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-

•

•
Page A12 • The Dally Sentinel

success of the display will depend
upon all o{ you . .
Tbe theme for the window or
both of we big display windows at
the Middlepon store Ibis year will
be "In Memoriam". If you bave a
loved one wbo atrended Middlepon
Higb School but is now deceased,
Tom would like to have a photo of
tbal person. It can be an old scbool
photo or a more updared one. Tom
also would like for you to loan any
mementos of that individual which
you have on band-a school jacket,
a yearbook, anything that would
trigger a memory. Tom says that be
will prepare a name to go along
with the pictures. He will take very
good care of all items so loaned
and they will be retumt:4 to you
when the window displays are dis·
mantled. If enough participation is
there both of the show windows
will be used.
Tom would like for you to func·
tion as soon as possible so be can
determine if the idea is gonna fly.
All you do is drop you contributions by the department store. He
will need some time to prepare
everything so time is important.
The windows will be ready for
your viewing no later than May 20
and the displays wiU remain in the
windows for a week following we
annual repnion so everyone will get
a chance to see them.
It's a neat idea and with your
cooperation, the windows should
really provitle a lot of interest. Can
Tom count on you?
If you missed the gorgeous double rainbow following Wednesday
evening's rain, you really missed
out on something special~ne of
the P,rcttiest sights I've seen in a
lohg while. Hmmmm, wonder if
there were pots of gold at the end
of them. Do keep smiling.

- - -.. News j:Jolicy---In an effort to provide oudead-.
· ership with currpnt news, the Gallipolis Daily Tribune and The Daily
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from we date of the
event.
All club' me e tings and other

•

,..._·If Boys Wore the Skirts----.·

PRNC holds-nursing
honie'-Week -activitie·s

by Bob Hoeflich

In recognition of the annual
reunion of the Middleport High
School Alumni Association
'Reunion , Tom Dooley annually
prepares at least one window at the
Middleport Department Store as a
tribute to the reunion. The displays
includes all sort of mementos of we
past days of Middleport High
School.
This ye·a r Tom has come up
with an unusual approach and the

I

•

Beat of the Bend ...
A number of scholarships seem
to' be floating around this spring
and every liltle bit helps so you
might want to make application.
The Easrem High Scbool Alumni Association is offering a,cbolarsbip to a cWTeDt graduare of Eastem High School. Applicati&lt;!'ls are
available tbrougll tbe guidance
counselor's offtee at Eastern Higb.
These applications .may be completed and IUmed back into tbe
office by Wednesday, May 17.
And-we Eastern High Alumni
Association banquet atld dance will
be held this year at the air conditioned Royal Oak Reson Activity
Building on Saturday, June 16.
Dini)Cr will be 'Ill 6:30 p.m. with a
dance to be held from 8:30 to 11:30
p.m.
· I can't stress too much that the
resort is a new location for tbe
reunion and everyone must have
advance tickets to all events.
Advance tickets are really a must
because you will.bave t&lt;J show your
tickets to be admitred to the reson
grounds . Tickets are available
through ·June 8 at Baum Lumber
and Summerfields in Chester;
Hawks 76 and Keebaugb's Sbake
Sbop in Tuppers .Plains; Reed's
Store in Reedsville, and Franc.is
Florist in Pomeroy. Remember,
you just gotta liave those advance
tickets!

Friday, May 12, 1996

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

news articles in the society section
must be submiued within 30 days·
of occurrence. All birtbdays must
be submitted within 42 days of the
occurcncc.
All material submilled for pubii·
cation is subject to editting.

Pomeroy Nursillg and Rebabilltation Center is celebratins National Nursing Home Week wilh a vartcty of activities.
The event was kicked off with
an annual Mother'.s Day flower
sale from today with proceeds to
benefit the resident's Christmas
fund.
A Mother's Day tea will be held
at 2 p.m. Sunday.
_ On Monday, the celebration will
continue with residents, staff and
volunteers planting 'flowers to
beautify the facility's counyard.
Tuesday residents will enjoy a
golf outing, followed by a teddy
bear showcase with area children

Man of
-the woods

volunree..S.
- Wednesday at 4 p.m., the Apple
Core Baton Corp under the direclion of Tammy Engle will perform
for the residents in the dining
room.
On Th·ursday the female tesideRts w'ill get a free facial from
Terri Bishop of Mary Kay Cosmet·
ics.
Friday at noon, an open bouse .
picnic will be·beld in the courtyard
for residents, staff, visitors and
community. Following this, residents will attend a games toutnament with other nursing borne resi·
dents at Veterans Memorial
Extended Care Facility.

·Featured on pege B-1

PORTLAND Freedom
Gospel Mission, County Road 31,
Portland,, Friday, Saturday· and
Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening.
Evangelist Rev. Johnnie WinneU,
Charleston, W. Va. Special singing.

!

MIDDLEPORT- Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett Post 238, American Legion,'will have Poppy Days,
Frl'day and Saturday, on the streets
of Middleport.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - Burlingham
Modem Woodmen, potluck dinner,
6:30 p.m . Saturday at tbe hall.
Camp to furnish meat and drink.
Mothers to be recognized.
'

MONDAY
· LETART - The Letan Town-

ship Trustees will meet Monday at.
?·p.m. at the office building.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- F.O.E. 2171
Auxilrary meeting, Tuesday 7,:30
p.m.

A Mulltmedta Inc . Newspaper

flowers

Open Mothers Day Week (May 8-13 only) 9 am· 6 pm Sun 12·5

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
992-5776

Syracuse

·-~

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
STARTING APRIL 3
SPRIN_G &amp; SUMMER HOURS
Open Mo.n.-Fri. 9:00-7:00
Saturday 9:00.3:00

THE
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Quafttg !J{omes ~
.

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Open 9fouse . l
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Saturiay &amp;

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•..

Just for
Mother's 'Day
• Specia[ «Momr Piicing
• Special (t:Mom" 1;inancing
.

'••

:~ L--------------~----------~

I

Serving all
of Southeast
.
Ohio and
Northwest
West Virginia

'
'

~
~

.~··

3 beautiful
model homes
- --&lt; ) 1· 1- ~:) located just
ClUA.Li .~ 1-tOI\IIES
south of the
I\IIA.S O N . VVV.
Pomeroy-Mason
bridge off
•
SR33.
"304-773-500.1
...-. __
...___ ,

Roses are red
Vi~ts are blue
You're the best
And we all love you.
Love,
Amber, Arica, Aja

Suntf~u

'
::May13tfi &amp; 14tf .~

·•· ~jresftments
• !free :flowers
:for !JL{{ Moms

#1%.09.1
SHARI
B-LACKWELL

#1 MO!Jvf
DELLA ANN
NEWLAND
,_,
Dear Mom,
Happy Mother~
Day.
&gt;

~

· Love You,
Ann - Patty Haroietta

Mom,
Aunt Con, Nanny,

Thanks for being
there for all of us
kids when ive
needed you!
Love,
Teresa, Rhonda,
Ralph , Carla , Kasi,
Candace &amp; Lyndsey

ANNAMAE
#lMOM

#lMOM

and Darling Wife

DOROTHY

Happy Mother's Day!
We Love You.
So_n, Ryan &amp;
Husband, Bob

PARKER

Love;
Your Ten Little
Indians

Lucille, I love you
wilh all my hear!!
Yourson,]ack

NOMA
MANLEY

ROBERTA
ALEXANDER

I

.

We love you more today
than yesterday, but no't
as much as tomorrow.
llappy Mother's Dity!
From.'Nancy and Ray

HAPPY MOTHER'S
DAY, MOM
You're one in a
million.
. Bet you thought I
would forget.
Love,
Cindi

•.

Happy
Mother~ Day!
We think you're
the best.

'

From Your
Sweetheart,
Michael Eugene

.

• ..

;-'""'! GOP balanced .

r~~i
,-

budget plan •••

tax

,

Middleport
dock project

Bring down th·e house: Board chief

progr~ssing

City earmarks eyesores, safety risks for demolition

GALLIPOLIS- Sometimes,
By 'GEORGE ABATE
Times-Sentinel staff
destruction is the key to beautifiMIDDLEPORT- The Middleport . cation.
dock launching facility continues to
Since January, I2 strucl)Jres
progress with. its. completion set for
determined to be eyesores or
Labor Day, said Jean Trussell, vilhealth and safety risks have been ~:--"-:"'
lage ·grants coordinator.
torn down, City Code Enforce"We' re moving along.''· she said.
ment Officer James T. Boster
The $142.800 project includes a
said Friday .
float ing dock , a wider ramp and a
Seven more are earmarked 'for
new boater parking lot, Trussell sal d.
demolition.
"
The project has been funded through
"It is the city's desire to elimithe Ohio Department of Natural
nate any violation to provide a
Resources, and with donations from
better environment for the citi·
the village, county and private citizen.'' Boster said.
zens.
The enforcement officer was
The acqui sition process for the
given the authority to clean up
IJ'Ojecl should take about three more
the city by two ordinances the
weeks, acCordin g to the grants coorcity commission passed in Janudinator. The village continues to
ary . One define s "objectionable
Aegotiate wiih one of the property
conditions" which ore unpleasing
owners. but has reached agreements · orpoteritially hazardous: the other
with the remaining owners , she said.
declares abandoned or. junked
' ·. Between eight and I0 parking
cars a nuisance .
.City Manager ' Matth ew
s_paces for boaters will be added' between Walnut and Rutl and streets
Coppler instructed Boster to
on Front Stree t.
make enforcement of the ordi·
The propert y to be acquired for
nances his top priority .
Those in violation of the ordithe parking space along Front Street
includes an ope n lot. a tra iler; a small
nance · are issued a notice and
one- story home and a two-story
given IS days to respond with a
home, Trussell said.
notice of intent telling the city
'!'hen, d emo lition ·should oecur
how they plan to remedy the s itu ~­
between 30 and 45 days after the
ation. Property owners then h,ave
property has bee n acquired.
30 days to fix t~ e problem.
.
DEMOLITION
City
Code
Enforcement
Officer James T. Boster looks over a demolition
"We need 10 give them a reason"If we get no compliance from
project
on
Third
Avenue
Friday
afternoon.
The
city is taking a hard stance o'n structures which
able amount of time to move out ,"
them. we fill out a complaint
create
an
eyesore
or
safety
concern.
Tbe
unoccupied
house is bei(lg demolished at the owner's
Trussell added.
with the ci ty solicitor's office,"
e~pense . (Times-Sentinel photo)
Construction of the project should
Boster said.
be completed by Labor Day, Trusse ll
The pro bl ems are usually
se ttled at the hearin g that follows, Boster said. but if not. the city their home. tear down a rotten po rch or fix sagging shutters.
said.
"We try to avoid. if it's an occupied structu re, a total condemState offi cials have agreed to push
makes the correc tions and sends out a bill.
nation on it." he said. "An inhabited home. we're looking for the m
"All costs incurred go back to the property owner."
the deadline for the project back to
·
Demolition is the final straw, Boster said. Most are ju ~ l tOld to paint to repair or fix up ."
Septembe r. Prev iously the slate had
Continued on page A2 '

-

Gallia VSC asks court to order
county to meet budget request
By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Hot on the heels of a ruling in favor of its Lawrence
County counterpart, the Gall ia Couiuy Veterans Service Co mmi ssion has
asked the court of common pleas fo r help in its budget dispute with tM county
commiss ion.

Happy 40th
Mother~ Day
DREAMA!

Vol 30. No . 14

so.• -- -

Hubbards Greenhouse
Beautiful Blooming Baskets
Ferns 10 in. &amp; 12 in., bedding
'
plants, double impatients- 6 colors, .
Geraniums, Rose bu~hes, '
•
Combination Plants
Large show plants

KAREN'S
GREENHOUSE.

MHidleport-Pomcroy-Gallipo lts-Pt Ple,ls;tnt - May 14. 1995

·GOP challenges Democrats
to produce balanced budget ~

Remember Mom on her Day
~ith
from

Planters of All Kinds
• Bedding Plant~
• Herbs • Perennials

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

,.
tm:es

Zero deficit by 2002:

· the junior bigb in Middleport. Students wiU perform tbe Tell..T!ile
Heart, H Boys Wore the Skirts and Great Smokles. Here, students ·
rehearse H Boys Wore the Skirts.

SPRING SEASON

614-949-2682

From the 'IIIitmli-~enlinel Staff

rehearsal s for
the political ·
The Ohio impact ...
grappling that is
likely to conWASHINGTON (AP) - Republican
budget propouta In juat tn,... .,.., sume
Washing"TIHt p,., Ia the bluepnnt
bruka
ton for month s. Medica,., c...... toano and
, . IJie budget , _ tlult
lor working lomllleo -could colt Ohio
The Demo· billlono of dollars over the MX'l oev&lt;~n,
'I
will ,.., through OclobtH. It
cratic leaders years, the White Houoe uya.
s.ra lim/Is by CB!egoty lind
Ohlow011ld ION $9 bllll011ln Medlcero
gave no indicaOtfera recommendllllona on
funding
over -•n yeara, and $2.6 bll·
tion they would
how IO reach lhoae {lOIIIs ... A
lion
In
Z002alone,
the WnlteHouoe uid.
offer alternaThe WhHe Houu Nld the HouM proconllnU«J dill/ague with tM
ti ves of their posal to eliminate the ln-achool Interest
Amtrlclln /*)pie will deter·
"It is mean-spirited and it is dead-flat wrong. " Vice
WASHINGTON - Republicans - including Sixth .
ow n. So me exempUon would raise college eoata by
mine ,,. dfllllla, but In tM
{;)istrict congressman Frank Cremeans, Gallipolis - are President AI Gore said~f the GOP approach ala Cap;toL
tank -a nd- fil e -up_to 53,000 per student, in~ the
iear
2002
the
deficit
will be
209,142' otudonta in Oh io.
challenging Democrats to stop their criticism and produce news conference Friday.
D e m oc r a r s.
From the Senllltl ,propoaat came the
Rep. Frank Cremeans
"The Republicans' bad-news budget is an assault on
balanced-budget plans of thetr own as Congress prepares
were expected White Houoe eoUmale lhot sealing back
to debate dramatic GOP blueprints for eliminating federal the hard-working people of this country,'' added House
to prese ~ t plans, the Earned Income Tn Credit would
Minority Leader Dick Gephardt, D-Mo.
deficits. .
·
statement released Friday, "Nothing could be further from includin g se pa- mean $1 ,473 more in ta• payments over
But Republicans were undaunted. Just a day after the the truth . This budget is a commitment to the children in rate group s_of seven years lor 399,331_Ohio families .
'The Clinton administration and Democratic leaders
dangled promiSes of compromise, meanwhile. but only if House and Senate Budget committees approved similar this country.
conservatives and Iiberals in the Hou\e.
Republicans dropped proposals to cuts taxes for the rich plans claiming to balance the budget by 2002, "their
'' If the budget is no·t balanced -and the status quo is
House Budget Comminee Chairman Joh n Kasich. R·
response to Democrats was simple: Show us how you maintained, we will force our children to pay for our lack · Ohio. was hoping to attract support among conservati ve·
and cull savings from Medicare and student loans.
The Democratic focus was on pain: for older Ameri- would do it better.
of restraint," he said .
Democrats. Rep. Mi~e Parker of Mi ssiss ippi was the onl y
"Our critics say once again that .we are hurting children
cans, students and low-income workers who faced reducThe full House and'Senute plan lode bate their measures Democrat to support the package in a comminee vo te
while balancing the budget," ' Rep. Cremeans said in a next week, and the partisan attack lines u.sed Friday were Wednesday.
tions in the earned income tax credit. •

JR, WGH PLAY -Eighth gracl.-rs at M~igs Junior mgh wW
perform tbree plays tonight and Saturday starting at 7:30 p.m. at

Now Open

Hours: Mon. -Fri. 9-5
Sat. 9-4 &amp; Sun. 1-4
3 1/2 miles past Southern
High School; St. Rt. 124,
·
Racine, Ohio

Details
on PllgeA2

a

- . Community calendar FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revo,ution, Friday, 1:30
p.m., Meigs County Library,
Pomeroy.

HI: -eo
Low: 6081

In a motion filed April 26. th e VSC asks the court to order the county
commiss fon to mee1 its f undi ng. requ est and issue 4n injun ction to stop the
"repeat ed in terfe rence··.wi th it s budgetary responsibilit ies.
.
The VSC claims the county com mission has "unlawfull y re~used to appro- pri ate to the( VSC) the budgelw:y fund55ubmjll!:(IJo(il) in ill:COrdam;e with lhL .
law." ·
.
"
In response to the VSC'&gt; requesl, the coun ty co mm iss ion filed Thursday a
moti on fo r sum mary judgment.
"All actions taken and dec isions made as to appropriations made by (the
&lt;ount y commission) were pursued and accomplished in good faith based upon
infonnati on avai lable to (the commission) and in accordance wilh the authority invested ... by the Ohio Revised Code," the moti on says.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . Any operating diffic ulti es or
shortfalls in the VSC' s budget
• The VSC claims the county
we re the "di rec t result of (its)
own
miscalculations, mi smancommission has "unlawfully reagement and/Or excesses and not
fused to appropriate to the (VSC)
the result of any actions or any
the budgetary funds submitted to
fai lures to act on th e part of (the
(II) In accordance with the law."
county commiss ion)," the moti on cla ims.

The VSC's req uest for manda mu s was fi led as a cross-clai m in a suit filed
by two'employees of the Veterans Service Office -director Steve Swords and
secretary Rhonda Lynch - who clain't the ir rights were violated when more
than $ 12,000 in pay raises wererevokedduring budget negotiationsearlierth is
year.
.
The VSC and county comm ission were both named as defendants in the
empl oyees' suit.
Five days before the cros.-claim was ·fi led, a judge ruled the Lawrence
Co u~t y Commission must give its county's VSC its full budget req uest and
ordered the commissioners to keep the ir hands out of the bookkeeping process.
As in Lawrence County.the two commissions are disput ing House Bill 448.
The VSC be lieve!;, the bill, signed into law last Jul y, req uires the county
.·ommissio n to give it a budget equal til one ha lf a mill.
~ ·----~- ..... 4-.-

-

hearS mixed
opinions on
bond issue

By KEVIN KELLY I
Times-Sentinel Staff
· GALLIPOLIS - Spl it opi nions on the need for a new
hi gh schoo l in the Gall iaCou nty Local Sc hool District are
not leaving Board of Education President David Woodall
with an optimistic outlook on passing a bond issue any-_
~im e soon.
"From wh at ! hear, I get people
who are strongly for it and strongly
against it." WoodaJI said. "It' s like
·they' re choosing'up sides."
The board is wei ghing th e po,.
sibility of placing an issue for a
new building to replace Ri ve r
Valley 1-ligh School on the fa ll
ballot.
Whi le Woodall said "t here'
more support fora new hig h" hool
now than before." ju&lt;t a' many
people are telli ng him they wi ll vote against the i"ue.
Woodal l's conclusions come from hi, own con tacts and
a series of public participation meeti ngs in which the new
hi gh school conce pt was a major topic.
Last week. the board hired two Columbus architectural
firms to prepare plans for a bu ilding program in ca&gt;e ihe
issue goes- to vmers-.
"Preparation is important." Woodall 'aid. "It 's not so
mu~h the expec tation of it pa»i ng. but to be prepared if it
does "
'
At I he meeti ngs. the board learned that a new school
would have . to be mdre i:entrall)-locntcd - ideally on
propeny withm the d"tnct near Rodney - if it were io
gain favor with vmt:r"i.

In addttton. \he board belie1e' that a nev. 'Chool would
have to be buill \OOn a!\ the long a.., th~ tax valuation on the
county ·.., two power plant-. remam"i the 'arne .
Woodall !\aid he underMand'i nppo ... ition to a bond i~su~

News capsules

Continued on page A2

GOOD MORNING

Voter option: 'None
of these candidates'
DA VTON, Ohio (AP)- A proposal by a stale
senator would give Ohioans the chance to

show what they think about all !he candidates
listed on l~elr ballot
She wants to create the option " None of.

These Candidates."
'
Sen. Rhine McLin, D·Dayton, said she will
lntrqduce leglalatlon lhhls&amp;ssion givlng.v.o.terJI
the alternative.
'
"We're still not genlng people out to vote
because maybe they don'lllke any of the char·
acters they can vote for." she said .. " I know

there have been times when I've gone to. polls
and would like to have said 'Nobody.' "
Nevada hao had such a tawslnce1975."None
of These Candidates" appears on all Nevada
primary and general election ballots lor atat•
wide executive offices and forr preside ntial

rac.es.
However, If " None" gets the most votes in a
race in Nevada, the c::1ndldate receiving the

moat vote a wins the election. Mclin' a bill would

.be similar and Would affect hJderal, state and
county races.

Former Gov. RlchardCalestesuggestedsuch
an option when he left office In 1990, but it has
never been formally proposed.

Summer gas prices expected
to be 5 cents higher this year
WASHI NGTON iAPl ~ Gasol ine prices will be on average
a nickel higher and supplies may be tighter thi' ,ummer than a
~«or ago as more American; take to the road. the Energy
Dep,~rt ment ~aid Friday .
Whi le supplies arc exp.:c1cd to be adequate, the government
'aid this 'ummer the ga&gt;olinc market wi ll be marked hy '')llore
uncertain ty.and com~k)(itf' than usual.
.
. .
An expected record summer demand, lower &gt;l&lt;&gt;&lt;b and introducti-on at the beginning of the year of a cleaner burning
· ·rclomlUiated" gasol me across about a third of the market, will
c&lt;&gt;tttpltc,\te matters, 'aid the Energy Information Administration .

The agency predicted that ga,olinc price&gt; would average
a gallon nalionwtde through September, five cents higher
than 1,1..,1 -.ummcr.
' Le&gt;&lt; than half of the oncrea'c wa' attnt&gt;uted to the introdwction
of reformulated ga~oline in area~ w1th . . eriou'l smog problems

Today's Times-Seniinel ·
19 Sections· 196 Pag••

Business
Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Edit oria l'

Dt
82&amp;3
D3-7
ln&gt;ert

Local

A3
A6
Cl -8
Bl

A4

Obitu aries
Sports
Along t he River
Weather

t!X1\L

"Buoyed by tpcrea'e' in real iJ&lt;'"Onal dt&gt;po;al income.
highwa) travel acti"t) tl prOJected to be 2.8 percent hog her than
las\ ye;\r" with ga&gt;olone demand approaching 8 million barreb
a day in the July-September p.:riod. a 17-year high . said the
af!ency.

Columns
J ack Anderson
FredCrow
Bob HoeOich
Jim Sands

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Mosl auto parts 'hops nc,er. sJ" il
coming: Sudden ly, the Legislature blackli."ed many of the bu~s . lend·
ers, hoods and doors in their garages.
A new state law requires auto body shops to use manufacturer'' parts v. hen
repairi ng the exteriors of newer vehicles, effectively dming b&gt; expensive
replacement parts carried by many shops out of the mar~ct.
The Wes( Virginia law, and another like it in Rhode bland. have outmged
an unlikely coa lition of insurance companie:\ and con~umer group~ . which
accu_se the automobi le industry oftrying to build a monopol) on the lucrative

I
.~

M
·M
~

Ill

Consumer groups, insurance companies unite against new state law
~ra~h

pans market.
The btll's main sponso~ was state Sen . Joe Mnnchin. D-Ma;ion, whose

J 996 gubematortal campatgn has recetved at least $11,000 from car dealers.
Cnttcs say the resultofthe law will be higherco;t~ to tn\urancecorn antes
and . ultomately, the CQnsumer.
p
'}'hese jaws ar.e anti·C~mpetttive and don't do the consumer any good at
all . satd John_Eager:.dtre.ctor of claim; at the f&lt;latoonal A%ociation of
Independent Insurers. We re really talktng about a chance for the marketplace to genemte the best price ."

''

r

Al

$1 . ~~

..

,.

�•

PllgeA2•, ' .........

allwl

Plague bacteria vials
found in Ohioan's car

OHIO Weather
Sund~. Mayl4
,.,.fcnca

Acca-\\'

Sunday, Mlj 14,18815

Pomeroy • Middleport• Gllllpolla, OH • Point P1eaant, WV

MICH.

•

IToledo I 83- I

Inc.

-·Expect Mother-'s Day to be ·
wet, warm, stormy _at times

~ock .P roject forges ahead
· Continued from page A1
set a July deadline, she added.
· :Plans for the 30-by-1 0-foot-wide
alum inum dock need to be approved
by the Anny Corps of Engineers, she
said.
"Puhlic bidding for thi &lt;dock should
begin within two weeks, according.to
TnMell.
The preliminary proposal from a
dock compa&lt;&gt;y ·was used as the basis
fortheestimatessubmitted.tothe state.
Tru&lt;&gt;cil suid. Theproject' scostshould

The plans have already been sub·
mined to the Ohio Department of
Transportation for approval, she said.
The village will be able to reach its
· match, including in-kind labor per'
formed by the village . .
In February.donors from across the
county helped save the dock launch·
ing facility by ral.sing about $6,500.
the county commissioners pledged
· another $10,000 and the village will
contribute village labor, Middleport
·Mayor Dewey Horton said.

near thi s estimate.

The englneenlf!f contra~:t for the··
project has already been awarded, the
grants coordinator said, noting that
the offi ce reques1ed a draw down to
begin. the project.

·- . BURLINGHAM

Col. Dale and John Van Reetb .
The honor guard of FeeneyO'Brien,
S. Army (Ret.) of Cassopolis, Mtcb., will be speaker at Bennett Post 128, American
the 1051b annual Memorial Day Legion, Middleport, will p"llrliciobservance at the Burlingham pa te in the ~emetery progum,
Cemetery. 1:30 p.m. on Monday, which will include a gun salute. ·
Recognitions will include the
May 29 .•
awarding
of the Bungtown Good
Music for the celebration will be
Neighbor
Awanl.
provided by Frank 0' Brien, banjo,
, Dale Colburn will be master of
and Joe Colburn, pianist; bolb of
ceremonies.
Columbus; Joe Wbite, bass; and
Beginning at 11 a.m., a smorDenver Rice, guitar. Singing at the
gasbord
dinner will be served by
The county commissioners origi- observance will be the Middleport the Modem Woodmen of America
Church of Christ quartet com~~
llally committed $26,KOO. -·
of Rice, AI Hartson, Mike Wilfong · at the ball In Burlingham.
The projec t is slated at about
$142,800. But with village lab9r.the
project could be ~educed to about
$120.000. Horton said.

q

Continued from page A 1

eoch

S und :~y.

815 Third Avr. ..

Post Office.
Member ;. The Auoci~:u ed Press, Wid the Ohio
Newspaper AAsodntion
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No s ub~ c npt 1 on&lt;; by m~u l pcmuu.e d m nreas

where motor canier ,Crvice
The Sund01y

SUIIC Highway Patrol reported.
.
PbtD S. UoroeJr., 17, 4S Redwood Drive, Gallipolis, and Ray A.
Cox, 16, 1691 Turkey Run Road, Cbesbire, were not treated at the
scene, the palro1 said.
According to lbe }1alrol, Unroe was soulbboQnd, 182 feet south
or Addison Township ROIIII 325 (Nibert) at 4:30 am. wben bls ear
failed to negotiate a left curve, went off the rigbt side of the road,
Slrudc a tree and overturned.
. The car was severely damaged, according to tbe report. Unroe
was C!red for failure to control and operating after uodeptge con-

Wash tub theft reported

i~

:lVailable

umcs-Scntinel will not be respon-

sible for mch·anct paymenu made to carrieB.
Daily and Sunday

"'"IL SUDSCRIPTIONS-lruideG•ItiaCounty

,

13W« ks......•..... ........,....... ....................l ,H. 92

26 Week ~ ...... , ............... ...... ,............... , .. $47.06

l2 We&lt;:k, ............................................... .S92.56
Rl.tu Out,tide Gallla County

I) Week•--······················ .. ········•······ .. ···; .. $25 6 1

26Wcoks ................................................S49.66

Gallipolis City Police were infOIDicd Friday

!bat a 30-gallon wash tub owned by Thelma-Patterson, 120 Slate St,
was stolen from ber residence sometime between May 7 and Friday.
The incident is under investigation.

Meigs man held for Marines
GAU.IPOLJS- Booked into tbe GalUa County Jail at 2:19a.m.
~atuJ:day was Mart E. Taylor, 21, Second Stree~ Syracuse. Taylor
. ts_bemg held for the U.S . Mari!IC Cotps on a charge of being absent
·

WASHINGTON- U.S. Rep. Frank Cremeans, R-Gallipolis, is
currently accepting applications for nomination to U.S. service
academies, with applications available at Cremeans' Hillsboro district office.

Candidate application packets contain information and forms. •
Candidates completing applicatioos wiD be reviewed and those wbo
meet minimum entrance standards 'established by the academies wiD
be invired to interview. The ~dline for completed appUcations is
Nov. 15.
·
.
. Applicants mnst be U.S. citizens, a resident of the Sixth Congressional District. at least 17 years old but not more than 22 by
July 1, 1996, and a high school graduate with bigb academic standing. .Also considered are leadership, athletics, community service
class rank, grade point average and ACT or SAT scores.
'
Those interesred may obtain additional information from the district office at 301 N. HighS\.• Hillsboro Obio 45133 (513)-3938688.
.

Council sets June meeting date

Engineer slates road closing·

Gallia County Court News
JOI!eJib L. Cain, judxe.

Divorce
Linda S. and Roger R. Oliva,
both or 2672 State Route 775, Gallipolis.

.I

Municipal
WUUam S. Medley, judge.
Criminal
Rolrert W. Martin. 26. 810

Fourth Ave., Gallipolis, SlOO plus
court costs for disorderly condUCL
DUI
Dennis W. Lucy, 4(i()FirstAve.,
Gallipolis, $450plus court costs, six ,
months in jail (aU but 90 days suspended), one year probation and a •
six-month license suspension.
HelbertR. Clonch, 42,18 Quail
Creek Extension, GaUiJlolis, $450
.
plus court costs for om reduced to
rectlessopetalioo due 10 low breathalyzer test results.

PHONE
Some Restrictions
Apply

Hurr;v, Limited Time Offer!

K Classic of .West Virginia·

The 4th Annual Kmart Classic of West Virginia, one of
the mid- I'!80s. The district·h·as twice
America's biggest international cycling events, will begin on May
gone to the state loan fund and i'
23, rain or shine.·
Th ·
·'
Venues:
expected to emerge from debt ne&lt;t
IS challengtng Tour de .
May
23,
Wheeling:
7.7 miles of
month .
France
style
btcycle
race
starts
tn
the
city's twioting roadwavs.
. "I've been given every reason unWheeling and will take world class vieWiJlg stations, vendors, lottery
der the sun for not supporting a bond
cyclists
and Olympic. hopefuls
ticl&lt;etgiveaways.
.
issue. partl y becau se there are people
through some of the most sceni~
May 24, Clarksburg: 100-~tle
' who are bitter about how we lost. all
h.
·
.
'
roller coaster nde from Wheeling,
. {hal money i~ 1985 and.are askiog.
t9uery ticl&lt;et giveaways.
1stoncand mountatnous parts of
'why didn't the board foresee thi s?"' • West Vtrg1n1a before ending with a
May 25, Charleston ·
Wkodall s at' d.
v
spectacular 100-mile road race in
May 26, Beckley ·
If a bond issue passes, an operating
and
aroun~ Martinsburg . '
May 27,Lewlsburg/Eiklns
levy will likely rollow lO pay for new
For more information, phone:
May 28 • Martinsburg
equtpment and fa cilities. Woodall ·
percent loss of that tax revenue since

....

·®MOTORoLA

..

CALL TOLL FREE 1·800·277·8212
UNITED STATES

CELLULARM
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•

.MOBILE TELEPHONE NETWQRK

NORTHSTAR SATELLITE

1 800 CALL WVA
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. 20:_:'a~id~------=---~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~JIIg;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

HOLZE,R.
HEALTH
HOTLINE

From s·a.m. to 11 p.m., seven da.ys a week,
a specially trained. R.N. is on duty to answer
your health care questions.
• ·Illness or Injury
• Physician Referral

'

1-800-462-5255
Another community sefllice of the Holr,er Medical Center,
100 Jaclc$on Pike, Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563
\
•

• Health Care E~ents
.-

• Support Groups

Two' inju,red in.Meigs crash

.

Pol.ice issue jive citations

bG

~--

is rooted in dislike of additional taxes,
es pecially for peopl e on fixed or low
incomes. AI the same time, a campaign to pass the issue would have to
c~mbat mistruSI of how the district .
has handled 1ts money, he added.
While slill considered one of Ohio's
wealthiest di slriciS because of lhe
power plant valuation. Gallia Local ·
has stru ggled with a state-imposed 30

Roadside break set for holiday

.

Applications being accepted

Common Pleas

, By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News Starr
.
TUPPERS PLAINS -,The
GALLIPOLIS - Free athletic physicals will be offered by tbe
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
GaUia County Health Department on Saturday, May 20 in the basement of tbe courtbouse.
~
District project is on target for consttuctlon lhis October. said Sewer .
Sllld!:niS plalininJ to undergo a physical must
the pre'-physiBoard President Lindsey Lyons.
cal screening at tbeir scbool completed before May"20.
The $2.6 miUioo lagoon system
High sc:bool students in tbe ·Gallia County Local Scbools will
should be complered within a year
bave physicals at 8:30 a.m., and Gallia Local elementary students
of iiS start, Lyons said.
arc scheduled for 9 am. Physicals fbr Gallipolis City Schools stuThen, more than 20 years in
dellts arc 9:30a.m.
building bans impo~ by the Ohio
Students arc asked to enter tbe courthouse lhlough rbe jail door
Environmental Protection Agency
In the alley behind tbe courtbouse.
For more information. contact the school nurse or the health
on 'tuppers Plains will end, Lyons
dcparlment at 446-4612, extension 292.
said. The state stopped all construction·near the community because of
potential health hazards from runoff sewage.
GALLIPOLIS -Motorists disobeying Ohio's railroad crossing
The sew~ dislrict includes 200
laws wiD be targellid Ibis week in a statewide enforcement program
households 'a balf-mile from the
to reduce injuries and fatalities at crossings, said Lt. Dan Gibson,
intersection of state Routes 681 and
cOIDIJllinder of the Gallia-Meigs Post of the Staie Highway Patrol.
7.
Operation Lifesaver wiD also feature infonnation and education
Currently, engineers arc prepar10 belJ1 cut the nwnber of coUisions, Gibson added.
ing the final plans for the project,
· Ob10 led the nation In the reduction of crossing aasbes and fatalLyons said.
ilies in 1994, Gibson said. During lbe year, 37 people were killed
Bidding is set for the middle of
out of 216 car-train crasbes, "a significant reduction from 1993 but
August, be added.. ·
sliD an unacceptably high toU," be added . .
The sewer board met with two
Officers on trains, in tbe air and along the traclcs wiD monitor
property owners Ibis week to distrain roptes an\1 issue citations to motorists .violating rbe law, Qih'cuss two sites for the sewage lift
son said. · ·
,
·
stations, Lyons said. Originally, the
district's plans included four lift
stations but only two were needed.
Once the sites are pinpointed
RIO GRANDE - A roadside rest coffee break will be set up
and options are signed for the land;
Memorial Day weekend by Gallia County Vietnam Vercrans Chapsurveying will start, Lyons added.
ter #709 at the westbound state rest stop on U.S. 35, two miles east
The stations wut likely be located
of Rio Grande. ·
off S R 681 east and west or the
The break will be operlued from 6 p.m. Friday, May 26 until
town.
midnight Monday, May 29. The VVA announced it willbe contactLocated on low-lying areas,
ing local businesses for donations in the near future.
these SO-foot-by-50-foot pump
sites will lift the sewage to points
where they can feed by gravity to
the lagoon, be added. This lagoon
RIO GRANDE - The regulat meeting of Rio Grande Village _ wiD be located a half-mile west of
Council for June bas been changed to Thursday, June I at 7 p.m. in
Tuppers Plains.
the Rio Grande Municipal Building, Clerk-Treasurer Marva Peck
Tbe easement acquisition prosaid.
. cess is under way, Lyons added.
Sewer district attorney Jobn
Lentes has been working on property descriptions, and be said signaWA1ERLOO- Walnut Township Road 180 (Ealcman) will ]?e
tures from owners will be collected
closed at 8 a.m. Monday so lbe Gallia County Highway Department
beginning next week. Easements
can replace a deficient one-lane bridge, County Engineer Joseph
should
be signed within 30 days
Leach said.
after
receiving
the paperwork in the
The bridge is two-tenths of a mile east of the intersection . with
mail.
State Route 141. Local traffic sbould use other county and township
Residents need to ·sign their
roads as detours, Leach said.
..
forms
in the presence of a notary
Weathei permitting, the road will 'oo reopened on Friday, June 2,
and
a
wimess.
If property owners
he added..
·
have ques.tions, lbey should contac~ •
his office, Lentes said.
'
"At some point, we may actually send pcop_le out to people's
DARWIN - A Chester woman was in fair condition Saturday in
homes,''
Lentes added. "We'll also
University Hospital, Columbus, .with injuries received in a onebold a meeting at the fare bouse."
vehicle accident Friday on County Road 18 (Kingsbury).
·
Tl)is meeting will likely not
Joann McClintock was transported from the scene by LifeFlight
occur
until 10 a.m. June 13, Lentes
foDowing lbe 6:55 p.m. wreclc, the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
added.
Highway Patrol Highway Patrol reported .
Easements will only be needed
McClintock was a passenger in a Jeep driven by Jack R. Whiteif
.customers
do not install their
man, 37, 47569 Sbowater Road, Chester, that was eastbound, 2.7
own lines, he added·. Most lines
miles west of U.S. 33, wben Whiteman lost control, went off the
should run behind the homes.
road and struck an embankment. The Jeep then overturned, the
Currently, tapping fees are .
patrol said. ·
expected to be $2,000 per houseWhiteman was also injured and was taken by the Meigs EMS to
hold, be added.
Veterans Memorial Hospital, where be was treated and released.
To defray the cost, the district is
· The Jeep was moderately damaged ·and the accident remains
seeking
a $270,000 grant from the
under 1nve&amp;tigation, the patrol said. ·
·
Appalachian Regional Counci.l,
Lentes said. Additionally, the board
is searching for $500,000 during
GALLIPOUS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police Friday were
the next round of the county'·s
Nina Hill, 21, Gallia Hotel, disorderly after warning; Georg_e H.
Community
Developm ent Block
Thompson, 36, 987 Little Kyger Road, Cheshire, and Apnl G.
Grant
funding
.
Adkins 31 162 Woodland Dri'Ve, Gallipolis, eacb for a red hght
Tbe
project
has bee n pledged
violati~n; Linda G. Dewitt, 40, Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., driving
more than $1.2-million in state
under suspension and counterfeit license plate; and Stephen M.
money.
Hawkins, 21, 371 Quail Creek Drive. Gallipolis, stop sign violation.
In July, lbe board sbould hear
from
the Fanners' Home AdminisEditor's note: Names and addresses are printed as they
tration
concerning its grant applicaappear on official reports. All newsworthy actiom wUI be pubtion.
he
added.
lished without exception.
FmHA will likely provide a .40
percent gr~t.

rs' service to VMH

Patrol targets crossing violations

sumption.

It's Wild! It's Wonderful!
It's World Class!

(USPS 525-800)

Onc W~ k .

ha-M~igs Post of tbe

May 23-28, 1995

Bond issue
Ga!hpolis, Ohio , by the Ohio VaUcy Publishing
CompanyiMulli mediQ, Inc &amp;cond clau postage pil.ld at Oalh pohs, Ot11o 4563 1. Entered as
second clau m:uh n@ maner ot P~meroy. Ohio,

A one-car a-ash early Saturday on COWity Road

~1 (Reese Hollow) left two area teenagers sDgbdy injured, tbe Gal-

wttboutleave, according to jail records.

job ne~rs
b_u ilding
phase ..

Sunday T'liDCs-Sentinel/A3

have

Crash injures GaUia teenagers

GALLIPOLIS -

Regional
TP sewer·· 80

Athletic physicals slaJed May 20

ceremony.

Centerville starts planning
11th bean dinner, parade ·

Speaker set for annual ·
Burlingham observation

GALLIPOUS - "Hands Amiss tbe River; CelcbrBiinJ Obio
River Heritage" will be lbeme of Ibis year's Fourth of July parade in
Gallipolis, !be Ga1lla County Chamber of Commetee announced
1bc ~ wbkb begins at 11 a.m., is part of tbe 1110ual River
Recreation ~al at tbe city parkfront The parade lineup baa bec:n
ICt for 10-Lm.
For more infOIIIUIIioo, contact tbe chamber at 446-0596.

'

ADDISON -

/,

July 4 parade theme announced

RIO GRANDE -lbc 11101111 -a- catitk:a1e wemooy for 1be
Gallia-Jachoo.Vinton Joint Vc- MioJDII Sc:boo1 District bas \leal SCI
for 'Illunday, May 25 at 6:30 p.m. in lbe ampllitbealrc at BuCkeye
Hilla Calm- Center. .
.
In case of. rain, the cmmooy wiD be moved 10 L yne' Celller at
tbe UDivenity or Rio Grande.
BHCC siUdeots will receive a vocalional certifiCate ot COIQI)Ietion and a Career Passpc:xt. 1bc Career Passport is a aedelllialing
tool that documents specific occupational, academic and employability sicilia of studeots completina a secmdary vocational education
prognm in Oltio.
Scbolarsbips and other special awards will be presenred at tbe

ply OOIIIJIIIIY.
blllld Friday lflcl"
F!JIIk Simione, lbe COIIIpllly' 1
lllree viala ~.,......... pDpe.. . . •vic:e praldent ot opetalions, said
ria wae foalld In Ills pouessioa. lbe oonpufit orpnilllllm provides
lbe sdenlltic: c;qnmooily with biollltboriliea lllid.
' Llny Wayae Harri&amp;, 43, ofl.lll- logical refeRDCIC cullules.
The culture sent to Harris is a
casu:r, plea (WI""' -:ent to' m:eiving stolen. property. He wu pal.bogen, a bacterium tbat causes
rtl=ecl afler JIOIIinB $1,500 qllll bubooic plague. Different requirebood IIIII 111 eddidcwwl $2,500 mc- ments e~~;ilt for sendin1 differcat
ognizancc bond in Lanc:a1tcr C:ui!Urcl, Simiooe aald, and Harris
MUDiclJIII Court: Jooae Cbris Mw- reprcae~~llid bimself 11 a mia:obtoldn ICbecluled I pldimiDary bearing oglst having lbe qualification• to
receive lbe baCteria.
for May 19.
Harris a11o told WBNS be is a
County Prolccutor David 1..111defeld said die clwge wu filed mlcrobiologisL
"Fortunately Federal Express
because Harris is accused ot Ullng
deception to obtaiD lbe bacteria dido 'I gel it to bim in lime, and be
called and complaloed," Simiollc
from a M.-ylaad Clllllpany.
1 aKietcld said be anlicipatel filsaid. The penon wbo look Hanil'
ing addilionll dlqes oo Mooday. call spoke with him and was alerted
During a searc:b executed Friday, lbat Hanilllllght 1101 be as lalowlpolice confiscated blasting caps edgeable as be bad led rbe compaand otbcr oMniii!ITI from Hanis' ny to believe.
llomc.
l'olice immediately began an
FBI agc:uu Interviewed Hanis investigation. Shortly after midon Friday and were considering night early Friday, tbey obtained a
presenting federal charges for 1s~b warrant and impounded
review to lhe U.S. district au&amp;r- Harris' car, wbere tbe vials allegedney' s office in Columbus. ·
ly were found. Landefeld said Ohio
'!1!!l EagkoGaz.eltt reponed Fri- Department of Health oflicials took
day that tbe inveatigation started tbe vials for storage 111 rbeir faciliThursday night after local bealdl ties.
officials learned Harris bad purThe newspaper said Hanis prochased lbe vials for ~300 from vided documentation to tbe MaryAmerican Type CUlture Collection, land company saying be was a
·
. Rockville, Md., a biomedical sup- microbiologist.

will

Tri-County Briefs:

BHCC.certijicaJe ceremony set

EI 1111

By The Associated Preas
.
Weather forecast:
Temperatures more 'typical of
Sunday...Thunderstorms likely
June are expected across Ohio east. Mostly· cloudy with a chance
through lbe weekend. Afternoon of showers and lbunderstorms
highs
climb into the 70s to west. Breezy and warm. Highs 80
lower 80s statewide Sunday.
to 85.
·
·
Cloudiness was xradually
Monday.. .Fau.
· Lows m
· tbe 50s,
increased across lbe state from Higbs 65to 75.
CENTERVILLE- Prepara- tprs' group; life-saving procedures
west 10 east Saturday. Showers and
Extended forecast: •
lions bave started on tbe 11th annu- by Grant Medical Center's LifelbunderstonnS were a threat across
Tuesday ... Fair. _Lows 45 to 55. at be d"
r and arade spoo
belicopter based at WeUston,
while the remainder of tbe Higbs 65 to 75.
mneCenterville
P Volunteer• Flight
lbe ·-·•
w~
soredan
by tbe
and a water ball figbt by area fare
state was expected to generally
Wednesday ... Fair. Low 50 to FueDepartment,oneoftbeeveufs dcparlments.
.m nain dry.
55. Highs in tbe 70s.
organizers said.
Units far rbe parade are to gath· Thunderstorms were expecred
Th
d • lb
lbi
er
at
tbe old Cenrerville Elementary
Around the natlon
e para e s eme
s year
Sunday over eastern Ohio, where
will be the "Red, White and Blue School no later than 10:30 a.m. on
someoftbe stormsmay ·be severe.
Itwascoldandralnylnmucbof Salute to Veterans," said Ann tbe day of tbe parade, Daniels said.
Over western Ohio, lbe threat of the West Saturday, with snow Daniels, wbo added tbat tbe parade
The parade is tentatively schedshowers and thunderstorms will falling in th~ Rockies· and Sierra and bean dinner arc scheduled for uled to lnclude Chester Boster, the
end by early afternoon as a cold Neyada. RaiD spre~d from tbe , Saturday, May 27.
oldest living veteran in CentCrville,
front moves east or lbe area.
Plams to the Appalacb1ans.
·
The parade begins at 11 a.m. and organizers are working on
. Skie,a remained mostly clear
Record rainfall was recorded and worlcs It way through tbe vll- seeking surviving veterans from
tbrougbout the early Saturday from Montana to Uta!). There was a tage to the Community Park, where · World War I. · ·
hours across most or·Obio, with chance of flooding as mountain . beansoupwillbeservedfromcaul·
More Information on entering
some bigb clouds reported. snowment began to run across tbe drons. Other concessions, including units in lbe parade can be obtained
Predawn tempcramres ranged from saturaSted ~D
. d.
fM
sausage sandwiches., will be by calling Daniels at 245-5635. ·
tbe upper 40s to lower 50s.
now oe a~ss parts o _on- offered.
In addition to live entenainment
The .cecord bigb for Saturday tana and_Wyonung and m the btgb; .
At lbe part, visitors will see at the dinner, WKOV -FM of Jackwas 88 in 1982; the record low 35 er elevations of Colorado.
demonstrations of a Civil War sol- son is scheduled to do a live broad- ·
in 1946.
It was unusually cold in the diet's life by tbe 9lst OVI re-enac- cast.
Sunrise Sunday at 6:18a.m., West. Redding, Calif., tied the
sunset
at 8:38 p.m.
·
record wilb 42 degrees..
.

Publ u h ~: d

Are.p News in Brief:

LANCASTER (AP) - A -

Wll ,..,.

May 14,1995

.

.

Tbree employees at Veterans Memorial Hospital had a combined 80 years or service tbe hos·
pital as of Friday when employee service awards were presented
part of National Hospital
Week. At left, Rhonda Daiky, R.N., .ISN,.Jiirulllr of nursing, prosents_jl Jlh.year service ~ward Ill
Administrator Scott Lucas • .Recelvl"'l a1"Jlrds for 15 years of sen lee each were Doris lhle, adminIstrative assistant, and James DaUey, bead oftbe purchasing department.

as

Commissioners approve request
to make shortcut one-way road
By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
.
LONG BOTTOM - Motorists
using Sand Hili Cemetery Road as
a shortcut may soon find themselves driving the wrong way.
Tbe Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Friday agreed to
make the popular Olive Township
shortcut near Long Bottom into a
one-way road. The road, less than a·
half-mile long, is often used by
local drivers 3.1 a shortcut between
state routes 248 and 124.·
County Engineer Robert Eason
showed commissioners a letter
from the Sand Hill Cemetery Board
of Trustees requesting the action.
At his request, the commission
agreed to make it a one-way road,
barring motorists from using it to
reach 124 from 248.
Motorists often enter the road
from 248 at a higb rate or speed,
Eason said. Signs marking the
change have been ordered and will
be installed SIJOn, Eason added.
Meigs currently has a single
one-way road on its county road
system - a shon section of Hiland
Road behind Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
"n addition, the commission
apProved Eason's request to solicit
bids for a new or used portable
s~reening plant for separating
grades of rock and gravel at the
county gravel pit.
Bids were opened on a project
to construct a new building for the
Scipio Township Volunteer Fire
Department. Home Creek Enterprises and Precision Builders submitted: bids for $21,149 and
$14,200, respectively.·
Commissioners tabled awarding
or the bid pending review by Scipio
Township officials.
Two Meigs residents were recognized by the board and county .

economic development chief Julia Society as the second half of 'the
Houdasbelt-Thornion for assisting · group's 1995 appropriation or
·the Meigs Economic Development $8,000.
Office.
Dana Aldridge of Racine and
Paul Lambert of Rutland were
• Met with Park Director Mary
commended for their assistance in
developing a .computer system for Pow~U •on a five-year plan for the
the office. According 10 a letter park district. Powell said the dis·
signed by commissioners and lrict plans on expanding its current
Thornton, the IWO saved the county acu vmes and obtaining more input
nearly $400 by providing technical from young people in the county.
services.
In other business, commission- · • Paid weekly bills of
ers:
$238,578 .52, consisting of 262 .
• Noted two Hobson area resi- entries.
'
dents intend to request a public .
.
hearing in opposition to a proposed
Present were Commission Presi- .
liquor license for TNT Pit Stop, dent Fred Hoffinan, Vice President
Hobson.
Janet Howard Tackett, Commis• Approved releasing $4,000 to sioner Robert Harten bach and .
lbe Meigs Pioneer and Historical Clerk Gloria Kloes.

.

The State Theatre
523 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-6575
has been restored and is open for movies every
njght at 7:30 plus a 2 pm matinee on Sunday. When
we have a stage show; there is no movie that night.
Watch local papers, radio and local cable news for
stage shows. The Theatre is available for meetings
movies, school outings, conventions, churches,
employee fun cti ons or activities that require a large
comfortable auditorium . For more information call
Lynn Durst; 304-675-2465 or Paul Wood, 304-6753742.

•

•

•'

&gt;

Is having an
ANNIVE-RSARY

County board
OK$ calendar:
POMEROY
The Meigs
County Board of Education recently adopted its calendar for 1995-96,
according to Treasurer Carol,e
""6illcey.
·
'Ibe school year for nine-month
employees will begin Aug. :25.
These personnel include teachers,
speech thernpists and coordinators,
Gillcey said.
.
Eleven-month personnel begin
Aug . I. These staff members
include school psychologists and
wort study coordinators.
.
Currently, state auditors are
11uditing the county office and
should complete their work by the
lieginning of this .,veek, Gilkey
said.
: The board also hired some indi·viduals on a part-time basis to complete psycbological teSting for the
district, sbe added.
· In other action, the group
li:amed the Clllrenl funds balance is
about $99,000 out of a $1 million
l{llllual budget. Gilkey said.
· The board will participate in the
Ohio Sc:bool Bo.ards Association
workers' compensation group rating program, she said.
·
: Gilkey will attend a 1reasurer' s
~linic June 7 in Zanesville.
.
• . Those ·a ttending tbe meeung
were Presidentleff Harris, Vice
President Robert Barton, members
Howard CaldweD, 1.0. McCoy and
Jeanette Thomas, and Superinten-.
dentJobn D. Riebel Sr.

•

•

.

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Commentary

Ma t4,tm

U.N. appeases China
UNITED NATIONS -

Tbe

United Nalioos- wbicb will celcbrate Its 50th annlvenary In ()cto..
ber- could soon be dealt a worldclass jlublic rela1iooa disaster by
one of its most obr'D* mcmben.
The Pl::oplc's Republic ol China
111 Court St., . . . ftlft Olola
(614) !ltl-1156

ROBERT L WINGETJ'
Publoher
HOBART WILSON JR.
Elloalln l!dJior
•

MARGARET LEHEW
Caoltmllor

A MEMBER or lbe Alaociared Pma, lnl111d Daily Pre11
Auociallon ODd lhe Amoriclll Newapoper Pllblilbon Al100iall1111.

Lll'ITERS OF OPINION ore woloome. Tbey lllould bo loll tbao
300 wonlllona. All tetlin an 1ubject to odilill1 and mllll bo liplld witb
DilDO, llddreu and telephone number. No unaianed lotren will bo

publitbod. !.etten should bo in Jood

IIIIa,

addre11i01 iiiUOI, not

penonlli~l.

Letters to .the editor ·
.Baseballpcogram a disgr~e

·:or. Foster is no

abortion activist

By"Jack Ande•son
''
and
Michael Binstein

rants among the worst human
rights violators in the world. Yet
two DIOI)tbs before the anniversary
celebratioo, China will play bolt to
tbe U.N.'s fourth intemational con- China begged U.N. offiCials to host
ference on women. Already, the the event several years ago, thinkspecter ol boldinJ a womea's eon- ing it would boost its international
fcrenoe in a country where infanti· pfl:lilige and visibility. While interclcJe is still common has drawn national Olympic officials turned
complaints frolll' international down China's request to bost the
women's advocates.
Olympics in 2000, U.N. officials
The irony is also not lost on top obliged. Today, however, both
U.N. offiCials, some of whom have China and the U.N. privately rue
privately complained for years the decision.
·
about the U.N.'s lendency to kowChinese omcials have raised
tow to Chinese demands. While international eyebrows by moving
U.N. officials often feel no qua)ms to exclude several groups from tbe
-about rebuffing American conference: Representatives from
demands, hardly anybody says no Tibet and Taiwan, as well as Iesto China,
.
bian organizations and others
"I've advised (the secretary wbom the government considers
general) that be ,has to 11et toug~ politically unsavory have thus far
on Chma, and he believes he s been denied a seat at the table.
gQir~g til !!.av~ I!! soo~:' a clll&amp;, -~Y~ su!Jl.Iisin.tUiliJlg is not

the county teams to Iiave more
GLIM~
games for the season.
.·
The head .of tbe county baseball
PlAY~
. league waited on'making his scbedLl~
~T
uies and finally gave up when no
one contacted him. Now we cannot
play any games with tbe oounty.
We are sure that we are not the
only parents who feel Ibis way, just'
the only ones writing about it. We
think the city manager, recreation
director, city workers, city commls.sion and parentS organizations
should work together, wbicb so far
is not h!ippenlng. We hope they can
wake up and do sbmething before it
is too late. The only people getting
hun are the kids.
If tbe person running the baseball program in the city doesn't
want the job, give it up.
All the parents in the city want
are fi.elds that are kept mowed.
dragged, bleachers to· sit on, benches for the teams, decent equipment
and something other than a 1ree for
a restroom.
Who knows, maybe we can get
Cliff Wilson out of retirement.
Gary &amp; Leisa Taylor,
Concerned parents,
Did you see where Michigan
Gallipolis football coach Gary Moeller was
fired (resigned) for his conduct at
an Ann Arbor restaurant? Seems
that be and his wife were enjoying
an evening 011 the town when he
apparently bad too much to drink.
An altercation followed inside
the restaurant and subsequently
outsidt;. When the police arrived
they arrested him. The pollee
apparently
were fearful of the
By WALTER R. MEARS
of
alcohol
he bad conamount
AP Special Correspondent
•
sumed
and
drove
the
coach to the
WASHINGTON - It's been more than five months since the United
hospital
instead
of
the
jail.
Sta~ bad a fully constituted surgeon general, and nobody' s sicker for tbe
The coach·apparently refused to
lack of one. The long-running Senate struggle isn't over a job, it is about
take
a blood alcohol test and ultian issue -llbortion.
·
·mately
was cleared, bealtb·wise,
Surgeons general get a Public Health Serilice uniform, a staff of 18,
for
jail,
and in fact spent the night
and a budget of about $1 million a year to oversee. That is hardly a power
in
jail
before
bail arrived.
base. But they also get a ·platform, sometimes used with high visibility,
Was Michigan too quick to
more often not
The Joycelyn Elders profile, blunt to the point of beiUgerence, is the cause the resignation and/or firing
of coach Moeller? Should the
.·
,
exception, not tbe rule.
His Republican critics notwithstanding. Dr. Heory W. Foste~ Jr. is no administration have waited until all
abortion activist He's been a doctor who delivered babies, thousands of . the facts were obtained?
Did Coach Moeller, himself,
them, for48 years. But tbe 39 abortions he is recorded as conducting during that career are more than enough to set conservatives, and would-be instigate the resignation? Is Michigan to be congratulated for its decipresidential nominees, against him.
Republicans complain, with sound reason, of his early misstatements sive action? What did Michigan's
on' bow many be performed, and of administration blunders in handling players think? What does the pubtbe nomination afler President Clinton chose Foster on Feb. 2 to succeed lic think?
A lot of questions and not a lot
tbe ousted Dr. Elders. They say credillility will be their grounds for voting
of
answers. I supp(Jse in lime we
against bim.
will
lmoiv all the answers. Maybe
· That's cover. He is, as Sen. Nancy Kassebaum said at hearings on Fosnot.
ter's confinnation, a pawn in the political debate about abortion. To
As an aside, given the O.J. soap
ardent foes of abortion, conservative interest groups with muscle in
opera,
can you imagine his defense
Republican presidential politics, it will be a test vote.
at
a
uial?
It wasn't the booze but
Indeed, there are suggestions from that comer that Sen. Robert Dole,
lbe
butter-sauce;
01c lobster was the
the majority leader, will flunk their test if he even permits a vote. Afler
aggressqr:
I
thought!
was drinking
saying he might no~ Dole seems to be open at least to listening, although
non-alcoh.ol
beer:
an
Ohio
State fan
be clearly·will vote no.
There had been an earlier assumption that Foster's nomination was a
sure loser, that he might step aside, and. that Clinton probably wouldn't
risk the political capital to fight for him . That's changed since his confirmation testimony, in which even Dole said he'd done a pretty good job.
With five RepubliCliiiS now saying they'd vole for him, and Democrats
NEW YORK - It seems irrevsolid for conftnnation, Foster can win confmnalion, if the proceedings get erent to say 11, even blasphemous,
to that point.
but the automobile that gives so
'
much pleasure and mobility to the
American family may also help
explain the great household mystery.
That mys tery is expressed in
various ways but most often in
what seems to be a question as
eternal a~ the tides and taxes :
Wbere did ali the money go? The
question is at the source of much
household frustr:ition. Ask anyone.
The problem arises in defiance
o,f pay raises and stringent housebold budgets. The explanation is
sought willtout success in examinalion of bills for groceries, vacalions, golf, compUler software and
a hundred other expenditures.
. A belter explanation might be
nghl there under your nose, or
under the hood, so to speak. That
is, in the costs of owning and operating your car.
.
For tax purposes, for example,
the standard mileage rate is 29
cents. but the American Automobile Association pegs the true cost
at 41.2 cents a mile, a one-year
increase of 4.5 percent, or higher
even than tbe inflation rate.
The AA.A makes that estimate
on the has_JS of a well-equipped,
o medmm:pnce.d new car purchased
on credu, dnvcn 15,000 miles a
·--·~yew:..and..scheduJe~to..~ O'I(M.&lt;!.
.
over a four-year ~nod.
The AAA lSD I t_be only one
•

In my opinion, .tbe youth "basebill program In Gallipolis is a dis-.
grace.
'
Mter years of disarray, a new
person lOOk over and promised big
improvements. So far this year, tbe
ball f"lelds aR: not being mowed or
dragged by city workers at all. The
few times the fields have been
properly cared fOr wa~ by the
coaches and parents.
There are no reslrQOms at the K
of P or the Water Treabnent Plant
fields. The equipment given out to
·the coaches is a joke. Either you
!lon't have enough or It is junk.
Every child bas to pay $2Q,a piece
to play ball. What is this· money
going for? (We certainly hope it Is
not paying tbe city workers to take
Can: of the fields).
·· Also, for Ibis $20, tbe city does
not furnish any uniforms. Each
eoach has to go out and find his/ber
own sponsor for their team to buy
Sbirts, hats, etc.
: As of May 12, there were no
schedules we lrnow of and the seaSon is supposed to be starting May
22. Also, the director of the baseball program was supposed to
schedule some non-league games

aide to Secretary General Boutros
Boulros-Gbali told us.
The cUiltint "China problem,"
as it is called here, came about afta'

INTO 1liQ5? LIFE Slttus
FS&amp;ll
.LII/t V82'l MUCN
A

nu;

US .....

