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Sp ' 1

ln s de

S1 ·

•

Bicycle
wheels keep
tumlngln
Galli• County

Old prllon or
dtuk Dline,kutd?
• FMturtd on Plee C8

HI: 808
Low: SO.
Detella on
pageA2

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis· Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant • June 22, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 19

______

,.,

stories.
.
The . · new
IIUiitl · ~~
One wss met at the door by a office houses
For more informat1011
man
with
a
gun
and
others
have
ACCESS
coun'
~lntlt18· It , .
been ~ssed down later by people selors, ACCESS
~f·~IJ~V:~:~i '·'''·'·1~': in cars dem~nding to know why executive directhey were at their· houses, she tor
Romola
said.
· Hopkins, and
.
. Home visitors say they have Head
Start
rt
.
had their cars stuck or broken director
Jan
:1
down !Diles from help, been cusSed Betz. Arms coordinates the Melp program while the
8y JIM FREEMAN
·
·
program to those grownups present
at and eVI:n greeted at the door by Gallia program is coordinated by Lillie Mu!flly.
.
Tlm11 Sentinel Blltl .
·
·
accordlna to Meiss County Head Start
people wearing no ciOihing.
.
Arms ~id the county programs are taking applica. P&lt;?MER~Y .- Whtle many _educators ~re t . g coordiaator Lynne Arms.
. Meigs Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lcntes, a Head lions now for eligible 3- and 4-year-olds. Kids who will
vacauon tbts lime of ·year, Galba and Metgs county
"It·went really well, we have almost half of what we Stlrt policy council representative, said sbme people be three ·before Sept. 30 may be eligible for enrollment
.Head Start worke~ are' busy recruiting new younp~rs . need," said Aqns. .
,
view the Head Start program workers as govemm1111i· in the program. ·
.
. :·.
What the program needs is -174 Meip County kids representatives. For people wbo resent any govern~! 1 . ~~ said the program needs to have full enrollment
:for the 'lll?gram lhts faU; ·
. · Dog bttes and peopl~ who resent government uuru- . and 'about 280 from Gallia County; she said.
·
intrusion,.this can create problems, he said. Some people ' by 'Sept. 16. Prospective children will also 'receive a
·sian are some of the nska that ·Head Start emplo!(~es
"This year the massive recruiting effort went pretty also believe the work~!S. are representing children's ser• · complete physical and dental screening. .
·face as they carry out their .countywide recruiting drives. smooth with the biggest mishap involving a dog bite she vice .agenci~. he ~id.
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In Oallia County, children attend the Heal! Start CeoDuring the first two weeka in June, the workers ' said.
·
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Head Start ·in the ·two counties is administered by ter for 'half a. day four days a week. In Meip County,
·.combed their areas, looking for houses with Children But in ru1'3l southeastern Ohio, kn~kina · Qn a ACCESS To Human Resources Development ~t 417 ~hildren.attend center for half \! day two times a month
marked .by the 1ell-tale toys and other signs of resident stranaer's door carries a certain amount of 'risk .and· in Second /!,.v.c., .
whjcb· 9fficially· dedicated its and are visited , in their homes for an hour-and-a-half
youngst~rs - knoCking on doors and explaining,.the the past sotii'c home visitOrs.haYC returned with, bo~r .' new'office
open house Frid~y afte~~il. '
cveryweek.

I

1-lt!,t&amp;

s

I

Head Sta. recruitment In full. sw/nn In Gallia, Meigs

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Tearing\ltdOWn
to·bt.iilct~~if:up: ·
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Lutheran
·return trip to aid

Galli&amp;, Meigs jobless
rate.drops in May
G~OlJS- Unemployment throughout most of
southeastern Ohio declined between April and May, the
Oluo l!ureau of Employmept Services reported Friday.
The only regional county reporting an increase was
1
· Lawrence County. ·
Gallia County's rate fell by 0.6 percent during the
·
period - · from
jobless rates
8.6 percent to 8.0 Regional rr&gt;tr:ri!I.Jg
r)
percen!. ODES
· fisures , show ~~~
1,100 · of the
· county's ~stimat- , •• "'''·
ed work force of
13,800 as jobless
in May. ·
In
(ll~

By KEVIN KELLY .
Tlm11 Sentinel Blltl
VINTON- Their home damaged by
tbe March flood, Dave and Sandy
Maskew got the financial assistance
·through the. S!Dall
·
.
·
, til!.i lfor a,mJJ!\7-"*'nt structure, .

probfc'iif'i)iilJJelf'.biJ!ds~!tliit to;;;;~~!

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Feda OK $18;9 million
'
for' Ohio flood
victims
WASffiNGTON (AP)- Ohio
will get·$18,9 million to compensate for er,nergency road and
bridge WOfk r~quifed· by spring
flooding. '
The Fedentl Highway Administr~tion approVed the state's emergency funding request, which is
intended to reimburse Ohio for the
cost of cleaning up m11d slides and
debris; improving guardrails and
liKbting; and fixing damaged roads.
The Ohio Departinent of Transportation said the money · would
reimburse the state for repairs
either iliready completed or scheduled to be finished in the next two
months. ·
· The largest share of the mottey ·I
was earmarked for repairs in Athens
CQunty - about .S4.3 million. .
. More than $3.8 million was
for. repairi in Washington
and. roughly $1.8 million
County, with the rest
repairs in . Adams,
~rown,
Gallia, Hamil•on, Highland, Hocking, Jackson,
Lawrence, Monroe, Pike, '
Scioto and'Vintop C!)uniics.

Good Morning
· Todlly'l ~~~ nlht•l
. 15 Sections ·l 0 Pqes
C3&amp;6

their old ,{aidenee.
:
'' · '
That's when the New Ufe Luthersn
Church that they attend came to their aid.
The .church put out a call to Lutheran,
Disaster Response, and late last week, the
M.askews:, previous tesiden~ on South
Main St~t was razed and the space was
. cleared for•the n~w modular home they
expect tO be delivered in few weeka. .
With the help of Jim Davis, who
brought heavy equipment in to tear down
.the Masko\llos' house, some of the :p vol•·
unt,eers fiv!n a Lutheran church in Easton, Pa., cleared the lot for the new home.
It's a stOry that has become familiar to
Vinton residents in the wake of the flooding, but a lll!ique one In the amount of aid
the flood'S ·Victims have received from
religious ,and charitible organizations
from all aflllllld the country.
"If it w~n't for tbis group of people,
we would ll.tve had no hopes of having a
new hom'~"' Sandy Maskew said. "It
gives me gQOSCbunips to tt\ink about it. •
Lutherap, Disaster Response has been
no stranger{\to Vinton in the·months folloWing the devastation, sending in crews
of voluntec" through the church's various
nationa~anlbll!te relief agencies, making·
donations and trying to right the. lives of
· ·
'
from .Efetoft, Pt., e~me' lnto VInton
to
the' flood's victims, explained the Rev.
In the demoiHJon ot 1 llood-d..naged hOUH 10 the owriera e~n
1 new
MillY Konqp)Ul of Cincinnati, the organilot. The voluntHrt 111 with ~:-~~~~=~~DI~"~II:er~~~==je relief
zalion's southeast Ohio coordinator.
help from Jim D1v11 wtth
to I'ID the
The latest group of volunteers had hou" (lop
they ~lid on debrte 1'11110¥111 . .
Another g..OUp' ot
heljled out'in"projects closer to oome,.but ~untwre
.
build • new home n- VInton. . ,
f~r many.lt :,Y,as the first time they !lad aof!C to Ill away disaster ·. ati~g bud~ct was just S3~, with mal)y of the volunteers sacri. SJte. Whtlet cine group worked on i:leanng ·the. way for the , fiang the1r summer vacations and' school breaks to lend a .hand.
· '
neW house, anothct was working ntar·Vinio~ building
Defraying some of the.eo&amp;t for the group w~re , plans to lodge
another houSe:.'
'
, tile volunteers ·at New Life's church off State Route 160 near
"If 23 mpte people can come in and get things going, it11 all Gallipol,is. That changed when several of New Life's members
be wortil it," ~d Susan 'RI!IIles, 0ne of thQ COOrdinators work- opened their homes to the group for the. length ~f their stay. ·
ing in the vi!l~ge. "If something I!Ceds done, th~ri: we arc.•
. The cburcb provi.ded tbe volunteers with dinner•. whiie.Vint~n
Ruggles, a volunteer coordinator at Lafayelle College in·Bas- Baptist Church, ~s 11 lias fO( ,all who hav.e come m th~ .rebuild
ton, and ~hoolteacher Chuck Lewis were flmong the LUthe~ fiO?d~struck sections of the.~·,lag~!~has gtVeJl thp,m Jheu lunchcongregation, there .who responded to the call from -New Ufe cs m ihC chiii'Cb hall.
.
'
,
Lutheran, which has a similar •mcinbeiship of about lSO people.
"1l)e t~n )las been. fantastic, with people coming by and
"Thirik aboltt a small congregation that·raised over $10,000 on saying hi;~ nOted Ruggles,•who &amp;aid was tough at first to visualtheir owp to come here, • added Lc\Yis, who said the group's operC!indnulld on page A5 ·

a

- from 9.7 per-·
· cent 10 9.6 per·
cent. According
to the OBES, 800
of the county's
estimated labOr
force of 8,300
was jobless dur. ing the period.
Other regional
· May unemploy'
ment rates (April
figures in parco- lww~"""
thesis)
were:
Athens: 4.7 (5.2)
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!=~;;;;!oil
percent; Jackson:
7.1 (7.4) percent; Lawrence: 5.8 (5.3) percent; Scioto:
8.0 (9.0); Vinton: 10.1 (10.7) percent; and, Washington:
5.6 (M) perocnt.
.
Statewide, the joblesS rate for May dropped to 4.5
percent from 4.8 percent the month before. The national
rate was 4.8 perocnt, compared with 4.9 percent in April.
· "The drop in Oilio's unemployment rate for May
refl.ects strong hiring patterns this spring,'' said Debra
Bowland,,bureau administrator.
''Most ' of the job growth this month relates to
stronger than usual seallonal hiring, especially in recreational and tntertainment-q:lated occupations," she said.
Ohio's nonagricultural wage and salary employment
rose by 9,000 jobs to 5.3 million, according to the latest
survey conducted by OBES. The improvement occurred
among service producerS, with 9,000 more jobs.
Job levels were unchanged in such industries as transportation, retail trade and finance, insurance and real
estate, the state said .
The jobless rate last month was down from the 4.9
percent ·recorded in May 1996. The number of Ohioans
working increased by 121,000 from 5.4 million. The
number of. unemployed decreased by 16,000 from
276,000.
. . . .
The number
Ohilfans with jobs was about
unchanged at 5.5 million in May. The number of workers
unemployed was 260,000, down from 275,000 in April.
The county raies ranged from a low of 2.5 percent in
Delaware and Madison counties to a higb of 14.6 percent
in Jefferson County.
Eleven CO\Inties had rates at or below 3.2 percent last
month. Ten had jobless rates of at least 7.5 percent.
·L

; _ : , ; ,. . . . . . . . : :

of

.w~~n police commit domestic violence, punishment is often light
By AA~E LEVINIQN
AP National Writer, .
·. ' ·
. SHERMAN, Texas {AP) Bob
Reyno!&amp; was someone .who'd ride to the
reS!=Ue if you were In trouble. Unl~sa you
were his ,wife, Charlotte.
.
, He whacked her. He wrencbeilltcr wrists.
. He twisted her arms so l!ard and so often,
her elbows llill bother her. 'IWk:e, he split
her
lbe butt of a revolvc,r, the~
lllit:cbc~ 'tli up hi1118Cif.
1
•

U~ many victims of family violence, she remain on the job, guns
police departments that make
waa too frightened to call police. But·Char- strapped to their hips.
. a special effort to confront the
lotte ~ynolds lutd an extra reason not lli'call. Often, they are shielded
problem, CBilCS of domestic ·
~Mae! o( !be time." says.her h1oshand, "if ' from the consequences of
abuse by officers sometimes
sl)e called for help, shewouJd bave go11en me." their actions by fellow offiescape de~ion; seldom are
·. He' waa~ll-rownThxaspoliceofficer, cers, sympathetic ' judges
abusers · dlalllissed from the
sometimes a polia,chicf. Eventually, he got and the silent terror of their
force .
help ·and CJ~~~e to understand that what he victims.
,
'fllat means the officer
did at home was not just somct~lns private,
"You got to understand
who is beating his or her
not juat a marital problem - it was a crime where we stand," Deputy
. spoUBC may be the same one
· 'I from the'6rst time I hii her to .the last."
Sheriff Donnie Mohler, a
.
who answers a domestic violn the ~Jive world of American Ia~ · Meigs County, Ohio, dispatcher, told 'a. lencecallatyournclpbbr's,house,oryoura.
enl'orcemcnt, ,one of the darkest secreta is reporter' "You go home and beat the crap And when the ablller wears a badge, the vichow lbiny police: ~rs pommit,thc crime out of your husband, it ain't the end of your tim can be the most helpi\IU oqe in town.
of dolllestic violence, anc;l how slightly they . career."
Dom11tlc YJoleMI
act Pllllilbed. if tbOy are punished at all. .
Most police do not commit domesiic viortmlllne largely hidden . ·
there ilatrans evidence'tbat t~ouaands lence,.of course, and many would notsive
Because domestic vtolence b~ police • •
, Continued on 111111 AS
:.
·of police bauer the ones they love and yet an abusive colleague a break. But even in

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Pon•oy • llldlllaport • O.lllpal£, OH • Point P11111nl, WY

Negotiators pour school funding Into ·budget
COLUMBUS (AP) -

A lut·

mmure lllditioa of 11101e . _ S200
minion for primary and "'CC!!dary

cttpped lefislllive IJeiOCi,
ationl over a new two--yew Sllle bud·

edt~eerioa

J«.

House and Senile budaet nego-liMOrs worltins late friday on lhe
$36. I billion budaet IIPJli'OVed lhe
education pac:kase after da)'long
meetings between legislative leaders

and administration officials.
"I think it's an excellent blldaet-·•
said Rep. Torn Johnson, R-New Con·
cord. "We did the belt we could wilh
the dollars we had available."
School districts stllewide will
share $250 million to repair or
replace rundown buildings, double
the amount proposed by lhe Senate
when it passed its version of the bud·
get last rnonlh. That's on top of the

-Local News in Brief:Two leelll deed
SHADE- Two pany,goers were
cited after deputies of lhe Meigs
County Sheriffs Deparllllent were
called to a party on Part Road,

Shade.
Jared King, 18, Shade, was arrest·
ed for underage consumption, tres·
passing, resisting arrest and disor·
derly conduct while Brent Whaley,
' 18. o.win, was arrested for resisting
~st and trespassing.

being stopped on State Route 7. .
He was charged wilh child endangerment because his ) ,year-old
daughter was in the car with him
when he was stopped for driving
under the influence, according to the
report.
•

$300 million set aside ia a sepll'8le
bill dill already bu been signed by
Gov. Geoqe Voinovich.
Schools also will get SJS million
for new textbooks and instructional
mllerials - SI 0 million more than
the Senate proposed. And basic
school aid was increased by S74 mil·
lion.
The deal also replaced $4.5 mil· .
lion for a test of charter schools in the
Toledo area and rponey to expand the
Cleveland privll!e school voucher
experiment. Both programs were
sought by Voinovich and the House
but had lheir funding cut by lhe Senate.
The committee's two Democrats
voted against bo.lh programs, but
liked the budget package over~ll .
, · "There are some gond points in
the budget," said Sen. Judy Sheerer,

D-Shabr HeiJhll.
.
But Sheerer said the incllllion of
the voucher and cblrter schools provlsiou left ia doubt w~a Dcmocrail will suppon the l*bae when it
reaches the Door of lbe House and
Senate next week- just days befOre
the current budaet expires June 30.
The committee ultimllely ·was '
able to reach the asreement because
the improving Ohio economy
allowed them io adjust Wt receipt and
welfare spending projections to free
up more money.
The.school building and textbook
.money, as well as an expected $286
million w cut for individuals, will
come from·money left unspent in the
current bodget. Sen. Roy Ray, R·
Akron, said the leftover balance has
ballooned to $908 million in the tatest .calculations - up from about
$767 million estimated last monlh.

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Suncl8y, June~ 1117

~ ... ~ , ··P·A:I '
~.~----~------------------------~~----------------------------~----~----------------------------------~. ------------------------------ ]
Corps district will note 75th anniversary ~ Tri-Coun~y Briefs:.

Regional ·

.Hot, humid condition$
expected to continue
8y 1M AIIOC

1
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HUNTINGTON, W.VL - The ces, the corps worb half of ill staff
lllecords. olriCC furniture and (111ft;
Huntington District of the U.S. Army in the downtown .district olfic:e, and iliee of BnJi.-n staff, atons with
Corps of Enp.-n will celebrate its · ·lhe 111mainder 11 SO silellhrousbout their hot~~ehold fumilhinas, were
loaded onto the sternwheeler James
751h anniven.ry on Friday, June 27 a five-lllate area.
·
in Harris Riverfront Part.
The district Wlli estalllillhed July I, Run-..ey in late June 1922 to begin
A ceremony bepns atll Lm., fea.. 1922, ,when a decision Will made to the trip down the Ohio River to Huntturing U.S. Rep. Nick Joe Rahal! an(j· clos~ lhe Wheeling and Second ington.
On July 11.1922,1heJamesRumMayor Jean Dean as speaiten.
Cincinnati distri\:15 and open lhe
sey
docked at the 26th Street landing
• One of lhe Hunti!lcton area's consolidated Hunlington District
. in Huntington, where trucks were
largest employers wilh I,180 employ- office,

The Nllioul Wealher Service said tt.. will be some cloudl Suaday
wilh 1 c:hlnl:e of lbunderstorms ICI'OSS Ohio, especially in southem parts
durinJ lhe day.
.
The high will be uound 90.
It will be clear Sunday nipt wilh a low in the 60s.
.·
Sunshine retums Monday wilh a high bet)Veen SS and 90 eKpected.
'The record high tenipenlllre for Saturday's date atlhe Columbus weath-er station was 98 set in 1988. The record low was 46 set in 1992. Sunrise Monday will be 11 6:03 i.m. Sunset will be at 9:04 p.m.

Weather forecast:

POMEROY - The following ving under suspension, Si50 plus
cases were resolved last week in the costs, 30.days jail suspended to lhree
Meigs County Court of Judge ,PIIrick days, S75 plus jail suspended if valid
H. O'Brien.
·
,
OL presented wilhin 90 days; Patrick
· Fined were: Betty D. Newell, A. Newlan~, Reedsville, speed, $31
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; Lan· plus costs, 5eat belt,·$25 plus costs:
ny T. Lester, Gallipolis, speed, $30 · Katharine L. Pickens, Pomeroy,
plus costs; James H. Woodyard, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Jennie L.
Racine, failure to display registration, Neat, Langsville, assured clear dis·
$20 plus costs; Michael W. Roush, I8IICe ahead, $30 plus costs; seat belt,
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs; $25-plus costs; no child restraint, SIS
Jay Fisher, Middleport, speed,· $SO plus costs; Jay Day, Racine, sell belt,
plus costs; seat belt, $25 plus costs: costs only ; Steven J. Edwards,
Deborah S. :Arnold, Albany, ·Speed, ·Racine, DUI, $850 plus costs, 10
$30 plus costs; Carol A. Johnson, days jail suspended to three days, 9().
Bidwell, seat belt, $15 plus costs; day OL suspension, one year llroba·
Timolhy E. Johnson, Bidwell. seat tion, jail and $550 suspended upon
belt, $25' plus costs; Ralph K. Oiler, completion of residential treatment
Langsville~ seat belt, $25 plus costs; program; Barbara J. Buchanan,
William D. Musser, Racine, speed. Spericer, W.Va., passing bad cheCks,
$30 plus costs; sell belt, $25 plus two counts, $25 plus coslll on each,
costs; Vickie A. Halstead, Pomeroy; restitution; Timothy D. Wplfe, Mid·
speed, $30 plus costs; Briim R. dleport, passing bad checks.- $2.5
Arnold, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus plus costs, restitution;
costs; Pablo A. Miutinez, Charleston,
Angela S. Fisher, Pomeroy, pass·
W.Va., speed, $50 plus costs; Shawn · ing bad checks, $25 plus costs, restiR. Mitch, Pomeroy, seat belt, SIS tulion; Caleb T. Shuler, Middleport,
plus costs;
allowing unlicensed driver to operate
Roslee Cain, Pomeroy, ~esisting a motor-vehicle; $200 or SO hours
arrest, costs, I 0 days jail suspended community service, 30 days jail susto two days, one year probation; Tony pended. one year probation; Walter
R. Mohler, Pomeroy, driving under H. Barrett, pomeroy, passing bad
the influence, $850 plus costs, 10 checks, $25 plus costs, restitution;
days jail suspended to three days. 9(). Dane L. Marshall, Pomeroy, DUI,
day operator's license suspension, one · $300 plus costs, $550 forfeiture, one
year probation, jail and $550 sus· year OL suspension, &lt;JO..day velticle
~ pended upon completion of residen· immobilization, 30 days jail sustial treatment program; Mary E. Kir· . pended to I0 days, two years probaby, Pomeroy, passing bad checks. $25 tion; driving under suspension, $150
plus costs, restitution; Dorolhy E. plus costs, 30 days jail suspended to
· Driskill, Clarksville. Tenn., speed, I 0 days concurrent, two years pro.. $22 plus costs; Cory J. Seymour, . bation; fail11re to conirol, costs o~ly;
Middleport, seat belt, $25 plus costs; W1lham · R. Adams, Reedsv11le,
. Derrick D. Jackson, Middleport, dri· expired tags, S15 plus costs; seat belt,

. ·

Tuesday through Thursday... Partty cloudy wilh a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Lows around 70. Highs around 90.

MIDin&amp; tnKk found

PAGEVILLE - A truck report·
edly parlced in Pomeroy wilh the keys
. in 'the ipition was found ditched in
Scipio Township early Saturday. .
Deputies of lhe Meigs County
Sheriffs Deparlment were sununoned
to Townsend Road for a 1996 Ford
Ranger lhll had been run into a ditch.
The glass was knocked out and sasoline poured over it wilh a trail ·of
· gasoline leading to the truck, accord·
ing to Sheriff James M. Soulsby. The
g159line was ipited, but did not bum
the vehicle,'he added.
The truck is owned by Thomas
Wilson Jr., Titus Road, Middleport.
Juvenile died
LANGSVILLE-A 15-year-old
Pomeroy youlh was cited t.o Meigs
County Juvenile Court following a ·
one-car accident on Jacks Road nem:
Langsville Thursday night:
Joseph L. Rife was soulhbound
when he lost control of a 1994
Dodge he was drivlntl that went off
. lbe roadway and struck a . ditch,
according to a Meigs County Sheriffs
Department report. The car, belongins to his grandmother, Maxine
Dugan of Pomeroy, sustained heavy
damage.
.
He was cited for failure to control
and no operator's license. '
Cba111es med
MIDDLEPOKI'- Ronald Steinmetz, Middleport, vias jailed Thurs·
day night by Meigs County Sheriffs
deputies on charges of drivins under
the influence; driving under suspension, expired tags, child endangerment, and on a warrant for failure .to
comply with a cou~ order. after

Phones as
low as 99t.

Accidents will
happen. Picking
the right cellular
company, however,
should not be left
to chance.

3MONTHS
PAID
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UNITED STATES

CELLULAR. ·
WIRELESS COMMUNICATIONS

Our mission is to
malu cellular so
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and RICOI'ds into the - offices lithe
Deeaan .t Noonan Buildina in lhe
I I00 block of FQUrlh Avenue (parking lol next to Maxie's Bar).
In the meantime, office.staff from
the Catteusbura. Ky.. suboffice
moved to Huntington to open the dis·
trict office for business on July I.

Cases concluded .in Meigs County ·Court

$unday... Partly cloudy and humid with a chance of showers and thun·
derstorms. Highs from lhe upper 80$ to around 90. Southwest winds 5 to
10 mph, becomina northwest tale. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Sunday night... Mostly clear. l-ows in lhe mid 601;.
Monday... Mostly sunny. Highs around 90.
Monday night. .. Mostly clear. L!Jws in the upper 60s.

, Extended forecaat:

waitina to move the office equipment

The way peorle talk
around hm.•

I

.

Cbitllcothl
.
UniledSII!tSCoikJiar

--

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1084 N. Bridge.SL
. 175·4141

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Southem'llllio ComrtUii&lt;ationt '
Cl111ic Plall · '
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285·5001

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Hillap Cooter
· 2475 Scioto Tra~

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New BOlliA
Un~od 811111 Celnr
Now Basion Shopting Center

4010R~Ave.
456·8122 Df C8001824-1175

Alto, 00011 end rrillt -

LAKIN, W.Va. - Once again,
The sweep was held Saturday and
American Electric Power took. a hand the bartle worked bolh sides of the
:· in the annual Ohio River Sweep by river from Lakin to Point Pleasant.
. using a crane harge from its River AEP i~ a cprporate sponsor of ihe
' Transportation Division to assist with sweep. organized by the Ohio River
the removal of tires, refriserators and Valley Sanltadon Commission.
olher large items from the shoreline.
.

vi . .

· WIJ.Mirt ioclll-: Chlllic:olhe,

New Bolton, Jeckscm.

:· ·

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Early·detection is your·best weapon ·in
the fight against breast cancer.

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tVSPS W...Ol
Publlohed eoch Sunday, 8l5 Third ""'"
Oalllpoll' Ohio, by the OtUo Valley Publlohlna
Companyl0111neu Co .. Second clus postqe

omo

paid at Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Entered as

PiCk 3: 7-1·6
Pick 4: 2·5· 7-3
BuckeyeS: 3·4·9-15-20 ·
The owner of qile Buckeye Slick·
et wilh die correct five-number com·
binatlon may claim an Ohio Lottery
prize of $100,000, the lottery
announced Saturday.
The winning ticket was sold in
. Westerville.
Sales · in .. Buckeye S totaled
$365,183.

&amp;etOnd tlaAs maiUna maoer Ill Pomeroy. Oltlo,

,PoM.Omce.
Member: The Aasociated Press, aad the Obio
Nt;w•p~per As~lodon.

SVNDAYONLY
SVISCRIPTION RATBS
By Carrier or Motor .....,

One Weelr .......... ..... ............... ............... ..... $1.25
One y.., ................................................. $65.00

HOlzer is committed to the fight ...
.

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SlNGLB COPY PRICE
Sundlly .............. ................................:....... 11 .00

No subscrlptlonR by mall permitted In am:&amp;s
where motor carrier AerVicC Is available.

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The Sunday llmea-Senliael will not .,e ~
,·

Early·Detection
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111lblc for advance plymalll mlde to Cllrien.

· ' Publl•het ,......lise ri&amp;hi!O adjuot nttel dur·
• inlthc 1ub~pdon pciiod. Subtcriplion nile
~ .. ,,.. ""'Y be lmplemenud br&lt;honslnslhe
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People to lose weight

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01 ' '1 3 Wecktt .............................. ...:.......... .. ... S21.30
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The Holzer
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By The A11ocllttecl Pratt
The following numbers were
selected in llriday's Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries:
.
.

·

(614) 441·1982

Last year, some 21.000 sweep volunteers in six states collected more
!han 10,000 tons . of trash. AEP's
crane barge collected more than five
tons of large ih:ms, such as household

appliances, tires, bed frames and
even an occasional CIIJ'. In addition,
over I SO AEP employees and their
family members helped pick up
debris along the Shoreline. "'The Ohio River is an importjllt
resource to us," said Keilh M. Darling, AEP River Transportation Division seneral manager. "We depend on
it to transport coaii!IJ(Ito help us sen~
.
The 134 Buckeye 5 game tickets erate electricity. We are happy to lend
with four of lhe numbers are each a hand to keep \he Ohio River clean."
worth $250..The 4,S88 wiih three of
the numbers are each worth ·$10. The
44,004 with two of the nunibers are
each worth $1.
The Ohio L~ will Pll!Y" out
G.All.iPOtls- July t4 will be
$773,:i69.SO to wi!lners in Friday's the fint day for people to sign up for
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sates campground space at lhe Gatlia
totaled $1,409,618.
County Junior Fairgrounds, and not
In Pick 4 Numbers •. players lhe final day, as reported in Friday's
wagered $409,555 and w1ll share Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
$327.300. .
Additionally, Junior Fair Board
. WEST VIRGINIA
President Mike Mc:Calla said all lots
Datly 3: 5-3-3
are available at the campgroUnd site,
Daily 4: 3-3·4·3
and not seven, as was reP?f~ed.
· Cosh ,25: 8-11-IS-1.6-19, 24

tnVMifln the pooltlon of being

and lour chlldrln ..., being out

·3,o0o aq. ft, omce space available with plenty
of parking area 'overlooking the valley. Just
minutes near Holzer Medical Center . on
jackson Pike (old Rt. 35). 3 mo~ha FREE rent
for the right renter.

Call for detail• at:
614-446·0021 or 614·446·3919 ·

--~;;;;-~

of the bulln llli'worl&lt; woi1d

~

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to tMice lhe oomlllltment to 11110111 8oiiiMMtem ...._ Cotllge,
the lluden( population 10 IMl v.ied, with IIUdenlll ol aM ..... IIIII
tleidllle ICitedllle lllllbllclllllto abnd IChoot M 111111, - ' !
care ot my family, and lliP grlliluate will! a ue QPA. n..
trilll•lll hllf*l 1111 to glln bolh 11M lldlt arid oot.:ltllltee tltat I
... to peololmwaMin . .
I Qllldl II tt ln.Juni1M.
am llOW•ttpluwd • A~U wliol and Plamllllll oll()lr~Mila maw.
I would 1UQ0811 to ~ ~ hM -llaught aboUt.
to lliiiOI1I to
~:;~- •••• alabullnm..,...,...
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..1
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Godlp toll, ONo 48181 .

BEGIN TRAINING FOI YOUI·IUSINESS ~
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For more information call the Holzer
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UNITY
Savings Bank ·
446-0315 .

Insurance

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Now has the ABBI* System, the
ONLY one.within a 60 mile radius. ·

· GALLIPOLIS -A two-vehicle crash on SR 160 near Gallipolis Frida~
• left il Bidwell man injured, the Galli a-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
· ·reported.
. .
John T. Drummond Jr.. 31, 5064 SR 850. was transported to HMC by the
Gallia County.EMS following the II :20 a.m. accident, troopc!"' ~aid. He was'
later treated and ,r:eleased, a hospital spokesperson reported.
..
..
'noopers said Drummond was northbound when he slqwcd his pickup
truck for traffic ahead and was struck in 'the (ear by a cur driven by Rebcc·
ca C. Loscar, 32, 30 Henkle Ave., Gallipolis, that was unable to slow in time .
Damage to Drummond's piCkup wa.' slight and moderate to the Loscar
vehicle, according to the report. Loscar was cited for assured clear distance,
and Drummond ~as tick~ted for no opcmtor's license .

P-------------------------Medical,·Dental, Optical Office

won't

KNOWS THE VALUE OF A
QUALITY BUSINESS
EDUCATION

,

Friday accident leaves driver injured , .

~

QTR~1996

.,

Gall/a authorities lodge six In jail

Correction

GRADUATE

A few yHIIIQO. I found

GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gatlipolis City Police Friday and early Sat·
urday were Dina Lou Eblin, 26, Bidwell,' no operator's license; Charles 8 : ·
Hill, 21, Patriot, disorderly conduct; and Heath E. Hutcfiinson, 20, Northup, •
underage alcohol consumption.
·
.
·

("

DURST

·

.City officers Issue citations to three

va.,

. :-Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks

jmtbq 'ltllt5 .. jt~ditltl

GALLIPOLIS- A memorial fund has been established ·for Justin Paul l
Bowers, the 15·year-old Crown City area youth who died last week in a swim·
ming aceidollt in Tennessee.
The fund has been set up at Ohio Valley Bank and "all donations received •
will be very much ~iated," as famjly spokesperson said.
.

$25 plus costs;
·William Paul Rogers, Valley Fork,
GALLIPOLIS -. Booked into the Gallia County Jail .following arrests =
Johnny Donohue, Middlepon, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Mark by aulhorities were: .
·
sexual imposition. $SOO suspended, N. DaJane, Midlothian;
speed,
I Brian E. Howell, 21. 434 Fourth Ave., Gallipoli s, Friday al 8:40p.m.
costs, 60 days jail suspended, two $30 plus costS; Mitchell D. Chapman, by Gallipolis City Poli,ce for domestic violence.
·
i:
years probation, restraining order Gaithersburg, Md., seat belt, $2S plus
• Joe E. Peck, 37, Bidwell, Friday .at II :0 I p.m . by city officers for domesissued; Reva Mullen, Pomeroy, dis- costs; Sasha N. Zill, Huntington, tic violence. ·
orderly conduct, $100 suspended, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Cather• Craia D. Durham, 36, Vinton, Saturday at I: 17 a.m. by lhe Gallia:Coun- '·
costs, restraining order issued; Joey ineOiaScoc:~,Athens, speed, $30plus ty Sheriff's Department for disorderly conduct.
t
L. Mc:Henry, Cheshire, speed, $30 costs;
. • Narvel H. Foster, 19,7398 Suite Route 588. Gallipolis. Saturday at I :37
.,
plus costs; Raymond Yonker 111,
Stuart K. Lyles, Gallipolis, speed, a.m.• by deputies for assault. resisting IUTest and disorderly conduct.
Nelsonville, seat belt, $25 plus costs; S30 plus costs; George M. Warner,
I Printhia D. Roush. 20. Point Pleasant, W.Va., Saturday at 3:07 a.m. by
.
ed
$30
N
t
·11
peed
$SO
1
deputies
for underage alcohol consumption.
'·
Scon A. 0 urs, Rae1ne,. spe ,
e sonv1 e, s
\
D us costs;
plus costs; Okey T. Pullins, Long .Anlhony Moretli. ·Alhambra, Calif.,
• Nicky Lee Craycraft, 31 , (::heshire, Saturday at 5:36a.m. by deputies
Bottom, speed, $30 phis costs; Larry speed, . $30 plus costs; Oleryl A. (or domestic violence. ·
,.
. W. Youns. Tuppers Plains, seat belt, Facemyer, PomerOy, speed. $30 plus . Minor Injuries reported in crash .
$25 plus 'osts; Kathy A. Francis, costs; J~s W. Warner, Middleport,
GALLIPOLIS -Two GallipOlis residents were treated and released for
Long Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus speed, $30 plus costs; seat belt, $25 minor injuries following a two--vehicle accident on Friday.
·.
costs; Scott Ashcraft, Coolville, plus co,rs; Nan~y Jane llrown, Poini
Gallipolis City Police said that Sandra K. Cox, 49, 44 Paxton Road, was ,.
excesscivbee winWdowM· tinhalt. S29. plus PleasanBt: W.WVa.,S spended; $p30arkplus traveling up Oakwood Drive atl2:39 p.m. when he vehicle went left of cen· ).
1sea . ars 1, Mtddle- costs; I11Y . • au ers,
costs;
ers- ter and struck Linda 1. Addington, 43. 30 Oakwood Drive, who W&lt;lS travel· r
port, seat belt, $25 plus costs; Timo- . burs, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; ing down Oakwood Drive.
,,
lhy F. Sullivan, Lancaster, speed. '$30 Margaret D. Scheider, ·Wyoming,
A passen1er in Coxls vehicle. Ray Pearson, 42, 58 King Road, Gallipo- ;plus costS;
·
speed,
SSO
plus
costs;
Date
W.
Bak·
r
J Reed .
bel $
IS, was transported
. to Hotzer Med'tea1 cen ter by Ga tr1a Coun ty EMS
. . 1,· .
.
Robert E. Sherwood • St. Lou1s, er r., .
sv111e, seat I, 25 P1us · Stephanie L. Addington, 11, 30 Oakwond Drive.Ja passenger in the Adding- .;:
Mo.~ speed, $SO plus costs; James L. costs; Rodney A. 1\ipp, Pomeroy, ton vehicle, wu lf&amp;nsported to HMC by a private vehicle. Both were later t,
Hurl ow, Cheshire, seat belt, $25 plus speed, $30 plus costs; Louise N. treated and released, a hospital spokesperson said.
costs; Shelby D. Seeley, Waverly, Meek, Mt. Sterling, Ky., speed, $30
Bolli vehicles were moderately damaged, and Cox was cited for left of, I{
speed, $30 plus costs; Christopber C. plus costs; Stephen Paul Nill, Moor- center.
·
Corkerton, Waverly, speed, $30 plus park, Cali(., $30 plus costs; Julia F.
costs; excessive window tint, $20 Murdock, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus Pollee tic;ket drivers in two accidents
plus costs; Colleen A. Denholm, costs; Kyle A: Wickline, Racine,
GALLIPOLIS- A Gallipolis youth was cited for failure to control on · :
Copley. speed, $30 plus costs; Kur- speed, S30 plus costs; Robert E. Wil· Friday following a two-vehicle accident.
,,
tiss L. Groves, Vinton, seat belt, $15 fong. Coolville, seat belt, $25 plus
According to city police, Steven M. Koebel, 16, 991 Mill Creek Road, ..
plus costs; Harold Barnes, Bidwell, costs; Meron E. Grueser, Middleport. was traveling south on Secon Avenue at I: 16 p.m., when he struck the left
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Lloyd A. r speed.SJOpluscosts;ChadA.Savoy, rear of a vehicle driven by H(/ward E, Gruber, 58, Cbeshire, who had stopped r
Miller, Toronto; speed, $20 plus · Reedsville, seat belt, $1.5 plus costs; to back into a .parking spot.
•:,
costs; Arthur R. Kopczinsky, David M. Armstrong, W:illi~mstown,
Bolh vehicles suffered slight damage, according to officers,
l!
Pomeroy, speed, $20 plus costs'; W.Va.; speed, $30 plus costs; Joshua · A second Gilllipolis youlh was cited by officers for assured clear distance ·~
Robert Boggs,. Coolville, seat belt. A. Starcher, Pomeroy, speed, ·SSO ahead on Friday following a two-vehicle accident.
· .,
$25 plus costs; Richard H. Roller. ~Ius costs; Branden A. Saunders, GatSayward L. Schuette, 16, 559 Jay Drive, was tmveling north on Upper ..
B•Ipre, speed, $20 plus costs; Retha · lipolis, speed, $19 plus costs; John· River Road at 5:22p.m. when she failed to stop in time and struck the rear ·J
J. DeHaven, Mt. Vernon, speed, $20, ny T. Grueser, .Racine, sj!eed, $30 of a truck driven by Jonathan W. Slone, 34, Crown City. Schuette told offiplus costs; Howard B. Raymond, plus costs.
cers lhat her brakes had failed.
·
~·
Lancaster, speed, $20 plus . costs; ·
Officers reported lhat bolh vehicles were slightly damaged.
,.,

:AEP again lends hand to river shorelin~'s cleanup ·
VIsit us Oft dw ......._. www.uscc.com
.
.
· Ollor ttqulm a - 11-moolh - · og.......,t. IIOamlng """"'· lillts, rolls and no- sur&lt;harges not lndude&lt;l.
Other mtrictlollllnd
.
. ,dii'9ts llliY opp~. Set stJ&gt;Itlor dtt&gt;ils. otlor "'*fS Juno 30, 1'97.

}

Fund established In youth's memory

•Frte 111111ment of yo\ir
tiltH.• to help you decide~~
job Ia rlghl for you

•Aasesan'lents Include
qgitUont for training or
upgn~cth 10 eklne for
Ntralnlng ·
eComputw mft:h of your
· tkiH• with job blnk of .
40,000 employert from
·Columbus to Charletbm

·

�-

.

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J

•

Cotnmentary

•

..... M!

::1

Sunday, June 22, 1817:
•
l
••

ilmhatJl 1rimes· $tntin:el Knife fiasco cuts Campbell's credibility
'Est/JbOsW 1111966

By J8ck Ancllraon
Mid JM llo. .

.

WASHINGlON-- Part-iime jewelry designer and full-time U.S. Sen.
Ben Nigbthorse Campbell, R-Colo:,
is keeping some strange company in
a quest to make a fcw.dollars for the
family business.
As we neported last week, Campbell is bumping up against a Jaw thai
he himself wrote in I990 as a Democratic member of the House of Representatives. The narrowly· focused
law requires that itll arts and crafts
sold as "American Indian" actually
·be made by Indians . .
A cynic might suspect that Camp.bell's law was somewhat self-serving.
CampbeWs wife ·and son currently
operate Nighthorse Inc .. a company
for which the senator.himself designs

825 Ttllrd Avenue, Gllllpolll, Ohio

814 448 2342 • Fo: U8 3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
814-9112·2158 • Fax: 992·2157

.!1

A Gannett Co. Newspaper ·
ROBI!Al: L WINGETT
Publisher

Margaret Let.w

Hobart WIIIOII Jr.

Controller

Executive Editor

ttl..,. ,

--ttl,....,,...

TIN._,I'I loolcc-..·-,.,,.-trom_on•lltoedllloot .... PIJII- "'IHOI ,.

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UfNN ID , . . , . , ., Ontl t/I,_IKidiJJIH
ow

Credibility gap
By WALTER R. MEARS

•

products,
the "Spirit
of
crafts
and including
jewelry.' ·Some
of those
Thunder Collector's Knife," are cur- .
· rently being sold by lhe Pennsylva·
nia-based Franklin Mint. A national
advertising campaign for the knife
shows Campbell resplendent in a war
bonnet and 1raditional dress.
What the ad doesn't mention, of

AP Speclll Correspondent
WASHINGlON- Long before Watergate, the credibility gap was there
and widening. Now, it's a cliche, summing up the mistrust and cynicism left
by scandal and war.
The phmse was coined during Lyndon Johnson's presidency, when misstatements on the escalating war in South Vietnam were frequent, and often
purposefuL
Not that governments ever always told the truth. Indeed, when John F. ·
. Kennedy was president, a Pentagon official said publicly that the government had a right to lie to avoid war in an age of nuclear weapons.
The government did lie, and.got caught, in 1960, when the Soviet Union
shot down a U-2 spy plane and the cover, that it was a s1rayed weather
research flight, was blown bec~use the pilot was captured. Dwight D. Eisenhower was president, and tried to make it work, but admitled being "caught
with our pants down."
Nonetheless, his popularity and approval standing stayed high- he said
"because the people think I am honest and sincere, as I hope I am."
Trust in government sagged in the mid-19605•.· as the Vietnam War
widened and the adminiSiration countered reality with optimistic forecasts
of American success.
Johnson 's reputation· was earned as a crafty manipulator of conflicting
·interests as Senate majority leader, but the traits that worked there cost him. ·
credibility in the White House. .
·
II was on the way to becoming a Republican issue in the 1968 campaign
-Richard M. Nixon carried his own credibility baggage even then- and
Johnson dropped out anyhow.
Even then, tricky tactics toward Vielnam peace negotiations could have
been costly to Nixon just before he narrowly won that election, but Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey wouldn't raise them against him, according to a
new book on 1968.
.
.
·
In "The Year the Dream Died," author Jules Witcover writes that Johnson offered Humphrey FBI wiretap and other evidence that the Nixon campaign had been telling the South Vielnamese gcivemmentto stay away from
peace talks thai autumn and wait for a new president.
.
There were reports of meddling at the tilne, but Nixon's people denied
any involvement.
·
Humphrey was concerned about the reliability of whatJohnson saw as
proof, about the impact disclosure would have on the peace effort and aboUt
the appearance of a last-minute ploy on his part, Witcover writes.
Besides, the ·polls showed him gaimrig strength in the closing days.
His refusal, Witcover repo11S, opened a lasting rift with JohnSQII.
That · ~really tore it" between Johnsen and his then vice president, former White House aide 'Joseph Califano told Witcover. Johnson tho~ght
Humphrey had no spine and no toughness, Calif~no said.
·'
Whatever the maneuvering then, it was the kind of dispute that fed suspicions and shook credibility. Nearly a year into lhe Watergate. scandal, in
1973, a 'Gallup Poll reported that a majority of Americans thought it was
just politics, the kind of thing both parties engage in. By the time Nixon
n:signed in the summer of 1974, most people thought be should,
In a poll conducted for The Associated Press. 6S percent said Watergale
wasn't much worse than other Washington scandal in the 25 years since.
·A Gallup Poll for USA Today and CNN found trust in the federal gov. r' emment has declined markedly since 1972, although majorities still express
~ confidence. Tbat survey reponed ·trust in the presidency down from 73 per. : cent to 62 percent, trust in Congress from 71 percent to 54 percent, trust in
· t the news media from 68 percent to 53 percent.
.
: , By now, Watergate is a slogan, the government scandal to which all the
• others arc compared.
•
"There's only - and thank God - one Watergale that we've bad," said
~ Sam Dash, who was chief counsel to lhe Senate Watergate Committed: .
: "We're talking about a phenomenal benchmark in the history or our coun·
~"
.

