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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Child molestation haunts mother
Dear Ann Landers: I nee&lt;! your
help. I just found out that my 29year-old daughter was molested by
my father when she was very young.
In my wildest dreams, I could not
imagine this happening.
I confronted my father. who is
now 74. He did not try 10 lie his
way out of it or make excuses. He
admitted the abuse and begged me
to forgive him. Bu~ Ann, I jun can't
I am simply crushed.
My daughter says she has forgiven
Grandpa as part of her healing
process and she doesn't want me to
tell her grandmother. My mother is
not well, and I'm afraid this news
would JUSt about kill her. I have
talked to my brothers ~boul i~ and
1
we all agree that Mo~ ,should not
be told.
The problem is I can't let go of
this hideous nighunare. When I'm
around my parents, I try my best to
pretend that everything is the same
as it always was. but it's impossible.
I fmd myself pulling away from my
fathec's touch, and I tum my head
away when he speaks to me .
Meanwhile, I am scared to death that

It is imperative that you get some
COIJ!lSCiing at once. I sense your high
Stale of anxiety and am worried that
you will make yourself sick if you
don't
unload your anger. Meanwhile,
1994 Los A.nge les
if there are any great-grandchildren
r, n es
Cre at ors 5 ynd ,cate
around, do notlea~e them alone with
Grandpa. Pedophilia is not
something that is outgrown.
Mom will sense something is wrong. Please mak e an appointment
I'm building up a lot of hostility immediately.
Dear Ann Landers: You
toward my £ather and am tempted
to tum him in to the police, but if I probably think you have heard every
did this, my mother would find ou~ problem in the world by now. Well,
and it would t.ear our family apart. I I have a new one for you.
cannot believe that this terrible thing
I live in Schenectady, N.Y., and I
happened to my baby girl and that I buy The Daily Gazette strictly for
was so nruve 1 didn't see what was your column. Almost every day, my
going on. I hate how I feel, but I boss comes by my deslc and picks
would feel a whole lot worse if the up my paper. He says, "WeD, what
news got out and my mother heard did Annie have to say today?
about it. She is a wonderful woman, Anything juicy?" Then he starts to
and I don't want to hurt her. Please read your column out loud, which I
tell me what to do. -- DESPERATE hale because I want to enjoy it with
IN N.C.
my lunch.
DEAR N.C. : You say your
This morning was the last straw.
daughter is 29 and you JUSt learned After he finished reading your
that she was sexually molested by column, he said, "This one I have to
her grandfather when she was very show my brother-in-law." He then
young.
tae your column right out of the
S ~ n a ,ca t e a r~d

paper. I had to go across the street
to buy another one.
I'm really Licked off with that guy.
and I'd like 10 tell him off, but I
don't dare. Any suggestions? -STD..L BURNING
DEAR S.B.: Prevention is far
bclter than rrying to fllld a cure. Keep
your paper well ditched and out of
sight.
Gem of the Day (Credit Sue Wall
in Phoenix):
011 Judgment Day
If God should say
Did you clean your house today?
I will say, I did not
I played with my children
And I forgot

·Featured on page 81

refreshing a glass of water as ever
Dy AI Hartson
I 'vc had , thank you my loyal subMiddleport Church or Christ
jecL~
."
On e of my fa vorite stori es is
Ev
eryon e was shocked . What
about the little village that learned
th e king was coming for a vt sit. did he mean "glass of water?" Had
They were all in a tetlrcr trying to the king lost his mind or his taste
decide iust what they could do to buds?
The answer was later discovered
m:ike hi s vi sit special. There were
as
one
by one the townspeople conall kind s of suggest ions but none
fessed
that they had brought a
seemed 10 fit. Finally one person
of water thinking that
pitcher
spoke up and said that because
everyone
else would bring wine
Feeling pressured 10 have se~? their area of the country was and their liulc bit wouldn't matter.
known for the fine wine it proHow well-inform£d are you? Write
duced, perhaps they could do Everyone had brought water in a
for Ann Landers' booklet "Six and something along those lines.
selfish attempt to keep their wine
the Teen-ager." Send a self-adA few minutes later they arrived for themselves.
dressed, umg, business-rue envelope at a deci sion : each person would
In I Cor. I 2 the Apostle Paul
and a check. or money order for bring a pitcher of their very best speaks about the body uf Chri st.
$3.65 (this includes postage and wine to the town square on the day the church, being made up of many
handling) to: TetflS, c/o Ann Lan- the king was to vi sit. There they members but that there was only
ders, P.O. BoJC 11562, Chicago, Ill. would lind a large vat which wolild one body. None arc more imporL1n1
606JJ-0562 . (In Canada, send be con structed especrally for thi s than any other. but rather each one.
event. They were each 10 pour their is interwoven 10 form the body. We
$4.45.)
pitcher of wine into the vat and all need each other, we depend
then when th e king arrived he upon one another whether we realwould be served wine which would ize it or not. TI1e hand is no more
important than the foot and the eye
be the very best available.
Finally the day arrived and as is no more important that the car.
DARWIN - The Modern the hour approached for the Kmg ' s Each part has it's place and it's
Woodmen of America, Camp 7230, arrival, tl1c townspeople were com- function, Just as God has placed
will have its annual potluck picnic ing from every direction with a them in the body where He wanted
and community service recognition pitcher of their best wine. The vat them to be . Vs . 27 says "Now you
program Sunday, 12:30 p.m . at the slowly began to fill up and the indi - arc the body of Christ, and each
north bound park. Route 33 . vidual wines mixed. The anticipa- one of you is part of it."
Recognition will be given 10 Ola tion of the town s people was growChristians, we ar_e Christ's body.
St. Clair and Aletha Randolph for ing as the time for the king's He deserves the very best body
outstanding community service.
arrival grew ncar.
possible and you and I make a difRACINE - The family of the
At last a little boy came running ference as 10 what type of body He
Rev. Lubert and Maria Hille Theiss into the square yelling "He's here.
has. Too many think they have
will have a reunion Sunday at Star He's here!" The moment had
simply been saved so that they can
Mill Park. There wtll be a covered arrived. The mayor welcomed· the spend eternity with God. That cerdish dinner at 12:30 p.m.
king and then offered him a glass tainly is part of the plan, but until
TUESDAY
of refreshment from the vat. that time arrives we need to underPOMEROY - Meigs County Expecting the king's face 10 show
Board of Elections, 4 p.m. Tuesday his pleasure at the fine wine, they stand that we have been saved to
at the office on Mulberry Ave., were surprised when he finished serve. Arc you serving in the body.
or arc you dead weight?
Pomeroy.
the
and said : "that was a
~~~~~
~~~~

-----Community calendar----FRIDAY
RUT LAND - The Rutland
Youtil League will hold an end of
year meeting Friday a16 p.m. at the
baseball field. All coaches and parents arc asked to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - Bend
Area Go spel Jubil ee, at Mason
County Fairgrounds , RGutc 62,
Nonh of Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
Friday, 6 to II p.m . Saturday,
beginning at 12:30 and Sunday, 10
a.m. until 5 p.m. Over 40 singing
groups, Free, camping, concession
stand.
POMEROY - The I 75th
Anniversary Committee will meet
Friday at noon at the Meigs County

Muse um .
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Community Association will
again hold a farmer's market,
beginning thi s Saturday. The market will be open from 8 a.m.-2 '
p.m.. with farmer's allowed to
come and set up at 7:30 a.m. Fcc
for the selling space next to Dave
Diles Park will he $5 . All vendors
should preregister by 992-5458.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains Fire Department
will conduct a door to door fund
drive Saturday beginning at 9 a.m.
in the distri ct served by that fire
department. Donations from those

Double
birthdays
celebrated
A party was held recently honoring Ryan Van Matrc. three , and
Jordan Decker, two, by their parents, Kevin and Ann Van Matre
and Brian and Melinda Decker.
The party was held at the Mason
Fire Station . A monster truck
theme was carried out, and cake,
ice cream and chips were served.
Attending were George and Barbara Van Matre, Don and Carol
Diddle, Sonny and Tweet Decker,
Bob and Jonetta Davis, Rusty and
Rosemary Davis, Tammy and
Brandon Bachner, Nancy and Crystal Muilins, Pauline Cunningham.
Tami. Jessie and Zachary Sheets,
April Van Matre, Jamie Parsons,
June Van Matre, Sonya ad Ezra
Zuspan, Amber Kearns, Chris.
Terry. Christy and Christopher
Neese, and Rainy Walker.
Others presenting gifts were

not contacted may be sent 10 Terry
Deem, department president. Additional information may be obtained
from him at 667-3933.
CLIFfON - The Rollins Family will be the featured singers at a
hymn sing Saturday to be held at
the Clifton Tabernacle Church, 7
p.m . Pastor M.E. McDaniel invites
the public to attend.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Darin Smith will
speak at the Mt. Moriah Church of
God, Racine, Sunday at 7 p.m. A
revival will be held there July 1517 with the Rev. Marvin Cann as
speaker. The public is invited.

Clarke family
holds reunion

RYAN VANMATRE
JORDAN DECKER
Deloris and Fred Taylor, Eulah
Redman, John, Kristy and Bryce
Clark, Kevin and Mandy Grueser,
Bruce Decker, Pat and Zachary
Carson, Benney and Pat Dent, Bill
and Jean Sim, and Charles and
Jcnctte Radford.

CLARKE
The fifth annual Clarke reunion
was held at the home of Dale and
Alice Humphreys and sons. Chris
and Peter of New Haven, W. Va.
A potluck picnic was held at
noon after which the group enjoyed
swimming, visiting and taking pictures.
The 1995 reunion will be held at
noon on the last Saturday of June at
the home of Dr. and Mrs. Greg
Clarke (Lynn) and daughters,
Rachel and Anna of Kenna, W. Va.
Attending were William J.
Forbes and grandsons, Jessie and
Casey Clarke, Charleston, and D.
W. Reed of Sissonville, W. Va.;
Dale and Marjorie Walburn, Middleport; Dr. and Mrs. Greg Clarke,
Rachel and Anna, of Kenna, W.
Va., Don Bailey of South Point;
Amy Roush, Marie C. Roush of
New Haven, W. Va., and the hosts,
Dale and Alice Humphreys and
sons.

mmrm:

GMC:muc:K. ~

Invites You To Help Us
Celebrate Our 3'd Anniversary

'

'

GMC:TRuc:K.,

V6, auto.,
air. 7
pass ..
power
side door,
more.

WAS
$22,141

1991 GMC 1500 Pickup .••.•... $10,200
LWB, V6, 5 opeed, olr.

1993 Chev. 1500 Pickup........$11 ,400
1989 Buick Lesabre ......•..........$6400

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galllpolls·Pt. Pleasant - July 1o, 1994

A Multimedia Inc,, Newspaper

Child support cases:
Judge Crow orders Meigs human services
department to pay cost of court proceedings
r

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
.• POM EROY · Mei gs Co unty Common Plea s Court
Judge Fred W. Crow III . Ill an entry l'ilcd Fnday after noon. ordered the Me1 gs County Department uf Human

"Any billmgs for costs pre vious ly submrll ed to the
agency , and nul pa1d as of thi s dale , shall be paid wrthm
se ven day s of the JOUrnalr zalr on of thrs entry (Frida~), "
Crow wrote .
In addrtiun . Cruw ordered Meigs County ProsecutiDg

Serv1ccs to pay court costs

Attorney John R. Lcntcs to '' take such me as ures as arc
necessary to collect unpa 1d costs here in ordered, pursuant

1n

child support cases and

ordered other county office holders to insure payment of
costs.
In the entry, Crow ordered DHS 10 comply with rules of
the court by pa yin g costs al the Lime of fil ing of any
pleading or requesting a judgment entry. He also mdercd
Clerk of Courts Larry Spencer to refuse filmg of &lt;lily
JUdgment entry wh1ch doc s not have allached a ce rtifi Cate
of payment or security for costs and to determine how
much DHS owes in court cusls.
Crow said the costs, once determined, will be submilled
to DHS for payment within seven days

to the statutory duties of his offi ce."
"The CSEA files mml of th e cases wherein cos ts are
incurred .
"The Meigs County Auditor's Office records mdi calc
that the Meigs County Department of Human Services. as
of Dec. 31. 1993 had a balance of $239.262 in its Child
Support Enfurc6menl account.
"In addition. the records indicate that un April4. 1994.
the Meigs County Departf11ent of Human Scrvtces transferred $104.768.14 from the Child Support Enforcement

account to the Publ1c
As~ i s tan cc ac count.
"Therefore, 11 ap -

pears that the Mcrgs
Co unty Department
of Human Scrvrccs
ha s had adequa te
funds to pay court
cost s incurred ."

"The fa ct thai the
Meigs County Department of Human

DHS

Lo-. low mllee.

1986 Olds Delta 88 .•.•..•.•.....•.••.$4400
Low mi.., 4 door.

COLUMBUS, Ohio(AP) -Spending on school districts may have to go up
by billions of dollars annually under a judge's ruling throwing out the current
financing system, according to a report published Saturday.
The statewide average in per-puprl spending rsa lillie more than $5,000. The
state spends about $3 .5 billion a year to guarantee all schools at least $2,871
in basic aid per pupil.
It would cost about $1 .85 billion more a year for all drstricts to spend $6,000
per student instate and local taxes,lhereportsaid, quoting estimates it obtained
from the state's Department of Education.
In Beachwood, a Cleveland suburb. the school district spends more than
S12,000 per student.
The cost to the state would go lo more than $13.5 billion to bring all districts
to thai level, the report said.
The debate over school funding follows a judge's ruling on July I which
declared the state's way to pay for public schools unconstitutional. Judge
Linton D. Lewis Jr. of Perry County Common Pleas Court ruled that the current
system creates financial differences among school districts.
Gov. George Voinovich said he will appeal because itcouldcostdistriets too
much money if they are forced to spend the same amount per pupil.
The Ohio Coalition .for Adequacy &amp; Equity of School Funding filed the
lawsuit against the state on behalf of 500 of the state 's 612 school districts.
The group's executive director, William Phillis, said the ruling does not .
mean all districts would have to spend the same amount per student. The
coalition is not prepared to say what the stale should spend to improve poor
districts.
On Friday, Voinovich, House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg, and
Senate President Stanley Aronoff. R-Cincinnati, wrote a letter to Oliver
OcaSA:k, Stale Board of Education president, urging the board to support the
state's appeal.
The board will adopt its position, possibly Tuesday, and it probably will be
a dose vote, Ocasek said.
Ocaselr. said earlier this week that he will aslr. the panel not to appeal and to
try to withdraw as a defendant. He said appeals would delay resolution of the
problem for, years.

1989 Chrysler New Yorker •.••...$7445
Lollll-.1, 4 door.

·

1988 Chevy lroc Camaro ••••••••• $6995
350 V-8, auto., air, T-topa.

1990 Chevy Cavalier ••••.•••......•. $5980

I

4 Door, air, Milo., low mllee.

1990 Chevy Lumina Euro .•.•.••. $7820
4 Door, air, V-6.

1992 Buick Regal ..................... $8990
Lo-.1-.1, 4 door, VS.

WINNING WING • Laverne Harley, center,
won the Gold Wing Aspencade in a contest
spcmsored by the Ohio Gold Road Riders Association at the stale rally in Nelsonville June 18.
The motorcycle was purchased from Riverfront
Honda whose general manager Tom Lear, Iert,

1993 Nlssan 4X4 Ext. Cab •.•. $13,980

is shown presenting the keys to Harley. John
Stratakis, right, sold the winning ticket. Proceeds from the tickets sold by the local Chapter
c-2 will benefit the chapter's "Santa's Wings"
project at Christmas for children and senior citi·
zens.

HURRYI

1985 Chevy K10 4X4 ••.• ~ ...........$7460
Long bed, auto., 56,000 rallee

1992 Chevy S.10 Blazer ....... $14,950
Sport Pkg., lo-, 4 door.

RACO crime watch signs to be installed
Crime watch signs have arrived the food booth.
Membership was discussed and
and will be installed in the near
a
challenge
was issued to all memfuture it was reported at a recent
bers
to
take
a guest to the next
meting of the Racine Area ComJuly
26,
6:30, at Star Mill
meeting,
munity OrganiZ8liOII.
Plans for a booth at the OhiO Park.
Kathryn Hart, president, had
State Fair were ·discussed as was
the July 4 celebration held Monday charge of the meeting and giving
at Racine. RACO had a food booth, reports were Lillian Weese, secresponsored children's games, and tary, and Melanie WeeSA: who gave
Joy and Aaron Young oversaw the the treasurer's report in the absence
frog jumping contest. Tables and a in the absence on Tonja Hunter.
sign board were purchased 10 use at Thank you notes were received

from the RACO scholarship recipients.
The Rev. Ken Molter gave grace
before the meal auended by 15
members and a guest, the Rev.
William Middleswarth of the .
Meigs County Historical Society.
He displayed and described the
I 75th Meigs County anniversary
commemorative coverlet and pre·
sented interesting historical £acts
pertaining to Meigs County.

1994 Ford LTD Crown Vlct.•• $19,994
WAS $24,275. Loedecl, INU.., 100 111llea.

__ DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

llon..Jil

_.

tOH:OO
l!atOMOO
Sun. 1:0H:OO

614·992·6614, 1·100·137-1 094

'·

.:.:rr '

Vol.
.

28, ·No.. 22
'
' '

court costs: excerpts from judge's entry

In orderlng the Meigs County Department of Human Services to pay court costs In
child support cases Friday, Judge Fred W. Crow wrote:
"It appearing to the court that the Meigs County Department of Human Services/
Child Support Enforcement Agency (CSEA) has recently tiled several motions/entries
or other pleadings without the prepayment of security of court costs, and upon a
regular review of tlllngs, the court has determined that court costs are not being
deposited, collected or paid In a large number of cases filed or brought by the Child
Support Enforcement Agency.
"Further, the court flnds that the agency does not collect or aHempt to collect court
costs In these proceedings upon the conclusion of the case. The result Is that costs
are not paid to the clerk lor which he Is legally obligated to collect, to the detriment of
the Meigs County General Fund.
"This failure to follow court rule causes gross Inefficiency as the clerk must send
leHers aHemptlng to collect court costs, the court has to order Individuals Into court
to explain why costs have not been paid, the sheriff has to make service of process,
a hearing must be had and additional entries must be prepared and served."

Serv ices has not and
docs not follow court rules and pay cit her secunty deposits
or cost s, results in extra work for the co urt . the clerk 's

off1ce and the sheriff' s department ; in .rdditr un, Mergs
County loses money, " Crow wrote.

DH S director Michael Swishc.r was on vacation an d not
ava ilable fur comment. DHS admini strati ve ass ista nt RI chard E. Jones said he had nut seen the entry and coul d nul
comme nt on it as of Fnda y aft ernoon .

Meigs library board
set to open bids for
new Racine branch

Luxur cru1ser:

Report: funding decision
could cost state billions

,·

I

•

School spending estimates vary

1986 Buick Lesabre ............•.... $5250

Chance of rain :
20 percent

tmts -

•

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Bids fo r construction of a two story brick buildin g in Racrnc
to house a bran ch library wrll be opened by the Mcr gs Cllunt y Libr ary Board
of Trustee s at I :30 p.m . on Aug. 4.
The buard uf trustees Thur&gt;day rcvrcwed fiml plans for the library branch
to he built in R;u.:inc at
the cornc.:r of F1)urth and

Pearl Streets on land donated b~ the Home Na tr ona! Bank of Racrne
Arch1tc t: ts on th e
project ar C R ~.: 1 s cr.

V:denlour and Callahan
of Athens.

J

Mone y for the constructiun cumcs from the

'

buildin g fund es tabli shed scvcra l years ago

by the count y libr ary
ustt:cs. That fund rcpmonie s n:ccivt:d
from the state 1n excess

11

rc~cnt s

LOOKING OVER PLANS - Meigs County olthat needed loopemte
Librarian Ruth Powers,ldl, was joined by Wendi the main libr:rr y at
Maxson, library clerk, to look over the plans for Pomeroy, the branch in
a new branch library to be built in Racine. Bids Middlcpurl . and the
on the construction will be opened Aug. 4 and bookmobi k .
Libraries arc funded 111
groundbreak.ing has tentatively been scheduled
Ohiu hy a port ron of the
for Aug. 16.

person al income tax .

Currently 5. 7 percent of the tax collected is allocated for operation ul lihwi es
in Ohio.
After the Aug. 4 bid opening. the architects wil l re view the bids· and make
recommendatrons to the Library Board of Trustees.
Mcrgs Librarian Ruth Powers sard that a tcnt;rtivc date llf Aug l(r has been
set for the groundbrcaking.
The proposed schedule calls for the budding to be under ruofbclore winter,
to be completed by early February, furnished and stocked with books by
March and in full operation hy Apnl.
The building will be completely hand1capped accessible. acco rdrng to
P.owcrs .

Each floor will have 1500square feet of space. with the flfsl fluor to rncludc
a large meeting room, a sma ll office and a utilit y ruom , Powers said .
Continued on page A2

LWB, V&amp;, 5 apeed, llir.

4 door, auto., llir,lo-.

Low: 60s

•

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - At first glance, the Gallipolis Police Department's newest
addition 10 rls fleet may g1ve the impression that the city has experienced a
serious boost to its budget. '
First introduced to the public at Monday's Independence Day parade, the
GPD 's 1988-Lincoln Town Car looks like a luxurious cruiser, complete with
radio, lights and siren.
But Police Chief Roger Brandeberry said the sedan did nol pula crimp in
the city ' s budget.
a
"The beauty of itrs there 's zero tax money in the car - only the gas is paid
for with lax dollars," he said.
Signs on the rear quarter panels of the car allay any fears that the police
department has developed expensive tastes: "This vehicle seized from a
Gallipolis drug dealer."
Before being seized during an arrest, the Lincoln was used to transport
cocaine from Columbus to Gallipolis once a week, Brandeberry said.
Because of its role in the trafficking of drugs. the car was .forfeited to the
police department once the dealer was convicted.
Brandeberry said the department felt using the vehicle for law enforcement
and drug education would be a bigger payoff than pulling the Lincoln on the
auction block.
Using money raised from other seizures, lil.e car was painted and transformed into a fully functional po lice cruiser. )
. TlW lincoln Will be used for public reialrops purposeS, not for rout rne
patrol, Brandeberry said. Be- - - - - - - - - - - - - - sides being on display at local
LUXURY CRUISER - Gallipolis
events, the car will be used to 'Police Chief Roger Brandeberry
travel to state conference and (above) cruises Third Avenue in the
training seminars.
department's newest addition - .a
"I think it sends a great mes- 1988 Lincoln Town Car (right) seized
sage," Brandeberry satd. "II from a cocaine dealer. The car will be
says, 'Galli pel is is going to be used for public relations and drug
Iough on drug abuse and drug education programs, Brandeberry
trafficking. Don't bring your said.
dope to Gallipolis ...

Look for Great Seleetions and
Priees All Month

!Ges l

Death clouds N. Korean talks - page AS .

Addition to city police
fleet seized from
Gallipolis drug dealer

DON TATE MOTORS, INC.

I.

O.J._turns 47 -in jail- pageA7

Mei·g s equestrian
rides into 5th place
in national contest

News capsules
Akzo announces
multi-million dollar
upgrade at Mason site

GOOD MORNING
-

State jobless rate
drops In June

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.- A
three-year, multi-million dollar upgrade A drop In the state's loblen
and expansion plan of the Akzo Nobel rate last month shows the
plant will improve efficiency and reduce state's labor market Is lm·
proving, but such seaaonal
waste emissions, vice president of phos- drops
are routine, analysta
phorous chemicals Robert Craig an- · slid.
nounced recent! y.
The state's unemployment
The company will invest "millions of rate dropped to 5.5 percent
dollars" to upgrade plant instrumenta- In June, down from 6.5 per·
tion and processes, provide new control cent In May.
The nation's unemployrooms and monitoring devices and improve the raw material receiving area ment rate was unchanged at
and sensitive materials handling opera- 6 percent In June.
tions, an Akzo press release said.
These improvements are in addition to the $5 million recently spent to
rmprove the storage area and add dikes to collect surface water as part of the
company's environmental protection plan.
·

Meigs political subdivisions to recover costs of storm
POMEROY - Meigs County's political subdivisions will receive over
$80,000 in reimbursed costs due to January's snow emergency, Robert E.
Byer, director of the county's emergency services. reported Friday.
Checks will be distributed Tuesday at 4 p.m. at the Emergency Services
office on Mulberry Heights in Pomeroy, but not all checks have been
re~eived, Byer said, adding that he hopes all checks will be received by
Tuesday.
"Villages and townships are asked to send a representative to the meeting
to receive their checks," he said. "Each will receive 50 percent of the eligible
costs for their snow removal work from January I7th through the 25th."
Those receiving reimbursement are all townships, the county highway
department and the villages of Middleport, Pomeroy, Racine, Rutland and
Syracuse, Byer said.

Meigs commission
opens paving bids

Today's Times-Sentinel
t8 Sections- t58 Pages

Dl
POMEROY - Bids for two paving Business
projects in Sulton Township were Calendars
84&amp;6
opened Friday afternoon dunng the Classilieds
03. 7
regular weekly meeting of the Meigs -:::---:-- - -- - ---=:.::....:...
County Board of Commissioners.
C;:;-;o;-:m_ic--:s--:-- -- - - - 'l"'
ns.·•:.:..:
.:. rl
The Shelly Company ofThornville Editorials
A4
submilted paving bids on 7/IOmi leof Local
AJ
Yost Road from Forest Run Road and
County Road 33, Oak Grove Road, -::O_b_it_u-'-a-'-r'-'
ie.::.
s _ __ ___:A
..:6::__
from state Route 12410CountyRoad Sports
Cl-8
29, Bowman's Run Road .
"'AI-=,o-n_g_t"'h-e"'R::c.i-v-e r- ----,B
::..I::...::..
The cost of the two projects as bid
A2
will be $20,659.50 and $64,290.80, Weallier
respectively .
The bids from the Shelly Company
were the only bids received on the
Columns
projects . Commis ~ .ioners Robert
Harten bach and Janel HowartTacken Fred Crow
voted to table the bids pending their Bob HoeDicb
review by Meigs County Engineer Jjm Sands
Robert Eason.
Chuck Stone
Commissioners also approved arequest from the Meigs County Departc ,,.,"""' v.u., PuNobJ., c•.
• menl of Human Services to use ---~$4,745 .63 from the deparlmenl '_ shurldrngconstruction, capital project fund
toreplace a ftve-ton air condtLrontng untt at the department 's office in
Middleport.
In other mailers, the board:
' Approved Ihe transfer of $200 within the Meigs County Park District;
• Approved paymg weekly brlls of $134,536.62 consisting of 124 entries.
Present were Hartenbaeh, Tackeu and Clerk of Commission Gloria Klees.
Not present was CommiSSIOn Prestdent Fred Hoffman.
L._

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Pomerov-y-lltlltldd~llpolls, Ott Point Pfenent, WV

nef

AIDS czar

'--.

Weather

Feds: people finding jobs,

•

res1gns;
activists
delighted
WASHINGTON (AP) - Her
clout and compeccnce under auad.
Kristine Gebbie is resigning as
President Clinton's AIDS coordi nator, sayin~ she faced "confiiclmg expcclallons of whal an AIDS
czar could do.''
Gebbie said Friday lhal her successa in one of lhe holiest spoiS in
nalimal heallh policy "musl have
che cools necessary" to win the
confidence of people suffering
from lhe deadly disease.
Many AIDS activists contended
she clearly had nol accomplished
thai goal and said they were
dclighlcd wilh her "mulllal agreement" wilh Clinton 10 leave lhc job
on Aug 2.
A registered nurse. lhe 50-yearold Gcbbie joined the adminisblllion in June 1993 afccr four years
as director of lhc Washinglrn slaiC
Heallh Dcpanment.
In her resignation lciiCr, Gebbie
cold Clinton:
"In assessing Lhc conuibutions I
have been privileged 10 make, lhe
issues being raised aboul how lhe
offiCe could be more effective, and
Lhc changes which are necessary 10
keep your agenda movin!\, I have
decided 10 leave this posiUOO al lhe
end of lhis fliSI year."
She said lhal in thai year she
had faced ''conflicting expectations of whal an 'AIDS czar' could
do and continued national divi siv~ss on issues cenllllllo ending
!his grcal epidemic ... ''
In accepting the resignation,
Clinlrn said more needs 10 be done
and "more will be dooc" 10 fighl
AIDS .
And he said Gebbie •s service as
lhc nation's fim AIDS policy coordinacor "gave lhis vilally imporlanl
bailie a lifl when one was despera~ely ncOOcd and long overdue."
One group of AIDS activists
immediaccly began campaigning
for Conneccicul Gov. Lowell
Weicker, who is nol seeking reeleclion chis year, 10 quickly
replace her.
In a slalement, lhe AIDS Coalition 10 Unleash Power, or ACT UP,
said lhal as a member oflhc Senate
from 1971 10 1988, Weictcr
proved himself a champion in lhe
fighl againsl AIDS in lhe years
after 1he faca,J disease was idenli-

fJCd.
"We waru a suong and aggn:ssivc lcadct wilh an AIDS commilmenl," said Wayne Turner, an
ACT UP spokesman. The group
had branded Gebbie "a pseudo
AIDS czar."

VLOR J
By ROBERT NA
r.
AP Labor Wrilrr
wASHJNGTON _ Unemploymenl held sleady al 6 percent in
June and 379,000 people found
jobs, lhe governmcnl said Friday.
Many new workers got k:mporary,
part-lime or low-paying posilions
rnlber lhan caRet"S.
••The ova-whelm in~ proportion
of lhe jobs lhac are being JIC!ded 10
the economy are low-wage~ in
the service seclor," said Mart
Roberts, an economise with the

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02

AFL-CIO.
The Clinton administration
hailed lhe rePort, which showed a
much greater increase in the
nation's nonfarm payrolls lhan the
quarler million or so most
economists had anlicipaled
"The greal American job
machine is bact and humming,"
Labor Seaccary Robclt Reich said.
The June unemploymenl rale
minored lhat for May, which was
lhe lowest since Noventber 1990.
President Clinton said some
employers were "swilching rrom
using more overtime 10 aclually
hirins more workers as lhcy bave

W.VA.

-Tri-County Briefs:__,
GALLIPOLIS - A local woman was taken into cusiOdy Friday
on a common pleas bench warrant for thcfl and records tampering.
The charges stem from a grand jury secret indictment June 30.
Gwendolyn F. Kirby, 32, 996 State Route 141, Gallipolis was
released after she posted bond, the Gallia County Sherifrs Department reponed.

=r.·

Authorities jail four
GALLIPOLIS - Local authoriti es jailed four men overnight
Friday.
Arrested by Gallia County sheriffs deputies were John B. Foley,
27, Cheshire, early Saturday morning for domestic violence and
Cecil D. Yost, Jr., 20, 3286 Morgan Lane, Bidwell, Friday nighl for
public inloxication and underage consumption of alcohol.
Jailed Friday 10 serve municipal court ordered commitments for
previous charges of dnving under the innuence were M~rk A. Cremeans, 35,60 Burdette Road, Gallipolis, and Keith E. Gillman, 21,
114 Aulumn Htll Road. Bidwell.

Man cited for open container
GALLIPOLIS - Robert E. Gordon, 37, 47 Yale School Road,
Gallipolis, was cited Friday night for possession of an open container of alcohol, the Gallipolis Police Department rcJX&gt;rted.

