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•

Landers
1119.5, l..(u.
TIIN'I s~
Milli S~.

A 11~ki

w

c~

By ANN LANDERS
Dear Ann Landers: I come from a
big fannily. My married older broth er, "Mitch," had an affair with
"Suzy" about two years ago. He
eventually broke it off and reconciled with bis wife.
Here's the problem. Suzy started
seeing my younger brother, "Joey,"
who lives at home with my mother.
Mitch has turned very negati ve on
Suzy, and needless to say, his wi fe is

still biller about the affaiJ. They always nervous that the other one the provertiiaJ skunk. at the family us who so far have not been able to
refuse to attend any family functions might sbow up and creat5 a scene. picnic and Mitch is so full of guilt he · kick this habit7 1 can't believe I'm
where Joey and Suzy will be pre, We're thinking of setting up regular c•n't see straight
the only one, although I have never
sent. ":fitch won't even !lo. to my visitation at Mom's so that they'll · Dcf.rAnn Landers: Recently, you metanother "cheekchewer." -- C.N.,
!"other s as long as Suzy ts allowed know ~ho os where and when. Mom published a letter from "Golden DENVER, COLO.
on her home. ·
has started to worey about who will West," a person who had suffered
DEAR DENV.ER:' You say you
My husband and I are often the attend her funeral since she knows from compulsive hair pullinJ for 27 never have met another cheek chewones who entenain the family. We Mitch won't , show up if Suzy is years and through your column er. You may have and didn't know it.
are in the awl(, ward position of there.
found help 'for this condition, which People don 't generally talk about
deciding whether'\o invite Mitch and
What is the right thing to do? is l:nown as trichotillomania.
such things.
his wife or Joey and Suzy. If I tell Please help us out. -- · LONDON,
For at least 30 years, 1 have been
My advice to you is the same as
them they are bmh invited ..nei_ther ONTAR)O
chewing the inside of my mouth to the advice I gave to "Golden West."
woll show up. My mother os on a
DEAR LONDON: I would the point of heing sore, and yet, 1 See a psychiatrist, not for counseling
worse spot. She wants to see Mitch adhere . to Landers' Law of cannot stop biting and hurting but for medication. Or, if you are
and the grandchildren, but she does- Internecine Family Warfare. It goes myself.
,
·
lucky enough to have an excellent
n't want Joe~ to move away. Mom is like this: Invite whomever you want.
The help you gave "Golden physician•. he or she will prescribe
77 and a wodow. She ~oesn:t need If one of the invitees says, ''I'm West" gave me hope that there might the medication. P.S. By now, 'I'm
thos stress.
sorry, I won:t come if you invite X , be help for us cheek chewers, too. If sure you'v.e guessed the chewing is
We feel guilty visitiM either • or Y, or Z," you should say, "Sorry, you are acquainted with1his behav- rooted in what we used to call
Mitch or Jo&lt;;y, and when one of my we'll miss you."
. .
ior, will you ple~e write about it in "nerves."
brothers comes to our house, we are
P.S. It appe~rs to me that Suzy is your column for the benefit of all of
Gem of the Day (Credit Reader's

Holy Week services for
area churches announced•
Portland Racine Branch of the
Reorganized Church of Jesus Chnst
of Latter Day Saints
East~r sunrise services at 7 a.m.
Sunday, with breakfast and an Easter egg hunt to follow.
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Churth
Sunrise Service at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church in Mtddlcport will he held at 6 a.m. Sunday.
Worship s~rvice wilt be held at I 0
a.m. with Pastor Les Hayman.
Racipe First Baptist Church
Sunrise services at Racine First

Long Bottom/Reedsville UMC
Long Bottom/Reedsville United
Methodist Church Sunrise Service
woll he at Long BottQ.JII, 6:30 a.m.
w1th Sunday school at 9:30a.m. Warshop serv1ce at 10:30 a.m. with Rev.
Norman Butler.
Freedom Gospel Mission
Sunri se services at the Freedom
Gospel Mossmn, Bald KnobStovcrsville road. Long Bottom, will
be held- Sunday at 7 a.m. Pastor
Roger Wilford invites the public to
attend.
Hysell Run Holiness Churth
Sunrise services will be held at the
Hysell Run Holiness Church, 6 a.m.
Communion will follow. Sunday
school , 9:30 am . and worship service, 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
A cantata and drama, "He Lives,"
will be presented at the Middleport
Church of Christ at 6 a.m. Easter sunrise scrvoce, and 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Apri I I0.
Ree.dsville United Me~dist
Church
Good Friday services will be held
at Reedsville United Methodist 'at
7:30 p.m. Hal Kneen will be guest
soloist. Rev, Charles Mash, pastor.
invites the public.
Grace Episcopal Church,

B'optist Church will he held at 6:30
a.m. followed by a breakfast, Sunday
school at 9:30 Easter worship service
at 10:40 with communion, and Easter night service at 7 p.m.
Hillside Baptist Church
· An Easter cantata will be presented at tne Hillside Baptist Church,
Pomeroy, Easter morning at II a.m.
and again at 6 p.m.
Mt. Hermon United Brethren in
Christ Church
A musical entitled "Lord of Glory" I;Yi II be presented at the Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ
'Church by the youth, Easter morning
at6:30 a.m. Breakfast will be served
in the fellowship hall following the
sunrise service. Sunday school will
be at 9:30a.m. and ll)Orning worship
at 10:30 a.m. There will be ·no
Pom~roy
ev,ening service.
Good Friday Liturgy, 7 p.m. to
Chester United Methodist
include the Solemn Collects, VenerChurth
ation of the Cross and Mass of the
Good Friday service at 7:30p.m. Presanctified.
and Easter Sunrise Service at 7 a.m.
Holy Saturday, 7:30 p.m. the
will be held at the Che&gt;ter Uniteo;l Great Vigol of Easter including the
Methodist Church.
lighting of the Ne~ Fire, Holy Bap. Faithful Gospel Church
tism and the first Eucharist of Easter
Good Friday services, 7 p.m. Sun- at the Christ Church , Point Pleasant.
day sunrise services, 7 a.m. Pastor
Easter Sunday. 8 am. Layds, brief
Steve Reed invites the public.
service of prayers, psalms and scripMiddleport Good Friday service ture, and 10:30 a.m. Solemn festival
The Middleport Ministerial Asso- Holy Eucharost.
coation will have a community Good
Hemlock Grove Church
Sunrise service 6·30 p.m. m the
Friday scrvice .at 7 p.m. at the Mod-.·
dleport Church of Chnst, Fifth at Hemlock-Grove Church with break'Main. Special·music will be present- • fast to follow at the grange hall. Suned by a communoty chmr. Sharon day service at 9:30 a.m. with egg
Hawley, Amy Perrin, and AI Hartson. hunt.
Speaker will be Richard Nease of
Mt. Union Baptist Churth
Heath United Methodist Church.
Communoon/Candlehght Service,
Syracuse First Churth or God
Froday, 6:30 p.m. Sunnse services,
Special services at the S~racuse Sunday, 7 a.m. Easter Program, 6:30
First Church of God woll onclude p.m. Located 2 112 miles south of
Good Friday services. at 6 p.m. and Carpenter Pastor Joe M. Sayre
Easter mornong, sunnsc scrvoccs at onvitcs the public.
6:30a.m.

Digesa):' When you are young, y~'
want to be the master of your fate: , '
and the captain of your soul. Wh&amp;n
you are older, you'll seule for bei~g·
the master of your weight and the,
captain of youf bowling team.
!

---:--Society s9rapbook--SENIOR SAINTS
Goldie Love of Point Pleasant
was speaker at the recent meeting of
the Rutland Church of God Senior
Saint.s held at Dale's Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Love talked on healing of
the body by God's spirit. She is the
author of the book "The Greatness
of His Love."
Bob Eads had the blessing and
Jackie Preece led in ' the business
meeting. The group donated paper to
the church copier and signed several

Parkersburg, W. Va. recently.
get well and binhday cards.
A discussion was held about the
Plans were made for a trip to
Founder's
Day donner to be held
Hunti~gton. W.Va. this week, and to
April
25
at
the Sportsman Restautake yet another trip this spring .
Attending were Mrs .. Preece, rant in Athens. Ann Rupe, president,
Mary Romain, Nellie Hatfield, Bob had charge of the meeting attended
Eads, Yvonne Sexton, Homer by Charlotte Elberfeld, Carol
Preece. Mildred Ingram, Geraldine McCullough, Nlartha McPhail, Jane
Sexton, Joann Eads, Maxine Hart, Walton, Rose Sisson, Jean Powell.
Reva ~aughan, Clarice Kraut!Cr,
and Chester Sexton.
Velma Rue, Joan Corder and
SORORITY LUNCHEON
Eleanor
Thomas.
Members of Preceptor Beta Beta
·Next meeting will held on April
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
II
at Grace Episcopal Church.
had a luncheon at the Point of View,

USA TODAY
What a difference an hour makes.
The loss of one hour's sleep when
most Americans "spring forward"
Sunday to daylight-saving time causes an average increase'of 7 percent to
8 percent in traffic accidents. says
researcher Stanley Coren. He speculates the hour's change disrupts sleep

patterns, atfe~ting judgment and
attention.
Conversely, the switch back to
standard time in the fall causes a 1
· percentto 8 percent decrease. ·
As a nation, Coren says, we don't
sleep enough: "Our sleep deprivation
is so great that we skate on the brir
of disaster." U.S. research shows th '
cost of sleep-related accidents of I

'

The Community Calendar is Trustees, Friday, 6•30 p.m. at the
HARRISONVILLE -· Easter egg 1 MONDAY
published as a free service to non- · Township hall.
hunt, Scipio fire department, SaturPOMEROY
Big Bend Farm
profit groups wishing to announce
day, preschoolers through I 0 years of Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.in. at
meeting and special events. The SATURDAY
age.
the Meigs High School Library.
SALEM CENTER-- Star Grange
calendar is not designed to promote
sales or fund raisers of any type. 778 and Star.Junior Grange 878, SatRACINE -- American Legion,
Items are printed as space perm its uoday. 6:30p.m. potluck supper fol- Post 602, Easter egg hunt, Saturday,
and cannot be I!Uaranteed to nm a lowed by a mcctmg at8'p.m. Inspec- . II a.m. for choldren, ages one to 15.
tion to be held with conferral of the Prizes will be awarded. Egg throws
specific number of days.
second degree in full form by degree for women to be a feature.
team .
FRIDAY
.
REEDSVILLE -- Clove Townshop

kinds on 1988 was·$56 billion, including 24.318 deaths and 2,474,430 disabling injuries.
Part of the problem, Coren says, is
a "macho" work ethic that sees
sleep as a waste of tome. However,
"Evolution dc~igned us to sleep
about 10 hours a. night." In 1910,
,...-.;·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
FALL &amp;WINTER HOURS
Open Tuesday-Friday 9:00-5:00
Saturday 9:0b-3:00
Closed Monday

'I'JII;
GRAVEI..V

SYSTEM

•

EASTER DINNER BUFFET
11:00 A.M.- 8:00 P.M.
- ~ Included .with regular items: Baked Ham,
Scalloped Potatoes, Candled Yams, Waldorf Salad
&amp; french 'cherry Cake.
"

6''

.$

satad
\nctudesert ear

VI.

/ -

,,••.

.....

Now Opa for the
Spriq S•ason

Complete line of ~eddlng &amp;
Vegetable Plan...
. Hanging Basket
(Blooming &amp; Foliage)
Geraniums
Shrubs, Trees, Azaleas
RoeeBushes
Open Oally H; Sunday 1-5

Foster Homes
are needed for
'.
Meigs County Children of all ages.
Call 9!J2·2117 for information and
to be part.of the effort. . ·

Golden Buckey" Card

•,

:_
Not as near as officials.hoped
.
.

By TOM·HUNTEA
· .Time•Sentlnel Staff
· POMEROY - Efforts to modify the structure of
, Ohio's welfare system are heing stalled, while human
:Service officials in each of Ohio's 88 counties formulate
~tate-requested reform proposals and state officials wait
- ~n a final blessing for the reforms from Washington,
D.C.

:
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Hubbard's Greenhouse'
.

Syracuae, Oh

992-5776

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-·
•
,
•
··
:·
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munity voice

"a

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Alive

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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
MERCERVILLE - A
projected ·return of stu- :
dents to the.Gallia County ·
Local School District
should a second high
school open will in part
defray startup ~nd operational costs if the former

100%

.H~ .,Tr~e ­

'992000

ThEi !1own side
7tireils v.tlere national perfonnance
has sigrlfficantiy ~ned:
,
.

'

. '
f t Reading achievement at grade
~ 12has-~reased. ·
·
· • ....-...~.
The Jl9rc8nli!!ll! 0 1~·'""'' .
• schoOl tetlcll8rs Who hold · .

60%--

-----.....:.,...

. O"k
'92 "'3

· "'
Qrada 12
. 100%,
100% --~......C..---'--±

t.;j ......

..:.;.

degreeslntheir~teacr,.inQ ~ ' . eoo;. .-------±:--±:-~

assignment has deCreaSed.:• .,,..

lillie~ The qap in adult edtlca!i&lt;lil .
. ~ pe111dpatlon bfitween adUlts
who h!lve looeived a hi!J) ··
school tiploma or less, and .
!hose wflo have adcltionaJ post~l. edUcation has .
I
t rug use
has Increased.

School building is
this fall, Gallia Local
administrators predict.
They currently expect
that 30 studen previously lost to o.r;n, e·nrqllment may
return to Gall Local clasSroolJI~ •t( a ·soutllem biaJi
school I re lly.
Propo
of the HTHS reopening have assured
administrato and the board of education that the figure
could oncreas significantly if the board opts for the
reopening.
The board
ed,a decision on the reopening proposal Thursday and srud it will make a decision at its regu·
lar meeting on April 22.
•
In the inlerilllo the board will examine a feasibility
study-containing fin"ancjal projections to either keep the
one high s'chool concepl: alivc at River Valley Higjl
School, or operate .RVI:fS and IJ'ru-*,'parate'· sccondtiry.
buildings to better serve
. Galli a Local's }jjgh$hool sru-·
dents.
~~.--~
The study also presents pros and cons on workin~.
a new, centrally· located high school.
_
"We know River Valley is overcrowded and thai Han-·
nan Trac~ may be one way of relieving that sitl!aticin,
there's no doubt about it," board memher John Davis
said. "But l,'ve asked about the expense of modulars, and
that's another way, so we're looking at several different
options."
Gallia Local Treasurer Debbie Ratliff said HT area
citizens have provided the district with lists almost doubling the amount of students expected to return if HTHS
opens.
"Depending on .how many students come back. il
may reduce the cost of opening another buildinJ,"
Ratliff said.
Continued on page A2

fioo,:, _____ ,_"'..,_.,....,...__

400,;; -!!!::!"-:
·.
20%
O"lo
'992000

.til·

.The sale of drugs at school.has increased. .

Gannett Newo service

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WASHINGlON- The rising controversy over tobacco industry cam. paign contributions to Congress is not
stopping most are,a candidates from
accepting them.
·
A new study by Common Cause, an
advocacy group for government
reform, lists area members of Congress
who have accepted campaign funds
from the industry. They include: Reps.
Steve Chabot, R-Cincinnati ($6,250);
John Boehner, R- West Chester
($3 I ,506); Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis ($5,250); and Lee Hamilton, DNashville, Ind. ($18, 700).
Among senators, recipients include
Mike De Wine, R-Ohio ($33,000) .and
John Glenn, D-Ohio ($1,000).
A group called the Campaign For
Tobacco-Free Kids has challenged
members to· stop accepting tobaccorelated contributions.
·
Pledges to not accept tobacco
.money have come from two qemocratic challen&amp;ers: former ReR.,Ted Striclcland, D-Lucasville, in the 6th Congressional District and Mark Longabaugh in the 'lst Congressional District.
,
'
.
But most Tristate incumbents said they
had
no
plans
to
twn
back
tobac•
co· money, despite the criticism. Barry Bennett,. a spokesman for Gremeans, said the 6th District representative
does 'not agree with the tobac.
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Good Morning

Area lawmakers inhale tobacco company money

• "Easter has been real good this year," she said. "People seem to be buy:ing more pre-millie products:"
.
.
: She estimates thi~ season, 300 of the bunny cupcakes have been sold and
COntinued ~n page A2 .
••

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could _defray cost
of opening· HTHS

Campaign '96: ls$ues and politics

: By USA PETERSON
·.: Time•Senllnel Staff
: . GALLIPOLIS • If Julia Childs
• and the Easter Bu.nny should ever
·~ collaborate on a project,- their end
·~ product might look something like
t the baked goods of Patti Weaver.
.~ Weaver, a resident' of Gallipolis
; Ferry, W.Va., is the deli manager at
":Food! and olt ·Second AVenue and the
: person responsible for those dreamy
•showcase dessens at the deli.
.t She puts the extra swee~ness on
~ all kinds of sweets, from do.uglinuts.
; to cookies to cakes. ,
. ,
~ Though she admit~ her favorite
',
;project is cake decorating.
: When . you decorate a doughnut,
: •you just decorate a doughnut, she
Panl Weaver with her cl'lllllona
~said. lint the possibilities are endless
[with cakes.
'
l Weaver has free artistic design ·in·tlie bakery and tries lo create some.thing
lfor everybody. For Easter she designed a baskel i:ake with cherry tC?Pping,
~bunny. cupcakes' and cakes, cpokies with Easter motifs and a number of pas.

j. .

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..of House Bill 167. Some of the federally lljlproved
waivers include:
• lillowing the imposition of a t!vee:year·time limit,
but extending benefits to individuals who reach •he liroit
through no fault of their own;
.
• allowing for the sanctioning of pregnant recipients
' who fail to cooperate il\ an HMO substanc~ abuse
assessment and treatment, as lbng as there is a specific
protocol;
·
.·.,
.• allowing the signing of a self sufficiency contract as
process to move forward. But, there is going to a condition of eligibility;
have to be major legislation moved through the Ohio
• allowing for pay-after-performance;
General Assembly and Washington ·io do this," said
• requiring an unmarried pregnant minor to reside in
Mike Swisher, dire!tor of the Meigs County Department an aditlt supenisedliving arrangement;
·
of Human Services.
• establishing educational requirement for a peBOR
The new call for welfare reform comes as a result of 15 years or younger to have a high school diploma, GEl)
House Bill 167, signed into law in August by Governor or working toward one by age 21;
George Voinovich. The new law limits for the first time
• requiring child suppon cooperation and good cause
recipients of Aid to Dependent Children (ADC) to for non-cooperation;
·
monthly cash benefits for 36 months over a 60-month
.
· ·requiring paternity cooperation:
·· period. The bill made Ohio one of only a few states
"We've felt that the savings that were based in House
nationwide that has adopted statewide time limits on Bill I 67 would be the be'st for us to ~tart with in Meigi
cash benefits.
County. These 18 wai:vers that were included in thlil
Thus far, the federal government ha:; granted 18 or 21 cover a lot of what Franklin County is trying ·tO do ill
waiver requests to .Ohio to allow for the implementation
Continued on page A2

l----~--~----------~~~~~~~~~~----------------~~~;:~N~a~tio:n~ai~E~du~c;ru~~~G~oa~~~Pa;n~e~l::::::::::~F~~~nk~.P~o~mpa;;·~G~a~nn~e~tt~N=ew~s~S~e~N~~;•!J
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Editor'• Note: This ,. the first Installment of a continuing eerlea of Gannett
News Service,, Sunday Times-Sentinel articles,.entitled "Report·Card'on America," looking at Issues crucial In lhls election year.
Corporate downsizing,' the dramatic shift to the servoce economy, the widening
income gap, the high value placed on technology skills - all these trends have left
p~~~:ents looking for ways to protect their children and feeling a little desperate about
American Education in the 1990s.
.
"This'is all linked to the economic anxiety of ~ople," said Edward Kealy of the
Center for Education Funding.
"It's a survival rt~Jljlnse people11TC taking," said Kealy, "saying, 'I've got
to make sure my kids have·the hest education possible.'. "
.. .A'ro9ld ·Fege.frllJD the National ~~11grees.
•. .. .
_
"It's a.fealization the .new ~!'J~Itill commodity in the econotilic
system is really ~rainpower. "Fhete's tremendous anxiety ·amo11g
; parents about assuring their children are on the cutting edge."
This anxiejy, say educators, is why education surpasses such
issues as jb~s. crime and. deficits in various' national polls. And
any issue toJlliiJlg_voter worries, even a mostly local one such as
.· .
education,. will figure prominently .in the presidential election .
.. ·
In rural areas like southern Ohio, some educators see the ongoing struggle 'for equity in funding becoming more.pronounctd as advanced technologies become increasingly important 1''-~"''.'ck''"" '~;;;:i,&amp;i~'·'''''"''f'!i'i'W'-i'"''·'''""'"''M'''''''+'
to·curricular issues.
·
"We dop't want to see the emergence
of haves and have-nots in terms ohechnology," said Sllaron ' Yates, Ed.D.,
Coordinator of Graduate Education at
the University of Rio Grande. "This is
an equity issue of growing impOrtance."
Yates also sees a need to bridge the
gap between trad.itional classroom
.learning and the world of work.
· ''Theory and . knowledge are best
.learned if immediately applied," she
said. "I have become very interested in
- and have hecome an ad'vocate of 'school-to-work' programs."
liffo~"
The veteran Rio Grande educator
furtl)et views "service learning" and
greater sense of commtlnity" as essential elements to the future of education.
Yates said an enhanced sense of community is imponant because, " ...as isolates,
we cannot do what we need to do."
·
"We need a sense of vision and missil')n of where we can be in 10 to 20 years,"
Yates added.
.
When parents,and educators realize the schools they.need so badly are in such difficul,ty, this anxieiy becomes combustible: Consider:
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Continued on page A2

iJust
add.
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HEa~ter) eggs
Iand
sti.
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Middleport Church. of Christ
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Fifth at Main
992-2914

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Franklin County officials unveiled a plan earlier this
week which would cut the application form from 40
pages to two; allow people who earn more to keep more;
and require all able,bodied adults receiving assistance to
work.
•
The proposed Columbus-area program, People
Reaching Independence and Developing Earnings

.
(PRIDE), is one of the answers to tl)e Ohio Departmen!
of Human Services invitation to each county for development of reform proposals.
The proposal's goal is to assist people in becoming
self-sufficient so they can leave tbe welfare rolls. ill the
Columbus-area, low unemployment rates and numerous
job opportunities afford Franklin County officials an
optimistic view when exannining the plan.
In other areas 9f the . state, particularly southeast
Ohio, officials are concerned about the formulatiQn pf
reform proposals. The concerns are directed mai'ry
toward the possibility that such proposals won't ever·go
into effect unless state and federal governments allow
counties to break a nutl)ber of rules concerning welfare.
"I think every&lt;&gt;ne wants reform, and the time is right

Vol. 31. No.9

Return·of student$

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~norlhe

Breakfast - 7:00 am
Worship I - 8:15 a~
Sunday School • 9:30 am
Worship II· 10:30 am

IT TAKES ACOMMUNITY TO
PROTECT ACHILD

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Gnll1polis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt. Pleasilnt • Apnl 7. 1996

elfare reform:

"

before the invention of the modern
lightbulb, we slept about 9 . hours;
today, it's ·about 7 112.

A dramatic presentation of the Easter cantata He~
with a cast of more than 80 people!

&amp;oess

OPEN 7 DAYS: 8:00A.M. TO 8:00 P.M.
FRIDAY NIGHT SEAFOOD: 3:00 TO 8:00 P.M.

PAGEANT
WINNER .
MIIFkanz~ Redman, daughter
of flay · and Mandy Redman,
Maion, W.Va. won the prettiest
eyes 41nd tirat place In beauty
In the .one-year-old-group .at
· the Sunburst Beauty . Pageant
held recently In Parkersburg.
She received trophies, a banner, a crown, and hal her beauty fee paid to tM l8tll finale to
be held In May at HarrlaoniJI,Irg,

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

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Sunrise Service • 6:00 am

ALL·U·CAN·EAT

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Most people quickly respond "I. know that."
But the question we would like to ask is this: .
"If Easter is so much more than candy or bunnies, why not make a concentrated
effort to worship the ONE whom Easter is all about- Jesus Christ?"
We'd like to invite you to join us this Easter for an inspirational time of worship
as we celebrate the risen Christ.

RAVENSWOOD, WV

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Reported ill were Ethel Arbaug))
and Opal Eichinger. The death ~f
Ada Bissell was noted and a card
from the family was read. The chai;
ter. will be draped for her at the ne:ll
meeting and member~ were remind'
ed to wear white.
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A letter was read from H~len
Taylor about the state sessio~ ~t
Marietta to he held in August.
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The rally to be held on April ~7
was noted and mcmhers were askca
to make luncheon reservations wit~
Bette Biggs. A practice for the ral)y
will be on April 21 at the Senior q~
izens Center, I p.m. State sessiqn
reservations are to be made with
,,
Joan Baum.
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The flagbearers escorted Ernla
Cleland to the altar for recogni.ti\ln
of her binhday. Mrs. Baum ~ad
"Dearest Kind of Friend", and
Esther Smith gave "Special Person"
and "Do You Know What a Birthday
Card Is?" She was presented witn a
gift from the Council.
Refreshments were served by,the
Good of the Order Committee.
Atten.ding were Ethel Orr, Mary
Holter, Margaret Amberger, Doris
Grucser, Lora Damewood. Roberta
- Maidens, Laura Nice, Marcia KeHor,
Jean Welsh, Kathryn Baum, Evereu
Grant. Joan Baum, Mae McPeek,
Esther Smith, Mary Barringer,
Goldie Frederick, Elizabeth Hayes,
Erma Cleland, Thelma White;
'Deloris Wolfe, Opal Hollon and
Betty Young.

''EASTER Is MORE-'' than candy or bunnies!

.MOM'S SMOBOASBOBD

Low: 208 ·'

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or

Dangers in sleep-stealing at daylight-saving
By KAREN S. PETERSON

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-Featured on pt~ge C1

who is impossible to buy for: .
Send a self;add~, long, bUll··
ness-sire envelope and a check
•money ol-der for $5.25 (tlils•
Includes .postage and lumdlitlg).
to: Collection, c/o Ann Landen;
P.O. Box 11562, Chicago, ·Ill.:
60611-0562 (ln Canada, $6.25). ;;

charge.

other prizes are, left, firefighters Skipp Johnson, Scott Curl, John Bechtle and Brant Manley. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel photo)

:Jellowslllp
and.frlendsltlp

"A Collection of My Favorite'
GeQJJ of the Day" is the perfec:t:
little gift for that spec:ial someone'

· of America, met recently at the hall
with Goldie Frederick, councilor, iri

· Members of the Middleport Fire Departml!nt
fill the last of nearly 2,000 eggs for Sunday's
annual Easter Egg Hunt at General Hartinger
Park. Filling the eggs with gift certificates end

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Chest~r Council 323, Daughte~

-----Community calendar-----

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rations--...., Chester
D of A
meets.

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Friday, AprilS, 1991:

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Lander's Law of Family Warfare says you ·can't please everyone
Ann ·

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Pqe 12 • The Dally Senti~l

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Today•s Gttm..-Jt;;;l'"•l

co industry on all issues but
·
16 Sections- 154 Pages
needs help to hofd onto his congressional seat in this year's
Calegdeg
election.
ClepiQcck
D3·7
With organized labor expectComjCs
lpsert
ed to provide help to challenger
Strickland, "We'll take whatever
A4
Editodeb
help we can .get," the aide to ereOfl!tuaries'
A6
means said.
Spof1s
BI-ll
Strickland said he is ' conWet!ther
AZ
vinced "there are some real ethical problems" with the tobacco
industry and made a decision not
Colu mns
to solicit money from tobacco
PA,Cs.
Jack Andenog
M
He said the country should try
8obHoe0kh
Cl
to help tobacco fannets switch to
1
Ann "'""n
new crops. "I think we ought to
Cl
J!mSaptll
try to help the tobacco farmer.
C4
..while at the same time holding
C4
Dorothy Sm!!
the tobacco industry account~
OIUo Volley ...bllohiq C...
able," Strickland said.
While the tobacco indpslry is
under attack on many legal and regulatory fronts, its contributions to Congress seem to be preventins ~ny action against the industry the{C, Common Cause charges.
Tobacco companies gave $4.12 million in political contributions ia
1995 and have given $20.6 million o~er the past decade. "With their
to the wall and standing aa:used of encouraging cigarette sales to children• · ·
the tobacco industry lw reiponded with record-setting contributi~IIi-geted to buy reaulll," Common Cause'l'laident AM McBride said. •

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State. troopers mo~rn pilots killed in cras·h

Sunclly, Aprl7 ·

By MICHELE CARTER

AccuW f01ecut- for

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~tlnel Staff
Young recallettflying with l\Jm.
POINrPI:.EASANT, W.Va. -As er for eight hours a day following a
Wesl V~rginia state lrllOpers uound prison brdllk in Moundsville a few
thestategrievethelossofrwooftheir yearsago.
Toledo 37"
' own, local law enforcement offi~rs
"We're talking low, lref· lop flying
and emergtncy personnel remember and Mall never lost his enthusiam,"
their times with Lt Matt Thmer and Young said.
retired trooper Wayne Childress.
Turner paid for a lot of his aviaTurner and Childress were killed lion training himself, according lo
Thursday morning in a Stale police . Young. Once he got into the departhelicopter c~h in Charleston. Tum- ment's aviation, Thmcr, as well as all
er.was the head of the Stale police avi- the other pilots in the division,
'ation division and Childress was a received extensive r~sponse training
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former head 'or the iii vision.
m case of problems m the air.
Columbus!3.,.
Dick Young, reiired state police . WheJI he heard about the crash on
lieutenant colonel of Point Pleasant Thursday, Young said he never imagspent a lot of lime in the air with both ined Turner Wa!i the pilot .
men as a major and lieutenant
"!'have no doubt. unless there was
coloneL
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a
mBJ·or
. mechant'cal m
· alfuncb'on, that
.
"They
were
exceptionally
gooll
Turner
did
all
he
could
do to land the
,
pilots,"
Young
said.
"I
would
not
heshelicopter
safely,'"
~oung
S31·d. "He
W. VA.
itate to fly with either one ofthem nt w.ould never
do
anyth
ng
to
j'eopar·
·
1
.
any time."
d1ze the rurcraft or passenger's with
Young niet Childress right after he him." ·
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came out of the academy: He rc;memLast week, Sgt. G.L. Clark. Point
bered one tnp be,made wtth Childress Pleasant Detachment commander,
when they were caught between • during yearly in-~ervice, attended a
wcat~r systems. To av?td,the weath- class:taught by Thrner. He also spoke
er,
Childress dropped mto the New to him briefly before leaving Institute
VIa AssoclattJO Press GrsphlcsNet
'River Gorge, approximately 30 feet last Friday.
. above the water, and fl~w to Hawk's . Clark said Turner was·always in a
Nest, landmg m a parking lot.
good mood and was very profes- ·
The retired lieutenant colonel said sionaL He had flown with him many
he '."et Turner ata cad~t at the Stale times in Mason County during mar- ·
Pohce Academy m lnsutute.
ijuana eradication, as well as searchBy The Associated Press
. "He was alw~.ys gun-ho_an~ ded- es for vehicles and people.
. Mother Nature will continue to in, temperatures and sunshine ,.;ill ICated to h1s JOb, Young satd. Tum"'Turner was available around the
play tricks on Ohioans over the return to more seasonal normals.
er always did what he ~as tolil and clock, he told us all we had to do was
weekend and into next w~ek.
Weather conditions for Sunday never questioned·orders." , . .
call and he was available if conditions
Unseasonably cold weather where will be a mix of sunshine and clouds
temperatures will be 10 to 20 degrees with . a chance for snow showers.
below the normals for this time of Highs will range from the mid 30s
year will continue over Ohio. Normal north to the lower 40s south.
WASHINGTON (;\P)- The fed· in Delaware. , _
highs range from the mid-50s nonh
The chance for flurries will dimin· There he presided in late afternoon
to the mid-60s far south . Nighttime ish on Monday. The best chance for era I workers killed in the Oklahoma
lows are in the mid-30s to the lower the snow will be .over lhe northeast City bombing a year ago and those a_t the return from Croatia of the bod40s south.
half of the state. Highs will range who died with Commerce Secretary ies of Commerce Secretary R'on
The cause for . this inclement from the mid 30s northeast to the mid Ron Brown in a1Jiane c~ this week Brown and 32 colleagues from govdemonstrated that ·gqvernment has ernment and business who had joined
weather was a cola unstable arctic 40s south. '
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nobility and purpose, President Clin· him on a trade.mission to lhe Balkaairmass spinning and holding firm
ton
said Saturday.
ns, ravaged by years of ethnic strife.
over !he Great Lakes and Ohio ValWeather
forecast:
Returning
from
Oklahoma
City
A Bosnian and a Croatian also died
ley regions. It will continue to cause
Sunday... Partly to mostly cloudy. where he himoied the 168 people when the Air Force jetliner slammed~
flurries and scattered snow showers
over non~m Ohio and nprthwest A phance of snow·showers northeast killed in the truck bombing of that into a hill while attempting a bad- ·
Pennsylvania during the period, anytime with a chance of snow show- city's federal building nearly a year weather landing.
"These Americans literally gave
especially Sunday.
. ers remaincler of the state during the ago, Clinton set off Saturday on "a
. A wedge Of high pressu~ througll af~&amp;moon. Cold with a high 'In the sad journey" to Dover Air Force !lase their lives bringing to others the
the Mississippi Valley will gradually miiiJOs northeast, to 40 to 45 south.
inove east jnto ·the western Great
Sunday nighL.Mostly cloudy with
Lalces and lower Ohio Valley through a chancb- of snow· showers early
~unday and eventually build over the
west, then clearing. Mostly cloudy
North Central accreditation stanConllnJJed from page A1
entire Great Lakes regipn toward the east Snow showers like,ly nonheast
dards, which the district abandoned
end of the week. It Will build in as the with a . chance of snow showers
"It's all speculation at this point, a's pan of its reduction ' plan to _pay
upper low pressure gradua1Jy moves southeast ·
but it's possible and we are starting off the state loans.
out of the area. Once the high b»ilds
to get commilmenls," she addnd.
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The possibility of reopening
The board was presented with a
·
HTHS
is still questioned by a group
projected
startup
cost
of
RVHS
parents and citizens conof
$126,031.32 to reopen Hrns. but
HT parents agreed to help slash the cerned about the cost and the impact
Conlln!llld from page A1
expense by more than $30,000 of the reopening oo the district.
:· • In 1'989, governors met in Char- educators: 9 of I0 Americans sur- through their. o.wn efforts.
. Ron Toler.. a member of the
t\iuesville, Va., to ·~t National Edu- ...vned by u,s. News &amp; World
group,
has strflSs.ed thar the group is
Athletic 'equipment and uniforms
cation Goals to be achieved by the Report· thought students should nol for a second building is estimated at not opposed to reopening HTHS to
graduate wiihout passing e11ams.
year 2000.
$26,500, but parents ana other ciii- serve HT and Southwestern area stuEducation reformers intent on zens pledged to raise the funds dents if- the administration proves
But m9re than halfway to the target year, the most crucial goals slip shaking up schools have overlooked themselves.
it's economically feasible.
away: reading proficiency levels are what parents want most - a disci·Jn addition, a $1,000 cost to
At the same time, the group ,
dropping, studrnt drug use increas- · plined classroom - say several . repaint the building, closed since W'lllts to know if information that
• ing, frequency of classroom disrup- polls.
1992, · may also be shifted off the called for a single high school in
. "It's discipline," said Frederick district's shoulders because resitions rising, and the percentage of
1991-92 and led, to the crea~f
seeondary teacl)ers holding degrees Hartwig of Peter Hart Research·· dents offered to do the work, Ratliff RVHS was inaccurate..
in, primary teaching as~ignments is Associates, who probed education said.
The group, as yet unnamed, orgaissues during the primaries. "People
down.
Assisting the case for reopening nized last week and invited board
· • Despite risirig ·school budgets, just feel schools · are no longer the HTHS is a recommenda.tion from
members to a meeting at RVHS on
money. spent on children In regular orderly places the public expects." Jack Hunter, supervisor of school April16 at 7:30p.m.
education classes has remained flat.
An astute, reader of . polling facilities for the state Depanment of
The number of kids ill. special ed ·
Education, who said the district
continues to rise sharply - they trends, President Clinton- moved "should follow through on your prosoak up the bulk o.f new school · early to make education his issue. In posal to reopen this building."
·
spending; while special ed students a flurry of speeches and school visHunter
toured
the
building
three
are aqout 12 percent of a district's its, he urged everything from school weeks ago and noted that it had been
Continued from page A1
population, many spend double that uniforms to wiring every school to "~aintained well" in spite of energy their reform proposal," said Swisher.
the Internet.
to meet the need. •
defects that could. be corrected
As for the issue -of payment to .
. • 13 percent of all college stuChallenging the GOP - which through use of H.B. 264 funds for recipients after work performance,
dents need at least one remedial has many members who favor abol- the renovation of energy-inefficient Swisher explained that ·this position
course.
school bijildings.
is one which has been long advocatishing the Education Department · • The move toward raising school Clinton lavished more spending in
The district •~knowledged that ed by the Ohio Human Service
standards foundered over "political his 1997 federal budget. proposing OJ!!ln enrollment - allowing stu· Directors Association.
·
. correctness" issues surrounding cur- $1 ,000 scholarships for the brightest dents to transfer freely to other . "Also in the reform war~. the
ricula proposed by national academ- students, more high-tech money for . school di'stricts ·- has hun Gallia state is being more flexible il) the
ic ·organizations. And as Connecticut schools. and more "Goals 2000" Local to the tune of $200,000 per · disregards for earned income. This
reformers discovered, the move to money to help districts plan for year lost in state aid.
is to allow . recipients to make the
raise standards draws unexpected · higher standards.
HTHS supporters have noted the transition into the working · world in
foes - upper middle-cl$s parents
defection of their students to Fair- a better fashion ," added Swisher.
fe~ring raising standards for all
land and Gallia A~ademy high
The th~Jle waiv.er requests denied
sc,hools actually will lowet stan· While Sen. Majority Leader B~b schools due in pan to the distance to Ohio by the· federal government
dards in their sch0$lls.
Dole has yet to make clear how he they must travel to get to RVHS. included: to deny food stamps to
The standards movement has -will use education issues in the cam- They told the board ThurSd~ the recipients who are sanctioned for
made little progress despite over- paign, he favors vouchers and likely exodus from the southern end of the non panicipation through the JOBS
whelming approval by parents and will join the criticism House Repub- coul)ty would continue if tilt&lt; single p~ogram'; to deny Medicaid to adults
licans waged . against Education h1gh school concept was maintained. who .fail to cooperate in JOBS or ·
Department spe-nding: Out of the
Curriculum·wise, a move to two non-compliance with laws govern760 programs overseen by • the high schools will prompt an increase ing ADC; and to allow simplificadepartment, only a handful support in · the number ·Of educational units tion of the rules governing the Sub(US~ .515-1100)
the basics of reading, writing and students - arc now offered. RVHS sidized Employment Program
Published eaob Sunday, 82.S Third Ave.,
math, they say.
, ,
Gallipolis. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pltbtisllinl
now has 40.6 units, but the district's (SEP).
Company!Oannett Co.. Second class poslage
"Welfare reform is a hot topic
If there is hope for school reform, projection is that five more . units
f'llid at Gallipolis. Ohio 43631. En1ered as·
now,
politically. I think this is just
1ee0nd cla.u mailing maHer at Pomeroy. OIUo,
it may be found among business will be needed if HTHS opens.
~I Office.
the
fi..St
step toward reforming the .
leaders a_nd governors of both parAdministrators said rhe units and
ties who gathered last month in New staffing would be revamped to meet whole process. It seems that everyMn~~ber. The Associated Pras, and the a.iO
one is saying the, same thing, I JUSt
N&lt;wopaper Alsociadon.
York to renew the push for higher
hope rhat everything comes to pass,"
standards.
SVNDAVONLY
said
Swisher.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
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be partly cloudy, cool

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were right to·fly," lhe sergeant said.
"Turner was very safety conscious," Clark said. "He always
checked the whole aircraft over
before taking off.·
A cadet cl~smat&amp; of Childress,
Clark said he and Turner were both
dedicated family men. Childress had
a son and Turner had three-children.
Sgt. Dale Humphreys said he had
worked with both men and is on the
lislto be an honor ~uard at the·fu.nerals. While stationed in Charleston,
before coming 10 · Point Pleasant,
Humphreys said he could remember
seeing Thrner every day.
At onto time: Humphreys said he
was really into boating and would
"allipolis Marimeet Ch'ldre
t ss at the ..,
bo
·
nato go on atmg trips.
Yi
'd Ch'ld r ·
oung sruhe p t. · ress
would bring
h'ts boa
Ito I
omt PI easant Regat·
ta.
"He loved coming to this regatta,
he_ always said it was the best
around, .. Young said.
·
• Young said one 'of his most vivid
memories of Childress was after a
hel1copter crash in 1982 which killed
the pilot.
Young said he had weekend ditty
at the acadt'!lly. While making
rounds, he noticed the lights On in the
aviation. Since he was alone, he went
overto See what was going on. When
he entered the building, Childress
was sitting in a chair crying. Chi Idress then told Young abo'ut the accident.

Reopening Hannan Trace

blessings of a· normal life that too
often .we here take for granted," Clinton said in his weekly radio address,
recorded for broadcast Saturday.
He said there ·Was a common lesson from the. devastation in Oklahoma City and the plane crash.
"Sometimes it takes a terrible
tragedy to illuminate a basic truth : In ,
a democracy, government is not them
versus us.·We are all us. we are all'in
it together," he said. .
·
"Government is our neighbors
and friends helping others pursue the·

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GALLIPOLIS ~ U.S. Rep. Frank A. Creineans, R-Gallipolis, is
now 3fcep\ing nomination applications for U.S. military academies.
Application packets are available at Cremeans' Hillsboro district office.
An applicant must be a U.S. citt.:en, a residenl of the Sixth Congressional District, at leastl7 years tild by July I, 1997, a high schoOl
graduate and have achieved high academic standing to qualify.
. Also considered are the applicant's qualities for leadership, athletics, comm·unity service, class rank, grade point average, and ACT or
SAT scores.
'fl:te deadline for complet~ applications is Nov. 15,; 1996.
!'or more information, contact Helen Hiestand at the Cremeans district office in Hillsboro at 513-393"8688.
·

dreams we .all share: to live in peace, ·
provide for ourselves and our loved
ones, and give our children a chance
for an even beuer life."
In the Republican response delivered Saturday, ~p . Robert Ney, ROhio, said Republicans join in
mourning the victims of the plane
crash .
"Those ah9ard that plane - Sec-·
retary Brown, our men in uniform,
our business leaders - were in
Bosnia trying to help the United:.
to rebulld lhe. sha1- ·
States in working
.

Parent meetings slated in Meigs districts
· POMEROY- Karen Smith, parent mentor for the Meigs County
Schools. will explain 11ew policies and procedures for special education at parent sessions slated for the Southern Local and Meigs Local
school districts.
Parents with questions are invited' to !!!lend any of the meetings.
Smith will d:scuss the parent's role and responsibility in special education. .
Smith will be in the Southern Local district from 8:30 a.m.- 11 :30
a.m. Tuesday at Letart Elementary, Wednesday at Southern High
Sohool; and Thursday at Portland Elementary.
In the Meigs Local distrlc~ there will be one district-wide meeting
for parents at 6:30p.m. 1\tesday in the Meigs High SchQollibrary. Child
care and refreshments will be available at the meeting.
· Anyone.who is unable to attend the meetings with more questions
about the parent's.role may call Sl'lith at the Meigs County Educational
Service Center, 992-3883.
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Piuk district items $tolen from depot
GALLIPOLIS - The, theft of items stored by the 0.0. Mcintyre
Park District in the old Gallipolis freight depot is under.investigation
by Gallipolis City Police.
.
Tho districl informed officers l'ri!lay thai the building on the 900
block of Third Avenue had been entered and railroad spikes, pitchforks,
shovels .and various tools were removed.
Time of the theft is unkno'¥n: The value of the missing ilems was
placed pt around $500.
Authorities are also investigating pther theft reports filed late in the
week, including:
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• Trinia-Manin. 46-1/2 Mill Creek Road. Gallipolis, who ipformed
city police Friday that her mountain bik~ ~as taken while parked out·
side of a residence on-Ute 1100 block of Second Avenue.
• Debra Kay Ryan, 830 Third Av~ .• Gallipolis, who reported to police
Friday that her wallet was slolen from her residence March 3L The
wallet con.tained cash and identification.
• Employees of the Guy an Valley General Store, 13330 State Route.
·218, Crown City, informed the Gallia County Sheriff's Department that
the srore was entered early ThU(Sday and 17 cartons of cigarettes were
taken .. Entry was made by breaking out the front door glass, accord-ing .to the report.

PAIN CONTROl CLINIC
WEIGHT CONIROL

TO ACCOMMODATE THOJE WORKING PEOPU,
. WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAYS .
. . (POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

Two-car crash causes minor injury
GALLIPOLIS ·- · Minor -injury was reponed to a driver· in a twocar .private property accident Friday at. 964 J)rchard Hill.Road, Gal- ·
lipolis, the Gallia County Sheriff's Depannfent reP,Orted.
Jody M. Hall, 32, 899 Orchard Hill Road, refused treatment at the
scene, deputies said.
·
According to the report, Hall was backing out.of a driveway at6:03 .
· p.m., failed to see a westbound car driven by Phyllis M. Plymale; 56.
. 1003 Orchard Hill Road, and collided.
· Damage was severe to PlymaiC:s cai and moderate to the Hall vehi-

ene
John$osn
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NNOU""'CE
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SINGLE COPY PRICE
Sunday .............: ........................................ 11 .00

NO subscriplionr ~Y OJ4il pennlued in
motor can1er servia: il available.

areAl

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The Sunday Tirra·Sendnel will not be m.poos.ible (Of' Ddvanc:e payme:nlllhlde t'o c;arrien.
• •Dolly ... Sonoby
·MAIUVliSCIUI'TIONS
J.ooiile
County

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13 w.eu .............: .:................................ S21.30

2 6 -................................................. S$3 .82
S2W..U ....................... ....................... $10l.s6
..... Otdoldt
Cotati)'
13 Woeb ............... : .............................,.. $29.11
%6 - .............:................................... $56.61
S2, Weel&lt;s ...............................,............ :.$109.72

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"By committing ourselves to
local standards we're saying that
we're going to change the current
situation thai measures how much
time students spend in their seats,
but not how much goes into their
heads," saiil Gov. Tommy Thomp:·. son. R-Wis .. on Dole's short list of
running-mates.

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Stockp82

NEW 1 6 CHEVY.' C~ARO

As low

Said Nevada Oov. Bob Miller:
"Kids in Germany a~ France aren'l
smarter than ~ncan ki~s- TJ.te
o~ly dtfference 1~ that they ve had
htghe~. expectations placed on
them.

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Paymant.baaed on $1Soo down or trade.
mo. closed and
le11e doas not Include tax or title fees. Thru 5th 3rd Blink ·
Ohio Raaldanta Only.
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~uthorities
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All-lENS (AP) - A Nelsonville
man who es~aped from law enforcemen! authonbes for the thnd bme '"
17 years was recaptured on Fnday;
Hockmg . (;ounty
shenff s
~eput1es, workmg ~n an anonymous
up, apprehended Mtchael E. Waddell
aro11nd 7:45p.m. m a wooded area
south of Logan. He was transported
to the Athens County jail.
.A~thorities sai~ a ~oman arrest'.ed wnh Waddell, 1den11fied as Teresa Waddell, 32, of Logan, was also

o

'616 E•ster• u1to1
Gallipolis, 011
446·3672 or

~~;;;;;;~;;;!·~~~~-100-~~52~1~-ooa~.~··~ •.

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',

RU1LAND ..,... Rutland Village Council hirild an operator for the
village's waste warer treatment plant at a special council meeling Friday at the Rutland Civic Center. ..
Joseph Owens was hinld op a probationary basis pending waste
water licensing by tlte state.
In addition, current operator Dale Han was retained on a 3-2 vote
as the village's licensed sewage plant operator and to do testing at the
plan! until Owens becomes certified.
Co11ncil 111embers Dick Feny, D111ny Davis and Rosemary Eskew
voted to retain Han while council members Gladys Barker and Judy
Denney voted asainst.
. .
Also present were Mayor JQIIIUI Eads, Cleric Kathy Stewart and village employee David D~vis.

.

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By AARON MARSHALL
Qw,.'latt News Service
COLUMBUS T New legislation
is needed to reduc~ the unreasonable
and systematic }•lays riddling the
state's death penalty process. ·
.
That was !he verdict deliver~ by
a review of death penalty cases in the
slate appeals process done by the
Ohio Attorney General's office on
Thursday.
·
"Our review, quite frankly, was a
surprise to me ... Our review revealed
that many death penalty cases sit idle
-literally idle- without action for
many months. " Ohio AG Betty
Montgomery said.
.
As Montgomery announced her
desire ,to trim delays out of the death
penalty appeals pr()!:ess, she was
flanked at the news conference by
·
legislators pledging to introduce bills
with just that aim, including Slate
Sen. Jim Carnes, R-St. Clairsville.
"In order to ensure that lhe death
penalty serves as an effective deter:
rent to crime, we mus1 take action i~
eliqtinate unnecessary delays in the
•ap~als_ process,·: Carnes said of the!
legtslat1on he wtll ·mtroduce in the
ty Sherlff'a Department In 1986 as a part-time dispatcher and cor·
senare
next week.
rections officer, waa recently promoted to road deputy by Sher·
"This legislation is an .important
iff James D. Taylor. (T·S.photo)
·
step in moving these ca~cs forward
rience: she will bring knowledge and · Pierce and her husbaQ.d. Steve, and making sure that justice is served
in a timely manner," he said.
expertiSe to her new position as a reside in Bidwell . ~
·
Carnes' ·bill would essenhally
·road patrol deputy."
.have two provisions. First. it would
· force the AG 's office to do an annual review of the status of deatli
penalty cases similar to the conducted
by Montgomery's office.
jailed and cliarged with harboring a plan, Castle said.
The bill would also ban defense
fu~itive from justice: Theit relation- · Deputies gave him an audio surship was not tmmedJately known.
veillance wire to aid in the under- attorneys who are found to have givMichael Waddell, 44, who origi- cover ojleration . But when he was en ineffective counsel in capital casnally was being held on a charge of taken ro the house near Coalton es from doing public defender ,work.
That second provision dovetails
complicity to burglary. ·escaped on where he said the items were, he
Monday, said Athens County sheriff's threw off the wire and fled into the · nicely with another .Carnes bill currently _in the senate's Judiciary com-.
Lt Vern Castle. Waddell was charged woods ..
with escape.
.
·
. mittee.
Waddell told authorities' he want- ·-~---.!!_III
JII!'I________
ed to help them recover jewelry, inoney and guns stolen in a burglary in
December thai he allegedly helped

_______

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romers are being advised . to boil
water used for human consumption ·
until further notice.
Meanwhile, a boil order for TP·
·cwD customers in the Tuppers
Plains area continues following a
water line break near Tuppers Plains.
The Order affects GUStomers from
Success Road and State Route 7 to
Tuppers Plains. the community of ·
1\tppers Plains, Pine Tree Drive, and
SR 681 between Rice Run Road and'
Alfred. Residents along several
Athens County roads are also under
the boil order.

REMOUNT AND
GIMSTONI SA I.E!

\1

o~o lil&gt;b

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks·
The jackpot for Saturday's Super
By The Asaocilatad Press
The following pumbers were Lotto drawing was $24 million.
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
WEST VIRGINIA
Virginia lotteries:
Daily 3: 0-9-1
Daily 4:·6-9-3-6
OHIO
Cashc25: 2-3-7-12-13-15
Pick 3: 4-4· 1
Pick 4: 6-5-9-0
.Buckeye 5: 4-5-7-32-36
There was one ticket sold naming
all five numbers drawn ·in Friday
night 's Buckeye 5. drawing and it's
wonh $100,000, the Ohio Lottery
said.
The winning ticket was purchased
at Bud's Pony Keg in Cincinnati .
There were 132 Buckeye 5tickets .
with four of the numbers, and each is
wonh $250. The 4,802 tickets show- 1 ,'
AIR
ing three of the numbers are each
worth $10, and the 51,267 tickets
showing two of the numbers are each
wonh $1.
Just Arrivedll
-The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$934,476.50 to winners in Friday's
The
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales in
Pick
3
Numbers
totaled
Lafayette Mall
Galli~
$1 ,609,044.50.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers
players
wagered
$388,630.50 and will share $170,600.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled $459,349.

g

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New Shipment

•

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MANY HAVE 101 c'Eirrs.
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TAWNEY JEWELERS INC.

404 SECOND AVE.

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422 SECQND AVE.

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apprehend area fugitive

Water boil orders issued
POMEROY - Leading Creek
· Conservancy District and the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water District both
have boll orders in effect ror some of
their water customers due to recent
water line leaks.
An LCCD water line on Union
Avenue experienced a break in a slip
area Friday evening, with water service be.ing restored around 5 a.m. Satufday, according to district manager
Brent Bolin.
·
. Since' the line was depressurized
and· the possibility of ground water
contarninatipn did exist, LCCD cus-

)

O,ath penalty
delays worry
Montgomery

Rutland approves operator hiring.

Wllllonor the

Haltbar·~ Gr~t~hotst

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POMEROY- A Pomeroy man was arrested by Meigs County sheriff's deputies Friday on a warrant from Meigs County Common Pleas
Court charging him w,ilh probation violation.
.
·
Patrick Oeland·has allegedly ~iolated two sections of his probation
,_' convicted of writing bad checks on-two different occasions, and failiqg to notify his probillion officer of the arrests and conviction, Sheriff Jat)lCS M. Soulsby said.
•
.
Cleland is being held in the Middleport Jail, pending a hearing before
Common Pleas Judge Fred W. ~row Jll.

Complete nne·of Bedding &amp;

Geraniums
·shrun, Tree•, Azal••
. RoteBillhM
ap.n Delir N, Su"" 1-6

Pierce completed her law enforcement classes in Gallia Counly and
received her Ohio Peace Officer's
training certificate in March 1986.
She joined the sheriff's depanment
on.a pan-time basis on Oct 30, 1986
as a dispatcher/corrections officer,
and became a full-time corrections
officer qn Nov. II, 1989.
She completed her corrections
officer certificate from the Ohio
Peace Officer's Training Academy
and was· reclassified as a full-time
corrections officer in June 1994.
"Deputy Pierce has worked many
extra ~olunteer hours and also
worked extra hours for Litter Law
enforc~ment," Taylor said. "Coming
from dispatch/corrections work expe-

Deputies hold nian on probation violation

SpriqS.aon · ·

(Bioolillng • Foliage) .

•

GAU.IPOLIS ,.- Gallipolis City Police cited a Vinton man on six
charges early Saturday, according to police records.
Corey E. Annstrong, 25, 854 Thompsop Road, was cited for driving under the influence, driving under suspension, possession of drug
, paraphenalia, possession of marijuana. red light violation and no headlights.
.
i
Officers also placed Tommy Gambill, 47, 70 Grape St., Gallipolis,
, in the Gallia County Jail l!t 10:44 p.m. Friday on a charge of domes'
~ tic violence.
Cited by poli.ce Friday were Tony R. Ferrell, 22, 107 Dillon Road,
Gallipolis, driving un\ler suspension and improper lane-..sage; Daniel
W. Craycraft, 19, Rt. I, Cheshire, open container and underage consumption; and PhiU S. Unroe J.r.• 18, 45 Redwood Dfive, Gallipolis,
loud exhaust and racing engine.
·
Booked into·the county jail by sheriff's deputi,es at 11:20 a.m. Friday was Wade T. Yo~ng, 40, 548 Addison·Pike, Gallipolis, on a~harge
of domestic violence.

