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I

Pllge 1 o• The Dally Senllnel

Frlct.y, June 21,1881
•

...
. _.,W-a.doofCktll
i3bi a J? 1 M 'J " - JIAI.
~ Scllool • I I L • •
Wonlup . IOo.m., 6 p.a
Wodnadoy Selvlca • 7 p.a.
M'" I

ld....,ofQrtal
Sill IIIII Noio
l'ulor: AI '*y 0411h Millillet: Bill Fruiet
Sundo) School • 9:30 LWI.
Wonhlp- 8: 15, 10:30 •·• ·· 7 p.m.
Wedonday Servlca . 7 p.m.

11M CllwdlofQrill
Worship- 9:30 Lm.
Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.
Pistor-lclfrey Wallaee
1st and 3rd Sunda)

............. Rldp Clo.... ofQrill
• Pastor: Ja&lt;t Colepove
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m., 6&gt;30 p.m.
Wednetda) Services • 6:30p.m.
t'rftW.Il8plloiCIIwdo
Alb Slmt, Middlepoll
Pulor: Lei Hayman
Sundt) Servicz • 7:30 p.m.
Sunday SchOol • 10 Lm.
Wednooday Service· 7:30p.m.

Zloe Cloon:b otQrill
Pomeroy, Harri10t1ville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Pastor: Roger Wat-.
'sunday School • 9:30 a.m:
Worship • I 0:30a.m., 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m,

Rllllalldl'lnt ..... Clloudo

Tappen l'lllltl Cborrb al QrtJI
Put..-: Stanley Minc:b
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship • 9:45 a.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Sunday SchOol· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4~ a.m. ·
'
,,.,....,
Flnl Boptltl
Pistol': Paul Stinson
Eost Main St.
Sunda) School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship • I 0:30 a.m.
41872 Pomeroy Poke
Pastor: E. Lamat O'Bryant ·
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:4S a.m., 7:00p.m. .
· Wednesday Servio:es , 7:00p.m.
FJnl Boplltt Cllun:b
Pulor: Mark Morrow
6th and Palmer So ., MiddleJlllfl
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Worship . 10: IS a.m.. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.
RaiM FJnt Bopllsl
PuiO&lt;: Rev. Lorry Haley
Youth l'uiO&lt;: Aaron Young
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhlp • 10:40 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Servioes - 7:00p.m.

~~I:OR'!r'

....!'

60...

. . . ol Slltlnlll. . . . .
Letodina erect Rd., Rutland
Pastor: Rev. Dewey Kina
Sunday IICbool· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship •7 p.m.
Wednesday pnyer meetina· 1p.m.

Laap•lllt Christian Cloorcb
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.l!i.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Sen:lce7:30 p.m.

Betbltbem Baplhl
Racine. OH .
Putor : Daniel Berdine
Won;hip • 9:30 a.m. Sunday
Bible Study • 7:00 p.m. Wednesday

Reednille Clton:h of Christ
Pastor: Philip Sturm
Sunday School: 9:30a.m.
Worship Serviee: 10:30 a.m.·
Bible Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Old Belltel t'rft WW B!'P'Itt Clton:b
· :!SiiOI St. Rt. 7, Moddlepon
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening • 7:30 p.m.
Thunday Serviceo • 7:30

Chri s tian Union

llllllide Btoptlsl Cllarrb
St . Rt 143 just off Rt. 7
Pa51or: Rev. James R. Acree. Sr.
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Wonhtp • lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;cs
. ·1 p.m.

RKifanl Clton:b of·C•rlalla
CbrlslluValoa
Hartford, W.Va.
· Pallor: Rev. David Me Manis
Sunday SchOol • II a.m.
Wonhlp · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servlca · 7:30p.m.

.

Vklory Bapllsl lode....,..lll

•

·Fall• Btoptbl Cbon:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday SchOol · I0 a.m.
Worshop • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

J••••

' The Chun:h of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Solals
St. Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-74841
Sunday School10:20-ll a.m.
Relief Soeiety!Pricslbc!od I J;OS-ll:OO noon
S.crament Service 9-10: IS a.m.
Homemaking meeting, Jsllburs. ·1 p.m.

Lutheran

Cban:h or Gad of l'roplleq
O.J. While Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Pastor: P.J. Chapman
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Clonler Chun:• ot Gad

S. R. 248 A Riebel Road, Clle11tr
PastO&lt;: Rev. William D. Hinds
Sunday School· 9,30 a.m.
Worship • 6 p.m.;
Wednesday, 1 p.m. Family Training Hout

Catholic
8ocrod linn Calli• Cloveb

161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 99Z·SB98
Pastor: Rev. W1l1er E. Heinz
Sot. Con. 4:4S·S:ISp.m.; Mw· 5:30p.m.
SIRI. Con. -8:4S-9:1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass · 9:30a.m.
Dailey Mass • 8:30 a.m..

Congregational
• "'

Churc h of Christ

Trtaltr Church

Secood A lynn, Pomeroy
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Sunday ochool and worship 10:25

Episcopal

Pa•ri'GJ Cbii'Cb of Cbrial

212 W. Main St.
Putor: Neil Proudfoot
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worahip- 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday ServiOCI • 1 p.m.

Belllaay
Pastor: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School-IOa.m.
Wonhip . 9a.m.

• Wednesday Services - 10 a.m.
Cormel
Pastor: Kennelh Biker
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
•
Worship· 10:4S a.m. (2nd A 4th Sun)

..

Rarlae
Pastor: Briln Harkness
Sunday School • I0 a.m.

St. Paul Lotlhenn Cllurch
Comer Sycamore&amp;. Second St.-Pomeroy

Pastor: Dawn Spaldin&amp;
· Sunday School • 9:4S a.m.
·
Wor&gt;hip • II a.m.

ML Olive Ualled Melbodlsl
Off t24 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Rev. Ralph Spires
Sunday Scbool • 9;30 a.m.
Wooship • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Joppa

Worship · II a.m.

Coohllle Uallod Melbndlsl ...riill
Puror: Helen Kline ).
Coal•llle Cllon:b
~bin A. Fifth St..
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Tuesday Services -7 p.m.

llitul Com-'ty Chun:b
Off Rt. 124
Pallor: Edoel Hart
.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Bethel Cloon:h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a."l.
Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Servio:eo· 10 a.m.

Dy•••llle Commualty Chan:b
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m..• 7 p.m. .
Morse Clupel Church
Suriday schooi · IOa.m.
Worship • II a.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.

llodola1f011 Cbwck
Grand Street
Sunday Sc:hool· 10 o.m.
· .

Wonhip - lla.m.

faith Gospei _C harrh
Lona Bouom
Sullllay ·School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
WedneMiay 7:30p.m.

Wednesday Services· 8 p.m.

Mtll• Coopenllve Parish
Northast Clusltr
Alhd
Paslor: Sharon Hausman
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m., 6:30p.m.
Chesltr
Paslor: Sh~ron Hausman
Worship- 9 1.m.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Sy....,...Missloa
1411 Bridgeman St., Syracu."'
Sundoy _School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 6 p.m.
Wednesday SCnrice • 7 r .m.

Ton:h Chan:b
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

.,

.

Postor: Bob Randolph
WOfship • 9:30 a."l·
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.
Loot&amp; Bollom
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • .10:30 a.m.
Reedlvllle
Pastor: Rev. Charles Mash
wo.. hip • 9:30 a.m.
Sunday S.:hool·l0:30 a.m.
UMYF Sunday 6:30p.m.
First Sunday of Month ·7:30p.m. service

Tappen Plalas Sl. Poal
Putor: Sh1ron Hausm.n
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship . 10 a.m.
Tuesday Services· 7:30p.m.
Ctatral Cluster
Aabu~ (Sync•~!.

Nazarene

MI. Ollvt Community Church
Pastor : Lawrence Du!th

Radtoe Flnl Cloon:b of th Naureae
P~Sior: Scou Rose
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
bcning - 7 p.m.

Middleport Ckurc• ohlte Naureae
Palloo: Qresorr A. Condilf
Sunday Schoo ·9:30a.m.
Wooohip . 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 1 p.m .
· Reed1¥1lle Fellow,.lp
· Cllon:b oftllt Noiii'Oae
Pastor: Matk A. Dupler
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
SyncoM Cbon:~ of lite Noareae
Paslor: Bill Stires
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
W011hlp • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7 p.m.

Wedneday Service - 7 p.m.

t

Ualled Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Paslur: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday .Service - 7 p.m.

.

'

UCINE MOWEI CLINIC

w•••

lrfns .&amp;Stntt•

....., s.nk•

11101111 HJITII IIPIII
949·2104

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE
. 1192·7075
.1n Nor1h Second Ave.
-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy,OH

· We Fill Doctors'

992-2975

Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

lllddltport

.St. Rt. 124.
Pastor: William Hoback
Sunday School • I0 a.m.
~vcning. 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;cs . 1 p.m.

. Yl.u 'U be floating on a

Worshir
, m.
Sunday Schno•l '1:45 a.m.

Middleport Pmbylerian
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.'

' Seventh-Day Adventist
Se•ealb·Da) Adv..llsl
Mulberry Hts. Rd., P&lt;&gt;o,ncroy
Pastor: RQy Lawinsky
Saturday Scl'\lices: 1
Sibbath School • 2 p.m.
Wooship • 3 p.m.

cloud with the buys ·
you 'U find in the, ·
classifieds.

' and Service Always"
"Dignity

Established 1913
992·2121'
108 Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy.

United Brethren
MI. llmDorl Ullltod Brothrea
Ia Cllrltt Cbun:h
Texis Community off CR 82
Pastor : Robet1 Sanders
Sunday Scl1ool · 9:30a.m.
Worship · JQ:30•.m., 7:30p.m.
wednesday Services. 7:30p.m.

f

Owen's sentence
Includes six months
In SEPTA program
,,

GALUPOLIS - Joe Owen
II, 26, Gallipolis, will remain in ·
the Gallia County Jail ; until
Aug. S, when he will en~r into
felrpder
Cl&amp;J .
the SEPTA program. ·
0}8
Owen, charged in tlte ~\Ill. 21,
death of 30 year-old Mark Bur·
conilq
Inert
ton, Gallipolis, was senltlnced
Jdltprlele
M
in the case by Meigs C!!unty
A6
Ohitp•rfa
Common Pleas Court Fred' W.
Sports
. BJ.8
Crow Ill.
:Al
Burton died as the res\ill of
Weather
injuries sustained during an
· allercation at the Old ~rick
Tavern, Gallipolis.
.·
Columns
· Son of former GalliP!Jlis
City Police Chief, Owen plead
Jac;k ·~non
M
guilly 10 charges of allempted
Bob Hgcftkb
Cl
involuntary manslaughter, tmd
assaull
last monlh in Gallia
Ann Ianden
C4
Common
Pleas Court.
County
Jim S!l!lds
Cl
Upon compleling the sixDorgthy Sayre
C3
month SEPTA program, Owen
Ohio Valley PublishiaJ Co.
•
will serve a five year probation
' - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . : . sentence.

a•li!ccll

Eclta Valted Brelhna Ia Christ
2 1/2 miles nonh ol Reedsville
on Slate Route 124 .
Pastor: Rev. •Robert Marlcley
. SuiMiay School • II a.m. ,
Sunday Wooshrp • IO:OOa.m. &amp;. 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30.p.m.
Wednesday Youth Servi&lt;c ·7:30p.m.

'

W1r1 UIIIVIIIIble
.
under lnv..tll)ltlon. ·'

.

.

.

~

·Sytaouse ma-kes strides in viUage, park improvements
Volunteers h~v~ l)elped by planling trees mile · walking path in
and flowers with one person donaling land the village, and a grant
for a picnic area.
for additional slrect
'!"ill see the completion of several projeciS in
The village's swimming pool, London paving is being considthe village of Syracuse, lftOSIIy involvi"g the Pool, has also received some auention with ered.
communily's recrealional facilities.
the addition of a new filtration system, hand·
The village rccenlly
The most visible projCCI, a combination icapped-accessible steps and other i'!Jprove- invesled about $36,000
.conce~sion stand and press box for the lillie . menu to the tune of aboul $8,000, Council- in a fire truck for lhe
league fields, was completed lhis year using man Lany Lavender said.
Syracuse .Volunteer
a combinalion of village funds and dona:
The adjacenl kiddie pool is expected to Fire Department/ .
!ions.
be opened this weekend, he added.
,
The 1975 Amencan
.. 'Adding·to village funds ·ofaboul $10,000
Lavender applauded Tom and Jean LeFrance pumper, paid
was $I ,200 in donations mostly from local Weaver, Jason Counu and· Donald Shaffer for lhrough Syracuse
businesses including Fanners Bank. Home Jr.. for their efforts· in gotting the pool open and Sullon and l..elart
National Bank, Chancey's Food Man. this year- painting and scrvbbing in prepa- township 'levies, hotds
Larry's Grocery, Baer's Matket, D&amp;M Pizza, ralion fo~ the annual opening.
·
I ,000 Ballons of w~r
Ohio Valley Publishing Company, Fraternal .
In addition, Marina Drive was recently with I, 100 feet of fire
Order of Eagle$, Hubbard's Gieenhouse, Mr. expanded to encircle the pool; ICIInis courts, hose, according to
IUld Mrs. Paul Hlislon and Alberta Hubbard, playground and ball fields.
councilman and firesaid Councilwoman DoQna Peterson.
The road, which also leads to the com- fighter Eber Pickens Jr.
The two-story, block building f~tures a munity's Ohio River-boat launch and docks,
Pickens noted the
concession stand downslairs, handicapped· will be paved this month with funds f!Om an 'fire department is 5eekl1Ccessible restrooms, and . a press box Issue n arant applied for by grants ~inis- ing approval ·of a oneupslairs wilh stprage room·, and lighting and trator Robert L: Wingell.
·
·
mill, operating levy in · · EXAMINE TRUCK ...;.. The village Ot SyrectiH ~ntly ecqulml •. MW flra truclt, thle 187S American
Future plans call for construction of a 48- November.
LaFrance pumper. Hera, councilman end ftl'l fighter Eller Plcklna Jr. thOWI tM truck to VIllage otftclllle.
scoreboard controls, Mayor George Connol·
ly said.
by-32·fool workshop and carage at the inler·
Councilw.oman
ShoWn 11'1, from left; Councilwomen Donne r&gt;etenon. Mayor o.otge Connolly, Plckene, Councilwomen
. The old concession slljKI is now slated section of Water and Bridgeman sttccu and . Kathryn ~w crediu 'KIIthryn Crow and Councilmen IMry L8wndlr,
for eventual demolition.
a fenced-in basketball' court II ORe of two Conn~lly for .many of
·.
. · "He has liken the bull by the horns," she ·. Par!t back up to standanla," ConnoUy said.
: The newly revamped ballfield will be the j)rOpoiOd loclllions alonalhe jlark complex. !iJe 1mproyemen~. ar~~ong ~~tch · she said.
.
"We've 101 1 million doll.- parlt IJld. it
aile of the annual Hubbllnl Little ~
Council members are d~ussing the )lOti· 'I!CI~s speerheadinJ the demo!Jbon of 1wo
"We are mllkinJ major effOrts 10 get the should look lilto 1 million dollars."
Tournament beJinninJJuly 8.
· -1ibility :of constructing 1 one-llld·a·haJf. , dilapidated houses. ·
·
·
·
·
By JIM FREEMAN
•
Tllllle-Sintllllll Staff
· SYRACUSE - 1be summer of 1996

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
H~mellle Saws

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

00
--'C51

Veterans
Memorl•l Hospital :.

115. E. Memorial Dr. Pomeroy
992-2104

'

,

GALLIPOLIS - Tax experts are
~rking to delermine what exactly
the true voted millage is in the Gal·
lia County Local
Schoo~ District.
The distri~l has
been certified at II. I
voted mills since
1976, when the slate
Departrnenl of Taxalion was created and
governmenl
local
taxing rates had to be
reported by coun\y government. .
B111 Gallia Local Treasurer Dtlb..
bie Ratliff, the hoard ·of educatlbt..
'""·~lila other administralors . belieYO that
Gallia Local's actual voted millage
rate should be lhe maximum of 15
mills. The district has had analysts
look at lhe sicuation and make a case
for granting lhe dislricllhe authority
lo operate at 15 mills.
The Gal[ia Counly Budget Commission decided last week to bring
in its own set of experts to see if 1he
distr' ~ • can get the maximum.
·. "The county schools claim that
an inadvenent error in 1he '70s has
kept them at II mills~" said Prosecuting Allorney' Brent A. Saunders.'
who ·serves as the budget ·commis·
sion 's president.
"The commis~ion's feeling is that
if the county schools are entitled to
the additional millage, they should
have it," he added. "But lhe commission does not want to increase
lhe millage without reviewing it first ·
and seeing if it's wilhin the law to do
so."
Ratliff said lhe review is part of
;r--;;-_- ongoing dialogue between the
district and the commission, which
set.• the lax rales for lhe county's
political subdivisions .
"We're trying 10 sec if a possible
. oversight or misunderslanding
occurred," said Ratliff. "After we
received the aitdilor's certification, I
went back to the records and I could·
n't find anything that said our voted
millage is at II. I mills.
"We need to determine how we
Continued on page A2

l~~~~~~~~~~~~-~bytM
Good Morning

"Frllhlrillf Krrtllll:ky Fri,nl 4'.:hicl:t·~t"l

EWING FUNERAL HOME

By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme..s.ntllllll Staff

llarriMn•lllr ,...h, '"ian durcb

·

Crow's Family
Restaurant
992·6432

at the Sternwhee~ Regatta

Syncu,. Flnl llpiled Prtsbyiertoa
Pa!iiOr: Rev. Kri!iina~Rob. iMon
Suflday School • 10 a.m:. ...... . . , ,. .
WOf5hip . 11 a.m.

RIDENOUR
SUPP.LV

228 W. Mlln St., Pom•roy

Tax experts debBtfl
the county's numbers

Presbyterian

South Bethtl New Te-nl
Silver Ridge
Paslo&gt;r: Roben Barber
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worsll::r.
· • 10 o.m., 7 p.m.
Wedne ay Sel'\lice ·} p.m.

POMEROY, OHIO • 992-66677
BILL QUICKEL

Clowning
around•••

MiddlepOrt Pentecoslll
'third Ave .
Pastor: Rev. Chirk Baker
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
E"'ening • 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7:00 p.m.

·

from the sccrelary's discretionary funds the $28.8 mil:
lion needed to replace the.bridge.

Gallia's true
voted millage?

'

Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACYli
204 Condor St.

RAWUNGS ·COATS

..

Pomervy Church of lite Neunae
Paslor: Rev. 1bomu McClung

Nationwide Ins. Co.
of Columbus, Oh.
804 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

tains an average daily trallic volume of 18,000 vehicles, year 1997 discretiollaiy funding request.
Byrd said that the Shadle Bridge is~ an illlegr'al pan of
it is Row incapable of handling vehicular loads of more
· the system linldng U.S. 35, S.R. 2 and S.R. 62, all of
than 80,000 pounds.
In addition, the bridge i-equires inspection every six which are being recommended by the slate for compati·
months in lieu of the tlormaltwo-year cycle, because of bit upgrades.
"UpgrQding this bridge from a narrow, two-lane
its deteriorated condition, and is, consequently, reduced
to 011e lane of traffic during each week-long inspection struCture 10 a fo1-1r·lane structure would accommodale
existing and proposed traffic, while simullaneously
period.
"The need to replace the Shadle Bridge on West Vir- affording the slate opportunities to attracl new enterprisginia Route 2 in Point Pleasant re111ains a top priority in es to the area, which demand safe, efficient, and accesthe slate," said Byrd, who contacted the secretary in sup- sible infrastructure," said Byrd. ·
The West Virginia senator Pena to make available
port of the Wesl Virgillia Division of Highway's fiscal

New Ure llldory Ctnltr
3773 Georges Creek Road, Gollipoli•. OH
Pa$tor: Bill Staten
Sunday Services · 10 o.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m. &amp; Youth 1 .

Full Gn5pel LJchlbouse
33045 Hiland.IIDad, PomeJOY
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School · 10 A.m.
E.ening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday-7:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

CLASSIFIED ADS
a supermarket
for everything

c:

' PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - U.S. Senator Robert
· : Bynl (0.. w.v,..) announced Friday he has contacted U.S.
: DepllrtJ!lent of Trao~on Secretary Pedcrico Pena,
· urging him to provide $28.8 million for the replacement
~f the Shadlo Bridge in Point Ple8Silllt.
·
• "The condition of the Shadle Bridge not only poses a
ievere lhreat to public safety, but also undeniline!l the
efforts of the state lo mainlain existing business activity
and attract new economic development opportunilies to ·
the area," said Byrd, llOting that most comm~;~eiallralftc
in the area Jravel1 back and forth across the bridge.
· Byrd told Pena that, while the .1931 struclllre main-

Wor5hip . 7 p.m.
•
Thunday Service. 1 ~.m .

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Vol. 31 . No . 21

:W.Va. senator f.!rges transportation secretary to release discretionary funds

Sunday School· 10 a.m.

Middleport Comnili.Bily Cburth
o'l 75 Pearl St., Middleport
Pastor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School I 0 o.m.
"venina • 7:30 p.m.
,
Wednesday Servioe • 7:30p.m.
Faith Tolternode Chureh
Bailey Run Rood
.
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday SchOol • 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Service · 1 p.m.

•

G(jllipolis • Middleport • Pomeroy • Pt . Pleas &lt;mt • June 30.1996

Clifton Tohet'llll&lt;le Chun:b
Clifton, W.Va.

Wednetday service ·6:30p.m.

Eoot Lotan
Pastor: Brian Harkness
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship ~ 9 a.._m.
Wednesday· 7 p.m.

Detalle on
pageA2

Byrd seeks $28.8M for Sha~le Bridge i-eplacement

Chun:b ol J..., Cbrls~
Apostol!&lt; Fallh
1/4 mile past FOrt Meigs on New Lima Rd.
Pastor: William Van Meter
Sunday-7:00p.m.
Wednesday·
7:00 p.m.
1
. . Friday-7:00p.m.

Eadllmell_. al Prayer
(at Burlingham church off ,Route 33)
Pastor: Robert Vane&lt;
Sunday wO!llbip • 10 a.m.

Monla1Sior
Pastor: Kenneth Bak~r
SutMiay School • 9:4S a.m.
Worsllip • 10:30 a.m.
Tbunday Scrvias ·7:30p.m.

Our Sa•lour Lulltena Cbon:b
.
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.Va.
lntrim pastors: Georae C. Weinck
Sunday School : '10:00 a.m.
Worship· II a.m.

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llorrisoavllle Comm•aily Ch....,b
· PaslOf: Theron Durflam
Sunday· 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

A G;:mnett Co. Newspaper

RtJ-1 Uft Cbun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pastor: Lawren« Foreman
Sunday ~hool · 10 a.m.
·Wednesday Serviceo • 1 p.m.

Tilt Belle..rs' Fellowship Mlalllry
l'lcw Lime Rd., Rutland
Paslor: Rev. Margaret J. RobiMnn
Services: Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Salloll .
l'aslor: Kenneth Baker
• Sunday School· 9:30a.m:
Wonhip - 10:4~ a.m. (hi &amp; 3rd Sun)

St. Joba Lulltena Cburrh
Pine Grove
Pastor: f?•wn.Spalding
. Worsh•p- 9.00 a.m.
Sunday School · 10:00 a.m.

s,......,
Flnl J;:bun:h of Gnd
Apple and Second Sts,

Follh Fall Gospel Cloon:b
LongBollom
Past01: Steve Re1.-d
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 9:30a.m. and 1 p.m.
Wednesday · 7 p.m.
Friday - rellowshtp servic::c 7 p.m.

Sao'"Ulo
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

Gnhom Ualled Melbodlsl
Wonhip · 9:30a.m. (lSI &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m, (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Servioe • 7:30p.m.

Pastor: Rev. David Ru ...n
Sunday School and Worship- 10 a.m.
Evenina Services-7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Rulload
,
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
. w..-.loip • 10:30 , .m.
Thuriday Set'\' ices· 7 p.m.

Pastor: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9:15a.m.
W0&lt;ship · IO:JS a.m.

Roorpalzod Churcb ot
Cbrltt
of Laller Day Salah ·
· ·
Portland-Racine Rd.
Plstor: Janice Danrier
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesd1y SerVic;es .. 7:30p.m.

v Sftvif",.c. • 1 n m

Rev. Oydr;Hendenon
Sunday service, 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Youth Fellowship Sunday, 7,00 p.m.
Wednesday servi&lt;c, 7:30p.m.

Saltm Ceater

MI. M - Clttiro:~ ot Gad
Racine
Pastor: Rev. James Sauerfield
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m. .
E"'ening . 7 p.m.

Wed

I I - Cllrlsllao Fellowship Cll•n:ll

PastO&lt;: Kenh Rader
Sunday School • 9:I~ a.m.
Wonhip • I0 a.m.
·
Youth Fellowshop. Sunday • 6 p:m.

Latter-Day Saints

• 1 p.m.

. Cllrlallao Felfowslllp Ceator
Salem St., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Mussrir
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· II : IS a.m.. 7p.m.
Wedneaday Service · 7 p.m.

\

Low: eo.

tmts

Sllve,..llle Word orFallh
Pastor: David Dailel"'
Sunday Schooi.9:30 a.m.
Evel)ing · 7 p.m.

Thunday ae,...i&lt;c, ·7 p.m.

Rode Sl'fi•P

Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Rotlood Cban:h of God
Putoo: Gregory L. Sears
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
wo:::r.- II a.m.• 6 p.m.

Fonsl Rua Btopllll
Pastor : Ari• Hun
Sunday School'· 10 a.m.
Wo111hip • II a.m.

&gt;

Pastot Miohacl Jlanaio

Sunday IIIYk:e, 10 a.m,

Pallor: Roben E. Robinson
Sunday S.:hool · 9:15 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Bible Study Tuaday • 10 a.m.

Church of God

Servi(~s

923 S. third St., Middlepoit

.,_..,,

Hl:~l

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Calvary Bible Chun:~
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev . Blackwood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m. .
Wonhia 10:30 a.m ., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday SerJicr: • 7:30p.m.

Otlwr Churches

Wonhil' It' a.m.

Reds make it ? in-a-row. Page a1·
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Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens
Service: Friday. 7 p.m.

, _ ~ ()pn Jlllllt a.-b

Sunilay S.:~- · ' · 9 a.m.

, River Rec~ parade line-up . ' • cs

rolllo Felowslllp Crusade for Cllrltt

New ...... Clo- otlloa Noareae
" - : Glendon Strood
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
W.Wp . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
•
Wednesday Servicu • 7 p.m.

Pout (to ' ptl

United Methodist

Wednesdly

Sunday School • 6 p.m.
Wednooday Servicu • 7 p.m.

·

Pntl'ed on ,... C1

Foir1'1tw Bi1i1t Chn:b
Letart, W.Va. Rt I
Pastor: Rankin Roach
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Setvice · 7:00p.m.

......,.. Mark MallOn

MlllenPutor: Charles Neville
Sunday Scho"l· 9 a.m. ·
W~ip ·oa.m.

_wllt(lllll aoe • body pt.rclng

Wloite'o CUptl Wnltyu
Coolville Road
l'ulor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School • 9,30 a.m.
Worship . 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday S.:rvice • 7 p.m.

w;;;;ii;p . 10:30 p.m.

' Worship · 10:30 a.m.

WnltyM Blblt I I - Cllon:b
15 Pearl'S!., Middltport.
Puaor: R.ev. John Neville
Sunday school • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;c • 7:30p.m.

••

a..row~•N••
Putor: ltri. Hetbon Orale
SuMay SchoQI· 9:30 . ....
Wonhip • II Lat., 6 p.m.
Wednooday Services · 7 p.m.

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·-r...-GGape!Mlt II
Bald Knob. oe Co. Rd. ll
PulOfl Rev. 'Roger WillfO&lt;d
Sundar School • 9:30 a.m.
• \9orshlp-7p.m.

....,_l'lnt Clo""'k otllte Naum~&lt;

Pastor: Cllaelet Neville
Sunday School · 10 . ....
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Thundiy S..,icct · 6:30p.m.
IIOJib (Mkldltport)
Pastor: Vernapye Sulll'rlll
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.

Pille Grove Jlllllt lloiJMaa Clooudo
1/2 mile olfRt. 325
Putor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;c : 7:30p.m.

. lltllllock Gro¥t Cllorcb
PUIOf: Gene Zopp
Sunday school· 10:30 a.m.
Worsllip ·9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Btoplilol
Fuurth I&lt; Main St., Middlepon
Pastor: Rev. Gilbert Craig. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S a.m.
Aallqult) lllpllsl
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · lf 1: ..5 a.m.
Tbunday Servi&lt; ·• · 7:30p.m.
Rallurl Fn• 11'111 Bapllll
Salttrt St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
SUndily School • 10 a.m.
Evening· 1 p.m .
Wedttesday Servioes · 7 p.m.

,.

Rot land 'Community Cllarrb
Pastor:·Rev. Roy McCally
Sundoy School ·9:30a.m.
Sunday Evening · 7 p.m.

MI. Ualoa Baptist
Putor '! Joe N. S.yre
Sunday Scbooi-9:4S a.m.
Evcnina • 6:30p.m.
WednesdaY, Services • 6:30p.m.

,_Roo

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Rrd MCII_ai ... N . Pistor: Samuel Buye
Sunday Scbool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Servia• • 7 p.m.

Sunday School • 10 a.m.
. Wonhip • II a.m.

Bl'llllford Cbon:b ol dorlsl
Comer of St. Rl. 124 .&amp; Bradbury Rd.
Evangelilt: Keith Cooper
Youth Mirli&amp;ter: MicluodTeaprden
. Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·8:00a.m.. 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:00p.m.

Dexter
Pasto&lt;: Woody Call
Sunday Evening . 6:30p.m.
Thunday Service · 6:30p.m.

.... ..

, _, Rev. Victor ltouslo
Sunday School 9:30 Lm.
~
11 Lm., 7:30p.m.
W
y Servia • 7:30p.m.

l.aORI CUll Frio Mtlbadlal Cloorrb
Pastor: Peter Tremblay •
Sunday SchOol · 9:30a.m.
Wotship • 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:00p.m.

Llborty Cltrtsllu Cloon:b

a

, _, Kcidt Radar

Rutlaad Cllon:b ot Cllri d
Pasto&lt;: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhlp-10:30a.m., 7p.m.

Sllftr Roa Bontlct
Pastor: Bill rftik''
Sunday School • IOI.m .
Wonhip • II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servio:es· 7:30p.m.

S:ZS N. 2nd St. Midilleport
PaSior: James E. Keesee
Worsllip • IOa.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

Holrness

llysell Roa IIDIIHu Cloon:b
Putor: Robert Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m.,' 7 p.m.
Thunday Service · 7:30p.m.

llldtary IIIIIs Cllon:• of Cllrltt
Ev~t~gelillloseph B. f!oskino
Sunday Scllnol , 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Weclne!lday Services • 7 p.m.

, _, Cllorlao ,...,olle
Sunday Sdoool; 9:4~ a.m.
Worship · l l a.m.
W......,r Services· 7:30p.m.

_.. •
Cloordl
31057 5tMO- 325, J..aaaaY)Io
, _:Jiav. ltil* Maloyed
Sunday~· 11:30Lm.
Sunday worship · 10:3S a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.
Cllildten-. dolln:h • IO:lS Ull. YOOih 6 p.m.
Wednesday pnyetset'Yia -7 p.m.

llndbttry Cbon:b of Clortol
Pastor: Rick Snyder
Sunday School ··9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

Flnl Soollbera Ba~l

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}tllflldng «
st«tement...

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hgeA2'• .. ) , .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Plnnnt. WV

