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'Page 10 • The Dilly S1ntlnel

..

:How much
will
.
it
take
tor
woman
to
~ealize
she's
being
duped?
.
Ann

Landers

By ANN LANDERS .
Dear Ann Landen;: 1' ve begun to
suspect that my husband is seeing
my friend, "Irene." When I got up
the courase to ask her what was
.going on with "Joe," she said, "It's
notlliJig sexual.''
I found out that Joe loaned her
•mone~ when she first moved here.
· He helped arrange for her teen-age

dauihler·to let toutlleting when the
girl had a serious drug problem. He
also helped the daughter buy a used
car. I wasn't told about these things
when t.hty happened. but word gets
around in a small town.
Joe is a quiet man. I never would
have suspected anything until he
started to become quite chatty, using
words and expressions that sounded
a lot like Irene. When I asked him
flat out if he had been getting together with her, he repl ied, "Irene is not
a pan or my life.''
· That's not the way itlooks'to me,
Ann. He says my imagination is
working ovenime. What do you
say? ·· Agonizing in Arizona
Dear Arizona: A man wh9 lodlls a

woman money behind his wife 's
back, IUTaiiJeS for the woman'S
daugllter to buy a c.r, helps her eet
counseling. and out or the blue picks
up the woman's speech patterns
looks guilty 10 me. Wake up- and
smell the coffee, dear.
Dear Ann Landen;: I'm writing to
suppon your position that all adoption records should remain scaled
except for medical information . And
with good reason.
My fin; I husband and I were in
the process of divorcing when I discovered I was pregnant We already
had a 3-year-old daughter, "Karen."
. My husband demanded that I abort
the baby. I refused. · ,
My parents oao,y-~at

I worktid. ~~- when die blby was pleased. Several times, X.fl,invit·
boln. I bad no choice but to put her eel Mary 10 go shopping, but she
in foster ure. I hoped 'it would be a always refused. When. I invited
temporary situation, but it was not ..I Mary to come to our home for din- ·I
was unable 10 provide for two chil- ner, her response was negative. She
dren and siped adoption papen was hostile and anpy. One da¥· she
when the blby was 7 months old.
lashed oui at me and screamed,
Ten years ago, I renwried. Last "You could have found a way to
June, Karen and I decided to sean:h keep me if you really wanted to! "
for her sister, who had just turned She resented Karen because she was
22. Karen had been told about not "aiven up...
"Mary" early on and wanted to
It became evident that our
meet her. ·
attempt~ 10 have a loving relationThe entire experience turned out ship with Mary were getting
,to be a disaster. Nothing we did nowhere. She was so abusive. both
pleased · Mary." For the. welcoming emotionally and verbally, that we
party in her honor, · we rented a decided irwould be best to sever aiJ
restaurant and invited her adoptive ties.
parents. She didn't seem at all
One never knows how the pen;on
. '

'
«

STUDENTS RECOGNIZED-:- Awards were presented to theae Intermediate students at Carleton
~ School by the staff members plc:tured. Left to right, they are front, Andy Lambert, Jennifer Gray, Del·
~ dra carleton, back, Ed Co;rart, personal care assistant, Justin Boyd, Sherry McCleary, Instructor,
~ Betty Smith, Instructional assletant, Billy Reesl!, Amy Davis, Jeaslca Simpkins, Trlcia Beer, reader
·:~

guide.

.

~ Carleton
~ students
~ recognized
Carleton School of Syracuse
·: reccndy held an awards ceremony 'cor
: students in the school age classe.s.
. The students were recognized for
: achievement in speech, physical ther: apy, adaptive physical education, and
: Q!"er special accomplishments.
· · Primary student receiving awards
:were Mark Bogard. most cheerful;
:Chris Edwards. class hot rod; Luke
: Lowery, hard worker; Mitchel Pow·cll, most kind; Ashley Roades, good
memory; Derrick Trimmer, creative
kid; and Nicki Wilson, superb readipg skills.
Intermediate students recognized
were Justin Boyd, niost cordial; Deidra Carleton, calendar skills and
attendance officer; Amy Jo Davis,
cyping and reading; Jennifer Gray.
using her liberator and best driver of
motorized wheelchair; Andy Lambert, best listener and most patient;
Bill Reese, math; and Jessica Simpkins, writing and classroom helper.
Transition .students receiving
awards were Mike Bissell, great
helper; Chris Lee, most cheerful;
Lonnie Roush, communication;
Allam Crouso, gaining independence;
Mike ,Bissell, reading; and Angel
~y. writing.

meetina 1111d special e.veots. The

calendar is not d riped "' pi"OipOte

sales or tund raisers or any type.
Items a"' printed as space permits
and cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
PRIMARY ACHIEVERS - These primary students were fee:.
ognlzed in an awards program at Carleton School. They are left
to right, front, Mark · Boggard and Chris Edwllrda, and back,
Mitchell Powell; Luke Lowery, and Nicki Wllaon :with Diana Ash,
Instructional aaslstant, left, and Kathy Stamm, Instructor.

TRANSinON CLASS ACHIEVERS - Recognized . aild presented awards during a recent awards assembly at carleton
School, Syracuse, were front, students, Angel Day and Aam
Crouao, back center, Chris Lee and Mike Blasell, with June
RadCliff,' left, ln.iltructor, and Pat Carson, Instructional assis·.
tent.

The Sentinel News .Hotline

992-2156

---01

D

To offer story suggestions,
report late-breaking news and
offer news tips

EXCLUSIVE EVENT
INVITATION!

· Notice Is hereby given that Communications
Buying Group, Inc. (CBG) has filed an
.application (Case No. 96-431-TP-ACE) ·with
·the Public Utilities Commisskm of Ohio for a
. certificate of public convenience and
nec~ssity to provide local and long distance
telecommunications services. CBG proposes to offer services throughout Ohio.
Any interested person, firm, corporation, or
entity wishing to ·intervene should fjle with
.· the Commission and serve on the applicant
a motion for intervention and .an
. accompanying memorandum in support on
or before July 8, 1996. Unl&amp;ss the
Commission receives a written motion to
. that effect and an accompanying request for
· ~n oral hearing In this matter, the case may
. be decided on the basis of the information
contained In the application and the
·affidavits submitted by the applicant. Further
Information may be obtained by contacting
the Public utilities Commission of Ohio, 180
Ea•t Broad Street, Columbus, Ohio 432153793•.

D '

purchase

whh CHERISHED

Clierislid tfetftfifS&amp; Cefebration
~ Saturday, ju1_1e 22ntf

.

astronaut. A former Buckeye Boys
The keynote speaker for this year
State representative, he was inducted was Randall Gardner, represe"tative
into the Boys State Hall of Fame. to the General Assembly. The com."
Other spe8ker5 included Gov. George mencement address was given by U.
Voinovich and Secretary of State'
Congressman Michael Oxley, also
a former Boy Staters.
RobenTaft.

s.

'

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Don,. Tate Motors. Inc.

.

308 East Main Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

Anniversary

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. 992-6491

DOI"TITIIIOTOIS, I.C. ·
IrS tNOR1H YOUR DRIVE/

cea

'.·,

' ,,

...

. . . ... .. ...
'

.

..

t:O:P

Carleton College scholarships .P-.A3

Detalle on
pegeA2

Low: 60a

•

tmts
Galltpolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • PI Pleasant • June 23, 1996

By KEVIN KELLY
•
Tlrnee-Seritlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The · independent candidacy of
Glenn.A. Smith has been put back into the hands of the
Gallia _!::ounty Board of Elections by Secretary of State
Robcn A. •Taft Jr.
~· The board, which deadlocked 2-2 on May 24 over
~ccepting Smith's petition to oppQse Democratic incum: bent County Engineer Joseph L. Leach this fall, has been
advised. by Taft to resolve its differences and schedule
another vote. ·
"Secretary Taft hilS stated repeatedly that tie votes are
appropriate when there is a legitimate question concerning the interpretation of election Jaws or when the law is
unclear," John F. Bender, Taft's chief elections counsel,
said in a letter that Elections Director . Jeff Halley
received Friday.
· :'However, when there is no legitimate legal question

Vol. 31, No. 20

Nonhups' contention, noting that
Smith had been a Republican voter
for many years and was ineligible to
run as an independent.
GOP members Connie Hemphill
and George Pope disagreed in their
vote to approve the petition, an!l
charged Jenkins and Rouse with
bias
toward Smith.
.
"While I respect the personalo
views of board memben; Rouse and!
and the law is clear, board members have a duty to put argument.
Sec:. of State Tefl Jenkins, there is no genuine issue in;
aside partisanship and follow the law, even if the law
He also detailed a 1980 court decision in another controven;y·with respect to, and no basis in law to deny~
• conflicts with their pen;onal views," Bender added.
elections dispute· that affinned an independent candidaTaft and Bender also upheld Smith's eligibility to run cy "does not mean that one is not a member of lt'politi: Mr. Smit!l's independent candidacy1" Bender said,•
"Therefore, at the direction of Secretary Taft, I am;
as an independent.
cal party.... Un(ler Ohio Jaw. any person, regardless of returning this tie vote 10 the ... board of elections for,
In local .elections board ties, the secretary of state party affiliation, may become an independent for elec- reconsideration in accordance with the guidance provid~
casts the deciding vote. Material relating to the vote. tion to office by timely filing the requisite nominating ed in this letter.,.
:
including explanations by the board members, were sub- petition ... " .
·
. The deadlock is the first in recent memory for Halley~
mitted to Taft on June 5.
Smith's independent c~ndidacy had been questioned who served •eight years as a board member before:
B~nder said the language of Ohio Revised Code Sec- in April by Harlan and James Northup of Gallipolis, who
becoming director in January, and Deputy Director
tion 3513.04 that governs candidate eligibility is clear had originally challenged his filing for the primary.
•Charlotte Seamon. who has worked for the board sincC:
. and does not prohibit Smith, who had previously filed in .
The Northups contended that Section 3513.04, com·
the; Marcil 19 Republican priitlary · for engineer and monly known as the "sore loser statute," prohibits a can- ·~~
"We're back to square one," Halley said. "The bo~
whose candidacy was invalidated by the board, from didate who had filed in the primary for running for office will have to meet again and take into considemtion wha!
running as' an independent.
·
the same year as an independent.
the secretary has advised them."
:
Bendet cited the Sweet vs. Hancock County Board of
After researching,the matter. Democratic board memHalley was contacting board members Friday and.
Elections decision of I 993 from the Third District Coun bers R. William Jenkins and Elaine B. Rouse voted · said another meeting would "hopefully" be set by thi~
of Appeals that dealt with a similar case to support his against accepting Smith's petition, agreeing with the week.

.

:

'Save the
battlefield'

SUNDAY Notebook

.

·May jobleas rates mixed In .sou!heastern Ohl()
GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment rates throughout southeastern Ohio
. counties registered a combination of modest increases and ·decreases in
May, according to figures released Friday by the Ohio Bureau of
·Employ~nt Services. ·
.· ·
·
· The jo~less rate in Gallia County -fell by 0.6 percen\ -.,~m 8.9 to
8.3 percent·- between April and May. According 10 the OBI:&gt;Ij, I ,200 of
. the cOiinty 's estimated workforce of 14,1 QO were ]~;~;
· ,, U~nt in.Meigs.Co.uaty j ncreased by

tlistorical society looks to public for _:
11e.lp ,in preserving 1{3uffington Island _:

&lt;I9.4 ..,....,.. :"'f~nl• ~ .,.fiodti(&gt;BES:figures
ty'~ ~.gptf!ft~lnbe~ ~qrkforce as ]!&gt;bless m May. .

• .. .
. Otfie.r regiol)~l f-lay Ufl.employ!Jlent rates (Aprtl percentages tn 'pat:entllesis)· 'were; Athens, 5.S (5.3) percent; Ja~~on, 7.1 (7.3) percent;
L&amp;Wt'enee. 6.1 (6.1).peicent; Scioto, 9.4 (9.2 ) percent; and, Vinton, 10.2
--·
·
•
~
(10.4) percent.
The counl)' and city rates jlre unadjusted, meaning they do. ~ot tal\e
·
"into account seasonal adjustmenis in employment.
The siatewide adjusted rate
for May was. 4.9 percent. The
U.S . adjusted rate was 5.6 percent.
..
Today'• ta...-Jieulht•'
Ohio Jobleu rate uJ) In May
14 Seetiolll· 144 hges
COLUMBUS (AP) -feople
C2
'
Calud&amp;n
_...,fHI...,'"----&gt;&lt;""---1 · whose jobs ended with the
Q•gUICds
school year . contributed· to a
DJ.B
slight
increase "in the state'~
. . .d
Cornia
unemployment
rate last month,
A4
EclltoriM!l!
the ()hio Bureau of Employment
Objtpariea
AS
Services said. •
Bl-8
SPOrts
The state's .qnemployment
increased to ·4.9 percent in
rate
A2
Weatber
May, up from 4.6 percent in
April, the bureau said Friday.
Columns
The nation ·s unemployment
rate last month was 5.6 percent.
_'_.,olllauc011
k"'Ap
11111d,.egUlloun_~Aa;14___ 1 . compared with 5.4 percent in
C1
April.
Bob Hpeflkh
TOUR HITS GALUPOUS - Meinbare of the Tour of Ohio profes"Ohio's
labor
market
slo""l bicycle group.IWipt through lha J!treets of downtown Gallipolis
Vilma pjhkg!a
C4
remained _relatively stable in
Satutday afternoon as part of the Holzer Clinic/Magic 101 Crlt(!rlum, the
JimSan!ls
Cl
May with very little change ip
annual, locally-sponsored cycling event. The Tour of Ohio, consisting
. B6
the number of working • of pro and Olymplcs·level cyclists, added Gallipolis this. year to Ita list
.SamWUson
Ohioans," ~id Debm Bowland, . of 12 cities where It competes In street races. The criterium Included
Ohio Valley Publisbina Co.
several other races for youths and cycling enthusiasts, In addition to a
OBES administrator.
62-mlle."racraitlon
. ride" through Gsllls County.

Good Morning

·TI IJ.e
l:ni'J'ronm
·
enf•
Suddenly a pivotal.
I
v
· election-year issue
(;I

1

1

1

Editor's Note: This 11 thl twelfth In a
_.ilea of Gannett News Service, Sunday
Times-sentinel articles entitled "Report
Card on An~Jrlcl," looking a crucial elec·
lion l11uea of thll election year.
·
GALLIPOLIS - When vote!§ handed the
coAgressi(?nal key~ to Republicans in 1994,
they issued a stem set of demands: Cut fed-,
eral·spending, cut taxes, balance the but;lget;
clean up your act, and get to work
on the nation's business without
all this
and petty

voters were
about the
environment; they certainly
didn't cast ballots based on
environmental concerns. lbe issue was not
pan of ihe Republican "Contract •With
America."
'
It didn't take long for newly empowered
Republicans to design a sweeping agenda to
ovetbaul many of the very environmental
laws that, polls show, Americans 'still accept
as being good, practical and successful.
Among the miscues: A Clean Water Act
that would destroy wedands; attempis to
~ripple the Environmental Protection
Ag~;ncy through budget cuts and policy,"riden;" that would have lied EPA's himds; ·an
unc:on,cer~ned

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10 Jt.M.-4 P.M.

•
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reception on the Lacosse field for .
MBA graduates and their guests and
a cocktai I party at the Hong Kong
Club in downtown Boston ' was
included in activities.

.

LEGAL NOTICE

. . .. . . ...

STEVE MUSSER

POMEROY •.' Meigs County VetRACINE ' - 27th •nnual Teaford erans Service Commission, 7:30p.m.
family reunion Saturday at Star Mill . Monday at the Veterans Service
Park in Racine. Dinner will served at Office: Mulbeiry Avenue. Pomeroy.
noon. Family members are to bring
articles for an auction and door
RUTLAND ·• Rutland Garden
prizes.
Club regular meeting Monday, I
p.m. at the home .of Margatei Bei~F
Weber.
· · "'
MONDAY

th

~onpi~eC1

HI: ..... to

Returns tie.-vote to local 'lection board with advisory to comply with law

Meig~ students attend
Bpys Stat~.
.
Three Meigs County juniors were
among 1400 at Bowling Green University last week for the 59th annual
American Legion Buckeye Boys
State.
· They were Terry S. Davis, son of
Terri and Larry HayiJFS, and Darrick
St. Clair, son of Gail and Mynle St.
Clair, both of Middlepon; Bill
frances, son of Bill and JoAnn Francis, Reedsville. Davis and St. Clair
will be senioos at Meigs High S.chool
this fall, while Frances will be a
senior at Eastern High School.
Buckeye Boys State is a workshop
in democracy where the studepts
campaign for offices, ·conduct an
·election, and function in the office to
which they are elected.
Ohio Supreme Court Chief Justice
Thomas Moyer administered the oath
of office to all state elected officials
during the inauguration ceremony.
Heading the list of outstanding
speakers was Lt. Col. Carl Waltz, an

Rent·• camp

Gall/a criterium
results :. pageB~
.
.

Taft's office finds 'no genuine issue.'
:w ith ·sm~th's independent candi.d acy

SATURDAY

.

Weekend
•
get-atitlaf1:

A Gannett Co. Newspaper

sity with a·degree in accounting and
manufac!Uring engineering . ~~ OU,
he was a Copeland Scholar, Corpo- ·
rate Leadership Fellow; President of
the Student Alumni Board, treasurer
of Beta Alpha Psi, member of the
Dean of Students' Council of Presidents and Was selected as the OUF
standing senior in his College and
was presented the Executive Master
of Business Administration AllRound Excellence A.ward.
Musser WjiS one of over 6,000
candidate~ who applied for the 800
MBA positions at Harvard:
Speakers at commencements
included Thomas S. Murphy, Harvard
MBAgradu~te, class of 1949, retired
CEO, Capital Citie5/ABC, Inc. A

s1

ln&lt;.,HJP

Send questlo111to Ann Landen.
Creaton Syndicate, 5777 )N. Cen·
tury Blvd., Suite 700, loll Angelos,
Calif. 90045

--Community calendar--The Community Caleodar is
published u a free service to nOll·
profit"groupa wlshlna 1o announce

Along the Rtver

who is " fO\Ind " is going to ~PQ!Id.
I rearet that we Died il The posilion
you've been takiq all these 'y..a,
Ann; is the correct one. •• Leanied
the turd Way
Dear Learned: Thanks for U,
validation. ! have taken a good many
4umps for my position on adoption
recoqls. It was .Justice Louis D.
Brandeis of the U.S. SuprelJIO Coun
whO said that the right most valued
by civilized men is the right to be let
alone.

Musser graduates from
Harvei(d University
Steven Alan Musser. son of John
and ·Dottie Musser, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, graduated from
Harvard University June 6 with a
Master of Business Administration
Degree·.
The two-day program marking ·
the 345th commencement program
included over 6,000 students from the
various colleges of the University.
Approximately 25.000 people attended. Mr. and Mrs. Musser and Dottie .
Sheets went from here.
.While at Harvard, Musser served
,as resident of the Student Christian
Fellowship, and was a member of the
Manufacturing-and Technology Club
and the Euf!!pean Business Club.
He is a graduate of Ohio Univer-

•

Frldlly, June 21, 1111

Pomeroy •Middleport, Ohio

·

•

Endangered Species· Act that critics said. ed $44,725 from the "n11tion's worst polwould consign suites of SJtCCies to elitinc- luters and the PACs friendly 'to them." The
tip~t; and flirtations wiill the National Park group claim&lt;;!~. the money was donated to
Service and speculation of a national park gain suppon for legislation changing the
fire sale,.
·
existing S.uperFund law.
The SuperFund is a federally-funded pro~ Tpday, after one of the most glari!lg miscalCulations by Republicans ,.in their 18 gram to j:JIIy for cleaning and reclaiming
nionths atthe'helm, the environment is huge, areas polluted by toxic waste.
a wedge issue that starkly separates scores of
"Instead of paying to clean up the lethal
oongressional candidates - including those · hazards they've created, the campanies
seelcing to represent Ohio's Sixth Congres- behind these PACs are putting their money
into campaign contributions in the hope that
sional District.
The League of Conservation Voters . Congress will let them off the hook and force
charged in a report released in March that taxpayers to bai I them out," said Citizen
Rep. Frflllk Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, has one Action spokesman Jim ·Lowe.
of "worsi environmental voting records" and
After such withering assaults by environgayc him a "zero" mting, the-groups lowest. mentalists, the Republican leadership admits
.
The Athens-~ Buckeye Forest Cou,n- they are severely mispositioned on an issue
cil has been higllly critical of C~means' that voten; took a5 an article of faith for a
,arnendmen' to the bill to fund the U.S. -~lor­ quarter of a century.
·est Service, which bars ·the Wayne National
Democ!'lltic and .Rep@lican polls. show
Fo~l from buying more land in thiee Ohio voten; fiJ'C now very interested in the envicounties. CrerfiC&amp;II~ claims fedQrallabd buys ronm~nt. A majority believe Republicans
have eroded the tax base that supports the want to undermine environmental and health ·
laws and maybe even start pawning national
counties' schools.
Another · consumer and environmetal parks. For the first time, many wiU cast their
adv'ocacy group, Citizen Action, has ballots based on environmental positions.
attacked Cremettns' acceptance of PAC
The first ominous sign for Republicans
money from "contributors linked to toxic came. in February when Rep. Ron Wyden
waste polluters."
· ·
became Oregon's first Democratic senator in
Citizen Action Charged Cremeans ac~eptContlni!H on paoe'A2 ·

.BY CHARLEI'f£ HOEFLICH
Tlmea·Sendnel Staff •
• '· . .• ·,
., ,
POMEROY - . WheJhcr Ohio's only Ci'vil War battle(teld is preserved or
loses its iniegrit~ through inappropriate development could bing~ on public
support for the Buffington Island site in eastern Meigs County.
That's the opinion of Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County His-'
· torical Society. the group spear- · · '''" ... ...,,•.,....,.... "
•· ·
• . heading a "~ve the battlefield" letTo get involved ...
ter Writing cdlnpaign tO the llhon I
Historical Preservation Office and
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
While there has always 'been
concern about preserving the site
and celebrating its location, the
matter gained prominence recently
when it was learned that a·sand and
gravel company was considering a
portion of the area for mining
operations. .
As explained by Parker, the bat·
,,, .
tlefield involves the entire Portland area. from Groundhog Creek to above :
Wells Run because it was a "running battle" with Union forces not only on::
land but in the river. She said that about 2,000 Confederate cavalrymen and; ·
8,000 Union soldiers, either on the river in gunboats or on foot as infantry-;:
men, participated.
Because Buffington Island was a running battle, Parker explained that ii
is very difficult to define a specific location where the main battle occurred
or to establish a small area to be preserved.
Carlos R. Rivera, a military e~pert with the "Ohio Historical Society, who
was in Meigs County on M~y 31 for a meeting about preserving the battle
· site, said at that tinie that it would be very difficult to detennine where the'.
main battle occurred, although he said a proposed archaeological study
should uncover the "hot spots ."
.:
At that May meeting representatives of The Shelly Company and
Richards and Son, Inc., which owns over 600 acres and has additionaL
Continued an page A2
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MICH.

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ITollldo I 78" I
IND.

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• IColumbus !Ill• I

W. VA.

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cities.

...

' •:Sho'll!fNfl T-•tonno ,..,

Rurriel

Ice

Sunz Pt. Cloud)' Cloud)'

pry, somewhat cooler day
predi.cted for area Sund~y
By. The Associated Press

with low temperatures in the 60s.
,, The National Weather Service More showers and thunderstorms
Sl~..dry weather will continue across
are likely Mondaywith temperatures
Ohio on Sunday with partly sunny warn»ng into the mid 80s.
skies. There will be a slight chance of
Showers and thunderstorms
a passing shower for southwest Ohio. moved across Ohio early Saturday
It·will be much less humid with highs · afternoon in advance of a c.old front
. ranging from the 70s in-the nonh to dropping southward from Lake Erie.
the 80s in the south.
As the front continues moving across
By Sunday night, showers and the state, the dew points will graduthunderstorms will return to the state ally drop off.

Voinovich: Central State's
problems
were c~vered up
.
•·

'·

. :·COLUMBUS (AP) - Gov.
George Voinovioh said Friday he is
SrJpalled by co11ditio 0s at Central
s'tli'te University, and he accused
. sc,!tool officials o( hiding problems.
' "Somebody has .done a pretty
.good job of covering up over there,"
'Voinovich told the Dayton Daily
Ne;ws for a story published Saturday.
. ' Voinovich also said deteriorating
~i,dings and declining enrollment
mkr foree the state to end Central
State's status a$ a four-year universi·
ty.....

,; ~'That's an option,
f~\the (Ohio Board

. "'

but I'm wruting

She said·she can understand how
the governor and legislators could
watch a videotape of building conditions and· conclude that state funds
were not being used appropriately.
With 2,500 students, Central State
is Ohio's only state-supported; historically black university. The school
has laid off teachers and campus
workers to reduce its budget deficit
of up to $6 million.

Environment

Clinton said he has w•tched the
revitalization of Cleveland and
praised Mayor Michael ' White for
attracting new busioesses, and
decreasing the crime rate.
"I've seen this remarkable cily 's
turnaround under your leadership
with pannerships of private sector
and the enom)ous spirit of the people," he said to White.
·As he closed the speech, Clinton
told the mayors they must not let their
citizens feel hopeless against fighting
crime. He pointed to a 12 percebl
drop in Cleveland's murd.er rate in the
last two years and said the trend is
continuing nationwide.
However, he said, crime is still a
problem !lnd citizens have to feel they
can do something about it.
" I want the folks back home to

~gme

••

Battlefield

Bloodmobile plans Thu,..day stop
PALLIPOLIS -As vac1tlons, school lnaks and outdoor activities
JI!Uitiply during the s~mrncr, the Red Cross finds it challenging to prov!de an ~uale, readily 1vailable blood supply for patients in area hospttals.
The Red Cross Bloodmobile will be in Gallipolis at St. Peter's Episcopal Church, 541 Second Ave., on Thursday from II :30 1.m. until6 p.m.
to help replenish blood supplies.
.
R~ Cross officials said the dernat~d for blood continues to .be high,
espectally for type 0 positive and 0 negative, the universal blood type.
. To be eligible to give.blf&gt;?&lt;J, donors must be 17 years old, weight at
least 110 pounds and be m generally good health. For more informaiion
on eligibility requirements, call the Red Cross toll-free at 1.800-344-6603.

CAA closes·door oh clothing bank

· CHES~Rii- Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency will no Ionge(
be operaiing the free clothing blink at CAA headquarters in Cheshire.
Those wishing to donate clothing ,should select another charitable Of8anizalion, Executive Director Sidney ElJwards said. .

Are' school wins Venture grant
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande Elementary School has been chosen
from a field of more thin 600 schools to receive a Venture Capital School
grant. State Schools Superintendent John M. Goff sai8. ·
Receipt of the grant was the result of a year of planning and grant writing by the school staff. The school will receive S125,000, or $25,000 over
the nextfivc years, to implement program inprovements and professional development.
·
·
·
.
"As one of Ohio's Venture Schools, Rio Grande Elementary has the
potential to powerfully influence thousands of schools statewide.and many
others nationally that will be watching and learning from your community's school improvement effons," Goff said in a communication to Rio
Grande J'rincipal Mike Perry.
"We believe the work you do.with your Ventut:e Capital grant has .every
promise of stimulating and sustaining a long-term focus on improving
teaching and learning in your school," Goff added.
·

MEETING THE MAYORS- Prasldent (:linton epoke wftl} Whlta
House Deputy Chief ot Staff Herold lckll Saturdly at Hopldn1 Air·
port In Clevellnd upon their arrival tor the U.S. Conference of
Meyors. Senate Clinton pledged ravltaiiZIItlon funding for the
nation's chles it the conference while a Rapubllcan "truth,. squad"
debated his record outside the meeting. (AP)
·
to be in Ohio on Tuesday.
bar protesting the· Defense of Mar"The first event after he resigned riage Act. which allows state.s the
from !he Senate, he picked Ohio," authority to not recognize 'arne sex
Ohio GOP spokesman Brett Buerck marriages. The measure is expected
said, defending Dole's decision to to be signed by Clinton.
pass on the conference. "That shows
Officers grabbed Drucilla Neely 1
how imponant Ohio is in the election. of Akron as she was running ·along
Bob Dole knows he must win Ohio the sidewalk with the motor pool
to win the White House.''
)lolding a handout from a gro,up
Clinton later stopped at a sports called "Thumbs. Up." The group is
bar in suburban Lakewood, where he against alcohol advenisements aimed
at children.
was greeted by several groups.
She criticized Clinton for visiting
About a dozen people waved
signs and stood outside the Slam Jam a' spans bar. .

DARE programs plait poo,l party
GALLIPOLIS - · A pool pany at the Gallipolis Municipal Pool lup;
been scheduled by the DARE programs of the Gallipolis City and Gallia
County Local Schools on Friday, June 28 from 8-10 p.m.
.· The pany, scheduled in conjunction with the Gallipolis Recreation
Depanment, is open to students in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades in both
school districts.
Admission wHI be charged and the concession stand will be open.

Drivers ticketed following accident

But at congressional hearings this
WASHINGTON (AP)- A judi- collected some 480 FBI background that's happened, and ... the administr.ation
h8S
taken
appropriate
steps
to
files
in
late
1993
and
1994,
many
of
week,
Richard Miller, assistant direccial panel is authorizing Whitewater
make
sure
a
mistake
like
this
doe~n
't
tor for protective opetations at the
prosecutor Kenneth Starr to look into them of past Republican appointees ..
· . · ~ecret Service, saiQ the agency keeps
A preliminary FBI review deter- happen again," he said. ·
whe!her any laws were broken when
The incident has become politi- its list of White House pass holders
the Clinton administration received mined that at least 407 of the requests
cally
charged because most .of the for- up to date and he had no idea how the
were
unjustified.
II
said
the
episode
FBI files on former White House
mer
White
House employees whose file fiasco occurred.
amounted
to
"egregious
violations
of
·
employees.
Miller said the Secret Service
In an order released Friday, three privacy." The WhiteHouse has said FBI files were obtained by Marceca
judges on the U.S. Court of Appeals it was a simple.bureaucratic blunder. worked for the Reagan and Bush updates at least monthly its computFriday's court order said the Sll"- administrations. ·
for the District of Columbia Circuit
erized list of 24,000 names, which
White House officials have said clearly indicates who still has access .
cial
prosecutor will "have jurisdicgranted Attorney General 1anet
Reno's l'equest 10 expand Starr's tion and authority to seek indictments the list used I!&gt; obtain files is believed to the White Ho115e and who no ·
to have come from the Secret Ser- longer dat;s.
jurisdicti!&gt;D to include the ·controver- and to prosecute" the case.
The order specifically cited as a vice.
'
sy.
target
.
of
Starr,'S
scrutiny
Anthony
The order authorizes Starr to
investigate whether anyone- acted Marceca, the Army criminal investiimproperly in asking the FBI for gator who said he relied on an out·
background files of people who had dated Secret ServiCe list in request'
worked in the White House previ- ing the files from the FBI.
ously.
Statr now has the authority to
·Starr also will try to determine . investigate ·whether Marceca, who
whether anyone tried to cover up or worked for the White House office of
obstruct investigators probing the personnel security from August 1993 ·
events thill led up• to the Clinton to February 1994, was telling the
White House receiving at least 407 truth when he made that statement.
backgrount;l files from the ~eagan ­
· Marceca was brought to the While
Bush era.
House by personnel security chief
The controversy erupted two Craig Livingstone, who was placed
weeks ago with revelations that an on paid leave this week because of
TWIN SIZE - SAVE $80
Army civilian employee detailed to the controversy.
the White House had asked for and
"TJ\e inde!iendent counsel shall
95 -.pe.
-only
have jurisdiction and authority to
s,..111111
S2ot.ts
investigate crimes ... any obstruction .
of the due administration of justice,
POSTUREPEDIC.
or any material :false testimony 0~
FIR~~ Stt,$399.95
statement in violation of feder:tl
Sltf Stt $449.95
CADMUS - A garage housing criiT!inallaw, arising out of his inves- •
an auto repair shop at 1645 Woodside ligation of the matter described
Drive was destroyed by fire Saturday, above," the coun's order said.
Rio Grande Volunteer Fire DepanLivingstone told ABC News on
ment officials said.
Friday that he was cooperating with
~
The sh.op was owned by Kenny investigators.
'•
"I have been deposed for many
Bloomer, whom Fire Chief Bob
Brandeberry said was using cleaning hours. and I will continue to appear
solutions on transmission parts as requested. It's an unfonunatc thing
"around 10:30 a.m. when vapors from .
ihc solutions came into contact with
--------------~----..,..----.---.,
a trouble light and sparkect a fire. · ,
Rio Grande dispatched three
trucks and aboutl2 firefighters to the
scene, Brandeberry said. Bloomer
was apparently not injured in the .
blaze and Brandebeiry said the fire
would probably be ruled accidental.
Funher details were unavailable
•
before prcsstime.

...

.•129

Blaze destroys
auto repair shop

a-.

r----------·;· .

GALLIPOLIS- Two drivers were cited following a two-vehicle accident Friday on Q&gt;unty Road 10 (Centenary), the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
Stale Highway Patrol reponed.
Troopers said a,pickup truck driven by James R. Sarrett, 85,:416 Hedgewood Drive, was southbound, four-tenths of a !llile south.of State Route
588, at 10:45 a.m,. when he turned left into a private drive and collided
• with a nortllbound cliJ'. driven by Jacob W. Venters, 17, 7936 SR 588, Gallipolis.
Damage was moderate to both vehicles. Sarrell was cited for failure
to yield and Venters was ticketed for no seatbelt.

Theft reports under Investigation
GALLIPOLIS - Authorities an: investigating two theft complaints
filed Friday, including; ·
,
•Irene Bosley, 123 1Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, who informed·Gallipolis
• City Police that generic pills were removed from her residence sometime
Thursday by .unknown persons.
• Tom Lyon, 8776 SR 775, Patriot, who informed the. Gallia County
Sheriff's Department that·an antique thermometer hanging from the exterior of the store he formerly operated was stolen sometime earlier this
month.
·
.. .
·

Pa.trol puts Columbus man in jail .

;
,.
:
"
•
&lt;·

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia-Meigs PQst of the State Highway Patrol
lodge:! a Columbus man in the Gallia County Jail early Saturday on two
charges.
John W. Huckleberry; 33, was ticketed for speeding and drug abuse,
'according to jail records.
Cited by Gallipolis City Police early. Saturday was Kenora L Casta,
20, 180 Deenie Drive, Bidwell, slop sign violation. Cited by officers Friday were Jamie J. Bowers, 28,40-1 Second Ave., Gallipolis, failure to display, and W.anda L. Wray, 2S, 415 Ball Run Road, Bidwell, failure to yield.

Suspect arrested In South Carolina

POMEROY- A 34-year-old man wanted in Meigs County on charges
• stemming from a I 994 aggravated burglaiy and arson attempt has been
.. captured b¥ authorities in Summersville, S.C., Meigs Sheriff James M.
Soulsby said.
According to South Carolina authorities, Robin Slater was captured
after ~e allegedly assaulted an officer and attempted to nee on foot.
Slater reponedly gave officers a false name after being taken to a local
hospital for treatment. Officers returned later to question Slater, who then
allegedly attempted to escape by throwing a chair at a hospital window.
After the window failed to break, Slater allegedly then assaulted four
officers.
Slater-is also wanted in Franklin County on an aggravated trafficking
charge, and in North Carolina on charges of fire bombing and failure to
sto for an officer.

And with it comes
the-"terrible two's ..
and many bumps
and boo-boos!
Call the· ·

HOLZER
HEALTH
HOTLINE ·

(USPS !25-110)

Publiahcd each Sunday. _82.5 Third Ave.,
GaiHpoli~ Qt,io, by lhe Qhio Valley PublisiUq
Company/Oannett Co .. Second c:1au ~
paid at Oallipolia, Ohio .. $631 . Entered ••
lt!COf'ld cla.u lfllililiJ maner at Pomeroy. Ohio.

,
·'

~tOtlitZ .

~btr: The Auocialed Preu..Md lhe Ollio
Newspaper AUOC'Iation.
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and ~peak
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8 a.m. ~o 11 :30 p.m.

No aubtc:ripltons by ~il permitted in ' orca~
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The Suflday nrnes-Sendnel will not be mponaibM. fpr advance paymcniJ mode 10 ~

llollj .... s...ro,

MAIL SIJISCRIPTIONS

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!

, Check wi.th your physician about medications

'

•

'I

I

•hgi'J'3

••

• •'
'•

•

'

''

...

8Y TOM HUNTER
reserve plate, accordins to Maison .
Times Senllnel Swtf
· Special computer terminals have
POMEROY- Vehicles on Ohio's been added to all local license agenh,ighways will begin to have a new cies to allow vehicle owners to perlook beginning in August, with the sonally choose a- v~ity or initial
official introduction of the state's new reserve ·plate.
license plate design by the Ohio
"An owner can sit down at the ter·
Bureau of Motor Vehicle.
·
min-.1,.along with the help of a speThe new "Gold Series" plates are ' cially aesigned catalog, anc:t choose
currently being issued in the design their new plates from a listing of
plates and vanity personalized plates, available personalized, or reserve
·
·
with all stock plates to be distributed plates," said Maison.
in the new design beginning Aug. 2
Once the owner makes a plate
at all 214 local license agencies, · selection and pays for !be plates at the
according to Meigs County BMV l.ocal agency, the plate is ordered
Deputy Registrar Sue Maison.
direct from the manufacturer that day
The new design is'll.lhile at the lop, and is then sent to the owner's home
stamped with the state slogan "Ohio, address. The new system has ~uced
the heari of it all, " and makes a slow the waiting time for a personalized
color · fade into a reflec!lve gold plate order from 6-8 weeks to 5-10
across the bottom of the plate.
·
working days, according to Maison.
Vehicle owners will have the
The popularity of special plates is
option to keep their existing plates or one of the main reasons for the implereplace them with the new Gold mentation of the new customer orderSeries plates at a cost of $8 . All vehi- ing system for plates. A recent study
cle classifications will use the Gold by the State Bureau of Motor Vehi·
Series design plates, according lo cles indicated that 30 percent of•those
Maison.
surveyed.are interested in purchasing
Another major plate design a special plate.
change is the resizing of letters and ,
Nearly 100 different special plates
numbers on the plates for the addition are currently available througp the
of a· seventh character to all state BMV, including Lake Erie, Scenic
plates. Stock plate numbers will now Rivers, Pro Football Hall of Fame,
feature three letters followed by four Collegiate, Military Reserve, and
· digits, while motorist seeking per- Military Combat plates, according te
sonalized· p!ates may have up to sev- Maiso.n. Each one of these plates can
en characters on a vanity plate or be purchased as a personalized or
three . or fewer characters on an reserve plate.

'.

•,
•

' .

t ~ Jllp,!!,,.U:1Irior.iilil~

·'·- ....

:

... --~---- .

,_

-..

.

NEW OHIO PLATES- The,_ Ohio Gold Series licanM pllteJ
are now avalleble to motoriet purcheelng epeclll plates, such 11
the Pro Footblll Hall ot Feme platee, top plate. The new design,
a white end gold sunburst design, will be avalllble on 111 stock
plates, bottom plate, beginning Aug. 2, according to Meigs County BMV Deputy Registrar Sua Maleon. The deelgn chenge end
Increase to seven chii'ICterl per plate mark• the biggest c!ulnge
In the state'a license pletes In nearlv 15 Y!lra.
COsts for special plates range
from an additional S10 for initial
reserve to $35 for personalized plates.
Special plates charges range from
$10 to $50, in addition to regular
vehicle registration fees. The basic
costs for a standard license plate is
$20 plus any local tax fees .
To better accommodate vehicle
. owners and motorists, the Meigs
County License Bureau is revising its
hours and adding a toll-free telephone
line for license information, accord-

••

ing to Maison.
. ~
The Mulberry Avenue offices n;w
hours will be 8 a.rn.-5 p.m. Mon~
through Friday; 8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.·O.
Thesdays; and 8 a;m.-noon on Saturdays, effective July I. Other I~·
ageneies across the state are currently revising their hours to better set¥e.
the -public, according to State B~·
Registrar Mitc~ll !· Brown.. .• :.,
The new toll-free telephone num-.
ber for the Meigs County Licensai
Bureau is 1-800-225-5961.
, ·•

Carleton College trustees vote to award scholarships
SYRACUSE- Carl]:ton College
trustees voted to award up IO $3,200
jn..college sc~olarships for the 199697.school. term when the 131 st annual me~g of the board was held last .
weeR.
'\
' ,There are 20 applicants for scholarships, it was announced. Applicants
must be legal residents of Syracuse to
be considered. •
In other activity, officers were reelected, ~even members were
renamed ·to tbe board, a replacement
was elected for an unexpired term

and afive-member scholarship selection committee was selected .
Roben Wingett was re-elected
president; Carroll Norris, vice pre sident; John Lisle, secretary; an&lt;l
Kathryn Crow, treasurer.
Renamed to new three-year.terms
on the 21-member board of trustees
were Carl B. Weese, Brooks Sayre,
Corbett L. Patterson, June Lee, Carroll Norris, Milton Varian and
Kathryn Crow. ,Fred Crow III was
elected to fill an unexpired term ere·
ated by the death of his father, Fred

Crow Jr., since the previous annual
meeting.
A moment of silent prayer was
held in rememberance of Crow, who
served as board president for several
years.
•
Board of trustees members named
to serve on the scholarship selection
committee were Varian, ·wingett,
Norris, Lisle and Larry Ebetsbach.
The committee will meet July 18.
li was decided that beginning
next year, new applicants for schol-

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks

arships will be given awards a mai-imum of two years.
••·
Board member Don Houdash;_Lt .
was recognized by the trustees fat
assistance to the scholarship program;
and the balance of all funds of the
board was reponed at $36,633. ·
Other board members present,''11,1 '
addition to those .previously namC.31:
were Emmogene Hamilton, 1aniFe
Zwilling, Larry Fields, John Bentley
and Rick Ash. ·
·
. ,.

CHICK Til

.- '

.

fOR Ill YOIR

totaled · ~:::=====================::~

By The Associated Prees
Sales in Buckeye 5
· The following numbers were $403,475.
selected in Friday's Ohio and West
The jackpot for Saturday '.s Super
Yirginia lotteries :
Lotto drawing was $30 million.
OHIO
WEST VIRGINIA
Pick 3: 6-6-3
Daily 3: 2-S'-6
Pick 4; 6-3-6-7
Daily 4: 2-9-9-9
Buckeye'S; 1-2-11-12- 19
Cash 25: 1-4-7-15-20.22
There were three 1ickets sold namiQg all five numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and each
winning ticket is wonh $100.000, the
Ohio Lottery said.
The winning tickets were purchased .at· Girard Sparkle Market in ·
Girard, Don's IGA in Chillicothe and
Van's Market in Columbus .
There were 188 Buckeye 5 tickets
with four of the numbers, and each is
worth $250. The 5, 707 tickets showing three of the numbers are each
wonh $10, and the 52,928 tickets
showing two of the numbers are each .
worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
$337,239.50 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales in
Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis
Pick'3 Numbers totaled $1,426,389.
In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers
players
wagered
$355,339.50 and will share $109,000.

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A SwiUner's Day Crossword Puzzle

OQ

SALES • RENTALS· • REPAIRS

aI •

G':LL.IPOLIS -A ..vinas ~~:eouatto meet the expenses in a local
youth s kidney trwtsplant hu ~n established at Ohio Valley Bank.
~as Gardner's oper.tion is set for July 16. Anyone wishing to make
• donatton can do so at any branch of the hult.
·

Whitewater prosecutor to ·look into files flap

Continued from page A1
of), Regents to
back with a proposal," 33 years by defeating Republican
_Gordon Smith i~ an election driven
v_,i,.ovich said.
c: Regents and other state officials by environmental issues.
tOured the university in Wilberforce
"All .the polls show that people
o~ Thursday: They found broken fur- ca~e." former Interior ~cretary Stun~lire, peeling paint, leaky pipe~ and an Udall told a. recent League of
s~fllrig heat in the dormitories.
Conservation Voters meeting . "This
·, Voinovich watched a ponion of a election is a critical election for both
villeotape abOut conditions. He said politico~ panics."
h~ was' surprised that university
"The environment has the potentrltstees had not told him about the
tial
to become a major wedge issue
problems.
in
the
presidential elections; it
~ Central State trustees, in a retreat
already is in congressional eleci~Colurnbus orl Friday, denied that
tions," said Democratic pollster
p~blems were hidden.
·
Celinda
Lake. She said Ross Perot
"There
ha5
.
ne~er
been
a
cover1
supponers
are notorious for voting
u~," . Tru!i,t.ee Jacqueline Souel the
enviro·nment.
~wney satd.
• She said the regents' staff travels
The environment also confronts
tO:Campus each year to help prepare Republicans with ·a yawning gender
~ommendat(ons for the capital budgap. And with the youth vote g~. and "they have access to all
those under 25 rank the environment
buildings."
.
as
their biggest concern after educa•
tion
costs, accordin~ to Democratic
•
rollster Stan Greenberg.
"Voters out there are feeling
very.
very abandoned by the govern·
•
: . Continued from page_A1
ment when it comes to environmen~
.:seage leased in the Portland area tal' policy," League President Deb
f~ 'sand and gravel mining purpos- Callahan said in announcing her
e~ had asked for identification . of .group's most ambitious plans to
t~ main bauleficld area.
replace "unfriendly " lawmakers
~The mining company representawith a greener crop.
tu:&amp; said ·at that time the goal is to
Some wonder now if it's too late
~a permit.fcir the loading facility
to change the Republican image.
•
by December and to lie in
through legislation, or whether all
o~ration soon after that. Russ
these issues will be handed to
Si{oll, Ohio Depanment of Mine· Democratic campaigns. .·
~lamation, was also at that meetinf. and talked about permit and
rQsl:!mation requirements.
.
:•that time frame creates some
ut@~ncy in gelling leuers of support
foj: the baulefield -preservation to the
aiJ&gt;ropriate agencies, said Parker. ·
.: "We need to remember the sacrifi~ that was made at the Battle of
B\lffingion Island, just . as we
remember the sacrifices made at
Genysburg or Vicksburg, and the
miiny other battle$ of the Civil War.
,
"Because, here on Meigs
NOII'ITAL
MTIINT Ll"l
WNIIL OMAIIII
OKYQIM
CQunty, Ohio soi!. just as on the soil
COMPLETE HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPLIES
o~ Gettysl!urs. men's blood freely
fiQwed as tlley fought and died for
tltjlir beliefs. .
• "On the Civil War haulefield at
FREE DEUVERY &amp; SEr-UP ......---;..,
Penland, in unmarked graves, lie the
• HOSPITAL BEDS . MEDICARE
relnains of soldiers killed during the
HOME
B+ttle of Buffington Island."
• WHEEL CHAIRS
MEDICAID
OXYGEN
t Parker stressed her concern abdut
• LIFf CHAIRS
PRNATE INSURANCE
24-HOUI
in~ppropriate development of · tl)e
EMERGENCY
• BATHROOM AIDS OWNED &amp; OPERATED
baatleficld site.
.
.
SERVICE
. LOCALLY BY
j She said there is support for the • NEBULIZERS
IESPIIIATORY
prJiervation from some national,
• STAIR GLIDES
1HE BOWMAN FAMILY
st6(e ·and local officials,, and
I \I h •II\
aped for Meigs Countians to get
1. \II 11'011•
I HI I 11: I I
iniOlvcd in the effort to preserve
~:~(I ~ I;: I
I I f I :- ..! : : ~
I :: 1111 I -,:: t ,; : I I
B~n~ton !Bland, Ohio's only Civil
Wilt site. ·
'

know that we can do something
about crime."
He said he has directed Attorney
General Janel Reno to come up with
a plan within 60 days that would
develop a national sex offender registration system. The system would
allow police to share information
about sex offenders in their communities with police in all 50 states.
"We 'II never eliminate crime frpm
Cleveland and America, but we can
go back to a time when it was the
exception, not a rule," he said.
Republican Mayor Jerry Wrighl
from West Valley City, Utah, said
overall. he believes Clinton has
helped the cities, but he wan15 to see
more action rather than hear talk.
"On sotne things, he has been
willfully lacking," he said, noting
Clinton's support of welfare reforms
that he later vetoed.
U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine, R-Ohio,
warned against Clinton's latest
promises. He recalled several previous · pled'ges not kept. inch1ding
promises to not raise middle-class
taxes, to provide cities with I00,000
police officers and to bring health
care costs in line with inflation.
"As Bill Clinton opens his bag of
election-year claims and promises,
we should comp_are his rhetoric with
his actual record," De Wine said.
Bob Dole, .the Republican presidential candidate, passed on an iilvi.talion to attend the conference, but
his presence was known. The pany's
"truth squad" campaigned across
the :;treet for Dole, who is scheduled

•

.....Tri-County Briefs: ...... 'Gold Series' plates
Ai:count ut up for youth'• operation
offering a new look
for residents' autos

President promises
revitalization funds
to nation's mayors
By JACQUI PODZIUS-COOK
Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND-PresidentCiinton pledged Saturday to help'Cieveland and other urban areas redevelop
their abandoned industrial siies.
Clinton has asked Congress for $2
billion in incentives for redevelopment of the sites, or brown fields.
"This one thing could do as much
to bring jobs back to urban America
as any o!ber thing we talk about or
want.-" said Clinton, who spoke at the
U.S. Conference of Mayors.
"And I want you, regardless of
your pany to help me get this passed
in Congress," he-told about 250 mayors and about 200 of their staff officials from the nation's 1,050 largest

Pomeroy • .lddl1port • o.lllpolla, OH • Point Ptn••nt. WV

Sunclly, June 23,1111

Sllndly, June 23, 1886

.

conditions and high lemperatures

.~

•

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • o.lllpolla, OH • Point Pl1111nt, WV
OHIO Weather

..

13-..................................................$29 .~

26 . '2 -

................................................ $56.68
..... ..................... ........ ..... ......$109.12

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25. Sen. Kennedy

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4.Peacases
5. Great anger

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8. Umpire
9. Allude to
13. Organ of
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15. GroW weary

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17. Prepare
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19. Messy place
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SUnct.y, June 23,
'

1,

~

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publl•her
M11tgaret Ullew
Controller

Hobart WIIIIOII Jr.
Executive Editor

ro_,.,-

Lettoro Ia llle ediiDr .,.. • • ' -· -nr.y •hould 1M 111M 300 III/Onh.
. A/1/enwa.,.. •ubJ-ct
m•t h aJo:ted- lndude. and twt.ph- number. No UM/gnfld 111111-. will h pub/,.._. L , _
should h In good rutw, eddla../nfl ,...,.., not ,.,._Nu...

' process gi•··
enforcement cues thai drq on for ' ibility to the electoral
end JAN MOLLER
yem lind yeers that I fear that the ing the FEC the tools it needs to clq
WASHINGTON -'- One year
.
FBC isllllki01 criminals out of hon- its job.
OVERHEARD- Jolwo Glenn,O.,
after President Clinton and House
est people, while it does II()( effec·
Ohio, has been a presidential candi~
Speaker Newt Gingrich agreed to
lively deter the serious offender."
What's needed is a stronger, 1101 a date llld a U.S. senator for more than
work toward campaign finance
refonn, the verdict from Washingweaker, enforcement ann. Only by 20 years. Yet he's conslandy remind·
ton's political class is clear: Trust I!S.
giving the FEC the tools it needs to ed that these achievements are mere!
be an effeclive policeman will can- ly secondary in the eyes of some
More than two decades after it was
.
created, the Federal Election Comdidates be compelled to follow the admirers.
A recent Thesday aftemoiln found
rules of disclosure. And that, unfor·
mission still lacks the funding and
support tbat it needs to do an effec· it doesn't want to interfere until tl!nMely, can only be done with an Glenn in a Senate hallway explaining,
the budget process and other politi:
live job. The agency, which is sup- then.
. increased budcet.
cal
issi!Cs to a grolip of Ohio schooli.
In smaller races, the vioi.Uons can
This week the Senate will take yet
posed lq enforce federal campaign
floor was
laws and collect financial inform.uoo be even more egre1ious. Rep. Enid all()(her slab at reforming a campaign children. But when the
.
the stu,.
••
on candidates, is facing a budget Greene, R-Utah, is resigning her seat finance system thai most lawmakers t11med over for qi!CsUons,
crunch that could be good news for a£ter 858 violations of campaign privately admit they hate. A bipani- clents had one thing an their minds!
candidates who are skirting financial finance law were revealed from her san bill by Sens. Jobn McCain, R· Glenn's cari:er as an astronaut.
Graciously, Glenn explained thf.
1994 campaign. Greene blames .the Ariz., R111s Feingold, ~ Wis., and·
disclosure rules.
A House committee recently vot· whole ordeal on her estranged hus- Fred Thompson, R-Tenn., will come perils and thrills of his flights into'
ed to freeze the agency's fundi~g at band.
to the floor with endangered space, which were chronicled in lhtji
Some lawmakers have branded prospeciS. The House will look at movie "The Right Stuff." He even
the FEC as an agency run amok. similar measures durinl "reform gave his st.amp of appro•alto anoth·
of the FEC budget, enforcement and House Appropriations Chairman Bob . week," scheduled to take place in er mo•ie, "Apollo 13," which hq
called a "•ery accurate" portrayal of
disclosure spending would drop Livingston, R-La., recently summed July.
up the feelings that many members
space
travel.
If the past is any guide, these
have about the agency:
· efforts produce brave words but very
(JarkAndenon amcl Jan Molter.
"The FEC has spun Ol!l so many small ·results. Yet Congress can still are columnists for United Feature
dle of what the FEC estimates will be
the most costly election cycle ever. . regul.ations and conducted so many · take a big step toward restoring cred- Syndicate.)
1,
The total cost could top $2.5 billion, ·
'
25 percent higher than the previol!s
·record.
r----------,-----------------------.:....---~
Founded in the wake of the Warugate ·scandal, the FEC is the cop
·charged with keeping politicians honUN, t OONT LIICI;
est when raising money. Without
enough enforcement tools, however,
't~WMnus
the agency has been the political
\\TOR'{ Ll~ tS
equinlent of an officer with a badge
but no billy club.
'1
This has created a culture in
which pOliticians often feel free to
break the rules •. or to file incomplete
or misleading information abol!tlheir
''
donors. Violators often· wait years
before they're penalized. And when
the FEC does act, it's often in the
form of a gentle writs-slap. By that
time, the election is long since over
surfacin1 abo\11 whether Bob Dole is
breaking the pre-convention spendi01
limiiS. Bu' nobody will know for sure
untilafru the election. The FEC says

Jack Anderson
and
Jan Moller

By WALTER R. MEARS

~p:.rs':i:~G%':~rse it's politicat. When Rep.l!blicans investi-

gate a Democratic White Hol!se, they're not only looking for facts-they're
aiming at a campaign target.
·
. That would be no less so were the power roles reversed. The campaign
is on, and this is part of it.
So that aspect of the Whitewater, trials, files and travel office controver~Y ought to go without saying. But it's said, repeatedly. The Democratic
defense of President Clinton centers on the arg11ment that the GOP congressional investigations are a political offensive,
Not so, Republicans counter, denying such motives. Theirs is the easier
(ole, since the investigations and reports serve GOP polilical interests anyhow.
·
.. A political sniear," a Democrat protested at the first in a series of House
liearings on the FBI files improperly obtained by the White Ho11se, after
Rep11blicans likened the matter to Watergate.
When the JI!Stice Department, briefly as it turned out, was going !O be
i,nvestigating the personal FBI files Clinton said were obtained beca11se of
an ·honest bureaucratic blunder, it led to a burst of GOP complaints. ""In a
political year it probably o11ght to be somebody else," said presidential candidate Bob Dole. .
.
'
· It will be. Attorney General Janet Reno, who had stepped in a£ter White·
water special prosecutor Kenneth Starr staried a files inquiry but decided he
was ~yond his jurisdiction, turned the case back to him. She concede&lt;! the
~onflict of interest of an ad111inistralion investigating administration conduct.
· And Starr, a Rep11blican who had come 11nder Democratic criticism eartier, got a q11alified White House seal of approval after the accusatory report
of the GOP-dominated Senate Whitewater Committee. "Cenainly in com.l
d ·--' · If the •
· parison ... to the way this committee has con l!c..,.. 1tse , y ve attempt·
ed to be more fair," Michael McC11rry. the White Ho11se press secretary, said
of the prosecutor,
·
· With Starr back in charge of the files investigation, McCurry said, the
Rep11blicans ought to be satisfied. "Hopefully it will shut them up," he said.

