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                  <text>Alo ng the River

$1.00

Wets retl ~111:
The •work'
in fireworks

...

Hi:-· 80
Low: 50s

Criterium kicks off festival -Page C1

Details
on PageA2

Hydro project on schedule -PageA3

-Featured on page B-1

•

tmts
A Multimedia Inc .. Newspaper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Pt. Pleasant · July 2, 1995

Go.v ernor signs
33.88 budget;
•

Ohio Gov. George
Volnovlch signs a$33.8
billion, two-year budget
as he works In his office
late Friday. Volnovlch
beat the midnight
deadline - when the

0

Vetoes·teacher tenure

. previous state budget
expired· by six hours.

"The provisions submitted to me in this bill not only
contradict my goals ·in this regard. but constitute a step
backwards from c~ent law," Voinovich said in a news ,
·
••
release.
"The Ohio Education Association has minimized the
positive evaluation aspects of the original language and
created additional protections for unsatisfactory teachers
by easing already lax standards,'· he said. ·
OEA officials could not be reached for comment Friday

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov. George Voinovich
jettisoned a pet project, then signed a record $33.8 billion
budget for. the next two years.
Voinovich used his ,line-item veto power 18 times on
mostly minor matters. But in one not-so-minor veto, he
opted to kill a section .dealing with teacher tenure and
performance evaluation - including some long-sought
changes - rather than accept the version passed by the
Legislature.
·

Vol. 30, No. 21

night. A security guard answering the
Columbus headquarters said all had le~t for
Voinovich spokesman Mike Dawson said the
tr'!tion would continue to try to get legislation '\lal;sed
making it easier for school districts to get rid
teachers.
, ,Generally. Yoinovich was pleased with the h•lrluet
~ "This is a-productive and fiscally
·
buclget
that takes important steps toward accompl

he said in a news release.
The budget increas~s the personal income tax exemption for taxpayers and
their spouses from $650 to $750 in the~
first year. and by another $100 in the
second. The exemption for dependents •
increases from $650 to $850 to $1,050.
The change will save the a family of
four earning $32.000 a year about$45 in
the second y,ear and cost $70 million.
The budget does not include
' Voinovich's plan to transfer money from
wealthier scliool districts to poorer ones:
Critics dubbed it "Robin Hood" and
said it would make it difficult for school
districts to pass tax levies.
Instead. the budget addresses the equity issue by increasing money for poor school districts from $75 million
t'his year to $90 million in the coming year, and $100
million the year after.
It also increases the amount the state counts as locally
contributed money when it.figures how much districts get
under the complicated financing formula. The changes
shifts about $25.5 million from high-wealth to moderate;
to low-wealth districts.
·

City targets ·s pring Valley Unso
for annexatiorNrttempt
mystery:
'92 shooting vexes
Meigs authorities

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis officials
· have targeted the Spring Valley area for
annexation, but are still defining which
By JIM FREEMAN
}
portions can "realistically" be added to the
Times-Sentinel Staff
•
city.
SALEM CENTER - On May 9. 1992.
A public me'eting to address annexation
searchers combing a wooded area in rur~l Meigs
questions from property owners .has been
County found the body of turkey hunter Ronald
scheduled by the City Commission for 7
E. Pohl, lying face down on top of his shotgun
p.m.'July II in the Activities Building at
- the apparent victim of an accidental shootGallipolis Developmental Center.
mg.
City Manager Matlhew Coppler said an
At the time. investigators thougl:ll they would
annexation committee comprised of city
soon determine who shot Pohl. However, more
officials and citizens agreed the area west
than three. years later, circumstances·surroundof the city out State Route 160 to and ,
ing his death - including the identity of the UNSOLVED MYSTERY- The shooting of tur·
including Spring Valley would be the likeshooter - continue to vex law enforcement key hunter Ronald Pohlln May,1992, contln·
ues to baffle law enforcement officers lnclud;
_liest site to annex.
·
officers.
The committee is preparing informa.tio1n· I
~1-f'jJ"~U. .. r&lt; l&lt;now liille aoouti'Oiil's Ta:~t mo-- lng Meigs County Sheriff Jamea.M~Soultby,
shown here examlrilng a roadside shrine
to outline potential benefits in service and
ments. but Meigs County Sheriff James M. erected In Pohl's memory.
costs that joining the city would present.
Soulsby explained some of wliat investigators
.. "This was the. proposed area residents
do know.
'
the cabin on a neighboring piece of property.
felt was a primary site to annex, but the
Pohl. 58. and his son, Mike, al so. of Dayton. • Potts reported hearing severo~! shots in the
exact sections have not been defined,"
arrived early that morning at the cabin of Tom area at approximately 10 a.m .. Soulsby said.
Coppler said.
Potts- also a Dayton-area resident, on PricePohl, who wore a white beard, had a mesh bag
0
"Whafwill happen. afterthe public meetStrong ~.qad in Salem Township. Upon their sl.ung over hi s shoulder containing a turkey
ing, is that the committee will sit down
arrival. the two reportedly
decoy. His hat was hangwith property owners and determine what
went directly intd the
"We're stillinvestigating it. ing on a branch nearby.
can be realistically "annexed into the city,"
woods to hunt. separating
Pohl ·had be-en· Slfot
SEEKING EXPANSION- Gallipolis officials hope the corporation limits sign on State from each other. Soulsby I want to solve it··· This is the from behind with a load
he added . .
' The city currently provides water. sewer Route 160 leading Into town can be extended fi!I:MII!r out to the Spring Valley area as they said.
only one I've got (unsolved oroo buckshot - an ungear for a "pro-active approach" to annexa'Tml'l. City leaders said they are getting
and fire protection to the area.
Mike came back around shooting)."
· usual size of shot for tur·
The city is barred from initiating annex - annexation Inquiries from areas surrounding Gallipolis. ·
1p.m. and his father didn't,
key hunting. according
[
ation drives itself, but is looking to propSoulsby said. He and Potts
Sheriff James M. Soulsby to Meigs County Game
erty owners to circulate petitions. The committee can assist resi- looking at what the city could do to s'top the stockyard," Coppler dro_ve~oundthearealook-~
.
__
_
.
Protector Keith W!Jud.
dents w!Til annexation efforts solely by offering Information ana explained. "ZoningproVided Iry!hecily would certainly l&lt;cep the - ing for him before calling the sheriffs office. 00 buckshot is generally used for hunting large
property us~ge the same. but the city has nothing to do with the
guidance, Coppler explained.
A search party. consisting of deputies. emer- game at clo.~e range and in heavy cover.
·
sitin$
of the stockyard." · ·
·
"There is some citizen interest in annexation. more so than we've
gene)' medical service members. wildlife officMost of the .30-caliberbuckshot pellets struck
seen in some time." Commission President Carol O'Rourke said.
Anti,stockyard sentiment and annexation were not coincidental. ers aj\d other volunteers was quickly organized Pohl in the upper body. neck and head. One of
· Coppler said interest in annexation ·-has been spurred by-some Cop pier explained, and he said he hopes11n annexation move won 't and, at about 4:15p.m.. Potts. who joined one of the pellets struck him in the Iicari with another
Spring Valley residents' opposition to the establishme':t of a become part of the controversy betwee'n the stockyard' s opponents the groups of searcher, .found the 6-foot 2-inch. lodging ·itself in his brain, an autopsy· report
Producers Livestock Association-operated stockyard on land near and supporters.
250-pound Pohllying face -down in a wooded concluded.
Thre~: Spring Valley residents filed suit in Gallia County Comthe Galli a County Junior Fairgrounds.
.
area several hundred yards behind and above
Continued on page A2
Continued on page ~2
"The residents there discussed the value of zoning and were

Budget commission denies
additional funding. for parks

News capsules

By JIM FREEMAN .
.
Times-Sentinel Staff
·
POMEROY ~The Meigs County Budget Commission Friday denied a
request by county park officials seeking additional funding from the county's
local government allotment.
.
. Early last month,budget commission members met with park director Mary
Powell and park board member Jim Pape who asked the commission for part
of local government allotment funds . .
.
The local gove(Jiment allotment, whtch does not currently provtde any
. funding, (or the park district; is divided among local muniCipalities and
townships.
· ·
The park-district had ~ought $44,000.
. . .
,
"It will-be very difficult for the budget commtsstOn to take money away from
these financially strapped institutions who provide police, fire; safety and
highway necessities for their citizens and put that money into a park district,"
reads a letter the budget commission prepared for park director Mary Powell.
"It is the belief of the budget commission that the park district should make
application to the county commissioners to be included within the' county
budset if there are sufficient funds available for county purposes," the letter
added.
.
.
For this year, county commtsstoners reduced thedtstnct s f11ndmg allowmg
it ~o operate for only' half a ye~r. Park·off•ce functtons halted Fnday. Earlt~r,
commissioners relieved the park offtce fro~ duttes related to the promotton of
tourism in the county.
·
Prosecuting Attorney John R. Lentes, a member of the b.ud~et commission,
said the commission could not change the a
tons a
ttme even 1f local
political sul;xlivisions agreed 10 do so.
However, Lentes speculated that it w Jd be difficult to get the subdivisions
to give up their money.
.
Budget commission president and county Treasurer Howard Frank satd he
would not change the local governi'QeJII distribution.
"It affects too fllany people," he said.
•
Lerites suggested the park district attempt to get state funding through a
program for parks an(!· recreation.
•
Powell said the stare funds are not for a~ministrative fees or to run an office.
"They are for upgrading eltisting parks and facilities," she said.
Powell said her office administers programs such as soceer and the PuntPass Kick program.
c

,

•

•

GOOD MORNING

Factory orders up
1.4 percent in May

Factory

WASHINGTON (AP)- Orders
to U.S. factories rose 1.4 percent in
May, recovering from three straight
declines.
The .Commef~e ·Department said
Friday the broadly-based increase·
was the largest since orders rose 2 .
percent in December.
Analysts predicted the rebound
after demand plunged 2.2 percent in
April and fell by smaller amounts
the previous two mpJ)ths. The string
of three straight monthly declines
had been the first time that happened
~ince March,thro,ugh May 1993.
Economic growth ,has showed
some recent signs of modest recov-

•

Oiilers

· Fraud, errors cost
food ~stam~_pr9gram
$1.7 billion· last year

Today's Times-Sentinel

___:~u Sectk!nN • 178 P!!CC5

WASHINGTON (AP)- Ameri btal new ordem in billions of dollars,
cans collected $I. 7 billion in food
seasonally adjusted
stamp benefits they did not deserve
last year, according to a federal sur$3l0
vey. It blames the loss on mistakes
300
by local welfare caseworkers and
,290
recipients who provide inaccurate or
fra\ldulenl information about their
270
incomes.
According.to. the.Agriculture De'260
partment,
7.65 percent of the $22.7
250
billion
in
food
stamps paid out last
240
year went to people who either were
230
not entitled to receive them, or colJFMAM
..., leered more than they should have.
11115
Tli·ousands of other low-income
Ameri
can~ were ,cjenie~ $608 mil ery.
lion
in
food stamps that they should
Earlier Friday, the government re,
have
recei'ledbecauseofmistakes
in
ported that gross domestic producl rose at a 2.7 percent annual rate in the firs.t
welfare
offices
across
the
country.
quarter this year. That is less than half the 5.1 percent booming growth in the
Nearly 27 milliqn Americans get
last three months of 1994.
The M~y boost in factory orders pqshed them 8'.8 percent higher for the first help with their g{ocery bills frOJ.ll
food stamps. ·
five months this yea!' compared to tho same period a year ago.

. -

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Local
Obituaries
Sport§
Alon'g the River
Weather

Dl
83
03-7
Insert
A4
A3
AS

Cl-6
81
A2

Columns
.lack Andcaon·
Fred Crow
JjmFreemap

Jjm Sapds .
c '"'· Obko . . . . hbllnlq Co.

CC?ngress. sends Clinton 50-state ~xpansion of Medicare Select program
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senior citizens in all 50 states would be able to '.
buy extra Medicare coverage at a discount by agreeing to use managed care
under~ bill given final approval Friday in the House.
. The House voted 350-~ to expand the Medicare Select demonstratio.n
project.. Since 1992, the policies have been sold in just 15 states.
Despite the lopsided vote, several senior Democrats acc~sed the Republicansofrushing through an expansion of a program that may q:&gt;st Medicare
money.
~ •

President Clinton i~ expected to sign the me~sure, elttendinga program that
was due to ~pile at midnight Friday.
Without the extension, insurers could not sign up any new customers,
although the 450,000 current MedJ&amp;are Select c u sto~e~s would.not lose the1r
coverage.
·
Medicare· Select is a new type of Medigap supplemental policy. In
exchange for discounted premiums, seniors agree to go to selected hospitals
and other providers.
.

...
I
' .

�•

•
j

' .jiunbq 1llimn-JientiNI
Page A2-•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

OHIO Weather
Sunday, July 2
Accu-W~ forecas&amp; for daytime conditions and high u.mpon~~ures

MICH.

1MansJield j 74• I•

~

Youngstown

""·

-~

• IColumbus In• I

. W.VA.

...... _... dilt1-(f-.
KY.

~

..

, ..........~..~ · ···· ~++
.,... ·::.;::~

Showers T-siDm!S Rain Flurrie•

Snow

Ice

SIXlf!JI Pt Cloudy Clo::cly
Cl1995 Accu-~. Inc.

\Itt ......ted p,... G/aphiciNel

P·leasant conditions·to rule
:tor ·remainder of weekend
The record high for Saturday at
By Tbe Associated Press
the
Columbus weather station was
Ohioans are seeing cooler, drier
98,
set
in 1953. The record low of
·and less humid weather Ibis week44
was
set
in 1988.
end.
Sunrise
on· Sunday will be at
Clear skies were expected SaiUr·
6:07a.m.
!lny iligbt as hlgll pressure and dry
Weather forecast:
air centered over ·the state. Low
Sunday
... Sunny and. pleasant.
temperatures dipped to 50 to 55.
Highs
75
to
80.
Sunday will be sunny and pleasMonday
...
Panly cloudy. Mornant willl highs ranging from 75 to
ing
lows
55
to
60. Highs from the
80.
70s
to
the
lower 80s.
upper
The Fourth of July holiday
Extended
forecast:
looks fairly seasonal Expect panly
Fourth
of
July
and Wednescloudy skies with scattered thunday
...
Partly
cloudy
with scattered
derstorms. mostly during the afterl.ows
showers
and
thunderstonns.
noon and early evening . Highs will
in
the
mid
and
up(ier
60s.
Highs
in
reac h tbe middle 80s in mpst
the
mid
and
upper
80s.
places.

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks
By The Associated Press
The following numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohio and Wesi
Virginia lotteries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 1-3-0
Pick 4: 7-6-3-9
· Buckeye 5: 15-20-23-25-27
Three Ohio Lottery tickets show
·the right five-number combination
in Buckeye 5, and c;!ICh entitles the
owner to claim a $100,000 prize,
(ll(be lottery anDOIDlced Saturday.
The winninL tickets were sold in
· Amherst, MaSsillon and East Liver-

worth $250. The 5.463 with three
of the numbers are each wonill $)0.
The 51,568 with two of ttie numbers are each worth $1.
The Ohio Lottery will pay our
$905,379 to winners in Friday's
Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,527,103.
. In the other daily game, Pick 4
Numbers players wagered
$342,595 and will share $134,700.
The jackpot for Saturday's
Super Lotto drawing was $30 million.
pool.
WEST VIRGINIA
.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
Daily 3: 8-7 .()
~ $452,638.
Daily 4: 8-0o1."6~
The 168 Buckeye 5 game tickets ·
Cash 25: 6-16-17"18-29-23
wiill four of the numbers are each

r

wv

Sunday, July 2, 1995

Senators block- ~pending cuts measure ·

Tri-County Briefs:

By DAVID ESPO
lienee Day break.
other Democrats supporled lhe and many of the members of his
A!&lt;&lt;octated Press W~iter
1'he gntllock on the floor stood spending cut bill on the Senate own party in Congress.
WASHINGTON'....:. lita prelude in contrast to ·a news conference floor, noting it was a follow-up to a
Wellsto'ne said the measure
to moriths of combat , two lonely where Dole, House Speiu&lt;er Newt measure Clinton had vetoed.
would burt some of the "most vulliberals blocked Senate approva l Gingrich of Georgia and other
The replacement measure ; nerable" citizens of his cold
Friday of spending cuts in social GOP lea!lers hailed Thursday's de vi sed through negotiations weather state with its cuts in energy
progrdJlls while Republicans cele· congressional passage of a plan to belweim Republ ican leaders and assistance, housing and oth'er probrated passage of tl1e1t plan to hal· eliminate deficits by 2002.
the White House, restored $772 grruns. ''I'm going to he an advoancc U1e budget.
"We're. reversing a trend as far million for educatir.n, environmen- catc tor illese people," he said.
In a reference 10 a. strin g of
Parting company with Prisident as crushing debt. We're reversing a tal and olber programs favored by
Clinton and other party elde rs, trend a• far as crushing taxalion," the White House. Thai was offset spe nding cu t measures ahead, he
Scns. Paul Wellstone of Minnesota said Dole. "We believe the Ameri- by $794 million iu cut.&lt;, about half said: " What I'm saying is if thi s is
and Carol Moseley-Draun of llli - can people will be proud of it of it from travel ru1d administrative a glimpse of what' s to come, I'm
nnis prevented a fit•11 vote on a bill · because we kept our word."
cost.' lbroughout the govenunent.
not going to he silent. II would be
to cut $16.4 billion from previously
The budg~t ·Outline, which ~"It's better than half a loaf,"
wrong."
·
• enacleu spending while funneling cleared ove r solid Democratic .
hi e smd.
While liberal s pull!d in one
aid to victims of the Califo rnia opposition, calls for $894 billion in
linton, in a written statement direction , conservalives tugged in
earthquake and other disasters.
savings, much of it from Medicare, Thursday night, said: •'The new anoth er. House Republicans
"TI1e people of my state would Medicaid, education and welfare, bill achieves the same runount of released a Jeuer to Clinton saying
not wailt to see me just lay down and call s for a $245 billion tax cut.
defi cit reduction as the previou s~ they woulu vote against ahy meaon this railroad track and ge t run
While the president's sigl)ature bill, butil does so the right way_ sure to raise ille debt limit until U1e
over without saying anything," was not needed on the budget out· by protecting investment.~ in chil- government is on a "true glide
said Mo!&lt;eley-Braun. She and Well- line. his assent will be required to dre n, education, national service, path" to a balanc ed bull get oy
stone objected to cuts in job train- put the follow-up mea sures into job1:raining and the environment 2002 or sooner.
·
ing, henting IL'sisOince fnr the poor law. Senate Minority Leader Tom that Congress wanted to cut...
The IID:uelslmfKirllUtt; llecause
and other domestic programs.
Daschle, D-S.D .. predicted Climon
That's not how Wellstone .and the Treasury is expected to reach
An irritated Majority· Leader would use his veto repeatedly to try Moseley-Braun· saw it. Exercising the limit of its borrowing ability in
·nob Dole of Kansas shelved the to force Republicans In abandon . .their prerogative , they blocked mid-October, and legislation would
1Dole's effortHo bring the measure be needed to extend it.
measure. at least until lawmakers "extreme" proposals.
relum frmn a week-long lndepcnIroni cally, Daschle and mo,;t to a final vole.
The me:L~ure cleared the H11use
on Thursday night despite signifi.
cant Democratic opposition that
Continued from page A1
city's 1 pe;cent income tax, address- reflected the gulf between Clinton
man Pleas-Soturt last week to halt a ingquestionsonwhatincomeistaxed
land leasefortl'le PLAfacilily.Ground and what isn't.
was broken for the stockyard SaturFaced with shrinking population
day.
and revenues, the city identified anClarifying the .city 's position on nexation as one of its· primary goals
annexation and providing infonna- for the next five years.
lion will be the focus of the public
Coppler said he feels annexation
has ils bene fils for Spring Valley resi meeting, Coppler said.
"There 's a .lol of confusion that dents receiving city water. Current
surroundsannexationandlhal'ssome· lines need replacement to increase
times what kills it," he said. "We 're walet pressure in the area, he said, but
See
trying to take a pro-active approach." the city cannot apply for grant fundJerry Bibbee
"Weareintheprocessofpreparing ing lo improve its system in
Marvn Keebaugh
Doc Hayman
material, including fact sheets, lobe unincorporated areas.
able to answer questions," O'Rourke
"We 're looking at solutions 10 wa- ~ ·~--....,.------,
said. "We want to make a coherent ter problems without raising thpales,"
Just 20 Mlriutos Drive Straight Up
Gun metal gray w/maroon leather
presentation to property owners.''
Coppler said. "This is one of lhe best
Rl. 7 North lhru TuppeiS Plains
interior-Dual Power Seats, All
The fact sheets include infonnation ways we can think of to improve
~2945 State Rt. 7
on rates for water, sewage and gar- se rvices ahd keep the area growing. It
Coolville, Ohio 45723
Cadillac options. Perfectly
bageservicethecityfeelsiscompara- will help the city and county both
. { 14} 66 -3 50
maintained car. Only 4,1,,000 miles
6
7 3
lively cheaper, she explained. The grow, because our fates are tied to·
Only $18,900
sheet also explains features of lhe . gether."

GALLIPOLIS - Bidwell rontractor Tom Holstein has boarded
•up the front of the first floor of the Newberry building at 53-55
t:ourt St. until a decision is made by the owner on tht: building's
future , City Manager Matthew Coppler said'.
Tile barricade was erected in e~pectati&lt;:m of the Cfl)wds in downtown Gallipolis during the River Recreation Festival. The barrier
will be temporary, Coppler said.
,
City officials met Thursday with Holstein, who bas been retained
by Mike Nonillup of Gallipolis to bring the building down to its ftrSt'
floor.
· Furore plans call for the facade to be taken down to the ftrst layer
• of bricks, be sealed, and erect a fence in the rear of the building to
prevent entry into IJ!e aging structure, Coppler said.
·
"They told us they're committed to getting the situation taken
care of," Coppler said.
Tile building, weakened by a nearby fire in November 1993 and
by heavy snows· that winter, has been the focus of safety concerns
from the city administration. The city flied suit in September 1994
to force owner Hru;old Newberry to repair or demolish the structure .
Newberry and Northup were at the time also involved in lltiga- lion over ownership of the building, but fiave since resolved. th e
issue. The city's suit is still pending in GalUa Counly Common
. Plea' Court "to ensure it will be taken care of," Coppler sa ill.

GALLIPOLIS - ·Two area natives have been promoted to
sergeant by the .State Highway Patrol and will joinUy serve a• assistant·post commanders at Ironton, Patrol Superintendent Col. Warren
H. Davies announced Friday.
Receiving the promotions were Troopers Richard L. Meadows
Jr. and James R. Hutton.
Meadows, a graduate of Hannan Trace High School, joined the
patrol in 1984 as a dispatcher at the Gallia-Meigs Post. He entered
trooper trdining in April 1988 and was commissioned the following
September.
,
Meadows has been assigned to Ironton throughout his career and
has been a canine handler for tiJe past .three years.
.
He has been twice honored by the patrol for excellence - flfSt in ·
!992 for capturing lwo armed robbery suspects, and in 1994 for res·
·
cuing a crash victim from a ~uming cat. · ·
Meadows, who bas accumulated credits from Ohio University,
currently resides in Albany.
Hutton, a Meigs High school graduate, entered the patrol academy in November 1982 and received his commission the following
March. He ha• been assigned to Ironton since and wa' honored as
that post's Trooper of the Year in 1989.
Hutton currently resides in South Point with his wile Sally and
daughter Leah, 11 . .

Fire dafT!.ages car on U.S. 35
CENTERVILLE - Fire of unknown origin damaged a car on
U.S. 35 two miles !rom the Rio Grande exit Friday, the Centerville
.
Volunteer Fire Department reported. ··
Two trucks and 10 firefighters- responded at 9:14 p.m. and used
75 gallons of water to extinguish !be blaze in the 1985 Dodge, a
department spokesperson said. No damage estimate has been established and the owner of the car was not immediately known Satur. day.

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.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City Police are investigating the
theft of truck parts from a city business.
. Paul Martin, owner of Martin's Garage, Ill Vine Sr., informed
police Friday that a carburator and intake manifold were taken from
U1e garage. Time of the theft is unknown, officers said. .
In ot11er matters; police cited James M. Montgomery, 19, 756
Second Ave., Gallipolis, for driving under the influence, and. Anthony W. Syrus, 18, 742 Kemper Hollow Road, Galli)llllis, for underage consumption. The citations were issued early Saturday. .
·- -~ Ciled by police Friday was Jobn M. Tyler, 22, Glouster, for no .motorcycle endorsement.
.

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AMP-Ohio sets Sept. 1 deadline
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Gallipolis
446·7263

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Saturday, July 8th -.12:00.Noon til ??
Over 40.singing groups and presenting":

"Youth in Gospel Music''• :
For mGre, information

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7 N01111IIIN~ PfiN

'!he

By GEORGE
Times
SentinelABATE
Staff
- , on target"
.. .
.
.
.
•
Earlter ttu s.year. le\leral CIIVJBELLEVIL~E. W.Va. -Con- ronmental ott aca als !t ee nsed the
$trucuon continues IO mov.e for- final dralt assessmcllt tnr the 25
W!'fd 0~ the Bellev.a~~.e hydr~elec- n'lil'es of power line s that will
tnc project, Amenc,m Mumcapal extend between Reedsville and a
Power of Ohio officials said recent· RutJamJ s.ubsl.aliun .
- 1¥
.
Federal ofl1cials~ hatl to dnmsc
. The coffer dam construcuon betw een fiv e pot ential routes,
should be completed wtthm 60 to including Uuee in West Vif£inia
Editor's note: Names and addtesses, are printed as they
90days •. saad Plul Me1er, AMP - and two in Ohio, sai d Ce leste
appear on official reports. All newsworthy actions will he puhOhm project manager. AMP-Oh1o Miller, a spokeswoman ror Ure Feuofhcaals .have se t a deadhne for eral Energy Rc£ulatory Cnmmisli.•hed without exception,
·
completion of the coffer dam at sion .
•A • •
•
Sept. I.
. .
More than ~0 pe rcent of the
The _coffer dam wall dtvert the right-of-ways have been signey for
RACINE - Six· people were Slilte Route 124, the Gallia-Meigs Ohm Raver away from_ the edge of the Meigs Co unty pnwcr line route.
injured in a two-car crash Friday on Post of the State Highway Patrol U1e dam so. crews can set illc shafts Daggett s:tid .
reported.
.
for,generating turbmes. Me1 er smd.
"A few more people we need 10
Taken to Veterans Memorial
fhe colter dams consast ~f 67- tafk with. and th en we' u have tri
Hospital by the Meigs EMS weli foot-wlde cyltnders that wall be take it 10 th e attorneys, " Dnggen
drivers
Shawn B. Diddle, 24, Syra- filled wath gravel and st()oe, Meter said.
(USPS 525-ROO)
· cuse, and Deborah S. Cleek, 38. said. The temporary d~m ~ill be
Even U1ou g11 not a.JI !)f UIC casePublished each Sunday. 825 Third Ave:.,
400 Spring Ave .. Pomeroy.
removed once consi(:"Citon 15 COil!· men I., have hccn acquired, thi s will
Gallipoli ~. Ohio, by 1he Ohio Valley Publishing
The EMS also transported four . plered, he added. · ·
'
.
not. hold up the line construction
Company/Multimedia. Inc. Second clas., posl passengers
i_
n
Cleek
'
s
car
Cre_ws
hav_
e
alr
eady.
burlt
a
portion,
he auded.
a~ paid fit Galhpo l i ~. Ohio 4~631. Bnterrd a.~
-K"~llnd d;w malling.w.utn at fomcmy. Qbio,
Danye! L. Smith. 16. and Hea~c;r ~ recrea~on !aCti!IY. _w~ach IS
of -~We've started l.lhCIIILnf lime,"
PoSI Office.
R. SIIUth,, 19, both of 400 Spnng the project, Meter smd: Most o ffie Daggett said of the line extension.
AMP-Oilio ueeded 10 secure
Ave., and Darla K. Childress, 30, land ncar the Bellevolle slle has
Membtr: ~ Auociau:d Preu , and the Ohio
Nc:w£pn~ r Association.
and _Lacey D. Childress, 7, both of · been c~eared.
.
.
165· parcels with casemenr ngrcc-Racme.
.
. One mtlhon cub1c yards of dart ments along tbi s route, Daggett
SUNDAY ONLY
Diildle and Danyel Smlth were wtll be removed dunng tlns projeCI, said.
SiJBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Roo it
.
. . .
Officials \Jrokc ground on the
both treated and released from Meier said.
One Week.................................................. $1 .00
VMH
,
but
the
others
were
trans'
.
.
One
gale
of
t~e
West
Vtrgama
$153
million project April 20. The
One Yenr .................................. ............... $52.00
felTed by MedFlight or the EMS 10. sttle of th~ limn wtll he closed off hydroelectri c plant wili cost more
, SINGLE COPY PRICE
Columbus hospitals. a VMH for the proJect, Meaer adder(._
·
Sunday ... .............................. ..... ....... ......... $1 .00
The first barge slnpment as set In
spokesperson said.
All in fair conuition Saturday arnv~ July 2~ lrom New Orlea~s.
No subscription5 by mnil permined in areas
where motor canier ~ervice i~ ovnilable .
were Cleek and Heather Smith at La., Meter smd . Mosl of the equtpGrant Medical Center; Qarla Chil- ment will arrive by the end of 'the
The Sunday times-Sentinel will not be re~pon­
dress at Ohio State University Hos - year.
.
sible for .&lt;1dvnnce pnymenu rrv~d e to carrier~ .
pitals; and Lacey Childre.&lt;S at Chil·
. Th~ first un_lt of the hydroelecDallyandSundo,
dren's Hospital. •
trtc ~lant remmns set tor gomg .on .
- - - · -'-~- - · - MMLSUBSCIUPTIQ&amp;_
noMERO'I
l~&lt;ld&lt;GollloCounty
- ;-"-'- -'!'be patrol said Diddle was-east~ I me m A ugu s1~ I-997, •md -li:~
. on-•-~--·"'
tl W«ks ....................................S2J92
bound at 2:27 p.m. when he lost Da£gett, executive vice president
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
l6Week• ........................................... S4?.06
control of his car went over the of AMP-Ohto . The seco nd umt
992-2588
52
w"''~~.;; 0~;;;;,;·(i~iii~ c.;;;~;;· $92 . 56
center line and stru~k Cleek's west- should be running hy tl1e following
VINTON
il Weeks ................................. ........ $2Ht
bound car head-on. severely dam- Novcmbt;r.
Gallla County Display Yard
l6Weeks......
.. .................. ......149.66
aging both vehicles.
"Everything's moving along .
155 Main St.
52 w,.,, · ................................. ......... $%.l0
Diddle was cited for left of cen· fine," Daggeu said. "Everything is
. 388-8603

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

See
Jerry Bibbee·
Marvn Keebaugh
Doc Hayman

By GEORGE ABATE,
Times-Sentinel Staff ·
COOL VIL.LE - Firecrackers
j ust don't excite one area cannon
manufacturer.
Paul and Sue Miller have built
cann ons at their Coolvil le shop
since 1989.
"It' s kind of a bug you g_et,"
Miller said of his craft. "If you like
the noise, that's it."
· The couple' sl5-year-old company ha s a six -month backlog o(
'
requests and cannot keep up with
the orders for Civil War-era cannons th at pour in from across the
·'
country, Miller said.
The Mill ers restored two 11pound Napoleons and two 6-pound
Caf\nnns that now are displayed at the Ohio .
CREATING CANNON - A CoQivllle family
bronze cannons for tl1e inauguraSlatehouse.
Paul Miller shows a cannon he and .
bas
built
cannons
in
.the
a~ea
for
th
e
last
seven
tion of Gov. George Voinovich .
·hi
s
family
recenlly
refurhished. (T-S photo)
Paul
and
Sue
Mill&lt;r
have
restored
four
·
years.
Cold weather halted the use of
these .weapoi1s U1is Jmmary, but in
September th ey will be brought 15 years ago. Since tl1en U1cy have non, he added.
oul,iue the Statehouse, Miller sa id.
built about 200 cannon.
. Later tl1i s year, the Millers will
A relative bought the l'ami ly a cast a cannon with a 1,100-pound
Currently, tl1e frunily is workin g
on a cannon for country singer cannon, since Miller had collecteu barrel that will totally weigh nearly
Hank Williams Jr., Miller added.
guns . Miller, who was operating a 1,900 pounds.
The Millers have maue Spanish cabi net shop in Baltimore, Md .,
A full size cannon can fire near. 4-pounders thai the Army displays buill the carriage lor the cannon.
ly-two miles. he added .
When a friend di splayed th e
''Most people uon't realize how
at St. Augustine. Fla. The Army
Nafion:il Guard at Golden, Colo .. c:umotl''in a nearby gun shop, J!CLI· acc urate th ey are," Miller sai d.
Member Ne'll' Vorll S loe~ t xchanou
ha' :in 1841 6-pounder ouilt by the pie started as king where Ihey could "They were phenomenally accn M~ber SI PC
1
ralc .'~
Millers .
-·.., get sit,nilar cannons,
·
·
The Millers also mak e cannonThe family travel ed to Civil
An experienced gun crew could
OFFERING:
balls betwevn one m1d eight inches War re-enactments, out U~e oruer; fire more lhan ll1ree shu1s a minute.
in diruneter for displays.
became so great thm they sw ncheu The Civil War cannons could also
•Stocks
fire grape shot or canisters that
All cannon ~he Millers build are . entirely to manufacturing.
•Corporate Bonds
" It's been hccti.:," Miller said. woulu hnlu 27 nue-inch halls.
functional, from the desktop size to
•U.S. Treasury Securities
The-Millers built up their busi one-ton cannon. Miller's company "Most weeks we work seven days a
ness throu gh ensuring qu:~ity and a
•Mutual Funds
remains the only American manuweek."
. .
.
facturer who will produce these
ThiS year, the l:omdy woll ha ve high degree or detail to eac~ ca n•Insured Tax-Free
non , Miller said.
cannon in all the sizes.
il~ first vacatinn in more than seven
Municipal Bonds
The firm uses a special lecll Cmmon Limited consists of Paul years, Miller added.
nique
In
ouild
the
carriages.
Most
The MiiiCrs work al lea·s t 60
and Sue Miller and their so n-in•Insured Monell' Markel
law. John Lantz.
· . hours a wee k, he audcd. At th at manufacturers build the carriages
·Accounts
Sin ce the family busines s · rate, U1e flflll can create a cmmnn in · from a single beam: But . lhe
Millers holu four beams together
•IRA's
moved to Coolville, they have built two weeks. •
.and
then
laminat
e
them
.
The
about TOO emmons larger than oneRefurbishing ~n . old cannon
Contact: .
quarter size. Nearly by accident. takes as long a' bualdong a new one Millers guarmatcc the GIITi:lgcs will
Jar.Caldwell
the Millers started in the ousiness - taking abOut 400 1\ours a can- ruH splil nr crack .

;J

Karr St., Just off Rt. I

'
Get Up to $25,000 for Home Improvements!

.~,

Police investigating garage theft

MARINE SE-RVICES

MerCruiser
Volvo
Penta
OMC

Demand stays
on rise for area
cannon makers

Area men ·win patrol promotions

WITH BARGAINS

Sund,ay Times-Sentinel/A3

Red, white
and boom

Newberry buildingboarded up

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING

Gallipolis eyes annexation

R;egional

July 2, 1995 ,

•

Free Admission
·concessions -Camping
Rain or Shine'

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~----ru·l-2.-Iw--s-----------------------.~(~~~()--111---IIl---e~·ll--t~~--f-Jf-----------------~---s-u-~-~-T-im-es--s-en-ti-ne-l/-A-4--~.~
•

Amen ca's most powerful special
interest group ts left mumbhng,
stumblmg aQd unsure ot what to do
for lis 33 mtlhon elderly members,
&lt;me can be cenam that Wa~hing!on ' s pohttcal chmate has under-

A Dlviaion of

.r-u:rMDIA, NC.
Ill Court Sl., Pom•roy, Oblo
(614) 991-1156

815 Third A&gt;o., Galllpollo, Oblo
(614) 446-lJ4l

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publllloer
HOBART WUSON JR.
Executive Editor '

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBER of The Associaled Press, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Assocuuion

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome They sbould be len than
300 words long Alllollen are subject to editing and must be signed wtth
name, address and telephone number. No unstgned Jeuers wtll be

publisbed. Lctlen sbould be in good tute. addremng ISSues, not
persona.litaes.

...,.

Letters to the editor
An Independence Day message
Dear Citizens,
I was the 1995 Mernonal Day
speaker in Galhpohs /\llhnugh I
received many compliments for my
speech. 111 refiecllon, I fell there
were 1wo thmgs I should have
pomled out.
Fust. I should have recogmzed
specifically all of those who served
111 World War II. llml war defeated
evil al 11s worsl The Nn1 elton
was a threru to the very ex!Sience
ol ~II humankmu. and IllS a rnaller
nl l1te and JUStice lh.ll people
served 111 that effort As we complete the 50th an111versary of the
end ol WWII, all WWil veterans
deserve special thanks
Secondly, I should have made a
d~recl reference to the newly con·
structed mernonal m lhc park The
mcmonal came mto hemg wllh
some controver:&gt;y. an!,l tt 1s there
hl.!causc of a grem efton of many

another senous concclu

Vr:,ry

heavy on my heart Last week
another one of Gal Ita Counly ·s line
yuung people. F- l lla,twcll. llted

gone a urasttc
''
change

ered tu AARP's DemocraiJC alhes
on CarHiol Hill - may have cnppIed any ho pes oI hallt ng ·•uJe rn II ·

8•' Jack Anderson
T
and
Michael Binstein

. The Amencan Assocm1ion of
Rcmed Persons has he en thrust
mtn d1sam1y over tlle prospecl UJat
·-Congress may 1run as much· as back qf Medicare.
$250 bilhon I rom Med1care over
'"Tlle Med 1care debate, hmh 111
tile llexl Seven Yc.'lrs After suffer- C
·'
.~
ong1ess anu Ill uoe press. IS now
mg a hum•haung defeat w1th the completely one-d1menswnal and
tlemJSe of healll• care legJSlatJon one Sided," Rother wrote "Those
l:bt year, AARP has taken a defen- who traditwnally have supported
·SJve posture regardmg Med1care.
the progrmn are 'out of gas' mlelll1e alann " ev•d•m 111 mlemal lcctually, because all their work
/\ARP memo.,•• rev1cwc·'u by our over ,,uJc past 1ew years 1"" 1ocuseu.•
",..ssocJate D."'e
V••
Alt.•'" regard1'ng on .compre h ensn~c• re 1orm, no!
.u
~·
an upcoming conference !hat's Med1care alone This IS an
.~ the 'Oth
,,
Pc 0&lt;&gt;ged 1o c01 ,1c,·'e
u w,· uo
·'
extreme 1y uangerous
slluauon, an.,.•
of
.red1
care.
The
mos
.
·t
be
d
.•
anlllver '"'Y
,.,,
muSI
remc 1eu as soon as posSIlllleresung 1.,,' •a c&lt;Jnfi·'"IJUal
mem~
hi e - pre t era hi y be fore t hc
&lt;&gt;&lt;
~
randum wrincn March 22 by Congress vmes m late summer on
AARP' s top lobhylst. John Rother, unprecedented Medicare cuts ...
I() hi .,. •,1,.•.. Execut1ve D1re··tor
'1 '11e AARP has tmc1111ona 11 y
, " ·'·' •
L!orace Deets
been unyieldmg in its defense of
In tlJe memo, Rolher atlmtts that Medtcare, res•stmg any and all
th e failure ot health care reform atletnpls to cui the program ·

spectrum presentmg

would

I can and God enables

me, I mou~;n wllh their numhes and
lnenJs and the counlless who love
anJ c:ue tor them II " JUsl all so
trag1c
Young people' When we who
love you share our concern wiib
words hke be carerul, faSien your
seal hell, obey the laws, don't dnve
too ta&gt;t, don't drmk and drive,
don't use drugs. be car~ful-please
don'! stomp your feel and grimace
saymg, "~Mom, Aw D:Jd"
The ords and thoughts "II

van- ~

auract congress10nal

j

Sue Fillinger
GALLIPOLIS - Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in the Cremeens
Funeral Chapel for Glona Sue Fillinger, 55, 307 Upper Rtver Road, Galhpolis, who d1ed Thursday, June 29, 1995 in Holzer M4dical Center.
The Rev Alfred Holley w1ll officmte and burial will be m Lbe Pme
Street Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Doug Lease, Dumper Graham, Andy Gtaham,
Charles Anlhony, John Carry and Mike Cmry

dillnmJ supponcrs of lbe Medicare
progrmn 111 the Congress" - read::
Democratic memher"' nf Congress.
- "are now largely meflt::ctivc
(111) ·counlenng lhe huuget sla,h-

Etta Bell Lyons
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.- Etta Bell Lyons. 85, Ravenswood, died
Saturday, July I, 1995 in Ravenswood Village.
I
Born Aug. II, 1909 in Calhoun County, W.Va., daughter of the late
Amos and Minme Lance Burnside, she auended the Bergoo Dapt1s1
Church.
Surviymg are three sons, Roben Lyons of Linden, N.C., Richard
J.,yons of Ravenswood, and Wilham Lyons of Wilhamst~own W.Va.; five
daughters, Virginia Asbury, .Joy Wolfe, Peggy Lyke and
Kay Staa!5.
all of Ravenswood, and Shlfley Miller of Charlotte, N. .; 25 grandchildren, 39 great-grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren; and two
sisters, Gladys Moore and Alva McGlothlin, both of Heartland, W.Va.
She was preceded m death by her husband, Staveley Lyons; and five
• brolhern.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the Straight-Tucker &amp; Roush Funeral Home, Ravenswood, with the Rev Gene Waybright-officialing. Bunal
will be in Lbe Ravenswood Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from 6-9 p.m
In heu of flowers, donations may be made to the American Diabetes
Association.
'
---~
-

ers.··

At this pmnt, however, 1t will,
take more than a conference to

make AARP the major player it'
once wa' unuer Democratic rule. .
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers fo United .
•"eature Syndicate, Inc.

Carroll (Casey) McKenzie and Ed Burkett
•

FredW. Crow

Enghsh" wnuen by Richard Lederer "If you thmk !hat toclay's stu- .
dents aren't Icarn111g all they
sboul&lt;l. check out some of the writing miscreated by _their mQ_m!i_ and
dads The following are actual
excuse notes received by teachers." :
"Carlos was absent yesterday ·
because he was playin!ffootball.
He was hurt in the growing part." .
"Chris w1ll not be in school cus ,.
be ha' an acre in his side."
"Please excuSe Ray Friday from .
schobl He has very loose vowels"
"Please excuse Gloria from Jim ..
today She 1s admmtstratmg"
· "Please excuse Roland from,
P.E for a lew days Yesterday he
tell out of a tree m1d lntsplaced his
h lp."
"Please exc'use Tom tor bemg
absent yesterday He had diarrhea •
and his boots leak "
"Please excuse my son's tardl·
ness. I torgot lo wake him up and I
did not lind him till I s~1r1ed mak· ,
ing the beds."
"Please excuse Fred for being
absent He had a cold and could not:
'
breed well."
In God' we trust.
Carry on.
Editor's note Long-lime .
Attorney Fred' W. Crow is the
contributor of ·a weekly column
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel. :
Re11ders wishing to applaud; crit·
icize or comm•nt on any sobjed :
(eK&lt;fepl religion or politics) are .
eoclmraged to write to Mr. Crow
·
in ,~re of thi: n's'~peri

John Cynflif/

I

----

~Lillian

Walter

WALOO - Lillian E. Walter, 88, Waldo, died Thursday, June 29,
1995 at Ultra-care Nursing Home m Bucyrus. She was a homemaker and
former member of the Dible Wesleyan Methodist Church of Marion.
Born Nov. 20: 1906 in Waldo, she was lhe-daugl!ter of the lale Jacob
and Sophia Straub M1ller.
Survivors include two sons, John L. Walter of Fluore..:ent, Mo, and
James A. Walter of Waldo; five daughters, Barbara Null of Gallipolis,
· Darlene Maurer of Central Pomt, Ore., Ruth Griffil.b of Caledonia, Jeanne
Bums of Waldo and Lita Smith of Marion; and 15 grandchildren, 13 great
grandchildren and one great-great grandchild.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband,
.
Lewis A. Walter; two daughters; two brothers; and four sisters.
Friends may cal12to 4 p.m and 7to.9 p m. Sunday at ~e Boyd Funeral HIJille, 122 W. Columbia Street. Manon, where the serv1ce w1ll be held
II a.m. Monday wil.b the Rev. John Burroughs officiating .
Memorial contributions may be made to Giddeons Intemahonal.

By The Associated Press
The body of a 3-ycar-g~rl
snatched from her grandparents by
a ro1Iing stream five days ago was
pulled from the swollen Shenandoah River Salurday. Rescuers also
found a woman swept IntO a nver
by a mudshde, bnng1ng tl1e death
toU to eight in more than a week: of
fioodmg.
Searchers on jel sk•s found Lbe

HOW TO ... STRETCH

IRONTON (AP) - An mmate prison for Lbe murders
could face the death penalty after
He still is housed at Lbe sou !hem
bemg convicted in Lbe deaths of Ohio prison, near Lucasville in
neighboring Scioto Coun1y The
[ive prisoners dunngl:h
April
Ina! was moved to Ironton, with
1993 "riot at the Southern h1o Cor·
rectional Facihty .
· Meigs County Common Pleas
Keith Lamar, 26, w · convicted Judge Fred W. Crow lil sitting in
Fnday of aggravated murder with asSignrnenL
dealh penally speCifications. He
Four of the inmates were ktlled
was directly involved in killing on Apnl ll, 1993, t11e firs! day of
tour pnsoners and ordered the the riot, aJld the filth was slam two
death of a Hfth, prosecutors satd.
days later.
Tbe Lawrence County Common
One guard and nine inmates
Plea
urt JUry began deliberating
died during the JJ .day not at tlhe
Thursday · bt and convtcled maximum-security prison State
Lamar of all 111
ts against authonties and pnsoners negolialed
him. Prosecutors had md•cted a settlement.
Lamar on two murder charges each
Lamar already was serving con111 four of the deaths .
cnrrent semences of 15 ye.1rs to life
A hearing 1s to begm Wednes- for a murder conviction in Cuyaday on whether Lamar shtluld be · hoga County and 1-1/2 years for a
sentenced to death or to fi(e 111 Frank:IJn County U1efl conv•ction.

Carleton.trustees approve
scholarships totaling $3,000
SYRACUSE - Carle1on Col- trustees were LISle, Emmogene
lege trustees voted to award up to · Hanulton, Dana' Winebrenner, Jan$3,000 in college scholarships for 1ce Zwilling, John Sauvage. Larry
the 1995-96 schooltenn when then Ebersbach and Rick !Ish
BOth annual meetmg or the board
John Bentley was elected to fill
was held last week.
an unexpued term created by the
There are 16 applic~nts for dea1h of Millon Roush SJnce the
scholarships, 11 was. an'lounced. previous annual meeting. A
Applicants must be le.gal residents momem of Silent prayer was ln:l&lt;l
of Syracuse to be consulered.
iu remembrance' of Roush, who
In other activity, officers were served as board v1ce preSident for
elected. seven members were several years
renmned to the board, a replaceAppointed to serve on the scholment was elected for an unexpU'Cd arslup select1on comm111ee were
term and a five-membct scholar:........Eber~bach, Mr~ Cruw, Wmgell,
ship select10n comm•Liee was Norns and L•sle. Noms and
selected
Brooks Sayre were appomtcd to
Robert Wmgelt was re-elected serve as the hoard's mvestment
president, Carr.oll Noms ~as committee.
named v1ce preSidem, John LISle
Other hoard members present, m
was re-elected secrelary and addition to those prevlously nmned,
Kathryn Crow wa' re-elecled trea- were Fred Crow, Lrury Fields, Milsurer.
ton Vanan, Don Houdashell anu
Re-elected to new three-year Jack Williams Sr
terms on the 21-memher bomd of

Gallia County Court News
Common Pleas

·Siolen 1991 FOrd Explorer when he
was stopped by !he SIBle highway
Jt~~~epb L. Cllln, Judge.
pl!lrollast montlh.
• Dlssoludoa
•
DUI
Jennif« R. Facemire, 25331
. Noah D. Lamm, 24, 129 Km
StaiCRou~ 7 Soulh,Cro~City, and Road, Bidwell, S1,1SO plus coun
Shane D. Facemire, 214~ Eastern costs, six months In jail (all but 36

Ave., Gallipolis.

days suspended), six months probation and a four-year license suspension. Chalgc of lkiving under suspension dismissed in pretrial nego-

·Mnpjcjpal
WDUam S. Medley, Judge.

TRUCKS -TRUCKS- TRUCKS- TRUCKS -TRUCKS
'

PRICE

1993 GEO TRACKER, !5192, 4•4. convertible,

- ~Hubert-Dalton, ~oute 7,
Mocksville, N.C., $250 plus court
costs and six months in jail (suspended) for a charge of receiving
Slolen Jllopelly reduced II&gt; alttmpted

.. Eillfiir's nole: Names, ages,
addresses and other lnforJDatlon
are reported 111 available on. court

receiving SIOlen property. According
11&gt; court recoots, Dalton Willi in a

1993 NISSAN TRUCK. 152G1 ,
1993 NISSAN TRUCK, 15200, black Kong Cab,
a~r,

AMJFM cesset1e, rear ft1p seats. sport wheels .... .., ..........$11,210

1993 FORD RANGER, 151119, blue XLT,

believes consumers aren't as
~tressed as some measurements ,
would indicate, believes consumer •'.
spenuing will .account for only ·50 ;
percent Of, economic arowth thiS o
year' compared ·With 9 percem in '•
~
J992.
. ~~
If 1he economy needs a spur, a' 1
from lower mterest rates, it seems ··~
hkely 1t will have to come from · :~
somewhere other than the con- .~
sumer sector. Dul thai won't quiet ;.:
the demands Nor will lower rates •
help those w1th mterestmwme
'••
In l&lt;tct, t11e In1es1 news about the lf.·
phg/11 ot 1he consumer could add a •
new choru~ IO·Ihe song, or maybe :
JUst a duel from \;Vall Street and the •
real estate-housing mdustry.
·:
, John Cunniff is an AI' Jmsi· :
nes.• analyst.
1

$11,996

1990 DODGE CARAVAN, 15147,AM/FM, automatic,
air, cloth tnterlor . .................................. ..
1992 FORD RANGER XLT, 1~139, rod AMIFM casseno.

$599S

rear slider, sport wheels .......... ..

1992 htSSAN TRUCK, 15138, automatic AMIFM casseno.

$7885 ...

sport wheels, dual mirrors

1988 DOOGE DAKOTA !!5098, rod, AM/FM,

$54115

low mile\ rear step bumper, custom stripes .

18117 JIMM'l' GMC 15133, 4x4, automatic,
air AM FM casseno sport wheels
..... .... ..... .
. $84~
11193 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN, 151211, blue 7 passenger
!Mr automallc, AM!FM cassette, till. cruise, power windows $11,400
1892 DODGE CARAVAN, · 15019, pewter, V6 automatic
air, AMIFM casset1e, rear defroster· ........................................ 110,650

1993 DODGE GRAND CARAVAN SE, 15163, whlto. V6.
7 passenger, air, automatic, AM/FM cassene. ltlt cruise.
rear atr, power windows &amp; Socks

$14,210

1992 CHEVY BLAZER S·10 4X4, 15176, whfto, spo~
package, atr, automauc. AMIFM cassette. t1tt. cruiSe, power
wmdows &amp; locks, rear defroster ahoy wheels,
ILIQgege reck
.................. .. ..

$14,4n

1991 QEO TRACKER, 151,88, red, custom atrlpes,
sport wheels AM-FM cassene dual mwrors

111920

1994 NI.SAN TRUCK. W5158, 19,000 motet,
AM-FM e&amp;ssene, sport wheels

$8t20

11192 DODGE DAKOTA. 15183, black, 4x4, automatic, air,
V8, sport wheels, hi!, cru1se, power wlndowa &amp; locka,
running bOards, duel mirrors, fiberglass topper .. . .. .

$14,100

1993 CHEVY G-2G VAN CONVERSION, 151M. oulomallc,
air, A.M -FM cassette, lilt, cru~. poweJ windows &amp; tacks
4 captain chairs. rear couch, railed roof
..
. ... .

114,900

.

t911£PorffiAC SUN81RD, '15195, red, 2 dOOr,
automatic, AM/FM, bucket seats. cloth Interior: ....................... $8334

11193 DODGE SPIRIT, 15194, 4 door ,air,
automatic AM/FM, tilt, cruise

tion.

1992 FORD TAURUS, 15193, green, V.6 engine, alf
automahc. AM/FM, cruise ltll, cloth Interior
.... ............... S8387

$9888

1894 HYANOAI EXCEL, 15203, 9,000 miles

APPLIANCE RECYCLING DAY
MONDAY, JULY 31D
LOCATION: Office Parking Lot on Union Ave.
Appliances can be dropped off at edge of
~
parking lot untll4:30 p.m. Monda~~·""""

S851D

red, 2 door, AM/FM cassette, rear deffoster .................. .

11191 NISSAN STANZA, 15202,4 door, red,
~1.000 m1les,

. sn1o

AM/FM casset1e, rear defro~ter

19111 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 152011, air, automatic,
AM/FM, sport whools, cloth Interior
.......................
•
11191 PLYMOUTH COLT, 15190, etr AM FM
cassene, rear defroster, cloth interior

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

18118 NISSAN PULSAR NX, 15181, T·lopt, AM/FM, rear
defroster, dual mirrors

. ' ., .

.

S499~

$5300

1990 FORD TEMPO GL, 15150, air, aulomaUc. AM/FM.
...... .........

cloth lnlenor &amp; rtlora
1H1 CHEW CAVALJER, 1151152rdual mirrors.
ctolh lnlenor custom StrlpiS

1541111

18119 DODGE DAYTONA, 15185, bluo aor, AM/FM
cassel1e llH, rear defroster, power windows

•

... ................... 14500

1M BUICK REGAL, 15130, automatic air, tilt,

body of Alexa Orentes about 8-1/2
miles downstremn from the camp-·
ground where she was washed
away in a flash tlood on Tuesday,
said Janet Clements, a slate Department of Emergency Services
spokeswomaJl.
"Our problems 111 th1s area ;ue
JUSt beginning," smd Dav1d Jones,
chaurnan or the board of supervl· P
sors in Mad1son County.

cruise,

~r

w1ndows &amp; locks dtgital dash

15995

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

1993 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 15140, automalk: air,
AMJFM cassette, power locks, cuslom wheels

'

!990 GEO STORM 2+2, !5157, air, automatic AM/FM,
rear defroster, ciDih lnlenor

....... .... .. ................................. $8885

11191 CHEVY BERETTA, 1515&lt;1, air, spM whoots.
AMIFM cassette. tMt, cru1se

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

11192 PLYMOUTH ACCLAIM, 15112, wMa air,
automatic, AM/FM, cloth 1nlerlor

saw.s
$7815·

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

ttm FQRD I-BIRD, WSOO!, rod" V~ .!ulomal"- IUJ. _

~.

18375

&amp; locl&lt;s

11192 GEO STORM, 1!187, roard4&gt;koster AM FM'

•

:
;
•
;
. ·'
.'

$9115

AM/FM, rear sl1der, dual m•rrOfs sport wheels ............ .
11192 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER, 15198, rod. SE .
1 passenger, 1/6 eng1ne, automatic, 811', AMJfM cassette, bll, CfUISI

records. All newsworthy actions
wiD be puhllsbed wltbout excep-

•

Tlie consumer tlllemm't. hkely
played a role 111 the "surpnsmg"
drop m consumer confidence measured in the lal,est sur~ey by the
Conference Board. Dut il was no
surpnse to retailers; they have been
hearing aboul ll for months.
Even Dun &amp; Dradslreet, whiCh

$8110

AM/FM cassette , sport wheels, black

crulse":~opower Windows. seats
I

PM Mo.

$10,944

air, automa11c, sport wheels, AMtFM cassene

tiations.

Crlmillal

•

$unbag ~imte·$entiml • Page AS

Lucasville inmate
convicte·d of murder
in '93 prison uprising

Death-toll from floot;!J
in Virginia rises to ~eig t

..

Will lower interest rates really
help?
.