SunMy, June •• , . .
•

OHIO We &lt;l lhcr

~~~w~~Jun;.~!u.~~coodi~tionsand~~~ C~urt ruling On C8ble porrl
~r~tS~$ larger legal issues .
:terious

•I

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Material witness ln slaying
defends self to .newspaper

rV

Dole, Clin~on utilize b·ombing
to score_campaign trail poi

Blennerhassetts reinterred
on island bearing their name

other

suarantee

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

'

Company/Gannen Co.. Second'class postaae
paid II Gallipolis, Ohio 45631. Entered aa
ICCond c:lau mailing matter at"Pomeroy. Ohio.
Post Oftirr.

Mtmbtn The Associated Prcu, and tht Ohio
New~ A&amp;sociation.

SUNOAVONLY
SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
87 c.rtitJ' 0.: Motor Route
One Week .., ............. ,. .•..1••••••• : .,. •• ,. .. . .. .. ..... . $1 .23

One Y...-......;, .. ,........................ .............. 16.1.00

SINGLB COPY PRJCB '
•
Svnday .................................................... Sr.oo

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No .~bAcriptton~ by mail pcnniued i'n areas
where mOtor carrier .Crvioc Is available.
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The Sunda)' 'Il~s·SendnCI wiD oot be rapon·
1lble for adVanoe paymentl made to carrier~.

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Dall¥""" Suodo¥

MAILSVBSCRJmONS
lnold&lt;GIIIIa Cooln!J

-0.-

()w..I&lt;S ........ ................................. ,,..... Sl7.JO
26 W«Q........................................... ...... Sl3.82

.12 W«b ............................................. .. SIOl..!6

G- Cooon11
13 - ... } ............ ...............................$2!1.2.1
26 W«b.................................................SlUI

l2 w'ectJ ...........................,................... $109.72

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Voted .millage
Continued tram page A1
came to thai rate wben there are no
·other records that match it," ' she
added.
Also before the commission is
Gallia Local's requesi to have an
ilousued half-mill assigned to .the .
. village of Vinton allocated to . the
district. The request was made ·by
the. board o.f education in ·Fel,lruary
r when it presented its I~97 bud' set tO the coffill)issiofl. ' · ,
.
.The commission declined to
make a decision a~ the time: pqnding
further review, and granted the dis·
trict a six-month extension on filins
the budget.
Saunders said Vinton has request·
ed to use the half-mill and is expect·
ed to make its pitch when the commission has budget hearings in
Augtl$1.

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FAMILY PUCTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

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·

Pregnancy TestS
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TO ACCOMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPU,.
., WE AU OPEN 'nL 1 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

2511 &amp; JEFFERSON AVEIUE

. POINT PliASAIII
(304) 675·1675
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Birth Control Methods including:
• ,Depo~Provera
•Diaphragm
• I.lLD~
• Birth Control Pill
• Condom/Spermicide
Anonymous HIV tests and coun5eling

1

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· Sliding Fee Scale

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We aecept Medicaid and private insurance.
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414 SECOND STREET 1

GALLIPOLis
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1 CUNBLAND- Ohio's c.Jtolic
liis~ want to convince the sover-

~

or and attorney general that there is
way to 'punish criminals without
xecut.ing them. '
' All14 of the state's bishops signed
4 •Statement Friday against capital
~unishment, saying it is racially
~iased· and applied unequally. The ·
~~'f has taken on more urgency
tp=Uy as death row inmate Wilford
~ Berry continues to request exedution.
'
·
: A psychi31rist's repon says Berry
i) mentally competent enough tO ask
~the death penalty, and the attorney
senetal's office agrees. But the bish4ps -·. and Betty's attorney~ '+'ant his life spired.
I "We ~lieve be should be in
' ·son, ,.-e believe be should get help,
I we don't believe he should be
ecuted," said James Tobin, associate director' of the Columbus-based
: ¢atholic Conference of Ohio.
l Berry,)3, was convicted of shoot·
· · g a suburban Cleveland baker to
ath a few days after he was hired
December 1989. He is on death
w with 162 other men.

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Jo ..... A3

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Youth~..-......
~

0.1111 MIIIJI Community Action Agency hla.become 1he umbrella orgarilzatlon tor'the Frlenda
for Youth progrem In 1he two-c~unty area. Friend a for Youth,.formerly Big Brothe.ra/Big Sletel'tl, recently organized and will be acl)ldullng activities for volunteeralntereatlld In asalf.tlng
,,... children, ..ld program coordinator Tammy Schmidt. Schmidt Ia ahlklng hand!' with CAA ··
Executive Dlrectilr Sidney Eclwarda, above, and behind them are member• of the Friends f~
Youth 1dYI1ory committee, front row, from left, Lealie Sheets and Hattie Taylor· back row Jer·
rY Sparlunan, Mary Bea Mc:calta and Melinda Norman. Not preient for photo _;,.,e comn:lttee
membere Randy Haya, Charlie Huber and Megan Lloyd.

ount.ain Stat~'s iss.u ,nce of tax credits in one year hits $98 million
$y ttANCY NUSSBAUM,

~IIOCiated Pre11 Writer

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The

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e~act amount of ~e credi.ts

Lebanon; Va.; Arch Mineral Corp. of

gahela Power Co. of

Fairmo~t; Ohio

~as.not listt:d, butcomp~ulles w~re 10 ~1. Lows;AshlandCoQIInc. of Hunt-- Power Co. of Canton, O!llo, now

' , CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The stx categones of credits recetved: JDgton; Cannelton IQc. of Engleslate gave about $98 mijlion in tax rno{e than $1 million; from $500,000 wQOC!, Colo.; Cyprus Kanawha Corp.
lfedits between July I, 1993, and to $999,999; froni $2.50,000 to ofMountGarbon;EagleNestlnc.of
J~e 30: 1~4. Tax Secretary Jim $499,999; from $100,,000 to Bethlehem, Pa.; Eaglchawk Carbon
daige said Friday.
$249,000; from $.50,000 to $99,999 Inc. of Grundy, Va.; Elk Run Coal
: Tax credits 11ft: subtracted direct- and from $1 to.$49,999.
Co. of Richmond; and HalfWay Inc.
· I' from taxes owed, unlike tax deducCoal companies have· claimed · of Beckley.
~ns, which are subtracted from about 7.5 percent of super tax credits . · Also receiving at least $1 million .
iiCOme,before lilxes. The credit infor- - since '1986 when the program was were: Hampden Coal Co. Inc. of
..ation. drawn from tax returns, was modified to make it.easicr for mining .. Gilbert; Laurel Run Mining Co. of
rfl~ased )iy the Department' of Tax com~ies to qualify, Muchow. sai~. P!ttsburgh; McElroy Coal Co. of
!fil Revenue on Fnday.
.
Cnttcs say the ·super 'tax credtt Pittsburgh; Pen Coal Corp. of Brent! "The credits have been fairly gives money to companies that Would wood, Tenn.; Terry Eagle Co. of
SJCady the · last three years," -said have a_lreiidy invested in coal.
Summersville; .Vandalia Resources
~~-~~chow, . head of resemh for
. Su~porters s~y the credits helped Inc. of Lebanon, Va.; and HPM
tile diVJston:
· preserve coal JObs and that some Corp, of Bethlehem, Pa.
! The depamnent's list included companies ·misht have delayed
Muchow said super tax credits
c~mpani,e~ that r•~ived 10 types of : invesUllg without it. ;
. P\08~ 81 S?O million in 199-1 and 11ft:
ciedits. The SUJ-• ,tax credit, or Busi- ·
At -leur:- 11_ c(!at coif1J1anil!s CX:pected ·to continue dropping to
nbs Invesimeni anci'Iobs Expansion · claimed a! •least' $·1 miUitln in 1he about $10 millicin by about 2000.
1
~•.~ llll' ll!abesl total, aboilt • credits during the period. They wore:
Five utilities received at least SI
~~- 7 s'?illion. It ~ follow~bY: the . Amigo Sf11,oke1ess Coal.e!i of ~k, mill~~n. in ~nduJiri&amp;!. E!ltplilsipn ~d
1t~dilsllia1 ~xpan~tpn and Rev•~tza·
ley. Anker·Group Inc. 'bf Moigan• ,, 'R~v1tahzallon Credits: A~lachian
tipn C~~il, about $1~ : 2 million. · • town; Appalachian Mining Inc. of Power Inc . .of Roanoke, Va.; Monon-

known as Amencan Electnc Power;
The Po.tomac Edison Co. of Hagerstown •. Md.; and West Penn Power
Co. of Greensburg, Pa. .
The program ts destgned to
encourage companies to rehabilitate
aging production facilities.
· Appalachian Power, also known
as American Electric Power, received
at least S1 million in Utility Low
Income c,edits for providing reduced
rates to the po6r.

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AIINellfti,CJI.liGOt

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-CMomlumPioolln81e

/IIONEY8ACKQIIARANrEE

panics and individuals who promise
to invest money in new businesses.
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A1111l '

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.1 Flm PIAUUCY . ·I

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Another type of credits, &lt;;apital
company credits, are given to com·

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-·LOSE : 10 LIS. ·.
·I Ill 3 DAYS I:

· Yl•l•
allo . . llflllt• llilliiiU ...... tf'SOO.OO.PIMIIylw -'f

'IMMCDt .. llttllllilllrrl

IICIWIIIWIU.P.Y. Ill MWie. tfltti . . tflltll .... ltatlllllljllttl .....

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(SI.OO-~-I.Mf1•

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O!tlllpall.. OH , .

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Youth .director faci:f19 charges
for running off with 8th· grader

418 BB20_ill

·MEN'S SEMI ANNUAL .

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BATAVIA (AP)- A 14-year-old
Mr.( Casqpbc!ll sail! her.cjaught~r against Luecke on March 27.. Alecia
!iirl who disap~ with a married told her that sbe had sex with Luecke, testified against him before a Clerchurch youth -leader in April is back volunteer youth director lit Monterey mont County gi-and jury on April 3. ·
!'(orne after authorilies found the two Baptist Church. She also said,~e was
Luecke disappeared April 10, the
at a South Carolina motel.
·•
pregnant.
, ,
· night before he was to appear in cou~
: Alecia Renae Campbell returned
lbe Campbel' family filed charges on Ohio charges ~ he had sex with
to her family on Friday after being .
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.the girl.
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missing for more than two months.
: Keith Luecke, . 35, is in jail in · I. ·
Berkeley County, S.C., near where
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)JPiice found the couple sleeping in a
motel in Hanahan, S.C .. early Friday.
Luecke is expected to be extradited
nht week to Clermont County, east
of Cincinnati,' where he faces eight ·
criminal charges.
: Upon her arrival home, the girl, an
eighth-grader, said sbe missed her
p!IJ'enls, but.said little' about her life
Ol! the road with Luecke. Sbe said she
djd not.'get lo say goOd
. b~e 1().
1
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·. ,
IJt;fore, he was arrested. .
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1 Police sa'id' they traced t!Je cou·
pie's lOcation from a call the ,girl
nlade · Thursday night to a friend's
hpuse. Police said they found .
Lilecke's car parked at the motel near
~eston, S.C.
: The ~irl's parents, Jerry and Debbie Campbell, said they were relieved
tbieir daughter was found.
'
~ "She said tl{at she wanted to
'
. to . •
come
home, and that was mustc
my ears,'' Jerry Campbell said after
a phone' conversation with, her. "I
w~ted'rny daughter to want to come,.

SUMMER

!

1

am so aSminel
I am! I ant!

·CLEARANCE
SALE

tum .

·,
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'

~ottery numbers
By The ·A11oclated Prell
-The following numbers were
se'ected in Friday's Ohio and West
Vil'l!iilia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3.: 2-3-9
:Pick 4: 2-2-9-5
:Buckeye 5: 1-8·24-26-31
,
~The Ohio · Lottery will pay
U~090,8S9.50 to winners in Friday's ,
Pi¢k 3 Numbers daily game. Sales for
th~ game totaled $1,447,107.. •
·.In the other daily game, Pick 4
N1frnbers players wagered $348,494
anjl will share S113,800.
.
.
.'Sales for the Buckeye 5 game
totAtecf $396,642.
~The jackpot for Saturday's Super
l,qlto drawins was $40 million .
! 1 WEST VIRGINIA
~Daily 3: S-0.3
fDaily 4: 4-4+9 .
'Caslr'2S: 4·6-11·13·21·24

'

'•

'.

The bishops hope their statement
The bilbopl repRMJtl the Roinan
will make Gov. Geocge Voinovil:h, a c.tholic llld Ukniniln, Romanian
Catholic, and Attorney General Bet- and Byzantine Catbolic diocaes.
ty Montgomery reconsider their supNoboay has been executed in
port of exeeuti0111.
Ohio since 1963. Execution was
. Mike Dawson, a spokesman for restored in the state in 1981, llld in
Voin~vicb, said lhe governor is aware 1993 the law was chanted to give
of the church '1 opposition to capital death row inmates a choice between
punishment, but probably won't lethal injection and eleetro(:ution.
change his mind.
.
"It is so easy for retribution to
"The governor has been a long· become revenge; for angen, fears and
time supporttlr of lhe death,pmajty," prejudices to eltCI'Cise nesative influ·
Dawson said.
ence on our public ac;pons," the bishDeputy'Attorney General Mark R ops wrote in "Affirming Justice and
Weaver said Montgomery tcspeets Mercy: Reassessios the Death Penalthe bishops' opinions, but feels the ty."
same way as Voinovich.
.
"The very viole~ ihat frisJttens
"The vast majority of Ohio resi- us. so much ousht not make us prodents, . the Get:~eral Assembly and ponents of vio•• llCC."
prosecutors-across the state believe
The bishops encouraged public
the death penalty should continue to officials to replace execution with life
lle an option for the most heinous in prison and to promote ways to pre- .
offenders," Weaver said
vent people .from becoming crimi- ·
The statemc:lft is an extension of • nals. They urged ministers and pasihe Ohio bishops' I987 document tors to be more attentive to victims'
again.st capital punishment. Tobin l)eeds:
said it was in response to Berry's case
' The church will not lle deterred
and Pope John ~aut n·~ March 199.5 despite polls ti1at indicate about 70 .
encyclical, which satd .the death ·percent of Catholics favor the death
penalty was morally wrong in all but penalty, said Thomas Allio, director
caseS of absolute necessity to defend · of the social action office for the Diesociety.
cese of Cleveland.

,

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Confidential Service for Women and Men
· ....a4 • H£4,.
Family Planning
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and Related Services·
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Cooler weather expected
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Ohio!W.Va.
Ohio's Catholic bishops
---Friends for
~rging against executions

June~.,

Volnovlch.
diJmlsses ··
proposal
for .CSU

By RICHARD CAREW
resenting public-access television
practical problem~ without
AltoeNJted PI'Mtl Wlftlr.
programmen and produeen, 81 "a IICrificina lhe free exchtlnac of idcu
WASHINGTON - Oiling free tremendous victory f&lt;!" Finl Amend· the Flat Amendment is deaigned to
speech, the Supreme Court struck ment forces."
protect."
COLUMBUS (AP) - · Gov.
down key portions of a federal law
"The I,:OOUIIOD-sense message that
His words 11n0 sure 10 be studied
Gc&lt;qe Voinovich has dismissed
aimed at restricting children's expo- comes througl;l is! only wben there is closely by those enmeshed in a dislhe idea of lUmina Cenlrtll State ·
sure to indecent programs Ol\ some evidence children 11ft: being harmed pule over the Telecommunicatiolls
Univcnity i111o two-year institucable TV channels.
will government be given more lee- Act of 1996, signed into lniby Prestion, AyiiiJ it is not practical, the
But Friday'_s splintered and com- way to impose censorship," Green. ident Oln19D in Febniary
Daylo!l Daily News reponed Sat·
Cotumbu,;!92"
plex decision left unresolved many berger said. ·
.
Thill law would make hlrder to urday.
questions. A huge one: Will the rutAnother free·~peech advocate, serid indecent material over the lnterMeanwhile, three stile audits of :
ing help or hurt government efforts to Andy Schwartzman of Washington· net if there's a possibility' it would be
Cenlrtll Stile found several im:akeep smut ()ff the Internet? . .
based ~edia Access Project, was less seen by children.
,
ularities, including reports tbat the
The coun upheld one pnms!on of· cn~ustasllc.
.
In blockin1 eaformnent of thai
school spe.nt millions of dolla
the challenged law. Congress first
The Supreme Coun has left the Jaw earlier this month, a 'Philadel
wi~ keepiug suftk:ient records.
effort to clean up cable television public With more, not less, doubt phia-based federal appeals court 't:
The univenity in Wilberforce,
programming. That provision lets abo~t how the Fi~t Am~n~cnl ed frcC-speech violations.
ct
about 20 miles east of Day1011,
cable operators refuse to c~ ony .appltcs to _cable _TV:' be StUd. . The • Sen. James Exon, D·Neb.
faces a budget defiCit ·of 81 muc:h
programs they reasonably belteve are co~:s ~tde dtvsstons are disap. released a Jetter friday in which · 81 $6 million. The state's only pub.
mdecent 011 channels they lease out . pomttng. . .
.
Deputy Attomey General Jamie · licly funded. historically black unito others. . .
.
.
.
The. deciSion prod~ stx sepa- Gorelick assured him the adminisversity has declllred a financial criBut the JUstsces sasd the govern- rate; optn1ons and three distinct votes tration will appeal the case direcd ·
sis and laid off teai:hen, mainte- ·
ment cannot force cable operators to with shifting majorities.
· the Supreme Court b 1\Jesda y to
nance personnel and other campus
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloud(
segregate all programs deemed indeThe court split 7-2 in upholding
In both the cable~ In~
workers.
cent and place them on a single the law's first provision. The justices flicts defenders of free
di conLast week, the state's architect
leased channel. Nor can the govern- voted 6-3 to strike down the leiiSC&lt;I· s~h have been 'ned an . v~ estimated·it will cost 1.2 million
ment _let cabl~ operators opt out of channels provision and 5-4 to strike ,tJten 's advocates p~nc:~:\15~t to rebuild the university's dormi· · ·
carrymg pubhc-access channels that down the public-access channels pro- what minors can
lories, caJeterias and academic ·
feature programs some might find vision.
· .
·
Friday's decis~ reiterated the
buildings.
Voinovich met Friday with
mdNecent. theMcourtdsas,d. d
.
The lahw dthefindees ~ndecent J!,ID- court's holding'that the government's
earmg on~ ay s en to tts · grarnsas.t ose at ptctordescribe broadleewayloreg late
·the- ·
Elaine Hairston, chancellor of the
1996-9,1 ten'n, t,he ~ourt 1ssued two "sexual. or excretory activities or television and r.Jlo b~:icaste~ Ohio Board of Regents.
.
By The Associated Preee
other tmportant Ftrst Amendment organs to a patently gffensive man- does not ap 1 to cable
r ·
"I
don't
think
there
is
any
con·
A cold front will approach the northwest corner of the state Sunday morn- rulmgs on the freedoms of speech and ner! '
.P Y
ope auons.
sideration right naw _to changing it
. .
.
.
For free-speech purposes, the
ing and then 'mbve across the state during the day. A ~and of scattered thunto a two-year school," Voinovich
assoct~llon.
.
..
.
Unhke
obscene
matenal,
indecent
court
treats
cable
channels
more
like
derstorms will accompany the front with the best chance in the northern part
said
Friday.
Ruhng 7-2 m ~as~s from. Ilhnots maten~l •s protected by the Consti- newspapers thai! broadcast stations.
of the state.
Breyer's opinion was joined in full
"I thin)( its important that we do
After the passage of the front, temperatures will cool Sunday night with · and Kansas, the JUSUces S81d ~nOO: . Iutton s free-speech suarantees.
pendent contractors who do busmess Opponents argued that programs on only by Stevens and Justice David H
everything
we can to take care of ·
re\l(lings .by Monday close to normal. Any chances for rain will diminish until with federal, state and local govern- AIDS, atJortion and child binh could Souter. Justice Sandra Day O'Conn~
the·youn.stersthal
are there now," ·
later next week.
·
ments
cannot
be
dropped
for
pohube
banned
o.r
blocked
as
indecent.
dissented
from
part, voting to uphold
Voinovich said of the 2,300 stuWeather forecast:
,
,
c_
a
l
dtsloyalty
or
speaking
out
.on
pub.
!he
provtSJons,
added
to
the
cable
the law as it applies 1o public-access
dents
enrolled last year;
Sunday... Partly cloudy with scattered thunderstorms. HigM from the upper he 1ssues.
.
legtslatson by Sen. Jesse Helms, R- channels.
·
Voinovich
said on June 21 that .
80s northeast to the lower 90s elsewhere.
'
. ·
And the court unanimou~l~ upheld N.C.; just before its passage, do not ·
Justicies Anthony M. Kenned · the state may be forced to desig- '
Sunday night... Partly cloudy. Low in the lower 60s north and 65to 70
a key part of a new law hmtttng fed- apply to commerc~al cable channels . and Ru!h Bader Ginsburg togelhir t11te the university a two-year colsouth.
·
eral
court appeals · by death"row such as MTV and HBO. .
voted to strike down all the rovilege because of ~udgel problems.' .
Monday ... Partly cloudy. Highs in the 80s.
inmates . and other stale prisoners.
. Steve Phillips, a senior spokesman . sions 81 issue
p
William Napier, vice chancellor· ~
Extended forecast:
That
decision
Iikely
~ill
speed'
the
for
Helms,
praised
that~:"'
of
the
~1Chief
Justice
William
H.
Rehn·
of
the regents, said die :~~:hoot's
Thesday through Thursday ...Partly cloudy. Lows from 60 to 65. Highs near
pace
of
execulto~s.
naltonw~de.
tng
be
satd
,would
help
Jll'O!~I.
chtl-quist
and
Justices
Clarence
Thomas
·
Strategic
Planning Committee, set '
80 northeast to the mid 80s south.
·
·
. Only one dectston rematns to be dren from sleazy programs.
and Antonio Scalia voted to uphold
up by Voinovich, Oppose&amp; changing
an~ounced before the justices begin
_As for ~e ~~ of ~e decision, the law in its entirety.
.
the :~~:hoot's four-year status.
theu three-month sum!"er reces.s. Phtlhps satd, We wtll eyaluate
·In all, opinions were authored by
The state's audits for 1992,
.The government JS seeking .to avmd ~hether there are any alternauve leg- Breyer O'Connor Kennedy SoUter
1993 and 1994 have found ihat the'
up to $10 billion in liability for an 1slative approaches."
.
Steven~ Utd Tho0:as
'
'
university awarded contracts tllat ·'
acc&lt;iunting rule change that plunged . · The court's main opinion, written
The 1992 catile
Ia~ ~ chal:
never were, bid: They ·.tso. sho't\'. 1·
many
savings
and
loans
into
financial
by
Justice
~tephen
0.
Brey~r,
was
lenged
by
two
coalitions
of
cable
protbat
the uni~ity forgave debts · ·
MARIE'ITA (AP) - The man dead six to eight hours. She was last
trouble.
.
.
.
worded
cauuousl~.
He
ctt~
·
a
new
grammers,
the
Denver
Area
Eduea·
owed
to the school · and violated
. police say is a material witness in the seen alive at 8:30a.m.
The
cable
dectston
was
haded
by
and
chang~?g
envtronment
and
the
tion,
a
l
Telecominunieations
Coniorstate law for di!!,blming large s~ms
slaying of a Williamstown, W.Va., • No one has been charged in her .
Mtchael
Greenberger,
a
lawyer
repneed
for
llextbtllly
·
necessary
to
tium
and
the
Alliance
for
Communi·
of
money. · '.
.
. . .·
v.:oman who was stuffed into a drain death and police have not called Ryd1
•
·
allow
government
to
respcind
to
very
ty
Media.
•
.
The
•
board
of
regents
knew
pipe said he is the victim of innuen- born a suspect. But they have
· . about die problems ideoill~ in the
do.
searched his home tw(ce, placed him
reports and proposed solutions, · '
Dennis J. Rydbom called The in a police lineup and ordered him to
board·spokeswoman liinda Qaden . .
Marielta· Times on Thursday to · turn over hair a,.d blood samples/
• . .
said Frida .
defend himself. He said he was helpRydbom said that he was with
· "TheJhasn't been in ltbsenee' :
ing a friend at the time Sheree A. Marietta student Scott Zeoli fnlm 9
o(.concern," .Ogden saic;l.
',':
Petry was killed and that he doesn't a.m. to' II :30 a.m. on May 25. He
Auditors
reported
that
in,
1992,
. ;
know why she was killed.
helped Zeoli pack for the summer.
the
university
paid
for
scholarships
·
DALLAS .(AP) - In a speech leading for three years now. Without takes maybe a tragedy ·
"It is beyond me to imagine any- -~oli, whO is from N~w Jersey, could
worth more than $1.9 million nostalgic for his own military, days, our leadership• the job will. not·get those people to understllll""
d ;...::.:a=tli
body who would want to kill Sheree not be reached for comment.
four
times the amount in 1990 - .
Bob
Dole
suggested
Saturday
that
done."
·.
or even hurt: her," he said.
Lawyer Janet Fogle, who repreerty arid freedom aitd duty and honhad
no 1stin f the students
t
President
Clinton's
defense
policies
Dole, confined to the campaign or, god and country II" all about,"
Petry's body was found about 1:40 sented Rydbom, argued police illeRing
.
p.m. on May 25 stuffed head first into gaily took items from his home dur- had "turned off the porch light" and trail, called for a united. American Dole, with his own VFW cap tilled
mag
itude
of tbe ·
i.
the
an 18-inch drain pipe. Police believe ing the searches and that all materi- left Americans vulnerable to terrorist front against temlrism, saying that across his forehead, told the veterans'
institutional schol hips, such a
attacks like last week's bombing i~ "when tragedies like this occlir we're convention.
she suffocated when her body weight als should be returned to him.
is ~riticl!l,"
auditors
listing
Saudi
Ara~a.
cut off her air supply. She had been
•
not Democrats, we're not RepubliRecalling his first day in the
wrote.
The Republican presiden!ial chal- cans- we're Americans."
Anny 81 Camp Barkley, Texas, where
In 1993, the
arship paylenger also contended that the bombYet. both his brief radio broadcast he said lie learn~ his first swear
mentS
increased,
to
more
than $2
ing · proved the need for beefed-up - which was aired as the GOP words, the World War II veteran did
.
\
military spending and a missile response to the president's address- not explicitly impugn Clinton for million. Auditors again reponed
defense.
'
and a speech to the-Texas state con· avoiding service in Vietnam and the university had no listing to subIn side-by-side national radio vention of Veterans of Forei~n Wars protesting thai war. But Dole did say stantiate the balance..
The 1994' audit found similar.
PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)- the island to auend, despite swelter- broadcasts, both Dole and Clinton echoed earlier cqticism of Clinton as that Vietnam veterans were treated
irregularities. The'university said it
Two historical West Virginia figures ing heat The Blennerhassetts' bodies condemned the "cowardly" bombing weak and naive m foreign policy.
like "second-class citizens."
had
produced a compu ter list, but
of
a
U.S.
military
housing
complex
in
who died and were buried in New were placed in stainless steel coffins
Veterans in the audience sharp"While the Cold War is over, tbe
not
a
monthly. report, as was rec·
York City on Saturday were re.in- -hers pink, his cobalt blue·- inside Saudi Arabia that killed 19 Ameri- painful reminder of tliis week is that ened the political point.
om
mended.
terrell on the Ohio River island that a concrete burial vault about 50 cans. And both too.k the tragedy as an the world remains a very danserous
"It bothers me .bad," Oscar StilThe 1995 audit has not been
bears their name.
yards from the north portico !lf their opportunity. to make some political · place," Dole said. "We can'tjust turn · ton, of Dennison, said of Clinton.
completed:
points.
Margaret Blennerhasseu and her reconstructed mansion. A dozen
off tlie porch light, lock our doors, . "And of all people who avoided ser,
Suppoiiers ofCet)tral State plan
Clinton, who WjiS headed to cross our fingers and hope everyone vice, I have no use for them."
son, Harman Jr., were buried .Satur- flower arrangements decorated tbe
to
march on the Statehouse
memorial services in Florida for the behaves."
day on the inansion grounds at scene.
Ernest Mudd, of San Antonio, said
After the 40-minute ceremony, the victims, -said he has "directed our
Blennerhassett Island. They recently
Dole said earlier, be didn't Dole's military background gave him grounds Thesday in an attempt to
,
·senior
officials
to
come
together
as
were exhumed from their graves in vault was covered and lowered into
begrudge Clinton the positive news greater credibility as a candidate for gain more funding.
Representatives
oftbe
National
soon
as
possible
to
discuss
additionNew York City, where they died of the ground, then covered with earth
coverase that come.s as a president the White House. "As president, it
cholera, she in 1842 and he in 1854. by a backhoe until the el!flh under al steps to intensify the .worldwide • helps his nation mourn. aur he not- would make a difference in how be Association for the Advancement
foreign nations," Mudd of Colored People, the Urban
Siate historian Ray Swicksaid.Jhe.;-' wal·nut and locust trees showed little fight against terrorism."
ed that Clin19n had,recently attended handled
Clinton,
speaking
in
Lyon,
France,
Lea.uc. ·Southern Christian Lead.
last remaining member of the fami- sign of Jiisturbance.
an internationat summil'on terrorism tbld a reporter.
ership
Conference and the Interdeat
the
end'
of
an
economic
summit
of
.Dole also reiterated his call, fre.
Jy, great-great-great-great nephew
The ceremony was conducted by
and "then this hap~ned. You never
nominational
Ministerial Alliance
Peter C. Bartholomew, a Stowe, Vt., Episcopal ministers Don Bretz and world leaders, cited his administra- k.now ... how the American people quently voiced on the campaign trail,
businessman, wanted them buried in John W.T. Weise, both of Parkers- tion's record in fighting terrorism and view it. But it's not a partisan thing, for a ballistic missile defense system. will participate in the march, said
.Clinton opposes the deployment of a Jessie Gooding, president of the
West Virginia.
. burg. They read extensively from the building a strong economy. Wlien he in my view." ·
!=arne
info
office,
Clinton
said.
"the
"She is the closest thing the Ohio Bible.
Dole never referred overtly to missile defense on the grounds that Dayton chapter of 'the NAACP.
Valley had to royalty," Swick said.
"Oh grave, where is thy victory?" United States was· not in a strong Clinton, but his remarkS were loaded there is insuffiCient threatto'justify its · · University alumni and students
position to lead."
'
also ~ill participate, he said. Good- •
$5-billion price tag.
with references .to their differences "We gather for a second and final Weise said at one point.
Now,
he
said,
the
worldwide
fight
"Our goal is not just to be strong ing would not estimate how many
especially their respective military
time to say goodbye to her earthly
Melissa Brown, superintendent of
"against
terrorist,
international
crime,
records.
enough to turn back a threat," Dole proJCSters q,expected.
remains."
Blennershassett Island Historical
"We plllflli&gt; protest the atroci- · •
"I would say to those ... who son · said. "Our goal must always be
About 150 people ferried across to . State Park, also read poems written . drug trafficking and the spread of ·
ties·
that have happened to Central
weapons of mass destruction are part of look down on the military, who say strength to
that no one ever
by the dejid woman . One of them of a campaign America has been
State,"
said Gooding.
we spend too much on defense, it again is templed to threaten us at all."
ironically included a reference to her
.watching two people be buried on the
island,
·
· Publi&amp;bed each Sunda)• .&amp;2~ Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio. by lbe Ohio Volley Pyblidina

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. Regional

Sunday; June 30, 1tie
•

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.ilinbav 'limes- ~tntinel In an e_lection year, forget conventiona·l wisdom:
'Estllbfislid in 1966

By CHUCK RAASCH ,
lonaer trends thai point til a very
• Clinton, who looked u politi- ties for a 55 pa&lt;:ent landsli~ fade
close
GN8
Pollbl
Wtllw
Clinton-Dole matchup:
cally dead as an incumbent ( ou1d a rapidly when a third-party clltdid•e
825 Third Avenue, O.lllpolla, Ohio
• WASHINGTON - With the
• Clinton may be the most ana- year 110. has gorten his S«ond wind is poised to take 10 pen:eni to 20 per·
&amp;14 Uf 2342 • Fex: 4441-3001
White
House's
FBI
files
fwco
getlyzed
president in American history, li'om 1 Republican revolution thai the UOI of the Cle&lt;:torate.
.
111 Court StrMt, Pomeroy, Ohio
and
(urioser,
it's
a
good
tina
(
urioser
public.thinlts
overreached.
His
conPetol is personally UIIJlOPtllar riJht
614-992·2156 • Fu: 992-2157
time to (haJienge conventional wissidenlble political ikills suit him now, but heo heads a movement thai
dom of the 1996 el~ons.
best in recovery.
has unc:oupled up to a fifth of lhe votThe domi11811t sense in these sulBut despite the GOP's big leg- ing public from the two established
try swnmc:r days is thai the status quo right down to his underwear and ur- islative failures, 1 majority of the political parties, A credible Reform
- ~ident Clinton and a Republi- tainly his psyche. But in a scranje public still agrees with many of the Pany candidate could still seriously
can C::ongress - will be bard to twist, the incumbent Clinton enters basic components of the GOP's plat- threaten the two major parties.
A Gannett Co. Newspaper
unseat. Possible. but remote, espe- the fall ~lection with much more form - a bllan(ed budget amend• Both si4es agree that the key
in
the
QSC of Clinton, who · mystery hanging over him than his
(ially
chunk
of electoral colleae real estate
ment.
term
limits,
smaller
governROBERt L WINGETT
leads
(Omfonably
in
polls.
principle
rival
Dole.
lies
from
New Jersey !0 Wisoonsin,
ment.
•
Pi.tblltlher
No one can predict where WhiteIn a recent Gannett News Serviu
• lbe.electoral college map has a vast swatch of Rust Belt and ~t
Hobllrt Wlleon Jr.
• Margaret Lehew
survey of presidential S(hoJars, only water prosecutpr Ken Starr goes bad a heavy Republican .bias since . C.Q&amp;St metroplexes where recent presExecutive Editor
Controller
two of 56 gave Republican Bob · next. Longtime Clinton aide and Richard Nillon unleashed his South- idential elections have largely turned.
Dole much of a chance of winning: confidant Bruu Lindsey already has em strategy in 1968. Since then, even Clinton would be favored in many of
' - - to lite editor.,. ,..~ TINy ahou/d be
lh"" 300 won/a.
Few also seemed to bold out much of been named an unindicted co-(on- counting Clinton's victory in 1992, these states right now. But all the biB
A/1/ettora- auiJject to editing and muat be a/gned .,d Include llddra chance for massive turnover of the spirator in an ongoing Arkansas trial Republicans have won an average of ones are headed by Republican govand ~ n...-. No una/gMd ,.,.,_ will be publlaltad. ...,_
GOP Congress.
alleging finandal crimes by two 381 electoral votes to the Democ:rits' ernors: Christine Whitman of New
ahould be In good tole, MJd,.....g 1••-· not peraot~~~IIU...
Both could be ~ wrong (On- bankers who loaned cash to Clinton's 1~. Any GOP undidate has a built- Jersey, Tom Ridge of Pennsylvania,
(lusions. It is folly to assume any- last Arkansas gubernatorial (arn- in base in the South and the West on George Voinovich of Ohio, Jim Edgar
thing four months before an election paign. And the comparisons between a scale that doesn' teltist for a Demo- of Dlinois, John Engler of Michigan,
in one of the most volatile periOds in filegate and Watergate become less of crat, notwithstandina Clinton's big Tommy Thompson of Wisconsin.
public opinion in· a long time.
a stretch with ~h revelation of low- poll leads in California and New
They will be able to pound ~
Which raises a larger point about level minions gathering dirt on polit• York.
Republican message as Dole surropresidential election year conven- ical enemies.
• Ross Perot is again coming to gates, ganging up on Clinton all fall:
tional wisdom.
No administration that has run as play as he did in 1992, he coul4 tum Their PQlitical organizations are likeThe term is barely half right.
many low-grade scandal fevers as the race into a three-dimensional ly to be in full gear by Nov. 5.
Conventional, it is. Pack journal- this .one should ever be considered a scramble for survival, not a quest for
And one of these governors is a
ism is its perennial offspring. Sound, h~thy front-runner.
a governing mandate. The possibili- good bet to be Dole's running mate:
(Ontrarian analysis gets trampled in
By WALTER A. MEARS
the stampede toward groupthink.
· AP Special Corre1pondent
.
. But it's rarely wise. Usu(llly, it's
WASHINGTON - Campaign finance reform is an idea whose time nev- proved dead wrong.
'er Sec:ms to come, despite years of promises and torrents of talk.
Ask ~ident Dukakis, or secondSenate and House campaign spending has multiplied six times over since term President George Bush who
Congress last enacted major legislation on contributions and costs, two · could have been crowned king after
decades ago.
the Persian Gulf War. Ask Ross Per'The task is one of self-reform in an arena of rival political interests. "Time ot, who was leading in polls about
after time we have talked about reform - .particularly when it is an election now in 1992.
year - but in the end we have done nothing," Sen. Christopher Dodd, chairAsk Bill Clinton.
man of the Democratic National Committee, complained before the Senate ·
Back a little more than four years
did just that, again.
·
ago, many supposedly sman people
Republicans blocked lll:tion in this year' s installment ·with votes against were swarming to the conventional
ending Senate debate. That avoided a direct vote that would have been awk- wisdom that by now Clinton would
. ward in a (ampaign year, aligning their majority against a politically popu- be a disgra(ed ex-Arkansas'govemor,
· lar cause.
without center, a shameless pander: The issue will be back, of course. A Republican, Sen. ,John McCain of er, the most callous politician of our
Ariwna, was a leading sponsor of the bill, and he said there will be reform, times.
maybe next year, "because the people demand it."
But not now. "It is too important to·address right atoihis point in rhe heat
Forgetting the polls, .there are five
·of a national election debate," said Sen. Trent Lou. the majority leader. He fading into a haze of draft 'dodging,
. said there's nothing to be lost by waiting sin(e no changes could be effec- womanizing llild un-inhaled marijua. live in this campaign anyhow.
na smoke.
.
.
· The Senate sh~lved the issue on Thesday; on Wednesday, the Supreme
The Problem in sorting this ~lee:Court added anoiher piece to rhe campaign finance puzzle by ruling that polit- tion year out is the press covers Clinical parties can spend unlimi.ted sums on behalf of their congressional can- ton the way his critics say be governs:
didates as long as it is done independently, and not coordinated with the cam- by the polls.
paigner involved.
·
When he 's up, as he is noW, he's
That could.become a factor this fall in closely contested congressional resourceful, a ~eft political animal,
raus, to Republican advantage sirice th~y've got more money io spend. When willing to compromise to move issues
the rules.change, one side or the other inevitably benefits. Thai's one of the forward, the great appropriator, the
obstades in reform efforts.
·
best pure ·politicillil of our times. .
Wh~ri he's. down, .he 's soulless, ·
In(umbents, and the pany that conl)'Ols Congress, fare best under the (Uf·
rent system. The Federal. Election Commission reports that during the 15
moqths ended March 31, political actiOP ~ommittees contributed $44.8 mil- ·
lion to Republican congressional candidates and $33.2 million·to Democrats. During a similar period while Democrats controlled Congress, their can.
I
didat~;.s got $46 million, Republicans just under $24 million.
ivory tower that sheltered many e&lt;li- ed America."
claimed to defend Yugoslavia even~
• The FEC said incumbents in both parties got $65 million, challengers $13 By JOHN OMICINSKI
Gannett
News
Senrlce
.torial
writers
and
opinion
leaders
who
"The
president
came
downstairs
he sr •tn plans to tum it-into a Serbmillion, from political .action committees, PACs for short.
WASHINGTON
American
wrung
their
hands
and
said
America
holding
a
book,
'Bat
tam
Ghosts'
by
dominated
dictatorship."
,
Those are fund-raising groups organized by businesses, unions, interest
leaders repeatedly slipPed and stum- (Ould do nothing because YuJ~oslavia Robert Kaplan, a history of centuries
Milos(\vic is the "major wrecker
blocs and rhe like, to raise money from their members and contribute it to
bled
in
Bosnia
because
their
policy
of
war
in
tha.t
pan
of
the
world.
He
of
Yugoslavia,"
writes Zimmenilann.'·
candidates. Ironically, th~ groups, which would have been banned or sharply
was
built
upon
a
Big
Lie
that
the
lr'
said
his
wife
had
read
it
&lt;Wer
the
"Hehasmadeacompactwithnalion:
curbed by the bill the Senate spumed, grew aut ofth~ 1974 reform Ia"( that
1990s war in form.er Yugoslavia was
0 n miCinSn.l ' weekend. and he had looked at it, too. alisrn as a way to bring him to pow-:
.Jimited individual contributions to candidates for Congress.
"The' message the Cliiltons took er. He can't break the compact with~
· PACs - the FEC study co11nted 4,294 of them - can give il candidate· based on indecipherable, insoluble
.
"ancient
hatreds....
.
was
so
complicated
and
vcry"old
and
from
the book was that these people out causing political damage to him.
$5,000 for each eJC(tion, which means up to $10,000 a year.·
Though
the
damage
is
done
and
just
awfully
hard
to
understand
and
:had
been
killing each other for I 0 self, but it has utilitarian rather than
The bill also sought to limit Senate campaign spending, with free and cuihundreds
of
thousands
of
lives
have
it
had
big
mOuntains
and
people
with
centuries.
'Holy
shit!' Aspin remern- an emotional value for him."
rate television time and mailing privileges as incentives because it can't be
been lost, the truth is coming out.
guns and Jots of different ethnic 'hered thinking that moming. 'He's
Yugoslavia, he concludes, "didn't
done by law. The 1974 law prompted by Watergate included spending limIn
his.
new
book,
"Origins
of
a
j!rDUps
and
non-English
languages
going
south
on
'lift
aad
strike.'
And
(Ommit
suicide."
.
its, but the Supreme _Court ruled that unconstitutional·two years later.
Catastrophe
Yugoslavia
and
Its
·
and
three
religions
and
blah
blab
blah,
he
did."
•
His
.list
of
indictments
includes·
The reform dilemma since has been to find a way to reinstate spending
Destroyers," Warren Zimmermann, blah blah. '
:•
·
"Ancient hatreds" was politi(al "most of all - Milosevic, for deviscurbs, whi(h do cover presidential candidates as a (Ondition of the federal
the
last
U.S.
ambassador
.
t
o
President
Clinton
is
culpable,
but
·
baloney
and the Clil)tOn White Iing and pursuing a strategy that led:
campaign subsidies they can get. Democrats had sought public financing foF
~ouse, in its youthful hu&amp;ris, ate it up Idirectly to the_ breakup of thC: coun-'
congressional candidates, too, when they ran Congress, but that was blocked Yugoslavia, destroys the "ancient · President Bush screwed up, too.
hatreds"
myth
and
describes
what
.
His
White
House
failed
to
mqve
like it was dogma after skimming a try and to the deaths of over a hunby GOP veto and filibuster.
·
actually
happened.
quickly
to
snuff
the
sparks
of
civil
single
book.
dred thousand of its dtizens. ' ·
The House is ellpected to Cbpsider campaign finance legislation later in ·
Zimmermann
draws
the
bull's
eye
war.
In
July
1992
at
the
Munich
G-7
"My
·
thesis
is
that
the
Yugoslav
"Nationalism was the arrow that
·the summer. But nothing is going to be settled this year. So the issue will
aroilnd Serbian dictatpr Slobodan meeting 1he vowed to lead a (Oalition cataStrophe was not mainly the result killed Yugoslavia. Milosevic was the
-~
.
·
President Clinton endorsed the Senate bill a day before it was blocked, Miloscvi(, calling flim "the prinie against the Seibs and failed miser- ofancientc_thni(orreligioushatreds. prin~ipal bowman."
agent
of
Yugoslavia's
destruction."
ably.
nor
of
the
collapse
of
communism
at
Zimmermlliln
's
list
of
AmericaJ
recalling his 1995 handshake pact with House Speaker Newt Gingrich to set ·
And
Milosevic
is
getting
away
with
Bush's
sin
of
appeasement
was
ihe
end
of
the'Colii'War,
nor
even
of
.,
politicians
who
must
share
blam~
up a reform commissio~. which hasn't been done yet.
(Ompounded by Clinton.
the failiu):s of the Westel'll'countries;" includes Bush and Clinton as well~
Before be resigned from the Senate, Republican Bob Dole protiosed that it.
Even
today,
U.S.
policymakers
In
1993,
says
historian
Ricliard
writes Zimmenrninn.
former Gen. Colin· Powell, the matr
a bipartisan commission study refonils.and report to Congress early nellt year.
continue
to
romance
the
Butcher
of
Reeves,
Clinton
abandoned
his
early
'"Thosefactors
undelliably
made
with the military-gctiiu~ reputation,
He said the issue "threatens to erode the trust" Americans have in their govBelgrade
while
wringing
their
hands
determination
to
lift
the
arms
embarthinss
worse.
But
Yugoslavia's
death
.
who actively opposed U.S. involve~
ernment.
Reformers say it already has, that overwhelming majorities believe spe- over Yugoslavia's supposedly deep- go against Bosnia and strike Serb and the violence that followed result- ment in Yugoslavia for fear of bcinl '
positions from the air after Hillary ed from . the conscious actions of d.ragged into another Vietnam..
·
cial interest contributions affect votes and win favors. McCain said reform seated historical problems.
"Ancient
hatreds
:•
was
a
Big
Lie
Rod
ham
Clinton
read
a
book
about
nationalist
leaders
who
co-opted,
Such
shameful
trepidation,
on
.
would not ·cure cynicism. but could keep it from turning into contempt and
psychiatry
used
as
an
Yugoslavia.
·
intimidated,
circumvented,
or
elimi-'
Big
Lie,
prevented
the
United
State(
of
diplomatic
alienation.
"(1be late Defense Secretary Les) nated all opposition to their dema- from doing anything . positive for
Spending in House and Senate campaigns for the 1994 elections totaled excuse by }.WO American presidents
and
many
huropean
leaders
to
'
w
ash
Aspin
went to .the White House on a ..gogic designs.
·
more than four years.
;
$724 million, about si~ tirnes what was spent in 1976. 1be average cost of
their
hands
of
the
biggest
genocide
in
Monday
morning
for
a
routine
cere"Yugoslavia
was
destroyed
from
Moreover,
the
United
Sta\es
b~
a winning Senate c~mpaign was more than $4 million, up from $600,000.
mony," writes Reeves in "Running in tiJe to~ dow_n."
.
. . . .
continued to play footsiC with Mil~
And when opponents of the reform bill said Americans spend more mon" Europe since the Holocaust.
1
"Ancient hatreds" also wa~ an Place: How Bill Clinton Dis@ppoint- .
Wrttes Zrmmermann: 'Mtlosev1c · sev1c.
·
:~
ey than that on products like yogurt, McCain countered:
'
.
.•
.
.
l
l
'
_ "There is not a crisis of confidence in the yogurt industry,''
(Walter R. Mean, vice president and ®lumaist for The Associated
Prell, has reported on Washington and national politics for more than
30yean.)
•·

Chuck Rsssi:h ,

.!l

*•

'

· ----~------------~----~~-·~- --~----~------------------

Campaign reform·:
lots of support un~il
it comes to a vote

Political baloney contributed .t o Balkan mess
J h 0

• •·

.Voc~tion.
al Board OKs business agreements
.

RIO GRANDE - The OalliaJac:klon-Vinton JQint Vocational
Ba.d· of fd!.-llion made qree.
-~~with localt..t' a rues dill will
fOIIer its instructional capability duriq iu recent meetinJ at BIICkeye
Hills Career CeniCr. •
The board waved a clinical
apeernent wi!h the University of Rio
Orande for.the Community Services
Program child Care f~eld experience.
A fiCility usage. agreement wiD
allow students in the ,Diversified
He!llth Oecupation5 field to use the
semces of FOur Winds, Heanland of
JICkson and HoiUJ Senior Care Center.
· An Ohio-Kentucky.Allied TheraBIGGEST TAXPAYER- Kathy HoOd, Qfflce 1Upervlaor lor the
PY Sef\,; s •greemcnt will provide
. Galllpolla dll1rlc:t of AmlrJcan. Elecb~ Po:Nr, prn.n._ Mllgl .
.. ·, County Trellurw HowMI frMk with the Clllftl*ly'IIU Pl¥ft*ltl
physico~ ' therapy · s~rvices for the
_for ltl te~~l •tltl holdlnp In the county Frlclay.llelg1 ~ . 1996-97 school year.
two checks In the total 1mount of $782,733.33 for
of
EMT clinical a'greement were
·., propertv taxll from AEP lor tile final hiH of 18H, "If w81n't lor
approved with the following facili. . American Electric P - , thl1 county. would be In trouble. AEP . ties; Cabeii-Huntington Inc., Holzer
: an!lltl ll!blldlarles lfl 1 true a1Mt to the county lnd the lfll, •
Medical Center, Holzer Senior Care,
' uld Frink.
and Pinecrest and Scenic Hills care
,•
tenters.
The board granted permission for
thcdistricttQparticipateintheSouth·
•
. eastern .Ohio Spe(ial Education

grant
. ness planning analysis coordinator
"The boW adopted food prepara- was awarded to Glenn Graham.
tion and apiculturll, recreational
The board approved the follow-

and diesel mechanici IS cOia'ies of
study. It selected Dr. David Cannan
as a delegate to represent the district
at the Novemlier Ohio School Boards
Auoeiation Capitol ·conference.
Dannie Greene was selected as the
alternate. . •
Gene Johnson Chevtolet-OldsGeo in(., Gallipolis, donated computer.equipment to the S(hooJ.
In personnel matters, the board
awarded a one-year contract !0 Dorna Smith as the . Adult Education
superv ~sor. Donalyn Smith was
appointed as wage coordinator.
Melanic Smith was hired as a
math instructor for the 1996 summer
school, and· Rebecca Sparlcs was
hired as bus driver for summer
Scbool .
Two non-certificated substitutes
were ,hired for the 1996-97 school
year: Christina Miller, cafeteria and
custodian; Patricia Whitt, custodian.
The board approved Adult Education budgets, including EMT
Bridge and Fire In-serviu.
A one-year contract as farm busi-

r.vmem

-

• f s·-1ifl·• county· .Brle

'"VInton Council plans special meeting
, VINTON -Vinton Village Council will hold a special meeting on Mon; day, July I at ~p.m. to discuss budgetary matters and 11\Xes.
,
· Interested residents are encouraged to attend.

ew stop signs up at int,rsections

:::e~:;:n:~!'r~1Y:~~~0:~

Funding allows school arts programs to continue

By TOM HUNTER .
- GALUPOLIS - New stop signs have been installed at all intersection~ · Time• Sentinel Staff
.
n Chestnut Street, City Manager Matthew Coppler announced.
POMEROY -A unique arts proMotorists are urged to use caution durirtg thjs transition and to obey all gram bringing visiting artists into
c regulations.
·
Ohio classrooms will continue in two
Meigs C!lunty S(hools with the ·
~wo,odland
announcement
of Ohio Arts Council
GALLIPOLIS - Woodland Centers Inc. clinic offices will be closetl
grant
.awards
for
the programs for
lfbursday, July 4 due to the holidlly. .
· . ·
1996-97.
'
1 Offices will resume normal schedules on July 5.1ndividuals needing emer'1\vo
$1,000
grants
were
awarded
'-ency assistance shoul,d (aJI Crisisline at 1~800-252-5554.
·
to Meigs Junior High School and
~·"'flours
Chester Elementary, which were list~ POMEROY- The Meigs County Branch of Woodland Center$ Inc. will
ed iunong the Ohio scbools reuiving
-be open from 1 a.m. Until 3 p.m. Monday through Sunday, July 7 due to a iota! of $156,921 in "Arts in Edu:':repairs on the air conditioning at the multi-health facility.
.cation" gi'a~ts statewide, Mary Wise
~: Those needing emergency assistance sho.uld call Crisisline at 1-800-252- of the Riveibend Arts Council said
~554. For more infoqnation, c8JJ992-2192.
Friday.
The programs, funded .through
these OAC grants and the Riverbend
·' •1 GALLIPOUS - Fire damaged a car owned by Josanna Corfias, 32
Arts Council, are two-week interac· Springer Road, Gallip&lt;ilis, in the area of First Avenue and Mill Creek Road tive workshops between stucknts and
in Gallipolis Friday, the Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department reported.
visiting artists in several ·fields,
' _The dePartrnent re(eived the .alarm at 5:19p.m. and sent one truck and
'including theater, dance, visual arts,
,i Jl. ftrefighters to the scene. No other details were available from the GVFD ln!ditional and ethnic arts.
·· lin Saturday.
·
·
•
The cost for the two-week programs is $1,600 plus lodging, with
th~ft.
; Q~L~US -Authorities 'are investigating a rash of theft.~rts filed expenses shared by tile OAC and the
Riverbend Arts Council. During the
&lt;!!I F,;ii:la¥1 inclu~ng•
·
·
•· :l . ~' George R. Kelley;Lot~l1, 2216·EastemAve., Gallipolis, w!Io informed program's ftrst three•. ye.,., lodging
GBIIipolis City Police that an unknqwn person entered his !Csidenec through ·expenses have been budgeted !rom
. ·the front door bet"''een 9 p.m. and midnight Thursday. The subject remqved ·monies raised through ·-past Meigs
Talent Showcases, which have been ·
a 20-inch color television 'SCI and remote.
·
. • Ray Smith, 6 Birch Lane, G&amp;llipolis, who reported to city police that held by the Meigs County Minsrrel
, . unknown persons stole a lawn mower from his.residence sometime between Association, A\CCOrding to Wise.
S!even Anllersoq, a children's
midnight and 8 a.JII. Friday.
• Roger Garrett, 142 Foilrth Ave., Gallipolis, who informed ciiy polke playwrisht and co-founder of Columthat $11.95 in change was stolen from a boll on the mantle of his residence bus' Phoenix Theater Circle, shared
instruction
by an unknown person: Time of.the theft is unknown.
.... in
. various aspects of the.• Charles M. Clark, 201 Mud Creek Road, Gallipolis, who told the Gallia County Sheriff's Depaninent that a weedeater and gas (an was stolen from
(Ill outbuilding on his property. Time of the theft is unknown.
• Little John's Citgo, Stille Route 160, Vinton, which reported to sheriff's
deputies that a driver left the store Friday afternoon without paying for $5
in~
.
DAYTON- The State Highway
Patrol is (autioning Ohioans of a
:;· 'GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police dted James .B. Morris Jr., 42, scam involving one or more persons
! Apartment 306, 553 First Ave., Gallipolis, with two counts of rheft Friday.
phone as a state trooper. on the tele• ' ·Officers also cited Corey M. Saxton, 18, 14567 SR 554, Bidwell, with representing,theinselves
Patrol investigators in the Dayton
; ;tlieft and shoplifting Friday.
·
area
are now conducting a criminal
::·· In other matters, officers ticketed Alvin R. Hylton, 37, 174 Cherry Driinvestigation
on a scam in which a ·
: ve, Gallipolis, for no operator's licen5e, and Ricky D. Manin, 35, 3487 ~
family
from
Oregon state wired
:' 141, Gallipolis, for expired tags.
.
·
:
Gallia County sheriff's deputies ·booked Thomas E. Sayre, 44, 2325 Van- $2,350 after being tpld a Vandalia
", co Road, Gallipolis, into the Gallia County Jail at 2 a.m. Satul'\lay on a charge area man whom they knew was
involved in.a crash and needed mon: ~f driving under the influence.
•
.,
ey.

Center_s closed Thursday

i

limited at Meigs ·branch office

. Firefighters put out automobile blaze

:·Pol(ee, deputies track

reports

'

ater with Chester Elementary students during the Arts in Education
program last Decembe( at the school.
As a result of the workshops, the
students created their first original
theatrical work, which focused on the
infamous Morgan's Raid which came
through Chester during the Civil
,War.
Anderson said that the cooperative
effon to bring arts programs such as
this to the schools of Meigs County
and Southeast Ohio has been ''terrifIc."
"I was astonished with the enormous (QOperative effort ·from . the ·
.school, the Riverbend Arts Council,
and tl)e Ohio Arts Coundl. A large
number of programs funded by OAC
and the' National Endowment for the
Arts go to. benefits schools such
this and can really enhanct the level
of education," Anderson said.
In March, students at Meigs Junior
High School panicipated in a twow~;ek Arts in Education program
which incorporated dance, drum rituals, and song from every aspect of
global culture by guest instructor
Yvetta, a Cleveland-based artist
known internationally for her work as
a writer, producer, director, and artist.
"Thr· 1rograms would not be
possi bk ,.,. financial assistance of
the OAC, the faculty members at the
schools, and the Appalachian Arts
Initiative. Our goal is to eventually
have the Arts in Education programs

as

Fraud op~ration .under_
investigation by patrol

,Officers cite two on theft charges

A caller to the Or~gon family
identified himself as a state trooper.

Today in hist9ry
B)"The AIIOC~ Prn1

·

Today is Sunday, June 30, the 182nd day of 1996. 'There are 184 days left
in the year.
Todafs Aighlight in History:
Twenty-five years ago, on J~;~ne. 30, 1971, the 26th Amendment to the Constitution, !Qwering the minimum voting age to 18, was ratified as Ohio became
the 38th slate to approve it.
On this date:
In 1834, the Indian Territory was created by Congress.
In 1859, French acrobat Blondin (bum Jean Francois Gravelet) (rossed
Niagara Falls on a tightrope as 5,000 SJle(tators wat(hed.
In 1870.Ada H. Kepley of Effingham, Dl., became America's first female
law S(hool graduate.
In 1906, the Pure Food and Drug Act and the Meat InsJle(tion ~~ be(ame
law.
In 1921. President Harding appoin~ former President 'l1lft chief justi(e
of the United States.
·
·
·
In 1934, Adolf Hitler began his "blood purge" of political and military
leaders in Germany. Among those killed was one-time Hitler ally Ernst
Roehm. leader of. the Nazi s(Ormtroopers.

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Bv JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Bu!llnHI Anllyat ·
NEW YORK - The latest Harvard housi11g study 'should be reassuring to homeowners who feel
they're going brokl! paying down the
mortgage while others are making a
fortune in the stock market.
The message is this: You too are
building your fortune, perha~ at a
rate greater than those who have
money to invest in stocks and mutual funds.
Does 14.8 percent a year civer a
.20-year period sound Bond to yQU? It
shoul!l, because very few professionat investors in stocks have
achieved such a level of performan(e. But that was the equity
increase for homes in Boston.
This· and other evidenCe of the
home IS the primary wealth' builder
colflcs from the annual repon on The
State of the Nation's Housing, ·pro-

as on~ path to wealth

--J-=-o--=h-..1

A. J. Rush, M.D.
Family Medicine
530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH
Accepting Appointments

(614) 441-0757

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Office Hours
Monday through Friday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

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Prouds. parents Jack and Sharon Griffith are pictured with their new arrival, .
Austin McKenzie; the 1996 Ag Baby. Also pictured are representatives from
Holzer Medical Center and the Farm Bureau..·

New arrival named

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1996AgBqby

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Wise noted that without the assistanCe of the National Endowment for
the Arts through the Appalachian Arts
Initiative and the Ohio Arts Council,
the programs which the Arts Council
administers such as Arts in Education, the Riverbend Theater Group.
the Community Band, and dance pro.grams would not be available &lt;o area
residents.
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duced by Harvard University's Joint $59,821 equity.
old problem of comparing apples tO'•
Center f()r Housing Studies.
· ~ven those Los Angeles residents oranges. Still, the two arc enoug~
.It com~ at a propitious limd 'who bought ne.lir the 1990 market alike to make observations, pro aDd:
. because, as the report notes, "reunt Jllllk have reason,to anticipate build- con, about relative merits.
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. i~l up wealth. While·equity in such
A house can be purchased on:
--C:-U-n~
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a ~omc would have fallen $6.500 by greater margin (10 percent down&gt;=
11
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1995, projections through year 2010 than could be obtained in the stock:
lll'C brighter.
market, adding enortnously to its•
· declines in,housc prius, particularly · While the report covers many ~bility to build'ecjuity. All the l!JIPre.:
in high-cost markets like Boston and aspects of ownership, including the ciation, not just 10 percent or it. goeS:
Los Angeles, have generated much growing challenge to the urban poor to the borrower.
:1
conurn abuut the erosion of home · in malting the transition from renting
Again, a house is different in lha '
equity."
to ownins, it reaffirms homeow~r some of that equity buildup is thei,
But, according to the study, spon- . faith in the house as the primary result of monthly payments on the•
mortgage. It is different also in that
sored by the Ford Foundation, even investrilcnt.
That
faith
had
been
badly
shaken
it
provides big tax deductions for
in Los Angeles, where prices dropped
sharply in the early 1990s, Ql!lners in many areas during , the past five · interest payments, even as the ~ui­
years, when some selling prices actu- · ty grows.
.
.
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might still have lots of equity. .
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ally
dropped.
It
was
further
underPerhaps
the
biggest
ad~antage
of1.
To illustrate: The owner of a Los
Angeles home pu~hased in 1975 mined by almost daily reports ·offor- a h~se ts that y~ un hve i~ it; a ~ .
with I0 percent down and a 30-year j tunes made in the rising $1oc:k mar- quahty not yet achteved by anythinJI ~
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. · · offered by Wall Street. 'It is a huse1 '
fixed-rate mortgage o~ 8.97 percent kct.
would have had $117,300 equity in · To compare gains in home equity benefit, but it comes ai ·the price of': •l
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1995. A 1985 buyer would have had tO SIO(k marlcet returns runs into that intere.st payments.
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in· place at each of the elementary
scbools in the county," said Wise.
This will be the third year for the
program at Meigs Junior High, and
its second year at Chester Elementary. Teachers at the schools will
select the visiting artists for their programs during a conference in Columbus later this summer, according to .
Wise.

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.Home equity remains

. ina Adult Division substitutes for the
·coming S(hool year:
i ABLE aide - Ri\4 Allen, Becky
'Bay, Cathy Haounond, Debra Johnson, Cindy Wilson; ComputeriBusi\ness - Julie Bays, Diane Hamilton;
Peace Officer - Clyde Beasley, Jim
Howard, Shirley Jeffers, Clint Patterson, Cofer Walls, Bill Wells, John
:Vates; ABLE instructor - Ann
·Boyd. Bon~ Crabtree, Betty Finney,
!Sherry Fisher, Helen Higgins, Sue
· Holeski, Kelly Kisner, Sue Priest,
Melody Robinson, Loretta Say lor.
Jody Walker, Chris Wakefield: Indus,trial Maintenance - Larry Bum;sardner, Vannen Crabtree, Clyde
Day, Vinson Jarrell, Carl Jividen,
Robert Muller; Auto Technology Vannen Crabtree; 'corrections David Dunn, Jim Howard, Bill Wells;
LPNINA - Susan Elliott, Barbara
.Lanier-Janes, Kim Stout; HVAC Vinson Jarrell, Carl Jividen; Business
- Jospeh Keating; Nurse aide/LPN
- Lisa Lee; Nurse aide - Rebecca
Stump; MRDDIBusiness - Roxie
Underwood.
The following hoyrly contracts

were approved by the board:
· Computer instructor - Julie
Bays, Jospeh Keatiilg: Industrial
Maintenance - Michael Bentley,
Jim Collins; Adult Clerk - CrystaI
Harman; Corrections - David Dunn;
Fire Extinguisher Richard
Eubanks; Basic Skills - Betty
Finney; Gateway instructor - Betty
Finney, Laura Justice, Lois Ihle;
PETE clerk - Crystal Harmon;
ABLE clerk - Crystal H8f1T!Oll;.
ABLE instructor - Helen Higgins,
Sue Holeski, Melody Ro~inson ,
Christine Wakefield; ABLE/JOBS
instructor - Sue Holeski; ABLE
aide - Deborah Johnson, Cindy Witson; PETE .instructor · - Kelly
Kisner, Melody Robinson; EMT
Bridge - (]ene Lyons, Steven Maffin, Helen Newland, Donald Stivers;
Gateway clerk - Michelle Mounts;
. Machinist instructor - Robert
Muller; ABLE/OED, ABLE/JOBS.
PETE coordimltor - Lili Roush;
GED alternate examiner - Steve
Saunders,
Dwight
Woods:
MRDD/Adult - Roxie Underwood;
ABLE recruiter - Jody Walker ~
Basic Skills and PETE aide - Cindy
Wilson.

SUMMER FUN- Galllpolll City DARE otrl-

cer WBYM SWMnay, left, II Mild fourth, fifth

:= -

111d 11x111 gnden In the city and 081111 Counflm IUIIIIIII'

-tY.LOcaJICfloOI dlltrlctl to b

:::roJ:~-=.v
"'.t'!::.
Ill Munlo.... Pool. Ctlllchrl ..... biel£ If to

~ g~~~~nll'ltl ot111r acllrlltu '"anlffort ·
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Gallia County's 1996 Ag Baby was born at Holz!lr Medical Center in M~trch to
·proud parents Jack and Sharon Griffith of Ewington, according to Karle- Shoemaker, GaUia.County Farm Bureau's Women's Committee chair.
Austin McKenzie Griffith weighed 7 pounds 14 ounces and was 21 inches long.
This is the fo.urth year for the Ag Baby Contest. Donating gifts to the new arrival were Bob Evans Restaurant, Gallipolis; Fruth Pharmacy of Jackson, Paul
· Davies Jewelers, Jack and JiU's, That Special Touch, Gallia County Farm Bureau,
Gabby Gang Farm Bureau Council, Friendly Farmer$ Farm Bureau Council,
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Carolyn Little and GaiDa County Extension .Homemakers.
' IUbltatiCe abuM.""'
to Wlrd tham IWIY from
perty wu held In conjunction with the OaJ.
Assisting Ms. Shoemaker were Jackie Graham, Farm Bureau Safety Chairman,
IIDGAI A1crMt1on Deplrtment and Wll lUI*·
Edte Duncan and.April Duncan, publitity chairman.
¥leiCI br the DARE==-. 8lld ltlfl and 1r.
guii'CII i t b pool.
.. forb DARE PfO"'I
Ms. Shoemaker expressed her appreciation to llolzer Medical Center and ev,.._ Ilk( •.ollter pool party lillY be held
eryooe wbo dooated gifts ·to the 1996 Ag Baby.
nMr the ind of Ju!J:(Timll Sentinel photo)
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.carl Argabrite
LETAKT, W.Va. - Carl Arg~te. Let111, died Thursday, June 27, 1996
in Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born in Clay County, he w• a son of the late Jacob ....SAnna Artu.ite.
He was a retired jeweler who owned ind operated ArJU!rite Jewelry in
New Haven, W.Va., a U.S. Muine Corps velenn of.World Wv IT, a member of Smith-Capehart American Legion Post 140, New Haven, and attended the Southern ColleJe of Watch Makin1, Memphis, Tenn.
He was also prectdc:d in death by two sisters and four brothers.
Surviving arc his wife, Betty Grimm ArJabrite; a son, Dennis Argu.ite
of Columbus; two sisters, Iva Mollollan of Akron, and Ida Law of Lorida,
A@.; th= brothers, Edward Araabrite and Clarence ArJabrite, both of Akron,
and William Argabrite of Ketterinll; sisters-in-law and brothers-in-law, Kathleen Keams of Letart. and Shvon and Gary Fields and David K. and Beverly Roach, all of New Haven; his mother-in-law, Mabel Roach of Middleport; and several nieces and nephews.
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Graveside services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Graham Cemetery, woth
the Rev. William "Bud" Hatfield officiating. There will be no calling hours . .
Arrangements arc by the Foglesong Funeral Home, Mason, W.Va.

Tommy Wayne McGuire

Phyllis ·E. Russell
LEON, W.Va. - Phyllis Evadine Russell, 62, Leon, died Friday, June
28, "1996 in Holzer Medical Center.
· Born July 16, 1933 in Leon, daughter of the late Walter and Mabel Rollins
Knapp, she was a retired nursing assistant at Pleasant Valley Hospital, and
attended the Yauger Community Church in Leon.
·
She was also preceded in death by a son, Roy Stephens; four half-sisters,
Gladys Durst, Edna Durst, Wilma Gibbeaut and Imogene Hart; and a half.brother, Eugene Knapp.
·
Surviving are her husband, Eadker Russell Sr.; a son, Eadker Jr. (Carolyn)
Russell. of Leon; three grandchildren and a great-grandchild; a sister, Nola
McDade of Leon; and two brothers, Dorsel Knapp of Leon, and Otho Knapp
of Barberton.
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· Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home, Point
· Pleasant, W.Va .• with Rev. Herman H. Jqrdan officiating. Burial will be in
the Yauger Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call at the funeral home from 5-9
p.m. Sunday.
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'007' producer Broccoli dies
B£VERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)Hollywood pnxlucer Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli, whose 17 James Bo.nd
movies matched !llave 007 wtth