'

.

,_,

· Chuck Raasch

•t
;etter t0 th e ed I or

din~~fO\nOtlongagoalsosaid, again

Dt

. .l

John Omlcinski

lh:-'

'

This day in history
By

.

•

Uoua pledJcd to keep Doraa&amp;
By JON FRANI)IeN
government their loved OIIC$ were siltencies in accounts given f the
• ·
O.w . . ..._. Service
defendin1 when they disappeared.
same incideni - in one c- the posted as hi• olf~ee talks with Nonll
Koreaa officials and fellows l!p leadsWASHINGTON-ForRobert
Wednesday,aN.UonaiSecl!rity sighlingofC•..;asi•nsonabuslla on lilblin1s - especially by the;
'Dumas, tile fnt lfOUIIl '-iftas iii subcomrnillee cblired by tho cham· , farm by a poup of Romuiau. At
Romanian WOt lanen and American:
'
lllllrty410ye~nonNOI1bKoreuW• pion of POW·MIA lf'OIIPS, Rep.· leasttwoofthellomaniulsnow live
G.ALIJPOLIS- CarlL. ''Mickey" Cameron. 65, 29 I3dJeDIOIII Drive, prilonen olw•- pen~. Robert DomM; R-Calif., exam~ in the Unitecl States and have been de~tors.
There are atleut four U.S. defee-'
Qallipolis, died Wednesday, June 19, 1996 in the Estd P1rk (Colo.}~- part~··
the issue of 'Vielnam POW-MIXs. interviewed .by U.S. officials. When
ton in Nol1b Korea. Several havo
ical CeniU.
Dumu hu Ileal blaliOB for inf«- Thunday ic wu Koru. given far less he said one man described the men oo reported seeina black lind white men··
BOlli May 7, 1931 in MassillOn, son of the 1e Harry lad tQzel Jenkins mation from ~ aovernmelll .ever nttention over the years.
the bl!s as "CatsCIIIIian" and all()(her they belie•ed to be American,, One ·
cameron. he retired in 1986 after 35 years of service as a radiology techni· since his llrother, Cpl. Reiger Dumas,
. But there was pave attention paid described them u "while," the room said he saw a man, about60, in 1976:
cilll
at Gallipolis Developmental Center.
' 4, 19SO.
--~ a paneI o f Wttnesses
'
.
L-.L• bed and de ..
r
wu captured Nov.
as "'--........._...
"'"""'out •m astorus
nstve at a farm. A worker described the ·
He wu an active member of the Fint Presbyterian Cbun:h of Gallipolis,
Thunda9 was the first time he had examined at length a spate of reporiS whoops and gasps.
.
man as "an Americ111 POW from ~
and alloy Scout leader, where he was aclive with Troop 200 for ·more than heard DefenR ~nt officials • indieatinl that •t least a small aumDoman, often a confronhlUonal Korean Liberation War," Lee's report
ll"O decades. He was a member of the Gallia County Historical Society.
acknowl~ tl!at reported sightinas her of Americans coul~ indeed have and e•en bombastic speaker, was said. ·
SllfViving are his wife, Kathryn J. Morris Cameron, whom he maried Sept. of caucasian'
credible evi- been held oit collective fanns · in gentle with Liotta, as he was with all
Liona ~d the United States has·
S, 19S4at Kinptoil; three sons, Scott Cameron ofLoJin,·Jeff ('Ibni) Cameron dence that some . ·can POWs.are Korea or.shipptid to the Soviet Union; the witoesses Thursday.
formally requested permission to:
clf Dover, and Marc (Janet) Cameron of Madison, ·Wis.; and six pandchil· slill aliv5-and ~i g held against their which despenllillw wanted to interro"These are not radically different qi!Cstion the four defectors, at least:
drerr. .
.
.
·
,
.
'.
.
will. /'
.
· gate U.S. pilotl'ibout their planes.
accounts. They are d1fferent, but one ofwbom has been quoted as say- .
Serv1ces Will be 2 p.m. !'-t~nday m the ~tnt ~sbytenan Chl!.n:h, w1th
"It's the ru:s tim~ they ha•e
Most enco~~raging to the family they are all in the ballpark" Doman ing he wants to come home.
t~ Re~. Frank Hayes offic1atmg. Btmal wdl be m the Mound Hill Ceme, admitted to anything," Dumas said members was !he testimony of Pen· said to loud applause from the POWBut when U.S. officials said they
. .
tery. Fnends may call at the Cremeens Fu.neral Chapel from 2-4 and 6-8 .p.m. after liS(eningfo three~ of testi· tagon analyst 1.0 ..Lee. who Wro\e a MIA familie~.
had known abol!tthe defectors since
Sundar.
.
, .
.
.
mony fra•u1hernment fficials.
report released 'last week that conDornan gave a bnef d1scourse .on they left for the north in the 1960s, .
In .lieu of flowm, mernonal contnbuuons ~ay be made to the Ftrsl PresDumas, who Clllries oc~~ments chided: "Thete are too many live · hbw most individual accQllnts of a
the crowd was angered. There were ·
byte~•an Church, 51 State, ~1., Galbpobs.' Ohm 4S631, or Boy Scout Troop • that he says pro•e the u.. govern· sighling reports, specifically obser- single incident differ significantly,
.
c
ries of "why didn't you do some· :
~. tn care of ~ven P. Tlietss, 3752 State Route 141, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. ment deliberately withheld infonna· vations of CBI!casians in a collecti~ and he politely made exc11ses for
thing" and .. Q~, no."
·
tion from the public abol!t the possi- farm oy Romanians .and the North Liotta, saying, "It's not your fault.
Doman, howe•er. ca11tioned the.
·
, bility of living POWs, is still hope- Korean defectors' eyewitness of Yo11're not~ trained analyst like Mr.
families not to make hasty judgments:
GALLIPOLIS _ Chester Cox, 67, 23 Belger Ave., Gallipolis, died Fri- f11l. Hopefl!l.that Roger'Col!ld be one Americ~ .::to dis~iss that there ar~ Lee." ·
·
day, Jl!ne 21, 1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
·. ·
of the wh1te people ~potted by no Americ~ POWsm North Korea.
1
1 Born April II,
29
in
Oallia
Col!nty,
son
of
the'
late
Hiram
an(!
Sarah
Roman1an
~orkcrs
m
the
No'1h
~ost
d1scoura~mg
to
them
~as
19
'
Wh' c
he
'red
te laborer and attended the Centenary Keirean cap1tal of Pyongyang an tesumony by ~ s boss, Alan L10t·
· c· tie ox, Chwash a ~u
copcre
1979, b.y U.S. · defectors near ta, depl!l)' director of the Pentagon's
omm11ntly 11rc
' p
b . .. . . th ld POW MIA' ffi
· .Sr
. .. · ·
~ brotheis Ao d D. Cox lind Clarence Cox, both of Gal·
yo~gyan~, or y c1uzens m e o
,o 1ce.
. .
. urvtvmg are
• Y•
.
·
Sovtet Umon.
L1otta was q11oted earber m the
Tamara D. Beman. 219 Windsor
Common Pleas
hpohs, and Brady Cox of C~lu~b~s; two SISters: Edna Bosto':;!~olum••It coul~ be. It could be." he said. week as saying the repOrt did not
Drive,
Gallipolis, charged with disGALI:.IPOLIS - The following
bi!S, and LI!Cy Halley of Galbpohs, and several meces and nep
· ·
The bearing room was filled with reflect the Pentagon's position. actions were recently filed in.the Gal- orderly conduct. was fined $100. .
Hewasalsoprecededmdeathbytwobrothers,CaryCoxandJoeCox.
h ld . - h
p
d he ·d "Id'd
d'
Donald Barnes. 31 , Vinton,
semces
· · WI'II be 1 p.m. M.ond~Y m
· the Will'
Fun ral Home with the Rev. people who o s1m11ar .opes. eo- Thurs ay, sat :
t not 1sow.n lia County Common Pleas'Court:
1
.
•s
e
'
F . itd
pie whose lives are dedicated to find- this report .... The reason we ha•e this
charged
with two counts of dti.ving
Divorce filed - 'Dna Rose
Jack Holley officiating. Bunal Wtll be •n the M~na Chapel Cemetery. rte s ing. out what happened io a son "a report is because of the efforts of my
under
tfle
intluence, was fined $450,
· Ragl~n,d Hurt, Thunnan, from I van
may
·
·
. call at· the funeral home Monday from II a.m. unul
, the lime of the ser-. husband • a ,•ather. a brother· - ' .m o ffi1ce... . ,
three
days
jail, one year prQbation
Lee Hurt, Bidwell.
~ICC .
Korea, in Vietnam, while flying o•er
However, he did not display the
and 180 days license Sl!s'pension.
Municipal
Iron Curtain co11ntries cfurinc the same confidence in the sightings as
Crystal L. Snyder, 35, Chesterhill,
GALLIPOLIS - The following
Cold War. They all support one Lee:
·
.
with drivingunder the infl11 ~
charged
cases were recently .resolved in the
another. Most feel betrayed by the
Liotta described "radical'' incon- Gallipolis M11nicipal Court:
ence, was fined $6()(), three days jail,
: POMERO'(- Mary L. Crossan, 69, Pomeroy, died Friday, June 21, 1996
Mark Krauss, 38, 5432. Lincoln one year ·probation and 180 days.
in Helzer Medical Center, following an extended illness.
Pike,
Gallipolis, charged with disor- license suspension.
: Born April 29, 1927 in Middleport, daughter of the late Elui ~d MarThe following bench .warrants
derly · a£ter warning. was charged
garet Burford Archer, she was a fonner manager and clerk at the Mtddleport
were
issued for those failin$ to
S I 50, one year probation and ·go
Illepartment S'tore, and was a member of the Bradfof'll Church of Christ.
appear
at show-cause hearings:
hours comm11nity service.
: Survi•ing are two da11ghters, Patry Roush of Middleport, and Cheryl
Small claims - Lavetta Griffith,
Charles W. Miller Jr., 20, 218
&lt;;:rossan of Syracuse; a granddaughter; three sisters, MartHa (Elmer) Bums
Calpepper,
Christin~
Orchard Hill Road, Gallipolis, S11san
qfMiddleport, Betty (Do) Rothgeb ofThvarifs, Aa., ;md Judy (Albert) Black By ROBYN'SURIANO
the infonnation also could help peo- charged with failure to control, wa5 Copeland, Heather Bias, Larry
.· Of Somerset; and several nieces and nephews.
.
ple on Eanh whose muscles weaken fined $25; charged with 11nderage Mooney. Garley Robinette, Dorothy
·
Florida l'Ocley
! She was also preceded in. deat ~ by two brothers, Clifford Arcller and
in old age or after spending a long alcohol consumption. he was fined Hall, William Brewer, Gerald Hall,
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Although they are 173 miles out in time sick in'bed.
&lt;;harles Archer; and a sister, Myrtle Hess. ·
. '
SI 00, one year probation and 40 . Ronald Phillips, Aorence Carroll,
• Graveside services will be I p.m. Wednesday an the Bradford Cemetery, space. Shuttle Columbia's as·tronauts
"This is going to help if we can hours community service.
James McGhee, Rosa McGhee,
Pomeroy, with Keith Cooper officiating. There will be no visitation . Arrange- sbare at least one thing .with some fig11re Ol!t bow to pre•ent it before it
Cindy
Wade, Diana France, Sheila
Shane J. Tackett, 22, 12 Hillcrest
ments are.by 0., Fisher Funeral Hon\e, Middleport. ,
, .
elderly people and accident victims happens and how to. rehabilitate Drive, Gallipolis, charged with open Ann Rece, Paul R. McCormick, Don"
someone a£ter it does," said Victor container, w.S fined $100.
: In.lieu of flowers, the family requeSIS ~t ·cpn~buuons he ritade to the . on Earth.
•
nie Ray Powell, Yasamin Shwan.
¥thur G. James Cancer Hospital and Research Insutute, 300 W. lOth Ave.,
Their mi!SCies are becoming weak, Schneider, NASA program scientist
Jamie M. Leffingwell, 18,735- 1/2 Carla Jeffers, Rodney Bennett. Beth
especially those in the lowh leg that at the Marshall Space Right Center Third Ave., Gallipolis, charged with Rocchi, Allen Sowards and Rena.
&lt;j:olumbus, Obi? 43201.
·
. are used for standing up. That's why in H11ntsville, Ala.
· underage alcohol consl!mption, was SoWards.
the astronal!ts are running experi- '
The astronauts carried Ol!l. their fined $ JO(}, one year probation and
Traffic and criminal - Angela
·, ments designed to see why and how muscle experiments Saturday by tak· 80 ho11rs comm11nity service.
Powers, Danny Mowery, Jamie 41f·
ing turns on a machine akin IDa piece
l DARWIN _ Richard Albert Mees, 73, Darwin, died Friday, June 21. '1996 the ·muscles ~e affected in space.
Christl!pher B. Wilcoxon. 22. 570 ingwell. Mark Kra11ss, Timothy.
of
exercise equipment that provides Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, charged Condee , Hester Turner, Todd Stearn~
id O'B1eness Memolial lfosp~Athens.
. ' · Col~mbia s seven :"'tronoots spent
I Born Oct 28, 1922 in Poni~. son of the late Alben and Gertrude Smith th~lrth•rd da~ tn'Orbtt Saturday on a resistance while the astronaut push- with open container, was fined SI00. and Janies Fielder.
t.;ees hew~ au.s.'Aniiy veteran be-world Warn, having served in 'ihe miSSIOh thai IS expected to break a es his leg downward.
The experiment gets a little jolt in
n.-·fi' Cheat.
• '
·
NASA record for sh11ttle fl1gh1S by
r""IIC
cr.
·
~
17d
he upc.oming days, when the astronau~
. · Silrv:iving are his wife, Eileen Mees of Pomeroy; a son, Larry (Dollie) stab:g· up .;::. . ays..
will he zapped with a smal.l electn·
Mees of Portland; three daughters, Janet (Ed) SmithafNashpon. Pam (Mike)
, nng, 1r ume m. space, t
RACINE
POMEROY- UniiS of the Meigs
cal
charge as they try to exert as mi!Ch
Sharp of Reedsville, and·Jean Mees of Darwin; seven grandchildren; a sis- astronauts muscles w•l! weaken.
7:52p.m., McKenzie Ridge Road;
Co11nty Emergency Medical Service
ter, Gertrude (Harold) Ertin of GallipOlis; and a sister-in-law, Wilma Mees Re~hers suspect tiJa1 s bectaheuse force as they can.
f Pomefo · ·
_
'
gra•1ty 1s no 1onger pu 11 mg on
m
This is ineant to see if the mild recorded 14 calls for assistance Fri- Jean Alkire, treated at the scene;
0
II :52 p.m.. Racine Fire Station.::
charge. gets them to push harder, day, including three transfer calls.
, He wasy~lso preceded in death by two sisterS, Phyllis Mees and L~cille andWhifo~cl inghthem 10 work. .
1
Brian
Jl!slice, Pleasant Valley Hospi-·
Units responding included:
·schneider said. ·
· k Mees and.
e muse
Shay; and •.our broI hers, Ma1co1m Mees, Gilbert Mees, Fredenc
ld hele tNASA
d eI expenments
I
h
tal.
"It's uncomfortable," said NASA
POMEROY
'
.
.·
couk
p
hoc olthrs ~om ow
Otto Mees.
SYRACUSE
10
mission
scientist
Patton
Downey.·
7:40
a.m.,
Nye
Avenue,
John
· Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Fisher Fl!neral Home, Middleport, to eep astronai!IS ea Y space,
a.m
., Rocksprings Rehabili7:05
Beaver, Holzer Medical Center:
with the Rev.!Brian Harkness officiating. B'urial will be in the Meigs Mem- r----~-=~~~--------::-------,
tation
Center.
Jessie Jarrell; VMH. .
4:10 p.m., Laurel Street, Mary
RUTLAND
~~n~a~ns, Pomeroy. Friends may call at the funeral home from 7-9 p.m. Lang, Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
2:53p.m., State Route 681, motor.•
6:28p.m., North Second and Rutland Street, Holli Clelanil, VMH, •ehicle accident. Orville Graham, ,
refused treatment:
assisted by Middleport Squad II.
OllltuDe . .
11r
'3:27 p.m., Old Ro11tc 7 Road.
Obltullrte...rapublhlheclureq...ttodtoaccOIIWIIOdllllhoMdlelrlngiROrl
MIDDLEPORT- An error appeared i~ the obituary in Friday's Daily
lnlllt'lnallon than 11 provided In the
DMth ~Marvin Yea11ger, HMC;
Senlinel for Rachel Wilson, 78, Middleport, who died Thursday, June 20, 1996
6: 18 p.m., Nichols Road, Marge·
Wisecup, PVH;
.
in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.
.
8:07 p.m., SR 143, Ernest Carr,.•
Wilson's son and daughter-in-law, Pal!~ ~d Missie Wilso~, were mcorrectly listed by the Fisher F11neral Home, M•ddleport, as restdents of Har·
treated at the scene.
REEDSVILLE
.
risonville. They are residents of Hixson, Tenn.
UPPER SANDUSKY- Eunice E. Bunce, 95, Upper Sand11sky, formerly
REEDSVILLE - A 17-year-old
·
9:15p.m.,
Forked R11n State Park,
ofGallia County, dfed Friday, J11ne 21, 19% in the Wyandot Nursing Home, Reedsville youth was cited to Meigs
fl
Sheila
Conn~lly, St. Joseph's Hospi- .· .
Upper Sand11sky.
.
County Juvenile Court following a
Qom Augl!st 27, 1900 in Cheshire, da11ghter of the fate Horton H. Roush two-car accident on Curtis Hollow tal.
and Launi Scott Roush, she was a fonner clerk at the G.C. M11rphy Store Road Friday, according to Meigs
and a ltomemaker.
Co11nty Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
She was a lifetime member of the.Addison Methodist Ch11rch and a memAccording to reports, the accident
, •
her of the Georges Creek Grange.
occurred at 2: 19 p.m. when James
DETROIT (AP) _ Battle lines her body.
She was also pn:cedcd in death in 1978 by her h11sband, Merrill A. Bun&lt;7, Folmer, Pomeroy, was westbod'nd ·
have fonned arol!~ Dr. Jack
Dragovic said his office was whom she married Apr!I.IO, 1919; two brothers, Everett Ro11sh and Hort•e when his 1987 Chevy Cavalier col. tided with a 1987 Cavalier dri•en by
Kevorkian since he assisted in his awaiting results oftests for other not· Roush; and a sister, Rl!th Mack.
••
POMEROY.
first Silicide in 1990. They're coming sons that niight have been injected
Sl!rviving are a daughter and son-in·law, Grace and Louis Lehman of James M. Smith, Reedsville, which
.
Nur Pomeroy-..._, Bridge
back into sharp foc 11s now that the into Hamilton's left ann, where a Upper Sand11sky: six grandchildren, Roger. Lehman of Col11mbus, Dol!glas was left of center.
. 992·2588
Moderate
damage
was
recorded
to
total has reached at least 31, includ· puntture mark was discovered.
Lehman of Upper Sandusky, Lol! Ann Lehman of Upper Sand11sky, Linda
both
vehicles.
No
inj11ries
were
VINTON
ing three this month.
' Asked if she was injected with (Leslie) Heimrick of McCutchenville, Deborah (Bill) Grove of Horton, and
GaHia County Dlapllly Yard
reported.
'
The latest deaths came after another substance, Fieger . told the Jackie (John) Miranda of Upper Sandusky; seven great-grandchildren, Nathan
1511 ...1nSI.
Smith was cited for left of center
Kevorkian was acquit!W for the third Free Press: ""I wouldn't tell you if I Lehman, Matthew Lehman, Andrew Lehman. Gwen Heimrick, Graham
time in as many trials of assisted-sui- knew. ... Maybe she died . of Heimrick, Casey Grove and David Grove; and a sister. Mildred Swisher of and no operator's license.
cide charges. Legal experts and law- syringomyelia."
Arcadia, Aorida.
makers wbo oppose Kevorkian conOn Thesday, the body of Lona
Services will be 10 a.m. Thesday. June 25, 1996 in the Waugh-Halleycede that little can be done 10 stop Jones, 58, of Chesler, Va.., was left at Wood F11neral Home, Gallipolis, w1th lhe Rev. Alfrcid Holley officialitog. Bur'him _for now.
another Pontiac hospital by her bus- ial will be in the Gravel ~ill Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may call· at the
"He seems to 11nderstand that he band. Jones had a malignant brain • .fl!neral home from 4-8 p.m. Monday. J11ne 24, 1996.
· can· become bolder becal!se it's ll!mor, Kevorkian's attorneys said.
In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the Addison Methodist
becorni. inereasingly ,clear that you
On J6ne II , the body of R11th Church in care of Eiizabeth Rumley, 303 Blazer Road; Gallipolis, Ohio 45631,
can't get a conviction," said Yale Neuman, 69, ofColumbl!s, N.J., was or to the charity of choice.
Kamisar. a University of Michigan taken to the same hosp1tal by one of
law professor and Kevorkian foe.
~r children. Neuman had cancet and
""It:s not against the law to kill · diabetes and had been paralyzed by
yourself,"· conceded state Rep. strokes.
. ·,
Michael Nyc, lt·Litchfteld. "".(BI!tlo · : The de~s followed Kev~an s
say). 'Here, Doc, corrie in and kill May .~u1ttal of charges he v1ola!ed
me, • 1 have a problem with that."
a M1c~1gan . Supren_u:_ C~rt rulmg
. The latest death involving that said ass1sted SUICide IS ll. fel~ny
Kevorkian "was that of Bette Lol! under · commol\ law. Knork1an
Hamilton. 67, of Upper Arlington, attendedtliedeathofan.Ontanoman,
Ohio. Her body was taken Thl!rsday !'ustin .Sastable, .hours" after test.•fy- ·
night to a Ponti&amp;!: hospital by Jeanne mg du~ng that. trial: .
.
Bogen; Hamilton's best friend,
Tw1~ earb~r. J~nes acql!llted
Kevorkian anorney Geoffrey Fieger Kevorluan of '?olaun~ ~ tern~
. said.
stale ban~ assisted swcide destgned
Hamilton had a proaressive neu- to slop him.. .
rological
disease
called
. S~ Michig~ la'NI!'akers have
syrinaomyelia, Fieger said. He said satd 11 m1ght be 1mposs1ble to draw
she died of carbon monoxide poi· up a new law to stop Kevorkian. But
sooing.
. .
until they do, M~omb C::ou.~ty Pros·
But the Oaldllnd County medical ecu~ Carl Marl1n~ said; they are
examiner, Or. L.J. Drqovic, toiCI the buiCally ~~~ .11 the to~I lind
Detroit Free Preu in a repon SIIUr· sayinJ •isled swcide, for all1lltelltl
dly thai lflmlJton did dot haVe a ~ ~ICS, is lepl il the ~ of
letNI level of c.IJon"mono~ide in M~ehipn.

Shuttle crew examines .
reaspn for weak muscles

'

.Hoax article highlights academic silliness

•

.fv1ary L..Crossan ·

· safely ensconced in the White House
that the FEC detennined that he
."
should repay S1.4 million to the gov·
ernment. Clinton's general election
• Not likely, with the bltJr of inquiries facinsthe .White House. Sen. Orrin committee was also docked, 10 the L~~~~~~-~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~-===~==~~::=~:..;":_:·J'
Hatch •.opening a Senate investigation into the files c~ on Thursday; said
1.
it . demonstrates that an "arrogance 'o f power has penneated this White ttine of S IOS,OQO. Ql!estions are now
House."
· The Republican chairman of the Senate J11diciary Coinmittee noted arch·
ty that what Clinton had promised Wt&gt;ald be the most.~thical White Ho11se
ever "is facing another criminal investig.Uon of itself."
1'
"It seems to me we sho11ld have the trial before we have the hanging,"
Democratic Sen. Joseph R. Biden Jr. replied. " ... This has tile slight aura of By CHUCK RAASCH
Now, along comes the aroma of Verney wrote in the Reform Party's state,cameintothepossessionofthe:•
a political undertaking, rather than a factual undertaking."
. ·
GNS PoiHical WrHer
real dirty ·tricks - a Democratic May newsletter.
White House? Ai the time the White.. '
It is more than an aura, with presidential and congressional elections 20
WASHINGTON- There's been White House gathering sensitive FBI
Republicans said they don't know Ho11sc req'IICsted the files, Baker was
weeks away.
one conspicl!oosly silent figure on the background files of more than 400 what Verney was talking abol!t, and widely mentioned ~ possible 1996,.,
"You have not heard me making political charges," Sen. Alfonse D' Am- Clinton White House's FBI ' files
pointed 0111 he once served as exec- challenger to Clinton. .
"'
l!tive
din:ctor
of
the
New
Hampshire
Why
were
some
big-name
people,:'
· ato, chainnan of the Senate Whitewater Committee, said after his panel's . fiasco: Ross Perot.
Democratic Party.
like Baker on the list, but others, like
report on 14 months of hearings was filed on Tuesday. But he certainly was
Which raises the following ql!esThe FBI files story is taking a Republican National Committee••
making charges, incl11ding a suggestion of obstruclion of justice. In a cam- tion: Does Perot, who often has por,
·paign - and he is Dole's co-chainnan -the adjective is red11ndant. Accu- trayed Washington as a shady world Rep11blicans- and Perot is l!nchar· familiar track for the White Hol!sc. Chairman Haley Barbour, not?
Truth
comes
out
incrementally,
and
And
what
security
was
in
place
for
sations like those are political grist for a challen1er.
of political dirty tricks, ha•e it in for acteristically silent.
the story keeps moving to new and this sensitive infonnation- some of ,
. "History will judge these hearings as a revealing insight into the work- Republicans?
Why? .
the most detailed backgr'Ound on••
ings of an American presidency that misused iiS power, circ~~mvented the limIf so, why the do11ble standard?
Perot Refonn Party spokeswoman ·more troubling questions.
The list became ·public knowledge people's personal li•cs - as it sat '"
its on its authority and attempted to manipulate the truth," D' Amato said.
This is the same bant•m billion- Sharon Holman suggested her boss
He said he hadn't disci!Ssed it all with Dole, didn't need to, and thinks aire who earlier this spring threw out wasn't talking about the so-called only arter a congressional subpoena around for months and months at the
·' :
the candidate should let it unfold "independent of his ·own campaign."
wild and unpro•ed allegations that he "Filegate ",because he got bmned the re•ealed the White House had White Hou,.,?
More lrol!bling, why was tile FBI····
DemocraiS filed a dissenting Whitewater committee repon saying it went to a secret meeting with top-dog last time he raised ihe specter of poll!· acq11ired the personnel file of Billy
Dale, who had been booted out as so willing to tum.these files over, in
showed "no miscondl!ct or abuse of power" by Clinton or Mrs. Clinton.
Republicans and they s11gg~sted he ical dirty tricks.
"He kind of got broken off," when head of the White House travel office . whar FBI Director Louis Freeh.
""This has been the most partisan and jlolilicized hearing in the history of lay out $1 million for "dirty tricks."
the Senate," said Sen. Cluistopher Dodd, a committee member and the DemoRep11blican National Chainnan he alleged the GOP dirty-tricks cam· under allegations he h8d misspent termed an ""egregious"" violation oft,
cratic national chairman. "These bearings were liUie more than taxpayer-fund- Haley Barbour angrily denied the paign last spring, Holman said.
travel office funds. He later was privacy lind bl!relu practices?
•·
"He kind of wants to let people acquitted in a trial after it was
The best-case scenario for the
ed opposition research."
.
.
.
.
· charge, and Perot never produced
So far, the p11blic opinion polls do n!ll register atoll against Clinton. They corroborating evidence or said exact- fonn their own opinion" on the Clin- revealed thai friends and a distant White House is it simply was incom-&lt;"
still show him ahead of Do!e. B11t it's early in the season -and early in the ly what dirty tricks he was supposed ton White Hoi!Se FBI files story, Hol- cousin of the president coveted the petenl in its early days. At a Hoose .
man added.
investigations Republicans will try to blend into a campaign-long issue.
to 11nderwrite.
travel office business.
hearing, former White House securiShe said every time Perot raises
So!lle chalked it up as more PerThe olf~eial White House expla- ty personnel ~scribed 18- and 20- 1
· (Walter R. Mean, vloe pnsldent and coiiiiiiDilt for Tile Assoc:iatcd
Press, hu reported on Wlllllln&amp;tOa and nadontd politics for more than ot paranoia, in the same •ein as his the specter of dirty tricks, "they nation is that a bureaueralic snafu year-old people with no security ·:1
30 years.)
· unproved charges that he needed to accuse him of being nuts, or whatev- res11lted in hundreds or sensiti•e FBI clearance working in a White Ho11se",,
files being gathered by a political ·office where secret FBI files on ' ;
get out of the presidential race back er."
But
Perot
is
not
the
only
Reform
operative-ll!rned-sec:urity-honcho.
Republicans were being assembled. ' ,
in 1992 because Repl!blicans were
going to disrupt his daughter's wed· Party figure who likes to assail, in the
The White House has suspended,
The worst-case scenario is this 1
broadest tenns, the eihics of Repub- with pay, personnel security chief was a dirty-tric!&lt;s opj:ration to dig ' 1
licans. Last · month, as the Dallas Cnia Livingstone, a longlime Demo- into the lives of political opponents . .
1
.
withol!l corroboration, that George Times Herald reported, Reform Par- cratic advance man and polilical At least four on the list are now advis- '.' 1
Ed
ar nor:
·
·
·
ing pres11mptive GOP nominee Bob 1'
The ancient Romans htld the Appian Way, a splendid road, that helped to Bush campa1gn operau•es tn I992 ty national coordinator Russ Verney operalive.
Troubling questions remain:
· Dole.
•
hold their empire together.
secretly begged him to stay in the said Republican "political terrorWho exactly compiled ·the list of
This may be a case of simple ', ;
Hikers have the Appalachian Trail extending nearly 2.000 miles from race in order to derail Clinton. II' ists" were bent on destroying Perot
the files to be assembled? Who knew bureaucratic incompetence. But:
northern Maine to the southern mountains.
caused puzzlement among Bush with "dirty tricks."
"Mean,
vicio11s
and
personal
they werethere?Whydidn"tred fl!lgS whatever it is, it's more than a fig-·1''
I Bicyclers have improved special roads laid Old for pleasl!re riding.
alumni, bl!t again floated off into the
i State Route 124 between Portland aad Long Bottom in Meigs County is atmosphere as one of those wild attacks are a mainstay of the Repub- go up when files on big names like ment of Perot's imagination.
'
1!4: most deplorable, neglected and roughshod stretch of road in Ohio. This charges Perot seems prone to make. lican Party's approach to politics," JIUIICS Baker, the former secretary of
-~
.
'
r&lt;fld is designated a scenic highway on the map. At one time there were signs
oa it calling it the General Lucas Memorial Highway. They are gone now.
Stmebody mi!SI have got ashansed of the road.
I' I
, This road beats "P cars like hamburger g~ing through a '!!usage mill. One
ti't'e a fine lady and her compan1on were motonng along thts road. Her false
Many · natura I scientists, wrote
What is needed. he said, is a "lib- j:
the editors became his unwilling
lith got knocked Ol!t and fell into the grass or ditch. Get some gii!C for yo11r By JOHN OMICitiSKI
eratory
postmodern science" to ""lit&gt;-·,'."
prey'.
!iokal, ""cling to the dogma imposed
Gennett News Service
f se teeth before vent11ring down here in this beautifl!l Ohio Valley. ·
His complicated paragraphs, wan- 6y the loog po5t-Enlightenment hege- crate h~~man beings from the tyranny ~;
WASHINGTON -The academSometimes it looks like a herd of cows have passed over this road because
ic
world
won~
soon
recover
from
the
derinttluoogh
ess-cl!rves of comnias mony over the western intellectual of 'absoluie trulh' and 'objective real-'
there are so many black spots on it.
literary
hoax
perpetrated
by
New
outlook ... that there exists an exru- ily.' "
: If nothing else, tear it up and keep it graded once a week. S~~rely the transDespite a jumble of fllOinoteS iliiil l!r
nal world, whose propcnies are inde·
pctration department of the state of Ohio can do betru. Let's hear from them. York University physicist Alan Sokal.
·pendent of 111y individual h11man back"P quotes (all accufl:lel. soltal •'
Sokal unmasked the foolishness
n
:
Qeyle Price
offered
no
real
proof
for
hiS
declara,•
and
parentheses,
are.
difficult
to
read,
thai
masqi!Crades
u
higher
educalion
being
and
indeed
of
humanity
as
a
,
·
'
Portland
S.:ience is enant !Ynflny, .... ;-~ .-·
in many ivy-covered comers of likC much of that slow waru flowing whole; that theSe propenies are lion
America by submitting a bog11s arti- through the stagnant academic encoded in 'etemar physical laws... there 1s no provable real.)Yorld, no JJ
cle that so11nded like the real thing to swamp of the 1990s.
8111 cool academics in the know, ~sen.tial .truth. What's real is in our.it&gt;i
Its priceless title - "Transgress- he.said, are aware that these things 1maganauon.
an infli!Cntial academic magazine
While he didn't believe a word or,
The Anocieted Pren
· called ""Social Text·"
ing the Boundaries: Toward a Trans- we see and touch and feel c&amp;roUnd us
what
he was writing, he knew it '' '
:Today is Sunday, June 23, the 17Sth day of 1996. There are 191 days left
formative
Hermeneutics
of
Quanrum
What Sokal did was absolutely
every dly are ""at bottom a social lind
would
ring U\le with academics seek- · ~·
Gravity''- is approptiately sopOrif· linJIUislic: conSirutt." There is a ""gendeliciol!l.
. in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: .
Sokal camouflaged his essay with ic, even monastic, so elegant that it der ideoiOIY underlyina the natun1 in1 to release them!elves from the ~':
On June 23, 1868, Christopher Latham Sholes received a patent for an pwposely ponderous, pompous, ten- ·must be true, right?
sciences," he declam!. There are no riaors of sll!dy lind free themselves to ' •·
His
article
posed
the
central
the·
invention he called a Type· Writer.
dentious, and prolix prose, lushly
real and absolllte laws of science, he mak~ up their own stuff u they F. .••
.
.
., 1J
footnoted and elaborately bibli- ~is that there is no such thing • phys- suggested, j11st those thll some old a~ona.
On this date:
,
.
And he was oh so riahJ. The edl- 1{
In 1836, Congress approved the D~!f!osit Act. which cotltained a provi- oJfiPhed. He made it look like any ical or social ""reality."" In · other male tyrants made I!P to subjugale
. up. · •., l•
tors. nee dless to say, a1e 1t
other tanaled testament to tenure, lind words, the rUI world isn't really real. succeedina generations.
·sion for turning over surplus federal revenue to the states.
'
•I)!

\(ou call this a scenic highway?

•

..
Gallia County court pews

;i

Perot strange1y silent over FBI files fiascq

•

·ches·ter Cox .

GOINC,...

and forgotten.
For example, an audit of George
Bush's 1988 presidential campaign
took seven years. E•enll!ally, the
agency con finned more than
$200,000 in illegal con.tribl!tions.
Nonetheless, the campaign ended,up ·
with a reprimand rather than a fine.
It was not until after Clinton was

-I

f

·congress•·onal probes ~l!:!::':~~d~~;·i~~::.-::~7~
?
I
•
•
po Iltlca1. ure1y not. bel:~!'i~u;.~~~~~·~~themid-

s

t

· ··ckey' Cameron ·
Car.l '.M

•

125 Third Avenue, Glilllpol.. , Ohio
1114 Ul 2342 • Fu: Uti 3001
111 Cowt8beet, P-oy, Ohio
111~·21511• Fu: 992·2157

,

Hearings fuel hopes for f•milies of POWs

JUnbav 1rinus·ientbttl FEC lacks teeth to enforce campaign refor
By JACK ANDERSON

,.

'

I;

'LstUD.sftd in 1!J66

Pomeroy •lllddlaport • GelllpOIIa, OH • Point P11111nt. WV

Sundey, June23, 1118

Richard A; Mees

EMS units answer 14 calls

0 bituaries-

Rachel·Wilson

P*l••noun- ..,....,d local-..-

""""""*"

Eunice E. Bunce

Legal experts admit little
can be done to 'Dr. Death'

'I

'

Teen ticketed
after accident

�.•

/

~

•

_J,....

r--M ........., ...

Nallon/World
,

FW'

'

-~orry

..

about that

Arab leaders to.appeal to Israel to 'save' peace, process
parties to establish and save the
Aaaoclated Preaa Writer
peace process.''
CAIRO, Egypt - Arab leaders
The first Arab summit in six years
willappeal to Israel in their weekend was calle&lt;j by Egypt, Syria and Sau·
summit 10 "save the peace process" di Arabia after the May 29 election of
by dropping policies, that deviate the hard·line Netanyahu.
from the land-for-peace formula I! At least 13 heads of 'slate will
accepted by both sides for negotia-' attend the summit, along with princes
:tjons.
I and prime ministers. As well as
Egyptian Foreign Minister Amr adopting a stand on Israel, they will
Moussa outlined lhe view after meet· ... have to deal with other issues, chiefly
. ing Friday wiih fellow Arab foreign divisions over Iraq.
'
Iraq was not invited to the meetministers to draft the communique to
.be issued by the 21 Arab leaders ing because of continued anger
meeting here Sawrday and Sunday. among oil-rich Persian Gulf states .
· Moussa said that the announced over th~90 Iraqi invasion of
pPiicies of new Israeli Prime Minis- 'Kuwait. ·
,
·
ter Benjamin Netanyahu threaten the
Egyptian
President
Hosni
peace· process. The Arab summit, Mubarak said "psychological obstaviould send w"clear-cut and prudent" cles •· also divide the leaders. He said
message to Israel and the intema- he 'hoped to arrange a meeling
tlonal community as the sponsor of between Jordan, which has made full
Arab-Israeli talks, he added.
peace with Israel; and Syria, which is
•·There will be · no messages of the mosi recalcitrant negotiator with
threats .or warning," he said. "But 'the Jewish state.
what I am saying is that it takes two
Mubanik made a gesture at solv·

ing his own country's dispute with
neighboring 'Sudan, which Egypt
accuses of stirring up Egyptian Muslim militants.
The Egyptian leader went to
Cairo's ail'(iort to greet Sudanese
President Omar el-Bashir. Mubarak,
wearing a business suit, and elBashir; in Arab robes and a billowing
turban, looked like tfiey were from
two different worlds a' the•1 walked
together.
Speaking on Egyptian television
later, Mubarak said that reports that
the sum!Jlil would castigate Israel
were not correct. "It is not against
lsrael," he saia.
However, Arab leaders have
grown increasingly worried as
Netanyahu's government has issued
policy guidelines d!fferent from those
of his predecessor, Shimon Peres, that
oppose the return of ihe Golan
Heights to Syria and the establishment of a Palestinian state.
The guidelines call for no discus-

crime.

.

.

The president also underscored his
anti-crime record Saturday in a
speech before t~ U.S. Conference of
Mayors in Cleveland and returned
again to the issue of church-burnmg
across the South.
He called again for an end to
church arson and said the burnings
represent "a dark part of'our soul. ... "
. Clinton reviewed hos sexual
offender initiatives for the mayors
and said of his proposal for a national directory: "These things need to be
shared and we need a national system
to share it."
The 1994 crime bill requires states
·to establish.regisaies of sexual predators and child molesters.
The so-called Megan's Law, fol·
lowup legislation Clinton signed
recently, requires states to tell a community "whenever a dangerous sex·
ual predator enters its midst." The
lnw is named for a 7-year-old New
Jersey girl who was murdered by a
neighbor'whose record of sex offenses was unkiiown to her parents.
"Now we must take the next
step," Clinton said in his weekly
radio address.
•
He directed Attorney General
Janet Reno to report in 60 days with
a plan to develop a national registry
or sexual offenders to allow police .to
track molesters across the country
regardless of state lines.
.
"We must make sun: police offi,
cers in every state can get the infor~ mation the~ need from any. state to
traek sex offenders down and bring
them to justice," Clinton said.
"The police officer in Cleveland
should be able to get information on
all known sex offenders in Cleveland,
whether they committed their crimes
in New York or Los Angeles," Clinton said.
''Police officers will be able to
prevent more crimes and catch more
crirninals if they can share and compare the'latest information we have."
The p.-·esident said his administration respects people's legal rights.
"But there is no right greater than
a parent's right 10 raise a child in lllfe·

ty and love," he said. '.'That's why the
law should follow those who prey on
America's children wherever they go,
state to state, town to town."
Attending to the business of politics, Clinton collected $2. i million
for the I;lemocratic National Com·
mittee at a trio of fund-raisers in
Houston Friday night.
His arrival came on the heels of a·
Texas Poll showing that in recent
weeks he has erased Bob Dole's
respectable lead in conservative
Texas and drawn into a 42-42 dead
heal.
"Normally, I never talk about
polls," Clinton told a gala dinner in
a Houston hotel. "But if anybody
hen: thinks that I'm about to write off

in a hurry...

Texas, they need to think again
because I intend to fight for the electoral votes and the support of the people of Texas. And I think we'xe got

HELENA, MC...t (AP) - After
three months in a Montana 'jail, ,
TheodOre Kaczynski traded a bullet- ·
proof vest for a tweed j~~eket Friday ,
and ~agreed in court to be moved 10
California to face charges he's the
Unabom~r.
;:
Kaczynski, 54, waived his right td :
fight a Justice Department request tc?
move him to Sacramento, when: a
federal indictment charged him hi '
four of the attacks in the terrorist's '
18-year campaign to smash the inod! :
em industrial order.
.
Federal iudge Charles Lovell dill :
not indicate wl)en Kaczynski wouhl :
be moved. The U.S. Marshal Service,:
which handles federal prisoners,
refused comment. ·
''
Kaczynski wore the vest whil~
being transferred to the courthouse. It ,
was removed once he entered court.
His once shaggy beard and hair '
neatly trimmed. Kaczynski looked :
calm and alert during his first time in :
public view in more than two months;
Kaczynski last appeared in court
April 19 when defense auorneys
tried to dismiss the lone charge
against him because of news leaks~ .
Lovell denied that moti.on.
On Friday, Kaczynski wore a.
light-colored tweed jacket over a pa],e
green sport shirt, light brown slackk '
with no belt, and heavy-soled hiking
shoes.
Lovell dismissed the single charge
that had held Kaczynski since his·
arrest on April 3 at "is cabin nort~ ·
west of here, possession of bombmaking components.
·
Federal prosecutors in Helena· '
moved to dismiss the charge "with!
out prejudice," meaning it could bC
.refiled .

sion about the future of Arab east 242 and accepted by the Madrid conJerusalem, which the Palestinians ference that began the peace process
want as their future capital.
·almost five years ago.
Referring to Netanyahu, Moussa
Moussa's moderate tone follows
said: "We would like him to recon- pleas by the United States that the
sider his guidelines and documents, Arabs not rejeci Netanyahu as a
which are upsetting and threatening peace partner. His reference to the
the peace process and all of us. "
international community was a clear
"We are concerned but•we would message to Washington and Europe
like to give the other party the chance to pressure Israel not to back down
to go back to the talks," he added.
from agreements already reached iri
A draft copy of the communique, peace talks.
For his part, Netanyahu has sought
obtained' by The Associated Press,
reaffirms the Arab commitment to to reassure .the Arabs
pe3C!' and urges Israel to do the same
without delay.
It also calls for Israeli withdrawal from the Golan and east Jerusalem,
which were ,seized by Israel in the
1967 Mideast War, as well as southSTATE ROUTE 124
ern Lebanon.
Moussa said the talks should
resume on the basis that Israel would
leave occupied Arab land in exchange
for peace, the principle embodied in
'.
U.N. Security Council Resolution

... ::: GALLIPOLIS - Jesus Espita
flld Robbie Ventura were declared
· the winners in lhe Class 3.4 and' the
pro Class 1-2 rai:es; respectively: in
Saturday's Holzer Clinic/Magic I 0 I
G£ileriwn, held around tlte Gallipolis
{;!ity Park.
.
.
The Pr0 Class J'. 2 race, which
a'rew 63 cyclists, was called early
because of lightning accompanying
~ late afternoon thunderstorm. The
race was called an official race, but
lfle places were unofficial. Official
· places are expected to be determined
today:
· · The celebrit,y race wanponsorcd
6y the Gallipohs Retail Merchants.
1
Here ate
results of the various
races.
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Gallipolis River
1,
RetreatioD JUde
. ..... PartlclpaDtl ~ Robert Lohse.
Van Gilder, Rod Stout (first to '

!he.

:;~~~·~e~GRRR). c~uck Canter~·
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Mklciepon 11112-3148

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Third- Vanessa Burris
,_10 year-G4d iw:e
WIDner.:... Lindsay C4]dwell
Sec:OIId - Brittany Darst
Thlnl- Joey Banks /
·U-11 year-old race
W~r .;_Ryan Carter
SeeoDCI ;... Curtis Darst

Classl-4.
WiDDer - Jesus Espita
Second- Greg B~mford
Tblrd- Kevin Chapman
Pro Oaas 1·2
Wlpner- Robby Ventura
Secoad- Eamon Roonet
Tbltd - Roberto Giggioli

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1 '}mti]ar league baseball action,

~n\kees _ beat

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~¥ ODIE O'DONNELL
·~ Correspondent ·

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lfldians

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1Jl.&amp; Mon. thru SaL

Dllcover,.

Dcvei's stumbled before the fourth
hurdle . in the semifinals of the
women's 100 hurdles, but still finished third in her heat in 12.93 and
advanced to today's final.
· LaVonna Martin-Fioreal,.a 1992
Olympic silver medalis~ pulled out of
the women's hurdles before the quar·
terfinals because of a stiained abdom·
inal muscle.
In the: women's·200, Gwen Torrence showed little sign or her thigh
injury while running her semifinal
heat in 22.)5 and advancing to
today's final. Carlene Guidry had the
round's best time of 22.29, fastest in·
lhe world this year.
Torrence, who said her thigh has
been hurting since shC won the 100
final a week ago, reached for the

'
thigh at the end of her quart~rfinal
and semifinal races. They were run ·
90 minutes apart Saturday. .
Torrence, the 1992 Olympic gold
medalist and a five-time national ·
champion in the '200, hopes to.win
gold tnedals at 100 and 200 thissum· ·
mer at,the Atlanta Games. She must
finish in the top three in the 200 to
make the U.S. team for that event.
Cun Clausen won the men's 20kilometer walk in I :29:50, and Debbi Lawrence won the women's ,1Ok
walk in 46:05.
Aft~r nine events in the decathlon,
O'Brien had 8,233 points- the most
ever at that point in a decathlon competition. He had 8,224 after nine
events when he set the world record
·in 1992. .
·

Oniy the I.SOO meters remained~~
O'Brien's worst event. When he ~t
the . world record, 0' Brien ran the·
l ,SOO in4:42.10. It wa• doltbtful hi
could approach that mark Saiunl•y iri ' •
the 108-degree heat of Atlanta.
, Huffins, who led tile decathlon'
through each of the firfo( seyen eventS'
in the two-day competition, set a per-';
sonal best of 2Q8-9 in the javelin but'
stilflost ground when O'Brien towecfi
that with his last throw.
O'Brien, the world record·hol.der'l
in the decathlon, came into the u.s~!
track and, field trials as the stronf..
favorite tO win the event and.go orl'
to win an Olympic gold·medal -just •
as he had come. Into the trials four';;
years ago.

. Billy Brewer(l-0), acquired Fripension during the Yankees' double· · day from the Los Angeles· Dodgers
header sweep Friday, went 3·for·S for a minor league pitcher, won in his
with a double. Eddie Murray hit hi.s Yankees debut. He was the winner
48Sth career home run for Cleveland. " despite allowing three runs in one
Dennis Maninez (8-S) failed to inning.
hold an early S-0 lea4. and lost his
John Wetteland pitched the ninth
lith strai~ht decision to tl1e Yankees (or his 21st . save,~ giving up Jim
dating back to 1982. He is 0-4 nome's Rill aiple.
against New York this season, and 2· The game took 4 hours, 10 min17 lifetime. .
.
utes, the longest nine-inning game in
"This definitely was a strange Indi'ans history. ·
game," lndians reliever Paul Shuey
"Both clubs·are in.the same boat,
said. "We were sitting in the bullpen using -pitchers we haven't .tried
talking about how great it was for before and bringing guys in from the
Dennis. Then everything hit the fan bullpen day after day," Torre said.
and everybody was warming up
Torre said Mark Hutton's three
again and getting into the game."
shutout innings was the key.
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For more
information
eall
992-2914
Come and hear about JESUS•

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"No Ordinary M•n''!
,.,

• APR baed on·minimiiDIIOII11Jll011111 of ··
Sll,ooO.OO for a term of 60 months. Monthly
· payment IDIOIIIll would bC $241.89, with a total
fiM!""" chlrl!le ofS2,S13.40. Offer available for
a limited time. 110 hlll'i'Y in tllday, during our
· Loell Sol&amp; Aa;...:., t'JOINO ON NOW! I

.(Fo) ,.F.irtners
Bank
...... __ .....,,
&amp; ~~~~ Comppny

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"Once he got into a groove, he
was terrific," Torre said. "If we did•
n't get that out ofhim,l'rn not sure
what would h.ave happened."
Torre did not have much to
choose from, having used up much
of his staff during the doubleheader
a day earlier. ··
Indians manager Mike Hargrove
was surprised to see Martinez falter.
· "Dennis breezed through five
innings," he said. "If we knew what
happened in the sixth we would have
headed it off."
Sierra and Paul o :Neill each had
.three hits as·the Yankees improved to
11 -2 overall at Jacobs Field, making
them the only opponent with a

record over .500 at the park.
Down S-0, New York had eight
consecutive batten reach base ·With
one out in the sixth. O'Neill singled
twice and drove in three runs in the
inning, and Wade Boggs also had
two·hits. .
·
Baggs'began the burst with 'a single arid Bernie Williams walked, set·
ling· up RBI singles by O'Neill and
Tino Martinez. Sierra followed with
his eighth home run, tying it at S.
ngen 6, Twins 0 . .
At Detroit, Brian Williams ·
pitched ' Detroit's second straight
shutout as the Tigers roughed up
former teammate Scott Aldred and
beat the Minnesota Twins 6-0 Satur·

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Athletic Boosters Club, the vast
improvements will feature new
bleachers to accommodate more
than 3,000 j&gt;eople, a .new press bOx
and new public rest rooms.
Core drilHng for the new bleachers is currently underway at the 48year old facility and removal of the
25-year old bleachers was started by
Dale WatsOII,Iast week.
. SuperintC!ident,Jack P.ayton stated· that replacement of the old
bleachers became a top priority
when the
schools' insurance car-

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day.
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Williams earned his first win in 1.l
five decisions, allowing only four' l
hits with five strikeouts ' and four"'·
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walk,s.
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Orioles 5, RoyAls 3
At Baltimore, Mark Smith
Baltimore's third home run in ihe •
bottom of the ninth inning Saturda~•. •
fapping an improbable rally that ~!;
gave .the Orioles a S-3 victory over ,,;
the Kansas Cit)' Royals.
i'
. Kansas City sla,ter Tim Belcher '
took a two-hitter and a 3-0 'lead into ' ?
the ninth, but a one-out double by ••S
Roberto Alomar and a homer by
~fael Palmciro got Baltimqre ,with- ;'/.
·m a run . ~
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rier notified the school board that
seating had to be brought up to safety codes by 1997.
Payton said new bleachers to
accommodate 2, 100 fans will be
constructed on the home-side of the
field and will feature a wheel·chair
access ramp with space for I 0-12
wheel chairs, fjv~ access aisles, 22
rows or aluminum bleachers spaced
42 inches apart and 174 fee't long .
The galvanized steel structure will
comply with ADA "n ramp and catwalk safety standards. , ,
The entire center section will

contain 924 sealS. which will be blue
in color to distinguish it as a
reserved section .
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A new press box measuring 48
feet by eight feet will be placed six
·feet above ·the iop row of seats. It
will include small separate rooms at
each end for use by the home a~d
visiting coaches during football
·games. The press box roof will he
designated as a film deck for earner,
amen and filming of contests.
Access to. the press box will be Up
one of tlie aisle ramps near the center section ofscats.

Wh~n completed the new. scats
will be against the Fourth Avenue
bank near the curr~nt l)lue Devil
locker room.
The visitors' side of the ·field will
also receive new bleachers of the
same design and material as the
home side and will accommodate
about 1,000 people.
Payton also statcll that the dilapi·
dated public restrooms are being
replaced by Mike Carter. The
restrooms will feature al,l new facili·
ties, including th~ concrete floors.
The GAHS Athletic Deptartment U

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suppiying the new fixtures . Carter is·:.~
donating .his labor on the much-. ;~
needed Pfoject. .
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·Robin Lane, the president ot tlie' ,1
GAHS Athletic BoQsters, said that ~
work on tlie softball field is under- 1
way, with the new dugouts and ~
·backstop n~ly completed. She also'
said that a renovation of' the current
GAHS Athletic Boosters' CO~Jcess!oll' 0!.
stand os planned, and should prov1dc..,
worker* with more room in which iQ1'11
operate.
·
"l1
Replying to a question about a•• i
target date for completion, Payton ·~
said, "our first home game is. with ~o
Meigs on Aug. 30, and that is our ·''
target date to have everything

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Oria·

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lbUr Batikfn~...