No.-, O&amp;Nn for liN
V4!geteble Pllntl.
Hanging Basket

1

Police lodge charges against Vinton man

Patt_iWeaver

Continued from page A1
says she can't keep the cake case
full.
·•
The treats, Weaver said, aren't all
show and no taste. ·
"They're very good," she says.
She credi~ the goodness of the
desserts with a good staff and team
work in the kitchen. With seven
workers at the bakery, she says this
is one instance where too many
cooks don't spoil the broth.
Weaver enjoys her work as well,
~'not just doing ill!u( tasting il too. ·
"You would think you would get
tired of it, but you don't"

ty." .

Military academy applications accepted

FAMILY PUCnCE

~

GALLIPOLIS - · Bonnie G,
Pierce, an employee of the Gallia
County Sheriff's Depanment for
nearly 10 years, lias been promoted
from corrections officer to · rotid
deputy, Sheriff James D. Taylor said.
"'This is the realizatioq of a 'dream
come true' for Deputy Pierce," Taylor said. "'She is looking forward to
serving the citizens of Gallia Coun-

. GALLIPOLIS -· The Gallia County Health Department will provide (n:e immunizations from 4-6 p.m. Thesday in the counhouse lobby.
Children in need of immunizations·must be accompanied by a parent and bring a current immunization record with them.

.

Welfare refprm

GALLIPOLIS - . An ~o Depar'tmcnt of Public Safety grant
enabled Galhpolis C1ty Poltce to condQCt 111 education program for
youths on the advantages of wearing safety belts.
The course was pRsented to every thirq grade class in.ill three of
the Gallipolis City Schools' elemenlaries, Police Chief Roger Brandeberry said.
·
.
.
Each classroom was presented a poster abou.t seatbelt use. A video
presentation and practical demonstration were staged for the students,
and each student ~eived a badge, pledge can!, book marker, sticker.
act1v1ty book and btcycle safety booklet
~
"The department receives great positive feedback from ibis program," Brandeberry said. "Tritffic accidents are still the leading cause
of death for children between 5 and 14 years old. Consequently. we ·
put a preuy higll priority on this program."

Health depattrtient plans immunizations

ROBERt M. HOLLEY, M.D.

Repo·r t card: Education

Regional·

•

IIUIII
•
GAWPOLJS - Danny Gillenwater, 22, 2092 Johnson Ridge
Road, Gallipolis, was recently sentenced 10 I 8 rponths probation in GaJ.
ha County Common Pleas Court in connection with a October 199S
theft charge, according to court recorda.

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By C.nier Or Motor R011te
On&lt; Wedt..................................................s1.25
ODe Year .... ........,.................................... S6S.OO

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r--.Tri-County Briefs: Lor:~g·time
Court grants probation 16 area
employee ·1
promoted ;-~··---:_._-City police e.du.cate youth on safety belts
to deputy

.
"The avi.tlion ~ys In: unique," ·
Young uiil. "They are lib: • bier- .
nity. II takes 101110011C special to do
thejob."
-'
Since the accident, State Police
Superintendent Col. 1borri Kirk has
suspended all air operations uritil
after~ funeral. .
Jomt funeral set'VIces for Turner
and Childress will be Mond:'y arl :30
p.m. 10 the Charleston Ctvtc Center.
Cl~ r~ned Saturda~ that seplll'!'te Vtewmgs have been scheduled.
Turner's vie)Ving will be held Sunday
from "- 8 P;m. at Legacy ~emorial
Gardens anil Funeral HQme m Cross
Lanes. Childress' viewing will he
Sunday from 2-4 p.ni. and 6-9 p.m.
~ at· the Chapman·Funeral Home, Hurncane.
1 1
f fl
'b ·
n 1eu o owers, contrt uuons can
be made to the Turner1 Ch'ldre
I
ss
Mem
· 'I F d PO B
g
8
on a un , . . ox 2 4,
South a.artcston, W..Va. 25303-0284,
The
·b ·
·n be ·
·
contrt uttons WI
divided
between the famthes, Clark_sa1d:
Accordmg .to Clark, . there ha~e
been state p'Oltce groups from Ohio
and Kentucky, as well as other stales,
that have inquired about services and
pia~ to attend.
. .
.
State pollee agenctes are hke a
big family," Oark said. "When 'something happens to one of them, the oth-.
ers are there for support."
Clark and Young, as well as troopers from across tile s~le, have their
share of memories about times spent
wit_h Turner and Childress.
·

Solemn Clinton hails victims' sacrifices

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OHIO WeJtllcr

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

GALUPOUS, OHIO

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4Se31·

.

ME~QER AMERICAN

GEM SOCIETY

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:Commentary
1!rimeJ- ~tntintl

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Sunclllr. April 7' 1911

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,a
Nation/World
..
Negot.iations.key h·ope.for peacefu.l .enld to standoff

· ~·

...' Aprtl7,1 ...

_NATO vigilant' about corruption in Bosnia

WASHINGTON The 4- were allegedly " visited" by
month investigation. In ian Serbs hid given him a a gift.
month-old NATO troop deployment officers from Ukraine,
A highly confidential report con·
No.vember 1993, a report
in Bosnia has been remarkably !rOu- Kenya. New Zealand.
conflfllled that some '!lim- . firming Khromchenkov and Logi·
ble-free, but the same can't be said France and Canada.
ited "
misdeeds
had nov 's "irregularitief' was sent to
825 Third Ave(tue, Galllpolll, Ohio
for
the
United
Nations
peacekeeping
The
soldiers
could
U.N. headquarters In Zagreb and
occurred.
Yet
U.N.
offi·
614 446-2342 • Fu: 446-3008
forces
that
held
sway
in
that
volatile
scarcely
have
missed
the
New York. But U.N. officials
maintained
that
there
cials
111 Coul1 Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
region
until
December.
.fact
that
a
few
yards
behind
had been no "organi,zed." thought the report was too sensitive
614-992·2156 • Fax: 992·2157
The history of the U.N. peace- the restaurant was one of the
to handle, so it was kicked over to
widespread racketeering.
keeping operation in Bosnia is concentration camps where
The U.N. in.,esti- Russian authorities in Moscow.
replete with stories of rape, vandal· the Bosnian Serbs carried
. The two colonels were summarigation studious.ly avoided
ism and other abuses .of the war- out their brutal campaign of "ethnic assigning any blame to UNPRO- ly dismissed in late 1992' ·after
weary local population.' S~me cleansing" against the Bosnian Mus- FOR's Russian contingent, which another investigation. Yet both men
human rights groups wonied that· lims.
was up to its blue berets in black were soon back in Bo.snia, acting as
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
the situation would continue when
U.N. officials in New York initi;ll- market activities. High hopes had "consultants" to Arkan and other
NATO troops )ook over.
ly tried to downplay the discipline attended the March 1992 dispatCh of · Bosnian Serb leaders.
~
ROBERT L .WINGETT
were
vo.iced
in
a
Their
concerns
problems.
A
co.nfidential
cable
by
the
first
Russian
troops
ever
to
serve
Now
leading
a
force
of
thousa~s
' Publlaher
letter to Madeleine K. Albright, Albright in July 1993, held that with a U.N. force.· But wo.rd soon from more than two dozen countri'",
Hobart Wilson Jr.
Margaret Lehew
America's ambassador to the United UNPROFOR (the name of the U.N. spread that top Russian commanders the United States will have to keep a
Executive Editor
Controller
Nations. The Jetter ,questioned force in former Yugoslavia) could had become chummy with a ruthless sharp eye out for "irregularities" in
whether the NATO force would be not be expected to follow regulatio.ns Bosnian Serb warlord named the coming months.
Letters ro lhe ad/lor IIIW - - · They •hould be r... lhllfl 300 'IIIHNt3.
trained
sufficiently ·to avoid "Oki- because it was not a full-fledged per- " Arkan."
As one U~ S. military official .
All letters ore sub}«~ ro ed/llng.nd mu•r be •lgnad lllld Include llddreH
nawa-type
situatio.ns,"
refening
to
manent
operation.
"According
to
the
The
early
repo.ns
soon
proved
who
recently returned from Bosnia,
and lolophono number. No tmalgllad loner. will be publl•had. ...,.,.,..
the abduction and rape of a 12-year- U.N.'s view," Albright said, accurate. Russian Co~ Viktor Logi- lamented to our associate Dale .v.,n
shquld be In good ,..,.., -*lnlulng /aaUH, no\ pe'*&lt;&gt;namr..
old Japanese girl by three American "UNPROFOR is not yet an 'estab- nov and his senior, Col. Alexrinder Alta: " We'd rather han~le land·
soldiers.
lished' operation and, therefo.re, stan- Khromchenkov, fre4uented lavish mines so.metimes than all of the
The American military leaders dard administrative regulations and drinking parties and feasts. complete mess that soldiers can get into whj:n
now running the show have tried to rules are not followed."
with female "company/' hosted by there's no shooting."
,
arm their troops against local tempJilek Anderaan and UlohMI Bin·
When the repo.rts became too per•. Arkan and other Bosnian Serbs.
tations with seminars,' manuals, lee- sistent, and the theft so widespread, Khromchenkov drove aro.und in a ateln . . wrlten! for UnltH FNture
!
lures and sensitivity training. But in the U.N. finally launched a two- notorious white Mercedes tbe Bosn-· SyndiC.W, Inc.
Bosnia, the United States is not o.nly
· responsible for its own soldiers -·~ 'By John Hunnell
.
•
.
. but an international coalition com•
••
••
l . I first met John Lowen about ,four years ago. This was shortly after his prised of soldiers from more than
·-: I(Xlth birthday. On March 28, of this year, two days after John's 104th birth- two dozen nations.
! -day I sat down with him and we spoke of the many facets of his life. This
Judging by the record of the U.N.
••
·' :inicrview took place at his present home, Rocksprings Rehabilitation Cen- peacekeeping effort, things can only
•
:~
.
get beiter. Black marketeering was
· , When I saw John for the ' firsl time, fo.ur years ago he was pushing a widespread during their stay. as
; •woman who was probably eighty in a whce!chair. To me this was ironic. U.N. forces traded cigarettes, alco.• Here was a 100 year old man pushing an eighty year old woman, who could hol, food, narcotics and U.N. cre:).ave been his daughter, pr at Jea,st was young enough to be, in a wheelchair. dentials with the beleaguered popu~:Thi s reversed the laws of probabilily.
l~ce . Whatever had value was sold .
·: John was born, March 26, 1892, in Covington, Virginia. His earliesl
Accounting procedures were so
::. memories were of running barefoot through the fields and skipping schoo.l loose that, at one po.inr, the U.N.
overpaid $1.8 million on a $21.8
~~ rd go fishing. · ·
.
: .
• ••
·, · He only attended sch.ool brrefly. At the age of I 2 he ran away and JOrned million fuel contract bef9re anybody
·, rhe Barnum and Bailey Circus. His main job there was driving a team of caught the mistake. Members of one
:ehorses which pulled a wagon load of tent·rigging and various equipment · Kenvan outfit are believed to have
··needed for operation of the circus.
stolen 25,000 gallons of fuel worth
·" His rravels with the circus took him all over the United States, mainly $100,000 and sold it to the Bosnian
~s taying in the western states. It was quite obvious by the gleam in his eye; Serbs.
··and the radiant smile on his face as be talked that his days with the circus
The • most infamous incident
'!were some of the happiesr days of his life.
occurred during the summer and fall
.:· In 1913, John married Lera Bentz. Her sister, who some of you may of 1992, when as many as 50 U.N .
••
•.
·:know. is Mrs. Edward (Marjorie) Bowen, Butternut Avenue in Pomeroy. peacekeepers visited "Sonja's Ken:; John and his wife Lera resided on Butternut Avenue, near Mrs. Bowen, until Tiki," a Bosnian Serb-run restaurant
:; Lera's death in 1984 after 71 years of marriage.
'lfld brorhelthat used·female Muslim
' John worked away several years eventually returning to Meigs County in prisoners as prostitutes. The women
: 1928, where he· has remained since. His fjrsl job was helping build the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge. After that job was · completed John traveled
throughout Ohio building bridges and state highways. He worked for Ben
•: Ho.lderman Co.nstruction Company which was based in Belfontaine, Ohio.
'~ut John always kept his home 1\ere in Meigs County.
- Spo.rts ge3f sellers, sensing more evening sports like softball ga~e$:
t. After his retirement John still remained quite industrious, according to his By AL NEUHARTH
USA
lt&gt;OAY
Politicians in three states ~ild three U.S. territories have had rhe go\1(1
:sisrer-in-law, Marjorie Bowen. According to Mrs.· Bowen, "John not only
Early
to
bed
and
early
to
rise
makes
a
man
healthy,
wealthy
and
wise.
sense
to resist this nonsense. DST is taboo in Arizona, Hawaii, part of In4i:mowed his own yard he also mowed sevefoil of his neighbors'. And this went
- Ben Franklin, "Poor Richard's Almanac," 1758
ana and in American Samoa, ~no Rico and the Virgin Islands.
;
[~~ well into his 90s," according to Mrs. Bowen.
.· .
But Benfield and his buddies now threaten to.
•.: I am quite sure anyone who· met John would find him a true hope and ·
Last week 111any of you woke up with the
push Congress to extend the phony time fropr
:tnspiration 10 all people, especially those-enthralled with longevity.
•'
.
sunrise and slarted your day bright.
March to Novembe~. Even d)e sleepyheads w~o
.·:' Srarting with this column and continuing with those to follow the writer This week, many of you will get up in the
will miss an hour of snOQze time this Sunday ou!Wr
:Is offering a $5 prize to anyone, rhal is the first one who answers a tlivia dark and start your day dull.
to set their alarm clocks ro fight this latest foolis~­
All ~cause of the silly semianpualtinkering
ness.
'9ucstion related to the column.
.
•, This is a tribute to the beloved, late Fred .W. .Crow Jr. Esq. A maJI who with the time clo.ck misleadingly labeled daylighr-saving time. It doesn't save any time at
·~aw the need, and desired a greater education for all. This will be kri6wn as
:~DBACK - Other views on daylight-savir ·
all.
Just moves it from morning to evening.
~e "Carry On" reward.
·
• .
, Tim col umn's question is as follows. What was th" stage name of Charles Upsets the body's naturai time clock. Pillages
the mosl productive hours of the day for people
;,Most people enjoy recreational activity in t~
·S. Stratton? To give you a hint his employer was one of John Lowen's.
with
get-up-and-go.
: If you are rhe first to answer the questio.n correctly you may collect your
evening hours - except self-righteous momi~g
DST started in World War I to. save electric. .!'Carry On'-' reward at the office of The Daily Sentinel. If the trivia question
folks like AI Neuharth. Not many people would ufc
II; nor answered before the publication of the writer's next column the SS ity and energy. .Congress repealed it after the
the sunlight before 5 a.m. if we didn't have·darlight-saving time. DST also is suppo.rted as a sa(¢revertS to the Eleanor and Fred W. Crow Jr. Scholarship Program in care of war. Re-enacted it in I942 for Wofld War II.
Repealed it again after V-J Day. only to see
The Farmers Bank and Savings Company.
·
·
ty issue. Evening daylight saves lives on our higll.. (Mr. Hunnell of Syracuse 11 a frequent contributor to the Sunday some states pass DST laws.
ways and makes )M;Ople feel mo.re securu on urb4n
Then in 1966 lobllyists for special interests
times-Sentinel.).
Sidewalks."
•
got Congress to pass limited peacetime saving
- )ames Benfield, ·direetor, Daylight Savi1'g
time. In 1986, they extended it to six months a
Time Coalition
·
year, from the first Sunday in April to the last
Sunddy in October.
"Fanners are no longer an iso.laled segment ef
Washington lobbyist James Benfield represociety. They want to participate in o.ff.farm acti ,._
sented ihese culpable companies · in getting
ties in the evenings too. But they can't when th4&gt;'
DST extended:
13y WALTER R. MEARS
need to spend their time in the field because daf•
AP Special Correspondent
- Charcoal manufacturers, smelling more
light-saving time curtails their participatio.n."
•
: WASHINGTON - Pricey lawyers and high-cost lawsuits always have evening barbecues.
- Bob 1\nlft, Indiana Farm Bureau
;
been tempting political targets. The ca.se for federal legislation to restrict
- Fas~, hoping for more evemng Shopping.
AI .Neuhanh Is founder of USA T~ay.
·
fhcm has been argued for I 5 years. finally pro.ducing a bill that President
Clinton intends 10 veto.
11 is an issue of unlikely alliances, bristling with disputed statistics, heavx.
w1 th jargon. punctuated by worst-case tales of frivolous lawsuits and of
I have yet to see a big-time college basketball. mind for this reason: I'm
appliel) in English, math or history.
•
bugc. sometimes illogical jury awards to people who sued and won.
star
lose
money
because
he
stayed
in
school
admiring
the
wonderful
Kentucky coach Rick Pitino made some refJ._
·· .Like rhe story told in the Senate of the man who sued the milkshake
encc to a pre-season Sports Illustrated arti&lt;l'e
.;,aker because a driver spilled it in his lap and ca~sed an automobile acci· instead of bolting for the pros before his senior object lesson from John
Wallace of the Syracuse
which said his Wildcats were saturated with talctt
dent. Or the lawsuit against a flag manufacturer by a man injured when he year.
On
the
other
hand,
I've
watched
many
underUniversity
men's
basketbut did not have the right chemistry to reach ti,2C
\Vas blown over trying to hoist it on a windy day.
finish line as champions. Pitino called his team"B
Those are rhe exceptions, of course: Opponents of the bill said only 4 per- classmen boll for the big National Basketball ballteam.
Big, athletic and
liule boy that grew up.
~
cent of rhe injury lawsuits filed each year involve the pr!!duct liability dis- Association (NBA) bucks and become'busrs.
few
years
ago
at
Temple
University
there
A
flashy,
he
probably
would
It was not simply athletic talent that got tQe
pules covered by this measure.
· .
Kentucky players over..The way in which thi): But advocates say the system is hurting the United States competitively, was Donald Hodge, a ?:foot junior center with have been a high pro draft
nice shooting range ·12 feet from the .basket. pick last year- if he foldissected oppo.nents with machine-like precisicfrl
driving up consumer prices and unduly rewarding trial lawyers.
proved that they practiced intensely and strenA: "We must do more to curb ... tbe kind of abuse that has turned suing your Hodge was a not-ready•for-prime-time player lowed advice to leave col-·
who
decided
nevertheless
to
go
out
for
the
NBA.
lege
as
a
junior.
Wallace
ously.
·
.
:
. neighbor into the newest American pastime;" said Sen. Bob Dole, arguing
He
got
hi_
s
wish.
He
entered
oblivion
as
a
backstayed.
for the bi ll Clinton said he won 't sign.
. .
.
Why not not use Kentucky 's example to p~
· Maybe, Wallace passed . By WAYNE DAWKINS mote concentration, patience and the work eth
• The president 's counterargument is that it tilts the legal playing field unfair- up center for a perennially bad basketball team .
Now, remember Ralph Sampson? He is 7-foot- on earning millions and
in classrooms?
iy against the consumer and in favor of business interests, who would be spared
4.
Often,
he
seemed
unstoppable
when
he
put
the
heeded
whispers
that
despite
his
crowd~
pleasing
No matter how graceful or po.werful the at'6igh-award punishment for injuries caused by faulty or unsafe producrs.
University
of
Virginia
basketball
program
on
the
dunks
and
slithery
low-po.st
moves,
he
had
an
· The bill, a compromise supplanting far more restrictive legislation House
lete, the J!ood-to-grent one hliS to wo.rk at his "'
unreUable outside sho.t and his p!!Ssing .&amp;kill. was her craft; the wins and ·.high scoring averagi.
Republicans wanred, would limit punitive damages in product liability cases map in the early 1980s.
don't all come naturally.
l
w$2 0,000. or ~wicc the amount of compensato.ry awards to 'people who It was highly annoying. rllen, to read Poston susp-..ct.
Wallace worked on his skills and proved him·
Excellence in the classroom isn't for ~o-callf
win suits for injuries, economic losses or otber damages. There's a provision Celtics General Manager Red Auerbach calling
self a complete basketball star.
brainy studen~ o.nly. There are many cases of stf
~or judges 10 allow larger punitive awards againsl egregious conduct by big . Sampson "stupid" for staying at Virginia instead
of
leaving
early.
He blended with his teammates. They played dents stumbhng and sweatmg through subj~f
businesses or governments.
Sampson got his college degree and a big NBA 'like champions before eventually succumbing ~fore eventually "getting it" and e_ven masteri!J
, Although Clinton has said he wants to sign a legal reform bill, he argues
like fearless warriors to heavily favored ch!IJllpi- lt.
•
that this one would go too far in favor of "tho.se ·irrespo.nsible ·companies contract, anyway.
Then
Sampson's
knees
betrayed
him
and
his
o.n
Kentucky
on
Monday.
There ·are more choices - or dist~ctionC.
willing ·to put profits above all else" and sell defective products.
,
Wallace stayed in co.llege for his senior year dependi". g on your viewpo.ini- ih life; cable
· The While House says the president would agr· e to a bill with relatively · NBA career was·cut shan.
Was Sampson a fool for finishing school aitd and his value as an NBA job prospect should (with h~' ndreds of channels. to boOt), VCRs. co
modest changes, suggesting tho.se could be negotiated after the veto. But the
earning
a degree for life after basketball? Seven· appreciate. Good for him.
,
puters, the Internet, portable phones and becpe
sponsors of thi~ one. Rep~bl!cans a~d Dem~rats, do.ubt that could be done
ty·sixers
rookie
Jeny
Stackhouse
has
NBA
star
Yes,
this
is
basketball,
not
books.
But
I
kept
Co.uld it be that there.are so many stimuli elf
and a revised b1ll passed m a campargn settmg. ·
despite
leaving
University
of
Nonh
Carolitalent
hearing
unintended
references
to
academic
excelhere now that the act of investing time to study - I
And rhe bill wasn't passed with the two-thirds margins it would take to
hit the books as hard as hitting a lhree-po.inter __;
ovenide a veto, ~s happened on Clinton's 1995 veto .of a bill limiting the na after his sophomore year. But Stackhouse may lence.
have made a huge mistake by leaving early. ~e 's
My ears perked up as I heard many post-game is unapptecialed?
. '
~
ability of sto.ckholders' to file suits for fraud.
.
playing
his
first
season
for
a
disorganized,
poorly
comments
played
O'!er
and
over
again
on
CBS
It
would
be
nice
if
more
people
saw
the
The political side of the argument has just. been displayed in California,
lei of hard work on the hardwood and "leavin
wh ich looked like a promising arena for measures to rein in lawyers, with assembled and consistendy losing team. Losing andESPN.
could
become
a
bad
habit
for
Stackhouse.
a
shame
·
Wallace's
teammate
Otis
Hill,
at
6-foot-8
·
c
onyour heart on the floor' ' ill study hall.
overloaded c·ouns and high-profile trials.
·
.
But in the March 26 primary election tbere, three measun:s that wo.uld because well-schooled North Carolina alumni sidered 'undersized for a big-time college center,
"' tot Ill
Dlualdt• II a aalwnn-.
have restricted suits and lawyer shares ·in damage suit awards all were nonnally bring winning attitudes and· champi· said; "We left our hearts on the floor."
Cowler.f'Get In
• Write to him 1ft
·
I watched Hill play with grit and resoun::eful- den
defeared, after a campaign in which llie rival si~s spent an estimated $2S onships to NBA teams.
CU11111t11 Blvd., C1111rJ
N.J, - .
The •undergraduate athlete question is on my . ness then thought, sure, effo.rt like that can be
million.
'
I'

:a,

~: ;M_eigs

County's
~:longevity. champ

.

Var·i ous views on .daylight-savings time

JORDAN, ~ont. (~)-The hope of Easter ~ buoyed people !lore
after two stnughtdays of talks between besieged Freemen and out. side negotjaiDB, and a woman and ~hild left the cornpoond overnight.
. · . Relatlv~ c'o.nflrmed Satwday that Val Stanton and her 5-y--old llau1h,.,(Cr Mariah left the besiege{! Freemen f~ in eastern Montana and wer,e tak·
,, en to an undisclosed loc~tion . •
,,, "She's out.lliat's ,g~." said m Spillum, owner of the Garf..td Motel
,.:and Val Stanton's brother-in-law.
· .
"I'm glad if the little kids get t of there. Tbey're innQCent." s,aid Phyl
; ,lis Stanton, the aunt to Val. Stanton's husband.
'
., , Val Stanton was not among Freemen at the compo.und wante4 by·state or
r· federal authorities. Six people not named in arrest warrants left 1\tC Freemen
;"farm shortly after the ·standoff ~gan March 2S a_n&lt;! were allowed to go on
., Jheir way.
1Saturday,

2

.

·A Freemen contingent meLwith the negotiariftttteam for a sec:o.nd time
Friday. Monlanll's attorney general said it was hoped the symbolism of Eastcr would encoura1e the militants to. peacefully end their standoff with rhc
FBI. now in its 13th day.
But ther~ was no word of progress between the Freemen and the unidentifled nego.tiators, described by a source who requesied anonymity as Montana state legislators.
(
State Attorney General Joe Mazurek sought to quell speculaiion about an
imminent end to the stando.ff.
"Nobody's sugpsting that there's some big breakthrough," Mazurek said.
"We're just hopeful, given the time of the year and the importance of Eastcr.to tho.tc people, that maybe it would provide an oppo.rtunity."
He declined to say who the negotiatqrs w.cre. citing safety concerns. Bill
he desCribed them as "third-party intei'JIIediaries," not patt of any FBI nego-

·

tiatins team.
'
"They are not deleaates for the FBI. They're not there on the FBI'•
behalf," Mazurek said.
,
The Freemen met for ~~ I~? hours with third-party negotiators in 1
35-foot motor home parked ~rt road about 200 yards from their farm·
house headquarters .
A Freeman stood' on a ridge about a half mile away and a government
surveillance aircraft circled ovemead.
The Freemen drove to the site first in the motor home and a white Chevrolet Suburban . The negotiating team anived about ;20 m'inutes later in a mud·
dy green Suburban.
•
· The two sides shook hands, then milled arou!lll outside the recreation~~{ ,
vehicle for a few minutes befoie going inside.
' '

~FBI a~em~Ung -·case against. suspected Unabomber ·
·; . HELENA, Mont. (AP)-Feder· ·al agents are X-rayrng about40 box,;s found at the secluded shack,of the
,,man suspected of berng the
,y nah9mber, a ~ederal law enforce:.:ment ofticral sard Saturday.
:.' The ~xes w~re sto.red rn the loft
_,bf the ~my cabm where Theodore
Kilczynsk.i has_l1ved fo~ more than a
.. ,decade. Investigators are proceedmg
: cauuously, fe~ng boo?y traps; but so
far none have been fou.nd, a law
enfo~m~nt offictal fatruhar wrth the
mve~U.&amp;atton sa~d . He spo.ke on the
condttton that _h1s nam~ no'. be used.
Kaczynski. 53, .was ~sted on
W~nesday and charged wnh. po.ssessrort o.~ bomb-making matenals.
. Inves~gators have repo._rted fin.dmg a parttaUy compl~ted p1pe bomb,
bomb-making chemicals . and comand notes on makin~ bombs.
oponenlls
n~ aw enforcement officral S31d a

typewritet found there appears to he ·una!x&gt;mber's bo.mbs.
the one the l)nabomber used.
The.federal offi&gt;ial could 110tcon.. Agents expected to flmsh ·exam- firm that repo.rt·Saturday.
mmg the boxes by late. Sat~ay 6r • Since the former Bcrl\cley mllth
early Sunllay. the oflicr~l sard .. ~ professo.r became a shadowy suspect
10-by- 1~ foot hand-budt cabrn . ts weeks ago, the- Unabomber Task
located rn the m_oun111r~s near Ltn- Force has been trying to learn every- '
coin, Mont, 50 mtles west of Helena. thing it can about him.
.'
Pa~l Bresso~. a spo.kesmaq for the
After his arrest thiS! week, their
FBI m· .Washtngton. D.C .• wou!d ·search moved into the open as they
~onfif!" ~nly that agents were ,still . tri~ to build evidence ·that he1 the
mv~suga~ng the sc~ne.
elus1ye bomber whttse 18-year string
They .re not takin~ the day oft:. I . ?f. attacks .killed three :people and
can assure you of that, Bresso~ satd, ,, InJUred 23 others.
1n what amounted to an ~t~'!ng of
"We c~n ~o. to all_ the.Jocations of
comme_nt. from the ·ttght-~tpped the bombtngs. the sttes of the mailagency.
iit8s and the places he lived alld ask
ABC News reported late Friday about him by. nanfe," a federal o.ffithat agentS fou11d intricately carved Qial said Friday on the condition that
wooden boxes in the s)laclc. Carved he not ·be identified.
videocasette-sized wooden boxes,
;The Unabomber's explosives
sometimes made from four different wlre marled from several stales, and
woods; were used in some of the federal agents are trying . to track

KaczyQ$ki 's movements through had records from the hotel , wberc
travel records.
rooms rates range from $11 to $14.
"That means motels, hotels, air- . But McCabe had a receipl on FBI stalines, buSc:s, gas stations. anything tionery for the guest records.
where his name or a known alias
McCabe, whose records o.nly went
might have been used," the official back to 1982, remembered Kaczynsaid .
.
ski as a po.lire but quiet man who said
On~· of two manual typewriters little when he came to the hotellocatfound rn the shack appears to be the ed on Last Chance Gulch, Helena's
one the Unabomber used to type his main street.
letters and his 35,000-wqrd mani"!tried to start up a couple of confesto, a federal officral sard .
versations. He'd answer that in rhe
Federal aut~orities have learned shortest way he could,.. McCabe said.
rhat Kaczynski left h1s shack and
Kaczynski. 53, was charged
traveled 50 miles to a Helena hotel at Thursday with possessing the bomb
least 25 trmes; four of the stays compo.nents. He was held without
roughly coincided with five bomb- bail and placed under a suicide watch
ings blamed on the Unabomber.
in his cell at the Lewis and. Clark
The FBI took records of Kaczyn- County Jail, the sheriff said.
ski's stays at the Park Hotel between • .He could get the death penalty if
1982 and 1~95: hotel owner Jack conYicted under federal law of sendMcCabe sa1d Fnday.
ing a mail bomb that kiils.
The FBI refused to confirm that il

Antique instruments may have-roie in crash

WASf:IINGTON (AP) - Te10h- airport : ~ rwo radio beacons, the mil- spoke on COI)dition of anonymity,
nology dating to the pioneering days ita&lt;y version of a .B6eing 737 · said the plane had a ground proximof air travel was 1J11iding the jetliner slammed into a hill!ide killing all ity warning system that should have
that smashed into a Cro.atian hillside aboard. ·
·
· .sounded as the plane neared the hillwith Commerce Secretary Ron
The causes of the disaster must be side.
Brown and 34 others aboard ..
untangled by !j•joint Special Com· Depending on the speed of the
" It is the kind of an approach (sys- mission of lnql)iry fonned ~y Croat- plane and the amount of room for
tem) that's been Qlound for a while. ian government and the U.S. Air' maneuver. there may not have. been
there's ·no question about that,'' Air Force . accident investigation team. enough . time to _respond .. warning
Foree-Lt. Gen. Howell Estes lii said Investigators from the U.S. Natrona! ttme IS a-problem m mountamous l,erof the landing at Dubrovnik. "But it's Transportation ·. Safety Board are rain where a hillside can loom ··up
, still a very validappro~ch. '.' · .
assi'~tinK. . . ,
.
:
t •
suddenly, as o.p,rosed to a pla~e
Ward Baker of the Air·Lme Prlots · Comphcatmg !herr task rs the f~ct gradually descending to a lower alttAssociation po.inted out thatthe ll\(lio that the plane . had no flrght data tude.
l)eacons u$ed to. guide airplanes lo · recorde~ to track tbe craft's move- • Nondirec!ional radio.beacons _like
Cilipi Airport are "the oldest type of ments. The recorders are required on those ~sed to navrgate mto
navigatipn, aid·~here i~_.·:., :.. . . all commerci~l a!rli.ner~\ ,; , •.
. Dubrovmk,,date to the 1930s, wl)en
! U.S~ anj:l local 9fficrais sa1d the · In 1914, the Arr Foll:e det1ded that the. first au~mpts were mruJe ~o use
'Airport was mis~ing a more modern its new planes would lie fitied witll radro to gurde .planes flymg m the
piece of compu~zed precision land- the devices, but did not in~ tall them dark and through bad weather.
ing equipment, i&amp;ken by the Yugoslav in the existing fleet because of the
Smce· then, many more modern,
~imny in Croatia's I 991 war, that cost involved. The plane that crashed complex and costly systems _have
•,),auld help planes. to land in any Wednesday had been purcha~ell just been develope~. Many natrons,
weather.
a year too soon.
r~cludmg the Umted States, are p1'1nAir Force T-~3 was following
Defense Secretary William Perry, nmg to mstall new satelhte-based ~.ds
."a low-frequency rad1o beam through -who used the same plane only days call~ the Global Posrtromng Sys(em.
va battering thunderstorm Wednesday earlier, called the crash "a classic sort Avtauon experts note that G~S has
;_.~oward .the airport nestled between of an accident that good instruroen- not yet wo~ approval for use m prefuountaJns and the Adnattl' Sea.
tation sh,ould be able to prevent. ..
CISIOn landmgs, however.•
Veerrng o.ff course between the
A senior Air Force official who
Airports around the world use a

variety_ of guide systems. including·
the radio beaco.ns.
.
"Very few are left' in the U.S . ...
but in less develo.ped parts of the
world it is still an important part of
the navigation system. " Baker
explained.
Such beacons broadcast a continuous signal-at a specified frequency,
which is published on the landing
charts for each airport. Dtibrovnik has
two signals lbcated 11.8 miles and 1.9
miles from rhe north end of the run- ·
way.
,
When tuned to the correct freguency, a needle on the pilot's compass points at the beacon.
.

•

Do you want to take a drive on
the Internet. but don't know · ·
how to·gtt corinectecl?
.Come to Bossard Ubrary
Wednesday,. flpril10,-1996
from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M
Zoomfiet Internet Service
will show
1howl

'.' ' m

'

'

l

College athletes shouldn't slamdunk chance to get a degree :

.I

•

The
.

'

'

~ HOLZER

HEAT,TH .
HOTLINE
'

'

'

'

can help you·find
the answers to your
health care concerns.

a

Call us at
1-800~462- . \255 '
Seven ·days :a week,
8 a~m. to l l :30.P.~m.

para.

Mil,......,

-IOHigll .......

Check with your physicia" about medication problems

'•''
J

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'

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•

•

Same old story: Laws,
.~awyers and politics

•.

•

---:~-------.:~~~~~--....:..-~.:.....-~--...:.....-~~-~~~.......:.;..._-._;,.;~~...;._--

'Uttl!Jfisfrd in J%6

g

. . .....

586-2863

�. -...

•

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•
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PoiMroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH&gt;• Point Plnunt, WV

I

'

Oscar winner Greer Garson dies at age
92 .
'

Ela·i ne A. Corsi

Current MISS OhiO
~a ~~~a~~~:~s~~:~::::~j~ will address 1st-year '
RG nursing students

Opal A. Duff

Anna G. Halliday

Maxine R. Jones

Edith Robinette

t ., prob es' 3 •VehI. Je erash.

I

Alva E.·Luckeydo~

,

Me.I gs c0 u. nty c·ou rt .

a

Meigs EMS runs

Edith Robinette

t

.

Coalition backs ·proposal
on state affirmative action

Let......
as •life

Jlit lor Your

-

I

ENT CO.

Memorial Day Delivery
Guaranteed

' 446·7039

ports

•

:

By .IANlNE ZUNIGA
J
MetbQdist University in Dallas.
.versity of London inc! studying at the
She ended up doillg vinually nom:
Aaaoc:IMicl PNu Wdw
Her late "husband was the oilman University ofGreDOble, Miu GIBOII ing for a year. "It was the m1111 dif-" •
DALLAS - ·Greer Garson, the
vibrant, gallant leadinJlady in films E.E. '.:Buddy" Fogelson. They milin- made her professioilal acting debut in ficuh and unhappie~~t year of my
CHESHIRE - Elaine A. &lt;;orsi, 36, Cheshire, died Friday, April 5, 1996 such as ''Goodbye Mr. Chips" and tained hbmes in Dallas and Los 1932 'Ill the Birmingham Repertory life," she once said. "I deo:ided qnce.
'
I was fortunllle OJ10Uch to get away
"Mrs. Miniver,'' died Saturday of Angeles and a ranch near Pecos. · 1beater.
in O'Bleness Memorial Hospital'; Athens.
In a 1937 visit to England, MOM . from Hollywood, It would take wild
N.M.
Born May I ,-1959 in Columbus, daughter of Anthony and Helen Salmons heart failure.
.
Corsi of Pomeroy, she was a )oan offiCer with Peoples Bank in Athens.
Miss Garson died pea~:efully at •· Born in County Down, Ireland, to .boas Louis B. Ma)'er saw her on the horses to ,drag me back."
Surviving iq addition to her parents are lhree sisters, Coleen (Eddie) Wha- about I :30 a.m. at Dallas Presbyter- a family with no !healer background, London stage and promptly signed
S~dtd ~~ape - returm~g t~
• Engl
for GOod~e Mr. Chips.
ley and Margaret Corsi, both of Pomeroy, 1111d Patri~ia (Harry) Davidson of ian Hospital, said John L. Roach, a Miss Garson perfonned Christmas . her to a film contract.
Racine; two brothers, Man: Corsi and Randy Corst, ~loth of Pomeroy; and friend and attorney for the family.
plays in her home and gave !ecita·
Sonic reference books .list her age tions
two nieces.
in the town hall at age 4. She
11 I
.
as 87, but Roach and a · hospital wanted to become a teacher but
She wa! preceded in death by an infant brother.
'
Services will be 11 a.m. Monday in the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle- spokeswoman said she was 92, giv0
pbrt, with the Rev. Gregory Sears officiating. Burial will be in the Burling- ing her birth date as Sept. 29, 1903.
The Irish-born, red-haired Miss
ham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
Garson won an Academy Awaid for
After graduating from !he Un1l
" Mrs. Miniver,'' the 1942 drama
about a British housewife couraPOMEROY - Hartwell Curd, Pomeroy,died Saturday, April 6, 1996 at geously guiding her family through
RIO GRANDE - Ellen· PasPastunak is th~ daughter of Frankl
the blitz bombings of World War II.
turzak, Miss Ohio 1996, will be the andCiaudiaPasturzakofPortsmouth:
his residence
guest speaker for the Holzer College She has four sisters,
'
' Arrangements will be announced by the Fisher Funeral Home, Middle- She was nominated for Oscl!f' for six
other roles, including Eleanor Rooof Nursing special reC"ognition cereThe following Rio Grande nursing
port.
sevelt and Marie Curie.
mony at the University of Rio Grande students who will he honored at I~ ·
In a 1990 Associated Press interand Rio Grande Community College. April 14 ceremony are from the In•
view, she deplored the violence of
The ceremony is Sunday, ~prill4 county area: Julia Abrams, Gallipo~
POMEROY - Opal A. Duff, 69, Holley Road, Pomeroy, died Friday, many modem films and added: "I
lis; Mike Adam, Gallipolis; Cheryl
at 2 p.m.
AprilS, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
•
think the mirror should be tilted
Accolding to Janet Byers, dean of Armstead, Gallipolis; Daniel Catte ~
. · Born Sept. 19, 1926 in K.anawha, W.Va., daughter of the late Rome Lee slightly. upward when it's reflecting
the Holzei College of Nursing, 44 II, Gallipolis; Joy Church. Middle&gt;
and Violet Andrea Meeks McDonald, she was a retired nurse •• the Athens life - toward the cheerful, the ten- ·
first-year nursing students will be pOrt; Melissa A. Davis, Gallipolis;
Mental Health Center and a member of AFSCME Local II. 'I
der, the compassionate. the brave, the
honored ak the special cerel!'ony. Melissa D. Davis, Gallipolis; Bobb\
· Sutviving are her husband, Paul A. Duff; three sons, Alfred A. Duff of funny. the encouraging. all those
These students are currently enrolled Dillon, Patriot; Ioella Fisher, Gal·
Racine, Melvin R. Duff of Dexter, and Gary L. Duff of Albany ; a daughter, things - and not tilted down to the
in the associate degree nursing pro- lipolis; Jenny Gardner, Gallipolisl
biana Phillips of Snowville; eight grandchildren and four great-grandchil- gutter part of the time, into the trou· gram at Rio .Grande. This class will Mary Gleason, Ashton, W.Va.;
dren; three sisters, Bertye Hedrick of Mocksville, N.C., Phyllis SlaterOf Dex - bled vistas of conflict."
gr;Kiuate in 1997.
D11nielle Gray, Middleport; Linda
ter, and June Stone of Orient; and three brothers, Clarence McDonald and
In recent years, she made her mark
Pastu~. a native of Portsmouth,
Harold,
Gallipolis;
Jamie
David McDonald, both of Dexter, and Daniel McDonald of Rutland.
as a philanthropist, donating millions
is a registered nurse who eained her Humphreys, Gallipolis; Jacqueline;
· She was also preceded in death by a brother, Romey Lee McDonald; and to colleges and other institutions.
BSN at Ohio State University_...in Maher, Gallipolis; Susie Meaige ~
a sister, Gertrude McDonald.
Among her grants was one for the
1994. She is currently employed at Gallipolis; Sollie Miller, Gal\ipolis r
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home, $10 million Greer Garson Theater
the Southe"' Ohio Medical Center in Kara Morgari, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ~
Albany,.with the Rev. Woodrow Call officiating. Burial will be in the Stan- and film archive .at Southern
Portsmouth. Pasturzak's platform Louise Neal, Gallipolis;· Diane Pear-'
Greer Garson .
ilish Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 )1.m. Sun~ay.
issue in the Miss Ohio competition son~tha, Pomeroy; Brian Reymond;,
highlighted community-initiated Point Pleasant; Stephen Roush, Gal·:
heallhcare programs.
lipolis; Angela Saunders, Gallipolis;:
As a student, Pasturzak served as Peggy Shadwick, Vinton; Pamela;
WILKESVILLE - Anna G. Halliday, 85, Wilkesville, died Saturday,
president of the ATD National Nurs- Snowden, Gallipolis; Cindy Stanley,
April 6, 1996.
ing Fraternity and was nomina.ted for Gallipolis; Melissa VanScoy, Patriot;'
Arrangements will be announced by the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home,
the Student of the Year Award in the Katha Wachs, Gallipolis; Kathy Wat-~
Albany.
Ohio State' nursing program. Pas- son, Patriot; and Kimberly Zembry.:
turzak also se..Ved as the guest speak- Point Pleasant. · .
;
er at a recent Ohio State University
The special recognition ceremony1·
alumni banquet.
will be held in the main gymnasium· .
GALLIPOLIS -Maxine R. Jones, 80, died Friday, April 5, 1996 in the .
GALLIPOLIS - Edith Robinette, 74, Gallipolis, died Saturday, April 6,
Future goais for the 23-year-old . of the Paul R. Lyne Center at the Uni- .
Holzer Senior Care Center.
•·
1996 at her residence.
Pasturzak include earning a master's versity of Rio Grande and Rio:
Born March 5· 1916, in Oak Hill, daughter of the late Thomas and RoxBorn February 21 , 1922-in Boyd County, Kentucky, daughter of the late degree in family practice nursing. She Grande Community College. A: ·
ie Stewart Williams, she was retired bookkeeper at Rio Grande College.
Jessie C. Brown and Verlie Pennington.Brown, she was a homemaker.
hopes to work with urban and subur- reception for the students will be held;
She was also preceded in death by her husband, J. "Benson" Jones, in 1985.
Survlvmg are her husband, Rufus Robinette, whom she married October ban groups to promote community• · immediately following the recogni-··
· Surviving are a s&lt;&gt;n, Rohert Jones of Fairborn; ~wo dau~hters .- Reb!occa · 5. 1945 in Catlettsburg, Kentucky; a son, Donald Robinette of Ashville, North centered heallhcare.
. lion ceremony.
(James) Dailey and Lynn (Roger) Rees, both of Galbpohs; ~IX grandchtld~n
a daughter, Virginia Lee Dillon of Gallipolis; three grandchildren; "I")
and seven great-grandchildren.; and a brother, Robert Williams of Sun Ctty, Carolina;
Valerie K. (Jay) Jarrell, George Richard (Bobbi) Dillon and Daniel Stephen r-'IJ 'f.Q
1C
Ariz:
Robinette \ three great-grandchildren, Jacob Jarrell, Dillon Wade Jarrell and
•
· ·
Services will be 3 p.m. Monday in the Kuhner-Lewis Funeral Home, Oak Tori Dillon, a brother, Howard V. Brown of" Kenova, We~t Virginia; and a •
GALLIPOLIS- One driver was man cars was severe, and ffioderate td
Hill, with the Rev. Albert Earley officiattng. Burial will he in the Cenlerpotnl special friend, Kyle Curry of Gallipolis.
.
. injured in a three-vehicle accident the Gibson vehicle. Finch and WorkCemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-8 p.m. Sunday.
She .was also preceded in death by two sisters, Marie Staley and Mary ' Saturday on Staie Route 7 just souih man were each cited for 8ssured clear .
Brown; and a grandson, !ylatthew Robinette.
. of the Gallipolis city liiJiits, the Gal, • distance, •
·
The . patrol investigated another. .
Services will he 1 p.m..Tuesday, April9, 1996 in the Waugh-Halley-.Wood lia-Meig* Post of the Sjate Highway
Funeral Home, with the Rev. Mark Sanders officiating. Burial will be in the Patrol reported.
injury~related accid&lt;ft Saturday on.
MASON,.W.Va. - Alva E. Luekeydoo, 76, Mason, died Friday, April 5, Pine. Str~:&lt;t Cemetery. friends may call at" the funeral home from 6-9. p.m.·
Francie H. Worl)man, 39, 450 SR 554 near Porter.
'
1996 in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Monday, April 8, 1996.
.
.
·
Horse Creek Road, Crown City, was
Driver Melanie R. BlizZard, 20.
Born ~uly I, 1919 in Point Pleasant, W.Va., son of the late William and . In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Holzer Hospice Pro- transported to Holzer Medical Center Point Pleasant, W.Va., was slightly, .
Viola Bin:hfield Luckeydoo. he was a carpenter on construction, a member
lOOJ k ·p·k
G u· I" Oh" 45631
bytheGalliaCountyEMS,wheresbe injured in a two-vehicle collision a(. ·
ac son 1 e., ,a t_po IS, 10
·
was later treated and released, troop- 10:35·a.m., but was not treated it the
ot the Mason United Methodist Chun:h, Carpenter Union Local 1159 of Point gram,
Pleasant, and the Mason Senior Citizens Center.
ers sl!id.
.
scene, IJiOOpers said.
He was also preceded in death by sister, Nora Elliott; and a half-brothAccording to the report, a northBlizzard was westbound near the
'
·
.
bound car driven by Clyde L. Finch, intersection with Bulaville Pike when
er, Pearl Riffle.
Surviving are his wife, Velma N. King Luckeydoo;Jwo sons, Larry E.
POMEROY - The following within 60 days; failure to display reg- - 52, Ravenswood, W.Va., was unable she collideli with a pickup truck dri(Karen E.) Luckeydoo of Poirt Pleasant, aQd Roger L. (Sandra U.) Luck- cases were resolved Wednesday in istration, $20 plus costs; seat belt, $25 to stop at 9 a.m. and struck the rear ven by Wilburn B. .Tholl'as, 37,
eydoo of Pataskala; four grandchildren and IWO great-grandchildren; tWO sis- the Meigs County Court of Judge plus costs;
of a s(opped pickup truck driven by 13182 SR 554, Bidwell, according 10
ters, Mildred Brown of West Salem. and Nettie Non of Point Pleasant; and Patrick H. O'Brien.
Matthew 'A. Pierce, Middleport, Beverly K. Gibson, 44, 1301 Rae- die report.
two brothers, Willard Luckeydoo and Marvin Luckeydoo, both of Point Pleas' Fined were: Evelyn Hines, DUI, $750 plus costs, 90-day OL sus- coon Road, Gallipolis.
Thomas pulled out of a driveway ~
ant.
Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus costs; pension. 10 days jail suspended to
· Workman's car, also northbound, into the path of Blizzard's car al tlie ,;
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the Foglesong Funeral tfome, Mason, John Ohlinger, Pomeroy, driving three .days, $450 of fine and jail sus- then struck the rear of Finch's car, the time of tbe crash, troopers said. •,
with Pastor Damon Rhodes officiating. Burial will be in the Kirkland Memo- under the influence, $750 plus costs, pended upon completion of residen- report said. Gibson had stopped for Damage io Blizzard's car was severe ,:
rial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 9 a.m. Monday until one year operator's license suspen- tial treatment program, one year pro- utility' work along SR 7, troopers and moderate to Thomas' pickup· ·
the hour of the service.
sion, 30 days jail suspended to I0 bation; Paul A. VanMeter, Rutland, said.
truck. Thomas was cited for failure to·':
· In ~ieu of flowers, the family requests donations be made to the Mason days. 90-day vehicle immobiliza- DUI, $750 plus costs, 90-day OL susDamage to the Finch and Work- yiclt:l.
United Methodist Church Building Fund.
lion, one year probation; driving pension, IQ days jail suspended to
Troopers cited Jeffrey A. Logue, L
under suspension, s150 concurrent three days, $450 of fine and jail sus16, LeKington, for assured clear dis- .:•
with DUI, costs, 30 days jail sus! pended upon completion of residenlance in a one-car crash · on Clark ·•,
pended to 10 days concurrent with tial treatment program, one year proPOMEROY - Units of the Meigs Chapel Road near Bidwell at II :45 ·-:
; GALLIPOLIS- Edith Robinette, 74, Gallipolis, died S~turday, April 6, DUI, one year probation; speed, $26 bation;
County Emergency Medical Service a.in. Saturday.
...
1996 at her residence.
.
plus costs;
Charles L. Stanley, Albany, disor- recorded 13 calls for assistance FriLogue was northbound, one-quar- . . _
:. Born Feb. 2) , 1922 in Boyd County, Ky.. daughter of the late Jessie C.
Erin Bolen, Belpre, disorder.ly derly conduct, $25 plus costs; Kathy day. including seven transfer calls. ter of a mile off SR 160.)11hen his car ·
Brown and Verlie Pennington Bro~n. she was a homemaker.
conduct, costs only ; Charles Mark J. Stanley, Albany, disorderly con· Units responding·included:
topped a hillcrest and encountered a .:.
: Surviving are her husband, Rufus Robinette, whom she married Oct. 5, Vankirk. Charleston, W.Va., failure to duct, $15 plus c&lt;ists; Lyle B. Haning,
MIDDLEPORT
mail delivery vehicle: LogueJIPplied : ·
1945 in Catlettsburg, Ky.; a son, Donald Robinette of Ashville, N.C.; adaugh- yield, $20 plus costs; MarshaK. Fox, Albany, disorderly conduct; $25 plus
7:03 a.m., Powell Street, Mary · his brakes and slid off the right side . . '
tl:~. Virginia Lee Dillon of Gallipolis; lhree grandchildren and two great-grandRutland, failure to control, $20 plus costs; Joseph D. Rose, Racine, defec- Durst, Holzer Medical Center.
of the road, according to the report.
children; a brother, Howard V. Brown of Kenova, W.Va.; and a specml fnend, costs; Tyler
Wolfe, Middleport, .tive exhaust, $100 suspended plus
POMEROY
Logue's car was sevlll:ely dam- . .
Kyle Curry of Gallipolis.
.
speed, $30 plus costs; Walter D. costs; Wallace H. Hatfield, Oak Hill,
2:31 p.m., Pomeroy Police aged:
•
· • She was also preceded in death by two sisters. Marie Staley and Mary Arnold, Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus defective exhaust, $100 suspended Department, Roger Reibel, Veterans
'
8rown; and a grandson, Matthew Robinette.
·
costs; WaJter D. Arnold, Pomeroy, plus costs; Richard G. Cummins, Memorial Hospital;
·· Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh-Halley-Wooo Funeral speed, $30 pl~s costs; Char!es A. Racine, seat bel~ $25 plus costs;
I0:27 p.m., Middleport Police
Hpme, with the Rev. Mark Sanders officiating. Burial will be in the Pine Street Ritchie, Tuppers Plains, speed, $30 . Brandy Nichols Carroll, Hampton, Department, Floyd McClelland,
'
Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Monday. . plus costs; Harley L. Drummond, Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Tammy L. VMH.
- : In lieu of floweis, contributions can be made to the Holzer Hosp•ce Pro- Dexter, scat belt, $25 plus costs;
Dillon, Reedsville, seat belt, $25 plus
RUTLAND
i.ram, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631.
Charles D. Call, Huntington, costs ;
10 p.m .• McElhinney Hill. Carl
W.Va., speed. $30 plus costs; Joseph
Timothy L. Curtis, Long Bottom, Qualls, HMC.
M. Galmish, Hartville, speed, $30 disobeyed traffic device, $20 plus
TUPPERS PLAINS
plus costs; Scottie H. Smitti, Chester, costs; Dwayne A. Browning, Mid5:44a.m., State Route 681, Patsy
failure to y•eld, $20 plus costs; Don- dleport, speed, $30 plus costs; Wal-. ' Perkins, O'Bleness Memorial Hospiald J. Haning, Reedsville, fictitious.. ter S. Thome. Wellston; speed. $30 tal;
registration, $20 plus costs; seat belt; plus costs; Bobby Gillispie, Jacobs2:52 p.m., SR. 681, Lona James,
COLUMBUS. (AP)- The Ohio civil sanctions against abusers.
$25 plus costs; Ralph E. Rose, burg, disobeyed traffic device, $20 HMC.
. The non-partisan group is Racine, reckless operation. $25 plus plus costs; Heather ]'JI. Franckowiak,
Coalition of Black Citizens has
involved
in community advocacy as costs; Betty 1. Webster, Pomeroy. Middle(&gt;Ort~.seat belt, $25 plus costs;
endorsed 1Gov. George Voinovich's
11roposal to revamp the state's affir· well as screening and eitdorsem~nts speed, $21 plus costs; RobinA. Rife, Christina A. Taylor, Mount Vernon,
of candidates.
mative action program. .
Middleport, possession, $50 plus seat belt, $25 plus costs;' Don C. Per·
Sen. Jeffrey D. Johnson, D-CleveThe coalition, a six-year-old group
costs; drug paraphernalia, $75 plus due, Prichard, W.Va.,- speed, $30
with about 30 members, said on Fri- land, chairman of the 15-member costs. five days jail suspended, one plus costs; Chad E. Piffin, Marietta,
1
l ..
day it supports Voinovich 's plan to Ohio Legislative Black Caucus, said year probation;
speed, $30 plus costs; Jason Smith,
.
the
call
for
stricter
civil
rights
penalswitch the program from a race-only
lndraned Chakraborti, Columbus, Rutland, speed, $30 plus costs.
' .
·•
system for awarding set-aside con- ties was on target.
expired OL, $100 suspended to $50
·
But
he
said
participation
in
the
setttacts to one based on social and ecoplus costs, three days jail suspended;
aside program was rightfully racenomic disadvantage. .
"We find great merit in the gov- based because studies hav~ shown Jeff A. Forester~ Malta, expired OL,
ernor's overhaul of the affirmative that blacks are economically disad- $100 plus costs, three days jail and
$50 suspended if valid OL presented
action program," said the Rev. John · vantaged.
Coats, the group's state coordinator.
. Takea yqu where you
. ''The governor saw the handwriting
ftllllogol
on the wall and ptil an acceptable
:oRuggeCI
alternative on the table.
"l'm.sure there is disagreement in
. oi)eper"odlble
the African-American community,'.'
•Affordable .
Coats said: "Black b!Jsinesses don't
c.JIUe-We w.nt-To
.' POMEROY .
want 10 lese out on the business they
Nllr
~"non
llrldgs
haVe."
812-1588
.
The cOalition UJged the governor's
• I
VINTON
administration to pursue stricter ,
'
· c~fon:ement of civil rights violations.
Galls.c;o:&amp;~ Ylld ':
It 'also asked the Legisl3!ure to pro388 81103
'
vide criminal penalties in addition to