beautiful women, diabolical villains
and gee· whiz gadgets for three
thrilling decades, has died at 87. .
B.uccoli died Thursday at hts
Beverly Hills home. He had undergone he3rt bypass surgery a year ago.
The James Bond movies, inspired
by the Ian Aeming novels about the
urbane British spy, is the most. suecessful longest-running film series of
· all tim~.
Broccoli successfully kept the
entertaining packages of adventure,
sex, posh backgrounds, gadgetry and

wit coming even though the actor
playing Bond changed several times
·and the supply ofAemong novels was
exhausted.
·- · Broccoli and GD-l&gt;roducer !i~
Saltzman .began the Bond _~es on
1962 w~~ "~· No.". It os swd '!'at
Broccoh s wtfe, looking at audibon
films, saw the then-unknown Se~
Connery on the screen and ~~d,
"Take that one! He's gorgeous!
The ~lm made Connery a star, and
he c~nbnued as B.ond ·~ films sue~
· as From Russoa Wtth Love,
"Goldfinger" and "Thunderball."
. Broccoli and Saltzman parted
ways in 1976.

--Area News in Brief:-.....
Two cited in alleged Portland theft
POMEROY- Two Middleport men have been arrested in connection
with the alleged theft of gasoline and motor·oil from a Portland area residenoe, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
According to reports, 18-year-old Ronnie J. Johnson and a 17-year-old
youth were arrested on charges of petty theft at the ~sidence of James
Turner, Portland Road, on Thursday night
·
Johnson is free on bond from·the Meigs County Jail, and is scheduled
to appear in.Meigs Coun~y Coutt.
Juven!le was released ~ the custody of his parents, pendtng a heartng tn Me1gs County Juvemle Coun.
Soulsby said.
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Deputies jail ares man for truck theft
POMEROY - A 29-year-old Pomeroy man faces charges of grand
theft auto following his arrest in the alleged theft of a 19~.1! Chevy pickup from a Pomeroy residence late Friday, according to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
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According to· reports, Linda Francisco of Pomeroy iCported the vehicle stolen at 11 :40 p.m. Friday.
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While driving an unmartced vehicle enroute to the sherift's offi~, Meogs
sheriffs dispatcher Donnie Mohler spotted the vehtcle, driven by
Edward J. King, !raveling north on State Route 143 at Wolfe Pen.
Mohler followed the truck while a marked cruiser was enrou(!:. King
later turned onto Arnold Road off 143, losing control' in a curve a short
distance out the road 'and striking a tree.
King was arrested at the scene and jailed on charges of DUI, driving
.
under suspension, failure to control, and grand theft auto.
Damage to the truck was moderate. No lnJUnes were reported 111 the

$/,;~iff
eyes leads in club bre~k-ln :
· RACINE- Meigs County sheriffs depuues arc conbnuong to mvestigatc an break-in at the Racine Gun Club lat_e last week, according to Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
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Accordi11g to reports, 65 cases of beer were taken sorneurne between
Wednesday and Thursday after the fi'ont door was forced open at the Nease
Hollow Road building.
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Several suspects have been questioned in the incident since it Wl!S firsl
reported to the sheriffs department Friday morning. Based on infotma'tion that the department has received, arrests are expected to be made soon
in the case, according to Soulsby.
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Suspect held in post office robbery
TORCH - Athens County sheriff's deputies, alorig with U.S. Postal
Seo:vice agents, arrested an 18-year-old Hockingport man i~ con~tion
with the June 18 robbery of the Torch Post Office and store 111 whtch the ·
owner was assaulted.
Brian R. Ackley, 201 Jet Star Drive, is cluitzed with aggravated robbery, a felony of the first degree, and is being held in the Athens County
Jail under $500,000 bond.

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Sunday, June 30, 1 •
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Bloodmobile
collects 65
units in Gallia
GALLIPoUS - Seventy-two
Gallia countians presented themselves !Gdonate blood during Thursday's.June visit of the Red Cross TriState Regional Bloodmobile at St.
Peter's Episcopal Church.
. Red Cross officials obtained 65
units. There was one first-time donor.
Mary James was chairman. Oth~rs volunteering their services were
Janet Wetherholt, Ellabelle McDonald, Evelyn North, Vtrginia Wright,
Mrs. Mike Pasquale, Mrs. Margaret
Ehman, Mrs. Keith Brandeberry,
Mrs. Evelena Williams and Mrs.
Raymond Jennings.
Donors presenting themselves
were:
Shirley Angel, Lora Smith, Kenneth R. Fanner, Charles Sibley, Ray·
mond C. Weiher Jr., J(eith E. Snyder,
Robert L. Lucas, Jacqualine S.
Vance, John H. Roush and Lee F.
Burcham;
Mary 1. Scarberry, Gregory L.'
Kratzer, Barbara C. Fulks, Dawn E.
Clarte, Bobby J . .clark, Richard P.
Speirs, Henry K. Milam, Darlene S.
Milam, Barbara A. Mills and Roy.J.
Piersdn;
Joseph P. Greeqlee, C115by Meadows UI, Daniel L. Carter, Ralph L.
Bennett, Travis B. Hutchins, Allyson
Thomas, Paulette M: Saunders, Ruth
A:. Greenlee, Gladys L. Medas and
Robin L. Pasquale;
Charles R. Landon, Walter J.
Pope, Kimberly A. Gillespie, Alan R.
Dean, Lawrence W. Phillips, Frank
E. Na'skey, Janet S. Williams, Belinda L. Broyles, Roben T. Polcyn and
Eileen W. Mink;
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Barbara A. Wallen, Usa 1. Caldwell, Amanda F. Darst, Farrell A.
Houck, Lawrence M. Tawney, Henry E. Dillon, Clarence B. Stout,
Shirley McDonald, Grenn H. Ward
and Dorothy L. Meeks;
. Harold E. Whitt, Augusta V.
Stephens, James W. Ypung, Douglas
Spurlock, Ronald R. Plantz, Sandra
K. Carroll, Vernon W. Burnheimer, .
Kimberly S. Schuette, Richard L.
Neal and Dorothy S. Esque;
David E. Clay, Wanda J. Connelley, Lisa D. Woolum, Teresa A.
Dayis, Peggy A. Phillips, Ricky A.
Swain, Gary L. Lyons, Dorothy L.
Perkins, WaY.ne R. King, Marilyn R.
King, Emelyn Scarberry and Paul W.
Morgan Jr. ·
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Meigs EMS runs
POMEROY- Units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service
recorded si~ ca11s for assistance Friday. Units responding included:
SYRACUSE
11:31 a.m., East Main Street,
Agnes Di:s:on, Veterans Memorial ·
Hospital. Assisted by Pomeroy Squa&lt;l

Hospital news

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Bombing su!;pect's lawyers target FBI agents act1ons
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ty lANDY IHORE
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Ptosecutors said they were keeping her in ~tlve c~y bee•nse she
. . .oct I d PI II Wtlw
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was left stranded in thls counur._p,n:gnant and Wllbout frionds or II!OIICy. .
DI!NVER- The wifo of Oklahoma City bombin1 S111p0C1 Terry Nidlols
Mrs. Nichols "saw a cruis rurun1 down ... and the Jovernment offered
teltlfiod Friday she did not completely undel$laad the f&lt;XIIII she signed allow- her aa umbrella.' ' prosecut~ Joe Hartzler said after the hearinJ.
illl fodenl-aents to sevch her husband's truck and house.
Nichols and his friend Tunothy McVeigh could face dcatb if convicted
~ys claim evidetice.reS..ttina from the search sho.ld he of the April19, 1995, federal buildina bombing, which killed 168 people and
IIJUUig that the WIUT8nt was illegally obtained.
injured more than SOO.
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· . Mlrife Nichols laid PBIIIICftts told her it would like time to ICI a tourt·
. The defe111e has asked U.S. District JUdge Richard MICsc:h to throw out
t&lt;bDroved search warrant, and suggested she could expedite marters by sign- key evidence gathered from Nichols' home, including bomb-making ingreiiij the forms.
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dients. They also want to exd ude statements Nicho!s made to FBI agents
1 "I wu cooperating mainly ~ause I wanted them to know I had noth- during a nine-llour interview. and the clothing McVe1p was weanng when
·i!ll to hide," said Mn. Nichols, a 23-year-old native of the Philippines y;ho he was arrested.
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· t6et her husband through a mail-order bride agency.
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Mrs. Nichols said she and her daughter accompanied Nichols to the pohce
: "I said, 'OK. I waat to cooperall:, • hoping they will allow me to leave 5tation two days after the bombing, when he heard·on television that he was

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J,!!:!:!nse

she said. Other federal agents came and went until about 9 p.m., when tbey
asked lier to sip the search consent forms.
Mrs. Nichols said she asked them to get pennission from her husband,
which they' said they would, but they told her they needed her sign~, ~·
Later, the agents told Mrs. Nichols her husband would not be leavana wolh
her because " he is a material witness," she said.
Earlier that day, FBI agent James Reighder said he had spotted plastic bwrels through a ripped window shade in Nichols' garage thaf resembled the
· containers believed used in the bombing.
The couple, w))o were mamed in 1990 in the Philippines, have tw:o children, Nicole, 2-112, and Christian, 6 months. A 2-year-old son suffooeted in
a plastic laundry bag in 1993.
Defe11se attorneys sought to portray Mrs. Niehols as a young woman with
limited knowledge of English and United States laws, who came to think of
·said. ·'He was e. He's Just anxious to know,what's FBI agents as her friends during her time in custody.
'Sbe said she regarded Eugene Thomeczek, an FBI agent who was a ncargoing on."
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Nichols was escorted to the basement and interviewed fonine hours while constant comDanion. as a father.
Mrs. Nichols was released a day after meeting with one of he,r husband's
his wife remained in a windo wless 'room with a member of the u.s. Army,
attorneys for the first time. ~ agents returned $4,800.

~fter
w~.~ =~=.~i~.
I AI·· thlll" But she said she did not entirely understand what she was sign•

UGHTBAR DONATION -The M1lga County Sherlfl'l 0epertment wu the r.cJp11ftt of •
n-llghtbltr tor • eherlft'a cllpli
cruiMr
almlllir to lite' one ahown
The llghlboir
Wll donlled by Fllher Fu....t Home of Middleport In recognition for ful'lll'lll Mcort IIIYice .

•bon.b•••t

~ Federal agents kept Mrs. Nichols in their custody for 33 days, shuttling
he betw
· h · · aft he d
b d
41 ported the
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an. her hus an ' now 're
to

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prOvided by the dlpiJbiiMt. Sheriff ....,...,
Soulaby ..ld • new llghtblir con. llbout

left.,. fllllWIII hcime

$1,200. From

He'nngto::~ ';~:=··tat~~:.

emp~oyte:

p
. al

JlmMAcne, fuMI'II homeown« B~ FlaM
er, Soullby, Mtd tun.,.I home employ-t

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Meigs County Court c~~es resol~ed .
O.vld Jahn~ •ltd Tony H•wk.
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POMEROY _ The following
cases were resolved recendy in the
Meigs County Coun of Judge Patrie;!~;
H. O'B nen.
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Fit1ed were: Donald A. Hartung,
Middlepon, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
Richard S. Bearbs, Pomeroy, seat
belt, $25 plus costs; assured clear diS:
lance, $20 plus .costs; Michael W.
Cosgray, Milford, speed, $30 plus
costs; Bruce A. Johnson, Coolville,
seat belt, $2S plus costs; speed, $30
plus costs; Gerald Marte Klein, Punta Gorda, Fla., speed, $30 plus costs;.
BrianT. Jolly, Wapakoneta, seat belt,
$15 plus costs; Robin L. Wood, Rut· land, failure to control, $20 plus
costs; Kevin D.. Burns, Cincinnati,
speed, $30 plus costs;
A. Thomas Lowery, Syracuse,
speed, $30 plus costs; Ian M. Beeker, Cincinnati, seat belt, SIS plus
costs; Donald M. Vickers, Wellston,
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Alton B.
Crothers, Lisbon, seat belt, $25 plus
costs; Russell G. Ellis. Glouster,
spCed, $30 plus costs; James D.
Stewart, Columbus, ·seat belt, $2S
plus costs; Jerry L. Cunningham,
Athens, speed, $30 plus costs; Daniel
L. Webb, Springfield, speed. $30 plus
costs; Lyle B. Haning, Albany, speed,

Alleged killer
accepted arrest
COLUMBUS (AP) - The suspect in a shooting spree that kil'ed
· four people and wounded two others
seemed to accept the fact that he had
been caught when II!: was read his
rights, a police officer testified.
Ashland police Officer.David Lay .
testified Friday in a pretrial heating
before Franklin County Common
Pleas Judge David W. Pais.
Lay said Jerry Hessler, who was
shot by a suspected victim, complimented the technique of the man who
shot him before he was caught.
"He said, 'The guy's good. Tell
him he's good. He got me from a
cross-position- center mass -just
like they teach you,'" L,ay said.
Hessler is charged in a 12-count
indictment, including charges of
aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, aggravated burglary
and improperly discharging a firearm.
If convicted, he could be sentenced to
death.
He is accused of killing a Columbus family, Brian and Tracey Stevens
and their 5-month-old daughter,
Amanda; and a Worthington resident,
.
Thane Griffin. Hessler is charged•

wit~~:~d!';! ::':e~~:r:~~~~~d•

Diane i.. Maynard, McConnelsvill ·
· $30 pillS costs;
Alben L. Curtis, l'llmeroy, no mud speed. $30 plus costs;
flaps, $20 plus costs; Mona G. PowMichael T. Elkins, Cutler, se
ell, Syracuse, seat belt, $2S p1us belt, SIS plus costs; Cathy S. Elkin '
costs; Gardener Succop, Parteers- Cutler, speed, $30 pl\ls coSts; Janie· ·
burg, W.Va.; speed, $30 plus costs; J. Vannostran, Canton, speed, $
Thomas F. Fannon, Dublin, speed, plus costs; William M. Zimman
$30 plus costs; Richard Halsey, Columbus, speed, $30 plus costs
Coshocton, assured clear distance, · .Margaret Ann Hanshaw, Huntingto
$20 plus costs; Joqathan R. Sims, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; Chad '
Nelsonville, speed, $30 plus. costs; Head, Proctorville, speed, $30 plu
James N. Barrow, Athens, speed, $30 1costs; John R. Felker, Point Ple'158n~
plus costs; RiclcA Kendrick, Hunt- 1W.Ya., speed, $30 plus cQSIS; ~ich
ington, W.Va., speed, $30 plus costs; C. Schmidt, Cincinnati, speed, $3
Daniel A. Vance, Gallipolis, plus costs;
,
Speed, $30 plus ~osts; Shelby A.
Pamela E. Grim, Albany, crimin~
Clark, Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus damaging, costs, 30 days jail su .
costs; Marte G, Strater, Wellston. pended, two years probation, restitu
speed, $30 plus costs; T. Scott tion; ciiminal trespass, costs, 10 days;
Adams, Wellston, speed, $30 plus . jail suspende4. two years probation~
coSts; Gary L. Kelly, Grove City, restraining order issued; Daniel W.•
speed, $30 plus costs; Daryl A. Pendleton, Albany, driving under •
Smith, Ewington, seat belt, SIS plus influence, $850 plus costs, 10
costs; Douglas A. Ward, Mc~hur, jail suspended to three days, !IU··Cia:~
· seat belt, '$25 plus costs; Richard. P. OL suspension, one year p~::-::::~
Kremer, Chillicothe, seat belt, $25 $4SO of fine and jail suspended
plus costs; Indira R. Gibson, Cincin- completion of reme~ial dri
nati, speed, $30 plus costs; Chad E. course;
Hunt, Columbus, speed, $30 plus
Sandra D. Distelhorsf, Ka&lt;:on~··~·
costs;
•
seat belt, $25 plus costs; I:oretta
Charles Brown, Pottsville, speed, tdcKnight, Pomeroy, no chil~
$30 plus costs; William E. ,Bowles, restraint, $2S suspended, costs;
Mason, W.Va.,leftofcenter,$20plus belt, $25 plus costs; Nicholas
costs; failure to control, $30 plus McKnight. Pomeroy, seat belt.
. costs; Angelll M. Sohar, Medina, plus costs; Bradley S. Iono,l:l
speed, $30 plus costs; David W. Bar- Reedsville, failure to control,
ber, Cincinnati, speed, $30 plus costs; · plus costs; Annette M. uar·e,.,,
Roger A. Milliron, Gallipolis, seat. Pomeroy, seat belt, $25 plus ms;. ~o:
belt, $2S plus costs; Eric J. Hollon, Daniel E.' €arsey, Columbus,
Long Bottom, seat belt, $25 plus commercial drivers licensefcombinacoSts; Tohy A. Hysell, Westerville, tion vehicle, $75 plus cos~; Charh:si!
failure to display registration, $30 M. Wal~er Jr., Cheshire, scat belt, $15
plus costs; Doug F. Skinner, Athens, plus costs; John R. Young, Chester,
seat belt, $1 S plus costs;
improper bac~ing, $25 plus costs;
William R. Sherman, Medway,
Don L. Cleary, Athens, failure to
seat belt, $25 plus costs; Patricia Y. yield, cos(\ only; Robert F. Dickens,
Bradley, Zanesville, seat belt, $15 Rutland, driving under . financial
plus costs; Kathryn E. Sherman, responsibility action suspension,
Huntington, W.Va., speed, $30 plus SISO plus costs, five days jail ancj
costs; Debbie G. Smith, Reedsville, $100suspended if valid OLpresentspeed, $30 plu~ costs; Randi A. ed within 90 days, two years probaWright, Blacl\lick, speed, $30 plus lion; seat belt, $25 plus costs; e~pired
costs; Travis A. Strawser, Cireleville, registration, $20 plus costs;
seat belt, $1 S plus costs; Todd Davis,
Ironton, seat belt, $25 plus costs;
1

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hospital after he ' was apprehended '1..,____:3!!1!1;!11!03~---.1
and police discovered he was shot. l"
With a nurse present, Hessler com- nr--....,...--~-----~!!!!1!~~=::=:====~
plimented his shooter, Douglas Staaton, Lay said.
· Orqp by for a free
Stanton, of ~bland, had fired at
hearing screening by our ·
Hessler after Hessler kicked in his
back door, shot at him and refused to
qualified ~earing health '
leave, police said. Stanton had armed
care prpfessionals and
himself after authorities warned him
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Ashland.
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MIDDLEPORT
8:03 a·.m., Mill Street, Ruby
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~~~.1-

Trooper's
killer gets
sentence.
of death

ASHLAND (AP)- An Ashland
County jury on Sallllday recommended the deatb sentence fot'a man
who shot and killed a state trooper.
Common Pleas Judge Roben E.
Henderson will sentence Maxwell
White Jr. on July 10. Henderson caa
either accepr the recommendation or
reduce the death sentence to life in
prison with parole possible in 20 or
30 years.
White, 31, of Reynoldsburg, was
convicted by the same jury on June
19. He was found guilty of auravated murder, abduction and illegal
firearms possession in the death of
Trooper James Gross, '},7. Gross was ·
killed during a traffic stop on InterPATRJOT - Tommy Wayne "Tombstone" McGuire •.4S. 1642 Cremeens state 71 near Ashland.
Road, Patriot, died Friday, June 28, 1996 at his residence.
White stood in the courtroom
Born March 31, 1951 in Hvrison Township, Gallia County. the son of with his hands crossed at his waist
Lester and Viola Lewis McGuire, he had been a furnace tender at BorgWarner and his head slightly titled back. He
Automotive for 17 years.
showed no reaction.
· A U.S.Air Force veteran of the Vietnam era, he was a member of the VicJean White, his mother, sobbed in
tory Baptist Church of Crown City, die CD Gang of Gallipolis.
.
the arms of her daughter, Donie, as
Surviving in addition to his parents arc his wofe, Carolyn Kay Rice other family members huddled and
McGuire, whom he mvried Nov. 22, 1974 in Cohunbus; three daughters. tried to protect each other from
Amethyst (Jay Dee) Cochran, Christine McGuire and Sarah McGuire, all of media cameras. They Ieft ,.__
""' court- ·
Patriot; a son, Tommy McGuire of Patriot; a granddaughter; three br~llhers, house without commenting.
Robert (Rhonda) McGuire of Crown City, and Dennis (Gwenn) McGuore and
·Gross' family, separated from the
Brian (Sharon) McGuire, both of Gallipolis; and a sister, Marilyn (Marte) Fos- Whites by a courtroom aisle, held
ter of Conyers, Ga. .
.
hands and gave satisfied looks.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Willis Funeral Horne, woth the Rev. Gross' wife, Veronica, cried freely
Gary Warner officiating. Burial will be in the Ridgelawn Cemetery, Mer- when the recommendation was read.
cerville. Friends may call at the funeral home from 6-9 p.m. Sunday.
They lefi without commenting.

..

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Friday admissions - Mamie
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Friday discharges -. none.
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Vital clues
unearthed
at scene
of attack

Hershey issues

•••

•

' WASHINGIDN (AP) - With the
Army detailee .,vho gatheRd hundreds of FBI files for the Clinton
While House refusing to say any
mare j\ublicly, a Secret Service agent
is raisinll questions about the vei'IICity of testimony by the 111a11's boss.
Craig Livingstone, the former
White House personnel security
chiet testified to two congressional
pane ' this week that he had known
nolh tg about AnthQny Marceca's
getti1g background files of former
Seen tary of. State 1ames,A. Baker Ill
and more than 400 other Republican
appointees.
" l was monilied" earlier this
monm "once it became apparent
what we had.'' Livingstone told the
· Sena e Judiciary Committee at a
heari 1'g Friday.
" 1 never thought we had 300 to
.400 . iles that were not part of" the
CiintJn administration, said Living· stone. who resigned Wednesday at a
Hou' e hearing on the conttoversy.
L•vingstone's statements were in
line with the position of the White
Hou· e, which is portraying the
impr Jptr file-gathering solely as a
bure ucratic mistake.

threat Friday that turned ·out to' be a
hoax - though Americans in
Dhahran have been asked.not to leave
their bases in military clothes and to
use civilian cars. 1be Saudis have
also boosted security.
"We ourselves are extra · vigilant," sald Capt. Scott Vadnais, a U.S.
Air Force spokesman.
Suspicion is focused on Muslim
militants who want to drive the
r\)ughly 5,000 U.S. troops out of the
kingdom, home to Islam's holiest
shrines. American officials doubt
several claims of responsibility by
previously unknown groups.
Investigators have some evidence
linking the attack to a bombing in
Riyadh, the Saudi capital, that killed
five Americans and two Indians in
November, Perry said Friday.

cream recall

HEI{SHEY, Pa. (AP)- hershey announced Friday it is voluntarily recall·
ing its chocolate chip cookie dough-flavored ice cream because the label doesn't I'J'I'perly warn people who are allergic to eggs.
People with egg allergies "run the risk of serious or life-threatening allergic reactions" if they eat the ice cream, which contains liquid pasteurized
eggs, an ingredient not listed on the label, Hershey Creamery Co. said.
The recall involves:
• Hershey Ice Cream Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough half-gallons with code
dates 5AI7, SNOB, 5K07, 6Dll, 6024. 6E23. 6P17 and 6P27 on end flaps.
. , • Hershey Ice Cream Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough square pints with code
dates 5Al6, 6Dl2, 6EOI, 6POI, 6017 and 6SIO on top flaps.
• All Hershey Ice Cream Chocolate Chip Ci&gt;Okie Dough super premium
pints.
• Any Hershey Ice Cream three-gallon bulk container that does not have
an ingredient label on the outside of the coqtainer.
The ice cream was distributed in Connecticut. Delaware, Kentucky, MassachuSCIIS, MarylaJ'Id, Maine, Michigan, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New
)ersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania. Rhnde Island, Tennessee, Virginia,
Verm~nt. ~ashington,
and We.st Virginia.

But Secret Se~ice special aaent
Arnold Cole, who had supervised the
•service's White House conrrol oper·
allons, testified ICpU'IIely at Friday's
·bearing that Uvinptone admitted
privately earlier this month that the
White House was 111 fault in collect1ing the FBI files.
; According 10 Cole, Livingstone
' met with him on 1une 7 - the day
news of the file-gathering surfacecl and acknowledged that the White
House had relied on an outdated
Secret Service list of names to get the
FBI files.
"We just wanted you guys to
know that we weren't blaming the
Secret Service. Using the old list was
our fault," Cole said Livingstone told
him.
Cole quoted LiviJiistone as saying, "We had the current list you guys
. gave us. 1 don't know what happened."
,
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the
Judiciary Commiuee's chairman,10ld
reporters later that Cole's testimony
"blows ·away the theory" thai the
q1es affair was an innocent mistalte.
• At the least, it is gross incompetence, and it may be something mucll

R~a· Mark Poi1ugal (right), who
alngle In the filth Inning, geta away from
, 1 the tag of Chicago catcher Scott Servala and ~ during Satur·
•· clay'a Nllllonal League game 11n Cincinnati, where the Recla won ~
?

GETS AWAY -The

ittc lldvancild on Eric
'• 5. (AP)

~

CINCINNATI (AP) -

Eric

- from Jeff Shaw in the eighth to
cui itto 9-5.
"
: ~ ·loaded doubles -in a five-run fifth
For the second straight game, the
·' inning that ~wept the Cincinnati Cubs failed to hold an early lead.
•, Reds td their seventh straight victo- They wasted a 2-0 first-inning lead
.l i'y, 9-5 over the Chicago Cubs on Friday night and lost 7-4.
' Saturday.
This time, they took a 3-0 lead in
-; : The Reds mau:hed their season- the third as Campbell and Brian
' best winning'streak and improved to McRae singled and Ryne Sandberg
two games under .500 (36-38) for the doubled them home. Sosa singled
first time since May 12. The defend- ,one out later for the third run.
ing NL CentJ:al champions have
Campbell got two outs in the botbeen as many as II games under · tom ofthe third, then gave up a triple
.500 this month.
to Thomas Howard and Boone's
Mark Portugal (4-5) allowed five homer to right, which stayed fair by
hits over seven innings in 92-degree a few feet.
·
heat· to win his third conseCutive
Yankees 4; Orl,.es 3
s~. The right-hander also had a pair
At New York, A.ndy Pettitte
•
•
?f singles in the five-run fifth.
became the American League's first
Culls staner Mike Campbell· left 12-gameWitlher Satutday, allowihg
t'he gatlkwilhla'J-2 'lead afiet strik- only three hits over se~eri fnnings as
:.ing-blit in 'the tOp of the fourth. the New York Yankees beat the Bal; Campbell _hjld tig~llless, in his ri-ht timore Orioles 4-3. · "
By JOE KAY·
~!bow and will fly to Chicago for an · - Pettitte (12-4) walke(J one and
CINCINNATI (AP) - Barry
struck out four, throwing 97· pitches Larkin slid in hard as he tried to steal
1 ~xamina.ti11n today.
1 • · Jim Bullinger (3-6) gave up Hal " and showing no aftereffects from the
second. Boos filled Riverfront StaMorris' game-tying single in ~ left elbow stiffness that caused him dium as soon umpire Jim Quick
fourth , . t~en set up the decisive to be held back in the Yankees'·rota- made his call.
inning by giving up a leadoff single lion.
"He's out!" Michael Fraser
-to Portugal in the fifth. A pair of
New York eKpanded its lead over yelled into his micropho!'•· "The
walks loaded the bases with one out Baltimore in the Al East to S 112 crowd is angry."
· ·
· and brought on reliever Kent Bot· games in front of 45,29S. the thirdWith that, the six-year-old boy
tenfield.
largest crowd at Yankee Stadium this · fromCana4aended his one inning of
Reggie Sanders grounded to third season.
.
play-by-play for the Fox Sports
baseman Leo Gomez, but catcher
John Wetteland allowed Bobby
Scott Servais dropped the low ·throw Bonilla's eighih home run with one
·, ·home for an err91 that l_et Portugal ·out in the ninth, a three-run·shot to
.. score ·for a·4-3lead. Davis followed · right that made i14-3. But he retired
:: with a ground-rule double for two B.J. Surhoff and Mike Devereaux for
:. more runs, and Morris was inten- . his major-league-leading 25th save
WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. (AP) ·: , lionally walked to re-load the bases. in 27 opportunities.
.
•
Olivedined the first pitch to leftMike Mussina ( 10-5) allowed David Green, the most prolific pole
: center for another ground-rule dou- only one hit in the first three innings winner in the NASCAR B.usch
ble an~ an S-3 lead.- The catcher before the Yankees scored three Grand National Series the past three
added a sai:rifice fly in the seventh. times in the fourth and once in the years, did it again Saturday, pulling
a surprise to lead qualifying for the
Morris 'went 3-for-3, and the fifth.
lysol 200 at Watkins Glen lnterna·
Reds had II hits. Bret Boone also hit
Cardinals 6, Pirates S
·
a twO-run homer iri the third off
AI St. louis, Brian Jordan's tie- tional.
Green.
driving
a
Chevrolet,
shat·
Campbell, his eighth.
breaking single with the bases loaded
Sammy Sosa and Luis Gonzalez and one out in the bottom of the tered the 2.45-mile road course track
I hit'solo homers on consecutive pitchninth inning·gave the St.louis Car- · qualifying record with a lap of
l es -'- Sosa's 25th, donzalez's sixth dinals a 6-5 victory over the Pitts- 115.955 mph, besting the previous
record of 115.309 that was set last
l ·I·
·
burgh Pirat~s on Saturday.
year by Terry Labonte. 1'he race is
'~ ' Pavis and Joe Oliver· hit bases- ·

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tiJou8ht I might be the next cuualty."
'
Graf, goi111 for her seventh tide in
nine years, waited and waited for
Sampru to tiqish, then lost the firsl
nine points against NicOle Arendt
before crushin1 her 6-l, 6-1.
"I'don't think it ever happened to
me, that somebody cheered when I
finally made a point," Graf said of
the crowd's reaction to her slow stan.
"It WIU ex1remely cold. Because of
Pete's match, I warmed up quite a
few times, but maybe not enough."
Graf didn 'I limp or look any less
fleet than usual, although she sport·
ed a white bandage the size of a large
Band-Aid just below the left kneecap
she injurea in an exhibition two
weeks ago.
"It keeps my knee a litde bit l!etter together," Graf said.
German compatriot Anlce Huber,
. CHILLIO,... ~uatnill'l Pa,.-!Ck R.n.r w,.,_ hlmMif In loRie to ~
the women's No.5 seed, became the
IMp WMtn during . . ~ llllltcfllgltnlt SW114 1rlend'a Mere
latest victim of bad luck in the tourROIIM on Wlmbfedon'a Number One Court llturdly, which ......
nament as she suffered a stomach ill-4-6.8-3, M, 1-1,1-3. TamparltU.,.. aklill by e.bluatery wtnd
ness and had to take a break because
ortglnetlng from loel8nd drCJPI*I to the mld-1111 upper 80s, chlllng ' '
of dizziness during a 7-6 (7-3), 6-1
pllyen lrtd IPIIIriiOr.. (~)
loss to Ai Sugiyama of Japaq. ,
"I never had something like ·
this," Huber said. "I was very dizzy five points to close out a 6-1, 6-3, 6Iosito Andre Agassi in the final Tour
and it was black in front ofi~Jy eyes. . 4 victqry over co111patriot Luke Mil·
years and,to Siunpras in Ihe final two
I had to take the break. I was so hap- ligan in a mau:h suapen4ed lly rain
years ago. "It would be a relief to
py to sit for a few ,minutes. II went . Friday evening. . ·
, ·
win it. lt's' llke I have a tili, stone '
away in the second set, but I just bad
'IWo.morueeded IMI! bowed out
inside my shoe, and I want to take it
no feeljng for the ball."
..
. - No. II Wayne .~ira and No.
ollt. A COI!Jilc of times I've come '
In other women's matches, No.6- 12 Man: Rosset-lxith in five sets
close but not Close enousll. I think if
Jana Novotna beat Ruxandra
Ferreira's loss to Maanul · I.won it•.l'd say,'Yes, now I did it.'
Dragomir 6-3, 6-1; No. 12 Kimiko Gui!Afsson left only one seeded · Maybe I ·could play easier.
·
Date downed Kristie Boogen 2-6,6- player- No. 13 Todd Martin- in
. "When I come hen! and I hear,
4, 6-2; and No. 16 Martina Hjngis the bottom half of 11\e draw lluit
'Winner, 1992, Agassi,' I always
· beat Linda Wild 6-3, 2-6, 6-1. Becker eir.ited. That means at least
think it should have been me: Not so
Meredith McGrath equaled her best one 111111 will be appearing in a.Wim- ·. in '94. Pete played 100 well."
'
Grand Slam performance by advanc· · bledoh final for.the firal time.
No. 10 seed Michael Stich, the
ing to the fourth round with a 7-S, 6. '1WO-time finalist and No. 4 seed
1991 Wimbledon .champion who
7 (4-7), 6-2 victory over Nancy Gomsllvanisevic, the other top eight failecj to set past the first round the
Feher.
·
·
· ·' ·
' ·IM!ed left in the toiii'Dameilt besides . las\ two -years, also·avoid~ th~ upset
The q1.1ickest outing of the day, , , -~prls. beat Alexander Volkov 7ttend with a 6-3,4-6, ~2. 6-3 victoand Wimbledon history, took place 6 (7-3), 7-S, 6-3. Martin beat Renzo
ry over Australiap Sandon Stolle .
when play began .on CenlrC Court. Furlan 7-6 (7-1 ), 6-4, 6-2. .
"I think the All England, qub
Tim Henman, Btilain!s last hpPe this'
"This is the tournament{ want to
sho11ld IIJ!lk at the dra..t,\ho)l/ dt :.Vas
year, served one game and a lOla! of Wiq so 11"\lly," said1lvanisevic, who
111dde thii year," *ich said. •
'

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.Six-year~old cantldilln,·cal~$ Rldt :9a1f1e
broadcast of a gable ·s uurday • innilljofthc!Reds'9-3yi~Qver . wentonthef~eldbef~ag~Fri- '
between the Cincinnad Reds and the · the Cubs.
· ,
. day 'nisin and ·was introduced to .
Chicago Cubs.
, '
''Our goal was not to lind the ll!'XI ' 'sotlle' of the players. He particularly ·
Fraser. who lives in the Toronto Vip Scully or Mel Allen,'' producer • , enjoyed the fireworks that accom- . ·
suburb of North·York, e-m..led his '. Michael Weisman ilai~. ·"Our goal panied _every Reds' home run, and
wish to be a sjlortscasler through · wa5 to look at the game throul!h tlte was surprised to see that the cotton
Fox's Internet site·, pan o( a JITO!IID- innllcent eyes of six-year:old. to go candy at Riverfront S~i~m is.blue.
tion for its hal(;'hour pregame ·sho)IV back to the time whe!l ':"e were all . · On Siturdiy, he learned about •
aimed at kids.
·
kids,and went to the ballparlc. fqr the • television. Fraser, who
be in the
Fox fle\¥ him to Cincinnati, intto- ' firsl _time and took in all the s!ghts · second ·grade next school year, got
duced him .to the players and save · an.d sounds."
·.,
makeup put on- "I must hlye felt
himthechancetodescribethesixth
fmer had a lot to take in. He · like a girl"- and ·sweated 'in' 92degree heal a~aiting his turn

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' Galli
. polis

poles list.
.
II 5.572.
"Most of my poles have been on
Rounding out the lop I 0 were
shon tracks.'' he said. "To win. the Michael Waltrip, Kenny Wallace, ,
pole here on a road course, with the . Jeremy Mayfield, Labonte and Mike
little bit of road course experience I McLaughlin.
have, I personally think it's good to
Green, the series point leader and
accompl.ish." ·
winner of last weekend's event at
•, .Joe-Nemechek, also in a Chevro- · Myrtle Beach. S.C., enters theevent
•let, w.. second at 115.841, with • with a 106-poipt lead over Randy ·
, Ricky Craven third 11 115.657 in a LaJoie. LaJoie crashed his car in turn
Chevrolet. Road racing specialist one on his qualifying lap and will
Butch Leitzinger, driving a Ford. was ·stan 36th in tuday's race in a backfourth at 115.648, with Hermie up car.
Sadler fifth in a Chevrolet at
LaJoie was not injured in; the
crash.
,
,

·

At the recent U.S. l'rack and Field building.
topped and it will end ther'e," sai!i 1 world starts responding to the invi- Times' chief Olympics writer.
"Once the announcement (of
ATLANTA (AP) - The streets Jabari Simama, a community activist tation to Atlanta iSllued six years ago · "There is a disposibility to it. It's like Trials, staged on the Olympic track,
journalists found tbey had great Atlanta's selection) was JTiadC, we
·are d.arlt and nearly deserted at II
and former city couricil member.
when · the International Olympic It's the K-Mart Olympics. " .
Words
like
that
sting
Billy
Payne,
.
seats down the third-base line but knew we had this unparalleled
Simama and ·other· critics say Committee'surprisingly awarded tile
p.m.. but there is action in downtown
.Atlanta. The Olympics are three ACOG and t,he Atlanta business I OOth birthday ofthe modern games ACOO's president and the dreamer horrible ones to cover running and . opportunity," Kelman said. "But it
1weeks away and there's work to be leadership have ignored the city's to a city barely l50 years old itself, , who almost single-handedly got . jtlinpihz. To · get from the press probably took two to three years to
• done, even in the dead of night.
people, especially in predominantly many of the reactions have been less Atlanta into the Olympic chase.some stands to the interview room, writers focus on things we could afford and
nine years ago.
. bad 'to descend lOS. sieps, then achieve in the time we had left.
~ · Cre~ing up the hill O!l Interna- black neighborhoods that only get than glowing.
"We're proud .of what we look trudge back up those eight floors to That's one Ieason they're still out
: tional ~oulevard, the .main thor- mentioned !lecause of their closeness
"A great place to do business
,
there paintins and paving.''
: oughfare 'from the hotel towers on to Olympic venues.
rnlher than a great city of the world,''. like and what we've done," Payne write.
Ever since the IOC vote, and
l the soU:th of downtown to the new - "The ciiY has done a thoroughly Ntw York .Time£ architecture critic said. "People have the right to cril- ' There was little protection from
especial!y
since the 1992 Gam!li
icize.
But
when
I
hear
it,that'S'
like
lhe
bNial
Atlanta
heat-or
thunder1Centennial. Olympic 'Parle and the decent job of sprucing up aroltrid the · Paul Golil~rger wrote in an anicle
wete
staaed
SQ successfully amid the
. saying my daughter's ugly."
s1orm1that swept through frequentsports Venues on the north, a massive venues," Simama sajd. "But ip ·the that sttuck civic nerves.
·
centuries-old
8fandeur of Barcelona,
Payne and others defend their ly in-.ihe afternoons, and rcsul.ts
. pavipg machjne is laying a smooth. · !&gt;lack community, , the inipac~ has
The primary target of recent critPayne
has
sttessed
that the Centen1new surface on the street.
" been disappointing." '
' ..&lt; icism baS been the centerpiece of the plans, saying the core of the stadiums . sometimes took an hour or more to
: · Srnelling of tar and grease, illuWhile Ihe downtown gets repavea · games ...:.. the Olympic stadium, were built -for long-term use as die- be produced. leaving readers without nial Games would -be · held in the
thos.e if!lportant numbers 10 chew New World. emphasis on the :new.
tminated by the bobbing headlights of and adds dramatic gardens and out- where the opening and. closing cer- tated by local tastes.
"No city in America can meet
"We djdn 't have the luxury of over .,with their mornina coffee. The
l dumptnicks and sieam rollers, the door sculptures, the surrounding emonies will be staged and where
tliat
standard,'' he said. "If people
having a. stadium we might use I0 shortcolitings were rcjlorted around
1 paver is the current symbol of
communities get lip service at best, track and field will be cpntested .
walit2,QOO yars old, they 'II have to
times a year, when we could have a ihe world.
Atlanta's Olympic progress.
Simt~,~~~a said. He pointed to a row of
Only it's not a track StadiUm The stadiums and arenas where dilapidated houses on a street that it's a baseball park, the horne of the stadium we will use 250 titnes a ' When the Olympic stadium in wait about l,SQO more years: But iu
runs from a MAki'A sub"'ay stop 10 Atlanta Braves once the games year," said Paul Kelman, vice pres- Barcelona - a 60-ycar-old facility the same time, I think people will
1the Centennial Qames will be played
!July ~9JAug., 4 lare finished. Con- the field hockey venue at Morehouse· ~pan and soll)e 40,000 temporary . ident of Centtal Atlanta Progress, a that wis gutted and iitcm filled with find here, from the airport 10 the
downtown developmem organiza. . state-of·the•an .seatinJ and tcchnol- neighborhoods, thl\t Atlanta is one of
istructiori liites downtown are slowly College, a r'Uie thousands of totirisiS · seats are demolished. ·
·
ogy -; ·was given its ftnt pte· the most beautiful cities you'll find
~being re;n~v&amp;l and officills of ~ will take in the coming month·. '.
Drive by it on Interstate 75-85 tion.
"We made a concious deciision- Olympic test, ora~nizen found In America."
~tlanta ~l!liltee for the Olymptc
,"I drive by it every day. I-drove and this jewel of the Allanta Oames
Harulield lnternational'.Airport,
,;joamesrepeat !heir mantra that all is by it one day last week and s~n- looks like a brick warehouse. Po~ , that's why there are so many tents . scoresofprobiOms,fromleakyroofs ·.
the
second-busiest air terminal in the
·~·;o'n ~-IJ¥1 on·budget." Still, there ly everything was painted white," he your helid inside and it looks the~- . and !railers,'' Payne said. "A IS,()()(). · to inadequate phone line1. But that
United
States, is ready for Olympic ·
' ~~ a seue qf ~ethi"g incomplete illld. "No repairs, just, 'Hey, we'll et tetto parks that have sprung up ~n tM:at aquatics center, for in$tanCe, is test was some lhree years before the
i1boi1t 11he •"wations ~ llli uneasi- paint your house.' It's clearly. a . Baltimore, Cleveland and Denver tn bad business. Except for an Olympic . gameJ began, not two monlha as in visitors after atop-to-toe renovation.
Zip lhrouah the, airport and stan
Oames, you doll 'I ~ jt. You can AtlatiUI.
,
hen over ·liJ&gt;w some have been whitewuh."
IIICjCint years.
1
1
1
your
ttip into the ,city, ancl . there~s
OllicialsiCknowletlae they wen:
· 00..
,,
, ·
It's not just the turnbl~ hous- · . , '11 1 a knockoff oLCamdcn !eJ*at that thought at a number pf
(See PltEPARING 011 1-1) '
• ·sloW .to awiteh fronl pilntlltiJ to
: "Tbe·lllli111treet will get black- a that are bein&amp; P'OJiited up. As the Yards,'' said Jere LonJ111an. the venues.''

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·· • .

the only road course event ~n the
NASCAR Grand National schedule.
Labonte, winner of the last two
runnings of the event and throe ohhe
five that have been run, was a heavy
favorite in qualifyina. but could
only manage 115.259, ninth fastest.
"This is one of the most impor·
tant poles I've ever won, personal·
ly," sai4 Green, who won his fourth
pole of the season. It was also the
18th pole of his career, moving him
into a tie for third place with .Tommy Houston on the series' career
,

takes place as symbol of preparations fo~ Olympics

fJl LARRY SIDDOf!IS

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WIMBLEDON, &amp;gland (AP)
- Defending champions Pete Sampras and Steffi Graf dodged the
tumult of upsets, freak injuries and
illness Saturday as an Arctic blast
closed out a wacky first week in
Wimbledon's winter of discontent.
Never in the 69 years since Wimbledon began seeding players have
19 seeds- a record II men and a
record-tying eight'women -depaned before the middle Sunday break.
The way things are going, everyone could use a day off. Fans bundled up in blankets and players
shivered in their shoris as chilly
winds gusted up. to 35 mph after a
session vingally gutted by rain.·
_ "It's all pan of our rich tapestty
of weather," said a meteorologist for
the London Weather Service. "This
front came in from over Iceland." '
The best news came from secondseeded Boris Becker, who said he
merely ruptured a tendon and didn't
.break any bones when he snapped
his wrist on a shot that knocked him
out of the tournament Friday. As serious as the injury still is, Becker
looked forward to healing in time to
play in the U.S. Open in late Auglist.
"I mustn'.t play for a month but
will definitely be 100 percent fit for
the U.S. Open," said Becker, who
feared he had chipped a bone in his
wrist and might have had a careerthreatening injury.
Sampras, seeking a fourth sttaigbt
Wimbledon title that would give him
one more than Becker, · sttuggled
unexpectedly against No. 107 Karol
.Kucera of Slovakia before prevailing
6-4. 6-1,6-7 (7-5), 7-6 (7-3).
"It was very cool and gusty, so
my form didn't seem like it was as
good as it has been the last couple of
matches,'' . Sampras said. "I got
through it, but it wasn't pretty.
"This Wimbledon has been so
. strange. All the upsets, and ¢en
Boris hurting his wrist yestei'day. I

!

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.Reds beat Cubs; ·.
,-vanks ,and Cards
i&amp;:lso r:aotch wins

f ·ancial discipline and long-term investing. Other compelling topics on the agenda included: • Feeb sed Planning Services • The Science of Seminars; and • Insurance Planning and Marketing.
~ationally-acclaimed speak,er Tom Hopkins also led a special sales training workshop featuring
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·
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Sampras, Graf,
lvanisevicr and
Novotna win.

·In major league .baseba/1,

Pomeroy, OH-- The dynamic 'principles of fiscal fitness were
explored in-depth by some of America's leading investment
authorities , at a training conference held recently in San Diego,
California.
'
Karl Kehler III, CPA of Pomeroy was one of more than 1,000 tax .
and financial professionals attending Vest Fest '.96, hosted by H.i&gt;.
Vest Investment Securities, Inc., one of the largestinvestment services
firms in the qation.
· During the four-day event, Karl Kehler III and his peers were .
educated on the strategies and techniques outlined in H.D. Vest's new
personal finance book, Wealrh Workour, which is designed to help ·
~----' individuals create and maintain wealth' through a regular program of

The Saudis have mobilized thousands of security · men across the
kingdom in their effort ro identity
those behind the bombing, which further tarnished the kingdom's image as
an oasis of stability in the often vii)lent Middle East.
. U.S. military personnel say they
feel vulnerable because they have lit,
de say over security measures outside
their bases.
Within the bombed compound in
Dhahran, which houses up to 2,000
Americans as well as British and
French ttoops, the allied forces are in
charge. But outside its confines, their
Saudi hosts are responsible for security.
Americans in the kingdom have
received a number of threats in recent
months, including one promising
revenge if four men arrested in connection with the first attack were punished.
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As the helriJIJ began. the croY4
ed room wu stunned by Hlldl't
announcement that Man:eca Wllf
invakina bis Fifth Auicndment ri~
aaaillllsclf-incriminllion and retu.;
in110 testify lO !¥ Senate.
:
'l'be sudden silence on the part c4
Mm:eca, who bad teStified at lengtl)
two days before at a House commit;
tee bearing, caused dismay at the
White House. Republicans sugesteil
he was being made the scapesoat iit ·
the affair.
;:
Marceca "is the dumpee.'' Sc'il.
Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., declared. ~
The turnaround by Man:eca -7
who, like Livingstone, bad a bac~­
ground as a low-lev_~politi~al o~­
ative and was brougnl by htm to tht
White House from the Army Crinilnal Investigation Division - sigQ!;
lies that "this investigation is gettilfa
somewhere," said Hatch. ''The mQ(e
we dig, the more we learn."
.:
Meanwhile, a senior White House
official said FBI agents working
Whitewater prosecutors toured tile
· personnel security office that Li~­
ingstone ran on Thursday. Agenls
also carne by the White House :to
view some documents Friday.

~

At Wimbledon,

. .
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more stnlSier u .... u.-.,
NIIU·
•

Local Financial Professional Attends Vest Fest "96"

BACK HOME - Krla Llcava, right,_reached out Friday to touch
senior Airman William Nevins' face after they were reunited on
the tarmac at Patrick Air Force Base near Cocoa Beach, Fla.
Nevlna and 16 other Injured servicemen returned to Patrick after
being Injured In tlte bombing of the military air complex at
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. (AP)

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•••

•

Secret Servi~e agent que$tions
past testimony in FBI files prot».·

By ADMAN IIAUK
AuociMed Pnu Writer
DHAHRAN, Saudi Arabia lnvestigat~ said Saturday they
found several imporl.lnt clues in the
rubble at a U.S. military complex,
including the serial number of the
deadly truck-turned-bomb that ripped
the front off the buildinll.
Pmian Gulf newspapers quoted .
Saudi officials as sayinll that inveslillators hnd the license number of the
fuel truck and would loon release
composite sketches of the bombers
wbo killed 19 Arnericans on Thesday.
Thc;y've also got the truck chassis,
complete with serial number, a blackened crankshaft, and a MercedesBenz hubcap that they think came
from the same vehicle, Air Force
spokesman Maj. Jim Sttatford said.
FBI agents have gathered hundreds of metal parts from the truck
and laid them out on1hree long plastic sheets in the parking lot 10 the ·
north of the eight-story building
whose entire facade was sheared off
by the bomb, exposing bathtubs,
mattresses and other household
goods.
As the Investigation picked up,
U.S. Defense Secretary William J.
Perry inspected the site of the explosion, which also injured hundreds,
and got a private briefing on the
. investigation.
.
•. Perry revealed that even before the
bomb blast. security had been heightened because of evidence that would. be terrorists hnd been scouting out the
area housing complex.
At a news conference, he cited
"suspicious actions at the Khobar'
Towers which suggested they might
have been under surveillance." He
said that was one reason U.S. forces
built new fences, established a security perimeter around the area, and
increased patrols.
Perry said that since the bombing,
the security barriers have been moved
out to 400 feet from the buildingsabout four times farther out than
before. "We are making our security plans as if there were other
threats," he said.
Life was slowly returning to norllljl! at the base -jolted by a bomb

Sundly, Ju,. 30, 1

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpollt, 0H • Point P111unt, WV

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Pomeroy • Middleport • G8111polla, OH • Point Pleaaant, WV

Reds hand Cubs 7-4 defeat
By JOE KAY

BAM! - Clnclnnatl'a Reggie .Sanders con·
necta for a home run In the ucon&lt;llnnlng of Frl·
.. day nlght'a National League game agalnat the

vlaltlng ':hlcego Cuba, who lost 7-4. Tha Reda '
win waa alao built In part on Sandara' two-run
homer In the opening frame. (AP)

.

In theAL,

Wh1te Sox beat Indians 4-2;
Yankees and Rangers lose
By TOM WITHERS
AP Sports Writer

Dennis Martinez stepped off the
mound, raised his arms in the air and
said he was through. As it turns out,
so were the Cleveland Indians.
Cleveland lost its second.straight
game to Chicago on Friday night,
dropping a 4-2 decision io the White
Sox and reducing the Indians' ie8d in
the AL CentraiiO one game.
Martln~:z, Who pitched through a
variety of aches and pains last season, strained a muscle in his pitching elbow at the end of the third
inning. He hadn't given up a hit to
the White Sox, but after returning to
the mound in the fourth, he left after
throwing one pitch to Frank Thomas.
"Too bad. J·fett good. I was in
command. But I felt a pinch in· my
elbow and had to let somebody
healthy take the mound," Martinez
said. "They're going to do an MRI
Monday back~n Cleveland. I probably won't pitch again at least until
after the All-Star break.':
The news couldn't come at a
worse time for the Indians, who have
ppcd seven of eight games and
I have six more games left with
ond-place Chicago before the
-Star bre!lk. ,
The White Sox took advantage of
Martinez's injury by coming bacl.l

from a 2-0 deficit against relievers make it 2-1, and drove in the goJim Poole and Julian Tavarez (2-5). ahead. run with a sixth-inning single.
Ray Durham scored in the fillh to ' (See AL on B·3)

score some runs." _
Galarraga hit his 22nd homer, and
third in two games, in the third
inning. Bichette's 15th homer keyed
a four·run fourth that made it 8-1,
and Castilla hit his 15th homer during a five-run eighth.

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New Yor1&lt; ............. 46 11
Balthnore ............... 41 35
Taronto .................. J5 4J

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,449

Boston .................... n 45 .416
O.uoit .................... 2.1 ~6 .291

CLEVELAND ...... 47

11

~2
38
41

45

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Wnttm r.. ~bion
Te~~o111 ................... ..4-:' 31
.60J
Stanle ............ ....... .41 lS . ~39
Cmlifornia ............... 40 J9 .•~
OnkiDnd ................ )7 't2

.468

4

Florida ................. 18 40 .487
New York ............ :\7 41 .474

II
12

4:'i

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Ill~

p.m. ·
New York (Penon 1-21 ill HuuNtnn

Houl!on ................. 40 40 .500

lll
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14
24

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10~!
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St. Loois .................\9

]9

.500

CINCINNATI ... .. J5 J8
Chicago .................. J7 41
Pinsburgh .............. J6 42

.479
.474
.462

Wuttm DI~IJion
Los Angelcs.. .........41 J9 . ~IJ
SanDiego ........... . AI J9 . ~IJ
Colomdo ............... J9 :i8 .506
San fr.:mcisco ...... J6 41 .46H

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Friday's scores
Florida2, Atlanta 0
7, Cllicngo 4
Sr. Louis 6, Pittsbursh I
Philodelphin 1, Monlreal J
New York7. Houston 2
CINCIN~ATI

~

7~
10 ~

Friday's scores
Boston 8. Detroil ~
Knnsas C! ly 6. Minnesota 2
Milwaukee-~ . Toronto I
Balli more 7, New Yort. 4
Cbic11ga 4. CLEVELAND 2
Oakland 6, California J
Seattle 19, Te~~ou 8

Colorado Jl Los Angeles 4
San Diego 6, San Francis~.:o ,I

They played Saturday

·

Chica&amp;o ~CampbeU 2-0) al CINCIN·
NATI (Porrusol J-~). 1:05 p.m.
Piusburgh (Deucns 0-1) at St. Louis

4-2). 4;0S p.m.
Oakland (Wojcaec:howaki S-.5) a1 Cali-

(J~~~~Un

fornia (Grimsley 4-~). 4 : 0~ p.m.
Tu111 (Oliver 6-2) nl Seollle

tMe:&gt;chom ().()), 4:0S p.m.
Octroil (Gollr 4·8) at Boston (Sele 2·

SP:OSp.m.
CLEVELAND (McDowell 6-!i) 111
jAivarcz 91}. 7 : ~ p.m.
. Min.neiOtf (Robertson J-8) at Kansu
C1ty (Linton 2·3), 8:05p.m.
Cbic:~&amp;o

Toclay's games
Milwaukee (Bone• 6-8) a1 Toronto
tHM•on 7-9), I :05 p.m.
.
Del roil (Sodow1ky I ·2 ) ll Botton
(Gordon S-4); I:OS p.m.

Baltimore (D. Well•4--7) Ill New York.
(Mendozo 3·1), I:)~ p.m.
·

Minnc101a (F. Rodriauu 7·7) at
Kanw Cil1 (Gublcza 4-11), 2:.15 p.m.
Tuns (Win 7-6) al Seartle (HnchcO«:k
6-3), 4:3S p.m.
Oakland (Waldln S-1) at Caliroroia

(Han«&gt;&lt;k 3.0), 8:(ij p.m.

CLEVELAND (Hershiaer 8-4) Ill
Cltielao (Tap~~,; 8-4~ 8:05 p.m.

(HeynoLb H-5), 8:05 r..n1.
Los Angclc1&gt; (Vl.l dt.:s 7-5) &gt;It
fRcluir 2-2), 'K:M r.m.

Cohlf;~\lu

Base baD
Am~n

IAqw

KANSAS CITY ROYALS: Purd , J.~-d dll: ~.:omm'l of C Henry M~o'fe~oWs
from Omuhu of the 1\mc:rkun Aunt,:iatinn. Sent 01: Chris St)'ntl to · Omnh&lt;~ .
()utri~k.'\1 RHP Dilson.Tnm:s 10 Omaha.

MILWAUKEE BREWERS:

Today's game•
Montreal CMurlincz 7-J) ut Philatlcl, phin (Mimbs ()..4), I :JS p.m.
ClJicagu (Telc:macu J-4) 111 CINCINNATI (IJurba 2-8), 2 : 1~ p.m.
Pinsburgh (Z. Smith 4-4) at ~1 . Luuis
{Stolt Iemyre 6-6). 2: I~ p.m
New York (bringhauscn 4-9) ut
Houston (Kile 6-S), 2 : :i~ p.m.
Los Ang~les (Nomo 8-7} ttl C91orudu
{Thomp~on J-7}. 3:0.5 p.m .
San Diego (Tewksbury :'i-5) ut San
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Atlanta (Schmidt J.J) at Fk.lridn (Bur.·
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Pia..-.~
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INF Danny P~rez and P Jeff D' Amku ·
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OVAA LiHie
League's.1996
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I.cam

DOWN BUT NOT OUT - American MaiiVal Washington falls ·Jo
the grc;~und during hll linglea match against the Czech Republic's
Bohdan Ulhrach Friday at Wimbledon. Waahlngton won 6-3, 11-3, 6·
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homer into. the second deck ia left
field.
"It just seemed that I didn't come
out ready to pitch," Castillo said. ''I
had good stuff. I made bad pitches 10
Larkin and Sanden and they made
me pay for it. The pitch to Larkin
was out over the plate. I threw
Sanders a breaking ball that just
hung ri.ght there for him."
...
Sandci's, Who came into the Jlllle . i
just l·for-8 career off Castillo, al.a -~
· hit a rolo hornet in the third. Morris · :
adc1ed his ~venth homer in the sixth "'
off Castillo and a sacrifi~ fly in the •
eighth off Bob Patterson. ·
;
Castillo· became the second "'
National League pitcher to lose 10 =a
games, joining Florida's Pat R.pp. In ...
just 17 starts. Castillo has matched ::
his loss total for last year, when he !
was 11-1 0. He has never lost more •
than II !James in the majors.
Sabo .muffed · Sammy · Sosa's
potential inning-ending, double-play
grounder in the first, and LeO Gomez
followed with a two-run s!ngle. The
Cubs added two more off Smiley in '
the fifth.
...

walks, two of them intentional.
Cardinals 6, Pirates I
Ron Gant and John Mabry both
homered. helping Donovan Osborne
win in St. Louis.
Osbonie (7-4) allowed live hits in
eight innings. He has won four of his
last five decisions.
Pittsburgh starter Denny Neagle
(8-4) also .pitched well, allowing
only four hits in seven innings.
Mels 7, Astros l
Rookie Alex Ochoa had three hits
and scored twice as New York won
at the Astrodome.
the Mets are S-1 since Ochoa
was promote&lt;! from the minors. He's
1mpressed manager Dallas Green
with his bat, along with his defense
in right field.
Mark Clark (8-6) pitched New
York 10 its founh straight victory. He
. (See NL on B·3)

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Rookie reliever Bill Simas'
pitc)led out of a bases-loaded, noneout jam in the seventh, retiring
Albert .Belle, lim Thome and Eddie
Mumiy.
"It was kind of tough to hold my
composure." Simas, 24, said. "After
the third out, I wanted to let it all
loose- jump.up and down- but I
could it· t do it.''
In the eighth, he struck out Manny Ramirez and Jeromy Burnitz
before getting Julio Franco to ground
out. Then Simas turned the ball over
•.o Robeno Hernandez, who pitched
a perfect' ninth inning for his ~3rd
save.
Elsewhere in the American ,
League, it was Baltimore 7, New
Ynrk 4; Seattle 19, Texas 8; Bos10n
!S, Detroit S; Milwaukee 5, Toronto
I; Kansas City 6, Minnesota 2; and
Oakland 6, California 3.
Orioles 7, Yankees 4
Rafael Palmeiro's second two-run
homer capped a three-run ninth as
Baltimore won at New York and
moved within 4 112 games of the AL
East-leading Yankees.
Cal~~ken singled home the goahead'ruil in !he {'inth and Palmeiro
folloYiedlwitf his 20th l)ome run, off
Mariano .kivera (3·1 ), who gave up
his~li
. · t~!J.Itlr. in 27 appearances this
seaso ' \' ··~ l ·
.. ur ~s (9·0) pitched 3 113
scortJ~~- in!)i!lgs 10 win in relief for
the e1~hih ti#J!,."
.,
~n..n 19, Rlrngen 8
.
At sea@;:,, the Mariners scored
seven'iil)leS in~ first off!exas ace
Roge( Pa~li~ (10-2) and w,ent on to
match,al"fu~ ~ecord for runs.
J~y. BillinC{'~ threelrun double
ignited \lie Marjners' first inning as
Seattle ~ualled ita·tepm record for
runs·scored };e( agai11st the Rangers
on May'20, 1994.
.
Llns ' Sojo led Seattle's 22-hit
attack with a career-high five hits,
and Joey Cora had four hits, includ·
ing a club record two triples.
Rafael Carmona(4-0} got the win
in re)ief.
Red Sox 8, Tixen 5
. At Boston, Tim Naehring drove
in foor runs with three singles as the
Red Sox won for only the third time
in I 0 gaines. . •
.
Lee tinsley also had three RBis
for Boston.
\

Tim Wakefield (5-8) had his best
outing since June I, allowing three
runs in 5 213 innings for his first win·
in five starts.
··
Brewen S, Blue Jays l
Jeff . D'Amico, activated from
Double-A ball earlier in the day, won
his major-league debut ns Mi,lwau:
kee won at Toronto.
·'
D'Amico, who ·at . 20· is the
youngest active player in the majors,
pitched 5 213 shutout innings. He
walked the tirst two batten before
settling down to retire 14 of the next
16.
_ Greg Vaughn tied a Milwaukee
club record by hitting his 12th home
run in June.
Juan Guzman (6-6) struck out II
. in taking the loss.
· Royals 6, TWins 2
At Kansas City, Kevin Appier, the
subject of several trade rumors,
pitched a five-hitter and retired the
final 15 batters.
· Keith Lockhart doubled twice
and drove in three runs for ltle Royals. Minnesota's Marty Cordova
extended his hitting streak to 22
games, matching Robeno Alomar for
the longest in the majors this season.
Appier (7-7) pitched his second
complete game of the season and
24th of his career. Last Sunday, he
shut out Baltimore on two hits for
eight innings.
Brad Radke (4-10) lost his fifth
straight decision.
Athletics 6, Angels 3
Damon Mashore 's first majorleague homer triggered a five-run
sixth. and Ernie Young and Jason
Giambi also homered for Oakland at ,
ti:alifomia:
.
.. The A's, who hit a club-record
eight homers and matched a majorleague record by having seven different players homer on Thursday,
have hit 15 home runs in their last
~hree galilef

for a sweep of the majors, winning
WIMBLEDON, EnJiand (AP)
the French Open for the fmt time
-One awkward swina and a painful
and recapturing the Wimbledon
pop in the wrist ended Boris Beck- championship he had won in 198S.
'86 and '89. It wu all quite possible,
er's run for a fourth Wimbledon title
he knew, after resunecting,liis career
Friday in a jinxed year for him and
the tournament.
through hard work and reaching the
W'unbledon final last year.
Becker dropped his racket and
clutched his right wrist the moment
1ben, just as suddenly, Becker's
year
went kaput. 'The French came
!Je struck a return of serve of{ the
and passed without him, and now he
frame on the first point of an opening set tiebreaker against South
is out of Wimbledon before even fmAfrican Neville Godwin .
ishing a set in the third round.
As Becker paced back and fonh
"I had a virus for a couple of
months,
and a muscle tear before the
alons the baseline, squeezing his list
and grimacing with a look offear, he
French," he said. "I almost can't
knew right away he would nol be
believe what's coming next.''
able to go on. His wife, Barbara.
A broken wrist. which usually
watched him from the players' guest takes six to eight weeks to heal,
box and tearfully buried her head in
could wreck the rest of Becker's
her hands.
summer. He wasn't planning on
" He hit a pretty bard second serve
playing the Olympics, but his status
· sliding into my body, and I turned
for the U.S. Open could be in jeopmy body away," Becker said. "I was
ardy. No other t011111ament, though,
trying to hit a forehand, and I hit it means as much tb Becker as Wimtoo late. My wrist gave way, and I bledon.
heard something pop. From then on,
"Irs the highlight of my season,"
I couldn't hold the racket anymore. · he said. "I felt l had a very good
"I thought, you know, I had bro- chance this year, the best I've had in
ken my wrist.''
a long time, of going. a long way
Becker called for an injury time- here. I felt I was ready for something
out to receive treatment from ATP major here.''
Tour trainer Doug Spreen.
Becker was heavily favored to
"From feeling, from testing with reach the final, especially since his
his hand, he thinks that a bone could half of the draw had been cleared of ·
be chipped off from the tendon,"
so · many big names. With No. 3
Becker said. "I know it's serious. I Andre Agassi, No. 8 Jim Courier,
have had many injuries in my career and No. 15 Arnaud Boetsch gone in
before, and I know when it's some· the first round, and No. 9 Thomas
thing serious and when something Enqvistlosing in the second, the only
can heal in a few qays."
seeds remaining in the . bottom half
Spreen sprayed an anesthetic on are No. II Wayne Ferreira and No.
Becker's wrist and taped it heavily.
13 Todd Martin.
Becker flexed the wrist a couple of
· Now vinually everyone in . the
times, picked up his racket and houom half has about the same
returned to coun to serve. But after chance of going to the final, and one
a few more flicks of the racket, he · semifinalist is certain to be an :
stopped at midcourt, turned around unseeded player. For the first . time. ·
and told the umpire he would have since seeding at Wimbledon began in
to retire.
1927, at least six of the top eight
Becker, the No. 2 seed behind seeds. railed to reach the fourth
defending champion Pete Sampras, round.
gently shook hands with the aston- ·
Wimbledon's luck, in a week
ished Godwin.
when every day has seen a star
"It feels great, obviously, to be in depart, turned from b.ad to worse
the fourth round of Wimbledon," shortly after Becker's injury as rain
said Godwin, a qualifier ranked No. cut short play. interrupting the first
223. "But it's not the right way I match between two Brits on Centre
would have liked to get there. I Coun in 58 years. Tim Henman led
would have liked to win the match Luke Milligan 6-1,6-3, 5-4 when the'
fair and square. But I guess these rain hit.
In all, only nine singles matches
days you take what you can get.
"It doesn't feel like a victory. It's were completed.
kind of a peculiar feeling." ·
American MaliVai Washington, in
Becker went for a magnetic imag- the quarter of the draw Becker vacating .scan at a nearby hospital, and ed, beat Bohdan Ulihrach of the
said he would remain in London Czech Republic, 6-3, 6-3,6-0. Doug
·until his doctor arrives ·from Ger- . Flach, who upset Agassi in the first
many to diagnose tbe injury.
round, saw his run end with a6-l, 6- ·
Five months ago, Becker won the 4, 6-3 IO$S to Sweden's Thomas
Australian Open for his sixth Grand Johansson.
Slam title, and first in five years. He
In women's match, No. 4 Arantxa
· spoke optimistically then of going Sanchez Vicario overcame a strained

•
.;•
' i

Athletes graduating
at slightly higher rate
than collegiate norm ·

...
..'
'·."" '

.. ....

.. ,.1

..' '

~ · ~r:

.z.t

a~itl: tfUee · - 10 aaend

thefuMndof~~~~.

9 Mary Joe Fernandez beat ArJ!'IIIina's Florencia Labat 6-2. 6-0: Aliitria's Judith w- beat Gip Fernandez 6-2, 7-S; Belpum's Sabine
Appelmans beat No. II Brenda
Schultz-McCarthy 7-S, 3-6, 12-10;
and Amy Frazier routed ArJentina's
Ines Gorrocbatcgui ~. 6-3.

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men's basketball.
There, only ·44 percent of the
College athletes continue to per- incoming class of 1989 earned
form adequately in the classroom, degrees in the allotted six years. And
graduating at a slightly higher rate · individually, 16 of last season's Top
than 1he college norm, according to 25 programs feU below 44 percent.
the NCAA's latest findings.
. Women's programs did a far betFifty-eight _percent of almost ter job of combining on and oiT-court
14.000 scholarship athletes who success, with 20 of last season's Top
entered Division I schools in 1989 25 matching or exceeding the nationhad earned degrees by last summer, al average.
a figure that has held vinually steady
" I guess we should be coil·
ror four consecutive yean. It com- cerned," says Kansas athletic direcpares to a 57 percent graduation rate tor Bob Frederick, outgoing chair·
for the general student body at the man of the NCAA's Division I men's
same schools.
basketball committee. He pointed
But amir.l the positive signs were out that the basketball season that
some cau tionary statistics - in the crosses two academic semesters,
high-stakes, high-exposure spo!:' of
(See RATES on B-4)
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MSRP .........:..}16,523 .

NL action ...

(Co~tinued from B-2)
won:,for the seventh time in eight
decislons, and Doug Henry pitched
three·innings'for a save. Mets relievers h'ave pitched
2[3 scoreless
innin'gs in the IPS\ nane games.,
PltUUiis 7, Ex poe 3
J.R. Phillips, a,late ~dition to the
lin~UP, l~~ of Glenn. Muri'~y's
wnst·l~, lUt twp (lome runs, highlightinj PJilllw;ICiptaia 's win ~t home.
'I'III!TfhiJiies had a Sc:ason-high 16
hits. B~nifO ~antijlgQ hit.a' t~e-run
homerr it.,tllert
i o~ mnmg and ·
Phillip&amp; folio
w1th a drive into
the u"* declk5'1ht tield.
~....... lhor1110p
Mark
G ~·k · ·
10thelhleup

lipment in her right wrist 10 bear
Naoko Sawamatsu dl" Japan, 6-4, 61.
Katarina Studenikova of Slovlk.ia
followed up her upset of MOllica
Seles by beatinl Belgium's
Dominique Van RO!ISt 6-3, 6-2.
In other third-round mau:hes, No.

1991

·According to the NCAA,

)

"•. ;

eCrulu control

•

By STEVE WILSTEIN

and Sanden followed with his aixth

The Dodgers saw a familiar face
at Coors Field. Outfielder Milt
Thompson, recently .cut by Los
Angeles, joined the Rockies after
being claimed ofr.waivers.
In other NL games, Florida beat
Atlanta 2-0. San Diego stopped San
Francisco 6-1, St. Louis downed
Pittsburgh 6-1, New York defeated .
Hous10n 7-2 and Philadelphia topped
Montreal 7-3.
Padres 6, Giants l
Visiting San Diego won consecutive games for the first time this
month and .sent San Francisco to its
eighth loss in a row.
Chris Gwynn hit his first homer
of the season, a three;run shot in the
first inning. He played while his
brother, Tony, missed his second
straight game because of an injured
right heel.
Andy Ashby (8-2) won his fifth
straight decision. He pitched five
scoreless innings before leaving with
shoulder stiffness - he missed 2 112
weeks last month because of a
strained right shoulder.
Marlins 2, Braves 0
AI Leiter. trying to. boost his