Pale Moon.
"I justlhought, 'How emb~sing for Ben. And who scnewed up7'"
said Suzan Harjo of The Morning
Star IIIStitute, a Washington-based
·Indian advocacy gt;&gt;up; when she
saw the ad for the knife. Harjo, like
Campbell, is Cheyenne. " I was
shocked to see that Ben had any son
of alliance with them."
The. American Indian Heritage
. designed the knife means that it's Foundation, based in .Falls Church,
"made" by an American Indian. Sen. . Va, ran into trouble in 1991 when it
Campbell has been a member of the sent out direcr-niail fund-raising
Northern Cheyenne tribe since 1980. appeals to buy food for what it
But this strange tale does not end called.the Paiute Indtans in Port Orathere. Participating in the venture bam, Alaska. "The ilfy·hand of winwith Campbell is the American lndi- ter is ... threatening to stmitgle the litail Heritage Foundation, which has tie ones in a death grip," read their
been accused of falsely soliciting . appeal.
.
.
money to help Indians. Its president,
The Anchorage D~ily New ~ later
Princess Pale Moon, portrays herself: reJl911ed that there was no food shortas a m~m Pocahonlas.
age, and that the village had nol been
'Yet, ironically, she is unable to notified of the fund -raising cammeet the definition of Indian as laid paign. Cily officials refused to accept
out in Campbell's law, since she is 1,000 pounds of frozen beef liver
not an enrolled member of an Indian from the foundation and •aid I he
tribe. Some Indian activists we spoke Paiute tribe is based in Nevada.
to expressed surprise thai Campbell .
One year later, at Expo '92 in
would even associate himself with Seville, Spain, the United States

knifes Ire actually Jaade in China.
Campbell's son, Colin, says this is
OK because the fact that his 'father

By Jack Anderson
· and
Jan Moller

•-;:.~-::;;,;;;··~;zijik:~~nl-----==_:._

Information Agency removed Pale
Moon from the inaugural ceremonies;
·at the United StaleS pavilion.after she
was unable to prove she is really an•
Indian.
.
.
Pale Moon, who was born Ritao
Ann Suntz, !Old us she isn't enrolle41
with a specific tribe because she didn't learn of her Cherokee bimtage•
until she was an adult. She added that.
the way she was ~aled by the USIA •
"was alrOCjous," and altrihuted the•;
Alaskan relief fiasco to a misunder~;
standing.
:.
Long1Jefone they became nominal
· business partners, Pale Moon anct
Campbell wene friends. Pale Moon"
says the 1wo mel al powwows held in
lhe San Francisco-area durin3' the
1960s. The friendship continued after'
Campbell came to Washington as a .
Democralic congressman in 1987. ;!
A loyal Republican,' Pale Maori"
was among the first to lobby Camp-.
bell to switch parties. " He said, ·~ ·
havehadsometbougbtsinthatdirec-~.

____;____

Media elite ignores abstinence education
By ROBERT WEEDY
Freedom of the press used to
mean that different sides of an issue
could be disCussed in an open forum
with a more or less level playi_ng
field. Some folk
think this is true
'the way it used to.
be, but this' is in
fact limited more
:and more. There
are certain topics
'that the national
media elite refuse
to · touch unless forced to by other
'outlets or talk radio.
The olher very interesting aspect
of ibis is thai the bias, pushing an
agenda minus ihe data and facts, is
becoming mone extreme when cer- .
tain issues are discussed at all. Now,
add to this list of topics the subject
of abstinence education in gfl¥1cs K ·
lhrough 12. Afler decades of "safe
sex", then "safer sex" presentatiOns

in history

what S)ECUS wants the states ·to
do. Yet, they claim to support the
abstinence philosophy. In reality, it
is a confused, mixed message:
"Abstain, and if you are not going to
abs1ain. act responsibly."
All the daia show that the kids
see through that message quite readily. It isn't a serious abstinence message to sta11 with, and the end result
of the message is evident in the stalistics.
.
Headlines tell the story of the
frenzied opposition lo lhe timeproven program of years gone by:
"Sex education won't work using
abstinence only"; "Abstinence-only
sex education is found inferior" ;
"Saying no can't he the entire solution." What is nol only sad, but
revolting, · is thai these reporters
willfully ignore solid data to the
contrary. By this they prove they arc
not interested in the welfare of the
children, but in a politically correct
philosophy. Perhap~ their joh
depends upon this, we don't know.
However, consider the following:
Sec. 912 -- Abstinence Education
-- amends Title V of the Social
Security Act including: "Separate
Progrnmfor Abstinency Education".
"Sec. 510. (b)( I) The purpose of an
allotment under subsection (a) to a
state is to enable the State to provide
abstinence education, and at the
option of ihc State. where apprqpri•
ate, inentoring. counseling, and
adult supervision. to promote absti·
nence from sexual activity, with a
focus on those groups which arc
mosl likely to bear.ehildren out of
wediDCk." Ohio is eligible for $2.09
million/year for five years under
this program. The State share is in
lhe current bndget bill being debat-

ed. Groups who have Abslinence from 1995 to 1996. The study surOnly programs will be eligible to veyed attitudes and behavior imme~,
make application , for 1 the funds diately before and after students
which will be used in sc~ools.
were instructed in adolescent heahlt
Also, dhio House bill #189 has . as a pilot in over 100 schools in Illi·
passed the House 93-0 and is being nois. Blind coding to ensure
considered by Senate committees ~nonymity matched participants for
prior to a Ooor vote. This bill is a a follow-up survey one year later
siep in the direction of obtaining a that included student populations:
more ·level playing field in the sex both downstate and in the city o(
education area. If a health course Chicago. ·
:
gave a few sentences to 'abstinence'
The follow-up survey indicatc4
in a week's time that was about it, · that 54 percent of the teens who had
the rest was "safe sei(", H.B. 189 been recenlly sexually active prior·
requires the State Board of Educa- to the program were no longer
tion ·in venereal disease courses to recently seitually active one year'
do all the following:
later. In terms of attiludes toward
· ·.· Stress that students should . self-cootrol, the percentage of those'
abstain from sexual activity until responding "AII:Vays" when asked :
after' marriage.
.,
.
about the possibility of controlling•
-- Teach the potential physical, sexual urges rose from 32.5 -on lhepsychological, emotional, and pre-course survey lo 51.7 rcrcent on
social side effects of participating in the follow-up.
sexual activity outside of marriage.
With Ohio reporting 6,204 abor: '
· -- Teach that conceiving children lions performed on teens, and.
out-of-wedlock is likely to have 17,405 hiiths to unwed teens for
harmful consequences ror the child, 1995, why shouldn't we ' opt fo~ .
the child's parents, and society.·
Abstinencc-Cenlered Education ''
-- Stre,ss that sexually transmitlcd Gallia County's share of the unwed
· diseases arc ;;erious possible haz· teen births wa.' 41 while Meigs' .
ards of sexual aclivity.
Counly's share was 24. This mean!'
-- Advise students of the laws that 60.3 Jlllrcent· qf births to teens
pertaining to linancial:rcsponsibility were to those unmaOTied in Gallia
of parents to children'' born in and and 68.6 percent in Meigs. For the,.
out of wedlock.
· state of Ohio, this.figure is. 82.9 per•• Advise students of the under cent. ,
,
· :;
which · ii is criminal If&gt; have sexual
Given this information, ·why""
contact with a person •.under the age shouldn't we encourage our ·lcaders
Q( 16 pursuant to sectio.n 2907.04 of in Ohio to follow through on boliG
· tll'c revised ~ode.
.
programs?
. · .• .
Project Reality has been a leader
'Robert Weedy, is • correspon,~
in Abstinence-Centered Education. dent ror the Sunday Times-Sen·
Nonhwest University has released . tinel . .
. its analysi~ of the impact of the pro, gral)l .as gleaned from'a longitudinal study f~llowing 2,s:I'J young teens
...-

'
s.
a.
decent
hitte·
r
All in all, ·Newt·
.
·-

i

..,_,!::

·

;ow

•Middleport • Gllllpolla, ott • Point Pl••••m. wv
- - Pom•roy
.

. lundly, JUM 22, 1817

., ''

.

'

But consider tlicse Newt Notions:
gara Falls of the, future for newly·
-- Privatization of the National
weds. (Wedding nights can be awk-- · , ., '·Periodic · "Co~ction Days.'' Endowment for the Arts.
",
ward right bene on earth.llllllgine the during ,which Congress would review
"It the people who com~ io loti',
scene in I WCiJiitless CRvifl&gt;nmenl.) . "lelf-evidenlly s~:· "pnifoundly '·by us .(for 'arts funding) who are
d1,1mb" and "silly'l government neg- famous and rich would simply dedi-2
ulatlons and vole ihem out of exis- cate I percent of their gross incom~~
tence.
'!I
to an 'American Endowment for the
Nor am I eiiiiiiOI'ed of lhi concepl
--The donatiOnN' free lime by the Arts,'" Newt toJd a press confene;
of ltlplop computer tax credits for the ,TV networks for allti-drug c;ommer· in April, "they would funil bi
poor; or nesuneclin1 Oiphanages; or cials. "When. the' ~works can pvc sySiem than the National Endowmen
converting Ameriea into an inteiM- $600,000ashow~ihree'('Seinf~') for the Arts." ,He poinled to the $90
tiona! mall for cqan transplaniS; Or · sws, each in lheJIIIIIC half hour,'' million tliat the Walt Disney Co. paid .
·building a teal Jurassic Part and said J'lewt in a speech, "lhe networks to doparted president Michael OvitibrinJling back exline! spec:ies.
·can give .every ~ingle ~ we need 10 and added: "If Disney would simply
Holdins oul beach volleyball as a ··communteate WI$ our Jtlds, and the)~, doaale u mucli 10 !he endoWment' u "'
. -or our fiecdom llrilces me as ouaht to do It 11 cilizeas bec::lllie DIIM)' pay~ 01111 executive whp is''
a stretch: Arid portrayinl the cunail· Americans have been pnUy dam te.vi•l the ~y. you .,:ouJd'1
ment of free ice 10 Conpss as a good 10 the networb."
f111anc:c the whOle thiq."
··Q
symbol
of
GOP
tJwift·
seema
absurd.
'
. .

a

'

.

case:

Ed
. I"th Hump h.rey .Reed

Vergie D. Roberts

-Area News in Brief:-·TP-C district suspends boll order

.

.t·I;..Le•ed 'n

t''

report ..

a

EMS units respond to 6 c·aus ~':t!:f!'~~=~'!:.~'::'e:':r::

POMEROY
past.year the officers· used violence
· . PoMEROY- Units of the Meigs
.
·
Cherry
R'dge
Road
. 2:04 p.m.,
. 1
, in marital conflicts. Thai surlley
County Emergency MediCal Ser'vii:&lt;
defined violence, from pushing lo
answered sil calls for assistana( Fn- Shade, Lee Blevins, VMH;
9:59
p.m.,
Seneca
Drive,
.
Ida
using a gun.
day. UniiS responding include4:
Clark,
VMH.
, CENTRAL DISJ&gt;ATCH
12:28 a.m., General HartinJer
Parkway, Middleport, motor veh.icle
accident, Ronald Casci, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Middleport
fAMILY PUCTICE
.
squad and volu~teer ·fire departmcnl .
,·
assisted;
I :03 a.m., State Ro11te 325,
Danv!lle, Marjorie Jwiazdowski,
O'Biencss Memorial Hospital;
•• 10:46 -p.m.. Mill Street, Middle· .
port, Delores Aeiker, Holzer Medical ·
Center;
·
I: IS p.m.. BeniZ Cemetery Road,
Shade, Cauie NUiter, Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital. .

Your Choice! ·

M. HOLLEY, M.D.

·.PAIII .COIITIOL CLIIIIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

Victims of fl'*'

*Computer Programmed For.Your·Hearing Loss
right in our office, by a hearing professional
* Manufactuered by "Siemens" -largest
mak~r of hearing aids in the world!
*Other sizes and types also on s~le
C•ll tocl•y for • FREE profeealon•l he...ng te11t
•nd p.......,.m•ble he•rlng•ld demonstration!

·TO ACCOIIMODAB IIOSI WOBIII PiEOPU,
WIIII.O"I ~ 7 P.M. 01 TUESDAYS

414 2nd Ave Suite 204

(POINT Pt.EASANT MEDICAL CENTER) .

GaiUpolla Ohio 41831

tJnl ·&amp; JlffiiSOIIRIUI
. Pllll'l PlWIII

671-1671
·I

r

I

Whea oftlcell lftl lhe abusers, ;
Cllnllnuld"-,...A1
. Apln, about 40 pera:nt
"Ru,ly does the~ of a
lltrJcly biddetl, II is dlllc:ult actaowledpd vloleat behavior. police oftkcr CODlmittiJIB domestil: experta uy, lite v~ often get •
10 llleuaJe.
'Ibilu•n.-a wim a r.ae ol.16 per- violence become public," taid cJwaed. Abuaas in aiform know •
But Tile AtaOCiallldl'lllllloobd cent of '"qJiea Ia tbe 1JC111ft1 popu- Jacqueline Sl. J0111, a Univenily of how 10 lhift blame, laid O'Dell, the ;
CROWN CITY -Juatin P.u1 Bowen, IS, Bladon Road, Crown City, died
II departmeniS of V1ll')'iDs sizea, Ia lition. llOOOidlq 10 atudlea
Denver Jllll{eaor and fonner judge pol~ CODIUltut. Aa:used off'tceR :
Wednelday, June 18, 1997 in LaFollelle, Tenn.
nepms,
and
found
evidence
Some
experiS.
iDcllldiog
Sbeldon
wbo
wu editor of a guide for jlllfses uylhinga like, "She's jealous, she's :
various
· Born Sept. 9, 1981 in Cleveland, son ofnidd and Telart Bowen, he was
of
it
in
911
dispatdueconls
showing
Orec!tberJ.
•
~r
police
adminishandlin1
domestie ,violence cues. nuts, she's tbnalened to kill me with •
a.student II South Gallia High School.
eme11ency
calls
from
officer's
lrator
wbo
nms
tbe
Police
Executive
"Is
ita
cover-up?
Or a reluctance of my Jllll,"' O'Dell said. "Cops have :
Surviv.ing in addi~on to his parents ue two brothen,Jody (Tonya) Bowers and )eremy Bowers; .a niece; and grandpii'Cnts, Ella Mae Russell, and homes, in department personnel Lcadcnblp Progam at Jobns Hop- spouses calling police? And what's a unique abilily 10 paint their wives '
records, in divorce files and in criJD. tins Uoivenily, believe the 40 per- the police response if ~U~d when they as lhe perpetrator."
•
l&gt;aul and Mae Lindsey.
·
.
'
inal
proceedings.
cent
fipne
overstates
the
'Ole
are
called?"
.
.
.
Aller
lbetr
nexl
fighl,
Ms.
HarlCIIII
,
He was Jlf'!"ded in death by grandpaneniS, Ray.and Frances Bowen; and
• In Meigs County, the bite mark problem bas lleeo "understated for
Helping keep lhe secrel are Jlte pn ned a charge that her husband :
a great-grandmother, Minnie Rose -Burge.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Mounl Zion Church. with the Rev. on Heather Harless's cheek sbows generations, but we want to be care- insular bonds of lhe police cultuR bit, choked and shoved her. In
and the power and ~that come neturn, Smith got her charged with ;
Gary Warner and the Rev: Garland Montgonlery officiatinJ. Burial will be clearly in lhe police evidence' photo- fu1 not to overstate it," he said.
graph.
She
·
reported
!hat
her
bus·
Other
experts,
such
as
Boulin
with
the badge, suglesling those poundin&amp; his chest with her fills.
in ~ Swan Creek Cemetery. VISitation was condUCied at the Waush-Hal- · ·
band,
Ohio
Stale
Trooper
Thm
Johnson,
find
the
studies
alarming.
wbo
wear
it do no wrong. 'The bUr·
Ms. Harless was later cleaned, i
ley-Wood Funeral Home, Gallipolis, on Sllllrday, and will be held a1 the
Smith, bit and choked her in Dcc:em- "'Ibe lhing thai needs 10 be liken den of the seem, and of expo&amp;ing it, and ·after Smith; pleaded guihy to ; .
church Sunday from I p.m. until the time of the service. ·
·
disonderly conduct, the couple ;
ber 1995. He claimed she bit bim, . very seriOIIIIy," she said, "is that ·falls most heavily onlhe victim.
too, explaiJiing his actions by say; we'nedcaling with people who are
Repoitingabusetakeseourageby divorced.
Cowily off'tclals insist Smith gQI :
ing: "You'ne trained lo react. It's not supposed 10 be upholding the law." anyone. When the b.llterer is a law
no
specialtneatment, but lhe epiSode '
. jusl something you cui tum on or
Psychologists who Sllidy police officer, lhe victim's risks multiply.
. ~IDDLEPORI'- Edith Humphrey Reed, 93, Athens, died Saturday, June tum off ... whether it's hotne or ,on say it's not surprising some officers . Interviews wilh both victims and prompted domestic violence ·training ; .
21, IWI in the Overbrook Center, Middleport.
lhe job." It , took a. second fight Ire violent at home; in fact, lhey say experts show that victims rc.r retal-. for police and an admonitioniO treat •
Born Jan. I I, 1904 at the Humphrey Green Tree Farm, daughter of the before Smith, 25, was clwged and it would be surprising if they wene iation or that a sua:essful complaint all abuse i:ases the same.
:
Onlr vlolaua • . •
late Lewis and Oraces Knowles Humphrey pf ''The Maples," Hockingport, fined $50 for disorderly conduel not.
could aJSIIhe abuser his job, deprivllllelytobenr.d
she was the deseendant of a pioneer Athens Coun1y family.
. ·
The Ohio State Highway Patrol also
"You have an occupation whose ing the family of income.
Until
recently,
only lhe most ;
She was a graduate of John Hancock High School, Ohio Univenity with suspended him for one.day, taken as primary or cone function is the
At The Spring of Tampa Bay, a
vicious
abusers
in
unifonii were '
a bachelor of arts degree, and Ohio State University with a master of arts vacation, when Smith agreed lo administration ·of violence," said shelter in Florida, Lisa Lant!ers
likely
to
be
rued:
If
limbs
were brodegree. She taught English and dramatics at Sullins College in BrisiOI, Va., counseling.
Professor V'teior Kappeler, an East- notes that clients whose abusen are
and Frostburg (Md.) State College, and also taught in Cleveland, Florida and
• In Chicago, lhe wife of Ofticer em Kclltuclty University expen on police officers say their partners tell ken, say, or murder committed, makWest Virginia
· James Nelson went 10 the hoSpital police deviance. "Would we not lhem: "You go to that shelter, I ing headlines.
"We fire police offrcers for steal·
·She had been an advertising copywriter for two advertising agenciel, and one day in November 1994 with sec· expect, then, an entire array of vio- know where it is. You can'l gel away
ing.
We fine police officers for any
direc10r of publicity for the Sachs Department Stone, all in New York City. and-degree burns on her face, neck, Jence outside the workplace, from me.' "
She authored a newspaper cooking column and wis a home CCOJ!Qmics lee- shoulder and legs. Her husband whclhcr against spouses, against
Heather Harless, · the Ohio · olher type of crime," said Dnew Dia:·
turer in the Monongahela System in Fairmont, W.Va., Morgantown, W.Va. intentionally splashed her with hoi children or other people?"
woman who accused her state-troop- mood, a retired Tulsa, Okla., police
and Oakland, Md. As an editorial assistant to Freeling Foster, she assisted oil, she told police. The officers who
Police ane "the heat seeken, the er husband of choking and ~,iting ·chi~f now wilh the Police Executive
~is column "Keep Up With the World" that appeared in Collier's Magazine. . listened to her complaint didn't people who like 10 get ll!ings done," her, says a sheriff's depuly lned to Research Forum. But in .many ·
She was a member of the Good Shepherd Episcopal Church of Athens, anal him. They didn't even file a said Albert Seng. a therapist in The- discourage her from filing 'a com" departments, be said, no standard
and served on the National Episcopal Chun;h Women's Diocesan Bolird for report. Nelson, who has denied the ·son, Ariz., .who before that was a plaint. "They 10ld me that my bus· applies 10 officers who commit fam·
the Diocese of Southern Ohio.
allesation, never faced criminal .police officer for 25 yeBJS . ...1 think band had a good job and they -,vant· . ily violence.
In 1994,. the South,.,estem Law
She was a member of the Pi Beta Phi sorority .and served as presiden1 of charges. However, an inletnal it's .' easier to lake lhat first step, ed lo see him keep it."
.
its Alumnae Club in Athens. Her other memberships included the Pi Lam- . departmental investigation of the when you've been working· the
The depuly, Jeff.Miller, an inves· Institute and the Arlington, Thxlis,
. ba Theta fraternity (a national scholastic honorary), the Nabby Lee Ames mauer Confirmed the wife's story. slneets and sec people beating each tigator for lhe Meigs Counly prose- Police Department surveyed 123
Chapter of lhe Dau~bters of ~he American. Revolution, the Athens Histori· As a.result, the investigating officers other, or go on domestic viOlence cutor, denies he was trying to dis· police ageicies in r;ommunities of
cal Soctety, the Enghsh Speakmg Umon and the Athens COunty Museum Cor- were punished and Nelson, 57, was calls.... It's easier to talte that fUSI courage her. He said be was merely more than I 00,000 people. They
poraloon.
suspended. The police superinten- step of pushing your wife, or healing pnesenting her with 'a choice. "IIold found about half laclked an inlcmal
She was also preced~d in death by her husband, Theodore Reed Sr.; and dent wanted 10 fire him, but the her."
her there was an allemative lhere.... affairS policy on abusen, and thll ·
by a stepson, Ted Reed Jr.
civilian Chicago Police Board
Reynolds, the small-town lens Did I say, 'I don't wanl Thm Smith . only one in five departinents fined an
officer after . a second domestic ·
Surviving are a stepdaught~·in-law, Nancy Reed of Gallipolis: three ordered bim reinstated after be got officer who used 10 beat his wife, lo lose his job?'l probably did."
grandsons; and numerous cousms.
counseling.
says he doesn'l buy lhe common
..
abuse offense.
A me!"orial service will be .announced at a later date ..Arrangements are
• In Lakeland, Fla., 1he pollee view that blames the stress of police
by the Ftsher FuneriJI Home, Mtddleport.
chief proclaimed Charles Dallas his · work.
1996 Offrcer of lhe Year. Chief Sam
"Everybody has stresses," he
Baca, who puiS ·a priority on domes- said, adding that his violence was
tic violence, was unawllfC at the lime learned as a child, watching his ·
GALLIPOLIS- Vergie D. Roberts, 91, Gallipolis, died Friday, June 20, thai Dallas had recently been subject f01ther bell hismolher. Reynolds now
!WI in Holzer Medical Center.
.
to a year-long reslraining order to runs a·program for baUeners through
· Born Oct. 16, 1905 in Gallia County, daughter of the late Riley l and Effie protect his wife from him. 'I'IIe order the Sherman Crisis Center.
White DeWiu, she was a bookkeeper and longtime employee of the Davis was issued after Elaine' Dallas swore
Cella obn dlld ended,
, Shuler Department Stone.
under oath that her husband · had
wllhout .1 report
She was also a 4-H ad_visor for severa.l years in Gallia County.
thneatened to kill them both and
In BI'O)Yard County, Fla., Chief
GALI,.IPOLIS- Henry L. (Luder) Steinbeck, 76, of Gallipolis, died FriDec • b
11 f
day, June 20, 1997 at his nesidence.
.
She was preceded in death by ber ·husband, Corbett J. Roberts, on
. ' ust a o your teeth out." The · John Fellgen of lhc sheriff's depart·
Born January 31 , 1921 in Gallipolis, son of the late )ohn C. Steinbeck
J, 1983; a son, Robert L. Robem: and a brOther, Horace DeWitt.
officer, 43, declincll to be inter- ment was so concerned about
·
Surviving are two daughters, Mary Corbeua RobetU of Gallipolis, and vtewed.
He was never chall!ed.
domestic violence by police that he and Ediih Davis Steinbeck, he was an owner of a dry cleaning business on
Brenda (Dan) Morgan of Rio Grande; a dlughte~in·law, Phebe Roberts of.
'Ibe AP's findings support the decided to do some research. He Third Avenue in Gallipolis for 15 years; and a retiree of Goodyear in Apple
Racine; five -~dchildren
and seven pat-grandchildnen;' and a sister, Mrs. . obscrva.tions of more lhan 40 examined 911 calls from homes of Grove, West Virginia.
.
5 '~~
· mtervoew
·
· ed •.or offircers m
· h'rs department and e1se- .
A U.S. Army veteran of World War II, be was a member of the Gallipo'
Dale (Betty) Harbour
of Nbany.
.
.
experts on poI'tcmg
Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Monday in the Ohio Vall~y t,fell)ory _Ibis.siOry. Th~l' incl~de police chiefs ~~ne ~0 ~ w~aiJIJ? .!;oo..l~ .'~:
lis Elks Lodge I 07 for SO years, and a member of the Cliffside Golf Course
Gardens: with PaS!OI' Joseph Godwin officiating. Frle
.' nds may call al the Willis and palrol officers, psychotherapists
He foUnd that, With dostuibmg in Gallipolis.
.,
'lh
I'
d
·
freq
·
d
·
·
1
·
cal'"
Surviving
are
his
wife,
Mary
M.
Barron
Steinbeck
of
Gallipolis,
whom
ho
k
Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m. Sunday.
· w wor wt po tee, aca cmtcs
uency, omesttc v1o ence
.,.
who sludy lhem, advocates for vic- made from officers' homes dead- he married October 7, 1943 in Gallipolis; a daughter and son-in-law,-Becky
tlms of domestic abuse, judges and ended wilhout a report or real iiJ'fes- and Mike Lahna of Coshocton: three grandchildnen, Paul Lahna, Mary Ann'
prosecuton. Ov¢rwhelmingly, lbey . tigation.
.
Lahna and Wendy Lahna; and a brother, James Steinbeck of Toledo.
say that dom~lc violence by police
This finding confirms what many
In addition lo his parents, he was preceded in &lt;lealh by a brolher, John
is a significant problem lhat has not' in policing know from experience.
Steinbeck; and a sister, Ruth Lockwood.
· ed ffi · t tl 1·
kno •
f
f
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday, June 24, 1997 at Mound Hill Ccmele, i)'.'
r c -A boil order implemenled last Tuesday ,for Tuppe
' rs recetv
a en rJOn. de
"We . w .or
act· lllllny
o
MINERSVIL"""
"Th su ·tcren
· .of
h adied
•
with
Pastor David Hogg officiating. B•;Yial will follow. There will be no vis-'
10 'orma11Y italian.
Plains-Chester Water District customeR on Amberger, Yost, Minersville Hill,
e maJonty
po tce part- these lhings are an
There will be a nag presentation atlhe graveside by VFW Post 4464
Welchtown Hill. Dutch Town and Nease roads and Fones! Run Road between menIS still don't handle.it correctly," and do not become pan of the l'ecord and the American Legion Lafayette Post 27.
.
.
es
Road
and
lhe
Block
.
Plant
.Road
'
has
been
lt''ted.
said
Anne
O'Dell,
a
,
former
San
of
lhe
de)l!lrtmcnl,"
said
John
Fir·
h
E
Roy Jon
"
D'
I'
· h
·
·
,
Pallbeaners will be Stanley Robinson. Vance 1o nson, arl Tope, George .
·-~nesday
are
consl'dcred
-·•e.
1cgo
po
tee
serReanl
w
o
trams
inan,
research
dinector
of
the
Inter·
Fold
d H
d D H.
Results Of a Water Sample taken w.""'
""''
I'
ld 'd • d
• •
·
·
Chi..L. f · Davis, Jrv
en, An y out an ave 1ve1y.
~'~omeii'.OY *""""n
po ICC WOr 1\'1 e m OmesiiC VID- national AssociatiOn of
~•• o
.The honorary pallbearer is George Hout.
r,
• • ,....., ,.,."' ''
'' BCC'J.enf
lUI
le-·
preventi
.
on.
"They'
re
ignorant
Polo'ce.
"Thene's
no
qu•stt'on
-thai
·~
In lieu of Oowers, the family request' that donation be made·to the HolzMIDDLEPORT __.A 17-year-old Pomeroy youth was cited for driving ' about the dynamics of this issue." law enforcement in the past has been er Hospice.
under the influence, running a stop sign, no operator's license and driving Abusive offitcers " deny, deny, deny, a very closed communiiy."
The Willis Funeral home is in charge of arrangements.
under underage consumption following a twO-car crash in Middleport early deny," fooling colleagues and boss,
!!!!
. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
~~ .
~she~
Roy E. Powell Jr. failed to heed a stOp sign at the intersection of BroadAlthough numbeiS •re hard to
way Street and General Hartinger Parkway around 12:38 a.m. and slrUck the come by, two academic studies sugpassenger side of another car driven by Ron P. Casci, 37, Midd~port, caus- gest thai police officers .are mone
. ing heavy and dis~ling damage to both Casci's 1995 Ford Taurus and Pow- likely to engage in domestic viaell's 1987 Chevrolet Cavalier; according to a Middleport Police Department .lence than mefl!bers of lhe general
rejlprt.
.'
.
public.
.
Casci ·was transported by the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service . Leanor BouliD Johnson, an assoto- Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy fot examinalion. ·
clale professor at Arizona Stale Uni•• I
Ju0 a-/.J.~t""
versity,
asked 728 officers in .two
81
meigS wpU 1eB
I ft'l
"'"' VIII!
~I Coast departmeniS in lbc mid·
. POMEROY- No injuries were reported following two accideniS inves- '1980s whether they had been violent
tigated Friday by deputies ofthe MeigsCqunty She(.ift's Departnlenl.
with their spouse or childne!J in the
The fiRtoccurred around 6 a.m. on Oak Grove Road near Racine. Shawn pnevious six months. The study dill
. Dailey, 19, Raeine, was driving a.1994 Ford pickup truck thai was st~ck in not define what was m~t by viol!lc left side by a deer attempting to cross the road.
.
• .
lence.
Around 10 am., Jason N. Mora, 16, Pomeroy, was westbound on Lock·
·The result: 40 perceni of the offi-·
skillet Road ~ear Long Bottom when he lost control of his 1994 Nissan after 'cers said they had.
·
seei1J8 deer in the road. The vehicle went off tlie roadway and struck a bridge
'Ibree p;ychologi~ followed .up
abulmenl.
··
f'il
·
. .
..
that study by surveying 42S off'rcers

~(114) 441-1971

or 800 434-4194

•H.,. 1M,.,.,,. II/..., H•*'t 16 Hltf ,....,.

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When .police ·commit domestic violence
Justin Paul Bowers

tion, but it would be a very difficult
move to make,"' Pale Moon told our'
associate George Clifford III. The.
switch didn't come until 1995, how~:
::;;;;;;;;;;~ ever, when Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-U1ah;'
.1·•1 ·
and others
jlcrsuaded
Campbell to;
switch
his partisan
allegiances.
Campbell 's office did not respond'
to our requests for commen1.
Prior to his party switch, Camp~ ·
bell had been a potent symbol for the'
Democrats -- even donning a .
·Cheyenne war bonnet and riding ~:
horse in President Clinton's first
inaugural parade.
'
Yet even as a Democrat, Campbell
wasn't always on board with Prcsi- '
den( Clinton's policies. In 1994 he.
said he was "disappointed" that
Clinton was backing Most Favored
. Nation trading status for China •• ari
issue that is once again heating up on
Capitol Hill.
··
"How can we tum our back on,
children and other people forced intd
labor?" Campbell said. "1 believe we
ought to lake the broader view of this
issue and not base our policy purely
on cCorloniics."
Did the senator consider niore
than economics when he began promoting an "au.thentic" Indian knife
that's being made in China? .
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are writers for United Feature
Syndieate, Inc.

I

to the classes, and lhe current results
. EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vice president and colulllilltt . coming from this philosophy, Con. for The Associated Press, has reported on Washinaton and national pol·
gress has offered funds to the slates
; Ides for more than 30 years..
·
. .
for abstinence education. We now
heat nhe hue and cry .from the cui-·
tural elite: "The .sky is falling, the
sky is falling!"
During those decades, federal
: By The Associated Preas .
.
money was supplied and· accepted.
: Today is Sunday, June 22,the 173rd day of 1997. Thcne ar:e .192 days left
Now that it is becoming available
: ·in the year. ·
for absli~ence-centered education
Today's Highlight in History:
· · ·
those in the pockel ·of SIECUS. (Sex
On June 22nd, 1945, the World War II battle for Okinawa officially endInformation and Education Council
ed; 12.520 Americans and 110,000 Jap~nese wene killed in the 81-day cainof the United·States) arc belittling.
: paign.
bashing, and condemning the id.ea.
On this date:
.
.
Those who always push for more
• In 1611, Englis~ explorer Henry _Hudson, his son and several other peogovernment money for their pro: pie were set adrift fn present-day Hudson Bay by mutineers. "
·
g~ms now say "Money, especially
. In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte abdicated a second time.
federal money, can · be a'Vfully
In 1868, ArkaiiSIIS was re;admitted .to the Union. ·
seductive. It's hard .to just say no to
In 1870, Congress created the Department of Justic~.
government dollars:" But that is just
. In 1938, heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis knocked out Max .
' Schmeling in the first round of their rematch at New York Cily's Yankee .'
·. Stadium.
~
In 1940, during World War II, Adolf Hitler i!ained a slunning victory as
~· France was forced 10 sign an armistice eight days after German forces over~ ran Paris.
By Joseph Speer
·
: In 1941, Germany invaded the Soviet Union during World War II.
Newt Gingrich gets a lot of grief
:, In 1944, President Rooseveh signed the Gl Bill of Righls, authorizing a for his wacky ideas, but a study of his
j broad package of benefits for World War II ye~. ·
· ·
·
stats shows lhat. he's a .300 hiller.
In 1970, President Ni~on signed a meuure lowering the voting age to Considering the league he plays in,
-: 18.
that's a pretty respectable average.
~ In 1977, John N. Mitchell became lhe fmt former U.S. Anomey Gener·
Everyone would scone his hits dif·
~ al to 10 to prison as he bepn servin1 .-sentence for his role in the Waterfenently, of course, but my guoas is
-lsate co~·up. He was neleued 19 months later.
that even his sevenesl critics would
:t Ten years ago: Fred Allaire, whole elepnce and fancy footwork graced red'11 h'1 • three
f 1o 1
m .or ~ 13
·
·,imone 1han 30 films, died 11 a los Afl.... le• hospital at aae 88.
.
. - cI'W!nlly jotted
outof0 Newt's
' Five yean aso: The Supreme I.OUn unanimously ruled that hate-crinle . ideas, for example, and found myself
:laws that ban cross-bumin1 and similar express\ons of racial bias viol~
in admiration of four of them.
free.SJ~eeeh ri1hls.
'J'!Ie ones that llhouJbt were ludi·
l One yur ago: At !heir fintiiiiDDiit in six yean, Arab I~ meelinJ in ~ included the spao:e trilogy: the
~Ciiro, EQpt, urpd W.l to prow ita.commitment to peace 'by nesumiDI idea that SpliCe touriiiD will be •
:•BOilad- witJiout delay.
·
·
. powth indusay f« lhe United Slalel;
• Today's Birthdays: Movie director Billy Wilder is 91. Allthor Anne Mor· : !hat the handicapped should be lhot
Ul'dberBh is 91. Fuhion desiJIDCr Bill Blass is 1S.
11110 space; thai space will be the Ni•

.
~ Today

. that these uawhentic"
•
course, 1s

•

(
)

•

.

I

'

�,...M·• ,1e

Nation/World

6 n •

•

Victorious anti-tobacco forces awalt next battle:
WASHINGTON (AP)- Anti-smoking forces w~s!ed concessions from
the tobacco industry in a landmark multibillion-dollar settlement, but they
know their bsttle is not yet won.
.
Congress and President Clinton still can reject all or part of the $360 billion agreement- greeted Friday with mostly cautious reserve. .
"We could be in a position of rejecting it or accepting it. I haven't seen
it yet," Clinton said in Denver. He noted, however, that "an enormous amount
of money" had been wrung from the tobacco companies.
The agreement, negotiated for months by state attorneys general, health
advocates, trial lawyers and cigarette makers, would '!lake tobacco companies change how their .products are advertised, sold and regulated. In
e~change, the indus~ would get what its investors crave: ~ey relief from ·
.lawsuits and legal billsc
· In a statement, the tobacco industry called the proposal "a bitter pill,"
but said the companies preferred the plan to a continuation of the decadeslong controversy over smoking.
·
But even as anti-smoking advocates announced - ~ agreement with fan- ·
fare in a hotel ballroom, a man dragged heavily on a cigar in the lobby. And .
in the tobacco country of North Carolina, Sarah Ablang puffed on a cigarette outside aRaleigh office building.
.
"They can do whatever they want. It doesn't affect me." she said. "I know
the dangers of smoking. It's my choice (o smoke."
The agreement calls for tough new warnings on cigarette packs, such as
"Smoking can kiHyou," and would give smokers free medical help to quit.

HISTORIC SETTLEMENT - MISIIsslppl Attorney Generel
Michael Moore, ·left, spoke during e Friday newt conference In
Waahlngton announcing the historic Mttlemant with the tobac• co Industry, while Connecticut Attorney Generel Richard Blu·
• menthalllstened at right. The settlement Is expected to cost the
• Industry $360 billion for 25 years, and billions more after that. (AP)

•
111e government also could lower the permissible level of nicotine in ciglt
rettes.

'

'

"'

And tobacco ads would change dramatically: no more billboards or splas!!&gt;'
color spreads in magazines that critics said were targeted at teen-agers . . •·
"With the agreement, Joe Camel and the Marlboro Man will move to the
same chapter of OW' nation's history as asbestos," said Florida Attorney Gelteral Bob Butterwolth.
·
~
Under .the settlement, the industry would pay !'360 billion over 25 ye~,
mostly to finance anti-smoking campaigns and repay state Medicaid mont?'
spent treating sick smokers - the reason 40 states sued. After that, the indu.try would continue to pay $15 billion every year.
.
:
Sick smokers could still sue the industry. Any money they won for mel£.
ical bills, lost wag~s or other "actual damages" would be paid from .a S~­
billion'a-year fund,set up by the tobacco industry. Smokers ~lso could wDI
punitive damages for future wrongdoing by tobacco compames. '
:::
Individual smokers. though, could not sue for punitive damages for aey
past misconduct by tobacco companies. Instead, as punishment-for all Pll!l
wrongdoing, the settlement includes a $50 billion tobacco industry fund; part
of that to provide health care: for uninsured children.
·
·~
Lawmakers •said the pact would be examined closely on Capitol Hill. '
"Tile industry's greatest fear is that litigation losses could expose the companies to unlimited liability,"· said Rep. Henry' Waxman, D-Calif., a lonjttime tobacco foe. "The deal eliminates this threat -and instead gives tlij: .
industry a guarantee of future profitability." .
;:·
•

Tax bill debate centers .on fairness perception -·
.

'

.

: WASHINGTON (APJ - At the
heart of a political brawl in Congress
bver the emerging tax bill are accusations thai both sides manipulate statistics to advance the respective polit·
ical agendas.
More than routine Washington
finger-pointing. the debate over who
benefits from the tax-cut bills moving through the House and Senate
goes to the question of whether the
public perceives the tax package as
fair.
·
It's a debate almost certain to be
a major theme in the 1998 miHtemi
elections.
· House Minority · Leader Dick
Gephardt, D-Mo., said this week's
vote on the Republican lax plan "is
one of the most important votes that
will be taken in this Congress."

'

House Ww;s and Means Chairman ·to people making more than $75,000 cuts is viewed in general categories
of income, such as the upper and lowBill Archer, R-Texas, lobbed the first a year.
.er
fifths of society.
Archer
blames
the
discrepancy
on
grenade in the battle. He accused the
" If that's the point Archer is makTreasury of using statistics that inflate such factors as Treasury's inclusion
family wealth and lead to the asser- of "imputed rent on owner-occupied ing, he's grasping at straws," Greention that the wealthy benefit from the housin~~:," an odd tax concept that stein said..
increases a homeowner's income as . The accuracy ofJoint Committee
tax package.
" If you ever wondered why the if the family pays itself rent for the on Taxation numbers cited by Archer
are. being criticized as well.
administration decries tax cuts for the residence.
The Center on Budget arid Policy
It also adds to a person's gross
rich, it's because they use a misleading and artificial method of defining income tlie value of fringe benefits Priorities says Archer's numbers are
income that is out of sync with real- . and increased investment -value of distorted because they calculate
t;hanges in Individual Retirement
ity," Archer said.
insurance policies and pensions.
Ari:her contends people who earn
A senior Theasury official defend- Accounts and reductions in 'capital
$20,000 to $75,000 a yeru: get 71 per- ed the calculation as legitimate gains taxes through 2002, welllxifore
cent of the benefits of his tax pack- because 90 percent of family income they fully kick in.
In fact, the proposed capital gains
age ..
remains cash income.
tax
changes will increase revenue by
The Treasury Departtnent, using
Robert Greenstein of the liberal
the "Family Economic Income" Center on Budget and Policy Priori- $2.6 billion through 2002. But in the
method of calculating family wealth, ties said Archer's argument doesn't next five years, it shows a loss of
s11ys 77.6 percent of the benefits go hold up when the distribution of tax $47,9 billion in tax revenue.

GOP surrenders ground before budget plan vote
WASHINGTON (AP) - House
Republicans are retreating from ear- .
lier positions on low-income
Medicare beneficiaries and wages for
some welfare recipienis who find
jobs. The changes are part of a GOP
scramble 'to avoid an embarrassing
· defeat next week on budget-balancing legislation.
· After a week of secret meetings
with administration officials and
Democmts, House Budget Committee Chairman John Kasich, R~Ohio,
said Republicans would modify the
package before the House votes next

week. ·
After President Qinton issued his
f11st veto threat Friday against the
budget-cutting measure, Kasich said
Republicans would give in still
another area- keeping legal immigrants who become disabled on wei·
fare. But this change, he. said, would
wait until House-Senate bargainers
begin writing a compromise bill in
July.
·
"I regard this issue to be of paramount importance," Clinton told
Kasich in a letter, referring to disabled legal immigrants.

He added, "I will be unable to
· sign legislation that does not" include
that provision, which was included in
the budget-balancing agreement he
reached with congressional leaders.
"1bere is recognition on my part
and the part of (House Speaker Newt
Gingrich) ·... that this is an issue that
clearly will have to be resolved in the
conference committee if we are to
reach agreement," Kasich said.
In changes Republicans already
accepted, the budget legislation
would -provide about $1.5 billion to
help m~)' low-iiJCome .elderly pea-,

pie pay their monthly Medicare ,pre·m,ums, currently $43.80.
The House Commerce Comm.ittee
had approved just $600 million for
that purpose last week - $900 million less than was called for in the
budget deal between Clinton and congressionallead~rs.

The two sides also were discussing other issues .

With Russia on board,
summit leaders turn up
pressure on Balkans ·

.:

DENVER (AP)- The newly minted Summit of the Eight, acting with
resolve, demanded Saturday that Balkan leaders fulfill their promises of
peace and ethilic harmony in Bosnia, then turned attention to a raft of common global threats to global prosperity in the 21st century.
In a strong statement drafted by the United States, with support from
Germany, the eight leaders said "there must be justice in Bosnia and ·
1
Herzegovina if peace is to endure." ·
Warning they woul.;l not relent, the leaders said "'the international community will maintain a·long-term engagement" in the war-damaged coun- "
try and the Balkans as 1i: whole.
.
Clinton is host of the 23rd annual summit and opened Saturday's discussions with a message of promise.
"Powerful forces are drawing our nations closer together, delivering
the p~mise of prosperity and security to more people than ever," he told ·
the seven leaders who traveled her for three-day meetings.
'
"Our citzcns must have the skills they need to succeed in the fast changing economy," he said. "And as barriers fall , problerns.rhat start in one
country can spread quickly to another, whether they are currency crises,
organized crime or outbreaks of deadly diseases."
·
He said, "None of our nations can meet these challenges alone."
At an opening sunun,it banquet Friday night, Clinton said thai the focus
· in Bosnia should be on making the 1995 Dayton peace accords work and
not.on when U.S. peacekeepers would be withdrawn. It was another hint
from Clinton that he might keep 8,500 American troops there beyond his
projected pullout next l)Jne.
Apart from Bosnia, the Su!Jlmit of the Eight. with Russian President
Boris Yeltsin now firmly in the embrace of capitalism's elite, took up.common problems such as terrorism, drug smuggling, global warming and
international crime. The, meetings took place at the Denver Public Library,
'

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CLEVELAND (AP) - . Manny
Ramirez led · • rejuvenated
Cleveland offense with four hits,
. including a grand slam
, and careord' belt the
high six RBis as the In aans
Yankees 13-4 Saturday,
·
Ramirez, who .was 4-'or-S, had
•· a runan RBI groundout in the first,
scoring single in ·the third, a double
in the seventh, and a grand slam in
the eighth off reliever Graeme
.
.
1
Uoy"".
u
Jim Thome sparked the offense
with a two-run double high· off the
l_eft-field wall in the third off Andy
Pettitte_ (8-5).
New York J·umped on Or•l
A•ter
,,
~
Hershiser
for three runs in the third,
Pettitte lost control and walked the
bases loaded in the bottom of the
inning.
Sandy Alomar extended his hit-

See: 1\fike Northup, _Dw:18bt Stevers, AI Durst,
Eric Bla.c kburn,. Neal PeU:er, Pete SommerVille,
- · J'~mie Adams~n:~. Steve White

. GallipOlis, Oh.

Or Tol Free l~IOG-446-G842

ca:lsttttttl

·

Juwo.

J'\ P:•

.

Columnist
says UC's
Fortson
maybe
future

.

1:

~ ' ~'*~':..

~Mailman' .