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He DOled thai· the next · thr~:e *l
GAHS games are on the road, leaving a three-week wiildow until· the 1 "~
n~xt home g~me· on Sept: 27 to corq- 1 ~
plete the proJect .
·
'It,
On June S, a contract for the new , 1,
bleachers was awarded tO thc ,:.l
Southern Bleacher Company tiy ,the ·
board of education, and will be simi- ·
lar to those currently in usc at high l' '
school fields in Bellaire, Orove City, "'
Coshocton, Lancaster, Circleville '11
and Massillon Jac~on.
. t 111
. The new, blcac,lle~s will 'teplacc '
those installed in the summer or:l•
1l'i
1971 which replli;ea the f~eld's
inal seats that were inst.lled whei{V:
the field wu dedicated on Oct. 1, . l
1948. The IICW pms bOx will be the •u:
third in the field's history, and 1101&gt;
ond totally .new llniCt1ri ii~ 1948. i1
· When the · new bleache~s· wert! ••~.
REMODEUNG PLANNED:...Incluclad In the manJ prulecta to
fMIIItlaul Oallla ~-:• installed in 1971, the secopcl press .
Memorial Field will bl the renoYMIOn of the GAH8 Athlltlc
COilCaaalon lllnd. lnc----d box,
poasible bY-the Gtlllipolis
prwaure from aport&amp; fllnl'for qulcllilr Ml"•'lc:e cUing COiltlnla MajiOti¥tldbOIMilwil club olllowl 10 Rotlly Club, was elevated 10 f"'- .:
mnlte aome=~ the 11118 fuolblll 1111q11, A!'llong the~•:~ameata wiD 1111 new roof, 1 111'11 One new deck wu added for vllkllla ,,
do« It the ----nlllld. an 0\larlllng In front to prq!!.itla ....._for ~It the ~amoeoountlr mediL
.
~·
1nd ,...l'l'lllglnfl of aqulpment lnlicle to provldl more WOfldng ap1ce
··

(We wouldn't "kid" you. about these
rates!)
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9s00aDl-12cOO
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(~ee :rRJALS 'on B..)

ready.n

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL
JUNE 24-28

.•IJ

·Tigers and.Oriole's; notbh·vict~,ri·es'. ·i·

~ si~th lineup afte~'serving a two-games~- '

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()N Nl~lf (~llll·S
f)NJJY 7.7.5'ro lll1ll *

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•GALLIPOLIS - Sports fans
ttc nding Gallia Acad'emy Blue
~vii football games, track meets
· ~n(} other events staged at Memorial
fi~ld this fall will notice the sweepchanges currently unjlerway to
donform with safety standards and
~rdvide unobstructed seating.
1, Jn a joint venture of the Gallipolis
City School Board, the GAHS
.t.tJlletic· Board and the G~lfS

Q.

llA'l'I~S

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bleachers,
bathrooms
and
press
box
Aenovations
include
new
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992-4055
Yin,

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204 N. 2nd., Middleport, OH

Dept. Store

5..6 year-aid race
WiDDer- Megan Saunders
Second- Anthony Fowler
Third - Quinton Nibert
7-8 year-old race
WIDner- Todd Sauilden
Second - Bethany Coppler

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'ning that lasted 64 minutes and feaGired 12 runs, 10 singles, six walks,
Ove piichers, two.errors, a double,
~omer and wild pitch left both man: '
~ers
•
. frazzled Saturday.
:: New York manager Joe Torre. at
,lttiSt. was able to smile afterward as
;his Yankees beat the Cleveland Indi'ansli -9. ,
•• •
" "The end result was.wonderful,"
said. "Getting there WB$ a
:tt'agedy."
: "' Ruben Sierra hit ·homers ·from
•bc;lth sides of the plate, including a
:three-run· shot during a- nine-run
;si~th inning for !he Yankees.
t •· Alben Belle, back in the Indians

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·"Clowning"

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We're· not

WIDner - Gary Roach; Gallia
County Chamber of Commerce
Setond ...:. Gallipolis Municipal
Court Judge Bill Medley
Third - U.S. Rep . Frank
Cremeans, Ohio Sixth Congressional

Michael Johnson came within a . also adva'lced easily to today's final
. . ATLANTA (AP) - Once Dan . breeze of the world record in the of the 200.'
O'Brien cleared his psychological' men ;s 200, crossing the finish line in · In the men's IIO:meter hurdles,
ba!rier, the pole vault har became a 19.70 seconds, but a tailwind pre, Jack Pierce ran the fourth-fastest time
ciiJCh. By the time' he w~ done Sat- vented it from being recognized as a in history - 12.94 seconds - to
urday, the event that destroyed him world record.
. highlight the sermfinals. It was the
tour years ago had become his sal·Johnson, looking to his right with fastest time ever run · in the United
yation.
·
.
SO meters left in the race and appear- Sta~.
e
O'Brien matched. his career ing to ease at the end, punched the air
"I love big meets and this is one
decathlon best by clearing 17 feet, four times with his right hand' when . of the biggest," said Pierce, the 19'12
three-quarter inches, taking the lead he saw the time.
Olympic bronze medalist. "The hur1)-oni Chris Huffins after eight events
But the wind registered 2.7 meters · dles fell like 36 inches today. They
·· the decathlon at the U.S . track and per secon~. over the allowable limit didn't feel like the regular 42 incheld aials.
of 2.0, so the record of 19.72 set by es."
· Then ·he went out and set a career Pietro Mennea in 1979 still stands.
Also advancing to today's final
5I in the javelin with a heave of214
Johnson 's mark was the seeond- wen: two-time Olympic gold medalt on his last throw, increasing his fastest in history under all conditions. ist Roger Kingdom, wor]d.champion
in o~er Huffins to~ points and Leroy Burrell ran a wind-aided 19.61
Allen Johnson and Mark Crear, the
tting him~lf on pace t.o 'challenge in 1990.
·
·
top-ranked hurdler in the world.
Two:lime world champion Oail
wortc!,record of 891 points. .
C:arl Lewis and Mik~ Marsh b«?lh

CLASSES TUES.·SAT. 10 A.M.·NOON
TUES. &amp; THURS. 6:30 ·8:30

a good case to make."
With 32 electoral votes, Texas is
one of the key prizes of any presidential election. Clinton lost the state
to Republican George .Bush four

Celebrity race

Wilmer- KelTY Carter
See011d -Annie Carter
!1-10 year-old nee
WIDner- Lindsay Caldwell
11•1Z year-old race
WIDner- Brenl Sebert
Setond- Ryan Carter .
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Jay RqB GLOSTER ·

We Will Be Oosel June 23rd·July 1st .
Reopen Tuesday, July·2nd At 9:30 Atft1.
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Third- Andiew Woodyard

P'Brien leads in decathalon; Johnson and Torrence in.finals

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, 7-8 )'ear-old race

·In the Olympic track and field trials., . .

eOUN1~"51~~ C~~AMIC&amp;

Clinton propose~ registry Qf sex offenders
HOUSTON (AP) - President
Clinton announced plans Saturday to
create a national sex offenders reg·
istry to allow police "to follow those
who prey on America's children
wherever they go, state to state,
town to town."
Clinton's new initiative, following
up on steps taken earlier. is one. of a
long series of moves by the prestdent
to counter longstanding Republican
claims that Democrats are soft on

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not combat
extradition

rallied In the town where arson fires earlier 1hll
·month burned tWo predominantly black ·
churches, becoming part of a string of such
blazes acrosa the South. (API

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alli
a
:Criterium
?results
·...:p osted ·

sduspe_ct will ·

.., LAFIRY O'DELL
Aaeoclnltd P1011 Wrttlr
: RICHMOND, Va, -An insurance company apologized Friday for can·
celing the trre insurance or a black church that was destroyed by arson, sayifl&amp; it was all a mistake.
; Travelen-Aetna Property and Casualty Inc. of Hartford, Conn., also
offered to reinsure the Glorious Church of God in Christ and to conaibute
io lhe church's rebuilding fund.
.
"Our company for more lhan 20 years has been a major insW'Cr of churcbcs in this counlr)'. When one or our customers came face-to-face with the
Gonsequenccs Qf a vicious act of terrorism, we didn't react properly," said
Chatles Clarke, the company's chief executive officer for commercial lines.
· The insurance company at first had defended its decision to cancel lhe
policy, saying the Feb. 21 l!l'SOn fin: did not prompt their action.
Keith Anderson, a company·spokesman, said he called Morris Mahoney,
chairman of the church'S'trustee board, and apologized. He said an official
of Travelen-Aema will'meet with church leaders Monday.
.,
; Thursday, Attorney General James Gilmore W asked the state insurance
qommissioner and neighboring Southern states to investigate complaints that ·
insurers are canceling black churches' policies because of the suspicious fires.
: The commissioner sent lettei's Friday to mot:e than SOO insurance companies urging them to exercise restraint In canceling .church p&lt;ilicies .
. Mahoney declined to speculate whether bad publicity over the policy cancellation llrompted lhe apology.
.
· ''It's difficult io read the hearts of men. The only thing I can do is accept
RAISING HIS VOICE - . Dewey Ccinley of
their offer for the benefit of the church," he said.
Greenvlll!l, Texas, hollered pall a row of pollee
There have been 40 or so suspicious fires at predominantly black·churchofflcet'l at the Knights of tha Ku Kulx Klan dur·
.es in the South since January 1995. On Thursday, an arson fin: destroyed the
lng a rally on tha steps of the Hunt County
sanctuary of a racially mixed church in Portland, Ore., the first such fire in
Courthouse
In Greenville Friday. Klan membara
the Northwest

By SALAH NASRAWI

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Unabomber ~

Insurer apologizes for canceling
policy on burned black church

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Ponwoy • Middleport • O.Uipolle, OH • Point P11111nt, WV

I

'1n other NL games,
NEW YOU (AP)- New Y«k

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HUIIdley alld Gilkey, who havtr
~- roo- 35ilomalso rw. boch
homered Friday niJht, le8di11J lhe
Nets to a 9_. vic:IOI"y over the
Cillcinnati Reds and &amp;iviiiJ Dil'llco
his MCOIId win of lhe aeuon.
In bolh of DiPoto's vic:IOries,
Hundley and Gilkey have ho!neRd.
They have done 10 in only one other June all year, and that wu a loss.
"It's real fun 10 have Todd hit
bchilld me. Hopefully, we Clll ~om­
plement each other for awhile," said
Gilkey, whose 151h homer, a two-run
shot in the fifth, put the Meu ahelld
to stay, 6-4.
"Gille and I have a good time
together. We kind of feed off each
other," said Hundley, who hit a pair
of two-run homers, one in the third
otT Reds starter ROJer Salkeld (3-2) .
and another in lhe seventh o!f reliever Kevin Jarvis.
"It's nice to hit the ball hard. The
last week or so I haven't, and today
it all came back for me," said Hundley, whose 20 homers lead all majorleague cat~hers .

"Oetti111 in there wu the bia
thina. When you do act in, you have
10 do IIO!Ddhitll positive, alld llllliJhl
I Clpita!izccl on lhe ehlllee," said
DiPoto (2-1 ), whose Jut win carne
011 openin1 day April I.
- DiPoto led lhe Meg in ttpp
UICCI with 58 last ICUOII, but this
yew had beat in oaly 21 of the
team's first 72 games. He had noc
pitched in a week.
"Tonight I threw acouple of sliden and oae fllllball, but I relied completely on my sinker. 1'1111'1 the only
pitch I really throw well," said
DiPoto, who allowed two hits and
struck out two in three innings of
relief.
Reds manager Ray Kni&amp;ltt was
impressed by Hundley's hitting
stroke.
"He's so ~omfonable at the plate
right now that any ball away from
him, he's jusc anihilating. We can't
seem to get the ball in on him,"
Knight said.
Cindnnati buill a 4-0 lead off
Meu starter Pete Harnisch in the firse
three innings'.
Willie Greene's RBI groundout in
the first, Brei Boone's RBI single
and a sacrifice fly by Ed Taubensce
in the second and Barry Ll!rkin's

e• ·

W-111¥-

Los Anscles ........ ...J9 J~ .527
Colorado ............... ,J6 :14 .514
San Franclaco ... ;.... 36 J4 . ~14
SaaDicao ..............J3 )6 . ~14

AL standings

· ~vort . .-~~~....... u--~

lil

.444

10~

- . ..................... 29 •2 .408
Detroil................... l9 S4 .260

D
. 2•

Ballimtll'l! .....~ ~!
Toronto .................. 32 &lt;10

. 5~1

Friday'• scores

3

C...,...DI•I:Ion

Mi-. . . . .

a.EYF.LAN0 .......46 26 .619
OaiCJW0.................. 4l JO ,,T7
Mn.... w ............. ~, 36 .•93
:M

J6

.4116

K111111 Orr ...........:u 41 .42.'1i

.S4)
.ns
.452

Now Yort 9, CINCINNA114
Phil....,lphia 4, Colorado l (10)
Allanla 8. San FranciKo 1 (II)
Fk&gt;rida 4, Pilllburah 0
M...... 4. St!moi:J (12) •
San Dicao 2, Oricoao J 00)
Housroa II. Los Anaelcs 3

They played Saturday

·~

10:;
II
IS~

WtllemDh"'• Te•• .....................44 28 .611
' Sealdo .................... J8 J2
Calirornia ... .-...........38 34
o.tlaad .................l3 40

I.
1
1

5
6

Jt:·,

Friday••...,....

DH: New York 8, CLEVELAND 1
tiO); New Yort 9, CLEVELAND J
Drltvil1. Min.eaoca 0

Colorado (Rirz 8_.) at Philadelphia
(Mulholland S-6), 4:0:Ci p.m.
PinsburJh (Ncasle R-3) 111 Florit.lm ·
(1\.Leilct 8-6). 1:05 p.m.
San Franci~eo (Gardner 7·1) 11t Atl•ta
(MadduJ. 6-~). 7:10p.m.
CINCINNATI (Schourd 4--4) 11 Ntw
York (Ciolk 6-6}, 7 ~ 10 p.m.
St. Louis CMoraan 1-1} Ill Montrul
(Urbina.4-0). 7:35p.m.
Hou11on (Reynokk 8-4} a1 Lol A•Je·
In (R. Maninel ~-I), 10:05 p.m.
0\ica&amp;o (Caf"'lbe:ll 2-Dl at San Die1o

.By The •eao ciMilld PIWia
: It wu quite a heady perfoo-m~
by David Doster.
,.. ''I ~an 'I explain how I feel "
~r said after his first c~r
~r. in the lOth innins. gave the
."hdadelphia Phillies a 4-3 victory
~ver the Colorado Rockies on Friday
'flight. "Besides gelling called up.
~is ~- 10 be the best moment or my
~ife."
~ It was almost his worst. Just two
lnninss earlier, Doster was hit in the
:tle!llld on a throw by Rockies first
:llascman Andres Galarraga as he
pame home from third with the first
'f n of hi~ major-league career.
boster, playing his founh maJorleague game, stayed on the ground
for a rew seconds berore walkin~to
lhhlugout.

RBI sinale in the thin! accounted far
the 1'\1111,
New York lOt even in a fout-run
third off Salkeld on 101e ViliCAillo's
two-run &amp;in1Je alld the ftrst of Hundley'stwo-run homers.
Vi~eaino
literally knocked
Salkeld out of the game with alinedrive single off his knee to open the
fifth.
"It's stiff and sore. It's just a real
deep bruise," said Salkeld, whose
knee was X-rayed and revealed no
further damage.
"They told me it's S0-50 thai I'll
.make my next start," Salkeld said.
Johnny Rulf'm relieved Salkeld
and Gilkey hit Ruffin's 3-2 pitch into
the Reds' bullpen in left field for a
6-4 lead.
Lance Johnson's RBI fielder's
choice made it 7-4 in the sixth.
FINAL FOUR EFFORT REcoGNIZED _: SevDave Mlicki, who replaced DiPo- .,.1 ttlember1 of the 111111 lhltP beMIMIIItMm,
to at the start of the seventh, gave up which medl H110 th'- ,_.., D1Yl8lon I 111111 ...m.
a pair of two-out singles .in that
fl•'-• wre hononcJ Frldly ~lng at a bellqwt
inning to put the tying run at lhe It the M1lg1 County GoH Cciuru. In front are (L·
plate, but struck out Reggie Sanders
to end the inning.
Hundley hit his second two-run
homer in the seventh to complete the
scori'ng and enabled Mlicki to earn
his first major-league save.
Gilkey's homer gave him 33 goahead RBis, tops in the majors.

tAdoby T-2),

Baltimme 9, KAftiAI a.,·l
Sealdo 12, Olicoao 2

1o:o$ p.m.

.

Today'spmes

T.,.l4.8ooloo•

San Franciaco (0. Ft:rnaMel 4-6) Dl

Milw•lrce 10, Califonia ~

R) Scott Georg., Robert Qualla, Brlld Whltlltch : ,.,...and Colin Roueh.ln the beck,_ are held coech Scott GhHn, Rick Hciover; o.ry Stanley, Ca..
Cleland, Chid Burton and Mitt Ault.

1'loe7 played Saturday
New York (Roaer• .5·3) al CLEVE·
LAND (0. Min- 8-4), I~ p.m.

Kansas City (Belcher 6-2) at BaiUII'IOI'C
(Eri&lt;..... HJ, I:05 p.m.
Ni~a CA&amp;dred l ... ) II Detroit (8.
Williams~). 1:1~p.m .
Toronto (Janzen 4-l) ar Oakland

4-4) 111 Philadd·
• 1 : 3~p . m.
81 Los An&amp;e!es

Colorado

:~~~;~b~~~~~~~· l- 0)

Today'spma

New York (Gooden 6-4) 111 CLEVE·
LANO . (Mc0o~II6-S), I :OS p.m.
MiiJncsota (Radke 4·11) at Ot:troil
• CGohr4-8). 1 : 1~ p.m.
~
&lt;Appier s.1~ 111 ~~~itnDI'I!
(Krivda 2-2), - ~~p. m.
·
St:allle (Wolcoll ~-7) 111 ChiCDJO
CBaktwin b-1), 2:M p.m.
Cmlifomia (finley 9-4) at Milwaukee
CKarl7-.l}. 2:m p.m.
·•
Toronto (Gu1man ~ -5 ) :u Oaldond
: (Wojdechowsk.i S-4), 4 :~ p.m.

ci'r.

Te~111

(Oiiver-6-

2~8~p. m.

NL standings
lallti'IIDivbion

L

ra.

26 .6.14
Monaral .....,..........42 30 . Stl~
Florida ...................14 38
NewYorl ..............;\2 40

!ill
3~

11 ~
1

.472
,&lt;444

l;\ 1'l

: Plllladelpllia .......... JO 40 .429

14\

CtolroiiN•. ........ ................ J8 J1 501
• Sl. LoW• .... ............ 15 ~6 .49l
1
Chi.,.. .................. :.. J9 466
PittJbw&amp;h .............. 33 :\9 .4!i8 . h
ONCIJIINATI ..... ...29 37 .4J9
4~

1

•

R.ORIOA MARLINS: Acrivllltod lB
Quilvio Vcm from 1he I.S-d;y diSllbled
1is1. Sen1 OF Russ Morman ovuiaht ro
Charlonr of the httemalional Waue.
NEW YORK METS: RecAlled OF
A)cJ. Ochoil from Norfolk or lhc )IIICrM·
.rionat Lc~~pe . Placed 18 Rit;u Ekv411Q on
the IS-da~ disabled list, relroact1ve 10
June 20.

PITTSBURGH PIRATES: Puft!huod
lhe contract Clf RHP Elmer Ocssms from
Col- ol olio PCL. Opoioned LHP Maoo
Ruebel to CuiJilfY. Daianar~ LHP Lee
HMCo..:k for Utsianmcnl.

. BukelbaU

I IJ.n

BOSllJN CELTICS: Traded C Eri&lt;
· Montrou ud rheit 1996 fml·round draft .
pick (No. 9) 1o 1he Dallaa MaYerick• for
thrir 1996 fim·rouod draft pick (Nc. 6)
and 1heir 1991 fim-ruund .-an pick.

Ill

Florida

- .......

BALTIMORE ORIOLES : Sisncd

,

NolioMIHoct.,..._ ·

NEW YORK RANGERS: Named
Lan-y P)cau vic.-c prrsident of plltyer per·
~

- SAN lOSE SHARKS: Ao:qui.... D AI

RHP Chad PDtOAIO aftd RHP Jolh Tow-

m.

Hockey
sonncl.

F'mwldez 6-JJ. 4:05p.m.
California (Bosk.ie 7·2) 31 Mil•;wlee
· · (Mirllilda HI. 8:05p.m.
'
Boston .(Wakefield 4-7• at Tua1
: (Pavlik 9-1 ), 8J$ p.m.
.

'

Ouunan foe the purpose of livinJ him his
u..condillonal rcleiiiC.

tF01rm1 6-5). I:J5

(C'houiftard 0.2), 4:05p.m.
.
Sc~~tlte (B.Wella 7·1) a4 Chicaao (A.

r..
»:
Allan!• ................. . ,

Nootloorl ........
CHICAGO CUBS: Wohed RHP looe

St. Louis (Osborne 6-3) Ill Montreal

.

Boston (Sck 2-S) at

POMEROY The Meigs
Marauder baseball team was honored with a· banquet Friday evening
at the Meigs County Golf Course in
honor of its making ft to the state
semifinals.
Also on hand were members of
the 1976 team, who berore this year
comprised the last Meigs baseball
team to advance to state tournament
play.
Arter the meal, Meigs athletic
director Rick Edwards gave the
opening remarks and then turned
things over to head coach Scott
Gheen, who gave plaques and
medals to the players. Edwards then
gave Gheen trophies similar to the
ones 'he school received for the district and regional championships.
Dale Harrison, the. coach of the
1976tcam that lost a 1-0 semi-final
game to Elida, was introduced. Harrison introduced memberS of his
team -Pat Soulsby, Homer Smith,
Steve Bachner, Crenson Pratt, Brian
Hamilton, Mick Davcnpon and Dick
Owen - that were present. Also in
attendance was assistant coach John
Amott.
Harrison tal ked about the 1976
team and the similarities between
this years learn and his team 20 years
ago. Both teams finished out or the
title hunt during the regular seru;on,
but put it all together in the touma-

.

BOSTON RED SOX: A&lt;quirod RHP
Natt Minthc:y from Pawtucket of the lnlemllliooal ........ Dni........ RHP loon
-Doheny foraJUanrnr:na . ·
KANSAS CITY ROYALS: R«aakod
OF Michael T•ckcr from rch11bilitalioR
uaiarui.cnl ud OF RC!dtriek Mycn from
Dmaba of the American Assodllion. ap.
rioiiOII RHP Brian Bevil ro Omalll. .......
IB·DH Bob HamCii• 011 !he l!'i·dly dis·
abkodli•t 'l'r1odod RHP Ruaty ldeio:hlm to
olio Seonlo ldari""' lot INF lote A.-.

Iafrate from the Boston Bruiu for RW
leff Odsm orod • 1996 fifth·rolind llral1
pick.

, I

111l1tant c~ch John Amott and Cren1011 Pratt. ·
In the back row are hllld coach Dale Harrl10n,
Brian HamiHon, Mlck Davenport and Dick Owen.

ments to advance to the state.
George, Brent Hanson, Rick Hoover,
Members or this year's team Jru;on Mullen, Rohert Qualls, CllnS:
receiving awards were Mall Ault, Roush, Collin Roush, Caleb Shuler:
Chad Bunon, Cass Cleland, Scou · Gary Stanley and Brad Whitlatch'!

LAWNBOY, CUB CADET,
JOHN DEERE, AND MOREll

Don Tate Motors. Inc.
308 East Main Street

th

Pomeroy, Ohio

Anniversary ·

S.ALE!
19960LDS
CUTLASS
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1995
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'$13,995 $11,499
1995 LUMINA
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PONTIAC
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•

M-.. .

MINNESOTA TWINS: Acli¥11«1
RHP Davt S1e""' lrom 1111 IS-day dis~
abled liat. 'Retailed OF Man La.-on ffom
Salt Lake City of lhe Pa~;ific: Cout
........ ()pllonod RHP Polo
INF BriM Raabt1o Sail Lake Cily.
NEW YORK YANKEES: A&lt;q~~lml
UIP Billy 8....., ftorn lloe Lor A......
Dodom lot RHP Mllelu4d.
SEATTLE MARINERS: Seno INF
Joae Ando 10 lhe kMIII Cily RO)IIIl f«
RHPRu:oyldncliam ·

1185.00
585.00
1485.00
485.00

•

SEARS GARDEN TRACTOR
ALLIS CHALMERS 611
CUB CADET 126

CUB CADET 129
CADET 1325

150.00
350.00
'
885.00
885.00
800.00

....,

WALK-BE·
HIND2·
v.n-tEEL
MOWERS

FROM

'496

D'Ditt LAW/I &amp; IMIDE/I
150 UPPER RIVER RD. GALLIPOLIS 114 448-7821

'MONDAY ·SATURDAY 8 • 5, SUNDAY .10 • 4,

Padres l, ()aNI
~~
Jody Reed's one-0111 single in tlje
IOlh lifted San Diego ove~ visililw
Chicago. snappiqg a live-game lot
ing streak for the Padres.
Trevor Hoffman (5·2) pitched
two innings of one-hit ball for ' 11M:
win. The loser was Turk Wendell (f
2), who started the I Oth by givin&amp; up
a leadoff double to Tony Gwynn. ~ .
Jason Thompson homered iq the
second for the Padres. Jose Hern\Ut
dez tied the game 1-1 with a hO(Il!!f
in the si•th.
Astros 11, Dodgers 3
Orlando Miller drove in thrq
runs, two in a rour-run first inni~
and Houston won at Los Angel~s t
move one game ahead in· the
Central.
:

"

' .,•

'
By TOM•WJTHERS
ing three. He was successrul by stay- 8-0 . •
AP Sporte Writer
ing ahead in the count and was able
Chris Hoiles and B.J. Sl\fhoff also
These ~D)'S, it's one of baseball's to retire ttie Twins on popups ~nd homered for the Orioles, who are 8rarest oc~urrences, more scarce .tll,an groundouts in pitching Detroit's sec- 2 against the Royals this season,
a triple play or hitting for the cycle. ond comple\e game this seaso.n.
including 4-0 at home.
·
The Detroit Tigers pitched a
"He's tough when he changes his
Ripken had an RBI sin_gle, a solo .
shutout. More precisely, Felipe Lira speeds," Tigers manager Buddy Bell homer and a two-run shor. He has 12
pitched a shutout ror the Detroit said. "And he can do that when he home runs in his last25 games arter
Tigers:
gets ahead in the count."
hitting onl~ two in his first 45
No -!boling. , ·
Travi~ Fryman and Ceci I Fielder
games.
Lira pitched a four-hitter ror had back-to--back RBI hits in the
The Royals have lost nine Qftheir
Detroit's first shutout since last sixth inning to account for the last 12 and 16 of 24.
August as the Tigers ended a five- game's only runs.
Rhodes entered in the rounh
game losing skid with a 2-0 win over
It was the Twins' second tough inning ror injured staiter Rocky
the Minnesota Twins.
loss this week. On Tuesday, Brad · Coppinger, who left after being
The shutout was the first of Lira's · Radke took a perfect game into the struck above his right ankle by ali~
career •nd the Tigers' first since Scan · seventh, but lost a 2-0 decision at drive. X-rays were negative.
Bergman blanked the Boston Red New York.
C~ris Haney (4' 6) took the loss.
Sox,on Aug. 2 of last season. The
"We just raced a tough pifcl)cr.Mariners 12, White Sox 2
cloiest,Detroit came to a shutout this and he shut us down," Aguilera·said.
year was a 6-1 win over Oakland at "What more can I say. Their guy
Las Vegas on April 6.
pitched a great game and that was
lllterestingly, Lira's career-best it."
perfonnattce came exactly one year
Elsewhere in tile American
after his previous best outing, a six- League, Baltimore heat Kansas City
hitter over 8 J/3 innings in a 1-0 win 9-3; Seattle dereated Chicago 12-2;
over Texas.
Milwaukee downed California 10-5;
"June21-llovethalday,"Lira Tel(as rout.ed Boston 14-4; and
Family N~fat
(4· 7) said. "It's my lucky day now." Toronto edgiid Oakland 7-5.
The Tigers, siill on pace to break
Orioles 9, Royals 3
Back... Only Better!
the 1%2 New York Mets' record ror
'At Baltimore, Cal Ripken.homeEVERY TUESDAY NIGHT
rutility, are now 19-54.
red twice and drove in five runs, and
4 P:M.·9
ONLY
Lira o.utdueled Rick Aguilera (I ' reliever Arthur Rhodes improved to
2), striking out only two and w:llk-

Truablluot Clo.
~and tllleiM
All ...,..._ ....... to Cl9dlt ...,....

root""*-·

DOl TIQ 1101011, IIIC.
ITS~ YOUR DRIVEl

Alex Rodriguez, Edgar Martinez
and Brian Hunter homered as Seattle won at Chicago without the
. injured Ken Grifrey Jr. for the second night in a row.
The White So• lost their seasonhigh seVenth straight.
Matt Wagner ( 1-1) allowed two
runs and seven hits in eight -innings
to earn his first major league victory for the Mariners, who will be
without Griffey ror about a month
while a broken bone in his right hand
heals.
Martinez and Rodriguez each
drove in rour runs. and Hunter went
4-for-5 . Joe Magrane ( 1-5) was tl)e
loser.
Brewers 10, Angels S
At Milwaukee, California lcrty
Jim Abbott ( 1-11) lasted just 13 and

'l

,o
'' t.

batters and remained winless since after being recalled rrom Triple-~
May 2.
Pawtucket earlier in the day.
•.
Abbott walked six batters and
Jose Canseco and Mo Vaugh~
gave ~p four runs and two hits. He
homered for the Red Sox, whff
dropped his career-hYgh seventh dropped their fourth straight game!
straight decision, and his ERA bal·
Gonzalez hh a three-run homer in
looncd to 7.92.
the si•th and a~ded a solo shot in th;
Ben McDonald (7-3) improved to
eighth.
i .
11 -3 lifetime against California.
Blue Jays 7, Athlelit$,} ·;
' . homer
'
Rangers 14, Red Sox 4
Ed Sprague hit a two-run
At Arlington, Juan Gonzalez
and drew a bw;cs-loadcd wal~ to drihomered twice and Dean Palmer hit
ve in another run as Tor\)nto got. ifll
a lhrec-run shot to help Ken Hill win
season-high fifth straight win with f
ror the first time in rour stans.
victory at Oakland.
.,
Hill (8-5), handed an 8-1 lead
Paul Quantrill (4-7) withstoDf~
arter four innings, allowed rour runs two-run homers by Phil Plantier.a114!
and nine hits in seven innings to win , Terry Steinbach, going 6 1/3 inni~llf
ror the first time in rour starts.
for the victory.
Te•as scored five runs in the secMike Timlin pitched the nint,ll 'fqr
ond inning orr Nate Minchey (0-1 ), his 13th save. Doug Johns (4-9) took
who .wru; making his 1996 debut the .loss.
J·
• !,'
I

It's time to expect more
from a car company.'"

Is

AT TAYLOR MOTORS YOU WILL
ALWAYS GET MORE!

According to Walker,

Belle deserved fine,
not
.by suspension by AL ·
.

.

BEN W-"Ll&lt;ER

AP Baseball Writer

· Sides, and now no one is satisfied.
Indians fans are flooding the all sports radio slalion in Cleveland, .
calling in to complain about "Dr.
Butt-head." Yina is still upset that
the union tried to get him to change
his story - as in, it wasn '.t so

·. At this rate, preuy soon AL presi(lentGene Budig will issue a formal
· qpology to Albert Belle, pay him $1
lflillion ror mental anguish and nomiRate him ror the Nobel Peace Prize.
:- At least, that's how it looks these vicious, was il'!'
dan, doesn 'I it 0
Milwaukee manager Pbil Gamer
~- Belle and the players' union make
is angry, and s~ arc Belle's team- .
tC: threat, Budig an~ baseball back mates . Even Belle isn't completely
\ll&gt;wr. The ·Just time someone got
(Continued from B-3)
JQli!Ckcd so flat, it seems. was Fer·
'!l'ndo Vina.
~ By cuumg Belle 's suspension ·
~m five games, to three to two,
ll'udig has .invited criticism from all
•

Henderson, WV
Gallipolis 8r Rio Grande, OH

1995 DODGE D-250

•

4X4

Tribe
loses,,
•.

:
(Continued from B-2)
:: Belle's replacement in left field
1f)ls Jeromy Burnitz. He went 4-rort,wiih a home run in the opener, but
-rns ·O-for-3 with a walk in the second gaine.
: ''That stuff always haunts you,"
10nkees manager Joe Torre said .
·:Belle's out and his replaeement hw;
~reat day, But so did our guys. The
~thusiasm (rom that first game carrD:d over. It was like a snowball
gping downhill."
• Rpokie Ramiro Mendoza (2-3)
~owed three hits and two unearned
runs in live inninll" to win the sccood game. He snapped his threegame losing streak.
~ Derek Jeter, Bernie Williams,
~til O'N\lill and Tino Martinez
open_ed the game with consecutive
sj!lgles to put New York ahead 2-0
blfore T11.varez got an out.
·
: Williams liit an RBI double in the
sacond .and . Fo~·s two-run homer
c~ped a four-run thifd that made it
'7;1 and finished Tavarez.
" In lhe opener, Jeff Nelson (2-2)
piched I 113 hitless innings dnd
J'}lln :OV,etteland got his 20th save ..
• Jete(~ two-out, two-run single
ltWl Jose Mesa (0-2) with-.the loss. He
glveup fa,ir runs in i 213 iqnings,
aOd 'blew- only, ,._!tis second save
cl~ance in 25 opponunities this·sea·
~qn and founh in '13 chances in IWO
~s.
.
· ~ 'f\le't~ullpen's railure cost Clevela~~d ,s~er Charles Nagy hil bid. to
bticome thC;~merican · League's first
I:Z•pme winner. He gave up three
ri4)s on f.ive. hits in 7 1/3 innings.
: "An we were trying to do was
hq!d 1our own and suddenly .we
bl!Jke ;out I was a lillie concerned
~f~ay through the first game,"
TQrrc said. ,; ·tth&lt;;Jught we looked flat
0( course, give credit to Nagy for
IOO'Io)if:lhjlt: He pitched very well."
t 'f'l ~ f
:

I

doubled to -give the Braves their
fourth straight win.
Atlanta has won 16 9f itS last 19
games asainsc San Francisco, which
had its winning streak stopped at
four games and played in its third
straight extra-innin&amp; game.
Terrell Wade (2-0) pitched two
scoreless innings for the win. .
Marquis Grissom and Fred
McGrirf homered for the Braves.
Martins 4, Plnln 0
In Miami, Kevin Brown pitched
a five-hitter and lowered his ERA to
1.88, best in the major leagues.
Gary Sheffield hit a two-run qouble in the first inning, and Devon
White added a two-run homer in the
seventh.
·Brown (6-5) struck out seven,

walked none, hit ~ batter, and
allowed no hits through the first five
innings. The ri&amp;bt-hander pitched his
second shutout or the year and beat
Pittsburgh for the second time in six
days. He has nor walked a batter in
his past 30 'U3 innings.
Danny Darwin (S-7) took the loss.
Expoa 4, C.rdiaals 3
In Montreal, Shane Andre\vs hit
a two-out RBI single in the 12th to
lirtthe Expos over St. Louis.
F.P. Santangelo hit a two-out single off Dennis Eckersley (0-5), stole
second and scored wlien Andrews
singled to left. Mel Rojas (4-3)
allowed one hit in three innings.
TheCardinats tied it in the eighth
off reliever Tim Scou on asacrifice
fly by Ray Lankford.

Tigers shut out Twins 2-0; Rangers hammer Red Sox

_Y

'. I •

grwnder to shortstop before Dye

In other AL contests,

),

O'DELL lAWN &amp;tMRHN
USED EQUIPMENT SAU

"On a scale of I to I 0, it was off Bruce Rulf'tn (2-2) in the lOth for
about a 7 or 8," Doster said of the the game-winner. Toby Borlancl (4shot he iook on the top or his helmet. 2} was the winner in relief.
"l was more worried about my con" I was trying to throw a slrilce
tact lens because I couldn't see. It and I left it out in' the hitting area,"
was alright, though. It had just rolled ~uffin said of Doster's home run.
up in my eye."
"You can't leave pitches up like
With the Phillies traiJ(ng 2-1 in that.''
Elsewhere in the NL, il was
the eighth, Doster doubled home the
tying run and continued to third Atlanta 8, Saa Francisco 7 in II
when right fielder Dante Bichette innings; Aol-ida 4, Pittsburgh 0;
bobbled the ball. Gregg Jefferies, hit- Montreal4, StLouis 3 in 12 innings;
less in his previous 22 at-bats, fol- San Diego 2, Ghicago I; and Houslowed with a hard grounder to Oalar- ton II , Los Angeles 3.
raga, who stepped on first and then
Braves 8, Giants 7
In Atlanta, rookie Jennaine Dye
inade a throw home that hit Doster
in the helmet.
doubled home Jeff B.lauser with one
Vinny Castilla led off the Rock- out in II th inning for the Braves'
·
ies' ninth with a home run against winning run.
Ricky Bottalico, tying jt 3-3:
Reliever Rod Bee~ (0-2) walked
Doster than hit a two-out homer Blauser and Javier Lopez beat out a

., • '.J

Meigs 'final four' baseball clubs
honored at awards banquet

Atl~a (Glllvine 7-4). 1:10 p.m.

T......,?,Oaldood~

.-

dpring a bench-clearing brawl May
31 ended after Thursday night's
game.
"There was m,&gt;thing wrong with
Julian's velocity, but his sinker was
nat and he hung his pitches," Har- .
grove said. "It was just not a good
outing at all."
Greg Swindell took over for
Tavarez and went S 1/3 innings, giving up two .earned runs on six hits,
striking out six and walking two.
"I felt good. Maybe this was a
1976 STATE SEJioiFINAUST- Mentber1 oUhl
test to see if I can help them as a' 1878 Mliglltlte eeml-tlnllllt ba11ballteam-.
slarter," Swindell said. "I'm happy al10 rec:ognlud It Fridly'• banquet. In front are
doing whatever I can here in Cleve- (L-R) Homlr SmHh, Pat Soulaby, Steve BfChner,
land, though. The rans have welcomed .me back and it is a gre;.t reeling."
(See TRIBE on B·3)

NlliiMIIhlketW A

·
-

Yankees sweep Tribe in ·DH
CLEVELAND (AP)- The New nando Vina in the basepath on May
.York Yankees consistently beal the 3 I. The knockdown led to a five•Indians when slugger Alben Belle game suspension later trimmed to
was in the Cleveland lineup and had three and finally two games.
In the nightcap, the Yankees
1!0 trouble sweeping a doubleheader
tagged
spot starter Julian Tavarez (2with Belle serving a two-game sus4)
with
seven runs on I0 hits in 2 'U3
pension.
·
'The day-night sweep gave New innings. It was his first start .since
York a 10-2 record at Jacobs Field. May 26, 1994, stopping a string of
.
"II is tough to play with 24 guys 85 relier outings.
"This
is
a
blue-collar
team
1/lat
when the other team has 25," Indi~~ manager Mike Hargrove said grinds it out and .today we did it
,after the Yankees heat the Indians 8- twice to another very good team,"
, in 10 innings in Friday's first game said Andy Fo• of the Yankees. "I
think Tavarez is a very good pitch:.00 won the nightcap 9-3.
: "I'll be glad to put Alben's name cr. He just ran into some guys who
· :011the liileup~ard (today)," he said. . were swinging the bats real well
:"He's the centerpiece or the club." right now."
Tavarez's three-game suspension
-; · Belle is batting .315 but only .222
for
flipping umpire Joe Brinkman
:~ince flattening Milwaukee's Fer-

.•.
'

)

Philli-es beat Rockies 4-3;
Braves win,. l:&gt;odgers lose
.

-Mets hand Reds 9-4 ·defeat
·Nets risht-"--cr Jeny DiPOco il
ricli111 tl!e co.t..cails of Bernard
Gilby Md 1bdd Hundley this sea-

~

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. Sundly, June 23,1111

:S&amp;inctty, June 23,1916

In American Legion baseball,

In the Olympic track snd field trials,

~~llipolis

gets 16-3
win over Athens
By 0. SPENCER OSBORNE
TlmH-hntlnel S1d
THE PLAINS - In District 8
American Legion baseball action
Friday. Gallipolis Post 27 shook off
an early defiCit with a three-run rally
in the second inning to notch a 16-3
mercy-rule victory over Athens Post
23 at Athens High School's Rannow
Field.
The host Legionnaires dodged an
opening-frame threat by Gallipolis
when they turned a S-2-3 (third base
to home to first) double play to end
the Gallipolis first. Then Post 23 •s
Andy Peny, who walked and,moved
to third on a 6-4-3 (shortstop to
second base to first) double pl ay,
scored on Jack Pepper's line-dri ve
single to center field.
Facing a 1-0 deficit in the
second, Gallipolis saw things
-looki ng desperate when Jamie
Gruber grounded into a 1-6-3
(pitcher to shortstop to first base)
double play. But Atflllns starter Matt
Ross, after walking Cory Wilson
and Morgan Sullivan, saw leadoff
hitter Jason Dailey line his 1-2 pitch
into left center field to score Wilson.
Athens left ·fielder Brock Guthrie
bobbled the ball after Dailey's
si ngle. which allowed Sullivan to
get to third and Dailey to arrive at
second . That made it a lillie easier
for both runners to score, which
they did when Eric Humphreys
cracked Ross' 3-2 pitch into left
center for a double.

Gallipolis, which led 3-1 at that
point, never trailed after that.
In the next two innings. Athens
watched Gallipolis increase its lead
- a fielder' s-choice grounder by
Jamie Gruber in the third , Ross '
throwing error, Mark Bums' single,
a walk to Cory Wilson and a wild
pitch in the founh were responsible
for the guests' five runs in that
stretch- before scoring again.
The las~ Post 23 runs came when
Nathan Meyer and Guthrie scored
on Matt Goodwin's two-out single
to left center.
The Gallians' eight-run riot in the
sixth forced Meyer. the second man
in the Post 23 pitching relay, off the
hill. How?
Edwards' solo homer. which
landed two feet to the right of the
306-foot marker in left field. was
the first of four runs Gallipolis
collected from Meyer in the frame .
Two more came when first baseman
Heath Jago booted Sullivan ·' s
hopper. A walk to Humphreys and a
single by pinch-hitter Joey Johnson
accounted forthe other one.
Gallipolis had as much success
with Perry, who came from second
base to relieve Meyer after
Humphreys ' walk. Joey Johnson
drove Perry's 2-2 pitch into right
field to score Sullivan . Athens' joy
overthrowingoutDaileyattheplate
seconds later died when D Brunton
hit a three-run homer to right field
to put Gallipolis ahead 16-3.

By DAVID KLIGMAN
SAN'FRANCISCO (AP)- Cal. ifomia star Shareef Abdur-Rahim
. has changed his mind - again.
Now he's planning to enter ·the
NBA draft. after reversing an earlier decision to tum pro by announcing he was staying in school.
"I don't know if you can look at
this as nip-flopping," said California
coach Todd Bozeman, 'Who confinned Abdur-Ramhim's latest decision Friday. "He just wanted to stay
in the draft. He technically was still
in the draft."

Walker.

T

•=

PIVOTAL FACTOR - Galllpolle P01t 27'e Eric Humptmtye (5)
fouling off a pitch In the middle of Friday'• game egalnai
A
s, made hlmHifa pivotal factor In theconteetby hitting a tworun double In the eec:ond Inning to bring home the go-ahud nme
that Galllpolle Mlded to tally Ita eecond viCtory of the Hllon.

..:(TI---:me_s_·Se_n.,.tl_ne_l..:.ph_ot_o_b..;y~G_;_.S;.;pe::...:.:.n;,;cer~O.:..:;•b:.:o:..:ll':..:ne:!)~----.,.....--

-;

On several occasions throughout
the eqntest, diving defensive plays
by third baseman ~evin Edwards
helped Gallipolis gel outs in critical
situations.
One of these was in the fifth,
when Edwards' stretch dive of Jimi
Parkins' grounder · preceded
Edwards' throwing him out. That
capped Sullivan's first 1-2-3 inning '
of'the contest.
Su11ivan's 'lther 1-2-3 l'rame
came .in the sixth.
. •
-·-·Gallipolis, which ended its three-

I

.P

•
stop northern road swing with a ·
Saturday afternoon twipbill at
Logan, will host Meigs in a
doubleheader today at I p.m.
lpnlpa ilWib
Gallipolis ........031408 0=16-10-3
Athens ............ 100 200 0 = 3-6-4

Gallipolis Post27 (1-6)
P!am-1101,
1111. [ b
Jason Dailey-cL ........... .2 . 2 I
EricHumphreys-c .......... 2 I I
Mark Bums:2b ............... 3 I 0
DBiunton-ss ................. .4 2 2
Kevin Edwards-3b ......... 5 2 3

hi
2
2
0
4

2

STAYING WITH IT - Galllpolli Poet 27 third Sicker Kevin
Edwlrdi, after bobbllng"'lml Parkle' grouncler In the NCOnd Inning '
of Frldly'e game agelnet Athene, gell the hlndle on thtl INIMbiD .
before firing it to flreL Though hie throw wae too late to get Parkle,
Eclwarde'defenalveplaylnthehotcomerwasoneofthefactoreln '
the Gelllana' gaining a 16-3 victory In Hven lnnlnge. (Timee·Seno- •
tlnel photo by G. Spenc!r Oebome)
··:
Casey Canaday-lb ......... 2 0 2 0 Jack Pepj&gt;er-c ............. :.... 3 0 1 ~
JamieGruber-lf .............. 5 1 0 0 MattRoss-p/cf.. .............. 3 0 0 g ·
Cory Wilson-rf .... ... :.......O 2 0 o Jeff Erwin-3b ....... :....... ..4 0 2 0
Morgan SuHivan-p ...... :.. 4 2 0 0 Jimi Parkis-ss ................. 3 0 0 !I•
Joey Johnson-phil b........ 2 1 1 0 Heath Jago-1h ................ 2 0 0 0
CalebShuler-phlrf.......... l 1 o o AdamMitchell-cJ'.. ......... I 0 0 0
Totals
30 16 10 10 Bryce Lonas-ph/1 b ......... I 0 -1) O•
pjtcbea
Totals
rT 3 6 1
Sullivan (W): 7 ip, 4K &amp; 5BB
Pitchers
!,
Ross (L): 3 ip, 2K, 8BB, 6 hits. ;!!
AthensPostlJ (l-7)
runs (5ER) ,
,
,.
Playtr- 000 ,
II! r b Jli Meyer: 21/3 ip, 3K, 5BB, 2 hits.;7
Andy Peny-2b/p ............. 3 1 0 0 runs (SER)
BrockGuthrie-lf.. .......... .4 1 2 0 Pcrry : 213ip,IK,3hiis, l run(IER)
· ~att Goodwin-rf.. .......... 3 0 1 0 . Jord~n Whitlatch: 1 ip, 2BB

•

team's No. 3 pick.
"'I don't think Sharcef ever officially withdrew his name from the

•

16.731 -Tfoater seats oF excrti1! folliy Fm ~

l.m -1!1iqle sllops

·
UOO-RestOO'Oills with a .,.;et~ oF cuisno
1.m -Holes oF cl-oropionst;p golf
115 - filly Flll'li.oo:t honeo &amp;condoo
553- Holes oF llilkltn golffor 11-e kods '
IU - Tl'rililg aJCJsenent rides
65 - lo'i~s of wlite soociy beaehe&amp;

-Pages i1 0&lt;.1' fllfE vacation renta
g&lt;lide

r

1·800·845·8191 ' ;
rTl()unes

.

'

Marshall University is now registering for both summer and fall terms. Our office hours
are from 10:00 A.M. until 5:00 P.M. each day, or by special appointment. For more
information call Homer Preece at 304-675-2526 or the Center for Adult and Extended
'E ducation al 1-800-906-4723. You may also stop by our office at 2413 Jackson
·Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV. All summer classes are in the evening from 5:30 p.m. until
8:50 p.m. at the Mason County Vo· Tech Center, Point Pleasant.
t ' . .'
Summer Courses are: English 101, English 102, Sociology .200.

. . . . "GI«IIIKMIIM.

.IIICiltio Avo • Gorden Cil)j leacl\St. 2!576

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RIVER FRONT·POLARIS

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446-2240

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•1 lt-altor 6ni11'ldn..: nla,~ vM~··
. Availahlt from Mar 20thru,lunr 311, 1996 onlpt puniriJX•tl~~~: l'ubns.lo·;~lt•rs. ,. ''"·'"""'"'"''"''"

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.

Pool
/roday- 1-3 p.m.
~onday - 6-9 p.m.
fl\lesday- 6-9 p.m.
~\Vednesday- 6-9 p.m.
lt!turm.y- 6-9 p.m.
):rlday- 6-9 p.tn.
)Saturday- 1-3 p.m.
~unday, June 30- 1-3 p.m.

,
Free-weight room
:Coday - closed
Monday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
lnaesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
~edhesday- 3:30-8:30 p.m.
nurm.y - 3:30-8:30 p.m..
f'rlday..:... 3:30-8:30 p.m.
llaturday - closed
!;unday, June 30- closed

ST. RT. 7 NORTH, GALLIPOUS, OHIO

.'

share of micj-race collisions, was not
involved in the pileup thai involved
Wysocki. ·
"'There was a lot of pushing and
shoving and I didn't want to get
caught
in it," she said.

Slaney survived a collision Monday in the S,OOO final . She nearly
tripped on the last lap of that race
when Amy Rudolph clipped her
heel, but she stayed on her feet to
qualify.

EASTERN TRACK HONOREES - Awarde
were presented to Eastern's top track athletes at
the annual Eaatern Track Awards Picnic at
Forked Run State Park. Receiving awards were ·
(L-R) senior Beth Bay (most points In girls' field
events), junior Adam McDaniel (most points In
boys' field eventa) and senior Jessica Karr (most

burglary with J!SSault. German w.as 121 tackles in 1995.
released Friday on $10,000 bond, but
After his court appearance Friday,
will remain under house arrest until Germa~ learned of his suspension.
trial.
. When asked how the receiver took
''I'm not going to skin the issue the news, his lawyer, Joe Rosenand dance around it," Davis · said. baum, said, "Not well. He's upset,
"It's going to be this way or it's but that's normal."
.
going to be the highway."'
Miami football hilS become synAlso suspended indefinitely, were onymous with crime in the 1990s as
linebackers James Burgess, 22, a numerous players have run afoul of
senior, and Jeffrey Taylor, 22, a the law. The sch\)ollost scholarships
junior. Neither player has been and the Hurricanes didn't go to a
charged in the case and could be bowl game last season because of
reinstated once Davis detennines NCAA rule violations.
their role in the beating of Voce on
Wednesday night.
. The sprinter, who is trying to
make the Jamaican Olympic team,
said he was attacked by German and
a group of football players at his
apanment. He was able to break free
of the group ahd run to a nearby,
dorm and call police.
.
Nlke Air Much Up
Voce said Gennan accused him of
Tempo Basketball
spreading rumors that the receiver
was gay.
"It's regrettable, but it's a part of .
Infanta,
life," Davis said. "It's a pan of why
Children &amp;
kids go. to college. Educatio'n is
Mana
about maturing and growing. It's
about learning to· make choices in
life and understanding those choices have consequences."
Davis said he was prepared to
suspend his top players so the scandal-plagued program could regain its
integrity and respect. ·German .was
Miami's top receiver last season,
while the linebackers are the heart of
the team's defense, accounting for

~

....

otes: A Lyne Center membersh is required to use the faCilities.
F lty, staff, students and administra.,rs are admitted with their ID
carps.
• Racquetball coun reservations
ca~now be made one day in advance
by i:alling 245-7495 locally or toll. at I -800-282-720 I, cKtension
74 5.
' All guests are to be aceompanied
by Lyne Center membership hold,
a $2 fee.

"

..
•••

,.

.

After five events in the decathlon,
world record-holder O'Brien was
trailing Huffins - who ran the
fastest 100 in decathlon history to
take the early lead in the grueling
twG-day competition.

pointe In glrll' running events). McDaniel was a
l'l!dl01nal qualifier In the long lump, flniahlng NV·
at the Dlvlelon Ill regional meet at the Unislty of Dayton's Welcome Sladlum. McDaniel
ehed just one spot short of qualifying for the
s e meet.

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'
;RIO GRANDE - Here is the
sc\ledule for the week of June 23-30
at •!he University of Rio Grande's
Lylle Center.
j . Fitness tenter, gymnulum
t
and, racquetball courts
iToday- 1-6 p.m.
!Monday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
il'uesday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
;wednesday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
-Thursday7 a.m.-9
p.m.
l
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•Friday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
:Saturday- l-6p.m.
:Sunchiy, June 30- 1-6 p.m .