chances of making the All-Star team,
pitched seven scoreless innings as
host Florida won its fourth straight
game.
Leiter (9-6) worked around seven hits and three walks. He was hoping to impress Atlanta manager Bobby Cox, in charge of picking the NL
pitching staff.
Jeff Conine drove in both runs.
Marlins teammate . Gary Sheffield
tied a team record by drawing four

,.,..83

Becker exits tourney after wrist·injury

1996 BUICK PARK AVENUE

&lt;Andy Bene• S-81. 2 : 1~ p.m.

They played Saturday
Baltimore (Mussina 10-4) a1 New
York (Penitte 11 -4), 1:0.5 p.m.
·
Milwaukee (Karl 7-J) at Toronto

NL standings

San Diego (Humillu11 CJ-4) at San
Francisco (M. Leiter 4-6), 4:05 JUn.
Montrt:ul H:assem ?- .~)at Philmldphiu (S~.: hilling 2-2), 7:0~ p .m.
Atlanta (Smu ltz 14· 2) :.t Floriila
fR:~rr ~ - 10). 7 : 0~

Crntral Dl•lsiun

.60)
.!190

.577

Phil:wlt:lphia ...... :\ 2

Ctnlr•l DJ.islon

· ChicQgo ... ......... ...... 46
Milwaukee ... ........ 39
Minnesota .............. 36
Kansas City ........... J4

:n

Willi him blcli, the defeadina NL
Central champions are playing as
well u they've played all season.
They're three PJIIC!l under .SOO
(35-38) for the filii time since May
14 and talkina about overtaking
Houston for first place.
"If we win and Houston loses a
few over the weekend, we' II be risht
in this one," ·~Wter John Smiley said.
"Irwe can aet to the top by the (All·
s..)lnU, it would be great for us."
Smiley (8-6) gave up seven hits
and four runs - three earned - in
six innings for his fourth victory in
his last five starts. The left-hander
has n~ given up more than three
earned runs in any of the starts.
Lee Smith pitched the ninth for
hiN second save of.the season and the
473rd of his career, the major league
record. S~ilh was fil}ins in for closer lcfr Brantley, who took a line dri·
vc oiT his left knee Wednesday night
and wa.• still sore.
Jhe Cuhs scored twice in the first
with the help of third baseman Chris
Sahc1's fielding cmor, but Castillo (2·
Hl) gave the lead ~way in just IS
pitches.

I'

At Wimbledon,

•
•

Thomas Howard ainJied, lllole..:
second llld scored on Bllll Boone's
single. Barry Larkin's double lied it, '

about u well u ·I've ever seen him
swin1...

~· t ........

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, .OH • Point Pia I tint, WV

Rockies pound Dodgers;
Braves and Astros also lose
, The Los Angeles Dodgers are still
looking for their_first win since Tom
Lasorda left. In their latest defeat,
· they also lost interim manager Bill
Russell.
With Lasorda in the hospital
recovering from a heart attack and
surgery, the Dodgen were roughed
up by Colorado . 13-4 Friday night.
Dante Bichette, Andres Galarraga
and Vinny Castilla all homered for
the Rockies.
·The Dodgers dropped to 0-4 since
losing Lasorda. Russell was absent
from the dugout at the end of the
game after getting ejected in the
eighth inni.ng for arguing a strike call
with umpire Joe West.
"You have your ups and downs
and your slumps," Russell said.
"Our starting pitching has had a
~ough time of late. It's a bad time for
us all the way around. We'll get
through it."
After scoring only 22 runs on a ·
six-game road trip, the Rockies have
totaled 26 in two games since returning home.
"In Coon Field, anything might
happen," manager Don Baylor said.
"We have a couple of guys swing. ing tl)e bat pretty well, and when
they 're doing that. you're going to

Montreal .......... .. 45

Sunday. June .30, 11M

In other NL action,

By BEN WALKER
AP Baseball Writer

NICE SHOT, EDDIE! - The
Cleveland Indiana' Manny
Ramirez (24) greeta teammate
Eddie Murray aftllr the latter's
aolo homer In the fourth Inning
of Friday nlght'a 'Amarlcan
League contest In Chicago,
whale the hoat White Sox won 42. (AP)

AL standings

CINCINNA11 CAP) - ~ he
warmed up in the Chicqo Cubl'
bullpen, Frank Castillo felt very
Jood.
'Ndng cuta in baaing practice,
Cincinnati's Re11ie Sanden fell ·
awful.
When they dua in against each
other for the first time Friday niaht.
thin1s chan1ed fast.
Sanders hit Castillo's lint pitch
into the second deck in left field for
a two-run homer thai put the Reds
ahead and in line for a 7-4 victory.
Sanden later added a solo homer off
Castillo, as did Hal Morris.
"In batting practice, I felt horri·
ble," Sanden said. "When I1o1 into
a game situation, I was able to concentrate and help the ballclub."
Sanders has been a huge help to
the Reds since returning from the
disabled list June 14. He has baued
.36~ with five ho111ers and 10 RBis,
one of the 111ain reasons the Reds
have won six in a row and waded
back into the NL Central race.
"Reggie is our Jcfr Bagwell. our
Fred McGriff," nianager Ray Knight
said. "He docs most of lhc damage
for us offensively. He's swinging

I

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Ollllpolla, Ott • Point Pletttnt, WV

Sundly, June 30, 11M .~~

•

By ODIE O'DONNELL
team won the Skin~ game.
T-s ~Oi'ldattt
·
Other memben of Jackson's team
G
US - ThC rtn~ 10lf were Marvin Boxdorfer, Melvin

tournament sponsored by the Gallipolis Lions Club on Thursday 11
Cliffside Golf Course attrecled 2 I
teams composed of 84 men and
women golfen, who played 18 holes
under superb weather conditions.
A team captained by Ron Jackson
claimed championship honors by
shooting a combined score of S9, 13
strokes under par. Ron Carmichael's

included Homer Hanltins, closest to
the stake on If I; Terry Lloyd, longest
drive on lf3; Kevin Grueser, longest
Tabor and Gene Gloss. The Sltins drive onlflO; Ron Jackson, closest to
winners included Dave Beaver, Dick the pin on lfl S; Tommy Meadows,
Bane and nm Meadows.
longest pull on If II ; Dan Davies,
Only nine strokes separated the closest to the pin on 1#4; and Jean
winning team from the last place Hankins, closest to the stake on f) 7.
team over the Par 72 layout, as all21
Ron Carmichael, Jeff Snedaker,
teams shot under par totals for the . Bob Hennessy and Ron Canaday
afternoon.
,
served on the Lions' tournament
Individual winners receiving committee, while Cliffside Golf Pro,
awards in the A&amp;B and C&amp;D flights
Mike Haynes, directed the competi-

At the Kroger Classic,

FROM THE NINTH 'reE - Jay Caldwoall of Gallipolis drlvea the ball
off the ninth tee during Thuraday'a Galllpolle Llone Club Golf Tournament at Cliffside Golf Cour11. Caldwell wae a member of the 21

four-player teams participating In thla Inaugural · tournament.
(Timaa-Santlnal photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

Weiskopf changes
from tormented ·soul
to man at peace
I

By RUSTY MILLER

I

BEACHWOOD, Ohio (AP) ·Tom Weiskopf is returning to Canterbury Golf Club this week .to
defend his U.S. Senior Open championship, but not as the same man
who left 30 years ago.
Born and raised in.the Cleveland
suburos, he went on to stardom on
the PGA Tour. He would still drop by
his mother's home, then stroll the
Canterbury grounds hitting shots
and enjoying his time away from the
pressures oflournament golf.
It has taken time, but Weiskopf
has found that same peace that he
once found only during casual
rour~s back in his h0111elown.
·~ne once said- and I feel
this way right now about my life'I think I finally know how lo play
the game, but I'm too old to play it,"'
Weiskopf said with a laugh.
No longer iS' Weiskopf- a hoihead of legendary proportions- tormented by missed shots and lost
tournaments. After stabbing at a
short putt, he doesn't throw his
clubs or curse his fate.
Times, and Weiskopf, have
changed.
At S3. he has watched his son and
daughter become adults. He has
built a ·successful golf course design
company thai requires most of his
time, although he still is a regular on
the Senior Tour. And he has joined
his wife, Jeanne, in her IS-month
battle against breast cancer.
Once a tour terror, capable of
shooting an 83 as easily as a 63,

'

Graduation rates ••.
(Continued from B-3)
unlike others that fit into either fall
or spnng.
.
"The time demands," he says,
"arc pretty great."
NCAA findings also suggest basketball is recruiting poorer students,
who on average arrive with the lowest high school grade-point average
(2.72) and SAT (850) and ACT ( 19)
scores of any sport.
But Frederick notes basketball,
perhaps more than any ·other sport,
sees players leaving school early to
play professionally in the NBA or
Europe and returning after the
NCAA's six-year counting period to
finish their degrees. Others note that
Afrkan Americans, who comprise
more than 60 percent of the player
pool, traditionally graduate at a lower rate.
In fact. black male basketball
players graduate at a slightly higher
rate (39 percent) than black males in
general. While male players graduate at an o~ly slightly lower r,ate (53
percent) than while males in the
overall student body.
"Even though the numbers arc
low," says Jerry Kingston, chainnan
of the NCAA's Academic Requirements Committee, "they're not low
relative to students in Division I.
Maybe we ought to say there are
some things we're doing right."
Elsewhere in the NCAA's findings:
- Female athletes,_ while dropping slightly, continue to graduate at
a higher rate than males (67 percent
to 53 percent).
· - The rate for black athletes continued to improve in the wake of
Proposition 48, which toughened
academic standards in 1986. From
35 percent, it's up 10 46 percent for
the incoming class of 1989.
-1\r;o schools, Siena and Davidson, graduated ] 00 percent of their
1988 freshmen, but thai was only
five athletes. More impressive were
Holy Cross (graduating 34 of 35),
Oregon Stale (42 of 44) and Fairfield
(14 of 15).
- AI the bollom of lhe 305School Jist were Lamar (nine of Sl),
Texas-EI Paso (seven of 34) .and
Texas-San Antonio (eight of 37).

MASON, Ohio (AP) - When
Jack Nicklaus 'hoi a record 9-underpar 62 on the Grizzly course that he
designed, J.C. Snead was in that
founome.
On Friday - 23 years later Snead matched Nicklaus' mark to
take a one-stroke lead iJ;~ the Kroger
Senior Classic.
"Mine was much easier," said
Snead. ".The longest pull I made all
day was at the third hole and that was
about 15 to I 8 feel ."
Mostly, Snead had six- to eightfooters en route ·tO his bogey-free
round, which was beller by one
stroke than the tournament record set
last year by Graham Marsh.
A 4-foot eagle pull by !sao Aoki

tion.
Lions president Roa Canaday
expressed the thanb of the club 10 Ill
of the sponsors, golfen aild ocbm
wbo worked 10 ma1ce the tOUI'iiiiiiCIII
a success. He said thai the club plans
to Vlake this an annual event to
replace the rose sale, a Lions fund
raiser for ~ past 12 yean.
Canaday noted that all proceeds
from the tourney will be used to
finance community projects of the
club for the coming year.

&gt;••-

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on the S46-yard, par-S 18th hole left today we played back ihen," said • lead.
"I don't have much energy,"
him one stroke back at63.
·Snead, although others contend that
"The ro11nd I played today, there the course is set up easier than when Aoki said. "I'm taking it easy. I
wasn't much luck involved in it." the Ohio Kings Island Open was don'tknow if I could play this well
Snead said. "I hit it down the fair- played here as pat1 of the PGA Tour. if I was healthy."
way and landed it close all day.
Sigel, a two-time U.S. Amateur
"Several tees are a little farther
"Any time you shootlow,.you've back," he said. "You have to drive champion who -led last week's Bell
had to hit the ball prelly good or pull the ball w61lor you're not going to Atlantic Classic until fading in the
well. This was just a good, solid score here . .The high scores are the final seven holes, is one of the
round of golf."
longest hiuen on .the Senior Tour and;
guys that drove il crooked."
Forty-two of the 78 players in the
Jay Sigel and Harold Henning left himself in good shape to make a
$900,000 tournatnent broke par over shot 65s, while Bobby Stroble, Bud run al the leaders.
the accommodating 6,628-yard Griz- Allin, Gibby Gilbert, Terry Dill and
"t.:'fy length helps here. I used the
zly course at The Golf Center at defending champion Mike Hill were driver six limes today. I knocked il
Kings Island, fonnerly known as the · another two strokes back at 67.
on all three par-5s In two,'''he said.
Jack Nicklaus Sports Center.
Sigel , who averages more than
Aoki, recovering from a bout of
Snead said that meant thai the stomach nu earlier this week, said he 277 yards a drive, ended Jim Dent's
course was in good shape and play- was "very lucky" to hole his eagle six-year streak as the longest hitter
ers were drjving the ball straight.
putt. A pair of bogeys cost him the .on the Senior Tour last year.
'.' 1 think i'i's the same course

Weiskopf now approaches the game
differently.
"We understand what the game is
all about and the commitment that it
In Jesse Owens' hometown,
takes," Weiskopf said of himself and
oilier veteran players. " I think we
have more time to give lo the game.
It isn'tlhe end of the world. ''
So the timing is right for a return By JAY REEVES
a decade· and raised only $150,000 plan after they announced the torch;" ilor center.
home. He will defend his champiOAKVILLE, Ala. (AP) - Jesse for the elaborate project until two said James Pinion, who played a lead
Ruth Owens, the athlete's widow,
onship at the same course where his Owens' hometown has always been years ago, when officials said the role in construction of the park and will unveil the statue. Owerts' grandmother used to belong and where his uneasy honoring his Olympic lega- torch would visit Lawrence County, will serve as a torchbearer.
son, Stuart Owen Rankin, will carry
brother Danny once won the club cy: Blacks seethed quietly as some in rural northwest Alabama, ·on its
The centerpiece is a bronze stat- the torch into the park on behalf of
championship.
whiles blocked a fitting memorial to way lo Atlanta.
ue of Owens running though the the family.
"For me, it's a great opportunity him.
.
More than $1.3 million in dona- Olympic rings. Sculpted by Branko ·
"Everybody feels real positive
to come back where I really grew
Now the Olympic torch is helping t,uns has flowed in since then, with Medenica of Binningham, the life- about it and is appreciative to the
up," Weiskopf said. "More impor- end some of that racial divisiveness. organizers attributing the influx 10 sized piece sits beside a replica of the people for remembering my grandtantly, this is where I learned how to
Sixty years after Owens won four excitement over the torch relay. The three-room house where Owens father," said Rankin, 29, manager of
play the game. I grew up playing gold medals in Nazi Gerrnany, the itinerary for the relay included lived as a boy. .
the publications office at the Harvard
public links golf. I went to Benedic- torch will visit tiny Oakville for Sat- arrival in Alabama Friday night with
The $1.5 million park also University law school.
tine High School and then on to Ohio urday's dedication of Jesse Owens a trek to the International Space includes an as-yet unfinished museArea blacks also are pleased
State. A lot of my thoughts, at least Memorial Park, built in a field where Camp at the U.S. Space and Rocket um, an eternal name, picnic areas, a Owens is finally receiving his due in
in my new career in golf course Owens and his sharecropper family Center in Huntsville.
baseball field , a basketball court, his birthplace, where he lived until
architecture, com~s from this state. once picked .cotton.
"At first it was a 10-year plan. It space for a runninglr~ck and a vis~ his family moved north when he was
because we had so many wonderful
Volunteers worked for more than was compressed down to a five-year
nine years old.
and great golf courses."
Weiskopf, 53, shot four rounds
under 70 to win the last year's Senior
Open at Congressional Country
Clul). Almost as important, he won
by four strokes over Jack Nicklaus.
Teammates at Ohio State .and both
management and .fans to do what
By RICHARD
Ohio natives, Weiskopf always
they can to make this.day a success,"
seemed to be eclipsed by the Nick- ROSENBLATT
NEW YORK (AP) - To come- .McCarron said.
laus' incredible accomplishments.
Conway has been a racing fan for
dian nm Conway, the Don MacBeth
Sea
years.
.
Memorial Jockey Fund is no laughJerry Bibbee
"I used to breeze horses when I
Marvin Keebaugh
ing maller.
.
u(i
in
Cleveland,''
· Doc Hayman
was
growing
Conway,
along
with
jockey
Chris
i(ean leads USAir
Clark Reed
McCarron and his wife, Judy, st.ut- Conway said. "Guys like ShoemakFutures .Classic
er,
Pincay
and
Delahoussaye
ed the MacBeth Fund in 1987 in a
serious effort to raise money for they were my heroes. To meet them
SUNBURY, Ohio (AP)- Laurel injured and disabled riders. Since its was a thrill. II was like meeting
2 Dr, ve 5 spd, Plum wlllght gray cloth
· Ieean of Willoughby, Ohio, was the start, the MacBeth Fund has raised Michael Jordan.
interior, AC, stereo ~as", inlermil wipets,
first-round leader Friday in the more than $2.3 million and assisted
"This fund is important to me.
rear delrosl, 5800 miles, local trade.
USAir Futures Classic with a S- over 700 injured riders.
We've gone from replacing a lost set
.,
under-par 67.
"I had earned a few bucks enter- of choppqs for one guy to helping a
taining some folks at a racetrack in female rider with a broken back
1 The three-day tournament continues through Sunday al the 6,121- Minnesota a few years back," Con- recover so she could ride again.''
yard, par-72 Bent Tre.: Golf Club.
way recalled, "and I gave the monKean has posted. five top- I 0 fin- ey to Chris and told him 'Give this
ishes in five starts at Futures events, to the injured rider's fund.' He said
including a victory in May. With a
. victory this week, she would · tie there wasn't one. So we started one."
The fund, named after jockey
Tammie Green's record by winning Don MacBeth, who died of can&lt;er in
her lith career Futures tournament. 1987, has its national fund-raiserNadia Ste-Marie of Lake City, Jockeys Across America Day VIUft1t Low Prices, 11111 Elclllt1t Stltctla, ••• 8rtlt Strlkt .
Fla., is one stroke behind Kean at 4- on Saturday, July 6.
under 68. Lori Tatum of Humble,
About 60 rac.etracks in the UnitTexas, winner of the 1992 USAir ed States and Canada are expeeted to
Futures Classic, shot a 69.
lake part. Fans as well as jockeys are
Eight players are tied at 70.
asked to make donations at various
·SALE PRIQD AT•'
fund-raising events at the tracks.
dr., 5 speed with
They will. include poster sigriings,
Dumler wins title
air, stereo cassette
autograph sessions, cap and T-shirt
and much more.
flight in WOSGA
sales, jockey foot races, fishing and
golf tournaments and even bake
amateur linkfest
sales.
"We hope to raise about
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP)
$150,000," said Tony DeFranco, the
Jamie Dumler defeated Natalie fund administrator.
Mosher to win the championship
cassette, power
AI Los Alamitos in California,
night of the 73rd Women's Ohio there will be a joc~ey challenge pitwindows &amp; locks,
State Golf Association amateur tourling thoroughbred ,riders against
t:ri.lise,
power windows,
nament Friday at Westbrook Counquarter horse riders and Sam Housplus much more.
try Club.
ton Park in Texas will hold a chili
Dumler, of Cincinnati, recorded a
off.
1-up victory over Mosher, of New cook
McCarron has alsp contacted ridPhiladelphia. in 19 holes.
ers· at 80 thoroughbred racetracks,
Kelly Moskol of Hi' n1c;tl1ey won asking for their support and is also
the consolation
a 1-up encouraging fans lo send i~ a taxair, 5 speed,
victory over
Calkins of deductible $2 donation to the fund.
cassette, chrome
Cleves.
package plush much
''We' re also asking racetrack
more.

Olympic torch helping chill some racial strife

~

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1996 CHEV
CAVALIER

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SAlE PRiaD AT

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But a news release from the uniDURHAM, N.C. (AP) - Mike
versity
said he was "ecstatic .. about
Knyzewski, who has led Duke l_o
his
new
contract.
.·
two NCAA basketball champi"I
look
forward
to
many
great
onships. has signed a seven-year
renewable contract, university offi- years ahead as an active member of
the Duke community," he said. "In
cials said Friday.
Tom Butters. director of athl~tics, my opinion there is no better place
said further details of the contnict arc to succeed .as a college basketball
coach, and I think Duke has shown
private.
.
"The tenns are commensurate a commitment to continuing that
-with Coach K's status as one of col- well into the future. "
Krzyzewski, who completed his
iege basketball's most successful
and most respected coaches," But- 16th season at Duke with·an 18-13
record and a first-round loss in the
lers said in ·a news release.
Krzyzewski, 49, is on vacation NCAA tournament,. has an overall
and could not be reached for com- record of 376-I 40 al Duke, making
him the school's winningest CIJl!ch.
ment. · ·
He has led his teams to I 2 NCAA
tournaments, seven Final Fours, five
championship gaines and consecutive nalionallitles in 1991 and 1992.
"Coach K is the best in college
RIO GRANDE - Here is the basketball," said Du~e president
schedule for the week of June 30-July Nan Keohane. "He is also a superb
7 at the Uni.venity of Rio Grande's teacher, who cares deeply for the student-athletes he coaches so well ."
Lyne Center..
Because Duke is a private instiFitness center, gymnasium
tution,
the university does not release
and racquetball courts
details of coaching contracts. The
Today- 1-6 p.m. ·
bulk of Krzyzewski's annual earnMonday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
.
ings is believed to come from a conTueoday.- 7 a.m:-9 p.m.
tract he signed with Nike in 1993,
Wednesday- 7 a.m.-9 p.m.
reportedly worth $375,000 a r,ear.
Thursday -closed
In spring 1994, Krzyzewsk1 conFriday - closed
sideied
other coaching possibilities
Saturday-l-6p.m.
Suoday, July 7 - ·1-6 p.m.

Lyne Center slate

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Pool
Today- 1-3 p.m.
Mooday - 6-9 p.m.
Thesday - 6-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
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before deciding lo stay at Duke.
Then, in the fall, a serious back problem sidelined him for the final I 9
games of the 1994-95 season. At one
point, he offered to resign.

OXFORD, Ohio (AP)- Miami
University has tired Jon Pavlisko,
who was head baseball coach and
had coached more baseball games
(766) than any coach in the school's
history.
Pavlisko's contract was not
renewed, Miami athletic . d.irector
Eric Hyman said Friday. Pavlisko's
14-year coaching career was the second-longest in Miami's history. He
posted a 379-38~ career record at the
school.
"We feel that the Miami baseball
program needs to go in,a new direction, and a change in leadership of
the team is appropriate," Hyman
said. .
Pavlisko's best season was in
1983 when the Redskins were 36-15
and won the Mid-American Conference with an 11-6 conference record.

-.

-~.

Krzyzewski and Duke sign seven·year pact

).

SELLS CARS AND TRUC

96 ILTIMI Gill

.
imminent.
Milwaukee. The Wolves are expect- arranged a deal to send Rider to PortMINNEAPOLIS (AP) ~ Still
McHale clearly was on edge ed to get that pick back as soon as land for shooting guard James
riding an enormous high from the wben discussing Rider. He sent a Monday by sending center Andrew Robinson, forward Billy Curley and
draft-day coup that netted Stephon sharp message with his response to Lang to the Bucks.
a No. I draft choice.
Maroury, the ~innesota Timber- a reporter's comment that a team. is
But after the NBA and its players'
Marbury seems as excited about
wolves hoped to continue the cele- defined by itS star players. .
the chance to play with close ·friend associatioo finalized their disputed
bration Friday by introducing their
"Thank God our stars are Garnett as Wolves fans are about collective bargaining agreement Fri- .
new point guard.
Stephon Marbury and Kevin Garnett Marbury's arrival. The Wolves sold day, all trades, negotiations and free
Instead, they found that their and Tommy Gugliotta," McHale I00 season tickets· in the tint two age~t signings will be prohibite&lt;!
maddening relationship with Isaiah said.
hours of business following the draft, unul July 9.
Rider had taken another embarrass- · Marbury, the highly regarded 19- about 20 more than they sell during
The talk of that deal was before
ing tum.
year~old point guard from Georgia
a normal week at this time of year.
Rider's arrest, a situation that could
Rider, in trouble with the law and Tech, entered the packed room a few
''I'm overwhelmed by thai," said ~orsen for the high-scoring guard as
the team throughout his three-year minutes later accompanied by a por- · Marbury's mother,· Mabel. ''I'm so police continue their investigation.
career, was charged with possession tion of his close-knit family. He got happy, because everybody seems to · The four cellular phones found in
of marijuana and possession of an a few qu~stions about Rider, but· like Stephon and they want him Rider's 1996 Mercedes are believed
illegal cellular telephone, both mis- mostly he was allowed lo talk about here ."
to be stolen. If he is charged with
demeanon, after he was arrested his seemingly bright basketball
Marbury handled questions about theft and the value is more than
Rider as smoothly as he handles a · $400, Rider could face felony
Thursday night in his hometown of future.
.
charges.
·
Oakland, Calif.
.
He was confident, honest and basketball.
"This is really Stephon Mar- humble all at once, drawing a large
Did Rider's latest problems alter
"We're not through with the
bury's day, you guys," Kevin round of laughter when he was his feelings about Minnesota?
investigation," said Officer Ron
McHale, 'the Wolves' vice president asked why star-caliber point guards
"That's doesn't change my feel- Bryant of the California Highway
of basketball operations, said before come along so rarely.
ings
at all," Maroury said. "This is Patrol. "So that (the misdemeanor
·
Marbury's arrival. "This is not a day
counts) could be upgraded."
where
I want to be."
"Because point guards are deliv- .
That would make a bad situation
to ask Stephan Marbury questions ered from God,'' he Sllid with a
Does he expect Rider to be
worse
for the Wolves. McHale
about J.R. Rider. Let's try to gel the straight face.
amo'ng his teammates when training
refused to confirm any trade specufocus of this thing back on Stephan.''
Marbury said in the weeks lead- camp begins in the fall?
lation. He .said he felt "like a proThat wasn't easy.
"I
hope
so."
ing to Wednesday night's draft Min- .
Rider's arrest tainted not only nesota was the team for which he
That will only happen if Rider's fessional babysitter," and he was
Mllrilury's highly anticipated arrival, · most wanted to play. He got his wish eroding reputation prevents Min- noticeably angrier with Rider than he
has been in the past.
hut also the Wolves' ongoing efforts when the Wolves shipped Ray Allen, nesota ftvm trading him.
"Am I upset right now? Yeah,"
to trade Rider as a reported deal with their,pick in.Wednesdax's fitStround,
The Star Tribune of Minn~sota
the P,ortland Trail Blazers appeared · and a future No. I dr~ choice 10 reported Friday that the Wolves had McHale said. "Do I want these
headaches? Absolutely no!.''

.~.

I

) I T:

with 11'11ificllion ballot. Ballou 1re ·month lockout and allowing the season 10 be&amp;in on time. But the uaion
due back July 8.
M1jority tpprOVal is needed for changed its leadenhip a couple
ratification, and the 1greemen1 months Iller and beaan challenJing
should be overwhelmincly approved various details includinJ pension
because il improves the terms the payments and salary cap interpretaplayen ratified Jut summer - and tions.
because it was negotiated by the disThe matter ended up in federal
sident faction that look over leader- court and before the National Labor
ship of the Playen Association in Relations Board, and the sides finalFebruary.
ly got together this week to try to
"We expect approval to be near- work it out at the bargaining table.
ly unanimous," Kessler said.
They met for 6 112 houn Tuesday, 4
The six-year agreetm:nt was first 112 hours Wednesday, 12 hours
ratified last summer, ending a three- Thursday and three hours Friday.

~

By RON LESKO

''

;

tract. It also includes an eiahl-year Gary Payton. Dikembe Mutombo,
aroup licensing deal with a substan- nm Hardaway, Reuic Miller and .
tially l~rger payout to the pllyen.ln Kenny Anderson.
O'Neil, Miller and PaytOn will be
the collective ba&lt;Jainina ..,-eement
that expired after the 1994 season, playinl on lbe U.S. Olympic learn,
the playen got only ssoo.oooa year which opens camp Monday in
for the use of their likenesses. The Chicaao. and all three will probably
blunder cost the players tens of mil- be forced to buy cawttophic injury
lions. in profits made through boom- insurance for the period between
ing merchandise sales.
July I and the day they sign their
The eight-day moratorium took new contracts.
"They may be reluctant to pracmany agents by Sllf)lrise, including
Leonard Armato, wbo thought he tice without !be protection of a conwould begin fielding offers Monday tract. but they would have been more
so if there had been a lockout."
for Shaquille O' Neal.
."In a sense, we're disappointed Kessler said •
Two rumored trades, Kobe
that we won 'I be ahle to begin the
process July I , but there's no gain in Bryant to the Laken and Andrew
taking a mililani stance against it," Lan1 to the Bucks, also can 'I be
Annato said. "The horses are at the finalized until July 9. General mangate and ready to run, and now they acen will face tampering changes
have to wail eight days for the door from the league if they attempt to get
lo open; I just hope I he horses don 't a head start on malti~g offen io free
overheat."
•cents.
Players will receive a description
Also included in this summer's
free agent market, the biggest ever, of the new agreement Monday, along
arc Michael Jordan, Dennis Rodman,

Rider's arrest mars Marbury's introduction

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

MacBeth MJF fund-raiser
scheduled for Saturday

By CHRIS SHERIO'AN
sttaighl day of negoliations at a ManNBW YORK (AP) - The NBA hattan hotel.
and its players' union finally final"We're glad we've been able 10
ized their t.bor deal friday, but the conclude our negotiations," deputy
tentative agreement won't allow free commissioner Russ Granik said.
agency, neaotillions and trades until
"And we look forward on July 9to
July 9.
re-focusing our energies on continDurina the eipt-day IIIOIJI(orium, uing the worldwide growth of the
playen will volt on whether 10 re- sport over the next several years."
ralify and sign the deal. OverNegotiaton worked out about 16
whelming approval is widely expect- disputed issues, and the last sticking
ed.
point was the amount of money the
Afterward, business will resume league should pay for use of the
with a collective bargaining agree- . union's logo. Talks broke off Thesment in place for the next five
day night when the union asked for
yean.
$31 million, and·the league ended up
"The ownen were insistent on
paying a couple of million less that eight-day period. They wanted money thai will be used for union
to make sure there are no misunder- · operating funds.
standings Ibis time and we accepted
"We feel like we did real well,
it reluctantly," said Jeffrey Kessler, especially because we've achieved
lead auorney for the Players Associfinancial independance. The NBA
ation.
got some things thai they wanted,
With the lbreal of a lockout loomtoo," Kessler said.
ing for Sunday night, the agreement
Most aspects agreed to last year,
was finalized Friday, the fourth . such as a rookie salary cap, remain
in effect through the life or the con-

In ,,. Minnesota Tlmberwolves' camp,

t 1•

.

,

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

NBA &amp;f.ld players' union ink labor deal to avoid lockout

·-

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Snead ties Nicklaus' mark~ to take lead
By TERRY KINNEY

•

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Gallipolis Lions linkfest results posted

Sunday, June 30,11111

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Olllllpolle, Ott • Point Ptna•nf, wv

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• ,.._._, 11

I•Page87

•

When commercialism In Olympics Is discussed,

·

·

Walker raps. critics when they lament death of amateurism
By RUSTY MILLER
CLEVELAND (AP) :_ Nine
times during the last 36 years, LeRoy
Walker has coached or been an
administrator at a Summer
Olympics. So the president of the
U.S. Olympic Comminee doesn't
take it lighlly when he is accused of
missing the point on amateurism.
"I get alllcinds of letters almost
every week, a handful of them, saying you' ve got the wrong motivation
here. You're sending these millionaires to the Games and you're not
giving the yoongsters an opportunity to panicipate. Unfortunately, the
numbers game has changed," Walker said Friday in a keynote speecli
before the national convention of the

Associated Press Spons Edil0r5.
Walker said the Olympic idell is
gone and there is no turning back. He
said there are more jarring changes
ahead, many of them forced by the
enonnity of hosting a modern
Olympics.
The Athens Olympics of 1896
included 13 nations, nine spons and
311 athletes and didn't have a budget. When the Games begin in
Atlanta in three weeks, there will be
197 nations, .28 sports and nearly
II ,000 athletes. The cost will be $1.7
billion.
" So the people are yelling, 'It's
too commercial!' Plealie help us
convey to them it's not commercialism as much as it is simple busi-

ness," Wallcer said. "You can't say
we're going to .reverse ourselves to
the time when we had fewer athletes
and less cost. So, what answers do
we have? Sponsorships- the CocaColas of the world, the Panssonics
and the Kodaks. If they aren't there
with their $40 million partnenhips.
Atlanta cannot malce it."
The business aspects aren't the
only changes Walker foresees. He
suggests choosing the host city no
more than three years in advance of .
the Olympics, to allow the host more
leverage and to hold down costs. He
also suggested that the Paralympics,
designed for handicapped athletes,
be included in the host bidding and
be used as a test for the Olympics.

UK'sModahl
clear to elaim
compensation
LONDON (AP) - The High
Court on Friday ~jeeted a move by
the British Athletics Federation. to
block a damage suit filed by middledistance runner Diane Modahl.
Modahl is claiming compensation
for the $720,()00 of legal and medica{ costs she spent in her successful
cam paign to clear her name of drugtaking allegations.
.
The BAF's lawyers failed to convlnce the court that Mlidahl's case .
should be thrown out because it
showed no reasonable cause of
action and was "doomed to failure."
Modahl, 30, was pleased with the
ruling and now wan.ts to devote her
time and energy to running.
'It has been a stressful few days
and I am happy now that I can concentrate on athletics again," said
Modahl, who qualified .for Olympic
selection at the British trials two
'weeks ago .when she finished second
in the 800 meters .
"This has not been an ideal way
to prepare for the Olympics. I want
to fix my mind on that."
The BAF imposed a four-year
ban on Modahl after tests in Lisbon
in 1994 purported to show she had a
high level of testosterone in her

raise them to honor thy mother and
said.
Jimmy had hoped to run the half- father. I did.what was required of me.
mile in the Olympics. Hfs path was I thought I did everything I could as
·
to start at Blinn Junior College in single parent," she said.
Brenham, Texas, which at the time · Marv Whiting, track coach at
had championship track program, Brookhaven on the city's .north side,
and continue to Ohio State. From knew Jimmy welL Ms. Greggs said
there, he hoped the path would lead Whiting was"like a father to Jimmy.
"Toward .the end of his freshman
to the Garnes.
"That was his dream," Ms. Greg- year, he told me he was going to run
gs said. "He told me he was going track," Whiting said. ·:The first
thing I notice about that season was
to the Olympics."
She wants to be there for him. But his unquestioned loyalty to do whatever I said. I used to watch him
it is an expense she cannot afford.
Ms. Greggs turned to Jim Scott, because he would do more than I
a. former Columbus televisi6n expected him to do:"
In his senior year, Jimmy placed
reporter now working at WXII-TV in
Winston-Salem, N.C., for help in second in the 800-meter run at the
raising money for the.trip. She knew state finals.-He also posted the fifth Scott because he covered the story of best time in the country in 1993.
But •his promising track career
the shooting, the funeral and the tricarne
to a sudden itnd violent end
al of a suspectJIJTested in the attack.
Scott offered to pay for air fare for that summer night the next year.
Ms. Greggs didn't set a curfew for
Ms. Greggs and son Brian, who
her
son that night. She saw it as one
attended Jimmy's track meets. The
night
of revelry before the five
trip, including lodging, ti-ansponafriends went their separate ways. She
tion in Atlanta and tickets to the track
said
Jimmy didn't hang in the streets
and field competition would cost her
or
go
to clubs and bars; he had called
about $4,000 for two weeks. Ms.
one
of
the friends to say he wanted ·
Greggs has about $100 to put toward
to go out with them that night.
it.
The next time Ms. Greg~s would
Another problem for Ms. Greggs
see her son would be in a hospital
is the kidney failure she suffers. She after the shooting.
has had the condition since 1995. In
"When the doctor told me that
Atlanta, she would need to go to a
Jimmy
wouldn't make it. I just
doctor for dialysis at least twice a
believe it," she said, pauscouldn't
week.
ing to take a deep breath. "I couldAs a single parent; Ms. Greggs
A' I believe that this would happen to
raised five children - Keith, !'Irian, hitn."
.
Tonya, Nicole and Jimmy, th~
He
died
that
night.
youngest who would have been 22
Authorities speculated there was
on June 25. Jimmy was the only one
a feud between some riders in both
who had prepared to go to college.
cars.
"It's especially hard when you
Days after the shooting, police

body.

The ban was lifted by Jhe International Amateur Athletic Federation
after an appeal tribunal found there
was do~bt about the. accuracy of the
tests.
Modahl ·also is seeking punitive
damages over the way her case was
handled by the BAF. The full hearing of the case is expected to take
place in the autumn.

In addition, he predicted 1 revi- ,said he favored allowing elite athsion of the current form of trials to letes to bypass quaHfying in special
determine U.S. Olympians.
cin:umstances.
"The regional championships
"They proved theY're the best.
will decide who will go to the Why should they have to come to the
Olympic Games, because cities are trials to prove it again?" he said.
saying we just can't build all these "You cannot choose in a smokefacilities. We can't bring a city to.vis- filled room all of the positions.
it a city," Walker said. "So you have You're just talking about that one
your regional championship games sure person, the Edwin Moses or
- you've got the Pan-American Gwen Torrence."
Games, the 'Asian Games, the All• Wallc~r also sees a region or sevAfrican Games, the European eral nations, rather thaii a city, hostGames. Let these decide who will ing the Olympics. He said the Intercome to this elite event called the national Olympic eommittee has
Olympic Games. It's not a develop- discussed parceling off different
mental meet any more."
events in the Winter Garnes to areas
The coach of the 1976 U.S. where there is the most interest.
Olympic track and field team also . Imagine a Summer Olympics

arrested a SIISpect, who was indicted for aggravated murder and related charges. He was later acquitted
during a jury trial.
Former Columbus homicide
investigator Roy Scott said prosecutors lost because the credibility of
their key witness carne into question.
The outcome of the trial was too
much for Sco,tt.

"I was in homicide for nine
years, and things of this nature arc
sad and disheartening," he . said.
"Jimmy Greggs' case was the last
one that I could take. I decided to
take a· break from hQIIlicide for a
couple of years." He now works in
a different department on the police
force.
.
Ms. Greggs ·said she believes her
'

with the bssketball competition beiltl l
at a large U.S. aren8. track and field tin Al'rica, rennis at Wimbledon and
soccer in South America.
'.: 1
Walker · said the USOC and
Atlanta organizers have addresaed r;
the prospect of terrorism following "1
the bombing of a U.S. banaclcs in
Saudi Arabia on Tuesday.
1! •
"They even did a dry run, how to
deal with that," Walker said. "You
try to cover all your fronts and all
they tell us is 'Yes, we know about :
it. Yes. we arc prepared. Yes, we've
gone through it and yes, we've tried
every contingency. But if we tell Yllli
any more, it's no longer security.'
But we have to be concerned."

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We were reminded of this continuity during the past few weeks. Mef Allen died and Owe Smith
annOUIIGed be would retire at the end of this year.
Allen, who was the voice of the Yankees from 1939 to 1964 and This
Week in Baseball for almost 20 years, died at the aae of 8~. He is one of
those individuals who reminded us of a simpler time when we had not yet
diScovered television.
One way schQOI chi)dren across the country knew .it was October was
beCause Allen's, voice could he heard announcing tbe World Series on the
rJ!dio. We carried out pocket transistors to school in those day_s. Yes, they
played World Series games during the day back then, and it usually involved
Mel and the Yankees.
·
·
'Smith represents a more recent reality: a player who played with one
team for most of his career, exhibiting loyalty, professionalism and integrity which were the rules rather than the exceptions for professional athletes.
He is loved by fans across America for his dazzling plays at shortstop which
earned him the sobriquet "the Wizard of Oz."
.
' ]limith was a consummate professional and a irue role model. The best
d nsive shortstop in baseball history. A man with family values who is
a ve in his community. Above all, Smith is a first class human being. You
't confuse him with Albert .Belle anytime soon. ·
~n a game which has witnessed strikes, lockouts, a canceled world series,
~ abuse, and greed, Allen and Smiih give us something to remember and
ci)&amp;rish. Baseball was a reflection of a life which seemed more simple and
~lesome. It was
a time when we still believed in heroes.
.

a 01 of ques~ons about exactly what
q)#:innati lleds owner Marge Schott
c~i do . now that she. has stepped
ditn is the team's ch1ef execuhve.
I'.·l, fhe National League expects to
h.ve some answers soon.
~ ~ president Len Coleman and
1.~' '
· ue legal counsel Robert Kheel
h~l - d to start filling in the blanks in
~ agreement with Schott during a
rrl,¢l:ting Friday at an undisclosed

•--- --- ~-- -

614·992·2184

For example, America became an urban society
in.lhe 1920s. Before then, baseball reflected the
paiiOI'Illife in oor country.
tLoolc ~ the ball paries built before that date: Wrigley Field, Fenway Pll'k,
old Comiskey Parle. You played baseball in a park or a field. This reflected
the rural nature of our society.
. The fmt park built lfter 1920
· was Yankee Stadium. There is
nothing pastoral about the stadium. It is an urban phenomenon.
Iron, steel, concrete, and girders
tefl«:ct the modem aae ..Christy
Mathewson and Walter Johnson
way to Babe Ruth and Lou

~INCINNATI (AP)- There arc

'li~~~~;;~~~~~e~~=;~
• Convenient Reverae

TUMI Ia nih III CotTM,I aftll ot
·Then is a certain continuity to baseball. It's a
reflection of American society.

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9ncertainty rules
~oncerning Schott's
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S rday that ' Schott met with top
N onal League officials at her
on Friday in an attempt to
h
fi~tlize the agreement. The newspapilrdid not name a source.
:; !fbe paper also said she was con·
s~ring a lawsuit if the NL tried to
make the final agreement tougher .
tnax. the preliminary agreement.
:: NL · spokesman Ricky Clemons
c~u1d not confirm that the meeting
toq~ plate~. but said the league
dq.ects 811 agreement soon.
; Jot can only say that everything
c~~erning the Reds and the Nationa~·teag~ and their transition should
ba ·' smoothed out very soon,"
qclinons said. "And all the questions
wj~ be answered."
,
" $choU agreed to relinquish daytot~ay decision-making authority
J~ 12 in order to avoid a suspensi ,II. The outline agreed to at that
ti , " left her with final say over the
b" ec, an advisory role in stadium
n '1 tiations and the right to go into
h office and onto the field .
; . ut ihe agreement left a lot of
1
q lions and put some Reds' fronto ~ employees in an awkward
s~.lt docs not specify what would
citl!~titute meddling in day-to-day
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"$he spends time in her office,
her dog for walks on the field
·lOre games, and sits in her sear at
'
pni\Stadium. Employees are
u~re how. much contact they are
pOipliued to .!Jave with Scholl and
· wtiat they. can discuss.
;;,,,
Complicating matters, Schott is

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RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande will hold its final
boys' baslcetball camp session of the season on July I I and 12.
It is the hunior high team camp, which is for players enterina grldes
7-9 this fall.
Playen will be housed in residence halls on the URG campus.
. Meals will be provided through the campus cafeteria.
For m- information, call Redmen bead coach John Lawhorn at
24S-7293. Residents outside the local dialin&amp; area may call I·SOO. 282·
7201, extension 7293.
·
·

•Credit Application• Are
Now Being Accepted
for Proce..lng

URG to hold girls' cage camps
RIO GRANDE -The University of Rio Grande will hold girls'
basketball camp sessions throughout June and 1uly 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
Jul) 25-27: Varsity Team Camp
·
Players will be housed in residence halls on the URG campus.
Meals will be provided through the campus cafeterijl..
·
For more informatioo, call Redwomen head coach David Smalley at 245-7491. Residents outside the local dialing area may call 1800-282-7201, extension 7491.

'Baby Blue' Camp Monday
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 infomtation, call Jim Osborne at 446-9284.

RVHS Boosters to meet Tuesday
CHESHIRE - The River Valley High School Athletic Boosters
Club will hold its regular meeting on Tuesday, July 2 at 7 p.m. at River Valley High School.
Among the items on the ·club's agenda will be organization of a
pool party for athletes and cheerleaders, planning for the upcoming
. football season and fund-raising for the 1996-97 school year.
Parents are urged to attend the meeting.

Basketball skills camp scheduled ·
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia Academy's varsity basketball teams will
begin a two-day offensive skills clinic on Monday, July 8 from I to
3 p.m. at the Gallia Acl¥lemy 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~.m. and on the clinic's first day.
·For more information, call Jim Osborne at 446-9284.

Meigs volleyball camp set
ROCK SPRINUS - The Meigs volleyball camp will run from
Monday, July 8 to Friday, July 12 from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
··
For more information, call varsity coach Rick Ash at 992-5960.

URG to hold baseball day camps
RIO GRANDE- The University of Rio Grande will conduct two
baseball day camps on campus in July.
·
The first camp is scheduled to run from Monday, July 15 to Friday, July 19 from 9 a.m .. to noon. Tile second will run from Monday,
July 22 to Friday, July 26 from 6 to 8 p.m.
Both camps, which arc for players six to 15 years old, will be held
at the Stanley L. Evans Field.
For more information, call Redmen coach Wayne Albury at 2457486.
.

Local football camp slated
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Area Football Camp, for boys
entering grades 5-8 this fall. will be held from July 22 to July 25 from
I to 3:30 p.m. daily at Memorial Field in mid· town Gallipolis.·
The focus of the camp will be to teach fundamentals .
.
Participants should wear a cleated shoe if possible. A camp T-shirt
will be provided for each participant. Various prizes will be offered.
Water and refreshments will be provided daily.
Application forms will be made available at Gallia Academy High
Schoool.
·
For more information, call GalliaAcademy head coach Brent Saunders at 446-3354.

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1tlt CHEV. S.tO 15805, B~k, chfCJIIII whlela, rNr 1ttp bumJ*,
cUiioiw ltrlpee .........................~..........................................._ ... ~
1te2 CHEV. 9-10 15800, Y-6 q., A/C, tilt, AM/FM ens., bad liner,
lpOft whltle ................................•.•.................•.:.........................$1111

1te2 CHEV. 9-19 15809, AMJFII Clll., Nnnlng bolrdl, CUllom

'

RANGER XLT 15841, Long bad, 28,000 mil.., Jill. o1
Wlrr., AMJFII c-.,t'lar tlldtr, eport wlletl1, gl'ltft ..,$10,135
1894 NISSAN PATHFINDER 4X4 4 DR.IS853, A/C, AMJFM
ivhHll, el""' lnttrior................................... $15,1195
1995
9-10 15942, Extra Cab, green, A/C, AMIFM Clll.,
t'llr flip MIII,IJ)Ort whHll- ...........................:..............$11,985
11195NISSAN KING CAB 15943,30,000 mllea, AMIFM Clll.,
A/C, rear allder, apon wlteela.......:...................................$11,345
1894 SUZUKI SIDEKICK 4X415962, 4 Dr., JX Pkg., aport
wlteelt, A/C, AMJFII, 23,000 mllea, bal. of flc:t. Wlrr..... $12,485
1993 DODGE CARAVAN 15888, Red, A/C, AfT, AM/FII
Clllllte, tilt. air b1g ............................................................ $9958
1991 PONT. TRANSPORT VAN 15784, V-6 eng., 6 pall., A/C,
A/T, tlH, crul88, PW, PL, P. 88&amp;1, fog light, lugg. raek..:.....$8995
1991 DODGE CARAVAN 15963, While, 7 JIIA, A/C, A/T,

1994

AM!FM ................:•.••••••••~ ••••• ~······ .....•..•..••..•. :.••...••..•..••••. ~•••••••$5995

1894 MERCURY VILLAGE
15981 ....................................... :................................. $12.385
1995 DODGE CARAVAN
15979......................................................................... :........$12,785

CUI

1999 PONTIAC SUNBIRD LE 15973, Red, 2 Or., A11!FM
CD radlo .......................................................................................$4595
1988 PONTIAC GRANO AM 15970, Black, A/T, AJC, AM/AI

.

.

.

t99211AZOA 32315916, 33,000 mile•. AM/FII ca11., apen whetle,
rear detroeler ................................:......................:...................... $6n5
1991 HONDA CIVIC OX 15907, Black, AMIFM ca11., 4 Or., eport
wheels, cloth lntarior...:.............................................................. $6495
1994 PONTIAC GRANO All
15974........................................................................................$10,995
1994 FORO TAURUS
15982 ......................................................................................... $11,785
1991 PONTIAC GRAND All 15925, WhHa, AJC; A/T, AM/FM call., 2
Dr., aport whltla .........................................................................$6995
1993 FORO TEMPO GL 15951, Whhe, A/C, A/T, AM/AI eut., dual
mirrors ...........:.......................................................:... ,.............:.... $7995
1994-GEO METRO 15905, 29,000 mil.., Bal. of 11C1. Wlmnty, A/C,
A/T, Ali/FM ca.IHHt ................................................................... $7886
1995 FORO ASPIRE SE 15741,2 Or., gretn, AMJFII can., 7,000
ma... bal. ot IIICL warranty.........................."............................$7995
1993 FORD TEMPO GL 15952, AJC, A/T, AM/FM call., rear
delirost&lt;ar,·cloth Interior ...:.......................................................... $7995
FORD TAURUS GL 15980 ............................................... $10,845
1994 FORO ESCORT, White 15890, 2 Dr., AM!FM casa., cloth
Interior ....................................................................:...... :............. $7995
1993 FORO TEMPO GL 15958, Black, AJC, AfT, AM/FM casHite,
defroster, cloth lntarlor.......................................................$7995
1993 CHEV. CORSICA LT 15954, Pewter, A/C, AIT, AM/FM, dual
mirrors, t'llr delroller ................................................................ $8495
1993 DODGE SPIRIT 15950, Green, AJC, A/T, AII/FII, air bag, rear
dtfroeler, clolh Interior .............................................................. $8995
1993 PONTIAC SUNBIRO LE 15889, 2 Dr., blue, AJC, A/T, AM/FII,
rear spoiler, cloth interior .......................................................... $8295
1883 CHEV. CORSICA LT 15896, Red, AJC, A/T, AM/FII, rear
detrotler ...................................................................................... $8995
1993 FORO PROBE 15840, Green, AJC, tiH, cruise, AM/FM
ea•sette, power wlndowa.................................,.........................$93011
1993 DODGE SPIRIT 15957, Dove gray, A/C, AfT,
AM/FM, crulae ............... ~ ............................................................. S8995
1992 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME SL 15842, 2 Or., red, AJC, AlT.
apen wheel., pewer wlndowe, pewar locks, tiH, c_rulae ......... $9587
1994 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX SE 15908, A/C, AlT. AII/FII cut.,
CNise, power wlndowallocka...................:.........................$10,994
1994 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE f593t,lllua, A/C, AfT, AII/F.M
ceu., tilt, cNise, power wlndowe ..........................................$10,885
1994 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SE 15832, Green, AJC, AfT, AM/FII
cau., tilt, eNIII, power windows &amp; loekl ........................... $10,885
1994 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 15806, A/C, A/T, AM/FM call., tilt,
CNIH, pewer windowtlloek.. power tall..
cloth Interior............................................................................. $11 ,I 87
1993 DODGE INTREPID 15813, While; A/C, AIT, AMJFM cua.,
power windowt, IIH, CNIH, air bag ....................................... $11 ,995
1993 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 15879, AJC, AlT. AM/FII cau., tiH,
crulat, air bag,..., delrotler, PW, PL, sport wh..le ........... $11,300
1994 PONTIAC SUNBIRO lE 1597U Dr., red, A/T, A/C, AM/FII
Clllltlt ...................................................................................... $9897

BICIROW BEAftiES
AUla Steek.
. . . . .UJ
' Proeraft,

Ge•eraden m, All
aulaahoatiiJ ee•la,
t::araveUe, All ·
Penteen'IBy t::I'Ht

1992 CHEVY CAIIARO 15948, White ........................................ $1995
1!117 PONTIAC FIREBIRO FORMULA 15133, Blue, 5 epted, aport
wheels, A/C ..................................................................................$3195

17'4" Caravella Open Bow,
Inboard 3.0L motor w/lrailer, .

Conv. top, Mooring cover.

Was $13,996.00

'11 ,900.00

11184 FORD LTD 15928, Black, AJC, Aff, P. wlndowe, sealll lOck..
V-6 tnglnt ....................................................................................$1995

I tat FORD ESCORT WAGON 15885, Aff, AM/FM,
cloth lnttrlor................................................................................S19i5
11114 FORD TEMPO GL 15860, AJC, AII/FII, cloth lnt .............$1995
1988 0LDS DELTA 88 ROYALE 15968 .......................................$1995
1888 DODGE ARIES tsm ...........................................................$995
1!111 DODGE DIPLOMAT 15976................................................... $995

Directions: U.S. 50 East' to
W.V.IIne ·tum right onto
Main St. South to Wash.·
Blvd. right onto wash. Blvd.
Next Left or Call: ·

Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

V8, IIUio, nKI wJwinll clolh Interior, floni l
n11r IIC, 1111110 Qlll, TV, Po,ww wlndowt lockl. Cllllle, till, ,_-lofa, roof nM:k.
M

KINGS ISLAND liCKETSI

Blnk Financing Available.

Marvin Keebaugh

'IHHO

.
URG to hold boys' cage camps

ALL ON S.t\0'! NOW . NOW

Jeny Bibbee

COME SEE THE COMPLETE LONE OF TORO• WHEEL HORSE•
TUCTORS AND RIDING MOWERS .

ER When,_

Clemons has denied a report that
the NL was investigating Schott for
interfering in day-to-day matters. He
said Friday thai no one from the
Reds hilS complained to the league
about Schott.
"There's bee.n no raports here.
The only thing we know about that
is what's written in the newspapers,"
he said. "And we're not investigat·
. hcth''
mg
r, at s .or sure. "
Allen will be allowed to run the
team for up to 60 days while a long:
tenn replacement is sought. Schott is
allowed to propose a CEO, who
would have to be approved.
"We're just starting in that
process," Clemons sai~.

1990 FORDE 150
CONVERSION HI TQP

INTEREST UNTIL OCT. 1ST

OR

OAUJPOLIS - H«e an the liMit I'CIUIII from the Clitrside
Llldies Golf Auocilllion'a Wednesday Momillallld 11usday Evenins
Leques.
Wedneaday, June 19- Jackie Kniabt (low pou). Cindy Sllley
{low net). Sue Bumeac (birdie on third hole).
. Thunday, June 20- Bumette (low pou). Andrea Halkins (low
net). Shelly Hukins (birdie on third bole).
Wedneaday, June 26- KniJht (low pou). Jean Hankins (low net).
Wanda Boxdorfer (cbip-in and birdie on oiJhth hole)
Th'unday, June 27 - Raymah Hawk (low pou). Karen Sprague
{low net and birdie on 13dJ hole). Knipt (18th hole) and Kathy 011'11
(14th hole) (chip-ins).

to me."

••

Lo ...·n and,Cordl!n Trnclor
20 ltp wirlt OJJtit)nol &lt;IS" tid~ dUcltorR" rnowi"' declt

j 5 lip •hcm·tt wir" opri.o~tal42" ~tWWi"fl' d•ck

making it clear to employees that she
is unhappy with changes made since
she stepped down as CEO.
"She's got that sour look," said
one employee, who has frequent
contact with Schott. "You can just
tell she's 11nhappy."
Schott reportedly is unhappy that
controller John Allen, her choice as
·CEO until a long-term successor is
picked; has reversed many of her
longstanding policies.
Allen has introduced numerous
promotions that Schott refused to
permit, incluiling reduced ticket
prices for some games. Tile Reds
sold 32,286 tickets - roughly
12,000 more than average - for a
game Wednesday night by offering
reduced prices on some seats.
On Friday, the club announced
that it will reduce ticket prices for a
game July 15.
Allen said Friday that the ticket
discounts prove ·that Schott is not
meddling in day-to-day operations.
"Obviously if she was meddling
to any extent, those things wouldn't
be happening," Allen said. "There's
a lot of talk (that Schott has been
meddling), and I hear some of that
stuff.... I'm very disappointed with
the press and the one or two employees who have said that.
"We've got to get the focus back
· on the field and the fans. For this .
stuff to come back up, that's very sad

""' ".

Mo.~l520·H

Modf"l 265·11 Lown &amp; Cnrtl•n 'Jrerlor

STATE lOUR 241

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''FREE''

CWA results announced

.

Like ex tra low and mid-range power to

741 East Main St.

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I

Qn the Reds' front-office scene,

The KowasakiJET SKI'" STS wolcrcraft utTers
plenty of performance withoUt ctlmpromises .

LET US FIT YOU WITH ANEW -TORO WHEEL HORSE

NO PAYMENTS

.'

t\tloolEPORT • 0~

A Big Fish in Any Pond.

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son would have run in the Olympic •.1
trials if he had lived. But she feeb ; ,
there must he a reason for his death. ·
"I miss him temllly, but I knb~ , 1
God don't make mistakes," shesai4 c,
"All or our souls belong to God, an4 i•i
he takes us back when ·he feels it'§ r!
time," she said. "I know he's in 11
1
better place now."
.. •

tt1:\~Coullh.

Special Prices on all motorcycles

KAWASAKI MOTOR
SPORTS CENTER

I •• '

. • t: ...

·All Jet Ski's in stock are on
sale now!

SKI
watercrafl.
The STS
Kowosaki
JET
Check itoul 1oduy.

•

I

Reporter aids slain Olympic hopeful's mother in quest to see Games
By RON VAMPLE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - On
an early Sunday morning in August
1994, five Br091chaven High School
buddies left a night club. They were
celebrating a last night out together
before heading off to different colleges.
.
As they drove down the curb lane
of a street, gunfire blasted from a car
in the passing lane. Bullets missed
three of the five mends. The driver,
Anthony Gwinn. now an Ohio State
University football player, was
grazed on the right shoulder. But the
perso·n sitting in the middle of the
back seat was shot in the face.
Jimmy Greggs' life ended in the
drive-by shooting. So did his dream
of running in the 1996 Olympics.
His mother, Linda Greggs, wants
to keep the dream alive by going to
the Olympics in Atlanta in July as a
tribute to her son.
"I'm going to do everything in
my power to fulfill his dream ," she

. ..

Area sports briefs-

Allen &amp; Smith:
Men of baseball to
remember, cherish

614-423-6541
. Bling thll ad and get a free.eafety kit with your new boat...

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Outdoors

A'l ong the River

..,...~-----Spot18 ~·--~-"""""!"'

WILLY PIKf:•s OUTDOOI LIFE

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Williams was scheduled to 01111
S3.4 million in what would be bis
16th NBA season. He is ilmocll eiafil
NBA players to score 16,000 poiniJ
and grab 12,000 rebounds. WiUia!tls
avefBied 7.3 points, 5.8 reboundl
and 23.9 minutes in 70 games last
season.
OIJmpicS
BOSTON (AP)- Jaycie Phelps
dtilled her final two routines IJid
totaled 46.887 points to take the lead
at the Olympic gymnastics trials.

....

POimAND, Ore. (AP)- Buck

wmi-. one or Penland's last linb
10 their sJory dayl of the early

1990s,
will become a flee arent The Blazen decided not to ~ercise their
option 10 lceep the 36-year-okl power forward for the final year of his
contract. .
1bc Blazers exercded the option
year 10 keep lcadins scorer Clifford
RQIIinson and n:serve guard James
RObinson.

.

Tycoon Lake harbors 28-pound
catfish
.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - . rock bass, bluegills, carp and suckHm is the weekly fishing n:port pro- ers are found throughout the entire
vided by the Division of Wildlife of river.
the Ohio Dcpanment of Natural
PAINT CREEK LAKE - Lake
levels have n:tumed to normil and
Resources:
the summer fishing season has
·Southeast
TYCOON LAKE -:- Channel returned. Channel and flathead catcatfish up to 28 pounds have been fish offer good night fishing opporseen during sampling surveys on this tunities. Try the tail water an:a when
lake. Usc lraditional baits fished dur- seeking saugeyes. Rocky areas of the
·ing late evening for best results. lake provide good places to fish for
Milly 111glen come here for the bass bass.
fishing. Usc plastic worms, Rapalas
Ohio River
or Spinnen.
The Stockport Pool in Morgan
TIMBRE RIDGE LAKE- This County includes 575 surface acres of
lake was opened to public fishing in water. Plastic worms, spinners and
1991 and is located in the Wayne small crank baits work very well
National FOrest. Fishing opponuni- when seeking spolted bass. Try fishties are rated good for largemouth ing near the docks, weed beds and
bass and bluegills and fair for chan- bridge abutments when seeking
nel catfish. Bluegills up to eight inch- largemouth balis. Crappies, catfish,
es and channel catfish up to 20 inch- walleyes, bluegills and white bass
es are caught each year.
provide good fishing action in sum!iouthwest
mer.
GREAT MIAMI IUVER - The
Central
river provides excellent small mouth
DEER CREEK LAKE- Condibass fishing from Sidney to Hamil- tions have largely improved which
ton. especially below the low-head has allowed the marina to open for
dams. Saugcye fishing can be fairly · summer business. Channel catfish
good from Piqua to Dayton. Lots of can be taken during late afternoon

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By JAMES E. WALTERS
PHOENIX (AP) - The main
goal in landscape watering should be
to keep plants from the stress stage.
I,.ongtime gardeners conslantly
practice loold'ng at a plant for signs
of stn:ss and what may be causins it.
This n:quin:s close attention to not
o",ly the plants but also to soil and
weather conditions.
A few basic practices smooth the
problem, such as realizing that
watering n:quirements change a5 a
plant grows and there is a need to
water ac;cordingly.
It also helps to group plants
according to their water requirements. Place together trees, shrubs
and flowen that have high or low
n:quirements. This will help keep
them from being over· or underwatered. While not always possible,
such grouping should be a leading
objective.
,
Soil salts are water soluble, so
deep watering is worth a try whenever a plant seems in trouble. A long,
slow watering moves the salts below
the roots.
Soil-salt damage often appears
much like the injury resulting from
abnormally low rainfall or drought.
Growth is stunted. Tbere can be yellowing leaves, leaf burn, leaf drop,
branch die-back.
Be sun: that the symptoms aren ' t
caused by ex~ess water. Determine
moistun: depth by how easily a long
screwdriver or narrow rod goes into
the ground. It.is hard to push into dry
soil.
·
While signs of wilting are bad
news they can be caused by too

Sports deadlines
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
The Daily Sentinel and the Sunday
Times-Sentinel value the contributions their n:aders make to the sports
sections. of these papen, an(j they
will continue to be published.
However, certain .deadlines for
submissions will be observed.
The d~adline for submissions of
local baseball- and softball-related
photos and n:lated articles, from.Tball to the majors, as well as other
spring and summer sports, is the day
of the last game of the World Series.
The deadline for photos and related anicies for football and other fall
sports is the Saturday before the
Super Bowl.
The deadline for photos and n:lated articles for basketball (summer
baskciball and related camps fall
under the summer sports deadline)
and other winter sports is the last day
of the NBA finals.
These deadlines are in place to
allow contributors the time. they
need to acquire their photos from the
photography studio/developer of
choice and to give the staffs the
chance 10 publish these items in 'the
· appropriate season for those sports.

much water or too little.
Established plants can tolerate
some wilting and probably won't die
· from lack of water. They just won't
grow very fast or look as well.
· ~ New plants and seedlings will
· need watering before they reach the
stress stage. They become eslabJi~hed through root growth arid a
good top-to-root balance. Some
species take one to two years, or
even more. Until you are sure they
are established, give them close
attention. Don't try to water on a
fixed schedule.
With a newly pUrchased plant, the
original advice is usually to water
every couple of days after planting.
The plant may look happy for
months. But if such watering continues, it begins to wilt and drop
leaves despite the attention lavished
upon it. Actually. it is drowning from
lack of soil oxygen . Mon: water finishes it.
It is better to water every other
day for the first couple of weeks and
then reduce this to once or twice a
week.
Light but daily watering will
establish shallow root systems sub-·

Marvin Keebailgh
Doc Hayman
Clark Reed

.

IU'fi~S . ftN Nl~lt7 f~llllS
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f)NJ..Y 7.75% .tll1ll*.·
.

" blrBankl.n~•rr

'(Fa) Farmers Bank
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ihat.

/'''"t

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0 It I D A

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·&gt;.:

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CUFF HANCOCK, left and R~ Thomas are co-ownara .of Temple Tattoo on Second Av~nue In Gallipolis. Aa well as tattooing the two perform

body pining.

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Businessmen
bring art of body
piercing to area

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surgical stainless steel captive bead rings,
which iJse the bead as a clasp.
·
The auto-claved needle diffen from a:
,gun thai is often used at jewelry stores to
pi.erce ears. Th• needle removes a small
core from the l''ercing rather than pushing through the tissue.. By usin
, g the
~
:

::~rc~::/;~f;

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seconds.
Cliff said, he will be talking to someone 'to take their mind off of·the sting and.
often they won"t even realize the piercing
has been done.
· ·
"'t really is over so quickly," he pid.
Body pierc·- ' • 1 ~ ·
ings require

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bead such as a barbell or stud.·
A stud for the nose is called a. nostril
screw. A stud is attached to a straight post
with a curl on the. end resembling a
corlcscn:w. It is scn:wed into the nose
with the curled~gmentlaying flat on the
septum the post bridging the nasal cavity.
A bllfbell resembles the kind used by
1 0