••

~~~:~

ay, MIKE O.COURCY

-'Q'

""\ -

.. .Wimbledon tostBrt·Monday ;

.

-Sampra·s &amp;·Graf to face challenges from young· stars
By STEVE WILSTEIN
. just as Agassi did. and the sport has
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) suffered for it.
Beware the . racket-toting
. "One thing tennis needs right
stranger, the .obscure overachiever now is a rivalry," Sllll\pras said, disstepping on Wimbledon's freshly missing . the ,dream that a Tiger
powdered lines. .
.
Woods in short pants will come
He lurks in the shadows of the along to trsns.fOr!n tennis the way he
new stadium, unnoticed amona the has its countrY club cousin. "You
incandescent champi9ns m
, arking don't have a rivalry· right now that
· 0 Mon d ay wnen
~
th e ~·ft
. g·arne. Aft~lh e occasao
~""rea II y sell the
'lUI" and I
untrod grass feels the weight of had it for a lillie bit a couple. of
skidding-sneakers for the firsttiJQe. years·ago, and thai really helped out
Three-time champ Pete Sampras the game. Now, new guys are winis on the lookout for danger in every ning majors, and guys are just kind
· a brash gene
· rat'ton· of commg
· fro'"'
. corner, knowtng
"' the woodw'ork ."
i.s challenging the dominion of the
Agassi disappeare.d into the
old.
woodwork since marrying Brooke
Perhaps the next anonymous Shields two months aao. though in
threat will slip in from Casablanca, truth he vanished from major title
as mysterious as thdsc who haunted · contention long before that. Sampras
Rick's Cafe, and snane the cheris~ hasn't spoken to him since they
silver cup:·Tiie way thiiils' have' paSsed in tftl"nlght at a tooi'lilmerit
gone lately, with Gustavo Kuenen nearly five months ago.
win nina ~he French and Carlos
"His absence really hurts the
Moya going to the Australian. fi~.- game.:" said -Sampras, who won two
two quick Moroccans, Karim Alami of their five matches in finals ·in
and Hicharn AriZi, have as good a 1995, including the U:S. Open.
chance of playing for the inen's title "When I played Andre quite a bit a
as anyone else.
·
couple yetirs 'lid, he made mea betTennis is going through a strange ter player. It was exciting walking
transition, led not so much by one or out with him at the final at Flushing
two legends-in-the-making but by a Meadow that one year- one of the
mad cast shouting; ·~We're tired of few ·times I really felt the electricity
getting stomped, and we're .not from the crowd and I he media. I
goingtotakeitanymore."
kind of felt like a heavyweight
Their timing couldn't be more fighter, which I really haven't felt
perfect. Sampras has been going too much in my career."
through a slump, as if he's weary of . In the past year and a half,
winning every week: His brief rival- Samprss and Agassi met only three
ry with Andre ·Agassi flamed 0 ut, . times, none of those in Grand Slam
'

There aren't many small fcirwards with a body like Fortson's; he

~~~~hh;~iho~~h. ~~~icw~~;d~ ·

he thinking about selecting less pro-

tournaments, and Sampras won all lilting breeze. but leave behind a champion Conchita Martinez. ductivc players like Michigan's
three in straight sets. Samprss, 25, is sense of disorder, as if they are Playing indifferent tennis the past Maurice Taylor and Villanova's Tim
Thonias ahead of him. Fortson is
still No. I, while tbe 27-year-old ·champions by mistake or luck. couple of years, Martinez is a long- likely 10 be
, selected i,n the middle of
Agassi, the 1992 Wimbledon cham- Kuenen cenainly earned his title in · shot to win Wimbledon again,
the first round, sometlaing like the
pion, has dropped to No. 29.
Paris by beating three former
No. I Manina Hingis is the betSampras gets rejuvenatll(l every champs, but he will have to win ting favorite despite a weak serve 14.th or 15th pick, and a whole lot of
time he sniffs Wimbledon's lush again and again to displace the · and a dent in her confidence after NBA executives are going 10 wind
up lookirllliike fools. Again.
lawns, and he'll have the added t!oubts and imprint his name on the losing to Iva Majoli in the French
Fortson was listed at 6 •7 during
.i ncentive of going for !tis lOth sport.
Open final, her first loss of the year. h'15 c· . . d
• be' 1.
G
d
Sl
t'tl
A'
odde
t'
"If
·
Grand
Sl
·
ld
be
Ha'
nga·s,
16,
lost
t
'
n'
the
fourth
mctnnat•
ays,
a.tcr
· ran am 1 c. n r reac ton,
every .
am wou
a
ed'in high,school at.6-9. . tng tstone that reveals something different winner, then maybe .the round of Wimbledon last year but
Perhaps if he'd kept those I'1VO
unbealthy about the sport and some crowd gets a little bit .confused. I showed promise as a grass-court inches, the NBA folks wouldn •1
of its zilli&lt;inaire players, comes don't think that is too good,-'' player when she won her first major have had all this time to figure out .
from the defending·champion.
Krajic~k said,
. title by teaming with-Helena Sukova · h h h ld •1
ed · h ·
The aIr wen t out of the game •aor
The pi ayer wa'th the ,,•astes t serve to take the doubles cham'pt'onsha'p. w
Y e s ou n succe 10 t ear
league.
Richard Krajicek in the months fol- and longest name, Australian Mark That made Hingis the youngest win- . When Fortson went in to be mealowing· his Wimbledon triumph last Philippoussis, may be just the man ner in a major this century.
sured during tryouts for a number of
year.
to create a new rivalry for Sampras,
.No.2 Monica ~elcs reached the NBA teams, be stood 6-7 1/4 in his
"I lost about four, 'five months who has won three of their five Wtmblcdon final an 1992, the year ·bare feeL Wearing a pair of basket·before I got the fighting spirit back matches. Philippoussis is coming oiT before she Yfas stt~bbed, but lost tn ball shoes, he is well over 6-8, the
... that I wanted to achieve
in a - t~neup triumph on grass at the ,econd round tn ' her return last ,
·
•h
t B ck
"ICnriiS," be slid: "I hill ilie feeling, ' Qlieiiri's"CIIi6'. 'wliicli' iliclu'deiFi 'year: B'e5ef6Y iiljutict:~as!'iii'IIICr-: ~m~.it~~~ .a.s. ,, e -;&amp;-r.C.JI :· u_ ~ ,,
'Why do I come to the coun? I have · final victory over iwo-time mg the fierce c?mpettttveness and
Fortson has been comnnred in
won the biggest title.'"
Wimbledon
finalist
Goran consistency that once marked her print to just about every player
Thai absence of emotion made Ivanisevic.
game, Seles also is going through between 6-4 and 6,8 who struggled
Krajicek yulnerable to more eager,
·The .women's .title is equally up the trauma of wljtching her father- to make. il. in the NBA. but, oddly,
if less talented or renowned, players. for grabs, and is almost surely going coach battle stomach cancer.
none who nourished. The surest
And his Wimbledon victory, com- to be captured by a first•til)le winMajoli, Mary Pierce, Lindsay means ·of discerning whether the
bined with tile ensuing defeats, ner. For most of the past two Davenport, Amanda Coetzer would person doing the talking about
opened 'the way for many of the decades: the big silver plate th'a t seem to have a decent chanCe 'at this Fonson did any research whatsoever
upsets that followed over .the past goes to the women's champion has title.
was if a correlation was made
year.
been held aloft by Marti'na
Teen-agers Venus Williams and between his NBA potential and that
"In a way, you can almost say Navratilova (nine times) or Steffi Anna Koumikova will creliiC excite- of Williamson, a former Arkansas
players our days have less and less Olaf (seven times).
.ment in their Wimbledon debuts, aii-American.choscn with the 13th
respect .for the ·better players a11d · Now, willf ·Nivraiilova in the though neith~r appears developed pickofthc 199Sdrafi.
they arc less afra.id of beating broadcast booth and the 211oyear-old enoUgh in . her serve-and-volley
Supposedly at would be a bad
them," Krajicek said.
Graf recovering from a knee injury game ·to be considered legitimate thang for For.tson to be another
QrandSiam victories by the likes that threatens her career. the only contenders. ·
·
Williamson •
even
though
of .the . happy-to-be-here Kuerten · player in.the women's draw who has
For the women, ,too, perhaps the Williamson averaged 11.6 points
briefly invigorate the sport like a . won the Wimbledon title is 1994 next champion lurks in -the shadows. and shot .498 from the floot an has
·
'
second season with the Sacramento

more

Boston B~uins~imake Thornton first pick in NHL ·draft :Jf7s~.:~:~~;~::;~;~~s~hi;;
Lindros' edgi~ss, was rated 1he be~
player·avail~e since the Quebec
Nordiques d ted Lindros in 1991 ·
and subseque . y ttaded him to 'the
Philadelphia ~ers.
, Thornton w1ll not be 18 until July
2 and
Turgeon as the
only 1
ever chos~n with
!he No.
·in the draft,

~whic:h

Thornton,' keeping with tradition, with the two most explosive scorers
immediately went to the stage and available when they took 18-yearput on a BruinS'Sweaterto pose with old left wing· Sergei Samsonov of
general manager Harry Si~den and .the IHL champion Detroit Vipers
otherteam officials.
· with t~ eighth pick.
, ·
Fan~ from his 40,000-resident " Sometimes called the Russian
hometown of St. Thomas, Ontario. Gretzky, Samsonov began playing .
hl:ld lip a huge banner reading, "Joe against Russia's top players when he
Thornton and St. Thomas No. 1.'' ' wis 15 and only his size- he is 5-8
· The Bruins
have come
-. is considered a major detriment.
He had 29 goals and 3.5 assists in 73
games for lheoVipers last season.
There was a bit of history made
in the first round. For the first time,
a goaliender- 18-year-old Robeno ·
'

Luongo of Val d'Or ·(Quebec Major
Junior League)- was chosen with
a·No. 4 P,tck, by the New York
lsltuidcrs.
Only three goaltenders 'had ever
gone as high.as fifth: Ray Msrtiniuk,
who never played an the league;
John Davidson and Tom Barrasso.

GRRR
attractsk31
.
,
:
-c ycliSts on Ire
.t h
h
G
11•
'
t
roug
a 1'8 . . oun y
,

•

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.

·
from Colorado.
T-8 Correspondent
Their assigned tour route took
GALLII'OLIS - ,And the bicycle them South on State Route 7 to S.R.
wheels keep turning ' in Gallia 218 with a water stop scheduled for
County in a week that has ~n Qver the Yellowtown ·Bridge (Thivener).
3,500 bike riders from sll over the then to .S·.R. 790 near Mercerville.
Onited States and some foreign · They followed S.R. 790 over 10 S.R.
countries participate in special 775 at Lecta, through Mudsock. and
cycling events.
··
onto !he Racoon Creek County Park
.
A 66-mile (100 km) tour of for lunch. •
Oallia County s,t,rted from the
Following the lunch break the
Gallipolis City Park Sat~ay mDrJl• Jroup pr&lt;K:ecded ·to S.R. 141, then
ing when 31 cyclists -deputed the south to the Cora-Rodney Road,
city under 'the watchful escons of . where they peddl¢ along Racc~n
Ohio State Highway Patrol and ' Creek through the Cor.a C9!"muntty,
Gallia County Shcrifl"s crui~.
up.. to Rodney for th~tr thtrd water
This event ,is sponsored by the stop. On across the Bt"weii-Rodney
Mcintyre Puk Distritt and Road to ~idwell, east through Porter
Holzer OinK:; Inc. as a fUnd raiser to to Bulavtlle Road. to Georges Creek
benefit the Rails to Trails project Road, returning to S.R. 1 for the
that follows · the former CSX final lea back to the city park. ·
•
Railfllld II1ICks throup the county. · Tho registrltion fee paid by each
IIIADY 10-- ""r af the Ill,: I ridlra llal•r,. Plrtl DI&amp;Licto lei""-'-' ol W-rrtlm:; . Officially called the Gallipolis rider included a T-sha~, food. and 111
who rio! 1 1'111 far . . Q I$ ~II ..._.
NU R Gelllpo~ CJ! C_!"' m~~er( 1111 DIWII In River Recreatioa Ride the tour · emerpncy SAO vehacle that sMdR. . Oft ~ .,. lllo"" lllfM *JA!Ihii
wwaldi.t ...lsttOI\ICM 1· 011
1ttln lllllurb), · llltrltted cyclilll liom K~S Ohio, owed the cyclisll the entire tour
.,_ . . Gl.llf!IIIC!Ir Plrtl. Pram
. o roede• r Nld hi .II 1 for!Wer .lllldent of West Viralnia. 1114 even one rider route.
·

By ODIE O'b()NNELL

o:q.

I

1

1

.

-

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·

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vastly superior jumpshootcr and is
more productive running the. court
on a fastbreak ..Hc. has longer arms,
stronger hands.
He ha.~ a power forward's body
in every respect except, pcrtiaps, the
. one inch of beight he lacks in comparison to Charles Oakley of the
New York Knick$ or the Cleveland
Cavaliers' Tyrone Hill. Williamson
is shorter than most NBA small forwards 11nd not a.• agile. Other than
that, Fortson and Williamson arc
practically twins.
In truth, Fortson's only rescm· blancc to Williamson is that both

:c:~f::c~~~~~i.\0~~~~::cs~

rare in basketball, and yet remains
so valuable. it ought· to he regarded
with respect. lnstel\d, those who rule
the post are figured to be confined to
it. If all a scout noticed about
Fonson was he scored a lot inside,
that person m.isscd his regular trips
beyond the foul line as the Bcarcats
. operated their offense in his final
month with the team. There, he
proved to be a dangerous, accurate
shooter whose ability had to be honored by opposins defenders.
Within the framework of the post
game, Fonson displayed his athletic
ability and creativity. When opponents chose to overplay him toward
the·baseline and force him to the
middle of the coun, he stunned them
with an acrobatic, over-the-head ·
reverse move he developed in practice.
· .
.
This is the aspect of him that is
inost dramatically underra!ed. He
will confront every challenge he
faces in the NBA by working 10
overcome it So many other players
lslk about how their dream is to play
in The League. Fonson, though.
really wants 10 play, not just weu
(See DeCQURCY on B"·l)

II&gt;

'

I,.

B

At Houston, Tim Bogar hit tbree
'
C ~~~~~:zr:lrer :.Vhat would
doubles and the Houston
Astros
'•
.A •• •
four
,
Dan~y Fonson's life be like at this
chssed Frsnk Cas11110 .,..,. JUSt
.
. ,,.,,....... ,
'
~"1.
-moment if Cincinnati Bearcats
oulli, beating Chicago 7-3 Saturday
•
,
,.:"
. the cubs 10 •'--'·
•-.. - L
..•¢
Y.··,.
coach Bob Huggins rsn a dishonestd
and se ndmg
u ...... •vwu•
·
""- :
consecutive loss.
''''"·''''" .1 ~~.ti$,'f'f" • · · •,
program? Had -the basketball worl
Luis Gonzalez went 0-for-3 with
"
'
•
been led to believe he stood 6-foot·
lk · th
••
9, would there be so many questions
. a wa an e seventb, stopping his ·
,
. ,
h'11 t"tng 5t rea k a1 23 game.s . 0 n
· ·
resarding
his ability to play in the
,
NBA?
Friday. he tied .. the Houston team
record.set by'Arl Howe in .1981.
dAiaRRIIIES AT SECOND - The Cleveland ueur Pat Kelly In the sixth Inning of Saturday'a dra~iapsips!~:::·~~~~=d~ ~=~
Chris Holt-(7-5) allowed three 1n na' Matt Wllll•m• arrives at aecond ba•e Amarlcen LMgue game In Clevttllll'ld, where the 8.1 the Cha-rlotte Cola·Sfl'um.
.
runs -. two earned - and five hits ahead of the tag of Nl'! York YankMI aecond lndllne won 13-4 (AP)
·
..
•
·
Others around him. guys Fortson
ifn 6 !13 innings, retirin1 10 straiahht . ~fi~~·'~ff~~~~~~~!!"!~-..'!--!!'--ll!l'lll!llll!lllll!lllll!l'!'llll!'lii£~~-~ll!llllll!'!!l!!lll!!lll-'!1111!-. .routinely outplayed during his thnie
rom the· third through the silct
arst on ,e Bagwell's RBI double Santangelo singled off Pat Rs"" (4Juden (8-2) allowed three runs
f NCAA bask ball
innings.
and Derek Bell's run-scoring single. 4) leading off the seventh and Mike and eight hits in 7 2/3 innings, years 0
et
• are see·
· Castillo (4-9) lasted 35 pitches
Expos 4, Marlhts 3
Lansing followed with a game-tying struck out six and walked three.
in~ doiHiar signs ·:nd cdxcl~mhation
and I 113 innings, his shortest outin1
At Montreal, Vladimir Guerrero d.ouble. Mark Grudzielanek sacriTodd Dunwoody hit a leadoff pomts . • as con.ronte wat non·
Apn'I 26. He a11owed fiave runs and Henry Rodriguez hornered, and ficed and Lansing scored when homer in the eighth, and Ugueth sense
·.
sance
_ like
Is this:
. he another Corliss
and seven hits, dropping to 0· 7 Jeff Juden won his third consecutive catcher Greg Zaun's pickoff throw Urbina relieved after Moises Alqu's
against the Astros sance July 24, start to lead the Montreal Expos bounced into left for an error.
two-out single. Urbina allowed a Willia(;'soh': h ~
he .
.
1993.
over the Florida Marlifas 4-3
Rodriguez followed with his 15th double and a walk that loaded the
:;- an s oot rom 1 pcmncHouston took a 2-0 lead in the Satlil'day.
· · the Expos a 4•·2 lead bases, 1he n reure
· d Zaun on a fl yout tcr._ Is he a power forward in a
. homer, gav,ng
Wi\h the E~pos trailing 2-1, F.P. and chaSing Rapp.
·
to the warning track in right
small forward's body?

_.,-., ... --. · ~n~~laltla

.. .

· ·
.,.

;:me:.

::C
11ft.!
p_.,•
a111
... - -0 .na••

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

.

·· ·

ORRIS NORTHUP DODGE,

•24995
,.

.

,

THIS IS NOT A LEASE

252 Upper River Rd.
(614) 446·0842

II

•

'

not

. StartiltiAI

walking t =

{;j .~ "/'~_ Ji:.:

it~~':l~l.l,;i{J{&gt;:•·M·, , ' H;~~

, ·SJ89.97A

A MONTH

THIS IS NOT A LEASE

FOOD FREEZER

ting sueak to 20 games' with an RBI
sinale in the seventh that made it 94.
Hershlscr (7-,3), wpo handed it
over to the bullRCn in the seventh,
sUo,..ed four runs and eight hits,

' 1992 SONOMA AC;cleanl
•

1 Owner

SectiQn

...... 22, 1tl7

AMONTH

1997 AVENGER.IIEW Air, ·
- · 1997 NEON "'' *289
·9 ·7, A. MONTH
' ,tilt,
cruiM,
..
*225.70 A MONTH

TOP lUTTON
REFRIGERATORS

WINDOW
AIR COHDmONERS

~169

1timts- ieadbatl

tunc~~¥

'1993 CAVALIER

*149.AMOIU'H
1993 CAUVIN

iua~q

Indians pound
Yankees; Astros
and_Ex s win ·

By ALAN ROBINsoN
PITTSBURGH (AP) .,.... The
Boston Bruins, who said weeks ago
they would choose 17-year-old cerlter Joe niomton with the firSt pick
in the fi!HJ,. dril\. needed only secon~~;~~~~.;e~t~~~ that today.
·at 6-foot-4 pos·
Jtilromir Jagr's wingspan,
·
and Eric

MICROWAVES
.
.

~~FR~~~

~-

*12,400

RANGES

' ___,.
.
).
~

95

993 CAMRY CD, moonroof, all pow1er.1

1994 LHS Loaded

otts

.

�•
.
,.

8undly, June 22, 1117 ·
=~::!:=:;:::·~:r;:•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Pol~m~..,~o!y;~!M~Idd~llpOI't •Glllllpolla, 0H •Point Pl1111nt,
WV
.
-------

.:

Reds'.4-2 win over Cards gives M~rcker fourth straight victory

For a lona while, Mercker won· breaking bill effectively. He used hia
It's been a long road back to the
ST. LOUIS (AI') - Ci1elnnati
dered
whether he would ever get his fastball on both sides of the plate,
fast
lane
for
Men:ker.
A
former
hell 11ar1er JC.t Mercbr iaa'taure
fastball
back.
and mixed in his pitches well."
power
pitcher
with
the
Atlanta
how hlrd he's throwina these days.
"The
bia
mental
thing
for
me
wu
Deion Sanclera hid a double l!ld
He does kllow, howe-, he hll his Braves, Mercker tinkered with his
fastbiU back.
· delivery last year when he was with · being a power pitcher all your l_ife, hit his third home run for the Reds,
"The hiller's reactions 11re all 1 · Baltimore and lost several miles an . and all ofa sudden you're throwing and Lenny Harris hid two hits and
83 to 84 miles an hour," Mercker scored twice.
look a1," said Mereker, who evened hour off his fastball .
said. "It's tough. You wonder, 'Did
"l
changed
everything
last
year
Aaron Boone, who wu called up
his record at !1-!1 with a 4-2 wia over
I
throw
niy
-last
good
fastball?
from the minors earlier in the day,
the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday short of throwiQg right-haniled,"
night. "\\'hen I'm jamming guys, or Mercker said. "It's taken me up to Maybe I' ve thrown_them all out.' " . had an RBI single and stole a base
Mercker pitched si~ innings and in his major league debut. Boone
guys are hitting balls to the oppoaite five weeks to throw the way I used
facld, fly lialls or pop-ups, I know 1o throw in Atlanta. I'm using a lot allowed six hits and two runs. The also received his first ejection for
more fastballs, and each time I go Cardinals hillers tan vouch that throwing his helrnet after getting
I' v~ aot enough on it."
called out by umpire Gary Darling
Mereker started the year 1·!1, but out there I feel like I got better veloc- Mercker has not lost his stuff.
"He pitched a good ballgame•." on a close play at the plale to end the
has now won a career·hiah four ity and beruir pop on my fastball. For
slrlight. In his last five starta, his me to be successful, that's what I Tom Lampkin said. "He moved his sixth.
· have to do."
fastball in and out and used his
ERA is 1.35.
Mau Morris (:S-4) took the IC&amp;s for

the Cardinals. Morrit abo went aiJt
inninp ud allowed line IWIJ, two
-..1, on aevcn hitJ while mikln1
out six.
Ciacinnati scored tlil wiMina run
in the siJtth on Boone's RBI pouadout to shortalop. Pokey Reese hit his
second horne run in the ninth off
Dennis Eckersley lo make it 4-2.
The Reds had taken a 2·0 lead in ·
the third on Sanden' solo home
and !Ill uneamccl'run. The Cardinals
tied it in the fourth on two-out, RBI
singles by Lampkin and Morris.

run

Lampkin'ssingle~Mercker's

16-inning scoreless streak;
Notea: Cincinnati is the only

nw,jor

tuaue team witbout •

CLEVELAND(AP)-~New

York Yankees have a pretty nice ballperk themselves, a little place in the
Bronll called Yankee Stadium.
Norhins against the "House that
Ruth Built," but the ·New Yorkers
seem io have found a second home
in Cleveland.
1ino Martinez hit his 22nd homer
and Dwight Gooden hid his best outing of the season as the New York
Yankees continued ~ir mastery of
Cle\oeland with a 7·1 victory over the
Indians Friday 'night.
Tile Yankees won their seventh
srraight at Jacobs Field ud imJ)roved
· 10 13-2 at the three-year-old ballpark,
where they 11re the only visiting 'team
wilh a winning record.
"We love coming here,"· said
Derek Jeter, who was 3-for-S.
"They're a tough team, there are a
lot of people here, and we seem to
play well here."
For the past few years,. the Yankees have been kicking the Indians
around no maller what the venue.
New York was 9-3 against lhe lndians last year. includina 6-0 at Jacobs
Field. The Yankees have won six
straight overall against Cleveland

and 27 of the last 36 meetings.
While going 2-13 against the
Yankees at Jacobs Field since it
opened in 1994, the Indians are I 5665 against every.body else. "There's no e~planation for why
you do well in some places and not
in others," Paul O'Neill said. "In the
long haul, it all evens out."
Cleveland, the two-time defend:
-ing AL Central champs, had heller
hope so. One ·way or another, the
Yankees figure to he in the picture as
the Indians try to repeat their 1995
World Series performance.
·
Indians general manager John
Hart met wilh the team for about 10
. minutes after the loss, which dropped
AL Central-leading Cleveland to ·a
mediocre 35-32.
Cleveland -manager Mike Hargrove tried dropping the slumping
Matt Williams from fourth to sixth in
the order. Williams got a hit, but the
switch did the rest of lhe lineup no
good.
"We have the talent," Hargrove
said. "We have to he patient and let
_the talent come through."
The Yankees improved to 40-30
in their bid to catch the Orioles, who
are off to the best start in baseball.

'

said Gooden, . comina back from
hernia surgery. "I'm not going to ldd
myself."
Cleveland's offense continued to
sputter. Williams snapped an ().for~
·20 over."
13 slump with a single in the seventh
Jeter led off the game with a dou- and got a standing ovation.
ble off Charles Nagy (8-4). Pai KelThe Indians got an unearned run
- ly dollbled him home and scored on in the third. Marquis Grissom singled
a single by O'Neill. After a double and scored when O'Neill bobbled
play, Martinez homered off the right- Julio Franco's single.
field foul· pole to make it 3-0.
·
Notes: The Indians last beat the
Nagy didn' t make i1 out of the Ya,nkees at Jacobs Field on Sept 13,
second. He walked three in the
inning, including Cecil Fielder with
the bases loaded to make it 4-0.
Jose Mesa, who saved 85 games
the past two seasons, got out of-the
RIO GRANDE - Here is · this
jam and pitched 4 113 innings - his week's schedule for ·events al the
longest outing since becoming a full- University of Rio Grande's ~ne
time reliever in 1994 . .
Center..
In his second start since coming
Fllness center, gymnasium
ofT the disabled list, Gooden (2-0)
and racquetball courts
allowed three hits and one unearned
Today- 1-5 p.m.
run in six innings, with two walks
~onday - 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
and two strikeouts. Gooden worked
Thesday-'- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
slowly and sweated heavily on a
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
warm, humid nigh\, but snapped off
Thursday'- 9 a.m.-.9 p.m.
Friday-:- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
some big-bending ~urveballs in one
or .his best outing$ since last season's
Saturday- I·S p.m.
no-hilter against Seattle.
Sunday, June 29- 1-S p.m.
"I still have some work to do,"
They are I0 games above .500 for
the first lime this year.
.·
"It's just a plateau," Yankees
manager Joe Torre said. "Now we
think in tenns of 15 over, and then

X..

IIa

-DI-

l! L b:L

Ballimca ........ :......"6 12
Now Yon. ..............40 JO
TOf'OiliiO ... ...............:t\ :14

lill

.616

.m-

1

.493 . 12'',.
31 .4l6
I~
:l9 ..WJ
16

Dotroit .................... ~l
BoJton .................... Jl

F:&gt;rtson and Williamson.
Both Fortson and Malone have
thick , muscular bo-dies,- can move
upcourt 10 finish the break and lack
extraordinary jumping ability.
Fortson, like Malone, has long arms
that help him ward off defenders and
snatch down rebounds -. In truth,
Fortson has a betier idea of how to ·
score inside, but then; Malone docs
have that o_ne- or two-inch height
advanlage.
Malone plunged in 1hc draf1,
same as Fortson will. Like Malone,
Fortson will make a lot of team
executives appe~r silly ·over the'
course of his career. In · a couple
years, they'll be wishing they had
him on their teams. Not long after
that, they ' ll be wishing they had
jobs.
·

CLEVI'.LAND ....... ~~ ~~
Nilw!Wkee .............lot 34
Kanaa CiiJ ...........33. J~
Mi1nno.a .............. JJ 37
Cbkico.................. Jl 37

41 .) 19

22

Cni...WDiwW.
:n .486
PitlltMah .............. )) ~~ .465
51. Looll ................ )! )9 .44)

114
)

CINCINNATI ........ )() 40

. ~22

-~

11·! ".
•2'':

..til~
.471

J'·:

..aM

.429

Chiea&amp;o ..................2H 43 .3.94

plete pme. ... s.au.day'a lliner,
Dave Burba. is 0-2 with a 10.!14
E!lA In hia lilt tine -.~a. ...
Sanden, who leads the Jeaaue with
31 lteala, stole hia tint base in 12
pmes Friday. ... Ron 'G1111 went().
for-5 and is now hitiiiiS in hialut 26
at-bats.... With his sixth-innina sinsic. John Mabry bas IIOIV reached
base in 29 strai1~t pmes. ... The
Cardinals drew 42,091 Friday to
push their altcnduce l!ltll -to
·1,013,476 for the aeuoa. It marks
the 35th conaecutjve year the team
has drawn at leut ~ million fans. ·

4

6~

Sao Dieao .. ., ......... JO 41

.42.1

33
J4

.~21

4)

.411

.-

Friday's Kota
N.Y. Y-.1. CLEVaAND I

y...,..)~;.,...o
Milw•W .Ka.a~Cily~ Mi•ae•~ua

. c.'hitaJo While So1 .~

..,4

Alllltirim . Oitload2

..........

Thei ,._,.. Sahlnlay
N.Y. Y...... (l'&lt;llille8-4)_1MCL£VE-

t.AND(-Iocr6-)),l~p.m.

Baltlmort (Ericboa 9-2) 11 Toronro
IOonoot. I 1·2), 4:G.'I p.m.
· Bo11o1 (Eihelm•• 1· 1) at Ot1roil

(Modoler 4-6~ 7:0,'1 pJft.

Clti-

.

.

Mi-• ( R - 7-) 1 II
-Solllloldwio u~ 1~ p.lll

K - City CAPI'ia , _,, II MllwouU. (M&lt;Ili-* 6-oi).'IM-p,.,_Scorlle , . . _ 6-2).

y,.., , _

.1-lll:)l p.m.
Oaklud (Prielo ~ ·4) 11 Aaahclm
(Dickooll 1-)), IO:Il.'l p.M.

Today'• .....

WilllW (kreir'tcti S-3•• Taroa·

10(-l-4~
·~·'"·
a- &lt;Oonlott
4-6) 11 DetNII t'loir
.
N.Y. Y - ·(\Vello I-ll M CL£VE-

4-)),1~. . ..

LAND(~rl

.,.I· I).I:OSp.m.
"-'" City ( R - l·)) . . ., ......
.... (!Iori 2-1~ 2:05 , ....
.
M - ( - . . 1-0) M CltitaJo
WW.SolltNmno44~2Mp.M.

(Orjotiot 1·2 ) . - (Pio.., .1-l~ ol,jl$ , _..,
.... (-1-JIIIT_(_

""' 1:05 ,_..

--

NL .......'p

not in session.

...,._,w"'

!iOn

•
•

.l99S. Nagy pitched a three-hit Bogga was 2-for-4 and is 12-for-33 .
shuloul to beat David Cone, putting (.364). His. single off left-bander
Cleveland in first place in the AL Alvin Morman in the seventh was
Central by 2!1 games. ... NIIJY lost for the first Morman has allowed to a
only the second time in 19"starts fcil· left-handed batter this season. They :
lowing a Cle~land loss since 1995. had been ().for- 12. ... Indians
... Williams is now hfor-14,-2-for;28 · prospect Bartolo Colon pitched a noand 14-for-99 (.141).- He has two hitter for Triple-A Buffalo against
RBis in his last 24 games .... Wade New Orleans Friday night.

.

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II

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-:·--

•bul• P--83 ~

·-

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. :clally, D1i

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Ellan M8rple (right) with a. check for $53,5110
tow.da the Marqorlal Flald bin chile at WldnH
day'a mwtlng.

Starllnsas
lowas

f• ~

.u;.=.;;,,

Rail Kits •.s.z&amp;-

'

I' ar
Stmkrii'IIPII'fnl,.

ondoolldcoloroH
OlllnOitled&lt; .....
In II'IM'f coloR. ...

·~
. _
pHonO'DEI.L LUHBER COHPAHV

• .., . . . . . . . lal .. showl an ¥0Ufwvod

or COftCfNbMt.
•
• s.ldocws ~' ..... llmlled ~
• o.lblt·vlftrl, vlrtUIUv ~ ht.

VIHE 5T •t THIRD AVE
. GAWI'OU5, OHIO
114 4411Z76

634·E HAIH sr
POM'£ROY, OHIO .
614 892-:5500 .

from start
finish, Racine's
but whenBob
the · · -r':':~~~:-:~~~~~~~~r':~~r%'%':':1
chips
wereto down
•
Adams carne home the winner. Early in the season, Skyline ran steel
block late models only, but now has
upped the ante for the full-blown aluminum block boys, racing under the
National Dirt Track Racing Association banner. Much to the delight of
ST. RT. 7
.
COOLVILLE, OH.
lhe fans, the racing was great with
the super sprints and super late mod:ls back on one racing card.
Adams and Kenny Johnson, a
second·gCneration driver and winner
.. .• :
_o f last week's topless 60, went nipand-tuck throughout the ace. The
racing was again very Close, but for
lack of a bettercliche, one could have
again thrown a r;,lanket over the top
six.
•
Behin_d ·Johnson was Darw.in's
Chris S!otts, Bobby Davidson, Sco(t
Wolfe in ·the McDonald's 1114; Ed
Venham, Kevin Smith, Todd Smith.
PerrY Raper and Dave Nutter.
· Heats went to Adams and John·
,.
son.
"I:hiny Pure stoc~s turned out for
the $700-to-win invitational, putting
on some of the closest racing of the
year. Two beautiful cars, a Chevy
and a Ford no less, went wire-to-wire
in a good old- fashioned shoot-out:
Chevy man Ralph Withem; led
flag-lo-flag, but the effort of young
Eugene ''Grumpy" Adkins· was
J
strongly admired. Adkins, Withem
l
and points leader Donnie Kinnision
}
set the slage. for a great race with
three-wide racing in the arly going.
Near, lap I 0 of the 30-(apper, how4 DR. HAT(H
.•
ever, Adkins clipped an inside tire
4 cyl., 4 apeect, gray with gray cloth interior, AC, atereo · . .,
and dropped back · to 12th place, ·
cassetle. GREAT FIRST CAR
.
.
·•
, compounding his fight for the win.
•
· Adkins slowly, but surely picked
off at least-a car a lap until on lap 22,
'
he was again on Withem's bumper.
· Withem held a steady inside line,
while Adkins first tried to root him
out inside, then tried to edge him on
I .
the ne~l groove up and finally, in the
'
waning stages of the rac:e moved
high against the cushion. Unoffi·

THE

_

. _

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7.3 power stroke diesel, 5-speed, PS, PB, 'air, till, cruise, PW, PL,
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~~

~-

•

"&lt;.

1988

""' .

•

•Backhoe

Els ·takes lead into Buiclc: Classic's third round

•Dozer

~ " HARRISON, N.Y. (AP)- Ernie

e

.

llominate the field and the course in
QJe Buick Classic.
: · An advantage the two-time U.S.
gpcn winner doesn't n~ is for one
of his pursuers to take h1s own name
off the leaderboard, as Paul Azinaer
~id Friday. ·
.
_
~~ Azinger shot a 2-under-par 69 to
jipparently ti~ for third-pi11Ce, four
ltrokes behind Els. But Azinger was
~isqualified after failing to sian his

MUSHROOM
COMPOST

p,corecard.

during my entire career,'' Azingcr,
who left the Westchester Country
Club quickly ·!after his gaff, said
through .a PO~ Tour spokesman.
"Obviously, I am upset about.doing ·
somelhing this silly. It especially
hurts since I was playing so well this

NOVA

.
.

.

·'

Bls has _shown repeatedly~~ he can

Open Monday thru Friday 7:30am til 4:30 pm.
Saturday 7:30 am-12 noon
You' Pick Up or We Deli11er
446-~114 or 245-5316 ·

.1~!

. .· ~ ~

_.

sllli:k ~our cyli~ main.: ·: · ·. '_- .. his:~C-knki'l~ ~is ~- -N~
the bll:k;ch~~ ,AdkiM • . Kiuiioo and Sieve Thomas lOOk the
Quick!y retuniiDI -Io ts prQIIII• __ had~-~plfow.~-~~ · ICti!Uiy. · ~ -~ _the I~, - but · . B--Main,
!leiiCe _
of1ts latc_J960'a, early 1910's M ,Siyli•lllialeMOIIUse¥eDover~ . Wi!hem't ' :: 1110men!Um alway1 . Brian Co~. who so many times,
bey-iliys, Skyhne Speed~l)' pro- Ill.
,
.
llrouahl him bll:k to f1nt at the llart- hu Jed but come up short at Skyline,
duced some excelleal. hiah-speed
Wooate. • Eric: H)'IOIII IQbbod linilh. Adkins mlde one Jut nin. At finally led and took home the Four
racing Fri~y niaht. Super Sprint the ~Y lead, but ~ 11cry wu the checkered flq, Withem won by Cylinder Gold, leading all 20 laps of
~an, flaunting 7~to-800 llcobol short-Jived u 'Myers 111 Pete Smith's a half-car's lensth.
the mini-stock main. Co~ was passed
mduced h~power, plundered the West Vqinia Sprinter dipped inlli
Rounding out the top 10 were . by Alan Strickland with five laps
. fast 3/hmlein near record times.
the While Lighlening and rocketed Tony Routh, who drove a strona Iremaining but a yellow reverted '
. O~o· winnin.~t _sprintcar_driver, into the load on the third round. Nier onsistent race, Brian Shaffer, Ted 1scoring b~k to the last compleled
J•m_ No F~ N1er of PiketD!', !oolt over on lap on lip fout, spark- Dillie, Jim Ashcraft, Roy _Roush, lap and co~ again assumed the lead.
.1111amlooked hke the man to beat m ma llfCil duel up fro111, however, MilCh Gillian, Darrin Roush and
Mike Baker came from way back
M~ came back 1o lead on laps five
John Stover.
in the pack to finish fourth .behind ,
and ~llt. . '
· .
HellS went to Withem, Adkins,
(See SKYLINE on B-4)
N1er and Myers bllded wheel·to-.
wheel until Ni« got some breathina
room in ·lapped traffic. Followina a
caution for Tony Broughton's dis- ·
abled racer, Myers got back in!o the
hunt in pursuit of Nier. Nier led
through lap 16 when he clipped an
inside marker and broke a torsion

. ..,......

PRESENTS .CHECK - O.Hia
· School Alhlellca Booatera Club
Lane
arldtlwiJUIW

.. .'

RODNEY, OHIO

-

That set up a charge for the fin·
ish as Myers inherited the lead with
Fremont's John "11le W!Z" Wisboa
running second and Mike Bowling,o f ·
Middleto)O'JI third. The big story of
'the nigh!, however, was the c:ha!ge of
rookie Cluis Gurley, the Indiana hotlhoe, whO had charged from tenth
place to the top five. Gurley bagaed
Bowling on the'start and several laps
latcr took over ~ond from Wisbon.
Seltina his siahts on Myers, Our. ley stapd a late ial:e ballleitbllt fell
just short ll the· finish. Following
Wisbo11 in third was Bowling, olve
Dickson, Keith Crabtree, Tracy
· Hoover, Mark Imler; Brian Benson
and Billy Jarrell. Heats went to
Myers, Nier and Crab!fCC. There
were 21 sprinten on hand.
The Late model fellure was close

• ,./

.

.

Win alSkyUrie SPE!edway

bar.

·

UP 011 fHI HilL

~'

.(\zinger is try ina to recover from
the effects of the lymphoma he was
diagnosed as having in 1993, at the
conclusion of his \lest year on the
tour. He won lhree.tournaments that
year, . including the PGA championship.

.

~eek."

1986 CHEVIOLET.S·IO PICKUP
4 cyllilder, 5 speed, red with l'ld Interior, AM/FM caaaette.
_
SOUD TRUCK.
.
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.:_ ."I have never done this before
~~,

h
II

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, _,~*·:!?~the
_•.,

cl!eck::in

~

Detrnil 11. Bulla.6

Sntole--,,

Noles
• A Lync Center membership is
required to use the facilities. Faculty, ~taff, students and ailminislration
will be admitted with !heir ID cards.
. • ·Racquelball court reservations
can be made one day in advance by
calling 245-7495 or 1-800-282-7201.
• All guests must be accompanied
by a Lync Center membership holder ($2 fcc).
• Gym lime will he available during the limes when sports camps are

LIMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVER GRAVEL
•

4

.l6J

1~ ~ W~

, STE~Dfl~wite . •
..harp of
old
v - -·CIIIIplliper BobAdama. Jr.
bed c.
.
~ YOUIII UfW of Racine, commonly lo!own u the
,~ W!ts.Friday ~aN 11 Skyline "Black Bandit" led ftq-to-flaa to
h~,5 ~~~ the win the first full blown aluminum
~
,18 .....-. uoo uvu. vet- blcck laiC model npain of the year ll
e{!;' Ronme Myers . of Caldwell the fut ~thens Coypty oval.
c, ~ • dramatic w!n over youna
Ralph Withml ~ &amp;lfCil bat~ook!e ch~er. ChriS _Gurley of de with "Orumpy" Adkins to post the
~l,_ lnd~ In the wtnaed super S700 Street Stock lt)vitational yietospnnt car actton.
,ry. Bryan Cox clahned the mini-

Work

W..wn~DhWan

)I

.

· l!ld the

. JLISIDENTIAL • COJIOfBRCIAI.

W-mDI ......

Satt F"""'it&lt;O ...... ..41 JO _,7
Coloqdo .-...............:UC :\4 .$2R
t..o.. .\natka ... ........ .1~ 36 .49.1

,Withem; Myers &amp; BobA~ai)1S·'

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PometOy•M~-~~~~·~. (w~l.fOH~~~~ -~~~-~int;~ .: _ _

HOLLEY BROS~
CONSTRUCTION CO., INC.

Houlton ......... ........ 3~

,

CettlniDI-

S&lt;attle ....................40
Teus ..................... 36
Al\lheim ...... .......... .llt
Ol*lllld ................ JO

. Today- 1-3 p.m.
Monday - 6-9 p.m. .
Thesday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday - 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
-Friday - ·6-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-3 p.m .
Sunday, June 29- 1-S p.m . .

l! L b:L . lill

Phiholelphio...........2~

.

Pool

Atluta ........ ,.......... 4~ 26 .6l4
Florida ...................42 211 .600
lh .
Mont~l .. ..............oto JO . ~11
4~
Neww Yot'k ..............39 Jl .549 . 6

ALstandings ·

. ' .. .

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Lyne Center slate

DeCourcy•.. u.tco~~~onlll'iwnuesilli!_u.rro!l!m!I!.!!.B-:..~.IJ..l_. ------------~the uniform, sit on the bench and dering why the same teams keep
cash the check.
·
'
showing up in !he lottery portion of
Most of the NBA's mistakes. are the draft and only six teams in a 29made because the league worships team league have won champiheight, even as the Chicago Bulls onships since 1980, this is an ideal
· won five titles in seven years with- example.
out a wonhwhile center. This is why
If you happened to be viewing
Kelvin Cato of Iowa State will be the drafl on television back in 1985,
chOsen ahead ofFottson.
when it was still competing wilh
Cato, you may recall from the soap operas for ratings instead of
NCAA Tournament, is a shot-block- prime-time silcoms, you watched as
ing 6-11 center forthe Cyclones. His 12 diffcren1 players were chosen
coach at Iowa State, Tim Floyd, before lhe Utah Jazz sleppcd forthought so little of Cato's defensive ward and claimed Karl Malone.
chances in a head-to-head matchup
The last team thai had the chance
wilh Fortson 1hat another player,_ lo choose Malone ahead of the Jazz.
Kenny Pratt, was assigned to play in ' 'lhe Washington Bullels, selected
front of Fortson and prevent him small forward Kenny .Green of
from catching the ball.
Wake Forest Green d1d not last to a
Fortson managed only eight 1h1rd season m the NBA.
shots, but destroyed Cato when he
Th1s IS not to suggest_ the teams
gut the chance .. He made six of his th~t pass on Forl~on w1ll m~ke a
attempts and forced Cato 10 foul out. mistake of Mal oman proporuons ;
1J was a clear mismatch.
Malone, who 1s 6-9, 256, has been
In tlie NBA teams look al tall first-learn aii-NBA nine consecutive
agile players ~nd see· possibilitie; seasons. Bul if you ~~tchecl the
that often are.not realized, instead of NBA playoffs on telev1s1on through
drafting players with the drive and May and June_, ~ou might have
skiUs to succeed. For anyone won- noticed more. SlmllantJes between
· ·
Fortson .and Malo~e than, say,

.

~~Jun•22.1tl7

.

llOIII-

Six-run win over Indians continue!; Yankees' mastery over Trilla
By KEN BERGER

. ·.·
. ·.

I

Sports de~dllnes

.Fo

.

The G1111ipo/IJ Dail_v Tribnn,,
T/1~ Daily s~ntint'l and the Snndu_l'
7irrrlls·S,rrtill.~l value the L~mtribu- .
tions their readers make to the !lpOfiS

Complete·Tune•Up
Includes Plugs, Air,- And Fuel Filters

'77.95
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' eeM'III

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sections of lhese ·papers, und they
will con\inuc lo he published.
~ However•. certain delf,llincs for
sulimissions will he observed;·
111e dclllllinc fur photos und rclut~rticl"" for football and olhcr l:UU
sports is !he Saturday befon: the
Super Bowl.
. •
,
.The dellllline fur piKIIO$ oncl rclut·
eel urti&lt;:les r,)j- bailketbllll (suinmer
ba'ski:thall and relalcd ·camps fall
under the summer iports•deadline)
and other winler spons is the lis! day
oft~ NBA finals.
- '~ .
The deidline for iubmiuion5 of
l~al ba$eball· and toflball:~latcd
phoiOI oncl relllled 1111iclea, I'Mrn T· ·
ball to the m~on. &amp;J well as other~
-Pnna and 1111111riler lfiOIU, is 1hc ~Y i
or. the last ptiiC !he World Serle•·~
The~ deadlines are in place. tu j
allOw contrilllllon the time they'·
n.t to .:qu!N their photos from the ..
Jll\qlolflllltr IIUdloldevelp or.!
lllloice IIICI to· pw the ttall'l lhe 1
dlpce to publlllltllela . . . the

.lff'aPI*

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11

•
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lnltilel 117 ·
Pllllr Cl'llll AI Sl

1!1117

lnlt 117 ClleYJ
Asln Cllwel'llll ¥11

C~JJIIIlfr
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• It Calllllan

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'Mllllrail Wllllk

•l.oldldl

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•llSINJhl .
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lrollrlor

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1979 GMC JIMMY 414
V8, auto., black with maroon cloth Interior, AC. AFFORDABLE

4WD. ,

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far thoeupaltl. .

