of what else happens,"
said Ohio's. first woman lieutenant
governor.
· Ms. Hollister, 48, told 1'hc: Dis'f
, patch that while she is open ·tO other
people's ideas; sbe will not be pushed
around. .
"In the world of politics, there are
peop)e who are always·trying to prod
and push you," Ms. Hollister said. "I
will make my own decision."
Ms. Hollister has set up a cam- .
paign committee to run for secretary ·
of state. She also is considering a.run·

Suual1D cbool!le
&amp;om. 3 door ll:
4 door r.Y-* Is In ,

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•eomemmr

. your Cat t:lri\'e
1Ddayf

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.11/eigs ESC a~ts _on grant programs

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policy an~ .:CCord retentio~ policy.
The lm-98 !iCh,ool calendar was
Servit~ Center met jn regular session ·
approved.
.
lasl Thursday. and tdok action on sev.
.
Superilltendent
John Riebel
eral grant programs.
. Budget modifications for spec!al announced' that .a · treasurer's clinic
g,rllhts were approved, 11nd an Equity will be held in Zanesville on-June II.
in School to Work mini-grant and Adult ~as1 Literacy Education will
School to Work ·Partnership grant have a banquet on.June 9. Riebel also
gave reportton health insurance and
were approved.
· The board also adopted a safety ESC merge!J. . ·

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The Meigs County Educational

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The board approved .textbook

~11ptions for industril!l techll&lt;!logy

and fQreign language. ·
,.
Cheryl King was hired has a sub- ·
stitule speech/language pathologist.
· · Present, in addition to Riebel,
· were Jeff Harris, president; Roben
Banon, vice president; members
Howard Caldwell, 1.0. McCoy and·
Jeanene Thomas; and Carole Gilkey,

. treasurer.

·

. MEMBERS INDUCTED - Membera of the Eastern High School chapter of the National Art
Honor Society were Inducted at th• aoclety'a fourth annual art •xhlblt Sunday. FrQIIl •ett are
art teacher Lolltll Morrow, Melody Lawrence, hOnorary nilmbtlr Mendy Gueu, unlor members
Angle Chaney and Laura Arlx, Bethany Cooke and Jennie Conklin. Not pictured 11 Inductee
April Foreman.

King named VJiedictorian, Krawsczyn
salutatorian -fd.r MHS graduation May 17

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" regional scholar, par·
She was 3.
. ticipated in tile programs of the Ohio
. 1be top academic achievers in the · University Governor's Scholars and
1997 Meigs High School graduating Ohio University Women in Engi·
tlass of ISS students have been neering and Technology, and received
announced by Principal Fenton Tay· the outstandirtkjli1llor award from the ..
Ohio Univei1ii.iy Alumni Ass&lt;x:ia·
tor.
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Valedictorian of the class is Lib- tion. She alsd'jleeeived the Daughters
eny Ann King, daughter of nm ~ of the Arne~ Revolution Good
. Citizenship Award
·
Edie King Of Middleport.
Krawsczy\l"
plans
to
attend
Ohio
·
· Sall!tatorian is Eril) . Leslie
Kraw!iCzyn, daughter of Bette' Hofl;'~ Uni~ersity wtlire she will major in
man . of Pomeroy, a.nd John Public relati!W. Sbe is a member of
Krawsczyn and Celia McCoy of the National llonor Society an4 Stu·
Pomeroy.
.
dent Couneil,.' and French Club,
King will be attending Ohio workS in the DARE'Propam as a rOle
N&lt;» diCill University, ·where she will model for elementary students, and
punuo a ~or ~n ,international busi· hu been 1 member of the man:hina.
neu aadiCOIIOIBicl. At Meip HiJb coacen Uld 111'2.buds all.four yean.
1be hooondans of the class an:
lhe ia a member of lbe National Honor Soclety, allldent council, Pretdl Jllllia Fieldl.=ofConnie Romine,
St. Cllir, 1011 of
Honor SOciety IIIII Club, IIIII is on POmeroy;
thequizteam.
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Myrtle and Olil .Clair, MiddlopO!t;
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Neln Stiff

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and will' cover up io SZOO of th~ bill their trash 'at the curt!' fo;the village
due to a leak. Information and appli· workers to p,ick up. Trash should be
catiC?_ns for the water leak insurance put out no later than rioon on Thursis a.vat1able from Clerk Karen Lyons day. ·
at tbe municipal ~uilding. ·
Council agreed to ~uest that the
When lhe meters are used as the sewer district install a dropped ceilbasis for calculJiting the water bills, · ing and lights in the sewer office. The
customers are responsible for water district would provide the material
4,000.
.
·
they use. ~hould a leak occur on the arid labor and the village would be
Minimum rate for non-residents is customer side 'Of the meter, the cus· responsible for the lieating duct work.
$14.40 a month for the first 4,000 tomer is responsible for the cost of Councilman.Dale Han·was appoint·
g~llons and 30 cents for each 100 gal- the water.i'
. ed to get prices
the project.
Ions over 4,000. Commercial rate is
On the 'recommendation of May- . Hill reponed that Randy Mam·
minimum of $21.60 for the first4,000 or Scott Hill, council rejected bids bout. of Prescription Oxygen has
gallons and $1.80 per 1,000 gallons receivedat'theApril meeting for con- donated an Ohio State University
over 4,000.
struction of the fire station. The bids pennant for the village offices. Hill
, : The Board of Public Affairs l)ad were ovef estimated costs and two requested that' any else interested in
requested the rates. It is anticipated did not meet specifications.
donating a flag for use on the outside
that the water bills will reflect the
The c&lt;lmmittee will review the pole do so.
·
new rates effective July I.
plans to~ if they can be revised so
Hill reponed fines and costs for
Council approved an ordinance that the firemen can do volunteer April at $1,5~. with the village share
establishing a voluntary water leak labor on some phases of construction at $1,089. ·
·
insurance to be used to pay the \Yat.er to save c~s . .
·
·
Council authorized Street Combill should a customer have a water
WedneSilay, May 14 and Thurs- missioner Glenn Rizer to get a·lo&amp;d
leak.
day, May ·l's have been established as of cold mix for the ~onlractor who is
· The cost is $12 per calendiU' yeaf clean-up days. Residents are to set
(Contlnued .on Page 3)