~~~cee main:~; ~~:~::.~. lb~e :! :~:.:si:.::::

GALLIPOLIS
Pick your poison ·
c·
.. ,
when it comes to self dpression. Will it and have less occur- ·
'
proper healbe brazen and bold or subtle !llld .sub- rences of infection.
ing.
The
dued?
_.
Being stainless · ·
·
·
process varies
. Those who lilce their self expression sieel the captive .
with people
with a little edge are choosing more lbaR bead ring also
&gt;
and location of
piercing but
just a signature coif or· tn:ndy 'fashion reduces infection,
ensemble. They're letting their bodies do 111d by the design
generally with
the talking with hoops and studs.
facilitates cleaning
the nose .it
Body piercing, an ancient .fa5hion, has of "ew piercings.
takes two to
come back into vogue. It is most com- The ring comes in
·six weeks, a
manly performed on the nose, navel, eye- several gauges of
tongue nine to
brow and mouth.
·
thickness for specif1·2 weeks and
Anyone willing to go under the pierc- ic piercings. For
a·navel around
ing needle can do it in GallipOlis at Tern- instance a nose
three tq six
pie Tattoo on Second Avenue. ,The two · piercing · would
months.
owners, Cliff HIJ!cock and Rich Thomas, require a smaller
.
Cleanliness. is
in their ·10 weeks of business have per- ' gauge than a nl!_vel.
A BOD'( p~lng flrat need&amp; to be done Ice~ to piercing
formed around 40 piercings. . .
· Eve~ the l~est with a captlvelielld ,111g, top. The ring can ma_n~tenance .
Some weeks \here will be no business gauge 1s no th1cker then be substituted with a noaa screw or Usmg anllsepfor piercings and some days they will do than the lead of a bartlell, bottom
· t1cs for above
several, Cliff said.
pencil and is really
the neck and
Body piercing is a highly monitored less. painful ~han
.
.
. ~urgical scrubs
procedure in Ohio. Piercers must be gettmg an ~ar JliCrced, Cl!ff Slll~.
for below ~e neck p1ercmgs sh?uld be
licensed and tools" and surroundings are
The enun: procedun: mcludmg expla- cleaned tw1ce dlllly. Spec1al p1ercmgs
held to high standards for sterility.
. natio~: sterilization,. pierc_ing and ring . require extra ~rec~utions and care. .
Ciiff and Rich usc single-usc auto- mseruon takes about ten !"mutes, but the
After the p•ercmg_"has healed a van~ty
clave sterilized needles: They pierce with actual lime for a p1ercmg 1s only about ten of nngs can be subslttuted for ,the capt1ve

o·.()

from the post allowing it to be insened
into a.piercing and then reanached.
All this piercing, in every place imaginable, may seem ·like just another fad,
but it n:ally has had some son of a following for centuries.
Naval piercing began in ancient Egypt,
Cliff s3id, and was reserved only for
· women of statun:.
"There have always been a certain percentage of people that wen: into this,"
Cliff said.
Body piercing doesn't seem on its way
to its demise any time soon either.
."It's not going to go back. It may
become less tn:ndy," Cliff said. "It will
probably taper qff but not die off."
It's for everybody, not just people
under 30, he said. Among his clientele are
women over 60.
It's not all about shock value.
. Sure people who become human pin
cushions may be doing it for shock value,
he said.
- But Cliff sees it as any other omamenlation people usc on themselves - self
expression.

' Clara ~of the bcine
having some health problems.
·
Clara became, ill and was ta1ccn to
Vetefll!s Memorial Hospital where
s!Je was slabilized after suffering 111
apparent bean attack. She was then
taken to St. Joseph Hospital in Parlcenburg, W.Va., and from then: was
sent to the Cbarles\on Medical Center. Irs believed that's she's had a
couple attacks. ,
·
Her sister, Maxine Bealmire, of
Syracuse, is serving as Clara's main
caretaker since she has been
n:tumed U1 her home with her brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert McDaniel, and her sister,
MIS. Betty Frazier, all ()f Middle' pon. looking in on her nilw and
again;
. ' .
MIS. ·Lula Keirns, a n:sident of
the Mark Rest Center in
McCoimelsville, is reponed to be
the oldest female resident in t..clfglll
County.
~- Keirns marked her 102nd
birthday yesterday, June 29. Harold
and Blondena Rainer of the Racine
·area are her son and daughter-inlaw.
Jlow ·about a free bean dinner?
That's the offer being made ·as a
pan of the 9th annual bluegrass festival to be held at Wilkesville on
JulyS and 6.
Entertainment will go from 6
p.m. to midnight on July S and from
12 noon to midnight on Saturday,
July 6. Among the entenainen pro- ·
·viding the bluegrass music will· be
.Changing Times, Rock ·Bottom
Grass, Dusty Valley Grass, Middleport Branch, Harvest Time, Ison
CICek EJi., Raccoon Creek Grass
and Stoney Grass the latter being on
hlllld. on· Saturday only. The free
bean dinner will be served on Saturday night. There is a charge of
attending the entertainment portion
of the festival. Sponsoring the festival is the Joseph Freeman Post 476,
American Legion.
Joe Gloeckner has been known in
Pomeroy for years as a gn:at grower
of roses which be distributes often at
spots around the community so that
others can enjoy them.
Having experienced lots of difficulty in getting roses bushes to
cooperate, I thought he would have
plenty to do in seeing that they
. thrived. However, Joe apparently is
into other flowers also. He deliven:d
a big co"tainer of several types of
lillies to Veterans Memorial Hospital the other day ·tO be used about the
hospital. They provided some nice
focal points.
Thanks to Joe who must be one
of those people blessed with a green
thumb. I should get so lucky.
COntinued on page C-2

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rBy JAMES SANDS

(We hav~ to tell you about o~r rates!)

• APR based m minimum loan unount of
$12,000.00 for a term of 60 months. Montllly
pt1)111111t ~ount would be $241._,, with a tala!
finlnoe charp of$2,513.40. Oftillr aqiilble
filr a limited time, 10 hgory in today, during cu
. Loin Sort. AJut· •~ OOINO ON NOW!!

We could discuss the weather but
;heck. you alreltdy bow about
, But did you know that we have two
"full moons this month which I'm
:told, is unilsual.
' '
My upriver friend, Ann Boso
advised me of the fiCI. The rec:ond
'full moon of the month is due to
· arrive tonisht llld ICCOrding to the
· lingo, it is known u a "blue moon.•
,Sounds lilce a sons to me llld I have
llo ·problem with that

Sternwhee.
l
er
Mountain
Boy.
made
July
4,'
1870
memorable
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Special Corrnpondent
"The grand old hills of Virginia
towered like gigantic monsteJS into
the evening sky. The placid Ohio
murmured musically
as it swept through
its -banlcs on to the
sea. The chorlsten
of the wood seemed
·' have w.oven them.
iel•ves intO a band to
·nfF:o~
8doration and
•
.
to the dying
glories of the day. It'is worth a year's
clOse confinement to be pcnnitted to
upon such a scene as this, e'en
for a little moment. My heart was
lifled far a"dve the sroveling
thoughts of this world, and for the
tiine being [ reveled in the pun: joys
oflife eternal."
'
: The above lines wen: writtel) by a
correspondent to the Gallipolis Journ&amp;l on July 4, 1870. The writer had
Stlent milCh of his day in a quiet
srove. Inl870 that seemed to be the
favorite means of observing the
national holiday.
: :The summer. of 1870 was hot111d
drjo. M111y people opted to board
sie.amboats that ran out of Gallipolis
on. July 4 and headed to Raccoon
Island, Long's Grove on the
Kanawha or Watson's Grove at
~- Fishina and picnicking
were lJ!el'erte!l to•tAayini in the hot

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Contain ·Ourselves!

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"Bear"..ly
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We Can

GMC4DR
JIMMY4X4.

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FAMILY HOMES INC.

something strange. In a place where where Payne envisions hundreds of
. the world will converge in less than thousands of visitors milling around
a month, then: is very little initial in the modern-day version of an
sign that you are entering Olympic-· ancient piazza, the scenery is domiland.
nated by capitalism- pavilions for
The primary impact comes from
Coke, AT&amp;T, General Motors and
what sets this city and its privately other corporate Olympic backen.
financed games apart- commercial
The park is considered the first
sponsors. Kodak, IBM and others major urban·open space to be devel who have paid up to $40 million
oped in a U.S. city in at least 30
apiece for the privilege dangle the
years, and officials hope that it will
five rings from billboards along the
be a magn~t for downtown renewal
interstate. Banners lining Peachtree after the games are . gone and the
Street show the Olympic logos and
sponsor tents .have depaned. It's pan
. adds for Coca-Cola and Della Air- of a dramatic change in the look of
lines.
Atlanla, at least ·the pan that conAbout the only place you can see
ventioneers and·other out-of-towners
the Olympic rings unadorned is at
see the most.
the center of the Olympic park,
"These are improvements that
where they are laid out in a multi- -would have been made, but it would
colored foun1ain. But evep there,
have taken anotljer I0 yeaJS," Kelman said. .
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•'~4

t&gt;IAL

All Ohio

Preparing.. ~~co_m_in-ued__~_m_B_-~_&gt;________~-

Jerry Bibbee

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Quality landscape watering rests
in keeping plants from stress stage

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:.. POMEROY EAGlES
CLUB MEMBERS DUES ~
ARE DUE JUNE 30TH. :

and evening on traditional baits crappie fishing is rated fair to good.
fished along the bottom in the upper
Nordleut
.
NIMISD..A RESERVOIR - Use
half of the lake. Try the tailwatcr for
saugcyes during early morning and larval baits and small worms fished
* .. -.
evening hours. Tick Ridge is a good beneath a bobber to !alee liluegills
area to fish for white bass during ·and sunfish. Traditional baits silch as
summer.
night crawlers and chielccn livers can
HARGUS LAKE - The outlook be fished ilear the lalce bottom to !alee
remains good for bass fishing. Use channel catfish. Try using small
large spinnen, surface baits and crank baits and spjnnen when seekplastic worms cast into shallow ing bass from shallow water areas
weedy areas for best results. Fishing near the shon:line.
opportunities continue to improve for
LAKE ROCKWELL - Channel
channel catfish angleJS. Crappies catfish can be taken during the earand bluegills are also available.
ly morning and late evening on traPLEAS~~rtb::~ LAKE
ditional baits. Use minnows beneath
a bobber fished in deep water to
Fish along the sandy beaches at locate crappies. Live baits or anifidepths of W to 15 feet during the ciallures can be used to take bass.
Lake Erie
evening when seelting saugeyes.
Most smallmouth bass are found in
the lower half of the !alee from the
Marking large numbers of fish is
lodge 10 the darn. Largemouth bass common, but fishing success continues to vary day by day, The areas
.
are primarily in the upper pan of the around C-Can, D-Can, Ruggles
lake.
Reef, Niagara Reef, the area around
· HARRISON LAKE- Prospects West Sister Island and the Toledo
A Few Of Our Home Standard Features
are good for channel catfish and bull- Shipping Channel are good places to
• Andersen Tilt Windows
~:.,
head anglen. Usc traditional baits fish for walleyes, Many of these fish
• Stanley Doors
fished .along the bottom during the · can be taken at various depths and
• 2•6 Exterior Walls, 16ln. 6n Center
evening for best n:sults. Bluegil1111d along the bottom.
'"-_. , • Armstrong solarian Floor Tile
Central basin anglers are begin· • Marillate Cabinets
ning to pick up more walleyes when
'"-_. • 8 FOOl Ceiling
fishing in deeper waters four to 12
• 2xl0 Floor Joint, 161n. On Center
miles offshore. Perch off Cleveland
• 52 Gallon Water Heater
5
and smallmouth bass along some of
1
• Shaw Ca!JII'tS
the brealcwalls provide additions]
*DeltaFa~ ·
COMFGIIiASSUREO.
.
fishing action.
• Master T-lock Vinyl Siding With Lifetime Wamnty
• 2S Year W8mmty Asphalt Shingles
ject to quick drying. Since a plant
• I 0 Year Structural Warranty On The Home
wilts if the roots don't have suffiCient
moistun:, the deeper the roots go the
Our Prices Are The Lowest In The Area.
E&lt;~sy Pay A uto
less vulnerable the plant is to fluctuations at the soil surface and sudInsurance
den drying.
Any Car
Model Home Located at ,
Deep watering is good insurOrrver
An
v
ance. This means applying.tbe water
Intersection of Rts. 7 .&amp; 33
OU I &amp; SR -22
slowly so that it soaks in instead of
Pomeroy, OR 614·992-2478
'
running off.
.
&lt;. D i sco un ts &gt;
Model Home Viewing Hours 1:00 - 5:00 p.m.
Conditions vary, of course, but
Compute r Quot es
The.- Sat. or by appointment.
stan by assuming that one to two
(6 14) 992-7040
hours of slow soalcing will wet the.
Po m eroy
average soil to a depth of two feet
and six to eight hours will reach four
to five feet. In general. flowers root
at least one foot deep, established
shrubs three to four feet deep and
most matun: trees as much as five
feet or more.
Mulching is another good technique. APJ!Iy organic ma'"rial to the
soil surface to pn:vent drying, hold
down weeds and keep temperatures
cooler.
The most convenient and timesaving method of watering a landscape is likely to be an automatic
irrigation system, eliminating the
need to drag garden hoses to various
locations.

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Ohio fishing report

Section
C
SunW!y, June 30, 1•

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· MOUNT'AIN BOY· In 1870 the MoUntain Boy tOok Gallipolis realdents to the favorlta Fourth of July
activity during the hot, c1rr au~ 9f
Picnicking and flahlngln a grove at treta, The Mountain
Boy wu _.l'lfiUIIr peckllt boet betwllft Gelhpolla •net Charleaton from 1868 to 1873.

1po •

city.
Some hardy soub scheduled
baseball games on the 4th. The·"Yin·
tons" played a game with the newly orgat)i~ Porter "Yaller Breeches"
.
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00

with the latter" winnins 34-31. The
•valier
Breeches
!' 10 called beCause
J4
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they wore bright yellow pants, had
to tiSe 2 "ringm" because two of
their players decided th-' they
t

~ouid rather go fishing on the, 4th
tbiJI play baseball.
' ~ boat that .took people to picnics between ·Gallipolis and
Charleston \n July of 1870 was the
•o

M • lo-•o

Mountain Boy. This boat left Gallipolis· every Monday, Wednesday
and Friday between 4 and 6 a.m. It
arrived back in the .Old French City
on Thesday, Thursday, aild Saturday
·evenings. ·
But on holidays the boat . ran
eliCursions. During this era, then:
wen: several boats that made regular
stops at Gallipolis: J .N. McCullough, Veter81J, Ohio No.3,
Potomac, Mattie Roberts, Fleetwood, Edinburgh, Cottage No. 2,
Kate Heitdenon, Emma Orabam,
and the Sallie V.
.
Most of the boats went both
upriver and downriver from Gallipo-·
lis. The · Mattie. Roberts fiJI only
upriver to Parkersburg and back.
The Sally V. r111 to Racine and bac:lc.
The Mountain Boy, which ran
between Galli)iolis and Charleston
from 1868 to 1873, was 135 feet
long and 26 feet wide. Tbere was
room for 60 passengers and the boat
could haul about 80 tons of weight.
The guest rooms were about 9 feet
by 7 feet.
• The Master was Jl\ffics Newton
with William Martin as the pilot
The first mate was Len Morris, the
engineer Ralph Hamilton, die stew-'
ard Mr. Thompson, IJid the cook
George Smith. The ads for the boat
refmed to the cook' as a "skillful and
accomplished professor in his an."
Several officen of the Mountain
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Boy lived in Gallipolis. Just a few
months prior io July 1870, the
Mountain Boy had panicipated in an
hist.oric event. The Mountain Boy
picked up West Virginia officials,
state records and property from
Wheeling and moved them to
Charleston, the new capital .
Stated Capt. Newton of this task: ·
"I will go with cannon, music and
floating flags aild will consider the
honor sufficient pay.'' At Charleston, :
the Mountain Boy was met by the .
Kanawha Belle with a brass band
111d a reception.
As with all other boats the
Mountain Boy had its share of prob.lems. ·It once ran over .80 logs in the
Kanawha River but did not brealc
IllY of the boards that made up the
wooden bottom. The Mountain Boy
sunk in 1873 when cut down by an
ice gOIJ!e at Cincinnati. The Gallipolis owners of the b&lt;Jat had sold the
·Mount~n Boy to a Cincinnati company so it could run between Cincin.
nati a~d Chilo. In June of 1873,
worker! n:moved parts of the boiler
from the wreck, They found a 4()..
pound catfish in the boiler.

....... Sanda Ia. apeclal correlpondent at the Sunday
Tlm11 S lllllnel. Hla lddt wa 11:
15 Willow Dr., Springboro, Ohio
41CMM$
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Pomeroy •llldcll1port • Glllpol... OH • Point P11111nt, WV
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In celebration. of the.:.
aii~American .deJi · ;;_
Shilldler, 1.ros Aaples editor f~ .
Zlpl auidea. F« bim, I deli ia:
ANN AllliOR, Mich. - Man "more tblll 1 piece telling comecl ·
c._. 1M muye brad llcitle.
beef ud J*Uuni."
;•
Nor
Ncr pickles.
"It's old wmtreues _. wm~ :
Iflhe dolicau uea - 1 bi&amp;b-1'11, who have much IIIII furJoUea :
low-humor OUipOil 011 the food cui- little. It's the couater JIIYI who put ;
bnl , ti'MIIc~ of~.. Cities eJttra me.t on the lllldwich ......,."(,
-'- is 10 llirYive,' ·it Ubi an -q ed · part of the ellpCrience is JOiitiOOI)I' ·
viJie_pr, Illite olive oil ,and import- ~ JOIIinl morelhln ycG CID poW;
eel IWiiD j:Oife«llra;,coo.
bly believe you can eat, Schindlc(
ZinJOI'IIIIII'I Deli, I crowded, 1&amp;)'1,
'
,noify, .coiJne·IOW!l lmiporium of
The ZiiiJCnlllii'l attiiUde?
!
edibles from rare Cheddan · to
"To lnak even and have run. 10 :
chopped li~. is aleaclor in ''the doli te.m about, 1teech llild ~ lfCI{ •
. renewal, a doli of the ruture," says food," says Weinzweig, passing out '
· JINIII Nathaa, author of "Jewish ' bread chunki and a snW1 saucer o£
Cookin1 in America."
$3S.per-boale I LCc:ci olive oil.
:
The dolis of the past, JpecialiJa '
Zinaerman's bas been mentioned· in ·meaty sllildwicbes .,.cl sauy ser- in magazines as a gourmet food
vice, are fading _OUI IS tile Easc.m importer. Under its corpont&amp; i
European Jewish uiumgraniJ wbo umbrella are a bakery lhat ship( •
(ounded and: sustained .diem die - bread nationwide; 1 mail-order llusi~ I
away. Now Yol'lt's le&amp;end*J delis, ness that c8n caler II bar mitzvah!t'I
~uch u the Qnelie. Slip ~ California; a produ~ 11181ket run b
and Secoad Avenue, ,rely iiJCreU!ina· '· Sapnaw; and an l!'ijiCCIII _cofti ·~ .
ly ·on tourists.
. house !hat-features b~ :&amp; siltNow it's up to.plq like Zinp- or. wallet.
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JESSICA FREDERICK AND PAUL SMITH
man's, run by !Me baby bciomerS
Yet the age-old favoriteS lili~,
who can sell rare handpicked tell grandma's nOodle pUdding "wit):'
under the same roof with 2,000 always be on the menu," Salina"'!
pouiljis
of.pastrami·a week, to kee'p says.
•·
POMEROY -- Charlene K. and
Frederick is a·graduate of Eastern
alive.
Caviar
salesman
Paul
Sarkissian,
schmaltz
MICHELLE
OLDAKER
AND
CUFFORD
THOMAS
Louie B. Frederick of Racine High School, class of 1996, .and is
Schmaltz, ..jn Yiddish's OeJtible of Ann Arbor, relishing a philter of
announce the engagement and employed at. Barnell's Daicyene.
lnicon, means chicken fat (the great smoked salmon (nova), proclaims:
approaching marriage of their Smilh attends Southern High School
glue of chopped liver) and senti- "I eat nova on an onion ba~l with
daughter, Jessica Vena Frederick. to and will graduate in 1997.
tomato and onion everywhere in the .
NEW
HAVEN.
W.Va.
-Toby
and
Oldaker and Clifford Scott Thomas ment, taste and emotion.
Paul Michael Smith, son of Don
The wedding will be Aug. 9 at the
Janet
Oldaker
of
New
Hayen.
W.Va.
"We
sell
the
fine
foods
of
the
country,
everywhere in the world,'
10.
Paul and Mary K. Smilh, Racin~.
Chester Church of God.
:·:
and Cliff and. Pauy thomas of
Weddi"g plans are incomplete II '90s - peasant food, au!bentic and Ibis is the best."
tastes people kept for hundreds of
Earthy or upscale, "once you've ·
Pomeroy announce the engagement this time.
years. We ·like foods with integrity, had real Oavor, there's no return;·:
~f !heir children, Michelle Dawn
liistocy and soul," says ZiQgennan's Weinzweig says.
''
co-founder Paul Saginaw. .
,
Saginaw and Ari Weinzweig
·'
star!ed the deli ncar the University
The Community CaleDclar Is
GALLIPOLIS - Water reunion, of Michigan campus in -1982 and
published as a free service to noa- Racj:ooq Creek County Park, .Shel- recently added operating · panner
prollt groups wilblq to aanouoce terhouse No. I. L'Unch 11 12:30 p;m&lt; ' Tommy York.
·-. :' 1
mfttinp and ll(ledaJ enniS. The
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There is no Zinpnnan. ·
_. ·USA TODAY ',
Let restaurant critic Mimi caleadar is not deslpecl 10 pro- EURI!KA -. Rev. Dale Geiser
They made up the name for ill
Sheraton,
who "would rather eat ,
mote Ilks or lund-railers of uy speakinJ at ·Christ UMC Church Euro-evocation. And they called it a
,
pastrami
than a brownie any i
type. Items are printed .., IJIIICC 10:30 am.
~li. based on the German ro01 "del·
permits and cannot be gua~teed
iciteSsen;" a place selling fine f()()fjs . day," and JINIII Nathan, author ·l
to run a spedfic number of days.·
of "Jewish Cooking in Amen- 1
or delicacies.
Monday, July I
ca. .. lliake you an cxpen on deli
Sunday, June 30, •
However, now that supermarkets
·
&amp;andwi&lt;:hes.
·
CHESHIRE • TOPS meeting 10 call !heir prepared-foods sections
Na!ban e~tplains the meats
·
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.
to II a.m. Cheshire United "delis," the w!lfd is like pyny, takAbat
defi~
deli:
'
ing many shapes. .
· N8rcotics Anounyrnous Tri County ·Methodist Church.
,. ·- Corned beef. Brisket pick- :
This "deli" dt1uiion leads to
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.
•••
led in a brine of salt, pureed gar- I ·
spots like chef Michel Richard's
•••
.GALLIPOLIS - Community
lie, allspice, thyme, inustard ~
KANAUGA · Gallia County Cancer Suppo[!_ Group 2 p.m. New Broadway Deli ,in Santa Monica, -.seed and coriander. .
·
Calif. "It's a wonderful restaurant
A arne meeting with Suzie H\Ullmer- Life Luthemn 'Church.
Pastrami.
Comed
beef
with great French pastries, but I
smith 7 p.m. at AMVET Building.
dry-cured with a crust of kosher
wouldn!t call it a deli," says Esquire
salt, garlic and ground blacll; · kl
. 'IUesday,Julyl
restaurant qiiiCJ'·Jol11i' Mllriani .
GALLIPOLIS -Schwartz Family
pepper, ·smoked with still mok '"l
Tim Za&amp;at would: :
·
to sing 7:30 p.m. Elizabeth Chapel
bllick
pepper, !ben · steamed. ,
Za$at, publisher of the restaurant
GALLIPOLIS · Alcoholics
t"Don
't
combine corned beef J. ,
Church. Nursecy provided.
Anony111ous 8 p.m. St. Peter's Epis- survey -auides. says, "The he811 of a
and
pastrami.
It's a travesty,'' j;
~ copal Church.
deli is rf'!ish, wonderful ingrediSheraton
says.)
,
CROWN CITY - The Laborers
ents," and he finds them across the
- Tongue. Need you ask? · . :
Quartet singing 6 p.m., at Mt. Zion
GALLIPOLIS - ChOose to L&lt;ise · culinary map ..
It's
boiled with spices.
:
Missionary Baptist Church . .
Amonl the top-nllcd .delis in the
Diet aass meeting 9 a.m. Grace
Sheraton
says:
"Look
for
•
.:
--1996-97 Zagat Survey book "AmerUnited Methodist Chureh.
plac_
e
s
that
hand
slice
the
mealS
-.:
ica's Best Meal Deals" an: !bose that ·
CHESHIRE - .Gospel sing at
even if you -don'l'ask lbem' to. 1-'
have mare. than the traditional deli
Cheshire Baptist Church· Sunday, 7
G¥-I.IPOLIS - Grieving Parents offerings. They · include Mandola' -The slices are not so !bin, not 10 ' ·
p.m. featuring !be E~odus singers:
Support Group 7:30p.m. New, Life
even. 'The grain is not ;a slic~
Brothers, a homey Hooston sandLutheran Church .
The meat won't be chewy."
:
wich shop·serving fine red beans and
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and ~rs. Nonh Gallia High School an~ ·a
On
the
side
intense
rye
·
~
rice; and New Orleans' Central OwJon M. Lynch of Gallipolis are 1994 graduate of !be University of - - - - - bread, sharp mustard, puctecy ~.
eery, known for an . excellent muf,
announcing the engagc;menl and . Rio Grande. He is currently a third · _The Sunday Times-Sentinel·
pickles -and true deli meats • S
Those not making the 6().day faletta, a. round Italian loaf stuffed
appro11ching rparriage of their class. pelly officer in· lhe U.S. Navy regards -the weddings of Gallia, deadline will be published during
packed into one-pound sand- : ~
with mea~ cheese and olive salad.
daughter, Susan Marie, to Larry and is stationed at !be Great Lakes Meigs and Mason counties as news !be daily paper as space allows.
wiches
at "a counter that-resemThey're delis because 'they've got
Dean ~allbill Jr.. son of Larry Naval Center, Great Lakes,_DI.
bles
a
war
zone," Nathan says.
and is happy to publish wedding sto,
Photographs 9f eitl)erthe bride or tam, Yiddish for indefinably authenHallbill and Marcelhme Hallbill of
The wedding will be Saturday, ries and photographs without the bride and groom may be pub- tic taste, Jewish or not, says Merrill
Bidwell.
Sept. 14 at the New Life Victory char'ge. .
lished with wc;dding stories if
. Miss Lynch i.s a 1993 graduate of Center,. 3773 Georges Creek Road,
However, wedding news must desired. Photographs may be ei!ber
Gallia.Acaderny High School and is Gallipolis. Music will begin at 3 meet general standards of tirneli- black and while or good 'quality ·
They tell me lhal statistics
employed by Fashion Bug.
.
p.m.
ness.
The
newspaper
prefers
to
pubcolor,
biUfold
size
or
larger.
have
shown
lhat slower speeds on our
Hallbill is a 1992 graduate of
lisb accounts of weddings as soon as
Poor quality jlhotographs will not
Continued frOI1I pege c-1
highways have been an important • '
Qn.a trip to Lancaster Ibis factor in saving lives. We must be ·- :·
possible aft~r the event.
be accepted. GeneraJJy, snapshots -or
To be published in the Sunday instant-developing photos are not of Week I spOUed regular gasoline allots becomina ove~pulated since speed · ;
. edition~ the wedding 'l'ust have . acceptable quality.
of pumps for S1.13 point 9--just limits in Ohio an: being increased to · 1
- taken place wi!bin 60 days prior to
All material submitted for publi- thol!gbtl would throw lhat in for your 6S m.p.h. on interstates. As you
enjoyment.
the f.ublication, and may be up to cation is subject to editing.
dodge the "bullets" out there, do keep r'
600 words in length. Material for
Questions 'rnay be directed to the
smiling.
··
'"
Along the River must be received by editorial departnlent from I to 5
the editorial department by Thurs: p.m. Monday through'Friday at446day, 4 p.m. prior to the date of pub· 2342.
·
Jication.

By_CA1HY LYNN GROBIM"M

utA TODAY

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Frederick-Smith

Oldaker-Thomas

Gallia community cal~ndar

Deli pointer$
from the experts

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The Co111111llllity Calendar Is

published .. a free service·to non•
• proftt Jl'OUIIII wisbln&amp;IO announce
ml!elin1 and !~J~Kial events. The
calendar is not dalped to promote salet1 or luud nisen of any
type. Ite1111' are printed as sPace
permitS tmd CIIIIIOI be paanmteed
to run • •l'""lllo: number Gl ilaya:
SUNDAY
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RACINE-· Racine Village Council, regular session, 7 p.m. Monday
at !be annex.
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Simms• Angel
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JNBEABING·
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435 2nd Ave., Gallipolis
Velinns Memorial HospiJal, POmeroy
TIO E. Miin St., Jacksbn, Ohio

Call u.' today!!

1(614-)~761 ?'

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CROWN CITY Medina ' -"!'§ Roge5 Angel..and the grooms·
Renee Simms and Charles Todd . man -was lhe brother of the groom.
Angel were united in marriage June Randy Angel.
23 at tile home of the groom's i&gt;arThe newlywedf will reside at 46
ents, Roger and Linda Angel.
Eblin Hollow Road. Crown Cit~.
The .bride was given away by
A wed&lt;linJ reception party. will
Doug Simms of Crown City. The be given in the newlyweds' honor
IJI&amp;id of honor was Cindy Lambert, following ihcir return from !be hon·
COtJsin?f the bride .. The best man .. eyrnoqn.
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Racine UMW discuss
Festival .of Sharing project
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Hou!W: Tue.-Frl. 10.S, Sal 1M. Cloaad Sunday and Monday
(614)388-931~

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SYRACUSE -- Sulton Township ·
Trustees, Monday, Syracuse Munic·
ipal Building, 7:30p.m .

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FROM LIFESTYLE FURNITURE

TUESDAY
CHESTER -- Pomeroy Chapter
186 Order of tfte Eastern Slllr meeting - Thesday, 1:30 p.m. at the .
Chester Masonic Hall. Officers are
to wear robes: FortY'Year pins will ,
'!e presented. .
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The Festival ·of Sharing held in

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OFF OUR ENTIRE STOCK. OF PATIO!

rro-

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craft
* lloyd Flanders_
·* Benchcraft

Those

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EAST MEIGS -- Special meeting
of the Eastern Local Board !lf Education TUesday; 6 p.m. for !be purpose of interviewing personnel and
other·riCJ:Cssary business.

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FruiiJ l'flllmNlcy

2W2 Slllle RGute 180
....... l'liliniNicy
31 Olllo

Springfield Sept. 28 was diScussed.
ALFRED •• Oranae Township
-UMW nte'rnbers will be instrumental Trustees wiltmet Tuesday, 7:30 p!rn.
in promoting this church wide
at the horne of'Jbe,clerk, Osie Foil·
jel:t. Ninety silt ~hurcbes iri ·~ rod.
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Atheris . District, including Racine; l , ·
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,participated in Ibis big lmssion pri;.
·Jecl last year. ~re ~ four selfPOM~O~ -~: ~eags _
County ,
help kits which any ~hureh meml!i.' atn.eal?g!Cal Society wOrkshop (or ;.
may donate.lnfonnation will be p~ · beginmna geileatogy ~searchers
pare4 by Karen Walker and placect ' Thesday, 7 p.m ·at the Meigs Copnty
in the chureh bulletins.
, M~seum. 4-H .member~, · scouts,
The chureh . wide pic pic spon- domg aenc:alogiCal .proJects, , and
sored by UMW will be held atthe~ : - anrone haymJ que51Jons reg•u'!'ing
shelter house Auaust 26 at 6:30 p.m.' _research I!IC welcome to attend.
at!ending 111e to take an· item ~
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for !be.white elephant sale.
CHESTER _, Chester Village
The rugs have been woven and . Historical Association meeting
member$ are going to meet at the Thesday; 6 p.m. at lhe fire depart·
church at a Msignated .time to tie• 1 ment discuss !Jpcomina Chesterthem and also sew mission scoo,ot ;.; s~. oars ~ for luly 19 lnd 20. •
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. All in!e{e5~ 1 people ·encouraged to
, Shaion Hall presented the pro- attend.
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"Let
Me
Go
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which
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utdld. ~~.~\
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• e~ vOted to donate $SO to focused on , living in the midst of ':
C 1111)', :% as several church mern- llea!b can itself be a resurrect,jon ~ PAGEVILE · •• Scipto Township
be wiH..'be attendina the conven- story. The author of the program '"'d . Trus~t;_CS. 6:30 p.m. Thesday •t the
t!
in ,Wennsylvania. Money -Will of a penonal eJtperience aaid shared Pqeville town hall.
at donated for two youna people it in her composed song "Let Me Go
to attend church camp at Camp Home ~ which !be group sang.
WEDNESDAY
At)Ul') in Rio Grande.
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1be neJtl meeting will be. July 22
.
arilyn Boaard will be aaending 11 7:30 p.m. lithe 'church.
I of Mission 11 Oltio Nonbem,
n~u)y.
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CHARLES AND MEDINA ANGEL

RACINE-- "We Have a Purpose"
litany opened a recent meeting of
the R.C:ine United Me!bodist
Womtn'llCJd at the church.
J'rayer was· said -in unison and
Lee W, presijlent, led the group in
re'ding ..',tbc leader-group ·Litaqy,
afl~ ~~\Donna 1\iatson.was welcomed:&amp;ll.a new.member.
.chii!l:; Hili gave !bC secretary's
repan, and and Clara Mae Sargent,
tit&lt; treasurer's report. She al~o
reP.onecl on mon!bly contributions to
vafious organizations. The penny
fuild was colleeted..
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i1nforrnation about head phones
fot!be sanctuary will be available at
tilt next meeting at which ti~ the
bery ~ommit.tee will also
• Teddy be~ for the .bear
t are to be brouaht lb.the noxt
ng;illd tlie list of itA:ms for the '
sb~ box. min_i.strY will be distrib·

JaM GARDNER AND RIC~AFID BI.AIN

St. Rt. 35 exit at Rio Grande, Oh., 3.miles
Nonh of St. Rt. 325
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Jeftt on Sailor Rd., 1.5 miles from Intersection

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PAT'S POSIE PATCH

PORILAND -- Stiversville Word
of Faith Church )Viii have. Torn Jeffrey' as special speaker at the 7:30
Sunday evening service.

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HOBSOI\[ -- Evangelist John
E.Jswick will be the guest speaker at
Hobson Christian Fellowship Sun·
day, 7:30 p.tn.

MONDAY
CARPENTER
Columbia
Township Board of Trustees meet-, ing Monday, 7:30 p.m. · at !be
Columbia Township Fire Station.

FREE CLEAN
&amp; ;CHECK
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Estimate. Lots of new gift items
for that special person. .

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M4rt Df..
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CALL_TO SCIEDUL.

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pom~unity

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Wedd'
. lnQ poI'ICY-----

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Your "One
Bridal Shop
•Custom Design Bouquets and Arrarigeme1ts
•Wecldlpg Invitations·Off
•Candelabras, Aisle CandlesI Arch/etc.
•carved Unity Candles/Tapers to
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;.Tlasting Candles, Dy,ectfo Match Mater:Hals
•Bridal Garters (nice selection)

Hurlow-Stroop-'

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l)oe$ your hearing
ai- need .repair!·

GALLIPOLIS • Richard 0. Blain . Valley 1-fospit;ll.
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llftd Jenny J. Gardner announce their
Blain is. a 1985 graduate of Point · ·
engagement and ·fortbcomilig mar- Pleasant H1gh s_choo! and a grad~ate,
riage.
of Marshall University. He recetv~
Gardner is a 1992 graduate of a bachelor of arts degree in secKyaer Creek High School, a gradu- ondary education and is employed
ate of Southeastern Business Col· by the Mason County Board of EduJeae, and a second year nursing stu· cation as a teacher and coach 11
dent ~~ the University of Rio .. ~S.
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Grande. She is employe(l by Pbysi·
A late summer wedding ,IS beang
cilll Praclic:e Service of Pleasant planned.

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Meigs

.Beat..~----~--

Gardner-Blain .

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1pp1e in the Oanlen of Eden, tha! Our clop. undouble(lly, kept tlie within IS feea of the tower.
liny-gauae wire
event surety - the beJinnina of sna1t1=s out of lbe yard to a canain
My brother emptied his 111n on it, mesh cage when I
poople's loalbinl of, snakes I Jove extent, but I'm sure my mother must and it kept striking. Yes, my 2x4 was II or 12. It
the comic strip B.C. In it ".Pat have been v.,- cueful in the slllden. worked much better.
seemed the nor·
811*1,• u the cbaracfer is calloil, is
Shortly after the incident of
mal thing to do
always whompina a snake with her 11.-. stepping on a rauter. mt parI made two rallies into earrings then ... but I don't
caveman club. That's bow I feel ents sold our .place and bought that summer but they were never my believe teachers
~ ••hs; tbe only good~ is another farm about 10 miles away. favorite pair; although I still have and
students
a del!d lllakc.
Tbere were no snake dens there and them. One rattle has eisht rattles and would feel ds
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But, aa:ording to the professional I don't believe any rat11es.,akes were a button, and the other ' nine and a bonored now.
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and amateur berpetoloaisll every~ ever seen on !be 11ew propeity..I did button. The Iauer was the one my
where, snakes are beneficial becauso think I beard one ranle ..,bile hoeing brother shot.
I'm hoping the first snake 1 see:
·, they eat rodents and inseciJ. Okay, ~Y ragwort one day. No one else
here will be a J1111C!..snake and not a:
but how many bean llltaclul do they w... near and my brothers accused
Our family provided !be schools copperhead. Reading material sua- .
s:aus,e in pecple yt!rJy? I don't know me of makinll up the stocy ID e'"ape wilh ralllesnakes for the then ver· gests coppemeads an: nol as retiring_:
the eJtact number of people in the hoeing tansy up on that hill. It was sion of "Show and Tell," and for .!be and docili: as rattlesnakes. I don't :
. United States killed by snake bites _ possible one was present, !bough. as biology Jab in high school. My want to find out. ' Would anyone :
every year, but I believe it is less there ·were rattlesnake dens wiJbin a father took us children (rno!ber did- miss _snakes if they were e~tinct? 11 than 20. Its reponed more people few miles of our second home in
n't care to go) on an annual rat- think I will have George buy me a :
are kiliCld nationally from bee stinas wester:n·9reJoil.
tlesnake hunt back to our old proper- 2x4. WhQmp. Whornp.
than snake biyes. However, malay .
On my. first. forestry lookout. . ty. The landowners were·glad to ~A
more citizens ,of our great country · when I was 16, 'which was located rid of any snakes and the school~
die of bean attacb every day. I • near my home, I believe the tower werereceptivetohavingdeadorlive
llafOihr._ondhorhuobond~, :
secretly suspeet at least of.ponion of wu located atop one or r;hore dens. rattlers for display. In retrospec\, fonMflv of llolp c:oun,. bacli .
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- Iy bee n may be lhe sc hools· fe1gned
·•- tnterest
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. ltouoo
·-a...-egoonc~.-,..kiolno
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tbose u.uortunllle
sou' Is had a bean A butie .llearby had prevJOiis
11c1ng tho Ohio " ' - 1,.1
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attack,b!x:ause.they were stanle4 .by ¥site of beav)' rock exca~alion for because my mother was on the · Sy-.
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a'snake. I me~-:, afl&amp;f!all, who .rouljl. a highway, The wor)cers told of find· _
kDow1 'Ille ~nab W9Uid have slith- ing many snake~ liS they set off
ered ' ... and the person would be dynamit~ ·charges. My , tower
lyil)g .,.:ad and. Couldn't say what perched up(m a t\vin, Ill ' the fi~l
caused the bear( BIIJck. Yes, I sus- rocky
and whenever I wanted
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peel s~s.
to show any!Jne a .rat!ler, all Iliad to '
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MICHAEL
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My inttoduction to snakes was do was eli~ down to the ground. I
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CJttremely early , in life. Innate, _ killed them with a piece of 2x~ turn·
Stop'~
almost. One of the ftnt stories· I ber; not unlike "Fat Broad."
about t1Jc crawly reptiles · 'I1Je younger of my two brothers
: Gij:.LiPoLJS . - lcatberine ·Q. ' Spires, Gell!l• SI!'QO(I and Ashley remember
was
when
l
'was two. My older sister was home &lt;!n leave from the service
Hurlow and Michael D. Stroop Stroop, dal!ghteh of · groom. The
2~o/o
had grabhed my hand to keep me while I was perchc;d on my tower
eitcbariged 'wedding VI)WS AJirit' 27 ·, be$t man was Charles Sammvt.'·
from running down· a pa!b wbere a !hal summer. He was carrying his
a~ the ,first Presb~rian Church 11 · , The bride-is a' graduate of B~k­
. Gaitipqijs' ;.with Rev. AI e&amp;rley offi- · eye Hills C~r 'Cintef and now rattlesnake was suetthed across the .4.5 revolver when he walked up !be
· n11110w trail. At 'lhat ti111c, the farm faee of the butte to see me. I can
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Mqtc~
l:{ur!ow, ,i, tiJe daughter IJf · The groom is a lraduate of Buck•
~olia Lewis of Gallipolis and eye 'Hills eareer'Ceilter''an4 9allia
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qtarles Satinden of·Rodney. Stroop Academy High School and i&amp;
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is.: the son of Sanford and Virginia employed wi!b midwe&amp;t Cablenet,
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Slfoop of Gallipolis.
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Ashland; Ky. : . ) The brii.lt's maids· wete Shauna
The couple resides in G~lipolis.
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Come in and stop by for a Free

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By DOROTHY IAYRE
~- plrelliJ owned wu near a little remember so clearly aboullhat day; school bolard. I can remember
carry- ·
WIJea the devil, cUpiaed M I creek. 0n the f.- aide of the creel;, in how we went to the fOOl of the tower ing one on the
wpent, I*'IU..ted Bw 10 eat an some roclul, wu a raalesnake den. looking for snakes and there was ode school bus in a

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SAVINGS
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~· June30, 1-

Pomeroy •llldel1port • Gllllpolle, OH • Point P11111'11t, WV

Ann
Landers
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By ANN LANDERS .
Dear Ann Landers: I am 27 and
haYC been seeing "Fred," who is 28,
for about five yean. One night after
being out with my friends and drink·
ing too much, I went to Fred's house
as I often do to spend the night.
When I got there, Fred was drinking
with a male friend. I was feeling a
little tipsy, so I went to bed and, as
usual, slept in the nude. I passed out
cold.

About a monlh Wcr, Fred picked·
up a developed roll of film l!ld
handed me the pictures. To my surprise. !here wu a photo of his friend
lyiaa nelU to me in bed, wilh hintm
around me. Hewuwearingonly his
shorts.
I wu furious and ripped up the
picture and the neaarive. Fred yelled
at me for tearing up the picture and
said I had no right to destroy his
propeny. He then laughed and said,
"What's the big deal? ll's just a picture."

I feel humiliated. I also feel I
can't trust Fred anymore or be safe
in his house. This picture thiJII has
really hun our relationship. Am I"
over-re~~Cting? ls it no big deal, as he
says? Or does be bave zero respect

for me? Don't most men wut to
keep other pys away from their
airlfriellds, upecially . when they
don't have clothes on? I need your
opinioo. -- Embarrused in Pittsblqh
.
Dear Pitts.: Sounds to me u if
both ')-ou and Fred would do well to
lay off the booze. B.ut that's another
letter.
Fred sbowed no respect when be
took that photo of you in the nude.
And, to · have positioned his friend
next to you was the absolute pits.
You can do better than Fred. Give
him a Michigan handshake and tell
him to hit the bricks.
·
Dear Ann Landers: I feel compellecl to respond to " Sally in
Spo~e," whose " Uncle John" bad

been .ccusedi of cbikllood sex.W
abuse by another family member.
~Y asked if sbe should keep her
youns dauJhter away Cram Uncle
John. hay, YES! YES! YES!
In 19-40, when I wu 7, my~ents besan sel!dins me to my aunt's
farm e~~eh swnmer to proiCCI me
from the dangers of beina llone
while' they were 11 work in the cicy.
My uncle started abusing mesex.W·
ly the day I lnived. He would order
me to meet him in the bun, behind
the corn crib or behind the chicken
house: I was afraid to refuse bec"•se
I w.as told I must obey him.
, ·But .1 knew be must be doint
something wrong because be
warned me never to tell anybody. I
could have gotten pregnant the sum-

mer I tumed t2, but 14idn't know
that thea. Thank God, my jweats
brouJbt me home before the sift·
mer eoded.
I un convillccd that pcdapbiles
\8 never cbanae.lt licbas me to

read about theSe people beini
rete.ecl after servina time. I realize
far worse lhinp miJht have happenecl to me 11 the hallds of this
IQICle. Thank the JOOd Lord I bavc
been able to f\mctioo, II\IITY and
have children.·
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No 'child lhould be subjected to
sex.W abule. ~.are enough situations over which not even parents
have c;Q~~trol.ln this cue, bow muc]l
III!R warninJ do the parents needf" MiJsouri Flli From Your F'1111 Col·
umn

Lea.ie - GDC 48. River
Valley Marchini Band - Dukes 49.
ODC 28. Olllia County Junior Girl River .Valley 50. Lutheraa bible
Scouts 12421 - Dukes 29. French Catnp • GDC f1olt SI. S&amp;!in Dolls ·'
Fanner- ODC - car 16. Ernie McK- City Daycare - ODC • flOat 30. Dukes 52. Clerk of Courts Candi~ LisiCd are the ealrants, Lbeir inney- Dukes - bicycle 17. 1995 Lit- Cathy and Paul Eich 1979 Corvet~e - date c.rolyn UUie - GDC- car 53.
Tbe Olllia .County Chamber of ley Jets • Dukos 13. Mullins Inaritute
&lt;;anmate bat IIIIIOIIIICed lhe line o Marlill Scieace - Dukes .· Oroup I
(flt lhe Ri- Rec:rellion Festivll · lof. Kypr Creek LiUie Lelpe TourPintde July 4.
nunent -ODC - truck IS. Ken

Dell" Missouri: AIIIICCIISMioD ~·
the cbildrea:
Cram IIICiq Unclo Jobn 011 the bMia'
of a llinp relalive'a finpr-poilldaJ
is Ullfair. 1'llil lilllllioft dolniiMI'
cuioo, nol paaic:. Allot&amp; II~ :
children IR never left
widi'
UDCie Jolm. I see no ·reasoa t,bey
ClllliOt CODiinue-to visit him.
,·
Oem of the Day: lteniember:
wbenyou goforlh to seek your fame:
and fortune, ii's not who you kno-.t
that counts, it's whom. I
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DOt proof. ProhibilinJ

&amp;nd•unllou toADD••nfu~ :

Craton Syudkate, 5777 W. CCaf
tury BIYd., Suite 700, Lol Allpl.,·.
90045
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BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel staff
POMEROY .. Want to be an
Olympic champion reader?
Then it's lime to join in the summer reading programs being offered
at Meigs County libraries and
through the Ohio Valley Area
Libraries '(OVAL) Books by Mail -"A 1996 Sponacular."
Just because S(;hool's out, doesn't
mean that kids should put down
their books.
The importance. · of reading
through the summer has be~n
emphasized in studies which show
that children.away from the academic learning environment actually forget up to 80 percent of what they
learned the previous school year.
In fact educators report that a
major portion of September is spent
reviewing material that was. forgotten over the summer.
But that doesn't bave to happen
and Jibrams are at the fotefront of
developing programs to motivate
children to read.
Research shows that children
who read as few as six books during
the summer tend to show achievemein gains in reading and vocabulary development whep they return

dren read is not taking on as much
importance now -- it's the aJ{lount of
time they spend reading that will ~
.counted.
.
Instead of being rewarded for
titlu, children will be given prizes
for time · spent reading, and those
prizes will come at certain intervals ·
to eJ1Courage continued participation, said Powers.
Children will have a reading program sheet on which to record their
reading time, and an adult wjll be
asked to sign it. Then periodically
they will be asked to return the sheet
to the library where it will ·be
reviewed and the ~rs rewarded
with prizes.
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Since lime and not titles will be
counted, everyone has a chance for
prizes regardless of how fast or how
slow they read, the librarian
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explained. .
The OVAL proJI'BIII operates a
little differently with children being
asked to "Read for the Gold."
' Readers set a reading goal, they
keep track of time spent reading and
tbe titles· of the books, and then
when they achieve their goal -- but
not later than Aug. 16 -- submit the
list to OVAL.
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earned, like a free book, discount
coupons, and stickers, the ultimate
goal· is·to win the "gold medal."
; That comes with having
achieved .personal reading objectives as set forlh in. a "reading contract" with OVAL, the extension
library serving Meigs and seven
other Southeastern Ohio counties.
Getting enrolled in the "sportacu·
lar" is' as easy as calling OVAL at J.
800-759-1537, asking for Extension
24: and requesting the free Books by
Mail catalog.
Inside the catalog is a postcard
order fonn to be used in checking
out books once they have been
selected from the 'catalog. A few
days after the card bas been mailed
in, the books arrive by postal carrier
in a nylon book bag. They are
returned by mail in the same bag
without any cost.
The Olympic-themed reading
programs offered by the libfaries
provide a mix of education and·
adventure while giving youngsters a
real opportunity to make the summer count toward improving their
reading skills.