•

on

VINTON- John G Ewmg, 83, Middletown, dted S1turday, July I,
1995 in the Middletown Hospital.
l'
Born June 28, 1912 •Jl Vinton, S()n of. the late George. P. and Esther
Jane Matthews Ewing, be retired as supermtendent of the mk department
at St Regis Paper Co., Middletown, 10 1972. He was a member of the
Christ United Methodist Church and the F &amp; AM Lmcoln Lodge#693.
He was also preceded in death by his rust wife, Irene Shoemaker
Ewing, in 1949; his second&lt; wife, V~me Welker Ew10g, 10 1995; a grandson, Daniel Ewing; and a brother, Wllham.Ew10g.
.
Survivrng are three S()ns, John G Ewmg Jr. of Lmcoln flli!k, M1ch ,
Charles L. Ewing of North Carolina, and Thomas Ewmg o~ M•ddletown;
two daughters, Sue Myers and Judy Pauerson, both '.'f M•d~letown; '·'
grandchildren and 15 great-grandchildren; a brother, Earl Ewmg of California; and two ststers, Leah German and Luc1lle .:\lexander, both of
Columbus.
Serv•ces w1ll be I p.m. Wednesday in Lb.e McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton, with lhe Rev C J. Lemley otiic~atmg. DunaJ w1U be 10 .lhe
Vinton Memorial Park. Friends will be rece1ved by the fam1ly al the
funeral horne Wednesday trorn noon until the hour of the service.
Masomc services wiU be conducted in the funeral home al 12:45 p rn.
Wednesday by Vmton F &amp; AM Lodge #131.

urgent. Rother noled. hccause .. tra-

Carroll "Casey" McKenzie was 10 Middleport, where he was a bar- w1ll auend out of 50 original squad
a 1933 P()meroy H1gh School grad- ber tor many years. In addition to members I will auend this game if
uate. He was a quiet young man that, he became mterested 111 old ~ have to hue a helicopter to get
who was an excellent studenl. He coins and developed a com collcc- there. Enough smd.
preferred to remain m the back·
Have you noticed !]le scarcity of
ground in schoOl activities Carroll
llies this year. Th1s plea-;es me, but
was raised by an uncle who lived
I am -certrun llmt U1ere m~ envimnon Umon /\venue in Pomeroy. He uon busmess He was tlJe presulent mentaliS IS who feel otherwise"
had very little mcome and had to of Ihe 0-Kan Club, which is an Should we ask Newt to have a govlly JOHN KING
work 10 sus1ain himsell while in organizatwn dealing With rare ernment agency appomted to finil
AI' l'olitical Wriler
school He had a hallk!)atllo travel
out why there are less flies th1s
WASHINGTON -In dramatically rewriung the rules for redJStrtcl- 111 order 10 graduale from h·igh coms
Last
year
a
maJl
by
the
name
of
year? I w1ll bel you there are reomg, the Supreme Court rmsed tlhe specter of erasing recent JXlllll\'al gams school
Fred Crenshaw came to Racine He pie living who will say that flies
by blacks and other racial minorities &lt;IJld dealt a blow 10 CIVIl nghts
After he graduated from high was anempling to lllCate his ances- should be protected and a study
groups s1ill reeling !rom other recent setbacks
school he worked m the Evans tors who lived bolll 111 Racme and would be helptul.
But whelher the npple from Thursday's dectston will be as devastatmg Grocery Slore in Pomeroy, and was Middleport, Ohio Fred was espeIsn't it wonderful to awaken at
as many hberals predicl" far less clear than the left's forcbodmg rhclonc patti the sum of $10 per week. Clally interested 10 the barber trade dawn and hear the birds chirping at
would mdicate.
Later th1s store wen! out of busi- as h1s ancestors were barbers So, I you. If you are fortunate enough to
ln another 5-4 ruhng on a controversml case. U1e d1vided coun threw ·
ness and he obtained employment had him go aloug witlh me to meet hear them then you know what
out a Georgm rediStricting plan, ruling that race could not be the prcdomt- at tlJe EvaJls businesses in Gallipo- Ed Burkell. Ed treated him w1th nature is all about. S11ting on my
nant faclor m crafting political district lines.
hs He worked up the ladder in much kmdness m1d the two of them back porch early in tl1e morning
The case dealt w1th Georg•a DemocratiC Rep. Cynlhia McKmney's their busmesses and became a diScussed the history of barbers in and hearing t~e birds chirp gives
oJuly shaped. tlmjonly black district, but the ruling calls inlo questiOns a! director in Dob EvaJls Farms, Inc
Middleport. Mr Crenshaw was one a good slarl for the day. Espeleast a l~:~l·dozen House seal' crafted under sumlar c~rcums~~nces Nolto
menuon state leg•slattve and other local d1stricL~ crafled with the cxphcll As we all know, Bob Evans Fapns, very appreciauve ot' thts and so wa~ c1ally 1f the birds are crows
Inc " number IumstheH restaurant
I. I only regret th~t I did no1 have Shouldn't the crow be on tbe songgoal ot increaMng.llJe numbel'li of bl~lg; 811!1 Hispanics m office.
·
more
urne.to get to know Ed beller. bud hst?
·
De
d
.•
.•
J
busmess
m
Lbe
.
:'"
story
IS
In an 1Dierv1ew. two-lime
mocra11c prest en11a 1 canutuate esse remarkable when you consider the I am certain Ihat he could !~ave
1 have been \hfille&lt;l to ~ath lo ,
JackSilll prelllcled legal chrJlenge.~ by the dozens, and srud tl1~ coun had
d.
fi- li3d
10
gtven
me
much
informalion
"ahout
learn
that the Racine Area Commumade a "revolutionerv reJ'eclion" of m1nonty votmg n••hls "1996 ts hml •caps that e '
overcome \,
·-,
"
to rise to Lbe top He cenainly wa~ mrmy of the early Middlepon busi- ntly Assocl3tion IS havmg a frog
gomg In look a Loll ike 1896,'' he predicted.
number one in his g1'3{1uaung class nessmen. We also salute you, Ed JUmp at 5 p.m al their 411J of July
Alhes on th,e lett echoed his dire prediCtion
of 1933 10 the busmess world. In
celebratiOn. Today I talked to Mr
Wade Henderson, legal d~reclor of the Nat10nal Assoctalmn fnr the addiuon 10 Lbis, Carroll was an out- Burkett.
I
have
received
word
from
the
Aaron Young and he IS striving
A~vanccmcnt ot Cnloreu People,,calleu tl1e decismn "the first step in t11c
slanding citizen and made many VARSITY 0 that the 1935 football hanl tu make this a huge success
1esegregauon ot Amencan electoral democracy"
public contrlbultons Truly Ius suePresident Climon didn'1 go that far, bul smd the deCISion "lhreatens to cess in the busmess world is quite leam will he hnnnred at hallllme Exccllenl pnzes will be g1ven to
an ach•evemenl. We salute him for dunng the OSU Notre Dame foot- the wmners and lhis should draw
undermine tl1e promise of the Votmg R1ghts Act.''
ball game on September 30, 1995. frngJumpers from all over lhe stale
But oU1er votces m the debate nrcdicted the Gcorgm dectsmn would
11" successes.
have far less reach
· r-...._
I'm really exciled. I have been told to compete m lhetr trog JUmp. It
Another
man
I
remember
fondly
Lbatthose of us who appear will be everythmg goes according lo
For stancrs, the court agreed to hear cases next year mvolvmg chalN
th
c
ed'
·
wes
Ed
Burket~
a
Middleport
bar·
fenges to Texas an d or
arolma r 1stncung plans 111c hncs mllmsc her who, unfortunately, passed perrmlled 10 ride around the foot- schedule we plan to have our frog
states w?uld be ripe for challenge under the Georgm decJSton. hut are nnw away recently. Ed slarted as a bar- ball field in golf carts and then a hmousme together w1th appropnale
,
lied up 111 the Supreme Court. And U1e court let Slrmd a Cahtonua rcdts- h.
th CI r Karr He was with special gift w1ll be given to each of mus1c !here
' tl'lcrlnbrpl31111r wlndnace-wrL.-:r factor
hOI not-tlie-only-ftJetor-- -Jn - 1{~.;;,.1 shorta~m; a~dlhen moved us..lbaL!llaY~:.t:Un.tlhe !93i.Bamk...~ Tl!l; following are excuses nQied
To-date there are 17 players who •n a tiook entitled "Angu•shed
c.lrawmg the Jme~.
So wh1le descnbmg ll1e Genrgm case a clear sethack Ill protcctmg
black-maJority dJStncLs, Deval Pamck, lhe head ot the Josttce Depml·
ment's civil nghts diviSion, s:ud all was nollosl. "We sill I have a·lighllng
chance, and we 1re stJII m thiS sta~ggle," he srud
Jronic;dly, the very gains the court called inlo quesuon also me hkcly
NEW YORK- If you believe omy · $150 hilhnn it' you gn hack ycru was made posSible in pmt hy
to serve ·as an obstacle to major retrenls.
real estate or ilecuriues promoters, 16 monlhs Thai's real money, morrgage rctinancmg over the rreIf le.iJal challeng.es to black d1stncts are sqccesstul, tor exmnplc. 111 what Uus country needs more than even today. It goes to sustalll VIOWi two year~
,
mnsrC!L,es the task of drawing new lines wtll fatY to &lt;lale legislatures, anyt)ling else is a good interesl-rale hteslyles It is spendable
That wmdlall. he reasons, gave
where d1e nwnber of black lawmakers 1s on ll•e nsc. from 430 nalimudly cui - sen of an aspinn for all our
consumers an oppor1um1y 10 satisfy
ti,ve yef)!'S ago to 560 today.
•
penl-up demands. mcludmg new
CCO~OffiiC woes.
That is still le~s than 8 per~ent of all offices But blacks m mru1y s~tl~s
You tan hear the chorus after
cars Some cqnsumers, you 1mglu
struck awkward alhances wiU1 Repubhcan.s when the hnes were redrawn every dip in the economy: Lower
add, needed no wmdfall to go on a
aller U1e 1990 Census. Repubhc:ms have benefite~ so much since from a rales will spur busmes.s, promote
,..
buymg &lt;pree; they simply borcombmation of new lines and c~t:~nged politic:}) land.&lt;eape-that tl•ey are in
Indeed, a "good iJC'~J · qf it is rowed to lhe hmit.
lunng, encourage home buymg, lift
no 111(10~ for maJOr rev•s•ons bet ore the next Cfinsus
~
stock pnces and ra1se consumer speni Alben Sindhnger; whose
The re'ulls show up VIVIdly on a
"I cenamly don't advocate or encourage;peoplc 10 go out and htt· conlltlence by putt•ug money in firm has mterv•ewcd hterally mil- chart of consumer installm•nt credgate," smd Haley Barbour, the Repubhcan Nattonal Comrnlltee chrunnan
lions ot heads ol household over it The ratio of credll 10 diSJXJSablc
people's pockets.
"I do tlnnk U1e l!exllime there IS rediSirJcting the legislatures should draw
Dut wait.a m1hule. Econom•c the years, says h~ed long ago . persot\al •ncome fell sharply
lair, compact districts amf no1 try 10 g1ve specilll11dvnntagc to any
pmmccas are rarer even wm ltledl· thai 11 IS eas1er to spend mterest ~throughoul 1992, then reversed
group ' '
,....___,.
..
itself ru1d began climbing aimosl as
cal vaccines. Do we now have the mcome thaJl wages
Next tune would be 200 I. Dy then, Barbour hopes Ihe trend among
Quesuon: Where would the sh&lt;1rply .
blessed good fortune to correct our
white voters 10 the South toward Repubhcans w1ll have ceme111ed mto a
11lnst. pressing economic problems economy be lpday w1thoul that
Dy this sprillg, lhe perce111agc ot
GOP reahgnmelll, g•ving his party more mapmaking power.
with a simple decllualion from the $150 btlhon mtlmnn?
crcdll to personal mcome was close
It " that same trend thai ha~ some Southern while Democrat.~ pnvalely' Federal Reserve?
But, some will say. mo~t ot that to a record 20, if you include home
lmppy wnh Lbe court's decision; if black voters are spread throu ghoul sevmlerest
mco~e goes lo older fol.ks,
The exarnmallon begins With
equily loans and aUiornobile )eases.
efalllJstr•cts mslead of &lt;;nncentrated m one 'or two, willie Democrat£ pre· · th1s quesuow If 62 percenf ilf the and 11 1s well known that the older At mat rate, mllhons of households
surnably would hav~ beuer odds.in an IIK-reasingly dJtficu!l climate.
populauon earns some l,lllerest- you gei the less you're inclnied to were at Lheit spending- limit
"You have the potenhal here for enonnous conl11cls between while
lllcome, and 1f more and more peo~. spend What about ll1e young folks,
Question: If S()me h;IVe reached
Democrats and hl&lt;~ck Democrals who lli!ye very different interest.&lt;," said
pie are relinng and hving oft inter- 1)1e Baby Boomers, the big spendmg liJllils, and others have
Merle Dlack, an Emory University polit~l sc•entJSI who s1ud1es Soulhem
e&lt;l mcome, won ' t a rate decline spenders?
satisfied demand, and more have
pohllcs "Anw pullmg rac13l 1ssues front and cenler m Soumem pohucs
They're spenl Over spent As • seen wages stagnate, are lower
hurt a lot of jleQple?'
helps Re[lllbhcans "
.
You can bel on 11. In the past economist Edward Yardem pu L&lt; •l. interest rates likely to induce them
EDIT.OR'S NOTE.- .John King cover. national politic.• for The
year, $100 billwn of interesl "The p.1rty's over." In his opiqion, to spend more, and by doing so
AsSoCiated Press.
mcome has been added to Ure econ- economic strength Qver the past give the economy a lift?

rip-p-le ~·

~1pers

Jol1n G. Ewing

slaflers, lobbyJSL~ and press allenlion. Highhgh~' of tl1e proceedmgs .
would be sen! to AARP members'
afler.wartls.
Rother m;tl;es ·no nnstake about
why he thmks the conterence is an
unper:Hive lor AARP:, "To be,.
effeclive, the conference would
have 10 be followed-up with a con- .
scious senes of actiOns des•gned to
strengthen AARP' s leadership and '
educatiOnal role along w11h lhe
pos111ve pmspects for Medicare" '
The con terence IS parlicularly .

own

,Redistricting

CROWN CITY- Marjone Faye Devan, 79, Crown City, died Thursday, June 29, t!j95 at ber residence.
Born Dec. 22, 1915 in Gallia County, daughter of the late James Preston and Minnie Wallace Williams, she was a retired employee of Oscar's
Restaurant and a homemaker. She was a member of King's Chapel
Church.
Surviving are ,her husband, Asa Devan; a son, Oral Ray (Georgia)
Devan or Crown City; a daughter, Doris Lee (larry) Duke of Crown C1ty;
and six graJldchildren, seven great-grandchildren and two step-greatgrandchildren.
She was aiS() preceded m death by a son, James U. Devan; two SISters
and a brother; and a grandchild.
Services will be I p.m Sunday m the Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Home, witlh the Rev. Johnny )()ffers officiating. Burial will be in
Ridgelawn Cemetery. MercefVIlle

nus optmns The conlerence would .
be closed to lhe puhhc, he satd, hut '

young people who have fell thts
hie m,my years hefme thetr ume I
fix no blame on .F J. or any ot11er
ot t11ese young people. mcludmg
!hose who have rlted tal"ng their

W!J.Jitl represents IS not controver""1- 11 is much more than JUSL
granite, metal, tmd other matenals •won't hap 1 to me" are mnong t11c
It represenls people who have most dangerou.s lh:JI exJSI. Young
g1vet1 ot their lives, some to the people, you arc o~r ~ummumty,
pomt of giVIng thcu hves, so tllat you are the lite ot Galha County
and you mold om natmn f01 the
we may hve 111 freedom
II represenls blood, swea~ tears, ofl'exl two generallons You reprewne, and fmnily, community, and sent everything !hat love and hfe
personal sacnfice. When you look represents. Handle wtth care and
at that monument, it is not jUst a holiness
beaullful site and a bunch of
In love,
nrunes, t1 is the hves of people of
John E. Jackson,
C:allta County who have served so
Pas lor,
thai we may experience a freedom
Chaphun (LTC P),
way ot life. It 1s a holy plac~. OHARNG
blessed by Go•l and lhe lives of
P.S. I don't know what it will
those who have served.
take for th1s 10 stop, but I do know
While I run "preaching" I have our prayers will help . .

Marjorie F. Bevan .

c ·

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

.Deaths

currently benefits two-Lbmls of 1Ls shtp surveys •t conducts each year, L
membership \Vllh Republicans in Rother wrole, AARP has little idea
c1mrt:e on aptto 1 H1II , however, what the members wam on"'' issue ,
Rother told hiS boss UJCll tl1e associ- like Medicare reform. which could
alton would probably have w g1ve move quickly through Congress 111 ,
some ground m the debate lest 11 late summer
;
tK;;;\..
~·~·o1ne 1rrelev•,•
m II
"We do nnt currently have 'per· '
"The Assoetitlion " cas!, miSsmn' from our mt;mbers 10 get
mev11ably, m a deteJNve nosture t()(l tar m fronl of lhern, •u terms of.. ,
when maJor cuts m Medtcare are advocaling a preterred program "·
bemg considered," Rother wrote. ourselves," Rother wrole
"D~t our posture is w1dely viewe-d
Above all, the AARP wanL~ 10
Ill the current environ•nent as not
avmd a debacle hke the one that ~
occurred lasl summer, when it
credible, g1ven the unmment 11naneta! shortt all facing the Melhcare endorsed a comprom•se health care ·'
I Ins pilaf Insurance trust fund ... We bill autl)ored by then·~nat~ ~aj~- ·•
are at risk of nol hemg seen as a ity Leader George IIC e • ·
cnnstruCilve vmce "
Mame, and then-House MaJOnty
U f
Leader
Richard
n orlunately for AARP, llS
· Gephardl,
tl d D-Mo.
·' ·• •
The
assocmuon
was
oo
eu
greatest strength may be 1ts biggest
h
II
d
d 1 Wlul
11
311
hablhty 111 the Medicare debale
angry P on:: ca s,fcar hs
edersf· ·
00
With 33 million members, the from mem ..crs a l1er I de · ar
· o
d1rec1ors
m.tJe
a
1asty
ec•s•on
organization aJld its lobbyists cmry
·'
h II A ·' d
1 11loe ·•
1
enuorse
11e
1
s
nu
esp1
e lhel
consl(lerable clout on Capitol Hill.
a! .•
1
Dut the size and divemty of the
controvcrs• enuorsemen s, ';e• r •
membership also makes it hard to • bill was ahleHio wm ass muc 'tlas a
vote on tl1e ouse or.
please everyoge Tbus the a1socia· ·enale
· oor. ,
liOn is oflen slow to respohd when
Nohody at the ass(lCI~Uon IS eager .
. b•lls move rapidly lhrough
to repealtlJat expenence.
C
Rother·s partml solullon was to
ongress
convene a conference m July wtlh
top experls from all &gt;tdes of the ·

m a seQseless auromoh!lc .accuJenl
He ]Oms a long liSt ot our I me

hve~
As be~t

Sunday,Jul 2,1995

~~~~~ s~~~! v..~~~~..!",.~.~"'~'~'~!!: ,eo!;~~!.~.~-~:

.

~

e&amp;ssene, doth intenor
11113 CHEVY BERffiA, 15157, ~ue, air, automatiC,
AM/FM, hll cloth tntenar
q

lOO's of

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Coming!

•

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a
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CALL
COWBOY WHITE
•
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Tod'ly.
•

air, AMIFM cassene power se11t &amp; windows lilt, cruise
elr, AMIFM cassene lilt, cru1se, power 5881&amp; &amp; wkldOwS

•

STATE ROUTE 248
''

'' (

111,450
111,850

1993 OLDS 88 ROYALE, 15001, groon, V6. air, aUiomal~.
H ·AMIIFM cassette, ttl! cru1se, power seat &amp; Windows
•
112,350
19111 CHEVY BERETTA, 15180, 2door. V6 eng,
sportymeels. sunroof, power window!, air . .

®"Hn.c;nn"rvi

·

.

1

l&lt; l l A

G o t s To

11r,

110,215

Payr~~enls figuredwtth down payment of $1,000 cash or trade plus tax &amp;!tile

•-•"
Poftable Spas

W! tt H 1. A "'} l

.............. . S0210

automatic
~
AMIFM casset1e, sun root rear defroster, tf:ioth lnlenor .

1t0o NISSAN 240 SX, f5170,

\11.~

BAUM.LU

·f.

110,010

19113 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15055, blue, aulomadc

Thefe's no better place to do a@solutely nothmg than in a Hot
Spnng• Portable Spa-the #1 selhng brand 'in Amenca. Hot
Spring Spas are easy-to-install. with warLTl swtrling waters that
wdl rela'x and rejuvenate you. And right now, you'll find special
savings on Hot Sprmg
Portable Spas for any SIZe
family, backyard and budget. So, If you want to get
good at doing nothmg, we ·
.can do somethmg for you.

•

11191 CHEVY CA~ARO RS, 1504t, whno. AM/FM cassello,
. aulorroat~. a1r, 111t, cruiSe, power windows, rear defroster
Sa270 '
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 8, 15080, whlla, aulomal~.

Rt 1 /\X"

ER CO.

985·3301
'
'

'

See salesman for details

•

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Page A6 • -'unbav 'a!imt•·-'•ntiml

Pomeroy· • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

.

•

. Sunday, July 2, 1995

~~~==~~

long the River
.

.

•

emwes- imtintl Section B
· Sunday, July 2, 1995

GALLIA ACADE·
MY STUDENTS
PLACE IN NATION'AL HISTORY DAY COMPETITION
.
.
.,,

\

.

•

COMPETITION/JUDGING
r.'

Each Group M,ust
Go Through A
Question and
Answer Period to
·'
Defend Their
Presentation.

'

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-

The Lady he serenaded with
First Family of a round
of colorful displays and ·
musical pops, booms and bangs
Fireworks to
was the same Lady George's
father Antonio, took his hat off
coordinate
to as he rode past on the boat
from Italy to America. George
had no idea that nearly I00
festival display. .years
after his father cried at his

..

•. J

(L. to • R.) Lindsey
Mullins, Tessa Sibley,
Abby Haffelt, Andrea
Hasldns, Jodie McCalla.
Each group must go
through a question· and
answer period to defend
their presentation.·

7TH GRADE G.r11...,.
"THE WASP: WE ~T1wr_"-~
Jodie McCalla, Abby Haffelt,
y Mullins,
Tessa Sibley, Andrea Haskins.

'

STUDENTS·IN HISTORY DAY COMPETITION
AT THE 'NATIONAL LEVEL
Steve Roderick, Chris'i'ian Casanova, A.J. Johnson (friend), Stacy
McCalla (friend), Jodie McCalla, A~drea Haskins, Lindsey
Mullens, Tessa Sibley, Abby Haffelt, Rod Hojat. Not pictured:
Walter Strafford.

(The 1995 River Recreation first sight of the Statue of

· Festival fireworks display will Liberty, his company would be
be 10 p.m., 1uly 4 in the Galgiven the honor to herald
llpolis City Part coordinated by America's existence as the land
Zainbelll Intenuuionale.)
.. of the free, home of the brave.
By NAN DeVINCENTIS .
But a lot has changed since
HAYES
Antonio first stepped on AmerillllltJn Tlmt1
lea's ground and began one of
George Zambelli wanted to the nation's first fireworks
have 1he best and bi~gest
. companies. Modernization took
firewoJts company m the world, a foothold; yet George .often
and he 111ade it happen.
favored old fashioned techHow big is Zambelli Inter· nlques handed do~ by his
nationale?
father. He claims that Zambelli
Big enough and good
lntemationale is a success '
enough to acquire SOple of the
because of its fint; blend of
world's largest accouius:
tradition to modem.
The inauguration$ of
From a variety of primitive
Presidents Kennedy, Johnson,
to futuristi~ means, George has
Carter and Reagan have been
. filled the skies with chromatics
embellished by George's
and choreography. He was one
mystical !'antasies. Y.ves St.
of the first to make use of
Laurent announced his new
electronic firings, synchronlza·
perfume through Zambelli fire- lion, emblematic displays and
wortcs shot froro barges in New lasers.
·
·Yorlc Harbor. Royalty, dignitarPresident George Zambelli,
ies. celebrities all have been
also known as "Boom Boom,"
clients of Zambelli FirewoJts.
"Mr. Firewortcs,'' and "The
The Italian wunderldnd was
Great Zambelli" has talcen a
even in the GuiMeSJ.Book qJ
small company and built it into a
World Records for launching
multi-office finn head~anered ·
fireworks at the highest altitude in New Castle, Pa., wi other
(a:a::usburgh'S' U.S. Steel
offices in Boca Raton, Fla. lind
B . g).
Rialto. Calif. George l')liiS all
'
'"One of my favorites,"
three with the help of his brother
"'was ~ celebra- Louis, 62. AnOther brother,
lion
of Ltberty on Jos_err· 80, passed away May
July 4, 1986. We, ~e of three
12, 988. Zambellis' staff
fireworks COII!parues. used about consists of cleric~ help, teclmi- .
26,400shells. -~
clans an!! iilfiiitiilstrators.

•

. This year the G!!lllp&lt;&gt;IIB City Seh&lt;&gt;ols earned the right to send nine students t&lt;&gt; the 'Nall&lt;&gt;nal
History Day C&lt;&gt;mpetltlon. The 1995 ltlstory Day theme was "Conlll~t and Compromise In
History." Two thousand students competed ai'Natlonalltlstory Day at the University &lt;&gt;I Maryland
In College Park, Maryland, from June 11th to June 14th In the 16th Anniversary Year lor the
contest. Entries must win first at district and then state i!vel competitions to quality to represent
Ohio at this event which had entries from forty-eight states, Including Alaska and Hawaii, and the
District of Columbia. Gallla Academy Junior High School seventh grade students Abigail Hallelt,
Andrea Haskins, Jpdle McCalla, Mullins and Tessa Sibley won seco,?d place In the nation In
Junior Division. These winners developed a group performance titled The WASP: We Sling like
a Bee " which told the story of women pllots.and their ellorls during World War II. Also, they
were ~ne of five performances selected to perform at the Smithsonian Musaum l!f American
History. As an eighth g~de student, Walter Strafford, mad~ run-offs In his division and placed
tenth In the nation with his Individual media project titled The Meeting of East and West: The
conflict and Compromise of l\No Cultures," telling of Perry opening China to western trade In
. 1854. Three young men also In the eighth grade, ChrlsUan Casanova, Rod ..Hojat, and Stephen
Roderick received one of the special awards fQr their group media presentation, "Middle East
Conflict: The Arabs and Israel." It was presented to them by the AWAIR: Arab World and Islamic
Resources Organization. Thay won this .award at the state competition and will be presenting
their slides at the organization's meeting In Columbus on July 13th.
Participating In History Day Is an exciting way to study history and learn about Issues, Ideas,
people, and events thai Interest young people. Approximately 50,000 teachers and libra~lans, and
450,000 atudants, grades six through twelve, participate across Amerlclt.'lrhrough History Day
students learn the techniques of a historian and develop skills that they will use In college and
one job. They must choose a topl~ that fits the general theme selected each year for the
competition; conduct extensive research with particular emphasis on primary sources, both
original documents and personal Interviews; write a summary of their research answering the
particular questions of the year and showing how the course of history has been affected; \\Tite a
detailed bibliography to be pres.enled ln. triplicate to knowledgeable Judges and to be defended
by the students; and tell about the historical avenl on a ten-minute dramatic presentation, a
paper, a ten-minute media presentation, or a three-dimensional board project similar to .science
· fair project presentations. .
.,
.
· Teachers and parents encourage History Day participation and help stude11ts will! their en_trles.
Locally Rofary ACademic Boosters Club, the Gallla County Historical Society, other civic
organizations ~nd Individuals have contributed generously to help finance the trips to state and
national history days. ·Each part of the History ,pay hierarchy Is vital to Its success, from each
student of the Executive Director and lncludlh~ the coordinators, teachers, judges, and
sponsors In between.
This year Gallla Academy students who competed at District Level Included, besides those .
previously mentioned, ware: Jake Ritchie and Brandon Lassiter; Jell Mullins; Sara Beaver, Holly
Epling, and Jamie Allie. Those who competed at State level were: Steven Cornett, Allen Skinner,
Matthew Yoho, and Andrew Fendeibosch, Cassie Graham and Omega Bossworth.
The City of Gallipolis can .be proud of the accomplishments and the participation of their
students who have shown not only the ability lei compete but also to win on a national level
competition. Any ·group or organization In the area that would like to have the partlclpal)ts
present as a program for a meeting should contect Julia Roderus. Mrs. Roderus can supply
Information anyone who might have furlber questions about the competition.

''
,.

..

•

•

Fuse:
What goes
In a mortar

Shell-type fireworks are
~
launched from lubes made of i
heaVW' cardboard or ~tal sunk ·
into the ground or mounted iri
racks .'The shell must fit snugly
inside the mortar to allow proper
thrust. SheHs measure from two
inches to three feet in diameter
and can weigh up to 700
pounds. Dozens of mortars of various s•zes are used at la'rge
professlona_l fireworks displays .

containing gunpowder,gnites
gunpowder mixture, lilts charge
at base ot shell and launches it.
Mcli~J fuses se1 ott
explosk&gt;ns high in the sky.

Wrapping:

'·

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GALLIPOLIS
446·2477
'

'

.

.

- ) A-G-K &amp; .}·-1-L-l'S.
326 SECOND AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

446·4343
CHEVROLET

·

• GEO

Gallipolis' Hometown
.. ' . Dealer

-

.

Contents:

Tigtltly packed balls of

chem•cals that burn as
the)' fly, making bright
colors and throwing
sparks.in ._11 directions.
Various spectacular
visual affects are
l·crearled with different
chemical combinations

JCT~

•

St. RT. 7 &amp; 35

.

.

.

·17 COURT ST.
446·2374

··.

90 JACKSON PIKE

,.

'

J

-"

' •; r '.'·.- '•

. ,,, · ·

'

GAlLIPOLIS

446·6620

,. .

UNITY SAVING.$

500 THIRD AVE. -

GALLIPOLIS .

'.

'

•

BANK

•.

GALLIPOLIS

446·0315
,.,

•

.'

·".Your Hometown Pharmacy"

2991 ST. RT. 160

HOLZER
CLINIC

GALLIPOLIS

a ground that shoot a
series of flaming stars
T into the-air .. • •

I

Stars:

T~htlv packed

bcilts of chemicals that burn

I
Gunpowder:
I
asthayfty .~

clients.
Though
staff inay not
be IBM-sized,
Zambelli
'
Fireworks as a
business is. Il's
· the world's
largest and oldest manufacturer
and exhibitor of fireworks. Only
five percfnt of its ground and
aerial show products are impaned; the rest are made by the
l

'

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r

.

•

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America Day," where Bob Hope
starred. For yerus Zambellis has
hosted exuavaganzas for the Na·
tional Boy Scout Jamborees,
world's fairs. Republican and
Democratic national conventions, British-American Cup,
Elvis~ley

memorials,
White House
concens and
the elaborate
July 4th exhibition alongside the Wash·
ingtDn Monu·
ment, which
Zambelli has
been doing for
tl)e last 30
years.

~ntact-with

Lo~t~bes mount~ in

tween S1ars .
When~ ex·
plodes the
uppermosl star '
is launched out ...
of the tube.
· 1

"Your Comiin~nity-Mindcd
Low Prices Supermarket"

'

.

Grwn ...... ~·..... .-: ............. Barit:ImGrMn and blue .............. Copper

. Zambelli has his own family
members (dubbed 'The First
Family in-Fireworks") pitching
·in, especially
duringthe
busy seasons.
He likes to
keep his main
staff small so
that he always .
has direct

company.
Abroad, Zambellis has .
produced fireWorks shows for
such prestigious events as QED ·
Falklands return. The lndepend·
ent show of Kuwait, (which
George says, "is our most ex-

pensive·~ •.the

Papal Visit, and
the Canadian National Exhibi·
lion, among a gross of others.
Domestically George has
done President Nixon's "Honor

Servi'cemen's Memorial-reflects incomplete era in

KANAUGA
446·4109

Central Supply_
Co.
.

Raman candle

Loaded be-

EASTMAN'S

GALLIPOLIS

~·

1

and timed fuses,

Deep yellow ......... Sodium salts
R.ct .... .................... ........Calcium
Crlmaan ........................Strontium

Shelt-typ. tlreworka

Phon e 446 051 6
JJ1 5econd Ave nu e 1 Ga llrpoil s. Oh10

~

season."

i

DrJmmrnm

332 SEC,OND AVE.
'
416·0476

.

from bright·burning metallic salts.,

E*trlc-whlhl .,,,,..,,Magnesium
and alum1num
Chlorine compounds are
used 10 •ntens1fy or
brighten colors.

LAFAYETTE MALL • GALLIPOLIS
446•4446 -.

'""

GA~LIPOLIS

· 1616
EASTERN AVE. .
•
• 446·3672

a

-·-

,·

My :Sister's C[oset

BURLILE -QI~L .iCG.•'_;

• OLDSMOBILE

CiENEJOHNSON
•

wc0~o~~

. Says George, "I have 35-60
full-time employees during the
year and hundreds in peak

Kraft paper rolled into a
cylit:'ldrical shape six or
seven laye11thick, glued
and fled at the top and
bottom.

The colors of fireworks come
I

LAFAYETTE MALL

•

A string of woven threads

How the colors occur·

LAFAYETTE MA\1
.GALLIPOLIS
446·4222

..

George's
· company recently received the Congressional Citation for excellence,
and ·was selected to represent the
United States in the 1985 Inter·
natiiol!!fl;l:'he\vOri(S Competition.
~~

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�•

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

Sunday, July 2, 1995 ~

Following the
directions exactly.

rS=u~n=da=y~,=J~u~ly~2,;:.1;:9;:9~5::;:::;:::;::::;~=~===~P=o~m~·~e=roiyRI•:M.id:dileip:C):rt:•:G::al~li~po-lis:,:O:H::•=P~o~in~t~P~Ie~a~s~a~n~t,~W·V~=~~~~~~~,S~u;;;nbnli'Minus-~tntirul • Pag~: B~

Anniversaries

Tarvin
graduate's
cum laude
•

By DOROTHY SAYRE

were small, and h8rd 10 hit Ken tCJ&gt;Ii
for
walking· towards Jimmy and IIIOI'e
'
speculty shoiS were heard. When Ken reached
' items in a Jiinmy, Jimmy proudly held up three:
large grocery birds. Yes,JimmyshotALLthebird!
in as they flew uptowardhim.. .onequail
store
Athens, I and two spanuws.
observed
The same sister-in-law, Bonnie;
groups of col- is fanious fer her coolcing, now. Not
lege kids always, though. One of Iter rust din~
stocking up ner's was when she was 15. Bonnie'!
for the Me- motllerwasgonefortheevening,and ·
morial Day she left detailed instructions for Boil.:
weelcend. The students apPeared to nie on how to prepare the fond. Bon.:
be trying tostreteh !heir meagerbudg- nie placed the casserole in the oven to'
eiS and learn the best buys. For many, balce; and she made a salad. Next on
college is their rust experience away the imltruction sheet was frozen peas .
AM IE FRIEND AND BRIAN BUFFINGTON
&amp;o.mhome. WithoutpareniStoadvi~ · and carrots. Bonnie was instructed to
them. • simpl~jask. such as groeety -start the-vegerables about IS minures
shoppmg, can become very complex. before the casserole.was due 10 come
.
PO'MEROY - Amie Dawn is employed at Miss Paula's Da~ . WbiJeonthepaperproduciSaisle, out of the oven~nd 10 cook the peas
Friend of Pomeroy and Brian Keitll Care Center.
a group o~ ~- young men, obvi- and carroiS according 10 thd box in- ,
Buffington of Pomeroy announce
Duffington is the son of Sharon ously buymg for a cookout, were structions. Bonnie informed her fatheir engagement and upcoming Buffington of Pomeroy. He is a reading their grocery list. One apther and sister that dinner would be in'
wedding.
.
19 86 graduate of Meigs High peared to be the leader. After he just a few minutes. Afler a long "few.
Friend is U1e daughter of Marvifl School and employed at Wesam crossedoffpaperplales,he81Dlounced
minutes," Bonnie's dad went 10 the .
Fri end of Pomeroy and Don nie Construction. ·
the next item was ketchup. Very seri- kitchen to check on progress. He found
!:fiend of Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The wedding will be Sept. 23 at ously he stated, "Now we have to be
Bonnie following the .instructions
~e is a 1994 graduate of Eastern
~autel Cliff Free Metllodist Church careful, because !here is caiSup and
exactly.
The box said 10, "Separate
H1gh School and a. 1995 graduate m Pomeroy.
ketchup, and Marty said we need
the JM::BSand carroiS with a fork." Y:~
of Hocking Technical College. She
ketchup." Another lady and I looked Bonme was separating the frozen
at each other and burst out laughing.
Oblivious to their mistake, the boys carroiSfrom thepeasandplacingthem, ·.
went in quest of tlle exact item: one 81 a time, in separate pans.
My folD'-year-old great-niece, '
"Ketchup."
Megan,
awalcened one morning and :
In Arizona this winter, we visited
my sistei'-ln-law near Lab Havasu. went to the kitchen where her mother
Her neighbor man, Ken, was telling was working: Her mothm: asked her
us about the rust time his 19·year-old what she would lilce for breakfast
Megan answered, "A toasred cheese
brother went quail hunting. The quail
Her mother replied, "No,
sandwich."
were very plentiful and Ken assured
Jimmy, his brother, they would be · that is what we cal for lunch. It is ;
breakfast time now, so whBI woulcl-o
successful on their hunt. Ken told
you
like for breakfast?" Megan";
Jimmy 10 wait while he, Ken, made a
quickly
answered, "Lunch."
.;
drive down a dry creek bed Ken !Old
Weshouldallbccarefulwhatwe:
--J
Jimmy !he covey ofbirds would come
flying up towards him, and to shoot say and how we say it; people ~
,;:
quickly. Ken told Jimmy the birds take us at OW' word
(Dorothy
Sayre
and
her
bus.
were small, flew fas~ and were hard .
band,
Geroge,
formerly
or
MelgC
. to hit Ken's last words to Jimmy
before !he drive were, "Shoot all the County, moved bere about three·:
birds you can." As Ken made the years ago and DOW reside in a newo
drive, he heard Jimmy · shooting. llouse rating the Obio River jusr
below Syracuse.)
:. ·
,Jimmy yelled he had shot some,
,.
•

Recently wbile

SJJowill8

GALLIPOLIS - Lisa Mill iron
Tarvin received a bachelor of science degree in elementary ellucation from Bowling Green Slate
University, May 5.
She graduated cum laude. an
honor to grad uates who have
achieved a grade point avera ge of
3.5 or higher throughouttllcir collegiate career.
She is the daughter of Gib and

G;llf~of~~;:nmunity L~~/endar
Th~

- Fr1· end-Buff1. ngton

MIC:H~~~EPLANTZ AND RYAN YOUNG

·-

Plantz-Young
GALLIPOLIS • Michelle Marie
Plantz and Ryan Lee Young
announce their eng agement and
approaching marriage.
Plamz is the daughter of Ronald
and Geneic Plantz of Gallipolis.
She is a 1992 graduate of Gall ia ·
Academy High School and attends
Malone College majoring in nurs-

ing.
,
Young is th e son of Ralph and
Mary Young of Gallipolis. He is a
1992 graduate of Galli a Academy
ll igh School and attends Malone
Co ll ~ge majoring in communications.
The wedding will be Aug. 5 at
the First Church of Nazarene in

Older-Hunt
Davis-Heflin
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Davis of Gallipolis announce
~ !he engagement of their daughter,
Lisa Linette Davis to Phillip HeDin ·
of Cincinnati, son of John Heflin of
. Carrollton and Jacque Heflin of ·
Tamarac, Aa.
Davis graduated from Ohio University with a bachelor of artS
degree and also graduated from

Marshall. University with a master's· degree. She is employed with
Hearin g,Speech and Language
Services, Inc. in Cincinnati.
Heflin graduated frpm tbe University of Akron with a bachelor of
arts degree and is employed with
the New Richmond School District
in Cincinnati.
The wedding will be Oct. 7.

1

'

'
GALLI LIS. Cellist Leighton
con kling and pianist Eugene Jennings will perform 3 p.m.. July 9 at
the First MeUIOdist Church in Gallipolis.
·
· -conlCI1n] has performed- wilh
the Juilliard String Quartet, the
Henri Temianlc 3 Little Symphgny
and- uie -Aspen Festival Orchestra
der tbe direction of lzler
Snl
·
0
~~':~ a professor of cello at
Ohio University. He also taught at

,
.
Whol dre•lo• ore ••de of .. -. · Remember your ch1ldhood dreom• of bdnl$ a brid&lt;;~ ~II dre"""d up in
Mltn ond lace . walkt"&amp; down .lhe iole l" lhe man of your dreams. You
your ":eddin&amp; would be. perfect ... the •plendor of your d""""· llle
. frall""nce of llle nower•. l.he py of your receplton. and lhe limeleso
beauty of your phololl""flh•.
· .

·:DRESSES
a-· OFFf

.

' .

...

Sliding Fee S.cale

··. We accept Medicaid and private'insurance.

SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446-0166

I

.

~-

Quality Fo'rrnalwear ot
Affordable Price•

are printed as spuce j1crmits and
t::_Jnnot he guaranh·l·d to run ••
Sp~~jfic llUtnhfr

or da) S.

...

D:~vis

(

Bring

CiALLIPOUS -Ke ith Eblin
preachi ng 7 p.m. Dch6ie Drive
fami ly

Ch:~pd

Scientists closing in on gene for bed-wetting children
By MALCOLM RfnER
AP Science 'IVrit.r
, NEW YORK (AP) - Scientists
say they've foun(l the approximate

location of a gene for pers.istcnt
bed-wetting in cliildren.
It's 111e first study to show that
t11e problem .can be caused by a single gene, said resea rcher Hans
Eiberg.
About 8 percent of 7-year-olds
wet their beds at least U1ree times a
week without ever having had control over the problem . This is the
pattern scientists studied in children past their seventh birU1day. ·
The gene might be re sponsible

for, ahout half to tllree-4uartcrs of
such cases when the hcd-wctling
runs in the family. said Ei hcr g. a
hinclmmis1 at th e Univcrsi1y of
Copenhagen's Instil utc of Medical
Biochemistry and Genetics in Denmark .

Bed-wetting disappears wiUwut
any treatmenl in ahoul 15 percc111
of affected child re n eac h year. and
ouly rarely persists into aduiU1ood.
Finding the heel -we tting gene
miglH help scientists devise new
treatments and lead to help in
matching children to appropri!) te
treatments; Eiberg said .
He and colleagues report the

DARE graduates to march..
in ·Fourth of July parade '

w&lt;irk in the Jul y issue of the journal Nature Gcnctt(S .
·
The study dea lt with persistent
bcd-wcllers, rath er limn Childrcn
who had been &lt;lr,y fm al least ·six
months hut then .1tartcd tn wet tile
bed again.

1

· 'JI doe s &lt;lcmon,trale pretty well
th ai bed -wetting is an iuhcritc.d

tnul. at least in «111te cases," and
thm it run s in f.unilic., hec:m~c or a
g,cnc ra th er than some parenwl
practice, such a~ the way lhc chilli
is lnil cl-trn incd. he said .

Eiherg anti colleagues ' tudied
Dr. George Kaplan , chief nf
pediatric urology :11 lh e Uni vers ity
of Californi:t at San Diego. !'ill iLl
pcr&lt;istent hed· wclling lins lon g
been known to run in f:unilies. Dul
the new work is the first he knows
of that tried to link it direc tly 111 rt
gene, he said.

II families with ca;-;cs nr pe rsisiCilt
bed - w~1 1in g.

The pall em of hell-

wetting lhrou gh gcncr:nams suggcstl:.d th;1t a si ng ll! gene was at
work. causing the pro hlcm in morl!

'10 percent nl chi ldren who
inherited it, t11ey said.

jJHm

Sl 11\I)AY SPECIAL • .Jl iLY 2. 199S

parade . The group will meet 10
a.m. , July 4 at !he GDC grounds,
Ohio Avenue. Participants should
wea(their DARE T-shirts. Prizes
wiU be awarded prior to tlle parade.

.By DARLENE SUPER VILLE
ry of sun. protectim\ producls.
1\.ssociated Press Writer
"S unblocks," a subset of sunWASHINGTON CAP) - Is screens, provide an actual physical
· sunblock better than sunscreen'' ' barrier lrom the sun.
The letters SPF st.'illd for "sun proThe FTC cautions wnsumers
1 -~~~fe~~~· ' :...but w:baLdo..,Ule_y__agaiuxLbeing..misled by. st~nscreens
I
~
·
that claim' to be &gt;iunhlocks . Only
gov,e rnment is offering opaque substances, such as ·zinc
MR. AND MRS. ST~PHEN HOUCHINS
some sun lotion tips this July oxide or titanium dioxi\]e, totally
Fourth to block out some of the block the sun's rays , officials say .
" We believe that for consumers,
confusion over sunscreens.
: MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. Perkins of Hillsboro , Mrs.
According to !he Federal Trade !hat what yo~ shouldreally f(lcus
Stephen B . Houchins of Middleport Stephanie (Bradley) Alexander of Commission, "sunscreen" is the on is nnt tlle riarne' of tlle produc~
oJlserved their 40th wedding Vinto11 and Mrs. Susan &lt;1fuey) general term for the overall catego- but 'father the number that tells
_-~iversary July I. The couple has Eason of Athens; three grandthree daughters, Mrs. Angela (Ed) daughters; and one grandson.

ROAST' BEEF DINNER
•Mashed Potatoes &amp;Gravy
•Vegetable
•Side Salad
•Dinner Roll

CLOSED
TUESDAY,
JULY 4TH

ss~s

HOMEMAD~

PIES

AW~

~ LEVOLOR" p-----------~----------~--------~

•

Meigs community calendar
at St;rr Mill Park, Racine. All fmni -

SVMMEII
SVBPJUSE

"on-prorit groups wishing~~~
a()nounce meeting and special
RA.CINE - Theiss Family
.vents. The calendar js n.nt J~cunif.ln-C'~rmmill ec mem in g-ru the- --n - d~ .,fgned- to promote sales or _ Jwm e of David Kucsma on Sunday .
hind raisers of any type. llems 2 p.m.
al',e printed as space permit&lt; aiul
&amp;
cannot be guaranfe~~:d to run a - POMEROY -· Rev. Margaret
Robinson will lead "Mind, Will
s~cilic numher of days.
and Emotion" at tlle Believer' s Fel&amp;
,
SUNDAY
lowship Ministry at 2:30p.m. Open
•POMEROY - Hillside Baptist to pnhlic.
Church·, outside services under
Stile Ends July 31, 1995
sl\elter hous; , Sunday, 6 p.m .;
MONDAY
Mllllday•·and Tuesday, 8 p.m . Dr.
CARP.ENTER - Columbia .
Jatnes R. Acree, Sr.,invites puNic.
Township Board of Trustees meet·
:MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Charles ing, 7:30 p.m Monday at the CarAN~
Cdrry, gue" speaker Sunday , 7:03 penter nrc station .
p.l)l. at the Hobson Christian FelsYR-Ael:rSE-~ -su tmr-Trrwn--"-!H-~
. -IH!'~hip-Church•--ship Trustees, Monday. 7:30 p.m at
MEMORIAL BRIDGE APPROACH ON
:POMEROY - . The Pathlinders. the Syracuse Municipal Building.
GARFIELD AVE, PARKERSBURG
go~pel quartet pf Coal Grove, will
presenta concert Sunday at First
. POMEROY - Meigs County
SouU1ern Baptist Church, Pomeroy
Recycling
Program wil'l accept·
Pil&lt;e, 7 p.m Sunday. Love ()(fering.
appliances to be recycl ed all da y.
:RACINE The annual Unload appliances at parking lot
428~1065
Leonard and Susan Jane Roush eclge until 4:30p.m. Monday.
rcunitm will be held Snnday, 12:36

ur

50o/o 20o/o .OFF-

STORAGE

Free Measuring
Installation

T·I·M•E
Treat your fur to a
· summer-vacation. Coal
shipment tor summer
going o~t July 7th.

Hurry In For Best Selection

WALLPAPER
ND SHOP

Summer Storage Speeial
•

RIVIERA
1Y2't..t"·.;'2"

· ly and friends welcome.

~· ,,_.cc-

Summer Storage

-s1-9 9-9 - --Cleani"g

$2'4 99 '

Cleaning, Glazing
and Storage

$39 99 .

•

LAFAYETIE MALL • GALLIPOLIS

. 446-2477
.

th1t In &amp; receive 15% off.any purchase)
..

1101 Viand Street
•
Silver Bridgf' Plaza
Point Pleasant, WV .
Gallipolis, Ohio
' ~Houn-M·F 10-8; Sat. 10-6;
HOIJrs·M-Satl0-6 Clo&lt;ed Sunday loiili!ol
_
12 5
•

.

See Puzzle
•.

on Page DZ

'

•.

MJJJJiiances and
Electronics Not
Included But Still a
Big Savings
•

•

•

•••

1

Sund:l)', .I uly 2
CHES HIRE .

MON: THRU FRI. 9·8:30
SAT. 9·5:30, SUN. 12·4

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
. 992-5912

GINGERBREAD Hous{6F GIFTS

I

POINT I'LEA~ANT, W.VA. Narcotics Anonymous Tri Cou nty
C&gt;ronp 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

•••

What' services should we offer - - - - , . - Any suggestion?
.

.

•

fund-raisers of 11ny typ•. lt•ms

What do"you the customer want us ·
to o'ffer _____-r~----1 •

You UJill have ove~ 190 style.t of
lftxedos ro choou from . . We have a
.lafge sele~lion of lhe Udest 11yles
and comjJlime~tary acceu.o riel for
tlail special occasion.

, )

bly ill Racine.
The Codners have U•ree children
at their home, Jayson, Jo shua and
Jessika.
·

GALLIPOLIS - New Vision to
sing anll Paul Chapm~n to preach 7
p.m. :11 Whit e ll onu Ch(lfch ofGpd.

Help the Gingerbread
Ho!fse to help our
customers.
Please fill out

OFFER GOOD THRU JULY 31,.1995

'

•••

nun-profit group s wishing tu
announce medin~s and spcciul
events. The calendnr is nut
designed to promot't~ sales ur

p... Help... Help ·

Haskins-Tanner.

)

GALLIPOLIS - Paul and Lois (Pat) Chevalier of Westerville, CarFife-Chevalier will obse rve their olyn Kay (Terry) Lowery of
60111 wedding anniversary witb an Columbus and Carl (Anita) Chevaopen house from 12 to 3 p.m.. July lier of Gallipolis; a daughte[.-in 9 at the home of their son, Carl faw, Elsie Chevalier of Columbus;
.Chevalier, 3645 Dulaville Pike, a son, Jack Chevolier, who died in
Gallipoli.-.
.
'
April 1961; seven grandchildren;
They were ·married June 29, SfiVCn step-grandchildren; and 10
1935 in Clipper Mill by Rev. John ' great-grandchildren.
The couple requesiS that gifls be
Tipton.
·
They have three children Tom omitted.

The Community Calendar is

•Birth ContrQ.I ·~xams
•Pap Tests .
.•Te~ts &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling ..
"
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•Methods include:

'

If you are planning a lf!edding •
rllen you should come .tee us -al

Chevaliers ·to mark 60th

.p uhlishfi:d as a free service In

Confidential Services
•
for females &amp; males.~

New Apparel Arrivihg Weekly! . •

NAt.o·Ry·
RrS
JULY SPECIAL

..

• DepoProvera-injection • Diaphraghm
• Birth control pill
• I.U.D.
_ • ~ndcim/SP!r!"!cide . - · - - -~

reunion I p.m. Kyger Creek Clul&gt;.

· Houchins celebrate 40th

or.. SOU7HEAS7 OHIO

Juniors • Misses • Etc~
Casual ApP.arel

.

'

-.PLANIED

Brands&amp; . Mo~e
· WithoutThe Dr1~e" --

Plaza

PAUL AND LOIS CHEVALIER

•

. 614-446-6700

~~Mall

'

•'

"'

(Preaent thia ad when bootllnt)

NOW OPEN

Spring Valley •.

PORTLAN:O- Robert James
and Sandra Codner will celebrate
their 251h wedding anniversary on
July 4. The Portland couple was
married at the Pentecostal Assem-

Government offers sun lotion tips

·. 5ove 10%

NeWS

424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS ·

•

Profe&amp;Jional Weddi1J8'Pholo8fflpher.B

-

TAWNEY STUDIO

Codners to observe 25th

DARE Officers' Richard Mudd
and Wayne Sweeney invite Gallipolis City and Gallia County
Local School DARE graduates to
join the DARE float in the July 411•

PHOTOGRAPHY

Wedding policy . ...

Le} us copy your old family
.IJI'Iotos. Special 2-5x7's for
$14.95. Reg. $19.95. SAVE
$5.00. We also do passport
photos, identification phophoto 'finlshing. 3 to 5 day service.

