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'

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fdur•q tlu' H1ver

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Memorial
Day
weekend

COtet,.,_,

activities

twiUgltt

Low: eoa

.of life's

,.,.A3

•Sc~Nl~eon

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HI: 70s

Detalla on
pageA2

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A Gannett Co. Newspaper

Gallipolis • Middleport· Pomeroy· Pt. Pleasant· May 25, 1997

Vol. 32, No. 15

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Consultants recommend ·two·sites
for.proposed new municipal building_·
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By KEVIN KELLY
Tlme•Sentlnel Staff
Conaulr.nta haile
GALLIPOLIS - Consultants
working with a revitalization effQrt
in Gallipolis' downtown have rec.·.
ommcpdcd two sites· for·placement
of a.new 'city building- its current
IQQ!ion, and ·the corner of Second .
Avertllll and Locust .Street near 'the
Galllai County Courthouse.·
;
The -su~stions from Brandsth- •
tcriCattolllnc. arc part ofll seri~s &lt;)f
recomllicnClalions the committee sultants said, but they 'recommended
will !;(,pslder. as part of an over~ll · the S.ccond and LOcust location
plih\~•incr~asc business and civic because of concern~

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::_ln~y. 500 preview·
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IS Package, 5spd, powet sceeriDg, aluminutD
· ~;air, AMIFM cass.bt, As, tow As...

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David · A.
secretary .
I1·~:~-~~~~~~d·~~ss~lstant
l
education for
tlie .S. Department of Education,
will be the cOmmencement speaker at t~e , University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande Co111munity
College on Sunday, June· 8.
Rio
Grande
officials said 360
graduates wiU participate in the
121st commencement on the college green.
''The . till)ing
could not be better
for Dr: LongaLorlfielnei:,tier necker to speak to
: our graduates,' their families and
southern Ohio," said.Dr. ~rry M.
Dorsey, Rio .Gmnde 's president.
''The president and Gongress are
currently considering several student financial aid proposals that will
make it (li!Siible for,,additional students to en(911 in higlier education,
~and for tamilies to receive more
,help in meeting college costs."
· Appointed · to his· position by
President ClintOn -and confirmed
'by tl)e sen,ate ln' 199'3: Longanecker serves as the department's
5cnior offieer:ln maoilgins i~e fed'
eral government~s investment in
.colleges, universitie.s, trade
~hools and their students.
AB assistant ,secretary. Longa- ,
l-llc1:ker is responsible for all.of the
department's postsecondary programs, including an $11 billion
l'Dnual budget fdr student financial
aid and a budget of $1 billi9n for
1nstitlilional aid.
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oppcH-tunitie~
in the,d.Owntow!f.
• ·: ;'· ·t~i~)~~~~u~
~:::~:::·0· :~~~=~~~:~r~~~~~~-,-,,:
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' ·Bfe was 1'$in'eil.
by the ijis!llric
uonahpace. ~c;l'the.n:::
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Gallipolis Central Business Distrkt
Scott .Enos of B/C said the estito . maintain
Revitalization Committee last sum- mated cost of a new building, with- toric flavor.
mer' to help it formulate an overall out the expen$e of properly purchase
"This is' your choice and we're
plan to. increase busineSl! and ci.vic · and .demolition, is around $1 mil- . only telling you why it should be
opportunities in the downtown. · .
lion.
· .
there," Niemeyer saiil. "Yo11're giv·
The ~mmittcc· has sponsored a
Th.ebuilding would have to cover ing us reasons .why it should be
series of "visioning sessions" with 8,600 .square feet to accommodate somewhere else."
•·' ''"'- ·•COnsu1tants since late last year usage, 'which the consultants estiA push for a new municipal headto 'ga~r public input. A ·new struc. mated would include 55 percent pf quarters arose two years ago during
ture housing city govemment. has space for administration, 20 percent . the administration of City Manager
been an integral part of the plan. ·
for the police department, 10 percent Matthew Coppler. Other sites have
('t. previous session had discUssed for the ·municipal court and the been suggested, · including the forthepossibiliticsofputtinganewcity remaining 15 percent for public usc mer Holzer School of Nursing dorbuilding closer to the downtown, but and traffic.
mitory oq First Avenue, and the
the ftrm unveiled its recommendaThe suggestion calls for .,the ne\v Warehime and Miller properties jusr
lions during a session last week.
building to be built where twq hous-· north of the present city buil\ling.
Erecting a ·new structure on the . es aJld an office/apartment block are
The dormitory wa·s ruled out by
present site is a possibility, the con- now, with expanded parking in the
· Contlnulld on page A2

GRANIDE -

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S1·oLB·· ·

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~~.ra.l$nt ~ary for

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5spd, V6~ JXIWer steering, ~wheel antilock brakes, As IDw As...

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Ctty formally accepts commissioner's
· resignation; begins search for successor
GALLIPOLIS - The process of' finding a replacemcnt for a Gallipolis ~ity commissioner wbo resigned her
seat on the five.mcrD)ler ·
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paricllast week has started. City 'Confni-loltfr

make an appoin!ment, Koby added.
,
Skinner, who was completing her first term on the
commission, hand-delivered a resignation letter to her
fellow com.missioners during a visioning session of the .
~c Cit~ ,Com~ission Hetman ((oby .Hid
Historic Gallipolis Central Business District Revitalizametm spectal scsston SatCom lrtiii&gt;Jon 1.: lion Commiltee.
·
·
urday to discuss . potential iiiJ·' ltiO."!..,~tfi-A '.
"I find it impossible to fulfill my duties at this time,"
candidates to succeed , ~ •-1 . ·~ ,_,... .to · the·Ictter read. The rcsig!lation was effective We\lnesday.
Cc~estin11 M. Skinner, who ·~~v~J..' ~
Under the city charter, the commissioll has io days
· resign~ the balance of her va,;.nt't:lty, hJ,BRIIf1• · froln receipt of the resignal!on to apPof!li a successor.
· . ter_m la~t Wednesday. •.t:•s:p(jiltJofJ' Oh • ·
Koby said the commission has also ·decided to readCOmmlsstoners also .for- ·
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vertisc the vacant city manager's position on 8 limited
mally accepted her re.slg- .//'1f(t.cl ~,.Jn
basis in Ohio, starting this week.
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nation. .
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,Ohio, ,Br.rti(JII this
;J'he commission voted down an ordinance last Tues- .
The commission is con- .WHk:' . . !i •· : ,
day that would have ·employed Boyd A. Kraemer of
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. Chadron, Neb:, as city manager.
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.sidcring three possibilities, .
Kraemer, one of three candidates commiSSioners had
Kent CQmmissioner Herman Koby said, and will be contactthe WI)' ing !he three to see if they're interested in serving the personally interviewed, verbally ac;cepted of the comDinner pentdt that
through ll!t remainder of Skinner's term, which ends in December.
mission's job offer two weeks ago, but no formal agreeThe parade, which preclldlld
dinner, bollltld
·A s~cial meeting has been set for 5:30p.m. Tuesday ment was reached prior to last week's vote, Commission .
' ''"'---.. co-anchor Sa.ndre Cole 11111 rmil'lhe,. ·
· in the City Building, in which the commission hopes to President Carol O'Rourke said.

·th'i

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of Ro~te 35 'Jigsaw puzzle' project begin.to

No papers Monday

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· ·The Oellljlolll Dally Tribune
· . and the DillY
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1et1ttn•.. will ·
not Pl!bllih
Monday; and,
bualnHI

oom- wtn

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bt clolld.
:
N011111l publlcltlon
·ecllllcluiM end buUi"' hol!rl
Wlll 'lftUftlt TIIIIICIIY·.

Good Morning

.W.Va.Pulling
a four lane expressway wit~
ramps,·exits and an
overpass
lot like working your
favorite
puzzle. Not much
mat&lt;es
until you ·get to lhose
last dozen
plec;es:
. The
3S projccl is nearing
that point
Wtth a quick glance
on top
the hill overlooking the
project, one CliO see the pieces com ~
ing logethdr just like it was drawn up
by ~_ the cn.*inecrs n~arly four years
ago.
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Gary .Young, chief inspector for
the Route !3S froject with the WV
Qepartment o Hipways, said ·lhe
proJect is cduple of weeks behind
sdtCdule ~use of the heavy rains.
·that bil.tile! lltl in late Mardi. Bar·
ring lil~m
re Jona periods of rain or
otber
e~ the entlro project
ahould
be l mpleted by De'cember
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CHEVRDlfl • OLDSMOBILE • QIIUS .......
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lot now shared by the city and th~
courthQuse.
"We also . want to emphasize
that's . creating a government
square," said Dean Niemeyer of
B/C. "The site gives you more of an
opportunity to do it there rather than
at the p~csent location."
But the proposed demolition .of
the structures on t~e corner was ·
questioned by Kim Sheets-Schuette ·
of the city's Historic Preservation
Review Board, who said .the buildin~ have historical value.
· · Sheets-Schuette wondered if the

of this year.
into .a fine, flat
"They're (construcJion company) surface. A layer of
hoping 19 be done sooner th.an that,. · matting and stone
but realistically it will be later," is then laid down
Young said.
·
to aid in drainage.
. Workers will begin pouring con~ · Once that is done,
crete on tlie overpass this week. It the road is ready
will take a couple of weeks or more to be paved.
to get the entire overpass poured .Young said 5ome
.because the eoncretc must be poured · p~rtions of the
in scctio.ns. Any rain storms push · road are ready to
back the proceliS at least a couple of be placed wlth
. days. Once the overpass i~ complete, asphalt thi~·weck.
.the road will be built to it.
.
This process
The appro)limatcly . two-mile 5ounds
easy
stretchi of road is in v~ing dep,cs enough, but each
of completion. Some parts of the .. step from now !)n
expressway are In lhe '"dirt grade" gels .more and
stage. This me-ns !lie roa!l is in. its mote lime con~=~:·~~~t~~:- Pert of the deck of the OYei'JIIII •tong ~ al In Hill- ·
basic shape, but several more steps· suming and diffi- deraon w11
to bt poured thla WMk.
·
must be completed before it is time cull. Workers .:an only do a small amount of min wreaks havoc with struction itself is difficult and lime 1
to break out the !ftiChi~cs tha) pour section of the road at a time beeause the schedule and makirig sure ·the consuming with all the reaulllioatl
asphalt. One of those slepl, is to go · tilt hcig!lt and width of the road has road remains within the required frQtil the stale, try . foiJowiaa 1111
over the din grade porllon with din to be.wltbin an iilch, and sometimes measurements'.
chain of companies it 1akci
Jr&amp;der. The ~ader smooth• the dlrJ . lest, of state rc&amp;ulations. Almost any
If, you think the actual road con- ·
Contlnulld on page AI .

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Fllllrtfllll.111 sstlll
lrt the picture
for Mortdlly .

OHIO Weather
Sunday, May 25

dace lliluntlng, uaa SIMIIHI and Traci Heii'IM;
back, from left, Amanda Milhoan, Mirtle Hollar,
Patly Aaikar and Bill Frencle.

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Disaster aid
Continued from pege A1
decision to shelve the bill rather than.
· accommodate Clinton.

. MICH •

Child center enrollment underway

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ship; LIM Stathem, UniversitY of
From left, back, are Daniel Otto, Unlveralty of
Rio Granda; Saail Maxay, Washington State
Community College; Bill Francia, Marietta College; and Catherine Coram, Washington State
Community College;
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AWARDS PRESENTED - These Eeatern
High School students were recognized for ace·
demic achievement on Friday. !'rom left, front,
are Meredith Crow, Engliah, French, physics
and paychology; Maria ,Frecker, buainesa and
government; Martie Holter, government; Tracy

White, ert; and Anna Wolf, economics. From ·
le", back, are Angela Chaney, FHA; Saan Max·
ey, drafting and · current world affairs; Chad
Wheeler, economics; Treci Heines, French; and
Peter Nowak, mathematics.

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Eastern High School .seniors
l
:' recognized at awards assembly

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~ By BRI~ J. REED
'· Tlmea~entinel Staff

and Daniel Olio. Univcrsitv of Rio
Band awards. to be presented
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Grande; Teresa McGrath. Hair Tuesday. were announced : Trac'i
REEDSVILLE - Eastern High Expcns Barber School; and Cather· l:lcincs, Marine Semper Fi Award:
, School seniors were honored for inc Coram and Scan Maxcy, Wash· Meredith Crow. Arion Awardj Anna
: academic and . extra-curricular ington State Community (;ollegc.
Wolf. Patrick Gilmore Award; and
: achievements at the school's senior
The Eastern Local Educiuion Christina Gros&gt;nickle, John Phillip
: awards assembly Friday.
Association Schola~hip .was pre· Sousa Award.
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The following were named the top scntcd to Traci Heines. · Meredith
Athletic rel'Ognilion went to: Chris
: I 0 scholars of the class: Meredith Crow was presented the Ohio Board" Bailey and Tracy While, Archie Gril~
· t Crow, valedictorian: Mario Frccker, of Regents Scholarship, and panici- fin S 11onsmanship Award; Palsy
} salutatorian: Traci Heines, Martie pal ion certificates wen: presented to Aeiker and Adam McDaniel. Ivan B.
! Holter, Lisa Slethem. Bill Francis, Lisa Stetbem, Traci Heines. William Walker Award; Meredith Crow and
Tracy Whitc:Amanda Milhoan, Pal· Francis and Maria Freckcr.
Bill . Francis, Ohio High School
, sy Aeikcr and Can~acc Bunting.
For outstanding achievement on Schuiar Athlete Award; Manic Holter
Academic awards were presented -the 12th Grade Ohio Proficiency .and Eric Dillard, Army Scholastic
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: by subject' teachers to: Christina Test, special recognition was giv!'n to Athletic Award; Daniel Quo, Marine
: Moore. home economics; Scan Max- · Bill Francis, Eric Marcinko, ~can Reserve Scholar Athletic Award.
l cy,.drafting: T~avis Thomas, indus· · Maxer. Peter Nowak, Lisa Stclhcm . Senior Athletic Awards, presented
I trial ans; .Mcreditlj Crow, physics; and Alicia Walker.
by the athletic boosters, were pre·
. l Moria Freckcr and Martie Holter,
Recognized for subject honors on sen ted to: Daniel Quo, Bruce Haw·
; government; Anna Wolf and' ·Chad the lcsl were: James Clif(ord, cili- Jcy,. Bill t;'rancis. M_e~dith Crow,
: Wheeler. economics;Meredith·Crow zenship; Catherine CQ!llm. citizen- Amanda Milhoan , Rick Hollon.
Adam
• and Traci Heines, French; Meredith ship: Meredith Crow, reading; Bill Christina Grossnickle,
: Crow and Maria Freckcr, English; Francis, citizenship. reading and sci- McDaniel, Manic Holler. Chris Bai·
! 'Tracy White, an;·Peter Nowak. math· cncc; Eric Marcinko, citizenship;. ley,' Mindy Sampson. Josh Casto, Pat·
·! ematics: Scan Maxey. current world Scan Maxey, science: and P.eter sy Aeiker, Eric Dillard and Tracy
; affairS; Meredith Crow, psychology; · Nowak, science, mlllliema(ics and cit· White.
~ and Maria Frecker. business.
izcnship. ..
Recognized as senior office aides
;
Organiutional awards were pro·
Student Council members recog- were: Patsy Aeiker, Laura Arix,
j sen1ed to Tim Epling and Jerom.ec · nized were: Adam McDaniel, Patsy Meredith Crow, Martie Holter, Jere·
t Caiaway. work-study students .oflhe Aeiker. Martie Holter, Biiiee Pooler my Hupp, Rick Hollon and Rocky
~ year; Angela Chaney, FHA; Laura (junior), Mindy Sampion, Scan Max· Hupp.
·
,: Arix and Angela Chaney, ,senior art ey, Daniel Ouo and. Amanda Mil·
Senior class officer awards were
. : honor society; Chris Gandara, work- hoan. Yearbook awanls '!"ere pre- presented to: Sean Maxey, Amanda
: study special 'ri:cognition; ·and Chad scntcd to Adam McDaniel, Kelly Milhoan, Mindy ·Sampson, Maria
Frecker, Bill francis and Dave Blk·
1 Wheeler, Christina Grossnickle, .Scan · Osborne and Angie.Bissell.
j Mney, Adatn McDaniel. Meredith
Na1ionai Honor Society memben er.
Mmdith CrOw was named winner
: crow, Bill Fnincis and Daniel Otto, recognized were: Meredith Crow,
•dramaawanla.
Anna Wolf, Traci Heines. tracy of the Tandy Award 111d New!IChln: Recoanlzed as scholarship recip- White, Lisa Stethem, Maria Freckcr, . nel3 .''Belt of the Ciua 1!197 ' - · "
: ienta were: Christina Grossnickle, Christina Grounic~ie, Manie Holter,
Brandon Buckley and Michelle
' Ohio University; Meredith Crow and Bill Francis, ~y Aeikcr, Amanda · Caldwell were named OUitllndint
l~Pnncis, Msriella Coilep; Maria Milhoan, Loaiie Parker. Candace junior boy and lifl. · .
Iter, Lila Stelhem, Martie Holter Bunlins and Sean Maxey.

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archite'ct Mark · Epling showed
city
officials
a 1995
study
by
upgrading
theafter
slructure
to be
handi·
capped-acces.~ible,, and meel current
building codes, could be cost-pro·
hibitive.
B/C looked at the WarehimeMilier sites and concluded thai a
new, larger building would ctinflict
with . residential properly behind
them on Third Avenue. The lots are
. also too narrow for expanded operations, Enns explained.
The consultants stressed that
these were suggestions and the final
decision rests with the commiuee
and the city. B/C ·is to tenla\iveiy
.present its fi.nai finding.' to the com- ,
mittee on June 6.

Rain
Vi.t Associated PlfiSS GraphicsNet

Route 35 project

a

ROOFING
Fast, easy installation
•.Goes directly over old roof
• Won't rust or corrode
• Reduces noise
~~ • Provides added insulation
• Lifetime li.mited warranty
Sale

$11 49

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48" X79"
Sholl (2U 141· ft.)

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~=~

"WOTOCI&lt;CCU&gt;M

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, RIO GRANDE - . "Domestic Violence Remediation," a se'minar spon. sored by the Social·Work Student Council at the U11iversi1y of Rio Grande/Rio
, Grande Communi,ty College, has been set for Wednesday. May 28 from I·
4 p.m. in Room 115 at Wood Hall:
.
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The workshop is designed to present a psychocducationai model of court"mandated intervention with individuals arrested for domestic violence. II woll
cover issues related to new laws, procarresl policy and community cduca·
tion.
· The presenter will be Paul Dovyak. ~ssociall)profcssor of social work and
. BSW Pro11ram director at Rio Grande. Completion of the seminar offers three
. Ohio Continuing Education credits pending in social work and counseling.
A fee is being charged for the seminar. For more information. call 245.7470, ortoll-free 1-8()().282-7201.
·
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· CA~ monthly meeting scheduled
CHESHIRE- Galli a-Meigs Community Action Agency's regular meet·
·ing will he 5:30p.m. Thursday, May 29 at the Guiding Hand School, Exec-·
utive DirectorSidney Edwards announced.

.County Board meeting rescheduled .
, GALLIPOLIS- The. Galiia County Local Board of Education's regular
,meeting for this month will be Thursday, May 29 al7 p.m., instead of Monday.
The meeting will be in the administrative office~. 230 Shawnee Lane, Gal•
lipolis.
·
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..Trustees request decor~tions removal
CADMUS -Walnut Township Trus1ees are requesting !hat ali ground
:decorations al Aagsprings Cemetery be removed by July 15, Clerk Jane Salln·
ders Miller announced.

One-car accident yields citation

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· RUTLAND - A Middleport man was cited for failure to control by the
.Galiia-Mcigs Post of the,State Highway.Patrol following a one-car accident
Friday on County Road I 74 (Happy Hollow).
·
Troopers said Chad R. Wise, 18, 769 Short Fourth Ave .. was nenhbound,
four-tenths of a mile north of State Route 124. at II :45 p.m. when he failed
to navigate a curve and went off the right side of the road.
The car then struck a ditch and a tree\ according lo the report
Damage to the car was slight
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City Pollee cite two in accidents · ·

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GALLIPOLIS- City Police cited Robcrl ,E. Griflith. 36. 752 Teens Run
Road, Crown City, for domestic violence late Firiday. according to records.
He was booked into 1he GaiJin County Jail at 12:16 a.m. Saturday.
Also put in the jail early Saturday were Cecil D; Yos.t. ~2. 3286 Morgan
.Lane, Bidwell. at 12:30 a.m. by the Gallia County Shcnff s Department on
charges of disorderly conduct. resisting arrest and open contaoncr; Charles
P. Lewis. 29. 3198 Kerr Road, Bidwell. at I :07 a.m: by dcputocs on a charge
of disorderly conduct; and Charles R. Wiuington, 34. 1541 - I 12 N. Second
Ave .. Middleport. at 9 a.m. by the Galha-Mctgs Po~l _of the Slate ~~~hway
Patrol on charges of driving under the mnucnce. onvnlg under suspcnsoon,
. unauthorized usc or a motor vehicle and improper lane usage.

Publlahed .:och Sundo)'; 82!'i Third Avo.,

O.tlipolio. Ohio, by the Ohio Vutlcy Publi•hina
Co•ny/Oanneu Co.. Second elM~ postqG
paid 111 Oallipolil', Otuo 45611. Entefcd 111
aond chu• mallina mttter at Ptlmeroy. Otlio,
POAIOffiCC •

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Mt.btr1 ne A.ilbciated Pn:u, arwt die Oflio
NewJPtPft As.wtiadon.

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Meeting will
study floQd
prevention
POMEROY - A public meeting
to discuss the steps necessary for the
nood prevention project in Salisbury
Township will be held at 7:30 p.m . .
Wednesday in lhc Meigs County
Emergency Services Building behind
Veterans Memorial HospitaL
The area under study covers main·
ly the Rock Springs. Willow Creek
and Laurel Cliff areas.
State. federal and local officials·
will be on hand 10 e~plain the IIJ..stcp
process and study· the fcasability of
ohtaining grant funds to complete the
nood niitigalion project.
Residents of thnsc areas arc
encouraged to allcnd the meeting to
give the public input needed fnr 1hc ·
projc~ls.

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WANTED!!!

(614) 441·1982

SUNDAVONLY .
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
lyCinWorlllolor....,
OneWeei&lt; ........:.:.......................................St .~
One v.. """""'""'''"'"'"""''"""''""'""$65.00

momt-

POMEROY - Memorial Day
activities slated for Monday in MCigs
County include:
Pomeroy Legion
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Lcgion. Pomeroy. will hold its annu· .
al Memorial Day Parade in Pomeroy
Monday morning.
TfoeparadewillfqrmatiOa.m. at
the Pom.eroy First Baptist Church,
move down Main Stteelto Bunernut
.Avenue. then take Seem~ Streei to
Lynn Street, and from there m'ove to
, the stage area; where services will be
held al II a.m.
,.
Speaker will be CoL Gerald
Koster (Rei.) of Syracuse. He is also
a retired United Methodist minister
and a retired employed of Ohio's
TICO. He served in the U.S. Army
during World War II. A native Meigs
countian. he is graduate of Pomeroy
·Higli·School.
The cemetery visit schedule is as
follows:
Rock Springs, 9 a.m.; Beech
Grove. 9' 15 a.m .; Sacred Heart
Cemetery. 9:30a.m.: Memorial Gar·
dens, I: 15 p.m.; Chesler Commons
for services at Chester Cemetery,
I :30 p.m.; and Hemlock Grove. 3
p.m.
Burlingham Cemetery
-T he 107th annual Memorial Day
service a1 the Burlingham Church
cemetery will be held at 1:30·p.m.

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. .
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slble far- poytniiiiJ . . - .. ·

Meigs veterans' units slate
observations for Monday

GALLIPOLIS - City Police issued citations in two accidents investigated
Friday.
·
·
, .
. .
. ..
· Lawana M. Moore. 4H. 616 Bigelow Road. Vonton. was tockcted lor lml- .
ure to yield following a two-car crash on Pine Street at I :42 p.m.
,
Officers said Moore was waiting to pull from a private driveway. 60 feet
west of Founh Avenue. when the driver of a pickup truck slopped and
motioned for her to pull out Moore did so and struck the the passenger side ·
fender of a car driven by Wilma J. Jqncs, 71. Oak Hili.
.
Jones had driven up to the lc.n side of the stopped pickup. according to
the report' Damuge lo hoth cars was slight
·
Eugene Johnson Jr.. 42. 1867 Peters Branch Road . Crown City. was cited for assured clear distance in a two-vehicle·crash on the 300 block of Second Avenue at 3:21 p.m.
·
Olliccrs said Johnson was southbound. 40 feel south of Stale Street. when
he was unable to slop in time and struck the rear of a stopped pickup truck
driven by William M. Sibley. 37, 1836 Graham ,School Road. Gallipolis.
· Sibley had stopped in iraffic all he lime of the accident. according to the
report. Damage to both vehicles was slight,
1

Four placed in jail by authorities

j

r

Seminar on domestic violence slated

o
. nl

,,
:'

GALLIPOLIS - The fgllowing
Memorial Day activilies have been
scheduled for Mon~ay in Gallia
'
County:·
Service in GaJUpoiiS
Activities planned by local veter·
ans will 'begin· with a parade starting
al Second Avenue and Spruce Stteet
at 10:30 a.m. , proceeding down Second to Couri S1ree1, and then left onto
Coun to First Avenue, where the
parade will disperse. World War II
prisoners of war from Galiia County
will serve as parade marshals.
VOLUNTEER EFFORT- Voluntaera Ralph
Memorial.Day. Also contributing to the beautiA memorial service will be held at
and Mary Young, right, and vetaran Paris W.
flcatlon Were Mary Lou Fellure and Central~
the Doughboy Monument in.the city
Young, 111ft, recently donated their tlma to place
ply Co., which donated muich. The volunteers
park at II a.m. Master of cereflowers and plants along the Doughboy Monpian to keep up the landscaping at the monumonies will be Charles Reynolds.
ument In the Galllpolla City Perk in honor of ·
ment through the fall.
The guest speak~r will be Gallia
County Common Pleas Judge Joseph ·allegiance. Pastor Paul Voss of the the gun salute, followed by Jill Shriv- of Honor or the Garden of Devotion,
and a family Bible. Registration
L Cain. A ny.over by the I 78th First Church of· God will deliver the er on taps. .
invocation.
A
promotion
will
be
conducted
for
forms .may be dropped in the box ·at
Fighter droup from Springfield is
U.S.
Rep.
Frank
Creaburialspll(ieintheVeterans.Garden
the
information tent.
Former
scheduled.
Ohio Valley
means will give the tribute speech . . · r--..-Memory Gardens
Patriotic and inspirational music will
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens has he offered by Pam Matthews, Carscheduled its third Memorial Day ser- oiyn Casey, Pat Hutchinson, David
vice for 6 p.m. on ihe · cemetery Stanley and Bill Ward. Pastor Jack L
grounds at Neighborhood Road .
Berry of the Simpson United
The program will begin with Boy MethodiSI Church in Rio Grande will
Scout Troop 200 memhe~s Josh Gul· give the benediction.
Icy and Charlie McGraw advancing
VFW Post 4464 and American
the. colors and leading the pledge of Legion Lafayette Post27 ~ill present

RIO GRANDE- The Gallia-Jackson-Vinton Tech Prep Consortium has
scheduled a Tech Prep awareness night for Thursday, May 29 at 6:30 p.m.
at the University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College.
Parents of students in grades 8-10 in the lhrcc·counties are·invited to auend
, the hour-long informational meeting, which will . feature a presentation on
Tech Prep, information on .entrance requirements, and the showing of two
videos on Tech Prep. Refreshments will be served.
Students and parents are welcome to auend, Tech Prep Coordinator Karen
Dillon said. Applications will be on hand for those wanting to be considered
,
for admission into 1he program.
Tech Prep ciass~s in manufacturing systems technology will be offered
students in grades 9- I I next school year, with additional program areas set
·
:to begin in 1998 and 1999.
, Dillon said Tech Prep classes Slarl in the ninth grade and follow a
. ·sequenced path through an associate degree. Students then have the option
of staning a job or continuing on 10 oblain a bachelor's degree in industrial
· technology.
· ', For more information, call 1-800-282-7201, extensions 7301 or 7304.

W. VA.

~
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City building

Day events
set in Gallia

Tech Prep awareness program set

' ' '' '

Continued. from page A1
number of people involved, but
Young said that everyone ~just gets
off such a project. ·
The easiest way .10 describe the used lO it."
numbe.r of companies and people
It's not ali work and heavy earth
·
h·
th
h )I
involved is to think of the saying movmg mac mery oug . . oung
about icebergs. What you see above . said many of the workers have taken
the water i~ usually
y about 10 weekends and rainy days to take
d
f h "Jdl'~ · he ·
a vantage o I e w1 11e tn I area.
pe rcent of what iS actually there.
to "'
nor k,ers have k'li
1 ed lurkey, deer an d
The Stale awarded the pro•;..,..
•-·
he
'ldl''
the Mashuda Corporati'on based 1·n ot r WI hC: when work can•I be
Pittsburgh, Pa. Mashuda is in charge · done.
of the actual road construction.
As Young took thi~ rejXmer for a
Mashuda then · subContracted Krae- bird's eye view of the project, there
met &amp; Sons Cons'truclion to do the were deer antlers and several differovem•"-'·
•..-- From that point. on,· it gets ent' tracks from animals as the two .
a little messy. _
made their way to the top through
Everything from jlutting up
the trees and sloping hillside. Young,
fence line to spreading grass seed to who is from St. Albans, said he has
painting ,the lines to pulling in the gone to the lop several limes in the
road signs is ail ilqne by a different evening by himself and with 1\is kids
· 1;0111pany. In all, close 10 20 compa· to just relax and enjoy the view.
nies have 'spent or will spend time
. After the last paund of dirt is
contributing their expertise to this placed, the last section of guardrail
project The only thing stale workers is set and the last road sign is placed,
do is watch over the companies to Young will move on to the next job.
make sure regulations are being fol"I like it (lhe job) because I'm not
lowed and everything meets the pro- . stuck in a factory all day and I gel to
ject's measurements.
he out running around from place io
"The , slate .pays these guys place all day and i gel to come home
throughout the JOb so we have lo in the evening," Young said.
ll)~kc sure they're doing the work the
If the weather cooperates, we.will
way it is supposed to be done," have a new expressway that has and
Young said.
Young will be able 10 move on 10 the
Communication would seem to next city and the next set of prob·
be nearly impossible considering the lems.
·
..--....:._.:.__ _ _ _ _:__ ___,_ _ _ _ _......,,.--~.,
·

Continued from page A1 •

~0 G~E- Enrollment for the summer program offered by the Uni·
~erslly of Rio Grande Child Developmenl Centc~ is underway. The program
IS destgned for c~ildren who have completed kindergarte·n up to the age of
10.
'The program begins June 16 and continues until Aug. 22. Children allend·
ing ~is su~mer's program will be given 1he chance to refine !heir 111a1h and .
readmg skills, explore a variety of science concepts and experience an, music
and dramatic play.
·
· Included in tbe program is panicipation in sports and recreational activities, andhan~s-on work on Macin10sh .Performa computers. Field !rips are
also pan of the summer schedule.
·
· Daily sessions run from 7:30a.m. until 5:30p.m. All meals, snacks and
·
field trips' are included in the cost of the program's tuiiion.
. For more information, call245-}477; or toll-free, 1-8()().282-7201 , exlen·
sion J7477.
·
.
•
'

' '''

These are "things that really stop
dead in their tracks until Congress
comes
back," Mj:Curry asserted.
·"Houses
won '! be built, sewer
· and water Jines won't be reconstiUCted, famiers won't ~ given
payments ... all because the Republican leadership decided to go home,"
Dasc· hi e, D•s,D . , to ld · reporters.
"It's a thumb in the eye 10 every disaster-victim in the United States."
The president had protested a
GOP provision in the aid bill
designed to prevent future federal
governmenl shutdowns, ·such as
occurred in the winter of 1995-96.
McCurry ·said the anti-shutdown
measure, which he called "objectionable and extraneous" would
impose Republican spending priori·
lies whenever the regular approprialions process deadlocked.
Clinton has said for weeks that he
would veto the disaster relief if
Republicans tied it to the shutdown
provision. GOP leaders feared losing leverage by lelling a "clean" aid
bill pass.
"They fiddled around with it,
then it got too late and they left for
their holiday," McCurry said Friday.
"It's not a good message to send and ··
it does not refleCt well on the Rcpub·
lican Congress."
Loll said the bill, which has S8.4
billion in new. spending this fiscal
year. including St .9 billion . for
Bpsnian .and Mideast peacekeeping, ·
would be one of the Senate's "first
orders of priority" when it and ·the .
House reconvene June 3..

Monday.
Speaker will be the Rev. Keith
Kapplc . Special instrumental and
vocal music will he provided by
Frank O'Brien, Joe and Kathren Coi,bum, Joseph and Rita While, and Dr.
Bill Cuckler.
.
Feeney-Benneu Po~t I 28, Amen·
can Legion will ~rov1de !he honor
guard for the servtcc.
Middleport Legion
A ceremony to name the American
Legion Park. next door to the Mid·
dlepart Post Office on Mill Streel will
be held Monday at 11:15 a.m. by
Feeney-Be'nnell Post 128.
The park's official name will be
the Stewart-Bennell Memorial Park,
in honor of Staff Sgt. Jimmy C. SIClW·
an and Maj. Edward A. Benncu. both
local recipients of the Medal of Honor.
'l"he legion will mcel at8:15 a.m.
· at the legion hall on Fourth Street,
followed by services. at 8:45 a.m. at
the Middleport Boat Launch, priorto
which the chaplain will place one sin·
glc rose in the Ohio' River.
.. Cemetery visits will be as follows:
Riverview, 9 a.m.; Bradbury, 9:15
a.m.; Addison, 10:15 a.m.; Cheshire
Gravel Hill Cemetery, 10:30 a.m.;
Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery
across froni Overbrook Center. II
a.m.
Luncheon will be . served at the
annex at II :30 a.m., after which the
legionnaires will visit Howell Hill
Ccmelery at I p.m. and the Burling·
ham Cemetery at I :30 p.in.
·

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- Tri~County Briefs:~ Memorial

. ay The AMoc181M PrMa

EASTERN TOP TEN- TheN- the top 10
scholars of Eastern's gradUating claM. From
left, front, are Meredith Crow, valedk:torian;
""ria
Can-

$

•

forecast for

A cold front will brinz rain and
thunderstorms into Ohio on Sunday;
but the precipitation should end in
time for Memorial Day activities.
'The front will enter northern Ohio
on Sunday and reach the Ohio River
by evening. Showers and thunder·
storms will slowly end across the ·
north but continue in the soulh dur·
ing the day.
.
Highs will range from the lower
60s northeast to the middle 70s far
south.
High pressure will build over the
Great Lakes Sunday nigl'u and Monday, bringing dry.wcalhcr across the
nnnh. Showers will remain likely
over central and southern Ohio Sunday night with .a chance of showers ,
in just Jhc south on Monday.
j..ows Sunday night will range
from the middle 40s nonh 10 the middle 50s south . . Highs on Monday
should range from near 60 nonheast
to near 70 .rar·south. ·
Weather forecast:
Sunday... Mostly . cloudy with
showers and lhun~rslonns. mainly
in the afternoon. Some thunderstorms
may contain heavy rainfall. Highs 75
to 80. Southwest winds around 10
mph. Chance of rain 90 percent.

Regional

. lilly 21, ne7

�•

Commentary
jun:b~ 1!imes· ientbtel

,..AA

'

Sunday; May 25, 1897

Gephardt gaining on

front-ruone~

'Estabfisfut! in 1906

•

825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio
814 446 2342 • Fax: 446-3008
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-2156 • Fax: 992·2157

A Gannett Co. Newspaper
ROBERT L WINGETT
Publllher
Margaret Lehew
Controller

Hobart Wilson Jr.
Executive Editor

Letters to the editor
.:· Remember the veterans

.'

!:

Dear Editor,
As a studem of military history for
the past27 years, there are imponanl
things to know about the Vietnam
War. Even though Congress never
declared war, Vietnam· was a war in
everything but name. At one time,
1:; .' more than .500,000 Americans were
; : · there engaged in combat.
•·
America did not lose the Vietnam
, · . War. You cannot lose a war you do
•· not fight to win. The purpose of
:: : American forces in Vietnam was to
:. : suppon the South Vietnam govern·' · menland to keep it from !ailing to the
communists. In every major ground
:
combat between us and North Vietnamcse or Viet Cong forces the

:
•
:·
; ::
: · :.
:::

'.'

::
;:

l:

•·

::

After the Paris Peace Talks. the
rumor went around that ·the Nonh
Vietnamese leadership hod told Secrotary of State Henry Kissinger that
they wanted billions of dollars in aid
to help reb uild their country after the
bombing. when Kissinger told Prcsidont Ni xon this. he refused to allow
America lo be held hostage. When
Americans go over there to try a'nd
find their loved, ones. they arc constantly told how much it will cost to
do so.

carrying arms and ammuni~ion was

These American soldiers need to

highest amount

of · anti-aircrafl

Gephardt sent out another invite, for
yet another Washington fund-raiser.
Both events were advertised as
being for Gephardt's own re-election
campaign . But under .campaign .
finance laws, he is allowed to lransfe• money from a congressional campaign committee to a 'presidential
committee should he decide to seek
the Oval Office.
Gephardt's money-raising takes
on added ,significance when viewed
with recent steps he has taken to di stance himself from President Clin!on .
to whom Gore is inexorably bound.
Only last week. Gephardt moved
boldly to stake out political territory
to the left of the administration, territory which could prove key during
the primary season. ·
,!;iephardt attacked the balanced
budget and tax cut agreement reached
by President Clinton and Republican
leaders, saying the deal benefited the
rich and did not put the proper
emphasis on roads, bridges, .ed11cation or children's health.
Meanwhile Gore, . who once
seemed the disciplined and invulner-

Or prisoners of war.

missing in action

the defeat of the Tct offense, so many
VietCong were killed that as a light·
ing force they almost ceased to exist,
and so many Nonh Vietnamese soldiers were killed that Amen ca n
forces could have marched in occu~
pied Hanoi. but with Russia and China backing her to the hilt -- and as
one of their most important allies -this would have started World War
Ill.
When America mined ·HaipHong
Harbor ncar Hanoi, a Russia freighter

arti.llcry. ·
The total of American dead siands

By Jack Anderson
end Jan Moller
WASHINGTON •• With Vice
President Albert Gore temporarily
unable to exploit the fund-raising
power of White House incumbency,
his chief rival for the Democratic
presidential nomination is· quietly
shifting hi &gt; own money machine
int&lt;r high gear.
The cloud of the Democrats' money scandal continues to hang over the
administration. including Gore. Until
the Democrats· financial disarray has
been sorted out, it's politically imprudent for Gore, the ·"fund-raiser in
chief," to aggressively chase money
for his next campaign. ·
While Gore sits in the-penalty box,
his chief competitor is apparently
attempting to skate his way to a power play: Earlier this spring, House
Minority Leader Richard A.
Gephardt, D-Mo., sent out a solicitation to Washington influence peddlers
for an event that he billed as. his only
Washington fund-raising event of
the year. It didn 'I take him long to go
back on hi s word. One month l~ter,

at 57,000 plus and 250,000 came
home with serious wounds. Total
Nonh Vietnamese and Viet Cong
losses were one in ill ion plus. A loss
of 10 or more for every American
killed.
American d~feat was a political
defeat. General Giap, the commanding general of North Vietnam, said
that America would be defeated on its
own streets with televisi on bringing
into the living room American
fathers, husbands, sons and .brothers
being killed. Seeing 11 at the dinner
hour was too much for the American
people.
.
We were never told of the number
of enemy dead. There arc still 2.400

American forces always won. After

sunk. When they complained to Presidenl Nixon, he -told them that they
had no business being there in the
fi'rst place. It is one thing to lose a
ship and a small number of your sailors, it is another to have such an
important ally ot:cupied.
As.lhe war drew to a close. American air power had air supremacy ·
over both Nonh and South Vietnam.
The American Navy controlled the
coastline, the Nnnh Vietnamese Air
Force had been shot out of the sky.
For every American figh.tcr shot
down, 10 North Vtclnamcsc were
losl. Thousands of our helicopters
were shot down by the greatest and

\

· Cleveland's development
· now a model for Rust Belt

By JOHN AFFLECK
· Associated Press Writer
CLEVELAND - Oh. to he Cleveland!
Don 'I laugh. This city. which has grown acc ustomed to having the words
"comeback" and "rcnai~sancc" altached to its name in recent years. now
is getting used to·another label : role model.
Tourism oflicials say cities in the Great. Lake., region arc looking at Cleveland and its $7 billion in downtown development in the last decade as a blueprint for their &lt;Jwn makcovcrs.
.
Perhaps nowhere is this more true than in Buffalo. N.Y.. 200 miles up
the coast of Lake Eric from Cleveland.
" I think people in Buffalo really affiliate themselves with Cleveland."
s.aid Richard Geiger, president of the Buffalo Convention and Visitors Bureau:
" It's a Great Lake, Rust Bell community th~t has revitalized itself and
its economy. and is really on the upturn,.. .
Buffalo. home to the Cleveland lndians' top minor league afliliatc, sometimes seems like a smaller version of the Ohio ci ty. Both towns boomed in
the early 2Qth century with heavy industries. then went through a sharp
decline in the 1960s and '70s.
·
It's jllst that Cleveland managed to fight back. rebuilding its business base
· · and placing new auractions such as tho Jacobs Field baseball stadium and
basketball's Gund Arena downtown to tap .into its community spirit.
While Buffalo struggles to lind something to put on its waterfront to go
along with a new hockey arena- the old arena sitting unused a block away
- Cleveland's lake front has the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Oreal Lakes
. Science Center and the Flats entertainment district.
Cleveland's success seems to translate into a pi_nch of sophistication that
is somehow eludes BuiTalo . .
~
Example: When a Buffalo tourism group wanted to mal&lt;e a pitch to Cleve-.
'· landers, members hopped on a bus converted into an office and headed down
: the highway. The Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau of Greater Cleveland made
· :. a similar trip to Buffalo, but it was on the dinner-cruise ship the Nautica
·: Queen.
•
Buffalo Mayor Anthony Masiello said that pan of his city 's problem is •
: that it is simply poorer than Cleveland and has a w~aker business sector.
~ While Cleveland was home to seven companies on the ,latest Fonune 500
· list released' last month, Buffalo had none. .
·
But beyond that, Masiello said Cleveland has something else.
"The thing that really caught my eye about Cleveland isn't so much the
: physical," he said. "It's really the civic pride. It's the invisible to the eye,
· but very much needed:"
.
·
.
·
Glen Shumate, vi~e.president of tourism development for the Cleveland
: visitors burcau,-said he has heard similar com ments before. When the Nau• tica Queen sailed to Detroit a few years ago, visitors to the boai said they
&gt; envied Cleveland and clamored for suggestions on how 10 tum things around
: bac~ home.
.
That's the 'IIIIIC Detroit that is planning new, Urban baseball and football
• Sllldiums and is being hailed as a comeblck city.

".

able heir to the Democratic nomina· ciatcd with Gore. He has traveled
tion, has ken acting like a political extensively to recruit strong candi·
dates to challenge GOP House
klutz.
He badly bungled questions about incumbents and auempt to win back
the revelation that he had called con- a Democratic majority. He has
tributors from his White House schmoozed activists in key primary
office. Those revelations came after states. And he has gonc·about the gritGore fumbled questions about a ty business of raising money.
fund -raiser he attended at a Buddhist
It's a task at which Gephardt has
temple in California.
· become increasingly adept. AccordOther revelations from the ing to Federal Election Commission
Democrats' money scandal . showed data, Gephardt raised more than $3
Gore rubbing shoulders with . a million for his last congressional
cocaine trafticker and sundry unde- campaign. In. 1994 he spent $2.6 milsi rables . whom the Democratic . lion, though his Republican chalNational Committee failed to Iiller lenger spent less than $200,000.
OUI.
Gephardl's spokeswoman, Laura
Gore also stumbled during his trip Nichols. did not respond to our
to China. missing an opponunily to repeated requests for commen.t.send a strong sig·nal about Beijing 's
Of course Gore still has the upper
continued hulnan rights abuse s. hand, but he now appears far 'from
While House Speaker Newt Gingrich invincible. Making the most of his
put on a strong show of American temporary fund-raising advantage
resolve while visi(ing Beijing, Gore over Gore is one way for Gephardtto
·was seen clinking glasses with the enhance the perception that Gore
butcher of Tiananmcn Square.
docs not have an auiOmatic lock on
bephardt in rec~nl months has the nomination.
been focu sed, deliberate and disci·
And Gcphardt seems intent on
plined -- traits that were once asso- doing that. One of Gcphardt's fundraising invitations graciously informs
would-he gtiesls, "We can accept up
to $2.000 per individ~al. $4.000
from a joint chcd\ing account signed
by both people and $10,000 from ... .
PAC's."
Anoth!:r invitation announces that
Treasury secretary Robert Rubin will
he on hand for the ·event. Gcphardt
says he is engaged in an important
fund-raising effon hel'&lt;&gt;rc he must
di,sclosc his receipt totals through the
FEC on June 30.
fn other words. he wants to show
all his potential adversaries that he
has the power to pull in big bucks for
a presidential run.
"Your early suppon will allow me
to spend the necessary time in the
·months ahead helping my colleagues
and our challengers baulc for the
Majority and fight for our shared val·
ues," he says in the Iefier. "We need
only a few .scats to win back the
House from Newt Gingrich and his
followers in 1998!"
Increasi ngly, however. it appears
that the house Gephardt has his
sights set on is the White House.
Jack Anderson and Jan Moller
are wrilers for United Fealure
Syndkale, Inc.
·

~. u.y 25, UWI'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point P~aaant, WV

&lt;·Strickland briefs Eastern students on education's future
By BRIAN J . AI!ED
Tlm11 81nt1MI Shiff
. lf!BDSVIU.E - Students in
public schools ~ not too young to
'be involved in the political process.
~ That was the assessment of U.S .
.Sixth District Rep. Ted Strickland, D
- Lucasville, as he addressed students at Eastern High School Friday
&lt;~bout tssucs relating to public education-.
, Strickla"d was invited to speak to
:;evenlh and ninth graders, to discuss
jssues ~elating to federal funding of
education. However, Strickland also ·
took the opportunity to discuss his
· .: .views on the March ruling of the
Ohio Supreme Court, which deemed
Ohio's method of school funding
·
. unconstitutional. ·
; Strickland urged students to
· • . become familiar with the issue of
. . ,school funding equity, and to pay
close.anention to the debate now rag,. ing on the state level.
''1bis is !he most imponant devel; bpment in education 'to happen in at
. least 30 years, " Strickland said. "This
. · )'Viii have a lot to do will) your future,
. . and with the future of your children."
, ' "You're never too young to be
involved in citizenship," he said.
;•Express yourself."
, In response to questions relating to
~ow Eastern students ~an help stu, . dents in other areas, Strickland said
. ' he fell they should contact their
· state-leY!'Ilegislators, and him, about
what they fee!' their schools need.
Strickland said the federal gov-

for SI ,500 for a second yeat of col"That young man's story, to me, college or technical school.
eminent does not fund local schools,
With satisfactory academic lege, Strickl-nd said.
per sc. Instead, the federal govern- says that he had the ability, he just '
students
be eligible
"If you want to
to
and
ment provides funding for special hadn't had the resources. He needed
programs, such as Head Stan, Title I a chance, which is what we all
programs and other offerings for need."
students with special needs.
"Our young people are just as
The federal government also sman and cominined as young peoaddresses the needs of students in ple anywhere," Strickland said .
higher education, offering Pell Grants "There's no reason why the schools
for qualified studCnls; ~nd guaranteed here in southern Ohio should be so
student loans.
· different· from schools elsewhere."
According to Strickland, Ohio's
Fielding questions from the .students, Strickland said the lack of public school facilities rank 50th in
industry and .infrastructure in Meigs · the U.S., with the District of ColumCounty and surrounding communi- bia having the only facilities more
tics causes ·a stru~le for public lacking.
Again, Strickland used Vinton
school systems in the area to provide
curriculum and facilities that com- County's operation as an example of
pare to those in Ohio's more pros- the disparity in schools across the .
perous communities.
staie.
"It's not that our teachers aren't as
"The boys and girls in Vinton
good," S1rickland said. "They are. County.don't even have a cafeteria,"
But the schools in our area don't have Strickland said. "At lunch time, those
the financial resources to leach a lot who can afford to go down the street
of-the material thai needs to be taught and have a piece of pizza or a can of
so that our students can he competi - pop. But in some of the richer distive."
·
tricts, the cafeteria facilities would
May 19 thru June 7
Strickland used as an example a remind you of the dining rooms in
student at Vinton County· High tine, expensive hotels.
· "What's fair about 'that'/"
School who had apjllied 'to the U.S.
Ohio's largest heating and cooling dealer is
Acknowledging that the equity in
Naval Academy, but was unable to
open ·ror business in Gallipolis! 1
gain entry because much of the funding issue is a state issue, Strickmaterial on the entrance exam had land said that Congress is taking steps
letter frlln-t David White:
not been covered in his school pro- to ensure that students will have more
" It is a pleasure to now be a pari of the vibrant and growing triaccess to a college education.
gram.
area. We have served the area for years bur now being a local
Among the proposals on the table
Arrangements were made for the
will allow us to do a beller j ob of satisfying .l 'Clllr comfort
business
boy to auend a year of prep school, are tax breaks for families with chilneeds. Our company is ·lhe largest in this area and one of the
and accordi'ng to Strickland, "he now dren, low·interest loan programs and
largest residential companies in the United Stales. Sandra and I
plays football for Navy, gets good a program which would provide
$1,500
to
any
student
interested
in
started
the business 20 years ago in a drajiy warehouse in Athens.
grades anq is doing well."
attending a public university. junior
We now employ 60 and have over 12,000 cu:sroiners. Bei11g "big" is

W~ CAtLJ.HM 1M~ WI~DCf ~DS:/,

. ..

,

a disadvantage because we can hire the best service persom,
at the lowest prices and give you the finest personalized service.
We have so many customers because we have always dealt with
ev&lt;!ry&lt;me the way we would want/a be treated. Most of our new
custonters come from referrals of our present customers, 'We are
!dedicated to honesty in our dealings and·excellence ·in our
lw-vic·e.S'top in and meet u:s all!

•

1102
Jackson Pike
.

numhcr' ""t in hallie:
Revolutionary War -- 25.324
Civil War-- 4YX ..l32
.
World War I -- 116.70H
Wqrld War II -- 407.316
Korean War -- 54.246
Vielqam W~r -- 5H.655.
Casualties go far heyond those
who died when we rcmcmhcrcd
those wounded hnth in hody· and
spirit.