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Co.t 'per ho~r:

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AS LOW AS

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By JOHN PACENTI
; CORAL GABLES. Fla. (AP)Miami coach Butch Davis has spent
i jot of time trying to repair his Huriicane football team 's re~utation for
·~ff-field thuggery. In a matter of a
'few days. his effons have been laid
,lo waste.
.
·: Hours after the second-year coach
Qnnounced Friday he was suspending three of his stars for beating a
track athlete, it was learned another
dneofhisplayerswasarrestedforan
tlqually violent crime.
·
) Senior offensive lineman Rick
!eny was taken into custody early
~riday on charges of battery and buralary after gettifig into a fight with
His date. He was released later in the
day on $10,000 bond.
:~Perry, 23, pulled 17-year-old
T~nessa Cumming&amp; outside of her ·hqme and struck her in the face,
causing bruising_ and swelling,
acCording to the arrest repon. Cummlngs had no comment Friday night.
' Stunned Miami officials said late
FPiday they would look into the matter. "After we get the facts, we will
relict swiftly," said Rob Wilson.
as~istant spons infonnation director.
· Earlier in the day. Davis wasted
nti time in suspending receiver Jamml Gennan and two defensive playe.-for the beating of MaKwell Voce,
th~ captain of Miami's track team.
:The 22-year-old senior is gone for
th~ season after being charged with

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6~

best and setting the world's best 1,300 Friday evening and failed to
An.ANTA (AP) - Makin1 the mark this year.
reach the final.
U.S. Olympic team in the 200 meters
"'My thigh was tight in the 100
Slaney, 37, was among the leadwas supposed to be a mere formali- meters, especially in the last 1.5 en with little more than a lap to go,
ty for Gwen Torrence, the rei1ning meters of that race," said Torrence, but was unable to cope with the I04Olympic champion and the WOtld's who has used ice and ultrasound to degree heat and 48 percent humiditop female sprinter.
treat the thigh. "It huru the worst on ty.
Now, all of a sudden, it's going to the turn."
"I was just really tired. Today
be a struggle.
Also hurting is Jacltie Joyner- was the hottest day so far. I can feel
Torrence will have to overcome a Kersee, who qualified for the the effects of it," Slaney said. "I
thigh injury to have any chance of women's long jump final despite a couldn't have pushed myself any
continuing her quest for two indi- cramp in her left quadriceps. Her . harder.
yidual 01 ympic gold medals this husband and coach, Bobby Kersee,
"I'm not unhappy. I'd have liked
summer.
said she should be fine for today's to have run a faster I,SOO here, but
~ Torrence, who already has quali- final.
that wasn't my priority coming
fied in _the I00, survived the first
Chris Huflins led Dan 0 ' Brien by here," she added. "'My priority was
r6und in the 200 Friday evening in 69 points at the halfway point.of the the S,OOO and making the Olympic
the U.S. track and field trials despite decathlon. Michael Johnson, Carl team. I accomplished those two prithe leg problem.
Lewis aod Mike Marsh all easily orities."
• She faced quanerfinals and semi- 'advanced to the quanerfinals of the
Ruth Wysocki, 39, whose first
fVU~Is 90 minutes apan in the 200
men's 200. Gail Devers won her Olympic trials were in 1976, also
S'aturday, and faces the final today. first-round heat in the women's 100- appeared to be out of the l,SOO-:"My lefithigh .is huning real bad. meter hurdles.
but she advanced to the final after fiiBut I'm going to gut it out and try to
Mark ·croghan won the men 's ing a protest.
make the team," she said after fin- 3,000-meter steeplechase, Bob
Wysocki led for most of the race,
i&amp;hing third in her 200 heat in 23 .07 Kennedy captured the men's 5,000 but got jostled by Sarah Thorsell and
seconds. ''I'm going to think positive · and Kate Fonshell finished first in stumbled at tbe stan ofthe final lap.
aad pray."
the women's I0,000.
"It was just very, very physical
, Torrence, who had an ice pack
While Torrence is trying to pre- out there," Wysocki said. "With a
placed on the thigh almost immedi- serve her chances of running in two lap to go, I kind of got my feet tanately after finishing her heat, had individual events at the Olympics, gled and was sort of standing still
· only the I Oth-best time in the first Mary Slaney will have to settle for while ever)lone else was moving. By
round.
only one.
the. time. I got moving. they were
.t Torrence, the 1992 Olympic
Slaney, who on Monday used a gone."
champion in the 200, said her thigh dramatic kick to finish second in the
Officials upheld Wysocki's
. began huning in the final of the .100 women's 5,000 and claim a U.S. protest, disqualifying Thorsell and
last Saturday. She won that race in Olympic team spot in that event, fad- advancing Wysocki to today's final.
10.82 seconds, tying her personal ed to seventh in her semifinal of the
Slaney. who has experienced her

•'•

••

•

Vacation Special
1979 Georgia Boy

placated, saying he 'd already hired him and get out of the way. He's when there was no penally flag on
lawyers to hntinue the fight.
young. He'lllearn."
the play.
The only ones entirely happy are
Sure, Belle's hit was a bit exces- . In Belle's case, he was not ejectprobabl-y the folks at Fox, who are sive, even though he didQ't come up ed. If baseball wanted to line him for
televising Satunday's game atJacobs with a flying forearyn. Instead, it was· a questionable hit, OK. A suspenField between the Indians and Yan- a straight shot. Nothing worse than sion, no Way.
kees.. Because Clev~land played a - what happens to catchers when they
Of course, none of this would
dayltlight doubleheader Friday, that gel barreled over while blocking the have occurred if hadn't involved
took care of Belle's suspension and plate .
·
Belle. Had it been an aggressive runmade him eligible to play on nationIn the NFL, players are occa- ner like Lenny Dykstra or Paul
al TV.
sionally fined- but not suspended Molitor, many may ·have seen it as
Of course, this whole problem - for hard hits on quarterbacks hard-nosed baseball.
could have been avoided if it had
been handled correctly from the
start.
Belle, love him or hate him there's no in-between - ·should
never have been suspended in the
first place.
·
Yes, his behavhK._has been boorish at times, on anitOI'r the field. No,
TOBACCO' WAREHOUSE
he' II never been mentioned in the
1525 EASTERN AVE. GALLIPOLIS,OH
same sentence, not in .a good way. ·
(across from RAX)
with Ken Griffey Jr. or Cal Ripken.
But, all that said, what he did to
Vina did not deserve a suspension.
SPECIALS
Vina planted himself right in
Belle's path, rather than trying to
PEPSI12PK
sideswipe him with a tag. The first
time in the game that Vina tried it,
COKE 12PK
Belle took it easy. The second time,
Vina paid the price.
"I just think he should've gonen
out of Alben's way," admitted MilCIGARETTES, CIGARS,CHEWING TOBACCO,
waukee coach Jim Gantner, a tough
SNUF, POP, CANDY, GUM, CHIPS &amp; MORE
second baseman for 975 games in
the majors. "He was in the basepath, and while Belle may have cheapFOR YOUR CONVIENENCE ..
shotted him, Fernando's got to tag

....

•

By ROB GLOSTER

Conference freshman of the year last Contra Cgsta Times reponed1Friday
season, averaged 21.1 points and 8.4 that the Vancouver Grizzlies likely
rebounds and set a .Cal freshman will draft Abdur-Rahim with the
scoring record.
.
He first announced May 7 that he
planned to enter the draft, but
changed his mi,nd less than a month
later and said he wa~ staying at Cal. .
Bozeman wouldn't say whether
he felt Abdur-Rahim was ready for
the NBA.
"A kid could stay four years and
not necessarily be ready," he said ..
See
"That's kind of an unfair question."
.
Jerry
Bibbee
The San Francisco Chronicle and
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed
_&lt;~ee_w-'-_~_L_K~&gt;_R_o_n_B-4_&gt;_ _ _ _- ' - - - - - - - - - - - : , __

-....

· ·

'~

Doubts about whether AbdurRuhim really planned to .remain ;n ·
school surfaced when the NBA
offices received no letter requesting
he be removed from Wcdnesda[s
tlraft.
~
If the letter was not received by
league offices by 5 p.m. EDT Monday, then Abdur-Rahim was automatically entered in the draft. The
19-year,old could still choose to
remain at Cal, but any team that ·
drafts him will retain his rights for a ·
year after he leaves school.· .
Abdur-Rahim, the Pacific-10 ·

-

, , • .__, " t•PageB5

Torrence-faces struggle to qualify for 200-meter dash

Californi~'s Abdur-Rahim makes choice -to try this week's NBA draft
•

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II

Baseball's selfish
owners willing to
abuse loyal fans
By SAM WILSON

n-..s.ntlnel Corrnpondent
I just returned from a vacation to St. Louis,
where I saw the Cardinals play an e~citing game
against the Mets. "They lost, but it was still a great
game!
I love the Cardinals and St. Louis. Cincinnati could learn 111uch by their
example.
This was my first trip to a major league game in quite some time. Like
many fans, I boycotted last season in protest of the selfish attitudes of both players and owners alike. I even refused to
attend a game in which I was
given four blue box tickets !9
Riverfront. This from an illf!Jividual who teaches a university
class on the history of the game.
But slowly, cauti~sly, I am
trying to recapture my love of
our national pastime. I was surprised by how much faith in baseball was
shaken with the events of the past few years.
My trip convinced me that Reds fans should have pointed to St. Louis
when Marge Schou blackmailed Cincinnati for a new stadium.
For example, this year St. Louis and the Cardinals are celebr·• • ; ·~. with
pride, the 3Qih anniversary of Busch Stadium. Recently. the playmg structure has been altered to resemble a more traditional environment. Grass,
which I last saw there in 1969, h ~ replaced astroturf. The playing dimensions have been changed and the sladium is, as always, tmmaculate. Attendance is slowly going up as the season continues.
The revitalization of downtown St. Louis began with the building of
· Busc h Stadium. This growth continues today, with the latest additions being
· the Rams and riverboat casinos. St. Louis has kept up with the times. The
Cardinals and the city continue to ·work together for their mutual benefit.
· In Cincinnati, however, fans are alienated by being forced to pay· for a
new stadium which isn't needed. There is nothing wrong with Riverfront. At
·most, it could use a cosmetic facelift.
This is just another example pf a baseball owner playing with the hearts
· and m.inds of fans by forcing them to decide between losing a team or build. ing a new stadiu m. It started almost 10 years ago with the White Sox. They
· thre~tened to move to Tampa unless Chicago would build them a new stadi .um.
Be advised tpat we, too, will be supporting the building of Marge's palace
·with our state tax dollars. Imagine the cost of a beer and .dog at this new
·park!
·
In .40 years, nostalgic fans will be admiring Busch as a classic example
·of 1960s architecture. In Cincinnati, however. fans will probably be forced
to build yet another stadium to pacify another selfish owner who will be
:•willing to abuse their loyalty for personal advantage.
: Sam JNIIson, Ph.D. Is an associate professor of history at the University of
. Rio Granda. An avid fan of all sports- and a near maniacal follower of basketboll -he Is a native of Gary, Ind., and a graduate of Indiana University- which
:ahould tell readers something about where his head (and Hoosier heart) Is. ·

Winston Cup slate
·and standings posted
'

.

NEW YORK (AP) - The 1996 ingham, N.C.
Oct. 27 - Dura Lube 500,
· NASCAR Winston Cup stock car.
racing schedule, with winners in Phoenix.
Nov. 10- NAPA500, Hampton,
parentheses and driver point standGa.
ings:
.Feh I8 - Daytona 500, DayDriver standings
tona, Fla., (Dale Jarrett).
I. Dale Earnhardt, I ,968.
Feb. 25 - Goodwrench 400,
2. Terry Labonte, I ,9 16,
Rockingham, N.C. (Dale Earnhardt).
3. Jeff Gordon, I ,904.
Mar. 3 - Pontiac Excitement
4. Dale Jarrett, 1,735. ·
400, Richmond, Va. (Jeff Gordon).
5. Ricky Rudd, 1,724.
March I 0 - Purolator 500,
6. Sterling Marlin, 1,6 18.
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Earnhardt).
7. Ken Schrader, I ,604.
March 24 - TranSouth Financial
8. Ricky Craven, I ,544.
400, Darlington. S.C. (Jeff Gordon).
9. Rusty Wallace, I ,537 .
March 31 -Food City 500, BrisI 0. Ted Musgrave, I ,533.
tol, Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
II. Mark Manin, 1,529.
April 14 - First Union 400.
12.
Bobby Hamilton, 1,525.
North Wilkesborp, N.C. (Terry ·
13. Michael Waltrip."i-,479.
Labonte).
14. Bobby Labonte, t-.j73.
April 2 I -· Goody's Headache
15. Jeff Burton, I ,435.
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va.
16. Ernie lrvan. 1,368.
(Rusty Wallace).
17. Jimmy Spencer, 1.363.
April 28 - Winston Select 500,
18. Jeremy Mayfield, 1.347.
Talladega, Ala. (Sterling Marlin).
19. Rick Mast, 1,345.
· May 5 - Save Mart Supermar20.
Kyle Petty, I,328 .
kets 300, Sonoma, Calif. (Rusty
21. Kenny Wallace, 1,249.
· wall~e).
22. Wally Dal Jenbach, I,234.
May 26 - Coca-Cola 600, Con.23. Hut Stricklin, I, I6'1.
"~ord, N.C. (Dale Jimeu).
·
24. Geoff Bodine, I, 166.
June 2- Miller 500, Dover, Del.
25. Darrell Waltrip, I. I 53.
(Jeff Gordon).
.
26. Brett Bodine, I,140.
June I6- UAW-GM Teamwork
27. Steve Grissom, 1,127.
500, Long Pond, Pa. (Jeff Gordon).
28. Derrike Cope, 1,107.
June 23- Mil[er 400, Brooklyn,
29. Roben Pressley, I,098.
Mich.
30: Morgan Shepherd, I,090.
. July 6 - P~psi 400, Daytona
3 I. Joe Ncmechck, 1,077..
Beach, Fla.
32. Johnny Benson. 1,060.
July 14 - Siick 50 300, Loudon,
-33.
Lake Speed, I ,048.
N.H.
34. John Andreui, I,028.
July 21 - Miller 500, Long
35. Bill Elliott, 1,01 5.
Pond, Pa ..
36. Wand Burton. 1,009:
July 28 - DieHard 500, Tal- ·
37.
Dick Trickle, 90 I.
ladega, Ala.
38. Dave Marcis, 752.
Aug. 3 - Brickyard 400, Indi39. Mike Wallace, 723.
anapolis.
40. Bobby Hillin Jr., 632.
Aug. I I - Bud at the Glen,
4 I. Elton Sawyer, .61 I. .
Watkins Glen, N.Y.
42. Todd Bodi'ne, 3o:z.
Aug. I8 - GM Good wrench
43 . Mike Skinner, 299.
Dealers 400, Brooklyn, Mich. .
44. Loy Allen, 204.
Aug. 24 - Goody's Headache
45. left' Purvis, I 85.
Powders 500, Bristol, Tenn.
46. Chuck Bown, I68.
. Sept. I - Mountain Dew South47. Chad Little, 98.
em 500, Darlington, S.C.
48. Randy MacDonald, 9 I.
Sept. 7 - Miller 400, Rich49. Tom Kendall, 84 ..
mond. Va.
. 50. Greg Sacks, 82.
Sept. 15 ~ .MBNA 500, Dover,
5 I. Stacy Compton, 64.
Del.
52. Jeffrey Krogh, 58.
Sept. 22 - Hanes . 500, Mar53. Larry Gunseh:nan. 55.
tinsville, Va.
(tie) Jeff Green, 55.
Sept. 29'- Tyson Holly Farms
55. Rich Woodland Jr., 52 .
400, North Wilkesboro, N.C.
(tie) Herrnie Sadler, 52.
. Oct. 6 - UAW-GM Quality 500,
57. Scott Gaylord, 49.
Concord, N.C.
(iie) Gary Bradberry, 49.
OCt: 20- AC-Delco 400, Rock-

Area sports briefsRIO GRANDE - The Univelliily of Rio Grande will continue I
holding boys' basketball camp sessions throughout June and July at
Lyne Center.
Here is the remaining schedule of sessions.
lune 23-27: Boys in grades 5-10
June 27-29: JV and Varsity Team Camp
. 1uly 11 -12: Junior High Team Camp (Grades 7-9)
Players will be housed in residence halls on the URG campus.
Meals will be provided through the campus cafeteria.
For more information, call Redmen head coach John Lawhorn at
245-7293. Residents outside the local dialing area may call 1-800-2827201, extension 7293.

with friends.
,
Police also were looking into a
fight that occurred at the bar, but
hadn't torlfirmed whether Willard
was involved or if the fight played a
role in the killing.
Willard led the Colonial Athletic
Association with 50 goals this year,
including seven in one game.

Tickets For Family of 5 Free With Purchase of Vehicle
•NO DOWN PAYMENT

GALLIPOLIS -The Gal Jia Academy Athletic Boosters Club will
hold a special meeting for all members Monday at 7 p.m. in Gallia
Academy High School's library annex .
'
Film sponsors and a membership drive will be first on the agenda.

Little League tourney Saturday
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - The Mason County Little Men's
baseball league will be holding an open tournament for seven- and
cight-year-olds at Hannon Park from Satunday through Sunday, :July
7.
Any team can apply for the tournament drawing, which will take
place at Harmon Park on Thursday, June 27, at 7 p.m. The first 12
teams to contact the league will be accepted. No all-star teams will
be allowed into the tournament.
For more information, call Reece Dalton at 675-4689.

Softball tournament Saturday
PATRIOT- There will be a United States Slow-Pitch Softball
Association-sanctioned men's Class D&amp;E tournament scheduled for
Saturday at Raccoon Creek County Park.
··
For more information, caul Ed Caudill at 245-5919.

URG to hold girls' cage camps
RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande will hold girls'
basketball camp sessions throughout June and July at Lyne Center.. '
Here is the schedule of sessions.
June 30-July 3: High School Girls' Individual Camp
July 4-6: Varsity Team Camp
·
July 20: One-day Team Shoot-out
. July 21-24: Junior High Girls' Individual Camp
July 25-27: Varsity Team Camp
.
Players will be housed in residence halls on the URG campus.
Meals wil I be provided through the campus cafeteria.
For more information, call Red women head coach David Small·
ey at 245-749 I. Residents outside the lotleal dialing area may call 1800-282-7201, extension 7491.

.

'Baby Blue' Camp set for July 1
GALLIPOLIS - The "Baby Blue" Camp, for those entering grades ·
1-3 in the fall, will run from Monday, July I to Wednesday, July 3
from I to 2:15p.m. at the GalliaAcademy High School gym.
For more inforrnation, call Jim Osborne at 446-9284.

Skills camp slated
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Academy's varsity basketball teams will
begin a two·day offensive skills clinic on Monday, July 8 from ( to
3 p.m. at the Gallia Academy High School gym.
The free clinic is open for all youths entering grades 4-9 this fall.
Registration will be taken at the GAHS gym Monday through Friday.from 9:30a.m. to ·12:30 p.'m. and on the clinic's first day.
For more infomtation, call Jim Osborne at 446-9284.

Toledo hires Liske as AD
TOLEDO Ohio (AP) -.Pete
Liske was chosen Friday to be the
University of Toledo's athletics '
·director.
Liske, 55, currently has the same
job at the University of Idaho. Toledo irustees will vote on the appointment July 10.
"Pete Liske has the strongest possible background in collegiate athletics as bpth an administrator and .
athlete," said Toledo president Frank
Horton. "I'm looking forward to
working with
. him. in the years. ahead
'

,'M;·

to mamtam and develop an outstanding athletic program at the
University of Toledo."
Liske has been athletics director
at ldahosince September 1992. He
spent the previous seven years as
associate athletics director at the
University o(Washington, and trom
I976 to I984 wa.• general mamJ&amp;er
of Belting Industries it&gt; Boulder,
Colo.
He replaces .AJ Bohl , who
resigned earlier this year to become
athletics director at Fresno State.

'

:

•NO PAYMENTS UNTIL
September 19M
w/Approved Credit
.Prlcea &amp; Paymantl
Clearly Marked on
Wlndahlelda

.

.

•Credit Appllcetlona Are
Now Being Accepted
lor Processing

GALLIPOLIS - The first Blue Angels Basketball Camp, a girlsonly basketball camp for. players entering grades 4-12 this fall , will
be held from Monday to Thursday from I to 4 p.ll). daily at Gallia
Academy High School.
For more information, call Blue Angel varsity head coach Renee
Barnes at 256-6636.

~i CA~E CAMP ENDS -

Area Basketball Camp 'f irst of three camps that
drew 63 boys. It was the will be held in Gallipolis in

the next month. (Times;. .
Sentinel photo)

~alii polis Area Basketball Camp concludes after dra~ing 63 boys

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t992 CHEVY S-10 15800, V-6 eng., AJC, tilt, AM/FM c11s., bed
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1992 CHEVY S-10 15809, AM/FM cass., running boards, cullom
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t989 CHEVY S.10 115903, Black, chrome wheels, cullom stripes,
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sport wheels, cloth Jntarlor ..................................................... $15,995
1994 FORD RANGER XLT #5941, 28,000 miles, ba. of fact. warr.,
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1993 FORD RANGER #5938, XLT, 33,000 mjles, sport wheels, rear

: · :GALLIPOLIS - Here are the
;Wtnners of various contests in the
•fl&gt;pr-day Galhpolis Area Basketball
~amp,jVhic hdrew63 boyseniering
:grildes 4·9 this fall before endlJtg
:r,llursday.
; ·•
Bump Out
' · ,Fou~·araders: Jeff Payton
t • (Fiftb"'n4ers: Nick Craft
; ~· ~Sixth-graders: Jeremy Queen
•. •Seveuth1raders: David ' Finney
: lEighth·graders: Aaron Quimby
~ · 'Freshmen: Jeremy Payton
: :
Dribble elimination
: : ~Fourlh·araders: Jason North
•: 'Fifth.graders: Brett Wiseman

1llder, AM/FM casa ......................................................................$9330

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1995 CHEVY S·10 #5942, Extra cab, green, A/C, AM/FM can., rear
flip seats, sport wheels .................................... ,.....,................ $11,985
1994 NISSAN KING CAB 15943, 30,000 miles, AMIFM call., A/C,
rear slider, aport wheels ................................................,...;.....$11,345
1993 DODGE CARAVAN' #5888, Red, AJC, A/T, AMJFM call., tilt,
bag .........:......:.............................................:,.............................;. $9158
1991.PONTIAc TRANSPORT VAN 15784, 7 pall., AJC, A/T, tilt,
cruise, PW, PL &amp; seats, fog Jlghta, luggage rack V-6 eng ....... $9795
1990 FOflD o\EROSTAR VAN.#5946, V-6 eng:, A/C, A/T, AM!FM
76
cloth lnlerlor, crulse; lllt.................................. $5115
.1994
CARAVAN SE #5847, 7 pall., V-6 eng.; AJC, A/T,
AM/FM cass., tUt, cruise, aport wheels, PW, PL ......;............. $12,594
1994 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X4, #5982, 4 Dr., JX Pkg., aport wheels,
A!C, AM/FM cass., 23,000 miles, bal. of factory warr.,
cloth Jnterlor .............................................................................$12,495
1993 CHEVY S-10 #51161, Black, AJC, AM/FM caas., V-6 eng., aport
wheels .................................,........................................................ $5995
1991 DODGE CARAVAN #5963, White, A/C, fliT, AM/FM, cloth
Interior ......................................................................................... $5995
1993 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER LE #5964, Blue, A/C, AJT, AMJFM
case., Infinity radio, 7 pass., V-6 eng., II~, cruise, P. windows &amp; . .
locks, cloth lnterior ..........................................................,....... $11,995
1994 DODGE CARAVAN GRAND VAN SE, Red, A!C, AJT, V-6 eng.,
7 pass., IIH, cruise, air bag, P. win. &amp; locks .......................... $13,495

,

Sixth-graders: ClifT Wheeler
Sevenlh·graden: Bobby Jones
Eighth-graders: JefT Mullins
Freshmen: Jeremy Payton
"100"
Fourth·graders: Jason North
Firth.graders: Tyler Merola
Sixth·graders: Cliff Wheeler
Seventh-graders: Justin North
Eighth·graders: Colby Burnette
Freshmen: Brian Sims
- Free throws
Fourth·graders: Jeff Payton
Fifth·graders: Nick Craft
Sixth-graders: Shannon Shipley
Seventh-graders: Joel Elliott
·

~

Eighlh·graders: Colby Bumeue
Froshmen: Cody Lane
Three·pointers
Fourth-graders: ZackShawver
F!ftb"'raders: Nkk Craft
SJxth-graden: ChffWheeler
Seventh-graders: Bobby Jones
Eighth-graders: Colby Burnette Froshmen: Cody Lane
One·onol)ne
.
Fourth·gl'llders: Kyle Hudson
Fifth.graders: Nick Craft
Sixth·l!raders: Cole Stumbo .
Seventh-graders: Bobby J9nes
Eighth-craders: Jeff Mulhns ·
Freshmen: Jeremy Payton

Ballhandllng
Fourth·gnde~: Kyle Hudson
Flfth~gl'llders. Nock Craft
Slxth·graders: Ryan Hudson
Seventh·graders: Joel Elhott

Froshmen: Jeremy Payton
Freshman shooting learn: Derek
Baker, T.J. Frasher, Micah Kolcun,
Robby Kuhn, Cody Lane. Tim

McCain. Jeremy Payton. Brian Sims
and Nick Tipple
.
Best notebook: Brett Wtseman
Hustler'sAwarcb: DustinDecker (7-9) and Nick Craft (4-6)

tt:t\~Countt.

. . .tr.cWd
461 SOUTH THIRD

.

.,

PHONE 992·2196

AfiO[jlEPORT; o\'\

1

4.6 high output eng., PS, PB, auto. trans.,
AM/FM stereo cassette with CD player,
·leather Interior, power moon roof, all pow.er, I~ car, cast aluminum wheels, till &amp;
cruise, low miles, extra clean, power ·
moon roof.
WAS
$21,995

lOW

'•
'
:· . '· AFTERNOON CAMPERS- The afternoon - ·
it~~~· 1996 Maig1 Marauder girls basketball ,
'~ lnclud!td girls from grades 7-9. In tront are
·:(t;·R) Carrie AbbOtt, Amber Vining, Marissa Wha·
· ~. Shannon Price, Jollna Allan, Amber Haning
·and S1acll Sima. In the aecond row are Arlca
-Blackwell, Beverly Burdette, Bethany Boyles,
·~anle- Burd8tte, Leah Hutton,.C!Ifrrle Hoover,

CIIS
1992 MAZDA 32315916,3,000 miles, AM/FM cass.,aport whttl1,
rear defroster .............................................................................. $6775
199HONTJAC GRAND AM #5925, White, AfT, AJC, AM/FM t:aa., 2 '
Dr., sport wheels, cloth lnterlor .................. :.............................. $6i95
1993 FORD TEMPO GL #595t, White, A/C, AfT, AMJFM _cass., dual
mlrrors ......................................................................................... $7995
1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT #5954, Lt. pewter, A/C, A/T, AM/FM, dual
mlrrcu.s, rear defroster ................................................................ $84811
1993 DODGE SPIRIT #5950, Green, A!C, A/T,AM/FM, air bag, rear
defroster, cloth Interior .............................................................. $5995
1994 GEO METRO #5905, 29,000 miles, balance of fact. warranty,
A/C, A/T, AM/FMcass................................................., ................$7888
1995 FORD ASPIRE SE 15741, 2 Dr., Green, AMJFM ca..., 7,000
miles, balance of factory warranty ............................................$7995
1993 FORD TEM~O GL #5952, Wh~e. AIC. A!T, AM/FM·cass., rear
defroster, cloth Interior .................................................... &lt;........ . $7995
1991 HONDA CIVIC DX #5907, Black, AM/FM call., 4 Dr., sport
wheels, cloth lnterlor .... , ............................................................ $6495
1994 FORD ESCORT #5890, While, 2 Dr., AM/FM casa., cloth
Interior ................................................................ :........................ $7995
1993 FORD TEMPO GL #5958, Bl ck, AJC, A/T, AM/FM Cell., rear
defroster, cloth Interior........ .. ................................................. $7995
1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT I . 53, Blue, AJC, A/T, AM/FM cruise,
cloth Interior.....................................................................;........ $8995
1992 CHEVY CORSICA LT #591 Jack, A/C, A/T, AM/FM Clsa:,
till, cruise, P, windows &amp; Jocks ..................................................$7686
1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRD #5889, 2 Dr., Blue, AJC, AJT, AM/FM, rear
spoiler, cloth Interior ................................................, ................. $8295
t993 CHEVY CORSICA LT #5896, Red, AJC, A/T, AM/FM, rear
defroster ................:..................................................................... $8995
1993 FORD PROBE #5840, Green, A!C, tilt, cruise, AM!FM ca11.,
power wl ndows .................... ,.... ,,, ....................... ,....................... 19309
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE #5908, A/C, A/T, AM/FM c11s.1
cruise, P. windows &amp; locks ..................................................... $10,994
1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL:IS984, 2 Dr., red, AJC, AJT,
sport wheels, PW, PL, lilt, crulse...............................................$9587
1~4 PONTIAC GRAND PRIJC SE 15938, Blue, A!C, A/T, AM!FM
caas., tlfi, cruise, P. windows &amp; Jocks .......................,........... $10,885
1994 PONTIAC GRANO PRIJC SE 15930, While, A/C, A/T, AM/FM
cass.,IIH, cruise, P. windows &amp; locks ................................... $10,885
1994 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 158116, V-6, AJC, A/T, AM!FM ca...,
cruise, PW, P. locks &amp; seats, cloth lnlerior..................._..$11, f87
DODGE INTREPID #58t3;'Whlte, A/C, A/T, AM/FM call.,
clolh Int., PW, un, cruise, air bag, rear defroster .................. $11,ft5
1ft3 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 15879, A/C, AfT, AM!FM Clll., Ult,
cr~~Jse, air bag, rear del., PW, P.locks, aport wheela ............ $11,300
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 15932, Green, AJC~ A/T, AMIFM
caas., tilt cruise, P. windows &amp; locka ................................... $10,885
1993 DODGE SPIRIT #5957, Dove gray, A/C, AJT, AM/FM,
cruise .......................................................................................... $8995
t989 CHEVY CAVALIER ,5929, Black, 2 Dr., A!C, A/T, AM/FM,
sport wheels ............................................... :................................$4994

! l

.

.

and Julie Spahn. IJI the third row are Amy Hyllll,
Abby Harris, Bridget VllUghan, Becky Smith and
Trlc:la Davia. Fourth row: Jennifer Shrlmplln,
Tracey Coffey, Maliall Werry and Tonya Miller•
In the back row are c:amp staffers Mlck Devan·
port, camp director Ron Logan and Mlck Childs.
Absent when picture was taken was Tiffany
Halfhill.
..
.

'

19,

8

1111 LINCOLN MARK VII
I

V-8 engine, PS, PB, auto . transmis-

~~

sion, air conditioning, AM/FM stereo
cassette;- tilt and cruise, power wind·ows and power locks, power moon
roof, CD player.
WAS

.

_Trail Blazers' Trent says club benched him
tbo long after losing starting job to iiJjury
. ; PORTLAND, Ore, (AP) Rookie forwand Gary Trent said the
POrtland Trail Blazers left him on the
bi:nch 100 long last seasQD after he
lOst his starting job due !o a finger
injui-y.
: "You should never 19se your
pqsitiQn be~ause of an injury," Trent
said after a workoutthts week .
" : "The same thing happened ear!ier;in the season when Harvey Grant
gdt hurt and I started some games. I
Jtriew Harvey would come back and

team," Trent said. "The whole year
didn't work out." , .
To sh~w his displeasure at bj!ing

s..

No. I I overall pick last year
t'r~m Ohio University averaged 17.6
m1nuies per game for Portland .. But
hQ exJlCcted to see more court ume.
: !Tre'nt played more than a quartef .
orJiy once in ihe final 23 games after
broke his right ring finger tn m•dheliteve in paying your dues,
president) Bob Whitsitt
drjlfted me to bring wins 'to thi~

42945 State Rt. 7
g9P[ville;.,Qhio 45723 .

6~7-3.350

. '
4X4, 2.8 V6 auto, Black/Silver w/Charcoal
cloth interior, AC, AMJFM stereo, cru1ise ,.,~
89K mi!es. Nice Blazer.

'II 999

111.3 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Sign~ture

. 4 DR. 4.6 V-8 eng., PS, PB , auto.
trans., air cond., dual power seats,
AM/FM stereo cass., tilt &amp; cruise, all
power, cast aluminum wheels, local
car, A-1 cond, bal. of faclory warranty.

~ • ~0W 818,195

.

11• FORD F·IIO 414 SL7 PKG.
26,000 miles: 302 V-8 eng., PS, PB,
auto. trans, AM/FM stereo cass .• tilt &amp;
cruise, PW, PL, sliding rear window,
air .oond., chrome rear step bumper,
foot bed, trailer towing pkg., local
trUck, extra clean.
WAS

•

!
•.''
•

a

•

•'

$19'":.~n:r '18,499

!
Modn 265~11 Lawn&amp;: Gnrd"' .1hrrtnr

• 1$

Mmlrl ,;t(J-11 lAwn nnrl Cnrrflln Tro"IPr

.

"p '""•" with nptiMtnl4il" moN!i,. dPrk

NO PAYMENTS

OR

:!fJ '''} ,..itIt ,.,,,wnul48"' •itH diat:ltarp Mnaoi"6 41HII

INTEREST UNTIL OCT.

~~;;:;:;

1ST

COME SEE'THE (OMPLETE l~NE OF TORO• WIEEL HORSE•
TUCTORS AID RIDING MOWERS

l
AMONG TOP FIVE - At the Ohio Elks Anoclatlon'a alate aoc·
car shootout on June 9 In' Circleville, two ol the three Ganta Coun~
ty district winners represented Gantpolla Elks Lodge No. 107. Jta·
sica BQdlmer (lett) took third In the 11·12 year-old !illrla' division,
while h.e r brOther Jakfl, (right) took fifth In the 1-10 ywr-old boya'
division. Fallow district wlmar Brttt.ny Miller wasn't able to par·
ttclplle In the slx..nd-younger glrla' division -pelillon beCaull
of 1 10hedullng conflict. Batwaan .them Is Mrs. Patty Bodlmar.

AU
IOUTI241

'

..

•

BER

'IOHO

CHimlt, OHIO
\
'

"

Series

20 99

•'

1984 FORD LTD #5928, Black, A/C, A/T, P. wlndowa, Mill &amp; locka,

cond., AM/FM stereo cass ., dual air
bags, dual power seats, PW &amp; PL, tilt
&amp; cruise, cast aluminum wheels,
15,000 miles.
WAS

WAS

US F.IT YOU WITH ANEW ~
1
TORO WHEEL HORSE
•
''

14 495

·8

3.8 V-6 eng., PS, PB, auto. trans., air

lOW

M~n\~1111 Dr1v8 Straiglt Up Rt.
7 NOIIh·tnru Tup"""' Plains

(614)

lOW

$21,995

Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

:~ "The

$15,995

banished to the bench, Trent began
pulling up his socks to his knees.

1987 CHEVROLET
.
S-10 BLAZER

start.··

IAI:IIOW IIID'I'III

,,

•

:f,ast
week's Gallipolis
•

11192 CHEVY CAMARO #5948, While ........................................ $1995
1987 BUICK CENTURY 15920, A/C,AIFM,
cloth Jnterlor............................................:.................................. $1995
1987 PONTIAC FJREBIRD FORMULA 15933, Blue, 5 speed, sport
,whettll, Ult. A/C ........................................................................... $3995
1M8 cHEVY CORSICA 15945, White, A/C, A/T, cloth lntel1or,

.

''

KINGS ·ISLAND TICKETSI

Blue Angel cage camp Monday

GAHS special boosters'
meeting slated for Monday

••

''FREE''

URG to. hold boys' cagr camps

-----Sports briefs-----PHILADELPHIA (AP) - A
woman's body found near railroad
tracks was identified as Aimee
Willard. a star athlete at George
MilSOn Univelliity.
·
,
Willard. 22, a lacrosse player
from Brookhaven. Pa., was last seen
alive Thursday morning as $he left_
the suburblln bar where she ~ aone

Sun"-Y• June 23, 1186

OH • Point P...unt, WV

Pomeroy • Middleport •

I

)

•

�I•

,.... 81•.

t

Outdoors

-J
..........,

• • •, •

Ohio fishing report

WILLY PilE'S OnHOI LIFE

Lake Snowden
shallow~ get high
marks.for anglers

rr"SILIIM
'TO F1SH HaM!

The GalliP,Iis Daily Tribune,
The Daily SenJine/ and the Sunday
Ttmes -Senline/ value the co~t ribu­
tions their readers make to the spons
· sections of these papers, and they
· will continue to be published.
However, cenain deadlines for
submissions will be observed .
The deadline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and related anicles, from Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer spons, is the day
of the last game of the World Series,
The deadline for photos and relat·
ed articles for football and other fall
sports is the Saturday before tlie
Super Bowl.
The deadline for photos and related articles for basketball (summer
basketball and relaied camps fall
under the summer spons deadline)
and other winter spans is the last day
of ihe NBA finals.
. These deadlines are in place to·
allow contributors the lime they
need to KQuire theirpho{os from the
photography stiKiiofdeveloper of
choice and to give the staffs the
chuce to publish these illlma in the:
appropriate season·for thole sports.

•

'95 BUICK

OR

CENTURY

.'94 GMC SAFARI VAN.

$

·OI)io State Park Rent-a-Camps offer
~asy solution to great c,amping

Per
Mo.

;

said, "I feel a difference as far as the
way the car is planted out there. But
they didn'treally design this nose so
we'd run faster, they designed it to
race better. When the race starts and
the track gets slick, that's when we'll
know if it'll really help."
Hamilton called his fast lap on
Friday "effonless," adding, " It
seems like every time you run a fast
lap, it's easy."
·
Derrike Cope, driving a Ford
Thunderbird for Calc Yarborough,
another former NASCAR driving
grea~. took the outside spot on the
front row for the second straight
week with a lap of 184.153.
Morga~ She11herd was third at
183.613, followed by Mark Martin's
183.608, bOth in Thunderbirds. Bobby Labonte, who drove a Chevrolet
Monte C~lo . to victory in both
Michigan races last year; was fifth ·
Friday's · qualifying staned 20
minl!teS late because of rain. The
skies continued to threaten the rest of
the afternoon, but there were.no further delays. ·
Here are qualifying results Friday
for tod!l)( 's Miller 400 Winston Cup
race at Michigan International
Speedway, with car number, driver,
~ometow~, type of car and qualifymg speed 10 mp~ (rest of 42-car field
~as determined Saturday in funher
qualifying):
I. (0) Bobl&gt;y Hamikoo, Nashvilk. Tenn. ...,,_

uac Gnad PriA, 185.166.
'
2. ( 12) Donike Cope. Sponaway. w..h. Ford

Thunderbird, 184.153.
3. t75) MDIJIII Shephenl.
Thu-lrd. 183.613.
·

eo.o....

'
N.C. F'"d
'

4. (6) Marlt Martin, BMIIYille. Art. Food lbuoderl&gt;ird. lll.CI!MI.
•
5. (18) Bobby Labonle, Cotpua Ovtali. Texas.
Chevrolet Moote Corio. lll.S80.
~· (!I) Terry Labonte, Coqq
.· Olri11i, Texas,
Chevrola Monte Culo, 183.39l ..
7. (24) Jelf Gordon, Piltlboro. Ind ., Clle•rolet
Monte Carlo, 183J79.
8. (4) Slerling Marlin, Columbia. 'lenn.• ~vro­
let Monte Carlo, 183.309.
9. (9) Lake Speed, Jacbon, Miu, Ford ThUll·
derbird, 183.104.

~3) ~ E..nlwdl.

Kannapolis, N.C..

~~-Carlo. 182.997.
tl· (16)
Ted Mupave, Fraaklia.

111~ : :·Ma)'fJOid.

0

Wit ..- Ford ·

Thundedlird.ll2.385.
,
to~ .
19. (110) ();ci;Tric:kle. WiiCOIIIID Rlt&gt;idl. Wis .. '
Ford~uDderbird, 182.362.

~

fwd :

Owensboro, Ky.. . 111 20. (21)Michoic1Wakrip, Oweastloro, Ky..
• undcrbird.l12..338.
.' ,
182.82S.
,
2 1. (7) Geoff Bodine, Olcmuoa, N.Y.. fcird
14. (JO) Ricky bdd. Cbe:.-d:e, Va.. Ford
Thu-..L......L'...a 18" 242
'•
Thunderbird, 182.783
~
·~·"~ ' · ·
·
U. (4t) Ricky Crmn. New~·-• . M~ne.
22. t!9),S~Orinom.O-.AJ... Cbevio- .
Chevrolet Moak C.-to. 182.695. ......,.,
lct Monlt Orlo, 112.186.
.
, , .
16. (II) K&lt;My Wall..,, St. Louis Food Thun·
2). (37) Jol!nAncftni. lndi_.is. Ford
~· ~ 112
'
derbird. 182.062.
.
t :_
~·~
.Sl6.
24.(87)JoeNemochek.I.Wionci,FIL, O.v\v&gt; ,
, 17. (l.ltick Maa. RockbridJe 8Mhs, Va .• Pon·
~~ MC&gt;t11e Carta. 181 .924.
~
noc GJIIId Prix. 182.403.
l.S. (99) Jeff Bunoo, South 80110D, V... ford •
t8. (2) Rully Wolloco, Caocord. N, C.. FMd
Thunderbird. t81.8SS.
.
l •
~- ~~

'~" onu-~~

'Ill•• :
'

•MUD WRESTLING•

••

IIEDED, 'BOYS UD GIRLS • • UD WOMEI
lps16 nd •p-Wela•ts .120••d Up ,

SAIURDIY, JULY 6 · . .

• 7:00

~ckeye Foodlarid and Browns·Hardware
· . State Rt, 16o , and
Bidwell/Port•

1\IU.;-

Hank Vest will be it Foodland Mon., ,June 24 and
June 25 at 2 p.m. 'til 5 p.m. t o algn up entrarita for thla
event. Peraona age 16 thru 21 muat have parent• or
gurdlan algn a releaM of llabll!tY for thla pattk:IJMII)on. ·
AWARDS to the wlnnera end loaers,ln el!c:h weight category
- Abaolutely NO Profeulonala,
·
·
.Rules will be HI and m111t be foi~I)Wtd.

..~-~~~k~~=t~~~-----J :

JUST ARRIVED!
1993 CHEV ASTRO CONVERSION VAN

SFj681

."' -'.
Locally owned
and maintained.
Air conditioning,
AM/FM stereo,
custom wheel
covers, and low
miles.

EY
I·

•

'·

."...

locally owned
whh auto trans,
air conditioning,
ti·lt, cruise, AM/FM
casSl!lle, alum
wheels. This one
won1 stay long.

•

1993 0LDS CIERA
V6 engine, auto
trans; air
·conditioning, lilt,
cruise, low
miles.

OR

Just A Good Deall
depollt; SaiH tax extra.
Ouantltlelt limited! ' Ask for the Fleetco

·let me lay a ne)V concept on you. :· ·
"lazy Day" .is the pen name df
B~ Gilmore, owner of Middlepoit
\ Trophies and Tees as he continues to
write . anicles for the A&amp;:E Trade
Magazine.
''
Well, ole "lazy Day" has a grUt
article in the July edition of the mag·
azine. The feature anicle deals with
our· Stemwheel Festival and
includes photos of several of the
stemwheelers as well as some gooil
writing which actually makes Jldu
want to attend the festival. Bob tics
in, of cou..SC, aspects of his busi.w!ss
with the details of the festival and It
works well.
·
That kind of publicity in a national magazine cenainly can't hun the
local festival staged e(\Ch fall .
Jack Greenaway is back in
Pomeroy after having be.en admitted
to University Hospital in Colum~
last Monday for surgery. Let's j~st
say that Jack is back home regroup..
ing after decidin'g on Monday not ·to
proceed with the operation at that
particular time.

I

· Talented Denver Rice of Middle·
pon cenainly is i'n the public eye ·a
lot. Denver sings with the Gallla
County barbershop choral group but
his most frequent appearancc:.s
involve his "toilet scat" guitar which
he made some years back.
Denver is really in demand ·lb
play those golden oldies on the
instrument and he knows all those
yesteryear tunes. He recently played
at a pany honoring Ike and Mona
lee Neal .in Middlepon . .I saw :a
number of the guests mouthing -the
words as Denver moved from one
· oldie to another. I wonder if 40 years
down. the line at S&lt;?me pany guests
~ill be mouthing the lyrics of
today's music. I doubt it.
Thank you for helping make the
recent 58th wedding anniversary of
Ed and Eloise Stiles of Middleport
so pleasant. The couple was so
pleased by your various gcst.ures.

'

Thunderbird, 181.029.

0

Story and Photos
By Tom Hunter ·

..

10. (II) Bm1 Bodine. Chemuna. N.Y.. Ford

Each of you probably have yoilr

I own idea of "lazy Day." Howe~r.

.'

Just in time for
. the tamily
vacallon. Pwr
locks; pwr
windows, tilt,
cruise, air
conditioning,
and much more.

..

'

. '. STATE PARK CAMPING OPTIONS- Rent-A-C.mp'altlll above, and Camper Ceblns, below, offer
visitors to Ohl&lt;!'S State Parks with an exciting oppodun 1ty to enjoy and experience camping. Each of
these camping opportunities are designed to be both convenient and affordable. Rent-A-camps offer
Remember John Shasteen, for.a tQ-by-12 foot lodge type tent with all the amenities, such as propane cook stove, cola, lantern, foam merly of Pomeroy?
IIHplng pads, and large cooter for a cost of $20 per night. Camper Cablna offer a 12-by-12 toot woodJohn, as you might recall, spent
B!I'frame cabin with the same amenl"as, and areldeel camping durlng .the spring and tall months. Both · his career, some 26 years, as a memcamping options are available at Forked Run State Park near Reedsville.
ber of the Ohio State Highway
Patrol. He retired in 1994 and is living in Libeny Township, Jackson
. County, Ohio, with·his family.
Trained in police work and pretty
young--5 I years old--not to work,
John has become a pan of the Jack: son Police Dcpannient working its
: Community Policing Project.
j . The concept of the project is
excellent. The idea is to bring citi, zens and the police department
1 together in a cooperative .venture to
I reduce crime and that goal will be
! accomplished through public meetings between citizens and police
officers to discuss problems and the
, answers to them. In Jackson, an
advisory commiuee will be created
to help address special areas such as
, high crime neighborhoods and at
· · risk groups like seriior citizens and
i young children.
Programs li,ke John is heading in
I ackson are going probably going to
have to be effectively put into place
across the nation in order 10 crack
down on crime which daily appears
to grow more prevalent. Meantime,
the Jackson program has a good
leader. By the way, he's the son of
Mrs. Ethel Shasteen of Pomeroy.
Continued on page C-2

Excitement m.arked early times .in the sleepy town of Gage ·
.

.

8y JAMES SANDS

Local one owner
car with pow~
. seat, air cond,
tilt, Cruise. V6,
pwr locks.: Priced
for a quick salel

~ hidden lurprllll -

$300

'

·- · ·

•

REEDSVIlLE - Have you had a camping option. .
Riverview Trail, one of three hiking
long week. Looking for a way to
The c~bins are pro1(ided ·the trails at . the park, winds hikers
get,away for a great weekend of same equ1pment as the Rent-A· through the natuml beauty of the
outdoor fun, but the thought of Camp sites, and offer a lodging park to a ·point overlooking the
packing all of that heavy camping option for the cool months during Ohio River and the nearby Ohio
equipment into the car until late spring and fall. Heat is not provid- River Boater Access Ramp. ·
Friday evening doesn't make it. ed to the cabins, so campets may
For those seeking recreation, ihe
wonh the hassle......
want to supply their own vendess park offers an 800-foot sand beach
Never fear, the Rent-A-Camp heat during those cool months.
for swimmers and sunbathers.
programs at Ohio's State Parks proThe cabins have been ve!Y pop- Canoe and paddle boat rentals lire
vide groups and families with fully ular for hunters stayina in the area available at the park eoncession
equipped campsites .and all the fun during the fall, according to stand for those who want to relax
that goes w~th a weekend in the out- . Wachter.
atop the water. Volleyball couns
doors, with nothing to bring but
Reservations can be made for have ~lso been added to the park in
• yourself and some sleeping bags.
the Rent-A-Camp .sites and Carnpe~ the last year, providing visitors with
The program, available Forked Cabins through the mail ot in per- a new recreation option.
Run State Park near Reedsville as son at the park offices. Phone reser· With a beainiful 102 acre lake
well as 36 other state parks across valions held on a credit card num- for fishing and swimming; gentle
. Ohio, allows anyone to enjoy tent ber are also accepted at most parks, forested hills for hiking and campcamping and all the fun that goes but you may want to check with ing, and the nearby ,Ohio River for
with it for $26-$27 per night, individual·parks for availability.
recreational boating, Forked Run
according to park manager Randy
Reservations .can be confirmed State Park has a lot to offer the
Wachter.
only if accompanied by a deposit. weekend traveler, fr.om both !\far
The Rent-A-Camp sites inClude The Rt:nt-A-Camp deposi\ i.s $20, . and far.
a I 0-by-12 foot lodge type tent while Camper Cabin deposits are
already set. up on a platform, with a $22. Deposits ·are non-refundable
12-byr12 foot dining canopy shel- for-all confirmed reset'VIitions. · .
tering a picnic table and two burner
Golden Buckeye card holders '
propane stove with fuel. 'Other . are given a 50 percent discount on
. equipment provided for the camp rates Sunday through .Thursday .
sites include two cots, two six-foot nights, and a I0 percent discount on
foam sleeping pads, a 60-quan rates Friday and Saturday nights.
cooler, a camp .lantern, fire exlin- Persons with ·Ve.terans Admhiistra- '
guisher, throw mal, broom and tion certification pay only $12 for
dustpan.
Rent-A-Camp sites and Camper
According to Wachter, the pro- Cabins.
gram !las proven to be a. popular ·
Weekend nature proararns,
way to attract campers to the park. recreational activities, and a new
"The Rent-AcCarnp sights for tlie hiking trail. highlight . summer
most pan are used every weekend. attractions at · Forked RJJn Staie
It's been a popular camping oplion Park, according to Wachter.
• for visitors to ·the Pll!'k since we
The nature programs offer chil• added these sites in the mid-1980s," dren the opportunity to explore the
said Wachter.
landscape of the 815 acres 'of the
Camper Cabins, 12-by-12 foot park, teaching them about the
wood~n structures, are also avail- native plants and wildlife that exist ·
'. · able for rental at Forked Run, pro- · in the fields and fores.ts of the area.
viding, ~k guests with a year-long
the new three-quarter . mile

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Hamilton gets Miller Genuine Draft 400 pole '' ,.

Olympic trials.

PRIX SEDAN

o!

••v

~~r:a~se ~~~in~ai~n~u~;:=

Sports deadlines

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'IIDUM -IJIIMII)IJ

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) and chicken livers fished along the
Here_ is the weekly fishing report bottom. Bass fishing success is betprov1ded by the the Ohio Depan- . ter in the upper end of the lake north
ment of Natural Resources' Division of the island.
of Wildlife:
·
NO.Uwest
.
Southeast
UPPER SANDUSKY RESER- .
lAKE SNOWDEN - . Use live VOIR -. Fish with plastic worms
bait or artificial lures in shallow and surface plugs around the cattails
waters during the early morning or and shoreline cover for largemouth
evemng hours when fishin g for bass in the upper end of the lake dur•
largemouth bass in this Athens
County lake. Sunfish and bluegills
range in size from six to nine inch- beneath a bobber to take bluegills.
.
es and can be taken in deeper water
VAN WERT RESERVOIRS - . By MIKE HARRIS
on small worms or larval baits. · Both res~~voirs offer good fishing
BROOKlYN, Mich. (AP) _
SAlT FORK lAKE - The out- opponumt1es for saugeyes and chan- Bobby Hamilton, driving for longlook is excellent this year for anglers nel catfish. The smallmouth bass time NASCAR star Richard Petty
seeking · muskies, channel catfish . population is rated eKcellent with earned the first pole of his Winsto~
smallmouth ·and largemouth bass: fish ranging from 10 to 15 inches in Cup career Friday, taking the top
Channel catfish .in the 12- to 15- length. Nighttime fishing from the . qualifying spot for the Miller 400 at
pound range are not uncommon. A shoreli11e produces good fishing for Michigan International Speedway.
spring survey indicated the presence catfish lovers.
Hamilto~ . who qualified for his
of a good population of muskies.
Northeast
I51st stan, turned a lap at 185.166
Walleyes measuring up top 30 inchWElliNGTON RESERVOIR mph on the two-mile, high-banked
es with weights up to 14 pounds - largemouth bass appear plentiful, oval, possibly helped by a new nosehave been sampled here.
but averaged about II inches during piece on his Pontiac Grand Pri'x.
Southwest
a 1989 creel survey._Use Rapalas,
It is the first pole for the Petty
COWAN lAKE - Fish with small sp.mners and plastic worms in Enterprises team since Petty himself
night crawlers along the lake bottom· areas ":'llh submerged structure or turned the trick at Bristoi,Tenn., in
to take bullheads and channel catfish. vegetat1o~ for best results. Bluegills the fall of 1979.
Fish at depths of eight to 15 feet and channel catfish are also avail"We never cared all that much
around drop-offs and land points to able.
,
about poles, although I won 126 of
take crappies. A large population of
TUSCARAWAS RIVER- The them in my career," Petty said.
largemouth bass is present with Gnadenhutten area is a good location · ''Qualifying didn't mean that much
some fish weighing up to five for smallmouth bass anglers. Use to us because we'djust try to get the
pounds.
soft craws or hellgramites fished in · car ready for t!te race.
Ohio River
deep pools and the areas directly
"Now, it's so cotton-picking comThe New Cumberland Pool in
beiQw shallow riffies for best results. petitive, position on the track means
Jefferson ~nd Columbiana counties This area also produces good catch- a lot more."
·offers good fishing for hybrid striped es of rock bass. Channel catfish
Neither Hamilton nor Petty
bass, flathead catfish, channel catfish
appear to be abundant at Tuscarawas. showe~ much emotion, considering
and smallmouth bass. Fish the rocky
Lake Erie
how long it has taken them to get to
shorelines in the upper pool with
Walleyes are being taken among this point.
small jigs a.nd minnows to take the reef complex and ~ound the
. "To me, il's no big deal ," Petty
·small mouth bass. Use spoons, spinIslands m the western basm, the area sa1d, a gnn shmmg from beneath his
· ners and twister tail jigs when fi'sh- five m1les nonh ofthe Rocky River . trademark feathered cowboy hat and
ing for hybrid striped bass.
. and s1x m1les nonh of Eastlake. Cen- wraparound sunglasses. "I expect it.
Central
t~al basm anglers are fishing wiih jet Even though we haven't won any
KNOX lAKE - Th~ woody
d~vers and small bombers or dipsy poles or races, we feel we've got the
~horehne ~over and areas Wl~u.atd1vers and spoons at depths of 50 to people, the. crew to make this ha.pIc vegetatiOn are the most produc~5 feet. ~ellow perch up to 13 inch- pen . ..ye·re going to win more poles
.spots to fish for largemouth bass.
es are bemg caught one mile nonh of and wm some races, too."
Use plastic worms or small spinners
East 72nd Street in Cleveland on
"We've qualifi&amp;i on the outside
for best results. The best catches of spreaders and minnows fished along pole a thousand limes, it seems
channel catfish are made at night.
the _bottom in 30 feet of water. like," said Hamilton, who actually
Some o( these fish weigh up to 10 Smallmouth bass catch repons are h~ staned from the Second spot only
pounds.
.
good east .of the Conneaut break tw1ce. "We carne close to winning
GRIGGS RESERVOIR - N1ght
wall, at Fa1rport Harbor, CEI East- the pole a bunch of times. And I've
fishmg forchannel catfish along the
lake, the bubble at Perry and in the staned dead in the rear a few times
e~t sl!orehne IS productive: Use Irarocky shoreline areas of the western this year and drove plumb to the
d111onal ba1ts such as night crawlers -basin islands.
·front, so my confidence level is
good."
As for the new Pontiac nose, just
~so_n_tin_ue_d_fro_m_B_-I.;...J- - - - approved by NASCAR, Hamilton
In 1992." 0'Brien held a cpmfonable lead after seven events and
decided to make his first pole vault
attempt at his usu~l opening height of
15-9. But then he missed all three of
his jumps.
That failure ruined his Olympic
hopes, as well as the "Dan or Dave"
Reebok commercials that featured
0' Brien and fellow American decathlete Dave Johnson. It haunted him for
years, leading him to seek counseling
with a spons psychologist who specializes in trauma management.
On Saturday. he set hi~ opening
height at 14-9. He easily cleared his
first attempt, bounding out of the pit
and pumping both fists in triumph.
He ran over to an opponent for a
high-five.
He easily. went over at 15-1 and
IS-9, grinning broadly after clearing
the height that tormented him ill
1992.'
Then he kept clearing the bar until
he had succeeded at 17-0 3/4. lie
nudged the bar,at that height, but it
didn't fall . Huffins, meanwhile, managed only a career-best clearance of
15-9 to fall behind O'Brien for the
first time in the competition.