'

~~~-c-~

Mrs. Earl R. Hunt of Long Bottom.
The bride-elect is employed at
Overbrook Center .in Middleport,
and her fiance is employed at
Transport Tanlc in Belpre.

The Sunday Times-Sentine-l lh · d
4
· ·
regards !he weddi , . 0 ·f G 11 1.
urs ~Y· . p.m. pnor to the date
ngs
a ~· of pubhcauon.
. .
Me1J\s and Mason counties as n~ws
Thosc.-not making the 60-day
and IS happy to publish weddmg deadline will be published durin g
stones and photographs Without the daily paper as space. allows.
charge.
PI IOtograpIIS of ell·'I1er the cun'de
llo we ve
dd .
,.+
r,
we
Ill£
news
must
II
meet general standard s of timeli- or th.e b rl'd e an d groom may b_e
.
ness. The new spaper p.refcrs to published WI~ weddmg s ton~s tl
publish' accounts of weddings as d~~tred. Photowuphs may be either
I I
soon as possible after Ule event •
b ,tck and whue or good quahty
·
To be ubi'15 h d 10
· 1 s ·d·
color, b•llfold s1ze or larger.
·
'tY m.
· APP.e
I ton
· ·
Jl wedd!Qg
e . tie - tun
Poor quality photograplls
w•'ll
La.wrence Umve.rs•
. . ed•t•on
the
1 ''Y
'
•
.
,
mus
lave
not
be
accepted.
Generally
snapW1s. a.nd Denmson Umverstty m taken place w•thm 60 day• pnor ttl
.
, ·
. .
Granv• 11e. .
. .
.
t11e pubhcat10n,
and may "be up to shots or mstant-developmg
·
. photos
Jenm.ngs IS a p1an~st. from Oh1o · 600 words in lenglh . Materi al for are not ~f acce~t.'lble qualay.
Umvemty where he reti~ '!'. Joly _ Alon!}tlu• Ri-ver mu~t -he ·received
- Alllnaterial submitted foqmbli,994. He aucndtd the Umvers1ty of by the editorial departm ent by cation is subject to editing.
Kan ~as m Law~ence where he
rec,.,v_ed bot~ h1s bachelor an~ .
, .. . .
.. ,
po/icy-----~master of mus1c degrees, stuoym~
l
.
under Paul Snyder, a former pup1l
In an eftort to provide our re:1d- evem.
•
_
ofTobias' Matthay and Artur·Schn- er,'hip wiU1 current news, t11 c GalAll club meetings and other
able.
'
lipalis Daily Tribune and Tlte Daily news articles in the society .section
'
Sentinel will not accept weddings must he submiued within 30 days
after 6Q t11ys frnm the dntc ol' ·tlle l~f occurrency
'

t p!"an I'st to -pe 0 rm
a,. t :Jst Method'l'st Churc'h
.
CeIIIS

M-IDDLEPORT - Mr. ~nd
Mrs . Fred...Oider of Middleport
announce the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Dorothy Marie Older to
Keith Bradley Hunt, son of Mr. and

ROBERT AND.SANDRA CODNER

You'll Come Up Aces With
·· The Lta!)SI
'7:!!!!!!!!!!

· DOROTHY OLDER AND KEITH HUNT

Community Calend ar is

puhlL;;ht!d· as a free se rvi tt' tn

-

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t

r

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Page 84 • JJu..Oau ~i"'..·JJ•ntiml

Pomeroy • Middleport ··Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleas~~i,

:

wv

'

RIO GRANDE - The Unive"ity
of Rio Grande Board of Tru.'lees
bas added two new faces to its
ranks, Former Gallipolis resident
Carol Haskins Wedge and South
Webster resident Frank Dixon
(Dick) Hyland joined Aile board at
the university's annual meeting last
,.
week.
Wedge is a member of the At".t·
demic Affairs Commiuec . Hyland
will serve as a liaison retwecn the
· Alumni Board of Directors and the
Board of Trustees.
A resident of Bowling Green,
Ky.,
Wedge is active in U1c follow•
ing community activities: elder ami
stewardship chairman in the Presl)yterian Church, board of uirectors
of the Riverview Museum, member
of the Bowling Green Beautiftca·
lion Commission, president of the
Kids on U1e Block Board of Directors, member and lonner president
of a ph!lanthrppic educational organi n uion (!'EO).

A grnduate of the University of
Alabama, Wedge was the interim
director of Chris11an Education at
the Presbyteriajl Churth in Bowling Green from:WS7-88 and taught
third grade at Hialeah Elementary
School in Florida from 1964-66
and •Washington Elementary
School in Gallipolis from 1963-64.
• Hyland is a 1946 graduate ofthen Rio Gr:uule College, can1ing a
hachelor's of science degree in elementary and second:uy education.
He then allen&lt;.led Ce&lt;.larville College for a shon tinle. Hylall!l holds
a master's of science degree in educational administration and supervision from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville and di&lt;l furU1er
post graduate work at Ohio University.
· The Scioto County nati ve taught ·
and coache&lt;.l in U1e S.ouU1 Webster
and Portsmou\h City School systems from 1941-42 'md 1947-52.
In 1953, he joined the Goodyear

Atomic Corporation as a training
coordinator and coordinator of
employee recreation and COimnunily relations. Wh~e at Goodyear, he
served as editor of the employee
newslcuer. "The Wingfoot Clan."
Hyland left Goodyear in 1964 to
work for Detroit Steel Corporation
as the company's assistant manager
of communications. During his
seven years '-'ith Detroit $lee!,
Hyland also ru;sllllled the d~t'ies of
director of training . He left Detroit
Steel Corporation in 1971.

Sunday, July 2, 1995-

' After serving six yean:;t'\ director of public relations and advertising fm the First Federal Savings
and Loan
Association of
Purtsmouth. Hyland was hired as
principal of Vernon Elemen tary
Schml in the Bloom Local School
Dis trict in 1977 . ln. 1979 , be
a,ssumed -adclitional duties as coordinator of special programs in the
Bloom Local School District.

.

By MELISSA CIAVA RELLI
Tim&lt;s-S&lt;ntin.t Staff
POMEROY - l1's 1101 just fm
playing bi ngo.
The Meigs County Multipurpose Senior Center does provid e
111-hom~c activities for senior clli:
7C I1S such as hi ngo anc.l pool. but
thdr fot~us is now serving people in
Iheir homes .
'''flH! center tries to pmviU~ any
service wit h the ultimate .goa l of
helping people to live m&lt;.~ependcnt­
ly." said Susan Oliver. exec utive
directo_r , atldiilg that most (lf the

'

mollcy, at the center goes towan.Js
~ervi n g

people in their homes.
Some programs Include a ohpre
serv i c~. wh-ich provides hou seclc&lt;lning and a homelnaker progr;un which helps with houseclt!an..
ing as well as meal preparntion and
errand running.
Provisions in. the homemake r
program uepenu on th e client's
net:.tl~ .

In aUdition. a ·home maintei1ance

prognun proVides ·minor repairs for·
handicapped clien!s such &lt;L' aduing·.hm1dmils 10 bathtubs and building

nunps for easier wheelchair access·
into the home . Clients must own
their own home to receive this .servicc.
The ce nter also recently
acquired a second van that will
help the Hot Shot program which
delivers hm me:~ s to elderlx people
in their homes.
Still more programs. both for
sen ior ci ti zens anLI their.U,nrcdones, toke place within the ccrucr.
Smile or tllt~e programs are
coordinated hy Lenora Leifh eit,
R.N. am.l long-term care assi!&lt;ital1l.
- Sliti'orga{lires1iiai1y support groups

"

incluLI.in~

nne fnr family members

of _ihose who have Alzheimer's
Dise:Lse.

that one person alone can not meet
every necJ a patient req uires. and il
help., lo sec !hal o1her people are
deal in~ witl1 the s:une dinicullie~.
The group also hdp.1 the caregivers to dea..l with emoti ons. such
as guilt and fear. wh1ch come from
dealing wi tll sick f:unily rncmhcrs.
Further, she emphasizes the
need for care-givers lo !!Ike care of
themselves, and realize Lhcy ·have
not failed if a patie nt req uires a
professional riurse or nu rsing
home .
Fina ll y·, the gro up (caches )hat
Alzheimer's Disea"e is more than
sim pl y losing shon -te nn memory .
Wi th no sure diagnosis, people arc '
encouraged to r:ule ou1 nil ot11er illnesses before concluding that U1ey
nr a loved-one has Alzheimer's.
Oflen, malnu triti on, dehydralion. or a vi~ion or hearing pmhiJ:!m
may cm,tse short-lerm memory loss.
O nce these :ue ;~levialcd, memory
often improves, said Leilheit.
The group is open to anyone
who wants to learn how tu care for
a sick loved one~d is not restricted 10 Alzheimer's ~are-givers.
Other servi ces include fre e .
rnoQthly and bimnnthly screenings
of all types, including cbplesterol
and cataracts screenings.
If an elder·!y person is unable to
get. to the ce nter, representatives
fr om the Ge nter can screen the
sen ior in his/her home.
Annual screenings include a
prostate clinic in Seplemher and n.u.
siloLs in October. ·
A free health information fair is
bl!ing planned where representatives froJn the Meig s County
Health Dep&lt;!f.,!!!!_enL\&gt;J.ill diWibule
infonn-alion and pamphlets.
The fair is intended to inform
senior citizens ahout what services
are available to them in Me igs ·

or

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

••
Crow's on top of things.

Hoeflich's 'round' the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

Times-Sentinel

,,

.

Cou nt y, but is open to eve ryone,
said Diana Coats, health coordinator.
These services arc not meant to
diminish the importan ce of th e
social ac tivities like pool, cra ft s

anti canJ games.

.

"If that ' s what make s !hem
;happy, if thm ' s why U1cy get out or
hed in the .morni1\g, what niore
should we do ?" sa id Oliver,
adding that the alternative, loneliness can lead to bad health.
The professionals at th e center
are well-trained to work with the
pati e nts . Eac h must go thro ugh

ex tensive training ant! then pa.o,;s an
agency lest.
" We have a wonderful staff.
They really care a bout peopl e."
saill Oliver. .. That's a tJni4ue silllation to be in."

(P'trr. more ·information about

Focus on

thefamil ·

ON._.WMP~

men ~1l."

..

~ I T H

Dr. James Dobson
\'urth America's forerno.st authoritY or1 the farn1lv

H
JU~I

ealth y.

Monday, July 3, 9:30 am - 6 pm
Summer
Swimsuits Dresses
Sportswear

wcll..adju~tcd
fa•ni llt'~

d1m't

h.tp pcn.Th..:y'rc

...:.1re

.md TL":-.pt'Lt. L.l...:h

·soo/o

wt:ckda y, Or-. Dobson
wrnbi ncs.sound .
h1bli...:,Jl wisdo1~1 Jnd )lr,lrti.:.ll
p-..ychological in:-.i_ght 1n Y,l\l' you
lht' h mi-. you llL'\.'d fix bL11 Id nw, .1
~ tr'!lllt;f,,mil y.
'
make thl· .\0-mH\llk hll.'u\
on tht· l;.lnlilv r.1d1o

program p.1ri nltht·irt..i.l~ '
Tumtne H•arts
Toward Home

2:5o/o·

off

75°/o off

-...-~.,"'W--.~e Will Be Closed J~.lly 4th

My Sisters Closet

J

Tune In 9:30AM on 1390
Br/iught to you by:
Hockenberry Leader Pharmacy
McClure's Restaurants
Health-Aid Pharmacy
Faith Baptist Church

(: /

SO%

Join milhnn!&gt; lll otlll'r'&gt; whtl

992-2161.

Lafayette Mall • Gallipolis

\\

Jurors' selections in profess ional photography included fll'St place
to Tom Layman, Ath e ns, for
~ : "Renections in a Creek." This also
;:: received a Purchase Award from
·• • Thaler O.rthopaedic Clinic. Second
Place went to Jim Stansbury, Buckhannon. W .Va., for "Lake Superior
Agates," with a Purchase Award
givi)n by Reliance Motion Control.
An .~orable Menti on went to
.Gar
aylor, Huntington , for
·~
" Beloved (Albert Memorial)" a
cibachrome print.
In print making, Jack Sullivan,
Chillicothe, received two awards
for his serigraphs, first place for
Striver "Goddesses" and second
~place for ."Wailing." In profession.. ~ al pastels, first place went to Paula
Perry, Huntington, for "Picturesque
Moo-Moo."
. Other Purchase Awards in the
professional divi s ion included
. . . "Phases" by Don B,aker, Kingston ,
given by Nancy Brubaker Lalhey.
She also chose "Shovels," a waterBev
, 10

Angie
tor; Diana

apd long-term care coordinahealth coordinator; and

ponmf Williamson, home maintenance coordi· .
nalnr. (T-S photo hy Melis.&lt;l\ Ciavarelli)

:Reunion policYWiUl the frunily reunion season
quickly_ approaching,_ma ny wiU
submiumg arlrcles ol l:unrly acltvtties for publica!ion.
To ensure prom pi publication .
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
· Tile Daily Senrinel requests that
articles be neatly typed ahd double
spaced for easy editing . Reunion
items should not ell,ceed 300 words
and must be subrnitled within 30
Jays of occurrence .

be

FREE!
· Gold Wedding Ring with
every Diamond Solitaire

No exceptions will he made.
All malenal subm1\t&lt;d lor puhli c:~uon IS subJect to edmng Anicles
will be publrs_hed a~ soon as possi- ~
ble.

W:liiTADS
"II
AHf JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS-

POMEROY NURSIN'GAND
·REHABILITATION CENTER

-r
FREE 'MAGIC SHOW.
'\

•
Compare our prices on
diamonds. We will not ,be
undersold. Also 50 to 70'l'o

off d'n 14K gold chains. All
make .watches. Men's or
Ladies 20 to 40% Off.
• 10 OR'14K-WEDDING
BANDS 300k,OFF

Tawney Jewelers Inc.
Gallipolis ·

4

6:00P.M.
~ OPEN

'

TO· -THE PUBLIC
-

LIMITED
SEATING
·,

·--,_.

1

ANY

'

I

PURCHASE I
OF $25 OR I
MORE
I

.

..lilly 3--

(full sales !WI 1ncludedl l
GOod lor 1n-stad: mert/13rni1St ontt One eoucwn pe1
1ranSit!IOil Pnoto CCCtes not acceD!e.:J On~r nOf ~aliO

on ~rdlase ol c ~re11es e•tstmglay·awiys or w.l~

other coupo11s Cus10mer must tmno mU1e ccrupon
10 recetve lt1e couoon value Valid U2 thru 714!95

.

.

I

1
I
I

II,:

L.:..;.. _________ _.

• • 4

· TOP ART - "Best of Show," Amateur Division, is a collograph
hy Clayton McNearney, Huntington, West Virginia. Shown he.re
by co-chairs .Jan Tholer, le n , and Saundra Koby for the 27th
Annual Festi"al Exhihit.
'
•
Holzer Medical Center, in memory
of her lat e husband, Ron Lathey.
Reliance Motion Control selected
two "in thi s division, a watercolor
by Teresa Baker, "The F ugitive:
and a photograph by Tom Layman,
"Co rn Field . at Sunrise, Athens
County." Bill Gray selected a
watercolor , " Hilltop View" by
Bemard Miller, Hurricane, w. Va..
A giftiD Holzer Medical Center, by
Dr. and Mrs. I . A. deLamerens;
was an ciil on paper. Synthesist
Revivals by Sharran Parkinson,
Athens. McDonald' s Restaurants
se lecteo a watercolor by Teresa
Baker, "Lake's Edge."
. In the amateur division, hest of
show and first place in print making was awarded to Clayton MeNeamey, Huntington , for his collograph, "Casket." First Place for a
three-dimensional work went to
Mona Arrill, Huntington, for a
stoneware piece entitled "Harold."
Awards in watercolors included
first place to Dee Trent, St. Albans,
W .Va., for "Child at Play." This
received a Purchase Award from
McDonald's Restaurant. Second
Place went to "Swee t Nothings,"
by JoeAnn Crawford •. Tornado,
W.Va . A . Purchase Award was
given by Gene Johnson Chevrolet
Oldsmobile for this painting.
In graphics, first place went to
Suzanne Rupert, Columbus, for a
charcoal/pencil, "Leaf' and an
, Honorable Mention for "Cabin ."
Second place was aw·aroed tll'"Glil-lipoliiJm, Lee Sprinkle, for a pencil
. drawing, "Octagon House." This
received a Purchase Award by Star
Bank NA Tri-State and is a giflto
HolzerMedicaiCemer.
Other awards.' in the amateur
division included first place for a
to Suzanne Rupen, Co lum "Autumn
." This

-EXHffiiT WINNER - Professional Division
"Best of Show" watercolor "Rosettes,~' by Don
- Ba ker, Klngstotr Oklo is being admired by somrof.the Purchase Award -donors, left, Bill Gray,
Ohio Valley-Bank, Nancy Brubaker Lathey,

SUMMER CLEARANCE GOING ON-NOW!

received a P~rchase Award from
Reliance Motion Contr()l. Claudia
B,Yant. Southside, W.Va., received ,
an Honorable Mention in Oils for i
" Rose Garden" and a Purchase
Award for U1e same painting fnun
Ohio Valley Dank , as a gift for
Holzer Medical Ce"nler. Fri enlls of
Holzer Medic;d Center gave a Purchase Award to Frank Miller, Point
Pleasant, W.Va . for "Sunrise in
Mason, County." This is a memorialto Mable L. Plants for the Mcdical Center.
Juror s selected a total of 47
works for the Jul y gallery exhibit.
In addition to the above, works by
Marian ...- Murpby, Huntington,
Karen Wonn, Crown Cliy and Ross
· Straight of Buckhannon, will also
· be shown: Many of the paintings
are for ~ale. All First Place and
Be;.vor Show in both divisions
receivt!--cash awards. John Cometl
representing. Bank One, will pre'\ sent checks to winhers July 2 at a
'reception for emering artists, sponsors and FAC memhers.
Those choosing Purch ase
Awards for area businesses included Nancy Brubaker and Marianne
Carnphell for Holzer Medical Ceriter, Bill Gray for Ohio Valley
Dank, Barbara Coleman and Alice
Niday for Star Bank,- Pau!'Schmidl,
for Reliance Motion Conuol, Pat
Sauber for McD·o nald's Re stau rants, Gene and Janel Johnson for
Gene Johnson Chevrolet and Jan
Thaler for'fh·aier Orth"!f1!11e-!ll&lt;: -I- -CI
Clinic.
Mis;se_s
Jurors' selections may be· seen
in the galleries tbrougbout July,
Tuesday throagh Friday from 10
a.m. to 3 p.m. and Saturday and
Sunday from I to 5 p.m., at 530
First Ave, Gallipolis. The·exhibit
is free and open to the public.

2.5%-50%

FC&gt;R HER

25%-50%oFF 25%-45%oFF
DRESSES..
NOW $10 to

SWIMWEAR '&amp; COVER-UPS

NOW $748 to $16 50

$35

Reg. 9.97 to 29.97

Reg: 19.97 to 49.97

25%-30%oFF 2.5%-30% OFF

'

SHORT SETS
NOWs6 to $12
. Reg.

7.9~

WHITE &amp; FASHION.HANDBAGS

NOW $6 fo $7
Reg. 7.97 to-9.97

to 15.97

25%-4-0% OFF 2.6%-4-6% OFF
SPRING ACTIVEWEAR
••
NOW $5 to $9
Reg. 9.97 to 14.97

I

-

· sLEEPW~AR

NOW $7 to $11
Reg. 12.97 1o 14,97

f

"SUMMER COORDINATES · TJE~DYET'S"&amp;~SHORTS
Misses &amp; Jrs.
NOW 17 to 1]6 R.... 9.97 1o 21 _97
NOW '6 &amp; 17
••
Reg. 7.97to 9.97
KNIT &amp;WOVEN TRAVEL SETS
_S_U..oN-'S-'H-1-f==-TS=--'--=..;..,:,;,:~:..:..:..:..--~NOW 112 to 114 Reg. 16.97 ro 18.97
NOW 112 to 1 14 Reg. 16.97 ro1B .97 .
.NOVE''TY
DENIM SHORTS &amp; BOXERS LIV("'
r tANK TOPS
L
1 KA
NOW 16 to 115 Reg. 8.97 ro 19.97
NOW 13 Reg. 4.97
CHARACTER TANKS, T'S &amp; SHORTS NOVELTY CROPPED KNIT POLOS
Misses &amp; Jrs.
NOW 16 t0 .11 Reg.11.97to 14.97 . ..A...-.
.17 t 19·

*.

:* -

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

·

0

~

Reg. 9.97 ro U-97

Gl~'

S .

.

FC&gt;R PC)VS

DRESSES

SHORT S~TS.

NOW $5 to $12

NOW $5 to $10

Reg. 7.97 to 19.97

Reg. 7.97 1o 14.97

Holzer Medical Center, Alice Niday; Star Bank;
Janet and Gene Johnson , Gene Johnson Chevro•
let a ml Paul So hmi-dt-, Manugers Reliance
Motion Control.
·• ,

.SHORT SETS
NOW 17 to 1 12 Reg. 9.97to ts .97
SHORTS, KNIT SHIRl:S,
TANK TOPS &amp; ROMPERS
NOW 12 to 1 10 R09. 3.oo to 14.97 .

GRANVILLE. Ohio (AP) Every day 's a holiday for Duane -·
Goodwin and .Bob Diebold. '
The two carpenters. for _seven
parmers in their Promoti on in .
~~~::~ business, spend the ir da.ys
J;
noats for p:uades arouno
the country. They do most of their

work in barnlike buildings in this
community about 30' miles east of
Columbus.
.
But they were lo ggi ng some
overtime as ihey hustled _to meet
the demand for the Fourth of July
- their busiest holidny of the year.
•

KNIT SHIRTS
NOW.13 to 17 Reg. 4.97to 9.97
-;
SHORTS

NOW ~ 3 tG •19 Reg.-U7to 12.97 -

*

.
ALL lAWN MOWERS·

the pair and some helpers h ave
created 26 noats.that w1ll al!pcar ~~
parades 1n two states thr ~ July
Fou rth .
.
!\'s no easy task, says Goodwm.
Wbo would have thou~ht two
grown men could make a lrvrng at
this?" he said. ·
,

. Brand ndme styles with convertible
mulchers, ·rear baggers &amp;,more!

NOW $103

to

$21-5

Reg. 129.86 1o 268 .86

•

.·.

-\

..:1 •

ALL GYM SETS

7 AY
'
.. A .

Deluxe sets featuring sV:.ings, slides,
gym rings &amp;more 'fun act1'vities!

I

WEEK. ; •'

NOW $99

.8 A.M. TO 1~ - P.M.

'

..

C,all and speak to a re~stered nurse who will talk to you about
_illness, injury, support groups or physician referrals.

.

. Sunday 1Oam-6pni
Monday thru Thursday 9am-9:30pm'
Friday &amp; Saturday 9am-10pm
• SPECIAL HOURS TUESDAY, _
JULY 4TH 8am•8pm .

•

1'~800-462-5255
'

'

calls h(ls us planning for a future expansipn of hours.

'

.

- Cub Scout Pack 205
Troop 205 were the-hosts of-Cub
the VF W. S h&lt;!lter June 17. Scouts

, thro~g.l)mit-.the area participated in the
day s activ1tres. Pack. 205 won the o~tirall tro·
phy.

.L

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••

'

GALLIP.,OLIS, OHIO OHIO RIVER PLAZA - ROUTE 1 N.
.

'·'&lt;i

.

Selections ·maY vary by stOre·..

STOF.IE HOURS

•

increasing

$399

to

Reg. 129.86 tp 499.86

•

'

OFF

. Float builders put their work on parade

h~lpy

Fonleroy Nursing end Reh"\&gt;)llf&lt;l11on Cent•r
36759 RockJprlngs.Rood • Pom•r~r, Ohio 45769-9731 • 6"/992-6606

1

.,

is there to ·

PRESENTS

WITH PROFESSIONAL NIGEL JACKSON
tUESDAYf JU~Y -4, 1995

WITH THIS
COUPON

J

HOTLINE

- - - - -

I

20%-50%oFF 25%-50%oFF

uMA"c'·IY

992-6491 •

.

•• '

off ,

you are ...
country, city or
suburbs...
. chanc~s are you will
need to talk to a
professional about a
health concern.
.

MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

.Middleport

SAVE.AN-, EXTRA

..

FC&gt;R.

All Natural C.H. 2001
Wllh Chromium Plcollna1e
.,

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.

•• -. ... ~-------I LOSEIN ~&amp;3 DAYS
10 l'B$. ~ - Tiie
I
I
Hpl;ZER
HF~LTH
I
~.HuPOANRM
I
FcRs•U
.ooToH...

)

'

"•

HELI'ING
- S.veral of
rnernhers at the Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Cente-r includ&lt; from left: Lenora
Leifheit, R. N. and long-term care assistant;

~unll~u 1Jhm•-JJ•ntiml • Page B'5

.

Now

,...

)

SHOP JULY 4TH 8AM-8PM
.
.

446-4446

No matter where
......

~

•.

"

gruwn ... with ILiVl',

111ese and other services provided
by the Meigs County Multipurpose
Senior Cenler, residents may call

.
t
•

424 Second Ave.

to

women s&lt;w-a quill to
h&lt;ip the le..s fortunate during the winter. Thl&lt; and other acti~lties
k&lt;ep seniors husy at the Meigs County Multipurpo-e Senior Cent&lt;r. (T -S photo by Melissa. Ciavarelli)
.

j

0

GAI..t.IPOliS - The 27th annual
French Art Colony Festival Exhibit, sponsQred by Bank One, Gallipolis, was j.Udge4. recently by
three prpfessional jurors frpm
. Ohio. West Virginia and Kentucky.
Jurors were Barb;ua Summ ers,
Exei:utive Director, Southern Hills
Arts Council, Jackson; Michael
Comfeli1, Olairman, Department of
Art. Marshall University, 'in Huntington;· W.Va. and Dr. Bill Booth,
Professor of.Art History , Morehead
State University, Kentucky.
After snrdying the enlries, jurors
stated, "This year's exhibit reflects
strength, power and artistic vision
by the participants. The strong handling of media in the professional
category is exemplary, particularly
in water9olor and photographic categories. NoteworU1y, in the amateur ca te~·ry, were prints and
graphics,
hich demonstrated
exception technique and handling ·
of the .me ·urn . Several awards
were given as encouragement for
works showing great promise.
Awards given in the professional di vision include: Best of Show
and first place in Watercolors lo
Don Baker. Kingston, for
"Roselle s." second place in the
same category, t o Be v Reiley,
Greenfield for "Jump Rope &amp;
Yo Yo's." Two Honorable M en· tions were given
Paul Bradford,
"!
Athens·, "K ink in the Sea," ami
" ·. Teresa Baker, Kingston. for "Two
Stories."
In professional oils, first pl ace
went to Sandy Nelson Perrine;
Greemlp, Ky., for "Kneen e l a nd
. ' Autumn ." She also received an
Honorable Mention for "Lexing1on
Spring." Second place in U1e category went to Paula Perry, from
Huntington, for "Up a Creek." An
additional Honorable Mention was
given to Sharran Parkinson,
Athen s, for "Consciously Orna-

TRUSTEE MEMBERS - The University
Rio Grande Board
of Trustees added two new memh•rs to il&lt; ranks r~cenlly. Carol
Haskins _W edge, l•ft, and Frank Dixon (Dick) Hyland were
installed atthe .university's
annual meeting
June 17.
.
.
'

.

.

Pomero~leport • G~llipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

ArtColpny Festival Ex,hiblt

•

Qenter offers in-house assistance for seniors

-·

. rtwork judged at French-

.'

~;_----_;_--_;_-1

-

•

Sunday, July 2, 1995

·university of Rio Grande adds new members to
Board
·ot
·
Trus.
t
ees·...:::_..:;;=...=:...::..:.::__.=:_.=__::___
.
llyland retired fium both,.posi;ious
in 1987.
He serves on the Scio10 County
Jrb.'llu of M R/DJ) and the Ohio
~ Asstlciation nf Coun~y Boar&lt;.ls of
MR/DD. He is also a tru s re e of
Shawnee State University. Hyland
is a lifetime member of the following _organizations: Sci,oto County
Re_ttred Teachers; Ohio Retired
Teachers and the· Ohio As~ocll\tion
of Basketball Officials. • .
He is an honorary . rnem6er of
the South Webster High School
Hall of Fame and OHSAA ·Basketball Officials Hall of Fame. He
holds a doctor of technical letiers
from the Scioto Technical Institute
as well as the Silver Beaver Award
from the Boy Scouts of America.
Hyland will serve a two year
term as alumni representative; to the
board of lrustees. He was·appointed
to lhe position by the University or
Rio Grande Alumni Board of
Directors.
.{
•.

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·.'

· MIDDLEPORT
Re v . pi an is t, .and Don Lower y ha&lt;!_
Krisana P: Robinson was ordained charge of tollin g the hell .
in recent ceremonies conducted by .
E lder McCalla had lhe opening
llte Presbytery of Scioto Valley at st:ot em,e nt followi ng si ngi ng o f
th e Middl eport Pres byte ri a n " Ho l y Art T hou" hy the Mei gs
Chu.rcb. .
·
Ministry Clloir. Prayers and scripThe min.istef. who pastors the tun! reading s were given by t~e
.·-Middl,e port, Sy rac usf and l-Iar- commissioners and Rev. York had
ri son viii ~ Prcsby teria.Jl Churches, the sermon, "The Misery and the
re ceived her doctorate' .hom the Majesty of the Ministry." A prayd
McConnick Thcol&lt;&gt;gicld Seminary of ordination with the lay ing on of
in Chicago June 6.
ilouHh w~s incl ud'eo in the ordina..... A silent meuitation, the tolling • Hem servoce. .
.
of the church bell. and tl1e procesRev . Robmson was born onto a
sion of the cru1didate and the Pres- Christian frunil y in Ching Mai and
bytery commissioners opened the graduated high school from Dara
service of ordination.
Academy, a C hnstt an sc hool for
1l1e commissioners for the ordi- girls in her hometown in 1976. She
n~ ti on we re Rev. Francis Nagy, wen! I? Payap Un iversit y al so _in
ex ec uti ve pre sbyter and Rev, Cfim ~ g Mao and rece oved a bacheWilliam Browne associate cxecu- lor ol art• degree on pholm oph y ru1d
live presbyter, ~th of the Sci oto reli gion in 1981. She then studied
Valle y Presbytery; Rev . Thomas at McGilvary Theolog ical Semo York, pastor of Board Street Pres- nary which was a part of Ps_yap
bytcrian Church, Columbus; Rev . Universi,ty and graduated woth a
Herold Demus, state supply pastor master of divinity degree in 1983.
of the church in lr&lt;&gt;nton ; Elder Paul She was pa.,tor ill a church south of
McCa lla. moderator of Presbytery BMgkok until I988 when she went
of Sc ioto Valle y; Elder Lily to the Au stin Presbyoeri luo llleolngSchlicht er, Hoge Memorial Presby- ica l Seminary in Au stin , Texas,
teri an Church, Columbu s; a nd gradunt ing from there wid1 a masElder Betsy Parsons, Middl eport ter ot theology in 198'1. Alkr thai
church; Elder Margaret Collrill, she anended the Austin CommuniSyracuse church; and Elder Pauline ty College until May , 1990 when
Atkins, Harri sonville church .
she cmne to Meigs County.
Le nnie Hapton s oaH wa s the
In conjunction with U1e minis organist: Eleanor McKelv ey the
·

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

U.S. ve'terans build
monument to Canadians. :who died.in Vielnam

•
ans and Viemamese milillll)' veterBy DAVID GOODMAN
ans now living in North America.
Associated PftSS Writer .
The 11-foot by 15 -foot granite
DETROIT (J!:eL- Tbe Viet monument
is goin g up at Windnam War led thousan!ls to cross the
sor'
s
Assumption
Park, in the btadU.S.-Canadian border. Some were
ow
of
the
Ambassauor
Bridge that
AI,nericans fleeing the draft. Others
links
the
United
States
and
Canada.
Canadians seeking to join
The
monument
is
a
labor
of love
fighting force s . .
for
three
American
s,
who
spent'
wiD dedicate a memo$180,000
of
the
ir
own
money
to
in the border city of
build
it.
Windsor,
to honor 11,3
Canadians who gave !heir lives in a · Vietnam veterans Ed Johnson of
war their own government had Farmington Hills anu Ric Gidner of
White Lake and Chris Reynolds of
L,.;L~~~~:;
shunned. ·
·
Grand
Haven had to p ersuade
- Ofdlnatlon ceremonies for the Rev.
"They're finally being accepted
Canadian
auth&lt;)rities to linu a place
Robinson were held recently at the Mlddleport, P
in C~nada," said Lest~ Pegouske,
for
the
monwnent
.
Church. She received her doctorate from the McCormick
a· U:S. Vietnam veteran helping to
' 'Without tbese thre e guy s
leal Seminary in Chicago on June 6. Participating In the
organize the event. "'Illey're' COIJl·
doing · it and paying for jt, it
were from the left, were ,Elders Lily Schlichter of Columbus, Maring ohtofthe closet in droves." .
garet Cottrill of the Syracu.&lt;e Church,
Parsons ()f the Mid·· ·••
Tens of thousands of Canadians, wouldn't have happened, " said
dlepol't Church, and Pauline Atkins of
Church.
, . p~rhaps as many as 40,000 , are ' Pegouske, an officia't of Vietnam
;. b~lieved to have been among the Vete~~of America Chapter 9 in
. ; 1.3 milli\lq, \J.S. military personnel Detr\)if. . ·
ter' s ordim\tion, Uoe 140Ul lmniverJobnst;H\ said he got !he idea for
, who serv~ the Viemam War.
sary of the founding of the MiddleThe dedication is expectell to the memorial when he met some
port Church was celebrated .
attract thousands of Canadiru1 oi:tili- Canadian Vi e tnani veterans in
The Middleport Church was
·
tary veterans , U.S . Viemam veter- Washington .
organized May 27, 1855 by the
~~
Athens Presbytery , and the lower
room of the church was constructed
between 1859 and 1861.: It was
there !hat all services were held
until the building could be completed. Construction was hamperell
by the Civil War but by 1869 the

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l WE WILL BE OPEN:

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CHICKEN
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SELECTID ITEMS ON SALt

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LOCAL SCHOLAR - Marie Kuhn of
Northup was on~ of six recipients of the Kathryn
Belch S~hularship. The $500 scholarship was
awarded during the ~-H Recognition-Banquet,
June 16 at the 4-H Youth Expo In Columbus.
The award is S(lflnsored by Ne.&lt;tle-Belch. Scholarship recipients and presenters were, front left,

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by presby~ry

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··SYRUP -

Melissa Wright, Kuhn and Liz Lapoczka; Tiney
McComb, back left, Ohio 4-H Foundation president; Derek Dusthimer; Kelley Darby; and
Keith Smith, director of Ohio State University
Extension. Kuhn plans to attend the University
of Rio Grande, majoring in nursing. Sl)e has
been nctive In 4-H for 10 years.
•

24·oz.

$

Diabetic Support Group to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer instructing inpatients and outpaMedical Center Diabetic Support tients about their diet, she contracts
Group will hold its monthly_ meet- nulritidn services with area nursing
: ing from 2 to 4 p.ln .. July !nlr-lkll. homes, HeadStanand prenatal.
hosp-itiil'SFrenc~ 500 Room . · J .
The group will dlScliss food '
Kelly Bailey; a registered dieu- .choices when altending family .
tian at HMC , will be the guest gatherings, picnics and reunions.
speaker. She has a master's degree . For more information call 446·
in nutrition from the University of. •. 5313 .
North Carolina . .In adllition to

~

Massive airlift flies .hundreds.•
of athletes ·to Connecticut

•

SHURFRESH

By EVAN BERLAND
cut earlier in the week, staying with
Associated Pres.• Writer
htlSL rrunilies and in hotels before ·
WINDSOR LOCKS, Conn. gathering on various cmnpuse's.
(AP). ,- On planes landing every
Gov. John G. Rowland .Jr. and
three minutes, about 1,700 athletes officials from Uoe games and com_ llew into Co11necticut (l~ Friday - . .panics .sponsor.in~ lb~airl ift!nm!ell .
an event organizers saod was tift the some '330 volunteers expected
largest peacetime airlift in history.
to participaoe.
·
Athletes and coaches arrived
The airlift, organized by Cessna
frogo 20 sta'tes and Washington, and more than 200 companies
D.C., 'on more than 200 corporate nationwide, took a year of preparaand privately owned jets to partici- tion.
p.ate in the ·nine-day Special
Olympics Worlll Games.
. President Bill Clinton, forst lady
Hillary Rollham Clinton and a
number of foreign dignitaries are
•expected to join the. approximately
7,200 athletes from 140 etmntries
for opening ceremonies Saturday
night in New !-Iaven.
·.
Volunteers led each group of
about six .athletes and ·coaches onto
a red carpet in a hangar at Bra&lt;lley International Airport. Connecticut
Special Olympians 3lld a band wel-comed each flight.
• .. "You see all of rhese pe!Jple.
standing here clapping and clteer-.
in g. It just _pump_s you U)l even
more,: ' .said, Abraham Shears, 27, ..
of Lima, .Ohoo, as \]le b~d played ·
"It's a Small World."
"You can't'ask for anything
better than this," said Shears, who
plans· to take pan in the pentathlon.
• The forst'pllme, from Columbus,
conectibie bean
.
..
Ohio, landed about 8:45 a.m. The
final flight, une of four from Texas, ·
was schcd~ touch. down about
204 N. Second Avenue
6:30p.m.
'
After volunteers unloaded lugMiddleport, QH 4~60
. gage, alhl~tcs boarded ~uses for the
. 10-s Mcm;·Sat. 61A/992 -4o55
.( Iii~
· ride rto CllHege-dormitories~in , the ·
Ne'w Haven 'are Athletes from
· other countri
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Entertainment

July2, 1995

Pe6i&gt;le 'in·the-news

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.J:tcm

DE1ROIT (AP)
Arnold has the
prenuJ!Ii1d jilla'S, and best man Chris Farley is
partly 10 blame.
•
"I'm worried about him stripping naked
and running through the ceremony,"'Arnold said.
"But then: will be ocher troublemakers there, too.
It'll be
Iloseanne's eJt will many Julie ChampneUa on
Jutr 22 at the Ritz..Qirlton Hotel in Dearborn.
Farfey,a "SBlurday Night Livt" cast m~mber, is'an
old friend oC Arnold's.
·
"I want·tohaveafamily,l wantlp have a kid. Apan
1'rom being in love, that's why I'm getting marTom
ried," Arnold said in Friday's Detroit News.
.
. .
Arnold. 36, and Cbampnella, 22, met when the
former uni..ersity student was visiting her~ in' California Champnella
is allllive of suburban Detroit

run.·

· .

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NEWYORK(AP)-BusinessisgoodlhesedaysforDonaldTrump.And
his eJt says she couldn't be happier about iL
Ivana Tnunp called the New York Post from Monte Carlo to say she had
lead about The Donald's financial C01flebaclc.
·

Alan ·Thicke·finds·himself'
in 'Hope &amp; Gloria·'
By LYNN ELBER
AI' Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP)._:_ Alan
Thicke is having the last laug~ at himself. And clearly savoring it.
As "Hope &amp; Gloria's" Dennis
Dupree, a talk show host who
refuses 10 let scant success deflate
his ego or his hair. Thicke bo.&gt;rders
on mockery of some of the lesser
mom ems or his'own career.
He's also getting the kind of
critical strokes for his skillfully
smarmy perfonmince in the NBC
comedy 8:30 p.m. EST Thursdays,
that can take the ache out of such
comparist&gt;ns.
Maybe that ' s why Th1cke so
readily accepts tn.e parallels . In
facl, he noles them him.o,;elf with a
Zen-like calm that forestalls any
criticism as unenlightened. Unin. (formed. And rude, to boot.
"I've been Dennis Dupree. I
have lived thi~· lif-e,· ' Thicke, 48,
says during a"'break on the set ' of

"Hope &amp; Gloria," which stars
Cynthia S Ievenson as Dupree· s
producer, Hope, and Jessica Lundy
as neighbor Gloria.
''I'm aware and having some
fun with the fact there' s au element
the guy· who
.of self-parody ....
all through the '80s emceed everything (Bill) Cosby w'\'n't available.
'for. And who hosted every parade
and pageant that Dick Clark wasn't
available for," Thicke said.
"Actually, I probably had tlle
. career that Dennis would .aspire
to," he finishes, wryly.
Thicke hosted a popular daytime
TV talk show in his natiX&gt; Canada,
was a successful TV producer and
~writer for Cosby, Aip Wilson and
ot·hers, is a songwriter. movie

I'm

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B'8
•'

•

"~ t1J.ink i!'s ~the's doing weU.Ifhe does wen. my children do weU,•
Constantine, SS,has been in eJtile in London sin;l967, wheli he and his
she said mFriday s paper.
__
. familyfledaflel'anabutivecoupagainstaright-wingmilitaryjuntathatseized
· She~ it clelr she doesn't want any oC his money for benelf.
power earlier that year.
· "I make moneyearthrectimes wlwhe paid me in a settlement," she said. ·
"I'm a hard-working tid. I'm doing gn:aL"
·SPOKANF,. Wash. (AP) - CaJJ!&lt; Scott
. Mrs::~P Rtdved ~10 rnillioo in cash when they di~ in t99o. O'Grady is looking forwanlto a little obscurity.
Smc~ theJt splil, she has wntten two novels and an lidvice book lind also has
The Air Fon:e pilot who hid for six days after
her own perfume and clothing IiDe oo the Home Shopping Netwa'k.
being sh&lt;it down Iwie 2 behind Serb lines in Bosnia
She is starting an advice column and makes about $20000 a~ in landedinfriendlierterrita'yThursdayattheSpokane
speaking fees.
•
· ·
'
airpon.
.
.
Family, friends and three WashingtOn Nati()llal

scriptwriter and , of course, had a
seven-year .run on the ABC sitcom
" Growing Pains."
Thicke earned two Emmy nominations for writing and producing
the slyly satirical "Fernwood
Tonite" and " America 2-Nite."
He is even a film swr: "I have a
Blockbuster movie career, which
means they g&lt;i direct to v.ideo.''
And just eigbl mon.ths ago he
took a beauty queen bride. forrner
Miss :.Vorld Ginn Tolleson.
Then U•ere's the circa 1983 Horror that Came in the Dark. Also
known as "Thicke .of the Night," it
was a syndicated talk show which
positioned ito;elf as threat to Johnny Carson and ended up a brief TV
blip.
Thicke verbally s4uirms as he
recalls the bravura promotional
campaign introducing an unknown
Canadian to American viewers as
the man who would be late-night
king.
•
• It ldt an odd, oily sheen of arrogance and flop sweat Umt Thicke
had to overcome. And· which he
now uses in conjuring Dupree,
Pittsburgh TV's "host who cares
tiu~ most.''
"CerL'linly everything I needed
to learn about failure, struggle,
damage control, career rehabili(ar
lion and ego bashing II learned in

Soul-singing~
King remains
royalty

By DOUGLAS J, ROWE
Associated P.ress Writef
NEW YORK (AP) - No rest·
ing on legendary laurels for Ben E.
King.
He sang on Manhauan Trans·
fer's recent comeback CD. He's
touring Japan through July. He
plans to work soon with country
star Mickey Gilley and the Edmonton Symphony Orchestra. And his
reminiscences. some painful, are
part of the recent 10-part video
documentary "The History of
Rock 'n' RoiL"
"Musically, I love to get
involved with whatever there is. I
· don'llike t~nock music ... I don't
like to say, 'Well, I don't listen to ...
tl1is because ... I don't listen to Utat
because ... , " says King. bc.st
known for the 1961 song "Stand
,
.
ByMe."
Looking more like the kinuly
grandfather he is these days than
the soul singer who also made
"Spanish Harlem" into a hit, King
.
contmues:
"Because I still write, I listen to
everybody. To find out what the
pulse of the music ls about at this
particular time. And then, too, I listen because I know whatever's
that," he says . .
happening iS' settin' the pace for
Thicke also acknowledges Denwhat I might what to get involved
nis' deeper television roots . He's
wilh.'' ·
. part of a loosely knit clan of what
And it continually intrigues him
Thicke calls "on-camera dunderto see whether those pace-setters
heads,'' starting with Alan ·Brady .
are just one-bit wonders onum out
J AZZ.ING IT UP .- Wynton Marsalis, artistic director of the
(Carl Reiner) in "The Dick Van
to have staying power. ' .'There's a
Lincoln Cente~ Jazz Orchestra, performS with t~e group at 'the
Dyke Show" and including Ted
trick about surviving after the
JVC Jazz Fesllval's "Battle of the Bands" in' New York's Avery
Baxter (Ted Knight) in "The Mary
fact," he says.
T.y ler_Moore.Sbo.w.' '- - _
.
Honda)---~ ~ .
·'I' nrverf-jnte'r=din
at what point do Boyz II Men actually lock in. You know what I
mean? As the Ink Spots did.
Locked
in. It's a name that will live
.general manager.
orchestras today," according to it&lt; to bring the budget back into balfor
a
lifetime.
The Mills Brothers.
Each year, musicians participate annual report.
ance, says Sandy Lusky, marketing Hopefully, the Drifters. It's a nrune ·
' in school artist:in-residence pro"We understood we would not director.
that will live forever. And they're
grams, master mentor programs repeat the mistakes of the past,"
One of' the. Colorado Sympho- of that caliber ... , I wonder, will
and other ..events that bring them in ·Yeingst says. :•we decided there ny's goals is to develop an endowcontact With 65,000 students.
·' would be no debt tolerated. An·d ment that could bring 'n more rev- ·they lock in?"
it was as the .lead singer of the
· "Sometimes our visit may be a now as .we're (!Ianning our sixth enue .for special occasions- for
Drifters
that King became famous.
student's only chance in his or her season with th1s group, we have the huge fee's obtained by stars and
After
the
group broke up, manager
lifetime to experience live orcbes- kept that promise·."
new '· compositions, among other George Treadwell, who owned the
tral music." says Ericllertoluzzi,
The concern over debt was things.
rights to U1e name, recruited the
the Colorado Symphony education prompted by the $4 million debt
•''l:wice a month I get calls from Crowns (with King) to become the
director. ·
'.
that grew uniil in the late 1980s it - troubled groups" wanting to copy
Many orchestras have similar ·. killed the original Denver Sympho- the Denver model, says Davis, who new,.Prifters. Their firsl song,
projects with sch'nolchildren . All ny, which included many of ·the adds that a change of attitude is an · "There Goes My Bahy," sung and
co-written by King, hopped to· No.
hope tbeir young listeners ~et · musicians now with the Colorado essential ingredienL
2 on the nor .~=hru:!S. in 1259, {Ql- .
- booked. and-make it a firsnxJlCfl~ -sym·)'ibOny . . - - - - :
'·'You - h-ave ro_ go througn lowed by U1e No. I "Save the Last
ence wiU1 live orchestral music, but
Debt problems are common bankruptcy, you have to live
Dance for Me" in 1-960. ·
no~theonly one.
among _ American o.rchestras, through.tha~ •:_ he says.
.
King ·was one of several leaU
The-Colorado Symphony also is according to a study done for the
singers
for th~ Drifters, and his
expanding its repertoire in an effort , American Symphony Orc'hestra
was
paiuful.
parting
to divest itself of the stuffy image. League. It- showed the industry
He
recalls
that they and others
symphonies have . Last year it deficit for U.S. orchestras at $23.2
were
"!;&gt;est
friends,"
goipg 'back to
worked with the Moody Blues , million in 1991, compared with
when
they
still
were
the Crowns
John Tesh and Tammy Wynetle. $2.8 million 20 years earlier. The .·
making
$5
per
man
a
niglu,
buying
This ¥ear, it. is scheduling appear- study estimated the defici.ts will
hamburgers
after.
their
g
ig
ances wiU1 superstar cellist Yo-Yo nearlytriplewithinafewyears.
1 and
up
with
$3
by
tHe
time
winding
Ma and U1e Canadian Brass.
At the same time contributions
they
got
home.
_
The orchestra advertises ~·
- rom the public 'sector have
Once U1ey becrune U1e Drifters,
radio sports talk shows and ~eccnlropped 4.3 percent over the past
U1ey
got into a dispute over $25 , ly had a televtston ad toutmg · s 10 years, and orchestras' share of
Or~~·
they were getting $100, but wanted
refusal to use "replacement play- philanthropic arts dollars has ·
ITB WOJl:rK IUIPL\2'1•0
$125. As the lead singer, King did
~ers"-- a dig at thB-baS8ball-strike.
dropped.onedhird:
" ·
~- J'aTCLUaii!I•DI ·tire talking witlrtheir·m;mager as It now performs more than 200
So the Colorado Symphony
well.
times each year, and pe,ople buying estabhshed a new m,odel. MusiKANAUGA DRIVE-IN
Treadwell said: "Don't speak
a ~ubscription can pick which con- cians lind managets participate in
FRI.,
SAT.,
SUN.
the group, speak (or yourself.
for
ccns to att~nd.
•
all ' decision-inakirig and debt is
Bf\UCE
WILLIS
And
if you're unbaPJly, get the hell ·
The big improvement has been pfohibiled.
IN
out."'
.
·
in the Colorado Syiil'phony's balThe budget is about $7 million,
DIE
HARD
WITH
A
ance sheet. which showed recent with $3.5 million corning from
·. VENGEANCE R
operating surpluses of ~P to ticket·sales, $2.5 million from other
COLONY THEATRE
AND
$503.000, even after musicians income and $1 million from govFRI: fflRU THURS
MEG RYAN, KEVIN KLINE
were paid bonuses.
ernment sources, such as the DenCASPER PG
'
IN
Its financial creed- "no' debt, ver area's cultutal arts ~i'ict sales
O'NE
EVENING
SHOW 7:30
.fRENCH
KISS
PG-13
· no annual deficits, escrowed sub- tax.
"
4~3
446-1088
scription monies, cas~-basis
Wtien costs come in under budaccounting" --was adopted to
get, the staff and musicians get a
'Jlrevent the' group from "digging bo~us at year's end. When the revitself into the &lt;leep.fjnm\cial holes · ·e1)ues fail below projections, someso common among American.. limes they forfeit pan of. their pay

a

PIZZA LOVERS NIGHT
EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT
You C~n Enjoy Any Style
Personal Size ...

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Park Playhouse. to ·present
'Wheels' at Ariel Theatre

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For OlliY •1.99
Cheeseburger
Lovers Night
Every Thursday ,Night

39¢ each umit ;o
Henderson, WV
Gallipolis &amp; Rio Grande, OH

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Yout•
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Glfi' CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE!

£iALLIPOLIS - Saturday ' s
Holzer Clinic/ Ameritech Criterium
. featured cleat-wearing cyclists
cruising around the Gallipolis .City .
Park's comers on machines that are, ·
to paraphrase a recent General
Motors car commercial, "nol your
·father' s old three-speed."
Some of the races featured all
~inds of riders, from amateurs from
all areas of Ohio who wanted to run
50 laps around the park to pros from
as far as California who came in
search of cash prizes for money laps
~----as well as the grand prize.
11
There were also races for youths
and adults who spend their weekdays in the public eye.
.
In the youth races, the youngest
riders (they were four to six years
old) were allowed to race for half a
lap starting on Second Avenue
opposite the Haskins-Tanner
Clothiers store. The resi 'of th'e
cyclists - the.y were divided into
'.
three groups (7 -8, 9-10 and· 1 I- 12
year-old groups)- rode a lap and a
,t'"
~IL
.
~-------"--~----.:_----~-----'­
Here is a list of the top three fin- ·
TURNING THE &lt;;:ORNER as close to the cones as possible at the ishcrs in the youth races, which
intersection of First Avenue and Court Street is the task of the moment were sponsored by the Gallipolis
for these pro cyclists in Saturday afternoon around the Gallipolis City Jaycees and the 0 .0. Mcintyre Park
Park.. Cyclists in this race came from as near as Athens and as far as District.
California.
•
-(
4·6 year-old group: Eric
r-:-;;;a;;u;;;::--_;..:---.i;~-;;--.:--~--cc:;;;Oiiiitiiii&amp;;oa:•7"~ Caldwell, Bryce Prall and Tyler
Howe
7-8 ye.ar-.old group: Wilr
Jenkins, Drew Henson and Lindsay
Caldwell
· 9-10 year-old group: Sarah
Stepp, Molly Roush and Joey. Banks
• 11-12 year-old group: Matthew
Roush, Le~ Earley apt( Evan
Musseter

·---:' Hot tempers replaced hot weath- Wimbledon turned bizarre. ·
By JOSEPH WHITE
WIMBLEDON, I;ngland (AP) er at Wimbledon Saturday as staid
American Jeff Tarango defaulted
his third-round match and accused
the chair umpire of fixing matches
for friends.
In an extraordinary news conference- at which Tarango's wife
confessed to trying to slap ·the
umpire - Tarango alleged that
Frenchman Bruno Rebeuh had
made friends with ~ertain players
by
. matches."
J~~;::;:~~;~ h~ WaJLH!lil..JlLay.
I
Rebeuh had with some
people concerning Olympic champion Marc Rosset at a party in
October J993.
"His direct quote was 'Marc
Rosset is a very, very, good personal friend of mine since. I have given .
him matches,' " T~ra~go said.
L::.....::...:.
=-__J
.
In Saturday's match against '
RECALLING ANOTH~R Efl:\- Edna .Wh1teley of G~lhpohs
Ale~ander Mronz, Tarango's ire (1~£1) and her ~usband Dame! w~tt fo~ the sb!rt of t~e celeb~tty race
first surfaced when he argued a line wtth one.o! thetr two pennr-farthmg btcyc!e~, .Th~,.ve~tcle got tl&lt; name
call on his serve. Tarango delayed fr~m Br1t1sh ~ur.r~ncy, wtth the penny b~1~g the btgger of. the two
the match by taking his seat while cams. ~owever, 11 s d_oubtful that the or1gmal penny-farthmg.&lt; had
protesting the call, and the crowd brakes hke the ones thts one has.
.
turned against him.
Shortly afterward, Tarango was
issued a code violation for telling
the crowd to "Shut up."
.After asking for the match supervisor •. Tarango_s.a.i.!! to Jl,ebcu)l,
"You are the most corrupt official
in the game and you can 'I do that. "
Rebquh then issued Tarango with
another code vfO.Iation. Tarango
screamed, ''No way. That 's it,"
· picked up hi~ bag and marched ortlhe court Mronz, leading 7-6 \8-6),
. 2-1, was awarded the match.
Tarango's wife, Benedicte, said ·
she then approached Rebeuh and

.:.:_-=cc..=: . . .: . . :.:=.:. .: :. . :.=========.======.

tried to slap him, but,
ceed.'.'

'~I

didn 't suc-

·'

Rebeuh declined immediate
comment on the allegations. The
All England Club released wstate-

•

Ati;in..:I'HF.V'RF. OFF!- These cyclists in the 7·8 races held around the Gallipolis City Park, alsq
)'ear•old division·begin their ran on ~cond Avenue-· gave llmateur a11d pm·cycJisL• a hr•ak' between the
doubles tournament and thai an in Gallipolis during the Holzer Clinic/Ameritech mulli;lap races.
lnvestig~tion into his comments Criterium Satur!lay. This race, one of four youth
would take place :'in due course."
,.,-..
Steffi Graf rolled past Kri i; tic Woodforde 6-1,1-6, 6-4, 6-7 (5 -7), Zvereva was ousted 2-6,6-4, 6-4 by
Away from the controversies, Boogert, -6,1, 6-0; and No. 4 Jana 6-~. Unseeded Frenchman Cedric 56th-rank&lt;&gt;d..!nes Gorrochategui of
THIRD-ROUND VICTOR- Germany's Boris Becker stretches lo Boris Becker rallied to beat Jan
reach a shot f~om lh( Netherlands' Jan Siemerlnkduring Saturday's Siermerink 2-6, 6·2, 6·2, 6-4 as Novotna beat Judith Wiesner, 7.-5, Pialine, a quarterfinalist here tw,o Argentina. ~ralian veteran
years ago, rolled past Germany s N&gt;cole Bradtke beat Mexico's
third-round. match on the Centre Court at Wimbledon, where Becker Wimbledon's record heat wave 6-4.
In
other
matches,
seventh-seeded
Patrick Ba ur 6-4, 6-4, 6-3.
· Angelica Qavaldon. 6-2, 6-1 .
won ·6, 6·, 6-2, 6-4. (AP)
came to an end. Women 's top ·seed Wayne Ferreira 'defeated Mark
In women:s play, No. 10 Natasha
•

• .,

c_ •• ,

..

would
I1--;~i't,~~·~~,i:i~'~:dTarango
from lne· mixed

Qo.rd·on.gets-past Marlin an_d Earnhardt to take Pe-psi 400 flag

• 'Esta{,Gsfut{ 1895 '

FDfiiEVEf\

Story and photos
by G. Spencer Osborne

Athletics 5, An1:els I - At Oakland, Todd
Stottlemyre allowed one ·run on three hits in seven
innings for his first home victory with Oakl.and as the
Athletics beat the sagging California Angels 5-I on
Saturday.
Stan Javier, Geronimo Berroa and Craig Paquette hit
solo homers and Rul&gt;en Sierra had a two-run single for
the Ns, who h~ve won six of seven and are six games
above .500 for the first time since the end of the 1992
season.
I.
.
_
J.T. Snow liit a solo homer for the Angels, who have
lost five of six. It was the 11th homer for Snow, who
also hit a solo ~hot Friday night.
Stottlemyre (7-1) struck out seven to increase his
season total to 96.
He walked four , all with two outs. Other than
Sriow's homer, Stottlemyre did not allow a runner to
reach third base.
.
Dennis Eckersley got the final two outs for his 17th
save of the season and 31lth of his career, breaking a
tie with Goose Gossage for fourth place on the all·time
list.
Brian Anderson (I -2) allowed five runs on six hits
in seven innings .for California.
Giants. 4, Padres I - AI San Francisco, Mar~
Carreon homered and drove in three runs, and William
VanLapdingham pitched 7 2/3 solid innings Saturday
. as the San Francisco Giants ~arned a 4-J victory over
the .San Diego Padres.
. VanLandingham (1-2) allowed eighl h'its and struck'
out eight without walking a batter as the Giants won
their third straight. In his sixth start since spending time
on the disabled list with injured ribs, VanLandingham
earned his first victor~ since Aug. 10, 1994 against
Chicago.
·
Rod Beck pitched the final 1 1/3 innings for his 13th
save.
Trailing 1-0,. the Giants scored three runs in the third
inning off Scott Sanders·(5-5).

Tarangos• tang I~ wit~ . official
·overshadows courts1de play·

4 PM:9 PM ONLY

&amp; ' .. ~lf
jC_~ftl~

NO ... Ul$, 1'110~ N1QH1

'

~

At Wimbledon,

.

BATMAN

-

.