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READING FOR THE "GOLD" - Sel'lh ti-wtey, fifth »~'~~Clef It • ..
Syrei:!IH Elementllry 11 enrolled In the oJ1mplc-themeil reeding 1 •
progra!111t the Meigs County Ubr..,. Her favorite ....ding t1111t11o
rial Ia the GooHbump mylterl4!a.
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Local women's quilts displayed at Dairy Barn
ties and repre5!=nt how today's quil- · exhibit for ber nationally syndicated
ters are drawing from and adapting public television program, Lap
traditional quilt patterns and tech- Quilting. Sh~ also held a book signniques to create work that reflects ing that day.
the changing realities of Appalachi·
On July 13 from 1:30 to 4 p.m.
an life.
Penny McMorris, noted quilt authorQuillers in Meigs and Gallia ity and one of the developers of the
The exhibit includes more than Counties whose work was selected Electric Quill software program,
6Q contemporary, traditio6al-pattern fot the Dairy Barn display ini::lude will be at the Dairy B~ to lead a
quilts from Ohio Appalachia. They Ethel Brandt, Lora Damewood, lecture and demonstration exploring
were selected in quilt shows held Patricia Jones. and ·Dorothy Morris basic block design fundamentals and
this spring in 21 counties. The coun- of Meigs County, and Mildred Har· traditional designs. The Electric
ty shows were juried by Schuyler ris and Marilyn King, Gallia County. Quilt software program will be used
and there will be a registration fee.
Cone, Susan Newman and Katherine ·
A
number
of
special
·
events
are
Inman with the assistance of county
Exhibit curator Dr. Cone, assis·
being offered din conjunction with
extension office&amp;·in the counties ..
the exhibit. Last week quilt expert tant professor of Human and Con·
The final selections include and author Georgia Bonesteel was at sumer Sciences at Ohi9 University,
works by 38 quitters from 15 coun- the Dairy Bam to videotape the will present a quilt and fabric care

and conservation presentation, Saturday, Aug. 24, from 2 to 3:30p.m.
at no charge.
She will also lead a quill piecing
class for beginners on Saturday,
Aug. 3 from I to 4 p.m., and and
there will be a registration fee.
· A free quilting bee featuring quilt
blocks on the theme cif the Athens
bicentennial will be beld Sept. 5 and
7.
The Dairy Barn gallery is open
Tuesday through Sunday, 11 a.m. to
. 5 p.m. with extended hours on
Thursday until 8 p.m.

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See puzzle on page 02
•

O..i~'&amp;~~
C&gt; 1996 HHCSO. All ""'" -...1,

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riding 83. Superstnltters -,Dukes 8-4. :
Mullins Institute of Manial Science •
• Dukes • group 2 85. Our House :
Museum - Dukes 86. Henry Myen :
1951 uactor- Spruce Street 87. 1996 •
Miss Gallia County Queen contes· '
tants - GDC · cars 88. Sllowette
Twirlers - Dukes 89. Dean rinehartfor Treasurer · GDC · car 90. Gallia
County Rebels Cbeerteam- GDC 91 '
Bob's Malket • GDC • float 92 Lau·
ren Neal 1970 Chevy truck - GDC
94. South Gallia Cheerleaders ·
GDC 94. Jividen Equestrian Group ·
Spruce S~t - horse riders 96. Mar·
sha Shriverfl'iffany Williams
Spruce Street - horse riders.

111••1•port, Oh

JUNIOR DIVISION (Agel1·15)

Rutland

noop if2237 - Dukes • ~alkin· aad :

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Middleport

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Northwest Terriiory Life Insurance Agency is located in the
Peoples Banking and Trust Company offfices;

Gallipolis

grant, oval leaves that grow in pairs .on a four-sided
stalk, and has showy, shrimp-like flowers that are
favorites of bees and humming birds.
'
It is a native eastern North American plant that grew
wild on the shores of Lake Ontario and in the present
New York area, that was the home of tbe OswegQ lndi·
an tribe.
·
From these Indians, the early .settlers learned to brew
a tea-like drink that had a warm minty-orl!llgy taste,
reminiscent of true bergamot oil that is derived from the
fruit of a citrus tree (citru&amp; bergamia) that grows in
southern Italy and is used in the blend of the famous Earl
Grey tea • still a favorite today. Thus the name, Berg·
arnot, for the Oswego tea.
·
· The Monardo genus was named in honor of NichOlas
Monardes, a Spanish physician and botanist, who prac· .
ticed medicine in Paris and never came lo American. He
was the first one to list tbe plants of the New World in
his herbal in I S6g, The .herbal was named, "Joyfull
Newes Out of the Newe Founde Worlde". It was the first
American h~rhal, and was' translated into English, Latin,
Italian, Flemish and French to prtuoide -information on
tbe he,hs of the Americas.
And now, after you have learned about Oswego tea,
you wonder how to grow it. 11tat's easy. You plant it in
a sunny, well drained spot wbere· it has room to grow,
because like any relative in the mint family, it spreads
easily, though it continues to grow in clumps.
Oswego tea saved the colonial wife from catastrophe
- the missing afternoon tea. That tea with the E!trl Gmy
taste was served and the colonists complimented the
wives for saving the day.
P.S. If you should like to have the recipe for monster.
cookies, I might be able to talk Grandma out of it.
VIlma Plldloja Ia •long-lima ..--and a rounding member olllla Gllllla HeriMtl Guild.

~~u·
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RACO 4th of J.uly .

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·The coolest lemon is
anew
frozen
treat

.

It is a plant that grows up to 48 incbes tall and has fra-

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These investment jnJJducts are neither depo5its nor obligations
of, nor are they pll1llitetd &amp;, The Peoflle,l Banking IJilll Trust
ComfJany or an, other bmlk caul are not iNured &amp;, tht FDIC.
lnwstment jli-ociKm are Sllbjta 1o inw.!tment risks, indwling
tht jJossillle loss of the principal amount invested.

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of two ltosweU museums dedicated . Then, in the 1980s, a string of related news clippiliJS. Admission is
bQoks, anicles and TV shQws raised free, but it costs $2.SO io "Have
A TODAY
·
to visitorJ frl&gt;m clutei space. · ,
'ROSWElL. N.M. - Like most
And at a cost of"SIS per1person, ~ specter of a military cover-up. Your Polaroid Picture Talcen With
~
ill this windb)own ranching they'll take a bumpy 8-milc drive to Rep. Steven Schiff, R-N.M .• com- Our Liule ' Visitor From Another
retirement rown of 50,000, Stan the ridge whee two alien spacecraft missioned a General Accounting World"- o...or the alien dummies
~\~by never aave much thought to ' allegedly collided· One stormy sum- · Office investigation, Which reported used in the Showtime movie
. ~"Incident"- a fiery cnisl\)and· mer night, sparlcinJ a what-if contro- last 'Summer' thai the Roswell crash Roswell.
i ·; nearly half a centuly ago, of versy that bas simmered for •nearly was that of a spy device designed to A few blocks down Main Stree~ the
the Army initially dubbed · a five decides.
determine wbether the Soviets were rival UFO Enigma Museum attracts
~ing saucer.and dismissed the next . More than SOO people , have testing atomic weapons. One snag: its own aficionados, thanks in pllrt to
diy as an errant weather balloon.
signed up for rancher Hub Com's the official 'admission that 4 years' a fibefglass saucer surrounded by .
:"We played cowboys and Indi-. tours, most of them. given in his blue worth of records from the ltoswcll stuffed aliens and guarded by a man- .
ats," recalls Crosby, a 45-year-old, pickup truck, since be launciJed the base'- 1946 to 1950 ·_ couldn't be nequin of a machine-gun-toting officer in sup glasses and fatigues.
fqurtlt-gene!ltion Roswell resident. enterprise 'in November 1994. A accounted for.
..
Among the visitori one recent
·
Jap&amp;I)Cse group rented a helicopte~
"We didn't play aliens."
By the time C\'Dsby held his fmt
, ~But now, Crosby and his neigh- for a saucer's-eye view. An Arizona fesliva,J to capitalize on the eS(;alat- weekday. afternoon were Rufus and :
ll9PI are cbeerfully cashing in on a man paid Corn $Z3 for a 2-gallon illg speculation, some Roswell resi· Helen.Oavidson ofVero Be~~eh, Fla. ·
~ for extratem:strials that's been
bucket of rocks from the ·site, and dents were leery of !be·now-famous · Like so many others who make their ·
fueled by everything from tbe hit TV one couple foiked over an oxtra $50 town being:branded as "kook city." way to UFO Town, USA, the David- .
s~w "The X-Files" to the recent to spend a nighl on the ridge.
· Church members, meanwhile; had sons admit to experiencinJ some- .
thing they can't explain.
"I didn'(want to spliil their fun to their own ·concerns.
,diS(;overy of a sol~~r system with
"We saw one .in Ohio back . in
,;But once people saw we
. characteristics similar to those of tell 'em the giowing lights tbCy saw
W.ren 't sacrificing UFO babies on 1964 or '65," Rufus remembers. "It
pur own..
were from Roswell." Com says~
Next week, which marks both the
Though Will Rogers• once the courthouse lawn, they calmed was bullet-shaped ... and it was not a
weather balloon, . I can auarantee
49th anniversary of the Roswell described· it as "the prettiellt little down," Crosby says. .
thallt
crash and the debut of 20th Century town in the West," . Roswell can ' These-days, tile "kook city" fears
No matter what the Davidsons
Fox's ballyhooed. alien-invasion ~laim neither the dramatic _scenery have lllt'gely. evaporated, too.
keep ·
fill'n "Independence Day," qrganizer nor the cultural CIIChet of Taos or They've been replaced with the real- saw, Stan Crosby is happy to
.
the questions- and the posst,b'l,
11Ues
C(osby hopes to d(aw at least 10,000 · Santa Fe. It does, however, ,have an ization that in a place so low-key·
pq)ple to the city's second "UFO earlr connection to s~ -. travel: that its soliye~ir, postcards depict a -alive.
E~ounter.". .
· .
During the ~9305, ~bert ·~~ · downtown intersection, the ·inter·
:ntey'll
s1tm
on
an
al1en
cosfume
conducted
his cxpenments w1th hq- galactic crowd. can mean stellar
1
business.
colltest, an "out of this world" fire - uili'fuel rocket flights here: ·
w~ display ani! a Crashlmd Burn
WhiSJ)ers of child-size, coffins . • The local Wai-Mart ordered a
~· a nonmotorized vehicle com- and alien autopsies had already shipment of "impact site" T-shirts,
on .designed to showcase the started.swirling in Roswell wben the and the Roswell Inn credits about 15
ts of ''aspiring galactic engi· ·Roswell Daily Record reported the ·percent of its summer bl!siness to
rs."
·
·
• military's ~ . of a flying SIIIJCCI' UFO fans.
At the 4-yellt'-old International
'flley'tl shop .,fQr' ' loc~l)y mad&lt;:. ~~ July 8, 1947. _But:~be~"9ffll:i...s
w Pcips candy ( "Oiowmg Where 'i liil 8:n ·about-face . lAd called tbe UFO Museum and Resean:h Center,
~o Pol' Has Glowed Before") at tbe debris a "'harmless, high-altitude a silver saucer pokes through the
International UFO Museum and weather balloon."' most citizens roof, and -an average 350 visitors a
day gawk at fuzzy pliotos and UFO:
' Rqsearch
Cen~r.
' one bought thO more b¢nign version.
, I 12 Cycle
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! Wuher
i

Tlm...S.ntlnel Correepondenl
!What is a tradition? It is afternoon tea for an EnglishmE
· •. and it is a c'ove[l:d dish for .an American family
·
·
re ion.
Icing in mother's box of family recipes is part of
a
ition, and maybe adding a little bit of your own,
· my friend died when she added a batch of cookies
fo~the· children's sake.
times change and the children grow up and the
youngest grandson was thirteen years old
when
. grandmother
decided to
drop the
, · monster
c~~~!~from the menu- until .Josh beard about it. "But,
(
- you can't do that. You have to take the mancookies· it's tradition!"
buess what? Grandma is baking and freezing mancookies for tbe second.d!IY in a row. It is a tradition.
wouldn 't·try to deprive the Englishman from his .~a.
- even if the Englishman is an American colomst.
British Crown tried that and the colonists gave them
- a tea party in Boston in 1773, and quite a party
too!
1769, when the British: Privy Council in London
to renew a tea duty on the colonies, the colonists
themselve~ as Indians, boankd British ships
harbor anr. dumped the tea boxes overbpard.
was effective, . ut also devMtating. How do you
an afternoon tea without t1!e tea? If you were a
col~nist ' s wife you would serve Oswego tea.
·.
pswego \ea is t&gt;tdnardl didyma (Latin name), also
known as Bergamot or Bee Balm.

"

Aress

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By;' VILMA PIKKOJA

I •

Nota
Chan of.
. ddge -

.l'· '

·tea, tradition-and· 'm9nster' cookies

. In an e~rt to provide our reade~hip with current news, the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune and The Daily Sentinel will not accept weddings after 60 dsys
from the date of the event.
.All club meetings and Other news articles in the society section must be
submitted within 30 dsys of occurrence. All birthdays must be submitted .
within 42 days of the occurrence.
All material submitted for publication is subject lo editing .

CORRECTION • An error wa• mecle In Max Tawney's column In
lhe June 23 edition of the Sundlly Tlmea-Bentinel. Kllft Hulme
owned 5,000 1crea end 1,000 hHd of •'-P· He wa1 men1ger not
owner of the 24,000 acre• end 15,000 heed of eheep.

.

r s.':rc:..

- - -·:,

----News policy---

.She
Needs
.a Helping
HanCL•• .

'

LAURA BLY

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Farm and Fleet - GDC 82. Brownie ,

67. 1995 River Recreation Festivll
Qucea Jamie Sexton - GDC 68.
Miss Paula's Daycare · GDC 69.
DARE · GDC - float 70. Howard
Mullen 1947 Police Car : GDC 71.
Kyger Creek Middle School Cbeer·
leaders - Dukes 72. Kawualci MO!Of
Spans - Spruce Street 73. Robert
Schmoll for Commissioner - GDC
74. Banks of Ohio Dulcimer Club GDC 75. Scenic Hills • GDC • float·
76. Ted Strickland for ConrreSJ GDC - car 77. Satin and Lace Dukes 78. 1995 Miss GaiHa County
Beth Vinson and Little Miss Gallia
County Miranda Merry • GDC float 79. 1995 Little Mister Gallia
County Ricky Jackson - car 80.
Kyger Creek 2 - GDC 81. Quality

; · reating the extraterrestrial at Roswell annh~ersary
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POMEROY - Four .quilts made
by Meigs County women and two
by Gallia County residents have
been selected for the exhibit, "Patterns Worth Repealing" which will
be on display at the Dairy Barn Cultural Arts Center through Sept. 15.

ton Youth

nace

Library.program enc ·urages sumrner reading ·
to school in the fall.
A recent Illinois Department of
. Education study found that children
who panicipated in public library
summer reading programs gained as
much as half a year in reading
achievement. while the children who
did not panicipate in the programs
lost ground.
With that knowledge libraries
serving Meigs County's children
have developed programs to encourage regular and frequent visits
through a series of special programs.
Already Ibis summer there have
.been programs by the Columbus
Zoo, lessons in yoga, and studies on
familiar and not-so-familiar worms.
July's feature events will be a
wildlife program on July 10, a stamp
collection session on July 17, a train
show on July 24, and a visit with llamas on July 31.
·
At each event library books relating to the interest subjects are displayed and can be checked out by
the children.
To encourage participation in the
summer reading program of the
local libraries, a new way of earning
awards has been initiated this year.
As explained by Librarian Ruth
Powers, the number of books chil·

means - GDC - car 27. Marshall
University Mid Ohio Valley Center-

rqeeting piiiCC and their JIIOOe of tie Miss Finx:nckcr Megan Sipwt ODC 3l ' Ooldwing Riders - Spmce Oirl Scouts tt379 • Dukes 54.
~portalion.
and Little Mister PirecriiCkcr Cody Street 32. Oallia County Soccer ·carmichAel's Farm and Lawn Pullins • GDC - I car 18. Buckeye Association - GDC - truck 33. Gallia . GDC - six traetors 55. Antique trac·
. ' I. Chief of Police - GDC - Roaer Hills FFA/AG Mechanics - GDC - Pcif0rmin11 Arts • Dukes 34. AI! My tor Lawrence Tiwney • GDC 56.
}trande~rry 2. Police Deplnment - floatl9. Olllipolis Sbrinen- GDC - Children - GDC • float 3S. Gallia Antique lriiCtor Bill Tawney - GDC
dOC 3.. Gallia County Vietnam Vet- 2 units and fOW" wheelenhnoton:y- . County Engineer Joe Leach - GDC S1. American Cancer Society Nurse
clans Association Spruce Street 4.' ~le~ 20. Glllia Academy Higb 37. Brooke .Adams - Dukes - bicycle of Hope Gladys Grant - GDC ~ car
Bob and Jewel Bvans - GQC - School -Dukes- waiting 21. Otllia 38. Green T-BIII - OPC - float 39. S8. River Rat Karao~e Club - GDC ~
Parade Marshalls 6. Chamber Jlresi- Academy High School MaR:hilla ltio Grande B' Ball • ODC - fl01140. van 59. French ~1iy Twirlers dent - G~ _. Gary ROIICb 7. VFW Band - Dukes ·22. Gallia Academy John Love - GDC - two can 4 I. Cub Dukes 60. Gallia Academy History
A:uxiliary GDC - Pickup Truck 8. , Hish School JVNarsity CbeCrtead- Scouts 11204 - ODC 42. Ohio Little Day Parliciputs - GDC 62. SnoufVinton AQI.erican Legion Auxiliary - en - GDC --truck 23. Gallia Acadc- Miss America Kayla Payne - GDC · fer Fire and Safety - GDC - truck
qoc - Truck 9. River Recreation my High School eighth and ninth car 43. Reliance ·Motion Control • and II" kart 63. Tom Kessel 1953
Queen contestant&amp; - GDC - boat 10. grade cbeerleaden- GDC · IIUCk 24. GDC - float 44. River Valley Taxi • Chevy Pickup and 1966 InternationKeep Gallia Beautiful - GDC • float Gallia Co.unty Republican Offic:e GDC - car 45. Wee CAre Daycare • al • ODC 64. K'-'9 Korps - Dukes 65.
Jr. ijigh Cheerleadem I
II. Gallia County Sheriff Depatt- Holders and C8!1'fidatel - GDC - Dukes 46. Cub Scouts if20S South- Hannan
nt- GDC - IS units 12. Ohio Val- float 26. .congruaman Prank ~ • west~rn Elemen!ary: GDC 47. Vi~ • GDC 66. Oavin Firetruck • GDC '

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l-ine up·posted for River Recreation Festival parade

Women should give lewd boyfriend the heave hd
.

•

Pomlloy •llddlllfO'l • Gellll! alii, OH • Point Pis 111rt, WV

....-,,June30,1-

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Pomrroy • Mlddtepolt • 0 r'lpolll, Ott • Point Plrrrrnt, WY

1

· Non~traditional
AnmNS - Counseling llld Psycholoaical Services
(CPS) u Ohio Ulliversity is again offering a special
carur counseling propam for prospective .dult lllldents
throuah August 3.
The program is designed for notJ:traditionalatudents
- persons wbo have been out of school for 10111e time and ·
are now considering enrolling u 'the university level to

SUn«My, Junr 30,

1•

students offered career program service

Pomeroy .• Middleport • Galllpollr, OH • Point P1111 rnt, WY

.

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VAU

and mae educational plans. Tiley may also elect to take
111 intemt inventory to help identify possible areu o[
career interests. If the interest inventory is taken.
pospeclive students will then meet with a ~ounsclor
incli:viduilly to di~~=UU the results uid their plans.
There is a minimal chaqe for the interest inventory
but no chaqe for the counseling.

begin collep ltlldies, to reiiiiii!C ~ollege studies; or to
seek 111 additional clep'ee. People wbo wiJh to take
adv111tage of this spa:ial program to discuss their concerns about resuming their education should conlll:t
CPS for 111 llppOintment.
lnlaaled persons may elec:t to have 111 individual
interview with a counselor to explono vocational oplions.

'

....,..,, June 30, 11M

•

Miller
graduates
.summa '
cum laud~c

Celebrations mark
legislature's return to
renovated .Statehouse
By PAUL SOUHRADA
As1oclated Prell Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
architectural .journey that began
135 years ago will come full circle
this week with the official reopening of Ohio's Civil War-era Statehouse.
·
Thousands of Ohioans are
expected to attend picnics, cere·
monies and other events scheduled
Wednesday through July 9 to mark
the end of the six-year, $112.7 million renovation.
Gone are the mazes of haphazard!)' constructed offices and odd
half-Hoors that left visitors dazed
and disoriented.
In their place are airy offices and
hearing rooms filled witll period
furniture and painted historically
accurate colors ·- ranging from
several shades of salmon to French
blue, freshly opened skylights and
exhibits designed to give !(Jurists a
taste of Ohio history.
"I'm very impressed," visitor
'{om Ulne.ss said recently while
reloading his carne.ra at the counter
of the Statehouse gift shop.
·
Ulnes_s has more than a tou~st's
interest in the remodeling job.
The Rosemont, Minn., resident
is his state's assistant director for
state building construction. He and
his wife were driving back from a
conference in Portland. Maine and
stopping off to check out statehouses along the route.
Ulness said he appreciated the
effort to make the Ohio Statehouse
look as much as possible like it did
when it was completed in 1861.
Minnesota took shortcuts when it
renovated its statehouse in the early
1990s - restoring public spaces
but not working areas.
~ ·Behind the doors ... it could be

'·

anything," Ulness complained.
Of course, Minnesota only spent
$12 ntillion, too.
When the first bids were
received, the Ohio project came in
at $73.7 million. An expansion
added $13 million; asbestos and ·
hazardous materials removal
heaped on $7.8 ntillion; and other .
costs, such as lawn and fountain
work, brought the total to $112 million.
Most of that is tax money,
although the board carne up with
some other revenue, mostly from
the Statehouse's underground park·
ing garage.
Ron Keller, who oversaw the
renovation project as executive
director of the Capitol Square
Review &amp; Advisory Board, said he
and the more than 3,000 other people who worked on the renovation
f~lt an obligation to carry on the
vision of the original builders:
He said the project's design
group visited dozens of state capitols before starting work, and
worked to make Ohio's the most
historically ac:c:urate working statehouse.
'
"The original builders of this
capitol ... didn't build it for themselves," Keller said. "They built it
for us.
"They wanted us to see whu
they thought of this American
experiment called democracy. Thaf
they wanted it to last for thousands
of years."
Even the style chosen for the
building - Greek Revival - mimics the architecture of the early
Greek city-states where democracy
was born. Popular betll!een 1820
and 18(i0, the Greek Revival style
also can be seen in county courthouses across the SUte.

YPSILANTI,
Mich. ~~~~=~
Miller
recently graduated
cum laude from Eastern
University with a bachelor of
enc:e degree in
ol:cupational .
therapy.
The requirement to paduate
summa
cum
laude is 10 maintain a 3:9 or
above . grade
·point average on
a 4.0 scale:
. A reception
was held prior to
commencement
for the students graduating from
University Honors Program, Of
1,600 graduates, Miller 'Was one
38 individuals to graduate from
honors program.
To fulfill honors
requirements, a student
plete 12 additional honors
mental -course credits, in~l~!::i
research and submission of a
honors thesis.
She was invited to present
thesis. "Theoretical -c~~~::~~~E
Frames of Reference in
al lherapy," at the Michigan
pational Therapy Association
conference. Attending the.
inencement alld honors
were her parents, Hoyt and
Miller, and her fiance, J.R. Sauer.
While attending EMU,
completed. her field work rea:uin!
ments at the Henry Ford ~~~:~~~~~
lion Services and Oakw&lt;iod
tals in the Detroit area, and
Columbus (Ohio) Rehabilitation
Subacute Institute. She
er of Pi Theta ,!"psilQn. !Jte
occupational ther.Py
block representative of the
Occupational Therapy
and a member of the
· Occupational Therapy AS!IOCiation.;
· She is the grand!laughter of "'"!'JIIO
Miller and Nola Brabham, both
Gallipolis.

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•880111 ClUCK

RENOVATION· P•ul S.uer lilltalll hi-tech wiring In th1 renovltld Slnlta cham.,.,. It the Stiltahou. . ln Columbul Ju1111 24. The rltl1ovltlon will re1tore the c:llam.,.,. to near-orlgllllll condition
with the llddltlon of 10phl1tlceted eltc:tronlc• that will allow leglelltorl to
laptop computer• It
their ct•u: The comput,n will he.lp tacllltate voting end ellow eleCtronic dlllvery of bllle and revl(AP Photo)

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More than 300,000 visitors are emed the territory that was later workers putting the finishing touchexpected to tour the renovated . carved into Ohio and five other es on the building.
Statehouse annually, compared ' Midwesterns tates.
.
Keller said the Statehouse work
with the 120,000 who went through_ · Visitors also can view onti of the should be 98 percent completed for
before the construction.
first state Hags, designed by Cleve- the opening festivities:
"! think everybody walking in lander John Eisenmann for the
the door ,... will get an education 1901 Pan-American Exposition in
. But, then, the work never really
when they come inlo this place," Buffalo, and learn something about will be finished.
Ke)ler said.
the state's prison system, which
Exhibits range from replicas of provided many of the workers for
"Our mission now is to preserve
the state Constitution and the the original construction project
the restoration," Keller said._,''So
Northwest Ordinance of 1787, the
Visitors who arrive soon after · that what happened over the past
temporary constitution that gov- the opening also may still see some 100 years doesn't happen again."

157 years later Statehouse restored to .original beauty
By AARON MARSHALL
ers of vinous crafts wit!) 150-'!00 -heavily aggressive," Thurber wrote
Gannett•News Service
workers per day restoring the build- in his Th'1rber Album.
COLUMBUS - Following a ing at the height of the effon.
"It is _almo&amp;t impbssible to find
colorful procession of some 5000
The process has been criticized the governor's office, or almost any
people to the northeast corner of the for cost overruns as·the original cost -other, unless you have been ace-usStatehouse grounds in Columbus, projec:tian was $67.7 ntillion. The tomed for years to its monumental
early nineteenth century Ohio Gov- total bill now stands at $112.7 mil- maze of corridors and rooms," he
ernor Jeremiah Morrow spoke to the lion, nwch of which will .be footed wrote.
throng assembled for the laying of by Ohio taxpayers.
Thurber and other more recent
the 16th state's Capitol cornerstone.
The process relied heavily on his- visitors to the Statehouse would be
."'Let the edifice rise in solemn, torical photos and
surprised
t,o
simple grandeur, a monument of contemporary
"It Ia a/moat· lt'npoN/ble to find · the buildchaste and classic beauty," said the newspaper
find the govemor'a office, or ing's basement,
early pioneer and then ex-Governor accounts fn the a/mo.t any other, unlelta ytiu formerly the
. Morrow just moments before plac- auempt to bring have been accuatomed for darkest of pasing the cornerstone on July 4, 1839. the _building back ,..,. to tt. monumental m-. sageways_comTwen.ty-two years and seven to it's original of corridor~ and rooma," oplete with a
architects later in I~ I, Ohioans got condition, said Jamea ThuifHw wror..
dropped ceiling
and a mess of
a gleaming Greek Revival style Cara Vanasdale.
Capitol building that rose into the air public relations - - - - --- - - - - - - wires. running
anchoring Columbus as the small director for the Capitol Square . overhead, to be quite different today.
town greJN into today's teeming Review and Mvisory Board, who Now ex~osed original limestone
metropolis of over I million people. has overseen the restoration efforts. -l!arrel archways greet the eye rising ·
Now neady !57 years after that
She explained tl!at much of the some 2~ to 30 feet high. "It's
first brick was laid, celebrations are building had been subdivided in pre· reopened to the. way·it looked origiaga'in planned as the Statehouse vious "pell-mell" renovation efforts • nally. It's very spac:ious... y(!u get the
reopens in all it's original glory fol- • while other architectural features effect of being a large vault, almost
Jow.ig three years and worth of such as natural skylights were lost a crypt-like area," said Vanasdllle. ·
restoration work. ·
under ~oats of plaster. The result
Now the redone basement aiea is
With restoration workers left was a statehOuse that was a . dark, home to the Statehouse Education
only to pullinlllast-minute polishing maze-like structure lacking in and Visitors Cilntcr which features
up duty, the Statehouse stands ready warthm and sensible orga,nization.
panel exhibits of Ohio's history as
to greet the thousands of Ohioans
Consider .the words of ren,owned well as artifacts. The center's manwho are expected to take part in the Columbus author James Thurber, ager Chris Matheney described the
week-long celebration of the build· who visited his father, who had a exhibits as a "mini-history of Ohio"
ing and Ohio's history July 3-9,
patronage job ·~ the tum ?.f the cen- and added t)tatlater this year a repli-'
The restorins of the Statehouse tury, at the Cllpttol often; The mte- ca 18th centlll')l s~ will be
has been a painstaking three year rior of the Ohio -Statehouse. is ~ added to the collection.
process involving about!OOO work- · darkly morose as the outstde IS
Near the visitor's center is a

newly opened gift shop featuring an
immense seal of Ohio, which hung
from 1920s through 1965 in the
rotunda- dome, hanging in th,jl
entrance . . The gift sh'op features
almost an~ gift a Buckeye heart
desires . with everything from
authentic, historic Indian arrowheads to golf balls sporting ~he
restoration effort l()go.
On the ground Hoor is the crown
jewel of the re~torative effort,, the ·
historic capital rotunda, where the
body of Abraham Lincoln once lay
in 1865.
Rising to a height of 12S feet
from the rotunda's hand-cut and
shaped floor, the cent~:r--o( the dome
, features a Stain glass skylight that is
an exact replica of the OIJC originally
hung there. Vanasdale said the
money for that , restor~tion was
raised.by fourth-graders from across
the state who contributed their "pel!'
nies and nickels and quarters."
Gone from the walls of the rotunda dome are the beige and gold leaf
trim paint. It's been replaced by a
coat bf pink paint that is historically
accurate. "We had a woman come in
whose in expert in paint restoration
. and she peeled the paint off layer by
layer to get to the color' you see
today," Vanasdale said.
Adorning the rotunda walls· are
replica gas lights, seve~! historical
paintings depicting moments in
Ohio history, and a rare original bust
of Lincoln, Vanasdale said.

The House and Senate chambers
of the working Capitol have also
been impressively restored. Original
pink and blue ornate carpet has been
copied and laid. Mighty chandeliers
hang in the middle of each room
from below a swathe of restored
skylights. The legislators desks are
designed in period style with modem exceptions made for phone a
computer wiring. In the Senate,
original"seating for the public as
been refurbished . as blue couche
rinS the chamber.

The Governor's office restoration ··
involved the laying of replica red
carpet, the addition of a stately chandelier and the same massive walnut
deak that was there i~ 1861. Again,
President Lincoln crops up to add a
historic touch to the desk. "Lincoln
sat across that desk from Gov. Deni·
son in 1861, when he was informed
he was.president-elect of the United
States," Vanas&lt;sale said.
.

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ALL FLAVORS

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By TODD HALVORSON
Florida Today ·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ·
NASA's Galileo spacecraft .,,·,~ ..'"'
off ' an 18,month orbital tour
Jupiter Thursday, swinging wit:hio
524 miles of the largest moon in
solar system.
•With nine ·of its 10 scicm,i,1~
instruments up and runnin~, ·
$892 million spacecraft cruiSed
Ganymede, one of four
· moons discovered by the ltalliu
~~Stronomer Galileo in 1610.
:am.~ scientific

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Gal ilea
spacecraft
launched
on trip to
Jupiter

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By The AISocleted Prell

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Openiryg of statehouse
·
Events to mark the re-opening of the renovated Ohio Statehouse:
- Wednesday, July 3: A pany for construction workers
employed for the renovation ... With families, total crowd' of 4,000
. expected.
- Friday, July 5: House and Senate hold special session to ded·
icate building. Invited: former legislators and governors.
- Saturday, July 6 : Black-tie fund-raiser to benefit the Statehouse Education and Ytsitors Center. Included: more than 300 Civil
War re-enactors who will line walkways and fire four cannons displayed on ihe grounds.
- · Sunday, July 7: .Picnic witli the Past. Open to the public, up to
25,000 people expected. Picnic lunches available "at yesteryear's .
prices," with no items costing more than 50 cents.
- Monday, July .8: State employees day. Food vendors from
around Capitol Square will market products on the Statehouse lawn
at reduced prices. Also: an after-work event for people who work in '
the vicinity of the Statehouse.
- Tuesday, July 9: Hands-on History Day. State history is told
through re-enactments, dramas and mock trials. Included: a display
. in the Rotunda featuring products and goods from each bfOhio's 88
counties.

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c or pictures \If tile pi::•·:~!~
oon will be beamed to E
the next two monthS; The first
tures of Ganymede - a m~~~~
whose surface is striped with . •
ridges, deep tr9ughs and earth'!'
ake-like fault lines - are .expect;~
ed to be released about July I0.

.,
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"We should have pictures of
interesting areas on the moon
think will look like nothing w"''wo'!~
ever seen on any other ~~-~~~:
before," said NASA project sc
Torrence Johnson.
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AT THE CORNER Of GIN, HARTINGER
PKWY. AND PEARL ST., MiDDLEPORT
TtiROUGH IS SENIOR Clnl£N DAY.
VAUGHN'S IS THE ONLY STORE THAT
GIVES A5% DISCOUNT TO OUR
.. SENIOR CITlZENS, .

·W.rNewAecept
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- ''The best picture$ of these

taken by the Voyager spaiCec:raft.
look very strange, like someone
taken a huse rake to the surf-,"
While Gov. Voinovich has · said. "There 'apparently are a ,lot
already moved into his new restored faults in !he surf- c:reatini
~
Statehouse digs and plans to work and tJ:OUshs, and we'll be se
daily from there, Lt. Gov: Nancy those from a vantage point 70 um1es '
Hollister's Statehouse office will not closer than the best ·VoyaJet picsee so much of her. The Lt. Gov's lures."
'·
spokesperson Lito Ramirez ·said that
NASA's twin Voyager spacecraft
Hollister will use the offiqe only i
few times a week keeping her base made weeldong passea through the
of operations at the·Riffe Center, 7l Jovi111 system in the late 1970s on . .
their way to enc:ounta.~ with Saturn,
S. High St.
\
· Uranus and Neptune.

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Entertainment·

,..ca., sa• • r ·

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-....:...--. - - - - -·People in the news..;;....__...:,_______---;-..
NEW YORK (AI) - Meg RyiD gOI to enjoy a ·dilferent kind of boot
Cllllp to ptqWe for her role IS ID Army clplain in "Courage Under FIJ'C."
"I'll tell you what it involved: tbe Four Seasons hotel, ClppUCCino and
' Jacuzzis," said Ryan, 34, who co-stm with Denzel Wlahington in the film
~., about tbe Persian Gulf War. It opens July 12.
" When I'd get to (tbe set) in tbe morning after Ill
of the above, I'd yell 'Okay, I feel good I I'll climb that
wall!"' Ryan says in People magazine's July 8 isSue.
Actulllly, Ryan did need some time to get used to
the militarY routine and even 101 some help from the
real thing.
"The real militarY were trying to impress upon us
acton that we were brothers-in-urns," Ryan said. "I
was soluting. l'm going left. I'm going riiht. l'm stopping short and walking into my brothers-in-arms. It got •
to be a comedy_act."
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A freelance journalist
won 't say who told him about a videotape allegedly showing Michael Jackson having sex with a teen-ager. .
A judge will soi&gt;n decide whether Victor Gutierrez should be penalized
for diSobeying 1 court order to revelll his source. A hearing is set for July 25.
Last year, Jackson sued Gutierrez for slander. saying he lied when he
claimed he saw a 27-minute videotape that showed the singer having sex
with a 13-year-old boy.
Judge Reginald Dunn had ordered Gutierrez to reveal his source by June
25. Gutierrez's lawyer, Robert E. Ooldrnan, _said Friday his client is keeping.
quiet. ·

~He bu an agreement with his confidential ~. and ... be will ho!Kll"

.. IJL,._.,.

- ·~

.~i: Corn

All ~~m:st wurant was iasued Wedllnd1y for tbe 28-yetr-old mlllidiD
after be left tbe Impact House in Pistdona. where be was serviai~:3E
of up to six months for his al'l'atlut y.- on cocaine and heroin
clwrges. He's only Ill lowed to leave if be's KCOII!panied by a
from tbe ceDI«.
Weiland left tbe faclUty Tuesday everting to "attend
to some penonal business,'' his attorney; Steven M.
Cron, said Friday.
"He didn't use drugs w~ be was gone,:• Cron .
said. "The judge agreed to Jive bim anolher chance." .
' A hearing was scheduled for July 29 to review Wei·
land'a pogress.
·The sentence forci:d the oltemative rock band,
whose current hit is "Trippin' on a Hole in a Paper
Heart,'' to cancel its summer tour.

that agreement," Goldman said.
Jackson was invesliglled in Santa Barbara and Los Angelercounties after
he was accused of luring at least one young boy into illicit sex, but wu 'lever
prosecuted because tbe alleged victim refuted to testify.
,
The multimillionaire singer reached a se~emcnt with his IICC1IMr in feb.
I'U8I'j- 1994. Terms were confidehtial but Jackson reportedly paid the boy IS
much as $15 million.
,
LOS ANGELES (AP)- "Peanuts" creator &lt;lwles M. Schulz dedicll·
ed his slar in the Hollywood Wolk o~ Fame right next to tbe stir honoring
Walt Disney.
"I'm very proud to be next to Wolt Disney's star, even thcluah ~ years
ago he sent me a rejection lener," the 73-year-old cartoonist said Friday.
More than 300 fans joined "Peanuts" characters Snoopy, Charlie Brown
and Lucy on the sidewolk as Schulz unveile&lt;l the Hollywood Boulevard .slar,
'
the 2,068th on the celebrated walkway.
"Pretty good for a cartoonist." Schulz sai.d.
NEW YORK (AP) - Motherhood has made Rosie SCOtt Wllani
The ceremony coincided with the 45th anniversary of the "Peanuts" car- · O'Donnell less cynical.
or
"My mom died when she was young, and I always thought that miJbtle
toon strip.
"Think of how many times you've awal&lt;ened with a horrible'hanaover or ·my fate," O'Donnell, 34, told People magazine for its July 8 issue: . " .
didn'~feel well,'' Hollywood-honorary mayor Johnny Grant told the crowd.
"Since ~ving my son, I don't think that anymore. I think I'm JO&amp;IIJ:ID
"Somehow you got over to the newspaper and read 'Peanuts' and went pn live to see him grow up." •
..,
to have a marvelous day."
.
O' DonneU' now brings 13-month-old Parker Jaren O'Donnell to lief N""
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Stone Temple Pilots lead singer Scott Weiland . York office, whefe she hosts a nationally syndicated talk 'show. O'Oonnlli
returned to a drug rehabilitation center one day after leaving the facility adopted Parker two dAys after he was born last year.
;
without permission. His lawyer said he stayed cl~as away.
.' ·
. . ·
·
~.

fuf_ res show biggest price jump In 22

•. " By HI I 'frf CHURA
' • . AP Bullnnt Will r
'· ·.
Com futurea prices MW their bigclt ne day jump in 22 yean Friday

: • · after u Apiculture Deplnment lqiOft ~bowed reconl prices have nOI
: · deterred demand lnd that stockpiles could fall to just 1 few days' aupply t;y

:
:
•

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harvest.
On othef markets, nawral 1as futures --o.l amid sweltering fcncasts
that could keep air conditioaen humming; oopper futures increased for a
:, i third day after a report low stockpiles had dropped even further. The Corn: r ~ modity ~h Bureau's index or 17 commodities fell 0.7 point to 248.67:
!~f. , The Agriculture Department estimated American bins contained just 1.7
billion bushels of com as of Juae I. That figure is half last y.-'s level and
:• sb(lcked qticllgo Board of Trade investors, who
it would be about
•! ' 10 percent higher.
.
.
· lJ
If consumption is n01 curbed, analysts estimate the country would have
two to 12 days of reserves when newly harvested com begins arriving at ele• i vat on in September. Standard reserves are about 90 days.
Investors believed demand had slowed in recent weeks as foreign buyers

:}t

*""ssed

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POMEROY - Several Meigs
Countians are again this summer
participating in the Ohio University
Cominuniversity Band -which stages
outdoor concerts over the summer.
The band is made up of nearly 80
adult, college, :riid high · school
instrumentalists,Amd includes residents of AtheD$ and the surrounding
- counties.
Meigs County perfonnen in this
year's band · are Chris Nee!; Dave
Bowen , Jeanne Bowen, Andy Wolf,
Christie Grossniclcle, Anna Wolf,

Traci Heines, and Eastern Band
director Su5an Climer.
The concen program is under
way with a full slate of featured
guest conducton scheduled to lead
the band during performances at this
year's "Under the Elms" co11cen
series. ,
Three concens remain in the
series: July 3, 10 and 17. All performances are held on the Ohio Univer.
sity College Green, adjacent to Tern•
pleton-Biackbum Memorial Auditorium, and begin prompdy at 7 p.m.

I

c

ByHALKNEEN
POMEROY - Meiss County vine .
ripened tomatoes are appearing at the
local markets. What a long .awaited'
treat! With a grin upon his face, Bobby Graham of Rock Springs Road
stoppe(l by my office this past week
to inform me that he had picked and
eaten his first home grown tomato of
the season. A taste would have been
appreciated. I guess I'll have to do
what the rest have to do, go out and
buy some! (In Gallipolis, Mrs. Frahk
Tabor, 122 Third Ave., reported the
first ripe tomato~ in Gallia County).
Remember Meigs County g!ll'·
deners, the 133rd Annual Meigs
County Fair, August 11-17 wilt have
space for your produce and flowen
to be displayed and judged. Who will
have the best looking produce this
year?
Spealting of the fair's activities ·
The Meigs County Soil Water Conservation Service is once again sup-

The Hunch back of Notre Dame

Disney's 'Hunchback' weaves exciting story
'

By MARSHALL FINE

Ollnne!l Suburban Newap~~pera .

It's hard to convince adults who
· don't have children that Disney's
· altimated films ~n'tjustfor kid$-:but "The Hun~~~ac!t . of ~otre
O.me" proves
11 once again.
In fact, "Hunchback" may not be
for · the smallest moviegoers. A
sometimes dark and mature tale, it
softens all the edges of Victor
Hugo's novel but leaves man·y of his
themes in place. It may prove a
shade too heavy for the under-5
crowd.
Still, this is a film that is at. once
j~bly beatitllu( exciti~g. funny
and serious; one that teaches toler·
ance and self-confidence without
sltimping on some of.life's cruelties.
, This may seem like heavyweight
stuff for a cartoon- which is exact- .
ly the point. While some people look
down their noaes at animated features as entertainment fit only for
youngsters, Disney proves over and
over that animation is an artfonn
whose boundaries continue to
expand.
The story · remains mostly the
sarl\e. with Quasimodo being reared
as the ward of the cruel Judge
Claude Frollo. who was responsible
for the death of his gypsy mother.
Frollo keeps the deformed child in
the bell tower of Notre Dame cathedral until he grows into a sensitive
(and strong) young man whose misshapen form cannot mask a heft
ycaminR to be free.
.

Frollo keeps him locked away, of the book in its depiction of intol- .
assuring Quasim&lt;X!o that the world erance and hatred, and the ripple
would mock him - or wone - if . effects it bas on this community in
be showed his face outside the Paris.
cathedral. But, egged .on by three
No, there isn' t Hugo's social
lively gargoyles (who speak only 10 commentarY - about either the reli·
him), Quasimodo' snew out of his gious hierarchy or ·the · scurrilous
tower to attend the annual Festival underclass of thieves. But children
will come away with positive ideaS
of Fools.
There he spots the gorgeous aboui sacrifice and loyalty.
.young gypsy Esmerelda, dancing,for . . They may also gain some sensithe crowd. Her performance stirs tivity toward those who are different
unaccustomed feelings in Quasimo- ·than they are. As for Frollo's obvido - and uncomfonable ones in ous lust for Esmerelda, roost of that ·
Frollo, who hates and persecutes all will zoom right over children's
gypsies within his realm.
heads.
Then Quasimodo is plucked from
the crowd and crowned King of
Fools - only to be persecuted and
pelted wjdi rotten fruit by the assembled' mass. When Frollo refuses to
help him (to teach him a lesson),
Esmerelda jumps to his defense, f!Jr·
ther incurring Frollo's wrath.
Adapted by a team of five writers
and directed by Gary Trousdale and
Family Nig!at Is
Kirk Wise (the team responsible for
Back... Only Better!
"Beauty and the Beast"); "Hunchback" captures the breathtaking
EVERY TUESDAY liGHt
adventure and derring-do of Hugo's
4 P.M.-9 P.M. OilY
book, without the vengeful finale of
the original. Yet it captures the spirit

TOM CRUISE IN
. AND
WHOOP! GOLDBERG IN
EDDIE PG-13
441-1018

t8..

td**

Hendenlon, WV
Gallipolis &amp; Rio Graride, OH

COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
DEHfll QUAID, SEAN CONNERY
IN

20..

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22
23

24
25

DRAGON HEART
PG-13
ONE EVENitG sHoW 7:30

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GALLiPOLIS • Intense competition and bad weather reduced sales
ancl earnings during the last fiscal
year.
Food~~~~~! sales cleclined due
to price competi·
tion
in
the
sausage
and
Hickory Specialities
markets.
Hog costs continued to rise reiali"!' to last year,,.
reducing
the
margin. Hog costs continue to
in thC first quarter.
Earnings fell by $0.33 per share
to the adoption of a new
IJCCounting standard which should
reduce 1997 depreciation expense
$2.0 million.
·
We expect the company to
..
a de-cision this ·year

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"- futUFt
future
future

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WASHINGTON (AP) _:.

(304) 675·3391 . ·.
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. up steam as summer

POINT PLEASANT
SURROUNDING AREAS
Serving G~llli I Melga Count111 In Ohio,
I
Maaon &amp;Jackson Countlealn West VIrginia
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Jbe

was growing at a
percent annual rate as.
~.IS:~:ec,onomy
and recent signs sug-

.. (100) 766·0553

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AJrlcultuJjlliail .....

1taMrce A..... Ollio Stlile Unl' ~ -"
venlty Extasloa.
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Leech joins staff-of
Althof &amp; Associates

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fetty complet•s OU course

:~:::.~ :a:rsins='t~~:S.

Stating one's opin,on not only right, it's·an o~ligation

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Home pnlliners take note to 'on. tiniiC liquid fertilizing your bedding
plants .and .hanaing baskets once
every ·seven to ten days, ~ our
weather gets warmer, addttionol ...
wa.,rinsifiiiiJils out necessary nutri•
enll to keep plants healthy lnd
growing. We need to replace them.
' Se~teral homeowners have com·
plained about fungus growth developinr on their mulched flower beds.
The fungus bre4ks open to spi'Nd its
spores (seed-like structure) wbic:h
may affix itself to clapboard/siding
of your house. The easiest and best
control method is to ·,ently ,.ltC the
funJUS when it is just slarti~g toform
and it will shrivel up.
· "
Harold Kaeea. It the- Mtlal

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Rout&amp; 93 South on Standpipe RQ'a4. '

In that area the . II&amp;B Variety
MIDDLEPORT •· Renovation is
underway on the large building at the Mart will operate under the mannge-,
'T' of Nonh Second and Mill Street ment of Vi~ky Camp. It will inclu.de
which was recently purchasell.by Bob · some new furniture, miscellaneous
Bush and will operate as B&amp;B busi- sale items, and a food convenience
store. Stocking is currently underway,
nesses.
•·
The exterior of the property pur- according Camp.
chased by Bush which e~IC~s from • Tite ~tdro;..,_ope~'I!!J;J[gr.c._w..illltOII•1.""
the alley near the Holzen Medical Monday.
In the middle st&lt;R front of the
Center on Mill to the old Western
'
building
on Mill ·sueet, plans are .
Auto building on North Seeond.will
being
made
to open an antique shop,
be painted beige and trimmed in dark
brown. The painting is underway · while in the store front near the alley,
now, as is the renovation of t.he inte- the owner plans a hardware store.
Pfins of the ow~r also include '
rior of the area formerly used as a
renovating
the apartments on the secsupermarket by Carl Platter and earregarding whether it will continue to lier by the late William Walters.
ond floor.
operate the Cantina Del Rio restaurants. .
Fourth Quarter,
Fls(al 1996 results
Founh quaner results were ·
slightly lower that we elfpected.
because operating eKpenses and the
~ ...
federal accounting standard charge
therapy
with
adults
and
children
9f
GALLIPOLIS • Linda ·Leech,
were larger . than forecasted. Total
M.Ed.,
has joined the staff at Althof all ages. She has m&lt;R tban 25 years
revenues grew 4.9% as more restau·
&amp;
As!;OCiates,
an outpatieqt ·group experience in human services, hav•
rants in operation offset declines in
offering
psychotherapy.
counseling, ing worked in a variety of capacitia
sante-store-sales and fobd segment
and self-devel · including direct client service and
soles. The gross margin declined ·to
administration. She has personal
opment.
69.1% versus 70.0% due to higher
experience
as a foster parent for
She
has
food and hog costs. The combinaseven
years,
having ·worked with ·
completed
all
tion oflower sales levels and higher
NEW STORE - The laB Vtrltty Mart oPened for business
more
than
40
children and adoles·
the
requireoperating costs caused operating
Monday
in the formar Plttter building It tha corner of Mill e(ld
menu for her cents with speci!ll n~eds . Her experi·
margins to decline to 9.7% versus
North
Second
In Mlddltport. VIcky Camp is 11111nager of the new
doctorate
in ences in this area allowed her to
Mart
.
14.2%. Higher health insurance,
Counselor Edu- develop a special interest in the
'
computer systems and advenising
needs
of
families.
cation
at
Ohio
costs were the main factors ·for
University ·
Leech is also fluent in American
increased operating expenses. Preucept
for
the
dissertation.
Her
docsign language and sCrv.d IS Ill inter·
Continued on 0-~
toral program empluisizes communi- preter for the -deaf for ~,. years. .
.
.
ty . agency and rehabilitation coun- She utilizes an, music. 'lnd other
OALLIPOUS • Leta Fetty, of classroom instructor for two and a
seling.
creative activities in her therapy. Gallipolis, and formerly of Meigs half years and an assistant coordinaPrior to coming to southeast allowing individuals to e~plore ne¥( County, recently completed·the com- tor for two. years.
·
Ohio, she was employed at Mound- y;ays of dealing with the stresses of mercilll teacher drivina administra- · She is now the coordinator forthe
builders Guidance Center in Newark
life.
. tiOII cou.W at the Ohio University in Driver's Education Program at 'tile
whereshe specialized in play theraAAA. Gallipolis, where she has '.
Leech is available in both the ' Lancaster. ·,
.
py,. group counseling, and individual Gallipolis and Pomeroy offices.
the course included classroom worked as a travel counselor for two
and ahalf yeirs.
.
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A
graduate
of
ll.utland
High
:
ALB-ANY • Gregory Maynard, · Co., recently.
, course allowed hef to attend the School Class of 1961 , Mt. State Busi- .
longwall supervisor•at Meigs Mine
Maynard resides in Rio Grande Highway Patrol and also to listen to ness College in Parkenburg. W.Va.,
in 1961 i!nd the Southern Ohio Skills
No. 2, and James E. Walker, prepa- with his wife. Mary Belle, and daugh- . actual cases in session of coon.
Center
in Jackson in 1982, she is the
ration plant utility man and Meigs ter Lindsay. Walker resides in Oak
She baS been a behind the wheel
Mine No. 31, were ~ognized for 20 Hill with his wife Sherry, and sons drivina instructor for six years, a daughter of Clarice Carpenter of
years service a1 S,outhern Ohio Coal James and Joshua.
comrnen:iol and driver'~. edu~ation Rudand.

AEP recognizes Maynard, ·Walker

......,. ...

VIDEO
TUNSFERS
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446·6939 .,
446·1370

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$tnrlq

TRINITY BROADCAST NETWORK
C·SPAN

'* "Option•! p,.mtum or pooy·pllr·vlow Pl'lltl,.mmlng"

Weddings, Insurance,
Special Events. .
Let us ptt.this on
Yide'o tape.

•

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30
31
32
33

• "Umlt8d Bulc 5etvlco"

Por All Your
·· VIdeo Neellsf

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26
27
28

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•i By JAY CALDWELL ·

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ChiD Oil

Strvlct

Cattlemen, keep your calendar
ct.-to attend the Stockman's Spectacular on Tuesday, July 9 from 69:30 p.m. at the Jackson, Ohio
Braach of Ohio J\griculturll
Malting pians fer a short weekend ~csean:b Development Center.
get-away this summer? Consi4)er While touring the farm several stops
attending the B!OIDO 96 W~kend . will be made to learn about: Getting
Celebration in Wooster, Ohio on July Cows and Heifers Bred • Quick snd
19-21. Ohio State Univenity's Col· Easy, Fescue Variety Trials, Early
lege of Food, Agricultural and Envi- Weaning • Cow ·Condition • Reproronmental Sciences is holding a ductive Pi:rfonnance, Breeding for a
three day open house of its' Ohio Uniform Calf Crop, Legume Variety
Agricultural Research Develupmen- Plots, Warm Season Grass Demontal Center facilities at Wooster, Ohio. strations, Grazing Cell Model-20
Celebrate how agricultUre is effec~­ acret. and Managing Resources for
ing your life. Discover through · Optimum Stocking Riles. West Virexhibits, demonstrations and guided Jinla University Extension Forage
toun what research is beins accom- Specialist, Dr: Ed Rayburn will be
plished to make your ~fe better. the keynote spealcer. No IU!IValions
Admission is free. F~ further infor- are needed- just show up! 1be Jack-

.