JUNK 27TH &amp; 28TH
9:00-6:00
Stop II ttl FREE Pepsi .t Hot Dogs IIIII Door Prizes.

We amy 1 full lint of pre-owned late mt cars atld truckL

IIOW we ·otfw our cuat01Mf8 full HFVIca Including: Engine
AIPIIr, ·AC 1\•,.mle.kln s.rvtce, arik.., Tune-Ups, n,..,
.lwll I and IXhault
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\,-

�_.......,,June 22, 1117

Afsm

Pom1roy • Mldclepcwt • Gllllpolll, OH • Point P" 111nt, WV

_1me to.celebrate: NHL Nemechek wins pole
~oming to Columbus !'!!'.~ Calif~~~~~-·

face

~ lAM WI IN!
~ 11 11 1111111 Cars 1pandll•

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OORALorGPC
89~
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12 pack cans

'I

!' .

coach at the University of Florida, will hold hie
annual cam~ Monday at Point Pleesent.

'1003.· .·

'JZH
carton

1

A FRIENDLY LECTURE - Point Pleesant
nltlve Donn'- Jonee talks to youths during 1
,rscent baeketblll camp. Jones, an assistant

YOUR
CHOIC£111

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carton

. 8UOUGHT ·

'1Z99

...•1.

By MICHAEL TAYLOR
When the camp first started,
view with Jones was later used ·
Times-sentinel Staff
Jones had about30 campers. The
when Jones was chosen as the sta·
.
camp has grown to nearly 200
lion's Hometown · Hero for that
· For Point Pleasant native Don- - - young basketball junkies. As
week.
nie Jones the past year has been
Jones has risen through the coachThe corning yeir shOuld be
like a scene from the. movie
ing ranks and has come.iii contact
interesting for Jones and the t'eSI
"Twister."
with·top.quality buskctball people.
of the Gators. Besides the top
Jones followed coach Billy
he has brought those people here
recruiting class, the Gators will
Donovan from Marshall to the
to help local kids improve their
·have the services of former
University of Florida just a little
basketball skills.
·
DuPont High graduate and former
over a year ago and since his move
Among SOI!Je of lhe former
Marshall star JasOn Williams.
.to Gainesville, Jones has had a
spcakm to 811Cnd to the camp m ;
Williams transferred to Florida
whiriwipd year.
.
Billy Donovan; coach University
after Donovan and his staff were
First came an · up-and-down
of Florida; Greg White, coach of
hired. He has had to sit the past
inaugural season in Gator country
Marshall University; Archie Tal~
year because of the NCAA rules
where the team struggled to stay
Icy, former NBA and Harlem
regarding Division I players trans·
at .SOO. Then, rumors that DonoGlobetrotter basketball player;
ferring schools. Jones said
. van was· a candidate to replace
Todd May, former two-time AllWilliams should start for the
Rick Pitino at the University of
American who Jed the nation in
Gators.
Kentucky had Jones ·wondering if
scoring with 42.8 points a game
The camp will have two ses- ·
he would be moving closer to
and Andre Smith, professional
sions.
The morning session
hOme. Finally, Jones and the rest
player in Europe and the United
includes
ages 5 to 10 from 8:30 to
of the Gator staff have put togeth·
·states.
II :30 a.m. The afternoon session
er what many consider as one of
The camp has also featured
will
be for ages 11. 17 from II
the best recruiting classes in the
many former Marshall and other .
·
.
a.m.
to
2:30 p.ni. The camp starts
country this year. ·
college players. Jones' assistants
Junc
23
and runs through June 26..
Jones' summer won't be sloware local high school coaches and
Ages
5-10
will resister June 23
ing down any either. He is curplayers from the last 10 years.
from
7:15
to
8:15a.m. Ages 11· rendy in the middle· of a three·
· The Donnie Jones Basketball
17
will
register
from 9:30 to 10:45
week basketball camp at the Uni·
Camp is built on fundamentals and
a.m.
versity of Florida. After the comstresses teamwork, leadership and
ReJistration wili be in the
pletion of that camp, Jones will
discipline. Jones • high school and
Point Pleasant Middle School
come back home to Point Pleascollege careers were based on his
Gym. The cost is' $60.00 per
lint where he will have his annuwillingness to pass the ball to
camper and a $25.00 deposit with
al Donnie Jones Basketball Camp.
teammates and his discipline to
the return of an application.
For the II th year .now, Jones
work harder than anybody else on
. Anyone interested can still
has had a camp in his hometown
the coun and in praetici:.
register
the lint day qf the camp
and each year the camp has got·
During last year's camp,
.
at
the
gymnasium
..
·ten bigger and better in terms o(
WSA'lrTV 3 i:ame to Point PleasFor more inforl)lalion, call
the numhcrofparlicipates and the
ant to film Jones teaching
675-4402.
.
quality of guest speakers.
campers. The footage and inter-

..
••

SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH 7/12197

BLtE $139.99
STAN.ESS Sl EEL

$139.99

$169.99

. . . s... .

U..Z: Ralph Withem, Brian Shaffer, Wayne Maynanl. Don Mll~y
Heat: Grumpy Adkins, Tony

No Credit, Slow Credit·.
Bad Credit, t;lankruptey?

"

'

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11-

STAN ESS STEa

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$159.99

$299.99

"

Bonkru eta M111t Be Dlo&lt;h

At Duteh Miller Chevrolet,

GALLIPOLIS - 'Cindy Smith
This event will incude activities . .
sank ·a lfole.!in-one on·u.e sixtl( hole SUCh as tug::Of-war and cage tiall con- · · ·
and put in a birdie on the fifth hole tests. :rhcre will be other events
durinJ .the latest Cliffside Ladies available as well.
. .
Golf ,A.ssociation Thursday Evening - _ The .tug-of-war c.ontest cntenon ·
--teague play.
· ·
will be total team weight. Tesms will
PRIZE WINNER '- Rachial
; :"'"
·
·
be placed in divisions based on the Stanley, the four-year-old dlugh.
!·: RIO GRANDE - Here are the · total weight of their members.
tar of Blly and GIMY $t8nley ol
:: remain ins dates for the UniverSity of
Thecage ·ball contest Will ha_ve 10 Patriot, was the winner of the
!: RioGninde'shoys'summerbasket- members per team. Teams wtll be Jimmy Halley Memorlal.tocland
:: ball camp.
·
placed in.age-specific divisions.
reel at a GaHJpolii.Beu Buatlrl'
•' June 22-25: Grades S-9
for more information, call 446- 18th annual youth day an May 24
. :: June 26-28; Junior varsity and . 4612 (extension 256) on weekdays. · at Bob Evans Farm near Rio
Grenda.
.•' varsity team camp
::
July
10.12:
Grades
7-9
POMEROY
There
will
be
a
., .
• • . The cost is $225 peqtudent or boys' Pee Wee baseball tournament
:: $220 if seven or more st!J(ients from in Pomeroy starting Monday; June
. ; :tJie·same school district register. The 30.
The tournament is for players
· ::cost for team weeki~ $155.
.
· : • Make the check or 'money order nine to I0 years old.
·
The
registration
deadline
is
• :payable to Rio Grande Basketball
·
Thursday.
The
entry
fee
is
$30
and
::camp: Rio Grande, Ohio 45674. '
:: Call 245-5353 (ex~nsion 7294) tWO JiasebaJJs.
· For more information, call 992::or 1-800-282-7201 for applications
S322 or 992-3976, .
::or more information.

.

,.

i: · ATHENS -. Ohio University is
: :Jlolding the following summer base·

$339.99

·
• •ball camps:
Fundamental camp; June 22-June
: :25 (boys ages 9- 15) ·
: : Hitting camp; June 2S-June 27
; XBoys ages 9 and up)
·
l: Pitc~ingiCatching camp; June 27: ;29 (Boys ages.9 and up).
• • The costs for the fpur-day funda•
: mental camp are $225 for overnight
: campers ·and SI80 for Ctmlmlllers.
: :rhe costs 'for the lhree::&amp;y hitting
; ~amp ·and the pitchin8/catching
H:amps are $190 for overnight
;~ampers and $ISO for commuters.
! for info; 614-593-1 I80 or.614-S93-

:!

$199.99

RIO GRANDI&gt; - Hero are the .
. dates for the University of Rio
Grande's girls' summer basketball
camp:·
June 29-July 2: Individual camp
(grades 9-12)
July 5 &amp; 19; High S&amp;;hool onc·day
shoot-out
July 20.23: Individual camp
(grades 4-8)
July 24-26: Hish m:hool team

cmmp

.

Team camps · .and one-day
shootouts will be limited to the first
12 teams that apply.
.
Call 245-7491 or 1-800..282-7201
for applicalions or more information.

PATRIOT- The 0 .0. Mcintyre
The Raider Bas· Park District will sponsor a three-on: ketball Camps are a·series of instruc· lhree outdoor basketball league for
Uionll rscssions for youths enterins youthi entering grades 3-6 this fall.
· ;trildes 3-8 this fall. ·
·
Players will -play in their respec·
• ! The fooua of the camp is on offen- rive grade divisions . unl~u there
; sive and defensive fundamentals. . isn 'I enough teams i~ a league. If that
• l:! 1· 1
ph
. · ·• • will he put on
happens. players wtll move up one
; rhoopec1 ~ e~ asls · ·
.
division.~ will be separate diviu Forcachcanip,thecosi·is$3Spcr
ong.
· •1or boysanc1 g'If15:
;:
. · SIORS
•. .
Player. The cost is $60 if two play- ·
Parents or players Will f~rm thetr
tri are i ent. Each camper will . own te~s. ~h player will pay a
.__:
· · 'f. h'rt
$20
,~1ve a · S 1 . .
ha re811tralton
,
. fee. Each team may
.
1
• • The final camp is a live-day·
ve .our P ~yers..
.
.
· ~ 'ffpir set for Monday ar River ValThe rcatstrauon . d~adlme . 1s
;~y High 'School for Jl1ldH S:8. 11 Thursday, July 3. Play will beam on
"*ill run from 9 a.m. to noon aild be Thursday, ~ulr 17,
·
•
~limited to 30 players.
FOr more .mformatlon, call ~
•Applications and checks mus.l be
4612 (exten11011 256) on ~kdays.
~led to camp director Carl Wolfe,
~~· YORK(AP) - It was the
. .
dreea 'Ytllley or., Bidwell, Ohio
..,,. w
5614.
·
·
11 1 I'll PIIA:hllll 1'e11 lo !he hi~tory .
· : , ¥or
infqrmalion, call 441 ~ or the World Series and ts unhtely · ever to.be dujllilllled. It's jusllbout
•• ·
· ·
~345.
.
c:erteiri it will nevcr be ecli~.
:: •u-•.- -.. 00 Mclnlt ,...._.IICI i111!105 when John
: p76.
••
: ! CHESHIRE _

Dillie, Ashcrllft, R. Roush, Stover
Four-cylinden
.
Heat: Brian Cox, AI Travis, Greg
Farran, Steve Roberts.
Heat: Mark Frost, Dana Nichols,
Alan Strickland, Arlhur Payne
- Feature; Cox; Slickhmd, Bryans,
Baker, Cruse, Long, Atwood,
Roberts, Rhodes, Masters.

WE CAN HEI.P
If Yon

Ha~e

At Leut II ,300
a month Income

(304) 529-2301

""" " ( l (l ·,.,) -• I ,·•,
I ·o•,.•·o
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DOn't 'i'.Y ThoM High Kentuckr
· e'iid Ohio lnMnlt Rmal

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~adco has good

Skyline•..&lt;Continued from I!-3&gt; .
Roush, Mitch Gillian, Roy Roush .
. Heat: ~nme Kenmson, Ted D1lhe, Damn Roush, Jim Jones.
Consi: Steve Thomas, Freddie
Carpenter. Robert Cornell, John Van·dale, Chris Johnson, Ed Gibson,
Mark Lyons, Jack Dempsey
Coca-Cola In~ltlltlonal
Withem, Adkins, Roush, Shaffer,

s.m WI-, PILD. Ia..., ·naalltlt pool nur ul hllla r llllhe ~or

Area $ports notes ...

\

. Strickland and AI Bryan. Steve Cruse
was fifth followed by Mike Long.
Atwood Steve Roberts Jack Rhodes
and M~ters.
'
Heats went to Cox and Mark
Frost.
SUMMARY·
Super Sprinlli
Heat; Ron Myers, "J:ony
~~:!~on, Tracy Hqover, Dave
Hest: Jim Nier, Chris .Gurley,
Mike Dowling, Mark Imler·
Heat; Keith · Crabtree, Lonnie 1
O.St, Craig McGuire, Eric Hysong
Feature; Myers, Gurley, Wishon,
Dowling, Dickson, Crabtree, ~oovc;r,
Imler, Benson, Jarrell.
1
LateModeiB ·
Heat: Bob Adams, Jr., Dave Nut· ·
ter, Scott Wolfe, Chris Stotts
Heat: Kenny Johnson, ·Botiby
Davidion, Ed Venham, Kevin Smith
Feature: Adams, Jolu!lon, SIC!,Its,
Davidson. Wolfe, Venham, K. Smith,
T. Smith, Perry Riper, O.ve Nu'*.

.

Rio Grande. An liVId IH or II...,.._ - ·and 1 -lllll'llelllullo- or bnbf.
bell- he Ia • NthN! ur Qary,tnd.,llnd • • - - or lntn.na un~vetlllr- Wllloll
ahuuld t811Nadara ~ 111aut wt-. 1118 l...cl (ll!CI Hooallr hMI1) Ia.

·~

.

'

"'
•••

Jones ·camp to stress
teamwork and .leadership.
.

.."'

FONTANA. Calif. (AP) - Wia- .• Hom tad, Fla., and leta 111M two
niq a pole is the only the fintllep weeb 1110 Joe and wife AnclfM had
.. lt'a time to bealn celebratlaa! Columbus will
for foe Ncmechek and his Put of the their first child, a 1011 they named
$-vc an NHL fmchiM in .lbe year 2000! Whit a
tJwe.car Slbco Racina team.
after John.
Sonderful way to 1tart the aew miiJcanium.
" It's goinJ to help lift us a loL" . "In a lot of ways, it's tJeo:n a very
- Natunlly, this aeems 'like ·a long way oft, llul
Nemechek said Friday after knock· . tough year," Nemechck SIUd. "But
::lillie always goes falter than we realize. I think of
ing Ernie .lrvan off the top spot In there certainly have been good
:Ibis teality every time I look at my leeJIIIe dauab· .
qualifying for today's California thinp,too, and this is another one 'Of
:lilt. Wun't she a baby just yesterday?
soo.
.
them."
.
_ , Wbat son of nickname for this new team? How
· "It's been tough. We' ve had a
Jeff Gordon, the series points
=ibout tbe Exploren? You know, in honor of Cbris.
suuggling year. But Felix Sabates leader, was third in the q.Wifying at
:011 well, it wu just a thought. I'm a Blackhawks
builtlhree brand new 111te teams this 182.894, followed by Dallcnbach at
~ anyway, so call them wllat you like. After aU.
yeat'. and that isa very big job."
182.755. Ken Schrader's 182.S93
hen Cbica&amp;o comes to town I will be cheering for
Two of Sabates' cars had a ierrif- made it four Chevrolcts in the top
:lbe Hawks. ·
ic day Friday, with Nemechek taking five, with only lrvu in a Ford.
• It's just going to be exciting to io up there to watch profesaional hoc:k- his first Winston Cup pole in lOS
Nemechck's lap was just 0.019ey's finesi perform. Start learning the players, becau&amp;e the explOSion draft tries, and Wally Dallenbach Jr. qual- seconds quicker than lrvan's, whioh
wiD be upon~ soon. Don't worry, we're not in Detroit, so you won't have ifying fourth for the inaugural race was just 0.007-seconds faster !han
to Jearn Ruialu.
.
at the gleaniins new California · Gordon's.
If Carolina and JacksonviUc needed just two years to make it to the NFL .Speedway,
'• As close as qualifying ,was,
'conference championships. how long will it take Columbus to display Lord · The third Sllbates entry had a bru- that's the way I expect it to be out .
,Stanle)"s cup in a ticker-tape parade down Hiah Street?
tal day, wilh Robby Gordon being here Sunday," Nemechck said.
Who knows, maybe we can talk Rio Grande into adopting hockey as a knocked briefly unconscious in a " You' re going to see one heck of a
college sport. The Rcdmcn on .lccl
·
.
crash during the pre-qualifying prac- race.''
,
• Fo!Jive me, folks, I just have hockey feverl
·
.
·
· tice.
·
·
Ncmechek is the lith driver to
~ Well, I went to Cinclnuati last week to watch loterlesguc play and.cheer
"Robby had an unfortunate acci· win a pole in IS events so fir lhis
. flir the White Sox. Of course, I atteaded the pme they lost, but it was elec- dent there, but thank the Lord he's season.
ttlfying. The stadiu111 waa filled with excitcmenL
going to be all right," Nemechck
However, I had two problems. Frank Thomas didn' t play and I couldn't said.
figure out why the National League fans were booing Albert Belle. Yes, he's
Jllemeehek, the 44th of 45 drivers
not Mf. Personality, but he Is one intense and talented ballplayer. He's also who made qualifying runs Friday,
fun to wateh. Boo blin and he gets motivated. Frankly; I would rather lesve turned a lap of 183.01 S mph.
him alone and take my chances.
·
That knocked Irvan, 'last week's
The future of interlesgue play may eventually Jesd us to league reslign- race winner at Michigan, off the top
men!. We may see an end to the National and American lesgues u we know · spot, which he had .held for more
them. Travel costs llid local rivalries may allow tesms like aeveland and · lhan half the qualifying session after
Cincinnati to be in the same division.
.
posting a lap of 182.92'7.
Naturally, for social and economic reasons, Cleveland and Pittsbwgh
"Awesome. This hllli been just an
must face escb other aa well. After all, it works for football. Didn't Steelers' awesome day;". Nemechck said. "I
fans feel chested this year by not playing the Browns?
·
think this team was just due for a day
. Eventually, new rivalries will be cre.ted. What ~all will call natu~ like this, and I thi.nk thoire's more of
rivalries. :rhc Mets and Yankees, Cubs and Wbite Sox, Marlins and Dev1l these kind of days In pur future."
Rays, Angels and Dodgers, etc. These teams will find themselves in the
. This was just the latest high in a
same divisions.
•
year of huge ups and downs for
Look for an NBA divisional setup: one lesgue, two conferences, four NemC~=hek, who sold his own team
divisions. Naturally, 30 teams can't be divided into foUr divisions, so that to Sabates and became pan of the
will neoessitste more expansion. Sometimes I think these baseball execu- three-c..- stable this season.
SECOND IN RACE - Bo
tives are not as dumb as we think.
His bl'Other John was fatally Shirey of GaHipolle, who will be
.There may be gold to be made in Mexico and l;fawaii. T'une will tell
a eophomore at Gallle Academy .
whether this plan will materialize. It ,must if basel!all Intends to compete for
High SChool In the fall, flnl1hed
the entertainment dollar.
MCOI1d with his Honda 125-cc
motorCycle In motocrou racing
After all, with hockey playoffs lasling until late May; and almost every
' on June 15 at Buffalo Creek
tesm making these playoffs, some Indians and Reds fans may be too preoc- ·
qaceway In Grayson, Ky.
cupied with the new Columbus teain to trsvel two Jiours to watch the Reds
Shirey's
race teem Is 1pon80!'1d
play.Expos. or the Indians play DetroiL .
.·
by
Souttleletem
Buelnees Co":
. But if the Tribe was in Cincinnati, that.miaht be a different situatton altolege
of
GaiHpolls.
gether. sOme·mlgbt make the trip just for the Sake of booing. . ·
.

.

..

·
news for homeowners
and bad news for
.the power company.
.............

"'

Air
---·
and options
Infiltration.
like SunSentry"'
It's the
Argon-filled
number one ·
Low-E Insulated
' 8Qurce of
glass'-an
.
'ttome enei'QY
Invisible energy
sa- that al80 ·
lollS-and
._,..__...,.
blocksout
hi hh tlng
g cooling
· aa
ultraviolet rays
and
. · · -~·· -costa. And lt'a caused by
that can dam~ your

. 18:~gn:~e~~;:~·· ~: =~18.turlno
a afop to air inflltrat.lon .
with caradco Wood
Rapl-"'lftt 'Windowl.
caradco con\blnea the
·
warmth and b4leuty of wood ·
with dual pane Insulated '
.
heavy·
gIass,weath4!r·
duty
et(ipPing,

•

Caradco products, we can
show you Just how eaayand affordable-'-ll Is to
replace thOie drafty old
windows'with b8auii!UI new
caradco wood wlndowa
- and patio doora. We
think lt'a time you
heard the OOOd news. 1

!

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2 - -

· J:
'

more

•
OPEN
WEEKDAYS

t:8H:OO
80H16-21118

. OPEN

SUNDAYS

12:0H:OO

· ~ · ~IUUI- 1,_

•

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Outdoors

June12,1117

•

..

ODNR Issues weekly fl8hlng report

Lake s ·nowden boasts top•rated largemouth angling spots
COLUMBUS, Obio (AP)- Here along the bottom near tile shelter
is the weekly fishing report provid- art&amp; when seeking cbannd catfish.
ed by the Division of Wildlife of the
Soutllwtlt
Ohio Department ·of Natur11l
COWAN LAKE - Fish along
Resources:
the bottom with night crawlers to
Soulhe8et
catdl bullheads and channel catfish.
LAKE SNOWDEN - The east The deeper water olf of submerged
shore and .the bay areas are the top . points aR good locations in summer
spots for largemooth bass fishing. to liSt minnows when fishing for
Use live bait or six-inch plastic· cmppies. Largemouth,bass IR fairly
worms. Rcdear sunfish up to eight · abundant and can be taken on spininches can be caught on wax· worms nen, small crank baits, plastic: baits
and meal worms fished around the and night crawlers.
boat docks. Try the southeast shore·
PAINT CREEK LAKE - Fair
·line by the campground when fish- numbers of spotted, smallmooth and
ing for bluegills and use small night largemouth bass inhabit the lake.
crawlers or wax worms.
The. rocky ar~u are most producDOW LAKE .- Bluegills up to tive; The tail water pool provides
seven inches arc being caught on · good night fishing for catfish with
wax worms fished in shallow water some fish weighing over 20 pounds.
Ohio River
along the shoreline. Largemouth
bass up to 16 inch.es are hitting on
Hybrid stripped bass· weighing
plulic worms and tizarcls ·in the bay four to five pounds are ·being caught
areas and alo.ng the south shoreline. in the Willow Island tailwaters on
Try using worms 8J!d cut bait fished shad. Jigs and minnows are being

Maine boasts booming eel-fishing Industry

used .in catchiqNUgeyes measurin1 up ·to 25 inches. Saugeyes,
freshwater drulJI, channel catfish,
flllhead caifish and black bass are
mllki111 up most of the ~emaindcr of
the cau:h for Ohio River anglers.
·,
Central
KNOX LAICE - Among central
Ohio's finest bass fishing lakes,
· anglers here will fiild they can catch
largemouth bass on plastic baits,
·small spinners, surface lures or live
bait. Keeper bus must .meuilre 18
or 111CR inches. Channel catfish provide elcellent night fishing. Use cut
baits or night crawlers for best
results.
· HARGUS LAKE - Channel catfish can be caught during late
evening or early.morning hours on
traditional baits fished along "the
bottom from the shoreline. Try the
upper end of the lake around aquatic
vegetation when seeking largemouth
bass. The shaded areas of water dur-

ing midday aR good spots to call:h
bluegills in summer.
No..-welt
ARCHBOLD RESERVOIR I .Fair numbers of brown bullheads
are present here along with a higher
abundance of channel catfish. Use
shrimp, chicken livers, prepared
baits or night crawlers fished illong
the bottom for best results, Use tar.val baits ,nil small worms suspended beneath a bobber when seeking

Nw•• st
TAP.,AN LAKE -: Anglers are
calehing crappies ~uring nine to
14 inches and bluegills measuring
seven to nine inches on night
crawler~ and minnows. Sau~eye
fishina hu improved recently with
anglciS trolling crank baits, rooster
tails and worm harnesses. Some
. bass weishing up to four pounds aR
being taken on live bait such u minnows and worms.
LAKE MILToN - Anglers will
find that crappies and bluegills are
biting along the shoreS near the
causeway. Try using night crawlers
and other iive'baits for best results.
The bass fishing is improving.
Anglers should try trolling for bass
with night crawlers.

bluegills~

CJ.,EAR FORK RESERVOIR Excellent opportunities exist for
catching muskies up to 48 inches.
Troll or cast large flashy spoons or
·large muskie baits through shallow
water in the eastern half of the lake
·around submerged weed beds for
best results. Bluegills, white bass,
chan11el catfish and largemouth bass
also provide a diversity of fishing
opportunities.

By LISA SINGHANIA

take up to 2S years.
· YARMOUTH. Maine (AP) On Maine rivers, where elver
Under. a pale yellow moon, Michael fishi.ng is legal from March l S to
Murphy crouches on rocks near the· June I5 and resident licenses stan at
Royal River, gracefully sweeping a . $33, the prospect of a hounti.ful barnet on a pole across an!l below the vest has attracted casual sportsmen
water's surface.
and professional fishermen ali.ke.
The gray-haired fisherman moves
The state estimates fishermen
the fine-mesh net back and fonh five caught more than $2.S million wonh
times before scoopi~g it out of the of eels in 1996, down from $3.8 milwater and placing it over a bucket. 'lion in 1995. ·
When the water has drained,
Fishermen have been combing
Murphy shines the lamp attacheQ to Maine waters for elvers for more
· his helmet on what looks like a ilest . than 20 years, but a soft market in
of wriggling, transparent noodles.
the late 1970s ended the craze until
The shimmering noodles are about three years ago. That's when
baby eels, or elvers. TwOnto-.4-inch- the reported price shot up to $700
es long and about the width of a per pound, luring newcomers to the
pencil, tbey're a delicacy in Japan, fishery.
China and Taiwan . A pound, or
In 1994 , the state issued 650
about 2,500 elvers, has fetched licenses for fisheries including
upward of $.500.
.
elvers; by 1995, that number had
" Not had, " says Murphy, 48, climbed to 2,200. About 1,370
looking ,down at the net. "If they elver-only licenses were granted in
keep coming liking this, it'll be a 1997, 1,000 fewer than the year
J!ood night."
. ·
before.
He never tastes what his cus"Last year a lot of people .came
in based on the high prices,"says
.tomers crave.
•'I don't even like to hold them," Lew Flagg of the state Department
he says, shuddering. " They slip of Marine Resources. "A lot of
'through your fingers."
them found out it was hard work."
Only five Eastern states- New
Murphy , who lives i.n Old
Jersey, Florida, South Carolina, Orchard Beach, offers this ·warning
Connecticut and Maine- allow the to anyone hoping to strike it rich.
capture of the eels . that swim "The actual days where you get
upstream each spring after spawning good money are few and far
in the Atlantic. Eels lay their eggs in between," says Murphy, who's been
the Sargasso Sea in the North- 11.1 it for two years. "Whether you
· Atlantic northeast of the West get two eels or 1,200, you still have
Indies. A few months after hatching, to spend 12 hours at night.outside!'
the larvae begin migrating via the
He says this year has been more
Gulf Stream along the Eastern Shore lucrative than last. but won't reveal
of North America. As they mature. his profits for fear of attracting more
the elvers swim upstream from salt- people.
watcr to freshwater, where some end · Indeed, on this cool evening, six
their journey in nets like Michael peQple trouch expectantly on the
Murphy's. Ot~ers grow to adult- rocks. Four are full-time fishermen
hood. then mtgrate back to the and two are what the younger
Sar11asso. The whole process. can
·

Summer
Service
.

$250 for his effort in the Gallipolis

race.

.

Here is. a listing of the competitors, according to finish
1-Todd Lhtlehales
2-Robbie Ventura
.. 3-Graeme.Miller
4-Kevin Monahan
5-Steve Sevener ·
6-Roberto Gaggioli
7-Steve Speaks
. 8-Dave McCook
9-Mike nllman
I0-Jansen Harm
11-nm Cox
12-0scar Pineda
13-Greg Henderson
14-Julian Dean
IS-Erik Saunders·

'

Murphy calls "weekend warriors." nm everyone follows suit.
One, dressed in jeans, a green • In May, a 33-year-old Ellsworth
sweater and Top-siders, gingerly: tnan ·reportedly shot at another eet ·
makes his way down to the rocky harvester after a turf battle involvi.ng
· shore to claim a spot after a day at placement of nets.
. .
his llllll:keting job. Another man. in
There have ~en poaching probwhite shirt and tie, also carries his terns in restricted areas, like fishdip net an~ bucket to the water's way s, and re·ports of nets being
edge.
slashed, according to Lt. Dan MorTis
Both part-timers say elvers are a of the state Marine Patrol.
relatively easy way to earn extra
"We suspend the license of every
· income, but Murphy says he'd like person caught in the fishways this
to see the fishery restricted to prO- year, even tint-time offenders," he
fessionals.
says. "Most people are honest, but
"They're st.anding in a spot in the elver fishery , temptation
where I could be making my living seems harder to avoid."
·
... not just SSOO a week," he says. ·
Police have also received noise
Wayne Dunbar, a Portland fisher- and trespassing complaints. In
man dipping nearby. worries about Falmouth. authorities spread the
overfishing. He would like to see word that drinking and late-night
more regulation, including bans on bonfires~ unacceptable.
.
fyke nets, the large .nets stretched
"There's been a lot of threats and
across lhe water to ·trap the baby intimidation ... that's unfortunately
. eels.
become aq.. expectation in the fish"I am an ex-urchin diver," he ery," Morris says;
says. "We regulated the urchins too
Morris' real concern, however, is
late... There won't be no eels left if the fishe~y's future . He says overwe're not careful."
crowding poses the biggest thr~at,
In the meantime, however, fyke and he's concerned that a bill passed
and dip net fishermen pian carefully this year lowering .fees will intensify
to take full advantage of the three- the problem.
month season.
State biologists regularly collect
Elver fishing is physically water samples and examine catclies
demanding, potentially expensive - to ensure some elvers remain. So far.
fyko nets and. licenses can run more tfll!y've.found no hard •evidcnce of a
than $1,000- and not necessarily shortage.
profitable.
.Murphy says .he's been paid as
little as $80 a pound depending on
the IIUII'ket. Flag says he's heard of
prices as high as $350 a pound this
year, and be expects 1997 to be better than last.
The trade's late hours and· potcntiat· for .profit create a competitive
and sometimes charged atmosphere.
And ~bile Murphy passe~ the time
sleepong, eattng and .playtng cards.

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lunUy, June 22, 1117

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J, REED
.nmea-Sentlnil Staff
_• CHESTER· Ohio's oldest stand·ing courthouse in Chester overlooks
'the tiny village as it has since it was
.built in 1823, but it will soon be the
.center of activity ·In the town once
·again.
: • The dedication and hard work of
'history buffs is beginning to pay off,
and Meigs County may have a new
tourist attraction and point of pride
'when !he project is finally completed.
The Chester-Shade Historical
.Association plans its second annual
Chester-Shade Days in July, to raise
funds for the renovation, to celebrate the community's place in history, and to pay homage to Meigs
County's forebears.
The. two-story, two-room building, which sits next to the old
Ches.ter Academy building, was
borne to its first court session in
Jllov~mber, 1823. Prior to thaUime,
the county government operated opt
of private homes, including that of
Levi Stedman, then a county commissioner, ·and owner of Chester's
first mill. .
· Stedman ·donated 30 acres of
property . for the new cc;&gt;urthouse,
which was home to Meigs County
government" until 1850, when the
.existing courthouse building in
Pomeroy was dedicated.
·.
.After it was vacated, it was used
at various times as an annex to the
~qhool, for Grange functions, and as
a' community building.
·
· Various modifications took place
.to the building, including relocation
· of the staircase, construction of partitions, and the construction .of two
prominent concrete supports on the
front of the building, .
The Association has received
$46,000 in funds from the State of
Ohio for· renovation and restoration
of the building. So .far, the funds
have been used to restore the stair-

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By BRIAN

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rewiring, baa been performed by
The
men invotved wtth the Auocianon.
.
Much of tbe work .from this point
will be pe.rtormed by professional
:'J'i:. ·
con~ors. Custer.Stucco and Plu·. 'Aaaoclatlon·
ter or Middleport will' begin the
· 1'
pointing of brick rightaway.
8~nQ lftn.U).I
When completed, the building,
.ter.:.f!tt;ade
, must
•be used for educational purCh•'"'
,...
~
_
poses in keeping with the purpose
.1 h• i ·
of the grant proaram•.according to
. ,I Y8 uU•7, ·~0 · ·· • Pat Holter, a membe~ of the
·· funds for
! , . .8
&lt;_:hester/Shade Historic&amp;~ ~·• 8 ·
·
lion.
·ra'no-Vatlon
She anticipate~ that.ellucationil
the
.., • ·. ·
... , ~: , •i , programs with a history e111p-il
celelirate the' !l . . will · operate fto~ the ficility: ~he
·, '
· .- _
hopes that;· espcc~ally, the ·bulldina
communl"•'a
•'
can be ~a to emphaaize Chester's
' · .
. ... · • ~ ·
main claim to fame: u the birth·
place 1n
place ·of 19th century author
- · ,, ' .
Amb,rosc Bierce.
·r.:-'""'t""'T':l':":-r~-r:-~"'"7'=~="'7"~--,=r--=::-;
~
~0
It is also likely that the saga of
,.
John Morgan and his raiders, who
·
on July 17 burned the :wootfen
bridge at ~ster during their raid,
will be·featured in displays: ··· '
Holter said that ·she would ·like
to see special exhibits on display for
all ·ages in the restored building,
case to its original centered toea· making it an attractive tourist spot
cion, replace the hip-style roof, as well as a showcase for county
replace one of the four main support history. ··
beams, which run from floor •to
CHESTER/SHADE DAYS
roof, and to add insulation. Anew
'To raise awareness for the ren0n
heating and air conditioning system vation project, and to raise funds for
will also be installed.
' building improve111ents, the Associ·
Plans are now underway ·for atio!l is planning its Second Annual
more aesthetic improvements: new Chester/Shad.e Days, to be l!eld July
period-style ~indows; pointing, or 18 and 19.
·
.
repairing, exterior brlckw~rk;
Historical reenactments, enterreplastering interior . walls; and tainment, and food are planned to
installation of si&gt;ecial interior light- make for ~an enjoyable,· historying.
·
.
laden event. New this year will be .a
A raised dais is to b~ built to state harmonica champions.hlp.
showcase a replica of the judge's
The Ohio State ·Harmonica
bench in the first-floor courtroom, Championship has been registered
and an ornate counter, believed to by the Association with the Secrehave come from the Meigs County tary of State, and will be judged by
Auditor's office in Pomeroy, will be Dr. Will"m Cucklcr, ·a harmonica
restored for.the room, as well.
NOV/... - Ohlo'l oldllt atandlng courthou.. ai It loclke today lnctuciea concm. plllnge, ~~~ In player, and another harmonica play·
· Until now, most of the renova- · cr to be named by the Buckeye State the 11140'1.·for eupport. During the proceA ot pointing the brlcka on the building, the aupport ~lion. ·
i.ncluding electrical Harmonica Club, as well .as turn wllJ J;lt reaurflcec:l to help Improve the appearance pf the building.. . .
.
· ·
Pomeroy musician John Anderson.
According to MaQI Powell, who
is organ4ing the contest, there ~re
several. harmonica clubs across ·!Ju:

Che.-r.811.ada HI*"'.rica.. I .

plan•

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..~evq~~. ,to.1, ~ . : , , . and
advancement of the armomca.
. ''J'I;lis was a fug tbi,.. for ~II$ in
· past years,•'..PoWcill(la~ ri ~-em­
ber when most kids received a harmonica. from the five aad -ten-cent
store for .CI!ristmas. It was a way for .
families to.eiK:ourage music, yet it
did not require lessons. •
A $200 prize will go to first
p!a:cc, $100' to second and s~ for
third place, There ·is no entry fee,
ani! information is available by calling Powell at 992~2622. A "jam session" for harm'onica players and
their accompanists wiil be held after
the contest.
·
· Equestrian enthusiasts will play ·
a major role in historical reenact- ·
ment.l, ~laying 'the roles of American In!loans, members of Morgan's
·Raiders, ·lild membe~' of Unio!l
cavalry.
In conj~nction with the Chester
Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary, the Courthouse Restoration
Committee will hold a pie baking
contest and auction on Friday, 'July
18. .
.
VINTAGe FURNISHING- Thll antJCiue counter, examined he,re
Mary PoWtli and 'Da(j COI!Kiin,
}'ie entries will be accepted until • 11 bllllvld
10 hive coma froil.! the Matgt County Audlfor'e offiOt In the P~roy courthouee. It will be
6:15p.m., wben judging will beJin. ....aor.ct and nMKit 1 part of .t he Pl'".'llllhJ turnltltilng• of thl reato~ Ch11ttr Courthouee.
·
1Wo fruit pies, one for judging
aDd one for sale, arc required. The
pies may also be sold by the auxil·
iary
during the two days.
' VOLUNTEERS - Howard Parkar.and Ron Eall:man. are two of .
Cash prizes of $1S, $10 and $S
till volunteer• who have helped r11tore the Che~r CourthOIIII.
The two Cheater-area relldente are eeen at the. elaetrlcal box will be offered.
·~lch .th~ repll'ced at lhl reer of the building. ·

by

Fall Semester begins·August 25th

•

·, CLEAN
INSIDE

$49:95

It's Time to Check Us Out!

r

ROTATE &amp;
BALANCE
TIRES .

Deals

Criterium results announced..

GALLIPOLIS
Todd
Littlehales of the Navigators
claimed first place in Thursday's
. Holzer Clinic/Magic 101 Criterium,
a bicycle race for professional
cyclists held at the Gallipolis City
Park.
.
Littlehales added this win, .coming in the third leg of the Tour of
Ohio Bike Race '97, to his victory
Wednesday in a race in Marion to
take first place in the Tour standings
with 71..5 points. He $320 from his
showing in the Gallipolis race.
Teammate Robbie Ventura. who
came in second. added his finish to
a similar showing in the Marion
race to take · second in the overall
standings with 67 points. He won

. UkeErle

JOII. IIIII Sl.

Pros &amp; dedicated locals want limits on trade

..

Anglers cominl out of LOrain
seem to have the best fishing suc-cess for walleyes with some fisb
\Weighing up to II pounds. Top spot,t
include offshore areas northeast of
Lorain and 'north of Avon Point
Yellow perch are being caught juSt
outside of the Lorain Lighthouse
and at depths of 40 to 50 feet 110f!lr,
of St. Anthony's Church, the Lorain,
Ford plant and Avon Point. ·
Smallmouth bass arc being caught
along the rocky shoreline across.
Lorain County ani! in shallow water
around the western basin island. The
top spots for western basin walleyes
are around L-Can, K-Can, Niagara
Crib, West Sister Island and the
Toledo Shipping Channel.

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A1ong .the River
Festival planned to highlight
ChesterCourtRous~ project

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Sundq, June 22, 1117

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Sunday, June 22,1887

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k
'Big Shot' shook up. so.me fun-see ers

By DOROTHY SAYRE
it aPJ&gt;eared construction was proIf 11 any time 1 Las Vesas visitor ceeding at the top ponion of the
tires of eating, drinking, stage Stratosphere's · tower. N01 SD. A
shows,
sight- roller coaster called the "High
seeing
tours. RDIIer" circles the building. But, at
shopping, and the top, is the home of the dreaded
playing in the "Big Shot."
casinos, there
My son's visit to Las Vegas this
are other activi- March was for a three-day weekend
ties to pursue. As of fun with engineering friends.
Las Vegas is try- . One engineer. formerly from my
ing to attract son's town in southern California,
famil'ies, there !lew out from Iowa 1.0 join my' son
are ·arcades, a and two others. They played rouleuc
water park, and amusements rides. and blackjack before deciding to
My son told me of one ride.he would investigate the action atop the
rather forget... .
·
Stratosphere.
We were flying into Las Vegas
By then it was dark. After paying
this past Aptil when we first saw the $7 to ride the elcvatm to the top, one
Stratosphere . Looking like a big suggc~ted they take the "Big Shot."
brother to the Seattle Space Needle. ride as the "High Roller" was closed
it towers I , 149 feet, or 115 stories. · fQr repairs, They bought tickets. The
overthc city. For a panoramic view, engineer from Iowa wa.' having sec'a gourrflet restaurant and lounge on() thoughts. The others needled
revolve in the top ponion of the him, and he collapsed to peer presstructure. In the bottom of the sure.
Stratosphere is the casino. along
As described to me, the "Big
with the Big Sky restaurant thay fea- Shot" is in the open with fnur'rusts.
tures, in my son's opinion. the best A scat holding four adults is at each
barbecue in Nevada.
,
post. All that restrains the people
From the hotel where we stayed. (my son said "victims." if that gives

•

MR. AND MRS. MICHAEL TERRY·

AMY ROUSH AND NATHANIEL COVERT

Woodall-Terry
GALLIPOLIS - Shelly Leigh Woodall and Michael David Terry were
united in marriage May 3 at the Faith Temple Independent Church in Gal- .
lipolis, with Jimmy Patterson officiating.
.
,
. :
Shelly is the daughter of Joe Woodall of Shoestnng.Ridge Road, Galhpohs,
and Sandra Woodall of Sun Valley Drive, Gallipolis. Michael is the son of
Larry and Shirley Terry of Vinton.
·
Joy Phillips served as pianist, and Joe Woodall, the bride's father, sang
"'I Do."·
.
The church was decorated with burgundy and white roses and carnations,
a floral ~hway, unity candle and burgundy and white bows for the pews.
Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a long white satin gown
with long lace sleeves. Pearls adorned the neckline. Her headpiece was crownlike with pearls. She carried a bouquet of white lilies and carnations with
burgundy roses. '
.
.
.
Maid of honor was Andrea Wood of Gallipolis, sister of the bride. Bridesmaids were Tabby Somerville of Gallipolis and Angie Terry of Vinton. both
sisters of the bride, and Krystal Myers and Tabby Dunlap, both of Gallipolis.
·
.
.
.
They wore long casual flowered .dresses and carried bouquets of white
and burgundy roses.
Best man was Leland Terry of Vinton, brother of the groom. Ushers were
Skeeter Woodall of Gallipolis, brother of the ~oom, Nakuma Robens of Vin:
ton, Chris Somerville of Gallipolis, brother·of the bride, and Mark Dunlap
of Gallipolis.
.
.
.
. ·. . .
The bride's mother wore a velvet burgundy dress w11h a burgundy orch1d.
The groom's mother wore a long casual flowered dress, similar to the
bridesmaids', and a burgundy orchid.
A rcccptio1l followed the ceremony at the First Church of God Fellowship Hall.
·
The tables were decorated with burgundy flowers. The four-tier wedding
cake was adorned with burgundy nowcrs and ribbon. A fountain was beneath
the cake.
Vkky Pilce and Lisa Midkiff, cousins of the brj,dc, registered guests. Alice
Ramey, aunt of the bride, served guests at the rcfcept1on.
·
The bride is a 1996 graduate of Galli a Academy High School and Buckeye Hills Career Center. She is employed by the city of Gallipolis. The groom
is a 1996 graduate of River Valley High School. He is employed by the city
of Gallipolis.
·
They reside in Bidwell.

Roush-Covert
Beegle-Caudill
· RACINE- The engagement and
approaching marriage of Tracy Dawn
Beegle of Portsmouth, (!nd Larry
William Caudill of Beaver is being
announced.
Beegle is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Don Beegle of Racine. Caudill
is the son of Larry Caudill of Bea&gt;tcr,
and Cathy Rudd of Piketon.

The wedding will take place on
July 26 at the • Manly United
Methodist Church in Ponsmouth.
Beegle is a graduate· of Southern
High School, · Racine. and allendcd
Shawnee State University. Caudill
graduated from •Eastern High in
Beaver and allcnded Rio Grande.

DANVILLE -The open church
Coven is the son of the Rev. and
wedding of Amy Louise Roush' of j ~l_rs. Paul Coven. ol Fncndsvrllc,
Pinch, W.Va., .and Na!haniCI Covenvr1:nn.
·
of Friendship, Tenn. will be held at If
Roush 11(8.' home schooled and
a.m. on July 19 at Danville.
·
attended a year at th~ Penn V1ew
Roush is the daughter of the Rev. Bible College in Penns Creek, Pa.
and Mrs. Daniel Roush of Pinch, and Coven is a graduate ol the Foothills
the granddaughter of the late Rev. Christian Academy and attended u
Eugene Roush and Juanita Roush, . semester at Unurn B1hlc College m
and the late Sherman Tillis and Kath- Westfield. Ind. He rs employed hy
. lcen Tillis of Rutland. ·
Dcnnso Manulilcturing in Tennessee.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Mall~ ·
have been called the town squares of
our times, but don't climb atop a
soapbox and stan stirring up the
shoppers with a fiery oration.
Lis death in 1973.
Mall owners contend the comThe house's owner, Eugene ·P. plexes arc private property and not
Golf, says the 1-112 s.tory frame subject to the constitutional guaran- .
house has become an eyesore and that tees of free speech.
.
he' might have to tear it down if it is
$orne free speech advocates argue
not moved or he cannot sell it.
that the Mall of America ·- the
· Commissioners said Warren largest shopping and entertainment
Motts,the director of the Motts' Mil- complex in the country - should he
itary Museum, and his panner, given the same status as other public
Richard Hoerle, did not prove that the spaces.
house cannot be saved li'pm collapse
"The place for fun in your life
and preserved at its current location. should also permit the c~changc of

Ace's boyhood home won't be mqved .
· COLUMBUS (AP) - The boyhood home of Capt . Eddie Rickcnbacker, a World War I flying ace, is
staying put.
The.Columbus Historic Resources
Commission on Thursday again
denied a request to move the lOt year-old bungalow on the city's east
side to a museum in suburban Grovepon. The group first voted on. the
issue in April.
Rickenbackcr ·was crcdiied with
downing 26 enemy planes and was
dubbed "the ace of aces" during the
war. The Air National Guard Base in
Columbus was named for him after

GEORGE AND MARJORIE KING·MOODY

50th anniversary scheduled

.