Ahh, sav.t old

routine.•. another
~. anothe!_'_,
1\uen~ thO\J$diN

dollars.

~~~~

·

·

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A5

~~~~an~.:..J.~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~.. ~~~~~u~-~!.~~.~-~

that these pups are being ostra- to a .toutill area far from die maio'
cized by China; it's that U.N. offi- c:onfaeace.
;
cials lbougbt it appropriate in the
"By selectiDB a lllc that kecpe
ty ol Rio Gnmdc. $6,185; Shawacc
fust ·place to let C1iiJui host eon· womea and tbelr sovemmeats
COLUMBUSProviding
day
State
U~iversity, $241,000; 0111o
ference aimed at improvinJ human apart, tbe Chinese JOYCI'IIIIICnt is
ate faellldea at Ollio's state-sup- Unlvers1ty, $89,375; aad Soulhem
t:Jghts for women around the aiobe. preveadna either mcetina from
This Is a country that once engaged succeeding," oompl•ined ~ ~
ported tmivcnltlcs and colleges is a State Community Collese,
in heinous foot~binding and legal from the Manila·based Women I
way to provide hiJher education to $90,000.
,
more students, a member of the
concubinage, and Is not yet out of Media Circle Foundatioq to
Ohio BOifd of.,.__,. ta said.
• 'What worriea me IS not juat
the dark ages wben It comes lp Boutros-Gbali.
.
.
...,.....
th
d
·
k
b
women's ri&amp;bts.
Conference planners In New
·"The absence of child care is ~~tt~':c;!!~;~ ~..~
At .tbe moment, behind-the· York have told our associate DaleJ
the bllilcr" for nontraditlooalstu' Laniet said.
scenes bickering centers on the Van Alta that the Chinese are alsll
deots wbo want to enroll in Ohio's
conference sile for representatives trying to come up with "red-tape;:
tiolversitlcs, Regent Liz Lanier said
She sal!! child care servla:s also
from Non-Governmental Qrzaniza- reasans" wby a few antl·abonlon;
J;rlda)'. In many cases it Is a belp auract new faculty members.
lions. Traditionally, these groups NGO groups cannot alteqd. The;
sreater barrier than risloj toitioo
Chancellor Elaine Haimon
help official representatives from ChineiO practice abortion routinelr.
sbe said.
·' . called the appropriation - which
each country with information and . as part of;;.&amp;::mment's effort
· .
.·
was half ofthe iotai req~ted As part of an oosomg effort ·to "a huge ·step altead" in the effort
support. .Some NGO represenra- to control
growth.
addreA the issue,·the board on Fri- to provide quiility child cll'e to all
tiv~ serve on official delegations
As the conference dale draws·
•y approved spending $2 millloo state-supported universities
as well.
.
closer, complaints about China's••
· fOt dlild care at 18 mace state tmi•
Banning NGO representatives human rigps record willlltely1
vcnlties
and
coUeges.
The
approShe
~
the
prosram
started
six
from China would be akin to hav- liecome more stridenL Yet another •
prlation
brinJII
to
42
the
number
or
years
ago
and
has
cost
$4.5
millioo
· ing denied the Sima Club a place recent episode is a lellinl mnindel',
campuses !hal have Ot are planning so far.
at tbe table at the Rio de Janeiro of China's thin-skinned ways of-'
cbild care facilities.
The schools receiving the grants
earth summit in 1992. China agreed dealing w!tb dissent. .
:·•
will
be required to match tbe funds.
10 admit the groups, but now has . Ian Williams, the respected
conveniently discovered the central chief !Jf.tbe U.N. C!l"espondents .
Beijing stadiam where they wen: to AsSOCiatiOn, was invt'!"lto ~
bave met is sUucturally-unsound. the Generai.Assembly s Coaumt~
Thus the NGOs have.bccil shunled. on lnfonnallon May S. He used the ,
'
.
. ClOSed-door OCCIIIOn w c:lllde !Mr '~11~
· U.N. for refusing to ailow a promi-:
nent Chinese dissident to address : ·
·the U.N.C.A., and for revbkina the •
CHARLESTON-· The state Health Care Cost Authority rejectcredentials of two Taiwanese jour- :
ed a Huntington hospital's request for a 3 perceot ratelocrease, sayDILUsts.
·
.
•
ing it oven:barged patients last year.
·
Williams' invective drew quick.
·
The board said Cabell Huntington Hospital exceeded its average
rebuke from Chinese offiCials, who :
' · OU'~Jlltieot charge by $6.12. Chairman Larry Fizer said Thursday the
protested May 8 that .Williams:
· hospital w,as asked to reconcile tbe difference in amounts.
"abused the bospitahty of the.
·
The hospital asked for an average outpatient charge of $244.51.
member states," adding that his :
The agency limited that to $229.96, or 1.7 percent more than the
actions ''constitute agross ioterfer-.
$226.12 per patient collected in 1994.
ence in the internal affairs" of:
China. Unforlunalely, the concept :
of free speech has yet to enter the •
vocabulaty of China's U.N. repre-;
CHARLESTON - The state agency that provides insurance.
sentatives.
~
coverage foc governmental units and nonprofit groups said it will
. Perhaps the embarrassing '
increase its premiums July I to help erase a $67 million long-term
appeasement of China - as typi- ~
liability.
fled l!y the upcoming women's ~
The Board of Risk and Insurance Management will increase pre- •
conference - will help remind I
miwn.s an average of 17 peri:ent for state agencies, taking overall
world leaders that after SO years nf ,.
premiums to about $21.6 million in tbe fiscal year that begins July
1;
.
service, tbe U.N. has yet to live up i ·
to its own lofty ideals.
-:
Premiums for counties and cities aild nonprofit groups such as
•
Jack Anderson and Michael ;
• volunteer fire deparbnents will increase an average of 30 percent,
'I putting premiums at $31 million.
·
•·
Blostein are writers ·r or United ; .
Feature Syndicate, Inc.
Director Chuck Jones said tbe increases should help erase the
·
deficit over 15 years.
· "We want to make sure we bill appropriately Ibis year," Jones
said Thursday.
.
•

a

West Virginia Briefs: ~

the money was available.
Lanier wants child 1311 provided at the state's ranaioihg 21 camposes within the next two to three
yean. Sbe said sbe will work. with
the board
to develop a timetable for
providing money to those schools.
· Priority in funding has been·
vcn to universities thai lack child

_,, __________

sites used for classroom trabtin .
.colleges. Two-year. college~_ad
than 25,000 undergraduates older
State-supported universiuef are 79,000 students older than 27.
than 27 and 17,000age40orolder.
serving a growing number of students aged 25 to 39. Lanier said
THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL
there are few older students wbo do
not or will not have children while
in school.
·
. A regents report showed that
SS,OOO married students enrolled

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•

I

Moeller was right to resign from Michigan
came in the restaurant and I h,ad an
allergic reaction; it wasn't Coach
Moeller's pate that was under the
cop's fingernail; it was his wife's .

Fred W. Crow
fault. Hey, that is a good defense!
Only kidding. Anyway, Coach
Moeller won't get tbe Ann Arbor
"Man of the Year'' award Ibis year.
Whether we like it or no~ when
one becomes Michigan's bead football coach, that person is immediately thrust into a nationWide fish
bowl. Everyone is watching . Coach
Moeller !mows this. ·
Apparently, so docs the Michigan administration. Given the
undeniable influence Utal tootball
has on our youth and others, it
would seem that Michigan and
Coach Moeller had no other choice .
The game and il$ influence is bigger than Michigan and/or Coach
Moeller.
A coach· s conduct should be
free froin impropriety and should
be free from even U1e appearance
of impropriety. His personal behavior must comport with what is
expected. .
If we arc to believe that football
builds character and that football is
therefor~ obviously good for our
young people, how could the Uni·
vcrsity of Michigan and Coach
Moeller have aciCd '!llY differently?
Public confidence would have

'; Company to pay for cleanup

been eroded if he were allowed to
stay. His players would have lost tuition to enroll at all of its state ;
respect for bim. The University of schools? It now costs several thou- :
Michigan would have lost respect. sand dollars for each student each ,
It is exuemely difficult to regain year at state schools. Some of the :
former presidents of the state _uni- ·
respect once it is lost.
While tbe writer bas compassion versities. as professors, are making :
for anyone who makes a mistake $150,000 per year for teaching a :
and while we all have unfortunate- few hoprs of.class each week. •
l
ly committed a mistake or two1 it Hmmm!
would appear that to indeed do toat
Did you notice that Big Daddy l
Which is right after publiely embar- Wilkinson and Korey Sbinger both •
rassing himself and tbe University were -nominated and inducted into ·:
of Michigan, Coach Moeller took tbe Ohio State Hail of Fame, and a :
the higher ground.and did or agreed tree was planted in each man's •
to what was right.
horior?
·:
No one can excuse Coach
This was an outrage. In order to :
Mo.eller for his apparent conduct. qualify for Ibis honor, the athlete •
However, right for Coach Moeller should not only be a good athlete :
must bave hurt. Right for the Uni- but should be devoted to tbe uni- •
versity of Michigan must have bun. versity 100 percent, as well as :
While doing right bas hurt, it bas being a graduate of the university. l
shown that principle does exist in El!ch of these men is guilcy of •
the, end. And that is wby football : being unfaithful to tbe university, ; · ·
does build character, notwithstand- as both quit school and went to the ;
ing a momentary and hopefully pros when they bad additional 1
infrequen~ irrational and unjustifiyears of eligibility to Ohio State.
:
able act. Character does not come
In God we trusL ;
easily. and never has.
Carryon, ·
Did you notice how the Reds
Fred W. Crow..;
broke their losing streak? If you did
EDITOR'S NOTE- Longnot, it can be told. Marge llad some , time .attorney Fred W. Crow is
loose hair from Schatzie, the dog, the contributor of a weekly col~\,
which was placed on tbe Reds bats. unm to The Sunday Times-Sen-·
l~stantly, they caught on ftre and in
tine!. Reade~s wishing to ,
three straight games they .scored applaud, criticize or comment on'
over nine runs each game. The. sad any subject (except religion or
part.about Ibis way of winning is politics) are encouraged to writ~':­
that the dog hair will soon give out to Mr. Crow in care of thh 'news- :
and tbc Reds will suffer.
paper.
Did you notice that thqtate of

detailing car-ownership expenses, involves tiny amounts that grow standard~. be suggests·, may be les&amp; ',
but surveys vary in methodology, · into important dollars with each h1s own than those of the carmaic-·
intent and findings and therefore mile driven during tbe year.
ers.
.
'
aren't always comparable.
For example: Fuel and oil prices
He estimates that tbe savings
rose .2 percent to 5.8 cents a mile amassed (and invesled) by boldin~"
over a year ago, and tire expenses cars for 10 year rather than three- ·.
rose by the same amount to 1.2 year periods throughout a 40·year'
·
cents a mile. Minuscule, but they work life can amount to aboui".
Government fig~res, for exam_- · mount like a runaway adding $385,000, enopgb to finance early .
pic, showed conswncr expenditures machine.
retirement.
· ··•
per new car aver'l!led $19,629 last
The biggest factor in the AAA
However, that $385,000 in savyear. And in 1993, average new-car study is depreciation, which rose ings is expressed in inflatcd dollars ~_
expenditures were equal to a record $133 over 1994 to a total of · 40 years hence. Expressed in 1995•
high 26.5 weeks of earnings, based $3,073, followed by insurance, dollars, the present value of .1
on median family earnings.
$783; financing, $686; and taxes, $385,000 available 40 years from ,
But, comparing a new-car today fees and regisuation, $203.
nQw is about $99,000, assuming, ..
with a new car of 1967, gives a difPond, a prolific author of finan- 3.5 percent inflation. · ·
· ·,,.
ferent story. On that basis; buyers cial tomes and head of Financial
Tbu.s, says Pond, the buyingl,.
pay lc ~s. Much of the cost of Pl&lt;!nning Information, Inc., , a power of Savings accruing 10 a per•'
today' s car is for safety and emis- Watertow , Mass. concern, bases son who trades a car every 10 years '
sions equipment unknown three his savings9 estimates on keeping a would ailow annual withdrawals of-·.
decades ago.
car for 10 years rather than trading $25,000 a year for five years;~:
Jeff Bobeck of the Automobile in every three years.
assuming 7.5 percent interest over
Manufacturers Association adds
"Constant financing charges the period.
·
.;~
another reason: With higher and too frequent .trading of cars
He concludes: "This income;:.:;
incomes, b~ycrs deq1311d more car. take a toll on your finances over combined witb other a·v ailable .:
"Companies try to satisfy needs · tbe years," be says.
·resources, should enable someon~-:
and wants of customers. and cus·
He practices what he preaches.. to retire five years earlier than their -·
tomers want more out of a car, " be While otherwise punuing an upper counterpart whose frequent trading : ;
says.
middle class life sty~e. he has habits have not provided incremen-~ To some extent, this .confirms owned the same car since 1984 in tal savings."
·:~:
the thesis of financial adviser spite of the derision of friends and
That's another way of· suggest: ~ .
Jonathan Pond that buyers should neighbors.
ing that his taste and reasoning,' '
demand less. He reasons that sman
Someone, he. said, once pu~ a rather than that of deriding friends/: ~
buying and operation over a 40- note o.n the windshield of bis car and neighbors, will prove superior;• :
year period could provid~ enough infOJ:ming him that "your ear viO: and, tbat not onir will he have tbe ;
savmgs for an owner to retire early.
tales this rieisbborhood's. standatds last laugh but the more secure
__fon.&lt;I.'.&amp;.CODQ:pt U,volves dollars o( goodJa&amp;to,!! BtJHo-l'ond, his ·- ~~ment too.
· ' .
that, over the decades, .compound taste is more reasoned arid sensible
John Cunniff Is a business
into large sums. The AAA study than that of'tbe notewriter, whose analyst for The Assa&lt;;iated

WINFIELD - An rail car repair company will reimburse the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers about $2 million for cleaning up
contaminated soil near the Winfield Locks and Dam, a coon document shows.
·
ACF Industries Inc. of Earth City, Mo., also will pay an as-yet
; undetermined amount to have tbe soil removed from the 22-acre site
near Eleanor, Putnam County, which is slated to be used for an
expansion of the locks.
The agreement is outlined in a document filed Thursday in U.S.
District Court in Charleston.
·
·
ACF used tbe site along the Kanawha River from 1952 until
1986 to clean rail cars that earned hazardous waste. The corps
bought the site in the late 1980s.
More than 70,000 cubic yards of soil are to be shipped to a landfill in Utah.

. Ex-agent pleads to theft charges
CHARLESTON - A former Charleston insurance agent plead. ed innocent to charges that he stole $213,000 from clients who hired
. him to invest accident or death benefit awards.
'
James W. Marshall, 44, of St. Albans appeared in U.S. Magistrate Ciiun on Thuisday to answer II counts-of mail fraud and reTat- ·
ed charges. He was released on SI 0,000 bond.
Trial was set for July 18.
Marsbail is the son-in-law of state Supreme Court Justice W.T.
Brotherton Jr.
-The Associated Press

Ohio, W.Va. lottery picks
By The Associated Press

The followin~ numbers were
selected in Friday s Ohio and West
Virginia lotteries.:

·

omo

Pick 3: 2-3·8
Pick 4: 4-54-8
Buckeye 5: 4-8-9-23·33
. Four tickets were sold naming
all five numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing, a~d
each is worth $100,000, the Ob1o
I..i&gt;ttery said.
. The winning tickets were purc~ased at Ebonne Wig in Cincinnati, Meijer Inc. No. 62 in Columbus, Village Carryout in Columbus
and Miller's Market in Eaton.
' Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$482,611.

•

There werc_,165 Buckeye 5·tickets with fourof the numbers, and
eacb is worth $250. The 5,510 ticket~ showing three of the numbers
are each worth $10, and tbe 56,003
tickets showing two of tbe numbers
are each worth $1.
· Sales in Pick 3 Numbers totaled
$1,516,092, and winners will
receive $503,295 . .
Pick 4 Numbers ·players
wagered $344,S62.50 and will
share $94,000.
The jackpot for Saturday's
S~per Lotto drawing was $24 million.
WEST VIRGlNIA
Daily 3: 5-0-5
Daily 4: 7-9·2-1
Cash 25: 1·6-10-12-14-24

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

Page A6 • ~Wi-.JI

Sunday,May14,1995

--Area deaths-- Cases concluded in Meigs
POMEROY - The followlag

C~unty Court

suspended· Jackie Olntber Port- Long Bottom disorderly conducl.
$is plus $100 fine suspeoded 10 $50 plus
In
tbe
Meigs
Co,llnty
Court
of
.
upoa
completion
of
~esldeadal
CClltl;
costs, ~ne year probation, ~~ee
OALLIPoUS- Betty Jem Hoblct Blickles, 69, Ga!lipolls. died SllJudge l'llrlck H. 0 Brien.
tmatme~t program; driving uDder ·
Eric M. Richards, Athens, days jatl suspended, restrii!DIDg
urday, May 13,19951lbet1Uidcooe
Fined wen:: James W. P\:rtins, suspenston, Sill!&gt; plus costa, 10 ~ $45 plus costs; Freeda L. order issued; E. Scott McKinley.
Born April 22, 1926 in Meip County, daugbler of lbe late Rolls IIIII Pmlcroy,
bell. $15 plus CClltl; days jail s~ to three daya
lee Cbelblre no OL $100 Middleport, reckless operation,
IDa Hobaci, sbe was a mtiled lin'n""" priCiiall nune ll (la!Jipnlia Devel- Roger D. seat
Ariz
1r.,
Cheater,
seat concurrent wttb OUI, ooe ye.- propia~
five days'jaillllld 's50 of $400 forfeiture and costs; left or
. opmenlal Center. Sbe was a mcmbel' of lbc F'lnl Pn:ab)'ICriaa Chllldlllld
belt, $25 plus C:f?.Stl; Michael L. baliOb; failure to control, $30 piDa !be ~ if Vllld OL pe- center, costs only;
1bc VFW Awtlliary.
· •
Oller,
Laa aville-, seat belt, $,25 costs; . .
seo~ witblD 90 clays; Tamera R.
Gregory A. Drake, Raleillb,
Surviving are two daugbten. Jldde (Srevea P.) Wolfe or Weslaville, plus costa;
~biUip
R.
Laudermilt,
Juaruta
M.
Thomas,
Middleport, Staata Pomeroy expired license
N.C.,
stop sign, $20 plus costs;
' · lllld Rollrna (AI) Harris of Gallipolis; two grandchildren and two pat- Pomeroy, no operator's license, DUI, $750 plus cost&amp;, 30 days jill $100 plus cost&amp;. ibree da~ jail and Valerie Hofstetter, Bloomfield
. 8flllldchlldren; aDd a special friend, Paul Ruektt ot OaiUpolls.
plus costs, one year probe.- suspended to 10, one year OL IUS· $50 fiiiC 1111J1Nlded if valid OL pre- Hills, Micb., speed. $30 plus costs;
.
Services wiD be 11 am. Tuesday in the F'ltSt Pmsbyrerian Chllldl with $100
lion,
30
days jail suspended to five pension, one year probation; driv- senled ·witbin 90 days· Janelle D Larry L. Sigler, Rutland, seat bell.
· lbc Rev. AI E;lrley officiating. Burial will be in lbe Omcnwood ~tery
days; seat belt. $15 plus costa;
10g under financial responsibility Williams, Racine faiiWe to yield . $25 plus costs; Editl) 1effers, GalRacine. Friends may call at lbc Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home ~
Mark Rathburn, RuUaDd, driv- action suspension, $300 flne con· rigbt of way $25
costs·
lipolis, seat belt. SIS plus costS;
Monday from 6-9 pm.
iog
under
tbe
influeace,
first
cum:~t
witb
DUI,
costs;
.
Dantenc's.
Kibble,
Lo~g
BotDoy
R. Nitz, East Liverpool, seat
In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to lbc Holzer Hospilie charge, $500 plus cost, 30daysjall
Ke1tbT.
Herdman,
Middleport.
tom, permitting unlicensed minor belt, $25 plus costs; Mary E.
Program. 100 Jackson Pike, GallipoUs, Obio 45631.
suspended to ftve days, 180-day DUI, $750 plus costs. 30 days jail 10 apera1e veblcle, $50 plus costs, Bentz, Pomeroy, seat bell. SIS plus
OL suspension, one year probation; suspe~ to 10 days, one ~ OL ooe year probation. tbRe days jail cost&amp;;
left or center, $20 ~Ius_ c:cnts; seat suspensaon, ';liiC ~-pro_bation! 90- auspeaded; J(ennrtb E. Wise, Lon
Howard K. DOfsl, P~meroy,
bell, $25 plus costa, drivmg Wide!: day vehicle immobi!IZiliOD; failure Bottom, no OL $100 plus costas speed, $30 plus co'lts;jbcky W.
tbe Influence, second charge, $750 to control. costa only;' possession. five daya jaU ~one
Crawley,JacksooviUe, left of ceoCHESffiRE - Michelle Dawn Fem:U, daugbter of Micbael Dwayile plus costs, one year OL suspension, $30 plus costa;
probation, veblcle Immobilization. lee, $20 plus costs; Larry B. Roband Angel Brown Fermll, CheShire, was stillborn Thursday, May 11, 30 days jail suspended to 10 ~ys.
Amanda Rousb, Middleport, }eery L. Hayman, Syracuse, assaul~ bins, Duenweg, Mo., speed, $30
1995 at University Hospital, Columbus.
';liiC YCW: Pf~?balion. 90-day vehicle reckless operation. $100 plus costs; $200 forfl!III!Jlj plus costa, one year plus costs; Kenneth C. Conley,
Surviving in addition to bet parents are a sister, .Belbany Nicole Fer- IDIDlobllizaUOD;
left of center, $25 plus cosiS; Todd probation mstrainiDg Mler issued, Parkersburg, W.Vat, speed, $30
rell, at bome: paternal grandmother and step-grandfather, Katby and ·
Craig A. Hanning, Sbade, OUI. Perry, Marietta, speed, $250 fine 45 daysjBn suspended to IS da s·
plus costa; Donna J. Snyder, WorJames Arrowood or Cbeshire; paternal graDdfalber, Elmer Ferrell Jr. of $500 plus costa, 10 days jail sus- witb $150 suspended, 30-day vebi·
Shawn p Price Radne ~~at tbington, speed, $30 plus costs;
Columbus; maternal gnindmolbcr and step-grandfalber, ~Ia and Doug pended to tbme days, 180-day OL cle immobilization, ftve daY_S Jail belt, $15 pi~ costs; 'Ronald Vance, Nicbolas 1. Rovai, Cbicago! Ill.,
· Gloyd of Cbesbire; maternal grandfather, Kenneth Brown of Boone
Tuppen Plains, disorderly conduct, speed, $30 plus c~sts; Davtd E.
County, W.Va.; paternal great-grandparents, Elmer and June Ferrell of
$25 plus costs· Greg Hayman
Barstow, Canton, msecure load,
Columbus; uncle and aunts, April FerreUf and Cricket and Cbad Brown,
'
' $30 plus CO&amp; II.
: aU of Cbesbire; and a special friend, Jennifer Neal of Cheshire.
. , Gfayesi®_~l~ J~Vere C!Jnducted Saturday, May 13, 1995 In tbe
· Reynolds Cemetery, Cheshire, witb !be Rev. Ronllammooos offiCiating.
on top of
: Arrangements were by tbe McCoy-Moore Funeral Home W~rbolt
: Chapel, Gallipolis.
Hoeflich's 'roWid the bend.

Betty .Jean Brickles

suspension, one year probation,

cuea were processed Wedneldlly $250 or fine and jail suspeadecl .

1aac1, cHsorderty CODducl.

Pius

Michelle Dawn Ferrell

yea;

• · EMS· 1OQS n1ne
• C8 II 5
MeiQS

Crow's

•

~WUiiam

ihuigs.-

Sands' in the past.
Freeman's out in the woods.

Kuhn

:
GALLlPQUS-WilluimF.Kubn, 77,Gallipolis,diedFriday,May 12
· 1995 at his residence.
·
'
· ·.
Born Nov. 6; 1917 in Cham- ·
berlburg; GaUia County, son of tbo
late Charlea and Mabel Porrer Kuhn,
be retired from Gallipolis Developmental Center in 1980.
A U.S. Army vereran of Wa-ld
War U, serving in England, France,
Belgium, Scotland and Germany, be
was a member of tbeEurekaMetbodist Cblllcll, a member of lbc Gallia
County Veterans Services, a member
of American Legion Lafayette Post
#121, and a life membel' of VFW Post

FAMILY PUCTICE

POMEROY
Near Pomeroy-Masdn Bridge

-·

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
k

fFBI eyes possible link betwaen
]chemist, suspect. in bombing

I Doing y•rd worlt?

I

=
a

a
a.

_aa Don't negfett your earsl aa
1!1
a

a

Gallia County Display Yard

mJ

~~!~!!!.!!~!~~~~Jg

Elias Productio~s &amp; Budweiser Present.

t'

992-2588
VINTON

TWIN RIVERS FESTIVAL

155 Main St

388-8603

MAY 26T.JI &amp; 27TH

Point Pleasant, West Virginia (Rt. 2)

Missi,Takes
Collect -c -a lls.
.

Missi Scarberry
Your Loan Officer

.
"A Little Bit of Country and A Little Bit of Bluegrass"
'

.

FRIDAY, MAY 26TH

The Gal/ia -County Local
Emergency Planning Committee

~

War material .
and /or making it a. success:
~ fears prompt
. .
Vinton Volunteer Fire Department ·
i' cont1nuatloli
Rio Grande Volunteer Fire Department
1 of sanctions Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department

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•

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call Missi Scarberry at 675-ASAP to apply for
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POINT PUASANT
(304) 675·1675-

'

~:;:~~•-....: ~--·:;..,a_t_,

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC .
WEIGHT CONTROL

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE ·

scientist, on band wbcn Ebo1a isolated 20 years a1o. doesa't
believe assurances tbe latest outbreak was caught soon enougb to
SlOP its spread.
Tbls city or 600,000 people Is
quarantined, its schools aDd clinics
closed, airline flights canceled.
Families mceive bodies Of Ebola
victims -in sealed coffins and are
'.
ordere4 not to open tbem.
The Wc.ld Health Organization,
whicb says 48 people bave died,
and the charity Doctors Without
Borders say tbe virus can be
stopped before tbe death toll goes
mucb bigber.
But people are sneaking into
' ~
Kiliwit's
unguarded hospital to
Oklahoma'
City
bombln1.
Colbern
was
taken
.
IN CUSTODY - Federallllllrlllala IIITUted
the
Oatman
Hotel
In
Oatvisit
dying
loved ones and possibly
Into
custody
outalde
. . Steve Colbern on Friday on a W111T11nt stemming
carrying
tbe
virus wben tbey leave,
IDIID,
Ariz.
(AP)
• l'rOI!l i weapon11 charge unrelated to "e Aprll19
said Jean Jacques Muyernbe, a Unl. versity of Kinshasa professc..
Muyembe was in tbe village of,
Yambukuo11Ionx tbe Ebola rivor
that gave lbe virus Its name, wben
tbe contagion was isolated there in
1976.
"The difference is, Yambulcu is
People in today's society are often aware of the
•
in
a
forest with a sparse populaIn
Olclaboma
Oty
pn
Friday,
tbe
ist,"
s.Ud
California
baH
bOndsman
·
: By EUN-KYUNG K1M
dangers of loud sounds, but do little to. avoid them.
death toU in tbe April19 bombing Gil Salazer, wbo looked for Col- tion," Muyembe said. "This is
· Associated Press Writer
n Exposure to mtense norse from sports and
n
more serious llecause·it is in a city
: OATMAN, Ariz. - A fugitive rose to 168, includin.ll.t9 children. bern. "Loves automatic weapons, , of a balf a million. The possibility
machinery such as skeetshooting,-lawn mowers,
llill
·
: chemist wilb survival training was John Youngblood, a 52-year-old beavy weapons."
of
expansion
is
tremendous."
1:;1
and
weedeaters
can
cause
temporary
or
'
The
searcb
for
Colbem
leaped
in
• wrestled to llle ground in Ibis tiny · safety inspector hospitalized since
There is no vaccine or cure for
tbe blast, died of smoke inhalation. tile last few days from Soulllem
~· former mining town by federal
permanent hearing loss. . .
Ebola,
wbicb kills 80 percent of
A Kansas law enforcement California, where be studied bio.., ageots wbo !IJe investigating a posn
A wide variety of effective hearing proJection
n
tbose wbo contract i~ often witbln
.&lt;: sible link to tbe Oklabolila City source, also speaking on condition chemistry at UCLA, to 'Bullbead days.
Victims
die
wilb
blood
pourU
products
are
available.
Call
and
schedule
an
.
llill
of anonymity, told The Associated City, where be IInce lived in a trail- ing from their eyes, ears and noses.
" ' bombing.
appointment today to find out which hearing '
.
;,;: Steven Garrett Col bern, wbu Press on Friday tbat investigators er bome fuU or reptiles.
Nearly
two-thirds
of
tbe
victims
A brown pickup truck sits out:;; allegedly tried to pull a pistol on are looking into lbe pdssibility tbat
protectors are right for you.
reported so far worked in Kikwit's
), U.S. mars~ was arraigned Sat· Terry Nicbqls, tbe second man side the trailer, raising speculation hospital, including tbree Italian
:f urday in Phoenix on federal gun charged in tbe bombing, visited tbe of a connection witb ·a brown pick- nuns ministering to the poor.
-----~~;;0~~---------o~-i~;r-l
; charges tbat date to 1994 and are day-care center at the Alfred P. up officials say was spotted travelAccounts of lbe de alb toll vary.
Licensed
Your .For
Murrah Federal Building 15 or 20 ing witb McVeigh wben be was Dr. Julia Weeks, an AmeriCan on a
~, unrelated to tbe. blast
Audiologist,
C
Life• In
.,.
At the same lime, investigators minutes before the blast, asking arrested in Oklaboma 75 minutes health .committee of Zairian and ·
heads a lull time
.
ompany •.,. ,.., 1ilill
~· are looking into a possible link questions. Federal officials refused after tbe explosion.
But oeigbbors said tbe 197 5 foreign officials, gave a lower
1n
stall of expert
~'between Colbern and Timothy
to comment
death tolllban WHO, saying Satur. audlologiata at .
111G
IU
Chevy
with
an
expired
Arizona
·~. McVelgb, one of two men 'cbarged
Prosecutors bave suggested tbe
day
tbat
35
people
have
died
and
INHEARING
Hear
.
:; witb tbe bombing, a senior federal . federal building was bombed to license in Colbern's name hasn't anotberlS are ill. .
:•!!:::.=_.::..!..= For Life location. . 435 2nd Ave ., Gallipolis I
•of' official, speaking on condition of avenge tbe Branch Davidian cult· been driven in six years.
Veterans Memo nat Hospita l, I
"There appears to bave .been a '
~ anonymity, · told Tbe Associated
disaster at Waco, Texas, exactly · Colbem .and bis wife filed for decline in the number of cases
Pomeroy
.1~
....- Press in Washington.
· two years earlier. More than 80 bankruptcy in federal court in Los being reported. Tbat could be a
770 E. Main St., Jackson, Ohio lllill
't. Federal agents walked' into tbe people died in tbat llisaster, includ- Angeles in 1989. Tbeir debts good sign, but it's too early to
5 Off the purchase of custom earplugs
I
totaled $662,565. One failed enter't Oatman Hotel on Friday afternoon ing 19 cbildn:n. '
!mow,"
Weeks
said.
.:i .and showed a pboto to owner Ted
McVeigh and Nichols are prise: a business called tbe ·Boa
......
..:.$.;..35·-- _
WHO plans to begin Sunday
...,. Tonioli and bis bartender. The men charged under a statute lbat could Connection.
tracing
contacts
of
people
wbo
Acquaintances said Colbern bad
~ told tbe agents tbey recognized bring lbem tbe death penalty.
am~aaam~aoooaaa
bave died or become ill, to find
~· Colbern, who had been in Ibis
Colbern, 35, of Oxnard, Calif., made few friends in Oatman. an
( , northwest Arizona bamlet four or was arrested in Upland, Calif., in old gold prospectors' town of 140.
". five monllls and worked as a prep July 1994 on a traffic stop. Officers The town mostly attracts tourists
'!:, cook and dishwasher.
seized a lmife, an S~S assault rifle, wanting to see llle honeymoon des"I walk outside and lo and a silencer and two .loaded band- tination or Clark Gable and Carole
, • behold, tbere be is," Tonioli said.
guns, said Richard Maxwell, cbief Lombard and ogle lbe wild burros
.: · He signaled federal officers as deputy district attorney for San · tbat wander in from tbe desert to
walk lbe single street
~· Colbern buugbt a newspaper out· Bernardino County. '
.side a store.
•
He was freed on bail but faDed
Colbem tried to pull .a .38-cal• · to show up for a court appearance
.,. · iber revolver from bis jeans, and Oct. 21 and bas been sought since
~ officers wrestled bim to tbe ground, on a warrant for possessing tbt;
~ said Tom Ni~n. chief deputy in silencer and for fleeing prosecu~ .tbe marshal's office in Phoenix . tion.
t -One mats hal was sligbtly burt A wanted poster from lbe U.S.
~ wben be feU on lbe sidewalk.
Marshal's office says; "Caution:
$ "The am:st of Colbern is part of Subject considered armed and dan• a search for an associate of gerous. Subject is trained in sur, McVeigh wbo might belp us clear vival skills and is .a chemist by
·• up tbe mystery of John Doe No, trade.''
t 2," tbe senior official in Wasbing"He's a backpacker, survival·~
t · ton silid. -"We are NOT saying be
DOORS OPEN AT 4:00 PM - SHOW STARTS-AT 6:00PM
\ is John Dee No. 2."
.l Investigators. bave a leuer from
~ . McVeigh addressed to "S.C." and
JETI
1 Colbern is thought to bave used
WILLIAMS &amp; ·
; McVeigh 's mailbox address in
THE DRIFTING
&gt; Kingman, Ariz .• tbe official said
~would l~k{! ~0 thank the !~llow_ing
~ Friday nigbt.
.
COWBOYS
.;
Colbem also shares McVeigh's
BAND
·~ or!!amzahons /or part1c1patmg
1 trait of bad-mouthing the govern~ ment, acquaintances silid.
in the May 11 disaster drill

a

POMEROY -:- Contributions in memory of Glenna M. Soulsby, 88,
Syrncuse, who Qied Thursday, May 11, 1995 at lbc Pomeroy NUrsing and
Rehabilitation Center, may be made to tbe Meigs County Unit of tbe
American Cancer Society.
In addition to survivors listed in an earlier obituary, Miss Soulsby is
survived by several nieces and nepbews.
Services were held Saturday morning in tbe Ewing Funer.il Home.
Burial was in tbe Letart Falls Cemetery. .
~

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

wbetbCr lbc virus bas SJ)I'e8d.
· over their faces in a feeble attempt
Dr. Ebrahim Samba, WHO's to protect themselves from the
director fa- Africa. expressed con- virus.
A sealed coffin arrived from the
fidence today tbat health experts '
intervened early enougb to contain fenced-in bospilal 100 yards away,
tbe disease; .
and tbe boys, carrying palm fronds,
"If we were slow and bad done wem warned not to wasb or toucb
nothing. it would bave been in Kin- tbe body as their traditions demand.
Medical experts from the U.S.
shasa' and it would be in Paris and
Centers
for Disease Control and
London and New York because
there are direct flights five or siz Prevention arrived Friday to begin
bours away," be silid in Geneva.
work to contain tbe virus. Willi
permission
from Zaire's governAsked wbelber tbe disease could
ment,
journalists
accompanied
spread to Kinshasa, be said "I
tbem
on
lbcir
flight
to Ibis sprawldon'tlbink. so."
"But nobody can swear abso- }ing city of cement block bou~s set
lutely. This is a relatively new In lush green savannah.
About 20 people - infected
tbing. We don't know everything
patients
aDd bospilal staff ezposed
about it, so tberefom we bave to be
to llle virus - were inside tbe 350overciwtious," be said. .
At a cemetery in Kikwit wbere bed hospital where the epidemic
authorities turned over coffms Fri- began. It bas been cleared out to
day, two small boys in a crowd of keep lbc Ebola virus from spreadabout 50 people pulled T·shlrts ing. '

JNI£ARJ;u-

Glenna M. Soulsby

'rr===============~~

By KARIN DAVIES
AJioclated Prai.Writer
KIKWIT, Zaire - One Zairian

11i3 ·

· MIDDLEPOR'I_' - · Services for Joseph A. "Turkey" Rhoades, 54;
Middleport, who died Thursday, May II, 1995, will be I pm. Sunday In
tbe Ewi 0g Funeral Home; .Pomeroy. Burial will be in the B.urlingbam ·
Cemetery.
· Omitted fro~ _an !lar!ier list or survivors are a sister, Bonita Davis of
· McArthur; and a brolller, John Rhoades of Barberton.
-· - .

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - Emogene Stewart, 68, Point Pleasan~
died Friday, May 12, 199~ in Holzer Medical Cenrer.
Born July 29,_1926 in Mason County, sbe was tbe daugbter of tbe late
Abraham and Ahce Meadows Scarberry.
·.
She was also preceded in deatb by her husband, Samuel Stewart, in
1990; and by two brolbers and two sisters.
·
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law, Susie and Eric Morris of
Pomt Pleasant; 1bree sons and a daughter-in-law, Sam Stewart Jr. of Gal,
Hpolis Ferry, David "Sk:ip" Stewart of Point Pleasant. aDd Scoit and Debbie Stewart of Point Pleasant; six grandcbildn:n; and two brolbers, Albert
Scarbef!"Y of ~oint Pleasant. and Cb~les "Jack" Scarberry or Letart.
Semces wtll be 10 a.m. Monday m tbe Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Point ·
Pleasant, witb llle Rev. William "Bill" Banks officiating. Burial will be in
tbe Kirkland Memorial Gardens. Friends ·may call at tbe funeral borne
Sunday from 6-9 p.m.

Sunday·Times-Sentinel/A7

a

Joseph A. Rhoades

Emogene Stewart

Nation/World
Quarantine f~ils to dispel
worry over E.bola outbreak

aa

114464.
He was also pmceded in death
by his wife, Mary Mooney Kubn, in
1981; a brother, Vernon Kuhn; and a
balf-brolber, Ralph Porter.
·
Survivina are two stepdaughterS, Geraldine Burcham and Betty
WILUAM KUHN
C?rbin, boch of ~allipolis; a special
.
·
·
friend, tdarluetile Gotbard of Gal' lipolis; four stepgrandchildren and four step-aieat·8fllldchildren· four balfbrothers, Don Kubn,F1a11CisKubn,1ames Porter and Paul Dean PMer all of
. · Gallipolis; and four balf·sisters, Helen Jean Plymale of Sabina, Nelli~ Mil. stead of Pickerington, and Violet :Jeffers and Ernestine u.~ botb of
Gallipolis.
.
·
........ ,.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in the W~ugh-HaUey-Wood Funeral
Home, with tbe Rev.JamesLusber officiating. Burial will be in tbePineStreet
Cemetery. Friends may call at tbe funeral home Sunday from 6-9 p.m.
Military graveside rites will be conducted by VFW Post !14464 and
Americl\fl Legion Post 1127.
. In lieu of flowers, contributions ·may be made to tbe Holzer Hospice
Program, 100 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.
·

May l4,199S
I

Member
FDIC

t
• MASON

Loans subject to credit approval.

'

• POINT PLEASANT

• NEW HAVEN

Gl
....,...
L.EPIIDER

.

\
UNITED NATIONS (AP) ) Concerned tbat Iraq may be con~ cealing material related to chemical
• and biological warfare ·programs,
~ tbe Security Council agreed Friday
: to maintain economic sanctions
~ tbat have been in place since lbe
,\ 1990 invasion of ICuwaiL
{
The council decision caine witb~ 'out a vote and followed reports
~ from U.N. weapons monitors tbat
l: Iraq may be trying to produce.bio. ~ logical weap~ms,
~
France ana Russia bave repeat' edly called for a possible easing of
~. sanctions if Iraq fully cooperates
• wilb UN. monitors overseeing lbe
~ elimination of Iraq's weapons of
1mass destruction.
~
But tbe chief U.N . weapons
~ inspector, Rolf Ekeus, told tbe
;. council last montb tbat Iraq bas no(
~ been able to account for 17 tons of
~ material lbat could be used to grow
; germs used in biological WarCfC.
: Ekeus ·also said Iraq bas not
• been abl~ to account for chemicals
~ tbat could be used to make some
. ~ 200 tons of nerve gas.
~
•'Tbere bas really been no
' progress at all since the council last
~ reviewed tbe sanctions," said
) )3ritlsh Ambassador David Hannay.
SSanctions are reviewed evpry 60
; days.
• "There wasn't a single voice
; raised for tbe lifting of sanctions, ..
!Hannay safd.
·

Guyan Volunteer Fire Department
.Gallia County Sheriff's Department
Gallia County EMS
Gallia ·County Engineer ·
Gallia CountY Health Department
· Gallia ~ounty Commissioners
Bob Ev:a~s Farm, Inc.
G.allia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol
Holzer Medical Center
G~llia County Red Cross
Mid-Ohio Valley Amateur Radio Club
Cellular One
.
Gallia County Senior Center·
Ohio Emergency Management Agency
Gallia County EMA
~ocal E~ergency Planning ~ommittee
Victim participants

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Sunday, May 14,1991

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

~long
0

DNA witness holds up against questions
By LINDA OEUfSCB
sibility of a mystery killer.
AP Special CottesPODCient
Defense auomey Ptlet Neulekl.
LOS ANGEL~S -- The key however, found many of his queawitness oo genetic evideoce agaill$t tioos disallowed by Superior Court
O.J. Simpson witbstood wide-rang- Judge Lance Ito.
inl aaempu by tbe defense to lind
Ito also was . annoyed with
flaws that would undermine her Neufeld's repealed focus oo pouipowerful testimony,
ble contamioatioo of blood swaldiMoleeular biochemist Robin es lbat gave evidcoc:e of Simp11011'1
COlton ended a week on the stand blood at the murder scene, at bia
Friday without falling under the mansion and in bis Bronco.
ldnd of withering questioning that
"You've asked that question
put police criminalisiS on tbe four times," Ito snapped.
defensive earlier in Simpson's mur·
Tbe week ended with jurors
der b'ial.
being told to disregard a key
The prosecution took a confi- defense assertion lbat blood on the
dent posture at a late-afternoon Bronco's steering ·wbeel held the
bearing In which a deputy district DNA of an unknown murdelel'.
attorney rejected a defense claim
Ito upheld objectiQns to
that some blood bad not Y,et been Neufeld's queslioos laying out the
tested in order to lay a : forensic defense to scientific: evidence that
ambush."
blood from Simpson and his ex' 'Now that tbe jury bas seen the wife was on the steering wheel.
kind of evidence we have, the
"Assume that Mr. Simpson cut
atnbusb already happened. And the himself in his home and walked out
overwhelming mountain of DNA to tbe Bronco to get something
evidence bas begun to cascade . from his car and bled in his own
right where il belongs, on Mr. Bronco," Neufeld said before he
Simpson," prosecutor Rockne Har· was stopped by an objection.
mon said.
,
.
Loyola University law Professor
Simpson is accused or slashing Stan Goldman saw Neufeld's sesto death his ex-wife t:licole Brown sion-ending suggestions as an
Stmpson and her fnend Ronald attempt to match some dramatic
Goldman outsi!)e bcr condomhtium prosecution moments in . the ·trial.
June ·l2.
'·
"I think that~was -t.be same sort of
The defense's scattershot attack auempt to end with a crescendo" at
on _Cotton's !estimony to~cbed on week's end to keep the jury thinkclal!"s ?f cvtdence planting, con- ing over the weekend, be said
tammalion of evtdence and the posGoldman said lte exp~cted

.
•

o

DNA lN DISPUTE - O,J. Slmp111111'• defense attorney, Peter
Neufeld, pointed to a chart of DNA analysll results from Simpson's Ford Bronco as be cross-examined prosecution wltneos
Robin Cotton In a Los Angeles courtroom Friday, (AP)
intensified defense, challenges of $1,200 a day for ber testimony, but
DNA statistics in the upcoming only after be struggled to suggest
her testimony was financially motiweek of testimony.
The defense earlier Friday vated.
Neufeld was ordered to rephrase
attempled to cast the forensics withis
question when be asked if CeUness as a hired-gun-type witness
mark
did "DNA.1CMi!lg for !00;."
for the proseGution. ~ .
,
He
bad
to settle for the question or
Cotton, laboratory directory at
whether
CeUmark was "a business
Cellmark Diagnostics of German·
operation."
town, Md:, acknowledged to
Neufel4 that the lab was being paid

Kevorkian attends another suicide
SOtiTHFIELD, Mich. (AP)- Dr. Jack Kevorldan bas defied authorities in the past to charge him with deaths be has attended. After the latest
suicide in his presence, the body was delivered right to them.
. The body ?f ??-year-old !'iicholas John Loving was found Friday
mstde Kevorkian s rusted, wbtte Volkswagen van. It was parked outside
the Oakland County complex which houses the medical examiner's and
sberifr s offices. .
.
. "I think it ""!IS the wish of everyone to millce it easier for authorities,"
said Geoffrey Fteger, attorney for the retired pathologist
Fiegei"'said Kevorkian, and Loving's mother, Carol, were present when
Loving died. Loving was dead before the van was brought to the sberifr s
office. Fieger said.
Carol Loving said her son died with a smile on his lips and a rock clas·
sic, Pink Aoyd's "Dark Side of the Moon," playing on his headphones
Tbe Arizona Republic repOrted Saturday.
'
'
"He let out a beautiful sigh," she said. "I turned to Dr. Kevorldan and
said, ,'He's gone to heaven. He's finally happy."'
. .
Hts last words were, "I love you, mom. Aren't you going to bold my
hand?'' ~~ newspaper said, adding tha~sbe did.
·. .- ~
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SPECIAl.

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·Frustrated Ciihton
promises to ·press
Japanese !lanctions.
By NANCY BENAC
Atloc!Med Preu Writer
WASHINGTON- A determined Pmsldcnt Clinton said Saturday he's tired of "bitting a brick
waU" in trying to ·open Japanese
markets to American autos: He
promised 10 press ahead with proposed sanctions against Tokyo. .
"We are prepared to act and we
will act soon if we must." Clinton
said in his weekly radio address.
Clinton renewed the· threat of
sanotions even as the disput.e with
Japan threatened 10 escalate into a
fi;tll-scale tr.lde_ wat! Japanese offi·
cials
the
are warnmg Y might retali- ·
ate against proposed U.S. sanctions
with punitive measures of tb&amp;:ir
own.
· Earlier this week, Clinton
ordered an unfair trade complaint
filed against Japan with the new
World Trade Organization and
authorized publication of a list of
punitive tariff$ against Japanese
automobiles and pans.
"We don'L:wanta trade conflict
with Japan, but we won't hesilate
to fight for a fair shake for Ameri·
can pr.oducts,'' Clinton said.
He said the United States had

the River

~imts- jmtwt

Section B
Sunday, May 14,1995

•
••

made considerable progress over
the past two years in oaenlnf
Japanese markets to a tange o
American goods and services from
apples to telecommunications
equipment.
''But wh(n it comes to selling
cars and auto parts to Japan, we are
stiU bittin~ a brick walL" be oom~
plained. • We've been hilling that· '
brick wall long enough. Now we
must act" to protect ·and create
American jobs."
·
•
Foreign manufacturers make up
about 30 percent or the American.
market for cars and car parts, bur
J. ust 4 percent of Japan's market, ""
""
said.
''
Clinton said tbat increasing,·
American auto sales in Japan~
would have a positivy ripple effecf
throughout the U.S. economy, and
also benefit Japanese consumed ·
''who today pay mucb highet
pri'7:s because of their trade banit
ers.
..
•
. "Opening laJlan's marltets is
win-win situation for everyon.e.';.:
Clinton said. "But old habits and
entrenched interests die bard."
·
'

•

TRIM·
MINGVP·
Cati!A trlml
tbt llada oft

cam-"e

'.

plutl for tea.
He will ~a¥e the
rooato
repla•t. With
knowledae o1
lhemedidaal

n

.'

val~~eolover

900p1Mts,
Catfishes most
wldel7 recommellded compoundlare
bitten tllld
"sod)' water."
He IJ'OWS th.e
herbs needed
for bitten in
his backyard,
and most can
be fOQnd
aatitrilly lilllie
woods. While
seUing bi~n.
CatfiSh wiD·
ingly aives the
recipe with
hints on how to
grow the herbs
and the proper
amouats. ()lie
bag of bitters
wiU produce a
quart of
cooceatrate.
Doses are takea
by the tea·
spoon, ia smaD
amounts for
health maintenance and in ·
larger amounts
.for serious
ailments.

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Herbalist
· ·dishes upo· his·
own·medicine

•~

By USA PETERSON
Times-Sentinel Starr
GLHN)VOOD;W.Va. =When some people
·look at the rich foliage of Appalachia, they see
a mass of vegetation. When Clarence Giey
looks at the rolling hiUs of this area, he sees an
enchanted forest
·
To Grey, known as Catfish Man of theWoods, e:-ery field is a stocked medicine chest
and ew::s:y wooded area a feast fit for a king.
.
Nestled in the hills along the Mason-Cabell county line; Catfish has been practicing his
own version of herbal medicine for over 40 years.
•
Using his own unique blend of herbs, astrology, religion and advice\ Catfish has a cure
·
.
.
for almost any ailment known to man.
He has (our basic betiefs- healthy kidneys, clean blood, correct diet and a pure life
leads to longevity.
.
A coqect diet leads 10 llealthy kidneys and clean blood. Catfish has compiled a group
of foods that should not be eaten. Among those foods on the blacklist are cabbage, porlc,
artificial sweeteners and tomatoes.
·
. Eating these foods, Ca~sh believes, leads IIi corruption in the body and "gummed-up
kidneys." ~en.the kidneys are blocked, impurities cannot()xit the body and.the toxins cause
bad cll'CUlabon m the blood. Tbey find the weakest spot in the body and cause iUness.
CatfiSh can delermine the stage of the illness and pinpoint the area of bad circulation by
"checking a person's water."
Starting from the feet. he probes the person's body up to the shoulders. The point where

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\The Kate Ad8.mS a Celebrated but unreliable $teamboat of the past
~y JAMES SANDS

Correspondent .
..Special
. No boat
ever catne to Gallipolis
~
~with

more "hoopla" than the Kate
Adams did in
192.5-.
"When
the Kate
Adams ran in
•
the Pittsburgh
. andCincinnati
$'
trade last
~'
summer, she •
drew more
~
people to the
~of the Oliio and attracted:
:,more atteotion to the river than any
)&gt;Iller boat thai has run on the upper
"Ohio in the last 30 years and at
:every landing crowds lined the
;'banks 10 see this great river packet,~
'WrOte the TribUM.
'
Tbe Kate Adams was one of .
:the last large sl®wheel packets.
:Ibe boat also attracled attentiotl
·because she had run ror so many
years on the Mississippi Rivu ·•

3 .

.

•

the body temperature turns from cold (water) to warm (blood) is the stage of the illness. The highcir up a
person's water is, the worse their condition.
When the sickness is detennined, wbe~Jler froni unhealthy living or an outside soun:e, Catfish relies on
his knowledge of the healing power of over 900 plants.
. ·
.
Pulling from an assonment of roots, leaves and horne remedies. Catfish has derived two virtll!ll cure ails
- bitters and "sody water."
·
.
l
Bitters is a mixture of20 different herbs. Itis prepared by boiling one bag of bitters in two quarts of water
until it is reduced to one quan. Tbe recommended dose is three teaspoons a week or for a serious illness, like
cancer, three times a day..
"Sody water" is.l/4 teaspoon of baking soda mixed in an eight-ounce glass of water or food every day,
or for more ~vere ailments. three times a day for one week and once at bedtime for two weeks.
Catfish prescribes these for general good
health and for cases sucbas cancer, black lung,
tuberculosis and emphysema
Some people are more susceptible to
certain iUnesses than others, Catftsh said,
·depending on their astrological sign. For example, someone under the sign of Pisces may
have trouble with their feet, and another under
the sign of Aquarius may encounter problems
with their legs.
Though the bulk of ailments Catfish
encounters are legitimately caused by imbalances in the body, others are psychosomatic.
·A pure life wtU· cJeanse the ..mind and body,
maintains Catfish, a fmn believer in the gospel
•
who never misses a Sunday in church.
'·
His knowledge of herbs and reeipe for
bitters eatne from his grandfather and great·
grandfather, who received their •medicinal
MAINTENANCE- Catfish tends tosomeortbe
sources from the Cherokee Indians.
herbs gr?wn in 'his b~ckyard for his ~itters. With 20
The Indians watched the animals, Catfish
herbs, bttters are boiled and drank m small doses.
said. They tracked wildlife and noled what
they ate. They integrnted the plant life into remedies. Animals are never sick, he said.
Catfish gained notoriety from appearances on David Lettennan's show, The Tonight Show and P.M.
Magazine. FoUowing the TV spots, he began receiving requests for his herbal expenise from viewers all over
the world.
And if proof is in the pu~ding, then Catfish's proof is in his bitters and letters of grntitude from customers,
In the Uving room of his shanty, Catfish has constructed collages of letters praising him and his bitters.
His customers keep in contact, updating him on their progress and Jives. He can rec ite the contents of virtually
all the letters with the swiftness of an auctioneer.
Catftsh is open for visitors Thursday through Sunday, and many days has a steady stream of traffic. He
seUs his he..bs and gives enough infonnation for even the layman gardener to begin his own traCt of herbs.
Whether a customer or passerby, Catfish bids a fareweU 10 each visi10r with a handshillce or a bug and
concludes his letters with love and prayers.

'

haulmg couon. In its first year the
Kate took an excursion from
.Pittsburgh 10 New Orleans fOr
Mardi Gras, an unusual trip in those
days. Tbe Kate was used in I 926 in
making the classic film, ''Uncle
Tom's Cabin."
Nicknamed the "Loving, Kate,"
during her time on the Ohio"River,
her two years on the Ohio were
more of a love-bate experience. She
had allkilllls of trouble. Sbe was
too big for the lOcks and was laid up
a few times to replace the outrig·
.gers. Another problem the boat had
was lbat it was usually late.
"The Kate Adams passed up
Gallipolis at 9:30 Tuesday mOrning
for Pittsburgh being almost two
days late owing to delay in making
boiler repairs. Tbe Loving Kate, a
fast side-wheelel', did not land here.
The Kate has,no steam-steering
apparatus, and it's a job for·a pilot
to bold her in the channels on the
upper Ohio. A. fme and fast side,
wheeler, such as ran in the antebel-

They steamed into Gallipolis
harbor fairly ab~ast atl0:45 a.m.
Saturday morning al'ter malting the
· run of seven miles in little more
than 30 minutes. Every ounc.e of
p~ure was in their boilers. All
along the river, people swarmed to
the banks to witness the thrilling
spectacle.
At Walker's point the Tom was
reporled to be leading by a narrow .
margin, but the Kate speedily
closed the gap and finished even.
No bets were losL When the two
steamers reached Gallipolis a large
crowd was gathered at the river·
LOVING KATE- The Kate Adams sidewheel steamboat Is shown
front to see the exciting fmish. ·
near Pomeory in 1926. The "Loving Kate" bad two celebrated races
Many ladies deserted their kitchens
with the Tom Greene in 1926 between Lock 26 and GaUipolis.
to view the memorable sighL
The two boats had a race a few
schedule was hardl y ever followed.
tum days, sliD attracts much
The Kate was fast, malting 18 miles weeks later from the same spo~ The
attenJion l!nd draws hundreds of
in an hour on a stretch of the river · two boats were in Lock 26 together,
spectators 10 the riverfront when
and as the lock fiUed, both crews
neat Marietta. .
. they pass," wrote the TribiW .
In July of 1926 the Itate Adatns made their boasts.
· The intended schedule of the
In the eight-mile stretch that
and
the
Tom Greene were involved
Kate was !0 pass Gallipolis going
with every passenger at
followed
up river Sun~y evening and going . in a celebrated race from.Dam 26
the
rails,
handkerchiefs
waving,
located near Eureka to Gtillipolis.
down river Fnday m6ming. This

'

flags unfurled, crew chtering and
jeering )lelow deck~. the Kate
Adams.pulled slowly &amp;head. By the
time the Tom Greene had stow¢
down at a local port, the Kate was
speeding on, three lengths in the
lead. The .,rew of the Kate shouted
that they could beat any)hing on
"this riVer or any river."
Unfonunately for all the
interest that the Kate Adams
generated. it did not generate much
money. In fact it lost money in its
two years on the Ohio River.
l n the fall of 1926 the Kate
was taken back 10 the Mississippi
River where she burned on l111. 8,
1921. The hull was later used as a
cot10n barge, but it sank and was
later abandoned at the foot of
President' s Island.