TORONTO (1\P)- Rookie Curtis Goodwin hit his
first major league home. run and Jamie Moyer allowe
six hits in 7 1/3 innings as the Baltimore Orioles beat
the Toronto Blue Jays 6-2 Saturday. .
Moyer (3-3) struck out four and didn't walk a batter
for his second straight win. Last Monday, he pitched 7
1/3 innings of two-hit ball in Baltimore's 2-0 win over
Milwaukee'.
The Blue Jays lost after building their first threeSi!.'!)e winging stre~k' of Jh~ season.
With the score tiod 1-1 in the fifth·,. Goodwin .hit an
opposite-field, two-run homer off AI Leiter. It was only
his sixth pro(essional 'home ll!n and f(rst since May 22,
1994, when he was in Double A. He added an RBI single in the ninth.
Goodwin went 3-for-5, giving him two or more hits
in six of his last seven games and 16 multihit games
since being ~ecalled from Triple-A Rochester on June
2.
Leiter (5·3) gave up four runs on seven· hits over 6
1/3 innings, striking out seven and walking three. .
Cubs 8, Cardinals 7 - At Chicago, Sammy Sosa
capped a four-RBI performance by singling home the
tying run and scoring the winner in the seventh inning
Saturday as the Chjcago Cubs rallied for an 8,7 victory
over the St. Louis.Cardinals.
Sosa, who leads the NL with 52 RBis, hit a threerun homer in the first , and doubled and scored in the
third as Chicago built a 6-2 lead.
·
But the Cardinals went ahead with one run in the
sixth and four in the seventh. Scoll Cooper, who
matched his career high with five RBls , tripled with the
bas'es loaded to give St . Louis a 7-6 lead. Sosa, the
Cubs' right fielder, misplayed the bail as Brian Jordan
scored the go-allead run from first base.
John Habyan (2-2) got the loss. .
Mike Perez ( 1-4) pitched one inning of scoreless
relief to get the win, and Randy Myers got the final
four outs for his 17th save.
-

'

GALLIPOLIS - Park Pi~yhouse . has been used and misused through
Park Pl~yhouse
.
Teen Theatre, a,~rogram of ·the history.
•
Davis PerfonninJl Arts Programs in
Wheels is Park Pl~ybouses's
Colwnbus will present the musical 1995 Summer Tour Production. •
comedy Wheels 2 p.m., July 8. at Ttie troup will perform at siies
•slcal Cp11tdy
the Ariel Theatre.
throughout th~ Columbus area, in
Wheels, by John .Caner l!,!d~ addition to the special performance .
Fro
Mary Kay Beall, covers. the histQJy at the Ariel Theatre. All perfor.· Sat. July 8, 2.p.m.
of• the wheel from the days of U1e manees are free and open to the
-'
cave people to .the presen~ J'?iti public. ~
Morrie &amp; Dorothy Halklno
.Rock and. Martha, two mqutstuve
For mdre information on the
Arlo! TIIN... 428 2nd; Avo. Oolllpollo, Oh
cave people, as they travel through "tour call the David Youth Programs
. Call 446•ARTS"
time exploring the way the wheel at645-SHOW.
·

Sunday, July 2, 1995

Orioles; C.ubs, Athletics M~tal tQ the pedals push··
criterium•s
fastest
races
and Giants tch win~

-Colorado Symphony findspopularity with creditors, audie_nce:
EDITOR'S NOTE-, Here's a
symphony orchestra that is wellliked by its bank, as well as Its
patrons. Unlike many other
or&lt;heiilras around the country,
the Colorado Symphony Orches·
Ira manages .to pay its bills ,.on
time, even if it doesn't pay its
musicians very much. It learned
valuable lessot:~s from a disastrous bankruptfy.
By ROBERT UNRUH
Associated Pres.&lt; Writer
DENVER (AP) - It's n~l your
·typical ·symphonyorchestra.
The -nrusrtilm&gt; nnly make
$26,QOO, they seek out donors, and
they mingle with grade-school kids
when they aten't rehearsing. When
revenues are down, Uwy give up
part of their pay.
Moreover, the--Colorado Symphony Orchestra, which 'arosc from
the a&lt;hes of U1e'Denver Symphony
when it was brought down by debt
in 1989, operaics ou a unique
fin.1ncial footing.
It never borrows money- not
for advertising, artists' lees, equipment, mustc, salanes . Never. The
proceeds from ticket s.1les even are
. escrowed unliLthe.batoJLdrops..oo
'con~ertni~ht.
. .
.
'Thts ts a new miSSIO!J wtth no
debt," says Lee Ycmgst, a mustcian and vtce chalflllrul of the Col.orado Symphony. "We have not
borrowed (and) that ":'~s a bench.
mark for the orchestra.
MuSICtan_s do 1~orc t.han J.ust
work on the1r pans: They paructpate Ill ad crunpatgns. pursue dona·
tions and help recruit. a new gener~tion of love(s ot dasstcal mustc
who may become potential supporters.. .
. .
. . .
"Thts orgamz,auon oper~tes as
if it were, .employee owned a~d
' operated, says Rtchard Davts,

•

In the .majors,

ForOnly$1.29.
~ With

Sectiori C

, .•

,.

ATHENS, Greece,(~)- Fonner King Constantine !=8f1 have back pan Guard crew members who helped rescue him were
o~ ~ ~ ~t the SoCialist govemmentconfiscatm when it Slripped him oC • on hand for his fllSI trip back to his hometown since
his cuizenship last year, an Athens coun ruled.
his capture.
The ruling, reponed Friday in the Socialist newspaper Ethnos, allows for
"I want the media-to drop Scott O'Grady and
then:tumof9,356acresncrthofAthenstoaninstitutefoundedbyConstantine. take these guys," he said of the tanker crew memThc magistrate court said the foundation is the rightful OWIICI".
hers. "These guys an: the heroes.·
Government spokesman EVI!lgelos Venizelos said the ruling is being
Tbc29-year-oldpilotp)annedtospendtbeJuly
appealed. ·
•
Fourth weekend in Seattle with his mother, Mary
The government passed a law.las! year that conf1SC8l.ed royal property and Lou "Scardapane.
.
.
deprived the king's family of citizenship unless Constanline renoWIC.ed his,
"I'mnotgoingtodoanymon:mediaafterthis,"O'Gradysaid. "I'm going
title and accepted a 1974 referendum that abolished the monarchy.
10 take a b~from tbaL I'm going to try to hide. And aU this will die down
·
·
•.and ev~body will tg_rget about me."
·

Battle of the Bands

~imes-~entiittl

ports

•

•

By PAUL NEWBERRY
· Chevrolet Monte' Carlos, which - brought' otitthe third caution of the
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .· (AP) _ have won 12 times.
·
day with j~st overthree laps to go. .
-The "Big Three " were1111 the
The race . was a rather boring
lttook.,twolapstoclearthelrack,
.,
.head of the .pack agailj"jn the Pep&amp;i affair by Daytona standards, _witb._seuing·up.a 2.5-mile dash.to the fin~
400, w.ith Jeff Gordon'• holding off Gordon ·and •Marlin overpowering : ish with 19 cars bunched on tlie lead
. Sterling Marlin and Da~'!'hardt , the f&gt;eld until things got interesti~g lap. While Earnhardt and Marlin
-·-in a filial -lap sprmt
vtctory at tl)e end: BQth Gordon-and Marlm baH led beh1nd htm for pos&gt;t&gt;On,
Saturday at Daytona lnle national led '12 of the 160 laps,. and there Gordon kept his rainbow-colored
Speedway.
only eight lead changes among fBur car in front for a q.21-~econd victoIt 'was l~e season-hig'h fourth vic- drivers.
·
• ry .
·
·tory f&lt;Jr_lhe 23-year-old Gordon, but
Earnhardt, who started from )he
Marl in rubbed sheet metal '\:ith.
Marlin maintained his lead in the pole and led the first H laps, fell Earnhardt coming into the trioval,
NASCAR Winston Cup standings back after his crew made an errant but edged 'him by less than a half,
when he edged Earnhardt for sec- adjustmen.t . After returning to h_is cal'-l~ngth for second.
"')
"We had a great practice
ond, about two car, lengths behind initial alignment, Earnhardt worked
the winner.
,
its way back through the field al\d (Friday), ami I told ,the guys not to
. After 15 of'3 I races this year, passed Marlin for s~cond with just mess with the car, w~ ' ve got whal it
· lakes," said Gordon. whose four
Marlin is seven points ahead of 131aps to go.
seven-ti,me serie~ chaJflpion
With ,his car r~nning high~ in victories. are two mor~ th~n a.nyone
Earnhard~ (2,200-2,1'13) ~nd I~ in the corners. Earnhardt closed on else on the stock-car ctrcu1tth1s sea·
front ofGordori. All three drive new Gordon before Mike Wallace's spin son. "We proved that today.".
'

'

'

Still, Gordon, who· became the
youngest winner of 'Daytona's sum·
mer race, wasn't pleas'{d when the
yellow. .Oag came obi on lap 157•.
''I didn 't want to see that caution," he said. "Earnhardt 'js the
las( guy .yJJU warn tJ)_see in your
mirror with one lap to go." .
The only other driver to lead the
race l"as Ri~ky Rudd, who ran in
front for .five laps .after Ihe leaders
came IIllO the ptls JUSt p,ast the mldway point of the race. Rudd finished
eighth in a Ford Thunderbird . .
Gordon wentlu the lead fdr good
after Jeff Purvis spun oul coming
out of turn· four on lap 129. The
leaders came in for their final pit
stops, with Gordpn barely beating
Marhn baok onl9 the track . . ·
; 'That's where we )Von the

I

\--

race;" Gordon 'said . ·" Jt was very
Marlin was just happy he was
hard to pass the leader. You cou'ld able to slip back into second.
pass for second and .third, but ~ol
"Me and Dale were having a
.for the.Jead. The .only time me and . good ra&lt;c there at the end," he said .
Sterling passed each oth~r was "That slowed both of us ~p and the
when I lJ?bb1ed or he hobbled."
pack caught up."
•
The youngster zealously guarded
Mark Martin was fourth in a
the lead while .&amp;rnhardt showed off Ford, foliowed by teammate Ted
his passing ability. The Intimidator, Musgrave, the Chevrolet of Ken
who had dropped as low as 14th, Schrader, Kyle Petty's PonJic, Rudd
hegao picking off those in fronl of and the Ford of Jimmy Spencer; the
him and moved past Marliil- for sec- defending race champion who
ond on lap 147. Bul Earnhardt never equaled his best finish in what has
made it back to the ,lead, even losing been a miserable season. . ·
a spot on the final lap.
- Gordon. won with a fa.t average
. " It was one of those Day~· speed of "166.976 mph in a race .•
finishes ," Earnhardt said w·
'i)owed only by the spins of Wallace
shrug. " The car was really bad af er and Purvis, and Steve Grissom's
we made the first change. but we brush with the wall. Gordon collectwere able, to fix it and I got back cd a rewrd $96,580 for the victory
up." ·
·
~ . before a crowd of 120,000.

'

I
'

..
c

.•

�•

/ )

•

Pom~roy • Middl~ • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Page C2 • ,$11Rlurg Glimts-.$t~hul

'

Sunday, July

2, 1995

Sunday, July

2, 1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis ,

OH • Point Pleasant, WV

s

Aided by ¥urray's 3,000th hit~ Indians beat' Twins 4-1 ·
~Y JEFFREY SHELMAN
MINNE APOLI S (AP)- As
impressive as 3,000' hits arc, Eddie
Murray
happier that the bis·
·

up the go-ahead run Friday nigbt in
Cleveland's 4- 1 victory over the
Minnesota Twins.
'' II was ni ce,' ' Murra y said .

tone htt actually meant something.
While a six lh ,innin g s ingle
m'ade Murray the 20th pl ~yer to
reach the 3,000-hit mark, iralso set

''B ut, rm stiil a perso n who · u
appreciate il more when I' m done
pl ay ing . There we re peo pl e n ut
the re . wh o were ha pp ie r than 1
was."
'
Murray~ a walk i
ond inning and flied u
fo urth before pulli g a ingle
through the right .s i_de ·
e sixth
again6t Twins staner Mike Trombley .
'' it ' s a re al sp ec ial thin g to
wa tch some on e a c hi eve that
beca use, ;ts a hitter, I know ho w
diflicult il i.&lt;," Cleveland manager
Mike · Hargro ve said . "Eddi e has
nlwa;(s been a

"•

\

\•

•

'

. CONCRATULATONS,
·EDDIE! - Several Clev.land
Indians, including Dave Winfield
(second from right) and first b8$e
coach Dave Nelson (hac!&lt; tu cam·
era), congratulate Eddie Murray
·after his sixth-inning single to
right- his ,l.tiOOth career hit in F.riday night's road game
·against the Minnesota Twins.
.The hit helped the Indians get the
go-ahead run' they needed to post
·n 4.1 victory. (AP)

.

.Corr~ction

or

In Thursday ' s issue
the Gal' -~ /ipolis Daily Tribune, it was repor:l·
' ' ed that McDonald's Kids Day will
be on Tuesday and that various
, track events conducted by Gallia
· Academy track coaches will be
: held on that day.
. .
·,
:
Kids Day will be Monday. the
:. same day the aforementioped track
:. events will be held (from 2 10 6
·: pm.).
:- The Tribune regret' the error_. __
- - - . . - -

- -

s

~ .!414•~·'

WARREN, Ohio (AP) ~ morning rain storm .
Michelle McGann bas been playing
''I'm very tired and my feet are
well since ber victory in the Sara soaking. wet,". McGann said. "It
Lee Classic in· May. She said pan was hard to get a feel for the greens
of the credit should go to her 16· at the beginning . 1 can't imagine
year-old "little" brother: 6sfoot-4; how it wa.~ this morning. t(/obody
210-pound J.C. McGann.
.
likes to play a course that wet. But
McGann and Katie Peterson. what can you do?''
Parker each shot 7-under-par 6Ss
McGann, 25, of West Palm
Friday tD share the ftrst-round lead Beach, Fla., birdied three of the
in the $550,000 Youngstown-War· first four holes in a bogey-free
ren LPGA Classic at Avalon Lakes round.
Golf Course.
Peterson-Parker, who needed
"I've been playing preuy well just 12 putL~ while shooting a 31 on
since I won, but it takes a lot of the back nine, credited a tip from
luck, too," . McGann said·. "I've 1992 Youngstown winner Deb
had fun since my little brother has
Richard.
been caddying for me, I think il's
"I put a quarter on top of .my
: helping my game bur ito;s costing putter and I swing back and
me a mint to feed him every through it You want the quarter to
we'ett."
come off at the point of impact If
McGann was among the late it does. that means your speed is
staners and wasn't affected by the right where it should be." .
"
.
soggy conditions_ g~Jil!:lLhY..Y...laL._
- ....: . .
~

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va

n ·et' tVfl . Hil l I
At k 1n ~ un . hnd•:~~:kcr R1··.• tt:Ht' il

350
engine, auto trans, Only
miles ·Loaded

L1 \nn
W1ll1l' Jl•n nr u~ . tlel c n.' I Yt' b ckllMI AM I IK11.PIII NS S !~nt• tl Att tlrew
trrt•enl' . ·~u : tr ll . (u :1thr r ~- Yl":JI ("fl lll r.~d

,

power

lt e Cottn;,u)!htun ltt'llt'r.t l!llanaj!J'I . dft•.::

Fr a n .: L~ ·

.

·package,

windows,

N ~liomali.Aa,~:u"

.

Baseball

/F'~·-..,.---

control, aluminum wheels. Local c.ar.

Noml.'d Ortfl llln ~ uhr cuat h,

I : 3~ J1.111.

Anttrk11n Ln.tu•

tran:;missicin,

. cassette, power locks, power wirldo•ws&gt;,l
· power mirrors, tilt wheel, and cru

C1111l im;,,al 1\:o~lulhu ll J\ .~~•r l ~lln!l

_

Transactions

,

engin~,

V6

3.8

inh ddt•r PI:ICl'll Chu c k St;on·
hupe. p ttch n , on !l lr o h ~ a l"tlt~ d I1s t

t.: u c J. 4 05 p.m.
.
_
• St LuUI N (ludw n U-KJ a! ('l tiCUfll
( 81lflm~cr "4· 1) , H :ll~ ]l.IU

.1

.

1991 FORD THUNDERBIRD

M:u:td . ;m d J,&gt;e S!ul7., rl t Ciltr~ : lltlt l WIII IL'

11- 1J. to 05 r .m.
g..ounc.~

$17 995

UALIT·Y PRE·OWNED!!·:

Wi l~ l'fSIIII.

5.5
8.5
12
13 ,

,l'thris Jame~ . outfieklcr. frn m· Ute (!0-da·y

.1~,647:

f995 CHEVROLET LUM.INA

/

tli~ ab [ cd 11~1. Opri o!k"i.l W;s Nn~rn;Jn . 11Ut ·
Om~m ltf the Arntn ca!'l Al'S{I·

fi dd er to

ll'

d ati ntl . M~ l'l•cd Tom Brf "-'llilli!. pitcl1er,
from th e I~ - 10 llll"i\o; rlay diH:aNed li~ t . •
MILWAUKEE BR~WERS : S1~h ed
Mike P..L"(ju::t.l lcc ~in , ptlcher, a ncl ll.'&gt;.~ lgn ~d
him w Helena nf the Piune er Le&lt;lll uen
Si~~:ncd ·Jart'd Cnmp ·11nd .la~1m · O a w ~ey

Power

,

pi! ~ h e r~ : Sam S in~lclun an d M tt.: key
U•)ltZ, i nri ~ hkrll; ani! Geriil&lt;l P..ll't!nt. uul -

N :.linn ~Huck
lll o l("l&gt;!&lt;· ):v:j~
I.e ur
MONTREAL l"I\NA fliE S·.,TrndcU

fi ehJer. Sent Mark Kie ft:r . pitcher, to New

Orleans of U1e American As• aciation.
TnmRferred the contract of Wes We11er.
infielder , from ~I Paso of The .Te1111
League to New Orleans. Transfet;rt'O.l the
cc•nrracl of Gabby Matl!ne:l , infie ltlrr.
-·~~tton oC d1e California left,F~ ~ ~o

Brian Bellow s. Je ll Wlnj!," to he Tarnpo
B &lt;~y U~h ! n in ~ for Marc Durt•a , cenlr r

OAKLAND AnnEriCS : Placed Jim
.Coni, pil&lt;'het . on the 15-d.-ly diRablcd liM.
Moved Steve)&lt;ar!lay·. pitcher , ftom lhe

·, LAS VEGAS TI IUN DEW ) iij! ned
fJaruy r.o~wcn . triT w t n ~ . tn a three ·ycar

PHILAD ELPHI A PJ;YE S : ~i ~nl' d

• OLDSMOBILE

lnlt rn~tioo:alllu'·-~ ~~'f~ ~~~u·e

cuotmct.

• Cullcg,c

pa.wer • windows,

BOWI.I M i ( ikEEN Nanm liCHldy

•

CO ;Jt"fl

•.CORNELL. Nutned

. Halladay, pi l cher.~_an d auigne d him tot
Dtu\Win of Ule Rondo Star~ ~U I! .

rne n · ~ !ii ( U : t~h

RtciLan l

M1lln 11111

•

· Gallipolis' HQmetown Dealer

c tmdl

. '.
'

.

•;

'

~ly '$13,995

tilt

•

1616 Eastern
Avenue
·,
I
GaHipolis

(614)

JoHNSON

"

Ju1 1;~n mrn · ~ ,,n~ wn tn Cn:... .x wii! IIIJL nr

..

TOROiiTO BLUE JAYS: Sianed Roy

·,

All for

Yanick Du p1 ~ ~ml R u~ ~.:~ij , fnrw.1r{lli

15· to the t'iO· day dil abled li11 t. Pluced
Ariel Prit!IO, l"'iltha", on the 40·11Jall IO!iter

TEXAS RANGERS · Sent Hector Fajardo, pitcli~. outriaht. co_-oklahouw City
of U1e Amencan A.lsoc1 ahoo .

locks,

wh'e el, cruise control , dual air bags, air
cond., AM/FM stereo. .
·

.•

....

;

' J,. KANSAS CITY IWYALt:;: AcYitll!ed

.
California (Dideck i J- .'J 111 Oal.:l::ancl
(H:.rKey 4-4). 4:0, p.m.
_
'h xa ~ (T e wbh ury (,. J ) 11 1 :S ean le
(Juhnsn n 8-1). 4: 3~ p.m.

...

ONLY

~pn IJlad.: an ti Ju&lt;'y Tl·rilh . _I•U i ftcl t lcr~ :
(J1Ivln Le e anti Mtd wrl Por7Jn, p t l cli~r~.
:-~n d AnllliiiiJ Mac lo:. inri d _
1ll'r S J ~II l't l Er_ic
Burn•u glts , mnfi dcln : M1k e ll art u n~ .. l~ d

:..t '--'·~ A n l!l·k~

(Mu n tne z 7-S), 4 ll~ p.m.
•
S:1n O t t~ll ( Bl'nl's 2-.'i ) at S;,~ n

111&gt; 11111

Bult 1murc (Dc: Silv a I -ll) at T 1•ntntu .•
(W1Iharns 0-:!). I :35 p.m
·.
CLEVEL.ANU {C lar k 3-2) at Mm -~
n l'~ntn (Harris 0-1), 2:05 p.m.
,
New Yn1\: (Pt t!t !le J-4) ol M1 1 w:au~u
· (Spurt~ 3-J), 2:05 jl.lll:
•
,
Chit.:a 11 n ( At&gt;~ ~ ·" ~ - 3 1 at Ku mHL~ c_! ty

Br.ing in your·best deal on a New Car or Truck ~md we
' will :try to meet or Beat thei D~al.
. FOR 1\ GOOD DEAL...
See Jack Roush, VictOr Arms or Bob Ross

$14 995

Tull~ ·l..uul H lllnll Lt~~t:Ut

Pimbttq,'!h (Neag le !.1- J) :11 ll ou·~ t ~n
(Swiuddl 5·~) . W~ p.m.
.
Colorllllu (Swifl J-2) :11 Lu~ An~:t•b

1- 1) at (M!:Iarul

' Tu.-lay' ~ ~:arnLoo;
U c:t r o1l 1Buha!I PII 11- l) at 8
{Cirlll t'ns:! · l l.l n~ p m .
'

J-:!)

Ynrk (.lonr~~ 4-'i). I :40 p.m

(Stnlllemyre fl ·l ). 4'(15 p.m.
,
New Yurl.: (1-{ltchwct. 9- 4) f11 M~lwmJ I.: I;'t' ( K;~r l O.O), IUJ5 p.m.
,.
au r:J~n 1Kq~t"f 1"' 21 at Kan~~&lt;~fi C1r y
• (G nnlnn 5- 3), H:05 p.m
.
CLEVEL.ANO (O~l'~ 4-0) :11 Mmnesnru ( R atl~~ 3·7 ), IUI.'i p.m.
Tl'kil~ (Plwhlo: 4-~) ~~ Se:utlt' (8ddtt'T
J-3). 1o.J~ r 111.

•

appll~a bl e )

Plus tax &amp; title

Reta il Price $21 ;456

MOB ILE BAYSI!ARK .Ii Rl'ko.,cd

Atlanlot (Oiovine (, . 4) ot Pl t li:J •i~·l r Ju;~
(Mmal"tti (,.2), l J'i p m
CIN CINNATI (Stmley 7- \) ~~New

(l..t" itrr 5-2), I : 3~ p.[ll .· .
Uetrnil (Liru 4· 4) at Bustun fl! arn.on

NOW ON THE SPOT FINANCING AND LEASING

Johnson d1sco unts

f l.!tr C~ ICI I Vl' HI JUIIl' '!.7.

1-(1) 011 lluuu u n

r.m

Toc_lay's

1

' Elal!tlll ll fl' (Moytr

;i~495

16,834 Plus tax
·1 ,839 . &amp;title

MSRP
Factory &amp; Gene
(rf

VB,
air
conditioning,
Silverado
front:
appearance package, alum. wheels, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cass. and air bag.

'stall. dlt·c t l ~r - Jul y I PI:J L'Cd .It til (iu11,
r1 t t.:li~r. 1111 tj tL' ~ ~ ~ dny d t ~ i l hft"&lt; l f1SI ,

M o ntreul (Hnedia J -4 ) at H orul&lt;l

'
They 11laycd Saturday

V,6 eng .. PS, PB, auto. trans.,
air
,, AM/FM stereo
I. CciSS,eftt~. lilt &amp; cruise, power
windows &amp; power locks,
.power mirrors, rear defroster,
local car.

Stock #462 Air conditioning, Big 4.3 V-6 engine,
AM/FM cassette , ·daytime running lights

n ;-f nt[tl A 1 I•OtfU t·r q li~d l••hn C.' u ttl·
minf ~. pildit·r. trnm S:1n Anmnn• u t lhl"
Tl'l OI~ l .r:liJilt"
PIT TSBll l( f i ll PI I-I.AT ES Nn med_
&lt;ll'n~· Latm •tll tt• ti11· h oo.&lt; d•;~'rr "r'"r:ll t t tn~

..

!S ..'i
24.5

l

CLEVELAND 4, Mirmt'suta I
Milw aukt'r 12. New Yur~(i
Oali.l ond II . Cal if1•rnia 5

1986 FORD
THUNDERBIRD
.

TON 4X4 PICKUP .

prtch l'r~ . 111 Alt&gt;uqunqm ••I tit ~ I' Mt lu
Cna_,t 'l.l':JI:!lk' l&lt;t•ro ilh:d lu.o,l' P:1rr:1. l' lldt

Thl!y lllayl.!d Saturth1y

Friday's Jir;l.'Orcs

Tt' ~ a.' HI. Se:•llll.'

Ynr ~ 7. CINCINNA"fl (,

St l.c:• ui~ (f'l'l~nv~ l'K 3-2 1 ut Cln r;l)!"
(fr:.: ltsel 2-ti), 2:21f p.lll
Sun l&gt; i c~n (S:m~h:r~ 5-4) :11 S:111 Pr:m• ci~w (Vunl...:.lntlingha m U-2), 4;05 p. IJI.
Atlanta (Maddul 7·1 ) at f11iln~l~l p hi a

'

1995 CHEVY S-1 0 ~4

LT.

Ci •l l lfado l . ll•.~ An~ell'~ I
San Fmoci SCt&gt; 7. S:m fli t'WI fl

ll•

$11 802

1994 5·1 0 BLAZER 4X4 4 DR.

Ptll s t-.urgh 12. 1-lutt..' tnn 'J

Ddruit 7. B1•~1on (i
· Tpronru 6, B:iltimore 5
·
Kan.~a.~ Ciry I. q1i c a~o 0

.,

J"·

.G.II

51(,
.402

Ca lifurnia ............. ..34 2ti

1986 DODGE
VB engiM, automatic transmission, bright low mount
mirrors , 8 foot bed, rear slep
bumper, all terrain tires. good
cond ition, bed liner.

&amp;L

L

2~

Ctntrul Oivlsiun •
ClEVELAND . ... 41 17 .7117
K:J nstL~ Cn y ...... .. 31 25
55 4
Mtlwuul;ec ·-·
, 2(, 32 .44K.,
C hicu~:n .. .... ..... .... .. 25 J2
.4J9
M i nn ~ ~uta .
. 17 42 .2t!R

Oaklal\41 ... .. ...... .... .. J3
• S e:1 1II~ ................... . ~O

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
V,8 eng., ·pow~r st~ering . ,
power brakes, auld. trans.,
AM/FM stereo radio, sliding
rear window. B foot 'bed, rear
step bumper, swing · lock
mirrors.
.,

.2ti
2J

Texas ....:.. ............. .~5

10,995
01504
WD
•

. .2(.

Superior Court on Mon(!ay to sec k -.
a temporary restraining order to
prevent a po'Ss ihl e move hy th e
Devils In Nashville, Tenn .

·

W e~h·rn Divl&gt;'lnn

8

,

... .30

Jl lrflQill..

4 cyl . eng., PS •. PB , auto. trans . ,
AM/FM stereo cassette, air cond .,
power windows, cruise control, rear
defroster, one owner car, low mileage.
WAS
$13,900

f250
4X4
,

lletroil.. ......
D a llimnr~

1995 FORD ESCORT LX 4 DR.

1980 FORD

B '~to n .....•...

n
...... 34

Yurt

miles spark plugs . .
Value priced at

Wrstnn Dh·isi un
FL OR JD 1\ M AJ.! U NS Agrn·d tu
Cu ~urat lu, ._. ........ · 1; ;~ -~~~
~
l d l!l!i wtth N~ll &lt;' R il l l ~o n , fi~t h:l.~t'lll:l~ ,
Lu~ Anl:!dl'li .. .. ...... .3. ~!./ ·· • ·
..
~ml as~q;nl'd t1it 11 '" tile M M I 1n~ ot the
SanOiqm· ............ "''I
~) 2'J ~
.:ciOII
l ..'"1i
lr C··~ rLI.o:.t "U~
"!I )
~
1
•
&gt;II
U, ~
tS
F
• an r&lt;~n !.: IM"" · .. '''
....
·
IIOl iST ON ASllHl&lt;.; . i-1.~~:;1. lkd J;inll' '
~ ,
,
.
Mt&gt; Uiun . uu lllc ltll'r. f r o t n l uc~un ut till'
.
I' rrday s scnn.' S
P:witk Cb&lt;~~l Lt.-., I!Ul' :~n•l ;~ c lrv:o lt•d lun 1
)'; t U1u1~ :t.Cittcugu I
frtlt ttlh l' t~ - t lil\' tlh: lhl\'c l t i ~r .
Plurnb Ill, M i• itlrl'otll
LOS ANl fEL LS IHll lG F: RS · Op ·
f&gt;ruladdpli ta 3. Atl unt.J I
l td lll"d nruor IJ:w l and (irl" l:! l! :l ll h~ ll .

1Ji¥1.dort

lJ:owl
N ~w

Air conditioning, AM /FM cassette radio,
Dual air bags, anti-lock brakes, 100,000

Just Arrived!
Loaded with options
including the powerful Co.rvette LT. 1
engine .

Sboreboard
.· &lt;. &lt; .::,
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

NOW

Now

.-

_.

Baseball

3.8 V-6 eng. , PS, PB, atJto . trans.,
AM/FM stereo cass ., air cond .,
keyless entry system, tilt &amp; cruise, P.
windows &amp; P. locks, P. seat - driver's
side', rear defroster, one owner. low
'
mileage .. ·
WAS
$13,495

1995 CHEVY CAVALIER ·

the New Jersey Sports and Exposition Authority ready to go to slat e

ting the Stanley Cup champions a
new lease and keeping them in
New Jersey .
The high-level talks were at
least the third between the warnng
sides this' weck and they c&lt;pne with

'·.
.

L

.Sports ~rlefs .....=...;....iiiiiiiiiiio.....,..iiiiiiiiiiiO......_._...____.~I-1=_:;:

·

1993 MERCURY SABLE LS 4 DR.,

Spacl!ll

·$34.99 ·

LS 4 DR.

4.6 VB eng . PS, PB, auto . trans ., air
cond...• AM/FM ste~eo cass,.,leather
interior, dual air bags, dual P. -s eats,
keyless entry system, P windows &amp; P.
locks, cast aluminum wheels, one
owner car, low miles of 19. 180.

TREESTAND

OPfN
WEEKDA.'r'fo

COMPLETE; SMALL ENGINE REPAIR SERVICE
PHONE 614-992·3922 253 W. Main St. .
or 8()().240-3922 Pomeroy, OH 45769

II

•.

.IACP:.[JlD HOLLOW
PDIHIS

AWNUNIIIUN
AMER ICAN EAGLE .22

.. . ...

Tune-Ups • Repair.• Overhauls

MIODLEPQR1, 0~

$219.99

22CAL

..

1
I

DAVE'S SMALL ENGINE REPAIR

.

.

'

~
~

Financ ing Avaialble. Free Delivery on Riding Mower.

I

870 EXPRESS PUMP SHOTGUN

.

~

OR

l
461 SOUTH THIRD

g.'

7.62 X 39

Sl.PER BLN 6 PK WASP

~

~

.
Saturday, July 1 , 1995 ts Cti.storner Appreciation Day
at Gent&gt; ]ohns~n Che vrolet-Olds -GEO. The fi rs t .50
people to come iri · ·will recew e at no charge
obligation . a FREE · Coleman Floating
Fla shlight.!
•
Thanks for aU your support
Bill Gene Johnson
~

NEW YORK (AP ) - Fo r th e fourtlL
AI Los Angeles. Kevin Ritz (fi,
New York Mets' Rico Brogna, it
Bias Minor (3-2) reli eved Ml ic, 3) and U1ree relievers combi ned on
ki 10 star t 'th e seve nth and we nt 1 a fi ve,h itt cr. bu t the suspense
be d.
pays
to isstu
IOUs.
, He' s 1/3 innjngs, allowin g two hils.
tlt'tltl' t end until the linal out ,
"Be
a"goo
d st ud ent.
Gant' s sacrifice fly and Reg gi e
1\(ler Eric Kan os home red. lbul
cha no" e &lt;l hi s mecha nic s," Mets·
Mnndes
i hll a one·ou t double aud
manager Dallas Green said after Sanders' RBI single gave the Reds
•Billy 1\shlcy w r~ke d wi th two mils.
Brogna's two-run seventh-innin g two runs in the third .
horne r g av e lhe Mets the ir fi rs t
Bonilla's sacrifice fly in the nrst Mi ke Mun uz rclicvcll to face Wch·
·
·
· 0 ,b an
ik
1
·
11
n
· d llt·s· homer ,·11 the fourth s1cr ami gnl him tn fly lo right.
·
10 1
t I1rce -gi.unc wrnnmg s trec · o
H!
se:cson Friday night witlt a 7,6 vic , gave th e Mets !'heir two runs off
LlUTY W:~ker siDle home in tllC
w ry ove r the Cincinnati Reds.
Rijo before the tltree ,run sixtlt tied · ftrsl inning when Colorado scored
· " He' s low ered hi s hands anti it.
. both of its unearn ed run s against
(is) keeping his elbow down . He's .
Botrry Larkin's 500th career RBI Tom Candiotti (4-6) .
, 1 u~tker tn tl1e b:~l, " Green , aid of
on a groundout nil reliever John
The Dodger s commill ed three
Brog na . whose ninth homer. fol - Franco gave the Reds their fina l errors, giving them 60 this year.
lowing a on e-out singk by Jose run in the ninth. Franco earned his
Phillies 3, Braves I
. Vi zcain o, gave the Mets a 7-5 lead ninth save.
AI Philadelphia, the Phillies hit
in a gam e in whi ch th e y once
· In oth er ga1ilcs, San Fran cisco three straight RDI singles with two
trailed 5,2.
slipped past San Di ego 7-6, -Col - o ut s in th e , se~c nth innin g to
Oddly, Drngnn wem m the plate ~urado outlasteli Los AngelGs 2-1. .· improve to 5,0 agamst !~e Draves
with th e idea of bunting for a hit to Philadelphi;t defeated Atlanta 3- I, this sea.,nn . ,
..
se lthe tahle for Dobby Bonilla, Pittsburgh heat Houston 12-9 .
" We' re in ltr st pla ce and
who earlier drove in a run witb a l'lorida beat Mom(Cal 10- l and St, dtey' re in seco nd pla~e . The more
sacrilice fly anti also hit his 12th Louis defeated Chicago 3-1.
games we win , the further bac k
Western nail·hiters
they go," said Tyler Green (RA).
homer , a solo shol in the fourth .
" Dmnin g has been a part of my
Th e tightly contested NL West who gave up five hil s and s tr~ c k
whole cmeer m1d) wentlo the ,plale had the tighte.st ninth innings.
· nut four m 7 2/3 mnm gs.
.
·One game had a home -team
1\fter a walk an&lt;l a two,out sm,
thinking that way," sui&lt;l Brogna,
who is hitting .414 in a seven-gmne hero lhe other lwd a hom e-lc:un gle in the seventh, Mickey Mo(:U1 hilling streak. ·
rally ,lhat fiz7.le&lt;l one run short. ,
tlini ,_Tony Longmire and Dave
" I spoke with him about that
Barry Bonds won the San HolllllS had RBI smglc' oft John
and he' ll learn fr.om it, '' said Diego-San Francisco game 7-6 Smoltz (7-4).
Green, who emphasized thai wilh wilh a lhree-run homer in .the ninlh ,
Pir~1trs 12, Huu.d nn 9
BnP~na hilling1hird in tlle mdcr he . while Mitch Wuhster, pinch-hilling
AI Hou s-ton . th e Pirates had ·a
should think about driving in runs.
with two men on base, flied ou.l season-high 17 hils. four by Dave
New York was able to rally with a chance to be the hero for Clmk and UlfCC each by Jay Dell
fnlm the three-run deficit, at least Los Angeles in a 2- I loss to CoJ, ani! ,Don .Slanght,
in pail , because Reds starter Jose · nrado.
. I he l'lfllles hml a 9,0 lead al .one
.Riio exhausted the pitch limit ,
When the late -game dramas JliHlll and led 12,4 hclorc Houston.
imposetl on him by the Re&lt;b' temn were over, tl1e Rockies Jtali a ~~~I · ¥01 two nms 111 ll1c st xth ";vld three
physician .
.
grunc lead ?V~r the Dmlger~. ~- ~~ ~ m th ~ nm.th .
. .
..
· " I could have £""" all&lt;Hhcr Padres ar~ JUSI I 1/2 games h.tck
, . Estcb_,lll L o~"" (5-3) won Iu s
inni 11 n hut 1 have'"' RO,pitdl limit and the Gmnts arc two grunc s out. hllh strmght start. D:lffyl K1lc (3, 7)
and j didn't want to take any . AII.~o~rareat.500nrl)cllcr.
. lost in the shorte st s tart ol ~
chances. 1 want to do what the li{K&gt;
IL s gomg to comtl tlown to th e carc.er.
tor says ," said Rijo, who threw 77 last I)YO weeks of tl1e season, rmy,
M:trlins 10, Expos I
pitche s in five innings.
way," l~ockics 1~an~ger D&lt;~n B~y J\t Mi;uni, Jeff Conine went 4Cincinnali used four relievers lor said . ''You rc JOCkeymg for fnr -5 with two hom ers and four
tryi 11 g to hold the lead, but Xavier position nnw. ,And . by the .AII,S~lf RB Is nn&lt;ltll c Marlins had a season. Hernandez gave . up a two-run break, I don l thmk anybody s hi£h I~ hils . Qrcg Colhrullll hall a
homer to Todd Hundley, his sev- going to run away wtth tL I thmk 1wo-ru11 homer a11d uuce RBis and
enth , and Mike Jackson allowed a · it's ~oi~1.g to go back and lnnh lor rnnki e Charles .lolmsnn hit hi s fifth
sacrilice lly tn ,Ryan ThompsmL rLs awlule. .
.
homer or tllC se;l'on .
the Mets tied the score with three
Gtants ?,Padres 6
C hris Hammond (5-2) allow ed
run s in the sixth .
At San FranCISCo.' lhc l.;ug~ s t ~i x hit s in eight innihgs with seven
Chuck McElroy (1 , 2) allowed crowd of the year al 'tandlesllck strikenut s and no wa lks . Carlos
Brogna's homer mthe seventh
Park (2R.871) got to sec an nut - Pere z ( 7'11!). playing for th e first
Dave Mlicki started lm the Mets standmg pcrlonnance by Bonds - time sin ce a fnul ball knock ed him
and remained winless in six home especially those who stayed lor the unconsciou' la st Sunday, allowed a
.
\
.,
cmccrshi gh nine hits ' rmd live run s
starts hy allowing five runs and end.
seven hils ov.er six innings, walking·
He went 4-for,5. homered.twJcc. in2 2/3 innin gs.
ot)e rutd striking nut fn~r.
drove in ·five run" and hll Ins first
Cardinals 3, Cuh.&lt; 1
Mlicki' left the gaine with a g~une,winnmg , nmtll-un\mg homer
At Chi cago. pit cher Tom Urbani
. sli£hl stiffness ih the hack of his of the year. .
.
. (2- 3) hit hi s first major league
ri·ght elbow but had already
"It fell hke a good p1tch, and! homer and earned his first victory
allnwedthreesolohomers.
thought! £Oitl outll.tere, ,but .•l in two moi1'ths . The C ardinals
Ron Gant hit his J7tldn the wasn't tar enough out. sa1d broke'' I- I tic in the sixth• when
first, Ed Taubensee Jell off the Trevor Hottman (4 ,2), who threw John Mahry hit :I twtH1Ul RB~.Sin,
fourth with his fourth and Eric the home, run pitch.
gl c nlf Frank Castillo (1\-4).
Anthony (!pencd tlle sixth with his
Rncki.s 2, Dod;::ers 1

hi ncr."