'95 GUND

Along·the River

~, JUM23,1

For a great deal on any or these cars see Carl Sanders,
Mike Sergent, Jim Walker or La111 Thaxton. . '

.; GEO • OLilSMOBILE

1616 Ea.temAve.

(6i4) 446-3672

• The plane crash happened on
back even while members of the
Special Correspondent
· April 16, 1937. 1\vo amateur .flyers
Wood family sat at the front porch:
, · Eve.n sleepy t.owns in G•llia' tried to m~e an emergency lal'!ding
Gilbert Bostic, who was 'visiting
·County like ·Gage bave ~ad exciting it\ their taper-wing Waco plane on
the Woods tllat even ina. saw the robmoments .in their history.
• the hill next to the road from Gage tQ
lle"' as he depaned the Wood home
hi 1925 there was a robbery at the Patriot.
aro1,md 10 p.m. He went back to die
·c;;age garage; in 1937 an airplane
. When tbe plane h!t the ground, it .
house and informed Tom Wood. ' .
crash-landed ob a hillside near turned at ;I right angle;, mn· into a
Bostic and Wood armed themGage,
ditch and ovenurn.ed. People living
selves wiih repealer shotguns. They
, Also in 1937, a Gage woman, 36, in the neighborhood rescued the surfired at the robbers who kept run~ied mysteriously.
vivors.
ning until they were in the woods.
She liad been marThe Tribune reponed: "Galbraith
It's probable that Bostic and Wooil
·ried for a week and . (tbe pilot) said be brought his plane
shot the robbers.
claimed that her hus- down because his gasoline supply
Back at the Wood G~rage, two
band had poisoned was ne,arly exhausted. He had
stolen cars that the robbers had useil
her twice. He put bought the plane in Washington,
were discovered. In one car .wall
something in her D.C., and he and his wife headed
found their take for the evenin~,
whiskey, she . told toward home. They' encountered
which included a sack of flour, some
doctors. However, ' many difficulties ~ ~y ca,me over
large oil' lamps like those used iii
the woman had a the moun.tains. In an effort to escape
churches in the 1920's and some of
hisiOIJI of IS attempt~ suicides. Her fog banks they attained a height of
Wood's motor oil.·
favorite modus operandi was to put 6,000 feet or more but they then ran
HEYDAY OF GAGE· This old ahed which may have b8en a atore at one,lma alta at the junction of
The cars belonged to people ill
_nail polish in milk. People believed into snow and ice. They were forced · SR 325 and SR 1411n the heart of Gage. In the1920s and 1930s Gaga had .a mysterlou1 death, an armed Hanging Rock and Oak Hill. The
sbe thrived on the sympathy she got to lower altitudes and eventually · • robiJery and a plane creah.
robbers were never caught. •
.
.
. . .
, .'
lrom ber hear misses.
made a landing but they didn't know airport."
Jemea Sends 11 a ·apeclel corno Ohm maps apd did not know bl( train.
: lnve,stigation showed th.at this where. In the landing the plane was
The pilot said: "I thought 1 recog- where we were."
reapondent
of the Sunday
. The robbery attemP,t was at the
:woman s death was most ltkely a slightly damaJcd, but they took off · nized tlie Ohio River and had·
Times
Sentinel.
Hla address Ia:
After a week at Holzer Hospital, . Wood Garage near Gaae. Robbers ·
suicide. She had gone too f'!' to get again. When ~y Crasljed at Gage - entered the state of Ohio, but I haP ~ couple returned home to Dlinois entered the locked garage from the 85 Willow Dr., Sprln91!oro, Phlo
.
.
,45088.
.
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•
they were lookiiiJ for the Charleston.
·
.sympathy.
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�P-eeC2•~

· 1 :·~~,~~~~~·~·~~~~~~~P~ome:':;~~y~•=M~~:~:~::~·~G~I=H~Ip:~:~I=I~,O~H~•~P:o~ln~t~P=~:I8~~~WV::~~~~~~~~~~~S:u~~::~y~,J:u;ne~23~,1;t;;ll

Pomeroy •llllldlwpart • O.Uipolle, Ott • Point Plnnnt, WV

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Heroes are everywhere; but especially at home
IJy DOROTHY SAYRE
Heroes come in various aces,
shapes. seJtes and sizes of huma11s.
Some heroes are showered in ticker11pe parades: most, however, remain
the unsung heroes in everyone's
daily life. I'd like to tell you abouf
my personal hero; my . husband,
George. George just happens to be
celebrating his 65th birthday today,
June 23.
My hero began life in Rochester,
Pennsylvania. His father, George
Martin Sayre, Sr., was from Antiquity, Ohio; his mothet, !filda Galligan,
was from the Beaver Valley area of
Penn. George's first remem~rances
of life include a life·long friend,
"Little Bobby Dugan," with whom
he rode, tricycles in the small park
outsi&lt;le their homes irl Rochester.
George's sister, Lois, was four years
older and kept an eye on the hoys
during their wild rides.
Life was unkind to the small
Sayre children; pneumonia en~ed
Hilda Galligan Sayre's life when
George was a.few months shy of six.
A couple of years later, George and
Lois were sent to make their homes
with (elatives in Meigs County.
Although lhey already had 'three
boys of their own, George's Aunt
Doris and .Uncle Herb Sayre loving-

ly lllfode room for lillie Georze.l.oiL
resided with her paternal &amp;rllldm01her, Camilla Sayre,- nearby.
Geortle spent time at both Meigs
County homes IIIII eventually lived
with "Granny• full-time. ·
. Growing
up in the Racine
area of southern
flhio remained
one· of George's
fondest .memories. His sister,
Lois, was an
eJttremely pretty,
popular girl. She
S.yre was a cheerleader
· and salutatorian of
·her class. George excelled, too, and
was a good student. In fact, he w0n
the state championship in Racine's
school division in Spanish one.year.
Basketball was his life in high
school, though. George played baseball, but by his own admission, "I
couldn't hit," and baseball was noi
the sport of his choice. George
worked deli~ering newspapers on
I) is bicycle part of his younger years,
ani! he turned his ·earnings over to
his grandmother without a second
thought.
lmmedialely after high school,
George_went io work for Crow _and

Company in Letart Falls processine • Ourinl his tour
chiekebs. Then, at ·age 19, he in Ilk Air Force.
entered the United States Air F~wal selected to
.with a few other young men froiJl attend 'The Fighter
Meigs County. He started his Air Weaponry School .
Force career as a radio ope111tor on a (the Air Force's
B-29. The Korean War needed equivalent of the
pilots. George applied, passed the Navy's Top Gun
wriuen, mental, and physical tests, school). George
and was acceped. He learned 10 fly wa&lt; . also, selectin an AT-6.
ed
for
an
exchange program to the Navy for
Soon, George was flying jet 18 months, where he became carrier
fighters. His 22 tn.year military qualified.
flying ~areer is mostly uneventful.
After the Air. Force and during
but it w.u punctuated by moments of
daring and excitement, not to men- part of his Air National Guard tour,
ti6n the word, "rear." He modestly he became a flight instructor/pilot
says he "broke a few planes," but for United Airlines. AI age ·60, com01her people and luck had a lot to do mercial airline pilots have a mandawith his problems and survival. He tory retirement, and you know the
ejected twice; once over a rice field rest of lhe story! Yes, he returned to
in Japan and once near ·a Texas southeastern Ohio and lives along
.schoor yard·. During lhe latter his beloved Ohio River. I admii to a
ordeal, his righl leg was badly frac- tiny bit of bias, but I believe most
tured. George was Hying with the people would agree with me, "The
Colorado Air National Guard when world is definitely better because of
his squadron was ca)led to South George Sayre." Thank you, George.
Vietnam. Perhaps it was on a "wing and Happy, Happy Birthday. I love
. ami a prayer" that George had you . You are my hero.
enough fuel to make it back to base
Dorothy Sorro ond hor huobond Qeofge,
after his F-1 00s tanks were punc- formerly or Meigs County. moved back
thr• yun aga •nd now rwkle In •
tured by friendly .or enemy fire . Nol about
hou•• facing .lhe Ohio River Jutl Htow
all·of his squadron was as fortunate . Syracuse.

Allbright-Cardwell
HEATHER OAVENPO~T AND MICHAEL OLDAKER

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.TODD AND KIM MORANDO

Koby-Morando

•: . GALLIPOLIS - Kim Marie Koby
:and Todd 'Fredrick Morando were
::united in marriage 2:30 p.m., May
:: 18 at Saint Louis Catholic Church fn
•: Gallipolis. Monsignor William
:: Myers celebrated the nuptial Mass.
;· Kim is lhe daughler of Dr. and Mrs .
~ Herman L. Koby. She is the grand: daughter of Doris Avery of Gallipo; lis. The groom is the son of Mr. and
;. Mrs. Carl Morando and 1he grand,: son of Lydia Gordon of BUller,
· ,·Penn.
C:
The bride wore a long sleeve,
t:full-length, straight gown embellr, ished with seed pearls and lace with
:a detachable train. She carried a cas·
t:cading bouquet of spring flowers
;: accented with roses and daisies. Her
~: hair was caught up in a draped pellfl
' 'and jeweled comh with a shoulder
:lenglh veil.
· Matron of honor was her sister,
;Kjrslen Koby Humbert of Wester'
·ville. She was altended by Kelly
;Koby, her sister, Amanda Pope of
:Gallipolis and Janet Gordon, cousin
;of lhc · groom of Butler, Penn . The
·bride's maids wore full-length, navy
:blue shealh gowns and carried
. :spring floral bouquets accented by
:daisies. Flower girl was Sara Moran- ~

do, niece of the groom.
Best Man was Tim Morando,
twin brother of I he groom , of Butler,
Penn. Groom's men were Braden
Weitzel, David Morando and Carl
Morando, brothers of lhe groom, of
Butler, Penn, and Keith Koby, brother of the bride, of Columbus. Ring
bearer was Carlo Morando, nephew
of the groom.
Music for the ceremony was pro-·
vided by Harpist·Terry Tomasek of
Sobthpoint and soloist Leslie Osche
of Butler, Penn. Readings were presenled by Amy Beth Podrasky• .
Arnold Maryland, Margaret Moran··
do, aunt . of the groom, of Butler,
Penn. and Tina Decker, cousin of the
bride, of Weston.
Gifts during mass were presented
by Robert Koby, godfather of the
bride, of Tiffin and Marie Ross. godmother of the groom, of Butler,
Penn.
Guest register was Lori Tope
Hardwick of Chicago, Ill.
• A. reception and dinner · dance
was held at the Student' Dining Hall,
University of Rio Grande.
The couple honeymooned on a
cruise in the Caribbean. They reside
in Butler, Penn . .

MONDAY
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Veterans Service Commission, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Velerans Service
Office, Mu'lberry Avenue, Pom6oy.

The Community Calendar is
publlsbed'as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to announce
meetlnp and spedal events. The
calendar ;s- not designed to promote sales or fund·raisen of any
type. Items are printed as .space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to nin a specific nunlber of days.
Sunday, June 23

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CROWN CITY · Waller Wood
preaching and baptizing I0 a.m.
Liberty Chapel Church.

ATHENS ·-Lupus support group
Monday, 6:30 at 8 p.m. at Grosvenor
Hall west room II 0 on OU campus.
Supported by the OU College
OsteopathiC Medicine and the Ohio
Departmenl of Health.

•.

TUESDAY
RlJILAND; -- Rutland Garden
POMEROY -- Meigs County
Club regular meeting ,Monday, 1 Genealogical Society, workshop for
p.m. at the home of Mar11aret Belle beginning g~neillogy researchers,
Weber.
'
·
·
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Meigs County
Museum . 4-H Club members.

---Galli~

~etzger-Pope

German Ridge Road with basket
dinner al 12 p.m.

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GALLIPOLIS - Education and
Interaction CIU'lliac Support Qroup 2
p.m. Holzer Medical Center French
SOO Room.

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CROWN CITY - Sincere Gospel
Group singing and Rev. · Victor
Langdon preaching 7 p.m_ Big Four
Church.

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School 6 p.m. June 24 through 28.
•••
VINTON - Thurman Grange
meeting 7:30p.m.

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POMEROY --Mr imd Mrs. Jerry resenlalive for Ravenswood AluGALLIPOLIS - Ric and Sue Rio Grande. She is .employed as a Davenport of Pomeroy. announce minum Corporation.
Oldaker graduated from West
'Metzger announce the engagement' medical laboratory lechnician at the engageinenl and upcoming marVirginia
lnstiiUte of Technology in 1
Holzer
Medical
Center.
riage
of
their
daughter,
Heather
and upcoming marriage of their
May
with
a bachelor of science in .
Pope
is
1993
graduate
of_Gallia
Christen,
to
Christopher
·
Michael
daughter, M.ichele Dawn to Jeffrey
8
,Allan Pope, son of Jeff and Carole Academy High School and is .Oldaker, son of Mr. and Mrs .. Toby influstrial technology and an associemploye~ by Bob Evans.
Oldaker of New Haven, W.Va.·
· ate of science in mechanical engiPope of Gallipolis.
. neering technology.
The
wedding
will
be
June
29
in
Dave~port
~rad~ate.d
wtth
honors
Metzger is a 1993 graduate of
The open church ceremony will
. · from O~•oynJVer~lty m M!~fCh ~1th
·River Valley High School and a Gatlinburg, Tenn.
·
·
.
a
BBA
ID"IDtcrnauonal
busmess
and
.l)e
July 20 ·at the Middleport Church
' 1995 graduate of the University of
·
finane.e.
Sb!:
is
aiL
inside
sales
repof Christ Music will begin at 6 p.m.
'

stouts. others doing projects; welcome.
..
RACINE -- . RACO; Tuesday,
6:30p.m. at Star Mill Park:
HARRISONVILLE -- Senior
Citizens blood pressure clinic, 10
a.m. to II :30 a.m. with meeting and
lunch to folloJ!I at town house.

ro

10 Ill'&gt; 111 3 DAYS·

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We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
414 SECOND STREET
GALLIPOPS
446-0166

__._,.,....

,.._

new, .. ,_, TIW* ,au. at·

_

...
-.., ....

. , . , _ ,.,.,_cy

,.

31 Olllo River Plaza ·

when you're young?

Does your ~f!!aring
aid need·. repair!.

ltDIC&gt;Tnu

•
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•

· ·Honrine-White ·

•

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Veterans Memorial Hospital, Pomero) L.if~·

Call us today!!
(614) 446-7619

Mayes-Patrick
GALLI'POLIS - Mitzi Lynn
Mayes and Darrell Lee Palrick
announce
·. their. engagement. and
upcomtng mamage.
Mayes is the daughter of Charles
E. Mayes of Gallipolis and Diana
Lynn Wilder of Homosassa Springs.

--~Wedding
The . Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards the weddings of Gallia,
Meigs and Mason counties as news
and is happy to publish wedding sto·
ries and photographs without
charge.
However. wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to publish accqunts of weddings as soon as
possible after the event.
To be published in the Sunday

,,

HOLZER·
MEDICAL
CENTER

Friday, Julj 5
,
11-8 p.m.
(3-8 p;m.Cholesterol checks)

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G.AI .I .TP, I ule~:P~•I~....:I'I.....IY
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•Stocks
•Corporate Bonds
•U.S. Treasury Securities

•Mutual Funds

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MELANIE LYONS AND JOSEPH i-IALL

Lyons-Hall

.. RACINE -- Alfred H. Lyons, Jr.
and Karen S. Lyons of Racine along
with Joseph C. Hall, Sr. and Leta L.
~all
Good win of Pomeroy,
announce the engagement and
af,proaching marriage of their childten, Melanie Dawn Lyons · and
J&lt;)Seph C. Haii , Jr.
• Lyons is a 1995 graduate or
HOc:king College with an associate's
ck!pee in dietetics. She works as a
•

· Saturday, July6
10
. a ..m
. ..to 4 · m. ·• /(ids

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OFFERING:

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nutritionist for the Hocking County
Health Department WIC (Women,
lnfanl and Children) progr&amp;!tt.
Htlll is a graduate of the University of Rio Gnui~ wi.th a depee in
biology/chemistry. He is employed
at Lancas1er Poultry.
. The wedding will be 2 p.m., Sunday; July 21 al the Syracuse fint
Church of God, Syracuse.'

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• Protection for

loved ones

poliCY---

· SU ER
CLEARANCE
SALE

Cal to IIChedule ·one free clean and
(Sll.!t•altle)

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• Extra retirement
income ·

MEN'S SEMI ANNUAL

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edition, I he ' wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received by
1he editorial department by Thursday, 4 p.m. pri~r to the dale of pub·
licalion.

•

isit ~~ HMC Mobile Unit during the
31st Annual River Recr~.atibn Festival
and receive a FREE health screening!! ·
.
•
· Thursday, July 4
.,1-6 p.m. - Blood pressures.

• Cash values buDd

Fla.
Patrick is the son of Kathy
Patrick of Gallipolis and Kenneth
Patrick of Oak Ridge. Tenn.
.
The open church wedding will be
4:30p.m.. Aug. 10 al the Nazarene
Church•. First Avenue.

675·1675
'

I

• Lower premiums ·

MITZI MAYES AND DARRELL PATRICK

'

: THURMAN - ' Mr. and Mrs. and a concentration in religion.
White is a 1995 graduate of River
Ronald . K. White of 'fh~rman and
J.fr. and Mrs. Roger .Hollrine of Inez, Valley High School. He·also attends
J(y. announce the engagement and Mount Vernon Nazarene College
forthcoming marriage of their chil- where he. is majoring in religion. He
~ren, Kristina Honrine .and JAson · plans to attend seminary school.
White.
·
· The open church wedding will be
: Honrine is. a. 1994 gnwuate of 3 p.m., July 27 in the Inez Church of
$heldon Clark High School.· She the Nazare_ne, Inez. A reception will
iuends Mount Vernon Nazarene follow at the church.
The copple will reside in Mount
~~:~::w~hereeducation
she is majoring
in
· wilh an
Vernon' until lhey have completed
on learning disabililies . their degrees.

IMIEARING·
· 43S 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
.0 ~;ar

on page ·o2

.,,..,,: l 'r.r.~o

HONRINE AND JASON WHrTE

.

s~ puzzle

•~- " ~ i

I 11!11&gt;1&lt;' . Yt .. o ,:11\lo''ll • ·

~

POINT PLEASANT

•

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25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE

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111.11 ..., . •. ,.,r

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TO
THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
·WE ARE OPEN .'TIL 7 P.M. ON TUESDAY$

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Why get State Farm-Life Insurance

f-8(1(.1.85f-5ol34

770 E. M~i\St., Jaekson, Ohio

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Focus on .your
financial future •••

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.
2tt:lSiate ~· teo 4,: ·

••

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Sliding Fee. Scale

_,,_.,..:lO_ond

•••

PORTER - Amish singers and
Peter Schwartz family singing . and
&lt;:;ROWN CITY - Ralph Work- Rev. Steve Rollins preaching 7 p.m. Qrown Containers." · ·
man preaching II a.m. and 7 p.m. . Clark Chapel Church.
•••
Good Hope Baptist Church. .
•••
•••
CENTENARY - Cal Sanders
GALLIPOLIS - Truman Johnson family reunion 10 a.m. to dark R!IC- l
preaching and Matthew Henry coon Crec.k County Park shelter six.
•••
.•
'!
singing 7 p.m. Bell Chapel Church.
Monday, June 24
GALLIPOLIS - Board of Direl:'•••
tors
of
Gallia
County
·
GALLIPOLIS
- Gallia Counly
been tucked away into forget it land.
Historical/Genealogical
Society
I
Local
Emergency
Planning ComThe usual story. of course. We gripe
. mittee meeting 12 p.m. Slowaway.
a little, have a flurry of publicity, . p.m. at headquarters.
·,
•••
I
then accept it ·all as inevitable. When
PATRIOT
Homecr'fling
at
GALLIPOLis
Canaan
Missionyou think about it. then it does
become just a tad more difficult to Saint Martins Lutberan Church, ary, Baptist Church Vacation Bible
' :
keep smiling.

•••

and Related Services
Pap Tests
STD Screening
Pregnancy Tests
Birth Control Methods including:
• Depo-Provera
•Diaphragm
• I.U.D.
;. Birth Control Pill .
• Condom/Spermicide
Anonymous HIV tests and counseling

·: , , _ . . . . . , , dmy•
~ llltJ(II Mil I \il'lf: _, Jff.

Thesday, June 25

,.•

Confidential Service for Women and Men
Family Planning

7'CSim- I UnlqUI Fonnulll cA 42
Hrlrbe, Yllamlni Mil •n.nla
Willi HlgiiiJpoll pic &amp; Thlnnogonlc .

GALLIPOLIS · - Vacation , Bible
Schoo(6:30 to 8:30 p.m., June 24
through 27 Elizabeth Chapel Church
f\'&gt;r ages 4 to 14.

.:

.

PLAN1NED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

liKE
· DIAMONDS
LOSt UP

Tammy Cardwell of Gallipolis ~
Judy Cardwell of Crown City. H~~s .
a crane operator at !nco Alloys lnt~-.
national. ·
•:
The private wedding will be J~c
29.
~
The couple resides in Gallipoli~.

I

C\UIIIIIIM ·

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate Garden Club meeting 7:30p.m. at home
of Brenda Covert. Program ·~Home

•••

GALLIPOLIS - Joanna L. Allbright and Brent A.. Cardwell
announce their engagement .and
upcoming wedding.
Allbrighl is the daughter of Alice
Allbright of Gallipolis. She is a cosmeiologist at Fines Styling. '
Cardwell is the son of Pe and

'

ADS CET

community calendar. --.

••••

:Beat. .. _ _ _ _ _ __
Continued from page C·1
. Rising gasoline prices were up
recently for the full scale media
· :treatmcnl. Eventually, gasoline
:dropped a penny a gallon--more big
)nedia coverage. The subject of high
:gasoline prices h~s now apparently

Sunday evening.

Davenport-Oldaker

MICHELE METZGER AND ALLAN POPE

--------Meigs community calendar--The Community Calendar is
published as a free service to nonprofit groups wishing to annoilnce
meeting and special ·events. The
calendar is not designed to promote sales or fund raisers of any
type. Items are printed as space
permits and cannot be guaranteed
to nm il specific number of days.
SUNDAY .
STIVERSVILLE
Special
speaker, Tom Jeffrey, at Stiversville
, Word of Faith Church, 7:30 p.m.

•••'•
••
••'•

Nowln

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Munidpal Bonds
•Insured Money Market
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"Serving the People of the
Area Since 1886"

Jay Caldwell
JohnMIUer

Account Executives
441 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

~

(614) 446-2125
1-1100-487-2129

Open Monday till p.m.

.'
~

\I

...

•

�•
~

1

I

Pomeroy • llklcl1port • Glllllpolll, OH • Point Pl1111nt, WV

ft pays to be friendly
when traveling in
toreign countries -

~

Sunday, JUM 23, 1186

A unive_rsal touch to h~rb lore

Pomeroy • MiddlepOrt • o.lllpollti, OH • Point P11111nt, WY

~. I

...

1
•

ly VILMA PIJOto.IA
frocn India.
!•
AfVic OuiiiiiiU, the days pow klepr rooalerB tpnol aad susafru n , utive to Nortll_.
ic:;l
step I~ every day" is the uying iomy llllive coun· ltld cbili 10 Mexleo.
try, Estonia. &amp;Ionia is u fw north in Europe u J.,_
Next time you pllllt a new hctb in your pnlen, ~
Alaska, is in North "'-ica,
By MAX TAWNEY
don't you ~ lhe question, "From wbe:e did dU pla'!f
said IIIII they were
The niahts aet shoner and shorter until Micbummer oriplally comeT'
I have met many nice "common, pan or his family.
·
,
NiJht, the niaht the nilhtinple stopllinpng beedown-IO-elrth • people in my world These dogs obeyed
•
there is no nighllefi., and Koit kiues Ella to declare their
tiavels. These people shlred !heir every
command.
I -libel a question: "Whaa- the fiMI bettie?" :
cverluting love- so the old &amp;Ionian 1101-y tells. It hlpliVes with me, which made my b'aV· When - the rancher
Pines hcdls i&amp; Frenc:h and I don't spea Pletldl, .0
just
wben
the
sun
dips
in
the
sea
and
teiiii1IJ
to
rise
els even more in~ting.
ordered them to herd
here is what the dic:tionary tells me. II il a Prenr:b IIOUi(
., When I was in New Zealand, I the sheep. they did .
again, and the sunrise the to used in the·plural. The "i" in fines is~ Ke" I]
.
·
kiu and to in "be," and the Kes" is silent. Tbe "e" in ltcdl ill pnl
Met a man by the name of Kun When he ordered
separate
Hulme who owned s,oOo acres of them to stop, they
iiOWICed ue".as in ''pet." The accent is on die last ayllfl
for another l!le. So, it is pronounced fe-ncrb tllld it means finelY,
land and more than 1.000 head of did. 11 was amazins
year.
•;
sheep. He invited the way the dogs carchopped herbs used together as a seasoning.
.
•
The
me to visit his ried out the rancher's
The 111011 usual combillllion is parsley, cllivw,
prolonged
ranch, so I spent commands.
fiiOII and thyme. But,. there IJ'e other eombillllidays,
with
plenty
of
sunshine.
encotJrqed
the
pllllts to a • ulled, depending on the f~ you are coolcing. 1iy
all of the ne~t
I will say that
vigorous growth and tomatOeS ripened faster. I ate in my ley, chi-. tarragon and chervil for your omelet
day with him. He New Zealand is one
1
father's garden, appl~ juicier than I have evet eaten
showed
me of the II)Ost favorite
All of thesi herbs are easy to grow And plet~~ant
IIJ!ain. In my mOther's herb garden, I remember the same have at harid to add upecial touch of taste to your cook-:
around
and countries that I ever
plan~
growing that I have in my garden in Ohio. My ing.
talked about the visited. All of lhe
;
father
used
to say, "All the w~ in your mother's gareconomic situa- people are
Remember thai funny rule I gave you - "Less of 1M
den have Latin names - that is why she calls them 'linle bit' is better than a whole lot of 'too mt,tch."' USC:
tion there and the friendly.
They
'herbs."' Well, not only had they names, but.my mother
customs people held. Then he took
WORLD TRAVELS • Max Ta~ right, Ia knew how to usc. them. That is why I love herbs. They an easy hand with your herbs and learn lo know them
me to his home for lunch wheR his reminded me of our
~les one by one. The herb is there 10 enhance the 18Stel
neichbors back on plctued whh rencher Kurt Hulme ~ owna are home to me.
v.Jjfe fixed a fan~tic meal. After
of the food- not to overwhelm it.
!
the farm. These peo. 24,000 acrea 1nd 15,0oo aheep In New Zeal111d. ·
There is quite a univenal touch to herbs and herb
hfnch, he took me for a ride in bis pic trusted each other
. "A. weccJ:I
lore. Even their origin sometimes ,surprises us. You
Jeep to check on his sheep. For and always helped each other. But, if friends, too.
to
those
who
have
forgolten
what
a
~eed
:s:
probably knew that many of our common herbs origi- is an unwanted plant growing in an unwanted place." Or,1
'!!!out three houn, we rode around I ever go back to New Zealand I
When I was in Kenya, Africa; I
·llaking sure the sheep were all right. hope I never sec that pilot named was hiking through a wooded area nate in Mediterranean regions, both sides of the Mediterranean Sea. For instance, bay, marjoram, mustard, ~: ~=~ =~ }~:~~-~~~ed is a plant whose usef~li
Jihen we returned, he took me to Alben.
when I saw a group of black boys oregano, rosemary, saffron and thyme are a few of them.
~ere they were shearing sheep. It
I just planned a new plaque for my garden: "My 0~
From New Zealand, I went 10 the beali ng up on another one about the
s unbelievable how fast they opposite side of Australia 10 Jakarta, same age. I picked up a large stick Southern Europe was the original home for sage, basil, den Grows Friendship" - and the weeds may stay tC
· uld shear a sheep.
·
Indonesia, which is northeast of and ran toward them. When they chives and sorrel. Dill came from ·northern Europe, from long as I find a use for them - and a Latin name, df
When I told him I was leaving the Australia. When I was in one of their saw me, they all took off and I went Scandinavia. Chervil came from Russia, tarragon is course.
·
• xt day for Queenstown, he said stores to buy a shin, a stranger came up 10 the boy who was lying oq the from Siberia and cardamom, cumin and tumeric are
VIlma PlklcoJa Ia a longollme ganlen.r lllld a founde of his best friends lived there. up and said he could show me the · ground. He was crying and covered
·
Ing member of the Gallla ArM Herbel Guild. .
. gave me his name and address best shirts. When he did, I bought with blood. I carried him back to lhe
d told me to be sure to go see him, two of them. Later, I discovered they hotel where one of the
'chI did.
were made of batik cloth, which is worken recognized the boy and
I
But I must say, the flight down to the finest cloth one can buy.
called his dad. When his dad arrived;
·st Church and Queenstown was
Batik, known to lhe ancient a group of natives had gathered and
something to write home about. Surncrians, was developed into an was cleaning lhe boy up and wrapOriginally, ·1 was booked on a 24- an of great beauty by the Javanese ping towels around him. The boy's
passenger plane, but there were only and other Indonesian people. The dad came up to me and offered me
foor and myself, so we had 1!1 take a batik proeess has become commer- · sortie money, but I refused and
small plane. Little did I know that I cialized in Indonesia.
reached in my pocket for a le·n-doi- ,
was about to take "the flight of my
This stranger said he was a doc- lar bilf. I told him lo buy the boy
lifetime ." The pilot was a dare devil tor, and asked if I would have lunch some clothes. One hotel worker said
who new like crazy in that moun- with him, which I did. We talked for I saved that boy's life because the
tainous pan of New
a long time, and he said he liked othen would have killed him, for
Zealand.
.
Americans.
sure. The hotel worken, who were
- He would ny through the valleys One day I went on a tour with IS black, had a feast for me thai
9ft close that when I looked out I other people, but I later decided I evening al the hotel and made a toast
t!JOught the plane would almost would rather go on my own and to me. I left a nice donation to those
tOUch the sides. of those huge moon- meet the local people. So I started delightful people.
tains. When we hit air pockets, the . out. While I wandered around, I saw
· When I was in China, I went to a
phone dropped hundreds of feet ·and a group of men smoking pot, which tractor factory and gave _the supervi~red me death. The pilot just iscommon there. I stopped to talk to sors a sign that I would like to go
l¥ughed about it. I thought for sure them, but they could not understand through and watch the men rhakc
that they would be sending me back English. They were having a good pans and assemble tractors. When I
to the USA in a box. When I got out, time, laughing and speaking in their got i~. I saw more than 100 men
l handed the pilot
· language. Then they stopped to offer working. Four supervison showed
The 1946 cllaa of Holzer H01pltal School of Nunlng held a r.unton June 13 lnd 14. Thone attend- .
$20, and said "you just saved my life me a pipe to smoke, but I told them me around. I gave each a dollar.
lng
were front left, Opal Riffle Hlrdlng of Plqu1; Jain Holmiln of Elat Tara1, Mlch:; Candace t:ewll
if l had a $100-dollar-bill, I I had a pack of cigaieues and hand- Boy, did they stan talking ·and
Thaxton of K..,t; Dorothy Ehmiln N!Wrt of GaiUpolla; Anna nmrnona npton of COiumbua; Beatrlc;e
to•uld give that to you. He hugged ed each one a cigareue. They started bowed down to me. Later, I found
Spaulding Stephenaon of Galllpolll and Allee Slick Sbtv-. of Pa!eakl, VI.
," . .
and said, "you ain't seen nothing to smoke them ·and clapped their
Conllnuad on Pl&amp;e c-s
•
1 ~&lt; • •~h.t ra
" and f said, "no, I don't want to
•
it either."
handsshook
in a gesture
"thank-you."
They
my handofand
I left.
When we airived I noticed that a · When I got back to the hotel and
&lt;flallter plane was taking passengen Jqld the guide what I had done, he
•
•
a flight over the south pole for said I was lucky they did nol rob me
l
Three of the fellows took it, because they wen:: bandits .. It pays to .
the other one did not have be friendly to the people. ·
flough money. I thought that was
A few yean ago when I was in
much and did not go, but some Bali in the Far East, I made friends
Jle&lt;&gt;ple who had made the trip said it with a radio announcer who really
worth $1,000. I understand that showed me around. He interviewed
me twice·on the radio, and took me
trip
~ilnl~:;;e~a~\~~~~~u~in3
but
tripthat
in was
tlu!l lo a funeral where they burned their
plane I just came in on was dead on a big scaffold out in the
of the best sightseeing trips ever open field. That day I was there they
burned four different bodies, and
''
I rushe&lt;j to a phone to call the there were more than I,()()() people
·I was supposed 10 see and he present. I took more than 30 pictures
l
10 pick me up. He look me lo
of thai occasion. I was very fonuhome where I spent two days and nate 10 make friends with this fel·
with his lovely family.
low. !think that is the fun of travelfriend also owntd a large . ing . in foreign countries--making
and had 2,000 sheep. In addi- friends with the common people.
he had five sheep dogs, and . They want to be

u.

pm1
ta

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f

alumni

•

PAUL AND RUTH KARR

·Karrs to.mark 50th

reuion-~~

, POMEROY ••\ Paul and Ruth dren, Marilyn (Ron) Spencer,
tvolf K.arr will observe their SO\h Nancy (Patrick) Morrissey, Roger
wedding anniversary with an open (Susie) Kair and David Karr, who
A:ception from 2 to 4 p.m., Sunday, will be hosting lhe event. They also
luly 'I at the Pomeroy Gun.Club.
have si~ grandchildren and one
t Mr. tnd Mrs. Karr were married · great-granddaughter.
1946 at Chester Methodist
The couple requests thai gifts be
panonage by tRev. E. L. Miller.
omitted.
· : l}teY are the parents offopr chii-

t''Y 6,

EdiSOnS obs'erve 60th
: MIDDLEPORT •• Edison and
.Bernice Baker of Middleport celeirated lheir 61lth weddirig anniver14arf May 24 in Frirfax, Va. at the
~orne of their daughter and son inlaw, P.al and Don Russell.
' Accompanying lhe Bal!ers to Virwere their daughter and son.,.law, Janel and Allen Downie of
\'~;~~:~~- A. luncheon honoring lhe
4
included grandson, Jon

!

::~~-;with
daughters,and
Kelly
and
troll) Virginia;
grandPam Boskie ,and her husShawn and son, Brad of Cali·

The Bakers · have three qther
§~;;;~ and , four great~
Who were unable to

1

r-~~~~~~~~~~~~;±~~i:;;;~~~~~:;;;;;;i:~;;;:;:::;;;;;jii;;;;iiijiiii;i;i:;i;iiiii~

'

hood of successf.ul removal frqm the
ventilator. .
.
.
Dr. Fraz:er rcce:vcd fund:ng from
. -several sources :n suppon o_f the
research.
1
She was awarded the .AACNSigma Theta Tau . Critical Care
Research· Grant m 199S. a research
grant from the Epsilon Cha.pter ~of
S:gma Theta Tau and a Pre~:denttal _
Fellowship from The Oh:o Slate
,University Graduate School. Addi. lional suppon was prov:ded byBaxler Edwards Cnt:cal Car~ D:v1s1on,
Puritan Bennell Corporat:on and the
Department of . ~ardlothorac'.c
Surgery at The Oh:o :Slate Untverslty.Medical Cent~r.
Dr. frazier presented a paper
reponing the results of the study ~t
the Counctl of Graduate Students
.

Spring Research Forum April 20.
Doctoral candidates were selected to
compete in lhe forum by submitting
a summary of their , dissertation
research. Frazier was selected as one
of the top eight entrants in thl: initial
competition .. She tlien submitted a
full paper and delivered the study
results during an oral competition.
AI the final' competition , she
received the Top Paper award in the
Professional ·Biological Sciences

Care Nurses,
the American
Thoracic Society, the Ohio
Thoracic Society, the Respi ratory Nursing
Society, Sigma
Theta Tau, Phi
Kappa Phi and
the . Midwest
Nursing
division.
Research SociDr. Frazier is · the daughter of ety. She is also
Ralph and DOrothy Frazier of Oal- · a lifetime mem- Suun Frultr: ,.
lipolis. She is a graduate of Gallia ber of the Ohio·
. •· ·
Academy High School and rece1ved State University Alumni Association·
a bachelor of science and a master of and the Galli a County Historical and·.
science degree from The Ohio State Genealogical Society and a membeJ
University. She is a member of the of the First Families of Gallia Coull'.
American Association of Critical ty;
''

.,.

Traveling ...._:____ _--:------~-~·----Once. ·I took my grandson, Bill
Continued from P198 C-4
Crank, with me 10 Ireland where
that a dollar ~qualed a day's wages both· of us found the Irish people
for lhem. What a tour I got. I spent eJ~;ceptionally friendly.
·
fourhoun there, and this included a
These are just a few of the won·
fanlastic ' lunch of rice and meat. I · derful experiences with people that 1
took one. bite because I never tasted have..bad. Some guides tell tourists
· anything like that and .later found not to mingle with the local people
out it was monkey meat. Thai was a because it is too dahgerous, but r
day i will never forget.
like to talk to .the common people.

·Give them a,. gift from good old
USA, and-that will really tum them
on. 1 never try to take advantage of
the foreign natives. That is a "nono." I always carry lots of cigarettes;
chewing gum and United States
coins. These things help make
friends with the natives. Try it on
your ne~t trip.
I hope to be on my way to Costa

Rica in the near future and may gil
on down to Panama. If I go\to Panat.
rna, I will have been i~ 71_ foreip.
countries. '
•.c.
Max Tawney II a local bUll.,
ne1sman who occaaloniiiJ·
wrltea oOiunlna for the Sunday.
Tlmea~Sentlnel on hill world
travels.

Empite.and
Furniture.
Bernice
also ·r. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.._....,_ _ _ _ _....,..~":""--------------....;.--------------,
owned
operated the
Middlepon
, .
Bookstore for 12 yean selling it in
1973 to Pat Smith anJI Janice Salser.
•

.

'

.

attend, Elizabeth Downie of Columbus: Debbie Beegle and son, Ryan of
Middleport, and Cindy S(mnions,
and her husband, Perry: and their
sons, Nlc)&lt;, Jake and Sh~wn . of
Texas.
The Baken are retired from,businesses they owned. and operated for
many years in Middleport. Edison
and his brother, John Baker'qperated
Baker Furniture for 27 yean, arid
then Edison continued ownershill
and operation with his wife ·until
1982 when lhe busihess was sold to

GALLIPOLIS • AI a commencement ceremony June, 7 Dr. Gordon
Gee, president of The Ohio State
University, conferred the degree,
Doctor of Philosophy, on Susan K.
Frazier.
Dr. Frazier's major field of study
is critical care nuning . She also
received a ·minor degree in cardiopulmonary physiology. Hbr dis·
seriation research is titled "Right
Heart Hemodynamics During Wean·
ing From Mechanical Ventilation."
The study described and compared the effects of three different
methods of removing an individual
from a mechanical ventilator (respi. rator) on blood now• through the
right side of the bean. Alterations in
right heart blood now a'nd right hean
· performance may reduce the likeli'

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• 2x 10 Floor Joint, 161n. On Center
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• t:r,;lta Faucda
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{_-· _____

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.............. - • • - ... · - -

Pomeroy • Nlcld..port • ~lllpolls, 0H • Point Plene'l1t, WY

_:,___~-People

SUndly,June23, 11111

1n
' the news _____________________..

.

DE'IllOIT (AP)- VeiCI'IJI "60 Minutes" joumalill Mike Wallace says 11(!11 trial, "In Contempt."
Kina says he was forced off the band's tour ~ fall when ~ to~
· -lie would seek help from Dr. Jack Kevortian, rather than sulfet".
Simpson was IICQUitted in Octobei of the 1layings of Nicole Brown Simll" him he n11~ a hart ~splant and had 10 nmwn near a Nuhvlllehospj" I 1m an old man ... I'd be the first, if neeesury, to ao to Kevorkian." · son and Ronald Goldman.
tal.
•
Wall110e, 78. said Friday dlll'ina an interYiew with WWJ-AM,
Joe Boyland, the band's co-manaaer. could not be reached for comment
Wallace said he could imaaine seekint
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It appears the price 'wasn't riaht.
Friday on the suit, which seeks unspecified damalt~ .
. · .
Kevorkian 's help comminina suicide if he sulfet"ed
Both sides in IIIIW show .host Bob Barker's libel
King, 46, joined Lynyrd Skynyrd in 1972. He left ~ band tn 1975 from. a painful or linael'ina disease.
lawsuit qainsl a former "The"Price is Riaht" model
two years before a plane cruh thai killed two !land
"You. have the risht as a human beina to do what emerged Friday after a·closed settlement conference
members. Kina rejoined the group 10 years later.
you want to do with yourself," he said.
without a deal, lawyers said. The judge imposed a gas
Kevorkian assisted in a suicide Thursday, the order.
third time he has attended a death sin~;!' his acquittal
Barker. 73, last year sued Holly Hallstrom, 43, who
TOKYO (AP) - Rapper ))evant Hardsoli of '!lie
in May for two 1991 deaths. Kevorkian has been said in interviews that Barker fired her
19 years
'Pharcyde was arre~ted and acCused of tryina to set on
acquiued five times on three charles of assisted sui- because she was fat. Hallstrom resigned "On her own,
a plane to Hawaii with 17 rounds ofhandgun ammucide.
·
Barker says.
nition.
"I had absolutely .nothing to do with it and for her
Airpon melai detectors found the .38 caliber bullets
. .. ,
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Two lawyers who to att,ack me this way is disgusting," he said.
·in a bag Hanlson was carry ina • Kansai International
, , Mike W•llace
fought on opposite sides in the O.J. Simpson trial are
Another model on the popular game show. Dian
Bob Barker
Airpon near Osaka, police said.
.
...
now planning 10 work for the S81J1C movie maker.
Parkinson, dropped a lawsuit last April that accused
Hanjson said he inadvenently brouaht the eartr;idge
Ed King ·
• ., 1 Defense auomey Robert Shapiro and prosecutor Christopher Darden
Barker of forcing her to have sex with him while she worked on the ·show. of bullets in his bag from his home in the United States,
have movie deals in the works at Paramount Pictures: accOrding to "Vari- Barker said the two had consensual sex.
.
accordins to Kyodo News aaency.
ety."
The Pharcyde, known for hits like "Drop- Runnin": "Ya Mama,'' and
. Shapiro will be executive producer of the movie, "Evil Empire," ti saga
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) -· Lynyrd Skynyrd guitarist Ed King has sued "Soultlower," had just finisMd a tour of foUl' Japanese cities.
: of the Russian mafia wrillen by Joe Eszterhas, whose previous films include his bandmares and managers, saying they forced him olf a tour last year.
Police said Hardson is ~Ospectcd of violating Japan's sword and firean)l
-:·:nasic Instinct," and "Showgirls." Eszterhas' $4.5 million fee for the movie
King, .who co-wrote•such Lynyrd Skynyrd hits as "Sweet Home Alaba- control .law,-which is punishable by up to thn;e years _in prison and a $2,800
.
.
,will set a record for·a screenplay, "Variety" said.
·
ma" and "Saturday Night Special," filed the lawsuit Thursday in U.S. Dis- ti~
, : Darden is co-producing the. movie of his best-selling book on, the Simp- trict Coun.

-·J'
•

:Spina.l Tap rocks on
·'in non-comeback tour

River Recreation entertainment

Spinal Tap trivia

Some rock bands never give up,
Tha Cincinnati Enquirer
.. ~o why should rock satire?
To acclimate the uninitiated to
'! , Spinal Tap, the worst band that
the fuzzy half-world hetween
..never was, is back like a nasty ·rash
truth and fiction that is Spinal
!1- this time· in a series of TV comTap, we herewith offer a dossier
mercials for IBM.
of information meant solely as a
The commen:ials aren 'I the only
guide.
evidence that "one of England's
Proceed with caution; you
loudest bands" has re-emerged.
could wind up weeping wit~ hysThey have an Qfficial World Wide , teria and bleeding from the ears.
Web ·
site
-Founded: 1964.
http:(slash)(slash)www.spinaltap.co
- Original name: The Origi·
• 111 - with updates on their fictional
nals.
·'"Third World Tour, " a "gallery"
- Second·· name: The New
1
\Vith pha,tos of their .:uitar picks and,
Originals.
'·b'f course, a catalog of Spinal Tap
-Other names: The Thames·
: iberchandise (real goods that can be
men, The Dutchmen, Ravebreak·
·'purchased with real money).
ers. Doppel Gang, Bisquits,
" Confused by all this electronic
Tufnei-St. Hubbins Group . .
whoopee? For those too young to
-Name adopted during film:
' rilmember and for those who simply
Spinal Tap Mark II.
' fergot the 1984 "rockumentary"
Fake albums: "Intra' "lfhis is Spinal Tap" ihtroduced the
venous de Milo," "The Sun
.'world to David St. . Hubbins
Never Sweats," "Shark Sand·· (Michael McKean), ' Nigel Tufnel
wich," ''Smell the Glove."
((:hristopher Guest), Derek Smalls
- Real album: "Break Like
. ~Harry Shearer), Viv Savage (David
the Wind."
• Kaft) and a series of shon-lived
- Real musician who copied
; ifrummers.
album design from Smell the
· ~ - Real director Rob Reiner played
Glove: Prince.
'
·
·make-believe director .Mani DiBer- ·
-Drummer John "Stumpy"
'·gi, -whose deadpan chronicle of a Pepys'
cause of death: Bizarre
band going down in names nailed
. ·.
.
gardening accid~nt.
· tock 'n' roll pretension with deadly
:- · Qrummd Eric "StUIJIPY
accuracy. To. this day, "pure Spinal
Joe" Childs' cause of death:
Thp" is the cruelest dig a criti&lt;! can .Choked on unknown person's
•slap on a band.
vomit. ("You can't really dust
for vomit.")
·
. • : The film's memorable cast
- Drummer Peter James
includes Ed Begley Ir. (drummer), , Bond's cause qf death: Exploded
·Dana Carvey (mime), Billy Crystal
on stage. (" Dozens of people
,fmime), Fran Drescher (record pubspmitaneously combust every
licist), Howard Hesseman (rival
year. It:s just not widely n;ponmanager), Anjelica Huston (Stone•
ed.")
.
.
henge designer), Bruno Kirbi (limo
- Total number of band
driver), Patrick MacNee (record
members by titne of film: 37.
mogul), Paul Schaefer (publicist),
· - Name of Jack the Ripper
and Fred Willard (Air Force officer).
rock opera David.and Derek plan
lo write: "Saucy Jack."
:. ' Tap disappeared for a while after
- The historic Saint Hub·ihe movie, then resurfaced in the
bins: Patron saint of qualiiy
'90s with an album, live perforfootw~ilr.
mances, videos and television
-Most-quoted lines:
a~pearances on "The Simpsons,"
"Mime is money."
f~r example.
"We're not university materi,,
al.''
" On the official Web site don't ·
"This miniature bread, I've
l!liss the. ·section called "Aumour. been' working with it ' a halfcentrale." It details gossipy tidbits
hour."
(e.g., Nigel had an affair with Bobbi
"These go to II." ·
Flekm:iJl) .from the Usenel news
"It's such a fine line between
gtou17 alt.fan.spinal-lap, one of sev·
stupid and clever."
era! unofficial · Tap stops on the
Internet.
:'

~ Farm/Business
:··- Attend state conventi

• MIDDLEPORT -- Workshops in
acting will be offered
t!)' panicipanls in R.iverbend Players,
a iroup affiliated with the Riverbend
Ans Council 'o f Middlepon in July.
The new drania group. still in the
organizational stage and open to
Meigs and Mason County re,'iidents,
will have the opportunity to work
.i-ith Marsha Hanna and Kay Bosse,
who will teach directing and acting
respectively.
' Hanna is. currently the artistic
director of the Human Ra:ce Theater
Co. of Da)IIOn, and a pan-time theater instructor.at Sinclair Communit)l.College there. She has worked in
the theater prpfession for 20 years,
and can handle all aspects of putting
on a production, according to Mary
Wise, president of the Riverbend
A(ts Council.
• Bosse's resume includes . credits
in ' both theater and ·shon film productions. She has ..en an artist in
residence at . Dayton/Cin'cinnati,
Ohio schools. Sbe is planning . a
wprkshop that statts with the basics
of:learning your way around a stage,
arft the "languaae" of the theater,
and progresses to improvisation,
·:--

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_,_,

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Registration under.wat
for Big Jree contest
•

GALLIPOLIS - Would you Hke to
win a new Audubon Society~ lo
Trees and be presented 1 pi ~!Que with
yolD' name on it at the annual soil &amp;:
water banquet?
·
Well, now is the time to be ·looking for the biggest ash tree in Oallia
County. That's liaht.ll's time for the
Oallia SOil &amp;: Water Conservation
District and the 0. 0 . Mcintyre Park
District to have their Big Tree Conlest. The biggest tree wins the ~ ·
This year's genus is the ash (Fraxinus americana), which is a.member
of the Oleaceae family. The (white)
ash is a ll!ll!e UP,Iand tree with a
straight trunk and conical to rounded
crown. The ash can grow to heights
of 80' but here in Gallja County

scene work and monologues.
Wise said that the idea of a drama
. group IS somethmg 1hat has heen ·
talk"d about and wanted for a long
· time in Meigs County.
The Ans Council approached the
state to see what form of help could
be found and Michael London, a
consultant from the OhioArts.Counc'il was assigned to assigned to work
with the Riverbend Players.
London has met four times with
the fledgling group in an effon to
exact from a group of non-professional, would-be thespians, what
exactly it is they wish to accomplish.
He assessed the situation and iden\itied the communtty t!Jeater needs of
the ~ during ·the first two meetings, and at the third one came up
with a plan to ·offer the directing and
acting workshops.
,
The Classes are free and open to
any adult or young adult, who wishes to participate.
Roland Wildman, pastor of the
, Trinity Church, is the liaison for the
Riverbend Players and anyone interested in joining may call him at the
church. Me is a. member of the
Tourism Poard and Chamber of

I

FOIIl YOIIIIIIJI

..

Documentary:·
good life,
happy times
of Brenda Lee

Starahlp faaturlng Mickey Thomae will perform at the 1996 River .Recreation Festival 9 p.m.,
July 5. Starahlp Ia known for such hlhl as "Fooled Around.and Fellin Love," "Jane," "Nothing's
Gonn• Stop Us Now," "We Built Thll!l City" an!l "Sara." Alao appearing will be country band Frazier River 8 p.m., July 6. Thay are notad for the hits "Tangled Up In Texas" and "She Got What She

Deserves."

·

'Star Trek' Barbie .beams into stores
The perfectly plumed pair will be
By TRACY L. PIPP
.'clad in first-generation Federation
The Datrolt News
'They come in peace. They mean garb - she's ·dressed in red as an
you no harm . And toy giant Mallei engineering officer, he's in gold as· a
hopes you'll beam them up at warp commanding officer.- and adorned
speed.
with miniphasers, communicators
"Star Trek" Barbie - and, lest and tricord~rs. They'll perch on the
we forget that men were the original · Enterprise bridge. Cost: $80 for the
space pioneers, "Star Trek" Ken- set of two.
will be avariablc in a galaxy near
Barbie fans already are buzzing
you come August.
about the debut. f

Commerce Board of Directors and events and opponunities for learning
inierested in seeing the community for the youth of· the community,"
theater get staned.
said Spalding. By making the RiyerWildman said thai with the new bend Players serve Mason Meigs
· amphitheater being buill in and surrounding counties it builds
Pomeroy, it is the perfect time to . fellowship among the communities
s1a11 training local residents who on both sides of the river, she conhave an interest in theater.
tinued.
"There are a lot of talented people
It was also pointed. out that by
in this county, and we need to tap opening up the group to people from
into, and showcase this existing tal- both states it will help in securing
ent, while providing opponunities funding.
for others to. develop new skills.
Spalding defined the hope that by
This basic Introduction to every- creating an anistic outlet such 115 the
thing that composes a theater pro- Riverbend Players, it will not only
duction is a great way to stan," said provide an nice activity for interestWildman.
ed people, but also develop a sus. The tourism office is assisting in - tainable economic activity.
·organizing the group. Dawn SpaldSince a lot of people in South- '
ing, pastor of St. Paul Lutheran eastern Ohio have not been exposed
Church and a member of the board, to &amp;·broad range of theater possibiliis currently working on a ·statement ties, Spalding said the opponunitY
of purpose for the group.
"We seek to provide educational
l lbrp,; Man't eldestaon. BW, ~w
up to be o . . , _ , of harp mu•ic'.
His fllher considered it benet than
anythi"' he played in the movies.

•H•.•u.,., SUN.