By The Associated Press

An end 10 lhe lhundemorms
and humid conditions is on lheway.
A cold front enlering norlhwest Ohio will bring a change 10 lhe
wealhcr piclure. A few clouds will
remain over lhc norlh and east seclions of the stale today. wilh mostly
sunny sties elsewhere.
Thernercuryshouldfalltohighs
ranging from lhe upper 70s 10 lhe
lower 80s.
The record high lcmperalure
for Sawrday is 105.secin 1936. The
record low is 49, SCI in 1963.
Sunrise today was a16: 12 a.m.
Sunsel will be a1 9:02 p.m.
Southern Obio
Today ... Parlly sunny. High 80
10 85.
Extrnd~ rorecast
Monday .. Fair. Lows middle
50s 10 lower 60s. Highs middle 70s
10 lower 80s.
Tuesday .. Fair. Lows upper 50s
co lower 60s. Highs in lhe 80s.
Wedocsday ...Aehaneeoflhunderstorms. Lows 60 10 65. Highs in
lhc 80s.
Across tbe natioa
Swellcring heal choked lhc
NorlheastagainSanmlaywhilepans
of lhc Soulh continued 10 struggle

Temperatures were expeciCd 10
climbnea- 100 from Virginia cosoulhem New York, wilh min expcclcd 10
end lhc oppressive humidily Iacer in
lhc day.
Sltoog thunderstorms also were
expcciCd lhrough the Upper Midwest,
across lhc lower Greai !..ales and
middle Mississippi Valley. Temperalures were lil::ely 10 be in lhe 70s, wilh
a few 60s near lhe Greal !..ales.
Low humidily, clearing skies and
highs in lhc 80s were expcclcd in lhe
northern Plains.
Flooding continued in lhc Soulheast Salwtlay, even though lhe rains
lhal produced il have left Thunderstormsweremostlikelyawayfromlhe
coost, wilhlhcstrrngestSIR:Idtingfrom
lhe Iowa Mississippi arid Tenrv:sscx
valleys to~ Texas. Higm were
flli"CC$1 in lhc.90s.
Lillie precipitation was expeciCd
in lhe Wes1, aside from a few showers
in lhe ~ Rockies. Highs were
lil::dy 10 lOp 90 and reach 110 in lhc
deserts. Ternpcralures along lhc coast
were expected 1o slay jn lhe 60s and
70s..
The bot spol in lhc nation Friday
was Dcalb Valley, Calif., wilh a high
of 121 degrees.

wilh

Continued troni page A 1
The library will be on lhe second
floor and will include - in addition lo
lhe stacks and shelving - study carrels, and access lo computers.
All furnishings in lhe building will
be new, lhe librarian said.
The hanl&gt;ack boot inventory will
include 7,000 volumes al lhe inilial
op:ning of tbe libJary. Paperbacks,
magazines, and periodicals will also
be available 10 library users. The
branch library wiU have ils own collection, wilh access lo books in the
county library, il was noled.
Powers said thai plans call for a
driveway around lhe building wilh
some parking spaces on lhe 101. as
well as some on-street parting.
Landscaping of lhe sile is also
planned as a partoflhe overall project,
she said
Decisions on what hours the library
will be operated and personnel have
not been made yel, according to Powers.
Patrons will use lhe same library
card a1 the main library or at either
branch. Since lhe county library syslem has been compulerized, books

and olher materials can be checked
oul only by pn:sc:nling lhe personalized card.
The Racine branch is lbc fourlh
major expansion in libJary services lo
MeigsCoUnlians in lhe past five years.
Thiswasmadepossiblcbylbechangc
in slale funding whicb funneled thousands of dollars inlo libraries.
In 1989 lhe Board purchased lhe
building on West Main Streel in
Pomeroy for lbe main library and
immediately weDI inlo a major renovation and expansion projecl.
The following year lhc MiddleJX&gt;rt
branch library was remodeled and lhc
collection of books increased.
Thai same year lhe county purchased iiS own bookmobile and began a program of service lo communilies on a frequent scheduled basis.
Prior to lhallime tbe bookmobile from
Ohio Valley Association of Libraries
(OVAL) came inlo Meigs County on
a periodic basis.
Establishmenl of a Racine branch
is another slep in lhe Meigs County
Library Board of Trustees' plan lo
increase library services hy making
lhem mor~: accessible, said Powers.

I•• CD SPECIAL I••
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WASHINGTON (AP)- ~
cutor Robert Fiske says il would be
inappropriale for him to 1es1ify
before Congress on his Whilewalet
investigation.
Fiske notified House Banking
CommiiiCC Olaiman Henry Gonzalez, 0-Texas, in a Idler released
Friday lhal "lhe major part of my
wort is Slill in progJCSS" and lhat
he should be allowed 10 complett
his entire investigation bei'1fC coming under cmgressional scrutiny.
"II would be inappropriale and
would compromise my abilily 10
function effcclivdy," FISke wrot.e.
Gonzalez said he was deeply
disappoinced and asked Fiske 10
reconsider his decision 10 forgo a
July 26 appearanc:e before lhc commiiiCC.
"To the exlenl your work is
cornplcled ... I see no reasons why
you should not be requiml 10 discuss your findings." Gmzalez said
in a leiter 10 FISke:
"We do not wanl 10 compromise your investigation, and lhal
can best be achieved by your )110viding clear guidance as lo the
proper scope of our hearings,''
Gonzalez added. Fiske offered 10
have his slaff meet privaldy 10 discuss the mauer, bul Gonzalez .
declined, saying such infarnialion .
should be presrnllld 10 lhe public.
Fiske's biggest last is just getling under way - a Liule Rock,
Ark.-based investigalion inlo

savings and loon assoc~ owr_led
by !heir business partners m Whltcwaler, an Ozarlr.s real eslale venture.
He cold Gonzalez he s1ill is
probing lhe Justice DeparUnenl' s
handling of a criminal referral by
federal regulaiiJIS in lhe Resolution
Trusl Corp. regarding Madison
Guaranty Savings and Loan, 1hc
Lillie Rock lhrifl owned by lhe
Whicewalel' investrnenl partner of
lhe OiniOIIS.
Among chose: "polenlially
involved" in 1ha1 aspecl of lhe
probe are Paula Casey. che U.S.
auorney in Liule Rock, and fOIIIIU
Associale Auomey General Webseer Hubbell, a one-lime law partner of Mrs. OiniOII, FISke said.
If Gonzalez called eilhcr as a

wbelhcr Presidenl and Mrs. ClinUIII
or lhe Clin10n gubcmaiOrial campaign bcncfiled from an ArJr.ansas

wimesses lhis monlh, "il would
poiCillially compromise chis investigation," Fiske said.
Fiske is f misbing the Washing1011 paase of his investigalim, emeluding !hal depuly While House
counsel Vincent Foster's suicide
was no I linked 10 Whilewaler.
Fiske also has said he woo't prosecure illlyone for more chan 20 contacts belween White House and ·
Treasury Ocparunenl offiCialS who
discussed a federal probe of the
Arkansas S&amp;.L.
A !bird phase of his W&amp;WngiOn
investigation - whaa White House
officials did wilh Whilewaler-relaled papers in Fosler's ·offiCe aftu
his dealh lasl July 20 - is 10 be
concluded Ibis monlh.

Driver cited in 2-vehicle accident
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va .. woman was cited
for failure to yield Friday morning following a two-vehicle accident
al the intersection of U.S. 35 and Burncue Road (Gallia County
Road 207), the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State Highway Patrol
rCJX&gt;rled
According to the accident report, Jennifer M. Tyree, 19, pulled
from Burnette onco 35 and collided with an eastbound Ohio Bell
Telephone Co. vehicle driven by Lawrence H. Theiss, 54, 162
Theiss Road. Vinton.
There were no injuries; damage was moderate 10 both vehicles.

GVFD responds to false alarm
GALLIPOLIS - Eight firelighters responded with one lruck
Saturday morning 10 a false al'!fm at the Gallipolis Developmental
Center's production facility, Jackson Pike. The call was lhe 192nd
of the year.
The department also responded 10 a car lire Friday afternoon, but
the call was canceled in route. The owner had apparently extinguished the fire on his own, the report said. The call was the 191sl
of the year.

CSP hit with 3-hour outage·
GALLIPOLIS - ThundersiOml-relaiCd damage, possibly by
lightoing, knocked oul power lo
568 Columbus SOulhcm Power Co. ,
cuslomCr!l for lhn:c: IKus SaumJay.
CSP manager ROll McDade said.
Damage to a lransformer on
Chestnul Screet in East Gallipolis
caused a cin:uiiiO lhe Addison subslalion on Georges CrecJr. Road 10
fail, prompting an 01Jta8C for customers in lhc vicinily ol lhe subslalion somh 10 Fast Avenue and Pine
S~teet, McDade explained.
Power went out at I: 10 p.m. just
prior 10 a lhllllllclslmn lhal moved
lhrough Galljpolis. McDade said

CSP crews localed lhe damage on
lhe transformer and got the circuit
opernble again shortly afler 4 p.m.
Repdirs 10 lhe lrliiiSfOIIIIU WIR 10
be done afler powa- was n:sllln:d,
McDade noted.

Road to close for slip repair
GALLIPOLIS - Lincoln Pike (County Road 40) in Green
Township will be closed 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday, Gallia County
J;:ngineer Joseph Leach announced. .
. .
..
.
The counly highway department w11l be dnvmg pilmg to repa1r a
.
slip immediaccly norlh of the Northup bridge.
Localuaffic will need co usc ocher county and townsh1p roads as
detours, Leach said.

Hospital news
VIITERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Mary
Jones, Pomeroy; Roger Theiss,
Racine; Kennelh Newland, Racine.
Friday discharges - John Lofcar, Cool Michael.

Area residents graduate academy
COLUMBUS -Two area residents were among lhe 55 members of lhe 1261h Ohio Stale Highway Patrol Academy graduating
class recognized in ceremonies held al the academy in Columbus
Friday.
Karen D. Smith of Pomeroy has been assigned to the Lebanon
Post and Chad J. Neal or Gallipolis. who was honored for cop per·
formance in physical filness, has been assigned 10 lhe Walbridge
Post
The ceremony signifies lhe successful completion of 22 weeks of
inlensive law enforcement !raining chat began Feb. 7, a patrol.
spokesman said. The newly-commissioned ltoopers begin active
duly Monday at33 of lhe paltol's_57 posts._
The class brings lhe lOcal numt\er of Oh1o ltoopers 10 1,446.

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Communi!)' reinvt'Stment
is no illusion...

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Housing commission
to meet

The money dud you spend in your community
reappears again and again-in jobs, in the schoot.
sy!&gt;1enl, in eronomic development, in new homes.
To help you work the 1113gic, Peoples Bank olfers you
a package of no-fee accounls when you support local
business. It's called Money Magic, an essenlial threein-one account that includes Otecking, Visa and
Peoples line of Credit spend $250 witb local mercbants over tbe ne%1 four months, andfees
are woiuedfor one year. spend $5(J(J
andfees are waivetJfor two )'f!III'S. Just
have the participating ll}eJT.bant wlidate
your Money Magic ain1.
When you open a Money Magic
account before Seplember 30, 1994,
Peoples Bank will reiJMst a portion of
the opening balance in United Way.
Between us,,flle ·a UJOrll mag;c.

VINTON - The Gallia County Fair Housing Commission will
mcel 7 p.m. Tuesday at the Vinton Village Town Hall, Clay Street.
The meeting is open 10 lhe public.

•

TP-C schedules water shutoff

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17MONTH

SHIRTS oR BLOUSES

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CENTERVILLE - An evicted
lemnt may have sought revenge on
his former landlord early Saturday
by selling lire 10 the rental properly, the Gallia County Shenff's
Department reponed.
According 10 I he report, Jim
Berry, Stale Route 141, Cadmus,
who owns a house !railer on Cherry
Ridge Road, told deputies the tenant threatened to burn down the
property when he was evicted
recently.
Two witnesses reportedly saw
the suspect pull into the residence's
driveway Saturday and chen drive
away as flames began to burn
across the fronl of the trailer.
Marlin Rose, assistant chief of
the Centerville Volunteer Fire
Department, said il appeared someone used fuel to sec the outside or

Minimum deposit S 2,500'.00. This CD is automalically renewable.
Penally for early withdrawal. This offer expires 7/15/94.

OFFER GOOD THRU SUNDAY, JULY 31, 1994

Ohio Valley Banis..'. .

the trailer on fire. Spilled fuel was
found on the ground ncar lhe trail er, the sheriff's department reporteel.
Sltcnff James D. Taylor said
deputies arc searching for the subject and plan 10 bring h1m in for
questioning. The suspect had not
been located as of press time.
Rose said fire damage, estimated at S1,500, was contained 10 the
front of the trailer. The stale fire
marshal was called in 10 investigate
the incident.
Centerville's and Rio Grande's
VFDs responded wilh a IOtal of 16
firefighters and live !rucks. Mosl of
the lire had been extinguished with
a garden hose before th1Hruck.s
arrived, Rose said. The remaining
names were put oul with I ~0 gallons of water.

Area firm markets new mulch
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va.
(AP) - A young company wants
gardeners 10 know thai when lhe
chips are down,lhe besl ones tome
from West Virginia hardwoods.
"Our mulch is dark and rich and
all organic," said Greg McLane,
sales manager of West Virginia
Mulch. "Unlike lhe Cypress mulch.
it biodegrades illld enriches lhe soil.
It's more !han decorative ground
cover."
Pumam Coumy brothers Butch
and Denny Thompson founded
West Virginia Mulch three years
ago. lnccrnalional Industries. the
parent company of Gilberl Lumber.
bought il some nine months ago
and lhe Thompsons manage il.
The company employs 30 people during lhe peat gardening season. For the firsl lime lhis year, it.
will run a production line during
the off-season so il can have a
stockpilc.on hand for next year's
planlers .
The Mason County firm expects

10 sell $1.2 million in mulch by the
end of July. the end of lhe planting
scru;on. It hopes 10 do more lhan $2
million in business next year,
Mclane said.
Butch Thompson said, "When
you have a business in West Virginia and thai involves natural
resources, the paltem has been for
an out-of-st.ale company to come in
and lake the resources and the
money back 10 the state it came
from.
·
"We have a product that's made
in Wesl Virginia by Wcsl Virginians that we can lake back to Ohio
and bring Ohio dollars back to
West Virginia," Thompson said .
The company takes bark from
lnlcrnacional Industries sawmills
and trucks it 10 a fomcr municions
plilllt about six miles north of Point
Pleasant The bark is chipped and
left in huge piles for seven 10 10
months 10 allow il to decompose
into a soil-nurturing slate.

OPHTHALMOLOGY
Is Now Available,

At
Holzer Clinic of
West Virginia
in Point Pleasant

Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are prinled as the
appear on official reports. All newsworthy actions will be published without exception.
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Deputies seek, suspect
in alleged trailer arson

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FIRE SCENE- Yellow tape bll){kS off a lire-scorched house
trailer on Cherry Ridge Road which i.s believed lo have been set on
lire early Saturday morning by a disgrunlled lenanl. (Times-Sen tinel photo by Kevin Pinson)

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains-Chesler Wa1er Dislricl will be shutting lhe water off on Township Road 67 (Sand
Ridge) Tuesday so lhal a ponion of lhe main line can be relocated.
The waiCr will be shut off around 9 a.m. and plans call for tl to
be back on by 5 p.m .. Donald C. Poole. general manager, said.
After lhe water service is restored, a boil order will be in effect
until samples can be drawn and ccsiCd. The results of thai lest will
be known al noon Thursday, Pool said.
He added lhal if it rains Tuesday, lhen lhe work will be postponed uncilche following day.

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Minor injury reported in accident
GALLIPOLIS - A Mason County, W.Va., woman received
minor injuries in a two-vehicle accident Thursday afternoon on the
westbound U.S. 35 exit ramp, the Gallia -Mcigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
·
Opal I. Martin, 43, Gallipolis Ferry, was not treated for her
injuries. She was a passenger tn a p1ckup truck dnven by Wayne W.
Martin, SO. Gallipolis Ferry.
According to the accident report, Mr. Marlin had stopped to
make a tum onto State Route 7 when a car driven by Agnes B.
Beard, 66, Soulhside, W.Va., was unable 10 slop in lime and slruck
the rear of his truck.
Damage was slight 10 bolh vehicles; Beard was cited for failure
10 maintain an assured clear dis~&lt;~ncc.

Howard Greene, M.D•

OPHTHALMOLOGY (of'thal-mol'o-je): The sum of
knowledge concerning the eye and its diseases.
Holzer Clinic of West Virginia now ofters
OPHT"ALMOLOGY services from 9:00 a.m. 11 :30 a.m. on Tuesdays and from 1:30 p.m. to
4:00 p.m. on Fridays. To schedule an appointment
with Dr. Greene, call Holzer Clinic of
West Virginia at 675-4498.
HOLZER CLINIC OF
WEST VIRGINIA
260S Jo(kson Avenue
Point Pleasant, WV

675-4498
·'

Sunday Times-Sentinel I A3

Rio Grande details
job appointments

Woman detained for indictment

hesilanl 10 add full-lime woden
becaUse they w~R "Slill COio::Giitd
·
Ovtl' lhe beallh care ISSUC and how
lhal's going 10 add costs."
"Job creation is~ news, bu1
the qualily is dcclinmg." lhc AFLCJO's Roberts said
Wall Street iniliaDy reacled
alively 10 lhe reporl . An ear y
slump in lhc bond martel URSieUied
s1oct investors, bul slocts Iacer
recovered.
Investors WOIT)' lhat an economy growing 100 rapidly drives up
prices and pushes down lhe value
of !heir holdings. One bit of cabning news was a decrease in avaage
hourly earnings from $1 I .09 in
May to $11.08 in June. The
decline, though slight, was an indicalion thai wage inflation remains
in check.
"We're nol seeing any inflacionary push," Reich said in an
interview wilh The Associaled
Press.
~
Wooies aboul inflatim
ed lhll'~40ial Rc:serve
1se
inlereSI rniCS four umes thi
a
101a1 of 1.25 pen:cnlage
IS.
.
•

Whitewater prosecutor de~llnes
Cold front bringing
relief from heat, storms appearance before commtttee

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

~

pealer confidence thai we're going
10 have 1 sustained ~very."
·~
The average work weet was
down from 421 hours 10 42 hours.
Overtime was unchanged al 4.6
boors.
Factories hired 34,00! wortm
while eonscruction payrolls were up
a modest 16,000.
Most of lhc overall gains came
in lowet-paying service seccor jobs
and in 1emporary and part-11me
positions. The Labol Departmenl
said 186,000 new hires were in scrvices and 46,000 of those w~
lemJX&gt;f3fY. Retailers added I ,\JU\1
jobs while restauranls hired 69,00!
new worlt:ers.
More chan 4.7 million Ameri cans who wanlcd full-time work
found only part· lime positions.
"There conliniiCS 10 be a lot of
slack in lhe jobs martel," Reich
said. He insislcd lhe employmenl
pictwe is suong.
Part-time jobs "are slill jobs
and t~ey will slill generate
income," said Marlin Regalia,
chief economist ror lhe U.S. Chamber of Cmunerce.
He said some employers are

Regional

July 10, 1994

burofthelow-wagetype

Racine library branch
(USPS ns.IMJ

July 10, 1994

RIO GRANDE - New job
appointments for existing staff al
the University of Rio Grande and
Rio Grande Community College
have been announced by Barry M.
Dorsey, Ed.D., president.
"We are a developing institution
with continually changing needs,"
Dorsey said Friday . "We musl
realign staff ass1gnmen1s to mcel
challenges and to ensure that we
have the most effective and efficient operation possible 10 serve
students and the community."
The following staff and faculty
arc assuming new responsibilities:
• Larry Specs, Ph.D., professor
of educauon, has accepted administrative assignment as executive
assistant to the president for instilu·
tional advancement.
Specs has 25 years of teaching
experience at Rio Grande. In his
new position, he will have responsibility for development and alumni
activities.
"I am very enthusiasti c about
helping Rio Grande develop finan cially and working wnh alumni tn
reaching common goals for the
tnstilution," Specs said.
• Krishna Kool, Ph.D., who has
served as acting dean of lhe Emerson E. Evans College of Busmess
Management for the pasl year,
became dean on J uIy I.
"I have seen Rio Grande change
and develop over the past 24 years
thai I have been on the business
faculty, and look forward to leading the college of business toward
major accreditation in the future,"
(\ool said.
Kool developed the curriculum
fur accounting. business management and economics majors during
the 1970s. Marketing and financial
disciplines were also defined under
Kool. He will continue 10 leach
business courses in concert wilh his
responstbiliues as dean.
• Beverly Crabcrce. director of

Units log 5 calls
POMEROY - Five calls were
answered hy units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Friday and early Saturday.
At I :23 p.m. the MiddleJX&gt;rl unil
went 10 State Roule 143 for Freda
Carsey who was transported 10 lhe
Holzer Medical Center; al 3:09
p.m. the Racine squad transporced
Roger Theiss from his Vine Street
residence to Velerans Memorial
Hospital; al 5:54 p.m. the Syracuse
squad went to Pine Grove Road for
Kenneth Newland who was taken
to Veterans; and al II :03 p.m. the
Racine unil look Carman Thompson from State Route 338 to the
Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:46 a.m. Saturday, Racine
squad responded to a call on Page
Street and ltansporlcd Edward Preston 10 Pleasant Valley Hospital.

d~vclopmcnc and planned giving,
w1ll contmue her current responsi bilities in institutional advancemenc
and add special projects in her new
role as special asslsi&lt;lntlo the president
A Jackson residem, Crabltee has
10 years of experience in the Rio
Grande developmenc office. Her
new job responsibilities include,
but are not limited to, "research,
rcporls and special events," she
sa1d.
. ~ Robert Haner has new responSiblltlies as duector of fmmdalion
relations, in addition 10 his currem
assignment as grantswriler.
• Personnel speciahsl Phyllis
Mason is now the director of
human resources for all Riu Grande
employees.
• Dawn Blair, formerly director
of placement. accepled the job Iille
change of director of career services, effective July I.
"It's a more comprehensive way
to presem services we offer to students," Blair said. "The office now
has a package of services to teach a
variety of skills lhal prepare graduaunll students m adjust m a changmg JOb market"

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Com.mentary

July 10, 1994

Sunday Times-Sentine1/A4

~,.q~~~h~'~' '!.~~ ~~.~. E,,~~N~,~~' ~~~::J~~~.:.;~~··r;:

A Divis ion of

9MULTIMEDIA, INC.
K15lhl n l :\n ., (;allipoUs, O hio
( t&gt;IJ \ JJ6-lJJl

i 11 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohlo
(614) 992-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Pul&gt;llsher

HOIIART Wll $ 0N JR .
EXt'l'Ut iove Editor

MARGA R ET LEHEW
Controller

A MEMBE R of The Assoc iated Press, Inland Da ll y Press
Assonall l'll an d the Ame rican News pape r Publishers Assoc iati on
LE'I1'E RS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than
300 word s long AU len ers are sut'lject 10 editing and m ust be s1gned wi th

nam e . adJress and te lepho ne nu mb er. No un s igned letters wi ll be
pu hlasbed. Letters shou ld be 1n good taste, add ress in g 1ss ues, not
persona lities .

"

Clinton troubles
threaten pledge
on reform action
fly WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
wASHINGTON - With campaign finance bills stalled a! an old
impasse. congressional reform still to be negotiated. and his own legal
defense fund open for donors. President Clinton hasn't dented the poltucal
money culture he vows to end.
.
. .
He says he's Lrying, very hard , to change the system . Unul then, t1 IS
workins to Democratic advantage because of Jhe fund -ratsmg power of
the Whne House.
.
Whether that pull will extend 10 the legal defense fund, the ftrsl ever
created by a president in office, won ' t be clear for monihs. For Chnton. Il
was the best among no-win options for handlmg lawyers btlls likely 10
exceed what he's got.
.
.
.
Bul it is no assello the image of the president wh o satd he d reform the
way money figures in campaigns and mnuences the workmgs of Washing!On. Now he needs money. perso~ally as well as poltucally, and the
establishment is the only place to gel tl
.
The defense fund, with a $1,000 limit on donations. IS 10 defray the
cost of lawyers in the Whitewater and. sexual harassmem cases facmg
Clinton. 11 is not a popular move; accordms to a CNN-USA Today (lOll. 80
percent of Americans think it inappropnatc, and 92 percent sa1d they
wouldn ' l give. More than half sa1d the fund should not accept donauons
from lobbyists.
I! will , though . The awkwardness showed when Clinton' s people
explained the rules, saying !hal congressional legal defense funds also
allow donations by lobbyists. A Senat.e bill would end .the pracuce. The
Clinton people also said it would be difficult lo dct.ermme which donors
were lobbyists and which were not.
There was no such uncertainty when Clinton was campaigning for
reform a year or so ago, and casting lobbyists as the villains. "There are
80,000 lobbyists in Washington making sure I can'! Jake care of your
interests," he Jold a crowd at a Cleveland shopPing mall. .
His 1993 budget and tax bill wiped out busmess deducuons for lobbying expenses. He wanted reforms to forbid fund -raising by or from lobbyists for members of CongreSs wnlun a year of any effort to mfluence
them .
.
The House and the Senat.e have passed campaign finance reform btUs,
but !hey have not setlled their longstanding dispu!C over political action
commiuees. The Senate voted 10 ban PAC donations in congressional
carn~igns . The House wants to keep them, with a $5,000 ceiling, for its
own campaigns.
Time is running short for a compromise. Unless they can agree, the
broader reform bill, 10 set spending reslrainls and enforce them with
.·
.
incentives or punilive taxes, won '1 pass.
Another bill, to ligh!Cn rules on lobbying diselosure and ban gifts to
members of Congress - the Senate voled a lOla! ban, the House a milder
one- also awaits compromise on a final version.
Meanwhile, Clinton has been raising funds for Democrats the old-fashioned way. at big-ticket dinners and receptions, ":here presidents dra~
crowds and conlributions, often from lobbyists. Clmton sa1d he wants tl
all limited, for both parties. "But I don 't believe in unilateral disarmamen~" he said on the way to a St. Louis fund-raiser on June 24.
Rep. Richard A. Gephardt. that nigh!' s beneficiary. said Clinton had
done more !han any president in history for campaign reform. Gephardl
said Congress is a few weeks away "from pulling on h1s desk both bills
!hat he's asked for · · to limit campaign spending and resblctlobbymg.
Four nights lat~r. Clinton spoke at a $5,000-Hicket dinneno raise
carn~ign funds for two Democratic sena10rs. One of them, Sen. J1m Sasser of Tennessee, said it had been observed thai ··money IS the root of all
evil. and we all need roots.··
When Clinton's term carne, he agreed about roots. "Everybody' s got
10 have them," he said.
For all the reform proposals, !hal's slill the bottom line at campaign
time.
"On strccts where slat.esmen once strolled, a never-ending stream of
money now changes hands - lying the hands of those elected to lead."
Clinton said in his 1992 campaign book.
He said he wanted to bring down campaign costs, encourage real com petition and level the political playing field.
II hasn't happened yet
.
(Walter R. Mears, vice president and columnist lor The Associated
Press,otlas reported on Washington and national politics lor more
than 3(1 years.)

U.S. Senate. Sen. John H. Glenn
200 N High St Room 600 ·
Senate Office Bldg.
Colu,;bus. Oh i·~ 43215
Washington. D.C. 20510
(614) 469-6697
(202) 224·3121
U.S. Senate. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum
1240 E. Ninth SJ.
Senate Office Bldg.
Cleveland Ohio 44199
Washtngton, D.C. 20510
(216) 522:7272
(202) 224-3121
u.s. Houae. 6th Dlatrlct ·Rep. Ted Strickland
P.O. Bo~580
House Office Bldg.
Lucasville. Ohio 45648
Washington, D.C. 20515
(800) 777-1833
(202) 225·5705

Today in hi.story

By }be Assodated PreSs
Today is Sunday, July 10, the 19lsl day of 1994. There are 174 days
left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 10, 1940, during World War II, the 114-day Batlle of Britain
began as Nazi forces began atJacking southern England by air. By late
October. Brilllin managed to repel the Luftwaffe, which suffered ~

.

,

Thought for Today: ''One can pay back the loan of gold, but one dies
forever in dcbtiO those who are kind." - Malayan proverb.

'

r7oUR wavcf LiFe. iS P:-lSSiNG.
Y BVT oUR t-lfe.HoRY WiL~ ~i'le

should have their VISion co~J ·ac!obsc ured by the lops of th J
els.
h
No one should be able 10 pull e
ribbons through th e liul e me ial
loops 10 fas!Cn a Jackel until he or
she has uied it the wrong way three
.
A
one adult
~r mm~ lime~. ~ 1ea51
ll · 'O h 10
031 rt .e r .s .~u 1 ;;:; ~ the ·~kbl~e.l WI!!' ~\ f ~d 1 I'0 IIJ'us!Jhang
el own.
a ou • ·
..
on lo one of these cushions. f ,
• Th ere mu st be a great uss
. .
d out of the
made of getung m an ·
boatlfthere, Is a ladder, tl musl no1
han.g qUite n~hl so !hal the :0:~~
trying 10 climb Into the
li s
thrown und er the boat, and ~i lh
the boat farther toward htm
each step he Jakes.
If ~ere IS no ~~~dcr, there m~~;
be a lillie sJep on th e mo

~

~
\h:

1

/!/ ._

~

1

\

\

·- /"

/

&amp;JSfe ;N · q~ .f'.i&lt;&gt;a
!Zck'J !V)p.j , """"''

for regional campus boar.ds
COL UM BUS (AP) - Ohi o
Sta te Uni ve rsity tru stees have
appoint.ed the II members of a new
board for the Man sfi eld regional
cam pu s and created similar boards
for the Lima and Marion brancr.es.
Th e Man sfi eld and Ne wark
boards were approved June 3. The
Ohio Slate board of lruslces on Fri day fill ed !he scats for the Mansfield commillcc.
The Mansfi eld board replaces
members of the Ohio State University-Manslicld Citizen s Co uncil.
Tru stees will advi se the dean
and direc tor on local educational
needs and develop support for the
campus within the community.
·' I am pleased thai Mansfield is
the first regional campus in Ohio to
ha ve its own board of lrustecs,"
sa id John Riedl, dean and direc10r.
" The fact that such eminent community leaders arc willing 10 give
. their time and energy to this cam pu s is a very goo d sign for the
· future of higher education in this
region ."
Each of the 11 -member boards

~:~~~~~~i~f~·~:t~e~no~

) ))) \

ifC:) ./

, ,It

FoReVeR--5o LoNG 3S Ttfe GR:JSS
GRoWS , THe. RiVeRs FL.oVJ aND
""T"U o~
o ...,.-:
1'" S -r.:
tr\~f\C 2 t\ B te.3fV l' J-a C06,

le in the baclc of the boat must
: gh the person in the wat.er.
Th "little st.ep" must consti e
.
tu !C no more than a barely pen:eptible teal on the motor, and the person in the water should Oat I one
fOOl vainly trying to locale the " liltic slep" with his toes. He should
bang his knee on the motor repeatcdly while Jhe people m !he boat
cont inue to incant like zombies
f om Nig ht or the Living Dead to
r
,
.•
••Ju s! pul your foot on the lmle
step just put your fool on the little
· ..
.
ste~. Atleasl one person in !he boat
mu st be whining at all times
Boaters may Jake turns if desired. )
~fter all it's ho~ !he motor' s cut.
• and in man cases !h e
~fte~u~ve spent atl~sl one day
sleeping on the ground, being nib-

1

the blink and eating with thin plas-

tic ~~;s_;,hiner(s) may choose from

a variety of topics. If the whiner is
skiing . he may whmc !hat the boat
driverjerkedhim , turnedthe comer
too fast or made him fall.
If the whiner is riding, he may
complain that it's too hot, lo o
humid or too cloudy; that the buyer
of the boat got a bum deal on the
(a.) motor. (b.) boat, (c.) skis; that
the boa! driver is making him sick
by knoc k.ing him over the waves;
or that the buyer of the beer bought
the wrong kind and besides, now
the stuff s hot. What kind of lousy
_........,.,. is this, anyway?
I know all this, why do I
continu~o let my neighbors drag
"'""nv1 10 The Lake every
Well. suffice it to say that
usl as good fences make good
neighbors, so docs being a good
sport.
(Sarah Overstreet is a colum •
nisi ror Newspaper Enterprise
Association.)

apprOX I111a lcly 200-250 people
assembled to watch these con!Csls.
Some of the promoters and workers
'" the Rac me contest were Aaron