Hartwen ·c urd

;

Sunct.y, Aprll7, 1

1times-~entinet

tn.Jor league batleba/1 action,

Section B

·-

Sports. In brief

_ln~ian~, Rockies, Pirates

- PoiatPir wtteeilt.
teara clereats Galllpulli
,
GALUPOLIS - Visiting Poin
Pleasant'.., tennis team edged Gal
lipolis 3-2 in a Southeastern 011
Athletic League tennis match
Washington Elementary's c
. -.. CLEVELAND (AP) - charles llnlt ended.
Hanson (1-1).
in
shivering temperatures Friday
· Nagy , the forgotten man in
Nav ( 1..0) pve up one nm and
RocldM 5, EXJ1014
even
mg.
, Cleveland's big-name rotation six ~its in ~ix illnings, getting the
At Mon~real, Quebe~ ,- Vinny
In
singles action. Andy Betz
"Ritched the Indians out of their se~ Indtans' ftrst wtn after Dennis Castilla hit his first career grand
defeated PPHS' Reed 6-0, 6-1.
.•son-opening skid Saturday as they Martinez. lack McDowell ·and Ore! slam and Andres Galarraga also
Greg Lloyd lost to Chibber 6-7 0"'lefeated ~ Toronto Blue Jays ;5-3. Hershiscr all failed. He struck out homered as lhe Colorado Rockies
6.
Neelima Kool edged Nichole~ 6The lndtans, who had scored just five and walked two.
•
took· a five-run lead and buns on to
1,
4&lt;6 and 7-5.
: one r11n in each of lheir first three
Jose Mesa, Cleveland's fourth beat t]Je Montreal Expos S-4
·'tosses;_ bro~e out of the. slump pitcher, worked the .ninth and Saturday; stopping alhree-game losIn doubles play, the A.J. John:::_.most tn sptte of themselves. They allowed a. home run to Alex ;ng streak.
son-Rob Smith cast lost to the Rus· lienefited from six walks , three Gonzalez.
sell-Wallis tandem 4-6, 0-6 while
Mark Thompson (1-0), making
-:-rrors, a wild pitch and a passed
th~ Jeremy Ball-Richard Stephens
Outscored 19-3 in their first three his 1996 debut in place of injured
;liall, and scored. five runs despite games, the Indians took a 4-0.lead in Billy Swift, allowed one run and
patr lost to the Maynard-Cossin
.&amp;omg 1-for-12 Wtth runners in scor- the second. inning - their fmt ~d four hits in si-x innings. Curtis
duo 3-6. 3-6 in the deciding,match.
·
:ing position. ·
of the season - largely because of Leskanic pitched the ninth for his
On Tuesday, the Blue Devils (0Toronto's three-game winning Jhe wildness of Toronto startet Erik first save.
2 overall &amp; in the SlfOAL) will
host Logan at 4:30 p;ffl. at Wash. Montreal trailed 5-0 before Dave
ington Elementary.
Silvestri doubled home a run in the 1 ' ·
fifth. Then in the eighth, Mike
·,' '
• _
. .
.
.
•
. ..
Thursday's SEOAL match with
Lansing hit a run-scoring sinsle, and
GETS
. '
Jackson was postponed because of
Moises-Alou and David Segui hit h
- Cleve~nd ahortatop Omar Vlzquel takes a bad weather. Officials. hope to
RBI d bl s
. k h. d t row to get the force-out at etcond base on Toronto'e Carloa
. ou es; e~u· 1oo t . tr on Delgado In the elxth looing of Saturday's AmeriCIIn Lug!.Hf11eme In ann~nce a makeup date Monday.
Deputies begin
Bruce Ruffin s wtld pttch wtth ~wo . Cleveland, where the lndlane' 5-3 victory was their first of iha
outs, but Ruffin fanned pmch-httter eon. (AP)
Ha-'
Investigation of Hardman
WASHINGTON
COURT
Sherman Obando.
whSfl Bip Roberts ' pinch double
AI Chicago, Chan Ho Park
Ktrk Rueter (0-~) gave ~p .five keoftd a five-run eighth inning became the first South Korean to HOUSE, Ohio (AP)- The Fayette
runs and seven hits tn 3 ~/3 mnmgs. Saturday lhat rallied the Kansas City win in the major leagues, pitching County Sheriff's Depanment has
Montre~l had entered With a three- Royals over the Red Sox 7-3.
four scoreless innings in relief of .confiscated a video camera during~
garne .wmm.ng streak.
The Red Sox, the only major injured starter Ramon Martinez as an mvesttgatton of a Miami Trace
· Pirates 5, Mets 0
league team without a win, dropped the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the High School coach.
At .New York, by Bell homered to 0..5 for the first lime since 1966. Chfcago Cubs 3-1.
'
· Deputy Ron B~rke said. Satur•
and topled as the Pittsburgh P~ra.tes They took a 3-2 lead into the eighth
Martinez, 17-7 with the .majors' day that. Kirk Hardman, the boys'
beat the New York Mets 5-0 but Stan Belinda (0-1), relieving only no-hitter last season, strained head ~asketball coach: was being
~aturday and w~n for the fourth ltme ·Roger Clemens at the start of the his ri~ht groin muscle while batting ' mvesugated for all~gatmns of mism five games thts _season.
inning, walked Bob Hamelin and in the second inning. He grounded conduct.
•
· Danny D_arwtn (_1·0) allowed gave up an RBI double to Joe out, took a few strides toward first
Hardman
was
placed
on
paid
base, fell to the · ground and was
three: htts 10 stx mntngs. and Vitiello.
Fr~nctsco Cordova and Dan. Plesac
After Mike Macfarlane walked. helped off the field. The Dodgers leave in March and has been
removed from all school · an
fi~tshed wtth .three-htt rehef for the Jose Offerman bunted, but pinch placed on the 15-day disabled list.
Ptrates, who lost four of thetr first runner Ion Nunnally was thrown out
Park warme~ up for about 10 coaching responsibilities·until the
five last season.
at third
·
minutes before using his fastball to investigation is completed.
· No charges have been filed
. Mark Clark (0-1) made his debut
Ro~rts. scratched from the start- overpower the Cubs. He struck out against
him.
·
wnh M~IS .an~ g~ve_ up two runs and ing lineup because of the flu, then seven, allowed three singles and
In a release Friday, the sheriff's
seven hits m SIX mmngs.
doubled over the lead of left fielder walked four.
said-a student's parent
department
M!'fk Johnson's ~I groundout Mike Greenwell. Johnny Damon's
Todd Worrell pitched the final
reported
to
school
officials that a
· two innings for his second save,
put Pittsb~rgh ahead m the first, and bloop double scored Roberts.
video
camera
was
in
a locker in the
Bell btl hts first homer of the season
Belinda hit Tom Goodwin with striking out the side in the eigh!h.
boys'
locker
room
near
the showlead~ngoffthe~ond.
.
the next pitch and was ejected. The.Dodgers stopped a four-game
Ptttsburgh, which had I! hits, got Benches and bullpens emptied onto losing streak, winning for the first ers. The camera was allegedly
three more runs tn t~e etght,h off the field but no punches ,were time since they beat Houston in their operating.
J~rry DtPoto o~ Charhe Hayes ~- thrown. A moment later. Keith opener.
·
The video camera, a 35mm
nftce fly, Bells run,-sconng tnple , Lockhart singled into right and · They were outscored 20-5 in the · camera arid video cassettes were
a~d Ne.lson Lmano s RBI smgle. Goodwin ·scored all the way from first two games of this series, which confiscated by deputies. • .
~~P~to had escaped a base~- loaded first for the fifth run of the inning.
has been played in ch.illy , windy
The investigation was turned
Jam tn the seventh.
Hipolito Pichardo (1 -0) pitched conditions.
over
to thd Fayette County sheriff"·
1
Royal!~ 7,.Red Sox 3
.two hitless innings in relief of starter
J~ime Navarro (0-1) allowed five after the school did an internal
.At Kan~as Ctty, M~ . , Bost:_l!_~ ~ Kevin Appier..
. 1
hits and four·walks in 5 1/3 innings.
investigation.
skidded to tts worst start m 30 years
Dodgers 3, Cubsl
·
No timetabl~ has been set on the
\
'
'
'
I
_ mvesttgahon.
When
it is completed, a report will be. handed over to
&lt; the Fayette County prosecuting
: attorney for evaluation.
H~rdman was indicted by a
HICKORY, N.C. (AP) - The any, money won and winner's aver- Conn., Chevrolet, 300, $9,505.
Ky Chevrolet 300 $3 69~
W:
.
.
order of finish of Saturday's .._age speed in mil~s per hour:
4. (14) Ja.qon Keller, Greenville,
ii (2) Kevi~ Lepage' Sh~lbllflle
":~·· ~~~~at301\,$~· 545 · H 1 - Hockmg County arand jury in
U67,515 Sundrop_300 'NASCAR
' I. (I) David i!lreen, Owensboro, S.C., Chevrolet, 300: $6,955.
Vt., Chevrolet: 300, $3,S45.
' Mich.·, Ford, 3 ~~ $ 3 .~ 7gwa, 0 1' ~ February 1988 on 10 sex-related
: charges. while he was the head .
Busch Grand Nattonal stock tar Ky., Chevrole~ 300; $17.480,60.323
5. (4) Todd Bodtnc, Chemung,
9. (5) Curtis Markham Freder(?) B bb D
Ch"
13
·1
H"
k
M
·
•
·
N
Y.
Ch
I
300
$3
430
·
'
·
o
Y
otter,
tcago,
_ boys' basketball coac~ at Logan
race at .363-mt e tc ory . otor mph.
. .. evro et,
• • ·.
tcksburg, Va. Pontiac 300 $3 395. Ch
1 300 $2 245
Speedway ~it~ starting position in
2. (17) Hermie Sadler, Emporia, .
6. (II) Jimmy Spencer, Berwick,
I 0. (12) ~ Pe~son,'spa'rtan~;o (~O) J' ff 'F ll. A b . _ High School in Logan. In Decem·parentheses, dnver, hometown, ty~
Va., Chevrolet, 300, $9,730.
Pa., Chevrolet, 300, $2,895 .
burg, S.C., CIJ,evt:plet, 300, $5.,595.
M · Ch v ~ 3
~ urn, - ber 1988, he was acquitted.
:- He resignetl "in May 1989 after
ot~ll!· laps completed, reason ·out of
.3. (6) Randy LaJoie, Norwalk,
7. (21) Jeff G.-een, Owensboro,
11. (26) Chad Little, Spokane.
ass., e ro et,
' •22 ·

oyals ·an.d Dodgers win

..:1

qreen c.aptures wi~ in Sundrop ~00 BG.N race

d:, $j

•

Czechs -take 2-1
By STEPHEN WADE
· PRAGUE, Czech Republic (AP)
~ Czech captain Vladislav Savrda
.bl:at his American co~nterpart Tom
Gtillikson at his own game Saturday,
l~!lving the Davis Cup defenders one
match from elimination.
·Sl!vrda switched his doubles team
overnight, choosing his top singles
players Petr Korda and Daniel Vacek
1instead of do11bles-specialists Martin
· Damm an&lt;~, Jiri Novak.
• · .:Korda and Vacek routed Ameri• Cli[IS Patrick McEnroe and Patrick
G~lbraith 6-2, 6-3, 6-3, giving the
C¥Cbs a 2-llead in the quarterfinal ·
· match.
.... \G_ullikson stayed. with McEnroe
ahil Galbraith, passing up a chance
' 10 .fuse bis tifp; singles player TOdd

lead~

in Davis Cup quarterfinals

Martin, who is also on,e. of the Courier or Michael Chang x- all
Gullikson did not take w~ll to
world's best ar doubles.
ranked in the top IO·and all wtth pri- · Korda's comment.
Martin, ranked 17th in the world, or plans.
.
"Well, • really don't know what
will face No:' 35 Vacek in today's
· "We obvie~sly have to have a . makes Korda delighted, so I'd rather
first singl~s match. That could leave good day tomorrow," Gullikson said. not comiitent on that," Gullikson
it to No. 19·MaliVai Was!rington fac- "It's going to be a difficult p,-oposi- "said. "These two guys you see here
ing the erratic but explosive No. 41 tion for us, but I think we have the are great players and great doubles
Korda in what could be the decider. . pla)'Crs who a~ capable of dOing it." players. They carne here and they
"Two great singies players are
The Czech are winless in three prepared to play and ·were ready to
probably beller than doubles spe' previous Davis Cup ties with the play -they just got beat."
cialist&lt;," Savrda said. "And the evi- United States, and have won the Cup
The two Czechs ha~ - played
dence of that is what happened last only once- 1980.
together twice previously in doubles
year in the finals when Pde Sampi-as
- Korda, who teamed with Siefan -but not for lhree years- and had
was called in to -play with Martjn."
Edberg hi doubles to win this year's lost each time.
Gullikson doesn't have Sarnpras Australian Open, said he was pleased
McEnroe and Galbraith were 1-0
this time. The Americans- 31 times not to see Martin.
' · in previous Davis Cup play, winning
Davis Cup champions - carne to
"When I heard McEnroe and Gal- ·in this year's opening-round 5-0
Prague with their "third team," hop- braith were playing, I was delighted ·victory over MeKico.
ing to get through to the semifinals that Martin wasn't there," Korda
The C1..echs- quicker at the net
without Sampras, Andre Agassi, Jim said.
with almost flawless serving with

..

numerous point-winning returns dominated from the first game to the
last.
·
McEnroe double faulted twice
serving the first game of the match,
giving the Czechs a break. The
Americans lost the first four games
of the set- Galbraith was broken in
the third. and wound up with five
double faults in a set that lasted only
26 minutes.
·
The second set was almost the
same. The Czechs again broke the
Americans twice in a set that lasted
only 28 minutes with the McEnroe
and Galbraith at times looking
almost defenseless.

~hiladelphia
·
boxers
tally victories in_Olympic trials .·
--1f1;
ED' SCHUYLER Jr.
like brothers," R~id said of the oth- 12 trials champions in the box-offs. ·u.s. championships in February.
,,PAKLAND,Caltf: (AP). Power two boxers. "We're all from A champion needs to win one bout Cauthen was the 1995 U.S. champi~r•t"tnclung Davtd Retd and c~u~ter, Philadelphia·." .
.
at the box-offs; the challenger needs on. ·
pu~~hmg Teromce. Cauthen ~omed :
-"I'm looking io -take the gold~ .to win twice to. make-the Olxmpic·
··Antonio T&amp;rY.er, 2?. a Pan Am and
~1t Raheem S~turday ~ Phtl~del- that's all,'' lbe·22-year-old !teid said team:
.
world champion from Orlando,- Fla.~
phiaboxerstow_mc~amptonshtpsat
aftctoutpointingJeffreyClark,27,of · ·
Cauthen,_l9, came on strong m won the 178-pound title on a
the.U.S. Olymptc trtals.
theArmyatFortBragg, N.C., 18-13. lhe third round and ;won the 132- walkover when Glenn Robinson,
Reid,. at 1.56 pounds,_an~ C~uReid,~ U.S. and Pan American
pound tide on a 10-5 decision over who had weighed in in the morning,
then, at 132, both turned m btg thtrd Games 147-pound champion in Jermaine Fields, 23, of Washington. failed to appear for the bout. Robinrounds Satur?ay in advancing IQ the
199~,1ed only 7-6 after two rounds.
D.C.
·
.
son, 27, of the Bronx, N.Y., can still
bo)I,·Offs ~pn! ~ 8•20 at Augusta, Ga. He rocked Clark with several boom"I dug down. I wanted it and I box in today's losers' bracket final.
OnFrida:r:ntght,Raheemwo~~
ing right hands to the head and pulled it ou~" wd Cauthen, who
"We're trying to make it to the
11.9·po~nd Utle on a 22-5 deciSion . fo~ him to take a standing eighttrailed 3..() after the ftrst round and 5- Olympics," Tarver said. "We hope
over Steven Carter of the Navy at count in lite third round.'"
4 lifter the second. ''The last round the rest of lhe world doesn't show
No~olk,Va., at the Henry J.I!JUse'
Clark will 'box in the losers' ' I said I got to figh~"
up."
1
Conventton &lt;;enter.
'
.
bracket finals today. The winners of ·
Fields, also a lefty, .had outpointFernando Vargas, 18, of Oxnard,
:._ 'We're very clo~; wfre almost those bouts will compete against the ·ed Cauthen in the sethifinals of the · Calif., looked especially sharp in

building up an 18-9 lead over Gary
Jones, 18, of Miami in -the 147- ~
pound final. Vargas, who landed sev· eral hard punches to the head, won
19-11:
Eric Morel, 20, of Madison, Wis.,
scored effectively with counter
punche.s in the third round and won
the 112-pound.title on a 16-15 verdict over"U.S. champion Ramases
Patterson, 19, of River Rouge, Mich.
Pauerson had beaten Morel22-12 in
the U.S. championships semifinals.
•

Hiltwin- pole posi~ion for toc:lay's Argentine Grand ~rix

; BUENOS AIRES; Argentina
"I was biting my nails which is a
·~i have to IllY it w~ al\Vays
&lt;1Pl- Bri~n's Damon ·Hill won bjt !!jfficult" when -you're wearing going to~ a close thina.'' Hill ~d.
t1iC pole postuon for the Argentine gloves,"Hllltoldanewsconfcrence. We left 11 very late to JO out, JUS!
Qi-and ·Prix,· qain. beating world ' . Siuing in the pits wilh the clock 'waiting to see how things went. trlf.
cllafupion Michael SchuruchCr by a ticlting away, Hill plwently w&amp;iliid •· fie was a big problem and it was ditfrajjtion of a. second on Saturday. .
for a chance to qu8Iilly while the ,ficqlt to geta quick lap."
~11. favoRd to llllcF. his llliJd
Gcnllan dri,vennade itto tile head of
Hill said "it is very importaalto
straightFormulaOiievit:tory,lefthis the qualifying list. Then; be we get pole position" describing the
b!if.t lap in his Willimla-ltcnault for went oUt and dramatically snatched track u "vety tight and twisty," ·
the.lut fiv~ mi~u.tea of thO 119ur·IOIII .pole IY'IY from tile P.errart team.
makins it difficult to pass ~nents.
trial, Cc!aina Schmaoher 'by 0.2
The pRviOIII day, Hill edaed
Schu'machtr, who wtll start
sci:Ondswiduclockingofl minute, Sebumacher by uimilar mlflin in today's race iR second place after
30.346111C011ds.
111c.next·to-lut·lap of practice. ..
recording a. time of I :30.S98, had

ti;e

..

J

said be would need "a lot of htck" .
to start high on th_c grid.
.
When asked tf be was dtsappointed at second place, Schumacher said: "Why? I think it's afantastic result. I'd have been very surprisod to be at the top."
Hill's teammate, Jacques Villimeuvc of Canada, Was third in
I!30,901, while Benetton 's Jean Alesi of France, recovering from an ear·
·ty spin off the track, ~e in fourth
in 1:31.038. Belietton's · Gerhard ·

Berger of Austria was fifth in .
1:31.262.
·
The first two positions for today
are the same as 'last year when Hill
won the race.
· Driven have agreed thai a goOd
position is especially vital (c.: today's
race because of. the tight 2.66-mile
tr&amp;Gk · which offers few passing
·
opportunities.

'
•

- six seasons as a teacher and· head
coach at Logan and was hired br
the Miami Trace school board in
June 1989.
Devils beat Whalers 6-3
HAR1FORD, Conn. (AP) The New J~rsey Devils broke out
6f a scoring slump with a six-goal
second period, and snapped a threegame losing streak in a 6-3 win
over the Hartford Whalers Saturday
afternoon. ·
The loss eliminated Hartford
(32-37-9) from the playoffs for the
fourth consecutive year and .kept
the defending Stanley Cup champions in the thick of the race for the
Eastern Conference's final playoff
spot.
..
N~w Jersey (35-31-12) trailed
1-0 after the first period, but scored
on five of its first nine shots in the
second a~ain&lt;1 Whalers rookie
goalte Jason 1vwzzaui. Muzzatti
· had shut out the Devils 1-0Thursday, but was pulled after the fifth
· New Jersey goal and replaced by
Sean Burke.
The six goals in a period- two
by Dave Andreychuk and one each .
by John MacLean, Bobby Carpenter, Bobby Holik, and Ken
Daneyko - tied a New Jersey
rec~&gt;rd. During their three-game
losmg streak, the Devils had scored
. only two goals.
New Jersey (35-31-12) moved
, into a temporary tie for the eighth
and final playoff spot in the East. em Co_nfere~ce w!th the Tampa
Bay Ltghtmng wtth 82 points
·pending the outcome 1 of Tamp~
Bay's game at PittSburgh Saturday
night.
Cantoo-Akron
beals Bowie 8-ft
. CANTQJ'I, Ohio (AP) - Jim
· Betzsold and 1Alex Ramirez had
·two-RBI doubles in the third as the
Canton· Akron Indians beat the
Bowie BaySox 8-0 Saturday in.
Eastern League action.
.
Richie Sexson had two RBI ..
including a run-scoring triple in~
first, and Enrique knocked in two
run~ with • fourth innirig single. '
. Je~.Se~ton(l..O) _gaveup~I:Jit
m stx mmngs, ~kmg out six and
walking one. ·Loser Bril\!1 Brewer
. (0..1) gate lip five runs, one .;, -.
them earned,. on five hits in three
in ·
. ~-·
.

r

�0

I

Page 82 • , ' 1 • .._, ' 1bwl

.

PomeroY •lllddllpolt • a.lllpolla, OH • Point Ptuunt, WV

,

Sunday,April7,

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

99l~

Giant$ down Marlins; Pirates also win
' night as the San Francisco Gi ants
By TOM WITHERS
beat the Marlin s 7- t in Miam i.
AP Sports Writer
The 27-year-old right-hander was
The Florida Marlins can only
hope their Cuban rookie pitcher is as one of two Cuban defector s coveted
by several teams this winter. The othgood as thi s one.
er,
Livan Hernandez, signed wi th the
Osvaldo Fernandez, who the Marlins pursued in the off-season before ' Marlins. He was scheduled to make
dropping out of an escalating bidding . his starti ng debut today for the Marwar, won hi s major-league debut lins' Triple-A affiliate.
The Giants were glowing followwith eight strong innin gs Friday
ing Fernandez's debut, in which he .
allowed one run and five hits, ~truck
Cent~r
out five and walked two. The team
was rid iculed all spring when Fer, RIO GRAN DE - Here is the nandez went 0-2 with a 9.45 ERA
schedule forthe week of April 7-14 givin g up 30 hits in 20 innings. A
at the Universi ty of Rio Grande's $3.2 milliun, three-year in vestment
Lync Cen ter.
appeared to be a waste.
Fitness ~.enter, gymnasium
. But Fernandez showed the form
. and racquetball toiirts
that helped him go 22-0 in internaToday- 6 , JI p.m.
tional competition for the Cuban
Monday- 7 a. m.- II p.m.
national team. He defec t~d during a
Thesday- 7 a.m.- II p.m.
tournament in Tennessee last July,
· Wednesday- 7 a.m.-11 p.m.
two months before the 21-year-old
Thursday -7 a.m.: ll p.m.
Hernandez did.
·
Friday -7 a.m. -9 p.m.
. Both players had wanted to pitch
Saturday - 1-6 p.m.
in Miami in front of Sou th Florida 's
Sunday, Aprill4- 1-3 and 6 - large .Cuban commun ity, but the
II p.m .
Marlins dropped out of the bidding

Lyne

1.

I

slate

~ dowa the Clev~Wid Jndj•M,

. !lllllt be llllki"' the rounda.
'
~ile, ~ eb,e lb expt.ln
wf.*'s hlppened'IO the IndiMI$ tq__far
thtc yeu?
. ·The lineup dutlled the mejon in
hllllng, lloalers and scorin1 Iaat seasOli has been limited 10 a tOial of
thOee
in three losaea, the lalest
a 7-1 defeat by the Toioo!O Blue Jays .
011.llrillay oigllt.
; •"If the other team pounds you for .·
seven runs, the weather's no ·
e~use."lndians batting coach Char• lie Manuel seid. " We haven't,been
'M
\.

NL
action...
'

,._, I

COMPLETES DOUBLE PLAY ,;_After retiring Philade~phla's• Lenny ·
· Dykstra at second base, Cincinnati shortat~p Barry Larkin flrea ,to.. -.
.first base to complete the double play In the third Inning of Friday; ,
night's game In Philadelphia, where the Reds;won &amp;-Sin 10 innlngs 1. ,,
(AP)
·
.
• .. ;

....

. ~~.

er.

:I•

!!: 0. tl;l,

See
Jerry Bibbee
• Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed.

I.00
1.00

1.00

2~

,, Boston ......................O •

.000

4

The Meigs County Community Housing Improvement Office is conducting a survey to
determine the need and interestin a Homebuyer Down Payment Assistance program in
Meigs County.
•.
The Hom'ebuyer Assistance program would · provide down pay~ent/closing cost
assistanC(:l to Low/Moderate Income Households in Meigs C~unty. This would enable
the households to purchase approved homes in Meigs County.
If your household would be interested in participat!ng i~ this program, please call the
Meigs CHIP office at 992·7006 - Monday thru.Fnday- 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.- Jean
Tru5sell.
If a ~ignificant number of households are interested, the ·County may include this
program in the FY '96 Round 6 CHIP application now being prepared.
.

4 cyl. 16 valve EFI eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans., tilt &amp; ·cruise·, P. v..:indows &amp; P.

locks, air cond., AM/FM stereo cassette, cast aluminum wheels,A-1 condition. Extra clean.

SPECIAL

4,999

8

I

Cminl DIYilton

3 .2SO

3 .000

• "'
Western Di•ilioa
• ~' Te1uu ..................... .. :\ 0 1.00
·,taliforniu ................. 2 I .667
.. Scoolc ......
2 2 .soo
·Qnk!""" ................... ! 3 .2'i0

~
1~

..

I~

,

.
1
I~

2'

Friday's ~res

Knn,.. Cily S, BDOII!n 4 ('12)

~=:.!~{~=p I

New Yart 111: Teu~, ppd., rain

o.ttand 13. Dem&gt;il1' .
Milwaube ·10, Selttle6

,.

California 7, 't.'III'Cirgo 6 (II)

"

•

.·

i.

Tiley played Saturday
Toronto (Hanson 1-0) at CLEVE·

•· Boston (Clemens 0.1) ar Kanau Cil)'
'(Appier 0-1). 2:3:11 p.m.
Detroit (Lira 0.1) vt. Daland (Reyes
•0-1) a1 Lu Vegas. •:0s p.m. · ·
• Ballimore (Hnynes 0-0) o.t Minneaota
·(Rndke I .0). 8'05 p.m.
, New Yort {Key 0.0) at Texas (Witt().
.0), 8JS p.m.
Chicago (Fernandez 0-0) n1 California
,(Abbo41 tl-0), lO,OS p.m.
' Milwaukee (Sparks 0-0) at Seanle ·
:UohllJOII 1.0), IO:M p.m.

.

4 Dr., 4.6 V-8 eng., PS, PB, auto.
trans., Climate Control, air cond., tilt &amp;
c ruise, dual air bags, dual power
seats, P. windows &amp; P. locks, AM/FM
stereo cass., cast aluminum wheels,
40,000 miles.

'17

'

I

Today's pmes

Toronto (Quanlrill 0-0) at CLEVE·LAND (M..tn.. ().t), I &lt;l!i p.m.
Ballii'RCft (Muulna 1.0) ot Minnesota
'(Robenwn ().I), 2:M p.m.
Boston (Moyer 0-0) at Kansas qty
(Gubicu 0.0), 2:35 p.m.
. Chic:IIJO {Aivar~ 0:.1) at C..,lifomia
IFintcy 0.1),·4:M p.m.
, Detroit (Sodowaky 1·0) vs. Oa.kJt:nd ·
. (Prie10 ~) 01 t... Veps, 4oM p.m.
· Milwaukee (Bones 0-0)'111 Seanle
JHilch&lt;:o&lt;k 1.0), 4: 3~ p.m.
, NewYori&lt; (Gooden~ondCooe !.())
. a1 Texu (Pavlik 1-0 and Hill 0-0), 4:05
p.m..2

'

I

S1. Louis .................. 2

2,

.2 ~

.750

2 ·· .S(XJ
2 .500

-·
WeRem Dlwlslon
'

Sna Dieso .. .............. 2 1 .667
Sna Fro}lcisco .'.... :.... 2 · 2 .SOO
Colurudo .................. ! 3 .2l0
Los Anselcs ........ ..... l · 4 .200

• - .

~

II
2

'ii'"'rliliiy's scores

'Moor.real6, Colorado 4
Chic:aco II , Los Anceles I
· San Francisco 7, Ac.ida I
CINCINNATI6, Philadelphia S (10)
Piltlburab 7, New Yon s .
Sl. Louis~ ; Atlanla .4 {14)
San Dieao 10. Houston 4

ni'ey played. Saturday .

Colorado (Thompson 0.0) it Montteol
(Rueter().()), US p.m.
Pinlbut&amp;h (Darwia 0-0) II New Yort
· (ct.k ().()), I:40 p.m.
,
Los Aaaeles (R . Mtrtiaez 1 ~ 0) at
Chicago (Navarrp 0.0). 2:20p.m. .
CINCINNATI (So!keld 0-0) nr
. _ ~ Philadelphia (HUilter 0-0), 7:0S
Snn f nmcisco (M, Leiter 0. ) arAoridn(K . BIQwn().l), 7:05p.m.
St. Louil (Andy BcatJ 0-0) at- Athmta
(Maddux. I.()). 7:10p.m.
.
San Oie10 (A1hby 0-0} :u HOUIIOft
(Re,oolds 0.1). 8:05p.m .

Todioy's games
S1. Lou is (Busby 0-0) at Atlqnta
!SchmidI 0.0), I : 10 p.m.
CINCINNATI (Schourek 1-0) a1
Philadelphia (Fetnandez 0- J ), J J.S p.m.
Colorado ~Ritz ,1 -0) Dt,Monuenl
(fwero 0-1), 1.35 p.m..
san Francisco (Gardnu 0.0) V' 'Aofi®
(Buiken ().()), I JS p.m.

second-Inning pickOff .a ttempt by_pitcher Juan
Guzman during Friday nlghf• game In Cleveland,
·.
· where the Blue Jays won 7-1. {AP)

New Jeise)' ......... ,29 44 J'T!
Boston................. .-.. 29 4S .392
Phitadelphio ........... t4 60 .189
Cmtral Dlwlsion
y-tbicago ..............6.S 8 .890
tndiona ...................4j 29 .608
CLEVELAND'..... ..43 ~ 1 ..58 1
A.tlanla ................... 42 ]2 .568
Detroit .................... 41 n .S62
Charlene ................37 37 .~
Milwaukee ............. 22 51 J OI
Toronto .......... :...... J9 ' 54 .260

2S 1~

!!: 0. E&lt;l.

x-Sa.n Antonio .......S4
,.~ ""' ":.........." ...so
. x-Hoost~......43
Denver ................... 31
Minncwtll ..............2.5

20 .730
24 .676
~I
.S81
43 .41 9
49 · . ~38
baUas ..............., ... ~.22 Sl .JOI
Varw:ouver ............. 12. 61 .164

P•clnti: Dlvlsloo
y-Seaule ................. S9 IS .797
x-LA. Laken ........46 27 .6~0
Portland ................. 38 35 .52 1
Phoenix. .................. 38 J6 ..5 14
Sacnunemo ............'34 ~9 .466
Golden State .......... 32 42 .432
L.A. Oippen ......... 27 47 .365
x.-i:li~hed plnyoff apoc
y-clinchcd division

24

28~

43
46

!ill

I Pord.OO 97, Denver 91

MiRPeW'a 103, U1ah 99
Seallle 130, - · 121 (2 01)
LA. L.ak.Crs 104, Vancouver 94
Sncrnmeato 96, Hou$1on91

p.m.

Today's games
Detroit nt Boston, 12:30 p.m.
Snn Amonio nt L.A. Lakers, 3 p.m.
. Phoeni-. 11.1 VIUlcouver, 3 p.m.
Chicago ar Ortando. S:30 p.m.
' Houston at Denver. S·p.m.Utllh at Sacramento, 9 p.m.

4
II
23
29
311h

41 1h

......-

1 2~
20 1~

21

241h
27
~2

NHL standings
EASTERN CONFEllENCE
A.tlanlltDhtision

laiD

!!: 0. I fla.!it: ta

x.-Philudelphia~
. 42

2J 13 . 97 269 200
&gt;·N.Y. Rongers .. I 22 14 96 263 216

F1arid1r................ 29
WllShinaton ........ :l 30
TamP" Bo, ........ ~5 lO
NewJersey ........ M~I
N.Y. blnnders .... 2049

Friday's srores
Delf0l1 I08. Philadelphia 87
Arlanta82, New Jersey 70
Olic:.ago 126, Chadone 92
New York 86, Milwaukee 79
. WasbittafOn 104, San Antonio 84

New York at Toronto, 6 p.m.
Miami Ill Indiana, 6 p.m. ·
Milwaukee at New Jersey. 7:30p.m.
PlliiDdtlphia nl Allldlta, 7:30p.m . .
Olarlotte nt Q.EVELAND, 7 : ~ p.m.
L.A. Clippers at Dallu, 8:30p.m.
Seattle nr Ponlnnd. 10 p.m.
Minnesota at Golden Slate, 10:30

20~
22~
23~

Mklwf:ll Division

lam -

They played Saturday

26
41

WESTERN CONFERENCE

r-m. .

·

9
II
12
12
8

87 245 121

ss
82
80
48

194
237
185
303

Nltl'thalt m.;.Won
, .p;.,burch ....... 47 26 4 9.! 344 263 •

Montreal ............ 39 :H 9
Boslon ................ :n JO I I
HW1fonl ........... 32 36 9
Bufrato ............... 30 41 7
Oc:tnwa .............. J7 !i6 5

tr1 2S6 239
8S 269 2.,.8

n

224 242
67 231 2S4
39 178 27~

••

1993 NISAN SENTRA 15715, Red, 4 Dr., A/C, A/f, AM/FM
caas., tilt, cruln, rear defroster ......................................... $9975
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tilt, crulae,.P. seats, windows &amp; P. loeltl,
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locka &amp; mlrrors •.•.•.._........................................................... $8995
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wheels, cloth lnterlor ............ ,...........~........,..............$6900
FORD ESCORT GT 15739, Red, A/C,.aport wheels,
cruiSe, rear defroster, AMJFM ceasetta.................,......... $10,475
1995 FORD ASPIRE SE-15741, Green, 2 Dr., AIC, AM/FM ca~.
rea~ spoiler, 7,000 mllaa, bal. of fact warr...................... $10,~
1993 FORD RANGER 15742, Dk. pewter, A/C, AMJFM cass.,
rear slider, aport whsals, bed liner, running boards ..... $10,425
1194 NISSAN SENTRA 15774, Red, 23,000 mllai, bal. of fact.
A/C, A/f, AM/FM cass, 1111, crulsa, ·
,375
GRAND AM t5750, White, V-6 eng., A/C, AfT,
AII/FII c.,a., Ult, crulae ...............-.......___,,,, ..-.•••....•••.•.$8825
FORD AEROSTAR VAN 15752, Red, 7 pall., A/C, A/f, till,
crulae.
wheell, dual mlrrort .....................................$8995
l'~.ti:vv LUMINA EURO 15753, Red, V-6 eng., A/C, A/f,
i.Mifil caaa., till, crulae, P. wlndowa, 24,000 miles, balance of
faeitorv warranty ................... """ ....:....... _" ......................$12,996
GRAND AM 15755, Rtd; A/C, AfT, AM/FII CD,
Interior... ,...........................~; ........................................$6495
CHEVY LUMINA APY 15757, Red, V-6 eng., A!C, A/f, 2
paint, 7 pan., P. windowa &amp; loeks, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
caas., cloth lnterlor...........................................................$12,205
19!13 CHEVY LUMINAAPV 15768, Lt pewter, V-6 eng., A/C,
till, cruise, P. windows &amp; locks.................,..............$12,800
1992 FORD PROBE GL 15767, Whitt, A/C, A/T, AM/FM cass.,
IUI110l~f .....................~.............................:.................. ,.. ,...•... $8370

1994 PONTIAC GRND AM 15764, Green, A/C, AfT, AM/FM
cruln, P. windows &amp; loekl............................. $10,625
TRACKER 15763, 4X4, red, A!f, AMIFMcuss.,

· Pinsburah (Wagner 1-0) 11 New York

NBAs~dings

EASTERN CONFERENCE

•

Alllatlc Diwllion

L &amp;1.

19 .743
New YOlk ...... ........43 30 .l89
Mi~ ................... J7 36 -~
Washinalon ..... .'..... JS 39 .473

!ill
11 ~~

17~

20 .

" ftiCI"
Kawasaki Motor Sports Center Has
P•rc•asetl 'lite.J &amp; I Sports s•op In
Po•roy, 0•• DH, To IH Weather
Conditions We Have .... UMble To Start
Constr.ctlon ex,.Hing lhe Existing .
Facility. Addlftl ANew AI!!IJar•r
Showroo• &amp; Stiles ....hllng. ·'1...
. "liEU'S ooa
PROJli.IM"
.
.
· AlAe End Of April We lave 'lilt La11e•t
Inventory Ever Htld At Tills Location
· Arrlvln1 Anti Nowhtrt To Put 11. .

Motk/520-H Lawn and

GatWn Traclor

WE INVEtmD THE GARDEN IRACTOR,
AND WE'RE ml11HE LEAD HORSE.
• Wheel Horse invented the
Uni-Drive Transaxle, and
· no-shift Hydrostatic drive.
• Wheel Hone invented the
first no-tool hitch system,,
and still leads the herd in
changing auachme'nts.
· • Wi1h Wheel Horse and
lbro as one company,
no other lawn and garden
tractor company even
comes close in quality and
service. Stop in for a demo
and see for yoarsel[

'

"iRi aGUii'JO.N"'
We Will It StiiiiJ All l1ve•tory At

Rock lottolli Prkes..wlth
Graatl Sla• ReiNitts oli ••Y Motlilsa
·YoJ•ttrs-~ ·Y•IIcans.-,
~ AI¥
.
..., Ski Aid Gt.er~~tors
.
·Specal Prk.. o. •••..,... ·

•1•••.

NO PAYMENT bR INTEREST UNnL
OCTOBER 1, 1996 For Qualified Buye~s
'

ER

BAU LU
STATE ROUTE 248

•

tHESTER

SiYIOIILL IIIVIITOIJ UISIJIIIIID IIW

YH Wn't ••• It P111 ·u· ·T~Iiae' lteit DHitU

KAWASAKI MOTOR SPORTS CENTER .
IIIII n.

222
227
199
211

(Jonts 0-0), I :40 p.m.
L~s An&amp;eles (Valdes 0.0} al Chic11co
(Cnsuno 0-0), 2:20p.m.
San Diego (BergrnnD 0-0) at. H0011on
(Swindell().()), 2o~5 p.m.
'

:ram
!!:
y·Orlondo .............. lS

NL standing!!

2 .lOO

3

J

.400

I
l
I

2 .lOO

2 .lOO

l

.:: Kansas

.~

PiHsbursh ................ 3

0

1 .61J7
2 .SOO
3 .2.50

.750

CiNCINNATt .......... 2
Houston ...................2

:.'New York ................2
.. Detroit ................ .. .... 2

• · MilwiMJkee ...............2
· · · Minncsoua .............. ..2
' • Chic:aao .................. .. l
City ........... .. l
. , CLEVELAND ......... 0

J

2

• ~

0
0

"
. ~:.

BACK TO THE BAG- Cleveland's Jim Thome
(right) dives back to llrat bl!se ahHd of·the tag
by Toronto flret baseman, Carlos Delgado on a

Central Dhklon
Chicago.. .................. 3 I .7!i0

Balrimort .................4
Toronlo ................... J

~~~~

WAS
$5995

Prices And
Payments
Clearly
Marked
On
Windshields

19114 GEO TRACK£R 4X4 151111, ~cad., sport whlels,
dull mlrrora .......................................................................$10,750
1989 BUICK REGAL CUSTOM 15617, Blue, V-6 eng., AIC, AfT,
AII/FM CUI., PW, Pl&amp; Ifill, lilt, cruln·.......................... $5995
1993 DODGE SHADOW 15628, Wflltt, A/C, A/f, AMJFM, rear
dtf., clollllntettur ................................................................ $7399
1989 CHEVY $-10 IS&amp;M, Extre call, AIIJFII, Clll., A/C, rear
mtt, bed liner. rilt elkltr.........._ ..........:.................. $6691
NISSAN TRUCK 15693, Rtd, AJC; A/T, AM/FM casl.,
rser llldtr, aport whsals, 22,000 miles, ba~nce of

li!l

:tAND (Naill' ().0), I ,os ,.m.

WAS
$19,495

---DOWN PAYMENT ASSISTANCE INTEREST SURVEY

Meigs County CommissionerS .

Eutam Dl~lslon

. Irlm

''

·~

4.5 V-8 ·auto, Maroon
lwlm11ro&lt;m leather interior, AC,
pwr seats-windows,
~~~~;~~mirrors, tilt, cruise, rear

Notes: A Lync Center membership is require&lt;! to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and adminis tr ators are admi tted with their ID
· cards.
• Racquetball court reservations
can now be made one day in advance
by calling 245 -7495 locally or tollfree at 1-800,282-720 I, ex tension
7495{.
.
• A,ll guests are to be accompanied
by a Lyne Center membership holder and a $2 fee .

,

·~

20'

1989 "'""·
DEVILLE

p.m.

'"

::~

1914 LINCOL,.

Rear Dutch doors, 4.3 V-6 auto,
Brown/brown w/beige cloth
interior, AC; stereo cass, pwr
seats-windows-lockS-mirrors, till,
cruise, rear
washer, defrost,
Like New

4 cyl; 5 spd, Gray wlgray cloth
interior, AC, stereo cass, re1u I
· defrost, 85 K miles. Nice car.

ERA last year, when he twice went
on the dis.bled list with shoulder
prqblems.
(See AL.., B-4)

NO MONEY DOWN AND NO PAYMENTS
UNTIL JULY 1996 W1th Approved Cred1t

MonliHI .......... :....... 3
Atlanla ..................... 2
NewYork ................2
Pbiladelphia ............. 2
Florlda ..................... l

AL standings

•',

8

Sunday, Afril 14 ~ Baseball
doubleheader vs. Georgetown at l

(Continued from 8 -2)
hitS. scored four unearned runs after
tWO. weie out in the fourth against
loser Tom Candiotti.
Pirates 7, Medii S
At New York, AI Martin homered
twice and Zane Smith won In his
return to the Pirates. '
Martin homered in the first
inning, then capped a three-run sev- ·
enth with a two-run shot' off· loser
Dave Mlicld.
·
'Jeff King als~ for the
Pirates.
'Smith, who spent parts of fi~e
seasons with the ~ rates before pitchmg for the Boston Red So~ last season, allowed fi.,.e hits in'five scoreless innings.

::.

auto. trans., Climate Control, air cond.,
AM/FM stereo cass . with disc player &amp;
voice activated cellular phone JBL audio
system, leather int. , all power dual power
seats, cast alum . wheels, rear defroster,
· &amp; cruise, dual air bags.
·

1987 FORD
ESCORT WAGON

Julio Franco. brou&amp;ht back from
J8ptUl to boost the · already potent
lineup, hoffiered for Cleveland's lone
run. 1be Indians have been ouUC&lt;ftd

·

M .. . . . . . . . . . . . .

.

Indians hitoien are just l·fot-24 19-3 in their losses.
with nalllleiS in ICOring position.
" We're just not bittin1 ri1ht
Leadoff Jllllll Kenny U&gt;fton is betting · now, " Franco said.
.083 overalll!ld cleanup man Albert
Guzman a!lo~ six bits in eilht
Belle isn't much better 11 .100.
innin1s. He went 4-14 with a 6.32

•

l\1ioolEPORT; 0~

1995
ASTROCL

il• nojly i.n'ta illldl!l! hip level."
·Juan Ou..,.a, cmUna Ptr 1a
iajwy-plqued "'IOD,IODIIbo willleu AL ct.e pioDI to tllelr lint.
threo-pme llllinc stJalr: a JICOIII
F'.eld since JUM 199ol. Clevellad IIIII
the belt home record in bauballlut
)'elf at S4-18.

runs

.14,120 MILES. 3.6 V-8 eng., PS , PB,

I p.m .

1ajies, the

c.s 1bowiaJ bow Allanta's pilclien

....

Today - 6-9 p:m.
Monday-. 6-9 p.m.
'liiesday- 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
ThursdaJ- 6-9 p.m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
s..turday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, Aprill4- 1-3 and 6-9
p.m.
Free-weight room
Today -closed
Monday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Thesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Wed.nesday- 3:30-8 :30 p.m.
Thursday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Friday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Saturday - closed
Sunday, April 14- closed

• ulftlalivc 11 -liiUally . .. 1be

..

Pool

Home athletic eventll
Thesday - Baseball doubleheader vs. Cedarville at I p.m.
Thursilay - Softball doubleheader vs. Cedarville at 4 p.m.
Friday- Baseball doubleheader
vs. West Virginia Tech al I p.m.
Saturday-Junior Olympic volleyball tournamen t (day-long event);
haseball doubleheader vs. Malone at

»•••

· - WAL.ICIR
P I ·Wi!t&amp;o
' 'fhote World Saie&amp;

for Fernandez when his price went straight.
allowed five hits in eight innings and
Mark Grace continued his hot hit: : ::
hi gher. than expected . .
Reliever Mike Dyer picked up the
had two RBis as the Dodgers ting, going 3-for-3 with two walks
After learning the Giants would _win, and Mel Roj,as got the last four dropped their foun h straight. .
and two ~Bis . He is now JO-for- 1 ~,,.;:
Bullinger (1 -0) wal.ked three and this season.
be playing the Marlins in the sea- oqts for his first save.
~
w:.o·&lt;-~
Cubs U, Dodgers 1
son's first week, Fernandez asked
matchecl a career' high with eight
Chicago, which fjnished with 16 ~;:
At Chicago, - Jim Bullinger sirikeouts.
·
. (See NL on B-3) .
~
San Francisco manager Dusty Baker if he could pitch.
" He was psyched, he wanted it,
he was ready," Baker said.
••
Stan Javier homered leading off
the game against Florida staner Pat
Rapp, and Darry Bonds hit a two-run
homer and a run-sc·orjng triple for the
Giants.
·••
Elsewhere in the National
.
~
.
League, it was Montreal6, Colorado
•
4; Chicago II , Los Angeles I; Pitts461 SOUTH THIRD
PHONE 992-2196
burgh 7, New York 5; San Diego 10,
Houston 4 ; and St. Lo~is 5, Atlanta
4 in 14 innings.
Expos 6, Rockies 4
Montreal rallied for three runs in
the sixth in ning against a shaky Colorado bullpen to wi n its home open-'
Trailing 4-3, the Expos bunched
.a bloop single, a fielder's choice and
infield singles by Mark Grudzielanek
and Randell White to wiri their third

ae

Bl_
ue Jay$ t~p Indians 7-1; ·A's also win ·

Moore walked Lee Tinsley on
But Jot-dan wasn't up for long, as there's anybody in the game that I've
four pitches, pulling runners on fi rst Moore struck him out, too, on a ever known that wants to be there for
and seconll with one out. That's called third strike to earn his second that last three outs, it's Jeff Brantabout the time Moore started won- save of the season.
ley."
dering whether he'd keep pitching.
"11 was close," Jordan said. " It
Notes: Knight said Brantley con" I knew I was one balle• away was a tough pitch, right on the out~ vinced him he was ready to return to
from being out of tl1e ganae," he said. side comer. I tip my hat to him."
the lineup. "He assured me that he's
" I had to zone myself in and conJordan, a rookie iofie.lder, sup- thrown enough on the side and that
centrate more.".
· plied some heroics the night before he has good enough command," the
Moate said be sensed a flaw in his with a homer that put the Phillies
delivery, which was related to his ahead for goocl in a 7-4 victory·over manager said . ... Knight ~lso gave
some high praise to Larkin. " I've
state of mind.
·
·
Colorado.
seen him time and time again do
" I was overexcited out ihere," he
"We battled tough all night," Jor- whatever it takes," he said. "There's
said. "That forced my fro~ shoulder dan said. " We showed that )Ne can no one that I would pick before Bar-to Oy out and my balls were going come back. We just didn 't end up ry Larkin to ~tan a baseball team."
high. I was bas ically all over the winning the game:" ·
.. . Philadelphia's Tyler Green underplace."
That honor went to the Reds, who went successful shoulder surgery
Moore said he came 10 the real- · now look forward to the return of .Friday, but the right-hander won 't be
ization at about the same time as a Brantley, who has been out since able to pilch until at least August,
number of teammates, who were March 3 after surgery on a broken team physician Dr. Phillip Marone.
more than glad to share their advice bone in his right foot.
... Two more injured pitchers, Cun
to him. .
" I feel like I'm being reinforced,"
Scliilling and Tommy Greene, are
"Everybod y was on me, ")le said. Knight said. ·'It's like making a huge expected to pitch in an extended
" I think I even heard the outfield get- trade to boost you."
spring training game Saturday in
Brantley, who had 28 saves last Clearwater, Fla .... The Reds Friday
tin g on me."
The Phillies sent up power-hitti ng seaso n, will ge t the closer's job back,
lraded minor league outfielder
Pete lncaviglia as a pinch-hitter, and Kni ght said.
William Pennyfeather to the 'cali" He will never fail because the fornia Angels for infielder Eduardo
Moore go t him with a called third
strike. Nex t up was Kevin ' Jord a ~ . situation 'is too big for him . He fails Perez, son of former Red Tony
who sent the game into extra inn ings just becau se he 's not making pitch- Perez. Perez, 26, was optioned to
es· that night," Knight said. " If Class AAA Indianapolis.
with a solo homer in the ninth.

In °0ther NL action,

'

In AL action,

Reds slip by Philli~s 6~5 in 10 innings
By JOHN F. BONFATTI
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jeff
Brantley returns to the Cincinnati,
Reds today. The Reds could have
used their ace closer Friday ni ght.
Marcus Moore put a scare in the
Reds before striking out the last two
Philadelphia Phillies with two runners on in the ,lOth inning of the
Reds' 6-5 vicrory.
With the Reds bullpen see in~ a lot
of action early in the season, Cmcinn~&gt;ll manager Ray Knight didn't
have many options after staner M'lfk
Ponugal was lifted in the sixth
inn ing.
·
" We used a lot of pitchers the prior three nights," Knight said. " Marcus Moore. we were either going to .
win it with him or lose it with him."
The issue was certainly in doubt
up until Moore's last pitch.
Barry Larkin's solo homer and
Eric Owens' pinch-hit RBI gave the,
Reds a 6-4 lead in the lOth, but
Moore came on in the· bottom of the
inning and immediately walked the
leadoff hiller, Mark Whiten.
Whiten mov'ed to second on Todd
Zeile's deep fly ball, and Benito Santiago doubled him home to bring.the
Phillies within one.

•
,.

,

' ...

l .

GMC SONOMA TRUCK 15785, While, SLE, sport wheels,
AMIFM ca11., tilt, cruln, Tonneau cover, rear slider, A/C, P.
iwlti!IOWI &amp; lol:ks.................................................................. $8570
NISSAN KING CAB 4X4 15789, Blue, A/C, AM/FM cass.,
mllea, balance of laetory warranty, aport wheetl, rear
'tlh:oer, duai mirrors ........................................................... $15,300
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 15788, 2 Dr., LE, A/C, AfT, AIIFM
wheela .................:............. ~995

GS 15792, V-6, 7pall.,
A/C,A/T, AMJFM can., PW, PL, tllt, cruiH,IIr bag.........$12,355
1994,CHEV. LUMINA APV 15793, Blue, A/C, A/T, AMJFM Cllll.,
lilt, crulll, 7 ptlli.•.PW, PL ..... :....................................,... $13,510
1994 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 15794, Red, aport wllllla, AMJFM
Clll., . , crullt, AIC, AIT ...................:............................ $11,905

1194 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 15795, Whitt, Air. A/C, AM/FII
cus., illt, cruln, air bag, PW, PL..........;......................... $10,594

1993 FORD ESCORT WAGON LX 15796, Blue, A/C, MI/FM
casal, .... ~ .......................:............................... $7583
1992 CHEV. &amp;-10 15800, 2-1one paint, V-6 eng., A/C, A!f,
eng., 1111, AMJFM ca11., raar slider, bed llner, 1
lport whHII ...................,..................................................... $7995
1994 FORD RANGER 15802, XLT, long bed, AII/FM Cllll., rear
22,000 milts, bel. Of folct. WIIT....:;...........................$9995
1tt2
CAPRI CONVERTIBLE tsao4, ~,000 mlies,
1992

c~~::X=. ~c;·~;;;i;;·iiit;:;;:c'

apprt whteii.,,,,,.,,.. ,,,.,... ,.,,J,•••-.• -..••oo•••oo••••••••••r•$1120

�'

"·
I

Pomeroy • Ml~ • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleaunt, wY

. Doctor Sam
,. on . the NBA ·

...