M yrra y s hook hands with
Cleveland l)rst base coach Dave
Nelson and Twins fir st paseman
Scoll St;llloviak after the milestone
hit. n 1ey were joined by U1e rest of
the Indians, led by Dave Win(ield,
who later took pictures from the
dugout with a camem.
·
Winfield was the last player to
reach 3.000 hits, doing il on Sept.
16, 1993 ..,., also at the Metrodome
- while with Minnesota. Murray,
who finished the night 1-for-3, and
Winfield are th e first teammates
with 3,000 hiL' since Ty Cobb, Tris
Speaker and Eddie Collins all
_played for the 1928 -PhilaUelphia
Athletics.
A seri es of Murray's career
highlights, elating back to his rook,
ie sea.,on of 1977, were played on
the Metrodome scoreboard before
the 27,416 in allendance after the
hit. Murray, wh&lt;narely -shows any
emotion on the field , raised hmh
hanu ~ over his h~ad .twi ce tu
acknowledge tl1e ovation .
" To see him go out there every
single day is great ,' ' said Cleve,

~~~~s

NORINCO SKS SEMI-AUTO RIFLE

SEMI-ALITO

Mets rally to beat Reds 7-5;.'.
Astros
ahd Cubs also lose
..

wtth an RBI smgle before Murray
grounded outtotheshonstop.
Denni s Martinez (7-0) gave up
five ltits in eight innings and Jose
Mesa pitched the ninth for his 20th
save.
.
Murray, 39, also has 469 borne
run s, pl ac ing him 18th on the
career list. Th~ first haseman,designateli hiller could someday join
Bank; Aaron and Willie Mays as
the only players to have 3,000 hits
and 500 home runs.
Notes: With the win, the Indians
remained nine game s ahead of
Kansas City in the AL Central . ·

land's Tony Pena. '' lle never. takes
an ything for granted . Be's JU St a
great hitter and he will be rememhered as a great player when he's
done."
urray's s ingle ca me a ft er
Albert Belle led off U1e sixth with a
doubl e . Bell e then sco re!! on a
grounder by Mann y Ramtrcz for a
2· 1 Icall off Tromhl ey .
'
"I was rryi n£ to £CI him in,"
Murray saitl. ' 'I'm alwa ys tryin g l&lt;l
get a hit. "
Dave Stevens rd ievediTrnmhley
(0 -3) . and Omar Vizqu el s in ~ led
and stole second. Bell e followed

Youngstown-wa;ren LPGA .
Classic has two leaders

.•

BUTI STO,CK~
PISTOL GRIP INC .

~pe~ial

In the NL1

146~3672

Ot

l-800-521-0084

.

'

�,.
• Page

•

'

C4 • ~unbav !llimn-~•ntintl

. , • )omeroy • .Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

'
Sunday, July

2, 1995

.

By JOSEPH WHtTE
WIMBLEDON, England CAP)
- T~ey are rlaying on grass at
Wimbledon. Barely:
. The closely cropped 'blades on
Ceniie Coun are wilting faster than
1he hundreds of fans - and one
player - treated for heat exhaus·
linn during the chmnrionshirs' tina
·wl!ck.
: The luscious green coun chris~ened by. Pete Smnpras on Monday
. )s now scarred with brown dead
ratches and four growing bald
.s(Xll' along both service lines.
· The court usually doesn· t look
like this until well into the second
, ,week. and the T-shined workman
;vigorously shaking the nozzle of
.Hte yello~ water hose at the end of
fllc~y Friday seemetl to be toiling in
'Vi\Jil .

The stilling heal combined with
;1 I:Jc~ of_ rain, h!)l; dictmed a blistering race of play during Wimbledon's lirst live days, negating the
effects of the new. soller balls
Uesigned. lo slow the grune.

·

Sampras. Goran lvanisevic.
Todd Martin :md new ln&lt;."i~ favorite
Greg Rusellskl swept Into lhe
founh round Frit.Jay on a tide of
and three·

; u.:c:-~. :-.avice winners
• sl roke volleys.
w

/\ccording to the players. there
i,, another culprit shorlcr gras!".

" lltllil they stop cut tin g the
grass shorter and shon er as the
tournament goes on, it's always
going to b~ fa.•t ," said the 14thseeded Manin, who' hit 21 aces in a
(i-3, 4_-6, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4 over .fellow
American Derrick Rostagno. "The
court today was 20-25 percent
faslcr than il was just two days ago.
and the grass is dying quickly. I
.can gunranree you it is gelling cut
shorter. In my lit1le lawn-mowing
experience thm I have, the shoncr
yt m ~·ut il, tlte easier il llics.· ·
7.ina GarrisonJjll;kson, who 1oM""
6- L 6-2 in~ and final Wimtfledon appearance 10 second-seeded Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
agreed. The big difference for the
women, she said, wa.' that the con-

T-SJGC to open
play on June 9
ASHLAND. Ky. - The Tri·
State Junior Golf Circuit, a series
of tournaments sponsored by the
The Herald-Dispatch of Hunting• ton, W.Va., will continue its annual
tour or West Virginia, Kentucky
and Ohio courses on Friday with a
stop at Sandy Creek Golf ('lub,
located on Meade-Springs Roml in
Ashhmd.
Other tournam·ents will be
played at the following courses:
· · Friday, July 14: Bellefonte
Gulf and C\llmll:y.Ouh. 208.Coun1Iy Club Dr., Ashland,' Ky.
·
Friday, J11ly 11: Port•mo'uth
Elks Golf Course, S.R. 73 West,
Portsmouth
Monday, July 31: Spring Valley Country Club, Sprin~ Valley
Drive, Huntington, W.Va.
• In all cases except U1e last tourname·nt, •entries must be hand·
' delivered to' the host course by 5
r.m. on the Wednesday before each
tournament or mailed to Tri-State·
Junior Golf Circuit, P.O. Box 945,
Proctorville, Obio 45669 two days
before the .toumament. (Entries for
the Spring Valley tournament will
be accepted up to Friday; July 28.)
For more infonnation, call circuit director Ed Wilgus at (614)
886-8910 or pick u)l' an entry fol)Il
at Cliffside Golf Course in Galli(Xl·

'

.

.

viciOry.

slower.
·
.." It's not true gn'"·" the gncsscourt specialist " 'itl after losi n~ to
a Sp;miard who pre fers clay . " It' s
niore like a hard court right now .
They've cut it shorter. Th~ halls are
heavier. I ,.,,, hill11tg a lot of h'tlb .
over (t h e he iblll ol) my he ad,

"Even 011 a second serve. you
can't see .anything," Boetsch said
of the left-hm1deu Croat. wbo plap
Mmtin in the fourlb round Monday.
Two-time defending chamrion
Smnpras hit 18 aces in a 4-6. 6-4.
6-1, 6-2 win over American dou- ·
bles specialist Jared· Palmer, and

wher ea-s on true gra .. :-. yo u t1on ' t ·

Rusedski- Srunpras' nc.xt oppo·

usually get .that. "
The All Englantl Cluh d c ni ~s
the grass has been cut any shorter
than in .previou s ye&lt;trs , 3JH.l it all
seemtid to make liltlc tlillcrcnce to
Arnaud Boe tsc h as he helpl ess ly
watched fourth-secdcU lva ni scvi..:
scorch 21 aces in a 6-4 . 6-4. li -4

nent - blew 36 past Olivier
Delaitre in a 6-7 (8-6), 6-4, 6-4, 7-6
(7-3) triumph.

''You won't see a lot of long
rallies., " Sampras said of playing
Rusedski .
With many seeds departed,
some ol'f-beat matches be tween

Area sports briJts
•

Knife of~ed as top prize
GALLIPOLIS - A knife made by a Londonderry knifemaker is
the top prize offered in a Cllntest held during Gallia Academy High
School's alumni weekend.
. ·_- A Jim Downs' knife, valued at $200. will be presented Tuesday to
the holder of the winning ticket. The second prize is $50 in ca.,h.
Tickets are $1 each or $5 'for six. Interested panics must sec Gallin Academy 's coaches. who will ,be present at the reunion, which
will continue today .
Winners need not he present to receive their prizes .
Proceed&gt; from the event will go to repair wall protection mats in
the basketball court' at GAHS and Washington Elementary.

•

,I

. Agassi has dropped jus! 10:
Friday was the holiest day in
Wimbledon history - the. Centre . gruncs in his 11rxt two ma1ches. buf•
Court thermometer regist ered 106. ~ Wilemon is a proven grass-court
degrees - and British douhl cs player wl•' reached the Wimbledo!~
player Shirli-Ann Siddall w:cs car- scmiili't:tls in l~CJL lltcy have spill
ried off on a stretcher after being .\ix cmccr meeting s. incluc.ling.
overcome with heat exhaustion. 1\ Wheaton ' .., victory in ·thc 191)1
wenthcr front was expecrcd tp enol Wh11hlctlon quartcrlinaJ ....
No . 'I Boris ·Becker will opet\
thin~s oil by the time IO(l·secded '
Andre Aga.'Si took the court Satur- rlay on Centre Court agains~
day against David Wheaton in a llutchonan Jan Sicmcrink.
third-round nmtch.•
·
j

lesse r-known rlayers are .likdy for
·
the second week .
Michael Joyce. the IY91 USTA
boys 1~11ional chmnpion' playing his
first se nior ·Wimhlednn , heat
Bri~1in's Chris Wilkinson 5-7, 6-4,
7-6.(7·3), 6-4 . His fourth-round
opponellt WHI· be Shuzo MaLsuoP,
whose five-set victory over Ja91er
Frana made him the first Japanese
m:m to reach a Grand Slam round
of 16 since 1934.
·

1995

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis; OH 'Point Pleasant,

WV

~unbav ~limt•-~•nlinol• Page C5

McGriff, Franco &amp; two juniors
among recent All-Star .h·ero~s

13-6 All-Star victory at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego. Griffey
coUected one of the RBis when the
American League scored four runs
in the first inning.
In the third inning , Griffey' s
one-run homer off Greg Maddux
boosted the AL lead to 6-0. Then
he doubled to lead off the sixth.
beginning another four-run iqning
by the Americans.
Outfield (1989) - Bo Jackson
CLEVELAND (AP) - A group
"You knew or should h :tvc cuss the matter on Friday.
of the Kansas City Royals .
of Gund Arena cornractors wants known that Gateway had no funds
'' IJnlortunatcly when litigation
Bo goes! The All-American
the Cleveland Cavaliers. to pay
to pay for the changes ," wrote i' threatened, our response has tv
Leaguer jumped off 10 a fast stan.
more than $9 million in outstand·
Shel&lt;)on Bems, a lawyer represent- be and always is, no comment," he
In the top of the first inning, at
ing bills owed by the agency which
ing the contractors. " Yet you said.
·
. California's Anaheim Stadium, the
operates the arena.
insisted on them in callous disrc·
The Cavs. Gateway and CuyaNationals scored twice with two
In a letter sent to the Cavaliers gard of the ef(ect nonpayment hoga County .officials have argued
outs. But Jackson's running catch
on Friday, the group has given the
for weeks over how to settle a $22'
would have on the contractors.
,
in left field halted t11e NL outburst
NBA team until July 15 to resolve
"You caused Gateway to inten- million deficit for the arena.
and prevented two more runs fmm •Milll!llllll'
the issue llr race a lawsuit.....
. tionally li1nder', delay or defraUd
When ·the Cavs signed a •con:
scoring.
"
·
The cmitractors blame the team 1hose contractors by providing you struction agreement with Gateway
Then Bo opened the bouom of
for driving Gateway inlo dcbt•by
with mnenities for which Gateway in 1~\11, the arena was slated to
the tirst tor the AL with a hugc.-HR
demanding frills for which the received notl1ing fmm you," Berns· · cost $118. million. However, the
off Rick Reuschel. Wade Boggs,
who came from many areas of Gallla County, ·
GIRLS' SESSION ENDS- These are the
agency had no money. By doing so, wrote.
arena wound up costing $152 mil,· •
next up, homered, too. In the secrunged in ages from eight to 14 years old.
the coniiactors charged, t~e Cavs
Cavaliers Vice President lion, which lel'l Gateway virtually
. ond inning, the 2-2 tie was broken campers that took part In the girls' session or the
Gallipolis
Area
Basketball
Camp.
The
youths,
committed fraud.
·
Richard T. WaL•on refused to dis· in&gt;olvcnt.
by Jackson's run-scoring gro~nder.
Final score; AL 5, NL 3.
Catcher (1988) - Terry Stein·
bach of the Oakland Athletics. ·
No doubt about it. Steinbach ·
1 ,
wa.~ the hero of the All-Star Game
'
·
at Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati. His bat alone gave the AL its
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis · Lynn Sheets, e iglith-grade girls'
2-1 victory.
The "Baby Blue;' camp, for ·chit:;.
Area Basketball Camp girls' sescmtch Garry Adki11s a11d GAHS
Facing Dwight Gooden, $Iein- sion ended Thursday . at Gallia· £raUuatc Me£haJl Knlcun .
tlr cn in grades 1-3, will be held
bach led off the third inning with a Academy High School with 26
Wednesday through Friday from l ·
Sponsoring th e cvenl were Boh
drive.
The
ball
bounced
off
campers
in
attendance.
long
to 2:15p.m. 01 GAHS.. _
.
Evans
Rc·S'taurant~.
Ct,aches
t
Cor.
right fielder Darryl Strawberry's
In addition to the game's basics
on
Registmtaon
.may
take
place
ner, Ule Shake ShopJlC and ~ide's
glove and over the wall for a home - ballhandling, 'passing , shooting
Wednesday from 12: 30 In I p.m.
Sport Shop.
run. In the .fourth. Steinbach's sac- offensive ' and defensive moves,
.
'
rifice fly to deep left field scored rchounding and screening- being
Dave Winfield with what becrune emphasized, several contests and
skills tests were held to evaluate
~e winning run.
Pitcher . (1986) Roger the cmnpers' skills .
Here are the resull' of the vari·
Clemens of the Boston Red Sox.
The 23-year-old hurler made tl1e ous contests .
•
Dallhandllng
most of his All-Star homecoming
Fourth
grade: Marissa Dey
inside
Houston's
Astrodome.
#94300, air, automalic, power
Fif'th grade: Tiffany Dickson &amp;
~windows &amp; locks, cruise
Chelsa Gooch ·
~fter
Grades 6·9: Brianna Johnson &amp;
and mor·e .
Heather Riddell
Dump ciut contest
. Fourth grade: Stephanie .
;
Addington
work stoppage with . a ratified. for the.lockout.
)
Fif'th grade: Chelsa Gooch
By-WENDY E. LANE
agreement within the next few
"We believe this work stoppage
Grades 6-9: Meredith Adding: NEW YORK (AP)- The NBA weeks." .
could have ·been avoided had ceripcked out its vacationing players
While the stan of the 1995-96 tain agents restrained themselves ton
Free throw conte.~(
Saturday but. said it was willing to ~cason is more ihan four months from IIying 10 dictate uniqn policy
Demo, 2 hi stock, air, automatic,
Fourth grade: Stephanie
. "'ntinue tabor negotiations with away, the lockout prohibits teams for our playels,'' he said in a state·
power windows &amp;
.
t11e beleaguered union.
from negotiating or signi.ng con· ment . "Their recent power play, Addington
Fj£(h
grade:
Kari
Taylor
NBA commissioner Dayid Stem tracts with free agents and the
including the dece.rtification initialocks, cruise.
Grades
6-9:
Katie
Swain-Rumered the first work stoprage in rookies selected in Wednesday's tive and the antitrust lawsuit, may
ley
gue history Frida¥, Uw day a no- draft. No summer leagues or IIy· have caused the own~rs to react
One-on-one
~frill~ no-lockout deal it had with .outs will j:te conducted, and players . more harshly than they otherwise
· Let the good times roll.
'PRICE INCLUDES TRAILER
Fourth
grade:
Kari Adkins
(lie pll!yers.was to ex(lire.
will not be rermilled to work out at. would have."
·,1
• Firth grade: Chelsa Gooch
• "H's a shame that the success temn facilities. .
A group of players including
''
Grade~ 6-9: Brinnna Johnson
~e and our players have enjoyed as
"II affects players as far as any Jordan. Paiiick Ewing and Scottie
Pebble elimination
result of working together is now payments that might be due and Pippen has asked the National
Fourth
gmde: Marissa Dey
~ jeorardy," Stem said in a statebenefits" such as healtlj,_ insurance, Labor Relations Board 10 decertify
F·iflh
grade:
Chelsa Gooch
.-'--..,...-~1
.
C
.ranlk
saiil.
the-union,
-.u'id
a
hearing
is
set
for
,-r ...
Grades
6·9:
Brianna
Johnson
t · IL.was the third· work stoppage · • On June 21, the league and the July 5.
Spot
shooting
contest
ill affect major league sports in the union atiilounced a tentative deal
Lawyers and agents representing
Grades 4-5: Chelsa G&lt;ioch ,
.J!tst I2 montjls. Baseball rlayers .on a new collective ·bargaining the dissident players say they have
Laura
Griffith, Haylie Johnson &amp;
tent on strike last Aug. 12, and agreement to replace the one that enough votes to win a decertificaKari
Taylor
·IIIHL owners locked out their play· expired in June 1994. It called for tion election that would strip the
Grades 6-9: Meredith Addingirs Sept. 30, forcing the cancella· added revenue thal ,would be union of il~ (XlWer to negotiate for
ton,
Morgan Davies &amp; Katie
Oon of 468 games and a delay in ,shared with players, an increase. in ihe players.
Swain-Rumley
,f;leseason.
.
the salary cap rrom $15 million to
"We believe this '(lockout) will
.'
. 30-second shooting
· ~ Tile NB A imd its union seem· $23 million, a luxury tax intended · force the players to come togelh. Fourth grade: Sterbanie
ii(gly had a labor deal 10 days ago, to tighten the cap and a rookie er," saidJ~tTrey Kessler, 'li-lawyer
Aui,lington
(eight)
lut opposition to the prOposal by . salary cap.
representing the dissident players.
Firth
grade:
L1ura Griffith (six)
G'fichael Jordan and oUter big-name .
Owners ratified the six-year de.11 '·we expect everyone will now
Grades 6-9: Lindsay Addington
layers divided the union m1d scut- unanimously L1 st week. But players realize there is no collective bar. ed a ratification vote.
tabled a vote on the contract, with gaining in this sport anymore and (six)
Notebook : Kari Adkins &amp;
"If that deal is no longer accept- some saying tbe luxury L1x, which ·the court~ will be the proper place
)(assle
Titompson
4ble to the riayers, theri we are pre- would. kick in oq certain large con- to resolv~ this."
'Jliu-ed to keep negotiating," dep·uty tracts, would limit salaries and pre·
. Jordan, Ewing and five oiher
Caroll Snowden, Agent
The cmnp staff included GAHS
®mmiSsioner Russ Grmtik said.
vent player movement.
players also .have filed a federal
342 Seco_nd An. .
"Recent events left the owners antiiiust lawsuit against the, NBA, varsity head coaches Jim Oslioinc
: Simon Gourdine, the union' s
(camp
director)
and
Renee
Barnes,
Galllpolla, Ohio
~xecutive director, said ·he still with no other option, because the challenging the salary cap and the
"PRICES OF USED CARS MARKED ON WINDSHIELDS"
reserve coaches Kim Adkin: and
. Phone 446·4290
ltlought an agreement was possible · players repudiated a hard-Tought rook1e drat't.
despile lhe lockout. .
"
agreement containing compromises -~ ,...----------------------.....
1984
1992HONDA
' "We will rrieet with the owners and difficult choices by hoth sides,
•
SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC:
STAll PAlM
roronado. 2 door,
shortly,'' he said, "and If they are and the moratorium' that kept this
· · 133 Pine Street ·
automatic, blue;
Jlrepared to respond in a meaning- league operatin~ this past season
loaded!
~J w~y to the concerns our players has now expired, 'Stem said.
·
Gaillil:lOIIis, Ohio 45631
1104.86 Mo.
~ve addressed witlt the proposed
Gourdine blamed player agerlts
INIUIANCI
®
4greement, we can re~olve this
By HOWARD SINER
Dome in Toronto. In the third, the
NEW YORK (NEA) - Meet American League grabbed the lead
baseball's best and brightest:
· fo.r good on a three-run homer by~
They're the All-Stars who rise R1pken. ''
and outshine the comretition at ihe
Before Ripken's blast to center,
Mid-Season .Ciassic, winning tbe NL hurler Dennis Martinez had
ball game's most valuable rlayer given up back.-to-back singles to
award.
·
Rickey Henderson and Wade
Here's a thoroughly modern Boggs . Qespite Andre Dawson's
team that. featuret only the most huge soiQ HR to center in the
recent winner at each spot in the fourlb inning, the NL losL4-2.
lineup of the All-Star Cmne's MVP
Third base (1'975)- Bill Mad·
.crown.
lock of the Chicago Cubs.
' First base (1994) - Fred
Top of the ninth. Bases loaded.
McGriff of the Atlanta Braves.
Nobody out. Tie score: NL 3, AL
· Last year's game at Three 3.
·.
Rivers Stadium in Pittsburgh was
Up to the rlale at County Stadione of the most competitive in All- urn in Milwaukee walks Madlock
Star history. After several lead of the. National League. Facing
changes, the American League - Goose Gossage, Madlock singled
went i.IJ.tO the bottom of the ninth _to lefUhrough the umwn in· infield.
Two runs scored. That sparked tlie
inning with a 7-5 edge.
· Then McGriff rinch hit for the NLers to a 6-3 victory.
National League with a man on
Actually, Madlock shllfCd MVP
base . Facing AL reliexer Lee honors at the 1975 All-Star Game
S~ith, McGriff fouled off a third with ·pitcher .Ion Matlack' of the
stnke l&gt;efore sl uggmg a two-run New York MeL~. Matlack had held
bomer lo ue the game. The NL won the Americans scoreless in the sev'.-7 in the IQth inning.
· '
e~ and eighth innings, fanning
'• . Second base (1990) ~Ju lio fourbauers.
franco of the Texas Rangers.
Outfield (1993) - ~Puck~ Franco's two-run double in the en of the Minnesota Twins.
~~P. of the s.even~h inning at
In tbe first inning, at Camden
:;wngley Ftel~ m Chtcago account- Yards in Baltimore, the National
~d for. all of the scoring in the
League got off to a 2-0 lead. That
lAL v1ctery. In fact, 11 was the only was cut in half by Puckett's solo
~xiia-base h1t of the 1990 All-Star homer in the bottom of the second
· ·
. off Terry Mulholland. It cleared the
• pame.
' As Franco faced NL hurler Jeff center field wall.
~motley, rain interrupted the con·
Roberto Alomllf's lead-off IiR
fest. Rub Dibble was nn U1e mound for the AL in the third inning tied
. ~hen play respmed at'ter more than the gmne at 2-2. In the fifth, Puck$\" hour. Franco lined his third en's run-scoring double into the
flitch into the gap in right-center gap in left-center capped a decisive
,
three-run inning for tl1e Americans.
;field for the winning runs.
• Shortstop (1991) - Cat Rirken Titey won 9-3.
~.of the Baltimore Orioles.
Outfield (1992)- Ken Griffey
: The National League took a 1-0 Jr. of the Seattle Mariners.
~dge in the top of tbe first inning of
The ALers, raced by Griffey,
the 1991 All-Star Game at the Sky- ran up a 10-0 lead and cruised to a

1

Arena contractors want $9M from

Cavalier~

GA BC gl•r1S ' session concluded

.

:-o

ACS cagefest Saturday
GALLIPOLIS- The American Cancer Society's Gallia County
unit will sponsor tlte ACS Cramm'n &amp; Slamm'n three-on-three· basketball touinmnent, which will start Saturday at 9 a.m. at Memorial
Field's courts.
·
All players will receive an ollicial tuun)amem T -shirt. Each
member of a bracket chmnpionship temn will also receive a IIOphy
and the chance to play in the stale chmnpionship playofl's lor a $40pet-team regisiiation fee .
All games will stan at9 a.m. Players are 'L'ked to he itt the courts
. 0 minutes before the toumcunent's start.
For more infonnation, call U1e local ACS oftice at446-7479.

SPORTS baseball tourney scheduled
GALLIPOLIS - SPORTS. (SfX&gt;rls Parents ()rganized for Recrc·
ation Team Support) or Gallipolis will sponsor a roster tournament
for. ,ba.,eball players nine to 10 years old from •Sunday, July 9 to
Sunday, July 16 al Ted Perry Memorial Field.
. ,
.There wili be an all-star baseball toumainent for teams of seven·
and eigh.t-year,o lds at Ted Perry frnm July 2lto July 23. .
For more infonnation on these tournament~, call446-8310.
(

Syracuse Open slatedfor July
SYRACUSE- The 1995 Syracuse Oren Tennis Tournament
will be held Tuesday, .July lito Sunday, July 16.
The entry fee· is $15 for singles and $20 for doubles ~r temn .
Checks should be mailed 10 and made payahle to John Bentley at
1254 Church SIIeet, Box 188, Syracuse, Ohio 45779. The ~ntry fee
m~st accompany application.
·
- r·"' ·
·
Tbe eniiy deadline is Saturday at trp. m.
!'layers are limited to three events with matches belng a best or
three sel' with a 12 point tiebreaker at 6 all. Players should f'e(Xllt
15 minutes before scheduled time. Players are 10 piO'vjde .il,tJew Citq
of balls, with the winner keeping the new balls.
All matches will be played at the Syracuse Tennis Courts unless
otherwise notitied .
Playe"' cmt caii'J92~165 lm-July -10 h·lf-sfllfiing:/sc-

.

Marshall to sponsor cage camps .

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. - Marshall University will sponsor the
1995 .Thundering Hero Women's Basketb~ll Camp for girls five
years old to recent high school graduates.
The remaining ,scssions offe:red will run a~ follows:
Cnmpelitinn camp (July 16-19): Entry into this session,
designed fur junior high, junior varsity and high sGhool teams.,
requires lhat all players·regisler as a group. Coaches are encouraged
to accompany Uteir tc'runs, but if that is not p11ssible, a coach will be
provided by the CruDp s~1ff. There must he at least eight players per
•
. .
te;un . All temns will play at least 12 gmnes.
' Little Herd Camp (July 30-Aug. 3): This session, designed for
players five 10 10 years old, will run from 9 a.m. until noon daily.
Fundwnelllals and various competitions will be featured . . ·
For fees and other information, call Marshall wo&amp;ien 's head
coach Sarah Evans-Moore at (304) 696-5445 . .

~

FROM THE HAPPY
HONDA PEOPLE

94 HONDA PASSPORT EX

expiration of old agreemeht,

HAMILTON WATER SPORTS
Home of Kawasaki Jet Ski

(at Hamilton Chevrolet/Geo) Proctorville, Ohio
14) 886·7979
Summer

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NBA orders lockout of. players

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•

95 HONDA ACCORD

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e Honda·of Minivans-::;
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92 650 X2 ...............$4,200*
93-650 sx ............... $4,399*
93 550 sx ...............$4,150*

~

Kawasaki

4TH OF JULY SPECIALS!

:t

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''Confused about
... Insurance.
.
?
Ihe
Rely on me to help u
make th right
choices.'' ·

OPEN UNTIL
6:00P.M.
MONDAY,
JULY 3

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Lyne Center slate

PUSH-BUTTON START
STRING TRIMMERS

-1990 FORO

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CALL ME.

Ranger XLT, blue, short
bed, 'Big 6", dual tanks,

dual air &amp; gas tanks,
I
rear bed, captains chai~
one owneo. Was $12,!195.

5 17995

. SlnJe Far1n Life lnsurdnce Company
, llmnl' Offin:

one owner, nice one!

Herb Smith

Klc"Jmin~ton , lllinol~

Lik e a good ncighhor. State Farm i' there .®

614·446-2532

1988 vw

Monaco LE, automatic,
·air, stereo, power
windows. ·

Gasoline
Powered

(lool

Today_- · 1-3 ·p.IH.
Molilllly -. 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday- closed
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday·- 6-9 p._m.
Friday - 6-9 p.m.
Saiurday- 1-3 p.m.
Sunday, July 9 - 1-3 p.m.

Free-weight room
Througll Sunday, July 9 ·cll1sed
·
-Notes: There will be limited use
of'the gymansium because of athletic camps in June and July. ·
·
A Lyne Center melnbership is .
required 10 use the facilities. Faculty ; staff, studellls and udminisiiarors are admit~ed with thei~ ID
cards.
.
\
•
~acquetball court reservations
can now bJ: m~de one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 locally or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All gwests are to be accompanied by a Lyne Center membership
hold~r and a $2 fee . ·

·'
.'

icario among third-round winners

tlilions ac1ually made their i amcs

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the week of July 2-9 at
the University of Rio Grande's
Lync Center.
Fitness center,
' gymnasium
aml ra&lt;&lt;JUetball courts
Today-l-6p.m.
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- closed
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thursday-9 a.m.-9-p.m.
Fr!day - 9. a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday-'- 1-6 p.m..
Sunday, July ,9 - 1-6 p.m.

,...

Sunday, July 2,

•.

~ampras &amp; San·chez

50 ft.

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• . 080~ guage line
• Dual line, 17-inch culling swath
• Meets C.A.R.B. tCaliromia Air
Resources Board} standardso

•, ''rrfie Jlappy Jlonaa Peop[e"
E. STATE ST. -ATHENS,

• 2·year warranty

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

.·

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Prof. 14G wlthfout
HydJ50" Mower
List $6578

SAlE. '4995

Prof. 14G with
HydJSO': Mower
List $707B SAU •539 5

4 Or., white~ auto., P:wlndo~•l
&amp; locks, cruise, tilt, one
owner. Was $12,595,

Soft Drinks
and Balloons
Sat &amp; Molt

•

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Prof. 180 with'
1-!ydJSO" Mower ·
List $837B • SALI 16595
List $7678

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Prof. 20Gwlth
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List $8778 ~I 1699,5

TRACTORS ARE ou~- BUSINEss, NOT A SIDELINE
•

MANNING K. ROUSH, D/B/A

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..

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Prof. 18G with
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CHESTER, OHIO

ULTRA HIGH EFFICIENCY
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Prof. 160 wlthlout
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Ust $7178 SAtl'5595

••

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. Model z725ce Push-Bulton Slart Sli'lng Trl~mer

985-3308

2o custom anachments

automatic, .

FREE

• Gasoline powered product
• Push-Button Star1 powered bY
rechar~abte nickel -cadmium
baltery with 40 starts per
charge
• 25 cc engine _

oQver

Monaco, beige, air,

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Purchase.

~.f. ·

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·•~trategl~lly located contrpls

1992 HONDA

Line: Free with ·

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Convertible', red, ·
5 speed.,air,
stereo.

The Gravely Profeisional-G ridinstractor is job-engineered to

,: •De)M!ndable.all·gear direct drive.
•Kohler commerCial grade engine.
•50" heavy gauge steel deck.

Prelude, 4 wheel steering, 5
speed, blue/green, fully
equipped, one owner.

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'12 S.E E.R e~iciency

FOR PROPANE &amp; HOME HEA·TJNG

OIL CUSTOMERS!. ,
CALL OUR .OFFICE FOR DETAILS
.

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for your
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'

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Ohio
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COMFORT JISSUAED.

..

.·

'

,.

'

�I

.'

••

July 2, 1995

·Far

Sunday Times-Sentinel /C6

Ohio fishinv report

In the Open

•

Musk1e angling rated high at Salt Fork Lake

COLUMBVS. Ohio (AP) _
Here is the weekly fishing report
provttled by the Division of
Wildlife
of the Ohio Department of
Times-Sentinel Staff
Natural Resources:
Southeast
DIL[ON RES~RVOIR Channel catfish numbers provide
excellent fishing opportunities,
e.,pecially for nighttime anglers .
Use chicken livers and prepared
oait&gt; fished along the bottom for
best res ults . Shoreline areas with
l.l.rop-off (Klints are good places to
!ish for largethouth bass.
SALT FORK LAKE- Muskfe
der-neutral: "hunter" fot both men
anti women; nol "hu nlres s.. or. fishing opportunities are rated
e&lt;cellent thi s ye·ar. Troll large
''woman hunter.''
muskie-type crank baits at depths
I have never considered the of three to 10 feet or cast mediumword "huntress," bntllike it It has sized plugs into areas with aquatic
a cer~1in mythological air ahout it ve£etation. Channel catfish and
"Woman h~mter", of course,. has a bass tlsbing .are.!!!so rated ex,ellent
tolally Jiffercnf lne311 ing to me . . this year.
Some of my mor~ frustrated coSouthw~sl
workers are woman hunrer~.
GRAND LAKE ST. MARYS
Use " men and women" or - Try fishing with six-inch plaslic
"males an&lt;.! females'', not "men ani.J wnrms. pork frog baits rmd · small
spinners among the. rucks along the
ladies.. or "men and females:"
east and west shorelines when
Among the list of non-lptfcnsive seeking larg~mouth bass. Fish with
llomenclature include: ang!"r, fi.&lt; h- wonns along the bouom in the boat
er, shooter, target shooter and channels to -take channel catfish
archer.
and bullheads. Trntline Jishing (or
"Some terms and expressions catfish is penniued in a restricted
are so historically and culturally m;ea.
MIAMI RIVER - Some of the
embedded that they defy efforts to
hest
fishing can be found within
un-genderize them," observes
severn!
miles up· stremn or the Ohio
NSSF president 'Rdbert Delfay.
in
the embayment,, . White
River
'·'Using an awkward 'new ' term in
h'ass:
carp.
catfish, bluegills and
an anerripuo avoid gender refercnn
be
taken tlmJUgh much
suckers
ence can be counter-productive.
nl
the
river
system
between Piqua
diswicting the {eader allll calling
and Dayton.
even more. attention to gender. ..
"'Anglerette' and 'fisherperson'
arc two examples," be pointed out.
Of course, the really evil thing
about these words is that my computer consistently kiCks them out as
being missspelld - playing hob
with my spelling chela in the process.

By Jim F-reeman ·
,,

. 'Anglerette~, 'huntress'
join list of non~Pc terms
· ' Caiffi"Politically Correcl Visits
to the Great Outdoors."
The National Shooting Sports
Foundation, with the blessing of
the Houston-based national
Women's Shooting Sport&lt; Foundation, recently compiled a few tenns
10 assist.Witd.oor. writers and otller
white, Anglo-Saxon •. Protestant
males in becoming more culturally
Sensitive.
·
"While there are no hard and·
fast rules at tile moment to help us
through the minefield of gentler
references, the NSSF, wiOt WSSF's
endorsement, has made an effon to
compile a few terms to use in reference 10 women participating in outdoor sports for which there is a
consensus of opinion. " NSS.J?
states.
./
A recent correspondence from
the NSSF includes mention of ail
incident in which .. a woman
addressing a group of other out!loorswomen referred to them as
(gasp) "ladies." Afterwords. the
aforementioned ladies started
gr9aning, · booing anti hiSsing at

•

her.
·
"Sportsmen" and "sportswomen" are generally considered safe
terms. For some rerL,nn. NSSF discourages the tcnn ·'sportspersons."
I guess the word "sportsgals"
would be way out of line,
"Sponspcople?"
Ditto for "outtloor.;man" as well
as "outdooniwomen."' NSSF adds.
I suppose the exclusive sisterhood of radical, feminist shooting
enthusiasts prefer the label "out-

mouth bass. Us~ soft craws, hellgramites and night crawlers. Channel callish up 10 28 pounds can be
taken at night when fishing with
traditional b:lits along the lake hottom.
Norlllea.&lt;t
ATWOOD R,E SERVOIR - ·
Cr~)lpies average eight to 10 inches
in lenglllt!!1ntl Can be taken on minnows suspended beneath a bobber
at depths of four to 12" feet. Largemouth bass fishing is best in the
early tnl~rning nnd lnte evening.
S;tugeyes are found alon£ tl1e lake
bouom and rrutge in size !rom 14 10
26 inches. B:Jting ·ar ntghr is the
best tim~,IOcatch s.1ugeyes.
·
HIGlfLANDTOWN LAKEBluegill numbers are high and .pro-

" "'f.he targ'ets were going everywhere." King_s.1id.
Several members of tile Southeastern Ohio Zone Team did not
shoot as well, consequently the
team finis bed last in the event.
Southwest and Northeast zones
tied with a score of 2405. The
Northwest Zone shot 2359 while
the Southeast Z:one .followed with a
score of 2356.

Safe boating course offered
University of Rio Grnntle on July
2~ fr&lt;im 8-.5 p.m.
.·
Preregistration is required by .
July 24 with a $5 registration fee to
cover class material: To register,
calll-614-353-7668 .

scum.

'

Jim "Real men don't eat quiche
- b'lt I did just once" Freeman is a
staff writer for the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company. -

RODNEY - Rutland Bottle
Gas' expnnsion throughout southeastem Ohio has taken another step
forward with tile installation of a
bulk plant here to serve Gallia
County ·and other regional customers more quickly.
A 30,000-gallon. 66-foot tank
bas been set up at State Route 588
and Starcher Road on land· leased ·
from tile nearby Jordan Gas Service. explained George Gra\~. who
described Rutland Bottle Gas as the
largest independent home-use gas
dealer in .the region.
Grate said Rutland Bottle Gas'
fiftll and newest plant at the 588
site will be open for business this
month. The fum's general manager
is Bill Coy, WhO bas been witb Rutland Bottle Gas for 37 years.

Call 1•800·523·2217

Sunday, July 2, 1995

..

The fmn serves more than 5,000 the fum on a p:UHime basis.
\ in. 1963, followed by plants
bulk cu~tomers and 2,000 home
Originally, Amold Grate bought' . installed at McConnelsville and
cylinder users in southeastern Ohio gas in 100-pound cylinders from a Torch in 1992.
and southwestern West Virginia, supp_litr in Peebles and tr.ucked
Rutland Bottle Gas service can
explained Grate, who said Rutland them back to Meigs County for • be obtained by calling two toll -free
Bottle Gas got its start in 1947 .
home delivery, but he established a numbers - 1-800-837-8217 in
The bottle gas business was an 12,00()-gallon lank in Rutland in Rutland and 1-800-382-5657 'in
outgrowth of Rutland Furniture. the early 1950s when the need Athens.
·
founded by Grate's brother Arnold arose.
George Grate said tfie Rodney
in the mid -1940s and now operated
"People .began to ask for tanks plant will be used as a satellite for
by his sons Herbert, Dave and to beat with. and afterward he deliveries in the area. and 500-galPhillip. Arnold Grate continued to added a 16.000-gallon tank next to. Ion tanks for home use will also be
operate the boule gas business until the first tank for more capacity," availableat the site.
his.retirement in 1982.
George Grate said . "Then be • Rutland Botlle Gas continues
- The firm ' s management then -brought in 500-gallon tanks for borne delivery service witll a fleet •
went 10 George Grate , who bad people louse and that's how· he got of vehicles. including seven small
retired after 32 years with Betsy into tile home delivery business."
L1 niers, four 100-pound cylinder
Ross Bakery. George Grate retired
Expanding customer arid geo- trucks, four service vehicles and
from the bottle gas business in
four trailers to enable tile firm to
graphical need led to tl1e establish'
1994, but remains affiliated with
ment of a bulk plant . in The Plains haul and Set up tanks at residences.

Middleport renews farmers' market .
By HAL KNEEN
· · fully marketing tlteir produce in !be lae or ins,ect parasitic nemrllodes ·
POMEROY - The Middleport southem states in stale-run farmers' have been effective in ·the eastern
farmers' market officially returns markets.
states. Insecticides such as chlorbetween 8 a.m.-2 p.m. July 4 at the
This past week's travel took me -pyrifos (Dursban) or diazinon have
parking lot between Dave Diles
to southern Ontario •• where the provided good localized control of ·
Park and Family Dollar Store. majority of produce is sold through beetle grub .lawn damage, if properExpect to find cabbage, green
grower mru·keting orders. Canadian · ly applied. However. remember
farmers elect grower representa- that the beetles tlo fly. so new .
·beans, peas. green onions. lettuce,
eggs;
flowers
and
lives
whp meet with packing bouse adulls. will enter your yard next
new
potatoes,
BULK
TO OPEN- Bruce Westfall of Slgnways,
baked goods.
owner representatives and govern- year from your neighbors' yards.
Athens, painted the lettering on the 30,000-gallon tank installed by
I've already had repons of local- ment officials to set quality stan,For those homeowners wanting
Rutland Bottle Gas ai'Rodney, marking the fifth plant operated by
Iy grown tomatoes being sold in the dards and minimum prices.
relief fro.m heavy adult population
the firm throughout southeastern Ohio. The plant will be operable
area. If warm weather prevails,
In both situations, quality, pack- feedings causing severe damage 10
this month.
sweet
corn
will
soon
be
on
the
maraginj,
commiunent and communi- plants now. sprays need to be
•'
ket. Remember, the early bird gets ,.,-eatfdn played !]lajor roles in keep- applied every five ro ten days. Over
the worm! Fresh produce sells out ing sellers and buyers satisfied. If . the counter pesticides !bat can be
quickly!
you are interested in further details, used include: acephate (Urthene),
If you are interested in bringing please call me at the Meig~ County carbaryl (Sevin), chloripyrifos
in produce to sell July .4 and then Extension Office, 992-6696.
(Dursban), malathion, methoxyon the regular Saturday fanners' .
The Japanese beelle has arrived chlor or rotenone plus pyrethnn .
;By LISA MEADOWS
reports have been filed. Benefits . market day, please call 992-5458. in the area, nibbling its way across
, GALLIPOLIS - Acreage repon- are similar lO those under previous There is a $5 set up fee for a I 0 by the flower and vegetable gardens of
•ing deadlines for the Non!lnsured d.tsaster programs. Under the new · 20 foot space to provide for future local residents. Expect a six or
. ~rop Disaster Assistance Program
P[O.gram, payments ar~ not made advertising. The market is spon- seven week invasio.n that quickly
.:&lt;NAP) are fast approaching. This unhl a spectfied area has suffered a sored by the Middlepon Communi- ends, once tile next generation of
•program ~s available through the loss greater th3!1 35 percent of the ty Association.
eggs are laid in the lawns and
:consolidated Farm Service Agency expected area yteld, and an t.ndtvtdVegetable marketing has taken a meadows. Mid to ·Iate August is ttie
··(formerly ASCS). It applies to ual produce_r .has more than a .50 priority in my past month's activi- best time to control the Japanese
:crops on which traditional crop percent loss m yield .
ties. In mid-June, I had the oppor- beelle as il is in its small larvae
:insurance is nO\_ available (all crops
Remmder - Burle~ tobacco pro- tunity to travel with ·the Ohio stage.
·other than corn, soybeans, or tobac- ducers must cerllt~ ~hetr crop Deparhnent of Agriculture Direc.
Applications of biological con:co) and operates at no cost to pro- acrea~e by July 17.1hts regmre- tor, Fred Dailey, on a mission to trol substances such as bacterial
:ducers. Payments cnn be·made only ment ts ne": ~or 1995..
.
see bpw small farmers are success- milky spore disease, Bacillus popilwhen an area-wide disaster occurs.
For addtllonal mformallon on
.crops affected are generally those the ~on-Insured Crop Disaster
'speciality crops such as fruits and Asststance Prog.~am or ··burley
WASHINGTON (AP) - After
vegetables.
tobacco crop cerultcattOn ·contact
a
grueling
debate, the House Bankr • To qualif~ for payments in the
the Consohdated Farm Servtce
ing
Committee
approved a broad
event of an area-wide disaster, Agency at446-8686.
.
deregulation
bill
01aL would exe:mot
-.crops must be reported by July 17. . 'Lisa. Mea.dows L~ the County
many
banks
from
a major foi•r-t•onih~
1995, at lbe Consolidaie!l Fal'l!l· E-xecuhve Dtrector of the Ga~lla
ing
law
and
permit
banks to buy
Service Agency. No benefiL' are Consolidated Farm Servtce
insurance
companies.
· OIVailable unless timely acreage Agency.

near on crop
;~ssistance program .· . _

POMEROY EAGLE CLUB
AERIE 2171 ME BERS!
. DUES ARE DUE BY
JUNE 30, 1995

For The Best Wheat
,Price In Central and
Southern Ohio.

'

Section D

.
.~Deadline.s

LOGAN, OHIO

•

1!rimes -~mt~I

.Rllltla d ottle Gas installs
new b lk plant in Rodney area

dance is good.

Windstorm interrupts King
'
-·· issued.
VANDALIA - Middleport

trapshooter Kenneth R. King shot a
score of 190 out of 200 representlive night crawlers produce good " ing Class C for the Southeastern
fish in£ results. Bass are protected Ohio Zone Terun in the Ohio State
by an 18-inch rhinimum length Singles Championship Tournament
limit. Early morning and evening held June 24 at tile American Tr:iphours are the best tirries to fish.
shooting Association home
Northwest
grounds.
·,
•
FERGUSON RESERVOIRKing broke 96 of 100 on the
Drift-fish or balloon-fish at night first 100, but broke only 94 or 100
with cut baits 10 enjoy .the best suc- on his second 100 when a wind·•orm and tornado warning was
cess when fishing for channel catfish. The open water just off the
shoreline is a good area· to catch
white bass. Use we~hted spinners
RIO GRANDE - The Ohio
and bottom bouncers rigged .with
Deparhnent of Natural Resources.
night crawlers to take walleyes.
FINDLAY RESERVOIR NO. 2 Division of ,Watercraft is offering
- Thf shoreline areas hold good an Oj)io SafeBoating Course to
numbers of largemouth and small- . anyp!ie 12 and older. Ute ~lass will
l).e held in tbe lecture hall at the

us1ness

vide novice anglers a good chance
to enjoy their lirst lishing trip. Use
larval baits and small wpnns fished
bene.1~1 a bobber at deptlts of three
to eight feet in areas with submerged structure and vegetation .
Crappies, largemouth bass, chnnnel
cmlish, yellow perch and hull heads
are also found in this lake.
_
Lake Erie '
Smallmouth hass fishi11g aclioh
continues · to he good -in lhe
nearshore are.:'ls anll over the west~
ern basin reef complex. The fish
are in deeper reef wnter, but can be
taken on black-haired jigs, jigs and
twister&gt;;· and .sQ[t craws bounced
along the bottom ~ Walle-ye abun-

Keynes Bros. Flour.

Seriously, selecting words that
include both men and women sends .
a clear message: outdoor spons are
for everyone. In tile meantime, just
doorswomyn, .. using the "y" remember that no matter which
instead of "e" in women to further tenn you use, you're sure lo offend
separate them from non-PC ll)ale , somebody.
"When possible, work around
fender. Use 'outdoors enthusia,ts';
the sporting public' ," NSSF re~­
ommends.
Some words are naturally gen-

Ohio River
The New Cumberland Pool is
comprised of2,000 surface acres of
water i'n Jefferson anti Columbtruta
counties.
June and July are the \X!SI ·
1
times to fish for channel catfiSh .
Use crank baits and jig and pork
combinations when seeking spotted
ba". 'Ote stream confluences in the
upper pool are good places to fish
for hybrid -striped b:t'&gt;.
· '
Central """
DELAWARE LAKE- The
deep Urop-offs containing stumps
and other cover are the best places
to Jisb for emppies and largemouth
bass during midsummer. Night
fishing with soft craws or cut baits
is productive for catfish anglers,
especially in tlte upper half or the ·
lake.
.
KNOX LAKE - The region's
top bass lake nJ1ers excellent
woody shoreline cov!!r ami vegetated areas where br:L'\S c::m be found .
Tt&gt;p water baits. small spim\ers and

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~ead the chemical label before
app)ying, especially on vegetable
cropsc
Attention greenhouse growers,
landscapcFs and garden center
operators!
. ·
Keep in .mind the Ohio Jnterna-.
tiona! Aoral Shon Course held July.
9-12 at the· Cincinnali Convention
Center. Whether you attend the
trade show exhibit area of over 500
booth spaces or attend the multitude of courses offered, this is tile
show for you. You can tegister on
site. If you wish further infonnation, please call me at 992-6696.
tJarold H. Kneen Is the Ohio
Stale University Agricultural
Extension Agent for Meigs County.

BUSineSS briefs

·Carpe~ter Inn a tranquil haven
· By GEOR~E ABATE
home away from home, Gremore operated · farms out of the home.
• , Tlmes·Senhnel Staff
said.
The building has antiques through''Our focus is on wellness nulli-· out the single and double rooms,
POMEROY- The Carpenter Inn
remains a secluded spot to escape . lion and rejuvenation," G(emore. along witll a family suite.
"(The Sabels) are very.iQterest- .
today's rush and ~tress, in~-keeper said. "There is some healing that
takes place, even if it's just for a ed 'in community," Gremore said.
Renee Grcrnof!! sa1t1.
. F_our burldmgs have modestly weekend, Partially just because it's adding the couple l)opes to attract
.
_
more professionals to the area'.
, furn~ed, - but pleasant rooms. The -quiet out here."
, max unum capactty of tile bed and
Bruce and Pnina Sabel bought&gt;
The 250-ncre property has
PROMOTED • Harold c.
. breakfastts 32people. The Inn also the property in 1992. In January . nature trails. a fishing pond, and Roush was recently promoted .
center "'r'u the vart'ous
offers a conference center wbr'ch 1994, the con'erence
tl
. other st"ghts· ·
ln mainttnance ·superv1sora t
c~ seat .100 people for a sit-down inn ore.ned.
"We are interested in preserving the Ohio Valley Electric Corpo.
dmner.,
.
·
The original two-story, wood and "sharing the lnntl." Gremnre ration's Kyger Creek plant
The comfortable furnishings and b.ed and breakfast is more than 120 s:iid. "It lends itself well to retreat' Roush joined .OVEC In 1967
, Qpe~. '\'Q9ded lrut(l remind one of a years old. AI least three
. and frunily reunions."
iJ lubilrer; 111 1971, he trans-~ ~
-'f. 'J\ , ·
More. trails are being charted by ferred to mai.ntenance as 8
I'
~'7
a: staffnHturalist, with nature walks helper. He advanced to
l'
. ·.
being held.
.
mechanic-C in 1972, mechanicThe inn has been described as n in 1973 and mechanlc .A In
trrutquil and ~aceful, ·a haven from
1986. Rpu.&lt;h, hi' wife Sue, and ·
. - ~!e_r~sh ofdmly h~c._llte ~~l!ll-~_dt&gt;_. Utdr .daughteu:esid~ jn _Ri.tlnot ~ave telephones. tclcvlslons or bond.
videu cassette recorders. Gremore
0-1

a.•

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$18 688
All ieiil994 conversion-~vans· ,

!Save $61001

BRAND NEW '95 314 TON CONVEiisiON VAN
• Onver Side Arr Bag
• Antt-lod&lt; Slakes
• AJr Cona~10n

• Power LOO.s
• Tilt Steenng
• Crurse Corltrol

• Automatic Overdnve

• A~'JFM Cassene
• 4 Captarn· ChaJrS

· Vista Bay W~dows
• PIS. P/8
.
• Power Windows

unted SJO

• lndrrecllrgh1tng

• Premrum WOOO Pkg".

···F'rtll ConVersron
• Alum10um Runnmg

.. $10,219

'.

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•

• Aarsed Rool '
•Color T.V.
. • Dnver Side Air Bag
• AnHock Brakes
• Atr ConditiOn
• Automat1c Overdrive
• • Vista Bay Wtodows

·PIS. P/8

• Indirect Ughl111g
• Premium WOOd Pkg.
• Full Conversion
~Aluminum Wheejs
• L&lt;iadedl

• Power Lodls
• Tilt Steering
• Cruise Control
• AMIFM C3ssette
• 4 Gaptain Chairs

list PriOe ................. $21,309

~raTo

Tom Peden OlacounL$1 ,2i l

Factory Aeblllte .. ..... $1,500

CluaiiOd Buy.. . . . ·: 1500
Tom Peden Dlscotll1 .. • $631

Sale Price

Tom:tc:~-l2.t2t

'-"1 ,., . . . . . . ... l21!.093
Op;on F'tg !lOco"' .. ..· $!100
Tom Peoen Oiscwll .... . $2,405

s11,388

~-

S.Te Pri~ -

Pnce

$8 788·
'

BRAJ11 NEW '95 CHEVY 8-SERIES PICKUP
• Power Brakes
.. Custom Cloth Interior
• Well ~quipped'
ftl Doc Fees Del•lll!retf

~D NEW '95 PONTIAC GRAND AM
•16 va~.~ Power
• Dnver S1de .Airbag
• 4 Whe,; Anti-Loci &amp;akes
• Power Steering

I$8v.''22t11

• Power Bralles
• Power f&gt;ott locks
· AWFM Stereo .,
• Steel Relted Tires

•

SJ7,688

..

• Power Sleeri"J
··.A.ulomatic
• Power Brakes
· Dual Albags
· • Power Dooo Locks
• 4Wheel A~'Loct&lt; , Pow~r wlliiows
Brakes
• AMfl'M Ste&lt;eo

No Doc Fees. o~·

.

l£ATIIER INrEIIOR

·Til Sleeri&lt;&gt;l
·Custom Ckl~ lnteno&lt; ·

•styiOd Wileels
:Well Equlppea'·
NO Doc F001 De~Ntrf~j'

,L-----~.•.---------------_:~~==~~

'.

•-Automatic Over&lt;!nve • PoWer Door Lod&lt;s
• ElectTonN: Sti1ft ·
• A1r Condrtion
·Power Driver "Seat
traosler.Case
• Driver Side A1rt)ag
• AMIFM Cassene
• ~emote
• Ant1·Lod&lt; Brakes
• TiiUCruise
• Keyless Enl~
• PIS, P/8 .
• • Rear Windo~ Oei09Qer • Loaded!
• Power Wmdows
• Leather Interior

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TOLL FREE 1·800·822·0417 •372·2844·
344-5947 · ·422-fl156
•
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· ' CARPENTER INN- Th~ Carpenter Inn and Conference
Center has operated for 18 months. The secloMkl gel-away offers
pleasant surroundings and unlqqe semlna~s. The 250-acre property has throe .cabins, in addition to numerous amenities. Here, Inn
keeper ·Renee Gremore stands In front of tbe 120-year-old refurbished farm house. (rimes-Sentinel pholoby Geo.rge Abate) .

Friday: 9 am -10 pta; saturday: 9 am- Midnlllfrt
S1111tlay: Noon- 8 pm; Monday: lam. 10 pm

• Twces, Tags. TJIIe Fees ext111. Rebate ll'dWed.in sale j)I'IOO olnew 'o'ehicle liSted wtlale app!cible. On approved cred~. Not responsible for ~pog~cal et'!Q's.

CLOSED

'

JULY 4TH

'1 .1

•

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fiOINT PLEASANT - FHA Title I Home lmptovcment Loans

are now available from the Peoples Bank of Point Plea&lt;nnt Mason

and New Haven.
·
~
'
The new Title I program is adva!IJagc!lu~ for propcny owners in _
low-to-moderate income brackets since borrowers may obtain home
improvement loans up (() $25,000, even though !bey have little 'or
no equity in their propeny.
ApplicanL' must have a£""' monthly income of at least $1,000.
Loalls are subject to credit approval and progra~n guidelines.
The bank is presently authorized to extend Title I Homes
~·-Improvement Luans ro w-e·srVil'glnta1KliT!lWl!i'l:, rum will Sllortly're ·-·
approved t~ do so in Ohio.
said.
For more information, call 675-1121, (Point Pleasltnt), 773-5 514
'I
•
(Mason) or 882-2135 (New Haven).
"People come up to here and
they just want to be quiet ," GrewASIIINGTON &lt;AP&gt; - Mexi.
more said.
GALLIPOLIS :Rocky R. Hupp, Gallipolis, recentl'y returned
In the past, unique events co's economic ref01ms are worlcing
the
United
States
stands
ready
from
a presidenfs conference of !be American General Life and
and
inclm.led solsUce' celebrations, an
to provide the balance of its loan ·
Accident
Insurance Company in Nashville1 Tenn . Rupp qualified
ailiance presenlations and an
f tl
tb
k. · th to 5n f 5 1oo
commitment. Treasury Secretary
or le even y ran mg m e p I' o . '
representatives in
empha~is on macrobiotics, w~i,:b is· Robert Rubl.,, s·,,t·d. The Unt'ted
sales and service in 1994.
.
.
a diet based ·on whO!@ grains, Gre • ..
States
has
provided
$10
billion
in
moresaid,
'
·
loans to Mexico to help it recover
•Y
r
The bed and breakfast will hold from a crisis triggered in December ,
GALLIPOLIS · Donna Brown and Tracy Lynn Sparks; Gallipoa women's wellness weekend the by devaluation of1he peso. Another.
lis, are currently working at the Zaleski CCC Crunp, located in
lirst weekend in August including $10 billion becomes available to
Zaleski St:tte Forest. 1l1e Civilian Conservation Cnrps offer on-thean herb:~ bath. "Exploring nmurc al' Mexico beginning Saturda~. .
job wliqing for IR-24 year-old men ruuJ women.
a snail's pace" will occur the third
Sen. Alfonse D' Amato, R-N.Y..
we.CkemJ in August and "Pu.n ing in
meanwhile, accused the Clinfon
'#
r ,
a tall garden and the art of co'ilf- administration of ·painting a rosy .
WASHINGTON- The Mead Corporatio~ and USDA ForestSerl""'ting"-wi II i ikeI y- be -held -some- - picrurc of Mexico's economy last- -'-vice.Thursday announced. a new parutcrshrp to conduct extensive
time in September, Gremore said.
ecosystem research on more thnn' 16,000 acres of Mead-owned foryear cveu though oflici;~s knew the
The northwest Meigs 'county
nation wa~ nearing a crisis. ·
csl land in southeastern Ohio. ..
-.
complex .!las expanded' during the
The
agreement,
which
is
U1e
largest
govemment-industry
ecosys1
last. yeat, Gremore said.
DETROI'r'(AP) - U.S. offitem project, covers the full range of fnrest-relatetl subjects such as
The inn has provided more ser- cials say they expect the new trade
vegc~11ion, wildlife. soils, landscape. mmiilgemem, forest health
vices nnd added two new cabins. . agreement wilh Japan to help the
acslllctics, tutU timher prolecliun.
·
.
Many of the cabins were de.1igrred
Bi g Three aij!Omakers increase
The a~reement was linalized Thursday in Washington as both
to bring the outside in, with large exports to Japan hy a factor of six ·
. tile raresl Service and Mead signoo lrJ!Ylmrl\emorandwn of ulltler- ··,
windows. ·
and add I ;000 dealers there .by the
standing for the research nroject. 1l1C partnership becomes encctive
·
·
Some of t~e guest houses also end of the decade.
immediately and builds 1m a smal ler-scale experimental forest project between the two panic.s.
'
But .that forecast is not a com feature jacuzzis and saunas.· A bot
tub will accommodate at least six m i lmen1 from Japan nr. pan of
Under the agreement. Mead will designate 16.6RR acres of its
Wednesday's agreement on open individuals .
forestland in Vinton County as a special area to be co-managed by
During the summer months, this ing Japanese markeL' lo U.S. cars
the forest Service.
locale has been increasingly used antl ,parts. [tis a goal set by Generfor weddings and receptions, Gre- al Motors, Chrysler ru1d Ford .
ClllCAGO ! Kemper Securities, Inc., one of the nation's largest
more said. Whil.e receptions are
brokerage flnns, announced Thursday that it will change
securities
catered, small dinner parties are
PARK RrDGE. N.J . CAP) it&lt;
name
lO
CAPMARC Securities, Inc. _ .
. ·
hosted bY' tile inn.
There's solne gtiotl news for fami ·The n'ame change will become effective when the finn corj!Ietes
Gremore specializes in vegetari- lie~ gelling read~ to load their kids
it.' transition to a newly independent, public company;'{;-Al'MARC,
an and macrobiotic foods, prefer. into rcnlaJ Cars and head to summer ~
Inc .. which will be majority-owned by its employees. Management
·
ring not to coo~ red meal .
vacation spots: Auto rental cornpa- ·
anticipates the cnmpletinn of t11\s pnJcc" in late July. 1
c'urrenlly
• The fre~~ vegetables grown ni es say th ey're again offering
unlimited mil eage.
·
' Continued on D-8

Announces name change

•

1

Home 'improvement loans availatJ e·

Announce pa'rtne' rshz:n

'

BRAND NEW '95 CIIM BlAZER 41100R 4x4 LT

NEW '95 BIRCII'tFSABRE

• Styled Whe,;s
• Well Equi&gt;Pedl

~:~__]~4,•

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Gallz'an·s·'LIIorkz'ng at CCC Cam'n '

-~ 4

...

.---Business briefs--

Attends conference

• Sotallled

• Power Windows

NEW BUSINESS OI'ENS • ~eauty Supply House, 43 Cburt
St., downtown Gullipnli.&lt;, opened for busines. recently. Grand
opening ceremoni,s were held Monday, June 26, and are stlll being
observed. Business hours are from 10 a.m. u·nlll 6 p.m. Monday
.through Saturday. The store Is closed on Sundays. Salon quality
!products are olfer•d for the heautlclan, barber, styll&lt;t und ma'ntcurlsl.
··
..'

BUS ness brl'efs

... JWSED ROOF CONVERSION VAN

Factory A&amp;Oato ....... $1.000

sa.le

Rear Anh-Lbclc lirekat_,

'

p

BRAND NEW '95 CHM 314 TON

List Price ................. $13,59!r

1~ Tin'e Buyer

• Rower Sleenng

-

1Save $6200 1.

·Loaded!

.. . . $300

.4

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Boards

·Sola!~ -

• Driver Srde Atrbag

•

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&gt;";'_

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Sunday, July 2, 1995

Pomeroy e Middleport •Gallipons, OH e Point Pleasant, WV

,Sunl&gt;aq ~imn-,Sentin

• Page 03

Broadcasters prorilise challenge to ruling ~y court .
'

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PROCLAIMING RATTLE DAYS -l'he1.1eigs County Board
of Commissioners Friday signed a proclamation rec~nlzing Battle
of Buffington Island Days from July 21-23. In addition, the board
pledged $5,000 toward funding for hMorical markers recognizing
the route taken by raiding Confederate G~n. John Hunt Morgan
and the respon.&lt;e hy Meigs countians. Commission President Fred
Hoffman, sealed at right, signed the proclamation while Civil War
re-enaclor David Gloecker, portraymg Meigs County Civil War
soldier Wesley Hartinger, and Margaret l'arker, president of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society, ohser~ed. Also
111pproving the proclamation were, seated, from left, Commission

Vice President Janet Howard Tackett
Hartenhach.

an~

·

Commissioner Robert
'

.Meigs ~ommission
)informed·road will .
close for three weeks

By LINDA DEUTSCH .
AP Special Correspondent
LOS ANGELES - -A hatr fragment resembling 0 J. Simpson's
was found on llhe bloody shlfl of
murder VtCIIm R(JII]al.d Goldman
and only phystcal contact cou ttl
have put it there. an FBI expert
•
(
•
Sat d.
Fnday's.testimony by Douglas
Dcednck, a half and fiber cxpen .
of fcrcd 011e of the smallest and
most powerful pieces (\1 physical
evide nce yet m a case that has
rchcd largely on circumstanttal evidence.
Although prosecu1ors have prese n leu DNA analysts of blllod
drops sa1d to hnk Simpson to the
scene of the slaymgs of Goldman
and Stmpson's ex-wife Ntcole
Brown Sunpson. there is no evidence of his blootl on etther vtctim
In another development, Lhe
courl released delails of i~vesttga­
twn s that led to the Jan 18 dtsrmssals of two jurofs - a 38-year·
olu Hi spmtic womru1 and a 48-yearold blaek man. The two have never
co me lorward an d thetr natnes
were not released 1l1ey were ldenllltcd onl y as Juror Nos 320 and
228
II undrcds of pages ot transcnpLs
ol closed-door sesswns showed the
woman wa!'\ d1sm1ssed because she

faded to disclose that her boyfriend
Ileal her. The man was dtscharged
I&lt;Jr a posstble meellng wilh S•mpson m 1982
/ ·
"
Transcnpts ol heafings on e1ght
oilier dtsmissec.l jUtors arc expected
to l1e released next week.
On Fnday, Deednck rejected the
tdea that the wmd could h.tve
By JIM FREEMAN
111 I KG3
blown lhe lmy hrur from other
Times-Sentinel Staff
ComnussJOners approved pro- clothmg or labrtc onto Goldman's
POMEROY - Mc1gs Coumy Vllhn g $5,000 1n matchmg lunds
Engmeer Robert Eason 111fonneu tow.tru U1e pl.1ques am! also SJgn~tl
the Metgs County Boartl of Com- a proclama uon rccognizmg Battle
mtsstoners that Leadmg Creek ol Dulflllgtou Jsiautl Days from
Road between State Rouw 7 anu luly 21-23
Mtddlepon's Hobson Road would
The pla4ues wtll commemorale
• be closed for approxunntely lhrcc 1hc tole Me1 gs counuans played 111
weeks smrting Wednesday
chwartmg Morgan's march to the
POMEROY - The following
Meeung wtth commts&lt;~oncts al Ohw Rtvcr anu the relauve safely cases were reSblved Wednesday m
thetr regular weekly meeltng. nfwestcm Vtrgmia
the Meigs County Court ol Judge
Eason said workc" wtll be rcpatr"We need to let people. know Patrick H. O'Brien.
mg a slip w1th money lor tl1c work ahout our lustory," srutl Civtl War
Ftne.d were: Denzil Prater,
commg ((Om a s1onn cJ.-unage grant rc-e nactor Davtu Gloeckner()[ Mason, W Va . domesllc VIOlence,
through the Ohw Dcparunent of Rac111c "(Morgan) was !ought 30 days m jail suspended to time.
Public Works.
every step ol the way by Mctgs served, restrammg order tssuec.l ,
The. road IS commonly used to counttans (who were) compl ~ lcly costs, Steve E Roley, Logan ,
bypass the railroad tracks crossmg oumumberctl "
speed, $~0 plu.s costs; Roben D
Hobson Road.
Gloeckner and Me•gs Museum Salf, Ashv1lle, log book not curThe board also met wtlh Dtrector Margarel Parker mvtted rent, $105 plus costs; W111iam D
Reedsville resident Lin!L1 Ayers, Ute bmu:u to anend a crut&gt;e on the Humphrey. Coolvtlle, speed, $30
who presented a petllton stgneu by Slemwhecler P A Denny from Gal- plu's costs; Harley l HUbble, Gal Eden Ridge Road reSidents a'kmg hpohs to the bailie SJIC m Portlantl lipolis. speed, $30 plus costs.
that 55 mpb, the speetl hmit on all on luly 21
Dentse L Coffman. Racme, seatcounty roads, be redu~ed
In other busmess, commtsslon- bell , $25 plus coSIS; Vtctnna 5
There are a lol of cu1 ve, anu ers
Rood, Pomeroy, failure l&lt;&gt; ytcld,
- h1c.lden driveways ot\ U1e roatl, she
• Bought a used truck for $7,950 $20 plus costs,
expla.med.. -,
from Don Tmc Motors of Pomeroy
Rmrald L Petrie Jr. Btdwell,
Commts~wn Prestdcnt Fred for use by the county dog wartlen · failure to comrol , $20 plus costs;
. Hoffman satd commtsstOncrs do antl dtscusse&lt;l.J!te possibtlity of Larry Van Cooney, Rutland. fat lure
not have the authonty_to reduce the makmg repairsl'O the uog pountl to control, $20 plus costs; Sharon
speed lt~ll, but smtl 1he bo.•:" before the Metg~ County Fatr;t!"'
C. Werry, Pomeroy, speed, $30
would exanune. Ule rwul 1111~ pqsst- ...
• Appomled Mrutla Mora to the plus costs, Mtchael P O'Netl,
ble pass a resolutiOn asktng the coumy housing comm1ss•on for a Ath~ns, speed, $30 plus costs, Jerry
state to lower the speed hmn
four-year lenn begmnmg luly 10,
D. Wtck.hnc, WellstM, safety VIOCommtsstOners also accepted a
• Dtscussed r.nsing tl1e lru1d con- latiOn, $55 plus ~osls; Frank E.
btd trom Asphah Matenals Inc ol vr.y,UJce fee from $1 per $1.000 10 Braxton Jr. , Stiver Spnngs, Md.,
Marien a for buummous pa VIIl g $4 per $1,000,
•
speed, $30 plus costs, Ahmad
• Patel weekly btlls of Yusn Yaakol, Madtson , Wis •
matenal lor U1e monU1 ol July
The boartl also. agreed"'"""' $222, 988 93. conmttng .ol 141 speed. $30 plus ·costs; Leah M.
the Metgs Coumy Ptonccr lUld I Its- entncs
Matson, Racme, speed, $30 plus
tori cal Society m tts btc.llo rccetvc
Present were Hoffman, V tce cos1s; seat belt. $25 plus costs,
gram tundmg for placmg htstoncal Presidem Janet lloward Tackell
Karla J. Smtih,' Reeusvtlle,
markers along the Metgs County Cmmmsswner Roben Hanenbach speed, $30 plus costs, Dtane M
roule traveled by Confederate Gen and Cle rk Glona.Kioes
Felly, Elkhart. Ina. speed, $30 plus
}ohn Hunt Morgan during Ins r:nc.l
·
costs; Tunothy W. Steele, H1lharc.l.
speed, $30 plus cnsL,, Steven Scoll
Powell, Middlepbn , speed, $30
plus costs; Floyd Cozart. Athens ,
nt1 OL, $100 plus cosf.,, three days
'
JlUI and one year probation; speed.
$20 plus costs, Thomns Denko.
Dexter, fmlnre Ill y1eltli $30 plus
POMEROY - No mJunes were reporlcd m two accl!lents mvcscosts, seat belt, $25;
tigated Friday by deputies of the Meigs Cou~ty Sheriffs DepartRru1dy Sm1th, Pvmeroy. no OL.
·
ment.
$150 plus costs, five days jatl ami
f. .Racine wom.-m's car sustamed heavy tlamage m a one•car
oue.year. prohat•.on, Jllil ami $5.0 111
acctdent on Stare-Roule Tin -Che.~fer Township wound 2:32p.m
line to be suspended il vilhd OL
Accordmg to the shenff s report, Charlotte Grant. 54, was norUlpresented wnhfn 60 days , Billy
bound and lost control of her 198R Ford nn wet pavement The car
Jones, Racu\e, hllermg, $170 plus
shd off the road, sustammg heavy damage .
costs or 40 hours communily serA 16-year-old Racine motonst was' ctled on a charge of reckless
.
vtce wtth litter control, Ehzabelh
operation following a two-vehtcle accident on State Route 124 ncar
Thomton,
Mtddlepon, arson, $100
Maplewood Lake arou!'d 3 p.m.
plus
costs,
s•x inonths m jail susCharles Eddy, Hilliard, was stopped m trafftc due to another
pendec.l,
two
years probatton;
acctdent wlien a car dnven by Emte Crusco pulled from a pnvale
Dowmtrd,
Pomeroy, drivTerry
dnve1 accelerated and struck th~ stue ol l.us car. acconlmg to Ute
mg
under
the
innuence,
$300 line.
repotl Damage to Edily's 1994 Chevrolet and Crusco's 1989 Ford
torfetlure
to
tat!
lunu.
costs.
$700
Escort was hsled a' hght
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&lt;JX month~ jail , indeflllltc operator's license suspenston, live years
prohalion ; operallng nn ImmohtPOMEROY - Kenneth I;: Leesburg. Page ville Rnad, Albany,
hzcu vehtcle. $~00 plus costs, stx
was jatled Salurday monung on charges of dnvmg under the mnumomhs Jatl, lorlettme ot velucle
ence and urivmg len of eenter. He will appear m Meiss County
and fiove years probatmn; drivmg
Coun
unuer suspensiOn, S250 plus cosls.
.
SIX months jail, live years prohd uon ; cruninal lniscl1ief, $100 plus .
cos ts, 90 days Jrul and resutuuon;
POMEROY - Mqgs Counly mdivtduals and brgantzau'otls who
Leonard Van Meter, Pomeroy.
sell lood at le s ltvals ~ to ftrsl get a license from the Meigs
DUI, $500 plus costs, 10 &lt;lays )atl
Goumy Healtl1 Deparunen~ otfictals satd recenUy
suspe nded to thref days, 90-tlay
A tempomry luod service operation is any place where meals.or
OL suspenston, one yem probatton, '
• lun·ches are served for no longer than five conseCMttve days. The
$250 of fme and jatl suspended
food may be consumed on or off the premises, ofHcmls said
upon co tqpletwn of re,.tlcnttal
St.UJdarus must he met bel ore thts license can be issued.
treaun ent program;
.
Tins reqmremcnt ~.&gt;e; not pertam to the 6ale of prepackaged
Cynllna Sn:uU1 , Rectlsv1lle. dnv11ems, such as ~andy , pol.llci clnps, snft dnnks or baked goo!ls
ing under fmancial responstbthty
Contact the Metgs Coonly Health Departmenl a1 992-6626 for
action suswnsion, $1 OQ_plus costs,
Oclatls
......
30 days Jail suspended to ~hree
days. 60-day immobilizatiOn of
vehicle and two years probatton,
upon proof of vahd OL within 90
GALLIPOLIS - The Qalhpolis Ctly Comm1ssion will meet
days,
$50 of fine w11l be suspendy.'ednesday ac 5:30pm m the Galhpohs Muntctpal courtrtmm
ed;
failure
to d1splay valid regtstra·
Cop1es nl the agenda wtll be available at the Ctty Dmldmg, 518
,
tion,
costS
only.
Second ' e . &lt;~nd lhe Dr Samuel L Dossard Memonal Ltbrary, 7
Forfeiting bonds were Gary
Spruce ••t
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McCorkey,
Belpre , speed, $80;
The mee)mg .w'" reschetlulcd from T~esday, luly 4, ctty offictals
M1chelle
Leighleta,
Lawrenceville.
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Ga .. speed, $100

County co.urt
clears cases

Tri-County ~ti_e_fs:·

Meigs deputies probe wrecks'

sh1rt

''A lot of people say they (pros" l wouldn't expect to lind any- ecuwrs) are going out with a whimthmg there tf there·wa' no physical per. ~· she sa td . "·Th ts ts not a
comatl' · with 1he killer, Deednck whimper"
said
Using a ponrait of Ms Stmpson
Stmpson's defense tea m 14,s pro)ecled on a 7-loot·hlgh screen,
sugges ted his hrur wa~ scattered ~ Deedrick told of analyzing many
the cnme scene when a blanket blond hairs simil ar 10 hers. He srud
lrm!l his s lain ex-wtfe's condo- 35 of them were found on Gold·
minium was brought outstde to . m:.m · s shirl - an ind1catton 1hn1
cover her body His nnomeys also the killer at~1cked her first artc.ILhen
have suggesled that any of Simp- moved toward Goldman. translerson's blood at the crune scene wa~ nng her ,luur to Goldman's clothes. I
ell her planted by pqhce or left tl1ere
Four hairs resembling those of
earlier when S1mpson was visttmg Ms . Stmpson ·were found on a
hts chtldren
bloody glove at Simpson's estate.
lntlicating the tiny size qf evt- In addttion. hau resembhng Goldtlence the FBI at13\yzed m U1e ca,e. man's and that of Ms Stmpson' s
Deedrick srud the item t.'lk:en from dog, Kato, and" a limb hair from a
Goldman's sh1rt had no root and hl~ck pers~ were found· on that
was "a very short head hair Img- glove Prosecution experts have
ment ''
lestified that lhe glove was sL'Iin~d
Q
He also tdenltfied 12 hmrs sunt - with blood consistent with tl1e viclar to U1ose of Sunpson on the dark ttms' and Simpson's blood.
knit cap discovered under buslles at
The glove's mate. found at the
the condo near Goldman's feet and cnme scene, haLl on it hair from U1e
another two hmrs on a golf cap on dog aml one ha1r simtlar 10 Ms
Sunpson's
the tloor of Stmpson's Bronco.
Asked by' Deputy DistriCt Attor"These hmrs exhibit the same
microscopic charactensttcs and ney Marcia Clark t\ Ms Stmpson's
could have onginated from the hairs appeared to h'ave been natudefen~ant," Deedrick said
rally shell or forcibly removed ,
Loyola Universtty law professor Deedrick said· "They were cut and
Laune Levenson called the evi. tom"
Clark suggestetl in a question
dence a powcrful.finale for the
U1a1 the tom hmr suppqrts a proseprosecuuon case

hair and fiber expert
Douglas Deedridl said hairs
similar to Nicola Brown
Simpson's wera found on a
bloody glove bahind O.J.
Simpson's house, on Ronald
Goldman's cl6thing and on a
glove found near the bodkls.

Ill&gt; Hairs similar to Goldman's
ware found on the glove at
Simpson's estate. Hairs similar
to O.J. Simpson's were found
on the knft cap found at
Goldman's feet and on
Goldman's shin.

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LIVE BAIT
N1te crawlers 99¢ doz
Meal worms 30 at 59¢
Mtnnows Crappte 69¢ d.oz
Bass 99¢ doz . shmers $2 50 doz.
Crawford's Grocery, Henderson, VW
Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
Srmlh BuickJ'ontiac Galltpol1s
¥6-2282

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96 Detty
181 L1near measures
97 Believe 11 or -•
182 Purple vegetables
99 Htghway
DOWN
100 Answered
103 Joke
105 Sl John's bread
1 Salcates
2 Cenlury Jllanl
107 Copper-and-zcnc
3 Defealed one
alloy
4 Scrap of food
11 0 Psychologtcal self
5 Certatn voles
t11 Slender
6 Patnler or sculptor.
113 Totl
115 Go, learnt
eg
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7 - excellence
117 Pace
8 Aclress Luplno
118 Journey
9 "- Mtsbehav1n'"
120 Colortul ftsh 10 Organs of smell
122 Exclude
11 Speak halttngly
123 - alat
·
12
"Ben-"
125 Anger
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13 Freshly
1213 Fame
14 Gatnsays
128 Bowltng ttem
15 Lab compound
130 Sweet polato
16 Make smooth by
132 Baseball.great
Willle rubbtng
- - 17 In the-past
133 Eggs - -,
18 Turner's machtne
134 Weasel's cousm
19 Protec11ve garmenl
135 On the - (fleetng)
20 Th•ngs done
137 Ore depostt
27 Munt or McCa~y
139 Tnumphanl one
31 Young felines "
141 Baseball's Cobb,
34 Ordtnance •
et al
37 Actor Wallach
143 Commumon !able
39 Spare
145 Exacl
40 Work un.l
147 Help-wanted..
42 Ftrsl ktng ollsrael
offenngs
44 TV at:!or Savalas
150 Rowtng tlem .
152 Ulah City
46 Sert
47 Basle
154 Top pertcirmer
49 Unheanng
155 Nol at all w11d ·
51 Ktmono sash
159 Stnnged
52 Speed-check devcce
tnstrument, for
53 Best part
short
54 Forte 2 wds
160 Fealher
56 Skull cavtty
162 Contends
59 ClanftcallOn
164 Johnny60 Parts of shoes
166 Aclor Beatty
61 Sugary
167 "Bolero" composer
64 Fragrance
169 New Jersey s
66 Sptgot
mckname 2 wds
173 Hawanan porch
68 Glrl·
69 Actor Usttnov
175 Mustcal drama
73 Card game
176 Fatted Ford
75 Food fish
·177 Patnful spots
78 Sheppers' haven
178 E&lt;press a belief
80 Toupee
179 Kntcks coach
180 Appratses
• 81 Btcycle r art

ACROSS
1 Beauty pa~or
6 Of bees
11 Bulb cover
16 Plate of mixed
greens

21 Where Greeks
• assembled

22 TV's predecessor
23 Adjusls a ptano
24 Wtdeopen
25 Y\')'11my
26 Cfear. like glass
28- Dame
29 Ftrsl woman
30 Ktnd oltump or lift
32 Group of players
33 Handle, as a
weapon
35 Coal shuHie
36 Wtlhered
38 -of W1ght
41 Quanltltes of money
43 Penod
4A Certatn cards
45 Chatl'l and potsonpen
48 Shows the way
50 Sadness
52 Oppose
55 Matures
57 Regret
58 Consecrate
62 He1ght abbr
63 Gas lor Signs
65 Clever fellow
• f57 Fall behmd
69 Wh1le sale tlem
70 NNW: e g
71 Conclusron
72 Broken-down horse
74 Vcsage
76 Chnslmas
77 Corpuscle
79 Scatter seed
81 Part of the eye
83 A grea1 deal
85 Thtrd letter
86 Ollhe ktdneys
88 Travels on
90 Sally Fteld TV role
92 Tooth dnller and
ftller
94 Sullen

82
84
87
89
91

":v

Of lhe moon
Upptty one
San -Obispo

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Can~

l r 11

Where Oslo IS
abbr
93 Saclors
95 Cantaloupe
98 Rocky h•ll
100 Backward. preltx
1o 1 Long-plu01ed btrd
,102 Short sw1m
104 Talk
t 05 Ptnk color
I 06 -'- Caltfornta,
Mex•co
108 Function
109 Fishgtg
112 Traveler's atd
114 Ktnd of wmdow
116 Out of control
119 Bards
121 Natural eleva1ton
124 Egyptian goddess
127 Twts1ed
129 Alliance acronym
1'31 Swab
132 Encounter
136 Wondrous lhtngs
i-98 Ptlys1c1ans: abbr- ·
140 After deductions ·
142 Costa del 143 Fleet of warshtps
144 Check
146 Lovtng !ouch
147 Panel member
148 Alncan antmal
149 Cut at a sian!
151 Tool for bonng
153 Unltdy
"156 "- Gel Your Gun'
157 lnlended
158 Adams and
McClurg
160 Drama
161 Formerly, forme~y
163 Colonnade
165 •Shapeless mass
168 Poet's "before'
170 Bllly- Wllllams
171 Ttmetable abbr
172, Spread 10 dry
174 Chtmpanzee ·'

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment •

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

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All Ages, All Risks
We try to~nsute

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everyo~e!

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AUTOHIO Insurance

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Phone (614}446·6111

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Gallipolis

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JaGkson Ave. P-t. PI
for appointments call .

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675-5649, after July 6
call 675-2939 Thanks!!

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Clearance Markdown
Now at Yours and Mtne
"A Second lime Around Store"
750 1st Ave Galltpolts
446-2468
The store you'll apprectate

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MOTORCYCLE
SERVICE &amp; REPAIR
20 Years Experience 2,3,
&amp; 4 wheelers all brands
614-446-0821

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- eherokee Btngo Cancelled
7th &amp; 8th gotng to totumb1a S C
· tnstead 100,000 coverall 1 car 1
boat pnce $154 00 lor everythtn g.
Call 614-446 -1923

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_ July 6, l. 8
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6 Famtly Yard &amp; Gar~ge Sale
922 Jencho Rd
Cheshtre, OH
Ra1n ·or Shtne

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Rto Grande Ball Assoctatton
would like to thank all those
who gave donat1ons/
sponsored teams.
Thanks go to
S &amp;·J Lumbl')r, Bob Evans
Farms, Giovonm's of R1o
Grande, Coaches Corner,
Paiterson Construction,
Subway of R1o Grande, Village
Floral &amp; Cards, Altizer Farm
Supply, Jumbo of Rio Grande,
BP of Rio Grande, C C.
· Caldwell Trucking,
Carmichaels Farm &amp; Lawn,
J1ms Farm Equ1pment Center,
Bodtmers Exxon.'
Please support these area
businesses as they support
• our area youth .

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See Answer on Page B3

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realdents of the village are
welcome to attend .
Jennifer L Harrison
Clark/Treasurer

June 29, 1995
July 2, 1995
Public Nolice

parents c:»' b&lt;: at home to supervt~~
what thetr chtldren sec and hear,
Judge James Buckley, wro1c in the
mnjonty opini?n.
.
FCC Chamnan Reetl !lund!
pratsed the court ruhng . "Parents

5-6 regular.
6 -7 beginners
Aerobics (variable
mtensity)
Monday &amp; Wednesday
10-11 am, 7-8 pm.

675·1371'
'Gallipolis Ferry,

VW

UNIQUE EXPRESSIONS
652 Jackson Peke Gallcpolls
~
446-4848
Red, Wht le &amp; 81ue
Bows of AII'Stzes Balloons and
Floral Arrangements For Your
Jut 4th Celebrattons

Call (304) 675-7222
for more tnformatton

BIDW]i:LL - Two Vmton residents were'taken to Holz~r Medtcal
Center for treaunent 11f-tnjunes m a
on~·car crash Fnuay on State
Rotlle 160, the Galha-Mctgs Post
o"f tl1c Stale I hghwny Patrol s:uu
· Drtver Vtckte M Darnell. 17 ,
was tran sportctl hy lhc Ga lh a
County Emergency Mcdtcal Sc rvtce and passenger Heitlt M
Compston, 5, was taken to IIMC
by pnvatc vchtcle. BoU1 restde at
53 7 N E. Road. accordmg to th e

Public Nofice the Salam Townohlp Fire
Houae Located on SR t24 al
Salem Center.

All envalopes should be
marked according to type of
bid. 1 or 2.
•
Salem Townahlp Truateea

ruervaa the right to accept
or reject any and or all bldo .

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg $149.00
Sale Pnce $59 00
Large Stock
Engtneer
$49 00
Welltnglon
$49 00
Loggers .
. .... . ..
$50-55
Harness .
..$59 00
Carollna-Georgta-H&amp;H
Insulated , Safely, Gortex
Swacn Furntture 62 Oltve Sl
Gallipolis
All US Made

LAYNE FURNITURE
NEW SHIPMENT
LIVING ROOM SUITESSOFA&amp; CHAIR
PRICED $450 TO $1095
LfoNE .MOTION SETS
SOFA &amp; RECLINER
.
$1195
Mon lhru Sal 9-5 p m 44,6-0322
3 miles oul Bulavllle Ptke

Hoof Trimmtng

AMVETs Flea Market

Ju ly '6 - 8 am
Baughman Farm
Call for. reservatioo....
256-6535
ATTENTION' •.

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Men- July 3rd

Kanauga, Oh
Past and Present
218 3rd Ave
Will be opE!n Sat. July 1st .
Monday 3rd, Tuesday 4th,
Wednespay 5!h 9-5
Celebrate 4th of July Wl1h us

JoAnne 's Kut
Welcomes Donna Otler
July Spectal
Perms $25 00 Reg 35 00
Man1cure - $8 00
Facta! $1000
Pedtcure"s- $15 00
Natlsp $40 00
"She wtll kurt up and dye for you"
Along wtlh'JoAnne, Connte and

It's Bar 8-Q Time!
Gra.n Fed Custom Beefs

614-446-2109
' GIGANTIC YARD SALE
JUNE30,JULY1-3
EASTERN HIGH SCHGOL
Ram or Sh tne
Sponsored by
Eamern Athleltc Boosers

LOST
Black &amp;Tan Female Coonhound
6 months old
between Ltncoln Pike and Ctly
Ltmtts, Reward!'
446-3476

8 Family
Yard Sale
Monday 7-3
Centerville

Thank You
WISEMAN

YARD SALE
Monday, July 3, 9 00-4.00, Don
Hubbard restdence, Syracuse
Mtsc . Home lnleno r,
new roll a way bed, etc.
RAIN CANCELS

INSURANCE

for supporting the
Giants 1995

Pee Wee League
TROYER'S BULK
Home Baked Goods
Cheese &amp; Lots more.
Open everyday except Sun.
Open July _4th.
Off St . Rt 141 on Maple
Grove Rd, 3rd House on left
1 mile S of. Cora Mills

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O'Dell
Lumber Co.
Gallipolis &amp;

Pomeroy
Open July 4
8 a.m. til .noon
Call446-2342 or 992-2156
FOR MORE

.

8 am

AMVETS Buildihg

Pnncess Video 446-2501
Open Under New Ownership
Open Datly 10 am · 12 mtdntte
Sundays 12 noon- 12 mtdntght

I

of pavament

receive

bid 1

for

the

following:
(1) 649 Foot more or loll
of

fence

line

to

be

Further Information of !ho
project can be obtained by
contacting Bill Browning,
Proioct Manager, at614-9926782.
Bldo ohoutd he marked
South Fourth a South Fifth
St. Paving:
Each bidder Ia required to
furnish with Ito propooal, o
Bid Guaranty and Contract

conatructod 10 townohlpa
opeclllcollons.
(2) 8 oet of brace post In 1Jond In accordance with
Section 153.54 of the Ohio
Already conetructed fence.
Spoclllcotlona may be Revleod Code. Bid aocurlty
obtofnod by writing Salam furnlahed In Bond form,
Townohlp Clarks office: oholl he l01ued by 1 Surely
26239 Legion Road, Company or Corporation
Langavlllo, Ohio 45741. , llconaod In the Slota of Ohio
Sealed propooolo muot be to provide aold ouroty.
Each Propoaal muat
received no later than 6:pcl
p.m. July 18, 1'995. contain lho full nome ot
Propoaalo will ba opened ol party or portloa subml111ng '
S;OO p.m. July 18, I 995 at tho propooal and all
poraona lntereotod therein.
Each bidder muot oubmlt
evidence of tta experlancea
In Memory
on projoc!o ol olmllor olze
and complexity. Tho owner
In memory of our
tnaonda and roqutroa that
thlo prolact he completed
no later than 10/15/95.

Shane
KeatJey

salll

required to

I ~~~~;:~.~ Enhrrprlae
tho Minority
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(MBE)

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Public Notice
Public Notice
cerlltlod Minority Business Manager, at614·992-6782.
Enterprlseo In an aggregate
Each blddor to required to
dollar value of no less than

five percent (5%1 of
prime

contract.

furnlah with Ita propoaal, e

t~e

BldGueranty and Contract

Bidder

Bond In accordance with

procurement acUviUes, 10 SecUon 153.54 of the Ohio
the extent 1het the Revised Code. Bid oocurlty
contractor
purchases turnlahed In Bond form,
material&amp; and/or services, ehall be leaued by a Surety

aholl reaul11n !he award of
Meigs County procurement contracts to
26239 Legion Rood at ate certified Mlnttrity
Lango ville, Ohio 45741 Bualneu Enterprises In an
(71 2, 6, 9, 13; 4TC
aggregate dollar value of no
Ius !han lwo percent (2%)

PUBLIC Nnlrtr.li
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Tho VIllage ol VInton
Sealed propooalo will bo
Council will hold a public rocolvod by tho VIllage of
hearing on tho propooed Middleport In the office of
t996 Budget on Jufy 13, the mayor, 237 Race St.,
1995 at 6:00 p.m. at the Mlddlonort, Ohio 45760,
l"to,wnlhaU. All roaldonta oro until 4 PM, July 17, 1995 for
paving portions of South
Invited to aHand.
Brenda Burris 4!h end South 5th 51roeta .
Tho propoood work
Clerk/Treaaurer
conalota of the laying of
July 2, 5, 1995
approximately 815 cu ydo

NOTICE TO , BIDDERS
Solem
Township
Truotoao, Melgo County will

patrol.
Darnell was reponed in " ""lactot y co ndtllon Saturday by an
IIMC spokesperson . The huspttal
hnd no recoru ot trCAimenl for
Compslon .
The patrol said Dnrncll w'"
southo\)und at 4:30pm in Morgnn
Townshtp when she IO&gt;I control nl
her car, went off lhe n ght stuc ol
!he roau and 1nto a c.ltt ch The c.lf
was moderately d:unagetl, !mopers,

Salem Townahlp Truateea

Public Notice

Public Notice

~nd the puhh c-:U'C the wmncrs," he
srud.
,Opponents nsscn cd th ,ll th e
coun rulmg coulu &lt;lcpnvc ndull, ol
progrruns sunahle fur them, Mll'h ,.,
shows on sex educ.num .ttHI AIDS •

Friday crash injures two

0

Open 1-5 Sunday
: GAHS • Washtnglon School
• Rtver Boats • Btcentmnel Statue
Great Savings
Books , Coverlets. Mugs, Balls
50% off• Dre'sses!
Gallia County
Historical/Genealogical Soctety
Jack ·&amp; Jills
4~0 Secon~ Ave · ~allipolis. OH
· Holtday Hours
326 2nd Ave.
Sunday 1 lo 4
Monday &amp; Tuesday 10-4
Gallipolis -r
446·7200
446-4343
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PUBUC NOTICE
The Village of Choahlre
hold Ita Annual Budget
Hearing on Monday, July 3,
1995, at 7:30 p.m . In !he
IVU:Iogo Office located at119
S R. 554, Cheshire. All

Country Line Dancmg
Tuesday &amp; Tt:lursday

New Shipment
of Stoneware Crocks

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c:3Summer Schedule

FLAIR FURNITURE

Sandy Daugherty
will be relocating to
(Total Effects)
formerly Mary K's of

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PVH Wellness &amp;
Rehab Center

JUNE SAVINGS
SERTA MATIRESS
$59 00
BED FRAMES
$1.9 95
RECLINERS
$99 00
4 Drawer Chest
$49.95
4/pc Bedroom Sutte
$499 00
Sofa, Loveseat &amp; Chair $599 00

NOTI E

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ca~ts, mo~t of them mvolvmg
sho clo radto programs suc h as
Howard Stem 's.
Under FCC ~ules, TV and radto
statwns may atr md ecent shows
only between 8 p tn and 6 am ..
The coun ruling narrows the "sale
harbor" tor mdecent program' 1o
between 10 p m and 6 am Cable
televiSion 1s not atfecte~
Becau se the guver ment has
shown a compelhng in eres1m proleering chtld ren from mdecenJ
m1nenal s, U1e conn upheld as constilutional go~ernment regulauons
restnctmg tht s 1ype of speech on
broadcast s~1tions.
"The government 's dual inlcrests m assistm g parc~ts and protecting minors nccessanly extends
beyO!lll._merely channeling broadcast iTltlecency 10 those hours when

ic Notice

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

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cution
the killer pulled : ~
Ms. Simp&gt;on's head hack by her ·"
hatr to sht her throat. Deednck~ :·:
agreed that was a po~ihle explana- ·
!tOll.
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SUNDAY P.UZZL-ER

cent. matenal ts \hat which
descnbes m tenns pmemly olfenstve. as measured by contemporary
com m'!_mty s~nd~rds, sexual or
excretory acuvllles. or organs.
Matenal judged obscene is barred
from Ute airwaves enurely
Gtven the definit!on, a pro~rarn
could be deemed mdec e nt tn a
small, .homogeneou s commumty
but not in a large , cosmopolitan
one. And a program could b_e
offenSive to one pe~on, but not Itt
the FCC's legal standard. In additwn , the commiss•on looks mtn
programming only if il rece1ve a
vtewer or listener compliant
Th e FCC hasn't. tak_en. any
ac!Jon agamst TV stauons m years
But 11 ~oposed fines agamst
radio stations for indecem broad-

BULLETt·N· BOARD

' •'

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

- from daytime soaps and talk
shows to such popular pnmetinie
fare as Roseanne to Married ...
Wrth Chrldren. broadcast attorneys
said
That's because no extstmg TV
shows have been deemed mdecenl
by the Federal Communications
Commtssion
And many regularly scheduled
dramas such as NBC's Homictde
and ABC's NYPD Blue that could
contain offensive scenes to some
people usually begin at 10 p.m
already
The court's 7-4 deciston did not
affect Ute FCC's longstantlmg indecency definiuon, but rat,her lhe
hours when broadcasters may atr
such shows
Under the FCCs standard, inde-

7

L - - . , . . , . - - - ' - - - - - ' : .'

Ci(y CommissiJn -nfeets Wednesday

•

'

Lance Ito to give jurors a
nighttime look at Ms.
Simpson's condominium,
where the bod,ias ware found.
The defense objected; Ito said
he would rule next weak.

Food vendors need licenses

•

'

Ill&gt; Prosecutors a&amp;ked Ju!;lge

Man jailed on DUI charge

•

BY, JE_ANNINE AVERSA
Assocaated Press Writer •.
WASHINGTON - Broadcasters and civil libertarians say Ill~( II
c~Jilllenge an appeals courtdectsmn
that broadens the government's
power to limit ~bildren's exposure
to ad~lt programming on radio and
televiSion.
In a rultng Fnday , the U S
Coun o~ Ap!lCals for the District of
Columbta gave broadca•ters a new
mstruction to follow when airmg
mdecent programs: Put it on after
IOp.m.
.Whtle governme.nt offtcials
balled the dectswn, mdustry and
advocacy gn)ups condemned tt as
an.assault o~ freedom o.f speech
The restncuon. won t affect lhe
scheduling of extsling TV shows

Company or Corporotlon
licensed In the State of Ohio
to provide aald aurety.
Each Propoaal muet
contain the full name of the

party or portlea subml111ng

of the prime contract. The the

propoaal

•nd

requlrementa.
evidence of Ita •~parlance•
All contractors and on -pro]ecta of almtlar alza
aubcontrectora Involved· and complextty, The owner

with the project will, to tho
extent practicable use Ohio
Producta,
materials
oervlcea, and labor In lhe
lmplementollon of their
pro 1e ct.
Additionally,
contractor compliance wllh
the equal employmenl

Intends and requ""'o that
lhla project be completed
no le1or1han 10/15/85.
This project Is o Minority
Buolnaas Enterprloe (MBEI
Set-Aalde Project. Each
bidder muat oubmlt
evidence that 11 Ia a Mlnorlly

opportunity requirements of

Business

Enterprlae 11

Ohio AdmlnlotraUvo CQAo certltled by the State Equal
Employmonr Opportunity
Chapter 123,the Governor's Coordlnolor
Executive Order of 1972,
,
and Covernor 'a Executive
Bidders are required to
comply with !he Minority
Order 84·9 shall be Bualnoso,Enterprloe (MBE)
required.
requirements oat forth In
Blddero must comply wllh SecUon 164.07 of the Ohio
!he prevailing wage rataa on Revlood Code, and Rule
Public lmprovamento In 164-t-32 of !he Ohio
Melga County and the Admlnlo!rollva Code . In
Village of Middleport, Ohio pori, !hlo meana !hal any
ao determined by the Ohio bidder, to the exton! that 11
Department of Industrial subcontracts work, shall
Relation•.
award aubcontracta to atate

The VIllage of Ml~~d~::~!l certified Mlnorlly Buolne01

reaerves the right to
lrregularltlea and to

Enterprises In an aggregate
dollar value of no 1111 than

and and all bldo.
Dewey M.

live percent (5%) of lhe
prime contacl. Bidder

Village ot

(71 2,

9, 16; 3TC

•

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS •
Sealed propooals will
received by the VIllage ol
Middleport In lhe office of
!he Mayor, 237 Race
Mlddlepor!, Ohio unUI 4
July 17th, 1995 lo
catch booln topo end
value

ex!en!

actlvltlea, to

!hot ' tha

contrtllctor purchaaea
materlala and{or aervlc ..,
shall reault In the aWard or
procurement contract• to

stole certified Minority
Bualneaa Enterprises In an
aggreg8te' dollar value or no

Lou !h•n two percent (2%)
of tho prime eonlact. The
bid• specifications provide

further details on theae
requirement•.
All contractora ana
coven to match
with !he Soulh aubcontractora lnvotv~d

pavl ng
October 7 , 1974Section 164 07 of lhe Oh to Fourth and Soulh Fifth Sto. wllh lhe project will, to lhe
eX1ent practicable u1e Ohio
Rovlood Code, and Rule povlng project.
July 2, 1993
materlala
164·1-32 of tho Ohio
Further Information may Producta ,
It's been
years Admlnlotrotlve Code. In be obtained by contacting eervlcea, and labor In the
Bill Browning, Project lmplemon!atlon of their
part, tt')la means that any
you left this bidder, to tho extent that It
pro It c 1.
Additionally,
contractor
compliance
with
.aubcontracta
worl.,
ahell
tiut we who
lhe equal employment
award subcontract• ·to atate
Card of Thanks
opportunity requiremenla of
love you sllll feel
Ohio Admlnlatra11ve Code
your presence wtth
The famtly
of Chapler 123,1he Governor's
Rebecca Smith would Execullve Order of 1972,
us. And although we
like to thank all of 1nose and Governor'o Executive
gave flowers, food,
84·9 shell be
mtss having your
money, cards, and kllld required.
•
body-- here, we
I wctrds of compassiOn
Blddoro muo! comply with
special thanks {O the prevoillng wage raleo on
and remember
Public Improvement• In
DiJddlllg and
a County and the
~&lt;u•m, ... v here IS over
A~~~~:~~~~~~ local
Alumtnum
l~:~·~:fe:·~~f ~M~t~~ddleporl,
Now you are w1th
S
5668 las
by the Ohio
Ohio
whtte
Dopar!manl
ol
lnduolrlal
other Sptrits, learntn
Relatione
~ave
b
The Vlllege of Mlddlepon
and watting unttl all
oI happtness e1ore
reaerves the rlghl lo wolve
of us on earth are
death Also thanks
Irregularities and lo reject
""'""''•
Dav1s
for
her
any
and oil bldo
reunited w1th God
.J fri!:_ndshlip with Becky
Dewey M. Horton, Mayor
s to Rev
VlllageoiMiddlepoJ'! ' '
, .Lo.v.e, Morn, P~d.
EDDIE A. · E.
Smtih, Sr.
2, 9, 13TC
Jamie, Matt,
' FERGUSON
P a 11 1 • Taylor.
Card of Thanks
Grandma, Grams,
Edwarc Sigler, Brian
6/24/53·1 0/4/94
Randall Arnold,
Aunts , Unci
A BIRTHDAY
The family of
Smtih. Don
Cousins and Many
and
Larry
PRAYER
Cheryl Pollock
Friends
Dear
God
1n
wants to thank
heaven
everyone that s~nt
Please hear my
In
flowers, food,
humble prayer,
In Lov1ng Memory of
G1ve this message
money, cards,
to
my
brother,
Thurman Boggs
• helped with
May
Bless you
•
So
he'll
know
that
I
passed away one
chores; most of all
for your ktndness
st1ll care.
yearagoloday
Mother &amp;Fattier I
their prayers.
Tell htm Happy
Carroll &amp;Barbara Smith
never sa1d
Btrlhday,
Son Jeremy
Stster, .Ltsa Compson
Jgo,odtJye, A mtllion r
He would be fortyCarl ~ Dorothy
ltin"'~ I've needed you
two.
requirement• aet forth In

?

11

million1imes I've
I crcied. lf·love could
have saved you you '
never would have
1 "''~u . In life I loved you
I rl&lt;&gt;l'&gt;rlv In dealh· llpve
:;till, In' my heart
hold a place no
one can ever ftll, It
.. '
broke my heart to lose
but you did not
go alone , For part of
me went with you ,
day God took you
home'
Sadly m1ssed by wtfe
Rebecca, chtldr~n.
grandchildren and
great-grandchildren

But thiS one ts so
spec1al.,
It's his ftrst birthday
with you.
Tell 1\im that we
love him
.
' '
And m1ss hi!TJ more
eac~ day
Our hearts have
!Pldd,enE!d since
u.~vem away.
He was a spec1al
perso!),
Loved by everyone
he knew. .
Bul our hearts are
much less burqen_ed ,
Just knowin!T""he's
w1th you .
• Stster Nancy
mtssed
al l

I

,
'

Mefford
)PrPmy Jt.f. II alley
1/eavPn mmt.be
/~righter bec_au•e you

are there.
Your smile made
otlu1r.• ~mile. J01.r .~
vmce

tllltl fJres~nCe

lmmgh1 joy Ia our
/warts. We Love ond
Jt.fLf.&lt; Y01t! Our prayer
is "IAJra )e•u• Come
Quickly ". Until then
u:e will c ontimtP co
Tommorrow is your
l1oltl you l~l our l~ellrl&amp; .
birthday. The one you
Will• l..nve ,
were wa11tng for. What
Onrl,
Mom,
Bryan,
would your 18th year
CrPir/ten,
Selecrw
&amp;
t"iave held for you?.
Savannah
God knows .

,
1

all

hid apeclflcotlons provide peroono lnleroaled therein.
further dalallo on these Each bidder muai oubmlt

l.

'

�•
•

Page 04 • $unllav 'm•mu $•1tlnul

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

SEORC's summer meQ
eting set July 13

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

_(

W ELLS TON - Cl ark Street
exec ut ive v1 ce pres1dent of the
OhiO Contraaors As!oc.atiOn Will
be gue st speak er at the annual
Southeastern Oh10 Reg1onal Coun
cd ~ummer meetmg July 13 at the
Farrgreens Country Club
Th e m ee un g wtll fo ll ow th e
annual SEORC goll tou rn ament
acc ordm g to an nn o un ce mem
from Bob Evans prestdcnt
Pnor to the even ng bu smess
rneetmg Street w II meet wt h the
SEORC htghw ay commmee at 4
p m Eval s srud
G K enner Bush cha rman of
the htghwa y COIDilltliCC said that
Street ts one of the mos t kn ow!
edgeabl e 11 h vttlu tl s m th e state
when 11 com es t ht ghw ay plan
m g fundmg and cunstructton
He satd tl e SEORC Htghway
Users Comm uee seeks to cxped1te
plann ng and CQ tstruetwn on seg
men~&gt;; of comtlor r utes 23 Route
7 md 52 US 35 \nd US 33 and
tl c Af'palflChtm Htghw ay RoiHe

fr msportauon m many capactues contmue th ro ughout the day He
wtth ass tgnments 111 location and added that gol fers from over south
destgn c6nstruc111 n and operauons~eas t er n O h w wt ll compete t or
11 t he d strt c t leve l L ~ t er he pnzcs m a Cal loway handtcap tour
became th e ch tef engm eer anLI nrunent
asSis tmt tl~rector of the OhH •
T cke ts for the meeu ng m ay
purchased fmm local Chrunbers ol
Department ol Transportatton
He JOlt eLl the Ohw Contr tel&lt;rs Conunerce or the SEORC PO Box
271 Wellston Oh o 45692
Assoc1atlon and assumed hts cur
rent pos ttt on n 1982 H e al so
Golfer s wts hlll g to pl ay m ay
ser ves as ch urman l f the O ht o~ se nti th e r entn es to the SEORC
S iu e W etl an ds Research Park p 0 Box 27 1 W ellston OhiO
45692 There w II be a IJospttalny
Gut dat cc Corrun111ee
Ev~n s sruLI Umt the golf toum 1 1ou ~gmn ng tr 5 30 p m Evans
met 1 w II beg m at 8 10 a m and sa d

EMS units record 13 calls
PO M ERO Y - Volunt eer s of
tl e Metgs C ounty Emergen cy
Mcd cal Scrvtce logged n c Ills t r
asSi stance Fnday mcludmg four
transfer call s Umts re spm dm g
mcludetl
MIDDLEPOR'}:
2 29 ~ m -Le ldmg Creek Rmtd
George Sear ch Hol zer M edtcal
Center
OLIVETWI'
2 13 am Long Bou om June
Gnffin St Joseph sHe &lt;p ~11
POMEROY
5 29 p m Pomeroy Nursmg and
Rehabthlatton Center Sherwood
Mend1th Vetera s Memor II Hos
p ~tl
10 35 p m Royal Oak Resort
Robert Farrell VMH
RACINE
2 31 p m volunteer ftre depart
ment ami squads t &gt; State Route

v

Bu It add~ th 11 Street s cxper
u c and expenencc w II be helpful
1 II e commllt ec ts 11 plans an
act on progrrun to ensure proper
pi mnmg on th e u lt 1Shctl seg
Tnct Is so that when funtltng IS
ava1lahle these prOJ eCts wtll he
ready for construe t
Street t 1 nat vc Oht&lt; 1 and
rccctwLI Itt&gt; bachelor I sctence m
c tv I engmcenn g I n the Case
In tuute of Technology 111 1953 He
w rked for the Oh10 Department of

I

Chun:tt Sole 'lb!llh G1011p llounl
lion M-.ry tlol&gt;tlll. t:w. RL
7 Below Locl&lt;o, Bl1don l.Mdlng
Bldg. "" Sal. lion.
Clolhn, l'1au-. IJihoo, Aoulh
~ Cl1oaiW. f111 So.rl, 11-5.

Sunday, July 2, 1995
80

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; Vlclnhy

and Auction
Rlclt Pooraon Auction Compaf\1

-- --

G1roge aol• July 3 &amp; • houoe-

hold furn lah ngs chid en and
adu 1 clothing 1011 mac Wh t•

....

Now u,... Rd Uon

~

173-5786 Or 1104-77:1-5447

Personals

40

40

Giveaway

Decorated a1onewa e wall tel•
"""""' old IampO, old thor....
old ckx:ka, antique fu nitu e

Pine SltMI HouHWar.. Furnl
turo Some Old ~

Two family yard ~ale Monday
&amp; 4th 451 Un

and 11&lt;-y 3rd

coin Street U dd epo 1 Ohio

Men 1 women 1 and ch dren 1
clothing all 1 let household
gaoda.9....?

Floo Marlcat Mar&gt;.luty 3rd 8 A.M
Amvett Bu IeUng Kanauga OH

Knlck Knuk• Etc 48 Burnett

Rood, Kanauaa.

Pomeroy,
Mlddlepon
&amp; VIcinity

3-Famlly Yard Salt 2108 Madl
""' ,.,. June 30-July 1&amp;3. 7orn?

Top

P lcoa Paid All Old U S
Co na, Gold R ng" Silver Co n1

Ga,.gt/Bulldlng c1oanou1 July
111-lllh Some anUque furnitu e

old jewelry marbiH, whot nolo
lrtl.,cta, ..,ak:al lnorumonta, aid
IOyo Toni&lt;U 10011 f1lda 1 reela

lMly 814-388-9303

Call Lar 'I

aid Hlrnoao, bu-.xl ..... gocart and much more 1mile out
Aohlon Upland Ad Turn 11 roll

Giveaway

~nl Solt

cal Co. (802) 1154-74211

Boouol\i varied tolar lclttono. 304
875-8822.
Black bar w 4 owlvol bor otoola

'Mnl Solo Rl 2N, !lmlleo. Juno 30July 4 Sowrol ondquoo, Chot•y
- b o d , loa of weryllif'CI.

NHCI Clothoa rvo Got S
M 1 L. Sltlrta For Boya. ero o 1

2 Shoaa For Man Plntl For

'

The Lords Work That 11 Why

Thora Won 1 Bo

Any

P Ice Taga

81~5118

Wilker Coonhound lomolo 304-

937 2895

:60::--:-Lo-st:-a-n-:d-:F:-o-u_n_d-:--

Yard Sale Thuraday thru Yon

day Rl 2 bv Hickory Chapel lol
road on right paat Promlte Land

LOST 1 des gne hoop earring
Galipol11 or P1 Ploa11111 oroa. Rowa.tdl C1l :J04..875-2231

F1oo Mar1!ot

groy oyea good