Jamu Sallds llaipedllcorrtspondentoltbe Salld87 Tlmes-SeJl.
tintl. His acldresl II: 65 Willow
Drive, Sprinaboro. Oblo 450M.

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

, Sunday; May 14,1995

Katie's Korner

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KELLY VANSICKLE, AND MICHAEL ELLIOTT

TERESA STOVER AND TIMOTHY MURPifV

Stover-Murphy
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA. •
Mr. and Mrs. Farrell Stover of
Houston, Texas announce tbe
engageme.!lt oLtbeir JlaJlght~r,
Teresa Lynn to Timothy Patnck

BRACE AND JAMES SHELTON

·Brace-Shelton
LAURA FORBES AND ROBERT SISSON, JR.

Forbes-Sisson
·
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RUTLAND - Laura Forbes
and Robert W. Sisson, Jr., both of
Rutland, announce their engagement and approaching marriage.
Forbes is lbe daughter of !be late
Gerald and Margaret Ellen Forbes.
Sbe is a 1980 graduate of Nel·
son ville-York Hig_h School and is
employed by the Pomeroy and ·

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MiddlePort Police Deparunents.
Sisson is the SQ!l!Of Robert Sisson, Sr. and Iva Sisson, Rutland. ·
He is a 1986 graduate of Meigs ·
High School and is employed with
Facemyer Forest ProductS.
The wedding will be July 28 at
Lake Snowden Park, Albany.

CROWN CITY -Mr.-and Mrs.
James E. Brace of Crown City
announce the engagement and marriage of their daughter, Teressa·
Lynn to James F. Shelton, son of
Mary M. Shelton of Arlington,
Texas and the late Glen W. SheltonBracc is the granddaughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace of
Racine and Mrs. Doris Bailey or
Lelart Falls and the late Oliver E.
Sayre Sr. Sbe is a 1985
of
the Univers
of
Grand.e

receiving a bachelor's degree in
education. She is employed with
. Wilmer Jlutcbins Independept
School District in Dallas, Texas.
Sbelton is a 1976 graduate of
The Coinmunlty Calendar Is
Lamar High School. He is publlsbed as a free service ~o ·
employed as a foreman of research non-profit groups wishing to ·
and development of explosive announce meeting and special
shape charges at Harrison Jet Guns· events. Tbe calendar Is not
in Kennedale. Texas.
designed to promote sales or ·
Tbe open church wedding will fund raisers of any type. Items
he 1 p:m., July 15 at Crown City are printed as space permits and
United Methodist Church wilh cannot be guaranteed to run •
Ge4&gt;rge Hollev officiating.
specific number of days.
MONDAY
LETART -The Lclart Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the·office building.
RlfiLAND - Free skin testing
clinic to he conducted by Connie
Karschnik, R.N., Meigs County
Tuberculosis Nurse, Rutland Fire
Station, Monday, 4:30 t6 6:30p.m.
'B IDWELL - Open House,
Scenic Hills Nursing Center to kick
off National Nursing Home Week.
Speaker Frank Cremeans to preside
at opening ceremonies, 10 a.m.
Balloon launch, brunch, and entertainment.
RACINE - Racine Village
Council will meet in recessed session at 7 p.m. Monday at Star Mill

BRANDl MALLORY AND JASON STEWART

Mallory-Stewart
RACINE- Lynn and Becky
Mallory or. Racine announce the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage or tlleir daUgbter; Btandi Joy, ...
to Jason Lee Stewart, son of Steve
and KeUy Stewart, Pomeroy.
The bride-elect is a 1994 gradu·
ate of Southern'High School and is
employed at The Shoe Place, Mid·

dleport. Her fiance isa 1993 graduate of Meigs High School and
a'ttended the Hobart Welding
School. He-.is· employed at 0-Kan
Marine, Gallipolis.
The open church wedding will
be Aug. 12 at the Racine United
Melbodist Chur.ch.

See-Hoschar
~

POMEROY - Darlene Anneue
• See and Dennis Jay Hoscbar
• announce tbeir engagement and
; approaching marriage.
.
See is a 1990 graduate of Meigs
• High School and is currently
• emp loyed at the Meigs County
.•• Public Library in' Pomeroy. She 'Is

the daughter of Kathryn and Cecil
Sec of Pomeroy.
Hoschar is a 1993 graduate of
Meigs High School and works for J
&amp; L Insulation . He is the son of
Wilma and Larry Hoscbar of
Pomeroy. ·.
·
· The marriage will be June 23 .

Aker~Majure

GALLIPOLIS · Donnita Aker,
daughter of Debbie Aker of Dun·
can, Okla. and Orin Aker of Oklahom a City, ~ Okla. - and Jimmy
Wayn e Majure, son of Phyllis
Majure of Duncan Okla.. announce
their engagement and upcoming
marriage.
.
Akcr is a .1994 graduate of
Sanger Christian Academy and is
employed at Wai-Mart. She is lhe

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards tbc weddings of Gallia.
• Meigs and Mason counties as news
:. and is happy to publish wedding
• s10ries and photographs without
charge.
.
However, wedding news must
meet general stantlards .of timeliness . The newspaper prefers to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible after the eve~t.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
· Along the ·River must be received
· by the editorial department by
Thursday, 4 p.m, prior to the date
of publication.

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read·

GALLIPOLIS - May is National
Arthritis Month, and the Kmart
Pharmacy is joining the Arlbritis
Foundation in encouraging people
to learn lbe many steps available to
lake charge of arlbritis:
"Despite lbe popular misconception that you just have to live with
i~ there are many ways p,eople wilb
arthritis can get help, ' said Ron
Those not making the 60-day Ellis, R.Ph. of K-Mart.
Seeing a doctor for proper diag·
deadline will be published during
. the uail y paper as space allows.
nos is is the Hrst step. Appropriate
Photographs ·of either th.e bride treatment depends on which type of
or the bride and groom may be · arthritis one has. Contacting the
published with wedding stories if Arthritis Foundation is valuable. It
desired. Photographs may be cilber has a variety of services that can
black and white or good quality make a difference, such as exercise
color, billfold size or larger.
classes, seif-hclp courses, support
Poor {J~ality photographs will groups and free information to
not be ac,cepted. Generally, snap· learn about arthritis ln greater
shots or instant-developing photos detail, he said.
are not o(acceptable quality.
Other specific steps that can
All material submitted for publi- make a difference include cxerciscation is subject to editing.
ing to maintain use of affected
Questions may be directed to joints; controlling weight to reduce
the editorial department from 1 to 5 lbe stress on weight-bearing joints;
p.m: Monday through Friday at using beat or cold as pain lbcrapy
446-2342.
strategies; and protecting joints by

ership with current news, the ~1/ipolis Daily Tribune and The Da.ly
Sentinel will not accept weddings
after 60 days from the date of the
.event.
All club meetings and other
news articles in the society section
must he submitted within 30 days
of occurrence. All birthdays must
he submitted wilbln 42 days of the
oecurence.
All material submitted for publi·
cation is subject to edilling.
PLUG IN ...

toG~at ~~~
l@J ¥

Buys....
'
Shop
ClaHlfteda

=:;;.J

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coDcctJ"blc. bears

BEDFORD - Tbe Bedford
Township Volunteer Fire Department Committee will meet Tuesday
at the Drawin town hall, 7 p.m.

CorrJpa ny

. er Bear
The OhiO Rf\1 204 N. Second Avenue

Midd leport, OH .45760 ..
614/992-4055.

"--"--- MICHELLE ouliiR~S~iii£;Aijiiiir''Q1.,._,,.,.
CROWN CITY - Roger l!nd be 5:30p.m., June 3 at Guyan Val, Virgie Ours of Crown Pty ley Missionary Baptist Church with
announce the engagement and music beginning at S p.m. The ccr. upcoming marriage of their daugb- emony will be performed by Gar·
'ter, Michelle Lea to David Alan land Montgomery. A reception will
Poling, sonofl&lt;ayMcCarley. ·
follow in the church fellowship
... , The open church wedding will ball.

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POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.·
Narcotics Anonymous Tri County
Group 7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

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·GALLIPOLIS· Grubb Family
Singers 6:30p.m. Scenic Hills
Nursing Home. ·
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Monday, May 15

• Crepe Paper, etc.

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(;OL()\1 .\HJ\ - ~

506 Grand Central Av e .
Parkersburg, WV
Across from
Grand Central Mall North
304-295-7 878

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GALUPOLIS • Alcoholics
Anonymous 8 p.m. St. Peters Episcopal Church.

...

GALLIPOLIS - Lafayeue White
Shrine of Jerusalem meeting 7:30
p.m. Rehearsal for new officers.

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AMY BENNETT AND CHARLES MILLER

Bennett-Miller

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Amy Lynn to Charles D. Miller IV,
son of Mr. and Mrs . Charles D.
Miller lli of Pbonenix ville, Penn.
Wedding plans are incomplete.

. ·:"' RIO GRANDE - Rebecca Ben'Jtett of Rio Grande and Kenneth
• Bennett of Crown City announce
, • the engagement of their daughter,

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Jones-Curtis

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Meigs High School.
The open church wedding will
be 3 p.m., Mat27 at th e First
Southern Baptist Ch urch on
Pomeroy .Pike. The ceremony will
be followed by a req::ption at the
church.

_,_ R!J'fLAND - Keith A, Jones, ·
;;'.3bn of Benton and Rhonda Phillips
l:!1.f Long Bottom , am;! Ginger M.
::t:Findlay) C urti s , daughter of
""'i'/aomi P. Findlay of Rutland.
..announce their cng_agement.
::. Both arc 1993 grad uate.s of

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Area
Christian Women's Club May Bas- .·
kets 12 p.m. Holiday Inn.

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Bethel #62 Middleport

CHECKOUT OUR SUNDAY SPEtiALS1
WEEKLY DRAWING FOR
PRIZE WINNERS1
l

International Order of Job's Daughte r s ·
will be holding a majorty ceremony on:

June 3, 1995 at 10:00

Vaughan's Cardinal .

interested Majority m em bers should
contact Cr..ta Riffle- 949-2058
Kathy jolmson 992-5328

Corner Of General Hartinger Parkway Ancl Pearl St. '
MIDDLfPORT ·
~ ·
" ~ ·
992·3471

for m !H'll information by May 22

•

ALL
BEDDING FLATS

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ANY

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We have new games, CD's and
movies arriving weekly!

992-6491 ' •

Less than 20"
In diameter.

·

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Tuesdaj,• May 16 .
MORGAN CENTER - Revi val
••
7:30p.m. May 14 through 27 Mor·
GALLIPOLIS · Gallipolis ga n Center Christian Holin.e ss
Retau' Merchants Association 12 Church.

FRUTH PHARMACY •

Middleport

I

rent-VCR's, Sega Systems,
5uper N•lntend0 Systems
and the new 321 System.

' BIDWELL :·~pen House 10 ofliccts.
•••
a.m. Scenic Hills Nursing Home.
Revivals
•••
MERCERVILLE - Revival 7
.G ALLIPOLIS - Community p.m. May 15 through 20 Victory
Cancer Support Group 2 p.m . New . Baptist Church with Jackie Clark
Life Lulberan Church.
preaching. Special singing nightly.

ALL HANGING BASKETS

~olitNie

-······L

Syracuse
992-5776
Open Daily 9 am-5 pm
.,;,""" 12 noon-S pm

MO HER'S DAY

•• . · All
INNatu,.l
3 DAYS!••
C.H. 2001
•

Hubbards Greenhouse

I I

r:LOSE
¥:tO LBS. •
······-·
-fYIACI! GUAIIANm
112 00 e-ll' C(M.IItON • UMIT 1)

Bedding-plams;vegeta51e
Plants, Hanging Baskets,
4 in Geraniums,
Shrubs &amp; Trees, Rose
Bushes, Strawberry Plants

VAUGHAN 1 S CARDINAL VIDEO WILL
BE OPEN TILL 11 P.M. ON FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY EVENINGS•
PICK UP YOUR MOVIES OR GAMES

Randy Wimmer Vinton Town Hall.
•••
GALLIPOLIS • American
Legion Auxiliary Lafayette Unit 27 ·
meeting 7:30 p .m. post hom e • ~
McCormick Rd . Nomination or

doing daily tasks in ways to ieduce
stress on joints or using labor-saving devices.

Whll Chto"'"""

Mow Opert For The Season

Get well wishes go to Clara
Adams, Racine. whoatage86underwent major .surgery recently. She
·resides with her daughter, Barbara
Dugan.
. Her address, in case you want to
send a card is P.O. Box 312, Racine,
Ohio.
Dorothy Winebrenner, Syracuse,
tells ils that her cousin, Peggy Kerns,

MIDDLEPORT - Grubb Family
Singer ~ to sing 6:30 p.m. Over·
brook Nursing Home.

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niece of Gwin Jobnson-Aker of
Gallipolis and the cousin of Timberly Johnson of Gallipolis and
Chris nntl Derel..,\ker-of Gallipolis.
Majure is a 1994 graduate of
Empire High School and is
employed as a welder . .
The wedding will be June 24 at
the Church of Christ, Duncan,
Okla.

p.m. Stowaway.

=:r~~:;~~G=~~~~

:fsf~~~l a.m. Good Hope Bap· p.:. '~Jn°~i~~~~~~J:~~!n7 ~~~

• Banners
• Center Pieces ·
• Plates
'
• Nap~ins
• Table Covers
• Balloons

\\' EDIHI\(; i\001\.

.,

CROWN CITY • Richard Unroe

SUTP£11:.5

TUESDAY
POMEROY- F.O.E. 2171
Auxiliary meeting, Tuesday 7:30
p.m.

The Community Calendar Is
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events; Tbe calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
fund-raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number or days.
Sunday, May 14

.(j!R.fl'D1.1.9f.lJ'I09{. '

1'.\trn 1101 ~ E ,\

McArthur and the late Donald
Elliott
. The wedding will be 7 p.m.,
May 20 at New Life Lutheran
Church, Gallipolis.

Gallia community calendar

Ours-Poling

....

VanSickle-EU.iott

GALLIPOLIS -Mr . and Mrs.
Dale VanSickle of Gallipolis
announce the engagement and
upcoming marriage of their daugh·
ter, Kelly Sue to Michael Lee
Elliott, son of Peggy Elliot. of

Fatten your wallet
with awant Rd

·May proclaimed arthritis month

: --Wedding policy. -.•

RU1LAND - Rutland Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary will
meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday atlbe Rutland fire ball. All are urged to
attend.
.

Park.

EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
School blood drive between 10
a.m.-2 p.m. Tuesday at the high
school.

DONNITA AKER AND JIMMY MAiURE

..

Murphy, Son of Susan Murphy of
Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The wedding will be 4:30 p:m.,
May. '27 at the First Cburc.b Of
Nazarene, Yoint Pleasant.

Meigs community calendar

fonnerlyofMjc!dlepmiJhlvinJICIIIC
A OIICIIIth IWO anch tiwe Md health probleml and «rtainny ._..
away they 10 • Eutcm High Sdlool evuyme's prayers and 111J1110L
Her tlddJea is 515 SkylU,
Calcert Band - that is .
Set'bring,
Fla.. 33872.
~IIIJIC~ in slate competition
on April 29 at
Talk about nice lalquets. I had
Gu.nna High
School the bind the bonor of attending twO mother
under lhe di.rlll:- and daughter banquets Ibis pMt week
tion of Susan and they weJe elepll to say lhe least
The first. I auended W1S at the
Climer received
a superior rat- Chester United MetbodistCbun:b and
ing, the highest the sc:rond one at the Syracuse Presbyterian Cbun:h. The food It both
· given. \
events
was very, vecy, good.
0 onEnrmainmtnt
Chester proa:::~~ wonder you received vi(!ed good sillgingIll·and
numerous
It
-wbatapleasuretobear
readings,..some of them very humormusicians .
•
ous while the entenainment at
BiliStobart, Tampa. Fla., former Syracuse was laken from the game
S)'lliCuse resident keeps in touch with show, Wheel of Fortune, using ail·
things going on in Meigs County swers from the Bible.
through former classmate, Della
Swtey, Syrncuse.
Received a Jetter from Annabel!
Della tells us thai Bill suffered a Lewis Houdashelt, Gallipolis, stating
stroke this past winter and is unable to that there will be no celebration of the
write butdoeskeepintouch by phone. . 1940 }&gt;omcroy High School GraduatBiU paduated from Pomeroy . ing Class of which she .and I are
High School in 1933 and was here in members.
1993 forthe60tbreunionofhis class.
And 80 it goes.
Some of his classmates were

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Page B4 • Ji~a.U.; 1llbat•·$mtinal

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

Sunday, May 14, ~-

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River Reveries

'Dogs About Town' serve as landmarks

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FREDRIC AND CATHY YOUNG

Aldred- Young '

POMEROY - The Beckett
Ridge Country Club of West
Chester was the setting for the
March 25 wedding of Cathy Sue
Aldred of Lebanon and Fredric
Louis Young of Springboro.
The bride is the daughter of
Eugene and Karen Aldred of
Lebanon, and tbe groom is the son
of Earl and Mae Young o{ Chester.
Judge. James D. Ruppert performed the double ring ceremony
at 10:30 a.m. following a program
of music by pianist Patricia Met·
zger.
·
The bride was given in marriage
by her fatber. Her at:endants were
Debbie Aldred, maid or honor, and
Gail Heiselman, Lebanon, matron
of bonor. both sisters of the bride. ·

Sam Blucdorn of Warren was
best man, and ushers were Steve
Freeze of Dayton, and Bill Heisel·
man of Lebanon, brotbcr·i!t·law of
the bride.
A reception was held at the
Go~ntry Club immediately following the ceremony. For a wedding
trip, the couple spent the weekend
in Louisville, Ky. They reside in
Springboro. " ·
The bride is a graduate of
Miami University with· a bachelor' s·
degree in business. She is
employed as a legal secretary.
The brillegroom graduated from
Ohio University in 1987 and . the
University of Akron School of Law
in 1992. He is an attorney in a Dayton law flliii.
.

B7 DOROTHY SAYRE
EveryOne. has beard lbe tam
"Men About Town." How about
MDogs About Town?"
During
our nearly
daily walks
through lbe
Io\Oely little
town
of
Syracuse, we
encounter
n u me r o us
dogs. The
dogs
are
mostly tied or remain in their yards.
There has only been one tlv!t sttuck
fear...even in lbe heart of my busband. Thatparticulardogwasnottied
but is now, t.hankfuUy, gone.
Myhusbandancjldon'tidentify
~ouses by the people inhabitants, and
m most cases we don't ltnow who
lives there; we identify the places by
the names we have given the dogs.
The dogs, just like people, have
their own distinctive personalities; and
just like people, while you like them
all, some are justa little f!IOfC special.
Oil one street, iliere is a mmiature
~berman. He is not outside much,
but he guards the house from his perch
on the back of a sofa looking out the
picture window. The draperies are
usually closed and all w~ can see of
him is his head, violently bobbing up
and down, while he emits a loud bark.

We call him, "The Medwucal Dog."
Anodter street bouts tbe resi·
denceoC"RichmdNixoo."Itisamaz·
ing bow much tbat dog loOOI like the
former Pn:sidenL we· were disappointed when we le8med be is really
a she and has a much more undigni·
lied name, "Bimbo."
Onedayaswe-walking. we
were joined by a bound-sized, YO\Dlg
black dog. He bad evidently torn
loose flan his tether. He was ecstatic
to see people, and to participate in a
wallt. We tried to discourage him, for
his own safety, but be was not easily
dissnac!ed He walked with us for a
coupleofmileslbefirstday. When he
WISII 'I lied, or had brolccn loose, he
calwouledldbim.i?in.~B=Yc.!requently. We
Black.ie was a curious dog and
we spent a lot of time laiughing at
somcofbisawkw.Uantics.Ifsome·
thing scared him, he would run 10 us
for proteCtion. A few months passed
without seeing Blackie; we figured he
bad moved. Then, one day when I was
walking alone in the rain, Black.ie
appeared. He was overjoyed to see
me and began jiunping up 10 receive
h~gsandpats. WhenlbentoveriOpet
~un. my ~n umblella was ~wn and
m Black.ie s exc1temcnt, he Jumped
again and tan~led a paw _in the um·
brella. HisacuoncausedhuniOfallto
the ground and 111111ed my umbrella
' "

wrong side OUl That was Bllckie, but
whit 1 dclilbL We leaned be is now
a ''r.m.dtJ&amp;" wm be can run and
play all day wilhout being lied.
Then, there is "Old Dog." Old
Doa is now 10 tiled that when she
walks, her hipulon'tquite wallt with
her. She doesn't travel YCry far any.
more.Sbetllledtogowithwbomcvcr
walked by...I think her favorite walking people were two ·ladies, but she
would walk witb anyone who passed
her bouse.
•
Two beagles 11e along the route.
I'm very pll1iai 10 beagiea u my 1011
had one named Jlatbie Doll We call
these "The Two Beagles." Maybe we
should call them Blllbiellldlecn. They ,
11e

seldom~· but DCYCI' bark or

pay m~b.attenbOIIIO us when. they
areunued.They~IOo~usysn.iffmg
~ ~d. That IS a dog} vcmoo of
readingtbencw~. . .
A vet:y favonte of ours 1.s an un·
known breed, but my gucssJSaGer·
man Shepheni/Husky mix. He is be·
hind a fence, but whata greeting he
gives. He knows our voices and he
actually tries 10 talk. His tail wags so
·· ferociously tbat his~ntire body 11CCJ11S
toshake,andhesofdyyowlsoutafew
low-sounding words. We have lljlver
heard anything like him. Someday I
may go knock on "Doggy Dog's~
owner's door to ascenain if a lqsb is
available, and 10 ask permission 10

Study: Sleep apnea higher in truck drivers
STANFORD, Calif. (AP)Nearly ·eight out of 10 long-haul
truck drivers sucre~ from a sleep
disorder that can cause severe
fatig'ue during waking hours, a
study suggests. .
Sleep apnea affec~d 78 percent
of 159 commercial drivers- a rate
three times higher than tbe general
population,
according
to
researchers at tbe Sleep. Research

Center at Stanford Universily amazingly high prevalence." In the
School of Medicine.
general population, about 24 per- ·
"This was a big surprise," said ·cent of men and 9 percent of
Dr. William Dement, the center's women suffer from sleep apnea
director and the senior author of tbe
study released Thursday. "When
The disorder causes people 10
78 percent of the people coming
st~p breathing during sleep, then
toward you on the road in 40-ton
trucks have such a disorder, you brtefly awaken, sometimes hun~eds or timef a night. The condihave a problem."
tion,
wh1cb is treatable, usually
Dement called the rate • 'an
ar1ses when muscles of the upper
atrWay become excessively relaxed
during sleep and block the air passage.
identification recbnique, can detect
maternal drUg use only within the
previous 24 to 72 boors.
"We must be aggressive In our
efforts lO promote knowledge about
the effects of alcohol and other
drugs during pregnancy and promole treatment of addictive illness·
es among women of all ages," said
.
Dr. Gerald E. Vallee, Gallia Coim·
319 Viand Street
ty health commissioner.
Point Pleasant W. Va
For more information about the
programs in Gallia County and. ·
Gallipolis, which provide inlorma·
lion and help for pregnant nloms.
call the "Help Me Grow" hclpline
at 1-800-755-GROW.
.
·

Birth defects awarenes~ week focuses on prevention ·
GALLIPOLIS • Alcohol and
Other Drug-Related -Birth Defects
Awareness Week begins today and
offers Gallia County and Gallipolis
an opponunity to focus on preven·
tion.
Gov. George V. Voinovicb offi·
cially designated the awareness
week in Ohio in conjunction witb
tbe Ohio Family and Children Ftrst
Initiative's "Help Me Grow" well·
ness campaign for expectant motb·
ers and tbeir babies.
"Newborns who have been
exposed to alcohol and otber dru~s.
because of their mother's addi.C·
tion, stay in the hospital tbree times
longer than tbose born to molhers
who arc not addicted," s~id Dr.
Perer Somani, state bealtb dlfCCtor
"By reaching women of child·
bearing age witb effective drUg and
. alcohol prevention messages we
could help eliminate one of the
leading known causes of ".'ental
retardation and save an estimated
· $1.6 billion annually in associated.

costS for Fetal Alcohol Syndrome S21,227,832 ..with immeasurable
(FAS) alone."
emotional savings," said Luceilld
According to the Ohio Depan- Fleming, dire&lt;;tor of ODADAS.
The range of alcohol and other
ment of Alcohol and Drug Addie·
tion Services (ODADAS), I, 137 drug-related birtb defects varies
pregnant women, ()r approximalely widely, with FAS among the most
1.5 percen~ were treated for alco- devastating.
hol and other drug problems in
According to estimates by tbe
publicly-funded treatment pro· Centers for Disease Control's Birtb
grams between July of 1993 and Defects Monitoring Program, for
June of 1994. Of these, approxi· every 10,000 babi.es born. nearly
mately 15.6 percent were adoles- four have FAS.
cents.
These. numbers may be low
Seventy-seven of Ohio's alcohol because the centers' diagnoses are
and other drug programs provide made within 30 days of birth when
residential and outpatient treat· facial malformations, such as small
ment, as well as education, out· head circumference, a flattened
reach, and interim services to midface and a sunken nasal bridge,
women and their children. During . that characterize FAS babies, are
1993 and 1994, there were. 459 difficult to identify.
·
drug-free babies botn in Ohio's
As many as 375,000 drug·
treauuent programs.
exposed babies are born each year.
"Based on a moderate average These numbers may also be under·
of $46,248 for the fir st year of estimated because many hospitals
treating a drug/alcohol exposed have yet to establish systematic
infant, the efforts of these residen· procedures to identify tbesc infants.
tial programs have saved Urine analysis, the most common

Disneyland is allowing ·women to-:do~ more
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Disneyland's women employees have
a,new reason to whistle while they
work.
After 40 years of men taking
visitors on a boat journey through a
perilous rainforest, tbc theme park
is letting women man the helm for
lile J unglc Cruise.
·
WiU1in U1e year, more women
will be cast in traditionally male
roles. including steamboat and train
· guides. Also. men will appear. on
the Storybook Land ride, a cbil·
drcu' s boating amaction where

g~idcs point (lUI miniature castles ing guests and pushing boats into
docking positions, said altractions
from fairy tales.
"The whote park will be uni· director Craig Smith.
The latest attempt came after
sex," said attractions supervisor
Bruce Kimbrell. " 'There will be no Suzanne Barnaby, a 15-year ride
operator, saw women skippers at
barriers."
Magic Kingdom managers first work at Walt Disney World in
tried to cast women as the wise· Orlando, Fla. She asked to jry the
cracking Jungle Cruise skippers in job when she returned to Anaheim.
She said the 12 women assigned
1974. But Kimbrell said "tbe pub·
to
the
·ride have a joking reton for
lie wa&lt; not ready to accept women
the
occasional
doubters: "At least
daredevils."
if
we
gel
lost,
1'
,11 pull over and ask
Another attempt in 1987 failed .
for
directions."
because women had trouble load -

by Bob Hoeflich

take tbis loving do&amp; for 1 walk.
Two of our spcci.J do&amp; friends
~~e now tJeceeoi.d
per.
haps. the best·behaved clop we have
eYCrsem .. .sopoli~eandfrielldly. On
tbe ran: oecasioos tbey would buk, It
was alw11ysa perfunctory alarm, a::·
companied witb wagging llils. They
usually stayed in the yn, but lbe
yOIBigcr of lbe two, "Suzie," would
somctimes come out to meet·.us and
receive ·a scratch 011 her neck. Tbe
dogs introduced us .10 lbeir owners,
who are now friends of ours. I t - a
vet:y sad day when Suzie.- ill wltb
cancer, had 10 be eulhanized. Tbe
oldcrdogdiedafewmonlhslalet. We
sadly miss those "dogs about IOwn."
(Dorothy S.yre and •er
band, Geroge, formerly ol Meigs
County, moved here aboutlbree
years ago ud now reside ilia new
house racing the &lt;&gt;~)lei River just
below Syracuse.) .. ·

b*

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP WllH
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Agent For

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We Bring Satel6te
Television Dawn to Earth

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Satellite &amp; TV
240 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis' ·
446-8212

Hours
M-Th 11 am · 10 pm
F-Sat 11 am· 10:30pm

Sun. 12 noon· 9&lt;10

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MONEY BACK GUARANTEE

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FRU TH PHARMACY

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Sale Starts
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GINGERBREAD HOUSE Of GIFTS
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Take Out Orders

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992-2156

$3.95

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.

***********************************
** POMEROY NURSING AND REHABILITATION -CE.NTER *
*

*:

!

.**
:

RECOGNIZES
NATIONAL NURSES WEEK (MAY 6-12)

4k

1r

*

**

Their hard work, skill, dedication and compassion play a very important role in
maintaining the health and well·being of our community as a whol.e.
·
:
Thank you for yo;tr service and the exceptional quality of care you provide.
PNRC NURSING STAFF:
15 Years+
·
Pat Hindy
Lane
Betty Chevalier
Frances Reed

** Beli~da
*!
*
*

3 Years+
1( Cindy Seymour
Sharon ~ussell
: Barb Eblin

4 Years+

Connie Hendricks
Kaaron Pickens
Cathy Scarberry
Mary Jane Talbott
Karen Johnson

.

2 Years+

Pam Riley

:

Karla Kuhn
Sherry Mille'r
. Lisa Barringer
Rachel Robinson

:

**
*
**
*
**
:

·•·.

GERRI VINCENT

:· Vincent to
;speak at Flame
:-Fellowship
• · POINT PLEASANT, W.VA .•
·Flame Fellowship of Point Pleas:ant, w.va: will host a meeting 7
;p.m .. May 22 at the Fori Randolph
Terrace. Gerri V'ncent, executive
"vice president of.Foreign Affairs
"for Flame Fellowship International
:·will be tbc guest speaker. ·
Vincent bas served as a speaker·
'teacher for seminars, conventions,'
retreats and the Full Gospel Busi·
)iessmen's Fellowship in the
church.
• Sbe and her husband. Ron,
recently started a Flame Fellowship
in Jamaica and are planning one in
England this fall.

:

I Year
Mary Lou Gogel
Debbie White

:

**

fn celebration of nurses wcek.PNRC will hon·or their nurses with dinner at Red · . :
Lobster irr Parkersbu'rg, WV.
·
I!
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center . '

*
.** ·~Ill'· ,

. FOLLOW 'RaE DIRIC,IORS ...
-to boost your energy level
-to lose unwanted pounds
. and inches
-to create a new body
-to make new.friends
-to increase self esteem
-to decrease stress
-to have fun

?L._ _
~~

0

~I~ l

Call

LADIES PREFER.ENCE
Health Club
446·3401

,,, ....... [
o)

.

"We cater to o wonwn :~
fitness 11eeds"

&gt;

'

.

u

-

Tbe spring tOUr included a com. pelition at Forestville Baptist in
110{ Viand Street
Cincinnati and ministry at Faith
Point Ple.:~sant, WV
Baptisl GallipoUs. Mason Christian
H ~ll/"11 - M-Sat ll)..fi Closed Sund•y
-:' "'~B'retlrreiPtnd--Grabam .llaptist JD_. · !~~ =-==~
New Haven, W. Va
""='8~ 1

.

With Chromium Plcolinate

**

0

I'm impressed with tbe know· Veterans Memorial Hospital is
right on top of us.
bow tbat our people are showing In
.'
The sale has been set for Thursproduciog all or tbose beautiful
and Friday, June 1 and 2
.
day
flower plants .
.
If you haven't visited at least beginning at 9 a.m. each day and
· one of our greenhouses sprinkled will be held outdoors near the park.
••
·about the county you should. Tbe ing lot area adjatent to the hospital.
And, of course, Auxiliary mem'•
greenhouses are aglow with the
bers
are hoping that any day now
beautiful flower plants in so many
you'll
go through your bouse, attic
colors and such varieties. Appar·
and
garage
and gather tip those
endy. the finished P..oduct doesn't
tbings
that
you'd
just as soon be
just happen. Seems like it would
rid of. While you're doing this
take a great deal of knowledge plus
a really, really green tbumb to pro- keep in mind that 011e man's trash
duce such plants. AU we have to do is another man's treasure. Your
is select what we want; take tbem contributions are certainly .requestbome and plant them. and bingo, we ed but tbe AuXiliary does not want
have beautiful flowers in our yams to handle any clothing items for
this novel sale.
for the summer.
.
I· understand tbat some or our . ~uxiliary mem~rs wiU apJll'ecigrowers have contracts to supply ate 11 1f you can drlip your contribu·
the plants to major stores so it tlons by the hospital lobby as soon
apparently can be big business as possible but if that is a problem,
just call the hospital and speak to
which our
local people seem to be handling it an Auxiliary member so tbat your
contributions can be picked up. The
well.
very worthy group is counting on
all of us to make tbe sale a success
Helen Hill of near Long Bottom· ~o please help.
has a lot of interest in the commencement at the University of Rio
G. Harold Martin, former Meigs
RODNEY AND DIANNE WALKER
Grande today.
Countian who bas been an attorney
Helen bas a granddaughter, in Fon Lauderdale, Fla., for many ,
Terri Lynn Hill, Racine, who will many years continues to maintain
'
. RUTLAND - Rodney and son and daughter-in-law, Eric and be receiving her bachelorUs 'degree his interest in tbe Pomeroy High
Dtanne Walker celebrated their Chrissy Wa"'er of Route l, Mid· in psychology and her son and School Alumni Association even
• 25th wedding anniversary with a dleport, and a daughter Candice daughter-in-law, Ronald G. and tbough it has been 78 years since
weekend trip to Niagara Falls in .Walker, a junior at Meigs High Joyce Hill, Pomeroy, will be his graduation. He has sent along
receiving their rpaster's degrees in his dues for
Ontario. Canada.
School.
education.
Both Ron and Joyce are the year as well as ·several ideas to
Mr. and Mrs. Walker were marMr. and Mrs. Walker reside on
teachers
at
the Chester Elementary encourage the Pomeroy Associaried at Langsville by Rev. Gene Beech Grove Road. Rutland.
tion to get into an extended schol·
School.
Musser May 10, 1975. 'They have a
'By tbe way, Helen's husband, arship program.
0
the late Leo Hill was a photography
--Hey, Moms. Hope you're havinstructor at the University· of Rio
ing a great Mother's Day . )ust be
Grande for a number ·o r years.
thankful that you don ' t.get that
awful neckties tbat will appear next
Did you know that construction month when Dad has his day.
, By THOMAS MARTELLO
· lion of what Jis in the child's best
: Associated Press Writer
inlerest, tbe court said. It noted tbat on the Meigs County Courthouse
TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - An New Jersey must adhere to "soci· started 150 years ago this montb?
:
The Meigs County Commis·
, unwed fatber cannot force his child ety's recognition of full equality
sinners first took action to bave a
I
to take his last name, New Jersey's for women."
highest court has ruled, tossing
The boy's parents never mar· courthouse constructed ·in March, I
I
aside centuries of Western tradi· ned. Alan Gubernat of Easton, Pa. , 1945 and arrangements were made
I
tion.
initially doubted he was Scott's for the lodll building to be con- I
l
P roceuo~ S•r~lets )
J
In a decision reversing lower father, and Karen Deremer retained structed from plans used on a struc· I
lure in Scioto County. It seems tbat
Premium Film Developing I
courts, the New Jersey Supreme custody of her son ..•
1
I
Court said that those who have
When tests proved Gubernat's Meigs County paid Scioto County
physical custody or the child paternity, he took an..!Ctive role as $15 to copy a part of the plans
12 or 15 exposures ...s1 OFF I
needed for the Meigs Courthouse.
should have a preference when it father. coun documents show.
s2 I
comes lQ surnames.
In seeking joint custody, Guber· . ~lidding for the construction job I
24.exposures............ OFF 1
"It is the Jove of the parent, not nat asked the coun to change his ended May I, 1945 and the bid of
the name of the parent, tbat binds son's surname, saying the hoy then Samuel S. Bergen was tbe accept· 1I
36 exposures ..... c...... '3 OFF I
·
I
parent and child," the court ruled would be assured "he always has a ed.
I
C
41
process
35mm
full-frame
color
To
be
150
years
old,
I'd
say
tbat
Thursday.
.
father."
1
print film . single prints only. Umlt 1 couoon
1
The decision means that 4-yearThe mother argued that Scott old Meigs Courthouse is looking
· per order and may not be comomea w1th ~
·
old Scott Thomas Deremer doesn't should keep her surname because good, wouldn't you?
I any other offer. ExCludes I Hour lab, 1/2 1
she was U1e primary caretaker and
have to change his name.
1 frame and panoramic orders.
TO REDEEM:
. An attorney for the boy's motb· . because her name is known in tbeir
You gotta admit time moves I Write
11'2r3
OH KODALUX I
er, Karen E. Deremer of Washing· small town.
1
Processing"
in
Special
Instructions
area of
.
along
at
a
pretty
fast
pace.
As
a
ton Borough, N.J., called the deci· ·
The trial court, later backed by
envelope and seat couoon and roll inside. 1
result
the
second
annual
White
Ele1 Coupon el(pires 5/ 31/95 . EMclu.des 1
an appeals court, ruled that the
sion "historic."
Tbe ·presumption that a child boy's surname should· be changed phant Sale of the WomenUs Auxil· I Colorwatch film processing.
I
iary at
should bear tbe father's surname to Gubernal.
.should be replaced by a detennina: TAWNEY STUDIO :

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,.,

Court says father can't-force
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'

preschoolers get home by dinnerA.uocillted Press Writer
time at least twice a week.
RUTHERFORD, NJ. (AP)"Nobody bas work more imporIt Kay Willis bad ber way, modler· • tant than we do," said WiUis, a 6S·
hood would be a recognized pro- year-old mother of 10 and grandfession. Moms would have coffee mother of seven.
breaks, personal days, vacation
Willis has convened many partime.
ents to her point or view as she
There would be two Motber' s travels the country talking about
Day boUdays.
Motbers Matter, her five-session
And a Jaw would require program to help mothers· and
employers to let workers with fathers ease into parenting careers.

. 25th anniversary celebrated

Chinese Restaurant

All

By DONNA DE LA CRUZ

--

PEKIN&lt;}

·-----·
I
I

"

They-.

* valuable contributions to the community.

tour.

~~:!ss~;.=s~Y· Jared Pyfes and

Beat of the Bend ...

•

*• thank our nursing staf~ and all nurses working m the Pomeroy area for their :

RODNEY • Teens from Faitb
Baptist Church in Rodney, rocenUy
completed their spring ministry
Tbe music ministry. Jed by Jlati·
na Dennis and accompanied by
Sarah Miller, included choir nuin·
bers "Let There Be Praise" and
"Bind Us Together." Quartet num·
bers included "Thank You" and
"Servant's Heart." Dennis and
Miller performed a keyboard duet
"We Shall behold llim." Personal
testimonies were offered by several
teens.
.
1llc theme of events included a
puppet play "Look. Out" written
and directed by Kevin Dennis and a
drama ''Judgment Day" written and
direc.ted by Rene' Farley. Mon,ty
and Lanna Blanton, Sandy Denms, .
Dave Newberry ;)nd John Spauld·
\ng assisted witb props, transpo~tion and other support. Teens nun·
isterlng were Layton Adkins, Susan
Deaver, Cbris .Bianton, Melonie
coen, Amber Dennis, Dani JenJcs,
Angie. Lewis, Racbeal Lusher,

•

** The staff and residents of Pomeroy Nursing and Rehab Center would like to **

Teen ministry ·
wraps-up
spr.ing tour

Moms shown how to treat
motherhood as profession

•

•
•

$un.llq Qtimn-Jhntwl• Page 85

36759.Rocksprings Road • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769·9731 • 6141992·6606'

*

···-~**•***************************

Cheshire alumni
b~nquet planned

Confidential Ser.vices
for females &amp; males.
•Birth Control Exams
•Pap Tests
•Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
•Anonymous HIV tests &amp; counseling
•Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
•Methods include:
• DepoProvera-injection • Diaphraghm
• I.U.D.
• Birth control pill
• Condom/Spermicide
Sliding Fee Scale
·We accept Medicaid and private insurance.
414 ·SECOND STREET
GALLIPOLIS
446·0166

509 S. THIRD STREET
MIDDLEPORT
992·5912

lll"b-"¥32~

1
I
I

424 2nd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

SEE SELECT &amp; .
ORDiR INSTANTLY,
NOT IN WEEKS.
Ancl. you leave wtth a FREE

PROOF SHEET. so you're
certa1n ot what you ordered

SubJacl tee. ot $4 00 oer person payat)le wnen portrAits ate taken No hl'nlt ;~;;~=:=~• CHESHIRE • .Finat plans have
cotlectlon!i pertamlly but on!y one advflrt,sed colleehon f'W'' subject Vour chOIC4!
- .Jiigb School alumni reun-on to be
Adrlrttonal poses take!1 tor op1ICM"'al po;ltart coHectm With no ohl+gal~ lo purch8!M!I
beld May 28 at the old school
THIS AREA KMART HAS A PERMANENT STUDIO OPEN
building in Cheshire: Regis~tation
, EVERY DAY Mon. • Sat. 1 0 am • j pm On Sun. 10 am (or
begins at I p.m. and the meal will
lle served at 2 p.m.
·
store opening, if later)- 6 pm (or store closing, II earlier)
Alumni who have not been con&lt;&gt;
G~LLIPOLIS
•
-·tacted and wish to attend may call-'- ·--;;;;-.~~-~·, . .., -·
II&gt; ...,.
Marilyn Reese at 367-7457.
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6ecn made for the second Cheshire

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Peoples Choice Presents

Summ(}r In :l\1ichigan
Mackinaw lslantl • Dearborn • Frankenmuth
'

Monday, July tO - Friday, July t4

•

•

Two nights lodg inS at the Grand. Hotel on Mackinaw Island, including
all meals; hydroplane ferry service to the island and horse and carriage
tour also Included
·
One nil;:ht in Dearborn with lodging at the Greenfield Inn; dinner and
tour of the Ford estate and morning tour of the Ford Museum and
village

.

Super Low Pricel Super Big Valuel

lllillllllllilllll~l ; ~

1

·One night In Frankenmuth with-accommodations at the Bavarian
Inn with dinner included, and shopping at"Bronner's Christmas
Wonderland, the world 's largest Christmas store

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Deluxe motorcoach transportation

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Pre-tour reception with valet parking

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Baggage handling and all taxes and tips included ·

•

Escorted by Mary ' Fowler, Peoples Choice Coordinator

,.

· Price per member: $675 double occupancy; •
$750 single occupancy. Non -members please add $25 .00.
Please call Mary Fowler at (304) 675·1 12.1 for reservation~.
Peoples Choice Is a division of the Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant, Member FDIC.
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' Sunday, May 14, 1~

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

--Double degrees---.

~

FAC announces jurors for co.mpetition

t

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at the Presidential Palace in Taipei, Southern Hills Arts Council, SumTaiwan.
mers worlcs as a reporter for the
Booth brings with him over 40 Wellston Telegram. Before retiring
years ol expertise in the art bistocy to the hills of Southern Obio, Sumand art educatloo arenas.
mer$ was an equity sraae lll8ll8lleT
Mike Comfeld, professor of Art witb experience on Broadway. off·
GALLIPOUS • Jurors for the at Marshall University in Hunting· Broadway and Ford's Theater in
French Art Colony'• 27th Annual ton, W.Va., bas done numerous Washington.
Art Ccmpelltlon, held in July bave
exhibits and commissions in the lribeen anDOUDCed.
state area, as well as receiving sevThe jurors • selections will he
Each 1ear the festival committee eral awards. Actina as clit'ector of
seeks new jurors from different Marshall University's Birke Art exhibited in the FAC galleries
areas. Tile, COIIUIIittee considers the Gallery, Cotnfeld worlred with the throughout July. Selections are
background and philosophy of eacb FAC to organize it's May exhibit, i&gt;llsed upon handling and appropri.
juror so that lfl!ditional art may fair "Selecled Wodcs from the Marsbal1 ateness of the medium, origfnal
betrer one year, while more absll'act· University Student Juried Show." idea and its expression and presenart bas a better chance tile next. Cornfeld's most recent creative ratlon.
Jurors chosen for this year's com· endeavor was as an artist-in resi·
worlcing independently farst and ·
petition are Dr. Bill Booth, Mike deuce at The Huntington Museum
then
ma,king final selections as a
Comfeld and Barll Summers.
of Art.
group,
jurors will choose between
. Booth, professor of Art a1 More·
Barbara Summers. executive
· head Srare University in Kentucky, dicector at The Southern Hills Arts 40 and 4S items, then determine
will serve as a juror. He has bad Council in Jackson; will complete ribbon winners and best of show in
several honors in the last 30 yc:ars the trio of jurors. Summers bas both tbe amateur and professional
of his career. In 1994, he was the served for several years on the divisions . Following this, enlries
recipient of the Medal of Freedom board of the Alliance of Ohio Com- are available for purchase awards
presented by the Senate. Also. munity Arls Agencies acting .as selected by local businesses and
.
llooth who is fluent in German, secretary. chair for the Personnel Individuals.
French, Chinese and Japanese, Commitree and cbaic foc tbe Rural
Tbe art will .be display in the
received the Cbaing Kai Sbek Regrant Panel.
Memorial Honor Award, presented
In addition to her work at the

Exhibition set
, for July Fourth

FUTURE GRADUATES • Cbrlo and Nt~ole Stutes of
Cedarville wiU graduate from CedarvUie College June 3. Cbrls wiU
receive a bachelor's degree In criminal justice and sociology. He Is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Stutes, formerly of Thurman. He Is .
the grandson uf Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Stutes ofTbt~rman and Mrs.
Esther Bush of Bidwell and the late Lambert Bush. Necole will
receive a degree in elementary education.

·~ Huck

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20 /o OFF!
OFFER GOOD THRU MAY 31, 1995

OHIO RIVE;R PLAZA, GALLlPOl!IS, OH.
.1
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Harri61an has been accused in
lawsuits of squandering $20 mil·
lion or more ol tbc eswe of bet lale
busbaDd, W. Averell Harriman, a
fooner New York aovemor. It was
generally believed at the lime tbc
sale was announced sbe needed
money to sellle suils brou&amp;bt by her
husband's belrs.
Her Picasso, "Mother and
Cbild," was estimaied to be worth
$7 million to $10 million. The sell·
ing price to an anonymous buyer,
including Christie's commission,
was $11,992,500.
Also sold fropt the Harriman
collection were Renoir's "Portrait
of Mademoiselle Demarsy," which
brouabt $5.6 million, within the
pres ale estimate; and Matisse's
"The Blue Hat," whicll was sold
for $1.1 million, far below the projeered price of $2.5 million to $3.5
million.
.Christie's auction Thursday
reaped $58.7 million on the sale of

By RICIL\RD PYLE
Associated Preu Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Times
Square brings to mind sleazy signs
and porn shops, greasy pizza joints
•and hookers. Picture Disney smack
in the middle.
That's what the city bas in mind
to make the New York crossroads
respectable - a skyscraper hotel
and Disney-backed entertainment
complex.
The $300 million project beat
out two other entries Thursday in a
competition to clean up and revital·
ize the area.
The flashy complex is dominat•
ed by a 47-story bote! wilb a curving slash down its center, from
which light will be projected
upward for what was likened to a
crashing comet effect
Mayor Rudolph Giuliani said
the effort to revive Times Square
was "the largest urban renewal

1
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34 works. Tbe tally was within the
presa1e estimate of $51 million to
$65 million.
Forty-one paintings and sculp·
lures were offered; seven did not
reach minimum bids and were not
sold.

On Monday, Picasso's portrait
of a fellow artist brooding in a
Barcelona cafe, •'Angel Fernandez
de SOlO," was sold for $29 million
- the highest price paid for a
painlin&amp; a1 auction since 1990. The
painting was sold frooi lbe estate of
banlcer Donald Stralem and his philanthropist wife, Jean.
The record-priced Matisse.
"The Hindu Pose," was painted in
Nice in 1923. It sold for consider·
ably more than its presale estimate
of $8 million to $10 million. And
on Weduesday, a nude by Amedeo
Modigliani &gt;SOld for $12.4 million,
a record for the artist at auction .

SLOGAN CONTEST • Fred Williams, GaUia County Chamber
of Commerce Slogan Conunittee chairman, presents Edna White·
ley a plaque as winner of the slogan contest. Whiteley's slnga!l was
"A Mind for the Future a Heart for the Past." She received a Gal·
lia County coverlet, $50 .and a plaque. Runners-up were Abbie
Henry and Mary CampbeU.

program ever launched" in {he
Unired_States. . .
·• \
"Forty-second Street is one of
the reasons why New York City is
the capital of lbe world," Giuliani
said.
Times Square attracts 20 million
visitors a year. •
Ti.shman Urban Development
Corp .• which will build and own
. the $220 million, 680-room b6tel, ·
expects to'brel!!&lt; grou!ld-ifl' 1996
and complete it iiiM!Oiii two years.
Disney Development 'co. plans
10-story, $40 milliog building
containing entertainment centers
and a Disney "vacation club" with
100 or more time-share apartments.
The flashy compte&lt; will occupy
an L-shaped property acquired by
the city last year for $35 miUion. at.
the corner of 42nd Street and.
Eighth Avenue.

PATRIOT. Rev. Frank and
Carolyn Fenton will be retiring
from the ministty of the United
Methodist Church. A retirement
reception
be given for them
May 28 by the Clough United
Methodist Church, Cincinnati, to
which !bey minister.
·
The couple served the area in

will

..JII I II I l'"r'

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SEE ONE TODAY•••
· Leather Seats
Loaded!

a

Fentons to retire from ministry ~
CELEBRATION PREPARATION· JenDlfer Giles, left, Arron
Thompson, Darren Clark, Michael Blank and Kenny Carter, stu·
dents in Debbie North's second grade class at Ohio Valley Chris·
tian Scbool, prepare for National Nursing Home Week at Scenic
Hills Nursing Home. The week will begia with an open bouse 10
a.m. Monday. Congressman F'fank Cremeans will he the guest
speaker.
,

:&gt;luideltt Sen·
ale !'resident Ben Hash Joins Dr. William Stitt,
the fir.&lt;t recipient of the Ernie A. Wyant Out·
slaridil)g Teaching Award, and Dr. Fritz -Russ
and Dolores Russ, brother-in-Jaw and sister-In·
how of the late Ernie Wyant; Dr. Barry Dorsey,

,...---Winning phrase----.

design winner:
From low life to high class

Ladies &amp;Men's

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Time~ Square

;,"'"

LEONA
EBLIN

We love you more today
than yesterday, but not
as much as tomorrow.
Happy Mother~ Day! ·
From Nancy and Rpy

galleries and in the city park. July
4th from 10 a.m. to S p.m. Pieces
juried into tbe FAC galleries will
remain on display unlil July 30.
Exhibits hi both the galleries and
cit~e_park are free and open to the
pu6Dc: To receive a prospectus for
the 27th Annual. Art Competition

"Young Man With A Cap," was
painted in 1888 and depicts an
unsmiling young man with a cap
jauntily peicbed on his bead. It wu
considered 'the most sJanifiCBIIt ol
his works to be put oo the block
sioa: his "Portrait of Dr. Gacbet"
sold for a record $82.S mlUion five
years ago.
1
Tbe presale price estimate fqr
the paintina. Whlcll bad been in a
private European collection since
1947, was $7 million to $9 million.
Michael Fmdlay, senior director
of impressionist and modem art at
Christie's, atlributed the higher·
than-expecred price to the demand
for tbe artist's work, the freshness
of the painting to lhe market and
"private buyers coming back Into
· market wltb an aggre5sive nature."
Christie's said the buyer would
remain anonymous. Tbe selling
price, $13,202,500, included the
auction bouse's requisite commis·
sion..

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trustee James Fraser Glqck.
The· library sued to retrieve it,
The first ·half. believed claiming ownership because Twain
des!Toyed at the printer's, turned up had intended to donate it to the
a couple of years Jarer, and Twain library, not Gluck himself. The
sent it on to Gluck. Wllltn Gluck lawsuit was settled in 1992, with
died at age 45, t!le first half of the the library paying an undisclosed
manuscript disappeared among bis sum to Gluck's granddaughters.
papers and was believed lost for
. The Mark Twain .Room opens to
more than a century.
the public Saturday, with parts of
In 1991, it turned up ip an attic the 1,361-page manuscript on distrunk at the California home or one play.
of Gluck's two granddaughters,
who
it up for sale through

as the centerpiece of the Buffalo
and Erie County Public Libr.iry' s
Mark Twain Room·.
The library had hoped to open
the Twain memol)al a year ago, but
budget and consttuction problems
delayed completion or the
$1.90,000 exhibit.
Twain, who worked in Buffalo
as a newspaper editor from 1870 to
1872, sent the manuscript's second
half to the library short! y after the
novel was published in 1884 in
to a
from

NEW YORK (AP)...,. Tbe IDOit
imponant Vinceut Van Gogh por·
trait to come to awket in five yem
sold for $13.2 mlllkin. surpassing
blliqDa at an auction In which
a iCasso also !etched aa eiaht·
digit price.
· TJae sale Thursdi\Y capped a
~ or annllll sprina auctions of
modem and impressionist art at
·Christie's and Sotbcby's. Tbe wtc1t
included the highest price ever paid
for a Henri Matisse painting $14.8 million -and a Picasso was
iluctioned Monday for $29 million,
far above the projected value.
: At Christie's on Thursday, thre«!
paintings owned by Pamela Harri·
man; tbe U.S. ambassador to
France, were auctioned for a total
of nearly $19 million. One of the
works from her· collection - a
Picasso from the artist's classical
period - was sold for nearly $12
million.
' The boldly colored Van Gogh,

cxr

DR. Bll.L BOOTH

OJJornt Pleasant, WV

Van Gogh por_trait sells .tor $13.2 million

~--cal·!~~

Finn finds 'home at library's Twain room ·

By DAVID GERMAIN
Associated Press Writer
OUFFALO, N .Y. (AP)- At
last. the Twains have met
After a century-long journey
almost as strange as Huck Finn's
odyssey down the Mississippi, the
handwritten manuscript of Mark
Twain's great.Amcrican novel
foun&lt;l a home Friday.
Separated for more than 100
years , the two halves of the
manuscri pt for "Adventures of
Finn" were reunited

Pomeroy o Middleport o Galli pol Ia, Oli

&lt;Sunday, May 14, 1995

the early 1960's, ministering to
Bethesda, Lincoln, Patriot and
Mudsoc Churches. After retiring
they will reside in Dayton.
Cards may be sent to Rev. and
Mrs , Frank Fenton, Pastor Parish
Committee, Clough United
Methodist Church. 20101 Wolfangel, Cincinnati, Ohio 45644.

Large
Selection of
Colors &amp;
Styles

•

"Your JJomdown Truelr Dealer"

SMITH
GMC TRUCKS IN·c.
GALUPOLIS, OHIO

133 PINE STREET
446o2532

Grande Community
Mrs. Erllle
(Ruth) Wyant. Stitt teaches
University of
Rio Grande with courses ranging from Introductory algebra and advanced ·differential 'equa·
lions to physics and thermodynamics.
.

URG recognizes outstanding teacher
RJO GRANDE· Dr. William R.
Still recently received the Ernie A.

Wyant Outstanding Teac hing
Award at tl1e University of Rio
Grande. Nominated by students.
Dr. Still was selected by the Stu. dclll Senate ,is_dille fmt@:ip~nt of
a teaching award originated by the
stu&lt;lonl bo&lt;ly.
Still joined the University's fac·
ully as a part-time instructor of
mathematics and physics in 1983.
By 1&lt;)S4. he taught"fuU -time in the
College of Math and Sciences. He
h:l' nnJTscs ranging from introductoi)' algebra and advanced differential equations to physics' and ther·
motlvnamics.

Jackson County, Wyant attended
Rio Grande College and graduated
in 1937.
He married Jackson Countf
native Ruth Russ in 1934. Together
they operat.id an insurance business
iJI addi!ionto !Jis__teaching career.
Wyant died in September, 1980. ·

success." .
The man for whom the out·
SL1nding teaching awani is named,
Ern ie A. Wyant, was an educator
for 41 years in Jackson County,
which included 16. years as a prin~illalll l Washington.J'QW!!s!!ip" A
na1ivc of the Redbrush area of

PHOTOGRAPHY

JJ;ofe£Bional Weddin5 JJhoto5rapherrB
What dree.m6 are nade

o'r .

.

l'rovnst an d Vice President for
flcadcmic AIT:tirs Dr.. Greg Sojka
said. "The Ernie -A . Wyant Out·
st:~~Jdi1ig Teaching Award gives us
an opportuni ty to recognize and
tcward outstanding teachers, which
i' lln("rlanl because teaching wc,ll
is the mission of thi s ins1i tution .
Dr. Stinha.{a long tenure of cfrcc·
liVe service atthC lJillVCrSily Of RiO
Gromde, truly focuses on st udent

Women's club

Ycu Ji~·uro•&gt;t.l yc-.ur :r~ddm~ would 1-r 1~rft'l"l

t ht- epk-rxlcr L.,f

J'"r drt&gt;M the rrnsroncc of Lhc tb• er!. tM• ~')' C".f y•lU ~ceptioo.
nod tho;&gt; ~.me \eM beflut.y of Yl'l•r ph~1i.&lt;..'&amp;f''f:Jh,.
Ynur '"!:&gt;khil/')&lt;'1111 ~ Ferlectl find .. ,. willl.,.lt.(•re tolum y(')IJr
htl k, ,'llrll ~nlll11y 1nlc, th,· yo• n up rcottj d oo

,·ept Ul'f'd

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unfcrseltobl~ dtt)

in pra'Cie&lt;~a ptlotcp.mfllu; th11l

dftllflll!l M"

Ute coupon• 101
the r.gltterr

We otTer C ore, Concern; 1:1nd CoJnpel ence

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• EKlended Chass1s
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Bernadine's wishes

• Vtsta Bay Wmdows

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all Mothers
A Very Happy
Mother's Day!