•··"

•

West Coast clubs·
put end to streak .
of visitors' wins

lySMIWIIIOII

~

•

e11t..-~ tbul•

•

Pege 85

'

In NBA action,

T..S Conftpondent

:·

!Iunday, April 7, 1996

Sund

•
The NBA season has le~s than ten games
remaining before embarking ppon its annual two
month long, but financially rewarding playoff forBy CHRIS SHERIDAN
20-point loss to the Washington
mat .
Unlike "Mmh Madness," the NBA post-season
AP Basketball Writer
•
Bullets.
For a while there, it looked like
"You're always afraid that a
does not possess the sudden eKcitement nor the drama of the college game.
How many of you are waiting in anticipation to see the Knicks-Cavs series? the visiting teams were going to win game like this is going to happen," ·
Are any of~u watching these final games to see if Cleveland can win home every single NBA game.
San Antonio coach Bob_Hill said.
. ,
Ill!!~- ,. '
· .._..
.
· ,
coun advantage?
.
The first seven games Friday . "Tonight we did it all. We didn't
~ ntQfJf./~..,,\~ , .
For most NBA fans the most night ended with victories for the shoot, we didn't gu!lfd, we did noth,
·' ~ fll•rliJI ' M•tl~n . l.- glaring question is which team will visitors- most of them by sui-pris- ing. Tomorrow we' ll go back to
• .:....lch
e...i..o-.....o emerge from the _Western C?nfer- ingly large margins- but the three work and try to remember that we've
!"'
. . . ··~· ,...,. ence to be the Ch1cago Bulls final games played on the West Coast won 18 of 20 and not let it bruise our
i)fr~ ~· - ~-~fl~: ·'~~~- victim on their road to the champi- bucked the night's trend .
confidence."
i' ~e '·
"t:lffifli!'ft. onsh_1p.
Chicago won at Charlotte 126-92,
Timberwolves 103, Jazz 99
) ~, fin . ' lett ' :w-i , .. IW·~,
Yes, the Bulls are that good! In Minnesota won at Utah 103-99,
Kevin Garnett and Isaiah Rider
~Jf!{ fact, spectacular!
Washington won at San Antonio hadd. 20 po intsheacfh, anhd Garnetht
,,'tq/ld'tO-'thiii;:hllmpli&gt;/t'iHijt•''/t Good. or spectacular for ~hat . 104-84, New York won at Milwau- rna e two c1me mg ree t rows wu
;'
·
. .
. . . · .• • . · .
. . matter. does not always equate mw
kee 86-79, Ponland won at Denver 5.1 seconds left.
1
"A 19-y~ar-old steps up there
excitement' Yes they may lose some games on their way to their fourth., 97-91 , Atlanta won at New Jersey
championship in six years, however. it will take .. '"rculean effon to defeat 82-70 and Detroit .won at Philadcl· with a lot of people -yelling at him
them in a "''ries.
·
·
phia 108-87.
and makes two free throws ... he's
Consequently, no one will be concerned or waiting in anticipation for a
Then, Seattle beat Phoenix 130- going to be a player in this league,"
possible Pa~ers-Magic rematch in the semi-finals as they were last year 121 in doublc-ovenime, Socramen- coach Flip Saunders said.
Tom Gugliotta had 18 points aM
when the Knicks and Pacers renewed their rivalry after a terrific seven game to beat Housion 96-91 and the Los
series the year before.
Angeles Lakcrs beat Yanvouver I 04- 15 rebounds and Terry Porter
Remember those great moments with Reggie Miller and Spike Lee? •
94.
reached 12.000 career points. Min·
No one is sefiously talking about a Houston three-peat nqw that Jordan
None of the visitors' wins was nesota halted a three-game skid that
more shocki ng than Minnesota's. included the loss 'at Vancouver that
has resurrected the Bulls from what would have been certain mediocrity.
Do you really believe Rcinsdorfwould have traded for Rodman if Jordan The Timberwolves were coming off snapped the Grizzlies' 23-game loshadn' t returned? Only Bulls fans aRd purists. who admire the Bulls for play, a loss at Vancouver, and the Jazz ing streak.
·
ing near perfect basketball. will find anxthing exciting about this year's weren't even a week removed from
Bullets 104, Spurs 84
playoffs.
.
·f
a _19-gamc home winning streak.
Washington handed San Antonio
II
This is not bad. li's just that the Bulls are that good!
" I don 't know where the guys'
its worst defeat of the season and
CATCH THIS! - The Chicago Bulls' Seonle Pippen appears to jarTI
Imagine if you would that the improbable cou ld happen! Bobby. Phills hcads .are ... I'm going to tell you snapped the Spurs' 12-gamc home
the
ball through the hoop for two points In a way where Charlotte's
hits a jumper from the top of the key to propel the Cavaliers into the cham- thi s, we can't win with just three or winning streak.
Glen
Rice can catch the ball during the second quarter of FridaY:
The Bullets stretched a nine·
pionship series against the Spurs! A stunned world reacts to the imposs ible: four guys competing, that's not
night's
NBA contest in Charlotte,.N.C., where the Bulls won 126·92,
a Bulls defeat. Sure!
.
enough," said Jazz coach Jerry point halftime advantage to 17 points
(AP)
And Northwestern wi ll make. it to the Rose Bowl in our li fe time' Yes! . Sloa n, whose team missed a chance in the third quarter, then extended it
game. It may surprise some people
The Bulls are that good ! But' a -Bulls defeat would make this an exciting to gain a game on San' Antonio in the to as many as 23 points in the fourth like we wanted to wln this game."
said Juwan Howard, who spot 11 -of- that we came in here and won by 20
playoff to rememher!
Midwest Division race.
quaner.
points, but I fee l that we can beat
Sam Wilson, Ph.D., ;1 an assistant professor of history at the University of Rio
The Spurs lost another shocker, a
" From stan to finish, we played 20 from the field and scored 25
anyone
like this."
Gran.-. An avid fan of all aporia- and a near maniacal follower of basketballpoints. "We shot well , we played
(See NBA on 8-6)
he Is a native of Gary, Ind., and a graduate of the University of Indiana - which
great defense , we played a perfect
ohould tell readers something about Miera his head Is.

I

"' &gt;

,.

•c

,._

,..r,·,-W/j£;

,.;.

-?
}

l
:1·
~.

··•

·";',"
,'
.:1&lt;

"
-~

AL games. :~o_n_tin_u_ed_~_ro_m_B_-3_l_ _ _ _ _ __
"E. veryone knows I had shouJd er ' Vegas, leadi ng Oakland to its first
. 1ast
• problems when I was strugg Iing
win of the season. The A's gave new
~,. year, but now I feel great," Gu zman
manager An Howe his first victory
.•• said. "I threw the fastball 90 percerit and ended a 12-game losing streak
.,
·• Qf the time and· just went out and. that dated back .to last year.
·
challenged hitters. When I feel conThe Athletics, playing six gam'es
fident in my fastball . I' m a good at Cashman Field because of construction at their Coliseum , were 0Pitcher. "
Ed Sprague homered and·doubled
3. An overflow · crowd of 11 .149,
for the Blue Jays, who ar!' off to a 3- · boosted by fans sitting on hills down
0 s1an for only the .second time.
the lines,_watched at the 9,353-seat
,+ Toronto, tied with Minnesota forthe park. There have been 16 home. runs
. ~~ worst record in the majors last year;
hit in four games at the cozy field.
w~nt 57 games in 1995 before winincluding three in two days by Broning three in a row.
s ius.
lndlans_ stane_r Ore I Hers_hiser_ tied
Doug Johns ( 1-0) became. the first
a career-htgh wnh three w1ld pnchOakland · starter this year· to go
es.
beyond the fifth inning. Greg Gohr
" I don 't think anybody is really ..._(0-1), out most of last season because
o'r shoulder surge1y, was tagged .for
frustrated. The longer this goes. peo" pie might get frustrated. This isn't
eight runs in4113 innings in his first
. -~ any time.to panic. Just keep playing.
major league stan si nce June 17 ,
and things ' II work out. This team
1994.
.._ will do just fine. " he said.
lndl·ans bench coach Jeff New On'oles 2 Twt'ns I
'
--- man ran the team. Manager Mike
. Kent Mercker won his AL debut
Hargrove went home to Perryton, and Randy Myers struck out the side
""exas,
to be wl·t·h ht's father 'ollow.m 1he mnt
. h mnmg
. . .or
' h'IS th'trd save,
"
,.
,_:;_ ing knee replacement surgery. Har·
giving Baltimore its first 4-0 start
:{·, grove was expected to be ba~k · for since 1985. The Orioles can n.atch
; ; Saturday's game.
.
their best stan ever with a win
~ In other AL games. Oakland to~ight in Minnesota.
·• defellted Detroit 13-2, Baltimore
Mercker, acquired in an offseason
·· ' beat Minnesota 2' I, California trade with Atl anta, allowed four hits
in six innings. Myers. one of the Oridowhcd Chicago 7-6 in II innings,
Kansas City beat Boston 5-4 in 12 oles' several free agents. finis!led off
innings and Milwaukee topped Seat·
the win.
tie 10-6. The New .York at Te xas
Shonstop Cal Ripken preserved
,
. d
d 'II b
Baltimore's one-run lead in the scv.
. :..&gt;; game was ramc out an WI
e
-;;_ made up as pan of a doubleheader cnth,· diving up the middle to stop .
'"'
·
·1· today.
Chuck Knoblauch's infi eld si ngle to
··.
, Athlet"'•
13,
Tt
'
gers
2
kce p th e po1en t'ta1 tymg
· run a1 th .trd
4 Scott Brosius, Terry Steinbach base.
and Matt Stairs hit home runs in Las

AHA's 'Hoops for Heart' set for April14 at MHS

There will be a three-on-three
ROCK SPRINGSMiddle and
· •
high schoo l students in Meigs Coun- tournament. Ohio High School Athty will shoot fo r the hoops for a good letic Association rul~s state that only
cause on Su~d- a-j'
y A~ 1 14 at Meigs two studeh1s from any one school
High Sch&lt;tOy ·
·
can panicipate as a team. The entry
Students will shoot baskets in the fee is $15 in donations .
American Heart Association's Hoops
There will also be a free throw
for Hean ·event to raise money for contest (entry fee $5) and a three
the fight against heart disease and . point shooting contest (also a $5
stroke. together the two diseases kill entry fee). Prizes will be awarded for
more Americans than any other the contest.
cause of death.
"Hoops for Hearl is a fun way for
people to get in vo lved in this life
s.aving effon," said Jeannie Taylor .
coordin ator of the eve nt. Mrs. Tay . 1or s;~t'd that Hoops for Heart partieipants also learn valuable lessons
about the importance of physical
activity. "That's because it's not just
good exercise and great fun-it's ed ucationaltoo," she said.
"Perhaps the biggest benefit for
Hoops for Heart is that the money
raised goes to fund potential lifesav ing research into he art and blood
vessel diseases and educational and
·
•M
communu
y
programs,-·
rs. Taylor
said.
Youngsters who participate in
Hoops for He an obtain flat contri- .
butions for their involvement in the
event. In addition, they_ can win
.
h
pnzes on ow much money they ·
raise.
.
The American Hean Association
spent more than $230 million during
the fi scal 1993-94 on research sup-

0

.. $ 59t or $14.58" mOIJ,th
.4HI' JfJtfiOR-- $ 999 or $Z4~· month .
5HP POHY.... - ..... ; 11219 or 1.51.59• month
IJHP TIH'I'V_

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. .An informal unlOr Fair market li~:s Ion and .will provi~ea near~y _location 't~referring ~o
challenge of r . ~oup, known as th ~ock proJect area
re-sale service for tlouse .fazr

The Agricult az;mg funds and seek'e .allia County A. .
e growing
groups i
ur~ Coaltion is m
mg m-kind don . grzculturaJ Coali . .
effort wi~ ~a~~~· County. The ~~1? ~individuals ~~~ns to fulfill the l:~:f caccep~ed the '
. many farme
,000 Pledge. Bu . a ounty Agricult represent inost ofth om~utment.
cause. Majo:: throughout the re;~ne~es in Gallia an~ral Center, Inc..Boar~ ~grzcultural
water line s omponents of the n. ave contribute surrounding count · ed off,the

HOURS 8 A.M. TilL 5 P.M.

FREE ADMISSION AND PARKING
FOR INFORMATION : BOB HOWARD 6!f'245-U47

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The su .
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" OUR TWENlY SECOND YEAR "

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Tuesday, Wednesday.&amp;Thursday·,

roast,
~p;z.l 13, starting at ~::~~try to attend : tas zssued an invitati~r ~us~ness on
. A spec. 1 cz zty tours. .
. noon. The ev
r~n~ Opening - 0 n o livestock
za thanks to the foll '
ent wzlJ include a .h Pen House on
.
..
. owmg for their tr
s ort Program o
emendous supp
' x
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ort.
.
.
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are, that ~~ort for the livestock m k
etng provided by Pro~~· Th~ capitai
.Project is exp:~n: as ~.ooo farms~~ et7has ~een strong th
cers Ltvestock
.Producers ·
e to glve ave
. _a 5-mtle radi . . roughout the
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Due to the tremendous response our
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Monday &amp;Friday til 8 p.m., Saturday til 5

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GALLIA COUNTY -JUNIOR FAIRGROUNDS
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

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Will the equipment be good quality?
Will the installation be done professionally1
Is the company insured?
~ill the company be in business to service my
equipment? .
·
.
t/ Is the company certified?
t/ How ~ong has the company ven doing _this? · ·
v Shoul(l trust this maior i~ve~tment to this company?
•

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•PAYMENT BASED ON 60 MONTHS, WITH

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ca community then cao enable the
Fazrgrounds Th s~te ls located at 35t:,;zcuJtural Society
.
, me through
the Agricult~r e z~e-acre leased tr . Jackson Pike . entered into a lea
some $150 000~1 Soczety in 1975 at act zs a Part of a 54 JUst west of the Gs~l ~greement
not been '
ease income du . a cost of $101 000 ·acre tract that
a za County
ProJect suUSed during the last 2~mg the next 20 Y~ars. The Agricultural s:~s PUr~hased by
maintain f!oyers rejected the co Years. Early in d.iscufr~m a .Portion of the zety wzll realize

APRIL 12-13-14

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APPROVED CREOIT. 16% APR

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Wi~h PLA The' t?e ~allia County A .

AND GUN SHOW

Some Things Our Customers Don't
.
Have to Worry . About: .

5HP PfiHr ~5-.. 114~ or $.56.45• month \
IHP IECOtfO.. __ $1550 or Uli.Bir month
7HP HOirR-- $1839 or Ufi.Jr month
7HP fS HORSI.... $2044 or $51.06• month
liD' HoRsE..... _, 12119 or $5.5.49" month
IHPIS HOR5f- 1$ZJZ4 or $SB.W month
***Now through April 20th. purchase a 4HP or
larger TROY-BIL T tillar and receive a FREE hiller!
furrower and bumper kit.
·

to

Heating
And
.
.•;•
·Cooling •

LfiiD/IfG lllfNI·
nHE nLU/15

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appeared to b mczaJs notified th I al Development G d Utdzty access. Se actory lease
Ohio Departme ~ery good, it did n:t ocal group in Ap;iJ roups and applicati:eral meetings

FRENCH 500 FLEA MARKET · '·

pon , publi c and professional education and community programs. The
AHA is the largest voluntary health
organization fighting heart disease
and stroke, which annually kill more
ihan 925,000 Americans.

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IXTINDID HOURS

GREAT GARDENS START HERE
· LOW MOhiHi.Y PAYMINT

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NEW

TL - - - -~ r;;,ILT

90 DAYS SAMI AS CASH PLUS

. Supporters
k . .
.
Coalition have %a e the Stockyard p .
. ~arketing 0
rge~ ahead with . ro;e~ bappenr T
·
.
Lzvestock As PP~rt~nzty into the tune, e.fl'Ort and . he Gaiiia Count
.
With the consstczat~on, on Decem ben~xt century. The ~oney, to assure a Agrz~ulturaJ
County. The ructzon of a livestoc r 5, 1994, voted to oard of Directors ocal lzvestock
~greement an~~:Or~zatien Was Co~t7arketing facility ::!~or~ze managerne~~ rroducers

• 1996 SEASON OPENER " .

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to''&amp;,,.,,.,
.-"&gt;"' , "":;,PIJ.

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abotitr'

JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT ,
BRASEL INC.
.WIWAM R. CRANK, D.V.M.
GENE NANCE
RUTH E. BUTLER
. ' THE HASKINs-TANNER CO•
JMI!ES R. BOGGS
PAUL D. NIDAY
ARUE DAVIS
HERMAN &amp; BERNICE WOOD
RAY HUGHES
MIKE &amp; KATHY McCALlA
BURULE OIL COMPANY, INC.
GENE JOHNSON CHEVROLET·OI.DS
3BRANCH
JAMES HARDYMAN &amp;CATHERINE HARDYMAN
BANDECATTLE
JAMES NORMAN
ROSS FULKS.
GLENN AND DAVID GRAHAM
ANY TIME B~TCHER SHOP
PHil, DON, WOODROW, POPE &amp; JOE FOSTER
GARRY LEWIS
DANIEL L JONES
RO'l &amp; LORRAINE SPRAGUE ,.
NoEL MA_SSIE
'
JOHN H.GIUS
HAROLD SAUNDERS
. YE- L JONES JR. AND BARBARA A. JONES
.OSaR E. GOOD
,
·
FRENOI HILl FARMS, IlK.
QIMICIWL FARM LAWN
ACI,IIIGMMUSIC '
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SUNSET VALLEY FARM
UNITED STATES &amp; CANADA SALES, INC.
JERRY AND BARBARA SHELTON ·
YAUGER FARM SUPPLY, INC.
ROBERT AND VICKIE POWELl
WOODWARD ENTERPI&lt;ISES
GEORGE WOODWARD JR.
JAMES AND JO ANNE GLASSBURN
CHESTER AGRI SERVICE
· ,
OHIO VALLEY BANK
CROWN EXCAVATING
SOUTHERN STATES
CHARLES A. DUNCAN
CHARLES T. WALTERS
DAVID G. BRYAN, SR.
JACK'S TRANSMISSION SERVICE ·
ROBERT HAMILTON
LLOYD WOOD
MARLIN BAKER
C. W. SHAVER
.. ,
CARROLL &amp; ELEANOR BROWN
COMFORT AIR SYSTEMS, INC.
C.C. CAlDWELL TRUCKING INC.
BURNETTS ROOFING &amp; HEATING
ROBERT E. JENKINS
VOLLBORN f~M ACCOUNT
THE HOUYBROOK'FARM
VERUN SWAIN
BO. SPURLOCK
RACCOON.(REEK CLUB CALVES
MARK &amp; DREAMA JIVIDEN
RODNEY SUPPLY CO.
THE WISUWIAGENCY, I.NC.
GERALD QD WOLE PO!'E
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ADRAH BEAUTY SALON
RUTH GILLS
JOHN &amp; OPAL PAYNE
TURNPIKE Of GALLIPOLIS
FRED AND ODELLA TAYLOR
CASBY MEADOWS, Ill
WINDY ACRES FARM
EMPIRE FURNITURE COMPANY ·
SAUNDERS INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
WILLIAM SMITH
TOM WOODWARD Ill
OHIO VAlLEY SUPERMARKETS, INC.
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT L EVANS
ROBERT AND MARJORIE WOODWARD
RIO TIRE EXCHANGE
MEMORY Of CLEARANCE E. JOHN JOHNSON
EDWARD STOWERS
MICHAEL FARMS
CHARLES N. IHLE
• HOLTER FARMS
RIVER CITY FARM SUPPLY/
EVANS CATTLE CO.
· CHERYL &amp; JOE HUBBLE
STEVEN BRYANT
MARION CALDWELl
MASON COUNTY CATTLEMAN'S ASSOC.
MILLS FAMILY FARMS
MICHAEL &amp; SHARON SHOEMAKER
DAIRY PROMOTiON COMMITTEE
THE O.K. TOBACCO WAREHOUSE
HAROLD &amp; SANDRA MONTGOMERY
GAWA COUNTY PRIDE IN
TOBACCO ASSOCIATION
TIM &amp; PAM MA~SIE
•

NEIL &amp; SHIRLEY McMAHON ·
GA. CO. CATTLEMEN'S ASSOCIATION
FRUTH P-HARMACY CORPORATE OFFICE
KAIL BUR(ESOH
HUNT_INGTON TOBACCO MKT•
GALLIA COUNTY COMMISSIONERS:
HARQLD MONTGOMERY
KENNETH FARMER
HAROLD SAUNDERS .
FRED &amp; MARY DEll
.RALPH AND GLQRIA .OILER
GEORGE CARPENTER
JACKSON COUNTRYMARK, INC.
DYKES TOBACCO WAREHOUSE
. PAUL &amp; KATIE SHOEMAKER
RIO GRANDE BP STORE .·
EXTERMITAL TERMITE &amp; PET CO~TROL
JEFFERY &amp; LISA HALLEY .
ROB MASSIE
RICHIE DILLON
SWANCREST FARMS
HUNTINGTON TOBACCO MKT.
GALLIPOLIS FFA ALUMNI ND FFA
BND; INC. DBA UNTRAL SUPPLY
CLAY &amp; BARBARA BAKER
. GAlLIA COUNTY FARM BUREAU
· EAGLE EYBIE FARMS
" .
JOHN PAUl HOlLEY
TED HANNA EXCAVATING
GALLIA COUNTY SOil WA1ER
STAR BANK CO•
. ANNADAVIS
JOHN &amp; CAROL JACKSON

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Sunday,April7,1tll
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PomerOy • Middleport • Glllllpol.., OH • Pol~ P.....nt, WV

•

By STEPHI!N WADE

world, got tho defendina Davis Cup
champions off with a 6-2, 6-4, 1-S
victory. Bul•in the second singles
match, No. 35 Vacek outlasled No.
19 Wa.shinaton in a five-setter, 4-6,
6-3, 6-4, S· 'T, 6-4.
Saturday's doubles ITI8tches
Patrick McEnroe and Patrick Galbraith againsl Martin Damm and Jiri
Novak. However, both captain~ hint-

PRAGUE. Cz.ech Republic (AP)
_., Todd Martin's singles victory
allowed lhe United Slates to bn:ak
even in Friday's Davis Cup singles
Jlllllcltcs as the Czeeh Republic's
Daniel Vacek defeated MaliVai
Washinglon in a marathon singles
match.
Marti", ranked No. 17 in the

In NHL set/on,

eel they mi&amp;hts11bslitule lheiuces ill·
the doubles- Manin for the Allier
icans and Vacek for the Clechs.
Reverse singles arc sel for IOday.
The Americans are ftekling •
third-string team after their lop four
players - Pete Sampras, ~
Agassi, Michael Chang and Jtm
Courier - declined to play.
(See DAVIS CUP on B-7)

RECEIVE AWARDS - Ohio Valley Christlan'a
1995-96 .a thletes received various awards for
their athletic pursuits at a recent bllnquet.ln front
are Anesa Van Matre (female spiritual leader and
. the top server in volleyball), Aaron Holley (male
spiritual leader), Josh Sebert (male Athlete of lhe
Year, best offensive player in soccer and most
assists in basketball) and Amy Pollard (female
Athlete of the Year, volleyball MVP, volleyball
passing and hitting awards and Cheerleader of

the Year)•. Standing In the middle row are Tony
Hughes· (co-top defender In soccer), Micah
Lanier (co-top d&amp;fender In soccer) and Nathan
Lusher (beat defender In basketball). Behind
them are Jaddy Newbold (top !lcorer In soccer),
Bo Pollard (best free-throw shooter In basket·
ball), Rv.an MCCleese (top rebounder In basket·
ball) and Brandon Layne (best field-goal shoot·
er In basketball).
·

rounds, but the .dogged Sanchez
landed some solid lefl hooks and
tights t&lt;1the head in the final round.
"He came in probAbly thinking
he would stop me like he did' those
other g11ys," Sanchez said. "I have
too much heart for that. "
Mayweather' had outpointed
Sanchez in the semifinals of the 1995
U.S. tournament·
David Diaz, 19, of Chicago, the
National Golden Gloves champion,
also turned the tables on Zabdiel
Judah, 18, of Philadelphia with 13·
8 decision in the 139-pound final.
·Judah had outpointed Diaz. in the
1995 Pol ice Athletic League final.
Jauquin Gallardo, 17, of San
Leandro, Calif., became the firsnri·
als champion . He scored effectively
with left jabs and right leads,for a 23·
16 decision over Sean Johnson, 26,
of Washin gton. .
In a beautiful exhibition of box·
ing and power punching, Zahir
Raheem, 19, of Ph iladelphis, won
the 119-pound title with a 22·5 ver·
diet over Steve CUrter, 21 , of the
Navy at Norfol Va.

By ~ Alloclated Press

•

Better Living, Naturally
•
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Catcher
Lag Homes

P.O. Boli 66
Cheallr, Ohio
miles North of Chesler
on fll.7
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lnd Sat. 10 to 4 P.M.

~

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Induction ceremonies Saturday

Al8o Open far Appolnlment
AU!horfud O.•lllr For

ALTA INDUSTRIES LTD
40 llod4la to

ChoooeFrom
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Available

· Golf clinic dates posted

Group seeks alternative sites
for new Cleveland stadium
CLEVELAND (AP) - A comll tittce working to recommend a site
lor a new football stadium is reviewlllg tw o key alternates 10 the current
Cleve land Stadium location .
The s ix-mem~et comminee

NBA contests...

expects to receive a proposal from
Norfolk Southern Cofll. next -week
on railroad-owned property near the
Gateway sports complex. II also will
review a parking lot area near the
current stadium. .
'
(Continued from B-4)

Bulls 126, Hornels 92
Pislons 108, 76ei:s 87
Chicago scored thefirst20 points
Grant Hill had 15 points, 10
of the game and reached 60 victories. assists and nine rebounds as Detroit
The Bulls need only five wins in "won.on the road for the first time in
thCir last nine games. to set an NBA ·a month.
record of 70 victories.
Lindsey Hunter hit on seven of
· "We expected them to put up a nine shots and scored 17 points and
better effort than they did," said benchmate Terry Mills added 13.
Michael Jordan, who played just28 The Pistons' reserves outscored
minutes and finished with 24 points, Philly's 48-15.
fou r assists and three steals.
SuperSonics 130
Sconie Pippen had 28 points and ·.
Suns 121 (2
Toni Kukoc 20 to help Chicago send
Seattle completed a season sweep
the Hornets to thei." second-worst of Phoenix and opened a five-game
Joss of the season.
lead in the bailie for the No. I seed
"We just want .to keep clicking," in the West. The Sonics,were led by
coach Phil Jackson said. ''!think the Shawn Kemp's 26 points and Gary
ouys arc interested in keeping this Payton's 24 in noiching their 59th
Oting going as long as it goes ."
victory.
·Knicks' 86, Bucks 79
Both teams downplayed the fourPatrick Ewing rebounded from game sweep.
one of tbe worst games of his career,
"If we play Seallle down the road
a l-for- 14 shoolin·g performance in the play~ffs, we feel good about
against Orlando, and had 24 points our chances," said Kevin Johnson,
and 13 rebounds as New York won
who missed die first three PhOt;Pixits seventh in a row at the Bradley
Seallle games'becimse of groin and
Center.
hamstring injuries.
.
The road tcam ,has .won the last
Kings 96, Rockets 91
· nine games in the series.
Clyde Drexler and Mario Elie
Trail Blazers 97, Nuggets 91
returned to' Houston's lineup, but the
Rod -5 tricklaQd scored 29 points
Rockets still lost for the ninth time
and Clifford Robinson 24 as Portland
in 10 games.
completCL! a four-game season sweep
Mitch Richmond had 12 of his 28
of iffe Denver and won its sixth in a
points ,in the fourth quartet for the
row, matching a season-high.
Kings, who have not made the play·
Dale Ellis scored I8 points for the
offs since the 1985-86 season, but
Nuggets, who lost for the s~cond
have a 2 1/2-game lead over Gold·
straight time and the s}'venth hme m en State and .a 3 112-game m~rgin
11 games.
·
over Denver tn the lighl for .etghth
Hawks 82, Nets 70
place in the conference.
•
The game was a makeup of one · •
Laken 104, Grizzlies 94
postponcll by a blizzard, and it drew .
Viade Divac had his firsl.triple·
few people and generated lillie
double of lhe season withi_O points,
exci tement.
.
10 rebounds and 13 asststs, and
Steve Smith shook off an early
Eddie Jones scored 26 pointsi
· ankle inj:•ry to score 23 points. . lbe Lakers began the fourthquarAt lanta outscored New Jersey 24-11
ter with a five-point edge and went 1
in the first ·quarter and gever led by
on a 9-0 run for an 86-72 lead with
Jess than six thereafter. \
. 6:56 to play.

on

.'

1990 PONTIAC
,.(ORAND PRIX SE
2 Door. automatic, V-6,
power.

The Gallipolis. Daily Tribune, The
Daily Sentinel an.d the Sunday TimesSentinel value the contributions their
· readers make to the spans sections of
these papers:and they will continue
to be published.
However, certain deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The deadline for photos and relat·
ed articles for basketball (summer
basketball and related camps fall
under the summer sports deadline)
and other winter sports is the las\ day
of the NBA finals.
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball· and softball-related
photos and related articles, from Tball 10 the majors, as well as other
. spring and summer sports, is the day
of the last game of the World ,Series. '
· The deadline for photos and.relat·
cd articles tor football and other fall
sports is the Saturday before the
Super Bowl.

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V·6, power locks, factory Automatic, air, till, cruise,
warranty.
all power, 1 owner.

ENTERPRISE · ·NAGLE

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$~0.00 Out of Every
.p-teat Pump Sold
Donated to Youth
~aseball League

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Chester~
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II losses. the Islanders have been
outscored 47-16.
Blad&lt;hawks 3, Stars 3
Gaty Suter and Bernie Nicholls
scored on the power play 44 seconds
apart late in the third period , and
Chicago rallied from ~ 3-1 deficit for .
a tie at Dallas.
Mike Modano notched his 36th
goal in the first period and Bill
Huard gave the Stars a 2-0 lead in ihe
second. Greg .Adams added a third··
period goal on a solo rush

~Marshall to host clinic Friday

The Lexington

~::~ati

·'

for Philadelphia.
•
also scored as Ottawa won its second
"Obviously, this a.ame became
"We didn'l come .out ready," straight game.
bigger when we IOSI ... " Rangers for- Brind' Amo11r said. "W' didn't
The victory ruined the return to
ward Adam Graves said after New forecbeck. We just laid blck. It was Ottawa of former Senators coach
York's 3-1 victory at Madison a letdown from a pRity intense game Rick Bowness, fired 3 1/2 months
Square Qarden. "We couldn't afford on Thunday."
ago. As "the Islanders' associate
to lose alld be down five points
Elsewhere in the NJ:IL, it was coach, he has been running the team
(behind Philadelphia in the Atlanlic Buffalo 4, Tampa Bay 3: Ottawa 4, while general manager-coach Mik.e
Division standings) with live games New York !Jianders 2: Chicago 3, ~ilbury scouts in Europe.
left."
Dallas 3; and Detroit 2, Anaheim 2.
Zigm11nd Palffy had a goal and an
It was the fourth victory in five
Sabra 4, LJPtnlng 3
·assist for New York- his 41s~fthe
. GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department's
games for the Rangers, who tight- . Derelc: Plante scored his 21st goal I SeasOn in Cach C8teg9ry - While
; baseball and softball registration deadline is Monday.
ened the Eastern Conference race for and added an .Ssist as Buffalo played ·Marty Mcinnis also scored. In their
firsl place. lbe Ranj!ers trail confer- the role of spoiler.
ence leader Pittsbur&amp;h by lwo points
Mark Aslley, Randy -Burridge
and Ji'hiladelphia in their own and Brian Holzinger also scored, and
; HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Marshall University head football coach · · Atlantic Division by one. The Pen- Pat LaFontaine added three assists as
; Bob Prueu and his staff will hold the annual Marshall University Foot·
guins and Rangers have five games 1 the Sabres prevented the Lightning
. ball Chntc ~n Fnday and Saturday at Marshall Universi,ty Stadium.
left. the Flyers have four.
·
from pulling farther ahead of die ·
; Regtstrauon w1ll be held on Friday from 8 to 9:15 a.m. at Mar"I think we showed a little char· New ~ersey Devils in the chase for
: shaU's Athletic Center,,located next to the stadium.
acter," Rangers coach Colin Camp- the final Eastern Conference playoff
: In ~ddilion to presentations from Marshall's coaching slaff, pre·
bell said.."The.guys really picked up spot.
. sent~llons by high school head coaches such as Charleston (W.Va.)
their game without Marie."
· With 82 points, Tampa Bay is two
: Capttal's Roger Jefferson, Ironton's Bob Lutz and louisville (Ky.) St.
Messier, who sustained a rib points ahead of th~ defending Stan: Xavier's Mike Glassier will be on the agenda. The clinic will end with
injury Thursday night, watched from ley Cup champions with five games
· the coaches' being invited to watch the Thundering Herd 's intetsquad
the stands as the Rangers fell behind remaining for both team~.
: scrimmage Sat11rday at I p.m.
.
·
1·0, then scored the game's next
B11ffalo goaltender Andre Trefilov
' All coaches- high school, junior high, grade school and league
three
goalsincluding
the
liebreakmade 40 saves. But Brian Bellows,
coaches- are invited to auend.
er early in tbe third liy Pat Verbeek. Mikael Andersson and Chris Gratton
; For more infonnation, call Marshall assistant coach Tim Billings
But it was the lying goal by. Bri- scored for the lightning, who lost for
: at (304) 696-6464.
. • ·
·
an Leetch thai waS a baCkbreaker for only the second lime in II games at .
, the Flyers. It came with just 20 sec- the ThunderDome.
onds left in the second·period.
Senato~;t 4, Islanders 2
"We
weren
'I real sharp," Flyer5.
Rt!ndy
Cunneyworth had two
, COLUMBUS- Five veteran coaches will be honored at the Ohio
goaltender
Ron
Hexlall
said.
"We
goals
and
an
assist as Ottawa band·
• High School Basketball Coaches ASsociation's lOth annual Hall of
were
up
by
a
goal
with
(20)
seconds
ed New York ils II th strai&amp;ht defeat
: Fame induction ·ceremon ies Saturday at the Crowe Plaz,a Inn at 33
left in the second period. It was a . while setting a franchise record for
' Nationwide Blvd.
big-time missed opportunity."
points.
· The eve in is open to the public at $20 ~r person, but seating is
Leetch
felt
his
goal
"deflated
The victory gave the visiting
•limited to 250 on a first-come, ftrst-served basis. Tickets can be
them
more
than
it
built11s."
Senators.
39 points, although they
:, acquired by writing Don Henderson, 1414 Eastgate Rd .. Springfield,
Luc
Robitaille
also
scored
for
·
still have the wotsl record in the
' Ohio 45503 or calling (5 13) 399-3534.
New
York.
Rod
Brind'
Amour
scored
1
NHL.
Radek Bonk and Stan Neckar
The social hour will start at 6 p.m. The banquet will start at 7 p.m.
, The '1996 f tass include~ the following coaches:
,
Davis Cup•.&lt;~_on_ti_nu_e_d_fro.;..m_B-_6&gt;;.___ _ _ _ _ _....__
: • The late Magellan Hairston from Rio Grande High School, who
' also coached the Waterloo Wonders to two Class B slate titles in the
Martin won his first two setS with seerped on the ropes fo~ the entire
:mid- 1930s.
·ease, consistently scoring with"lirst · three-liour, 22-minute match.
: •· The late Dick Berning of Cincinnati St. Xavier. High School,
"I don'( think I've ever seen him
serves and capitalizing on the errat"whose teams won 568 games and made one state runner-up appear·
ic
_
play
of
Korda,
ranked
No.
41.
play
better, so when you walk off the
ance.
·
The
third
set
w~ a different stocourt
still feeling . you could have
· • Ray Etzler of Convoy Crestview High School, whose teap1s won
ry.
Martin
and
Korda
broke
each
othwon
you
can't wail to ·face the guy
445 games, tive district titles and made one final four apperance.
.el's serve in the first four games, the again," Was!lington said.
• Bob Haas of Willard High School, whose team won 522 games,
only time the American lost serve in
After falling behind 2·1, .Wash·
;completed five regular-season campaigns unde fe~ted and made three
the
match,
and
appeared
headed
to
a
ington
held serve throughout the
, final four appearances.
·
·
tie-brea.k at 5-5·.
,
fourth
set
and finally broke Vacek in
. • Rich Voiers of Bay High School, whose teams won 461 games,
With KorcJa serving in the II th the final game 10 win 7-5. ·
:rnade three regional appearances and one final four appearance.
game, Martin reached bre~k point
But under the pressure of 10,000
but the Czech saved it with an ace. screaming fans, Vacek did not falter
Undaunted, Martin hit a forehand in the last set winning 6-4 with near
winner
down the line on the next ral- · flawless serves and several winners
' GALLIPOLIS- The Cliffsisde Ladies Golf Associalion and Cliff·
ly, screamed "Yes!" aad raised a fist down the lines as Washington rushed
:side Golf Course pro Mike Haynes will sponsor a clinic scheduled
as
if he knew the match was almost the net trying to press the play.
:lor "I:uesday, April 16 and Tuesday, April 23 at 6:30p.m. each day at
won.
The Czechs, who won their only
;Cliffside Go,lf Course..
350 V-8 engine,
He
wa,s
"
r
ight.
·Davis
~up in \98Q, are 'Yinle&amp;$ i'!.
.F Those interested in auending the clinic may call 446-GOLF.
SilVerado Pkg,
·Martin won .the next point to · three previous Davis C11p ties. with
., The cost is- $3 per person .
Z-71 off road
break serve, then easily held serve in the United States. The matches are
~ For more information, call Avalee Swisher at 675-4831 or 446·
pkg, pwr
the next game to close out the being playOd Qn an indoor carpel sur;1085.
windows,
pwr
match.
face at the Prague sport hall .
,•
tilt,
cruise,
locks,
In the secqnd match, Washingtort
low miles.
; . GALLIPOLIS - A $500 mernGrial scholarsliip award has been
:established in memory of Tony Canaday, a two-year lettennan in fool·
l!all and baseball, for the Gallia Academy High School Blue Devils.
I
.l Canaday, who was killed in a tragic incident on March 16, was
named Best Defensive Back in football for the 1990 Southeastern Ohio
lA.thletic League champion Bl~e Devils. He was also an all-Southeast
V-6 enigne, auto
Pistrict baseball selection in 1991 .
trans, alum.
•
j J I:he scholarship will be awarded to a senior who plays football
• wheels, tilt
)m~1~r . baseball, or preferably both sports.
.
wheel, cruise
•· Anyone who wishes to make a contributiQn may send it to the Ohio
control, AM/FM
stereo.
l.talley Bank, Attention: Customer Service, 420 Third Avenue, Gal·
lipelis, Ohio, 45631.

Registration deadline Monday

1992 OLDS CUTLASS
1993 CHEVY
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CARAVANSE
4 Door, V-6, auto., cruise, V·6, auto., air,. cass., all V-6, auto., cruise, ti~. all
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houn earlier a1 Philadelphia.

-Area .sports brief

OH,Aa·:n

co11ch Jim Lindeman. Standing .are head coach
John Taylor, J.P. Lindeman, Tom Frazier, Eric Taylor, Mark Chafin, Cody Caldwell and assistant
coach Jerry Frazier. Not making the photo session are player Jeremy Daniels anct..assistant
coach Gary Taylor.

captain Marie Messier, the team's
inspirational leader, was sitti~g out
with an injury. With or without hini,
the Rangers had to find a way Friday
night to reverse a 4-1 setback 24

· For the New York Rangers, there
simply was no room for another loss
to the Philadelphia Flyers.
So this time it didn't mauer that

1993 BUIQK .
1994.JEEP
CENTURY WAGON
WRANGLER 4X4 .
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GALLIPOLIS ROTARY CHAMPS-. The fourth·
grade Gallipolis Cellics won first place in the Gal·
lipolis Rotary Rinky·Dink Basketball Tournament
by beating Hannan Trace 43-41in four overtimes.
In front are (l·R) ball boy Chad Porter, Jamie
Ehman, Casey Taylor, Jason Porter and Brian
Burton . Squatting between rewa' Is assiatarit

.

.

Rangers hand Flyers 3-1 loss; Sabres ar:1d Senators also ~in

Sanchez among victors
in·Olympic boxing trials
By ED SCHUYLER JR.
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - The
last scoring blow of the fight made
18-year-old Augustine Sanchez the
Olympic Trials 125-pound .champi·
on Friday night.
'\
that right-hand punch gave··
Sanchez, the 1996 U.S. champion, a
12-11 victory over Floyd May·
weather, a 1995 U.S. champion.
Sanchez, of Las Vegas, leaped
high and waved an ann when the
verdict was announced at the Henry
) . Kaiser Convention Center, while
Mayweather. 19, of'biand Rapids,
Mich., stared dejectedly at the ca~­
vas.
The victoty puts SanChez into the
box-offs April18-20 at Augusta, Ga.,
which will determine the 12-boxer
Olympic team.
Mayweather now must fight Sunday in a final of the losers' bracket
in this double elimination tourna·
ment. Today's winners go to the box·
offs as challengers to the trials
champion. A champion .must win
once in the box-offs, while a challenger must win twice to make the
Olympic team.
.
"I'm 'through with this," May·
weather told his uncle, Roger, a for·
mer pro junior lightweight and light·
weight champion. "I ain't fighting."
Mayweather led 8-5 after two

.

"•"hiiW-.....,mtbtd • Page 87

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GallipQlis

(614) 446-3672

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lA ong the Rit/1

iunbq
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.iura. •entba:d

Section C
s~ April7,

•

•

Ohio· DOW offers
on-Jine information

•

By Bob
Hoeflich

•
Congratulations jlfe in order for .
William Grueser, well-known Rock
Springs resident.
Grueser will mark his IOOth birthday this Friday April 12.
By the way, Grueser is responsi- ·
blc for !bose beautiful handcrafted
dulcimers which grace many IIU
homes. He's IIQt able to make lhem
anymore but he certainly crelled
some beautiful instruments in his
day.
·

•

--

- --

JAYMUIIC.

division, defended the law.
"It is imperative that Ohio ... take
steps to help improve the status of
the yellow perch," he said.
The new limits were set to
increase a decreasing perch population.
·
In 1988, there were about 95 million perch in western Lake Erie. Last
year, there are fewer than 25 million.
This is not the first time Ohio has
had perch limits_ There was a 50catch-a-day limit in the early 1980s.
It was dropped in the late 1980s after
the.perch stock increased.
Local fish companies said t!Jey
already have seen the effect of the
limit and are looking elsewhere to
buy the product, sometimes at a
higher price.
.
That price has hurt local churches and clubs that hold fish fries as
fund-raisers .

St. Rt. 7, Cheshire, Ohio

EQUIP.M.ENT RENTAL
30 &amp; 35 TON GROVE _
ROUGH TERRAIN CRANES
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CASE 580 BACKHOE
CAT 320 TRACK HOE
MACK WATER TRUCKS .
35 &amp; 50 TON LOW·BOY SERVICE

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Cards will reach him at35215
Blake Rd., Pomeroy. .

I

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6'14-992·6637 or
614-446·9716
Jerry Hall

Don Tate Motors, Inc.

,.
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·3oa Eaft Main Streer ·
Pomeroy, Ohio .
'

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·fffi6wship,
reflection and
thanks

. or

1-614•991-6614

on

•

1-800-117 -I 094

Special Olympics linkfest
scheduled for _April 21

,I

•.

Top left a member of Cheshire United Methodist Church sings a sofo
during Maundy Thursday services. Above Monsignor Myers unveils the
cross during Good F-riday .ervices at SL Louis C&amp;thollc Church.

•

Dettmers to talk
. about songbirds
and woodlands
Thursday
PIKETON- The Southern Ohio
Forestland Association (SOFA) will
have Randall Dettmers, Ph.D zoology candidate at Ohio State University, speak Thursday shonly after 7 ·
p:rn. at Piketon Research and Extension Center.
Dettmers is conducting research
on 1he Wayne National Forest that
involves landscape level models that
predict abundance and productivity
of songbirds. He has been ~udying
bird habitat on numerous large plots
to determine relationships between
avian populations and percent and
type of forest cover.
SOFA is a I 0-county woodland
owner and tree farmer group that
meets to share information &lt;in man.
agernent and appreciation of woodlands, wildlife, etc.
llie social hoqr will he at 6:30
p.m. A short business meeting at 7
p.m. will precede Dettrners' presentation.

CLIP .AND SAVE

And quite an li!:Complishltlent for ·
R(\Ddaii .C. Johnston, a third year
cadet at the United States Air Foree
Academy at Colorado Springs, Colo.
Randall recently won the U.S. Air ·
Foree A"aderny Wing Open Bo~ing
Tournament, middleweight division.
This tournament was a,single elirnin~tion ani! culminated with the finals
March 8. The finals matched the two
remaining boxers in each weight
division.
·
·
By winning this tournament, Rand!lll gained the privilege of competing iqthe National Collegiate Boxing As~n., Mid-West Regional Tournament at Xavier University in
Cincinnati March 29 and 30.
,Randall, along with II olher team
members from the Air Fof!;e Acade- :
iny, competed against box~rs. from • ·
several colleges across the Mid-west.
He was the silver medalist in the .
middleweight diyision and the Air :.:
·Force Academy team did ·fin.ish first
overall in this tournament. The winners from this event go on to compete at the national toumamentto be
April 12 and 13 in Reno, Nev.
Randall's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Johnston and their son, Kelly,
traveled to Cincinnati to watch the
tournament and to visit with their
son: Other Meigs County natives
hand to see the tournament in the
Queen· City. and visit with Randall
were Allison Gannaway and Kelly
Doidge.

•

WILL 00 COMMERCIAL
DIRT WORK .

~

MASON, W.Va. -The fourth
awarded a new car, co~rtesy of Tom
annual Special Olympics Golf · Peden Country dealership in Ripley,
Scramble will be · held on Sunday,
W.Va. The 175-yard ninth hole will
April 21 at Riverside Golf Club.
be designated the "Win the Car" hole
during
the tournament.
L~t year's tournament raised
ove $3,000 for the Special
There wi)l be several other prized
Oly ics programs in Mason Coun- to be awarded during the day's play,
ty, wi 92 golfers panicipating in as well.
the event.
Tournament activities will kickoff
This year's tournament promises on Saturaay, April 20, · with the
to be bigger and better, with opening annual "Meet the Team" party at
in the field available to 144 golfers.
New Haven American Legion Post
The players will be blind drawn for
140, starting at 8 p.m. Snacks and
four person teams, with the teanl's refreshments will be provided.
playing I~ holes of golf.
Tournament action will gei underThree types of player entries and way on April 21, with registration to
sponsorships are available. A .SIOO· tak~J plac~ between 8 and 8:30a.m.
Gold Sponsorship will give tee or at Rlverside Golf Club, followed by
green signage for the sponsor, .a shotgun start at 8:30a.m. Hot dogs
incl11ding one players fees for the and refreshments will be •erved all
toumiunent field. A$75 Silver Spon- day, while a chicken barbecue and
sorship will give shelter signage for · award ceremonies will immediately
the sponsor, including one players follow the event.
fees for the tournament field . A $50
Players wishing to enter the tourBronze Sponsorship will include nament are asked to contact Riverfees for one player in the tournament side Golf Club at (304) 773-9527 for
information, or send name, handicap,
field.
·
All donations by non-players are and type of sponsorship with a
also appreciated by the Mason Coun- check payable to 1996 Special
ty Special Olympics.
. Olympics Golf Tournament to RiverA hole-in-one on one of the par side Golf Club, Rt. · I , Box 35,
Three holes at the course will be Mason, W.Va. 25260.

Area churches
·mark Easter·
.with

JA..c4,~ .••

North· Coast merchants .
unhappy~ with perch quotas
.

'
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...

Beat of
the Bend

WILLY PIKE'S OU!DOOB LD'E

COLUMBUS- The Ohio Divi- March and produce one litter per
sion of Wildlife now offers a variety year, usually between March and
·of information ·On fishing, hunting June. Skunks breed in February or
and other topics through its own on- March and have young in May ; one
Iiiler per year.
. line worldwide web site,
The agency's new electronic
Groundhogs . breed between
address
is March and May and produce their
http://www.dnr.ohio.govfodnrfwildlif one litter between April and June.
e/wikllife.html.
Rabbits breed February to SepIncluded on the web site is infor- tember and give birth from March to
mation about hunting and fi shing September, .producing up to two to
lic~ses, publications, agency news
five litters a year.
releases, watchable wildlife and genIt is important to c hec~ the yard
. eral information about the division. before cutting the grass be~use
''We are now able to reach other some animals, partic;ularly rabbits,
people through a very popular and wi II nest anywhere there is food and
rapidly growing medium who other- cover, noted Starkey.
wise might not have 2ontact with our
The rabbit's nest is a shallow
agency. Now, anyone in the world depression in the ground. four to six
can connect with our web site and inches deep and four to five inches ·
PORT CL!Nl'ON, Ohio (AP) ' learn more about our projects and in diameter. lined .with dry grass arut Some anglers and owners o'f fishingwildlife resources in Ohio," said fur from the mother's body.
related .businesses along Lake Erie
Susan Adkinson, executive ad minisIn general, birds will mate and said Friday that the state.'s new.quo. trator of the division's information make nests anytime from January to tas for yellow perch may hurt busiand education group.
ness.
April and their nesting periods can
· The division one. day hopes to range frorh February to October.
The' Ohio Depanrnent of Natural
include an electronic version of its
If you see birds nesting in your
Resources on March I began limitquanerly publication Wild Ohio. yard in your yard, please to try avoid ing the number of. perch for spol'!
The division will continue to update . that area so as not to disturb them, anglers to 30 a day. '!bat compares
its web site and plans to include its Starkey advised.
with an unlimited number last year.
weekly fishing reports beginning
Many wild animals are accidenIndividual limits have beeri estabthis month.
tally killed during this time of the lished for commercial fishing based
Spring is time
year when the young are dependent on how many pounds of perch they
·to watch for young
upon the parents for fqod and pro- have caught over the last five years.
NELSONVILLE - Spring is tection, he added.
Don Mitchell , co-owner of the
here and this is the time of year that
Automobiles, farm machinery, Hi-Way Bait Store. said the limits
wildlife are having their young.
cats and dogs probably take the wiU hurt business.
The Hocking Valley Community greatest toll on wildlife.
" It's the dream of catching I()()
Residential Center, Nelsonville,
lfyou find young wildl.ife near,.i\5 perch that keeps the economy
which features a facility to care for · dead parents, or if you find inju;aJ going, " Mitchell said Friday.
wounded and orphaned wildlife, or sick animals, don't touch them,
Mitchell is one of several area
offered some pointers for wildlife Starkey said.
businessmen who tried to get 'the
watchers·:
"Piea.&lt;e contact the Hocking Val- depanment to reconsider its decision
The most common mammals you ley Wildlife Center at 1-614-753- • to impose the perch limits.
may find around' your yard are rab- '4400 before you do anything," he
He collected 5,000 signatures last
. bits, raccoons, squirrels, opossums, said. "Ask for me or my assistant, fall from people opposed to the
. groundhogs and skunks, according to lana Durham. At the center, we change and delivered the petitions in
.: center executive director Ralph C. accept all wildlife except skunks, person. Most of the signatures were
.
.
racc()ons, bats and t:ox.
· Star~ey.
collected at his store,' just outside this
· Fcx and gray squirrels breed
"Please keep in mind)that wild Ottawa f.::ounty city.
between December and February, ~nimals rarely abandon their young
·:Basically, I had to fight it '
·and May and June, usually giving· as orphans, so unless something because it was going to hurt my Busi:birth from February to April and tragic has happened to the parents, it ness. This is how I make my living,"
: June to August. Squirrels may pro- is best to leave wildlife in its natur- Mitchell said.
:duce one to two litters per year.
al surroundings.
Buc McNeil, owner of Warrior I
"Remember, you can enjoy the Charters, agreed that limits will hun
Opossums breed from January to
·October giving birth from February thrill of watching wild animals in businesses. Thousands of anglers
to November; one to three litters per their natural environments just by head to Lake Erie when the. weather
using your common seose and fol- . gets warm to fish: One of the lures
.year.
.
.
.
Raccoons
breed
from January
to. lowing simple steps of observation was the freedom to catch an unliml ;
r
,
.
and not touching the animals."
ited number.of perc!J.
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"These people, they're not going
to charter a boat for $360 a 'day for
only 30 perch," McNeil Faid.
Ken Paxton , assistance administrator for ihe depanment's wildlife

•

· · Have you heard about Middlepan's Jtme Kloes? ·
Well, J~ne has retired from her
work as a registered nurse with·the
Horne Health Service at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Friday, March 29, was her final .
day and of course, a party was held
in her honor by her co-workers in
ihe service. A "wheel of fonutie"
type fonnat'was carried out in a prOgram during which time June was·
presented with a number of gag
gifts. Qh, but there was good stuff
too including a gold necklace with a
guardian angel charm. Refreshments? Oh, sure.
June staned work as a licensed
practical nurse at Veterans Memorial
in Novembj:r, 1976, so has worked
almost 20 years in nursing•here. She
joined the horne health staff in 1986
and has done a fantastic job.
Always wanting to be ·a nurse,
June had ·an Opjli&gt;Muni!y tO receive .
licensed practical nursing training at
Buckeye Hills, Rio 'Grande. Even
though she owned and operated a
children's clothing shop at the tiiJle. · ·
June jumped at the chanc.,: to get the
training and sold the shop to pursue ·
her schooling. After receiving her
licensed practical nurse degree and
going to work, June continued her
education at Hocking College in
Nelsonville to earn her registered
nurse degree.
June and her husband, Manning, a
retired banker who now works as
attendance officer with the Meigs
County School System, plan to do a
bit o( traveling before June settles
into retirement which, she says, will
be no problem. She loves sewing
artd quilling and plans to dq volunteer work related to her field.
She and Manning have three children who arc Kent of Belpre; Lori
Herron of Columbus, and Lynn
Andrews of Nelsonville. They have
seven grandchildren--Mandy and
Jeremy Kloes; Rachaei, ·Rebecca and
Michaela Herron, and J~nnifer and .
Samantha Andrews.
·
I know everyone joins me in
wishing pleasant June a happy,
happy retirement.

. i.

1996 CHEVY CAVALIER

1996 CHEVY-SSERIES PICKUP

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1995 Old$.Cutrass Supreme
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1995 Iuick Regal
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1995 P.ontiac Grand Prix
· Yow Cflofee
AS
LOW
AS

uring the past few days area churches and their congregations have observed Passover; Good Friday
and Easter.
Churchgoers renewed their faith in the Lord
and gave thanks for the ultimate ·sacrifice and
everlasting life. Congregations studied the scriphlre trying to understand the pain of Jesus' crucifixion and rejoiced in His resurrection.
With new hope in the air, prayer was offered
and songs proclaimed Him Lord.
Members took the body of the Lord with communion and showed love 1oward lheir fellow man with '
footwashings .
.
Re&lt;;nactments traced the final hours of Jesus and demonstrated a
Jewish Passover dinner.
All denominations of Christianity joined hands in remembrance
of Hiin.
Special programs and sunrise services will continue on Sunday.

$9 949

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OR

Auto., air, cassetie, V-6
AS LOW AS
..
.

,

.$10,995

199~ BUICK LISABIE ••••••••• ~................................................... $1·1,995
1993 ~UICK REGAL ....................................................,••••••!•••···~ $7995
19~5 OLDS CIEU Only 1,009 mnas....................·..............~......~...... $13,995

1992 -CHEVY CORSICI~.................................:...~••~••••••• ~......t!...... $5995
1994
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1992 CHEVY AS.TRO CONVERSION
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. Taxes ar'ld title fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.
.IT'S

·YOUR DRIVE! ..

-.

Top left a child bows her head during communion at Good News
Baptliat Church Thursday. Left a woman at Addison FrMwJII Baptist
Church washes a frlenda fHI during -.vices ThUrsday. Top Batty
Clark, left, !ather Davia and LH Clark demonstrate Pauovar rnHI
during Hrvlcq Thursday at Chnhn United M.thodiat Church.

All prices include
rebates to dealer.
Taxes &amp; feea not
Included.

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tered 80 Thursday afternoon. Sure
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knew it couldn'tlasl, but I can dream ·
can't I? Do keep smiling.
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Pomeroy • Middleport • G8111pollt, OH • Point. Planant, wv '

LENE HOEFLICH
Tirnetll-8 htiiAetsUtff

By MAX TAWNEY.