CHESHIRE- George and Marjorie King-Moody of Cheshire will .celebratetheir 50th we~ing anniversary on June 29.
- They were married in Raseville on June 29, 1947, by .the late Rev. Ernest
D. ·Banlett at the United Methodist Church Parsonage.
·
George is·a retired unit supervisor of AEP, Philip Sporn Pia~!, New Haven,
W.Va. Marjorie retired from Cox's Department Store m Galhpol.'s. .
They have live children: Charles (Carol) Moody of Cheshire;. Rickey
(Ann) Moody of Gallipolis; Kathy Vandermark of Mmoa, N.Y.; Apnl (Paul)
Sti~on of Cheshire; and J1m (L1sa) Moody of_ West ~olumb1a, W.Va. They
hav 16 grandchildren and fo~r great-gnmdch1ldren.
.
amily and friends arc inv1ted to an open house m therr honor hosted by
the it\ children Saturday, June 28 at the Cheshire Baptist Church, Cheshire,
in till: fellowship room fr~m II a.m. to 4 p.m. . .· ·.
.
The couple resides at 283 Roush bane, Chcsh1re,. ~nd w1sh a card show~
er in ~ lieu of gifts.

ideas." said attorney Larry Leventhal; ,
who represents animal rights prutcstcrs arrested at the mall.
Four mcmhcrs·of the.Animal, Lib- ,
eration League were arrested on May
19. 1996. for holding signs aoo pa.'5. ing out .litcratutc prntcsting fur sales .
outside Macy's department store ..
They were charged with . criminal
trespass . .
They claim the arrests were .a vio- ·
lation of their rights tn free speech.
Even though Minncapolil&lt; spent
$186 million to hdp huild the $700 .
'million mall. city nrticials and the
mall"s management hclicvc it is private propeny.
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Monday and Friday
8AMtii7P~

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· Thureday • Saturday
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BED

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ROOMS
ON

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HOURS:·
Dally 9 to.s .
Friday 9 to 7~

fiiiiiMOf.ll Of 01.1
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Welln ess Is
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p ... ,

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446·5131

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THE SAJ.E.JS W!NDING DOWN. TIME IS RUNNING OUT...BELOW IS A SAMPLE OS SUPER SAVINGS.••

•
•

CHESTER- Chester-Shade Historical Association specil\1 trustees
meeting, Monday, 7 p.m. Cheslc! Fire
State; Chester Shade Days commit-

.

SAVE 50 to

"SLEEP SOFAS
ALL ON SALE

'l

Do You Desire
Complete Wellness

The Warehouses are empty...our 4 Showrooms
are bul in with furniture _

•

'. .

THt.JRSDAY

POMEROY- Middlcpon Child
Conservation League, family picnic.
2 p.m Sunday, home of Harold and
·Helen Blackston.

.

:.

.

I
OF ·RUTLAND
"FINAL DAYS"
FURNITURE'S LIQUIDATION SALE

•I

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I

SYRACUSE - Vacation Bible
School . Syrac~sc Church of the
Nazarene, 6:30 to K p.m. Monday
through Friday. nursery through sixth
.grade.
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs County Family and Children First Council. Thursday. 1\:30 a.m. at the Meigs
County Department of Human Services.
·
·
'

POMEROY....;. Mark Limier. formerly of "Perfect Hcan," gospel conand Jaclyn Swartz; Aaron Sheets and ccn Sunday, 10:4~ a.m. at the. First
Annie Francis; Donna and Bennie Sou\hcrn Baptist Church, Pomeroy.
Spears, Jared Cook and Marlo White,
MONDAY
and Vladymyr Stcfanovych. who
MIDDLEPORTOh-Kan Coin
resides with the Sheets family. They
werejoincd for a celehration follow- Club, Monday. 8 p.m. RiverbCnd Ans
ing graduation by John and Mary Council building. New mcmhcrs welcome. Refreshments .
Beth Lohse of Westerville.

·'

'

tee meeting to follow ..

RACINE- Eliza and AI hen Hill
reunion , Sunday, I p.m. Star Mill
Par!&lt; ..

Jared Sheets

fc-u~it~~~r:;ig:~·.graduation were

1

-Meigs community calendar-

WE

•.

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HUTCHES

The ride ended. They were alive.
People waiting outside ·to choose
whether or not to ride asked, "how
wa.' it?" There were no replies. The
engineers just wanted to leave

I

before by some freak chance they
had to ride again.
.4 of a second into each blutolf,
a photograph is taken. All four of the
engineers' faces werc grotco;quc due
to gravitational pull and fear. As my
otherwise-fearless son has stated. "If
we could have backed out after seeing the women hlast into the darkness, we would have!"
· He said he cannot imagine any- ·
one watching someone shoot off on
"Big Shot" and then going. My son
is sure his finger . indentations
remain on the iron restraining bar.
Lat.cr. safely back in their homes,
the . engineers teamed "Big Shot"
was featured .in a national magll1.ine
as the most terrifying ride in the
United States. They know it lirst
hand. And, I'm not sure if it is just a
coincidence or not. hut sinc'C then,
my son's churchattcndance has been
nearly perfect'.
· (Dorothy Sayre and her !lu..
band George, formerly of Malga
Countv, moved back about three
years ago and ·now realcla In a
house facing the Ohio River·just
below Svracuse.) ·

EBLOWI G ;BE ·ao.o.r ·
OFF ~
B-OUR
AL ARKDO
BEFORE E ·wALL.S
El '•

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any idea of where this story is
going) is a safety harness rcsembling one in an infant's car scat, and
an iron bar. Loose fitting shoes, eyegla..ses and hats must be left with the
attendants.
A scat with four young women
was set to blast off while my son and
his friends sat strapped in watching.
AI the ladies' blastoff. all lhur of the
engineers wanted out. but it was too
late. Big Shot fired their scat. Four
Gs were tearing at their bodies as
they skyrocketed 200 feet and fell
back only to be shot up om:c more.
They· were plummeting and escalating up in total darkness. ·They were
terrified. There was no fun, only
fear. They had paid to be scared nut
of their wits, and they received their
money's worth. (The engineer from
Iowa undoubtedly thought he would ;
never live to sec his wife and baby
again.)

SUNDAY ·

. bME AP
Th 17h
· themwillopennewexhibitionspaces his wife, the former .Laura Cobb, a
1
R r. ( J-. e
-century
surgical nurse at Mount Carmel West
Villa;l" Borghese museum, renowned in June.
.
Hospital ·in .Columbus·, his parents,
&lt; 1
•·
· t sculpture t's reopening
The June 29 inauguration cere•with.
or ran
ancien
'
·Mr.
and Mrs. Sheets; Adam Sheets
fare and fireworks after 13 mony·will be followed by a gala conye~of renovations.
cen and a fireworks display.
'Jlle reopening is the first step in
The villa housing the main muse- · Buj, $ell, or ]1atle In tho
the revival of the 200-acre Villa .' urn was closed in 1984 after a IOBorg6ese gardens, which has four squarecfoot chunk of ceiling in one of
sw~h~ :J~h!Mi~n ,are~ . .Two pf ....~he e~h~l:lf!.l r~~n.'s !•II. , .. , ,. "

••

1 you

The Communllv Calendar Ia
publlahed aa a fi'H' service lo nonprofit group• wlihlng to aMounce
meeting and •peclal events. The
calendar Ia not dealgned lo , promole sales or fund raisers of any
lype. llemtl are printed as llpiiCa
perflllls and cannot be guaranteed
lo run a specific number of days.

POMEROY - Jared Sheets, son
of Jim and Jennifer ,Sheets of
Pomeroy; ·graduated Friday, June 13
fror:n the Ohio State University College of Medicine.
The valedictorian of his 1989
Meigs High School graduating class.
he received a bachelor of science
degree in nutrition from Ohio State in.
1993. graduating summa cum laude
i and as an o.utstanding senior..
.. He is now-doing a combined r~s· idcncy in internal medicine at Ohio
State University and pediatrics at the
Columbus Children's Hospital.
He is plann.ing a career in rural
primary care after completing his

G(and ·reopening slated for·museum

•

RECLINERS
ROCKER
RECLINERS
RECLINING
SOFAS

Sheets wins
degree from
Ohio .State

:
.
·

Mall of America becomes
Couple to wed next weekend battleground for free speech ·
MIDDLEPORT- The open church wedding of Danielle Rae Gray and
Robert Steven Caruthers will be held Satunday at 6:30p.m. at the Middlepan Chucrh of Christ.
·
·

.. t t an.....J lbu! • Page C3 •

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

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pr

SUftdeY, June 22, 1187

I

Gallipolis mills rnet demand
for flou·r in late 19th century
By JAMES SANDS
Special Comtepondent
GALLIPOUS - In 1944, the
Bell &amp; Shaw floilr and feed mill on
Vine Street in Gallipolis was sold to
. Ecker &amp; Myers. The mill had ceased
to operate earlier in 1944. With the
sale, it brought to an end 64 years of
milling on that site.
,
It was in 1880 that G. W. Clark and
E.H. Neal built a three-story brick
milhin Vine Street. It was built to
replace their mill on State Sireet
which burned to the ground in 1880.
In 1882, the two-story brick part of
the mill was added. About 1897,
another three-story addition toward
the river was added.
In 1880, Gallipolis had two other
flour and grain mills. Eureka Mills
was at Third and Grape, and the Ceralia Mill was on Founh and Grape\
The largest of the three mills was the
Eureka Mill. It had been built by
Reuben Aleshire about the time the
Civil War began. Aleshire'~ mill and
Langley's mill produced lflour that
was shipped as far away as Brazil.
They were also responsible for
making flour for the Union Army, as
well as supplying in ~notherbuilding
flour which was used to make hardtack that all .soldierS carried with
them.
In ·the 1880s, Eureka Mill could

·Entertainment

~ ·-

lly GAYI DILAPLANE
nated the Vinny Pro-Celebrity Golf lawyer or doctor.'' Gill siys. "My
R1no "e•etta lourllll
Invitational to benefit Junior Golf in puents never said, 'When are you
Maybe he's the ofi&amp;inal nice guy. . 'Jenneace. Thia year, the Ten.._ goiag to give (music) up?' They
At ICIII be sounds that wly as he · PGA Junior Golf Tour honored Gill were always a positiVe influence.
, chats on the · phone from his by naming a tournament for him: They never pressured me In my
. N~ville, Tenn., off~ee . We're 1101 V"IIICC Gill Tenn-. PGA Junior career choices."
· talking gushy, lalown-you-fotcVer GolfToumament.
After a year with Bluegrass
nice. His conveJ11!Iion sou!lds sin, Gill has never set career goats. he Alliance. Gill· joined Sundance, a
• cere, down-to'earth and founded on said. He's J'~t do.ino what comes . Los Angeles ~&gt;mup led by bluegrass
pn'nciples.. Just .nlain
·-o time.
.• old-fashioned
nice.
r
naturally, one day at·a
fiddler Byron"'-'
Berline. · .
·
"W,,hen I started out, it was like
One day he taoocd along wl'th a
•
.,.
His career is irllflllrtantto him, be
JBid. only .becaiasC his music allows saying, 'Here we go, so hang on and friend to an audition for Pure Prairie
let's sec what happe'ns.' "Fortunate- League J'ust to see 1'f PPL members
: ,him to share emotional eKperienCC$
. : with those in the audience. "I'm get- ly, a lot happened. And for that, he's would remember · him from his
.. ling to do something I like. I try to grateful.
.
Mountain Smoke days. He was not
· inake the music honest, and 1 hope
The Nrly r-•rs
only remem~red, be was offered a
1 ·n be 105
· 1·red b ·
The
.
son. of a ban;o-picking fCdc:ral job. He recorded three albums with
: pcop
e WI
P
y.lt.
'
them, and his lead vocals on ·Pure
.
"The best thing about my life is . appellate coun judge, Gill grew up
that I get·to rid~ around on the band playing bluegrass music· with his ·Prairie League's "Let Me Love You
· bus. hang out with a bunch of people. family. In high school, he played Tonight" put the group back on the
. h Mountain Smoke, whose cred-. chans·
· I enjoy, and act like a lS-year-old.'' wn
Married for 18 years, Gill and his its included opening a concen for
Gill's next gig was with noted
··wife, 'Janis. have one . 14-year-old the pop group Pure Prairie League . . country songwriter Rodliey Crowell,
daughter. "Jenny plays and sinp," Following high school, Gill- also playing with Crowell's band, Cherry
Gill said of his daughter. uwe sang &amp;'talented athlete- was considering Bombs. In 1983, Gill moved to
toget~er for lhe rust time this yea~ trying for a professional golf career Nashville, signing with RCA
and boy, did 1 experience the whole when he was offered a job with the Records. Releasing three albums at
proud father thing. We sang a duet at Bluegra.'IS Alliance, a progre~sive RCA, Gill had several sipgles make
the opening ceremonies of a new group made up of 'exceptionally fine the charts' Top 10.
arena in Nashville. It was fun to musicians. He didn't hesitate. He
In 1989, Gill moved to MCA
. watch her In front of 15,000 people. loaded up his van and headed for records where he was given the freeShe was great."
Louisville, Ky.
dom to exptore 'the full range of his
"Even though my dad was a talent, from dance-.hall swing and
Gill spends a lot of his time performing for charity events. He origi- lawyer, he never ~ushed me to be a rodeo songs to pop ballads. His

v .. . ... ~-

I

" When I Call Your Name" album not into gimmicks. I'm not into
finally brou&amp;htswxesa in a big way: cute.:t
it scored multi-platinwn sales nomBut an overwhelming number of
bers with sonp "Never Alone" (co- critics agree that Gill is into great
written by Rosaruie Cash), "01\la- music. He plays a mean guitar and
homa Swing," a duet with Reba he knows how to deliver his hits.
McEntire, and ~' When I Call Your He's backed by 'excellent musicians
Name" which, with Patty Loveless who get a chance to exhibit their
on ' harmonies, won a Gram my · individual talents.
:'
A.
d m
· 1991 for Best Country
r.war
"No bells and whistles," Gill
Vocal Performanoc and the CMA says. "Just playing and singing."
awards for. Single of tlje Year and
So
r
A llllmorlll Ill to ri'IUIIC
ng 0 the Year.
'
"Go Rest High on That Mountain "
From 1991 through 1996, Gill has special meaning for Vince Gill.
racked up 14 Country Music Awards He. began writing the song after the
and nine Grammys. He not only was 1989 death of his close friend, counhonored for his vocals and overall try singer Keith Whitley. It remained
performances. he was given a Gram- unfinished until Gill's brother died
my for Best Country Instrumental · in March 1993.
Performance for his exceptional gui"I think out of respect for Keith I .
tar work. Twice he took home' the didn't finish it," Gill told the Pittstop CMA award; Entertainer of the burgh Tribune-Review.
Year.
"I wouldn ' t want anybody to
Gill's current tour, sponsored by think I was taking advantage of the
Kraft. Foods, began in March with moment by writing a song and
85 cities on the schedule. The tour recording it, then putting it out so
benefits Second Harvest, a national soon after he passed away.
food bank network that gets 99.7 of
"Losing my brother gave me a
all donations directly to hunger really valid reason to finish it. ... I
·
. assistance.
brought it back out (because I needGill's shows always promise to ed) to deal with this emotion and finbe romantic, ballad-filled occasions. ish it."
"Lyric content is important to me,"
VInca Gill's Albums
he says. "The song is the thing. I'm •"Tum Me loose," 1984

It's picnic time. All you need is
good food and . good friends. OK,
good weather helps, too, but that's
what sqelter houses are for, right?
You can give old favorites interesting new twists with relative ease.
For example, if you're toting sandwiches, try pita instead ,o f regular
bread slices. · Fresh fruit - berries,
grapes, bananas and apples- makes
good picnic fare because it's portable
and easy finger food.
"
" Picnics are special because
they're different," says Jim Huss, a
specialist in hotel, restauran) and
institution management at·Iowa.State
.· University in Ames. "It's a different
routine. It's outside. And when everyone says foods always tastes better
outside, it's true."
As for food safety, Huss says the
buzz words are " thermal abuse."
" It all boils down to keeping cold
foods cold and hot foods hot."
Peggy Sherry, research associate
with ISU's Food Safety Project, saysanother.imponant consideration deals

'

with personal hygiene. " So many·
food~orne illnesses are carried by
hand. Take along moistened handwipes on a picnic or a washcloth with
a bottle of soapy water."
.
For a well-packed picnic basket,
consider these items: plates, flatware,
cups or glasses, napkins, garbage
bags and twist ties, corkscrew, paper
towels, insect repelleni, aspirin and
ground c)oth, blankets or throws.
For an eleg,ant. picnic, add something special: tablecloth with weights
tied to comers to hold it down; big
cloth napkins; candles, candleholders
and matches, plus hurricane covers to
prevent them from blowing out;
flowers and vase; wine glasses; china, crystal and silverware.
These upscale extras can give
even' hot dogs and burgers a flair.
Picnic packing
Pack your basket. in reverse order:
food .on bottom; serving items, tableware and tablecloth on top . This
allows easy access to items you need
first.
· Make sure all food containers are
loak proof, with a top that ~naps shut.

For king and queen, the contest is
open to all Meig~ County hoys and
g1rls, ages 16 to 19 as of Jan. I, not'
married nor having been married, nor
having home a child.
. Applications must also be a member of one Of the organizations represented on the Junior Fair Board 4-H, FFA, FHA, VICA, Grange, Boy
Scouts or Girl Scouts.
Interviews will take place on
Thursday, July 17 at 6 p.m. at Meigs
High School. A requirement is that
contestants come appropriately
dressed for an interview.

By TOM LONG

Check to ensure that containers are They should be stored in the air-con- · is still ice in the cooler when you will be placed immediately on the
right-side-up to prevent spilling.
ditioned car.
'
arrive home, leftovers are safe to eat. grill.
To prevent containers li'om tip• Use ueparate cooler for drinks,
• Bacteria can be present in almost ·
Avoid opening the cooler lid. letping, make sure the entire space of so the cooler containing perishable any food, as well as on your hands.
ting cold air out and · warm air in.
the bas,ket is f~ll. Fill excess space food items won ' t be constantly
• When in doubt, throw it out. If · Pack beverages in one cooler and perwith rolled newspapers or towels. ·
there's any doubt about food safety, ishables in another. When handling
opened and closed.
Avoid soggy sandwiches by wrapraw meat, Degner advises removing
• When handlin~ raw meat. pitch 1he food item in question.
ping bread in a plastic bag and pack- remove from the cooler only lhe
.
· from the cooler only the amount that
Grilling nfely
ing filling ingredients separately, amount that will tit on the grill. Do
If you' re grilling at the picnic site, will fit on the grill.
Then chill them in the cooler.
not panially grill extra burgers to eat take special precautions, advises
And don't use the same platter iutd
Picnic basket safety
later. Once you begin cooking burg- Nancy Degner · of the Iowa ' Beef · utensils for raw and cooked IJ)Cat and
The old rules still apply: Keep cold ~rs by any method, cook them until Industry Council in · Ames. Com- poultry. "Any bacteria present in mw
foods cold, hot foods hot - and keep completely done to assure that bac- pletely thaw meat alld'poultry before · m~at or juices can contamin~e the
it simple.
teria are destroyed.
grilling, so it cooks more evenly. Use safely cooked meat," Degner says.
Susan Klein of Iowa State Uni• To be sure. bacteria arc destroyed, the refrigerator for slow, safe thaw- . "This is prime cause of summer
versity Extension Service offers ideas cook hamburgers and ribs to 160 ing; microwave-defrost
. if the food food-borne illness."
'
for picnic safety:
degrees, .or until the center is no
• Try to plan the right amount of longer pink and juices are clear. Cook
food to take along to avoid worrying ground poultry to 165 degrees and
about s10rage or safety of leftovers. poultry parts to 180 degrees. Reheat
• Foods cooked ahead of time pre-cooke&lt;! meats until steaming hot.
should be thoroughly chilled in the
• When taking foods·off the grill,
refrigerator. Use an insulated cooler put them on .a clean plate. Don't put
with sufficient ice or ice packs 10 cooked fooll on a platter that'held raw
keep food at 40 degrees.
meat.
SLHj fi£ I Iii
,qq 'I )
· • Takeout foods like fried chicken
• Promptly place leftover foods in
or barbecued beef should be eaten 'cooler after grilling or serv;ng. Any
within two hours of pickup.
items left outside for more than an
~),11,.
~· 1110
· • Do nol carry coolers in the trunk. hour should be thrown away. If there
7 Pc. Wood Dinette

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•I .fRuTHMUCY
I
ue
QIIItpolla, OH

.

Techno pop is going to save the
world. Techno pop is going tO cure
cancer. Techno pop will decide the
next presidtntial election, remove
warts and replac~ the gasoline
engine.
Well, not quite. But oyer the past
six months or so, some extravagant
claims and hopes have been pinned
••n the sort of snap, gurgle and pop
music being referred 10 as technO, or.
eleotronica, which also comes in
about 15,000. sub-genres ranging
from jungle to house to rave to acid
and whatever has come up in the
·
past 12 hours.
The most common musical bond5
boldingalllhesestylc:s together are synlhesizers, a sheen of studio anificiality,
pen:olating fat bass linC!i and, at theirbest, a willingness to try just about anything no matter how Weird it sound.~.
In a inusic industry searching
madly for the Next Big. Thing, tech-·
no just might be it.
But not so fa,. The first major
artist to try to integrate the new techno into a pop album . was David
Bowie with "Earthling" back in

February. It was his best album in
. years, and yet it ·ditd a quick and
pronounced commercial death. .
• , ·By !lOB IIINzESHEIMER
Write II bOok called "Glued to . e migrant workers, but did. ;,lead the
. Then came the. album that was
I. : USA TODAY
Set: The 60 Television Shows an
way in personalizing our politics;" going to truly tum the maN.o;c,~ on to
:
A former lawyer who says he Events That Made Us WhO We Are erasing the line between Hollywood techno, U2's "Pop," which has flashy
:: lacked a "litigious personality;" . Today" (The Free Press, $25), and and Washington.
tech-trickery on a number of cuts.
•: Steven Stark is braced for heated you trigger a debate. ·
. Stark, a speechwriter for Jimmy After debuting high, it has wallowed
:: objections: How can he omit "The
"The Monkees" but not " Play- Caner's long-shol presidential cam- . in the chan teens for. the past month,
:: ' Honeymooners"? Or "The Simp- hous:i 90"? "The Brady Bunch" but paign, doesn't see TV as benign. .
which is not what you'd call a stellar
·.sons,'' the cartoon family, or O.J. nol ' Happy Days"? And Barbara
The "ioday" show, he writes, ' performance for U2. So far so bad.
.: :· Simpson, the defendant?
Walters having more of an impact with its bite-size programming '!set
And then the great. gods of the
.'
than TV 's sainted Edward R. Mur- the country on a road that led to its techno movement, the Chemical
'' ' From hi• book, "'nnt flO T•,._ row?
current case of atlcntion deficit dis- · Brothers, relea~ed their much-touted
vltion Shotn atid ~~~ TJN!t
Stark, 45, a confessed "TV fan" order." His chaprer on · crime- album "Dig Your Own Hole". in
• , . . U. ·Mio W. Art ·roctay, n educated at Harvard and Yale, . ,obsessed local TV news is titled, April. It debuted at a very healthy
:
allfhor Sttvtll Stvk lt.ll hla · leatned about the country by watch•· "Television's Biggest Scandal."
Number 14 on 11\e Bill hoard charts a
pi~;-:;:.~
ing TV. He says he listed, not the
But he is more interested in how few weeks back ... and then started a
:·~ wlltl Millon Bartl
-.-1-"'llll.sl shows, but the programs and entertainment shows shape politics. steady plummet. Last week it had
• ''Howdy Doody"
events that, for better .o r worse, had TV, he writes, '"presents. il~ most dropped to Number 40. It 's· making
"llwl the F'rHa"
!he biggest impact.
radical ideas in the form of comedy, money, sure, but it's hardly a huge
:;.
• ., Love Lucy''
"The Honeyrnooners" and '.'The the better . to beguile the masses commercial bonanza.
• "DI'Igllll"
Simpsons'' are both excellent in while preaching to them."
One bright, commercial light for
• Bllhop Fulton st-n'e "Life
their own ways. he says, but neither
Long ·before Betty Frieda~. "I . techno is the Jocelyn Enriquez
,"l Ia Worth Uvlng"
was popular nor influential enough Love LUcy" "gave voice to the res!- . album, "J~clyn," which has yield:; ·'
• "Sell It Now"
for other shows to try to copy them. less a~pirations of a gcnerat'ion of ed the top Dance Music single ." A
•
• "Today"
· ·
And while 100 million viewers housebound women." "The Brady Linle Bit of Ecstasy." PreN.' releases
· Enriqucz the pe rfcct bl end
'
• "DI•n•yland" (flrlt of
tuned in to the O.J. Simpson verdict, Bunch" dealt with what Stark calls . proclaim
~ ~~
~ Welk Show" few watched much of his trial. More "the six:ial· iN.~ue of our time: In the of techno and hip-hop, a break!
. "The Ed Sulllvln Show"
watched a shorter miniseries featur- post-feminist age, how are. men and througll artist, a vision of the future .
• "GuiiMIOkl"
ing Anita·Hill, Clarence Thomas and women to get along? " "Roseanne,"
And yet after giving a listen to
• "American Bandltllnd"
the Senate Judiciary Committee.
which raised "verbal child-bashing "Ecstasy" or the rest of Jocelyn,
• ''iWenty-One"
Thomas'. confirmation to the to an· art form," was TV's c;ounter- a..-one over the age of 30 is going to
• "l..elvl It To B • - ·
S,upreme Court, Stark says, had less part tl) a wider ~ial trend cutting stop and say, "Wait a minute. This
'·
• "Th81WIIIght ZOna"
to do with sexism and more ·to do budgets for ~verything from schools . i~n 'I new.
'
' ·-· • Prllldentllll prelll confer·
with his supportelli understanding to lil!ruries. The Monkees, the first
"This is.,.. diSCo!"
that such battles are now "political . made-for-TV rock band, commer·
That's
right.
Techno ·is
•• "The
"ParryDick
11111011
Yin r...o.. Show
.
struggles cast in the form of 1V cializc.d .'60s rebellion, making lonj! · inescapably the weird son of disco.
.,•
~~· .
ha1ra
· fash'on
· Actually,
·~tlfiVIIIon
S.hoWS. "
,
.
• I statement i not a polit "
'rd
f disco itself
. hwas thef
• "t1Mt iJevllty HUibllllll"
Hill's wiinesses could have beeri ical'one.
'
we1 son o space mus1c, t e sort o
• Pt uldlnt I&lt;M"*f'l • . _ . "yuppie .extras on 'thirty~mething•.
But-·~Saturday Night Live" made experimental stuff that cam~ about
lhldon
Thomas' supponers often looked as "evefYihing into. a jpke, which ulti- in the early '70s when voltage-wn• ' • "MIItar Ed"
though they had just Stepped Off the ffiatcll)' meant that t~how itself · trolled OSCilll\tOrs became popular,
•• "111t
DatinG
"eme"
set
of. .. 'Roseanne'.''
could never really be taken seriously synthesizers were the rage, studios
........... CBS _ __._ Nlwl"
',.
.........
Murrow makes Stark's list, but as as a cultural force.''
~~
a great joumalisl and radio star who
While relying on 1V historians
"Ill 1 1m
"b·"""
never auracted vast .T V audiences. a and critics, Stark says he wanted his
•
u on:
11"1 zw
· att eraII , · book to treat· 1Vth
• "The
lknothela
Brothera
"near-fata1fl aw on w hat 11,
. e " way '·most peoComlclr Hour"
··
· a mass commercial medium. ''
pie watch it: as fup. 1bere are worse
Walters! : unlike Murrow, never · sins in life . than providing some
• ··~n •nd - Merlin'•
'
devoted 'an .eatire · program ·tO ; fpn.' ~.
·
• l..luDIHn" ·

LOSE " 10 LIS.
AII-C.H-~1

tum the ma- Oh to techno, U2'a "Pop," debuted high,

· n the chart lee'!!' . the put month.

.

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'Author
trl·es to pl·ck TV's ·p· ··votal best'
~
·•: (and .worst) and spar·k··s. a·debat··e

Tabla 42x&lt;C2x54x68,
. 6 Sold Wood High

crowning of the winners will be held ' .
July 22 during the livestock interviews at the Rutland Civic Center.
Questions concerning either of the
competitions should be directed to
Chip Haggeny at the Meigs County
Extension Office, 992-6696.

1113 DAYS

·

' bulu:~~~~ IIIJUm ·t hll- clog to truly

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fO

The announcement and crowning
ceremonies for the king and queen
will be held at the Meigs·County Fair
Grandstand, on Sunday, Aug. 10 at
6:30p.m.
A.s for the prince and princesses
the contest is open to all Meigs County boys and girls ages 14 to 18 as of
Jan. I, not married nor ~aving been
married, 'nor having borne a child.
Another requirement ,is that they
must exhibit at the fair beef, dai.ry . .
goat, horse, poultry, rabbit, sheep or
swine livestock project in 4-H or
FFA. ·
.
Contestants will be ' interviewed
Monday, July 14, at 5:30p.m. at the
Meigs County Fairgrounds in· the
Grange building. Announcement and

·

Thtt Detroit NIIW8

a

Applications being taken for Junior Fair royalty
POMEROY - As plans move .
forward for the 1997 Meigs County
Senior and Junior Fair on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Aug. 11-16,
applications are being · taken at the
Meigs County Extension office for
Junior Fair royalty.
Contestants for king and queen, as
well as princess and princess for beef,
dairy, goat, horse, poultry, rabbit,
swine and .wool must the complete
the application forms and return
them to the EKtension office by 4;30
p.rit. Friday. No applications will he
accePted after that date.

-:::''-?f:Hter".

'E' •

6820.

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'

GR~UATES- Jay Rlgga po 11!1 with NBC "Today Show" holt
Matt Lallli', the Ohio Unlvert~lly commencemant apeeklr, during

• reception for Lauer held In the B•ker Center ballroom. uuar
left OU In 1971, four credit houri ahort of fuHIIllng grlldultlon
NqUirementa. He receullr completed • requlrlld cl111 and Wll
•-rdlld his degrM during the June commencement Progl'lm.

"Lane" Encore Sectional ·
1.1' x 91/2' 2 R~lln81'1, Full Sleeper, Pull DoWn Tray

Sofa I Lov•••at

I

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Jay Riggs graduates from OU
REEDSVILLE- Jay Rigas, son
of Kenneth E. and Judy A: Rlsgs of
Reedsville, graduated June 14 from
Ohio University with a bachelor of
specialized studies in business and ,
community.
His main ·areas of concentratiall
were mlrketina•.finance; COitlP\1•
science and interpersonal conimunications.
Riggs is now punuinc1J11dutite ·
lludiel with The American College in
Bryn Mawr:, I'll., where he is worting
on Cll'lling a CLU, OIFC cleJiJUtion.
·
While It Ohio Univenity, he was

j

a member of the OU baseball team ·
and earned two varsity letters. He list.ed as one of the highlights of his time
on t11e team as getting to meet former
OU baseball star, now ·in the Hall of
.Fame, Mike Schmidt when he
returned to campus for the 1970 baseball team reunion.
·
Rigs was also involved in fundraisins effons for the construction of
the new Bob Wren baseball stadium
now under construction, and worked
for OU's Spans Information Depart·
ment doing basketball season com- ·
puter stats for the men and women's ·
homeaames.
I

•

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.•......_.Btl.,....
·The
Bowf·

-~~--r

Iuper

• '"Tile lnlcly lunch"
• "AI.In the Family"
• "The Mlty ~ Moore

' lhow"

'r
~·'
lI

••

'

•"The Things That Matter," 1985
•"The Way Back Home,'' 1987
•"Best of Vince Gill," 1989 (gold)
.•" When I Call Your Name," 1989
(double platinum)
•"Pocket Ft~ll of Gold,'' 1991 (double platinum)
·
·· " I Never. Knew Lonely,' ' 1992
(gold)"
•"I Still Believe in You," 1992
(quadruple platinum) ,
•" Let There Be Peace on Earth,''
·1993
'
•" When Love Finds. You," 1994 ·
(double platinum)
• "Souvenirs," 1995 (platimtm)
•"High Lonesome Sound,'' 1996
(gold)

I

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expanded to 24 tracks, and a wild
Here's the question: Will people
new range of electronic gizmos start- buy it?
ed popping up. ·
Here's the answer: No one
The off-the-wall work of artists knows.
ranging. from M. Frog to Tangerine as long as they're put in a more stan- •
Dream and Kraftwerk are the true dard commercial context. If techno
roots of techno. Then in the mid· '70s is going to move beyond novelty hit.~
Giorgio Moroder, a German produc- from movie .sound tracks, it 's going
er, applied their techniques to pop to have to capital izc on ·the strong
melodies and set them over a relent- rhythms it often already has and
less unadorned beat. The singer he work beneath at least some sort of
produced was Donna Summer, and melodic structure. Let's jus( hope
disco became an international sensa- somebody does it better than
tion that would soon enough be Enriquez, and fast.
called an international plague.
. Still, the commercial viability of
Before the beat (and the Bee this music has noth ing to do with its
Gees) had driven . everyone mad, intrinsic worth, and much of what is
though, Moroder had taken techno going on in electronic pop now is
further in his· film soundtrack for · extremely exciting. For the brave
"Midnight Express," creating odd' soul who wants to take a dip in the
horror sound poems and a decidedly techno waters without risking total
weird hit called "The Chase," which immersion, MTV recently released a
was nothing more t~an a simple syn- nice little CD sampler called Amp
thesizer line riding over an even sim- (after its techno video show) that
pier beat, gilded with all sorts of offers an idea of the range of music
strange studio sounds. It was techno falling under . this rather large
at its purest.
umbrella. .
Then came the disco backlash'
It is not only an ideal starting
and the '80s, and techno went under- · place, it may prove to be an end to
ground. It never disappeared, it just itself. The downside of most techno
bubbled away below. The scratching . artists is they tend to fall into .stylisof rap had its influence, and dance tic grooves that can become numbmusic has always been thinly dis- ing. Listen to an hour of Aphex .
guised disco. (The term became an ·TWin, with all hi s buzzing chamber
Am~rican insult in the late '70s, and serenades and fluttering rhythm ,
the stigma never died). Dance clubs punches, and chances arc your eyein both Detroit and Chicago began lids will .bc jumping uncontrollably . .
melding techno experiments inlo But catch his ." Giri-Ooy Song" on ·
hip-hop ' grooves, and after years as Amp, and it offers nice contrast to
an underground European move- the pounding of the Future Sound of
ment, techno finally leaped over the London 's " We Have Explosive" nr
Atlantic to the United Stales. .
·
Fluke 's hyper "Atom Bomb." 11. lot
When grunge happened, techno of great techno stuff is on compila- its polar opposite - was just tiorn; (the Big Hard Disk rave collec- .
starting to ' rdisc its head again in tions arc classiCs) and for good rea some interesting . ways, with odd son.
sound symphonies by England's the
The current techno pop isn •1
Orb and weird little ditties by people mertly a case of everything old is
such as William Orbit. ·
new again. II is part of an ongoi~g
Now grunge is officially buried, music movement that has been
alternativ~ (whatever that was) . around for 30 or so years.
seems to be on a respirator, and
album sales arc stagnant at best.
Meanwhile the wizards of techno
have gotten surprisingly. good as a
FRI. THRU THURS
RENE RUSSO IN
generatio'n of computer kids have
d~'c-ovcted the funny sounds they
can m'ake . .
,ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30

·euoov ..
446-0923

••
•,

FRI, SAT, SUN
JIM CAAREY IN
UARUAR""

•
I

j

l-

AND

PIERCE BROSNAN IN

DANTE'S PEAK '""

446-1088

••
••
••
•
•••
••
•
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.........••.•.........~.~.~~~..~1~1~.:

Family Night Is

Back.. ~Only Better!

EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
4 P.M.·9 P.M. ONLY

·446·6939 or
446•1370

I

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n LoP8geCS

For All Your
VW.oN•••!
·Wedllags, Insurance,
Special Ev•ts•
·Let us put this on
video tape.

I

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_Techno pop: The Next Big Thing
or is it just Electric Dreams?

Uniqueness ot ·.picnics calls for something entirely special
,By CAROL McGARVEY
The De• Moina Reglater

;e

Vince Gill skips the fanfare, delivers good mUSIC

..

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produce 200 barrel~ of flour per day. little wonder then why Gallia's
The Clark &amp; Neal Mill had a capac- numerous mills wenf under through
ity of only 55 barrels a day. By the the years.
In 1904 AnchOr Mills was sold by
way, the demand for flour in Gallipolis in the 1880s was estimated at lhC Gallipolis Savings &amp; Loan Co.
' '
about ISO barrels per day. All three The.bank had foreclosed on the mill
of Gallipolis' mills could also grind when it could nol pay back its loan
com.
The Eureka Mill in the taken out in 1897 for remodeling; The
1880s was an all roller process run by buyer was Thomas L.' Bell, who pursteam. .The Clark &amp; Neal Mill was chllscdthe mill for only $4,200. The
part roller and part stone. The new mill was assessed for SIS,OOQ. The
rollerprocessallowcdformoreofthe only creditor who ended up with any
wheat berry, particularly the shons . money was the bank, as the loan was
where much of the nutrients were, to for about $7,000.
··be used. In the old process the shons
Anchor Mills also owed some othwere sold for feed.
er firms about SS,OOO. Apparently, the
By 1897 the Clark &amp; Neal mill, bank did not have mucll confidence
then known as Anchor Mills, could in the future of milling in Gallipolis,
produce ISO barrels of flour per day. which is why they accepted such a
·
From the Civil War to ' the early low price.
. pan of the 20th century, Gallia farmThomas Bell had been connected
ers planted on average about 15,000 with Treasure Stove Works . . Bell
acres of wheat every year and a~out became owner and general manager.
15,000 acre's ofcorn. About 1900, Hired ·as bookkeeper was Frank
that ratio began to change dramati, Shaw. In 1919. Miss Mayme Bell and
bulldlltg on the mill lite. In llltlr yNra, John. HISTORY OF MILLING- Thla mlllatood on
cally and by 1930, Gallia fanners had Frank Shaw formed a partnership VIne Strait In O.lllpolla from 1880 untll1847.
aon'• Grocery occupied the Maggled Brothers
19,000 acres of com and only 5,000 which owned lhe mill until 1944.
The mill waa deltroyed by .flrs In 1847 ind lit· .
building.
acres of wheat.
· It is interesting to note that accorder
that )'llr, the llaggled Prother1 erect.&lt;~ •
By the 1980s, wheat planting in ing to the Gal/ia Times repons ofthe
Galli a County took up less than demise of the mill, it noted that in
Ecker &amp; Myers sold the mill black pungent smoke filled .that end flames.'
1,000 acres of land. Corn growing 1944 even fanners who grew wheat · property to the Maggied Brothers in of town. Sparks as big as si~er dol(Jamaa Sanda Ia a epeclal correspondent
for The SUnday nmeelater also declined. By the 1980s, bought their bread from a store. In 1946. The Maggieds used the mlll for lars fell over a big area. Fortunately,
Santlnel.
Hla
addrHI 11 65 Willow
ooly 6,000 acres of Gallia land was ·1944, Gallipolis had one major bak- the storage of furs and scrap metal. It the town was then covered with ice
Drive,
Springboro,
Ohio 45068.)
in com. By the 1990s, thiu number ery, Mootz, but most of the flour they was on Feb. 26, 1947, the old mill and snow, or most of the buildings on
had shrunk to about 4.000 acres. It is used was grown outside the county. was destroyed by fire. For two hours, Vine Street could have gone up in

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VIDEO
·TUNSFERS
'

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Henderson, WV

Rio

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t

Sunday, June 22, 1181,

Pomaroj • Middleport • Gill~pou., OH • Paint n ... -t, wv

~

. . . . . . .. . . . .
, ....

.· .

by Bob Hoeflich
Martha at the . wheel, the couple
made it to lhe scbool.
When they arrived, they found
that President Reid had reserved a
home on campus for them· to reside
in while there. There was also a golf
cart provided to Martha and Jack so
that Martha could motrir Jack to all
of the activities which took place over
a period of three days and three
nights. Jack, who will be 92 on july
20, was the oldest alumni on hand for
the event, and so he and Martha were
given special recognition everywhere
they went, including a dinner at the
home of the school's president.
Everyone is supposed to .get 15
·minutes in the limelight, but Martha
and 'Jack during their trip ·really went
over the alloued time in receiving
anention and recognition.

So many ofyQu·know Charles and
·Maxine Goeglein, who have been
quite active in the community over
the years.
But did you know that•thcy will be
. marking their 50th wedding anniversary on June 28? B~cause of health
problems. there have been no plans
for a reception or big celebration, but
friends are hoping that you will be
able to send the couple a card to congratulate them on the occasion. The
address is 35610 Flatwoods Road,
Pomeroy.
Charles and Ma~ine have three
children who llf'e Charlene, in Kansas
these·days, and the twins, Mike and
Jodie,.
who live near Pomeroy, and
I told you Martha and Jack Green- Mark and Tammy, who live near Tupaway were back in Meigs. County pers Plains.
after wintering in Florida, and I also
Ah ha. So you've resisted turning
mentioned they would be busy. And
on
the air conditioning this spring.
·
they arc.
I'll
bet
some.of you caved in Friday,
While in Florida, Martha and Jack
though.
Well, that's one way to be
met Paul Reid, president of the
Williams Trade School near Philadel- "cool," and apparently that's · what
phia. and Jack had graduated from everyone and everything is supposed
· that school in 1926. Paul urged them to be these days. If it's any encourto attend the school's annual gradua- agement for you, yesterday, June 21,
tion and alumni reunion this month was the first day of summer. Do keep
and · so after a tough drive with' smiling.

- Gallia community calendarThe Community Calan.dar Ia pubCHESHIRE • Rev. Clyde Henlished u a free urvlt:e to non-prof- . derson to preach 7 p.m. Old Kyger
It groups wishing to. announce
Freewill Baptist Church. ·
meetings and special evanta. The
calendar Is not designed to proMonday, June 23
mota sales or fund-taiMra of any
•••
type. IIams are printed as space ·
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Chappermits and cannot be guaranteed
to run a specific number of daye.
ter 283 OES Friendship Night, 7:30
• p.m.
Sunday, June 22 . ·
•••
CENTERVILLE
•••
Thurman
ADDISON - Sunday School pic- Grange 1416, 7:30 p.m..
nic Addison Freewill Baptist Church
•••
after Sunday School at the Kyger • GALLIPOLIS • Canaim Missionary Baptist Church Vacation Bible
Creek Sheherhouse.
School. June 23-27, 6-8 p.m .
•••
GALLIPOLIS - Witness lito sing
MERCERVILLE - ·South Gallia
7 p.m. ·Bell Chapel.
Boosters, 7:30 p.m., at the high
·
MORGAN CENTER - Rev. Nov- school.
el Russell to preach 7:30p.m. Mor•••
gan Center Christian Holiness
Tllcsday, June 24
Church.
·
*** .
GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Lose
. MERCERVILLE - Singing Hayes Diet Class, 9 a.m.. Grace United
Family ·to perform Guy an Township Methodist Church.
Volunteer Fire Depanmcnt I:30 to
•••
4:30 p.m. Lunch to ··he served at 2
GALLIPOLIS -American Legion
Auxiliary Lafayette Unit 27 installap.m.
tion of officers. post home on Bob
CROWN CITY ~ Singing Hayes McCormick Road, 6 p.m. Auxiliary
Family to perform I0 a.m. Kings members and guests. Potluck dinner.
Chapel Church.
•
RIO GRANDE - Open Gate Gar.GALLIPOLIS- Schwanz Family den Club tour of Call's Shiloh Farm.·
to sing 6 p.m. Elizabeth Chapel.
Meet at the Riu Grande office of
Ohio Valley Bank, 6 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS • Christ Academy
Handbell choir to perform 7 p.m.
EWINGTON - American Legion
Post 161, 6 p.m., Ewington Academy.
Christ United Methodist Church.

...

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...

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...

••

•••

KANAUGA • Rev. Dennis Parsons to preach 7 p.m. Silver Memorial Church.

...

•••

R~vival

•••

GALLIPOLIS • Revival in
. progress at Mina Chapel Missionary
CENTENARY - Angel family Baptist Church.
reunilm II a.m. to 3 p.m. Raccoon
•••
Creek County Park Bobwhite Shelter.