GALLIPOLIS · With t11e spring
planting season at hand, tbe
OFWC-GFWC'Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club will be sponsoring
jL~ second annual "Spruce Up For
Sprinjl" beautifi~ation contest.
" In LhC club' s ttadition of com·
mumty service. we are sponsoring
a landscaping contest, as part of the
Gallia County Strategic Plan for
Tourism to beautify our county for
-New Hours for working Ladles~
VISi torS and residentS alike," Said
Mkhcllc Jenkins, commluce chair·
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30 • 8
man.
Tues. Wed. Thur. 9;30 • 6
Any resident or business wi thin
Gallia Cou nty will be eligible 10
Saturday 9:30 • 5
. enter the contest Landscape
improvements ,will \l judged primarily on planting, but inert land·
scape improvements such as flower
bo•c.~. statuary or fencing will be a
factor in lhcjudgin~. In addition, to
qualify for judging. 1111 improvements mu:;t be seen from the road.
The first·place winner will
Lafayette Mall
iccci vc $50 from the Gallipolis
~
Junior Women's Club. Honorable·
~
•· ·men1ion prizes will also be given,- ·-' '·""'~'~~~~
Juuglllg will take place June 24
throi1gh ~0.

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sponsors ~

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.Entertainment

May 14.. 1995

p~rts

•

Sunday Times-Sentinel /88

~-s- jtntmtl

.

Sunday, May 14,
1995
.

People in the news

In the majors,

"This has changed my outlook.• lhe Hall of FilM pildla' pumbled in
Gete is expected biiCk in July.
MJAMl (AP)- Corporate executiveS may 10011 Friday's New York Post. '1t mates me wonder wbetber trying to be Jiice to
.
. OMAHA, Neb. (AP) - Fml. G!llldy Cllls himself I "'ccoveriD8
be wearina ties deSigned by tbe Chairmlll of the people is lhe JIIIIC • ukin&amp; for II'OIIble.•
Xoufax, wbo is Jewish, said he was told lhe skullcaps wete to be gi\'Cn as congressman" who's gotte11 eight years of polilics all or his system.
B&lt;wd.
•
"I'm completely cured and rehabilillltd from that," said Grandy, the
awards to ltlldcniS It a Jewish ~eligious ICbool.
Neckties bued on Frank Sinaba's artwork •
former Republican conpessman from Iowa and cunau pesident of Good- ,
· Instead. B&amp;J Collectiblt.s sold them.
being offered by tbe people wbo brought you
1
"All lhe yarmulkes have been sold." Slid a woman wbo answ~ lhe willlntanalional. "I am IOially committed 10 lhe GOodwill job." ·
neckwear inspired by lhe Gnlleful Dead's Jerry
phone Friday at !be Lakewood. NJ.,business. As for Koufax'sconlention lhat
Gan:ia and jau p-eat Mi1t.s Davis. .
.
Grtlll\!¥, wbo played Gopher on TV's "The r----..;.....---,
The S40 lies with abstract geometric forms goon be was told othc%wise, she~sai&lt;l. "Did be tell you lhat, or did you n:ad it in the Lo\'CBoal,"spokeThundayataGoodwillawards
sale Saturday at Bloomingdale's. Some proceeds newspaprt? Not everything in the papers .are true. •
dinner.
Kourax piu:bed for the Brooklyn and Los Angeles Podgers in lhe 1950s
will go 10 tbe Barbara Sinatta Children's"Fund for '
Grandylei\CongresstochallengelowaGov.
Terry Branslad in last year's GOP primary.
and '60s.
·abused children. .
•
'
Af~er lhe success of lhe Gan:ia ties, inttodoced in
KEYSTONE, W.Va. (AP)-There was no show in Keystone when~
· BONN; Gennany (AP) - Hebrew Univer1992, Sinatra's manager apjliO&amp;Cbed Sll.lllehenF
star
was
a
no-show.
sity
of Jerusalem is naming its European affail3
Ltd. to offer Sinatta's paintings.
A
Paramount
crew
on
Monday
constrUCted
sets
for
''Primal
Fear,"
about
· "Itnew immediately Ieould transfer it to a goodinstitute for Helmut Kohl
a man with multiple personalities wbo murders an an:hbisllop. But the star,
The German chanceUor has ''persistently and
looking necktie," said Stonehenge pal Diet Natan BIIICh.
.
In 1990. as~ absiiliCt floral canvas sold for$17 ,OOOatacelebrity an Richard Gere, never made it from Los Angeles- he had the flu- so the crew success(uUy acted for ... the intensification of
•
dismantled everything and flew borne.
.
relations between lsraelBRd the European Union,"
aucnon.
The brief flurry was excitement enough in this town of 900 peOple.
Dan Mor, spokesman for the Israeli Enibassy, said
"It
has
been
a
lot
of
people
for
this
little
10wn,"
said
Mayor
Billie
Cherry.
NEW YORK (AP)- The 30 yarmulkes Sandy Kpufax tboughthe was
Friday.
.
, Kohl visits IS!ael next month.
autographing for students ended up makins someone a pfofit - they wete "It's been fun for most of us. And it has been very-interesting to watch. I didn't
Helmut Kohl
realize it took that manv neonle to make a movie."
sold for $75 each.

Orioles end Indians• win streak

--

•

Mus.ic makers: Manhattan Transfer trying to spin out of a detour .
By DOUGLAS J. ROWE
Associated Press Writer
· NEW ·YOR-K- (A~_ - ''The
Offbeat of Avenues" led Manhat·
tan Transfer to the group" s lOth
Grammy. Problem was: It turned
outtobeadetour.
After the foursomfs 1991 debut
for Columbia Records, the vocal
ensemble had a faUing-o!'t with the
n:cord company, stemmmg ~I'Om a
d1sputc over whether a Cbnstmas ·
album should be a part of the three·
album deal they signed.
The fallout from the falling-out .
was that we didn't bear much from
~anhattru~ Transfer. Ye~: ~ey did
The Christmas Album m 1992,
and last year saw lhe release of the
group's first children's recording,

"The Manhattan Transfer Meets accomplishment enough for them
Tubby the Tuba."
.
to see their way tbrougb this slump.
- As Tim Hau$et, who_DJ:ganized "We stayed togelher,'..:.Hausec.-said
the group in the early 1970s, con- simply, as if that were the most
cedes, those efforts didn't ~ount important thing.
much in the, public's consc1ousAnd now Manhattan Transfer is
ness, and now Manhattan Transfer b:u;ktciappealingtogrownupswilh
is trying to pull out of its longest _"Tonin'," wbicb also marks the
downswing.
group's return to Atlantic Records,
"If you stay in this business the label they left four years ·ago
. long enough, r.ou can see Y.our ~use- as lhey to~d The Asso·
career like tbat, Hauser smd m a c1ated Press at the ume - they
recent interview, moving his hand were feeling like a '·'piece of old
in a wave of peaks and valleys.
furniture" there.
· "Very few people arc just like
The latest compact disc consists
that," be added. sending his band of songs from the 1950s and ·early
in an uninte1111pted upward trajec· '60s, such as "T~.~usy Thinking
tQry.
. . .
About.My B,aby,
I Second That
. Hauser, tbe dtmmuuve, bald Emouon," " Dream Lover,"
ManTran member, feels it was "Groovin "" and "The Thrill Is

• Gone."
And comparable to Frank Sinatra:s "Duets" albums- the group
sings an but two of the• songs with
guest performers, including Phil
Collins. Bette 'Midler, Frankie
Valli Smokey Robinson Cbaka
· Khan' James Taylor and'Ben E.
·King.'
.
'
Janis Siegel, the other Manhattan Transfer member recendy bere
to talk about the album admitted ID
having doubts about ~ing able to
bounce back . And Hauser half'oked· "I'm so neurotic I bave
1oub~ when we're doing g~t"
After a quarter-century tog~ther,
the group bad even weightier issues
00 their minds like !heir relevancy
and mortality. '

..-----Beatles histo

\

· FAD FOUR· A five-hour bistory of the Beatles, shown In· tliiS 'undated flle' photo, featuring
the world plfmiere or two . "new" songs by the
Fob Four wi~l air In November on ABC. Paul

Rit1go Starr, second 'rrom righl,
-vf!cals
music to unreleased recordings by John
Lennon, second from left, of "Free as a Bird"

and "Real Love." (AP Ph11to/FILE) ,

Star watch: Omar Sharif recalls
'Doctor Zhivago' on its rerelease
"And I sec my friends 'tbere.
By BOB THOMAS
Good
friends, ones you can pick
Associated Pross Writer
right
up
with, no matter bow many
LOS ANGELES (AP) - It is
years
have
passed.
·
arguably the greatest enuance in .
"People
were
amazed
wh en I ·
the history of film: a small ~peck in
gave
up
the
.
a
partment
I
had in
the shimmer of desert heat, grow·
Paris
for
20
years
.
It
was
.easy.
ing imperceptibly into a galloping :·
Paris
bas
become
a
difficult
ci
ty to
figure, finally arriving to face the
live
in.
I
still
go
there,
bul
I
am
apprchensi ve T.E. Lawrence.
much
happier
in
Cairo.'
'
"Lawrence of Arabia" in 1962
Of U!banese parentage, be· was
brought bmar Sharif instant starborn
Michael Shalhoub in Alexandom. an Academy Award nomma·
.
dria
and
attended college in Cairo.
cion and an international career
that' continues tu this day. Three When he converted to Islam, be
years later, be !llayed the. title role took the name Omar El-Sharif. He
in anolhcr David Lean ep1c, ' 'Doc· . worked, in tbe family 's lumber
business until he was cast in a 1953
tor Zbivago."
The 'film is observing its 30th film. Soon he was Egypt's ·most
anniversary witb the theatrical popular Slar, and he caugbtlhe eye
release of a fully restored print and of Lean.
Sharif became an intcrnation3.1
a digital soundtrack. Turner ·Enterstar
in good films ("Doctor Zhiva·
tainment and MGM launched the
go,"
"Funny Girl"') and bad
. rerelease with a gala screening at .
("Chc!"
"Oh Heavenly Dog!"').
the Motion Picture Academy thehe
admitted, his work is
Lately,
ater aLtendcd by cast members
'mostly
in
lclevision
miniseries:
sllarit. Geraldine Chaplin and Rod
"With
my
age
and
accent, I'm
Steiger.
·
.
.
Sharif appeared for an mterv1ew not easy 10 cast in movies."' he said
duiing his visit bere. and be with no hint of self-pity. "When
seemed little cbanged at 63. Gray- you arc over 60, producers aren't·
er, of course, but dashingly hand- interested . Most of the pictures
some and with bis whole .omc, can- today are aimed at the kids. Action
did chann intact.
He bas grown more philosopbi·
cal with the ~ears, aimlyzing his
life with startlmg honesty.
"Being on th~ move for 30
years 1 have no friends," be
remarked. "H undreds of acquaintances, yes. But real friends, no.
The only friends 1 bave are tbe
ones I knew in Egypt when I was
•
young. For that reason. I movedhaCk to Cairo on March 21.
.
"Yes, Chlro is a difficult city.
Sal. May 20, 8 p.m.
Wben I left, there were 3 miUion
Sun., May 21, 2:30 p.m.
people. Now lb~re are 15 milliorr.
The city is dirty' and overcrowded.
Morris &amp; Dorothy Haskins
But wben tbe lights go on at nigb~
Ariel Theatre 426 2hd. Ave. Galllpolll, Oh
you don't see the dirt, It Is a beauti·
Call 446·ARTS
, ful city all over again.

AIY~J~

Univ. of Rio Grande

OUT OF.THE
RED BRUSH

·•

"We would have conversations ·
about our place in popular music.
Are we c\'er going to find.a place?
Are we hopelessly out of date?"
Siegel said. "We re-examined
everything. Which was a good
lhing."
Manhattan Transfer's career has
spanned 16 albums. In 1981, they
became tbe first gro~p to win
Grammys ~sam~ year m ~P ~d
Jazz categones, w1th both wmmng .
songs coming from lhe "Mecca for
Modems" album - "Boy From
New York City" and "Until I Met
You (Comer Pocket)." Their 1985
release, "Voc~CS?," received 1~
Grammy nommat10ns, malcmg ,It
second only to M1cbael JacksonS
"Thriller" as the most-nominated
album ever.

Spillane comic to see ·
print after a half century

is what they' want.
''No matter what the picture, I
have to be a foreigner. It's impossi·
ble for me to play an 'American.'"
· He played Nicky Arnstein, Bar·
bra Strcisand' s love in "Funny
Girl" and "Funny Lady .' ' ·He
laughed as be recalled how he had
tried to mimic a New York Jewish .
accent. The director, William
Wyler, stopped him and told him to
talk naturally . ''We'll call it a
Boston accen~" be said.
Sharif has made millions, and
lost millions as well . No, not at
bridge - he is a world~lass player
and has written a book and newspaper column on the subject.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS

By BRUCE SMITH
Associated Press Writer
MORRELLS INLET. S.C. (AP)
- The warmth of an April sun
clings like perfume to a cheap suit
as gumshoe Mike Hammer's alterego, mystery writer Mickey
Spillane, greets us from the wooden deck or his waterfront home.
· "Like my Carolina Cadillac?"
he asks, pointing to white a Ford
pickup in the carport.
Tbis day, with the mercury
beading toward 90 and lhe gulls
circling like ~ad fan dancers in' a
burlesque club, Spillane wants to'
talk of his retllm to his comic book
roots after a half century.
So a photographer and I head to
the "burg where be's hung out 'for
more than four-decades.
This 77-year-old writer, actor,
tetevision pitchman and one-man
literary empire could live anywhere
he wants- L.A.. New York. the .
South of France. He chose a South
Carolina fishing village lined with
seafood eateries. He lives in a modest home with bis beloved fishing
boat parked on the grass in front.
Hammer would go stir crazy
here. but Spillane visited' in the
early 1950s. liked what he saw, and
sctUed for good.
·
Spillane, whose novels have
sold more than 180 million copies,
leads us into a tiny office off the
porch. The carpet is blue-gray; the
sunlight soft as it filters onto a clut·
tered desk through venetian blinds.
He explains that before Hammer
and those millions of books. he ere:
atcd a comic book detective named
Mike Danger. At the lime, the early
'40s, he was scribing for Batman.
SubMariner and other comics.
"!·wanted to get away from the
Oying heroes and I had the prototype. cop," says the writer. wbo
still hammers away with two fin·
gers on a vintage gray Smith-Com·
na manual with dark green keys.
I !e calls it his mistress.
Danger never saw print. The Big
One broke out and Spillane cn~st·
ed. When World War U was over,
he came home and wrote the Hammer novels. The comic book idea
~ANAUGA

was put asi'de for more l than 50
years.
·
·
The gray-haired ~pil)ane, in
black T-shirt, white shorts and cordovan loafers , proudly pulls the
cover art of what was to have been
the first issue from a filing cabinet..
whose drawers roll as smoothly as
suntan oil applied to a bronzed leg.
Te.knQ·Comix will bring Danger
to pnnt next month. Danger, the
prototypical
detective, will be
transported to the 21st century. but
be ' 11 get entwined in the usual
entanglements and the usual dolls.
"They do a Rip Van Winkle on
him," says Spillane. "I bavc said
for a long time that Mike Hammer
was 'based on Mike Danger.''
Spillane may even write some
of the plots. Bu~ Uke his other literary endeavors. "it aU depends on
whether the fish are biting or not
biting ."
If they're not, and Spillane
needs some cash, be sits at the 30year-old Smith-Corona.

a

:sos

PATRICK SWAVZE

IN

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DtSNEYS

MAN OF THE HOUSE PG

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Vie 'W,

Blue Ja_ys 10, B~wen 0
At Milwaukee, David Cone
pitched a three-bitter, and the
Toronto Blue Jays bounced back
Saturday to beat the Milwaukee
Brewers 10-0.
Cone (2-2) struck out two and
walked three in his 20th career
sbutOU\. Last year's Cy .Young win·
ner stopped the Brewers a day after
they trounced Toronto 14-5.
Cone's complete g3Jlle was t,be
tbir(! in the majors this season.
Baltimore's Mike Mussina,pitcbed
one earlier in the day. and
Cincinnati's Kevin Jarvis bad one
this week.
John Olerud hii his first homer
and Devon White drove in tbree
runs.
Cubs 5, Padres 0
At Chicago, Frank Castillo
pitched thre.e -hit ball for 8 1/3
innmgs, and lhe Chicago Cubs beat
the ·san Diego Padres 5-0 Saturday.

In the NBA playoffs,

.

Rockets beat Suns

118-8~;

Pacers defeat Knicks 98-84

and ll rebounds , thoroughly domi· grab~ one -poinl le ad at halhim e. his right shoulder. Davis, I he learn 's
nating lhe struggling Palrick Ewi.ng Ewing had six poinls during the leading reboundcr during the regular
in Indiana's 98·84 viciOty .
spurt and ' hit all four of, his shots in season. h a~dislocaled lhe shoulder
The Knicks, facing eliminalion in I he second period.
1wice pr ~· sly 1his season.
Sam M. hell slarled lhe second
five games for the first time in coach
ln.diana losl an imporlnnl compoPat Ril ey's rour ·scasons wilh the nent of its front l ine in the seco nd hair in Davis ' place and scored tO
te am. will have to win Game 5 quarler when Dale Davis disloaatcd poi nts.
I
Wednesday al Madiso n Square
Garden 10 my alive.
Reggie Mill er scored 21 poinls
for Indi ana, bul much of lhe credil
for the Pacers' Game 4 win goes to
Smils, wh o look advanlage of
Ewing's nagging injuries by darting
around him in the paint or.slipping
away to gel open jumpers.
AJter a big third quarl er, the
Pacers led by 18 early in 1he rounh
bul couldn't put New York away.
The Knl cks used a 14-4 spUr! to CUI
itlo seven with 3:24 left on Anthonv
Mason's tip-in. That, however, was
!heir laS! fiel,d goal until a baskel by
Ewing wilh 36 seconds left.
Ewing had 25 points for New
York_and Derek Harper added t 2
and nine assists.
The Pacers overwhelmed the
Knicks in the lhird quarter, holding
them 10 17 points by pressuring lbe
.ball and forcing New York oulside.
Down by one aJ halflime, Indiana
ca me oul wilh a 13-2 run and kepi
rolling, building th e lead 10 65-53
afler Smils hi I thr ee baskeiS and
Mark Jackson maue a lhrec-poinler.
Afler New York call ed a timeout,
Miller came back with anolher 1rcy
10 slrelch th e lead to 15.
By lhe end oflhe quarter, Indiana
had a 16-poinllcad.
II ha~ been a rrustraling se ries ror
New York's ccmcr, bolhcred by pain
in his calves and ham siring
'Ew1ng, who complained aboul
the Officiating artcr scoring jusl II
,~~ A! 1njlia,naRQiis, lndi~na ·~ ~!:_lllllf .PQints in G~ 0 1e 3, plaxed qqter Ihan
'
has th e Pacers one win away from . he had in Games 2 and 3, in which ·
retribuli on.
,
he had a tolal of 22 point&gt;·. but gal
The reve nge Indiana has sought' inlo foullroublc again. Al'icr scoring
sinc e losing to New York in the 14 first-half poinl s. he drew hi s
THERE HE GOES! -Indiana 's Mark. Jackson (iefi) watches New
Easlern Conference finals last year fourth foul wilh 2:59 lcfl in the 1hird
GETIING BY the Houston Rockets: Kenny Smi1h (30) is the prinri· cou ld be c lose 31 hand arler lhe quarter.
York's .John Starks get by him in the first quarter of Saturday's NBA
pal task of Phoenix floor general Kevin Johnson in the first quarter of ·Pacers look a 3·1 lead in !heir best·
After t h~ Pacers took a 3X·31 Eastern Conference semifinal game in Indianapolis, where the Pacers
Saturday's NBA Western Conference se mifinal game in Houston, of-seven conference semirinal se ries lead wilh 6:1H 'lcfl in 1he first half. won 98-8 to go to the brink of clinching the bcsl·of-seven series. (AP)
1
where the Rockets won 118-85. (AP)
SaiUrday. Rik Smils had 25 poinls New York lllliScorcd !hem 13·5 10

HOUSTON (AP) - After two
lopsided losses to I he Phoenix Suns,
the Houston Rockets were involyed
in another blowout Saturday . This
time, however, lhe Rockets were on
the winning side.
Hakeem Olajuwon had 36 points
and 11 rebounds and lhe Rockets
held Charles Barkley to a career
playoff-jew five points in a 118-85

rout in their Western Conference
semifinal.
Houston still trails the series 2·1,
but the Rockets took the first ' step
toward a possible repeat of last
year's playoff co mebaCk against
Phoenix. The Rockets also losl lhe
firsI two games to the·Suns last year
before rallying to win in seven
games. and going on to win the

Nj3A championship.
The Rockets shot 54 percent from
the field while the .S uns made only
40 percent. Phoenix shol 56 percenl
in the first two games.
Barkl ey was 0-fo r-10 from the
field and sal ou11he fourth quarter.
Kevin Johnson led Phoenix with 14
points, all in lhe first half.
Clyde Drexl er scored 23 poinls,
while R.pberl Horry had 17 for lhe
Rockets.
The 33-point victory was the
most lopsided margin in a series ·Of
blowouts . Phoenix won the first
game 130-108 and the second 11 894.
·
In the first lwo games, the Suns
go( off to a fast start. This lime, il
was the Rockets who weol on a 20-H
run in the first period en route 10 a
62-39 halftime lead.
Olajuwon scored Houslon's firs!
ll points of lhe third quarter before
turning the game over lo the substi·
' tutes.
Game 4 will be played loday in
Houslon .
Barkley was 0-for- 7 fro m the
field in the first half, and the Suns
were especially cold a.l I he end of
each quarter. They failed to .score a
basket in- the ji.rlll 6:45 of th e firs!
period and gol only one bucket in
· ihe final 3:52 of I he second quarter.
The Rockels, meanwhile, enjoyed
their best shooti ng of lh e se ries.
Olajuwon sco red 12 J!Oinls in lhe
first quaner and Sam Cassell scored
Houston 's first 10 poims of 1he sec·
ond quarter.
Tl)e loss snapped a nine-game
winning streak by the Suns, who
won !heir final four regular-season
games and were 5-0 in lhc playorrs.
Pacers 98, Knick.~ 84

LPGA boss calls allegations of lesbianism 'absurd and ugly'
By DAVID GINSBURG
WILMINGTON , Del. (AP) The LPGA commissioner denies that
lesbians have hampered the success
of tbe women's tou'r. calling such
charges "a\)surd and ugly.'"
Charles Mechem Jr. held a news
conference Saturday to respond to
reported comments by CBS golf
analyst Ben Wrigb~ wbo was quoted
as saying "lesbians in the spon burt
women's golf."
"I'm sad because lhe charge is
demonstrably untrue and I'm angry
because it's· an uafair attack- a
cheap shot .:.... at a group of talcnteil
professional women," Mechem
said.
.
Wright deriied making the state·
ment, reported in The News Journal
of Wilmington. CBS supponed the
announcer and kept him in the
broadcast booth Saturday during the

1.

.

After View,
- . "'\ I
_.

., ,.-

~.;r,·
·

.

• ,, ,

third round of the LPGA know whether Wright made the
Cbampionshi~ .
· c?mments. But he felt compelled to
Mecbem d1dn't call fot Wright's dispel the1 concept lhat the game has
·ouster, saying he didn't lcnow if the had trouble drawing fans and sponanalyst actually made the remarks.
so~ because of lesbianism.
"Quite obviously, if be made the ·
"It is an absurd and ugly charge,
remarks attributed to him, it's inap· that lesbianism is stunting tlle
propriate for bim to broadcast an growth of the LPGA tour." be said.
LPGA event,'.' Mechem said. "If be "The absurdity of Ibis charge both
did not make the aUeged remarks- ·saddens and angers me."
as he stoutly maintains- then it
Mecbem said the sexual preferwould be terribly unfair and prema- ence of women on the tour is a "[ll;iturely judgmental for us to insisi that vate and personal matter." and accuhe be replaced."
sations of lesbianism are merely "a
Wright was also quoted as saying way of de'meaning or uivializiilg
women·· don't pllly as well as .men their performance and accomplishbecause their "boobs" hamper their ments."
backs wing. He denied saying that,
The s1ory received heavy play in
too. insisting he was merely relating newspapers. throughout the country,
a s:tory by Hall of Farner JoAnne with several columnists calling for
Carner and never used the word Wright's firing. Tbe story was fea·
"boobs."
tured on the front page of some
· Mechem. admitted he may never JDpers, including the New Yotk Posr,

which used the headline "The lloob
On The Tube.' '
.
.
Mechem ; m the mtddle of hts
·fifth and final year as commissioner,
Said the women's game continues to
grow in terms of sponsorship and
fan interest.
"We talked to thousands of pco·
pie ... in not one single interview
was (lesbianism) raised,·' he said.
"I'm not suggesting that this issue
wasn't on some people's minds, but
it wasn't the issue that defines the
LGPA Tour.
"l have yet to receive the first
letter or' phone call from a fan suggesting to.mc 1hat this is .a problem." -.
Wright, meanwhile, issued a terse
denial thai he ever made derogatory
statements about the tour to reporter
Valerie Helrnbreck.
"At no time during our convcrsa-

lion did I say that: 'When it gets to couple of days is wrong. II is just
me "?rporate level, that"s not going plain wrong," he said. "Talented
to lly m conne~uon w1th IC$btantSm young women have been crudely
or any other subject." Wright said in and needlessly harmed, and for
a written statemenL "'Not going to what? What does it have to do with
fly' is not a phrase I use, but I do this event and the tour 'in general?"
recall that Ms . Helmbreck used it
The golfers vying for the
wben she asked me to comment on S180.000 top prize have tried to
the sponSorship issue."
ignore the issue, although it bas been
David Kenin, president of CBS a standard question thus far in post·
sports, said in a separate statement: round interviews.
"~am convinced lhat the offensive
"I" m here to play golf, that' s
Stalements attributed to Mr. Wright what it's all about," said defending
were not made.''
champion Laura Davies. reponedly
News )(Jurnal editor Dave Hale described by British compatriot
said. "Wc'.re slll!lding by the accurl!· .Wrialllas. being "byiltl.ike a tan!&lt;."
cyofourstory.'"
.
Davies was Sllfprised by the
·Mechem was upset that the furor . quotes. ·
over the newspaper story has
"It's a load of rubbi_sh if he said
deflected attention from one of the it or didn't say it."" she explained .
four ·major tournaments on the "(But) I can't believe someone of
LPGA Touf.
his stature said that."
" What has happened in the last

,111

~·.

Els' 5-under-par 65 good for
lead in GTE-Byro=-n -Nelson Classic
.
-

HILARIOUS!
DON'T MISS
IT!
\Ill •

By BOB GREEN

M. l ~llll

Ko " '"'

last 15 games, and is 8-for-19 wilh
Expos 6, Mets I
eigbt RBI witl1 runners in scoring
At New York, Mike Lansing bit
position.
bis second three-run bomer in as
Clark bcld lhe Orioles bidess for many days and Pedro Martinez kept
three innings. He didn't allow a ball up bis mastery of the Mets as lhe
out of the infield until Anderson led Mootreal Expos beat New Yort 6·l
off lhe fourlh inning with a borne Saturday.
run for a J.() lead. Tliome lied it in • Lansing, who drove in the game's
lhe fifib with a two-out homer to fust run with a double in tbe seventh
center.
imiing, broke it open in lhe eighth
The Orioles turned three bits and with bis homer off reliever Butch
two wallcs into a four-run fifth . Leo Henry. He had a three-run homer
Gomez bit an RBI double with one Friday that keyed a 9·6 victory.
out and scored on Damon Buford's
Martinez (3·0) beat the Mets for
sacrifiCe fly.
the second time this seaso n, and
Anderson drew a walk and went improved his career record against
to lhird on Kevin Bass' ground-rule them to 6-0 with a 1.36 ERA. He
double over lhe center-field wall, allowed only four bits in 6 2/3
and both runners scored on a single innings and also drove in a tun with
by Palmeiro.
a seventh-inning sacrifice fly.
The Orioles increased the lead to
Martinez struck out two and
6-1 in the seventh. With two outs, walked two. leaving after Jeff Kent's
Bass and Palmeiro singled off RBI single for New York in lhe sev·
Dennis Cook, and reliever Jason enlh that made it2-l.
Grimsley walked Cal Rip ken and
· Reliever Josias Manzanillo (0-2)
.Harold ~aines. .
,
. took the loss. _
.. '

•

'

....

HOUSE GUEST PG

lolj-

PIZZA LOVERS NIGHT
EVERY
TUESDAY NIGHT

BALTIMORE (AP) - Mite
Mussina pitched the rust complete
game in the American League this
season, limiting Cleveland to lhree
hits as the Baltinu)re Orioles beat tbe
Indians ~ 1 Saturday.
Mussina (2-1) walked none,
struck out five and faced only 28
batters in stopping lhe Indians' fivegame winning streak. Kevin Jarvis
of Cincinnati bas the only other
complete game in the majors.
Brady Anderson bit his third
. homer of the season, and Rafael
Palmeirn delivered a two-run single
during a four-run fifth inning as the
Orioles ended a lhree-game iosing
streak.
Mark Clark ·(2-1) gave up five
earned runs and five bits in five
innings. Jim ThOme homered for
Cleveland for the second straight
BROKE~ UP - Baltimore's Chris Holies keeps .Clt¥eland short- day. .
Palmeirn. who broke .an 0-for-12
·stop Omar Vlzquel from completing the double play In the fifth
slump
·with a fourth-inning double.
lnnning of Saturday's Amerkan League game In Baltimore; where the
bad
three
bits. He bas 14 RBI~ in )lis
Orioles won 6-1 to halt the Indians' _fin-game winning streak, ll\f} .

: . ·'.'

AND

THE UNBELIEVABLE
ADVENTURES OF PECOS BILL PG
. ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0\'123

The ensemble's repertoire
extends from the '30s to the '90s,
from blg band, bebop, doo,wop
anq vocalese to rock-laceil pop,
fusion jazz and Brazilbul sounds.
"1 think everyone ~u~ lhe
way they want to see us, S1egel
said. "The jazz fans, !think, see us
as a jazz vocal group and can't
understand wily we keep ~alcing
these albums wtth these stup1d pop
songs,
"And then other people want to
know when we're going to make
another 'Boy From New York
City' and then olher people want
another 'Brazil' album."

DRIVE-IN

FRI., SAT., SUN,
CHEVY Ct1ASE FARRAH FAWCETT

Section c·

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Inclusive tour;, 3 to 8 day&gt;, from S137.50 10
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Yarmbuth

NOV'\

SCOTIA

IRVING, Texas (AP) - South
African Ernie Els follo:-ved a 61 with
a S-under-par 65 and opened ·up a
th!'ee·shot lead Saturday. in the third
round of the $1.3 million GTE·
Byron Nelson Classic.
· The current U.S. Open champion
completed 54 holes in 195. a distant
IS-under-par on the TPC at Four
Seasons, one shot off a PGA Tour
scoring record.
Only a bogey on the 17th hole his lirst in 42 holes- kept Els from
matching_htour scoring record of
125 for c,utlve rounds .

..,

Els was not particularly con·
cerned.
''I'm very: very happy with the
round;" he 'said.
"That's the best I've played in a
long lime."
Robin Freeman, who has the
unenYiable distinction of being the
only two-time winner of medalist
honors in the tour's qualifying
school, was second ~lone at 198 a!ler
shooting 68 in hot, muggy weather.
Freeman, not yet a winner in a
live-year tour career, led the qualifying school in L!l88 and 1993. He lost
his 'playing rights due to lack of per-

.
formance in the 1988 season, was orr Heinen. whose 67 left him a1200.
the tour for four years, then led the
Craig Siadlcr. D.A. Weibring,
school again.
Brandel Chamblee and Kenny Perry
· "It's no.t something you want to were next at201 , 9-undcr-par.
brag about," he said. "Usually,
And all hav e a chance in
when you win it once, you d'On •·t Sunday's final round, Day sa1d.
have to go back again.''
• .
"Anybody ·at 9-under or better
Fuzzy Zqeller, the 43-yea~·old · bas a shot at it," Day said. " But if
veteran who had four runnerup fin· Ernie plays a good round, he's going
ishes last year, and first-round leader to be very, very ~ard to aa1ch."
Glen Day were next at 199. Zoeller
And Els has every inlenlion of
shot 64 d'espite some chronic back doing just that. ·
problems - "I'm clicking along at ·
"l"ve just got 10 play a decent
about 80 percent," he said- and round tomorrow.," he said . " I've
Day shot67.
•
just got to keep it together.'' .
He could gel some help from the
They were followed by Mike

weather . The hot wmd dned out the
greens.
"They're starting to g_et bard,"
Els said. "If the wind keeps on
blowing, it could make it very c)iffi·
cult for anyone to shoot a really low
score tomorrow."
Els, tied for the second-round
lead with Freeman, moved into sole
control of the top spot when· he
played the front in 4·under-par' 31 .
He parred the I Oth through the
l4th then ran in a 35·foot birdie pull
on the 15th. He two-putted from orr
the green for birdie14 on. the 16th
and went 6·under-pat for the day.

At that point. he needed to par in
for a share of the consecutive-round
scoring reconl.
But he pulled a S.'iron int'o a
bunker on the 17th and failed to get
up and down.
John Daly birdied four or the first
live holes and, at that early stage.
was Within two shots of the lead and
his huge gallery was buzzing in
anticipation.
But Daly played the back In 40,
had a six-hole strctcb with rour
bf!geys and a triple bogey and fin·
ished wtth a 73 and a 206 total, II
off the pace.
'

-.---------- --~-------~~·-T----------~~------~~~-------~~~•
•

.,

�•

,•

- 'In Division Ill baseball sectional final,

.

~:
.
_ Sunday, May 14, 1195

Sunda~May14,1195

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

.

-

.

In the NBA playoffs,

.

CHS

'

001-100-1•3-4-0
So.,
300-020-x•S-7-2
WP-WIIIIMr!s
LP - WUiiam!IOO
RACINE _;_ For tile fourth
airaiaht ye., Mick Wlnelxenner' s
S!llllhcni Tornadoes bave won the
sectional cbamploasblp, duplicatIng the feat Friday uigbt witb a S-3
win over the CrootsviUe Ceramics
In the Divisioo m fmal at Wicldine
Field,
Southern's Ryan Williams gcit
Soutbem off tile book by gettiDg
bis club out of a bases-loaded jam
in the seventb inning.
Southern's Ryan Williams
phcbed a brilliant game. Tbe
offense came up witll some tey
bits, and the defense was there
when il needed to be, altllougb
S nuthern did make two costly
errors. Whenever Williams baa

'

been on the mound tbb leUO!I,
despite being eft'cclive, be bas beeoplagued wltb defensive woes
bebind bis pitcbing.
·
Southern eased the tension In
tbe bottom of tile first wben It
scored t11ree runs. Tbat, coupled
witb tbe fact !hal Wllllama atruct
out the fitst two blairs be faced In
a 1-2-3 Inning, kicked off some
momentum for tile bosu. Ryu
Martin led off tbe Soutbern first
witll a single, Jeremy Hill slnaled
and Ryan WiUiams walked to loadtbe bases. Jesse Maynard clcarcd
the bases witb a tblee·run double as
Southern 1001t a 3-'1 lead.
Williams was awesome iu the
second, striking out the side In 1-23 fasbioo, but Soutllem was retiredtbree gp, _tbree down-In the second
as well. Witb two out, tbe ninth
Crooksville batter and first batter
waited. Tbc ninlh batter bad previ-

OU&amp;ly SIOien teoond to put ruDIIerl
011 the co111ers. Tbr runner at fint
lllelnpled a sceal, but the old c:orDel'~ cteJayed Ileal ranaed au
error at second and the I'Ullller at
third aOIICd witbout tile bcoeflt of
a bit to Jllllkc the IICCil: 3-1.
Wine'-- said, "Thhs was
big win, but a play lite tllat in a
ligbtgame can tiU you. Wc'w. bad
some poor defeu11ve games tllb
IICaS!JO, just little midates lbal can
tate you out of a game. We've also
had $OIIIC bil defensive games dill
have won us come ball games.
Maybe Monday we'U have anotber
good defeasive game."
Southern threatened . witll a
Maynard sinJle in the dlird and a
Lisle single m .the fourtb, ~t bad
notlllng to go witll iL CrootsviUe
scored anotber run In tile fourtb 10
·trim Soutbern's lead to a 3-2 margin.

a

Vance among·five Red men baseball
, play~rs receiving aii-MOC honors ·. Here are the members of the
1995 aii-Mid-Obio Co11ference
baseOOll team.
First team
First base- Simon Kisb Ohio

Dominican

'

Second base-Travis Gray,
. Mount Vernon Nazarene
:
Third base Juon Benyo, Rio
· Grande
.
.
SS-Scott Dappricb, Mount
:Vernon Nazarene .

Otber lnf.-Bob Roberts, Malone
·

Olltfleld-Divld .ROiilnJOll,
Rio Grande; Steve Mays,
Cedarville; Gary Kliqgel, Mount
Vernon Nazarene;· Aaron Duncan,
Shawnee St.
Catcher-Brian Cummlnas.
Obio Domlnica11; Brad Nelson,
Mount Vernon Nazarene
DH-Matt Miga, 1iffm
Pitcbet-,Sbawn Connolly, Obio

Dominican; Mite Patch, !'.Gunt
Vernon Nazarene; Ryan Teglovlc,
. Mount Vernon N82amle~
Player of tbe year: David
Robl1110n, Rio Grande.
Coacll of tbe year: Keith
Veale, Mount Vernon Nazarene.
HOIIOI'able mention
.Matt Asbtettle, Ernie Daniels &amp;
Sbanen Zimmerman, Shawnee SL;
Shannon Bossert, Rick Patterson
&amp; Mike Vance, Rio Grande.

·Pirates record 9"-4 win over Giants

By ~NNJS GEORGATOS
before the season isl'd lite to play
s:f~ fRANCISCO. (AP) - everr game: It bas yet to happen,"
Matt Wllluuns bas no destre to start Williams S31d.
a round of 'what-if' · questions or
Pittsburgh would like to see bim
dwell on bis .cbances for one of getsomelimeoiT.
baseball's most cherished records.
· Ye~ tberc be was on a rainy Friday night, hittilig two homers as
pan of a 4-for.-4 performance in the
San Francisco Giants' 9-4 Joss to
tbe Pittsburgh Pimtes,
Williams pusbed his season
home run total to a major-league
leading eight. More tantalizing was
tbe fact he 11ow bas 62 bomers over
San Francisco's lnst 160 games. In
nonnal limes, tbe game total would
be two under a season's wot1h and
tbe bomer total would eclipse
.
' Roger Mari.s ' record by one but, or
Even up your
course, last season ended prema·turely because of the strike and Ibis
willl Stihl FS 36
season was also shortened by it.
Trimmer. It trims
Jeff King belped offset
Williams' billing witb a tie-breakspots your mower can't.
ing three-run homer and Denny
Neagle (1-1) limited tbe Giants to
six bits in seven innings for his nrst
•
·
wjn of tbe year.

.

"They're certainly an impressive offensive club and I tbougbt
(Neagle) did a good job to conlain
tbem tbe way he did " Pimtcs managerJimLeylandsaid.

Soutbem scored twice in tbe wilb a lllriteouL
Soutbem'a blaen wa-e Mayaard
·fiftb when Martin singled, Hill
walked aad Williams doubled. 2-2, a walk and line RBI. Mlrtin ,
After an inlallional walk to May- 2-4, Hill I liDIJe, Wllllama I dounard and a f.eldcr' s choi~ 10 gun ble aud Lisle a lingle.
WiiHama fanned 14 and Wilted
Hill at tbe plate, Jay McKelvey
walked to force home a run to six f01 the win, wbile Willl•maoo
mite the saxe 5-2.
and Hammond combined to fan
All was quiet in tile sixtll, but four and walk four.
Crooksville scored one In tbe sev- ·
Southern advllllCes to the first
cntb and bad tbe bases loaded .witb
two out in the seventh before round of the district 10 be playCcl at
William• aot Soutbem orr the book . S p.m. Monday at Jackson.

C0111ea1tivc siDJ!cl to Duacnbmy and Cllloll plus consecutive
wi1b to Addiagton IOd Hwnii!OIId
forec:ed In • filii. '111111 ~ dclpliC
tile fact Williams ltruc!t out all ·
tblee bau.ln for the outs.
CroobYille bad a nmner in the
-fifth, but Williams struck out tile
Jut· tbrc:e batten witll some bigh
heat over tile .plate. WiUlama had
the curve ball worlcing for the aet
up and bad Travis Lisle's mitt
smoking witll the fastball.

•

rlstb!amm: nnes fotlhc tam.

CWCAGO (AP) - ·Tbc Uulled

~·center was tbundcrou at the

~ •begi:nulng. MldlaclJOidan, beck in
·-·familiar No, 23, flouting league
, rules, bad lbe crowd charged and
" frenzied by bitting bia first five
.• sbola.
•:
It was just lite old limes. So It '
semm.
•. The Orlando Magic, a young
'team In its firsl-ever 'best-of-aeven
' ' aeries, fell behind' in tboae early
slllges - but never apart.
.
Keeping their composure and
:!llayln$ lite the more experi·
team m the fmal minutes, the
Magic produced a ll0-101 victoey
tbelr scncral manascr sees as tbe
bill!! est In franc:llisc llisiOry.
don't know If you can mature
overnlsbt or between games, but
Ibis was a s~p In tbe rigbt ditec· ·
lion," said general manager Pal
WiUiams. "I lblnk we'll look bact
years from now and see tbat Ibis
was a unique and special game."
Orlando's victory put the Magic
bact abead 2·1 and restored the
bomecourt advantage squandered
: in Game 2. Game 4 is Sunday in
· tbe United Center.
ve matured a lot, ~!aid
'
;'!lo.J[)rlan~lo'·s Nick Andersotl;'wltpscored 22 points. "We showed a
lot of puise. They came out blister·
log, but we stared wilb it and we .
~tayed in it. II s a good sign for
us."
Tbc Bulls tbougbt it was a good
sign when Jordan scored 31 poiniS ·
in the first ba1f while wearing No.
23 f01 the second straight game and

after mming 0111 of lelirement
After a poor performance in
Jcrdali won: No. 23 wblle IeidIng the Bulls to NBA titles iD 1991, Game 1 of tills series, lnc:ludlng
1992 and 1993, but switdxxl to 4S · two ·&lt;;UCial turnovers iD the closing

93HONDA ·

94NISSAN
Serrtra LE , 2 door, wMe, auto., air,'
stereo cassette, rear spoiler, 11,000
miles. Was $12,995.

Accord SE, 4 dr.• saddkt leather lnl.. air,
A8S brakes, windows &amp; k&gt;dl:s, 25,000
miles, air bag, power sunroof. Was $17,995.

ex.

Now 51

NOW~15,

Now 511

92 HONDA ,

93HONDA

91 HONDA

Accord \.)(, green: 5 speed, power
windows &amp; locl&lt;s, cruise, 32,000
miles. Was $14,995.

Civic LX, 4 door, blue, 5 speed, power
.windows &amp; locks, stereo cassette.
Was$9,595.

Now 51

92HONDA

Accord
2 door. black. power moon
root,air, aH power equipment
Was $14,995.

Accord, Coba~ bille, air, auto., po'\'8r
windows &amp; locks, cruise, cassette .
Was $12,995 ..

LOQAN LADY BOBCATS- The Logan ·
·Lady Bobcats, ani Amateur Atb..tlc Union-sane·
lloned 13-and·under girls' basketball team, have
three Gallla County players - Galli• Academy
elgbtll-11raders Allsba R.oJu and Amy Wilson and
Kyger Creek elghlb-grader Megan Mulford - to •
help them take Jlllrl In several weekend tourna-

92HONDA
Accord EX, 5 speed, RoseWOOd, 4 door, pow.

moon roof. power windows &amp; loCks, ABS
brake~: cass .. 34.000 miles. Was $14.995.

Accord LX,

•

a~o.,

Cobalt blue, 49,000 miles,

air, pJWer wiildows &amp; locks. cruise.
Was $13.595 ..

New Yort .............. to

LeBaron, 2 door, automatic, maroon,
air, cassette, trulse.
Was$4995.

801ton ..........._,..........9

5

8 .46'1

3

Detroll ....................•6

9 .400

4

,

.6ot3

.m

9

W~ern

lawn

TeXM ........ ............ ...6

93 FORD

Tempo GL, 4 door, red , air, cassette,
low miles.
Was$6495.

F-tSOXLT pickup, 6 cyt., 5 speed,
du81 fuel tanks, stereo, rear step
bumper. Was $11,595.
r

Now 55195

.s

.429
.lS7

4

.333

6

Yorl(Miicld 1.0),1:40p.rh.
Sao Dleao (Ashby 1· 1) at ChiCIIJo
(Castillo 0·1), 2:20p.m

PiU.bwsh (Loalal-1) at Su fna&lt;j,.

c:o (Rouelli 1.0), .-:01 p.m.

s

·' Colorado (Freeman 0·0) at florida
(Witt 0-2), 7:0S p.m.
ONCINNATI (Smith 0.0) Ill Atlanta

s.s

(Giovioe 1-1), 7:10 p.m.

Philadelphia (Wett 1·0) at Houston
(llamptoD 1·1), 8:05p.m.
St. Louis (Frucatore 0..0) at loa Anac(Aitaclo 0-0),10:05 p.m. .

.60()

6 .571
9 .438
10

.37S

.5
2.5

.1&lt;\

3.S

Today's games

New York 12, 8ostoa 2

CINCNNATI (Smiley Hl) at Atlao ..

CLEVELAND 3, Baltimote 2
Detroit 6, Tnu I

·Now 59995

(AvttyO· l), t:IOp.m.

(Bullinp,2..0), 2:20p.m.
·
Philadelphia (Quantrill 2·0) al Houston
(l(lie1 -1), 2:ll p.m.
St. Louis (Osbourne 0-0) at Lol Anac-

Brown, AM/FM cassette,
air, less than 50,000 miles.
Was$4995.

Corolla SR5, red finish,
stereo, 5 speed.
$2295.

1). 8:05

91 EAGLE

·

NBA playoffs
Orlando 110, Chlc~ao 101; Orlando
leads teriea 2-1
l..A. Laken: 92, San Antonio 85; San
Antonio leadJ saiet2·1

New York (Mc.Dowelll -1) at BO&amp;ton

12. Smitlf0-0),1 :05 p.m .-

~.

CLEVELAND (ltenhlset 1· 1) at Bal-

DON TATE MOTORS, Inc.

.Sarprise Mom with A Quality.
Clean-Economical Pre-Owned
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Accord LX, gray, auto., air, power
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4 wheel steering, 5 speed,
ofle owner, Clean,
loaded.

Firebird, white, auto .•
T-Jops, power windows
&amp; locks, air, like new ..

Now 51

~::

'308.00

They played Saturday

timore (Rhodes 0.0), 1:3S p.m
Oailand {StotU~myre l-O)·at Mian~W­
la (Radke 1.0), 2:0$ p.m.
Toronto {Henlsen 2..0) at Milwauk~:e
(Eldred 1·0), 2:05p.m.
Cali.rornia (Laoaston 1·0) at Kan5as
Ci ty (Linton 0-1), 2:35p.m
DetJoil (Moore 2~) at Texas (Mellin&amp;
0-1), 3:05 P•"'Chicaao (Abbott 1·1) at Seattle (Aemina 1·2), 4:35p.m.
~

Phoenix at HoUlton, 1 p.m. (NBq

New York at Indiana, :UO p.m. {NBC)

Today's games
Phoenll at Houston. 1 p.m. {NBC)
San Antonio at L.A. Laten, 3 p.m.
(NBC)

Orlando at Chicaao. 5:30p.m. (NBC)

NATIONAL LEAGUE

'255.52 :'

Eulem DITlllon

Ium

.ll! L ld.

Philadelphia ....: ..... . ll

4

MootteBl ........... ,......9

7 .563

Atlanta .................. ...?

I

New Yort.. ............ ..6
Aorida . ~...·................ 3

.733
.467

9 .400
12 .200

NHL playoffs

liJI
2.5

Friday's scores

4

5
8

Philadelphia 4, Buffalo 2; Philadelphia
lead• .teries J - 1

.5

ton leadl seriea J- 1
New Jeuey I , Bo•toc 0 (OT); New
Jersey leads serin 3· 1

W;uhicgton 6, PittJburgh 2'; Washing-

C.ntr.d DITIRon

GARAGE SALE ·

Sunday; May' 14th

1994 CHEVY CORSICA

$9,499

1994 OLDS CIERA

$1

During our Cruise-In Car
·Show we will be selling
obsolete Parts-Service,
Owner~ Manuals_and"

92 FORD

92FORD

90 CHEVROLET

TeJilpo,
red, ~ir,

Tempo, white,
air,
automatic ..

Corsica, gray, automatic,
air,AM/FM,
new car trade.

au~matic .

$8495

'1

Mo.

Chicaa,o ....: ...... ...... ...9

5

Houston ... :...............9
CINC1NNATI. .........7
Sl Louis ..................?
Pill.sbw-gh ..................

6 .600
! .467

88 VOLKSWAGEN

..

1995 CHEVY TAHOE OR
GMC YUKON

1992
CADILLAC
Low Miles, One owner

1989
CADILLAC DEVILLE
NICE CAR

$18,999

$9,999

BROUGHAM

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NO REASONABLE OFFER IIFUSED

Cars.&amp; Trucks Must Go.

Taxes and t~le fee not included.
All payments subject to credit approval

DON lATE MOTORS, Inc.
lT'S WORTH YOUR DRIVE!

Safari 7 passenger van,
automatic, vs. air, power
windows &amp; lOCks.
Pot
Mo.

Convertible) red,
5 speed, AM/FM,

10 .186

ilsSAAB

2

Chfcaao at Toronto. 7:30p.m. (ESPN)
St. Loui• at Vac couver, 10:30 p.m.
(ESPNl)

s

. They played Saturday

7995

84HONDA

88 VOLKSWAGEN
Jettl. wMe,
automatic, air,
· $tereo.

$3495

56495

..

&gt;9·9¢

..

*Payments figured with $1 .000 down - 93's for 60 mo. at 9.15 IIPR, 92 &amp; 91 for 54 mo. at 9.20 APR, 90 &amp; B91or 48 mo.
at 9.24 APR and 88 &amp; 87 for 36 mo. at 9.31 APR

'

•

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594·8555"
'

MONTREAL EXPOS: Sianed Ka1h
Beauchan.,, outfle.lder; aDd auJan«&lt; him
t.o Harrl1burg of the Eutern League.

BasketbaU

ofrpme.

·

EDMONTON OILERS: Annouaced
they purchued the remahtiaa
ahwe
of thC1r AHL affiliate trom Syd~~ey. No¥1
_Scoti1, •nd •e now aole owners of the

so•

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•

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FootbaU

NadonaJ Football Leaaut
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ARIZONA CARDINALS : Named
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CINCINNATI BENGALS : An ·
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Friday's Kores

Today's games
.

Amer&amp;unLa.,ut
CIUCAGO WliiTE SOX: Sianed John

p.m.

Calllomia (Bo1kie 1·0) al ~Cam.• City
(Appier l·l ), 3:0l p.m.
Oakland (Dill'hna 0~1) at Minneaota
(Maho~ 0·1 ). ll:OS p.m
Chicago (Fernandel 1-1) at Seattle
(llavio! -0), 10:0l p.m.

Now 51995

NOW$4195

tui aquad.

BasebaU
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le&amp; (Candiotti 1-2). 4:0S p.m
· Pittsburatl (Lieber 0-3) 111Saa Francis·
c:o (Willoa 2-1), 4:05p.m.
Colorado (Ritz 1-0) at Aorlda (Rapp
0-2), 6:0l p&lt;m.
Montreal (8. Uenry 0-2) at New York
(Saberhagen 0-1). I;OS p.m. -

New York (Wickman 1·0) at Beaton
C&amp;helrlllll2.0),1:05 p.m.
CLEVELAND (Clark 2·0) at Balti·
mot'e (Mw.aina 1·1), 1:35 p.m.
Toronto (Cone 1~2) at Milwautcc (Mi·
randa 1.0), 2:05p.m.
·
·Detroit (Wella l·l) at Texu (Pavlik. 0-

85TOYOTA

,

San Dieao (Hunlltoo Q..l) at Olicago

Callrorala 3, JC.In&amp;u City 2
Millbeaota 9. Oakland S
MllwMikee 14, Toronto 5
Seattle 6, Chicago 4

.. \
.
They played Saturday

87VWGOLF

Sianed Oehiel Swaby, rorward and
pl~ed him on the WI squad. Activated

Andre Tueter, forward, £rom the tni
aquad.
FLORIDA SHARKS:. Placed Wes
Matthews, auard, on the injured re~rve
Hat. Plat~ Arthur AJee, SUill'd, on the

Montreal (P. Martinez 2·0) at New

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They played Saturday

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Buffalo at Philadelphia, 3 p.m

·Los Angelel I, St. louis4
Pitllbur&amp;h 9, San Francisco 4

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MIAMI TROPJCS: Released Jim

Dcuoit .t o.IIM, 3 p.m. (FOX)

· Cl.ic:ago 8, San Diego 4
Colorado 10, Florida 6
CINCINNATI S, Allaata 4 (11 i.Dn.)
Morureal 9, New Yort 6
PhiladtJphia 1, Houston 2

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Craig Dunn, Julia Fry, Mulford, Danlelle Lurty
Erjka Roesch, Krislln Thompson and coach Do~
Tho~pson. (Tribune photo)
·

Today's games

Friday's scores

L &amp;1.

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the

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-r.,

Major leagues

GET EVEN

Williams insists he doesn't feel .
cheated and appears unimpressed
by bis home run numbers.
"I've been to lbe World Series
. (in 1989) and played in it," be
said. "You could bave 100 bome
runs and have no feeling like that. I ·
think that's everybody's motivation. That's wbat you're hero for."
He said all be wants to do now
is play and bas oo grand design on
·a record-setting campaign.
"1lle only goal I set for myself

_

Magic ·beats Bulls;· Lakers down Spurs

Southern hands Crooksville 5-3 setback to earn district berth
IDnlnatotab

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Page C4 • .,_., CIU....Jtadirwl

,

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

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

'

; Meigs breaks tie to slip past ~allia Academy 5-4 in semifinal

•

Devils, Flyers, Capitals &amp; Rangers win NHL _
p layoff con!ests·
lyTIIeAM«IItedl'reu

·

l!lgbt elltra minute• weren't
eeoup to get a puck past Mania
Brodeur. Tho way lbe New Jmey
alllitendl:r II playin&amp; il might have
i!lkeulbe BOIIOD Brulns aootber 80
minutes.
BrodeiD' came up witb 37 saves .
roc bis tbird sbuiOUt of Jlll'l-seasoa
play Friday nlgbt, a 1-0 overtime
vlao:y over tbe Baston Bruins tbat
gave lbe' Devils a 3-' lead in tbe
best-of-seven series.
Tbe BJUins, wbo race history as
weD as ellminatloo witb tonight's
Game S possibly lbe last be played
in Boston Garden, have gotten
~goals in four games against
Brodeur, tbe NHL's rookie of lbe
year last season.
"You bave to give their wbole
team m:dit," Bruins forward Cam
Neely said. ''They're playing very
we,ll defensively ancl tbls was bis .
(Biodeur's) best game of tbe four.

We came at him a lot stronger
tonight, but we still couldn't get
anytbing by bim."
The only tblng tbat sot by
Blaine Lacher in tbe Boston goal
was Randy McKay's shot at 8;09
of overtime - and tbal came oo a
giveaway in front by defenseman
Jon Robloff.
• 'I couldn't believe it was
over.'' said Lacher, wbo made 24
saves. "You always bope tbat if
you lose sometbing like that you
get beat fair and · square, not on
miscue like tbat. It's a tough way to
lose."
Also Friclay_nigbt, tbe otber
Eastern Conferenlle series all went
3-1 as Pbiladelpl!ia beat Buffalo 42, Washington downed Pittsburgh
6-2 and tbe New York Rangers
defeated Quebec 3-2 in overtime.
Three of tbe Western Conference series resume tonight·, witb
Cbicago at Torontp, St. Louis at

Vancouver and Calgary at San
Jose. Tbe home team leads 2-1 in
each series.
Flyen 4, S.""-o:Z
Eric Undros bad two assisiS in'
in his firSt cared' playoff game as
be came back from missing four
games wi tb ·an eye injury. He
assisted oo second-period loals by
Eric Dejarclins and John l.eClair
tbat gave tbe visiting Flyers a +{)
lead. Alexander Mogilny and Pat
Lafontaine scored 37 seconds apart
in the third period, but that was all
goaltender Ron Hextall gav~ up.
The Flyers, wbo are 10-0 in series ,
wben tbey have a 3-1 lead; can
wrap it up at home today.
Capllalsli, Penguins_:Z
Micbal Pivonka bacl a gaal an(!
tb!ee assists as tbe Capitals won
tbeir fiftb straight borne playoff
borne game against tbe Penguins. •
Washington can win tbe series on
tbe road today. Penguins coach Ed

Jobnston ·1tarted seldom-used
goalie Tom Barrasso in place of
Ken WreggeL It was 3-2 after two
periods, but tbe Capital$ came up
witb three soals in a five-minute
span in tbe third. Peter Bondra and
Dimitri Kbristicb each ~d a go;al
and two assists for tbc Capitals.
Jaromir Jagr and Larry Murphy
scon:d for lbe 1\mguins, wbo never
led in Games 3 ·aod 4.
Ranpn 3, Nordlques :Z (OT)
Steve Larmer ~&lt;:ored at 8:~ of
overtime and goaltender M1ke
Ricbter came up big in bls lint
relief appearance or. the seasc;m.
Tbe.bom~ victory w:'s tbe tb1rd
stra1gbt 10 tbe s~n.es. for tbe
Rangers who can wm 11m Quebec
Iyday.
.
Larmer worked a g1ve-and-go
witb Pelr Nedved, who left a dro_p
pass for bim in front of tbe net. HIS
first sbol was st~pped by ~oa_l·
tender Jocelyn Thibault, playmg m

bisflrStStanleyCupplayoffpme.
but Larmer put in ~etf':';,od:
cap a tbree·goal ~
oc
~sen, wbo trailed 2 after one
period.