·These ,who gave that last full
measure of ·dcvotion· did so in the
name of freed om. ·for their family
and friends . and for others they

and Grand

'

;I

.

unfair. They complain that the mili - sex. Fm&gt;ling around with a couple of
tary has hccn overly moralistic 10 its · guys on a desolate air base in Nonh
treatment of the 26-year-old Air Dakota is not the crime that threatens
Force Academy graduate. Instead or to end llcr military career. She's not
being court-manialcd. they argued. hcing drummed out of the Air Force
Ainn -should he given an honnrahle because she had two affairs: What
discharge.
threatens her career is this: when
They're wrong.
ordered to end nne of the relationAs hard as·it is for some people to ships. she didn 't. When asked about
·
understand. Flinn viola!Cd military · them, she lied.
law and then lied about doing so. .
Any branch of the military that
Given the prudishness of two or the tolerates someone who refuses to ftilrules in question - adultery and frat - )ow lawful orders is couning a cripernil.alion - its easy for some to dis- piing blcakdown of discipline. More
miss the charges against her. But to imponant, &lt;ifliccrs who lie to their
do so is to ignore the more troubling superiors and disobey orders in times
matter of her deceit and re.fusal-lo·fof;oc of peace canimt he depended upon in
low an order. · --- · times of war. ·
" This is an issue about an officer
If this sounds like a rather harsh
entrusted to ny nuclear weapons judgmcnttllat's bctausc it is meant to
who disobeyed ~n order, who lied," be. Do we r:cally want someone
Gen. Ronald Fogelman, the Air Force piloting a B-S2 1\)adcd with nuclear.
chief of staff, said to Harkin~ during ~capons who thinks. it's all right io
ptck and choose whtch orders they
a Senate hearing earlier this week.
A,nd that's the point
wtll obey? Do we ~ant to entrust the
Ainn's case is not simply about defense of thts natton,llf' the control

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of nuclear weapons In su~h a free
spiriL'!
I don 'I think so.
Lou and Harkin sec Flinn's ca.'c '~-'
·one in which a female nlliccr is heing
held to a higher standard than male
ofliccrs whn .commit adultery or
have sexual contacr with enlisted per·
sonncl.
Again, they' re wrong. .
With Flinn it's not the crime but
her aucmpt to cover it up that cries
out for punishment, .Her defenders
complain that she should have been
counseled or transferred 'to· another
ha.'c when her sexual misconduct wa.'
discovered. They say $he's thc 'victim
of a double standard. Thai's a plea for
mercy, not·a defense of her conduct.
Fll[ what me did, Flinn., wants to
Jct off scot free. Instead of a courtmania!,. she's dcinandina tn be
releued from the Air Fcnc with an
honorable.discharge: That wbukl be
a serious mistalu:. Kcny A inn broke
the rules and yiolllled her 01th

AM••ICAN"

•a.•CTJIIC

with the congreesman are, from .Jell, Ashley
Hager, Aaron Schaekel, Sherri Myer1, Rachael
Lees and Chris Lyons.
·

VISITS STUDENTS- U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland
vl•ltec:l wllh Ea.tern aevenlh and ninth graders
Friday to discuss the future of ec:l~lon. Pictured

Flinn's sins are more·than adultery
By DeWAYNE WICKHAM
Gannett News Service ·
WASHINGTON -'it's not often
lhai Tom Harkin and Trent Lou end
up on the same side of.an issue. On
most matters of policy or public interest; Iowa's liberal J)emocratic senator and the conservil!ive 'Republican
from Mississippi usually knock
head s.
But nqt in the case of Lt. Kelly
Flinn.
·
The Air Force's first female B· 52
pilot, Flinn became the subject of
public debate - and political wran,gling - when she was accused of
several violations of military law
resulting from .her _sexual trysts with
a married civilian and a_iillgle enlisted man~Ainn was charged with making a
false statement to investigators, disobeying a lawful order, adultery,
fr;uernization with an enlisted person
and conduct unbecoming an officer.
Harkin and Lou think this is

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never knew. They preserved certain also when we· look at the cost tp dies, welfare, hcnclits; all from our.
qualities of character that were maintain it. John Quincy Adams own money. our children's money.
opposed to serfdom or servitude to knew this when he said: "Posterity : and our children's .children's money.
human master~: rcprcscntallon in the you will never know how much it The rules, regulations . and additionmaking of laws to live by: freedom has cost, my generation to preserve al taxes come along' as pan of the
to pursue a career of choice: free - your freedom . I· hope you wi II make package.
dom to support strong family values. the most of it."
The real irony of all this is that
freedom of sel f-reliance . These were
John Adams addressed the sub- ·the track we arc on is Inking us backnohlc causes. wonh the sacrifice, ject of heing ahlc to govern one's wards. Most polls show this to be
because they knew what the alterna - self when he said: "We have no gov- · the view of most Americans, ret
tive would be.
crnmcnt anncd ~ith pow~r capahlc . everywhere we look more governWhen we look at the track we arc . &lt;if contcndi ng with human pnssions. tncnt programs arc being proposed.
now on we sec a totally different unhndled by morality and religion. Docs dependency. and the desire 10
picture. Unclcqed officials arc now Avarice, amhition. revenge . or gal- he chained, have such u grip on us
making laws I(Jr us to live hy. Many lantry. would break the strongest that we can not hreak the bonds'! We
court decisions and some executive c.:on.Js or our Cnnslitulinn as a whale arc not designed to 'he sert,, we arc
orders have been given as though goes through a net. Our Constitution · designed to be free .
th~y have the for(;c of law. yet law
was made only for a mural and reliWhy arc. we exchanging the valmaking is the sole jurisdiction of the gious people. It is wholly inadequate ues of freedom , virtue. and self-'
Congress and Lcgislatun~s .
!&lt;I the government of any other.
reliance fur the honda~c of serfdom?
ThCI freedom In follnw a t:arcer of
Bcnja_min Franklin seemed to We should know that the borrower is
choice in line With our ahilitic' and understand human nall.1h! when he slave to the lender. -and suon that
efforts will he seriously hampered if said: "Only_ a virtuous people :ire lender .will exact his price.
.
current government planning is capahlc of freedom . As nations
Waken up. America. Time is runimplemented . Can you imagine heuomc corrupl af!d vicious. they ning out. The warning signs arc all
many midJic-st:hmllcrs ._nowing have more need of maslcrs ."
around. This Memorial Day we need
what they want to do Y(ith their liiC'.'
And still there arc a lot of folk to consider how future t!Cncratinns
This planning likewise will make today who think that one set of val - will r.emcmhor us. Will they wish to
parents irrele vant to families, except ues is us good as another.
honor us. or will they ask:' "What
a:-: providers ~o the pro~c ss. The stUtc
Was lint Patrick Henry. that were you doing when America was
will raise the children. Values will dynamic Christian. a prophet to our in crisis'' Why didn't y_ou prnfit lrom
be whatever seems apprupriale at lime when he s;\id: "The Constitu- history and help save us from
IHc time. there hcing nothin g tion is not UIJ instrument for govern-, hondagc'!"
.ahsolutc.
mcnt to restrain the people, it is an
How will we be rcmemherCd '!
Incentives t&lt;&gt; he self-reliant will instrument for the people to restrain . TI'!C choice is ours, for a little while.
disappear and today's . dependcm:y lhc government -- lest il come 10
Bob Weedy is a special corre·
class .will halloon to •izcs like the · dominate nur lives and intc"rcsl~i."
spondenl for the Sunday Times·
socialist stales. Serfdom will he the
So. on thi s spiral staircase. our Senlinel
rule for the day.
freedoms. lives and interests arc
Freedom comes at a &lt;high price cxchangcJ for grants, loans. suhsi-

you're willing to study hard, you'll be
able tq go. I really helicve that."
Strickland said. '

David White Services' •

-miS IS~. "e CAA fl~ ro~ ~as Cf~N6Uir~A ~..,

be brought home once and for all. It
is a nati onal insult to· all of us that
they arc still over there. either in an
.
unmarked grave or in some hc)l hole By BOB WEEDY
When we ha ve a memorial to a
.prisoner camp. I don't care ·how
many billions it takes. do it and do it
::--.. person
or an
now.
we arc
event
The Vietnam veterans did not
implying that this
question their orders, they went to an
1s someone or
awful place and fou ght in a terrible
some event that is
war. T)lcy arc itkc all who have
worthy of honor.
se rved America. tru e · American
worthy of hcing
heroes each and every bnc of them. I
, rcmcmhc rcd .
dedicate this leiter In all Vietnam vetGreat leaders of
' our country have
cnins of Meigs County and cspccially to a Vietnam veteran in the Oh Kan hccn so honored . Anniversaries of
Coin Club. one who served and hi ston L'a l cvcnb; arc rcmcmhcrcd
yearly. Sacnftccs of a host of mdi served. so very we: II .
David Edwards, vtduals arc collectively rcmcmJxlrcd
Pomeroy on Memorial Dew
Veterans of past wars who made
the supreme sacrifit:c lo nhtain frcc dmn or to ~:ontinuc our oplion nf
freedom have a special place or
honor. We all may have relatives or

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Nation/World

.

Welfare limit advocate may. support
extension of benefits to five years

remembering thoH who fought for their coun·
try. Mike Floccarl, above, puts a flag on the
grave of Ed Evans aa Ron Smith, Clbmmander,
Carl Searles, Bob Gilmore; Joe Andreoni, Henry Clatworthy, Charles Tate and Norman Van
Meter look on.

IN REMEMBRANCE ....: Following a tradition
of ·many yeara, llglonnall'ls of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 went from cemetery to cemetery In
· · Middleport Fridlly eftemoon to place flags on
• · the graves of veterans. About 500 graves were
m"rked with flags for Memorial Day, a time for

COLUMBUS (AP)- The sponsor of a welfare reform bill who
fought for a three-year benefit limit
is inching toward extending the liiJI·
it to five, a news~r reported.
Rep. Joan Lawrence, a suburban
Columbus Republican who chairs the
committee reviewing the. bill, said
some caucus members want the limit expanded to match ll)e five-year
federal limit, The (Cleveland) Plain
Dealer reported Saturday. ·
The state's cum:ntlimit for receiving welf~e benefits is three years
over a five-year period. Democrats
from both the House and Senate have
opposed the shortened limit, threatening the·bill's passage.
Ms. Lawrence said the issue has
not been decided. The-committee is
scheduled to vote on the bill this
week.
The time limit lias been the
b!ggest stumbling block for the bill,
which also would require that people
work to continue .rccciving benefits.
Earlier this month the Galena

County Court
cases ended Gallia native
POMEROY - The following

lawmaker was quoted as saying the
time limit would not be changed. Ms.
Lawrence said she would work with
opponents to deal with some of their .
concerns, but not delete the threeyear limit. .
Cheryl Burchard, a spokeswoman
for House Speaker JoAnn Davidson,
said there have been mixed feelings
within the GOP caucus.
· Lawmakers are considering an
alternative that would allow a person
to receive cash benefits for three
years in any five-year period, fol lowed by aitother two years of eligi·
bility, the newspaper reported.
Ron Rhodes, a spokesman for the.
Department of Human Services, said
department Director Arnold Tomp·

cases were resolved last Wednesday
in the Meigs County Court of Judge
Patrick H. O'Brien.
· RUTI..AND- Warren Black, 73 , Rutland, died Friday, May 23, 1997 in
Fined were: Dale J, Herman, MidGALLIPOLIS - State Highway
the Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Cleve.land.
dleport, domestic violence, costs, 30 Patrol Trooper Allan L. Wheeler, an
. Born Sepl. 13, 1923 in Middleport, he was a retired shop foreman for days jail suspended to one day, one
investigator working in the patrol's
-~win )-1. Davis &amp; So.n Bus Garage in Danville. ·
.
year probation: Guy Morris, Rutland, Columbus district, has been promot· :! He was a disabled U.S. AITIIy veteran of World War II, a graduate of Rut- driving under the influence, $1 ,000 ed to sergeant and will assume new
land High School and a member of the Rutland American Legion . He was . plus costs. six months jail suspended duties as assistant commander of the
a charter member of the Rutland Church of the Nazarene, and a former to 30 days, two-year operator's New Philadelphia, post. said Col.
employee of the Ford garage in Middleport.
·
license suspension, two years proba- Kenneth B. Marshall, th~ patrol
Surviving are his wife of 54 years , Esther Schoppert Black of Rutland; tion, 180-day vehicle immobilization; superintendent.
his parents, Burdell and Effie Black of Pomeroy;_four sons, Jerry (Sharon) · driving under financial responsibiliWheeler, originally from Gallipo·
., Black of Rut.land. Ronnie (Barbara) Black of Cheshire. Roger Black and ty action suspension, $I 50 plus costs,
lis, joined the patrol in July 1979 as
fiance, Sharon Werry, of Rutland, and Lynn (Joyce) Black of New Haven, six months jail suspended to 30 days . a cadet dispatcher at Gallipolis. He
• w:va.;three daughters, Debi (Mike) Gilinore ofRutlan'd, Brynda (Randy) · concurrent with DUI, two years pro- entered training in Jan.uary 1980 at
· Faulk of Danville, and Lynda (Bruce) Stewart of Orient; 19 grandchildren bation: Cynthia A. Klein. _Pomeroy. the patrol academy and received his
_ and II great-grandchildren; a sister. Emogene (Robert) DeWeese of Flori- passing bad checks, $25 plus costs,
commission the following 'May.
da; two sisters-in-law. Connie Black of Rutland, and Goldie Black of Ray; restitution:
His first a.signment was at Gal. two stepbrothers, Dale (Patty) Arnold of Snowville. and Stacy (Marcia)
Linda M. Buckley, Middleport, lipolis, where he served until trans··Arnold of Racine; ll'/0 stepsisters, Ruby (Joe) Jones of Mason, W.Va. , and passing bad checks. three counts. $25. ferring to the patrol's general headi . Alice (Jim) Bowling of Jackson: a stepsister-in-law, Donna Arnold of Mason;
plus costs each, restitution; Shawn P. quarters in Colum.bus as an investi·
!·.. and several nieces and nephews.
·
Price. Ashville, passing bad checks. gator in Decembcr.I98H.
He was preceded in death by his mother. Helen Howell Black; two -broth· $25 plus costs, restitution; Michele R.
He also served as a pilot in the
v·ers, Robert Black and William Black; and a stepbrother, Lindburgh Arnold. Dickerson. Pomeroy, .passing bad patrol's aviation section before
.· Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday in the Rutland Church of the Nazarene. checks, $25 plus ·costs. restitution: receiving his current assignment as a
. .with the Rev. Samuel Bayse. the Rev. Charles Swigger and the Rev. Lloyd Shawn M. Stobart, Racine, DUI, Columbus district investigator in
, .Grimm officialing. Burial will be in Miles Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may $850 plus costs, 10 days jail sus- March 1992.
call at the Middleport Chapel of the Fisher Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7-9 pended to three days, 90-day OL susIn 1982, Wheeler received the
; .. p.m. Monday, and at the church on Tuesday two hours prior to the services. pension. two years probation, jail and
patrol superintendent's Citation of
$550 suspended upon completion of Merit for disarming and capturing a
residential treatment program; dri- man who had just robbed a bank in
ving under suspension, $100 plus Meigs County.
:''
two years probation , 10 days
costs,
·· ALBANY.- Mildred Staneart. 74, Albany, died Thursdar, May 22, 1997
Wheeler graduated from Gallia
jail
suspended
to three, days concur- Academy Hig"',School in 19711 and
'-in the Veterans Memorial Hospital Extended Care. Unit in Pomeroy. .
rent:
o • Born Oct. 29, 1n2 in Gallipolis, daughter of the late Wilbur and Bertha
served in the U.S. Army before joinShawn L. Fife. Pomcmy. speed. ing the patrol. He and his wife; TerIJ'hompson Downey, she was retired from the Ohio University Housekeep$30 pluscosts; Kent A. Varney, Long ri, currently reside in Gmvc City. He
"·ihg Department.
She was a member ofthe Albany Orderof Eastern Star 558 and the Albany Bottom, DUI, 10 days jail suspend- has a son, Chad,. l9.
ed to three days. $800 plus costs, 90' Veterans of Foreign Wars Ladies f:lu&gt;~i.li~ry 9893 ..
... Surviving are three daughters. Darla (Eugene) Faccmyer of Albany, Lin- · day OL suspension~ two years pro•da Kittle and special friend, Ben Andrews, of El Paso, Texas. and Tere§:l R~i­ batidn; driving under suspension.
gler of Kokomo, Ind.; three stepdaughters, Marilyn G. Allen of Zanesville. . $,150 plus costs, 30 days jail sus· Paula Jean (Larry) Pickens of Pomeroy, and J,Jycc (Joe) Sheline ofMcAnhur: pended 10 five days concurrent, two
' five grandchildren. IO 'stepgrandchildrcn .- a great-grandchild and 17 step- years probation; left of center, costs
only; disorderly conduct, $100 plus
. great-grandchildren; a sister, Erma Carsey of Athens: and several nieces and
costs; resisting arrest, $I 00 pi us
''nephews.
costs, I Q days jail suspe~ded to five
' She was also preceded in death by her husband. Cecil Dale Staneart. -in
days concurrent; posscssi'on, $50
· 1996: live brothers, Wi IIi am, Paul . Perry. )ohn and Chester Vernon Downey;
plus costs: open container. $50 plus
live sisters. Crystal Clark. Edith Bowles. Marie Dailey, Glenna Manley and
Frances -Elizabeth Downey.: two half-brothers. Owen and Dan Downey: an.d costs; Greg E. Huffman. Shade.
·a half-sister. Mary Boho.
domestic violence. 'costs. one ·year
Services will be I p.m. Monday in .the aigony-Jordan Funeral Home.
probation, restraining order issued, I0
}\!tJany. with the Rev. Denzil Wright ofliciating. Burial will .be in the Bean
days jail suspended to two days;
Cemetery. Friends may call a~. the· funeral ht&gt;mc from.3 -5 and 7-9 p.m. · Michelle R. Trussell, Long Bot~umlay.
tom, assault, costs, two years probation. six months jail suspended to
three days; domestic violence, costs,
two years probation, six months jail
suspended to three days; .resisting
MIDDLE~RT - Beulah E. Strauss. R6. Middleport, died Thursday, arrest. costs. two years probation, 90
May 22. 1997 at her residence .
days jail suspended to three days conBorn Nov. 5, 1910 in Middleport. daughll:r of the late Walter and Ella current; disorderly conduct, costs
Pfarr
. she was a member of the Heath United Methodist Church. the only : Allan Halliday. Dexter, cruelty
Amateur Garden Club and th.e Litcr- tn animals, $1.000-s'Uspendcd, costs,
.,1Ty Club.
.
30 days jail suspended. two years
She wa~ a retired secretary and probation:
assistant health commissioner nf
David A. Darst, Cheshire, expired
Meigs County. · ' ·
,CDL. $20 plus costs: scat belt, $25
Surviving arc her husband : plus costs: Joe Conley. Portland, disArthur Strauss of Middleport: nnd orderly while intoxicated, $100 sustwo special friends. Dave and Cherie pended to $35 plus costs, six months
Sec of Middleport.
probation: Rohert · L. Writescl.
. · Services will.- be II a.m. Tues- Racine. speed. $45 plus custs; Rob!:rt ·
day in the Middleport Chapel of the Marcirokn. P-:&gt;meroy. littering costs.
Fisher Funeral Home. with the Rev.
Vcrnag.aye · Sullivan and the Rev.
.
. Dmtl roles_ . .
Roland Wildnwn officiating. Bun a! . In 1\140. m hiS hrst talkmg ptcturc.
Beulah ~- Strauss
will be in the Beech Grove Cemetery. Char he Chaphn . played both the
to;Pomcr0 ,y: Friends may call at the funcrol home from 6-H p.m. Sunday.
Tramp and a Hitler ligure in "The

:. warren Black

'"Mildred Staneart ·

·:· By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aero1pace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. ~NASA astronaut' ·Jerr-Y Linenger
: returned to a flowery welcome Sat1 urday after four difficult and some&amp; times dangerous months aboand Rus- ·
: sia's aging spaC'e station Mir.
~pace shuttle Atlantis brought '
:
• Linenger back to Earth, swerving on
: the gusty runway before rolling to a
: safe stop. Touchdown was delayed 1: 112 hours by low clouds.
:
"Feeling great and good to be
• : home," Linenger said.
•
He felt even prouder once he
: stood, demonstrating that orbital
: exercise indeed pays off. ·
:
NASA chief Daniel Goldin greet: ed Linenger with a dozen yellow and
: purple tulips, which the astronaut
: promptly gave to his pregnant wife.
~ Uncnger had.requested the nowcrs as
.,a present for wife Kathryn, whom he
.._hadn't seen since January.
·
:
Goldin also gave Linengcr a gift
: tor the astronaut's 18-month-old son,
: a teddy bear dressed in a NASA T: shirt, and a rattle for the baby due in
• late June.
"He couldn't go to a store out in
t space ... they're really his presents,
: they ' re not mine," Goldin explained.
:
Linenger's Mir mission was, by
: far, the toughest space station stint
. .
; ever for an American.
:
The · 42'year-old doctor almost
: had to evacuate the 11 -year-old out·
: post in February because of a lire. He
~ was forced to rely on an unreliable
• backup system · to produce oxygen
: after both main gene..tors broke .in
: March. And he had to endure tern·
: peratures in the 90s. high humidity
: and antifreeze fumes in April because

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Colonial Road
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* Prize Drawings
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' ••••IJ .... 1\lntlty, 1:30 ......:t:OO , ••
. Tu,.U,, 1130 .... ,•7:00, ~\
,. Wed•estlly,&amp; Frklly, laG ,.&amp;·12 ••••

.••,.,,. ....

F.linn begs in vain for ~econd
chance to serve in Air Force ·

of gravity and to help him stand upon
of cooling-system leaks.
Goldin praised Linenger for the landing, His rehabilitation will con"integrity and.extreme courage" he tinue for the next month.
Researchers prefer that returning
exhibited aboard Mir. Even the head .
of the Russian Space Agency, Yuri long-term space travelers remain on
Koptev, was impressed, compli- . their backs to preserve the body's By HELEN O'NEILL
. Air Force, saying, "I still hope, deep privately said she got oil' lightly. They
m"nting the National Aeronautics and state of weightlessness as long as AP National Writer
down inside, that there may be some point to other officers of the same.
MINOT AIR FORCE Bi\SJ:l, bencr solution to my case. for both rank stationed at the same ba.&lt;e who
Space Administration for choosing possible, but acknowledge it's hard to
control gung-ho astronauts.
N.D. -First Lt. Kelly Flinn apolo, myself and the Air Force."
"people with the right stuff."
have gone to prison for similnr ·
Although there was no official
· It's also a safety issue; an astro- gized to the Air Force and begged for
But the future for the 26-year-old offenses. Flinn faced up to nine
word on whether he walked from naut easily could stumble and break a second chance in her ·resignaJion first lieutenant is far from bleak. Her yean; and six months in prison.
Atlantis or had to be carried on; com· a space-brittle bone.
letter made public Friday, saying "it celebrity status is already attracting
In announcing her decision .to
Frank Culbertson, director of feels like pan of me has died."
mander Charles .Precourt observed
talk ot book deals and movies. Her deny an honorable discharge mill give
· Lincnger was " up and about." And NASA's shuttlc,Mir program, said he
Flinn, the nation's .first and only lawyer, Frank Spinner, says Flinn has Flinn a general discharge, Widnall
NASA photographs taken shortly c~nsidcrs Atlantis' ,nine~day fe!"Y female B-52 pilot. will leave in a gen- received offers to ny for commercial said Flinn's "lack of integrity," and
after lan!ling showed Linenger stand- fltght and Ltnenger s M1r mtsston . eral discharge rather . than face a airlines.
her "disohQdicncc to orders" were .
ing·inside the crew transporter. sim- complete succeslles regardless ~f court-martial on charges of adultery,
more
serious· than·. the adultery ·
"What we really would haVj: preilar to an airport people-mover. that how Lmcngcr extted. Even the Mtr lying and disobedience.
.
.
ferred W!IS .for·the Air Force to wake charges.
pulled up to Atlantis.
"More than anything, I wish that up and understand what the American
hrc taught NASA valuable lessons
"It is primarily those allegations
After 132 days in space, the sec- for the international space sta(i~n to you would accept my apology and public understood --' that the Air that made -nn honorable discharge
ond-longest mission by an American. be butlt starling next yea_r, he satd.
give me a ~ccond chance." she )~'rote Force took cKccssivc action in this . unacceptable," Wid nail said.
Linenger returned with weaker mus.
Bcstdes ptcktng up Lmenger, the in the May 19lcttcr to Air Force Sec- case," Spinner said this morning on . · The White House said Friday thai
cles and bones than when he took off seven-member shuttle crew left retai'y Sheila Widnall.
President Clinton felt the Air Force
NBC's "Today" show. ·
for Miron Jan. 12. He exercised like · behind on Mira new oxygen gener"This is tbe hardest decision I
"They could have l!ivcn her a appropriately dealt with the mauq. ·
mad in orbit- on Earth, he's a triath- ator and crucial repair equipment as have made in may lire and it feels like nonjudicial punishment and looked Presidential .spokesman Milc.c
lctc -to lessen the crushing effects well as another astronaut.
part of me h!IS died," she wrote. "I · for a way to put her hack in the cock- McCurry told reporters that the Penjust want the chance to reconcile this pit, which is really where she should tagon kept the White House updated
situation and perhaps have the oppor· be," he said.
on the cao;e, but denied that Clinton
tunity to redeem myself in the eyes
Flinn ha.• been a "baron" - the or his aides inllucnccd the dccisiuh.
ofthc Air Force.''
Widnall's annnunL-cmcnt cappcd.a
nickname o(the 23nd bomb squadron
She said she "fell deeply in love proudly cmbo~sed in yellow on the . week of political posturing and ncgu·
with a man who led me down this tiJ!ll of the B-52 jeL•. She said it was ·tiations aimed at allowing both sides
path of self-destruction and career all she ever wanted to be.
to avoid the embarrassing srectaclc
destruction" and \Ifill sull'cr for it forof
a coort-martial that could take nn .
After
the
decision
Thursday.
she
: By ANWAR FARUQI
Ali Khamcnci. issued a brief state- Asghar Tehrani passed out sweets- ever.
the
qualities of a soap opera.
.
wasn't
talking.
.
a traditional form of' celebration·: J',aaoclatecl Prass Writer
ment endorsing Khatami~ victory.
"Madam. the thought of le~ving
In
tearful
television
interviews,
, "She's physically and emotional·
The number of votes cast wn' the and said he hadn't slept all night wait- the Air Force, never to .set foot upon
: · TEHRAN, Iran - A moderate
ly
exhau.•tcd." her brother, DOn Flinn Flinn had insisted she would go
:cleric :with wide support among the highcs~incc the 1979 Islamic rcvu- ing for the results.
another base. never to stand at attcn·
throo!lh with a cnurHnurtial if 'sl\c
"This is a.blessed day. I am hap- tion as the Colors pas.' by, never to Jr., said at a Thursilay nil!hl news
: young has won Iran's presidential lution. In 1981, 16.8 million people
.was offered anything less than.
conference
at
the
base.
"She's
.been
• election, state radio and television voted in presidential elections won by PY not only because Mr. Khatami will wear the wings of an Air Force pilot
honorable discharge. It was her
become the next president. but also is the cause of my relentless tears, a · abused in her rclatii&gt;nship. She's dream to lly bombe.r jets. shC said,
:announced Saturday. The victory by Khamcnci.
lice~ abused· in the system."
·: former culture minister Mohammad .
Friday's election was a showdown because our votes arc heing tallied punishment that I will live with tbe
While her family la.•hcd out at the and she would fi!lht for her dream.,
. : Khatami is likely to set back hard-lin- . between hard, line and moderate rae- correctly.'' he said.
.
But the rressure mnuntcll a.' intimilitary and at the man they say t&lt;K&gt;k
Mohammad Razavi, the owner of rest of my life."
.: cl'!i' efforts to impose stricter Ml!slim iions inside the ruling Muslim dcrFlinn begs for another chance. to advantage of Flinn, Air Force brass mate details about her private.. lite
: social codes.
·
gy. Many Iranians had suspected that a publishing house in Tehran, said he live out her dream of llyi_ng for the
were revealed.
:
Khatami won 20.7 million votes the conservative clergy backing voted for Khatami " because of his
•of the 29.7 million votes cast in Fri- Natcq-Nouri would do everything gnnd work .in the past.~·
·:When he was minister of culture
: day's election. radio and TV said.
possible to.s_top a victory by Khatawe
had few problems with things like
:
Ali Akbar Natcq-Nouri. his con- mi.
·
: scrvative challenger who con~cded
Senior.' intlucntial clerics. who ccnsors~ip. Now we have many.''
: defeat earlier Satunday. won 7.2 mil- have-considerable sway i&gt;vcr .lran's s:)id RUlavi: 31.
Khatttmi 's suppurtcrs hope he will
: lion vorcs. Two other candidates deeply religious ·population. had
bring
a more rc!a.cd interpretation nf
~ who ran won less than a million voles
to vote for
. declared it forbidden
.
A LifETIME
Islam
tn the presidency. Khatami
"each.
· Khatami. Khamcnei had tacitly slip''
GlFI'
:.: Khatami succeeds Hashemi Raf- rortcd Nnteq-Nouri. the country's enlivened lriulian cinema and litemlure during his II years as culture
: sanjani. who steps down in August powerful parliament speaker.
:after two four-year terms.
No one expects Khatami to bring minister. bt.it he was forced out in
19\12 by Nateq-Nuuri 's hard-liners.
: Iran's supreme leader. Ayatollah fundamental changes to Iran's !&lt;&gt;reign
•
who
accused him of being ton per~
. policy or clergy-dominated po liti ~s.
:il&lt;aczynski defense but his victory would be a setback for missive. ..
•
I" d
hard-line mullahs who have ruled
::Claims agents te ' since the 19791slamic revolution and
:lo search his cabin who want stricter enforcement of the
Muslim code that bans everything .
1 j. ·
, I I '.
Fn.Crosi
: · SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) from dating 10 satellite TV dishes.
1
'
I
I
·
I
1
·'
:Attempting to suppress potentially
Outside a groccry_storc in western
: damaging evidence against the Tehran. ecstatic proprietor Haj
IIIII Prices
:unabomber suspect, defense attor:OCY• Claim authorities created tJM:
lojllusion that Theodore Kaczynski
:was linked to the deadly blasts so·
:titey could search his isolated Mori&amp;
:)ana cabin. · ·
: The defense claims the FBI's
:1Cqucst for a search warrant distort· ·.
;td stau:mcnts from Kaczynski's rcl'tltives and witnesses. misinterpreted
'
Member NfW Yon~ StOCk EathlnOfJ
Mombvr
SIPC
.
::ONA evidence and .drew incorrect
:Comparisons from Writing analyses_of
OFFERING:
..
~zynski and the Uilabomber.
•Sioel!s
: Kaczynski. SS, a math pi'Qfcssor
.Corporate Bonds
)umcd hermit, faces a 10-count fed•U.S. Treasury .Securities
:J:ral indictment in connection with ·
ofour explosions that killed two peo•Mutual Funds
1 oz. ..,.,.
' ~le and maimed two others. He could
•luured 'lltx·Fl'ft
lace the death penaltY, if.convic_tcd . .
Munklpal Bonds
; Kaczynski's
court·appotntcd
•Insured Money Market
Zlcfense lawyel'!i, Quin Denvir and
2udy Clarke, in March ask~ that cviACcounts
.clice seized from the ~abtn be sup·
•IRA's
p-essCd. A hearing on the motion was
Contact:
Engraving Available
lleld Friday.
·
: "They did put in piles of Jrivial
Jay Caldwell
tDcts that were meant to seduce the
J_ohn Miller
lnct9:r." Den vir told U.S. District
llf'Hshrlelll Ex~euJi.-er
~dge Garland Burrell Jr.· "They
fied to create an illusion of probable
Daily9·5
·441 Second AYenue
Comer 2ndlncl
Sta.
pute."
.
.
Frlday9-8
Gallpolls, OH. 001
Galllpolla, Ohio
• The defense wants to bar docu·
FrtePMidna
itents and dev~ seized ftpm the
FrteOIII
.
(614)·
446-2ll5
hmp¢ tabin near Uncoln, Mont.,
fi'II90Dey
UGO 487·2129
~re ' KJI:zyna~i
~ted lilt

GIFTS FOR.THE GRfiD

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

OHIO
• · Pick 3: 3-6-4
Pick 4: 2· 1· 7-2 .
Buckeye .5: 10.13-19-20-24
One ticket matching all five num·
rs drawn in Friday niglit's 'But?keye
drawing is worth $1 OO,OQ.O, the
hio Louery s~id. · . ·
·
·
'ThC winning ticket was purcttased
.i 't Tag Market in Shaw.nee Hills.
: Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
370.199.
.
•
!,j The jackpot for Saturday's Super
~tto drawing was $16 million.

WEST VIRGINIA
~ Daily 3: 3-8-2
C: Daily 4: 4-3-8-9
.;. Cash25: 1-9-16-18-23-24
••

FAMILY PRACTICE

BACK ON EARTH - STS-84 '-'lsslon Specialist Carloa Noriega, left, spoke with Elene Kondakova of Moscow and NASA
Administrator Dan Goldin near the space shuttle Atlantis after its
landing Saturday at the Kennedy Space Center. (AP)

REDUCED .

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

'

.

..

Great Di~tutnr. ''

The Associated Press
.The following numbers were
!;selected in Friday's Ohio and West ·
Virginia lotteries:

.

PERFECT GRADUATION GIFT

Sunday,_. May 25th, l-5

,.
numbers

•

li"

.

If you are unable to attend .
feel fre~ to come by another day.

'·

tmore relaxed atmosphere to Iran

Please Join Us...

E. Strauss

··

! Cleric~s ·vi-c tory expected to bring

Gallipolis. Ohio

.

IN:"

'

OPEN HOUSE
.

case

I

MONDAY, MAY 26, 1997

1229 Neighborhood Road

ed it was time for action, to see ammonium nitrate fertili'zer. but did·
"blood flow on the streets 'of Amer- n 't provide any witnesses who said
DENVER - The 'defense in the . ica."
they saw McVeigh buy tbe fenilizcr.
Oklahoma City bombing trial sees ihe
In 18 days of testimony, the gov- · ·An FBI acent testified that he found
government's case as a five-legged e"!""ent tried to stningthen iu
by · McVeish's finge_rprints on a Tertili~ - .
table -lcnock doWI1 ·one leg and the ehminating connicling eyewitnesses . cr recetpt, wh1ch was found on
ta~le stands, two and the table wob- whO claimed they saw a Ryder
Nichols' h~~· where McVeigh was
bles, three and the table falls down. outside a Kans!IS motel the day a frequent vtsttor.
, .. . . ,
Defense attorney Stephen Jones before McVeigh rented the truck, and
The FBI a~so admttt~d 11 d1dn t
began chopqing away at the weakest FBI lab technicians who were criti· find· McVetgh s fingerprtnts on the
table legs last week with testimony cized in an FBI repon.
·
Ryder truck.rental agreement. or the
from a fast-food delivery man who
11le government earlier acknowl- Ryder truck key they .fo_und m .an
delivered food to a motel room rent- edged problems wilh the Fortiers, nlley w~ere they saod McVeogh
ed i'n defendant1imothy McVeigh's who admitted they lielf to save their st~d hts getaway car. . ,
The prosecutton d1dn I show
name. He testified that lhe man who own skins.
accepted the food wasn't McVeigh.
The government also left huge McVe~gh ,was iii Oklah?ma City. an~
'Other weak legs - from the gaps in its ·story - the government th~y dtdn t show he butlt the bomb.
defense's perspective -ll!e the 'tes- told jurors that an Arfcans&amp;s gun deal- satd Denver lawyer Andrew C.ohc,n,
timony of admitted drug users er had been robbed to pay- for the --:ho has been ~ttendmg the tnal. ·
Michael and Lori Fonier; no eyewit· bombing. but didn't call the man who
In his opemng ·st~tcmcnt, proseness to place McVeigh at the bomb- . claimed he'd been robbed, Reiger cutor Joseph Ha~lc,r ackn~w-ledgM
ing site .and the alleged contamination Moore. Pointing that out to the jury, · the~ arc some mtssmg pteccs. .
of evidence in the FBI lab.
Jones questioned whetherthere even
A~ you can probably tell from
l,ast week, the prosecution was a robbery.
.
what I vesatd: there ts no ~tngle wttwrapped up a strong, streamlined . The government also promised to ncs.' who ts gomg to come tn here and
case that portrayed McVeigh ss an· prove that McVeiRh and co-defendant ~II the whole sad st';l"Y- Ourc~ c~­
anti-government activist who decid. Teny Nichols bouJht two tons of SISIS of doze~s of pteecs of cvtdencc
put together.

Aaaoclated Preu Wrtt.r

.,. Flowery welcQme
:·.greets astronaut
~~ after 4-month stay_
::on space station

FOR SALE .

wins promotion
from state patrol

By STEVEN K. PAULSON

~~ home'

CEMETERY LoTS
·

McVe-igh's team chops away
at gaps in prosecutor'~ case

=-'Good
:..:.t o.be

kins expected the limit to be changed
_ if not by the House, then by the
Senate.
.. We had said, and the governor
had said. that the federallifeti~ lim·
it was sufficient," Rhodes satd. But
after discussions with House m~m­
bers the bill was changed to three
year~ - a. change Voinovich supported.
· Ms. Lawrence still wants the
three-year limit to stick.
" One of the reasons I think three
years makes a lot of :;ense is that it
puts a lot of pressure on the county
departments," Ms .. Lawrence said .
"They have to contract with P:ople
to give these people some tramtng ·
and get them to the point whe~ tbey
can succeed."

ora.,.

Bruce R•.Fllhlr

Director
~

..

,..._.

w•

'

'

�e

PageAI• .. • I

.. 7!

.

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Sundly, -May 21, 1807

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleuant, WY

I

orts

·e

Section

....._,..., . . 11117

Sports
in brief
Race day roncMt:

•

..

iood chaace of tbllllderstormsINDIANAPOLIS (AP)
Thunderstorms could get in the way
of the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday.
The National Weather Service
said there was an 80 percent chance
of thunderstonns on race day, with a
high temperature of around 70.
Thunderstorms al so are possible
Monday .
The last time rain ·postponed the
Indy 500 was 1986. After two days
of rain, the race was held the follo)"ing weekend.

•

•

•

....•·'

•

'.,

At 90 JacksOn Pike

'·
....

Reds pul Reule Sllllden ·
on 15-day disablecl-Jist
ClNCINNA TJ (AP) -

Cincinnati
Reds
plac~i!d'~~!.~!~
Sanders on the
I 5-daySaturday, after he severely
his right ankle in the last play
Friday night's game.
·
Sanders made a'n awkward slide
into second base while trying to
break up a double play. He was
taken from the field on a stretcher.
Dr. Timothy Kremchek said the
sprain could sideline Sa~ders
: : GETTING BY Mlam'i forward Jamal Mashburn (24) Ia the.taak
several weeks . A small bone chi
the moment for Chicago's Scottie Pippen In·the first half of Gam11l was found, but it could have been
3 of the NBA Eastern Conference finals In Miami, where the ,Bulla from a previous injury . .
won 98-74 to take a 3-0 lead In the beat-of-aeven series. (AP)
The Reds called up outficldc
'. ·
Mike Kelly fr om Triple A-

.,

In 1949, the· physicians practicing at Holzer
Hospital formed -a separate partnership, the Holzer
Clinic, whicl.t has steadily grown to its present
stature as one of the -largest group medical
practices iQ Ohio and West Virginia. 1\venty-five
years ago, Holzer Clinic consolidate its Gallipolis
services into a new facility on Jackson Pike.
It has been an honor and a privilege to serve the
people of this region for nearly 50 years. Holzer
Clinic salutes our ·patients and our employees for
their commitment, dedication
and. trust. Thank
.
.
you .for letting us be your hometown healthcare
provider and your employer.

"Charlea E. Holzer, Jr., M.D.

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' ~ U l -Is n'o tch.j .98-74
'Vl•cto·ry ov'er"· Heat'
•·n 'NBA
Iay_·. ·o··ff_s·'
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Drawing of the 6nt major Clini~ expllDllion.

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Under co08truetioo, approximately 1970.

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The completed facility.

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"Holzer Clinic is a multispecialty group practice
established and organized to a~tend to the health
care needs of patients and organizations in the
mid-Ohio River Valley. To set an example for
others to follow, Holzer Clinic's continuing
commitment is to be
"THE BEST PLACE TO COME FOR CARE
AND THE'BEST PLACE TO WORK."
To assure quality services, Holzer Clinic seeks to
attract and retain highly qualified and motivated
professionals and.staff who recognize that service
excellence is comprised of both demonstrated
concern _for people and technical competence.
Interactive teamwork and mutual respect among
all members of the Holzer Clinic are·essential for
meeting this commitment.
Hol~er Clinic is commited ·to providing wellequipped, safe and accessible facilities for its
patients' needs and comfort..The clinic recognizes
and endorses the importance of other health care
entities which also are necessary to provide basic
health care services to patients in this area."

Stephan Elberfeld
Evelyn Fowler
Gladys Grant
· Demmie Hanna
JoAnn Hannan
Reba Hansen
Hilda}aney
Joanne Johnson .
Linda Kemper
Brenda McCarty

The early 1980'a

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A. the (acility looked In 1995. ·
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New eigoage. and a new :parking deck - 1997.

Celellratinfl Our Beri
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Sycamore Clinic 1980

Main Clinic 1972

Holzer Clinic ofWY 1988

Meigs County CUnic i982

Jackson County Clinic 1976 ·

Lawrence County.CUnic 1988

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LATE TAG - Cleveland shortstop Omar second base in the third Inning of Saturday's
Vizquei.J!uts the late tag on Baltimore ' s American League contest In Cleveland, where ·;.,
Sanders
the disabled
D ... (AP)
three
timeswas
lastonseason.
when list
he Jeff r e Y ammon ds afte r H ammon d s s t ea Is the Orioles won .....,
81

or·loles' down lnd·lan· s 8 3•
van·
· kees &amp;'· Astros als'0 w· ' ··n.
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~~~~a~::~e(J~J~a b Jegda~i~~-~ne;~

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Health &amp; Rehabilitation ·center 1993

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CLEVELAND sacrifice ny scored Erstad for a 2·0 lead.
(AP) - Rafael
Yankees 4, Red Sox 2 - At New York, Charlie .
Palmciro
had Hayes. starting at third ba.&lt;c for New York over slumpthree hits. includ- in~ Wade Boggs. hit ·a two-run home run with nne out
e
ina a thrce,run in ·the ninth innina Saturday as the Yankees halted a
ho~cr. and Mike live-.,ame
losin• srrcak with a 4-2 win over the Boston
e
.e
Muss ina got a Red Sox. .
,
·
· ·
rare victory over
Paul O'Neill walked with one outln the ninth and
Cleveland as the was lifted for pinch-runner Sco'u Pose._ Hayes. whose
. Baltimore Orioles insenion into New York 's ·
landed Boggs on · the
bcat,the Indians 8-3 ~atqr_d~y.
. .
, . , -~
, hcnch for the lirst time in his I
~arecr. hit a 1-2
. ·T-he ~oriole~ml'r"""'d'c l@';iln AL -hest ~kl ~~;mf\ -·.r.~~}-h ·Jffi!n::John -":~~~~~:•'[)'2r~J,I~
ended Cleveland · s season-high s ix -ganic win ,0 in'" lcnce till' h1s ih1rd I
••
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streak.
·
Hayes' shot, ·the Yankees' lirst game•winnin!! homer
Mussina (6, 1), who had a 14.81 ERA again st the since J_uly 28 of-last season, ~ave -Mariano River~ ( J-1 l .
Indians last season and was 2-6 in his career against the win . Rivera pitched a perfect ninth in relief o Dqvid
them, had a season -high nine strikeout s i_n seven Cone.
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Cone walked one and struck out seven to take the ·
Muss ina struck out every Indians batter except major league lead in strikeouts with 85.
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Manny Ramirez and David Justice and walked only one . · Aslros 7, Rockies 0 - At Denver, Darryl Kile
In two regular-season stans against Cleveland last sea- pitched seven mqng innings and Jel'fBagwell and Craig
son·,, Mussina allowed 21 hits and 17 earned runs in '10 Biggio each homered Saturday to lead the Houston •
113 innings: He also got a no-decision In Cleveland 's 9- Astros over the Cohirado Rockies 7-0 Snturday.
:
4 win in Game 3 of the ALplayoffs. '
.
Kilc (5-2). who is 4-0 in his la.'t live games with a
Rookie left-hander Steve Kline {3- 1) lasted only 1 0.47 ERA during that span. won his Jir.;t game in J'our
2!3 innings in his first major league stan.
stuns ·at Coors Field. He limited Colorndo to just JiJ~r .
Angels 3, Blue Jays 1 - At :roronlo, Allen Wutson hits and three walks. striking out five, sending the
pitehcdscven shutou.t innings and Darin Erstad hit an Rockies to their 13th loss in 17 g~mcs.
inside-the-park home run Saturday . leading the . Colorado's. only sc&lt;_Jring threat came when Larry
Anaheim Anj!els to a 3· 1 victory over the Toronto Qlue Walker doubled in the s·ixth inning - following a 43Jays.
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minute rain delay that stopped play al'ler the lifth. But
Watson (~·3) gave up four singles· as the Angels won the Rockies stranded him at third.
'their founh in a row an_d lith in 12 games.
Houston slopped a six-game losing streak at Coors
Watson allowed only .one runner to reach third. Joe Field .
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Carter. who had ·two singles forr------------,----'--------~-----; .,
to, got his h'30Qth career RBI on .
a groundout off-Mike James in the l'
eighth.
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ninth, striking out two, for his second ·
save .
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Tony Phillips and Er.;tad. who had ·
three' hits, stancd the game with c1in- ,
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sec1,1tive singles off Woody Williams
(1-4). On~ out later. Jim Edmonds hit ;
an RBI s1_ngle and Garret Anderson · s ..

of just 13~ mph ~fore !&gt;lowing his.
If the drivers needed a reminder
of why safety is so important . all
they had to dn was hxJk at John Paul
Jr .. who l&gt;rnke his right leg and left
heel during a c.:rash at pri.J(.: ticc.
Paul. in a wlwelchair. was at the
driver's meeting to receive the Scott
Brayton Drivcr·s Trophy . presented
fnr the first time in memnry nr
Brayton. who was killed at Indy during practice last year. .
.
The meeting· wa.~n ' t all husin css.
Ward drew laughs from the crowd
aud driver.; with his thinly disguised
dig at Championship Auto Racing
Teams. which is boycotting Indy for
the sccpnd straight year.
·
Most of the big-name drivers
were in St. Louis on Saturday for
CART' sMotorola300. ·
" I don 't care what anybndy says,
you're the 35 best drivers in the
world or you wouldn't be here, "
Ward said, prompting cheers from
the crowd and applause from a few
drivers.
. •
As Warj) talked to the drivers
about starting clean, a fan yelled out,
"No crashes in the turns! "
" That's right, no clashes inJ'um
One," Ward said, drawing laughter.
"And no crashes in Turns Two.
Three or FOur, either.' :
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Today;s Indy soo to put 13 rookies,
anc;r:,:new engin~s- Qn center s~age

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L-----------...1

Indy flags

Bertie Saunders
Willie Shaw
.Richard Simpson, M.D.
Mick~y Smith
Ro&amp;e Stoney
Jackie Wallen
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·Naomi Whitt
Ann Wickline

fl

Jackson County Rebabiliation 1995

'Cu~~nders le~ds the Reds with siXIL_-----~~-----~---r__.:--4::::_:'-::.~4~~:_-~:~_

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Meigs Health Services 1995 .

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·Millie McCarty
Carol McDaniel
Fran Mullins
Donald O'Rourke, M.D.
James Orr, M.D.
BeekyPeck .
l)ave Reymond
Sherry Robert&amp;
.Sandy Runyon
Arnold Sattler, M.D.

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Thanks to our dedicated employees who ·have been apart of the Holzer Family for over 25 years ...
Doug Adkins
Mary Bays
Rhonda Burri&amp;
Carolyn Carman
Roger Carter
Rita CoUghenour
Dorothy Crabtree
Charlayne Crisp .
.Robert Daniel
NancyDoweU

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Indianapolis
He
was expectedtotoreplace
be in Sanders.
uniform for
Saturday's game with the Chicago

By MIKE NADEL
the lowest-scoring playoff game in already this season, for a bulging
MIAMI (AP) - This till)e, mOdem NBA: history .
disc in his lower back.
Jordan was '14-for-25
$80
' Michael Jordan and Scottie Pippen
8
excelled. · Once again , the Heat' aftergoing4-for-15in6ame2 . whi
didn't . So Miami had no chance Pippen improved from 9'of-21 to 8Saturday- and the Heat have little Of-16. Through three quarters. the
FRISCO. Texas (AP)- Annika
chance_to keep Jordan , Pippc_n and dyn_amic_.·•.u,·o aet_ually outscored -the Sorcnstam. the lcadinj! money win'1 · team, 51-49 . .
ncr
the women'
s_ tour
this
won on
s8o.ooo
·over the
openina
·
the Ch1cago Bu 11 s from reachmg the entire MIBI]'ll
NBA Finals.
.
Chicago, which shot 36 )icrccntin
e
Jordan scored 34 points and grinding&lt;!!!! victories in each of the holes of the JCPenney LPGA S.kins
p1
· pe
dd d 21
th d ' d' · first t o g•mes made 45 percent
Game Saturday.
P n.ons
a c
as c eoen mg 1 w v
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Sorenstam won four sk•'.ns and
took
a
3
0
lead,·
the
1
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shots
t"'•'st1'me
Champl
1
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fi - I ' th n 98
The H ~at me. anwhile ~ate·hcd birdied five of the first nine holes.
erence· mas WI a '
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wh•'le' Karr1'c Webb, the No .. 2
...,s
74 victory. The Bulls arc looking for the NB~ playoff record for fewest
their fifth title in seven years.
field goals in a game with 21 , shot 38 money-winner,. won one skin and
Club.
No teall)· has ever come back percent and committed 32 turnovers, $20.000 at Stonebriar
Laura Davies, the all -time
from a three-game playoff deficit. They arc averaging only 73. points in
Miami. 0·9 against Chicago in ' thrcc the series..
· 1 Skips qam,c 01011-ey wjpncr
· playotherics: :~!l.~t~Z~~·" ~~;·n~~:~~~~~;:;~~;:;~~i,:~~·~~:~~jr~ft~fM&amp;O,QQ,O ,and- t&gt;otiillo~l\pjl(:r,,
and Tim
all-limC. (ailed to win a skin.
vage some respect
Four sk1'ns wonh $11_0,000 w1'l
4 here.
·rough days.
had one bas.
ket and nine.lurnovers and Hardawav carry over''into today's lOth hole,
, Jordan and P1ppen made fun of scored just six points . VoshGn where $140,ooo·wm be at stake.
themselves ,after they played poorty_ __ l,.pnard led ti)e· Heat with '14 points, · · Ogrln shoots near record 62;
m the Bulls 75-68 VIctory Thursday,
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Woods only one back
I
FORT WORTH,' Texas (AP) 1David Ogrin shot an 8-under,paf 6;!
II\
Saturday to take the third-round
I"'
lead of the 'MasterCard Colonial but
lci)UJ&lt;:In ' l shake the ominous spectre
.ofyounB1igcrWoods.
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Woods , three shots back and
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By DAVID DROSCHAK
wife. mother and father as eight under par at the start of the
CONCORD, N.C . '(AP) ·- If Ncmechck cruised to ao impressive third round, rode a 64 into second
anyone needed a racing win it was victor)/ Saturday in the Carqucst place entering today 's climactic
Joe Nemechek.- who has struggled Auto Parts 300 Busch Grand showdown.
,
with per.;onal trage&lt;ly and -lackluster National '[ace at · Charlotte Motor
Ogrin was .at I S-under 195 , a
performances this sca.~on.
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stroke ahead ol' the 21 - year-old
The 33-year-old driver wa.~ at his
"Losin-g my best friend . my Woods.
·.
younger brother's side in March hrother. part of our .fami-ly- to
Reeling off six consecutive
when he died after suffering ma.&lt;s.ive come ba~k )lere to victory lane. 1 birdies at one p&lt;lint, and without a
brain injuries in a NASCAR truck just wish : lje was here with me. •-· bogey on his card. Ogrin came withraoing crash jn Florida. Meanwhile. Ncmcchek ,said about his brother in a whisker of matching the course
Ncmechek:s -Winston Cup team is John. wh'!i" dici\March 21 in a rceordof6L
struggling at 37th in. the points Miami hospttal. .
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But Woods stalked him as relent·
stim&lt;!ings.
" It was beautiiA. 1 know that lcssly as. well , a 1iger.
So it was understandable that a God was looking out for us and
With victories at the Masters and
fcw~tcars were shed in the pits hy his John •s· soul ." said l\lcmcchek · s I B•vro· ~ Nelson .in his last two starts,
mother. Manha.
is zeroing in on three
The vic) ory was Ncmcchck ' s straight titles and his founh of the
ft) urth on the circuit and earned him 1997 campaign.
$43.800.
Even though drivers are in radio
communication with their learns, to
inalnlain order on the race track,
officials need to communicate w~h
drivers ·to warn them of dangerous
slluatiQns and to let them·know
when the race Is over. The series
Of colorad flags that are used at the
. Indianapolis 500:
By NANCY 1\RMOUR
,
- . Line up in even rows 111 the
INDIANAPOLIS (APJ - Pit stan.
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swps.
yel(oii:
.
-''Oags.
black
nags
and
No
pitting at the start i1f Jhe
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yellow !lag. .
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restarts.
, It sounded like Auto RaCing I O'r.
- No standing un the gus in the
nnd in many 'ways it was.
·
warmup lane aflci" coming out or th~
"I want l!l sec a nice clean l&lt;n- pits.
.
Caution, slow
malion down the hackstrcich .;. so
-And ahsolutely. positively . no
Stan; ctear
and hold
we can come down in a. nice clean trying to get ahead of somennc until
course
position
stan:· Keith Wanl. chief steward of your -car rumbles over the rnw nf
the Indianapolis 500. told driv ers bricks at the start.
Saturday at their lin at pre-ra.:e meet- - ·'I' in· nor. a_sking for -:r good stan.
· ing.
.
I'm cxpecling it. " Ward said.
" Be couneous and letguys'gct·in
The added instructions could
. place when they · need to get ·in CO!Tk) in handy. The National
BLACK
place." he said. .
Weather Service said Saturday there
Pull into the
Of the- ,35 drivers in today's race was an 80 percent chance of thuilat the India napolis Motor Speedway, ,d crstorms today. Any moisture
~i181kin .
13 arc rookies -and 10 arc making would m.a·kc the track slick and
just their spcond start at the could cause delays in the race.
And no one knows for-sure how
Brickyard. Last year. 17 rookies
s·tan e_d: thf record is 19 in 1919 and well the new Aurora and Nissan
1930
lnfiniti engines will hold up: Thcrc
said
lhpookies
weren't
the
have
been problems with them all
Ward
YfUDW!
IIWI/atrtpe
reason
for
his
laundry
list
of
instrucmonth
- speedway officials even
llrlpt
MCMoverto ·
lions.
It
would
hav.
e
been
the
Slime
_
m
ade
the
unusual move of allowing
Oil on track ·
another Jane
speech
if
Jhe
field
was
full
of
veterfour
drivers
one lasl _practice session
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ans, he said. · if ·
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"It's bAsically just a rehash of the engines. . .
.
Jim Guthrie. Sam -Schmidt and
topics covered at the private drivers'
meeting,-" Wl!fd said.
Claude Bourbonnais of Team
. Durinl! his 20:mintite speech, he Blueprint
Rac'i ng
!ftisscd
went ove~ everything --'- no matter Carl).uretion . Day with 'blown
how routi'Jc it mil!ht have sounded;
engines. Robby Gordon of Team
SaiX:o ran six laps with a top speed

Holzer Clinic's Mission

The land prior to co011tructioo

The

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WANTS REPEAT- Budd~ler, the 19941 l~lenapolla 500
Trophy ll8lllrCMY It
ring OINI1Ionlea for thl1 YMr'•
edhlon of the world-fllmqua auto !'ICe. From Row 4, he Ia looking
for a repeat 11 one of the 35 drlv. . running In today'l race. (AP) ·

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cflemplon, atllnda with the
'lndlanapolla Motor Spa•ctwav

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SUnday, lley 21, 1.7

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, Ott • Point Pleaunt, WY

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Sunday, May 21, 1117

:r.-TOII WITHERS
A a,arteWtlbr

Jinuny Key~s name neeeived all
the prepme hype. But
it was
over, Child Die~~ was the pitcher
everyone was talkinc about.
Oaea pitched a two-hitter with a
career-hip nine strikeouts as the
Cleveland Indians ended Key's winning streak with a 6-l win over the
Baltimore Orioles 011 Friday night.
"Ch&amp;Q was about perfect
tonight," Indians clllf1her Sandy Alomar said. "He threw a couple ·of
· shutouts last year thai were pretty
good. bUt this has got to be one or his

once

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Ogea (pronounced OH-jay) needed to be perfect to ouduel K_ey (8· 1),
who lost against a ieam he has heaten 16 times in his career.
Key, who came in with a leaguelow 1.80 ERA, was tagged for 10

hits and six runs in 4 1/3 innings his shortest stint this season.
"Tonighi it seemed like I was
first-and-third, second-and-third all
night," Key said. "I look up and
they're ahead 5-1 or whatever it was.
.They're a hot team right now and
they' re playing good. They did a
good job arid they were better than
us.
"I don't know if it was a case of
bad me, good them or'a little bit of
both. It happened and it's going to
happen. I've been spoiled, we've
been spoiled, everybody's been
spoiled. There's no question about it.
Sooner or later a same lilce this was
going to pop up. It happened, I've
had a lot of bad games in my career.
I'll be back in live days."
David Justice and Manny
Ramirez each had three hits, with
Justice improving his average to

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.384. Cleveland won a seasoo-hi&amp;h
sixth straisht and ended Baltimore's
season-high streak at five sames in
the first meeting between the teams
since Baltimore knocked Cleveland
out of the AL playoiTs in four games
last season.
Elsewhere in the American
League, it was: Seaule 8, Kansas
City '4; Boston 9, New York 3;
Detroit 7, Texas J; Anaheim 12,
To'ronto 2; Milwaukee 4, Chicago I;
and Oakland 8, Minnesota 4.
Mariners 8, Royals 4
AI Kansas City, Mo., Ken GriiTey
Jr. hit his.major league-leading 21st
homer and Jay Buhner hit his fourth
homer in as many games as Seattle·
rallied from four runs down to win.
Randy Johnson (6-1) won forthe
23rd time in 24 decisions, allowing
all four runs and eight hits in seven
innings. He struck out 10- his 72nd

game with double-digit ,trikeouts.
Griffey hit a two-run homer in the
ninth off Tim Belcher (5-S).
Kansas City has lost seven
straight.
·
Red Sox 9, Yankees 3
At New York, pinch-hitter Mike
Stanley lined a tiebreaking three-run
homer in the eighth and Wil Cordero
hit a three-run shot in the ninth to
send the Yankees to their fifth
straight loss.
The Red Sox rallied for four runs
against three piichcrs in the eighth.
Cordero's RBI single made it 3-all
and Stanley hit his second three-run
homer in two days against his ronncr
team.
Aaron Sele (5-3) pitched seven
strong innings. JeiTNelson ( 1-4) was
the loser.
Tigers 7, Rangers 1
At Detroit. rookie Brian Moehlcr

CINCINNATI (AP) - As the
· ·Cincinnati Reds' season began to ,
sour, Deion Sanders wondered aloud
when they'd get to play the Chicago

AI Chicago, ·Sc:OII Karl (2·5)
allowed three hit• over eiaht innings
and Mark Loreua dmve' in three runs
to stop Chicago's six-same winning.
Lorena hit a two-run homer otT
Matt Kan:hner in the ninth, Doug
Jones then finished for his II th save.
Wilson Alvarez (3··5) allowed
two runs and seven hils in. seven
innings.
Athletics 8, Twins 4
At ¥in neapolis. SteYe Karsay (I·
5) won for the first time since April
9, 1994. giving up three runs ond six .
hits in 7 2/3 innings.
·.
Jason Giambi, who hit 'his lirst
career grand slam in Thursday's 107 loss at Texas. highlighted n fourrun fifth with a two-run double and
also had a sacrifice fly.
Paul Molitor ticd ·his cari!cr high
with five hiis, the fifth time he's done
it.
.