Triptimers are useful for more
than just deterrence of burglars
By BILL WOLFE .
.
The Louiuvllle C:OUrllr.Joumal
Ligllls tum on and off by themselves. Televisions mysteriously click
into .action with no humans present.
Such are the signs of electronic
timers -I!IOPules that plug into your
ts and. let you plu.s appliances
the mod¥1es. A.t specified ~ours,
IIICf kicp in, lets the electricity
111d the appli~nce fire up.
,-~IJICTS are popul• at vacation
in., bill they are
for more than
confusing bUill~. They can also be
convenient ~~jays tp pu1ke sure lights
tum themselyes Of!' when you go to
bed and bacll on berore you get up.
1'IMy can
coffee brewing 10
mjnutes before you get to the .break·
f-' table ~ launch the dishwasher
late at night when you're snoozinc.
You can ·~ a little or a lot,
depeqclins 011 what you need. Here's
wfiallr.oe found at ~io Shack.

i

F-

sWt

U tJ

· • Simple. Cheap. An $11 timer.
which simply plugs into your outlet.
can take a light appliance through as
many as 24 on-off cycles in one day.
You can set in IS-minute increments
by adjusting a rotating dial.
For a heavy-duty appliance, such
· as an air·conditioner, you'll need a
S15 module with only one on-off
cycle per day.
.
If you need more precise timing
- say, to t\lm a cassette recorder on
at exactly · 7 p.m. 10 cat~h your
favorite radio show - you' II proha·
bly want a digitally controlled timer .
for a few dollars more.
• Radio remotes, WantiO program
. several timers throughout your house
with one master controller? '!'ou can
use a radio-linked system oeo to sev·
eral plug-in modules. The controller
costs about ~30. Plug-in modules are
$13to $20 each.

RACO 4th of July Frog Jump
Star Mill P•rk, Racine

•.

•

Sh~tter

Ann
Landers ·
I'.IY~.

l.Au

Aftltlt~

TiiMll Sylt.licate ~ Cte·
lllllfl SynLIIn~e .

By ANN LANDERS
;,-Dear Ann Landers: You've print·
'!9.many leuers on the importance of
110t keeping silent about child abuse.
Ay story may be peninent and help-

Don Tala Sale Prices 13',969

11EWI

*

1997 BUICK .
S YLARK CUSTOM

4 Door, auto., air, cruise,

cass.

MSRP $16,815
Don Tate Sale Price

'15,477

\lEW\ . 1997 lUlCK .
CENTUD CUSTOM
Auto .. air, V6, all power. cruise
t..Ots ·
MSRP $19,543
Don Tltt Sale Prlt:e *18,5 22

1997 PONT. GRAND PRIX SE
EWI V6, keyless entry, auto.,
\l
air. cruise, tin. .
t3113

MSRP $19,849

Don Tate Sale Price '18,615

::' Nine years ago, at age 45, during
¢!Y fourth marriage, I molested my
~-year-old stepdaughter. I had five
'lftildren from my previous marriages
~ had never touched any of them
ittappropriately. I was incredibly
~ky, howe.ver. My stepdaughter did
liiOT remain silent. She told a friend,
.Jij\o told her Girl Scout leader, and
(U:statc law. the scout leader had to
t;J!ort what she had hear~ to legal
l!i,thoritics.
"' I knew I. was sick and immediatel~nrolled m a program that counsels
aiilsivc parents and victims of abuse .
If recommended a I2-stcp program.

ttl\ 1997 PONTIAC FIIEIIRD
CD, auto., all, cruise, Um~ed slip, 5
speed, uplevelateerlng.
Jl. \ MSRP $8,258

Don Tate Sale Prtt:e *16 ·989

...

Jll\ 1997 CADILLAC DEVILLE

ve. leather, Nprthstar. emerald green.

.

5 speed, cass., air, bright red,
. ,.,.\
rear spoiler
10
MSRP $15,868

MSAP $38
087
, t,

Don Tate Sale Price

Jlf\

'""'

19971UICK
PARK
AVENUE .

&lt; ·· '

. I

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•3·5,934

au!&lt;J., alum. wheels, CO,
2tone paint,tugg. rack, MSRP
Don.TataSalePrlce$24

$25.-

315

tlEtlt
1997 OLD$
CUTWS
SUPREME
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All wh&lt;iel drtve, gold 'pl&lt;g., CO player,
auto., air, toWing pkg., loaded.
.

....,....locka

TATE·SALE PRICE

MSRP $19,825

4 Door, all power, auto .. air, ·

PW, CD, till, cruise.
MSRP $22,302

Don T.t~ Sale Prlt:e '20,886

MSRP $31,979
Don T.teS•t• Price '27

•ti,IIB

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942

1996 lUlCK REGAL

1996 CHEVY CORSICA

V6, auto., air,
PW, PL, cassette.
Don Tate Sale Prlcu 112;9~9

Auto., air,
stereo, air bag.
. Don Tate Sule Price 18,995

_,· ..........~~ ···-··ell•

·riluca·,. ,·.
.

...

'

1995 JEEP CHEROKEE V6, auto., air, stereo, cruise, 4X4 ..............:...................................$15,995
1996 CHEV. TAHOE VB, auto., air, PW,PL, cruise, CE player.............................................;.$23,900
19M GiO METRO Auto.,.air, Cass., PS, PB .............. ~........... ~ .. ~~~ .........._........ ~ ......................... $8,695
1994 GEO PRIZM Air, ·auto., cass., tilt, c·rulse .......................... ~................... ~........................~~.$8,995
.
.
"·
~993 GE.O PR.IZM 5 speed, alr,'stereo, PS, PB, tllt..................:.•:..... ;~ .....................................$7,765
1996 CHEVV:S-10 PICKVP EXt. cab, air, 5 speed, stereo ........•:··..............................'........... $11,629
19M FORD RANGER PICKUP XLT 5 speed, air, cissette•.••..•~.............................................$8,929
1995 CHEVY SUBURBAN 3/4 Ton, auto., air, 4X4; leather .....~ .............;....... ;.....;................. $26,959
1994 GMC SIERRA PICKUP V8, auto.,.air, cass., crulstt, tllt.; ...................,;...................;....$14;995 .
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Placid, N.Y., at lhe Corvalr Co!lvention. Like
other Corvair lovers, Fallot, from Louiaville,
Ohio, drove his Corvair to the annual Corvair
National Convf!ntion. (AP)

LOVE THOSE CORVAIRS- Stanley Elst of
Bolton, Dnllrio, left, judged the engine com- .
partmenl of Ruy.Fa•ot's Sllndard Corvair 1965
Monza coupe, while another Judge checked the
paint during senior division judging in Lake

room' for one perso~. so my husband
had to look for another place to park
and my business is thriving.
himself.
The lesson is clear- silence hurts
Since the game was a sellout,
everybody. Speaking out, though every time he found an unoccupied
painful, embarrassing and frighten· space. he was asked to move so one
ing, is the only way a victim can get or two people could squeeze in. By
the help she (or he) needs, and it is the time the game was half over, my
the only way an abuser can be reha- husband was feeling so squashed he
biljtated. Please get this message was happy to leave .
across to your readers. - Healing in
I know some people. can't control
New Mexico
,
. their weight, but the obese must realDear N.M. : It took .courage for ize that they take up more space than
you to write to me in an effort to help people of normal weight. They
othcn. No one can tell a story more should buy two seats to accommoconvincingly than one who has been · date the extra girth,orjust stay home.
there, and you certainly have. Th'ank What do you say, Ann?- Nowhere
you.
to Sit in Maryland
Dear Ann Landers: I'd like to
Dear Maryland: Sorry, l'magainst
speak on the subject of overweight discrimination across the board pcopl~ . My husband and I drove five · race, religion; sex and add to that
hours to se.e our son play in an impor- · height and weight. People Of ".extra
lanl colle~e. basketball game. There girth" ~re · penalized enough without .
~c no mdovtdual seats at the stadtum, being asked to pay double at sporting
JUSt benches.
events. Your· bias is sbowing. Get a
When we got to our bench. there grip.
was a family of three in the space
(Send questions to Ann Lannextto ours,~ith what looked like a dera, C.reators 6yndit:lte, 5777 W.
combined wetght of 900 pounds. Century Blvd.; Suile 700, Los AngeNeediess to say, IMre was barely Jes, Calif. 90045.)

I had a history of drug and alcohol
abuse, so, that very week, I started to
attcncl Narcotics Anonymous meetings and. subsequently, semi-weekly
sessions with a psychologist and
weekly group sessions with other per·
petrators.lt was there thatl .came to
realize that my parents had sexually
abused bQth my sister and me.
J was indicted on one charge uf
criminal sexual contact with a minor,
p(eaded guilty and was sentenced to
supervised probation, with continuing
aucndancc in both individual and
group therapies and Narcotics
Anonymous.
My wife divorced me, and I feared
I would be cut off from my family
forever. Not so. My stepdaughter
phoned' in tears and said that after
months of therapy, she. had a much
better understanding of the situation
and wanted to forgive ine1This is a
small town, and we run into one
another frequently, but we now feci
at case being together.
I switched from Narcotics Anonymous to AlCoholics Anonymous five
years ago and have been clean 311d
sober.for nine years. My relationship

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with m'y children is beuer than ever.

I have a wonderful woman in my life,

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M1n.i'num depos'li to open an acooU~t Is $2~000.00. ·Rites indicate ~nnuaJ pe;Ce'ntaQa
yield and are enective for accounts opened June 19 thru June 25, 1997. Interest to be
capilatized. Depos~• of $100,00Q or mooe are subjeclto dally rate quotations. A penally ·
tor ea~y withdrawal may be Imposed. Above rates avalabki at an Peoples Bank
locations. FOIC tnsuoed. ·
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Mlddlepon 1'0~!01' Rutland · TOO 0u1y Blnk-Btl'llaae
992.6661 992·2133 742-2888 376-7123 t-1100-374-6123

Glllipolls

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;F.kmina, 96, w-.111anasing editor

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Baltimoo: Sun from 1924 to

1~2 lind worked with famed colum-

OPEN
SUNDAY 1-5

1\

H L. Mencken. Mrs. Fleming. a
'chlmilt, Will an llfiltut 10
Nobel Prlze.winnins team of
Hildliul1811 OeM!de Elion

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'". ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP).:... for 1,0 years. · ·
,
The school offered 35 winter prOWho spends vacations studying?
And Sid and Marlene Lavine of grams, from baseball to Shakespeare,
~ ·Eiderhostelcrs do.
· Cherry Hili , N.J ., took their first and had 2,500 people trying to get in.
" These are seniors, many of whom Elderflosteltrip in Novcmher after he
Annually, Ec.kcrd 's Elderhostcl
h11ve been away from the classroom rctir¢d from his optomctri.ia practice. and Senior College programs entice
ftr·dccades. They come on holiday ih "We've hccn on four in a row, all nearly 4,000 hostelers with 75 pro. a:l!uest for enrichment and entenain· over," said Lavine. 67. .
.gram oft'crings. The programs add
r(i:itt.
•
Eckcrd is Florida's oldest Elder- about $2.5 million to the college's
~· What they find is a week long .hostel site 'and was founded in June income .
c:jpericncc that puts them back .at a 1977 at the liheral arts and science
dS;;k and offers an opportunity to college. It staned ·with 25 vacationsii!Cialize with peers.
crs who took courses with summer
:..•'We arc gelling ·to meet other school students, stayed in the dormiIMlks. and at the same time_gelling lories and ate in the cafeteria.
rlmlal stimulation." satd 86-ycar-old
Today, Elderhostel is a free-stand·
~old Corbin. linishing up a week
ing unit at the campus on the shores
;C;j!ckcrd Gullcge with 35 other of Boca Cicga Bay on Florida's centr~Jciers.
.
lral Gulf Coast. It has private. hotel- ·
"'''If you don't usc it, you lose it," like rooms to accommodate 50 pe·o- ·
~d Carbin. a former president of pic and plans to double the capacity
tG'American Marketing Association. . by next summer.
:::.t orhin, who sports a white han~ar moustache. and his wife,
C3{!1re. a former treasurer of the
~&gt;elation, were workinj,!their way
lliijugh a 12-hour day. In the morntheir studies concentrated on
sh playwrtj,!hl. a~l&lt;ir and com·
f1 r Noel Coward. Later in the day.
t~ visited histnric Tampa Theater,
hf' \!inner. and took . in a. synchronrt.cd
show.
•• :riteswim
. Cnrhins arc retired univcrsi- .
l)loflrolcssors whn say it .is their way
ol:rclaxing because they like 'being
c~&lt;)sed to new ideas.
l;:idcrhostel pmgram began in
tl¢'; country in the mi\1- I970s. '{'wo
docades l~tcr. it caters to 300,000
so7.iors in the United States and
Citnada. according to the nqtional
Eltrcrhostei Inc. Qflice in Boston. ·
~Although thC packqgc is' dire.cted
a1:1hosc over 55, the average age of
thi, ,~ostclcr is 68 and most come ·
fr~ professional ha~kground~. said
J!fkic Mallory, who has shaped Eck·
ea11.'s program for seven years.
· ~or $350 a week, a pet'llon gets
, : , and board, classes, field trips
a.Qi, entertainment.
s. Mallory says. the concept
a
Is to p:ople who DR still cxcit·
c hout life and lifelong .leamina..
of course. they titustlike to trav....
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;_Age is no barrier.
'
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:-oii tour were J. Kinaston Fleming
.;.. his wire, Jane, enjoying their
folnh trip ,o &amp;kerd.

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fihile matriculating at holiday elderhostels

. ·Ext., 4 Or,. V6,

ca1a., cruiM, tilt,
•uto., air,

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~eniors seek out entertainment, -enrichment

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LESAIIE

1997 PONTIAC
TUNSSPORIU

MSRP

\lUll 1997 BUICK REGAL LS

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All,---- ·_.·

All power, 3110-0
VI, auto., air, CD
&amp; c..a., leather.
MSRP $32,350

"wi•PageC7

the silence cloakin·g sexual ab,use ·

C41.

1997 PONT. GUilD 1M COUPE

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FOURTH ANNUAL

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then-unknown Detroit lawyer, Raiph •64 Monza.
Nader- said the Corvair hM steerRich shined up his car in loving
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. - Listen ing and control problems. The detail readying it for competition. •
closely as the sleek Corvairs motor charges stuck, and the car's name
"My wife's jealous of it," he said.
around the Olympic speed-skatina became mud.
,
The Corvair hit a bumpy road in
track, you 111ight just hear them whisAI the conventiqn, Nader· is per• the mid-'60s, when Ford came out
per: What goes around, .comes sona non grata.
with the Mustang - a car inspired by
around.
"I don't want to pick on him. too the succes.• of the Corvair, according
,Nearly 1,000 Corvair enthusiasts much," said Ray Fallot ofLdt!isville, to mechanic and Corvair historian
descended on this Adirondack Moun- Ohio. "You know, he is the great pro- Larry Claypool.
tain reson Thursday 10 show off their · lector of everyone. Well, ! don't need
The sportier Mustangs - availodd-looking cars and give the inf• any protecting."
· able with V8 engines - began out·
mous model the kind of respect that
The Cl~rvair dates to 1960, selling Corvairs. And soon, Chcvroeluded it in'the 1960s.
Chcvrolct's economy-line answer to let hegan planning a more powerful
· " 'Once you see. how they handle, the popular Volkswallen 'Beetle. The car, the Camaro.
they kind of get into your blood," cars shared some distinctive feaCorvalr production ceased in 1969
said Jim Benak of Burbank, Ill., who tures, most significantly an air-cooled' - but not C.orvair interest.
with his wife, Barb, owns two '66 engine placed in the rear. But the CorThe C.orvair Society of America
Corvairs.
va,ir was bigger and sleeker than its now boasts about 5,500 members.
an,nual Corvair Convention, Perman cousin.
and part·of the attraction is the price.
whtch runs through this weekend. , The low-slung car with four front Restored models can run
low as
allows owners to take part in a . headtights became a popular seller. $3,000, lending credence to the nick·~!oration contest, ra llies, a parade The line eventually included con- name "poor man's Porsche."
a endless talk about The Corvair. vertibles, vans and ' pick ups (comEnthusiasts are also bonded by a
t.io ~~
· 00 of the star-crossed. pletc with a gate on the side).
sense of·vindication. a feeling that
rear· ngi cars arc in tow 0.
. It looked like nothing else Gener· time has proven their car worthy.
The orvair was buried by the rise al.Motors put out at the time and it after all. Corvair innovations like uni·
of the muscle car and by a 1965 book caught the imagination of people like body construction were later adopted
on auto design flaws. "Unsafe at Any AI Rich ofCharlone, N.C., who has . by other cars.
Speed. " The c~pose - written by a immaculately maintained his father's

in gettina and staying healthy, ex~ . experts say. It is gettin1 easier 10 plates. ~ultiple colors of food in ono, ••
By KHRISTINE ELLIOT
say. Healthy living is something choose healthy rood with a variety of meal helps provide balance with,. .;
Battle CtMk Enquirer
Gwen Riter changed her life entire families should be p111Cticing, selections in grocery stores aft~~ veaetables and fruit.
Barr recommends using two basic ~~
through nutrition and exercise.
experts say. Here are Some thoughts: restaurants, but it's11p to the individThe Battle Creek, Mich., woman
' c-nladrice
ual to actually eat the healthy food, nutritionalsuidelines: Dietary Guide- ·
has lost 114 pounds. Now she's ·
Althouah most people know that said Carol Barr, a clinical dietician,&amp;! lines for Americans and the Food , ,
Guide Pyramid.
, ;
teaching her daughter Kelli, 4, about exercising resularly and eating prop- Battle C.uk Health System.
"!think everybody oughtto know ;,
healthy living.
. erly are keys to good health, some
"Try· to avoid fried . food and
"What tickles my husband and me people aren' t doing . these things, , dessert and be real careful in all-you· (these), but a lot of people aren't ...
to death is if we go over to someone's experts say.
~an-eat places," slie said. "Almost doing them; " she said. "!think pea- ·
house and they offer her a snack,
"In the past 10 years, I really every place offers something t~'s pie are becoming m'ore aware, but I' "
she'll opt' for an apple · or banana haven't seen a big difference in peo- baked or broiled now. Be careful don't 'know if we practice what we ,•..
·
·;~~:
instead of cookies," Riter said as Kel· ple paying more attention to their about salad dressing. Don't put too know...
~ople shouldn't skip meals. That, ,.
li· mimicked her aerobic exercises. health," s!lid Dr. Mark Henry, a Bat- much on.''
just
makes them eat more when they ,
"She's learning what! didn't."
" tle Creek family · physician. "Some
·Eat a variety offoods, experts say.
have
a meal, she said. Eat every four
About five years ago, a friend who people are very concemed about it. Kuzma tells his patients to have at
or
five
hours while you're awake. ..
was worried about Riter's weight but Some people are really overly con- least three different colors on their
didn't know how to tell her brought eemed about it. Others don't care.
her to a fitness club. Riter 's been
"I think people :.. want to do
. hooked on exercise ever since.
something, but when it comes down
'.
She now works out four or five to actually doing something, they
times a week, doing 30 minutes of have a hard . time breaking , old
••
aerobics and 30 minutes of muscle habits. "
building. Kelli plays in the center's ·
Motivation for practicing healthy ·
"
supervised day care while her moth- lifestyles is individual, he said. While
er works out.
some people will change' their habits
"I never wanted to do anything at the suggestion of their doctor, othJuniOr Plvlslon (Ages 1·1.5) Senior Division (Ages 16 l Up)
physical (before), . and I've been ers. will not despite repeated suggesRegistration Fee $5.00
Registration Fee $3.00
doing it ever since," Riter said. "It's tions. It somciimes helps to enlist the
·good for my head, my heart ana my help of the person's spouse, he said.
1st..................~.......... $100.00
111..........~·~··............$40.00
body. I have more energy, and I can
To help his patients remember
2nd •.•••..• :.................. $25.00
2nd ....................~......:•. $75.00 ' "\
keep up with this tyrant (motioning . healthy habits, Dr. George Kuzma,
3rd ....................... ~ .• $10.00
3rd .........................~ ..... $50.00
a family physician from Albion,
.toward Kelli)."
•
Riter is doing what health and fit· Mich. - teaches them the acronym
No ttHida, Frog gala 3jumpa off pad. Longelt meuure from pad to ~
ness ex pens wish more people would NEW START. The letters stand for · IUt jump recelvu prla 'money. nme of even to be announc:ed :
do. She has changed her habits and nutrition, exercise, water, sunshine;
latar. No llmh on number of troga reglltered per per110n. Rant·A· :
has taken charge of her own health. temperate living, air, rest and trust.
Frog 11110 al!lllable. AM froga wHI be treated humanely and rlturned ••
. Good nutrition
Proper nutrition , exercise and regto natural habitat. Ouaatlone, Cllll Aaron Young, 814-1148-2545
•
ular phy'sicais play an important role
Eating right is an important factor, ~-=--~--.-----~~~~~

Auto .. air, tin, cass., SE Pkg.,
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By MICHAEL HILL
AIIOCIII d PtUIS Wrltilr

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28 years after production ended,
the Corvair finally gains respect

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More .an.d more, precepts of good }
......
nutritio~, exercise change lives

Beat of the Bend ..

Pomaroy • Middleport • o.lllpolla, OH • Point P......,t; WV

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Relatives held at surprise party
last Sunday honoring Middleport's
Velma Rue and it was so successful,
Velma is still radiating enthusiasm
about it.
The party was planned by Velma's
daughter, Sue Gamer of Pampa,
Texas; her niece, Rita Edwards of
Jackson, Ohio; and her sister, Margie
Bow"'an of Pompano Beach. Fla.
Since the hostesses were widespread
and weren't ali that up on Velma's circle offriends. planning the party was
quite a chore and ali done through the
courtesy of the long distance phone
lines.
About 50 relat ivcs and fricnds
were on hand forthe party held at the
Grapevine in Jackson, ·owned by
Velma's niece. Rita Edwards. ,
, Relatives on hand for the event
besides the hostesses. of .course.
included Velma's son , J.T. Rue and
family of St. Joseph, Mich.; a niece,
Sally Bowman and her son, Eric of
Terra Haute. Ind. ; a niece, Charloue
Sargent of Toledo; a nephew, Phil
Bowman and family of Jackson, and
Vclma's four grandchildren, Ally Garner. and Kendra. Eric and Tyler Rue.
. A bullet dinner was served and the
hostesses created a tribute to Velma
through gift bags decorated on the
outside to represent some of Velma's
activities among which are church,
sorority. golfing. dancing and more.
Needless to say, it was quite a
· reunion and a total surprise to Velma
which really made it nice.

Sundlly, June 22, 1187

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • G•lllpolla, OH • Point PIN..nt, WV.

Tourism: Is it an old prison, or a dark Disneyland?
By DAVID SHARP
A8.ac:laled p,_ Wrbr
MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. (AP)
- Paint still flakes from the walls
and musty odors still flow from old,
damp cells. People in the courtyard
still gaze up at cold stone walls,
· vicious razor wire and turreted gun
towers.
Some · things have not chal)gi:d
since the old West Virginia Penitentiary closed, except now the uniforms are worn by friendly guides,
and their wide-eyed wards . are
tourists.
"I never thougbt I'd be giving
tours here," said Josh White, a corrections officer for 22 years. "Eh,
it's a livitig."
The Gothic, Civil War-era
fomess was the raison d'etre for this
friendly Ohio River town, about 50
miles southwest of Pittsburgh, for
nearly 130 years. The state moved
out the prisoners and shut down the
prison two years ago, leaving it a
fading footnote to history on the
verge of becoming.an eyesore.
But the town intends to transform
it into an offbeat' tourist attraction~
The tours brougbt 20,000 people last
year, mostly by word-of-mouth and
a few crude brochures.
" That's · more people than
Moundsville ' has seen in ·a long
time," said Phil Remke; owner of a
Main Street furniture store, founder
of the Moundsville Economic
Development Council and leader of
the prisoners-to-tourists idea.
The idea started with a trial run
,gp weekends through the old buildings pretty much .as inmates left .
them. Then, it was opened six days a
week from April 'to .December last
year.
Now, buses unload tourists at a
former guard , shack where the old
signs still warn, "No Firearms
Beyond This Point."
A mug shot is taken before visitors meet their tour guide. Then,
with a "whoosh," a hydraulic gate
separates the tourist -prisoners from
the outside world.
It is qot Disneyland, but it is a
trend nevertheless as people try to
transform antiquated prisons like the
West Virginia Penitentiary. Other
prisons put on the tourism circuit in
recent years inclUde the Mansfield
Reformatory in Ohio, where "Shawshank Redemption" w'as filmed, and
the Eastern State Penitentiary in
Philadelphia.
Alcatraz Island in San Francisco
Bay is 'the granddaddy of them all,
attracting 1 million visitors a year.
"People have absolutely no idea
what happens in prison. They're
amazed. They have a macabre inter-

est," said Sean Kelley, prognm
director at the Eastern State Penitentiary. ·
Dan Seck~l. board president of
the Mansfield Reformatory Preservation Society in Ohio, said he does
not understand the fascination with
prison..~. But he hopes to keep the
tours going.
"We're preserving a piece of historic architecture," he said. "The .
fact it is a prison is secondary." .
In Moundsville, visitors pay $4 to
$5 to enter a stark, shadowy world

of metal, concrete and 5-by-7 cells service worker were talten bostage
stacked 'four stories· high. As many in the 1986 riot in wbich tbree
as 2,3S7 inmates lived at the maxi- inmates were tortured to death.
mum security prison.
They hear about the 1979 escape
Many of the guides are foriner in .which 15 inmates bolted out the
corrections officers. They tell no front door and killed a trooper.
make-believe stories.
And they see the spot where three
"We don 'I sugarcoat it. From . inmates, including a former coal
grade school to senior citizens, we miner, escaped through an elaborate
let them know how it was. It wasn't · lighted, ventilated tunnel thai they
nice to be 'in here. And it wasn't nice built under the prison green house in
to work here," White said.
1992. Inmates got rid of the dirt by
VISitors see the dining hall where giving it away to unsuspecting Cor15 corrections officers and a food- rections officers for their gardens.
Corrections officers have their
own gritty tales, like the time White
was attacked by an inmate, or when.
he watched a prisoner's bead swell
to !he size of a basketball after a

fight.
-.
wife, Liz, felt claustrophobic.
The inmate breathed his last as
"When thai fll'SI door shut behind
White sat ne~~:t to bim, alone, in Jhe me, it was 'Wboa! I'm here. It's
prison infirmary, he said.
• locked.' It's a creepy feeli.ns." Mn.
"We know what we're talking Grabman said, now much more
about. I know how it smelled. I've relalied as she looked over the plasbeen assaulted. I've seen a man tic handcuffs and other souvenirs in
die," White said. "I don't lie to the gift shop.
them. There's enougb true stories to
Remke bas been a tireless probe told."
. moter. He has opened the prison for
In all, 94 prisoners were executed, haunted tours at Halloween and tor
mostly by hanging, but nine in "Old an annual "Jailhouse Rock" dance.
Sparky," the state's electric chair, · He envisions bringing in artisans, rewhich still is on display. ScOres more opening the cafeteria, and hosting
died from diseases like tuberculosis · conferences.
that swept througb the prison.
A Baltimore consultant told
· One tourist, Carl Grabman of Remlte that the prison tours coulit
Westfield, Wis., recorded the higb- bring up to 150,00() visitors a year
lights with his video &lt;;amera. His · into town.

EXTENSION GUNTED
Last .Day To Pay Second H
' alf Real
Estate Taxes Will Be
July 7, 1997

TOURISTS EXAMINE 'Old Sparky," the lllllte'a electric chair, which
atlllls on display. Nine condemned Inmates died In the chair.
·

10% PENALTY Will Be Charged After The
J"ly ·7th Date on Real.Estate Taxes•.
MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
· Howard E. Frank
1997 Ag Baby announced
· Bryan Chase Benson, son of Ashlee and Brian Benson of Thurman,
has been named the

1997 Ag Baby by the Gallla County Farm Bureau, .
The new arrival, born Monday, March 24 at 5:44a.m., is the grandson
of Harold and Sandy Benson ofTyn Rhos, Dale Saunders and
Dan and Karen Beam, all of Gallipolis. He also has one sister, Jordyn.
·
As the 1997 AgBaby, Bryan received several gifts
frpm area businesses and organizations including:
Pictured with the new Ag Baby and his parents are (sc;ltcd),
Cheryl Frazier, RN, HMC Nursery; (standing), Jackie Graham,
Fann Bureau, Katie Shoemaker, chairperson, Vicki Powell; Fann
Bureau, Henry Thrapp, Kiwanis Club scc;rctary, Trooper Charlie
Chapm:on, and Charles Withee, FU!Il Bureau.

That Speciql Touch, Fruth Pharmacy, Revco, CVS, .
Paul Davies \Jewelers, Friendly Farmers Farm Bureau Council, Gabby
Gang Farm Bureau Council, Raccoon Creek Farm Bureau Council, Bob
Evans Restaurant of Gallipolis, Gallia-Meigs Pdst OSP, Ohio Easter Seal
of Marietta, Holzer Medical Center and the Gallipolis Kiwanis Club.

Section

D

8und8y, June 22, 111t7

french 500 Flea Market benefits
Monthly event attracts
between 5,000-7,000
:.weekend customers

falrboar~,

community

.. ,, ........ ........

JIY ODIE O'DONNELL

·
OVP Corre•pondent
: GALLIPOLIS - "We are not the largest flea-market in Ohio, but we are
proud of the boost this monihly event gives to the economy of Gallia Coun1Y since ·We are averaging.between 5,000 and 7,000 customers every day we
.ere open during the season."
·
•
' .
: This past weekend. Bob Howard,' veteran manager of the French 500 Aea
Market in Gallipolis, discussed the continued growth of the IT\Brket, now celebrating'24 years of operation at the Gallia County Jooior Fairgrounds, five
miles west of Gallipolis on Route 588. .
,.
: Proceeds ·go to fairboard
Howard, who is also supervisor of the buildings and grounds as a mem-_
ber of the Gallia County Junior Fairboard, reported that the marlc:et offers
customers between 550 and 600 dealer displays to view, 200 of whpm occu,
)&gt;y sections ofthe 41,000 square feet of indoor display areas in·the eight build;ngs.
' ·
·
·
: All .proceeds from the monthly flea-markets are used by the fair board
Jor permanent improvements on. the fairgrounds property. Dealers are charged
· :a flat fee of $6 per day for each I0 feet of frontage theit&gt;booth· occupies;
Howard stated, "in 1991 the fairboard made about $12.000 from the year-·
long market. but in 1996 earned approximately $45,000 from the dozens
:of dealers who show their wares in Gallia County seven weekends a year."
: · A shopper visiting the flea market is not charged for parking or admis-sion, and during the three-day June market, vehicles were counted from 19
:different Ohio counties and II different states. Tile majori.ty of vehicles
parked on the grounds carried Ohio or West Virginia license plates, but oth~rs were from Michigan,.Illinois, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Indiana, Alaba:ma, North Carolina, Missouri, and Florida.
, Many of the dealers bring their own camping trailers, camper trucks, or
motorized homes to live in for three days. Several start lining up as early
·as Wednesday. A few utilize the camp ground located at the ·rear of the prop. eity and those stayiiig on the grounds have access to showers, toilets, and
free utilities for three days. Between 150 and 175 dealers remain on the
grounds throughout the weekend, but those with inside displays commute .
to their hollies within a 50-mile radius of Gallipolis.
LOCIII economy benefits
Each weekend the local economy in the Gallipolis area benefits from the
dealers who patronize restaurants, gasoline stations, .motels, convenience
stores, grocery stores, and other service outlets. The thousands of shoppers
also feed additional money 'into local businesses.
Three food concessions are always available throughout the weekend and
are operated by local residents, Chl\flie.Sission, Barbara Curnutte, and Noel
and Tim Massie. Sisson's concession employs Andrea Lanier.of Point Pleasant and Simon Copley of Milton, W.Va.
An auction was staged on Sunday, June 15 in a first time experiment to
determine if such an event was worthwhile. Finnis Isaac of Vinton served
as the auctioneer and sold a .large number of antiques and collectables in
addition to a large quantity of new merchandise. Another auction is planned
for next month and will be held 'on Sunday, July 13, starting at 4 p.m. It is
open to the public.
. Variety of items offered . .
r
.
· The French 500 Aea Market offers a gigantic variety of every-day mer~handise such as fresh fruits and vegetables, clothing, china, glassware, auto
parts and accessories, farm and lawn merchandise, tee-shins, NASCAR rae- .
ing memorabilia, and thousands of hand tools. Also included are hundreds
of antiques and collectables with prices ranging into the thousands of dollars.

ere froin a wide are~~ display lhelr merchandlae. BelwHn 550 end
800 dealers set up displays at one of Ohio's large1t ftee.markell.

EVENT A1TRACTS LARGE CROWDS • Thlala a !Yplcal acane
of lhe French 500 Flee-market lhllt attrac:tl between 5,000 and
7,000 vlaltora one typical day during eight Mekenda a year.deal~ '~" ., .
.
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.MAIN STAGE DISPLAY AR~ • The main
stage •t lha Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds

Ia converted 10 a dallier display area for the
monthly French 500 Flee Markel.
·

One dealer displayed a used University of Michigan football helmet with
·some battle scars. It was Jiriced at just $3.
.
.
Other items on display include army surplus, jewelry, Avon products, Fenton glass, hundreds of dolls, freshly baked goods, automotive shop equipment, tents, sporting and camping equipmeiu, and guns of all type and
description.
Ted Hanna of Gallipolis was asked why he is a frequent shopper and·his
reply was, ~· 1 look for things l·ca:n use in my bulldozer business, like cheap
air hose. It is cheap and does not last very long, but it does the job for as
long as I need it." He added, ""we have been to many.' flea-markets from Aori. da, to Tennessee, tQ Ohio and this one is a:s good as any of those we have

I

VETERAN DEALER - Ju8111la Fenlon of Scioto Furnaee,
has operated an antique booth
al lhe French 500 location
slnca It started In 1973. Now In
her 241h year of selling In Gallie County, ahe enjoys coming
. hare 'becauae of lha friendly
people," and the numeroua
filende ahe has 1111de among
other dealers and ahoppera.

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Howard explained the basic rules of renting space at the flea-market by
stating; "we do not permit dealers to sell animals, medicalions, dope, or alcohol products, but we welcome all dealers who behave themselves and sell
anything from junk to the most.expensive items."
·
Five more scheduled
The French 500 Aea-market will be open five more weekends in 1997
including July 11-13, Sept. 12-14, Oct. 10-12, Nov. 7-9, and a special Christmas bazaar Dec. 5-7 that :will be restricted to just Christmas season merchandise. No flea market is scheduled for August due to the Gallia County
Junior Fair.
·
.
Anyone seeking more information about the monthly event is invited to
call
Bob Howard at 6~4-245C5347.
- ·'· . . ..
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visited." .

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in conjunction with the

Black Lung Program
and .the
·
of Health
Ohio De artment
is offering

. OUTDOOR LAB • Studenls above are participating In 1118
- macrolnvertlbrale collecllon portion of the f:)Utd~r lab with Dan
· Kush; water quality specialist wllh the Ohio Department of Nal- .
Division of Soli and Walsr.'
·
·
ural ' Resources,
.

r---------~------------~----~----- .

Area students participate in
:enviromental education labs

PULMONARY FUNCTION TESTING
and
CHEST ·X -RAYS
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· By STELLA GIBSON,
. Education Coordinator
' . GalUa Soll11nd Water
Conservation District
I
GALLIPOLIS - Area students now have aiwther resource for study. ing environmental sciences in our area. The Galli a Soil and Water Con-·
servation District (Galli a SWCD),offers outdoor labs for participants. The
· labs include forest ecosystems (dendrology, geology, forest uses and
l)e'alth), water quality and stream ·monitoring, riparian biodiversity, and
macroinvertibrate collection and identification. Other topics that will be
' included at different labs will cover soil sampling nod topography.
·'
Students from Gallia Academy, River Valley and Squth Gallia have
. participated in stream m·onitoring and macroinvertibrate collection and
identification: The students actively ·participated in monitoring streams
to determine water flow, depth, temperature, riffle and potil areas, pH.
percentage of dissolved oxygen and presence of pollutants. The students
also collected specimens including caddisfly larvae, dodson fly larvae,
mayfly nymph~. riffle beetles, stonefly nymphs, beetle Iamie, damselfly
nymphs , dragonfly nymphs, crayfish, cranelly larvae, aq~atic worms, and
minnows. The students were able to determine the general health of the
stream due to the water quality and the presence of pollution intolerant
· specimens.
.
.
These programs and all other programs offered by the Gallia SWCD
are available to groups or individuals.
.
If
you
are
interested
in
outdoor
labs
or
group
presentations
concern.,'
ing our environment, please call the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
·'
District office at 446-8687.

•

Testing ia being provided at no cost to the patient. Costs not covered' by patient's insurance wili be offset by the
Ohio.Department of He~lth Black Lung GIYlnt.
.
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Do you experience:
•Occasional shortness of breath?
•Tightness in the chest7
•Burning in the chesr and throat areas?
Are you:
•A welder, insulator, iron or chemiCal worker, etc.?
•An active or retired coal miner?
·
•A regular or occasional smoker?
Doyon have:
•Emphy~ema?

•Aslhma?
'
•Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease?
•Asbestosis?
·• •Occup;Jtional Lung Disease?
Were you raised in, or are you now in , a smoking household?

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

. 90 .Jackson Pike
··Clalllpol~ Ohio

HOLZER CLiniC

OF JA~KSON COUNTY

zs SOath Strtet ·.

(614) '446·5397

. I

HOLZER CLiniC

Jackson. Ohio

IJ()LZE CL NIC ..... Here For.Your Health ·Here For Your Lifetime!
jl

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THE BARGAIN SHOPPE - Located allhe comer
and second slraels In Pomeroy, The Bargain ShQppe features a
wide variety of new and uaed merchandise Including appliances,
clolhlng,.llnen, rugs, tools, loys and other chlldrens' Items, books
and dolls, according lo proprietor Nelia Seyler, shown here exam-.
ll)lng some of lhe cloll• for sale. The store Is open Monday.-Frlday, 1o-4 .p.m. and 7-9 p.m., and Seturday, 1o-4 p.m. The store
features 15 rooms of merchandise, Seyler said.

ARNOLD

RIBISON CU'mNG CEREMONIES • Ribbon
cutting ceremonle• for a new buslneea, S111ay
Scl1801'a, SA.141, Galllpolla, waa helc:l Wedne•
day, June ·18. On hand for lhe function ware,
flrat row, laft 10 right, Rlch•rd Mahan, repreHnllng.Ohio V.llll)' Bank; Laura Lovatt, ltyllat;
Bran!(l Male)', nail technician; Marglret Fraalar, owner/operator; Greg Fre11ar, owner;

Harold Seunders, and Harold Montgomery, .
county commissioners. Second row- Amanda
Lyons, ltyllsl. Third row - Roy Bickle. Bickle
Con1trucllon and Brent Halley, Halley Cabinets.
The facUlty officially opened for business May
13. Grand opening ceremonies will be held Saturday, J11na 28, from 11 a.m., untll4 p.m.

New fu/1-S.ervice .salon now open for business on SR 141

GALLIPOLIS - Sassy Scissors, a ra Lovett, stylist, aad Brandi ·Maley,
new full-service salon, is now open nail technician.
for business on State Route 141 (just · 1be new salon offers unisex hair
before reaching Centenary, about care services for the entire family and
two miles from the intersection of SR wa~ing seryices. Manicures and oth·
CHESHIRE • Roger M. Weaver ·to by R. E. Amburgey, planfmanag• 7-141) under the ownership of Mar- er types of nail·services are also avail. has been promoted
able along wjth a 1997, 28 bulb
from performance er.. Weaver joined OVEC in 1992 as' garet and Greg FfiiSier.
Wolfe bed pace tanner.
·'
· engineer to senior an associate engineer in the perfor-· . Ms. Frasier, a hair stylist since
All types of products are available
performance engi- mance department. In 1993 he was l979, and former·owner of a salon for customers.
·
in Alabama, served as a hair stylist
neer in the perfor- promoted to performance engineer.
Grand opening ceremonies are
He is a graduate of West Virgini~ locally for the pa8t fiver years prior to
mance department
scheduled
Saturday, June 28, from II
effective May II,' Institute of Technology with a bach- opening Sassy Scissors on Tuesday, a.m. until4 p.m.
at the Ohio Valley elor of science degree in mechanical May 13; ·
A 7,500 square-foot parking lot is
Salon personnel includes Ms.
. • WEAVER Electric Corpora- . engineering. Weaver resides i~ New
'
F
.
rasier,
Amandl!Lyons,
stylist;
Lau..
,
: tion's Kyger Creek Plant according Haven, W. Va.
'

'

·Weaver receives promotion

available for customers patronizing ·
the modem state-of-the-art facility.
Hours of ,operation are Tuesday
through Saturday, from 8 a.m .. to 6
p.m.; with later appointments available. Walk-ns are welcomed.
Ms. Frasier · stated, "'our operational procedure is to place the customer first; and to make sure our customers are pleased and completely
satisfied with the services that have
been rendered. The salon belongs to
and exists for the customers, not the
owner or staff."

RIFE

Arnold, Rife
retire from
·Kyger Creek
power plant
CHESHIRE - the retirement of
two workers from the Ohio Valley
Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek
Plant in Cheshire was recently
announced.
Stacie L. Arnold, assis!lint shift
·operating engineer, retired from
OVEC with 41 years of servic~ He
began his career with the company in
1956 as a laborer and transferred to
the operations department as an aux: .
iliary equipment operator in 1958. He
advanced to unit supervisor in 1977
and to assistant shift operating engineer in 1990.
He is a member of the Forest Run
United Methodist C:hurch in Racine .
He and his wife, Marcia, reside in
Racine.
· James A. Rife, a ~uard at the plant,
retire~ a(ter 30 years of service. He
joined OVEC in 1967 as a laborer
and transferred to the personnel
department as a guard in 1970.
He and his wife, Ann, live in
Cheshire.

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WATERSCAPES PLUS· Water1C8pell Plus; now open for bus!·
neaallt ~Meigs County community of Five Polilll, offers everything the homeowner need• 10 lnatall decorative yerd or patio
ponds. Proprietor Debbie Burke 18YI Waterscapes Plus sells the
necessary equipment 'hinging from pre-ahaped ponds to pumps,
water plants; fish, 111trature, boou, vi~• and other Items
Including bird balha.ln !lddltlon, Burke can design, lrtsllll fJI' offer.
technical asslsllnca. Burke said lhe bualnesltl started aa • hobby, adding lhal decorative pond• are becoming inore popular.
Waterscape~~ Plus (814-992-4427) Ia open Monday and Thursday
from 1HI p.m., Friday and Saturday from 11-8 p.m. and Sunday
from 1o-6 p.m.