. THE PHANTOM,..,.
AND
DENNIS QUAID,
SEAN
IN

Tucson Citizen
The Beatles .opened for her in
Germany.
Famed
songwriter
Harlari
Howard calls her "the female
Elvis."
. According to music historian
Roben K. Oermann, "She's's song's
magnet." ·
She palled around with Patsy
Cline, 'Judy Garland and Elvis.'
·
Her first hit, ''I'm' Sorry," came
at age 13. By the time she turned 20.
she had recorded 2S6 songs.
She's •onsidered the top female
vocalist of the '60s.
Brenda Lee Gtill has all of the
energy that earned her the nickname
"LiUie Miss Dynamite" when she
was barely in her teens and atth~ top
of the pop and country charts.
TNN will premiere "The Life
and Times of Brenda Lee" Th~­
day, June 27, at9 p.m. ED (repeating .
at midnight EDT) on the cable channel.
Lee says in a phone interview
from her Nashvi!hi home that she
was "thrilled" to be asked to be the'
subject of a documentary, with one
small reservation: "I though ii w~
strange l!ecause uslially these thing~
are tibout people who are . no Ionge~
hel'!'. I thought, 'Well, this is nice. ·
I'm very honored.' 'but I had to thin!.
about it a minute."
The hour-long installment of th~
"Life ani) Times" series chronicles
LOO's 4(}.ycar career, from her hum~
ble beginnings in an impOverished
.but loving family to the highs and
lows of her musi~ career.
·
Included are interviews with her
husband Ronnie Shackleu, daughters Julie Clay and Jolie Snyder, leg-,
endary producer Owen Bradley_.
.Oermann, Howard, interviewer'
Ralph Emery, and singer Porter.
Wagoner, among others.
·

Ocrmann, wbom Lee calls· her
"biggest cheerleader," believes Lee
has not gouen her due from her
"Lots of people arc showing peers. Though she was given the
interest in the set, regardless of .lhe prestigious Governor's Award from
cost," says Barbic-crazy Jennifer the National Academy of Recording
Warf of Indiana, who created a Bar: Ans and Sciences in 1984. he note&amp;
bie home page on the· Internet that she has iiever ·won a Grammy
(http:lsilvcr.ucs. indiana.edu/-jward. , and has nQI been inducted into either
barbie.html ) and has a 300;-member the Country Music or Rock and Roll
Barbie List of doll-savvy collectors. halls of-fame.
"I think that combining these·.two
','Had she been in that plane crash
collecting genres will be prclly sucinstead of Pasty Cline, had she overcessful for Mattei."
dosed on alcohol and dru~s like
Judy Garland ... in other words. had
she died young, she'd be a goddess
loday," he says in the documentary.
should provide alternatives th~l are
But it is not in Lee 's nature to
free or at a price financially accessi- demand star treatment or be scl.fble to all people in the area.
destructive.
Wise said that the Rivcrhend Af(s
Council will be the fiscal agent and
''I had a great mother who·
sponsor for the group, ·
instilled lasting values in me." she
The next meeting will be held on says . "And I happened to marry a
Tuesday, June 25, at the Riverbend good guy. I always had people
Ans Council headquaners in Mid,- around me who liked me as a person
dlcpon.
and not as a product, who ~llowed
me to be just the way I am.

...

•

By CINDY ..IENKINI

,q

~:Pearson .accepts

-.·:".P OSt at

UR'G~ I "C·

' heipu of 55' to 60'.~ more ;omThe ash tree Clll "' fOUIId In ~
IIIQII, diamefen c.n 10 to 2' wliich is
valleys and slopes with deep rVh
~ all thai uncommon in our area.
. soils. You may also fiAclu llh tree
~ 'I'I1e lea~tes and branehina ~ in 1111 area that mi8h! have bell tiled
oppOsite, m.eanina all rwip, lim~ as putlll'e or farmed. They .,... tree
and leaves~ direcll)' opposite each that needs full sunlight to~
·
r!
~on tbe ~h. (Most trees have and arow vigorously. •
alternate branchtn•. )
If you would like to ~i!J1*1n '
The leaves are compou'1'i- with the Galli a County Bia Tree Coneest.
usually ·seven leaflets. on one l.eaf !;ajl District Forester Cindy lenkillf'at
stalk,
.
446-8687. Galli a Soil &amp;: Water COn1'\le.bark .of the while ash is dark servation District or Forester/Mmgray; thick ,and on ol~r trees has ager Debbie Ellioti at 3'$-&lt;2711,
&amp;:ep diamond-shaped furrows.
Raccoon Creek' County Park.
It is one of the most valuable and
You can be sent a registration f*"
larjest of the native as!\. II provides ot the judges will bring a fonn wt,n
hard, strong, durable timber for fur- they come to judge your ~'
niture but is JlfOb!lbly best known for
Cindy Jenkins Is the Brtll , .
making baseball bats. tool handles, trict forester. •
·
· f
and oars.
.

·5:L

::~~::'d;.:.il~~n~i~de~r~:!-~el~~!~:; ~~:~~~!n
~~e~~~~:~:.si~:u~~~ ~arty
for )\dvancement and Support of J;;j
I

:-·;Wet ·weather changes
! :planting plans.for f~rmers

JO

IRA savings plan valua.ble to eve.ryone~

a
. c

Education, the National Society of
Fund Raising EKecutives and Phi
Delta Kappa.
·
•
Pearson and his wife, Mallory,
have two adult children: Will Jr.,
who is a captain in the United States
Anny. and Charlotte, who resides
with her husband, Lt. I.on Ning, at
the USAF Academy in Colorado
Springs .

ed t~sell the unit, which includes 27 ly issued AEP common stock. .
plants In 12 countries. The unit proThe packaging unit employs
di!CCS plastic for food packaging and 3,500, but none are in the Coltllllbus
area. Borden, whicl! product:$ fOOd
pallet wrapping.
The transaction signed Thursday and chemicals, had sales of $62.5 mil,
-,
provides Borden with $280 million in , lion last year.
cash and at least $SO·million of new'

'/ "

.
. .i ucccssful current capital campaign,
,.lleveloping an . annual giving cam·
. . paign to be implemented in the near
.· future, and conducting a long-range
... ,development campaigp, On a daily
· ; ~asis , he will also direct other oper·
.. ,]ltions in the developJ11Cnl office
. ... including foundation relations and
:,grants writing.
,: In a telephone interview Pearson
· ·isaid, "I plan 10 increase the number
·; ·.

.

COLUMBUS (AP) .-:- Borden
Inc. has signed a dealld sell its global packaging business to AEP Industries Inc. for at least $360 million in
cash and stock, the companies said.
Borden, based in Columbus,
announced in January thaf it intend-

By RYAN SMITH
.
Income Security Ml llRISA), WorkGALUPOLIS- How many times ers without an employer-sPQnsored
have
statement in the pension .Plan could m~ke up to
+RIO GRANDE - Virginia resi - of donors and the amounts received
media: Ameri- $1,500 m tax deductible, tax-·~&lt;lent William E. Pearson, Ph.D .• has from those donors."
cans need ro.save dcfei'red annual contributions. Three
• accepted the position of executive
more for retire- vc.ll'S later, the. annual contribution
1991 93
;.assistant to the presiden.t for instituFrom
' Pearson served as
ment? You've iimit was raised 10 $1,750. Then, in
· the training coordinator io the Uni"'lional advancement at the University versity of Virginia Development
probably seen it 1981, the Economic Recovery Tax
,..
of 'Rio Grande office as well as assistant director of
often and it's Act expanded the IRA so that all
and Rio Grande
true. Today, the workers could contribute up to
the National
Campaign
~eview
ProCommunt'ty ·col- gram,
special projects officer, and
average person $2,000 annually. Contributions were
lege, effective continuous quality improvement
10
20 to 30 years in fully tax-deductible and tax clef~
July I
retirement. Yet, the future of Social until withdrawn.·
"I was attract· coordinator.
Security and Medicare is questionThe picture changed in t986,
ed to Rio Grande
As the headmaster of the Wood- able and company pensions and however; when the Tax Reform Act
by the mission land Academy in Monrross, Va., retirement plans have been red~ced put restrictions on IRAs "only workstatement," said Pearson su~ised 21 employees, dramatically.
·ers without employer-provided pen~· · Pearaon Peatson. "I have a created and Implemented. a school . One way the government can sion plans, individuals with annual
·l' .forilbinaljon of. ~xJic:rie~i:e in com-. budget, d41v_elo~ an~~llli!Jn~med a " et~.couq~geAmeric_~ns to sa"ve IJIOre incQmc unde.r $2.5,000 or auorried
.mullil)' ebhege"''ind fOU!"year bac- systell', 9t.co':"':"umca!J!lnt,...~. par- -· ot.liiiteriieltfis 'td mike fnafiitcr.ial "couples with.inciJIIIC below $40,000
.:, calaureate institution development," . ents.and adJntmstered a K-7th grade Retirement Accounts (IRAs) more can fully deduct their.contributions,
'"he added. ·
cumculum for 130 students.
attractive. To date, about two dozen These provisions remain ' the same
A fl)nner director of development
He completed a Ph.D. in· higher IRA and IRA-related bills have been today. ·
;itt Piedmont, Virginia Community education administration and M. Ed. introduced i~ Congress, some with
During the early 80s, the average
.College in Charlouesville, Va., Pear- in administration and supefVision at budgetary tssues, others as tax savings rate per household in this
,,len has been responsible for imple- the University of Virginia and reform proposals. Although at odds country ·was 8% When the Tax
· "lnenli.ng a development pl~n. creat- received a bachelor's degree in his- with ea~h other, they have one com- · Reform Act pul're~trictions on IRAs,
)ng alumni support, administering tory from did Dominion University. mon obJeCttve-- tncreased tax hene- the household savings rate dropped
,,grants development ~nd serving as a
Pearson 's professional affilia- fits that make IRAs more templtng. in half to 4%, according to the Con"'Chief staff officer of an educational tions include the American HistoriThe IRA was created 1? 1974 gressional Budget office. The gov'foundation.
cal Association, American Society through the Employee Ret~rement ernment .felt they had to take . • tion.
Pearson's responsibilities at Rio for . Training and . Development, •
•

I

'·

AEP Industries .fo purchase Borden packaging firin ~

In workahope, and anet'ld six gaMral-lloiw.
This yea(a epeeker1 lncludad Keith Matheny,
1 mentalist; Scott Friedman, humoroue antar·
hllnar ; W. Jonea Loflin, past National FFA ofiJs
cer and President of HOPE and Seth Damar,
National FFA praaldent.

River Valley
of Ainarlca
llttliildlng
FFA convantlon In
Baahal Fallon,
Seeha Shriver, Jarrod Fargueon, Lealie Hudson, Justin Bowara, Beth Walk., and Dusty
Flahar. During tha avant, members had the
opportunity to vlalt a cera« show, participate .

IJy A.J. FLICK

R·iverbend Players to offer directing, ac~ing workshops ,

~frecting..and

~·

•

1

By MARGARET A. McGURK

......

•

after

1'ht Clnclnllltl Enquirer

~ ~--

•

•

~ ·l
-~

___ ... _ _ _ _ , _ _ _ _ ,...• ._, _ _ . .............

1.

expan~

cou-'~s

in 1992, attempts to
.the IRA als and $80,000 for married
10 upper mllldle class farmhes were and all~w tax-free and pen!"~Y-~
seen as too expensive by the govern- e.arly, w11hdrawa~,s for c~llcge. fi,cymenl and were shot down. Last year, ltme home buymg, maJOt: med\~jll
members of Congress and Presidelll expenses and l.ong-term unemplo~ C,lin,ton introduced measures 10 get ment. It also allows for so"Cal~d
mo~ househo_lds
interested in IRAs back-end non-taxable withdraw'ats
ak the
the
h f fi
and '· to m e . money
y stas
a tllr 1ve years. ,
,..
away more available to them penal3. The Senate's Roth-Br~l!!oJX
ty-free evenbefo!ll retirement. How" Super IRA, introduced by SenatllJ'S
evet.•. at this
. point, itf is
thedoubtful any- Bill Rot.h (R-Del) and Jo,hn Breaux
thing WI 11 eomc o. . . se proposa1s (p-La;), would restore-·full IJYI.
until after the electton m November. deduotibility to eve,Yone i'eganll~'s
Three of the many proposals of income and allow for t~e· S81)C
stanjl out:
kind of penalty-free early with{ . The American Dream Savings draw~ls as the Ol'!er tw,o propos~s
. Account, pan of the Republicans • ment1on~d. above. As . tn ~h.ntll:'&amp;'s
Contract with America. Jt would plan',mdtvtduals could opt for back·
·main\Mn cum:nt mtrierions OO"t11ll·~· w~mllke- wc..rli!"
~educlibilily but give ~ligiblc iildi- : wtlhd~~wals a~ter .live' years ms~
viduals the optiQil of skipping the of watlmg,unttl age 59112.
·tl
up-front deductions and making taxDon't wait for Congress to ·do
free withdrawals after age 59 112. something. ·IRAs, a.' a retirement
Early withdrawals would be permit- savings,plah, are valuabh:l'to evetYted wtthoutlax or penalty to pay for one. The advantages of IRAs, CVllJl
college, buy a first home and for cat- as.thcy currently are set ~p. are clear.
astrophic medical expenses.
Chf.ek with y~ur financial or tax
2. The White House Middle Class adv1scr for detatls. '
n;
Bill of Rights would expand the
Ryan Smith is an myestmeilt
income threshold for full IRA advisor .with Advest, Inc. In
deductions to $50,000 for individu- ·Gallipolil! ollice.
.,,
01
·
·
•

Its

bll·g·ht Sl.gh"ed
· · p. f,iants :;£:~.
II . . ·on
. tomato

By HAROLD KNEEN
How does your vegetable patch
grow'
In my visits to local commercial
vegetable growers I continue to see
a great variation of plant development, fruit set and water needs.
Planting is still in process with the .
last of this spring's sweet corn, pumpkins and green beans heing sown.
Fruit . formation is bccurring, especially in sweet corn !lnd tomatoes.
Several sweet corn fields are in tassel with ears in the early to late silking stage. It takes corn approximating 18-21 days from silking to harvest, depending on variety and air
temperature. Homegrown Southern
Ohio sweet coni will be ready for the
Fourth of July!

·By LISA MEADOWS
.
receive reduced crop insurance cov" GALLIPOLIS - Wetweather this cragc on acres planted during the 25
: ., spring changed the planting plans on days following the ending planting
·many farms.
..
date. Burley tobacco musi have a late
: ::' Records from various areas .of planting agreemen! in place by July
: :'ballia County in• licate rainfall in 19 for tobacco set after June :W. This
: :!1996 through Ju1.. 15 range · from ·agreement allo~s tobacco producers . Tomato lovers - note that early
: ::!l3.63" to 28.dl " (Normal rainfall to seuobacc.'! up to 20days after June · tomato blossom set has been varied.
::'through Iunc 15 is approximately 30 with reduced crop insurance cov- Cool tempe~~lures and wet weather
' ::ZO" .)
erage. Crop acreage planted and
· ""'; The crop insur;~nce prQgram and subsequently $maged or failed as a
:. ;,l)on-insured crop assistance program result of Oooding ·or other abnormal
. •:shanged mans of the requirements in conditions should be reponed to the
- the event of prevented planting or Farm Service Agency within 72
GALLIPOLIS- A. J. Rush, M.D., .
::!railed acreages. The following ·are hours of the damage occurring or at a community-oriented family practi· JUSI a few situations that may occur the time ·the producer notices the tioner at Pleasant Valley Hospital,
:::; each farming operation is .unique damage. A phone call will start the Point Pleasant, W. Va., recently
: · therefore, we urge l":&lt;!ducers with notification process in the event of a opened her new office, located at530
· questions on prevented, damaged, or ,disaster -- please call the Fann Ser- Second Avenue, Gallipolis (it) the forfailed acreage to contact the .Farm vice Agency at 446,8686 iinmedi· mer Warehime Clinic building.)
:service Agenl:y (formerly ASCS) at . ' ately if you have had altered 'plf!li·
First opened in 1953, the Ware• 446-8686 or 1-888-2.11-1626 toll- tig plans this spring-- failure to repon hime Clinic was considered a lux uri·
::· free) i!l)mediately.
· ·, ,'
,may.cause crop· insurance claims or ous osteopathic center with a 17-seal
·:·" ' To 'o~tain full crop in$Unuice cov- lion-insured crop disaster as!listancc waiting rQOm.
·
" ·~rage, ih.e'fi!l,arplanting date for com I!&gt; be denied.
..
Donald Ray Warehime, D.O., was
· -:-was June 5, tor soybeans June·20. and ; ' Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell the clinic's originator. •
for tobacco June 30, If' crops are not are county · execudve dlrecton of
Over the years, Dr. Warehime
(llilnted by these dates, the Farm Ser- the GaUia-Liawrence
Service delivered thousands of bab,es and
vice Ageqcy should be notified by AleliCy.
provided h-.ahheare seriices to local
Iuly 15. Corn and soybeans may still
· residents.
.
"I doh't remember a day when the
(
Cardiologists form statewide
group
office
did .not·have patients," his wid~
ow
·
Mary
recalls.
COLUMBUS - Eighteen Ohio ry care phy~icians and assist'cardiol- ·
·Now,
approximately
44 years lal- ·
' cardiologist~, including Dr. •Oelic
ogy patleins with recovei:y and
er, Dr. AJ. Rush has reopened the
Abels;' Gallipolis, have formed an lifesrrle changes. . •'
. .
(ndependent Physici8J\ Associllion
Future plans for the organ1zauo~ office which stood vacant after Dr.
Warehime's death several years aao.
'(IPM ·lino.,vn as Greater Ohio CanJi: i~l~ i"':reasioarbe number of car"I am glad that the Warehime
.ologists Network, Inc., in an effort to dso1081sts mvolved an4 olfenJ!8 partshire resciurces and provide cOlt· lime. practice hours .in S!D&amp;ll towns Clinic will be active once again," said
Sfective care.
•
'
surrounding physicians' office loca- Mary as she scanned a yellowed t9S3
copy of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
. · The group .;ill work with
'lions.

.

tomato plant leaves. Tomato plants
need one and one half inches of water
per week during ·fruit fonnation.
Secondly, keep your tomatoes staked.
Beller air flow around the plant
allows the leaves to remain drier.
Thirdly, keep· rows and s.urrounding
areas clean of weeds to allow better
air flow. Lastly, applying fungicide
· applications (Bravo, Terranil, Echo,
Mancozcb, Ziram) help but only if
. p.lants and surrounding areas are
managed.

have .caused aborted Oower set and
thus the flowers drop off. This week
of warmer weather should greatly
improve the fruit set.
Tomato Early Blight, a leaf disease. is quickly spreading due to the
warmer weather. 70-90 degree day
temperatures and, 70 plus degree
night temperatures. Early blight has
been sighted on local growers' tomato plants. Look on the lowest leaves
for black concentric circles forming
black spots. Early blight spreads
when its' spores arc splasl1ed from
leaf to leaf.
·
Ways to reduce the spread of ear·
ly blight include: when irrigation
is necessary, watering should be
accomplished in the early m~ing
hours. If possible, use.trickle !rrigation or at least avoid wetting the

. Greenhouse operators -The Ohio
Inte'{national Floral Shon Course
will be held froni July 13-17 at the
Cincinnati Convention Center. Take
the oppOrtunity to attend this event.
Over one huni!ted educational sessions are available to growers and
retailers covering subjects as broad as
. greenhouse production, marketing ·

and business management. Several
hundred vendors will be present ~~
the adjOining Trade Show to advi,sc
and sell you plants and grecnhou~
supplic~ . Learn what the Floricuhur~r
Industry is all about! For rogistrati~'
materials please call the Ohio Florists'
Association at (614) 487-1117. For
funher . general information abo111
the Shon Course give my office a c;~ll
(614) 992-661Jli. .
. . .~
.

---

~,

.
wish to welcome lP.
~

In closing, I
southern Ohip, my new colleague~
Jennifer Byrnes, who is Gallia Coup.
ty's Obio State University Extension's ·
Agricultural &amp; Natural Resou~
Agent. Byrnes is originally fl'Orll
Virginia and brings expenisc in ani!
mal science and field crops.'
_
Harold Kneen is tlu: MeiM
County Agricultunt &amp; Naturllf:
Resources Agent, Ohio State 'Qni!1•
venlty Extension.
·
! :' . '·

,,

Dr. A. J. Rush opens practice in Warehime Clinic buiding "..
, ..

Farm

I

.

'

Prima·

:

,,

.

,,

.,
J.;

11 tJ

announcing the opening of her husband's center.
"I embrace the effon being made
by Dr. Rush and I know that the·
community will also support her in
her endeavors."
Dr. Rush received her Bachelor of
Science Degree in Nutrition (1981)
and her Medical Doctor Degree
(1986) from Ohio State University,
Columbus.
··
From 1986to 1989, she served as
an emergency medicine resident at
the University of Southern California
Medical Center in Los Angeles, ~lif.
Prior to joining PVH, Dr. Rush
practiced family medicine alld provided·urgent and ambulatory healthcare at the Southland Family aM
Urgent Care Mission Viejo, Doct\)1'5
Health Care, Laguna Hills, ·San
Clemente
Medi-Center.
San
Clemente, and wauna Beach Community Clinic Laguna Beach, Calif.. .
Beginning in 1991, sh!: was ·a
wellness physician for the Family
Weiaht Loss Clinics in HwitiiiJion
Beach, Garden Grove and Santa Ana,

·-r··

scriptions iitto'patients lifestyles ·a~,
Calif.
Her responsibilities . included, monitored their health and progresfo,
Dr. Rush possesses cxterisi-.ss
nutritional counseling and general
knowledge
and practical experience'
healtheare for individuals. She also
Continued Oil D-8
,,t;
incorporated fitness program pre-

OPI!NS PRAC'T1CI! IN GAWPOLII • lllry WW*Qt, wife Gf
thelatl Dr; Dol lid w.r.hlme, 00111111 ~IIIII Dr. A. J.I'Uitl, rlgtlt,
Oil h openlrlg Gf her new ofllca, lattl it M 110 liD ariicl A'*l ., •
G ··alii
'

''

•

�-

... ..
I

...
•• '

l

,

QIORQE

lilt

ll1llei'S,

~

'

ettv.

RECEIVES AWARD • "-tMn HaD, Crown
rec.irecl the ·
• 1 • EtN~onmen181 Sclencea Achievement Awenl during tiMI
: 11
Mnquet of the Ohio 4-H Youth Expo, held June 14
Jill
Ha will now 1b11d the Nlltlonai4-H Youth Col\glua
:~ IIIM!phll, Tenn., Nov. 2t to Die:. 3, •• 1 I'NIIIt of the 1wen1.
t ltlllll the 1011 of Dnld IIIKI Jld8 HaU. Ha II • Junior at Ohio Val' ily Chrlltlln School1nd plan• 1 ca,_ In medlcaiiCience. The
IWW'CI- doi•MJ by the Ohio 4-H Foundltlon. Pk:tlnd- (._,.
to right) Hiney Pllttw&amp;oil, pr. .ldent of Ohio FoundltiOn 1nd Han.

==..

plill iedurrry IJid federal MJilllton
will be WMc:hini 1uly 2210 delermine
wbetber the nation's commodity
excbaqes can ensllft&gt; arderiy - and
lepl - ~of the pivotal July
fllllnl ~tract COveriiiJ commodities in lllciruupply llld put demand.
Since reserves of these commodities arc limited, prius on contracts
calling for delivery bef~ this fall's
baryest have been volllilc, risina and
falliDI sharply with each development involving weather and export
sales.
The situalion could lend itself to
price manipulllion. Or even anempts
10 comer the m.1cets hy fon:ing those
who must buy futures to setde their
contract obligatiom either to purchase the actual com and beans at

·Aggressive growth fund means risks
8y D... Vufovlch
· Everybody wants to be noticed in
:life. For one mutual fund, that break
~when they got bought out.
Tlke a look at the Evergreen
AJgte~sive Growth Fund and you
might think you're looking at just
inother relatively new stock fund.
But, dig alitdcdecper and you'll find
il fund that's been around for years,
a performanc~ record wonh noti!ll- the year-to-dale total return for
lhe fund through lune 6,' 1996, is
l:S.ss percent, ranking it45 out of
1:96 other capilal appreciation funds,
lt:cording 10 Lipper Analytical Ser\'jces -·and it has had the same ponfolio manager since its inception in
1983,
.. Harold lrell!fld has been managing
the fund ever since it was CM&amp;ted as
tile ABT Emerging Growth Fund.
When ABT was bought by First
P.nion in 1995, the new owner, which
already acquired the Evergreen
Funds, changed the name and added
it 10 the Evergreen roster.
.
; All those changes translated mto
more money for the . fund -- more
money to adv.ertise the fund and, it's .
~· grow Its assets.
.
w_JM:n w~ leftAB!, th~ fund had
~S mtlh~~ m assets, S8ld Ireland.
'Today~ ~Is .~early doubled Wtlh
$127 mtlhon.
Granted, this is a small fund. But
bel10d has big dreams. His !!oal is to

t-

J!ld

have the fund. grow to at Ieist half a
billion to $1 billion in as5cts. Is that
possible? You decide. Here's his
strategy:
Ireland keeps about 30 stocks,
mostly mid·caps -· in the ponfolio.
There are a few e=ptions, however. Microsoft, for instance, is the
largest company in the fund's' ponfolio. Ireland said it h~ a marlcet capitalization of around $61 'billion.
Youth Services Inc. is the fund's
smallest company holdin$, with a
marketcapitalizationofroughly$144
million.
.
Other names in the ponfolio
include Autozone, Bed Bath &amp;
Beyond. Cisco Systems, Home
Depot, Medtronic and United Healthcare Corp. The largest industry
weightings in the fund fall into the
areas of health, specialty retail, technology and computers .
Some of the screens used to select
stocks for the ponfolio include size
(Ireland prefers larger companies to
smaller ones); a five·year track record
of both sales growth and earnings
growth· a return on equity exceeding
20 pe~nt per year; and low debt
(less than one-third of a company's
overall capitalization).
. He also likes companies with
insider ownership.
" What's their incentive for the
stock to go up if you're the'president

of a company and you own zero
.stock?" he asked. "Wayne Huizenga
owns a lot of stock, in his companies.
I love that because what's good for
Wayne is good for me and my shareholders."
The small number of stocks in this
fund's ponfolio adds a level of risk
that conservative investors m likely
to find unappealing. But risk is pan
of Ireland's style.
"When you take the risk out of a
portfolio, you take the potential for
gain out of the ponfolio too," said
Ireland, who spent a few years as a
securities analyst specializing in
small-to-mid-cap growth stocks with
Sir John M. Templeton before
becoming a ponfolio manager.
No matler what your take on the
Evergreen Aggressive Growth Fund,
Ireland did . Jearn some investment
tips from Templeton that those who
are ·seeking high returns from their
stock fund investments might find
useful. They are: Think big. Go for
the long shot. Think long tenn -- not
three months ahead, but five, 10 and
IS years ahead. And be consistent.
Dian VuJomb is the autllor of
"Straight 'l'lllik About Mutual
Fuads" lllid "Sq,dil)lt 'l'lllk About
IDvestina for "our Retiremeat,"
both of which are published by
McGnw IIlii. SeDd questloDS to
her Ia care of this newspaper.

Homes: Questions and answers
ly POPULAR MECHANICS
,_ AP SpiCIII Fllturn

' Q: I have been considering buying
an older home. The building inspec·
lor has told me that the water heater
in li.e house that I like the best is
~tljHope.iy protected. Does this mean
dull il will blow up or otherwise ere·
~a dangerous condition? How do I
find out just what is wrong with it and
what do I do to correct it?
A: One problem that building
appraisers run into is an improperly
proleCted domestic hot-water heater.
To answer your question, your conabout a water heater explosion
is corrccL Live steam from the explosion of a tank-type hOt-water heater
could cause severe damage or, if
someone happened to be nearby at
tile time, serious injury or death.
All tank-type water heaters,
whether they m electrically heated,
Jias fired or oil fired, must have a
rtlief valve that is both temperature
lind pressure sensitive. Unfonunately, many relief valves arc pressure
sensitive only and this will not pro. vide you with the needed protection
aaainst an explosion.
Should the water heater's thermo. slat malfunetion, the water in the tank
could become superheated, meaning
it's heated beyond the temperature of
212 degrees Fahrenheit at atmos-

ecm

..... .... ____ .,. __ _

pheric pMssure. As the boiling point
_of water increases, its pressure
increases and J:,mh combined can
weaken a 'iank and cause it Jo rupture,
or simply exceed its yield strength.
lfthis happens, the water pressure
immediately drops to atmospheric
pressure. The super-heated water
instantly flashes into steam, inc{eases its volume and liberates an amount
of energy that can be greater than a
. pound of nitroglycerin. If .the water
had not been heated above 212 F, it
would not flash into steam and an
explosion would be impossible.
Consequently, pressure- and tern·
perature·sensitivc relief valves m
designed to prevent the water tern. perature from exceeding 210 F. It
does this by discharging the over. heated water and allowing cooler
water to enter the tank, safely lowering the temperature.
It's also imponant that the BTUcapacity of the relief valve exceed the
BTU 'input of the water heater. If the
capacity is less, the relief valve will
not be able to discharge the over~
heated water at the same rate it's pro· .
duced, resulting in an unsafe condition or possible explosion. Check the
capacity of the relief valve on the
nameplate mounted on the valve.
Specifically, look for the AGA
(American Gas Association) rating

given in Btu/hours. This rating must
exceed the Btu input to the water
beater listed on the plate on the tank
casing.
Also, when' the relief valve is
inslalled, its temperatUM·sensing element should be immersed in the top
6 inches of the water in the tank. This
is imponant because there is a tern·
per~redifference between the tank
and
bot-water outlet pipe. For
instanc when the relief valve is
installed in the hot-water outlet pipe
S inches away from the tank, the
water in the tank could be raised to
250 .F before the temperature at the
relief valve reaches 210 F. ·
So, you can sec that installing a
correct relief valve is imponant, but
it should not be too difficult or
expensive. Once this is done, you
don't have to worry about a hot-water
heater tank explosion and you can
decide on the basis of the home's other feat11.res. But, if you buy the
house, be sure to have a new relief
valve installed.
To submit a questioa, write to
Popular Meclwtles, Reader Ser·
vice Bureau, l24 W. 57th St., New
York; N.Y. 10019. The most later·
esdag questions wiD be aa.wered In
a future column.

prices
contnct
rates.
DeliverinJihe commodities them·
selves miafll be difficult TheM are
reports of very limited supplies of
cora llld ~beulavailable in Olica10 aad other poillll for use in setdemeat of luly futures contracts •
Most of the focus is on how the
situation will be handled by the
Clticqo Board of Trlde, where com
aad soybean fu~ arc traded.
An incident covering a couple of
minutes of trading in wheat futures
shordy after noon March 20 raises
serious questions over wbcther the
exchange can ens= orderly liquidation of business in a key contract
'1\'ading in March wheal futures at
the CBOT was to end at noon on that
date. The price at 11 :45 was $5.19.
According to longstanding proce·
dUMs, officials of the CBOT and of
the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, which regulates the

wheat

lift&gt;

1 Ropes
6 Conaec:nste
11 Oular garmentS

16 Eats no food
21 -acid
22 Way between 888lli
23 A greeting

24 Toward the tell,
nautiCally

25 Speed-check device .
26 Order lor supplies
26 Water wheel
29 An article
30 Newt
32 Biting bug
33 Nasal sound

35Sailor
·:18 Merit
38 Monocle
41 Smoolh
43 Notable time
44 -of Wight
. 45 Lovtng
48 came to a ctoae
50 'Peter-'
52 Give (with 'uponj
55 Peruse

57 TVI Donaldson
58 Kingly
62 Cutting tool
83 Une of llltchea
65 Exclamatory word
87 Collection of tools
89 Place In Italy
70 Edge
71 -Lanka
72 Wookroom, lor &amp;hol'l
74 Ancient garmenl
76 Lola and tots
n Lamb, aHamativety
79 Cunning
61 Giver
83 Tropical tree
65 Expire
86 Fuml&amp;htngs
86 Sword
90 Word ol asaent
92 Suede

94 Firat: abbr.
96 Cheal piece
97 -Angeles

1 -blanche
2 City In Nebraska
3 Passenger

role

107 Kind ol bar
110 Grampus
111 Air pottutiOn
113 'The- Train•
115 Stilt
117 Length times width
118 Dog's cry
120 Water-filled trench
122 Bar bill
123 Branch
125 Th for126 Pep
128 Talk
130 Destroy the Inside
of
132 Kind of maoket ·
133 Native of: suffix
134 Vaml&amp;h ingredient
135 Swab
137 Instrument
139 Chutes
141 Mire
143 Aquatic'mamlnals
145 .Put up
147 Rata of movement
150 Rough ealculatjon:
abbr.
152 Abound
154 "Let's Makea - ·
155 Helper: abbr.
159 In the pasi
' 160Coup162 Little M to drink
184 Animal frtand
166 Golf score
167 Scandinavian
169 c;nrus drink: 2 wds .
173 Sharp
175 Instruct
176 Of sheep
177 Entertainment
award
178 Harvest goddess

179 Like sea water
180 Removes, In
printing
181 Marsh plants
182 Watches

4 Lener In genetics
5Achy
6 Trade
7 Tell a tale
8 Masc. tMte
9HH
10 River in Paris
11 Bleaches
12 Soak, as flax
13 Dismounted
14 Did a farm job
:~ ~to!25 Across
17 Mit. add. pert
18 Kinds
19 Courtroom event
20 Fixed gaze
27 Rescue
31 Posies
34 Doze
37 - King Cole
·39 Standard
40 Take legal actloo.
42 Bismarck's St.
44 Sluggish
46 What rolling atones
tack
47 Perceived
49 Give off
51 Have being
52 Exposed
53 Banishment
54 Curved tines
56 Sorrow
59 Kind and generous
(hyph. wd.)

60 •- Get Your Gun"
61 Kind of printer
64 Troubles
66 Pale
68 Spinning toy
69 Manservant
73 Lad

75 Lass
78 Excellent (hyph.
lvd.)
80 Sweet potato
81 Jeans Iabrie

82 Sand along
84 Damagas
87. Curved bones .
89 Exclude
91 Costa del93 Fish In eans
95 Stomach
98 catch sight of
100 Vestibula
101 Goddess of peace
102 Sticky stuff
I 04 Acquired

105 Disprove
106 Restore to heaHh
108 Stop
112 Joke

153 Ur&amp;a-

158 Reject
157 Cloyed
158 Lock of hair
160 Gainsay
161 Khe appendage
163 Ponder
165 Diplomafs forte
168 Perch
110 Opp. of s .s.w.
171 Frozen dessert
172 Low fallow
174 Third litter ·

improperly handled.
"' II!ADER'B DIGEST IIOOKS
If you plan to cut metal, use a spe·
, l'or »Bpeetat F.....,..
· For most household jobs that cial metal-cutting blade- and brace
,aJuiM a quick straight cut, a portable yourself for a shower of sparks. To
circular saw is a good alternative to ensure safety, wear earplugs and
goggles or a full face-mask. Work far
a cumbersome table saw.
A ponable circular saw consists of away '- say SO feet - from sawdust,
a motor that drives a disc-shaped flammable liquids or anything else
blade. The motor is enclosed in a case that' is likely to catch fire . When sawwith handles, and blade guards. ing metal use a metal blade guard;
J;ocking devices help to make the plasti~ melts. Preparation
When used carelessly, a circular
saw safe, provided that they are
llways used. 'JYpes of Ponable Cir- saw can be dangerous. To avoid kickbac)t, a prime cause of circular saw .
cular Saws
The lize of a circular saw is deter- accidents, make sure the blade is
•mined hy tJie diameter of its blade. sharp and clean. Clamp the work to
The 7 114-inch models arc by far the a finn surface. Don't saw wet wood.
· most popular and practical. General- Be especially careful when sawina
lY• a !-horsepower (or 11-ampere) warped or knotty wood.
A P.Onable circular sa¥( cuu
motot' dri•es a 7 114-inch blade effii:lendy for most jobs. Weight also upward. The teeth of the blade often
•"'Ips a saw cut smoother, but make splinter the wood as they emerge. 'For
1111'11&amp; model is not so bcavy that it is a neat cut, mark cutting lines on the
bal:k of a piece and clamp the piece
l'adpina and hard to control. .
· 'IWo kindl of circular saw blades face down.
To make more accurate cuts with
wart for most jo!ls. a aetlelal-purpose
~bination bla!le wi"' 20 to 24 teeth a circular saw, mark the cutting line
in! afine cultiiiJ blade with about 40 · on the front of the saw's base plate
~. :AI a rule, il's bell to ae1 car- with pll,int or an indelible felt mark·
bicle-ilpped blades. They slay ~ er.
Want your saw to glide as ii cuts?'
iona«· but they're expensi~ and
.
Heat
the surface slightly with a hair
jncn bria1e and can be daJna8ed if

dryer, then rub a block of paraffin
wax on the underside of the saw's
baseplate. Using the Saw ·
Maintain a finn footing and.never reach too far with the saw. Stand
to the side so you're out of the way
if the saw does kick. back. Keep a
finn grip on the saw. Start the saw
bef~ the blade touches the work.
Release the trigger immediately if the
saw starts to bind. At the end of the
cut, hold the saw firmly to keep it
from dropping. Wait for the blade to
stop before removina it from the
work. Cutting Depth
Always set the blade to the depth
needed for a particular job; Don'tjust
set it to its full depth and leave it there
regardless of the depth of cut Doing •
so is danacrous because it can cause
kickback.
·
HeM's an easy " 1 to measure
and set your circular saw's cutting
depth without having 10 pull out a
measuring tlpe· every time. Mai'k
one-half-inch, three-fourths-inch and
I 112·inch blade depth moas=mcnts on the saw's blade guard with
a fine-point permanent marker. Then
line up the bottom of the saw's soleplate with the appropriate mark.

'?II 81

Ill lAST SECOND ITIIUT,

l'
,_....._%-.t,
(t) 21 , 23, Ill lTC

'!'fndowo In the dtainl room

the lulU edict the detallinl or
the ClhU ed fron' porch.

lltrlllhl oheod, the romlly

r.oom d fapiiJI I wall o(

F&gt;mch dooro thol o..,rlook 1
covered back porch and •
luae dec~ . With Ita raised

brlclr. hearth, thellftploce Is 1

httln1 centerpiece of the

..

A eounb7llalr f"ICM die ta.:..te. wbkh feature~~ donner wladowe tel IDto • abnple roeftlae,

""1""'- ,..beo hmin« the Nlled hat pord&gt; utd olouttered - · - -

1):':~,~~:

h.. 1 remn,.
foyer, .
room,
breaUut nook.,

room,
kltdlen, tbree bedrooma, two

.....,t
A curved Island snack bar ·

full baths. computer roo m
1nd uUIJty room , totallna
t ,877 square feet
Uvln8

®nnecu the 80Unnet kitchen
the lUnD}' breakfast area,
which featurea 1 t5-foot
vaulted ceiUns with eiL1IIsflll.
AU the other room&amp; hne Groot cellln11· A nearby computer room 11 a spot for aurfto

inl the Internet end keepins
up with buaJn.esa.

Tbe master bedroom hat a

window arraJ',rement overlooUns the biu:k}'ard . The

ANNOUNCEMENTS
005

room . There are buUt-i n
shel•ea and cablnell 10 the

risht or the ftreptoce end •
.a~etr obove them.

2 Yellow Killenl One Ma le One
Female, litter Trained, lns_ide
Only 61.!1·448-3897.

..

" ,
,.,.,

.or

spoce. An upper·Ooor expan·

.......

slon area provides t,SOO
square feet
future llvtn(l!: J
space. The plan la-aviiUable
wllh !114 exterior wall fram ~
ins and 1 a11ndard baaemenl,

or

40

no~,..,

"'"'··

space.

.....

. ...
liUITU

UDIOPI

......

...., f'Oial

G·7
THE FORMAL DINING ROOM to In view from the foyer.
Stralsht ahead, Ia the homily room, ancl\ored by a llftplace

....

"
"

and a trio or French doon to tbe· co¥ered. bact porch and
nel«bborlns deck. Styll1ht1 crown the brlaUasl room,
whkb b lolned lo .t he kitchen by a curYed Island 1naek bar.
A compuler room lea~ to the uUIIIy room aDd the moo.ear

sara1e. On the oth~r lide ·or lhe bome, two bedrooiDll and a
f\IU balh l1ank. the pllllllffl to the mruter bedroom which h111

.,
'•

• prlvale belh.

'''I

Open apacea hllhtltbt the lllmily room, where Freneh dooro
aad olcylfsbll ll'om lbe aelpbortns breakl'aat room p,.,vlde
U,bl. The kllchen baa a cunred 1riac:t bar.
~· ..... ~·
,,. " - ,., -

'6'• •

(For a more rl&lt;taU&lt;d, scakd plan qf thil howe, lncludinlf suides
to eslirrllitinlf ""'" and./lnancins, send $4 to HoU$t qf the Week,
P.O. Boz 1162, New York, N.Y. 10116-IJ6Z. &amp; Jure to inclruk the
plann~r.)

("\, ·

......

..

.'

f,

"

•••

Ceramic _tile is durable,
'
but not maintenance-free

.

1:-

'

·•••

.._,.

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special Features
Ceramic tile is an attractive and
durable material that is especially
popular above bathtubs and inside
showers. It's so popular that alternative surface materials are oftep _
offered in styles that imitate the look ·
of the reallhing.

'" .
"'
'"

However, tiles aren 't mainte-

....'

nance-free. When problems arise,
you' ll have two simple choices. You
can fix them now, for a .few dollars,
or you can fix them later, for hundreds more. Once water penetrates
the tile grout, wall damage can be
extensive. '
The problems almost always
begin with damaged grout joints, and
for one of two reasons. In today's
housing market, installers need to
move through a job quickly. The

•· '
'"

...

...,
"'
"
"'

Free Kinens. long Ha\red.Cah~
And Also 2 Calico Femal,e A.du 1
Cats. E•cellenl UouserU
Good Homel614-387-028."1 - ,~'

DEADLINE 2:00 P,M , FRIDAY

IUIMIU

.,

problem is thattile.-wor~ resists speed ceramic tiles need help? To begin,
witl\ two obstacles. The first is that look for discoloration in the grout.
tile mastic cures too slowly, the sec- . Dark SpDIS in grout suggest that
ond is that grout cures too quickly.
water is penetrating.' either because of
The mastic used to glue tile to pinhole openings or because the
walls will set in a day, but takes days grout is ·loose.
longer .to cure. If the spaces between
As water penetrates these gaps,
the tiles are grouted too soon, the gas- molds grow in them, holding more
es that must c!;cape in curing create water and further weakening the
tiny pinholes in the grout.
.
grout in those areas. Where water
As for curing the grout, the best mineral levels are high, the dark spots
approach is a wet cure, where the nor- will be surrounded by lighter, yellowmal dryin g rate is prolonged. When orange discolorations. Of course, if
cured properly. the grout becomes small strips of grout have.already fallhard and ·water resistant. If allowed to en out, you'll have little time to
dry too qui ckly, the grout will have a waste.
You should also closely examine
so~t . chalky surface that absorbs
water. As the water is absorbed, the the caulked seam~ in the comers and
grout swells, fractures and falls away. . where tiles meet the tub. Where you
In either case, Water reaches the dry- find spots of dark discoloration or
wall behind th'e tiles and destroys it. cracks, a repair is in order.
How do you know when your

LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
OVER 100 IN STOCK!
ROCKERS , WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250-$450
FREE DEt.IVERY
LAYNE'S FURNITURE .
Mon. thru Sat. 9-5: Ph. 446.0322
3 Mites Out Bulaville
Channel Marker
Condos

N.

Myrtle Beach
accomodates 6, private pool,
near Gt!H courses &amp;
restauranl row.
Dates Available
·1
6]29·7/6, 7/13·7/20, 7/20·7/27',
8/17-8/24, 8/24-8/31' 8/31 ·9{7.
· Call 446-:1206 from 9·5
After 5 &amp; weekends 446-2!734

C FFORD
MORTGAGE
COMPANY
Compare Our Rates!!
24 Hr. Approval
Home Purchase
Low down Payment
Re-Finance
Consolidation to lower
your monthly payments
Low .Ciosing Costs
Call Mike Clifford
1 (800) 353-1917

*

Jr Girls
SLO-PITCH
Softball Tourname·nt

PUBUCNOTICE
The 1997 Springfield
Township Budget hearing·
will be hold at the
Springfield
Twp.
Townhouae on Monday,
Juty 1, 1• ot7 p.m.
Hermon Spraeue, Clerk
. 1474 Ke" Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814
June 23, 1986

---'-------1
'

---'P'-'u::bl::.::lc:..:Nc:;o~t::.:lce=--1

.••,

..

NOTICE TO VENDORS I
SUPPUERS
Sealed propeaalo lor new
kitchen 'IJ.Uipment for the
Senior Cltli:eno Center, witt
be received by the Galtlo
CountY C!linmloalonero ot
their office, 18 Loculi
Street, Room 1292,
Gattlpolltl, O)llo, unlit 10:30
a.m. TUetdaly, July 2, 1986,
and then at 10:30 a.m. ot
aald office opened on«! ..-

..

~.

'

~ ~ -~

. ·.!..

.ro•
'· '',

aloud.

...."'',_-,.._....
.

Bpectflcatlone and
Blti/ColllriC1 F01111a IIIIIY be
-urec1 at tile'office Df the
Qatlla ·
County
Commlulonera, tl Locuol
Street, Ro.om 1292, Qaltltl
Cqunty Counhouoe. AI
bldttoro mutt furnleh, u 1
pari of their bid, all
equipment
per

.,

........

,epeclflcatlont, plut de!Jvary

« the -

.',.
"

l!aoh titd muet be
anlltftPIIIItd by either a bld
bond In on amount Df 100%
.

..
'

•

to the Senior

· CIIIDne Contlr•

··--

'

.

.

-

Public Notice

Public Notice
of the bid amount with a
surely aallafactory to the
afor81ald Gattla County or
by certified check, cashlera
check or tetter of credit
upon a solvent bank In an
amount of not tess than
10% of the bid amount In
favor of tha afote_.ld Galtia
County. Bid Bontla ahatt be
accompanied by Proof of
Authority of the official or
aeent algnlng the bond.
Bl~a thatt be ...ted and
marked aa "BID . FOR
SENIOR CmZENS CENTER
KITCHEN EOUIPMENT "
and molted or delivered to:
Galtla
County
Comml..lonera Office, 18
Loculi StrHI, Room 1292,
Gliltlpolta, Ohio 45631.
Anontlon of biildort It
colt~d to
ott of the
requirements contained In
the bid packet, vorlouo
lnturance requlrementt,
vorloua equal opportunity
provlelont, and the
requirement for a paymenl
bond tnd performance
bond of 100% of the
contraot price.
No blddar may withdraw
hlo bid within thirty (30)
......
- Df
dllyolflar tho actuaI tho opening thereof. Gattta
county r-rve• the right to
wolve ony lnformottll• or
rejeCt any or oft bide.
oanto County adller• to
all • - polk:lea pertaining
to . Handicapped
Acceoalblllty onlf Equal
Employment Oppomonltlao.
GALUA COUNTV

Public Notice

COMMISSIONERS
June 23, 28, 1996

Public H-lng
The budget for Utarl
Townahlp Ia open lor
tnopectlon at Olfti:e of Clerk
at 23238 Hill Rd. Racine,
Ohio 45771 from Juno 23 to
July 1, 1998, 5:00p.m. The
Hearing for the budget will
be held at 1,:00 p.m. July 1,
1996. R.oular tnHIIng to
follow at office building.
BoerdoiTruotees
William 0. Graham
Chrtoiophar T. WoHe
Don Hilt
Jayl:e White, Clark
(614) 247-:1125
(6) 23 fTC

a-

Sat. July
Sun. July 9
Call 7 42-2209 or
992~7467

BUSINESS FOR SALE.

446·2282

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp;REPAIR
"Pianos Are My Business·auatity
· Tuning &amp;Service Since 1977
BOB GRUBB (614) 446-4525
13 Hilltop Drive, Gallipolis, OH.
NOW OPEN
Indian Creek Golf Range
Rio Grande Exit
on Buckeye Hills Road
Day light till Dark
·
Never ClosedBall Dispenser available •
Bring Quarters
For info call
245-5747

ROOFING
20 Years Exp. Free Estimates
245·0904
Ron Paden
Super Summer Sale
40·50% off
selected albums, candles,
ft:ames , stationery &amp; much more!
Full Hallmark Shop
OhiQ River Plaza
Gallipolis
rtv::tnr.A Cleaning

Public Notice
I

·_, Public Notice
The Vlil!tee of Cheahtre wilt
hold Ito annual Budget
Hearing on Mondlly, July 1,
1996, ot 7:30 p.m. In the
Vlttafll Office toq~~ted ot 119
S.R. 554, Che•hlre, OH. All
realdente of !h• vlttoee ara
welcome to -nd.
Jennifer L Horrlaon
Clerk/Treoaurer
June 23, 30, 1986

l"ubllc Notice
A public hearing on the
. annual budfiol foryoor 1997
ahd be held on the 2nd day
of July, 11198 at tho
IOWnohl hell R....o.•-1
Ohio. P , ' ,_...,.. na-,
(&amp;) 23 1TC

PubiJc t:lj)llce
The Board 01 'l'ruoteeo of
Latart Towntl)lp 'witt accept
bldo al Office of Clerk
. at
23238 Hill Rd. Racine, Ohio
41771 for the pavtne of 3.5 --~------·mllea of roed uted for flood
Public Notice
rood. Biela witt be aecopled
_
until July 15, 18118 at 7:00
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
p.m... whleh Ume blcla will
1108
to. opened. Tha B011rd of • Male•
county
.True- r-n• the rlflltl Comml•olonero, Molga
to acoepl or roiOet any County Court Houao,
ondlor iltt blclo. Contact I'QoMroy, Ohkl417111

.'•

&amp;

upholstery cleaning
For appointments call
614·388-8290
MY HONEY
JIM P. SKIDMORE
All my love for the 1 '""''t 1
week. And for
me in your
wedding.

&amp;

stocked . Great location .
Serious Inquires

Only

441·0770, 446·7507
"Super Furnitu.re Savings"
MATIRESS
$59.00
BED FRAMES
$19.95
RECLINERS
$99.00
4 Drawer Chest
$4g.95
La·Z·boy Recliners
$299.00
Sofa, Loveseat &amp; Chair $599.00

HEARTLINE
Education

Cardiac Support Group
Sunday, June 23

2 p:m.

Holzer Medical

Center French 500
Room
Dr. David Miller

FLAIR FURNITURE

TOPIC : Ectopics

675-1371

Irregular Heartbeat

Gallipolis Ferry,

WV

. Refreshments

'·

·Call446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION
.'

Low Down
Payment
SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance
All Ages, All Risks
We try to ins.ure '
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111
. Gallipolis
Revival starting .
June 24th at

7 p:m:

with the Rev. Paul .
Bartruni, at the
Church in Kanauga~
Everyone Welcome!
BOOTS
.All Leather Western Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer...................... ..$49.00
Wellington ................... .. .$49.00
Loggers .........: ............... $50-55
Harness ........................ $5!1.00
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated; Safety, Gortex'
SWAIN FURNITURE
62 Olive St. Gallipolis
.
.•

.
I•

"'
'"~
l$'1
,,
~

PEEWEE BOYS
Ages 9 &amp; 10
All Star Tournament at
Rutland
July 13 &amp; Sun July 14th
15 man roster
· Call 7 42-2209 or

Jn::
~,

.~

·.,&lt;"

"'
.:.,:•

... .,.,'
,"'r'
..,,.

··,_;,

,.

742-2724
Summer Camps and
Summer Dance Classes
for all ages at
The Art School
441-1988

&amp; Interaction

'

•

II

15% off
all carpet

Auto Insurance

Silver Memorial

PET SHOP
Fully equipped

Public Notice

Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Smrth Buick- Pontiac Gallipolis

at Rutland

Clark for specs.
Board of Truet••
William 0. Graham
Chrietophar T. Wolfe
Oon R. Hilt
Joyce White, Clerk
23238 Hill Rd.
Racine, Ohio 45771
(614)247-3125
(6) 23, 28 (7) 5 3TC

Public Notice

875-8757 or 304-675-3847.

bia enaii:sf. ~j;

F1eld S!ock To A ·Bird Hunter
Only, 6t .... 256-1429.
Free Kinens 81 4-446-39ds.· 1 t ~

BULLETIN BOARD

.."'',.....

in chest of drawera . -Other
e:~tras include a step-up apa
tub end a separate shower.

8 Black pupJuas, pan Lab_ 30 4·

1 Mixed Beagla Puppy, Greal
WHh Childrenl&amp; 14·441 -0409 .

D.J • .,.,

dJatw

Femal• 1 Yeilr

Giveaway

crawlspace or slab foundation. A two-car sarqe with
an 1djoJnJns alorU;e room
provides ~~t square feet or

......,.

Adorable par! Colli• pupp••· 10
good home. 30+61!&gt;62210. 1'·~

Personals

PIIUll

private belh lneJudea a dualsink Yllllity and a Ooor-to-cellinl alorage unll with a buill·

''

'

1,..,..,.. Inc. Ia

and In the bedroom acrou

,.· .