Fred

w. erow

Young, Joy Young, Dale Hart,
Kathryn Hart, Jim Carnahan , Aaron
Wolfe, Ivan Powell. Charlie Boso,
Dan Smith, Dalla!&gt; Jarrell, Montana
Jarrell, Frank Cleland and Carolyn
Powell.
One of the funni es t moments
occurred when a frog named O.J.
was on the pad. His jockey, Chris
Wolfe , tried hard to get 0.1 . to
jump, bul O.J. would not budge.
The jockey yelled "Jump, Jump to
Freedom. 0.1.," "Freedom , OJ ."
Bui O.J . decided to be stubborn and
would not move within the 30 seconds lime limit. Chris Wolfe also
entered three other frogs, "The
Juice", "Mr. Innocent" and
"Schapiro." Yes , even the frogs
and their jockeys are interested in
thebigcaseinL.A.
The winners of the Senior Division were J.F . Young jockeying
"Art Hill," 12 '8"; Dallas Jarrell.
"Leaping Leonard," II '7"; and
Chri s Wolfe with "Powell and
Smith," I I' 3".
The winners of the Junior Division were Curtis Lidel, "Freddie
Frog" 12'10"; Montana Jarrell,
"Flyaway Flossie," 12'3" and
Aaron Olinger, "Soon to be number
one," 12'1".
Other participants were
Jonathan Reese , Robert Reiber,
Kathryn Hart, Keith Friend, Dan
Smith, Damon Fisher, Jay Proffit~
Terry Wolfe, Rich Wasley. Todd
Cummins, Macy Reese, Shannon
Louden, Aaron Olinger, Kati Cwnmins, Curtis Crouch, Brad Crouch,
Briuany Morarity. Fravanna
Moore, Alan Moore , Hannah
Wolfe, Jordan Lidel, Adam Johnson, Shelly Cummins, Terry Smith,
Christopher Warden, Derek Warden, Craig Jones, Stacy Mills,
Mark Allen , Jared Mills, Jacob
Adkins, Darcy Winebrenner, Jessi-

ca Nance, David Nance. Jonathan
Evans, Lacey Young, Shyla Jarrell,
Casey Winebrenner, Ryan Stoban
and SJaCy Lyons.
To deviate somewhat and going
back in the pas!, I should like 10
poml out a few thmgs that happened in the first frog Jump which
occurred on Saturday, June II,
1966. The original frog jump in
Pomeroy was the result of a vacancy in the program of the Pomer~y
Chamber of Commerce for !he Btg
Bend Regaua. The first Regaua
was held in 1965. Dale Warner had
read aboul the national frog jump
in California and he and !he writer
decided 10 schedule a frog jump in
Pomeroy. This was on the sp~r of
the moment and wli had no Idea
how to plan or prepare for this contest The Regalia officials decided
to hold !he frog jumping event on
the upper parking lot. Bleachers
and a large tent were installed .
Though frogs were few at this first
jump, laughs were not.
One of the more colorful
entrants was a frog named
"Shenang Springer," owned by
Don Guinther and jockeyed by
Kearns Roush . Escorted to the
jump in an old hearse. "Shenang
Springer" seemed a tough competitor. But, when faced with the jump,
he just sat. It seemed the excitemenl had been too much for it and
"Sh~nang Springer" was 100 weak
to jump.
Winners of the Senior Division
frog jump for 1966 were: I st,
"Holier Hopper" jumping 10' 11/2", jocker,ed by Roy Holler; 2nd,
"Herman , ' jumping 7' 2·1/2",
jockeyed by Janet Nobel Worthington; and 3rd. "Tail Twister," jumping 6'7" jockeyed by Karl Krautter.
The winners of the Junior Division
were: 1st Connie Warner , 2nd,
Many Vaughn and 3rd, Tommy
Holter.
In comparing !he two events, 1
would like to slllte that the Racine
group was better organized, had
morcfrogs jwnping and had a Iarger crowd !han did the first frog

jump m 1966. Thts should g1ve our
friends from Racine hope that the
frog jump can be continued. Yours
truly will help aU he can 10 make 11
succeed. Before you can be sue cessful, a group of enthusiasts has
to be orgamzed to promote this
contest on an annual haSIS . You
have to have a dedicated group of
young people who will work and
plan the event well in advance. The
original frog jump was made iniO a
super allractwn because of lh.e
efforts of Dale Warner, Gu.y
Guinther. Roy Holler, Roben
Wingell, Harold Blackston , Jim
Roush, Earl Ingles, Vilma Pikkoja,
James Clatworthy, Ted Reed, KC(mil Walton. Thereon Johnson .
L1ghtnmg Boyd, Jeanne Morgan,
Roger Morgan, Bill Young, David '
Jenkins, Jim Carnahan, Dan Smith,
and many, many others.
For the ftrst number of years the
frogjumpwasmanagedbyagroup
of devoted frog lovers. including
myself. Time finally caught up
with this group and in 1977 or
1978. the Jaycees. headed by Bill
Young, kept the event going umll
the last event occurred in June.
1982. The writer was connected
with both groups.
Thanks 10 RACO and to Joy and
Aaron Young and Kathryn Hart for
inviting me 10 what I hope will be
an annual event. This gave me the
inspiration to consider writing a
book on the past frog jumping cont.ests. Knee Deep, Knee Deep, Knee
Deep which is the official pass-.
word for !he Ohio Society for the
Promotion of Bullfrogs, Inc .. a live
Ohio Corporation.
In God we trust
Carry on, Fred W. Crow
• (EDITOR'S NOTE -Longhme atlorney Fred W. Crow Is
the contributor of a weekly col·
u.mn lor The Sunday Times-Sen·
hnel. Readers wishing to
applaud, criticize or comment on
any subject, except religion
politics, are encouraged to wri(e
to Mr. Crow, in care
this
newspaper.)
·

or

or

My friend in Harlem, USA, us all, but it seem like you be be like one a David's psalms. They
Booker Malcolm Du Bois, is a man Iovin' them !he mosl what dig you be hating him with a perfect hatred.
of very lillie education, but infinite and your son. I guess only you,
And I don't be understand in'
wisdom. He prays a lot. But after
that Lord. Your son told us to love
he read Alice Walker's The Color
our enemies . "Bless them that
Chuck Stone
Purple. he was inspired to record
curse, do good to them that hate
his prayers. He won' t let anybody Lord, be know in · 1f that be Presi- you and pray for them what
Tead them. Whenever I visit him, dent Clinton, his frins, them con· despitefuUy use you and persecute
however. I sneak a look and surrep· servatives who talk 'bout him in you.''
titiously jot them down ....
the mostt.erriblest way or they frins
Them conservative folks, spc·
Yo, Lord!
who go 10 church every Sunday shally Mr. Rush Limbaugh, am't
It's me, Booker, your main man. and say they love you, but hate about Iovin' no enemies. He ain't
Booker for Booker T. Washington, anybody else who be disagreein ' even prayin' for hisself, and he l;c
Malcolm for Malcolm X, and Du with !hem.
hatin • more people than can fill up
Bois for W.E.B. Du Bois. I lcnow
I ain 'I much into politics, so I all the baseball Sllldiums in Ameriyou got lotsa main men and wim· don't be knowin' what they mean ka
mim. But it be like that hip hymn by folks on Ihe religious right. Oh,
Mr. Limbaugh say on his radio
we sing in church, "When others !hey be nasty, Lord. Ooh-wee, lhey show that he be bigger than Jesus
you are callin,' please don ' t pass nasty. They don't like people who cuz he say he be the truth. Jesus
me by."
don 'l vote like they do. They don't said he be the truth - and Ihe life
I be lhinkin' 'bout you, Lord, like colored people cuz they
'cuz things be geuin' serious down churches be all white. They don't and the way. I believe Jesus.
I like President Clinton, Lord.
here . Everybody be sayin' they like poor people. They don't like
But
he make it so hard. He be as
pray to you. Everybody be sayin' them folks who be actin' funny
mean
to them as they be to him and
that you be on they side. I wonder with each other, and they don't like
jes'
like the devil - always
be
how you can be on everybody's wimmin wbo gil one a them operaserip!_ure,s
for ~ pwpose.
quotin'
side at the same time. Somebody tions so !hey won't be havin · no
He
compare
his
enemies to the
be lyin'.
babies they cain 't support
moneychangers
in
the
temple and
I know you big enough to love
As for Mr. Clinton, Lord, !hey
President Clinton be ·wrong, Lord.

,,

Jes becuz folks talk 'bout you and
mistreat you don 'I mean they be
evil people. Now. I lhinlt: they evil
people, Lord, but that make me
wrong, too.
I heard about a book what came
out last year written by a brother
about !hem religious right folks. He
be a law professor. Stephen Carter,
and he say if them refiJiOUs right
folks is wrong for Amenca, it must
he beeai!-SC Ihey message be wrong
on the Issues , not because they
message be religious.
President Clinton read that
book, Lord, and he don't wmerstan
it. That be makin • everything all
even cuz his enemies liCk like they
don't be really unnerslandin' the
Bi~le either. When Ihey call Mr.
Chnton unChristian and tell terrible
lies 'bout him 1 they done forgot
what they be utughl in Sunday
school.
;
And, Lord, I'm still goin' be
prayin' for them -and my pres.i·
dent, too, cuz I dig him.
(Chuck Stooe Is a columolst
lor Newspaper Eoterprlse .)

in Lima and Marion will consist of
nine area res idents. a nonvo ting
student enrolled al the local campus and one university Jruslee.
The Lima campus serves a 14counly reg ion in west central Ohio.
includin g All en, Auglaize. Defi ·
ance, Hancoc k, Hard in, He nr y,
Logan, Mercer, Paulding, Putnam,
Shelby, Van We rt. William s and
WyandoJ counties.
Th e Ma ri o n branc h serves
Crawford , De laware, Hardin. Marion. Morrow. Union and Wyandol
counties.
In other acti on Jaken Fri day. !he
Ohi o Sta le boa rd on tru stees
approved:
• Purchasing fi ve ac res for $4.26
million . The uni versit y, whic h is
leasing a bui lding on the property,
expects the purchao;c to save about
$880,000 over the remammg lime
of the lease.
• Changing the name of !he College of Agricuhure to the Coll ege
of Food. Agriculture and Environ mental Sciences, effective immedi ately . Officials said the new name

Ohio News in Brief:

Policy broadens arrest powers

CLEVELAND - Police officers will have broader powers lo
make domestic violence arrests under a new policy in Cuyahoga
County.
Mediation no longer will be used to resolve s~c h cases of alleged
domestic abuse. Municipal Judge Ronald B. Adrine srud Fnday.
Under the polic,Y. an officer on a domestiC violence call must
make an arrest if the officer witnesses abuse or the v1cum complet.es
a slalemenl alleging abuse, even if the victim does not sign a complaim.
.h
· d
The officer has the leeway to make an arrest wit out a s1gne
statement if interviews provide reasonable grounds to beheve such
abuse has occurred.

Janitor pleads in strangling case

The reviv~l of the frog-jumping contest
About a week prior Jo July 4th f
rece ived a ca ll from Joy Young
requesting my appe arance at the
frog Jump al The Star M1ll Park m
Racine Ohio, on the 4th of July. I
was asked 10 present the winners ~f
the frog jumpmg cont.eslS with thm
award s. My respon se was thai I
would like to do it, but did not
know if I was physically able to be
there. 1 must say thai I was honored
10 be asked 10 give these awards 10
the winners. A night or two before
the ev en!. Aaron Young, Youth
Paslor of the First Baptist Church
of Racine, called and again invited
me to att.end. I replied that I would
if I could, but I was not certain
aboul my appearance there . I wanted to attend in the worst way bul
had been having dizzy spells which
interfered with my walking. AI 4
p.m. on July 4th, I fell able to go,
so my son drove me.
Rupe,l was indeed surprised to
see the number of people present. I
must have looked like a man from
Mars with my oxygen tank and
plastic tubing attached to my nose.
Also I was carrying a cane. All of
this made me look a little ancient
and weird. Be as it may. I 'was
extremely thrilled when the jump
slalted. Rick emcred a frog ~amed
Big Fred for me to jump. Th1s frog
leaped seven feet and ten inches.
The jockey was Mark Allen, who
tried valianllyw. have a winner for
us. Had not B1g Fred turned courses on the second leap, we would
have had a winner.
As always, some of the frogs
would leap well and others were
jUSllOO ured 10 move off the pad.
The k1d~ JOCkeymg the frogs and
thetr lrruners were ranng to go. It
took. an hour and o~e half for both
the JUniOrs and .semor events 10 be
completed. Whtle waJChtng •. a nosJalg1c feehng look place 1~sule me.
Rupe. one whtch I haven t expenenecd In many m_oons. Frankly
speakmg, I was· thnlled lo d~th to
present the :-vmners of both Jumps
with cash pnzes and nb~ns.
There were 55 partiCipants and

Ohio/W.Va.

(

OSU trustees name members

y

Booker prays for Clinton and foes

President Clinton
1600 Pennsylvania Ave.
Washington, D.C. 20500
(202) 456· 1111

losses.

so uri . Land of the Ma n-Made in fant bapltsm Ill signtflcance lO
Lakes Covering U What Used to the boat owners . A few s wimsuit· ,
Be Farms From l~e age of II it clad. thong-fooled boaJ-ndcrs must
:
·
·
became tm po ss1ble for me to
Sarah Overstreet
eseape the generosity of boat owners who took me w The Lake lo
drag around.on sk1 ropes for their
.
am uscmen l whil e th ey ~nj oye&lt;t'. stand bcstdc the boat ramp and yell
cold beverages from the boat.
. \; naudtbl e mstruCllons whil e ~ h e
People who own boats soon dts- dnver 1r1es lo back the boa! trailer
cover thai going 10 The We is no onto the boa! ramp.
fun unless they have someone 10 do
The exc item ent of all panici· ·
·
·
·
· h · hi d 'f th "-akcs on
11 w1th . (Or do Illo, dcpendmg on pan ts IS eig cne 1 e "'
yo ur perspec ti ve.) My tale nt at the car make great screechmg and
hangin g on fo r dea r li fe be hind sque alin g no ises, as if !hey just
some neighbor's. in stallm ent- loan mi ght no! stop before roll ing over
investment was d1seovcred tn early Jhe navigaiOrs.
• Eve ryone in Jhc bom should
adolescence. so I've had 30 years
lu lear n th e unw ri lle n rul es of Jry on each of the hfc Jackets m the
expected behavior while boating:
boat before choosmg one to wear.
• There must be a great hoopla None of the jackelS should fit. anymade of getting the boat inw the one too well . havmg been designed

July 10, 1994

~

'I

CLEVELAND - An office janitor has pleaded gwlly to aggravated murder and aggravated robbery in the strangling of a woman
on June 22.
•
Bobby L. Hampton, 31 , of Cleveland, pleaded guilty Friday and
faces sentencing Aug. 17 in the death of Theresa Mruer, 28. of Hudson.
.
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Judge Jose A. Vtllanueva
could sentence Hampton to 20 years to life in prison for murder and
10 to 25 years for taking $1 &amp; from her P.urse.
.
A security guard found the woman ms1dc a fourth-Ooor su1t.e al
the Enterprise Place office building in suburban Beachwood . An
eleclrical cord was wrapped around her neck.
Hampton was arrested the following day and told police he had
killed the victim. Police don't know a mouve .

better addresses the diverse set of
issues .
• Appointing L. Alayne Parson,
associate dean of the Co llege of
Mathe matica l and Phys ical Sc iences, as vice provost for progmm
evaluation and coordination. The
appoi mm enl is part ·of ongoi ng
admini slrative restructuring.
The board also awarded con lrac ts for:
• An 8,000-squarc- fooJ addition
to Ca mpb ell Hall and a 9,500 square- fooJ atrium for a stude nt
ce nter. The $3.4 million for the
project would be funded from gifts
and slate money. The projects are
expected to be compleled by 1995.
• The Library Book Depository
in the University Services Center Jo
pro vide storage for uni ve rsity
arch ives. The project. estimated Jo
cost $3.7 miUion through slate and
university money, should be com rleJcd by June 1995.

&gt;.;;"~A_,.

i

•

• ' ·

)

•t"~'""')r·~·

ilt ~ &lt;!hi ) ,,
"'!It· "'trl:.

•

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·., .

THE WALL THAT TUMBLED DOWN - A
Columbus mounted patrolman rode past the
fallen section or the form er Ohio Slllte Penitentia ry wall Friday. The wall , which collapsed

lottery numbers
By The Associated Press
The foll owing numbers were
selected in Friday's Ohi o and Wes t
Virginia lolleries:
OHIO
Pick 3: 5-8- 3
Pick 4:3-0-7-3
Buckeye 5: 1-14-15-19-26
The Ohio Louery will pay out
$726,345 Jo winners in Friday' s
Pick 3 Numbers daily game.
Sales in Pick 3 Numbers tolaled
$1,493,755.50.
In !he other daily game, Pick 4
Number s players wagered
$325,478 .50 and will share
$103,600.
Sales in Buckeye 5 totaled
$509,764.
r he jackpot for Saturday' s
Super Lotto drawing was $8 mil lion.
WEST VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 4-4 -1
Daily 4: 8-8-3-1
Cash 25: 1-7-9-13- 15-2 1
Ban Starr scored on a quarterback sneak with 13 seconds left to
give the Packers a 21 -17 victory
over Dallas in the 1967 NFL-championship game.

•

l.J,
.
J
...

.. ..-...,..
'

We dn esday a nd fl att e ned two pa rk ed cars,
cr umbled du e to age. The "old pen" is more
!ha n a century old. (AP)

·Lose weight.
Feel confident.
Start today.

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Attorneys seek photo suppression
WHEELING . W.Va. - A photo lineup that led to the indictments of three men in the beating death of an Ohio woman should
not be used as evidence, defense anorneys argued.
Mark Watkins, 30, and Delmar. Walton, 45, both of East Liverpool, Ohio, were accused of killing;M'atkins' ex-girlfriend, Debra
Pugh, 33. of Lisbon, Ohio, in May 1989.
.
Michael Millward. 34. of Easl L1verpool also was charged m Ms.
Pugh's death but has since pleaded guilty 10 lampering wilh a witness Millward is awaiting sentencing.
Defense a110rneys argued that evidence from the phmographic
lineup of the men was tainted because of how the Hancock County
prosecu10r's office presented the pho10grap1Is 10 witnesses.
U.S . Magistrate James Seibert did n~ 1mmedmtely rule on the
motion Thursday and continued !he heanng until July 25.
Ms. Pugh's badly beaten body was found floating in the Ohio
River near Chesler II days after her disappearance and more than a
month after she mlked with Columbiana Coumy. Ohio, authorities
about Walkins' alleged drug dealings.
All three men were indict.ed in May on charges of killing a fcder·
al witness. !raveling in interstate commen:e with the. intent to commil a crime. conspiracy to kill a witness and consplf3Cy to InJUre,
threaten and intim1dat.e a wilness.
Walkins also was charged with conspiracy to distribute cocaine.
and Wahon also was charged with Lrying to keep Millward from
cooperating with authorities.
.
. .
.
.
Trial is scheduled for Sept. 6 m U.S. Dislncl Court m Wheeling.

Police chief appeals suspension

.

LIMA - The police chief has appeal_cd a three-day suspension
the mayor gave to him for missing a meeung.
.
. .
.
Police Chief Frank Catleu appealed to the L1ma CIVIl Sem ce
Board, but may still serve the suspension wilhoul pay next week
while a hearing is scheduled, board Secretary Michael Bender smd
Thursday.
h ·
The three-member board has 30 days to schedule a earmg,
which likely will be held in August.
.
.
During the hcarins. the two may tesufr. and call ~.'messes. The
board then must decide 10 "affirm, modify or deny !he suspension.
h' f
Mayor David Berger suspended Ca!lell on June 28 after the c 1e
missed a mandatory meeting on June 16 and was late 10 another on
June 2.
,, . ·
j
Berger reportedly asked Catlell lo restgn !" .ear1y anuary
because of the police department's poor.p_u~hc 1mage. Catleu
declined, but mentioned retirement as a possibility.
.
Catleu has declined to comment
- Tbe Assocwted Press

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~_

CHECKING ACCOUNTS
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•'lemhcr Fllll'

New Accounts Department: Pt. Pleasant 675-1121 • New Haven 882-2135 • Mason 773-5514
'

�••

'
Page-AS-Sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant,

wv

July 10, 1994

--.Area deaths-- Inquiry
Clyde Mount
VINTON - Clyde Mount, H2. Bidwell , died Friday , July 8, 1994 in
llolzcr Mcd1ca l Cen ter.
Born March 17. IY12 1n Lesage, W.Va .. son of the late Steve and
Cass1c Effi ngham Moum, lie was a retired fanner and a member of the
Deer Creek Baptist Churc h.
He was also preceded m death by his wives, Eulah Mae Donahoe
·- Mount, in 1976, and Helen Lewis Tyler Mount , in 1982; four brothers,
Sy lvester Mount, Roy Mount. Eve n Moun t and Ira Mount; and three sisters, Eddie Barry, Nettie Mac Barry and Roche! Scarbarry.
Surv tvtng arc th ree sons. Richard (Avenel l) Mount, Lester (Freda)
Mount , and Norman (Wilma) Mount. all of Bidwell , two daughters, Anna
IJames C) M1tchcll of Ga lil po l" , and Joyce (Darre ll) l,ivingston of Bid·
we ll: 15 grandchildren :md 18 grcat-grondchli drcn; and a sister, Li llian
LJCkson of H1mtington, W.Va .
,
ScrV ICCS will rc I p.m. Monday In the McCo y-Moore Funeral Horne
Vmton, wit h the Rev. Mickey .Maynard and the Rev. Lloyd Fry official~
111g. Bunal wtll be 111 Vmton .Memorial Park. Fr iend s may call at the
funeral home Sunday from 6 -9 p.m.

Lewis F. Slagle
COLUMBUS - Lewi s F. Sbglc, 75 . Columbus, died Thursday, July
7, 1994 in Mount Carmel East Hospital.
He was a re tired carpenter lmrn the Defense Contractors Supply Center
(DCSC) and was a U.S. Army veteran of World War II,
Survivi ng arc his wife, Violet Slagle; two sons, Roger (R uby) Slagle of
Co lumbus, and Carlos Dean (BrcndJI Slagle of Westerville; four daughters. Sharo n (Ken) Hedrick of P1ck crmgton. Marilyn Slagle of Canal
Wmchcstcr, Car la Jean Slagle of Co lumbus, and Kay (Ralph) Dean of
GallipoliS; I I gran dchildren and two great-grJndchildren ; and two sisters,
Norma Jean Sattler and Sarah Fc llurc.
He was preceded in death hy two brothers, Howard Slagle and Marvin
Slagle; and a sister, Awilda Maddox.
Services will be 10:30 a.m. Monday in the chape l of the Dwayne R.
Spence Funeral Home, 650 W. Waterloo St., Canal Winchester, with the
- Rev. Newton Smith offic iating. llurial will be in the Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Sunday.

Ivy M. Sleeth
MIDDLEPORT - Ivy M. Sleeth, HS, Middleport, died Saturday, July
9, 1994 in Overbrook Center.
Arrangements will be announced by the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, W.Va.

Anna Margaret Wilson
GALLIPOLIS - Services were held Friday, July I, 1994 in the Cannon Mortuary, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Anna Margaret Wilson , 7&amp;, Salt
Lake City, who died Tuesday, June 28, 1994.
Bishop Bob Norton officiated and burial was in the Mountain View
Memorial Estates. Salt Lake City.
Born Sept. 27, 1915 in Gallipolis, she was the daughter of Orner
Amassc O'De ll and Elma Almira Tinkham O'Dell.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Philip Edward Wilson.

Deaths elsewhere_
·
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Robert E. Lee
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Robert
E. Lee, who co-wrote hundreds of
plays for stage, radio and screen ·
includin g Inh erit the Wind and
Aunrie Mame, died Friday of canccr. He was 75.
With Jerome Lawrence, Lee
penned lnherir the Wind, based on
the 1925 trial of John Scopes, who
was prosecuted for teaching evolution mstead of Lhc biblical theory of
crcauon.
They also wrote Aunrie Marne, a
comedy about a free-thinking
woman that was adapted for the big
screen and as a musical, and The
Night Thoreau Spent in Jail.
Dick Sargent
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Dick
Sargent, who played the belea·
guercd husband on the television
series Bewitched and later declared
his homosex uality with pride, died
Friday of prostate cancer. He was
~-

u~ .

Sargent was best known for his
1969-72
Bewitched role of advcr'
,r,,
!ising executive Darrin Stephens, a
,,, mortal coping with marriage to a
charming witch, Samantha, played
by Eli&gt;~1beth Montgomery.
Sargent appeared in the films
'·
•
The
Beast With a Million Eyes ,
,... Bernadine,
Pellicoat
:r and A TouchandofOperation
Mink, both starring
,[.
Grant. On television, Ire
.._ Cary
appeared 111 Gunsmoke, Playhouse

.

·-

90 and Family nes.
In 1991, on National Coming
Out Day, Sargent announced he
. was gay. He said he was HIV -negauve but was declaring his sexual
orient;ltion because of the high rate
of suicide among young homosexuals. ·
John Shad
NEW YORK (AP)- John S.R.
Shad, a former Securities "and
Exchange Commission chainnan
who initiated an investigation of
Drexel Burnham Lambert, then
went on to try to clean up the brokcrage as its head, died Thursday
after heart surpcry. He was 71.
As head o the SEC, the federal
agency that regulates the nation's
securities markets, Shad ordered a
probe of Drexel in 1986 that eventually led w a securities-fraud plea
agreement with the Justice Dep;ift·
mcnt. Drexel hired Shad in April
1989 as part of its settlement with
federal regulators.
Shad left Drexel more than a
. year later as the failing brokerage
tried to work its way through a
bankruptcy reorganization.
Shad was a vice chairman of
now-defunct E.F. Hutton &amp; Co.
from 1970 until his appoinunem w
the SEC by President Reagan in
1981. In 1987, Shad left the SEC to
txx:ome the U.S. ambassador w the
Netherlands.

...

·- Tensions rise as Georgia
h -

residents ignore curfews
"·
,...
flood devastation
·- BytoJOANview
KIRCHNER
80,000 residents ned their homes
·~

...

·~ ·
~~

Associated Press Writer
ALBANY, Ga. - Tensions
were rising along with floodwaters
1
as the raging Hint River neared its
crest Saturday and stubborn resi~ · dents broke dusk-to-dawn curfews
~- ignoring police barricades and
, refu sing to leave their homes.
~
Police with bull horns drove
;;: through neighborhoods Friday
- ntght to warn of the flooding that
.:::. already has killed 23 people,
1
• mcludmg two children trapped in a
j;:, car that plunged off a bridge and
•- into the river.
i'
But some residents in this south·
~: western Georgia city wouldn't lis:· ten, and stayed to gawk or wait till
.. _. the last minute lO nee.
;~~·
"It's making me sick," said
;. Sissy Troucrof Albany, whose par~-:_:· ems lost thetr home and four cars
i thiS week to floods farther north in
,: .. Macon. "People want to go around
:· · and sightsee. This is a disaster and
~· they should treat it like one.''
Rivers also overflowed in the
:.. .: Florida Panhandle, and in south:":: eastern Alabama, one person was
1•• ;, killed Friday and two others were
1. , reported missing in the floods.
• •.
More than 20,000 of Albany's
,,
:..

r·

• n•

......

,

Thursday and Friday, but the worst
flooding was to come Saturday.
The Flint River was expected to
crest at a record 45 or 46 feet. the
National Weather Service said.
Flood stage is 20 feet. The levee
pro!e(ting the city is 38 feet high.
That didn't scare Henry Holloway Sr., who sat and waved at
passersby Friday evening from the
from porch of his mother's house,
about two blocks from where the
water was rising.
Some of his neighbors took time
to mow their lawns. A nearby
lounge was packed with customers
at sunset.
-.._..._
"There· s real Iy ilil'mllii'er at this
point," Holloway said. "It's not
that I don't care. I'm staying,
txx:ause I do care and I don't want
to leave my home until I absolutely
have to.''
A carload or people wbo drove
onto a barricaded highway plunged
into the Aint River on Thursday
night. Five were rescued, but 2year-old Shabazz Mallory and 4year-old Kason Mallory of Jersey
City, NJ., were trapped.
Kason's body was found; police
were to resume the search for
Shabazz today.

Nation/World

Ju1y.IO, 1994

slated
in fatal
wildfire

O.J. notes birthd·ay in jail, ~
pondering trial in murders
By LINDA DEUTSCH
A.P Special Correspoo*nt
LOS ANGELES - OJ. Simp. soo spent his 47th birthday in jail
Saturday, facing a dooble murder
trial after a judge found there was
enough evidence to link him w the
brutal knifings of his ex-wife and
her friend .
"As you might imagine, it's not
going W be very pleasant." lawyer
Robert Kanlashian said Friday after
speaking briefly to his longtime
friend before Simpsoo was led off
to jail.
SimJI!iOII showed no emotion as
Municipal Judge Kathleen
Kennedy-Powell ordered him held
without bail until a July 22 arraignmern in Superior Court. Earlier, be
cried while listening to a coroner
describe how his ex-wife's throat
was slashed w the spine.
Kardashian said Simpson told
him he had expected the judge's
ruling.
Kennedy-Powell said there was
enough evidence to suspect Simpson in the murders. She noted prosecutoo; only had to show ]J'Obable
cause, not guilt beyond a reason-

fly STEVEN K. PAULSON

Associated Press Writer
GLENWOOD SPRfNGS, Colo.
- Searc hers have recovered the
last two bodies of 14 crack firefighters who were trapped when
wind whipped a modest brushfire
into an inferno so hot it melted
their fireproof shelters.
In Washington, Interior Department officials said a fedcml review
board will begin a 45 -day inquiry
into the fire on Storm King Moun tain .
" We must find answers w what
caused this terrible tragedy ," Interior Sec retary Bruce Babhiu said.
Winds up to SO mph fannro the
50-acre fire int o a devas tating
2,000-acre bl aze in a matter of
hours Wednesday .
" I just sec it a~ somebody made
a bi~ mi stake by sending them in
there ,lt' said Nadine Mackey,
wfiosc 34-ycar-old son, Don, died
fighting the fire.
Firefighters were aware of a
cold front moving through the area
and anticipated gustY. winds. But
they said they didn t expect the
bands of fire to rip through driedout juniper and pinion at 100 feet
per minute.
" The whole canyon just blew
up," said smok ~jumpcr Eric Hipke ,

FIRST-HAND LOOK- U.S. Forest Service
incident commander Jack Lee, Iert, or Clovis,
Ca lif., gave U.S.. Secretary or Agriculture Mike
Espy a tour or the rire camp in Glenwood
who was burned on hi s arms and
legs. "I've nev er seen anything
like that in my life. It just kept
chasmg us back."
Officials could not determine
yet whether the deaths resulted
from deficiencies in training,
equipment or management, or if
weather and terrain were the deciding factors.
The blaze grew to 2.430 acres

S.prings, Colo., on Saturday. Firefighters at the
roght bead out to battle the forest fire that killed
14 firefighters on Wednesday. (AP)

talking experienced firefighters,"
fire Chief Jack Lee said Friday.
"These were knowledgeable, well trained people."
Glenwood Springs officials said
they will light a cross on top of
nearby Red Mountain for the next
14 nights in honor of the fallen
firefighters . A memorial service
was planned for Sunday at a town
park.

by Friday but-was expected to be
contained by tonight, said federal
fire command spokesman Tony
Svaws.
There were complaints the 52
firefighters were not supervised by
a fire safety officer, but federal
officials said two crew chiefs who
died in the fire were designated
safety officers.
· "We're not talking kids, we're

Cult member gets three-yea.r sentence
WACO, Texa s (AP) - The
lone Branch Davidian to strike a
plea bargain in the shooting deaths
of four federal agents was sentenced Friday to three years in
prison on a reduced charge.
Kathryn Schroeder's testimony
was key in convicting eight of her
fellow cult members, a prosecutor
said. She was the last member of
David Koresh 's cult to be sentenced in a gunbaule that erupted
during a raid on Feb. 28, 1993.
In addition-to the four agents,
six Branch Davidians died . Ms.
Schroeder's husband was among
them.
"I want to say I know a lot of
people have suffered. I really am
sorry for that. I don't think it
should ever have happened," Ms.
Schroeder tearfully told U.S. DisIIict Judge Walter S. Smith before

sentencing.
Ms. Schroeder and the prosecutor,
"It's up to you. I'm sorry. Ray Jahn, said they were satisfied
Thank you ," Ms. Schroeder said.
with the sentence.
Smith sentenced Ms. Schroeder,
"It's great," Ms. Schroeder
31, to three years in prison, three said. "I Owught it was gQjng w be
years on probation and fined her
seven or eight years."
$5,000. The charge against her was
"I think it was fair ," Jahn said.
reduced from ftrst-dcgrec murder.
Ms.
Schroeder avoided a murder
Ms. Schroeder, who could have
trial
by
pleading ~uilty to resisting
been sentenced to 10 years in
arrest
and
testifymg against other
pn so n on the resisting arrest
cult
members.
Eight were convict·
charge, asked to be allowed to
ed
and
three
were
acquitted.
serve her time in a federal prison in
Assistant
U.S.
Auorney Bill
Marietta, Ga., so she can be close
Johnston
considered
Ms. Schroeder
to her 4-ycar-old son, Bryan. The
key
in
securing
the
convictions,
boy is now with his grandparents in
along
with
stiff
sentences
- 40
Aorida.
yearsfor
ftve
of
the
defendants.
Ms. Schroeder's three other
In the trial, Ms. Schroeder' testichildren are with their father
fied
about the cult's plan to wage a
William Mabb , in South Dakota:
war with authorities, detailed
holy
Bryan's father, Michael Schroeder
where
cult members stood anned
died in the gunbaule.
'
during
the standoff and described
Smith said he will trv to help.

their weapons.
"It was ihe best inside story that
we could provide the jury." Johnston said.
After the Feb. 28 shootout, Ms.
Schroeder handed out weapons and
ammunition. She left the sect's
Mount Carmel compound just outside Waco on March 12 w be with
her children, who had been
released to authorities earlier in th~
51-day standoff that followed the
botched raid.
The impasse ended April 19 ,
1993, when a fire destroyed the
cult's compound. Koresh and about
80 followers died during the blaze,
which prosecutors said was set by
the sect as federal officials tried to
tear holes in the compound. Branch
Davidians deny they started the
ftre.

able doubt, the standard they will
be beld w altrial
Nicok Brown Simpson, 35, aD!I
Ronald Goldman, 25, were killed
June 12 and their bodies were
found early the next morning outsi de Ms. Simpson's Brentwood
condominium. about two miles
from Simpson's estate.
Defense lawyer Robert Shapiro
argued that the prosecutors' case
was purely circumstantial.
"There is not and cannot be at
this point in time a 'sllbng suspicion
that Mr. Simpson is guilty of anything," Shapiro said. "This is a
case that everybody has jumped to
an immediate and unrealistic conclusion."
He argued the murder weapon
had not yet been found, and tests
on blpod droplets foond at Simpson's estate and the murder scene
were not conclusive. He suggested
that it would have been impossible
for Simpson to commit the crime
and then abandon bloody clothing
in less than an hour.
But Deputy District Attorney
Marcia Clark said physical evidence, including everything from

minute into the flight as Columbia
S!Icakcd over the Atlantic Ocean.
Shriver said it probably was just
condensation created by shock
waves, but he asked fli~ht controllers to doublecheck thelf data as
a precaution.
Flight controllers at Johnson
Space Center in Houston also
coped with a computer problem in
the final minutes of the countdown.
Some of their monitors were off by
nearly a second, but they worked
around it
Once settled in a I S4-mile-high
orbit, the seven astronauts quickly
began powering up the bus-sized
laboratory in the shuule cargo bay.
The crew includes Dr. Chiaki
Mukai, the first Japanese woman in
lem ."
_
A puff briefly appeared near the space; about 650 Japanese were on
right solid rocket booster about a_ hand to sec her off.

By MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. Columbia roared through clouds
into orbit Friday on a two-week
mission to study the development
of thousands of aquatic animals
and millions of cells.
' NASA fretted throughout the
morning that storms might interfere
with liftoff. The weather cooperated and the space shuttle blasted off
promptly at 12:43 p.m.
"You always ,.l:ind of wonder,
'Well, are people still as sharp as
they were when ,we last did it~' "
said shuttle manager Loren Shriver.
:'Today I think I was reassured that
a couple months' layoff is no prob-

Oregonia~s
By The Associated Press
An Oregon group that seeks a
ban on ~ay rights legislation submilled Signatures Friday hoping to
get its proposal on the November
ballot. Groups with similar go~!s
carne up short in Washington and
Missouri.
They arc among several states
where petition drives by gay rights
opponents have been under way
this year. In Arizona on Thursday.
a group sponsoring such a drive
said it had dropped lhc petition
campaign and instead would con-

By SALLY JACOBSEN
., . Associated Pms Writer
NAPLES, Italy - The world's
seven top industrial democracies
Sawrday rebuffed a new U.S. uade
proposal at their annual economic
summit but vowed renewed efforts
to attack record global unemployment.
The communique wrapping up
the economic portion or the meet·
ing said that the summit countries

supported continued efforts to tear
down global trade barrien.
However, that language fell far
short of a U.S. proposal to launch a
new round of global trade talks
aimed at attacking specific barriers
in such key sectors as telecommunications and financial services.
The reading of the fmal communique was brielly dellQOO by lastminute haggling over how the leaders should address the ticklish

MORNING GREETING - Presideat Clialc. acltaowled&amp;ed
tile salate-at-D lliliu policemaa at tile ead or llis •onill&amp; .iol
Saturday ia Naples. Belliad tile presideal was a secarity maa.
CliDtoo later joiaed otkr I hs fl Ole G7 to resume political alii[
economic tall&lt;s 1t Ole Royal Palace. (AP)

signatu.re~ _w.put its new anti-gay
nghts mi!Jauve on the statewide
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AFI'ER TilE HEARING - Los Aageles Dis·
trict Attorney Gil Gar«tti, ccater, Ranked by
prosecutors William Hodcman and Marcia
Clark, spoke to tile media Friday at the cooduLos Angeles area with the same
genetic marters as those found in
the droplets.
Mathesoo also said that the rests
only exclude sources of blood
rather than identify a particular person. Prosecotors, however, are
expected to use more sophisticated
DNA analysis of blood samples
during trial.
Also Friday, Deputy Medical

.

l~

... tl· , ...., ...,.,, ~

sion or the OJ. Simpson prelimiaary llcarin&amp;Garcctti sail\ his office would be ready to proceed with trial within the 60 days required by
law. (AP)
.

Examiner Irwin Golden used black
and white drawings of bodies with
vivKJ red slash marks to show how
"gaping .. knife wounds killed the
victims.
His diagrams and testimony
showed Goldman was slashed
repeatedly w the head and body in
a violent struggle with his =ailanl
In the courtroom, Goldman's sister
and stepmother cried quietly and

held hands. His father left before
the testimony.
Simpson struggled ror composure from Lhe onset. sighing heavi1y, looking away and rubbing bis
fa ce as Golden described Ms.
Simpson's clothing, a short black
dress still damp with blood two
days after the murder. He was seen
wiping tears off and on throughout
the bloody descriptions.

the earlier 123-nation agm:mcnt in
time to create new World Trade
urgamzalJon by Jan. I. .
"We are· resolved to continue
the momentum of trade librr.llization," they said.
They also pledged as much as
$200 million in assistance to per·
manently close the dangerous
Chemobyl nuclear reactor, sjte of
the world's worst nuclear power
accident in 1986. This figure was
billed as a downpayment with more
to come later.
Frencb government spokesman
Jean Musitelli said Clinton
acknowledged the oppositioo during Saturday's session and said he
was temporarily withdrawing the
idea until legislative approval of
last year's big trade-opening deal, a
new Genrral Agn:ement on Tariffs
and Trade (GATT).
"We've just barely finished"
the new GA1T rules, which took
seven years w negotiate.

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problem or the dollar' s plunge on
global currency rnaruts.
President Clinton and the leaders of Gennany, Britain, France
and Canada looked on as Italian
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi
read the final communique in an
elepnt. red and gold thcatu in the
palace where their meetings were
held.
Japan was represented Sattii'day
by its foreign minister, who sat in
for an ailing Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayarna. hospitalittd suffering from dehydration and an
intestinal bug.
Later, Clinton and the others
were to meet with Russian President BOOs Y eltsin for a discussion
of new global uncertainties with
the death of North Korea's JJreSi·
dent, Kim II Sung, certain 10 be at ·
the top of the agenda.
The summit session was overshadowed by Kim's death of an
apparent heart attack.
YellSin arrived late Saturday,
beaming as he SlqJped off the planc
into the warm afternoon iiiiiiThe final economic communique made oo mention of a scaleddown U.S. initiative to at le&lt;~st
study the feasibility of launching
new global trade talks. This language was crossed out or earlier
versions after the United States
gave in to vehement objections
from French President Francois
Mitterrand
\
Mitterrand argued that' lite
nations should win legislativ&amp;.,
approval for last year's market
opening apument before taking
on a new round of trade talks.
Ointon withdrnl tile U.S _proposal, but rqKJrtedly told summit
partnen he ~Ianned lO ~it it
at next year s summit in Halifu,
Nova Scolia.
In the draft, the leaders uadcr·
scared their determination to JllliCy

CLINIC

the November ballot if the secrc·
tary of state determines that at least
89,000 of the signatures are valid.

Daring Honth

.

HOLZER

seek to stem gay rights action

centrale on challenging existing
gay-rights ordinances. In Michigan,
backers face a Monday deadline of
submitting enough signatures to
force a statewide vote.
The Oregon Citizens Alliance
turned in what it said were 120,000

~4

+~C

.·G7/eaders rebuff U.S. request for trade talks

and how the cells divide and grow
in the absence of gravity. Toward
that end, two male and two female
Japanese Mcdaka fish are sharing
an aquarium lank; biologists hope
they will mace and produce lots of
offspring.
Scientists also arc hoping for
lots of fertilized toad eggs. Dutch
biologist Geert Ubbels and her
team removed the testes of six
South African clawed toads Thursday evening and loaded them on
board Columbia with180 eggs.
The plan was for the testes to be
smashed automatically in orbit and
the sperm squirted onto the eggs.
The embryos will be killed and preserved during the flight
Columbia is due back at
Kennedy Space Center on July 22.

" We were quite impressed with
the beautiful launch," said Noriyuki Sekinc, parliamentary vice minister for science and technology in
Japan.
Columbia is jammed with all
sorts of Japanese fish, newts and
sea urchins and wad eggs galore.
There also are nics, slime mold,
mouse bones, roots, cress and lentil
seedlings, day lily cells, yeast cells,
and human and mouse white blood
cells.
More than 80 experiments are
planned, with more than 200 scientists from around the world panicipating. Shriver called the mission
"a stepping stone into the space
station program."
Biologists want to sec how the
animals develop in weightlessness

blood drops to matching bloody
gloves fomd at the scene and at the
estate, clearly linked Simpson to
the murders.
'·'
·'The evidence is consiSiellt and
very powerful, even at this early
stage, that the defendant has indeed
committed every crime that he is
charged with," she said.
Prosecutors have not yet decided whether to sect the death penalty. They said the case could go to
trial by mid-September if Simpson's lawyers invoke his right to a
speedy trial.
Final witnesses at the hearing
included police blood expert Gregory Matheson, who said Simpson's blood type potentially
matched one of a trail or drops
found alongside bloody shoeprints
leaving the murder scene.
He said the blood matched nei ·
tJv of the victims, and that Simpson was among the .43 pen:ent of
the population, ahout one in ewsy
200 people, who could have left the
blood drops.
But Matheson acknowledged
under cross-examination that there
are 40,000 to 80,000 people in the

•' -- ,·, ,._., ,,

'•

Columbia launches latest research mission

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tfaify at Jofmsons .

�Page-AS-Sunday nmes-Sentlnel

July 10, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH---Polnt Pleasant, WV

N. Korean leader's death clouds efforts to end standoff
llv PAUL SHIN
Associated Pres.~ Writer
SEOUL . South Korea - Kim II
Sung, who dominated Nonh Korea
for four dec ade s and defied the
world ove r hi s nuclear ambi tions,
ha s d ied of an appare nt heart
atutck. He was 82.
His demh left efforts to resolve
the lo ng-run ning nudcar standoff
in doubt a nd fueled fear s of a
chaotic success ion sLrugglc.
Immed iate tndiCations were that
Ktm 's son and heir apparent, )(im
long II, had managed to con soli :la tc powe r. Rut Sou th Kmca put
tts mili tary on fu ll alert, citing the
sec urit y threat po sed by Kim ' s
death .
·
Kim . who wag ed th e Korean
War agai nst th e Sou th and built a
god-lik e pe rsonality cul t arou nd
him se lf. sitffc rcd a heart al! ack
Thursda y and dtcd a day later, the
North sai d via its official media. It
d1 d not announce hts death for 34
hours.
Kim' s de&lt;tth came 2-1/2 weeks
before what would have bee n a
first-eve r meeting of the presidents
of No rth and So uth Korea, and as
hi gh-le vel talks wit h th e United
States on resolvmg the nuclear diSpute got underway in Geneva. Titc
talks were suspended Saturday.
The Nort h ann oun ced Kim' s
d e~th in a special broadcast. later
aired by So ut h Korean TV. "O ur
great leader has died of a sudden
di sea se ' " th e an nouncer alm ost
sobbed.
North Korea said a st.ltc funeral
would be held Jul y 17, after a ~&lt;•cck
of mourn ing. A foreign res ident of
th e Nort h Korea n cap ita l,
Pyongya ng, contacted by telephone
from Beiji ng, said !11e capital was
calm and somber.
In th e So uth , the reac tion was
one of shock. South Korean President Kim Young-sam immediately
summoned hi s defense minister and
ordered him to prepare for all contingencies.
"It's a very worrisome development th at makes the security situation ex tre mely un stabl e," sai d
Sohn Hak-kyu, spokesman for the
ruling party.
.
At the Seoul bu s !c rmtn al.

White House
nixes charge
by Panama

stran ger s grabbed each other ,
tgnon ng calls to board their buses.
At the main railway station, travel ers stood trdnsfixcd by a large TV
sc reen .
" I can't beli eve that he is ac tuall y dead, it 's so sudd en." said a
34 -ye ar -ol d office work er. Kim
Hae-jung. ' 'I'm scared."
Ki m II Sung had ruled North
Korea sin ce 1948, the onl y leader
the hard -ltn e comm uni st co untry
had known since the Korean peninsula wa' divided after World War
II.

If the younger Kim successfull y
succeeds hts fa ther, it would be the
first lineal transfer of power in the
eomm un ist world.
In the hours after Kim's dea th

wa s a nno unce d, Nort h Korea n
rad io played songs and speeches
praising Kim Jong II . South Korean
observers said that suggested that
a t lea st for now . he wa s at the
helm.
Presid ent Clinton, 111 Napl es,
Italy for a summ it of indu stnali zcd
na tions, offered condole nces 10
North Koreans and said he hoped
the suspended Geneva talk.' wou ld
continue "as appropriate."
Kim' s death came as tensions
had appeared to be eastng over the
nu clear stand of f. Kim met la st
mo nth with form er Pres ide nt
Jimmy Carter an d promi sed to
freeze the North's nuclear program.
The North de nies it is trying to
build nuclear arm s, but its refusal

to allow full internatiOnal inspections led !11e Unitt;&lt;! States 10 push
for sanctions - in tum leadi ng the
North to threaten war.
The Clinton administrauon had
backed off its threat of sanctions
pe ndi ng the Geneva talks.
During his docades of rule, Kim
built up a 1.1 mill ion-man mititary
and presided over a Stalinist-stylc
police state. A 199 1 report by !11e
U.S. Stale Department call ed the
Nort h one of the wo rld' s mo st
repressive regimes.
The cult of persona li ty su rround ing Ki m was one of the most
ex treme of 1ts kind. North Korea is
dotted with buildin gs and squares
named for him , and a giant bronze
statue of him loo ms over central

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No Doc Fees. 0e1r.nr

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IHIIH Nll 94

8

Delroster, Loaded'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - "I was delighted
to win in the district but then 10 go
to the nationals and place there was
really gr eat ," comm en ted Lori
Hayes of Pomeroy who took fifth
place in the natio nal stock seal
compe tit ion at th e 2 1st Annual
Intercollegiate Horse Show Association held at Texas A&amp;M University, College Station, Texas.
A junior at Ohio Univers ity ,
Lori is a member of the Equestrian
Team !11ere.
She qualified to compete in the
nationals by winning the district
champion ship held at Findlay in
May.
At the national competition, riders are mounted on horses fur . hed by !11e host college .
Horses were drawn by lots, the
e of personal tack was not
a lowed, nor was sc hool ing permitted .
"What happens," said Lori, "is
that contestants draw horses, and
then they get in the ring and show."
Control and ability to ride is the
judging criteria, according to the
OU student, who said that includes
rail work , walking, jogging, equitation, and working a pattern.
The theory behind !11is slructure
is to equalize variables of the com petition and to test the horsemanship of the contestants.

No Doc Fees. OeirvEfed"

'14 £HfVRDlfllUMINA 4DDDR SlOAN

813,288**

'

llDSMIIIU'IIfW
~HIIRAnlllf liiiiY,
THI AlliiW IIILDSIIBIII AIBIU

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times Sentinel Starr
RACINE - The Midnight
Cloggers have rerumed from a performance tour which included eight
shows in two days at Dollywood, a
theme park located at Pigeon Park

in the heart of .the Smoky Mountains.
This is the group's third year of
performing at the popular resort
and !11ey have been invited back for
the 1995 season.
Producer/Director Bruce Wolfe

~4 Ton Chassis. V-8 P&lt;Mw, Split llerdl Aeciniog Seat, Aelr .lrnpseat,
PiS, P/8, ftJI SizeSj&gt;lle Tre, Wei E~

817,188

11

Have a hot news tip
or
story sugges,tion?
Call the

Tribune 446-2342
Sentincl992-2155

To

•

Will r/l'fllltl #I &amp;flfJ, Ills, ,1118, lila, I• Ill &amp;au r11 lallr.

TOlllllii-BOO·B22-1417 • 311-21ff • 144~1· 412·1111

• Taxes. Tags, Tille Fees extra. Rebate tncluded m sate price ot new vehicle 11sted wt18fe appliCable. On approyec~ crecltt. NOt responsible lor typographical errors.

'*"- 1-'17 _, 1UP1r FAIRf'UJN I~

(Exit 132) Tum Moitf'l on Rt.l1 , OillllrlhiP II
3 ""'" on 11ft.

Cl asses ranged from walk -trot
for first-year studen ts to the open
di vision for experienced riders.
Riders qualify for participation
in competitions through a point
system . Durin g the year, contestants acc umula te point s at local
shows to qualify for the regional
finals in their respective divisions.
Lori competed in the regional
individual adva nced stock sea t
competition in Findlay against riders from Ohio and Michigan. When
she won there she advanced 10 the
national IHSA ·compe titi on at
TexasA&amp;M.
The second division winner
from the Ohio University team who
quali fied for IHSA competition
was Jen Sellatti who rode in the
jumping English competition . She
did not place in the national con test.
Lori said that the horse she got
in the drawing for her use in the
national competition was not what
she would describe as a very good
horse and that, perhaps had she
drawn a betler one, she might have
placed even higher in the competi tion . However, she was quick to
emphasize that she is content witl1
having placed fifth in the nation.
Lori, an exercise physiologist
major, described the trip 10 Texas,
her first, as "wonderful." Her
mother, Darlene, accompanied her

along with her O.U. eq uestrian progra m coach, Marti Lim oli . Lori
works with Limoli by teac hing
some begmncr horseback riding in
the rclauvely new equestrian program at O.U.
Horseback riding is "old hat" to
Lor i. She says that for as long as
she can remember she has loved
horses and enjoyed riding and competing.
When she was two she started
riding with her brother but it wasn' t
long before she was riding on her

own.

When she became old enough
she joined the Meigs County 4-H
Pleasure Rid ers Club and was a
member of th at group for nine
years.
Ycar after year she competed at
the Meigs County Fair, and se veral
times was selec ted to compete at
the Ohio State Fair. Through the
years she also competed in open
and quarter ho rse shows in th e
area.
While there arc always several
horses on the Kenneth and Darlene
Hayes fann located on old Route
33 north of the fairground s, Lori
has always had a favorite, one to
call her own . Now it 's a four year
old quaner horse , Bobbie Sue.
While Lori says winning cham pionships and placing in events is
nice, even important, she is more
into horses for her own personal
enjoyment

Bend area Midnight Cloggers return from third Dollywood performance

IIAID lEW '84 3/4101414
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July 10, 1994 ,,

IIADID!

YAH

~imts - ~e~t Section

•

badly since losing· its major fanner
trading partners with the collapse
of comm unist governments in the
form er Soviet Union and Eastern
Europe.

84Month
fiNANCING*

-·Spat Patlt Scheme Aclljl10fl81

WAS HINGTON (AP) - Clin ton administration officials arc disputing an all egati on by Panama' s
president that he was browbea_ten
into agrcc tn g to ac cept Ha1t1an
refugees - a decision he has since
reversed.
U.S . offi cials tri ed Friday to
defl ec t Pa namanian President
Guill erm o Endara's accusation s
that the admini stration treated hi s
country like a " banana republic."
"The president of Panama was
treated with the utmost respect by
U.S. officials," said State Department spokeswoman Christine Shelley.
Another admini stration official
expressed astonishment at Endara's
statement that he " felt mocked and
intimid a ted " into agreeing to
ac cept I 0 ,000 Haitian refugees
fl ee in g th eir impoverished and
repres sive homel and by boat. He
canceled the acceptance Thursday.
"I neg oti ated wit~ them 'til
midnight, and they mistreated me.
They trea ted me as if this were a
banana republic," Endara said.
The U.S. official, speaking on
conditi on of anonymity , said the
disc ussions with Endara had been
cordi al throughout. The official
sa id Endara mi srepresented hi s
own role by saying Panama objected to use of U.S. military bases to
tcmporaril y house Haitian refugees
while a Panamanian safe haven site
was bei ng readied by the United
Nations.
In fact, the official said, Endara
agreed las t Sunda y 10 a written
statement tha t said pending com pletion of the U.N . safe haven, !11e
United States would "coopemte in
providing interim safe haven faciliti es using space at exi sting U.S .
defense site s in Panama."
In any event, the administration
was willing to "accommodate him
in any way he wanted 10 be accom modated,' · the official contended.
Endara did not say who spceifi- .
cally had mistreated him . Over the
week, he spoke with President
Clinton twi ce by telephone, met
with seve ral U.S. officials and
spoke at length by phone Thursday
· witl1 Vice President AI Gore.

Pyongyang .
During his rule, Kim kept Nonh
Korea's 22 million people isolated
economically and politically. The
Nor th ' s econo my has stumbled

Along the River

DOLLYWOOD PERFORMERS- Tile Mldllllht Clo11trs,

back from Dollywood where tlley did ~laht allows Ia two days, wiD

male their a ext appearance at tile Meigs County Fair. Ia the
group are front, left lo rlpt, Katie Jeffers, Clleltia Moataomery,
Peuy Smltll, Sheri Cummlus, Delaaa Ekhbl1er, aad Renee Bailey; aad baclt, BeltJ Ladley, Allee Lawhorn, SberyiTIIoma, Betty

is assisted by team directors Beuy
Smith and Margie Wolfe in training the cloggers who come from
communities in both Ohio and
West Virginia and range in age
from seven to 67.J
.
A perfonner with Walt Disney

World's Magic Kingdom Entertamment, Bruce, a native of Meigs
Count y, last year was recognized
by Specialty Entenainers of Ameri ca, a national clogging perfor mance association in Washington
D.C.,
as "Best Show

Diroctor/Choreogmpher" for 1993.
That award came to him follow ing an outstanding anniversary
show performance of the Midnight
Cloggers at last year's Meigs
County Fair.
Wolfe said that officials of Specialty Entertainers viewed the
group 's Meigs Fair performance ·
and on the basis of that selectcrl
him to be the recipient of the
award.
Again !11is year Meigs County
fairgoers can see the Midnight
Cloggers in action.
·
They will be performing on the
Hillside Stage at 9 p.m. on
Wednesday, Aug. I 7.
Described by Wolfe as "electrified magic " the show has been
titled "Midnight Carnival."
The· production captures the
imaginatiQn in a unique mix of
country, bluegrass, pop, techno,
and specialty music, according to
Wolfe.
It is a 55-minute song and dance
tribute 10 music, dance, festivals,
fairs, and street parties from around
the country and world, and it has
taken II months of planning and
rehearsing, Wolfe said.
As for costuming, it' s colorful
and striking, with over 800,000
sequins, 110 yards of silver lame
fabric, and countless crystal minestones in the trim.
Rehearsals go on and on for
hundreds of hours, and then there
are the special effects with lighting
and fog machines used in the production, Wolfe said.
''This year's fair show is a simply 'a must see show', he said,

"because there 's something for
everyone .no mauer what your taste
m entenamment "
"And you won ' t believe your
eyes, as you gaze upon the Meigs
~ounty Fairgro~nd's hill stage after
Its transformauon into one of the
biggest street parties yo u' ll ever
see," he concluded.

AWARD RECIPIENTBruce Wolfe, director of the

Midnight Cloggers was the
1!1!13 recipient of the "Best
Show Director/Choreographer'' aw11rd given by Special~ Entertainers of America

ashin11tou, D.C.

'

1

�July 10, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Fertile family makes fourth ·one count
.
Dear Ann Landers: A while
baclr., a woman wrote to you about a
rather unusual problem. She saJd she
was so fertile her husband was afraid
to get near her. And not wt·thout
good reason. They had 8 pair Of
· o f twtns
· wt·th lll
·
tnp
. lets and two pam;
a period of seven years.
You advised a vasectomy for him
and a tubal ligation for her. Ann,
honey, if they take your advice, 1
hope theyhavebeuerluckthanFran
and Moe Casto in New Jersey. I read
about this couple in the Roxboro,
N.C., Courier-Times. Here's the
story:
It seems theCastos were living in
New Jersey in 1977 when their
second daughter was born. They
didn't want any more children, so
Fran had her tubes tied. A few
months later, Fran began to feel sick
in the morning, but she ruled out
pregnancy, and her doctor assured
her that it was most unlikely.
Well, the doctor was wrong,
and several mont hs I ater, t he
Castos had a third daughter. They

J

Ann
Landers
..

.....Synd•~'"'""
'"'•""·~·
rm,.

c'"'"'' svnd&lt;ato·

sued the aoctor. Moe had a
vasectomy. and they were
..
guaranteed, 'This is iL
In June 1993, Fran began to
experience morning sickness once
a••;n_ She lltough~ 'This can't be
.,.......
happening
to us again, not with both
of us in our middle 40s." But it was
indeed happening again. Fran was
pregnant They were so cmbarrnssed
litey didn't tell family or friends
until Fran was in her sixlit month.
d h
They adjusted, however, an w en
the baby was born, they were
overjoyed:· It was the fttsl boy in
lite family, which assured the Casto
name will be carried on.
What do you say now, Ann
Landers? -- ROXBORO' N.c.
DEAR ROX: I say thanks for an

Genealogical society to
honor eligible residents

'"
1

LEANNE CLARK AND SHAWN CUNNINGHAM

Clark-Cunningham

R.\C IN E - Mr. and Mr s. and is currently attending Ohio
R,,nJid C!Jrk of Racine announce University working her bachelor's
the· engagement and forthcommg degree in nursi ng.
Her fiance is a 1988 graduate of
nurriagc of tl1cir daughter, Leanne
Sue'. to Shawn Allen Cunningham, Southern High School. He is a
'''" of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cun- trooper with the Ohio State High way Patrol at the Gallia -Me igs
m n~ ham, Svmcuse.
'ihc brid'c-elcct is a 1988 gradu- Post
The open-church wedding will
ate of Southern High School and a
1990 graduate of Hocking College. be an event of Saturday, July 23, at
She is a registered nurse at the . 1:30 p.m. at the Syracuse Church
Home Health Department of Veter- .of the Nazarene. Music will begin
ans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy, at I p.m.

POMEROY - The Meigs
County Genealogical Society is
moving forward on plans to honor
residents who arc able to provide
their lineage here before 1830.
This is anoliter part of the observance of the I 75th anniversary of
Meigs County.
The deadline for gelling information to the Society is Aug. 1
since soon after that a tea will be
held to honor litose who fit the lin cage pattern. ,
The place to start if you litink
you qualify is by picking up an
application at either the Pomeroy
or Middleport libr.uies, Bank One
branch at Rutland, the Home
National Bank at Racine, and lite
Meigs Museum. One of the rules is
that you must be a current Meigs
County residenL
Generations of families must be
documented. For lltose having dif-

PHOTOGRAPHY

Profelflonsl Wlddln11 Photography

(614) 446-6700

it was possible to get pregnant with
underwear on. When you said
semen cannot travel throug~ clothes,
I'm afraid you might have given
teen-agers a false sense of security.
When I was 14, my 17-year-old
boyfriend and I often engaged in
heavy pelting. I was unbelievably

naive, but! knew enough not to let a
boy go all the way. Well, I
am living proof lltat you CQ/1 get
pregnant with Ulldelwear on.
of · It h 1
I dropped out hig sc: oo, and
·
retl
d '-·'- ~-··•
we married
sec(' Y anThe
._..."""""'
·
'
our mamage ICCIISC.
mamage
and
had
•L-lasted 20 years,
we
uuo;c;
more children. After my husband left
d
ark.
us, I got my GED an went tow
I've been very fortunate. All my
children grew up to be gOQd citizens
and are self-supporting.
,
d
tha
Please in.orm
t
h · 1your
h rea ers
·
keeping t etr c ot es1 on BEE
IS not
reliable birth contra . -N
TiffiRE IN GEORGIA
DEAR GEORGIA: Thanks for the
Toda ·
ill ha
teStimony.
Y s gem w
ve
special meaning [or you.
G
f the D M h
·
em o
ay: y, ow Urnes
have changed. In our day, safe sex
meant a padded headboard.

RIO GRANDE - The work of
local artisans will be on display at
the Bob Evans Farm 1994 Home-

....

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GALLIPOLIS - Because only
51 percent of Ohio 's two-year-olds

Lawrence-Cox
GALLIPOLIS - Jeri Yunker of
Rio Grande and Keith Lawrence of
Bucyru.f'wish to announce the martj:nge of their daughter, Angela
Fawn Lawrence to Tony Curtis
Cox, son of Cunis Cox of GallipoJi&gt; and Glenna Cox of Crown City.
· The June 3 ceremony was at the
bllle Log Weddin~ Chapel in
Gatlinburg, Tenn. wtth a honey moon following there.
.. The bride wore a drop waist tealength white satin and lace bridal
~own adorned with sequins. ·The
tlouquet consisted of mauve, teal
and white carnations.
The groom wore a black tuxedo
,;-.with a teal vest and bowtie and a
taal boutonniere with baby 's

GOA TEE - Rocker Bruce
Springsteen sports a goatee
l)ackscage at the Academy
Awards in Los Angeles. The
~oaCee, not always the hippest
of facial hair, is again the
growth or choice on cutcing·
~dge chins.' '--...,2

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queen size quilts arc the result
some 27 years later.
Wickltne says she stores her full
size quilts and they do not get
much usc but the crib quilts get lost
of usc.
"I give them away as fast as I
make them - mostly to grandchildren and great grandchildren," she
says.
Her mother taught her to quilt
but she says others in her family
qui lted too. a grandmother and
aunLs. She buys fabric as she sees
interesting p1cccs. uses scraps and
gets some as g1fts and from friends .
She has ex hibited at Bob Evans
and won a blue ribbon for her
Mother' s Double Wedding Ring
qui ll.

breath .
The bride is a 1989 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center and a
1993 graduate of the University of
Rio Grande with an associ ate's
d~gree of science in nursing . She is
a registered nurse at the Charleston
Area Medical Center.
The groom is a 1989 graduate of
Gallia Academy High School and
Buckeye Hills Career Center. He is
member of the International Association of Heat and Frost Insulators
and Asbestos W,orkers Local 203
and is an abatement worker for
Ohio Valley Insulators.
The couple will reside in Gallipolis.

arc appropriately immunized, the
Ohio department of Heallit Immu nization Program and the Aetna
Foundation are developing a state wide computerized immunization
recall/tracking system for new borns, said Judy Linder of lite Gallia County Heal lit Dcpartmenl
The health department has been
selected as one of six sites in the

state for testing of lite program. To
enter information into the computer
system,the mother's social security
number will be needed.
This system, when fully implemented, will link the public and'
private Medical Sector to one central system in the state. The program will enable users to mstanlly
access up-to-date, accurate patten!
information and wtll supply
providers with a complclc immu -

nization history.
The health department requests
that all mothers bringing their children in for immuni za ti ons bring
their number with them . The
Health Department provides over
300 immunizations to Gallia county re sident s each month fre e of
charge.
Immunization clinics arc held
from 8 to II :30 and I to 3:30p.m.
eac h Tuesday and Friday . Out -

reach clinics in tllC comm uniLy and
ex tend ed evc n1n g hours arc also
held each month .
Children needing immunizations
must be accompanied by a parent.
have a curren t "shot " record and
the mother's socia l sec urity num ber.
Those needing more informa tion may call 446-461 2 ex tension
292.

Hoffman named Collegiate Scholastic All-American
MIDDLEPORT - Bryan T.
Hoffman of Middleport has been
named a Collegiate Scholastic AllAmerican by the United States
Achievement Academy.
The USAA has established the
Scholastic All-American Collegiate
Award Program in order to offer
deserved recognition to superior
students who excel in the academic
di sciplines, Dr. George Stevens,
executive director of lite academy,
reports.
Scholastic A11-Amcrican Colle-

gtale Scholars must cam a 3.3 or
be!ler grade point average and only
scholars selected by a school official or other qualified sponsor arc
accepted. These scholars are also
cltgiblc for other awards given by
the USAA.
Hoffman who attends Campbellsv i lie College at Campbellsville, Ky., was nominated for
this national award by Tommy Ray
Clark, professor of fine arts at
Campbellsville College. He will

appear ill the Scholastic All-American Collegiate Directory which is
published nationall)l.
"Recognizing and supporting
our youth is more important than
ever before in American history .
Certainly, winners of lite Scholastic
All-American College Award s
should be congratulated and appreciated for their dedication to excel lence and achievement," Stevens
said.
The Academy selects Scholastic

AII·Amcrican Collegiate Scholars
upon the exclusive recommendations of professors, instructors,
deans and other qualified sponsors.
Once awarded, the students may be
recognized bv the USAA for other
honors.
Hoffman is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. George A. Hoffman, 25
Riverview Place. Middleport, and
is the grandson of Mrs. Martha
Hoffman, Middleport, and Mrs.
June VanMatre of Mason, W.Va.