BRODEVJt
WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) tbe newspliJICI' quoted Wrigbt as
CBS and golf analyst Ben Wright saying. "Wben it gets to tbe oorpostrongly denied a newspaper report rate level, tbat' s .not going to. fly.
quoting Wright as sayiiig ttiat les- They're going to a butch game and
blans are hurting tbe women's that furthers the bad imase,of tbe
·game.
·
game."
"I believe that Mr. :wrigbt made
In· bis own statement released by
statemclll5
tbat
were
disparaging
CBS,
Wright denied sucb a state·
110
or otberwise offeasive to gays or ment, adding tbat "'Not going to
lesbians or tbe LPGA, • • CBS fly' is not a phrase I use, but I do
'Spart.s prilsident David Kenin said recall tbat Ms. (Valene) Hebnbreck
in a suutment after conducting his . used it when sbe asked me to comown investigation into tbe matter. menton the sponsorship issue."
Kenln said tbat CBS and Wrl,bt
The story al:;o qu~ Wrigbt as
bave "been done a grave injustice saying anatomical dtfferences put
in Ibis matter" by The News Jour- · women on a different level tban
nal of Wibnington.
their male colinterparts..
Ntws Journal editor Dave Hale
'·women are band1cappcd by
said "We'~e standing by the accu- baving boobs.'' Wright was 9uoted
nocr'ofOUistorY."
as •saying in the story. "Its not
"l..et's face facts bere. Lesbians easy for them to keep tbeir left arm
ia the sport burts women's golf," straight, ancl tbat'soneofthetenets
of the game. Their boobs get in the

N.BA playof!s...

(Cdntlnued from C-3)
las! November, and sco~ed 38.
Tbe league fined tbe Bulls
· $2S,OOO, saying Jofdan couldn't
cbl\nge uniform. numbers on a
wbjm witbour prior approval and
promised to impose more sanctions
if Ji:mlan didn't switch back.
·
Jie dido' t. Ancl be didn't score
much in tbe second half, either, ·
gelling just nine points to finish
witjl 40.
.
And as in Game I, be bad trouble:in the stretch, fouling Anfemee
Hardaway on a tbree-point field .
goal attempt with 1:38 left~ losing
tbe:ball 15 seConds larer to former
teammate Horace Grant and tben
miSsing on a drive when be was
apparently fouled, but didn't get
tbe ~ali.
, The Magic scored the fmal nine
poilits, all on· free throws.
~haqullle O'Neal bad 28 points
and was 8-forfrom tbe free
throw line. Jordan finished 15' for3-l ·from tbe field. aftet making
seven of bis firSt nine attempts.
In tbe other playoff coolest, tbe
Los A!lgeles Lakers beat San Anto·
nio-92-85
Lakers 92, Spurs 85 .
At Inglewood. Calif., tbe Lakers
featured Nick Van Exel popping
from outside, Vlade Divac scoring
and rebounding inside, and Cedric
Ceballos finally making bis shots.
The San Antonio· Spurs had
David Robinson, and not. much ·
else.
.
Van Exel scored 25 points and
bad eigbt assists, Divac contributed
14 .p oints and I 3 rebounds, and
Ceballos added 22 points Friday
night as tbe Lakers beat tbe Spurs
92-85 to u-im San Antonio's playoff lead to 2-1.
.
~obinson was practically a oneman show (or tbe Spurs, scoring 34
points and grabbing 13 rebounds.
Sean Elliott had 16 points, but the
other three staners scored a combined eight points - tbrec each by
Dennis Rodman and Avery Johnson, and two by Vinny Del Negro.
The founb game of tbe best-ofseven Western Conference semifinals is·at the Forum on Sunday.
"I tbink the rest did us good.' '
Lakers coach Del Harris said, referring to tbe days off after Monday's
o.vertime loss at· San AntoniO .
"Now we play again-_in36 hours,
· but so do they, so it' s an equalizer.
··
That's fair."
.
The Spurs got otT to a miserable
stan scoring just 11 points in the
firS\ 'quarter to trail by 17 at tbe end
of the period. They got no closer
th11n sill points the rest of tbe way,
and every time they. tbre~ened. tbe
Lakers spurted away agam.
"They put us back on our beels
and Wf just couldn' t get in i~ " San
Antomo coaCh Bob Hill said. " We
didn't sboot tbe ball well. We'll be
doing a lot of sbbOting in prac~e
and see if we can't do better on
Sunday."
The Spurs, 5-for-20 in the ftrst
quarter, shot 38 percent for tbe
gwne to tbe Lakers' 44 percenL
Ceballos bad been a virtual noshow in the series, averaging 4.5
points the first two games , and
Divac was the soat of tbe last Qlle.
"We got good performances
from a lot of people, and as pre&lt;\!ctcd, Cedric Ceballos bad an outstanding game," Harris said .
"Cedric played barcl in tbe first ·
.:..--r~~~~:·!b;u:•.~bisbeshotS
didn't fall.
back:. Tonight

ro

way."
In bis statement, Wright said
, that, in answering a question ~t
the differellCes between tbe mea s
and women's games, be J;epeated a
story told to bim by JoAnne Camer, an LPGA Hall of Famer.
"I explained tbat JoAnne bad
said words to tbe effect. that: 'If
you want to know !be dif~erence,
it's these,' at wb1cb pomt ~be
pointed to ber breasts .. At no ume
did I ever use the word 'boobs.' ." .
Kenin said tbat, as part of b1s
probe, be asked tbat tbe newspaper
"provide support materials; for
journalistic rea:;ons, !~Jey re~used."
After speaking w1tb Wngbt and
others, "I believe tbat Mr. Wright
made no statements that were disparaging or otherwise offensive to
gays or lesbians or tbe LPGA,"
Kenin said.

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stock #4154200.
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trans., air. cond., AM/FM stereo power brakes, auto. trans.,
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cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, power air
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alumin,utn wheels.
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air
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OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MON.·FR1. 8-5; SAT. 8-12
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6 4

BARNES SCORES - Gallla Academy's Ryan
Barnes (left) gets by Meigs backstop Cass Cleland to
score tbe go-abead run In the third Inning of

.

.

'

.

..

here.··

CRUCIAL GROUNDER - The Meigs Marauders' Gary Stanley
takes his first steps out of the batter's box after hilling what be!'3me a
crucial frelder's-cboice grounder 'to. third base in the seventh inning of.
Friday's tournament game at Memorial Field. Meigs Friday's Division n sectional semifinal game In Gallipolis. Stanley's
sbook off tbe 3-2 deficit tbe Blue DevOs created to two-bit errort helped pusb tbe Marauders into Saturday's title ga~
win S-4. (Times-Sentinel photo by Dave Harris)
a!::~J:ac~~:on~-~(T~i:nre:s;-s~e:n~tl:ne~l~p:ho~t:o~b~y~D=•v:e~H:a:r~ris~)~. . . . . .

•

r

·

The Bmves released Gant IJ&lt;lfore
the 1994 season after be broke his
l~g in a motorbike accident. He
missed tbe entire season last year,
but worked bard to win a s~ 011
Cincinnati's roster. It was b1s fiftb
homer of the season.
Tbe Braves built a 4-2 lead on
tbe first tbree homers of tbe season
off Reds starter Jose Rijo - a tworun bomer by Chipper Jones following a walk to Jeff Blauser in tbe
· founb, tben Fred McGriff bit Rijo' s
next pitch into the right- field seats
for a 3-0 lead and Charlie O'Brien,
who bad tbree of Atlanta's six lilts,
added a solo bomer in ibe sevenib.
" _Cbipp,er bit a good slider

down, it was a banging forkball to
McGriff and a banging slider to ·
. O'Brien," Reels catcher Eddie
Taubensee said. ''Most of the time
be (Rijo) makes those pitches.''
!be Braves aJ)peared .to be on
tbe verge of ending Cincinnati's
five-game winning streak and tbeir
own two-game losing streak until
Greg Maddux tired witb two down
in tbe eigblb .- the longest stint by
an Atlanta staner tbis year.
Barry Larkin bad an RBI double
in the sixth and later scored on a
single by Lenny Harris. Larkin then
doubled wilb one out in .tbe eighth,
stole third ·and scored on Hal Mor·
ris' grom1dout.
. Brad Clontz got Gant to end tbc

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eighth, then got wilbin a strl!&lt;e of
ending the game before Taubensee
singled in Hanis. who had singled
to open the ninth.
"I got it up a little and
Taubensee ·nailed i~" Clontz said.
"Give-bim credit. It's· clutch· for

J

( '

him.
Maddux, a three-time Cy Young
Award winner, said he was ready
· ~
to come out after balding the Reds
,- '--\
to eigbt bits witb no walks and
."
eight strikeouts.
-·
'
.!I
"I was done.'' he scUd. "I was
obviously tired. I bad lost. a good
fool or two off my fastball. It was
time for me to come out."
·Jeff Brantley (1-0) blanked tbe
Braves over the last two innings.
HEATING &amp; COOUNG PRODUCTS
Atlanta bad runners on first and
third in the lith, but jerome Walton made a nice running caicb of
• Mike Kelly's liner to left-center to
end tbe game.
Manager Davey Johnson bad
put lbe potential winning run on
&amp;.
base to pitch to Kelly, having
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
22 SMITHERS AVENUE
clinic. Pena said tbe Indians bave balls. Twice, be got Kenny Lofton ordered an ·intentional walk to Fred
c:'
come to expect sucb displays.
to bit into double plays, a career
BUSINESS HOURS
McGriff.
JERRY L. _BACK
"We know that Dennis is .fiJ'st for ibe Indians leadoff bit!Cr.
MON.·
FRI. 8:00 TO 5:00
"' "1 sure didn't want to see Crime
(614) 446-8280
bouncing around on the mound ibe
Thome's solo home run in ibe
(McGrifO hiL" Johnson said .
. -whole game," explained Pena, one · seven!)J (!ovide(_IJjle winning J11M:
of tbree Indians with a pair of bits. . gin.
·
" "That's why he's so good (defc?" This was not .a good day for
sively). He's not afraid to get m me.'' be said. ··From 1be fmt pitcb
front of the ball."
in tbe fust inning, I struggled.... I
However, Hargrove was afraid don't Jcnow if I felt worse late iban
to leave Martinez in to finish the I did early."
.:
inning . While conceding that MarSports briefs 8997 STATE RT. 160
BIDWELL, OH 45614
tinez cot~ld have pitched more,
Hargrove didn ' t want to take any
STORE HOURS:
Next to Brown's IGA Market
cbances. ·
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Basketball
lion.- S.L 7:30a.m. · 8:00p.m.
· He figured Martinez, who said
PORTLAND, "Ore. (AP) PHONE: 446-8828
he could bave remained in the
Nine years after be was a surprise
'·
game, bad dodgedenougb bullets
first -round draft pick of Portland, ·
-even if be badn't dodged tbe last · Arvydas Sabonis is ready to come
..
one.
10 theNBA .
'
"All winning pitchers field \heir
The 7-foot-3 Lithuanian
,,
positions well,'' Hargrove said,
• MTD Model: C451F
announced in Madrid, Spain, be
recounting somelbing former lndi·
intends 10 sign witb tbe Trail Blaz• 11 .5 HP Briggs &amp; Stratton . ;:
ans skipper Birdie Tebbetts once ers, who retain tbe rights to tbe
told bim . "If you've gor a pilcbcr player generally acknowledged as
Industrial/Commercial
wbo doesn ' t field his, position, be
lbe best in Europe.
Engine
• : ,I
(Tebbetts) said, that's a .500 pitcher."
Hockey
• 38" Cut
Wbile Martinez dominated, OriWINNIPEG , Manitoba (AP) _
• Mulching Capable
ales starter Kevin Brown (2-1)
An offer from a Minneapolis group
• Shift-on-the-go 5 Speed
appeared to have tbe Indians in
beaded by businessm ~n Richard
· check.
Burke was accepted in princi Ie b
Transmission for Sm.ooth
. Brown, who allowed tbree _runs
owners of the NHL ' s w· P . Y
No Clutch Shifting , Shift
on seven bus over eogbt mnmgs.
Jets •
mnlpeg
got 1-5 of bis 24 · out~ on ground - -· -· · ~ever in Da-sh ·
•
.

BALTIMORE (AP) -'- Clevelancl Incllans catcher Tony Pena
Jcnew it would take a lot to Jcnock
Dennis Martiilez off tbc mound.
But~never-somelbing as simple
as a ground bali, one wbicb gave
Martinez an opponunity to sbow
off bis fielding prowess as well as
bis domination of the Baltimore
Orioles on Friday nigbt.
Martinez (3·0) pitcbed 6 2/3
• innings in Cleveland's 3-2 victory
· over tbe Orioles, for tbe Indians'
fiftb straight win, wbicb beiped
bim remain Wlbeaten in lbree decisions against the team for wbicb lie
staned bis career in 1976.
·
"Tbe first four innings, be bad
. pinpoipt control.'' Cleveland man· ager Mike Hargrove said of Mar·
tinez; w.bo belped open a ninegatpe road trip successfully.
"He was keeping tbe ball at tbe
. lcnees on the outside of the plate,"
" Hargrove said. "And I mean the
very outside."
.
But Martinez, who cl,idn't allow
. a bit until the fourtb !Wming and
retired tbe first 10 Baltimore bat·
ters, struggled a bit in lbe fifth and
slxib. The Orioles got two runners
· on witb two ~uts in each inning,
tbougb.Marunez all~w.ed . onJy
Damon Buford'S RBI smgle 10 tbe
- fifth . · In tbe Baltimore seventh, singles by B!el Barberie and Leo
Gomez gave the Orioles two on
with none out. Tbat's wben Martinez came up wilb a pair of fielding gems to preserve a 3-llead.
Martinez, who allowed one mn
on seven hits , jumped off tbe
mound to field Buford's attempted
sacrifice bunt, wheeling to tbrow
Barberie out at third.
With Brady Anderson, who bad
a '11-game bitting sn-eak snapped
by an O-for-4 night, batting, be did
it again.
· Anderson's grounder, accompanied by a splintered bat that went
through the box, handcuffed Martinez. Tbe bail bounced off bis
pitching band,_but ~e recovered
quickly , forcmg P!ncb-runner
Manny -Ale-xander w11h a perfect
throw to third baseman Jim Thome.
"There are certain fundamentals
tb_!ll you've got to &lt;lo, and toni~t
we didn' t do tbem .'' lamented Ori·
oles manager Phil
wbose
team lost its tbird sttaigblt game.
But when it came
•c••""!~ ,
·-·-·- ruiilfanUintais, Martinez put on

I:

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Indians post 3-2 win ·over Orioles
to ga·in fifth consecutive victory

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He didn't.
Instead ·be bit a 1-1 pitch from
Steve Bedrosian (0.2) over tbe leftfield fence leading off tbe 11 tb
inning, giving tbe Cincinnati Reds
a S-4 victory ov.er tbe Atlanta
Braves on Friday nigbl
"I just got a good pitcb to bit,"
Gant said. "When it wins a ball·
game, it's special no matter wbo
it's agaiolt. But it was good to
'come back and bi·t a bome run

$

OCTOBER 1995.

.L
..,
[

·

.. •
3 99iJ
Nowl,

GETA

...-&lt;rg)'er-~,

By ED SHEARER
· A1LANTA (AP)- Ron Gant
bad bdtterflies before bis rust game
against his former team. ·
. " "My. frame of mind was such
tbat I actually tbougbt about dnogsing a bunt tbe last lime up," Gant

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5 5 3

Eric Humpbreys-c ........ .3 0 ,
Dylan Evans-db ........... .3 0
BrettCremeens-p ..........3 0
Casey Canaclay-lb ........2 D.
Chris Casto-rf................2 0
Isaac SatDiders-2b ......... 2 0
Andy Neal-cf ...... ,......... 1 I
Dave Rucker-3b ........... .3 I
Setb Davis-ph...., ........... I 0
Jason Dailey-pb ............ 1 1
Heatb McKinniss-pblcr.t 0
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Totals
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Cremeens: 9K, 3BB &amp; 5 bits

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rounding the base, tbe Hans&lt;&gt;D· ,
Stanley-Paul Pullins relay nailed .
Evans upon bis aJtempted return ~
third to end tbe inning.
'
The fourth: Tbe Academy's 3-2
lead disappeared when Oeland liDCd, :
a 3-2 pitcb to center for a doubl~. ,
Then after (:~emeens got Feuy and
Brad Wbitlatcb to strike out swing: •
ing, Cremeens got a 1-2 count qJI ,
designated bitter Rick Hoover bef01e :
Hoover bit a grounder that Rucka: ,
misplayed. Tbe error allowed ,

Newsome's fiiSI offering to him into
center 1o score Barnes, but I(Btcber
Cass Cleland's tbrow to Stanley at
second was in time to nail
Humphreys in lbe latter's attempt to
tate lbe additiooal base.
After designated _bitter Dylan
Evans singled to right center,
Cremeens bit a grass-busging line
drive less than a foot past tbe third
base bag into left field ibat, considering Evans' bustle, would bave put
runners at tbe corners. But because
Evans got too far past tbe bag in

Newsome: 7K, 3BB &amp; 6 bits

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thinss started foc themselves when
Andy Neal got aboiW oo a grounder
to sbortltop becauiCd Stanley mis·
played lbe ball.
Tben Dave Rucker's grounder
got between first bueman David
Fetty's legs and bis glOve, allowing
Neal to set to third. Ryan Barnes,
after Rucker stole second UIICOIIIeSted, lined Newsome's 2- I pitcb to
center to score N cal aod Rucker
before advancing to second on tbe
play.
· Wltb tbe same tied 2-2, No. 2 bitter Eric Humphreys drove

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LPGA CODJI!lissiOner barles ·
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satd tbat be dtd ~?I say wbat ~
~~e~ teport.ed ·:·• Mecbem sa1d.
G1ven tb1s dispute, tbe LP~A
does not have a st.atement w1tb
respect to Ben. Wngbt'~ alleged
comments un!!i we know more
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Wome!i s golf ge!S about balf the
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•718' fnsulatad 'g!ass
performance.

Academy's final at-1111 to poat a S-4 ~~~te foc leadoff bluer Scott (Je(qe
win Friday In tbe resumption of. to bit a baa-10-tbe-mound grounder
s.torm-delayed 1bat would, by allllppellaDCCI, be
GAUJPOLIS- Scott Gbcen's Wednesday's
Me ill Marauders broke a 3-3 tie Divilioo n buebel' sec~iDDII semlti- 111e iDDiDa'sleCOIId ouL
But Cremeens' emat throw to
willl a two-nm rilly iD lbe 1eve11tb na1 aweat ll Memllrill Field.
Tbe scoreless affair, resumed in first bi!K waa out of Canaday's
Inning and weatbered Gallia
tbe Blue Devill' ICCClDCI, saw Meigs ~each, 8lld H8D1on, al!eady on his
pildler Bn:tt Ne"W1KIIIIC aet 1be mid- .way to third. made il bome witb tbe
die of tbe bosl.l' . battiDI order- aame's lint run. Witb George on
lefty pitcher Brett Cremeena. flnt second. No. 2 bitter OarY Stanley
baseman Casey Canaday and rigbt doubled to left center to score
Im• J.GIIIa
fielder Cbris Casto - out in order. George. Cbad Burton and Newsome
Meip ................002 100 2 • S-S-4 Then tbe Manwden went to wert.
followed with groundouu to end tbe
Glllipolls ..........003 000 I • 4-6-3
The third: B~ent Hanaou's one- Maraudenl rally.
out double to left center f~eld sttlbe
Larry Carter's Blue Devils got
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Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolla, OH • Point Pleasant, WV

Sunday, MIIY 14, 1896

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O'DELL .LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER
150 UPPER RIVER RD. (across from K-Mart
446-7826

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Pqe Cl • ~C-...JI

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In other NL action,

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.

rea sports briefs Nomo's arm

GAHS netters end season
GALLIPOLIS- o.JU. :Ac*my Hlgb Scllool's teaniJ tam
carluded Its 199~ &amp;eaiOII Friday,
In sec:llonal·dislrlc~ slogles compel,ition at Porlsmoulll, BJ'Id
Baker fmlsbrd alxlll 0111 of 49 players, rillsslog lbe regloaal pllyoft'l
by ooe m8t.cb.
·
,
"
In doubles action, C~ Smitll and Wes Saundcn loll 10 tile
tournament' a sevealll seed after posting a rust round win. Cluis
Waicb and Grea Uoyd lost 10 llle tournament's No. 8 seed after
winning tlleir tint round.
'
The Galllans finished fourtb Ia Soutlleurem Oblo Atlllellc
L.eague fllay witll a 2-6 recml. Maietta won tbla year's aown.
The GAHS DeiterS will be bonored Thursday nl&amp;bt at llle 111111ual
SJlring sports banquet at Buckeye Hills Career Center near Rio
Grande at 6:30 p.m.

•

Sunday, May 14, 1115

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

Lifeguard training slated
GALLIPOLIS - American Red Cross-sponsored lifeguard
training ·will be available al lbe Gallipolis Municipal Pool from
Moilday unlil Friday, May 26.
~
Kim Canaday will be llle IDSirUctor for lllc classes, for wlllcb
times must be arranged.
For more information, call446-7538.

SPORTS meeting Wednesday

.

GALLIPOLIS - SPORTS (Sports Parents Organized -for Remational 'Team Suppon) will bold a meeting of parents and rQ!!Cbes
Wednesday at 6:30p.m. in lllc Gallia County COUI'IhoY,se's second·
Door meeting room
The focus or tile meeting is 10 discuss tile baseball season, conecssloos and lllc Fourtb of1uly festival.
·
~ ~

Meigs Chamber linkfest Thursday .
POMEROY - The Meigs County Cbamber of Commerce will
bold a golf scramble Thursday at I p.m. witll a sbotgun stan at the
Meigs County Golf Course.
The four-player scramble will be a bring-your-own-team fonnat
Players must have a team IOta! of a 40 handicap, witll only one play·
er of nine or less.
.
.
The cost is $50 per player and includes pm;es. food and bever·
age. For more infonnation contact Jim Anderson at 992-3671.
'

MHS Band to sponsor linkfest
POMEROY - The Meigs Marauder Marching Band will bosl
its fiflb annual Memorial Golf Tournament will be held oo Sablrday, May 27 at i!le Meigs County GolfCourse.
.
It will be a four-mao scramble with with a "Bring Your Own
Team" fonnat. The cost is $200 per ream wilb a team handicap of

•

•
Price includes food, beverages, can and many prizes.
One of the
prizes will be a 1995 GMC Sonoma (valued at $14,000) or a COOl·
parable-priced vehicle for !he- fmt golfer to sink a bole·in-one on
1
the par 3 ninlb bole.
· For more information, call John Krawsczyn at Meigs Higb
School at 992-215.8 or at home at 992-6394.
-

:Meigs girls' cage caJ!ip.planned
ROCK SPRINGS- The 1995 Meigs Marauder girls' basketball
camp will be held from June 5 to June 9 at Meigs Higb School's
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The session for grades 4-6 will be ~ld from 9 am. until noon
daily. The session for grades 7-10 will be held from Ito 4 p.m. ·
The ciunp will be conducted by Meigs girls' bead coach Ron
Logan and bis staff. Senior members of the Meigs varsity team will
· also be on band.
·
: The campers will be instructed _in fu~damenws, offensive an_d
' ·defensive skills and fundamenlals, mdmdual and team play, post: lion skills, game rules and sportsmanship.
· The price of ibe camp is $35. Those wilb more !ban one partici: pant will pay no more !ban $60: Applications IIUIY be picked up at
: aU schools in lbe Meigs Local School Dislrict.
·
: Each camper will receive a T-shirt and a basketbaU. However,
. prospective campers are encouraged 10 register tllis week to.ensure
: getting a basketball.
. ·
For more information, call Logan at Meigs High Scbool at 992. 2158 or at home at992-2723 .
·
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:
:
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~elpsDodgers

B7 cmns SHERIDAN
AP Sportl Writer
•
If IUCOCssls IIICIIUred by fewes(
hits lllowed, Hideo Nomo bad a
· ~debut at Dodger Stadium. If
It I meuwed Oil a broader scale,

111c return tbrow by Ray Lankford
sailed pur lllird bue allowloa
DeSblelds 10 crou 111c pi..
The Dodgers brote llle game
open witlltwo runs in 111e fifth llld
another two in the sixtll on Raul
Nomo -ao:-so,
.
Moodesi's flflb bamt:run.
The lflll'll'e•e rlabt-haader bad a
In oilier IIIDICI, Colorado beal
J10obil!er throup four
Fri- Florida 10-6, Philadelphia beat
day, but It c:atalnly wasn t a tblag Houston S-2, MOlltreal beat New
of beauty. Nomo walked sevea, York 9-6, Piusburgb beal San Franthrew a wUd ~ illld
,a.~ cisco 9-4 and Chicago beat San
yet lllere was lUll a btg 0 on Die 0 8-4
scoreboard where llle St. Louis
g
·
,Cardinala' hits were waled.
Roddea 10, Marlin&amp; 6
It stayed that way uatlllllc slxtll ·
At Miami, V.luny Cullu. weat .
innln1, well after N0111o bad been 4-for-5 witll two home runs llld six
lifted for a pinc.b-hiuer, and lllc Los RBis, giv,ing him 18 RBis In bla
AaJeles Dodgers went on to beat last 21 at-bats and a .S36 avenge
St. Louis 8-4 Friday nigbt.
over 111c last seven games.
NOIIIO'sflntstanatDodgerSta-,
Larry Walk:er homered for tile
dium was anyllling bul an onlilwy founb time in five games for lllc ·
oigbt. There were 175 media ere· Rockies, wbo won tlleir fourlll .
cleallals issued. lacluding 8S for llle straight game. Tbe Marlins
JlipllllCIC press, and tile same was dropped llleir sixth In a row and
televised live badt to.Japan.
· · felliO 0-8 tllis season.at Joe Robbie
"I was never strained, even Stadi11111.
tbouab tonight was my del&gt;ut.
Bill Swift (1.0) ~tered .six hits
Beeause of our.clubhouse, it's a over five innings and left witll a 6good atmosphere and a lot of fun, 2 lead. Florida staner Marl!: Gard·
so I wasn't nervous at all,'' be said. ner (0-4) lasiCd five innings, giving
The first pitcb Nomo lllrew In up six runs and nine bits.
warm ups sailed over llle bead of
PhiUla 5, Aslrol Z
tliC Clltelief ililll Slllll!llled bUll tile .
- At Hoostmr, Curt ScbUIIng (3.0)
screen behind borne plate. Nomo's shut down al) offense tllat averaged
control Improved very little after eigbt ru!ls per game on its recent
tbal, and tile Cardiuals scored llleir nine-game road trip.
first three runs witllout gelling a
Schilling struck out eigbt, scathit
tered seven bits and walked two in
Nomo's wildness must bave bad 7 2/3 innings, and Heathcliff
aa effect on the fielders, 100, as lllc Slocumb-pitcbed a perfect ninth for
teams combined for 12 errors. Two his sixlb save.
of them came on one play tllat gave
Darren 'Daullon bil a two-run
Los Angeles llle lead for good in double and the Pbillies bad 12 bits
tile founb.
10 win for the eighth lime in .lllcir
"This was, I bope, lbe ugliest
game I've ever seen. I don 'I want
to see aiiolllcr one like it," Cardinals manager Joe Torre said. ·
Nomo ended up with his !bird
straight niHiecision. He struck out
five and threw 94 pi'tcbes. His only
at-bat resulted in a .strikeout. Todd
Williams (2-0} earned the victory
witb two scoreless innings of relief,
allowing just one of St. Louis' five
bits.
.
Los Angeles went ahead 4-3
witb two outs in tbe founb. Delino
DeShields walked and stole ·secood
before Danny Jackson's (0-3) pickoff throw went iniO center field and

Jm:lnP
!I&amp;'!

_

beat Cards

·

lilt 10 pmea
suapped a tic wllll a three-run
Doua Dnbek (1-2) kd: thi! lol&amp; homer and Denay Neaslc (1·!)
for 111e Alll'OI, wbo gave .away 111 pitc.bed seven str~?na lunlnBS u
S4,3SO llctets for fmc. Only 30,828 Pittsburgh ended us three-game
people abowcd up.
.
losing streak.
.
,Expoe !1, Meld
Mark Portu•al (1-1) walkedhi fiveln
AI New 'fork, IeffFassao (4-0) and aJlowcd •~ runs~ six ts
bentme 111c flnt rour-aamc winner 4 213 innings..Malt Williams hit bls
in t{le NL.ICIUCrina nine hits in six seven!fi and etgbth bomm for San
inatnga witll two walks and six FraDCISCO.
slrikeouts.
Cubl8, Padm 4
1be Expos bad eigbt extra:~
At Chicago •. Sammy Sosa drove ·
hits seven orr Juon Jacome (0-3). · in lbn:le runs wtlb a double and two
One or 'ilic was a three-run bomer singles, sending San Diego to its.
by Mike Lansing, bis fust of tile nlntllloss in 11 games.
year.
•
Jaime Navarro (3-0) lasted
Bobby Boailla bad two borne sevea innings, allowing only oae
run a, oae batting lefty and oae bit in tile final four. Andy Benes
rigbty.
(0-3) was tagged for seven runs and
PJrlates !I Glaatl 4
seven/hits wbile walking five in 4AI San Fran~lsco, Jeff King plusiniungs.
·
·
•

Johnnie Jackson ..
.AMVETS Post #23
Kanaugal Oh

SPAGHETTI.
DINNER
$3.00 - All You Can Eat

LIVE -BAND.·

"Out Of The Blues"
,Square Dancing

IU.TI UIM

A
CAROLL ·
SNOWDEN

342 Second Ave.
GaUipolls, Ohio
Ph; 446-4290
Home 446-4518

power locks·,
power windows.

1994 DODGE DAKOTA LONGBED
Auto Trans, V6
Magnum, lilt,
Cruise, Custom
Wheels and

.

Tonneau Cover.

•
AM/FM
Cassette, lilt
Steering Wheel,
·Cruise Control,
a nd Air
Con ~itioni ng .

4x4, 350V8
Engine, Auto
Irans, Pow~
windows, Power
Locks, Ttl! ,
Cruise and
Limited Slip
1 Rear End.

..t

CHEVROLET • GEO

•

OLDSM9BILE

GENEJ HNSON
•

TIME: 7 PM et
PRICE: $24.~5
'
Phone: 304·675-3398
1-800·766-0553 .
'

••
•

Gallipolis' Hometown Dealer

1616 Eastern

!~e.

..

•

C~lUp olis

(614 446-3672

......-----~--·

.

!

to fisb for walleyes, trolling
cranltbalu,
and us~
plaotz lxwds will
more fi ·

bacttro::.t

PAYMENTS · Due Until
·· AUGUST
NO
MONEY
DOWN'

* Beat rising Interest
Rates by buying now!!
* More car for your
mon~y...More money

for your car!!

ttt1 NI$SAN .x4, 15071 , "•'· dull "*'tn,
sport wheels, red, clalh """"' ........, ..........................................: ............ Ht70

111to GIIC VAN CONVERSION, 15075, Ulillcl. Vl,lir,

- ·Ii ,

Ulmolic,lll.flj
&lt;;'lis~, .... doit .. CIIUdl.dotlltm ...... · 1113 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE, - -· QIOOII. . . -. lir,
.\uiFM- till, cruse. air bag, - · 1'11 ....................... 111 ,1100
11112 DODGE CARAVAN, 15018, pewtof, V8, 7 past' IQIO ,
•
air, automal~. loJA!FM casselle, rear~.
11 O,tl50
11112 DODGE CARAVAN SE, ISOI'f, V8, 7 pow a IQIO , air,
aulomal~. AM/FM cwette. t~. aulse, power wi-dows .................. 110,1100
1H8 DODGE DAKOT.\ 15021, 1oi.g bed. blut, -~
AMIFM. IIIISI~Bf. doll&gt; interiol .......... ....................................... ... $&amp;115

clalh-.. . . ..

::.;,~;;!:~~~~-- ~: ~~~:

...

li.- -

\.ve5

IV91 CHEVYS-10,14970, AM{FII cassette,
sport wheels, rear bumper,.bed liler, custcxn stripes ............ ..,............
1113 NISSArlPATHANDER SE, .... 414,
C8SSIIte,lii,Oii!e, _ _ , ...
1.- " ' " '
IHI CHEVYLUMINAAPV, ISC87, V6, elr,automatlc:,
AMIFM cassetto, tik, au~e. powerw.-.,
S8l*
11112 DODGE CARAVAN, 15079, wtllte, air,
Bulomatic. AMJFM cassette, air bag, rear &lt;lefrosiBI ..................... 110,23&amp;

sea

.,t-.cloll-.

eloy""""" ................

1983 CHEVYLUMINCAAPV, 15083, or, automaTic,

AMJFM cauetle, tilt, CI'1Jise, power windows &amp; locks, V6 ............... . $1 1~
1983 CHEVY LUMTNIA APV, 15082, alloy""'""·
air, automatic, tin, eruise, r~r defroster .. ................ :.. ........,"··········· $10,43a
1992 NISSAN TRUCK, 15086, reel, 22,000 mMes,
spon wheels. doth interior ......... ................................... .... .......... ....... S8834
11192 DODGE CARAVAN, 15088, t&gt;ue, air, IUiomalic,
AMJFM cass~ e . air bag. cloth interior ...............................,........:........ S8334
' 1993 NISSAN KING CAB, 15091 , reei.AMIFM c:welte,
rear nip seat, sport wheels, rear slider ..........., ...................... ........... $10,820
1987 FORD BRONCO It XLT, 15090, 4X4, I'll engine,
2to.ne paint, AM!FM cassene ..:.....•:.:...... ........... ......... ~ ...... ,................ S4St5

1993 CHEVY CAVAUER RS, 15060, dall&lt; pewter, aw.
automatic, cruise, rear defroster, dual mrrrors, cloth Interior ......... ~ 3 55
1H3 CHEVY CAVAUER RS WAGON, 14118, reel, ai&gt;,
automatic, AM/FM cassette. tiH, cruise, powet' ~ks. luggage rack .... $7595
1991 CHEVY LUMINA EUROSPORT, 141141 , blue, au1omatic,
air. AM/FM, tilt. cruise, power winOow!, VB, alloy wheels .................... S7095
11190 PONTIAC FIREBIAD, 15061 , led, 2 dOO&lt;, 48,000 miles.
automatic, air, AM;fM cas.sene. tit, cn.ise. sport wheels ... ,................ $7995
1094 PONnAC SUNBIAD I.E, 15032, ai&lt;, AMIFU eassene.
tilt, cloth Interior, 28,000 miles .. .............. .................... ......................... . S~7t0
1993 CHEVY CORSICA LT, 14985, wflhe, all, automatic, i~.
croise. AU!FMcassene. power lOcks. rear defroster .......... ............... S0870
'

'

1991 CHEVY CAMARO RS, 15048, AM;fMcas.sene. automatic,
air. tilt, cruise. power windows. rear defroster ......... ..... ....................... S9270

-Super

gDeal With AHigh ffficiency Heat Pump!

Between April 24th and May 20th, 1995 the first 12
customers that buy a system, Warner Heating &amp;

COLUMBUS - Tbe boating
is fast approaching.
Tbe Division of Watercraft
reinintls all boalel'S' to ''Tbink·Safe·
ty'' Ibis boating season. Inspect all
your safet)"':quipment and repau or
replace equipment tbal does not
meet safety standards.
.
During National Safe Boatmg
Week and 111c Memorial Day Holi!
• da y weekend, the Division of
Watercraft will offer safely mspections at !be following launch ramps
and marinas.
Sunday, May 21 : 10 a.m. ·~ 11
p.m Shawnee State. Park Manna,
10-11 a.m.; Shawnee State Park
J;Wnp, 11 a.m.-noon;
·
·
Friday, May 26: Ohio Brush
·
t reek Ramp, 6-7:30 p.m.
' Saturday, May 27: 12 p·. m. 1:30 p.m. Portsmoulb City Landing noon-1:30 p.m.; Tycoon Lake,
J· p:m.; Lake Vesu vius, 4-5 p.m.
. Sunday , May 28 : Turkey
. Creek(Shawnee State Park), II
a.m.-noon; Holiday Point Ram~ II
a.m.-noon; Holiday Point Manna,
noon-! p.m.; Ironton City Ramp, 2·
'
3 p.m.
Monda y, Ma y 29: Jackson
Lake State Park, noon-I p.m.; Lake
Alma State Park, 3-4 p.m.; Lalce
Wbire State Park, 11:30 a.m.-1
p.m.For further information on ··'
...,e
boating and boating registrations .
call or write Division of Water·
craft
640 Second Street
Ports~outh, Ohio 45662, or call
614-353-7668.

Goir
'CLIFTON , N.J . (AP)- Bob
Murphy shot a 7-under.par 65 for a
one-stroke lead after the opening
. round of tbe $950,000 Cadillac
1\IFL Classic.
· Don Bies was one stroke back,
while Raymond Floyd; defending
champion and leading money winner, was tied with Tom Wargo at
' 67 .
!sao Aoki and lbree olbers were
at 68. AI Geiberger, George Arcber
and lloJl Charles were in a group at
69, while Dave Stockton and Lee
Trevino were at 70.

1993 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15055, ~ue , aw,
aU1omatiC, AM!F~ cassette. tilt, cruise, power seats &amp; windows· ..... S11,650
1992 BUICK LoSABRE CUSTOM, 14935, d41k blue, M,
automatic. AMfFM casmte, tilt, cruise; power windows! l~s ............ $1 1,820
1993 OLDS 88 ROYALE, 15001 , green, V6. ~r. automatic,
AM;f'Mcassette,·lilt. cruise, Power windows &amp; seats .. ..................... 112,350
1994 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME S, 15053, wtite,V6.... tl,
crui&lt;e, autonati&lt;,MI/FM cassette,jiOWI!oea•&amp;......,,olloy_ ... $1 2,850

•

Cooling will give them a 10 year Partsand

Labor Warranty fre~. That way. your new s~stem will

g ·_,.,, HVUNDAJ EXCEL Gl..-15074, low ml'"',

be covered until the year 2005. Also at no charge, we will
install a High Efficiency Media Ai_r Filter. Act now before
. the heat of the summer raises your temperature and the
pnce.

AM/FM.cassette. rear delroster, cloth intefi:lt' .. ... .... :............,........... ... $3495
1993 HYUNDAI EXCEl.. 150S8, reel. 4 d0o1, AMIFM
cassette. dual minoo. rear defrost&amp;r,. 22.000 m~s .............. ,.............. $6870
1990 NISSAN STANZA, 14904, &gt;ed, 4 door. ail, automat~.
AMIFM casset1e. tilt cruise, rear defroster ................................... ..... $6495
11190 MAZDA PROTEGE U&lt;, 1511 0, wn!e. elloy wheels,
sunroof, AMifM cassette, cruise. power windows ......... ., ... ,.... ,........ $7110
1992 TOYOTA COROLLA, 14678, ai1, automal&lt;:
rear clelroster, cloth rnterior .... ........
.. ......,.................. S8925
11193 NTSSAN MAXIMA SE, 15057,tll&amp;clt. ail, .AM.f'M
cassette, Bose ~.0. tilt. crutse. leather, alloy~. power Stllraot .. 116,995

It 's H a1d 7b StopAJ}nni:
1N8 DODGE DY~ASTY, 15042, VI, er, automaTic,
lilt, cruise, alr bag, Cloth Interior .._..... .................·........ .............. ,..... ...... S39t5

1992 FORD ESCORT WAGON, 14983, 10ct, aw, ·
AM/fM cessene, rear defroster. dual mirrors. doth Interior ................. 56585 .
.'

1992 MERCURY TOPAZ GS, 15004, wtone, a&lt;. aul&lt;&gt;natic,

AM!FM ca:ssene, til , cruise. po_wer windows &amp;seats, alloy wt'leets

$7170

11192 DODGE DYNASTY LE, 15051 , wloite, I W,autometoc.
AM/FM cassane. tH1, Q"Uise, air bag . ....... .'......,.............................. :. $7111-0
1883 MERCU~Y TOPAZ, 14990, green. air. sutoma1k:.
AM/FM cassene. tBt. cn.nse. J)OWt' windows locl!s .......................... S8H5

a

it $Ham 1b StopA 1hme:·

.

'

11193 DOOGE DYNASTY LE, 15050, green. V6. ar, autOOlAtic,
AM!FU cassette. tilt. Cf)Jise air bag. power seat &amp; winOOws .......... :. 111,320

'

,_ • A rather bold prognostication, but one_that Wa~ner Heatin~ &amp;
· Cooling would not make if we weren't so sure about the quality and
reliability of the Trane XL 1200 Weathertron®heat pump. Built to
the highest standards, and it provides cooling efficiency up to 13.0
SEER. For the best in year-round comfort, get the Trane XL 1200.
Designed, tested and manuf-actured to last. Best of all it heats,
cools, and saves.
I t's Hard To Stop A Trane,™

I

11192 DODGE DYNASTY LE, 141191 , wtlite, al. automat~.
AMJFM cassene. tHt cruise, power windows, Ill' bag ·- . ....,......... M350
1!1!12 DODI:lE DYNASTY, 14959, gold, V8~ 11&lt;, auiomattc,
AM/I'II cass®l. 1m. &lt;Nisi, all bAg. dplll ~ll!rior
............. S~
1991 FORD PROBE 01.. I4TI'UI; bi!Jf, ar, automal~.
AMIFM cassette, alloy wheefs , dual mlnorl, fakl dawn rear seal ..... 17415
19M FORD TAURUS LX, 15053, ail. automabC, AM/I'M cassette,
. $12,550

1~. cruise alloy-·· -seal &amp;windows. keyless enl;t

19M FORD ESCORT LX, 141184, 2 door, green. alloy wloeols.
20,000 miles.1ir, AM!FM cassette. rear delfostlf . .
. ......... , ' $8127
1992 FORD T·BIRD ISOCJe, W engine, automat~. ti~.
cruise. pOwer windOw~. see.ts.&amp; locks .... . .. ............
1ilt2 MERCURY TOPAZ GS, 15040, blua, ar, '"omalic
~eriar . ........ ...... ....... .... .... .....

•

AM/Fl.!,-

. W 75

11450

11112 EAGLE SUMMIT DL, ~.green, ail, automal&lt;,
AMifM cissetta,,... delrD&lt;tor, sport- ...............................". 18175

WARNER HEATING &amp; COOLING
Servirtg Meigs, Mason &amp; Gallia
HIGH EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMPS &amp; FURNACES
3561 5 OA!&lt; HILL RD.
CHESTER, OH 45720
61~985"'222

want Ads.
NIVer Wit • Vac I • •
llley 'M:IrkAI '1111111

PT. PLEASANT, WV 25550
304-675-7254

...

•

•
•

NO

in lllc Westao Basin. Smallmoutb
are staning 10 move iniO sballow
waters lllrougbout llle reef complex.

$49.00

- ·-sports brlefs-

.

'

':k

$C3SOD

Power Seats,

tm TOUilllW WIE onllTDI 101 Alil~lllllY

a time honored metbod

iDcludes 34 miles in Meigs County.
May is an excellent lime 10 Cllldl
hybrid striped bass. walleye, smallmoupie, ~u!:; ~~%~d
and dam sites aloog tile'main river
channel and lhe area below llle
Belleville tailwa,ters are good
places 10 take bybrid striped bass.
. Southeast
' BURR OAK LAKE - The
dropoff points and rocky shoreline
· opposiq: this Alllens County stare
park beach iS a good place 10 talre
largemouth bass wben using live or
lasllc baits. Angler success is higb
I ~ Pfor spring largemouth bass flabing.
Nortll-1
• Blue gills; sunfish. saugeyes and
FINDLEY LAKE_ An excel~cbannel catfisb also provide a vari- lent blucBillS populatloo exists bere
~ety of good fishing tbrougb lhe · with most fish taken measuring
~summer.
more t11an seven inc.bes. Use unaU
~ SALT FORK LAKE - Fisbing worms and larval baits fished in
is raied excellent for small and sbaJlow water for ,best results. This
~argemoulb bass,' cbannel calfisb is an excellent lake for adult
~and. muskies; good for bluegills,_ anglers seeking to introduce tlleir
'Sunflsb 'liM waneyes. flathead Cit- youn~ters10 111c an of bass ftsb·
~sb and crappies occur in lpw to ing.
· rtsbinsls good.
:;,moderate numbers which provide
MO UITO CREEK RESER~an additional challenge for anglers.
VOIR _ The year's best walleye
:;
Soulllwat
U
fishing occurs now tllrougb mid·
•' ROCKY FORK LAKE se June. Many walleyes are taken in
~)ive nigbtcrawler rigs or troll small shallow water, panicularly along
WINNING BUCK _.Jake Kennedy, 19, of Uarrlaonville, was ·
;pankbairs around tbe soutll beacb. llle wave-washed portions of tile
named
first-place winner In lbe 0' Doll's Lumber Big Buck Contest.
1and Kelleys Cove area to take shoreline. Bluegill and crappie
The
buck
feU llle ftrsl day of Ohio's deer gun season to Kennedy's u.
•:Walleyes. Fisb allrai:tor locations riSbing sbould be excellent
gauge
Ilhai:a
Buc:k Special. The 13-point deer scored 137 718 points
·)Ire lisled on a free map, wllic!l ean
Lake Erie
a
20.25-lnch
spread with six-Inch hues. Tbe winners were
and
had
'-be used to rtnd some of tile better
Walleye and smallmoulb bass
announced AprU 25.
:rnie fishing spots.
fishing is beginning to improve.
I STILLWATER RIVER WbU drif 1i b'
'gb ~ ard
:Sma11moutll bass, rock bass, carp, ~~e~;t~-~IS;m~g~w~e~t~~~-~o~rw~-~===========~========~~
fliCkers, and sunfish can be found ~
)brougboul much of the river. Look
· for the deeper pools below riffles
and some of !be backwater eddies
lo locate good spots for small,
tnoulb bass. Use bellgramites or
is giving you the safety, security, and
softcraws when available for best
results.
'
convenience of. a cellular phone for only
· Central
: KISER LAKE -There is a
•
developing hybrid slriped bass l1sb~ry'new to Ibis lake. Stocking
began in 1992 and some .fish now
· tneasure up to 20 incbes. Use
In addition, sign up for two years and
thicken livers fished on lbe botiOm
tor best results. The shoreline cover
receive a $50.00 cr~dit toward your bill.
produces fair catches of crappies
and offers excellent bluegill fish* Certain restrictions apply
'
mg.
: MAD RJ:VER- A small popujation of brown lroul is maintained
lbrougbout the year as ~ result .of
$dvanced fingerling stockings .
Gallipolis,
(614) 441-1168
1502 Eastern Ave.
~orne older trout present in the
river weigh up to 10 pounds. New

Pivision
·
.o f Watercraft
inspection
.s ites·posted

State Farm Insurance Companies
Home Offices: Bloomington, Illinois .

· After pincb-hiUer Tony Dugan
struck out, Slanley hit a grounder l&lt;i
lb ird that, ,by a II appeara nces,
should have been !be' th ird out.
Rvcker's reaching Tor ibe ibirdbase
jlag before Whit latch's arriva l
resulled in the base umpire's calling
in .out ,on lbe play. But after Gheen
protested tbe call, the borne plate
lllllpire ruled lhat Wbillatch was
iafe, and tbe bases were loaded.

Ilona!

OialoRlver
RACINE POOL _ This area

apinntn Ia

9h

. Silverado, 350
VB, Auto. trans,
tilt, cruise, omNer
, locks 'and
windows
fiberglass lopper.

(Continued from C-5)
Cleland to tie lh~ game at 3-3.
·'
· : Hanson, lbe next batter, popped
clul to second to end lbe Marauders'
tounb.
· The duel: The next 2 1/2 innings
saw Newsome and Cremeens allow
one base runn er between lhe111
(Rucker, who wallced in lbe fifth,
was thrown out ste aling during
-~ ames' at-bat) wb ife facing lhe
'mininum number of baiters m !bat
slretcb.
The seventh: Whitlatch staned ·
the Meigs se venth with a walk .
After Hoover struck ou~ Hanson's
back-to-lbe-hjll grounder resulted in
Crem eens' overth rowing second
liaseman Isaac Saunders during an
attempted double .play . Whitlatch
stayed at second because Heath
McKinniss, who replaced Neal in
¢ nter ihree innings earlier, came in
q·uickly to deny Whitlatch th e
p!ance to go to !bird.

OOH. C.UD IU!JEcr TO(~

Natural Resources:

trout regulall0111 are In effect OD
Mac-0-Cbee Creek, a tributary of
lllc Mad Rivet.
.. Nortll-l
.
CLEAR. FORK LA1CE - Crappie fisbiuJ Is rated u good Ibis
year williiOOII flab raoain&amp; in abe
fton1 elght&amp;t to 13 lnc::bil. Use llllnaows slllpCllded beneath a bobber
in areas with submciJed brusbpiles
in lllc lower half of lllc ~· l..arle·
moulll bass range ftonltwo 10 five
pounds and provi aood ~q~ring
fisbiag. Tbls is 1o one of llle
state's top
.
LAKE LECOMTE - The flab·
ing forecast Is rated sood this year
for bullhead and channel calfisb,
largemouth bass, and yellow perc.b;
fair for walleyes. Bultlleads can be
•·'-- durin tbe earl
· and
,_..n
g
Y mommg
evening boon on iradltlonaJ catfisb
baits fiShed along tile bottom.

NATE COMMUNICATIONS

Leather interior,
Alum wheels,

'

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is 111e weeldy flabing report •
provided by the Division of
Wildlife oldie Ohio Depwtnieat of

.

For More Information Call 446-4927 '

Sports briefs_

Auto rating
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Arie
Luyendyk and Scolt Brayton ,
·favorites til win .tile pole for lbe
Indianapolis 500, bad the fastest
practice laps iu Indianapolis Motor
Speedway.
Bl)lyton's 234.472 mph was surpassed by Luyendyk's consecutive
laps of 234 .711, 234 .9p and
234.889.
'
Tbe fastest practice week in
Indy history ended with 14 drivers
above 230, including Michael
Andreui, Scolt Goodyear, Robby
Gordon, rookie Andre Ribeiro,
Paul Tracy, Mauricio Gugelmin,
Fabi,
Villeneuve ,
iurun-v
Hena. Raul

:~·~~y~~~~~~~s----~--~----------&lt;&gt;~u~t~d~o~o~r~s~--'n thli Racine Pool,
.
.
Bass &amp; catfish angling tabbed excellent

CELLULAR-ONE®

All proceeds. go to the Building
Funct· All Donations Accepted

Marauders win ...

:; Then Cremeens got full counts
on Burton and Newsome before
y.lalking them. The walks brought
Wbillatcb and Hanson borne wilb
(be lie-breaking run and the cventugame-winning run before Cleland
llluck out
&gt;The Academy's final at-bat saw
.ltUsbman Seth Davi~ fly out to left
before Jason Dailey beat out a bigb
ch'ppper off !be plate for a single.
After Cory Wilson walked and Jake
Bl4zer' s bunt to, shortstop resulted
ill ) bases-loading single, Rucker hit
a: srounder to second lhal retired
Blazer and allowed Dailey to score.
With Wilson and Rucker at !he coriaers, Barnes grou,1,1ded out 'to
· Newsome to end the Blue Devils'

.

•

1-800-767-4223

.

J

Povmenta figullcl w!llctown payment1ll SI ,OOO""'«Iri&lt;TtpluS tall &amp;1111o. See IOI&lt;smM tor clelailsl

�Sunday, May 14, 1995

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

Antarctica becomes
earth's laboratory

1 95 THUNDERBIRD L

By PETER JAMES

naliOIIS stated lariUJrial claiml 10
SPIELMANN
huge slices of the continent.
CAPE ADARE, Antarctica (AP)
Britain, AJaenlina 8lld Cbile have
- One bunc:lred years ago, tbe
overlapping claims oo the Peninauwbaling ship Antarctic: anchon:d
Ia. France, New Zealand, !Q'orway
off this wind-battered volcanic
and AUSII1lia ~ asaened claiml.
coast and sent a longboat tbrousb .
Nationalism reached iJs peak in
!be choppy Ross Sea 10 shore.
1940, when Nazi Germany sent
Led by Capt. Leonard Krisplanes 10 drop swastika-engraved
tensen, the landing llllflY len the
stakes oo vast sln:tcbes of Antiln:ti·
first known human footprints on
ca. c:laiminB it for the Third Rclc:b.
the Antarctic: continent on Jan. 24,
As the world was caught up in a
1895, as part of their voyage to slobal war, and then the Cold War,
shiugllter whales in unclaimed
Anwctica was abandoned except
waters.
for the predations of the whalen.
Antarctica was baptized in
But science was about to return
blood. Seals were massacred by the
10 The Ice in a big way, spurred by ·
millions for their fur, and whales celeslial events.
and penguins for their oil, needed
Sunspot activity was approachto grease tbe machinery of the ing a peak in 1957-58, so scientists
lndusbial Revolution.
•
and govemmenJs worldwide mobiOn Maequarie Island, hundreds lized for the loternatiooal Geopbysof thousands of ·timid penguin&amp; ical Year, using Antarctica's
were herded up planks to the rim of unique view of the $0Utbem bole in
the Earth's magnetic field to study
cauldrons of boiling oil until they
toppled in, to be·rendered for their it under the bombardment of solar
own oil.
radiation.
After 100 years of exploitation
Scienlists from 67 counbies set
of the Frozen Continent, mankind
up bases around the continent.
is finally turning away from the Their cooperation was so successful that it spurred negotiations for
fast buck an&lt;t the quick kill, to set
aside Antarctica as the preserve of • the Antarctic Treaty -one of !be
nature and science forever.
world's most remarkable intemaToday there is talk of establish·
tiona! agreements.
ing a world parlc.
Signed in 1959 by the counbies
Antarctica also provides science
with key interests in Antarctica, It
a window to such global pollutant set aside tbe cootinent exclusively
threats as ozone depletion and !be for peaceful purposes. It banned
greenhouse effecL
nuclear testing and explosions, and
The turnabout has been remark- dumping of radioactive waste. Milably swift, considering humanity's
itary activities were restricted to
brief and tentative presence in logL~tical support of science.
Antarctica. Only bits of coastline,
Conflicting territorial claims
islands, and a few routes to the were simply shelved as an issue. In
• South Pole wen: explored until the a rare example of Cold War coop1957-58 International Geophysical eration, the superpowers did not
Year.
assert any claims, and refused to
From tbe beginning, man's pres- recognize those of their allies ence in Antarctica .has bee.n a j'!"'· though they reserved the right to
bled tale. of feroctty, nattonaltsm make them in the future. That deft
and tdealist_D; untem~ butchery &lt; maneuver discouraged smaller
spaced wtt~ occastonal noble counbies from pressing their terriattempts at sctenttfic research.
torial claims
By the 1960s and 1970s, gov. During Wo~d War I, wha!ing
mcrea~d as otl. was refined tnto ernments and induslry began oovetglycerm for arullery shells. And ing the oil, gas and minerals that
arter vlorld War II, Amenca and oogbtto lie iii and around Anwctitbe Soviet Union bunted sperl!l ca. ,
•·
wbitles, needing their extra-fine Otl
National bases proliferated,
. as jet engine lubricant.
especially
on the peninsula and
Until the lGY, most of Antarctiislands
off
it, only a three-day
ca was still "Terra Australis Incogcruise from South America. When .
nita," as medieval map-makers bad
Antarctica's population peaks in
labeled the theoretical southern summer at about 5,000, most of it
continent.
is crowded into lhe urban sprawl of
The ftrst person born in Antarc· dozens
of science stations on the
tica is not yet an adult. And even
that birth was a witness to national- peninsula and its islands.
istic pretension. Emilio Marcus
Palmer was born in 1978. at
Argentina's Esperanza Base, his
RJO GRANDE - Here is the
. mother flown specifically for that
purpose, to underscore Argentina's scnedule for the week of May 1.4claim tD a large swath of Antarctic 21 at tbe University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center.
territory.
Fitness center,
That was nine .years after Neil
gymnasium
Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin bad
and·
racquetball
courts
walked on the moon and planted
Todayclosed
their nation's flag as a symbol of
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Ameriean pre-eminence.
Tuesday
- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Roald Amundsen's dash to the
Wednesday9 am.-9 p.m.
South Pole in 1911 for the honor of
Thursday9
a.m.-9 p.m.
Norway.' s King Haakon VII was
Friday
.
9
a.m.-9
p.m.
simply the most successful and sinSaturdayclosed
gle-minded such exploit.
Sunda~ay 21_- &lt;;losed
Rober-t F, ..Jlcou- and hi~ team
made tbe same Uip for the glory of
Pool
the British Empire. but also collectThrough
Sunday,
May 21 ed rock and fossil samples, drag closed
ging them along in their manhauled sledges. A combination of
Free-weight room
demoralization at finding AmundThrugh
Sunday, May 21 sen had beat them to the Pole by a
closed
· montll, poor diet, the effort of hauling those rocks and sheer bad luck
Notes: A Lyne Center memberdoomed Scott's party on their
ship
is required to use the facilities.
return trip, making Ulem the first
Faculty,
staff, students and adminmartyrs for Anrarctic science.
are
admitted with their ID
istrators
Richard Byrd esrablisbcd Amercards.
ica's claim on the South Pole by
Racquetball court reservations
flying over it in 1929 in a Ford Tri·
can
now be made one day in
motor. The Soviets used the voyage
advance
by calling 245-7495 local"
of Russian Adm. Thaddeus
ly
or
toll-free
at 1-800-282-7201,
Bellingshausen past the Antarctic
extension
7495.
Peninsula in 1821 to justify their
All guests arc to be accompa interests on the continent.
nied
by a Lyne Center membership
Around Antarctica, whaling
bolder and a $2 lee.
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GALLIPOLIS • Meclical Services of America, Inc. ann~
tbe appointment of Mary Beth
Carli~le, RN as assislant administrator in cbarge tbe Gallipolis localion of Medi-Home Health Care.
Mrs. Carlisle is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
the Holzer Hospital School of
Nursing.
Carlisle has been actively
involved in the local home health
care industry for more than 10
years. A resident of Point Pleasant,
Mrs. Carlisle is a member of the
· Mason County Board of Education
and active in the Christ Episcopal
Church. Sbe is married to dentist
Dr. Michael Carlisle
and has three daughters, Jennifer
and Bethany Rose and Messina
Carlisle.
Medical Services of America,

. '

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93 AEROSTAR XLT, loaded .. ...... ~ ...... :.....$11,995
87 GRAND MARQUIS, loaded, low miles .. .$3,995
92 NISSAN 4x4, low miles ............................ $9,995

.1995 EXPLORER SPORT

•

Twenty-five area business were recognized
Thursday morning at the Gallia County Cham·
ber of Commerce's Bossiness Appreciation
Week breakfasl Proprietors from all over the
business spectrum - from wholesale and retail
to agriculture and transportation - were honored for their roles In tbe business community.
TOP PHOTO (len to right): Paul Knox of
AOK. Builders, William Stapleton of B&amp;E Shoe
Repatr, Debbie Rhoades of Bank One Jamie
Harrison of Basket Delights, Buzz Call' of Bob
Evans Farms, Carroll. Caldwell of C.C. Caldwell
Tr~cklng, John LeBlanc of Borg-Warner Automotive and Bob Burlile of Burlile Oil.
CENTER PHOTO
to right): Gary
Roach of The Wiseman
Paul Smith of

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PORTSMOlJfH • A special 'c&lt;)ucational seminar was recently
m Cbilltcotbe for se.v~ AAA South Ccnual Ohio travel agency employees ..
Attending from the Gallipolis oflice. were Lana McKoy travel
counselor and Linda Carney, manager.
'
The principle theme was: "The Individual European Counlries as
a Destination for American Travelers". ·
Tbe seminar was conducted by Werner Scbafer-Jungcr, who at
one time was AAA's chief European tour escort. Scbafcr-Junger is
a world traveler, wbo lived half of his life ·in Euro~'ilnd who still
travels in Europe by car at least once-or twice a year.
The-seminar presenration concentrated on today's facts and travel conditions in Europe.
.
·
Participants also learned details and tbe differences between
•
• · uavcl via escorted iour or traveling independently in European
• countries.