Cubs.

Taxi driver .files complaint against Gooden after money conflict
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the fifth- and walked two.
assault complaint, which is under to the Rlurth floor. Gooden ig11ored the story. "'Finally. Gooden tackled Navigators beat Bowie 3-2.
G!ioden will make at least one
. investigation, pol icc said. If charges the cab driver, but finally took out a Hakim and ripped off Hakim:s shin.
Gooden retired i 5 of the first 16
arc liled, it would be next week at the . five dollar bill. Stone said Hakim Hotel security and the night manag- bailers he faced and did not allow a more minor league start before
earliest. Arlington police spokesman told him.
er arrived and Gooden fled into the hit until a leadoff homer by Wady returning to the Yankees, either with
Norwich or Class AAA Columbus.
"Gooden, however, refused to clevatot.','
Dec Anderson said.
Almonte in the sixth:
allow
Hakim
·to
remove
the
cash
,"He looked like he wa• pretty far
Gooden admitted Thursday that
Gooden, who improved to 2-0
Gooden, who ms suspended for
the two fought, but said he didn't pay from his tightly clenched fist, " Stone the second of the 1994 season and all with a 1.50 ERA at Norwich, threw along," Yankees scout Gene Michael ·
because the driv.cr accepted another said. "Without any provocation of 1995 for testing positive for 58 strikes and 33 balls. He struck out' said. "He had pretty good command
passcn cr. Gooden said he had want- whatsoever froni Hakim. Gooden cocaine, is currently on an injury seven -fanning the side in order in of his breaking .balls...
ed to etum straight to the team's threw Hakim against a wall , huning rehabilitation assignment with the
hotel ar The Ballpark in Arlington. his neck. back and ribs." ·
Yankees' Norwich. Conn. , affiliate.
Hakim said he tried to escape but He travels with the major-league
He · 1d he reacted when Hakim
him from behind in the hotel Gooden continued to chase him club between starts.
throughout the fourth floor of the
corr· or.
6000 LE
On Friday night. Gooden was
hotel.
~:;three or four times and wa~ natly
Gooden said, the driver "fol·back in Norwich. where he allowed
"Hakim screamed for help," · one run on two hits in seven innings
"'Tefused·each time."
lowed me to my room on the fourth
Stone said. giving his client's side of in his second rehab outing as the
:::~ Halcim. 44, filed two criminal
floor and ~rabbed me from behind."
'''~complaints against tbe New York
" I hit him. We were fighting,"
:;.~Yankees pitcher, alleging Gooden
Gooden said Thursday in New York.
See
""·assaulted him after he rode an ele- "It stopped. Then it staned again. I ------Sports briefs-----Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
. ,,:vator to the hotel's fourth floor tried to finish him. I wasn't thinking
Baseball
or ncar the major league minimum of
Clark Reed
::~:when Gooden refused to pay the fare.
at the time."
NEW YORK (AP) - With the $150.000.
···
The
taxi
driver
claimed
Gooden
Hakim, however. claims Gooden Yankees on the verge of signing
,,
'""nd the woman were together when agreed to share his ride with the top- Hideki lrabu, acting baseball comTennis
:· ~e picked them up at the strip club
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) less dancer. one of Hakim's regular missioner Bud Selig said the major'
4 Dr, V6, auto, Blue w/blue cloth
,.,;,about 2 a.m. CDT lasJ Saturday, passengers, Stone said.
Stanford's
Lilia
Osterloh
and
Florileagues will investigate whether
Interior, AC, stereo cass, pwr
::;~ours after the Yankees' 11-5 victoThe lawyer said Hakim told him New York tampered with the pitch· da's M.C. White advanced at the
windows· locks, remote mirrors.
;,:tyover Texas.
NCAA women's tennis champi;
that when the cab arrived at the er before it owned his rights.
cruise tiH. nice car.
~:: Police said the driver filed two
team's hotel, Gooden continued to
, lrabu und the Yankees were said onship to set up the tirst all-trcshmcn
:;criminal complaints . .one alleging talk to the woman' through the car's to be close to an agreement on a singles tinal in NCAA history.
;.&gt;·.':"'sault and the other accusing the window, then walked into the hotel four-year contract worth about $13
r... suspect of refusing to pay ·the fare.
without paying.
million. The deal would include a
:~ But the driver has since decided
Hakim said he followed Gooden signing bonD&gt; of about $7.5 million,
;~.J,to pursue only the misdemeanor
into the hotel elevator and they went butlrahu's 1997 salary would he ut

DALLAS (AP) - A taxi driver
says Dwight Gooden's.refusal to pay
a $4.20 fare came after a topless
!',:dancer sharing the cab repeatedly
\·~ rejected his offer that they go to the
~player 's hotel room.
~~·
"During the ride to his hotel,
:'~Gooden propositioned the dancer
• &lt;riding in the back ofthe cab," Bryan .
~~Stone, lawyer for cab driver Ziaud~~:din Hakil!l. said Friday.
"~: "He asked her back to his room
;:~at the Marriott Hotel to pany but she
,•.declined. He repeated ihe proposition

1990 PONTIAC

PURCHASE A
EFFICIENCY XL 1200
TRINE .HEAT PUMP FROM WARNER HEATING
AND COOLING INC. TODAY AND RECEIVE·

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N.Y. M!!l~ IReynuso 2-tll at

•Rebates Up '' $250
•Payments ~s Low As

Philmki -

Jlhlii(Madum .l-~) Hl~pm

Chicii#O Cubs (Tn1chu:l 2-4) :.1
CINCINNATI (Ourbu 4-4).7:0~ ~- m
Pinshuri!h rScltmiLll I-2J at Mtmtrcul

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Rnll!mnr~· IMui'l~lnn

FOR A LIMITED TIME
RECEIVE
A
.

Lu~Ut'

fr111n ( 'ulur.ulu Spnn)!s nf IIM.·I'&lt;'I..

l

· Sports briefs--

. .
Golf
- UPPER , ARLINGTON, Ohio
(.AP)- San Jose State, led hy individual leader Janice Moodie, n.ovcd
wit~ in two shots of defending champion Ariwna in the team race ·at the
NCAA Division I women's goll
championship.
. ·
'
Basketball
LOS ANGELES (API - Bill
Fitch signed a two-year contract
extension with the Los Angeles
Clippers. which will keep him
around through the 1999-2000 season.
' Fitch. 65. gui~lthe Clippers to
the playoffs this season for the first
time in four years and just the third
lime since 1976. ')"he learn was
swept in the first round by Utah, the
. regular-season Western Conference
champion.
He has the mo~l gl\mes coached
and lossc• in NBA history, and a
career record of927-1,041. _

.

PLUS

('OI.Of{ADO ROCKII :S . ,1 \nl,lllll'

(I

lktrnu1. Tt'.t:l~ I

CLEVI-:L!\ND fl. Ballimun: I
Anaheim 12. Turnnln2

*38 Per Month

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•
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ti nm.··II.HP Hud. l:ll.'ll•'r ht S)ra,·u_,,.

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I~

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.
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Baseball

.

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.

By JOE KAY

Bftwen,4, Wblte Sox 1

(3·3) scattered seven hits in eight
strong innings and struc:k out a
career-high nine. He fanned AL
MVP Juan Gonzalez four times.
Melvin Nieves and Tony Clark
both homered for Detroit. Darren
Oliver(2-5) lost for the third time in
. four decisions, g1ving up four runs
and nine hits in 7 113 innings.
Angels 12, Blue Jays 2
At Toronto, Dennis Springcr(3- .
I) pitched a seven-hitter fot his first
complete game since la~t Sept. 29,
and Tim Salmon went 4-for-S as
Anaheim took advantage of three
errors by pitcher Juan Guzman.
Gary DiSarcina hit a three-run
homer, Luis Alicea added a two-run
drive and Jim Ley ritz connected un
a solo homer as the Angels won their
third. straight and IOth in II games.
· ·Guzman (3-4) made three errors
. that led to six unearned runs.

t , • ...._.,. llwti•Pege83

Cubs beat slumping·Reds 3-1

Indians down Orioles 6-1; ·M ariners ·&amp; BoSox also win
.

~

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

GAME·ENDING DOUBLE PLAY - Clllcago
second baseman Ryne Sandberg· (left) fires to
flr1t basa to retire Hal Morris to complete the
double pley aftal' forcing the Cincinnati Reds'

Reggie Sanders out at second to end Friday
night'• National LNgue contaet In Cincinnati
with a 3-1 victory lor .t he Cubs. Sandera uvere- ,
ly sprained his right ankle on the play. (AP)

Rockies get past Astros 8-7;
·Braves, Phil's &amp; Expos win
Jones (1-0), making his second
career stan, allowed six runs and II
hits in 6 2/3 innings. Steve Reed
pitched the ninth for his fourth save
in seven tries.

By The Associated PreS.
Just like last year, coming home
to Coors Field turns things around
' for the Colorado Rockies.
·
Dante Bicheuc homered and
drove in three runs and rookie Bob- ·
. by Jones earned his first career win .
for Colorado, which beat Houston 8; 7 Friday night following a 3-10 road
· lrip.
.
"We'd struggled as a unit of late,
: but you have to remember this is not
; a se"'on of sprints, but more of a
. marathon," reliever Darren Holmes
; said.
;
Ellis· Jilurks· hbmered foT !he
fourth straight game as the Rockies
won for just the fourth time in II
. games.
.
Rockies' relievcr.s gave pp 34 _
: runs in 33 2/3 innings for an 8.55
· ERA during the road trip. On Friday
:· night, three relievers combined to
: allow only one uneaJl)cd run over the
: tinal2 1-3 innings to preserve Jones'
• first career win.
·
,
"Bullpens have their ups and
· : downs like anyone else and we've
: been in a battling mode over the last
: 14 games," Holmes said.

Donnie Wall (l-2)was tagged for
eight runs and seven hits in 4 1-3
innings. Houston manager Larry
Drerker left the club Friday following the dealh of his father in Los
Angeles. Bench coach Bill Virdon is
managing the Astros this weekend.
In other NL games, Atlanta beat
Los Angeles 4-2. San Francisco beat
St. Louis 2-0, San Diego beat Florida 6-3, Philadelphia beat New York
2-1 and Montreal best Pittsburgh 4I.

Braves '4, Dodgers 2
John Smoltz (6~3) ·allowed two
runs and ·seven hits in eight innings
as visiting Atlanta beat Pedro Asiaeio (3-3) for the ninth straight time.
The Braves have won seven straight
while ihc DOdgers have lost six in a
row.
Ryan Klesko hit a two-run homer
in the sixth that increased Atla~ta 's
lead to 4-1. He has four homers and
six hits in 15 career at-bats against
Astacio,
.
.
Mark Wohlers got three ouL~ tor
his II th save.
Giants 2, Cardinals 0
Shawn Estes (6-2) puched a twohitter for his second shutout of the
sea~on to outducl rookie Matt Morris .(1-3) and send v1s1tmg St. Lou1s
to liS lOth los.~ m 12 games .

Barry Bonds had a run-scoring
groundout in the fourth and Jose Vizcaino added an RBI single in the
sixth. .
Morris (1 -3), making his ninth
major league start, pitched his first
complete game, allowing five hits.
.
Phillies :Z, Mets 1
. kookie Garrett Stephenson (2-0)
allowed one run and three hits in six
innings as Philadelphia handed visiting New York only its founh loss
in 13 games.
Dave Mlicki (0-4), winless in 15
starts.since Sept. 19, 1995, allowed,
two runs and five hits in six innings .
Philadelphia scored twice in the
second on doubles by Rico Brogna
and Kevin Stocker and an RBI single by Gregg Jefferies.
Expos 4, Pirates 1
Pedro Martinez pitched a five-hitler with a season-high 12 strikeouts
. and no w~lks at Olympic Stadium
• ard imp'roved to aclub record 8-0.
Darrin Fletcher scored the goahead run in the seventh and drove
in two more in the eighth with a
bases-loaded bloop single.
Steve Cooke ·(3-6) gave up two
runs and five hits in 6 2/3 innings.

. As the slump grew into Cincinnati's worst start in 117 years, manager Ray Knight wi~hr:d he· could
play the Cubs to fi.nd out where his
team stood.
The·Reds got tbei'r wish Friday
and found out exactly where they
stood: several sieps behind the Cubs
and losing ground fast. Terry Mul~olland went eight innings for a 3-1
.victory that left ~hicago a seasonhigh three pmes ithead of the last-·
place Reds.
"In this same. it's not how you
·start but how you finish." said Mulholland (4-3), whO allowed five hits
over eight innings.
Since opening the season 0-14a National League record for ineptitude- the Cubs have been anything
but p pushover. They've gone -17-14.
overtaking the Reds for fourth place.
. They wanted the Cubs, and now
they've been surpassed by them .
"They don't know ,this Jearn,"
said Mulholland, who has won his
last four decisions to help the Cubs
rebound. "All they're looking at is
what we did the first two or three
weeks of the season. I don't think
those guys have paid attention to
what we've ·done the last two
weeks.u
The Reds haven't done much all
season, resulting in ·the worst mark
in the major leagues at 14-31 . Things
gOI even ,more glum Friday nighJ
when Reggie Sanders, who leads the
team with six homers. severely
sprained his right ankle while sliding
into second base· on a game-ending
double play.
"Unfortunately, a sprain on the
inside of the ankle can be worse than
a fracture at times," Dr. Timothy
J4emchek said.
Sanders, who was on tbe disabled
list three times last season .and once
earlier this season, was taken off the
field on a stretcher. X-rays found a
bone chip that might be from a previous iri)ury.
In any case, Sanders is expected
to be out for several weeks:
"I think he hit the bag wrong,"
Cubs second ba.•cman Ryne Sandberg said. "I just heard him moaning. I turned around and asked if he
was all right. He said, 'No.' That's
when I mo1ioned Jo the dugout."
The lo&amp;s marked . the end of
Knight's three-game suspension for
his outbutst at umpire Jerry Layne.
He was in the clubhouse before the
game and went on the ticld afterwards to find out how badly Sanders
wa.• hurt.
.
The Reds fell to 1-2 ·during

Knight's absence because they
couldn't do much against Mulhollaad. The left-hander gave up four
singles and Joe Oliver's eighthinning double as he extended his
streak or impressive pitching.
In his la~l six starts, Mulholland
has allowed only 10 runs .~ver 44 2i3
innings -· a 1.34 ERA over that
span.
"This was his lith stan, ~nd he's
· h~d a good start every time," manager Jim· Riggleman suid. "He's
been so consistent for us."
Mulholland lost his shutout in the
eighth, when Oliver came around on .
a pair of groundouts. Terry Adams
pitched the ninth for his fourth save.
Sammy Sosa also ha.• been a hig
factor 'n Chicago's turnaround. His ·
two-out solo homer in the fourth off
Kent Mercker ( 1-5) put the Cubs up
1-0. Sosa has II homers this season,
eight of them in his last I7 games . •
Tyler Houston bad a pinch tworun double in the seventh off Stan
Belinda, puttin.g the Cubs up 3-0.
Mercker.set up the rally by giving up
a double to Shawon Dunston and a

pair of one-out walks to load the
bases.

Chicago's Mark Grace went 0for-4. ending his hilling streak at 15
games. 11. was the Cubs' longest
streak since. Grace hit in 16 games
ncar the end of last season.
Notes: The Cubs called up outfielder Brant Brown from Triple-A
Iowa to take the spot of Brooks
Kie,.chnick, who was optioned to
Iowa on Wednesday. ... Since returning from the disabled list, Houston is
6-for-14. ... Grace played his
1,322nd ,game, at first hnsc fur the
Cubs, . moving ahead of Charlie
Grimm for second place on the
team's list. Cap Anson is first with
2.058 games .... The Reds called up
pitcher Brett Tomko frnm Triple-A
Indianapolis. He takes the place of
closer Jeff Brantley. who went on the
disabled list Tuc.•day.... The Reds
arc 0-7 in Merckcr's stans. His victory came in relief. ... Dcion Sanders
went O-for,4, dropping his average to
a season-l.ow .309. After hitting .383
with 19 steals in April , Sanders is
balling .218 in May with eight steals.

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LXI

~ Bengals' meet sales goals;
Su
, Jerry Bibbee
Marvin Keebaugh
Clark Reed

:club in position to get lease
~ pact with Hamilton County
CINCINNATI (AP) -' The
: Cincinnati Bengals have met their
; sales goals for luxury suites and club
scats in their new stadium, virtually
: assuring a lea~e agreement with
: Hamilton County for the football sta. • dium.

i

Bengals president Mike Brown
: a"d county Commission President
: Bob Bcdinghaus said this morning .
· 1he club has sold at lcast ·80 percent
: of 104 suites and 80 percent of 7.500
: club scats in the projected 66,965: scat stadium.
·
· llie sales generated more than
: 5 II million forthe 2000 season. The
: 1eam now has sold a total of about
• 43.000 scats .
: · "ft's an indicatitm of the excite. : ptenl people feel about the new stu. : clium, We're confident the new sta: ~ium will become t.hc premjer ~ntc~:
. : tainment. venue ·m the rcg1on.
, ..rown sa1d.
,
·: · County officials need a signed,
. lease with the Bengals by June I. If
:!hey don't, a lialf-ccnt sales tax ·
; increase will be elimin~!Cd. ~c
·increase was approved m Ma~ch
: !996to build new studiums for the
;·~engals and buscball 's Cincinnati
" Reds.
·
i · ThC Reds and the county arc not
:close to a lease agreement, so it is up
to !he Bengals to make the deadline . .
1
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raise $50 million a year, $35 million
,\Jf it for the new stadiums and the
rest for a local reduction of proper- ·
~y tuxes 'for ho~wners.
. Tile team oriainally was required
to sell' 'nl least 83 suites and 6,000
qlub seals by April 30. But the deadline was waived after tile county met
its goal or selling $20 million in sear
ljclniN and the Benpls closed in 011
their aoal for suites and club - ..
T.The Benaals now have llOid at
~ut 83 suites, which average
f70,000, and al lcut 6,000 club

scats, which average $1 ,000. Anothcr'36,000 scat licenSes, which entitle holders to buy season ticket, have
been sold for a total of $26 million.
Salcs.of suites ami club scats go
toward revenue. Seat license sales
arc applied tn the team's sta4ium
contribution.
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Flyers top Rangers
·3-2 to take ·3-1 lead
.i_n Eastern fi.nals

Western Conference finals continue

. Rockets kill Utah's
~ streak of victories
:with 118-100 win ~

Sunday, May 21, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pl1111~ WV

M I

HOUSTON (AP)- Bench scortng, rebounding, shooting percentage, three-point production The
Houston Rockets had been woeful m
every single category.
Then came Game 3. and every"' thmg got better in a hurry
The Houston Rockets, gettmg a
tremendous boost off the bench from
38-year-old Eddie Johnson, reversed
their troubling trends of Garn~s 1 and
2 and defeated /the Utah Jazz 118, 100 Friday night.
It cut the1r defic1t to 2- 1 m the
· · best-of-seven Western Conference
finals and kept them out of a 3-0 hole
-something no NBA team has ever
climbed out of
Game 4 is today before the senes
returns to Salt Lake C1ty for Game
5 on Tuesday night

REACH FOR REBOUND- Utah's Greg Ostertag (00) and Houston's Hakeem Olajuwon r~ach for the rebound in the fourth quarter of Game 3 of the NBA Western Conference finals In Houston,
where the Rockets won 118-100. (AP)
I rom behmd the hne.
"It seemed easy at the start,"

Malone sa1d "We started off the
game as well as we can start a game,
then we started gmng through the
mouons "

Malone went to the bench for the
first seven nunutes of the second
quarter, and Utah's oftense struggled.
Sedate Threatt Jut hiS l1rst two
thrcc-pmnt attempts of the quarter,
and Johnson had one m an 11 -0 run
that pulled Houston tn 33-32. Stockton made four of Utah's next five
shots as the Jau hmlt thc11 lead hack

to seven, hut the Rockets closed the
half with a 7-0 run for a 5 I-51 t1c at
halftime
The lh1rd penod stayed light unl1l
OlaJuwon, Drexler and Mar10 Ehc
scorccj consccut.vc baskets to start a
quartcr-cndmg , 15-6 run that left
Houston ahead 80-72 entering the
fourth
Utah had one more run remaming. and a 7-0 spurt pulled the J.w.
to 91 "86 before the Rockets went to
Olajuwon twice 1n a row for layups
and Johnson then stole a bad kickout pass by Stockton and went m lor
u fast -break layup

Tyson shaping up for rematch with Holyfield

•

'
h

By TIM DAHLBERG
LAS VEGAS (AP) - M1kc
Tyson underestimated Evander
Holyfield once. He says he won't
make the same mistake twice
" 1have a great deal of respect for
his txlXIng sk1lls," Tyson satd "W1th
that respect alone, I'll be a Jot more
intense for th1s fight. "
Whether Tyson's intensity can
help h1m in the rematch agamst
Holyfield remains to be seen But he _
showed Fr.1day that he should be m
fmc phySical cond1t1on for the oncepostponed June 28 rematch.
All that remains 1s for Tyson to
get h1msclf mentally prepared to
meet a t1ghtcr who knocked h1m out
the lirst t1mc they got together m the
rmg
"My confidence 1s never shaken
by anything." Tyson Insisted ''I'm
gomg to go IQ there and l1ght h1m
!1 kc I knocked h1m out the hrst

Tyson worked out before the
mcd1a Fnday for the firstt1mc Since
Holyfield beat h1m last November.
then stood and patiently answered
questions about how he was preparmg lor the light that could hkcly
define hi~ boxing career
Losmg to Holyf1eld m the II th
round of the11 Nov 9 f1ght was cortamly somethmg that "opens your
eyes, " Tyson conceded. though he
refused to call the rematch cruc1al to
Ius bexmg career.
But Tyson. who turns 3J two days
after the bout, sa~d 11 was a fight he
had to wm
" I feel I have to wm 11 for
myself." Tyson sa1d. "I want the IItle
back.
Tyson. who normally train s
bchmd closed doors at a local gym .
went through a 40-mmute workou1 m
a ballroom at the MGM Grand Hotel
that mcludcd three rounds of hlltmg

pads held up m the nng by camp
member Stacy McKmley.
The purpose of the sesSion was to
d1 spel rumors that Tyson had further
mJunes smce a cut next to h1s left eye
forced the ongmal May 3 rematch to
be postponed or that he wasn 't tramirg properly.
"As far as I know ll"s going on."
sa1d Tyson. who w1ll cam at least $20
m1lhon for the rematch "I'm m great
shape."
Tyson certainly looked f1t as he
threw savage lefts and some hard
nghts to McKmlcy's pads and to a
llak Jacket around h1s m1dsccuon
Promoter Don Kmg watched closely from nearby.
"We're puttmg the rumors to rest
and saymg that the f1ght will take
place," Kmj! sa1d "They say he 's
lat, he's uut ul shape. he's out
carousmg You can be the JUdge We
want to stop the rumors ...

Tyson was attentive to !ramer
R1chic G~achett1. brought back to
camp followmg the Joss to Holyfield,
as G1achctt1 mstructed h1m on combmatiOns of punches to throw.
G1achctt1 seemed to be trymg to
get Tyson to throw more jabs, which
he d1d httle agamst Holyf1cld. and
pressure hiS opponent more.
" How's my balance look. IS 11 all
nght?" Tyson asked at one pomt.
Toward the end of the bncf sesSion , Tyson made McKmley !linch
when he h1t h1m w1th a nght to hiS
padded m1dscct10n
"Can he (Holyfield) take that.
lad1cs and gentlemen ?" G1achctt1
asked the small crowd. " No."
'
Tyson, who started sparrmg on
Monday for the fight, said he has had
no problems wuh the eye he cut m
trammg the first t1me for the rematch
" As long as 11 holds up unt1ll get
m the ring. I'll be line," he sa1d.

zone With 12 seconds to play.
New York never made it that far..
NEWYORK(AP)-Ma~be it's
Flyers
defenseman Paul Coffey
JUSt the Philadelphta Aytrs' year.
puck
along the right boards
got
the
How else can you explain it'?
and
passed
il
to
I! rind' Amour enterWith the game tied 2-2, an inndvertent sti~k to the face of John ing ·thc Rangers' zone. He shoveled
LeCia1r gives them a four-minute \t to LeCia1r w1th the clock winding
powerplay with I :35 left in regula- ' down while Rangers goalie Mike
tion of Game 4 of the Eastem Con- Richter moved to guard the corner of
,
ference final with the New York the net .
"I knew if I shot it, I couldn't get
Rangers. Then, LeCia1r's bhnd pass
m the closing seconds lands on Enc much on 11 so I JUSt wanted to put it
Lindros' st1ck \Yilh an empty net in to the middle," UCiair said. "I really didn't see anyb9dy. I didn 'tlook.
front of h1m.
Game over. Senes almost over I just put it there."
And Lindros happened to be
with the Flyers returning to Philadelsteaming
down the left side,.
phia for Game :5 today with a 3-1
"The
puck
came rolling over and
lead m the best-of-seven sencs and
on the verge ol ending Wayne Gret· I just fired 11 at llie net," sa.d L1ndms,
zky and Mark Messier's dreams of who had been c'ontamed very well
th1s game after scoring his first
another Stanley Cup together.
career
hat trick m Game 3. "You
" I don't know if ~e·re lucky,"
don't
really
get too fine. You just try
Rod Brind'Amour sa1d after bndros' goal w1th seven seconds to play to put somelh1ng on net and we were
gave Philadelphia a 3-2 victory. "It fortunate enough ll went to."
New York now faces the prosrcct
was unlucky when I missed an oncn
of
trying
to become the 14th team in
net JUSt before that and we keep letting them come back again and again NHL history to rebound I rom u 3-1
and agam But we are findmg ways deficit It should get some help
today w1th ·dcfcnscman Alexander
to win Without playmg our best."
For the second straight game, the Karpovtsev returning from Moscow
Flyers blew two third-period leads, followmg the funeral of his mother.
hut they agam found a way to win He missed the last two games. ·
"We' ve go a tough chore ahead
w1th the help of a Rangers' defenseof
us."
Grctzky smd. "We rcali1.c the
man.
s1tuat1on
we're in and we .uc m a
Bruce Dnvcr miSplayed a puck m
center ICC m Game 3 to set up the 2- tough hole. We don't make excuses
on-1 rush that Trent Klatt converted when we lose. We arc not going to
into a game wmncr in breaking a 3- quit now."
Messier msiSled the Rangers'
3 tic. The wild game featured seven
confidence has not been shuttered
th~rd -pcnod goals.
Jclf Bcukcboom made the b1g losing1wo close games at home.
"We think we can win the
mistake m another w1ld th1rd period ,
series,"
he said. "Tho feeling in the
that saw Esa T1kkanen tic the game
dressing
room IS that we can win. We
1-1 :wtth a shorthanded goal at I :41.
After John Druce talhcd shorthand· fell hchmd m the third game and
ed to put Ph1ladelphm ahead 2-1 w1lh fought m Game 3 and we did the
3 13 to play, Bnan Leetch knotted same thmg agam."
The key for New York m1ght he
the game 65 seconds later on a great
gcttmg the lead against Ron Hextall.
Iced from Wayne Grctzky.
However, Bcukeboom chppcd . He has played very well, allowing
LeClair with JiiS st1ck heh1od the net, just five goals in two-plus games.
New York has not led smce Game
opening lour cuts on hiS face. The
one on the bni.lgc of hiS nose 2 and 11 feel behmd Fnday on a powrequired three stitches to close. There er-play goal by M1kacl Rcnberg at
were two slashes at the comers of hiS 7:08 of the lirsl rcnod.
"I think they arc starting to
eyes and one on the left cyehd.
The one on the eyelid hied lor a bend," Rangers coach Colin Campmmutc or so and LcCia.r could not bell said "We saw some good things
start on the powcrplay. By the time tomght and I thmk that we had
he goLon the 1cc, the rcriod was numerous chq.ncqs tp. :;&lt;;pre. Our
winding down and it looked like the problem was we JUst couldn't
Rangers would make It to ovcrume score."
when they got the puck out of th01r

process.

1
Bartrum to hold football
'
camp &amp; lin~est. in June

Dates revealed for summer cage camps
GALLIPOLIS - Dates for the
annual Gallipolis grade school boys
summer basketball camps were
announced recently by GAHS Coach
J1m Osborne.
A four-day camp. open to all
boys in the area. is scheduled June 9,
10, II , and 12 for thusc who Will be
m grades four through nmc dunng tbe
1997-98 school year Cost IS $60 per

I

- Way litis w1ll happen is for you to
make 11 happen. I know w~at 1t's ltke
OVP Correspondent
, ROCK SPRINGS - The first to grow up in Soulhcaslcrn Ohio and
:Mike Banrurn Football Camp and how special those times were to me
:Cclehnty Golf Tournament, a·two- Throughout my career, the support
•day event, wtll hegm on June 20 at from this area has kept me gmng and
:Mc1gs H1gh School's foothall prac- I now want to ~1vc hack hy holdmg
tice field and will feature two scs- thiS camp lor the k1ds, because lhcy
arc the future."
, :sions.
For more information on the tour. The tournament w1ll &lt;ontmue
:until June 21 at the Meigs County nament you can also call Edwards at
·the ahove numher. Proceeds frnm the
•Golf Course.
' The fouthall camp, set for June tournament will go to ollsct the cost
'r· :20. will have a stalf includmg scv- ol the camp and establiSh a scholar' !era! current and former NFL players ship fund .
The momm~ session will be J'rom
j :as well as with several former cul9
a.m.
unul noon w11h rcgiStratwn
:tegc players The names ol the playfrdm
8:30
unul 9 a.m That sesswn
lI '' crs will be announced' at a later date.
Will be held lor grades 5-K.
1 • The tournament will he on June
The altcrnoon sesswn w1ll have
I :21 w1th several of the players taking
1
in the· festivities. The tnuma- regiStratiOn lrom 1·30 unt1l 2 p.m.,
mcnt will be u scram hie forn1at w1th w1th the camp running I rom 2 Jl m
I :a hhnd draw hcginnmg w1th a shut- until 5 p.m. That sesSion will he lor
gri!(lcs 9-12
I . !gun start at I0 a.m. Pncc of the tuur'rhc cnst ol the camp is $10 per
namcnt IS $45 and includes bevcr•:' ages
camper.
The rcgiSlralwn dcadhnc IS
and a meal. Also on June 21. a
June
6.
For
more mfonnauon on the
•mcmurahiha aucuon w1ll be held at
camp. call camp director R1ck
: the gulf course begmmng at 9 ,, m.
Edwards at614-992-215K
~
"We want tn mukc this an annuul
; event," Burtrum s:ud . "So the only

:By DAVE HARRIS

boy
The second annual "'hahy hlue"
camp is scheduled June 30. July I
and 2 for lirst. second and th1rd
graders to-be thiS fall. Cost i&lt;Jr thiS
camp IS $30. All part1dpants will
receive a ball and T-shirt
Entry forms will be avmluhlc mall
the elementary schools later thiS
week accordmg l&lt;l Couch Oshorne.
'

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TOURNEY PRIZE- This 1997 Buick Century
could be the prize of some lucky goHer in lhe
American Hurt Association tournament O!l June
19. It will go to any golfer who ca~ make a hole-

in-one on number 9. Pictured with the car are left
to right, Roger Jesse of Don Tate Motors, Inc., the
sponsor, and Dick Warner of Krc j er.

'
POMEROY - The Mc1gs Coun-

....... ,,....
....................
...... ,•.,.Rid!
___,..;.....,,_

ty American Heart As'!&gt;eiallon will

Eastern girls'
basketball camp
slated for June
EAST MEIPS - The Eastern
girls' haskctball &lt;amp w1ll run J~ne
2-5 from I :30 to 4:30 at a lcK:atiOn
to be announced
The cost of the camp 1s S40 hy
' Thursday or $45 at the d()(lr. A
deposit of S15 by Thursday will
reserve your child a camp sh1rt and
·= a camp ball.
•
· 1lle camp is for those cntcnng
grades 8- 12. If there is no grade
"'hool camp because of asbestos
removal, the camp may Iller open up
10 Mudents enterinJ pade 1·
For furtller details call985-3329
: or ScOII Wolfe at949-2045.
.;·
Milke checks payable to Eastern
: AdtleCic Boosl.en.

•

'

hold us annual go ll tournament on
Thursday. June 19, at Me1gs County Goll Course
Check m lime is set at II a.m. and
Includes lunch
A calcutta lor the lour-rcrson
scramhlc begms at noon and (he
shntgun start Will hcgm play at I
p m A steak dinner will follow the
tournament with diStllhutiOn of
p!llCS.

Hole-in-One sponsor" Don Tate
Mutors, Inc. which IS oflcnng a new
car, $10,000 or a trip for two tor the
lucky golfer scoring n holc-m-onc on
designated holes All mtcrcsted players are asked to sign up in the club
house by June 15.
The bas1c cost is $42 for course

members and $50 lor non:memhcrs.
There IS an additional $5 fcc for a
mulligan and $2 fcc for greens con~~,:st~. both optional
Busmesscs and iridrv1duals arc
bemg contacted to sponsor holes for
the Amcncan Heart Association tournament in conjunction with the
Amcncan Cancer Society tournament m July Anyone wishing to be
a hole sponsor 1s asked to contact
J1m Thomas at 992-7376.
For more mformalion, residents
may contact Metgs Golf Course al
992-6312, Becky Triplett at 9925485 or the American Hean Assoct·
ation at 1-800-2&amp;2-0291, extensiOn
3&amp;1.

. . . 4 .. . .

-,
.. .

CHERRY HILL, N.J. (AP) Rob 'N Gin, a 3-S favorite ridden hy
Jerry Bailey, set a track record m
winning the 54th runnmg of the
$1 SO,OOO Jersey Derby at Garden
II

•

·
b 11
rts
I • • .' ' . ,a ad rec:quel a cou
1
' ~ Toc~Jy - closed
:.
·Monday-6-JOp.m .
~·
6 a.m.- 10 p.m
I • , ' 1\JesdayWednesday6 a.m -Ill p.m.
1
l , Thursday- 6 a.m -IO p.m.
1 ' Friday- 6 a.m •9 p.m.
It · Saturday - 1-6 p.m.1 ~
d
Sunday, June 1- · - p.m an
10 p.m.

j '

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State Park
Rob ' N Gin took the lead entering lbe stretch in the turf race for
three-year-bids and warded off a
challenge from Tekken, an Irish- •

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614-992•6637 ...
614-446·9716

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446·1044 ·
\1 '

Martin said ''I've been runmng '
By DAVID DROSCHAK
CONCORD. )'{,C. (AP)- You Busch smee 1987 and have worked
have to excuse Mark Manin if he out some things that really•. really
gets a bit nervous when one of his work and we keep using them. The
mechanics pups the hood or crawls setup under that car is not so differunderneath h1s Busch Grand Nation- ent than the setup I had in my car 1n
1988 out here. We run basic stuff,
al car as 11 sits in tlic garage area.
and
we have good cngmes and good
Martm doesn't like to tinker wnh
success. And he's had plenty of that cars and good chassiS setups."
Martm says that's qune a bu difon the Grand Nauonal circuit over
lercnl
from the constant changes he
the last decade.
sees
most
teams makmg weekly tn
The 38-ycar-old dnvcr from
Batesville, Ark. , one of the stars on their Winston Cup cars- mcluding
the Wmston Cup scncs, can set the hiS own crew
"Somct1mcs the Winston Cup
all-umc victory mark on the Grand
cars
are just as awesome and someNational circuli with a wm m Saturlimes
they're not," Martin said when
day's Carquest Auto Parts 300 at
comparing the two sencs. "We go
Charlotte Motor Speedway.
The race comes a day before. the through srclls where we work hardtrack 's big event - the C&lt;&gt;ea-Cola er and try to get better with the Win600 - where Marun will also be ston Cup car and that usually makes
going for hiS third straight Winston us worse. When we finally give up.
throw our hands in the a11 and drag
Cup wm.
out
the old junk and start runnmg 11
Martm " ucd w1th Jack lngr~m
again,
we start running g&lt;x&gt;&lt;l agam "
lorthcmostwms(31)mlhc 16-ycar
Although
Martm has had good
history of Grand NatiOnal mcing,
cars that arc slightly hghter and have success 1n Wmston Cup racmg. he
Jess horsepower than Wmston Cup said he is extremely pruud ol his
cars. He has won five of the 13 races • :tccomplishmcnts on the lowcr-profi lc series.
sn far this season and look the pole
" It's a pretty h1g uccompi1Shmenl,
Thursday with a speed of I 75.012
somcthmg that! don 't normally recmph.
"The Busch car has JUst been a ognize," Marlm smd when asked
abOU( lhC I P"SSihilily &lt;&gt;J' hrC:tkmg
rcul cut-and-dry, Simple program:"
Ingram's record Saturday.
"To think that in 1981 when I
came down here to NASCAR and I
couldn't gel :mythmggomg We sat
hall tournament (9 a.m -6 p.m.)
on two Winston Cup poles nut ul
''
live races and yet I couldn't get ,,
. Notes
sponsor
and l'&lt;&gt;uldn 't get a ride. it"s
• A Lync Center membership is
pretty
grat1lymg."
rcqu1rcd to usc the facilities Fucul.In 150 Busch starts, Manm ha&gt;] I
\ ty, staff, students and admmistratmn
will he admitted w1th the1r ID &lt;ards. wins.

WJLL DO COMMERCIAL
DIRT WORK

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bred.

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Martin seeks wins
in Carquest 300
&amp; Coca-Cola 600

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Monday- 6-9 p.m.
1\tesday - 6:30-9:30 p m
Wednesday- 6:J0-9:3CI p.m .
Thunclay- 6:30-11:30 p.m .
Friday- 1-J p m.
Saturday- 6-9 p.m.
Sunday, June I - 1-3 p m. and
6-9 I' m.
Home athletic events
Today_ AAU girls' btl~kcthall
"
l
tournament (nnon-7 p.m.
Monday_ AAU girl~' b:L~kct-

1979 GMC JIMMY

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·=-:····

-----Sports briefs-----,
Hone rt1Cin1

l 'univcr~ity of Rio Grande's Lync
1 Center.
I , Fitned center, IJmnaslum
I

•J......_. .... .,.,..

,

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The extra pnu.~icc sesSion " the
latest in u series of changes at the
speedway in the rust two years. The
h.1t1le between the new Indy Racing
l.e.1guc and Champumsh1p Auto
Radng Temns has kept most of the
hil(-name drivers away lrom the
5!Hl And this year, the speedway
added two curs to the truditiona133car held.
Must people along Ga,oline Alley
fell the speedway made the' right
deciSion by adding an extra practice
session, considering all the questions
ahoul the new Oldsmobile Aurora
and N 1ssan lnfin1lt cngmes and the
lack of spare parts. The engines have
never raced for 500 miles.
"If somebody needs the e&lt;lra
work, I would rather them go out
now than on race day." said John
Menard, owner of Menard Racmg
And exceptions have been madz
before In 1979, some dnvcrs were
allowed lo rcquahfy the day belore
the race after they sued for the nght
to compete. In 1986, the race was
delayed six days because of rain and
there was a closed pracuce sesSion
the day before.
Guthrie and hiS rookie learnmates were the only drivers among
the 35 starters unable to take pan m
Thursday'!! pracuce. They ~qd hoped
to get their backup engmcs m 11me
for Carburet10n Day, but there was a
prohlem in Ch1cago w1th the dyno,
the machine that tests the engines.
Of the 32 drivers who made 11
onto the track for the two-hour session, Tony Stewart, last year's polestarter, led the way w1lh a lap ol
215 502 mph. and rook1c Greg Ray
was the only other driver to get
above 213 mph.
That' s considerably different
from last year, when the new IRL
teams were st1ll usmg turhochargcd
engmcs and warmmg up at close to
210mph.

! :· ---~.;..........;.--Lyne Center slate-------'
!i ~week·~
· RIO GRANDE - Here " this
Pocl
schedule for events at the
Today -closed

··~,.,....

MeigS County AHA to sponsor
annual golf tournament on June 19

Indy 500 officials
let trio hold makeup
practice ses~ion

lAM WI !!()H
TlrUI 81 lllolll Conwpondent
As you Clll1 probably guess, I enjoy going to
sporting events. They ~re a nice distraction from
the importlllt ISpeciS of life.
Discussing either the Bulls or Red W'mgs with
friends Clll1 also be 1 nice break between classes or
meetings. Such interchanges disrupt the monotony
By NANCY ARMOUR
INDIANAPOLIS (API - 'lltc
' and stress of normal day activities.
new tradition at the lndhinapohs
In fact, every weekday morning, I look forward
to discussing the hockey playoffs with Ed Sofranko; however, that &lt;~~&lt;n't · Motor Srcedway is on lrad1t1nn
Jnn Guthne. Sam Schm1dl .md
mean that I have forgiven him for the Tigers' World Series win in 1968.
' - Naturally, sports can also, lead to atguments and fights. That's why I Claude Buurhnnmus of Teum Blue•.never mentiod Dale Earnhardt's ineptness over the past two years while I' m print Racing s.ll nut the tina! pr.o&lt;:ti&lt;:c
session Thursd.ly with bltown
. having dinner at Mogie 's. ·
For some' NASCAR fans, Dale's lack of taking the checkered flag has . engines. Rnhhy Gordon of Team
·
become another personal problem in their daily lives. I do find time, how- Suben ran SIX Iars w1th a top speed
ever, lO discuss Dale's problem with John Glenn. He's a Rusty Wallace fan of JUst I 35 1hph he lore blowing hts.
No problem. Indy ollici:tls smd.
and likes the fact that Dale is having problems. We know bale's difficulties
ju.st
t~tkc your curs clut for u srHn Satwon't last forever, but we'll enjoy it for as long as it lasts.
On Wednesday, June 4, I will be taking a busload of baseball fans to Cin- urday uftern&lt;Mm And wllh thlll,
ergy Field to see the home team play the Astros. It should be a wonderful another tradition w.IS history.
W1th a few e~ceptums. the linal
time for aU interested parties.
prdclicc
session-at Indy is usually on
We leave Rio Grande at 3 p.m. and return when the game ends. It .only
Carburction
Day, the Thursday
• costs $37 a peiSOD, which includes your transportation and a blue t1cket
• along the third baseline. It's rigbt in foul ball heaven! If you're interested in before the ra&lt;:e. II dnvcrs need more
going, call me at the university and make a reservation. Tickets are limited practice, they' re ·supposed to take
and going fast. In actuality. it benefits the Gallipolis Ki)Wanis Club, so you're their cars to another track.
"Tradnion is a great thmg, but
·
encouraged to bring your families.
there's
no point m getting too stuck
If you can't make this trip, I will be having two other trips to sporting
events next winter as part of my History of Spons class. If you like sports, m a rut," sa1d Ken Anderson, ch1ct
engmeer for Gordon's Team Sabco.
you migbt want to consider being a student.
Jusl think, you'll have the opponunity to tell me in person that I don't "There's no pomt in hurting someknow what I'm talking about in these articles. You will not have to worry body JUSt because of tradition.".
Guthne. Schmidt, Bourbonnais
• about sending me a nasty letter or leaving messages on my machine. This
and Gordon will have 15 minutes on
should !I(Jpeal to you Earnhardt fans out there.
In actuality, the foreign soccer players have shown the greatest interest in the 2 1/2-mile oval to check their
· this class. They wanlto debate the significance of their sport as the true foot- new engines. Guthne had his backup engme Fntlay, and the ones for
ball.
: Sports is serious business and universities have now joined the media to Bourbonnais and Schm1dt were
itudy its impact on our society. One of the most frequently asked questions expected to arr1 ve from Chicago Sattoday is whether the MLS players will destroy their own spon with their urday morning.
Gordon's new engine also was
~emands for free agency.
Can this nascent league survive a labor crisis before it has established expected by Saturday morning.
"It's more of a safety check than
itself as a mainstream sport in this country? The future of professional socanythmg," Guthrie said. "It would
cer may be over before it has a chance to begin.
: Speaking of soccer, congratulations must go to the Rio Grande team for be stup1d for one little fittmg to be
going to Columbus to battle Ohio State to a 1-1 tie. It shows how competi- loose and take out seven cars m the
live Rio's program has become in a very shon time under Coach Morrissey's first tum."
Gordon had planned to be m
lute Iage.
Charlotte,
N.C., today to practice for
: The team has even begun to spoil its fans. We don't even ask about how
the Coca-Cola 600, a NASCAR
~ad they beat Shawnee Stale. We are shocked if such opponents are lucky
race he' II run after fimshmg the 500
Fnough to score.
' Coach Thomas and the basketball program have begun the rebuilding on Sunday. But Ken Anderson, Team
Earl is excited and dedicated! He's committed to success and has Sabeo's chief engineer, smd Gordon
lhe university's support. There is a greater sign of enthusias111 al this lime will stay m lnd1anapohs and let
someone else test hiS stock car.
lhan there has been in recent years for this program.
: Just this week I was approached by an OU fan who told me he was com1ng to watch Rio play next season. He's been after me for years to join him
Jn Athens for a game. It's ironic lhal the first game we will attend together
~s in support of our learn.
• Like Coach Morrissey, we are beginning to expect big things from Coach
!rbomas.
! S.m Wlleon, Ph.D. ls an u•ocllllll prulaaaor of history at the University of
J11o Gnnde. An IIVld 18n of all aporia - and a nnr maniacal follower ol baaket·
bell - he ts a ndve o1 Gary, Ind., and a graduete of Indiana Unlveralty - whlch
. ~houk! tell .....,. aomelh!na about Where hla head land Hocaler heart) If.

By TOM CANAVAN

By CHRIS SHERIDAN

the bench - was one of the many
thmg$ tl\e Rockets were lacking in
the first two games. Johnson was
partly to blame~ too, as he shot a
combmed 3-for-9 w1th JUSt seven
pomts. The Jazz had even begun
leaving him wide open on the
pen meter.
"They weren 't even paymg attention to me, and I knew I had to make
them pay for that," Johnson sa1d.
He led Houston to a 47-28 edge
in bench sconng - a category the
Rockets had lost badly in each of the
first two games
.
The Rockets outrebounded Utah
38-30 to reverse another trend from
the first two games, and shot nearly
59 percent from the field after shootmg 38 and 37 percent m Games I
and 2 Thw 12 three-pOinters
mawhed their combmed total ,from
"This wa.'ii defm1tely a must wm. the ilrst two games.
Houston also outscored the Jazz
and Sunday 1s also a mu•t-wm,"
Charles Barkley, sa.d. "We don't m each of the final three quarters to
, want to go back to Utah down 3-1, recover from an early 14-pomt
' but if we had lost tomght we would dcficn
;t have been dead. D-E-A-D."
Hakeem Olajuwon added 27
"
The mam reason the Rockets are pomls, Barkley had 19 pomts and 16
still very much ahve was Johnson, a rebounds and Clyde Drexler scored
journeyman shooting guard who 15 points
played m the Greek League last seaKarl Malone scored 21 points,
,;. son before bemg Signed hy lndmna, John Stockton had 17 pomts and 10
getting traded to Denver and then ass iStS • and Greg Ostertag had 15
bemg wa1ved
pmnts for Utah. wh1ch lost lor JUSt
The Rockets s1gned him m early
the fourth time smce March I.
The Rockets survived a strong
March, and Johnson had h1s best
start by the Jazz m wh1ch they hit six
game of the season Ft'lday mght w1th
of their first seven shl&gt;ts lor 12-4 lead
31 pomts on 12-for-17 shootmg,
that grew to 22-13 JUst over e1ght
includmg 5-lor-8 from threc-pomt
mmutcs an
range.
Malone g.we Utah a 31-18 lead at
"It dcfimtcly was one of my
b1ggest moments," sa1d the 15-year the lirst-quartcr buner. by makmg a
three-pmnt shot J'rom two steps
veteran. "You try to pick a moment
InSide the hall court hne. It 'was the
when you can seiZe the opportumty
first three-pomter of the season and I knew I had to make a differmcluding the playoffs - for Malence."
Such a difference - a scorer off one, who entered the game 0-lor-ll

Nice
distraction
a,

~·

liNGS ISLAND TICKETS!
Tickets For Family of 5 .,.. Free With Purchase of Vehicle
•NO MONEY DOWN
Augult1997
w/Approv.cJ Credit
•Prieta &amp; Ptymanta
Cltarly Mtrked on
Wlndllhleldt

.Credit Application•
Are Now Being
Accepted For
Proc.tllng

PRICE
1994 FORD T·BIRD 16645, Red, AfT, AJC, tilt, cruiH, PW, PL.
alloy whltls, AMIFM cau ......................................"...- •.• $1 0315
1991 BUICK LESABRE 16638 Blue, A!T, AJC, tilt, cruiH, PW,
PL, AIIJfll cass......................................................,............ .$6918
1994 DODGE INTREPID 16651 Green, AJC, A!T, AM/FM cass,

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~:.:.'l:~1R?. ~~-~..~.~~~~:.~~-~~~~-~-~~.~~

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1994 PONTIAC GRAND AM SE, 16630, White, AJC, A/T, AM/FII
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•

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1995 FORD TAURUS GL 16537, G'"n, 33,000 ml, bal ollacl
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1996 FORD TAURUS GL 16615, Red, A/T, AJC, AM/FII cass,

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1996 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE S.E., 16628, Green, Gray.lnt, A!T,
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1995 HONDA CIVIC EX 16640,31,000 ml, bal of !act warranty,

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1994 OLDS 88 ROYALE 16531, AJC, A!T, AMtfM caaa., Ult,
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a

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1991 CHEV S-10 16649, Red, AMJFM sponwheels ............$4395
1995 GMC SONOMA 16626, G'"n, AM/FM 36,000 miles,

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1995 CHEV S-10, Extra Cab 16622, white, AM/FM call, rear
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1993 NISSAN II
1993 CHEV. BLAZER 4X4 4DR, 16563, Blue, AfT. AJC, tilt,
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1995 GEO TRACKER 4X4 16582, Green, 4X4, sport wheels,
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1995 NISSAN 4X4 TRUCK 16646, White, AM/FM caas, AJC,
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1989 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER VAN 16654, Blue, A!T, AJC,

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a

1992 MAZDA MIATA 16572, White,
LEBARON GTC 165811,

top, AfT, AM/FM

•

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II

SUnday, ...y 25, 1117

Pomeroy • lllddlepot't• o.IHpol18, OH • Point ~le•••nt, WV

I

'sundlly, -

Division I district trsck snd field flnsls end

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HEADED TO VICTORY - River Valley's Penny Salisbury heads
t-nl the finish line after clearing the last hurdle in the girls'100·
,..,..... hurdles in Friday's Division I track and fiald finals at Logan.Hockl119 Middle Schooi•.Salisbury, a senior, outstepped Logan's Ali
Gebrlll and Warren Local's Trisha Alloway and Jackie Pierce to earn
the vlelory and the first of two berths in this week's regional meet·
at Dublin. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
: _;.

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Grove (L) 34-5; A. Roberts (R) 335.2; Wheatley (A) 32-9.5; Yaskoff
(A)31-3.5; DeGarmo (R) 30-1
100-metkdash: J. Martin (A)
;12.6; McCoy (R) ; I 2.9; Schultheis .
(Mar.) :13.1: Beard (A) ; 13.4; Lalumondier (C) :13.6; Feisley (Mar.)
:13.6
100-meter llurdles: Salisbury
(R) : 15.5; Gabriel (L) : 16. 1;Alloway
fY'/l :16.2; Pierce (W) :16.6; Crace \
(C) ; 16.6; Stewart (A) :17 ·
· ZOO-meter dash: J. Marth! (A)
:26.1 ; Sc.bultheis'(Mar.) :27; McCoy
(R) :27.1 ; Gabler (W) :27.9 Pinkerton (W) :28;:Feisley (Mar.) :28.8
300-meter hurdles: Gabriel (L)
:46.5; A. Martin (A) :47 .2; Alloway ·
fY'/) :47.4; Hook (L) :49.5; Crace (C)
:5 I; Greenwalt (W) :5 13

400-meter dUb: Crace (C) I :02;
Saving (L} I :02.9; Feisley (Mar.)
1:03 .8; 'Iarmer (C) 1:05 .8; Moon:
(W) I :06.5; Kemper &lt;LJ I :08.2
800-meter run: Shearer (A)
2:24.2; Ringhiser (L) 2:29.5; Enderle (L) 2:31 ; Martin (W) 2:32; Shea
(C) 2:34.2; Leeper ( Mar.~ 2:34.6
1,600-meter run: Hitchon (MT)
5:34; Bryant (Mn 5:43.7; MutTay
(Mar.) 5:45.3; Enderle (L) 5:46.4:
Balding (A) 5:49: Franc (C) 5:49
3,200-meter run: Hitchon (MT)
.II :56.4; MutTay (Mar.) 12:46.4;
Huffman (C) 12:47.6; Balding (A)
12:48.9; Waid (L) 12:58.9; McClain
(A) 13:04.6
4 x tOO-meter relay: Athens
:5 1.5; Warren Local :52.2; Chilli-

cothe :52.9; Logan :53.2; Marietta
:54.4; River Valley :54.6
4 x ZOO-~r relay: Athens
I :48.4; Warren Local 1:49.4; Marieua I:SI.S ; River Valley 1:51.7;
Chillicothe I :51.9; Logan I :53.9
4 x 400-meter relay: Athens
4: 11.9; Logan 4:12.2: Chillicothe
4:22; Warren Local 4:27.3: Marieta
4:34.4
4 x 800-meter relay: Logan
9:55.7; Miami Trace 10:01 .5; Athens
10:23.6; Marietta 10:25.5; Chiiiicothe 10:26.7; Warren Local 10:28.2
Notes: At press time, River Valley's coaches weren't available to
submit results of their male athletes
from Wednesday's action or Friday.'s
'linals.