More than a mustache, less than a beard the goatee returns

~~·~·~·~·~

Archer-·Burnette

.

TONY AND ANGELA COX

a= [GJ .

MONICA ARCHER AND KEITH BURNETTE

dred Osborne and Genewlit Wickline will be on display from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. July I litrough 31 daily at
the Old Wood Homestead.
Sally Gill of Patriot, says of her
first quilting experience "My moliter-in-law put a quilt in the frame
and told me to sit down and quilt it
and liten it was mine." Since litcn
she has completed approximately
200 quilts.
She uses tntdilional patterns that
come from magazines, books and
visions in her head. She says "!like
traditional patterns best, but I like
1hc newer ways of pulling them

together. I have new ideas coming t1onal paucrns that she has seen at
in mind every day and with the
or in magazines and/or
new melitods it makes it easier to exhibits
books.
get the project done."
She says, "I am inspired 1o do
She has exhibited at lite Athens
quilts
that have distinguished or
Dairy Bam, the American Quiltcrs'
colorful
patterns ... ! also now prefer
Society in Paducah, Ky. and at Bob
doing
small
er blocks with a vanety
Evans Farm. She has won unique
of
p1eces
and
a variety of colors or
design and baby quilt awards .
patchwork.
Many
people refer to
Mildred Osborne of Gallipolis
this~ a scrap quilt."
started quilling to fulfill a longtime
Mlfny of her quilts are used
desire to follow her ancestors.
"especially my moliter, my mater- every day by her children. fnend s
nal aunts and paternal grandmolit - and family . She has exh ibited at
er," she says. She ha s made Bob Evans Farm where her quilts
approximately 43 items in nine have received honorable mentions.
Gencwth Wi cklin e of Rio
years. She says she is the only Grande, traces her quilting roots a
active family member quilting at neighbor who gave her a paekilged
thi s time but a niec e and fir st kit for a cnb quilt when her grandcousin are interested.
child was born . Fourteen cribs
Mo st of the time she u ses tratli - quilts and 25 lwin , double and

Immunization tracking system to be expanded

.•

ate of Marietta College wtlh a
bachelor's degree in human
resource mana11ement. She is
employed by Manetta College.
Burnette is a 1988 graduate of
North Gallia High School and a
1992 graduate of Marietta College
with a bachelor's degree in marketing. He is employed as an account
manager by Coca Cola.
The wedding is planned for 4: 30
p.m. Oct. 8 at Porterfield Baptist
Church in Little Hocking.

• . .

.... '.

~

'·

VI NT ON - Lee and Jeanette
Archer of Vinccnt announce the
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Monica
Denice Archer, to Keith Edward
Burnette, son of Bonnie Stepp of
Vinton and foster son of Tommy
and Patty Sprague of Bidwell.
.
Archer is the granddaughter of
Walter and Madilen Brown of Vin cent and lite late Glen and Vivian
Arc'lcr of Belpre.
She is a 1989 gractuatc of Warren High School an~ a 1993 gradu -.

--.r. .

1·,

rhingsaround.

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~

20·50%

·J a ·•.- •.•

.........·--·-8. . . . . . ._.,__,
-~ I stea~uW~i~l!~a~~~~~~x~:~~~Mil-

Is alcohol ruining your life or thL
life of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
R
· 1 H
D 1
How
ecognm
I, ow to ea_
w·II hitoI, How
c
1"
to• onquer I can turn

TO
2oFF
Semi·Annual
CLEARANCE sl ENTIRE SUMMER STOCK!
~
Includes Bathing Suits,
SALE!!
•
All Sportswear And Dresses!

Gallipoli s ~ -~

Local quilters ·exhibited ·at Bob &gt;Eyans

'

ficulty with that, the Genealogical
Society will conduct a mini-workshop sometime later this monlit to
g1ve direction in document search.
Sue Hager who is president of
the Genealogical Society and is
well-versed in researching will give
direction. She can be contacted at
949-2241.

~~ne-

opportunity to give my readers some
valuable information.
According to Dr. Lane Mercer,
chief of gynecology at Norlltwestern Memorial Hospital, it is
possible in some instances for tubal
ligations and vasectomies to heal
by litemselves. Approximately one
in 300 women who has had a tubal
ligation finds that she can conceive
again . Medical 'literature suggests
that men have a checkup every few
years after a vasectomy to make swe
it is still working. K~p
reading for .
·
another letter that might scare
some teen-agers into behaving
themselves.
Dear Ann Landers: This is in
response to "Terrified m
California," who wanted to know if

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page-83

By LARRY McSHANE
AssociaCed Press Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Forget
Colonel Sanders and Burl lves.
Think Brad Pitt and Snoop Doggy
Dogg.
The goatee, not always the
hippest of facial hair, is again the
growth of choice on cutting-edge
chins. It 's less than a beard, more
than a mu stache and much cooler
now than when Maynard G. Krebs
sported one, daddy-o.
"It seems like this is the trend
these days,' • said Boston Bruins
dcfenseman Ray Bourque, one of
several dozen hockey players who
sported good-luck goatees rather
than the usual beards for this year's
playoffs.
Bourque has since shaved, but
that puts him in the minority.
Turn on MTV. There's John
Mellcncamp we:uing a little beard
rcmini scent of the classic Krebs
goatee.
Bob

SOFA &amp; CHAIR

Local host
families sought
: POMEROY - Local host families are needed for foreign high
sohool students who will be arriving soon to attend a semester or
year in local high schools.
· According to Pacific Intercultural Exchange (PIE) Executive
Director, John Doty, the students
ate all between the ages of 15 and
18 years, are English-speaking,
h~vc their own spending money'
carry accident and health insurance. and are anxious to share their
c~ltural experiences with new
American families. PIE currently
has programs to match almost
every family's needs, ranging in
l~ngth from a semester to a full
academic year, where lite students
attend local high schools.
· PIE area representatives match
s(lldcnts with host families by findill&amp; common interests and lifestyles
through an infotmal in-home meetirig. Prospective host famtltes are
allle to review student applications
aqd select lite match.
· As there are no "typical" host
families, PIE can fit a student into
jt(St about any sit~lion, wheliter it
be a single parent. a childless coupk, a retired couple or a large family, it is reported ..
. Families who host for PIE are
al);o eligible to claim a $50 per
month charitable contributiOn
deduction on their itemized tax
re:tums for each month they host a
sJlOnsored student.
• For the upcoming programs,
PiE has students from Spain, Germany, Poland, Russia, Finland,
A:rgentina, Brazil, CoiQmbia,
P.,aguay, AusD'Biia, New Zealand,
Croatia and many other countties.
: Famili~ interested in learning
m:ore about student exchange or
a(ranging for a me~ling witb a
community representative rua)"call
PIE, toll-free, at 1-800-631-1818.
The agency also has travel/study
p(Ogram opportunities available faAplerican high school students as•
well as possibilities for community
volunteers to assist and work with
area host families, Stlldents and
sc;!Jools.

'

Denver played .the ~~~k Slde~tck
on the 60s stlcom_ .. The Many
Loves of Dobte Gillts. )
Take yourself out 10 the ball game. There s Brct Saberhagcn of
the New York Mcts stanng m Wtlh
hts recent grow.th, maybe factng the
Allan~ Braves newly tufted Charlte 0 Bncn . (Athletes and mu stctans are two major goatee growing
groups.)
Head over to the Cannes Film
Festival and c heck out Bruce
Willi s' chic beard. Stopping in los
Angeles? A goateed Pill, the star of
"A River Runs Through It" and
"Thelma and Louise," was photographed recently outside a Los
Angeles club.
Hit the World Cup, where U.S.
defender Alexi Lalas attracted as
much attention for his flowing ~oatee as for his game. His thrce-mch
mini-beard turned Lalas into Amcrica's most recognizable soccer
player and landed hif!! appearances

with Jay Leno and Davtd Lellcr The history of the goatee is hard
man . Lcucrrnan tnmmcd tl up.
. to trace. Titc Three Lillie Pigs were
How coolts La las' growth"
possessive of the hair on their chin" I hav e employed a full-time ny-chin-chins. Jefferson Davis ran
stalf of highly-trained professionals th e Confederacy with one: Len in
to keep it clean," he joked.
did the same for mother Russia.
Them's more. ABC's hour of Buffalo Bill Cody was a goatee
pnmc-ltme ~oatccs, wtlit Mtchael man. Dizzy Gillespie combined a
O'Keefe on .~Rosearne"and Ayre beret and a goatee to be cool in u1e
Gross on These Fnends of '40s.
Mine;" .th~ grunge goatees of Alice
But the beard wasn 't alway s a
m Chatn s ~ayne. Stay ley and
hip took. Beatniks and folk singers
~oundgarden s Ch~!s Cornell; the seized it as an affectation in the late
I love th1s goatee look of NBA
' 50s and early '60s _ two-thirds of
stars fr9m Kevtn Johnson of the
Peter, Paul and Mary wore them
Phoentx Suns to Karl Malone of (you figure out who).
the Utah Jazz.

Robert Bark, .the defeated
Supreme Coun nommee, ts a veteran goatee man . And a goateed Pee
Wee Herman was arrested three
years ago tn a Florida porn movie
theater for vmlmions unrelated to
hts fanal hatr. .
.
But the qucsuon no longer ts
goatee or not goatee- the beards
arc everywhere. The greybeards:
Bruce Sprmgstccn._Roberto Durar.
The dtrcctors: Sptkc Lee, Robert
Altman. Generat1on X. Actors
Ethan Hawke, Btlly Baldwm. The
mwrna11onal crowd: Ital!an soccer
star Roberto Bagg1o, U2 s guttartst
The Edge.

There CAN B·e A Med.·cal Reason
Why Your Child Won't Eat!!

S.g R•lool SH9 QS
5Gve 5100

$199 95

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF

SOUTHEAST OHIO
Confidential Family Planning Services for females &amp; males
• Medical exams
• Pap tests
• Pregnancy tests &amp; counseling
• Tests &amp; treatments for sexually transmitted diseases
• Aaonymous IDV tests &amp; counseling
• ~ethods and supplies for birth control and safer sex
Norplant-lmplant
DepoProvera·lnjectlon
Birth control pill
Coadom/Spermlclde
Sliding Fee scale
We accept Medicaid and private lnsuraace

414 Second Street

509 S. Third Street

Gallipolis

Middleport

446--0166

992-59ll

CALL THE HOLZER HEALTH HOTLINE
to help you determine
why she doesn't want to eat ...•
especially when she has always
been such a good eater!

l-800-462-5255
OPEN 8 AM-11 PM- 11 PM

7 DAYS A WEEK

SPECIAllY TRAINED R.N. ON DUTY!!

�Page-84-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

--The House of the W e e k - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Saunders Sis ters singing 7 p.m . at Elizabeth
Chapel Church.

•••

By PAT WKAS

CENTENARY · Rev. Harold
Benson 9:30 a.m. at Ce ntenary
United Methodist Church.

AP Newsfeatures
Elegant co lumn s enhance the
symmetrical beauty of this grand
colonial home.
The regal facade of design F-2, by
Homestyles "Source I· Designers
Network, encloses a well-planned
inter ior, which provides all the
amenities for comfortable family
living and formal entertaining in
4,284 square feeL
The colonnaded entry porch
frames a tall door that is crowned
by a semicircular transom window.
An abundance of symmetrically
placed windows grace the front of
the home, promising a well-lit interior. Pedimented dormer. high light the home with traditional
The high angled rooflines in front
are echoed in the rear, where
there is a further abundance of
glass trimmed with brick sold1er·
ing. Columns outline the covered
rear porch, which is designed for
outdoor enjoyment in any weather.
Double doors open to the entry·
way, which showcases the grace·
ful. curved stairway. A convenient
storage area is tucked behind the
stairway . The home is well zoned
into formal and info rmal living
spaces.
The elegant entertaining areas
flank th e front entry, while the
casual family areas are oriented tD
the rear. To one side of the entry
lies the elegant parlor. perfect for
receiving guests. Its HHoot ceiling
is co nti nued throug hout most of
the first floor. To the other side of
the entry is th e formal dining
room. which has easy acce'!S to the
kitchen area
The spacious family room is th e
center of the home for casual activ·
ities. The two-story-high ceiling,
which is accented with attractive
fa lse beams . adds volume to the
massive space. Th e fireplac"«
boasts a brick hearth and mantel.
Three walls of windows flood the

D

UPPfR R.OOR

•••

Monday, July 11

.•

•••

·

•••

•••
•••

Cl'ALLIPOLIS - Alcoholics
Anonymous Wood land multipurpose room 8 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - Olla Arbogast
7:30 p.m. at Cannan Baptist
Church, Route 218.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County
Disuict Library Board of Trustees
5 p.m. Bossard Memorial Library.

POINT PLEASANT · Narcotics
Ano nymo us Tri County Group
7:30p.m. 611 Viand St.

•••

Rc,,i,·al
CROWN C ITY · Big Four
Church, Hannan Trace Rd ., July 6
through I 0 7 p.m.

CENTENARY - Job White
Reunion 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. 0.0.
Mcintyre Park Shelter #2.

BIDWELL - Stu mbo 's Stoneyard July II through 16 7 p.m.

CENTENARY - Steven Myers
Reunion 0.0. Mcintyre Park Shel·

GALLIPOLIS · Christian Community Church Lincoln Ave. , July
7 until further notice 6:30p.m.

II

POMEROY, OH.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD JULY 10 THRU JULY 16, 1994.

•••

,_ ....

2LITER

•••

(

•••

To Order Study Plan

II

FAR~ FRESH BUDGET PAC

t

•.. ..

•••.••

•

-·
•.. ...

.... .J
MAIN FLOOR

F· l.

comfortable family room
light.. The balcony of the second floor is just above the hond80me
fireplace.

Concert fans
sue ticket
company
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Five
concen fans filed a S185 million
lawsuit against Ticketmaster, con·
tending the goanl distributor violat·
cd antitrust laws and charged exorbitant fees.
The federal lawsuit comes after
similar acc usat ions by the band
Pearl Jam that the Los Angele sbased company gouges customers.
The lawsuit sai d Ticketmastcr
and two ticket agencies in Northern
California agreed to avoid compcti·
tion with each other. giving Ticket·
master a virtu al monopoly · on
Southern Cal iforn1a and four other
Western states.
The lawsuit fil ed Thursday
names Ticketmastcr-Southcrn Cali fornia Inc. and subsi diaries. Com·
pan y execu tives co ul dn't immedi ·
atcly be reached for comment.
In May. Pea rl Jam filed an
antiuust cornpbin! against Ticketmaster w1th the Justice Bepartment
over scrvoce charges . Ba nd mcm·
hers said Tickctma stcr arranged a
Pearl Jam bO)'COtt among concen
hall opera tors because th e band
wanted to charge less for its tickets .
Fred Rosen. Tickctmaster's
chief operat in g officer . defended
the company at a June 30 congrcs·
sional heari ng. claiming it makes
about 10 ce nts per ticket. despite a
typical SS·a·ticket service charge
and a $2.50 handling fee .

ENROLL NOW
For Classes Starting
July 19, 1994
• Financial Aid Available
To Those Who Qualify

I!J

Cal l Ca&gt;at Vineyard

1·614·373-3617
Valley Beauty
School

252 Front St .
Marietta, OH 45750 373-3617

A GRACEFUL, curved stair separates the formal entertaining areas
- the parlor and the dining room. Just to the rear is the very pmc·
licaily sized family room. eomfortable for any everyday gathering
you may plan. The library is s bonus for private time. and is an
appreciated buO'er between the famUy room and the lll88ter suite.
Each ol the two bedrooms on the

THRIFTY CHUNK
STYLE DOG FOOD
4 LB. BAG

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF

s

189
Round Steak·••••••••••;!·. ·
U.~.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$ 89

Clip thi s order and return label

Enclosed Is $4 for plan No.-- - - - - - - - - - Enclosed Is $4,95 each for the booklet(s) _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Name' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOMS 179

Street·--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - -

Round Steak •••••••••••L:~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

DR. SPENCER'S MOVED!
......

(

Ch1cken •••••••••••••••;.':••• 69

Full study plan information on this house 1s available in a $4 baby
blueprint. Fou r booklets are also available at $4.95 each: Your Home-How
to Build, Buy or Sell It, Ranch Homes. 24 of the most popular from this
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 money order payable to the Associated Press and this
label to: House ol the Week, The Sunday· Times Sentinel, P.O. Box 1562,
New York , NY. 10116·1562.

State (ZIP) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

-

PEPSI COLA
PRODUCTS

WE NOW ACCEPT WIC COUPONS

•••

c~--------------------------------

--

24 PK 12 Ol CAN

298 SECOND ST.

GALLIPOLIS · David Ronda
Nichols homecoming at the morn ing service at North Baptist
Church.
'

•••

R·c COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE.- HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM·lO PM

•••

Tuesday, July 12

•••

brick exterior of this colonial catchu your eye with ilB colo1U18ded entry porch. The tali
door is crowned by a semicircular transom window, and balanced on either &amp;lde by on abundance of
symmetrically placed windOWB.
The large brick fireplace is flanked
room with natural light, and sliding
by built-in shelves. The bath
glass doors ease access to the cov·
includes walk-in closets, a win·
ered porch. The porch includes a
esign F-2 has a parlor, din·
dowed platform tub, a separate
built-in brick barbecue with star·
ing room. kitchen , break·
shower. a compartmentalized toilet
age space.
fast area, family room, .
and a dual sink with make-up area.
A breakfast room offers a view of
library four bedrooms and four
The main-floor secondary bedroom
the rear porch and creates a sunny
baths. totaling 4.284 square feet of
includes dual closets and a private
environment for casual din ing. A
livable space. There is a three-car
full bath. Each of the two bed counter. designed for a trash com·
garage, utility room and storage
rooms on the second floor has its
pactor, visually separates the room
area.
Doors lead from the family
own bath
from the expansive ltitchen. which
room
to a co vered porch. The
features an island counter. abun·
overall dimensions of 96'10" by
(For a mqrt detailed, scaled plan
dant cupboard space and a roomy
61'6" include the garage.
of this hnust, incl,.ding guides to
walk-in.
Construction blueprints provide
estimali"'I costs and jinanci11g, send
Just steps away. a half-bath and a
details for a full basement. crawl·
$4 to House of tlrt Wuk, P.O. &amp;n
closet flank the entrance to the
space or slab foundation .
1562, New Yo'*. N.Y. 10116-1562.
large utility room. which co ntains
Be s""' to i~~ellldt tlrt number of the
cabinets and co unt er space. The
p/on.J
utility room also has access to both
the porch and the three-&lt;:ar garage.
The garage has a storage room
and pull-down stairs to the attic.
Just right of the family room is a
pocket door that opens tD the cozy
library. The libra ry offers built-in.
floor-to-ceiling bookshelves.
The remainder of the first floor
houses the secluded master suite.

-Middl

Daily Special In Our Bakery,
10 am until 2 pm Mon- Sat.
Hot Dogs 2/$1.00 with sauce 3/$1.00 plain

GALLIPOLIS · James Robert
Barcus Family Reunion 12 p.m ,
American Legion Post 27, Rt. 588
and McCormick Road .

VINTON . Community appreciation picnic Vinton Communily
Park 7:30p.m.

•••

TilE

ter #5 .

•••

GALLIPOLIS · Ralph Work·
man II a.m. and 6 p.m. at French
City Baptist Church.

flair.

p

Gallia community calendar
Sunday, July 10

Colonial Is Impressive Inside and Out

July 10, 1994

r--~---------------~~o;m:e;ro~y~::=e~po~rt~-G;::a~lll:po:l~ls~,~O~H;:P~o:ln~t=P:Iea::sa:n~t,~WV:_ _ _ _ _ _..;s:u:nd(ly Tlmes-Sentlnei--Page-85

July 10, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Eye of Round Roast.L!.

Dr. Thomas R. Spencer has moved his offices
from E. Main Street In Pomeroy to the Meigs
Medical Building, adjacent to Veterans Memorial
Hospital In Pomeroy. His new quarters are In the
same section of the Medical Building as the hospHal's Home Health Service.
Dr. Spencer Is seeing patients from 9 a.m. to
11:30 a.m. and from 1 to 5 p.m., Mondays through
Fridays, In his new quarters. His new telephone
number Is 992-4226. Please call for Information
and to arrange appointments.

BUCKET CUBE

Steak••••••••••••••••••••••L:·.

ECKRICH SLICED

B ogna ••••••••••••••!~...

.
R1b Eye Steak •••••••••!~. 4
Wemers ••••••••••••••••~~=~ 69
FLAV~RITE

STOKELY
TOMATO JUICE
46 oz.

(

69(

$ 69

1·

$219
VAN CAMP

$ 39

1

PORK N' BEANS
16 Ol.

s

secon;d::Ooo:r~ha:s:ita:.:own:.:bath:·~-.:::::::::::::::::::::~

Hoeflich's 'round the bend.
Sands' in the past.
Pinson's off the wall.

\

CHEF BOY· AR·
DEE 2 CHEESE

Discount Brokerage
SERVICE &amp; SAVINGS
Our low-&lt;m discount brokmtge ~is ideal for inYISors who
do not require lhe bmefit ri resemh or rerommendalions, but
who still insist on service and personal~.
• Low conunissions
• Prompt, efficient sernce
on tnldes

• No annual fee IRA account
• F'U'SIIrade in IRA account
is free

Refer to our 00111li1N;ion scbedule and oompare fees.
Then call to set up your personal account
MIDDUiPORT
m.(,66t

IDDONLY
t-37&amp;.7123

PIZZA

128 years of Quality Clothing Sales•••• 1866·1994

Men's Suits

20°/o to lfa off 20°/o to lfa off

Lettuce •••••••••••••h.-:~ •••••• S9c

Men's Summer
Dress Shirts

Sport Coats
Reg.S25
Reg.$32

NOW
NOW

:~: :~::::

Reg.$30

Sloc:O
Pnce
$1 ·$6
~

RoundTrip
CW$20
RoundTrip

,~

.

1·100
shares

200
shares

300
shares

$211,011
S«llXl
$20.011

$25.011
llliD
$25.011

I3DJIII

400
shares
$35.1111

IIIIIXJ

$100)

500

1000

shares

sharas

s «1.011 s 52.50
SlnOO
S1CMl
s 40.011 s 52.50

I3DJIII $31.011
lllm
S«llO
llliD
llliXl
StOOm $125!11
$30,00
$20.011
S40.00 $4UO • 5G.OO S IUO
Stock selling at less than $1 :$15 per trade plus $.03 par share,
Minimum $20. Transar.tions $1 -$5 of ovsr 500 shares add $.025 par
add~ional share to the 500 commission rata. Regular and Round Trip
transactions ovar $5 anti over 500 shares add $.05 and $.025 par
additional shara. respectively, Ill the 500 shara commission 1'8111.
Round Trip rates only apply to stocks over S5 and on transactions
cbsadoutwithin 31 days. Corporate Bonds:$25partrade, plus S5 par
bond. Peoples Bank broksrage servic8s are ofl8nld tf1rough Olde
Discount Corporation, Member SIPC, NYSE, NASD. Oisoount brokerage funds are not FDIC insured,

.,...