.
Small business info fair May 24

'.
•'·

372-3673
37?-4674
Retains

•

•' .

ATHBNS • From writing a business plan to ~ccuring l!· small
• business loan, individuals thinking about starting a small business
• can gather the Information they need to succeed at a small business
• infonnalion fair Wednesday, May 24, at the Ohio University Inn,
~· Athens. Sponsored by Bank One, Athens, admission is free.
•
Ten exhibits, as well as (our seminars, will be available through: out the.
:
Seminars include: Risk Management and Analysis, by John
,. Lavelle; Small Business Start-up, Accounting and Tax Information,
; by Thomas W. Parfitt; Legal Issues for Small Businesses, by Atty.
: David Frey, and Business Planning, by Marianne VerMeer.
~
For .additional infonnation. contact Michael Mullins at Bank

.. •One, 593·6681.
' l

-.
:

•

J&gt;usiness briefs--

HOLZER CLINIC LAB TECHNICIANS •
Holzer Clinic laboratory technicians display certificates of accreditation by the Commission
Office Laboratory Accreditation. Holzer's five
branch clinics In Meigs, Gallia, Lawrence and
Jackson Co11nties and Mason County, W. Va.,
have ~ectntly achieved accreditation status. ,

First row, left to right are Susan Davis, laboratory manager; Kim Craig, Cathy Workman,
Patty Young, Bonnie. Sparks, Jennifer Derenberer and Amy Sprague. Back row • Dr.
Althaus, Shari Garnes, Sue Henson, Virgil Bentley, Scott Mays, and Stephan Elberfeld, a neil·
lary services Birector.
'

Holzer Clinic recognized
for quality laboratory·. service
GALLIPOLIS - Hol zer Clinic's

year the branches bave been ic director).
involved in applying for tbe
Tbe Commission on Office I..ab· met all cri(eria for accrediralion by accreditation. According tD Davis, . omtory"Acerediration is a nationalthe Commission on Office Labom- "All went very smoothly and the ly recognized clinical laboratory
tory Accrediration (COLA).
inspectors were all comp!imentary accreditation organization wbicb
Accreditation is given only to of our efforts and accomplish- accredits laboratories throughout
laboratories that apply rigid stan- ments. In many a&lt;pects we were far the United Srates and its territories.
dards of quality in day-to-day &lt;Jl)eiahead of the requirements for
COLA is approved by the Fedations , demonstrate continued accreditation."
eral Government and sponsored by
accuracy in the performance of
The accreditation certificates lllc ~erican Academy of Family ,
proficiency testing, and pass a rig- were awaFded durin~ a recent Phystctans, the American Society
orous on-site laboratory survey. brtmch laboratory mceung held at of Internal Medicine, the American
The Holzer locations have earned the Holzer Cjinic o~ Jackson Pike. Medical As~ociation, and the ColCOLA accrediration a&lt; a result of a Da vid P. Althaus, M.D.; medical lege of Ame~ican Pathologists.
long- term commirmcnt to provide laborarory director of two of tbe . Holzer Cltmc s Mam Facility on
qualil y services to the patients of three branch labs, expressed com- Jackson Pike in Gallipolis was fii'St
the region .
plimcnt s to the laboratory techs, accredited in 1982 and · bas
Susan Davis, MT. laboratory Susan Davi s and Sre ve Elberfeld remained a COLA accredited facilmanager, noted11Jat this is tbo fii'St·"' (ancillary services and branch clin- ity since.

primary care branch locations have

J'

--- 11~--ncau

1-800-964-3673
Ripley, WV

FORD-MERCURY

Reliance Motion Control, Ron McDade of
Columbus Southern Power, Joe .F oster of Pope
and Pope, Randy Freedland of T&amp;T Holland
Motor Express, Mark Jagello of Quality Farm
and Fleet, Barb Coleman of Star Bank, Alden
Wedemeyer of River City Farm Supply and
Barry Dorsey of the University of Rio Gr~nde.
BOTTOM PHOTO (left to right): Jack
Fruth of Fruth's l'harmacy, Bob Eastman of
Ohio Valley Supermarkets, Mike McCall.a of
Gallipolis Tobacco and Cundy, Charles Adkins
of Holzer Medical Center, Roger Hood of Hask·
Ins and Tanner Clothiers, Bob Daniel of Holzer
Clinic, Jeff Smith of Ohio Valley Bank and Tom
Woodward of Oakwood •' arms.

AAA officials attend seminar

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. 95 TAURUS. 4 DR, loaded .... .......... ~ .· .. ........ $15,995
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·

tJJen6igli-(jarrett
372..3673
372:..4674

Inc. with headquarters in grown into an international oorpoColumbia, S. C., began providing ·ration with more than 90 offices
borne health services in 1973. throughout the East, Midwest, and
Since that time, tbe company bas Southeast as weU as in !be Philipp;ues.
.
·
Medical Services of America is
a comprehensive borne bealtb care
provider with services wbicb
include medical I surgical I IV
nursing, pedialric nursing, psycbi·
atric nursing, physical I occupational speech therapy, pharmacy, .
medical equipment (rental sales),
cardio diagnostics, rehabilitation,
case management, passport programs, and private care.
The Gallipolis location is at 412
Second Avenue with business
hours 8 am. to 4:30p.m., Monilay
through Friday. Mrs. Carlisle can
be reached at (614) 441-1779 or
(800) 481-ME;Dl(6334) for more
infonnation.
MARY CARLISLE

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•

,.

·~·

Continued on D-8

'95 f-350 CREW CAB

TREMENDOUS NEW VEHICLE·
INVENTORY •

1995 RANGER SUPERCAB
4X4

or .confusion," said Jeff Christian,
chief executive of Christian .t
Timbers Inc., a Clevelaad-based
e.xecutive placement fiiDI thai specializes in bigb technology.
"Everybody w~ts people wbo
are in the induslry now," be said.
"The trouble is \here are too few
' 0 to recrutt0 out of."
compantes
Even AT&amp;T~ Corp., the largest
telecommunicauons company, bas
noticed a talent crunch for some
digital-age jobs.
"Because it's so new, there's a
not a lot of experience in the induslry," said Karen Polich, the human
resources manager responsible for

Carlisle named assistant administrator
of Medi-Home Health Care in Gallipolis

I

flOC H••t

COMFORUSSUREO.

Sunday, May 14, 996

By EVAN RAMSTAD
/ - can fall victim to unforeseen
AP Business Writer
.
changes in technology. (
NEW YORK - Big alliances
In addition, tbe number of peaand mergers get all tile attention as pie with experience in thing$ like
companies n:sbape themselves 10 on-line systems, the Internet and
take advantage of advances in com- entertainment sltflware is fairly
municatioo networks and comput· limited.
.
ers.
·
For"&amp; consumer products com, But behind the scenes of ven- -pany that is j_ust starting to develop
tures like the one announced this a marketmg
presence
in
week by MCI Communications cyberspace; for Instance, it can be
Corp. and News Corp. is .a race to difficult to find and expensive to
fmd the right people to execute the hire someone witb the years of
strategies on which many compa- experience they may traditionally
nies are betting their fuwre.
seek for another. product or strateThe trouble is that many compa· gic position.
.nies ~ave poorly-defmed strategies. -· "There's a buge amount of '
And even those with clear ideas staffing going on. 111ere's also a lot

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· BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

1thntsJentintl
·

•

1-800-964-3673 .
Ripley, WV

•Free esttmates

us1ness

Business Appreciation Week·....., Hiring

,,

Lyne Center slate

~t·

•

a

•

...••.-

'·

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PROMOTED • Charles A.

Wi~liams was promoteil to

mamtenance supervisor in the .
maintenance department at
Ohio Valley Eiectric Corporation's Kyger Creek Plant, effec·
live April ~. Williams jolnejl
OVEC In 1976 as a laborer. In
1978 he transferred to tbe yaml
department, whete he progressed to barge a,ttendant. The
following year be transferred to
tbe maintenance deparbnent as
a maintenance helper and
advanced to maintenance
·mechanic-S that same year. In
..;
Janu~ry or this year, he was
WAGNER HARDWARE- Racine's Wa11·
prom1oted to maintenance
ner
Hardware - owned by Ron and N•ncy
mechanic-A. Williams and hi•
Wagner
- bas heln transferred bac:k Into the
wife, Christine, reside on Cora
Wagntr family from a pn•lous !)wner, Mildred
MUI Road, Gallipolis, and they
Carnahan. Wagner Is tbt third gener~tlon In the·
ary the parenl• of three sons.
I
.

...

. family to operate the hardw•re store slme 1952.
The business ucently bec•me Meigs County's
only store to carry the Trust Worthy Une. !T· S
pbot.o) . ·
.... ,. --·

•

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•

~

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�I

••

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''

Sunday, May 14,_1~

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

l

.

- The-House of the Week------__;,_ _ _ _ __,__ __
l

By POPULAR MECHANICS
For AP SpecW Futww

I

BY BRUCE NA1HAN
AP Newsl'eittures

This one-stoiy home weds function and elegance masterfully,
making use. of every inch of
DECK
space to accommodate four bedMASTER
BEDROOM
rooms and plenty of living space.
Plan f -48, by Home Styl es
Designers Network, featur es
1,814 square feet of living space ·
that provides for comfortable liv. UVING ROOM
ing. The ornate exterior includes
an oval-glassed entry, wood
columns and rich wi.pdow and
brick treatme nts. A gabled
roofline above adds a touch of
DINING
domesticity.
1
11 • 12
The foyer offers views into the
GARAGE
liVing room and the dinmg room.
20 • "
Th e living room p_rovides an
open space enhanced by a 12-foot
r---------------- ~ --------------~
vaulted ceiling. It overlooks a
huge, backyard deck through AN EffiCIENT Ooor plan is the hallmark of the interior. The foyer
Fre nch doors framed by win- Rows into the dining and living rooms, giving instant views to the
deck and backyard. The Island kitchen and the neighboring family
dows.
Me al pre paration ca n be a room provide for cheerful mornings and rest at the end the day.
maslcr suile ~· privolc access to the deck and an overs4ed
pelight in the sunny, open central The
walk-in closet, while the garden hath includes a sepamte shower
kitc he n . An ove r sized is land and a dual-sink vanity.
expands counter ·space, while a
recipe-work desk aids in the planning stages of special meals. A
spacious pantrY ensures room for
all ingredients.
Th e a djoining family room ·
spor ts a fi replace and· a ceiling
that vaults up to a 12-foot-high
flat area. A French door provides
deck access, while neighboring
windows give expansive views.
Four bedrooms, two baths and a
large laundry room are housed in
the s leeping wing: The maste rbedroom features a walk-in·closet
and private French-door access
to the· deck. The private maste r
bath has a garden tub and a separate sh ower. A dual-sink vani ty
and a private toilet round out the
amenities.
..
The three nice-sized secondary ·
bed room s offer a mple c loset ·
·
.·. .
space a nd a nea rby bath . One
bedroom has a 9-foot vaulted ceiling, as does th e dining r oom . TilE
living room features French doors nankcd by
T he remaining bedrooms, in windows, plenty of space for decorating nnd cosy access to the
addition to th e laun dry room, o~er common areas o·r the home.
have standard 8-foot ceilings.

.....

.....

'

. (For a more detailea, scalea plan
of th;. house, including guides to
estimating costs and fi"a ncing,
send $4 to House o/the Week,
P.O. Boi 1562, New York , N.Y
10116-1562. Be sure to include
the number of the p/an.J

D

esign F-48 has a living
room, dining room, family room and kitchen,
four bedrooms, two full baths
and a utility room . .t_otaling 1,814
square feet of living space. There
is also an attached two-car
garage. The plan is available with
2x.4 exterior wall framing and the
option of a crawlspace or a slab
foundation.

Preparing
your will'-.
By
READER'S
DIGEST
BOOKS
For AP Special Features
Wills are not just for !he rich
and old.
Wbelher you .arc married or single, it's wise to bavc ~legally binding will to make certain your property goes to !bose you want to bave
it. A will also lets you name a
guardian for your minor children.
in tbe event tbat you have no surviving spouse.
If you die witbout a wilt, your
property wiD be passed on accord·
10g to state laws. It could end up in
the bands of relatives you have
never seen or liked. Or, if you have
no surviving relatives. it could go
to tbe state.
·
To prepare a wilt tbat you can
be ccrutin is valid and legally binding; seck lhe assistance of a lawyer.
Don't rely on stationery store
fonns.- only a lawyer·knows wi)at
constitutes a valid docume'nt'in
· your state 'lo two situations are
e~cUy al..:e. It's also important to
put your will in writing; verbal
)YiUS an: rarely acceptable.
For most-people 11 wilt is very

II

..

To Order Study Plan

II

FuU study plan in'formation on this ho use is available in a $4 baby
blu e p~1nt. Four,booktets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sell it, Ranch Homes. 24 of the most po~ul ar from th is
feature; Practical Home Repairs. which tells how to handle 35 common
problems; and. A·Frames and Other Vacation Homes. a collection of 24
styles. Send check or moneyorder payable to the Associated Press and this
labello: House of the Week. The Sunday-Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562
New York. N.Y. 10116-1562.
'
Clip 1his order and return label

Enclosed Is $4 tor plan No. - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - ' - - -

The landscaping yo\1 do outdoors can be as lmportaDt In mating a bouse a bome u tbe decoral·
ing you do illdoon. It may be ~;V~:D
more important in terms of buildlog equity.
.
But while most of us know the
loot we're after in the family
room, fewer of ua can conceptUal·
ize a weU-IIylcd and self~sustainlog
menagerie of outdoor planta that
will add real comfort and street .
appeal.
· There's design to consider, of
ooune, but plants ate living things,
witb specl.tic and sometimes Umit·
log soil and sunlight requirements.
And at today' s prices, it pays to get
it right tbe fltSt time.
.
So bow to proceed? You really
bave three optioos:
- Yau can do the job yourself.
- You Cl\11 hire a nursery-garden center to draw up a plan and
eitber do tbe plantings yourself,
accordirig to lhe lllueprint, or contraci the nursery to dO it all. In tbis
case, the planner is usuaUy a celti·
fied landscape designer (CLD),
with a backgmund in horticulture.
-And, finally, you can hire a
design specialist - a registered
landscape architecL
While these approacbes can differ significantly, tbere is also some
overlap .. A do-it-yourselfer, for
example, wiU cettainly seek out tbe
eJ(tensive free information to be
found at every garden center.
Moreover, while gm'den centers
and nurseries usually employ bollicullurists with design training ,

In tbese cases, arcbitects wort
with preferred subcontractors to
provide turnkey services - plans,
plant$, pllu,ltings and all.
Tbe · difference between a
designer and an arcbitect, is that
certified landscape designers are
often bocticulturists with secondary
lnlininl in landscape desi&amp;n. .
Tbougb not always the case,
tbey tend to know more about
plants and plant diseases tban
arcbite&lt;;lll. In some areas, CLDs are
tested and certified by the state,
while in aLbers, it's an industry certification.
A registered landscape arcbitect
masters !"ost of tbe same tbinas.
but comes to tbe task from a different angie. He or.sbe is a designer
6flrjiining and remperameilt;""oot
must also be versed, and state cellified, in landscape principles
including grading and drainage;
property laws, irrigation l!Dd erosion control.
From tbe consumer's point of
view, there's also a significant difference in tbe professional relationship. A landscape designer usually
works for a nursery and creates an
inexpensive pian for about $50 to
$200. Tbis fee is typically credited
10 your account after you purcbase
a certain level of merchandise, say
$500 10$1,000.
'
It's understood that tbe nursery

Business briefs'•
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Share·
holders of tbe 1\luminUDi Company
of America overwbelmingly voted
down a proposal to forbid tbe company from contributing money to
groups tbat Jillr(orm abollioo.
:
In a proxy st.alement distributed
befcre Frida,Y"s sbarebolders' meet•
ing, Alcoa ·s bOard · of directorS
urged sbarehold~rs to vote against
·
tbe proposal.

,,•

ACROSS

1 Furniture ilem
6 Speed•check device
11 Rabbits
16 Rubbish
21 StandoHish
22 Run oH to marry
23 Gentuoy plant
24 ·A Marx brother
25 lnflue{IC&lt;l
26 Macadamized
27 Turbine part
28 Mass ot metal
29 Writer Fleming
30 Achy
31 Soft mass
33 Quantity ol yarn
35 Stringed instrument,
lor short
36 Old pronoun
38 Branch
39 Destiny
40 Print measures

41 Snaky fish
42 Ride
44 Calms
48 Saijor's saint
51 Put a'ji9e
54Sell _ •
55 Chinese gelatin
57 England, France,
G6rmany , etc.

61 Gum bel morning
show
62 Conceal
63 Irrigate
65 Militaoy decoration
!\6 Burden ol proof
67 Rules
70 Has a meal
72 Letters in·genetics
73 Legendaoy bird
74 Arab VIP
75 Have a meal
77 Improvise
79 Collection of things

DOWN .

90 Bom: Fr. ·
91 .Started
92 Expresses a belief
94· Scanty
96 Play on words
97 Mild cheese
100 - de Janeiro
101 Sacred book
104 On a Jl!!nsion: abbr.
105 Painter - Ghagall
106 Native of: suHix
107 Prohibit
108 Flies high
110 Support, as a

1 Implied but unsaid
2 God, in Islam
3 Pioneer Daniel -

4 Ferrigno or Gehrig
5 Newt
·

6 Explosive sound
7 Kind of clock
8 Peace symbol
9 Mimic
10 Sequoia
tt DiHicult
12 In the past
13 Darn it!
14 Gall forth
15 UnruHied
16 Skinny
17 Sprinted
18 Fight verbally
19 Talked
20inn
30 Secure
32 A.B.A. member:
abbr.
34 -of Wight
37 fitzgerald and

cause

t12dn a- (agitated)
tt3 Not m
116 Operatic songs
t18 One of the deadly
sins

t19 ·- Gabler"
t20 Sounded, as a bell
t22 Land measure
123 Healthy upstairs
124 "Pop goes the -·
125 Landon's Scotland
t 27 Unyielding
129 Region: abbr.
1Jl! ACtor.Halbrook
133 Curved l i ne~
135- in a million
136 Family membe&lt;,
far short
137 Display
141 Goy at bulltights
142 Concerning
144 lata
·
145 Glue
146 AGabor
t47 Goral island
149 Speak eloquently
151 Ca*in
153 Femme fatale
155 01the kidneys
156 Cockpit occupant
157 Item for a
~acks mith

87 Minaret

158 Uke a- lot
159 Clothing
160 Pans of shoes
161 Receded

89 Perform

162 Desires

others

•

39 StandaHish one
43. QLrnlli~_g Piaru
44 Passover meat
45 Hemand 46 Mild oath
•
47 Glut
49 Silent
50 Mine's output
51 Boutique ·
52 Esteem
53 Instructive

54\ Bright, as colorS
56 Split
58 Miscellany: 3 wds.
59 Discussion group

60 Make happy
62 "'dyssey" poet
64 Kinsman: abbr.
67 Old Testament book
68 Delicious drink,
69 Cui-de-71 Make quiet

83 High card
84·

- cap~a

'

The forage quality in mid-June

For all your Video Needs
Transfers, Video Taping etc .
Call VIDEO TRANSFERS '
446-6939 or 441-054 7

Auto lnsura11ce
Low Down
Payr:nent
SR -22
'- Gancelledlr;lejeGted-.
• DUI • .No Prior
Insurance

L ._

HOME HEALTH
CARE

86
88
89
91
92
93
95

Billiards rod
Delicate trap
The Slates
Exploded
Satell~e·s palh
Grand or player
Horse directive
Slop
Slage whisper
Zinc, e.g.
Feather scarf
Pasternak

96

98
99
102
103

..
"'

SPRING SAVINGS

"

"
"

...

character

1OS ~ Everest
109 Red gem
111 Ca rpenter's tool
112 Scorches
114 Wort&lt; at
115 Oolong is one
117 Caspian 119 That girt
121 Unirteresting

All Ages, All Risks
We try to insure ·
everyone!
AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111 ·

Gallipolis

•

"

.

123 New Mexico's

capital
t 24 Adirection
126 Hangs down
128 Cow sound
129. CQI!!!M ~
130 Accumulate
131 Change
132 Sierra134 Unusual thing
136 Burn superficially
t 38 Long-necked bird
139 Not hidden
t40 Lessens
142 ·- Well That Ends
Well"
143 Laity
144 N.Y. team
145 Flavoring plant .
t48- Vegas
150~ Shoe pari
152 Unruly crowd
153 Gutting tool
154 Actress Lupino

"
"'

76 Doctrines

"

78 Marsh
81 Male child

SERTA MATTRESS
BED FRAMES
RECLINERS
4 Drawer Chest
4/pc. Bedrbom Suite

$59.00
$19.95
$99.00

$49.95
$499:00

FLAIR FURNITURE
675-1371
Gallipolis Ferry, WV

.,

LIVE BAIT
Nile crawlers 99e doz.
Meal worms 30 at 59e
Minn ows: Crappie 69¢ doz. ,
Bass 99; doz .. shiners $2.50 doz.
Crawford's Grocery, Henderson . WV

LARGE SELECTION OF
LANE ACTION
RECLINERS
ROCKERS , WALL
HUGGERS, CHAISE
LOUNGE RECLINERS
$250 - $425
FREE DELIVERY
Mon . thru Sat. 9·5;' Ph. 446~0322
3 Miles Out Bulaville. Pike, '
North Gallia Alumni
Association

,

BPHS
NGHS
1995 Banquet, May 27 at Buc~e ye
Hills Career Genter.
Doo rs open at 5:00
Dinner at 6:30. $9.00 per plate.
Reservations due by May 23.
BPHS: Donna Cohrell Broyles. 85
Locust St. Galli polis. OH 45631 ;·
446·2071 NGHS: Diana Gi llman
McCarl ey. McCarley Rd. Vinton .
OH 45686 388-8319

- Kitche n/Gri ll cook/Bartende r _
needed. Exp. preferred
Appl y in pe rson
~ Cliffsi de Go lf Club
100 Cliffs ide Dr. Gallipolis

The Put-Ori Shop
&amp; Jamaica Joe 's
334 2nd Ave.
446-656 0
Tanning P rices ~ ·
1 month unlimite d •
$30.00
1 Visit per oay ~
12 Sessions-$2 5.00
6 S ession s - $15. 0 0
1 Ses s io n--$3. 0 0

Revelatio ns Revealed
Ma y 14 lhru May 27, 1995
.
'
7:30pm .
Morgan Center Chris tian
Holiness Church
Prop hecy by Ann Wh itma n
Latter Re ign Minis try
For complete deta ils contact
Pastor Robert He rsman
(614) 388-8728

MAS ON
BOWLIN G LAN ES
1-304-773-53 00
MOTHER 'S DAY SPECIAL .
Bring Family And
Mom Bowls "FR EE"
Sunday 1 ;00-7:00
AD ULT JR. LEAGUE
Starts May 21 at 3:00 PM

"'

.......
.."

.

."
,,,,

..

.- '

.,.

breedin for Marcb calvin !a a
dairy~ forage ualily is ~Oect
ed in tbe next m31ting once th;
tbreat o( managing ar~und seed
head· formation has passed The
remainder of tbe year us~all
involves moving througb a al
dock system as slow as possibfe in
order to build reserve days ofvegetative forage. Tbe reserve day s
become necessary in order to et
· tbrougb !be "bot dry" summer !d.
tbe long faiVwinler pCriod. The key
10 Management ln.tensive Grazing
is staying flexible.

BULL.ETIN BOARD

ACRYLIC NAILS $35.00
REG. $45 .00
Special for month of May at
Micheal &amp; Friends
1056 Jackson Pike

State (ZIP)' -----------~---------------

I

•

In most cases the care we
provide to you or your loved
ones can be pro~ ided at no
cost to you. Also Hiring
CNA's , HHA's &amp; PCA's EOE
!&gt; 14-446-3808 Potential
Clients May Call
1-800-759-5383

City _________,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

leave notbing to anyone else. But - be sure .that y.ou spell uu t your
intentions clearly.
if your children are minors, pro. teet their fuiUre by naming a
guardian to lake care of them
should they be orphaned by your
death. Before doing so, discuss
your plans with your candidate to
avoid legal complications after you
are gone. Pick Someone You
Trust As Executor
. Name an executor to bandie
your will's instructions. Select
someone you trus~ who is morallY
and financially responsible and
capable of making sound decisions.
Make sute that tbe person is willing
to t~o the responsibility and
nam
alternate in case your first
choi e is unable to do tbe job.
If the person you designated
refuses to serve, your estate could
be tied up while tbc court names
anotber executor.
- You nlust sign .your will after
it's COJllpietcd. Two or three witnesses must be present while you
sign and !bey must sign, too. Your
wilnesses should be persons witb
no frnanclal inu:rest in your estate,
who are lill:ely to outlive you and
who .can be easily located. • ·
I

els.

The sudden availability of moisbaa spurred tbe growth of pasture. Those involved in Management In1ensive Grazing tue being
cballengcd to keep "stair-Siep" levels of JITliSS in !bell paddoelts.
Movement througb the system
at Ibis point needs to be rapid, witb
efforts made to prevent the plants
from developing ·a seed bead .
Nutritional values of mature forages are mucb lower than plants in
the vegetative stage.
ture

Medica)d/Medicare
approved, disability
approved &amp; passport
approved

Street. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

affordable- as Iiille as $100 antl a simple will ~can be' done
quickly. ·
You !!lUSt follow requirements
of the taws in your state for making
a w1U. After your death your heirs
musl submit any document "assened
10 be your will 10 the.surrogate or
probate court, wbicb determines if
.it's genuine. If it's 0()1 drawn properly. the court may decide il's not
what you wanted. You Must Be Of
LegaiAge
.
To make a valid will, you must
be of legal age. You also must be
"of sound mind," - tbat is,
understand lhat you're making a
will. comprehend its legal consequences and know the ex.t~nt of
your prope~Jy and who your heirs
a_fe."Otherwise. the court may
direct that your estate be treated as
if a will bad never been made.
Although you have almost
unlimited power over your propert~ r,you can't use a will to totally
dlSmbent your spouse - unless
you have a vaiidprcmarital agreement. If you try, the courts in
almost-every state will usuall,y let
your spouse lake up to one-thirtl or
one-half of your estate anyway .
You can, however, disinherit or

GALLIPOLIS -ln Ohio for
tbe weelc ending May 7 cam plantlog moved 10 tbe 21 ~1 complete level with about ooe-tbird of
. the. state reporting surplus soil
motsture.
.
Nonnai planting progress on a
five-year average would bavo-been
daub!~ ~t level. Locally, farmers
were limited to field wort on Mooday only and continue 10 b~ for
W31Dler roils and more sunshine. In
some fields, alfalfa weevil populalions bavo reached· damaging lev·

'

·82 Actor Beatty
83 Take willingly
85 Spot

Name•------------------~--~-----

coocepl.

S.UNDAY PUZZLER

80 Times

Enclosed Is $4.95 each lor the booklet(s)._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

"
profits litm lbe materials you buy.
The plan is a big beip to !be consumer, but it's also an effective
sales tool, and everybody knows i~
In .contrast, a landscape architect
- except fQr tbe design-bulld vari~
ety -- does not profit from materials or installations. On a pracdclll
level, this means tbat an architect
bas to cbarge more for his plan, but
is .more willing to accommodate
exbaustive revisioos.
·
:
In addition to superior desi&amp;ll
training, bis oc ber willingness 10
work your tbougbts ani!
afterthougbts into the mix is likely
to yield a more strikin&amp; and satisfY,ingplan.
·
· '
Wbicb is the better cbuice?' For
most of us, a garden-center design
will do just fine. Simple yaf\18, sim'
pie plans.
But if you're shooting for some•
lhing beyond a propollional pleas~
antness, or if your property is large,
witb multiple elevations and com'
plicated drainage requirements,
lhen a registered landscape arehi•
teet is worth tbe invesbnent.
'

some also employ, or Contract with,
registered landscape arcbilects.
And though landscape arcbitects
are usually not associated witb
nurseries, a developinJ trend in tbe
business is th~desisn-build" ·

,.

...

Answer onA5

....'

,unbav t!imo-,mtuul• Page 03

Grafts in the Barn
Bob Evans Farm Rio Grande
Saturday and Sunday
9:00. to 5:00
Monday thru Friday
10:00 10 2'00

Cakes by Sally· Custom
decorated designs of your Ghoice
for your cakes. Wedding .
Anniversary. Birthday, Graduati.an
Candy made to order for special
occasions and everyday. Mints
JOL wectainiJ • gradUl!tilm. parties

THE PIRATE 'S
RESTAURANT
Happy Mather's Day Specials.•
Marinated SteaKs
Ribeye, New York Strip, T·Bone
Served with ba~ed potaio: veg .
salad, and homemade rolls
1/4 Roasted Chicken
Served with homemade noodles,
mashed potatoes, veg., and
homemade rolls
Atlantic Perch served with french '
fries . homemade hush puppies

New to area chocola1e

wedding cake tcippeis .
D.J's Crafts Shop
2390 Jackson Pike Gallipolis
Ph ne- 4 -21 4

BOOTS
All leather Western Boots
Reg. $t49.00
Sale Price $59.00
Large Stock
Engineer ... ..................... $49.00
Wellington .. ...... .......... .... $49.00
Loggers ........... .. .......... .. sso-ss
Ha~ ......... ::::::: .. ...... $59.QO
Carolina-Georgia-H&amp;H
Insulated. Safety. Gortex
Swain Furniture 62 Olive St.
Gallipolis
Ail U.S. Made

lUcky, wait tmtil laic May or early
June to aj,ply iD5ecticidal car tags.
A new tag, Double Barrel, contains
two ingredients, Jambda-cyialothrin
and pirimipbos methyl. The second
ingredient give~ a quiet tnocltdown eff~L Two other. new products, Wamor and Diapbos Rx, cootai~ a combination of products
whtch are botb organopbospbate
insecticides.
..
'
(Edward M. Vollborn li the
agricul'-r•l ex~Mion agent for
GaUia·County.)
.

21 commodities rose 0.21 point to
230.45.
.
Wheat for May delivery rose 4
3/4 cerits on lhe Chicago Board of

dam aging fro st in Kansas, tbe
nation's largest wheat producer.
" We bad one in 1981 during
Motber' s Day tbat was the worst
Kan sas e ver saw ," said Steve
Freed, research director for ADM
i nvestor Services Inc. in Chicago.
There was plenty of skepticism,
tbougb. Dean Witter analyst Jerry
Gidel said temperatures would
have to fall to 25 or 26 degrees 10
significantly damage lhe crop. He
said wbeat in ilortbem Kapsas is
less vulnerable than usual because
th e cool spring bas slowed crop
development.
.A freeze last month damaged
whea t in southwestern and west,
'Central Kan sas.

Wheat hits 3-month high
on talk of Kansas frost threat
ByDAVIDDISHNEAU
AP Business Writer
Wheat futures prices zoomed to
a three-montb bigb Friday as bastile weather threatened to furtber
shrink i.J.S. production.
Prices surged in late trading
amid forecasts for a freeze in !be
winter wheat fields of nonhwestem
Kansas and rain in tbe sodden
Nortber.n Plain s, where spring
wheat planting is far behind schedule. ~· ~ - On other commodity markets,
sil ver ended sJi·ghtl y lower after
recovering from a steep drop. and
near- tenn cotton rose sharply for
the third straight day. The Commodity Research Bureau's index of

.......

\ ..,. ·~ ..

Money
BLACKBURN REALTY Ideas
By BRUCE WILLIAMS
lit

514 Scunnd Aw . . Ca i.J iphlis, Oh. 4563 )

UJ. Runn y Bl uc khurn , Bro kt· r. Ph ntw: (6 14) 446-0008
] m• Mnnn• , A ssi'~e i u t l' 441-llll

Real Estate Appraisal
Classes
May 19, 20, 21

Call 446-4367

Spring Umbro Sale
Hurry in while selection
is good - limited tim e
Also-extra long &amp;
baggy mesh shorts ,
cotton plaid bo xers
The Bes.t Selection of
Shorts &amp; T's aro!,J nd

NEW LISTIN~llt . ~ Estab lished Body DEBBIE ·
.
EVERYONE
Shop Business and home on same site. SHOULD OWN A NEW HOME AT
The property oHers a large tlody shop LEAST ONCE. This 2 story beauty
with a 12 x 18 office space and t 0 x 30 features 3 or 4 br's, 2 baths , beamed
ceilings in the LA &amp; family rm, cherry
storage area, all contained on 1/2 acre:
The ranch style home offers 3 bedrooms. · cabinets in kitchen, 6 in. outer walls &amp;
much more . Fantastic view

1 1/2 baths and a very large living room .
There is a detached garage, all located 5

miles from SR 7 and 5 miles from SR
162. $59,900.00.

·The Coach's
Corner

PERFECT FOR EXPANDING FAMILY 1.6 Acres +Or -, 3 BR, 1 112 bath, lull ·
bas·e ment, 24x30 d etached garage with
10 ft. doors. Great for large trucks. Low
ma1ntenance vinyl siding. Includes an
above-ground pool. This is .a musl-see.

(inside G .C . Murphys)
Downtown Gallipolis

FHAapproved. ·

441-0133

1429 - OFFICES, OFFICES, OFFICES ·
That's what this 3.000 sq/ft. building
oHers . .Located on. SR 160 near Holzer..

PETS PLUS

Ideal for many uses. Call for more
information.

NEW LISTING II II • SA 588 and·Bur&lt; han
Road 1 mile frbm town, 3/4 acre, m/1 4
bedroom , 3 baths , a fu ll basement, very
large living room , nice new deck, hard
wood floor in living room and 1 bedroom,
all the rest of house is carpet, eat .i n
k1tchen and dining area , eqUip. k1tchen .
everything 10 house ·can be negotiated.
New top soil and grass seed. Lots of love
and TLC has been given to this home .
Must be seen to appreciate it . Extra

PLANTZ SUBDIVISION ~ $56,900 ~ 3 or
4 BR brick &amp; frame tri·level. 1 t/2 baths.

(inside G.C. Murphy Store)
441 -0770
BIRD SA1LE!
10% off a ll birds, includes ;
Love Birds, Canarys,
·.C.eekatiels, f'.aFakeets
&amp; Finchs.
Come in &amp; See our beautiful '
Black Pekinese Puppies.

LR , Family rm·, kitchen, new roof, new

siding. GALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT
TO SEE .

storage buildings. $79,900.QO

RACCOON
CREEK CAMPS
&amp;
GARDENS Located at Ewington. Short
er leng -- term leases,- Cheaper :.than
owning.
·

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE~REABO UT

SOLD OUT

1992 Dodge Spirit
Cruise . air. 4. cylinder fue l
ejection, low mileage,
excellent condition
Call 388-9809

Public Notice

Public Notice

·NOTICE
Bedding Plants
Full Flat $6.95
Hanging Baskets $7 .95
Coca-Cola Products
24 pack $5 .75
Cement Yard Geese
$20 each
New shipment of
Fountains &amp; Cement
Yard orna.m ents
Just Arrived!
OHIO

The
Gallia
County
Commissioners recessed
their regular meeting on
Thursday, May 11, 1995 and
will reconvene on Monday,

May t5, 1995 at 7:00p.m. In

the
Gatlin
County
Courthouse, second floor
meeting room lor the
purpose of reviewing new
health insurance contract
proposals with county

elected otflelals/departmenl
heads apd repreSentatives

Pu blic Nollce
Scho.ol Oislrl~t is currently cert.il.le:ate and must meet

o f county bargai ning unit$
t
t hat are participants In the seek1ng applications from
County Health Insurance certified applicants far head cerh tcatlon requirements of
Ohio lor sports medicine
Plan. This meeting. will be varSiily football coach
CPR .
Persons
held In executive session as ~asistant football coa.ch' and
junior
high
footbBII
coach.
interested
should
cion tact
it Is contract relutecl.
• Jim
Lawrence
Gallla County IUf'!iOr high volleyball coach Superi ntendent , Soulh~H~
.
Commissioners junior high girls basketball Local School District, P. 0 .
May 14, 1995
coach, assistant high Box 1r6 , Racine Ohio
school girls baske.t bali . 45771 . Also, cont~ct 1:h~
coach
, and Junior· high Treasurer, Dennie Hill, at the
Public Notice
PUBLIE:
The

NOTICE
Local

ScuHtern

cheerleader advisor for the
1995 -96 school
year.
Applicants must holcl a

:~~pli~~-

valid

Ohio

(5)

40

Giveaway

teach,'ng

same address "f

I you wish to
materials and

10, tt , 12, 14 . 15 ; STC

Across, from fairgrounds
Gallipolis

005

40

Giveaway

Cute MIJad PuppJ; Approx. 1

Personals

lolonlhe Old. Good

....,.

111

~

Ne1cl1 Room To Aunl 11&lt;4-«8-

EJrperienc:e the ultimate in n••

ogo Jlating. t ·ll00·82S.6000 ••L

8 t28. SZ.!IIImin., 1e.. U"""' Co., Free Klllena, 4 Weeka, Grey,
Whiio. Or Colioo, Coli Ahor 5 Or
l!ll2·1154-7420.

FOR MORE INFORMATION

Public Notice

WAREHOUSE

ANNOUNCEMENTS

.

I am th e owner of a
finan ce business. Frequently, I speak to clients
who cannot qualify for
cooventional loans for one
.reaso n or another . Tbe
maj orily of these applicants do not meet the criteria of lhe underwriters. ·
I have good news for
these clients. My company
and companies like mine
can.assist folks in s.ecwi ng
borne financing. Usuall y,
borne sellers don't want to
carry paper. However,
whe n these se llers are
shown bow lhey can sell
the note after closing, they
are freq uently more lhan
willing to give the buyer
the financing needed to
make a sale.
IL's a win-win sit uation: The seller sells !he
bouse; the buyer gets a
ho use an d my com pany
buys a good invesune nt.
We have many plans and
programs avai lable fo r
both buyers and sellers. Allen L. Wciennan; Pan
St. Lucie, Fla.
· DEAR ALLEN: Thank
you very much fo r your
Jencr, which provides yet
another creative way to
finance a home. Ilhink in
all fairness, however it
should be pointed out lbe
seller wi ll have to discou nt the mortgage substantially iQ Qrdcr 10 sell
it. That should be/ taken
into account before one
enlcrs into a deaL At !he
very least, someonc' like
yourself should be ·consulted as to bow much the
seller can expect your
finance company to pay
upon completion of the
transaction.

VALLEY

•••o•. t14417-8388.

Frn Klntnt, To good Hame.
-·-cld.l1~

Giveaway

Call 446-2342 or 992-2156
.

Trade to $3 .71 112 a bushel, tbe'
highest dai ly settlement for nearterm deliveries since Feb. 13.
Tbe market came 10 life 10ward
tbe end of the session as talk circulated that a private meteorologist
bad forecast freezin g temperatures
in northwestern Kan sas for early
Monday morning. The forecasting
firm , Central Weather Service,
declined to comment on the rumor.
The Nati!)nal Weather Service
predicted overnight lows in tbe 40s
and 50s in Kansas Monday.
lt is not too Iate in the spring for

.

Get an average size room and
hall. cleaned $34.95; Two room s
&amp;Hall $49 .95: Five Rooms
$9g.95 Call Captain Steamer
Carpet Cleaner (304) 675·1304
Expires 5/31/95

Homemade soups

homemade deserts
Fresh Strawberry Shortcake
Glazed Banana Gheroy Cake
Plus Qur Regular Menu

of May 7

The lead arucle m tbiS weelt s small austacea, about the SIZe of a
UK Pest newsletter was "Stranse clover seed. They can build up
Float Bedfellows ." In Kentucky, tremendous numbers if conditions
more aquatic creatures began to are good. and: according to Dr. Lee
.appear ID float water. Red wrig- ·Townsend, will cause no hann. ·
ghng '::arms known as "bloodWe don' ~ ~ve a positive ID, but
wOJ:ms were rel?orted I~ float creatures su~uiar to the waterflea
tobacco systems 10 Wasbmgton were f~und m a greenhouse float
County, Ky.
system ID Gallia County.
T~ey are not bloodsuckers, are
considered scavengers and should
Dr. Leci Townsend also reports
cause no barm . Another find in now is tbe time 10 make decisioos
Fay;tte County, .~Y·· was identified on fly control for pasture catUe.
as waterflea. Waterfi ~as are
He recommends that in Ken-

L•..

...

.

~El~.~nFarm
planting
~.~e.~?.!~~
to
21
.
percent
as
Flashes

~·

S.hould you be your· own
.
landscaper.or hire someone?~

Functional Four-Bedroom Home Features Efficiency

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galllpolls,.OH • Point Pleasant, wv

_Sunday, May t4,·1Hs

s pUpptea, moth., Rfi3 . Ba1ttn Fr.. reading· heltJ to Adulta 1
r...... ~.~.... Co. 10r11cy eou ..
Hound, · - 7. roody .. II"·.ell . 304· 175-8078 or 30&lt;4·112075-Z!IIII.

Good-

Bordtr Colllo &amp; Sllopllord

To

O:oQ•

11~ tezf.

3m.

Free To I. GoOd Home, 1 Year
Old Bordor
81---t, ·-

ea..

FREE I Nutritional Weight loti
Program. Nftt~t Bualneu LDOklnQ

For lndtviduala $.,lout About
Loa ln~ Wtlaht, 100Yt Nahnal •

Doctoc RtcommediHJ. limited
nnw.Oftll'. 303-25W871.

Klnent, 2 Black Uale, 2 Fenwle ·
Cdco. 8 14-4ol1.Q3.4S.

.

Lou: Btown &amp; while 8auen
Hound, vlclriily or Hogg Sl, an- · .. "Ciydo'. 304-&lt;175-2024,

70

Yard Sale
Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

~

2 Fomilr: Fur...,,., Clolllol. l.tioc.

·purebr•d black lab, female,
hOUMbtOkt. Qor.d 'Mth kldt, OM

hemt. 1127

Rt Nl, ACfOU ftam

\/lull Co. Mon. TUOI.

·

,.., • • , ••• 24M.

All V.rd Salas Wuar Be Paldr tn
ACII&gt;onco. DEADLINE : 2:00 p.m
1he dey Mfore lhe ad !a to run·
Two , Yea r Old Sf:d• Flmale Sundoy odllioo · 2:00 p.m. Frlcll¥.
C•ta.~~-~I _CII CO:,
8 14·3fl7- ~ Odilian • 2:00 p.m.
,...,.;....,., ._
11.,:

..

.._

'

s.

.

�...
Page D4 • Jlunba1 ~u.u.-;Jattfuul

I

.!

sunday, May 14, 1995

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

~~j~~mH;;,~~.~=f;~~w.~n~Wd~m~~~==~1~1io~~~~~~.
==~1~10~~~~w~.;n;~~=1~~~::j[~~~~~~~M~~~WIT~n~H~~i.~~~~~~~~~11;0~~--~
Middleport
ADS
WI.,
='' ~·

~

&amp; Vlclnlly

•.

Pomeroy· Middleport • Gallipolis, c;&gt;H • Point Pleasant, WV

•

'JOBOI'I:NNlS
Out To Componr Promotlano, S

Ta lillY: Junll Au.,.

-

~~\':'al.11 "!~:L

AI

Yard Salet Mutt a. Paid In
Coli Lorry
Advance. Ooodflno: 1:ooj&gt;m tho
dor lltlore .,. ad It II rvn. s.n- Wanttd: Lllllt l'filtt OUf40ar
~
frkllr, ...,. cu11e In Goad c-11or1•.,4.
7•
-.
.......
...,lltlo:Mar 11-20. 10:ooomt:OOpm. loll
Sarno~
1Uro, omoll oppllancn, a.ldwtn
aiU
. cia....., holdo

•·

:..=

ol..._

:!":R:IIIZ.:O.. 11iii.21. ,J
l.anl&amp;htt.l~monor.

Public Salt
811d Auction

80

Wodomoror'o Auction Strvlco,
Golpoiii,Ohloet4n3711-2720.

Auctlan w.ery Soturdly 7:00pm.
U - R1vor Rd booldo Buill Oil
Floo Marktl opocoo Thur, Frl,
•- -· · - ··~
-·~·~
Rid&lt; Paorean Aucdon Componr.
lull ~mo ouctlonoor, complolt
oucllan Hrvlco. Llcon•od
toiii,Ohlo I WNt Virglnlo, 304·
n:J..57850f 304-n:J..5M7.

Wanted to Buy
--•-• ~ E
I
Complaro Hou--d
- ototto
Arrt Ty~ Of furnlturo, Appllonc:•o. AnliquO'I, Eli:. Aloo Approloal

90

AeeifebW 114-370-2720.

Cleon l,oto Model Coro Oi
Truo:U, 1887 Modolo Or Nowor,
Smllh lhllck Pl&gt;ndec, 1GOO Eall·
GlllpoiiL
·
~ltd o~-o. will lifo.
-·
~
........ old ...... aid ••mon•
.old ant1c1uo lloml1oor&amp;
Andquoo. Auao loloaro,
- - · 114·882·2528. Wo liuJ

trn-....

-

J • D'l AulD Porto ond Solvlgo,

Tho.._........, A =.::;:
Of

~:·':;1 :' ~· 4 Wooko
Cto111oom + Addltlanol On Tho
~~=
_
,
Wo Provl Cotnplell ComoanY
a-111. Mojor Medico!, lltn!al,
401K. Guoront..d lncomoTo
StatL All Prornatlano Are Baltd
OnlltriiNotStnkx:tr.
To Bt IIC:ctpled, You NHd A
110 Help Wanted
Ploooanr ParOGnoii!J, .a. Ambl·
tlauo.
E12
- Of
To Gel
llfvt
A Grodo
a ••_Ahlad,
Educa~·
--•
S4LUMBER
Bo Bondoblt And Frtt Ta Ston
IWIAGERTRAINEES
WOrk-lllv. ,
Wo Art Pardcuforly In-ltd In
S4 l u - Comporor. Tho Fo•· Tho10 With lndorohlp Abllltr
1111 Growing Notlonol Lumber Who Art looking For A Gonulno
Chtln Hu ca,_ Opporrunldoo C..~~
.
Today
d¥onco-t Aro
11 Ropld Cal Mo • ~ u-•- 7 • "
And 'A...
n Pramarioni
From
' .._, A...
Wlthn. Firat Yttr Eornlngo Av,. •gP.M. .,; 4411 ~73
ogo 18 ·22,000. a.ntfltolnclude ASKFORiftllMR'IIL.HARRIS
..,.,pllo"•atlan, Pooflt Shoring And
Much Mote. If 'liMo Eo+&gt;J A Com· Applica~ono ora now bofntloc·
blnotlon Of Saito And PhJolcal caprtd II 1'1,_011 C.. ceo-,
Work, Hovo Complorod High "170 Plnocroll Drlwl, a.Ja::::r.lllo.
School (Sotnt Colltgt Preletrtdl OH 4&amp;a1 lor !loll port
Thtn 'liMo May Ouollfy. No K""""· - · IIIlO lllltfd llirofrle ooolotdgo 01 lhlildlng Matorlalo Nee· .,.IL Campoli.. dlllor·
ooHry ·Wo'll Teach. Muot Be - 1 wlm uporionce. E..ro' ~
Wiling To Rotacott.
fiCIIIU'IIYEiif!IIOJw,
ll.tiiEDIME OPENINGS. ACT
Appllcallana Are Now lloolnO lie:·
NOWI
capltd AI Pl,_..t c... Conllr,
170 Plnocroot Drift, Gotllpollo,
Stt:JmAmolct
Ohio 45131 For Full Time And
MondooJ, May 15111
:•\ limo, ~toto
~rolng
gAll. ·2P.ll.
Dllof olin!•·, Woml!~ E o lgoo,
At
trtnuO
lh xperltnco,
'
e~·-· n.-.. ...... e_.__,
84 LUMBER COMPANY
....- .....- --~ ~ •.,....,...

AVtnlle

An EC~~al Opporlllnl1y Empl.,.,
11/F rN .

H. have eJtperlence In

Ullll·

In Memory

.,..l Will lour ono piKO or """"
pltto tllllloo, Do~ Morlln. 814.

In Memory of
In Memory

NANCY

FLORENCE M, SPIRES
(CALDWELL) .
Sept. 25, 49· June 24, 91
Mother's Day Is a time
we especially remember
you, mom.
Mom, we still send yo
cards and gifts in ou
minds , with love lhat
grows time after time.
Love, Denise, Julie,
Steve, Cindy
In Memory
In Memoiy of
JEWEL CLARK
on her birthday and ·
Mother's Day
May 14, 1995
The growing up ol days
.·together,
The sunshine and bad
weather, .
The holidays a~d the
times of cheer,
The friendly chats and
the listening-ear:The lun that came from
givi'ng and sharing,
The warmth and all the
love and caring,
The sweetest family
memories..

April 27, 1936
May 2, .1 984
Our beloved maltier
and grandmother. Its
been 11 long years,
and not a day goes
by that you are not in
our hearts and on
our minds. But today
is special because
we want to wish the
best. Mother in the
world
Happy
Mother's Day.
We love and miss
you very much .
Husband , c hildren

In Memory

Bertha B; Thttle
who departed this life

Aug. 1993
who is missed very
much by children ·

and grandchildren
In Memory
In memory of

Neva M. Grimm
on ·Mother's

M. is for t~e MotherG"od
gove us
0 · i~ lor lhe Outward love
· she shored
T· is lor Tenderness she

cored
E -is for ihe Everlasting
values
R· is for the Richness of
he r woys
Put them olllogelher, they
spell mol~er
The one we will miss and
cherish oil our doys
M~sed and loved by
Children, Grandchildren
Great-Grandchildren

grandchildren.

by
g~eat

grandchildren , great·
great grandchildren.

•a

~

·

at

is . not

she

is

wanted

to Buy

WANTED:
Antiques
Art &amp; Prints
Furniture, Toys,
Glass &amp; Art Pottery,
Advertising tins,
signs 1 item or
complete estates
Call Duff
614-797-4723
Highest Prices Paid

in memory every day,

IIC.

., ,

PUBLIC AUCTION

· Thursday Evening May 18, 1995

•,

just

ADDICTIONS PROGRAM MAN·
AGER: IM!dng An E,.-lenced
...,.., ... Chlmlcll Dlplndlit·
cr Outpalllnt S.r¥1CII In

·•
'

"Trucks"

Wa.ttlngton CountJ. Ma1t1t1
l ..ol Willi eeoc 111 P!larltr

198Ei F700 Ford 5 speed w/429 engine, 1986 F700
Ford w/429 engine and 5 speed, 1985 Ford 150 4x2
aft, 19~ Ford Bronco 2, 1983 Ford heavy duty van
w/460 engine, 1978 Chev. Bruin Tandem w/13 Sf'Eied
Road Ranger and 3208 cat. engine, ana 1968 Chev.
C60 fuel truck.
· "Equipment''
'
1975 case 350 dozer wlwinch, 1979 Rogers Low Boy
trailer, 1970 Bbckeye spreader box, 1982
lngersolrand DA-30 roller and 1958 Bros. rubber tire
roller,
~

Condldoto Willi Domanolraled
T - Rocord In lludgollng, Muld
·SVO*M caa dk•lion. Ptrl&lt;lmol

J

Manaeement,

'

Ottlgn And lmplomontotlon Ao
Well AI Community Relations.

E_.,..,

•

Located

(SWICK) HYSELL
May

8,

St. At.

on

May 19, from 11 am-

Cash Positive ID Refreshments
Note: Auction starts at 9:00am
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
l

JACKSON ST., VINTON, OH
SATURDAY, MAY 20

Help Wanted

(ommunil'iiehoobilllo1ion (enl!~. liil rn,; melon!'""' opportun~ieliiGW ovoiloblo ol
.,. Golbpo~ . OH locoli~ J~n 0111 olihe leo4i!!g pro.den of quolily rehobililotion ~tl'lk"
Oiilf toke yOJr &lt;Ore!! lo ihe 11011imf.

'

Our buly, dynomk and supportive !IIVironm&lt;nl offers continuous new &lt;hollang.,, on
mellent !Qiooy and benelo~ pod&lt;oge, and grOW1h opfiOIIuooly. for inlnod'KOie &lt;!lllli1lero1ion,
&lt;onlod: Chriltioo 0 Polok, IRA, Rlgioool Rtm11111, Commomiy Rahobilllo1ion Centen, Inc.,
918 Young~rown.Woorenld.,luite (, Nile!, OH 44446. (800) 846·2695. EOE

•

I

CHILDREN'S PROGRAM
POSITIONS

Kltchon /Grill Cook /Bartender
Nttdtd, Elporlonctd Proltrred.
Apply Poroon, CIIWoldt Golf Club.

''

·,

Real E.tate Career. Profetllonal

Br-.

· Monday -Siturday, Mu11 Have
Rafarencea, 61 •441· 1195.

HllpWanted

.

Local

AITENTION UNEMPLOYED
YOUTH AGE 16-21 .
Gattia·Meigs Community ,Action Agency Is
seeking applicants lor temporary summer
employ!flenl as custodial, secretarial, and
maintenance trainees. The emplOyment would
begin· .In June and is - exp-e~ted to ·1ast -ror
approximately 10 weeks.
·

Applicants may be high school/college students,
gradua\es, or out . of school. Successful
applicants must meet program ellglbitlly,
requirement including Income, age, Gatlia-Melgs
resident, and others. Priority Income age, GalllaMelgs resident, and others. Priority consideration
will be given to applicants age 18-21. Preappllc:ations may be obtained at the following
CAA offices:

required. Evenings/weekend '

I

FINANCIAL

recommend• that you do. busl-

Experienced

Halrdre11er To

lla Dolir Tribune, 825 Thlld Av•
nuo, Gatllpolia, OH 45831.
AllY PHONE ROUTE

!ill lo&lt;:al And Eotabllahed Sileo,
Earn f ·l,500 Weeklr. Open 24
. · Someona To Pull Aura Pari&amp; Wllh ·Houro. Col1·800-868-45118.
Own Tool I,. For Car Cruohet, 81 •·

--

Someone to ute Weedeater on
hlllolde. Call 304-882-3&lt;177 leaw
Sl)'lltr Wanted Full Or Part Time

For Busy Shop, Inquire At: Finest
Styling Salon 1390 EatUtrn Ave-

nue,51oj.-22.

HllpWanted

work required.

.KEL•~yrem~orary
L

In Memory Of

My Mother
RHEA ANN DEEM
On Mother's D:.ty

Truck driver wanled· muat have
COL llc:enH 1 tlralghl·bed trucks,
muat have own niedlcal card,
ae~Jen days per week, c:ali 814-

· True

247·21184.

Bccnu~c A~

In Memol)'
In Memory of .
RUTH GREEN
Six years ago wday our
loving siste r left us 10
go and li ve wilh ·lhc
l.Qrd
II was also on
Mother's day.
,
Wherever we go
Whatever we do locked

Serv1ces

In Memory

Thl!y Say Time Heal~ Your

Waltrau Full-Time, Apply Hall ·
dar Inn, Gallipolis, No Phone
Calli JY.aue.
•

I
PubliC Sale

&amp;Auction

AUCTION
Saturday, May 20, 1995 At 12:00 NOON
From Galllpolls, take Route 141, tum left onto
Route 775, tum right onto Patriot Road. Walch
for signs. Only 10 miles from Galtlpolls
HOUSEHO~D

Sofa, chair and oHoman, stereo, desk, metal war·
drobe, table, sewing machine, stand table , metal
cabinet, Tupperware, Comingware dishes, electric
sweeper, window fan , linens, pictures, dresser, metal
gliders, lawn chairs, canning jars, lamps, living room .
chaii, dishes, pots and pans, misc. hand tools,
chairs, pressure canner, pressure cooker, electrical
kitchen appliances, refrigerator, khchen table and
chairs, 18ft. chest freezer, chest of drawers, dresser,
beds, auto dishwasher, silverware, living room
chairs, some hand tools, ·much, much, more not
·
listed.
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLE
Flat back cupboard, wicker stand table, vanity dress·
er w/stool, chifforobe, chest of drawers, big wooden
chest, mirrors, ironing board, crock bowls, green
depression, pink depression, blue ink bottle, feed
sacks, Watson Howe Co. Ashland Ky. stone jug,
.washboard, gray granite keHie , auger, camel top
trunk, flat trunk, buggy axle, Emges lard bucket, coo·
kie jars, sad iron, old kitchen utensils, water can ,
quilts, crosscut saw, Pepsi Cola .5 lid, child's
Greyhound wagon • no wheels , dresser top with mir·
ror, old hats, trays , wicker table, Saturday Evening
Post , old oak chairs , metal doctor 's table, iron beds,
Maytag · wringer· washer, · blue jars, pictures, metal
bed, metal money box, walking canes, ruby red tum·
biers, #9 Griswald skillet, granne ware . AP
Donahoug stone jar, 6 drawer che£t of draw\)r~ .
McCoy pots, kitchen cabinet .with flower bin, wooden
rolling pin , sad irons, wooden ironing board, iron skil·
lets, McCoy vases, old straight back chairs, oak 3
doored ice box, Baltimore pear dishes, cigar boxes,
green depression mixing bowls, set stainless Jlat·
· ware, slaW cutler, Haning scales, stone jars and jugs,
stand table with drawer, set Golden Rhapsody dish·
es • service for eight, set refrigerator dishes, etched
Sternware, wooden wardrobe, much, much more not
listed.
Eats
Cash
Positive t.D.
. MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER Lie. 3615
· 6. 14~79·2720
·
Not Responsible tor Accident or Loss of Property.
~503021

rI __.S~;.!!!!!,~~~~;~==~!!!.!~~L.J
Come And Plan To Stay All Afternoon And
PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUGTION
LeGated 9 miles south of .Gallipollaon State_·
R'oute 7. One mile·above the locks. ·

'Qpportu'!._lt}' . . .
INOTICEt
OHIO VALLEY Pl.lllll~ INO CO.