'

;By DAVE tiARRIS
gavt the·Tigers a 4-0 lead-.
The Marauders threatened in the
.T.,S, CorNepondlint
, LUCAliVILLE - Meigs spotted third inning, Robert Qualls walked to
Wnerly a 4-0 lead in the second lead off the inning and Brad Whitinning and was never able to rccov- latch singled to put runners on first
'er as the Tigers defeated Meigs S-'1 and third with two outs. But Crabtree
' in the 'Division II district champi- goi'Tony Dugan to fly out to rightto
,onship game .Friday evening at re1ire the side.
"Lucasville.
Meigs threatened again in the
, The contest featured two all-state fourth inning. Chris Roush singled.to
,Pitchers in Joe Crabtree of Waverly 1with one out, but was forced oui ·at
, and the Marauders' Scott George . 'second on a fielders choice. JeremiThe two pitched on almost even ah Bentley singled with Ramsburg
terms in the contest, but the Maraud- going to third and Bentley reached
•.ers made mistalt:es that came back io second on the throw. But once again
:haunt them.
Crabtree retired the Marauders with: Waverly jumped out tb an early 1- · out any damage done.
1Jiead in the first inning without the
Waverly made it a 5-0 game in
• -:benefit of a hit. The Tigers took the fourth inning when' Vallery
®vantage of a walk, sacrifice a walked and scored on a triple off the
:Meil!:s error and a fielders choice to bat of.Josh Blakeman.
~late the run.
Meigs scored in the si~th inning.
: Waverly increased. the lead to 4- . Chris Roush struck out, but reached
Xl in the second inning. Ramsey fir~t base oil a passed ball . Ryan
:teachcd on an error and Adkins fol- Ramsburg then singled'to right and
iowed ' with a single. A fielder's to put runners on first and second.
choice, a balk and another single One out later Robert Qualls lined on
'

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' By MIKE COCHRAN

OUT OF . THE BLOCKS - Will'! help. from .
behind provldad by junior cll!tl$mate Chlsa Briggs, River Valley's Amy McCoy (sprinter at left)
aprJnta out of the blocks in the girls' 100-meter
dash held during Friday's Division I track and

. I

By SCOTT WOLFE
bracket as Nier and Jones dueled for
T' S Correspondent
the top spot. Finally, ·Nier got by for
STEWART - A large crowd good on the 15th circuit and Mike
was greeted with goOd .weather, a Bowling charged by for second.
•I
greatlicld
of cars and excellent rae- ma~ing a great three way battle. The
I
I
ing
for
Skyline
Speedway's Fan c~citemcnt at the front of the pack
I
t I'•&lt;'
Appreciation Night festivities and nearly over shadowed the daredevil
Memorial Day Championships on · tactics of third generation driver
the ultra-last 3/8-milc day oval Fri- Jason Dukes, who rocketed the CharI
day night.
lie Brown 1199 from a 17th stan to
I
'"··
Cars from several different states founh place. Rounding out the top
were on hand. but when the check- · rcn were Hysong. Billy Stinson.
l'I -· HEAVING THE IRON- River Valley's Nate Polcyn deliVIII'S a 41- ercd
!lag fell, it was Piketon's Jim· Dave Dickson, Brian Benson and
tour-Inch effort in the shot put during Friday's Division I track
I foot,
my
Nier
bringing home the outlaw Hud Horton.
.f
and field finals at Logan-Hocking Middle School. He later had an
super
sprint
win.
Pomeroy's
Todd
Heats
went
to
Bow
hng
and last
effort that crossed the 42-foot mark, but the top six competitors had
Smith in the Late Models. Radclilrs week's winner Ronnie Myers.
•l efforts·covering at least 45.51eet, ending his junior season that day.
Donnie Kinni son in the street stocks
local racing .talent and Sam
(Time•Sentlnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
.
. ;
and Dana Ni&lt;:hols in the Four Cylin- Elliott look-alike Todd Smith of
'
ders.
·
Pomeroy drove the Larry Slather's
A hcautiful spring night and great #37 to a popular win in the late mod·
field or cars made for some great ra&lt;:- . cl feature . Like the Elliott cowhoy
ing. Skyline Spcedway&gt;tylc. The chara&lt;:tcrs. Smith was quid to the
· Super Sprint A-main saw five dif- draw for the early lead with Ed VcnICrcnt lead &lt;:hangcs. hut when the ham close· hchind. Smith and Ven· .
! STEW,.,RT- Coming on Friday wh(J win also be on the racing card money was down at the inish. first ham put on a great show up front.
: June 6to'Skylinc Speedway. some of June 6th. This week, Skyline will
weok winner Jimmy Nier in the · ·while hack row starters Greg Eaton
l the best drivers in 410 cu. outlaw host regular racing in all four divi- .JNqJcnkins #00 &lt;:amc home with and Scott Wolfe fought their way
' sprint car racing will asscmhle for sions.
the popular win .
i.ntu th~ inp live.
Fm an action-packed night of
the $3.000 to win Coca-Cola Classic
Pole-siuer Eric Hysong took the
After a cauti&lt;m for Vcnham late in
clean, family fun and c ~citcmcnt. nr initial lead . after jumping Pcnnsyl- the race. the field was tightened and
fpr Winged Super Sprint cars.
This is thi: lirst of many specials a night in the enol spring air and
vania invader Bill Jones. Hysong led at the finish one could have thrown
of ~3.000 or ·more to win hy gutsy relaxation , come lO the new Skyline
until lap eight. when the caution !lew a hlankel uv~r the lop three linishers.
;promoter Lou Huhhard and wife Speedway: located on County Road for Jonathan Stevens and Mike · Wolle came off the tail in the
: Roxanne, who arc niaking Skyline 5~ between Athens and C&lt;KJivillc. nil Imler. Jones got the jump on the McDonald's/Prccision Automotive
:Speedway the hot hcd of sprint car U.S. 50. Warm-ups arc at 6:30 and restart. but despite never having Rocket to finish third .
ra&lt;:ing at 7 p.m. Gates open at 5:30. seen the track before Friday. he kind. racing that it once wa,&lt; in the early
Meanwhile. Smith's churge was a
A
14"cooler limit isin effect.
·
· I\170's. Already. over 40 drivers
ly tl&gt;ok the smooth red clay to his lik- green-to-checkered endeavor. He
Super Sprints. Late Models, Pure mg. .
:have expressed an interest in the
wa~ followed across the line hy Greg
Stn&lt;:ks and F&lt;.Jur-Cylindcrs will he on
. :super sprint spectacular.
Bucking and bruiting, Jones shiny Eaton, Scott Wolfe. Aamit Fleming.
: Fans can sec the Ohio Valley. Out- the menu . Skyline is located ori hluc # 12 backed .it in hard against the DatTin Smith. Ed cnham, Rohbie
County Road 53 hetwccn Coolville tightly knit .cushion. although Nier Thomas. Brian Willard. LeRoy Fer' laws versus thC best Pennsylvania.
·Indiana. West Virginia and Kentucky and Athens. less than an hour's dri- was right on his tail. Nier took the gusun and Ryan Cline.
invaders. ~1s well as a contingent
ve from Gallipolb. Chillicothe and
lead on lap ten at the llagstand. hut
'Heats went to Cline· and Smith.
-from ·the Ali-Sta·r sprint &lt;cries and Columbus.
Jones never wavered .and regained who made a clean sweep fur the
·world of Outlaws. This is one you
lear!. As several drivcrs ,furthcr night.
.
:won't want to missc
·
__..;.Sports briefs...;....;. the
back fought , for position. the fans · · Talk about grass rcxJts racing:
! Not only doc&lt; Skyline offer the
Tennis
were 'treated to some ·great wheolic ~1 , the -'~r~ct stock fea~u~c. was a
'• most c•citing open wheel racing in
DUESSELDORF. Gcmtany (AP)
stan~s on the tacky racing surl~l foot-stompm . door hangm . wheel· l~e Ohio Valley. but it.also ha&lt; great
- Australia · gained a place in the
Times neared the tcn ~sccond .to-wheel hattie that had the cmwd on
fields of Steel Block Late Models,· lin:ll nf the World Team Cup hy
Street Stocks, and Four Cylinders. 1.~iminatin~ Croatia 3-0

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l Skyline Speedway offers

j $3,000 prize for June race

HOLLEY BROS.
CONSTRUCTION CO., ·INC.
• •&gt;

UP Oil 1111 IIIII

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•Backhoe
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Work

· Fur)'R (64-67) and Bob Tway (65-66)
FORT WORTif, Texas (AP) were at 131.
.
Eight shots off the lead, nubbing
But the spotlight, as· usual, was on
short birdie pulls and obviously .woods.
frustrated, it appeared Tiger Woods'
A Colonial title would give the
:bid for a PGA "triple" was doomed. former Stanford ace victories in
Wrong.
' three consecutive starts, a feat last
The incredible young man accomplished on the PGA Tour by
, warmed up. on the back nine at Nick Price in 1993.
"Hogan'sAIIcy" Friday and moved · "I want to get the lead or be ncar
within three strokes of the lead the lead on the back side on Sunheading into 'the third round of the !lay," he said.
Ma.,terCard Colonial.
·
It appeared at one point that
"I'm just concentrating on getting Woods' quest was in jeopardy.
myself into position for Sunday,"
After a lackluster front nine of par
said the 21-year-old Woods who 35, Woods had birdies at Nos. 10 and
fired a S-under-par 65.
II, picked up another at 13 and
David Frost ((\6~3), Brad Faxon closed with a couple more on the two
(63-66) and Paul Goydos (64-65) final holes.
tied Colonial's 36-hole record of 11 "Somehow it just clicked in," he
1.\nder-par 129 and led the field by said after missing four putts of'less ·
•two at the halfway point.
than 10 feet on the front side.
Justin Leonard (64-67), Jim

field finals. Mc!:oY's 12.9-second finish was over.come only by Athens junior Jennifer Martin, who
turned in a school-record 12.6-second sprint to
win the race. (Times-Sentinel photo. by G.
Spencer Osborne)

. .

UMESTONE
TOP SOIL
RIVEf' GRAVEL

MUSHROOM
COMPOST.

.the menu. Skyline is located on
County Road 53 between Coolville
atid Athens, approximately an hour's
drive from Chillicothe and Columbus.
. SU,MM~.IlY

.

lllwdlly7:ao Mto12 noon
'You Piele Up or W• DeliHr

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - The spectators expected to follow Woods
· Tiger Woods . Shciw is coming to through 72 holes.
Ohio.
·
"We know what our fan base is,"
The golfing phenomenon agreed lie said. "According to the players,
Fric!ay to play at The Memorial we have some of the most_politc and
T(iurnament, which hegins Thursday knowledgeable galleries in golf. I
.and continues through June ·' at don't think you will sec an influx of
Muirlielci Village Golf Club in the new golf fans coming to the event
Columhus suburb of Dublin.
wh.o don '-t know golf etiquette."
Woods has won three times in
There were no tickets remaining
eight appearances this year. includ- for the four-day ·tournament.
ingthe Masters and the Byron· Nel· although some were availahle for
son Classic in his lust two oulinl!•· practice rounds. on 'Tuesday and
He is competing this weekend at the Wednesday.
Ma.,terCard Colonial in Fort Worth,
Earlier Friday, it was announc~d
·
·that
11cxas.
. John Daly wjll
. return to comThe 21-yeur-old Woods is the petition in the event. The 31-ycar-old
PGA Tour's lending money winner · wilincr.ofthe 1995 British Open and
this year with $1,290,350 in cam- !he 19\11 PGAChampiori&lt;hiphasnnt
·tngs.
·
played competitively since entering
.
Jim Wisler. director of The alcohol rchahilitation following a
Memorial Tournament. said ·ample .drunken spree at the Players Chamsecurity will be in place for Woods,
who draws legions or fans every- .
where he plays.
" We've been keyed up for marquee players ft~r years," Wisler said.
"We have had (tournament founder
and course designer) ·Jack (Nick- ·
laus). of course, and. Greg Norman
and Arnold (Palmer) when he ba.•
played hGrc. So we've hecn in that
mode to hegin with.
"Our volunteer committees have
hccn doing it so long tb&lt;:y know how
to gear .up for it. We don't have to
add anything special."
;;: Wisler said he docsn 't expect
••
••many problems fritm the: throngs of

..
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·~

THROWS FIVE-HmER - Meigs hurler Scott George turned In
a five-hit completa-gltrne effort In Frldlly'a Division I dlatrlct finlll
against Waverly at Lucasville. H_.., the Tlgara slot four~ In
the first two Innings and moved on to nsglonal play with • 5-1 victory. (Timee·Sentlnel phOto by Dave .,._rrla) · ·

ARRIVES AT THIRD - ·The llllgl Marauders' Ryan Ramsburg
getS cloWn and at1rs up some dult at thlnl bllte after arriving on
Jenmlah Bentley's double In Frid8y'1 Division II di1trlct basebeR
final aplnlt Waverly at Lucullllle. Waverly -n 5-1 to end the
Marauders' 1111011. ('TirMs-Sentlne photo by Dave Harris)

to right for a base hit scoring Roqsh.
But once again Crabtree came up
with the big pitch when he· needed
and he retired the next Marauder batter to end the threat.
·
Crabtree retired the Marauders in
order in the seventh on two deep fly
balls off 'the bats of George and
Whitlatch. And then he got Dugan to
ground out to shonto give the Tigers

The senior who was na~ to the
Division II all-state team this week,
gave up five hits, walk~d tw.o a,nd
struc:k .out eight. Brad Whitlatch led
Meigs with a pair of singles. Chris
Roush, Ryan Ramsburg, Jeremiah
Bentley and Rohert Qualls each
added singles. .
Waverly (22-S)will advance to
regional tournament action Friday a1

the district crown.
Crabtree, who ."''ent. the roule to
pick up the win, scattered six hits,
struck .out 10 walked one and hit a
batter. Blakeman had a triple to lead
Waverl:t1Crabtree added a double.
Malay, "amsey and Fyfee each singled.
.
George 'was the hard luck loser
for coach Scot Gheen's Marauders.

''

•

""'....,.._,_ ·. Nei
setVICe
makes.State ann ·uniCJU:e...
my p&lt;?licyholders swear by it
year after year;" ·
342 Sacond A1181lut, P.O. SOx 908
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.·
. 011.: 614-4*4290 or (888) 970'-i2345
Res. : (614) 441-1420

Lancaster against Edison (22-4 ). the
winner from the S(euhenville district
tourney. Meigs will dose out one of
the most successful seasons in the
schools history with a 19-K record.
lpninc ll!llb
Waverly
130-I!Kl-tl=S-5-3
Meigs
' (J(XJ-001 -Il=l -6-0
Crabtree (WP) and Oyer
George (LP) and Mullen

:

I

s..

• . _ . . . 1111 ui . . IIF%
I
...,_.
111ft-...... - . -

Jerry Bibbee

Marvin Keebaugh
Clark Reed

ln•~rourJO\,. OtmpanH;s

.,

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KAWASAKI MOTORSPORTS CENTER
741 EAST MAIN

1-e14-m-2114

POMEROY, OH. 457H

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r

"
.•

•.

·MemoriRI DRy
Speci11l.

With a cdlul~~r
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pho11e and the
right .
scrviccrplan from
U11itcd Sllitcs
Cellular;- J'OU cmr
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DOUBLE
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PACKAGE

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;, touclr.

Phones as low
as 99t .

••

Waived activatio11.

......

Teuil

· ' STRASBOURO, FI'IIKC (AP): Stoffi Graf, still stniglinJ with her
pme, beat Amanda Coc~ for the
• fint lime in throe trlea this year, 4:6, 7-S, 7~ (7-4) In the ~enlifinals of

!

:the
Open.
- SUUbotlrJ
.

--

.,..Kmtsrc'd

1

Hockey
1E . NEW YORK (~Pl - Marc
r iiCrnwford, conch ol the Colt)rado
·::Avalanche, wa.' tined $10,000 hy ttic
: :NHL Qfter attempting to get to the
: "DCtroit Reel Wings· hench during bis
· I team's 6-0 loss in Game 4 of the
Western Conference final series.
•
The line was levied under a rule ·
; that punishes con~~ct that is "~is: honorable. prejudt.canl to ~r agatnst
• the welfare of the: league.
!
· Golf ·
~ , NEWYORK(AP)-JohnDaly. ·
1wlio has not played compc:t~tiv~ly
• since entering alcohol rehabrhtauon
~ following · ti drunken spree at the
• Players Championship in March,
: will return to 'the PGA Thur next
I wcpk at the Memoriol Tournament.
: Only committed to the: Memorial
: before the p.m. deadline.

:

ltt)fTk.' OtfK.\.'S:

'•

1987 CHEVROLET
. SUBURBAN 4X4

s

Slaw fardl

tell you straight out," he ~aid .. "I
have to he honest. My futbcr taught
me that."

IJ

·!

...,....•.

. ./&gt;:,

British Open champion Tom
Besides, he pointed nut, he sim.
Lehman
(141
);
Ben
Crenshaw
(
1'13)
ply
was telling the truth.
1
and Tom Watson ( 144).
·"You gU)IS ask me a question, I'll
Despite his solid 66, Faxon used
one
of Woods' favorite lines, joking:
it.
"I
didn't
have my 'A' game today. It
· Faxon was in the clubhCJUse at 11undcr when Woods made the tum. was n C-minus."
Asked about Woods, Faxon sugAfter a 67 on Thursday, Woods was
only 3-ulider and his hid for a fourth gested he still has a little to learn
victory this year loomed as a long- . ahout life on the PGA circuit.
"I mean. seriously. it's impressive
shot.
what
he's done," said Faxon, u live"Getting the birdie on 10 gave me
time
tour
winner. But he went on to
something positive," he said. "I had
a lot of good 'chances early. I just point out that others have woll when
never could get anything going with not playing at the top of their game .
"He'~ making it sound like he 's
the putter. I'd pull 'em or lip 'em."
the only' one," Faxon said. "Jack
He reached the par-5 lith in two
Nicklaus won u lot of tournaments
and two-putted from 5 teet' lor birdie.
when he wasn't playing well. Tom
He rapped in two 12-foot birdie putts Watson was the same way. It's the
coming in and then drilled a 35-footmark of a champion to win tournaer at No. I K as the huge gallery
ments "!ithout having everything
cheered.
together."
For the second straight day, soft .
Natu.rally, Woods wa.&lt; quizzed
greens. fast fairways and gentle
about the subject.
breezes left the nonnally treacherous
"No one ha.• mentioned it CX(Cpt
Colonial Country Club course vulBrad," he said. "Look, Nicklau&lt;
nerable .
won a lcit of tournaments when he ·
The cut was at even-par 140, the
didn't bave his 'A' game. I won at the
second-lowest ever at the course
Nelson when I obviously didn ' t
nicknamed for hometown legend
bave my hest game."
Ben
. Tho casualties included
. After walking ofT the eightl\ green
in frustration , he handed his golf ball
to a yeung boy and said: "Here.
Maybe you' II have better luck with

.

·J= ·

Like a Hood lieiRbhor. State Farm is there. •
~'

'

••

We feature • Overnight Horse Camping, Horse
Training and Boarding, Fun Shows, Birthday
parties, Gift Certificates, Trail Rides, Family
· Outing, Groups Welcome

446-2114 or 2411318

Woods makes commitment ·
to play in The Memorial ·

Super Sprints
Heat: Mike Bowling, Jim Nicr.
Bill Jones, Lonnie Darst
Heat: Ronnie Myers. Eric
Hysong, Stinson, C.J. Holley
. Coca-Cola Feature:. Jim Nicr,
Mike Bowling, Bill Jones, Jason
Dukes, Eric Hysong, Billy Stinson,
Dave Dickson, Brian Benson, Hud
Horton.
·
Late Models
Heat: Ryan Cline, LeRoy Ferguson, Bryan Willard, DatTin Smith
Heat: Todd Smith. Ed Vcnham.
Rohhic Thomas. Greg Eaton·
Femurc: Todd Smith. Greg Eaton,
Scott Wolfe. Aaron Fleming, Darrin
Smith, Ed Vcnham, Rohhie Thoma.,,
Brian Wi liard, LeRoy Ferguson.
Ryan Cline.
Street Stocks
Heat: Donnie Kinnison, Ralph
cr am.l rode home th~ victor ahead nf Withem. Tnny Roush. Frank Roush
Heat: Roy Roush.· Jim Ashcraft.
Summers. Bryans. Steve 'Cruse,
Kurt
Stacy. Darrin Roush.
Steve Rohcns. AI Travis, Pappy
Feature: l&lt;innisnn, ~ithcm.Tony
Christy. Bert Flora and Jeff Braley.
Roush.
Frank Roush, Darrin Roush.
Action continues each Friday at
Johnny
Van~alc . Rickey Johnson,
the super fast Skyline Speedway. For
Ginny
Atkins.
Rick' Kapplc, Tim
·an action-packed night of clean,.
Martie
.
·
family lun and excitement, ur a night
Four-cylinders
in the cool spring air and relaxation,
Hem:
Mike
Buker. Dana Nkhols:
come to the new Skyline Speedway,
AI
Bryans.
AI
Travis
located on County Road 5~ hctween
Heat: Steve Cruse; bavc SumAthens and Coolville, off U.S. 50.
Warm-ups aic at 6 ; ~0. and racing at mers. Stuve Roherts, Bert Fln;a
Feature: Nichols. Baker. SumK p.m. Gates open 'at 5:30. A 14"
mers,
Bryans. Sieve Cruse, Steve
cooler limit is in effect:
AI Travis. Pappy Christy.
Rnhcns.
Super
Late Models, Pure
Ben Flnra. Jcfl' Braley
·
{j~iijifiijijjjjlijji will he on

(Ask about special group rates. We also give riding lessons
to all ages.)

Open Monday thN Frldey 7:10 8111 1114:30 pm.

'(

its li:et. Donnie Kinnison appeared to
he well on his way to a victory early in the race, however, slowly but
surely Ralph Withem reeled him in.
Withem went for th~;.lcad on lap nine
and held it for the next six go-rounds.
Kinnison was not to be denied n'nd
cast his own line for the lead-footed
Withem. Kinnison overtook Withem
on lap 15 and lqd t~c rest or thway.
Johnny Van!lalc made a gallant
run from 15th to sixth place behind
th.c two leaders and the brother's
Roush-Tony, Frank and Darrin. After
. second place Withem was Tony
Roush. Frank Roush. DatTin oush.
Johnny Vandale. Rickey Johnson.
Ginny Atkins. Rick Kapplc and Tim
Martie. Heats went to Kinnison and
Roy Roush .
A similar hattie developed in
Four Cylinders where Mike Baker
took the early lead qnd led the lirst
15 laps . Dana Nichols· and Dave
Summers . nearly made it three
ahreust. hut each time Baker withstood the challenge. With fi ve laps to
. g&lt;&gt; Nichols took the point !'rom Bak- ·

John K. Schmitt, Alltnt •

BUID.INTIA.L • COJOaiiCJAI. .

..

1W oods' comeback takes him three strokes behind leaders·

Smith stands among latest victors

I

Jl r '•PII(IIIIIJ''

MasterCard·Colonial second-round play ends

Skyline Speedway results posted

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t ,.

Waverly. nine down
.Meigs 5-1 to claim
:D-11 district crown

Five Lady Raiders get regio_
nal berths
LOGAN - In the finals of Friday 's Division I dlsttict track and
field meet at Logan-Hocking Middle
School, River Valley sent five athletes - senior Penny Salisbury,
juniors Amy McCoy and· Chisa
Briggs, sophomore Ashly Roberts
and freshman Casee Jus'tice - to
this weel( s regional meet at Dublin
Coffman High SchooL . ·
J'he regional is slated for Thursday and Saturday. The ·meet. will
have the top four qualifying competitors from each event in all finals.
McCoy qualified for the 100- and
200-meter dashes. Roberts qualified
for discus and shot pui. Salisbury,
who qualified for the I 00-meter hur, ·
dies, got.her second event when the
Raiders' 4 x 200-meter relay team,
which includes Briggs, Justice and
McCoy, took fourth in a race that
pushed Athens to set a new school
record.
River Valley's·girls' team, a Divi- ·
sion I entrant for the first time, .took
fifth place out of the seven teams.
River Valley's boys' team finished
last out of the ei~ht teams in its sesSion.
All athletes will be identified by
school (A-Athens, C-Chillicothe, LLogan, Mar.-Marietta, MT-Miami
Trace, R-River Valley and W-Warren Local)
Girls' session
Team scores: Athens &amp; Logan
tied at 116; Chillicothe 66, Warren
Local60, Marietta 57, River Valley
43, Miami Trace 36
' Discus: Car!er (L) 127 -II;
Wheatley (A) 120-8; A. Roberts (R)
I 09-6; Metzler (L) I 06,9; DeGanno
(R) 101-7; Salzman (A) 97-8
High jump: Blair (L) 4-10;
~rown (W) 4-10; Kight (A) 4-10;
Kieparek (C) 4-8; Dill (A), Crace
(C) &amp; Barnett (W) tied at 4-8
Long jump: Crace (C) 15-9.75; .
Beard (A) 15-1; Beatty (C) 1410.25 ; Snow (Mar.) !'4-6; FetTell
(Mar.) 14-4
Shot put: Cart.er (L) 39-3.5;

Jl

PorMroy • Middleport • Oelllpolla;.OH • Point Pl..aant, WV

21, 1117

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Outdoors .

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"OIJio flshlng _report

COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP) upper end of the lake ncar Howard
Here is the weekly fishing report Road when seeking white bass.
p~vided by the Division of Wildlife
INDIAN LAKE- This is a popof the Ohio Depanment of Natural ular crappie fishing lake and offers
~esources :
·
fish ranging in size from seven to 12
Ohio River
inches. Use minnows and jigs fished
Jigs and minnows· and.jigs and around shoreline cover. The channels
twisters work best when seeking and vegetated areas are the top spots
saugeyes and hybrid stripped bass. In in spring to fish for largemouth bass.
the Ga.llipolis tailwaters, hybrid Use small spinners. si~·inch plastic
itripped bass up to seven pounds worms and surface baits. 'The South
have been caught on jigs and twister Bank area is a good spot to catch
tails .. White bass up to 15 inches are whale bass.
Northwest
also being caught in these !ail waters.
Largemouth and smallmouth bass
BELLE.\'UE RESERVOIRS Bluegills measuring five to eight
fisbing is improving as well.
inches have been caught by anglers
SOutheast·
.
fishing With wax worms suspended
. MUSKINGUM RIVER
Anglers are using night crawlers. beneath a bobber in four feet of
shrimp and chicken hvers to catch water in Reservoir 4. A few large·
mouth bass are being caught as well
ch~nncl catfish ranging in size from
12 to 24 inches. The top spot is the on jigs and pigs.. In Reservoir 5, good
Y-bridge near the Ellis Locks. Some crappie fishing is the norm for
rock bass, carp, smallmouth bass: anglers using minnows fished
and white bass are also being caught beneath a bobber at depths of four to
throughout the river system.
si~ feet.
DILLON LAKE - Use jigs to
NEW LONDON RESERVOIR
t11ke largemouth bass from 12 to t6 -Anglers have had good success in
in~hcs. Minnows, meal .worms and
catching walle)l:es from the shoreline
small spinners are being used to as well as boats. Jigs and minnows
·oaq;h crappies up to 14 inches long. along wath twister tails arc the bait~
Larval baits and red worms work of choice. Drift fishing a worm har·.
, well when seeking bluegills. The ness is also productive when walleye
·IWJlrina area is a good fishing loca- and yellow perch fishing.
Northeast
tion .
:; ,
Southwest
WEST BRANCH RESERVOIR
:,.. COWAJI! LAKE - Fish along - Muskies ranging in size from 36
the bottom with night crawlers dur- to 48 inches arc being caught lake
ing late evening wlien seeking bull- wide hy anglers using crank hails
heads and channel catfish. Use min- lished at depths of three lo eight feet.
nows fished at depths of eight to 15 The best locations arc areas ncar
reel around the shoreline cover to points and submerged structure.
.catch crappies, some which may Largemouth bass weighing live to
measure up to 13 inches long. Large- ·eight pounds have also been caught
mouth bass abundance is very good on shiners and jigs tipped with minand should provide excellent fishing nows.
during the year.
PIEDMONT LAKE - Muskics
PAINT CREEK LAKE - The ranging in size from 30 to 45 in•hflooded timber areas arc the lop spots ·es are being caught on worms lished
for anglers seeking crappies. Some in shallow waters. Largemouth bass
of these fish can measure up to IS weighing four to seven pounds arc
inches long. Usc minnows for best being taken on Hot N' Tots and minresults. Try the points and drop-offs now-jig combinations. Some
adjacent to flat areas when seeking saugeyes continue to he caught in a
saugcyes this time of the year. The few urcus by anglers fishing with jigs
outlook is good to very good for and minnows ncar the bottom.
anglers seeking channel catfish and
Lake Erie
Smallmouth bass arc being
largemouth bass.
caught around the western basin
. Central
ALOM CREEK LAKE - This islands in waters 18 to 25 feet deep.
has been an ·improving lake for l!l;c leaded hair jigs or soft craws on
muskic anglers. Fish stocked in pre- a wcight-lorwurd spinner li&gt;r best
vious years show excellent growth results. Walleyes up In I i pounds
rates with some fish now measuring can he caught this time of year. Try
up to 47 inciTes. Try. trolling large lishing along the central basin breakmusk1c hails in shallow water ncar walls when seeking smallmouth bass
the dam. Bluegills can be taken on cast 'of Huron. FiMhing action is
small worms and larval baits lishcd he ginning to improve as boating con·
at depths of I0 to 25 feet. Try the ditions moderate .

location.

· When the boat reaches a spot
about 200 mctcrs ,offshorc, the GPS
unit screeches. telling the 56-yearold retired Procter &amp; Gamble manager that he has reached "MAT! ."
MAT I is a wooden 1'"-llct
crowned with oak strips that Modena and fishing buddy Nelson Estes
loaded with lead and sank a few
weeks earlier.
Instead of marking the spot with
n noat, they simply pressed the
" 1118rk" button on the GPS unit,
odaing .the location 10 its memory.
;;'Fish nrc allrac!ed to these struc·
tures," Modena said as he activated ·
the . Hummingbird Wide-Eye fish
fiDilcr mounted on the rear of the

Section C
•.-,as. 1..,
•~n~~~y

Have you
visited your
local library
recently?

rfie

Ohio to offer free fishing
on June's first weekend
COLUMBUS - Ohio~qs · will
have the opportunity to fish, Ohio's
rivers, lakes and streams for free this
coming June 7-8 as part oftl)c stat:'s
Free Fishing Days. according to
Governor George V. Voinovil:h.
State fishing licenses
not
required during the two-day promotion, aimed at introducing t~.s.public
to the fun and excitement jl spon
fishing,
"Fishing is a relaxing, f~ lfilling
hobby; one I consider to :l!c our
finest, family-oriented outdoor pastime," said Governor Voinovich.
"Young people especially oun -take
lhis opportunity to join with their
parents to learn the enjoyment or
recreational fishing."
·
"On this special weekend, ashing
licenses won't be required fti i"Ohio
citizens who arc lishing in uny of the

are

BOW KILL- Mike Johnson from the Five Polnll area of Meigs
County Is shown with his third tom taken with 1 bow and arrow In
the p11t two y11re. The gobbler weighed 19.5 pounds and hid an
11-lnch beard and 1.25-lnch apurs. The last two toms liken were
1110 captured on videotape with 1 vldeocamera hidden In Johnson'a
ground blind.
·

Winston Cup slate
and standings posted

By The Aaaoclatecl Press
The 1997 NASCAR Winston Cup
stock car racing schedule, with winners in parentheses and driver poml
standings:
Feb. 16 - Daytona 500, Daytona, Fla. (Jeff Gordon).
.
Feb. 23 - Goodwrench Service
400, Rockingham, N.C. (Jeff Gordon).
March 2 - Pontiac Excitement
400, Richmond, Va. (Rusty Wallace).
March 9 - Primcslar 5Cl0,
Hampton, Ga. (Dale Jarrell).
March 23- TranSouth Finan10ial
400, Darlington, S.C. (Dale Jarrell),
April 6 - Interstate Batteries
500. Port Worth, TcKas. (Jeff Burton):
April 13- Food City 500, Bristol. Tenn. (Jeff Gordon).
April 20 - Goody's Headache
Powders 500, Martinsville, Va. (Jeff
Gordon).
May 4 - Save Marl Supermarkets 300, Sonoma, Calif. (Mark
Mnrtin).
May I0 - Winston SClO. Tallade~a . Ala. (Mark Martin).
May 17- x-Thc Wmston. Concord. N.&lt;;:. (Jell Gordon).
May 25 -Coca-Cola 600, C&lt;in•ord, N.C.
June I -Miller 500, Dover. Del.
June 8 - Pocono 5CKl. Long
Pond. Pa.
June IS - Miller 4CHl. Brm1klyn.
Mich.
June 22 · - Califnrnia 500.
· h&lt;Klls, " Welcome to the high-tech Fontana, Calif.
July 5 - Pepsi 4(Hl. Daytona
lishin ·hole, boys."
Beach,
Fla.
This is the new world of lish and
July
13 - Jiffy Luhe 300.
computer chips. Once the province
of barefoot hnys with cane poles. Loudon, N.H.
July 20 - Pennsylvania S(Hl.
angling has gone hook, line and
Long
P\md. Pa.
sinker for technology. . ·
Aug.
2 - Brickyard 4CHl, lndi·
Electronic navij!alional aids can
display maps of the entire globe, anapolis.
Aug · 10 - Bud at the Glen:
wnh derails such as river names and
Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
gcogrnphic landmarks. A new modAug.
17 - ITW Devilbiss 4&lt;Hl.
el links GPS wi1h e-mail while
Brooklyn,
Mich.
...
~not~cr c~~ts negative ions to put
Aug. 23 - G&lt;KKiy's Headache
lash an a b111ng m&lt;Kld.
Powders
SOO, Bristol. Tenn.
l.urcs, once handmade by crahsAug.
31
- Mnunauin Dew South. men. arc now designed and
machined by computers. then ern 500. Darlingtnn, S.C.
Sept. 6 - Winston Cup 4(Kl.
infused with J!enctically engineered
Richmond.
\'u.
·
allraction scents.
Sept.
14
·
New
Humpshire
300,
The greatest consumer impact ha.&lt;
Loudon,
N.H.
·
'
come from the recent marriage of
Sept. 21 - MBNA 500, Dover,
lish lindcrs and GPS. Falling comDel.
p~ter chip prices ha\le made the gilSept. 2K - Hanes 500. · Marmos more affordable: Simple sys- .
terns can cost a.' lillie a.' $300. with
full bel I.-and-whistles units reaching
$4,CX)O.
Both technologies trace their
roots back to the Pentagon. The lish
Iinder is a cousin of the sonar, an
acronym for "lillund navijlalion and
rnnging."

.-ya, 1wr

COLUMBUS Ohio killed, down from the 527 killed ·in
Department of Natural Rl!isources 1996, Gallia County reported '422,
reported that 12,301 wi~ turkeys down from the 551 l(illed in 1996.
were killed by hunters in 'iile threeOther neighboring counties· and
week season that ended on May. 17. their 1997 totals were Athens (462)
. The preliminary record total was and Lawrence (305 ).
appfl!ximately a 2% inc~c over
Opening-day totals show 2,231
last year's harvest, whi~'yieldcd · birds taken, a. 13% drop fro!ll the
12.098.
1996 total (2.556).
·
The counlies where the highest
Modem-day -turkey hunting in the
number of birds were checked dur- Buck.eye State can be traced to May
ing the season were Guernsey (504), 4-7, 1966, during which hunters
Coshocton (498), Ashtabula (495), killed 12 birds in nine counties.
Jackson (488) and Vinton (466).
There were si~ non-fatal hunting
Meigs County reported 454 incidents reported during the season.

·New electronic gear
helps anglers find fish
By SAL RUIBAL
USA Today
BIG SANDY, Tenn.- The thick
morning fog clings tightly to this
small cove 'off the Tennessee River,
hut Joe Modena IS having no problem steering his 17-foot bass boat
through the shallow labyrinth.
The quiet dawn· is interrupted hy
the steady electronic hecp-hcel'hcep coming from the glowing
screen on the hnat 's control panel.
The liquid crystal display reveals
the water's changing depth and the
shape of humps and buml's below.
Flying 11.000 miles above the
cqvc, a necklace of Global Positioning System satcllncs beam down a
stream of high-frequency radio
waves to a Garmin40 GPS receiver
on the boat. The unit translates that
data inm numbers that flash on the
screen. indicating the hours precise

.

ODNR tosts wild
·turkey ftill totals

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_G allipolis L&amp;D
tailwaiters harbor
seven-pound bass ·

'·

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tinsvillc, Va..
Oct . 5- UAW-GM Quality SOU.
«;:oncord, N.C.
,
Oct. 12 - Scars Diehard 500,
Talfadega, Ala.
Oct. 26- AC Delco 400, Roc,kingham, N.C..
Nov. 2 - Dura Lube 500,
Phoenix. ·
Nov. 16- NAPA 500. Hampton.
Ga.
~-non-points race.
Driver standings
I. Terry Labonte, I ,544.
2. Jell' Gordon, I,505.
3. Dale Jarrell, 1,492.
4. Mark Martin, I.W4.
5. Bobby Labonte. 1.329.
6. Dale Earnhardt, 1,287.
7. Jeff Burton, 1,277.
8. Ricky Rudd, 1,172.
9. Michael Wultrip. 1.126.
10. Bobby Hamilton, I, 121.
II. Ward Burton, 1,098.
12. Rusty Wallace, 1.082.
13. Jeremy Maylicld, I,(l68.
14. Johnny Benson. 1.062.
15. Bill Elliott. 1.058.
16. Darrell Waltrip, 1,()43.
17. Ernie lrvan. 1,038.
IX. Ken S10hmdcr. 1.033 ~
19. Sterling Marlin. 1.021.
20. lhett B&lt;idinc: 1.0 IK.
21. Ted Musgrave. I.CKI'J ..
22. John Andreui. 96CI.
B Gcolr B&lt;ldme. 950.
24. M1kc Skinner. \145.
25. Morgan Shepherd. \142.
26. Jimmy Spencer. 928.
27. Kyle Petty. 887.
2!1. Lake Speed. 846.
29. Kenny Wallace. ·K31.
30. Steve Grissm)h 784.
31. Ri10ky Craven. 767.
32. Rick Ma&lt;t, 761.
H. ·Hut Stricklin. 759.
34. Dcrrikc Cope. 750.
35. Dick Trickle. 749
36. Dave Marcis. 717.
37. Joe Ncmcchek. 631.
3!1. Rohby Gord&lt;;n; 6iO.
39. Chad Lillie, 574.
40. Robcn Prc,"lcy. 545:
· 41 . Bobby Hillin Jr, 425.
42. David Green, 395.
43. Greg Sacks, 392.
44. Mike Wallace. 374.
45. Wally Dallcnhuch. 267..
. 46. Gary Bmdherry. 227.
47. Billy Stramlrigc. 155.
48. Loy Allen. 119.
·
49. Ed Berrier. ·93:
50. Todd B&lt;ldiric, 93.

'

l

slate's waterways- including Lake
Erie," he said. "Free Fishing Days
can remind those who have not
fished in a while of the great outdoor
cKperiencc they've been missing."
Legislation · authnri;cing the
statewide Free Fishing Days wa.'
supported by Governor Voinovich
an.d approved by the Ohio General
Assembly in 1992.
· A~cording to· ihe Division ·of
Wildlife, 1997 should he another
excellent lishing' season across the
slate, Luke Eric is well known for its
outstandin!l walleye and smallmouth
bass fishing, while the Ohio River
of.fers u wide variety of catches. from
black hass and crappies to saugcrs
and walleye. Ohio's inland rivers,
lakes and streams also offer many
line lishing opportunities.
"Fishing is not only a fine hobby,

._.,.
)

it is alsn responsible ror conlrihuting

-Sports briefs-Auto racing
MADISON, Ill. (AP) - Paul
Tracy, who will carry a two-race
winning streak into the Motorola 300
on Saturday at the brand new 1.27mile oval at Gateway lntemaiional
Raceway, was outrun by Bra?-iliun
Raul Boesel.
. Boesel picked up the third pole or
his CART Indy-car career, and first
since June of 1994 at Milwaukee,
with a lap of 187.963 mph. Tracy,
who had led every practice since the
track lirst opened for competition on
Wednesday. was right behind' ut
187.739.
Tennis
MADRID, Spain (AP) - T"psccdcd Monica Scles struggled curly before regaining her form 19 bent
Argentina's Florencia Labat 6-7 (3.
7), 6-1, 6-2 in the scmilinals of the
.Madrid Open:
In Saturday's final, Sclcs will face
dcfcilding -champion and No. 2 seed
Jana Novotna. a 6-4, 6-4 winner over
Spain's Arantxa Sanchez Vicario.
Tenni•
ST. POELTEN, Austria (APlAustr~lian Patrick Rafter and Marcelo Filippini of Uruguay scored semifilial victories in the Raifcisscn
Grand Prix clay court tournament. ·

an estimated $1 billion per year to
the slate's economy," said Governor
Voinovich. "Ohio ranks among the
top I0 states nationally in lishirig
license sales with more than one million licensed anglers and about two
million anglers total:"
According to the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. more than 35 mil·
lion U.S. residents age 16 and older
rarticipate in recreational lishing
nalitmwidc.

No Credit~ Slow Credit
Bad Credit, Bubuptcy?
At Dutch Miller Chevrolet,

WE Cc\N QEI.p
If You Have At Lem $1,300
a month lneome

$SAVE THOUSANDS$
Don't P1y Th.,_. High Kentucky

and Ohla I n - ~I
Many vehlclel Ale Available With
NO MONEY DOWNI
CALL 24 HOURS A DAY·

7

"

·.

;fmemorabl9 Memorial·Day in Gallia County's history
-

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~~IICJ\. Gc»·:.S "It) lti~.AX~

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Puzzle Ia on Page 02

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Jhe Tragedy
,
of
Life•s Twil_
ight

·

Stop In Peoples lank
Lobby ,,·: Pomeroy and
, See Ou( Hot Springs
Sp, Display

.

Sonar wwo dcveiCified by the U.S .
Navy durins World War II to lind
submarines, hut entrepreneur Carl
Lowrance ligured out that it wnuld
he just dandy for findinl! lish. too.
In 1957., he introduced the first
electronic lish-finding device·.
Lowrance Eloc!ronics Inc. is still
active in the market.
The Global Positioning System
was
conceived in the L970s and
bqat.
'
Almost instantly. the screen became part or the so-called "Star
shows two digital fish shapes si~ feet Wars" defense system developed
durinslhc Reagan years. It uses sig·below the .boat.
Lines baited with live minnows nals fro!n 24 posychronous satelspluh into the water. A few minutes lites to lrianplatc exact taracts on
I_., a sw.-Iike crappie swllllowslhc Elrth.
In 19M1 the Department of
wrilgllng bait and is hooked.
- As the foot-10111 fish is swuns Def- ·cplll~ GPS to civilian UIIC.
inte the boal, Modena Jrins and

By DOROTHY SAYRE
•
My husband, George, is a more
. frequent &gt;isiror io the library, or at
least Meigs' mobile library, than I.
However. we both enjoy reading and
always have a book "goirig." While
we have our favorite books saved in
hardback, most of our daily reading
is in paperback form; it is less
eKpensive, and easier to carry while
traveling and to read in bed. Also, at
the price, paperbacks can be given to
the Iibrary or
passed · on to
'
friends.
fPeorgc and I
seldom read the
same books. His
taste tends to run
towards
.John
Grisham, Tom
Clancy, b!ographies. Oying war stories, and . sports. I prefer his\oric
novels (Shogun was my all-timefavorite),
modem classics such as
COMFORTING A CAREGIVER •• Caring lor som.One with
Steinbeck,
Heminway and Faulkner
Alzheimer'• .dl1111e can be 1 lonely experience. T9 help with
(which
I
occasionally
re-read), true·
llf:Dtyle adjuatmenll and the Isolation careglylng brlnga, 1 aupport
life
crime.
and
mysteries
c~d!pt
prOSJI'IIm· .II. offered by the Meigs County Council on,~l.ng at the
romantic mysteries and sci~fi.
S,nlot:'Center. Lenora Leifheit, R. N:, Is the coordinator anr;I her role
Agatha Christie is my favorite (is,n \·
llleludea encouraging and comforting cereglvere. ·
she everybody's?). I. also. like some
biographies, self-help books, and
humorous books. Both 9f us enjoy
the animal/vet stories of Jam~s Herriot.
.
When we first moved here, I hap•••
pily
discovered Meigs County had a
..
'. .
good library. (And, the colorful,
melodious Meigs' mobile library
•
'
brings a smile to c~cryonc's face.)
I've enjoyed the local library for
some research, as well as the library
I . '
at Ohio University.
..
Recently, we had an opportunity
to visit t~e Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial
Library of Gallia County.
1;1¥. CHARLE~E HOEFUCH
lonely eKperience."
0
I had been asked to speak on our
rfitleii!·S..,tlnel Staft
Caregivers· become isolated as
and emotion• reeultlng In a tregedy lor not only the vlcJ:u:~t :h~ure,
1992 experience backpacking 526
. , POMEROY ·· '!Now I am -alone; they are forced ipto lifestyle changes has
the memorlel of 1 lifetime with the m1n she married many yeara ago.
miles on the southca:n portion of the
~he doesn't remember" writes in order to c:ire for their loved ones.
+. •
' offered at the Senior Citizens Cen- handle stress, how to cope with rather quickly to the point where Appalaehian Trail. The speech was
a::atrick· D. Woo4 in a,poem he titled That feeling of i~olation is intensipatient disorientation, the effects of deterioration can be seen almost to be the first of a new program
'IInner Pain." · &lt;.. ·
·
·fied by the fruslration at not being · ter, can make a difference.
drugs
and-outside stimuli, and just as daily. The disease may reach its being implemented on Sundays at
.. W.ood· wtlo lives on Spring able to communicate and the actual
"Although it is common to feel
"-venue in .J1omcroy reveals in the physicahlemand~ of taking care of alone, to thmk that no on_e c~n importan\, how to 'take care of them- plateau and venture a steady course the library. I conned George into
for a while and then move quickly helping, aod we had a nostll)gic
11oem·a tragedy of life's twilight •• someone' with deffi~'llia.
understand what IS happen1ng m selves.
Knowing
the
disease
process
is
into a stage of complete hclpless- afte.rnoon digging into our box of
\\fll~n"' li longtiine coin pan ion is·
Yes, it is a l()il'Cfy· ~XP.Cri~nce. but your hfe, there as help out there ••
itpp.(!fl•l)l.'
~ays
Lcilheit,
becau~
tl)e
ness.
; •···.
•tru•=:•diseasc. . .. - ~s helP,.'·1 - ~~~tiS advises someone to stand by you. someone
irail maps !lnd .()ther paraphernalia·
more
y.ou
)&lt;now
..
about
'wh!u
to
·
'·.
Leifheit
says
the
disease
comes in
' .,
""''"',.."!l.'l? ·""''"fJ~
·
' . N.•'AI zy.:JIIW"
·...,.
your, •feel•·
•• R
~~Yrt•s a..v-m,---~....
•·J,'i.~A:•'lhen,
s.-. witltwhom;you-tan
.
~
.,. share·
.
• ..... expect, the bc,ttlf'bff'Yilq llllll ift , ~n"i'. • !lttee_rstagesl ''friild;'. moderate and preparins oursplves to present a true
a ing care'fi'l' fi\fO~t'd'b'a!i'~'ilh· t~" su ort ~ordinator for the · M'elir_' :mpt.,so~~:.WJ.oo..tSjCliJIOricnemg
represelitation ofinlillife. ·
(jling what comes along. That infor· severe/terminal. The first stage can
While at the library, tlic Deputy
di_,. li~e l~llei\l\!lr'J . I!(~Q'fe .; 11-:."tl~nty ~ouncil on Aging. )"f. '·\'(' many of tilt: same problems you mation comes from associating with last several years and the symptoms
Director, Judy A. Wilco~on, ga\lc
do\t;nward mental sp!ftil' is~~e 'iiiaer
. • She ·i~ convinced that partie Ipal · arc." say_s Leafheat. .
of-things is often described .as "a in&amp; in a,s~~pport group, such as that . She as a firm hchever that com- others who have experience in deal- range from memory loss to confu- me a tour of the beautiful building:
ang together wnh ot~crs havang sam- ing with those afflicted with sion. from lack of energy to moodi- A total surprise greeted me a.s I
ness .
ilar problems provides support to get . Aizheimer's disease.
entered the atrium and saw the ·casAbout 40 Meigs Countians arc
The. scenario as described by cading pool. The atrium, with its
through the daily trials of dealing
active with the support ·group. and Lcilllcil is "one of a rcrson sensing lush foliage. glass-topped tables und
with victims of the disease.
She acknowledges that isolation although some of them get to meet- somelhing is wrong llccausc she can chairs. brick lloor and skylights, was .
· and the demands of carcgiving, the ings only occasionally. they still no longer remember how to balance reminiscent of a courtyard where I'd
forced c~angcs in lifestyle. the loss maintain that contact and gain com- her checkbook. going fora drive and lunched in Guadalajara. Mc~ico.
of friends, and sometimes. even the fon from communicating with those not remembering huw 10 get home. What a treat to find such a delightful
lack of f~mily support. can be dev- who arc having similar experiences. or losing things like keys. finding room in a library!
Statistics show that 70 rcrccnl of ·them, and then nut knowing what to
astating.
The library tour conlinued with
Alzheimer's
patients arc taken care dn with them. Then going tu great meeting rooms. reading room.
That's why· support j,!roups were
established. says Lcilhcil, who .of at home, . many times hy choice. lengths lO ''"cr up fur behavior g~nealogy room. children's lihrary.
.
emphasizes the importance of being but sometimes for lack of finan&lt;:ial changes."
and mohilc library area. I was
She dcscnhcs the sc;:ond stage a.' impressed with the volume ol talksure ' that the C~!fCgivcr. because of assistance.
mtldcratc and the longest in dura- ing hook.s availahlc. Judy W1lcmon
the man~ responsibilities, doesn't
tion, sometimes several years. In informed me the talking h&lt;loks arc
become a victim.
Stages of Alt.heimcrs .
Lcilhejt explains that one of the . The first stages of Alzheimer's this stage. patients usually need full- currently popular with busy people.
biggest advantages of coming to the disease, says Lcilhcit. is "a cover-up time supervision . Many wander While talking hooks .used to be
support group is associating with stagc.... thosc who have the disease around, stay up all mght. have difli- mainly for 1he hlind. 1he hooks nnw
others who arc facing similar ·prob- arc covering up and the spouse or cuhy maintaining halan10c. become fill voids l&lt;1r tmvelcrs. walkers. and
paranoid. and have d1fficuhy '" for f1Cuplc gardening and doi-ng
lcms. and sharing techniques for family members arc covering up."
coping with the sometimes bizarre
"Most patients arc uwarc that ~.:ommunicatan~. ·
housework. II is presently possible
The final stage of the disease can to listen In a hook no matter where
behavior peculiar to the discasc.
something is wrong. hut they arc not
last for several m&lt;lre years. h is a you arc or what you arc doing. It is
. "Caring for someone with sure what it is." she continues.
time
when the patient is unahlc to especially pleasant for readers who
dementia is yery. very stressful and
"Then there is this conception
it's important thai caregivers take that Alzheimer's is a mental illness. rucugniw family and fncnds. can't must spend their workdays readmg
care · or themselves and not feel It's not; it's a physical disease. But communicate nor do simple tasks or waLching n ~.:omputcr monitor.
. guilty about it." advises Lcilhcit. there is that stigma .-: if someone is and requires total 10arc. "just like With a talking book, readers can rest
•
L..;._....J · That, she added. is an important .pan
confused or disoriented. then 'they when they were a hahy." adds their eyes doing mundane. mindlcSH
Lcilhcit.
. • COPING WITH ALZHEIMER'S·· Much haa
written on how of attending the support meetings.
must be mentally ill'."
chnrc~ at homl! in the evening, and
During the whole time of the diS- still enjoy the latest novel.
flimlllas can understand and care for Alzheimer'• v.lcllms, while
T-here not only do caregivers
Alt.hcimcr's disease has been
maintaining some semblance of normalcy In thfllr own llvea.'ln addl· share w~al's going on in their lives compared to a roller coaster ride·-- it euse's progression "emotions arc in
The Bossard Memorial L1hrary.
tlan to respite and other in·home servll:es, th~, Center hll numer- and of the ones they are caring for. starts out slowly and gradualLy, then
Continued on page CB
Continued on page C4
aU) books and pamphlets available for l~n to th~e struggling for but they lcam from speakers how to builds up momentum and progresses

RllliOUIIMI
.
915·~J01
•

By-,JAMES S~NDS
tary honors in the cemetery at Min~peclal Correspondent
isterol. France. II was not until1921
Memorial Day in Gallin County that his body was returned 10 the
' in 191 '! wa.' one of United States. Bui on·that Memorial
the hardest .in the weekend of 19'19 unc of the largest
county's history. Not crowds, if no( t,J1c largest crowd in
only had a number ahc ~istory of the church had gat~­
of county residcn(s crcd to hear three ministers. S.S.
died in World War I, . Denney. J.W. Greer and Samuel
but the previous fa)l Lewis remember Donnally in a fitand winter had pro- ting way..
1
dH~ed nearly I00 deattis froan the
A vacant ch~ir was placed on the
laSt grcal epidemic to hit here. The rrn&lt;trum and appropriately dceoratin.flucnza epidemic of 1918 -1919 · cd. Mrs. Maggie Davis read a lcller
killed yQUn. ~nd old. For instance in . that Donn~lly h~ written to the
one week tn November, 19111 tlic ·church wjule I)C was an France. In
ases of the deceased were as fo)· thC letter Donnelly c~prcsscd an
lows:' 54; ~- 11. 16:·2S. 17. 10. 18, ·. alboding faith in ' hristianity and
r6; 49, 33.32 and 41.' ·~ .
as~urcd the members or his ·home
· : J'\1 Victory Baptist, &lt;;~~urch ncar ~hurch that he w~(trusting in God.
Mercerville, a memorial service was daily. 'whom he was. sure would help
hciCJ for Price Earl Donnally who ~im win the victory. Donnally to.ld
lllddiedin Fra.,ce Oct. 14, 1918. He how he wiiS IOOki!lll fo..Ward 10 the
had died of pneumonia. which was · tirne when he would return to Victo:
t~:Oflitial cawac of death of most of·· ry CJ!urch -red with glory and
~ 100 ip Gallla County's civilian . with conftdeclce IIIIU~e hid ~e his·
fKII!t!lllion wllo c:onfniCted. Splnish duty and done iC wan .
lnftuenza. 1he diiCIIM! .usually was
'l11e sert.ice Oaf with .the names
~ied by pneumonia. Mr. of 28 boys from the Mercerville area
Donailly W. buried with full mili- who had served in W.'W. I was pre-