-14 oz. Unwashed
St. Leg &amp; Boot

~~~ $2399

.
IIMI

14 OL Pre-waShed

Reg. S30.99
NOW

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All fashion S\Yies
Vol. To $47.50

$2599 $3599

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tll8 pm
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...
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2

$

1

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"
s1
59
Nestea ••••••••••••••••••••••
Ice Cream ••••••••• !~··~a:••••
Paper Towels•••••••:&lt;~£••••69c Frozen (h•1cken •••:;·••••• $219

TWIN PET CAT
FOOD

6 oz.

s

KEMPS

3.6 oz•

BOUNTY ~

-

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GRADE A LARGE

Eggs ••••••••••••••••••::.

En/er our annual fourtb lfl1llr1#r Sloclt Picking CmttesJ.
Elllryfomrs wt1J fir lll1llllaiM in SeJK-Itn.
STOCKS

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••::~•• \ 1

:~: :~~:!~ 20o/o to Y2 off

99

$ 89

VALLEY BELL

1--:M:-en":"'s-:S-um_m_er'":'Spo-rt~+--~w~al~kS~ho_rt_s,~----~~~-...;;:;.:,:....:::;:~ -,
Shirts &amp; Knit Shirts
Swim Wear
Dress &amp;Casual Slacks
Reg.$20

28 oz.

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25

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p·--··-....... 1
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July 10, 1994
Page-:-86-,-Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnel

.;;

30th anniversary celebr
Ha rri so nvill e, and Mt chael King
Jnd Thomas King of North Caroli na; and two grandchildren, J.B. and
Mtkcy King, Harrisonville.
A family ce lebration of the
anniversary was held last weekend.

Meigs
community
calendar
The c;;""mmunily C~lendar is
published as a free service · to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meetings and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fundraisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of days.
SUNDAY
RACINE - Darin Smith speak·
ing at Mt. Moriah Cht1fCh of God,
Racine, Sunday at 7 p.m . A revtval
from July 15-17 with the Rev. Marvin Cann as speaker. The public ts
invited.
DARWIN
The Modern
Woodmen of America, Camp 7230,
annual potluck picnic and community se rvi ce recognition program
Sunday , 12: 30 p.m. at the north
bound park. Route 33 . Recogmuon
will be given to Ola St. Clair and
Alctha Randolph for outstanding
community servtcc.
RACIN E - The family of the
Rev. Lubert and Maria Hille Theiss
will have a reunion Sunday at Star
Mi 11 Park. There will be a covered
di sh dtnner at 12: 30 p.m.
MONDAY
EAST MEIGS - Eastern High
SchJol volleyball meetings for all
girl s grades 7 through 12 will be
held Monday, 9 to 10 a.m . and 6:30
to 7 p.m. All interested girls arc
asked to attend one of the meetings.
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School at the Middleport
Pres byterian Church , Monday
throu gh Frida y. Classes for all
ages, 10 a. m. to noon.
SYRA CUSE Di sabled
Amcncan Veteran s and the Ladies
Auxiliary . Monday 7 p.m. at Carleton School, Syracu se. Dinner fol lowing meeti ng.
RACI NE - Racin e Board of
Publi c Affairs mee ting 10 a.m .
Monday at Star Mill Park.
MIDDLEPORT - BrooksGrant Camp of Sons of Union Yet- ''
erans of the Civil War will meet
Monday at 7: IS p.m. in Hope Baptist Church Annex. Guests welcome. Charter memberships still
available.
RACINE - Southern High
School Athletic Boosters, 7 p.m.
Monday at high school. Parents of
all athletes and cheerleaders asked
ua attend.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Board of Elections, 4 p.m. Tuesday
at the office on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy.
POMEROY ·- Meigs County
Chamber ol Commerce meeting
Tuesday at noon at the Senior Citizens Center. Speaker Dan Cowdery, executive ~irector OSU
Extension Entcrpnse Center for
Alternative Agriculture.

Thetwo~wldingstJaa_toccullY I~

and 126 ~Avenue an Gallipolis
wereerectedanl882byN.S. Jackson
to be used an his rag busmess.
It should be remembered that in
the 1800s most
paper was m.ade
from a combanation of rags and
wood
pulp.
He.nce there was
a lively. trade an
rags an the Old
Freoch City until
the 1890s when
most paper makers swiu:hed ua an
all-wood pulp process.
The Jackson business was one of
the last an uawn ua be involved in
paper making. In the 1850s Gallipolis had two paper mills, one located
on Vine Street and one on what is
now Memorial Field.
In I 850 the Star Paper MiU on
Vine Street bought from Fabor and
Company of PiliSbWJ!h two 40-inch
Clued boilers that were 18 feet long.
Theseboilersmntheenginewhichin
tum powered the bleaching tub and
the paper machine.
This operation could handle 325
pcWlds of rags at a time with a daily
limit nf 1,500 poWlds. The paper
making machine itself came from
Philadelphia and it turned out paper
that was 44 inches in width.
, About30 reams of paper per day
was the end product for 1,500pounds
of rags. The Star Paper Mill was
originally owned by Clendenin and

are

Rock hall changes to enhance exhibits but delay opening

EDWARD AND SUSAN KING

HARRISONVILLE - Edward
and Su san Kmg of Harri sonville
obse rve d their W th weddin g
ann tvcrsary Friday.
Th e couple were married on
Jul y 8, 1964 at the Rutland Church.
of God. The Rev. John Smallwood
performed the ceremony .
Mr. and Mrs. Kmg have four
children, Joe and Jess ica King of

~y Jam Slmcls
Spedai.C?"'espoodent

By JAMES HANNAH
D·es pitc the enrollment dro~.
Associated Press Writer
there are plenty of jobs for eng• ·
FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP) - A neers. he said.
state university said Friday it will
Only 2 percent of the school's
pay for its engineering under~du ­ 1993 engineering graduatess ur ·
ates to earn master's degrees tf they veyed arc still Iooktng for JOb s.
can ' tland an engineering job.
Eighty-seven percent have landed
"We don't expect large num - full -time jobs, 8 percent arc conUn·
bers of students to take advantage . uing their education and 3 percent
of this simply because we think said they had "other plans."
th ey're going to find jobs," said
"We find the market is improvJames Brandeberry, dean of Wright ing, not getting worse, " he said.
State University's College of EngiBrandeberry said he knows of
neering and Computer Science.
no other sc hool in Ohio that offers
Ja y Thom as, dean of Wright such a program.
State' s graduate studies, said the
Gay Clyburn , spokeswoman for
goal is to beef up enrollment and the American Association of State
generate interest in engineering as Colleges and Universities, said the
a profession.
program is rare but not un ique.
If it works, the increased enroll She did not know which schools
ment should offse't the cost of offered similar programs.
tuition for unlu cky undergrads ,
To be eligible, the students must
Brandeberry said. The free tuition have graduated from Wright State
has an $11,000 value per student.
in June 1994 or later, have a !,'Tilde
Enrollment in the engineering pcint average of at least 2.7, and be
unable to find an engineering job
sc ~o o l has declined by about 35
percent during the past eight years. within Lhree months.
They must maintain a B average
That follows a national trend , Brandeberry said.
as a graduate student and can
The school currently has 1,500 receive the free tuition for a maxi engineering undergraduates and mum of two years. Book fees,
400 graduates.
room and board
not included.

.

CLEVELAND (Af) ..,.- Design
30to tlieSept. 1,1995.
changes at th(! Rock and Roll Hall
" The design changes in exhibits
of Fame will delay the hall's open- and architecture will add some time
ing but make it more vi sually and
to the project, but they will be well
mu sically excitmg, the museum' s • worth tl1c time,'' Barrie said.
director said Friday.
New additions to exhibits
Museum Director Dennis Barrie
include stage sets from the Rolling
said the changes would delay the
Stones "Steel Wheel s" tour and
oocning of the rock hall from June

three East German Trabant auto mobil es that U2 used as stage
props.
The Trabants, speckled with
mirrors , will be installed on
whirling mounts above a fourth floor bal co ny overlooking the
museum 's glass lobby and will be

visible to passing motorists, Barrie
said.
The changes will increase the
museum 's cost from the projected
$84 million, but officials believe
they can limit the increase to the $2
million set aside in a contingency
fund.

Nash.
The principal cusuamers for the
mill were the newspaper companies.
The Gallipolis Journal from the

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When the first temperance movement hit the uawn in the 1850s, the
distillery was closed and the peach
orchard was convened inua a place
for camp meetings and pclitical raJ.
lies.
In 1860 the Ohio Conference of
theMethodistEpiscopaJChurchheld
its A!Ulual Conference in the orchard
because Gmre Church was 100 small
to accommodate the crowd.
Thepresidingbishopthalyearwas
Matthew Simpson, who was a trusted
friend of Alnham Lincoln. In fact.
Simpson presided over Lincoln's

"Ji'amil~ Ounu!d"

1·800·837·8217

\

funeral.
Those who heard Simpson in Gallipolis reported thai "his prayers are

".,

likethethunderandlightningofGod's

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ANi'MAL ORDINANCE • Michelle Laycock sits with her lion
cub "Siam" in her Cincinnati home, Thursday. Laycock is trying
to restore the heallh of the cub before finding a good home for
him . A City of Cincinnati ordinance tbat went into effect Friday,
July 8, prohibits anyone to own or harbor a wild animal within the
city Iimils.(AP Photorrhe Cincinnati Post, Melvin Grier)

EMPIRE FURNITURE
BEATS
HIGH IN,.ERES,..RA,.ES
SUITES IN STOCK

by Bob Hoeflich
A family reunion in Chat- "Pennies from Heaven ." It's
tanooga, Tenn.? Why not?
encouraging that so many of you
That's the spot Terry Knight, arc taking part. Every week severformerly of Pomeroy and son of al new people are getting involved.
Annie and Chet Knight, Pomeroy,
Those naming tune six include
picked as a good central location Loretta Beegle, Pomeroy; Johnetta
~ for family members to get together. Chapman. Pomeroy; Ramona
• And so they did over the long July Hawk, Pomeroy; Betty L. Curf. 4th weekend-for the second con- man, Syracuse; Betty Denny, Mtdsecutive year.
· dleport; Don L. Snyder, Athens;
:
The group did a bit of sight see- Stacy Warden, Racine; John Y.
: ing but mostly just enjoyed the Story, Pomeroy; Joan Mescher,
: company of family . Making the Syracuse; Pauline Wolfe, Racine;
. trip from Pomeroy were Anme a~d Lillian Hayman, Racone; Bonme
: Chet, Bill Matlack and Mane Ransom, Racine; Mildred Milburn,
; Hauck. Annie's brother and sister- Middleport, who also correctly
" tn-law, Mr. and Mrs. Wtd Ash - identified the fifth tune but forgot
; worth of Niceville, Fla., were on to include her name; Linda Jenkins,
~ hand along with their daughter, Pomeroy; Sharon F. Smith,
. Corinne Bray and Terry Wt!hams Pomeroy; Faye Wolfe, Pomeroy;
:, of Indtana; Mr . and Mrs: Jack Betty Reibel, Pomeroy; Isabelle
.. Jones and children, Kristte and Wolfe Pomeroy; Ruth Young,
: Sarah, of Hamilton; Mr. and Mrs. Middl~port; Mrs . Carl Gorby,
; Jim Ruckman, also of Indiana, and Langsville; Cindy Chadwell, Long
.. Mr. and Mrs. Terry Knight who Bottom; Betty Pooler, Middleport;
; reside in Marion. The Knight's Louise E. Gloeckner, Pomeroy;
~ other son, Dick, had vacationed
Mazie Hannahs, Pomeroy; Came
· earlier so couldn't get time off to Kennedy, Middleport; Ralph
: make the trip.
Graves, Pomeroy; Ann Lambert,
•
Pomeroy; Gussie Hostottle,
.~
The active Middleport Arts Pomeroy; Loui'sc Hall, Middlepcn;
; Council was one of 460 organiza- Rodney E. Spires, Cheshire; Judy
: tions awarded grants totaling Elkins, Tuppers Plains; Marie
• $6,549,153 this week by tile Ohio Boyd, Racine; Dorothy Oliver,
: Arts Council for art and education Columbus, and Margte Weaver,
Bedford, Ky.
·
: programs in Ohio.
The Middleport organization
The name coming out of the hat
: has been awarded $1,000 which to win the "big" $5 prize is Louise
: will be used 10 carry out a two E. Gloeckner of Pomeroy who has
• week creative writing program at proven to be a whiz at identifying
: the Meigs Junior High School in the contest tunes.
: Middleport
And that brings us to the clue
~
Plans of ·the local council call lines on tune seven. first copyright·
: for having an artist in residence at ed in 1933 but maintaining a
:: the school for the full two week degree of popularity over the years
• period. The grant will be supple- and particularly just after World
: mentcd by funds which the council War II:
: received last fall as co-sponsor of
"A million dreams it seems;
., the Big Bend Minstrel Associa"Have gone by since we shared
.: lion's Thanksgiving musical.
our dreams;
"But I'll hold you again;
"There'll be no blue memories
·•
A former Dyesville rcsidenl,
: Clemma Vale, will be observing then".
: her 90th birthday on July 23. If
Direct your answers to P.O. Box
• you'd like to send her a card tile 729-B, The Sentinel, Court
: address is 408 Marion SL, Canling- Pomeroy, or drop them by
: ton, Ohio 43315. No doubt she Sentinel Office.
:: would be pleased to he~r from
: Meigs County on the occasaon.
Yep, those are homegrown
.•
uamatoes. Now what happened ua
:
You're doing well. In fact, that bacon? Do keep smiling.
··some of r,ou arc batting a thousand
Bob Hoenlcb Is rorJDer ""'"'' • •
: in the • Whatsa Name of That al manager and rn1ntrlbu
• Song?" contesL
columnist to the Sunday Tlmes: . T~irty-four of you. corr~i:ti.Y Sentintl.
: idenUfied tune number SIX WhiCh IS

&gt;

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.;;-~:·I,

Beat of the Bend ...
•
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:
·
:

For Rome, Farm, Business, and Industr~

RA G I'LANT · N.S. Jackson built th e slruct ure at 124-26 Third
Ave. in 188 2 and made ·rag pulp th ere for a few years. In later
years a creamery was at the location. From 1795 to about IR65 this
are of Third !\venue was covered by a peac h orc hard .
·

tance.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Lions out procedures for conllscaling aniand tigers and bears! No way!
mals.
As of Friday, it became illegal
Two lion owners said they will
to own or harbor a wild animal in comply.
the city.
Mi chelle Laycock said she
Anyone who violates the ordi- bought Siam, a 13-pcund lion cub,
nance, prompted by complaints in May from a couple in suburban
from neighbors of lion owners, will Forest Park. The previous owners
be charged in Hamilton County said they sold the S-mooth-old cub
Municipal Court. Fines of at least in anticipation of an wild animal
$300 can be levied for each viola- ordinance enacted there in June.
tion thereafter.
Ms. Laycock said she has spent
Police likely will issue only at least $2,000 on the lion, includwarnings for the next two months, ing treatment for bleeding mouth
asking violators •to ship their ani- ulcers and a blood transfusion. She
mal to a sanctuary, police will be sending' Siam ua a Califorspokeswoman Lt. Cindy Johns nia preserve.
,
said. The city will provide names
"! have mixed emotions. I feel
and telephone numbers of animal he's better off there, but on the
sanctuaries as far away as Califor- other hand, I've fallen in love with
nia and Texas.
him and would like to keep him.
She said pclice are still working

•

•Normall.P. Gas Tank
Installation With
25 Feet Of
Copper Tubing·

early 1850s was pnnted on paper wrathagainstsecessionandslavery."
One of the big discussions 81 that
made in Gallipolis. In the 1850s, the
His sermons "swept like a whirl- 1860 Annual Conferea~~:e penained
Jownal also produced books, pam- wind over the hearts of the hearers. uawhetherornotitwa.s!X'Operforthe
phlets,cucularsandannoWJCemerus. Men clenched their hands, shouted, minister ua talk about money from
In 1853 the paper mill on Ytne stwnped,stoodootheirfeetandwere thepulpiL
Street was operated by Clendemn, left at the end in a tumult of pauiotic
The Conference passed a resoluBlack and Heasner. The latler. two excitemenL"
tion Slllling: ''Thai we regard such
had been assocaated wtth the mall on
In 1860 there were four circuits sermons by the ministry as in no wise
the present Memorial Fteld propeny. that covered Gallia County with derogatory ua their character as minAfter Jackson went out of the rag Gallipolis being a station church.Two isten."
business, he was a scrap metal collec- ministers lived in Centerville and had
The Annual Conference was also
tor. Around.thetumofthecenturythe nine preaching appoinunents.
held in Gallipolis in 18791900,1901
Jac~nbuilding was used for HelTwo more lived in Wilkesville and I926butinGraceChurcll. Bishop
nohsLivery.
and preached 81 seven churches in Simpsonalsopresidedherein 1879.
Pickenngton Oeamery used part Gallia County and Wilkesville in The Methodist churches in Rio
of the building from 1931 ua 1952.1n Vinton County . Until 1850 Grande and Pomeroy were named
1959 the Blue Valley Oeamery and Wilkesville was in Gallia County.
after him.
Roach and Pleasants Electncal CooCircuit riders also lived at Swan
tracuars were here, but by the 1960s Cnek and Patriot 1n 1860 most
James Suds Is a spec:ial correTabor Aoor Covering began a long Methodist preacheri were single and spondent oltbe Sunday Times-Senassocaauon wtth the property. . . were grouped uagelher in pairs. The tinel. His address is: 65 Willow
_ In the early hastory of Gallipolis older man mentoredthe)'OWlgerman.
Drive, Springboro OH 45066.
' this whole area of Third Avenue was
'covered by apeach orchard. A distillcry that manufactured peach brandy
was located up the street a shan dis-

City bars wild animal ownership

EARLY. BIRD SPECIAL

•Heating and Water Heating
•Lift Truck Gas Delivery
•Grain Drying and Cooking
•Construction Heatrng

Sunday Tlmes-Senllnei-Page-87

Paper Mill thrived in early Gallipolis

Free grad school -offered
unemployed engineers

40TH ANNIVERSARY· Mary Ann and Earl McDonald of Vinton celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary Sunday. They are
the parents of Gail, Earl Jr. of Cleveland, James (Dawn) of Eastlake, Michelle (Bruce) of Euclid and Thomas of Cleveland. They
are the grandparents of Ashley Thomas.

'

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July 10, 1994

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I

Entertainment

July 10, 1994

People in the news
NEW YORK (AP) - What's
ina name? Nothing, if you're TV's
Roseanne Arnold or rock music's
former Prince.
Thestarof ABC's''Roseanne"
has called it quits with comedianhusband Tom Arnold and wants to
drop her last name and be btown
just as Roseanne.
She aslced the Los Angelesbased Academy ofTelevision Arts
&amp; Sciences this week that any
mentionofberin theJuly21 Emmy
nominations refer to her simply as
Roseanne. The academy will honor
her reques~ spolcesrnan Marie RO!lCh
said Friday.
'
As for the former Prince, he
said he changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol so that he
Roseanne Arnold
could move on to the next Slage of
his musical developmenL
Vihe aslced the former Prince how one pronounces his new name.
"You don't," he replied.
"Prince did retire. He stopped making records because he didn't need to
any more," (Symbol) said in the August edition ofVibe magazine.

tapes of"l'm a Big Boy Now" by a 5-year-old Michael Jackson and
his brothers.
·

master

. The song sold 10,000 ~ies 27 yCIII'S ago. Brown began offering it by
mail Fnday to fans who missed tt the ftr8t time. He insisis it's an anistic
project, not a commercial one.
"Kids love it." said Brown, who met the Jacksons in 1967 as president
of the now-defunct Steeltown Records, where the song was reca'ded.
"Philosophically, it's about moving from childhood toadolesceru."

ATLANTA (AP) - Did he
talce notes? Former President Bush
toured former President Caner's
library as he malces plans for his
own archives.
Carter, who was in Japan, had
written a note inviting Bush to visit
the complex, a Carter spokeswoman said. Bush visited Thursday.
"He's here because he's in the
process of raising funds f&lt;J' his li- brary and center, and he wants to
talce a look 81 wh81 we're doing
here," said Don Schewe, director
of
the Carter library and musewn.
GARY, Ind. (AP)- A little-lcnown 1967 release by the Jackson 5
Bush's library will be on the
stayed buried in a kitchen panuy until family friend Ben Brown began
campus
of Texas A&amp;M Univerassembling a history of the famous family.
Brown was looking through his parents' panuy when he found the sity.

'Con1e to My Garden'
·set for Rio Grande
July 15 through 16
"And This Is My Beloved" (from
Kismet). and a medley from th e
musical The Secret Garden.

RIO GRANDE - Come to My
Garden. an evening of song. will
be presented at the University of
Rio Grande's Fine and Performing
Arts Center on Friday and Saturday. July 15-16, at8 p.m.

Featured performers include
Raymond Lynn Boothe. James
Cochran, Sharon Cox, Erica Han ning, Teresa Preston, Allison Purcell, Stephanie Purcell, Dorothy
Riepcnhoff, Ed Roark, Allen Ross,
Ed ith Ross, Amy Rouse, Patricia
Schuldt, Doug Sharp. Jean Ann
Vance and Terri Weakley.

Produced by RSR Enterprises, a
locally-based non-profit production
agency, Come to My Garden is a
concept choir presentation featur ing the singing talents of the tri county area. The musical evening
includes a medley of turn -of-thecentury songs, a tribute to MGM
and Broadway musical s.

Tickets for Come to My Garden
arc $5 and may be purchased at the
door prior to performance. No
reservations arc necessary. Special
rates arc avai lable for children and

Featured in the concert arc such
numbers as "Singing in !lie Rain,"
"Over th e Rainbow," "T he BoY
Next Door." "Be My Love.'' "A
Coupl e of Swells," "Wait Till the
Sun Shines Nellie," "S1rolling
Through the Parle," "Be ll s arc
Ringing," "Anthem" (from Chess),

George Bush

Sports

Sunday Times-Sentinel /B8

Section C

"intts-jtltti.ul

July 10, 1994

In the majors,

Mariners, Blue Jays, Cubs among Winners
BOSTON (AP) - Edgar Martmez hit two solo home runs and
T1no Martmcz_hll a three-run shot
So turday, g1v1ng the Seattle
Manners a 7-4 wm over the Boston
Red Sox and handing Chris Bosio
hi s first rood wi n of the year.
Seattle
shortstop
Alex
Rodnguez. the lO(J choice in the
1993 draft, got h1 s first maJorleague hll and stolen base m the
fourth. He had two sing les in four
at-bats and also reached on tlurd
baseman Scott Cooper's error.
Bosio (4 -10) is 3-2 with a 2.84
EI&lt;A at home. but was 0-8 on the
road before struggli n'g 10 beat
Iloston. He barely made it through
the fifth innin ~. allowing four runs

on nme hits tiC fore Milt Hill took
over mthc SIXth.
.
. Scrg1o Valdez (0-1) made hiS
fnst star t of the season, replacing
Roger Clemens. nursmg a grom
inJury.
nlue Jays 9, Royals 4 .
At Toronto_. Pm Hcntgcn pitched
seven effectiVe mnings and the
Toronto Blue Jays s t~ppcd t~·e"
se ven -game home losmg streak,
bcaung the Kansas City Royals 9-4
Saturday.
. .
Hentgen ( 1_1-5) won his fifth
straig ht deCISIOn, giVIng up two
runs on .six hi ts. He struck out nme
and improved to 3-0 agamst the
Royals this scas_on.
Ed Sprague s three-run homer

off the foul pol~ in left field gave
th e Blue Jays a 4- h. lead In the
fourth. He hll hiS eighth home run
af~er errors by second basc m&lt;tr
Terry Shum pert and left fielder
Vmcc Coleman.
The Illue Jays were helped out
by two more errors 111 the fifth,
addmg five runs for a_9- l _lead and
chasrng ~tarter Bob M_IIacki (0-4).
Rangers tO, Tigers 4
. At DeU~ll, Juan Gonzalez and
Ivan Rodngucz homered, lcadmg
Kenny Rog ers and _the Texas
Rangers over the Detroit T1gers 104.

.

of his last II starts and ieads the
Rangers with four complete games.
. The Rangers, who had 18 hils,
JUmped on John Doherty (6-7) for
three run s on five hiLs m the first.
By the time Doherty left, after 5
2/J innings, the Rangers had lagged
h1m for e1ghl runs, 14 h1ts and two
walks. .
.
Trav1s Fryman h1l a two-run
homer m the DetrOit first, h1s 13th,
and Juan Samuel hit his fourth
homer m the seventh.

Angels 10, Yankees 5
At New York, Spike Owen
drove in three run s. includin g an
RBI single during a five -run fifth
mnmg Saturday that sent the Cali-'
fornia Angels over I he New York
Yankees I 0-5.
Malt Nokes homered twice for
the Yankees. Pa t Kel ly also con nccted for New York, which led 30 after four innings.
. Owen hit an RBI single '" th e
f1fth and scored the tymg run on

Chili Davis' double. Owen had a
two-run singl e during a three- run
seventh thai made itR -3.
Cubs 7, Aslr!J!i J
1\1 Chicago Sammy Sosa drove
in three run s ~nd Anthony Young
won for the first time m eight sUlrts
as the C~icago Cubs defeated the
Houston Astros7 -3 Saturday.
Young (4 -fi) gave up one run
and three hits in five innings. He
left early because of a strained right
elbow
·

.

Rogers (10-4) p1tched three- hit
ball for seven 1nnmgs. He_has
worked at least
mgs m 10

senior citinns.

All proceeds benefit RSR Enterprises and its efforts to supply
scholarsh ips for students auending
Rio Grande.

Billy Joel and Elton John team up in first of dual shows
lly KIRA L.IIILLI":
Associated Press Wnter
PH ILADELP HIA (AP)- The
piano mcn1 Dueling ivories? Clash
of the hllmakc rs? Whatever you
call it. " Piano Man" Billy Joel and
" Hooky Cat" Elton John k1cked
off th e fir st in a se rie s of dual
shows in Philadelphia Friday.
The tour was Joel's idea . The

two had been part of a 1992 AIDS
benefit hosted by John 's longtime
partner Bernie Taupin, but did not
perform together.
They first met on stage May 9,
when John. 47, appeared during a
birthday ce lebration for Joel. 42. in
London.
The three Philadelphia concerts
arc part of a 14-ci ty , 21-perfor-

mance tour ending on Aug. 21 in
Orlando, Fla. It also includes an
Au!l. 6 performance in Columbus;
OhiO.
John is a prolific ductist. starting
with Kiki Dee in 1976 ("Don't Go
Breaking My Heart") and continuing to hi s 1994 "Duets" album.
featuring performances with
Tammy Wyneue and Little

Richard, among others. Joel has
only performed one duct. with Ray
Charles on his 1989 album "S torm
Front"
·
The artists will perform on an
80-foot oval slage at Veterans Sladium, fla nk ed by two 20-by-30foot video screens and American
and British flags.
Joel and John are schedul ed to

Larry King sues former
girlfriend for telling
magazine she dumped him

TO PERFORM - Terry McBride and The Ride will appear
from at 6 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. July 23 in Wellston at the Jackson
County Fair. Among their songs hitting the charts are "Can 1
Count on You," Sacred Ground" and "Going Out Of My Mind."

Concerts
Peter Frampton will perform 7

MEATLOAF
Meat Loaf will .Perform 7:30
p.m . July 20 at the Charleston
Civic Center.
Tickets can be purchased at the
Civic Center box office and at all
TicketMaster locations or by phone
in Charleston at (304)342-5757 or
Huntington at (304)523-5757.

ELTON JOHN
BILLY JOEL
Billy Joe l an Elton John will
perform at the Ohio Stadium 7:30
p.m. Aug.6.
.
.
Tickets are avrulable at all TtcketMaster locations or charge by
phone at431-3600 in Columbus.
There will be hm1t of eight uckets
.per transaction.
PETER FRAMPTON

p.m. July 12 at Paramount's King ~s
Island TimberWolf Amphitheatre.
Tickets may be purchased for
the park and concert by calling
(513)573-5700.
GRATEFUL DEAD
The Grateful Dead with special
guest Traffic will perform 6 p.m.
July 29 at Buckeye Lake Music
Center. Tickets can be purchased at
all TicketMaster locations or
charged by phone at (304)342-5757
or (304)523-5757.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Talk
show host Larry King filed a slander lawsuit against a former girlfriend who told a magazi ne she
dumped him.
The lawsuit said Rama Fox was
the source for a line in the July
issue of Washingtonian Magazine
that said, " In King's relationships.
he usually doe s the dumping, but
Fox dumped him ."
King's attorney, James Tierney,
sai d the ar.ticle holds King up to
ridicule and damages his reputation . The lawsuit said the article
also damaged King "by imputing
to him impotence or a wanl of
chastity ."

King, who is married, is seeking
unspecified damages. He also seeks
to recover $50,000 that he and Fox
were going to usc to purchase a
home together and disputes a claim
that he agreed to give Fox
$400,000, Tierney said.
King also asks in the lawsuit for
Fox to return some of his clothing
and other personal property_
King. who is not married, is
seeking unspecified damages. fie
also seeks to recover $50,000 that
he and Fox were going to use to
purchase a home together and disputes a claim that he agreed to give
Fox $400,000, Tierney said.

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SETS RECORD - Ernie lrvan or Salinas, Caiir. leans against bis
car after setting a track record Friday at the New Hampshire
International Speedway In Loudon, N.H. to win tbe pole ror today's
SUck 50 300. (AP)

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2U5JACICSON AVENUE

By MIKE HARRIS
LOUDON, N.H. (AP) - Ernie lrvan will
talce momentum any way he can get it
lrvan slipped and slid in his Ford
Thunderbird to the pole for today's Slick 50
300 on the treacherous one-mile oval at New
Hampshire International Speedway.
Even though the lap at 127.197 mph Friday
was a track qualifying record, it was not one he
was particularly proud of.·
"That was probably the worst lap I could
ever run and get a pole with," lrvan said, a
sheepish grin brealcing across his mustachioed
face.
With temperatures above 95 degrees and the
track talcing a beating from the unrelenting sun
and the 3,500-pound Winston Cup stock cars,
lrvan stole away the top qualifying spot from
Jeff Gordon.
Gordon , sixth in the qualifying line, broke
Mark Martin's year -old track record of
126.871 with his lap of 126.884.
."You could hear the track coming up as
you were goin~ around the first comer, so I
lcnew it was gomg to be tricky," Gordon said.
"I was hoping that going out early was going
to be beuer than going out lale. Last year, just
one comer was bad Now it's the whole track.
You don't even want to run on the track. I had
to run both l!:ft-side tires up on the apron to get
around.'' '

OWNERS; JACk AND PATTY LEE

POINT PLEASANT

By ALAN ROBINSON
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The All-Star game is
interrupting its tour of the best of the old and new
:::lloarq to return to one of baseball's biggest building biunden.
If baseball temples like Wrigley Field, Camden
Yards and Dodger Stadiwn are alcin to the Taj Mahal,
then Three Rivers Stadiwn is like a shopping mall.
The players will be All-StarS Tuesday, but the
unpopular, unloved stadiwn certainly won't be.
Three Rivers remains as characterless and colorless
as its cookie-cutter brethren - Philadelphia's
Veterans Stadium, St. Louis' Busch Stadium and
Cincinnati's RiYGlfront Stadiwn.
Born of the polyester suit and platform heels days
of the early 1970s, and just as unfashionably dated,
Three Rivers is an all-too-visible monument to
bureaucmtic blundering, architectural undelllthievement and lack of foresight
"When we moved out of Forbes Field (in 1970)
and into Three Rivers, we were all excited," said·
PimteS broadcaster Steve Blass, then a pitcher. "I
mean, we actually had carpeting in the clubhouse and
a place to parld We thou$ht we were moving uptown.
"Now, everybody thinks of Three Riven mostly
as a football stadium.''
Designed to put Pittsburgh on equal footing with
its urban contemporaries, many of which were rushing in the 1960s to build new stadiums, Three Riven
wound up wilb all of the Haws tbat are now so disliked: artificial turf, symmetrical sameness and faraway seats.
Designed to make everyone happy - the Pirates,
lbe Steelers, lbe fans who were tired of wedging
themselves into too-tight Forbes F'Jeld wooden scats
or backless Pitt Stadiwn bleacbers - Three Riven
ended up pleasing no one.
Look anywhere but the scoreboard, and players
can't tell if they're in Cincirmali, SL Louis, Pittsburgh
or Philadelphia. It will be the same way when the All-

ctWCE rr . VIM 1 MASlDCAID I NotERKAN EXrR£96. Dt!iCOVU

·.

·,
·· -· ··

lrvan, who was just three places behind
Gordon in the qualifying line, said, "The track
was brealcing up. It's tearing up and it tore up
the last time we were up here. But we came
back with a half-inch wider tire and every year
we come back with more horsepower and better equipment Those lcind of things tear up
racetracks.
" I just slipped a little bit less than everybody else," added lrvan, tbe Winston Cup
point leader who also leads the series with five
poles. "You can't really complain too much
about your lap when you win the pole, but it
defmitely was pot as good as I expected. But it
was good enough."
lrvan, who lost by less than half a car-length
to first-time winner Jimmy Spencer last
Satwday at Daytona, picked up the 16th pole
of his career.
"Momentum's moment," lrvan said. "My
momentum kind of got knocked in the butt last
week. I've got to get something going again."
Nobody else was able to come close to
lrvan's lap as conditions continued to deteriorate on the humid afternoon as Ford won its
14th pole in 16 tries this season.
Ricky Rudd was third at 126.643, followed
by Bobbr Labonte's 126.500 and Ken
Schrader s 126.446. Martin was lOth at
125.790.
Rusty Wallace, third in the points and the
' ~'!!ittc ' \l:lllf'iJ

All-Star Game slated for Tuesday
at unloved Three Rivers Stadium

Ltuex

1 : 10 , l!OO

7:10,9:10 taiLJ' ..r.lld'/1111.1:10,1:10

the tag in the firth inning of Saturday's game in
lloston 's Fen way park, where the Mariners won
7-4. The 18-year-old Rodriguez started his first
major league game. (AP)

HE 'S SAFE!- The Boston Red Sox's John
Valentin (right) slides safely into second base
before Seattle shortstop Alex Rodriguez can apply

I

'PRIPAP! '10 BE AWED'

C.ll 446·1RTS

Turner in the third inning of Saturday's game in
New York's Yankee Stadium, where the Angels
won 10-5. (AP)

f

lryan expected to keep Winston Cup lead

FLAT

AND

\:;.t·· hi&lt;4:

In today's Slick 50 300,

IGI

,&amp;oi£L

"'

POLONIA SCORES -The New York Yankees' Luis Polonia goes into a belly slide to score
before the throw gets to California catcher Chris

EXTERIOR~

B-S2's
The B-52's will perform at 7
p.m. Paramount's King Island TirnberWolf Amphitheatre. Tickets
may be purchased for the park and
concert by calling (513)573-5700.