Take Over Beauty Salon. Send
Repl"" To: Cl.O. 352. c/o GaHipo-

3Bfl.ll082, Of 81~PAIIT.

.

Saturday, May 20, 1g95 10:00 a.m. ·

Someone needed wentngs and
waaMnda • care b etderiy wom-

Ohio 45711g, giving ••~rlenco ,
relorenr:al &amp; -raquir....,...

SOWI2·f783.

210

neae with people you know, and
NOT 1D And money through the
mall until you have Investigated
lhe olloling.

writing Tho Dally Sond·

~-oW&gt;rJ fllrogt, bt- Now HI·
van Su,.,market, llattam ftaor
comptototr romodoltd. 2 btrf:

(front 1oaJ 40'•21', roor 1oaJ
32'123"), 100'K40' lot•• 18,500.

time, Ask For Mike, 379-9111 .

SeCretary /Receptionist Mutl
Havt Computer Sldlll, EmphaoiZ·
lng Word Proce11lng, f:rench
City Preu, 423 Second Avenue,
OdpolliL

net, cJo Bo1 728-0, Pomeroy,

859 Third Avenue .
Gatti polls

ASSISTANT OR ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
CO!..LEGE OF NIJRS!NG
Call For Appointment 446-45.11
Posting Date: April 24,1995
The University of Rio Granae announces two· full
time tenure openings lor an Assistant or Associate
Professor on Nursin\1 lor the College Qf Nursing.
Two full time tenure track faculty positions available
lor the academic year t 995-96. Both positions require
a Master of Science in Nursing Degree with
Equal OpportunitY Employer
consideration given to those who are nearing
Never an applicanl fee
completion of MSN degree. Previous experience
teaching in an Associate Degree Nursing Program
preferred. Community Health prepared individual·
110 Help Wanted
·should have previous experience teaching in BSN
Program . Valid Ohio R.N. License (or Ohio eligibility)
and
one yea·r previous experience as staff nurse
THERAPIST
• required.
Responsibilities of botf'l positions will be to teach
Branch ·office of Prestera Center for Mental HeaHh
theory
and skills labs, clinical lab supervision, student
Services, Inc., located In Point Pleasant, WV, is
commHtee work for University and College of
advising,
seeking a Mesler's level therapist to provide outpatient
Nursing. Faculty members will be required to teach in
clinical services, perform asseS$ments, and provide
Associate Degree Program and Bachelors Degree
Individual and group therapy. Master's Degree In
program.
'
Human Services field and one year clinical experience
applications
will begin on May 1o' and will
Review
of
required. Excellent benefHs. ConJact Mark Bowman or
continue
until
positions-are
filled.
.
Lou Ann Rich at 304-675·2361 or send resume to:
lnlerested persons should send a letter of interest
and resume including the names and addresses of
Mason County S\Jpv.
three references to :
· Prestera Center
Ms. Phyllis Mason, PHR
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Director
of Human Resources
One Valley Drive
U~iversityof
Rio Grande Campus
Suite 213
P.O.
Box
F27
Pl. Pleasant, WV 25550 .
Rio..G1all'de, OH 4567 4
EEO·AA Employer ·
EOEIAA

adnnced detlgn, energy savlngl and environmental beneli\1,
repeat type bualnett with jnnova·
IIYe benefit package and exlenalve training program. No even·
IDOl· NQ: W@!_k!_nds. For_!_ c~nli­

Apply~

Driver/Shipping-Receiving work.
110

Will
lnllall
I tOO &amp;
~1&lt;
-368Wlndshlel9a
·9062, Or 1114·4411·
Yard Wor k, Will Cut Gran &amp;
Trim, Reasonable Pt~e. Call Anr·

an In her home near Pomeroy.

--- Servleel
=""'---

Lie. and Bonded' in State of Ohio Case

'-Bleat growing Industrial Compa·
hy In our lndu11ry. First year
earnings tn ekcess of $28·
32,000 .00. Our product• fea1ure

8353111 2.

33105 Hiland Road
'
Pomeroy
or call 446· 1018 or 992·2222.

COL. license, Fork-lift experience

SALES. INDUSTRIAL

ear- Oppar,.nitr wim ~

denJial IntervieW ca:lf: J1m Ryan·
Monday tam-3pm at 1·800-257-

Hours per week 32 or 40
Pay rate
$4.25 per hour

.Long•term position

do""'"""

' \lrolnlng. ERA Town I CoJrnlry Will
work, phone 1114ReoJ Eollllt,
Bockltf Stain, 992·31 73or 614-992·5858.
304-875-5548.
Will Haul Warer, fill Swimming
ROtlablo Brt~lftta&lt; Needed In lly Poole &amp; Mow Lawna, 61.- ·256 ·
'Gallipolis Home, Hour1 Varying 1977 Aller 7P.M.

EOEIAA

Help Wanted

iluord appllr:adano are bolng
tor London Pool SUbmit

i•••

PRESlER A CENTER
Human Resources/
Mason In-Home
P.O. Box 8069
Huntington, WV 25705

8010 North State 'Route 7
Cheshire

Lilt

....,plod

2843.

Ginning houoo ond office•. ••·
perloncad, phono (5141 99223111 ·
Dorcaro, Make Plano For tho
Summer. A Great Choice For
Your Child. Prlvala Roo!doncoln
Choohlro, Acdvldoo, PlarmoiOo,
Mtolo I TLC Corlfl!td Rtterorw:n,&amp;l+387 « 15.
Gon~tol llalnlaponca, Palnrlng,
~':.'~••~'C,~a~~~d~~~. ~:u~r::.
commerl~al, Reoldantlol, sravo:
1114·448·1697.
Gaorgea Parrabi'e Sowmlll, don't
haul ,.., logo 10 111o miN juot coil

!:,

Case Manager· Providell case ma11agement services
In the home and refers clients for therapeutic
assistance. Requires B.A. in human services field and
one year experience; e~perience working with children
preferred. Requires some flexibility of hours and travel
within the county.

110

100 C l - Odpoll~

ll00-51lN887•

CIS Aura Repair· ropolr o1 mas.t
mat&lt;n and modtiL Cal 814-1192·

· lpflllcatlano,lrw:ludlng ninlng ond
· . oxporlonct lnlor.,.tlan. to Jonlco
· Zwilling, Ciotk· Trooauror, VII logo
at sr ..cuoo, Munlclpol lhllldlng, ~75-1957.
Synocult. Ol1lo 45778
Lawn &amp; Garden service, 814·
On DuiJ Medical lo Ploaood To 258-1033.
Announce OUr New Office At 995 ProiOialonal Tree Sorvlco, comJad&lt;oon Pika S.lw •210, GaiUpo· plato Trot core, Buckel T1uck
flo, Ohio 45531 , Como S~nd A Service ·50 FL Reach, SDOmp ReNight Or Two In Our Furnlohe~
Free Eollmaleal In·
Aportrnonr Wllh A Ploof. Work 2 moval,
surance, 2• Hr. EmBt'gency Serv• Or 3 Dar• And Earn A weeki Ice .Call And Savel No
loa
: • Par. All Shlfto Aro Avatlablt For Big Of Too Smalll8t4·388·96&lt;3,
· Colun1bua Work. Startlni Wage
· 11 $7.00 An Hour. For Further 814·387·7010.
' Dol&amp;il CIII1-«JJ-508-3773.
Rotiabla Bobralner, Days, Eveningo Or Waokonda, 814·448·
POSTAL JOBS
$12.28 /Hr. To Soan Pluo a.nt!to. o0878.
Carrl1r1, Sortarl, Clerks, Main· Sun Valley Nutoerr School.
tananca. For An Application• &amp; Chlldcare M·F llam-5:30pm A901
, Exam Info. Call1·800·81g.sg15 2·K. Young School Ago During
Summer. 3 Day• per Week Mini·
. •' ' EICL 32, g A.M. -8 P.,., 71la'f~
1!1Jmll14-·3857.

Team Leader- Provides thera'peutlc services and
oversees
.. case
management
servlcli
delivery.,Experience in tamily therapy preferred.' M.A. in
human services field and reliable transportation
required; professional license preferred. Will require
SOfl'le travel within the county.
•I

Help Wanted

TOURISM DIRECTOR .
Part time 20/hrs. wk. Need dependable car,
willing to learn worp processing/computer,
organized, salesmanship/good personf!lity, high
sc hool diploma or h igher, resident Meigs County,
able to travel in/out Meigs County, handle office
work. Send resume to ;
Meigs County Chamber of Co mmerce
Tourism Committee
. 238 W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio by May 28.
(This is a readvertisement· previous resum es still
being consi dered). :
110

' Plouo Roopond Wllh Reoumo
And Loner Of lniOrtlt To Heal.,
- , Se&lt;VIco, Inc. Atrl: Non·
cr Doloon. P.O. Box 724, Alloeno,
OH 45701. E.O.E. Emplo)otr.

Send resume including salary history to:

Auctioneer Finis "Ike" Isaac
Lie. &amp; Bonded Ohio W Va 1030
388·9370 388-8880
Nol responsible lor accidents or lost property

Help Wanted

Help Wantld

Ptofalllonal

knowMgly accept
advertisements lor real estate
which Is in violation of the law.
Our readers are hereby
lnlormed that all dwelt'lngs
advertised in lhls newspaper
J are available on an equ'al
. opportunity basis.

••P·

gaf'd;rtd Documentation And

Fence. Largo IIOrogt
157,000, 114-441·7321
P.ll

This newspaper will not

Ace Troo Sarvlco. Coll'pl••• ,..
CASE MANAGER: Ft, Ouollftco· cora, 20rro.
&amp; lnourad, froa
done: Bachtkara D-arH Or eotl.,.toa. 814·441·11g1 or 1·
LS.W. Proforrod. C- And Of.

Mason County WV office of Prestera Center lor Mental
Health Services, Inc. has the following positions
available In a 'Mason County program providing
services to severely emotionally disturbed children and
adolescents at risk of removal from the home:

Mlsi:.
Shoe blacking box, f 906 encyclopedias, wood hand
router, wood plane, A.A. bucket; picnig table (redwood),
hand corn sheller, ultra violet heal lamp, air lank, mole
traps, large upright air compressor, wood ext ladder
Furniture
Oak 'drop leal table, wood commode w/ granite pot,
small porcelain top table, love seat, chest of drawers,
large dressefw/ mirror, Craltmatrc twin size bed, wood
wardrobe, Regina sweeper w/ atlach., headboard, bed
w/ book case headboara
·
This is a very general listing . ' There will be much more
lo come!

110

WESTERN
MEDICAL

pm ·

Ohio#1344.

Sadly missed by your
children, Guy, Madeline,
evelyn, Aeger-and·Gaoy
and Families

~

4

DAN SMITH • AUCTIONEER

Nothing on earth was
more precious and
dear Than the love of
our dear Mother
She cared for her
children and taught
them the value of
sharing and helping
each other.
She watched 0 ver her
children
Whatever the problem,
she cared
No one will ever be able
to know
Just how much she
gave and shared.
For the love she gave
ner family
\
For the toughtfulness
she showed
She is still loved more
deeply
Than she cou ld ever
know .
Thinking of you Mom on
this Mother's Day 1995

RN's to $30 00
per hour
LPN's to $20 50
per hour
Lots of work
throughout Central &amp;
Southern . Ohio in
hospitals (ICU, CCU,
step down, med.
surg., &amp;ER), private
duty, &amp; correctional
staffing.
Minimum ·1 year
.
expenence.
Call Paulo
614·846·8398,

Portland,

Ohio. Will take consignments on Fri .

1914

March23, 1990

110

124 in

•

All real eSiate actvenising In
this newspaper is subject 10
tile Federal Fait Housing Act
of 1968 which makes i1 illegal
10 advertise ~a ny preference,
limitation or discrimln8tion
based on race, color, rellglon,
se)( fam ilial status or natiOnal
origin, or any Intention to
make any suet\ preference,
limitation or discrimination.•

And~

Communlcotlan Sldllo Will Public
And Cllonto Eooontlat. E•porl·
onco Wllh Adult Dual Dlognoolo
Or Chemical Dopondenq Work
A Prlorltr. Travtl Roqulr.t d Wllhin
' A Muhl .COUrwy COii:hrnenr Aroo.

.

.......

230

CLINICIANS: Stoking llconOIDd
And Oorllfltd Cflnlclono Dr On
Ellglbllllf Trod&lt; In An Ourpadoilt
Clinlcol Salting. A Minimum Of
Two Yooro E..,.lonct' In Clitml· 180 Wanted To Do
cal Do~ndencJ Rooldendol Dr
Ourpallont Sot*1go P r - Off. 'Udllty Work Dono' I.Jondo.capl~
ora S~ong Cor- Opportunldn ::=~~;,"~~~":.·0 ~~2 ~': ~,.;
Wl!h EIICIIIonr Growth Parondel. inh

w.

110

Programming

Comrnl,.,l To Rurtl Comriluni·
del A Pin s1r0no Bonattt Pocl!·
ago With Fltxlblo Solorr Duet!
Clio Edl,lcatlon And

. "Mise"
P.T.O. 20 ton winch, large amount of scrape iron,
metal sheer, and other misc. items.
By order of the Meigs County Engineer, Robert H.
Eason, P.E., P.S.
·
DAN SMITH Racine, Ohio AUCTIONEER
Ohio 111344
Va 515
Cash Positive ID
All interested partys may review and inspect
auctlonltems at the Meigs Co. Highway Dept. All
sales are final··and sold as is! "Announcements by
auctioneer day of auction take precedence over
printed material."

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
Sat. May 20, 1995
· 9:00a.m.

FRANCES

OCCUPATIONAL -THERAPISTS
SSOOO SIGN-01t"80NUS
$55K+/YR.DOE
FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING .

•.

EOE·

King, who is with us

In Memory of

Speaking:
Timothy Vaughan and Randy Wimmer

The

FAIRI'I.AIN, WV

_

P.O. BCJ( 124
ATHENS. OH 411111
CLINICAL VACANCIES: AVIII·
In Mulll -Couritr JCAHO Mcotdlltd Su- Aliu11 Agon-

•• 1114) QQ2-

=:o:,;-'
~=
~1»4'151

HEAillii£CCNERY fiER'ItCES,

I

pm

110

'·
SHCNE'I"S
DIST'RBJ110NCENTER .
~nEXIT132 .

Cn . memo,Y of Edith

she

~1.

the Meigs County Highway department.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

'lfoese O'lt·fumr sen!Jas present tf12 JOopef oj our Lori Jesus
Christ in pun'ty onrf.&lt;rmpfu:rty. ;.J[( are wefcome.

We would like to
express our sincere
thanks to the
Meigs Sheriff's
Dept. and Rutland
Squad, for biking
care of our dear
brother and father,
Stan Larrtbert.
Also, the help of
our cousin,
Christine Tackett '
and a special
thanks to the
McCoy Funeral
Home in VInton.
Lambert FamU

511811992

......... Col -

And Appl
81...., • C""""t "VR
~·Ac
•
.
Y Located at 34110 Fairground Road, Pomeroy, Ohio at

Your children

Dear God, please take
this me ssage to our
loved one up above, leli
Mom how i'flUCh we m1ss
heo and giv'il her ali our
love.
·
Love,
Connie
P S. Happy Mother's
Day, Mom
So sadly missed &amp;
memoroes cherished by,
choldren, grandChildren,
great·grandchildren,

7:3.0

3119/1899 -

MOOG p a ...._ orOWMI loot op.

lr-.JI:;_----------------;

7&amp;--

uoo

8::

Pain.

Bul Thai JuSI Can'illc
Every Day

Passes
I Cry More For

The Twcnty

You.

Year~

I Ilad

With ¥eu

Having soll:l our property we will sell the following
at publ ic auction:
MF 135 tractor and 'Ford 2000 tractor, 1970 Chevy
(42,000 miles), Freeman loader, scraper blade,
cultipacker, boom pole, potato plow, 2 row co rn
planter, one row cultivator, dirt scoop, International
2-14" plows, International 3 pt. adj ustatlie' disc,
carry all, Industrial 5 HP vertical air com pressor
(80 gal.). concrete mixer, 300 gal. fuel tank, Sears
12 HP mower, battery charger, 3 pt. orchard
sprayer, Homelite water pump, tow bar, metal
·drums, log chains, load straps, 4"20' c~annel
beams, fire wood, gas grill, Homelite water bug,
power washer, kerosene heater, lumber, push
mower, elec.. edger, tractor wts . and many
miscellaneous items .
Furniture &amp; Antiques = Real nice piano, writing
desk , .L.R. suite, GE refrigerator, elec. range,
stone jar, BR furniture, 2 swivel rockers, recliner,
coffee &amp; end tables, DR table w/6 chairs, wooden
rocker, wash stand &amp; towel bar, 4 antique oak
chairs, 2 chest, pressure canner, quilting frames,
bicycle, stone jar, copper wash boiler, ·wooden
wash tub stand ; and many oth er miscellan!!OUS
items .
Terms: Cash
Mr. &amp; Mis. Richard Ross , Owners
h

10:00 A.M.
Located on the comer of Wuhlnglon &amp; Franklin
St. In Buffalo W.V. along Rt. 62. Tha estate of Earl
W. L1!99 wilt be sold.
Tall oak fancy carved bed, Mah. cedar chest, Mah.
drum table, king size bed, 2 pc. early American L.A.
Suite, coffee table &amp; end tables, wardrobe, lg. poster
bed, dresser, chest's, Mah. music cabinet , portable t9"
G. E. color TV, unusual &lt;&gt;¥ sewing machine, gun ra&lt;;k,
lift chair, 17-,500 B.T. U. Kelvinator air conditioner, 30"
Whirlpool electric range (like new), 16.3 cubic lt.
Whirlpool refrigerator (like new), Samsung Microwave
oven, Whirlpool Washer &amp; Dryer, Gibson chest freezer,
Old quiUs. art deco ship lamp, assorted glassware, set
of Coke glasses, .Cobalt pitcher, Blue Willow dishes,
Hen on Nests, several pieces Avon , oil lamps,
stainless steel bowls, old pictu•es &amp; frames, flatware,
iron skillets, pots, pans, kraut cuHer, washboard, stone
jars, rocker, porch swing, few hand tQOis , 5 H.P. MTD
rota tiller (nice), 20' lawn mower, JNheel barrow, Plus
much more!l!
AUCTION CONDUCTED BY

RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO
AUCTI(')NEER: RICK PEARSON
AUCTIONEER: KEVIN MEADOWS #A-116
EXECUTRIX: MARGIE JORDAN
LUNCH
MASON, WV 773·5785
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH i.D. ,
Nol responsible tor accldenla or loss of propertr
llcenaed and bonded In Ohio, Ken1ucky &amp;
West Virginia 1166

remain with

U!'&gt;

.I

..

Lic . .No 4596
Terms Cash or check with I.D.
Not responsible for accidents or loss ol property.
Licensed and bonded in state-of Ohio

Real Estate General

By Owner
(Not to be auctioned)

•3

built in china cabinet
• Convenient Rio Grande Location
• New equipped kitchen with
custom oak cabinets, tile
• New Roof

Owner wili sell private: Nice private ranch
house 3000 ft. full basement, 21 acres, 112
blk. top drive, 24x40 cabin , pond

• 3/4 acre

The following will be sold at auction:
.
Doll Collection: 50 oriental dolls, (some old) Onental
Cabbage Patch Doll· Ashton· Drake-Brinns &amp;more .
Doll Furniture: Canopy bed, h1gh cha1r, whrte wrcker
childs ~ pc. set, 2 new oriental silk flower trees, 6 ft
wicker divider, rod iron 4 chairs and fable , onental
statues, lamps, etc., 4 bar stools like new, Carnaval
blue punch bowl set, like new, onental doll cabrnet,
assorted pictures , brass vanity w/mirror, assorted
kitchen items a,.orted concrete yard ornaments ,
what nots Christmas decorations, .ski . exerciser,
exercise bi,ke, new ·12 spd. mountain bike 24", bass
guitar, 7 piece drum set, 5 office chairs, old stair rai l, 2
floor jacks, vise, grinder, 5·55 gal. drums, I lot of roof
metal, mise doors, pipe threader set, 12 gau~e
shotgun brass fire extinguisher, work ben ch, 3 t1er
rack on' rollers, Uisplay case f~ll of wiper blades,
wagon full of mise, o:d set of plows, 4 ft . bush hog,
other items to numerou s to mentron.
Note: Extra clean sale (lunch served)
OWNER: WANDA L. NEAL
·AUCTIONEER LESLIE LEMLY 446-6241
Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property!

sss,ooo

Wood Realty, Inc.
32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

446·1066
Allen C. Wood , Realtor/Broker-448-4523
Ken Morgan, Realtor/Broker-446-09(1
Mose Canterbury, Realtor-446·3408
Jeanette Moore, Realtol"i?56-+745
Tim Watson, Realtor-446·2027

Real Estate General
lOTS .OF

POSSIBILITY-COncrete

buoldong .

wolh

commercial space downstatrs. 3 room apart upstatrs

also two bedroom mobile home .at rear JUS1 WHAT
YOU ·ARE LOOKING FOR.
VACANT LAND· Approx. 7.3 acres on Green Twp Coly
water available
. . PRICED RIGHT,
.
NEW 199~ MORRIS LEXINGTON mobile home localed
In Quail Creek park, 14 x 70, MUST SEE CALL FOR
APPOINTMENT.
HOME FOR SALE 3 bedroom, bath, lov o0g room. lamoly
room, kitchen, fenced on back yard REALTOR OWNED
PRICED AT $45,000.00
'
. .
NEW LISTING· 2 homeslocateq on approxomalely I t/2
acres. One home has ·a rooms. 3 bedrooms, 1 112 baths,

•

:-:1..•

Harrt11mvlll&amp; •LOCated

•• ~--·

·"'

•

on Nt~w l1ma Rd.

thiS great property IS 1\JS\ waittl"'g to be a

nome !or your tam11y1 II ofter.s 5 BR 3 Bath Kll Wrrange &amp; rett1g &amp; large eat in
booth . 01ntnQ area , Famtly room , Deck w/hot tub. SJ01tell1te diSh. 2 ponds 5 a
5tutam . barn. snoo. 3 BR rental11illller, exlrill n~e 30 ~so metal bldg wrl!'114 • 2'0
oH1ce Allthlro plus 63 acre$
Can &amp; let us quaiJty 'fOO 101 thls p10perty1

·~

I

-"

I

I

livtng rqom, dtning room, family. kitchen. One- t'lome has
8 rooms.- 4 bedrooms . 2 baths. livtng rooni . kttchen,

family room. Both have rural water. LP gas Furnace, and
more Call for apj:x)tntment to see.. ·

BEAUTIFUL LOG HOME · CHAROLAIS LAKE ORIVE ·
located ·on c¢prox: t'18 acres with sun- room. hOI tub
and sky lights MUST SEE
FARM FOR SALE,Bnck home, barn. 2 sneds and pond
on 49 acres more or less. City Schoq!s_ Call to see

LOCATED IN WALNUT TOWNSHIP· Mobole home wo1h 2
bedroom on one acre more or less. wtth county water

satellite.CALL TO SEEI
. HOMES AND APARTMENTS FOR
REALTOR OWNED

Pom&amp;roy

Th•t brick home

'!

lOCated
near tO town and sChOOl and IS a gteal
biJyl n ofler1 J SA , 1 bath ·a.rge LA
Eat II'\ ki!Chtn. rutl basement wllh bat/1.
opphanees, and one ~:.Jt attadutd
gatage One ot the Dest bargatn~ ) 0 ';

.

Pameroy • E)l;e&lt;:ut 1ve .type nom11 29 mtleS !rom Par1cer5burg 5 mtllll from
p 0 rne,oy 01\ SA 7 li)IS ot pu~acy 4 BR ' 1/2 betrl~ LA wffp. FA w/tp DR Ett•ln
kl1, Bsml. gar , stg bldg a pooj many o111er amMtlie&amp; Mall.e US An OtTer

5.66 ACRES -Wooded - 35 Area ..
1o.s1cRES- 5.88 Area.

1.75 1o 3 ACRE BUILDING LOtS.

We Need Lrstrngs" We Ar e Movong Prope1ty
And Need More to Show!
992 -2403 or 992·2780

londl At Ol'll)' 534 900

.

informatton.

FOUR LOTS · E'ach lot con1aons approx. 20 acres. Two

ol back rard lenc«od. 3 BR LA. Kit
Bath, Ul• tm . He11t pum_p AtU.l!OI", 1
nr garage and carpor1. Crewlspaei!
Mtl bldg , Alum Srdtng_ 20 mtlea from

P31kel$burge, Set up fo{

ut

lots h.ave frontage on St. AI 218 and 2 have. frontage on

Cox Mercervolle Rd. CHECK ON THIS ONE

....-OO&lt;Iburn.~ 11"1

$45 900 Make Afl Offer

'

.

Mlddieport. 429 N. sec:ond·St You

RE~T·

HOME FOR SALE · View, Q{,I!ltver, 3 bedrooms. bath,
loving room~kit dlt•~pool . 2 car garage. col)'
schools.
C
l~n:iRMATION
.
.
LOT IN GREEN TWP FOR SALE· 156 X 100. coly w~leo
&amp; sewer, electric 10 pole Pnced al $14,000 Will sell on
Land Contracl· '$5,000 down paymenl, payments of
$191 2~ per monttr .for a perood of 5 yrs Call for more

Tupptrs Plain• · GooQ ne.ghborhood ,
Ntn settinv on at~st 1 acre lot Some

ZONED COMMERCIAL .
DUPLEX - Each unit 2 bedrooms.
Unit 1 has 1 bath. Unit 2 has
bath .
Kitchen
complet·e
w/applianc~s . Each 1 ·car garage .
Excellent area. Good Investment
Property.
'

.,

yard with large trees

Real Estate General

orr..

.

Chimney

-- 'Call614-245-5399

B1mt , Stg bldgs $46.!100 Maloe U.s M

'

&amp;

hardwood floors.

• Ex,cellent Condition

gOJge0\.15 bay w1nd0W 1n LR FA or DR ,

w,

&amp;

countertops

Syracust LO&gt;~ely olde• home locatvd
on a corner with 3 lOIS N1ce pat1o orr kn
1nd b•g shady 1ton1 po rc f'l Etttn
•ltthen wlappl 3 BA 1 I 2 b,P!ht ,

Commercial - or - Residential
Excellent condition. Close to
hospital. 2 car garage, lg. deck on
side.
·

BR, LR, DR, Study, bath, eat-in

kitchen, full walk-out baseme_nt,

Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER'
Crown City, Ohio
Phone: 256·6740
Not
' Responsible For Accidents Or Loss Of Prqpe·rty

REDUCED! ONLY $66,000

.

Real Estate For Sale

I
.I

until we

die .
Layunie, lma, Leona,
Vernon &amp; Marie

AUCTIONEER DAVID BOGGS

Sat. May 2Qth, 1995 10:00 am
Located from Holzer Hospital take Rt. 160 to, PMer,
Oh . Turn right on Rt. 554, go approx. 3 112 miles, turn
right on W~eaton Rd, go approx. 112 mile, turn left in
drive.

-

in our hearts. Arc
of you.
Memories arc treasures
no Qnc can SJeal. Death
·is a heart uchc nothing

-.

Retired and goin9 out of business
Location take 35 west to 3:17 turn At. go about 5
miles righl before Rt. 32 on right watch for signs.
Living room suite, set of end tables, set of lamps,
Bent wood rocker, antique rocker, old Vickta l
antique dresser, homemade quilts, 5 p iece
dinette set, 2 recliner, chest of drawers,
wardrobe, 3 bathroom, vanity, drop leaf table with
2 chairs, full size bee! metal and wood , twin size
beds, set 1of bunk beds, sofa bed, rolla way bed,
baby bed , Jenny Lynn high chair, stroller, walker,
ref., gas range, elec. range , elec. dryer, washer,
bar stools, exercise bike, window fans , storm
door, window, desk, chair, m icrowave , sheets .
blankets. 2 wood and coal heaters w ith blower,
keresene lamps, floor lamps , porclain dolls and
clowns , lots of what nots, wash stand with pitcher
and towel , dresser with mirror, tools, hay hook,
cross cut saw, 16 ga shot gun, 25 ants pistal ,
plus much much more.

PUBLIC AUCTION

Know

Teresa Deem Davis

Sat. May 20, 1995 · 10:00 am

· . Excellent Value ·

Arr Cherished In My ~lear!
And Deep In side I Tmly
Thai We Will Never Be
A pan.
Sadly Missed By Daugluer

Public Auction

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

memories

can hCal. Its only a
grave thai still needs
care. Butlhc one we
love is sleeping there.
The pain of paning
without goodhye will

&amp; Auction

ESTATE .
AUCTION
SATURDAY, MAY 20, 1995 ·

Uld
.te loluld·lMotlltllntl
_. _
.....,_DaldMifrliVOf peld wMillr, 12000•

'

&amp; Auctlo

:~.~flo;~:!H01~

Loved and missed,

each Tuesday May 16 ·June 6

We .all love you so

, 1 ~••• 1iractor /Trolltr· E•-•1·
...1
~

away.

care.

Vinton Town Hall

Died

gone,

3 - 10- 95

are being held rn the- ·

~ ~ ~?

90

Bom

though

~~~ T&lt;t~+.
L"t..
~

Happy Molher's Day.
.v ery much .

-

In Memory

30 Announcements

&amp; Kale ; Bill &amp; Faye.

....

AYOH SEUS ITSELF!
Avorogo
·•ISillr. AI Work.
Homo. lloonofitol Dlacaunlll Tor·
rltorr 0Atlonol. lndtp. /Rop, 1·
IIIXI-742-1738.

. fri ends &amp; neighbors.

Gerald; Eleanor; Bob
Also

Doy

&amp;

Jaunila

UftV -

-

Very

JUST A LITTLE
NOTE
Dear Mom,
We wanted so much
10 keep you. we
watched you day by day,
until at lasl wit breaking
hearts, we saw you slip
away.
You wore a crown of
_ Q_~t ien_!:!!._ .,.A~ - you
st rug gled on and on ,
and hand s• l hal resl
forever, are the hands
that are so strong .
·
God watched you
wh.ile you suffered , and
he knew you had your
share , He tenderly
closed your weary eyes,
and took you in His

·-

In Memory

Or~· e1 • • •• 1011.

Edna M . Kingery

H· is lor the Heart that

Missed very much,
By family and friends

-

Special Lady,
.

I!OZO.IIQAEP

Public Sale

&amp;Auction

French CUr To1l Drhrero, Dlo.
potchoro, AppNcltlano At 1840
r~--Git,
~ .. - PubllcSar

1

~-·

In Loving Memory
Of One

Avan,urllll-14/hr.,luiUpon..,., no- • -· 1·800-371-

•--.. ,_.,_r-..
......
_,..,.
: -.w PWjd-*?
111
, ~!._
·~'""-1-IHallcforo?

11 11 .,_,

-~~ ~- Oro'llp ,

f~c:.!! :·..;:,.=~
-··

::::'014'"' · -

Public Sale

Bualnlla

210

u-•·•-...,

'IIlJa( llAIIIBIS:

Cook·clutiO'"'--wo
Par 1Wk21 Poororo _,,. o caaiL Proloroblr
......
~.
ua.
uo..,
•~•
I
OKP"fitncod
InI"lh-tlc m•
..,.,.._, - . - ,.,.., - u
Col-. Sllollonll. Graduolll. Of '"''· A. pao .. on In pleooont
OUI 01 School. Suc-otul Ap· worldng orMroroo•ot,. o . . .
...,__ u
= E I ' ml,~d ltlm worlltr. Pl&gt;mtror
,..._, .u ""' " NUlling lfllh u'tr'lm c - 11
~,,, ~
Agt,"'G":'it~Mtloo .:::: oft US " b t - Alhtno ond
; ; , And Ofwo. Priority Conolcl- PWnoro,. Coil JlfrJ Vickroy, Dfo.
.,.••• Wll a. G~ Too Appllc- msuporrioor 11114-182.-ol.
-·
·
onu·
Ago ,.- ·21.-Pr•Appllca·
tlono Mor Bt Oblllntd At Tho Eur Work! Excellent Pari Ao·
Folo1iogCAA~:
oomblo Producto At Homo. CoU
N
'orth
Stato
Routt
Toll
,
7 313. Froo, 1·800.417·55&amp;11, Eot
8010
~~w,.,
-I'W-:II!OroiO

In Memory

Iough! us

Are made of special
. things like these.

Oneita;

PATTRSON

~ Wlntld

AVON
...__ I All Arooo I Shlrlor
- - . 31M-el'S-I-

10r·

In Memory of
RUTH BUFFINGTON
Happy Birthday and
,
Mother's Day
We remember the good
limes and laughs we
always had on this day,
Untillhe Lord took you
away.
Always so true,
unselfish, and kind,
You are always on our
mind.
Mom your beautiful file
came to an end
But you died asyou
lived, everyone's
friend.
We think of the days
gone by when we were
all together,
Now our dearly loved
mother is gone forever.
Sadly missed by
children, grandchildren,

monr ond liDS, o•callenr docu·
mentation oklllo ond bo obit ra
work nexlblo houro. Thlo loa full
limo poolllon. Send '""""'"· work
hlstorr and aalar,- requlremenla
c/o Tho DaiiJ Sontlnal, P.O. Box
729-011,
45788.

rum..,,.. no lwn • •roe ar .,..

110

In Memory

Wronttd • buj· IU1Iiquo ond uttd

..

a.Hfe ·Meigo CommunltJ Action
Ag~' 1o _ , . A!&gt;DIIcanll
Far , . . . _ , au- Emplar·
mtnl AI CuotHiol_.ltorollrial,
,,
And Moln-nce , _ L Tho
rnv 111•• ~ Bogin In Jun.
AnciliEif*lld'IOIJIIIFer~
......,, \
to

·-----"---

'220 loci
.lo&lt;:kaon,OH

"',.._...,,
110 ~ Wa~
EXPEAENCEO

'IOOTH l!llE 1W1

T•::·

"""-Ohio

QQ2-7441.

Al1BmOH IJNEIIII.lWEO

110

A'oON 10 buy ot .... .....,.., ...
11*112·21US 0!
Ex-··lit
••. w
~-·
Work Yocatktnt, RttiiiW

. ..........

~~"\~uNt'i~ Pa~n/r.:

buying· wrocko, junk ourao I
trvcb. AIM, porto tvr oalo. 304- Appllc.Uono oro btlng occer,rtd
77M343 01 m-5033.
lor ~ paolllon olllc:dvllf Droc·
=..;,;..~,....,;.,;,.~--:--:-:I lor. Tho Ideal condldott wm 'bt
SLIDE PROJECTOR· muot hold C!lli~ u on ocllvily diroc~~r tor
up 1110 llldol, (et41 ~120.
Ohio, bt ooll otardng and diroct·
Tap Prlcoo Paid: All Old U.S.
Colno. Gold RinGo, Sllvor Colno,
Gold Colno. M:T.S. Cain Shop,
151 s-.1 - · Gallpolll.

ur

.

coulifget ltl•!

~
~'!:::i:i!
t~NOI'io:"

nome at a rea11y good prtee

{IIJ.d wtlh a l•tle wo1k ot would mak&amp; a good u~~nt•l 4 ,BA. t · ~ath, lg LA , Ell 1n kll
'"'ncedtoleiiiOnly$12000 M!.,e M0ftll'l

•

FOR YOU!~ CONVENIENCE TRY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
1-800-894~.1066

.

~

·~

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS '
PlCK Ul&gt; THE FREE QUALITY HOMES
BROCHURE AT SOME OF THE LOCAL BANKS,
RfiAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS
AND RESTAURANTS.

·:-~

-·--

..--.....-~

-~---·-

.-

'

�••

Pomeroy • Middleport •
510
For

~nl:

2 Bedroom Tral.., In

lfool Pulll!l T - Porto. 1112- OUI
Oat Furnace, 1 Acr•, O.raga. Bul4rtille Road. No~ ~~

11 FL can-o1on - · Hoollh
Appralllld For ONo +

Addaon Aroo, $&amp;2,000, 814-307· FllquiM(t 11....., 11 1).1,
7217.
•
.
::::-;-----:---::----1 2 Btdroom Trailer, Bunco Road,
4llr. houM on 1/3oc. o" Jolwloon f3251Mo.· UdNUOI Pold, Dopollt.
lan•. GaJUpollt Ferry, 120,000. 114 Ultsa.
:!Ooo-8-1 n.
2br · R o - • Dopoojt
Now 3 llodroom 2 811h1, 2,000 No poll. Allo ttallot lot R1 UN,
Sq. Ft. Home In Golll oo ll l , No LOCUli Rd on ri ght P1 P1MNnl
Tuoo For ,. Yearol 10'11. Down 30«75-1071.

F u - Elllcloncy Slwa .... Soctionol. UOO. lt blOWn w/
All Uutltioo l'lld, .1411111o. 111 opodii.IIIUJI.GG.
Socond AveiOII, GaiNpoUa, 11._ I:::::::..:::::.:..;:;.:;..::.;::.._ _ _

And Owner Financing To Outll~

44&amp;-3845.

::::-7:;.;.:-::..-,=-:---1

One bedroom hoult In NIW Ha•on, $100 de!MIIil, $150 monlh
"I'll
Very nice counlry homo, 35ac.
,.;. divide. 304-675-&amp;roa.
•

Mobile Homes

1 end 2 11tdroom opor1m01111. fur.
nlih,ed end .unfurnlahod, IICUrl!y
depoa lt requ ired, no poll, 114·
11112·2218.
1 Bedroom Corwonlont To At·
llonco Electric And Holzofa
~~,:·:,::.:~;~· Dopolllr

for Slile

, bedroom New Haven area.

~:-::':'"'"':'::-:"":':"'":'":----

320

ApartmentS
for Ram

-71.

-.~7--

SWAIN

AUCTION I FURNITURE. 12
Upololra, I - I ... 11 Jlod. Olivo Sl., Qolllpolll. Nw &amp; UMd
room), Furnl.twd,
"-*· furnUu ra, htllerl, W.a~ern I
onoo ond ~~ Roqulr~. No
boo.. l1~111.
~ &amp;1.._,1518.
1,;;::.:,::;:=.;:;,:;.:..;:,:.:;;;::.:-..,--

14x851iomena. Qll hear. new 2 BA. Glraga Apt Gaa Hu.t No

c:en.

1077 Ub&amp;f'ty 2 Bedroomt, Srove,
Refrigerator, Washer /Dryer[
Good Queen Size Bed lncludea
Set Upon lot, 614- 448-41 &amp;4 Bet··
• 9·'"""AM Drs 1oP. u
ween,..-~

' '

.

·"'·

Pe tal S300.oo Month. Oapoal t
81._...,2:Xl0 or 614o44NJ87

2bdrm. apt1., lotal eiKtrlc, liP·
pllancH furnished, laundry room
lacUiriH: clou to ICI'1oo' In IDWn.
37t1 . EOH.

•

1

1087 14l85 Fleming House. un·
derplnnlng Included, $7800, cal l A.ccommod• tlona- rar lhrH men,

ahowef' end catH TV, mlerowaw,

h 9prn

814·992·3955 a or
.
ro~lgeral:&gt;r, off otreet por~ng and
Ooublowlde Repo1, nwer l!ved In! Pfl~a te entrance. Middleport. 814Financlng Available . Call Run 1112-7791.

_u_urdoc_k...:.....l-_8&lt;»_25
_ 1·50
_ 70_·_ _ BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Make 2 payments and move inl
New 14x70, 2 or 3br. Fi nancing
AvallaDI•. Call Russ Murdock, 1·
1
800-251 -5070.

New 1995 14x70, includea skirt·
lng, steps, blocks, one year
homoowners Insurance and 1i.11
monihs FREE lot rent Only S1 025
down and S20717 per tronth. Call
1·800·637·3238.

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood Drive
from -$228 to $291. Walk .. ahop
&amp; movlea. Call eu. ue -2588.
Equallloulling Opoonunil)'.
Furnl lh~

Apar lment, Ulllidea
Paid, fBedroom, Uptlllrt, Sec·
ond Avenue, Gelllpolll, No Pill.
Elc: tllent Condillon, 814·448·
11523.

7 !/2ft loculi Poalo. :101-773·
5738.

51 o · HouMhold

300 Thru 2,000 Gallons Ron
~;...--------'1 E•ona EntarpriMI, Jackaon. OH
1. - .537-11528.
530
. Antiques
'"
~ I "'
Cuatom 250 wall amplifier head
Bur or Ml . nlverliii Antlquea. air auapended 2·15• wolftrt
1124 E. lloln S-~ on Rl124, t250. Ban guillr w1ca1o t150.

Pomeroy. Houtt: 11. T.W. t o:oo 304· 773-5304.
•
a.m. ., 8:00 p.m., SUndar 1:00 Ill
&amp;:00 p.m. 81HIIZ.2531:
Cullom Sowmlll Work $100 l'lr
81
1354'
540 Miscellaneous
ThouiOnd, Merchandlll
El ..ulc Wheelchalro And Scoot·
~,......-_,_....,,.....;..
· - - I oro, New And Uoed, lndoO&lt; And
Ouldoor M'odtlt, Bowman••
Homocare, 814--448-72113.

Country FurnUure· furnluu• tor
E'"'Y Room. 1m., Rt. 2 Norlh, Pt.

Emerald thantung lull htngth oil
ohoulder atralgm formal gown w1
lhlght hi~h lilt IIZO 11-20, alze 7
ahoea to match. 1150. 304-1175-

P1ooaonl 304-67S&lt;I820. '

4501.

875-3485.

Scenic Valley,

Apple Grove ,

boautilul 2ac Iota, public woltr,
Clyda llowon Jr.. :JO.I-578·2336.

sevERW7-~cRe PARcns.
remote, be•ulitul ridgetop land: .
Me-i91 Count,-, Columbia Twp.,
Mount Union Rd. (Twp. R4. 1 ~ 1.
$900/acro. Call for good map, 1-

6U·593-6545.
warotad To ltase· 00 To 5&lt;l Acr·
89

Pasture Land For Cattle, 614 _

oW!·2158

36 0

Real Estate
Wanted

We Bur Farms And

Acrtag&amp;.

now In atock. _,,Equipment,

- -----1

:-:-....-~J$.:-~..:;il2;:..1;:...

llo,.l RooJing l Siding, ChKI
OUr Prl- -ra 'lbu Buy. Altlz·
«form Supply, 814-245-5113.
Steel Bldg Super Sale. 30xd,

20

Acres And Larger, No Limit. 814665-3064.

410 Houses for Rent
2bedroom. 1112 Hogg St, Oeposil &amp; lease reqwed. S275mo. 304-

862·2221.
5 Roorns, fjath, S3601Uo. $350
Depdstl, Years Lease; 42 VInton,
Galhpclir, 81&gt;1 ·448--9504, 8 A.M;-

OP.I.I.
Rent With Option To Buy 3 Bad

Brickhouse, Wllh Full Basement,

Nice Locations, Available June,
614 -5 75-1813, 614-441-11 .. 5.

(614) 685-3064

(614) 685-8138

ATHENS COUNTY: 12 miles North of Athens, 156
acres. divided. into 19 parcels rangin g from 5 to 15
acres each, some of the pric8s are 5 aCres $ 6 ,500;
10 acres $8, 000; 15· acres $11 ,000; most parcels
have nice wooded building s1tes. some restrictions for
ypur protection, owner f inancing , 10 years, 10%
interest with $2 ,000 . down on eac h parcel.
GALLIA COUNTY. Just East of State Rt #7, 30
m inutes south of Ga ll ipolis , 358 wooded ' acros,
divided in 18 tracts rangmg from 5 to 34 acres each ,
all for sale on land con tract wilh 10% down and 10%
interest for t 0 years. some of t~e prices are: 25
acres, $14,000, 34 acres. $ 16, 000 and 7 ac res ,
$5,900
.
GALLIA COUNTY: Just East of Stille Rl . #7 , 30
minutes south of Gal lipol iS, 25· wooded acres
everlee king the Ohio river, $22,000 , on ly $2,000 .
down and $264 .30 per mo nt h, 10 years, 10%
1n1eres1. G14 -775-9t73
We give' 10% di scount for cash and all 10 year
con tracts have a 4 year balloon .

Extensi\le re modeling just comleted

on

thi s nice 2 bedrooms

moderately priced home. Call today, it won't last lony . 1739
PHONE OFFICE 446·7699
I
KENNETI;I AMSBARY, PH. 245·5855
CLAUDE DANIElS, PH . 446·7609
ETTA SPENCE, PH. 446-6426
WILliS LEADINGHAM, BROKER, PH. 446-9539

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

has been

.

.

Appalach ian
Structures,
D ept.

'~
D O TT I E

Log

URN ER R EALTY

Inc.

WV 25271

chomplon, Grandllra, AI&lt;C molea,
11250. llho10 Ol1d
1111ond
dtc:l.-1- 81-7-3404.

-mod.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

1,800·458-9990

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
.!J! 1-800-585-?lOL or 446,.7101 @
RLISSE·II.IJ WOOD. BROKER.44h·46 1H
Judy DeWitt . ...
.. .+4!·0262
J Mtrrtll (':uta.
179-:!651
Ruth Barr .
..!46-072~

o ff e rs

570

112 PriCII, 1114-446-8788.

nice 3 bedroom ra nch
style home with heat pump, attached one car garage, and
a one car detached garage, above grou nd pool and
storage building on n1ce laying lot.
ONLY $45 ,000

/ ,,om, .~
tt11~one could

610

Farm Equipment

, 4 24 Internatio nal

tractor. 614-

256.e608.
8806

Tra c Ke r

Sharp,

,

Mk

MIDDLEPORT· A 2·3 bedroom 1 1/2 story home with large

offerS" eat -in

DR . partial basement. 2 car LR with fir~place, extfa large BAs, 2 baths and large living
garage situated on 2 acres, kitchen with dming area, ,2
area Above ground pool
more or less. Above ground carport on a large lot $44,900
Maintenance free. #217

bath , also a 2 ca'r garage , s1t1ing on a nice lot.

$28,500

youo

$35,000

a newer

roof. Close to schools

and stores.

Only $27,500

RUTLAND· Jividen Rd .· Approx.,2 1/4 acres on a dead·
completely remodeled inside and. newer sid1ng . Has a
cellar, 24x24 work-shop w 1th attached shed, and a fenced
~rea for animal.
ssorooo

AUTLANQ LASHER RD. · Approx. 3 acres with a 2 story '
., house, 4. to 5 bedrooms. large family room , dining room,
one bath utility room, porches, 3 sided pole barn and is

partly fenced .

S40,000

MIDOLEPORT· S Second .' An older 2 story home with

bath, eat-in kitchen, 2
garage, large covered deck , 1
n~,,_-,1 X 16 OU1building . $69,900
#201

lots of possibilities. Has 3 bedr!?oms, 1 1/2 baths, dining
mom, and full basem~nt. Large,.. corner .lot and an older 2

car garage

$45,000

WILLS HILL ROAD· A small "home that has calhedral
ceiling, large livmg room, din1ng area, kitchen, one
bedroom, utility area, heat pump. Sitting on approx. 1 acre

ground.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC,
446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER- 446-9555
Loretta M'cDade • :W6·7729
.
Carolyn Wasch • 441-1007
Sonny Garnes • 446-270?

$33,900 )

POME~OY· Condor St. - Ate you wanting renta l property
or a f1xe~ upper. Then you may want to see th1s one- A 2

s1ory with 3 bedroom , 1 bath.

ASKING $14,000

DOTIIE TURNER, Broker.......................... 992·5692
BRENDA JEFPERS .......... ..................... ......992·3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882·3498
CHAAMELE SPRADLING .......: ......... (304)·882·3498
OFr;ICE ................................................ .

,.

MIDDLEPORT • C ute one floor
frame home w ith 2 b edrooms, bath ,
F.A .N.G .
heat,
utility
room ,
f ireplaces, fenced y ard wilh storage
building . Nice neat hom e close lo
local s hopping Ask in g $29. 000.00
MAKE OFFER !!

Lawrence Enterpri1e1 T.W. La·
Nw 1111 t.nk1, one ton lruck wranca, De% Gat Furnacet, l · P
11110 Oodg_ll Rom Van B·250, ..,.. - - bri111ll. ott:.
&amp; Nat. Heat Pumpa 1 .Electric
i2.ooo· Mlroa, se,ooo, Can Be D a- A Alllll, AI'*', WI/. 301-372· Furn•c••- Free E1~tnate1-:-Jf YOu
Soorl At Galllflollt Dolly Tribune, lt33ot1-:li:H3ZI.
Don't Coil Ua Wt Bolh Loael 81._
125 Third Avenue, Calllpolia
4~-8008 , 1-100·287·6308, wv

84 Bronco II, 4x4, V-1, 4 apeed,
rune &amp; looka grut, 111700, 1114·

7034.

Able ID WOrk W/IOme IPt- RHidendal or commerc:lal wiring,
new HfYiw or repalra. Manw ucenaed e lactrif:llan. Ridenour
Csmplng
Elecolcal, WV0003011, :104-875178&amp;.
.
Equipment

1--------

Real Estate General

DALE E. TAYLO R
REALTY
137 BUITERNUT AVE.
POMEROY, OH 45760 .
(614) 992·5333
MIN I-FA.RM- J bedroom I 1!2
bmh horn e with approximmely 5

at th1s price.
LOW

OOWN

PAYMENT·

Good · Stancr Home: M ust see
this beautifully remodeled . 3

bedroom home thm sils on
appr9"· 314 of an acre YotJ can
enJOY the quit like for unly
$I 3,500. Call today this on e
won 't last long.
G ALLI A· MEIGS: 50 acres to
ha.~

a

lot of road frontage. a well, and

a

~­

$22.500
POMEROY-

Dear Viol,
Over the Hill?

Never!

Sexy at J6,
Still Suy
at 60.

my
Sall!man

Happy

My gnndpmnts are

Birthday! ·

...,

Salfl

OH
the late trank
Florence Holdinger

3

bedroom

walking diSiaJlli:O to downtown,
new healing sys1em. low utility
bills. comer toe. Remodeled w1t h

much po~ibility. $29.500.
NEW J BEDROOM HOMt:,
This ranch style humc has an
acre and a whole !Ql of courmy
surrounding rl. There is a
buSiness with approx. I 1/2 acrt::s
thut also goe~ With 11. A great

place for rhc. emrcpn!neur that
wants to l1ve close to work. Mu&lt;i.r
sec this one $R0,500 (Will sell
se p~ra td y)

M AN\' JIOMES TO t:liOOSE
FROM. WR WELCOME

YOUR LISTING.

Your loving

DALE E. TA\'tOR

Gert!

DIWE PARSONS
(SAI"ES ASSOCIATE)

•

(BROKER)
IMY~ H~lli6 1 4 } 99l.:22 3?._

NEW LISTI N G • POM ER O Y • 1
Story
Frame
Home
with
3
b edrooms . appliances, Cable Hook up, on . paved street. ASKING
$1 8,000.00
SYRACU SE · One owner 1970 12 x
60 Mobile home wi th 2 bedrooms, 1
bath ,
ut ility
area,
range
&amp;
rel rigerator.
Covered
patio,
o utbuilding , nice landscaping . Q uiet
Slreel. T he pro p erty has gas heat,
S yracuse se;.ve r &amp; water hoo k-ups,
cable and some newer carpeting .
ASKING $16 ,500.00
M IDDLEPORT - 1. 1/2 Story Frame
Home w ith 3 bedrooms , family
room , livi ng room , kitchen with an
office area. Utill i)! area built in book
shelves , ceiling tans, central air,
N .G.F. A .
heat.
cement
walks .
privacy fencing , fu ll basement. Cule
Place .. Lots of room!! New furnace
6yr. warranty. ASKING $29,000 .00
LIVE H ERE AND YOU CAN WALK
ANY WHERE IN TOWN TO DO
YOUR SHOPPINGII

I.

Real Estate

-- Cheryl Lemley .............. 742·317 1 OPPORruNm ·

EUNICE NIEHM
M~•• 0/J••·IU..4IIM

tUClolrll

11015 BEAUTIFUL NEW BRICK HOUSE on
Cora Mill Ad 3 Bedrooms , 2 lull Oaths, gas
heat, cent air, 2 car anached garage .,. a ~nd
garage wtth workshOp area that w11l hold 2 to 5
more ears 1 063 acres. Call Pany Hays for
.

•

A TOUCH OF .C LASS
The
rem·arkable spactous home w1th vtew of tne
co unty. Italian t1le toyer, cathedral ce111ng wllt1
balcony, 3 BR, 2 1/2 ba ths, living room with
woodbutnmg fire pl ace, equtp krtchen ,
breakfast room has a lg w1hdow stereo
speakers throughout, brass 11g~t IIJ~tur~s and
much more 2 car attached garage, at1tc
s torage , 2 acres miL Th1s Muse 1S

Real Estate Gener a l

11004 RIO

GRANDE COMMEACIAL
BUILDING 1850 Sq . Ft . 3 rms for offtce
space, Large storage rm al50 parts rm
Localod on a corner lot on a state route

Canaday·
25 LOCUST ST. • G ALLIPOLIS

\

F. Canaday, Broker
Mary P. Floyd , 446·3383

Audrey

446-3636

Gl
,.. _
LEN DER

·NEW ON THE MARKET...3 TO 4 BEDROOM HOME
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED IN THE C~TY. 2 bATHS,
DINING AREA ' OR FAMILY ROOM OFF KITCHEN .
VERY AFFORDABLE AT $32,000.

r'l,~;~Jf~,9,~, THE UNIVERSITY OF

',;..

I!DF,OClM HOME
ROOM WITH
-GAI~A&lt;:iE AND OTHER
GARDEN SPACE ..
t!UILUIIM:
LOT
CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO SEE THIS
HOME I
VILLAGE OF CHESHIRE ..3 BEDROOM, 1 1/2 STORY
HOME HAS NICE LAWN, DECK, ABOVE GROUND
POOL... $44,0001
COMMERCI~

SITE ON EASTERN AVENUE,
CORNIER LOT PLUS 2 ADJ91NING LOTS . 2
DWELLINGS , PRESENTLY RENTE~GREAT
LOCATION FOR BU~INESS. JUST LISTED!
APPAOX. ·2 ACRES LOCATED ON HARRISBURG
ROAD
CORNER LOT.
HAS WAtER TAP.
RESTRICTED BUILDING SITE. CALL FOR MORE
INFORMATION .

451 LI NC OLN STREET! 2 Story alum. sided home,
living room . dining room wfth built -In - china/buffet ,
kitchen , den, 2 baths. central aor &amp; more!
#758
LOOK ING FOR A NICE L OT? T HE N CONSIDER
ONE OF THESE;
#1
4.507 acres m/1
'9,000 .
#2
4.6t 5acres in/1
10,000
9,000
#3
4.702 acres m/1
#4
3.881 acres m/1
a,ooo
#5
4.190 acres m/1
5,000
#6
5.442 acres m/1
10,000
#7
6.148 a~res m/1
6,000
10.320 acres m /1
11,000
#8
#9
'7.253 aores m/1
7,000
NEW LISTING! 122 MULBERRY HEIGHTS! 2·3
Bedroom ranch wilh a one car attached garage.
Dining room. kitchen, uti lily room &amp; bath, .3 2 acre
lawn. ·
,767
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY! For this 1 t/2 story
home, 3 bedrooms , living room, dining room . kitchen
complete w/refrigerator &amp; range . 30' x 32' garage
situaled aJ College. Avenue . $20's .
n46
BUILDING LOTS situated in Pomeroy. Lots range
from approx. 2.808 acres up to 6 .726 aetas. Call
#751
today for more information.
47159 EAGLE RIDGE ROAD! Aluminum sided 1 t/2
story home. living room. kitchen, over sized detached
2 car garage. FA electric lurn11nce. Additional mobile
home hook-up. Must call today for an appointment!
#558

,,

1998 NEW LISTING 20 ACRE S &amp; FARM
HOME located m tha country w'4 BAs, 2
baths, new'carpet &amp; new roo! fl nte reduced to

$65.000.
1997 REDUCED to $65,000, an CncK, j
bcdrrn , lull ba-sement kll. LA, OR 2 baths.
Cafport &amp; large yard. The tlme I() buy IS now 1

&amp;46-1897

11001 IMMACULATE/AFFORDABLE cozy 3
bedrm. Green Twp LA wfFJreptace , tull
bsmt , new wmdows, cabmets, Jenn Air
range, rei , d1shwast1er. Lovely treed yard
1874 CHESHIRE
3 bedroom ranch, 2
11rep1aces full basement, comfortable hvmg
rm , 2 car garage R~ntal home also

GREAT RETIREMENT or starter
home 2 BA, kitchen &amp; DR 1 acre mr'l Super
buy $34 900
.

N999

LOCATED IN CITY OF GALliPOLIS ·
Elegant Bnck Beauty - Located Ll] the c1ty 2
story, full basement &amp; garage D.EJ5Lgnod for
great hv1ng f1rst floor has formal entry wfLR

&amp; formal DR

C~rry

cab•nets

1n

the k1tchen

BlasiA &amp; powder room Second IIOOr offers 4
BR &amp; beaut1ful BA Basement has 4 rooms,
BR, FA w/11reptace . laundry room . sto rage
room, new furnace wiC!A Very much morel
Call VirgLnla l Sm1th 388 8826/446 6806

N1021 REMARKABLY SPACIOUS 4(5
bedroom 110me destgn~d tor prestigiO!JS l1v1ng
"Great roo m wfcathedr'a l · ceiling and

woodburnmg !I replace. plant rm, , kitchen has

many cabm!Jts &amp; an LSiana work area
breakfast nook overlooks a pone! formal dH\InQ
rm . e ac m/1, Call Virg1ma 388-8825

117 Acres close to

new freeway,, hospttal, Sl1oppu·\~· C:lt Water,
gas, sewer AdJOtnLng Pmecrest f&lt;!urs1ng Home
1990 HANDY MAN'S SPECIAL
Large 7
room, 2 story nome , 3.6R. Iarge k1tch0n , OR. 3
SA , forced om furnace Beaut,ful treed lot
Some outbldgs Moblre Home Hook Up
$35,000

A WONDERFUL

A.LL

BRICK RANCH - 2 bedrms IJ!~~I horrle
very neat ~~~ utd1ty rm eJC'Ita storaue rrn ;
car attached garage Also a rental horne·
w/garage Just rLghl for the mother 'n law

111019 NEW LISTING 1h•s lovely 3 b(&gt;ctroom
ranch 1S ready to move rmo Wilt'Ll large
1,009 NEW Ll$:f1NO 8AICK RANCH .. lamtly.r~m. and li1 a ntce area .mea lut so
located 1n Addison - 3 bodrm, LA wtlovely bet1~r hurry and call WLirna on tll•s one l!
carpet eqUJpped krtchen lull basement
bbvered patio. attached garage 2 car barrl
building 3/4 ac m/1

1964 OUTSTANDING 5 acres TRACf build
your masterp1ece on one ot the LAST lots 1n
LAKEVIEW EST 5 acres $33 ,000 2 348
acres $25,900 4 lots on WMe RoacJ SUbJect
10 restt~C\Ive

covenant.s

t1016 GREEN TWP. 1't acres more or less
large barn, pond, lance and gqod road
frontage Level to rolllnQ , mostly pasture.

wont last long
·

11012 NEW USTINC 1h1s 4 Ped•oom w t~

basement w111 g1ve you all the spact· vClu w1lt
e11er neeG and on a n•cE' sectudl?d 101 close
to town c;;~ll W1lma tor a v1ew

11011 100 acres for

thq

tarmm

m1ndPd w1th

a n1ce farmhouse !hal has tJeen wc11
11'1a1ntauled JUS! ot1 St~te Route. 124 ~nJ
pncec lo sell at S63 900 00 call Wilrna lor
more mro

11017 WANT TO BUIL.O A HOME OR to
put c1tra,1er on~thls g acre~ 15 wrced nght so
ca'l W1!m; lo see tn s

some 'IJOOds $3.5 000 00

M't DOS OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL 1h1S rS
a lovely 3 bedroom mobile hom'e w1m
caH1redal cell1ngS !hal rs sure 19 please a

1933 BUV THIS DOUBLE HOME 1or an

most to see so can us today

lnvestmelill or live 111 1(2 &amp; let the rent help
wtthe p.ayrnonts Locatod 1n mce lirtle town
clo&amp;e to GallipoliS
_

11020 COUNTRY CHARMER Just a great
neat &amp; clean place lor a tam1ly Oak cab1oets 1n
the kit Range, Rog . OW, white carpet In LA.
Garden Tub &amp; shower bath. 24 ;.: 24 detached
garage ~bo\19 ground pool 2 Ac nVI

11022 ENJOY

N$30 INVESTMENT Seven Umt Apts Prtme
locahon Call tor more mlormatn:;)n

1959 COMMERCIAL BUILOING 1n tile C1ty
30 'x80' block bldg wfapprox 3.900 sq ft 110
&amp; 220 e1ec, !6' door $45 000 Ill Sm1t1'1 3688826 or 446-6806

1813 REDUCED PRICE

388-8826

. 2!16-0036

LYNDA FRAlEY
&amp;45-6806
PATRICIA ROSS ............ - ...................... 245-9575
PATRICIA HAYS ... ~ .....~ ..... ,

1849

Adam

WE HAVE SEVERAL NEW
LISTINGS BUT WE NEED
MORE!! THE MARKETS
GOOD, SO IF YOU WANT
TO SELL NOW IS THE
TIIIJ! E!!! CALL US TO GET
YOUR HOME SOLD
TODAY!!!

MAKES THE OIFFERENCE

dBIBIIS 446 -3884.

;4m6ez &amp;

MINI FARM
Acres of ground
located on Welchtown Hill Ad . 2
bedroom Home With Living room.
bath, utility room . Gas warm
morning heat, TPC water, some
fencing if you'd like to have a horse
or some cows. A lso a barn . and
c hicken house . Great Garden Area .
ASKING $13 ,500 .00

VIRGINIA
. BAOt&lt;EFL
WIL.MA WILUAMSON

(614) 742-3171 or f-800-585-7101

IB RUSSELL D. WOOD, BROKER t:=)

NEW LISTING • Vacant Ground .Approx . 84 A~ res on Sharon Hollow
Road . Small Gas Royal1ties. electric
on site , should have free gas tor 1
dwelling.
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION !!
ASKING
$29 ,540 .00

Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

N EW LISTING • RICE
R EEDSVILLE • 1 m/1 acres o f.
ground with a n1cely remodeled
modular w ith 3 bedrooms , 2 baths,
fam ily room . equ1pped kitchen,
heatpump, fireplace , n1ce deck 36'
x 8', garden area. Total electric this
is a must to see!' All this and m0re
for $39,500 .00
M IDDLEPORT
Investment
Property - 2 StorY' Brick Building
w/'2. Apartments, Currently rented .
ASKING $13 ,000 .00
'

optio~~ and extr.~s to mention in
one ad Asking $38,000. A Sleal

bubbl)ng brook. Accessible to
e\ectnc. If privllte and secluded
nre wh m you are looking for.
then 1h15 ts the place. Only

.if'~..,.~

CR EW .
ROAD
NEIGHBORHOOD! 1 ..26+ acres o f
ground goes wilh th1s nice splil foyer
home . 4 b edroom s, 2 f ull ba ths,
some appliances w/kitch en. n e wer
s iding . N ice la rge back patio! "This
Home Is W aiting For A N ice B ig
Fam 1ly To Fi lii! U p! !" RE D UCED TO
$51,500.00

acres. Pnvate W1l h a beautiful
view, close to mwn. To many

hunt. bUJ id or enjoy however you

/!,ove,

· · Realty

..

cili-

would lilce. !fhis propeny

Jake and Cora

RAC INE • Nice 1 1/2 Story Home
w ith 3-.4 bed rooms, large living
room, dining room , kitchen w/nook,
f am ily room , bath, lots of cloSet
space, beautiful hardwood .floors ,
ne w er w indows, siding and roof.
Hom e has a cellar and a t car
garage. A SKING $4 0 ,000 .00

"

ma1atenance free of best quality Make your
appointment and see 1f you don 1agree

1!nd road Three to four bedrooms , dmlng room , one bath

br~~k~~sil65 Folrflald Lane • 3

TrantmlnlonL UMd, robull, Ill 002945.
lnopocttd. guaranlood. :10 ...75-

Refrigeration

T-..... 114-37f.22113.

5064.

$26,,000

POMEROY- East Main relax on ltle front porch and enjoy
the view of the nver in this 1 .t /2 story 3 bedroom hom~.
with equipped kitchen vinyl siding and Anderson windows.

1#749

Ohio.

814-250-1«111.

=n~..!ial'!t""~'h'T.!:': 1·::::::-:=;;:E::Ie:..:ct;.....r:-lca""
.. ':'l_a_n,.d~-

sitting on ,13 acres. If you enjoy hunting this is the place for

bedrooms and 2 baths. t;~s

well 1nsulat ed, very
ma1ntamed Pond, small
blacktop drive pnvate 21 plus

mlotionL Aloo, caah And Carry

.

e11 e'll(t hl1v; I

Fermetr Round Bait,, 014·2•5-

LANGSVILLE· You'll love to come home to relax in !he
country in this 2 bedroom ranch with equipped kitchen

MIDDf .EPORT· Granl Slreel· A 1 1/2 slory home wil h 3

ranch homa. sun

room. livtng room. eat-in kitchen,
newer ,.replacement

~O'l .

([hanks ~o'l

Faclory Sale, ,. All Steel Buildings, 2.t,.33, 33x.t5, .ta,.Qg,
75x1 88. Limi ted Inventory. 11t
Como. 111 Stnlod. Call Now: f'ro.
cision Pbat Ftanw 304-773-5348.

..

ranch

18111 Suzuki S.murel JX 'x4,
1111,000ml, needa clutch wark,
.... gocd, $1300. 30«75-1111.

.....

Columbus.

/Ill

1jou'u the
6est ;11om

LA NGSVILLE~ Crouser Road · A

Bind S1,995: 611-281HI522.

1068 Second Avenue kitchen , LA , FA with fireplace. 14110 SA 7 . 4 BAs , 1 balh ,
Completely Remodeled!! 3

acres

~. Kawai Concor1 Grand Piano AI
White Model KG · 21l Retail
$14,,700 Will Sell For Len Than

T020 Ferguson $1 ,995; 7 FL Hay

brick

JJ
Card of Thanks

$6,550 ; 5040 AC Diesel $3,895;

558 Haski ns Road

Aii;'actll~·~·

~

Musical
Instruments

Oeutz

Tammi' DeWit! ............................ 245-0022
Martha Smith.
379·2651
rmdy
1..
..245.9697
742-3 171
Chcr) I

All Tr.- Acc:ou;t,~o To freeman'• Heating And Cooling.

Ovar 10,000 Tranomlatlon, Alao lnatall atlon And S.rvlce. EPA
c.tifiod. Realden1111. Conwnort:itl.
l'lrll. lt ..37f.2t35. '

of Ewington~

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

3·4

Rolo!N~

wv

11171 Ford Von, A· I lhope, • .,.
anow tlrea mounted, good· for
trlpa, .12111. 301-773-5104 lla·

·

Jude for favors
granted.

IH8-21211. .

..

f arm

vans

Marcur~ Grand Narqulo,

Shar pe! pupple &amp; for &amp;ale, 6 1.t·

Real Estate General

Lovel y

1

Kathleen M. Cleland 992-6191

tiding, roofing, oallftor pointing,
Nlca '211' Chadtrnlto COIWincor, powe, washing, ffte 111imatea,
tlllck, open bow, •70 ~. B14-tl2·4232.

Thank you St.

Schnauzer• miniature pupplea,

Henry E. Cleland Ill 992-6191

Jae'a Home Maintenance, vln,.l

304-675-811111.

~1 68.

GOT,

bedroom home w1th 2 baths. 8529 SR 218 ·
Reduced
FA, formal LA &amp; DR, del. 2 on !his 3 BA, 2 bath home. 11a ai88nll,&lt;iar
car garage, 2 story barn, 3 t R, FR w11h fireplace ' with home
sheds, situated on 21 gently blower, DR, ea1·in ki1chen. Large LR, eat-in ' " """'' ·
bat hs, 2 fi replaces .
i
I . acres, m/1. $95,000 Was $60,000, now $58,000
REDUCED to $77,500 #210

1--11h-p
1:114.

aege WI Can't Get To Phone, Or 1118g Ponllac Flreblrd, :105 V·8,
Cal Aher I P.M. Call Arl)'1lmo For sspd ..namlulon, priced to Mil.
~A;::I'I"'::.;;,i';:;";:;•:;:•:.~8.:.1:..:4-..:256;:;:..:;8550:;.:;·;..__ 811-245-G 17~ "' 114-448-1 575. ·
1
Rabblll br Salo Lop Earad, would 1tt1 Chtll. Aatto Mini..,., Sl'arp.
like 10 buy Malo W,hlto lop Original Owner, 8 f'luanger, v.
:E=arrod.
::::..:8.:..
14-:..:3=8:.B::857
::.:_
7 _ ___ I, AlB, t7,ooo Mllea, Runa And
1
Reg. Box• pupil lor uUt. dackad, Looka Grtatl $8,900, G14· 446 ·
datlawed, 1hat1 and wormed, 184861-2·21180.
Csrd of Thanks
Registered Himalayan kittens.
'Seal , name 1 aeem pointl. 11_..

P.O. Box 614
Ripley,

1871 CamaiO 350 SB; 1tl1 HDP

:.:.::=:::..::::::.;__ __,....~1,989

OFFICE 992-~886

Local reftrtOCH furnished. Call

Porchu. Exporlonc:od, Froo Eat!11111 ......... 810 Joe 810, f2.100. 114 4488511.
Good~··-14738.
C&amp;C G-.! Homo Mal-.....
bow,
low ttnd , _ Homo Repair. Fo&lt; ~­
houra, many -uorlol, bright ......... Chot 811-002-8323.
bfue/Whlto,
boot.3114-175-

Profenlonal Pet Grooming . All Mint Condition, V·8, Automatic,
Breodl, Reuonetile Rotoo. Guar·
"I
antetd Se tlalutlan, Your Pttl Power Evlfythlngl 70,000 "' lei
Second Beat Friend. leave Mes· $5,800, 814-441..().414.

1571 THURMAN AO/ID •
UPA FREE QUALITY H OMES
SEE HOMES IN COLOR!!

811-245-5054. .

#1023

- VERY EXCLUSIVE HOME - W ilh a bil
of woodland . Hugs 4 bedroom, 2 s tory w ill1 2
1/2 baths , form al living rm . &amp; dining rm ., 1S' x
23 ' iamily, Loads of cab inets in K itchen a nd
utility rm·. Indoor heated pool , many more
amenilies to offer. Shown by appo intm enl o n ly.
For full ·
call V irginia L. Sm ith, 388 ·

•

Experience For Appointment, 6D,OOOmi ., good con ••·

Real Estate General

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

and-·

0.-.