•

Camp Shcrmun in Chillicothe April
I, 1919 and was diSIOharged. He fell
pretty good unt1llatc May when the
eiTctL' from the German poison gas
began to show up in his body. It
hecame dear to him that the end was
ncar. Bui he wanted 10 he present at
his memorial services and so religious services were held in his home
in Ohio Township that summer. On
July 22, 191\l,just d few days before
' his 24th birthday, Waugh died . He
was laid to rest in the King Cemetery.
The few Civil War veterans left
in 1919 gathered at the Bethel
Methodist Church in Oh'io T\)wnship
ror Memorial service~ . · William
Lanier wrote of the day: "A few
--RIAL DAY • VIctorY a.,u.t Ctturcti nl!l'' Mircertllle Wll years ago 40 or ?O Civil War vc~cr­
the 101M~ 1 111-ntOI'IItl aarvloe for YIW 1 CIIUIIty Prioe l!arl Doh- . aAs could he casaly mus~crcd up ·~a
nally, 'TNt ....-~ waa hekf· the 8unt111 IIIIWI, MemOrial Day In cbmmumty for an ~c~saon lllte.tha_s.
11111. DonNIIIy'llld liMn 1 lllthful mern~of the chUrch from hll but the ~ks arc thannang fast and tn
yo""
·
·
u §hort time the la'll .vatant chaar w1ll
· _•
"
·
,
·
.
he -draped. w!Jich will ruanind th~
sellted by .Home~~ and N~l aervtee was W.W. I -veteran Araus . livinl! that oiiOihCr arc~ war has
Holick. ~ two'W .IIIII lhll w.k 'L~rgus W!luah. He was u~ablc to pas.cd into hililCiry. and warriors of
rctunted frop~· ~- 111e~ be.~nt. Waugh IIJid made tt home more h:ccnt yea"' will continue to
described ~OIIllllly,ls aravc in withoUt ~Ins shoe. even lhoulh he c..-ry on the sood work that each
Fruce.
~· li!een tn 10111e or tile fiercest bat- year brinp about the beautiful sentiOne .Of the fnvlted pelts at the tla
the war. He !lad returned to
·
, ·
'
'

ot

•

mcnl of Memorial Day."
The handful of Civil War vcter·
ans also traveled that day to the following cemeteries for short services:
Providence. Mercerville,' Saint
Nichoias, Blankenship, Ross. Clay
Chapel, McClellan, Hazlcll and
Swan Creek.
Present at some of these Memorial Day services was W.W. I veteran
Aaron Cofer. He was present in the
Baltic of the Argolmc Forest. At one
point in the battle he recalled counting. without moving from his tracks.
the dead bodies of 70 American soldiers. Cofer told about how he and
some others were commanded to
bury 64 of their comrades from the ·
Rainbow Division 'in one grave.
Cofer had been one of the first volunteers for service, he being a part
of Company F that camped in the
. Gallipolis City Park in the summer
of 1917.
,J1me1 Slndlla 1 apeclll corre•pondent 'of . the · Sund•y
Tlmll 8u161ilt. Hla add- Ia:
65 Willow Dt., springboro, Oltlo
'450ee•
~

-

-

-

•

�PegeC2•.•

tb

;C

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea1ant., WV

Sundly,llley 25, 1117

Pomeroy •llldcllport • Galllpalla, OH • Point P11nrnt. WV

By MAX TAWNEY
plane was ~ld and we nn into a bad agents on a trip to PMupl, SJ*n, became aood mends.Mtny times he on Good MominJ America, Maury
When I was 20 years old, I was in storm. Some of lhe passengen were France and England. Woqld I tum called me and invited me 10 ao with Povich, David Leuennan, Larry ·
; Cincinnati walking down a street screaminJI. I thoupt to myself that I that oppQrtunity down? "No way," I him on short trips to Mexico, KinJ Live, and many others. I_mtist
· when I saw a sign in a travel agency was crazy for making this trip. But said, "when do we lave?" He told Hawaii, Alaska iutd many other say it is ~ honor
' : window that said "Round Trip to finally we made it to Havana. What me we would leave May 3, and places. I ~!lade over 30 trips with to have him as
Cuba $99,"
a relief?
·
asked if I could make il. I told him, him at a small cost until he was my good fri'end.
I walked in and.asked the lady at
I could not believe I was in a for- "yes, I could hardly wait." I could transferred to California. By ihat
I was writing
the desk when tbe flight was leav- eign country until I saw how differ· not sleep that night and was on cloud time, lhe travel bug had binen. me
this
story when I
ing. She said, "in 30 minutes." I told enlly ihings were from United nine. II was like winning the lottery. and until now, I have been to 70 for·
had • my heart
Ho~fully, you m'ade a note that her that I had $120. She said, "that's States. They spoke Spanish, dressed There were 22 of us on that big - eign countries.
attack
and was
all
you
need,"
and
handed
me
the
diffe~enlly, and the weather was hot.
TWA
plane.
·
The
best
travel
comP.nion
I
ever
the Meigs County Pioneer and Hisrushed
to
the hosticket.
I
gave
her
$100
and
she
took
It
.
w
as
really
a
four-day
experience
Our
first
stop
was
in
Lisbon,
Por·
had
is
a
fellow
by
the
name
of
Jack
torical Society will showcaSe musipital
for
my
oper,
the
ticket
back
and
said,
"just
a
for
me.
I
still
have
some
souvenirs
tugal,
and
we
stayed
in
the
finest
Hanna! who was the supervisor of
cals of the Big Bend Minstrel Assoation,
and
I
just
ciation over the past 40 years at the minute" A man sitting near me said that I purchased in Cuba. A , few .• hOtel while we were there. We had the Columbus Zoo. I met him at a
now finisbed it.
Meigs Museum on Sunday, June 8, he knew what she was doing • she years later I took my wife, Mabel three meals a day, and the tours were· mectina and told him .the next lime' Again I want to thank all those good
was
changing
the
original
name
on
back
when
Batista
was
in
power
and
wonderful.
he
went
to
Africa
and
had
an
openwhen the annual Heritage Day is
the ticket to my name. The person. it was a wonderful country until
From there we went to Spain, ing, to let me know. He called me people who.prayed for me and sent
·. observed.
whose
name
was
on
the
ticket
had
Castro
took
over
After
the
trip,
I
Paris
and then London always stay- late one Friday nigh! to tell me he me beautiful get well cards. I am
I was chatting with Jo Stalnaker
knew I wanted to become a travel ing in the finest hotels. Of course, lu!d a cancellation if I wanted to go. - now recovering from my operation
about the special obserVance and she not-shown up for the trip.
When she finished changing the agent. My own AAA office began at , each country treated us like celebri· I ·beat it to the Columbus airport at 7 and hope to hit the road·again soon.
mentioned that she does have pho·
I am running out of travel stories, or
tographs of her sons, Terry and name, she told both of us to get in . my store at 422 Second Ave. in ties because they wanted us to send a.m. on Monday morning.
would you like for me to write some
the
waiting
taxi
that
would
take
us
to
1961.
John
Irwin
was
the
manager
our
customers
to
their
countries.
I
When
I
got
there,
I
boanled
the
Bruce, taken in some of their cosreruns?
·
the
airport.
We
arrived
jtist
as
they
of
the
AAA
in
Portsmouth
at
the
have
since
traveled
all
over
the
plane
and
away
we
went.
When
I
gol
, tumes during their participation in
were
closing
the
gate,
but
they
held
time.
I
hired
Lucy
Venz
to
handle
the
world;
but
this
was
the
mosl
beauti·
there,
I
boarded
the
plane
and
away
· the Big Bend Musicals.
MIX Tawney a longtime QalWhich brings us around to the it open for us and told us to "run." business e)ld of the travel transac· ful and lealit expensive -trip I have we went. I will never forset the
We
didn't
hesitate.
If
we
would
have
tions.
I
couldn't
have
hired
a
better
ever
taken:
If
that
wouldn't
make
a
memories.
from
my
travels
·with
llpolla .bual118Nman occaalonalrest of you. I've asked Jo to bring in
been
just
two
minutes
IJ~ter, we
person.
person
want
to
see
the
world,
noth·
·
Jack
to
i\frica,
Esypt,
etc.
Jack
now
ty wrltH columna for the SUn·
the pictures _of her sons to use with
would
have
not
been
on
our
to
Cuba.
A
few
years
later,"
I
met
Bob
Ziming
would.
.
·
·
has
his
own
animal
siJows
on
many
day
TIITIII Sentinel on the histo· about 100 photographs that I have
I
mennan
of
St.
Louis.
He
asked
me
if
.
I
later
met
a
TWA
supervisor
who
TV stations. He hilS become very ry of downiDWII Galllpolfa and
· on hand and now I'm asking you to
twas a rough trip all the way. The I would like to join 20 other travel 'was stationed in Columbus, and· we popular. Jack Hanna has appeared hla II'IIVela.
·
do ·likewise. You're gonna love the
•
· display of photographs. Among
, other people you'll see a very young
John Lisle and also a very young
Celia McCoy. The photo of Celia
also includes Melanie Dean and Joy
Kati: in baseball uniforms yet. The
three made up a vocal trip and their
Not Just for Girls
song just had to be 'Take Me Out to
POMEROY·· Four area residents will be honored at an awards dinner to
Anymore!
the Ball Game". The . very young be held at the Meigs Museum Thursday evening by Ewings Chapter, Sons
John Lisle is wearing an Uncle Sam of the American Revolution.
.
.
costume and is flanked by Susie
Donald Shaffer of Racine will be given a heroism medal in recognition of
Parker Carpenter and Evelyn Cle- outstanding bravery in the face of imminent danger for his rescue attempt
land Knotts; also both being very during a trailer fire.
young at the time. If you have any
Frederick W. Crow of Syracuse will be presented the Law Enforcement
photos or memorabilia from shows Commendation Medal in recognition of his panicipation in the Lucasville
which s.tarted in the mid 1950's, we prison riot trials.
Barbara Shelton of Gallipolis will receive tbe Good Citizenship Medal
will be glad to use those items as
"'"~'~'~'-•
pan o~e June 8 observance. ·
for her leadership in the Toys for Tots campaign and food collection and dis·
" &amp;
"Your contributions. can be left at tribution in Gallia County over the past holiday season.
the offices of The Daily Sentinel in
Robert Jones of Oilk Hill will be given a cenificate for his role in the flag
· Pomeroy. We only ask that you mark festival held in Oak Hill .over th( memorial Day weekend.
· your items -clearly with your name . Several other awards and certificates.will be presented during the dinner ·
and phone number so they can be at the Museum.
·
returned following the showcase. ·
~5 East Main St
1·800~638-1864
A sampling of costuming used
· Logan, Oh 43138
over the years will be on display at
· the museum as well , as programs
from the shows, show props and
accessories, newspaper accounts
. The Community Calendar is published as a free service to non·pmf·
and, of course, sheel. music used by . it groups wishing to announce meellng and special eveDls. The calendar
· Big Bend musical groups accompa- is not' designed to promote sales or fund raisers of uy lype. Items •re
. nying the shows.
prillted as space permits .and cannot be aua,n nteed to run a -specific
The historical society is staging number of days.
at open house from 12 noon to 5 SUNDAY
p.m . on Sunday and that is, of
SYRACUSE ·· The Southern High School Class of 1977 will reunite
course, open to the public. However, Sunday, I p.m. at Carleton School in Sr.racuse. All welcome, no reservations
it is the . hope of _the society and needed. Bring covered dish. For more information, call 247-4681,
myself that the many, many panicipants in the show whether on stage TIJESDAY
RACINE •• RACO meeting, Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Star Mill Park. New
or behind the scenes will stop by the
members
welcome.
museum a few minutes to renew old
memories. Relatives ·of .panicipants
POMEROY •• Meigs &lt;;:ouniy Veterans Service Commission, 7:30 p.m.
who cheered on the performers over
the yeats arc also ccnainly urged to Tuesday at the Veterans Service Office, Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy.
be on hand for a spell. The society
POMEROY ·• American Legion Auxiliary, Dre--: Webster Post 39,
wi II serve refreshments and plans
Pomeroy,
will meet at I p.m. Tuesday at the hall.
· . .
.
.
arc now being made for some of the
cast nwmhers to cntcnain at inter- .
We are a sales and installation agent for Primestar. CaD us for an appolnbnent today. .
CHESTER .: Meigs County IKES meeting Tuesday. 7 p.m. at the club
the
afternoon.
. vuls___during
. ___ _
house nn Scout Camp Road. Trap shooting to stan at 6 p.m.
Abbie Stratton, president of the
POMEROY ·· Meigs County Emergency Planning Committee meeting ·
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
I'IIIMfHW
Memorial Hospital. reports that the Tuesday, II :30 a.m. at the EMS building behind Veterans Memorial·Hospi·
auxiliary group has ·set Friday. Jui,Y tal in Pomeroy. Business includes LEPC Compliance Program. membership
II, as the date for its annual "white renewals, LEPC projects update and LEPOEOC -Qperations in a disaster.
Call EMS director Rohen E. Bycr at 9'12-6617 for more inli&gt;rmation.
The best value In Satellite TV.
elephant" sale.
Members arc asking you to clean
out the attic. basement and closet&lt;
•
and come up with some of those
"white elephants" that you've been
given over the years but have done
nothing but gather dust. We all have
those things that we just don't know
.
.
.
what to do with. Trust me, the auxil·
inry will re· glad to take them off
your hands for the sale.
When you get your items togcth·
er--and the group is avoiding cloth·
ing--you can drop your contribution
to the auxiliary at its counter in the
hospital lobby or if you really have a
The l997 tri-Co.inty WalkAinelka on April 'l.7 r•hed cner
whole bunch of stuff arrangements
$89,000 lvr the Mardi Of D• !11' c • ...,..... lor lledllt'er
can he made to have it picked up. If
that, indeed, he the case, just call at
._...._ Many children will lead happlef. healthier
the auxiliary at 992-2104 and leave
because
caring and generalslty.
the gooll word.
Regardless of which 'manner you
use to get your contrib!'tions to the
. Working together. the
of Gallla, Melp
~
auxiliary do make sure that your
name and address is included so that
Counties have made the Jri-Cowlty WalkAmerlca the latpst
proper thanks can be extended .

Area Residents to be
Recognized by SAR

Buttons.
&amp;
Bows
~~~--~~--~-------------4 ~~~~~o~n!th~e!T"~
Nike, Reebok, Guess, Fila ·
.Quicksilver plus Le' Top, Jolene,.
. . Little Me, and Osh Kosh. .

Girls Homemade Dresses!
·
Girts Sizes • New Born to 4, 8.
Jr. sizes starting at 3 ·
Boys sizes

..

Soon • No Fear!

1·614-385~3200 "

Meigs community palendar .

. CHRISTOPHER AND SALLY DAVIS

JAMES AND TRACI BRACE

McKnight-Davis

Black~Brace

MIDDLEPORT ·· Sally Jo McKCROWN CITY · Traci Lynn
Michael Cook was the best man.
night
and Christopher Alan Davis
Black and Jatnes Edward Brace-, Jr. John Fields. Bobby Gray and Jason
exchanged
wedding vows in a May
were united in marriage Saturday. and Michael Black, brothers of the ·
:April 5 at Lucinda United Baptist bride, wer~ the groomsmen . The 10 wedding at the 'Victory Baptist
.Church in Proctorville.
ringbearer, Zachary Rankin , carried. Church in Middlepon.
The bride is the daughter of Car, The' ¢e.remony was performed by · a smaU white pillow accented with
los
S. McKnight and the late Betty
;Rev. William Hall and Carl Black. lace. The: groom and his pany wore
:Judy Milton and John and Debbie long tailetl black tuxedos with peach R. Me Knight, Happy Hollow Road,
Middh:pon, and the groom is the son
.
:cardwell provided the music. The rose bolj~onniercs .
of
Dale and Karyn Davis or Racine.
The ellurch was decorated with
·bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
The double ring ceremony was
:carl Black of Crown City. The six braS&amp; pew markers and brass
performed
by Rev. James E. Keesee
;groom. is the son of Mr. and Mrs. candelabras adorned with live peach
and yellow. roses and white carna- before an archway decorated with
;James Brace of Crown City.
.
pink and teal. Bows in those colors
:: The; bride was given in marriage tions.
the pews.
decorated
A reception was held i!11mediate·~Y her parents and escorted by her
in
marriage by her father,
Given
:f_ather. ·She wore a sweetheart style ly after the ceremony at the .recepthe bride wore a white satin gown
;gown willllong sleeves and a high tion hall .
Rhohda Merrick and Stephanie with cathedral train. The gown was
:Deck accented with pearls ~nd beads,
fashioned with short puffy sleeves, a
' '&lt;\&lt;hicli fi'l:lwed into an elongating McComas served the three-tiered
sweetheart
neckline with lace and
,train. · ··-·, ,·
cake tl!at was placed over a fountain .
sequin trim. She carried a cascade of
~ She ': .;,ore a beaded headpiece A set .19f .stairs connected to three
·accented with silk flowers. Her cas· smaller cakes. The cake was deco- pink and teal ro~s with white accent
and wore silver earrings itnd a pearl
:Cading.))puquet was made of peach rated ..Jith peach and yellow ribbon
, bracelet.
. :and yellow roses and white lilies and flowers.
Cindy Faulk of Pomeroy was
The groom is a 1992 graduate of
;enhanced with pearls.
·
maid
of honor: She wore a pink satin
: Amy Black, sister of the bride, Hannan Trace High School and is gown. Janet McKnight, sister-in-law
.was the maid of honor. Elizabeth emplo,ed with Sun TV and Elec- · of the bride of Syracuse and Bonnie
:Wamsl~y and Michelle Poling: tronics of Barboursville. W.Va. as a Davis of Middlepon were brides:cousin pf lhe bride, were the brides- salesman. The bride is a 1993 graid- maids. They wore teal satin gowns
'lllaids. Tbey wore long daffodil col- uaic of Fairland High School and a with lace trim. Kayla McKnight
. :Ored dresses and carried bouque\S of 1996 graduate of the University of served as flower girl for her mother.
;yellow .anjl pea9h . rose~ enhanced Riq ;.&lt;;/Jande with an associate:s
'
"
!With tibbOn . The 'flowergirl 'WaS · degrc!e. ·in early childhoOd •tlevelop- ·
·Sarah Beth Sydnor. She carried a ment. She is employed as ·a teacher
:white b.asket with yellow and peach at·Wee Care Day Care in Gallipolis ..
Following a honeymoon · to
:rose petals.
POMEROY ·· An open wedding .
: Guests were registered by Jamie Gatlinburg, Tenn., the couple resides reception will be held June I, from 2
lrr
. City.
'Dinwiddie.
·
to 4 p.m., in the Meigs High School
cafeteria to celebrate the marriage of
· Robin Burnem to Edward "Tate"

The Community Calendar Is publlaf1ad as a free Hrvlca to nonprofit
groups
wishing
to
announce meetings and spacial
events. The calendar 11 not
designed to promote sates or
lund-raisers of any type. Hems are
printed as space permits and can·
· nol be guaranteed to run a speclt·
lc number of daya.
·
Sunday, May 25

"'*"'·

KANAUGA · Rev. Dennis Parsons to· speak 7 p.m. Silver Memorial Freewill Baptist Church. Rand
Avenue . .

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Homecoming
haskct dinner 12:30 p.m. Ebenezer
Chun:h with program to follow.

'

You said it. Spring is a little late
this year. Normally. .by this time we
have had the three big attacks from
the ant colony. in the area of the sink.
This year we haven't . had the first
one yet hut I'm watching the area
wiih tcrro in hand. Do keep smiling.

..--News

per-capita WalkAmerlca event In the counay. To all the
walkers, hdpeJS and sponsors who made It happen,
I extend my most Sincere thanks and admlradan.

ou

policy~

. T - 1 1]1f"" Wl'«i IIIIID
Oid IN.1,997~t· ... ~An•lw

In an effort to provide our reader·
wjth current news, the Sunday
·Times-Sentinel will not accept wed·
~ings after 60 'days from the date or
the event.
.
We&lt;ldings spbmitted after the 60·
day deadline will appear during the
week in The Daily Sentinel and the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
All club meetings and other news
articles in tile society. section must
·be submitted within 60 .days ·of
'occurrence.
All birthdays must be submitled
withia 60 days of .lhe occurrence. .
All material submitted for publication is subject to edilinJ.
~hip

•

·•

•;

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•••

LECTA · Spencer Carey, a missionary. to speak 10:30 p.m. Walnut
Ridge Church . ·
·

•••

GALLIPbLIS .· Footwa'shing and
communion 7 p.m. Bell ·Chapel
Church .

liVes

and

people

••

••

The Clnclnnlltl Enquirer
. Auto safety officials increased use of seat belts by launchin1• simple but
effective public education campaign called "Buckle Upc'
National water safety officials hope to do the same for safe boating with
a campaign ursing boaters to wear life jackets. Their lheme:.
"Life Jackets. They Aoat. You Don't.".
"Life jacke!s save lives," says Jerry Scannell, president of the National
Safety Council. Nine of 10 people who drown do not wear lifejackets, Scan~
nell points out.
'
Most boating deaths occur when someone - even .experienced swim· ·
mcrs and boaters - falls overboard or capsizes a hoat. Once in the water,
they can lose cOOrdination, IJ!:come burdened by heavy clothing. suffer from
eJ~posurc to cpld and become disoriented.
Nationally, deaths from boatinll accidents dropped from 1990 to 1994 bul
increased beginning In 1995 with the rise in popularity of personal water"
craft, such· as Wave Runners and Jet Skis, according to the Coast Guard.
Most boating-related deaths and drownings occur among 20-!o-49-yeuolds.
·
. Collisions with other boats are the leading cause 9f boating accidents (~9
percent) and the third-leadi'ng cause of boating deaths (12 percent). The
leading causes of deaths from boating arc capsizing (28 percent) and falling
. overboard (26 percent).
.
Among the tips from the National. Safe Boating Campaign:
- Buy your own life jacket and usc it. Flotation devices arc not o.ne size ·
fits all. (Federal laws require boats to be equipped with a life jacket for each
person on board). .
·
.
- Set a good eJ~ample for younger children ~y wearing your own life
jacket. By law, children 10 and under must wear life jackets at all limes in
boats.
· - Buy and wear the proper jacket for your weigh!.
,
-Try on life jackets before purchasing. Secure buckles and straps. Make
sure the jacket cannot slip over your head or above your ears_.
- Don 't substitute water toy s or innatable rafts for Coast duardapproved life jackets.
.
.
- Throw away life jackets if they leak, rot or develop mildew.

She was also in teal satin and carried
a basket of pink rose petals. The
attendants carried hurricane lamps
decorated with pink and teal roses.
Best man was Bill Carswell of
Pomeroy, ·and groomsmen were
Terry Aoyd of Wellston and Todd
- .Cneck life jackets every year to make sure they fit and Ooat.
Evans of Middleport. Ushers were
Carlos M. McKnight of Middlcpon,
and·Kenneth McKnight of Syracuse,
both brothers of the bride.
For her sons' wedding, Mrs.
Davis wore a light green dress with
Those not making the · 60-day
The. · Sunday Times-Sentinel
white jacket and a corsage of roses. regar,ds the weddings of Gallia, deadline will be published in the
A reception honoring the couple Meigs and Mason counties as news daily papers as space allows.
was held .at the Rutland American and publishes wedding stories and
Photographs of either the bride or
Legion hall.
photographs without charge.
the bride and groom may be pubSilver vases of pink and teal roses
However, wedding ·news must" lished with wedding stories if
decorated the table. The three tiered meet general standards or timeli- desired. Photographs may be either
fountain cake was decorated in pink ness. The newspaper prefers to pub- black arid white or good quality
and teal and topped with a miniature lish accounts of weddings as soon as color, billfold size or hujer.
·
bride and groom inside ·a heart.
possible after the event.
·
Poor quality p~otographs will not .
Cindy Faulk, Janet McKnight,
'ro be published in the Sunday be,accepted. Generally, snapshots or
Bonnie Davis, Bill .Carswell, Terry edition, the wedding must have instant-developing photos' are not of
Floyd and Todd Evans. presided at taken place within 60 days prior to acceptable quality.
.
the serving table. Guests were regis- · the publicaiion, and may be up to .
All material submitted for publi·
tered by Jean Thomas, Jessica Davis 600 words in length. Material for cation is subject to editing.
·
and Brand Darst·.
Questions
may
he
directed
to
the
Along the River must be reeeiv~ by .
The couple resides on Happy the editorial department by Thurs- editorial dcpanmcnt from I to 5
Hollow Road in Middleport. He is day, 4 p.m. prior to the date of pub- p.m. Monday through Friilay at 446employed at the Pillsbury Plant in lication.
2342.
Wellston.

---Wedding policy--.;__

Werry. The couple was married
April 12 in Gatlinburg, Tenn . at the
Smoky Mountain Laurel Wedding
Chapel.

Gallia community calendar

An Important Message
For Eveeyone Who Took Part In WalkAmerica·:

on

Page C3

Burnem·Werry

PRIMESI

«you

t i .......... . u I •

BY SUE MIICOONALD

(Save $32.99 to $59.99)

.·4....,y ...,••~

~

'Life Jackets. They
Float. You Don't.'

How Max ·Tawney came to be a world traveler

Beat
of the
Bend

•

•••

NORTHUP · Patty and Lennie, a
ventriloquism act, to perform 9:45
a.m. Nonhup Baptist Church.

EDWARD AND BRYNA BUtLER

Vollborn-Butler
GALLIPOLIS · Edward Jason
Butter and Bryna Su1.anne Vollborn ·
were united in marriage in a double
ring ceremony April 5 at Grace
.United Methodist Church.
Butler is the son of Edward and
the laic Ann Butler of Crown City.
He is the grandson of Jahtcs Craft of
Gallipolis and or Paul and Elilahcth
. ·
Butler of Crown City.
Vollborn is the daughter of
Edward and Sue Vollborn of Bid- ·
well. She is the granddaughter of
Jean Riegel · of Jackson and Mary
Esta Vollborn of Akron (formerly of
Bidwell). .
.
Fresh flowers , aisle candles and
wreaths adorned the sanctuary.
Music began at 5 p.m. with organist
Edic Ross. She played several contemporary . romantic sclc~tions .
. Solos were performed by Tony Amsbary arid Pam Mathews. Rev. Leland
Brehm officiated the cC!J:mony
which included a rendition of
"Lord's Prayer" sung by Pam Math·cws.
· '
The bride w11 tlressad in a while
oll'-the-shoulder beaded gown with

a. chapel lc~~ lh train. The maid of
.honor was Beth Vollhom. sister or
t~c .!lride. Bri~,csmaids were Lisa Jo
Vollborn, cousin of the bride: Lori
Jj&lt;Kfson and Renee Carmichael. The
bridesmaids . w.ore off•thc-shuuldcr ·
hur~undy gowAs accented with glittering bands across the top .of the
bodice. Lehanna Craft. cousin of the
groom. _was .,)~c flower girl. She
wore a pink gown and flower halo.
Amy ~ills, C\;!Jsin of the groom:
wanhc guest hOok attendant.
Bryan Brudifield was the best
man. Groomsmen were Kent Butler.
brother of the groom; Barney Vollborq. brother of the bride; and Adam
Clark. The ring bearer was Luke
Vollborn, cousin or the bride. The ·
gentlemen wore b"lack tuxedos .
accented . with burgundy jacquard
vests.

Following the ceremony, guests
attended a reception with dinner and
dancing .at the ,University of Rio
Grande. The c011ple honeymooned
in the Caribbean and now reside
ncar Crown City. • ,

.

•••

...

Tuesday, May 27
,

GALLIPOLIS
Alcoholics
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peter's Episcopal Church.

•••

...

VINTON • American Legion
Post 161 meeting 7:30p.m.
"

GALLIPOLIS · Checrlcading
clinic from -4 to 6 p.m. lin all stu·
dents in first through twelfth grades
at new Will Power gym.

•••

EVERGREEN · Landowncts
along abandoned CSX railroad
meeting 7 p.m. at Springlicld Townhouse . Attorney. Mr. Boulger to
attend .

•••

RIO GRANDE ·Open Gate Garden Club meeting 6:30 p.m. Rio
Grande Municipal Building wiih
cookout and workshop.

•••

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

QUALITY CARE
· . CLEANING ·
' '

Gallipolis, Ohio . •

.
Q 441-0755
."When Quality Counts • Count On
Q"allty Care Cleaning"

.................................
...
c..,..
tRo.n&amp;IWI-ttt••• 3 ............. " .."

1 Upii•IR•PJ PlocucerlxtNI
BuJ MJ of
room oomblnlltloRprltl ..
all f.il nkl1ra ola•l•

til•••

.,... .-1"'

fortunate we are in West Virginia to
the beautiful resort, the Greenbrier,
visit. We spent an overnighl there
recently and· toured the underground governm~nt Bunker
requested by President Eisenhower as a shelter for the
Legislative Branch of the government in case of a national
emergency such as a nuclear attack. II has been staffed and
updated for this reason until recently when it was brought to light
by a D.C. reporter. If you haven't visited, it is a most interesting
trip to take. We plan ·a trip each year within our own state so we
can all realize how much our state also has to attract tourists. The
·meals, accomodation~. shops and grounds of the Greenbrier
.provided us with a relaxing overnight with a private tour of lhe
· hotel. We stopped· enroute to visit Tamarack and the Lewisburg
area.
We just returned from a trip to Hilton Head Island, S.C. with
overnight stops in Columbia and Charlotte. Our accomodations
on lhe island were at lhe beautiful. Westin Resort located on the
ocean. While lh~re w~ enjoyed a dinner and of course wonderful
seafood! One' day was spent in the historic town of Beaufort,
.S.C. where we visited an old ch_urch and learned of the 500 years
of lrisiory of the town . Enroute to Beaufort we visited Paris
Island, training facility of the U.S. Marines.
Now we are packing up for a great trip to Branson!! Ye Haw!!
We have a full bus and have packed up our boots and can't wait
to get ."on the road again." There we will be allending the Oak
Ridge Boys, Shoji Tabuchi, and lhe Osmond Family shows. In
addition we will have a luncheon cruise and show on the
Showboat Branson Belle, a visitlo Silver Dollar City, a land and
water tour of the area on the "Ducks", as well as I!-Jt of good old
fashioned cooking!! We will spend the night enrou\e to Branson
at St. Louis where we will have dinner on the Station Casino
Riverboat docked on the Mississippi. Those who ' want can try
their hand at the gaming tables. On the way batk home we will
stay at the beautifu-l Galt Ho.use in Louisville, Ky., where
everyone will have a suite. A gtear trip· we are anxious to get
started!!
We ·have a few seals still ·available on our western adventure
trip July 15-24 so if anyone is interested, please call immediately.
We will fly to Denver, Colorado, board a deluxe motorcoach to
the destinations of Flagstaff, Salt Lake City, Zion and Bryce
National Parks, Lake Powell, Sedona, etc, We will board Amtrak
for a day trip to the Grand Canyon with dinner on the train. Our
last stop will be in Las Vegas for two nights at the fabulous.
Expalibur Hotel with free time to relax and enjoy this great cily.
Froin there we will fly back home.
·
We have a vari~ty of trips, including one day, overnight and
exlended trips on our schedule for1 the rest of th~ year and we
would love to have you be a part of the fun .. If you have any
questions, you can now call me on my direct line at 674•1028.
My voice mail is -also available at this nu·mber. Check your
schedule, give me a eall and join us as we ...
LET TilE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

l./fif: .

-aa.••-'"
--I'OIC110

,,
\l

•••

Monday, Ma:v 26

•••

CHESHIRE • Gravel Hill Cemetery Memorial Day Services I 0:30
a.m. with Lt. Col: Ron Sec speaking.

I

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FOW~PLES

MARY
CHOICECO-ORDINATOR

,.

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Pomeroy • Middleport • GaiiiPQIIs, OH • Point Pleaaant, wv

: Sunday, May 25, 1997

Sunday, May 25, 1997

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

, _ .1 c-..Jt !Wl • Page C5

HENRY AND REBECCA WII,.US

Willises to mark 70th
AUBRA AND ALTA BAILEY

Baileys to celebrate 60th
TUPPIORS PLAINS -- The 60th
. wedding anniversary of Aubra and
Alta Bailey will be celebrated at an
copen reception Saturday. May 31.
from 5 to 8 _p.m. at St. Paul's
Methodist Church, State Route 7,
Tuppers Plains .
Mrs. Bailey is the daughter of the
late Raymond and Edith Harper. Her
· husband is the son of the late
Lawrence and Florence Bailey.

They are the parents of three
daughters, Jean Stout-of Bay Town,
Texas ;' Donna Parker of Tuppers
Plains; and Audra Bulin of Zephyr
Hill, Fla. They have six grandchildren, I 0 great -grandchi-ldren and
one great-great-granddaughter.
Relatives and friends are invited
io the celebration . The couple has
requested that gifts be omitted.

CADMUS
. Henry a,lwin
"Skeeter" and Rebecca Louise
Willis will celebrate their 70th weddin g anniversary. They were !Jlarried
June 3, 1927' in Greenup, Ky. They
have lived throughout their marriage
in Walnut Township and the )ast 60
years in the home built on the hill for
them.
They are the parenl' of four children. Eugene (Carol) Willis of
Beavercree k, Mary Lou (Pene)
Swick of Lafayette, La., James

([)eloris) Willis of Xenia and Joo
(Anne) Willis of Anchorage, Ky.
They have II grandchildren, nine
great-grandchildren, five step grandchildren and one step great-great.
grandchild.
Skeeter worked for the State
Highway and drove a school bus for
many years, and they both retired
from the Gallipolis State Institute.
A . fa'mily cookout is · being.
planned to celebrate the occasion.

EARL AND MARGARET DILLON

Dillons to observe 50th
CROWN CITY - Earl Douglas
·and Margaret Burgess Dillon of
Crown City will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary with a reception from 3:30 to 5:30p.m., June 12
at Crown City Wes leyan Church.
The reception will be hosted by their
children and family friend, Jennifer
Tanner.
.
The Dillons were married May
28, 1947 in Ironton. They have six

BARBARA OVERTON AND TIMOTHY RAWLINGS

children, Harold of Crown City, Sue
Lester of South Point, Betty Cook of
Huntington: W.Va .. Kathy Johnson
of Crown City, Danny of Crown
Ciry and Lynn Michael of Bidwell.
They have II grandchildren and live
great -grandch ildrcn.
Doug ha.' worked over 45 years
in the asphalt business. Margaret
worked as a retail associate and is
now a homemaker,

BRENDA RATLIFF AND ROBBERT TERRY· .
KIMBERLY CRITES AND

By JEFF WILSON
floating nearby in cloud-style letters over 32, the
Associated Press Writer
number of pennies it takes to buy a stamp.
BURBANK, Calif. (AP) -What's debuting
"Bugs Bunny is one of the most recognizable
nationwide, doc?
icons in the world, probably third to Elvis a11d
A U . ~. postage stamp featuring Bugs Bunny . Coca-Cola. He is a pan of Americana," said
goes on sale across· the country_today: Some col- stamp collector John Andrews of San Antonio.
lectors are decrying use of the wascally wabbit as · "It's allowing Warner Bros. access to pos1al
blatant commercialism and a dumbing-down of venues," Wundcrly said, griping that "no comthe philatelic traditi on.
'mercia! enterprise is one of the postal rules."
" It's impossible for me to see that this 'is anyPostal Service spokesman Barry Zeihl said lhe
thing but a crass eomme~dal campaign that takes Bugs Bunny stamp was within guidelines, adding,
away from the higher purpose of the· stamp pro- "The nature of America to.day is commercial."
gram," said Kathlee~ Wunderly, educa~ion director for the stamp collector group American Phil at·
The idea came from Warner Bros., but postal
elic Society in Stale College, Pa. .
officials were already considering such a stamp
Postal officials have no doubt that the 265 mil- out' of concern that stamp collecting was growing
lion Bugs stamps will be hot commodities.
'less popular among children, Zeibl said.
The hare-raising unveiling took place Thurs:
· day at Winner Bros. studios, which markets Bugs ·
Sabuli Honarchin, 9, of Burbank attended the
Bunny toys and other products. First day sales unveiling with classmates: " We'll send our
were co nfined to the Tour Office at Warner Bros. friends more mail arid I've already started a stamp
and 1hc Burbank Post Office.
collection."
"Bugs Bunny's timeless and ageless humor
has entertained audiences worldwide over !he
Postal ·officials had discussed stamps bearing
years. " Postmaster General Marvin Runyon said. Disney characters with the Walt Disney Co. Dis·
The stamp shows a toothy Bugs Bunny leaning · ncy wanted royalties, which th~ Postal Service
on a mailbox and clutching a carrot with "USA" was not willing to pay, Zeihl said.
'
'

•.

POMEROY .. Kimberly Dawn
Crites and Mark Allen Haley, Jr.
ijnnounce their engagement and
hpproaching marriage.
.
, Crites is the daughter of Linda .
1
Crites and Richard Herman of
: Pomeroy, and Haley is the son of
! kex and Brenda Darst and Mark and
; 'Sherry Haley, all of Pomeroy.
"'
I .
:
:
:
:

Bugs Bunny, first cartoon U.S. postage ·stamp, gets collectors licking
4

.

4
4

Ratliff-Terry

n1.......

Crites-Haley

••

•'
•
!

MAf~K

GALLIPOLIS • Brenda Kay
Terry is the son of Robben and
Ratliff and Robben Gregory Terry Wanda Terry of Thurman. He is a
both of Gallipolis ·announce their graduate of South Webster High
engagement and upcoming mar. School and the Un iversity of Rio
riage.
Grande . He is a member of New
Ratliff is the daughter of Amy Life Victory Center and is employed ·
Barnett of Gallipolis. She is a gradu- at Buckeye Community Services.
ate -of Gallia Academy High School
The . wedding will be 12 p.m.,
and a member of New Life Victory . June 12 at New Life Victory Center.
Center. . She is employed at Dollar
General.
·

.Crites attended Meigs High
School and is employed at Darst Private Care Home, Pomeroy. Haley
graduated from Meigs High School
in 1992 and is employed by the
Pillsbury Co. in· Wellston.
The wedding will be June 7 at the
Free Will Baptist Church, Ash
Street, Middleport.

Overton-Rawlings .
MASON, W.Va. · Linda P. Overton of Yorktown. Va. announces the
engagement and approa.ching marriage of her daughter, Barbara Lynn
Overton , to Timothy Ray Rawlings,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rawlings of Mason, W.va. The brideelect is also the daughter of the late
William W. Overton . ·
The 10 a.m . Saturday, July 12,

wedding and reception will be held
at the Watennen's Museum in Yorktown .
Overton is employed by Howmct
Corporation of Hampton, Va.'Ra,wlings is a resident of Williamsburg,
Va. and is employed by Vrrgrma
Power at the Surry Nuclear Power
Station in Surry, Va.

~

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The Rumors Are True••.After so Years of Snviee to t-e Area
·:

TIME IS
TICKING AWAY

LAMBERT

Lamberts to mark 25th
VINTON .. Dannie and Sheryl
Lambert of Vinton wil'l ohserve their
25 th .wedding anniversary May 27.
They were marri'cd in 1972 at the
Danville Wesleyan Church hy Rev.
Lawrence Sullivan . She is the
· daughter of Chester and Margaret
·Johnson of Langsville , and he is the
son of Rohcrt Lamhcrt. Sr. of Jack·
· son and Anna Malinda Hysell of

DE1"N~IA

....•."'

..,'J. .
'

.Craig-Halley

::
MIDDLEPORT
Monette
:,: Weiss, Roger Weiss and Peter Craig
~ of Chagrin . Falls announce the
•; engagcm~nt of their daughter. Katie
' "Alison Craig, to Bradford Kntght
: Halley, .son of Rolland and Sue Hal ·
• · Icy of Upper Arlington .
:
Bradford is also the grandson of
~ · Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight of Middle1 port.
· Craig graduated from Kenston
: 1-Jigh School in 1989 and Ohio Uni -

.

..

&gt;

!··.

Everything Sold uAs·ls"
Cash &amp;Carry, Delivery Available ·
':

BOTBVYSON
COOL AIR
CONDITIONERS!
·s,OOOBTU 110 Volt.. .........$299
81000 BTU 110 Volt.. ......... $399

·'

,.

I'

:~

,.
I·
,.
'

••'
'
;,•

'

'~

·',.,.

•
n:··

''

'

·'

.'

''I

.. ''
·• .
ll:

•

9,000 BTU 110 Volt... ........ $469
121000 BTU 110 Vott ........... $539
151000 BTU J10 Volt.. ......... $619
18 000 BTU 220 Vott .......... $599
•
221000 BTU 220 Vott .... ;..... $739
25,000BTU 200 Vott .......... $829
1

FRED AND MAGDALINE ST. CLAIR

St.Ciairs celebrate 60th

. '

:; .

GALLIPOLIS· Fred and Magda:~ line St. Clairor'Gall,ipolis cclcbrnicd
·, their 60th wcddmg ann~vcrsary May
·•· 15. They were married May 15.
.f 1937 in Gallipolis by Rev. Wilber

Reclhiers .
Glider Rockers·
·Bean Bags
·Coffee &amp; End
Tables
Televisions
Mirror$
Curios
Lamps
Appliances
Even the Pictures
on the Wall

Good Selection

A~ET

For Women
OSON For Men

RECLINERS DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. KITCHEN AND DUliNG
ROOM SETS STILL AVAilABLE.

,

• •

pave C1

•

.I

•

••

I

I

'

--"t'hc older you get. the greater your
chonces."
;. moe ion" .. from denial to anger 10 · "But perhaps the saddest. thing of
!• depression, and finally acceptance.
all is that bee~ usc we are livi ng
::. Age, says Leitbeit, is the greatest longer. more and more people -viii
actor in getting Alzheimer's disease .

I.

·'

J

Academy High School. Johnson is
employed by Ace Tree Service in
Gallipolis .
The wedding will tic 2:30 p.m.,
June 7 at the Christ United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis. A
reception will he held following the
ceremony.

MASON. W.Va. · Mr. and Mrs .
Dean Hamons of Willard announc e
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter. Deanna
Lynne Hamons, to Thomas Richard
Rawlings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Rawlings of Mason. W.Va.

:I

'
, COLORADO SPRINGS, Col. -

.; Mr. and Mrs. Myron Edwards of
' COlorado Springs. Colo. announce
(he engagement of .their daughter,
~arey Cai'inne to Brian Rodney
!lobens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rod..ey Roberts of Gallipolis.·
: Edwan:ls is a 1993 araduate of
Oallia Academy · Hi&amp;h School
(OAHS) IIICI altends the Uni~ersi~y
,of Rio Onmde (URO) majonn1 m
•

•I

secondary math educatioti. She . is
employed at That Special Touch in
Gallipolis.
Roberts' is a 1992 graduate of
GAHS and is a 1996 graduate of .
URG. He is employed with Roberts
Constoiction in Gallipolis.
The wedding will be 6:30 p.m.,
June 21 at the Fn:nch An Colony i_n
Gallipolis.
.

.

..

The open church wedding will he
Saturday, June 14, in Wi liard at the
Willard Church of Gnd with a reccrtion following the ceremony.

·-----·I

I
I
·I Fiut'HPiiiDi'Acl 1
All N8tur•l C.H. 2001

ket will be about 10 inches around
its· widest part and seve~ to eight
inches tall .
All supplies arc included in the
tuition fcc . Call the FAC at 4463834 to register.

Wllh Ch10mlum Plcollnote

MONEY BACK GIIARANTfiE

Flower pouches, seed geraniums,
assorted planters; porch boxes,
speciality gift item~
Plastic 55 gal. drums for sale
Just North of Co.Rd . 19
Rocksprings Rd., Pomeroy

992-2762

CWSIIIID

•

446-t620.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER'.S

elfso

::Memorial 'Day Specials

All hanging baskets7
bedding plants
$6.50

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Gattlpolla, OH

ROCKSPRINGS GREENERIES

"Walk For Wellness"
Tuesday,·May 27
11·2 and 4·6
Hike 8t Bike Trail
A registration table will

CAREY EDWARDS AND BRIAN ROBERTS

Edwards-Roberts

They arc both graduates of Lee
College. Cleveland. Tenn.

'LOSE ~: 10 LIS.
•
·
IN 3 DAYS
,

.Bean pot basket class to be
held at French Art Colony

TWIN, FULL,
N
BEDDING AVAILABLE

.'

:·:Alzheimer's ...
:If

Steward-Johnson

vcrsily in. 1993. She is a huyer for
Spiegel in Chicago.
.
Halley graduated from Upper
GALLIPOLIS · Mr. and Mrs.
Arlington High Seho(ll in 1988 and Larry Steward of Gallipolis
Ohio University in 1993. He .announce the engagement and
received a master's degree from Ball upcoming wedding of their daughState University in 1995 and is a ter. ·Dana Leigh Steward to Ri chard
consultant for Anderson Consulting Alan Johnson. son of Richard and
in Chicauo.
Peggy Johnson of Gallipolis . StewThe . 'Wedding will- take place ard is a 1997 graduate of Gallia
Sept. 13 at the United Methodist
Church in Chagrin Falls.

· GALLIPOLI~ • The French Ari
Colony, 530 First Ave .. Gallipolis.
will offer a Bean Pol basket making
workshop Saturday. May.J from I to
5 p.m. The workshop will be headed
by instructor Linda Marshall .
The Bean Pot basket is round ,
· with a "mrlnn" shape reminisce nt of
a New Engl:md bean pol. It has a ·
metal swing handle with a wooden
grip. Students will mak~ the pl~in
reed, which may be starncd usmg
walnut hull stain. The finished bas-

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and arc the parents of a daughter.
Mary Ann (Marvin ) Hufford of Gal·
lipolis and a son, Gene St. Clair of
Lancasler. They have one grandchild, Harold Hufford of Gallipolis .

'I':\:

Continued from

DANA STEWARD AND RICHARD JOHNSON

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Hamons-Rawlings

. KATIE CRAIG AND BRADFORD HALLEY

.

Wellston.
Mr. and Mrs. Lamticrt ·have a
three dau ghter&lt; . Bridgen (B ill y)
Wells and' Damcllc and Melinda.
and a son. Daniel. at home: and one
grandchild . Tahatha Dawn Wci ls.
A npcn rece ption 10 honor the
couple will he held May 29. 7 to
9:30 p.m. at the Salem Ce nter Fire
Department.

HAMONS AND THOMAS RAWLINGS

local internet access
· with a smile.

be located at the rear
of.the Big Lr:'ts parking
lot on Pine Street.
Public Is Invited!

A special prioze to the first 50
Max ~/ISO members to mgister.
For more lnforlnldon cal 446·5055 or 446~5056
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Sunday, May 25, 1117

Pomeroy • Middleport • GelllpoiiJ,·OI:I • Point Ple.ee6nt, WV

lbul

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gelllpolle, OH • Point P1eaunt. WV

-A 90s twist on a romaritic story frorn the past
ited her twice !l day. When she was suing the property owner for ·all I becau~e after all, doctors earn si~­ check. didn't drink.t&lt;i!&gt; much, helped
discharged,
he asked her to the could get, this same doctor treated figure .incomes." •• Tuned in and · with the kids, took bis. wife shopping
Ann
once a week, went .to church and
movies to celebrate. Tiley subse· me and insisted: that I stay in the Turned on in La Jolla, Calif.
Landers ·
·near .Tuned and Turned: If you . took a bath . oii · ·saturday night
quently married in the same chapel infirmary. He'then made twice-daily
1995. Los A.nJ.:Ic:~ .
visits to see how.! was doing, which are'n'i a professional writer: you . whether he needed it &lt;)r not, she did.
where they had met
Titr~t:s S)'fldicalc aM C~ ­
Here's how that same story made me suspicious. I complained ought. to consider it.. Your updated . n't expect nluch rjlori and the mar·
aW!. SyNficaw:.
riage worked.
,
to his supervisor and filed a sexual version cracked ·me up.
would go if it happened in 1997:
Dear Ann Landers: I have been a ·
By the same ·token. if she WO\IId
"Dear Ann:· Last week, I anended harassment 'suit. .
"I was discharged in January, and Lutheran.pastor for almost37 years. siay home, cook:: &lt;io ,the laundry.
By ANN LANDERS
church services and noticed that the
Dear Ann Landers: You recently soldier sitting behind me knew all the doctor asked if I would like to Marriage counse.ling has been a · take care of the house :11nd the kids,
· pripted a ·sweet " how-we-met" the wor&lt;\s to every song. I ·figured see a movie t.o ~elebrate. I iold the . large ·part of my work. You won- be nice to his parentS, ~ive. within a
' story. The woman said at the end of · anyone who knew those lyrics was police he was a :.stalker and applied dered w.hy so many- World War · II budget and haYe. se~ ·with him regu..
World War II, she sat behind .a sol- probably a memtier of the religious . for a restraining order. ,When the . marriages between people who did- larly. she was a ~ood wife.
Today, a spou·se· is eq,ecied to be
doctor asked me to marry him in the n't-know each other very well lasted
.
.
dier in church. He knew all the lylics , right.
to the songs so she figured he could"I bumped 'into· him a month same chapel where we first met, I so long. I think it's be.c.ause SO years . a soul mate, a beyt .frjend. a golf
n't be all bad: Later, she learned he · later. After cussing him out and called the FBI. They searched his · ago, we had lower expect;l.ltons of partner and a psyctJiat~iSl and hold
• was a doctor. Three months later. she telling . him to watch where he was apartment to make sure there were what a-marriage was .supposCJI to-do down a full-iime job. She must look
.
.
like Cindy Crawford, and_he should
slipped .on an icy walk and injured going. I learned he · :was a · doctor, no shrines built to me and IIQ bodies for us. ·
Back then,, if a riuin had· a job, look like Tom CruiSe:. · .
·
her arm. That same doctor insisted Three months later, 'I·slipped on an hidden under the floorboards.
With . such unrealisiie expecui"I married the guy anyway, c~me · home from work with his payshe stay in the infirmary, and .he vis- icy walk and injured. my arm. After

' , • ....._~ n ••PageC7

Substitute, re-constitute and re-distribute. do 'these thrift tips work?
By MARY CHALLEDER
,.,The Dn MolnH Regl..,

tions. the pressures are bound to
increase and the disappointment
level accelerates. It sholild come 'as
no surprise that after three months'o f
marriage, couples are writing to you
and asking if they should send back
the wedding gifts. -- A Voice From
the Heartland in Iowa .
:
Dear Voice: · You Ullderestimate
the young people of today. Tnie,
some have unrealistit: expectations
of marriage, bur by and large, I find
them pretty level-headed. Today,~ a
successful marriage is-a partnership,
and I see that as an improvement. ;
Send questions to Ahn Landers, .
Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Ceh·
tury Blvd., Suite 700; Los Angelea,
Calif. 90045
.

;.. 'There are two things that always
:;have stood in the way of my becom•• ing a bread crumb-saving, store,.,bousht-hating, vinegar-and-baking· ·soda-praising, recycled, card-carry.,,jng member of the use-less, re'usemore society.
Jh
Fi..St, I hate clutter. Second. I
..Jyalue ,time over money. (Trans Ia"Jion: I'm basically lazy.)
~:. I ~ycle the things that are recy~ clable in my community, ·as long as
,~hey aren't 'too difficult to clean
(peanut butter jars get tossed). But
I've never looked. at a banana peel
..,and been inspired to use it to polish
.•JIIY silver or considered there might
,Jle secondary uses for egg shells.
Someone must care about the
subject, ·however. There have been
..dozens of books published on
::bousehold thrift and the recycling
:Z:ommon household ·items.
:: ·. Do any of them contain ·good,
~actical ideas, the ·ki·nd busy, fast;pfood-eating, paper-towel-wasting
= ouseholds can benefit from? Or are
..they all on the same caliber as this
-:hot tip from a book called "Re::!Jses": "Save the wishbones from
:)our chicken dinner. Let them dry,
:::Jhen cover with gliller or paint Fas-

ten the wishbones on packt~~Cs for
good luck or hang them on Christ·
mas trees."
To find out, we searched through
five books and tested the most
promising of the thousands of tips
presented to find out whether
the.y're worth the effort.
''Hints· from Heloise,"
Heloise (Avon Books)
- "The Tightwad Gazelle."
Amy Dacyciyn (Random House)
- ··Re-Oses," Carolyn Jobs
(Crown Pub Grp.)
- "Don't Throw That Out!",
Vicky Lansky (Book Peddlers)
- "1001 Bright Ideas to Stretch
your Dollars," Cynthia ·a. Yates
(Servant)
Here are tile results:
- Sulisfitute hair conditioner for
shaving cream ("I ,00 I Bright
Ideas'·). The shave wasn't as smooth
as with shaving cream, and · it
gummed up the razor. Since I use a
cheap conditioner and an e~pensive
shaving cream; !his move would
save me roughly a nickel pershave
or about $8 per year.
·
Recojnmendation: Pass.
- Use a dollop of baby oil in
your bath water instead of skin care
lotion ("1,001 Bright Ideas"). I didn't like the oil all over my back or

the oily film the baby oil left behind
in the bathtub. Applying the baby oil
after I got out of the tub, howeve{,
seeined to work well. This tip
required no extra time. A mere $2 a
boule for baby oil compared to ncarly $10 for the same size bottle of dry.
skin lption represents a big money
saver.
Recommendation: Wonh a try.
- Baking sod~ as · deodorant
("1,001 Bright Ideas"). Just dip a
colton ball in liaking soda and dab it
on your armpits. Although this
seemed to stop wetness effectively,
it also made me feel like I had a coupie of pieces of'sandpaper under my
arms all day. On the plus side, it can
save _you money. Baking soda is 59
cents a box; the deodorant I usc goes
for nearly $2. Mixing the baking
soda with cornstarch might mal\e it
less abrasive.
Recommendation: Pass.
- Make your oWII Silly Putty
("Don•t Throw That Out 1"). Combining two parts white glue wiih one
part liquid starc h gives you some
gooey stuff that looks and feels like
Silly· Putty. But, it won't pick up
images from a piece of prin1ed
paper. . And without that capability,
what good is Silly Putty?
Recommendation ' Cough up a buck

and get the poor kid tbe real thing.
one color at a time. 111e·consistency
-Malee your own Gak ("Don't of our play dough was good and it
Throw That Out!"). For those of you formed into ropes easily when rolled
u~familiar with Gak, it's a stretchy, between the hands, just like the real
rubbery, gooey substance. The stuff. 1be pan looks horrible when
recipe calls for mixing one pan liq- you're done but rinsed clean easily
uid starch with one pan white glue. 1 with hot water.
also added a few drops of yellow
Recommendation: Try it. Play;
food coloring. It took about three Doh only costs $2.19 for a four
minutes to make and resulted in a pack, so the time vs. m\)ney. investsubstance with Gaklike consistency. !""nt would probably be on the side
Since a.• far as. I know, Oak ·goesn'fc of store-bought here. But making
actually DO anything, it was hard to your own play dough is nearly_as
test the quality of our fake Gak.
much fun as playing with it.
Rccomcndation: Worth a try if your
-Homemade breadsticks ("Rekids clamor for Gak, since the real Uses"). Take several slices of bread,
stuff sells for nearly
cut each slice into four pieces. brush
- Homemade .Play-Doh ("The the tops with melted buuer, sprinkle
Tightwad Gazette" ). Mi~ 3 cups . with grated cheese, sesame seeds or
flour, I and one•half cups salt, 6 tea- garlic salt and bake in a 350-degree
spoons cream of Lartar, 3 cups of . oven until . crunchy. The resulting
cool water, 3 tablespoons oil and breadsticks looked funny (like bread .
food coloring in pan. Cook over sticks) but t.ook less than five minmedium heat, stirring constantly. utes to prepare (not counting cookWhen dough pulls away from the ing time) · and were surprisingly
side of pan and you can . -pin~h ii tasty. And they were way cheaper
without sticking (about S minutes), than the breadsticks from the· pizza
remove from heat and knead until places.
smooth.
Recom~ndation: Worth a try.
1be process took about half an
- Homemade croutons ( "1.00 1
hour, and a single batch makes Bright Ideas"). Toast several slices
enough generic play dough to fill of bread (any bread will do but
five store-bought containers. Unfor- French bread will look most like
tunately, it's hard to make more than packaged cro.utons). cut it up. into

crouton-sized squares, toss the bread
with melted butter and spices (I used
oregano and garlic) and cook for 10
minutes at 375 degrees. Preparation
takes just a few minutes and yoiJ
save the $1.50 or so pre-packagtld
croutons cost.
Recommendation: Real winner.

ss:

- · Bread crumb cookies ("The
Tightwad Gazette"). If. you feel
guilty throwi~g out breild crusts and
heels. try this recipe. Mi~ I anJ onequarter cups flour. I and one-quarter .
cups sugar, one-half teaspoon salt,
one-half teaspoon baking · powder,
one-third cup cocoa. 2 cups bread
crumbs, one-half cup milk. I egg .. !
and one-half teaspoons vanilla and
two-thirds cup melted shonening .
The directions say to sift the dry
ingredients. add the wet then add tbc
melted shortening and bread
crumbs, but I just threw it all together. Stir into thick bauer then drop liy
spoonfuls onto ungreascd · cookle
sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for 15
minutes or until done. !'didn't really
like the texture of these cookies but
some unsuspecting visitors· seem~d
to enjoy them. The recipe was also
time-consuming. It tonk 20 minutes
just to combine all the ingredients.

~Memorial _ Day: Some think ·it should be changed to May 30 .
-

'

Youth All' Stars. Unlimited ·

Jr. All Stars Unlimited

Love, a support group for relatives
of victims of war or terrorism
abroad.
·
Instead of the natjonalthanksgiving of Memorial Days past, recent
.years have seen "a few people gather in some faraway cemetery•and it
makes a few seconds of the evening
news, and that's 'doing Memorial
Day,' while the rest of the country
goes to the beach,"- ~erry said.
,Memorial Day traditionalists
point to a variety of causes for the
holiday 's commercialization. The
trauma's of the Vietnam War turned
many Americans away from ceremonies honoring the military, many ·
said. The pace of modem life has
made it hard to spend time off doing
anything but relaxing, according to
others. Some veterans said people
now take for granted the freedoms
members of ihe armed forces died to
protect. .
"The country has fallen away
from these kinds of things,'' said
World War II veteran Marshall
Love, whose son.- James. was killed
in the Persian Gulf War. "Many of
them arc not really familiar with the
wars, and they've lost sight of these .
things."
Some. like Caci in Waterloo,
blame the decision to c.reate a threeday weekend for the decline. For the

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All Stars Unlimited Cheerleaders
tank
top
in
nation
at
competition
e
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.:..:&lt;
GALLIPOLIS

- The All Stars Jr. All Star Champions, eighth run:Vnlimited Cheerleading l:eams ncr-up at the ECA National lnvita- ·
l'tompleted their 1996-97 compcti- tiona! Chccrlcading Championships
~o n season by-finishing in the Top and tenth runner-up at the U.S. Spir- ·
!:te n Youth and Junior All Star it National Checrleading Champif:iquads in the nation, as ranked by onships.
~o th the ECA, and the U.S. Spirit
Fanned eight months ago, the
:t~ational Checrlcading Associations'. Youth All Stars Unlimited earned
·~ · Represe nting Ga.llia County.. the · lirst Place at the GaUia County Jr.
i"-ll Stars Unlimited earned their first Fair, secn nd ,place . at the ECA .
111ational ranking at the Eastern - R&lt;:gional runner-up. Youth AU ·star
:(.hecrleadcr Association's National. Divi;ion. ninth Runner-up at · the
;tnvitational Chccrleading. Champi-. ECA' National lnvitationol Cheer-·
~~ships in WiUiamsburg, Ya. After lcad.ing Championships. and 6th .
~ompeti ng with 30 teams ·in the Place at the U.S. Spirit Nationai
::Yo.uth AU Star Division. and -. 33 Cheerleaditig Cham·p.ionships.
~cams in the Junior AU ·Star Divi-·
In ·addition (o t~am awards. six
t, ion, the Youth All Stars Unlimited · individUals received the· utl'c of "All .
Zwon ninth runner-up. and the Junior Amcncan . Checrlcitdcr" and wi ll
~II Stars Unlimited were named perform ·&lt;11 the · I~9H · Pro Bowl in
:Jiignth Runner-up in the nation. in . Hawati and c&lt;Hnpete .individually for
"tRc Youth and Junior All Star Divi- over $30.000 in schohin;hips. Chn•·•sions.
. sen from more t~an 3.400 cheerlead.:t Their second national rankmgs crs were · Katie Rail iff. Tessa
·. ~ere won at Universal Studios m Rothgch, and S;lrah Burnett. Juhtor
:i&gt;rlando, Fla. April 5. After two All Stars. and Ale·m Geiger. Di;mna
:founds of competitions. the US. Jarvis . and Sarah Rus,e11. from the
- ~pirir National Chccrleading Assn - Youth All Star Division. .
;ttation awarded the 23-mcmher.
The All Stars Unlimited Youth
~th · All Stars Unlimited sixt h
and Junim Squad; hccamc the first
itaec in the nation in the Youth All loca l All Star Checrlcad.in£ ·teams to
}it.ar· Division. The 25 mcmher&gt; of ever earn a nat tonal ranking. .
. :the Junior All Star Team rccctved
"It is a maJor accompl"hment for
: lOth place in the nation for their per- a cheer team lo win at a regional
;formance in the Junior All Star Divi - compe tition and carn .thc chanc.c to
!);io'n.
.
go to the national level of compcti• During the 96-97 Competition tion ," satd the teams advisor. Becky
~ason. the Junior All Stars Unlimit- Rothgeb. "To go to nationals and
~d amassed several· awards. They
actually tnakc the top ten .in final
-won first place ttl the R•vcr Rccrc- rounds is something very few teams
j.tion . fc ~tival. first place at Galha ever get to. ex perience."
.~ounty . Jr. Fair. fourth place at
Competiti ve All Star Chccrleadlki ngs: Island Chcerleading Cham pi- ing teams arc the fastest growing
itnships. first place at ECA Regional area in c~ecrl cadi ng today. and arc

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Becky's wheelchair brings. .
~iversity to Barbie's doll world

.y MARK PULS
. .
· J:he Detroit News
· ':; Barbie ofthe '90s cares. .
.
, ..
... Mattc.l lm:. on Wcdncsday.:in'trod~ccd Bec'ky. an II and onc-IJal(-inci: .
-~ashion doll iyho uses a pink whcclch:tir. as Barbie's new sidekick. . ·. · ·.
~ "She's another friend in Barbi'es world ... that retlects the rear world:"
~ys Marla Lihraty. a product manager for Mattei. · .
·
• There have heen other wheelchair dolls. hut. not a fashinJ doll - and
40nc that takes wardrobe tips from Barhie .
·; "Barbie is so much a part of a little girl's world growing up:· Libraty
~ys.
.
.
.
·,. Share a Smile Becky has long auburn hair and wears a trendy denim
Mirquoisc skirt with a matchin¥ vest over a ~hite . short-sleeved T-shirt. She
.Uso wears pink ·Jcggings and IS sold cxclustvcly at Toys "R" Us for about
t\!0.

.

t Mattei is counting on the idea that ·parents will want to tcach .their kids
about people who arc physicllily di ffcrent. And for children who usc whcciC!)airs. Becky helps them feel represented, say people who work with physi lly challenged kids.
r
· 1.. "lt·s very validating for our kids to have a. major company like Mattei
r!lease a doll with a wheelchair." says Julie Overton. program director for
Winners on Wheels. a Fresno, Calif.. group that helps kids with wheelchairs
..!.. and helped to design the Becky doll.
·
.
: Overton agrees Becky can teach children to be more comfortable around
RCoplc with wheelchairs.
. .
·
'- " It scnsiti1.cs all people in soctety and makes them more aware of other
~oplc ." Ove(lon says. "Many people don 't look directly at' people in
"!heelchairs because they don't know how to act But that is changing as
people sec they are just like other people."

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among the toughest and largest divisions .in which· to compete. Many of
the teams· which competed against
lhe All Stars Unlimited .were made
up of 25 girls from a gym who's total
chcerleading enrollment was anywhere from I50 10 400 girls.
Many factors played a roll in the
All Stars successful season. said
Rothgeb. and we ~ould like to thank
otir many busin·css and individual
sponsors. a·s well as the patience and
kindnes5 of the First Church of the
Nazarene ·and ihe Gallipolis DcvciO{'mcntal Center.
·
·
The Youth All Stars Unhmitcd in
kindergarten through sixth . g'radc·
arc: ·Kelly Abrams. Branqi Berry.
Whitney Br.ooks. Deanna Bryan.
Wliitncc CaldwelL Felicia Close.
Ad[iannc Eastman. Alexis Gieger.
Mcghan Humphreys. Dianna Jarvis..
Stephanie Jarvis. Haylic Johnson.
Whitney Larkins. Amanda ·Lucas.
Jacc·y Mahan. Jcnmfcr Northup.
Britt.ncy Potter. Ahby Rccs.
Kayleigh Rccs. Lcxxi Recs, Courtney Reuter. JoBcth Rothgch. Andrea
Russell. Sarah Russell. Jill Sanders.
Mariah Saunders and Sarah Stepp.
rtJc. Junior team in in ninth graqc
and under arc: Kelly Abrams. Kuri
Adkins. Jenny Burcham. Sarah Burnell. .Whitney Brooks, .Mandy
Brown, Alix Boster, Brandi Berry.
Ariel Brinker, Mcghan Deckard,:
Julie Fisco. Nicole Gibsc&gt;n. Mackenzie Greene, Meghan Humphreys.
Dianna Jarvis. Staci Jones. Nikki
Keefer. Nicole Lucas: Jodt Merry,
Katie Ratliff. Ahby Rccs: Tessa
Rothgeb. Sarah Russell. McKinsey
Saunders. Mariah Saunders. Molly
Shato. Betsy Shawver. Krista Smith

and Sheena Williams:
Both All Stai:s Unlimitcid Cheerleading Teams will be perf~rm.at the
Open House for' the opening of the
new Will Power Gym, located
across from KMart in Gallipolis,
Sunday June I, from 2 to 4 p.m.
Sign-ups for next year's competition All Star Cheer Teams arc · now in
progress at Will. Power Tumbling.
There will also be a Senior·all Star
Team for. students who will ·be in
grades I0-12 for the 1997-98-s"C hool
year. Enrollmc·nt is &lt;&gt;pen for 'those
interested in· Youth. Junior or Senior
All Stars. with ·any team .tryouts
uccurrin~ at 1hc end of the summer.
Call 675-6762 or 441-1570 for
infnnnation or to rcgtstcr. · Classes
hcgin June 2.

.

Dialysis Spedat'ists of Belpre,··LTD.
. and

• MEMORIAL DAY - For the past 40 years the 3rcl US Infantry has honored Amerlca'a fallen heroes by
rllclng flaga In front of more than 240,000 graveatonas at Arlington National Cemetery. · .
·

.:By

Dr. S. K~ppera,. M-edical
Director
.
.

.

•

'

· 2906 Washington Blvd.,
Belpre, OH

HEMODIALYSIS: .Using State of the Art equipment and highly experienced
hernodiaiysis nurses.
PEKITONEAL DiALYSIS INCLUDING CAPO, CCPD AVAILABLE
For Information or Appointments; Please Call:
(614) 376-0045 or (614) 423-2073 .

~0°/ooff
. our entire stocL: of
niens, ,.,oDlens, &amp;
children's ReeLoL:

A.tLietic

•

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I•

-·

1,:

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"

--

l l ~ ~ t f ~ eI ~

r I ~ n ! : II

--After brea.&lt;t •urgef)'. woinL-il soon discover what they want in a breast fonn, AnJ
. . Amoena\ re1·olutiona"· LUXA:' LITE deli~•"· less weight. Mon: flllln~..
Exm.softn'"'· Contoured ftt Stop by today. And see just haw richlli&amp;hl can&amp;..
-

~dk

f1MOE:Nf\

SHL

RT 2 By-P111 Point PI.. Nnt
875-7870
'

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"

________

Friday, May 30, 1997 1iJ11 Pleasant Valley
Noon • 3 p.m.
IJt.:ll Home Medk:8l f'4dpment

....

Suea...MIOG&amp;QJ' b.

lllllle••lldtk .. _

Sun 1-6

,,, ' ' '

'

TaL:e an additional

Mon-8119-8

ONE

LOW

PRICE

Sen. D~nicl Inouye of Hawaii has
introduced a bill to return the holi. day to May 30.
·Today, it becomes an extra day
of rest," Inouye said. "A day of
remembrance of . sacrifice has
hccome a day of picnics now. and
the first day of outdoor barbecues."
Other clfons to refocus Mcmnri. al bay also arc under way. Nn
Greater Love will sponsor a national
··moment of remembrance" Monday. At 3 p.m. EDT. its supporters
will pause for a commemorati vc
minute of silence. In ·state capitals,
nn 200 Amtrak trains, in more than
1.000 malls and at racetracks, casinos and baseball stadiums around
the country, ·announcements will
remind people in mid-Mcmoriql
Day revelry of the holiday:s.original

. .

Sug. fltlltiJ
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MIKE MADDEN
30th. the same way you keep July country lose sight of the holiday 's
:Qannett Newa Service
Fourth ,on the fourth." said Joseph original meaning. Other v.ctcrans
.: ·This Monday. a.• millions head to Ci!ci. commander of the town's Vct- across the country agree with Caci
,aradcs and barbecues across the crans of Foreign Wars Pnst 6433 . - who served J9 months in the
.:ountry, most residents of Waterloo. "You don) change Christmas. and Army in Berlin in 1960-61 - and
have launched an effort to remind mcamng.
;,..,.Y., birthplace of Memorial Dny. you don't change New Year's."
Such sentiments arc not new.
:Won't pay any auention. .
Caci and others in Waterloo stick people that Memorial Day hasn't
Purists
always have sought to keep
: Schools and government offices to the traditional date for a reason: · always been a time 1&lt;1r sales and
Memorial Day solemn, almost since
ln the upstate New York town will The towns residents say it hel(l the swimming pools.
the holiday was established in 1868.
·
·
.
"We
owe
these
people
a
dcht
of
~ lose, bui there won't be any
nation 's first Memorial Day ccrcmol!agcantry.
ny in 1866. when its citizens com- remembrance. " said retired Navy In the 1890s. Civil War veterans
: For Waterloo. that will wait until memorated Civil War victims. One chaplain Bill Perry. aVictnam vctcr- decried the first Memorial Day sales
friday, May 30- the date on which hundred years later. President Lyn- . an who ·volunteers. for No Greater for their commercializing effect,
¥\.mericans used -to remember the · don Johnson proclaimed Waterloo
iiati&lt;in's warderid, before a 1968 act the huliday's birthplace.
But aside from tradition and civic
of Co~gress created the three-day
Professional Counseling &amp; Family Services
weekend that also marks 'the he gin- pride. Caci prefers to mark Mcmori-.
riing of summer.
. al Day on May 30 hecause he feels
, ··You keep Mcmori:ii Day the ihc three-day weekend has let the

Are pleased fo announce the opening of iheir newest location at

WEEK ·END SPECIALS
Sat·Sun-Mon ·

..

said

past sc.vcral congressional sessions,

.

·

Rutgers University history professor veterans realize Memorial Dais
G. Kurt Pichler said.
other meaning - the beginning Of
His colleague John W. Chambers · summer - isn't intended to detract
'
suggests the holiday's dual meaning from the memory of the dead.
as summer festival may not·bc such
"It's hecn happening for decades
a distraction. The simple fact that now. not just with Memorial Ddy
people get the day off is an indica- and Veterans' Day hut ·with oth9r
tion that Memorial Day is special, days, " he said. "11 doesn't have anyand that forces people to remember thing to do with disdain for the holifallen veterans.
·
day. We don't take it personally:·
"Americans don 't sec anything
But Caci called the move away
wrong with this because, after all, from Memorial Day traditions an
Jefferson promised the pursuit of indication that the country is losing
happiness,'' he said. "We sec the;; touch with patriotism. And to Perry.
pursuit of happiness a.1 a national Memorial Day has been chCapencd.
right. so this rite can fit without
"It's like saying, we can inundate
offensive ·disjuncture:;
ourselves in 'Rudolphs and plastic.
And Steve Van Buskirk of the Christmas trees, and that's the birth
Veterans of Foreign Wars
most of Jesus," he said.
· · ' ·~~~~·~~~~

. . . . . . . . . ."

7

1

(304) 675-6100

"

·A brief history ot.Memorial Day .

MAY IS MENTAL HEALTH MONfH
· "MAKE THE CONNECTION"

Gannett Ne"' Service

.
Before the Civil War, there wus no nationwide commemoration ol Amcr. · ican soldiers killed in baltic, not even those who died in the Revolutionary
War, Rutgers University history professor John W. Chamhers said. .
·
. The first l:irge·scale commemoration of America'.• fallen sol~!cr~ was.
a
otgani~ . in 1868 hy the Grand Anny ol the Republic. an organwmon ol
veteran ,Union troops. .
. .
John '1\. Logan, commander of the .Grand Anny, called on veterans to
mark the graves of slain comrades on May 30 .._ ·•Decoration Day.''
Mig tbl Cgnn!!!jlloo - Between Met~lal Health and Physical Health
' Thf9~ghout the North. vetcrnns.m~rched throuilh.t!teir towns io the ccmc·
Individuals with depression are 1.5 times more likely to die than
tcrie!l. and !lass were ·towered to hall -stalf, Other clttT.cns w~ld follow~~
individuals with another serious medical condition who are not depressed
veterans to panicipatc in graveside ceremon.ics.
. · . ,
·
·.• .
(Rovner, et al.. JAMA, 1991 ).
·
'The nature of the Civil War set Mcmonal Day s, local tonlj.i "Chambers
· An intensive lifestyle change program conelsling or maintaining a lowsaid. Except for Gcuysburg. which hc~amc the first national CCJ11Ctery, most ' fat diet, exercise, yoga, meditation, and group support can reverse the
slain soldiers were buried in their fi(imetowns. Each town hll!~· ~ceremony . effects of hean dia8188 (Omlsh, 1990).
.
·
. •
. . .
A six year follow-up of patients, dlagnOHd with malignant melanoma,
10 hOnor its fallen vcicrans.
Though Congress made Memori&lt;\1 Day an official national ccle~~atton m
who had received short-term (six weeks) structured psychiatric group
188'1. most Southern stat~s continued holding ceremonies on vary1ng dates
intervention following their dlagnosi~. showtd a mortality level30 percent
to remember Confederate soldiers. lJ'ntilthe end of World War l,.Memortal
less than that of a control group, which did not receive the lntarvention,
Day was explicitly .linked to the Civil. War. and most people saw ttas a hoiand li recurrence level of just 54 percent ot the conlrOl group (Fawzy et
iday for the North only, C:hambcrs ~atd.
,
.
•
If., 1993).
.·
Even today, Rutsers htstory ,prolessor G. Kurt Pichler sa1d, some Slll"h·
The control or stress In the treatment of many dlaeiHI IUch as ·
em towns ·save' their austo for their state's Confoderatc commemorauon,
arthritis (Long et at, 1993) as waH as ~ion, cardiac airtlythmla,
with only scaled-down parade on ~cmorial Day.
.
Insomnia pre-meMtrualayndrome, ~tfdty and the Fill Ilea and vomiting
After World War I, veterans' groups split bel~ those ~ho wanted
1 llCitded with chtmotherlpy llllgnllcaut (Bel11011 and Stuart, 18112).
Annistice DaY. to .stand separately from Memonal Daf and those . who
~~~~ MemOrial Oily should honm: all war victims.
.
,