I

•

lleppt ............... off
ll'om U.e foyer, while ,on:be4

~~~ I

.

rrt 1 1

DOCUIUNTI
ud
M'I!CIFICATIONI uy be for 1111 ~ .. lti,OOO ...
ol*lned .. the Olflae of Jurlt11, . .
George
A.
Mara I'Ndlluf'L

decllltdl) wetcom1n1 roce.
Arched openlntfl Join wttb
cwlu-• to lldcl ewto oppell.

r

See answer on page,C2

...............
Df 140.00 for ....
w iD 1101 be

LOCWI, OliO 4a1M.
~ "' .... CONTI'IACI'

''l'lle ....... tlmple
-wlodowa,
roonlaes
oncl ' nJied pordlto projec:ta

Public Notice

Portable circular saw is handy on the job

.,••

1,&amp;!00-r.et.

t09 Smith and Jackaon
114 Broken-doWn horse
116 Supporting
s!ructure
119 - minister
12.1 Not atall wild
124 MascuHne
127 Alrtcan animal
129 Yacht
131 Foot digit
132 Head lor the hiUs
136 Promises
I38 Law: abbr.
140 Actress Lupino
142 Poor grade
143 Go very hungry
144 Dried out
146 Wild pranks
147 Trousara
148 Greek assembly
149 Pinkish color
151 Tolerated

::r:-"_..loh
,...

OHIO

lhe- n-'o •m .,......,
reet. Tile upper floor ..,. be
an· '1~ .......... e+II"•M

SUNDAY PUZZLER
DOWN

IIIGINI.I.IIINCl. INC., II LOGAN,

lAST II!COND ITIIEET,

APNawilwbarea
CoMt)doMa_ ... _
•• coa-.e.. te•cea mart thia
~· ~-•· Plu 0-1, by
HomeS.,Ieo Oeolpen Netwwk. ...... Uln ..,.,.,, ... at
........ ... loouood Ia

At 110011, a bell was rung signalinJ sional testi111011y th• "the July situ·
thai trading in the coiiiJ'!ICI had one Ilion is shaky."
.
minute to go. At that point. a major
Senate Agriculture Committee
lflin ~y still needed to buy Olairman Ricbanl Lup of Wan.,
larae 1111011nts of wheat 1o offset its looltina ahead to the poteDiiallr
tradiq position. Thus, a willing sell- volatile settlemeat of July com llld
cr wu needed.
~bean contracts, told the CFfC and
At 12:01, a second bell sianaled ,the exchan1es thai "a repetitiotl
an end 10 buying and selling, thou1h .should not occur."
.
,
the lflin firm still ticeded wheat.
The CBOT has brouaht prelimi·
Despite the hell, business continued nary charges apinstseveral brokers
for almost two minutes as two floor and firms involved in the incident,
brokers sold wheat to frantic reprc- although its chairman, Patrick Arbor;
sentatives of the grain company for said details of the inquiry- inclltd·.
$7 and $7.SO a busbel. A total of ing namcsoftbosecharged-won'r
305;000 busbels weR traded at extra- be released until af'ler hearins• II'(
ordinarily· high prices, well after · held.
..
trading legally ended- all this with
Arbor promised heightened vigifederal and CBot regulatory offi- lance- and a louder bell on the IIad-·
cials present in the pit.
ing floor.
'
ActingCFTCChairmanJohnTull · . The CFI'C ,shoultfn't depend oq ,
Jr. described the March 20 incident as more noise to gul!fantee the integri-·
"a wake-up call for the entire grain ty of these madcets.
·

99 Genuine
100 Pyromaniac
103 Fix fraudulenlly
105 'Honeymooners"

I ---~ I' '•Pegl

Public Notice

a, llUCI A. N.\11WI

Cornett ...,,.,.
Rl11LAND ·· Desmond ·Jeffers
Mo., has completed ·a comprehensive
. GAlLIPOLIS --John Cornett has number of courses at banking schools has accepted a position with Peoples·
accepted a position with Peoples and has several years management Bank as personal banker and manag~~
Bank as vice president, Gallia-Meigs experience in banking. Finance and er of the Rutlat!d office.
The announcement was made by ·
Division, according to an announce- c\)lllmcrcial lending are his specialRobert E. Evans, Preside~! and Chief"
ment made today hy Robert E. Evans, ties.
He is a native of Gallipolis and is Execulive Officer of The Peoples :
President and Chief Executive Officer of The Peoples Banking and Trust a member of the Gallipolis Planning Bimking and Trust Company today. '':
leiTers is a native of Meigs C'oun- ·
Company.
Commission, Gallipolis· Retail MerHe is Msponsible for all admin- chants, panicipates in the Coats for ty, is a graduate of Hocking Techni· ·
istrative and lending functions con- Kids program and is·. treasurer of cal College and has spent 17 years irf.'
banking. He and his wife Joni, their.... ""
ducted at the Gallipolis, Middlepon, United Way.
He
and
his
wife
Many
have
two
daughter
and two sons reside in Har-~·"'
Pomeroy and Rutland offices.
·
children.
.
rison ville .and are members of th&lt;(.r~
Cornett earned an MBA from
Washington University in St. Louis,
l'1b!!lleJl?" &lt;;h,u~ch ofChr.i! t, .,,,,.
r--_ _;,..__ _...__ _ _ _ _ ___,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...., ., ,, :

ACiloss

t

Country charm; upscale living

said

Cornett, Jeffers accept posts with Peoples Bank .

Pomeroy • Mlddhport • Odlpo118, OH • Point P11111nt, WV

- Houae of the week

Commodities closely watched by farmers, regulators
8y
ANTHAN
tradina industry." He
the aaency is
hicb
or be cOtnpelled to buy exchanps, entered the
out their
oblialli0111 at hiah- pit to ens an orderly end to Mardi investiJatinl the incidenL
The Die Molrtn R•t
WASHINGTON the way-robbery
trading.
Tull confumed durina CotllfCJ·

.
.....

~

••

I

'

::

8unday,June23,1118

Sundly, June23, 1M

Pomeroy • 'I dell p 1141• 01~111, Ott • Poln- Plttttnt, WV

i'

;•;.
•'
...
•
•••
••
••
••
••.

..

·-'!··~,

•

•.·'

•• • tJ

--

SHOIW&amp;SAlE

-

Pt. Pleasant, w.va.

June 29th 9 to 3 4th &amp; Main Street ·
Large local bottle and stoneware
display sponsored by
Piddler's Place Antique &amp; Craft Man
675·4795 .

••¥

. ~.

'

�•

Sundly, June 23,

Pomeroy • M~ • G8111polle, OH • Point Pluunt, WV
110

40

HtlpWII'Ited

110

Help Wlnled

BaO,an In llr Homo llond•r
CALl. ToU!t,STAIO'T~"::4 8idwtll Area 110 Dtr
S1 000 S111n On Bonvt Hiring
a 14 !IU 1134 Aflet !1::10
flat .... Orl-1 All M1it1 Paid R w llonnr Frklsr Anr dmo

_,

·--~Ute-~~~.
Donut
PwOQtlllft. ECKI t I' 1 1.8QO.
t1 1-4838. Owntr O!&gt;tfa1011 ......
Wtkcnledl

W I I ldL

8odr - k on cara &amp; ~uc:Q,
AONble rat••

-

rfiii'IOf mecMn~cal

oil ""'nget. cd 114-742
21135 tek lor KIP. Rutloro!

-JL

Malo Slack l~b lill11tt1 2 Yean
Old Ploy Well a E-pttlc 814
«11le61

SaiOIIO doll\.304~15-17811
Ten adortblt kln•n• aU colon

161&lt;)MI-27511

To Good Homo K111ono. I - ·
Old, 814 2511-1M

60 Lost and Found
LOST Man 1 aiiYt&lt; ID bnicolot ot
HOlzer Hospttal ot Fruth 1 Pharm

COllicen•• drlv.r with tanker
tndolttmenJ. 2 ,..,. txl&gt;tMIICe
toq~~lltd lor Colu-1 lttl Clll Don 1 Lawn Cate Rllld•nual
ChufChts &amp; Cemellfltt Rea
114-11112 3220
Rt..l614 37'i-2847
Camputtf Uaen Needed W.tlt
Own Hovrt 20M To SSOK /Yr 1 Gan~tral Ma ntena~• Painting
IOIJ.341-7111&amp; X 1173.
Y•rd Work Windows Waahed
Guuara Cleaned lighr Hauttno
O.nlat H1g1em11 klr talabl thed Coi'N'Mfiul Resiaenliai Stwt
pr8CKI n Athens Ohio MUll be IS 14--..ocB
If endly (IUIIIIY Otllnted and I
team player Send rea~.~m .. to Goorvot Portablt StwmiM don 1
R l Spero ODS 715 W Un•on haul your logt IO lha mo!jUII ctll
304-675-1857
Snol. Alher11 Ohio 45701

Orivtrt Nttded New Contract
Stating ltle .kine For Po;nta In
Eostorn HaH 01 U S. Starting Pay
lost Ytclfllty'Of Dr Btowna offica. Up To 291 IMtle Plus Vacation
long void necklace w11h woddlfl9 Pa1 Elc Patd Evtty Week Aa
Slgneji Convent onal Tractora
nng set ataehed CI14-D92 sa.s.
Home Weekends Wtlls ca,ga
70
Yard Sale
Inc Stoutav lit Ohto BU
1377

acy lllound call 304~7!&gt;111100 or
304 875-5530 REWAADII

•1•

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

DRIVERS Needed lor OTR flal
bed carr er home most wee
kends patd w"kly hospnal za
All Yard Sa\11 Mutt Be Pakt In 1 on dlsabtlity 1nsuranee 40tK
Advance DEADLINE 2 00 p m 1e11 ement pl;;m mJI'1mum qua~ lac
t ons good safety &amp; dnv no
the day before the ad is 10 run
Sunday tld1Uon 2 00 p.m Friday record 23yfl of age 2yrs exper
ence or tyr w•th dr vmg schoo
Monday ed•tton 10 00 a.,m Sat
Appl cauons taken da•ty !rom
urday
Sam 5pm Sat 8 12 at H&amp;W
First Time Sale Mat8fnny G rlt Truck1ng Co Inc 633 Fudge
NB 4 Mens ladies Sat June Creek Ad Ona WV 1 800 826
29th l 11 e Kyger Roael ut 3580
House On Right Past R V H S 9

AM?

Earn 1000s weekly stuff~ enwl
opes at home Be your boss Start
now No e•penence Free sup
pi es mfo no obi gat on Send
S.A S E 10 Prest ge Un 1 l P 0
Boll 19S609 Wn er Spnngs Fl
A,l Yard Sales t.luat Be Pa1d In 32719
Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Advance Oeadhne 1 OOpm the
day before the ad s to run Sun

day ad !ion 1 OOpm Fnday Mon
day tld oon 10 OOa.m Sawrday

Easy Workl E•cellen t Payt As
semble Products at Home Call
Toll Free t 800 467 5566 EXT
12170

Movmg sate starlmg Thursday HELP WANTED Men /Women
? varety of hOusehold Items new Earn $480 Weekly Assembling
lypewr ter seWing machines cb Cucun Btlards !Eieclronlc Com
dOg kennel Gold Ridge Rd Thai ponenla At Home Exper~enc:e
ma Bankl Harpeuealdence
Unnecessary Will Tra n fmme
;;,;;,;;=;;.P;.;;;;:u:::b::.II;;:C:;S8=:I:;e:;..._.l d~ato Opemno• Your local Area
80
Call i 520-680 7891 Exl D10V4
,-.,--a_nd_.,.Au_c_tlo_,n___ HOME TYPIST PC users need
1
Wedemeyer s Auction Service ed $45 000 tncome potential
Galhpohs Ohio 814 379 2720
Call1 BOO 513 43&lt;43 Ext B 9368
f\tck Pearson Auct on Company If you are 1ook1ng !Of a career n
lwll ume aocuoneer complete the hea tl"tcare he d are hard
auc! on serv1ce
Licensed work no car ng and have a desure
#66 Oh o &amp; West V1rg'" a 304 lO care for people we w11 prov de
you w fh the educat on ~ou need
773-5785 Or 304 773 5447
to be a STNA CompeUt•we salary
90
Wanted to Buy
benehts hoolth nsurance and
lull on re mbursement awa labia
Camp ele Household Or Ettateal for lull t1me employees We en
An~ Type Of Furn ture Apphanc
courage ua ned nursmg ass1s
es Ant ques Ere Also Appraisal tanta 10 apply as weU Please call
Ava•1ablel814 319 2720
Penny Delong at 61' 887 3158
or apply tn person at Arcadia
Clean late Madel Cars Or Nur11ng Center Eaat Ma1n Street
Trucks 1990 Models Or Newer Coolville OhiO 45723 E 0 E
Smtth BUtck Ponuac 1900 East I:::.:::.:=...=::...:.:.:=:.:::::::__
ern Aveooe Gal~pofis
Immediate open•ngs lor part t me
AN S and LPN S al sh Its Com
J &amp; 0 s Auto Parts Buy1ng sal pet live wages d11ferent al w fh ex
vage vehicles Selhng pans 304 pe ence equal opportumty em
773-5033
ployer Contact the D rector or
, 0 , Nurs ng Pmecrest Care Center
Non Work n9 Wa' "ers
01
" Freezers
' r 1 70 P~necrest Of ve Gallipolis
Stoves Relr gerators
A r con~ hone 1s Color T 11 5 Ohio, 45631 614 446 7112
VCR s Also Junk Cara 814 258 legal Secreta'y WP eo good
1238
commun1cat•on sk !Ia typ•ng
Paytng Top Dollar For Jun" Cars 60w p m references requ~red
Tru 'ks &amp; Runnng V.h IC .' Ta Send resume to Box CW 21 c/o
Dave 814 44&amp; 95 75.
Pt Pleasanl Reg s!et 200 Ua n
Sl P1. Pleasaru WV 25550
Top dollar antl(lues furniture Need 6 lades To sell Avon 614
glass chma clocks gold s lwer 446 3358
coins watches estates Osby 1.:.:::..::=------Marttn 614 992 7441
lmmeG1ateiy Repa1r P8f
Top Pr cas Pad Old US Cons Needed
son
Needed
For Yaccum Cleaner
S iver Gold D•amonds AU Old Company Dut•M
Include Repatrs
Collecubles Paperweights Etc On
Elecwc
Motors
In
M T S Co•n Shop 151 Second Home Servtce Must BeSome
Neat In
Avenue Gall pols 614 446-2842
Appearance And Able Ta Work
Wanted To Buy Used Mob le Well With The Publ c W•ll Tra1n
The RIOht Person Call 6 u 441
Homes. Cal 614 446 0175
1975
Wanled To Buy Autos &amp; Trucks I~=--:-~-:-----­
Any Condtton 614 388 9062 Or Needed towboat p1IOI steady
61" -446 PART
work good pay call 1 412 &amp;43

1MI Clorlon "1&lt;l".,- c..,..
llull Stll Wtl 17 SOO Haw
..ii!Dil1 ........ 10

HIMng ~ Party! Rlvtr City Sound
Producuona Tht Righi OJ 1 For
Youl Rtttontble RaiOI 814 441
0571
I would likt Ia clean your house
or bustnen WHkly or monthl~
Low rattl ver1 dependable

Alltll-

--"'Ill

IIIII nr I'll 101 IIIUbjtet 10
lha F - Fllf~ loCI
oi11M18-- Kllogel

.. _ ... ...,prtltr•tee
•• " l':n (Jf dllcrttl.lllloil
...... colol: lllglon.

---ororigin oranyii...,A:wttD
mtkt ""Y ............ tee
lrNiadon Of cllcr'omil . . . .

_Viii...,.
-lion

Tlllo ~~~~- wi!IIOI

- - l o r .... _
wltlch II In
ollht loW
OUr - . , . t101t0y
Informed that all chwelklflll

tld-ln lhllltl\are avallltH on an equal
oppor1unllybeols

P1tutcol~15-787li

lnt•riar &amp; Exterior Painting For 310 Homes for sale
Free EIOIMIOS, 61 ..245-5457
2 Bedroom Home land Contract
Mother ol lhr" Will babya 1 Ru To Oualdted Parsons 10'1. Down
ttand area any age 1 ooam 61~ 2511-8573 For Apprintmerl.
6 OOpm Monday through Fr da~
614 7,2 1507
2 3 bedroom house 50x100 lot
n Syracuse appUancaa
Profeas•onaLTree Serv ce Stump located
lncludtld
call 614 912 5767 alter
Removal Free Ell mates' In 4pm.
surance Bidwell Oho 814 388
9648 614 387 7010
2 3 bedrooms bnck i1R new
carpet complete new
Sun Valley Nursery School WJI'Idows
kitchen
and
bath garage full
Chtldcare U· F earn-S 30pm Ages basement 614-992-6389
2 K Young School Age During
Summer 3 Days per Wee!( Mm 213 Bedroom good cond ton
mum 814""48 3857
Close tO hosp tal 5 SChOO S n Pt
Pleasant SAI7 000 Call 304 675
The french C ty Ch ld Care Can 8897
tar Hours 8 AM 1 PM Man
day Ttlru Fnday Infants Tod 3 BR 2 bath ranch 2 car garage
lien Pre School And School Sp no Valley area close Holzer
Age Program For More lntorma Hosptal 614 446-7940
lto n Contact L•aa Coughenour
614 448 4467
Cottage newly remodeled wlout
build ng &amp; pr vac~ fence 1 floor
Wdl Ca e For The Elderly There plan good lor elderly or rental
Home Or l ve In M~ne 15 Years Jollerson Ave $35 000 304 87S.
Expertence Excellent Work And 7~12
Personal References Call Kaw
6,4 379 292'3
Country setung ' bedroom 2
balh living room eat n k tchen
W•ll Mow Lawns In Gaiha County fam ly room wa k tn closets 2 car
614 446 2761
garage 1acre 304 882 3326 af
Will PrOVIde Chtld Care In My ter 6prt1
Home for Children 2 1 Up Asso GOV T FORECLOSED Homes
c a to Devree In Early Ch ldhood For Penn es On $1 Del nquenl
VInton Atea 814 388 8932 Ask Tall Repo s REO s Vou Area
For Becky Hess
Toll Free ( l ) 800 898 9778 Ext
Will Pr.ov•de Quality Chtldca e In H 2814 For Cu en! Ls nga
My Home Laca1ed Near Holze One bedroom home n Pomeroy
Hosptal Call61444e8t13 Fo WII sell on land contract 814
More InformatiOn
992 5858
Work Wanted Mow ng l gh! StOfy ~nd A Ha I House W1th Ell
ConstruciiOn Pa nllftg Ya d tra lot In B dwell $22 500 614
Work Etc Call Dave At 614 256 24594!5
1309
Three bedroom home n country
Whttes HUAd Rutland one baltt
FINANCIAL
!)..ground po~ 614 992 506 7
21 0

Business
Opportunlly
!NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
recommends that you do bus•
ness w1th people you know and
NOT 10 send money through lhe
ma•l untl you have nwesugated
tt'le offer ng
Su!ltnelsp&amp;f'!on Small Size Con
tractor Nal onal Manutact u e
Award ng loc:ai DEALERSHIP
For Steel Bu1ld ngs Bg Prof t Po
tent al On Sales And Construe
lion 303-759-3200 Exl 2300
ClASSIC OUTDOOR WODD
FURNACE Is The Most Etf1C1ent
And Lowest Em11S1ons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market
Central Bo let' Is Currently look
ng For A Qua ty Dealer In Th s
lmmed ale Area For tnformatton
On Becom ng A Deater Or For A
Free Brochure Ca 1 800 2-48
4681 Or 1 218-782 2575
PAY PHONE ROUTE
35 Local &amp; Establt!ll'led S tes
Earn Up Tc S1 500 Wkly
1 800~98-4980

230 Professional
161-4
Wanted To Buy Junk Autos Wllh
Services
Ot Wtthoul Motors Cali larry Non Smoktng Pan Ttma live In
Nanny
Needed
For
3
Year
Old
&amp;
LIVely 814-368-9303
s Tree ServiCe Tr m
2 Month Old Good Pay For Ex Johnson
mtng
&amp; removal of Ilea shrubs &amp;
panenced Person References hedges 1 800 718 0793 or 304
Requited 614 258-155V
5116 1285
'
EMPLOYMENT
Postal Jobs 3 Po&amp; t ons Ava1l
SERVICES
able No bper ence Neceasar~
REAL ESTATE
For lnlormation Call 1 818 7tl4
9018 Ext 7102
110 Help Wanted
Sacrotary Position
1 112 story 4 br lr dr lr ba~
$WANTED I
For Immediate Htre Full Time men1 &amp; aun porch 136 000 call
10 peop e who need to lose Secretary For The Comn..nity Imwe ght I make money to try new provement Corporation Of Gall1a 614 992,480
pa1en1ed we1ght lou p oduct County Must Have Advanced 2 112 bedroom home w!balh walk
304 773-5083 241Yslday
Computer Skills MICrosoft Office to town &amp; school good cond ton
ACT Helpful Should Be Able To remodeling 1n progress oow rugs
POSTAL JOI!S
Wnte Busmess Leiters And to sun buyer 95% hnance ava 1
S12 88 IHr To Start Plus BenefitS Have
Command Of Sec able to quallfed buyer Property
Carr era SOrters Cterl(s Comput retar General
al
Sk
lis
Must Be Neat located at 131 Buuernut Pomer
er Tra nees For An Apphcal on Courteous With Exc~ient
oyO
And E•am Information Call 1 Skll a S&amp;nd Resume CowtrPeople
lener
219 791 I 191 Ext P6•32 9 AM And References To Executive Oi
To9PM 70ays
rector The Com.,un ty Improve
ment Corponmon Oi Galfia Coun
ty RO Box 465 Galhpohs Oh1o
'5831 Deadlne Monday June
24 1096 All Appllcallons Are
4 Potenlla leaders Ser austy In
terested In Invest ng Few Hours Slr~lly Conlidenbal
Weekly In Pa t T me Bus ness
Someone 10 stay with elderly lad~
814446 236
for room board and small salary
Able Avon Represen1auves Send resume and references Clo
needed Earn money to Chr s1 Sentinel P 0 Box 729 25 Po
mas b II&amp; at hometat work. 1 BOO mercy OH 45769
992 0356 or 304 882 2645 lnd
Takmg Apphcat ons Bartender 1
Rep.
Wa tress Full T•me Apply In
America s Lead•ng Home Health Person AI Carls Tavern 856
JOSHUA TYLER COX
Co hu an opemng lor PER Second Averw.~e Gall polls
IOpal &amp; Bell Cox wesh
DIEM PT Opponun tes also
Galha Me gs Community
avatlable for RN s HHA s Call The
1 st grandchild
Acuon Agency Ia Seekmg 4
Mon Fr 8 5 304 529 0726 1400 Housmg
Rehabthtat
on
Spec1allat
Commence Awe Hun11ng1on WV To F111 A Pos1t on Wllh The Galita
Happy
1
25701
County CHIP PJogram The Can
d date Should Have Fouf (') BirthdliY on June 23
AmNTION
Yeara Expe11ence In Housing
Memmas
General Help No Exper ence Construcbon Preferably Hou&amp;ing
Needed Gall a caunty firm Seek Rehab IJaiiOn Wih HUD Or Ollttr Foot &amp; Pappas Lettie
ng Enetgellc IndiVIduals To F1ll Government Funded Programs
Buddy
Permanent Full T me Posit on&amp; SuperviSor~ Exper ence In Hous
ng
Trades
And
Sen111
we
To
The
Applicants Should Be 18 Or Old
We LoveYoul
er Neat In -.ppearance And Needs Of Low Income Famll ea
Awa fl able To Slart Work Th s Sala1y Is Based On The Current
Week For Personal Confident al Sa t ar~ Schedule Send Reaume
Interview Call Monday Only 81' To TOM PASOUALE Galha
u 1 t989 $300 IWetk As Per MOIVS CAA 8010 North SA 7
Sox 272 Chelh~re 0H 45620 No
Agreement To Starl
Later Than June 28 1888 For
Further Information Call 81+317
STUDENTS
73&lt;1 1 Or 814 002 6629 The Gal
Summer Help Needed Schol1r ha Me1g1 CAA Ia An Equal Op
ah ps Available Flexible Schad porwrtty Emptoyw
ule No E•ptnence Necessary
Call Monday For lntarvtew e 1' 170 Miscellaneous
441 11H11l
All Natural Fat Leu Ptoduct
ATTN WDIIEN /liEN Earn E1 Lose We1ght Feet Beller In
1111 lncomt Fle~ble Houral 1200 creased Energy $1 A Day 8U
1500 Weekly Call 7 Oayt 407 ... 1236
87 s.2022 E•• 0528 HH.
180 wanted To Do
ATTN WOMEN/MEN Eorn t11tal ~~~-;::::-:;::;::;::--::-::=
meomo FleXIble hourtl 1200 Anr ~ toba. "- nlr18 corpon•y
$500 wotkly Call 7 days 1407) rep1111 lown work IIC 304 075
0752022E•L0598H25.
7112

14kl0 Flir._r llltH btd
blithl all tiKifiC
•O'a10 deck Included 1 ,..out•
...... ctl814-812-41134
fDDml two

1911 Schuh loloOIIt H- 3 8td
rooms 2 Baths Klachen Dwung
L R Huach Heat Pump AC
Porch 112 Acra Hllllop Or•ve
Gtl!lpohs $25 000 Cuh Or
$30 000 Owntr Finlncod no 1nt
- ts.OOO Down 114 4~1 U55
1883 CIJyron rnobllt home
lhree baiwm, wilh ftlll ful

••xeo

over PI!Ymtnll 814

only ptGplo Wllh v&lt;&gt;Od
coli

1Llmmoa Ollar I 1918 dou-idt
2bath $1788 down $2751
month Free deliver,. I setup
Only at Oakwood Homes Nttro
wv 304 756-5115
Lmted Ollar Only $500 down on
any new smgle w1de 1n atoc:k
Free delivery &amp; setup Only at
Oakwood Homes N tro WV 30'
755-5115

U••

Equll Hout11111 Opporlllily

AI&amp; MICA

Furnlthtd 2 llotlroom Aportmtn~
Acro11 From Peril AC No Petl
Rtleroncn 0tpo11~ U50111o
814 448-41236 11......osn
t207V ~
FOR RENT OR SAl.£ 3 lltdloom Furn ahed 3 Rooms &amp; 8tlh Up
2 btlh ..,.,, room pool ....,., 11a111 UdiUiH Futnilt'ted et•an
til 1550mo 304 175 3030 or No "-11 Reltronco 0tpo111 Re
qv,rtd 114-448-1518
300-175-3431
3 Bedroom Houst In Ka,.uua
Ftneod Yard carport $325/llo
t300 DtpoaiL No P.to. 114 441

N•ce 2 bed,oom oaaemtnt va
tiiQe n1ct yatd teferen(tl de
JIIWL no pel~ 304~75-5162
N~e 2 or 3 bedroom ltou• '" Po
......, no ptll 814-992 51156

BRUNER LAND
61' 775-9173

Trailer lor rent tn Gal poh&amp; area
814-9

Me gs County Mmute&amp; To
Athena Near Albany 5 Acres
$8 500 11 + Acres 18 500
Many Good Huntmg lots

Two and three bedroom mob le
homes startmg at S240 1300
sewer water and tta&amp;h nc:luded
8141192 2187

Hartford Wv
IE~~~~~::::
Senous calls
Scen1c Valle~ Apple Grove
beaut1ful 2ac lots publ c warer
Clydt Bowen Jr 304-576 2336
Secluded 5 5 Acrea Len Than
Mile From .. otzer Ho&amp;pltal
S12 500 Ftnanc•no Avatlabla
614 386-9062 614 446-7278

440

Apartments
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments fur
nished and unfurnished secunty
deposit required no pets 814
992 2218
Card

of Thanks

The fam1ly of Dave
Bnskirk would hke to
thank hts fnends, co
workers,
and
netghbors for all lheu
VISIIS,
prayers,
flowers, and food
dunng h1s Illness and
death
A spectal thanks to
Hosptce nurses Marge
Sktdmore and Ann
Forbes Also
hts
careg1vers
C1ndy
Mayle, Sue S1mpson,
Ada Rowe, and to
Paul Stmson for hts
many
VISitS and
funeral servtce
The
love
and
concern
you
all
showed will never be
forgotten

170 Miscellaneous

Btrthday
"River Valley
Rhonda"

SUMJfU SAVINGS SA I.E
NOW T11RV JI1NE 2l9Df
ALL CEILING FANS 25% OFF
Large selection In stock. •••••• $22.50 to $78.95

Noretum
Happy Ad

Lordy Lordy
Gail Patsy
Turns forty.

I

Robert and Bobby

Ad

It's elementary my
Dear Watsonyour hard work and
determination IS inspinng.
Congratulations!
Mark A. Watson, A.A.B

Furnished Apartmlnl Upstairs. 1
a.dtoom No Pelt Second Ave
nue Galhpol 1 AU Utili rial Paid
Dt!&gt;o~~ 814-44&amp;-8523

Furnished Ell•ecl.ncy Apartment
Central Heat &amp; Aw C.ondltton1ng
Unlurn shed 2 bedroom house All Urlltt1e1 Furn 1hed Private
f'IIC:t &amp; clean no ms1dt pets de-- Parking 81.-4415 2602
polltrequ red 6-" 992~
GraCious hvlng 1 1nd 2 bedroom
apartments at VIllage Manor and
New 8tnk Ropos Only 3 lell S1111
R1vers•d• Apartments in Middle
tn W81'1'8nry 304-755-7111
poll From $232$355 Colll14
1108 Belmont Mobtle Home 3 420 Mobile Homes
092 5014 Equel Hou 11ng Opper
bedroom, 2 bath lot 851l105 Call
IUAD8S
for Rent
Somerv lie Raalry 30' 675 3030
or:c..;30;:.~_.;.:7.:.S..:.:J4.::3;.;,t:..__ _ _ _ 14.1170 3 Bedrooms All Electric Mtddleport 4th Ave 2 Bedroom
1 For Rerr Of Sale 014-318-9378
furmshed apt deposit I rater
Pr ce Buster 199&amp; 3bedroom
ence 304 882 256&amp;
$825 down •15Dfrno Free dellv 2 Bedroom tn Mason washer &amp;
New Haven 1 &amp; 2 Bedroom lur
ery &amp; setup Only at Oakwood dryer ac no pets ~' 773-5751
n
shed apts Deposu &amp; te!Bfenc
NtroWV304-755-5815.
2 Bo&lt;l•oom Mobile Homo No F'OIS ea 304 112 25111
340 Business and
S22!&gt;'Mo. St35 Depos u1u ..
N1ce two bedroom apartment 1n
38 7
Bull~tlngs
'
POmeroy no pets. 614 992 5658
2 Bedroom Trailer 8 M1les Route
Ptotesa onallBus.ness bu id1ng lor 210 $210/Mo + Deposit Aelor One bedroom apartment 1n Y1d
sublaast Located a! 509 S Th rd ences 814 446 8172. 814 256 dleporl all ut hne&amp; PB d 1270/mo
Srreet Mddlepon Ohio Excellent 8251
plus $100 dopoo 1 Call 614 992
for phys c•an of! ce 01 rea es1ate
7808 6arn 5pm
space Ample street park1ng 2 Bedraom Unlurnlthed Mobile
Ava lable mmed•ateiy Contact Home No Pall I2251Mo $135 Tara Townhouse Aparlmentl
Very Spactous 2 Bedrooms 2
Rl Kunz 814-593-3375 co lecl
llepoll~ 614-4&lt;4&amp;-3817
Floors CA 1 112 8tlh Fully Car
2 Bedroom very clean nice peted Adull Poal I Baby Pool
350 Lots &amp; Acreage
porch and yard C1l1forn a Street ~allo Starr $3401Mo No Pata
1 Acrt footers water septic ga '" Hartford S225 monri'IIV 304 Lease Plus Security Depos t Re
rage blacktop road 1n Addison 882 238V
qu~ted 814 367 7850
aroa.ot .. 388-917a
3 Bedroom House Tra11er located Tw n R vers Tower now acc•phng
25 Acre&amp; Hannan Trace School In R o Grande Roleroncea Re appl,catons lor tbr HUO subSid
D1stncl Small Tobacco Allotment qulred No .,_,, lnsidel BU 379
zed apt for elderly and hand
Mneral Rights 814 251 1811
_,.27..::20.:. .AFT_.::EA;.;,.:_O.::P.M.:.._-'---- J capped EOH 304 67!&gt;11879

Gall a County Galhpol s 2 Miles
Out Na•ghborhood Ad Nce 22
Acres S28 000 8 Acres $14 500
Or 10 Acres $17 000 Towards
Huntington 3 -Nttes Out Teens
Two bed oom rancn LA DR Run &amp; Chamb.8rs Rds 10 Acres
kllchen w th new oak cab nels a- $10 000 5 Acres $12 000 7+
mode ad bath laundry oom Acres Wlih PondS 12 000 Nco
forced aJr fu nace w th AC at Levat 8 Acres Wtth Str•am
tached garage separate garage/ 111 900
workshop storage shed Syra
Cal For Maps &amp; Owner F nanc
cuse 614 992 2365
ng Info 10"1. OFF Cash Pur
Chases!
320 Mo!llle Homes
for Sale
Bu ld ng lots For Sale Mtdway
Dnve New Hawen City Water &amp;
14•70 Homette 2 bedroom lu•ury Sewar HXI•177 Phone 3041 773bath totally remolded Call 304 5948 Pr cod to Sell
675 6397
1970 Schultz l2x65 W rh 12x16 lors lor rent Now taking applca
t•ons Counrry lane Mobile Home
Add I on Many New Improve p k G 11 111 F
WV
ments Pr cad To Sell 1 $2 ooo 8 :~ s. 2 ~ IPO
err~
304
Please
614
446 3164 Ser10us lnqu res
1976 14x70 Freedom Wlh 10120
Vemco Add Room Very Good
Condron E ecuc Heat CA 614
446 8034
1985 Redman 4x70 2 Bed
rooms 2 Baths Washer Dryer
Stove Retr gerator Excellent
Cond tion 61 4 245-5628

1 Btdtoom Super Nloo Ulll
llo Pluo UOiidta UsuoHr
2 lltdroorn llriclt In R10 Grandt SorntiNIIJI A~l Sun V.lltf
Apor- &amp;1~2157
11 ..245-SGI
2 &amp;Miroom Houst 2 S.droom 2bdrm apts tot.ll electric IP.
Trollor AC ~ Golli906~ 8 te 448 ~•nces furntshtd- lau"*Y room
lacllldeo, dOH 10 tcl1ool In """'
~ppllcodart1 tvaillblt 11 Vllllvt
- ""' lnlormt....
2 2 ° ...,. ""-'taltlt 111 01 July Grton Apia. IMt or coN114-1182Ltrtt 1'/ard UIO!IIo 11 4 448- 3711 EOH.
2515.
BEAUTIFUl ~PARTMENTS AT
3 11 s ocwn &amp; tuU bulmtnl. c.n BUDGET PRICES AT JACMSON
hi Ill I no poll $400mo. I cJt. ESTATES 52 Wtttwood Drlvt
10 S3t5 W.lk 10 shoP
po1U 2411 I Montee Ave Pt lrom
-ttnt WY CtH 304 ..75-1743 I mov1e1 Call IH 441 2518

410 HauHIIor Rent

LARGE SELECTION UNFINISHED WALL
CABINETS In Stock •••••• From $49 00 to $98.00
5' KITCHEN STARTER SET ................ $299.99
2·1530W, 1·SB60, NiO" Counter Top
8' KITCHEN STARTER SET .................. $300.00
Reg. $389.99. No retum
LARGE SELECTION VITEROUS CHINA
DROP-IN LAV. BOWLS In Stock •• 25%-50% Off
STERLING LAV. FAUCET
Reg. $109.99 No Retum ................. NOW $39.99
ENTIRE STOCK OF LIGHTING ON SALE: '
POrch Light, Wall Lights •••••••• $8.99 to $28.99
Chandellera ...........................$34.99 to $89.99
Good Selection In Stock
17x19 VANITY BASE &amp; TOP ••••••••••••••••••• $44.99
Un1111mblecl
25x19 OAK VANITY BASE

&amp; MARBLE TOP...................................-$98.98
4aX22 OAK VANITY BASE TOP ........... $249.1M1
48X30 OAK TRMEW
MEDICINE CABINET ........................... $14a.99
36X391AJ TRIVIEW
MEDICINE CABINET ............................. $81.99
30X30 OAK TRMEW

MEDICINE CABINET ............................. $72.11
STAINLESS S"n:EL KITCHEN SINK DOUBLE
BOWL IMge BowtiSmall Bowl. No Nlllrn
R-s~- Rmll $89.99.............SALE PRICE $24.99
PEDESTAL SINKS Reg. SM.IMI, $7i.99
Blut M18t &amp; Creme In ltock............... 20% OFF

CABINET WAREHOUSE
2232 Honeysuckle In Welllton, Oh. 4&amp;1112
814-384 4115

Valley V ew Apartments R1o
Grande
Now accepting applicallons for
two bedroom apartmant1 Apatt
mtntl have &amp;If condiUonin~
kltcn•n appliances fenced 1n
playground laundry lac l•ty on
1 \1 management 1nd water aaw
., and uash paid by ownen For
more tnformation piasa call (614)
245-9170 Monday Thurada~ from
Noon to 3pm EOUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY &amp; RURAl ECO
NOMIC AND COMMUNITY DE
VELOPMENT
Vet~ ntce dean one bedroom fur
ntlhecl apartment•n M1ddlepor 1
814 QQ2 2178

1•

Iunday, June 23, 11M

_..,_ -........
upa Call aftlf 2 00

p m.,.

460 Spa:t fOr Rtnt
For- Roymond llu11ravt low
Ott.. on 5lh SlrHI In l'l. PIMa
ant Lots of Space Gr. . t But
ntll lvcauon 15001month rent
304~~7

470 Wanted to Rtnt
Clean reapon11ble chlldles.,a

---

tovtt • ,.,_

Good rtlertneH. wilt omployw~
by VMH willing 10 do mo&lt;1tt'llt;.

ropalra 814 882 1030

'P•••••

MER C HANDI SE

51

o

.

Household

Goods

Ar Condutontr&amp; Washer Or~er
Refrigerator Freezer Stove Mt
crowav• Color TV VCR 114
258-1238

1

B1g Sav1ngs On Carpet &amp; Vinyl In
Stock SB 00 Yd &amp; Up .. ollohan
CarpeiL R7N 814-448 7444
Counuy Furniture 304 67S..682Q. 1
Rt 2 N 8m1lt1 Pt Pleasant WV
lues Sat 9-6 Sun 11 5
~
G1bson refngerator good conq.
$100 304 675-6988
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wash•rs d1yen relr garatoraJ
ranges Skaggs Apphanc•• 76
Vme Street Call 014 " ' 739&amp;._
1 800-499 :1&lt;199
'
llhlped cou~ onoman cha' &amp;
end table S300 304-875 6474
Refngerator good cond $125

Beige carpat 13x27 $75 304 675-

110

WortWn 1 b&lt;ldol aot t.&lt;Jlamond
lltn 1 - . g bond 1-Giomond
bOVghJ lor 8100 will Mil lor 1300
304 773-95111

1'lpera,

710 Autos
Slit
710 Autos for Sale
...._..:;..._,:;::.;.:...._,

r

Help Wanted

DRIVERS STABILITY
Over 2000 customers lor
24 yearsl EQUIPMENT All
94 96 conveflllonalsl
PAY 24 35¢ mtl
Expertenced (1 + yr OTR)
AT P dnvers (2 t1 mo
OTR) all welcome!
Top benetils
$tODD sign-on bonus'!
Nattonal or regtonal
0/0 lease/purchase av4JII
TAL toa 2p Sun or 9a 5p
M F t 800 876 8754 eld
IP 62 'condtiJOns apply

8

Public Sale &amp; Auction

8

71 0 Autol for

710 Autos

Cougor lS. 1 _,. 11182 Chewy C.IIWO RS 25111 At&gt;
on.- "1*-.,
low rnilol ' " cand. ' 4 500 n,..,..,, Rlttl 18ilck St11pea
300-1~7!95Fvllr LoaOod Atkm8 S 12 000

1915 Dodge lanc•r tour 4oof
..- . 12.000 milw
8 1 4-812~134.

1115 Ponooo UOO 114 3f7
0217
1815 Thundorblrd lvrba ...,..

...,, QOOd cond. 11 500 304 773~

1VI7 Ford Ttmpo 4dr aulo,

IVftl

"ML3Q.t..8.75-.,De
E-r• .., ovto eo OOillt'li

'*

$1100 :J04.ll822030

11MIII Flrtllild V a 5 S9MC1 Now
Tltwt 83 000 llil11. Se 200 OliO

Supeor Nicel 111e Bereua GT
12100 080 loodod 014 245
5al2
1881 Ford Tempo 2 3L Enom•
Air Aulomtlc POl 1882 V W
DitHI A1t Good Cordllan.
Em Clttnll1+-t
111811 Ford Ttmpo GlS 2 Door 5
Spotd AM IFM Co111111 AC
NewT res Real Sharp• 11 900
01!0 814 3711-:!MS

111$&amp; ~lode~- ES. 20oar '
5 Spted ~~ Alllfll

4

c,-

Ctlltltt 57 ooo lllltt. A&amp;kJnt
.. 700 080 114-256-41340 114-

1. . · - . . , . .. 814-ll4s.5i12.
7
playe. American 1112 CMYy Lum1na Evraspon 251--141
....,. ......_104-7n-S011.
'Mint Cond 11on l,.tnt•nanu ttt5 Camara. klltded I I 7 500
ttlt Bulcllt L•Sabre e•cen•n• K•pl Fully loaded Aslunc 304-77'3-4188
:
,.nnlng oondibon V 8 P8 PS 11.000 11+245-5112.
1118MewoGeo.et..., ebl.tmAC WN-1. S3800 014 1113 Chrytler Ltlllnln Con Ex
1m eu1t11t Plld St3.000 ... lot
7;848;::llll4=;5:-or~&amp;::1:4--::;::2:•:11:......_,..-l ConcL s 1 Only ll«h Owned Fvm 1101100 Clll 304-1112 3413
111G BuiCk Rovol
1120000081..-41 05lla
31.QOOmi c11an ss
'17 Otdsmob t• ee 7411. v 1
500
I7'5-3!512Mon-Fri ~~;30.
1883 Plymouth Sundance Au
11150 IS Ooclgl 800 11 4._ •t ..
,.,... Air Rtar ~r .. 000 $1350 614 114..3228.
ttl&amp; Olds Cv1i111 Citro Body Mlltl Atlung $5 300 OBO, 814
~ Runa Good. N50 014 2511-1340 at .. 2511...,.7
Aulll Loant, Oteltr willllllltilf 11441 1• 1• •r
s
nanc ng wen tf you ha'll• been
uu111n9 LJ"
1-"" v " "ter IJ. 814 ue 1""3
•• Red Ford ...
tufne d down 1 Isew here Upton
loaded 50 000 M1les S8 000 Equ1pm•nt Used Cara 304 dl1882 Ctrntro CooYOII ble RS 8141182 5481
1088
25th
Sar111s "'o Au
toma1te transmisSion Only Ht84 Dodge Shadow ES Au Orag Race Carl 1959 ~a M•
11 ooau..._ One of 1 kftd Btigttl tomaae Au 23 000 Miles 114 nus Eng•ne 197D Mon;r:a Round
red Betge lop BeiQit lealher 1n 379--0384 8 14-245--9258
ubt 4 l1nk ChalliS 1070 Nova
ter or load.cl a real collector 1
BaCk Halt Cat AI New: 19el •
car GU confltma tl"'ll lhtt 11 • 1__;.._;___-::-_,;.-::---:..!.E::119="'=6=14=~=•=2=203=1===::­
rar• car Mull ... to appencat• t
l1ke new Asll.ng SU 500 Call
'
304-e7S.tll8111tor 5PM

WN\dOwa CO

Ann_..,,

Estate Auction

ESTATE

Saturday, June 29, 1996, 10:00 a.m.
Location: 3 VIne Street, Gallipolis, Ohio

Auc'lo

THURSDAY, JUNE 27'1996
10:00 A.M.

ToHrtletheestateofH. Claude Evans,
I(P,robate Ca1111 No. 961081}, the following
will be sold:
4 pc bedroom suete, half bed 2 denette
wherlpool cllest type deep freeze,

locllted et the auction center on At. 331n MelOn, II ll:rea1dle seweng machene, desk &amp; chaer, 2
WV D11t1 to divorce will be lelllng the
2 gas ranges. several llveng room

new Andenon windows
3' x 6 1/8" x 4 x 5 t/4",
3 x 2 1/8" x 4 x 9
1/4" ®- 2" x 2 118"' x 6 x 5 t14".&lt;D 4 x 6 t/8" x 8' x 5
1/4"0- 2" x 2 t/8" x 4 x 9 t/4".&lt;D· 4' x 6 118" x 4 x 9
t/4",(])- 3' x 2 1/8" x 4 x 5 1/4",$ 2' x 2 1/8" x 6' x 5
1/4"0 2 x t/2" x 3 x t/2", plus others
Auctioneer nole WindoWs will be sold llrat by place
mill then offered as a lot House plans will be
avaHable Be on Umell

bnlncl

®

®

stands, several ketchen appliances,
one lot of glassware and deshes, hnen,
portable TV. bench gnnder, vese,
weedeater, natural gas heater, one large lot
hand tools and mescellaneous Hems
Terms: Cash
Concession
D. Dean Evans, Executor

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66

John1on • Auctioneer
Crown City, Ohio

Muon, WV 773-11785 or 773-5447
OWners JeH Hartncht • Sheny Durst

Phone: 256-6740
Nor Rapo•lb,. For Acc/denr.

Terms Cllh or check wilD
Not re.ponslble 1or IICCidlnta or losl of property

Or Loa

Real Estate General

Public S.le &amp; Auction

AUCTION
''50

AMMONIA REFRIGERATION OPERATOR
lmmedeate opemng for refngerateon
one year of refrigeration expenence
be geven to ammonta refngerateon
expereence Applicant must also possess
electrecal and mechanecal mamtenance
expenence The person wtll be tratned to
Pillsbury Ammoma Standards whtch w111 reqUJre
knowledge of basic math skills Poseteon
second sheft Pay rate $9 50 to $11 75 per "u'". •
dependeng on expenence
If tnterested, please send resume to
THE PILLSBURY COMPANY
2403 Pennsylvania Avenue
Wellston Oheo 45692
ATIENTION R 0
EEO/AA Employer

Latee China Cab1net, good cond
3011~75--

l.n tractor MTD lawnll 18 11
H~ 38• cut 5 speed electnc
Sllrt, QOOd COndlllon $375 61'
V4..2249
'
Gat Furnaces New Galvan
IZQd Duct Work New Hood Fans
610-37V 2720 AFTER 0 PM

N+

RCA 18 Inch SateUttD Dish
$450 614 245-9737

OrthOpediC
Never Used Snll
$800 Sell $250

M.E. PUTNAM CO
MICHAEL E PUTNAM CAl AARE SLA
J MICHAEL BRUCE Auc/Ntcholette Ratcliffe App
76 E 2nd St Chtlhcothe Ohto 45601 (614) 773 4321

EXPERIENCED

HELP WANTED

8

Now accepting applications
expenenced supermarket clerks. All
pos1t1ons needed Local opportunities
grow1ng fam1ly owned company
Excellent benefit pkg. Vacat1ons,
Health
Insurance,
Prof1t-shanng
program etc Call 446-9312
appointment

I and matching chair
old s250 8~&lt; 992 6955

PUBLIC AUCTION
29, 1996

10:00

An Equal Opportunity Employer

MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST
Ohto Umverstty Human Resources Is currently
accepting appllcattons lor the posthon ol permanent
Intermittent MEDICAL TRANSCRIPTIONIST lor the
College of Osteopathic Medicine JOB DUTIES
Transcribe medtcal dtctatlon for clintcal faculty tn the
Osteopathic Medtcal Center QUALIFICATIONS High
school dtploma or equivalent reqUited Six to elgtllee,rtlmonths related experience and medical terminology
requtred Expenence In the use of transcnplion
equtpmenl wllh the ability to Interpret translate and
edt! medical dictation required Excellent typing
spelling and proofreading skills required Abtlity to
read and follow written and oral mstructlons
Applicants wtll be required to pass a clerical wrlnen
examrnalion and be able ID type at least 50 wpm
transcription leal will be administered by the College
Osleopalhlc Medtclne Starting salary Is $10 27 notmy.
Hours ol work are to be arranged
off
·~
I
Saturday and Sunday APPLICATION OE,ADII.INIE:
June 28 1996
'
Alllndhltdulils lntereated In thiS pDBitton are require!!
to complete an application available al University
Personnel Services, 44 University Terrace Athens
Ohio Applications may be obtained between the
hours ol 7 30 a m and 4 00 p m MOnday thr&lt;lugii"F •
Friday
;
OHIO UNIVERSITY
Athena Ohio
Ohio Un'-slty Is an Equal Ofportunlty/AIIIrmatlve
Action Employer
i

!
.
I1

~----:--=---II
w,_R WELLS DRN.L£o
:;:·:,~aaonabte serv,c• 6

Scl\ool (Now South Galha H S ) St. At 218
South en Mercervelle.
Galha County Local Schools well offer at

~-:;;;~~;==JII auct1on

r.; .........
CGITROL
:
:

the followeng etems plus 4 school

buses
Senger seweng machines, art tables,

Raclnt, Ohio
Compllte
Comm•rclal &amp;

typewreters, mesc school desks and chatrs,
portable washer, secteonal two burner
commercial range, educational felms,

'esldtntlel Service

projector screens, canon copeers,
commerctal deshwasher, floor machenes,
outdoor hghteng for football field, lockers,

l

• 9413151
•• 742·2248
' Loolllrcnttned •

,,.:=....
. .nler

l .........

~,......., Specialsl
&gt;

s.lor llilmllnl

(614) 311-9485

~I PRESS

lflll""""&lt;h 'e

111·1932

992.-7.25'1

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

Kathleen M Cleland 9'1Ut'lt
Office;....... ;..................992-7.259

SR 124 Entering Rulland Recently
remodeled 1 1/2 Story Frame Home Vinyl
Extertor 2 3 bedrooms bath appliances
plaster walls wood floortng ante space
basemen! wt1h washer &amp; dryer Large living
room with atrlm doors that open onto new
fron1 covered deck Home Includes ceiling
tans and new celhng light fixtures Cule
home
small 101
IMMEDIATE
POSSES"S;~IO;NN~II~R~ERAiaS~ONA8LE OFFERS
_,
ASKING $27 900

"'""

OHIO RIVER VACATIONER PARADISE
Located on SA 124 Beautiful 4 yrs old 1
112 story frame home FANG heat carpel
vtnyl flooring perma payne wmdows
dishwasher jet atr range disposal central
vac:cum system central a~r cable encl phone
jacks In each room 2 bedrooms 2-3 baths
Circular cemen1 driveways anached garage
deck to lliew your own prece ol Ohto
Allier
Property contains 8ppiOJI 1
DUy'lng a Ula llrne VBcellon Home

1r-

Publll'; Sale &amp; Auction

PUBLIC' AUCTION

STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Gallon
Upftght Ron Evans Enterpr•ses
Jai;tson Ohio 1 800537 952&amp;
·, . - - - - - - . - - - - . . : . . - - - - - - - - - ,
• WOLFFTANNING BEDS
a
Tan AI Home
~- 8vy DIRECT and SAVEl
..,ommere at/Home UMils from
Saturday, June
•
$199 00
low Monthly Paymtnla FREE
: CoiOf Catalog Call TODAY
am
1 800 842 1305
Sale Locateon Fonner Hannan Trace Hegh

OHIO VALLEY SUPERMARKETS INC.
EASTMAN'S FOODLANDS

Shem

BASKETS &amp; POTTERY
June 29 al tt am
St Peters Eptscopal Church
Gallipolis Ohto
Auc Nole!Terms/Directlons
250+ baskets tn every category to be aucttoned
Includes 11large colleclton of ol~er baskets all 1n
condntonl We wtll accept absentee bids for any
JUSt gtve us a call for more tnlormatton
accepted up to day ol sale Cash check VISA MC
Dtscover accepted buyer premtum Food Will
available Thts ts JUSt a partl81 list ol lhe many
baskets we have lo offer Call 6t4 773 432t for a
today! From Chtlllcothe
35E to At
7
Gallipolis Address IS 541 2nd Ave (AI 7 ts 2nd Ave)
Look lor stgns
OWNERS Pea~ Allen &amp; Olhsrs
Longaberger111l and the other basket and collecltion
names are the property ol The Longaberger Company
Thts aucttonts tn no way connected wtlh nor Is
approved or sponsored by The Longaberger Company

K•f'G s•ze waterbed
haadboard 12 drawer$ und••·•
nl'8th
Couch rocker cof
i~' and table S50 30' 675

Stand

Auction Conducted by

Henry E Oeland Jr

washer I dryer
washer needa
814-843 5453

Slit

AucUon

I'I

Appl ancas
R•condn•on•CI
Wasnera Dryers Rangea Rtfrl t.
grators 90 Day Guarantef ..
French C ty Ma~tag 614 ••d
7795

667&amp;

620 Wll1ttd to Buy

Fui llloodtd Con• PoppoH No GRADE LOG W~NTEO Otllv
150 Paront On - L =:.,~,e~..::
814... , 1013..
1o!lllnmon1 Contort Toblta
Inc HOI us At35 Soulll aln
Chests Trpewrllera ,, .. 4•e
Full Blooded Golden Reulnar w.. 2$117 .....,. 304-4175-75811
4712.
550
Building
Pvppltl All llat.l 175 May .. 304~~~u...oa e-t4..t48-~
Suppllet
vrRA FURNITURE
Llvtetock
114-448-11158
Jack Ruuett terrktr puNJ•• tO 2 Hall ngtr Gtldlngo llrokt To
Cuo1i1r- F,.1111&lt;t And All Sltllllvildfltlllo ~., Pul Up
.. ........ Dr ve 1 Ride 1 v..,. Old e1'
Wlrh lllutprlnlt 11) 40x20 Wtl lbt.
Appllli~Ceo. Graet Dtals On
two ...
Snewe
minil.lute
Colt'''
24S.t232
C-. And c.ryt RENJ 2-0WN
S5 100 W1ll Stll ~or U 200 I1l malot.lt2S'tt 814 742 2050
40k37 Woo N 450 Will Soil For
And u,..a, AAia ... @Jbh
SUoo Opon Endl Con Oti¥try Mele AKC Reg istered Pome11 S1mmen1al Cowt Calve&amp; Bulls.
FIW OoiMry Wil\in 2511iltl
114 245 51195.
1 100 282.0111
r111n Puppy Chllrnplan Uno 1250
Border
Con
•
Puppy
No1
Reg:ls
Block b&lt;l&lt;k, _., p1,_1 wmd teted Femate Husky $75 814 Two lhltt 111011lh aid molo Pvvmf
VOIII $100 080 11141 ef2C
on l ntels • Claude W1n11ra 448o8827
2122
Rio Gfandt OH Call eu 245
~nllqvt Boldt Shaw Juno 21
5121
Puppy Pllect Kennttll Boardll'tg
Hey &amp; Grain
eam 3pm 11 00 ldrniuton 41h
Stud SotiiiCO Puppies, Grooming 640
andllllin, PI Pltattn~ 814 912 M•tat Roof1ng &amp; Sid nQ Galvan Buy S•ll &amp; Trade AU Brnds
ALFALFA HA"I' Slorooo dollvtt'y
5011 304-875-4715
lztd Galvolumt ond PainiOd AI Payrnentt Welcome 1114 381 available
Margin t-Farrn At 35
-Form Sultplioo &amp;14 245-51113
0428
1'1111'1 304-1137 2011
Buy er ufl Rlverlnt Antlquet
1124 E Moln Suoe~ on Rr 124 560 Pets for salt
RaltbiiS For Sale 814 258- 1318
"-moror Ho~rs M T w 10 oo
L't\t Ia 8 00 p.m. &amp;indty 1 :00 10 Groom Shop Par GfOOiniiiJI Ftt
AKC Bassett Hound Male 1 112
TRANSPORTATION
o{lo p.m. 81&lt;4-1112 252111
tunng Hrdro Bath Don Sheets v..ra Old F~tmal• 2 Y•ara Old
eon 8t4 408.0231
St008oth 81 .. 256 8785.
540 MIScellantOUI
At&lt;C Bassen Hound Pupp1e1 5 Schnauzer pupp..s. AKC u lt &amp; 71 o Autos for sale
Weaks
Old e1•.....a3354
pepper snots &amp; wormed c.ham
Merchandise
84 Ford Tempo ' cbor au1omat
pon blood llhe 814~7 s-o.
•c tell rear tat! hg~t dam1ge
12 HP C 1
d
AKC Lhasa Apso Pupp es
,. tsman n lnt'
Ready I Shot&amp; Wormed Pr vale Th1s Week s Spac•al Poodles 97 000 mllet •~oo 080 014
lully tqulppad computer
Husk e&amp; G•rman Shepherd&amp; 040 2311 dayt or &amp;1• o•u 28-h
e1••2 3014
~~~A~I~hen~a~I~M!a'~'e~u:a~St:•:1•
814 ss1 2122
ChOws. PiC BuB &amp; Arredlle Puppy 8YOI1ing~
1~85 Craltamen Atdmg Lawn AKC mu'll P nschtrs twO temaltt Palace 614 388-0429
89 Thunderbird SC. - dOOr 3.1
11.- 20 HP 52" Cut Mothltt
litre V8 elite model turbo PS
u--· E
E ell
S300 •eft one lt'Aie S250 rttdy 570
MusiCal
PB AC 5 &amp;peed power 1eara
....,-m lllllltt. tiC ant Conci- Juno 15 acceptmv dopoolll
Instruments
and lockt Great Car· $5200
_110!1..;,..8_1..
_2511__
11224.
_ _ _ _ _ _ L8:.'~4~G•:;:II-:.:30=26=--:---nev 614 092 7478 or 114 949
' "P~eee Llvll'\g Room
AKC Rag 11e ed Bo•er pupplet Piano Lessons lucy Jane Bulm 2679
Whh Culhlona lilttt
'!~v~ I 30• 8758095
01 Harllord Call 304 882 2395
115 f'o&gt;noac Grand Pri1 SE 13 000
Rtchnera
S25 Bolh
AKC RegiStered Pomeref! an Small Lowrey organ S250 excel mde&amp; excellent conchtiOn garage
1332 After 6 P.M
Pups Very Small 1(, Si:ze Read~ lent conchtton Doll~ Woods 814 kept $17 500 Ote 992 6955
Bl\le Rtdga Spa wnh cOV"er red To Go 814 4-46-9742
;99;;;2;.;33;;;;;12:;..._,;._,;._ _ __
1D75 L nco in -48 000 Actual
wood frame/ steps 8 jets like Beauutul AKC Rott Weiler Pup 580
Fruhs
&amp;
M
les A 1 White Marroon lnten
naw 18811 6 Pa d s•ooo Octobor
Pr ce Reduced S3 800 Sea
p.es
7
Weeks
Old
•
Females.
1
Vegetables
er 1895 was 11k1ng S2700 now Mate Mov1ng Must Sell l 112
Tom Kessel 61,..&amp;48-7787
$2200 814 912 eo.•
Pnce 614-378 2e67
Cabbove you cu~ ~ head Jm 1978 Uallbu laoks good runs
Bpo1s By Redw'"g Ch ppewa 10ga1 tank aet up spec als F1sh HII F11m ltlarl Foils Ohio 614 grea1 $800 614 985-3489
Tony Lama Guaranteed Lowesr Tank &amp; Pet Shop 2413 Jackson 2'7 ~2or814 247 2842.
P&lt;ico&amp; AI Slve Cole. GaUipoiiS
1980 Oldsmob le Cutlass tour
Awe Pomt Pleasant 304 675
Strawberriet Taylot 1 Barty door 72 000 miles on Dody 814
2063
Box Spnngs &amp; Manress Set New
Patch Open Mon Wed Fn 9 8 892 6t34
Nol Uted 10 Year Warranty
Sarnt Noon 11+245-11047
S1SI5 l v1ng Room Su•tts From
1980 Ponuac Trans Am Au
For Sale Pet Shop Ful
1275 Bunk 8td $260 Complele Bo11ness
tomattc 2 Doors Sunrool 455
~ Eqv ppod &amp; Stocked. Great LoRt 7 Bea1de G ovannt 1 p,zza callonl Serous lnqulf ea Only
FARM SU PPLI ES
Good Shape &amp; PariS Cat S1 500
Procl0f&gt;111e 614-886.JI373.
304 67S.•B4t AFTER 8 PM
61-4 441-0770 6" ·~1507
&amp; LI VESTOCK
Concrete &amp; Plasttc Sept c Tankt, CFA Reg stered Pers1an K ttens
1983 Bonnev•lie (Brougham) Will
300 Thru 2 000 Gallons Ron 1250
Sell Cheapl614 446 3833
Male
and
Female
61
4
256
Evans Enterpnses Jackson OH 6107
610 Farm Equipment
1.8QQ 537 9528
1983 F reb rd 305 V8 5apd oc
Dog
&amp; Cat Groommg reasonable New Holland 273 Baler Excellent rtld $1 200 30~ 578 4022
Country Stylt Atld Checked Sola pr ces 15yrs e•per ence Call for CondiUon S2 450 How Holland
$125 Anllquo Oak Bed $800 appll 304-6758831
256 Rake S1 050 Excenent Con- 1983 Ford Club Wagon XL 351
614 446 9256
ton New Holland 451 Mower 12 Passenver $2 000 &amp;14 388
Ferrets 8 Weeks Old 1 Male 2 d
8306
Good
Cond ton SIOO 11' 881
Ehtculc
S,:ooters
And Years 0 d 614 379 2882
5101
W~eelcha r&amp; New /Used Van 1
1985 C•era 4 Door "'Cyhndar
Car lll1 Installed Sta rglldes Llh Fo Sale Or TJade AKC Reg11 Spnng Clearance on Homehte &amp; Cr~se T I~ Ooley $1 000 l....,. ~
For Brochure 814 te ed Chow Pupp1es F rst Shots Green Mach•ne tr mmers Siders Message 81+388-9739
Wormed Wth Papers 614 245 Equ fJ'TlE!nt CO 304-675-7421
9821