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Pomeroy • Middleport e Gallipolis,

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OH •Point Pleeunt, WV

SWidly, Ju~ 22, 1117

~.Junezt~1~91~7::~~~~~~~~~P~~~m~•~•~oy~•iM~k*~~~~P~~~n~·;o~~~~~~~~~~-~·~OH~e~p~~~n~t~~~~E''~'~":~~wv::~~::::~:::::::"'==:,:•~•:·~="'~~,~·~··;P;ege~-;D3~
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BINGO

It's time for adult Japanese beetles about to emerge
By HAL KNEEN
to S e11s before reiUI'I\iRgto plants to
POMEROY - Adult J..,.. e e Bee- feed and mate. This cycle of feeding.
ties will soon be emeJ'l!ing. Dave ·mating and egg laying continues
Shetlar, Ohio State University Exten- until the female has laid 40 to 60
sion's Entomologist states that "the ~ggs. Most of the eggs are laid by carJapanese beetle, Popillia japonica ly to mid Aug~t. though adults may
Newman, is the most abundant and be found until the first frost.
important landscape pest in Ohio."
The eggs hatch in 8 to 14 days and
This pest was detected in New Jersey the fir~t instar larvae dig to the soil
in 1916, having lleen intttoduced surface to feed on roots and organic
from Japan. The adult beetles eat the . material. The first instars shed their
l.eaves and flowers of ov.er 200 jllants skin (molt) in ,., .to 25 days. The sec:
by eating the tissue between the ond instars take 18 to 45 days to
veins, a type of feeding called skele- . ·mature and molt again. Most of the
Ionizing. The larvae, ·called white grubs are in the third instar by late
grubs, feed on plant roots and organ~ ·September and by October they dig
ic maller in the soil, especially under deeper into the soil to overwinter. The
turf grass. This feeding may result in grubs return to the surface in the
. dead patches of turf that can be · spring as the soil temperature warms.
usually in mid April. The grubs conpicked up like loose carpet,
The adult beetles normally emCJ'l!e . tinue their development and fonn a
· during the last week of June through· pupa in an eanhen cell, 1 to 3 inchJuly. The first beetles out of the es in the soil.
·ground seek out suitable food plants,
Adult beetles can be removed by
like roses, cherries and sand cherries hand when they are less active in the
and begin to feed. · These early early morning or late evening. They
arrivals begin to release an aggrega- can be deslroyed by dropping them
tion pheromone (odor) that attracts into a container of soapy·water.
The adults do not like 10 feed on
additional adults .. Newly emerged
females also release a sex pheromone ageratum, arborvitae, ash, baby's
that attracts males. After feeding and bre•; garden balsam, begonia,
mating for a day or two, the females bleeding hean. bOxwood, buuercups,
burr\)w.into the soil to lay eggs at a caladium, carnations, Chi'nese lantern
depth of 2 to 4 inches. Females lay I

plant, cockscomb, columbine. coralbells, coralberry, coreopsis, cornflower, daisies, dogwood (Oowering),
dusty-miller, euonyri'lus, false
·cypresses, firs, forget-me-not. forsythia, fo•glove, hemlock, hollies,
hydrangeas, junipers, kale (ornamental), lilacs, lilies, magnolias,
maple (red or silver only) mulberry,
nasturtium, oaks (red and white
only), pines, poppies, snapdmgon,
snowberry, speedwell, sweet pea,
sweet-William, tuliptree, violets.and
pansy or yews (laxus).
Traps using a Ooral lure and sex '
auractant are available. These traps ·
are not recommended for general use
unless special conditions can be met.
The traps have been demont,rated to
be reducing damage and populations
only when landscapes are isolated
from other Japanese beetle·breeding
areas or when mass trapping (everyone in the neighborhood) is used.
Keep traps 30 to 40 feet away from
plants that auract more beetles.
The adults can be controlled by
spraying ' susceptible plants with
· insecticides. Over-the -counter pesticides available for this include:
acephate (Orthene), carbaryl (Sevin),
chlorpryrifos (Dursban), malathion, ·
methoxychl.or and rotenone plus

.

pyrethrin. During the heavy adult
activity periods, spmys may be needed every 5- to 10 days.
Grub control is needed when grub
popuhitions are greater that .5 to 10
per square foot of turf. However, raecoons, skunks and moles may be
active with fewer grubs in an area.
The bacterial milky disease, BacilIus popilliae Dutky, has been quite
effective at controlling the grubs in
cenain areas of the eastern United
States. The spore count must build up
for 2 to 3 years to be very effective
and during this time you should not
use an insecticide against the grubs
that are needed to complete the hacterium cycle. Grub X is a "new" product using the milky disease (echnology.
Insect parasitic nematodes have
recently become commercially available. Products that contain strains of
Steinernema carpocapsae (Biosafe,
Biove.ctor, Exhibit, Scanmask)·have
been marginally effective against
white grubs in turf. Preparations
containing Heterorhabditis spp, seem
to he more cffectiyc. Apply the
nematodes when the while grubs are
small. Irrigate before and after applying the nematodes.
The grubs are best controlled

.when they are -.II ' and .:ti Yely
feeding near the soil
usually
mid to late Auaust. Control of grubs
in late fall or early spring is probably
best done by professional turf care
experts·. The key to good control is to
make an even application and water
thoroughly. Pesticides available for
homeowner use in Ohio include:

Wet weather complicates corn growth in area ·
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - Some area: com
· crops are struggling in their early
stages of growth due to the excessive
amounts of rain. This cannot compare
with last year's situation of washed
out and drowned out corn thai forced
many producers to replant very late
in the season. However, the amount
of rain is a major factor responsible ·
for the stunted com observed in this
area and across the state ..
Saturated soils have inhibited root
development and function, resulting
in reduced nutrient uptake. When
warm, dry weather returns lhcsc deficiencies.should disappear. A common
symptom exhibited in this area is purpling of the I~ deficiency. This purpling is caused by any stress that
inhibits root development, in this
case. the amount of moisture coupled
with cool soil temperatures. Wat~h
yo~r· .crop as the weather waims Jor
these symptoms to disappear. Provided the ~orn grows out of the pur- .
piing, do not expect a yield loss.
·
Although the frequeni rains have
prevented crusting, a~d helped with
cf11ergence. soil with respectable silt
content will have very low aeration
·as they dry out, and this will afTcct
ruol development a.~ well. Eventual-.
ly, ~racks will allow ac~ation, but
until that happens. producers may continue to sec poor, uneven growth·.
Many arc taking the time to cultivate
and , improve . th~ aeratiom Another
· · concern is how the soil nutrient con. rent is affected by the wet weather.
The main question is whether or no!
to apply more nitrogen. Usc this ~im­
ple score card to evaluate your situ. ation Apply the numeric score to the
answer that best fits your situation:
What nitrogen product was used'/
Anhydrous Ammonia with N-serve.- 2 pls.. Anhydrous Ammonia --3 pts.,
28% or Urea Banded -- 4 pis., 28%
or Urea Broadcast--5 pb. When wa.' ·
the fnilizerNitrogen applied'! Before
April 20 --5 pts, or a--er April 20 -3 pts. What has been the predominille
soil ·moisture status in the field this
spring'&gt; Standing water/saturated --4
pts., wet ,.3 pis .. or normal --I pt.
What is the ~rop's currentondition?
Pale in wlor and less than 12" tall -5 pts., pale in color and more than
12" rail --3 pts .. green and less than
12" tall --2pts,. or green .and greater
· than 12"tall--l pt. Scores that total ·
II or less, no supplemental nitrogen
is recommended. for those with 11 16 total points. re-evaluate in 4-7
days, and for 17 points or more. add
an additional40-70 pounds of nitro-

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gen

10

the acre.

• The Ohio State University, The
Un'itcd· States Dcpanmcill of Agri.cullure. and Gallia County·Commissioners Cooperating In addition.
remember that wet weather will bring
·an unusually high incidence of discascand fungus problems. Scout your
f fields and look for sunny weather. '
For more infonnation about com
and the effects of weather. disease.
and insects. please call the OSU
Extension office al614-446-7007..
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AGNEWS

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BLUE MOLD FORECAST:
· There. arc confinncd cases of blue
mold in Kentucky. As of Thursday,.
June 19, the Ohio Valley, especially
Gallia and Lawrence oounties, were
at very high risk to disease development as a result of this Kentucky
source. Early last week, suspicious
samples from Gallia county. were
analyzed at the University of Kentucky, and tested NEGATIVE. for .
blue mold. Thus there 11e still no con-·
finned cases in Ohio, although this
·! may have chanJed by present day.
Weather patterns are blowing blue
mold spores out of KentiiCky into our
area. If weat~r coaditions are prime
• f&lt;W dille8M, such as they have been,
producers may nlllt be able tO Jde.
qllllely control blue mold, if they
approch the problem a--er they see

it. The time to spray is now. Use
Dithane or Acrobat MZ on field
tobacco immediately. Cover the
ontire plant. This should not be a
problem now, white tobacco is very
small. Please report any suspicious
cases to the OSU E•tension office
immediately, for more information
call the ofnce a.t 614-446-7007.
UPCOMING FIELD DAYS :
Southern Ohio Crop Diagnostic Field

Day, Fayette County Airpon, WashJennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia
ington Court House, June 25, 9 3:30. Ohio Bccfand Forage Day, Counl)'s extension agent in agri·
OARDC's Southern Branch, Ripley culture and natural resources.
Ohio on Tuesday, July I, 2:30-9 p.
m..
Stockman's
Spectacular,
OARDC, Jackson Branch on July 10. •
Gallia CountyTobacco Twilight Tour,
meet at 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park, Stale
Route 775 on July 15, 6-9.

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!Z SOUTHERN STATES
Going Out Of Business
INVENTORY LIQUIDATION

· 1 Instruct
6 Icy ·covering
II Quench the thirst
16 Seashore
21 Divide ip two
22 Answer
2~ Work ol fiction
24 Terre -, Indiana
25 Creek
·
26 ·Faited Ford
27 Kmd of daisy
28 Gaseous element
29 Third teller
30 Not many
31 Melon
33 Mark from a wound
35 Final: abbr
36 "Hotel" lor dogs
39 Bold
43 Pull hard
44 Legal matter
45 ·Apronoun
47 Wyoming range
49 Reno's St.
51 Stallone role
54 Kingdom
57 Portray
59 Egyptian goddess
63 Beery beverage
64 Sol! mass
66 Highway
68 ·Bill or fare
69 Breathe rapidly
70 Cageling
72 Move back and IMh
74 Multi·colored
76 Hardens
78 Therefore (latin)
79 Charmingly
deceptive
82 Mild·maooered
84 AGreat lake
86 Bungling ·
. 87 Fragrant ointment .
89 look cautiously .
91 Bowling item
92 Pigpen.
93 Break a last
95 Cravats
97 Belgrade native
99 - King COle

Come Up Aces With
·The

5' •&amp;99"
6' $99900
6' Double Bell •1 09900

Little things ..
llrt Worth A lot ·
in

an axis

157 Warns
161 Go wrong
162 Dismounted
164 "EKodus" author
165 .Fa!l mo.
167 Hem and 168 Another time
170 Bellini opera
173 Dern the actress
175 Illegal act
177 Molhar-ol·pearl
178 Sprite in "The
Tempesr
179 light-ray device
180 Diminished
181 DeriSive look
182 Tilis
183 Lots and lots
184 That place

. 7 Burgundy. e.g.:
2wds.
8 Harvest godde!iS
9 Snoozed
. 10 .Mary - Moore
11 Pried
12 Smoked salmrin
13 "-Maria"
14 Islets
15 Exclusive.group ·
16 Kind of card

LeGAL NOTICe

11 Scull

18 Be an omen of
19 Filched
20 Canvas shehet'll
30 Go by plane
32 Animallriend
34 Female relative
37 Seize
38 Sullicienlly.

archaically
40 Close
41 Particular
42 Dummies
46 Order by decree
48 Dressed to the ·50 Snake
51 Jewish reacher
52 Man trom Mars
53 Combine
55 Cut oil
56 Cripple
58 Clownish lel!ow
· 60 Garments lor ranis
61 Metal mass
62 Tale ·
65 Pointed tool
67 PrQfound
71 Trick
73 Biting bug
75 Poor grades
77 Wash cycle
80 Boot-shaped
country
81 Ghastly

p,_.

:!!'._ ":=::~~~~=
OIRRit

propoull rnuat be Nettled
It the IUcktyl Hllll ofttcl
on or btlort .Jullf 31, 1887
lllf 5:00 p.m. Ttchnlolll
anlalance wll bt olfiNd to

..

,._

tomoleoo~304-l!f!.4302.

Angora cal. 7 mantha ald...lver
I whlto, vory loving, to good

homoonfr.304-I'IS-1t03.
COlla pvp, male, 7 montr. ald. 1D
good horne. 814-742·2187.
oomplltl In tha bidding Coon Dog 1 Pupo, 114 .37g.
pra 11 H nardad.
2574
Contraota lor 11nlor
·
a•rvloet will be lor th• Froe Kllteno, 81""'*3407. · ·
period 1/1/111 to 1/30181.
Eatlmated
11ounty -T\1'&amp;.3114-875-71111.
allooatlona and amount• M••• ·- r nolO Boagto, 81•d..lgnatld lor epaclllo 8112-7507.
MrVICII will bt tllltllttlltllt
bltldlr'e oonflirtnce.
Roctlnor, nMCio 'fi!ld. 30o-e75For lurtlttr lnlormltlon or 8111·
a propotlll paoktt, pt••• Rogloiorod llalo Btaok Lab, 2
COittllcl Olinda Collllll (114) Yoara Old, Wonderful Houaebro·
1431
ken, Loveobl• Great With Kidt,
ji,-22;1tQ
814-245'5071.
'
To Good Homo: 1 Black I White
'""t:..-l Klnan, Fama!a, e Waoka Old,
814-04e-2398AitorsP.M.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
T1ll ¥•111• Local Board ol Vlrloli• Kittane, 814258- ·.
wr::-~:.=
In Mainory · &gt;
Breaci/BIIIIei'Y, Milk/Dairy
produCII, Flltt lnaurtince,l Judge! Rob.ert S.

1111

---------1

:;':."'::,'

149 Denim pants
150 P&lt;pe or barrel'
t 51 Vestige
t !i3 Last

ancll\JbtiiT1M.

,.

. All bide ahtll Ill rtntvld
Betz
In, and bid apacHtciiiOIII
may ba obtatnad. from,
Oct. 25, 1925
TREASURER'S OfFICE, 320
June 22, 1979
E. Main. ltrellt, P-•roy,
OH 487t8, on or before 1:00
God saw that you
p.m., Montlty, .July 7, 11117.
needed to come home at
Thi~Hlgt Loo8llolld or ,
Educetlon re1trv11 th' ; an ear1Yage.
right to reltOI anr and all ' · Alway~&gt; loved but never
blclo, and tha aubmftlllltl ol : ·
forgotten. Oreatly
eny bid ehlll tmpoH no 1
· ·
or obllg·lltfon upon
missed by wife, Kay,
lltbH....
"'
lhlllllld Board.
·
! Children, Bonita, Steven,
All env1lopea mutt ba ' . Scott, Grandchildren, 8i.
CLUJII.Y
MARKED
~rill to lhllypl ol bkl.
Sister &amp; Brother-in-laws
·
Clndlf .J. RhO_., ,I
and cousins.
. n.taurer
MEIGB LOCAL BOARD OF i
EDUCATION 1
of Thanks
· P.O. Box272,1
Pomeroy, 01\ 487t8,
utra special thank
YI?U note
In
For all ofyOf.' todDy
As long ·as there Holds more

;:;::::::=::::::::::::;;;:.

.,•

are starS in the sky
and sand in the sea
we
will
remember
...
. .
Jilliati Paige Jones
June 4-21'-1995
Aunts Joanie,
Joyce &amp; Juanita,
Uncles Jimmy and

Livestock Medicines
Animal Care Products
_Dog &amp; Cat Food
Gates, Feeders, Head
Gates

••1'17 .. ,.., .,... hst

F.

av~-~ :~;~:~;i~· r~~~~~~~~;

1 .~8 Dose~er

155 Cultivates
t 56 Newton or Azimov
158 River in Germany
159 Circus pert9rmer
160 Stockholm native
163 Shredded
t 66 Automobiles
169 Wrath
171 Estuary
172 Chess pieces
174 N!!ighbor ol can.
175 Hundredweight:
abbr.
t '/6 Go. team!

=

· Tht Artt AgtnClf on
'lu tS.TIOH .
Aging ol Buektyt Hilla• Hu Your llarrtago 0&lt; RetotlonHocklng Valley fleglonel :':.
~W::,. ~~~
Dtvalap-lllllblot, Route Adult Vldtaa. 100 - Ra!Mooat
1, Box- D, M*1tii8,J)hlo 1380 Eu10rn "'"- Ga!!lpo!li,
1o Nqt Servtott
r ttl.Ill P~CPnalalor
Aglng
In Athena, ;Or~Co!!~e~1;4;u;e;ee;22.~;;;;;_...
Hooking, Helga, Monroe, 30 AI'IIOUII~~;Wntentl
rl•1'9•n, Noble, Perry and 1100 NMrd a.r torgoot chemical_....., Counlltt. Older ty lrM llulotn paiCII, Equinox a..Atntrtolnl Act tnd Stntorllnlcol
==:::":.:':.:.,.,;.;~.:ii2:.;·2541.=~-­
Communltlf s.vlott Biook Ql'llnt (lndl art tvtltabta Ct•wlord'a Flta llorkot Ptuo In
.......,
ttendoroon, WV. Froo opace In
lor u .. ouo1owing ltfY(cea: Juna. c.rr lor dttal!o. 304 ..75TriDIPOrtatlon, Madtcal 15404•
Eecort, Congreg1t1 and
Hor111 D•llvered ll•ala,
E- Legal Barvlce1, Optlona
"'I..I!CtAN"
Coordination, In-Home Plrtiot, ohurohoa I ochaola. Pt.
a ...irton, . Supportive ~S:;~n~· wv. 25550. 304 .. 75A Blclder'a .
40
GlveiiWIIY
will bt hlld· on ..JUDI 30,
18t7 from 1:30 P.M. • 3:30
P.M. It th• Buckeye Hilla
conllnnce room locllld on
County Road I, llarllttll,
Ohio.
paolteta will 11 ·12 Month Old II ale Puppy,
111 aVIIIablt at the Am•rlcon Fox Hound. lovtl
eottr..-. 11 you are not It Chlldr•n. Will Bo· Good watoh
1
11
·lha oo:•:re:n:ce::y:o:u~l:EI Dog HuntlntJ, ·~504.
requ•at the
2cu"' btowNbl8ck 'klneno, part
wrllllltl.
A~gora. Alta 1 loving yellow

Se~

t t :1 Pertecl places
t 15 'En - (in II bOdy)
116 Hospital worker
1t 8 Uppity one
t 211 Native of: sullix
12:l Pal'al headdress
1.2 5 C!l' in Oklahoma
t:lO R&lt;lfooan emperor
t 32 Mr. Preminger
t 34 Mm ally !)ad
t 37 Dr11g
·138 Ceremonial acts
140 Paid hOO)age to
142 Work by Pindar
t 44 More nasty
146 Hearing &lt;;&gt;rgan

10 Cal "'-li!OM54-7o1211.

«e::

83 Shippa~
85 Make Into law
88 B.argain
90 Paid ath!eles
'14 Tie-on labels
00 Hit hard
98 lM two together
100 Diplomacy
101 Place
1&lt;)2 Actress Bergen
t03 Leisurely pace
tOS Protrude
I0 7 Whistle sound
tOY ·Gentlemen Blondes"
I I I Put on iCe
1 r;

UPDATE

1•100--1100, IXT.
n.H ""
llull Be

1467 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS,.OHIO 45631
446·977~ or 446·24•4

5 Snood
6 Unreslraineq

!IPORTI ICOAEII

A Challonge1 Try Tho Tr1v14
Ga,.
---------·I
lltn.
18
::.--11071,

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

Through -and thin
2 Hindu queen
3 Woody or Gracie
4 ·- Got a Secret"

liito...... ad
11110 ...... - . . ,
ocl!llon.- :t:llll p.m.

·~Is!

apprecilltion
Tlian any Words can .soy
For )'OU 're the nicest
kind ofpeople
This world has ever
.blown ..
'1/~r~

the though/ulnen ·
you 'w shown.
. Willard (Bill)
Faye Watson's Brctther)

I

'[o all mu
Hair Hir111/lr111ts
&lt;?wstomers:
""
'"' '"'
llsof&lt;]une21, 199~9willberetiringafter19
11ears in the business. 'rerri ~arr will be
MJrking full time Moneta!! tim&lt;~ ~riaa!! to take
01'1 mu clients. She is an experiencea srut;st
"' been wofkinn 8 ueQfS.
'"'
anei has
,. "
9t"s been great fun ana 9"11 miss ever11one
there. ;'/ special.thanks to Sharon for ~ing
such a ':1nreat boss! YJ
r.ooa luck' to !!OU. "julie.
'r:erri &amp; lisa.
·gl/i:Je seeing a/1 of IJOU. gm sure.

RUTLAND
POST 467

6:30 P.M.

StAR BURST
.

$1800.00
$5·0.00 01· MORE
PO GAME

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

goa !Siess

Penn
I

BULLETIN BOARD

. . Pllcl111 ~.

110

HllpWanttd

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

$St OA[tCERS M

....... Mondly oclll!otl

005

tht Classi/iffl SeCtion! :::. :•s:~po~:~~;:

COME SEE THESE AT: ·

1

.ALL--tile.,

AtitWIJIICli.H tl r ';

WE ALSO HAVE 50 USED TRACTORS
IN STOCK - ALL MAKES, ALL SIZES

DOWN

I

PEN!I'"E:2!00 p.m.

Due to the change in economic times, we will
be closing our doors• .
Livestock Trailers
Flat Trailers
UtllltyTrailers
Truck Caps &amp; Lids
Hitches
Truck Accessories
Lawn &amp; Garden ,roducts
Chemicals
All Feed Products

...t·

WE'RE OVER STOCKED

101 Mineral spring
·104 Workroom.·for shon
106 Beer Ingredient
108 Fly up and around
110 Hidden supply
114 AutomatiC weapon
·. 117 Neighbor of
Thailand
119 Extended
121 Exile's Island
122 Run·down area
124 -lisa
126 Male .ones
127 Floor covering
128 ·- Wet! That Ends
Weir:
·129 Smile
131 Fuss (hyph. Wd.)
133 Charge
135 Actor Chaney
136 Tints
·
·'
137 Annoy
· 139 Wash oneself
14.1 Electrical units
143 Flightless bird
145 Uncanny
.147 Very. very hot
149 Iota
152 Folklore creature .
154 Movement about

---.a

5pm.",

SUNDAY PU·ZZLER

ACROSS

110 Help W.t-.ct

- · lllaall olot. Si. 124 •rN Alltiquta, IDP pr1oot peli, Rlvor- Ortvo.. •ue 10 e.,••·
1 wllilb\11.-.ada.
1M AndquH, Po-oy. Onto, oiiNM, I N - , ..
_
._
llun llooro owner, 114-teZ- -lind
ler
FOUND: A nurq CGctoer 8(lln- 2UI.
" ' ' ' tenoo. Conti '"' milo or
let ..,..,. 'IW ~7..
pe!WII .... · - pef ,..._
2711.
Burl flO Stalldtng Pint, 1 Aero . . , (~lOr podooge
liooCtor.._....,• .-.
n·rtt~.!_. , •
Loot: 8et Of Toott On Eeown
~·- · - , ,..._, 114-117-0301, L••• cr ... Late .. _. cars or
sa-COtmllr'olclllo
M n ••
~~·~:0~=~ 1~E:;: La• . -~~~~WilliNG: TilT .... Ro-ller
It
lar!&gt;Pay
1111
mlltd,
.....
•
....
'"
•
11ono11a
~~
mloltd. REWARD! J &amp; ·D'I Auto Plrto. Buying HI•
tto...i...-tion
01304-87H4li0
Vl8" Sellntl partt. 304....·
m-5033.
Diu~~:''""'"
1\EWARDI llolo Slamett, ,...,_
lng pvrllle Ilea collar, y 110n Wontod Ta Buy: s Bodroom
Fuot l SOftly l!cnlo
.,.., Cllli.-582·7Zl7 All&lt; Dr Houot'hlter,l1......e-l052.
Minimum quotllicatiana: Good
..... Sr.
driving rocord,
23yro orochaol
ogo, 2yra
~Otro1Umll1l2-...o
Wintocl To Buy: Barbie Dalla, .,perionca
or driving
with
70
Yll'd Bile
Clot1101, And Accaaoorltt. 1850 iyr experlenc:o. Apptlc:otlona tak. 1g11cas Dart 81UI8 8164.
on datly, Monday.Frid.y, 8am·
GIHipolls
Wantt&lt;l- older blcy•"'· etHtzWlluoldfiO eo. tnc.
&amp; VIcinity
:.:lo!;::lll.:..__,__ ___;__
833r:':,&lt;J:'~Rd.
.,...,_,~....,..,==~=~I W.nlld: UIICI Hardwood f*&gt;orl110
0n1 wv 251545
4 Famty Yard Silt: Frldlr, llltur- In GoOd Condition, Call 814-245-.
1.(1()().828-3560, at. tO..
cloy, Sundoy, g A.ll. Ti&gt; 1 425 'L• 5187
Gmlde Blvd. Galllpo!l., Cloth01 · ·
All Sizto, T.,V.'t Bocldlng, Curlllnl, Fumilll,.,
Fr.1PI ovr.1Hn
S FRViCES

":r.l

Speeial Priee ·
On Finishing Mowers

10 w•ut•d

!he,..._

Merit 75WP, chlorpryrifos (Outs·
ban), diazinon, isofenphos (Oftanol)
and trichlorfon (Dylox, Proxol).
Dursban is not recommended if
lhalch Is preseni in the lawn.
· Harold H. Kaeea 11 lbe Melp
Count) Aaricullllnl and Nalultl
Resources Apnt, The Olllo State
Unlvenlly Extelllio11. · ·

~----~~~~~~~~~·

OS.

-

surr-.

II'ICI Founct

Southbtt&lt; ~Bar
At 2 Pt. Ptoo-~ wv.
S.blrdty, ~~~~ 35 Well Apotl·
(304) 875-5055.
,_,, llorooo ·from SP Cinema·
Computer Duk, Rug•, Wlokor - AAA GREETING CARDS ••• ·
Potontiat S45K Port Time Or
Ctu, Clothtl, lllto.
.110K FuN Time Servicing LOCI!
SUnday .-,,_ ·22ncf, 11:00 Tit 8:00 Storti. No SeUing, AccoiJnlt .In·
•10;00 LIIL 1111 ...

HRlln Canco\locl.

Tri-State Pressure Washing
"We Pressure Wash Anytime"
Houses, Decks, MObile Homes
&amp; Equip. etc.
Call for Free EBtimatas

eluded. Your $8,850 lnvellmenr

POmeroy,
Middleport

&amp; VIcinity.

Saoured By Inventory. 'BOO- 77 1·
3141'
AVON I All Aroao . I Shirley
Spearo,304675-14211.

FOR SALE

All Yonl Solooa Mu&amp;l Be Pold In Able Avon Repreaentatlvea
Advance. Doocl!tno: 1:00pmlho naodtd. Eorn money lor Christdoy befaro tho od to to roo; mat billa
-k.-1-800Suodaj I lloodtJ odltlon· 892·83511 or oo•-882·211•5, Ind.

Oak Pie Safe

&amp;I....,_,

1:GOpm Frtdoy.

Rep.

4 tins- original
446-4658

•

Pt. Pleasant

llebyoitt•r nooclod nlghtt. WedSOl, the Ill thru 20th ol aaoh
&amp; VIcinity
month. Apply in poraon 1•8 N.
Yard Salo: Mens, Womana, girla Park Drive.
and Belir Ctothln;, Bed Sprtadt,
II!U!NO DEPT.
Soma Home Interior and KnlckPer1oli H.vfna ExperiKnaclll 511. G-5, Sundar 1·10·11. Malure
In Medicare And lnaurance
2018 Jeltoraon Bl¥d. Pt.-~ ence
BINing. Mutt t!a Compu.ltor Utor·
Wv.
ate, Profealonal And Alllllble, M·
F Day Shift, RalurM To: P.O. Bo•
'Publtc sate
33, Gallpolt, 011451131.
.
and Al!ctlon
Do!tvel'l' Drlv•,. lltdo CaooarJ
Now Hiring Dotlvorr llrlvor •.
Hoully wage + Caoh Cammllllon
Paid Dally. F"'xiblo Scnoclu!ea,
Utlltorm Provided, Apply At Galli·
~~UK&amp;~n.
•
QONT Bf!Q IHISI
Compan~
Unleu you want to Loo10
comptore · w.Jght &amp; Foot Greal CAU. NOWI
Llcenatd (3041 582-0373.
304- Drlvw

446-2332

446-8592

LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS, WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS

BOOTS
' Alllelither Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
.Large Stock
Engineer ........................ $49.oo
Welllngton.:.................... $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50-SS'·
Harneaa ....... ,................. $59.!10
Carolina-Georgia - H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

$250.$425

will be closed for
Vacation
6/23-6/28.
Our new hours
will be
9-5:30 Mon-Fri
Closed Saturday
_&amp;Sunday

Wanted tO Bnu
.. ,

, .
We IreCAIIOIW.
exptindingFREIGHT
our operation
"'com--p'"te'"ta~H,..ou'"s,..eh~ot~d-=o::-r::'e,~,.~,..-:-:1 in your araBI Need dflvara tor
A~y Type 01 Furniture, Appllanc- FLATBED oparetion w/Ciau (AI

'J'

at, An~quo't, E;c. Alto Appralaa! COL, min. OTR o•p ·&amp;good
:.;"'": lta: =b!o:;,I8:.;1. :,4-3.:.'19:.:.·.:.27;;:ZO::.;.___ =oc~roctDep
.
Abaotu"' Top Oottar: All us. Sll- 'Satorute C111T11111nloo.
vor And Gold Colno, Proolaoto. '401K+CX&gt;.lld.ralre.
Dlamonda, Antique J-try, Gold 'BC~S Mad. Oenlll, VIsion
Rings, Pre-1930 U.S. Currency. 'Load/Unload Ply, Stop/Layover
Strorllng, Ell:. ·kqultl!lono Jewokr Plly Pd va~llon
- M.T.S. Coin Shop, 151 Stcond 'Rider Prop~~ &amp;MOREl
A..,..,Ganlpolt,114-44&amp;-2842.
~~::.==
Antlquaa. furniture, glass, ohlna,
Boyd:80().220·2421
coins, tor•. tamps, guns, .toots, COL (A) WIHazMat Req.
oatatao: alto appraisals, Ooby
EOEJ!MIF
1
99
8
2
;:M:::•rtl.:;n;:,,:..;:.:. _.:.:..;.._1A4-:'·===:!====~----'-

Rev. Novel Russell
Preaching Sun. June 22
7:30pm at
Morgan CentE!r Christian

an educational &amp; health
interaction group,
meets.

•

POSITION AVAILABLE

Sunday,June

E'LEC-ICAL
FORKLIFT
Ill
MAINTENANCIMECHANIC

22 2 PM

Holzer Medleal Center's
French 500 Room

ApJ)IIcanlS must be atile to work in· cold eonditlons
and In high places. Should possess mechanical skills
and knowledge of 110, 2201480 volt .electrical systems.
Knowledge In the following areas will also help
applicants: DC controls and motors, hydraulic and air
controls, testing and repair of electrical systems,
electric fork lifts,' welding and cutting torch use. A
minimum of four years mechanical experience and two
years electrical experience or equlvalimt education Is
1 ed
'
requ r .
.
·
Position
on
second
shift.
Pay
rate
$9.15
to
$11.15
per
H d
d'
1
our, epen tng on exper ence.
If inleresled, please send resume to:
·
Ttt• Pillsbury Companr
2403 S. Pennsylvania Avenue, Wellston, Ohio 45692
Attention: HR-FOI;IKLIFT
EEO/AA Em ,,.er:,.._ _ _ _....;..t
-

Sp~ak~r, Peggy
Field~, A.D. A.S
TOPfC: Stress
Management
Open to the public
Refreshments to follow

1

Class of 1992 ''-VdG.,
reur1lol1 at the Elks Farm
• '$15/person; $25,/CoiJpiel
ISelnd checks to: .
Kelly Smith
68a
Pleasant Hill Rd;
1
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
111~~!~ due July .10 or r.nr•t•or~l
Marchi at (614)
1.
contact us if
not received an

Disease

FREE DELIVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Mon. thru Sal. 9-5; Ph. 448 re:!?
3 MHes Out Bulavfle Pike
Canaan Missionary Baptist
· Church
Rt. 218 Gallipolis, Oh

Vacation .Bible School
June 23rd ·- 27th

6:00 pm to 8.:30 pm

. A Free Gospel Concert,
Featuring
"Tha Kevin Spencer Family",
will be held on Sat., June 28,
· at 2 1Pm at the
State Theatre, 6th &amp; Main Sts,
Po.int Pleasant.
All are welcome to attend!
Sponsored by the Mason
County Ministerial Association,
and participating Churches. .

SFS TRUCK SALES, INC.

HEARTLINE, ·.

"10 Help Wanted

W'JW~'ULII;:i

CONVENIENT MINI
STORAGE
109 Flamingo Or.
Spring storage Spedal... Pay 3
month$ and gel 4th month free.

J&amp;B
Technology

NEW OPERATION

90

. Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
S81Vice and Repair
All Makes
Smith Buick- Pontiac GallipOlis

2150 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis, Oh

1/614-448..0051 1/1100-280-6088
We specialize In:
•Heavy DUlY Truck Parts &amp;
Se!vlce
•Engine Machine Shop
•Manufacturing of Dump bodies
• True1&lt; Repair .
• We make up Air &amp; Hydraulic
Hoaas_
We also carry a complete line of:
•OTC Tools
•Baldwin Fitters
.Chains &amp; Binders
•CR Seals &amp; Bearings
•Brake Shoies
•Deka Batteries •TRC Lubricant
•U-JolnlS
Cattle Hoof Trimming
. Baughman Farms
8:00am Saturday,
June 28.
Please call

256-6535
l::========~

,.

&amp;

Related Disorders
Support Group Meeting
Thursday, June 26th

1:00pm
Pleasant Valley Nursing
Rehabilatation Center

FOR · SALE:
Remodeled white frame
house approx. 5 .miles

Macular Degeneration
support group meets this
Monday (8/23) at 12:30 pm
at Christ Episcopal Church,
804 Main St, Pt. Pleaant.

Shooting Match
Kanauga
Sportsman Club

•

(on Brick School Road)
Sunday, June

22, :1997

12:00 Noon til ?

Hams,

Pork Loins

$$$$
· 50/50

Door Prize

Food and
Refreshments available

La Cantina
Mexican
Restaurant
Open 11 am
7 days a week

304-675-7115
Gallipolis City Schools
Clearance Salel
'"'Used Equipmenl *"Odds and
. Ends'*
Tables, classroom desks,
classroom chairs, tv carts;
Apple liE Computers, MonHors,
Printers, Kidney Shaped lables,
I :~:r~: carts, teacher desks,
lb
chairs, typewrlters,lVs
Many other miscellaneous
itemsll
Doors open at 9:00 am on
Sturday, June 28, 1997
Location: GAHS HJr. High

south of Gallipolis

3 Bedroom; 1 1/2 bath,
basement, carport, 1 acre
with additional land
available
Phone 446·0035

304·675·5236 .
For more information.

SWAIN·FURNITURE

ROUTE7

All proce:~!~a~lll
GAHS Athletic Boosters Club

,(came from Las Vegas) ,
14 different kinds $20
each or will trade

PIZZA EXPRESS

SWAIN REUNION
GeOrge and Emma
(Williams) Swain family
reunion wilr'be held at
0.0. Mcintyre Pari&lt; on

June 29, 1997 from
11 :00 am
until
dark. ,
I
.
Pot Luck dinner at 1:00.

·
Delivers to you in Darwin
- Chester - Pomeroy •
Middleport • CheshireI

Rutland and
Harrisonville.
Ask about our Specials!

992-9200

Bring lawn chairs.
,.

Crossword
Puzzle Answer on Page
8-4
.
.
'
•.

..
l

w.

•
•

'

'

�• lundly, June 22, 1187

WE OFFER:

PIPII...-YIIDUTI

Will bobJoll, ltv" -1• wllh

. HDmt Raeullrty

Mint lllrt lmaU. Ortol lltool Eorn
tz.ODO + Wtoldy Going follll 1•
.. ,...., .........11M7.
800 3211 71188.
caN. UCIIIftlcwt. .. l'nf

·:::'T·

-

=do r Cloon DOT lno.,...

Stool llulldlng dtoltrollll&gt; ..oilIn open .....l llill«o buy
fllc1ory dlrKI. High fi&lt;OHI patenUot, toloo or COtlolruc-on. 111031

FI~IAtiUM

~tl tll

Two frolloro At Blue Fauntoln :

-

NtJ lloro

.,._Ell--

REQUIREMENTS:

230-

OriY.- Zlyro Olago
Good Driving-

P.ll.

ProlttSional

..

Strvlcel

Atloool1yr0TRE-Ielooo

No mora man 1 Proventable At·
.:idonl ln 12Monill
No DWiorDUI

Corlltloll Ia ho- child coro,
llon-Frl.. 7om-5pm, 814·848·
21Q.
.

•a· Flotbed Troller wllh Equlp..,t&amp;Torpo
O!&gt;Cionol J*klgo with no Troller

Erporlan&lt;ad child cart o'lolloblt
In ll lddlopor~ Houro 7om-8pm,

- . Ill I 18 02A 1. " ' - Clll
Mondor -FrldoJ B o - s &amp; e

•

for Rent

road frontage._
na

•

•

holpnW.oo-ts
. Coli Todor 1-800-125-3580 E1L

UtilldH,

21167.

18.

D-

11U_ot_II27-04S1
EOE

DAIYEAS WANTED

500 IIIIo !ladtua · Homo Evory
-and, Fomllr tnauranca Paid
Br Compon,. (Don Ill, Eyo, p,.
wlption) ..01 kAotlromoni Pion,
Firat In - Firat OUt Dltpoleh. 1.111
llodol Conv. Trocroro Wllh
Flllbtd Tralllfl Cornpotillvo Pay

- Par...-go Otar-

11111mo Buworl E·Z F~ 2
Or 3 Bodraomo Around t200
llonlt Ftoo Do1vory &amp;SOt Up, 1-

Qolllpolla FonyWY
IOM711o711S.

-RIDER PAOGRAII

or

1he monrh
May. Applications
are now being aceepted at
38758 Rodcoprlngo Rd., Pomo&lt;or,

BIG 'BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 74Z·3171 or 1·800-585·7101
...:S RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER m
~ Cheryl Lemley..... :........ 742-3171 . Y,!.

en11 that tuccaealullr comPlete
111o TCE daoo will bo ollglblo tor
omploymont Abooluta~ no phont
&lt;tii~~OE

I Auction

.OPERATORS Dewatering Compony Hiring /Training Flold OpPumps. Immediate Openings.
$D.OO /Hour MlnlrTIIm StarL HIQh·

Sale a Auction

view. Metropolitan EnYWOnmtntal
Services, Inc. 5055 Nllce Drive,

Hilliard, OH 43028 1-800'8807378 Or LOCIIIj Coli 81•·771 •
1881. E.O.E. "

144 Acre ·

Farm

u. BIKk

ADpiCIUie

PUBLIC AUCTION
Thur. Eve., June 26, 1997

Ford 7710 Wide
FI'GIIt Tractor

Show"-

"Houllhold"
Gibson uptight freezer, KaMnator 20.6, coppertone
refrigerator, SeatB washer &amp; dryer, recliner, coHee &amp;
end tabla&amp;, gas unvented · heater. desk, lamps,
bookcase bed, chaat of drawers, dresser, misc. pots &amp;
pans &amp; dishes.
•Antique or collector's Items"
Tables, · buffet, chairs, radio/reCOrd player, victrola,
Beveled mirror, 1'1111k can; Iron pots, over 100 Whiskey
decanters, avon bollies, lots of jewelry, gun &amp; etc.
"MIIC"
_
Beauty shop chairs, dryers, all kinds of new Hems
from beauty shop, sewing machine.
·
"Auto"
1983 Buick Electra UmHed - 4 door

. Nwl
Bush Hot! 2AI Loader • ~ Eaulprn t
mt0-10 Crawler Loader/Baekhcle •'Stciek Tndler
Flatbed Tndler • Flatbed Truck

SAT. 1 ~~e 28th • 11:00 A.M.

Ql401 Mltcneu

l

''

Localed approx. 2 miles on Silver Ridge Rd. from St.
Rt. 7 al the Eastern High School julll North of Chester,
Ohio. Watch for auctlcin signs.
"Antique or COIIICtor'erteme"
Chlnll ~inet (curved glass), stand w/drawer, ha11
tree, iron· bed, . buffet w/lop, chlffrobe, wash stand
w/lowel rack, stool, sellers kitchen qabinet, kHchen
cabinet w/llour bin, oak table, wicker bottom chair,
elder press, 7 sets brass bell hames, Horse harness,
3 roll cane mill hoi'Stl dr&amp;Wn, slate, horse_drawn plow,
llorse drawn dump rake, Horse drawn .mowing
machine (C1186 &amp; McCormick), IH 2 row horae corn
planter, Indiana cast iron set, small &amp; large Iron
kettles, corn sheller, trunks, newspaper world war II, .
Elvis pictures, plate from Whaleya -Powder horn &amp;
pouch, Iron tea kettle &amp; skillets, chicken coop, coal
bucket, pie safe (bad shape), shaving hoi'Stl, oil lights,
warm morning cook stove, iron wheel wagon &amp; lots
more;
'
"HouMhOld"
B&amp;W 13" TV. table &amp; 2 chairs, recliner, hideabed,
85,000 BTU warm morning heater, cedar wardrobe,
metal cabinet, drop leaf table, bottle gas unvented
~p:~~-dreS&amp;er base, double bad, chest of drawers,
gas range, M. W. Frostleas 18 refrigerator,
I &amp;' chairs, Large chest deep freezer, Maytag
wringer washer, small upright freezer, misc. kHchen
Hems, microwave, dryer &amp; Etc.
"Mite"
Set sales, block &amp; rope, double &amp; single trees, misc.
tools, push garden plow, steel beam &amp;side hiU plows,
black smith shop (Forge &amp; Tools) Plus lots more.

Public Auction
28, 1997 If 9:00
744 second Ave., GalUpoUs, Ohio ·
Across Prom Johnson Grocery
Pei'!IOnal ·P roperty of the Late Ella Folden

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLE
12 TIN nAT WALL PIE SAtT, CHEST OF DRAWEtlll, OAK
HALL STAND TABLE, WATEII FAIL l PC. BEDROOM
StJITE, ROCKER, IOOKCASI, COFFII! JAR, GLASS IIASKETS, MISSION OAK STYLE YANn"Y. BRUSH AND MIRROR, PCi. OCCUPIED JAPAN, WOOD HAND MIRRO.R.
SHIRLEY TEMPLE BOOK, COWR AND CUJ!I1 BOX,
"OPALESCENT UU. QUILTS NIGtrr STAND, SOME FEN-

DOIUES, Cil.uR TO TELEPHONE STAND, SALT
CELlAR, DESK AND CHAIR, GIANm ROOSTER, WOOD
ROILING PIN, COUJICTOR GLASSES, SOME ftRE KING
TON,

DISHES, WIUTE 8 II P 8IIAKIR, HVLL PCS., SHAWNII:
P01TIRY, HVLL Pri'CHU AND S a P, TEUO'Ill, NUT
GRINDIR. COOUooiCS, SPICE JARS, TEAL HARKER
WAllE DISHES, HOUDAY PINK CliPS, INK ROYAL LACE
CUPS, PINK IIOII'IAIL CliPS, AND SAUCEIIIl, CRYSfAL
SANDWICH PLATES, IIOWUI, CliPS, WI PUNCH BOWL,
WHITE SANDWICH CliPS (PUNCH IIOWL) WI ST,VII),
LOTS OP DISHU, UTE IWI ftJI! ICING ROASID,
GRAY GRANITE, IROWN CROCK IOWLS, RID HANDLE
SIPTIR, GUEN MCCOY CROCK BOWL, IAINBOW
GLASS, HVU. WATER ULY TUPOT L-IW (Ill ICE), MM·
100 PlANI' SfANII, OLD GAME AND·TOYS, LOTS ur.
TLE GOLDEN IOOJCS, COWBELL, IIG KRAllf CIJTI'ER,
GREEII GRAltiTI! PAN, WASH IIOAIID, ITONE JAR,
COLBCA THI! JONZ PIN BALL MACHINI, BUCKET
IENCH, LOTS or OLD JIWI!UIY, P'I11L SID METAL

lED, JW,.P SID METAL RD. LOTS OF 71 RICOIDS,
IRON SKIUZI', AND MVCH MUCH MOU.

HOUSEHOLD AND MISC.

11 cu. rr. norr na III!I'IIGIRATOR, G.E.ILI!C1'IIIC
RANGJI Rll CUAit OVEN, KITCIIIN TAILI AND '
~ AIII'O WAJHD AND DIIYU. TWO IIOfA. UY•
. ~ CIIAIRit, IIICWtiR, Z1" ZBNJl1l COLOR TY,
Pl. WOODDI CA!QIL&amp; IIOLDIU, PJCnJUS,
D
ICAAVU, lOOT ft,'OOL, IIANitDCIIIIPS,
111W
IIAIID MJJnD) PLA1'II, LOTS or POTS AND
PANS, LOTS 1J11 MI8C 11111111, n.ooa LAMP, IUCJU.
CAL Kfl'Cill!l'l APPL}ANCII, GAlliEN 1'00U, MIIIC.
MilCH

MOD.

Polltlft ID

llertln Wedeml)er, Auellan11r
UGII11

....

..--.1

' ;,

,. ·. .

.

LOCIII"I
ld: Addlaon Township, 114-418·

RE NTAl S

e·mall us for Information on our IIMings:

410 Houses tor Rent
1 Bedroom couogt. located In
Point Ptoooont No HUD or poll.
1250/mo. t160 DopoojL 30-4-1752117.
.

Wo.od Realty, Inc
-446-1066 .· .

I

205 North Second Ave.

. "Q1S from 1-Spm.

Auctlon11r: Flnla "Ills" lNec
Phone t14 3IHI70 or 3111110
Ucenaed lnd bonded Ohio 13728

SL, -~~~ O H . -·2077.
Houoe For Silo 11W OWner, Rooltoro
AI •ow, Locolld On

-mo

. HouN, Wltl - Rqot, - Car., pot, 2 Cor Anochod Go"'D!';
Abovo Ground Pool With Pallo
Wllh 2 lovtl Dock On Bock,
Fenced In liock "l'ord. AjlplloncH
Slay, Nlct Neighborhood For
. Kidl, 8H;4•a·7007 Allor 1:30
P.M. For Appaintllltl.

~~~a4lh It· A 2 stooy home with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
living and dining rOom 'with newer carpet In
and dining room. Has a large tronl porch and.a
small baCk aitting porch wtth a large back yard thai has
grapes, alrawberries, and.blackberries bushes. HoUse hu
newer vinyl aiding and rot. Also a detached garage.
ASKING f31j,IOD

Houta Far

Bootmonlln
Acre Lot On At
114-148755.

!50 Acr.. .ol vacant proparty on Rowaavllla Rd. In ·
O.llla County, hand dug and drilled wells, on site. Electric

1

Facing

Houoo
12•68 lrtllor, houot
juot po ntod, good ohlpo, both
occupied wilt goOd rantoro, 304-

FLATWOODS RD- a newer one story with part baaernan1, .
one car garage, a bedrooms, 1 bath, dining a.nao, all s1111ng
on 1.73 acrea. $48,1100

882o3103.

Pomoror. Fllhor

, BA. new catplt.

SIFH~

3 JIA, 1

tomt •ra,CIIna.

• 113.000, &lt;tll81..1:18 tt150.

i ,12rl0 Good Condition; 11,000

oq:11. 011 a more than.a

.

,.

!•

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'

446-3644 .

I

::r.

Office ........................... 992-2259

~636

e._,..·

'Comlor1ablo
- . . . . . •.ontond llaJI
bo1ho, nicely Ulld OUI kMChon,
gorogo, pool IKI- and oo
much
more..
Meket

~~~-

MUI;H CITY Ul'l?
COnoldor 11111 homo, epprox. tlx mllea from

Goltlpollo, 3 ·bedrooms,
oHochod glrogo, booomonl

LARGE FARM LOCATED JUST . OFF STATE
ROUTE 860. 3 BEDROOM HOME. BARNS AND.
OTHER OUTBUILOINGS.. SUITABLE FOR
FAAMING OR DEVELOPMENT.. SEVERAL
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING SITESI

'-

w~.~-­

Ellotpti'"lol Buyt ...... , . ,

WALL TO WALL CHARM
,,_...,. l!id _ , - IWO 1111F LIGIWIIII • f)on1tour badloorno,' 1/:1· lhllona

.
=
-ln. p-'*"' '""" -'F
r;:no
ltOrY....,

betflt with 2 .c. a«ached · In -~ ~"ad oreo. 1btol
of 1ve rooma, - . N I Ell1tlo lnttudo -

porcl1, -

tad wfoppltel-. Iorge

wrop
lo

pordt.

tor,jho

flmllrll l130,ooo.oo

THINKING OP IUfLIItNQI
Thlo could bo whll rour

,10000

Fiul UP THIIIUYI

ThrM badloom- homo,

anclooad porch, largo JIUI _
buifllng,- -

HDIII ON Till LOT • ""'

trontago. Loto1ad In Plantz
....wMIIon.