TRAVJELIING AliiROAD • Max Tawney, cehter, Ia shown II! 1987 In
Suzl, left, and Jack Hanna. Tawney has been to Africa
severall times with Jack and also Italy and.Egypt with Jack.
happened to a ·beuer person
Jack Hanna. He appears on
many TV shows and is ·always the
highlight of every one.
When you are ever in Columbus
you should stop at the Columbus
Zoo. It is fantastic. Jack really put it
on the map.
I have known Jack 'for many
years. His wife, Suzi , has the greatest personality of any person I have
met. They have three of the most
beautiful daughters in Columbus.
Th~y invited me an~ my granddaughter, Tandy, to Suzanne's wedding . It was held in the largest
.church in Columbus. It was packed
and there were over I00 outside who

POMEROY -- Mass lead poisoning t.csting in six scheduled clinics
will be held inApril and May by the
Meigs County He.Jth Deputment.
Announcement of the clinics
came following the information
from the Centers for Disease Control which has identified lead poi•
soning as the number one public
health disease of chil~n in the
United States.
According to the CDC one out of
every six children has a blood level
equal to or gieater than 10 ugldl.
Research has shown that levels pre·
viously assumed to be safe are not,
and that children with low levels of
lead show long range neurological
damage as manifested in learning
disabilities, behavioral difficulties
and cognitive delays, said Torres.
"Lead poisoning is not curable,"
Nonna Torres, nursing director at

could not get in.
But they saw to that we had a
front row s.eat. I must say it was the
most beautiful wedding I have ever By BILLY WATKINS
attended.
Jackson
(Miss.) . ClarionJack had the reception at the ioo, Ledger
•
and I was told there .were over 2,000
SOUTH PANOLA, Miss. ...,..
people there. What a party .it was, Four South Panola High School stu·
really out of this world. When old dents - tWo whites. )wo blacks Jack does something, it is always top started kicking around an idea one
shelf.
afternoon last year during work after
,J really consider it a great honor . school: Why, they wondered, are
to have dear friend's like Jack Hanna there two · separ~te junior-senior
alld his beautiful family.
proms- one for wi)ite kids, one for
(Max Tawney is a · local busi- black kids?
nessman who occasionally writes
"It just didn~ t make sense," said
articles for the Sunday Times-Sen- Chaunte Smith, now a I7•year-old
senior who was involved in the dis·
line! on his travels.)
cussion. "We go to school· together,
eat lunch togethet, play ball together
... why not have a prom together?"
The four approached teachers and
1· wondered. "How many people sickness, and if not treated immedi- school officials, gellif!g a warm
are aware of this?" I certainly was- ately, it could be fatal .·
receptipn. So, for the first time since
Ann
n't.
. As I said earlier, I'd rather have a
Landers
Soon after I received Dr. cat.,
199~ . Los Anrclcl
DeBuono · ~ letter, I was hit with a
Dear Ann Landers: I have read
TimeJ Syndk:alt and Cn:·
barrage
of
mail
from
readers
in
vir•
·
your
column' since I was a high
ak)t'$ Syftdil:au:.
·
tually every state in the union, school student -in Clay Cen'ter, Kan.
a..;;;;;;;.~-~-~---...., . accompanied by newspaper clip- I wrote you some sappy letters when'
By ANN LANDERS
pings. It seems a .J· week-old boy in my girlfriend dumped me, but you
Dear Readers: A while back, a · South Bend, Ind., died of sa.lmonella didn't print any of them . I hope you
reader .from Kelso, Wash., wrote 10 poisoning last October, but the cause will print ~e enclosed. It appeared
me extolling the virtues of her pet, of the child 's death was not dis- in the Hon~lulu Adveniser over 20
an iguana. "lggy," the reader said, closed by the board of health until years ago, I believe.
No signature, please. I already
.''is paper-trained, has the run of the recently. ·
house, loves bubble baths and-macaAlthough he/lith officials are not have had my 15 minutes of fame. ·roni and cheese and sleeps with his cenain how the boy contracted sal- Anonymous in Kalamazoo, Mi~h .
Dear Kal: Thanks for the upper.
own blanket, pillow. and · heating monella, the most likely explanation
pad."
.
is an iguana. The boy 's parents \ It's always good to start the week
She said she was proud to own owned an iguana as a pet, and the with a laugh. Here's 1he article:
"It was reported !hill Sens.
and love "lggy" and, if people. were deadly infection was contracted
William
B. Spong (Va.) and Hiram
fraid
to
come
and
visit
because
of
soon
after
the
boy
was
born.
Fulton
1
Fong
(Hawaii)
got their heads
iler pet. they should stay home. In County health nurse Diane Jones
to
sponsor
a bill recom·
together
~pite of Kelso's glowi·ng testimonial, - said it could have. been as easy as
1 replied, "I'd rather have a cat."
. someone handling the iguana and mending the mass ringing of church
. !.failed 10 appreciate the wisdom . then touching the boy. She-added, "I bells to hail the arrival in Hong
of my choice until the followi'ng lei- don't know why pet stores sell these Kong of the U.S. table tennis team
after its tour of Communist China.
; ter arrived a few days later. It came things."
"Unfortunately, the motion died,
rom Dr. Barbara A. DeBuono, comHealth officials say there's been a
missioner of health in Albany, N.Y.
rise in the number of unusual strains ch!ating Congress out of passing the
. Dr. DeBuono wrote; "Dear Ann of salmonella co~~ponding I() the Spong-Fong Hong Kong Ping-Pong
Landers: The iguana is a reptile. All increase in the popularity of pet rep· Ding-Dong Bell bill."
tiles, especially iguanas. People with
·
·
·reptiles carry the bactepa sa1mone 1· immature or weakened immune sysSend questions to Ann Landers,
la, which is a common cause of dtarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever terns, such as babies, the elderly or Cre'ators Syndicate, 5777 W. Cen·
and can cause life-threatening infec· those with AIDS, should be aware. lury Blvd., Suite 700, Los Angeles,
'
tions in children, the aged and those that the bacteria can cause severe Calif. 90045
with weakened immune systems."
.--------------------------,

Iguana~

Sund8y, Aprll7, 1198 ·

Pomeroy • Middleport • o.lllpolla, OH • Point P1111ant, WV

Meigs Heat~n . Department to. t~st
·fo lead.poisoning with six cll~1cs

The perfect
traveling
companion
I have 'traveled with lots of people in foreign countries but I must
say Jack Hanna was the best traveling companion I have ever had.
There was never a dull moment
around Jack.
·
I have been to Africa several
times with Jack and also to Italy and
Egypt. Jack kept everyone happy at
all time.
I will never forget when we went
to EgypL We were delayed by the
custom 'gents. Everyone was really
upset after waiting two or three
hours. So I walked up to the custom
agent and pulled out a police badge
that generally carry on some of my
trips. I told the agent that I called
'President Mubarak.
He told me to tell the guard in
charge to let us go through at once as
I was a U.S. Ambassador. I got up
close to the guard showed him my
badge looked him right in the eye
like I was mad, and he opened the
gate immediately and let us through.
Jack will never let' me live that
down.
I think there is no.one that knows
wild animals likeJa~k . I am sure he
is responsible for keeping many
species (rom becoming extinct. It is
unbelievable the fantastic way he
can handle animals. No one can 'do it
like Jack. I recently watched him on
Larry King live with Newt Gingrich .
It was ahsolu!ely unbelievable the
fantasti~ way he can handle all thOse
species and not get bit.
Jack has made it big time, and it

•

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may be

the Meigs County Health Department said, "but it is preventable. In
order to effectively prevent our chi l~re from becoming lead burdened,
all f society must work tclsethe; in
coordinated and collaborative
effon."
Educluioo regarding the sources
of lead, proper management of the
young child 's environment and
appropriate resources can diminish
the number of children affected, Torres poinlld out.
But. she stressed, "tbllre is no
way to know if a child is being
assaulted by le&amp;!l without a blood
test." .
All children between the ages of
six months and six years of age
should be tested and anyone who·
has not been been screened in the
past ~ear. shoul&lt;! take their child or
children to one of the clinics.
For those with insurance or a
Medicaid card, that information will

Gallia community ca~endar
Tile eo-lllllty Caleadar II
puhlkhd u a free senke lo - pnllt IJ'OIIPI wlllllac to u-we
m.t1qs lUid spedlll. e¥Uta. Tille
cdendar ia DOt llelllped to pro- * W.. or flmd-rtlilen of any
type. ltem1 are priDted u space
permits aDd caDDot be plnDteed
to 1'111D a speclfk aumber of days.

need to be provided for billing purposes. Torres said. Others will have
the cost paid for by the Child at1d
Family Services Program. No child
will be turned away because of an
inability to pay. according to tile'
nursing director.
.
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Tbe clinic schedule ts as follows:
Monday, April22, noon to 3 p.m.
Dave Diles Park in Middleport. :
Tuesday, Apiil 23, 8:30 a:m. to:3
p.m. Meigs County Health Dep~­
ment
Monday, April 29, 8:30 to II :~0
a.m ..and I to 3.:30 p.m. Meigs Cou~ty Health Depanment.
·
Tuesday, April 30, 8:30 to II :30 .
a.m. Tiny TQCh PreschooJ, Midd~port
.
Monday, May 6, 9 to II a.m. arid
1'2:30 to 3 p.m., Gingerbread
. Preschool, Middleport
,·
Thursday, May 9, 8:30 p.m to
1:30 a.m. ·and I to 3:30p.m. Health
I'Jepartment.

Sunday, April 7

•••

KANAUGA - Sunrise service
6:30 a.m. and Cheshire Charge
.Choir Cantata 6 p.m. · Fairhaven
Unite!! Methodist Church.

...,

GALLIPOLIS - Bossard Library
will be closed in observance of tbe
Easter hoi iday.

Barbers celebrate -50th

u~healthy

p_
ets

.

ly after integration. Parents began
organizing proms not sanctioned by
the schools, and most were segregat;
ed.

.South Panola is just one of many
Mississippi sch(iols that quit having
school-~ponsored proms immediate-

•

POMEROY -- Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Barber recently celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary.
The fonner Coolville area residents now reside at Lakeside, Mont.
They are the parents of a daugh· ..

In recent years, most schools have
resumed sponsoring proms, final
social ·celebrations before. seniors
leave for college or work.

1

ter, Gloria M. (Jerry) Styer. They
·have one granddaughter, Tara Dawn
Styer.
A reception honoring the couple
was held at the Ramada lnn at
Somus, Mont.

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MIDDLEPORT-- Francis D. and son, John Lightfoot of Middleport;
Clara Frances Custer Lightfoot, • and two daughters, Barbara Grueser
'31268 Noble Summit Rd., Middle- of Shade and Tanya Barnhouse of
P,on, are celebrating their 50th wed- Wellston. They have nine grandchil·
&lt;lit\g anniversary today.
dfFn.
.
They were married April 7, 1946 ·. lt. family celebration was held in
at Syracuse, and are the parents of a their honor Saturday.

"Like just about every fad and
fashion, proms arc coming back.':
said McComb High School Principal
Stephen Hand!ey. · •

" I went to our pro/rj last year, but
I didn't feel good about it.'' said
senior Heather Cole, 17-: "I think
everybody wanted to have one prom
together so· it wouldn 't feel so ... so
racial."

Said Bob Hudson, assistant superintendent of the Columbus Municipal
School District: "Why not!! Schools
have always had a hom.ecoming
dance, so why not a proin? Just
because everybody ·gets all dressed
up? It doesn't make sense to me. '

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MR. AND MRS. JAMES SOULSBY

Soul~bys

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MoVe.
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Great things come from workiOg together -

The Community Calendar is
published as a·free service to nouproflt groups wishing to announce
d!eeting and special events. The
calendar 'is not designed to promote sales or fund nisers of any
type•• Items are ,printed as space
pe1111lls and Cllllnot be guanmll:ed
to nm a specifiC number of days.
MONDAY
POMEROY •· Big Bend Farm
Antiques Club, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
· at the Meigs High School Library.

services of an experienced staff of therapists.
We've a lso added sorne of the most up-to -date
equipment for rehabilitation.

Extended Hours·

Our new gym f~tures airdyne bikes, treadmills,
pul!eys, and on isokinetic computerized system
that helps strengthen your jOints and muscles
and gets you bock on ttl,.- move again. As o
cardiopulmonary patient, you will _feel secure
with o personal telemetty device that altows our
~exercise physiologists to cloSely monitor you
while exen;i~ing. Our PhySical The'ropy area
offers two whirlpoolt, four treatment rOoms which

8:00 am to 6:00 pm, Weekdays
8:00 am to Ngon, Saturdays

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CardiopulinQnary

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Camden~Ciark Memorial Hospital
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For Youf lifetime

·eoo Gortleld Avenue. Po~ .- wv 26Hl2 (304) 4.24·2111
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POMEROt · - The 38th wedding
anniversary ofNara and Henry Hanman was celebratad Thursday with·a
party at the Rock Springs Rehabilitation Center.
The celebration was hosted by
Mr. and Mrs. Hartman's c!aughters,
Marcella Weber and Carla Kimes.
Attending were the Hartman's
grandchildren , Josh and Jeremy
Casto, Derek Weber, Jessica, Jason

POMEROY -- M~igs .County .
Board J&lt;Jt-.Eiections 9 am. Tuesday
board meeting and official count of
ballots from March primary.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -· Middleport
Literary Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. James Diehl.
Reviews by .Mrs. Roy Holter and
Mrs. Richard Owen.

RACINE .. Karen Smith, parent
mentor, will be at Southern High
School Wednesday from 8:30-11 :30
a.m. to meet with parents abdut the
hew polici.es and procedures for spe·
cia! education.
POMEROY .. Parent meeting at
Meigs High School. Wednesday at
6:30 p.m. to discuss new policies
and prOj:edures for special education . Childcare will be available.
Refreshments will be served.

POMEROY .. D~V Chapter 53,
meeting, fairgrounds, 7 p.m. Monday.

ROUND POOLS
15' - $92511l

TUPPERS PLAINS- .. Tupper.;
Plains ElementaFy PTO, 7:30 Monday at the school.,

18' - $995111
24' • $1 ,22511l
15X30 • $1,795111

TUESDAY
,
ROCKSPRINGS -- Meigs County Chamber of Commerce luncheon
Thesqay, noon at the Rocksprings
Rehabi litation Center. Special.
speakers win be Meigs· CountY·
DARE officer Mony Wood and
· canine officer Steve Heater.and dog
Calyp~o.
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For More Information CaH 424·2804

cllaleotorol iesled.

Hartman·s observe 38th

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, _ .....,.,..,.., .......,;""' fO&lt; .n. lim too peop..
Re,e,..~r to fast.for 4 hours prior to hovinQ your

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Tah a tour of ,t~is new heahhcare facility and
gel a free Sports Boffle. You'll ...., how our new
Outpatient Physicai'Theropy &amp; Rehabifilotion
. ~rvices' will help get you on the move Oga'inl

.•

• 8:00 ~m to 6:00 pm, Weekdays

1616 Eallern AYtl•l
Gallipolis, Oh
446·3672 or
1·800·521·0084

'

ore specially equipped with inteQroted.alarm
systems, and designated rooms for speed:~ and '
occupotionol therapy. .

Physical Therapy

Payment based on24 Mo. GMAC lease with $2350.00
Capital Cost Reduction.

CROWN CITY - Sunrise service
6:30a.m. with Pon Saxon speaking
Kings ChaPel .Church.

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and Carty Kimes; Keith Weber, '
Randy Kimes, Clara Conroy, Carl
Bryant, Mr.. and Mrs . Henry Eblin,
Mr. and Mrs. Anie Eblin, Rev. and
Mrs. Richard Ringle, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth.Delong, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Roben Barrett,
Kathleen Tillis, J aunita Roush,
Kristy Mills and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Dugan. Sending a gift was Rev. and
Mrs. Victor Roush.

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LETART FALLS -- Karen Smith,
parent mentor, will be at Letart Fail$
Elementary Schdol Tuesday .from
8:30.11:30 a.m.1o meet with parents ·
aboUt. the new policies and procedures for special education.

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CHES1Elt -- Chester Township ,
Trustees meeting, Tuesday, ' 7 p.m.'
town hall. .

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·ANNOUNCING THE UPCOMING EVENTS AT THE
STAR MILL PARK FOR THE SUMMER:
Aprlr27- Flower Show
June 15- S.turday !'4lght Entertainment
July 4 - All Day Activities
J'uly 27 - Saturday Night Entertainment
Augu.t 31- Saturday N'9ht _Entertalnment
$eptember 14 - Fall Fe.tlval
· ·
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~ 28' ;_Saturday Night Entertainment

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IN 3 PAYS

All Natural T·Lite•• .
With Chromium Plcollnate

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Thesday, April 9

*II!* ·

GALLIPOLIS · CHOose to Lose
Diet Class 9 a.m. Grace United
Methodist Church.

•••

RIO GRANDE , Red Cross
Bloodmobile visit 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
University of Rio Grande Rhodes
Cen'ter.

•••

BIDWELL · Sunrise service 6:30
a.m. Prospect Baptist Church.

RIO GRANDE - Buckeye Hills
FFA Alumni meeting 7 p.m. in Ag.
Mechanics Classroom.

· GALLIPOLIS · Sunrise ser:;ice
with communion and footwashing 6
a.m. Bell Chapel Church .

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
District Library Board of Trustees 5
p.m. at library.
'

PORTER - Sunrise service 7 a.m.
with Inheritors performing 8 a.m.
and Jake Frye speaking Clark
Chapel.
·

GALLIPOL.IS
Alcoholi~s
Anonymous meeting 9 p.m. St.
Peter's Episcopal Church .

GALLIPOLIS - Sunrise service 7
a.m. with breakfast following First'
Church of God Youth.

Revivals
WILKESVILLE - Revival April
7 through 12 Church of Christ,
• Sunday 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. and
weekdays 7:30p.m .

•••

Baptist Church in Gallipolis.
Karen is the daughter of Helen
and Clovis ~ailey of Rio Grande.
She is a registered nurse at Holzer
Medical Center.
Steve is the son of Catherine and
Elmer Newberry of Letart, W.Va. He
is employed at Ohio Valley Bank . .
They have three children, Janet
C&lt;:&gt;en and David and Chris.

_.___ _Meigs community calenda~--- LOSE : I 0 LIS.

so thoJ is just whet 01.1r Physical Therapy and ·
Cardiopulmonary Depar1JneQ.ts decided to"do.
Together they formed Outpatien1 Physical
Therapy &amp; Rehabilitation Services and moved
to the Medicql Office Building, where service is
more accessible and more convenient for Vou .
Outpatie nt PhySical Therapy &amp; Rehobilitotio!l
offers pr?mpt core, 'xtended, hours , and the

'

observe 44th

, POMEROY
Mr. and Mrs.
Soulsby is a former Pomeroy post
James Soulsby of 117 Union Ave., mastet and current sheriff of Meigs
P.omeroy, observed their 44th wed- C,ounty. The couple attends the Rock
ding anniversary Friday.
· Springs United MethOdist Church,
1
Married April 3, 1952 they are are officers of the Meigs Athletic
the parents of two daughters Susie Boosters and members of Pomeroy
(Roger) Abbott and Cindy (Joe) Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Fields, both of Pomeroy; ' and !wo. Star. He is also a member of Drew
sons, Jimmer (Connie) Soulsby of Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy and Patrick (Terri) Soulsby · Pomeroy 164 Masonic Lodge.
o.f Tuppers Plains. They have I 0
A family ·celebration of the
grandchildren.
anniversary was held.

the l

• • •• • •• • •••••• ••••••••• •

RIO GRANDE · Steve and Karen
Newberry of Rio Grande will mark
their 25.th wedding anniversary
April I0. They celebrated early by
· going to ·Fon Walton Beach, Fla.
They lived in Fon Walton while
Steve was stationed at Eglin Air
Force Base after they were married .
They were united in marriage by
Rev. JOseph C. Chapman at · Faith

•

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Nce.s ...

NEW 1996 CHEVY LUMINA

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Sunrise service 7
a.m., regular Service 10:40 a.m. and
Easter play 7 p.m. Elizabeth Chapel
Church .

Newberrys to mark 25th

•

i•

.. e Jonnson

. Chria Cozza, executive director of the Gallla County Chamber of Commerce, accepts last
minute reservations for the 59th
Annual Chamber Banquet,
scheduled for 7 p.m., Thursday
In the Stud81lt Annex .a t the Uni·
versliy of . Rio Grande. Congressman Frank A. Cremeans
will be the guest speaker. Reservations may be made by calling
446-0596. Deadline for reservations 1112 p.m., Monday.

••••

CROWN CITY - Sunrise service
6:30a.m. with Dean Warner speaking Victo_ry Baptist Church.

•••

•

•••

VINTON . Eastern Star meeting
7:30p.m.

ADDISON Sunrise service .7
a.m. with Wade Webb and breakfast
after service Addison Freewill Baptist Church.
·
STEVE AND KAREN NEWBERRY

•

CHESHIRE - Sunrise service 7
a.m. with Rev. Bob Thompson
speaking, morning service 10:45
a.m., Sunday School 9:30 a.m. and
· evening service 7 p.m. Old Kyger
Freewill Baptist Church.

•••

We've MovedL.J9~.B~JP.Y.9}:1

Monday, April 8
CHESHIRE ' TOPS meeting 10
to II a.m. Cheshire United
Methodist Church.

CROWN ·CITY · Sunrise service
6:30 ~.m. with singing by G,ospel
Sounds Trio Crown City Methodist
Church .

••

....

KANAUGA - Sunrise service 6
a.m. Silver Bridge Memorial
Church.

•••

.

...

·CROWN CITY - Sunrise service
6:30 a.m. and regular services II
a.m. and 6 p.m. with Ralph Work·
man Good Hope Baptist Church.

...

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BIDWELL - Sunrise services
6:30 a.m. with Robert Kuhn speaking Harris Baptist Church.

•••

••

F\~NO\J

...

•••

•

Gen .

•••

NORTHUP - Sunrise service
6:30 a.m. with Darell Johnson and
special singing Northup Baplist
Church.

•••

MR. AND MRS. JERRY BARSER

•••

CROWN CITY - Suivise ~ervic~
6 a.m. Liberty Chapel Chun:b.

•••

.

Here's a novel idea: End the segregated prom :
racial barriers fell at the school in
the late 1960s, South Panola will
have an integrated, school-sponsored 'prom this year on April 20.
· • " We think it's an important
step," said Principal Charles Ba£Vln.
" I came here in 1990, and this is one
of the things that I fooked to change.
We don't look for any problems
from having one prom, and ! 'in sure
we won 't have any."

Baptist Church.

GALLIPOLIS · Sunrise service 6
a.m. with Jack Parsons speaking
Debbie Drive Chapel.

•••

CROWN CITY · Sunrise ser·
vices with communion. and foot,
washing 6 acm.. Mt. Zion Missionary

• •••

•••

...

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•••

CHESHIRE - Revival with Bon
E. McQueen 7_p.m., April 7 through
13 Cheshire. Bap•ist Church.

•••

CROWN CITY · Revival running to Sunday 7 p.m. Kings Chapel
Church.
·

...

KANAUGA- Easter Camp meet·
ing April 5 through 7 Door of Hope
Ministry's. Children's services Sat·
urday I 0 a.m.
' ·

•••

VINTON· Revival 7 p.m. April 3
through 7 with Forrest Blevins at
Vinton Full Gospel Church.

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Revival 7 p.m.
April 4 through 7 White Road
Church of God with evangelist Ron
Prosch and special singing.

On Tuesday, Ap'til 9th, if weather
permits, the SUTTON . TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES will close the lower
section of WELSHTOWN HILL ROAD
in Minersville in order to use
equipment to clean ·the ditches and
culverts ..This is the section from St.
At. 124 going up hill to the Pomeroy
Corporation limit. It should take only
about 3 hours on Tuesday 'morning,
and residents can travel across to
Minersville ,Hill Road (County Road •
No. C-403).

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District will be flushing
their lines .the second week in April (8-12), Below .is an
outline-of areas and dates.
Monday, April 8th, Success Road, Alfred, Tuppers Plains
Tuesday, April 9th, Tuppers Plains, Reedsville, Coolville
Wednesday, April 1Oth, Tuppers Plains, At. 50, Guysville
Thursday, April 11th, Stewart, Broadwell, Kilvert
Friday, April 12th; New England, Canaanville, Stringtown
These ~rEt general areas, ~o please be aware that the
water may be discolored several miles around each area
during the flushing period. · If at anytime the water is
discolored for a period of time lasting longer than a few
hours, please contact the office so we may be alerted to the
problem.
·sincerely,
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water District
Donald C. Poole, General Manager
,.
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:pP~ag~•~C4~
·i·:·•~==·=·~·:·==~-~="~~~~~~~~~P~~:m:.,~oy~·~~~:~~po:~~·~o.::n•~~:~~-~~~OH~·~P=~~m~~::••:•:•:~~wv~~~~~~~~~~~~=s:u:~~~Ap~~:t~7~1~:98~

•

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I

The winding campa1gn trail through area's history .

1

i By JAMES SANDS
I Speelal COI'I'Hpondent
j
One or the

•

mote
interesting presiden·
tial elections in Gallia history was the
election. .of 1840
when Wilham Henry
•
. Harrison (Whig) ran
agai nst Manin Van• .
. Bu.ren (Democrat).
Pnor 10 Hamson s nommatmn by
the Whigs in December of 1839, the
. , Galli a County Whigs were endorsr ing Henry Clay.
Nationally though, Clay's nomi. ' natwn . was put in j~opardy because
; of has mvol ve~ent m Free Masonry.
· lt was the !'Jpmaon of some voters
. .that there was a conspiracy between
Maso ns and the government to
. ensure that only members of Mason: ic orders prospered in the country.
This conspiracy theory led to the
, formation of the Anti-Masonic pany,
. whach was evenlually swallowed up
Jnto the Whag party.
.
.
Dun ng the 1840 cam
. paagn Ham'son visited a number of towns close
lO Ga ll ia County. like Burlington,
Ches ter, Portsmouth and Chilli·
, cothe. But he never campaigned in
Gall ia. Harri son became famous
during the Indian Wars of the 1790s

'

l

servin~ an· aidelOGenefiiAnthony Wayne. He was also sccm.ry of
the Northwest Territory, lmitorial
member of Conaress, governor of
the Indiana Territory, member of the
Ohio legi&amp;latun:, and hero of the War
of 181 2.
Democrats ridiculed Harrison's
campaign claiming, that at age 68 he
should be sining in a rocking chair
somewhere.
Wrote one newspaper, "Give him
a small annuity and a barrel of hard
cider, and he will spend his days
contented in his log cabin beside the
Ohio."
The Whigs turned thai phrase
into a campaign theme. It was the
backwoodsmen of the Midwest and
farmers against the "Eastern Establishmenl'' represented by Van Buren.
Ironically Harrison was born on a
large James River Virginia planta·
tion and was quite a wealthy man. .
The symbols of Harrison's cam·
paign were log cabins, cider barrels,
canoes, buckeye branches and
plows. The E.G. Booz Distillery of
Philadelphia bottled whiskey in
decanters shaped like log cabins,
and from then on booze became syn·
onymous with whiskey.
William Waddell ·once remembered that Whigs in Green Township

•

wu pulled by sevcnl oxca. They

·

bid a buckeye uee plaaled along

CAMPAIGNING • Thle old campaign flag le from the 1840 preeJ.
dentlal election won by William Henry Harrllon. The flag can be
seen In the Point Plea..nt Muuum In Tu· Endi·Wel Park.
·
'
gathered on a farm near the present
day Gallia Junior Fairgrounds. Here
they built a log cabin. Waddell said
the builders had plenty of cornbread

and hard cider. In September 1840
the group brought their cabin, which
they had built on top of a huge
wagon, into Gallipolis. The wagon

The effect of certain voc~bulary on the listener
By DOROTHY SAYRE

·Everyone s~ems to have their
pet words · and
1
.phrases .
The
..
words and phrases
•
"l•Y change over
~:
· tile years, or tltey
.'
may not. My hus- .
•
band, George, has
i
one phrase, "I
.
see ... " and it just
'
trails off into an
,.
abyss. That "I
• see ... " has a very unsettling effect,
' because the listener isn't sure
• whether George understands, is in
,' agree·ment. he's thinking on it, or
~ h e's diametrically opposed. That "I
'sec.'.." encompasses so much and
' says nothing. Yes; George would
('
··

/ make a marvelous politician. Cou-

' pled with George's rather stoic face
:(at times), I'm sure his rather dry
S&lt;: nse of humor is frequently missed.
: He is truly the nicest, and most unbi, ascd, person in the world; but some. times his wry wit and that "I see ... "
leave people searching his face for
'c lu cs ... "What did he lmean?" Rest
, assured; if you are ever on trial, are
·innocent, and can pick a juror, select
·Ge orge. He is extremely
honest and
.

.

··56th annual

fair.,.even with that unnerving, "I
see ... "
.
Our kids are into the everythingis-"cool"-mode. That seems so hilarious because that is what I said as a
teenager and finally outgrew. And, I
sometimes hear a few expressions
out of them that I am not yet old
e'ttough to use.
Let's take the word "Dude." Did
anyone ever call you "Dude?" That
has to be a 1960'~ wod. George con·
tinues to laugh about our bicycle
trip, Cycle Oregon, in 1991. As
George was puffing up a long, steep
hill one day; a middle-aged cyclist
(with a distinct hippie appearance)
pulled up beside George and said,
"He,y, Dude. Your back tire is flat,"
and off he pedaled. George said he
had never had anyone call him
"Dude" before, or since. When I
write to our grandson, I usually plaster his envelope with stickers. I
found some cute space stickers with
an alien saying, "Hey, Eanh Dude,"
and I thought Jim would love them.
Wrong. He said, "I'm not an Eanh
Dude." I really don't know what the
word "Dude" means in today's Ian·
guage so I probably shouldn't use it.
Being from the west, I thought it

was an "un-cowboy."
Of cou~. there is the "Isn't that
special'" phrase from, I believe, Saturday Night Live. I am a chicken,
not an owl, so I'm seldom liP late
enough to catch the late night news,
and definitely not the late shows.
My son· started directing the "Isn't
that special." phrase in an imitated
Gilda Radner voice towards family •
members trying to get a reaction
after we had expounded upon a
favorite topic. It remains a family
joke whenever one of us makes a
statement, and the phrase pops out
from someone else. Family teasing
can become vicious.
.
George would say his least .
favorite expression used by me is,
''Oh, No." He never knows what to
expect when be hears that. Actually,
my description of the word is, "Terrible calamity, but no one hun." I
don't believe I use it very often. I
distinctly remember saying, "Oh,
No." last summer as George's riding
mower, absent George, went sailing
down the river bank, hit the concrete
block border, 'did an airborne flip,
and came to rest in a mangled heap
along the edge of the river.
This winter George heard me

saying, "Oh, No. Oh, No. Oh, No."
Each '.'Oh, No" reverberated through
the house a little louder. I think my
vocal chords wen: stuck. George
couldn't tell which direc'lion my
voice was coming from and be was
yelling to 'locate me. He finally did.
.I was standin.in water in the utility
room. The hot water· hose on the
washing machioe had ruptun:d, and
the !lood of 1996 fc;~und . us a month
after it did everyone else along the
river. I think George would be happier if I'&lt;I change my vocabulary•to
where the action is occurring, e.g.,
"Oh, No, in the Utility Room." •:oh,
No, along the River bank." Perhaps,
I should just use a diffcn:nt exclamation.

LOSE UP TO 10 Ill~

,_."

·t-lunt set

All tlppllcllnta lor home own.....,lp muat quatlfr a

J!y TOM HUNTER
'Sentinel News Staff ·
. Hundreds.of children. and parents
from throughout the Tn-County area
wi ll converge on Middleport's Gen·
. era! Hartinger Park this afternoon,
·continuting a 57-year "Easter tradi· ,
lion, with the aniJUal Middleport
Easter Egg Hunt.
The event, which dates bac)&lt;. to
1939, was sponsored by the Middle.pon/ Pomeroy Rotary Club from its .
'inag ural event until 1993. The Middleport Fire Department assisted the
F.oaary Club with the annual Easter
Su nday activity since its inception,
and aoo k sole sponsorship of the
event in 1995, according to' Skip
John son of the Middleport Fire
Department.
~ During its 57-year history, the
egg hunt has not been held during
one year, 1994.
The event. which attracts hundreds of children from Meigs,
Mas on and Gallia Counties, is
$C hcduled to get under way at
approxi mately I p.m. today, with an
air horn si!!Jialing the beginning of
ihe hunt.
.
· Several area merchants and indi~ idua l s have made contributions for
ihis year's event, which will include
2.000 plastic eggs fill~d with gift .,.
certifi cates and cash prizes, accord- .
i'ng to Johnson.
·. Children wi!J be divided into age
~ategories, with prizes awarded in
each age group.
: The Easter Bunny wilt' be in
ancndance, complete with a new
qutfit purchas~d by the fire depanment, and will be greeting children
throughout .the afternoon.
The evenl will be held snow or
shine, Johnson stated . In the event of
rai n, the hunt will be postponed until
Sunday April 14 at I p.m.

.

• ftlmlty, muat -

PATRIOT · Fifty-three children
performed various acts during a
variety show March 2~ at Soulh·
western Elementary luni &lt;~r High
SchOOl. Sponsored by the Beta Club
the show inclpded lip sync, dancing,
comedy, singing and piano.
Panicipants were Emily Elliott,
' Jessica Carr, J.W. Sheets, Jessica
.Cox, Aaron Walker, Tessa Baker,
Bridget Harder, Jamie Nic kels,_
Amber Ward, Crystal Miller, Joshua
Skidmore, Nathan Wood , Nathan
Jones, A11nah Ruff, Tosha Pelfry,
Amanda Perry, Christina Eastman.
Chase Blantin, ·ousty Dotson , Tyler
Salyers, Jeremy Wheldon, Keith
Davies, Chris Dotson, Tommy
Kemp , Ahmad Heidari , David
O'Dell, Seth Arro~ ood , Tiffany
Frazee, Celeste Harringlon, Kelly
· Elliott, Josh 'Lavender, More Barret,
David .Stanley, Kegan Parks, Ashley

Roush-Dean

In an .effort to ,provide our readership with CI!!Jen t news. the Gallipolis
. Daily Tr~ bune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 days
. from the date of the event.
POMEROY .. Mr. and Mrs. Vic- · Appai!IChian Home School. She is a
All club meetings and other n~ws articles in the society. section mus1 be
tor Roush of Pomeroy announce the dental assistant for br. Shabbir Doc- submitted within 30 days of occurrence .
' and approaching mar.
engagement
tor of Point Pleasant, W.Va. Dean is
•
BETSY CHERRINGTON AND MATHEW RODGERS
fi!lge of their daughter, A~t~anda · a 1994 graduate of Salisbury Christ'•
Dawn; to
Duane Dean, son of ian School and is employed with
'
Mr. anr;l Mrs. Tim Dean of Salisbury, Dean's Construction at Salisbury.
'•
•
N.C. and the late Janie Dean.
The wC\lding will be 2 p.m., May
; . GALLIPOLIS ' P. Ervin Cher· the grandson of the late Carl
Roush is a 1994 gra,duate of II at Calvary Pilgrim Chapel.
'
. 'l'&amp;ngton, Jr. and Lana E. Cherrington Rodgers of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
•,·
\
. o f Jackson announce the engage- and Mildred and the late Bracy Wray .. ..--ixaent and fortlicoming marriage of of Apple Grove, W.Va. He is a 1983
,.!heir daughter.- Betsy Lynn to Math- · · graduate · of Nonh Gal.lia · High
: ew Perry R~gers of Oa)lipolis.
· School and a 1.988 graduate of the
:
Cherrington is a 1989 ·graduate of University of Rio Grande. He is
: Jackson High School and a 1993 employed with the United States
:~graduate of the Hocking College Postal Service.
•School of.Practical Nursing.
The open ch~rch wedding will be
~odgers is the son of Mr. aM · 2:30p.m., Jun~ 8 at Calvary United
~ IVm. Samuel Rodgers of Kerr. He is Methodist Church of Jackson .

cherri ngt0 n- Rodgers

..... yours-day

I

34480 A ROCKSPRINGS RD. (CO. RD. 20).
B..... A ........ AINITI'»fte~W

;

.

,.
'

(

••

2 FOR TIE PRICE OF 1

•'·

'
Turbo 22,000 ';
Ultra Sun bed :
The most advanced ·
tanning technology
I

Ultra Sun
2 Conventional·
beds with dual face
tanners and body
fans. Speciai En.d. April 13th

i

Number of Peraona In Houaehold
3
18,1150
28,1150

4
18,500

29,600

5

20,000
31,1150

6
21,450

34,350

.'

7
22,850 .
36,700

3
6

3
4

Mulmum
8

.

....... 992·5756
:,.SHAWN REED AND AARON WILSON

;

Eat Up••• lt's Good for You?

I ~EEDSVILLE

•.m. ·

C.l 448 11251. Equlll Houatng Opportunltlee.

Dr. Joey 'D. Wilcoxon of the
Gallipolis Chiropractic Clinic
is proud,. to announce .
·the addition of

MASSAGE THERAPIST
ANNA MARIA LOPEZ
.Ohio St. Med. Brd Licensed, Nat. Cert. in
therapeutic massage &amp; bodywork &amp;·an American
·· Massage Therapy Ass. Member
Gift Certificates Available.

722 Second .Ave.

=

.employed at Washington State Community College .
Wilson · is a 1991 graduate of
Eastern High School and a 1995
graduate of Washington ~tate Com·
munity College. He is pursuing a
bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and a research intern at the
Ohio University Avionics Engineering Center.
·
Wedding plans are incomplete.

.

:

Wedding policy---

~The

Sunday Times-Sentinel
r~ards the weddings .of Gallia,
r.tfags and Mason countaes as news
al'l!l will publish wedding stories and
~tographs without charge.
• However, wedding news must ,
~ general · standards of timelinels. The newspaper prefers to publiGJ accounts of weddings as soon as
IH'.i~sib•le after ~ event.
be published in the SundaJ
c&lt;tltion, the wedding ·must have
place within -60 days prior to ·

the publication, an~ may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received by
the editorial depanment by Thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of publication.
·
Those n01 making the 60-day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photographs of either the bride or
the; bride and groom may be. published with wedding stories if
1
desired.

·-·---·
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I'IUSCI'It

I

LOSE :: 10 LIS.
IN
3 DAYS
.
All
C.H. 2001

I
1
1 .i.niP'irUicl 1

Model Home Located at
lntersectfon of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-992-2478
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00.5:00 p.m.
· The. , Sat. or by appoi,ntment

11Hi Mon. lhru Sit.
Vl1,1, MasterCard, Discover, ·

JEWELRY
REPAIR
20% OFF OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES

----A. J. Rush, M.D.

OIIIIpolla, OH

•

446 6620.

Family Medicine
530 Second Avenue· r
.. . Gallipolis, OH

I

.
Accepting Appointme11.ts
I

.

.

.

.

~

(614) 441-0757 ..
•

Office Hours
Mon~ay through Friday
9 a.m. -5 p.m. '

Herr {l1r Your Hffllth ... Hm {l1r Your Lifrtime.

Call (614) 446-5381
or(614)286-6417

S,ee puzzle on page 02
. ··

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'

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992-4055 .

IIIONEY IAI&lt;K GUARAN1EE

Holzer Clinic

.' .

204 N. 2nd., Middleport, OH

With Dlramlum Plcoll..,.

•

.

Bears for

Natonl

Of course, every pregnancy is different. If you're pregnant, Holzer
Clinic can provide nutrition ~ts and lnlorination about nubilion
during PJ'e81'Bncy. Call today... because Hti'!g right is right'for You and right
{l1r you,r baby.'
'

.

FAMILY HOMES INC.

PROFESSIONAL

\

Gallipolis, Oh

Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.

~~:E::=~~.

Reed-Wilson

.. Do.nald D.
of Marietta and Therese S.
~II of Watetford announce the
efgagement' of their daughter, '
SDawn Marie Reed, to Aaron Antho- .
nJ: Wilson, son of Beryl and Linda
Wilson of Reedsville. ·
,~ Reed is a 1989 graduate of
\WIIiamstown High School and a
! ~5 graduate of Washington State
tlmmunity College. She is

.

AppiiCIInla n tiCC8ptacl by the Authority IIi
3i1 Buck Ridge Rotld, Bidwell, Ohio 458!4,
llondtly • F..., 8:00
4:30 p.m.

.

~

"Eat up...irs good for yoti'. Well, the fact is... irs nor- ·
. mally true if all the basic food groups are on your plate.
However, when you're pregnant, the rules change. The
key is eating the right amounts of the right foods. ~re
are 'the recommended daily food servingli:
• Mlk, !fOIUrt Md oheeM Four to five servings of
milk, yogurt or cheese for calcium to build
a baby's bones
'
and teeth and to protect yours.
• P1olieln fDDda Three or four servin~ of meat, poultry.
fish, eggs, dried beans and peas or nuts tb- provide protem
for growth of tiSsue ~d ,nuscles.
• Prun. Mel "I*' 'laD TWo to three servings of fruits
and four servinge o~ vegetables for .vitamins,
minerals and fiber.
·
•• ....' d., o......... rice
•nd
z .
'
ptNtll Eating 6 to 11 servings of
whole grain and enriched breads,
'""
.. - tlteDie
lfglac
amount
of cereals, pa$ta and rial provides
flte lfgld Mda fiber; minerals, vitamins and carbohydrates
for energy.
• Pida, oiiD Md •aw
..
eaeiDIII Always use these sparingly.
• W&amp;l r To dissolve food and auty away waste; drink 6-8 glares each day.

•
ApptiOIIntl muat aleo - l h e following arllarltl:
1) muat hllvelhe potentllll to hllve aufftclent.tllld auottllnlng IDCOIIIe to
aec... •molt~ INn .
2) muat hllvelhe •blllty to provide thlt requiNII routine IIIBinltllltlnee tiller
purcMI; (exception• mllde lor hndloQped •nd dl11hled pt1ra0na)
·
3) muat h~~ve • cr.dlt thtlt eMIIIea them ta quallfr lor • mot1!ft111e lolln
4) muat not hllve •ny i:rlml.,.. conviction• on record 111111 precludeli the
lemUy from qu•llfrlng lll!der lhe Authority'• public housing program.

RACINE ·: Mr. and Mrs. DouNazarewycz is a 1990 graduate of
glas Rees of Racine and Mr. and Somhern High School and i ~
Mrs. Lew Nazarewycz of New employed at_ Peoples Bank in New
Haven, W.Va. announce the engage- J:iaven . Lloyd is a 1990 graduate of
ment and forthcoming marriage of Point Pleasant High School and is "
their · ·daughter, April
Jean employed at American Alloys.
·
L,..l
· Nazarewycz to Mayo Andrew
An open church wedding will be .
Lloyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clayton held 3:30 p.m., April 20 at First L,...
..
Lloyd of Southside.
Church o.f God in qallipoli~.

10% DISCOUNT

Numberaf........,a

Minimum

,* MFJIL
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·Nazarewycz-Lioyd

Oocllfltlncy bndtlrdla are • fotlowll:
No.ofBidl""""'

•

• Andersen lilt Windows
·;
• Stanley Doors
• 2x6 Exterior Walls, 161n. On Cemer
• Armsarona solarian Floor 1ile
• Marillale Cabinets
· • 8 FOOl Ceiling
• 2x 10 FloorJoinl, 16 ln. On Cenler
• s2 Gallon Water Heater
• Shaw Carpets
• Delta Faucets
~-- ASSUOO&gt;.
• M~ster T·iock Vinyl Siding Wilh Lifeaime Warranty
• 25 Year Warranty Asphall Shingles
~ I0 Year Structural Warranty On The Home

APRIL NAZAREWYCZ AND MAYO LLOYD

lnCO!M Umlla ...... lollowll:
· Annual
tnc0111t1Under

J~tty

Homes To Fit Your Lifestyle

· ·'DDaes-SentlnaJ Staff

COUN,RY

EMILY ELLIOTT
My.ers, John Gill , Gennifer Henderso n, Shaya Massey, Crystal
Sowards, Josie Shipley. Chelsea
Dt:Garmo, Candice Fraley, Megan
Adkins.. Erin Salyers, Becky Baird,
Samm ie Miller, Jason Dill, Tiffany
Skidmore, Bridget O'Dell and Mail
Wood.

----News policy - - - -

AMANDA ROUSH AND JERRY DE~IN

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Call for a

lnCGmtl Llmlla tllld OCcupt~ncy Saandtlrdla, ~'-Mel lor lhe Authority'•
Public Houalng Progrem tlnd muat be either • current JWI~t of lhe
Authol'lty'a public Housing Prognam, • Certlflctlllt holder who hlle obU!Inecl
hauling In lhe Authorlly'a Section .8 Exllllng Hou•lng f'ragram, or an
IIPPIICIInt on the Authorlly'tl Public Hou•lng walling !lat.

GALllltOliS CHIROPUCTIC CLINIC
.

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lhe

Today for Appainlaiaat

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3 DAYS'

1816. They would eonti11ue until
1856. This group's most memora~le
appearance was at the hanging &lt;in
• Gallipolis of Jim Lane in 1817. On
tbat occasion the fife and drim
corps played the dead march l~"g
Lane to the scaffold and the qua6tistep of "Merry Man Home To If is
Grave" after the hanging. This G.J.
lipolis ~fe and drum corps' favo1te
tuoe dunng 1840 was "Van, Van, If a
Used Up Man."
l
Harrison carried Gallia Cou'N
easily and won th~ country as wtill.
On March 4, 1841 , Harrison, cqltless and hadess rode to his inauguCati~n .on h01$Cback in the cold ~·
His maugul'll addre~ lasted nt-:!Y
two hours, making it the longest 11n
American inaugural his!ory. In a~
days Harrison !Je!:ame ill and wi 'n
a month he was dead. lronica y '
even though he had run on a "cleiOa- ·
up government" campaign he sJXtat
his last days of life making sure tlflt
his cronies and friends received gowernmentjobs.
~
.
i
.. Jemes Sande Is especial cdr·
r11p0ndent of the · Sund4y
Timee-Sentlnel. Hie addreu ._:
85 Willow Dr., Springboro, Oljlo
45066.
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Easter!

STUDENTS
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c111 441-o20o

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bid performed at every filly si~

Happy

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HOMEOWNERSHIP
01111• Metropolltlln Houalng Authority hu ......tty complellld conatructlon
21 thn!t bedroom •nd 2 lour bedroom h0n11111 In the O.lllpolla 81'1111. The
homee will be renltld to low •nd vwy low Income larnlllea who Clll'l prove the
abllltyfJM*nU•I tp purchllae the home within • 11411 period of Ume.

·.:::aster Egg ·

side the cabin and a coon chained 10
the top. A couple of men sttaddled
the roof of the abin and Jed the
saniJng of "The Campbells An:
Coming.'
Wro1e Waddell. "The procession
. halted at every Democratic house
and gave tine cheers for Tippecanoe. Great crowds were here from
Meigs, Athens. Lawn:nc:e and Jack·
son counties and Tom Corwin, 'the
wagoner boy' was oratiir of the day."
Corwin served as Governor af Ohio.
There were a number of log cabins brou&amp;ht to Gallipolis for thai
filly. The Gallipolis filly .b~ought
several thousand ben:. In Chillfcoche
a similar filly attracted some 50,000
people.
·One of the great orators to visit
Pauiot in 1840 was William. Sumter
Murphy, who years before hl!d been
involved in the famous Gallia County witch trial.
The day ofth~ Whig rally in 1840
a tornado hit Gallia County that was
sucb a foroe as to blow the roof off
of the Gallipolis M.E. Cbun:h
·(Grace).
·
Participating in that rally and
huge parade were members of Gallipolis' own fife and drum corps that

Students
showcase
talents

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Jlpjuisitions !Fine Jewefty
91 Mill Street .
Iii]
. Middleport, Oh. 457110
614-992-6250
•

151 SeCC)nd Ave. .
GaUipolls, Oh. 45631
614'446-2842

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Entertain111ent

----~------People
LOS ANGELES (AP) - ll's no illusion - David Copperfield wants to
make llis S189.SOO auction bid for the Batmobile vanish.
He filed court papers giving notice that
he 's withdrawing the bid he made last
month, his publicist Heidi Schaeffer said
Friday. .
'
Copperfield believed he was bidding on
the Batmobile driven in tbe 1989 film "Batman," Schaeffer said. He found out later that
the vehicle was one of five and was built for
promotional purposes.
Andrew Vorzi~r. a lawyer representing the owner of the Batmobile, whom he
c!idn 't identify, said Copperfield " had full
disclosures and knew exactly what he was
purchasing."
1
The San Francisco-based auction house
was surprised by announcement of the withdrawn
bid and was writing a response.
David Copperfield
spokesman Levi Morgan said.
NEW YORK (AP) - Louis Malle left the bulk of his $3 million estate to
his three children, and his houses to his wife, Candice Bergen.
The late French film director's 12-page will, filed for probate Friday in
Manhattan, provides trust income to each of his children when they reach
21. At age 30, each will be entitled to $1 million.
The will, signed by Malle in 1992, gives Bergen, television's " Murphy
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in .the
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By EILEEN LOH
Associated Press Writer
JACKSON, Miss. (AP)- It was
1941. · Russians racecT through the
Imperial palaces of Leningrad, frantically hauling armloads of priceless
~rtwork to hide in dusty basements.
Outside, Nazi guns shQOk the city.
Fifty-five years later, 616 of these
priceless . treasures - including
g9ld, hand-tooled thrones, Alexander Il's bronze coronation carriage,
and the exquisite live-inch Faberge
Gatchina egg - are on display a
)VOrld away in Mississippi. gleaming
in exact replicas of the lavish palace
rooms they once graced in the city
that has reclaimed the name of St.
Petersburg.
· The six-month exhibit, "Palaces
Of St. Petersburg: Russian Imperial
Style" represents the largest exhibition ever in the United States of the
history. romance and opulance of the
lost czars and czarinas of Russia's
Roml!'ov period.
It sprang from a c.amaraderie
betwe(n the people of Jackson and
St. Petersburg, and from a desire to
showcase Mississippi through its
most elaborate cultural endeavor.
· From the audio tour narrated by
actor Morgan Freem~n to the ornate
wood parquet floors created in Russia and assembled at the Mississippi
Arts Pavilion. no detail has been
overlooked. said Jack Kyle, executive director of the exhibit's creator,
the Mississippi -Qommission for
International Culturat ·Exchange Inc.
Among the treasures saved from
Nazi looters are items- such as the
enormous gold jewel-studded Bible
of Empress Maria Fyodorovna that have never before been on public display, · even in Russia, Kyle
said.
.
The idea for an exhibit that would
capture the history, romance and
wealth of Russian royalty can be
traced to a 1993 visit to Mississippi
by a Russian choir.
It was then that Pat Fordice, wife
of Gov. Kirk Ford ice, learned of the

detililed gifts.

Branda 'says Je'{Vish filmakers insensitive to suffering

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO
Confidential Service for Women and Men
Fa.rni!y PI arming ·
and Related ServicesPap Tests
STD Screening
Pregnancy Tests
Birth Control Methpds including:
• De~Provera . •Diaphragm
• I.U.D.
• Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spennicide
Anonymous HIV tests and counseling

·

Sliding Free Scale

We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
414 SECOND STREET •
GALLIPOLIS

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were anti-Semitic.
"I will be the tiist one who ~ill
praise the Jews honestly and say,
'Thank God for the Jews,"' he said.
"The Jews are amazing people."
At one point, Brando qualified
his remarks, apparently blaming
"the old-time Jews ihat ran Holly-

91 Mill Street
. Middleport, Oh 45760

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For meaningful Easter
gifts. For beautiful
Easter memories. vtslt
us today.

wood. ••.

Check the
~lassifieds

FRUTH
·PHARMACY ·
2991 ST. ROUTE 160
GALUPOUS, 01:1 45631 .

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~--~6~1~~9.r.~2~~~25:!0·~----~6~14~44~6=-2~84~2----..J !

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· Cook satd that desptte some 4rawbacks, Freedoin 'J:o Farm "overtakes some steps in the &lt;;lirection of shifting the rationale for farm
, payments in the direction of tbe environment."
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siXTH IN DISTRICT • The Galllpolla Future
placed sixth In the
Divlalon ·tO Team Declalon lllaklng contest,
held recently In LOgan. Flret row, left to right
Farmer~ of America Chapter

Gallipolis FFA Chapter
places 6th in district meet
GALUPOUS - Gallipolis' FFA
Each member of the team was
Chapter placed sixth in the rllCent required to .demonstrate at least one
District 10 Team Decision Making parliamentary procedure ability corcontest !hat was held in Logan. Gal- rectly during a business meeting.
lipolis was one of II teams in a II :The abilities were randomly
,
county area to receive a silver.rating . .. selected by the judges and were pre1
1. .l. .. ,·. The conr,lstn! c\lapter parhamen- . sented to the team members three
lary procedure was an outgrowth of . minutes before the meeting began.
the desire within the membership of 11te teams were also giaded on their
FFA chapters in Ohio to develop the ability to recite opening and closing
abilities to conduct and participate ceremonies properly and effectively.
effectively in business meetings.
After completion of the business

, GALLIPOLIS - For the third
sl):aightyear,OhioValleyBancCorp.
h~decl~d a stock split and a cash
diVidend tncrease.
• .·
.; This ~nnouncement was made at
t~e conclusion of the .company's
annual shareholders' meeting
Wednesday, ,April3, at the Morris and
,
DOrothy Haskins Ariel Theatre in
Gallipolis by OVB Chairman and
C~ief Executive Officer James . L.

ers of the record date of April 25,
1996willreceiveonenewsharefor
each four shares of ~ommon stock
owned. 1he cash dlvtdend, adjusted
rorthesrqcksplit, wasincreascdfrom
$.24 to $ .2~ per share, raising tbe
quarterly cash dividend 4.17%.
Shareholders voted to increase the

k Nursery
· ·WI"l/
·
()nen
.for business April 13
, I"
.ft

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f!'OI ,eruroo

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CELLULAR
.