304-773-5151 -WY

couple llltd chatp

Pets lor Slit

Ullll F - 130 11u1o11i11t Pille,
......., Doolia, Chlin. leds, En

SIHprne roomt with eoo"ing
~110 ttalltt .,.c.e on rive• Alt
hooll

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gllllpoll8, OH • Point Pleuant, WV

510

Swtna II 1 1 - Oollil Holjl.
11 ...... 1SIO

__

-. . -

•

metal

shelveng,

basketball

rebounder,

volleyball equep , projectors, Apple II C
Computers, TV's, mtsc , storage cabenets,
09mmercial toaster, plus more not listed
School
buses.
1981
Ford,
1979
International, 1980 Ford, 1979 lntemateonal
The Gallea County Local School Board
reserves the nghl to accept or reject any
bid

Auctioneer:
Leslie Lemley
Licensed and bonded by the State of Ohio
Not responsible for accidents or lose of property

Saturday June 29 t996 altO 00 am 317tt McGuire
Ad Pomeroy Oh
Dtrecltons Follow At 7 to the JUnctton of Sl At t24
watch for stgns
~~~~~~~~~hn Brogan Phone 992 3283 lor , more
Thts ts only a very parttal listing We have loads of
boxes butldlngs &amp; storage umts to sttll sort
Couch and matchmg chatr Stevens model 940B
t2G W/36" barrel fishmg rods tackle box marble lop
drum table rugs carpel dressers kero healer
pictures cametas Ftsher Pnce toys rocktng chatrs
hand &amp; garden tools color TV portable atr
compressors OBI tubs w/stand gas healtng stove
DBL smk, 6 fl wood step ladder AI eldenston ladder
saw horses wooden crates tack ttems garden tools
weedeaters msat saw fool ADZE al patto chatrs old
chalk 2 cap cast tron stove 4 x 8 uldtty trader
btcycles slide tn truck camper new dump lawn cart
pastime cafe &amp; filver cafe menus lrom Ptoche Nevada
1930 s. Menu &amp; Rosier ol Company 590 CCC Camp
Muddy Rtver 00-22 MOAPA Nevada t926 Standard
wtrtng book shark teeth Prince Albert Tin stratght
razor (Loewenstein &amp; Sons Charleston WV) CCC
log cleats w/lools &amp; stamless steel soap dtsh old
lumber 88 GMC t500 w/305 automattc &amp; new engtne
cap colleclton old records (Hank Williams Conway &amp;
others), seeder mirrors C B radtos electncal boxes
Elvts Gu~ar Clock slereos &amp; speakers pocket kmves
water hose coal &amp; water buckets fans books lawn
chaus new TV antenna lawn mowers milk can
werghl &amp; exerctse machines 3 pc set ladtes luggage
dbl deck animal pin han tree new bench compound
bows bar stools clocks beer stgns AC clock B&amp;D
edger boxes ol dtshes sweepers Flute w/case
chatrs electlc ttems stainless stael restaurant ttems
hobby crafter vise Chnstmas ttems pols &amp; pans
brass plated shell beds car !Ires swtng w/stand bar
bells air condntoner, tool box. gasoline ration stamps
plus much. much more
The following Items sell wtth a reserve t988 GMC
truck camper &amp; Stevens t2G
Refreshments, Food and Aestrooms will be available

Auctioneer: Finis "Ike" Isaac
Phone: 814-388 8370,388-8741, or 245-511311
Ucansed and bonded Ohio rf3728
Terme C.Sh or approved check
Not responsible for accidents or losl tlems &amp;
statements mlde day of sale has precedence over
printed material

,

located on Bnck
Streel tn Rutland This home contains 3
bedrooms bath part baseman! large double
lo1 IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONII Slop paytng
rentll Come look at thrsll ONlY $18 500
FLATWOODS RO POMEROY Double
Wide wilh 3 bedrooms 11111ng room
room one bath &lt;:etltng tans walls are
floors are carpet and 111nyl Sh1ngle
rs FA Metal storage butldtng and wood shed
ASKING t27 DDD

Talk Aboul A Great Locallon Thts Is Hll
Level 1 acre lo1 wllh comfortable 1 floor
frame home with 3 bedrooms full basement
attached garage and seperate garage wHh
storage Nice front santng porch Prtvacy
Greal Area If you re looking for comfort
convenience look at this ASKING $58 900
Clwna' may accept a reasonable offer
POMEROY
Ranch Style Home wllh 3
bedrooms 1 1/2 balhs k1tchen appliances
washer dryer alec B B heat and 2 car
garage ASKING $44 900
MIOOLEPORT Mein ST 2 Story Frame
Home with care free siding Several new
repairs I e roof ceilings painl plumbing 4 yr
Old FANG furnace.lull basement with ullllty
hook ups 2 balhs 3 4 bedrooms 1 car
garage w~h upstalra storag41 anlc space
cement front porch cerpet and hardwood
flooring This Ia A very Nice Hornell ASKING
$&lt;18 900
COUNTRY PRIVACY PEACE OF MIND bs
All Herell This newly conslructld Home Ia
lOcated Just off 681 IIPPfOX 5 mtles off SA 33
Home contains kllchen living room 3
bedrooms masler bedroom Wlih lui balh encl
walk In cloeeta ullllty room drywalL' carpet
lnlerlcir wood decking Total IIICblc Willi , _
hN1 pumfiiC A steel rlacn therma .-yne
windows liMy Insulated Selling on approx:
2 5 wooded llcr8l ASKING $58 5DD

SYRACUSE BEAUTIFUL REMODELED
HOME
This home has "NEW
EVERYTHING" New sldtng roof pa1nt &amp;
carpeting new wandows faucets front
entrance door new bath off the master
bedroom with a huge garden tub encl double
shower stall new covered 12 x 16 deck
This home Is like new constructionll Home
Includes 3 bedrooms family room an
abundance of closet/slorage space also a
one car garage with electric &amp; phone hook
up Nice lol In d very mce locat1on Of Lee
Circle ThiS IS a MUST SEE HOMEII ASKING
$115 000

THE WEATHER'S HOT
AND SO ARE OUR
BUYERS, THERY'RE
SWEA7lNG TO FIND
THAT PERFECT
HOME!!! WE NEED
USTINGII LET US
HOOK YOU UP TO A
COOL DEAL!II
.,.

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•

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n

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p

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SUnday, June23, 1886

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV
110 Autos lor Slit
SEIZED CARS From S115.
Por1c:hea-. Cad•l'"-ca. Che¥,,,
IIMWI, C.....11t1, Aloo

.1M91. •

WD'1, Your 41ea. Toll Free 1·

720 c-,.
'lhlcks tor Sil
rveo

-

1 Ton

Good Shape,

TorM, t 1,400, •••· ..8·2IWI

"""'a I'M.

100·8i8·8771 Ell. A-28u For
Cur-UoMQo.

198&amp; GMC good c:ondilion. 304·
875-5182.

720 Trucks tor Slle

11187 Ford F250 31• Ton. 351
WLndiOr 2 whltel Dnwe, 15"·•4.0·
2&amp;15 .. 304-875-2385
ttto Ford XL Lar1e1, 53,000
Mtles. Standard. 5 Speed. Ercetlent Cooclhon! •••· 245-5828.

llr____:===:c~":•:•I:E:a~llt~•=o:•n:•=.,~====--,

AC, 35,000 Miles, 814-441.0421 .
1992 fsuzu pickup, 4 cyl . s
speed, r'IICe, 70,000 m1les, $5500,

ma,

consad~r

pan•al rrade for a

4r4 01 pontoon boat, 61,. ·992-

2594 alter eom.
Hl78 F - 150 P•ek -.Up 302 Au tmoatic . . 1800: 1981 tAercury
Marquis 302 Automat •c SBOO ,

S-10, 5 Speed, ExV-8, 3e.ooo Miles
614 -446-4A23,

e,. -•"6·0899.

Real Estate General

TSO

cedar

sided

730 Vlftl a 4-WDI

ANIEII hO.•..

~

Pomeroy • Mlcldlepott • Galllpolle, OH • Point Plu81nt, WV

no

~

810

Cllupara a

Ron·• TV SorvQ. ~no ;,
Zonill1 ella _.icing moot other
lnncla. Hoo10 calla, I ·IOCHI1·
0015, wv 311-4·576-2311.

•

Jta7 fofd Ro- 414 Excellonl
Clondilion, Red Will&gt; All The El·
~I - Poirl.lt4-258-&amp;m.

Roolilg &amp; "'............. homo
remod-eling deck1 &amp; aidlng, 35
,..... •perionu, B I BlloGtilg
and ConlltUCiion, 814 ·882·2384

'W8tl Dollgo Grand Carovan SE
Nic8 M ,IOO, 814·•411·3237 A11e•

820

-\1110 Dodge Ram Van B-250 ,

r.z .ooo

Corollod. Ro-lliool. Commorcoll.

~ Third Ave11ue. Gallipolit

'.

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
(614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

Plumbing ..
Htatlng

FrHman's Hte1ing And Coohng.
lniiiiii!lon And Servtct . EPA

Milaa.~ u . ooo.

Con Bo
At Galllpello O.ily Trl ... nt,

-

MEIGS COUNTY .

011-100-1111.-

~I'M.

814-254-1811 .

Chevy tat EJIIndtd Cab,

tone color, with topper,
II ..M -2123.

IINE'W UST1NG- Spacious 1992 Modular Home
over 2,000 sq. 11. of living space. With 4
3 full balhs. and utllily room.;Theres
· stone fireplace in lha family room
In lhe kitchen as well as
serving island. Loi:ated at
124 and 160 it rest on 2.64
In Wilkesville . You can't go
up your viewing 1oday. ~"'·"""'·

' ··--~ •t.t• PageD7

WANTED!!! .
NEW LISTINGS CALL TODAY:

llnpnlvlmentl

Motor Hornta

B-LACKBURN REALTY~ :

Come by for a plemureable &amp;troU through
three very nice home&amp; on Charolau Lake!
LOG HOME WITH CHARM
' Beautiful bird 's eye
view overlooking the
lake.
Wonderful
home
inside.
3
bedrooms,
2
full
baths, large eat-in
kitchen.
Beautiful
living room with loft.
Hot tub off master
bedroom. 2 decks.
Muchmore.

8Qndly,June23, 1198

•

------------------------

OPE.N HOUSE ON THE' LAKE

11Ml2 Cnevy S-10 Tohoo 5 Speed.

'

IB

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cheryl Lemley..............742-3171

4111 ACRES II or L
OIIE OF THiliUT M.l" lot GAUN TWP~ ~.....,~
COUNTY, OR SOU1MEAST OHIO. 411 Acrw II
a-t lor Dairy Farm, rllillng beef cattle; or )UJI tarnlllng,
"- 3 houiM ranted now. Barns, T1le Milk House,
Shed. Plus ot1;ter bldg&amp;. &amp; 1aollheda. 2 Tractors. 2
2 Dilc., I Hayblne, 1 Hoy Baler, 1 n.ke, 1 Cornplcker, 1
Corn Grinder, 1 . Manure Spreader, 4 M-s. 2 Bush
Hoge, 3 Hay Wltgons, and a cattle loader. Many more
farm equipment and tools too numerous to mention here,
Ill goes. A complete Farm wllh all Equipmenl Phone lor
appolnltnent now.
1713

a

PIOII OffKI446•76H
,. KENNETH AMSBARV, PH. 245 - 5
WILLIS LEAOINGHAII, BROKER, PH. 441 1111311

LUDINGHIM REAL ESTATE

REALTY COMPANY
Michael Watson, Broker
Office 675-3433-675-7109 Home

Seroing Mason And Gallia' Counties

• S2,BOO OBO.

• •
1'995 Potar~s Jet .Sk,SLT

~"tor

This
oustandirig
home
features
a
great
room
with
cathedral ceiling and
floor
to
ceiling
windows which bring
the lake right into
your home!! Many
other
features

Near Rio Grande: Country setting, very nice ·1 floor
home, offering 3 bedroom, 2 balh , large family
room/fireplace. 2 car garage, in ground pool. SHuated
on 1.7 ac. Price Reduced.
NEW LISTING- Good investment opportunity in Rio
Grande- Nice 1 1/2 story home, 3 BA, 1 112 baths,
newer roof &amp; vinyl siding and a 14' x 60' mobile
home, both have good rental income $59,000.

C

m.

lor Sale

1~ Brand New Nev.r Been In
W.f!l~ 650 ·KaWasaki Sk• Jet;
199:S T•a iler. 12.800 . 614 -367-

--

1~5 Kawasak• ,Je1 Ski ?OO CXI
30il-_576-2345.
.

.

'

rgps SrraiO&lt; , 5 Plo. Xt. DC. t 75
HJ! _EYenructe Fully Loaded .
AMity To Fi1h, Or Play 814-4.t1 -

'

98tfAhet5~M.

•

Real !=state General

Smith 388-8826 AFFORDABLE
PRIVACY!!
NEW LISTING! EASE
Here's a ooauliful home with a
OWNERSHIP!! With ·
private setting that you can
bedroom home s~uated
affordl And Ws a newer home
dead end street. Vinyl sid•inol on top of that! Very nice home
will keep
that features eat-in khchen,
minimum ·so you can
family room wllh · fireplace,
lhe large ded&lt; and
dining room, 3 bedrooms end
lawn. 16x32 storage
2 full baths . 01/er 1700 sq. fl.
would
make
a
of deluxe living space for only
workshop. Affordably
$69,9001 1/2 acre lot only
at $42,500. H502
minutes from town. 1213

3 bedroom vinyl sided ranch on over. 112 acre. Well
cared for home with newer roof, tilt-in windows, and
alec. heat pump. Country living with city convenience.
Call Joe at (304) 428-9895.

·

: :: Accessories

-

:=;:·~d:~:·n!':~~~ :~ck
~~~:X,~~~~~ 30 ' -372.
::;:,:~::.. ~;:;~;.~~auc,
790 campers &amp;

..

view

&amp;

min. from t:tolzer. Beautiful

location

2.8

· acres of secluded

privacy. Completely new kitchen, custom
cabinets,
OtJality

Motor Homes

4

Corion

tops,

Appliances,

Island,

Two

New

heating

&amp;

Cooling systems.

tl.72 Coachman. 24', sell·contlined, wilh power unit, 413 with
oulo., PB, PS. 14000 firm, 814·

446-1066
32

LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

REALTORS:

2S L9CU!I It· G'" m

I _

kitchen . Pati o at lhe rear
wJinground pool , Pool house,
fenced yard, beautiful trees . .
Gazebo. 2 car att. gar. &amp; 2 car 11025

AJJfb'i F. t.r.aday, 8RJker

detached garage. A Woman's

Mary P. flovd, 443383

Dream · VLS 388-8826 · 446·
6808.

448-3636

•
•

•

Allah C . WoOd, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Reanor- 256-1745
Tim Watson, Reanor-446-2027
Patricia Ross, RealtOr
LOOKING FOR A NEW
HOME FOR $52,000?.,_- •
Located In the city. Three
bedrooms, 2 baths . Tax
abatement, Realtor owned.

11111
LOOKING FOR A FARM? MAKE
THIS
YOUR
This Is worth taking look 1111 WEEKE~ OR
Reduced Ill the low 50's. A
N EN T
Modular
with
three &gt;RESIDEH
e mn
bedrooms: two full baths, wllh lotll8
for
deck satellite dish barn campef or mob le home.
w/atti.c:hed aheda l8X40 Public utll. available, located
block bldg.. pond, city along Raccoon Creek .
schools. 11 acrn mll11300t M2007

a

11073 OELUXE CDUNTIIY
uvtNG W1TH AU. IT8 CIIARII.
1 year old bride ranch, 3 bednns.,

2 baths. A very lg. Gre81 Am .. U .

&amp; din. rm aeautiful all oak
cabinets. Rear De&lt;:k, 2 car
garage , 2 LOTS. Dreams are

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE CITY. THREE
BEDROOM HOME HAS NEWLY PAINTED
INTERIOR AND EXTEAIOR ..CAA POAT...FENCED
BACK YARD. CENTRAL AIR CONO . GAS
HEAT.. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT AND LET
US SHOW YOU THIS NEW LISITNG.
· LAND
LOTS
OF
LANDI
OVER
300
ACRES .. PASTUAE, TILLABLE ACREAGE AND
WOODLAND. 3 BARNS... PRODUCTIVE FAAM .. .IF
YOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT A FARM ... SEI; THIS
ONE.
1WO STORY HOME WITH POOL...3 BEDROOMS.
1 3{4 BATHS.. SPACIOUS LAWN LOCATED IN THE
CITY. .. $39,000 BETTER CALL
FOR
AN
APPOINTMENT SOON.

'
'

... .

Just What You've Been
Looking Forll 01/er 1900 sq. 11.
newer home offers 3 brs, 2
· bath, LR, FA wllh flrptace, DR,
oak cabinets In k~chen. Heat
pump. Nk:e wrap-around deck.
Satellite dish. Large storage
building with carport 32x46
pole building with electric &amp;
water. Located at 2500
Wheaton Road, this Is a "Must
See' hOrnell $89,900 1300

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644

1.....

pantry,

1st

.floor

laundry,

basement. 1\pprox. 2,548 aq. ft..
1t nns .. haat pump. 2 c a r -110-t3 JACKSON CD. 121 IV;.
m/1. Mineral rightl, posture, homo &amp; Barn. Clnn to froowoy,
airport &amp; town. Po&gt;.sibte
Recreational.

m'~~tCE

or

t -.
houeing

REDUCED
Lot

2-

2.5

~

--

Carolyn Wucb • 441-1007
-441-0268

•

~ ·•
&gt;

REEIUCI!D PRICE FOR THIS
SOUTHERN BEAUTYI Lots of
·room Including !arge living
room. family room, formal
dining room, den, sun room,
t and so much
lull baserrien_
more. Including 2 car attached
garage &amp; over 5 acres .
lnground swimming pool! Call
for the rest.
1713

THIS IS ONE OF TH.OSE
THAT YOU MUST SEE TO
/'PPRECIATEI Vinyl sided
rancher wllh 2 car attached
garage, large fronl porch, low
maintenance. Living room ,
dining araa, extra nk:e ldtchen,
den, .famlly room, 3 bedrooms
and plenty of baths (3 1/2). All
decorated so nlcelyl Super_
nice level lawn. You will be
Impressed.
18111

--~11!,101~111 "Oul•t, Lovely" Voew
surrounds this 4 bedroom
house in the Rio Grande
Area. Acreage Is you want II.
stall
Enclosed Fox Pool for
all that oomee
altl·activel offseason swimming. Lovely
1 1/2 slllry homo
home lor family &amp;/or
entertaining . Appro• . 3,200
that southern look
big columns In
sq. fl. and so much morel
Situated on a paved
1142
Call for oon\plete details!

MANY
OVER 18
several !eel of roed
Two large bldgs that
excellenl condition .
equipped with loading
Previous usa was a
operation I

JUST VACANT LANO·
25 ACRES MIL plus this 3·4
BR newer home. Land Is
rolling with some tillable &amp;
fenced acreage. Mineral
rlgft1ed Included. Calltodayl

1825

MIDDLEPORT· Rutland St.- A 2 story home that has just
had new siding put on, a new porch , and an upper deck
WAS $59,900 NOW $54,000

area.

~ICOO=::::;~

Such a pretty view of lhe Ohio
River from this 29 acre tract of
land Acreage being sold aa
development land property hal IMMEDIATE PO,SSIESiiiO'Nij
$25,000. will let you
been surveyed.
lastl 3 bed loOms 14 ·•:7o'l
LOT· 2.8 Acres mA, $15,000 mobile home wilh '
Counly water available, mostly addition. Appro•. 1
lawn, paved counly
all level. Nice place to build.

This Is one of lhe most
productive farms in Gallia
Counly. Fertile bottom land
alon g Raccoon Creek that
does nol frequently nood. t09
Acres,
or less.private
Pond,
road more
frontage.
location. Well maintained
buildings. 2 · story modern
home . Farm can be
purchased with equi~ment.
For more details call todayl

1856
12 and one hall acres. Mostly
all level pasture and tillable
land. Tobacco allotment &amp;
mineral rights Included.
REALTOR OWNED.
1134

PRICIP REDUCED! WOW I
$45,900 Owner is more that
willing to work with youl She
has to -sell nowI Lovely 3 BR
18211
ranch, with full divided
108 ACRES- will sell on land OVER-SIZED FLAT LA1111N-j basement, large LR&lt; &amp; eat-in
kitchen, one car attached
contract, Ideal hunting land. 3 bedroom ranch
garage. Clly Schooisl 17M
Lots of road frontage. Call !hat is ln. good
·today Alfordable.
- garage, deck on
home. Low $40'1. .

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
l-800-58S-710l

or 446-7101 a .

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618
Judy ~Witt .......:...................... 441-0262 Ttftonile OeWitt ................................ 24S-0022
81106.

POMEROY· Lincoln Drive- A t t/2 story hom" that has
been completely remodeled and has 3 bedrooms, one
bath, dining room, and a nice front slning porch . Has
central air end it seems as H it is in the county. Quiet and
on a road wrth low traffic. Great place for a family. $45,000

that you si1 and watch the river. Home has 3 bedrooms
and 2 baths, newer carpet, and newer kitchen cabinets.

NEW usnNGI
STYLE HOME·
conveniences!
vinyl sided
PRETTY
LOT
APPROX.
1 ~4
ACRES bedrooms. 1 1/2
COMES WITH THIS 3
basement. f~~~~1~~~
BEDROOM HOMEI Uvlng room,
room, dining area, kitchen, &amp; carport .
balh , all this conveniently POSSESSION!
localed at SA 160 close lo
D •n •II.OIEI
grocery &amp; hospital, elc.
OWNER REDUCEO PRICE
. 1711
TO $34,000.00

IS

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 4.46-9555
Loretta Mco.de • 446-77l9
Garnes • 446-l707

made ot this. Call VLS 388-8828
11088 Larga 4 badrm. 2 stry.
family home w/2 t/2 baths. tormol
D.R. . 2 fireplaces. family rm ..

I:.a00-4-58-9990

441·09i8

'LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALLUSn&gt;DAY!

fireplace

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Available Immediately. Appt. Only

W!Jo!! ro~!!1!Y1H~!C•
open

OFFICE 992-2886

Ross-Hibbs and Assoc., Inc.
Parkersburg, WV
Phone
422-1435

Lg. home

7-r-2259-

deck
perfect while wal:chirlO
take a swim
&lt;ngo·oun&lt;ll
pool.
Bargain
$106.900. N212

sale

heve .reduced the price ol tltis property! Features
bedrooms, living room, dining room. 1 balh. cellar &amp;
on a very nice lot close to Rutland Elem.
Avenue. .
t746

P.O. Box 614
Ripley, wv 25271

Real Eatate General
bi.Ng, AU
Types,
AccessibleAlso
To II
1-;:=====~;:=::J~=:::======;J
Ofar•1
0 ,000
Transmission.
4 24
~"' Ki&lt;s, s• • s-~n
House For Sale By-Owner

Wontad : radillor lor '78 Ford
302

;..._-+.

I'"'"'!~"'! NEW REDUCEO PRICEt·Owner wants a quiet&lt;

tloidfWt Transmissions, Used 1Re-

rm., nice kit., generous space in
all the rms., Lovely carpet
throughout. Pallo &amp; tronr porch. 2
car att. gar. More than 1 ac.
Owner is ready to make a deal.
. $70's. VLS 388-8826/446 6806

on SR 160,

PLAINS AREA

•

: 7ecl. Auto Parts &amp;

11087 LOVELY , AND
AFFORDABLE Come and see
this 1653 sq. 11. home. 3 beanns .•
2 1/2 baths,lafG&lt;I LA. and family

Pomeroy • EKecutlve-type home In a ~': locatiOn with a private
4 Bedoooma, 22 Balho,
LMng Room
'· Farnltv Room w/ fireplace. Kltchanlw 1o1ue
eat-in area I app lances. Dlnlng Room. Formal Entry way wfth
otoln:au. Full Buement. Large 2 car attaChed Qllrage. s-mlng
Pool. Several S1oraga bulldtntja. Price&lt;l 81' $21 5.000. can us tor an
appo~~.-uem to see tNa onet

-.op ~:-home

Appalaehiim Lot
Strueturc.. (;me,
Dept. GDT,

1$90; Celebritr 110 Boat 18 fr.
rSo ·ttP Sharp! 17,500 61 ... 46·
~!it~. Evenings.

G)

Couk1 have 11 many uses as your Imagination allows. Asking
$140,000. Call lor an llj)pOinlmenl.

lnl.......Uon. _-

syrge -·~ at 4·448·2072.

~ 2- "

ume Rd. H O - - hOme with 10 acres m/1 ot!ero
Drlvttcv and a qultt country 10l11ng. This home hu 5 lledroomo, ~ ·
illlhll: I.Mng Room, !llnlna Area, Kitchen WI appl., Family Am, 2 COl
-In lltrl1--. Tbllll-allo a 30x50 Metal Biting W/OII!Cellltlt

Coli or writr f•r aor"' I ·

Inboard Fully Loaded, Tamdftm
Allies, Eagle Drive On Trailer 1

•

CoMtort, ~velli:enee.
eneru dflci'eacy,
dural&gt;llity and flcxlbiUty
In deolp ore afffW of1he
reooano why 2,000
wiD build a lot
homo lhio yoor!
Appolachian . Lo1
Stnctanio hoo heen a
lcoder ia the 1"1 halnduotry for onr 15
yeon. Choooef..,. OY&lt;erl
70 atlllldord •odela
we'll caatom deaip
for you.

Gallipolis 446•9340

1989 21 Fl Well Crah CC 26C HP
c

LOG HOMES

French City Mobile Homes, Inc.

A

Real Estate General

2nd Rd to left. Follow Signs.

L.

•• · '

-------.r:---....r•--"'"':..,;

Directions: SR 160 Approx. 1 0 mi. fr.o m SA

Hostess: Virginia

~ Boats &amp; Motors

Real Eatate Gener-'

'••IIi••

or

H \\\\
Il l l l hill H\
\
V!
Ill( &lt;lid H
S
E
~·~~ ~11 1111 .,
E
TR
RTI
Ao E PROpE

OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICES- Just half
between Gallipolis &amp; Holzer Hospital on
160, t4 rooms, 3.000 SF. Call for more details.

Location: 106 Amby Lane, VInton, OH

554 continue

675-112-1

,

(614) 446-3644
In Gallia County, Wiseman is a HouseSold Word!!
111.11110~

35, go to SA

Ninja , Muzzy

bra , 13200 080,

tum right on WMe
Follow

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.

Peoples Bank Point Pleasant

LA

Three outstanding homes.
.All open Sunday afternoon
June 23, 1 :00-3:00 p.m.
Directions: Take SA 160 to Whrte Road Oust pasl Haffell's Mill
Road.
for
i , tum left onto Charolais Lake

!996 Honda 300 EX 13.800 . 614·
$8-11237. 814·368-9833.

8

41! ..

including
bedrooms, 2 baths, 3
decks.

like New. 15,800
Timberwoll :'X4

324 MAIN STREET, VINTON, OHIO 2 •w&lt;n
house, 11 rooms, 4 BAs, 2 baths, oox'"l
garage (detachedt fuel oil heat, counly water.
$39,900

K BUR rl RE

1994 Clayton 16x80 Mobile Home
Total electric, 3 Bedrooms, 2 full
baths, garden tub, stereo system.
Contact:

~·4·256-814l

ENJOY A BEAUTIFUL VIEW OF THE OHIO
RIVER AND THE GALLIPOLIS PARK. HaH of NORTH GALLIA ESTATES·
duplex has been completely remodeled. building lots. 100x300. Located on state route I
• Tl&gt;ere is 2 bedrooms, 1 t /2 baths, and a large 160 between Porter &amp; Vinton.
kitchen. Let the one hall help make your
RACCOON CREEK CAMPS &amp; GARDE~$.
Located at Ewington. Short or long term
leases. Cheaper lhan owning.
•

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, JUNE 23,1996
TIME: 2:00-5:00 p.m.

FOR SALE

350 4 Wheeler E•-

RANCH HOME LOCATED AT 15063
160 In Vinton, Ohio. This home has 2
bath, large FA, LA as well as DR. This
Is carpeted. New siding and insulation edcls-to•l
tills home. There is a carport and a large
on lhe back of lhe home-and bsmt. $49,000, •

J. Mentll Caner.........................319-2184 Mortha Sll)ith ................................... 379-26SI
Ruth Bm...................................&lt;l-46-7101 Cheryll..omly ...... ,..... :...................... 742-3171

RACINE 4TH ST· A.two story home with 3 bedroom 1
bath, remodeled living and dining room wilh newer carpet
In kitchen and dining room . Has a large front porch and a
small back sitting porch with a large back yard that has
strawberries, grapes and blackberry bushes. House has
newer vinyl siding and root. Also a detached garage .
ASKING $35,1100
OFF SR 7- Bone Hollow- Close to town- Approx. 2/3 of an
ecre wHh possible home or mobile home srte.
$4,000
MINERSVILLE RD- A 2 slory stucco over stone Colonial
home with a balancy. Has 3 bedrooms wilh hardwood

noors. and 2 baths . Has a big lot, a front and side porch
and a storage building.
$40,000
WAGNER LANE- A 4 year old ranch with 2 bedrooms and
2 baths. Has a heat pump, ,carport, and a nice front r)orch .
Also has a mobile home hook-up and is sitting on appro•.
one acre.
SSS,OOO
MIDDLEPORT- N. 3rd· Looking for that one story house in
town? All approx. 4 yr old ranch . All American home with
- vinyl siding, .has 3 bedrooms with 2 baths, and storage
building. Close to everything.
·
Only $30,000
POMEROY· A 2 story house on Main St. has 2 nice
porches, t 1/2 baths 3 to 4 bedrooms, part basement, and
a brict&lt; driveway. Owoer will sell on Land Contract
$36,000
POMEROY· Beech Street- A 2 story 15 yr old colonial
home 1wilh a fantastic view. Has 3-4 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces. 3 1/2 baths, family room, formal dining room,
finished baeemllnt In ground swimming pool, solar heat,
satellite dish, 2 car garage, and lots of privacy, sitting on
25 acres.
$133,000
RACINE- Apple Grove- Dorcas Rd.- A 1993 Skyline 14x70
mobile home with 3 bedroom and 2 baths. Very efficient
living e•penses and mobile home Is In good shape; all
sitting on a haij acre lot with a 12x16 storage building.
WAS $35,000 NOW 132,000
DOTTIE TURNER, Broller...........................-5882
JERRY SPRADUNG ••.•.••..••••.••.••••••••.•••..••• Ml-2131
CHARMELE SPRADUNG .•••••••••••••••
MI-2131
BEnY tiO COWNS...................................t124*
u •••••••••

OPPICE ........................................................ ~

�•

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llwl

Sunct.y, June 23, 1

Pomeroy • Mhillllport • Gallpolle, 0H • Point PIIIUnt, WV

Dr. A. J. Rush..ew·· d~ro~~·o.·
in llt!lrition, health and filllen. but
phlces spocilll emphasis on preventive medicine, includin&amp; herblll aJid
wellness-oriented leehniques.
In addition, Dr. Rush was previOIIIIy employed IS an emergency
medicine physician at the Kaiser
. Permanente Southern Clllifornia
Mediclll Group in Bellflower, Calif.
While in this position, she worked

·-----------------------~----------------------------~
a strong pan of the community
in a high volume, inner-city atmos-

phere where she wu exposed to a
variety of medical llld traumatic
emergencies.
She also served u the director of
the Disaster Plannin1 Committee for
the Belleflower facili ty.
"Opening my_ own office will
give me the opportunity to build longlasting relationships with the resi -

dents of the tri&lt; OIInly area."
Dr. Rush hiS thrr:e chilchn, Robe•plaincd Dr. Rush.
by, 14, Danny, 8, both studenu 11
'"The main objec1i ve fOf bod! Christ Academy in Point Pleaaant,
Pleasant Valley Hospital and myself and Alexandra (~). 3. She also
is to offer quality healthcare services bu tine step-children. NichollS, 8,
Scott, 6 and Jamie, 6, who resicle in
10 the loci! community."
'
Dr. Rush and ber husband, David California.
Dr. Rush's J)lreniS, America IIIII
Surdyb, M.D., an orthopedic sill'· .
geon at PVH, currently reside in Rio George Jordan, live in ·l'llriot, IIIII
Grande.
that played an iategral p1r1 in her

decision to return to ~ area.
"My husband would have been
plewd with the advancements which
._ve been made in medicine over the
put years commented Mrs. W~hi me...
"He was a flTDI believer in being

know that Dr. Rush will be . . .~
commiued." • ·
For more information
Rush's office, or 10 make an ~p~:ioin~
men!, call (614) 44-0757.

Ohio Lottery

I.

Johnson sets
new world
record In track

\

Sparta on P~ge 5

..

Super Lotto:
1·10.1.21·21-35
Klcl1u:
9-2-7-3+2
Plck3:
3-2·2
Plck4:
5-7-9-8

·~~
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y

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.•• •• r

.

p

Partly cloudy tonight,

chlnce of lhon••· Low In

the eos. Tunday, aunny.
· High In 1M eo..

•

FOIIlL Yotl

.
Vol. 47, NO. 41
1 Stcilon, 10 Plgea

.

35eente
AGlnnett Co. Newapapar

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 24, 1996

Southern Board.votes to. cut. bond issue lnillage
1997 F150

"AIR C()NDITION AND MUCH MORE"
WAS $17,365.00

1996 RANGER

1996 BRONCO

"EDDIE BAUER WITH EVERY OPTION I"
WAS $32,040.00

"REAR BUMPER, 4 CYL, BASE TRUCK"
WAS $11,085.00

,

~24I 995°

0

1996 ESCORT SPORT

1996 EXPLORER

PRE-OWNED SPECIALS
1993 FORO FESTIVA, 5-SPEED, CLEAN .................................................... $4,800.00
1!194 FORD F250, 4X4, XLT, AUTO., LOADED .......................................... $18,800.00
1994 FORO F150, 4X4, XLT, LOAOE0 ..................................................... ~$14,800.00
1990 FORD F150, XLT, LOADED ...........;..................................................... $7,495.00
.
'

1991 UNCOLN IIK7, AUTO., LOADED~.................................................... $10,495.00

"AIR CONO., TILT, LOADED"
WAS $13,715.00

1992 FORD TAURUS, GL, AIJTO., LOADED............................................... $7,495.00
1994 MITSUBISHI ECUPSE, AUTO., LOADE0............... ~ ........................ $10,496.00
1993 FORD TEMPO, 2 DR., AIR, NICE CAR ............................................... $5,750.00

1993 PLYMOUTH DUSTER. V&amp;, LOADED ••..•••.••••••••.••••••••••.••••••••• ,••••••••••••• $8,995.00'

"XLT, AUTO., 4 OR., LOADED"
WAS $27,860.00

1995 FORD F150, 4X4, XLT, AUTQ., LQW MILES...........:........,................$16,500.00 .·
1991 FORD F150, 4X4, AUTO., XLT, LOADED .................:.......................:.$11,800.00

. 1994 FORD RANGER, XLT, LOADED.......................................................... $8,995.00
1995 DODGE STRATUS, ES, V6, ONLY 9,000 MILES .............................. $16,495.00
1994 S10 SUPERCAB LS, 4X4, AIR .............. :...... ri .... ................................ . $14,995.00
1995 FORD F150, XLT,4X4, LOW MILES .........;...:....................................$15,995.00

1996 TAURUS
.

"FULL POWER, LOADED"
WAS $20,590.00'

AU FACTORY REPURCHASE VEHICLES REDUCED FOR THE THIS SALE!II!
96 TAURUS, 96 SABLE, 95 TAURUS, 95 SABLE, 95 ESCORT, 95 CONTOUR,
85 MYSllQUE, 96 MYS11QUE,- THEY AU ~OTTA GOIII .

1996 AEROSTAR

That's right! An old name Is bringing a new
game to Ripley, WV and we need helpll

"XLT, quAL AIR, LO~DEO"

WAS $20,197.00

Applications for the following positions
are ·now being. accepted.
SALES DEPARTMENT - Sales persons for
new ana used vehicle sales.
SERVICE DEPARTMENT - Technicians for
vehicie repair. Ford-Mercury Lincoln Experience a plus.
Contact fluy. N. Sayre Jr
. ..or Mike Bing
.

1996 CROWN VIC. LX
•

"AM/FM CASS., CRUISE, POWER LOCKS"
WAS $16,195.00

"FULL OPTION VEHICLE"
.
.
WAS $25,510.00

I .

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RIPLE.V: WV

'

Heavy rains swamp
·lower Gallia ~CountY

·Goeglein
slip work
underway
By TOM HUNTER
Sentinel News Staff
. Slip t:epair llld road reconsttuction
work has slarted in the area of a slip
which limited traffic to one lane on
the recently closed section of old
Stale Route 7 south of Five Points,
according 10 slate ltighway officials.
The section of c.ollapsed roadway
lhree miles nonh of Pomeroy. known·
as the "Goeglein slip," sank approximately eight inches after heavy rains
saturated the area May 4, according
10 Don Tillis Ohio Depanment of
Transponation project supervisor on
the 1-77/U.S. 33 Connector Project
The .old. road was close(! las!
Tuesday to all traffic at liive Points. ·
H0wever, the road remains open
from 'The Beacpn station in Pomeroy
. lo the .Watering Hole bar south of
Five Poin~ but is open to local!raf.
fie only, according to Tillis.
Excavation work began late las!
week at the slip, after t!le old road
was closed and all through lraffic was
detoured to the new 2.25-mile U.S.
33fl·77 connector project between
Five Points and Rock Springs. The
work on the slip is considered part of
!he connector project and is being
completed by Kokosing Construe·
tion, Fredricktown.
·
"Backhoes and heavy equipment
were in the area over the 'weekend
removing·all of the old asphalt. Once
!hat work is completed, crews will
beJin excavation work, widening the

SECTION- This siCtlon of formar
Stats
7, Jl!st north of the Watering Hole
bar near
Polnta, Ia closed while repairs are
made to a slip in the·old roadway. The old SR
area with fill for reconstruction ofthe
road. Plans also call for cutting the
slope of the bank beside the road 21 to control erosion," said Tillis.
Afler repairs are completed, the
section of highway will be abandoned
10 the county . and will become a
county road. The road will be known
as Chester Road, wilh @county road
number to be assigned after il is
turned over 10 the county, according
to Meigs County Engineer Bob
. \

7 between Five Pointe and Pomeroy Is open to
:local traffic only while road reconstruction is
being completed.
·

project, while construction ts comEason .
According to Tillis, the road will pleted on the eastbound lanes near
· follow its former route and will not Five Points.
. Seeding work is being completed
have limited access from !he east·
on
sections of embankment on the
bound lanes of the connector road.
project.
while excavation work and
This will preserve !he traditional
route from Five Pomls lo downtown sub grade work is being completed
Pomeroy for area drivers.
.
. near the eastbound off ramp, accord·
·
·
Meanwhile, work is continuing on ing to Tillis .
Completion
date
for
cpns1ruc1ion
completion of the four-lane connector project. Only a one-mile section on the four lane project is still Sci for
of four-lane highway is open on the Sept. 6.

GOP leaders pledge to dig into files dispute.
'

\

1996 CONTOUR ·.~

By JIM .FREEMAN
to'the existing high schOQI. Southern voters,-earlier asked to pay $1(180,000 classroom into'an art classroom or other classroom.
Sentinel Newa Staff ,
of the 'proposed $7,370,800 building project, will now be aslfd 10 pay
:The proposed building program is similar to one cum:ntly underway in
The S~uthe~ Local Board of Education voted Friday to change figures $3,719,000, or approximalely 50 percent.
.
·
the Eastern Local School Dislricl, approved in March.
·
on a dtstnct-wtde bond levy ballot for an Aug. 6 special election. .
Meanwhile, supporters of the new school hope the added stale money The'board almost missed !he deadline 10 change !he ballot language. havlt means Soulhern voters will be asked .to pay 5.42 mills for a proposed and resulting lower millage- will give the issue a boost in the polls.
ing until the close of business today 10 amend its resolution to comply with
building project instead of6.1 mills- a difference of slightly more than half
According 10 Lawrence: "(5.42 mills) looks a lot beuer !han 6.1 mills." the printer's deadline 10 have ballots printed before absentee votes can be
a mill.
,
,
,
The proposed two-story, 650-studenl K-8 building would include 22 reg· received, according to Meigs County Board of Elections Director Rita Smith.
The Secretary of Stale's office said !he figure can be revised if !he bai"The ame,nded resolution has already been delivered tb(County Auditor , ular classrooms, lWSJ science laboratories, six special education rooms, three
Nancy Campbell) and the election boll(d." said Superintendent James reading rooms, an art room, a music f09m, a computer laboratory, a lots have not been printed or notice of election published, Smith added.
Lawrence.
library/media center, a 300-seat gymnasium with locker rooms, a cafete·
'The printer was ready 10 make the ballots last week and awaiting a call
· _The change reflec(s a decision by the Stale Controlling Board last week rialaudiwrium and numerous· storage areas.
·
from the election board 10 proceed, she commented.
r
to mcrease by $461,000 Southern's amount of building assistance funds. This
The plan also includes additions to the existing high school, including a
Present were Lawrence, Treasurer Dennie Hill and board members Susie ·
increases the stale's share of the proposed building to $3,651.800. ·
new library/media center, new computer laboratory, renovating the existing · Grueser. Dave Kuczma, Bob Collins and Many Morarity, who all voted 'to
• At issue is a dislrict-wi~e K-8 building plus a 4,900-square-fool addition media center into a business/typing classroom and renovating !he business amend the ballot resolution. Absent was board member C.T. Chapman.

.

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summaries of more than 400 Reagan
and Bush · administration officials
were "political operatives who were
known for digging up din in the
past. "
·
·
·
Administration officials insisted
there is no evidence of wrongdoing
and accused Republicans of inaking
unfounded claims for political gain .
While House Chief of Staff Leon
Panetta, appearing on CBS, said il
was a "sad commentary" lhat ·pre·
surnptive GOP presidential nominee
Bob Dole had become a "hatchetman" for the party. Dole las! week
pointed lo what .he said was a "pat·

WASHINGTON (AP)- Repub·
licans promised to shed light on
whether the While House was
engaged in political mischief in
obtaining FBI files and pressed the
· White House to tum over more con·
fidential documents.
· "Hopefully !here is nothing wrong
here, but it sure doesn 'I look good,"
Sen. Orrin Ha!Ch, R-Uiah, chairman
oJ the Senate Judiciary Cornmiuee,
said S.unday.
•· Hatch, speaking on CBS' "Face
the Nation," sail! that !he lwo White
House employees accused of-improperly obtaining the FBI ba,ckground

'

tern of ethical arrogance. " in the
Clinton White House.
·
"I think that's pari of the vcn·
omous atmosphere that we have in
this town right now," Panetta said of
the attention given the issue. ·
Rep. William Clinger. R-Pa .. head
of the House investigation into the
files , said on NBC's "Meet the
Press"lhal he would continue 10 push
the White House to answer the ques·
tion, "Was there a darker motive ·
here?''
"The president is very angry that
fundamental questions cannot be
answered," While House spokesman

GALLIPOLIS (AP) - Heavy
rains in Lawrence and Gallia counties
in southern Ohio forced creeks oul of,.
their batiks, damaging bridges and
roads, authorities said.
A news release from Gallia Coun·
ly Sheriff James Taylor's office said
the areas most affected by the storms
early Sunday were Guyan and Ohio
townships in southern Gallia County.
Three to 4 inches of rain fell in
· about three l!ours Sunday on ground
that had been saturated from rain
throughout the day, said John Sikora. a hydrometrologist allhe National Weather Service office in
Charleston, W.Va.
About six bridges were damaged
or destroy'&amp;~ and anumber 9f culverts
wete washed·out, the release said.
No injuries were reported.
The water had receded in Gallia
County, but more rain is' •forecast
today, said Terry Hemby, director o·f
the county's Emergency Management Agency. A flash flood watch
was in effect for Gallia, Jackson and
Lawrence counties .
Damage to roads and bridges is
estimated at least $1 million. Hemby
said. Local and slate officials were in
the townships today to assess the
damage.
. Local agricultural officials were
~hecking crop dam~ge. Livestock
lossiis were minimal. Taylor said.
Most of the damage in Lawrence
County was to crops, said EMA

Supply shortfall correction. .
aiding decline in gas prices

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prices at the nation's gasoline pumps fell by
more
than a penny a gallon over the lastlwo weeks, according to an oil indusMike McCurry said today. However,
.
McCurry said he would leave it up to try survey.
The
average
price
for
all
grades,
including taxes, was $1 .35 per gallon
independent counsel Kenneth Swr to
on
Friday,
according
10
the
Lundberg
Survey of prices at 10,000 gas stations
find the answers because anything the
nationwide.
'
White House did would be subject to
Supply shonages of early this year have boen corrected, and pressure for
further hearings, subpoenas and
lower
prices will continue now that Iraq has hcen allowed to sell oil for the
inquiries, "misery. "
first
tiine
since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait, anal-rsl Trilby Lundberg said
"The While House certainly
Sunday.
hopes and expects !hal Mr. Starr will
Prices increased by about 21 cents per gallon this year before peaking at
move promptly 10 get answers,"
just over $1.38 per gallon in the May 24 Lundberg survey.
McCurry said.
Unleaded regular gas at self-service pumps fell to an average nf just under
ClingersaidlheFBlholdsfileson
$1.29
cents per gallon, !he latest survey showed. Mid-grade unleaded aver·
some 75 million Americans, and the
aged
about
$1.39 at self-serve pumps and premium unlcaded '$1.47.
ease&gt;with which two political opera·
Full~ervice
prices averaged about $1.61 a gallon for regular u~lcadcd , ·
tives got access to them " is uhi·
mately going· to resonate with the · $1.69 a gallon for mid-grade, and $1.76 a gallon for premium .
American people."

AEP's transportation division lends hand
to annual ~1-eanup of Ohio ·River.shores
American Electric Power's River al various sites in Ohio, Wesl Vir- . Others who helped on 'the Safety
Transponation Division took a lead ginia, Illinois and Indiana during the Leader were John Rey,nolds, port
role in the recent eighth annual Ohio effort to clean up the banks banks of caplain, Randy Wedge, harbor boa!
operator, and Brian Ttilodzieski, son
the Ohio River.
River Sweep.
•
.
.. ''f .
A key element of the s_weep was a of maintenance manager Hank
Sponsored by the Ohio River Val·
'
/
ley Water Sanitation Commission, the donation of equipment and lime for Tulodzieski.
',., ; .
/
"We were happy ' to be of ass isevent provided a riverbank cleanup of the ihird consecutive year by AEP' s
lance,"
said Rhodes. "The Ohio Rivthe 981-mile'length of the river from River Transportation Division.
The' AEP harbor boa! MN Safely ·er is a vital pan,of our lnlnsponation
Piusburgh, Pa., to Cairo, Dl. ·
·
Leader
towed a barge equipped with infrastructure. It is imponanllhat we
Twenty-seven AEP River Trans·
a
crane
10
lift out larger items - such lake care of it - no! just for today•.
ponation Division employees and
as
mud-filled
tires and scraps of met· but for future generations."
their family members paniciJl!ltedin
Among the items found during
the cleanup that was coordinated al al - tha! were too heavy 10 be pulled
River
Sweep at Point Pleasant were
from
the
riverbank
by
hand.
The
Point Pleasant. In all, more than 75
buckets,
a wooden ladder, steel
Safety
Leader
traveled
a
seven-mile
individuals tnok part in June 15
cables,
52
tires,
a basketooll, a TV set,
stretch of the river from Lakin to
cleanup effort.
"We had a good turnout," said Henderson, W.Va.. loading two Ions auto pans including seals and a from
end, metal 4rums, a shopping cart, a'
AEP Kiver Transpor1ation Division of trash onto its barge as, il went.
rural mailbox, a 15 mph sJieed limit
Gale
Rhodes,
manager
of
the
divi·
·
stores supervisor Marty Gilley, who
coordinated the Point Pleasant sion, and Paul "Sonny" Haynes, oper· sign, a small boat ,dock, a hoi water
. RIVER PICKUP - ,A cmtelttllchld to Amer·
cleanup. "~'s a good bunch of ations s.uptrvisor, waded into the riv· '!Bilk and !' plastic wading pool.
er to hQok heavier Item~ onto the · Several Riv'er Sweep panicipanu .lcan Electric Pow.r'a MN s.t.lv !-••dlr lifted
people at this C'(FnL"
• mud-filled automobile tlra onto • blrOe dur· '
• More than 1.30 AEP employees cmne, oj,enlteilby Steve Newsome. also observed the presence of a fam- lng River ~WMfl 'IMI:the barge picked up up
ily of Canada geese on the river.
and their family members lOOk pan
..

. ~ ...

,.,. ....-"' ..:r~ •.. rl r"" • ' " ~ '·· .... " ~-..... ••· ·• '") '"'·•·'• "!],,· ~' ·11 ot •~.:.

•

rt•

;

~· ~j ·'· ·'-1 , ·" •' · .,

Director Ross Butcher. The damage
had n'ot been tallied.
•
The high water also damaged
three or four bridges, Butcher said.
In Wesl Virginia, a Cabell Coun·
ty woman died after being swepl
away by flood waters in Mi,lton,
while heavy rains quickly dumped
several inches of rain in soulbllrn
regions of !he stale, authorities said .
The wom·an 's body was found in
the Lower Creek near Milton early
Sunday, police said. The wo!Jlan's
name haS not been released pending .
nolificaliOI) of family.
Rains swelled the creek early
Sunday as a summer lhundorstorm
dumped as much as 2 inches of rain
in sqme ~reas during 1\-0nc;.hQU.!.IIC,Q• , •
od.
Water was at least 6 feet deep hi
pans of the county, said Bob Legg.
assistant chief of the Milton Volunteer Fire Dcpanment.
" It was justa downpour for about
45 minutes," Legg said. "There was
a car that washed on lop of a fann
tra.ctor. Probably an·togcthcr about 12
cars in the creek were washed away.".
The Cabell County woman had'
justleflthe home of her boyfriend's
family when her Ford Escon was·
engulfed by roilin g waters from tl]c ,
crcck ,.said Cabell Sheriff's Sgt. Bob
Adkins.
"According·to witnesses, (the car)
went into the water and got lodged," .
Adkins said. "She then tried to get
out of the vehicle."

'

•

•

~

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