In pool. Chocll-

· - torlhll prloo .

rrvt, tor IM,IOO.OO.

· . _....

-:..="
~~::-ropaco , atoraga,
on~

~leO'o.- ·

KEEP YOUR"COOLI 3 BEDROOM RANCH l;iAS
CENTRAL AIR. COND.' AND IS Nt;AR_THE CITY
POOL! FENCED BAC!&lt; YARD, c;ARPORT. PfiiCEO
IN THE FIFTIESI
BEAUTIFUL LAND ...OVER .300 ACRES LOCATED
NEAR
WAYNE
NATIONAL . FOREST
AREA. .. PRODUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT OUTDOOFII~. 3 BEDROOM HOME, .3
BARNS , OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. POND,
'I'OBACCO BASE. THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS
THIS SIZE ON THE MARKET...DO 'NOT MISS OUT
ONTHISONEI

BAtSHA.N ROAI~ ~paciou~ 28'• 60' Modular
Home wi1h 3 bedrooms, 2 ba1hs, equipped
kitchen, fireplace, alec. F.A. and Central Air.
Room 2 car .garage, lull ~semenl, paved
road. Nice neighborhood, lovely setting. 2+
acres of level laying ground ASKING S75,000

,

- · l. .

.

"OCIIIIIIICW. ll'wWI . . .T
· Ctlwllfloll_ ... _

1181 14170-tllr!On Nold11d;1 I
...aoma,_ ~ !1-1111, H.P. D. W.,
. -...~.- .. 111.000 Flr!ll.
ll+i!IN111.0rl-

1131 '

pwldng---

LARGE COUNTRY HOME... 10 ROOM HOME
FEATUJIIES A FIREPLACE IN THE UVING ROOM
AND F.-.,.ILY ROOM...FOAMAL DININO, LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. IABEMENT. .. CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' CWIAOE•

a

•

ONE ACRE.

I

Kathleen M. Cle~nd 992-6191

.

JERRY SPRADLING •••••••••",...................... M-2131 ·

Till

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

1122,000.00 • CENTENARY

-

•

ul

I

l

I

. AREA • Thla Ranch homo

•lgtUoo, In 1111 110'1. 10 ....
m11 with oopro•. _
g ~,.. .
wcalied, rMieral rlghta. udl.
. . . . Pt' , _

' II.IDOLII'ORT• Broadway Street- A 3 bedroom tWO
home wl1h vinylllldlng. bMhroont ]UII ~­
gas IOn:ed alr ~ with low bl!dget. ae,eoo Alao has
an txtra lol ballde the property that can ~ flurchased. ,

BRENDA

. Henry E. Cleland Jr ..992-2259

·25 LOCU§T ST.· GAWPOUS

TOO

--.a tor, ond tho prloo It

MIDDLEPORT· North 51h Ave- A 2110ty houM completely
redone lnd lootll , _ up8taira arid • • living room with
carpet, dining room, front porch,. large utility room,
and ldtchen. S31,000

.

Realty
.

a carr. Let us handle
your real estate needil

tho tow prloo "' 11.0001 Lol It
oo-- 1oo•eo, wnh rooc1

SEU. CALL UU2ti,OOO

a•

Real Eatate General

Aud,..y F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 441 3383 ·

at V(ood Realty have
just about loki
av8rytltlng. WI have
buyers lookJng for that
osrtain DleCe of
propet1y. It could be
yoursllf you have
been thfnking of
putting your houae on
them&amp;rket,orpoellbly
looking to buy, give us

• 11110 OakWood 141110 2

' 4005.

.CHARIIILIIP~NQ.........................
BITTY JO COWNI ..- ...... _.;...-•••-~IM

~anadaytil

..--------.
Our prolellllonala here

..... iuiLD THAT DIIIAII

: 2. boll1, waahor I dryor
, dlahwolhor, conlrol tlr.

on acra lot . _ _ 011

n.c.

.

(614) 446•3644

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-Q971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256·1745
Tim Walllon, Realtor-258-61~
Patricia Ross, Realtor

: .,CIII Allor I Ftll. 114-147;121.

laurot 81. OWNER SAYS

iJc, li• ·lp y,,ll ','1,111 Y1 !Iff III,IIILI,fll

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

-oom.

· 1D88 Oot aa~ 14x70 ill&gt;t. 2 ball.

J1•i

1103

pot~ l l loDII2-3-085 """' 5pnl.

POIII!ROY
Thlo ol1ro&lt;11vo 2 alory S
bedroom homo wllh _.._

-......

.

livability Is what you'll find in this
outstanding 2. story brick tudor. Formal entry with winding stairv.:ay,
beautiful formal living room with fireplace and formal dining room, both
have lovely hardwood floors . You pick which family room you want to read
a book In - the bright, sunny one on the main floor or cozy up by the
fireplace In the basement family room with beamed ceiling, large kitchen
with
cabinets and counter top space, bright breakfsst nook, 4
3 1/2 baths, workshop, 2 car carport with attached
lot with pool, pool house, beautiful patios arid
· pond • .A property like this does not come available .often call
tor your private viewing. Priced al $269,900. 1613
·

N.wty NIIIOdolad dv•
ono """ 112 ball1 homo 1n u-.

: , homo, ono both. ,..,. condldon,
, ;13000080. 11A-ItHI$1.

POiiiRoY- M....., H1lah18- A 2-3 bedroom ranch 110m1
with attached garage. A very 11H1 looking ·plac. will a large lot. Clole to ~ and lchooll. A8KING III,GIIII
DOtTIE TURNER, Broller...~.....................112 5112 '

REALTORS:

f."'"

available, 15 acre hayfield some tlmbar. Very aechided.
$45,000

'

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOUS, OHIO 45631

,

: :320 Mobile Homes
ror Slit
; ,-::,2::-.18::::0:-1::-:lltl:=5=rwo---=~
~rao~m~mo=bl:=::lo

41-tild._,,_,llilllleln
bUt
"""
. .....
Downalldro
- LA,
DR, Klt,
laflr, a to. br. a fUll bat(~~.
lllttlly nn, ilpltlllla - 3 br &amp; u
ball: Blnt. llldg, I rM.

.

: NMr Ali•acdalad

.

~E -

.

.

For Sale br Ownor-3112 mllto
ciut Sandhill. 4bl, 3 beth, largo
-11-40.000..SIM-1171&gt;-5403.
For llle, 1.bedroom homo ill f'o.
moroy, wll toll on land controc~
814·DD2-58158.
Homo tor oalt on At. 2 NOrth
about 1 o mlloa from P. • 5 bfd.
roomo on ocre lo~
by Ill'
polntmont onlr. c 30•·372-

FISHER ST.· Almost an acre lot wl1h lOts of~- Could
have 2·3 building or movlle hOme ailet. Has Older hOrne
I ,;: :::,~ ;;r;;;:: t:o be 10m down. S11.000

-

.

DIGNITY &amp; ELEGANCE, yet

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

~

1-1011

.

IH, oil\

LeGrande loulovonl, 3 ~

PRICED TO SELLI Only

Reduced Price ' On This Restful
SHustad at 435 First AvenU&amp;,
for 2 bedroom, 2 bath .home
a lot to ollar
besides Its enviable location, river frontage and an
easy walk to downtown shopping. l11e living room
with bay window le8IUreEI a Qreplace whh gas starter
and bullt·ln bookcu_
ea end 'FrankNn Stove" style
woodbumer with gae IQIII. For ouldoor enjoyment,
there 18 a large deck, nice landecaplng and steps
down to the River. Call today lor an appointment to
see this very special home. Reduced_tp $135,000.
''

~--of"l

=

prlrt*llltllerllll.

I

County. Scipio Townohlp. SA 882
~uti oUR 1&lt;13). OwnOr "-ng.
eott lor oood map. 1-•••·503·

Houoo ol\ll fi&lt;Oporty, 1ppr01. ilacru ldotl 111r1or homo. Booth

todarl

remo11, boourltul land: llolga

•m

HAYES REAL ESTATE

appointment

.....................
..,,6011_ .

; 3 I!Odroorn H- Wlll1

WITH A WINNING TEAMI

"' ari

have "S!Iveral

2.8 Acre• +· Corner lot- Graen

, Blfn, Malnttnence Free,

.....a77,0rl11 418113118

BRICK HOME
Syra.- U3 0011111 mn wllll
rlvot tronlogo, • BR, Lt/Fr, Dr,
2 bolho, .Eat-In k11chen, patio I
holt pump W/Oir. A new root.
WAARANTED·HOMEI Coli tor

-251·6070.

,.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Directions: 4 miles W.ol Galiipois on Rt. 141 across
from Aunt Clara's Collectibles.
Owners: Bill and Julie webb· The J)er&amp;Onal eflects
the estate of Alvin and virginia·Lewis ..
.ANTIQU!:S: Many old toay (SQme In orlgi"-' boxes),
crystal basket, miniature tea set, quilts, dresser,
rocker, side chair. Lg. &amp; miniature lanterns, mantle
clock, procalain figurines, kitchen cabinet w/llour bin,
blue English Lyndhurst China (Service for 6) •. Hull
pottti!y, cast iron cook · ware, skillets, &amp; utensils,
watches. two metal kitchen pantries, 1915 Clyde A.
Beldwin Lodge Ledger, Pink dishes, (service lor 12),
old pu$ mower, old tools, porcelain top kitchen
cabinet. cherry drop leaf table, crocks, old hand made
linens, oak rocker, side·tabk!, antique record albums,
crystal depression luncheon plares w/cups, footed
cake servers, mugs. depression glass,. lg. pottery
plcther, brown pottary bean pot.
.
HOUSESHOLO· Hall &amp; full beds, couch, aectional
couch w/reciiners, blankets, sheel8, towels, dining
room table w/5 side chairs &amp; captain's chair), ladder
back chairs, book caaes. ewlvef rocker, end tables,
metal wardrobes, Canmore microwave, Butcher block,
Horne Interior; larnps, sweeper, Horne tjealth Medical
Equipment.
.
MISC- Orca four harnesa rug weaving loom, garden
tools, book, trunks, ·sewing .boxes &amp; patterns, sewing
Mags, Singer sawing machine, Bell.&amp; Howell movie
set (camera, projector, IICI'een &amp; equipment), Polaroid
camera, afghans, plct~res, TV stanqs, elect. broom,
sm. kitchen appliances. food proeeeaor, Bakf!t'•
equipment, cook books, stainless steel- flatware,
complete embroidery paint kit, new a.v.c. ltam~.
exercise equipment; camping stoves, beds, lantarne,
iighl fixturea, box fan, yard ornaments. lawn lumiture,
canning jars, electric &amp; hand tools, gae
new J.C.
Penny's fabric arid wood window &amp; door
8IIW8.
corn mill alec. tree trimmer, car ramps,
IJntern, _kerosene lanrem, creeper, Coleman
Push Plow, Meat aaw, plumber enake, dil can,
cabinet, carbide auto l~a. Grlawokl ash tray, :Birda eye
dreaaer w/mirror swivel bevel adoe, glider
, drum lable, hand stftchad quilll. McQoy 12"
Bowl, large glau ballcet, SUI)btam Mix Muter,
v~table steamer, food proce11or, tater twliDr,
Kroger Anniver.,-y "*!'_~Y· inl\4ftDr candle holcler,
l8lad lhooter, marbltll, ,.... liOWII8d 'llllllt-lllcllr. .
Relreshmenta, food (Amlth ladlee), and a mboom
wll be available.
.

Acre- Nice flat, Fiarlield

-

2 Bedroom Homo, Largo lot on
' OUiol In GoUipallo, 30 Vinton SlrooL Coli Afllf • P.M. 11+

·saturday, June 28, 1997 at 10:00 a.m.
3961 State Route 141

6 of . .Winding

Centenary

...

Curtll HollOw R011d, A log cabin that has never been
lived in. Slttinll ilcroas from Forl&lt;ed Run State Park. Public
Hunting and only 3/4 mile from Forl&lt;ed Run Lake. Cabin is
lilting on an acre lot and the cabin hal a walnut stalrcaae.
Has a 10 x 24 front

Terrna:Calh or epprovtd ·Citeck
Nol relljlotllible lor aoadlt Ill or loll lleml
StatSbllr...,.,m,.enll made day oflale hal ptecedence -

•

opponunlly -

Home For

Come See What We Discovered!

'

Priced to aell.

'

Public Sale a Auction

MVCIJ,

5.61 Acru- Buhi Morton Rd .

: 310 Homes for Sale

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF 1lt1S EXCEWNT
. OPPORTUNITY.
.
We are offering two restaurants lor sale. One ·in
Syracuse and one in Middleport: EvetYihlng is set up
ready for a new owner, · building, equipment and
inventory lnclud~ In sales price. Both currently in
operation and there Is even room to expand the
hours Wyou ·want. Take a look al being your own
bossl.Call Cheryl todayl/1902
POMEROY VILLAGE. This home hal everylhlng bullhe
most e•cHlng leature Is the excellen1 view of the Ohio
River. Owner hal utilized this lliew to the fulleat extent
Full finished basement wl1h kitChen, lOvely stone FP In
fannl!l LR, handcrafted kilchen cabinets ilnd oak trim.
Amenitlel galore. 11887
·
•
· 124 Acrtl more or lees sHua1ed at J;alon Road. PriCed
at $48,000.00 1871

Cash
Poeitlve ID · Refreshments
"Not responsible for accidents a ion of nrn•"'rt"'

cash
Positive ID
"Not responsible for accidents a loss of property"

ANJ)

Road. Some

R f- AL ESTAlE

Owners • The Myera Family
Dan Smith ·Auctioneer- Ohio 11344

Owner • Carolyn Tripp
Dan Smith · .Auctioneer

TOOLI; LOTI. or "WIIAToNOTI,

2· 1'lve Acra-+- Fairfield Church

~

l'

--

Ohio 11344
)

' oi

-·
.
'1

Saturday, June 28, 1997
10:00 a.m.

Bo 21 Yoors Of Ago, Coli Bo.._
a A.M. -6 P.M. To Schodult lnlor·

Located at the L. B &amp; Elizabeth Vaughan home on
Mulbeny Ave. Watch for auction.signs.

!":

PUBLIC AUCTION

fttore Far ·Filter Prell, Dredge,

5:30p.m.

.......

MEIGS COUNTY

OH. Clooo llzo lo llmllod. Throo
13) retaronct PIPifl ore required
wlll1 oppllcation. ~plj In potion
between toam &amp; 3pm M-F. Stud,

PUblic S.le a Auction

·~

7 Acrel- More or • -· Pleaeant Hill
Rd:

2

___..

Roct&lt;oprlngo R"""bHitauon Canter
wiH be otloring trall&gt;ng claooto In

Drivers licente Required. Must

Eorn 11.000 - y Sluttlng Envatopoo AI Homo. Storl Now. No
E•porlonco. frH Supplloo, Into.
No ObllgoUon, Sond LSASE To:
AGE, Oopt: 1361, l!clll 5137, 'Diomond Bor, CA g17a5.

whlchlslnvlololloo
law. O u r - ... illlnllly
Informed thai all motet~~naa
- I n INS.,.. CYiillltNI on an equal

Nurse Aida Training Pragram-

or Rota Wilh E•porlonca. Bonolits
Poc:kago, Trove! Required. Food I
Lodging Paid Br Compony. Valid

CIAAHTTAUCICINO, IIIC.
11411SAH
OAK HtU. OHIO 4MU
-ZI-2113

1.103 acree, 1 .56.87 Road
frontage, Green Elementary

R-oon Rd• 18 Ac,... 731 Feet
Creek Frontage. Secluded- Tree
shaded, Greet Creek view. Lovely
home or seasonal conage site.
14x70 Deluxa Mobil Home-priced
for pay off. set upon a private rented
lot. Lots of extras. 2 112 miles from
city to Gallipolis.

City Iota· Exceilant· For condo,
15 yr tax defferedment. · · ·
·

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

· -101K

view Raccoon
Hobart .Dillion

4-

HELP WANTED
LaCondno

'I'AIO VACIJIOI!i

•

Clooe
To Galllpollo,. e1•·U82072.

~

-

NEW REGIONAl.
OPPORlliNnES
PAY UPTO 35CPM
-MEDICAL BENEFITS

Oopolll Req. 81•·4•8·

2 Badroam Aportmont, Control
Air, Goo H..l. WID Hook-Up

.,

Clfrior.Muii._Aelloo•A•
COl. Wltl HAZMAT &amp;
Rec:on1 OTR ~
CALL DAVE OR USA

poll, I

' 1 Bedroom Nur Holzer E1tta
Nlct, Central Air, 12118/llo., +

D(Mm

+·,

2· Iota 1.605 acres, wooded.
Blacktop road.·

2.440 Acm +- Green Twp, 182.48

Bull(llngl

call 014~012 ·8:Q21 relerencea
PIOti_,

II201-TI8CIOf
•
Satellite a Ptua ar Compan1 will

AIICTIC EXPRESS
Ia
Ohla'o ~Ro...,.._

APartmtnls

440

340 Buslnlse and

LAND- LOTS- OF LAND

..

·- ·
I

�I

111!:
l~'

Sunct.y, Jun. 22,

PlgiDee . . . . . . . . . . . . .
440 .

IEAUTIFUl AAUITIIENTS· AT

._...

IUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON

ESTATES. 52 Wot- Drlvo
~. -·thop

l movloo. Call 114·4U·2511.

450

E&lt;IUIII-.o~.

. Rooms

IIKC Rog Boaoro. ONLY 4 fo.
moltt ltlt. l250tt. Wor...., 1

1-'t SL lllddltport. 2br fur01&gt;1. u•llot
Ptld. dopoolt
,- .........
~2518.

Antiquo

Size:
Whttll, EactUont
UHd llobl'- Homo

~""t!:t.·=·~:::;:r

tocoiOd on Park Rd. Plttao coli
814·882·22112 lor mort lnlorl!l&amp;·
tlan.
.

,

!!Or Crib, M!'!it., E -

Fot S..... 8100 080.,114--

Klll:hon Carpot 81.50 Sole On All 7127.
Ctrpot tn Stock I Room Size
lololol&gt;onC- 11..-·7444.

Countrylidt Aptrtmtms: 2 lltd,_,. I 112 Boll, CA, W.O-

Up, S34D/IIo. ; 2 Btdroomo, 2
Bolhl, CA. W/0 Hook·Up, $ 4 5 0 1 1 - - - - - - - - - 520
llo., ~· lltcfllrtd, 513-574-

-

AKC Rogloltrtd Collie Pupa,
Chtmplon Bloodllntt, 1150 1
Phllco conooto oteroo. I track f3lO 11-I·IGa.
capo-. country &amp; - - 1 oo•
,.., - P t a . nHIII.
AKC rwgi1- Ro-, 7 wkl.
old, Ill lhOII I war-. 1200.
l'aol- tsoo. \IIIIW75-311211. .
11-7105.

1,-===~=..;.:~;.;;___

au-

....... and hotllr. Phont

I

S..ro sa• cut riding - r . 10
h.p., Tacumuh, exceltent candl·
dan, 1345 OBO; lull olzt truck
.. _ $45; - portoblt phone,
'IIIII _. at 112 price. 125; .,,.._

Furniohod 3 Room• I Bath, No
Pall, Rolorence And Depoolt Roqulrocl. II 4-4411-151 D.
Fui,.._. Apm1mlnt. 1 B1d oom.
1 - . Udlllea Paid, 0311 Soc·

eec· Atw 1 P.M.

~~~~~~;e;;.l810
Fann J;qulpment
f.ui~Btoodtd Delmatlan

448-4110

840

Hay &amp; Grain

·~
~-

·,;

Holilnd 1 Hoo-n H~ .liool ...--,........,.::-:-==-~.,...,.
·•
Corn lor 11io, 13.00 per buohtl,:::..
Salo-472 THayblna 17,500. 468 contll&lt;t014.fi2·2447.
·· ~ •
Galdon Rotrlovor pupploo, lull i':~igr~ 17,QOO. 48211'Hayblno
- A
· blooded, 0111 lholl 1 wormed,
834 R. Ball! BlOt Toba~co water bod planll. 3042045.
SIOO, 114.fi2-71151.
844 R. Balor IDDDt 885-31154.
·
....
8-10
·a.a ltr 10001
Bola &amp; Chair, Nn Amorlcon
.,
Hom•l750; Sotoiilta Dilh 1100, Jack!\1-RttTttrltrpupplto
Ntt Wrap
TRA NSPOR TATION
., ....:115-6881.
&amp;wko old, S75H. 304·875-7846
5.500. 654 R. Baler 15DDt
5.800. 815 DIIC Moworo 0' I"
Ill
CUI J4, 700. Ho11ton 30' V Rtko -=
Poll PIUI, Sllvor Bridge Plaza. 14,200. Htllton TIO OIIC llow· 710 Autos for Sllle
11-HI77D.
tr1 15,300. Heullln 10' Pua TIKI•"
:.:.;:...:,::...:,:.;.:;._..,....;.._ _ 1 dtro.l1,300. Htllton r llowtr· 1048 Chovroltt Fltttllnt, 814;",;..
388 "3"3.
/1: Rtullllrtd Auotralian COrd Stub Guardo. Heuton 630
.
. :•
d Puppltl, $150, Takl- R. Bolora 5Sot l7,i00. Henton 1863 Buick ~~·lal $5 500 Firm
... 540 R. Bolero IODOt $10,600. 814-448-02'17.
"
...,....
'
C&lt;•
n--.111.114381 a38l
••no' \
...,....
·
Htllton R. Bait Silage Wrapper
Rtgilllrtd Btut Tick Coon Hcund $7,300. Ag-Wrop R. Bale Sllago 1170 C-t. 305, Rtbuiit Orlal-.
Pupo, 7 Wuka Old, 814·367· Wroppor. 17,300. A8 Wrap Film nal Tranamiulon, AC, Ron, •
0303.
20·x 1000' $85 per roa. 30'X 5000" I ~~::,:•·~.~R~o;m::,~odeled Interior~ ~ ~
$75 perroll. D UIOd ROUnd 811· II
I Work 11.100, •

ond Avenue, Galllpollo, 11 .... 446-

448

2 Now odull wootorn uddlot.~
~IIIM;.:.;-11;;.75-:..5040::..;;;;.·-----·'~ !
~-::-::=--~---- Riding and Buggj Horota 814'. ~

1Dpl'"'* ut up opoclolo. Fllh
~~;-;;;;;d;;;;;-;:Qj;Qiiiii:'l Ttnk I Ptt Shop, 2413 Jackoon
Rootr olr cooKIIIIoo.,, 7,000 BTU. Avo. Point Plouont, 304·175·
With oatil uanoltrabit worranty, 2013.
t250,11~S818.
.

Etocu~.

'

'Aflr.1 SIJPPL 1r S
&amp; LIVl';fOCK

:104-m-5414.

Btdroom, AU
Carpatod,
Co••
Klt&lt;:htn. Eltetri&lt;: Hoot
Nt Condtlori..

· Allor 7P.ll.

liD--· -...

Boby CockttOIII lor ltlt, htll
hotdboord. paddtd rallo, Ml· prtce. - . Cll et•M-3755.

Downtown Gallipolil: Modetn 1

-

~--·~-

Bike. Amtnt llovo, Ztfoa Ptf·
..... Cojlltr,ll ....:llll'-

-

81~1311.

Pur:,

Q.,....,

AKC
Shepherd
Wltlto Chomp Lint, II 4·~ •
8114.
.

Fumllhtd

Wormtd, 175 Each, 11

-

81122.

!,.OVERS· Enjoy yo~r Cltny Spenllh In thlt Country. This
\Yaekende fishing &amp; watching the brick beauty is nestled on a 2 acre
ABOUNDS lJIS
barges float bY· This like new tract In lite rolling hills of Addison ·. COUNTRY CLASSIC. Historic two
8)ecatcher Is empty &amp; ready lo mow Township on McCully Ad. Enjoy your story hou$e offers 3 bedrooms, 1 1~
Into. Special feature8 are approx. 1.8 &amp;uf)lmers In and around the pool; bath, LR, DR, FL. IIAI basement and
acres, 2 cac garage, large cedar deck, ·extra large pa11o &amp;gazebo. There are detached work shop. Bring In the
security eyatem &amp; lOcated
4 too many features 1o mention but 1 outdoors In the· window covered
mi. aoutll of the Etnlca Dalln.·IIIUIIIJ 'few are the extra large ·LR, Family ldtchen with atiached walk-in pantry.
room with a stone FP, completaly Plad 10 steel at ~4.900.
equipped kitchen, 4 BR's, 2112 baths,
2 car garage &amp; a vitry nice barn.

.

Furnlahod Elllcloncy $105/Ma.,
Udlltleo Paid, Share Both, 807
Socond Avenue, Galllpotlo, IIC·

------------~---- "

=

:o

Sattnaurera, miniature, alilt •

po-. AKC,
thOII, wormtd

81.....e7-M04.

ctwnpion bloodlno.
&amp; ftrot grqcimlng,

Stol _ , Hlmallyan Ieinen, mole,

.,,.._2002.

·--

..._...........................

3874~

..

New Holland 1003 automodc, t&gt;ote

· ·~

.

1882 Ford 4a4 I2,0DD: 1888 '"'

wagon, 44 bale ;apacity, v.ery

Camtro, Rebuilt Molor &amp; Tran• , ;

so

lay Daviaan Sponstar $S,ooo: ~

rnisalon, $4,000 080: 111!17 Her· ' '

814 381 1481, 814-192-et71,

Now Holland grinder ml•lf • .,c

. I~

. Sport wo-n . ::

cond.304·273-4215.
~~~~~~~--~·-:...:· :~
We makt hydraulc hoot aosem- I·
Auto, blitl. Sldar:s Equipment 304·
. ".v
875-1421 .

1981 Dodgo Spirit ID4K Runa
Good, Wtil·llainlalnod, 112.5DD,
614~

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY 18 hard
lo find but you have 7.66 acres m/1
with 'this 2 story larm house. Wllh 3
BR, 1. 1/2 bath, city schools and a hilt! on·• hill in Green Tnwnshlp. This
view flt for a king all located just home Is brand , _ &amp;located cloee to
minutes from Gallipolis, you should towlt at 1573 Graham School Road.
not let· this flow by without a look. $45,000 Bt,iy an extra 5 rm &amp; bl!th
Reduced lo $89,900
home and bam for an extra $29,900.

/""'l.( ·. • ~
.._.,.,.«ot,et•
":(. •
-,

1881 lincoln llork VII LSC
55,800 111111. Eaclltnt Conditlofl.
Alidnt 112,000,111 ue 1044
. 1882 Pontiac Flrebird, alllllmodc,
V·l, t-topa, 1111 color, all - ·
~ray lnttrlor, ucouom condition,
:otr dtioggtr; 83,000 rniltl, 11 4·
247-31101 ..... 5:30pm.

I

IDEAL SITE FOR APARTMENTS:
150 x 207 lot Is located at the comer
of Spruce &amp;: .5th. All utllltiBS avaJiabl8.
$19,900.
'
I!J(TRA NICE

'

.

11113 Ooclae

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
.
446-4618
Judy~Witt .......... ,................... 441-0262
J. MemO Cancr;........................ 379-2184
Tammie DeWitt......................... 245-0022

oar-. 4 C11ndtf,

5 Speed, l.otded, 84,000 lllltl, .

. Martba Smith ................................... 379-2651
Cheryl Lemly ........... ,....................... 742-3171
Dana Atba.......................•................•379-9209
KenncthAmsblll)' .............................245·5855

$3,0000B0,114-2fi&amp;.li!ln ·

1111.4 Dodtlt . _ 4 CVIindtr 5
Spud, With Air, 10,800 llilto,

... roo 080, .,~. 114~7.

19il4 Groan Choniktt Sport, 4

Door1. M,OOO MIH. P8. PB, PW,
Alr,:2 - Olivo, •10,500, 114-

..

PICTUIIIIQUI HOME
HILL 10.44 Acreo mn .
· 3,1100
II. Ylnyllexterf9r,
lormllICtINf,
4 BRt, 3
batha, flnlahld roo. woa In tt.
bamL WI!/FP In aamo room &amp;

SHADED .LOT, lotll

of lreesl Nice comlortable

dtn atrium rm, oak -and
trim In ldl. 13 to1o1 roomt, 2 c:ar

garage.. . Profoaolonally
lanc!IC&amp;Pid· Duality and Luxury
. 0f11V. YJrglnia L

ranch home thai has an
OYilnllzed 2 car .garage, large .
living room, 3 bedrooms, nlced
sized kitcHen wllh dining arn
lhat lta8 patio doors lhat led to
a covered deck on rear of
house.
Cent'ral
air
conditioning. Quiet location,
not far from grocery, church,
ale. 1118

II

IN TOWN I.OCA110ffl
H
· nd= to luet about
Ill· Sltve gael F1111lly
II
3 ~m home. Nice
slzl!l living room, kitchen,
dining, baaement. · Finished
·attic area. Covered front
porch. Detached garage.
Broker Owned. Immediate
·possession! Call RuBBell lor
more delallal

WISEIUI REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446·3644

83 'Chevy Clllttlon, asking 1500:
8e :catsla Qtdamobllo, aaklng
·. 1500; bunk bod SID; 814·Dt2•

9lomesteatf '13entf
(304} 882-2405

.,fth

Real Brlale Senkea
Zl5
Stnet
NewllaYID, WV 15265

MACRE8
AWAY I'ROIII TH£ CROWD- YET·
JUST IIIINUT!SI'ROII10WN
.... ~ Juet all Sand Hill Road
* Public WfDr
.
* f'ltollle Vel c:-Hnt
• 5 v..r old, 4 Bedroom
Approx. 2,0b0 eq.
II.

Hoi••

• 2 Cennl Al( Unill
• Bile ony O..erloolcs OrMt Room

[B

* Dlllllr1c:tiW Parquet llllrdwood Flocn

.... !..

·

b

(614) 446-3644

.

E-MaiiAddrm: wlseman@zoOmnet.net

•

PAVI~ WISE~f4N, BROKER,GRI- 446-9555
IAinUII MrDIMie • 446-mt

CaraiJfl W.-ll· .Ul-1807

avallible. $12,000

1

·
0.

RIVER FRONT LOT • 1.368 ai:ies
mJIIocated approx. 2 mi. aout11 of the
Eureka dam. Great potential at

$19,900.

Plymouth

your
chance to own your own
buolntul inventory left at lhe

~~~;~~~:~~;~~

!

1110·1110

CARS FOR •1110111 '

StiNe! And Sold
. loctlyTNo' ·Trudia. 4a4'L Etc.

. time of oell will go with thO

meat
cooler,
lee creamlnetudld:
freezer,
buslnou.
Equipment

pop eoolero, vog. cooler,

rtlrlgerator, atove. dOuble door

commercial oven, Hobart maar

.slicer. ·Hobart meat grinder,

Crflit Prablamo? Gauronltld F~
nailcing, 10'1 Down. Ptjmtnll
AI low AI 1180 Ptr llon!fl. Na
Tur,n Downat Coli Rutlll14-441-

21117.

.....

~~~' 2 ~homO. t.SironiiiOrY.
1,1012
KNOCKiiiO to own a
~·rt rge ••··-• room, &gt;n1 &amp;
hOmo In the city, 3 bedrrna, 2 ' oldt porch. Perfect ,ror the
bathe, Hugo LA w/gu llroplace, . i\';"~:~rnlly. Coif ~ally H~yo
newlj r-l&lt;!d. new 1uma&lt;:lf, NIW LIITINGI MILUON
AC, wlndoWI. porch, lidlng, IIOLLAII VIEW Of lHE OHIO

.

AwelltH. 3Qi4 t51 1081.

carpet, . cement 'drlvew,.y,
appllanctl, P.ool
Hot lllb.
Comt -1 Comt to Buyt VLS

u-

vou

W/1•
'

-.a82f.IUI 1800.
: IIIII VACANT LAND 100
In Morgon Twp. Baluty
aKo
to""'build
• public utllill.o

•

-.
I.......... pool 1 ·pool
...- '""-~
2:.uoo.
lovoly trood ~ard

encr1y ·efficienc·y,
duralollity and Oexlbillty
•
IV dt!lip """ o few ullhq,
rouollo why 2,000
r,niilie~· Will build • lot
h)11n• thia yeorl

I

"'II
.,_
'
11- LOT ON LAKE VIEW CT.

•,

'

,.

'

-von

~ AI•J&gt;aloehi"" Lo1
Slrueturoo .hoo ~D a

VAWES'

111111.
ovlrlookJng lhe city. Flag atone
lltfl 171 ACRII MIL In entry, llrot , _ launclfy, full

loader In the lo1 hull'•
l~d•otry for \over . 15
yean. Chcto• ln. p¥"er'
70 •talldortl model• or
'
'.
&gt;t• 'II .euolom deolp .one

1'l)mouth ~ ll1tl1 air, 7~
seatir«. E'asj Out Rolliir. Seats" tnl .

I&gt;Oitnllnt w/rte. rnt &amp;
WlfOdbumlng ft.replac,. 2. car
,trttd 1o1. ca11 1or '"
appolntnitnl to Ito lhlt
actp11ona1ty amort hornt!· ·441-

:=.t:= :~r ~=

· ptlllura ltncl and

· Rut-' Wlltl, Fat t ~llti' call Claudt 11 441 eeoe or

-

.

Get $2,000 ifr total values on se1et1

.,.,

Morgan Twp, Lata of ..,_ In
many terti of

•

mote-'-all at no e~t~~ wae. That's
$2.000 In tol8i values: $1,250 in 22T
piC. values prus $750 cash bacll

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and w~1itg minivans-on a* for a lmlted the. ·

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2.3 mll.vtrt nice rtltrlcttd w/goztbo, deok ln. the rear, to build a drtam homo. Alia I
,...yard,
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4 IIDftOOM 2 both ac. on WHto Rd.
Cloullte on 8 terti MIL In MIDI lHI cnv, IUT
Twp 12 • 18 . . . . - 0N1 Of THIS WORLD, 3600
beck porch. Formal ~ room oq. ft. MIL 4 IOvoty bodrooml. 2
plut a oat-In kitchen. M. l/2 bathi, ~uo• fomnv rm.,
$48,000 thll .... will not tut
.
lontf.' Colt Cll\ldt Oor!Jeia for formal ,,dining &amp; living rm.
111Gi1J.ntrnoll1
_ 4U-6801 at 4AS- w(WBF~ ond 'wfndow won

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J-80C)..4.58.999

Choose from the roomy Pl)mouth Grand
Voy• with the available .4th door and
Easy Out. Roller Seats~ Or gel $1,000
cash back on the unimate minivan-the
luxurious Chr)5ler Town &amp; !lOuntry LXi.. with tun ieather·trimmed interiOr and
.independent climate zones.

utility
fireplace.
living rm. w/atono
avo-. PUIU&lt;O/IIIteblt omtl . flropjaeo. 2 car garago. .City
-·
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Schoota. FOf -lntmont. colt
11013 • 4 BIDIIOOMI, 2 1/2 Patty Havs. 446·3864.
batho, tovtly kltchtn w/ttt in $2oe;700.00
dining rm., 11071 FRIINDLV HOM I
....,ken liVing rm. w/lirepleCe, ConVenient to evorylhlng. 3
llmlly nn., newlumtct. etlaclltd. btdiw1•, Largo kit., 1ovt1y LR.
2 car gorage,' detachtld 2 car utility nn tdotN~ $38800.

}.OGHOMES

: Pept. GDT, I
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......,.; wv 15271

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fiiY!RI Baaulllul 3 to 4 bedroom
brick home full mlnuttl awav
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$1000
' BACK.
CASH

12174 NEW lilTING on
Btlldmort Rd. Spacious 4

Upll!n U1td Caro Rt. ~2-3 111111
South of loon, WV. Financing'

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All thla 1or one vory low prleet
Coli Pany H-. 4AS-3884 lor

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a.r-446-2707

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ALMOST · NEW BM.EVEL
.. 4S+ WOODED ACRES!
Nice quiet country

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turt, oitetsonlco. cornpllttrt ttc.

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WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

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4-~te.a, mo~&gt;r

!~=~ ' 1130
ICI\IIIIment
&amp; cattle inaudld.
Ca" tor ~omplete
llaUng ..
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c~ FdA 11001 Truokt; boato,

NIW UITINGI 21 ACRU
.11/L • IIOIILI HOllE A
' a~COI!IIIwlthlhlll
HOUI&amp;... CIIY "lchoota, okler
home lhat llln need ol repelr, 1 ACRE 11/L. LOTS, elch (OOilty home 3 bedrooml, 2
would make a lovely country wllh approximately 150' of full bah, IMitlai .baletnent
Cou.nty that Include• laundry,
home and. Ill' X 80' ,mobile frontage.
watar/eleclrlc avallabltt., ov. . lztd living room · "
home th8t i1U loll of
batldta 3 badtoort•; 2 belha. om.-Y lor Iota ·!lave bHii dlnlhg aru, ·at~uin clciore
Call today lor . more lniltallad along wlti) home ft14! oil kitchen
.
to dtel&lt;
alta clured. $7,DDD ~ lot,
over tlzed .3 car
11122
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lnfomlallon. ""
WILCOIII IIAT'I OUTI
Of
home. call
Tempting large 5 bedroom 2 . VERY
WE L L CARID your prMie lhowlng.
balh home. family room with FOR .. Nice cheerful •home LOTI A '
1
1
cathedrll c81ng, dining room, wllh lots ol ch11m and
pprox mate Y 112 ·
septic/leach field
kitchen , Iarge wrap around appeeI. 01 -nIn g room wllh acre,
an.~y 'In 111c1 county wa..,
deck. baseman!. Selling on nlcie harwood_ floor, b(lghl · available. FrOntage along
apprvx..81108Cflllot.AIItfill&amp; living_ room w/nawer . SA 180 Good elle for
men lull a quick drive 11om carpeong kitchen, balh, lui mobile home or houte
IOMI. . . . ·
baaement, encloiad front . ta,IJOO.OO 1123
·
Jl(ll\lll. ~ -.~zed cledt
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AIRLINI R AD•. an badi, .11'81~11
·' ·MI for LOTS 01' P01'INTIAU ,,
11111/1110 3 acrw men Of lt!ll .-~ · tu.M(, u. II! llulld? Net ertOUQh
·wllh IIIII IPfUC*I
Mutt time? Conllcfer, lhlll horrie.
~ie ' : · Aemc ~~~ed.
:::_awr1ftoc~a'•·~.aW . Flnllhld loMr ~eve~ (~ BA, .
n.... ga
apota.
car
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da~ Loll ollnfo. appolntminl,
will be level nMdl to be llni8Md,
Cell
111
IOidl 1118
to Include 3 Bill, 2· batha
{lllllter BR &amp; bath In loll
YACAHT LOTI Buy Them All LOT 1711/1110
Aane. ...., great room 20 x 25
lor $14,800.00. 3 level 1011. County water available.
calling. Private
County water avaU.blt. WooCIId 1o01110n . LOll. of dlcldng.
Colltty ICI!oolll• •4

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*21/2 bldhl

0007.

FARMABLE! Excellent bat!
production larm. 257 acrh
m/1 or . land, plenty of
pasture, tillable land, plenty
of woOded acreage witfl
matltetable ltrltbei. 2 large
h~~~~~~~~ nme bame, ml~e. ahedl,
;;
· garage &amp; corn 'crib. Farm

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A Neod A Car? No Crtdit, Bad
Creel~ Bonknlptcy? Wt Con Help
Ro&amp;Eotablloh Crodltl Mull llake
11$0 Waak Takt Homo, 15'1
Down On Caih Or Trade To
O'f_!lty For Thil Bonk Flnonclng, '
No, Crodlt Turn Downol 814·441·

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Twp. Gallla County; property offeril
lots of poaslbilltiBS priced at 34,900...
call today fllr dlrecllot •.

75ql'.

CHEERFULLY COZVII Put
down roots In lhls eaay to
love 3 bedroom ranch .
Kitchen &amp; dlnlrg .. room
comblrtatlon, living roam,
den, 1 car a~ garage.
Nice 1lzed lot w/lenced-ln
back lawn. And more with a
comfortable price of
$49,500.001111

OPTIONS,
OPTIONS,
OPTIONIII Owner willing to
deal. Over I ate of land that
has septic, ~ &amp; water,
and a i4' ll 10•·mobile home
with 2 ~- &amp; 2 balhs,
Will ·· consld•t aelllng all
logelher or wll ... eeperately.
Cal far dNIIL 1110 .

Chrysler

4411-4015.

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Pike

o~namntOIU-.•CIICIII•eu7.
IMDY~ Ill 1211

t9li5 Sa.,m SC2, AuWimttlc. Nr,
Crulao, AIIIFII Calttttt, Trun~
... $12,500 Cd 5 P.ll.
(S~rliiuo lnqul~. . omrll 11.4·

DON'T HAVE TO WAIT TO
MOVE INTO THIS
~le Harne, Only! 14' x 70" REMODELED
HOMEI
Clayton, 2 baths, 2 bedrooms, Roomy rooms, Including
living room, dining area &amp; large aet~n kitchen, balh, L.R
kitchen combination, (Island w/ big picture .window. Easy
khchenl Included In sale 2 to mow level lawn. Dslachlld
deckl, 2 etorage buildings &amp; garage &amp; storage bldg. Call
more. ReaHy nlcel Asking todayl 1117
$13,500.00 1124

PRICE REDUCED to $199,000.00

• Flrepi8CI wllh l,..rt
*Full B1nment With WOOdbumer
* aa-Mid In Porch For Outdoor En~
• 4 Bay Glrlgl with Bltlment· SUIIble for Sllble

I 885 Mon.. CillO lS All Powfr,
~Rooo
Law
llllillgo
llull·Itt
ToSpolar,
AppiKIIlt
i'h9M No.lloj..:ZS0.1401. ·

COUNniY JEWELl Lovely
spacious home that Is the
right size lor a large family or
lhoae who just like extra
space. 6 bedrooms, Ioyer,
formal living room, dining
room, kitchen, laundry ·&amp;
more. Remodeled with
newercarpat,lumace&amp;rool.
Paved d~ve, 5 ~cres m/1,
large bam. le28

22 ACRES OF ROWNO COUNTRY
SIDE accompmy this secluded block
hunting lodge. IOCilled in Addison

RIO GRANDE • COMMERCIAL
LAND • FARM LAND - HOME
Appr'ox. 8 acres total.
SITES • YOU NAME IT. 147 acres
~IVER L9T IN THE CITY • 2.3 . mJ1 with approximately 1 1/2 mile$ ol
acres f!\11, Approx. 234 fl. frontage on road fronlag9 on State Route 325 &amp;
the Ohio River. All utilities available. Pleasant valley Rd. Broker owrted:'
Old home '011 property.
$450,000

ovet1ool!lng the Ohio River with a
RENTAL PROPERTY INVESTMENT: slclrage btiklng, stBps going down lo
This package consists of 2 houses hibeai:h &amp;a large dock. $1'7,®0. . ·
and 2 single apartments. The inCQmo
from lhls will more than make your COMMERCIAL LISTING - Rio
They are located In lhe Grande area. 1.6 acres mJIIocated.on
of Vl~on $79,900 MAKE lhe.NE,corner of u.s. 411!ne 35 and
SR 325, lots~ potential. $49,000.00

4411-11537.

Directions: Located on Bulsvllle
lpiii'Olllmataly 5 miles from SR ·180.

l

.I .

BUILDING· OR
.IIIOBILE HOME LOT. ~ Mature Pine FISHERMEN'S-DREAM • 1'wo miles
.
·
Trees on lhB thrB9 ·skies. Access to . beloW the dam you•a find lhiS older LAKE DRIVE SUBDMSION· RIO
Raccoon Creek. Located In Hobart completely furnished 2 BR mobile GRANDE- Close to Unlversily- Lot
Dllon Subd. $11,900
home. ll'lele's an 8 x 24 deck 1121 , has water, · sewer &amp; el~c. ,

•

Here's a beautiful brick ran h on a 3.6 acre lot, m/1,
surrounded by scenic G lla County countryside.
Thla home Is built better an most and features 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, llvln room, large kitchen and
dining ar11a: Plus large walk out basement, large
deck and a 40 x 60 metal pole building perfecl for a
wortcshop. 1402

•

Service Center St. Rt. 87 Pt.
Pfoaunt &amp; Rlpt~ Rd. 304·895· 1881 Eogto AulD, $800, 814.....; "~~
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0159.
•

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After5P.M. ~ II.J;

era to Choo11 From. Keeler'a

go72.D&lt;l cond!Hon, $4500, 814·882·

Trllt "Hoi Spall.• Kill Flou,
Ticko, llooqoltoo &amp; Flloo On
Contact. Without Jnttrnol Pol·
oona. Alk J D NORTH PRO·
DUCE 114·441·1'833 About
HAPPY .JACK KENM:l DIP.

'"'EDIATE OCCUPANCY.

•

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