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Mag tba Connection - Between Mental Hsa/th and lnsurai1Cfl Coverage
By' the end of 1995, 56 million were enrolled in HMOs, double the
level in 1985 (Group Health Association of America, 1996).
·
. Since 1993, Medicaid mjlnaged care has increased 140 perce.l)t
(Health Care Financing Administration, 1996).
· More than 66 miUion Americans - or 27 percent of the population were without health insurance for at least month between February
1992 and May 1994 and five percent lacked coverage.

By MIKE MADDEN

CRISIS LINE 1-800-252-5554

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FiJrm Business

Entertainment

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----------------People in the news---------__;,_,;,._______,...._____
'

Eight out of I 0 Americans questioned in a poll could identify the golf
Many of.the winning ,films or their directors had some link to poli;ictiJ or
•-..GRAND FORKS. N.D. (AP) - Flooded-out high school students who
social issues, but there was notl)ins politically correct about the decisions,
had to postpone ~heir prom found out superstar or the tattooed basketball player.
Only 9 percent could identify Reed, the Ol!tgoins executive director of the Adjani told Le Monde in a story pub·.
· ' ·
it's wonh . the wait - Soul Asylum
Christian
Coalition,
Dr
Fleeh,
the
FBI
director.
·
lished Thursday.
will perform.
The poll, conducted last week by the Pew Research Centedor the People
"Simply, the majority of 'the most
The Minneapolis rock band.
· interesting filmmakers are the ones
best known for its million-selling &amp; the Press of 61 S adults, had a margin of error of 4.5 percent.
1m album "Grave Dancers Union,"
confronted with difficult situations,"
OVIEDO,
Spain
(AP}
Yehudi
Menuhin
and
Mstislav
Rostropovich
will play at the June 28 prom at a
Adjani said. "Their creadvity blows a
Grand ,Forks Air Force Base hangar, a were named co-winners of the Spanish equivalent of the Nobel prize Friday hole in the wall and lets ,in the light..
for the "univ~rsality" of their music and their contribution to (reedom.
·· When the film works, YO!'· have to
publicist for the group said.
'
' '
'
The jury of the Prince of AsiUrias Concord Prize lauded Menuhin, the ~t''
Students from Central and Red
River high schools can attend the violinist, and Rostropovich, the cellist, for "contributing with their music to
This year's Golden Palms went to
.
prom. The spring flooding ravaged 90 the harmony and concord of the world."
Japanese director Shohei fmamura for
The award, one of eight Prince of Asturias prizes presented annually, "Unagi'' ("The Eel") and Iranian
percent of Grand Forks and East ·
Grand Forks, Minn.,' across the Red includes $35,000 and a sculpture by Spanish artist Joan Miro. They are pre- filmmaker Abbas Kiarostami for
River.
·
sented by the l!eir to the Spanish throne, Prince Felipe of Asturias.
"The Taste of Cherry," both films
' 'Grave Dancers Union"
Former winnerS of the Concord Prize, awarded for contributions to inter- dealing with suicide. Kiartstami had
inCluded the singles "Runaway national understanding and cooperation, include King Hussein of Jordan, · trouble getting the film to · Cannes
Train" and "Somebody to Shove."
Spanish former Prime Minister Adolfo Suarez and the American Foundation because of Iranian censors. '
for AIDS Research.
Jurors included American novelist
WASHINGTON (AP)
Paul Auster, Chinese actress Gong Li,
· Mstlslav Rostropovlch
Who's Tiger Woods? Or Dennis RodPARIS (AP) -"Isabelle Adjani, who headed this ye:ir's Cannes Film Fes- American director Tim Burton.
man? Most Americans know. But, tival jury, insists the panel awarded its top prize - the Golden Palm - to British director Mike Leigll and CanaIsabelle Acit..,l
'
"great films, not good causes,"
·
dian writer Michael Ondaatje. ·
Ralph Reed? Louis Freeh? Who?

Family.Channel ~ys
aloha to a '70s TV classic

Mary Black spreading.her success around

Mary Black
By BRUCE PILATO
Gannett News Service
On her last visit to London. Irish
singer Mary Black sold out three
nights at The Royal Albert Hall. hut
when she rcturnca there recently.
she played London'.s intimate Jazz
Cafe. Black decided tn premiere
material :· from her new album.

"Shine" (Curb Records), by giving
a spellbinding. performance to a
small familylike group of industry
supporters. music media and
devout B.ritish fans.
"Hello. London' It's.great to be
hack." Black told the suld uut audience of only 400. beli1re launching
into a series of new songS from her

tenth album. "Shine" is the record
most music industry insiders feel
will break her carcer •outside of Ireland and England, where she is
already a superstar.
In her homeland of Ireland, she ·
is that nation 's biggest female star,
ever, with nine platinum solo
albums, outselling both U2 and
Sinead O'Connor. Black has made
hit ·records with her brothers and
sisters, as The Black Family.
She's had pockets of success in
most countries, including the United States where Black has .a devoted cult audience. Her record label
and · · managqment are hoping
"Shine" will. do for Mary Black
what "Nick Of Time" did for Bonnie Raitt.
Blade's timing is certainly right,
with contemporaries such as Raitt,
Sheryl Crow, Shawn Colvin, Alanis
Morissette, Jewel, and · Mary
Chapin--Carpenter, at the forefront
of today's music scene.
"I would love to be hugely suecessful worldwide, and I think I am
more ready for it now than ever
before,'' says Black. "But I think .
the way that things worked out was
the right way.
.
"I don't think I would.havc real·
ly wanted to hit the big time,
around the world, until now. I' ve
been able to savor ·each moment of
· success that I have had thus far.
instead of just.. whoosh!"
Black has juggled her career
whiiC maintaining a 17-ycar marriagc and raising three children
ages, 10 to l(i.
"It.'s been difficult,'' she adds.
"Part of the problem that Women
have being in the music business is
that we have to make sacrifices. We
have to give up certain opportunities to be there for the family. My
career has been a gradual growing
thing. which has been easier than if
it had been a sudden tla•h of success.
"This year we will be touring
more than usual and I will be away
a lot and that can be hard. Fortu-

nately, I get a lot of suppon at home
. By ALAN FISK
from . 9 to II p.m. And Monday's . .
from my husband·and my f~mily. "
The Detroit News
movie is from .8 to 10 p.m. Starting
. Spearheaded by the song. "One
"Book 'em, Dano."
Tuesday, the regular one-hour series
And Only," Shine is a triumph for ·
. If you watched TV in the 1970s, will ~ir at 9 p.m. .
.
Black. who, is arguably, one of the
those three words represented law
While TV has. seen many cop
best pop female singers of the last
and order, cri.mc and punishment, drtmas, "Hawaii Five-0" was spc-.
20 years, The album . features 12
good overcoming evil - all in a cial Perhaps it was the fl!St-moving
selections all written by seasoned
tropical paradise.
plots or the intriguing supporting ·
songwriters like · David Gray.
"Dano," of course; was ,Danny cast· Kam Fons a5 Chin Ho Kelly,
Richard Thompson, and "Shine's"
· Williams (James MacArthur), detec- Zulu as Kono, Khigh Dhiegh as the
producer, Larry Klein.
tive sidekick to Steve McOarrett mysterious Asian criminal Wo Fat.
With "Shine," Klein has created
(Jack Lord), head of Hawaii'~ elite
Perhaps it was the exotic weekly
a subtle mix of traditional Irish
criminal investigative unit, Hawaii opening sequence, with ·hula girls
music with mainstream pop songs,
Five-0 - and the title of the TV and poundil)g surf and swooping
which combined, act as the perfect .
series that ran from 1968 to 1980.
aerial views of Hawaii. The Family
vehicle for Black's beautiful voice.
Now you can relive the "Hawaii Channel has hl\(1 the series digitally
Klein, who is married to ·Joni
Five-0" days on the Family Chan- remastered to make the colors even
Mitchell. was a logical choice; havnel starting this weekend. The cable more vivid.
ing won Grammys for his producoutfit stitched together three two-.
Cenainly part of the _series allure
tion of Mitchell, and his work with
part episodes of "Hawaii Five-0" was the McGarrett character. GranShawn Colvin.
and created TV movies that will air ite chin thrust out, thick mane flow"I .· obviously love Shawn
Saturday, Sunday and Morlday ing in the tropical trilde winds,
Colvin, and I was aware of his pronishts.
·
·'
McGarrett took no guff from anyd~ction skills, but, in actuality, it
· The .!!aturday ep,isode: entitled one. When • he ·smiled, which was
was Larry that showed an interest
"V for Vashon,'~ runs from ·8 to II rare, it looked like his face had
in me," says Black.
p.m. Eastern. The Sunday movie, cracked open.
TI1at · was initially very flatter"Three Dead Cows 111 Makapu," airs
Now that's acting.
. '
ing. I had niet Larry in Dublin after
one of my shows, He was· the first
person thai came to mind when I
had to stan thinking about a new
' producer." .
Black!'s successin •u.s: markets
RIO GRANDE - The sound of , mandolins and fiddles. Toes will be
is more likely now than ever
old
. time country ;md· bluegrass tappin' prior tJ).Und following combefore. bCcause traditional Irish
musi,, known at Celtic music. is · mustc wtll nng throughout The Bob · petition as special guests, The
. finally. gaining huge support with ' Evans Fann valley Saturday. June 7, Rarely Herd, . Pinccastlc Records
dunng t~c 2nd annual Bl~cgra~s recording artists from Ohio and
record buyers stateside.
Competttton and Jambor~c to Rto West Virginia, perform origitial
Gr~nde.
h.
'
d' · 1
"I have seen traditional Irish
V.tst·1ors· to the event WI.1,r sec songs t at range .rom tra Utona.
music innucncing American music .
J
blucgruss to contemporary ucousuc
f h
. , r.
some o t c rcgmn s 11ncst amateur
· 1R ·
· · ·
for years," says Black, who is not
· ·
. ,
h
matcna
. cgtstratton
ts from 9 a.m.
mus1c1ans compc 1c .or more l an
· · · hegrn·
.
surprised that Celtic music has
·.
.
: . .to I2 p.m. wtth compeltlton
·
$2
. ,000 tn pnzc muncy 10 11 vc calcn'tr.o.
,
.
.
.
become a staple in many U;S. CD
· -- ban ds. ~..anJOs,
·
'
... • 1 12 ·-30 p.m.·
gones
guuars.
players. "i don 't think this is· something that 'has just happened. Irish
.,
immigrants .:arne to America during the famine and with them they
ly a story of a very sad life. hut'
Continued from page C1
llrnught their music.
has Daisy Fay wearing ro~c­
Flagg
located at Spruce Street at First
colored' glasses and with a tremenAvenue, in Gallipolis, Ohio, plans to
" In a way, what I'm doing, continue
their series of adult pro- dous sense of humor. .
although I am Irish- is I'm fusing
Why not visit your library today'/
grams. A schedule had not yet. been
many aspects of American pop into
A
wealth
of infom1ation and enjoy·developed when I last spoke to rcpmy music. S&lt;) in a way, it's all'going
ment
awaits
you.
·resentatives of the library, but it was
full circle."
hoped a different program could be
given one Sunday each month Of : COLONYTHE AT RE I~
1'111. TttRU THUll$
every other. month.
TOMMY LEE JONE8tN
=:_;~
My niece recently recommended
=! VOLCANO PQj' \ ·._
a book · that has to be th~ funniest
and 2:30 p.m.. the Irish Step . tion, noon; Harp and Fiddle, Ted books I've ever read. It is Daisy Fay
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
Dancers, 2 and 3 p.m.; and the Teays Jordan and Debra Norris, 12:30 and and the Miracle Man by Fanny
I;'Valley Cloggers, _4p.m. .
2 p.m.; the Beni Kedem Highlanders
On field actiVI~tes mclude the Pipe Band, f' p.m.; Storyteller Jane Flagg. Flagg is the author ofFried
bluegrass band, 12:30.-3 p.m.; the Morse, 1:30 p.m.; . the Welsh Green Tomatoes. The book is actualPar~e ofTanans. I ,p.m.; and chi I- Gymanfu Ganu and Tea, 2:30p.m.;
dren s games, Mtller s border colhes. and special music, 4 p.m.
and. the Kanawha Valley Ptpes and
On field activities Sunday
.FRI, SAT, SUN·
1111AUENIN
Drums, I :~0 p.m,. . .
include children's games, 1:30 p.m.;
JUNGLE;! JUNGLE'"
. Sunday s acuvtttc~ on stage and the ladies wellie toss, amateur
AND
tnclude worshtp servtce and the athletics and Miller's border collies .
MARLON
WAYANS IN
Beni Kcdcm Highlanders, 10 a.m.; 2 p.m.
·
'
THE
SIXTH
MAN'""
acoustic guitarist Mark Ward, 11
a.m.; the bonnrest knees competi,
.---"""::~~~-·....
.

l

medallions and ribbons awarded.: .
A children's corner will be set up
including activitieJi, . face painti~g.
storytelhng and Nesste. .
.
Cclttc. vcndor!i wtth tnter~stmg
war~s wtll be o~ hand. Some tt~ms
are tmportcd H1ghland accessortcs,
woolc~s, t_
artans, books . ta~cs. .
ccramtcs, Jewelry and clo_thmg .
There wtll also be the tradlltonal
We.lsh frted cakes and Scotttsh meat
pies.
"The Tri-Vallcy Celtic Society
feels that it is important that we eelebratc the hefitage of our region so
. that we can appreciate the traditions .
and teach our children about their
roots," a spokesman for the society
· said.
, "The Celtic Festival not Qnly cclcbrates and recognizes the con!ributions of the Irish. Scots and Welsh to
the development of this region, but
also attracts to our area hundreds of
visitors from all across the country,"
the spokesman a.dded. .
Saturday 's activities on stage
include the Banks of Ohio Dulcimer
Group, 10 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.; .·
Menagerie. I I a.m. and 3:30 p.m.;
Kanawha Valley Pipes and Drums,
II :30 a.m.; the Poverty String Band
bluesrass g.roup. noon; the Colum·bus Scottish Highland Dancers, I:30

..•

.•

. Farrp~". plu~grass cornpet_it!on .

Library...

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Special Evats. .
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·VIDEO
TRANSFERS

i '"'

OF'FIC:EI11S • New officers for tha 1997·98 school year
were
recently by members of the Gallipolis FFA chapter.
Pictured, left to right, Klmm McCormick, vice-president; Amy
· Crlsenbery, president; Rette Carmichael, student advisor: Tim
.Howard, treasurer; Beth Roberta, secretary; and Ketlsha Warren,
, sentinal.
~ .

Tap your ·toes at Bob Evans

Cel~ic Fest ·. al scheduled for May 31 through June 1 ·
RIOGR?\NDE - .The campus of
~he Umvently of R!o Grande will
ilgain be the host_ this year lor the
IPI•th AnnlJ!II Celllc Festtval on Sat~~rday, May 31 and Sunday, June I. 9
· li·l,"·-5 p.m. each day at the u~tvcrst ·I~ s Stanley L. Evans Memonal Ath!file Freid.
.
.
. ln. ca•c of ram. events wtll ~
'fld 10 Lync Center. Admtssron wtll
charged.
The Tri- Valley Celtic Society and
~e
1 universit~ ·are ~resenting the fes1 val as a cell:iu'auon of Insh. Scot1 'sh and Wetftrlteritage.
..
. Scottish folk singer Carl Peierson
1 ill be among the festival's special
uests. A Ceilidh will be held Satur1
1 ay at 7 p.m. in the James A. Rhodes
tudent Center, with free admission
d refreshments. A Welsh Gvmanfu
anu and tea will be held Surday at
:30 p.m. in the Main Tent.
Along with the many clan tents to
risit and a'5istance with gencaloJly.
, tivities will include Celtic and
luegrass music. Celtic dancers and
loggers. storytellers, Scottish pipe
ands. and working border collie
emonstrations.
. Also ·scheduled arc the ladies·
1 ~eilie toss, Scottish arJ!ateur athlet- ~ f_s. the bonniest knees competition
r"d children's games with trophies,

. GALLIPOLIS FFA MEMBERS HONORED. Two members of the
.Gallipolis FFA chapter will be among those honored at the FFA
state convention for outstanding aervlce an~, achlavamenta. Jill
.Carter, left, and Chris Dodson will be awarded State FFA clegraes
: .at the FFA Association convention later this spring.

Gaf!iPC!!i$._ffA . Pbapter
members .are h·ono;ed
Advisor Hdrold Benson recog· GALLIPOLIS - An awards ceremony was the highlight of a recent nized 25 individual ·members who
meeting of the Gallipolis FFA chap- participated in 13 different skills
ter parent/member banquet held at contests ~eyond the local chapter.
Otber highlights of the banquet
Camp Francis Asbury near Rio
Grande. The annual banquet is to rec- included 1 an address by Jennifer
ognize ·those members for their Byrnes, Gallia County Extension
accomplishment~ during FFA activi- · Age.11t, and the annountement that Jill
Carter is the Star Chapter M~mber,
ties d~ring the past year.
:: All first year studenis r'eceived the and Jason Pugh as the Star GreenGreen hand ·degree and second year hand member.·
The banquet program concluded
.. , students were awarded the Chapter
with the itistallaiion of chapter offidegree.
Jill Carter and Chris Dodson were · cers elected for the 1997-98 school
· '. applauded for being honored with a year. They include President Amy .
· : : State FFA degree which they will Crisenbery, vice president Kim
secretary
Beth Roberts,
:.; receive during the Ohio FFAAssoci-. · McCormick,
.
I
treasurer 'fim Howard, reporter
· ·. ,alton convention later this spring.
·:
Also, Troy Duncan and Jason Natalie Miller, sentinel Ketisha War:: ~ov.:ard. were recognized for their ren, and ·· student advisor Rette
·• )lomtnauon for the coveted American Carmichael.
: ~ f'FA de)!rec . ·

:[:Obtains
real estate.license·
•
•

- Cara Casey of
Bidwell recently
completed classes
at
Hondros
Career Center in
Columlius and
has obtained her
license to engage
in the real estate
•
, business.
~ ::she joined the Virtinia L. Smith

.-

real Estate flflll April 14,
Casey IS p 198 I graduate from
Gahanna Lincoln High School in
Gahanna.
She previously worked' at
Ratliff's Pool Center.
She is ma'Tied to Morris Casey, a
graduate of Gallia Academy High
School,&lt;and has two children, Kia .
and Kyle. She is a member of Paint
Creek Baptist t:hurch in Gallipolis.

Beetles sighted on

e~rly

By HALKNEEN
POMEROY - Potato and tomato
growers and gardeners, be on the
lookout for the Colorado Potato Beetle. The beetles have been sighted on
early potato plants from Langsville to
Letart. These adult beetles have overwintered as adults under rocks, leaves
and wood. Their instincts lead them
to the first sprouts of potatoes. The
beetles can fly up to two miles but ·
normally just walk to the nearest
potato or tomato plant.
Hand picking off these beetles is
the best initial control measure for the
small gard~n homeowner. These beetles may have built up resistance to
the &lt;;hemicals you sprayed last ye.ar,
so by destroying last.year's surviving
beetles you help in. retaining the

Post-bloom care of bulbs will affect
future blooms for daffodils,
hyacinths, tulips, and crocus. As
bulbs finish blooming, it is a good
idea to remove faded blooms and
developing seedheads. Allow the
foliage to grow at least six weeks so
the plant can .develop next jear's
bulb. DO NOT cut or braid foliage,
allow it to die down naturally. Foliage
can be removed onee it has turned
yellow or brown.

544 W. Main St., Pomeroy,
~

I loll llfiiiNrt
I IIIII '•

i....:N

~· l~l ;M

~

/\11 '. 111' . . .

- _......

&amp;14 ·992-5724 or 1-800-552·1990

IN s rucK• ..

•

Al'lle bit oltht Pca1eor limn Illidge
VIIi! OtW IIIIi lhowroolil ar Cll · .

--

"I

I

llllldlrlon, WY

..

aRlo

Ott

effectiveness of our most coinmon
pesticides. -Look underneath the early potato leaves for the Colorado
potato beetles' small, orange colored
clusters of eggs. Crush these eggs or
pick off the leaf and properly dispose
of the leaves .
One hundred .percent eradication
of the' Colorado beetle is not possible.
However, the combined use of cultural measures, physical ·control,
chemical control and biological control can reduce the beetles devas!i'l··
ing effect on your crops. For more
detailed information, ask f.or Ohio
State University Extension's Factsheet #2204, "Colorado Potato Beetle in the Home Garden''.
Were your Spring bulbs beautiful?

u.y 25, 1W7

potato plants

Dates to remember:
· • June IS- Washington/Meigs
Vegetable Twilight Meeting will be
hosted by Shane Pugh, at Doak
Greenhouses SR 7 North, Marietta,
Ohio. Maps and further details can be
obtained at my office.

• June 25- Ohio State University
Extension's Field Crop Diagnostic
Field Day will be held at the Fayette
County Farm, just north ofWashington Court House. .The day begins at
9 a.m. and the program highlights:
soybean, corn and wheat variety trials; herbicide trials; insect resistant
stands of corn and alfalfa. Call me for
further deiails.
.
• June 28- bhio Cattlemen's Associ inion Suinmer Roundup is being
held in Delaware/Union counties
starting at 8 a.m.. For more information contact OCAoffice at(614) 8736736.
.
Harold H. Kneen is the Agri·
cultural &amp; Natural Resources
Agent, Ohio State · University
Extension, Meigs County.

Tips on selecting a pest control company
By JENNIFER L. BYRNES
GALLIPOLIS - The calls and
concerns about termites are still
being reported to the office on a daily basis. Although most calls involve
swarmers . in the yard originating
from infested wood piles and other
sources, some situations involve the
homes directly and warrant finding
an exterminator. Most homeowners
want to know the basis on which ihey
choose a reputable pest control company.
Although obtaining several estimates from different companies is
good practice, it often makes the
decision more complicated and confusing.
·
To son out the options and estimates, keep these factors in mind: I
) Select firms that have membership
in a local or national pest control
association and those who cooperate
with the Ohio Department of Agriculture. the Ohio Department of
Health, or The Ohio State University. 2.) Do not take licensing fot granted. It is always safe tp inquire about
certifications ·and pesticide applicator
licenses forthe application of restricted use pesticides. 3.) Be sure that the
company carries general liability
insurance to give homeowners a
degree of protection should an accident &lt;?Ccur. 4.) ,Bec"cuse termttes w~rk
very_ s]owly, repu.l!lble comp~ntes
I

.

AGNEWS
county area, and will feature an
will not rush homeowners into makBLUE MOLD UPDATE: There employment specialist as -well ·as a
ing decisions and signing contracts. ·
5.) Inquire about the guarantee for the have been no reports of blue mold in panel of producers and leaders who
job and the length of time that it is Ohio or in Kentucky. In the past, con- are overcoming the labor crunch.
effective. ae·sure to ask what is need- . taminated transplants o.ut of the south Also. the · annual Tobacco 1\vilight
ed to keep the guarantee in 'force. 6.) and southe~st have been the most Tour is scheduled for July 15, at 6
The pest control company should probable cause of early blue mold .p.m.
CATILE REDUCERS : The
answer your questions fully, and epidemics. It cannot be overs tated ~ ­
buy
your
plants
from
a
local
source
Southeastern
Ohio Herd Improveinform you about the pest, extent of
to
pr!)tect
your
crop
and
everyone
ment
Committee
still has 5 good
infestation, pesticide formulation to
else's.
Early
last
week,
the
N.C.
quality bulls available for sale or
be used, application techniques, and
lease. Please call Produces Livestock
instructions following the treatment Stnte Blue Mold
Forecast
predicted
the
possibility
Association in Gallipolis, at 614-4467 .) Beware of out-of-state firms
of
weather
carrying
blue
mold
spores
9696.
apP,Caring unexpectedly claiming terPORK PRODUCERS: The World
mite damage at a neighbor's as an .into North Carolina. Thus far. there
Pork
Expo is scheduled for June 5-7
are
no
identified
cases
of
blue
mold
excuse to inspect your home. 8.)
Although estimates wi.ll vary celnsid- in North Carolina. As of Thursday, , in Indianapolis, Indiana. Please tall
erably (often up ·to $1 ,000 differ- May 22, threats to North Carolina the office at 614-446-7007 for a
ence), be cautious of estimates sub- were discontinued and the weather detailed agen!)a.
D~IRY PRODUCERS: The FDA
stantially lower than the others. The pattern ·predicted no source threats.
·cheapest estimate is not .always the The growin·g high risk areas contin- recent.ly published a riew regulation
ue to .' be confined lo 'Gainesville, that will change how milk is labeled.
best.
·
Homeowners should take the time Florida, Reno, Georgia, and parts of The new labeling will enable the
and energy to investigate their spe- South Texas including Corpus dairy industry to more effectively '
cific situations, as well as the com- Christi. We are in no threat of wind promote the nutritional value of I
percent and 2 percent milk as equal
panics that provide estimates. borne blue mold _spores.
to
that of whole milk. Furthermore,
Remember, there is no need to rush
However, concern about wind
the
changes will allow the use of the
into treatment. It is not unusual to borne spores is a waste of time if the
terms
"fat free", or ·"low-fat" on
ta.ke several weeks or even a month disease is carried in on
to settle on a pest control company.
transplants from other locations. .labels. As.society continues to search
TOBACCOPRODUCER:MMk out tliese terms on food labels, this
P-rotect your investment, take your
time.
your calendars for two programs this change attempts to minimize the
For more information on selecting summer. Farm Labor meeting, June barriers to drinking milk, by meeting
a pest control company, or on termite . 17, at 8 p.m. at Buckeye Hills Career these · c~n~umer demands.
control ,please call the O~IJ .Euen- Center. This meetiqgj},'l\91liQlW,1:&gt;Y. ·
Jennifer L. Byrnes is Gallia , .
· sion office at 446,7007.
the
Farm
B~reau, .w·u~-!l!'l.o!ve.: a: '4
County's
Agent In agriCulture and
.
natural resoun:es.

Ease the bite of higher taxes with municipal bonds
By RYAN SMITH,
Safety
,
Municipal securtues have an
Adveat, Inc.
OALLIPOLIS - Are you tired of excellent record of paying interest
having to (lay taxes on your savings and principal on time. Each bond
and investment acco.unts in addition . must be judged on its own merit, but
·to your earned iqcome? Regardless as a class, municipal bonds offer a
of
one of the only high degree of safety and security
means of tax.avoid- · second only to u.· S. Government
remaining is bonds. The relative ·quality of
municipal bonds.
municipal bonds can be determined
The goal of any by rating provided by the two major
investor should be rating agencies Moody's Investors
lo maximize after- Service Inc. and Standard &amp; Poor's
tax return that ' is Corporation: Generally, bonds rated
consistent with the BBB or better are considered to be
amount of risk he investment grade or suitable for
or
is willino to take. Most preservation of invested capital.
municipal bonds continue to . pay
Flexibility
interest that is exempt from federal • Municipal bond investors can
income taxes. And in many cases, · . choose any desired maturity date
·stales and cities also allow an from ·one to 30 years or more.
exemption on interest earned on Because of this flexibility, investors
their · own issues. As a result, . can u,se municipal bonds to plan for
mvestors can often get higher current and 'future income or capital
returns after ·taxes than they can get appreciation needs.
from comparable taxable investTypes of Bonds
ments.
· A wide variety . of municipal .

F~rmer Galli~

In the next three years, more than
$200 billion of outstanding munis
will be retired. This will have a significant effect on both the supply.
and demand for municipal bonds.
The amount taken out of the market
will be returned to municipal bond
investors in tlie form of caSh. many
of these investors will.then be looking to reinvest into other municipal
bonds. Unfortunately there-will be
fewer bonds to choose fro{ll.'
Tax-free bond funds have been
coupon i*sues that are especially · massive purchasers of munis taking
suited for building a retirement fund available bonds out of the market ·
or college savings. '. .
thereby further depleting the supply.
· Municipal bonds can be pur- And, higher income tax rates resultchased individually in minimum ing in an · incr~ased demand of
denominations of $5,000 or by municipal bonds and a shrinking
investihg in municipal bond mutual supply means only one thing_. highfunds and unit trusts. These invest- er prices.
ments offer tax-free compounding,
To find out more how municipal
diversification and professional bonds can help ease the tax bite in
investment management for a low your portfolio, consult your finanminimum investment.
cial advisor.
Shorter
supply,
grea•er
demand
•

County resident honored in Maryland

~GALLIPOLit- Franklin Square ~nd r~latives in

.. -.. .,
•

',
'

••
•

bonds are issued from vinually
every city and state to finance such
projects as schools, roads, airpons
and sewer facilities . ·
The categories of bonds range
from general obligation, which typically carry superior credit ratings
with corresponding lower risk and
yields to revenue bonds, which generally provide greater returns than
general obligations bonds.
There are also insured bonds for
additional protection and zero

D. Thomas Crawford, M.D.

.Champion completes .acquisition
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. - Chtlmpion Industries, Inc., announced May
21 that is has completed its merger
!'Qth BliiC Ridge Printing Co., Inc., of
Asheville, N.C. Blue Ridge has been
merged into a division of Cluimpion
: ill exchanp for an undisciOied num: ber of common shares of Champion,
lbe transaction was accounted for as

Sunday,

D

Huyt, Pomeroy.
Gallia County, the Gladys Crawfprd, Marion and the
Mrp•· Crawford is also a graduate
David W. Crawford.
Hospital in Baltimore, Md., recog- Crawfords have returned for many lateDr.
Crawford and his wife of 46 · of Gallia Academy High School ,
Pomeroy, believes the merger will nized a former resident of Galli a visits over the past four decades. ·
years, Mary Ann Hoyt Crawford, ~ lass of 1951.
The 1950 GAHS gra,duate won the
give him the price advance he needs County recently by naming a new
The ·Crawfords have three chi!- ·
first Gallipolis Rotary Clu.b Gil reside in Glen Arm. Md.
· to complete with certain chain stores. facility after him,
dren,
Cacia, Kristin and Oregan and
Mrs. Crawford is the daughter of
On April 3, Franklin Square hon- . Dodds mile run as a junior in the
"By merging together, we have ereMrs. Arthur Hoyt and the late Arthur seven grandchildren.
· ated the largest hardware related ored D. Thomas Crawford, M.D.; as spring of .l949 on Memorial Field.
After leaving Gallipolis, Crawford
product buying cooperative in the one o(the men who helped guide the .
country. This puts us in a strong hospital from its uncenain beginnings · graduated from Kenyon C~llege in
Gambier in 1954. He rece1ved hts
negotiating position and will result in to its present success.
As medical director from 1966 to medical degree from Johns Hopkins
lower costs for store.owners and-that
translates into lower costs for our cus- 1988, Dr. Crawford built a strong School of Medicine in i 958, and
tomers," said ,JI'nkins. He added, ·medical staff and residency pro- served his surgical internship.at Ohiu
''The huge home !!enter stores can not . grams that have gained national · State University Hospital i• :Colum· match our frieq~ly and knowledge- prominence.
,
bus.
The new Crawford Conference
He continued his surgical training
. able service. A~ with an even betCenter,
which
was
dedicated
on
April
at
the National Cancer Institute in
tcr price advan~fe, we are even bet3,
brought
into
focus.
Fran·klin
Bethesda,
Md .. and the University of
tcr prepared to make them lifetim,e
·Square's enduring commitment to Maryland In Baltimore. In 1966, he
customers.'' 1 ,
No store nam~ Ire affected by the medical and health education, a tra- became a Diplomate of the Ameri.can
dition jufllp-started.by .Dr. Crawford. Board ofSurgery. .ln 1989, he bec,ame .
merger. ,
As the latest addition to the hos- a Fellow of the American College of ·
pital , the Crawfo(d Conference Cen- Physician Executives.
.·
· ter features a 250-S.at auditorium and
' For 22 years, Dr. Crawford was '
a pooling of intere&amp;ts. .
nine conference roo~s. pro.viding the director of medical education and
Blue Ridge Printing, a nationally . more space to teach, tram and 10form medical director of Fr~nklin Square
Jt~:~:~~~A:~ EARNS FIRST PLACE- Six members of the
recoanized color printer since 1974, phystctans, other health professtonllis Hospital Center in Baltimore. For the
South G
FFA recently took first plltc:e In FFA District 1o In a
specializes in siiltl to advertising and ~he communtty. .
.
past \0 years, Dr. Crawford has been
speciality crop cQmpetltlon held et Ohio Stata Unlvar11ty. Tha
asencies. it will' continue to operate
It s been 47 year~ smce Crawf~rd the-medical director of Broad mead, a
team was iwarded first place on the Tobacco Proficiency Appll- ·
undet the familiar Blue Ridge Print- left Patrtot and GalhaAcademy Htgh Quaker retirement community in
cation by the Ripley, Ol!lo boMI of trade. Pictured with their
ing name. Blue Ridge operates full School. Until the 1990~, the Craw- Cockeysville, Md.
award plaque are taam IMII'IIIere, front left to right, Mike Carservice process colbr pre-press cen- fords owned a farm tn Nof!hup.
Dr. Crawford grew up on a farm
penter and Bo Sword. Back row, left to right, Je1on Harris, Allen
ters, printing plants and binderies
Because of the farm and many frieft4\ls in Patriot and is the son of Mrs.
StapletDn, Rob Harrison, and Melanie Nanca. •

:~~erger is approved by owners .
_;:: GALLIPOLIS - By an over~ whelming majority, the independent ·
·'owners of 1\-ue Value and ServiStar
''Coast to Coast stores voted on April
:: llo consolidate their buying power
:: ~lid resources in one wholesale com·
·••
.pany.
The new company, Tru-Serv Cor. poration, is the world's largest whole~ saler of hardware and related prod~ucts aimed at the Do-lt-Yourself
.market, with expected annual sales of
. $4.5 billion.
. The creation of TruServ will
~kengt!len O'Dell True Value Lum. ber, who is a member of the whole: ~ale co-op.
·
• ., Robbie Jenkins, owner of O'Dell
True ValiiC'Lumber in Gallipolis and

Section

i

�,
Page D2 • J1

t

I ••••JIJI.I"IIIIII'

House of the week

Public Notice

Older homes·often
have serious problems

Spacious country home

A·WIDE FRONT PORCH and mulll-pened windows with ahullen sfve thla home a dlatlncUve counttyslyle appearance.
··
Big beech tree contest
By BRUCE A. NATHAN
made special by elegant column&amp; vides additional coun(er .space. It
also has an auached bayed breakAP Newsfeatures
and exposed beams.
The central living room Is won- fast nook for casual dining.
Plan G -55, by llomeStyles
.GALllPOLIS ·Would you like to
Designers Network, wllh 2,117 derful for eniPrtuinlng with Jt• 12- . A ·handy ulllity room and a half·
win a new Audubon Society Guide to
square feel or !Ivins space, ha&amp; a fool cathedral ceiling, a soaring bath frame the short halHeading
Trees and be presented a plaque with
well-deslsned noor plan that nrepiace and ··rend• doors that out to the carport which has a · your name on it? Then read on and
larf!e storage area.
adeptly seL• apart the living areas lead to the rear polio.
find out the details for The Galli a Soil
Natural light Is uvailabie In
from the sleeping quarters. ·
The kitchen is spadous and
Water Conservation District and
To the left of the foyer is the · designed for both work and play. abundance through picturesque
The
0. 0. Mcintyre Park District Big
formal dining room. This space is ll features a large i•l•nd that pro- windows in the master suite. This
Beech Tree Contes1. Show us your
space also has his-and-her walkbiggest beech tree and win.
In c!oselS and a very special bath
that features a plant shelf above
• This years genus is the American
·~
the
raised
spa
tub.
Beech
(Fagus grandifolia) which is a
II-..;_ ---11
T!te two remaining bedrooms
member of ~lc Fagaceae family.
· share a compartmentali•ed bath .
There arc 65 native. trees in this
that accommodates more than
family. American Beach wai recogone uset at a lime.
CAAPOAT
G-55
nized by the colonists, who already
knew the famous, closely ·related
European Beech. American Beech is

.....