~~~~~~g~o=od~W~/c~h~l=dr~o~n

70

Giveaway

&amp; VI 1 1ty
C0
110
3 Famly July Ill 2nd g? 18
Mile Oul Georges Craok From RL

Ral,... T1oa, 81~85&amp;4

1yr old blacil. male aemllong
haired c.t 1 maMt bladuWhlte kit

Six K ttens Seven Weeks Old
Tra ned Warmed To Good
Homo, 81~7470

.... ~56-221&amp;

d Sal
,ar
e

v

Two female dogs

112 Cocker

Span ,. ta It cut, lD ggoit home

7

110

Help wanted 1

814-91l2-5205
2,.... khtena. 304-e7S.22&lt;8
110

HelpWanted

$35000/VR
INCOME POTENTIAL
Readmg books
Toll Free
J\1 l aoo 89a 977£
Ext R 281 4 for deta Is

.

Help Wanted

304-875-4889

1 White Blue Klaon. 8 Weol&lt;a, I.J1

tarTflirad. 81~5.

WANTED
Due to recent expansion
COMMUNITY SKILLS INSTRUCTOR poslltons
available to teach communtty and personal
skills to adults with learnmg llmltattons tn
Me1gs County HOURS
(1) 40 hrs /wk (ltve In) 3 pm Mon thru 8 am
Sat , sleep-over required, daybme hours off
excellent beneftt package
(2) 32 hrs /wk (ltve tn) 8 am Sat thru 8 am
Mon
sleep over requtred vacatron/stck
benefitS
(3) 20 hrs fwk 4 8 pm M F vacat1on/s1ck
benefits
(4) 18 hrs /wk u am 7 pm Sat /Sun
vacatron/slck beneftts
ALL POSITIONS reqUire attendance at 2 hour
bt monthly staff meeting or hours as otherw1se
scheduled Vanou!l skills and talents needed
H1gh school degree, valid dnver s license
good dnvtng record three years licensed
drlvtng expenence and adequate automobile
insurance coverage required
Training
prov1ded Salary $5 00/hr
to start
If
Interested contact Cee~ha at1 800 531 2302 no
later than 717195 Equal Opportumty Employer

AmenCare Home Care, Inc.

we eare
Our dedtcare

of

$40 000/YR INCOME
POTENTIAL Home
tTYPtsls/PC users Toll
Free (1) 800 898 9778
Ext R 2814 for listings

Local Area Freight
Co accepting resume for delivery
dnver Knowledge
of Galltpolls area
and good driving
record a must Send
resume to 4210 1st
Ave
Nitro
WV
25143, Ste 305, Att
Mtke Colltns

Buckeye Home Health
Psychlatnc RN Case Manager

We pledge
lo pul the
patumt
frnl

•••

Buckeye Home Heal h a d \liS on of Be hesda
Hasp ta
s C\1 ent y seek ng a part time

Psycllratnc AN Case Manage tor lhe Gall a
County offce
Cand dates must have he ab I ty o p ov de
profess ana psychother.apeut c nter'lfent ons
n the home sen ng us ng knoWledge of the
nu s ng process herapeu lc commun cat on
sk I s
lam ly
dynam cs
psychotrop c

medleallons special zea psychologlca tools
and scales support ve psychothe spy cop ng
st ateg es and case management

Wepkdge
to succeed
through
teamwork

•••
We pledg"
lo slnve for
contmuows

The qua fed applicant w 1 be a Reg ste ed
Nu se n the Sta e of Oh o w th app opna e
Advj~.nced Degree ~ndlo expenence A BSN
degree w th a xea of e ated work expe ence
tn an active psysh at o trea ment p og am o
an Assoc ate s Deg ee w h two years
eMpenence s equ ad ANA cert I cat on n
psych atnc nu s ng s des ed Good cl n cal
skIs as wei as good o al and wntten
commun cation sk Is a &amp;...a, must Recent
home oare eMpe ence s prdre ed

App cants mus have p ool or a va d d ve s
cense el able t ansporta on and p oof ol
nsurance n orde to be cons de ad fa th s
pos 1on Add t ona~y qualil e&lt;1 appl cant• w 1
meet co e job equ emenls w h o w thout
easonable accommodat ons
For prompt coiuliderallon please contact

Pot Amos Regional Director at
Buckeye Home Health
French Square

400 Second Avenue bGalllpollo OH 45631

E E

BETHESDA
CARE SYSTEl\1

llenlr/o
care •pecwlul•
lll_22~9~5!1~~!!A~ve~·~~~~~O~h~4~3Z70~lj
are
commatted
to helpmg II
an any way lhey can

COMPLETE NURSING
&amp; HOME HEALTH
CARE SERVICES
HourlyfDailyfWeekly
•RN, &amp; LPN,
•NurJe!J Aidea

• Comparnoru
•Home IV

Therapul•
• Homemakera
•DomeJllc
Re1pded

Sermce•
Available

286-8646
1 800 967·3646
ICAHO

Public Sale
and Auction

===:;::=::::==:;::::===
Gallipolis

On Any OIIL
Moalfy lillie tong-haired 1cJ1
Thanka For Your HoP P aaae 1on wlbaby blue eyoo 304 458
Cal For 0 rocllona 814-448-35118 2218.
Ali&lt; Fvr lloma.
Pupplea, Swka old m wed l&gt;fHd

40

80

635e

ahort curly llarod dog

wfth tho public Send

ou do bull
ne11 wllh people
u know and
NOT to aend money through the
mall u nt I you have nveatlgatecl
recommends tha

Senlinol 111 C...rl SL """Oil.

bv 7171V5.

tho ollorlng.

Dellvory peroon noodod lor local

Metal Bu ld ng Manufacturer Se-

furniture 1tore Fu I time wlbene
f 11 Send resume to Box P 28
%Paint Pleaunc Reglatar 200
Main St. P1 Plouoro, WV 25550

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

Hutchmson Auction Inc
Household Auction
Wednesday, July 5 at 6·00 p.m.
Take US 50 &amp; 32 West and ex1t onto
50 West towar~s McArthur
Auction 1s quarter mile on left S1gos po$1cd
Samuel J Jasper of Athens 1s movmg mto
a smaller home and w1ll offer the f6'11owmg
at auclton as well as other constgnments
Modern furmture antiques collectibles and
tools Currently takmg cons1gnme{lts for July
16 ant1que auction
Terms c;ash or check w/-pos1t1ve 10
Food available
AuctiOneer Mark Hutchmson 614 698 6706
L1censed and Bonded m Oh10
Partner Frank Hutchmson bl •l-)'~l-4j~fY

Pub-fie d/-uction
CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
THURSDAY, JULY 6, 1995 AT 6 00 PM
Located on Patriot Road tn Patriot, Ohto w1ll
take consignment on Thursday July 6 at
300PM
Will Sell Outside Begtnnlng At 6
PM
PARTIAL LISTING 1987 lroc Z 28 like new
979 Chevy Blazer 80 000 ortgmal mtles 305
~mn;inA: 1977 AD 400 Yamaha motorcycle 1975
Pontiac Catalina More comtng'
Cars Trucks, Motorcycle Boals and Etc
MARLIN WEDEMEYER AUCTIONEER
Ltc 3615
614 379-2720
Not Responsible for Accident or Loss of Property
EATS
CASH
POSITIVE I D
AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY AT 7 00 PM
From Gallipolis take Boule 141 turn left onto
Route 775 turn right onto Patr1ot Road Go
approx 2 m1Ies

oo

u-

d n ng table w eat bachelors chest 2 dr ut ty cab sw vel
rockers upho cha
bookshelf s nger swe1ng mach ne

w/stand came back and sl ap trunks maple chars KI work
table slanlback rocker metal ce box USS tl Carol na metal
cab floor mod c osley rad o wood tool cab plus more

GLASS POTTERY CROCKEI;tY
24 pes Ienton &amp; mpe al earn g ass Rosev lle Weier
He sey Foster a Wan P tcher (Kathy Ka e) Johnson Bros
Stangl Westmoreland Nor take N ppon Occ Japan
Meak n Czeck Frankoma 4 p set Curr e &amp; lves D shes
McCoy Blenko Hazel Atlas C acker Ja Ruby Coba 1
Vasel ne Blk Amethyst Cambr dge Sm lh blown glass
Bava an Germany ta y Plus more :5 gal stone churn 1 2
Gat Donaghho storage 1ar (Ch1p) Several crocks &amp; tugs 5
gal Glass Water Jug Plus mo e
MISC
Do w/fu cape n box kn ves Buck (107) Sktnn ng Buck
Pkt (301 &amp; 303) Ul ca Pkl Case XX Lk Blade Curtis
Durotorq Bea Hunter Lk Blade Db! Duck Sl Razo
Chal enge Cutlery St Razor 1923 Shr ner s P clu e
Assorted Tins (some a~v) 1949 C n Reds P clure by
Ashland 0 1 Quaker St 0 S gn Dozy Chu n (Wood &amp;
Dove Ta

ceda

&amp; s ver quarte s

Lg Assort oil nens g us mo e
~
MOO ERN
Amana..,s de by s d6 relrlg (Frost F eel Hoi Pont Drye
Tappan M crowave w cabinet Hallogen s and lamp antenna
w/35 lower ste eo w/turnlable cassette &amp; AM/FM 60s &amp;
70s Reds Cards Olymp c Dream Team P clu e 84 Buck
wagon (3 0 V6 104 000 m es) 12 HP R d ng mower lg gas
gr I &lt;;ar raffll!s engine holst W/4000 b boom 5 Sea s wood
Lathe e eel dr Its cttcula saw chan holst g W lion Vise
10 Table saw hedge trimmers sanders battery charger too
boxes p pe wrenches grease gun wood clamps meta
shelves

e&gt;etra lg

assortment hand too s

sockets

w enchas (Snap on C aftsman Tho son Etc ) Plus Mo e
Th s ts only a parttal sl ng
We Will ho d regula sale at 7 00 p m

Auctioneer F1n1s Ike Isaac
Phone 614 388 9370 and 388 8880
L censed and Bonded Ohio N.3728
Terms Cash o Approved Check
Nol Responsible lor Accidents or Lost Items
Food and Dr nks w II be

'

&amp;

440

1 Bedroom Near Holur 1 AI

Condldonod SUpe Nice $25g
Mo ~~~ Roqu rod 814 444-

Apanments
for Rent

Nice 2bed com apa tm•nt w d
hookup Rt erencea. Depot L No
po&lt;L 304-e75-5 62.

2957
2 Bedroom Apart ment Traah
W1tor Sawogo Paid $2115/Mo. +
Dopoolt,l1~2481

RENTALS

773-5357

41 0 Houses for Rent
3 Bed bomt Bath &amp; 1 2 A o
G anda Area Washer 0 ~er

Hook Up $490/Mo Oepoolt Requ ed, 5 3-922-(1294

houn Malon A I
e ectrlc S325mo It SO depot 1
ava able Ju 'I 1 304 773 593"
lflllr 4:30pm
3bedroom

Limited Offer 1998 doublewldo
3br 2bllh $18Q5 down $259/
monlh Free delivery &amp; aetup
Only a Oakwood Homea N 1 o
New 1i95 14x70 ncludn tid 1
block• one year
hotneowner1 Insurance and 1 •
monttw FREE lot rent Or"ly • 025

&amp; 81th (1 Bedroom) Furnllhtcl. Ctean Raitt
once and ~oft ~ulred No
Plto 81~\518

-1iwlclln.304-75S-71gt

OAKWOOD HOMES Nitro WV
0 rect taciOry aalet No middle
man Save $ 000 e 304 755

450
call after 8pm 81-t gg2 200D or
304-773-5707

3 bedroom haute 10 14 acrea, S

Furnished

Rooms

One bedroom houl8 In Pomeroy

Price Buaterl New 141170 2 o

'"50 Yo

Upollitl, 3 -

Now Bank Repoa Only 4 oft

5885

Otpoal~

::.e,:;r• lor= :end

down ond $207 17 por ""'""' Call
1 800-837-3ZI8

Cape Cod Sl)'le Counlry Home
On Eight Acrea For Sale In

$400

No Pe11

Appllcodona AI
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 1743 Ctnltnory Ad Ooll pol a
BUDGET PRIC~S AT JACKSON 81.___Z!IJI5.
ESTATES 52 Wootwood Or vo
lrom $228 to $291 Walk to ahop 1\oln- r - .- aocepdng
I movies Ca I 814 448 2588 appllclllono tor 1br HUO l4lbold
Equal Houolng Opportun ty
EOH
7D hand I

•niJ 11ep1

oro AI 2 Flatroc:ll $43 800 304
87&amp;-1507 or 81 &lt;HI84-9088

Smoker•

304 882 2568

wv llol-75&amp;-5885.

d flIng room kitchen large utllty
room enc o1ed porch 1 ca
drl.,..in basement, approx 3J~a

Boocn St lllddlopor~ Oh. 2bed Ont Y•r Old Spacloua 2 Bod
room 1\irnlahad apt Dopoalt &amp; rol """"' ~~~ 4 Mlloo From Go I po
erancea equired Utlllie• ~ d lla Appllancoo Furnlohtd No

Rooma tor

rent

..-

or manti

S1atdnQ at , , _ Gollll Hotol
814-448-11580

8802.

minutia hom IDWit 304-e7&amp;-4575.

1983 lnd as Manuta.c ured Horne
And 2 5 Acree Ux80 Home
Featu f'l 3 Bedraoma 1 314
Balha, Living Room. Olnmg /Kitch., Combo And UOIIy Room Metal
Sto age Bu ld ng With Concrete

F oor Concre o Walks And Patio
Localed On~ Holow Road

420 Mobile Homes
tor Rent

350 Lots &amp; Acreage
55 Ac 11 Of land With 28JI32

Bu ldng On Cloy Chapel Road. 1
1100-287 8308 81~6308
Leon WV. 6+ rooms. fu t be h fu~
ba~emenl 'Ill arge 1hower lava
lot. gu furnace new appl anc;ea.
Mutt ' " to apprec ate potent II

Ewcopdonally nice nelghbo hood
Reaaonabt~ priced 304 757
9240

310 Homes for Sale

2 Bedroom Tralor On Upper Ro
$27Wo 61~2515.

Ul8 7

1 113ac:rea. lnveatment oppo tun-

2 Bedtooma 14tt110 Total Elocltlc
No "-11 1 M1e South Of Eu,.i&lt;O

Pleuant on Rt 2. Price educed

~d

lty In

ronal property !itrin flvm P1

0tm. $325/llo

+ Oopoal~ AI Ud~
Except Elect c 814

Real Estate General

~75-8277

Nk:e 2 bed oom mobile home k'l
Mlclcleport. 814-ill2 5858

Priced cheap to 1ettla eatate 5
11 AC MIL Goorgoo Creek Road
room one story l'louae 2 bed
rooma bath. carport pat o base- Water Etec Available f13 500
ment out ol all ftood watefl. very 080 814-441 15113 Allor 5 ~M
good location &amp; neighbOrhood 10-

callld ol 832 Gntnl St Midd opotl,
Oh o $25 COO 814 892 7047
814-7&lt;2 2550 0 81,f.384 8364

OFFICE 992-2886

Sma I Mobile Homo U - R1 7
References Deposit No Pets

814 448-3780
440

Apanments
for Rent

I ond 2 bedroom aparttnoniL fur
ni1hed and unturn ahed ltcurlry
deposl1 requ ed no pet• et•
992 2218

Fo Mo e Information Call 814

205 North Second Ave
Middleport, OH

VIRGINIA SMITH BROKER
388-el2e
WILMAWIWAMSQN ...... ,............. 2~
EUNICE
NIEHM::,·::::.::·:·,· ·:::::.: ::::.·:-: ::4:46~1:8:87
LYNDA FRALEV
448 6806
PATRICIA HAYS

448 388•

~A SPENCE ......... ,..................... ,.4*e428

C\AUDE DANIELS

446-71509

nn

Owner - Dee

&amp; Pat McCall

Dan Sm1th - Auctioneer

lt020 COUNTRY CHARMER Jusl a great
neat &amp; clean pace to a tam y Oak cablnets
n 1'\ek Range ef g OW wh ecapet n
LA Ga den lub &amp; showe ba h 24x 24
detached ga age Above g ound pool 2 ac

Racme,

Oh1a
Ohlo#1344 WVa #515
Terms cash
Pos1t1ve ID
Refreshments
Not responsible for accrdents or loss of property

mn

1984 OUTSTANDING 5 ACRES TRACK
M1 028 NEW LISTING Vou w want o see h s
we 1 kepi 4 bed oom w h 1/2 ac e lo close o
35 bypass s priced to sell so bene hu ry on
thsone CaW ma

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

"
com

58 &amp; 82 OLIVE ST Corner of 3rd Great
me c a bUlJd ngs Can be sod sepa a e
Cal o nfo rna on
~~ 021

AUCTION

PRIDE SPEAKS FOR ITSELF I Just dnv ng by th s
mmaculate br ck and v nyl bt level w II tnvtte calls
Located at 238 Carman Dr ve this lovely property
offers everyth ng a tam ly cou d want Tuck the
ch ldren nto bed n one ot the 3 BAs upsta rs ,wh le
the pa ants retreat to the master 1!11 su te downsta rs
with double walk n closets forma LR/DR J=R w th
ample closets equ pped k tchen en tOY the morn ngs
and even ngs n the lovely Flor da oom 1 1/2 baths
2 ca attached garage You mtght th nk I m In shed
but 1m not Add a double lot w th a surpns ng ~ ew of
the rver frorn the gazebo at a pr ce worth f ght ng for
of $89 900 Ca I Carolyn tday lor your pr vate v ew ng

Step Back Cupboard Lg Cannon Ba I Brass Bed
Beaut ful 4 Pc Mah Poster BA Sutte Ntce Oak
Mantles R R Roll Front Ttcket Box Fancy Oak
Secretary Fancy Oak H Boys Mtss on Oak Grand
Father Clock Oak Wardrobes Oak Dr~s Mah
Dresser Oak Washstands
Fancy Oak Hole!
Washstand 8 Pc Depresston D R Sutte ~ 1.gg Oak
Table Lift Top Wash Stand Maib e Top Dresser P e
Sale Fat Wall Cupboard Oak Church Pew Youth
Beds Trunk Mah Rope Tw st Table &amp; 4 Chars
Napanee Oak K tchen Cabtnet Oak Sew ng Machine
V ctrola Metal Dental Cab net Rockers Wteker Table
Wtcker Flower Stan\! Several Beds Fancy Carved
Custom Mah 3 Pc Parlor Swte W/lg Eagles Round
Oak Table Claw Foot Record Cab net Amencan
Fostona Plates Tumblers Cruet Footed Cake
P tcher &amp; Others Fostona Co1n Spot Pttcher CoveredJ
Candy Dtsh He sey Compote Sandwtch &amp;
Depresston Glass
PotnseHa May!a r Floro J"'""Y'
Open Lace Amer can Sweet Heart Ptnk 4 Rare 4"
Tumblers 6 Carn val Glasses 6 Deep Flowered
Bowls Harhquen Pttcher Paden Ctty Chma 30 Pes
Ivy PaHern Wlserv ng Pes Rosevtlle Autumn Leaf
Hall Casserole Grey Grantte Water Set (6 Pes
Dresser l~mps Lamps 1600 s S lver Uo,llars,
Excellent Frames &amp; Ptetures Book 1913 "The Call
The Cumberlands s&gt;gned Dusttn Farnum Copper and
Brass Coffee pot qu Its mtrrors stone tars and much

1 tn C ty Loca~on 2 Moderate y Pnced 3 3 Bed oon\
Home A 1 F oor Plan HOOli 5 ~~to MP n1a n
Call today for an appomtmenl to see th s home o you w l
be the on"e- MISSING out on own ng lh s lovely home
#727

•

Meadows #119~

773 5785 or 773

5447

rEAMS CASH OR CHECK WITH I D
Not responstble for accidents
or loss of propeny
Ltcensed and bonded In Ohio
Kentucky &amp; West Vlrgimll #66

Announcement made day of sal,
take precedence over pnnted matters

n ce

1996 HANDY MANS SPECIAL Large 7
oom 2 story home 3 BR age kitchen OR
o '&lt;.ed a fu nace Beau tu I eed o Some
outb d~' Mob e Home Hook up $35 000

Vance Rd Approx 30 acres of mostly wogdtand btg
garden area small stream free gas and a 3 4
bedroom 1 1/2 story home Home needs some work
Pr vale setttng
$27 500 00

1918 NEW LISTING 20 ACRES &amp; FARM
HOME oca ed n the country w 4 BAs 2
ba hs new ca pe &amp; new oof P ce educed
o $65 000

MIDDLEPORT S 2nd Ave A very well manta ne,d 3
bedroom home that has alot of extras You ve got to
take a look at thts 2 story home Wtth It s !oyer
stauway ltvlng room with llreptace and hardwood
(loors

N630 INVESTMENT Seven Un I Ap s P me
QG8 on Ca fo mo e nfo mal on

110111 MMACULATEIAFFORDABLE cozy 3
beD oom G ee11 Twp LR w eptace fu
bsmt new w ndows cab nets Jean AJ.
ange er d snwasher Lowey eed yard

?