CBS' head of daytime programming.
ABC learned that lesson this
week, gelling stung in the
overnight ratings when it cut away
from Wednesday's live coverage of
the O.J. Simpson hearing and
switched to the soap opera "One
Life to Live" from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m.
EDT.
Lee said all NBC's pre-empted
soaps would air in sequence when
the daytime slate goes back to normal next weclc.
"We want our viewers to feel
we're talcing care of them and to let
them know they haven't missed
any shows," Lee said.
ABC and CBS promised the
same.

RIGHT AT

'

(ilJCITEJ

Macaulay Culkin
TedDan-n

Daytime execs sweat soap opera
pre-empts in Simpson case
By SCOTT WILLIAMS
AP Television Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - While
network news executives debated
whether to cover the OJ. Simpson
hearing from moment to moment,
deprived soap opera fans were
nearly off the edge of their seats.
• 'Our fans are beside themse lves." Susan Lee, NBC's vice
president for daytime programs
said Friday. "They seem 10 feel as
if we've become the enemy, yet
we· re just as bonded to these shows
as they arc."
·
NBC went so far as to pre-empt
a Friday night "Han to Han" TV
movie to air back·to-back episodes
of "Days of Our Lives," which
has been its top-rated daytime
drama runong women aged 18 to 34
for the past month.
"When you're building momen- .
tum. the last thin~ you want is to
have your fans ticked off," Lee
said.
Six day s of Simpson's preliminary hearing ended Friday with a
judge ordering him to stand trial on
charges he killed his ex-wife and
her friend.
The networks likely will revisit
the pre-emptioo issue when Simpson's trial begins, possibly as early
as September.
"This is as compellin11 as a
drama. So I think our audtence,
though upset that they're losing
their soap operas, is also glued to
the screen," said Lucy Johnson,

LUcnE~S

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN

fRI THRU THURS

One Eveninp Show 7:30
Admlss1on '2.00
446-0923

Award.
Joe l has been on the road since
last September in support of his
Grammy-nominated album, " River
of Dreams," which has gone
quadruple platinum. The tour will
re su me in the fall and continue
through the spring of 1995. His big
hits include "Just the Way You
Arc" and "We Didn't Start the
Fire."

begin with several acoustic songs,
then four or five singing dueL~ with
John's band. Each artist then will
play individual sets and return for a
finale with both bands. '
Both singers are Philadelphia
s1aples. Joel has played the city 25
times and was awarded the
Philadelphia Mu sic Alliance's
highest honor, the Philadelphia

winner of the inaugural Slick 50 300 in 1993.
was 18th at 125.166.
Dale Earnhardt. trailing lrvan by 88 points
in the season standings, was a victim of the
slippery track, turning a lap of 122.136, placing the six-time and defending Winston Cup
champion 43rd among the 47 drivers who
made qualifying attempts on Friday. He won
his first pole of the season a week ago at
Daytona.
"The track is slick and there's a lot of gravel out there.'' Earnhardt said. "I got out of the
groove, got in the loose stuff and I was gone
then. I was doing a little dirt-tracking out there
but I didn't want to.
'
"We'll get it dialed in and be ready to race
on today, but getting in one &amp;,ood lap is going
to be tough."
The top 20 qualifiers nailed down starting
positions in today's 40-car field, with the rest
of the lineup to be settled today in another session of time trials.
Among the drivers who bad to make the difficult decision whether to stand on their firstday lap or try again today were series regulars
Bill Elliott, Greg Sacks, three-time pole-winning roolcie Loy Allen Jr., Hut Stricklin, Wally
Dallenbach Jr .. rookie Steve Grissom, Dick
Trickle and leading rookie Jeff Burton, who
had an engine problem. All qualified Friday
below 30th.

11 I . Ill '

Star game returns to Pittsburgh on Tuesday for the
fii'St time since 1974.
Except for some sprucing up, some new seats,
landscaping and a new scoreboard, Three Riven will
look pretty much the same as it did then.
Nellie King, a former Pirates' announcer, recalls
how the breathless anticipation over Three Riven'
opening on July 16, 1970, soon gave way to the reallife realization that Pittsburgh had sacrificed character
b conformity.
Forbes Field, the Pirates' home from 1909 to June
1970, was gone. Its cramped seats, deanb of parki!tg
and decades-old filth weren't missed, but Its picturesque seUing and grass field soon were.
"Three Rivers was clean and new, and I was 1111
impressed with it, but the more I saw of it. the less I
was fascinated by it." King said. "There was a sameness to it It didn't have much penonality."
It still doesn't. And what still rankles many
Pittsburghers is that rather than being one of tbe
crowd, Three Riven could have been one-of-a-kind
- a non-conformist, multipurpose stadium with
amenities ~ng to both footbell and baseball.
In its initial design stage, Three Rivers - on the
.
drawing board since 1955- resembled Dodger
Stadiwn, wilh an open-ended center field that would .·
afford an unparalleled, Camden Yards-likc view of
.
•
Pittsburgh's skyline. It was to be a vast impovemmt
over lbe rusted-out railyards and boarded-up wareLARGER THAN LIFE - Twenty-one years
houses that previously occupied the near-downtown
after
bls posthumous illducdoo ltlto lbe Baseball
site.
Hall
of
Game, tbe Pitlllburgb Pinta plan to use
There were to be plenty of seats for football Tuesday'•
All-Star Game 8t 1bree Riven Stadium
55,000, or 5,000 more than Three Rivers actually
as
the
stage
to introduce a new ceneration ol laos
would open with - but they were to be close to the
fteld, creating a baseball-only like setting. The oogi- went through the roof.
nal plans called f&lt;l' a plush palace that, if built, probaAnd the best-laid plans for a unique stadiwn went
bly would still be hailed as ahead of its time.
out the window.
.
The trouble was, it also was altead of its budgeL
What came back were nearly the same blue¢nts
Bids opened in July 1966 wen: $10 million hi~her used in SL Louis or Cincinnati: a circular concltte
than the projected $28 million, and the politic18DS shell with more amenities than the stadiums they

,;

tt:

! '

.ill!

to Roberto Clemente (:U), shown collectln1 bla
3,0001b career hit on SepL 30, 1972. Aa one or lbelr
greatest players who was viewed as larger tbao
life, be was also revealed to be an even bluer mao
in deatb. (AP file pboto) ,.
replaced, but with all the charm of a $29-a-night hotel
room.
Leave it to Pirates outfielder Andy Van Slyke to
suggest the low-cost. easy improvement that could
corm;t all of Three Rivers' problems.
"Demolition," he said

�July 10, 1994

Page C2-5unday nmes-Sentlnel

In Hubbard LL Tournament,

In the NL,

By JOE KAY

, CINCINNATI (AP) It
seemed like the perfect opportunity
for the Pittsburgh Pirates .IC finally
win one at Riverfront Stadium.
The Cindnnati Reds had four
regulars out of the lineup Friday
night Brian Hunter broke anO-for20 slump with a two-run homer
that put the Pirates up 3-0 in l.he
firs1 inning. And Pirates star1er Jon
Lieber struck out two of lhe first
l.hn:e batters he faced.
An omen• Nope. Justa tease.
The Reds sent II baucrs 10 the
plale in a wacty l.hird inning~ scoring eight runs for a 12-4 vtctory
l.hal would have been surprising
under any ocher circumstances.
Not f&lt;J' t.besc teams. Not on this
field.
The Reds improved their River-

front record to 29-11 - matching
Cleveland for best home record in
the majors _ with their 26th comeba ck win . Nothing they do at
Riverfront surprises lhcm anymore.
"Once we had some comeback
wins (at horne) earlier in the season, it put it in our heads that we're
never out of i t,·· said Eddie
· Taubcnsee. who homered and had
three hits.
.
The Pirates could be forgtven
for feeling they're never going 10
win one at the circular ballpark that
looks so much like. their own. PillSburgh has lo st eight. straight at
R•vcrfront, a slump thai began July
2 of last year.
Every time they make a lillie
mistake - or a few b1g ones, like
they did Friday night - the Reds
turn it on.

Lieber (4 -4) learned t~e hard For reasons he couldn' t explain,. lie Louis blanked Atlama 2-0; Fl_orida
way. He took a 3-0 lead into the changed strategy. and threw m a edged Colorado S-2; and Chicago
third. loaded the bases with none slider down and 10 - J~SI wbere beal ~ 6-5 m 1.1 _mnmgs_
out, lhcn coaxed a comebacter out flo:?"' was looking for one.
Ggn~ 3, l'toiDtn 2
of Jacob Brumfteld. But instead of
I JUSI look a chance l.hal he
Step U\de, Jumor . Mall
twning it into a dcva&lt;&gt;lating double was.~omg to come ~.s•de and be
(Sft NL a. C-3)
play, he had the ball go off l.he end dtd, Howard sa.td.. ~e had my
of his glove for an infield single number up to lhalpomL .
.
Sports deadlines
that let in a run and set up the other
"ll.hn:w him .l.hn:e sltders ~a
seven.
row and in m~ mmd I was th~J!
The Gallipolis Daily Trib~U~e,
"The ground ball back to me ·a~;' I doo I blow why I ditkll
Tile Daily Se111ille/ and the Sllllday
could have been two outs easily do tl, Lieber saJd .
TiiMs·SeratiMI value the contribu·
there," Lieber said.
The end? N~ I]Utle. Left rrlder
lions their readers make to tbe
Tony Fernandez extended his G~ Vanho ftmshed the mmng
spcriS scclioos of these papers, and
hitting strea1c 1o nine games and pul wtth a htghhght film blooper that
they will continue 1o be publisbt'.d.
the Reds ahead 4-3 wil.h a two-run gave the Rtds yt:t another run .•
However, cenain deadlines for
double, and Thomas Howard outVarsho lost Jeff Branson s fly
submissions will be observed.
guessed Lieber and hit a three-run baH m the ltghts, fell down after tl
The de.adl~ for submissions of
homer that doomed Pittsburgh to Ian~ behtnd ~tm, lhen had ~e
local baseball- and soflball-relau:d
just another Joss.
baH slip out_ of hiS hand a&lt;&gt; be tried Jlhc*ls and relaled articles, fran TLieber had been gelling Howard 1o throw tl m. Branson cucled the
hall 1o the majon, as well as Olher
out by throwing him sliders away. b$es on what was scored a triple spring and summer spons, is lhe
and an error.
day of the last game of the World
Yes, lt bunch of guys named Series.
Brunfield, Howard, Branson and
The deadline for photos and
Taubemee did in l.he Pirates.
related articles for football and
"It has 10 do wil.h a lot ol confi- ol.her fall sports is l.he Saturday
dence," Taobensee said. "Every before the Super Bowl. The deadtime out !hen:, it seems everybody line for ,photos and related articles
doesweU."
fiJI' basketball {summer basketball
Jdm Smiley {9-8) COOSied 1o his and related camps fall under lhe
fifth straight win by scattering SIX spring and summer spoos deadline)
hits over eight innings. But be gave and ol.her winter spons is the last
all the credit 10 the makeshift day of the NBA finals.
offense.
These deadlines are in place 1o
"They ' re just remarkable." allow contributors l.he time !hey
Smiley said. "It's just amazing lo need to acquin: !heir photos from
watch them aiL"
l.he photography studio/developer
Elsewhere, San Francisco edged
of cboice and 1o give the staffs l.he
Pbiladelphia 3-2, Los Angeles beal chance 10 publish l.hcse irems ill l.he
New Yort 3-2 in 10 iminp; Moo- appupriale seasoo for tho9e sporu.
rouled San
14-0; Sl.

GET PAii FOR
SKILL l'RAIMIMG.

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'Think ·about it.
Then call:

614-446-3343

In the evening's sc"ond contest
the Racine A's scored eight, lltird

• AU YOI CAlli II:

five and striking out 10. Norris had by Will, Spencer, doubles by Crow.
thre e doubl es to lead Racine, Edwards and Matthew CaldwelL
Re1ber added a double and a smgle,
Smtih. who p1tched a one-h•ttcr
Jo sh Baker a double and Boso, to p1ck up the win, struck out 12
Ryan H11l and Lauderm1lt a single and walked two. Crow led the way
each. , .
wllh a home run , double and a sinCum1n gs wa s th e starter for · gle , S~encer added two double s
Syracuse and was tagged w1th the and a smgle , W11l two smglcs and a
loss, Matt Ash pitched in relief.
The two combmed to walk eight
and str•ke out 10 while seatlenng
nmc htts. Harmon led Syracuse at
the plate w11h a home run and a single, Cumin gs and Hubbard added
doubl es and Dav1s a smgle.
In the nightcap, Tuppers Plains
JUmped out on top 4-0 after one
inning and coasted to a 13-0 victory over Middleport. The Tigers
pounded out IIi hits in the contest
that was called after five innings
because of the 10-run rule .
Joshua Will singled to start the
hottom of the first for the Tigers.
Then Kin Spencer doubled, Wes
Crow singled, Matt Edwards doubled and Joshua Broderick singled
to get the Tigers off and running.
It was more of the same in the
second inning, Will doubled, Matt
Bissell singled, Spencer doubled
and Crow launched a towering shot
over the left field fence to make it a
8-0 game. One out later, it was Eric
Smith that went deep to give the
Tigers a 9-0 advantage.
Tuppers Plains closed out the
scoring in the third inning. The
Tj_gers scored four runs on singles

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McDonald's Red Sox posted a 12-2 league mark
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and place third in the Big Bend League tournament. In front are (L-R) Tyler French, Steven

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Semifmal action will gel underway on Monday at 6:30p.m., when
Bidwell will tangle with the Gallipolis Yankees. Racine will battle
it out with Tuppers Plains a18 p.m.

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batter. Smiddy had the only Middlcport hit a fourth inning double.

•

A1L\NTA UAYBI: . _ . . a.,
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double. and Edwards a double and
a single. Other Tiger hitters includcd Smith hi s home ru·n, Bis sell,
Brodenck, Jeremy Gillilan and
Caldwell all a single each.
Stanley and Vanlnwagcn had
mound duties for Middleport, they
struck out three' and didn 't walk a

~

attempt at second base in tbf li«&lt;OId ionia.: or Friday night's game i• Cincinnati, wllere 11ie Reds
won 12-4. (AI')

Scoreboard

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inning run s and went on to post a
14-6 win 9ver Syracuse.
.
The A s Jumped out on top "'
the lop of UlC first inning when J.B.
Boso Iince! a single into left field.
Three con scc uuvc walks ga,vc the
A's a 1-0 lead.
.
Syracuse ca me back ,m the bottom of the. fi~t 10 take a 2-1 lead.
Josh Davt s stngl ed .and scored
wh en J.P . Harmon hll a two-run
homeroverthe.left fi eld fence.
In the dccts1vc thud mnmg, the
A's took advantage of five "'alks, a
hu batter and doubles by Kyle Norns and Russell Re1ber to take a 9-2
lead.
.
Syracuse scored once 1n the
fourth 111n111g when Harmon smgled, stole second and th11d an,d
scored on a passed ball. The A s
mcrcascd the lead to 11 -3 m the
ftfth mnmg on the strength of walk,
an.other Nom s double and a field er s chmce.
Racine increased the lead to 143 m the top of the sixth inning
when Josh Baker doubled, Re1ber
and Jason Laudermtlt hll back-to- ·
back smgics and Norns followed
w1th h1 s thud consecutive double.
Syracuse closed out the scoring
in the bollom of the sixth on two
w11lk s, and back-to-back doubles
by Aqam Cumings and Chad Hubbard to make the final score 14-6.
J.B. Boso and Chris Randolph
did the mound duties for the winners scattering five hits, walking

ARMY RESERVE

.,. .

HE'S OUT! - PiUsbur.:h shortstop Jay Bell
(ltft) prepares to lay tbt ~e.-r till the CiDdnaati
Reds' Rq:~ir Snders o• tile unsuettSSful steal

~

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11..5
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l'im.es-St•nlinelCorrespondent
' llw Gall1poh s Yankees, Racine
.\ ·, and Tuppers Plain s all
:~ch·; mn'cl in U1c 19'14 Bill Hubbard
Memorial L1nle League Tourna m ~nt Fnday evening at King Field
· in SyrJcusc.
The first game putlhe Gallipolis
White Sox's against the Gallipolis
Yankees and all the scoring was
done in the second inning . Th e
White Sox drew f1rst blood in the
top of the inning when they took
advantage of a pair of walks and a
Yankee error to take a 1-0 lead.
But the Yankee~ came back on
the strength of a walk, singles by
Jimmy Wiseman and Micah Kolc un, Robby Kuhn's triple and
Justin Jones ' bases-clearing double
to plat e five runs and that's the way
the contest ended.
Cody Lane pitched a no-hitter to
lead the Yankees to the win . He
walked three and struck out nine.
Joncs had the big bat for the win ·
ners with a ~ouble and a single,
whi le Jeff Mullins added a pair of
singl es and Kuhn had a triple.
Larkin s, Wiseman and Kolcun all
added singles.
Josh Sanders and Mathew Bush
held down the mound duties for
White Sox. They combined to
strike out seven, walk three and
scallered eight h1ts .

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Sunday nme.....senunel-t"age C3

Gallipolis Yankees, Racine A's, Tuppers Plain_~ head to semis

(

Reds erase early deficit to .notch 12-4 win over Pirates

~.
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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

Julj 10, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant, WV

594·2114·
,·

I••
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•

•

•r

I•
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••...

(Continued from C-2)
Williams is coming through.
The National League's All-Star
third baseman hit two more home
runs Friday night to tie Ken Griffey
Jr. of Seaule for the major-league
lead and give the San Francisco
Giants a 3-2 victory against the
Philadelphia Phillies.
Williams now has 10 homers in
his last 16 games, three in two
games since Darryl Strawberry
moved into the batting order
behind him and 33 overall, tied
with the Seattle Mariners' more
celebrated slugger for the most in
the majors .
They are both on pace to challenge Roger Maris' 1961 record of
61 homers .
So, Mall, what about challenging one of baseball's hallowed
records?
"I refuse to think about stuff
like lha~" he said. "I've got a job
to do. A solo home run is no more
important than an RBI single. The
factthatl'm hitting the ball hard is
gratifying. Hilling the ball hard is
the objective."
And Williams is meeting the
objective with a vengeance .
His three hits Friday - he also
singled - gave him 82 this season,
43 of them for extra bases. He aiso
bas 68 RBis, fifth in the NL.
Mickey Morandini's homer
gave the Phillies a 1-0 lead against
Mark Portugal (7 -6) in the second,
but Williams' first homer tied it in
the fourth .
Dodgers 3, Melli 2
At Los Angeles, Mike Piazza hit
a two-run homer in the fusl inning
and an RBI single in the lOth .
Delino DeShields drew a walk
from Roger Mason {2-4) with two
out in the lOth, stole second and
scored when Piazza slapped a 3-2
pitch into ri~ht.
· Expos 14, Padres 0
Montreal had II extra-base hits,
including a team-record four
triples, and Kirk Rueter pitched
seven strong innings at San Diego .
Mike Lansing had three hits and
scon:d three times and Lou Frazier
had three hits and two RBls for
Montreal, while Rueter (4-2)
allowed three hits in seven innings.
Andy Benes {6-10) gave up
seven runs on nine hits, eight for
extra bases, in just two-plus
·
innings.
Cardinals 2, Braves 0
Bob TewksbUI'Y pitched a fourbitter for his first shutout in almost
four years and Mark Whiten hit a
two-run double to provide all the
runs as St. Louis won at Atlanta .

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Major, Eric VanMeter, Shawn Canterbury, Brandon Grover, Dustin Vanlnwagen and Luke
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Po. eo. ~o2e

Pomeroy. OH

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Page C4

Sunday Times-Sentinel

In the AL,

Twins

•

surviv.~

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - Min aesota Twms mana~er Tom Kelly
knew Shane Mack s f1rs1-1nnmg
grand slam wouldn't be enough
agamst the Cleveland Indians.
Even when the Twins built their
Icad to 7-0, Kelly didn't feel entirely safe. So when the Twins had to
hold on for an 8-6 victory Friday
n1ght, Kelly wasn't surprised.
"Against a team like Cleveland,
four (runs) is certainly not enough
to win," said Kelly, "but it's cerlainly a nice way to stan."
Mack's grand slam- the founh
of his career- buoyed Twins
starter Kevin Tapani (9-5), who
snapped a personal three-game losing streak. Jason Grimsley (1-1)
gave up s1x runs m 2 2/3 mnings
and took the loss.
Carlos Baerg a hit a three-run
homer off Tapani to spark Cleveland's rally, which saw the Indians
close to 7-5 after seven innings.
But the Twins added a run in the
eighth. and Rick Aguilera pitched
the ninth to earn his 19th save
despite allowing a solo homer to
Jim ThOrlJ,C.
Tapani, who had his worst outing of the season against Cleveland
last Sunday, conu-olled the Indians
through five innings while the
Twins built their lead:
"He really set a good tone for
the game and the players responded
with some runs," said Kelly. "Last
time, !.might as well have gone out
there.
After Mack's lith homer, the
Twins added two more runs off
Grimsley in the third inning on a
sacrifice Oy by Kent Hrbck and an
RBI single by Pedro Munoz. Chuck
Knoblauch singled in a run in _the
fourth for a 7-0 lead.
Grimsley walkedthr~. hit one
bauer_ and _threw a wtld p1tch wh1le
allowmg SIX runs on three hils.
"(Grimsley) didn'ttry to get
Minnesota 10 hit his pitches," said
Cleveland manager Mike Hargrove. "He's u-ying to be too perfeet."
.
.
The Ind1ans rallied for four nms
off Tapani in the sixth, getting an
RBI single ffom Kenny Lofton
before Bacrga s lith homer of the
season made tt7-4.
.
The Ind~ans added a run m the
seventh on Sandy Alomar's RBI
single off Tapani.
"They've got a strong lineup:
it's really a test," said Tapani, who
hadn't won since June II.
l'apani had allowed just a pair
of singles until the sillth, when consecutive singles by Paul Sorrento,
Wayne Kirby and Lofton started
the four-run inning. Tapani left
.after the seventh, having allowed
five runs on eight hits.
The Indians threatened in the
eighth, moving a runner to third
with two out, but Carl Willis sbUck
out Albert Belle to end the inning.
Scott Leius' fielder's-choice
grounder made it 8-5 in the eighth.
Notes: The Twins signed AllAmerica second baseman Tod"d
Walker, their top selection in last
month's free agent draf~ to a contract Friday. The former Louisiana
State star will report to Class A
Fort Myers (Fla.) .... The Indians
signed Anaheim prep star J a ret
Wright, a right-handed pitcher they
selecled with the lOth overall pick
in last month's free agent draft. ...
Minnesota's victory over Cleveland ended a five-game losing
streak against the Indians. who
have won seven of the 10 games in
the series this season .... Belle is
hitting .364 over his last 29 games,

July 10, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

season.

His star that year at Central
Michigan was Dan Majerle, now
with the NBA's Phoenill Suns.

Sports brief
Baseball
NEW YORK (AP) - Marquis
Grissom of the Monteal Expos was
selected 'to replace starting oulfielder Lenny Dykstra of the Philadelphia Pbillies on the 1994 !'/ational
Leagu~ All-Star team.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

•

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page--C5

Depending on weather in Cleveland

late rally to top Tribe 8-6; ChiSox win

but is just 3-fo~ 17 (.176) in his last
four. ... Lofton elltcnd~ his hitting '
streak 10 II games. He s IK-for-43
(.4 19)intllat span.
Elsewhere in the American
Lc:~gue. it was Boston 4, Scallle 3;
Baltimore 13 . Oakland 3: New
York 4, Ca lifornia 3; Detroit 7,
Texas 3; Kansas City 6, Toronto 5:
and Chicago 9, Milwaukee 5.
Red Sox 4, Mariners 3
John Valentin had barely given
Fenway Park fans a chance to reiish his hi storic moment when he
gave them reason to cheer again .
Valentin made the 10th unassistcd tnpk play in baseball history in
th e six th inning Friday night and
th en led off the bottom of the
mnmg wl!h a homer lO lead Boston
to a 4-3 victory over the Seattle
Mariners.
With Seattle runn ers moving
from first and second base in the
top of the sixth, Valentin went to
one knee to catc h Marc Newfield's
liner. He then stepped on second
base to double up Mike Blowers
and trotted a few steps to tag Ke1th
Mitchell.
Mitchell, who was well down
th e baseline, made no effort to
av01d Valentin or run back to first.
so the Boston shortstop started
thinking he had ended the inning
with a double play.
"The guy didn't run. so I
thought there was one out. I looked
up to sec the board and realized
there was nobody out," Valentin
said. "So I lagged him."
After some handshakes in the
dugout, Valentin then homered off
Dave Fleming, touching off a
three-homer outburst by the Red
Sox.
Andre Dawson followed with a
double to chase Acming, and Tom
Brunansky greeted reliever Bill
Risley (6-5) with his sixth homer.
Two outs later, Rich Rowland hit
his fifth homer.
Valentin's heroics upstaged
Seattle shonstop Alex Rodriguez's
major-league debut.
.
Rodriguez, 18, the first ch01ce
in the June 1993 draft, became the
youngest position player to stan a
major-league game since 1978.
Rodriguez, called up .from the
minors on Thursday went 0-for-3
'

at the plate but was flawless in the
field -:-- including a backhanded
stop 1n the hole to rob T1m
Nachringofahitinthefifth.
Chris Nabholz ( 1-2) allowed
three runs and eight hits in eightplus muings.
Orioles 13, Athletics 3
At Baltimore. the Orioles ended
Bobby Will' s scoreless inning
su-eak at 28.
Mike Mussina (13-4) gave up a
run and f1ve hits in seven innings,
slriking out a season-high eight.
Witt (7-8) allowed just nine hits
in throwing three straight shutouts.
But after pitching a scoreless first
innmg, he gave up two unearned
runs in the second and a three-run
homer to Clms H01les m the thrrd .
Mark McLemore went 4-for-5
for the Orioles.
Yankees 4, Angels 3
At New York, Bernie William s'
RBI sing le capped a wild ninth
inning.
California, held to one hit in 8
2/3 innings by Melido Perez. raJlied for three 111ns Wfth five su-aight
·hits lO take a 3~2 lead in the top of
the nmth .
The Yankees loaded the bases in
the ninth off Joe. Grahe (1-4) on
two singles, a forceout and a hit
batsmen. With one out, Williams
grounded his game-winning single,
scoring Matt Nokes.
Bob Wickman (4- 3) got the win
despite allowing Mark Dalesandro s RBI smgle that capped the
Angels' rally .
Tigers 7, Rangers 3
At Detroit, Cecil Fielder and
Junior Felix homered.
The Tigers scored three runs in
the fourth off Hector Fajardo (4-5)
and two in the fifth.
Tim Belcher (7-9) gave up three
runs and su htts m m mnmgs.
Royal~ 6, Blue Jays 5
At Toronto, Vince Coleman's
run -scoring single capped a two run rally in the ninth inning.
Felix Jose singled to open the
ninth off Darren Hall (1-3) and
stole second. W1th one out, Brent
Mayne singled to bring in Jose with
the tying run. Terry Shumpert's
smgle moved Mayne to second,
and one out later. Coleman grounded a sm~le to center.

While Sox 9, Brewen; S
At Milwaukee, Julio Franco and
Bob Zupeic homered and Norberto
Martindroveinthrcenms.
Jason Berc (9-2) picked up the
win.

Hipolito Pichardo (3-2). who
allowed t.llc Blue Jays to take the
lead in the seventh by hitting a batter w1th the bases load ed struck
out three in 1 l/3 innings' for the
wm.

Kirk McCaskill _pitched 3 2/3
perfect mnmgs. SU"Jkmg out SIX a_nd
the s1de m the mnth for h1s thud
save.
Chicago scored five runs in the
second off Angel Miranda (1-1).

_~.j
~

NAILED- The Minnesota Twins' Chuck
Knoblauch eats some dirt to no avail while being
lagged by Cleveldnd shortstop Omar Vizquel in

the fourth inning or Friday night's game in Minneapolis, where the Twins survived a late charge
by their guest~ to win 8-6. (AP)

rt-t\.. count~
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CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott said
Friday she is still considering
whether to buy Riverfront Siadium
. and convert it into a baseball-only
· ball~lc: for the Reds.
·Yes. we're stillloolcing at it,"
Mrs. Schott, who bought majority
control of the Reds in 1984, said in
a telephone interview from her
home. "We've had outside people
down to look at it"
She declined to elaborate.
The Cincinnati Enquirer repon. ed Friday that the Cincinnati busi. nesswoman was backing off her
proposal to buy the 24-year-old
ballpark, home of the Reds and the
NFL' s Cincinnati Bengllls.
The Enquirer cited sources
: which it did not identify as saying
Schott instead has decided to con. centrale on trying to build a new
stadium.
The sources said they think
. Schott wants a ballpark similar to
; Cleveland's Jacobs Field, which
· . Schott visited last week:
·
Cincinnati business leaders have
· indicated tbey would be willing lO
~ consider helping build a baseball:. only home for the Reds. The exec. : utives also have said they support a
: renovation and expansion of River. :front for the Ben gals.
. · Schou's interest in buying
:·Riverfront Stadium surfaced May
· I 5 when she asked Cincinnati and
:· Hamilton County to give her 90
; days to pursue a deal. The county
· owns the stadium, and the city
. manages it.
·: The city and county agreed to
.. her proposal. The agreement states
:: that if good-faith negotiations are
:: under way by the end of the 90
.. days, the e.clusive arrangement
: could be extended up to 60 more
· days.
·
Daryl Brock, assistant to City
:. Manager John Shirey, said Friday
· that Mrs. Schou or her reprcsenta:: tivcs have talked with the city's
:: finance director, Frank Dawson,

about Riverfront; met with Glenn
Rcdmer, the city's stadium manager; asked for copies of the stadium's financial records, and
requested a copy of the city's
agreement with the Bengals to
m:lke improvements at the stadium.
Shirey and Bengals general
manager Mike Brown negotiated
the agreement last year.
The city made the deal lO keep
Brown - who has demanded
installation of more seating and
luxury skyboxes at the stadium from moving his team ~o another
city. The agreement promises the
improvements Brown demanded.
Schott has criticized the city for
not including her in that deal.
The city and Hamilton County
have been arguing about the stadium's value for tax purposes. The
county auditor last year valued
Riverfront at around $65 million,
but the city contends its value is
approximately $19 million.
The city has $24 million in
debts on bonds that financed the
sladium for its original $44 miUion.
The city also has loaned $10.8 million to the stadium's operating
fund.

ilously close to the walls around
the 10-turn, 2.37-mile temporary
road course.
"I was pleased . I wrung the
car's neck," Mansell said. "I ran a
very, very good lap but, as it seems
over the last few races, never good
enough ."
Defeating Roger Penske 's Marl boro -spo nsored triad of Tracy,
Unser and Fittipaldi has been next
to impossible this year.
"I've just accepted the fact that
unless you drive for Penske tbis
year, you're just not gomg to be in
a posilion to win," Mansell said.
Tracy won the Deu-oit Grand
Prix on June 12 and set a time-Dfrace record of one hour, 56 minutes
43.678 seconds. He is halfway to
collecting a SI million bonus
offered by International Management Group, the promoter of the
Oeveland and Detroit races.
To collect, a driver must win
both races, start from tbe pole in
one race or the other and set a timeof-race record in one race or the
other. Tracy said he felt the hard··
pan - seuing a race record - was
already out of the way. And while
the money mi~ht be nice, Tracy

Pro Football Hall of Fame
theater expansion underway
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - An
expansion of the Pro Football Hall
of Fame will add a high-tech movie
theater designed to put fans in the
middle of professional football
action.
Ground was broken Thursday
for the expansion, which will add a
fifth building 10 the complex. The
expansion will increase the size of
the hall by 63 percent - from
50,457 square feet to 82,307 square
feet.
While the expansion will provide more room for e•hibits, the
centerpiece is to be the theater.
The theater presentation will
open with a five-minute video
about locker room preparations for
a game. It will be displayed on a
high-definition, 10-by-16-foot
screen.
At the end of the video, the
audience seating section will rotate
180 dcj!rees to reveal a 20-by-46foot Cmemascopc movie screen.
The turntable is expected to simulate the experience of players walking from the locker room into the
football stadium, said hall
spokesman Don Smith.
"What they will be showing on
this huge screen are the sights and
sounds of pro football," he said.
The eight-minute movie will be

Meigs and Gallia Countl Residents
See Bill Hupp t
Southeast Imports At

produced by NFL Films, which has
won 58 Emmys for football television documenlaries.
The $8 million expansion is
scheduled for completion in late
summer or early fall of 1995. The
expansion also is expected to
include additional displays and
exhibits, an enlarged library and an
expanded museum in an existing
building.
The ground-breaking ceremony
Thursday marked the end of a
$750,000 preliminary phase.
The hall opened 111 1962 as a
two-building complex.

said his eye i-s on th e lndyCa·r
standings, where he is curre ntly
sixth.
Winning the race will mean
enduring 85 hot, humid laps on ~Je
bumpy Cleveland course.
."A 144 mph -average lap is
qmc ~ for a road course. It's proba·
bly the fastest track we go to," he
sa id. ·:It's ro~ and there are
th,ose b1g, long, sweeping turns. so
1t s hard on your neck ."
The Penske cars have won the
last SIX races . Fillipaldi kicked
things off 1n April at Phoenix.

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Sports brief
Golf
GLENEAGLES, Scotland (AP)
-Peter Mitchell of England shot a
:: 5-under-par 65 to maintain a one.. su-oke lead after three rounds of the
:: Scottish Open.
'
·· Mitchell's 54-hole total of 196
:: was 14-undcr-par, the lowest of the
. season on the PGA European Tour.
:: Another Englishman, Carl
· Mason, carded the day's best score,
: 61, to close within one shot of the
:lead atl97.

Jeny Bibbee, Owner

1990 FORD TEMPO
GLS 4 DR.

Unser won the next three races
including the Indianapo li s 500:
Tracy won at Detroit and Unser
won again at Ponland on June 26 .
The Penske team fimshed 1-2- 3 at
Portland .
Fi11ipald1 left the u-ack shortly