Buyers can also feel cheaicd when
they discover that local zoning and
buildifli ordinances prohibit the
remodelins an,d improvem.:nts
planned when the bouse was bought.
It definitely pays t&lt;i hire a professional to evaluaic a home's structural and mechanical condition, and
'
' 'f
about how.much it will cost to fix up,
before you sisn on.!he·dotted line.
The inspection should cover roof.
ing, walls, ceilings, floors, windows,
doors, foundations and basement
slabs.
An inspector will determine
whether main structural components
are sound, free from rot or insect
damage, and strong ~:nough to sup-

'&lt;.

S&amp; WCD

.

.'
a handsome shade tree and bears sim- pic, mostly toothed or lobed. They are
ilar edible beechnuts. which arc consumed in quantities by wildlife, especially squirrels, raccoons. bears, ollt·
er mammals and game birds. Unlike
most trees, bei:ches retain smooth
bark hi age. The trunks are favorite•
for carving and preserve initials and
dates indclinitely.
The beech is a large tree with ·a
rounded crown of many Jon!! spreading. horizontal branches. They grow
to heights of 80-80'. The hark is light
gray, smooth. and quits thin.
Twigs arc slender. ending is long
narrow scaly buds. with short side
twigs. The leaves arc alternate, sim-

.elliptic or e11g-shapcd and · course ·.
toothed. You will ecncrally find the ·
heCch tree in moist rich soils of
uplands and well drained lowlands: •
often in pure stands. Beech is used a&lt; ·
a timber species. The quality of'
woodJs only fair but used for cheap .
furniture, tool handles, veneer. shoe .
lasts, and fuel. ·Beeches arc also ;
planted for ornamontals.
•
If you arc interested in participat- •
ing in the Big Beech Tree ·contest. : ·
contact the Gallia Soil and Water :
Conservation District at 446-88R7 or :
, the 0. 0 . Mcintyre Park District at ·
446-4612 for a nomination· form. ·

c..e

. 2717.011A)

Notice 11 hereby given
thallht unclanllgned tiled In
CaM No. 177112'1 apptloatlon
10 lht Common Plua Court,
Prob81a Dlvlelon of .Gallla
County, Ohio, for an order
to chana• nama to Karen
SutTabor.
'
Said application will be 614-388-9908
.
heard In uld Court, II 8:15
......,.
A.M., on the 27th day of . wanted- Glaztd Ml....,..-ort
brlclc. call614-522oll517 collect
June, 1887 at the Gallla
County Court Houra, Locuat. Wanted : Three Wheel Bicycle
Str111, Galllpolla, Ohio With Baal&lt;et 614·•.&lt;111·3834 Day·
llmo,
451131.
P.M. 6H·4•8·20•2. Allor 4:00
Kar.n Sue Thornton.
May 25, 1997

Commlaelonera
In qaflfa, Jackaon and
Mtlgli Countlea (1 0
appoint•••&gt;· Curr•ntty,
tiler. art lhrtt vac:anclw to
bt tlll•d. by two County
CommluiOMr
appolntmenta and one
ODADAS appolntntanl tor a
family mamb•r ot a
cOnaurner. I
·
•Individual• lnterntad In
being conaldarad for thaaa
appolntnMinta oan do ao by
requeatlng an application

the County

D

esisn G-55 has a living
room,

dining

SUNDAY PUZZLER

room,

.. kitchen, breakfast nook,
three bedrooms, two and nne half
baths and" a utility room, totaling
2,177 square feel or livhtg space.
This home includes a standard
basement, crawlspace or slab
foundation, and 2•4 exterior wall
framing. The carport, with . its
storase area, provides ~60 square
feel of addlliol!a! space.

ACROSS

THE FOYER leada Into the llvln1 room and Is open to the fomW
(Ji'or a nwre derailed, scaled plan
dlnlns room on the left. Stately columna set the dlnlns nrea apart qf lhu hoUJe, incJudinK Kuidt• ro
from the Jlvln1 room. A French door In the llvln1 room ope111 to a eslimalinl costs and financing,
backyard peUo. The Island kJtchen Is connected to the bayed break- send $4 to lloUJe Q/ the Wuk, P.O.
fast nookl The handy uUIIIy .room can be entered from 8 ehort haD Bo.r 1$62, New York, N.Y. 10116· ·
orr the breakfast nook. On the oppoelle aide or the home, a lon1 hall . I 162. Be sure ·ro include lhe plan
joins the master suite with the other two bedrooms.
tJUtnber.

Concrete repairs here we come
By READER'S DIGEST BOOKS essential tools. You may also need a

.·

For AP Special Feature• .
Whether you' re fi•ing a walkway,
steps or the basement floor, concrete
repair techniques arc essentially the
same. Tools and Materials
The basic materials that you'll
need for most jobs are patching mortar and liquid bonding agcnl. which
helps lhc new pate~ slick to the old
concrete. You' ll have to mix the mortar with water as directed. You can
usc an epoxy or. latex patching compound instead of pqtching monar for
small jobs. These compounds form a
stronger bond. do not rc4uirc a bonding agent and arc self-curing. But
they arc expensive to usc for large
jobs.
·
A llm and a pointed trowel arc the

-· On a wider crack. usc a light
light sledgehammer and cold chisel to sledge and a cold chisel to chip away
remove old .loose concrete. If you loose concrete and enlarge the crack
need to make a form for a step, you'll so that .it's I inch deep and at least 2
need some scrap wood, motor oil and inches wide. Make the crack wider at
du" tape. You'll also need some the base than at the surface; this techburlap or white plastic hags to cover . nique. called undercutting. helps lock
·the new concrete .while it sets. ·
the patch in place.
To protect yourself, plan to wear
- Brush away the loose debris
sai'cty goggles, hcavy - d~ty work thoroughly or remove it with a shop
gloves and a dust mask.
vacuum. Scrub the.crack with a soluFilling Cracks
tion of strong detergent and water. .
- l'ix a hairline or narrow crack
.- Using a tro\Ycl. coat the still·
(onc,cighth inch .or less) with damp crack with bonding agent.
pqlyurethane caulk. It's sold in car- Apply the patch monar while the
tridge form, for usc in a caulking gun, bonding agent is still wet.
at home supply centers. Clean out the
Fixing a Broken Comer
crack with a wire brush. apply the
- Chip back to solid concrete sn
caulk and smooth it with a puuy the patch will hold.
knife.

Is your farm environmentally safe for children?
.

GALLIPOLIS • Docs your farm
provide a safe environment for chi I-'
dren? Is lhere a safe place fnr them
to play away from livestock. equipment and other hazards? Do you ask
them to perform chores that put
them at risk? These arc questions
which need to be considered on
farms . where children arc present.
says Jackie Graham. Gallia County
Safety CCJOrdinator of Farm Bureau.
· An estimated 5.000 young adults
519 years and under) are seriously

injured and 300 arc killed annually on tor's sight.
Livestock alsci·can he dangerous
U, S. . farms. according to the
National Safety Council. Many acci- for farm children. Accidents rcpons
dents involve farm youth who arc suggest that young people or playing
"extra riders" or victims of tractor around farm animals arc exposed to
cAtshing &lt;!r. kicking hazards. which
overturns.
1·n addition tn the extra rider and ' can result in disabling injuries.
overturn fatalities among farm youth. . ·Other hazards farm . exposures
accidents present a risk to younger include ponds and silos. improperly
children. Pre-scholars arc at high risk stored chemicals and ponalilc irriga·
fur runovcr incidCnts hccausc they · tion systems.
often approach larJle farm tractors or . Farm owners should.he very caumachinery out of equipment opera· tious when their children or those ol:
workers arc present.

Seagoing vessel
. 96 Child
97 Pull hard
99 Defaces
100 Kind o1 oil'
103 AclriiSS - Arthur
105 Pulsate
107 - decimal system
110 MIL add.
t 11 Pesky bug
113 Kind of drum
115 Xmas mo.
117 Burrowing animal
118 Knocks
· 120 'Study in naste
122. Pass away
123 Triumphant cry
125 Estuary
126 Snag
128 Edgar Allan 130 Time in spring
132 Of the ear
t33 Speck .
134 Entertainmani
awa.rd
135 Plant juiea
137 Blue ootor
139 Wave lops
141 Caustic solution
· 143 Handgrip for
standees
145 Slereo part
147 Rabbit
150 Shott rest
152 Mineral springs
154 Ripped
155 Flotlting platfonn
. 159 El!fiBrt
160 Send payment
162 ·-Well That Ends
Wetr
164 ,\lrican animal
166 E~ctude
167 Money in india
169 lncognfto
t73 Supply
175 Emma Peel's
partner
176 Brown color
177 Beaten path
178 Changes position
t 79 A greating
180 Walks

18i Meaning
182 Women on c;ampus

94

1 One who gets up
6 Put one's- on the
table
11 Exams
16 Played for stakes
21 -acid
22 Mythical hunter
23 Hawa1ian greeli"l!
24 - tower
25 Gumdrops and
sou malls
26 Filled up again
28 Extent
29 Breakfast ~em
30 Do wrong
32 Kite appendage
33 Lubricated
35 Rocky hill
36 Sandra and Ruby
38 Interlock
41. Rounded handle
43 A grain
44Acquires
45 Indefinitely many
48 Bedouins
50 Recent: prefi~
52 Tool for pounding
55 Ship part
57 Knightly titte
58 Furniture item
62 Mr. Wallach
63 Caused to go
65 Opening
67 Regulation · •
69 Capital ol Spain
70 Alphabet's start
71 - - maller of lect
72 Joke
74 Cape Canaveral
grp.
76 Ditty
n Enticement
79 Famity member. for
short
81 Ethical
83 Midway attractiOii
85 Fruity drink
66 Protective garment
88 Dud of a car
90 Plant pouch
92 Far East temples

.

DOWN

1 Went quickly
2 Spit and3 Bum superficially
4 Conclusion
5 Rogers and Thinnes
6Hom
7 ·Malrie measure
8 -van Winkle
9 Idiot
10 Kind of thief
.11 Makers o1 clothes
12 Overhead rails
t 3 London district
14 His and hers
15 Unhappily
16 Prepare for action
17 Actress Gardner
18- Carlo
19 Rye fungus
20 Tinters
27 Ship of 1492
31 Affect strongly
34 Poetic time of day
37 Addition resiltt
39 Labor Day mo. ·
40 That girl
42 Pail's handle
44 Prods
46 Flat-topp8d hMI
47 Holiday drink
49 Fiber source
51 Greek letter
52 Be&lt;:omes well again
.53 Book for snapshots
54 Very small
58 Prairie SChooner . ·
59 Bladed weapons
60 She played Krystie
on "Dynasty•
61 Roms
64Brad
66 GoH score
68 "The - olthe
WOflds"
69 "-, I'm Adam·
73 Auto fuel ·

75 Drink slowly
78 Reverberation

60 Collection·of things

ll1 Specks
82 Turner's machine
84 Mlldoath
87 ch~ssman
89 Unruly crowd
91 Mongrel
93 Ulah city
95 Sock
98 · Deity
100 Freight
101 Gemstones
102 - and feather
104 Plus
105 Special pleasure
106 Pummel
108 George or T.S.
109 Poet William BuUer
112 sp;got
114 Point .a weapon
U 6 Cowardly one
119 Musty
121 Greatest amount
· 124 Land measure
1:i7 E~ctaim
129 Cup handles
131 Indeed!
132 Butter subst~ule
136 TropiCal fruits
138 Filling
140 Go wrong
142 Opp. of WSW
143 Upright piano
. 144 Tropical tree
146 Sock pattern
147 Severe .
148 Sharp
149 Repulse
151 Accumulate
153 ·Narrow openings
156in the sky·
157 Got along
158 Long lock
.160 Change the decor
161 Drink to excess
163 Positive
16513omer Pyle,-·
168 Long fish
170 Bile
171 -Francisco
172 Fleur·de· 174 In addition

•

e~eperience required. Application

·computer Users Needed . Work

fOR ALL YOUR
Yard Sale

70

Babysitting Class for
ages 12 and up
Monday, June 2

8:30AM to 3 PM
Holzer Medical Center
French

500 Room

Pediatric Department

$20 registration
Call Holzer Health
Hotline

40

Giveaway
1
1 1/:!yr old,.malt, pori Lab. amos
old female, parr white German
Shephard, good wlchlldrtn. 304·

1•800-462-5255
Lunch provided

875-5890.

2 pupplita, ltmalea, 112 PI! Bull,
good wldlildron. 304-805-3285.
Beauoiful year old Tortolae Sholl
Tabby,
aholo, ~.. 10 rlghl

-ad.

home, 81 ..11112-3710. .

80

F'" KllltnS. 814-448-2388.

FRESH ROASTED COFFEE_
.BEANS
Whole bean or fresh ground .
Choose from 12 varieties or
order your favorite flavor.

Pilbllc Sale
and Aucti~!'l

Parl Wedemeyer's Auction· Service,
Collie. 6 Weeka Old, 614·367~ Gallpolls. Ohio 61 .. 379·~~20.

THE CITY PERK

Free Puppies, Part Lab &amp;

7291.

t(itterl• To loving Home, 33

42 Court Street, Gallipolis
441-1770

Lemley's Auction Service, leslie
Lemley, Auctioneer. HoUsehold,
Estale, Farm Sales. Phone 614-

..Evant Hoighla. Galli pols. .
388-9443 . .
Killona, ,. m.,1 l. also I I. calioo &amp;
1 m. black (outaide) cal, 614·992· Rlck Pearson Auction Company,
tull time auclioneer, complete
7505. .
Male Dalmatian, amoa old, 304·

auction
service.
Licensed
#66,0hio &amp; West Vil'"ginia, 304·

875-7183.

773·5785 Or 304-773·5447.

319 Viand St.
Special Dinner Buffet
Thur-Fri-Silt 5:30-8:30
. $6.9S

au eon Size Waterbad, t.latreso 90 Wanted to ·B,4y
Noods Patched. 614-44e-1815.
.,...........,.__,,__ ____::;..._
Complete f:jousehold Ot Esrares 1
Small Black &amp; While Male Dog Any Type 01 Furniture; Applianc~
With Bob-Tall, Frlondly &amp; Love· ea, Antique's, Etc. Also Appraisal
able, 81 .. 367-G3811.
Avallat&gt;el 814-319·2720.
Wanted - nice used ga&amp; range,
60 Lost and Found
304·882·2566..
Found: near SR 681, young mala
dog, tall. lhln will1 ahaiiiiJ lur, red

O'DELL LUMBER COMPANY
634 E. Main St· Pomeroy
Vine ST at Third Ave- Gallipolis
OPEN MEMORIAL DAY!
MONDAY, MAY 26
8AM-4PM

ANNOUNCEMENTS

collar. 814-898-2608.

Foond: Small Black &amp; While Male
Dog With Bob· Tall, Friendly &amp;

loveable, Cheshire Area, 014-

367-G3811.

Lost Siberian Huaky Puppy. Ap-

prox, 35 Pounds Around Mercerville Area, Reward! Please Call

61•·256·1585.

Yard S81e

211111 Tllru 3111, 8-? 6 Milea South

BINGO

FOR SALE
3 Piece Living Room Set,

POST467
MON. &amp; WED.
6:30P.M.

· Dining room table,

446-2430
NAILS, NAILS;

STAR BURSJ
$1500.00
$50.00 or more

6 Family Yard Salo: May 23rd,
24111, 26111, 9 ....M. 2 112 Milts Ouo
Rouoe 218, \'allow Trailer On LolL
Name Brand Ctolhao. lnlanl Thru
Adul~ Furniture, J.llac. ilamo. Ad·
dodllollyl

NAILS
at
Shear Pleasure Hair

&amp; Tanning Salon
· 242 Second Ave.,

p•rgame

BEECH GROVE
ROAD

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-4442

**
**
*
*

•

GRANT TRUCKING, INC.

Homeworkers wanted Part! Full

5488 SA t3

Part-limo Polilion AYill- Now.
Stwlng Knowledge Aequirocf. Apply ln Poraori At: JoAnn Fabrica
and Cralts: Silver Bridge Plaza.
a.tlipols.
RN, CNA telA I PCA
Full; Pan Tlmo Poaltlona Avail·

lo: PO Boa 720. Ripley, WV
2&amp;271 Of call ~,372-2731 on.
3l4 for an ~~~~Plication. EOE
Wantod: 31 Paoplt Loll 11 ·25
Pounda In Tho Ntlo 30 Daya.
Nllural, Gueranltodl 1·1100-000.

able ·ln

Galli&amp; Qounty. Exptrl-

onced Stlary A;oncr·Wilt Train
Employlft Wllh High 'School Dl·
ploma. GED Or 2 Years Experienct ln Cering For The Elderly,
Stnd Roaponll Jo: CLA 411, CIO
GalHpolls Dally Tribune, 825 Third
Averw, Gdipoli' OH 45831 .

2ZI5.
wante~ :

Accoumtng Aa•latant

ta·\

Ill. Lakin Hoapllet, a 138 bod
tonq 1orm coro facility - ·
per1enced individual for the accounts receivable depertmtnt.
candldato ahould hevo orperlanco ln elocuonic 'billing. lhdl·
caid/Mtdicart a.nd other rhlrd
party payora. Computer exp«i·

Poaltion Available: Modi..l CliniC enct requlrod, AS400 exporlencl
Group Praclice Ia LOoking for
Computer Proleuionall With
Skill ln Al Loul o,.. Of Tho Fo~
lowing Areas: NoVell Network

Management, Uaer Training· 01

beneficial. lnlertlted applicants
•h.ould.' call 304-&amp;75-08&amp;0 en
t02 or 10g. lakin Hospital Ia and

EOE Em...atwe.o
·
.,._,....

PC Appllc:aolona (Especially liS wanltd: OirocLOr ot Nuraaa. LIOitlco), Oatabuo Programming. kil Hoapioal, 1 131 bod long torm .
Poaltibn Require• A S.&lt;:helor'a cate facillly aeak1 .an e1p8rl~
Degree .Or Comparable Expert- enced Registered Nurat to PI'·
enca. Applicable Work Ex pori · lorm direction ol dtpartment perence Is Strongly Preferred. Send sonnel and patient care. lnttrHI·
Resume To Human Reta11ona, 90 ed applicant• shauld call 304-

**

GRAYEL HILL CEMETER't
M~MORIAL

DAY SERVICES

~;UUIU:}.~
..,.-:',,.,..'!".;o;-

-~

Speaker: Lieutenant Colpnel
Ronald R. (Ron) See
MILITARY SERVICES BV

AMERICAN LEGION
FEENEY~BENNm

POST 128

*
**
**
*
**

********

'

Electric Mobility Rascal
Three Wheeler
Handicapped Scooter,
Climbs grades, fits 400
lbs. Indoor, outdoor use.
Call 614-992-5460

'

Lost:

Puppy

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
Pizza Cafe For Sale
Buy just the busineSs &amp; lease the
property or purchase all.
404 Rid eAve. Rio Grande Ohio

Go for a better job without
risking the one you've ·
got. Try Prudential's new
training program in your
hours, at your own
home. Fh1d out if y9u've
Perry's Green House
got what it takes to be
Memorial Day Special
All Flats and·Baskets $7.00 ea.
one of our
1 mile West Rodney .St. Rt. 588
Representatives.
Close to Jordans Gas.
EOE.
Operdoto7 ·
Call Manager Frank
GALLIPOLIS CONVENIENT MINI
Kesseling or Kim Hannan
STORAGE
for details. 744-5318
109 Flamingo Dr.
Sprlng Storage Special... Pay 3
The Prudential
months and gat 4th month free.

Ple~ Call

ott

Ladies First time
ever .in Gallipolis
the Original
. Chip-N-Dales from
California
June 12.

Tickets available
at City Limits or
call 446-4801 or
367-7177

•t

446~8592
A~~tomotiva

AIR CONDITIONING
Service and Repair
All Makes
·
Smilh Buick· Pontiac Gallipolis
446·2332
·

May 26th··

Chester Fire Dept
Annual Memorial
Day BBQ
Chicken &amp; Ribs, Homemade
Ice Cream.
Dinner $4.50
.Chicken &amp; Ribs only $4.00
Pie &amp; Cake donations
appreciated. Serving time
11 :30 'P01rade at 1:30 meet at
school at 1:90 for lineup .
Everyone welcome to march
in parade. Also there will be a
FleE! Market/Craft Fair for
anyone wishing to set up.
Fellowship Chapel Homecoming
·
June 1, 1997
Pot Luck Dinner 12:00 pm
Afternoon services with speaker
Danny Hager
·
Music Vinton &amp; Marcella Rankin
Katrina Campbell
Everyone Welcome
Pastor Paul Ring
No Evening Service

Empire's
After Holiday
Sale
8 am ti18 pm
Tuesday,
, May 27th
Shear- Pleasure Hair &amp;
Tanning Salon
WELCOMES ·
Sharon Kincaid
former. Counter Parts
hair stylist and clients.
242 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-4442

Approx. 35 pounds. Around
Mercerville area, Reward

,

,.

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY

Presented by HMC

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

l

Pay

lor a FT Stiff Pharmaclat COfft.
petltln salary 1 bentlil pack·
age. Previoua ho1pltal ••perlence prefttrtd. Submit reaume

~~.:.._

Spring Cleaning
Call Call Captain Steamer
Carpet Cleaner
Deodorizing,.Scotchgardlng
Free Estimates
675·1304

005
Pvrsonals
Gallipolis
GonUaman Soaking Companston&amp; VICinity
shlp From Nice Female For Talks, 1------....:.___
Walko &amp; Friopdshlp. Send Rt·
plies To: CLA 309. Cio Gallipolis
~YardS.. Uutl
Daily Tribune, 825 Third "venue,
Bt Pald In Advanct.
· Galli pol a, OH 45631.
DEAQLI!Ij: 2:00 p.m.
tha day bttort tho ad
Stnglo meoling other alnglaa. Wo
Ia to nm. Sunday .
con halp. For deoalla write D"T"·
odblon • 2:00p.m.
M"TE
Dept. WV
PP 25504.
P.O. Bor 10521-~~~~~~od~H~IonLBa&lt;lloursvlllo,
1.

70

!)

Flatb~ Trallera Competitive
- Percan!age 0t Gto11.·

1hllt1, experience prtfttred. H Intertlltd pleiM come in and fill
out an application. no phone edt.
pltiM.

loltohontc8l E-ltra. Apply AI
Now Taking Appilclliona IJ 0om- Blg Boyt Wlltr Toy a, In
lno'a Pizza In lht GaHipolt and Chotlft,814-3117·7102.
i'Omorby "'. . ....,for: Dri¥orl.
Il.;;;;;;;.:;;~~~~r-STAFF PHMII~IST
Overbrook Center, 333 p agt
SUHI, Mlddlopon hill pert timo Jackaon General Hoapllll, Rip.
RN poahiono available lor all tty, WV 2527t h11 an opening

own hours. $20k 10 $50klyr I· Time 1-800·873·88 18 or l·800·
DAKHU,OHI04!!8511
Pike. Gallipolis. Ohio 875-0880 eat. 1'02 or 101'. Llkln
800-3&lt;111-7186 a1508.
·
878·18711 ___________ 1____;aoo..;.:..2:.:82~·~21_;83.:__ _ Jeckson
•563t:
Hosoloatlun EOE Empl-.

r

On Rolllt 7,.ttolhea a Miac.

l......... • -

PC users needed, $45,000 In ~

p'ockup Monda•, ".81h
&amp; Tueadaw• coma potential. Call 1·800·513·.
&lt;
27111, 1Dam-8pm. No calls pleaso. · 4343 ExL B-11388. ·

\l'cHECK THE CWSifiEDS_

Rawatdl Lost-Dalmadan, male, Rl
2 area. Child's pet, an1wera to
"PUngo". :!04-675-5930.

Puzzle answer Ia on page 88

HOME TYPISTS,

Service Technician .,,,, Have

BULLETIN BOARD

ANNOUNCEMENTS

..

Groomer needed, verification of

Kerr, OH. 45$4

•

.G-55 S1'ATISTICS
'

In··-·

31.,.

PROBATE COURT OF

Iii,.._ (4 appoint-) and

MLUIIIEA

IU..'IAOIR TRAfNII

110 Help Wanted
110 Help WlllitM
NEED lJiaTIIUClt:llll
Doll wark.t!CUIUr nudtd. llull
bt II!Wra. okl. Apply II C-..ra Aceounlng. Economlca, BuliniU Stml o.~ F fia~• 114
J.lanagtmtnt. Social Science, 11•~!!88~,3~--·_o_r__.....
_'_·_ ·
Stnd Rtaumt To: P.O. Bor ll-l2, I·
wv.

14 ~umbtf Company. Tho Fu·
ttlt Growing Nallonal Lumber
NEW OPERATION
Chain Hal CaiHI' OpponuniUH
CAIIDIIW. PIIIICIHT
Today. Advencomonl la Rapid Wo art "pending our -lion
And All Promotion• Alt From In your Jrtal Nted driYtra lor
Wirhln. FIPal y.., Eatnlngs Avflf- VAN oporadon w/Ciaaa (A) COL,
caln1, lays, lamps, ouna, toola.
ago 118,000 • $22,000. llenolila =~r OTR e11p I QDod driving
••rates; alaa appral1ata, Oally 110 Help Wanted
lntludt Lilt lnouranea, Hospl11Nllarlln, 11 ..11112·7401.
zation. Profil Sharing, 401 K And 'Top f'l¥ IIO'Oi'ICI Dep
Don1al. ll You Enioy AComblna· 'Salllllla Commuric:a...,.
"' AAA GREETING CARDSAnUquta, lOp prlc.. peid, Rlwtr·
lion or Saito And Pnillcal wor~e, •401K ..c:o. pd.r..re.
Pooonolet
a45K
Part
Tlmo
Or
In• Antiques, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Htvo Comploto Hloh School
Run Moor• owner, e14·i92· $1 IOK FuU Time Servicing Local (Some Collage Proltrrod) Then 'BCBS Mod., Dental, VIsion
StataL
No
Selling,
Accountl
In·
•Load/Unload Pay, Slop/layover
25211.
tludtd. Yaur Se,aso ltw111ment You May Oualil)'. No Knowledge
PayPdYICiion
Buying Standing Pine, 1 Acre Stcurtd By Inventory. 'SOQ-771· 01 Building Materials Nacesaary · 'Rcior P"'ii'""' &amp; l.tOREI
Wa11Taech.
Hiring CO Solo drNtra,
Tract OrlafliO', 81H58.eo38.
husbandlwllo IHmL
Clean Latt' Model Carl Or AVON I All Aroaa l Shirley
MIEDIAT!: OPEliNGS·
Cal Boyd: 800-220-2•21
Truck•, 1aao t.tadela pr Newer, Spoon, 304-875-H:!II.
MITNOWI
COL (A) W/Hazl.tat Req.
Smllh BuJ&lt;k Ponllac,. 1900 East·
EOEIIMIF
ern MillO. GaiRpolia.
SEE: .JM ARNOLD
TUES. WAY 2m!
Good u1ed hay wagO'n. Call in Able Avan RtprenntatiYel
Drivori ·Flalled
needed.
Earn
money
for
Chrisl·
lho evtnlnga 3D~· 773·5269 for
11,1)110 SlllN-ON BONUS!
FAOII
1-41
P.M.
mu
billa
at
home/ao
work.
HOQBillllanMetar.
Now
Pay Packogot Mon&lt;hly Bo·
992·6358 or 30•·882·2805. tnd,
nul Program! Need COL-A &amp; 8
APPLY AT:
i &amp; D's Auto Parts. Buying sal· Rep.
Moa. OTR ECKMiller 800·111 ·
84 LU118EA COMPANY
wage vehicles. Selling parts. 30-t·
8838, Owner Operators Alao
2200
N;Y
AYENUE
AVON
Sales
18
·$15
/Hr.
No
773-5033.
Welcome. .
JACKSON,OH
Doar To Door, ·aonuses• Fun I
Non·Workin9 Washer, Dr~era, Eoayll 1·800·827·4640 lnd/SIII
DRIVERS WANTED
EIIAIL ADDRESS:
Stovtl, Relngerator1, Freezers, Rep.
JOBS@I41
UMBEA.COII
Air Conditioners. Color T.V.'s,
500 Mite Radius • Horne Every
VCR'o, Alao Junk Cars, 814·256271 Note~~~PendiiA-·WIHikend, Family lnaurenco Paid
""'~
........ ._
An Equal Opportunily Employer
1.231
8 YC ompeny (Oenla1, Eya, p re·
Middiopool·Ohio
IAIF DV Drug Freo E"''"""""''
Wanted To Buv: Standin~~ Timber
814·9G2·4514
lcrlption) 401KRetirement Plan,
'
...
p r·--• t
Fwll In · Flrll Out Dispa&lt;ch, Laoo
Or Vacant Propertt With Timber, Position now open- ro -ona
Model conv. Tractora With

OAWA COUNTY, OHIO
In lht matter Dl Kar.n But
Thomlc!n,
No. 977021.
NOTICE
Rtvlaad Code, S.C.

apPOintMa), lht DII'Mtor of
tlja Ohio Department ot
Alcoltol and Drug Addlollon

110 Help W.m.d

110 Help W•dld

Top Dollar: All U.S. Sll·
Ulod Floo&lt;lna
And Gold Colna, Pl'llofatta. Wanlod:
In Good Condldan, Clll 114·2~
Olamonda, 'Antique J~. Gold !5887.
Ringo. Pre-1g30 U.S. Currency.
SMrllna, EIC. Acqultlliont .-Lry
• U.T.S. COin Shop, 151 Stcond
H.1PL ovr.1nn
-.~.81....S.21M2.
SE R'liCES
Antiquts, lurniLUrt, glue, china,

Public Notice

.. appointed by..... Dlrtctor
of the Ohio Department of
Mental
Health · (4

w.m.d to Buy

Vt&lt;

41481CCntiA111 1/2 W. laaancl 8lrMI,.
P.O.Iox514
Pomaioy, Ohio 411718,
Gelllpollt, OH 411:11
during r.. ular bualnaaa
Phone: 1114 Ull 3022
hour• for a period Dl 1111
The
Board atrlvaa to
daya aubatquent to
maintain
a balanced
pilbllcatlon of thla nouc..
rapreaentation
of
(8) 12; 13, 14, 15, 111, 11, " ·
community mtmbera and
20, 21, 22, 23, 211121c'
welcom.. minority or
flmala appi!Canl8.
Public NQtice
May 25, 27, 21,1187

PUIUC NOTICE
'Th• •lghteen m•mbar
GIIIIINIIclcaon-..elga loard
of AlcohOl, Drug Addiction
and Manta! Health Strvlcea

Middleport • Glllllpolll, 'OH • Point Ple8Ant, WV

Abto"'IO

and illtrllllf ltNith let JIC II

........ v. f'uftz .... Ollloa,

pon the weight of the house. He' ll '
check out all exposed water and :
waste pipes, faucets, drainage, water :
heaters and connections to 8JlPii: •
ances ..
He'll also evaluate the overall .
condition of the ele¢trical system to
see that it's adequate foryour'i.urrent
and future needs. GroundinJ con• .
nections and exposed wiriniJ will bC :
tested for overload protection as well :
· as the efficiency of healing and cool• •
ing systems.
·
•
A home inspection typically costs ;
one-tenth of I percent of the cost of
the house. with a minimum charge of ;
about SISO.

to be sponsored by park district,

80

Public Notice

lnlm:
. PUIIUC IIOTICI.
Ral It A. Adldna,
TIM annual report , _
'• autlft Dll atDI'
Ito Pf tor the Klllabla
'M!rll'rnll•lgl
foundation larnard v.
lloMI ol AI c~hoi, Drua
Pultz, Trualaa, 11 available
'dd'DIIDII
tor pulltlo lnapactlon It

•

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP Special FMturH
Buying an older home for future
renovation can be an exciting and
rewarding experience. Aged bniss
doorknobs, ornately carved banisters,
fine wall moldings, natural wood
beams and trim ;u-e just a few of the
features that attract many buyers.
Yet, along with their chann and
style, older homes often have serious
problems and 1\mitations - many
unapparent to the untrained eye. For
eumple; new base~J~C:nt paint could
hide pc~istent flooding . Heavy carpeting may mask a rotting floor and
that attractive wainscot may be ~lome
to thousands of wood.eatinJ! insects.

P~ •

Sunday, M8y 25, 1117

PorMI oy •Middleport • Glllllpolla, OH • Point Plelunt, WV

256-1565

CHANNEL MARKER
CONDOS ·
N. Myrtle Beach, S.C.
Sleeps 6. ·
Dates available in
May, June, August,
September.
July 5-12 still available.
Cali 446-2206 9-5,
446-2734 weekends.
Contenetial Catering is
now acc;:epting catering
contracts for the Gallipolis,
Pt. Pleasant, Jackson and
surrounding areas.
·For weddings, private
parties or any other special
occasion, call 245·5590 or

446-0854.
Ask for Mellis.s a.
LAST CALL!
GAHS CLASS of 1987
Ten Year Reunion
Tickets must be
purchased by ·
May 31, 1997
Any additional
information on
classmates will
be helpful
Contact: Lynn Conley
Slakely
1214 Hubert Drive
Versailles, .O H 45380

Summers Coming
Book your
entertainment with
All American
Sound System
Wedding Party or
Wedding Reception
or even Birthdays
FREE Limousine ·
Service
Call (614) 367-7177

Tri-State Pressure Washing
"We.Pressure Wash Anytime"
HOU$88, Oecka, Mobile Homes &amp;
EqUip. etc.
Call for Free Estimates
614·367·0433

•

!'

·. BOOTS
All Leather Westem Boots
Reg. $149.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Sloe~
Engineer ........... ............. $49.00
Wellington ... :.................. $49.00
Loggers ......................... $50.55
Harness ...................... ... $59.00
Carolina-Georgia • H&amp;H
Insulated, Safety, Gortex

SWAIN FURNITURE
Camp for
children ages
to Sixteen
at The Art School. Cost Is
$80.00 a week. Instruction
Includes: acting, dsance,
choreQgraphy, crafts, costume
design, painting, story
creations, performance make·
up and other various arts.
Please call 441·1988 for more
information. Localion 1271
Lissa's Riverview Salon
480 St. Rt. 7 N Gallipolis
is now offering a full range
of nail services including
Acrylics, Hot Oil Manicures,
Water Manicures, Nail
Piercing by Teresa Albrecht
Call for your appt. today

446-4660
Help ~upport the
Lion's Club Golf
Tournament Thursday,
June 26, 1997 12:30 p.m.
Clifside Golf Course

. '

446-2342 or 992-2156

FOR MORE INFORMATION

~=

\1

,,
·"""""

�P8ge D4 • •• ' ; ·~- tbul
110

210

Hllp Wanted

Opponunlty

AENl-WAY
1lle Right Way
Join Uoln ThO Wlnlllf'o Ctrolo
Our recent merger ma~ provide

: you an apporrunlt~ to move to
; the Inside track wilh an out&amp;tafld..

.-ing. retaJ-purchaN company. Full
·ime palltions are available JQr:

•

Dollvwy
91or. Mlnag•ment

eu·---·
A&lt;countoiU....,

·

u.n-.amenerm,...

~Our impreii!Vt c:ompenaatiDn

paclcaga includes a compotitlw
·ttarting 1110; paid wcalion, slc:l!.
:One! holiday time, 401 (KI-ilgl

,plan., and more.

If you have experience in the
rental or retaW lnduatry, or you are
.looking for a challenging car,er
.opporr~:-~nu~. Rent·W•W' may be
.lfle dcket ror you. An ability to ,...
4oca1e is nol requited, but can entlanc:e your opportunity br career
icM!ncemerw.

Applications are acCepted ar 5
Ohio River Plaza, Gallipolis, Ohio
area Rant-War stores, or submit
•our resume In confidance to the
above address.

:1ao

310 Homes for Sale

wlndowo, S25,000. Call SomerBualneoa Of&gt;portunl!y; Pizza Colo ville
ReallY 30H75·3030 or 304·
for aale. Buy ju&amp;t the Bu1inen 875-3431 ..

Jog, shrubs &amp; weeds trimmed,
l andscaping, sidewalks edg~d.
lawn care, etc:. Call Elill 304·675·7112.

320 Moblte Homei
for Sale

t20 Mabll Homes
fOr Bale

Public IItie &amp; Auction

230

Professional
Services
HARTS MASONARY . Block,

12xes Mabllo Homo Far ·Solo.
814 3. DOB2.

895-3511 aner 6:00pm, no job 1o Beautiful 2 Story On Corner LoL
816 Main Street, Pt Pleasant,
1111811or 1D BIG. WV-021206

WV 3 Baclroom, 2 .Fun Baths, liv·
ing, Dining, Family Rooms. Mod·
ern Kitchen, large laundry Area.

llvinqaton'a ~aaemant waterproofing, all basement repairs
done, free esrlmates , lifetime

$68,000

:;:~·;:~:r~l~:5~on job axparl·

Or 014-

614- ~40 · 2205,

446-9585.

Briel&lt; 3 l)eGroomo. 2 Full Batha, 2

Car Garage, Parquet Floor In En·

REAL ESTATE

try &amp; Dining Room, Pa•Ually Remodeled, N"ice Nolghbo•hood 01
Georges Crook $89,900, 614~

310 Homes for Sale

I

122 Highland Ave. 3Bedroom. 21-====.:.::...::.::::__ _

,

l ll!cludts 6 months FREE lot rent 0.1111 co.: Gallipolia, 2 Millo Out
i 4nly S18L66 par month With Neighborhood Rd., 10 Acre Par!,1050 down. Call 1-800-837- eel $17,000 Or 22 Acraa Re;:1238.
duced To $2-4,000. G•een
Schoolo, County Water. Friendly
! Nliw Bonk Ropo'ol Only 3 loll, Rldga,
Prtva11 ;o Acres s1e.ooo.
t owner financing· available. 304·
Ac,.a
$7,500, &amp;.5 Acr••
8.5
755-7191.
$8.000. Groan Schools, County
-l S&amp;e Menutactured Homea, at Water. Teens Run Rd. • (31 10
llountaln Slate Homoo. Rt 82 N - Acr8 Paroelo, $10;000 +.

menl and Garage. Recently Remodeled. Call Toda~ 614 ~ 367·
'

CONVENENCE IS lHE KEV

By owner : Mount Vernon Avenue,

Po int Pleasant. 6 rooms, 2 or 3
bedrooms, ~ bath, large kitchen
3 Bedroom Ranch Style Home with laundry hook-up, all on one
Wilh Garage &amp; Barn, Main- floor. Basement, vinyl siding,
_Expmlencad carpentry and remo- tenanc:e Free, Located : Addison carport,
fenced· back yard . Per·
deling. Inside. and outside, Township. 614-4-48-4792.
f&amp;et starter home or lor older indi.. decks, vinyl siding, add-on add Ividual (sl. $73,000. "CALL NOWr
: lions, c._bmet tetacing or newly
304-615-.6310.
. rebuilt. References-Free Estt·
·Child care in· my home, references avaUable, 614-992-5642.
.

.icroaa from VQcarional achool.
' Mobile a sectional homes • patls

·I ·service. 304-el'S-1400.

'7 - - - - : - - - - - -

.'

:330

..mateo. Jim Shull304-675-1272.

, 1~0 Acre Farm With Acceaso·

_304-675-1957.

; Improvements. For Mora lnlor-

Georges Portable Sawmill, don't
· haul your logs ro lhe mill just call

· ~es On Slala Route 55-4, 5 112
·Year Old Houae With New Home

Well,
what do
you know

. "614-379-2135. .

.,____;;...;.;....----

: Profeaaional Tree Servk:e, Stump
. Removal, Free Estimates! ln·· &amp;Urance, Bidwell, Ohio. 614-388·9648, 614-367-7010.
'
: seamatren 25yrs. experience,
]lema, zipper&amp;, alterations for
.men &amp; women. can Mon·fri 304·

·67S-872e.

·Will haul junk ol trash ·~. :pickup load. 304-875-5035. .

$351

FINANCIAL

Oran Barry just hit
·the
five-o%

--.21-- ------,--o Business

Happy Ad

Opportunity
.INOTt.CEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.

In Memory

]amesK
Tomlinson III

Megan,

. -recommend.s that you do busi·
· nasa with people you know. ai"ld
· NOT to send ma:ney through the
Jnail until y'ou have investigated

:lho olferi~.

The family of Donald W. Price wish to thank
everyone who helped us in our time of deep sorrow.
,To those who prayed for us, brought food, sent
cards, sent .flowers, gave words of consolation and
love and made donations to the Old Kyger Youth
Ministry.
.
.
To pastor Robert Thompson, the Mc.Coy-Moore
Wetherholt Chapel and all others who shared th·eir
time with us. We will be forever grateful
W~e - Hope Price
,
Mother- Darlene-Price
Brothers - Bob, Jim, Mark, lim
Sister - Cindy

One day God
decided to create

·

~- ~ 197~Jan.

the most precious,
sweetest and

· Happy Ad

You have gone
Im still here
Learning to live
Letting go the tears

cutest little girl in ·

Happy 70th .
Birthday, Dad
Felon Thacker

Gallia County. So
He made you.

May 26, 1997

Mommy &amp; Daddy.
Mamal &amp; Papal Sigman
Mama! &amp; Papal Swords

Love, your
uEight is Enough"

tomorrow

Don't Worry, we Decided
To Go Easy On You~
f 1!

1-t:A 10 JOY

'
'"'

'

.- f
.r ', .

•

'.',

'

"

.

!I-'

I

) /I .
'\.

40th

1BI1R71-t®:AY

~

.

m ;k
" .e

In Loving Memory
of
Charles A. Morarlty
· &amp; Mary p; Morarlty
The world may
change from year to
year, our lives from
day to day. But the
love and memory of
you shall never pass
away.
Love, daughter, Connie
Hansford. son &amp;
daughter-in-law Larry,
Billie Jean Morarity &amp;
.family, son &amp; daughterin-law Marty, Debbie
Morarity &amp; family

Jordan

12/02/24 - 05/24196

of

We did not know one
year ago your life was '
coming to close,
for every time in the
past before,
God gave you back
for us to adore.
J
But in your heart we
hope you knew,
how much our love
had grew and grew.
Now in our hearts
your love is near,
to help us through
each lonesome year.
Sadly misse.d by wife,
children,
grandchildren, greatgrandchildren

May 25, 1995
you were suffering
A cure was not to be
whispered softly "Come with Me"
Still missed. Still loved.
The Gilmore

110 Help Wanted
Excellent Opportunity To Become Part 'of A Bed GeriatricBehavioral Unit Located at Oak Hill Community Medical
Center in Oak Hill, Ohio.
Positions Available:
Registered Nurse- PT, Pool and full time night position
(required at least one year experience in geriatrics or
·
· psychiatry)
Mental Health Tech PT and P011l
(require at least 6 months experience as CNA or MHT)
If interested Please Fill Out Application A\
Oak Hill Community Medical Center
Personnel OMce or Mail Resume to
Renne Hughes, Unit Admlnlslrator 350 Charlotte Ave, ·
Oak
Ohio 15656
Community Relations Coordinator
- Gallipolis, OH RehabCare Group, a natianal leader in the
delivery of physical rehabilitation services, is
seeking . an experienced marketing
professional for our adult ippatient rehab
program at Holzer Medical Center.
As Community Relations Coordinator, you
wil be responsible for community marketing
an'd public relations; organizing .census
development; serving as a liaison to 3rd
party payors, physicians, and case
managers; and handling patient , preadmission screening process. Marketing
experience required; nursing or social work
experience beneficial.
We offer a highly competitive salary and
benefit package along with opportunities for
career advancement ·For more Information,
please send/fax your resume to: Barbara
Snell, RehabCare Group, 7733 Forsyth
Blvd., Suite 1700, St. Louis, MO 63105. 1800-677-1238, ext. 216. FAX 314-863-7751.
RehabCare Group
Equal Opportunity Employer

Jeckaon Co.: Jackson, O.autltul
Building Sites For. Your New
Home. Just Wast On Beaver
Pike. NICe Grasar_ Knolls Or

Wooded Seclusion EllhOf Porltcl

s

440

AI* !menta
torRent

Business and
Buildings · .

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES SALE

a

At the Howery Auction House, located 5 mi.
West of Athens, OH on St. Rt. 32-50.
FURNITURE-RAILROAD·MILITARY·MISC.
FURNITURE: bak round glass china; -small adult S
roll top desk w/raised panels; small oak 3 door
·icebox; pie cupboard; oak hoosier style kitchen
cabinet;· 2 oak wall telephones; oak serpentine
1\ighboy w/mirror; walnut . brown marble top
washstand; other washstands; walnut one drawer
night stand.s; oak fancy dresser, maple hoosier
kitchen cabinet; oak highback sofa w/serpenthead
arms; large empire oak library table; buggy seat;
cobblers bench: 6 drawer spool cabinet; blanket
chest; 6' store base cabinet; primitive lift top, desk In
red paint: small lift top do.vetail box: 2 pocket doors
(oak 76" x 3'ea .. w/6 raised panels); large mirror
26x48 in nice big oak frame; wicker table &amp; 2 wicker
chairs; oak youth bed, Iron baby bed; mahogany
. dresser &amp; washstand; also pieces as found candy
showcase; 2 wardrobes; childs rocker; vanity; roll top
oak base w/ralsed panes &amp; more.
RAILAOAO RELATED ITEMS: the original union
station schedule board which closed in 1970's
Columbus, Ohio. carry around telephone w/case; St.
Louis switch light; lanterns;.train whistle; A.A. locks;
oil cans; sunshine light; Stephen Girard Lyonal 17"
·train car: 4 lg. H. Hargrove train paintings.
MILITARY RELATED ITEMS: World War 2 Army
Uniform; 3 books on Civil War Including Ohio •at ·
Vicksburg; 1914 G.A.R. delegate badge; 1895 G.A.R.
encampment badge; cast iron cannon made from
barrel of Civil War Musket; steins; badges; patches;
toys; photo album; post cards etc.
MISC: neib beer sign &amp; more; oil lamps; jewelry; 7
up ice chest; carbibe light w/hat; baskets; repro.
hotiby house; super nice lg. dough bowl 12 x 36";
super ·nice ox yoke; crocks; stone jars &amp; jugs
including market Donaghho's; mirrors; excellent
wicker basket &amp; others: child craft puppets; doll~: zig
zag cigarette paper dispenser; fishing tackle box:
case of Bartle! Blue washing blue; glassware &amp;more.
GOOD SALE, COME EARLY &amp; LOOK AROUND
Terms: Cash or Check w/pos. ID
Food Available; Plenty of .Parking
Auctioneer: Rodney Howery,
Ucensed and bonded in State of Ohio
Phone: 614-698-7231 or 1c800-264-6390 ·

a Auction

Public Sele

'

•

.remote, · beautiful land; Meigs

2 Bedroom, total elecmic, refer- ment For Elderly &amp; Handicapped,
ence required, Sandhill Rd. 30'- Furnlehed AppiiJnces, Equal

875-3834.

440

Aplrtmtnta
forRtnt

Hunlingl

Area,I14·2B&amp;0007.

'

Glenwood. 3bedroom mobile
home In the counlry. Very nice,
city wattt. 3Dmin. from Pt Pleaa-

$200 mo. plus $100 deposit, 614·
D92-7806, 8am-5pm.

Two bedroom apartment in Mid·
dlepor~

no pato, 814·992•5858.

450

F1,1mlshed
Rooms

Sleepin~

rooms with cooking.
Also 1ra1ler space on river. All
hook-upa. Call alter 2:00 p.m.,

304-773-5651, Mason WV.

460 Space for Rent
Downtown firsl ftoor office space.
condidoned. New carpeL cau

Trailer Lot For Rant, Addison

Pike, 6111-4&lt;16·7834.

Carpet In Stack &amp; Room Size

MoNohan CarolS, 614-4-46-744-4.

Nice Sola &amp; Matching Love Seat,

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THJS EXCELLENT ·
OPPORTUNff'v.
We are offering two restaurants for sale. One In
Syracuse and one In Middleport. Everything Is set up
ready for a new owner, building. equipment and
Inventory Included In sates price. Both currenUy in
operation and there is even room to expand ·the
want. Take a look at being your own
Ch~ryt todayl N90~ ·
·

814-388-6144.
Sola &amp; chair $250. Consolo TV
$100. ~all 304-675-7964 alto•

. ·.... '•

Spm

U11d Ait Condirtoner &amp; Heat
Units SHiO Storm Coors $50 614·

«6-3301, 814-446-3563.

Used Furniture : 130 Bulaville
Pike, Baby bed, play pen, coHoe/
end tables, nlgt'iit stands, desks,

droauro. couches, chairs, rock-

art, bunk bed set, much more.
814-44&amp;-4782 HRS 10- 4. We buy
used llm1ture.

530

Antiques

Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,

1124 E. Main S1teet, on Rt 124,

.Pomero):. Hours : M.T.W. 10:00
a.m. 10 e:oo p.m., Sunday 1:00 to
e:oo p.m. eu-992-2526, Russ
Moore owner.

In Point Pleasant: Unfurnished,
Spacious 6 Plus Rooms, Refer-

NEW USTINGI

Cute Remodeled Ranch style home that Is just right ·
for you. Sttuated at 25 Riverview, Middleport. Call for
an appointment &amp; d9tails today. ~20 ·
124 Arn4 more or less A MUST SEE HOMEI
sKuated at Eaton Road. Nice kitchen, 3 bedrooms.
Priced at $48,000.00 1878 Located at 842 Pearl
·
Stfeet in Middleport clOSe
to shopping and schools.
47158 EAGLE RIDGE Prt·ced
at
Only
ROADI Aluminum sided 1 $29.000.00 1888
1/2 story home, living
room, kitchen. over elzed
detached 2 car garage. FA
electric turnace. Additional
mobUe home hook-up.
Must call today .for an
appolntmentl 1558

Call For
MORE
LISTINGS

ant or Huntington. Will accept tnct &amp; Deposit, 814·448-0041,
HUO. $386. 304-562·5840.
Mar 6 P.M.
T"" -..n. partially turnlihed. Nawly remodeled ono bedroom
cennl air, lerga yard, good clean furnished apartment In Middle-

R_e al Estate General .

e-mail ua for lnformatiDI) on our listings:
blgbend@eurekanet.com

PUBLIC,AUCTION
Saturday, May .31, 1997 ,
·10:00 a.m.

•

located from St. At. 124 just East of Racine, Ohio
take Tanners Run Rd. approx 1 mile to house. This is
the personal property of the late Clarence Wickline.
"HOUSEHQLD"
.
Whirlpool coppertone refrigerator, Magic Chief gas
range, Magnovox color TV w/remote like new, 4 pc.
WestfaU bedroom suite, bookcase twin &amp; double beds,
l;ttresser. chest deep freeze. small wood dish cabinet,
end tables. recliners, 2 pc. living room suite, Table
chairs, Singer Sewing machine, vac. sweepers,
I SpeEtd Queen wringer washer, linens, Lamps, .dishes,
&amp; pans, misc. electrical appliance: •
"ANTIQUE or COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Chillfrobe, kitchen cabinet, hoop skirt, lots of old
single tree, qUilting frames, wards
canning sealer w/boOk.
·
"AUTO"
hc10., Chev. 'cavalier AS, air, PS, w/52,872 miles.
"MISC"
1 .noouu Crank hOSpital bed, bedSide table, patient fift,
wonder wood stove, wheelchair. card table, rag rug
tots of thread &amp; sewing items, c~thas. air
!J011dition·er 220, Dr. Hendrix, rtnse tubs, wheelbarrow,
!at1tery charger, pressure cooker, small amount Qf
3 pt. grass seeder, &amp; Etc.
Owners - Eileen M . Hanelln
'· · Dan Smith, Auctioneer, Ohio #1344
•
Cash
Posith1e ·ID
Refreshments
' "Not responsible for accidents 6r loss of property"
Note sell car at 11 :30 a.m.

•

C~~~~S~~~n~:~
~,;otJnuv. This brick beauty is
n1
on a 2 acre tract .the rolling hills of
Addison Township on McCully Rd. Enjoy your
summers in and around the pool, extra large patio &amp;
gazebo. There are too many features to mention but
a few are ·the extra large LR, Family rm wllh.ll stone
• completely equipped kitchen, 4 BR's; 2 1/2
baths, 2 car garage &amp; a very nice barn. IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.

cy~q, f;/w:d.

- *

. 446 6806 ~~J.Ia/1Branch Office
Main Office - 388~8826
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

h••

I

All

ere

, footages. and any Oilier form of
and sqct to change when
m~ day of sale (alee pracedeiiCfl
of adwltising. Auction Firm &amp;

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Real Estate General

Real Estate General

#2867 PICTURESQUE HOME ON A HILL.
10.44 Acres m/1 approx. 3,900 sq ft, vinyl &amp;
stone exterior. formal entry, 4 BAs, 3 baths,
finished rec. area in the bsmt, WB/FP in
game room &amp; den atrium rm, oak cabinets
and trim in kit 13 total rooms, 2 car garage.

Canaday ·fir
Re~lty

Professionally landscaped. Quality and
Luxury through-out. Appt only. Virginia L.
Smith 388-8826.

25 LOCUST ST.- GALLIPOLIS
Audrey F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd, 446-33.83

Real Estate General
Spacious brick for sale by owner, loca1ed on So. Rt. 7
approx. 2 mt. from city pack, on 1 acre city schools,
· 3-4 BR, 2 barhs, eat-in kitchen~ den, i:k. w/srone FP,
dining rril.., Family rm. w/srone FP, 2 car garage.
'195,000. By appointment . only • 446-4949.
Available, adjoin.ing I acre with 32 x 32 metal bldg.

BY APPOINI'MENT

REDUCTION Ill
. With a price of $189,900, you cen own a new home
without the hassle cif building. Quality construction,
comfortable family living and a beaumut setting Is
what you'll find when you view this lovely 2 story
colonial home. formal entry with formal living room
and dining room with beautiful wood floor. Large
family style kRchen open to family room wHh gas lot
flrepface, 4 bedrooms, and 2 1/2 beths plus the
convenience of an upstairs laundry room. Make this
property one you'll want to call home. Call Carolyn
for your prlvele viewing. 11113
.

· WISEMAN REAl ESTATE, INC.
(61

446·3644

''

446-3636

YOU CAN BUY THIS FARM WITH OR WITHOUT "·
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ~--------------------~
THE FARM MACHINERY... APPROX . EIGHTY "'
Bids will be accepted up to and including
May 30, 1997 for a · 2.92 acre tract along
with building owned by Columbia Gas of
Ohio, Inc. at 645 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. This lract is described in Deed
Volume 317 Page 51 Gallia county, Ohio
Recorders Records.
Sealed bids will be accepted by LETTER
ONLY and mailed to:

.