~ jlranch Farm is located off State

million call our office at 992-6696 or
. direcdy to BIOHIO hudquarten 111
(330) 263-3635.

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::• BQb Eva •• s -_arms, n:c.

rc";W',i•;.;ch-;;;. i.:;.ii.-;;e;iifi,'di;',j;i;i;·i99•l
WSAZ Huntington-Charleston (NBC)
"Community Watch 3"
WGN · Chicago
WTBS - Atlanta
WSYX ,Columbus (ABC)
WOUB Alhens (PBS) ,
WCHS Huntington-Charleston (ABC)
WPBY Huntington (PBS)
WBNS Columbus (CBS)
WI/AH Huntington-Charleston (FOX)
WOWK Huntjngton·Charloston (CBS)'
WTAP Parkersburg (NBC)
HBO
.
'
CINEMAX
DISNEY
SHOWTIME
future
Community Bulletin Board
STARZI
"HOME TICKEr pay-pef-view
future
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future
future
future ·

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·1Cbtnnel
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potting tlie Meigs County Fair
through itS anriulll Hay s~. Three'
c11egories of hay will be judJed. if
suf(icient entries are reaistered • 75
or more alfalfa. oil passes. and 49 or
le§s legumes. As you cut lllld bale ·
your hay_remember to reserve a few
bales to show.·

POMEROY HAS NEW BUSINESS- Jun GrueRr of SyracuH
· . wll open The Thrift Shop on Ponwoy'a Mlllil Sbeet llondty. She
: wnt be handling a variety of good u'" clothing for children and
.: adultS, toya and bicyclts, bocika and plct"rea, collectlblu, and
. tame fumiture, along with a line of new Jean• for women. Her
· houra will be frp,in 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Grueaer will accept don • ·
. tel ltema for aale In the ahop {lnd wHI dOI!IIIe five percent of the
. ~Ill the Melga County Senior Citizens center. Here tele. phOIJ!! number Ia 992-3125.

.
! Investment viewpoint

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Plus 101 For the channels that have been reassigned, yo"'ll
find most by just adding 10 to the channel they were O.r:'l·
For example, The Discovery Channel moves from chan. 34 . •
to chan. 44. Remember:
Plus
101 · ,
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8&amp;8 ·business opens
at the 'T' in Middleport

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Bow .Ia ftnd Your Favarlleff

t4** .
ts** ·
t6**
t7**

PG-13

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Which
· channels? You tell usl 1 Give us a call, send a
postcard or letter with your requests to:
CableVision, Attention: Program Qirector
·141 0 ~efferson E)lvd.
Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550 ·

t3*

MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE ·

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of

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12*

FRI., SAT~ SUN.

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Effective 6:00am· on July~. 1996, we're movlng ·many ~~
your favorite .channels to make ·room for new channels!
Stai'ZI and American Health Network will be available on
July 1. Other Channels will be added du,rlng the rest
the.
year with more coming In January.
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to•

KANAUGA DRIVE -IN

The band, uncle{ the direction Pf
Ohio University Director of Banll
John Qirner, will feature a patriotiC
celebration on July 3, with pieces
such as "Siar Spangred·Spectaculai'.:"
fearuring tbe muaic of G~ ~
Cohan. Other selections will incl~
Sousa's "Stan and *SiriJll!!
Forevcril\," tile wOiidorf!ll j::aimen
Draion Hollywood Bowl am.P~
ment of ':America 1be .Beautiful"
and music from '"The.Music.Man'.:"'
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First ripe tomatoes reported in Meigs, Gallia

Area m'usicians performing communiversity ban¢
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have been priced out of the market and domellic feed .... ._ " - is 11181oaa. ~ .. nnmtnallaul:JO pa • brtind ~etc•' · bav1 bltnj. . M WIIIM 1
sharply curbod. Friday's USDA '""'"m. however, reVC..S O!lly 1 4 plf- iaa l!eea d!pl.... by I banh ~ 11111 IDipl L
cent drop &amp;om a year a,o. Allalyst Mil:by Lutb at LaiP1 0..,.. il Cbici- cold .t hoe lpriaJ 11111 has bpt c.- . t air oo.diti- n I 1
10 predicted prices could riae 19 S6 a bushel to cwtail IIIII" evea funber.
AuJu1t lllllnl . . rc. 12.4cenll to$2.91 per l,OOOcubideet-1'*'"
"I hope hogs and pigs lib to eat grass,'' be saW.
·
tra:1 hiJh onlhe Nft York MaciiiCile Exct.np. Pricelbave ......, Futures lllso shot higher on forecasts that called for dry, 100 dep days m. SI lila the b1J1nn1n1 of the ,.....
in the Midwest over the next few days, said IMlyst Williamlieclenlun at
OIPPer 1\mnt piDed on a 7,8()0.1011 Ndllction il supplia on tbllaAllendale Inc., a futurea brokerage in Crystal Lab, Ill.
don Miw E•cb•11•, tbllaqaat copper eJ&lt;Cbantt, Mil onapeculalion CIIIM
Corn for July delivery rose 34 3/4 cents to a COIIIhl:ttu,a of S$.16 114 a wlllllld to buy 10,000 toDJ of the indllltrillliad lllalll, laid Beue '
~~
bushel in unrestricted trading of fcnt notice day. It Will 1M tara- jump lot II'J'ncdeetilll Soct!ritiealae. in Nft York. She jajd gains were
since July 20, 1973, according to die Board Of Tndo.
IS iftlllOI'I ~ pl'llfits, f.-iRJ s.itomo eo!lfd dump IIOIIie of ill ....
NI1Ural aas futures leapt higher after a ~ iD the Blue Wirer Cll!btrinl reMrves U it tria t o - from JU billion iJI 1 - 0VW I declltt.
System curbed supplies from the Gulf of Mexico, said Doa Morton at J&gt;ru..
Copper for July dllivery' ICIJed 1.(1!1 cetlll hiperto91.15 ceDIIIJiblmd
dentiol Securiues in Manchester, N.H. The system poc!Uila about 700 mil- - sllJhtly off ill hip o19U5 cefttl'l pound 011 the New York Macantilc
lion cubic feet a day.
Eltdwlac. Scplem* copper gained 0.9 Clllt to 90.40 cents: a pound - off
"It's not a lot in the big picture, bitt it's gOI the!n acrambling to replace its high of 92.40 cefllla poiWI.
lost production," he said.
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Copper has plunpd 26 percent this sprinJ, lUJely on fan aboul Sum·
It is uncertain how long the system will be out, but Mortoa laid any delay itomo.

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Depanment said
in its Jangross domestic product

E!Y KIM HARLESS
• JACKSQN • What do you think?
In the United States, those four
words should riltg as patriotic as red,
white arid blue and ppple pie ..
because in this country, stating your
opinion is not only ·a ·right, it's an
obligation.
Having an opinion is .easy; using
that opinion as ·part of' a problemsolving process is more challenging.
but that chall~nge is what Farm
Bureau is oil about: If you have an
was slightly less than the 2.3 percent idea ~t how things should he
gain ~poned a month ago. I~ initial changed, plug it into a system that
CaOmlte in April wu ~.8 percent.
can actulllly do something about it.
Still, the increase was more than Part of that system is the policy
four limes the anerrtic 0.5 percent development process Farm Bureau
growth race in the fourth quarter last aoes through each year. That proc;ess
· year. The economy expanded 2 per- bqins this summer and will conclude
cent in all of 1995.
this winter at the stat• and national
Farm Bureau annual meetlngs.lf you ·

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want to be part ofthat process, now's
.your chance.
. 1
The policy development process
begins with input from Galli a County Farm Bureau members, ~;ommit·
tees, advisory councils and board of
trustees. Also, meetings with resource
P.,ople from lllCal govetnmelll and
other organizations .,. held'. All ~f
these ideas are submitted to the Oal·
lia County Farm Bureau ·Policy·
Development C9mmittee. This com· ,
rrtittee reviews all of the piOl&gt;Osalt
submitted and presents them at~
county annuol meetina. Thia year's
Gallia County Fum Bureau Ann.ual
Meetins is September 24, at Buckeye
Hill's at 6:30 p.m. Any active member (full or part lime fl!ooer) IDlY
vote to accept or refUse the proposed
policy. Those policies dlll..-aceep~­
ed IIJ'C then forwarded to .tbil Ohio

f'arm Bureau Policjt oevelopmenl
Committee.
The state committee meeti twice
in the fall to review all of ihe policies
that counti~s have pro~sed. During
t!tis process, the state committee
hellll from many mource people
from outside oraaniillions to gain
insipl into the issties. For ex~ple,
buntinr- and wildlife are almost
always hot topics for policy. officials
from Ohio Department. of N!~tural
Resources and the Divisi.on of
Wildlife auend the committee's sessions to answer questlou and discuss
policy changes.
All of the policy proposals are
combined into 1 booldct of tentative
pollcias that will be Wild 01111 Ohio
Farm Bureau's Anaual Mee~inl
DeuaN 3to Sin CleYeland. Those
who v0111 at the state annual meetiDJ

are delegates representing the mem· ben in their respective counties.
onct the del•aates vote on the policy proposols, then the direction and
goals for the organization are' set for
the coming year. This p~ess 'con· tinues to the natjonallevel where pPI·
icy is det~rmined for the Amencan
Fum Bureau. •
DO you want to be part of this
process? Shquld you be part of the
process? 1be answer is clearly yes if
you are a Farm Bureau member who
has an opinion· or idea that would
serve agriculture or the rurlll community. The obliaation is youn:
• Compl~~ina is a w~te of energy
unless 11 ts channeled cnto a system
tbatean JliiiSibly comet the problem.
How can you 8CI involved? Sevcra1 ways. Become a member of
·
Ca r •iHd oa 0.2
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Pomeroy •Middleport e CW polla, Ott • Point P!Munt. WV

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. Corne~, · Jeffers aceept posts with Peoples Ban~ _
OALLIPOUS.- Joha o.- Ita

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lltcep«ed a position with Peoples
Blllk u vice pmident. Gallia-Meip
1
• • Division, aecordiaato u mcnt rude today by Robelt E. Evans,
Ptesident lltd Cllief Executive Offi, oer of'l'be Peopl~ Blllltinalltd 'lhlst
~Oil!III"Y·
.
He is Rspoaaible for all ldministrative lltd lendins functions conducted 1t the Gallipolis, Middleport,
Pomeroy lltd Rutllltd of@es.
Cornett earned an MBA from
.Washington University itr St. Louis,
.. Mo., has completed a comprehensi""
I numher of courses 11 bukins schools
and has several years manqement
experience in b811\ipa. Finance and
· eomrnen:ial lendinlf are his specialtics.
,
He is a native of 'Gallipolis and is
a member of the Gallipolis Planning

SUndly, June 30,1818

•

Hqu• c1 the

The IDJIC)IIIICell1elt 1¥N tude by
Rober! E. Ev111., Pmidenl ..t auet
Executive Oflieer of The Peoples
BankinJIItd Trull Company loday.
Jelfen is a native of Meip County, is a Jflldulle of Hockina Teclulleal Colleae IJid tw spent 17 yan ill
banltinJ. He lltd his wife Joni, their,
IW!abter lltd two sons reside in Har·
rilonville lltd are memben of theMiddleport Chun:h of Christ.
'

Bird, Cotterill honored for service

JlfllllUal A..IU'J1W(

APNew P , w
Pion 0-1, IIJ HomeSCJiel
Deolpers Network, wel-

. Comlll ·

-Business

1chants,

Failed, damaged crops need to be
.
d to Farm Service Agency

·IBusiness briefs I

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Bob Evans...

wwitlc

Country home has invitlog covered porch

briefs~
Commission, Gallipolis Retail Mer"
participates in the Coats for
NEW YORK (AP)- Those who
Kids
program
and
is
treaSIIRI'
of
1
just HAD to have the newest Donna
United Way.
He and his wife Marty have two Karan came out in force. They, .
weren't buying elegant drases or
children . .
other designs, though. They were in:
RU1l.AND - Desmond Jeffen
market for stoek.
·
has accepted a position with Peoples ' theDonna
Karan
International Inc.
Bank as personal banker lltd managmade its debut as a public company ·
er of the Rudlltd office.
Friday to Wall Street's venion of
applause. investors bid up the fash- ~
LICENSE PLATES BY COMPUTER·Vehlcle
milling the owner to select the preferred plate.
ion house 's shares about 17,peroent,..
owners with Ohio license platae can order spe· This new service for epeclal plldea will colt the
cial platea or vanity platee through a new comrising above its offerins prk:e of $24 ·
owner an additional $10.$50, plus the llandard re~
puter ineteHed in the offlctt of Gallle County
a share to $28 on ihe New Yorks:zo tee. Wilt Is shawn aboVe explaining
G LIPOLIS - Crop acreage an area I~ of grc;ater than 3'5 percent Stock Exchange.
Regletrar Ruby Wilt by the Bureau of Motor
· ·
ordering eyatem to Ron Barnes, Crown City,
plan and subsequently damaged or can ,be established. (An area is
Vehicles. The BMV .hae Installed lldclhlonalter·
and employee of the Galllpolia Borg-Warner
minals at all214 license agencies In Ohio, per·
fail as a result of Hooding or oth- · approximately the size of one counplant.
,,
NEW YORK (Ap) -. · Planet"
., "·VIii· '
er abnormal. conditions should be ty.)
HoUy~Ood stock shot higher on '
reported to the,Gallia-Lawrence Farm
The Gallia-Lawrence Farm Ser- news that~ !Rndy .Rstaul)lnt,chain .
Service Agency within 72 hours of vice Agency can be reached at 1-888- would set into the gambling business ..
the damage occurring or at the time 211-1626 (Toll free in 614 area code) following Hard Roek Hotel · and
ALBANY · lWo Meigs County who resides in Racine with his wife,
LYON, France (AP) -In a rare the producer notices the damage. A or~8686.
Casino's success drawing young:
employees have been recognized for Judy, aitd children, Amber, Ang~l
rebuff by allies, President Clinton phone call' will start the notification
Failure to report damages may gl!lllblers. .
their 20 years of service a1 Southern and Elizabeth.
was taken to task over U.S. efforts to process,
cause crop insurance claims or nonPlanet Hollywood, in a joint ven-'
Ohio Coal Company:
,
· Steven D. Cotterill, mechanic at penaliZe: international companies thai
Crop Insurance covers losses on: · insured crop disaster assistance to be ture with Caesars World owner m •
They are:
Meigs Mine No. 31 who resides in trade with renegade regimes like Com, soybeans. and tobacco in Gal- denied.
Corp., plans to open casino-liotels in ,
William H. Bird, preparation Page ville with his wife, Barbara, and Cuba and Libya.
lia County and corn, soybeans, tobac· Lisa Meadows and Jim Herrell Las Vegas lltd Atlantic City, N.J.
plant operator at Meigs Mine No.. 31 children, fv' ichael, Susan and Denise.
co, and wheal in Lawrence County. 11re county execulin directon of
"We're using •their llliiiiCi and ·
Non-insured assislllllce programs lhe GaUia·Lawrence Fana Service their promotional capabilities," RarJd •
cover losses an all other crops includ- Agency.
V. Araskog, chairman and chief :
......
. - - - - - - - ing .vegembles and hay, in the event
c~ecutive of nT, said Friday
'
Continued from D·l
Farm Bureau and get involved in the county to discuss various issues;
charge operating margins were 6.1%
various committee or bQard positions. many policy ideaS come from these
versus I 0.5%.
After that, attend the Gallia County groups. We're listening if willing to
As previously announced, Bob Annual Meeting where you can vote speak up.
Evans elected to adopt new rules on or even propose. Throughout the
Kim Harl~ Is area orpalza.
related to accounting for impa:red year Farm Bureau Advisory Coun- lion director or the Ohio Fana
I
asseis. Resmurant operations consti· cils, which are discussion groups of Bureau.
luted the bulk of the $22.0 million friends and families, meet around the
•
75 Cempu~bulklingl,
write-off with most of the charge
87 Journey
DOWN
ACROSS
lorlhort'
88 Not at till harsh
related to the Cantinas. We e:.timate
Loan
charge: llbbr.
1 ·-; I'm Adlm"
90 -of pauage
•
· 1 Swamp
that ne~t year's depreciation expense
'
2
Tolerate
.,
91
Noah's
vetisal
79
Chjel
6
Delay
will decline $2.0 million as a result
Bl Tlreeome lllker
3 Rtlllllc
92 Remarlt
II Uslinov or Fonda ·
, of this writ~off.
·
83
Purpolll
95 Ohio player
4 J81 leiters
16 Money In Mexico
85
Holl1lng dode111V~- .
96 AutomobHe type
5 "The Say - Kid'
Restaurant sales grew 7.2% due
·21 Mlatraat
88
Lay hold of
8
Klndolcow
98 -wolf
to more restaurants in operation
22 Nest on a halght
J
89Welrd
7flrrita
100
Jolts
23 Go away
(390 versus 354). Bad weather and
92 Jnsllnce ·
8 ~raek war god
101 ScuU
24 Cen!ury plant
intense · competition continued to
93 Twingy
102
Genus
of
herbs
9
Fleur-de25 Filthy
adversely 1mpact restaurant opera94 Lock of hair
10
Salad
lngreclttnt
104
Loud
noise
26 Dejected
tions. Same store sales declined
97 On:heslra leader.
t05 Homed animal
11 River In Nebraska
2S
Batman's
sidekick
I. 7% for the quarter, the fifth conabbr.
106 Make untidy
12 Snaky fleh
29 Oklahoma city
secutive month of ·negative results.
99 Canlli gi'Ua
107 Churdt part
13 Soft mineral
30 Goes wrong
100 Fair .
Net marsins declined to 6.1% ven:us
14 AI
106 Playwright NeU 31 Child
103 AlrtJome•epec:lt •
9.6% due to increases in food costs,
15 French p81nter
I 10 Explosiwt sound
32 Frog sound
105Fancy~
16 WOld with Hyde or
I I2 Flexible Ia
labor, heahh .care insurance and
34 Concluslorr
'.
106
Cow aouridl .
I I3 •- Marner"
Central
advertising.
35 Dissolve
107 Aseietld .
17 Psychological H1f
114 Annoy
37 Graaay field
'Food segment operations were
109 ~·a St.
18
Sword
116
Scatter
seed
38 Aches
adversely impacted by continued
II
1 Luau lara
I
I
7
Chimney
dirt
.
19
Of
a/leap
40-andyang
high hog costs and lower sales vol112 Farm Implements
II 8 Cover gtita
20Tral'lllllllls
41 Legal matter
umes. Sausage volumes deci ined
113 Weep
V Eating Jmplemant
119 Morally bad
42 _; over heels In lOve
115 Puartodue to increased competition. Hick121 People In pitaone
30 Ardor
44 Summons for
117 Relative by
124 Innocent one
33 Indigo dye
ory Specialties continues to suffer
speldlng
marriage
125 Hlrt and Paelno
36 That place
46 Estrangement
from intense price competition that
118
Big
cerslhaldl
128 Mug
38 Natural elevation
48 Abaaa
started last summer. Mrs. Giles sales
120
Sheen
39 Steady and sob8r
130 Retail even!s
52 Burrowing animal
were relatively fait, but this is their
122 Something
43 Devour
131
Large
cask
53
Small
island
seasonally slow period. The most
wondroul
132 Uninteresting
44 Froglikl creatura
. 55 Plundered
Mr. Don Sheets and Mrs..Gladys Sheets will be reloc8ting
significant factor impacting the food
123
Jai138
Butter
serving
45
Do
wrong
59 Chris- Lloyd
segment was the 12.1% increase in
the Groom &amp; Supply Shop to 373 GEORGES CREEK Rll, 4
124 Explodee
47 Dandy
137 Mi&amp;plac:aa
eo SmaU bottle
hog costs over last year. Pre-tax
125
To pl«as
48
Shredded
139
Knock
61 Exprasses a belief
tenths o1 a mile off Slate Route 7 North. Tha telephone
margins declined to 5.9% from
126
Beer
140
Beak
part
.
49
French
art181
84 City In Utah
number will remain (§14) 446-0231.
127
Put away lor later
12.7% due to: I) a difficult compar141
Ocean
50
Sidestep
65 Sport
•
129
lrrlllte
.
142
Okl
place
of
51
Office
notes
ison wiih last year, 2) lower sllles
66 Grftlyatuft
131 Doctrine
52 Source of ore
assembly
67
HaiFiaaa
on
top
volume and higher expenses associDon has served an extended apprenticeship under Master
133 Traatrl\801
54 Bank employee
144 Boob tubas
88Boy
ated with expanded capacity at
134 Julce-liiMd fruit
147
Goes
from
place
to
56
City's
lnhabltallltl
Groomer,
Julie
Webb,
and
has
perfected
his
skills
while
70
Female
al!eep
Hickory Specialities and 3) health
135 Endurae
place
57 0ccurrence
71 Fuss
working with Mrs. Webb. Don also obtained his West
care insurance.
137 Country
88 Quantities ol
149 Familiar TV show
72 Door In a fence
Oudook
138
Unkempt 01111
Virginia Cosmetology License in 1989, after receiving
150 CaN forth
medicine
73 Bogus
140
Portable
bade
151
Group
of
eight
eo
Cl&amp;teme
74 Cover wilh water
We reiterate our "hold" raling
2,000 hours of extensive training at the Huntington School
143
Regrel
81
Hardwood
152
Jargon
76 Direction lenera
baSed on our opinion that while the
of Beauty Cult,ure.
·
145- out (get with
62 Agreeable
· 153 Brought to bay
17 Grawt
stock m'ay drift lower over the nearclfllcully)
.
63
Paulo,
Brazil
154
Revoft
79
Name
tor
a
stranger
term, the share price will be suppon146 Frost
66 Fried
155 Hotbeds
80
Skilled
enough
ed by the value inherent in the com147 Deserter
87 Unmarried gent
156 Youthful time oiiHe
· 82 Rides a sled
pany ' s balance sheet and its brand148 Mineral
89 Physicians
·
84 Body structure: ·
name value.
72 Alms
abbr.
73~py
Our new forecast reflects our
65 Money
74 Antiaircraft Hra
86 Fly high
revis!'d expectalions for restaurant
sales: and persistently high hog
pric.$. We "fine-tuned" our 1997
earnings per share forecast from
$1.10-SJ. 11 to $1.09$1.10. Our initial 1998 earnings per share estimate
is $1.19. These estimates reflect our
r-(~,
assumptions of appro~imately 6.4%
G;~+.
sales growth (restaurants-7.0%,
food-5.0%) and relatively stable
operating expenses .
Our current forecasts assume no
change in the Cantina operations,
However, based on our interpreta"
tion of the company's recent actions
and financial data. we expect management to announce their plans for
the Cantina concept in the near
future . If this happens, we would
"
expect operating margins to improve
"
over the long-tenn once the under
As low As
"•
performing Cantinas are eliminated.
Our 18.5· to 38.5-bp compact utilry lnldo.,lct you hook up any of l1lCft
Shedding a different operating forthan two dozen implements in about five minu..,._without tools. AndAIIIIICing lor with dual PTO oontrols-they let you run implements separately or
mat would ajso allo"' management
4111as.
simultaneoa!!ly. Or better still, run the ~.mower. or tiUer without
to concentrate on improving the
detaching either of the other two. Get attached tD a)o~n Deere !10011.
•'
operations of their original concept.
We ihink this concentrated focus is
NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE.
.,
LV
especially important because we
expect the industry to remain highly
•
Feel free to drop by one of theae local John Deere dealen todlor.
competitive .
' The Ohio Company makes a mar·
ll:et in shares of Bob Evans and, as a
matter of course, may buy or sell for
'
668 PINECREST DRIVE
GALUPOLIS .
its own account. An officer of The
Ohio Company is a member of Bob
Acrosa from Gallla Auto Salet on old Rle. 35 WMt
'1
f!vans Fanns, Inc. 's Board of DirecOPENMONAIAT. 8 AIM PM
,
tors.
I
(614)
446-2412
or
Toll
Free
1-800-594-1111
J
: (Jay Caldwell Is an investment
'Monllly peymont~- on John Den CNCII ReYotvlng Plln. 10%_, peynll!l
'
broker tor lbe Ohio Company in
I
Pnce
1nd
prot1uct may va.y u to palllclpetion.
•
Ill GaUlpolls oftke.)

the.,..,

~mea ..Wton willa Ita eo•ered, lllll·w.lclllt froot pon*
IIIII wide of to u..._- II
CIOillblnea eh avn lldfllhlonecl eo11111r7 Clllann In
111 economleat !,iM equare
feet of U.tac epece. Detllled
col,. .,.•• railfnp ontl oltutten hm
1
lo Ute ceatnl alrJ.
IIIII o!f Ute enllf, the blftltl

prelo•••

le,tbe,._,........,

and Jpra,.llnl ll.to1 room

....... With tbe dlalnl-.
Tho eldo wall 'II lined with

....._ •d bu a Jllrench dool'
lbal opens to lite side Jud.
The two formll ........ rnoln-

taln 1 feellllfl or sepueUoa,
while keeplns elsht llnee

open.

'

Tho 8llflled kltdlen ,.,..,._
I 10roln1 DOIUIIer that frtce1

the dltlln1 room. A hondJ
laointlr7
mil to
1 etorale area Qd Ute two-

c1-.

..,...,.....,.,-...,,

A btlold door nudllea - " "
from tho IIYIDI room, and
opens to 111 -...Jed lW1 Jeedlnl to the lledroom wln1. A
fWl ballt ......_ tho two ....,.
ODdal'J bedrooms. 1111 pia~

near the en1r7 10 that It ml&amp;ht
alao aerYe 'u o powder,_
for .,...., or u a lui-minute

wyh-up staUon before dinner. Both bedrooms otter
ample cloaet apace ud windows ootertooll.ln1 tho beck
and aide Jarda.

The mat1er oulto olfen o pri-

vate bath, 1 walk·ln clout
and a dreaainl are• with 8
van!l)o IIIII oounter epece.

Sfafing.;:n_un_u_ec~_rro_m_D·_•

.

..

..' .

S.UNDAY PUZZLER

.

~·

..

'

..

re

ES BROS.
FLOUR MILL
LOGIN, OHIO

FOR THE BEST WHEAT
PRICE IN CENTRAL AND
SOUTHERN OHIO.
CALL·1·800·523·2217
-

~·

·The Groom &amp;Supply Shop
is proud to announce new ownership.

Easy to.
get attached to

..

4.9%

a

CARMICHAEL'S FAJIM &amp; LAWN

...

'

..

..

See answer on page C4

-''*'·

. II~-'
•••I

r
I

"

l

Pomeroy • llldcleport • Gllllpollt, OH • Point Pia 111nt, WV

•

..•

,.
•

t

I

• ,, '•PIIID3

••

Ma,intenance ·of h·ousehold'
.
appliances will pay off
'

' .
By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP 8pecllal Feattnl
Routine maintenance of household appliatices will pay for itself in
improved efficiency, longer life for
the appliant:es, lltd improved appear·
ance. Just keeping them clean, inside
and out, can make a world of differenc~ .
,
'
Refrigeraton:, like air conditioners, move a lot of air across their condenser coils. With this air comes
dust, pet hair and lint that clings to
the coils, mlucing their ability to dis. sipate heat. When this happens, the
compressor runs longer and cools
less. This makes for an inefficient
appliance and higher electrical bills..
Cleaning these coils twice a year
tlaiiii;JIIIh CIMIIIIJ7
makes a big difference and will take
ap~lft-·only minutes to complete. As for
(Ftlr411101'1 "'"""'· u:tllollp/41! qftiW ltouo,lnd~pidu
10 allmiJtllll ""'u IJII4jlltiJndnjf, 1md U 10 Hou,. Q/ 1M W•lr. gaining -access, the condenser coils
ellln 0·8 hu aa P.O. Bo:t 1112, Now rom; N.Y. ttllt6-IJ62.
llldud41M are bellind a grille below the door.
entry erea, U~IDI ,.,. lllllllkrJ
The location of the evaporator
room, dtntns room,
plate
(or evaporator coil) will vary.
salteJ•IIJte kltehen with a
On older models, the evaporator coil
laundry a pice at .one end,
three bedrooms ond .... run
is next 1o the compressor motor at the
baths, totallns t,~ee squore
appliance's back behind an access
feel of Uvlns opoce. The plan
panel. Newer models usually have an
II aYIIIIoble with 2d exterior
exposed coil in the form of a large
wall rnmiol• ancl a crawl·
metal grid on the refrigerator's back.
spoce or slab foundation. A
two-c1r aara&amp;e wjth an
As the condenser em I'does most
odJolntns lion~
proof the work, it will deserve the
olde MO aqu!lftl roe. 'fir .......
greater share of yotir attention. Begin
by lifting the grille from its place
IIQRAM
below the front door. The coil will
1D'ali
.: :
probably be loaded with clusters of
greqsy fuzz. Use a vacuum cleaner to .
pull the dust from the coils. If the
coil&amp; feel very greasy, use a spray
bottle and some degreasing cleaner
to rinse the lin tubes.
Next, pull the refrigerator out so
· you can work on the compressor
companment. Remove the access
l.!!!!!i
•
panei and vacuum the compressor
11'•11'
and evaporator m 1l. Finally, replace
the grille and access panel and move
· the refrigerator back.

.

Kltchen ranges come in gas-fired
and electric models. Of the two, the
gas models require more maintenance. The reason is that gas is
flamed from the edges of burners and
pi lot tips, which means that both
pilot and burner can become
clogged. Electric ranges come wiih .
direct electrical connections, that
remain more or less in!aCt.
Probably the moSt familiar .source
&lt;&gt;r trnubie are range-top pilot names.
There are two problems. First, the
pilot orifice may become clogged
with carbon grit. Second, the flame
shield under the cook top can accumulate carbon and soot, mlucing the
flame space between the orifice and

shield.
In either case, tip the cook top up,
and check for carbon buildup. If you
find a buildup on the shield, remove
the cooktop completely and scraPe
the carbon off with a knife. Then, for
good measure, use a safety pin or
thin wire to clean the pilot Dame ori·
lice. Do this to boih sides. of the top
before lighting the pilots. If the pilot
Dames seem too tall or too short, follow the pilot feed lines back to !lie
mixing valve at the control panel and
adjust the flames using the slotted
adjustment screw.
While you've got the cook top
tilted up or removed, check the
Dame at each burner.

Be,,.."'

D

..,In

'

.

GREAT INyiSDENJ pROP'AIY

.

$900.00/month lnccme Presently. All City' Utilities, Partial
Basement..This could be. an INTERESTING VICTORIAN
HOME IN CITY OF GAWPOLiS. With today's low Interest rates, it will pay loir itsen. Converilen1 location. SEE
THIS ONE NOW
175e
LOT - SPRING SUBDIVISION
One large lot approx. 10t 'x171'. City water, city sewer,
natural gas, electric, all are available at this lot Prepare
NOW to build your dream home In lhis pleasant, quiet,
and nice subdivision just a short distance out of
Gallipolis. Lotl17. ReaUor owned.
1731

PHO..E 446·7699

KENNETH AMSBARY, PH. 245 5855
WILLIS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. ue 8531

.....

LEADINGHAM 'REAL ESTATE

!!S!!.!!!!

~----------~~--------~

Into tho dlnln1 room. An-~=-~----­
open counter jolna tbe dlnlllfl room to the walk-thro111 b ...,........;P:-u=:::::b::llc:::-:.N::o:::t:::lce:;.-U't'ln!l roo!llf mtb eanU[Ibt. Tbe adjolnllll ll.ltcben's open Utchen, wblcb bu acceu to the ..,...,, The muter bedPUBUC NOTICE
counter can doullle • a aei"¥¥DD llotlon or ...., a ellDd-up room and two eecondai'J' bed&lt;oome are located alons an. The Joint Commlalan an
ID&amp;cl&lt;Hr,
8llflled wall.
'Accreditation ol Halthcare
OrganlzaUona will cortduct
.
'
a~ accreilltatlon eurvay
Holzer Medlcol Center'•
11om. HM-rvloH end
Hospice on July 29, 30, 31
and
Auguat 1, 1911&amp;. Tha
By POPULAR MECHANICS
involves quite a bit of work. Not only place, but tearing it up will send purpoee
of the aurvey will
For AP Special Fellturae
will you have to scribe all the 'sheets some of it into the air unless precise be · to evaluate the
Q: We are considering laying ~
.to lit, you may also need to cut off EPA abatement procedures are fol- organization•• compliance
new vinyl floor in our kitchen. Our
the bottom of any doors to allow lowed. Ail and all, a vi'nyl-over-vinyl with nationally eallbliahed
Joint . Commlaalon
home was 1built in the 1930s and ,clearance above the now-thicker installation is a better bet as long as standarde
. .The eurvey
there are some dips and sags here _floor. The cracks beiween the under- your existi'ng floor haS n6 serious reoulta will be uaed to
detarmlne whether, and the
and there- noihing serious though.
layment panels must be filled and the problems.
conditions under which
Do you think it's a good idea for us
depressions caused by the numerous ,
accreditation
ohould be
To submit a question, write to
to take up our existing vinyl Oooring
nails required to install t¥ panels
awarded
the
organWtllon.
Popular Mechanics, Reader Service
and add a layer of underiayment
must also be filled .
Joint
Commlaalon
before installing the new floor?
You should ·consider, too, that Bureau, 224 W. 57th St., New York, etondardl ·deal with
A: Your new floor will have ·a
many resilient flooring and flooring N.Y. 10019. The most interesting organizational quality· of
laauas and tha aofety
more uniform look if you do this, but ' adhesives installed prior to the e~­ questions will be answered in a care
of
the
environment In which
you,have to realize the job you 'II be
ly 1980~ contained asbestos. This future column.
care Ia provided. Anyone
undertaking. Laying underlayment ., asbestos IS perfectly safe wben Jeftm
believing that he or ahe baa
pertinent and valid
Information about auch
. mattere may requeat a
public lnformllllon Interview
with the Joint Commlaolon's
plain bar soap handy to lubricate the field representatlvea at 'he
good choice. Crosscut Saws ·
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS
sidesnot the teeth- of the blade. time of the aurvey.
Before buying a crosscut saw, tap
For AP Special FHiurea
lnformllllon preanled Ill the
Handsaws com; in tWo styles. the blade; it should give a c)ear, ring- Ripsaws
Interview will be carefully
Ripsaws are designed to trim evaluated lor relevance to
The most usefUl is the crosscut saw ing sound. Next, flex it. The blade
for cutting boards across the grain. should bend·easily into a half-circle lumber into different widths; they are the accredlllllon proca11.
The other type is the ripsaw for cut- and spring bac.k into line ·when • generally. too rough for crosscutting:
The chisel-shaped teeth chip through
ting along ·the length of a board, released. •
A crosscut saw's knifelike teeth the loitg fibers of boards, parallel to
going wiih the grain .
·
It's difficult to tell the two types are beveled to slice cleanly through · the milled edges. A ripsaw with 5 1/2
of saws apart by just looking at them. a board from edge to edge. The more teeth per inch gives a smooth fast
They. differ primarily in ihe shape teeth, the cleaner the cut. For a cut.
Ripsaws also cut on the push
·and number of teeth. A crosscut saw smooth cut, use a saw with I 0 to 12
stroke.
To start a cut, place the saw's
teeth
per
inch.
·
·
has knifelike teeth that slice through
te~th
almost
flat against the work.
Always use a crosscut saw by cutwood fiber and haS from 7 to'l2 teeih
Carefully
push
forward, nicking the
per inch. By contrast, a ripsaw has ting plywood, regardless of the plyedge. Keep doing this until you have
coarse teeth .shaped like tiny chisels, wood's surface grain.
with 4 to 7 teeth per inch.
In starting a crosscut, align the . established a good kerf, then raise
On both, alternate teeth bend out- . edge of ihe saw blade on the waste the saw . to a comfortable cutting
waril from the center line, making a side of the marked line; otherwise angle and begin cutting with long,
· cut (called 'the kerf) that is slightly you will cut the board too short. rhythmic strokes.
When making a long cut, clamp
wider than the blade. Buying lips
Sight along the top of the saw:when
a
straight
piece of scrap wood along
On better quality saws, the blades aligning the saw.
.
the
cutting
line to serve as a guide.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
are taper-ground: thinner along the
Crosscut saws cut on the push
To
keep
the
saw
from
binding,
put
a
top and ttij~ker at the teeth, and thin- stroke. To start a cut, place the heel
ner at the tbe than neat the handle. of the saw on the waste side of the wedge in a long kerf to hold it open.. 40
Giveaway
This helps keep the saw from bind- line. Support the blade with the Saw Care
1 Beagle miked, 1yr old, house
Have a handsaw professionally pet
ing. Saws made of tempered or thumb of Y!&gt;Ur free hand and Cl!feonly, blacklwhitelbrown, good .
1 Tertier mia~ed, 1112
stainless steel are durable and easy to fully draw the saw hackwaril with a sharpened as soon as it hegins to cut w/children.
years
old,
good
wtchijdr&amp;CI, tikes
with difficulty. ·
maintain. ·
.
few short pulls.
. '. ' · \,
to run, to good horne onty. ~lnens
· Hang the saws to avoid damaging · '4wks old, Angora, champagne
A saw should·feel comfortable in .
The snw should glide through the
the
tee,!!L For long-term storage, coat colOr. 3Q4..67S-4650.
your hand.' Buy one with the longest wood with a ·minimum of effort.
blade you cah manage easily; the
Avoid pushing faster than the blade-· ffie b18des lightly with machine oil to 2 Puppies to 'QOOd home, wm be
longer the · bl;ide, the fewer strokes can cut; you may bend the saw or prevent rust. Clean stained blades big dogL 3Qo4-e75-4431 .
\"lth steel wool and mineral spirits. 20 Pound Female Mixed, Dog.
heeded to accomplish a cut. A 26- damage the teeth.
Very loveable, Housebroken ,
inch blade is standard and usually a
Keep some paraffin, paste .,Vax or
See Her At: 510 1/2 S..ond Ave·
THE VAST LnlNG ROOM g...,.

Ho.m
. es: Questions.and answers
.

Proper ·use of handsaws discusse~ .

nue, Upsh;lirs Apartment,

Is rt?.tirement living affordable?
a¢cpurii, your pension amounts to
. OEAIUJRUCE: I am 91 years $I 2'.500 a year, and the cost here is
· .' !~
old and i:on~idering moving into a only about $18,000.
retirement ,home; but I'm not sure
Given your assets, even: if you
about the finances. I have $58,000 in
have to spend $10,000 from '!lrihciCOs, my Soeial Security and pension .pal, you still would have enough to
are $12,500 a year; in addition, my
live there for at least 13 years.
house is worth a! least $80,000. I also
Clearly, that would stretch. the actu:
aria! estimations of your life span to
have about $15,000 in my checking
acCount. The tetirement home I'd , its outside limits. I'd move in immelike costs $1,52' per month, plus diately and enjoy!
DBAR BRUCE: In a recent cql$12,000 down. Can I. ~ it? -,umn you wrote about Medicm arid
L.O., Sun City, Arii. •
DEAR L.G.: I think you have litth~ protection of useiS should one
tle to worry about. The down pay-· have to draw upon this benefiL You
should know that Medicare does not
mrnt can coine out of your checkin11
.
By Bruee.\YIIIIaine

,

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Gallipo·

~.

Public Notice
Requeata· lor a public
lnformotlon Interview muet
be made In writing and
ahoutd be aenl to the Joint
Commlaalon no later than
ftva working claya belore the
a.wy IMiglne. Tile Nq.-t

the
_
Public Notice
The VIllose of Cheshire will
hold Ita annual Budget
Hearing on Mondey, July 1,
1996, at 7:30 p.m. In the
VIllage Offloe to I led til \1~•-ltt''"'-­

Ti_.,......., ...

S.R. 554, CheeiiiN, OH.

.,

Kinens

I litter Box

Trained, 614-367·70.78.

·

Retriever puppies &amp; kittens, 614·

992·31 40 Qr614'9926649.

Single story hOuse, to tear down

br the lumbef. 304-675-5890.

Strong -and activt dog, mi•ed

w1

Gallipolis

Gallipolis

&amp; Vk:lnttv

&amp; VIcinity

'
~----....:"7;.__ .,....,.......,.---_;;_-- "

Bedspread, Misc . hems. Monday

Glassware, U1sc. Items. Somelh·

July 151 And Tuesday, July 2nd,

ing For E\leryone l 325 Green "'~
Tenace Court

Beagle &amp; Miniature Collie. w1th

9-5. Ra in Or Shine Absolutely No

QOOd nose. 304-675-1484.

Ea,y Birds!

60

29th, .Xllh, and 1st. 8 a.m. ·? Corner of Route 7 and Flamingo Dr.
Gallipolis Clothes Women's plus
sizes, men's various sizes and

Lost and Found

Found : Puppy On .Kiicker Road,

614-446-8630.

.

2 Miles North 01 Holzer Hosptial 3 Family Yard Sale: 509 Vance
On At. 160. Clothing, CQven With Road Ott 5~8 Monday July 1s1.
Bed, Vases, D1shes. Sheets , Two Tuesday July 2nd: 8:00 A.M.-7
"
Old School Desks. Trailer Hlrch,
1
Furniture, Pillows, Geese OutliiS, 711, 7f2nd , 9: ? Clothes, Bo&amp;ka, .•

misc.

Found : Small Collie', 814·446-

1019.

·

•

7t1St, 2nd , 9· ? 1900 Jackson ' f
Pike Beside Harley Shop, Crafts. . ~
Home lnlerior, Video Game 1

Tapes, Clothe•
7/la~· 712nd, 7/3rd. 9-5, Rt 35 Be- • :

· side Spring Valley. Toys , Child· ,'

rens, Adults, loti Misc . Mulli- · '.

FamilyI

All Yard Sales Mull Be Paid In •;

Advance. DEADLINE · 2:00p.m. ..

3 Kinens, 8 Weeks .Oid, 614-367 -

At••

County"
at the·
Office ·
Houae
until · 1:00

then at eeld
w!ll lie publicly ·
reeldenll of tha village are
opened and read aloud.
welcome to attend.
The
CONTRACT
Jennifer L Harrison
Clerk/TrNIUrer DOCUMENTS mey be '
ezamlned at the following
June 23, 30, 1986
locallona:
The
Comml.. lonera Office or :
Public Notice
GEORGE
MARA
INC., 55
STREET,
ADVERTISEMENT FOR
43138.
BIDS
,
of the CONTRACT
Meigs
County
ENTS . and
Commissioners, Meigs
may be
County Court House,
et the Office of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
A.
Mara ·
Separate oealed BIDS for
lac:ated at •
the conetructlon ol PEACH
STREET,
FORK (PHASE 2). WATER
MAIN
EXTENSIO'N LOUA,N, OHIO upon :
PROJECT will be racelved payment of $40.00 for each
aet, which will not be ·
refunded.
in a hurry...
The Engineer's ~atlmate
lor the Project 11 $46,000.00
June18, 1996
Cainmlaalon'a
Fred HoHman,
requlrementa.
IlEAL nHE Prea. Melga County
June 30, July 7, 14,'21,1996
SAVERS.- (6) 21, 23, 30 3TC

muol alao Indicate the
nature of the Information to
be provldad.lll the Interview.
Such requeata should be
addrealld to:
Division of Accradltatlon
.Operatlonit
OrganoUtlon Llillaon
Joint Commlnlon on
Accreditation of Health Care
Organization• ,
One Renalaunce
B9ulevard
'Oakbrook Terntce,IL ~181
The Joint Commlsolon
will acknowledge auch
requesta In writing or lly
telephone and will Inform
the organization of the
reque1t for any ·interview.
The prganlzailon wilt, In
turn, notily the Interviewee
of the dele, time, and place
of the meeting.
Thla notice le poeted In
accordance with the Joint

311c11 Goldlish, 614-4&gt;10·8627.

seize .assets and d oes ·not ,consider 0451 Aller 5:00 P.M .
property when determtning whether 3 Mon1h Old All While Killen 111
or not it will cover or t ~imburse a :,!,1 6~~:&amp;.~=way To Good
person in or outside a nursing home. 4 Black pupl)in , IOwkt old, pari
Please make the llPP,ropriate cortec- lab, good with children. 304·675·
ti.on.--- Lilia Samaniego, fieldrepre- 8757 or 304-e75-3847,
sentative, Social Seeurity Adminis- 4 Klttons: 2 Males, 2 Females: a
tratio(
.
.·
· · Woeke Old, Liller Trained, To
. DEAR LILIA: Thank you for Goocl-.ony,e14-441·t847.
calling this error to my attention. 8anny Chlclleno, 304-875-5354.
Somewhere ih between ihe writins ctwomo dinene toble w/2 choirs.
and the printing, a translation error 3()t.en;,.208.
·
took place. 'The column referred to FrH Killeno, long H1•roci. Calico
Medicaid, not Medicare. Your obser- · And
2 C~llco Fomolo Adult
11
vaiions, of course, are completely,, =~r~',";!.~:l~:' To
accurate.
o, =:..:.;;.___:_.:....·...,____:_;:___

Public Notice

Public Notice

the day be lora the ad is 10 run. - .
Sunday edition · 2:00 p.m. Friday. ·
Monday edilion · 10:00 a.m. Sal- ".

urday.

~ost

White Female Poodle, Near

Tho llo-11 Cenler, 614·446-1954.

=========
70

Yard Sale

GaiHpolls
&amp; VIcinity
2 Family: Saturdly 2tltll, &amp; July
Ill, 177 Circle Drive, Plenll Svb.
Ott Bulavlllo Rd. Clnvoa Ttnl, 1'-=
Dlehwolhtr, GU Stoyo, Choin
Saw, Chlldreno Cloth!ll And loll
Morel Alln !Shlno.
I '

,,

'

�•

Sundeys June 30. 18111

Ga-.,..

PDmen!y,
0

Mlckleport
I VIcinity

I VIcinity

Help Wantlcl

580

CAll. TMIW.ITAIITT-

SI 000 Sltn 011 Bonus Hiring
Frome• ll•oe 1tl 2nd 3rd. 230
Flalt&gt;ed Orlvtrl All llolea """'
L . . - on... 311ioo Out
Rodl""'ng' Rd.
( - S..Ot). Uie IHMI111, I
8onut "-om. ECKIIIIIor 1 Big Ylld SOlo July Ill, 2nd, ... Thr" tomoly 11orw1ay. Juor 1sl 811-111138. bwnor Cli*lloro Alto Tht llolga Coumy or ...,._
Gam-? 1 112 tnUet lOUth o Tup- ·.vI ;Wldl
PM At 1341 Shottttlng RidGe
•'
~rardltM&gt;n
and
Ot
alu
,.., .,.
!lalllpollt, Soya And Grrla pora Ploirw 11 Tho Card 8or toO"
rat Olsablhaes (Carttton SchooiJ
Clolhol. rn To Size e. 11 ..
Ctrlltltd
Heating
And
Cooling
Jur., 2. th ird house on Sorwlct Tech. Erptfltrl&lt;ed Only, Mt1g1 lndustrltt) Meke • auboornlly Clothes. Men And Wom Thttday,
right,
Sc:out
Camp Rd, Chtlttr, AUtaat 3 Vtan Contac t J1m lblult Httllh Sarvlc" CoMdinatnt Clolhls, lnltriot, Bill!'
(RN or IJ'HJ ., •"' - . 2 $lOry. 3 'tt I d OO&amp;Y\ 1111 ........
Bed, We lklr B..tintt, Uuch pelnt-btfl gun. prom dr"IH Itt
Horman 'l'ln.. Httong &amp; Coolif'1l, oor
tntl and Multi wlf1 dft: IID,Cinllh11 3/4, glrla bicycle, toys. glrla 1-801).'21-3722
lll dlaabUitlea Uuat be a r-olaclothtl IIZII 10 12 mise CIOtti·
t.,ed nurse Of licenaed pnacal
Community Clothing, All S1ztt, ~
DRillERS
nurse currently lltlr'\Md In l l'le 2·3 bedroom houoe, 101100 fo\
Houaehold llemt, Etc Turn Right
Two lam•l y July 1 2, 821 Ash Dflvet'l Needed In A Onvu-.g 10.· Sto,. ot Ohio Proltrred quallfica- located In syracuM, app$1~
Foodmlft 218 5 MUtt South
•ona •-ltnco In pobllc htollh oncludtd, cal 81411112·5787 allot
s..... Middleo&gt;orl 9am 4pm.
Ju,.. 1tt-3rd
llvtry Operation Ue $34,000 nurtmg,
experience worklnt with
F1r11
V11r
Wt
l'lly
Roed
EXP111"
Don't U111 1J2 Off Salt! Second .,-.,d sale Bashan Ad 1n tror.u ot "· Holidtys. Safely BonuHI. Ex childt'tn .and adutta wlth d.. • •
hre department , July 1 e Gu
Cl'lance Shop, 701 Second Ave
celltrll Benofil Pacl&lt;ago lncludong mentll d111blht;as Sand reaume
range disc
nut, h~tde Uov1e Saoan
10
lnaurance, Reclremenr, Side ~a. "'July 10,
Sloady
Paycheck
W
ith
Loll
01
Garage Sale Monday, Tuesday
Pt. Pleasant
s - 8oht E - Oirocoor.
Home Tme Raqu1ramenra cass
8 1 Console TV Clothes Toys
ll~~~g• Couroy Boord d Menoal
&amp;
Vlcln!1y
A COL, DOT Certifiable, 1 Year
W1ndow Shutters, Household
Relardat10n ond lltwlo""""oal
Exp Sate Or~var Stable Work
Stull Too Muc:h To Uen11onl large yard aale July 1 2 3 Gath~
Disallill.... 1310 CI.OOIDn 5 - \
H•storr. &amp; You Must L1ve W11h1n
Corner Of Mabelene Drrve And polls Ferr~ below Sider's JeMiry
~0 Box 307, Syrocu11, Ohio
75 W1les Of R1p1ey Apply Today
160 By EmerQMCI Squad
457JV
"ntlque f\Jrn1ture &amp; lois of mile
AI
Huge Sale 38 Smithers Avenue
80
Public Sale
Multi· tamity yatd .... . S.tuuMir.
an. m1S. norlh or failgtOUndl on

Baby Furnilure, ClOthes h4t

Pomeroy • Middleport • G.lllpotle, OH • Point Pluaant, WY

AKC RtQ tewect 8oat0n Terriet

Pupplll) El&lt;tlllfll Blaodllne,
Sho1o &amp; WoJmod, Now Taking
D-1111 'lllu Choott Your OWn

.••.

...,_,., AIIUng 1300 Eacfl. Call
eu 4411210

14a70 F•*-~· M11drwn. 2bllh. w:
ceniCIII air, tii,SOO. 304-011-2382 _, ,
., :104-875-2t211.

1... Kirk Wood

1Ogol oank 111 up
Tlflk &amp; Pot Shop.

--..
..

acrea or •• ,
ao.- '
'
1870 Flte!Wood ur?O 3 Bod·

....,.,

&amp; ~

land lor 111&lt;1 In Ht,.,.,_
875-- Of 104-f7S-21-Cl
rooma . 1 112 Balh&amp;,

Ave.

.' • .

114·245·

0704

Wedemeyer' s Auction Service

July 1st Onlr! D ~ S. 3 112 ..Mea
Out 218 AntiqUe Glassware, Old
Book, Lam p1, Coffee Tabtts, New
&amp; Used Items Skies Knee Board
Tube Bedspreads CurtAinS
Clolhe a Purses, Shoes, Anhque
PICture Frames And U1sc Items
Too Numerous To Mention I

Gallopoli~

379-2720

Oul Neighborhood Road, Clolhing
Dishe~ Somolhing For Alii

July 2nd 3rd Corner 01 R1 180 &amp;
At 12o4 In W111uv111e A Phrlhs
Mulholand s Residence

....:.::..::.:...:.::....:=.:.::::.::..____ ,

July 2nd :lrd EUREKA COM·
MUNITY Just 10 ~fin So From

Monday July tst 9 4
Chestnut Street Hgme In teno r
Clothes WICker Setee EIC

LAYNE FURNITURE

Clean Late Model Cara Or
Trucks, 1990 Models Or Newer
Sm11h Bu1ck Pont1ac 1900 Eaat
em Avenue Gallipolis

Pat1o Sale Movmg, E~erwthmg

Must Go D1rt Cheapl Lots 01
Brand Name Ktd s Clothes Toys.
Household, Etc Don t M1ss Th11
One! Ratn 0.. Sh1ne Monda1 And
Tuesday, Julr 1st, 2nd 9 OO~?
2975 St Rt. 141 Centenary

Patnot Road, Ofl 775, t.ton lues,
8 5 Jeans, Oulflll, t&lt;1ds Mens
EIC
Ram tSh1ne Garage Sale 7t2nd
Vernon s 2359 Graham
~:=:~=::..:::..:::!:.:::.:._.

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

Dave, 814-...,6·9575

Manager lor Automo11ve pa
store loca ted 10 Po1nr 1
area Parts counter
must Posi11on mclude11
benefits afler 90 dars
send re11ume and salarr
ments to box CW 26 c/o
Pleasant Reg 1ster 200 Uam St
Pt. Pleasant
25S50

Top Pnces Pa1d Old US Coma,
Silver, Gold Otamonda All Old
Collectibles Paperwe1ghts, Etc
M T S Co1n Shop, 151 Second
Avenue Galhpofis 614-~6-2842

wv

RetardatiOn and Dowlopmemal
Oisabihbet

Wanted To Buy Autos &amp; Trucks
Any Condmon 614 388-9062 Or

Openmg lor Preschool Special
Educ:a11on lnsuuctor at Carleton
School Mull have current
Oh1o Oepar rmanr or Edo•caliorll
Teachmg Cerllf1cata and have or
be willing to obtain Oh1o Depart
menr ol Educa11on Early Educa
11on of Handicapped Vahdat1on
Send resume b)' July 12 t9961o

;;8.;.14:.."":..:8:..;.:PA.::.RT:::______

__ , WantH To Buy . Junk Autaa W1tl'\
Or Wuhout Morort Call Larrr

Lively 814-388 9303

4 farnl..· lsi 2nd 3rd babv Items,
.,
'
~lothmg all 51Ie5, lots ol m1sc

Old Wooden Screen

By

82 Ca ll An)ltlme, 614 446 -2501,

814·367~12

Carleton Sd"!ool, PO Box 307,
13 10 Carleton Street. Svracuse

WiklwCreek Ad

EMPlOYMENT
SERVICES

685 General Hartmger, Middleport 1·2 3 Home lntenor, bed~
spreads, curtains , baby 11ems.
clotnng &amp; nne

·"Yard Sales Muoo Be Paod In 110
Advance Deadline 1 OOpm the
day DefDfe the ad IS 10 run Sun
day ed1t10n- 1 ODpm Fnday. Monday edmon tO Ol:ll m Saturday

New L1ma

Rd between Ruoland

Hamaonv~le.lollow sl~s

OhiO 45779

Help Wanted
S WANTED S

1975

Body work on cars &amp; trucks reasonable rates, mmor mechamcal
repairs, 011 changes call 614 742·

Clean Homes &amp;

Ofl~ees Reaaon·

able Raoes. 81H41-G870
Dons lawn Care Reaidenlial
Churches &amp; Cemetanes, Rea
sonable Ra1811614-379-28'7
General Ma intenance Pam1mg
Yard Work Windows Washed
Guners Cleaned L1ght Hauling:
Commencal Res1den11a1 Steve
614-388-042'9
.,....--_;....:_..::.;_

____

____

Georges Portable Sawmill, don 1
haul your logs to lhe m1111ust call
____;.....:.....;..;_.;._
:Jl4-675-19S7

l1gh1 Hauling House Wash1ng
Home,
Bus1nen
Wi ndows
Washed Yard Maintenance Call
After 6 PM et4-446·8183

Reading Books Toll Free (11 800898 977BExt R 2814 For Detaila.

FIVe fam1ly- July 2·3, first house
on left, Ba1ley Run Ad Clothes
gun cabinet, m1sc

AVON 1 All Areas 1 Shirley
Spears, 304 675·1429
!F::.ou:.;r:;la::.m.:.:l;:.ly.::.S.:.:I::.II_h_S_or_o_eo_.-S-yr-a' 1 4 Potennal leaders SeriOusly lncuse Jut~ 1·3, 9am 3pm Furn!
ture baby uemst clothes 91ass
ware, rmcrowave, some antiQues
Ra1n cancels.