•

:I ll

~

. · Racine Village. Council g~ve a
first ~ing to a proposed ordinan~e
regulating water meter rates at its recenl meeting.
Under this ordinance, the mini·
mum rate for residents is SJ2.a month
for tbe first 4,000 gallons and 30
c¢nts for every hundred gallons over,

•

•

for the 6th Congressional District
against Democrat Rep. Ted Strickland of Lucasville.
Some Republicans would like the
former mayor of Marietta to run for
state treasurer,
Roben,;Bennell, chairman of the
Ohio Republican Party, expects Ms.
Hollister~ run for secretary of state,
but said, ~She's not closed the door
on other options."

Council gives initial .nod
to prQposed:f w~~~~r · rat~ . ~~i~Q.tl ~

•

CHEVRDIEI • OLDSMOBilE •

Nano., P. Holllaler

Rac;in~
- · .. '

.

GOP leaders in the 6th District
want her to run for that seat, he .said.
"She's gelling a lot of pressure
from her hom, territory," he said. "I
learned a long time ago that you supply information to candidates. They
make a decision that is in the best
interest for themselves."
. Gov. George Voinovich has put ·
Ms. Hollister .in charge of several
areas of state government, including
economic development, farmh1nd
prestrvation and local government
matters.
But· the newspaper said her role
isn't as high-profile as ber predeces- ·
sor, Mike DeWine. DeWine, now a
U.S. senator, was the administration's
point man on crime issues. .
,
Ms. Hollister had considered a
possible run for governor, but the
newspaper said Voinovich's unoffi·
cial endorselllent of Secretary of
State Bob Taft essentiallY has precluded her from seeking that position
- at least for now. ·
M~. Hollister would not say if she
would one day run for governor.
"There will be a female governor
of Ohio." she said. "It will be in the
next 10 years. I certainly would like
to be part of that."

I

,.

r'

Slacie ~. daughter ofOtarles and
K;athy Barren .of Rutland; Tara
Grueser, daughter of Danny and
Debbie Grueser of Pomeroy; Bever·
ly Stewart, daughter of Kathy and
Jim Stewart .of Rutland; Taryn
Doidge, daughter of Kathy Doidge of
Pomeroy; and Sheila Neace, daugh·
ter of Freddie J. and Judy Neace of
Langsville.
. Other members of the class are
Scott Autbenon, Ryan Baker, Issac
Barnett, Heather A. Barney, Lillian
Marie Bunlwt, A.dlm D. J;lanett, W.
Chad BIU1rum, James Roben Black·
well, Darnell Blanks, Maria Laura
Blodom, Casey Keldon Booth, Juon
Anthony Bracken, Maria Laura·
Canero, ·Angel R. Caner, . Dlsiree
Dawn Clemons, Jennifer DelliJe Clif·
ford, Amy Dlle Clonch, Cassidy
Coffey, Anita Oayle Collins, Jessica
~ Counts, Eva Yuvonne Crab-

tree, Ernest E. Crouso, Brooke Nicole
Dailey, Jacob Shauri Davis, James
Oliver Dean, Chad Brandon Dodson,
· Robin Dale Donohue, Timothy S.
Durley, Donald Elkins;
Paul Lewis Epperson, Jennifer
Pauline Ervin, Emily FI\Ckler, Shaun
Lee Fife, Anna Ruth Fink, Brian
Michael Finkenbinder, Jennifer Ann
Garey, Brandon Scott George. Ro~n
Earl Gilkey, CIIITje Frances Glaze,
Nicholas Jae Goodwin. Heath A,
Gruescr, Michael A. Guess, Whitney
Corrin Haptonstall, Jerry Hardwick.
Virgil R. Hartley, Stacy Ann Hawk.
Cynthia R. Hawkins, David
Heighton, IoseJ)h Hill, Joseph Aaron
Hockman, Alyssa K. Hoffman, Lynn
Ella Hoffman, Ricky E. Hoover )r.,
Betsy A. Houdashelt, Joshua C.
Howard, ~ie Howery, Robyn
Hunt:
Misty Diane Jeffers, Ste~Jhen A.

Llbtlr'ty King
'

.

Jenldns, Cheryl Lynn Jewell, JulieN.
Jones, Tasha Lynn Jude, Linden J.
Kelly, Downey Lynn Kennedy. Jared
King, Julie Kin&amp;. Shawn Ray King,
Kennith Mallhew Kirk, Michie! A.
Klein, Aimee Kloes, Christopher
Scott Lap'lben, Edward Keith Lao-

daker, Shawn William Leach, Timo- ·
thy Scott Lewis, Alma Angelica
Loaiza Ayon, Gustavo Pettinali
Lucio, Connie N. Mash, Leigh Ann
Mash, KellieAnn Maurer, Sltellie R. ~
Maurer, Wesley J. McClure, Carl W.
(Continued on Page 3)

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