,~~=~~~~~-25 and Jun~ 1 from

PHONE 446-7899
.
•
WILUS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

446·3644

SAT., JUNE 7, 11:00 AM

hi,. lndlrlrlually and Comblnatkln _
CampsKes w/weter, sower &amp; elec.. a 4,144 sq. fl. qllicei
clubho·use building, 2240 sq..tl. recreation/game haU/Iaundry
building wllg. water front deck area, 1500 iq. ft. maintenance
bldg. Sewage treatment plant. 5 park model cabins; 300 lineal
ft. slide, miniature goW courae, guard house, and a world of.
other lmpro'/ementa. This reson.
been in operatiOn for
ll~~~ for licensing
and IS in a
good as
state
of repair.
Deertand
Is
tovery
operate
a ptlvate
reson.
A very
and outstanding opponunity to purchase an estabR.V..Resott near two major4-lane.hlghwaysln tho heart
the footh~ls of the AQpalachlan Mountains.
1S ACRII VACANt - ThiS ptopertY lays adjacent to the
50 Acre Resort. Features outstanding building Sites. totally
wooded, county water, 400 fl. frontage. A super location in an
area of many new, fine homes.
TIRMa.c:ONDinONit Purchaser to pay 10% down on
lldlav •ofsalewlth balance due on or before July 15. 1997. Seller
111 half.of 1997 Relit Elllle taxes. PossessiOn upon
Information contained hetein was obtained 6l:lm
souroes and is ~l'ild to be accurate but Is·not

Uke n8w lnsid8 &amp; out. built 6 years ago. lmmac::ulate clean. You'll
feel an atmosphere of openness 4f'd complete tranquillity as you
view the scenic rolling countryside from the living room &amp; dining
room ot this 3 bedrooms, ranch style home. Share our enthusiasm
and see this 15 A. of Woodland, Pasture land, &amp; Homeshe lor
yourself. Nice 24'x40' Garage &amp; Workshop, Pond, 20'K2.t'. Storage
.bldg. There's more· Call Now 1713

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE; INC.

Pll!nl

Located-Just outside Jacl&lt;son. OH. 2 Mi. s. of Rl. 32 off SR
93 on Standpipe Rd., or 1/2 mi. W. of Rt. 35 to Standpipe Rd.
50 Ac. IIIIIORT and 15 Ac. VACANT LAND

Locust St.
Ohio

Here's a 3 bedroom home on a nice lot that's sure to
catch your eye. For $35,000, you'll get your money's
worth. New carpet &amp; new windows have been
added to !'Spruce this home up. Uving room, dining
room, 1 bath, 2 mobile home·hookups also. 11203

DEERLAND RV RESORT

·

•-

Two bedroom apartment in Mid·
diaport, we pay water, sewer and
trash, you pay gas and elettric,

Provided, S30M.Io., 81 4·2•5- ""rl Ftom $236·1304. Call 614- Two river campsilla wilh full
·
992-5064. Equal Houotng Oppo•- hookup, patio &amp; dockl, 614-902·
tutities.
5956.

15 Ac. VICant Lind (WI s.p1'611/y)

.

capped. EOH 304-675-6679.

8388.

Public Sale &amp; Auction

· Amenities '• Sewer

1978 Meek R Modal, .44 rears, cummins diesel, 13 speed, double frame
11171 Meek R. W. Superliner, .44 rears. 400 Cummii)S, 13 speed. double frame.
24.5" Tires, Jake Brake
111811 lntemattonat F9300, Cummins Diesel.• 24.5" Tires, 15 speed. Jake Brake
TRAILERS
1980 KW Cabover, 1985 Benson Dump Trailers
1: 1975 East 30' x 60"
5. 1986 Fruehauf 36' x 82"
2. 1985 Benson 36' x 84"
6. Utility Reeler/Storage Trailer
3. 1986.Trallstar 33' x 86"
7. 1984 Dodge Pickup
4. 1985 East 34' x 86"
8. Misc. truck parts, wheels, tires. etc.
Terms.and Conclltions:
·
·
Te1'!11S and conditions (cash) payment for allltems ·must be made in full on sate
day by cash, cashier's check or chack with a bank letter guaranteeing payment
similar to the followif1g. This letter will guarantee payment of a check(s) written on
the account of enter account holder's name up to the amount of $ specify amount
for purchases made at the auction ~n May 31st, 1997. This letter must be
addressed to Peck's Auctioneering Inc. Must accompany all checks or wire
transfers.
·
·
Bank letters must be presented at time of registration and remain the property of
Pack's Auctioneering Inc. Make all checks payable to Peck's Auctioneering Inc.
NO EXCEPTIONS! FULL SETILEMENT TO BE MADE AT TIME OF SALE! NO
BANK DRAFTS ACCEPTED!
The buyer is subject to any ~pplicabte SaleS/Use Tax. If exempt, a certlflcete
muat be furnished at the time of registration or pay applicable wes.
·
PRE-REGISTRATION IS ENCOURAGED.
..
.
Send your personal Identification Information (driVer's license number and state,
Social Security number) with proper bank tetter and buyer's number wilt be
aaslgned prior to sale. Peck's Auctioneering Inc. reserves the right to refuse to
llllign buyer's number, All blddi!!Q muat be clone by number.
Directions At. 117 (North) to Addison through Cheshire. McGuire 18 on the left
approxlmataly two miles from Pomeroy next to the TNT Pit Slop. Refreshments
and restrooms next door at the TNT Pit Stop. Everything sells 'as Ia and w11-. 18."
The condition Is expre&amp;Rd with no werrantlee Implied. Announcementl midi the
clay of the sale take precedence over In and all aclvltrtl~ and ltltementa
previously made. Any . info~llon given herein - • obtained by peraon.t
Inspection and II for advertllfnO purpoi8S only. Aocuracile cannot be guerenteed.

ized ap1. for eJderJy and hand!·

Housing Opportunity, 614-446- (6141 446i363 8 a.m.-Sp.m. monday thur tlday.
483D.

65 ACRE~ • 4 AC~E LAKE

May 31st, 1997 @ 1:OO.p.tn. Cheshire, Ohio

For morelnforrnatlon call: Rocky Peck (304) 486-11:!1,

(513}574-2539
420 Mobile Homes
Downtown Galllpolio: Modern 1
for Rent
Badroom, All Elact•lc. Ca•peted,
Complete Klll:han, Elac1!1c Haat'
14X70 Mobile homo lor Ronl 2 Air eondltionlng, 614~-4383.
BR, Bidwell. (8141·448-9889
Furnished 3 Rooms &amp; ·Both. No
, •x7D Two Bedroom, Two Bath Para, Reterence And OepOslt' ~
Trailer, Two Acrea $17,goo, 10 quirad,814~·1510.
~creo $20,000, 3 Acre Loll
$7,000 Each 61-4-367-7555 Furnished Apartmant1 Badroom,
Chaahlre Area.
938 Second Avanue, Gallipolis,
2 &amp; 3 bedroom moblla homes SliS/Mo.,
Ulillties Paid, 614 --44831144, AllOr 7 P.M.
atarti~ at$280-$300, - ·· water and trash included. 61•·992· Gallia M.a nor Apa•tmenls Now
2187.
Accepting Applications For 1
BedtOom HUO Sublldlsed.Apa•l·

condition, no poll, S230 par ""rt, 814-092-2178 o• 614 -992monlh, New Hovan. 304-882-2488 1 _530_4_.- ' - - ' - - - - - - onytlmo.
'

'

'

Required

·County, Scipio Township. SR 892
~ull off SR 1431. Ownat Hnanclng. Call For Frae Maps + Ownar Fl:Cell lor good map 1·614-593- nanci~ Into. Take 10% OH Usled
P•~• On Cooh Pu,.m ..sl
B545.
·
'

AUCTION OF McGUIRE TRUCKIN~

Some reRFV18IIfiPiy.

Lor, Your Choice $9,500. Nice

Tress And Plen!y Ollaval, Great

$7,100oacll

OeposU

Gta4=ious living. 1 and 2 bedroom
3 Bedrooms,· 2 Full Baths, Partial- apartments at Village Manor and
ly Furnished, .New Furniture, Lot Rlyaraide Apartmel'1ts In Middle·

Fork, Just 011 SR 93, Two Mileo
South 01 Oakhlll On SR65, 20
Ac•os $12,000, 13 Or 14 Acre

s..-8-ocNparolls

•

Month

With County Water, $18,000 +,

Charming Farm Home On 5 Acr-

:350 Lots &amp; Acreage

.

~-

room, 2 large Baths, Washer

Dryar Hook-up, Central AI• $450

For Your New Home. 5 ·7 Acres

"II Res1rlc1ed. Call To Vlaw Thla

.

clean, no inside petl, deposit and
references required, 614· 992.·

3 Bedroom Trailer, Thurman

and Bulldi,g. Crawford's • es With Pond $70,000, Or 58
,Grocery, Henderson WV. Priced Acres With large Barns Etc.
·on inepectlon. Call 30&lt;4-675·5.40• $67,000. Mobile Homo, Nice+
Clean $2,800, You Move. Black
'or 304-875-1408.

Sunday, June 1, 1997, 11 :00 a.m;

In l.oving Memory

So He put His arms around you and

your loyal following, beer
drinkir)g compadres' of Death
Valley, we wish you a howling
Jack - n - Coke weekend. ·
Happy Birthday
Love, Family &amp; Friends

In Memory

Clarence S.

who passed away

Border • Remota 10 Acres
so.ooo. Ol1ly $1,000 Oown + $10&amp;
A Mo. P,.lso, In Same Area, Nice

~ Lend

In Memory

GeorgeV.
Gilmore

. .r

•
. '

In Memory

Ad

Dana
Sargent
Looking
Fineat69
Happy
Birthday

Low, .flo

Happy 5th Birthday
We love you

13,1993

. t\i!ltion Call614-31!7-7031.

:t40

Mtlg• Co.: Near Arnane Co.

Home Site ON 5 Aores $7,500.
Athans Schools. ·

Farms for Sale

•

: Lawn Mowing Services Commer-cia! &amp; Residential, 6~4 · 446· 4865,

814-775-1173

, New 1997 14J:70 lhrae bedroom,

Cheshtre , Third Stteet, Fac ing
Park , Five Rooms, Bath, Bue-

7l14

f~t'JTAl

!

4&lt;16·8252. Or 814...,1-0399.

1 112 Smry Homo with Th""' Bed- ;Br:-:1:-:ct&lt;-:3/: "1:=. ,:=_
.111-:=-:D:-e-tached__.:::Br:::_ic-k-Ga-.
rooma, Two Baths, Basement, 55
s
Acree with Barns and Fence. rage, econd lot For Trailer or
Free.Gas. Call. '614} 367-n64
large Garden, tH;i89 1•9,900,
'
In Rodney (&amp;I~} 245-5488

1992 moduiar home on permanent foundation on 1/2acte lot in
Gallipolis Ferry.. Heat pump; 3br,
2 lull baths, DR, ftont &amp; back
porches, stor&amp;ge .building. 304675-2644 wae~ys 8-5.

350 Loti I Aci'Mge

1

con-

IDildalion;
No
oppllcation toe; AllleYola of credit
CaiiDdoy lor a tree analylial
. 100-129-1401111114-512-

britk &amp; stone work, 30 years ex·
perienca, reasonable rates. 304·

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Plea•nt, wv

~~~~~~~~·I '
fAcToRv DIREcT.
(OWN 'OUR OWN LAKE) 410 Houses for Rent
Oekwood Apartment Available e.
NO lllllll.E MAN.
43.28 AcrH E101Hant Fot Build1 end 2ond
""'*-"
apartmonto.
'"'" 1197, Uodern 1 Bedroom, Quit '
nlahod
unfurnlollod,
HCurlty
SAVE""tne. Hun tine, Flahlne, Campi~. ·4 Badroom houH on NO&lt;Ih Main
Profa..ional Preferred, Relerenc:·
Oakwood Homea Ia tho only At&gt;Pn&gt;•. 10 Acte Sprtnv f'td L• St. PL PloaaanL 1300/mo. + d• dopo•lt roqulrod, no pato, 814· tl,
Secrult~ Oepoeit, No Pet•.
11112-2218.
: dttalar In tha ttl-etate 1r11 that With lliand..• Caunty Water, poait:ll447S«MI.
I 1110/llo., P1UI UtilldM. &amp;14-440r,1ERCHANDISE
• bulldo and 11111 lholr own Electric On Black Top Road S
· hamto. For tac10ry direct prleea Bodrooma, 2 112 Bath lloblla Four bedroom hauao with largo 2 Bedroom Aparuntn1, 13115/Mo., 2055.
' ohop OAKWOOD HOMES, Nl: Homo With Add-On 10 Milot To yard, no oppllanon, .225 par .100 Olpolf~ All Utlll1loa Paid. No One bedi-oom apanment In P
Household
·, :!lR0.:-:':'::~;-·..;:304-'77'-55-;;..:;:588~5.=--:-- Galli""lla. Mo•e Acrnga Avail- month, •100 dopoalt. Call &amp;14· !'loll. 814 4~6 3437.
Pleasant Furnished. Very clean 510
: Filii Tlm• Buyora·Euy Finane- otio $135,000, 814-3811-1678.
742·30&amp;1,1ocal0d In Dtlllt.
2 Bedrooms In Gallipolis, No &amp; nice. No polL 304-675-1386.
Goods
. I lngl 2 ' 3 Bedroom around noo -1-A-=c'",-"2-Ac..C.:._Io:=.ll:..:f..;:oc..r'-,a'-1.-i.-1 Pomeroy Ohio Witzgal Street 3 Pet1, Referenc11, Water Paid
S2SOIUD.,e14-388-1708.
Ooe bedroom apar1ment in Yld· 2 Small Blue Recliner Chal,.: t
• par month. Free delivery &amp; aet· Scenic Valley Subdlvtaiqn. Bedrooms, 1350 a.tonth Deposit.
dlot&gt;Or~ an utilltieo paid, $270 mo., End Table, 614-446-o343.
: up. Wos1WOOd HomH 1-BOG-251 · Wedge Roal!y, Broker 30-4·&amp;75- (513)574-2539
2bdrm. ap11., total electric, ap- $100 deposit, 6H·992-7806,
1 5070.
2722
pNancea furnllhed, laundry room San..Spm.
Appliances:
Aetonditloned
~:..:·~------:---:-:-:::-1 Pomeroy: 3 Bed•oom, 1 112 Bath locllldo1, dolt to achool In town.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges, Refrl : IT'S BIG . 1007 49R, 2BATH 5 acr• tracta aurrounded by Za. Home l!or Rent, Mon1h To Month,
Applications avanable at: VIllage Three bedroom apanment, large gratora, 90 Day Guarantee!
• OOUBLEWIDE. $1,949 DOWN , llli&lt;IStai0"'-$9,900. ,.
Addlllonal2 RoomOIIice Suite G..~to. •~8 or call 814-112· kill:han and living room. Avalla~e French City Maytag, 614 · 446·
; U1111110. FREE DELIVERY &amp;
May Be Ranted Separately Or 3711 . EtiH.
June 1 at. Third Streel, 'Racine, 7795.
.• SETUP ONLY AT OAKWOOD 5 acre uocls available In south· Vjl1h Home, 614-44~·2055, For
Ohio, $325 per month plue utili.- HOMES, NITRO, WV. 304·755- trn VInton County fronting on 0e1BIIs.
2br apartment In Henderson. We· tles, references a'nd deposit re· Dresser With Mirror $75; Chest
· Stale Route wilh rural Watet availter, aewar, garbage furn ished. qulted, 61•·247-4292.
1 ~ 5885.,Lh!1ted Ofttr.
Ot Draw"s S75: Chillr !Stool $35;
',.., ~~.· aalactt.•n ·01 u td •
able, $9,900.
Small house ·in Cllltori, clean,
required. $200/mo.
End Tab!e $15 ; Small BIW T.V.
.....
•
I
ooOmt. 2
quiet, no pall, $275/mO. $200 Referer:acee
304-875-1912.
Three Room Furnished Apatl· $20. 614· -4~6 - 4141 Alter 6 &amp;
3
! "' btdtOOma. Sta•ting a1134g5_ Owner financing available wllh de!i&lt;t~L 304-773-1192.
Weekends.
··
'
'·~k dallvary. Call t-800-837· SSOO down •aymant, 614-598~~~~~~~~~I Gallipolle,
ment At 651
Second
Avenue,
Next
To Bossard
Ll·
Two
BedtOom
House
Re~lgerator,
•
bn,y. No Pe11 Allowed; $350 Pe• GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
, :"!""-:-:-::-::-:""":"~-:--- 5707• (agant owned}. ·
Stove, Futnlahed, Washar, Dryer
Month, Refarancee And Deposit .Washere, dryere, rafrlgerarora,
• ~lmlled Offorl1097 doublowlde, 5 Acru On Goorgll Creek Hook-Up 733 Third Avo. $275.
ReqUired, Contact Dabble Or rangea. Skaggs Appliances, 76
1
79
::tJ&gt;r. 12hbaJh, S d 11g dow1n, $2791 Road, OH S1a10 Rou10 7; 135,000, tno70nth S150. Deposit. 614·448·
Judy A1614·448-7323 (Li~'YI·
Vlna SI,.01, Call 614·448-7398,
. mon . rrao ovary aotup. Co11Aitere:Oo,G14-448-7168.
38
1-800-&lt;99-3499.
' &lt;?nly at Oakwood Homes, Nitro
Twin Rivera Tower, now accepting
; '6V. 304-755-5885.
BRUNER LA!IO
TwC)bedroom house, nice and Country Site ApL Large 2 Bed- applicalions lor ~br. HUD subsid· Ki~hen Ca•pat S8.50 Solo On All

and laaae lht property or purchaae all. 404 R l d~t Ave. Rio
Gm-. Ollio

304-675-1120.

--~ANY ODD JOBS: E111erior paint-

320 Mobile Homes
for Sale

5 rooms. new htat pump, root.

bath, brced Bit g;ia furnace, c:enual air, lull basement $39 ,500.

Wanted To Do

310 Homes for Slle

'Sunday, llay 25,1907

Sunday, May 25, 1917

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

Michael F. Sucharski
Qolumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.
Southern Region - Land Services
939 Goodale Blvd.
Columbus, OH 43212
SELLER RESERVES , THE RIGHT TO
REJECT ANY AND ALL BIQS.
Inquiries can be made by calling:
Henry E. Hatfield
Columbia Gas of Ohio,lnc.

614-286-8567

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

ACRE~ ... LARGE BI-LEVEL HOME: ... BARNS ... CORN

CAIB... TOBACCO BASE ... AEAOY FOR SPRING .,
PLANTINGII CALLSOONI
BEAUTIFUL LAND ... OVEA 300 A(:RES LOCATED
NEAR
WAYNE
NATIONAL
FOREST •
AREA ... PAODUCTIVE FARM, DUDE RANCH OR A
TERRIFIC PLACE TO LIVE AND ENJOY THE
GREAT OUTDOORS. 3 BEDROOM HOME,, 3
BARNS, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS . POND,
TOBACCO BASE. THERE ARE VERY FEW FARMS
THIS SIZE ON THE MARKET.. .DO NOT MISS OUT "
ONTH!SONEI
THIS HOME HAS ESSENTIAL FEATURES MOST
NEEDED FOR COMFORTABLE LIVING AT
CONSERVATIVE COST. SPACIOUS .LIVING ROOM,
3 BEDROOMS, . EAT IN KITGH"EN ... UTILITY
ROOM ... GAS FORCED AIR FURNACE. CENTRAL
AIR COND : .. cARPORT... FENCED BACK
YARD ...CONVENIENT LOCATION ... PRICED TO

SEl.L!
LARGE COUNTRY HOME ...10 ROOM HOME
FEATURES A FIREPLACE IN THE LIVING ROOM
AND FAMILY ROOM ... FORMAL DINING, LARGE
EAT IN KITCHEN. BASEMENT... 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE. PLUS ADDITIONAL 24'X20' GARAGE.
' APPROX. ONE ~CRE.
,

·.
..
~.

'.

--·.
.-•
;

.·

�•

•

Pomeroy •lllddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point PIMMI't. WV
---~-

114 c;arat round diamond 10lltar1

ring, &amp;eYen dklmond anniYetaar~
bond, both olzo 7, 1350, 81 ..11112·
3045.

Still Available Due To Baok Out
On Purchuo: 1SH X 3Ft. Deep
Round above ground pool . All

· Acconorlu, $300, e14·U5·
5323
1985 Ravena Alum. Aat 45' WJS
814~2788.

American Saddle Breed Horse

$1 ,000, e14-38HI2111.

20 Ft Von BoM, Ntodl Repalt On
Back Roll Up Do«: Can Bo Soon
At: William Swlshafs, Cheshire,

Ohio, On Little Kyger Road, 1St
Hou10 On Right After High
School, eu-387-7289.
~·

heavy corrugated pipe, 100ft.

roll, $21 ,99. PAINT PLUS HARDWARE. 304-875-4011&lt;4.
\

Big sc:reen TV for sale; ReSpon·
sibla party to ~aka on small
monthly p&amp;'f'menta. Good c:rtdit a
I"JSl Ce~

1-800-718-1657.

Boots By Redwing, Chippewa.
Rocky, Tony lilma. Guaranteed
Lowest Prices At Sholl Calo, Ga~
I~UL

IPRINO IPICIAL: Central ,\lr
COndlionora: 2 Ton SUDS; 2 112
Ton l1,285; 3 Ton"$1,385; s 112
Ton 11 ,5i5; 4 Ton 11.8115: Prm
Above Include Normal ln1tatla·
lion. Full 5 Yeor Warranty. "If You

premises, born 3120ie7, lhDtl
and wormed, 1200, call ~tYeningl

a n d - . 81•·11112·31131 .

...,Only

610 FMn Equipment
,0..., OFF all tarm 1racror pana.

IOgaltano 101 up 1pacial1. Fllh Slder'o EqulpmonL 30~·875·
Don't Coil Uo Wo Both Lo .. t• Tank &amp; Pat Shop, 2413 Jackoon 7421.
Free Estlmateol Add·On Hear Ave. Point Pleallnt, 304·015· 487 New Holland Hay Blno, 614·
Pumps Only Sllghty Higher. Coli 2083.
4*2514,
Uo Today. 19117 Ia The Twenty
Soventh Year In The Headng &amp; Border Collie Pupa Scol!l1h 5.438 Tobacco 8111. Will lea10
Cooling Buslnoul 8U·448-8306, Bloodline, Very Nice &amp; Obadlent AIIM Part (8U)-256-a8!18
I-80G-2D1 .oo98.
$75; Also, French Mlni·Lop Rab- BN FO&lt;'d Tractor Good Condition,
STORAGE TANKS. 3,000 Gallon bits, 81 4-..-2110.
W)th King Culler Disk &amp;ulh Hog

Upright, Ron Evans Enterprlaea.
Jackoon, Ohio. I-80G-537·D528.

WoLFF TANNING 11ED8
Tan At Homo
Buy DIRECT and SAVEl

Bost~n

Building
Supplies

tent Condition, With Fresh Paint,

4514.
Full-Blooded Collie Puppies, No

1 Field Raadyl $1,350, 814·448- cau Before a P.M. 814-446-1052.
0103.

Have Experience And Reference

Papers: $50; With Papers: 1150 •

$20l!, e1H4H063.'

Block, brick, sewer pipes, wind·
ows, lintels. etc. Claude Winters,

Himalayan Klnens For Sale, $150,

maki hydraulic hose assem1 i7!~"7 is;·':der's Equipment 304·
I'~

long haired Registered mini

Dachshund, Smos, female, shots
&amp; worrTjOd, $200. 304-875-1978.

Pets Plus, Silver Bridge Plaza.
614·441-0770.
Purebred Siberian Husky puppies, blue e~ea, white, gray &amp;
white, pretty maaks, 1 male, 2 Ia·

WOr~ 814-379-2961

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons
Evans Enterprises, Jackson,

AKC registered Boston Terrier

Bulldog puppies, I tamale 1250, I

1'800·537·9528.

male $200, 10 weeks, shol&amp; &amp;
Designer white wedding gown wormed, 614-992-7623.
and short veil with d e l i c : a t e l - - - ' - - - - - ' - - crown, size 8 short: $150 firm.
s·I H48·2200 or 30H7S.2174.
Top· of the Hill Dog Groomin~.

Cheryl Riley, 131 Howard St.

E:lecJric . Scooter and Wheel· New Haven, WV. 3Q4..B82-321 ,.,

Wolf Hyt&lt;lda Beautifut 1 Yoor Old
Male Poodle, Poodle Puppleo,
614-381Hl429.

570.

Musical
Instruments
Star Guitar, Chesnlre, Cillo- less·
1

ons and nstrumenta- plana, gui-

cha!rs, New/ Used, Scooter Uhs, 1;::;;:;::::;;:::::::::;:..~tar::and::d:ru:m:'~6:1-4-:36::H:l30:;2._.,
Portable Ramps, Stairway Eleva- 1
tors. Bowman's Homacare 614-

4&lt;16·7283

1H4 M~ 11 Foot Qilorl 8Go1!.
w!Sun DI!Ck. 4.3, Liter Vt, Mer-

CIIIi.,.,

Gravely 50 Inch Mower 14 HP
Kohler $1,250 ; Lawn Swoeper

SSO: Hufly Bicycles 1 Ladies ·1
Mans "$75 Each: Goll Clubs:
Mans Loll Hand $100: Ladies
Right Hand $200; Goll Carts $50

And Utilities Paid I Salary, Must·.

1988 Harloy Dovldoon Soltoll,

·-

~h.614-388-8718.

Wanted Tobacco Plants Wlll
Work Your Ground Or Help Sel
Your Plants Or Will Pay For

.um8d &amp;
•111113.

Thorn. e14-446·1052.

•

Glubb's Plano· tuning &amp; repaira.
Problems? Need Tuned? Call the
pi,ano Or. 51-4-448-4525

114·245-

TRANSPORTATIOtJ

81H42·1D03.

!DDS Kawuaki 800 Vulcan,

t8000. e1o.Q82-7211D.

1880 Plymoth Sundance, Two
Door, e8,000 Milot, TIM, Cruise,
AC, Aula, 12,500 Exotllent Con·
dillon. 814-440-i552. •
. .

1Qt5 Yamaha Tlmberwolf 250,
uery low houra, $3000 oso. 81..
DH-4581 .

HI"'""

'*·

~

Applianco 1'1111 And Service: All
Very llood Condition. Mull See. Name
Brandl Ouw 25 Yeert E•·
~300. (814)-311-11855
perltnce All Wark GuaranlHd,
Wlnitebago·ITASCA 271!. motar French City Mayllg, eu.ue.
home, Mlr contained, air, fur~ 11M.
niCI, IIHpl I, generator.

uperlenc:&amp;

•

840

.•

Rastdenlial or commercial wiring,
new MrYice or repalra. Master ll·'

... &amp;00 080. 304-875422.

canaed electrician. Ridenour

Eltclrlctl, WVOOQ308, 304·675·
1788. '

~. er~~~. llld

40hp ......... 304-875-15817.

Electrical and
Refrigeration

·

w/

SIMI 14' Fillling Boat With Trail·
or. Quid&lt; Solo, SSOO: 10' Aluml·
num, Groat For Pond 175, 814·

-D.

AutoPirta&amp;
Acceteorles

760

~udgtt Price Transmlatlona,

5lllrtlng at • •00 lnd Up. Ueed I
Rabullt, All Typal, Over 10.000

Tranaml11iona, Acc111 Tt'lntfer

Caaeo &amp; Roar Endx, 814-245·
5877

ES·TUTES
REI1l77JRt
446-4206 ·

bedrooms,

living

kitchen,

room,

family

IIIALJOI

.
'
NEW USTING· Letan· Cabin w~h river 101·
bedrooms, 1· bath, screened porch
basement. Heat Is electric. ASKING ,,9,,11UU

• Jl.

:sm.

NEW USTINQ. Marlchan Road Twp. Rd.
Approx . 99 Acres of vacant ground, wa&lt;&gt;d_!td.kl
hilly, some level, Immediate possosslon.
for more lnlonnation. ASKING $12,f!M

~1082 Park Avo.nue, Good Motor

• &amp; Trana, Hat Window Problems,

.

2iloko Good Damo Car $400;
c1981 Oldo Cullan V·8, Auto,
• Runa Fair, $350; Call 814·446·

u

:QB53.

PRICE REDUCED- Middleport· Older 2 SIO"t
frame home, 3 bedrooms, 1 bath. Hofne needs
some repairs. Located on Mill Street. Wouf&lt;l
make a great starter home or rental property.
RE.DUCED TO $5,!500
· .~

Within walking distance 10
shopping. Two bedroom
home, 15K 12 room coukf be

that third bedroom, kitchen
and dining combined, full
basement. $30's. 1134

0807.

Au., Loana: Au., Dealer Will Ar·

4·whaeler~, motor homet, lurnl·
el~tronica. c:omputert etc.

•

\

·

~

,

L,ISTitfG· .Aflor~able, Mid
40's·, Tucked aw.ay at the woods
edge Is this very rustle· and unique
home: Master bedrclom features a
d"e~k also 2 other bedrooms,
Mddern kltcl'!en,n,ew cabinets,
counter I!IP,S ~nd BPP!Iances ,stay
with the hOme~ Living rooin,. full
basement, stop paying rentll This

one you (:1111 afford.
RACCOON CREEK- 731 Foot
Cr1141k frontage. Total of 18 acres.
Woodland and flat. Build a summer
cottage or a new home. ,

ture,

room

by FBI, IRS, DEA. Available yqur

area now. Call
En S.9368

.

.

'...

.... .j".

1·800·513·~343

Credit Probl~n~~? Gauranttod ·F~
nancinv. tO% Down. Payment•
Aolow All180 Par Month: No
Turn Dow~al Caii'Rulll 814·44•

COMMERCIAL • BLOCK
BUILDING- Located
on
Jackson Pike with good alze
parldng lot. Start up your own
business today!-

new" feeling, It features ttvee

bedrooms, one and half bath, 2
c. garage, work atlop. Would

A Hood A Car? Na Credit, Bad
Crodl~ Bonkruptoy? Wo Cxn Help
R•Eallblloh Credit! Mtl't Make·
$150 Weak lake H.omt, 15%
DOwn On Caah O.r Trade To
Qualify For Thta Bonlt Flnanclnf.
Ho Credit TUm Downal114-441·

: 11183 Honda Accord, 4 cylinder, 4 range Financing ·evon If You
•d,oor,. 4 good tlrat, 5 spUd, Have Been TUrned Down Betor-.
: rs.ooo on rtbulll motor, new Loan1 Avallabla For No Credit,
~braket, runa good, body good,
Bad CredR And Bonk(uprcy Buy·
4. tint•d windows, priced to tell, ero, Call Dione 814~8172,
} $595, 614-1192·21104,
CARS FOR $1001 Trucl&lt;a, boats,

dining,

·varr oPI'OIItng• B~cliiSt•t

..

•

• 1•79 Olds Cudaoa; Dey.,na dros
•I rima, new , engine. 30,.·875·

~·s.l127
.~,

a

[Jl Bonnie Stutes, ·Brpker

Our professionals here
at Wood Realty have
just about sold
everything. WE!. have
buyers looking 'or that
certain pl9()8 of
property. ft could be . WHY RENT WHEN YOU
CAN OWN THIS . THREE
ybursl If you have
BEDROOM, two bath Mobile
been thinking of
home! For the price of ·
putting your house on
534,WO. With two acres mn.
the market. or possibly Enclosed porch, large shed.
Call lor more detallsii&lt;I001
lookinp to buy, give us
a cal . Let us handle
your real estate needsl

aiding hOmo· hal that ' like

..01 tubs- uk about ac:ratc:h &amp;
dent and factory seconds. Aa low
as$1999. 304·295-eges.

~ertlllzed.

t1~.000,

1He All aria 400 Scrambler w11h
blade, 2 wheel and all
drive,
low , houl•·

wtflreplace. New Price Is in lhe

Sunday, May 25, 1997· 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
710 Art Lewis St., Middleport, Oh.

IIU than 7000 ICILIII milll,

••
:;o Aoreo 01 Goo~ Cloan Hay,

r::---:---:---:----.

Located In a,_ TownlhlpPrlce hal belln loworad, very
charming Ranch offers three

OPEl HOUSE

-.v"'

A: IJ:;t14-2te«&lt;IS r .
Poni0111. 1t11. Biloo Tracller

Allen C. Wpod, Realtor/Broker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, Reattor/Broker·446·0971
Jeanette Moore, Realtor· 256-1745
Tim Watson, Realtor·256-6102
Patricia Ross, Realtor

Frigidaire Flaif harvest gold cook

205 North Second Ave.

~

Conlalnad. Awning. Sleep• e.

IN TOWN CONVENIENCE-

~all

u,eoo.., ..- - .

REALTORS:

Raady For P~k·Up, Call .81 4-446·
. ' 074 7 Anytime.

below, very good condition,
' 614-742·227"

.11323.

WATERPROOFING

27 Coachmln Camper: air, ulf-

F4r Sale : A Toilet. Drop-In Sink
For va·nity And A Catt lron Tub,

!IIOVBl 2 ovens wilh burners on
pull-oul drawer, 40•, with storage

BASEMENT

--lilt

Office ..........................992-2.259 ·

32 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Two male miniature Collie pupa.

$125 eech; one female Jack Rus·
oelllorrier pup, 1250; 814·742·

bofll,
IIIOiile hOmo ropolr IJIId more. fol,
lrM eollmo• coil Chi~ I 1..11112··

liteli.,. guaren!M.
referenon furnished. Et- Hono. linilh.DAI'WALL
1H4 Prowler 30ft camper, like Local
rwpojr,
lllilllhed 1175. Col) (81 4) •48· Clilf"os llltured,
plasler repair.
bod,--. 0170 Or 1-800-287-0578. Rogers CoN Tom 304-875-~166 . 20 yeers
-*'11. 304-575-2547.

Wood Realty, Inc
446-1066

malea, r•dy now, 1120 each, colt
614·992·5144.

$200 each, Vet Checked, Sholl; 2050.

Concrete &amp; Plas~c Septic

4

C&amp;C Glnlfll Home Main·
- - · Palnllne. vinyl lidlnf,

. . - . doort; ..........

Exotl...,l Condition, Well Wain·
- . Nt Conrlllbw &amp; F - .

614·367-!!539.

EioTTLED WILL POWERI LOSE
up to 30. poundo, 30 DAY MON· New Anderson windows in box,
EY BACK GUARANTEE I Natural, approx: $10,000. Will sell lor 1r2
Doctor Recommended, 614-441 · price. 304-675-4215.
1·ge2, Free samples.
560 Pets for Sale
Brown Topper for a FuU Size Picl&lt;·
Up, 8ft long . Good Condillon. A Groom Shop ·Pet Grooming. ·
Featuring Hydro Balh . Don
(814)·258-1012

Sheers. 373 Georges Creek Rd.
Cemetery lata. Granile Bronze 814·446-0231 ..
Memorials. Apple Grove e.4emoriAKC Garman Shorthaired Polnlar
al Gardens. 304·578-2779.
puppies, great tor both field &amp;
Collectible dolls • Etfanbee, tarnty, $175; 61H42-3177.
Horsman, Vogue, k1eal, 'Etc. 304875-5811 Mrs. Austin.
AKC Golden Retrievers Puppies

Sarurday, noon-Spm. 814·992·

Horne

Improvement~

1HS Cole.,.n Pop-Up C1111por

-W874.

day through Friday, 1Oam.6pm.

l ,

OuHn llze Aftd Filii Size Bed,

P I - - I · Alplof Ad

Wanted Someone To Work On
Farm In .Exch•ngt For Trailer

110

=~=r"' 2011. ....

K.....a _ C _
StIll 87

prec;iate, $1,800,814-387-7419.
New Holland 55 Hay Rake, E•c:ei-

Supplies· grooming· pet&amp;. Mon·

Woodworking Equipment For
Sale, 614-448-2.&amp;78.

Rio Grande, OH Call BU·245·
5121.

.

'•I '· .

btiorttochooiehom.

Formal! Tractar Super C In Exoe~
lent Condition. Come Sea To Ap-

Chriaty'a Pall
271 North ~nd
Middl&amp;por~ Cillo.

for lilt

round balet $D,500. 844 round

Sun Flowor Hay Rake t125, 614·
448·1052.

.

I

730 Ylnl I 4-WDI

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

bolor autowrap I12,DOO. 854 A.
baltr IUIOWrap 115,400. 451 T
1ickto mower f3,150. 815 8'8'
dloc , _ 14,700. 8 ullod round

NH Hayrakl II .~o; JD 1!4ywag·
on New 18' Bod &amp; Tlroa $800,
New Paint Both Excelltntl 614·
379-2788.814&lt;371h2748.

Bo•••
1052.

111111.00
.
Low Montltly PaymentS F,REE
Color Catalog Ca~ TODAY
1·800·711-0158.

550

T!frrler &amp; Chinese Pug Turning Plow ·I Middle Buster,

472 r hayblna 11,500. 411 o·
hayblno t1,1100. 4112 D' hayblno
18,400. 41 S dl1cblna 11' cut
113,500. 565 IqUiri bolor 3 joint
PTO wagon hitch 10,200. 134

Puppies, Both AKC RIQIIttred; 13.500, 81.. 2~5-9379.
Show Ouelity, Vet Chaclcod, Sholl
T
&amp; wormed Now Taking Deposit 9' Weldor Truokbed With oot
Or Payment~ 614-388·11325.
Price 1250 Firm, 814·448-

Col1"1NfCialtHome Unita From

~eruy E. Cleland Jr.. !m.~a59•]

- - H . , T M I -.

AKC Rogl1torod Co- Spaniel
pupploo, blaco, bolll paron11 on

no ...._ ......

2897.

SARA WINPS· Fafrfleld Centenary
&amp; Vance f,load. 4 buildjng sites
temalr'l. Thi!J area Is bJilldlng fast
with lots of Deilutiful homes. Don't
walt
Ulllil,.., 11'8 to' J8te.
·
'

Owner will listen to offers!! Welcome

whole family...

ln-lawa •and all. And nqbody will be bum~ IMo each other In 1hls well cared l?r turn of the
century hOnle with 3 etortea ofli'llng apace end then aome. Charactei abounds tn ·the main
pan of the house ihat features living room, dining room; lt&gt;yer, aat·ln -kitchen and several
!!nQied flrepl-s. Large family room • 18K38 w~h attractiVe brick fireplace and master
bedroom lUIIe of equal a1ze wm plaue thole looking for elbow room. 8 bedrooms In all, 3 full
and 2 half betha, 2 car garage, lnground pool with privacy fence. Beat of all, conveniently
locatad In IOMI. Under $250,000111201

new proposed

park. ·Don1 let this one slip
WINDING CROSll ROADS· Cora
Mill· Pleasant Hill, located between
the new proposed city schools high
school and ' the Industrial park.
Woodland. flat and some rolling,
SOme restrictions.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.
(614) 446-3644

FAIRFIELD CHURCH- Seven acres
In one tract Btld more io be dMded.
New homes starting to build In t~e
area also.

Real Eallte G-"tl

BIG BEND REALTY;INC.

+lB.

1993 COMMODORE
14K71l- Prtce reduced. 2 bedroom, 2
balh, Modern kitchen wlth
ap'~lanees. Heii"Pu~. central air.

l-800-585-710lor446-7101

RUSSELL D. WOOD. BROKER
446-4618

a

Martha Smith.\ ................................. 379·2651

JudY De Win .............................. 441.()262 .Cheryl Lcmly ................. ................ :. 742-3171
' J. Merrill Caner......................... 371)..2184 Dana Alha.................;.......................379-9209
Tammie DeWin.........................245..0()22 Kenneth Amsbary ............................. 245-5855

·-...

have to see to appreciate.

:.L.....

·&lt; ,
·,

JET

AERATION MOTORS
Rapalrod, New &amp; Rabuilt In SIOck.
Call Ron EvanL 1-800·537-95211.
cupboard51 tor sale, 6t4·
: Eqiupment

f'!&gt;meroy Thrill ShoP. now buying

children's surT,~mer
cktthea. ma1ernity clothes, baby
items and large lays. Call 614·
tu.rnlture,

902·3125.
R',Pirlgerator, Couch &amp; Table, 614·
441 -0432.
. ..

Art Lewis St., Middleport, Oh.· Step
Into this beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath
home and you'll fall In love. Count
the extras, It has a fireplace In the
den, a jacuzzi tub In master bath and
a roll out Island In the kltohen. If
town living Is for you, look at this
one. $59,900

Hae Iota of Potenttll·
COMMERCIAL· In ·lawn
location, has onice space,
~PACIOUS "!"'CH· With a _storage and warehouse.
prlva1e setting 3 bedrooms, 1 ~ Call for more Information.
1/2 bath, lull bsmt, attached $50'sl5001
·
garage, exterior Is vinyl siding
w!brlck, above ground pool.
12008 NEW LISTING
$80's 1131 •
Plantz subdivision, vac.dnt
lot measures approx. 110
x eo. would make a great.
spot for a new home.
$8,000.00

· NIW UlnNGI WELCOME
IIATS DUTI 'Tempting large
· 6 bedroom 2 bath. home,
family room wllh cathedral
·ceiling, dining room. kitchen,
large wrap around deck,
* - " !. Setting on approx:
.880 acre lot. All this &amp;·more
· jUII a quid&lt; drtve from town.

RD- A posSible
7 &amp; Flatwoodt Rd.
detaChed 2 car garage
flO Acr.. of vacant property

.....

ori Rowesville Rd. In Gallla

.
..._

County, Hand dug end drilled wJ111s, on site. Elec:tric:
available, 15 acre hayfield some timber.

VfiiY secluded
'

:

$41,000

.

ij ,
~-­

NEW LIITINGI IIMPLII'Y
· 'lOUR II!AACH. Savor the
cqmfor1 of this 3 ~room, 2
1/2 bath briCk ranch home.
Dlnihg room, living room •
room end more,. AIIIICI!ed 2
geiagt!. Nice level lawn
that· le euy to mow. Keep.
··cool wltl\ central air
con~ltiontng this eummar.
, CitY M:hoola•. 8511 LeGrande

.-c.

car

comer Ia a COIM18rt:lel
two
11u1~~:; epprox. 2375 square 1eo1t downllalnl
~ ·'
upstalra. His a full baaernllnt and li

for Land!

painted
look like ~ "Stemwlleelef". Gfeat
existing business or a new one.

All Counties,
40 acres and up
with Road
Frontage. Call
Mike for details.
.1-800-213·8365

:LOG HOMES
Comfort. cunvc.n icncc,
Cncrgy
c£ricicnCy,
durubility uml Rcxibilily
in •fcsign art~ a ft•w
ri~ &amp;IWR I:I

RIV'ER FRONT PROPERTY Js hard
but you h!l\ql7.66 acres MIL
this 2 story farm hOuse. With 3
· 1 112 bath; city schools and a
fit lor a kin~ all located just
mlriUtiJs from Gallipolis, you should
flow
without a. look.

why

2·,000
familii:Mwill huild a log
humc liW yt:ar!

S1 ructu'r ca has

n

tcaclcr in the lug home

i,nduatry for over IS
years. Chno1c frum over
7Q 11tantlarcl mmlcls or
~e'll

tiutont tlcAiVt one

fur you ..

•

• Cull or write fur mnrt,
'
in(onnalion.

Appalachian Log
.Structure&amp;, lne.

Dep\. GDT,
P.O. Box 614
Rlj,ley, WV 25271

1-800-458-9990

·

LOVERS • Enjoy your
weekends fishing &amp; watching the
barges float by. This like new
eyecatcher Is empty &amp; ready to
move into. Special features are
approK. 1.8 acres, 2 car garage.
large cedar deck, security system &amp;
located approx. 4. mi. $outh ol the
Eureka Dam. $69,900.
EXTRA NICE BUILDING· OR
MOBILE HOME LOT. Mature Pine
Trees on the three sides. Accelll to
Raccoon Creek. Located In Hobart
Dillon SUbd. $11,900,

REN:TAL

COZV lWO BEDROOM COTTAGE
high on a hill in Green Township. This
hor119 is brand ,_ &amp; located c19se to
town at 1573 Graham School Road.
$45,000 Buy an extra 5 rm &amp; bath
home and bam fpr an extra $29.900.

ApproK. 8 acres total.

POMEROY· Asher Street- Almoet an ae~:e lot with lola of
froniage could have 2·3 building sites. Has.an older house.
that needs iota of work.
.
S11,000

Make A Homo For Your Famllyl
Down to earth liveability describes
this 3 BA, 2 barn rancn perched
on 8 acres, m/1 When you walk in,

RACCOON CREEK LOVERS •
Finish !his beauty and . return fo
quiet and peaceful living. This 1 1/2
story seml·chal!'l offers 4
bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, oversized
equipped kitchen, sunken living
room, heat pump and much more.
You must see the 60 to 900 ft. cre!lk
view !rom this 6 acre tract .
$119,000. OWNER ·wANTS AN
OFFER.

Log
lu~cn

-.ooo

SYRACUSE· Rose valey· A 2 bedroom home with approx. ,'
5 acres and 2 trailer hook ups one 14x70 3 bediOom
mobile home already,on one of the iota. All for ••1100

or IIJc

ApJ,alar.hian

"!• for an

dining room and nice kitchen

RESORT PARK UVINQ. A f 2x34 Park home with one
bedroom end lots ol extras. All yelir Jiving or jUII ,1
getaway. Setting on a leased lot at Royal Olk Parle wttll full
membership that paaaes 3 generallonl. Own. may accept
bnd contract.
.
t30.000

front porch or large covered back
porch. Send the kids or the

'I'LATWooils Ro;. a , _ one story with part b.eement.
one car garage, 3 bedrooms, 1 beth, dining area, all ttltttng
·on 1.73 acres.
t4t,ICIO

you wll be Impressed with the

open11110s of tho living room with
cathedral calling and fireplace,
lhat'e built to use. Enjoy the
summer evening from eit"- the

.
1171 UNCOLN HEIGHTS. PO'l\&amp;roY' Nice starter home or

husband oul to the added Hllc14

II ~~·:~~;r;!o 1~rec.School
room. Localed at
Road and

. buy~ for a rental. Well kept home. 2bedroom;

. This is one Lwinclows

~~~~~~~~·~~~~~

POMERQY· Mulberry Hta. • A .,_-.Uy uHd olllce
dociOr. Could have many othlf uees. Ha a -~"'
1181, 3 lllCBm rooms, a lab, kltc:h'", bas'"*",
.
oflk:e, a big upstalra.
·

RAICCC&gt;ON CREEK PRIVACY This
almost brand new ranch style home
rests in over 1·acres of woods with
approx. 800 It of creek frontage.
Some of the many features are 4
BAs 2 baths, 16x21 LA w/ftench
aoor's. 2 large treated decks. vtnyl
siding &amp; an unattached 2 car
garage. II you don't want to
your neighbors . YOU
THIS ONE .
REDUCED

•
lI

GRAIN FARM - Mostly creek
bottom • Ewlngton area • no house •
broker owned • $88,000

FISHERMEN'S DREAM • Two miles
beloW the ·dam you'l find this older
completely furnished 2 BR mobile LAKE DRIVE SUSDMSION • RIO
home. Then!'s .an 8 J&lt; 24 deck GRANDE • Close to University •
112 I has water, sewer &amp; elec.
overlool&lt;lng the Ohio River wlth a
available. $12,000
PROPERTY storage bulldlng, stepS going down to

This . package the beeCh &amp;a large dOck. $17,900.
COIIIISII of 2 houall and 2 single
~PM••• The inc:ome from IIlia wt1 COMMERCIAL LISnNQ • Rio RIVER FRONT LOT • 1.368 IICI'9I
ttw"t make your payment~!. Granda area. 1.6.,.. ~ localad on ~ localed approx. 2 mi. 80Uih of the
n lot aled In the Vllllge of
NE
of U.S. 4 lane 36 and Eureka dim. Greet
tllal Ill

"'*"

bath dOWn &amp; 3 b(ldrilorne
4 roomt llld
a full bath up. HU 1 newly remodeled kiiChen ilnd !Min
bdl ilnd e , _ roof, Beautiful flrapilcl, wrlfi-IIOUIIII
pprd1 .00 fNncl1 doole.
.

,,••

.,.
r

m

•••.ooo

~~--~==--------~----------------~--------~-------r.:
WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC. ~
1
.......
(614) 446-3644
!ilL
·

E-Mail Address:

POMIROY· Mulblny tlli\1111- A 2-3 bedroom ranch home
with attachad gnge. A very neat lOoking .,._ with a
11rge 101. CloH to ttoep~ta~llld IChOOte. A8KING

te•.ooo

wlseman@zoomnet.net

DOTTII TURNER, ....... _....;.,_...............112 1111
JIRRY IPRADUNQ ·······--····,···-····....... .-.a111
CIW1H" 'IPillDI..IMJ.,,~ ...~ .....- ..-·......11
• • 1vJO,.,. •
111 a•1
IRIIriDA .J&amp;Fihl-···-···;.....- ......_ •.....a-7171
OF'PICE.....~.......~........- ......- ............ 11, 1111

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER,GRl- 446-9555
Cero&amp;,. Wuell· 441·11107

UZ,OOO ·

r•. . . .-.. . . _. ,. . . . .

'.

NEW LISTING! ldoll
Sllrterl
Priced
Ill
$39.900.00. 3 bedrooms,
dining room, k~chen, living
room. Detached 2 car
garage. Call us today to see
this one: Situated at
Georgos Creek Rd. 1925 ·

...

'

WePAYCASH

THIS HOME MERITS A
VISITI So bright &amp; perky.
Suberbly maintained,
·enclosed front porch, dining
room, living room, nk:e sized
bedrooms .• full basement.
Nice slied lawn with
attractive shrubbery &amp;
partially fenced·ln. Large
deck on rear. A must aeel
Affordable!

~-- ··

C.().().L SHADED LOT, lots
of trees! Nice comfonable
ranch home that his an
oversized 2 car garage, large
living room, 3 bedrooms,
nlcad alzed kitchen with
. dining area that haa patio
doora that led to a covered
deck on rear of hoult.
Central air · conditioning .
Quiet location, not rar from
c:hUfCit, etc.ltl18

Cheerfully Cozyll Put down
roots in this easy to love 3.
bedroom ranch . Kitchen &amp;
dining room combination,
living room , den, 1 car
anac:hed garage. Nice sized
·lot w/fenced·ln back lawn
And
more with
a
comfortable price . of
$48,50().00 11111

.

NEW USnNGI RIO AREAl
Lot appt:ox. 5 acres more or
r.,. CountY Water available.

Suitable lot mobile home.
Alking $6,500.00. flt27

NEW LISTING! Mobile
Hot'ha, Onlyl 14' x 70'
Clayton, 2 batht, 2
bedroomll, living 1901'1· dining
.,... &amp; kitchen combination
(llland kitchen) l~luded In ·
eale 2 decks, 2 etorage
bulldlngl &amp; more. Really nice!
Alklog $13,500.00 11124

OU,IET COUNTRY
SETTINQII Enjoy all 1he
peace &amp; quiet you will lind
at thla property. , Over 8
acres of lend and a 14' x 70'
2 bedroom, 2 bath mobile
home. Nice sized kitohen w/
extra cabinet space, isisnd
range &amp; so much more .
Must see to appreciate.
Motlv"'ed seller. H10

Nice sized
with plenty of
room Inside end out.
OVer 8 acres of land, county
water. Hrile has '3 bedrooms,
2 baths, large kitchen,
attached garage and 10 THIS COULD .BE THE '
much more Including lots of PERFECT FIND I Enough . •
'privacy. Call todayt 11105
land for the ma~ or the
house and a super · nice
home lor the lady. Over 44 i·
acrea 1 with 2 silos and pole

barn, Uke new spacious 1
EXCELLENT BEEF DR .
1/2 story home with 5
HORSE . FARMI .Ovei 140
bedrooms
, 3 baths, foyer,
land almost brand new
Or &amp; so much more.
houae was constructecl In REDUCTIONIIII OWNER LR,
Close to Holzer Hospital.
1895. 3 BR, 3 baths, approx.
WANTING TO GO SOUTIII You will be Impressed at all
3,800 aq. 11.. lnground pool Super nice lot. 1.5 acre m/1 tM quality this home offers
for thoea hot eutrilner days, that has road lrol)lage only 2 .
·
Large bern approx. 100 x 96, roads. Excellent lor 11103·
maChinery lhed, pole belna &amp; residential or commercial. LOT $?,OOO ovar Acree,
3
more.ll31
Could split lot l~to seperata · County water available .
tracts. tnclu~ed rs a 14 x 80 Wooded 1889
IN TOWN LOCATION!
mobile home, 3 bedrooms, 2
Handy to ·fuat 1bout baths_. . heatpump,~ PRICE REDUCTION! You
tverytlllng. Save gas! underptnnrng, deck &amp; morel are ml~tlng a great deal!
F1mlly 11zed 3 · ~droom . 1111.
Quality brick ranch home
home. Nicesizatllivlng room, IDEAL HUNTING LANDI that has OVllr 2.5 acres &amp;
kitchen, dining, basement. ·235 a~res more or less. onty just a hop, skip &amp; a
Flnllhed attic area. Covered Wooded. Owner liquidating jump from town, almostl
front· porch. Detached propenln owned In GaiHa la&lt;Qa Sized rooms. Attached
gariga. Broker Ow~td. county. ~ke them an o!fer garage and a 30 x 40 .PQia
Immediate poneaalonl ·call they can t refuse. Asktng bam Lots more call for
for more detail•' ,
$55,000.00. #WIIC
.
more Info. OWNER WANTS'
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SOLDIII75
HElD ROAMIN' ROOM?
~r
with
PrtYltt " ng comes
IIIII 8 acre mora or • - tract
of land · and a 3 bedroom
f1l()bh home with 2 additions
· VI 1 ldl
d
addtd .
ny a ng; an
lllingll roof ,_,uy il18fded.
Large dining 111a. Vert nell
1nrf claln. Road front1111•
along two roatle. Call for

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80 LOVABLE .• LIVABLE!

~Y the comforts of this
malntalnecl ranch. ' Bay
wiitdow enhanc11 thla nice
slzecl living roon\, eat·ln
kltthen. 4 bedroomt, flmlly
room. L.ota of retn""a''~. flat

lawn,

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atora91 building
lfiiii'OX· 12'X20 • Exptcting a
biG prlct? Notl Only
1At ua~Mw n to
youiCII!Odl¥.1111

S38,eoo.oo.

SQUEEZED I'OR SPACE?
You'll say "yea• to this
Inviting light &amp; airy . 3
bedroom. 2 . bath ·home.
Uving room, family room,
dining arel. RHf and front
deel&lt;e that ovw looks pretty
llndecajllng. approx. 1 acre
-lawn. You will like thlt floor
plln. Cal today! 1112

8-mall '" for Information on. our listings:
blgbencl@eurelranet.com

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