180 Wanted To Do

Please caM·304.fl75 7875

$35,000 IVR INCOME Pooenllal

&amp;

448 1236

Needed lcnmed1ately Repair Per Havmg A Partyt R1ver Cny Sound
son Needed For Vaccum Cleaner ProductiOns, The R1ght OJ s For
Company Out111 Include Repa irs You! Reasonable Rates, 614·446·
On Etectr1c Motors Some In 0571
Home Serv1ce UuSI Be Neat In - - - - - - - - - Appearance And Able To Work I would hke to clean your house
Well W1th The Pubhc W1ll Tra 1n or busmesa, weekly or monthly
The R1ght Person Call 614 -441
low rates. very dependable

10 people who need to lou
W81ght &amp; make money to try new
patented we1ght loss product
30o4 773-5083 2o4hrSidey

B1g satel 1st 3rd, dump truck,
backhoe furniture, clothes etc,

All Natural Fat Loss Prot.'lucl
lose We1gh1 Feel Belter, In
creased Energy $1 A Day 61o4-

--'=;__:..:::.:.;_:____ ,
Meigs Counoy Board ol t,lenlal
2935 aok for KIP. Rulland.

Wanted To Buy Used Mobtle
Homes Call 614 .W6.()175

36

GRUBB'S PIANO
TUNING &amp; REPAIR
"Pianos Ale My Buslness"Oualoty
Tuning &amp; Servoce Sonce 1977'
BOB GRUBB (614) 446-4525
13 Hol~op Drove, Gallipolis, OH.

Call 446·2206from 9·5
After 5 &amp; weekends 446-2734
Cattle Hoof Trimming
Tues. July 9
Baughman Farm
Call 1f coming
(614) 256-6535
Maynards Quilt Shop
SALE 10% to 20% off
Everything in lhe shop
thru July
Come 1n and s1gn up for
FREE TICKETS To the
Ctncinnatti Reds Game.
Open 9 am till 4 pm Mnonrt:::~v I
thru Fnday Saturday 9-1
588 West of Rodney

4 Family Yard

Sale
Forst sale in five years
A little ol everythong
July 1·2·3 Sixth Street Syracuse
9am-3pm

Profesa1onal Tree Serv1ce Stump

Removal, Free Esttmateal In
surance, Bidwell OhiO 614·388

9648.814-387 7010

terested In Investing Few Hours
Weekly In Pan T1me Bu!uness,
61 4 446 1236'

A respectable yo un g man to
spend 11me w/bra1n damaged 25yr
old :xl4 773 6093

Four family July 1 2. V1ne Street,
Rac1ne, 8 30 ? Household Items
clothes rad1o wuh a track plarer
and 1peakers, small ererc11er
stepper

LANE MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
$1195
Mon thru Sat 9-5 p m 446..o322
3 miles out Bulavolle Pike

8/17-8/24, 8/24-8/31.

Top dollar anuques furniture,
glass, chma, clocks gold 111ver,
coma watel'les, ellates Osby
Martin, 614 992 7441

Wanted

NEW SHIPMENT
UVING ROOM SUITES·
SOFA&amp;CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $995

accomodates 6, private pool, near
Golf courses &amp; restaurant row
Dates Available

Pay1ng Top Dollar For Junk Car~.
Trucks &amp; Runnmg lleh1cles To

Doors, Any Condooon, Size

Summer Camps and
Summer Dance Classes
for all ages at
The Art School

441-1988

Able Avon Represent&amp;h'les
needed Earn money for Chrltt·
mas bills at homelal work 1 800

992 8356 or 304 882·2845, lnd
Rep

FINANCIAL
21 0

Business
Opportunity
INOfiCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
,ecommends that rou do bull
ness with people you know, and
NOT to send money thtough the
ma11 until )IOU have tnveat•galed
lheof1Bf1~

CLASSIC OUTDOOR WOOD
FURNACE It Tho 11011 Efllclono
And Lbweat Em1111ons Outdoor
Wood Furnace On The Market

Central Boiler Ia Currently look
1ng For A Oualtty Dealer In Th11
lmmedtale Area For lnformauon
On Becommg ~ Deater Or For A
Free Brochure Call 1-800 - 248-

4661 Or 1-2111-782·2575

Wendy Long will now be
located at Finest Styling
1390 Eastern Ave.

446-8922
HELP '~'"'"'u
Please help us find a
baby or child to adopt.
Call (614) 742-3705
anytime .

SALE
MONDAY, JULY 1
9A.M.·5 P.M.
YARD

Keith Oiler residence,
St. At. 325- 742-2076

PAY PHONE ROUTE

35 Local &amp; Etlabliohed Si111
EarnUpTo$ 1 500Wk~

1 800.flll6-4980

has part 11me

rrore

·~~:~·~~~:o;oo;r,;s~TT~NApleu
s all
e

1v1

Jul)l 1 2 103 Pomeroy Street ATTN WOMEN /MEN Earn Ex
Uaaon, WVa, Home lntenor plus tra Income Fle111ble Hoursl $200
IIZeS. baby ItemS raiNtlhlne
$500 Week ly Call 7 Days 40 7

Cremeens, Stall
more mlormBtiQn
or come 1n and

875 2022 E11 0526 H25

July 1· 2, 159 N F1fth Aven ue

ModdiOpo&lt;l Qlj0,•900 7

ATIN WOUEN! MEN Earn extra
Income Ftuible hours• $ 200

July 1·2 35 Riverv1ew Dr•ve, Mid·
d18JX)rl 9am 1
July 1 3 9am ? Th1rd house left/
W1llow Creek be s1de Pam1da
ClOtheS toOls furnnure, farm ma
c;hmerr ant1ques, m1sc baby
items

Part T1me Admss10n
Coorclnator

1500 weekly Call 7 dayo (407)
875-2022 Ert 0596 H25

Respona lbti i!ISS Include The Fol

AVON Sales $8

IOWJrlg

S 15 /H r No
M1111mum Order
9onuaet 1 800 827 4640 lndl

Doot To Door, No

R8ferral5, Coordinallng Adm11
Markeun g Fac1l1ty Pubhc
:.:;:.:..:::::___ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1•~=~~~~~&amp; A Uu 11 E~~:penence
;::::.:.:;__ _ _ _ _ _ __ 1 Beaut1ctan ha~rdreaaer wanted
Not Required If lntet·
July tat 9 5 Bill Croll residence lull or part t1me w1th chentele Call
Inquire By July 5
Yeflowbuah Rd, Racine, Oh , 304 675 3040
1996 At Holzer SeniOr Care C&amp;rl,
men' l women's &amp; c:hlldrtn'l - - - - - - - - - - ter 814 446-5001
,

clolhing

:.:;:::;::::________ I

Sis/Rap

Investment
$5 950
FT! PT
Jul)l11t· Wagner lane, 1nteraec:- FREE PI&lt;G 1 800 513 4282 2o4
non of SR 143 &amp; 7 Ctalhn. mile Hra.

mull&lt; gam _ _ _ _ _ _ ,Cable
::.:::;.:::::;_
Monday 111 &amp; Tuesday 2nd, t/2
nilt up Beiloy Run FIG o" 124 Lol·
II• Tokes, Super Gamo Boy ':.
rrore
&gt;,

1

II

BEST HOME BASED BUS

/Mini Satelhle ln11alle ra

e,

ln.t..we-tn7,

Automotive
AIR CONDinONING
SerVIce and Repair
All Makes
Smith Buock- Pontiac Gallipolis
446·2282

Channel Marker
Condos
N. Myrtle Beach

Non Worlunq Washers, Dryers,
Stoves, Aelr~gerators Freezers.
A.~r Condmoners Color T \1 1,
VCR s Also Junk Cars 614 256
1238

:...:.:=:::..::.::::::..:::::::::..:.:::___ ,

leaac'a Auction House
Antique or Collectible Sale
VInton, Ohio
Slturcley, July 1998 7:00 p.m.
The following Is only a brief, partial listing ol itAtn•l
we have lor this sale. Many items woll be arriovln!g I
too late to be advertozed. We normally have a
hour antique sale with Items left over for
following week.
Nice oak church pews, trunks, berry craie, wiclkerl
Items, candy rack, old tools, quilts, hanging sao1~s.1
cast Iron horse hobles, pope beds, wagon otmop, 1
wringlers, wood stools, kero lamps &amp; lanterns,
kotchen work tables, old coins &amp; silver dollars,
granite ware, jewelry, wak:hes, cookie jars, 5 cent
blade coka knife, chests, old concrete black meon. 1
old kitchen utenslls,com jobber, com popper, """~ 1
Iron, Guyan creamery milk bottles wfwire rack, old
'
radio, advertizing Items, ladder back chaors, buffets,
'
sportsman cast Iron camp stove, weller, miniature
metal collector plates w/shelf, plus much mora
Auctioneer Flnll "Ike" IIUC
Phone 614·388·9370 evenings or 388-8880 from
10:00 am -5:00pm .
Ucensed and bonded Ohio #3728
Terms. Cash or approved Check
Not responsibls for accidents or lost ~ems.

JimaFormEqu,.,.,o
GalipohL OH 45831

Blooded Dalmttoona No Pt
OrOI4- 448 2:::;.::·~1::.:75::.·:."::"'~25eo:::..tl0::..:;12::.____ 1 FARNALL CUB WI CUitiYaiOfl,
Groom Shop ·Pwt: Grooming. Fea hydrauhe hft, gvod t1rea, run a
ourong Hydro 8a1h Don ~heelS good 1!,900 304-87s.:J824
Beier 273 How Hollarwl, 814
:C=at:..:l8:..:14:.·:.••=•.:.o=23::1;______ 1 Hay
2511.fl800
Jack Ruuen te111et' P41PP•ta.
lbl. ful ~ all a:Hora. l250iea :
two Shtlt1e mln111ure Colhts,
ma1e1, S1251coe..e14·142 al!iO

,•

• I

vage vehiCles. Se:llmg parts 304·

....:.....:.:=.:..:.::..:.:.:...:::_____ ,

Public Sill
&amp;AuctiOn

Center. Inc

I~

773 5033. _______
....:;..:.;.::..::.

Rilln DatesJuly50r6

.., Of'.,8NCiAi.s

Form Eqn-11:
40 Ntw Shtrlnlut, 3 New Shinfllus, 2S HP Dtlsol 14.1185 .• In
Slock, Over 40 Used Tracoort 2
I 4 WO, New King Kuntr Equip.
mont
STOP l'f AND CHECK OUT
TilE SPECIALS AT·

1

J &amp; D's Auto Part1 Buymg aal

Monday 711 st. 8 To 5 1 112 M1
Down State Rt 7 South Small U 1
crow ave, Wooden High Chair
Boys Toddler Clothing Toys
Books Old Otshes Linens, Good
Clothing lamps, Much More

HuQt S.ltctlvn Of TtiCIOfl &amp;

1467 Jadl.ton Pike

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Better!

Julr 3rd 5th, i · S Corner or
Burkhart
lnlenor And 588 Lo ts Of Home

~iS~~~=~~~~
~1250
8107

1814

a

Buement Sale July 6 ooam
Jackson Ave Pt Pleasant below
MorrOW's Deh and Hatfelra Carpet Woodwo rking tools hand
10011, pedestal gnndefl, Old Ca"
Deafer farm Implement parts, antique gas nova upnght engine
watder metal saw and ect Cash
and carry:

July 111, 2nd 3rd 9 To 4, 2 U1les

GallipoliS Rt 7, 81Qg81'

Oh" 814

1110 Farm Equipment

DoG 1 cat Grooming rttaonolllt
pr1cn. 15yra tlptfltt1CI Call tor
J04-07S.N31
Dog Dbodlanco Cla1111 Tho
Roghl Paw Training Cenllf Sllerry
R-1 Ctf11fltd '1'rolf11f 814 448

BULLETIN BOAR:D

and Auction

Bedspreads

Pltuanl, 304·675-

CFA

'*

6t28th, 30th 0- ? Barb11 Doll 1
Avon Bottles. 0 1shn. Cumnns

P111nt

20113

Postal Jobs 3 Positi ons Avail
able No Erpenence Neeeuarr
For Information Call 818 788

1570 Ero 6009 _ _ _ __
I...;:..;...:;;;..:.:;;::..

Earn 820 + tHr Mull Have Own Sales Parson Wuh 2 Years Mini·
Truclce, Tools &amp; Err&gt;&lt;rnence Run· mum Experoence And Building
nong Wires Call Rob Ar 1·888· Malarial. Hardware Please Call
NS-11222
•
LlndaOrGene814-446-2002

•

AI real oslale advo~l~ng In
lhls ne-r Is subjacl to
lho Federal Fair Housing Act
ol 1968 wl1lch inakes ft ilegal
10 advertise "any prafe1811C8,
Hmltallofl or diiiCIImlnallofl
baood 011 race, color nollglorl,
sar tarNIIal ooalUS or nallcll'll
Ollgln, or any llllonllofllo
any IUCf1 preio1811C8,

ma~o

'Basket &amp;.Pottery

Auctron

Over 250 Longaberger®
Baskets &amp; Accessories. This
os your chance to purchase
relired items. You don't want
to moss this salel
Salurday, June 29 at 11 a.m.
1n the activities room at
St Peters Church
541 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

Family Yard Sale Caldwell's
667-3493 Children's clothing,
furmture, beddong, dryer. July
1, 2 • 1 mile south of Tuppers
Plains on Rt. 7

Auto Insurance
LowDown
Payment

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Family Yard Sale
July 1-2-3
8:00-5:00
Raon or Shone
3 miles out GeorQl*l Creek Rd.
from Rt. 7
Drapes, Yardman Tractor
mower, clothes, Utile Tike Toys
and much more
A snapshot onto the future-

FOTODISK

Computerized Photography
NOW OPEN 446-9955
2018 Eastern Ave , Gallipolis

~==============:::!
The Racine Fore Dept &amp;
Auxoliary will have a chicken
BBQ and homemade 1ce
cream sale on July 4th at
11 ·00 at the Forehouse.

Giant Yard Sale
Come See and Buy.
Johnson Resodence,
Vine Street, Racone,
July 1-3. 8 30 a.m. tol?

Car Hand Washed
Hand Waxed $25
446-8778

-. '

Phone (614)446·6111

Why buy new furniture
when we can make
your furniture as good
as new! We offer a
large selection of

25 Acres, Hannan Trace School

LIVE

Dllb'ICI, Small

8-1 0 ft. Palm Plants

245-5795

Ue1gs

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Athena, Near Albany Pure Coun -

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ParUy Furn11hed 839 112 Sec:ond

Galla Counoy EurNI 3

3573

360

Real Eltate

Wanted
----------1
5enous buyer haa ca1h for land,
any eonditton, 30 acr11 or more

.

SJeeplnq rooms woth cookong
Also trailer space on uver All

hook· ups Call aloer 2 00 p m
304-713-5651, MasonWV

1·800·24START Sporll Engo
neerlng, Am Charlol.

MERCHANDISE

RENTAlS
_____
;!..;...._, 510

JET
AERATION MOTORS

Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In Stock
COli Ron Evans. 1 800 537 9528

560

Kiln dried lumber lor 1111, ,.

$250 304-875-5786

Pets for Sale

AKC Boxer pupp.es, lawnlbnndie

random Width and length, walnut
and tasaalraa S1 26 per bd h

arwl up Limited quanoly 814-89112808
King S1ze SQIId Oak Waterbed
W1th Full Size Wall UniT Haa
L1ghts I Mirrors A Matching TV
Unn tDresur Included So4 50

oeo &amp;14-44&amp;-1825

Kitchen Table /4 Cha1rs, Excellent

"KC lhasa Apso Puppiea Now
Ac:cep11ng Depoa111 W1ll Be
Ready July o41h 111 Shots And
Wormed $175, F1rm, 814 388

agso Alter 5 PM 614·388·8434
Belore 5 P.ll
AKC Regtttered Boston Terner
pupptes one male, one tamale
ready to go, call 61•-9•9·2&lt;495

614 992 3752 OJ 814-992 3965

Condition, $125, Arter 5 00 814·

448 8313

LIHII Tyke riding toy , baby bed
c:ar ~ear. 1tro1ter high chatt,

..onco. ptoy·pen 304.fl75-45o08

Mattreu And Heater Only, F11a
Queen Size warerbed L1ke New
180, Al1ar5P.II814 4-18 8313
Naw t8 Fr Ublll)' Trailer. Tandem
Axle, Load1ng Ramp 5x8 F1 Trail·
et New, 61 .. oW6-8588

New Gas

Furnacet,

New Galvan.

IZed Duel Work , New Hood Fans,

814-379-2720 AFTER a PM

In Memory

In Loving Memory
of
GARY
SCHOLDERER
who passed away
on June 29, 1995

Household

Goods
0

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Trailer At;, In Galhpolla 614 446· .Refrigerator, Freez.,, Stove,
crowava, Color TV , VCR, 114·

Bi4t For InformatiOn

25~1-1238

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Indian Creek Golf Range
Rio Grande Exit
on Buckeye Hills Road
Day light till Dark
Never Closed Ball Dispenser available •
Bnng Quarters
For Jnfo call

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Pomeroy,

4 bedroom wid, remo-

deled, Hud, fenotd, no

a

poll,

ref

erencet, $475, secunty deposn,

814.gg2setle, 530pm.

Counb'y Furntrura 304-875-8820

Rl 2 N, 8molot, P1 PloeHn~ WV
Tu ..·Stt 9.fl, SUn 11·5

245-5747

Anniversary
Love Ya Forever
Rod, Lori, ~ !oi!Ve,l
Kevin, E rnieJ
Teresa, An,gie &amp;

leave us
he dtdn ' t go alone
part of us went with
him.
llay God took hom
home.
Sadly missed by Cortnie,.ll
Shannon, Tracy

Thompson· Beeson Reunoon
Sunday, July 7, 1~96 Donner
1 00 pm at Uttle Kyger
Congregational Chnstian
Church -Bring Favorite Foods!

fabric, new foam,
expert craftsmanship.

Call for Free
Estimate
614-446-3438
2205 Graham School Ad.
'

Due to the recent fire
Ray Davis Insurance
Agency is now affiliated
with the W.R. "Dick"
Brown Insurance Agency,
386 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio. Phone
numbers will remain
(614) 446-1544 and

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Go1:Jd

Top
For Sale
Will haul in Ohio only

2 Bedroom Tralltr, 8 Miles Rou,.
218, $210/llo ,• Dtpo111, Rotoraneea. 814-448 8172, 114 258
'25 1
u
2 Bedroom 1urn1shed, ac washer

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&amp; dryer, 1250Jmo + ut1h11es No
peta.. Reflwences &amp; deposll 304 •
875-4874
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CaH 446-4851

no answer, leave a·message.

,. 0

Stze 1 Full Bed, 2 Baths, Clay

• I ,
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Rent 2 Bedroq.m Mob1le Home
Coro IIHI Rood DoPoll\ No Poll.

(614) 446-1960.

Call446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

, "1
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••~ .. Jr

actvertlsed k1 th6&amp; new1peper
are 1111llalllt on an equal
oppor1\Jnlly basis

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Free0elr~o~~rywurun25Milea.

Wa1her Wh~rlpool $95, Wringer
Washer $150

Dryer

JW,.. ,. ......

.,. , . , of
"Mfdt,. C.II'GIL

Help Wanted

DRIVERS· Experienced
(1 yr. + OTR) A.T.P
drivers (2·11 mo. OTR)
welcome! STABILITY
(over 2000 established,
long·tenn customers)
PAY (24-35e mo)
EQUIPMENT
(all '94·'96 conv. lleet).
Natlona~reglonal. Top
b8nes. $1000 sign-on
bonus"! 0/0 lease
purchase avail. Call
1Oa-2p Sun or 9a·5p
M·F 1-800-876-8754
ext. JP71
• Conditions

Refrigetator Frlglda~re fro11 Fr. .

ll

520
Sporting
114-245-51122 Evenlngt
GoOds
Trailer for rtnl $2001ino. you PlY
uliitltt, no ptll. 304-875-2535
Rueor I Mil 30 Rd. Mag. • Ex·
Trader for rent 1n Galhpoh area 1181 1350, Mark 2 PIIIOI 1250,
Merlin 22 Mag Deluxe &amp; Scope,
114-448-884Q.
1200 All oeo. eoH4HB27
Two end onrM blldroom mobile
Antiques
hornu, 11ar1lng at S240·t300, 530
• - · Wiler and lrath Included • Bur or toll. Rlverlnt Anllquoa,
814-11112·2107.
1124 E lloln Sorteo, on Rt 124,
T1111 bllclroorn mobile nome In Pomoroy Hour~· M T.W 10.00
country, dipoat! tnd rtlorencoo a m 10 e 00 p.m .. SUnday 1m
em pm. 014oll82-25211
requitd,:14-2«13

.Birthday?.' ·

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

AUCTION OF REAL ESTATE
JULY 3, 1996 AT 10:00 A.M.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

NEW HAVEN, WV

DR. DONALD M. THALER
A•••s his dosing of his oHke for
the practice of Orthopaedics effective
July 1, 1996.
Patients may arrange for the
transfer of reco(ds by call119
614·446-01 00.
Dr. Thaler wishes to thank lis many
patients, who have placed their
confidence in him over the years.

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, July 6, 1996 10:00 a.m.

H~ppy .

PUBUC AUCTION
Saturdly, July 6, 1996 at 10:00 a.m.
137 Ewlngton Rd., Ewington, Oh
Directions: From Vonton follow St. Rt. 160 to
Ewlngton, tum left at first street, sale on left side ol
street. Watch lor signs.
Owner. Kathleen Slager
This Is only a very partial listing. We have many
boxes to unpack and sort, plus Kathleen has many
other Items she will be adding while cleaning out
cabinets, closets, &amp; buildings
Meta wardrobe, patio set, table, wall shaH, rugs &amp;
carpet, desk &amp; chair, box fans, al glider &amp; rocker,
metal k~chen cabinet, queen size bed, mght stands,
record albums, 12 place selling ol hannony· ~~:,~ ~~~
China w.accesaoriee, misC. glassware, giilj)e b
milk glass plata, cake plates, platers, baskets, several
nice rods &amp; reels (Zebco &amp; others), full tackle boxes,
lishong tackle, dip nets, boat oars, wren houses,
clocks, kero healer, come-a·long, racks, shovels, &amp;
misc. garden tools, pipe wrenches, wrenches,
screwdrivers, plus other hand tools, Craftsman· bench
grinder. drill &amp; sabra saw, Freon tanks, hand saws,
pope vise, bench vise, cast Iron skillets, juice set w/6
glasses, freezer containers, lamps, mosc small
k~chen appliances, apple pealer, granne canner, coon
collector, books, 8 lt. Chrlsbnas tree &amp; decoratoons, lg
10 point mounted ~ear head, pictures, what·nots,
misc. cookware, Coming Ware, craft Hems, plus much
mora.
The following Items sell with a reserve: Hannony
House Chona and mounted Deer head.
Relres~ments and food woll be available.
Auctioneer: Flnle "Ike• 11811G
Phone 814-388-9370, 388-8741, or 245-5939
UceiiNCI and bonded Ohio 13728
TenM: Cuh or 1pproved check
Not responsible lor accidents or lost Items &amp;
statame'118 made day ol sale has precedence over
printed matenats.

The family of George F. Curry, Jr. would like to
everyone who gave us comlort and support on
time of need
To Willis Funeral Home for being so comforting
helpful. To the pallbearers: VIctor "Fats'
IVollmslc~:le , Tom Brooks, Dean Jividen, Gene
I r. •• n~.otau Dave Drummond, Greg George and the
pallbearers· Larry Johnson, Danny
I•PAn~m~· Darst, Mark "Short" Curnutte, Dave "Fud"
IJjliidEin and Gary Bums.
1To Carl 'Boxer" Swisher, Georgie's Uncle, who
~x. You've been a pillar ol strength
us. We love you.
And to everyone who sent flowers and food and
offered us their love and prayers to console us In
time of grief and sorrow in the loss ol our
Georgoe (Jungle to hos friends) we thank you
Special thanks to our dear friends, Chris and Carol
Layh, Rick and Helen Riling, Reva Musser, Debbie
Boston, Joe Clark, Don Hendricks, Ronnoe and Pete
and to those, who having lost a precious son
daughter, set your grief asode long enough to
us through ours God Bless You All
Bonnie and Dwight Swisher, Dorothy and Tom
Brooks, Carta Deweese, Freeda Chandler, and
families.

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

Fastest Melon Eater

Public Sale
&amp;Auction 1

C8rd ot Thanks

Hotpolnl

Chepol Roaci.814-258-84Ce
1150. 30 Inch Elecoroc Rangt
~;;;~~~~T.;~;;;h.l Hotpomt $95 Air Con~tioner
Furnlohed,
lot, porch, 8 ooO BTU $75, G E Waonar,
rar4. good
condition, no Oryor St\ $205 EaCh, GE Rtlrlgwater, 304· 882· erator Like New Choice or AI
peta, $2eO
24811~
mond Or Whllt $350, Skaggs
~:=:;;:;:-t.;"R.;;;:-~:;;;:1 AS)I)Nincta, 76 V1t1t Sttlet, GaiUt,lobMt Home For Rlflt,
,,Uo. 814-448·7398. 1-800·488·
121V
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VrRA FUI1NITURE
OUaMNH::.=F:rwl&gt;roAnd
•1
Appliances Groal Dealt On
Cuh And Carryl RENT-2-0WN
Arwlt.y-y Alaolwaltoblo

of lore 1111 Cllrt , . ,
rills _, &amp; IHicwlf ,...
tosfor '" all ,of us.

110

2 Bedrooms. Furnllhtd, 1 OUaen 195 Froazor Chell Type $150,

t -. I '-

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,,.,..., Oil,_,.,

Avenue. Water Paid, 614 446·

10 Acres $10,000, 7 • ~• Wolh Small apr. It, bf, bath kitchen, tur
Pond 112,000, 8 + Acre• With mshed wlullll! le&amp; pa1d eJicepl
Stroam •11,900 !lalllpolla - 2 electne $200/mo + depos•t 30o4
•·hies Out Neighborhood Rd 9 875 1365
Acr11 $14,500, 22 Acres W11n
Pond 128,000 Or 1o Acres Twtn R1vers Tower, now accepllrtg
apphcaucna for 1br HUO subs1d
117:000 '
lled apt tor elderly and h"ind1
Owner Flnancong. 10% OfF Cash capped EOH 304.fl7S.6679
Purchaso~ Call Now For llapol
Wedge Apartments 508 Burdette
Building Lot S~ Rl 850, Near Rod- St 1bedroom tJo P!&amp;t• Futnlshed
ney, Aalldcted 814 441..0541 At &amp; unfurmshed 3'o4 875 2072
Mrings
""5 ~~~
Bulctlng lol All UtUIIIat Available,
Furnished
Plus - · Flodnoy Area, $5,600. 450
81 ......2801
Rooms
Lottlor rlfll -liking appllca· Corcle llolel, Gal)opolls, OH 811·
riDN. Cou111ry L.ano llobllt Homo
Park Galllpolla Ferry wv 304 446·2501 or 614 36r0612 El1e·
t1ency Roam1, Cable, Aar, Phone,
67s-5ot21
llicrowa"' &amp; Refngeraoor
Sc:emc Valley, Apple Grove Rooms for rent • week or month
beautiful 2ac Iota public water; Starr1ng 81 s120'"10 Gan1a Hate!
Clydi!Bowan.tr , 304 57112336
81 ._..._9580

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Acr" 18,500. 5
18,500, 11
Acr" 110,600 Going Falll
-

On T..n1 Run + Chambart

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. July 4th Rib Dinner
Sponsored by Amencan Legoon &amp;
Auxoliary, Middleport, Oh
Ribs, Rolls, Cole Slaw,
Baked Beans
$4 00 a donner $2 00 meat only •
Dessert and Pop extra
Starting 3 00
All Welcome Joon Us
Mill StreetAnnelloacross from
Middleport Post Olfoce

•e•otlol

,,.,,., ••tl ,,

To

At"''

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Big Yard Sale
at 3300 St. At 141
Centenary
July 4th, 5, 7

County .. M1nu1es

lf)l loti, Great For Horaea 10 +

'

Clearance Sale!
1/2olf all clothong in stockl
Second Chance Consignment
Shop 701 Second Ave.
lnsode Movoe Station

coorri6•rfoes ro r6e

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Past &amp; Present at
218 Thtrd Ave will be open
July 1, 2, 3 &amp; 5th from 9-5
Stock reduction Sale
Continued

Tobacco Allotment.

11,,..., Righll 814 251-1811
BRUNER LAND
e14-ns.a113

o

I

imltallon or dlscflmlnatiOn •

Thla newspaper Wll not
knowllngly KCII&gt;I
advtotloomenlllor reale11ate
wtolct11s In vlolallon ol tho law.
Our readert oro hel'lby
lnfomoed lhelal dwollnga

Wt n IOiftllrtilrJ, tel
otr frleods w6o
6ti,H It t6t till• of
c.f's """'· 161 food.
,. vlsllr, ... , , . &amp;

.' ' ' '

Gallipolis

NOW OPEN

GRAHAM
UPHOLSTERY

.,

Cllrd of Thanks

' '
Yard Sale
Mt. Zoon Missoonary Baptist
Church About 11 mrles down
Rt 7 at Eureka, Ohio.
9-5 Mon - Tues • Wed

Helpwanted

DRIVERS· $2000 signon bonus • 1 yr. flatbed
OTR expl Start »32e
rni. for 1·3 yrs. om exp.l
$38,000/yr. ave.! All late
model
conventiOnalsl
Home 11-14 daysl Top
beneiHa. Training for
grads avail. 23 w/CD L'A'.
Boyd
Brother
s
Transportation.
1-800543-8923 ext AG·76

--

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance

Ilea 11,750 304-87s.&amp;oeQ
10

c '

SR-22
Cancelled/Rejected
• DUI • No Prior
Insurance

Internationa l Farman Cub Belly
Uower Wheel We1gh11, Hrdrau·

Located at 27 Pinecrest Drive Brentwood
VIllage) Chesapeake, Ohio
Owners are moving to Florida and are selling
many pieces of nice furniture as well as a
selection of hand tools and garage Items.
Terms: Cash
Lee Jotmson, Auctioneer

Two (2) Vec:ant Iota PLUS
508 and 508A Fourth Straet
New Haven
Duplex: Loving room, eat-In kitchen woth range,
bearoom, and ':1. bath.
Uvlng room, eat·ln kHchen with range. 2 bedrooms
and% bath. Both units have electric heat.
507 Fifth Straet
New Haven
1. One unit - Living room (needs finish work), 2 or 3
bedrooms, eat·ln kitchen, and % bath. LP gas
spaca heat 12'x15' storage building.
Eat·ln k~chen, bedroom and 1'. bath lP space
heal.
ll~=iilnve~stment property! Property beong sold 'as Is"

II

1O"A. down - non·relundable. Balance due
days - al closing
Prooe~lv Is being sold w~h owner's confirmation To
Propertlel - call Rlclc Pelr.on,
llcenM 188, 11 773-5785 01' 773-5447, or
ERA Town 6 Country AMI Eltlrll, Broker II
1175-5541 fol' eppolnlmlnt..

Conduct.d by

RICK PEARSON AUCnON CO. •
6

.

Ell r... &amp; c...,ry ••• ......
Becky

Bnlktir

�I

I

Pege06•

Pomeroy • Middleport •

June li"l' Spoelal1: Round Bolon
- JO 375 S7,885: Vormoor 403
Lillo Now .S 5.1SO: JD 535 Ll ko
Now ,1',500: JO 410 S4 ,710:
S..... l Nlco Utod Raku; Htyblnea • HH 477 ; NH 417; 2·
NH4tll: 2 Nico J0 1219: NH Diok

1175 Lincoln . 48,000 AcNal
IIIIH, A· I, - . Minoan lnllrior, Prlco Roducod. 83,800, Sao

Tom -•1....,..71117.

1877 Oldlmobllo, 2 - · ole, 1111
Mower ; NH 411 Oisk. bine - Nict; · 13,700 "'""· dtlve •nyNtw Hay Tedders ; Nt• H1y - · ,..y IIQOCieondllion, 814- .
Equl-1 - 6 .0% Fonancing; 40 - 148-322J.
60 HP TriiCO&gt;tS - 7.5"- Finlnclng;
Compac( Ttachul 24 -39 H~
4.8Yt Financing; HydrauHc HOMI,
PTO Sholl! A-Ir, Air Condl!lonir.g Service. CarmM:hHI's Farm &amp;
lawn 814-448· 2412 Or 1 ·800-

1 _7_1_0_Aulos__;~f0r~SI.:.;Ie:__ 1

710

AutosforSIII

71

o

Autoe fOI'

..,_tic,

-::875-~284~8,--:--:---:---- 1 f34000110. ..........2311 .•

WANTEDUI
NEW USTINGS' CALL TOIM

1184 Pontiac Grand Am Sport
t77 Ford F 100 302 L.
11c
Coupo, oxcollont condition, 1
"
• -toma •
_
• Fl 11oc1 ~ 080: t1H13
· 814-918-:1111111.
VIctor ia 302. Runt hcollont,
Auto loanL ~will- 11- loaded, ! BOO OeO, BU-448ftlftCing tvon 11 you hol•o boon 4824, DIYI; 0 &lt; 814·448-4138
turned dawn efsewMra. Upton Ewringl.
Equipment Ulod Cart. 304-458- ~- Fol&lt;l Pick-Up. V-8, 4 Spood,
::-'oet=.=-:--::------ l GOOd Work Truck, ·S&lt;95, Aher 4
SEIZED CARS From '175. ~11. 114-441-oeeA.
Portchot, Cadlllan, Chevyl, 19811 Ford 250 4X4 8 Cylinder, 4
eMWt, Corvene1, Alao JMpo, 4 5 d L
Wh 1 9
3
'wo· •• Your Area. Toll Ftte 1· P••814 379
ono
•• ase, 14
21123
,800-898-9778 Ext. A-2814 For Ton,
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·

1989 Olda Cut1111 Clera Body

Oomago, Runt Good, HSO, 814UI-11115 , After Six 814·448·

MEIGS COUN'I):" 1"

c.-

1244,

t889 V-8, Toronado Dark - · 2
OootS, Auto, AMII'M Storoo C.•
sene, A.ll Power, All lealhet,
Good TirOl, Good Shape, 304-

875-36811.
1990 Toyota Creaalda, V-8, Auto,
Lo•ded, Elec:ulc: Sunroof, Maln-

a lnod, Garae- i(Qp~ SB,SOO, 814441 -1 5155 P.M.

~......... 1111

1•

720 Trucks for Sill

1811 Oidl Cullall Caiall 4cyl '811 F-250,
llllding5t~Mt, aunroot, am.r,., caueue: ow in IMck. 300 e cyt.. 11~
runt &amp; lookl groal SUOO. 304- condldon, grut work tructo. ftrtt

oa...

rtMI
1883 Ford Thunderbird llerllla-.
302
V-8
,
autolll&amp;tlc,
lookl
and
NIW' Holland 68 Hay Baler And 3
Ftolnt Hitch Rake, 11 ,500 814· ,..,,. good, *tl. ,,..., 1812 , 1988 ~~~~ • ...., door, v~ Uulti4411·2540 ..
Chrr•'•• LoBaron convortllllo, 4 par~ IUIO. , ,... paint, S2SOO, 114cyl . automatic, black, look• and 94&amp;-2877.
Spr!ng Clearance on Homelite &amp; ruN good, S1500; 814-247-42112.
~..=:.~-----­
GrHn Macl'line trimmers. Siders
- - - 1988 Buick Skyhawk 4dr, auto,
Equ lpmont Co. 304~75-7421 .
4cyl, loaded , 47,000ml, 14,500.
1884 Ford MUlling RobuMI ...... 304-675-4172.
ITrantmllllon. Ahor 8, 814·446- ---::.......:.:::._ _ _ __
620 Wanted to Buy
8888.
1988 Firtbird v-e, 5 Spood, Now
3-• Bedroom house In counlry on
TlrH, ,
M~H, S4,200 080,
land conrac:1. 304-875-4385.
1985 Crown Vicloril., one owner,· Super
1992 Dodge
very good condition, 40 mlktt on Air,
Mile1, 12,900 000
GRADE lOG WANTED : Dtliv- rebuilt engine, 84 ,000 milea,
llfed or will pidl.-up contact: Harry S2400, 6144112-38110.
GoJdsberrwoJPaul Mercer Sawmill,
Firebird, V.e IUIOmlfic, ~.
Inc . 2606 US Rt35 South side
c;ondltion, 12800, 814- 742·
Wv. 25187. Phone 304-675-7598

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

820

(614) 742-3171 or l..SOO.:S85-7101

m

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
Cbery!Lemley......... "...742·3l71

I

~Ufrtf11 Ultingl.

Home
lntpiOVemtlltt

......

a

Fr.....,n'o Hnting And Cooling.
Installation And Service. EPA
Cor-. Rolidonill. Comrnordol.
814-251-1.. 1.

840 Ellctrlcll and

NEW USTINGI CPMMEIICIAL PROPERTY. ' Ru111no:{f

\.., ....

--

BLACKBURN REALTY
514 Seeond Ave., Gallipolie, Oh. 45631 ·
R•nny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
Jiir Joe Moore, Aoaoci•te 441-1111

Atfrl,gtl'ltlon
ASESCE~ED DEAlER
~NCE ENTERPRISES

Appelaelll ..
Stnctw....... ._.. .
!wier ............. .

011uf.... nw
70 a............. -

we•a ....... .._... ••
yea.

Haat pumpa, Air Conditioning, II
VOu Oon1 Can U1 Wo Boltl Lot1l
Fru E1tlmato1, 1·600·291-ltlli8,
814-440-e:IOI. WV .002145.

"qi;;rt;IIF'N!.:n.l;_f
=~bedrooms,
room,
room,ID ~=~~5~~
g8l8g8 on living
a very
nicedining
lot cloee

[$20•,00CI NEW REDUCED PRICEI Ownerwanls
have reduced lhe price ol this PI

~

Plumbing &amp;

HHtlng

Department Stole. Over 5,300 sq. ft. on main level
2.700 sq. ft. on sec:onc1110ry. 2 Lots lnclueled. Pui'chll8
Includes ootitenl8. Cell Cheryl lor more Information.
,..,,,,.,

Sha-.

01'

OH • Point Pleaunt, WV

1H7 c.prtce ._3 4 Door, S...O, 1111 Buick LISibfl, exr;:ell•nt
Runt Strong, lolaln!Ainod Vory runnlno condition, V·l, PB, PS,
ndab~. 81 ,700, I14-441 - M;, window-. S3800. 8141S85 SP.II.
918-2045 or 814-918-2302.

SN-11 11 .

June3G,

••
••

on Collage AV811U8.

:JJ.t-675-7682.

630

Livestock

1100 Pound Holstein Heller

Ready To Freshen, $675, eu.
388·99411.
50 Inch Mare Pony Broke, Ride

Good ~ltl Foal, 614-441l- tt 79.

.

1--------------------

Cattle For Sale, 614-682-7874.

Riding &amp; Trail Horses, Pony, Oil·
l«ent Prices, 6 14--446-•11 0.
Two year Reg, Ouaner mare ; 20'

Gooseneck trailer; 614·742-2552.

Hay &amp; Grain

640

ALFALFA HAY· Storage delivery
available -Morgan's Farm At 35,

Pliny. :rl4-937-2018.

SARA WINDS - Quiet Country Setting with a
beautiful view of the .hills and pasture, no .
traUors. in view. Always a gentle breeze. Mostly
all flat to rolling. Restricted; Only 5 lots left.
vance-Fairfield. ·

Hay For Sale: Round Or Square
614-682·7674.
Sraw lor sale. 304-875-1807.
Tob acco Pla·nts Wanted , 614 448-1052 George StCMW.
Tobacco Plants Wanted , 614 - .
446-1052 George Stover.

TRANSPORTATION
710 Autos tor SBie
'82 Pont iac T-1000, runs good,
good body, ale, low miles, St200,
614-992"7663.
'84 Ford Tempo, 4 door automalic, left rear tail light damage,
97,000 miles , $400 080, 614 ·

949-2311 days or'SH-949:2644
eYe rings.
'89 T h under~ ird SC, IWo door, 3.8

litre. V-6, elite -model!urbo, PS.
PB, AC, 5 spe9d, power seats

and locks. "Great Car: $5200
neg., 614· 992-7478 or 614-9492879 ..
1967 Plymouth Sportfury, 62,000

actual miles, 3t8cu. in , $1,800
1978 Chry. New YOrker, pans- or
·whole ct.r. 304-675-2t58 alter

"'"!·

Lanier
Plumbing
K~chens,

Bmhrooms, Speciar5t

ST RT 588 - 10.5 acres. Next to Gallipolis
Christian Church. large Woodlanded area and
a pond .

22 Acres - yet to be divided. Pick your new
house setting, Green Twp. Five Acre Lots and
two or three acres. ll's your choice.
·

5.66 Acres • Buhl Morton Road. Only
acreage left In this a(ea. Rolling to flat.
Wooded. Private and quiet.
·
Old 35 West. Sunkist Development. Nice
Lot. 90 x 172. On a paved street. Sets high
with a great view. $13,500.
City Lots - Home or Commercial. New to
build a new business building or a new
home.

WANllNG NEW UmNGI!I

-

LOOKING FOR RESIDEN11AL. FARMS a VACANT LAND.
WE HAVE PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS, GIVE CHERYL
A CALL TOOAY AND PUT YOUR PROPERTY ON THE '
MARKET FOR SALEI

NEW
LISTING
1992
MODULAR
HOME SPACIOUS
offers over 2.000
sq.
ft. of living space, wkh 4 bedrooms, 3 full
baths. and utility room. Theres a beautiful
stone fireplace in the family room and
endless cabinets In the kkchen as well as
a centrally located serving island.
Located at the JunC1ion of 124 and 160 it
rest, on 2.64 acres mil in Wilkesville. You
can~ go wrong by call1ng to set up your
view1ng today. $72,900.

FISHERMAN'S PARADISE • The Ohio
River lot located in Addison offers a
mobile home with wrap-around deck
lacing the River. County water ·and
electric availabiJ1. Price at $23,900.
Make this your get away spot today.
NEW LISTING OF VACANT LAND
located on Lake Drive Subd. in Sec. 27
Raccoon Twp. this lot measures
1OO'x1 00'. The water .and sewer tap Is
available. $12,000.00
33 ACRES • MIL corner of SA 325 and
Woods Mill Rd., recreational land only
$16,500.
RACCOON CREEK FARM - Located on
State Route 160 in northern Gallla
County. Approx. 1 mile creek frontage. 30
flat lots surveyed . Water and electric
available. $88,000.00

Office Space for Sale - 35 West Area.
Across from Bulaville. This building is ready
·to move into. Great Location, large deck
area across the back.

.

'RELAX
on thehome.
front
porch of this historic
2 story
Resting on 5.85 acres lies tl)is newly
sided and insulated 7 room home with
a 40x4Q shop with oversize doore. This
home also offers a 26x30 block bam
and large pond. Call today tci get away.
$82,900.00.
CQURT STREET RESIDENCE • Older
home has 2 sap., units or could be
· converted back to 1 family dwelling.
Faces city park.
·
RACCOON CREEK PRIVACY This
almost brand new ranch style home
rests in over 7 acres of woods with
approx. 800 It of creek frontage. Some
of the many features are 4 BAs, 2
bath.s, 16x21 Kit wir.-nge, refrig, disp
&amp; OW. 15x15 OR, 16x21 LA w/lrench
doors, 2 large treated decks, vinyl
siding &amp; an unattached 2 car garage.
II you don't want to look at your
neighbors, YOU MUST SEE THIS
ONE. ASKING $115,000.
.
ATTENTION DEVELOPERS AND
INVESTORS, EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY LOCATED NEAR
PORTER - Large lake with lake front
sites,. mobile home on property at
present time, county water, entire tract
consists of 77 acres, m/1. ·
NORTH GALLIA ESTATES
building lots. 100x300.
L~~::,~Et~ on state route 160 between
P
Vinton.
H~::l:~~~~~
TWNSHP
47 acres
~;
land. Comer of Elliott
Ad. and

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPO!'f, OHIO
OFFICE 1182-2888 ·

..•.

OFFICE 992·2886

HoME 992-5612
DOTTIE S. TURNER, .
BRO~R

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, JUNE 30, 1996- 2 P.M. TO 5 P.M.

1874 Chateau Travtler -campor,
...ing, liHpt 5-C,
-

S. 21D lVI., MIDDLIPOiil, OH. 45760

everything worltl, good
••king
114-4185-

nsoo.

Mirage 70,000mi,
re•r wheela, .ccyl,
sink &amp; refrigeraror.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

Henry E. Oeland Jr .. 992-21.~9
Sherri L. Hart ............ 742-2357

MIDDLEPORT - SOUTH 2ND AVE. - A tan brick home thlt hat 2
atorlea, an attic, 4·5 bedrooma, family room, dining room, newer
cabinets In kitchen, 1'h batha, p•rt baaement, 3 really pretty
flrepla4i:el, front and aide
partly fenced yard and much more.

NOW

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191
Office ............ ,............. 992-2.259

.

'

\"·

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

m

SeniorDisatunt

(614) 38H485

1-800-585-7101 or·446:. 7101

a

RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER
446-4618

Judy ~Wilt. .......................;..... 441-0262 Tammie DcWiii ................................ 24S-00~2
J. Mcrnll Cartcr ......................... 379-2184 Martha Smilh ................................... 379-265 I
Rulh Barr...................................-446- 7101 ·Cheryl Lcmly ................................... 742-31.11

Dft PES'I'

COIIROL

Racine, Ohio
Complete
Commercial &amp;
Reeldentlel Service

94s-;3151

742·2246
Locally owned &amp;
operated
Free Elllmates

Thinking of building? Can't afford to build a
large home with an expensivo price tag; high
utility bills and property taxes. Land Is beautiful
rolling to flat. Some woodland location is
excellent. Green Twp only 2 to 3 miles from the
new Industrial Park area proposed to be bui" in
the very near ·future. S.everal beautiful r)ew
homes l'!as already . been built In the area.
Priced $15,000 &amp; Up Only 7 lots left. Realtor
Owned. ·

W!~!ro~E~!1!Y1HIJ!C•
· LET US WORK FOR YOU!
CALL US TODAY!

446-1066

State Route 124-Naar Com Hollow-A ranch
home with 4 bedrooms and 2 baths. Has neW ca~.
new vinyl , fresh paint and border. Nice oak cabinetS.
Looks like new and shs on approx. 1 acra of level
yard.
$65,000.00
Leading Creek Rd.-wanting that home not far from
town at an affordable price? A 3 bedroom ranch wHh
vinyl siding, one car. garage, nice -lot, and · 2
outbuildings.
$38,000.00

Roush Hollow Road Immediate .Possession! 3
1 BR , 2 bath ~ouse and 20
acres, m~. located ott SR
554 between Cheshire and
Porter. Priced to sen at

Allen C. Wood, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Rea~or/Broker-446-0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor- 256-1745
11m Watson, Reaftor-446-2027
Patricia Ross. Reaftor

11011

PRICE REDUCED! NOW
$110,000.00 - Exceptional
Ranchl Oilers 3 bedrooms,
torma.l dining, lg. family
room , fireplace , garage,
pool, 2.7 acres mn. 11120

Great In Town Lociltlonl
Located at 154 Second
Avenue, this 2-3 BR home
otters the convenience of
living In the city. Eat-In
kitchen, fireplace In LA, DR,
bath and . utility room .
Reduced price to $38,000
easy. on the pocketbook!

1204

In Town 2 Houses, t large lot,
1 low prlcell Here's a large 4
bedroom, 2 story home with 2

baths. Living room, dining
room and eat-in kitchen.
Lar9e rooms. Extra houn
basode main house Is a small
3 rqom house - .-ds work.
Extra large lot measwes 86 x
t 74·. Garage. Priced to Mll .at
$49,800. 1201

District. Large living room,
family room, fireplace, out
building. Priced at jult
$39,000.00. Realtor Owned.
1124

'.

Pearl St.-A one story home with 2 bedrooms,
enclosed front porch, part basement. Has vinyl
siding, equipped kitchen, and hard~o~d floor
$29,900.00
.
• ....

x

LETART. i,.arge levellot·with 14' 70'
Mobile Home with room addkion, patio,
appliances, 3 bedrooms, 2 ba1hs", elec
heat, CiA. well &amp; TPC available. sepUc
and gorgeous River View. ASKING
$31,500

Porl!sroy-Osborne St. -Approximately '25~ toot
frontage and lots of·!lepth. All city services avllllable.
. Could make 2 trailer lots. was $8,000.00
Now $7,000.00 · ·

Groundsll Nice Locaticin,. cozy home. 1
112 Story Frame with 3 bedrooms, bath,
B.G. heat, unit air, carpel/Vinyl flooring,
satellite dish, small patio, fenced yard.
Nice porch and 16' x 20' garage. This
has II allll . Come Check II Oulll .

Broadway St. • Middleport-A 1 1/2 story home with 3
to 4 bedrooms, dining room. fuN basem,enl, and a 2
1/2 cer garage, Has a 50x225 lot and iklmlnum
aiding. $35,000.00
·

or\ . . VInyl siding,
thermopane windows,
garage, 2 18 X 20 out bldgs.
14000 .

12008 - 9.7 acres m/1 with public utilities available, approx.
4 acres ot woodland.

M2009 - New Ustingl Located on Pa- Trllil, 48 acres m/1
that Is rolling and lome wooded. Has Old houH and bam
on propefty.lleiltnr owned. Priced in lhe low 30's.

.YO&gt;UR CONVENIENCE TRY

~L.;;~~~~~F~R~E~ENUMBER

Lovely" "VIew
this 4 bedroom
Rio Grande Aretl.
.vou w11nt it.
Enclosed Fox Pool for on
...son swimming. Lovely·
home tor family &amp;/or
entertaining. Approtc. 3,200 111ft •.,.teo much mjll8l 1142

Just off French Ad .-Tracks,T~acks.Tr8Ck.O..r,
Turkey,. and other creatures abound on this ·approx.
30 acre wooded alta. Hai a great horne ·ske thalia
totally seclu~ed. Ju•t $15,000.00

12005 - Approx. 5 acres, mostly wooded with a large
building on property. $12,000.00

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, I~C.
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER· 446-9555
Lorett. MrDade • ~~77:Z9
Garnet.

POMEROY • 1 1/2 Story Frame dome
with carpet and nice hardwood flooring.
Drywall interior, paneled breezeway,
elec. H.P./C.A. Appliances , 1 car
garage. 3·4 bedrooms, basement, close
to town. Nice area,. Really Nice Hornell
Owner Wants To Sellll
RUTLAND - 7 Aoorns - 4 bedrooma,
appliances, attic space, nice. level yard
and garden area on this 2.9 acres. Woo
burning fireplace. C.A/H.P., hardwood·
carpet flooring. 1 1i2 Story Home with
Ornate woodwork. COME CHECK IT
OUTII

Pomeroy-Naylors Run-A 3 bedroom r~nch style
home with ceiling fans In living room and dining
room, has Woodburner stove. Just a little ways out of ,.•
town, if you want the convenience of being ctoee to
town btk the feet of country you wHIIike this place. ·
$30,000.00 Price Negotiable
.
•

·Snowville-Gooose Creek Rd.-approx. 11 acres of lend
with possible building site. Property Is on both sides
road. ·
·
TWO BEOROOM RANCH - REAL NICE
MOBILE
Located In City School HOME wltf1 2 rooms added

,.

POMEROY • Home has 3 bedlrooms,
nice large living room, bath, utility room,
kitchen and dining room. 6.67 Acres of
ground, nice garden area. Close to .
town. Owner really wants to SELL
THISII MAKE AN OFFER II

N. Fourth Ave.·Middl!lport- A one
mostly finished basement. there Is 2 ~c~~~:· ~~
room, and a large bath. Has a beautiful built
hutch and oth'er recessed shelves. Also •has ,
sifting.porch. $25,000.00
·

REALTORS:

Located in the cl.ty. Thrae
bedrooms, 2 baths. Tax
abatement, Realtor owned.

paved county I'Oidl

Are you tired of paying rent? Here's your chance to
be the landlord. 8 houses on Lincoln Drive and 1 on
Brown Alley: Very well kept properties. Mollt of the
houses have 2 bedrooms. Living room, Kitchen, &amp;1
bath. A ~Ouple are larger. Nice income. All have vinyl
siding. $195,000.00 ·
.

$55,000. 11504

LOO.KING FOR A- NEW
HOllE FOR a112,000? -

IIIIIEDIATE POSIESIIONI
$25,000 will let yau move In
fastl 3 bedroom• 14 ·~70'
mobile home with room
addition. Approx. 1 acre iewn,

' complete With stock.
Corn Hollow Rd.-A feed store
Has a small block building and a huge block building
partially finished, an ol4j barn and approx. 1.3839
acres. Call lor your appointment.

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

BLACK HAWK ROAD-Five
acres m~ . mostly wooded
with a large b~lldlng on
property. Priced below
$15.000 00 12005
IRICK CONOO - Offers 2 Brick riome · In a good
bedrooms, 2 bathe. Located neighborhood, 3 bedrQOms,
within the city, close to 2 lull baths, family room,
everyt.h ing.
Low garage, all this s~uated on
120x264 lot tor a prce ot
Maintenance. 569,000.00 a
$150,000
1122

r

OWNER RELOCATINGII MUST SELL Level corner 200' x 100' .Lot In
NOWII. Absolutely No Reasonable Offer Syr~cuse with a 11 Story Frame Home.
Rtlusedll 2 Story Frame Home, 1 1i2 2-3 bedrooms, fireplace, bath, utility,
baths, 3 bedrooms, lull basement-, TPC many new reparis including roof, vinyl
water, 2 car carport. Newer Repairs. siding. 2 car garage with attached
Approx. 4. 75 Acres: Energy efficient , workshop. Very Nice home - Great
outside . wood burner. Private setting Location. Owner Aelocatlngll ASKING
Consider Offer.
close to town. ASKING $29,900. COME $45,000 May
. __. .•..
MAP(t: AN OFFERII OWNER
.
.;.; .

Beech St. Middleport-An affordable 3 bedroom ranch
home with an equipped kitchen, and heat pump. Has
chain link fenced back yard with 8 x 10 outbuilding.
Was $37,000.00.
New $34,000.00
·

LOT· 2.8 ACRES m/1$15,000
County- tw~Kable, moe!ly
.. '-'· Nice~ to build.

,.

Carolyo Wuell • 441-1007.

Darteoe

,,

.

RACINE-Modular Home 28' x 60' wkh 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. equipped kitchen,
fireplace, etec. F.A. &amp; C/A. Roomy 2 car
garage, dull basement, paved road. Nice
neighborhood, Lovely Setting. 2 Acres of
level" laying ground. OWNER WANTS

TOSELLII
MIDDLEPORT • Very Nice Coder two
slqry Franca Home. carpet, Interior
plllter/drywall, F.A.N.G. heat. 7-8 rooma
with 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 baths, Ioyer,
apace.
dack utlltly area, attic _
Woodburner · l.nsert. IMMEDIATE
~EIJSIONII
.

Nice Affordable Home.- POMEROY- 3
bedrooms, gas heat, applia·n~es,
including washer and dryer. Approx. 112
acre with fenced yard. Full basement. .
PRICE REDUCED TO $15,000
PRICE REDUCED • RACINE • OWNER
WANTS TO S"ELL QUICKII Approx.
1.873 acres, with a 1991 • 14' x 70'
Mobile Home. 2 bedrooms, bath, front
porch, deck. ceiling fans, appliances.
CiA. B.G. furnace. TPC- water.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIOt-111
WAS $29,900
NOW $25,500

HELP WANTED!! WE
HAVE BUYERS! I WE
NEED LISTINGS!!
CONTACT US IN
PERSON OR BY
PHQNE WE'LL TELL
YOU HOW TO GET
YOUR HOME SOLD!!

'

'•

•

•

�..... Dl• .. ) ...

Pomeroy • Mlddllport.

.. "wl

-----

wv

OH• Point

Independence Day

•

Eckrich Truckload .
Celebration ~ale

••••.., ..... s••••,
I AM-10 PM
291 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 011.

"

Accepts Credit Cards

THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

WE ACCEPT WIC COUPONS ·
DOUBLE COUPONS

OR DETAILS

ECKRf(~ ·s~IC!ED

· ECKRICH CHOPPED

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2oL

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P
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$ . ·. 19 .

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&lt;

·. Reg, lfali-.n, Jalapen,a.... .

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SWIFT PREM

$ ·. .59

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SWIF~ ~RE~IUM

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$ -~.' ,4' .

. .

Canned Hams ••!:•=··-·· 6
Beef.or Pork S1zzlean ·· · ·
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·,
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129 SWIFTPR~UM
.. .
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TURKEY BACO,...........
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GROUND

CHUCK

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USDA CHOICE BEEF
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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>mcguire</name>
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    <tag tagId="275">
      <name>russell</name>
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