State Route 338 Across from ~avenswood
Alumtnum approx 83 acre's and a 2 sto y lrame
home that has 3 bedrooms and one balh A n ce v ew
of the rwer from the front porch
$~5 000 00

11004 RIO &lt;;RANDE COMMtRCIAL
BUILDING 850 Sq F 3 ms fo office
space La ~e sta age m also parts m
localed on a co nenon m as ate olite

Mtdd aport South Th rd A 2 story house w lh
A umtnum S d ng newer windows downsta rs 3
bedrooms 3 baths fu I basement deck out back
front porch and a ca port
$39 900 00

N1032 Poecal Ad 5400 sq 11 of delghtfu
vngareaon 55acesm/ 48A 3Bath s 2
compete y equ pped k tchens Solh nne and
c ute wa s abunden y lnsu ated Be aut ul

m
home w h Hemlock s d ng 4 bed ooms 3
ba hs 2 comple e k lchens am ly m LA
w/fi ep ace lowely ca pe hroughout W ap a
round deck On y 3 yea s old 5 2 ac es mil
Th s s supe b coun ry wng.. Ca I tor mo e
ntormat on li s ~ng ......,

AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON
MASON WV ~

REDUCED

Pomeroy Mulberry Ave A 3 bedroom Do4b e Tra ler
on a large lot Has a sh1ngle\f root a large I vtng
room a r cond 1oner new.carpet and lots ol storage
room Also has a butldtng for a mce Shop and lots ol
parktng space
$27 500 00

comma c ~I lot eady to bu d on call W ma
to more nfo

11032 HIDDEN RETREAT Beaut ul 9

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

LUNCH

1&amp;95 REDUCED

11031 NEW LISTING 4 BA 1 5 baths n
P anlz Subdiv s on Sola 0 Beautifu tri le\18
home toea ed on a a ge co ne lo ~ew v ny
sd ng and new oof in 94 Ths 1 a ovey
home Ca soon to mo e deta s

more

Aucltoneer Kevtn

v

bu d you mas erp~ece on one of the ast ots
n LAKEVIEW EST 5 ac es $33 000 2 348
acr&amp;s $25 900 4 ots on Wh le Ad Subject o
rest ctlve covenants

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC
(614) 446-3644

Lawn Tractor 342 Toro wheel horse magnum lawn
tractor w/197 hours
Auct oneer Note As always the bu ld ng ts lull come &amp;
spend the day !

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO

LOCATED IN CITY OF GALLIPOUS E agent
B ICk Beauty Located n he c 2 story fu
basemen &amp; ga age Des gned fo g1 ea "V ng
F s roo has a lorma entry w LA &amp; forma
OR Che ry cab nets n the kilchen Breakfast
&amp; powde oom Second oo offe s 4 ooms
BA . FA w 1 aplace laundry oom sto age
oom New u nace w C A Very much mo e ..
Cal g na L Sm h 388 8826/446 8806

tv

Located at the Auction Center
on Rt 33 1n Mason, WV

Owne&lt;S Hank and Sharon M er Seji ng Due To Hea lh
D reel ons Take 850N From Rt 35 18' B dwe l F rst St to
Left Watch For S gns
FURNITURE
Oak Low Boys (one w/ serpent ne front), Duncan F fe
Table Mailogany des!! matcl1 ng dr&lt;&gt;SS&lt;3t.
chest 2 dr ward abe w/blm dr d o~
(ref n shed), Lane cedar chest sm drop eat table octagonal

Real Estate
Wanted

Movie Sa a V deo Store Remo
del ng Appro• 11 DO Move I 200

REAL ESTATE

10:00 A.M.

PUBLIC
60 Church St , Bidwell, Oh1o
Saturday, July 8, 1995, 10 00 am

Metal) Wooden Boxes

Located from Sl AI 33 n Nelsonv lie Oh o Take St
At 78 East app ox 7 m es to Murry C ty Oh o on Locust
St at the fo mer Ayers Ice Cream &amp; Hardware Store
Antique or Collectors Items
Wood s gn Ayers Ice C earn Oouble D p Cone 5¢ Stgn
Coca Cola Please Pay Wll'en Setved Thank Vou back
bar 78 x 107" m rror xJ leaded glass nserts &amp; maib e
tnlay ce cream parlo table &amp; chars paper rollers 12"
x 30" porcela n Coke s gn 7 up s gn Toytown ce
crusher 1 gal g ass Jugs Kennx househo d bleach
A len Keystone wallpape tnmmer letter scales wood
bucket glass d spay case 25 x 72 glass door dtsp ay
tn sect ons total 33 x 1or brown Coke bottles wooden
dye rack Boye nee\fle case clock w neon ght old
sea es w/ wetghts R R anterns old old nsulators ce
cream scoop 2 n or g nat box glass banana spltt boats
sundae d shes 2 cases 10 oz Peps gasses small
Coke w &amp; w out syrup ne Bardon tee cream tray
soda founta n stools work bench ce c earn sandw ch
make wood shelv ng lots of med c ne bones Ma I
Pouch thermometer p us lots of s lve cons wheat
penn es
Guns
Forehand &amp; Wadsworth 32 p stol 22 s ng e shot ntle
22 W nchesler repeater r fie Hopk ns &amp; Allen 22 s ngle
shot r f e two s ng e barrel 12 gauges old p stol lor
parts
Used &amp; New Items
NCR cash reg star lans rock ng char cross cut saw
platlorrn scales ftshtng tackle g ft terns na ts
gQivan zed p pe
ngs wheel barrow bed &amp; t).and es
Chnstmas Halloween na b n plate glass w ndows
There s somelh ng for everyone

360

Only Tho Boot Oualllad Cal
(303)758-4135 En1soo

~y PHONE ROUTE
50 Lo£• And Eotabllohed S tal,
Earn IJ1 500 Weekly Open 24
Hours, Call 800-888--&lt;588.

SATURDAY, ~ULY 8, 1995

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

2btdroom NfiW Moon Ira fer new
ga1 furnace good cond 1 an
12 000 304 1575 8922 0 304

5~1.1

Saturday, July 8, 1995"
10 00 am

588 In AodnoJ. .12.500 814-24&amp;-

Racine Area 2 3 Bedrooms Llv 30&gt; Only S995 clown $195/month
lng Rodm Eat In Kitchen Ut ty Free de IVB y &amp;. aelup On~ at Unturnlahed 2 bedroom houae
Room &amp; Bath Attached One Ca
Oakwood Homes. N lro WV. 304- nice &amp; clean. no intlde Pill. ref
Ga age New Fbrnace Heat 75&amp;-5885.
erencea required 1200 deposit.
Pump Etc $45 ooo 814 ••a
$275 I month""'~ 81 ... 11!12-30'00

ocdng Sma I Or Largo Builder 1
Dealer In Some Open Areas
High Profit Potentia Accepting

PUBLIC AUCTION

~~--~nRd.

Men Women &amp; Children mou...
For Women S W l Th 11.la To Homol 814-245-50111
Be Given Away Bring Tha Onoa
Lo11 two male t ger cars •
You Cant Wear Or Want Any 'Fr.. Klnona 2 Gr.,. 1 Black 2 month• old one bobtal Eut
mo•e Shoot Anyth no Thol You Black Wth White FH~ To Good Main Pomeruy v c: nlty 814-092

Would Want To G ve To Other Homo
People Bring Toy' 1'1&gt;11 I Pona,
Thlnga That·l'ooplo May Nood &amp;
You Oon 1 Want Thla Ia Oolng

Ill -

reaume wllh prevloua wark ••
perlenca &amp; rh H ralerencea to

Adull Movln Would Llko To Sell
All Togolfte 814 3117 0812 Allar

lilac ltoma AI 2 N Ill houoe

lalromditlon. 304-571&gt;4144
Dropped 011 'tbung Coon Hound,
Ve y Gentle Needs A Good

-

Storage Bldg On Renlltd lot on

814-25H574 AltarS Pll

3iiOdtoom, lbalh, IMng room

HOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PU~ISHING CO

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Monday July 3 11-Spm

..

H You

Sun-

22115 or 304-57&amp;-1120.

5 kinens 1 calico all have blue Two temale tiger call with aome
eyea. 304-e7H732.
wh .. 814-949-2270

30 Announcements

......_

Scenic Val ey App e G ova
Slide-In Expando. 2 beautiful 2ac Iota putK c water
8R 1BAtlt. Comra1 Air with !ltt12 ClydollowonJr 304-578-2338

25 FL Moltlr Homo Newly Upllol
awed Large Refrigerator FrHz
er Large Bath Carpeted Good
Cond lion, Roady To Go Camping!

adwert semen s or ea l estate
wh ch s n viola tan o the law
Ou eade s a e he etly
n oi'TneO that ant!W&amp;I iOQS
ad'Vort sed n his newspape
a e ava able on an equa
opportun ty bllt ls

Business
Opponunlty

210

day &amp; evening houra must be

~tnall

Wlt~out Mota 1

814-

FINANCIAL

Cleo1c Mnllld
- afIncaah
POmeroy
area ""
knowledge
regl1ter I any alfk:e machine•

Apartments
for Rent

81~8785.

knowllngty accept

1-lll0-742--4738

holplul 33-40 houro 1

esta e advert s ng n
th s newspape s subject o
the Fede al Fa Hous ng Ac
of 1968 wh ich makes t ega
o adverti se an9 p efe ence
m tal on o d scnm na 10n
based on race co o e lg~n
se• fam al sta; us or nationQ
oOg n o any ntent on to
make any such p eference
lllllta 1on o dlscnm na on

Th s newspape wll not

Torrfioty ()ptllnl.lndir8p.

Ill buy an~quo and used
turnltu e no Item IDO farge or too

Wanted To Buy Junk Autol With

Wli do - w o r k , phone

lli-INo ~ ..l!ltHI

Wartllld

Or

DeV*Iopment V ntan 114 38&amp;81132, 81~17 llocky Heaa.

Homo

Want to buy any Rod Wc:Kuen
paetty book• pubUthed around

Will buy one piece or com
p eta etta tea. Oaby)4arlin 81-4
1192 7..1

Will Caro Fo Chlldca o In My
Homt Oegroo In Eltly Childhood

1182-3173 or 814-882-5858

440

Ul82 TownhOUII 14X70 with

8)(24 fw:IOry

1 8Q3 Sunlh ne 3 BedrOom• 2
Batha Other Extrall 118 800

ea

All

11324 Aok For~

71h -daya.\

AVON I All Arou I Sn oy
~ 304-e75-14211
~
AVON SELLS ITSElf
Avo ago $8 $15 Hr AI Work

Good Condlllon Kitchen Set
Sand Box Picnic Tab • &amp; lltt e
'llll8o Cor 814-24S-&amp;87

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

Septeniber

Rahabilltadon Contor State Route

1870'1. 304-e7S.78)g
Wanted To Buy L ltte Tykaa In

814-258-6578.814 448 4208
Juno :l01h. .July Ill, ~ ClothoL

Call Me In Hlllabo o 513 383

350 Lots &amp; Acreage

05

814-245-8007

N ghta Due To Vlaltlng Fam y

82, Route 1 Box 32e f'l&gt;lrn Plaaoon~ WV 25550 :J14.&lt;!7S-3005

ltUCkl AIIO patti for Nie 304
173-5343 0( 77.1.5033

161 Sooond .~~r....., Gat pooL

care Nurt ng Aatlatant tta nlng
clan Clall beg na Augu1t ht

e$unttnv 'mtmts .$•ntint l • Page

1!193 Skyline 3 llodooomo, 1 Batit, We Buy Farms And Ac eage 20
All Eltctric, E - Condition, 2 Actoo And La go No Um L 814llock' On Rented Lo~ $17 000 885-3064

lov ng

HMrt, Complete Care 15 Years
Experlenct Live In Daye Or

Mar1o Ia ~euen AN cln.s rn
lb'uctor: Point Pleasant Nurllng &amp;

buying wreck• junk auto1 &amp;

Gold Col no IA.T S Co n Shop

Chi dcatW IH e.m-5:30pm Act•
2 K Young School Age Ourlno
SUmmer 3 Doyo par Wotll lllnl
..un du U8 3857
WanUICI To Core Fot The Eldotly
In Their Home Have A

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

5750

Sun Valley Nursery School

Accepting oppUcatlono lh ough
July 18th lor Rtgiol*'ed long l*'m
through

••toa.

Eata• Sale July •• Alil3rd. 51

304MI531185or~121

- POSTAL J08S"

Spr ng Va ,.,. On Jackoon Plkt Slw tamlly July ~ lt101de Sl&lt;a18The Signa ~,. 301h A Way Chtster Twa ant que
July 111, And 2nd, 8 To 5, Pllr1 01 bedapread1 turnllure tampa,
P r - Go ToG M H.A.I&lt;Id&amp;
drapea gu tar amp c: othe• J I D'l Auto Porta ond Salvage
Avon Rtwle gl't Producta tD)'I
ml"" Rain or alinol9am-5pm

lnlormallon. No obllgodon Send
8 A.S E to Proadgo Unll L PO
8o• 1Giie08 Wlnltt Sprlnga FL
3:1718

Help Wanted

•u

lor

••pertenca FrM auppl •• Free

Sllrt $12.0Mt P!ua Btnellta. Fvr
Ewn ond N&gt;Pic:atlon tnt&gt;
Cot 2111-1114-litll o En OH 200
IIAIHo 11f'll 70aya

Ruaa Moore
owner 814 892 2528 We buy

Are 'lbu ANdy For Romance? 1
800 338 8000 Ewt ,4184 $2 88
Po&lt; lllnutt lluat lie 18 Yra. Pn&gt;-

9

110

R verlne Anliquel

And Follow

Earn "" to '1 000 _ , atu!Mg
hom&amp; Sllr1 tvW No

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

90

&amp; Tuao. Ju~

compltllly rotnodolocf 2 boyo
Georgoo Port1blo Sawm II do~ t (front bay 40 w28 rear bay
haul your logs ta the nil jusl coil 32'll2!1) too ••o tot
500
304-e7S.1Q57
-27e3.
Semi trucll w~og tntllor
hlro

-... ............ 11

Wanted to Buy
Community Yard Sale T Sill 11 Gigantic '!lord aote- Juno 30 July Complele Houoohold 0t Eotateal
Ano llofl Pari 01 ProcHdo Go 1-3 Eastern High School rain o Airy Typa 01 Furnlllro Applionc
To G.M H.A. Kldo. .Nne 30111 tfri~ thine Sponaored by E11tern 01 Antiquo L Etc AIID Appro Ill
July 111. (Sol) And 2 !Sun) F'tom Alhldc: 9 l a.
_ , 814-3111-27211
Q ., 5 AI a.illa Met £•101, 311 Hugo Qat11UO ao1e- ~lr s.a throe
Buck Ridge Road Bolllnd Spring miloo north ot Choo111r on SR 1
Clean Late Mode Cara Or
...., CWmo. ~Tiw SIQna.
Trucks 1087 Modell Or Newet
Huge ya d ••I• June '30 Juty Smith Bulc:ll f'l&gt;ndac 1800 Eall
C01111)111nlty '!lord Solt T Sltirt1
4th
208 Afdl S1r001, Now Hawn •nA.,w ~lpala.
And More. TShlrta Can Be UMd WVoctolll!omN-

AI Sw mault. I Sun Coverupl
Seal Covers N1ght Shlrtt!_ G1g
G Ita. SouYOflir Ot Juat To =&gt;PaaJt
Your U nd Galla W.t Eetatll

2 otory pa,.go "-olde Now H1
wen Supermarket bottom floor

Wanltd To Buy Uaed llobllo
. - . 814-448-0175.

Oh o I Wtll Vlrglnl1 304

-

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galhpolts, OH • Pomt Pleasant, WV

Buy

wanted to

run time auct oneer com plata
aucllon
ttrv ct
L1cen1ed

IDid CIOIIIftt On R! 2 Follow
olgno 8 oo e OOpm 304 578

005

90

Public Sale

Sunday, July 2, 1995

CLAYTON
24x56 doub ew de n G een Twp on 1 6 acres and on Y
three m1 es from thown C ty schoO s and county water rJre

dtst net featu es fo thts total eleclnc and central a r
cond tone&lt;! home The datached 1 ear garage and
workshop make lh sa rea buy CALL TODAY
1736
PHONE OFFICE 446-7699
KENNETH AMSBARY PH 245 5855
WILUS LEADINGHAM ijROKER PH 446-9539

REAL ESTATE

Coun ry Sen ng

11034 NEW uSi'km so acres ott Bob
McCo m ck oad p me bu d ng land and
p ced o se cal W lma toda)' to al the
deta s

W1030" NEWlY LTSTEI:i '3 cod oom 9§4

18411- A T()UCH OF CLASS The ema kab e
spac ous home with "View of the county Ia an
tie roye cathe&lt;:l al c:e ng w h balcony 3 BA
2 2 bahs vng oom w h wood bu n ng
f eplace equ p k chen b eak as oom has a
lg w ndow s e eo h gughou b ass gh
frlCtures and much mo e 2 c:a attached
ga age an c storage 2 ac es ml Th s house
s ma ntenanca free of besl qual ty Make you
appo ntmen and see If you dOn ag ee

-

1873 REDUCEb PRICE
7 acres c ose o
new t eeway, hosp a shopplflg ctr wa e
gas sewe Adjo n ng P nee est Nu s ng Home
1874 CHESHIRE 3 bed OOJll an ch 2
r eplaces ~u basement com ortab e "V ng
room 2 ca ga age Ranta home also

1894 REAPY FOR SUMMER CHANGE tha

s affo dab e ca 1 w rna on this- 4 BA hOme
that has ots ol space fo &amp;'Veryone and a mce
age ot

16lCBO mob a home on 3 ac es ha s very
n ce 2 outtlu ld ngs and a slocked pond must
see o app ec ete ca w rna

1888 GREAT RETIREMENT o 1 arto home
2 BR k tchen &amp; DR 1 .ac e m/1 Supe bw
$34 900

t1 015 BEAUTIFUL NEW BRICK RANCH on

Co a M 1 Ad 3 bed ooma 2 ful ba l:ls gas
heat cen al a Ia ge tlltchen with p enry of
cabine spate 2 ca attached garage &amp; a 2nd
ga age w th wontshOp a ea that will hold 2 to
S mo e cars 1 063 acres. You deserve he
very best don t let his one pass you by Call

Pall'/ Hays lor dolals 446 3884
11018 GREEN TWP 11 ACRES ML age
ba n pond fence &amp; good oad I omv
l.eve to ol ng mos ly putu e some wob&amp;
$35000
r

11017 NEW USTING 9 ac es lo the homo
bu Ide o to put a mob kt home on Ca

Wma

A' I 033 NEW L ST NG p me bu d ng 01 3
loiS n a I w th new hOmes hal a e ove y
b acktop d vewa';' sept c and wa e ap
a eady on lol c ea ed and eady to bu d on
cal Wilma to tu 1dela s

11034 NEW LISTING 50 ac e s o
BobMcCOtm ck road p me bu d ng land and
p ced to sel cal w ma today ro at the

dela

Apple Grove Dorcas Rd Approx 6 acres of ntce
laytng yard and a one story ranch wtth 8 rooms 12
bath 3 or more bedrooms lam y room d n ng room
and a step saver kttchen Also a detached 2 car
mtrages workshop and attached shed
$80 000 00
Pomeroy Anne St Counlry lee! but conven ience of
n town I v ng s thts 2 3 bedroom house at !he end of
the street w th approx 3 t /2 acres Only $ 18 500 00
Ant q u ty appro• 13 acres W th one ol the most
beaut fu undescrlbable vtews of the Ractne locks the
nver bottom• and htl s You can see for mt es A 9
room home Wit(] 3 4 boorooms 2 baths famtly room
W th f replace glalosed n 65 ft porch and a 97 ft
long deck 1o see the v ew A 4 car garage and 2 heat
pumps Very pr vale at the end ol the road $120 000
M ddleport • Grant Street a 1 1/2 story home with 3
bedrooms and 2 baths Has a newer roof Close to
Was $26 000:'()()
schools and stOres
Now $22 000 00
Mtddleport Walnut St A Victor an mans on Leaded
glass front door sayr;. what you can expect on the
tnstde Fancy woodwork hardwood f oars pocket
doors &amp; more Has a large Ioyer w lh bench d ntng
room I vng room butlers pantry 4 bedrooms on 2nd
floor and a large room on the 3rd floor w th a skyllgl:tt
wraparound pqrch
Just $69 000 00
DOTTIE TIJRNER Broker
BRENDA JEFFERS
JERRY SPRADUNG
CHARMELE SPRADLING
OFFICE

992 5892
992 3056
(304) 882 3498
(304) 882 3498
992 ~888

�-·

..

•

Sunday, July 2, 1995
Page 06•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant, WV .
to Rent

!540

trolt·frll rtfrlgtrltOt,

MISC"ellai'IMUI
• Merchandise

540

Ohio. C~an ,_.
BR
20 Min.· Of Bliclgl. May
Conaldet L•aae WIOpllon On~
DR. 71 ...1152-oe.IO.
Boo11 By Rod Wing Chi- ,40
To · 50 DegrHt, H.H. 8rown
GuaranrHd, loweat Pt'lwl, The

:-:-:--:-:----:-----:-:--"1
Household
s
Good

to

•m

Commodore 128 w/printer. mofli.
tor. 2·drl¥.eo. oohwaro &amp; booko.
1500. 300-117&amp;-7223.
300 Thru 2,000 Gallon&amp; Ron
Evant Enterpriae1, Jackaon, OH
HI00-537-~

Day Guarantee I

French City Maytag, IH-448-

77115.

Alllolrad. - I Bobullt In SIOCI&lt;.
Gai BonE"'"' 1-537·11528.

Fan, And lnoido And Outoldo

Margay Racing Fnorne Go Kar~

I;~ID=OO~I r~m.~~~~~4-~9U~2-:52D~~·~~·~~~-~~~~~~~f::::::::::~

r

Kenmore 30" Almond gaa rang8,
pilotle11 Ignition; GE awcado 28
cub~ tool aide x oido rolrlglfltor
WI Ita rnAkAr, txlth axcellonr 401\·
dition.l275 oacn 81 ... 11112~584. ·

5

..
Real Estate

"

Free Dellv&amp;f)'.

One Drll&lt;e Satell• .,...., tsOO.
Ona Floher!Ya-tt.o otarao oyo.
... f300. ~
OriiiiWio. 4 i'Giallighll - r Dla-

·~

Uta Sill Barbie Doll. 614-245-

noy, Ooa anytime, paid $300, Mil
t9U.:JOoi.34 7·24BII.

5887

Ouoon Btd Complete Willi Bad·
135
ding, E1collant Condldon, S •

Relrlgoratoro, Stovu. Waohera
And Dryero, AH Rocondltlontd
And Gaurantoodl 1100 And Uo,
~
IW lloliwr. 614o88t 6441.
SacUonal Sofa With Roell nero
Endo I Sloe~r. And Wurlitur
Orgll\ 11oH4ft.3ol31.
Side br olde rolrlgorator froozer
f12S. Small rolrllllfiiiDr S75. Eloc;trlc-$75.:Jl4.578o~ .

., CJP

B,.,., ,. OJ!ir. • ~141fld
2Jl.~u• S1,

t.51CI«rli C. I I U

DALE E. TAYLOR REALTY

Plkallr.iiiiiiii'r...,ir~i:o~•;.~"=•'::'::;~~r~·~·n~.,x~ir~o~Aio;::'~"~"~~=j

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 82
CINe St, Gallipolil. New I UMd
lurnilure, heater&amp;, Wutern &amp;
Work boom. 61~446-3158.
6 1"4-446--31 S8

....

LETAAT 3 Bedroom . Brick Aanch·stylll homt Clo•e l o river tnd tchool Htoill
pump. tentJII tir mee Yara, ctrpon, many extras. Thrs hoi.ISt has II all lor only
$38000

RACINE: 70-at:rll farm w1th

1 4-bedroom larmhouse and

split

.

good

working barn
Beavuful scenery and mUCh usable lAnd comes complet• W11h wlkllift. Secluded
and great f01 those who are searching lor peace ar.l 13ultt. $59,500 lor all or will

1

Sponlng
Goods

I

VERY EXCLUSIVE HOME • . With

a bit of

4

2

bedroom, 2 story with

. 530

&amp; dining

rm., 15'

· Antiques

31' x 53' with a lovely 16' )( 36' pool , attached
Home can lle bought with

small acreage or all 115 ac. m/1.
beautiful rolling
Owner

Antique Settee Refurbished, Ex·
cellon! Condlion, 81 .....4&amp;-3416.

x 29'.

Wildlife..

&amp;

planted

The

land is

treed with trails . throughout.

approx:

Abundant.

25,000

Virginia

L.

pine

trees.

Smith

386-

8826/446·6806 .
Buy or 1111. Riverine An.Uquea,
1124 E. Mlln S~oo~ on RL 124,
Pomeroy. Houta: M.T.W. 10:00

Concrete. Trowllng
t200 Bull Float Willi
-·-· (Niwl: $200 Eirth Compacior:
1800 11 H0..1t _., Rear nne
. .,_T ier; AftM 5 P.M.I14-388 8ilo3

.
Very Good

614· 2~70•,

ts- RockiDrd Fasgatel In
CCMifl.

72/IJ.

FARM FOR SALE OVER 300 ACAES ... PASTURE.
LOTS OF TILLABLE ACREAGE SOME WOODED
AREAS .. .:l' BARNS ... 3 BEDROOM HOME...ACREAGE
LIKE THIS IS HARD TO FIND ... BETIER CALL SOON ! ·
NEW ON THE MARKET!
.

box WI

S200 080. 30&lt;1·875...

21' RCA. color 1V $S5. 52" round
maple •ble. SIO. 304-875-7128. '
2g2 International Oieael power
unit $500 naecla work. Satellite
dlth, 11r old,"$500. Two woad·
burning atovea $75aa. Two ale&lt;:·

NEW LISTING- PICTURE PERFECT
This lovely home has il all. Lois ol charm &amp; characler.
Living room w/woodbuming fireplace. lormal dining
room wlbuilt~i n china cabinet, complete kitchen wflots
ol oak cabinets. 2 bedrooms w/dormer windows . Lois
of closet space.' D.eo f!rea downstairs'. 1 car garage,
heal. cenlral air arul air lillering syslem.
·

Uood

Realty~

$1,260 lnatalled, 5 "Yr. Warranty
All P1111, 1·800·287·8308, 614·
448 83)8.

3-4• electric atove $150. 30+8753n4.

4 year old modern breakfa~t ae~
table &amp; 8 padded. COilller Chalra.
· S85; 2 aulomalic washing ma·
chlneo &amp; 1 electric range, $25/ea.
11 11. sink, fauce1 &amp; g)Unltr top.
170:81 ...11411-261111.

Comfort, con&lt;Ven1ien•~
energy

durability
ani!
nexibUity In deslp an:

a

rew of the reasons

why 20,00 (amUies wUI
buUI\,a loa bome this
year!

.

NEW LIMA AO, HtniHnvlllt • &amp;3 Ml'll
·m,! IW/treal Mm•ttw.t l'l•t~ II~Bft .
Ntlt,

a

'&lt;'~'(lppl

end meltl l&gt;ldg . c1n til purchlltd
AACJNE - MilO lt. · Thll 3 SR home II

located In nice I'Miighborhcod cloM to
schd'ols end tltnk II hast LA , K1tct~en, 1
beth tuM buement &amp; ctrpo,lt Also. 1 nice
chain link tenca 1round U~ y•rd Alking
only $32,800
Pomeroy · E•~ut lve · type home 29 mllttt
trom PJriUH"Itlirg, S m1l11 from Pomlroy
on iR 7 Loll ol ,-rvlcy 4 SA. 2 1/2 batht.

0 ~er

Pom~ro~

• Locuat St. . One floor plln
hOYII hit 3 br 1 btth. lg. LA. eat in
kitchen 1nd lull basem~l Some 11orm
wiMOWI I KfMnl. FA G11 fllmace Onl)'

I

I

I

L.09"' St. Tl"ll I I
home on • COt"08f lol If oltert ~ M . I
.
OR \JIIIffy ~m ~ rernoo.le(l~

Mlddl..,art · ll«l

wall• I eek10J · New ballvoom bturn ·

standard
Jtlodels or we'll custom
·. 70

,.... ki!dleo ~ St:M '

Call o; wrfte for more
'
'

, bath.
' !':~ ~:::-.~~
- large
I bUimeol "Mtn tilth
IPPIIMCM, lo'ld lftiCt1ld giW"llllt
One of tt. * ' bWQft1n11 'PJ"I tnal A1 Only

Loa

GDT, .
P.O. Box 614
Ripley, WV ~271
1-800-458-!1990
D~pt.

..

...

&lt;

LOOKING FOR A PLACE TO BUILD? • Than lhls
· vacan.1 Jot ls just for you. The lot contain; 20 acres more
or less . located on Sl. AI. 218. CHECK ON THIS ONE.
'
M2001

Clfe

"'·""'
4;1.

Mlckltport - Ut ~- tehnd IL ·'foil COI.td Qelfw heme II I rMiy good prlcl Rt wit! a Iiiii
ooor1o ~ IIIIOUid make • good
8A. 1 ~l.JI, f:tl -tn kit Plictd 10 IIUI Only $12,000
MakiAn on., Tht,.. QC!I to Nil! I

,...,,al •

ANI"...,.,..,.,

PLAINS . Tl1112 Na"oom tlDmt illocltltO
1C111X11 0111 corrw 1D1 ht
11 1.1 ICI"• "'-' There " I Bath, M-Ig room dining IQOfTl. Ell-In lilldlen. utility tm. I elf~
Elec!nc 8all0oiii'O neat. TP w.~•, lepdC lySIIITI (Will Of aty ...... toDO)
TUPfE~S

a..,.

We Need L 1SI1rq5 11 1/-.J(' Arc Mo~mg ~)tCf 1 ('1ty
And Ncc•d More tu Sl1uw 1
~y; /4UJ r.r ~lJ2 ~ II:W

~
~

FOB YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
•OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
:r.:::: . .
1·800-894-1086

AFfORDABLE HOME WITH
ACREAGE! 3 Bedroom. 2 bath
home With fUJI basement. Over 8
acres, 2 barns and more.
Possibility of land contract .
$47,900.00'
#736

..
, .

TEN ACRES, PLUSI County
water available. Call for more
information $10,000.00 M757

nos.

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE UST1NCiS
PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RE\'AIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, .MOTELS
AND BESTAI,IRANJ'S.- -

"

bedrooms,
extensively
remodeled almost everything

new such as windows. heat
pump &amp; ,,more . Nicely
lcindscapsd lot approx. 85' x

4 QJarltr Hor.Oa, 2 Groen Broke.
2 Brolta, 81 ..........110. I
Baby Plgo; Barltlhlre ·Boar.: 814·
3711-2583.
-liquid Wormoro Not Doing The Pulled HeiJur Bui 8f4·25e-13J5.
:Job? Aok J D NORTM PRODUCE
614•448-tg33. Abou1 HAPPY 640
Aay ( G .r aln
JACK TRIVERMICIOE . Roc·
ognlred Sale &amp; EltaciiYe Agalnol Buy now and oave. Buy hay In tho
~obk, Round &amp; Tapeworms In rleld and loaded on wagona for
_llog-i:o_&amp;_C&amp;:-11-:1 -::--:-:::-·I eat~ loading. Con1ac1 Harley or
7
11
Proleoalonll Dog Grooming Vln· ~~~ ~ ~~:." '
ton•I Rio Grande Araa, 20 y..,.
ExP.erienc:e For Appoln1man1, Premium aa11-'falta rolla, $25.
B1~24S.S054.
.
Strn. Morgan'o' 'F8rm, Rt'35. 304-

,.

.

Pu(a Bred Oalmallon 4 Weeki
Old; $150, 614-2&lt;5-57311.

36 Henkle AV&lt;mue...~l,der
1/2 slory offers 5
eat· in kllchen, lfl,
basemen!. 2
$45,900 #302

Ratblta for ule. Jamea Allan. Rt
1 Bb1 2a.., Gatllpolla Ferry, WV.

~75-4413.

Rog. Shollio miniature Collie pups.
Roo. Englloh Coonhound pupo.
Co-ckatiel w1cage. Parakeet w/

"*'*'

•

CiOV'T FORECLOSED
homes lor pennies on
$1. DelinqueruJax,
Repo's, REO's. Your
Area . Toll Free (1) 800898 ·977B E&gt;&lt;t. R-2814
lor listings . ·

1965 Pontiac: GTO, very re1tar·

71.000rnl., SS.200. 300-!!'lt.364t .

ablt, new rebuilt motor, not orig~·
nat , not In car, many e:.:trat.
$2,000 . ln1erea1ed partie• only.
Firm. last olio&lt;. 30H7S.7356.

1118g Ford Fooava LX. good con·
dltion, AC, AAIIF!IIIIfao. $1 ,400,
304-273-3107.

Dart , 4dr, V8, exc. 1881 Chevy Beretta,

llloCIMwy 5-10, rod. 4 ~. 5 !Ill.

altum. whoola, AMIFM caoune,
f.4400 ooo. 814-11112-45ta

730

Vans

·ao

Dodge Sportsman 314
-$1500,614-11112-5064.

ton

8584•

07a Dodge St. Regia loaded,
Excellent Condition, $~ ,000 Or
Trade For S~reet Bike, 814 ·448·

1083 Torota Corolla LE, auto.,
looded. ..... cond. 300-!17!HIIIII.

1U3 Dodge Window Van 316,
Auto, PS, PB, Air, GC .1.500,

1gD4 Bukk Sl&lt;ylarll Cuotom 4 ey.
IInder AC, Trll.tCrulao, f!3,000,
Mlloo, t11 ,500, OBO, 814·U1 ·
1593 Alter 5.

2004.
1981 Buick Rogal 359 Engine.
Runs Good, Good Tifea, Vet Railyo Wheelo. U .200, 304 ·675·
2352 Alief 4 :3cr~u :
- ·

111111 i'lrmoutti suridahce; 4 Door,
12,000 Ml~o. Exc:allont Cordtlon,
Aula, Air, &amp;D95Q 81 ...258-6854 or

1981 Ford Granada Great Inter!·
or, And E)lterlor, low Mileage,

~-

I'

1g81 Dodge Van. f800, .,..,_

11o4-38&amp; 88Gt

1ggo Dodge Rom Van B· 250,
72,000 Mlfoo, te,OOO . Can Be
S.On At Galli polio Dilly TrlbuM,
825 Third A'ltlnua, Galllpollt

Ol1o. -

-

1991 S.to u V.6, 4xo, Loaded,
84,000 Mllto, SI,SOO, 114·U8·
78&amp;0 Or LMve Mauaga.

1g5g Well Croh 21 Ft. CC 260
HP, Depthllndor, AM!FM Cao·
11110. Ship To Shore Radio, Eo~
llrivo0nTrd•, 81..._2072

Freemn's Hoattng And Cooling
Installation And Serv1ce. EPA
Certified. Reaid&amp;nDal, Commen:ial

frM 11drNIII call Chill, e 14-t:Kl2·

81-4-256--1611 .

::":::"~-~:-:---~::::;!

840

820

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

Electrical and
Refrigeration

COMFORT A.SSUREO OI:ALER
LAWRENC~ ENTCRPRI&amp;S
·p-,-:-:.,-,'7-na-:-.-::::-~,-,-,-x-~::-,~1•8::n::c:al Heal Pump•, A1r Condlt.on 1ng, 11
,..,..
YoY Don'1 Call U• We Both Lotel
with all muon, rick, block, &amp; Free Eadma111, 1-800·287 6308,
atone. Alto room addltlona, u•· e1 •·448--6308, wv oo~ s
raget, ate. frH tatlmatel. ~ ·
882·3408 or 304-77:1-9550.
Residential a·r commere 1al w1rrng,
=-~:::-::--.---:-:;:;:;:::-;::! new l8t\lle&amp; or ropair1. ~ a51er Ll
Ron's TV Serv~. specializing In unaed electric ian. RldQnour
Zenith alaa Hrv1cing most other J:lecrrlcal·, WIJ000308, 364 615brands. HOUle calla, 1·800· 7i7· 1186
•

0 1 10 1 20

7 112 HP Soaro &amp; 25 HP Sta
King, 1\Jno Good, 61 .........7881.

760

liome
Improvements
C&amp;C General Home Malntonanco· Painting, vinyl oldfng.
carPif'llrY. cloorw •.wlndowo, bltho,
mabie fljlOir and mora. For

Joa'o Ho""' Maln1onance, vinyl
oldl"l!. rooll"l!. oxtorlor painting,
power washing, fru tatimatel,
61 ...11112... 51 .

19g2 Coble 17 112' Open Bow,
145 HP, 110, 70 Hro, Eoay Load
Trellw, Pluo E•uut 18,•00. 61._
258-IDOS.

Auto Plins &amp;
Accessories

New gaa lanka, one ton truck
_ , radlallr' floor nata, etc.
D &amp; R AulD, Ripley, WV.'30 ...37231133or1-li00·273-1132D.
It

~

001S WV 304--578· 2398.

.

' Real Estate General
I;::;::;::;::;::;:::;;:::;:::::::::::::::=====;

SOUTHWEST PICK-UP PARTS
Bado, Cabo, Doora. Fondoro And
More. 3 Mlleo Soutli Of Golllpollo
AI Juctlon RL7, &amp; Rl218, 11._
448-3787.
790

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

1884 Sunstream Uotor Home 2D'

54,000 Mlloo, Loaded, Extra Nicol
Price Reduced To Sell! 814·258·

1222.

wo.

-

810

18 Ft. Ski Boat, 380 Engine,
Comas With Trailer Oepthlinder,
SI,SOO, 614-3117-05110.

&amp; 4-WDs

cond., 71 ,000ml. , $1,950. Call
304-67S.24DS alalr Spm.

SERVICES
810

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

FOR SALE
•
. 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, Heat
Pump, Gas Furnace, 1 Acre,
. Garage. Addison Area,
$62 000, 614-367-7267.

·Unconcll1lonaJ Nletl- ouanoniH.
Local noloranceo lurnlahod. Clll
(114) 448-0170 Or (814) 237·
~ Qooora Watorproofl"ll. Eo·
-1g75. ·

AppllancAI Pull And Sonrlce: All
No""' Brande Over 25 V..ra E•parlooco All Work Guarontaad,
French City Mayteg, 6 14·446·

77115.

NEW LISTING - . 35 W. · Area $70,000's. lovely ·bri ck ranch . 3
bedroom, 1.5 baths, LA. kllchen
. w/appllances and washer &amp; dryer,
garage, nice flal lawn . Property Is In
excellent condition.
NEW LISTING - 2.38 Acres + - All
wooded wllarge lrees. very secluded
and private. Sl. Bt. 588 Area.

4 CITY LOTS - Good nome I sites .
Delerred taxes lor I 5 years.

35 WEST- Duplex, brick &amp; vinyl. 2 Bfl
unlls. I car garage each unll.

ELEGANT NEW CAIIE..COD located .on .1.2cacre lot overloo~ing,Charolais
Lake, 2.5 miles from Helzer Hespital. -This quality- heme features 3
l "b•ednoonls, 2 '1/2 · ballis, beautiful oak woodwork and staircase,
firepla~e in family rooni, formal dining room with hardwood floor, wc•11uv.
kitctieri with oak cabinets and Whirlpool appliances, complete rtm:isnea
basemen! and 2 car attached finished garage. Also beautifully decorated
throughout and plenly of .starage space . Landscaped . This ' qualily home
priced to sell at
viewigg .

4 BEDROOM HOME - E&lt;cellenl
location. appro&lt; . 2 miles lrom cily.
Garage, pri vale senlng.

NEW LISTING - Two slory home. Less
lhan a hall block lrom
Elementary. This home features a large
family room Wtcathedral ceilings and
~ea rns. Lois ol windows . Enio.Y
walching sports allhe Washington Field
from your back yard . 3·4 bed roo ms.
Complete kitchen . Carport . Shown by
Appl. Lisled in lhe $50's .

$169,500.
•

;oo;iiY.

~EW LISTING! STATE ROUTE 7 TUPPERS
PlAtNSI Approx. 1 acre wittL a 2&lt;Lx.24' ._b~i.ld.ing
especially designed for an antique business Lovely
2'-3 bedroom home with parttal basement. You must
see this one.
·
. 11759

41159 EAGLE RIDGE ROADI Alum inum sided 1 112
st):&gt;ry home, living room ,, kitchen, over sized detached
2 car garage . FA electric furnace . Add111onal mobtle
h(lme hook-up. Must call today for an appotntmentl
•
11558

..

·

1!2 MULBERRY HEIGHTS! 2·3 Bedroom ranch with
a . one "car attached ~age . Dining room. kitchen,
utility room &amp;bath , .32 acre lawn.
11767.

'

'

L. Brinager ...... 949-2439

Sherri L. Hart. ........... 742-2357
Henry E. Cleland
Kathleen

111992-6191

M. Cl eland 992-6191

Qffice ......................:... 992-2259

BLACKBURN REALTY
[B Ranny Blac klmrn , Broker, Phone&lt; ·(614) 446-0008
-

Joe Moore, AsliiO~iate44l -lJJI

64 ACRES • corner ol Woods Mill &amp; 554,
has a really nice homesite old&gt;o.b,arn , lois
of privacy yet close to school and other
activilies.
'
NEW USTINGIIil - COMMEACIAL SITE
IN TOWN large open lot $90,QO(j.,OO.

451 LINCOLN STREETI 2 Story alum. sided home ,
living reom . dining room wjth 'built-i n china/buffet.
kitchen, den, 2 baths , central air &amp; more!
11758

NEW UST1NGIII 54 acres mn in Morgan
Twp . Gallia Cly. RUI'al Water, septic
system (or trailer hookup, small buikjlng
on site. Can be purchased on land
conlract. $65,000.00

BA.C"IE · Slory
Home, 3 lo 5 bedrooms, Country charm
Interior. large eat·in kitchen , front. ~ircular
selling Porch, garage. shed. and garden
space . Could be a Classic Home . ASKIN_G
$34,500 .00

SYRACUSE . Newly Remodeled 1 1/2 Slory
Home has kitchen , living room. din ing room,
3 bedrooms . 1 1/2 balhs. Buill·•n book cases.
front and rear poches New Gas F.A.
Furnace. New 2 Car Garage Nice location on
corner -lot. ASKING $49.500.00

NEW LISTING! Ill . Two lois in Cheshire,
Ohio lots are 60 x 153 m/1, Jive on one
and rent l~e ·Other, currenl cash ftow is
$200. per monll&gt;. SiorageJ&gt;~ild . Pril;!L:
$21 ,900.00

Eatabllahed Body Shop Bualneaa and
home on same site. The properly offers a
large body shop. with a 12 x 1B off&lt;ee
space a~d 1 x 3D storage area, all .
conlained on 1/2 acre. The -ranch style
home offers 3 bedrooms, 1 ·1/2 baths and
a very large living room. Ther.e is a
. detached garage, an located 5 miles from
SA .7 and 5 miles from · SA 162 .
$59,900.00.
..

o

COUNTRY
• with the
convenience of cily living. 1 Located 5
minules lrom Holzer Medical Center, this
spacious home rests on 6.25 rolling
acres and offers 5 bedrooms. 2 ~ltct)ens.
and •4 balhrooms, wilh many other
custom teB.tures . This · home would be
great for lhol' prolessional family or a two ·
family duplex.
•

DEBBIE DRIVE •
SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
LEAST ONCE. ~s 2 ' story beauty
features 3 or 4 b s, 2 baths, beamed
ceilings in the LA &amp; lamily rm, cherry
cabinels in kftche 6 i!1. outer walls &amp;
much more. Fantastic vieW:\
'

MIDDLEPORT - Cule one fl oor fram e home
wilh 2 bedrooms . balh . F.A.N.G. heat. ulilily
room, ftreplaces,fenced yard with sto r age
building. N1 ce neal ~o me close lo lo cal
shopping . ASKING $29,000 00
REDUCED · SYRACUSE - GREAT PLACEII
GREAT lOCATIONII This Home Slls on a
niCe quiet Street. Th1s home has 4 bedrooms.
~,Pa ths, large liVing room , equ1pped kit chen .
dining room Refrigerato r &amp; Range less than
1 yr. old. Also lhere's a dishwasher. Ullllly
room With newer washer and dryer. Front.
PQrch , side deck, sining on 3/4 ·acre lot with
lots of tlowers, trees and sqme fencing. Call
f&lt;lf Your Appt. ASKING $55,000.00
PPEAS PLAIN AREA · REDUC ED ·
Modular located· on Christy Rd. Th is Is
HandyMan's Fixer· Upper. \1'ealur ing 2
bearooms, bblh, space lor Fil'eplace In sert .
Part basemen! w/ utllily hook·up. Wood en
OUibulldlng, garden area, covered deck area
TPC waler. Nice ,country localion. Home has
many possibilities. Bul does need work .
ASKING $20 1500.00

e

NEW LISTING Ill Ranch home 110 cal,~a 11
·on Bulaville Pk . 3 bedroom, cenlral
two l~rge buildings on property. 21 x
and 24 x 20, nice deck, basemflnl can be
finished for a 4th bedroom. 10 ·minutes
from town. 2 acres m/1, $54 ,900.00

NEW LISTING! ST. RT 124, RACINE. Lovely 3
bftjroom home wllh handcrafted hardwood flooring.
·o ptached 2 car g11rage with overhead apartment. Call
to see this one .
#776

•

Ji'":99l-6191

Real Estate General

.

LOOKING FOR A NICE LOT? THEN CONSIDER
ONE OF. THESE:
: 111
4.507 acres m/1
· '!l,oOo
112
4.615 acres m/1
10,000
: #3
4.702 acres m /1
9,000
: 114
3.881 acres m/1
8,000
• 115
4.190 aC(88 m/1
5,000
; 116
5.442 acrea m /1
10,000
• 117
6.148 acres m/1
6,0110
: 11a
10.320 acres m/1
11,000
: 19
7.253 acres m /1
7,000 •

·.

Hens:y E .-C icland
Tracy

Contact Carolyn Wascli for your private
·
116l6

• ~EW PRI&lt;;EII $35,000 - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
lor this 1 1/2 story home, 3 b~drooms. ltv1ng room,
• dining room .1 kltchen complete , wl relrigerator &amp;
range . 30' x 3~' garage situated at College Avenue .

.

-

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
446-3644

COUNTY

Cheryl Lemley............ )42-3171
.

#746

Carolyn Wascb.

~uta,

-·

V8,
3.1, pl. 55,000ml., $7,goo OBO.
300-1175-8277 aftor 6pm.

-

'19 RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER"(!;)

Gr
--

XLT,

750 Boals &amp; Motors
for Sale

07

:l&amp;r. 514 Second Ave. , Gallipolis , Oh. 45631

: (614) 742-3171 or 1-800-585-7101

727 4 SA 7. S. • Owner Very
AnKiousl Wanls An Offerll 2·3
BR home overlooking the river.
New kllchen wilh breakfasl
nook, bath. $32,900 M609

-

Real Estate General

BIG·
. BEND REALTY,'INC."

I

McDad~ - 441!-77l.!l

1887 Honda Accord OX, •xc.
cond., well equipped, auto,

Real Estate-General ·

~·· MEIGS

_WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
'~"''
446-3 644
'
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER~ 446-"9555

1gg4 Ford Ranger
10,00011- 304o875-1643.

.11187 Ford Crown VIctoria S2,1!00;
1~$7 Dodge Omnl f7,000; 1g54 . 111g5 Ford FtSO, 8CWI, longbed
Pallmlno Tent Camper 614·3CI7· au fa, air, cruiM, tift 304·875·
0108.
.

'88 Bomevllle, 4 door, .PW, POL,
pluth Interior, high mil es, well
malmalned. $3400. 814·1185-4369.

301-117S.2032.

..

1571 Thurman Road - --·-···,
farm offers 3·4 BB home
2 baths. FR. formal LB &amp;
det. 2 car garage, 2
barn. 3 sheds. situaled on 21
nlly roll ing acres . m/1.

~.

,Sunbn"Q '&lt;llimrs-,Srnlintl • Page

Hlmoiayan C'""' Pl&gt;lnl Dadawad
Nautorad.:,.Md Hao All Sholl, 2
Yoaro Old, o150, 614-3711--2730.

Mo•. ll&gt;avt A Moooago I'll Got
lladc, 814-251H1550.

Loretta

1888 Olda 88 EX111. Condition.

1DSSI Ford truck, low mileage,
good conddon. PI'Gna 304-e765t85, 30H76-11211, or :JOoH76-

~

·"·.

110', aboiJe ground pool with

.

1984 Mazda Runs , Good, Au -

tomatlc, Bedllner, Sliding Back
Window, S1,100, Mako Me An
Ollar, 614 388 IID43.

12.800. 814 448 8003

'6 5 Muotang, oharp, $5500, 814·
D92·5532.

1g71 Dodge

111114 Pbnllac llonnovlllo LE. ;104-

1081 Nluan Sen1rt Ha1chbadc.
AC, 5 1p11d, CO player, new
·ttantmla.Jon and e11hau1L rwnll
looko good, ·tt300 OBO, 614·
9U2-3244.

Autos for Sale

Trucks 'for Sale

.

=p,-Q~,.-,-.=io-n-ai_P_o_I-:G=ro-o-m-:l-n-g.=~~~~.:9:37:·20::t:a:::::::::::::::

01

71 0

120

67S4ellfl.

Ou.

7

m

TRANSPORTATION

Autoa for Sale

I...;--------=--

VIEW OF RIVER · 15 Minutes from Gallipolis. nice 3
bedroom home, locate d on At. 7. Must See This One. ·
N108
BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME - t_HN10i:41t LAKE DRIVE
located on approK-+-1b1D..,9"'f1Ms'Uri room, hot tUb,
afll1 sky lig hlllfU~!!':'"
#104
LOCATED IN WALNUT TOWNSHIP • Mobile home
with 2 bedroom on one acre more or less,,with county
waler, satellite. CALL TO SEE!II 11602

design .one (or yQu.

· Structures, Inc.

·,

VACANT LAND . ApprOK. 7.3 acres in Green Twp. Cily
water available. PRICED RIGHT #~002

loa bon1e II

Appalach.l an

'•.'

f/775

!awn.