·aoo-44·CELL·1
' CHii.U&lt;;OTHE
JACKSON
803 Central Center
384 Ea,t Main Sl.
ChNIIcOthe. OH
Jacl&lt;aon, QH,
n2-41oo
286-607;3
PORTSMOUTH GALLIPOUS . WAVERLY
1-eaaternfwe. 188W...rlyl'luo
Ga!Np, OH
W...rty, OH
441.()047 ,
114NI228

Or Any .AuthOrized ~Hula;, one Agent

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., GALLIPOLIS - A new nursery
eljterprise promises \D qffer area gard~ners and ·landseapers something
&lt;!i,fferent when they plan th.eir outside
e~deavors this spring.
.) The Ponerbrook Nursery, operateil by Frank Poner Ill and Bruce
McDonald, opens its doors for busi, d~ss on April 13 and will feature
perennials, herbs and o!her flora not
nqrmally found in the neighhorhood
&lt;Jepartment store, Porter said.

bedding flowers different from those
you would find at a Wai-Mart," he
noted.
"We Wl\nt to offer a selection that
would stock a garden or landscape
wi!h some!hing unique to the ll{ea,'
Porter added.
·
Located in the Porterbroo.k Subdivision off Centenary . Road, the
nursery will carry tbe largest selection of perennials and herbs in the
stale, Porter said. The sele&lt;:tion fUnS
! "The purpose, as we envision it, is
to 2,000 species and is expected to
:.l.ilursery that offers trees, shrubs and
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State leg1slat1ve director Shaner to speak at Me1gs fete Aprll26
·
B p••..-rv
·
Y "'' • • DYER,
District
Conservationist,
Natural Resource
· Conaervation District
. GALLIPOLIS -'Gallia and Meigs
. County Grange m~mbers discussed
legislative issues facing farmers
across Ohio and the nalion during the
annual legislative conference held
recently in Zanesville.
The Ohio State Grange sponsored
the event, held at its Friendly Hills
camp facility where .some 200 members gathered.
Local Grange members Patty
Dyer, Opal Dyer, Christine Napier,
Pauline Rife, Bobby Mitchell, Ann
Mitchell,' Ray Midkiff and Eldon Barrows, heard from speakers representing state government and a
spokesperson for the· national Grange.
Private propeny,rights legislation

(HB533)' was ~t the top of the list of
issues viewed as imponant to members..
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Ohio 'State. Grange Master,
Bernard Shoemaker repons. "Grange
members come from rural and agri.cultural communities. We want to
make sure their righr'to own pro~rty is not ·violated. Individual
landowners shouldn't bear the cost
when regulations meant to protect
society' as a whole, reduce land values and income derived from agri:
cultural land."
·
Checklist assessment ·
State Representative Joy Padgett
(House. District #95) was on hand to
welcome the groijp to her district. She
reported that HB 533 was unani-·
mously passed out of the Hous~ State
Government Committee in February
before the General Assembly
recessed for the primary electidn, and

"·

may come to a vote on the House
floor soon.
RejxesentatiYe Padgett explained
that the bill would require state agencies and government entities to use a
checklist to detennine if a "taking of
property, as defined by the constitution and current cads lliw. would
result upon the ·enactjng of cenain
rules or regulations. (The checklist
assessment would take place in cases where land use is limited and a
potential for a decrease in propeny
values is likely to J&gt;Ccur.) ·
The intent of the propeny rights
legislation is to ensure that agencies
of the government thoroughly consider the r~mifications of certain
actions before proceeding with rules
or regulations that will likely result in
a "taking". It is hoped that the cost to
taxpayers, as well as landowners will
be reduced, hoth in the reduction in

the number of unnecessary "takings"
and in court costs.
Padgett also talked about other
pending legislation and urged Grange
members to be active in the pol' t\!;11~
process. She said, "You do make a
difference." She indicated thatlegislators' want to hear from individuals
in their districtS, and often rely on letters, phone calls, and personal con- ·
tacts from constituents to help fonn
positions on an issue. "We don't like
form letters. J don't know o( a legislator who has been influences by
receiving multiple copies of a form
;letter," Padgett said . Those in attendance were given the opportunity to
as~ questions of the Representative.
Term limits and campaign contributions, were among the many topics
discussed dunng the question and
answer period.
Continued on D-8

Topic$ announced~ for two garden programs

exchange them for someone else's
ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY .- New and experi- extras. Just before the exchange, I
. enced gan'leners, are you interested in will be speaking at tbe Senior Citizen
Center on selecting the right perenannuals and perennials?
Come join me the next two 'lUes- niat.for your garden site. .
day nights, at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
What are you going to do with
County Senior Citizen Center,
your
1996 calves?
P0111eroy, for two programs' develIn the words of Harlan Hughes,
oped especially for you;
On /l.pril 9, the topic "Creating A Extension Livestock Economist for
Perennial Border and How to Care North Dakota State University, "
For 'J'!Iem" will be presented. Learn Marketing our 1995 calves taught us
ahout ideas in creating yoU.. own !hat we need to produce for the marperen11ial horder, identifying com- ket rather than market what we pro·
mon perennials you might utilize, duce. ,
Cow
calf
prod11cers
need.
to
be
how \O plan, mainfain and divide
your perennial gardens. 0~ April 16, familiar with feeder calf and slaugh, ·
the program is entitled "Which Annu- ter cattle seasonal price patterns." On
. at Flowers Are Best For You".
Wednesday, April 17 at I p.m. a new
· . ' . We will review the multitude of .livestock market, Producers Liveannual. flowers, the requirements of , stock Association Gallipolis Market
~enain annuals, how io achieve Slllll·
will have ,its fmt 'auction.
mer-long cqlor in your garden bed
An Open House of the facility 'and
and review some of the common mis- the opponunity to meet Manager Britakes when planting annullls.
an Hamilton and his staff is planned
.j. OFFERING THE UNUSUAL - Fnmk ~"«* • .uftllnad 'one
11te 111\nual perennial exchange 31 ' for this coming Saturday, April 13 at
~ the pla!lf; He pia.- to,,l'llll In the POI'tlltlrook NU,.ry, opiiithe Meigs COunty Senior Citizen noon. The facility is located on the
J[Ig tor bl!llnnl on~ 'Ia Pot1lr Uld th!t rKII'IIIY wll offltlloo
Center will be held April 11 from Gallia County FmiJI'Ounds at the.Rt.
• 1'1 tor Jlldltlll'l anit.}!lndecapat'I1Mt can't Ill folnlln 1 mafor
II :30 l'.m. to I p.m .• Dring your ,160 exit off U.S. 3S. We welcome
~IOUtlet.
.
ellc:ess
perennial divisions ~~nd .ibeir addition to the other reg'ional
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meeting each•member was required
to properly answer a question concerning parliamentary procedure and
each chairman·was·asked a question
concerning the responsibilifies of the
chair.
The Gallipolis team 'co11sisted of
nine members: Jill Carter,Brad Harri s, C-hris Dodson, Allison Rink,
Amy
Crisenberry,
Kimm
McCormick, Betq Roberts, Ketisha
Warren, and Laura Cowles .

Per$onal property rights tops list

number of authprif.cd shares of Ohio
Valley l)anc Curp; from 2 million to
5 milli&lt;ln; all o( which will be com~iley.
mon shares, each without par valu~.
hareh ld
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0
A stock split of 25% was declared ' S
ers !"so elected Dailey,
bY, the board of directors. ShareholdContinUed on D-l

• Companion Service.
"2 Phones ·1 'Number"
•1 st Month Access Free
Expanded Home Area
Phones_starting·
. as low as $29·.

are Laura ~owles, Ketlaha Warren, Beth
Robarts, Allison Rink; Klmm McCormick and
Jill Carter. Rear, Brad Hirrls, Amy Crlsenberry
· ·
arid Chris Dodson.

By LISA MEADOWS
.
GALLIPOLIS - On April 12, the
Lawrence County Farm Service
·Agency in Ironton and Galli a County Farm Service Agency in Gallipolis will close their doors for' the final
time and reopen on Monday, April
15, as the.combined Gallia-Lawrence
Agricultural Center, Ill Jackson
Pike, Room 1571 . Gallipqlis, phone
- 446-8686. A toll free number from
producers who live in the 614 area
code is 1-888-2 1.1 -1626.
The current staff in Gallia County will remain the same. Lisa Meadows will remain county d f~ector for
Gallia County .and Jim. Herrell will
remain county director for Lawrence
Courity.
· The county commiuees will
remain the same in both c9unties,
therefore there will be two separate
offices in the same location. The two
separate three member committees
will become a combined live member area committee 'following . an
election in the fall of 1996.
In January 1997 the newly elected area committee will determine
who will be the. county executive
director of the Gilllia-Lawrence Farm
Service Agency.
.Both offices are currently busy
with tobacco leasing and sales ·and
trying to prepare' for the upcoming
farm bill. We are hoping to maintain .
normal functi ons during the move
that will take place on April II and
Continued 'on D-8

~ividends increase Approximately 200 south·ern Ohio Grange
b
d
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·mem ers ISCUSS 1egiS 1atlve arm ISSues

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pv~ SplitS ~tOCk.,

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SAV'ING THIS
SPRING AT ••.

3&amp;3-8583

, By GEORGE ANTHAN •
: Gannett N-s Service
, !' WASHINGTON - After a year of rattling th~ir sabC1;5 and bel; lowmg oul threats to overturn existing conservation provisions in agri1t cultural programs, House GOP conservatives have meekly accepted
II an environmentally fri~ndly farm bill.
·
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Much of the credit .can 'go to adroit maneuvering by Sens. Patrick
1 Leahy; D-Vt. , and Richard Lugar, R-Ind., and to Rep. Sherwood
: Boehlen, R-N.Y. ·'
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The Freedom To Farm Act, despite defects in guaran!eeingfarmer
: s..,bsidies, is being praise(! by conservation JfOups as. not only con. • tinuing basic protections for soil and.waier resources, but as promol• ing envirbnmenUllly friendly crop relations and COnversion of row crop
acres to pasture.'
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Also, the American Fannllind Trust, a national farmland preserva• tion group, says the mel!Syre represents "a historic and long overdue
: recognition by Congress of the need for more federal suppon of state
: and local programs that protect agricultu~alland from rampant devel' opment."
Why did the conservation terminatorS retreat? "They came up
• •l against political reality," said Brad DeVries·of the Sus.tainable Agri. culture Coalition. "They got way our ahead even of the constituency
: they said they represented."
•
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AFf President Ralph Grossi·uotes that the new farm bill incl~s
f!'alithorization of the Conservation Re~rve Program, which helps pro;
, J teet 36,million acres of erodible farmland. H~ also cites a new Envil rot~~~~ental Quality Incentives Program that provides aid to crop and
livestock producers in preventing water pollution; ·
.
Kenneth Cook, president of the.Environmental Working Gr!lup and
.
' · among the most severe critics of past farm policies, said, "The worst
t ~: ::::.~~u~l:~. ~~~e .~~ve~ against the ~nvi~n~~~t didn't cq~ .

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.DAYLIGHT IsN'T, THE ONLY
THING YOU'LL BE

140311UlI'Ortlmatllh, OH

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SPRING! ~p~-~~~

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Conservation
!&gt;
e
ffo/1s
pr~vail
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151 S.Cond Stnlat
Gallipolis, Oh 45631

THINK

Combined
operation will
·start April 15 .

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is·before they Stilt sprinJ pl111ti.;, or hllveatins wi•
IF wheat, sees trouble ahead. . .
_
He said that as the paymenu shrink ·so will the
income safety net for farmers. especially if -ut
prices fall.
,
.
Gary Goldbei'J, president of the Americao Ccn'
Growers A$sociation, said he will take the paymelti.S
although he and the association are opposed to decciUpiing the supports from ti farmer 's need.
"Should,the role of govein!flent be to provide fann.
ers a payment when (market) prices are high?" Goklberg asked.
11te farm bill "is a welfare bill'.' that could tiii'Jl the ·
public qainstfatmers and future farm prognvm, he
said.
.
The National Com Growers Association endorsed
the bill. '·
·

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i l, JLcquisitions .~~=r:: . :

11te greater freedom meant gre111et volaliliiY. in IDIII'·
k.et prices down the fOld, he predicted. If fanner$ 111:
free ·to plant with their eyes on market prices and no
external limits on the number of acres they can crop,
"there will be greater volatility because of switching
in crops," Boehlje said.
He does not expect farmers to t8Jce great advantage
of flexibility in planting this year because most had to
decide liSt fall what they would plant. At the time. the
White Hou5e and Congress were at odds over farm legislation wi!h no date for resolution in sight.
.
Eventually, most major agriculture groups supponed the concept of farm payments divorced from crop
prices,
·
But the president's signat~ did. not satisfy some
doubts ahout the change in d!cades-old policy.
Clinton, who said he relucta'1dY signed the bill
because fanners need to know what agriculture policy

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all crystal and brass.
in stock ·

Sun&amp;My, Aprll7, 1 •

"We believe we are in a position to carry out the
statute," Weber said. .
,
.•. •' W~roN ..:... ~sidem Clinton, in official
The Fedirat Agriculturallmprovementllld Reform
. '11110~ over the death of Commerce Secretary Ron
Act is a ~even-year blueprint for a new. farm policy that
'li.ro~thou·
SIJned a far-reachin~ and controversial f1n11
will COlt $47 billioti. llte bulk of the money in the bill
t11 Wt
I ceremony Thunday.
·
I will provide fanners who JfOW whea~ feed grains
·'. ~ow the race is on for the Agricultllle Depanmen~ ·
(com, barley, sorghum and oats); conon and rice with
, .which must 1ssue resuJations for fannen siping up for
direct payments regardless of whether they are earn';'lhe futed and declining annual payments tbat will
ing high or low prices on the market.
yepl-. jraditloiiJI subsidies tied to crop prices. Near11te law also ends limits on the kinds of crops a ·
!Y $6 ti!'Jkin WtU be paid out in "market ttansition" payfarmer can grow and still remain eligible for govern·
,: !.fiCO~ •_n 1996; $36 billion over seven years.:
ment subsidies and loans. Policies that required land
Eli8Jble fanners will have until Aug. I to enroll for
to ~. idl'ed in s.om~ ·years !,0 keep surpluses from
· ' !he enti!ecseven Y~ of the IICW program.
.
deJ!lessing market prices also are eliminated.
:'~ Randy Weber, associate administraJor for USDA's
Mike Boehlje, an qricultural economist at Purdue
• o,; arm Service Administration, said the ;tency has been
Univetiity in Indiana. said farmers are trading a broad
•prepanng for the signup based on what appeared likefederal income safety net and limited market Stability
~ ., to become law.
·
for greater flexibility and access to markets.

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446-4)166

- lty I!LL'YN FERGUSON
.'1A • will """ 81M c-

30°/o off

25% off

Section.D

:~SDA goes .to wo·rk after ·Clinton signs farm·bill

New Shipment
Pulsar &amp; Seiko Watches

country's need for medical
supplies · and services. So
Mrs. Fordice and pharmacist William L. Stevens
formed the nonprofit organization
Mississippians
Reaching Out, which
. donated over $20 million in
medical equipment and
supplies to a St. Petersburg
hospital.
Kyle ·said that in .a show
RUSSIAN STYLE • .The six-month exhibit, "Palaces Of St. Petersburg:
of gratitude, the people of Russian Imperial Style" represents the largest exhlblti~~A ever In the United
St. Petersburg offered to States of the history, romance and opulance of the lost czars and czarlnaa
loan the priceless items of Russia's Romanov period.
from the city's imperial
(Banquet) Hall from Peterhof, the
palaces to Mississippi.
Throne Room fro111 Gatchina, and
The $8.6 million cost of the the Lantern Study from Pavlovsk
exhibit makes it the most extensive Palace are cast from the palaces'
cultural endeavor in the state's histo- actual moldings, Kyle ~aid. The parry, Kyle said. He said it would quet floors are near-duplicates of the
require ticket sales of 430,000 just to originals.
break even, but that · the exhibit
Everything e.lse is genuine, he
already had sold 150,000 before the said, and were 'the personal possesdoors officially opened last month.
sions of the Russian royal families.
Kyle, who organized Memphis'
That includes the various thrones
Wonders series exhibits - which belonging to the Russian royals ;
· included displays on Napoleon, Alexander ll's malachite desk set;
Catherine the Great and Imperial the last czar Nicholas ll's military
Tombs of China - decided to focus uniform, which' he wore to his wed_the exhibit on the Russian imperial 'ding to Alexandra, and ihe Faberge'
palaces; the official homes of czars Gatchina Egg he presented to his
and czarinas.
_
mother, Dowager Empress Maria
He chose live rooms from the fyodorovna; Catherine the Great's
great palaces encircling St. Peters- gold saddle and naval uniform dress;
burg: Peterhof, Catherjne Palace, Paul l's priceless "Asia" and
Gatchina and Pavlovsk, to be "Africa" tapestries; and Peter the
painstakingly re-created .
Great's silver gilded drinking cups
The master craftsmen hired . to encrusted with garnets.
copy Paul l's Throne Room or
Gallery rooms contain smaller .
Empress Mari.a Fyodorovna's personal items: an ;unber chess set
Lantern Study are the artisans who salvaged from the deStroyed Amber
labored , to re-create the actual Room at Catherine Palace; lapis •
· palaces. aft~r the 900-day Nazi siege lazuli furniture, royal hunting rifles,
during World War II left them a child's sword belonging to the
bombed-out and in near ruins.
young Nicholas II, an elaborately
" This. is as accurate a reproduc- carved roll-top desk commissioned
tion as possible, shon of gelling on by Catherine the Great, and dueling
For you, Easter Is
an airplane and flying to St. Peters- pistols - a gift from Napoleon 'tb
more
than hunting
burg and viewing those palaces in Alexander I.
person," Kyle said.
eggs. It's finding faith.
Everything in tit!: exhibi~ had
Moldings in the baroque Portrait been removed from the palaces
Precious Moments letS
Hall and Blue Formal Sitting Room before the Nazis' deadly siege,
you express your joy
from Catherine Palace, •the Yellow which killed an estimated 800,000 in
with exquisitely

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Marlon We' ve seen the chink. We' ve seen
Brando said he was angry at some · the slit-eyed dangerous Jap. We have .
Jewish filmmakers in Hollywood for seen the wily Filipino. We' ve seen
not being more .sensitive to the suf- · everything," Brando said. ~· But we
fering of others - allowing many never saw the kike because they
stereotypes on film. though none of knew perfectly well that . that's
Jews.
where you draw the wagons
"Hollywood is run by. Jews. It's around." .
" I am angry with some of · the
0 \vned by Jews and they should
have a greater sensitivity about the Jews," he said elsewhere in the
issue of people who are suffering hourlong interview. "They know ·
... ," the legendary actor said Friday perfectly well what their responsi·
night on CNN's "Larry King Live." bilities are."
"We've seen the ... greaseball.
Brando, 72, &lt;1enied his comments

•

1 "It's been a nightmare. Y011 don 'I want to thillk you're in a soCiety thai~
SO ruc:tionary," Craven said Thursday.
Board· members said Craven's movie
'
would add to a glut of violent movies. "Violence on the screen begets violenq: in kids,"
member Cynthia Zieber said.
.
11te board will make a final decision
NEW YORK (AP)- Frequent protester Martin Sheen was arrested after .April 16.
joinitlg an anti-nuclear demonstration on Good Iiriday.
_.
1he actor was among 20 people who blocked the enirance to the RiverDrew Barrymore. and Coortney Cox will
side Research Institule, a nuclear research facility in midtown Manhattan star in "Scary Movie," the 181e of a serial
police said Friday: They were arrested'and·charged with trespassing.
' 'kille~ who calls on teen-age fans of slasher
· The marchers called their demonstration a peace walk. 11tey began at a ~ov1es.
church and ended at the institute, stopping along !he way to pray for social
topics ruging from domestic violence to the death penalty. ·
·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Police Chief
Willie
Williams got some help from friends
Security personnel for the institute refused to comment on the activities
•
toward
paying 9ff $75,000 in legal defense
of the institute.
bills.
Sheen, whose film credits include "Apocalypse Now" and "Gan&lt;Jhi."
Los Angeles Lakers star Magic Johnson
has joined in numerous demonstrations, including a 1995 anti-nuclear
llertlnSIIMn
and
a lawyer for Rodney King are among
.
protest outside the Pentagon. •
WilUams' high-profile supporters, rec;ords show.
~bout 130 people have 4onated about $30,000 for Williams, who was
SANT~ ROSA, Calif. (AP) - Wes Craven says it's been a living night·
swamped
by the legal fees last year when he, fought a Police Commission
mare trytng to scare up a high school to spoot scenes for his latest film. ,
attempt
to
reprimand him, his lawyer Melanie Lomax said.
He thought he had lined up one school after board members gave him iniWilliams was accused of lying to die commission abo!lt receiving free .·
tial approvalto film scenes for ."Scary Movie" here.
·
.
lodging fr&lt;ll(l a Las Vegas hotel. May.or Richard Riordan upheld the repri-:.
. Members became outraged, however, after reading the script, which mand, but the City Councill.ovenumed it in June.
•
mcludes a fQIII-mouthed
principal and teen-agers who. get mutilated.
'.
.

The Artists: Russian
Imperial style comes
to Mississippi

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·F arm/Business

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Brown,"·the contents lind use of Malle's Loa Angeles house, and the use of
a house in France.
·
Upon her death, the houses will go 10 the three children.
.
Malle di~ in November of ly~phoma at qe 63. He has a daugluer,
C.hloe, I0, wtth Bergen, and two children from a previous marriage- Justine, '21. of France, and Manuel. 24, of Manhattan.

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markets: Athens Livestock Market,
Mineral Wells Market, PLA's in
Hillsboro &amp; Lancaster and Union
Stock Yards Company.

as Angus. Chiangus, Gelbvieh, Limousin , Polled H.ereford, Romagnola,
Salers, and Simmental. Preview night
win be Monday Apri.l 15th st~ipg at
5 p.m.. For further mformauon call
my office.

Thinking about improving your
caltle herd's bloodline? Now is the
time to take action! Two sales are
Are you having problems conplanned for Saturday, Apri.l 20 at I ' trolling Multiflora Rose in your pasp.m. So you have two local opportu- ture, woodlot or meadow? Join the
nities to purchase animals in your rest of our county's landowners. Coneffort to improve your herd.
trol of multi.flora rose takes persis• The Fourth Annual Spring Lim- tence no matter what method of conousin Sale is being held on April 20 . trol you utilize: cultural, mechanical
at I p.m. at the Washington County orchemicid. OnApril15 at 7:30p.m.
Fairgrounds, Marieua, Ohio. Fifteen- a program entitled ''Controlljng Mulbulls and thiny-one heifers will be tiflora Rose On Yolll' Farm" will be
offe.red by the membtrs of the Ohio held at. the M~igs County Extension
:Valley Limo11sin Association. For fiir• Office located at Mulberry Heights
:tiler infonnation contact Bobby Gra- Pomeroy in the basement of th~
:ham at (6J4) 992-6040.
Infirmary Building. This program
• 11te 27th Ohio ~Performance was made possible by the cooperative
Tested" Bull Sale is being held on . efforts of the Meigs County Soil &amp;
April 20 at I p.m. at the Ohio Bull .Water COnservation Service and Ohio
Test Station located at the Eastern State University Extension, Meigs
Ohio Resource Dev.etopment Center, County. Hope to see Y0\1 there!.
Belle Valley. Ohio (IS miles south of . Hafold H. Kneea 11 .u.e . .taa
Cambridge on 1-77, one·mile east of Couaty 1Apicultural lc NaturaJ
Belle Valley exit on S.R. 215, Over 'llaouaus A1ent, ObJo 'Staq Uoi.
· '
110 bulls will he sold in such breeds ;venl(y E:J:tension.

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'Po1118roy • Middleport • Galllpolle, OH • Point PINMnt, WV

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WASHINGTON CAP)·- Rising
grain prices are likely to push up the
cost of milk this year at the farm and
in the grocery store .
·
The Agriculture · Department
expects an increase of 50 to 70 ceots
a hundrenweight (100 pounds) at the
farm , although by year end farm
prices could be only slightly above
the 1995 average of S 12.78. Retail
prices, which rose less than I percent
last year, are projected to climb by 3
percent to 4 percent.

"This would be the first time
since o990 that retail dairy prices
rose faster than general inflation,
although the difference is projected
to be small," USDA said in its
monthly Dairy Oullook repon. "The
farm-retail price spread is expected
to rise modestly in 1996, even
though it was below a year earlier in
late 1995."
Gains in mille output ·in the next
few months should· boost supplies
enough to bring prices of cheese and

' For those who grow specialty products,

Porterbrook Nursery...

'&gt;-

Tight fruit
supplies will
keep prices up

0 VB

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place of production-based payments, past to lOUt California almonds from each year, making the nuts the state's t'r•
growers of basic· commodities will Brazil to India.
·
No. I expon crop and the nation '~ .;,.,
receive direct checks worih $36 bilWhile complicated and requiring No. 6 cxpon crop.
lion over seven years as compensa- detatled· paperwork, the program
Exponing is where the action); ·,:·
tion for the end of subsidies. Linle of essentially offers trade groups and for the foreseeable future, agricu(-"'"
that money will go to producers who cooperatives a"50 percent match on I ural 'economists say. While growth"'"
grow anything beyond cotton, soy- Jlun~ they spend to advenise their in consumption of farm produci:( ';'
beans, corn or wheat
products overseas, . auend trade .domestically is slight, fann exponl&gt;,~ ,' .
The ponion speCiaMty growers shows or otherwise tout U.S. pro- have climbed from $26 billion irr"~'
note with hope, however, is the duce. .
·
·
)986to.$55 billion last year.
·c'::;
MAP. It's designed to help the small
While corporati.ons could use the
To win those markets, lf.S . pro::':: :
eXlJorters of cut flowers seeking funds in the past, the new farm bill ducers need to be ·not only price" "'
entry to the Tokyo market, the limits those wlto can participate .to competitive but also masters of the ~···.
processor of marinate&lt;! · artichokes lr~tde associations or cooperatives.
"chess game" of overseas marketinf'~ '
who would like to sell in Indonesia,
Blue Diamond, for example, one in turbulent times amid rules that arc"""
the packer of almonds who is trying of more .than 4,100 grower-owned often unfair.
.~.; ''
to overcome arcane trade barriers ih cooperati ves .nationwide, has used
Europe, for example, spends $95;.:,.,
money ,in the past to help its 3,500- million a year just promoting its win,{-7
India.
"This should be called the 'sell plus members market·almonds over- exports, often wi\h rebate program; ::::
American products overseas' pro- seas. Brauner credtts the program to retailers, which make it hard for~
gram," said Susan ·Brauner, spokes- with helping California almond U.S. vintners to find shelf ~pace ."'·• '­
woman for the cooperative Blue growers climb to internatio,nal dam- Norway s~ends $20 million a year'"' 1'
Diamond Growers i.n Sacramento, • inance . California now exports gelling its salmon into u:s. surer- :~;1
which has used the program in the· approximately $1 billion of almonds markets.
.
.
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~-------------------------------------------------------~~-------------,.·~~1
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SUNDAY

PUZZL~R.

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ACROSS
1 Layered rock

84 Throw in the lowe!
85 Black and

Red

DOWN
t Kind of engine
2 Draft animal .
3 Flavonng plant 4 Sheltered side •
s·Letter belore tee ~
6 Stick
1 Hag
8 Ubenine
9 Dawn gD&lt;!desa

··~

By POPULAR MECHANICS

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To Order Study·Plan

II

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88 Panama -

Wl\afs ,wagered
·

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

93 Mpthllr;ot-pean "

s~-------~~-----~-

85

89 ON source
92 Marsh'bin:l
94 Tolerated

·
97 DevOior
,
;,~Kind ol ~~-· · • ··, •99 , P~?i
. ;TGIF·';,;.,
11looked searchlngly, ·• 100 Gef4rt."P
· '
· 103 Fonntirty, formally
· 12 "You- There"
13 Knocks
·10!i 'I'UJblne part
14 ParticulaiS' , , ,
· 10!1 Cooper or Busey
·t5 Greatly '
· • • 107. Extenq to . : ·
16 P~ on a ship
109 E~ dlg~
17 Noah's vessel
111 -:-King CO!e
18 - Doone
•
112 Room divider
19 Eschew
113 ·- Ooubtllra'
20 Depressions
1is "20,000 Leagues" .
~7 Marx or Malden
captain
, •. •
30 Scotland's Loch 117 Went by
33 Certain votes
U8 Receptacles
36 That plate
120.Club pti~nt .•
38 Read quickly .
122 Underground ..
39 Automobile type
, . paiiSIIge
43 Mineral
123 Melody
44 Dried out
124 Speak lndlsllnclly
. ,45 ShadOwy .
1~5 Was·in·a rage
47 ~~est's vestment
126 ":--of Two •
48 Cheer
Chles•
49 Not at all tipsy
127 Send J)ayf!18nmt
. 50 The ones there
129 Go away
51 Seismic events
13t Balance ·
52 Miami's county
· 133 Musical drama
54 Nuts
134 Metric measure
56 Likelihood'
135 Acts
57 Stage direction ·
t 37 Ope
58 Plantefs need
138 Crisp cooliie
eo Soft masses
140 Eastern Eur01111an
6t Marsh
&lt;.143 Natlva of: sulllx
62 Lacking energy
145 Fruity drink
63 Canine
t46 -rata
66 NerYO\Js
147 Hgt.
67 Thiillc about
148 Regret
69 Perceive
72 Middle

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State (ZIP) _ _ _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - '

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~ save with the dosslfleds

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Homes: Question·s and·answers
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By POP!JLAR MECHANICS
ter.
For AP Special Features
It's important to keep the crawl
Q: We hav~ a moisture problem. space dry, not on,ly for the oak floorOur 4-year-old, two-story home. is a ing, but because excessive dampness
few hundred feet from a saltwater •. promotes rot and creates conditions
creek. By midsummer, condensation conducive,to termite infestation.
de~elops· in the crawl space under the
Q: I have light-colored shingles
house and drips down on the plastic on the roof of my .house to reflect the
vapor barrier that covers the crawl summer sun and thereby reduce my
space floor. By autumn, the damp· air-conditioning costs. The problet)l ,
ness has caused the oak flooring in i.s that the shingles are discolored by
the room above it 10 buckle. When dirty streaks of what I believe is
the heat comes on in the winter, the mold. Is this discoloring due to
floor dries out and settles down, mold, and can anything be done to•
though not completely. Can you eliminate it?
help us solve this problem?
A: The discoloration is probably
A: Check that the vapor barrier on cau.se4 by m~dew spores. According
the crawl space floor has no holes or to the Asphalt Roofing ·Manufacturopen joints. Specifically, check the . ers Association, this is a common
joints between the vaRor barrier and
problem and is often mistaken for
the foundation walls. All open secsOot or dirt. Fortunately the mildew
tions must be sealed with duct tape.
spores do not cause the shingles to
.Jn addition, during the winter deteriorate.
when the humidity is low, install a
The discoloration cannot be elimvapor parrier (large polyethylene
inated, but it can be lightened ternsheets with taped overlapping joints)
porarily with bleach. Gently sponge
to the underside of the floor joists in
a dilute solution of chio{inc bleach'
on the\hingles then rinse it off with
·the area below ·the room with oak
flooring. Also. place a dehumidifier
a hose. Don't scruli the shingles or
in the basement that can discharge
you will loosen their granules.
condensation to the butside by means
Q : The porcelain in.my bathtub is
·of a condensate lift pump. Disconworn off on about half of the tub. The
neetthe dehumidifier during the win- n;maining porcelain is very rough

and porous. I cannot replace the tub,
but I think that a good paint and
primer ·system would improve its
appearance: Do you have any suggestions? .
A: We would definitely not recommend painting the tub. This is
considered a temporary solution. We
have seen tubs where the finish has
(ieeled, cracked, chipped and discolored in just a few years. It would be
better to.replace the tub or to cover
it with a Re-Bath Liner. Re-Bath
manufacturers hi -impact acrylic liners with a nonporous surface that is
custOm 'molded to fit over existing
tubs. They have over 400 models of
tubs with different shapes and sizes.
. This is not a do-it-yourself project, however. Prior to ordering a liner, a factory-trained dealer will check
dimensions of your existing tub so
that the installed Iiner will fit over
your bathtub-. The installation does
not disturb the existing walls or floor
around the tob: It will also not disturb the plumbing except for the tub
drain and overflow to the lin,er. .A
typical tub installation costs about
$550. Tub surrounds are also avail able.
For more infonnation , contact
Re-Bath at (800) 426-4573.

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POINT PLEASANT.

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.tLU.i

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Mon. • Fri. 81111· 8 pm · SaL hin • 2 pm
l''~'•" r

See.answer;on page 85

l

Public Notice

1

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Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
118 of the Ohio Department
Bidding on this project Is
STATE OF OHIO
af
T ranoportlltlon, re.otrlcted to Minority
DEPARTMENT OF
Columbus, Ohio untll10:00 I Buainttu Enterprises
TRANSPORTATION
a.m., Wednesday, April 24, (MBEo) eertlflsd as MBEs in
Columbus, Ohio
11196 for lmprovomento In:
acca.rdarice with Section
Office of Conlnlcto
Qaltla County, Ohio for 123.151 (B) (2) of the Ohio
Legal Copy Number 96-314 Improving sectlona GAL· Revised. Code by the State
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
233-11.185112.472; Gal-325· Equal
Employment
Mailing Dele 3129196
1.336, State Routes 233 and Opportunity Coordinator
Sealed proposals w!ll
325 Iii Perry Towno~lp, by · and qualified to bid with
accepted from alt.
replacing !!rldgea and ODOT under Chapter 5525
qualified blddera •'"'..thotl culven with box sections.
of the Qhlo Revised Code.
Office of Contracta, Roo1m I

"The date set for
complellon of thla work
shall be as set forth In the
bidding proposal." Plana
and Specifications are on
file In the Department of
Tranaportlltlon.
JERRYWRAY
DIRECTOR OF
TRANSPORTATION
March 31, 1996
April 7, 1996

Classified Line Ads
Tribune 446· 234 2

3 papers

3 days
6 days
10 days
Monthly

15 words
15 words
15 words
15 words

Matc;hing couch &amp; chair. 304~

Personals
CLUBV.t.P
DATING SERVICE

675-3822.

Register 67 5·1333
Over 15 words
57.00
$.35 per wd.
sl 0.00
$.45 per wd.
14.00
$.60 per wd.
S1.40/day $.06/day

or less
or less
or les~
or less

ANNOUNCEMENTS

005

•

Sentinel 992· 21 56

s

:::
70=--~v::-a-rd~s=-8-:-1 e-_;_· 90 .Wanted to Buy
All Yard Sales Must Be Paid 'tn

Mix8d Seagle, 7mo&amp; old , house
pet. good home on ly. 30'4-675-

4650.

Advance. DEADliNE . 2:00 p.m.
the •day be lore the ad is to run.

Sunday edition · 2;00 p.m. Friday.
Monday edition · 10:00 a .m. Sat-

Older Type 3M Copier 614-367 -

urdav.

0638.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
· &amp; VIcinity

U_sed lurnirure- antiques, one
p1ece or comp lete estates also

do appraisals,• OsO:f Marrin: 614·
992-7.. 1.
Wanted to Buy Used Mobile
Homes. Call: 614 -446 -0175

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos With
Or Wilhout Motors. Call larry

Livelv. 614-388-9303.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

All Yard Sales Must Be Paid In
Ad11ance. Deadline : 1:OOpm the
day before the ad is to run, Sunday edit1on- 1:OOpm Friday, Monday edition lO:OOa.ro. Saturday.

80

Public Stile

and Auction
Wedemeyer's Auction Service,

Gallipolis, Ohk&gt; 6t&lt;l-379-2720.
lost: 2 Black &amp; Tan Doberman

Anycna Knowing The Where- Pups In Kyger A.rea, OnQ tia 8
abouts 01 Diana Beaver Pleaae Bright Pink Collar, Childs Peo, R.Write: P.O. Box 281, Wlnllekl, WV
25213.

ward l6t4-367-7528.

Rick Pearson Aucrion Company
full liiJ'I f! auctioneer, :::lmplvi.&amp;
auction
service.
Licensed
166;01'lio &amp; Weat Virgin ia, 304 -

m ·5785 Or 304· n:J-5447.

By BARBARA MAYER ·
Old fountain pans have enjoyed a
For AP Special Featuree
renaissance for several years. Now
The four-pedestal, center-drawer blotters and ink wells. useless since
· pesk is beitlg rendered obsolete,by the ad~ent of the ballpoint, are in
'the computer station as surely as the. , de'!land ..·'So are other desk accesclectric typewriter replaced dte man· sones from. the late 19th and early
ualand the PC wrote the end to thein , 20thcentunes.
.
both. ;&gt;
"They are not ne~anly 100
But wait long .enougiJ. and il will percent use~ I•. but t~ey are beauuful
all come back, not as utility but as an and lend tn!bvoduahty to a desk that
aesthetic. Cruise the garage 'sales, bas the same anonyJDous computer,
f1ea markets and antiques stores and mouse, telephone set and tape dossee what collectors are coveting as a pe~ser," says _LeJh · Gordon, , an
personal stamp on an impersonal ant!,ues dcal~r on _ e:ov York.. ,
.office_ at homq or at work.
·
These thongs go m cycles, she

'·•.

Public Notice

'

.

Paper spikes nat included

..New Hours...

---------r--------r-------~------~
Public Notice

," - ' , I

Orders Call675·2780

Clty_~----------_.;._--

F-96

$22

'Polni Pllillinl

w

1

Enclosed Is $4.95 each for the booklet(a)_ _ _ _ _ _ __;_

® ~~=N~::S~:~~~~-~-~.~~:. . . . $24

1111 ec..whl inet

Penetrating oils best
~for protecting wood.

81 Bird of prey

' II.

675-2~80

.•.

Homes:

83 Nolat!le time

have plans for new branches in new

Cornish Rock Cross Chicks &amp; .
50 lb. Start-N-Grow Feed .............

)

solved in I gallon of alcohol proFor AP I~Mclal FMturw
dLces 1-pound cut shellac. Liquid
To protect wood without masking shellac comes premixed in 3-, 4-, or
its natural texture, look to penetrat- 5- pound cuts. ·
ing oils such as tung oil, linseed oil,
Shellaf is sprayed or applied with ·
Danish
rubbing
oil
and
wood
bowl
a
pad
(French polishin~) but brush'
gr•ceful •rchea, columna and
sealers.
For
maximum
protection,
i~g is the easiest way. Dilute it to a
ni)inp, givea thla .bome a Charuse llll oil finislt that contains a resin- 1- or 2- pound cut. Brush with long
act~r all ita own, Dormer winlike urethane. As the oil soaks into strokes with the grain. Don't back··
dows lild arched transoms prothe wo,l)d, the resin 'hardens forming brush over the same area. It dries
vide further appeal. .
.
a
tough, resilient surface. Jn.'surface qu_ickly and once it starts to dry,
The home'a lone (oyer introoil
finishes don't crack, chip, or n.r...- ir.it:l&lt;brushmg leaves marks. Wait at
d ucet the formal dining room, .
off.
.
·
least · ne hour before sanding with
which features a 10-ll cellinl and
· Work the oil into'the bare wood 220-g 't paper. Six to eight coots
transom-window views to the
with a soft rag or brush. Wait about work best. Rub them out with 3/0
front porch . There is enourh ·
30 minutes for the wood to absorb steel wool for a satin finish . .
room here for a large dinner
the oil. Then, wipe the surface dry
Varnish combines oils and resins
paq:y. The foyer then apiDe into ·
with~ clean, lint-free rag, wait ·30 for a super-durable top coat that
the central living room, which it
minutes and apply a second coat. resists .heat, water, alcohol, and abracrowned by a 10-ft.-high ceiling.
Build up a sheen by rubbing the sur- sion well. It brushes smoothly and
A ljreplace is flanked by' French
face with very fine (4/0) steel wool. easoly, but slow drying time Jets dust
doors that open to a covered
Then, buff .the wood with a soft, senle in .the finish. Natural varnish
porch or sun room,, and a she).
n cloth.
·
dries in 24to 48 hours. It 's classified
tered deck beyond.
·
· Shellac, one of the worid 's oldest by its oil-to-resin content - long-oil
Just off the living room, the
=...~:.~~-....-~ nishes still in use today, is derived .varntshes for tough marine and outisland kitchen and breakfut area
EYE-CATCHING DETAILS IJIIIdl the home'• facade; they lndude jp'aCelul arches, etateb' coltamm lllld from the resinous secretions of the door applications and shon-oil for ·
provide 8 spacious dining area.
lac bug- a small Asian insect. The fine furniture . Synthetic varnishes
ralllncll, a trio ol ~ wbllllou, arched~ apd • pnHD!nent front entrance.
I ust around the comer from the
resin is rrjined into dry flakes then with alkyd, yiny l, phenolic or
kitchen is a large utility room for
dissolved in alcohol to form shellac. polyurethane resins go on easier, last
Because shell.ac has such a shon longer and dry faster.
storage of cleaning implements.
shelf life, buy shellac flakes and ·
Apply ~arnish .with a top-quality ·
The fokklown ironinr board is a
esign F-96 has a living
alcohol to mix fresh shellac as you natural bnstle brush. Thin the first
Space saver. The nearby powder
room, dining room,
need it Shellac is designated accord- coat with mineral spirits. Sand this
room is convenient for a cleanup ·
kitchen,
breakfast
nook,
ing to tlte proponion of shellac resin · sealer coat lightly .with 240-grit
after yard work.
three bedrooms, two fuU baths, a
to alcohol - called the cut. For paper. Ne&gt;t; apply full-strength varThe unusual master suite
haU-bath, and a utility room,
exarnple, I pound of shellac dis: nish in full stripes about a brushincludes a window alcove and
. GAIU6E
totaling
2,410
square
feet
of
liv·
)(
width apart.
access to the porch. The private ·
ing
space.
The
plan
is
avai~ble
bath includes an ele11111* garden
I
with 2x6' exterior wall framing
tub, walk-in Closets for )jim 1111d
and
a
standard
basement,
crawlhe·r , a separate shower, twin '
space or slab foundation. The'
sil)ks and a private toilet
·
plan's two-car garage offers 512
' '
· One of the two secondary bed·
square
fl!'et
of
space.
Full
study
plan
information
on
this
house
is available in a $4 baby
rooms baa a 1~ft. ceiling. All of
blueprint.
Four
booklets
are
also
available
at
$4.95
each: Your Home-How
the remaining room• have 9-ft. ·
to Build, Buy or &amp;!lilt, Ranch Homes, 24 of the most popular from this
ceilings. A full ~tit serves both
feature; Practical Home Repairs, which tells how to handle 35 common
secqndary bedrooma.
problems; and, A-Frames and Other Vacation Homes, a collection of 24
Ev~n the two-car garage has
styles. Send check or money order p;wableto the Associated Press and this
amenities, including a storage
label to: House of the Week, The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
N&amp;wYork, N.Y. 10t16·1562.
area, access to a l,OO!HIQ.·fl attic ·
•
·SpaCe and a wheel stop.
Clip this older and retum label
..
, •. '•
~
. . ·' .
,·~
••
: .:· c::;ll : ·
: ,.,..,..... .
Enclosed ls•$4 for ,plan No. - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - ·.:. ;·~.·
·.:·
0

May 1, 1996

®

"J

73 WhBedle
74 Fashioned
75 Slide
78 A continent: abbr.
79 Uletess

'86 Boys

87 Restrain
88 Portion of a meal
11 Where the Louvre Is
90 Car with a meter
16 Plate ol mixed
.,. 91 Female sheep
greens
92 Keeps .
21 Muslcalaounds
95 Winglike part
22 Sink down
9&amp; Tire surface
23 AMuse
98 Circular plate
24 Demonstrate·
too Get along
25 Amerindians
tOt Dead language:
26 Domestic employee
abbr.
' .;
28 City In OhiO
t02 Victory goddess ' ,·
29 Donkey
104 Gab
30 Hawaiian goose
t 05 Soaks, as flax
31 Automobile
106 Profit
32 Smudge
107 Puerto34 Insect egg
108 Ward off
35 Encounter
110 Male singers
37 Poets 'befon~•
112 Cry out In sorrow
38 Fathers
113 Paris subway
40 Cunning .
114 Learning session ·
4t Clas&amp;Wied Items
1
42 Flexible tube
116 Perchad
117 Man of rank
44 Burned with liquid
118 Cried like a mule
46 "Happy New -·
119 Abound 49 Directs
121 One hundred
52 Distribute cards
percent
53 Short swim
124 Hodgepodge: abbr.
55 Inclines
125 Distant ·
59 Chicago's airport
128 ACtor Gibson
eo Put on guard
1.30 Rustle
6t Censured
131 Play on words
84 Carried
' 132 •- everything!" .
65 Tlmsome talker
136 Westem Indian
66 Green9em
67 NickQI, e.g.
137 AOilnded roofs
139 Bite
68 FoOd fish
140 Drunkards
70 Carry
71 Rough calculation:
141 Bakery item
abbr.
r
142 Mrs. Dwight D.
72 Far-reaching ,
Eisenhower
144 Relative of a
73 Gear teeth
sundae: 2 wds.
74 Sorcery
76 Place ol rest
147 Mountain ~dge
149 Best part
77 prepares. as
150 Sidestep
leftovers .
151 Rub out
79 Put on
152
A.nracted
80 'Easier said 153'1-linder
.done"
82 Clippers
154 Repulse
6 Land measures

t55 Delaware's cephal
156 Salty drops

Day

markets on the draw[ng board. We
will be aggressive, but to be ready for
these markets, we have to change."
•He explained that the change he was
referring to includes everyti)ing from
being open more hours to constantly
evaluating the cost effectiveness of
the service OVB provides. He gave
details of two significant changes
implemented by OVB at the end o.f
1995; the forming of a consumer
finance company and a restructuring
of Ohio Volley Bank. The finance
company operatin~ under the n~me of
Loan Central recently opened offices
in Gallipolis and South Point.
•
Dailey noted that finance companies are subject to less government
regulat io'n and traditionally have
higher profit margins. He added the,
bank was restructured into three distinct grouos: commercial, financial
and ret to accommodate the continuing .,.owth of OVB and to "allow ·
the lints of r,csponsibility to ·work

APNe'*'

•4

'

·

Plan F-96, by HomeSty)et
Deaia'nen Network, but 2,410
equare leet of u.q ipiCe in Ita
unique country1tyle Boor piau.
The detailed front porch, with

'
J uu

'

House·of the week

By BRUCE A. NADIAN

~ ~-.

.

Pomeroy •llkldllport • o.tlfpolle, 0H • Point Pllltant, WV •

~

Detans·· add character to home

increase as much as had been expect·
ed earlier.
. ,
USDA's Economic Rciotllch Ser, _
vice projects the number of epws td. ' -decline about I percent this year !lftel'" •
a slight dip last year. Hiahcr feecf•"'·
costs in 1995 did noi significllllli)"· ~
delay bringing new operations inte-f.'
producliOn.
~,~
Even wilh higher retail price~'::
commercial use of dairy products ~"~
forecast to grow by I perce,nt .to ~':"
percent this year.·
"••

Export program worth miUions to farmers ·
By DAVID JUDSON
Gannett News Service .
WASHINGTON - While the
billions in ~irect farmer payments
· authorized in the new farm bill will
go large ly to big producers of major
.. WINNING ENT_RY • Sunset Valley Farm, Gallipolis, exhibi\ed
commodities
s'uch as corn and soythts grand champton female at the 1996 Ohio Angus Association's
beans,
one
relatively
small program
Super Star Show. and Sale in Columbus recently. The winning
will
be
wonh
millions
to the small
entr~, SV~ Sara 502, is a March, 1!I95 daughter of OSU 6T6 Ultra.
growers of specialty products.
0~ nght ts Tom Woodward. (Photo by American .Angus Associ·
It's to be known as the Market
alton).
.
Access Program, renamed from earlier programs. designed to help
exponers. II will provide $90 million _
next year to f.telp speciality exporters
wage battle around the globe and
crack
tough markets. ·
"What's nice for me is, it's adjaContinued from D-1
one of the few programs that
"It's.
increase every year, he ~dded.
cent to what was my grandfather's
Poner said research into the selec- farm. In a way, I feel it's making a we have in our arsenal that really
tion will occur in cOnjunction wilh con tinuing contribution to the coun- expands trade opponunities for U.S.
ag products,' ' said Rep. Cal Dooley.
running the business. He and ty," Poner said.
McDonald are investigating the kinds
Porter, who obtained a doctoral D-Calif., author of the pr6visions in
of herbs and other plant life the area degree in anthropology from the . the year's mammoth farm spending
can support.
University of Maryland and taught on program. Specialty tommodilies
"We' lltry it out in our garden, and the college level for many years, has such as fruits and vegeJabies
if it.can withstand the climate, we'll authored or edited more than I00 "receive absolutely no subsidies.
sell it," Porter said.
books on Native American culture. This is the only program that helps
With the opening, Porter said he He still teaches and lectures on the them."
The five -year farm bill, passed
and his partner plan to offer work· subject at request.
He plans to apply tfle same schol- amid controversy and panisan wransh.ops on how what the.nursery offers
can suit the home.
arly approach to the nursery in its gling, is being hailed as historic this
· " Our motto is,- 'come and grow quest to offer ti)e unique. Of partic- year because it ends subsidies as
with us,"' he explained. "The idea is ular interest is locating and trans ~ they've been paid iij the past. In
to offer something different each lime planting plants and herbs kiwwn to be
at every workshop, not the same dying out in their native lands, Porter
every year. It won't all be done althe said.
"I wanted to do something differsame time as we want to allow our
ent, something equally rewardin g,"
clientele 10 grow."
Porter said the nursery will also he explained. ''Here;· yo~ have the
WASHINGTON (AP) - \ight
seek to accommodate customers' challenge of finding seed sources,
supplies
of apples, pears and strawneeds, such as seeking out items it and once you procure the plant, you
investigate the botanical and cultur- berries are expected to keep grower
might not carry at no e&gt;&lt;tra charge.
prices for fruits and nuts above last
al
history of the particular plant.
"We will do landscape design and
levels, 1he Agriculture Departyear's
"Whc~
I
find
these
plants,
I
grow
help them find whatever plants they
ment
says.
them but at the same time try to mainwant in their garden," he said.
Higher retail prices for fresh
Poner, a Meigs County native, has lain the genetic strain in a different
apples, grapeft:uit, lemons and grapes
erected the nursery on property once soil," Porter added.
The grand opening will be an all ' were a factor in the January rise in
owned by his grandfather. McDonthe -consumer Price Index . Conal d's family previously operated a day event, he said.
sumer prices may be nudged up
farm on land adjoining the nursery. ·
again because of the just-ended
harsh winter.
"It is still to early ... to detect the
stock.;:n_iin_ue_d_rr~_m_D_·l-~-- damage to the new I 996 noncitrus
crops," USDA said. "Growers are
concerned about lower fruit sets and
W. Lowell (Buz) Call and Morris E. more efficiently."
Dailey pointed out that OYB Iighter crops in 1996."
Haskins to thre.,.year terms as direc·
Last 'year 's noncitrus crop was
tors, to expire in 1999. Other board stock, including dividtnds. almost
members are: Keith R. Brandeherry, doubled in value frorri 1976 to 1986. worth $6.6 billion, up 6 percent from
Robert H. Eastman, Merrill L. Evans, During the past nine years, that same 199~ . Apple production dropped 4
Warren F Sheets, Jeffrey E. Smith stock value has more than quadru- percent, which, coupled with strong
• domestic and expon demand, pushed
and Thomas E. Wiseman. The nine . pled.
Introduced. were special guests grower prices 29 percent highef.
Bane Corp. directors also serve as
U.S. orange production is expectdirectors of Ohio Valley Bank along Dan Evans, Chairrnan and Chief
with Lloyd R. Francis, Frank H. Executive Officer of Bob Evans ed to ri se Ipercent this year, inCludFarms, Inc,; Rob Lucas, attorney ing a 17 percent increase in the CalMi lis, Jr., and C. Leon Saunders.
President · Smith's report on from the firm of Vorys, Sater,Sey- ifornia-Arizona cro~ of navel
income and expense was highlighted mour and Pease in Columbus; and oranges. Florida's crop:·which took
by record earnings. Net income for Mike Rarick and Steve Lattuca from only minimal damage from late
1995 increased by 12.47% to Crowe, Chizek and Company, the freezes, is likely to drop 2 percent
from the bumper crop of a year ear$2,728,000, which represents an bane corp's independent auditors.
lier.
Dailey praised Evans for his supincrease of $303,000. Earnings per
The retail price of orange juice
and commitment to Gallia Counpan
share rose 8.87% at $2.70, which was
may
stan to rise in the coming
ty.
"We
wouldn
't
have
this
(Ariel)
$.22 per share over 1994. Cash divi.
months
after an expected 2 percent
theater
to
have,
this
meeting
in;
we
dends paid to shareholders during
drop
in
production.
1995 totale~ $ 1,193.9 11 . The cash' wouldn 't have the Casey .McKenzie
The lcmo.n crop is forecast to rise
dividend of$ I .18 per share was an Ag Center. and all the good things it
does
for
agricuhure
in
this
area.
12
percent and bring lower prices. A
increase of 4.42 % from 1994·.
There's
a
good
chance
the
Universi
9
percent
drop from last year's
Earnings and cash dividends per
ty
of
Rio
Grande
wouldn
't
be
here,
.record
grapefruit
producuon is proshare were bjlsed on weighted average number of shares outstanding of and most recently the n~w industrial jected.
Grape harvests declined .2 percent
I,O il , 5 I 2 for 1995 and 977,97 I for park."
Dailey
concluded,
"Gallia
Counlast
year. USDA expects this year to
1994. Shareholders equity rose $3.19
ty
is
prosperous
and
a
better
place
to
hring the largest crop pf table grapes
n11llion.' Record earnings and $952,
since
live
in
thanks
to
Dan
Evans
and
Bob
I 992 . Peach and pear produc000 resulting from the purchase of
Evans
Farms.
We're
proud
he
's
a
tion
also
was off last year.
over 26.000 new. shares by shaoeshareholder.··
holders through the bane corp's dividend reinvestment pian were major
reasons for the strengthening of the
tLmacK.
company's capital position according
to Smith.
Dailey addressed the shareholders
on how competition creates changes.
(Place orden by
Responding to the increased competition in OVB's markets, he said, "We
Aprllll)

•

Sunday, Aprll7, 198f...

nonfat dry mille closer to year-eT!rlier levels, the repon said. Butter
prices are like~ to remain steady this
spring, it said .
Alfalfa
prices are slighlly
under last ~ ar's because of ample
low-qualit suppijes. However,
pricos- of
-quatilr hay are high,'
especi~ly i the We$j, USDA said,
Milk per w is forecast to go up
by about2 pc; nt this year, although
the num
cows recei.ving the
bST gro b honnone is unlikely to

•

Sunct.ty, April 7, 1111

Clean late Model Can Or
Ttuc:ks, 1910 Models Or New~r.
Smith Buick Pontiac, t 900 Ea11·

ern ~e. GaUipoli!l.
J &amp; D's Auto Parts . Buting salvage vehicles. Selling pans: 304773-5033.

Top Price• Paid: Old U.S. Coins
Sliver, Gold, Diamonds. !oil Otol'
Colloctiblea. Paptrwoighta. Etc.
M. T. S. Coin Shop, 151 Second
Awtnue. Galllpoll~ 614-446-2842.

•

11

o

Help Wanted

$,WANTED'$
10 _people who need to lOse
wetght &amp; make money, 10 try new
patented weig ht-loss product.

304-773·5083 24hrs/dav.

='"'!'1!':11

.

'

�'

,.

:P~age~D4~~·,~~·~·;··~~,~~~~~..,~~~~~~~~~P~om~-~~~~y~·~M~I~dd~~~p~ort~·~~~~ll;po~I~~~~~O~H~•~P~~~~~P~II~a~e;•~~~WV~;;~~~~;
Sundly,April~1~
'i1o HtlpWinttd
HtlpWIIIttd
230
Hou~t~lorRtnt Hou...
Mobiii~Hol;m~;.:==~4~40F~A~p81;;11i;ltl~n~t•~~
110

StrviCMI

S t ,000 W-ty Proco11lng IIIII Ro&lt;oplionloc wilh IY1&gt;ino. _

-•'
t

'

..

Free Info. Send Soii·Addro&amp;&amp;ed
Stamped Envelope: E•proll
Dept-131, 100 Eut Wnltn10ne
Blvd., Sultl 148-345. Coclar Plrl&lt;
TX 781113.

or-orlontod ICcUia and ~
lng, pick up 0$11&gt;11&lt;aliott 11 Ra,ol

,.;.;;...:.:.~=:..:..;;:.::....

135,000 tYR. INCOME Potontlal.
Rloding llooko. Toll FIH Ill 800lllf.flna Ellf. R-2814 'FOt Detlil&amp;.
•ATTN: PointPIIaanr

IMoko Money! 8t4-..1-0tii7,
etol-..,.t23e.
S.loo t'.r1011 Cammlalion o\tlnt

Ook ~ 9134211- Ad.,
Roc:ine, 114-ti:!-

___

=--C.,...,:------- I mlc
Rod Hot Fat lou Ptoduct. DynaMatlleling Pion, LoN weiGht

I

.

Salelile Oilh. NM Our·

t/2 A&lt;tt Lo~ Located
.South On SA 7.
132,000 090, Mo·
Be Sold Sepera.-

614-25e.e391 l - 1 1 -.
11185 14&gt;70 Ctay10o 3 Beclrooms,

~

ACCOUNTING

SOCIAL WORKER Nooded For
ASSISTANT· Eight Rnltlantlol Pro8romo For

Aasociate In Accounting, Buai-

nasa Admlniattation Or Admtniatralive Secretary Preterrtcl. Proriclent With PC And Calculator.
••

Knowledaa Of LOTUS 123, Word

' 'I'{

614·11112~.