~~~ON VINTON ST.

BASEMENT
WAI ERPkXJFING
U'*'!dltlonal Nfotimo guora,_,

1 1800) 287.0578 Or 18111 237·
--.., ltlodod, -,1 3114- 13- 0411 Aoget~ Walllrproofing. Eo·
sat, Htgn.
llllllahed1i75.
.
1817 211' "'-'"' lroa~ 200 H.P.

-13&amp;0.

emdency,

lnComation. ·

110 8oatl • Motors
tar Sill
'tS 17 llnr- boat 115 V4
7

tt2.e1g1-~~---------~~~=-----~~~
.AKC
Dolmatlon, mole, 1yr old, tt81 Oidl Dola ee, li,IOO 080,
780
.;..ai1QII,.;:;;:;.o:'.;..'2&amp;.=30U::..:..;:..7..:
S...:5251=';..___ 1'081 Codlllac DeVIlle ft ,IOO 740 Motorcycle•
AKCo'lninialllra Poodle pupa ..,. OBO. 111 118 4428.
1t78 Harlay ·Oa•laon Motorqclo,
plolo will lalla cHppod ftrotlholl 1tl85 Ford Eacort 2 Door, 4 Low Milea, $4,500 Firm, 81.,245- Now Euroilal Tond1l Slorrn Shield
Uiollmo Wttrranly SIMpo 5. Wort
I -...!, $350, 11 4-843-&amp;383, Speed, AII/FII canono, Run a 0453.
loll12,
B14-44Ht10.
4
4
.:.":..:..:DCI;;;Z.
:..;511::;.:.::.
· - - - - - - 1 Groatl$1,000, 111-441-82117, Or
187~
Yamaha
XSt100
full
drooa,
790
AKC
Rogla,.rtd
Male See At 639 Fourth Avo-. GelllC8li1plrs &amp;
new tire• &amp; banery, tookl I run1
ilol:hlhund, One Year Old, 811- polio. CH.
greot. S1500 OBQ 304-875-4508.
Motor Homes
41
':'~-1 ,-:111-Afllr':'"'":'I_P.II.-:--~::--·1'986 Oldl Clotra llrotlllflam, ftllly
11184 Chfoly - . . 24ft moD&gt;r
American Cocker Spaniol Pu~ loodad, 4 door, $1250, 1114) 742- 1980 ~ 1100, Sl'aft
Fron1 And Roar Dlac Brakll. Ex· 18,1100mi, '"'Y gocd condl·
~AKc Roalllerod. c~wnp~O'n 2367. ·
collent Condltlon, $1,500, Firm, IIDn. 304 451 184
1
1
2
~-~~·~·~~4-4-~~l't-~~7211.~:-~-~~988 Grand Prix. 2 door, V·l, 614-~1~
1888 l'llomlno IMIP.UP camper.
Birdl, lg•naa, Tarantulas, mice. auta, new tront Urea a thoC~I,
Flah Tantl &amp; Pet Shor.· 2413 good condition, eaay on get, 1000 S.zukl Dutlaport, OR 850-S. dalu• - . - · lk'lt. leo bo•
$1600. 614-892·3400 aile&lt; 5 pm.
IWNng, •lecttk: or batllry, 111.t·
Jackaon Ave. Polnl P eaaan1. $1450,G14-002o41111 .
11112-3114.
30«75-2083.
1987 Chfoly Cavalier. pa, pb, oc. 1881 Honda so, good condition,
30' ltiYtl trailer w/refrl ge,aror,
- - - - - - --::--l80.ooorn. gooil condition, $2000. $600. 30«7~ .
Nloa CIII!!DH75-50111.
CSA Rogllltted Hlmolayan r&gt;.r· 30«75-4118.
sian Klttana Wormlfd I Litter 1987 Dodge Charger, Good
T,.lnod. Roody For ...,_, Dorl ..... _ S1.200,II4-448-tlal.
81-7-7705.
_...,...
::.::.:.:::..:.:.:::.------1 1~88 Chevy Cavollor Z-24, auiO,
Norwegian Elkhounaa. 814· 843- loatiod, aakl~ f4500. 304·578·
5178.
·~
2843.
Protaallanai Dog Grooming Vk\· 1988 Mercury Cougar LS,
1Dn &amp; Rio Gnu'tde Ar-. 20 Veara
d $3 00

Real Estate General

Call or write ror more

4111

,-..,twill

Industry Cor over 15 1---------...;_~;;,:,;..:;______

103 Greenbrier Dr.
B yesv;lle,
0/•;o
43 72 3
"
u

1

Tracy.,_ Brinager ...... 949-2439

.

2 malo " " - fiOM Boaala 87
pup- 1t84 Dloaol VW Rabbit, good
old. l25oa. 304- 5- condition, 114·742·2833 alter
!11122. I

'•

years. Choose Crom
over 70 standard
models or we'll custon•J
design one Cor you.

p

He nry 'E. ClelandJr .. 992-6191

En;tw.l14 •• 3243.
gloo, flO uch or Ill lot polr. 1U5 Ford F· 150 Rod &amp; Whitt, ~.::..~1"'" tu.:: Ron'a TV Ser.llee, spec ializing In
Good Condition, Nw Whoo!o &amp; garage koPL wo10 rood~. '3too ZMlh alao Mrvlcing moat other
814 - .
. Tlrtl, BraiiM. 13.500. oeo. .... 111m,·~-branda. House calla. 1·800·787·
00 15,
304-571-23111.
Robblll For Sale. lllnl .._ Bll· 24NID32.
- I Black llorlano, 112 I Up,
760 Auto Perts &amp;
820. Plumbing &amp;
1188 NINOn l'tdi·Up,- Good
AMMIOr 1~
....245-01118.
~181 .......710.
- - .....
Heating
BudQiel Trenamlallona, Used &amp;
TRA N SPORTATIOr~
·730
&amp; 4-WDs

_p_e_•_. Z28
Camoro 400 58·,11186 Con12~-~·~~h~n!•~··~~·g~p-,up
~150
-., 81' 8113.'100.
lid.; 81 4-882-2102.
1 qua~tTurbo,

llruoder In the log borne I

c0 •

B rune r Land

1 C 1

720 Truc:kl tar Slit

1174 Stop Side Shol1 Bod V·l

="'

-

21,1100mi.,
fully - · ~-·
21111 .
'

8001 .

48d&amp;, 50a110, &amp;01120. Sa•o
Thouaanda. Somt Aa Low AI
$3.00 Per Sq. Fl Faat Oell•err. 710 AUt""' fOr .......
81.-.217t.End5-31 .
.,...
;;.S;.;60=..;Pe=ts=for=Sa;:_le_ _ l,ll73
-Run-. 1111
- - - - - - - - - l o l 1flo
I o,opicara, 24,000
mll11. V·l. lllp otlck auto. . dc,
Groom Shop .f'lt Clroomlna. fM. llr, anvlm. original cond111on. fair
turing H~dro Both. Julio Webb. to good lhopo, 12500, 114•tt2·

CColl~l~l~4~1!~~023!!1!;·..,...-....;;;..,--1

S~RVIU S

.::817::.:.::1111:;;1::.__ _ _ _ _ . _ , -.so w 1DP
Jlarnett'a Hom. lmporwementa: 1
1113 Ford Probe. rod. Sopol., ~-:, 4~1 ion tl1on 101 Room Addldona ·Dockl, And

er-.

~a~..;,.,;i~on~-;,;;.;;;~;;:rplpo:.i::i,L:dra;;;;.ln;;;pl;o;po;; IFemale goo~ •so. 2 malo . . .

Real Estate General

1lltS Eagle Vlalon Tll2t4 liP,
Rod, low 111101. Mint CorMI.... ,
f11,500 Will~ Trado For
Vohlclo Of l-or Value, 114·

1t51 Chevy I
4 Spood,
Vory. Sold Body ,,,100, 1 1 -·

owo. lln1olt, etc, Claude Wln10r1.

Som JIOmorvlllo'a Army Surplua,·
uMd comounlflo turkey clolhlng.
by Sandyville Poat Olllc:o, noon·
epm Fri·Sun. (GIIh -na c:heckt).
304-273-5855.
•

Structures

s

"*""'
-.
""""Hoii-

Biocil, brick, - r p i - wind- or Filii'. 1M3 112 Hondo Hunt
Seat AOHA llaro, 1H4 111o
Rio Grande, 011 Call 814·.245- ChHIIOII AOHA Flllf 114· 2115121.
.
11622.

bruh hoa properly In Northup

Appalachian

&amp; Acreage

Afltll 11112 NJHA

SUpplies

=~~~~~~ring, fo!lrutry 1.... •

Refrlttrltort, Stovel, Watht"
And Dr~a11, All Aacondllloned
And Gauronlllodl$100 And Up,
Will~. IU 16UU1.

durablllly
and
OexlbUity In design are
a rew or the
why 20,00 Camilies
buDd a log home
year!

acre• w/Water I
Real Estate General
tleclrlc,
While
Hill
Rd,
Rutland
.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;
Township, 614-902-2621.
Lillie d'Vet

--,:--,----I

area. Call 814-892-3217 arter
7pm.

Comfort,

Farms f or Sale

Lots

ThrM PIOm clin111, lliZo 7, orio
wodcllng gown, long - · · high
nod&lt;. low blclo, - · hoop, hell
price, &amp;1.t·04D-2411 or 114-317028&amp;.

.-otGUiJdll

ltizoltl 210 Ollad • L llnf
HouM • Pre' I ..tiJ fWiuttl
Enp!nL muD IU Ul CJ

Toblcco Miler $350, 10' Ford
. limo aproador Uoo, 1 toblcco
=~·all in OOOd

Flttn
-,
_Allaon,
, ' 1!1210
,Oia.81....,.._
-.
2 Buna: 14 llonflt Old 1 Aogl•
::':'-..,--,------lttrtd Charolalt, 1 Roglatorad
Wornln'l golf duba • bl!a. u 1101 Angue, 114-38U2117.
Including 4 W®d, $100. :104-812:211=.:1:.:1;.
.
3 Quortor Horaoa, 3 Wal~ng
"'""
llor-,114-448-4110.
.....,
Building

A&amp;S Furniture. We buy, ooH ond
trtlde andque, ntWI.u Hd hous•
hold furnlthlnga. Will bu~ any
amount latvolamllil. 505 Stcond
Sl. , Muon, WV. OWner-Rocky
--773-5311.

energy

740

Tobacco
Senor,
814-245-01110
. . Tobl!cco Stlclll.
-~3311;;;:;;;:;;;-;;;;;;;;-;;;~::.;::=-l
1'1' lllE'S METAl DETEClORS

LOG HOMES

Real Estate General

13 Acre• And Barn I HoUle, 3
Bedrooms, 1 H2 BaH••. LA, &amp;
Paved Drlvowav. 61~.

350

SUNQUEST WOlFF (qcl TAll·
NINO BEDS lqcj
•
Now Commercial, Homo Unlto,
Tanning From f1H.OO. lampe.
lotlona, Aocoaoorloa. I'IFmtnll
low Ao f20.00, Coil Today FREE
NEW Color Ca10iog. H00· 412·
t187.
'

Computer table w/hutc::h, eJc Queen 1lze nterbed, cnw..-a.
~ llidng $50. -~7841.
headboard! teml-weve, heater,
ral 1, good cond. f200.
Concroto I Pl01tlc Septic Tanka, padded
30«75-1418.
I

Rlver11da Ap8rtrnenta In MJddt•
porl From $232-$355 . Call 814·
T,.iiVf For SOle, 614·4&lt;1·6g67 E. ~~2·5858. Equol Houling ~· Heavy duly Whirlpool dryer, very
clean excellenr eond. 175. ao•-

~0

_....._.
0 1
Ron All..,, 1210 ~nd.nuo, Golllpolla. Ohio, 114,.41·

and,..,

:l)A.·JS5-S88S.

blli ieo.

W.O....., - 2-101140,
ltt!OOBO:I14-tl21SliD:

Wanltd: eomeone wllh U'ICIOf' 10

•

.J ato F.,.. Equipment

_ _...;;,;,;.;.;;,;.;.;:..;.::.::.;:...__ Fllnl 5000 Troo:ltlt, llotot 0tawn
WMIMrbr .22.t Magnum rifle, firm Fqt "71111t1WII lt71

Ponablo Eagle Flah 10 with
c;omplolo 2t Gal. Flah Tan~ &amp; tranaom bracket u..d 2
S10nd, 3 Lo. ff' ·10" I Cot· f100.00 Movie Siallon 701
FW.olomlt eu u8 eeso.
It .... ! M !

OAKWOOD HOMES, NITRO. 01· Furnlahod Elllcloncy $1~5/llo.
RECT FACTORY OUTLET, NO Ulllltlol Paid, Share Bl1h, 807
MIOOLEMiiiN, SAVE $1000l, Second, Galllpolla, 814-~8-4411
FREE DELIVERY &amp; SETUP,I ·A:-ftao
-:-7-P._
.M:-.-:-----:-:-:-:-LARGE SElECTION OF SINGLE Gracloul llvl~. 1 and 2 badiOOm
&amp; OOUBLEW IDES. II'IE OWN
·~
THEM. WE'LL FINANCE THEM. aportmonll or Village Menor and

614....S. 11122 M.

MO
'

ShoeCar..l14 118 1222

MERCHAN DI SE

-~780.

StlllrwQ
Elevator•
And
W-hHlchalr: IScoater Llrll For
Caro, Now And UMd, Bowrnano
llomocara, &amp;1 ......7283.
.

Now 100,000 BTU HI Emc:loncy
Gu Furnoco Now Hoot Pumpa,
V.rr ~aaonobl~ Priced, Ono
Uaed 251&lt;W Electric Furnace,
·Boola By Rod Wing CN- .4Q Conllal All Condl-. Frao Ead·
To · 50 Dogre01, H.H. Brown ma•a. 1-100·287.e301 Or 114·"
Guaran-. lOWOII Prlc:OI, Tho 441$'0'

11~2-~

Coffee T•ble With 2 Melchlflg
End Tab111. 'GooO Condition, 614·

Kln(alzo wotorbad. 114·441 ·
101
.

:mDAfllreP.II.

Trailer lol lor rent In Middleport,

Corpot &amp; Vinyl In S""* $5.00 Vd
&amp; Up 00 Po""'"' Of K - Cor·
pel In Stock . Over 35 Pattern•
Vinyl in S1:&gt;cl&lt;. Mollohan Cor614--7"".

dr-•

wordtoba:
12·14, llilpo,
PNirle aklrl, ehott, blouNt,
oklnL 30«75-4151.

loatiod, Now Carpotl 814·371·

460 Space for Rem

seil3.

........ _,.,. ...

l.ldy w.nted to 1tw.re my home.
--2431.

:~~ ;rs:_201mo. a.111a Hotel.

3pc Buthllne Uvlngroom Julte,
lhodea ol blOWn &amp; ruat 10._773-

aqu.. -

448 11154.

Flooma lor ..m • - o r monlh.

Goods

--·

-..,lido .........

=

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

Sunday, May 14, 1995

STORAGE TANKS 1,000 f100 .. Upright
Ron EVIIII En!Orpr,.._, ,
~~~furnace. 111; 114•812·
.-..~1-137-

l&lt;llehon Cab!- Good Condition,
$&amp;00 OBO, Coil Aher 4 P.M. 81._

AoclnM!

Applications available at: Village
Green Apts. 148 or call 814·1l92·

Flbarglau grHnhouoo and
anolttt.. oxpondablt, durable,
mo ..llllle. unllml~ Ulll, 114·

-1181.

vr~~~

Furnllhld

r:

lhtough out, new carpet. 3ton
aw, $8e50. 614-«64175.

24 FL Round A11o¥t GIOund Pool
Compflll 1300 Oedc 1100, 114-

cr..n.

SIHplng rooms with coDklng.
Dn rfyer. All ·
12.:52 Homane, gat h.. r, axe. S185mo p{ua electric. Refererat Al10 trailer
cond., new -carpet, $5950. 6 14· I de patl l required. 304-182- 1!J~~!!t;~;~~p.~m::
..
2221.
~175.

12•85 El Cona Oolu•• llobllo ' "'· unfurnlahed IPl. OOOd ntlgf&gt;
H"""' 814-4&lt;1-83Zl.
borhoo&lt;l.30«75-8153111o&lt;Spm.

w.v.. et4--

21Wtn Slzo llattr•••· 114-4&lt;1·

450

__

540 IIIICelllniOUI
Mtrchlndl..
_....::.:.;.;;,;..;;._

540 llllclfllnloua
, llerchllldlae

3 811loom1, 2 Boh,

led:::-;lluy-'-"'-,-·..:.8.-1~"':~,;:&lt;1:.:2115::::.;;7,~-l 440
;;

Sunday, May 14, 1995 :

OH • Point Pleasant, WV

11017 NEW LISTlNG fresn on the markel
tt11s 9 acres more or less and pnced to·sell at
·only $11 ,500 00,

jr995 IF YOU NEEP A COMMERCIAL LOT

then loOk M more tn1s lot nas been cleaneo
amt ready for bu1\drng, also has a 2 t)edroom
home on corner .or the lot , has boon fectuced
so call Wrlma lot more details

11018 NEW LISTING, QU!Ot country hiJmQ In
1945 LAND CONTRACT $38,000 Price. · th1s 2 bedroom ranch wah 1§ acre w1th rnce
$5,000 down $33.000 Balance 9% APR ttees. and sttrubs, or owner w1U trade tor a
S334 71 P &amp; J for 15 years Close m 3
mobile nome, ca11 W•lma tor more cJeta1lS

Bedroom ranch

1938 PASTURE LANQ, 50 acres tevel tO

sllghtn; rolling with a &amp; oedroom farmhoose-tor
$60,00000

1194 THERES ALOT OF L.IVINO SPACE. 1r1
thts 4t bedroom home wtth a large lot and
prlcea 10 iell, ln th&amp; AdcltiOrt area

-H73 MAKE OFFER, owner wa~ SOld now
this 3 bedroom moMe home o~ \12 serf' lot
w1lh a 2 car 'garage IS r:.lo~o \Q tho cfty

11'001 NEW LIS11NG lO ac mil off SA 160
on Ke11on .Ao close to town Htlltop Vjew
wflots o1 trees . Very soctucte(l

�'
'·
Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Point Pleasant,

•

wv

Sunday, May 14, 1995

By HAL KNEEN
Hay and Pasture Day from 2-9 p.m.
POMEROY- Rhubarb Ioven, June 8 at the O.A.RD.C.'s Jacboo
enjoy. the spring season as freshly
Branch on State Route 93 just
picked rhubarb leaves quickly south of Jackson. Afternoon highbecome rbubarb pie, sauce and lights include bay makinll ~Oil­
cobbler. Several Meigs countiaos strations with the latest equtpment
have called me concerning tbe for.mowing, raking, baling, wraplarge white flower stalk sprouting ping and storage.
.
from the center of each plant
Dinner will be available for a
If possible, cut the flower ·stalk small charge. Early evening activt,
as soon as it .forms, thus pennitting tics in¢lude fencing, forage vari~
more plant energy .to go into the · eties, use of goo-textile and water
production of leaves. Keep a 3-to sources. Finishing up the evening 4-inch deep mulch of rotten will he guest speaker Dr. Harlan
manure encircling the rhubarb White, a retired eXJension
plant. This will reduce grass from agronomist from Virginia Tech
growing too close to the plant keep • speaking on fescue forase produc·
the roots cool/moist during the lion.
summer and provide nutrients for
Cattlemen roundup
proper plant growth.
The Ohio Cattlemen's AssociaCbeek out the trees surrOunding lion Swnmer Roundup will be beld
your vege!ab)e and flower garden. on June 17, witb Clark, Fayette and
Are there any blaclc walnut or but- Greene counties' cattlemen as
temut tr~;es close by? If so, you hosts.
GALLIPOLIS- Gordon E.
may have problems growil)g cabHighlights of the farm tour
Roth, maintenance supervisor at
bage, . peppers,
tomatoes,
include: visiting Sire Tech-bull
AMEJUTECH TO HOST CHAMBER EVENT - The Gallia
the Ohio Valley Electric Corporacolumbme, lthes, alfalfa, rhu~b. stud-farm; Thornhill Farms, a large
County Chamber's "Business After Hours" slated Thursday, May
·.lion's Kygllf Creek Plant, retired
blackbenies and many other plants.
cow calf herd· Beaverdale Farms
The walnut and butternut tree ' Inc., club calf 'farm; Gain &amp; Grain
18, at the Gallipolis Holiday Inn, will he hosted by AMERITECH
~ay 1: aftet nearly 40 years of secaccording to Mick Knisley, right, community relations director for
vtce wtth the company.
·
roots produce a substance .called Farm lnc a feeder operation·
Amerltech "This is the second In a series of "Business After
Roth joined OVEC in 1955 as a
ju~lone, which inhibits. or kills cer- Avalon F~. specializes in Mid:
Hours" ·pr~rgrams, ·wlfh:lr lltr sclleduled 'f!Uarterly. Alh:bamberlaboreF.--During-lbat-~11-foaE,-be -, 1".
trun plants...-lhus-allowmg-UJe.-trees western-crops and livestoCk: Loumembers as well as community leaders and those interested In
transferred to the = a
ntenance
to ~row wtthout other plant compe- McDorman Farm, specializing®
learning more about the Gallla County Chamber of Commerce are .
department as a ma tenance
'
tiuon. The roots extend pa~. the feeding· over 1,500 calves ;
wtdlh of the tree, up to 50 addtbon- Trelawny flums, pan of the Opekinvited to tbe session between 5:311 and 7 p.m. Knisley said' such
helper. In 1956 be w~
. oled to
infonnal gatherings provide an Ideal setting to get to know other
mam~nance meebame-~; m 195?.
al feet.
asit Farm Management Farm; and
chamber members, share Ideas and become more Involved in Gal!o mamtenance mechantc-B; and m
Gender check
finally, Campbell Cattle Co., spella County Chamber of Conunerce ac!Wlties. "fhose who plan to
1968, to maintenance mecban!C·A.
Homeowners, now is lhe time to cializing in .club calves.
attend are asked to call th·e chamber office at 446-0596, so that ·
In 1985 be advanced to mamteThe farm tour, including Jurich,
check the smilll whitish colored
approprlate arrangements can be made," said Chris Cozza, len, ,
nance supervisor.
nowers of your American holly costs SIS per person and $7.50 per
lhe chamber's executive secretary. .
·
Roth is a member of the Christ
plants to determine Whell\er you child under 6 years of age. The
Episcopal Church in Pt. Pleasant,
have male or female plants.
complete Saturday activity ticket
West Virginia. He is also a member
American hollies are, botanical- .costs $30 per person and $15 per
of the Gallipolis Masonic Lodge
GOROONROTII
ly speaking, a dioecious plant. child under 6 and includes a farm
#7 , the York Rite and Aladdin
Dioccious means that it takes both tour1 lunch, dinner and bus transTemple in Columbus; the Gallipo- Moose Lodge· 11731; and the Gal- a male and a female plant ·in close portation. Reservations must be in
lis Shrine Club; the Gallipolis Elks lipolis Boat Club. He and bis wife, proximity to each other to allow for by June 1. Make reservations
always at.lhe top of our agenda!
Investment viewpoint
Lodge #107: the Pt. Pleasant Ruth Ann, re.side in Gallipolis.
fertilization of the female flower through the Greene County ExtenBut first get comfortable with
By JAY CALDWELL •
ovary and the formation of tile sion Office, Iva Holbrook at (513)
GALLIPOLIS - Ask a number the concept. Don' t rook at retireberry-like fruit (properly called a 372-9971 .
of people to give you !heir defini- ment planning as something to be
(Hal Kneen Is the agrkultural
the TV program syndicator called drupe fruit).
WILLJAMSBURG, Va. (AP)
tions of "the best retirement" and avoided as long as poss ible.
Hay
&amp;
Pasture
Day
extension
agent for Meigs Coun·
inconsistent with his role.
you ' 11 ge t a lot of different Instead, view it as an opportunity · - The Clinton administration's
Plan to attend the Southern Ohio ty .)
answers. Some might say it's the you have today to predict and innu- tough stance in its trade battle with
freedom to travel, exploring what- ence the size of !)le retirement pay- Japan is winning solid support
ever small town or major nation checks you'll be receiving. from America's corporate leaders.
During its three-day semiannual
they find intriguing; Olhers would Through planning, you can deter·
conference
.e nding Saturday,, The
reply that 'it's Ule chance to indulge mine:
'
-Ho
w
big
a
total
paycheck
B usincss Council - heads of I 00
in favotite spons and bobbies of th e largest corporations in
you'll need in retirement
golf, fishing, gardening, crafts -How big a retirement paycheck America - urged the administraor to learn new ones. Still others .
would say that for them, the best you can expect from ·the govern- tion to stick to its position and predicted Japan would compromise.
retirement means simply being able ment and your employer.
-How big a retirement paycheck
to spend more time with friends
'
DALLAS ('A P) - Cineplex
·
and neighbors, children and grand- you C:l!l give yourself.
Your paycheck to yourself: The Odeon Corp. and Cinemark USA ·
children.
Inc. scrapped a proposed $390 milV aricd an~wers. indeed. People key to the bes.t retirement. .
Just like previous generations, lion merger that would have creatdefine retirement as personally as
they've defi ned their lives: But you may be counting on the gov- ed the world's largest chain of
!here's one defin ition they all can ernment's paycbeek (Social Securi- movie theaters.
There was no explanation from
agree o n: ulhc bes l. retir.cmenl" ty) or your employer's paycheck
means freed om from financial wor- (pension benefits) .to create a fman- the parmers Friday on why the deal ·
ries.
cially secure rctiremem for you. fell lhrough.But it reportedly been
You probably feel lhe same. A . That's risky at best. These days, thrown into jeopardy last month's
secure and comfortable retirement Social Security and employer pen- when Seagram Co. agreed to buy
Is something we all hope for. But in sion benefits make up only 40% to 80 percent ofMCA Inc. for $5.7
Any New '95 Grand Am,
'today's complex and costly world. 60% of your retirement income biUion. That acquisition would give
an affordable retirement takes more
needs, .and that percentage will Seagram's controlling Bronrman
Bonneville, Century or
·family more authority over Cineprobably continue to decrease.
than hope. II takes:
What's needed, then, is an plcx Odeon than origi nally envi· UNDERSTANDING. You
Trans Sport in Stock!
need to recognize and comprehend increase in your third retirement sioned.
·your main sources' of retirement paycheck _ the one you can give
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (AP) income-= your three retirement yourself. With proper planning and
Deep-discount
chain Pbar-Mor
paychecks: Social Security, professional advice, that paycheck
Inc.,
which
is
operating
under
employer pension benefits and your can be substantial. It can spell the
own savings and investments.
difference between a financially bankruptcy court protection, wily
· PLANNING.'\' ou necll'lo lcant uncertain reilremenr.:-or one that is clusc-41 stores in B -states. •
The move would leave Pharhow careful planning cart make
virtually worry-tree.
those three paychecks work togethHow can you write a retirement ·. Mor with 102 "solidly profitable"
eno create lhc best retirement for paycheck to yourself! By starting stores in 19 states, the company
you.
to plan for it now. By beginning a said Friday. The remaining stores
Most people find it difficult to program of regular saving and have annual sales of $1.1 billion.
plan.
·
diversified, tax-sensitive investing
NEW YORK (AP) - King
Let's face it: most of us don't to accumulate the money you'll
World Productions Inc., (listributor
really WANT to plan for retire- need.
·
(Mr. Caldwell is. ion invest- of "Wheel of Fortune" arid "The
ment. We have many other things
we· d mtller think about - and spend ment broker for The Ohio Com- O~rah Winfrey Show," fired its
chief financial officer for conduct
.our money on - and retirement isn't pany In its Gallipolis omce.)
· Price supPort on tobacco treated
with non-approved pesticides or
not used according to labellnsi!UC·
lions will be witbbeld if !be price
support is withheld, a "No Price
Support" marketjng card will be
issued for the fare end all price
support advances received during
the current year oust be refunded
False certification case will be
referred for proseeution with high
monetary penalties and possible
imprisonment
Lisa Meadow• Is the County
Executive Director of the Gallia
Consolidated Fame Service
Agency.

Gordon Roth retires from
OVEC with 40 years service

'I

The best retirement:
Plan now to make it happen

----Business briefs----

THE .OHIO VALLEY'S NEW.
·: LOW PRICE .LEADER!!
3.6o/r Financing On Selected 1Uodels!

OVER
INVOICE!

er 6.Q N_ew

'_9_5 ~

ick &amp; Pontiacs Ready To

1994 GMC

Hiring...
Continued from D-1
AT&amp;T'sconsumcr interactive services.
Like others , AT&amp;T relics on
headhunters and watches its competitors for promising executives.
Polich said the company has also
drawn people from Bell Laboratories, ils highly-regarded research
arm .. into product operations.
The on-line computer busi nesses of MCI and News Corp., expected to he one of thc'first product
areas the companies jointly develop
from their alliance, illustrate contraSting approaches to hinng for a
so-called "new media" enterprise.
MCI devcloped·its " network
MCI l)usincss" product, a package
of software and on-line connections, with a team of programmers.
marketers and managers recruited
fmm other partS of the company.
· News COFp.'s De.lpbi lntcrn ~ t
Services Corp .• a distant fourth in
the on-line race with under 200,000
subscribers, is on a hiring spree as
.it changes its technical systems and
marketing direction.
·
At MCI, lhc creation of its online business occurred in just a few
months last year wilh people wilh a
variety of experiences in the company. They were led by Ron
McMurtrie, who just prior to the
new venture bad been a senior
manager in MCI's finance depanment and bad six otber jobs in his
previous six years at the company.
. "We' ve taken talent from within, ~ople I call '360-degrcc people, " because they bad technical,
operational and marketing skills,
McMurtrie said.
But MC! has also gtabbcd some
expertise outside tbe company.

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

Dedicated to
being the best
mulching mowers
John Deere

SAFARI VANS
.

.

From ...

8 Passenger Loaded with
Options
10 In Stock!

$14,988

AM4DR

V-6 Engine, Automatic,
AM/FM Cassette, Power
Windows, Tilt, Cruise,
Rear Defogger, Bal. of
new Car Warranty. 16K

1994 SUNBIRD

Automatic, A/C, Deck Lid
Spoiler, Rear Defogger,

1994 GRAND

2DR COUPE

15,000 Low Miles ,

Bal. of New Car Warranty.

14SZ

~-S25
per

month'

l9938UIC~

PARK AVENUE

Lt. Gray, Tilt, Cruise,
Cassette, Power Seat,
Power Windows, etc. Bal
of new Car Warranty.

John Deere
14PZ

· Was s13,900

$11· 999
Was sl l,900

$1~

.. "

888

Per

mo o ! h •

0

•

188&amp; CBEVROLn

Looks Super,

CAPRICE
4DOOR

Runs Good-

Was s3,995

Loadeo.

NOTHING RUNS LIKE A DEERE. ,

--------------~'------------------~·----~3C
fet!l free to drop by one of th t:'se I&lt;Kal John Detre d ealers today:

. CARMICHAEL'S
FARM AND LAWN

~· P.h.,.§)'!:-446·2412
Betweerr Gallipolis Be Rio Grande on Old Rt. 35
·

668 Pinecrest Drive

_

BUICK•PONTIAC
SINCE 1954
1911 Eastern Ave.

Gallipolis, OH

446-2282 '

'Munthly paymitf1tll based qn JOhn OGere Crmt11 Re'JO!vmg Plan 10"1. doWn paymqnt reQI.IIfed
Pnce and prOducl rTIBy 11ary due to CHI8.1tf partlt:lplltOn

Sports, Page 4

I

•

'

.'

..

''

Val. 46, NO. 11

1 Section, 10 Paget 35 cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, May 15, 1995

Copyright 1995

Meigs starts
drying out
I

.

Around 200 evacuated after heavy
rains prompt flash flooding Sunday
By GEORGE ABATE
The Gilkeys were call~d by a
Sentinel News StaiT
relative and they just escaped the
Residents between Rutland and home when it tipped on its sid·e.
Pomeroy were hammered with the Water rose about eight feet along
worst flash flooding in more tban • the sides of the mobile borne. .
50 years ·e ady Sunday, Meigs
One of the Gilkey's cars then ·
washed down the creek and lodged
County officials said this morning.
About 200 residents were evac- against a concrete abutment
uated between Langsville, Rutland
beneath U.S. 33 .
and outside Pomeroy, said Bob
According to emergency
Dyer, Mei·gs County Emergency reports, rescues occurred at KeeManagement Services director.
baugb/Follrod Road, Roc~prings .
KNOCKED OFF FOUNDATION - Blll and
water by a relative and escaped. In their riightAoodwaters raged through Rut- Road, Depot Street, and witb cars
J ulle Gilkey's mobile home near Rock Springs
clothes. The flood waters carried one or their
land, forcing emergency beli- stranded in lhe Burlingham area.
vehicles· about 500 feel from the trailer. It was
was knocked off its foundation and inundated
copters to remove residents near
Mud and debris covered the
lodged nose down in the creek against a highway
by water during Sunday morning's flash ftoodHysell's Garage off State Route · roads, with slips reponed in severn!.
abulmenL (Sentinel photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
ing. The Gllkeys were alerted about the rising
124, Byer said.
locations.
"Tbe water was so swift we
High water covered many roads
couldn't get a boat across," Dyer in the central and eastern ponions
said.
of the county, the sheriffs depanNo injuries or missing persons mcnt said. Major roads closed by
were reponed, Dyer said.
the nooding included 33 between ·
Between 3 :30a.m . and 6: 30 Darwin and outside Burlingham,
a.m. Sunday, at least five inches of State Route 248 at Keno, State·
rain fell outside the Rutland area. Route 143 at Wolf Pen, Laurel
Bycrsaid. .
Cliff between 33 and State Route
.
The waters peaked in the Ruh 124.
land area between 7 and 8 a.m..
Due to road damage, the Metgs
. Dyer said. The county garage at Local School District canceled
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
Rock Springs reported three inches classes today.
Daniel
Patrick Moynihan, a Demoof rain during !hat period.
The Leading Creek Conservancrat
trying
to res~ape the welfare
Numerous cars were submerged, cy Dis~ict suffered water damage
debate.
ca
lle
d Republican plans
while basements and homes lilled to its entire eastern ponion of its
"punishing,
punitive"
on Sunday
witb.water, Dyer said.
system, an LCCD official said.
and
accused'
President
Cli nton of
· "Luckily, no injuries happened
Residents without water service
1
promising more than he c.an deliv'
In &lt;tbc middle of the night. We're since Sunday will be asked. to boi\
er.
thankful that no one was burt in water for at least tbe next three to
In a tough assessmcn\ of Demo· Ibis," he added . "It was flash flood- four days, the official added.
cratic and Republican proposals,
ing in areas I've never seen
From Hysell Run , all of Brad-.
the New York lawmake r who is
before."
·
bury, Union Terrace, Middleport .
cons.idered Cong ress· expert on
The work of volunteers and the ·bill, SR 143 to Homer Hill all have
poverty a lso ad monished GOP
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart- not had water, the official said. By
presidential candidate Sen . Phil
ment helped prevent any tragedi~ late afternoon Monday, these water
Gramm, R-Texas.
·
systems should be back on line.
Byer added.
"Phil Gramm, stop that ," ·he
"I flew over the area," Byer
Dave Spencer, manager of the
said at one point during a debate on
said. "It looked like a disaster woe Meigs County Highway DepartNBC's Meet the Press . When
in some of those places."
,
ment .. sai.d hi s office was still
FLOODED APARTMENTS- A heavy rainstorm early SunGramm
said welfare gives "more
. As of presstune today, the area as'!;ssm,g the damage.
..
day sent water surging off the bills around Pomeroy's Village
and
more
money for women to
Sf:tll had not been d~clared a state
We ve _ba~. a lot of damage, ·
Green into four lirst floor apartments. Residents salil they were
have
more
and more children,"
dtsaster area, Byepru1;t --- :-- --Spencer. ·S~td. W.e.had.crews.ouL.__ttwakened-about S-a. m. by. water- slapping against the hallway
Moynihan
snapped,
"lbai' s a fanAt 7:28 a.m. Sunday, a Rock all day yesterday. There were a !.ot
walL•, and before they could escape it was nearly four feet deep In
tasy
.
That
docs
not
become
you."
Springs trail er owned by •Bill and
of area~ we su~ could not assess.
all four apartments. Above, JOJSOn Black, who resides in one or the
The
joint
appearance
by
MoyniJulie \lilkey tipped ov~r, according
Vartous bndges and .c ulverts
apartments, and Melissa Snyder, who came in to help, look over
han,
Gramm
and
Senate
Finance
to Metgs County Shenffs Depanwere damaged, Spencer satd.
the damage as water was pumped rrom the apartments. (Sentinel
Commi ttee Chairman Bob Packment records. ·
·
(Continued on Page 3)
photo by Charlene Hoeflich)
·
wood, R-Orc .. offered a glimpse of
the welfare de·batc looming in
Congress.
Packwood, whose committee is
a
key
to any welfare legislation, is
are charged in lhe April 19 bomb- sister on March 25, urging her to
between the tinks .
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) drafting
a bill that would allow
let him know if she had received
Eleven -year-old Brian Grider ing that has killed 168 people.
Thousands of people ringed tb e
states
to
take over welfare prdFederal authorities were still his last letter or if it was interceptbombed wreckage of the federal jammed his hands down into bis
grams, backed by federal money
building Sunday, many in cburcb pockets, shrugged and tried to find searchinjl for John Doc No. 2, a ed by "G-men or Dacl."
sent
in form of block grants.
He
told
his
sister
not
to
se
nd
any
tanned
,
muscular
man
witnesses
clothes and some wearing Mother's his voice. "Sad," he said.·
Legislation passed by the House
''We came down yesterday have placed with McVeigh when more letters after April 1 unless it
Day·corsages.
in
March
also proposes siJltc block
was
an
emergency
and
warned
her
he
allegedly
rented
a
truck
in
JuncChildren hooked their fingers afternoon and we just had to come
grants,
but
the money would come
to
"watch
what
you
say,
because
I
into the 8-foot-tall chain- link fence bac~ ," said Curtis Wilkey, who tion City. Kan. Aulhorities say the
with
sevemlconditions,
including ·a
may
not
get
it
in
time,
and
the
G,
carried
the
bomb
made
of
·
truck
circling the bulk !hat' s scheduled to brought his family along from Norprohibition
against
using
federal
men
might
get
it
out
of
my
box,
be brought down by demolition man for what be cal led a pilgrim- 4,8()9 pounds of anunonium nitrate
money
to
pay
cash
to
unwed
teenincriminating
you,''
Newsweek
fertilizer and fuel oil.
.
experts this week. Visitors have age.
age
mothers
and
!heir
children.
reported,
citing
unidentified
law
Newsweek reports in its May 22
Timothy McVeigh and Terry
slipped flowers, toys and poems
issue that McVeigh wrote to his enforcement officials.
Nichols; two former Army buddies,

Competing
proposals
on welfare
draw fire

Thousands make pilgrimage to bomb site

Jacob Matthew Morrow and John Pickens, has been aq:epted at
The sflcaker at Sunday' s comDavid Franklin Pickens are co- Ohio University. I lis goal also is to
bined baccalaurea te and comvaledictorians, and Kendra Marie become a doctor . Pickens is a mencement program will be the
Norris is salutatorian of the 1995 member 'o f the National Honor Rev. Mark Morrow, Middleport
Southern High School graduating Society, yearbook, drama and quiz First Baptist Church pastor. Musibowl team.
cal selections will be presented by
class.
Kendra Nonis, daughter of Mr.
the choir, directed by David
Announcement of the top stuand
Mrs.
Gary
Norris
of
Racine,
Colvin.
dents who will address commenceThere will be ' special recogniment Sunday at 8 p .m . in the plans to allen~ Ouerbein College to
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium begin work toward a degree in tions by the principal, after which
Superintendent James Lawrence
was made 'by Principal Gordon pediatric medici~e .
·At Sou.thern, Norris' activities will present lhe class to Don Smith
Fisher.
.
Morrow,. the son of Mark and inclul:lc National Honor Society of the Southern Local Board of
Vicki Morrow of Syracuse, and membership, volleyball, softball, Education, who wiU present diplorecipient of the Franklin D. Walter senior play, library assistan~ year- mas to the graduates.
All Scholastic Award as , Meigs book photogmpher, magazine stalf,
Members of the graduating class
County's outstanding $enior, plans secretary/treasurer of her class, are Brian Alfred Anderson. Randv
!o attend Marietta College in the quiz bowl and drama. She earned Eugene Bin g. Jessica Kay Cape fall. He will pursue a bachelor's the AU Tri-Valley Conference Aca- hart, Scott David Carsey, Peggy
degree in sports medicine and then demic Award . She is a Veterans · Sue CarutherS", Mary Amelia
attend medical sebool specializing Memorial Hospital volunteer and a Chaney, Cornell William Chil member of tbe Meigs County dress, Grant Douglas Circle, Jessiin ra(Jiology.
The National Honor Society Libr.lf)' Youth Council.
ka Joy Kay Codner. Kellie Ryan
Class academic honorarians are Collins. Sabrina Renee Congo,
member bas been active at Southem in quiz bowl, drama, yearbook, Mason Gordon Fisher, Brian · Michael Lee Craig, Bridget
and pep"club, and is active with the Alfred Anderson, Courtney Beth LeAnne Davis, Erica Dawn Dugan,
Meigs County Library Youth Hill Roush, Andrea Elaine Moore,
Steven Joseph Edwards, Jason Paul
Council.
· ' Randy Eugene Bing, Grant Dou- Ervin, Mason Gordon Fisher, SherDavid Pickens , son of Carol glas Circle, James Enn;tl Randolph ri Ann Fredcrjck, A !an Eugene
·
Pickens ofl Portland and the late and Amy Darlene Weaver.
Gallatin, Christopher Todd I Iamm;

MATT MORROW

River
jaunt
turns
deadly

Heather Dawn Harris, Christopher Corey Hendricks. Co rey
Richard Hill, Justin Claire llill,
Aaron St even Hoback, Sco11
Anthony Hubbard, Kevin Michael
lhle, Jeremy Allen llill, Eric Preston Jones, Eugene Vinccm Long:
Amber Racbellc Lyons, Carrie
C~lls_~t}vf.j)lon~;, Crystal Lynn
Mli.hlhach , Us a Dawn Mont '

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. (AP)
- Fou r Ohio men died and tw\l
were injured Sunday after a bac!K!Ior party when their motorboat collided with coal barges on the OhiO
River, state officials srud.
_
Officials did liOl know the cause
of l)le crash, but the boat suuclc thi:
liarges after jumping their 'wat,es
several times. said state Division·or
Natur ~ l Resources Maj . Bill
Daniel.
Crew members from a boat
pushing the barges rescued the two
survivors minutes before a severe

thunderstorm swept the area, said
Sgt. A.G . Shaver of the West Virginia Divi sion of Natural
Rcso~rces.

" Had it not been for th e boat
crew, any rescue ·effortS probably
would have been slim to none,"
Shaver said.
The party was for Michael Walters, 34, of Northfield , Ohio, wbo
was to be married. He died in the
crash, Daniel said.
Also killed were Mich ael J .
Karas, 24, of Maple Heights, Ohio;
Jamie M. Wisniewski, 36, of
. Nofthficld, i)hio; and Robert R.
Ricker, 29, of Freedom Townsllip,
Ohio, Daniel said.
Dean Horba, 20, and Jason Walters, 23, and Michael Walters'
nephew, both of Northfield, Obio,
were taken .to Camden-Clark
Memorial llospita!'in Parkersburg
where ihcy were in stable condition .
•
_I\ nursing_ surc.rv\sor refused IQ.___ -· _
relea~Cdetails of their injuries .
The accident occurred about 3
a.m .. just south of Parkersburg near
Hockingport, Ohio, Shaver said.
Mich.acl Walters owned the
mo torboat, but Karas likely was
driving at the time of the collision,
Shaver said.
The force of the collision rjpPed
the bow off the fiberglass motorboat and the sound of the crash
awoke people who live near the

river.
Daniel said the wealher was
partly cloudy at tile time of the
crash, b11t it wasn't foggy.
The towboat was owned by
Elmwood Marine Se rvices of.Belle
Chase, l:a ., Daniel said. No telephone number was listed in
Louiltiana.

DAVID PICKENS

gomery, Andrea Elaine Moon!,
Shannon Lynn Morarity, Jacob
Mallhew Morrow , Jon Travis
Mugrage, Kendra Marte Norris,
Terry Lynn Ottman Jr .. Kira Lee
Pagel , Jame s David Parsons Jr .,
Larry ~helton Pallerson , David
Franklin .Pickens, Tracy Michelle
Picke tt, Jame s Erm a! Randolph ,
Claudette · Ram ona Rcilmire,

Angela Nicole RobertS, Crista Virginia Rose, Jeffery Marcus Rose;
Brandy Nicole Roush, Courtney
Beth Hill Roush , Robert Lesley
Sellers. Toni Roxanne Sellers, Jeremy Alan Smith, Jcni Lynne Stewart, Forrest Raymond Teaford Jr.,
Bridget Jo Varney, Amy Darlene
Weav~'r , Ryan ll.aJ.ter Williatns.and .. " .
Amy Michelle Wood.
•

•

0

•'

KENDRA NORRIS

'

)

Four killed when,
party vessel hits
coal barges neat
Hockingport

•

~
•

Lo..tonlghtln 4Gs, clear,
TIIHday sunny ltl the lllOI'Illal·
High Ill SOL

salutatorian
named for Southern graduatio·n

825
Our 14PZ and 14SZ walk-behinds with Tricyrler" mulching anaohment
&lt;Ill' ready to mulch the minute you buy them. And with their low
monthly payments. you won't l(et cliprJ&lt;.'&lt;I on them either.

Pick 3:
765
Pick4:
2154
Super Lotto:
13-24-33-37-40-46
Kicker:
799207

Co-valedictorians~

$9 990
•

Ohio Lottery

·Reds edge
Braves on
Gant's HR

Gardening tips

Tobacco growers reminded
·of pesticide restrictions
GALLIPOLIS ·• The Gallia
Counl)' Consoljdati'AI Farm Service
Agency reminds tobacco growers
that all pesticide products used 011
their tobacco must be approved by
the Environmental .Protection
Agency for use on tobacco, aod
must be applied in accordanoe with
label instructions ·
Pesticide sampling may be made
on 1995-crop tobaq:o to determine
whether pesticides have been
issued Erforts are being made to
reduce the level of maleic hydrox·
ide pesticide residue in flue-cured
tobacco - this type of tobacco is
not grown in Gallia County

..

'

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