NEED MORE BEDROOMS?? This one has 415
bedrooms. 1 bath . !cealed on one acre . COME SEE
THIS NOWII PRICED RIGHT. ~101
•

Make Clt AA Offer-

Choose

lnlomatlon.

conditioning, hotwater heater,
carpeting &amp; more. 3 bedrooms,
tarqe living room . kitchen &amp;
dintng area. 8 x 12 storage
building . Nice mal'licured level

~~~. .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~n,~ce;;~·~. . . . . . . .:~~71~1~-

1393 Ewinglon Road ,- 4 BAs.
1 1/2 baths, DB, FA in lower
level, 30 K 60 barn. 46 x 388
·
&amp; sOme eqt,iipmenll
#602

Tobacco Plants. Walerbed ptinta
lor lillie. Call 304-811S.3954 after
9:3lpm. Danny DowhJroL

.

LOTS OF POSSIBILITY · Concrele building, wilh
commercial space downstatrs, 3 room apart . .upstairs,
also two bedroom mobile home al rear. JUST WHAT
YOU ARE LOOKING FOR . ~2501

LR wJip. FA w/lp. OR Ell -.n k11, 8\mt 11., ,
stg tlll! gt, pool, manv olhllr am11nlfiet

industry for over " I
years.

141-6.7Piusacreswithmostly

all in pasture. 25' M 25' block
building. 4 Bedroom two story
home, living r.oom, dming room ,
kitchen, den and morel 11771 .

NEW 1994 MORRIS LEXINGTON mobile home located
in Quail Cteek park, 14 K 70. MUST SEE CALL FOB
APPOINTMENT.
H1501
.

HPAII.II Lots ol polll bri~J,s l!t

Loc

In the

EASILY
COMMERCIAL
INVESTMENT PROPERTY!
Frontage SA 7 &amp; Pike Sl. 2
House &amp; 2 lots . aaraae
w/apartment , and adllitiotral
buildings.
·
1739

LANDI LANDI &amp; MORE LAND
modern 4 bedroom house, 2 Approx . 176 acres of Ideal
balhs. 2 car garego. Lois of hunting tand, frontage along
road frontage, approx. 28 acres Raccoon Creek.
1¥719
M710
YOU WILL APPRECIATE THE
NEW LISTING I MINI FARM! LOOKS OF THIS HOMEI Vinyl
Property situated al11041 SR SJded home . 2 baths, 4

197 Amby Lana • 3 BAs. 2
baths. BL, DR. 2 car garage,
heat pump, nice family
orie.nted neighborhood.
$64,900 #235

71 o

&amp; Grain

614·258-1012.
UM&lt;ITractoro:
1994 Saturn sc 2
Color, 5
Puppies, Shott &amp; Wormed, Dew 11180 JD 2240 • &amp;30 Hro. RG &amp;
5 Spoad,
1981 Clda Cu1la11, new motor. Speed, P,~et SunfQot, Aflox 111113 Ford F·150, 4
ClaMid. 61HSU887.
Canopy 113,100; 19114 .fatd 50311 304·87~1.:1.
Wt.elo, Alrj Cauatto, Deck, Low Air Condlllonlng, 22,500 Mlloo,
MFWD 'S /Cab ·78 Hra -Uke Now .:;;.'-='.::...;.:..;::::....._ _ _ _-t'-1 Mllooge, Aoklng: S13,900, Alter 6 112,300, 814-387-7755.
8 Moo Old Pupplea, Pori ChoW, U6,500; JD 2840 ttO,tOO; JD 1981 VW Rabbi~ groal gao • .,. P.M . 814-24S.g184., Dayo: 814· ·
··Part Coli~. 1 Blac:lt &amp; Brown: 1 2g40 f11,900; MF 135 Gao '
1995 Ford F·tSO 4x4 8 Cylinder,
or, tDOO 000. 30+1175-8873. • . ~2107.
Nice $5,250; Cub Lowl&gt;o\&gt; W /50'
5 Speed, Air, AMIFM Ca11otte,
Wli.. 814 ~~· 8881.
-$2,4&amp;0.
1984 Ford Eacon l , Automatic, 82 Chevrolet Malibu Classic, new Aluminum Who&lt;tlo, XLT Chrome
N&lt;C Coclwr Spaniol, 1 - . . 7
Loodod, 23,000 Mlloo. S3,400, 01hauo~ ,_ bnokeo, $800, 614· Package, Badllner, 2,500 Mlleo
malea, tail docked &amp; clawo .....,Traan:
Asking: $'18,200, 8U-448· 12U
992-8833.
,........,, 3 ~lcolor, 1 black, &amp; 4 JD 7400 MFWD W /Cab, In 814o388 9522.
l..ooM Moooago.
black &amp; whllo, 11111 oi'Gte given. Stoc:lt; JD 11400 Open Station W I 1,885 BU ick Someraet Motor For Sala Or Trade: 1969 Caviller
$100, atu female copper no .. Power Quad, ln. Stack; 2 ·JD Compl~ RebUilt, Loaded, Z·24, Loaded. looltl G.,Qlj, Runo 740
Motorcycles
Beagle, f30, only 13 wko. old, 5300 MFWD. In SIDCk; JD 5400 $1,~.
eu 448 0211 .
Groat! Depandeble, $5,500, 614·
1ga4 Honda ZSOR Looko Good,
~14-llll2-32821aavt1
3e7·7ns.
·
MFWD. In Stodl.
Runo Good, $450 CUll Or Trade,
11185 Mazda 5 Spd., Sedan, PS,
AKC Goldin Retriever Pu~oo.
814 448 0821 .
PB, AMIFM Coaoetto, SUn Rool 720 Trucks for CSaie
Will Hold With Depool~ . lt50 M - o :
35 MPG, Excelltnl Condition,
H
&amp;
S
1350
All
Purpooe
Tank
Eact\81~
'83 Ford F 100, 8 cyl., 614-742- 1987 Honda 2508 -Rod PluSpreader, (8 Montho Old) S7,950; St ,200, 000, 814-3711-2845.
de Now Tlreo, looko &amp; Runo
JD 3800 Chopper 2 .Ro&gt;o Narrow 11185 Oldlllllll&gt;ll6 FlronU, ldOOr,, 2301.
Good, S2,DOO, 81.......173.
Head 13, 500; Now JD 350
rune
good,
Qflll
k
W.
~
'
1
14
Fotd
Ranoa&lt;.
heavy
duly,
luNy
Spreadar. In Srock; Naw H &amp; S
300-1175-~51.
loaded. $1200 worth ol extru. 19go Honda TRX300 4-wheelor
AKC reglolerod palmallan I!I'P· Silage Wagono. In Stocll
$2,700. 111114 18~ car hauler, loc·
$17,000, 81 ...1192·5532.
tory bulh trailer, $1,500. 30 ....7S.
plot,~· -.. 2 mala. $250, ""'
11185 Trano Am 305 Auto, Load·
ohola, mother &amp; father avollabla, Discount~ farm lractor parts for od, T·Topo, CD Player. $3,850, tD77 Ford 112 ron pickup, ~a 8 . 1310.
Maltty,
Ford,
IH,
&amp;
olhara.
814-882-5724~ after apm 814·
cyl. autom1dc; body fair, no r•
Sldar'a Equipment Ca., Hender- 8, 4-446---'173.
~7114.
1gg5 Bancheo, good condldon,
son, WV. 304--875-7421 or 1-800- 1988 Cawalier Z·24, Whitt, V·6, ....... $550, 614-742·2502.
only rodo 8hro, 14800. 304·675AKC Reglllorod F~tn~~ Bao\ett 2n·31117.
•
Auto, P.W, Pb, Good Condition, 1878 1 Ton Truck, E11cellen1 5785.
Hound 1 Yoar Old Comeo With
S3,200,' Aher 8:00 ~M. 814·446· Shape. 814·24&amp;-g227.
Farman
A
Cub
Wide
Front
End,
111114 Honda CBR f·2 llfHI bike,
Her Own 12160 Pan Apd Dog·
New Tira, Excellent Condition, 5 8891.
houN $125, 814-3117-CM88.
1988 F150 corwerllon by action, with extras. excellent condldon,
Piocoo 01 Equlpmen~ 614·388- 1986 Cullan Oldo 442 With · like n- condlllon, 6g,ooomi. caU 81 ...D92-39112.
1
AKC Siberian Hlloky Pup. Ci'G~ 8183.
20,100 MUea, ~OIIded. loll Of Ex· ts.SOO. 3Q.H75-3841.
Female, Rare Melk, Blue Erta,
traol Show Room Condltlol 814· I-:-=-:::::--::-:--:-:-,- 750 Boats &amp; Molors
Black l While. S150, 814·448- Ford 1000 SU $3.500, 614·370· 446-llllle.
1g89 Chevy S· 10, 4Cyl., 5opd.,
for Sale
2744.
8827.
tinted _ , ,_ bed liner, axe.
1DBB Ford Eocor~ 2 door, Hatch· cond., BO,OOOrnl., $3800. 304-675- 1-4 Ft. Aluminum V-Bonam Boat,
AKC Regloterad Cocker Span~! Ford DN Tractor And 5' Finish back. auto, amlfm caaaene, aun 7981.
Trllllf Naw nroa, laathlr Saall,
Puppy, Malo, Bull &amp; While, MCM8f814-448-7881.
roof, clean, runs srrong/ S125o,
Alreator, Trolling Motor, 175_0,
Wormed, Vac:clnatad, Champion
1964 f·250 4xj. 614-379-2882.
Good Ear Corn Approw. 150 81 ... 742·Zl55.
614~183.
Bloodline, D.O.B. 31.2195, Uoo.
Buohalo, H Farmall Tractol, 4
814-3711-2728.
Good nroa. Runo Good, 814-3711Estate
BWd' tguanat, Taraniulas, mica. 24118.
Floh Tank &amp; Pel Shor.· 2413
Livestock ,
Jacll!aon Ave. Point P auant, 630
30oH75-2083.
1 drah horse, Amish broke. 814·
446·2222.
AKC Reglotarad Dauchohund, 8 12 Rog . Anguo Cowo . 7 W/
W - Old, Mel AKC Regloterad Calvoo, 4 To Calve In July •
MlnlaiUno Yorl&lt;ohlre Torrlor'o 111 SI,OOO Each, StO,OOO For All.
Sholl &amp; Wormed Hlmolayn, Por· 0
olan, SlameN Khltno. 814 •387•
ne 15 Month Reg. Mgua Bull
$950; Seven 800 lb. Reg. Holler~
f850 Each, Gary Barnard, 30&lt;1·
Ferrell, 8 WHkl Old, 814·3711- 1181J.144G.

PART·TIME FARMER! 2 story

-llnB

today!

$560.

-.o

E~~;~~l~~~~~i~

Structures has been a

leader

'

.

S t7.500.

Appalachian

BRICK 1Y, STORY AT THE
EDGE OF TOWNI
4
bedrooms, 2 baths, UIJing room ,
k1tchen.. large front porch .
11712
Convenient
COMMERCIAL
RIO
GRANDEI Almost 2 acres
complete with along SA 588.
Call for more info.
11766

OWNERS HAVE LEFT THEIR
NEST ALL ALONE Sian moving
immediately into th1s 4 bedroom,
1 1/2 Story home, good sized
kitchen &amp; living room . Part
basement. Detached 2 car
garage . Call today for complete
listing.
11731
NEW USTINGI STOP, LOOK &amp;
LISTEN at the many features of
this witH manicured ranch . 4
Bedrooms, 2 complete balhs.
equipped kilchen including
dishwasher, spacious li11ing
ro_gm, din ing room, attached
garage. Central air, rocking chair
front porch , co11ered patio.
above ground pool with decking,
minutes of town. Take a look

Har

Used
Equipmof!t
JD 327 Square Balor · Low Use •
VG. 15.750: NH 585 Square Baler
• LlltB Now $8,500; NH 853 Round
Baler • Like New $8, 750; New
Idea 8 112' Rake · like New
12,485; IH 27 Square Baler
$1 ,050: IH 241 Round · Ball(
13.250 ; DeuiZ 3 PL Disc Mower
WI Conditionar $3,100; MF 725 T
Hayblno $1,250; JD Bake g 112'
Rake $750: JD 39 Sic:ltle Mower

DUCE"' about tho I:IAPPY Now Hay Equipmont
JACK 3·X FLEA COLLAR. Klllo
both malt &amp; female adult fleas. 2 ·JD 335 Round Bolero, In
s~ 1
385 Bound Baltr. In
.loiaijable Q.T.C.
Srock; H &amp; S Hydraulic Bllold
Graom Shop ·Pot Grooming: Fei· Raike; In S~ H·&amp; S Sltrex TOcf·
luring Hydro Bath. Julia Webb. dero • 4 Rotor U,650; H &amp; S
...... Hay WraP~* 15,850.
cau 81 ...446.0231.

, ,-

LA, FA,
Kit.pump. 2 ,car
Dinning
Arltl,
l.llllily,
11e1.
l"llal
g11age
in btml
Sp1~ - lles biOCil 1,111ny1 e~Mnor, Sill. Dtlh.
Elllrt nice metal ~ - ~30 • 50) wlconcr1t.
WDOr, 2 lg . g1rage dOo"rt, &amp; off~ee Atlo, 3
BR trtller. Blrn. shed . pondt. some
lenc.og Good 'Hunting HouM. 10 IICI"es

I

'

OWNER WANTS . TO SEll
NOW! MAKE HER AN OFFERI
4 BR, 1.5 story home which has
been remodeled. 2 BA, 1 car
C1etached garage , concrete
driveway. 20+ acres.
11622

Pets for Sale

'OnCt·A-Month' flea P'ogram
neef holp? Aok JD NORTH PRQ.

· Jnc .

Allen C. Wood,. Reallor/Broker·446-4523
Ken Mofifan. "Realtor/Broker-446·0971
Mose (\\nterbury, Realtor·446·3406
Jeanette Moore. Realtm· 256·1745 ·
Tim Watson. Realtor-446·2027
Patricia Ross • 446·1 OQ6

Poc:ltaga. Syotem Or Spill Syllem

LOG HOMES

560

446-1066

3 Ton C._nraJ All {;ondl tlqner

Real Estate General

-.,.,
'••..

White maple tongue·groovad
noorlng, 314" thlck,.l 112"' wide.
Alao Spanish IGOiing tilao, groan.
~578-410D.

32 Locust Street. Gallipolis

lrlc oil hNtero tsooa. 304·67512D5.

.~ . ~;::::=::;===::;:::::::;;::­

Rio Grande, OH Call 614·245·
5121 .

BEAUTIFUL NEW
BRICK " RANCH
HAS 3
BEDROOMS ... 2 FULL ·BATHS ... lARGE FAMILY SIZE
KITCHEN ... FOAMAL DINING ... SPACIOUS LIVING
ROOM.. .2 CAR GARAGE ... PLUS GARAGE/
WORKSHOP... THIS IS HOME YOU MUST SE;E TO
APPRECIATE. .. CONVENIENT LOCATION .

1r bo11 wfMivet aeata. alec:tric
/ ' mo_1•&gt;r &amp; blinery. S!eel chalnaaw
032 w!CON&lt; Maot bloc!&lt; wnablo •
~nile · Wolght bench w/ru;·
ceuorlea far legs &amp; arms. 30-4·
6J'5.6801. grill

ST~EET

ACROSS THE
FROM THE UNIVERSITY OF
RIO GRANDE. COM~~ 3 BEDROOM HOME
HAS I 1/2 BAT!
VING ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE, DEN,
, GARAGE AND OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS R
LOT HAS GARDEN SPACE ..
CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS
HOME!

I

1o hp. portabtt army genatator.
liar~ -~~~ (100&lt;1. $400, 61._
Tant,~

LAND FOR SALE ON ROUTE 160. BUSINESS AND
RESIDENTIAL SITES. CALL SOON ... WHILE THIS
PROPERTY IS STILL AVAILABLE. JUST LISTEDI

APPROX. 2- ACRES LOCATED ON HARRISBURG
ROAD. CORNER LOT.
HAS
WATER
TAP.
RESTR ICTED BUILDING SITE. CALL. FOR MORE
INFORMATION.

pul

1Oa20 3 Room

-

APPROVED FOR FARMERS
HOME! 4 bedroom ranch, vinyl
sidtng, newer electric heal
pump/central air condttloning, 2
car garage. City Schools! 11760

.,

'''

'

NEW ON THE MARKET... 3 TO 4 BEDROOM HOME
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE CITY. 2 BATHS.
DINING AREA OR FAMILY ROOM OFF KITCHEN.
VERY AFFORDABLE AT $32,000.

COMMERCIAL SITE ON EASTERN AVENUE,
CORNER LOT PLUS 2 ADJOINING LOTS . 2
DWELLINGS,'il PRE&lt;!&gt;ENTLY AENTED .. GREAT
LOCATION FOR BUSINESS.
'

~

Condition, $175,
81 ...258-11311.

~

LENDER

I 1/2 STORY
VILLAGE OF
HOME HAS.lJ!I;l,ft.~~~ABOVE GROUND
POOL .. $44.~
,

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

742·2502.

'

~~:~~~~.:· ranch.
NEATI Cute wall
Newer roof,
1 electric
heat pump/central air

tit
--

CHESHI""-~~.

a.m. to 6:00 p.m., Sundoy 1:00 to
8:00p.m. 614-GII2·2528.

540

446-3636

x 23'

an office, partial basement Heated pool room
garage 25 '

F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd , 446-3383

Audrey

1/2

with breakfast nook, large utility room serves as

Spauldilg lrono, 1 thru PW $125.
Winchester t2 gauge $150 .. Rug.
or .22 plotol S200. 304-875-3774.

'

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Realty

.

Block, brick. sewer plpea, wind·
owa, linleta, etc. Claude Winters,

I

'
t""· , .....~·
"'
$$$31,900.00$$$
Approx.
2.850 acres comes with this 3
bedroom, , 1/2 bath home ,
dining room , kitchen, laundry,
central air conditioning. Large
detached divided garage with
extra high door for trucks. lots
morel 11110

25 LOCUST ST. ·GALLIPOLIS

family, Loads of cabinets in an equipped kitchen

Compound Bow, .lonnl"l!l Forqa
Lightning With Sighll And Bow
Quiver, sao. au ue 1cw•.

·

Unldon colltilar bag phona wltli .
I'Por~at!l~ an1anna and battery ·
now, SISO OBO. 304-

Tammie DeWill ............................. 245·0022
Martha Smilh ................................ 379-2651
Cindy Drongowski ..... " ....."., ....~., .1_45-9697
Cheryl Lt:mly ................................ 742-3171

anaday . .__
baths , formal living rm .

11-2-8828.- f

640 • Hay

8 Wllol&lt; Old AKC Cocker Spaniol

"

MANY HOMES W (: HOOSE FROM WE WELCOME YOUR LISTING
DAVE PARSONS (SALES ASSOCIATE}
(61.)992-2237

-

Washer &amp; dr~er, refrlgera1or,
double ov-en stove, and couch.
$350 lor Ill. 30+675-67110.

520

FREE Color C&amp;lalog. 1-800-"'12·
•gl:;:g:::7': -;:=::;:::-::=:-:-:--Tolet!o 5300 hiGh opoocl commor.
clal moat oaw wloxtra bladeo
$1,100080.3Qol.576-410i.

'.

BEAUTIFUL RIVERVIEW 3 possibly 4 bedroom homt wi1h a l ull basement, cloH
110 tow'"·· mOve 1n Condllton. latge lrom porch lar!)ll rooms nb steps This proper1y
qualities tt horne sweet hOme. $25,000

II

woodland . Huge

Two rraller axles wirh drop apln! •
diu, Dodge hubo, braktl'o, .
opoingt, tirto a~ rlmo, StOOioo. , :

~~~i:C:Oc'!'/r ~~b~~ ~~:"~~~

RUSS ELL D. WOOD, BROJ(ER .446·46]8
Judy DeWilt .................................. 441 ·0262
J. Merrill Carter ............................. 379-2 184
ROth Barr.........................~........... 446· 7101

E TAYLOR (BROKER)

Waah•. Dryer, Refrigerator, Air
Conditioner, Microwave, Calor
T.V.. 614·258-1238.

II., 8ti-9U2-8828.

BIG BEND REALTY,. INC .•
!B. 1-800-585-7101 or 446-7101 @

pump one car Gar• and many tKifU . A grttt Ottl en $29,500

VfRA FURNITURE
Oua61y Hou- Funi ..ro AndAppiar&lt;:oL Glvol Dealo On
Cash And Carry! RENT·2.(JWN
And Layaway AJoo Awilable.
Free o.Miwry Within 25 MI.

-su~NEINGSTBEWOI.FFDS
""' Ho
Co
clal
u
mmer
• mo n1II, From

t 17 BUTTERNUT AVENUE, POMEROY. OHIO •5760

(614)9112-Ull
LANGSVILLE· Betutdul 3 bedroom home in t ~•ry Quit! and •fNtC'OUI atta. ThiS
hOuse wlf rtmodtled r~ght and has an 1bov1 ground swlmm1ng pools new h. .t

Wuher, Elctllent Condition,
$100; Dryer Ntedo Work tsO : 1g75 Cherol&lt;oo 2hp .bumper·pull
E*tlrdaa Bll&lt;e ISO: 614·441-llDOI tralftr ramp load. watlt-lhru , verr
EYinl.
goad cond., $1 ,800. 30'· 882·
2682.
Waveleaa ~ watartJed . 304 -87SZl85.
BN Ford Tractor With Blade,
Runo Excollonl, $1 ,950 Or Will
Wihdowa, one ba~. 1 amaller Cortolcler Trade, 61 .. 446-3787.
cranli: outs, aft ttlm, t200, eu.
D&lt;t-2810.
FARM
&amp;
CARMrCHAEl'S
LAWN, 888 Pinocrolt DriYI, Gal·
551)
Building
llpollo. OH 45814, 814-446-2412,
1-80().511-4-1111.
Supplies

""* wllll M~&lt;eo, t!illi ,·

PICK UP A FREE QUAUT¥ HOMES
TODA¥! SEE HOMES IN COLOR!!

STOP

610 Farm Equipment

1

1Wo hiler

FA RM SUP P LI ES
&amp; LIV E STOC K

Unlden aautlllte aystam, $150 ,
........ 304o875-&lt;1417.

·' •
~~:.: ~ 12.001) ,.

STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Calion
Uprlgh~ Ron Evono Enl.,prlooa.
Jodclorl. Ohio. 1-537-11528.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH.• Point Pleasant, WV

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

·

Merchandise •

Reill

RACINE N1 ce roomy J . badroom homt, garage, 'and OU1build1ng tn vtry l'IICI
locllllon and no cloY neighOOrs. appro• im-'llly 2 actes wit h fruit trns and grape
atbof, Must sae to BPPflld&amp;llllhiS ont For ~9 000 don't let th1s set awayl

~ &lt;:?J&amp;z~
·

,_llrao, 2 mo1011, Iota ol niac.
...
Real Estate

VERY SPACIOUS This new 4 btte~toom ranch style hOm• sits on 1 acre Of grouna
with only pasture land around II. EnjOY the ail condition1ng with a beautiful \llew
ClOse to town and very n1c11 for only ~55 .000

\:::;!1?UVJ,
~

u,.;,. Offir•-188-8824

Complete home furnlthlnga.
Houra: Mon -51!, 9·5. 814·448·

. J~

tr"-/

~.

- · ---

"'~•

. LAVNE'SFURNITURE"

0322, 3 miles out Bulavllle

OR

~

7055.

7;.;
.; ' 7':--::-~~-:-':::::-

~~~':"~!!'.;,.';'Dlaa
' 6.1::~

Merchandise

Rotrloorator 'SCI; ~loctrlc Range
SSO: Aeci- Ctwir $75, 61..._

81 ,._~7-o&amp;l2 Aller

S~ll.

t Dr. Druaar Willi Mlr(Or.
-

Merchandise

MOY~ Sale: Video Slore Rtmocloll"l! ~·· 11 oo 11-: 200
Adu• llo\lloa, Would Ul•• To Soli
All Tc&gt;golllor,

540

1554~0~M~I~sc~e~n;an~e~o~uss;-f~R~:;;;::;~154MaO~M~Is~ce~l~lan~e~o;u~s~.=-

Condltlon,l:~equ~llpo~:~~-~~~~7~1i0~,~~~~~11411-~211~10;·~~8~u~u~·6~3~75~7~.;~~:~~ ~:::;::;;;;~;i~~~~~~~i~~~~~~=~==~

couotero, Plua Flonllllack RoU·
Price,Awnlngo,
$1.500. 81Good
......... 18117, 814Coolanotor Dol'&lt;lmld•ft., f85: Low- Out
Carpet &amp; VInyl In SIDe!&lt; $5.00 Yd rey0rgan$125,81 ... 4oUI-&lt;l924.
«a-t410.
&amp; Up eo Pattfwnl Of Kitchen Car·
pet In Stock. Over 35 Pa ttern• Eleclrlc Whtalcha lra, Eleelrlc G.E. Waoher Hoavy Duty, Good
Vlnyl .ln Stoc:lt. !lollohan Carpelo. Scoo""" Nowi\JM&lt;I Scootor Ults, Condition: Giboon Dryer, Heavy
814-446-7...,.
Stairway Elevator~, lift Chalra, Duty. Good Condition; 814·388Bowman't Hamecara 114· ·448· g()SQ_
Country FurniiLo~·re-Furnitu~ foPtr nm,.
Harvell Gold Automatic Washer,
EIIOIY Room. em .• RJ. 2 ~···
Pleaunt 30-4-875-6820.
Fecldert air conditioner tor tal• Ranoe. Di thwaahtr, Mattt·eu,
ld
k
d •"
Matching Bq• Sprlnga. T.V. 2
GOOD USED APPLIANCES one year 0 ' wor 1 goo 'a-"ll WhoaiTrailor. 6t.....a-2G76.

ranges. Skaggs Appllancea , 16
Waahtn, dryera, 61relrlg.ratara,
~~~:;:~~~~~ ... 46 . 73g 8·

JET •
AERATION MOTORS

ctU, good cond. Wll"'l 3t&gt;&lt; col·
tea &amp; end table IlL Ouun·olzt
wol8tbod. Wa- 1 01-,.r. Homt
on•-'·•1-·1
• ~-• bi.., .., ... , ·-lor.
.... , .,....rn....
cy~. Col!'(&gt;lete patlont caro lur·
niiUre. 30.... 7S.588hr 30H7S.
"'86.
FOR SALE : FOOD BOOTH
TRAILER. Well -Equjepad, In·

=~0:\:!'g, C.!:~

Concrete &amp; P&amp;uric Septic Tanka,

Applianctl:
Recond11loned
Walherl, Oryera, Rangea, R&amp;lrlgratara,

Sholc.Jt,eu ue

540 Mls 11a
;,
. MeC:ha:f: · '

condition. f100 , 114.gg2.

F~x IIHI oofo, aa""' ao new w/

MER C HANDISE
510

Miscellaneous
M~handlse

Sunday, July 2, 1995' :

•

SIZZLING!! They wanPwhat you 've

~~~e :~~~Eb:d~o~~~. ?n1~2F~~~~sF. "G"ans''. l

got. We n ee d your listings!!!!.

Wood Burner Mat 1{'.(. Water. Shed. 2 car
attached garage. Appliances. Appro&lt;. 3 ·2
Acres. ASKING $28 ,000.00

Clela)d Realty, Your Cool Home
B u y ng/Selling Conn. ection ...

4:'1·1.~7

.

"

•

POMEROY Old House neKI to New Auto
Zooa.locatioii. f1aer· Upper Ql rJlfllove home
lJNIONP.VE . • ClOer hom-e Sltllng on· for Trailer Sile. ASKING $4 .500 .00
'
appro&lt; . 1/2 iltcte . Uillilies available. Possible
ll&lt;er·upper or lear down home lor nice lot
Buyers are hot!! ! The Weath er is
ASKING ss.ooo Make Offerll

NEW LISTINGIII St. At. 160, Vinton
Ranch, 3 bedroom, all' carpet, small tool
shed $49,900.00

SYRACUSE · Fianch Stv le Home has 4
bedrooms , 2 · baths. utility are! a, ceiling
ra diant/B.S heat, AC Unil. Lois ol clsoel
space. Pat1o wi th sliding glass door and 12 x
16 shed in a. nice Subd ivlston ASKING
$39,000 00

•

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Pomeroy • Middleport • G~lllpolls, OH • Point Pleasant,

wv

Sunday, July 2, 1995

Rai.n fall levels still spotty
for Gallia County growers
....
...

_topple

June 30, 1995
NYSE

DOW (lndwlrills)

By RANDALL HACKLEY
Associated Press Writer
DENVER - Chile is likely to
become the fourth member of
NAFfA by early nex't year, U.S.
Trade Repre$(lntative Mickey Kantor said' Friday at au economic
summit of 34 Western Hemisphere
nations.
.
•. L-eaders at the summit are wrappmg up plans to create au Americas-wide· fre·e trade zone by 2005 .
Kantor used the occasion to
announce that Chile was expected
to join the North American Free
Trade Agreement. ·
Th~nited States, Mexico and
Cana
onned NAFTA in January
1994.
''We have made a marvelous
start to establishing a free trade ·
area for the Americas,"· Kantor
said on the first day of the ·threeday summit. ''And the three ainigos have become four amigos, or at
least we hope so by the end of the
year."
Finance Minister Eduardo Aninat of Chile welcomed the news,
sayi~g trade had been "the engine
for Chile's growth" and "all of
this.is building up to hcuer jobs."
Earlier, a protest' by environ-

a

.

.

lives include tax reduction, outliving
one's incOI)IC, and providing for the
. high COSI of

.. medical care.

=:lac~~~:~=~~

•

a recession is not likely,"
satd Abby Joseph Coben, market
strategist at Goldman Sachs &amp; Co.
'. ~Thit-fundamentals are still COil•
structiv~."
.
Technology stocks slaTted lhe·
day barrellin-g higher but then
backed off as investors took profits
and ended mixed . On the Big

~o~~d·3}!~ f:~-~~~~ ~·. ~~~=~

tef. ••

YOUR ..lftURES IN ONE DAY y

Custom Fitted Dentures In One Day At Our. Teays Valley Office.
By Our Professionals And Trained Staff. ·
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualified Technicians.

CALL TOLL .FREE 1-800.926-0025 :
For An Appointment or Information.
Evening Appointments AyiJI/able
,.Our Regular Service Ia A vellable At All Offices.
SAME DAY SPVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!.
DENTURES SlART AT $143 PER DENTURE!
CHARGE FOR SAME DAY.SERVICE

West .
VirFa Dental SerVice ·
Willlam V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.
109 POPLAR FORK RD.

Scon

ot, WV•757-7441

lowing the opening session of the Western Hemisphere Ministerial and Trade Forum in Denver,
Colo. (AP)
·.

'

.

'

103~ QUARRIER STREET
306 Atlu Bid ., Charleston-343-2954

1 Section, 10 Pages 35 cents
A MuH
Iaine. Newspaper

8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mor:tday, July 3, 1995

WELLSTON (AP) - An lndi· · State Park in Vinton County, s.aid
ana man is suspected in the death · Jackson Coul1ty Sheriff Gregg
,of a southeast Ohio man after using Kiefer.
the .. dead man's identification,
The body was taken to the
authorities said Saturday.
Franklin County cornner' s office
Jason Baker, 24, from Ander- tor autopsy, Kiefer said. He did not
son, Ind., was being held 'in the know a possible cause of deatll.
Montgomery County Jail. He was
Walton was last seen w1th Baker
being held on warrant&lt; of homicide in tlJe park and was reported missfrom Vinton County, receiving ing June 22, Kiefer said.
stolen property from Jackson
Baker, who was living and
County and· burglary from Indian;!. 11-'orking in the Dayton area, was
said Montgomery County Correc- stopped on Thursday and arrested
tions Officer Jeryl-Ann Kassa . fpr public intoxication, He used
Bak,er. ~sl,l Js. being. ch:u;g.ed in Walton' s' identification and wa'S
obstruCting jusli~e in Montgomery released the next day.
, County.
.
Montgomery County authorities
The body of Eric Walton, IS, of discovered that Baker had used a
~Wel~{\l] .i~ Jackson County, )IJUS ._. false .i&lt;fentification and arreste&lt;f
discovered Friday in a shallow . him,Friday.
·
grave along a creek near Raccoon
.

Case against O.J.' will
end with former in-law

suffering. from severe problems,
· said Bill Conmhc, spokesman for
the county's community mental
health board. The number of youths
needing services increases by 200''
to 250 each year, board records
show.
The board in Augu'st plans to
open a ··four-bed center to care for
young patients in crisis. The center
also
ser. will offer home-based
VIceS.

.

.

{304) n3~5366.
1-800-664-3362

1--

nd performers

'f' :

Count on our 325 and 345 Lawn and Garden Tractors for a long
list of extras that make any job almost effortless. Like our
·
exclusive Twin Touch" foot controls that let you easily adjust
speed ;md direction with b.ne foot Or, a Quik-Talch" mounting
·system thaf attaches fn minutes. There's even a hydrostatic
transmission for infinitely variable speed selec!ion. So if you want
.&lt;~long list of extras, without an extra big price, stop by your local
John Deere dealer. See for yourself why the 325 and 345 Lawn ,
and Garden Tractors are such
.
·
impressive all-around perfonners. . ...._NOll!ING RUNS
-

,

LIKE A DEERE'·

Lucasville since the 1970s, moved to Mansfield Correctionallnstilution in
February. However, any ex~cutions still would take place at Lumwille, .
U1e state's maximum security prison.
Some inmates say the move bas improved living conditions and rapport with guards and has increased privileges. "It's like gning from helltu
heaven," Spirko s~
·
That's not to say tlJe new death row is any outsider's notion of heaven .
If anyone thinks " this is a Holiday Inn, I' II trade with them," said
Dennis McGuire of Preble County, sent to death row in Decem her fQr the
1989 rape and stabbing deatl1 of a pregnant woman. "Even tl1e homeless ·.
out on the streets, I' II trade with rhem.' '
Each cell is a 91.58-sq uare,foot cubicle containing wall-mqunted bunk
beds and desk, a slilinless-stecl toilet and s!nk, a shatter-proof metallic
"
mirror and a shower. · .
At Lucasville, inmates were pennitted only oi1e five-minute phone call

a year, at Cltrisunas. At Mansticld, they can usc the phone neitrly every

r

day .
.
.
. .
[&gt;ri soners are likely to he allowed supervised "contact visits" s/JOII.
For tl1e .tirst lime. the most trusted inmates can h'old jobs - custodial ,
Iood service, clerical -· inside death' row.
'·
It 's p:Jfl of a change of philosophy by correction s oflicials, who ltre
trying to treat condemned inmates more like other prisoners; I he l)ewspapcr sai u.
Overall, Warden Cu·I Anderson said .,denth row inmates cause fewer
discipline problenis th lUI otl1er prisoners, although assaults have -occurred
among tlJe condemnell at Mansfield, aud homemade knives hav.; been
found in cells.
·
"There :tre delinitely inmates in the general porulation who have more
se rious crimes thnn inmates on death row , but U~ey didn't get U1e deaU1
penalty," Anderson. said.

..•

Jump!
Frog jumping
contests draw
wider appeal

(,

LOS ANGELES (AP) - After
weeks of dry testimony from DNA
experts and other scientist&lt;, prose·
cutors in tbe O.J : Simpson trial will
end their case on an emotional note
when they call the motlicr· of
Nicole Brown Simpson to the
stand.
Juditha Brown could testify as
early as Thursday, a day after the
trial resumes following U1e long
holiday week:end. She is expected
· to tal\&lt; about a ielephone con versation lbe had with her daughter !e.'s
than an hour betore Ms : Simpson
and Ronald Goldman were '\\lashed
to deatb .outside Ms. Simpson' s
condominium.
...
Legal analysts are divided over
the effectiveness of the prosecu·
tion's tactic to call Mrs. Brown as
the last witness in a five-month·
long presentation .
"It makes sense IX:cause ·it pro· vides an .emotional impact. II
. reminds jurors willll tl•e. trial is all_
· about: a mother losing her child in
a lirut&gt;il murder," said Loyola llniversity law professor Laurie Leven·
son.
·
But veterim defense lawyer Hac·

•~· f
&gt;

.

'~ '\

&lt;:

f

-~

;:or;.

'

'-+.). ';

.... Ol

s.;..ts

.,

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"'

DRAGGJNd-and personnel from the Meigs County Emqgency Medical Service units
·or Middleport, Pomeroy and Syracuse assisted Mason' County, W,Va., resc11e sqUads over the
weekend In dragging the Ohio River for the body of a man who reportedly jumped from the
. ··
•
·
. Pomeroy-Mason Br_idge abolit a ·p.m. Saturday.

·Authorities -investig;~te report ·
of individual leaping off bridge
According to a spokesman for
West Virginia and Ohio
U•e
West Virginia State Police, a
authorities are investigating a
search
ensued -until 9 p.m. Satur· report of a man allegedly jump·
day
and
resumed at 8 a.m. Suning fro111 the Pomeroy-Mason
day
.
Officials
called off search
, •.
Bridge Saturday night.
and
ilragging
.operations
at 2:~0
Pomeroy Police Chief Gerald
pm
.
.
Rought said a youth first reported
The
state
police
helicopter,
seeing someone jum·p from the
Mason EMS, Mason Fire Departbridge around 7:53 p.m. Three
ment,
New Haven Fire Departwomen then reported seeing the
..
rnent
,
New
Haven EMS, Mason
same thing from their vehicle.

land Braun says the shift to Mrs.
Brow.n after a slew of scientific
evidence may he too jarring.
"I tl1ink 'this b unfortunate ..It's
not an invariable rule that you have
to end wiUJ a bang," Braun said .
"I rilink the jurors. might feel,
;Well, tl1ey're putting Mrs. Brown
on the stand to manipulate me .
ap'peal to my emotions, not my
brain ."'
Prosecutors will have another
chance to call witnesses during
WASHINGTON (AP) - Amertheir rebuttals to the defense pre·
sentation, estimated to last about . icans' personal income'fell 0.2 per·
cent in May, the first decline in
six weeks.
·
Mrs: Brown is in a f)osition to· more th,an a year, while spending
·
back up a nmnber of contentions rose 0.7 percenl • '.
The Commerce Department said
the pmsccution made in opening
statements, including the sugges- today the drop in income was led
tion that Simpson exerted financial · by a dedjne in private wages and
'· and psychological control over Ms. ..oalaries. The spending gain exceed·
ell analysts' expectations and was
Simpson ..
In March 1994, just three the largest in iwo months.
In another report, the depart·
months before U1e slayings of Ms.
'.. Silnp$011 and Goldman; Simpson · _m~!)t sai&lt;! ~.!J Q S truction spen~_ing
allegedly told Mrs. Brown: ''The . fell 1.5 percent in. May, its second
straight decline and the biggest
- only w(lman I w~nl in my life ·
and I can't fa ve - is your d~ugh· drop ft. four years.
~ "The question"we're trying to
ter. "
answer is whether it will turn into a
")

I

County Sheriff's Departmenl,
Mason Police , Meigs County •
Sheriff's Department, Pomeroy
EMS, and Pomeroy and Middle·
'port Fire Departments . TI1e Coa.'t
Guard also assisted with pleasure
crafl that were. in the area.
The state police SJI(lkesman
said three people have conL1c1ed
1heir office claiming to be the
jumper, and the invC$tigation is
continuing .

CARMICHAEL~s ·
FARM AND LAWN
668 Pinecrest Drive
Ph. 61 4-446·241 2
Betw"n Galhpobs &amp;Rio Grande orl Old Rt. 3S

payments based on John Deere Credil Revolving Plan . 10'% down payment r&amp;qulr&amp;el
Price and prodiJCt ma~ IIBIY due to

. By .liM ••REEMAN
Sentiljd News SWIT
, In the competitive world of frog
,jumping, it's a frog -eat-frog world. '
Frog jumping has a definite ·
place in the history of Meigs County , with organized events being
held between 1966 and ~ 1983 in
connection with the Big Bend
Re'galta. Last year, organized frog
. jumping was revived in Ra~ine as
part of the village ' s annual Independence Day celebralion. ·
Frog jumpimn g enthu siast Fred
W . Cro w Jr .. Meigs County's
Grand Croaker, and Dale Warner
started the first Meig• frog jump
anti tl1e event Sllf"'l became known
statewide. Crow even incorporated
the Ohio S,ociety for the l'romotion
of ll.ullfrogs Inc.
The second. Racine frog jump is ·
Tuesday at 5 p.m . at Star Mill Park..
The event is headed up by the
Rev: AarOn Young, who won in
junior di-vision in 1981 in the original event. •Young notes the secondplace winner was from Akron ,
demonstrating the wide appeal of
frog jumping.
Young is aticmpting to run tl1e
evenl "true to fonn ," but acknowledges that Crow ltnd W:m1er had a
Jot more experience in frog jump-

U.S. personal income po~ts 0._2o/o d~cline
recession or stOJI short of zero,"
said economist Cynthia Lalla of
Q)U-McGraw Hill, a forecasting
linn in Lexington, M~Lss. There is'a
good chance tor a modest recovery
in U1e latter part of the year she
sa'iu .
.
.
. '
Stocks tra'ited •at nea• ~eutral
level s early ·roday ,;~ 't~e ilflark~t
treadcd ~ater at the ~t:trt of a hohday -s hortened session . The Dow
.Iones industrial average was up a
little 111ore than a point in thE ~r~
half hour.
The economic data are among
the last to be made public before -a
key two-day meeting starting
Wednesday of the Federal

•

Three held after allegedly
pouring
blood on Enola Gay ·
.

.Hi.r oshima A-bomb -r un leader .
say·s he was just doing h·i s job

. ·..._.

WASHINGtON {AP) - three '
people
face charges of dCstruction
,
.
of gove rnment property aUer a
demon stration ·ar the Smithsonian
COLUMBUS (AP) - The pilot
Tibbets, '\low 80, Selected from a on t~e flight to promote the Baby
In stitution's Air and Space Muse_of the plane that dropped th~ first Boeing assembly line the B-29 Rutl• candy bar.
· um' s ex hibit of the Enola GaY,
atomic bomb on Japan nev.e r Superfomess he would command
Sm ith so nian spokesman David
recalled the World War II mission "" 'the Aug . 6, 1945, bombing of
Davis had stopped t,o talk with
Umansky said.
•
as particularly exciting, The . Hiroshima, Japan. .Then ·a 30-year, Tibbets' father, a wholesale con·
The thre e, two men and a
Columbus Dispatch reported Sun· old colonel, he named the bomber fec ti oner, and mentione~ that he
woman,&lt;t"ere arrested Sunday after
day.
Enola Gay, after h\s mother. needed someone to hurl tl1e candy
pouring what a park police
Rather, Paul Tibbets Jr. remem·
The bombing killed an estunat· from the biplane.
·
. spokesman said was human· blood ·
bers being truly exhilarated hy ed 100,000 people. Three days
Tibbets overhcaru the conversaand a-s hes on the plan e, which
flight ~sa 12-year-old, when he got lat~r: tl1e United States dropped an tion alid, despite hi s father's,
dropped the atomic bomb on
to toss Baby RuU1 cahdy bars from atomic bomb nn Nagasaki, Japan, protests, volunteered.
. ..
Hiroshima, Japan , on Aug . 6, 1945.
a-biplane over Hialeab.race track in . kill.ed an estimated 40,000 people . · In his autobiography,.17te Fltght
Umansky could not confirm '
Miami: .
Japan surrendered l_ive days later, of!he Enola Gay; lie ·wrote of the ·
whcU•er
the red liquitl ·poured on
Writing !ater aliout tl1e boyli~ endipg World War!\_..,
.
adv enture: "No Arnbian prince·
the
plane
was blood.
. .
a'&lt;(venture, Tibbets compared himTibbets, of Columbus, has neve·r ever rode a magic carpel with a
The
B-29
bomber
did
not
appear
self to an Arabil'n prince . riding a expressed regret over his role in the greater delight or sense of superiorPAUL TIBBETS
10
he
m~ed
or
damaged
when
!he' ,
magic carpet, the·newspnper said in lliroshima bombing. He.told The ity to the rest of the human race. I
exhibit
reopened.
after'
the
midaftera copyright story, the first arucle of · Disp/Jich that the mission wa.' his could see the unfortunate; earth· . -before enli sting ill th e Army Air .
job and hi s duty , and not very bound 1port&gt;~ls crawling around like Coips in 1938.
'
·
·, non incident caused it to he· closed
a Urree-part _series.
. The Dispatch spoke to TibhcL,, eventful despite meticulous and ants 011 the ground hclo~." l
· He retired from the AiJ Fprce in for about two hours .
The park police .spokesman,
who seldom gives ·interv ie}vs, as p:linstaking preparations.
'
1966 ash brigadier ge11eral and
the 50th' aRni-versary a~proaches of
Not so years earlier, when he·
Tibbets, a native of Quincy, Ill., w.ent on to become an executive who wouldn't give his name, s~id
the first time man used a nuclear accompanied barnstormer and for- attended the University of Florida · with a chart e'r airline ba sed in J he identi lies of jhose detained had
not been confmned
.
weapon again.~t his telloll'JII,,.anu....' ---.,-"HliJlCotr_jW=oruldiLlW+aruulufl"'i"'e'r~
D,o"'-u!&gt;.g,..D"'auvnis......_,.,nd-1-IH:-Unil&lt;e.uit.)L.oLCinr.iimauti_,_columhus:
·
. .

••

..

ing.

Abs ent is the fmgmobile and
Ule other frog regalia reminiscelll 1
of U1e Big Bend Regatta event. hut
Youn g said those items may be
revived.
.
.
"We had a lot of fun with it. last
year!' Young said. "Weird t-hitigs •
_ like U!is tlraw a crowd, nlways rut
·a s!l'ile on ·peoples !itee."
Reserve's policy-sellin g Federal
Young explained ·some, nf the .
Open Market Co mmittee . The
rules of fn:!J:.Jrunping .
oflicial
FOMC is studying U1e economy to
FirS!, no to ads arc aljowcd, ·
determine whether it shoulil cut
all hou gh nther species of frogs may
interest rates to stimulate growth.
participate.
·
The government confirmed last
·
The
person
's
anti
frog
·
s
name
week that UlC CCO(lomy slowed oramatically in U1c first three months · arc ca1le&lt;.l to the ring and the frog is
plllced on a pad in tile cent.er.
, .(lf,J995, as gross dome~tic product
The perwn is not allowed tn
rose 2.7 percent alter surgmg 5, 1 touch
tlle frog' once i1 is placed on
percent~~~ U1e fourth quarter last
the
pad,
he said . They can do
year. The second 9uarter that enued
almost..:mything else lo prompt itln
_!u_ne }0 wa s beli eved tn be even - jumr - blow on it, yell, scream,
slower.
.
pound U1e ground.
The Commerce Dcp.artmenl s;ud
. The fl'.llJl IH~' 60 seconds to
today that d•sposal&gt;le mcome rose
lllllke
it&lt; tirSl jump and :m addition.'·
0.7 percent m May aJter fallmg 0.9
- {Cuntinue~on !'•~• 3)
percenlUJe prcvu1~s mm1.U•.

[:li1iiiil•

.,

•.

'

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(

·

'Moott1~

•

Wrong ID leads
to arre~$t' in killing
of Wellston man

signs say.ing "Free Trade For
WhoT '
The protesters said companies in
Mexico have flouted lax environ·
mental regulations under NAFfA.
They fear ecological ,l'roblems elsewhere if the world s largest free
trade zone is creaied.
Police stood by but did not
intervene in the protest, which
broke up without incident less than
an hour later. No arrests were
reported.
The trade ministers issued a decl(lration Friday saying customs
cJ\tties will become standardized
across the region , many subsidies
phased out and measures taken to
prevent the dumping 'o f goods at
below-market prices by 2005 . ·
Kantor welcomed about 1,200
finance ministers and business
.leaders to the summit by declaring
the region from Crumda to Argentina ·will have no trade barriers with·
in a decade.

II

•

•

enviromnenlal slogans and carrying

7G

~dy. Tut~y. bigho In the

446368

MANSF[ELD (AP) - Prisoners who have been pn death row as long
. as 13 years are faced with the f1rst governor in years who supports capital
pumshment.
.
Gov. George Voinovich two weeks ago signed into law a bill that
speeds appeals by giving inmates just six months to file claims not related
to specific trial questions.
;
On death row, 14811)en struggle with boredom and su&gt;pense as appeals
move through the court.s. Execution has seemed more ru1 abstract concept
than an imminent danger ill. a state that hasn't executed anyone in 32
years.
But exi&gt;erts say it's likely that a killer will executed sometime in the
next two years, the Dayton Daily New.&lt; reported in a story Sunday.
''It's getting close, ~· said John Spirko, convicted of U1e 1982 slaying of
-Elgin postlnllstet Betty Jane Moltinger. ; 'Some inmates think lt' s ·!lot ·
going to happen, bulit is."
Death row, housed at the Soufhe~n Ohio Correctional Facility at

· menr,alists brieny disturbed the
summit's opening.
•
About 300 demonstrators dampened the proceedings by. marching
in a light rain outside the down·
town Denver meeting site. chanting

All

"'

.

Low-loillghlln 60s. Partly

New law may speed executions ln Ohio

'

.

Kicker:

Vol. 46, NO. 45
Copyright 1995

Last menta/ ·hospl·ta/
'/! k•d · • Oh •
·
Or I . S In
10 closes
CINCINNATI (AP) _The ·tast

•

16-18-24-34-41-43

e

..

·

Technologies fell 1/8 to 55.
In Nasdaq trading, .Intel fell 716 to63-3/8, and Apple fell7 -l 6 to. ·
'46 13 16 ·
.
Th.e Dow industrials were
buoyed by a good perfonnanCe'i
cyclical stocks, which could ti~
expected to continue perfonning
well as long as the economy is still
growing, Cohen said.
•
Leading the 30 industrials higher were Intemational Paper.

Ca

What wiD
your retirement
be like? No
doubl,qtiitediffen:nt from that
of
parents..
c. gmndparenii.
As the 21st cen11111 appooa:hes,WipfCCCdented shifl.!l
ill our population and our way of
Jiving are redefining retirement for
most people. There are~ three key
questions you should answer to obtain a clear understanding all!Jut what
you.are seelrlng for retirement, The
fJI'SI question is...AI what age would
you like 10 have the freedom to stop
working? This age wiD help you detamine .the. liJlPfblxiate ,investment
requirements to achieve your goals.
The second question should
• be. •.In today's doUars, how much
monthly income would be adequate over the n~x! seyQ-a] years, thai
for you to mainlain a comfatable woJter-to-retireeral.iowillbereduced
lifatyle? ~g to some govern- , to less than 2·10- 1. With•additional
ment estimlleS, most people should drain. on ljJe system, Social Security
be able lo retim on '1/3's to 3/4's of may contribute a much smaller portheirp-c-retirenJenlincome. However, lion of your retirement income needs.
10111e people will need vinually the With all tbe changes is a fmancially
same level ofincome. Also, by deter· . secure and comfortable retirement
mining an amount in today·' s doOars,
unrealistic goal? Notal all. Proper
you can choose an inflation rate to an
planning Gan stiU make it happen.
In future articles, we will discalculale what your monthly income
need will be in the future; For ex- cuss in more detail. the process 'or
ample, if you haw ~ monthly income establishing and implementing a
objective of $4,000. 20 years until. sound fmancial plan.
ielircment, and believe inflation wiD
. (JayCildwelllsanlaYe$1meal
average 5%. The monihly income Broker for Tbe Obio Company ill.
need. adjusted for inflation, becomes Its Gallipolis oflice.)
$10,613. This fact shot!ld be a power-

your

·si~wed,

mental hospital for children in
Ohio- Millcreek Psychiatric Center iq the city's Bond Hill neighbor!J~- has ~en ch:»;ed.
Mtllcreek: which once cared ~or
as many_ as 100 paue?ls, has dtS·
charged t~ l_ast two children; It bas
four remammg staff members, but
at one Ume employed as many as
140 counselors, teachers, nurses
and others.
.ful motivaur for many to begin inThe center's director, Peter
vesti.!lg fll: your retirement.
~pen
Steele, §aid Hamilton Count)' chi I·
Living longer will coSt you more.
dren qeeding hospitalization still
The good news is that, due to medical
Continued from D-1
will receive it, but nearly all will be
advances, you can ~peel to Jive into
cared for at home, at school and in
your 80's, your ?D's, possibly· even from the ever-expanding gardens community programs as youth .
00:
are used in Gremore's kitchen, she treahnent statewide shifts to compast 1 · Thus, you may spend as added. As the business continues lo
munity-based services.'
-many yean in retirement 88 you did grow, more local fanners' produce
''There was a time when the
worlring. And thai means you'll need will he used.
system hospi~1li7.ed too many chiltostretchyourrelirementdollarsover
Herb walks are ~-\0 held, with drcn. When I first came,.)Jete:l(~n
a longer lime span. Careful planning lectures on their d"se as natural 197.5), many of the kids were lo!.\1can help make sure thai you don't remedies.
functioning, some mentally tttardoutlive your retirement income.
"Our fo'cus is on well ness and ed, some with behavioral problems
Health and long•term care costs back to the land," Gremore added.
and they would find themselves' in
wiiiCOI\tinue-rori~ These IIRI9C8f)'
• "People want to come and be
the mental. h~alth system, " ·..Stt.oele
unknowns. How much will you need pampered."
lmid.
10 spend on health care after retire- of'&gt;
.
. •
.
.
, ·
He said. community-based pro- ·
ment? Hyou'renotproperly inswed,
D•recuon.s: The mn and confer- grams treat youths at younger ages
a serious health problem orlong-tenn encc centerts located south of Car- than before and provide more
Slily in a nursing home could quickly penter. Travel o~ Carpente.r H•ll . int~nse counseling, allowing most
erode your fmancial resources
Road abouLone mile up the h1U and of' them. to avoid hospitalization. In
Th th ' d .
·
·h
~of the hill the road will
addition, advanced psychiatric
1 spliLto_ the''li(ght and Iefl Turn right medications now allow many men~ tr que.stton s OU~·
be...
sowtes of •ncome do _yo onto Carpenter-Dyesville Road.
tally ill people, including the
hav~forreurem~nt?Youmaybegm The series of buildings will be sevel'ely ill, to live at home. ·
~e that_ retu:e"!~nl is c:x~~ely located severn! huiJdred feet after
In Hamilton County this year,
·madequateifsocial 1nsecunty IS the on this road.
more than · 3,600 youths •will
t:Ofl!Crstone ~f your fmancial plan. · For details, ca.JI 1-800-644 -' rece•ve treatment for mental ill Social Secunty will undergo more CICC.
nesses, with nearly 2,100 of tl\em
demand 'with less supply. Today, 3.3 r---------------,.;.;;;..;,;.;;.;.;..;.;,~

An eye-opening
.look at you_r future
BJ JAY CALDWELL
GAILIPOUS ·Retirement is the
· No. I financial concern among the
majoril)' of Americans today. Education is the No. 2col!cetn.Otherobjec·

ComPQfilte volume:
1!194 •¥1- comp. YOL:

'

Super Lotto:

Sports, Page 4

Hemisp·h.e ric cooference ·eyes
future fr~e trade in Americas

Market in brief

Pick 3:
' 566
P,ick 4: '
1821

'

·1\1ets . -

Farm Flashes

morning as a series of mixed ecoBy PATRICI'A LAMIELL
nomic reports kept alive investors'
AI' Business Writer
NEW ffl!fK ·- Stocks ended · hopes that the ·economy can continFriday's session with modest'gains, ue to grow enough to support cor.·
•
. as a tlurry of last-minute selling porate earnings.
The
Commerce
Department
erased most of the day's advance.
The Dow Jones industrial aver- repoited that the gross domestic
age closed up5.54 at4,556.19 after product, the sum of all the goods
paring gains of more than 30 and services produced, grew at a
2.7 percent annual rate in the first
Jioints.
!hree months of 1995.
"They've had a g.reHt run ,"
That was unchanged fmm earliSteven Goldman, market strategist
er
estimates,
but barely more than
at Weeden &amp; Co. in Greenwich,
Conn., said of U1e blue chip stocks.· half the pace of expansion in the
·previous quarter, and ihe weakest
·~So me portfolio managers are
locking in some profits to sUtrl the performance in a year·.and a half.
But, Commerce also reported
new quarrer."
'Advancing issues led decliners that orders to U.S . factorie s rose
hy more than 2 to I on the New 1.4 percent in M;~y , re~overing
York Stock Exchange. Big Board from three straight declines. The
vnlume totaled 311.37 million University of Michigan was said to
shares as· of 4 p.\n. , with large have reported that its consumer
portion changing hands ig the last sentiment in de~ rose to 92.7 in
hour. That was just below, the vol- June from its 92.3 preliminary
·
ume of 313.08 milli6n shares that reading at mid-month.
traded on Thursday.
An Index of economic activii.Y
Stdck by ChiCago purchasing managers
The
American
Exchange's market value index fell to 47 .6 percent in May from
climbed to a new high and closed .5 3.5 percent, but that was not
for U1e ll"t time abuve 500, gain- enough to dissuade investors from
.ing 3.8.1 to 500 .19 . The Amcx the notion that the economy is in
~ reported the highest weekly trading
gi)Od shape.
.
·volume· for 1995 at ·147.5 million · ·- Investors also factored in a.near· .
shares, and and the · highest-ever ly 20 percent jqmp in new home
JliOnthly volume at 539 .3 million sales reported on Thorsday, and
shares.
concluded that while the economy
Other market indexes posted' may not he slowing enough to jusgains as well , with the NYSE's tify an inlerest·rate cut by the Fedcomposite index up 0.58 to 291.84, eral Reserve, the growth is suffithe Standard &amp; Poor' s 500-stock cient to support corporate ·earnings
index up 0.88 to 544 .75. and the and stock prices.
·
Nasdaq composite fndex up 6.64 to
"Over the past two to. three
933.45 .
days, the economic data has sugStocks headed higher in the gested tliat while the economy has

0 hio Lottery

Reds

tions of Ridomil to keep Ridomil based on supply/demand estimares
By EDW A"RD M. VOLLBORN
GALLIPOLIS - The weekly sensi tiv~ populations under control. and even Dro Uhrig feels that it
Ad&lt;tljls Cpunty E~tension Agent appears bish for an average. The
crop-weather report finally put
most or Ohio in the adequate soil Robin Stevenson Is working with Fnday {June 30) USDA 'estimate of
moisture category. Moisture short· the Ohio Department of Agrieul· planted acreage, due to lateness or
ages were mosUy reported in north- ture tn get an emergency label for planting, still -reflected a lot of
westObio.
·
Dithane DF . This would permit intentions not actual planting. Or.
Rainfall in our region ha.' been Dithane DF use in Ohio should the Uhrig says that the first obiecti\e
v_ery spotty with several crops. par- Ridomil res istant strain of Blue yield an_d production estimates
ucularly soyhc:uJS ami tobacco, just Multi show up in Obio. Tbe woii'"l"CCme until the Aug . 12
sitting there despite the wann tem- ~ troilgest Bloe Mold activity in USDA report.
.
peratures. These fields were typi- Kentucky has been assvciated with
'
cally planted at the end of the wet · infected Georgia transpl:mts.
Reminder: The Regional Beef
and 111oist conditions and are now
The operating cos t of farm Industry Insights Program is schedbaving trouble adjusting to drier
machinery is often a haru ligure to uled in Gallia County on Monday.
.conditions .
get a hanule on . A big item nf the July 10 starting at 6 p.m. The prooperating cost is fue l cost. Dmmes' gram is sp.onsored by the Ohio and
Dr. William Nesmith, Plant Ag Report indicates that the aver- Gallia County Cattlemen's associa- ·
Pathologist at the University of age fuel consumption for a diesel tions and will he hosted by Cham·
Kentucky , reports that the drier tractor engi ne should he .044 gal- pion Hill Farm on State Route 554
weather the pl!Sl two weeks has . Ions per hour pe~ max'imum PTO east 'iifRO ute Hlll. Tlie evening
greaUy reduced the likelihood of a horsepower. How is your tractor activities will include a free hamwidespread epidemic of Blue Mold doing'!
burger fry. _viewing many of the
in tobacco for the early part of the
Champion Hill Show hefd and a
season.
' ·
What is the "highest" price esti· · short progqim . This is a fun
_There have been no reported · mate for this year's com and soy- evening that you don't want to
cases of Blue Mold in Gallia Coun- bean crop that could he triggered Iniss. We strongly encourage beef
ty but several outbreaks have by the erratic wea'ther uuring the producers from neighboring coun-·
TR~DE ~UESTIONS - U.S. Trade Repreoccurred in Bro,wn and Adams nonnal planting season? Dr. Uhrig, ties to attend.
sentative M1ckey Kantor, left, and Trade Minis·
counties of Ohio. If we should Purdue University, says the averter Douglas Ascarrunz of Bolivia listened to
1 (Edw~rd M. Vollhorn is the
return to cooler and wetter weather, age com farm price could be near
questions during a news conference Friday folunprotected fields will he at risk. $2.75 per bushel.
agricultural extension agent for
Use the cultivationllayby applicaAn average ne:ir $6.80 ligure i\; Gallia Councy.)

Wall Street closes out
with modest advance

. ·:.

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"

Wilnesst;s' in th e exhibit dt the
ti&lt;l) C of the incident said ahout 15
people lagged behind a group that ·
had been aumittcd anu starteu
sc reaming " We repent. We
regret. " Jhcn soveral protesters
stmtcu rouring a red liquid under
the fuselage llf· UJC Enola Gay and
tossing, white ,dust in the air. OUjCr
prnteslors h&lt;mued out pmnphlet&lt; .
,
" There -were frightened kids,"
said Irwin Yuen, a touri.~t from San
Frnncisco who was in the exhibit at
the time. '"fi•a! wa' the worst fhing
about it. &lt;;hildre n were ju st cryiilg." ·
Yu~n said th~ incideill only lastcd for about five lu ten· seC&lt;Jnds
before the three prnt cstilrs were
arrcst e&lt;l.
'
Twe-nty aclivisUi were. a..;.~!'&gt;ted
Wilen U1e exhibit opened Wedncs- • · •·
day. after they unfurl ed bm111Crs and
dror.(l!!d anti-bomb 'pamph lets from
a halcony &lt;in'th e visitors.
.

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