~lect, Network And Other PC
Syatems, And Payroll Tax Regu -

People Wilh Mental Ralardarion
And Developmental Oiaabilt~ tn
Southeallern Ohio. Ucanud SoC11l Worker And Graduate From
An Accredited Social Work Program Requ ired; URJOO E;~peri ence Preferred And Knowledge

latlono. Sand Rotume To Holzer Of Medicaid ICFIMR Regulations
Clinic, Human Relationa Departmen~ 90 Jackson Pike, Galtipol!l,

•

OH 45631.

Helpful. Travel Required •• Mutt
Have A Valid Drlvar'a license

This

lnlormed tt1atoll dweHingO
advertised In this newspaper
are available on an equal

opportunity basil.

:-:-~.,--...,.,.-...,.,.---:-:c­

..Jo

AVON · $8 ·S 15 iH1. No Door To ·Soc:lal Workers, Now Hiring $23 I

1 112 Story, 3 Bedrooms: Free

Door, No Minimum Order Bonus-

Gas, Ba&amp;. Of AdQson, Oh1o, Re·

•• 1-804»27-4640 lndrSISIRep.

Babysitter needed 'in my home,
Rutland area, afternoon ahlft, call
befote 2pm, 8~ 4-742-1033

'

1ng To Apply fo Your Area, t·fiOO.
3311-6150.'

Telemarlceling Needed, No s.fl·
ing, S&amp;Uing Apl)ointments. For

..

i,.1"';
.:r

10xH} Storage Bu tl d1ng, Green

Babysitting In my home, reasonable rates, flexible hours, have

politlon of Cuotamer Service Rep

•l

PLOVER

'&gt;'

nv. Human Reeourt&lt;to Deport·
mom. ~0. Box 738, Marlena, OH

·• • Ato~oo Benklng &amp; Trust Co&gt;11P8·

45750

Earn $1000s weakly stuffing envelopes at home. Be your boll.
Start now. No ewperience Free
auppliea, inlo. No obligation. Send
S.A.S.E. to Pra&amp;tlge Unit IL, P.O.
Box 195609, Winter Springs, Fl

32719

guaranteed 15yrs experience.
References. Free estimates. 304 675-6921 .

Cedar Park, TX 78813.

Earn up 10 $1 ,000'1 weekly stuff·
ing erwelopes at home. Start now.
No experience. Free supplies, in~ formation'. No obUgauon . Send
..... self-addressed stamped envel-

to Bucl&lt;o Dept 172. 3206-C E.
Colonial Dr., No. 308, Orlando, FL
32803.

,,,. epa
'!.'

.·•

Full or part time posilions available. Pliny Truck Stop. 304-937·

2456 or 304·937·2766.
Full tine boby liner for 4 112 year
• old and 2 month old, In my Roc:ine
area home, days and evenings.
) Expenence a must, pref~ar a marure person, 1:1111 014·949-2512 lor

:~ =~~in~~=rvMW=·~---~~~--~

· Interview• Now Being Accepted
·
On A First Come, First Servce
.,.~ Basia. G'rowing Company Nteds
30 People To Fill lmm,diate
Openings. No Strikes, No lay·
Oils. Expanding Gallipolis Oistribl.won Center For Laroe 82 Year
Old Electrical Appliance Comp(l·
.f. flY Has Open1ngs In Several De·
~~ 1. partmants 'For Display Work lo
~ ~ Management. Can· Do Our Work
t Easily· No Experience Necesaary
. • As
Will Provide Train ing That
Can Lead To Very Secure Poslrr
rion With High Starti~g Income
Call For InterVIew, Monday 9

W8

A.M. -5 ~M. 6)4-448-8795.

·'

Need 5 People To Sell Avon ,
~1

Eileen's Per&amp;onai Care. Spec:lallz1ng 1n Alzheimer's care gi11ing.
Call us - We can help. 304· 7622544.

... 46-3358.

.

two beth brick home, three ponds.

304-675·t957.

8053.
SANDIE'S DAYCARE· rouon·
able rates, references, playroom,
home environment, Texas Rd.,

·

Sun Valley Nursery School.
Ch1ldcare M F 6am-5:30pm Aqes
2-K, V~ung... SGhooi _Age Ourmg
Summer. 3 Days per Week Mmiroom 814-448·3657.
8

Will Babysrt 1 Child In My Home.
Infants Too. In Rodney Area. Ref.
erences AVailable, 614-245-5887

Anvt1me.

..... An&lt;! Info HJ00-536-3040.
.
• .
POSTAL JOBS
; J·Start $12.08 !Hr.. For E•am And
' f Application lnlo. Call 219·769·
· 8301 E•t OH579, OH581 9 A.M ·
App1

g P.M. Sun -Fri.

POSTAL JOBS
Starting $12.68+/hr. + Bqnefits .

For E•arn and Applicallon Info.
Call 1-331·470· 7227
352

.11"'f'": 7dar"

••c.

PSYCHOlOGISTS ·

i&gt;' Now Hiring llcenood Ph.D. Poy·
•• cttalagloto 1 llllt.r level Cllnl·
'I clono In GaiJipolla &amp; Vk:lnlty For
Qom~lc: I'Dpulallan, Low Sll'IU.
\, High Sadofllcdon, S•l..t Houro,
Send Rolu.. lb: CC. 11184 llod1111. Sullo 1011,-. DH 442tie.

pole barn bu11d.ng, two car ga -

5588. .

New Bank Repos. On~ 4 loft. SDII
1n warranty 304· 755-7191 .

Seperate Uttlity Room, All In Ex·
cellent Condition On 113 Acre Lo·
cated In -Green Townahip. Oversized Garage, 8'X20' Porch, Satellte System ln~luded, $'52,000
Call 6t4448-1908 Aflet 4 P.U Or

Anytime Wooltonda
Bran&lt;! New Crown C&gt;l)' Rout~ 7. 1
Story 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. CH &amp;

A1r, Kitchen tOimng Room W1th
Bay Windows, Wrap Around
Porch, 112 Acre, Ohio River View.

Schools, $147,500. 614·
2SIHI287
Fa~rland

Five bedroom, three bath home.

Will Do lnrar10r Or Exterior Pilinl·
ing, Reasonable Rate1, Ewperi enced, References, For Free Estimates, 61 .. 245--5755

new

kitchen, heat pump, lull basemen~ nineacr~. 6t4-992·5085.

GOV'T FORECLOSED Homea
For Pennies On $1 Delinquent

Tax, Aepo's, REO's. Your Area.

Will Do SeWing &amp; Alrerarions In

My Homo, Please Call 814·2450341 .
Will mow commMctal &amp; reaiden.
1ial iawna. Have experience. Free
ea11mares. 304-875-5963, ask tor

.Millo.

Will mow grass and lrim, 6 u .

m-51161 .

FINANCIA L

Nlce home in Racine, large build·
ing will house small business,
aleo a one car garage, fenced
yard , out ol flood area, asking

$47,000 61ol-848·2804.
Bualneas
FOR .SALE : Rental Property,
Opportunity
House With 2 Apartments Located At 517 Fourth Avenu~," Galll·
.
INOTICEI
polis, 814·446-3983.
OHIO VALLEY PIJBLISHING CO.
recommend&amp; that you do busi · PRICED REDUCED· three bOd·
210

ness with people you fu:low, and
NOT to 18nd money through the
ma11 until you have lnveatlgated
the offering.

Flatwoods Rd., 614-992·6575 or
614·99~·2418, 614·985-9829. •

Commercial building for rent rn
center of downtown Middleport,
2500 sq. ft., 81 4·11112·2459.

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

room, central air, attached garage, 28x24 bu!kttno, on halt acre,

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
BR.INER LAND
6t4·775-9173

LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp;CHAIR

GALUA COUNTY: Eureka I Three
M1ie&amp; Out On Teens Run Road &amp;
Chambers Road. County Water +

PRICED $450 TO $995

5 112 Aoros · $9,500, ONLY
$t,900 Down+ $100.44 A Month.
10 ACres With Pond $14,000. 11

LANE MOTION SETS

Acres With Barn $13,900. Many
Sizea &amp; Styles To Choose From.
Also, Close To Gallipolis 2 M!les
Our On Neighborhood Road, 22

SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon. thru Sal. 9-5 p.m. 446·0322
3 miles out Bulaville Pike

Acres • $26,000 ONLY $1,900

Down + $318.50 A Monrh 8 Acr-

es $12,000. 9 Acres· $14,500

Card of Thanks

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp; REPAIR
lll"l?iwno.s Are My B~iness"Oualily
Tuning &amp; Service inc~ 1977
BOB GRUBB (61 4) 46·4525
13 HiiHop Drive, Gallipolis, OH .

$8,500. Very S01;uluded Building
Sites &amp; Good Hunting Property.
So Many Grear Lora You Need
To Call For A Map.
Owner Fmaricing. 10% OFF Cash
Purcheaea. Examples Based On
10 Year Contracts with 4 Year
Balloon Paymenl

8th Annual
Forgey* Club
Lamb Sale
April 19, 1996
7:30p.m.
· Gallia County

Creek side camp sites and lots,
H2 acre, road, water, electric .
$1 .900 mostly. Contact Roy Lee
See. 304-576-2152.

Fi11e

acres.

Rac~ne.$16 , 000

half -n.

aeratQr, near
can linance w1th

6t4·949·2025

Lo1 For Sai'Et: 2 Acres, 2 Tratler
Hook-Ups, Between Bidwell, Porter &amp; Chesh~re, 614·367-7010

Fai rounds
ATIENTION!! .
Wotd has

O'lltlills E.R. staff, Dr.
l11ts, Jaeger f11eral
H011e, fts••r Funeral
Ita., and speclai!Ws
to,_ Aaee &amp; '-v
Halik of flshr f••il
Home. Tlatk1 to • !he
frllllls -' •laf1hn ftr
t••lr •a•y prayers,
spl, f.od, car~s &amp;

HILDA COPLEY

15·112 Vine Street, Gallipolis, 2
Bedrom Upsta1r1 Ouple11, Garage,
$335/Mo. Water Paid, Deposit, f
ReferenceS, 614-448·2419.

Is Over the Hill

Row~rs.

Mo...., Yklly,
Sfsltfs ' • •

2 Bedroom House, 2 Bedroom
Trailer In Gatupdtls, 614·446-8849
For lnforrTilrion.

"50"

2 Bedrooms In Gallipolis, 1 Bath,
Air, Garage, No Pets, Oepollt &amp;
References, S3951Mo. 1514-4462800.

Range
is now OPEN ,
M·F 2 til dark
Sat &amp; Sun 12:00 til Dark
New PGA Teaching
Professional Rod Harris
For Appointments
Call 304c 773·5354
Video lesson available

2br., Hartford, no pets. 304·882·
2016 ah8r 4pm.
3bedraom, nWi, in Hartford. $3501
mo . .. utilities. 304 -882-2 016 or

ll4-117S.3100.

Ashabelle's

Water &amp; County Water, Building,
Garage,
Garden.
Pasture,
Sreened-ln Back Porch &amp; Buill·
On Sunroom. Hannan Trace Elementary, 2 Acres +t·, Very Good

444 Silver Bridge Plaza
Ganipolis OH .45631
1 0% off shoes

Condition, $32,000 No Land Con·
tra&lt;t814·256.S813.

20% off prom dresses

Happy Ad

'

Shore Bath, tt85111o. Utllitlea
Paid, 607 SOc:ond Avenue, Golll·
polis. 6t ....48-..10 After 7P.ll.

port. From $232-$355 . Call6t4992·5064. Equal Houolflil Dpporwnidea.

'

m Pt.
Ploasan~ no poll. 6t4-992·5858.

Ont bedroom apartment

One bedroom efficiency aparlmen~ 61o4-982-2178.

Tw1n Rtvers TOW8t', now accepting
applications tor , br. HUO subsid·
ized apt. for elderly and handi·

ACCOUNT MANAGER,
EXTENDED CARE .

capped. EOH 304·675-6679

Painter was born
December 18, 1995.
She celebrated her
three. month birthday
March 18. She is the
daughter of Victor
and Lisa Painter of
Middleport. Maternal
grandparents are
Kathy and Jerry
Strickland and the
late Michael Pierce.
Great grandmother i8
Doris
Haynes.
Paternal grandparents are Ralph
and
Madeline
Paj;nte1r,all of Middle-

Two bedroom apart,..ent in PO·

prolalllonoiOW~IIIftlporlomlt:Ai&gt;lthtlofltlttrtt,mltlrnurnotlyeart;

O&lt;lllklo ulas o"91'flr1ce, and llio obllky to craotolstds !nd cullivota - ·
IM&amp;sil111 1r1 Badal U.IMnlults nparilnce 1 p,lua.
•
' ,::
\,
.
Wo Olftr an axcoifoot'compansotlon ~cts;a. Santi,..,,.; tdh cov•llllllt"'

Two Upstairs Apartments: 1 Furnished , 1 Unfurnished, Pri11ate
Entrances, No Pets, References 1

~ ~

Deposil ~ulrod, 614-4:48-0264.

ond 111ary roqulromtntt, in corifldonu. by A,dl11. 1111llo:lleorii-

IIMioaiCo!...-.AII:fiJ)J&amp;IIU11.221ti.W. 81tt.IIIIIA..8rMaty, ~'
OH 0122. No sgsnciH or pltono calls, pfosu. Wo ctxtduct pro·omploytl&gt;~

450

Wltl'l Hutch Ylrtor $35: Sh iera

UMd Few w.tw 1300; Flbero'au

Tapper With Ciampa To Fit Stan- Edgo Machino l40: E•orciae
dord e· Truck Bad ltOO t5 B11&lt;t, Extra Urg&lt;~SNt,ll2,5. BoJ.
llifllnoa From llolipolls, 114:378· bol S.t 150. 614-3117.(16311.

$800, 8, ....,-oM.
Otder chest frftZ8f', workl gOOd,
$50. 1yr old coal wood burning
stov1e$500
, gla n f~o!t~ ~~-~~,ns of
001

•

2801 .

1-----...;..----Bonnevine,

clfnea On Both Enda Matching
Recliner Eacelltnt Candlllon.,

000

· ~-~7.
PICKENS FIJRNr!URE

1D7a Pontiac;
lir, now droa,

CfU II t,

I am giving 5'!f. of "'I saJ,ea in lhe
month of ApriiiJ 1ht carar fund.
Yow aupport wtM ba appreciated.

014-441-0tM.
a • truck ~•mper· stove, oven, 3
way rtfrigeramr, e•cellent tondition, 1800 OBO; •78 Oldt Omega,

Home Care Products. For a

stand."'"" in&lt;t&gt;ding fillh $200. Dale V Woad, Independent Dlst.

Brunc.o woodburner with all accenorlel. 1700: 1988 truck cap,
Cenrury, ltts 88 &amp; 88 lull size,
he•vy duty s·xa· utility uailer,
$400, 611 69~5.

1

1514--448-3158
OuaHty HouiBhold FUI'niture And
'Appliance&amp;. GreatOealaOn •

Cash And Carr)' I RENT·Z.ClWN
And Layaway Also"Availatia.
Free DeliYery W11hir12S Mile1.

Washer, Drylf, Refrigerator, CokJr

T.V.M -.814·258-1238.

Pric:es At Shof Cefo, Ge~p6H~

Bumper Pool Table SSO : Sears
Ping Pong Table, $75; Sean
Washer &amp; Dryer S40; 18 Inch

Ele "· lawn Mower, $20: 1987

3t68.

TUo(key, Archerr. Guna, Ammo
Reloading &amp; F11hing Supplies :
Liva Bait &amp; Ucense Crawford's,

AE.RAYIONJE1.""'TDR5

lawn mower 1yr old , 22· cur
mulcher, Shp Briggs &amp; Stratton
motor. Ba&amp;ement atorm wlndowa
w/screens: Two

•2

Jl

30

17 willa.

114 Wlde.

304-M2·

Hogan grafill sllahCdnvor and 3
&amp; Swooda, 61•·992-6104.

Onando, 4 Hotel NiQhts Near ·Dis·

Car waterb.-d, $100 , 1514·982·

$300, Sell For $100 , 614·523'

3761.

ney, Can. Use Anytime, Value

87ll8.

Evans Enterprises. ' Jackson. OH

1-800-537·9528

Olmng Room Table With 6 Chairs.
1 Leal, Very Good Condition , Pe-

can, $35o, 6 t..446-8021 .

Abow lfltfude Normal lnatalla·
tton. Fult 5 Vear Warranty. FrH
Et~motu,

ue noe.

1-eotl·291.()0N; 614·

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gillon
Uprigh~ Ron Evant Enta&lt;priMI,
- - Ol&gt;lo, 1-!537·8528.

.

Overlooking Ohio River, 2 Bur~ai
Plota $325. . Each, 1·800·•54·

1978.
Pine Headboard' Queen Size Wa·

tor Bed $100, &amp;14-448-8081.

Refrigerators, Stoves, Waahera
And Otyen, All Reconditioned

And Gauranteedl $100 And Up,
W~ l Deliver. 614-6811-11441 .

SHOP AND $AVE NOW!
Serta Mattress
$59.00
Bed Frames
$19.95
Recliners
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
L.a·Z·Boy Recliners
$299.00
4 pc. Bedroom
Suite
$499.00
FLAIR FURNITURE
675· 1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

hook·ups. Call after 2:00p.m.. 600p.m.614-992-2526.
304· 773- 5651 · Masonwv.
540 Miscellaneous
. Merchandise
MERCHANDISE
'Loralio" prom clres, rod, full ttlclrt,
11ze l, cost $300. aaklng $1 so.
51·0
Household
3tl4-67~98,
•
Go~s
t Used Coleman Down Flow Gas
Appliancea :
Reconditioned
Washers, Dryers, Ranges, Reffi.
gratora, 90 Day Guarantee'
French ' City Maytag, 614·4•6·

For Complete, Professional Individual
and Business Tax Preparation.
736 Second Ave.
446-8677

7795.

10gal tank se1 up spec111s. Fian
Tenk &amp; Pet Shop, 2413 J1ckson
Ave. Point Pleaunt, 30•· 875·

Easter Bunni11 : Nertharland

Dwarf Min Re•, U1n Lop, Uixed

Real Estate Classes
April

12, 13, 14

Call

446-4367

1-800-214-0452

Elec:tric Craftmat1c Full Size Bed,

Good Condition, $175, 614·3792720 AFTER 8 ~M.

Summers Coming,
Don't wait, Book your party
early with
All American .Sound

992-7651.

AKC Regia1ered Boxer pupa. fawn
colored with black mask af)d white
10es. excellent breeding , parenls
on premises, $200, BU-9853907

~ro, 614-3711-2728.
H~PPY

JACK MANGE MEDI·

CINE: the oldesr &amp; mosr reliable
treatment for skin diseases on
dogs &amp; horses . Contains NO
S.nz,l Benzoate! Available 0 -T·

C SOUTHERN STATES. 304·6752780.
HAPPY JACK MANGE MEDI·

Vine Street, ·can 614·446·7398,
1-800-499-3499.

Call

Gallipolis

Productions
Featuring Magic 1 01's
Jerry Jl
Country, Rock, Top 40 &amp;
Oldies We Do It-All!
614·446-0571

Make Loans Fast

FOR SALE: (2) cemetery lo1s in
Mound Hill Cemetery (Holzer
Addition, overlooking river). $650
for 2 lots. Contact 1:0 waggoner ai
Mound
Hill
Cemetery
for
information. ~hone 446·3565
Full time baby sitter for

4

"r/2 year 'o ld and 2
month old, in my ·

Z. Cavaricci jeans

Racine area home.

Visa • Mastercard • Discover
Accepted

Days and evenings.
Experience a must.

.

for an interview.

Instruments

5t93.

-:---:--,,..---,~-,.,--:-~1 Massey Ferguaon late Model ·

Consot. Piano, Reaponsible Patty
Wanted To Make Low Monthly
Payments On Piano. See Locally.
1-800-.268-e2t&amp;

218S Tractor With Loader,
$ 1,995; 65 Massey Ferguson
New Mo1or S3,ggs; 35 Maney
Ferguson $3,695; 614-286-6522.

CINE . the oldear and mosr rell ·
abte treatment lor skin diseases
on dogs and horses. Contains
,NO BenZyl Benzqarel A'llallable
OTC, R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply, 614·

992·2164.

AKC ~!&amp;tered Roll Weil9f' Pul)pies, Champion Sloodlme, Sire

Labrador Retriever wJpapers,
chocolate color, female, 16moe.

0433.

2669..

OFA Cerlilled, $250, 814·2•5- good w/children, $200. 304·575·

Land • Lola of -Landlll
1.5 to 10 acres, +I·, sull·

E:le,tric Pole With Breaker Box

able building lois. Some
flat, · rolling 1o woodland.
tall for details.

E lactric
Scooters
And
Whee lchairs, New fUsed, Van 1
Car lift lnslalled, Stai,glldes, Uh
Chalrs, Call For Brochure, 614 ·
446·7283.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

287-8308. 6t4·448·6308. 1-600·
29Hl098.
10x85 Mobile Home Great FOr

Storage, Shop, br Olfioe, $1,500,
614-446-2056.

15 Inch Fall agates Speakers &amp;
Box $150; 400 Watt Hotshot

Amp. With RCA Cables, $80:
'Sherwood CD Player $150:

Winchester
12 Ga . ,300
Defender Model 8 Shot, S150;
Wincheater 12 Ga. 370 Model,

Slngleshot, seQ, 614-379-2639.

"Misc."

Cash

"Not

Public Sale
. &amp; Auction

CHERIE BARR
446-0965
Coming Soon
•
I
Book Sale
. ' I'
Bossard Memorial ••
Library.
Gallipolis, Ohio . .'
. ' •'
Saturday
•
:'
April13, 9-3
••'
.t
'

.

.

.
. .

... , t

.;

f

. I;..
•r
r
• r

,r

'

•·

1

&gt;

Call446-2342 or ~92-2156
FOR MORE
. INFORMATION

FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTION
Sat. April 13, 1996
10:00 a.m.
Located from St. AI. 33 In Shade, Ohio. Take Athens
Co. Rd. 44 approx. 2 miles lo lodl 80/Sargenl Ad.
approx. 1/2 mile to the farrn: Watch for signs. Due to
death the following will be sold.

"TRACTOR"
Massey Furgeson 245 Diesel, Power Adjustable
Wh~ls, Remote Valve, Spin Out Wheels.

"EQUIPMENT'
3 pt. 2x14 Ford plows, 309 Ford 3 pl. corn planter
w~nsecticlde boxes, Battle 3 pt. fertlllzer spreader,
Ford 301 mower, N.H. 477 Hayblne, N.H. 56 hayrake,
N.l. 323 one raw corn picker, 14A N.l. manure
spreader, M. F. 12 haybaler, continental sprayer, J.D.
13·7 model F-B grain drill (Excellen1), ~ pt. hay tedder.
3 pl. 6' King Cutter blade, Shaver poet driver like ne'w,
5' Wciods bruth cUtters.- 8' I.H. 37 disk. harrow, 3 pt.
bale ·carrier, 8' double cul11paclcer, 3 pl. post hole
digger, Alum. Eleva1ors 16' &amp; 20' com single chains,
N. I. Picker for parts, drag harrow, 21' bale elevator, 3
pt. pig pole, gravi1y wagon, .and 3 pt. headgate
Ouickway and chute.
Note • Equipment cleaned. oiled and Kept Inside. No
Small it9111S

Owner • Peggy Cooper
Cash

Postltlve 1.0.

Dan Smith -Auctioneer 1#1344 , WVA 1#515
Billy Goble -Apprentice ~769
.
NO EATS

"Not

.,

·(

•

SPRING·MACHINERY AUCTION
AT

MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

Rt. ~2 North of Point Pleasant, WV
Saturday, Aprll13, 19~6
10:00 a.m.-??
•No motorized titled vehicles .
•No animals
•All farm !elated,consignments welcome
&lt;Consignments accepted Friday, April12, 1996,
Noon-6 p.m. or
Salurday, April 13, 1996, a.m. until Sale Time
•For more information call (304) 675·5463 or
(304) 773·5696
•Purchasers must present tax exempt number or
·pay sales·tax. No Exceptions!
oNot responsible for accidents
•Auctioneers: Rick Pearson #66 and
Edwin Winters #334
•All commissions go to the Mason County Fair.
Financing available through West Virginia Farm
Credit, ACA. All financing subject to approval by
West Virginia Farm Credit; ACA . .

a

for acctdllnt&amp; or loss of Propelty"

THURSDAY,

A_PRIL 11 , .1996
AT 7:00.P.M.

. HOUSE FOR SALE BY OWNER
Debbie Drive, Brick and frame BHevel, 3
bedrooms, 1 full bath and 2 ha)f baths, ni·~w I
carpet, kitchen and dining by Creative
Kitchens, family room, utility room, extra
large yard, new deck and screened porch,
G_
r een Elementary.
Call446-8471 after 5:30p.m.

From Gallipolis, Take Route 141, Turn
Left Onto Route 775, Turn Right Onto
Patriot Cadmus Road. Watch For Signs.

TRUCKLOAD OF NEW CARPET
SOME NEW FURNITURE
Uvlng Room Suttes, Kitchen Tables &amp; Chairs, etc.
Also: Sale Every Saturday at 7:00 p.m.

Marlin .Wedemeyer,
·Auctioneer

General

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
RUSSELL. D. WOOD, BROKER .
...~.,.~-7101 446-7101

or

{614) 379•2720
Ucensed &amp; Bonded Slate of Ohio; Uc. #3615
Not Responsible For Accldenls or loss Of Propeny

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Postltlve 1.0.

Dan Smith -Auctioneer 1#1344
Billy Goble - Apprentice 1#6769
for accidents or loss of Property"

Call

Prefe.r a mature person.
Call 614·949-2512

570

15KW, 20KW, 25KW, 1 Used 3

lady Kenmore trash compactor, magic cheif w/double
oven, stereo, couch, kitchen cabinet base, 30 gal gas
hot water he~ter. apt. size. range, sink, des~.
westinghouse small refrigerator, clothes rack. chest
drawers, Dog house, martin bird house, ·alum. ladder,
games, books, drums, 50 gal. barrel, fire hose, green
house small, fan, stools, flower pots, sheij file cabinet
boat trailer frame, old T.V., Kerosene healer &amp; lots
more.
Owner - Mltlgs Co. Ubrary Board

South of the

Silver Bridge Plaza We

Schnauzer pupplts, miniaturea, Gehl Round Balers. Mower ConChamp,gn Grand Sirti; alao Poo· ditioners, Oiac Uowers, Diac
dies, little toya &amp; teacup, AKC , Mower Conditioners, forage
ahota &amp; wormed, 81447~.
Equipment Sales And Service.
Altizer Farm Supply, 614·2~5·
Musical

nace, 160,000 BTU's, Upflow

Located in Racine. Ohio on St. At 338. Watch for
siilns. Located at the Tyree Home in Racine. OH.
•
"Antique or Collectors Items"
Iron bed. pop boHies. porcelain top 1able, stone
c,rocks, old newspapers, oak catalog sla~d &amp; drawers
from library, typewrners, wood boxes.

LOAN CENTRAL.

River City Sound

61"·

S250: 3 Used Electric Furnaces

PUBLIC AUCTION
. .
Thur. Eve. April 11, 1996
· 5:30p.m.

Phone (614)446-6111

Now Open

Roglaterod Shihtzu pupplas, $~,800. 30HJ'6.3t5e.
readv Friday, males, $300, cash. 6 HP Troy Built Tiller SS&lt;IO,
c:al 614-992·21107.
245-9165.'

Furnace, 70,000 BTU's, Complete
S250: 1 Used Johnson Gas Fur-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUTOHIO Insurance

OFWC/GFWC
Gallipolis Junior. Woman 's Club
Rummage Sale
Friday April 12, 1996
St. Peter's Episcopal Church
9:00to 3:00

&amp;

Save B1g On Carpet &amp; VInyl In
Stock $6 .00 Cash /Carry Moll ohan· Carpets, Rt7N . 614·446·
7444.

everyone!

For Rent: Myrtle Beach Condo
Ocean Front Accomodates a.
complete kitchen
April 20th 1hru 27th
only $375 [lrm
(614) 379-2135 (614) 379·2381
For Professional OJ
Karaoke Service

'

try to insure

Kemper Family Private
Treaty Pig Sale
April 13, 10:00 am
at the farm
614·446-3845

Hey Bllef. Wheel HIY RaJw, John

12x60 Trailer Frame, 614·389-

Washers, dryers, refrtgerators,
ranges . Skagga Appliances, 76

All Ages, All Risks

Systems
We do clubs, wedding
receptions, school dances, class
reunions, family reunions. Can
Karaoke &amp; D.J. Your party.
Have all 1ypes of music.
Call1·614·367·7177
Ask for Debbie or "eta.

Rnsonabjel 8 14-388 00~6 .
300 inltrnational uac:tor wtpiows.
'dltcs, grater blade &amp; bush hog.

Supplies

Good Home Only: 3 Year Old
Male Black &amp; White ~ocker
Spaniel, AKC Reg•stered, Good

610 Farm Equipment

Purebred Mini Dael'lshund Pupplea, $125. Hat 1tt. Shots I

rtO-..

Groom Shop ·Pet Groomng. Featunng· Hydro Barh. Julia Webb .
can 614-446-0231

&amp; LIVESTOCK

Duro 12 FL, Tandem Disc. PriCe

Building

Pets for Sale

FARM SUPPLIE S

04;!g.

Full blooded Go lden Retr iever
puppies, has had !1rsl sholl,
ready to go 4118198, $75, 1514·

560

pwf11111W'Md 1D

--""',.,.,., ....... ill'"
8218.Col · - """"'-~oc:o~r-

Maney Fe rguon •12 Square

1·1100-842· 1305.

614-245'5193.

CONSOI£ PWio
ri:IPQIItil

Stud Servic&amp; Puppies. Grooming.
BU •• Sell &amp; Trade. All Breeds .
Payments Welco me, f!U · 388·

::WOr-:m,.;._81_4-:-318-i-:-:-1::-i4-._--:-_

Metal Rpofing And Siding Gal vanized, Galvalume And Painted,

Jnstrumtnt~

GOOD USED APPLIANCES 1100

Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
111surance
We

PuPPf Pal~&lt;~ Kennels, Boar~ing,

Breed, Hollond lop, Frenc:h lop,
814-3116-8577

Block, btlck, aewer pipea, w1nd·
owa, lintela, au: . Claude Wlnttra,
Rio Grande, OH Call 61•·245·

.

9033.

$188.00
L-llontlt" Plyrnents fFEE
Color Cotalog Call TOOAY

550

Mu~

570

Ton' Rheem Heat Pump, 1-800·

Coun try Furniture. 304-675-6820
At 2 N, smiles, Pt Pleasan~ wv.
Tuf!s-Sat 9-6, Sun t 1-5.

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

tor Sill

,_,no,

$100: Hay Wagon $150, Grater
;;B:::uy~or:::s::o::-:11~
. R;;;l::-ve~r;:ln~e-::A~n:':"tiq_u_e-s, Blade $100, 2 Bottom Plows $75,
1124 E . Main Street. on Rt 124 , 814-387·0219.

Starting at $120JmQ. Gallia Hotel.'·
614·446·9580.
•
Sleeping rooms with cookmg. Po,meroy. Hours: M.T.W. 10 .00
Also trailer space on river. All a.m. IO 8.00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 to

~ts

AKO Rogl&amp;tottd. Shaw Duolltr llonthl, Flu Program Hood
liolp? ~k JD NORTH PROOUCE
Good
Eanllont llork· 814--·1833 AbOUt Tho HAPPY
lnge. Back &amp; Ton In Color, JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR Killo
Do• Of IJj(tl&gt;; ~11M, Hou.-brv· Malo ~ Fornolo AdUlt Fl-. For
kon,l14-379-2nl.
Dogs&amp; C1101
AKC Shutzund Gelmtn Shet&gt;htrd Price "Reduced : 7 Weekt Old,
PuppiH, From German tmparta, UKC American Eskimo iSpiUl
PecllgrMs Available, 11 4· 4115· Pupp1e1 Af ter 5 P.M. G14 · 2~~ Hk2.

Ten At Homo

Buy DIRECT end SAVEl
ConmercW+tome Uris From

560

Wale' Coci.et S,aniel Puppy,

2063.

WOlFF TANNING BEDS

5121.

One set R.H. Ladiea Square Two
golf club~ 3 thl'u 9, P.W. an&lt;! lady

Aria K Station Wagon , 99,000
Mites, $1,~, 614-388--8349.

520

trade for 1911,45 cal 30•·615·

calalog:304-675-1090.

Thr., 34 112 •
3106.

SPRING SPECIAL : Control Air
Conllltic~r~•• 2 Tan ,I, 185; 2 1~
Ton 11 ,295: 3 Ton $1,385: s 112
Ton l 1,585: 4Ton SUM; Pric:es

tree

nice car, $500 OBO·, 81 4·"92·
'' &amp; Rebuilt
Repaired, Now
In Stod&lt;.
•
21 48.
Coli Ron Evans, t-1100·537-9528.

Sofas, Lov.,..ts, Ct..irs, Reclil\-

_•&lt;~e- t_17-:t:::
. :::-::::::==:---I
VfAA FU~ITURE

Hardwood mulc:h.. ponine ool. hu·

mua, 3 bagi/S5. Cypteaa muiCI'I,

&amp; batter)', lata ot ttltas, liking
Sl,300. 2 'ocke, glldera, Baking
$ 150ea. Two 1Sgal. fiah tlnka WI

Boota By Redwing, Chippewa,
Tony Lama. GuarantHd LOWeat

ing Sofa With Matching Rocker t.
Recliner Corbin &amp; Snyd,er 6U-

I,;.;~~;;.;.;~;.;._.,;.;.;,;,._ _

lnrorior &amp; ••lorlor plno borl&lt; mulch. 2 bogo/S5. S.t.
good cond .. I700. 181 ~ Hondo ondt April 13. Point Plul 30•·
Mogno V-45, 10,00Dml., - drH 075-4064.

New 1\JIId
304-1575-1450

Furnished
HoncJorson. WV.
Rooms
Rooms tor rent . week or month. 530
Antiques

druglcrtaning. EOE.

40% off Pepe-

REVIVAL
Cheshire Baptist ChurCh
Don E. McQueen. Evangelist
Shining Light Mission
April?-13, 7:00p.m.
Public Welcome

US: Kenmort OrJtf Harvett

Carpet &amp; VInyl Sale : Mollohan
Sponlng
· Carpers,Bt4-446-7144Rt' 7N.
meroy, HUD approved, $250/mo.
Goocts
plus utilities, 814-887·6205.
&amp; Plastic Septic Tanks,
Springfield 30 Cal . M1, eac. oond.. Concrete
300 Thru 2.000 Gallons ~on

, YOII-Id col txt ~ng·llrm can fa'cilllll.ln • soiaom Oltlo ontlcontntl
soutlttm Wast~~ tlffitory, moxltttiziPO'yot&gt;r talonll II"' toorptlc;'&lt;

Riverside Driving

2 Baths, Electric &amp; Gas. CA. Well

Betty

Furnished Effic iency 2 Roomt,

Gl'llcloua livina. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartmenll at Village Manor and
Aiverttde Apartments If\ Middle-

Isn't it Nifty to be

1960 Windsor, , 4X70, 3 Bedroom,

50th

it Gallipolis

City Schools Bus Driver

410 Houses for Renl

9543.

helped In o~r tl• of
..-row. The Athtu
E•erg~•cy
Stt~ad,

q~led. 814-~1518.

SR-22

1979 Baron 14x70 Wilh 7xt4 E11 ·
panao 3 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, Torsi
Electric With Backup Gas Heat,
AC &amp; 2 Porches On 3 112 Acre
Wooded Lot Close To Gallipolis
(Will Sell Seperate) 81 ~-446-

Tile famdy of T~
a.llfen would like to
••aak everyone that

&amp; Beth, Up.
stllra, Utilities Furnished, Clean,
No Pall, RotoJonu, Dopolit Ro-

10 AetAS · $12,000
MEIGS COUNTY: Beautiful Country Lots · Just Opened. Near
Dyasv11le, 7 112 Acres Wilh
Stream $6,500 . 11 4cres .

"e 1235,114 446 0577.

FurniShed 3 Room•

2 Bedroom Upatalr&amp; Apartment

LARGE SELECTION

"FAST FOOD FRANCHISE"

1-_..;;.;;;;..:;.=...;.;.==;_-

6,.

BULLETIN· aoARD

Toll Free Pl 800·698 -9776 Ext.
Fo'r Current listings.
Scenic Valley, Apple Grove,
beautifuti2ac lots, public water,
Ma.wel Avo.. 3bod1Uom, LR, DR. Clyde Bowen Jr., 30 ..576·2338.
large family room, double garage,
8yrs old, $107,000. 304·675·
RENTALS
4048.
$25,000.:rlH75-3986.

Aeferencea, Deposit. $3SO~o . ,

Price Busteri New 14K70 , 2 or
3br. Onlj $995 down, St9simonth
Free delivery &amp; setup. Only at
Oakwood Homes, N1tro WV. 304·

H-2814

Moving out of the area, must selll
2 atorv, 3bedroom, 1 112batha.

t&gt;rM&lt;Urlty

800·929·5003

New Bank Repos Only 3 Leftl

Gas GtiH 135, Laroe Dre11er

~ t 1 ·---~ •WI • Page D5

'-ts for Sill

580

Kotpotr\t Waahar HltVtlt Gold 1,000 Gallon Plutic: Tank Only

•rrnonc

rtO-

HARRIS
TRUCKING

Air Conditioned 3 Bedrcom, 2 Full

Baths, 24'a18' LA, DR, Kitchen,

Homlook Grove Rd., new windows,

¥:: .

Postal &amp; Gov't Jobs $21 IHr +
Benetlta, No Exp. Will Tnun, For

78 acres mtl 'Mih three bedroom.

rage, 6t4-742-1902.

Learning &amp; loving environment tor
child care services 1n my home.
Close to schools. Have references. Call lor inlormalion 304-675-

'

plo~ment Opportunily Company
d8dic:atod 10 Jjverafty.
·

heat pump. 614-992-5315.

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to the mill juat call

,,

ant WV 25550. An Equal Em·

3-4br., corner lot. clOse to school,
Syracuse, 24x40 block garage,

67S·ll83.

-· .,. . .

aume inctud1ng salary requirem&amp;(lta to Bow M-31 , %Pt Pleasant
Register, 200 Main ·St, Pt Pleas-

ter We.U, 30x•s Barn, 2 Acres
Plus, $60,000,814-388-8448.

614-388.()429.

Food Bu11ne11 For Sale! Afford"' Ne&amp;d someone to plow garden in
able, low Overhead Operation
,il~~ Middleport, 614-992-3815 alter
Wilh Ex~ellent Location And Inot.) f 5pm or anytime weekends.
come Po1tnt1al. Full Trainmg, OnNo E11perience Necessary! $500 , going Support &amp; ~ertlslng Pro To $900 Weekly /Potential Pro- vided . Good Terms . Some fi ·
cesaing Mortgage Refunds, Own nancing Possiblq Under 25K,
-~
Hou,., Call (909) 715-2300, Ext. Ground Floor Opportunity To Join
t351 (24 Hours).
Huntington. Based Company With
!
'
j ~6 Franchises In .WV, KY, OH &amp;
.. Po1n1 Pleasant area buainesa ac:· VA, 1-800-377-8260.
•
ceptmg appUcations for full II~
PAY PHONE ROUTE
·
front desk entry level oHice pose·
.
.
tion having varied clencal re ·
35Local $Established Sile&amp;
• r sponsibilitiea. Qualified applicants
Earn Up To $1,500 WkiV
. ~ w•ll possess pleasant pet"&amp;onality,
1-800~96--4980
.,If; have QOOd commun ica tiOn, key ·
'4:1&lt; board, and phone skills. Good 1-----~--:---

bOnelns. II intoroated submit re·

Dining Room, Mud Room, Uodern
Kitchen, Approx. 1,100 Sq. Ft.
Storage Buildmg Plus Cellar, Wa-

General Maintenance, Painting,
Yard Work Windowl Washed 3bedroom, 2bath, hp, 2iarge
Gutters Cleaned Light Hauling, · decks, new outbUilding, pnvate,
Commerital, Residential, Steve: 4.35acres. Smiles lrom town 304·

Chester, 61 4·985-3406.

Earn up ro $1,000 we&amp;JI;Iy stuffing
envelopes at home. Start now. No
e~epetiance. Free supplies, information. No obligation. Send seH
•ddrened stamped envelope to
Expreu Dept 38, 100 East
Whitestone Blvd., Suite 148-345,

...!.

•

Twp. 614-446-8695.

can 1.,..

•
~

no pets, 01 , _
2 Bedroom Mobile Home, 13001
llo. Ralof.,_ /Oepoli~ 614-&lt;L46·
2 b;Ooom apar.,.-.c In PomerVJ,
7321 .
814-1182·!5151..

IMMEDIAnLYI

New 1~x80, 2 or 3bedroom. Only
make 2 payments 10 move in. No
payments after ~years . 304· 755-

180

· ·,, Marietta. OH 45750.
~}
EQUAL OPPORTuNITY EM· .

••

wv. 304· 755-5885,

3 Bedroom Ranch,. 1 Be., Garag&lt;~, 755·5885.
New Windows, 12xt6 Deck,

(teller). Enenfial skills include
excellent communication, customer service and croas-selhng
--~
•blli1iea . Must be able to effec,.....
tively manage caah drawer and
process and balance 11anous
types or transacti ons. 20-25
hours per week. Send reaunw
on&lt;! tenor ol application ID Human
Resources CSR, P.O. Box 738,

1

fQUIPII!EIIT!
·~~TODAYTOSTART

S4Q,OOO. 304-875-2327.

Wanted To Do

e •

ITAW

month Free delivery &amp; setup.
Only at Oakwood Homes . Nitro

3br. 2bath, $1799 down. $2751

2bedroom. In Flatroclc, new rool,
new porch, new hot water tank .

1

'

on the other,

•

81 ... -M!-0181 .

Ltmlted Offer! 1996 doublewlde,

5598.

Telemarketing Needed, No Selling, SeUmg Appomtments, For
Free Program, 9-5, Top Wage, 1-

Meigs County division of regional
financial Institution is seeking
qualified tndlvidual for part-time

'!&lt;

.

one, collect 2 rentals

825 Tt'lird Aven ue, G•llipolis,

lnalde

EXQWNTPAYI
EXQWIIT IEIIEFITS &amp;
COIIVIIITIONAL

30H36· 7295.
Cruise Shjp Poal1ions, Trav_. To roleronoos, close to S&lt;hool. 304" 3 Be&lt;lroom, 2 Bath Ranch, 2 Car 330 Farms for Sale
Garage, 100 Jay Drive Mter 5:00
E•otic Ptacos, $200 ·SOOO Week- 675-2764.
~M. 6t4-446-7940.
ly, Call 7 Doys, 407·875-2022 E•L Check this out. Fi11t save st . I~=_..;=.;,:,..:::...
_____ 300 Acre Farm For Sale, 8,400
05211C14.
Mtke's interior/exterior painting,
3 Bedrooms, 2 'Baths, Porter
Pda. Tobacco Base, 614·256roof pamting, hand .waah down Road, State Route 160 Area,
CUS10MER SERVICE REP
1117, Call Anytime.
houaea, mob1lt homes. Neat work large living Room, Fireplace,

'

'l

2 homes 1n Middleport, It 'll&amp; in

-·Of

.... 1'1

Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • P~nt Plel18~ WV
540 lllet. . leOUI
lllrcllirlcbe

Good•

movlu. Coli 1114·441·215118. Gold US: Wagle Chor 30 Inch
E~Houoii'IG~
Goa Range, Almond l165, liot·
PDint
Ret~"' $150; Whirlpool
For L -: 2 Bod,_.
Washet Lfk• Hew. 1 Year WarPwtlalilf Furnllhod Or You Furrt· rani}' l205: Colori&lt; 30 lncn Eloc·
''" Yaurull, v..y Nk:A Roomo In
Raooa Almond, ltSO: SlcactDa
Nice Aroo. Galllpolla. Central All rle
Applloncea,
614·448-7381, 76
In Ewry-.._ 81-7174.
Vlno SlriOI, Glilipoh, ,..,.,._,
Furnlllhed 2 8odroom Apomton~ 341111.
Acrou F•om Parlt, N;, No P.to, LIQht Blue Sectional Couch R•
&amp;

HOllE MOST WEEIENDSI

For Sale or Rent 3bedroom,

Salea ~anagement /Finance

1100-323-1718.

WE

5o7!l.

$40,000 obo, call Ron Casci, tl14·
992·2290.

.

. .i.

duced $37,500. 614 -367 ·7 259,
614·446·1988

~om l244 to PHi. Wttl&lt; to """"

ociiOOIIn -._
available at: V~

d - to

III~;;;~;;;;F=1

buyorL E·Z linanc:iflil. 2
Call Run Murdock H00·251·
time

&amp; 2 bedrooms. Around $200/mo.

Free Program 9·5, Top Wage. 1·
17_18...;·- - - - - _eoo-_323__

CosmotologiSI Wanted , Guaranteed Wages, Paid Vacations,
Full &amp; Part-time Positions 614·
446-7267.

..)'1·

Hr + Benefits, On The Job Train-

304· 7311-3409.

BUSNESS DIRECTOR
SIX FIGURE INCOME
Exp. Helplul Naoonal Co
(214)&amp;80-3414

'

310 Homes for Sale

1.~n:.:.':. ~;.:;

112baths, $350 plua depoalt.I---~~~-:-:-Homeatead Realty. Broker. 304· 110 Help Wanted
Mobile Home' a Payment As low I .:67:5-:5:540=.=:::====:As $189/Mo. Only At Oak Wood 1•
Mobile Homes, Barbouavlllo, WV, 11 0 Help Wanted

WV. 304-773·5751 or 614·992·

REAL ESTATE

flO

1 tiiCII

Two story duplex . 3bedrooml, 1

2bath, cfa, no pets, in Mason,

Admjn jsuatj)!e Clerk - 6·8 week

420 Mobile Homes
fOr Rent

Mtup appointment

YoerCinNo!O,:rl4-J36.7295.
Wny Rent 199;, 2 or 3 Bedroom
Will not

Two bedroom home in Pomeroy.

BEAUTIFUl AI'AATIIENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES. 52 W•twaad Dtlllo

for Rani

2badroom, Cia, coun1ry O.ning, 300 Fouun Avenue , Gallipolis,
eml. out SandhiH R&lt;l. 1350/mo. Utliliu No-· R e - i
T'NO bedroom, new c:arpet. 1toYt. 3114 185 32oCSDopooi~ 811 u8 3437.
c:ableltruh mcluded, In Mason
near park. conl!ructlon workera Buudltrl River \lltw, 2 IJ4!droorno
weloome. Call 304·773-5784 10 '" tcanouga, No Pill. R e i Dmolt, Footofa Mobile H"""'•·

Make Two Payments, Move In, .(

""k:k1 IS In violation ollho law.
OUr readers are hereby

And Good Drlviflil Record. Solary:

$22 -25,000 Near. Excellent Ben·
efit Package. Send Reaume To .
aulgnment in the area starting P.O. Sox 60•, Jackaon, OH
· Apnl 26 . Microsoft WordtExcel 45840 ; ATTN : Cecilia. All
skills required . Send resume to · Resumes Must Be Post ·Matked
..;;. We.tern Stafl Services, P.O. Box By : ~/18t96 Equal Opportunity
764, Lancaster. OH 43130
Emptoyef.

-r

ONo 45631 .

Household

..

for Rent
Will Shore largo Comfortable T- end &lt;lvH b..troorn mobile
Homo In S.E. Ot'jO. - - ... homol, olllrllng ol U•0-1300,
elude All ll•lo. ,II aid, Lou !)dry.
ond llllllh lndudod,
$1 .500/Mo. Roapond To: CL~

b01oment. Rolartn&lt;H. Depolit.
No - 30«75-5182

house, depos~ required,
pets;e1H92-3080.

p4n.,ing, ~r1ing , Extended War·
ranty, Olher f;:rtras! $19,500, Afler
6 ~M. 81 .. 441!.0415.
New 14r80 ' Or 3 Bedrooms,

knOwtlngly O&lt;C81&gt;1
advertisements for real estate

420

Newly d ecorl tt d 2bt d room,

Two badraam houat, carpeted,
nice and cle.,, dtpol41 requ ired ,
no insidet;Pets ; three bedroom

2 Batha. CA. AU Eleclric, Und81"·

Part time aecuril)' guard and
Able Avon Reprtttntalives maJmenante position, pick up ap.
nHded. Earn money lor Christ- pllcallon at Royal Oak R11ort,
1111.1 biftt at hor1'l4Wat work. t-800- 33428 Flatwooda"Rd., Racine,

forRent

379, e!o Gallipolis Daily Tribune.

HUD appoved, $300 With depO~~
··• .~
6t4no pall, wo" -· on conuaot.
72
""·

117.000 Firm, No Land Contraa
S.rlou1 lnquirlel Only Please,

Spon, 304-8JS.142jl.

Galli·

oncoa ~ulred, Avlilallll lmrnodlaltly 81.. 4ol8· 7538.

Brookwood 1114178 3 Bed·

Serlin Prlntor, E•parlonco Nee·
•nary, Serious lnquirlaa Only,

8g2·6356 or 304·882·20•5. Ind.

Home

- - - - - - - -. . I ~D&lt;&gt;ma 2 Balha, Ollllwaohor, CA.
FL Abcive Ground Pool,

AVON I All Arou I Shliloy 814--.zaee, AlkforCiriL

A

410

1---------- •pollsBedroom
Old01
In
$360/Mo. Dopooit ~ Role&lt;·

Pwoonol - we et SUft CrMt
c-t•ry. 'four laved onoo d•
, lboe 5 Oolpllin, co. covered
814
..,.. opoc1o1 •-tion. Co"
• l'_!~~·~ndor::.;~pl~n~n!ing.~u~c~·-'""_d_..
1M12·7S52aflor8pm far,... info. I•
lirnt 304-175-1736.

1~. But Mull Bt MoYtd For

E:o.

410

. for Slit

Poa11.1 PDaldont. Pwtnlnentfull· With Leads Benefilt, Apply At
time for cl.,klaort... a. Full Bene- French ~&amp;~*"· 423 S.Cond
flta . For eum, applical10n ,and ~a.

Ilia()' lnlo cal: 708-284-11138
3117!l, a.n "'llf&gt;m.

~ ·

Home•

PI'Ofelalc)MI

Pomeroy •

"QUIET, LOVELY"

ESTATE
·AUCTION

EI,MWOOD -TERRACE APARTMENTS
Elm Street, Racine, Ohio 45771

Accepting Applications for one and two

WEDNESDAt APRIL 10, 1996

1:00 P.JA.

a

Loc8tlld on the corner •of 3rd Rollin St. In
New Haven, W.V."The real Htatte of ttie 1818
Ada P. Rlckllrd will t. offwecl at auctiOn wHh

lowruerve.

bedroom apartmeats.
Rents based on income.
Range from $0·$506
HaHICap Accessible Units
Management and laundry on site•
614·949·2012
TDD 1·800·750·0750

Spacloua Colonial Home
lhat offers ol-5 bedrooms,
formal dining room, 2 car
garage, family room, den, sun
room, 2 full baths plus ·a ha~
inground stainless steel
11 ·~-·· gorgeous almost 6 acres
ground.

View

surrounds this 4 bedroom
house In lhe Rio Grande
!\rea. Acreage H you want il?
EnclOSed Foxx Pool for off•
season swimming. Lovely
home for family &amp;/or
entertaining. Approx. 3,200
sq. II. and so much morel
1842

· CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TQ[)AY,
YOU WILL BE IMPRESSED! •
Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG .BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101
RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
' .............. 742-3171
Cheryl I..emley

�-

•

)

Page 06•,
610 Farm Equipment

71

o

Autos

Pomeroy • Middleport ~ Gallipolis, OH • P tPieaaant.WV
••
• 110 Autos tor S.lt
11 o Autos for Sill

tor Sale

N- Hollond 288 oquort hoy bol- 'Ill ThunclorblrO SC. , . door. U
IDit 11..0... llonl 3000 \lor~
tr, ••c • .cond, C•ll ~· &amp;75-2841 lnr•, \1-8, etll• mod~ turbo, PS, Oop.ndablt,
30 MPG, Auto, Air,
af'IM !Spm.
PB, AC, S sp.. d, power ... Ill .CtuiH , PWR Window&amp;, Auta

1888 Ch011y Ctltbrity, 4 cyl.', 4 1180 Geo Prizm 11 Vatv•. Air,
doo a to bl
••c~Jon• Automatic, POt, tt,OOO, V.y 0.
'· u • ue, run 1
"' ..
=....:::..::_______ 1 aM locka, ·Great Car," $5200 Locka, And Mortl _EYt&lt;ythlng ~*:;18:;:5Q:=:·-;:";.14;.DG2::::·~2..:
1 D;.1·--:~--: ~- s-od Clwnor. $3,1195.
8t ...Z.OS-t108.
N- Holland 56 Hay rake: E•c.t- neg., 6t4-tD2·7H8 o• 6t&lt;-t•9· WOO.o, Oriwn Dolly, Bo\IGIII Now t988 Oodgt Omnl, 4 Door, 5
lenl Cand1t1Cn . $1500 814·311· 2879.
l!:~~~:"~":~~~.S:, ~: Speed, 2.2 lolomr, 82,000 Milia, 15180 GlS Hundl~ anvtm castet•,
28t8
$1,000,0110, 8t ..258-1233.
PW, tunroof, air, 5 •p•ed, de·
'93 Eu:ort LX , air, 5 IP*Id, 9248.
hayed Wlptlf'l, MCUflty alaf'm IYI ·
70,000
mil
...
new
lranamtn
ion,
Tttctor hydrau lic lluid S1&amp;.9DI
ttl88PB
Mercury
Cougar
•c PW
002 XL. - ti"t · tern, 4 dOOJ, 10,000 milet, ¥&amp;ry
Sgal. S.doro EquopmonL 004-e75- run• e~:ctllenl, $H~95, 814·7• ~· t982 Muo•ng 5 0 h.o. GT, 4spd, PS
.
~
"- 304'75
• • ~ $3500,
• ' 8t~·
• ,_
... nlt.e, $3400, 814·742·2125
3802.
7&lt;12t or HI00·277-39t7
Net
garage -~L
~ · automatic,
849·2045
15a-4.
Ot6l4-'949-287'D.
1881 Pontiac: Flreb1rd V-8, TWanted To Buy· •oo -600 Bulk 1968 Camara, nice shape, 327 2
54).
rran~m~s•n.
garaged
last
,
2
M1lk Tank In Good Condition,
1983 280ZX O.tt.un, 5 sp., 15 cyl., 1Q88 Ply Horizon "ulo, Sunroof. Topa, Loaded, Alarm, ••.ooo
yrs, SU-7-42-3190 or IH-7C2- runs well, $900 080, 1984 CJ7 Tlntad Windows, Great Gas Ml, M1lea. u.ooo. Neg. 6H·378·
614·965·1922.
2550.
Jeep, 4 sp., 6 cyl., partially re· Nice Car, Sharp! $1,200, &amp;1•· 2St•.
stor-.l. 8~742·2258 aak lor 245-5320 My11ma.
630
Livestock
1970 &amp; 1972 Mont&amp; Carlo, both Mtka or Jtm.
1988 BU ICk Regal Sporty Car,
for
$2,500
1092
runs
&amp;
looks
2 year old Leghorn hens, 75f; per
"t988 S-tO Pick·Up, t890 S· tO
1989
Dodge
Da~tone
Auto,
4C,
good.
1970
needs
engme
&amp;
1983 Mon1• Carlo, Good Condibird , G ar~ Michae l, 6, 4 ·985 Pick-Up, Tradal Welcome, Cook
trans11'11sSIOn 3:14-675-8858.
tion, $2,500, After 5 P.M . 614 · Tilt Steering, AMIFM Ca10otte.
3956

•

Sunday,April7,1111

SUnday,April7,1996
1110

Cl(l TIE (WSIFIII fOIIll

7 Ang1cross cows, spnngtng with
second calf {vacclna ~ ed) . 30-4 -

Runs

ooo,~t4-256-8169

t984 Chevy Camaro. Stooo. 814·
992· 76811.
t980 AMC Spint, $600 obo, 614·
992-6511 .
1985 Ford Escoft L, • Door, Au ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
lo rna tiC, AM IFM Cauettt, New t990 Couoa• LS, 80,000ml., lully
Saturday, Apnl 13th, 1 P.U.
T4ret, 28 MPG, Looks And Runs loaded, S6,000 f~rm . 304-875·
Spring Special, All Breeds Feeder 1986 Oocsga A ~res K, runs good
.3856
Great!
$900 OBO, 61-4-379-26-45
Call Sale, Cattle Being Acce~ted 1 .s;..700~;.304_
·6_7s.e_o_3,..
t .'' -::-:-,.....Starting -4 P M Fr~day, All Con · 198EI Ford Esoort. 304-675-6364

.,

6

'•

For Salt:t983 Ford Tom~o GL,
loodad. 38,000 mi., AIIIFM casoottt. Call atlolr 2:00. 6t 4·245··
532t

61~- 592-2322, 6U· ~~§~~~~§~~~
General

Cl t"a

965 20
."
P1gs

Boars

&amp;

Sows,

ll amps h ~re, Bur ks h1re, Pol and ,

Also Feeder P1gs, 614~ 379 - 2563

Four Hereford

LOOKING T0
~!!1!Y1H!I!C•

LOG HOMES
Comfort, colwc nic:nt~:, I
energy , clri cieney

LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

446-1066

durab1lity and fle:•ihilitlr I I

two year old bred
hOllers, call 61 4-985-3805.

Lirr\Ouslne/CharOJa,s bull, 15mos

Old. 8501bS $500 304-882·2422

Performance Tested, bfack An·
gus yearlmg built Brrth -. 1, weanIng +25, m1lk •12. yearlmg +40

REALTORS:
·AHen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446·4523
Ken Morgan, Reattor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanene Moore, Realtor· 256·1745
Tim Watson, Reattor-446-2027
Patricia F.toss, Realtor

304-675·6248

Appalachian
Log
Structures ha ~ been
leader in th e log hotnc Ill
indu"stry £or over 15
years. Choose from ov,cr Ill
70 standard models
we 'II custom •lcsign
for you.

Pygmy goal kidS $65 to S75 304·

895 3103

REGISTERED ANGUS
Ar.d Ch1- Angus Bu lls, And HeJI.

ers $700 Up Excellen t Bioodhnes
And Low 81rth We1 ghts. Slate Run
Farms. 614 286·5395 Jackson

Llmousme bu lls
polled &amp; horned
$!00 &amp; u p 304 -895 ·3571 even·
1ngs
fleg1stered

131acks. reds,

Three Bedroom Ranch, 2
car. garage, pool with 54 Looking for a
new,
8 split level deck over never lived in
, for
looi&lt;itia Raccoon Creek. $52,000?
the
city. Three bedrooms, 2
baths. Tax abatement,
Realtor owned. # 109

Call or write fol' more
information.

Appalaclunn Log
Square bales of good m1xed hay,

Structures, Inc.

6t4·992-3553

. , Dept. GDT,

TRANSPORTATION

MINI FARM • 11 acres
m/1, and a Modular wHh
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
deck, satellte dish, Barn
with attached shed, 18 x
40 Block Building, pond
City Schools. P..riced in
the Mid SO's. ~001
THREE I,.OTS • Located
In town ·wlt11 watar and
sep!ic
available .
$7,000.00. #2004

SPACIOUS MODULAR-3
Bedrooms, lg. walk In
REDUCED! Exceptional closet in MB, 2 full baths,
Ranch - In Rio Grande 30 x 40 garage, above
area. 3 bedrooms, formal ground pool. Upper 40's
'r;hning, lg. family room, DON'T MISS THIS ONEI
fireplace, 2 car garage, 111121
· situated on 2. 7 acres m/1.
VACANT PROPERTY!
111120
218 acres more or less. It
is located in Gallia and
GREAT HOME SITE· J
k
C
Vacant Property-Approx.
a c so n
o u n 1Y,
2 5
acres
mostly bordering Little Raccoon VACANT LAND- approx.
wooded, with p"ublic Creek. Excellent hunting 5 acres mostly all
utilities
availablt~ . ground, $250.00 per acre. wooded with a 24 x 40
$1
#2006
· Real!or Owned. lll2003
Bldg $12,000.00. #2005
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR
NUMBER.,

P.O. Box 614
71 0

AU1os for Sale

Ripley, WV 25271

'79 Ford LTD If, runs good, roo my, groat work carl $1200, 614·

l-800-458-99?0

742 2497.

.Real Estate General

..

Got II Made? Not unless you
reward your success wl1h

thts grand colonial that
allows you to el'tertaln
lavishly or be p-erfectly
comfortable at home.on the
deck overlooktng the lake. 3
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths,
formal dining room and 2 car 3-443 St. Rt. 141 · Green Twp.
garage are among the brick &amp; vinyl ranch on .33
amenities awaiting you In acres, m/1. Three bedrooms, 1
this home located in Tara bath, FA, 1 car garage and
Subdivision N5t o
fenced back yard. $64,900

•

NSOO •

•

Combine a Price Below
Appraised Value and Today's
Low Interest Rate ....and
can't posslbl\r go wrong
this property!! Built In 1993",
this 2 story vinyl sided home
offers approx. 2800 sq. n. of
living area Open liveable floor
plan offers a formal LA &amp; OR,
~ra large eat-In kt!chen that
any lady_ of the house wiU
love, FA with woodburnor plus
a large rec. room for the kids,
4 BAs, 2 1/2 baths located In
a lovely wooded setling wlth 1
to 2 acres In the Rio Grande
area. Pnced at $106,900, you
just won't flnd a betler value
on the
nowtl N601

·WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

Loretta McDade. Wi-7729

•

LOWERED PRICE TO
$32,900
YOU
ARE
MISSING OUT BY NOT
CONSIDERING THIS
PROPERTY. 3 Bedrooms, 2
baths, living room, eat-tn
kitchen, approximately 6
years old. 1 car detached
a nice level

farm equipment and tools too numerous to mention here,

all goes A t;Qmplete Farm with all Equipment Phone lor
appointment now.
.
,
11753
PtfONE OFFICE 446-7699 '
AMSBARY, PH. 245-~5
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539
KEN~ETH

· LEADINGHAM REAl ESTATE

starting

story
for couple
Living room,

large eat-in kitchen, covered

front porch. LOW $30's.
H832

OVER·SIZED
LAWN ·
3 bedroom ranch style home
that ts in good repair One ca1
garage, deck on rronl of
home Low $40's.
N821

""""'-r:"""

WOODED "PRIVACY • 3
acres more or less and this
newer ranch home with a
tully equipped, attached
garage, pole bern approx.
24' x 32' and morel 1835

HEY YOUI NOTE lHIS,
OWNER HAS LOWERED
TO PRICE OF THIS
HOME TO $97,500.00 He
is serious about selling
lowered price $12,100.00. 3
Baths, 3 bedrooms, family
room , den , dining room,
kitchen, large detached
garage, tnground pool with
pool house. Over 3 acres
land. Call today for an

--

'•'
'

PRICE REDUCTION!
VACANT ACREAGE Approx.

eo . ~eras m;: i:tuated at

Pioneer Trail road , ,just
minutes from Rio Grande.
Cou'11)' water available. Nice
VIew and building sites. 1828

'

NEW LISTING! 7 ACRES
NEXT TO TOWN! Mostly all
wooded. public waler
available . City .schools.
Neighborhood Roed. 1844

We Need Listing~

11

We Are Mov111g

Property And Need fJiore to Show!
i

LOTS ACRES! OVer 251 • 2
barns , large tqbacco
allotment, road frontage
along two roads, Ideal
hunting areal11755
FARMI 83 acres m/1 and' 1
1/2 story home that consists
of 3 bedrooms, large living
room, bath basement, and
more. Private settlngl Call
for an appolntrnantl

LOTS
11.608Acres rnA
$14,000
7.744 Acres mn
$12,000
9.491 Acres mn
$12,000
County water available ~575
RIVER LOTI Over one acre,
county water available, nice &amp;
level, frontage along SR 7. Let
us sell you this one.
LOT · 2.8 acres m/1 $15,000
County water available, mostly
all !eve~ Nice place Ia build.
N826
Well Maintained 30,000 Sq. Ft.
approx. building sltuared on 1
acre more or less In CHy of
Gallipolis. Lots of parking area,
office space, loading docks,
central air &amp; beat. Call for
oomplete details. N790
LOT · Being approx. 5 acre
more or less. County ~alar Ia
avaUable. SHuated at a paved
roarl. Callloday. ~819
·

J

I

'

r

""'dod· 11...-.1m, A~

tor 7 P.ll.

V·l, lwo door , ltandUd, alf,

23", 1073 Fleetwood tr, 1982

cru1ae, sun root, loade~ must
aee, 6t&lt;-949·248t alter 5pm l

HEY YOUI NOTE THIS,
OWNER HAS LOWERED
TO PRICE OF THIS
HOME TO $97,500.00 He
Is serious about selling
lowered price $12,100.00.
3 Baths , 3 bedrooms,
family room, den, dining
room , kilehan, large
detaChed garage, 1nground
pool with pool house. OVer
3 acres Janel. Call today for
an appointment. 1816

S 1

Motor, Brakes, Locko uts', $3,500,

t 99t Honda XR80A Llk Naw,
614·387-0239.
1991 Kawasaki EX 500 Street
T A dB n
Bike, New Rear lte n
a ery,
7,500
Mlfes,
$1,800,
6t4·245·
·
t .
03 9
199 3 300 Honda 4i4, V.~.C
$4,000 Ftrm, 8t4-387-7577.

1993

·.

RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY This .
almost brand n6w ranch style home
rests in over 7 acres of woods with
approx. 800 n of creek frontage. Some
of the many features ar11 4 BAs, 2
baths, 16x21 Kit w/range, (efrig, disp &amp; ,
OW. 15x15 DR, 16x21 LR w/french
doors, 2 large treated decks, vinyl
siding &amp; an unattached 2 car garage. If
you don't want to look at your
YOU MUST SEE THIS
neighbors,
ONE. ASKING ,$115,000.

..

....

·'

DEBBIE DRIVE • Brand new home
offers 3 BR, 2 BA, LA", kitchen, FA/DR,
pick your own new carpet. Builders are
JUSt wailing to put the finishing touches .
on for ·you. Call for a viewing! PRICE
REDUCED $79,900.
,•

1453 • OHIO RIVER PROPERTY
located at end of White Ave. off Garfield.
Seve_rallots $20,000.

'I

--~

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

33 ACRES · M/l corner of SA 325 and
Woods Mill Rd', recreational land only
$16,501).00

'
AJ.VNTION DEVELOPERS
I~TORS, EXTRA NICE PEICE ur• •
PROPERTY
LOCATED
N,.,.,,,;. .
PORTER • Large lalce with lake
sites, mobile home on pro!)erty
present time, county water, entire tract
I
~'
consists of
acres, m/1.

'

OUT OF TOWN OWNER
SAYS
"GOTTA SELL
FASr Reduced
price
$5,000 &amp; wants offurt Over
1~ ~ m/1, barn, shed,
garage &amp; more; F!lus 1 1/2
story home that has been
remOdeled! ~822

RACCOON CREEK FARM • Located on
State Route · 160 in northern Gallia
County. Approx. 1 mile creek frontage.
30 flat lots surveyed. Water and electric
available.

50 Plus Acres! Nice pond
county water nearby,
several feet • of road
frontage. Land conn6Cia to
Wllyne NaUonal Forrest.
Owner will conSider dMdlng
Into smatter trp. ~833

NORTH tALLIA ESTATES • Restrlcled
building lots. 100 x 300. Located on state
route 160 between Porter &amp; Vinton.
.
'
RA~COON CREEK CAMPS • '
BiARRISON lWNSHP • 47 acras GARDENS Located at Ewlngton: Short •
'•cellent hunting land. Corner 3f Elliott or long term lea~es. Cheaper than
Rd. &amp; Uttle Paragon.
owning.
:.

.'

n

•

'
EXTRA NICE BUILDING OR MOBII.l:
HbME LOT Mature pine trees on three
sjdes, access to Raccoon Creek.
Located In Hobart Dillion Subd. $11.900

I

Mic.l Watson, Broker

Office 675·3433 • 675-71 09 Home

Sertling Mtuon And Gallia Countie1

•

MT. TABOR ROAD
Near Rio Grande' Country setting, very nice 1 floor
home, offering 3 bedroom, 2 bath, large !amily
room/fireplace. 2 car garage, in ground pool. Sttuated
on 1.7 ac. $79,000

Real Estate General

OFF~CE

992-2886

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Yamaha -4-M Kod iak -4-·

wheeler, t20 mtloo. 304·675-e858
Iter Spm.
a
1994 Suzuki 'GSX 750R, t!)OOmi.,
wlhel~ S5,900. 30+713-11M.

t995 Honda 300 4wd 4·whoeler.
cond., $3,850 firm. 304~8953390
exc.

Real Eslale General

MONEY IN THE BANKII
This Naw Usting Has Had Many New
Repairs. All It Needs . Is Youll
MIDDLEPORTII Main Street • 2 Story
Frame Home with Care Free Siding.
Several new repairs I.e. roof, ceiling:;,
paint, plumbing, 4 yr. old FAjlj.G.
Furnace, full basement with utility
hoo~·u'ps. 2 baths, 3·4 bedrooms, 1
car garage with upstairs storage, attic
space, cement front porch, carpet and
hardwood flooring . This Is A Very
Nice Hornell ASKING $46,900

EVERYTHING IS COMING UP
DAFFODILS • SPRING IS EVIDENT
ALL AROUND THIS 30 ACRE FARM!
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! NO
REASONABLE OFFER REFUSEDII
This property located just off SR 7,
contains approx. 30 acres that
consists of woods, hayfield, garden
area, fruil trees, large variaty of
flowers and shrubs. There is also a
lar9e POND for recreation or for farm
ammals. The older one floor frame
has 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, LDC &amp;
cistern water, woodburner, . F.O.
Furnace, central air, cellar. Enclosed
porches. Some newar carpet and
paneling. OWNER WANTS TO SELL
SO COME SEE THIS ONE TODAY.
ASKING :r&gt;40,uuu

A SMART, BUNNY WOULD . Mu•vt:
RIGHT IN • Affordable, Newly
Remodeled and Ready for Occupancy
SA 124 Entering Rutland - 1 1/2 Story
Frame Home, Vinyl Exterior, 2·3
bedrooms, bath, appliances', pl~sler
·walls, wood floorl11g, attic space ,
basement With washer &amp; dryer. Large
living room with atrlm doors lhat open
onto new front covered deck. Home
includes ceiling fans and new ceiling
llghl fixtures. Cute home small lot.
IMMEDIATE '
POSSESSION!!
REASONABLE OFFERS WILL BE
CONSIDERED!! ASKING $27,900.

COUNTRY, PRIVACY, PEACE OF
MIND... It's All Here! This newly
constructed home Is located just off
~1. epprox. 5 miles off SR 33. Home
contains kitchen, living room, 3
bedrooms. Master bedroom wtfull
bath &amp; walk In closets, utility room,
drywaiVcarpet interior, wood decking.
Total electric with new heat
pump/C.A. ,. steel doors, therma
payne windows, 1\llly insulated.
Setting on approx. 2.5 wooded acres.

REDUCED TO SALEIII PORTER AREA·
6 room house, new water!mk, new range,
new. roof, central air, 2 acres. $55,000.

REALTY COMPANY

'

RACINE • 2 Story Frame Home wHh
4·5 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room,
dining room, kitchen. Shingled roof,
N.G.F.A. Heat, sitting on a nice lot.
Walls are panel and drywall and
floors are carpet and vinyl . ASKING
$32,900

LOCATED ON ST. RT. 160, VINTON,
OHIO. This 11 room house has many
features of yesterdays. With 4 BAs, 2
baths, a 18 x ?4 _garage, a very pretty
breakfast nook and much more to see.
Located on a great corner lot. $39,900

so

or ~-• 384 3.

Kathleen M. Oeland 992-6191

•

RANCH HOME LOCATED AT 15063 ST
AT 160 In Vinton , Ohio. This home has 2
BAs, t bath, large FA, LA as well as DR.
This home is carpeted. New siding and
insulation adds to this home. There is a
carport and a large deck on the back of
the home and bsmt. $49,000.

,.-..~•Page07

SMrri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

Must $eel $900,

DON'T GET YOUR SONNET IN A
KNOT • LOOKING FOR AN
AFFORABLE HOME! HERE IT ISII
One floor noma with 3 bedrooms,
kltch!ln and one bath. Floors . are
carpeted, walls are drywall and panel.
Has a family room in the basement
and also has an ingrou,n d pool.
ASKING :ti&lt;:4,,ow

514 Second Ave., GaUipolis, Oh. 45631
.
Ranny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008·
~ Joe Moore , Associate 44l•llll
'

FISHERMAN'S PARADISE • The Ohio
River lot located In Addison offers a
moblla home with wrap-around deck
facing the River. County water and
electric available. Price at $23,900.
Make this your get away spot today.

·

and COrtlttuc:llon, et• ·992-2384

JIJCH Pop-Up 11·112' Pontoon
24' Nice. 111110 lloConnlok Road,

Carolyn Wasch "'441-1007

11116

DELl
NOT JUST VACANT LAND ·
all Inventory
25 acres m/1 plus this 3·4
for 52 people),
bedroom home. Land Is rolling
t9a9 mini-van.
already established donut with some tillable &amp; fenced
delivery routes . Building 'acreage. Mineral rights
rented Call today for more . tncluded. Call tudavl
N825
details. H836

k f

UC S Or ae
CanBeSeenArSmllh"sAsNand,
8~0odge 3f4 ton Co nvers1on 614 ·379-9891
70 000
va ll', ~tB en gine, under
·
1986 Long Wheel Base 3/4 Ton ,
m1hJs,. PS, PS, POL, cruise, air, 4 Dod e Panel Van 3t8 Automatic
cap).aln charrs, electr1 c rear sofa
g
•
•
Good , $t,400, 614 ·256·
be d, 1tow1n g hllch, $5500 , '88 Runs
6854,614-256-6329
Do dg~ Ram 50 E•tended Cab, l ...:~::-~---,--:::-1209(),6t4-742·2420.
Vans. Looks &amp; Runs
500
t9..:S · model Chevy pickup. 5
· · 080· 614 "245·
w1nclows, very res tora ble,,$500 1.:.:.:.:.________
304•576-3t56
t990 Dodge Ram Van B-250.
dvl
72,000
M 1les, $6,000, Can Be
19"!.'" lsuzu PICk up, 4 cyl 5 Seen At Gallipolis Oa1ly Tr~b une,
speed, 70,000 miles, nlc&amp;, $SSOO , 825 Thi rd" Avenue . Gallipolis
61 4..S~2-2594 after 6pm
dhlo
t98r FtSO 4,4, 6cyl. 3s~d. wlod,
•
67,QOOml 304 · 675 ·6 858 afler 1988 Ford Aerostar $2,000 080.
Sprn.
304-675-23t1 or 304-675-4040

~

.
Tammie DeWttt................................ 245..0Q22
Martha Smith .......,......................... 379-2651 .
Ctndy Drongowskt. ......................... 441-0736Cheryl Lemly ................................... 742-3171

IF YOUR A HANDY-MAN?
THEN WH~T ABOUT THIS
FIXER-UPPER? $25,000.00
Ranch home consisting of 3·4
bedrooms, larpe kitchen &amp;
dtnlng area, livmg room &amp;
bath. 2 storage buildmgs
County water, city schools.
Nice sized lawn approx. .69
acre. #838 -

·,

Real Estate General

1-800-585-7101 or 446:-710).

415 ACRES M or L
ONE OF THE BEST FARMS IN GREEN TWP., GALLIA
COUNTY OR SOUTHEAST OHIO. 415 Acres M or l .
Great for 'oauy Farm, rais1ng beef catUe, or just farm1ng, 1t
has 3 houses rented now Barns, Tile Milk House, Lean to
Shed Plus ot11er bldgs &amp; tool sheds 2 Tractors, 2 Plows,
2 D1sc , 1 Haybine, 1 Hay Baler, 1 Rake, 1 Comp1cker, 1
corn Grinder, 1 Manure Spreader, 4 Milkers, 2 Bush
Hogs, 3 Hay Wagons, and a caH\e loader. Many more

men!

Sonny Ganes • 446-2707

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
RUSSELL D WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy DeWitt.. ............................ 441-0262
J. Merrill Carter ....... ................ 379-2184
Ruth Barr...................................446-7101

7.20 Tr

446-3644
Df'\VID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555

BLACKBURN REALTY ·
NICE LATE MODE~ MUI~IU:
14'x70' REDMAN BEEZEWOOD. 1 1/2 baths, 3
bedrooms. heat pump, fronl porch, elec. refrlg. &amp; range,
all curtams, drapes &amp; m1m blinds. All undersk1rting, all set
up on a rented lot and ready to mova Into. Low Pnce. PH
TODAY.
•
M651 A

199t Ford Exp~Q&lt;or Sport ••4, 4.0

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NEW LISTING! LOW
MAINTENANCE • Brick
Condo located wllhin
walking dtslance of
shopping . Offers 2
brms., 2 baths, Tax
abatement, and so much
more. Call loday !o get
the details. ~122 .

,

vans &amp; 4-WDs

.

32 LOCUSl' STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

reason•
families will 1huild a
home th1s ycar 1

730

s

s1gnments Welcome , Truc::k1ng

Black Angus Ieeder calves. heife rs bulls, ste ers,. 61 4-985-4117

Wv

t~85 AI..., taft. open - · t40
hp, 110, I trailer, oxc. cond., ::et::4:::t41~1S;,;.tt;:.·-----!840 Ellcblclllnd
ss.ooo. :!DU75-tl75.
~~~~~~~~-:.:~t988 Chevy t/2 Ton V-e, PS. PB. - . . t s .
Rlfrlgerlllon
t994 ,..,.,.., tuity-loadad, lou
t99• Muollng GT, Rad, 5 Speed, ~~I=~ ~M895, 6t4·446·4225
ol
oalld,
tilL
S.rlouolnqulrlea
t987
Clratlon
Open
11
FL
199~ Chevy Aatro Converoion
RSES CERTFIED DEALER
1r Tir... Premium, Sound Sysvan . ~t.ooo mllto, 4.3 V-e, aulD, Long, lnboatd IOu-rd - · only.304-t7WtOS.
LAWA:NCE ENTERPRISES
tem With CO IC.uette, 614·388- 1991 Ford Ranger 81 ,000 Miles,
loadad, • ca~•ln -~~ &amp; bendt, 100 HP, Good ~. Prlot HMt F'umpa, Air ConditlOning, If
9445.
El(Ce!lent Condition, $5,000,' 814· new lires, gatage k.ept, lftl&amp;t .... IOr1lble. 111 SlflviCf
• •.
'IIIII Don1 CaH Uo We Bolh Losel
448-2056
asking 't0,800, 6t4-949-2411 of·
t99&amp; Cadillac Seville SLS DiaFrN Estlma•s, 1·800·211-oo91,
ft4-448-e308, WI/ 002945.
mond Whilt12.000 Mites. EXcel- 1995 Chevrolet S-10 Extended tor~&amp;-nds.
lent 'Condulon, After 5 P.M. 614- Cab, Many Extras I $9,500, 614- t995 Z-7t Enendad Cab, Chevy
Residential or commarc~l winng,
~se;.
446·7750
350 4x4, Slut, Aulo, Air, Tilt,
new aervlce or rep11rs. Maater U·
censed eltclf lclan. Ridenour
1995 Dodge Avenger Efes, 24V, 1995 S-10 PICkup, a1r, anvfm cas- Cru1u, PW, PL. 1 Bar, 18,000
es, $20,500, 614·379-260-4
ElecUICII, WV000306, 304-675·
IJ·$, J't)wer Survoor, Fully Loaded, sette, arr bags, 5 speed, 18,000 Mil
Bai'NOen
5&amp; 9 ~ M. On~.
t'llle.
AN ,Pbwer, t8,000 t-AIIea, Excelleru miles, Wi ll sel l tor loan valueC~n, 614-4411-&lt;1861.
$9400, 6t4-247-3832.
1995 Ford Eacorl UC Automatic, 1ton. red Chevy, long whee( base,
Motorcycles
AC, S~ver / Blue lntenor. Caa~ne "94 model, 350 eng 1n e, Sspd , 740
After -4 P.t.A. 614-441.0119
33,000m i., 1-owner 304 -6 75- 1977 H 0. , 380 mile$. on COf'T'IP!e!e
Pole I II gs
1 9b~Grand Prix Sport Coupe, 5332
restoration , $11,900. e1-4 - 992 ~
D.C. Mllll W.s, .._
auiOtJI8tic. loadad, like new, 9,000
3878.
m1ret. never been smoked in,
Cannelburg, Inc. 45719
,977 Harley Da'ridson, 380 miles
ask1rig ~yoll, $t7,500, 6t4· 742· 730 Vans &amp; 4·WDs
Specllllizing in Pole
on
complete
restoration',
$1
1
,900,
3t4:1.;pr 61 ..992·56t7
'78 Ford Van 150, 351 automate; 814-992-3878
Buildings.
191!i- Mercury Trac&amp;r, 4dr, air,
'19 Ford, 4 door, 6 cyl. automatic: 1980 Suzuki GS750L, new bat·
Deljigned to meet your
am;fm &lt;4Jsat!j&gt;, Ss~. t3,000ml., 61•-2~7-43)1 after 5pm.
lery, mag whee Ia, carburetor~
bucgundy wlgray lhterior, dam.
needs. Any size.
aged on right fron t, good title, '87 5·10 4x4 Extended Cab, V·8 have been jetted out, runs Qt'ea11
CHOICE
OF 10 COLORS
5 speed. a1r, 142K milea. eng rna $750, 614-387.0323.
760 AutO Paris &amp;
$2,850.304-675-3073 after 8~.
FREE
ESTIMATES
ON
rebulil by Hemlock Eno-na. $3800, t 985 Honda Rebel $1,350, et4·
AcctiiOI'Ies
93 :Piymou 1h Sun Dance, 4 cylin- 6t4·985-3979
446·2288
Post Buildings and
dec,Auro, i\tr 81 ,400 mtlage,
Ntw gaa tanks, ~n• ton truck
DRYWALL
$4 ,700 obo. 6t4·256·6340 or '89 Lariat 150 XLT 4WD, loaded, t
Package
Deals. Save
986 Honda 4so Night Hawk wheels. ..d.,toro. Hoor moll, ttc.
6t ...256.6467
Hong, tin18h,
·
·
lifl
klt,
fiberglass
bed
cover,
red
street
blke,·
only
4,000
m
1es,
exCeilings
teMtured,
plasltr
repair
&amp;
R
Auto,
Ripl"'',
WV.
304-372·
0
•
Hundreds,
even
1
'
Call Tom 304-675-4t58. 20 , ..,.
and sliver, very sharp, $14,000 cellenl co~dltlon. $1600
. , 6,4-742- 3933 or t·800-273-a28.
94 'Mustang, V·6, auto, all power, OBO, 614-992-5447.
·
Thousands of Dollars.
e•penence.
2153
eKc;elleJll cond ition, factor~ war Local Sales
ra rity~ i5K miles , $11,600, 614 - '93 Dodge Caravan ES, tully load- 1987 Honda 125, 4 Ifill, 2wd 4- ----CI----&amp;---1 Pars Home Improvement· remoRepresentative
990{·2791 .
ed, teal blue, one owner) rear
wheeler, s1,soo.304 -675- 1941 ,
790
mpers
doling, rooting, siding, call 8t~_
and h&amp;al, 6 disc exchanger, ~.' Motor Homes
992·31 88
WESLEY MULLEJ
Aurhban'a. Dealer w1l! arrange
cellent cond1t1on, $11 ,500, 614· 1987 Horlda 4-wheeler 250, oood
141 Barlow ·Rd.
Ron's
TV
Servrc:e,
specializing
In
na~L1nu even if you have been 742-3802.
"
cond ., ,,,eoo. 1988Kawasaki 4·
tu rn4$! down els•where. Upton 1979 VW Bus Blue fWhite Looks wheeler 220, good cond, $1,800 1980 Holiday Rambler Fifth Whee' Zenith also servlc:;ing moat other
Patriot. Ohio 45658
34' camper, shower and tub. brands House ulla, 1 ·800·7~HEq~i~ment Uaod Car&amp; 304-458· Good, Run&amp; Greall $ 3.200 , 6t 4_ 004-&lt;58-t793 or 004_.58-11105.
pi{, 614-258-6031
$5500, 8t4-9ol9-2902.
00t5, WI/ 304-576·2398.
,OfS.,
446·1008
1990 Yamaha Warrior' 350, exc
SEI~D CARS From $175.
cond. many e•tras, $2,000 304Por'schas, Cadlllacs, Che'llys, 1982 Dodge Convenron Van, 773 , 1t 3
BM~ Corvenes, A.lso Jeeps,
Very N1ce, $2,500, Or Trade For
-~
·
W(l'S', Your Area Toll Free 1· Pontoon Boat, 614-245-5320 An- 1991 Harley Davidson 1200 CC
BOO-Q98·977B EKt A-2814 Fer ;;Yt;_
' m=•~----:---l Sportster 7,000 Miles, Ltk&amp; New,
CurtentllSbngs
· 1982 Ford 374 Ton 4 WD, Rebuilt ~~~~ $7,600 , 6_14.·446·9355 After
Henry E. Qeland Jr..992-2259

675·5428 after 6~ .

353t .
Ava1lab1e
696·

tor.Sale

t984 Muarang GT Lazor, red, ""::-'"CF:-'--R::-~---­
1988 ord anger, 5 s~ ~d. no
rutl,
'"'"' 90od. ' '600, 814 ·9 49·
2388.

Mottrs, 614-446-0tOO.

41,000 Miles, New Ttres, $3,300

446·6689.

Good

720. Trucks

auto: toedtd , t2.COOmi. Hil89
Cavau., Z24 COIWtrllble, red ,
e,;c . cand'.,

co.-.

Ventura
$500, 614·388-9914

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpol'-, ott • Point Pleasant,

Camplra.
750 ao.ta • llotoiS
tor Sill
.
MotorHomtt
•
162 Llncol'n Continental Ltatme" t9 8 F d R
V6
4 0'
anger,
Moan Roof tceyl11a Enlry
' runs tOOt Ch~ Z·71 , 350. 5 Speed, t913 s.tw SRV210 21 Ft CUO.
Aooq • guller1 .....,... groat, S1,400 080. 304~75-2:152 4 WD, 68,000 Mllta, 6t4·!88tt77 Pr-. 20', 1177 Wlldef • remodeling
docka 1 oldlng, 35
441 .{) 738.
dr
Cabin,
Uo
lolo•r.
All
Equip- neaa
006t
,
614-3111HS004.
24',
t873
Holiday
AarniNr
,..,.
• .,..,tonte, a • a Aoolng
::.:..:..:::=-:---::::;-:----:-1 aller 5:00pm.

..

1975 Pontiac

Autoe for Sale

•

•

POMEROY· Mobile Home 14' x 70' •
Uving room, kitchen, 3 badrooms, 2
baths all the curtains and furniture
stay plus the washer and dryer.
!:lectrlc heat. under-pinned, 5 years
old, sitting on a double lot. ASKING
$24 ,~

WE'RE ON THE HUNT
FOR BUYERS AND .
SELLERS. WE LOVEDEAUNG WITH GOOD
EGGS UKE YOUII
HAPPY EASTER FROM
CLELAND REALTY, INCa

Ch!)ster-A one story stucco home with 2
bedrooms , full basement, fireplace, built in
bookshelves garage with attached workshop,
and a deep lot w~h garden area. $35,000.00

Pomeroy-Wehe Terrace-Really neat and nice
home Has a large L-Shaped living room-dining
room, nice modern kitchen, full basement, 4
bedrooms, and an attic for storage. Has 2 lots
with 2 Car garage on oppos;te side of rofld.
Price Reduced Owner wants 10 sell ·
Rutland- Majn street· a one story home wtth 3
bedrooms, dining room, one bath, b;g liv;ng
room, on an average size lot. $32,500.00
Pomeroy • Naylors Run · A 3 bedroom ranch
style home jusl a little ways out of town If you
want the convenience of be;ng close to town ut
the feel of country you will like this place.
Only $30,000.00
Beech St. Middleport-An affordable 3 bedroom
and Home with an eqwpped ki1chen , and Heat
Pump. Has chain link fenced back yard wilh 8
x 10 outbuilding.
was $39,000.00
now $37,000 ,90
Pearl St • A one story horne with 2 bedrooms,
enclosed front porch, part basement. Has vinyl
siding, equipped kitchen , and hardwood floors.
$29,900 .00
Syrac·use-A large 1/2 Acre lot wt lh a ranch
style house that has 3 bedrooms , big living
room, family room, Sun Room and 2 baths.
Has a 3 car detached garage with a one
bedroom apartment above. Some fr~i t trees
and grapes.
was $69,500.00
now $64,500

oo

Rutland-New Lima rd.·A 1 1/2 story home with
3 bedroom, enclosed back porch , full
basement, also a log home that is not finished
A large lot.
Was $30,000.00
Now $24,000.00
Middleport-South .2nd Ave.-A tan brick home
that has 2 stories, an attic, 4·5 bedrooms,
family room, dining room newer ·cabinets in
kitchen, 1 1/2 baths, part basement ,.3 really
pretty fireplaces, front &amp; side porches, partly
fenced yard and much more. Must see.
.
Now $75,000.00
Was 79,900.00
Middleport Elm St.-If you want rental property
this is it. A large lot with 3 trailers setting on it.
You could live in one and rent the othe You've
got to look at this. asking $29.900.00

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GRAND OPENING • Generations, a new
clothing store, recenHy i:elebreted Its grand
opening wHI! a ribbon cutting ceremony, On
l!and for the ev111t were, left to rlgllt, Robin
Fowler, WMGG; Pam Wlaemen, Ohio Valley
Bank; Erma Brewer and Lacle Heel, employeea;
. Mendy Heel, owner; LOI'Ie Neal, employee; Rob-

ble Jenkl.ns, prealdent of the Gallipolis Retsil
Merchants Auoclation .and .Marlanne campbell, president, Gallla County Chamber of
Commerce. Generations features clothing for
women of allagaa, akin and hair products, and
jewelry. H Is located In the Ohio River Plaza.

•

BIDWELL·'champion Hill, Bidwell, has been recognized nationally
GALLIPOLIS • Wiseman Real
by the American Angus Association Estate Ill$ announced the addition
for having one registered Angus cow ·of Gail Belville to its real estate
included in theAAA's 1996 Pathfind- sales
er Report.
.,
A li(elong resiOnly I ,647 of the more than
dent of Gallia
29,000 members of the AAA are repCounty, Belville
resented in !his year's repon.
·completed her .
real estat~ class-·
es
at the HonOffice merger
dros Career Cenannounced b}' IRS
ter in Columbus.
A graduate with
CINCINNATI· The Internal Revenue· Service ·district offices in
· honors from Itio
Cincinnati and Cleveland merged on
Grande College
April I, forming the new Ohio dis~ with a BS degree
in elementary ed~cation , B.elville
trict.
The district will be headquanered later received her MA degree in eduin Cincinnati, with 2~ field offices cational administration from Marstatewide.
.

.I

POMEROY·-- Taking advantage
of the Ohio River's expanding spon
fishing aciivities, Claudio B. Kruscamp o( Gallipolis has opened a new
bait and tackle shop, C. B.'s Live Bait
· To Go, at. 243 West Main Street in
Pomeroy.
Kruscamp officially opened
'fhursday and offers a variety of live
bait including minnows. shiners, ·
goldfish and nightcrawlers. In addition he carries livers and other llaits
including salted, dead minnows-and

'shiners -- popular with catfish enthusiasts in parts of the country.
He is also building on his inventory of fishing lures and other rei ated fishing items. Special order ·is
available and a hot pot also awaits
coffee drinking anglers. ,
Future plans include a floating
dock and picnic area located behind
'the shop. C.B.~.Live Bait To Go will
-~open from~ a.m . to II p.m., seven days a week.

Approximately 200.~~utinued from o-t

•.

Other speakers at the conference .
included Don Anderson, Director of
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR), and Robert
Frederick, Legislative Director of
· the National Grange.
ODNR's future topic
Anderson talked about the future
of the ODNR and the direction he
expects the agency to take. He dis. cussed ibe state of our State Park System, and the fact that the implementati&lt;;m of a plan· for systematically
improving the condition of parks is
underway. He indicated Ohio has an
excellent park system compared to
other states, and is among few states
where users of a state park are not
charged an admission fee.
He did say, however, "Our current
policy is one that requires any lodging or food service facility to he selfsupporting."· The policy is based on
the premise that meals and overnight
stays in a cabin or lodge should not
be subsidi=' by taxpayer dollars. "It
is only fair that individuals choosing
to use those facilities should cover the
cost themselves," Anderson said.
Robert Frederick from the National Grange, spoke about the prospects
of the 1996 Farm Bill, or the "Free- .
· dam to Farm Act'. He showed the his- ·
tory of past farm bills and the impact
they ' have had on the agricultural
community and the economy. He
views the components of the Farm ·
Bill as causing 1996 to be a "watershed year where agriculture policy is
concerned, pointing out the features
of the proposed legislation will mean
big changes in the way· the governmen~ ' deals with agricult'l"e in the
future, ·
,
' Frederick said, "Even though'lhe .
t'Freedom to Farm Act" means slg- ·
nificanl changes in policy, the political climate and the public perception
of agriculture today, would led to
some changes 'Yithout a Farm Bill."
He stated his belief that the agnctil-

VOL41,NO: ZII
I hollofi, 10 .,.._

'

Continued from D·l
12. Producers are urged to contact the
· Galli a County •Farm Service Agency ,
with any questions regarding day-todar, operations.
·
Lila Meadows Ill .tbe c:oa1ty •
euc~~liye diftCWr bl tbe CalHa
Farm Servke A...-cy.
'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, AprilS, 1996

3S 011111
AGennett Co. Newt I I '!

.

' .

, HELENA, Mont {AP) --=" As · ·Burger King who recall¢ seeing expecting to see him •about now," news conference in Washington.lbe
investigators ~laCed the travels of sus- Kaczynski conic in a few times in Hensley said, referring to Kaczyns- brother lipped authorities after noticpeeled Unabomber · Theodore · recent years.
·
ki's arrest last week.
ing Kaczynski's old writings were
Investigators ·building a case similar to the Unabomber's antiKaczynski, two people remember
Frank Hensley, a desk clerk at the
·
seeing the reclusive m11oth professor in nearby Royal Hotel, told The Asso- againsi Kaczynski are searebing the technology manifestos.
northern California, where the last ciated Press he saw Kaczynski in the country for evidence that the hermit
Also, federal prosecutors from
four bombs were mailed.
neighborhood near the bus depot · left his tar•pi!(Jl!r shack near the Con- California, New Jersey, Montana a!ld
"He looked like one of those almost annually during the last five tinental Divide . to mail or leave Utah were scheduled to meet in
bums who coine in in the morning years. He stayed at the hotel two or bombs in other states.
Washington to discuss how to proand have a sandwich and cup of cof- three times, usually iti the late spring . Today, a lawyer who acted i\5 an . ceed with the case and where to hOld
fee and walk out," saicl Mike Singh, or summer, Hensley said.
intermediary between David Kaczyn- the trial.
manager of a Sacramento, Calif.,
"If ·it wasn't for all this, I'd be ski and the FBI planned to hold a
The Sacramento Bee has reported

~.

bombs and letters to.news organizations were mailed.
The last fpur bombs . from the
Unabomber were mailed from Northem California: Two bombs post·
marked in Sacnimen1o e~ploded' in
June 1993, wounding one person· in
San Francisco and another at Yale
University in New ltaven. Conn. A
bomb mailed from San Francisco in
1994 killed a New Jersey advertising
executive.
'

that Sacramento is tl\e favored site
because two of tl)e killings were
there.
FBI spokesman George GrO(z
confirmed that agents were investigating whether ~aczynski bad traveled to the Sacramento area.
The New York Times, citing
unnamed federal officials, reported
today that records from the Sacramento hotels tie Kaczynski to the
·dates investigators beli~ve that

-------Integration-------. Freemen
checks are
.I

··found in
. car
.

CLEVELAND (AP)- Counterfeit checks signed by Freemen leaders and found in Ohio include three
discovered in the car of n militia
member shot and killed by a.police
officer, 'fhe 'Plain Dealer reponed
today.
:.
Checks signed by LeRoy
Schweitzer and'Daniel Petersen were
found in the car of Michael Hill1 tl\e
first "chief ju~tice:• of a gro)Yillg
Ohio Christian patriot movem~nt
similar to the Montana Freemen, the
newspaper said. The newspaper did
not cite a source.
Hill. a chaplain in the Ohio UnorMilitia, was

..

photoL Special 2-5x7's for
$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.00. We also do paaspo~
photC?s, Identification photos and photo finishing.
-

TAWNEY STUDIO

. ...... . ..,,,I
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Prubyterlan Church
Galli lis, Ohio

424 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOUS

a

•Air Conditioning
*Automatic

weapon at an officer.
Schweitzer and Petersen were
arrested March 22' in Montana on
charges of bank and ma:il fraud and
threatening public officials. Ten to 12
Freemen are holed up at their ranch
compound, surrounded by federal

".

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•Controlled Cycle Wipers
*Rear Wll)dow Defogger

*Sport Interior Group •15" Tlrei
&gt;Casaatte
*Rear Deck Spoiler

·

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oCrulaa Control

PARK AVENUE
Just traded, white with ruby
leather, 23,000 miles.
Local one owner.

"NIW BUJCKTRADE"

parenting program
passes .oile-.year milestone
•

-4 DOOR
Tilt, cruise, cassette, power wl_
ndowa,
power door locka, anti·lock brakes.

1995.BUICK.
SKYLARK 4 DR.
Automatic, a!r conditioning,
tilt, cruise.

$11,888

s.l3,900

1994 PONTIAC

SUNBIRD 2 Di. '
.

Su11roof, autol"atlc, aiNMnd., rear
spoiler. Only 14,000 mll8s
WAS
$10,900

, the Pomeroy hoapHal. In addition Dr. Anthony
Sola who has been serving In radiology wHh
Vetsrans Memorial Is continuing his services.
· Dr. Bruce P811nlngton of tha Holzer Clinic ruds
X·rl}'l at V~H. ·

.
'.
The Meigs County Parerlt Educa- focus on their children's concerns and
tion Program celebrated its fi..St year ·to lessen the problems that may ·
of bperation 'Saturday with a brief develop throiJghout the .4ivorce
ceremony in the Meigs Count)'€ourt proce_ss ~nd in l.ater years, she
explained.
of Common Pleas .
Issues discussed are the stages of
The program is a&lt;;lministered by.
divorce, emotions and behaviors that
.
th~ comm011 pleas co~rt in conjuncAll the work and preparation for . took over full sponsorship of' the
tion with the Meigs County Depllrt- can be displayed by children, co-par-· By TOM HUNTER ,
enting skills, bow to _hdp children Sentinel News Staff ·
the annual event by members of the event from the Middleport-Pomeroy
ment of Human Servi~es.
understand
and
cope
with
the
changes
The
event
had
all
the
makings
of
Middleport
Fire Depanment, par- Rotary Club in 1994.
• Originally funded by a grant from
in
their
lives
and
information
to
help
the
first
Saturday
in
May,
instead
of
ents,
and'
children,
vanished within a
Over 250 children, divided into
the Ohio Supreme Court. the program
·parents
learn
how
to
make
the
.
t
he
first
Sunday
in.
April.
Spectators
matter
of
two
minutes,
as
over
2,000
five
age groups, gathered eggs filled
was initiated by Judge Fred W. Crow
III to assisrfamilies going ihrough a divorce experienceless traumatic for were watching, enthusiasm was in the eggs were picked off the t\lrf at G.en- 'with cash prizes and gift _certi~cates
air, and the cold chill on a sunny East- eral · Hartinger Park and officials dunng.the hunt. Grand pnze wmners
divorce; dissolution of litigation. their children.
Court
administrator
Paul
Gerard
er
aftemooil ~med almost non-exis- ·· started making plans for next year's m the age groups were: ages 0-2
Additipnal funding is provided by the
announced
the
theme
for
the
second
tent
to the children who waited to car- event.
group, Cassie Stew an, Middleport,
department of human .services. ·
'd
tradl.tl·on
""'e
had
a
good
turnout
today,
and
·$50
••vings b'l&gt;nd;_ages 3-5 group,
ry on a Iong hoII ay
.
"'
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According to program coordinator year will be "Kids Come First" .
"The theme reflects the court's
Several members of the Middle- everyone had fun. This is something Michael Lee, Middleport, $50 savJeanie Weeks, the program has bencomlliitmentto
putting
the
welfare
of
port
Fire Department gathered chit- which we look forward to each and ings bond; ages 6-8 group, Bryon
efited 219 parents and more than 100
·
· 'de · the startl·ng gates and every year, and we hope to continue Haggy, Rutland; Brandon Shull and
d
families, Weeks has received training children out front where it belongs,"
ren tnst
Gerard
said.
lined
them up, 11lmost like bringing this EaSter tradition for many years to ~sten Trader, both of Pomeroy,
in the mediation process, ~uended
The program is presented at no horses to the gate for die Kentucky come," said Skipp Johnson of the large Easter baskets; ages 9-10 group,
Parent Education Program training
Ronceverte,
and currently works with families cost to the ·public and is open to all .DerbY· At I p.m,, astaners horn Was Mt'ddleport Fire Department, sponsor · Jeremiah Parkinson,
. bag chair; .ages 11-.12
event.
w
..
Va.,
bean
aster
with chemical dependency problems. those who 'Wish to attend. For in for- sounded and they were 0 ff... as the Of the annual E
1
The .three-hour program is pre- mation about ·the program call the 56th annua I MI'ddl. epon Eas ter Egg . The Ft're Depanment has ·been group, Stra_ud Litle, Pomeroy, 26",
sented twice monthly to provide par- Meigs County Common Pleas Court Hunt commenced m front of a crowd active in the community Easter Egg . 10-speed btcycle.
~ of over 500 parents and chtldren.
hunt since the first event in 1939, and
ents with information to help them at 992-6439.

agen~.

56th annual egg h~unt ; attracts .
.more than 500 in Middleport
~

WITlUPPROVED CREDIT

,.

1995· BUICK REGAL

INTEGRATION-Integration of services
between Veterana Memorial Hospital and .the
Holzer :::nnlc 11 taking p~ce. R*dlologlats from
the Clinic are now vlsHing Vetsrana Memorial,
Monday through Friday, to perform dutiaa at

M~igs

·s

1992 BUICI

'L·

••

La! us copy your old family

36MC&gt;NTH LEASE- 36,000 ~ILES "':

1616 -Eastern AYIIel
falllpolls, 011
446·3672 or
1·800·521..0014

Snow tonight. Low ln 201. Tu11day, anow eholll ;
..... high In :JCM.

Suspect's trail traced to Californial

Per Mo.

Payment bised on $15;00.00 down or trade.
60 mo. cloaecl and lease. Laaaa doea not Include tax or tiUe
taea thru 6th Thh'd Bank - Qhlo relldenta only.

Kicker:
448453

'

•. ~

--

.

1'996 GUND AM SE COUPE

MSRP
$21,749

8212

a

FREE SERVICE OFFERED· Quality Farm and Fi'eet now offers. .
a free service .for Individuals who change their own oil, trans-. .
mission lubricant, and hydraulic oil, Anyone can bring up to five
gallons a day of th" used oil onto the ground or Into the sewer
system," said Jim Cozza; Automotlva Specialist at Farm and .
· Fleet. '.'the oil from a single oil changa can ruin a million gallons
of trash water, a year's supply for 50 II(IOple," he added. Man- ·
·agar Mark Jagello said this is just one. way Quality Farm and Fleet '
can help protect our environment Pictured Ia Jim Cozza.

WASHINGTON - The United national Airmail and Express Mail or ·
States Postal Service launched a new competitive time-definite services.
international product March 25 called
"Global Priority Mail."
Global Priority Mail was tested in
1995 in seven markets under .a different name, WORLD POST Priority
Letter.
Global Priority Mail offers international delivery to 27 countries in
Western Europe, the Pacific Rim, and
Canada.
· '
The service objective for Global
Priority Mail is that it is intended to
be delivered in four or five business
days. However, this service is not
guaranteed or time definite and does
not have tracking and tracing at this

'

Combined •••

!';:.-'

New product lau~ched
by U.S. Post~l Service

NEW 1996 CHEVY 4 DR. 4 WD BWER

Pick 4:

Unabomber may have·been seen in Sacramento
where last four bombs were
mailed
.
.

If the field tests in· the middle
By BUZMILL$
. GALLIPOLIS - With phosphorus . range (above critical soil test level),
and potassium fertilizer costs being a a maintenance level of added nutrilarge portion of a crop budget, now ents for the specific crop and yield
is the time to make hard core deci- level may be added by banding
sions on the amounts to apply to field beside the,row in cases of no-till and ·
/or planting into cold, damp soils.
crops.
,
.
.
Using a current soil test is the best Ot~erwise the nt~trients may be as
starting place. When the,~;oil is test- effective by broadcasting the nutriing in the low range in a particular ents.
nutrient and com or other row crop , A tield testing in the high range
is being planted, it may pay to add all . (above maintenance level) may be
or pan of this nutrient in .a band able to ~roduce the desired yield levbeside the 'row as a starter applic-a: el without an added nutrient(s). In
tion. By placing the nutrient close to these cases the soil test recommenthe seed the fertilizer a~ailability is dation will show t~is . Fields in this
e.nhanced. On non-row crops the fer- category m•y nl)t need to have a partility needs can be met by broadcast- ticular nutrient added for a year or
ing the fertilizer. On these low nutri- ll)Ore dependinll: on the soil test levent soils, the soil test will give a nutri- el, crop grown, and yield level. There .
ent build up over a four year period is no economic or yield gain by
to the "critical level". This is the lev- adding a nutrient that is in a!Jundant
el when the soil can provide ;ldequatc supply in the soil.
levels of a nutrient to support optiBuz MUls is technician ror the
mum economic growth of a panicu- Gallla County Soli &amp; Water Con·
lar crop.
servlition District. ·
·

!Ural community has a big job ahead
in educating the public about the
many challenges of providing a plen- time .
Competitively priced, this product
tiful, safe, and economical food supply, as demanded by American con- is positioned to fulfill c~stomer needs
by bridging the gap between Intersumers.

135

Spoeu,Page4

shall University.
Currently employed by the Gallia
County Local Schqql District, she
teaches students at'"'Hannan TtliCe
Elementary with teaming disabiljties.
Belville has been active in the
past by being president of both the
Gallipolis Business &amp; Professionltl
Women's Club and the Kiwanis
Club. of Gallipolis. She is also ' '
member of the Gallia County Local•
Education Association, the Ohio
Education Association and be
National Education Association i ·
Belville is looking forward to.a
career in real estate. She is plannigg
to work summers and weekends i8t
!his time.

·Nutrient management

New Pomeroy bait shop opens

flclc 3:
Super Lotto:
12·29 4o-43 44 46

Soil tests good place to start .

LIVE BAIT TQ GO - C.B. Kruscamp of Gallipolis offers a variety of live and dead fishing balta at hla new baH shop, C.B.'s Live
Bait To Go, at 243 West Main Street ln. Pomaro.y. Kruacamp displays an example of one of his Items, large goldfish.

Ohio Lottery

second game
In a row

.Gail Belville join_s
real estate staff-·

Local Angus
breeder
recognized

.

Indians win

Sundly,April7,1918

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Ple111nt, WV

lin I

'

Denver-an edge

.s9,500

,1990 CHRYSLER
FIFTH AVENUE

1993 FORD F150

· Showroom clean, only 54,000
· miles, local one o~ner. Mark Cross
Edition, gray with leather trim,

XLT Package, 29,000 low miles,
V-8 engine, a~omatlc, air cond.,
power windows.
.

.IXP.ICT TRI USTf

SHOWS T.LC.t

First Oklahoma bombing
hearing begins Tuesday

PICKUP
'

DENVER (AP) ·- As this city Ni~hols face tlit death penalty if conprepares for its ·first hearin,g in the victed of murder and conspiracy
· Oklahoma City bombing case Thes- charges in the April 19 Oklahoma
day, security is extending beyond City federal building bombing that
downtown's stone-and-glass federal killed 168 people and injured more
courthouse.
' than 500.
"' Police wary that anti-gov~rnmen!
U.S. District Judge Richard
groups may be drawn to the pro- · Matsch moved the trial here in Febceedings are teaching people in.busl- ruary, ruling an impartial jury could
nesses nearhy ·how to deal with sus- not be seated in Oklahoma.
picious packages, odd-looking letters
Since then, questions have rippled
and telephone threats.
through downtown Denver about
"I think there's a little bit of anx- seeurity, traffic and the impact on
iety around something of this mag- workers.
•
ni~." . said Dave BankS of U S
Last week, severai dozen business
West, which is housed in a 52-story representatives atte11&lt;!ed a seminar to
building near the courthouse. . · ·team how to handle lhreats and sus. The telecommunications giant is picious parcels:
adding security guards and taking . Nearly 80 news OI'JlaniZlltions ·
, other precautiOns. ·
have requested space in Mauch's ,
.• Tunqthy McVeigh antf' Terry 1BO:seat counroont
•

. I;GG HUNTERS AWARDED • Tile following
ware winners In the ~th ·annual Middleport·
Easter Egg Hunt, held Sunday attemoon at
Oen4nll Hartinger Park. Plcturad with mambarl
of the Middleport Fire Dapartlnent are, L to R:
1ha Eilster Iunny, with ages o-2 group winner

Casale Stswart; ages 3-5 group winner Michie!
Lee; ages 6-8 group winners Br•ndon Shull,
Bryon Haggy, and Kristen Trader; ages 9-10
group wlrinar Jeramlah..Parklnson; ages 11'12
group winner Streud Little. (Tom Hunter/Sentinel' .Photo)

Dan Rosten!lo-kl·

Sources reveal ·
plea deal struck
by former rep.
CHICAGO (AP)- Former U.S.
Rep. D~n Rostenkowski was expected to strike ·a plea deal this week limiting his sentence to t'7 months for a
corruption case that effectively ended his political career, according lo
news reports
In the deal, Rostenkowski would
plead guilty to two federal corruption
charges and pay a S100,000 fine ·
Newsweek magazine and Chicago'~
· WBBM-TV reported Sunday, citing
unidentified sources close to the
case.· ·
Ros,tenkowski, 68, a Chicago
Democrat wl\o lost his bid for reelection to a 19th term in November
1994, was charged in May of that
year with 17 felony counts alleging
he plundered nearly $700,0oo from
the 'government and had ghost
employees kick back paychecks to
his office.
He was charged with mail frau~,
. .tamJlCring with a witness, embezzling·
pubhc funds, concealing a material
fact, wire fraud and aiding and abetting.a crime.
The fonner chairman of the pow;
erful House Ways and Means Committee p~•ded innocent and denieJt
wrongdomg.
'

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