after qualify mg . saying he felt a
slight cold .
"Right now. I need to get home
and get plenty of rest and a good
n1ght's sleep ," he said. "I think
part of it is going from the hot
weather to the air -con ditioned
rooms."

9

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LWB, V6, 5 opted, llir.

1993 Chev. 1500 Plckup ........$11 ,400
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Schott wants Riverfront
exclusively for the Reds

By RICH HARRJS
CLEVELAND (AP) - Paul
Tracy, who could collect a $1 million bonus with a victory from the
pole in today's Cleveland Grand
Prix, held the provisional pole after
the first round of qualifying Friday.
Tracy. the defending champion.
had a fast lap of 143 .303 mph,
nearly one mile an hour off the
one-lap record for the Burke Lakefropt Airport course of 144.139
mph, which he set last year.
Nigel Mansell was second at
142.873 mph, followed by Emerson Fittipaldi at 142.247 mph, Indianapolis 500 winner AI Unser Jr. at
142.038 mph and Mario Andretti at
141.143 mph.
Qualifying started late Friday
afternoon under skies that had
threatened thunderstorms all afternoon. No rain fell, but scattered
storms were expected through Saturday night
'T m going to do a rain dance
all nigh~" said Tracy. whose provisional pole would stand if qualifying is washed out or slowed by
bad weather Saturday.
Mansell said he gave it everything he had Friday as he came per-

Low

8

Come In For A Free Test Soak 10day.

Tracy's Grand Pri'x pole may hold up

WAIT~NG for t~e track to open for practice at the Cleveland
Grand Prtx Friday ts Indy-car veteran Mario Andrelli of Nazareth
'
Pa. He will retire l'rom the circuit at the season's conclusion. (AP)

Coles to return as
Miami University
assistant coach
OXFORD, Ohio (AP)
Charles Coles, a former basketball
star at Miami University. has
rejoined the school as an assistant
to basketball coach Herb Sendek,
Miami officials said Friday.
Coles. 52. replaces Ron Hunter,
who quit last month to become
head coach at the Indianapolis
campus of Indiana and Purdue universities.
Coles, a native of Yellow
Springs. Ohio, played at Miami
from 1962 to 1965. He was a member of Miami's 1965 Mid-American Conference championship team
and still ranks 18th on the school's
all-time scoring list with 1,096
points.
He spent the past two years as
head basketball coach at Central
catholic High in Toledo, where his
teams were 32-16.
He previously was head coach
six years at Central Michigan University and bore that was an asststant at the University of Detroit He
coached Central Michigan to the
regular-season and tournament
championships of the Mid-American Conference in 1986-87 and to a
berth in the NCAA tournament that

July 10, 1994

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Page-C6--Sunday Times-Sentinel

;.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

'

At Skyline Speedway,

·

. July 10, 1994

.

....
-··
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Outdoors
;: ~o~h~i=o~h~s~h,~n=g~~=ep~o~rt~----~~~~~~~~~~-----------------

.~~,~T,S, Cus~!.~~.~ ,.~.~.~ ~~~~ ct~rs

Times-Sentinel Correspondent
STEW ART - Duphcaung last
wee k's fea t, Bob Adams Jr. of
Ra,ine cl :11 med big wins in both
the Lilt£ Model and AMRA Mocllfo ed IJonions of th e pro~ram at

Adams. Sr. Memorial slate Friday
mght.
Adams walked away with the
$2,000-to -win, 40-lap Late Model
mam 10 honor of hos father alter a
race-Ion~ duel wllh R.J. Conley

. Ed Venham continued his winmng streak with a btg wm 10 the
Limited Late Model s, and Steve
Bigley c laimed the V-8 Pure
Stocks, whole Mike Baker rctumed
to voctory lane m the four-cylinder
Pure Stocks after a two-week
absence and six straight wins. The
top three drivers in each divi sion
received a trophy.
R.J. Conley claimed the fast car
dash in a field of hot iron on hand
for th e Adams Memorial. Rod
Evan s placed seco nd , setting the
stage for a Con ley-Evans rematch
at the start of the feature.
While Conley jumped into the
early lead, Adams meticulously
worked his way back through the
pack, after a 12th place stan.
A great battle between Rod and
Delmas Conley, Steve Lucas and
Adams developed in the middle of
the pack. while Adams picked his
way through traffic around the
inside groove.
By lap 28 Adam s had worked
his way into thi rd, then one lap
later sl ipped past Evans for second.
On th e 32 nd tour , Adams edged
Conley . who glided high. The Bandit shot into the lead for good.
Scott Wolfe moved from 14th
to seventh in the McDonalds #14,
but a broken tie rod sidelined him
on the 34th circ uit in a similar incident that claimed Bruce Dennis 12
laps earlier.
At the finish, Adams led the
freight train, with Evans, Conley,
Lucas, Delmas Conley, Rod Conley, Jeff Wood, Jay Jenkins, Mike
McDaniel and Jeff Burdett in pursuit.
Heats went to Luca s over
Adams, who edged Wolfe by a
nose at the finish. Delmas Conley
claimed the second heat over Jeff
Wood and Ryan Cline.
In the AMRA Modifieds,
Adams had a much easier time,
despite persistent attempts from
John Burdette to unseal the modified king. Burdette finished second
ahead of Rick Tracewcll, who
turned in one of his best efforts of
the year over Bob Crace Jr. and
Rick Venham.
Jay Foster, Dave Landrum,
Allen Hibbard , Mike Huntley and
Chris Dickson rounded out the top
ten among a great field of modifieds.
Adams and Tracewell won the
heats.
Kirk Isner had dominated the
action earlier in the year when he
won six straight features; then
came Ed Venham. The burly veteran had been on a roll the last three
weeks after barnstorming the first
month of the season on Isner's coat
tails.
Venham battled it out for a fastimproving Johnny Wright, then
held on for the win. Roger Games
was third, followed by Pomeroy's
Todd Smith, Mitch Brunton, Roger
Cozad, Johy Remy, Kevin Smith.
Kevin Haught and T.R. Cullums.
Cullums of Pomeroy won the
first heat, improving every week in
only his first year of the powerful
Limited Late division, while
Wright claimed the second.
Chris Stotts of Darwin and
Mark Davis claimed the V-8 heats,
but Steve Bigley came from way
back in the pack to claim the win
over Davis and Stous.Despite h~at­
ing problems, Stotts' Precision
Automotive car continued to be
one of the top runners in the Pure
stock division. George Adkins was
fourth, ahead of Evan Chichester,

• f

A rea SportS b rle S
Janey pitches perfect game
LOGAN - Bo Janey , the son of Ron and Marcie Janey of
Logan and the grandson of Betty Janey of Gallipolis, pitched a perfe-ct game fOr Hack Keynes in a 3-0 victory over the Logan Eagles
tn a June 20 midget league ha,eball game.
It was the forst such game in more than 25 years in that area.

Anderson meet medalist
PO MERO Y - David Anderson wa s top medalist for last
Wednesday's meet of the Meigs Junoor Golf League with a three
over par and the Meigs County Golf Club.
Birdies were made by Steven McCullough . Mike Franckowiak.
Jared Warner, and Adam Thomas, with long drives posted by
.-\dam Cheval ier, Ryan Well and Jacob Davis.
The chops and putts of the day were made by Clay Crow, Josh
Price. Nick Smith, Robert Harris, Ryan Pratt, Brice HiU and Jason
Lawre nce. The chipping contest was won by Robert Harris, David
Anderson and Jeremy Roush.

LL Yankees beat Mariners

\ ... "

GALLI POLIS - Taking a time out from the Bill Hubbard
Memorial Lottie League Tournament, the Gallipolis Yankees
returned 10 regular-season play and beat the Gallipolis Mariners 11 3 TIJUrsday night, according to a report released after deadline Friday .
The decision gave the Yankees (8-2) a Lie for the Gallipolis Little
League title.
Micah Kolcun. the winning hurler. pitched five innings before
giving way to closer Cody Lane. The pair gave up three hits, which
came from Dusty Cox, John Fields (both 1-2) and Stan Gregory (13). Cox took the loss.
The Yankees' hitters were Richard Mullins (2-3 ), Justin Jones
( 1-2), Robby Kuhn, Lane, Jeff Mullins and Alan Skinner (all 1-3).
The Mariners fell to 6-4 overall.

Eastern beats Southern 50-43

-·

-·

-

EAST MEIGS - In girls' summer league basketball action,
Eastern defeated Southern 50-43.
Eastern led 13-4 and 26-6 at the half, but Southern came back to
34-27 after three quarters.
EHS was led by Jessica Karr's 13, Tara Con!!o's 12, Nicole Nelson' s II , Rebecca Evans' nine and Amy Redovtan's six. Congo and
Crystal Morris had 14 and eight rebounds respectively, while Evans
had nine.
Stephanie Evans. Chasatie Hollon and Amanda Wheeler were aU
credited with great hustle.
l onna Manuel led Southern with 20, while Sammi Sisson had
seven . Teammates Jessilca Codner and Andrea Moore had six each.
Ea stern will host Nelsonville today at 3 p.m. All girls are to
report by 2:30. Eastern will then host Meigs and River Valley Tuesday at6 p.m.

Bass tournament today
LONG BOTTO~~ The Meigs County Silverado 4-H Club will
have a buddy bass tournament today from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Forked
Run Lake' s Ohio River access ramp.
The entrance fee is $50 per boat. Entries will be accepted until
the drivers' meeting at 6 a.m., with a boat check following at 6:30
a.m .
Payback of 80 percent, based on 30 boats, is $600 for forst place;
$300 for second place; $200 for third place and S100 for fourth
place. A big bass contest will also be held at $5 per boat with payback of I00 percent.
For more information, contact John Riley at 985-4383 or Trennia
Harris at 843-5249.

Hunter to visit Gallipolis Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio University men's basketball coach Larry
Hunter will come to Johnson's Supermarket on Second Avenue
Monday from II a.m. to 12:30 p.m.

Junior golf series continues
ASHLAND, Ky. - The Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit continues
with a tournament Friday at Bellefonte Country Club.
The registration deadline is Wednesday. All registration fonns
must be received by mail or handed into the coune in person by that
time.
For more information, call Cliffside Golf Course at 446-GOLF.

Youth diamondfests slated

f~~a~~!~~ch~~·:J~~~~k;;Y

WELLSTON - The Wellston Parks &amp; Recreation Department
will hold a drawing for pairings Wednesday at 5:30 p.m. at Cecil
Arthur Field off State Route 327 for a girls' team softball toumament for players nine to 12 years old that will be held Saturday and
Sunday, July 17.
The entry fee for this diamondfest is S50 and three balls.
The drawing for pairings for a Little League toUJ1Illl.flellt to run
from from Saturday. July 23 to Sunday. July 31 will be held Thunday, July 21 at Blamer Field at 5:30p.m. The entry fee for this tournament is $65 and three balls.
....
For more information, call Phil Fain at 1-800-821-4870 or Mark
Thomas at 1-384-2309.

White.

Gcor~e Adkins and Milce Baker
battled tt out early, but when the
dust had settled Baker found his
familiar home in victory lane.
Adkins was second, with Brian
Balcer third, Cliff Whitley fourth,
followed by Charles Lantz, Tony
Roush, Mark Frost, Joe Christy,
Roger Mayle and Larry Hanshaw.
Adkins and Baker won the
heats.
Next week, despite regular rae-

OK-Polnt Plerunt, WV

E

.,

i..

CHOICES OFFERED - A hole in one at the
American Cancer Society's Thursday golf tournament at Cliffside Golf Course in Gallipolis pre·
sents the lucky golfer a choice of a car from one of
the four Gallipolis new car dealers. Shown are
Gene .Johnson of Gene .Johnson Chevrolet, Greg
ing , Late Model s will face an
increased p.urse with $800 to win
throughout the month of July.
SUMMARY
Late Models
Dash: R.J . CONLEY, Rod
Evans, Mike McDaniel, Rod ConIcy, Dan Morrison. Jeff Burdette.
First heat: Steve Lucas, Bob
Adams Jr. Scott Wolfe, Doug Hall.
Second heat: Delmas Conley,
Jeff Wood, Ryan Cline, Jay Jenkins.
Featurc:Adams, Evans, R.J.
Conley, Lucas, D. Conley, R. Conley, Wood, Jenkin s, McDaniel,
Burdette.
Limited Late!;
First heat: T.R. Cullums, Roger
Garnes , Kevin Haught, Roger
Cozad.
Second heat: Johnny Wright, Ed
Vcnham, Todd Smith, Jerry Tolson.
Feature: Venham, Wright, Garnes, Smith, Mitch Brunton, Cozad,
John Remy, Kevin Smith, Kevin
Haught, Cullums.
AMRA Modiroeds
First heat Bob Adams Jr., Bob
Crace, John Burdette, Benny Hickel.
Second heat: Rick Tracewell,
Mark Dickson, Jay Foster, Rick
Venham.
Feature: Adams, Burdette,
Tracewell, Crace, Venham, Foster,
Landrum , Hibbard, Huntley , Chris
Dickson.
V: 8 Pure Stocks
Heat one: Chris Stotts, George
Adkins, Mitch Gillian, John Powell.
Heat two: Mark Davis, Don
Ross, Evan Chichester, Conard
Newman.
Feature: Steve Bigl , y, Mark
Davis, Chris Stotts, Adkins, Chichester, Newman, Ron Brinker, Powell, Chad Nelson, Jay White.
Four: cylinder Pure Stocks
'
.

Smith of Smith Buick Pontiac, Cliffside pro Brett
Epling, John Sang of Turnpike Ford and Mike
Northup of Norris-Northup Dodge. Those who
wish to sign up for the tournament may call tournament chairman Marvin Boxdorfer at 441 · 1104.

Heat one: George Adkins, Mike
Balcer, Cliff Whi~ey, Roger Mayle .
Heat two: Brian Baker, Mark
Frost, Larry Han sha·w , Steve
Roberts.

,,,
· ··
'

Feature: Balcer, Adkins, Brian
Baker, Cliff Whitley, Charles
Lantz, Tony Rou sh, Mark Frost,
Joe Christy, Roger Mayle, Larry
Hanshaw, Steve Roberts.

.BQttom fishing best at Burr Oak Lake
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Here is the weekly fishing report as
provtdcd by the Division of
Wildlife ol the Ohio Department o1
Natural Resoun:es:
Southeast
BURR OAK LAKE - Olannel
catfish provide excellent summer
fishing opporttmities. Fish at night
with traditional baits along the lake
bottom for best results. Excellent
fishing is also forecast for largemouth
bass.
Fish
with
nightcrawlers or small spinners in
aJeaS with dropoffs and extended
underwater points.
PIEDMONT LAKE - Use
softcraws or black -haired jigs

fished along the bottom in waters
of moderate depth to take smallmouth bass. Tbe marina area and
the dam are good places to fish fa
muskies . Walleyes and saugeyes
also inhabit the late and can best
be taken at night along the bottom.
Southwest
GREAT MIAMI RIVER - The
river provides excellent smallmouth bass fishing between Sidney
and Hamiltoo, especially below the
numerous low-head dams. Saugeye
fishing is good from Piqua to Dayton due to fish stockings in the
Troy area. Fishing for channel catfish is best between Dayton and
Cincinnati.

·· Channel catfish angling helps
anglers beat summer heat
By JOHN WISSE
DivEioll of Wildlir,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Channel catfish provide an excellent OIJIXXIUility to introduce: beginning anglers 10 the sport of n:creational fJShing and relief from summer's heat, the Division of Wildlife
said.

Because the whiskered fiSh is a
boUom-dwelling nightime feeder,
catfiSh anglers can take advantage
: of warm summer nights. Catfish
are IW! ol the nation's most popular garnr:ftsh. aroxding to various
sport anglen sur-.eys.
Catftsh arc taken on a variety of
•
bait, including nightcrawlers,
' chicken livers. shrimp. and pre•'· pared baits. A stout line and fiShing
~pole fashioned with a moderate'l
sized hoot and sinlcer is all that is
r,
nttded wben fishing for catfish.
$ tha!Tbehaschanl
nel catli!~ ishi'!~ue in
,
tt
ong cat- ,..., w ...ers. or

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7973 PiPdmonr Road. Hunllngton. WV /304)4 29-4 788
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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

1

•
•
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•• Adventurous Camp
slated for Monday

''t
i
'' '·

CENTENARY - The Avemturous Camp will be held from
; ~ Monday Wllil Friday. July 22 from
: 9 am. to 2 p.m. • Ratooon Creek
• County Park for children four to
•·'
, · eight years okl
Panicipants are asked to bring
' their own sack lunch. The park
saaR' will ~ drinks. Shorts or
, , slacks, shirts lDI tenllis shoes are
~ .• recommended for the day camp.
::
A minimum ol20 pnil;ipants is
• . required to have the camp. The
: deadline 10 regisltl for the second
: . 'session wiD be Thunday, July 7.
~·
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barbels, around its mouth. It is a
scaleless fish with a deeply forked
tail and sharp spines in the dorsal
and pectoral fms which makes handling this fish a delicate matter.
A channel catfish is generally
bluish silver on the upper part of its
body and silver to white along its
lower half and belly.
These fish range from I pound
10 15 pounds, but some may weigh
much more . Ohio's state record
channel catfish weighed 37 pounds,
10.4 ounces what caught Aug. IS,
1992, in LaDue Reservoir by Gus.
J. Gronowski of Parma.
The Division of Wildlife says
m&lt;R than 600,000 channel catfish
are taken annually in Ohio waters
by recreational anglers. Nearly half
of Ohio's estimated 2 million sport
anglers fish for channel catfish at
least once a year.
The wildlife agency also raises
and releases channel catfish into
some lakes and reservoirs where
natural reproduction does not
occ:ur. When a lake is rehabilitaled,
such as Hargus Lake near Circleville in 1986, catfish arc stocked
with largemouth bass and bluegills
to help establish a new fishery.
This summer, creel clerks
employed by the Division of
Wildlife arc conducting daytime
and nighttime surveys at Hargus
aod Fox Lakes through Sept. 17 to
determine what anglers are fishing
for and catching.
"'It's important ... that any
anglers who are contacted by our
creel clerks at Hargus and Fox
Lakes cooperate in our survey
effort," said Randy Miller. an
assistant fish management and
~h administrator in the Division of Wildlife.

. .. , f'

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loans and indirect auto loans are excluded.

Ntll'llled

MOSQUITO CREEK RESER-

WOULD DO IPWE Bl!CAME ONE!!!
WE HAD SM001ll FUGIITS AIL UIE WAY. STAYED 1M UIE
fAMOUS PLAMJN(J() HJUUN H011!L. RIGHT ON niB sniP, AND
ENJOYED GltJ!AT 1'000! YES, YOU'RE RIGJrr, WE'RE BACK ON
UIE DIETS, BtrrWHAT A WAY TO 00!
WE SAW A NUMBI!R OP GREAT SHOWS. AS ONLY VI!GAS
PltODI.ICI!S 1111!M. SOME OP US WI!U I'OR1tlNATI! 1U CATCII
CONNU! S11!Vl!N'S SHOW AT DI!BBIE RHYNOLD'S 11ll!ATIU! AND
IKJI1!L. SHJ! BROU&lt;JIIT BACK UYfS OP MI!MORIES AS SHJ!
Plti!SI!NI1!D OLD STANDAJtDS AND TAUFJ&gt; AIIOUI' HER MOVIE
AND 1V l!XPI!JUI!NCES.-AND, SHJ! S11LL SINGS GltJ!AT! WE
lOOK IN niB BI!AU11PUU.Y PltOOUCI!D •JUJIJU!I!'" AT BAILYS.
'UJY UGHfS" ATUIE I'LAMJN(J(). AND WAS l!ND!RTAJNFJ) BY
SUPI!ItSTAR LOOK-A-UKES AS 11II!Y GAVE 11UBUJ1! 1U UTl1Jl
JUCIIAitD, ELVIS, MICHAEL JACKSON, WliJ1liJ!Y HOUSTON, AND
ODII!RS- A GIU!AT SHOW. AND. OP COUJtSI!, 11II!Y POSI!D Wfl1l
US POR JliC11JltE TAXING.
WE VJSD1!D AIL UIE GltJ!ATHOTELS ~CASINOS AND IT IS
SO AMAZING HOW AIL nos Gtn11!R SEEMS TO BH SliT DOWN
IN 11IE III!AIIT 01' ntE DI!SI!IIT- FROM OUR JtOOil( otnHE 19'DI
PL00R.. YOU COUU&gt; ACJ\JALLY SEE AN OU11JNI! 01' niB mY
SHf AGAINST 11IE GRAY BACICDJlOP OP 'DIE DI!SI!RT AND
MOIJIIITAINS. SOMl! 01' OUR GltOUP '10011: SIDE TOURS 1U LAKE
MEAD AND 'DIE GRANDCANYONWHlU! IN niB AIU!A.
NOW WE ARE BUSY PACKING UP TO 00 FROM 1111! Ill'
11lMPI!JtATURI! OP VI!GAS (01' CllORSI!, NO ~ 1U 1111!
COOL. RI!PIU!SIIING A1U!A 01' NIAGARA PALLS AND TORONTO,
CANADA NEXT WEEK. WE WllJ. BE STAYING ON niB
CANADIAN SIDE AND HAVE TOURS 01' 11IE A1U!A PLANNED 1U
TAKE IN AIL 'DIE SIGHTS. WE WllJ. IUD£ 1111! MAID 01' 1111!
MIST BOAT 10 SEE 11JE PAU.S UP CLOSE. (RAINCOATS
PltOVIDED) AND HAVE WNCII AT mE SDLON lOWER 10
VIEW 1111! PALLS FROM ABOVE. AT NIGHT 1111! LIGHTS ON 1111!
WATER ARE BI!AUilRJL ONE EVENING WE WllJ. DRIVE 10
NJAGARA-ON-11JE.I.AIJ! POR DINNER AND WE HAVB RllSI!IM!D
Sl!IJS 10 AN ENGUSH PlAY. ONE DAY WE WHL 1UUR
TOROHID AND VISIT A WINEilY. OUil ACCOMMODA110NS AIU!
AT mE llAMPTON COURTYAitD JNH. 1 11IINK IT WDJ. BE A
GltJ!AT TRIP AND WE ARE SOLD OUTWDH 41 PI!RSONS GaNG
ALONG.
PLAN 10 STOP IN AND VJSrTWJDI US WlDU! ATI1!NDING 1111!
MASON COUNTY PAIR AUG. 9-13. PI!OPLES CHOICI! MI!MIII!RS
Wll.l. .QN Ml! AS WE CONDUCf IXlOIU'IUZI! DltAWJNGS. SHOW
TRAVEL VIDI!OS, TALl: OP OUR TRAVEU, SIIAJlB OUR
SICtAIBOOD 11IAT WE EXHIBrr AFJ1!Il EACH niP, AND PASS
ON JNIIOitWA110N AIIOUI'OUJt PltOGRAM.
.QN US 1111! NEXTWI!I!It ON 111UltSD~ AUG. II AS WE TAKE
OUR DI!UJXE ltlO'RlRCOAat ON AONE DAYVISlf101111!01110
STAll! PAIR IN COLUMBUS, OHIO. IF YOU HAVI! ALWAYS
PLANNED TO GO Btrr DIDN'T WANJ' TO PIGHT 11IE 'l1tAI'PK:
AND PAIUCINO. COME JOIN US. 11IE COST 0P $39.50 lNCUJDI!S
ROOfG-TIIP TL\NSI'Olri'A11 1U COI.UMBUS. ADMJSSI()N TO
11IE PAilt AND A USI!RYI!D 11Clti!T TO 11IE CHARUI! DANlJ!LS
ClH:I!IlT AT 1 P.M. 11IAT I!VI!NING. JUDI!S AND JI00D AU ON
YOUR OWN. nus TRIP IS OPI!N TO CHD.J&gt;JU!N AND YOUNG
PI!OPU! AS WBU. AS ADuLTs, Btrr EACH PJ!RSON UNDIDl nil!
Am! 0P 21 MUST BB ACCONPANII!D BY AN ADliU': WI! AU
CA1llNG nos OUR "'G&amp;ANDMA roua- SINCB AIL OUR
ORANDCIIILDIU!N LOVB TO S1!B OUR MO'IORC()Aat TAD 01'1'
AND AUIVB WJ11J "()()()(WW!s- POll 11ll!lol AND OPI1lN 11IIIY
SAY 1111!Y WOULD LOVB TO IUD£ ON 11IAT BIG BUS. WEU.,
11JI!IIt TDOI HAS COlO!. WE WILL mrmttTAIN 11II!W WlDI
YIDOOS, OAMBS, SNACU,AUlNG nil! WAY AND AU IDOKINO
RlRWARDTOA RJN DAY. COMHDN US. AS WI!

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Member FDIC

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Sulte900
Columbus, Ohio
1-80N86-0LAW
(UOO BB&amp; 0529)

I!HI1RJ! GROUP, Btrr WE SURE HAD I'UN PLANHINO WHAT WE

25 NISSAN TRUCKS AVAILABLE

...

VOIR - The rJ(IIJook is excellent
for white and blad mppie fishing.
Use mimows suspended bmcath a
bobber in areas with submerged
structure for tbe best results .
Bluegills are abundant and offer
good shordine fishing action wbcn
using I.val baits aDd small worms.
SPENCER LAKE - Catcb
rares for largcmoutb 111m are good.
A 15-inch minimum length limit
docs not allow the harvest ol smaller bass. Bluegills and channel catfish offer e&gt;:cellent fiShing action
during summer. The outlook is
good for c111ppies and bullheads.
Bullheads average 12 indies and
Clappics avaliiC nine incbcs.
Lab Erie
Walleye fJShinl OOIIIinucs 10 be
good in the westun basin. and is
improving in the central basin east
of Cleveland. Top !pOlS include the
Toledo shipping channel, the West
Sisla' lslalld IRa. F-Can lDI Cedar
Point. Anglers are trolling with
planer boards and dipsy divers in
deep water. Walleye lengths average 16 to 20 inches. Central basin
walleyes are being tate. seven to
10 miles offslxn from Euclid lDI
one 111 line miles off Fairport Harbor by anglen trolling with dipsy
divers IIIII spooM at depths or 40
to SS feet.. Though not as abundant,
cadr3l basin waJit:yes 1ft largu on
average. An oa:asional Sleelhead is
also taken by central basin walleye
angbs.

HEIJ.O,
FJUI!NDS!!!
WELL, WE HAD AN Dm!ltES11NG 11MI! IN LAS VEGAS, I DON'T
1111Nit WE BROUGIU BACK ONE NHW MILI.JONAIRI! IN UIE

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Get a.Bank One Personal Loan before August 31, 1994.
And get the greatest deal of the summer.

PAINT CREEK LAKE - Flathead catfish up to 20 pounds or
more can be taken on cut baits
ftshed at ni~t along the late bottom . Try foshing the points and
dropoffs adjacent to nat bottom
areas when ftshing for saugeycs.
largemouth bass and crawies can
also be taken during most hours.
Cmtral
KOKOSING RESERVOIR Fish around the dmpoffs along) thc
old creek channel during earfy
morning and evening with sll(face
baits and spinners to take lllrgemouth bass. The areas with fallen
trees and submerged brushpiles
near the shoreline are good places
to ftsh for crappies.
GREENFIELD LAKE Largemouth bass. bluegills and
channel catfish were stocked here
in 1989 as part of a lake rdlabilitation project These fish :ue now ol
harvestable si • and provide some
good summer fishing action. Try
fishing variom shcrdine lR8S and
near the submerged brusbpiles
located at the dam.
Nortb\ftSI
ARCHBOLD RESERVOIR I
- This upgrotmd reservoir offers
good fishing for channel catfish
and saugeyes. Try fiSiling at night
with prepared baits, shrimp.
nightcrawlers or chicken livers
along the lake bouom near the
shoreline for best resulls. Fair ~
u1ations or bullbcads and bluegiUs
arc also p-cscnt
FERGUSON RESERVOIR Good SUJIIIIIC7 walleye fishing 131
be enjoyed by drifting or baiiO!JD
fishing using weight-forward spmners tipped with nightcrawlers.
Overcast days and evenin=
arc the besl timc:uo fish. .
.
catfish up to 22 pounds can be
taken on cut bait or nightaawlers
fiShed along the bottom. Try the
open waler -just off the slimeline to take white bass.

)

~Er~;;~
WAlYIOWU..~
aDCI! a&gt;OitlliNA10R

•

�\

Page-C8-Sunday Tlme&amp;-Sentlnel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH--Polnt Pleasant,

July 1o, 1994

wv

EPA preparing to put ban on lead in anglers'. sinkers .
fiy BILL SCHULZ
A rLANTA (AP) -

.
The Env rron mental Protccuon Agency rs
..crwus about getung the lead out.
It wants th e lead out of lakes,
ponds and streams and out of
:mgler',s c•cklc boxes.
Prohahly late thi ~ year a ban on
lead sinkers will go into effect. Its
final form will not be worked out
until this summer or fall, but as of
now it covers all sinkers containing
lead and zinc. including brass
sinkers , one in ch or less in any
dimension .
It covers homemade sinkers as
wcll as commcrcral ones.
It docs nm cover jigs - hook s
with lead heads used as part of a
lure . Th e Environmenta l Defense
Fund wants to expand 11 to mcludc
jigs.
"We're not proposing to cover
any kind of lure," says John Melone, director of the Cl&gt;emical Managcrnent Orvr sion of EPA. "We're
not covering jigs in this proposal."
"We don't have in hand analyti ca l information that provides a
compc llmg reason to include jigs
or lures." Melone says. " If somebody can come up with compelling
evidence that this is part of the
problem we might address in the
final rule."
The mlc will affect manufacturcrs. Anglers will hardly notice it,
Melone says.
··Fish ermen arc being led to
believe th1s is really going to hit
them hard in the pocket book. It 's
not. We're talkmg a few ce nts or a
few dollars a year. There arc lot of
substitutes coming onto the market.
1 think there's a lot of unnecessary
concern an the part of fishermen, "
Melone says.
.
The EPA estimates more than 2
million pounds of lead sinkers arc
sold in the United St.:ltcs each year.
Industry representatives said they
have no data to contest the cstimate.
The Environmental Defense
Fund, one of four groups which
petitioned EPA to impose the ban,
want to add jigs to the banned ltst.
The others arc the North American
Loon Fund, the Trumpeter Swan
Society and the Federation of Ry
Fishers.
" We're going to urge EPA to
extend it to jigs," says Michael
Bean, attorney for EPD. The prob-

lem, he says, is workrngout lan guagc to dcfrnc an 1llcgal J•£·
''We need 10 fi!l.urc out how big
vanous Jigs arc, Bean sa 1d hy
te lephone from Wa shington .
"Weight may be more appropriate
than size to define a jig."
He says EDF may also try to
inclu de spinncrbaits in the ban.
They arc lures shaped like a large
open hairpin with a lead head and a
hook w1th a plastic skirt on one end
and one or more spinning blades on
the other end .
"We don't know how to define
them, we haven 't done the calc ulations yet, " Bean ~ay s.
In their petition, the groups crted
a U.S. fish and Wildlife Service
report that ingcsuon of lead fi shing
weights contnbuted 10 the loss of
swans in Id aho , Montana and
Wyoming . They ci1cd 18 swa ns
that died from lead poisoning and
four specifically from swallowing
lead sinkers. The petition also cited
the deaths of loons, saying various
studie s of dead animals showed
that 52 percent, 6 percent, 17 perce nt and 40 percent had died of
lead poisoning and fishing weights
were at least a contributin g factor.
"The toxicity of lead to wildlife
is well documented," Bean says,
citing the han on lead shot for hunting waterfowl a decade ago.
''We know there arc readily
available subst itutes for lead, such
as brsmulh and steel. and they are
not very expensive when you consid cr what the average fisherman
spend s on his sport," he says.
Lead 1s potentia II y toxic 10 fishcrmcn as well, he says.
Anglers who make their own
sinkers may inhale lead fumes and
may be feeding lead to their chitdrcn.
"The lead neates dust and lead
dust is dangerous. It gets carried all
over the house. It's very hard to
control,'' Melone says.
''There arc businesses out there
selling sinker-making equipment
who have told fi shermen they can
usc the molds to make smkers on
the kitchen stove." Bean says.
But lead is so poisonous that the
office of Occupational Safety and
Healthy will not allow workers
who work with lead to eat in the
workplace, he says. In addition,
those workers have to change

clothes bcf?rc e?tcnng the lunchroom. He sard rt s loohsh to work
w11h that !OXIC a chem tcal m the
krtchcn.
.
. Melone agrees w1th Bean there
wrll be lrttl e rmpact on anglers but

"it' s no question there are some
srgmficant impacts on manufacturers and com mercial distributors."
''W hen you look at what we
believe arc the market costs of substitutes, the additional cost to fish -

ermen is minimal, in effect it's trivial compared 10 all the other costs
as~ociatcd with fishing,' ' Melone
says.
Wrillcn comments can be sent

to TSCA Docket Rcce1pt (Allenuon Docket No. 62134), Offic~ of
Pollution Prevcntton ~nd Toxtcs,
Envrronmcntal Protecuon Agency,
Room E-G99, 401 M Street SW,
Washington, DC20460.

WHEN YOUR BOAT NEEDS SERVICED•••
SERVICING

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MARINE SERVICES
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Don Wood
Jlutomotiue
Complex this
Satu,dayl .

FarnJ./Business
By LISA GENASCI
NEW YORK (AP) -

Millions
of employee la~offs have helped
corporate Amenca cut exp;nscs.
But evidence is grow in~ that the
strategy known as downsiZing produces destructive side-effects that
range from dembralized workers to
job burnout.
Moreover. researchers and
strategists say th e allcmpt to
strengthen profits and productivity
through culling layers of workers
rna~ actually have cost many compan res btlhons of dollars. Nor ts tl
· · h
d
clear I hat downsJZmg as rna e
busmesses as pnodue!Jve as mrually
hoped.
. .
"Much of the downsiZi ng of the
last 10 yea_ rs has been an enonnous
·
·
waste ol tunc and energy, and m
many cases h,&lt;~ been spectacularly
unsuccessful, satd M1cltacl Ham mer: a consultant spcc !~lr.zrng mrcengmeermg dforts. I m secmg
many comll~~cs go that route and
then regret rt.
To be sure, there is a powerful
argument for cutting unnecessary
workers in an age when technology
can do the work of several people.
If American industry is to remain
compcllllve on costs, workforce
cutbacks arc still seen as an ohvitlte goa1 .
.
ous way to ac htcvc
·
Indccd , on WaII Strcct, a mam
barometer of corporate perfor. .
mance, mvestors usually act favorably to word of cost-cutung. Stock
pnccs often Jump when compantes
tcnnmate workers.
Othe~s. however, charge r.ecngmccnng has become a fad, wtth

companres embmcrng the strategy
wtthout constdcnng th e consequcnces.
.
.
Hammer esumates 70 percent of
the corporate cost-culling he has
observed has not achteved hopedfor results. And a surve¥ of top
cxcc uuves by the consultmg film
Arthur D. Lillie shows about twothrrds arc not satrsfrcd. In h rnd Sight, many satd they should have
planned more carefully.
Part of the problem. the study
f d
n b
oun '. wa~ a con ICI ctwccn the
exccuuvcs ObJCCllvcs, mouvatrons
d
tal ·
an ex pee tons.
. Soli, Peter Scott-Morgan . asso·
ctate diiC~t.or at Ltitkand author of
the book The Unwnncn Rules of
the Game," said that, not surpris · 1 h' f
· . h· b
mg y, c Je executrvcs ,tvc ecn
rcl~~tanttoaddress thc.'r farlures.
. Th~~c has been a consprra~l of
srlcncc, Scott-Morgan satd. But
many feel the c~angc~. have been
too, ~low or too patchy.
The tragedy IS that so many
people arc suffering and the rcasons for which they have had to
suffer not being achieved" h
.
·
c
satd.
Beyond the obvious emotional
and financtal cost to employees is
the less-publicized and not insignif.
tcant
cost
companres
. tocorporauons
. themselves.
Amencan
are spend. be
$ 7 b'll'
d $IO bil
mg tween
I ton an
. Iron a year on rc -e ngmeenng,
Scott-Morgan estimates.
Many of America's lar~est companics have been shrinkmg since
the mid-1980s, and the economic
recoverv has not slowed the pace.

For examp le. after eli minating
about 100,000 jobs since \98 4 ,
AT&amp;T is still dropping 1,000 a
month, spokesman Burke Stinson
said.
Between 1983 and !99 3 , Fortunc 500 compan ies eli minated 4.7
million people from their p.1yroll s
or one-quarter of their workforce:
said David Birch. president of Cog nctics, a Ca mbridge, Mass .. busi ness research firm .
St r\1 , a study for the Census
. '
Bureau's Center for Economic
St udy questions whether JOh cuts
·
. .
·
and rmproved productrvrty - a key
ratronalc for man y rcstructunngs
- ncccssanly go hand-m-hand.
"In many ways the message is
that we need to be .;.,rcful .;hen w~
.
look at trends m the economy and
then apply them to all industries,"
sa1d Umvcrsuy of Maryland ceonomi cs professor John Haitiwangcr,oncofthestudy'sauthors.
An analysrs of productr vrty at
140.000 factories during the 1980s
found that while 55 percent of
gains came where the workforce
f 11 th 0 th 45
.
c • e
er . percent came at
plants wrth grow1ng employment.
David Nocr, author of "Heal ing
the Wounds: Overcoming the Traurna of Layoffs and Revitalizing
.
.
.
Downsrzed
Operauons,'
' sa1d
th e
anger and fear among employees
h
·
off . 'tth . ·k
w 0 su rvtvc 1ay s 1lmt . err m ·
takmg - and hurt producuvny.
Pan of the problem, Hammer
and other strategists say, is that in
th eir quest for efficiency, many
companies have ignored the human
side of tl1c drama, that restructuring

, and the American Board of Surgery's
Diplomate Ccnif1C3lion in 1991. He
was made a fellow in the American
College of Surgeons in 1993.
Stone also attended the United
States Navy Offteer Indoctrination
School in Newpon, R.I., and has
served as staff smgeon at the naval
hospital at Camp Lejeune, N.C. since
1990.
A recipiem of the National Defense Ribbon, the Combat Action
Ribbon, the Aeet Marine Force Ribbon and ocher military awards, Stone
has served in Desert S10nn and remains an active member of the U.S.
Naval Reserves where he holds the
rank of lieutenant commander.
Stone and his wife, Janet, and
their daughters, Lawel and Natalie,
reside, in Gallipolis.
DR. CHARLES STONE

•

• Sieve JUnser's ""llaiiiDIIne••
World of IJIIIIa~n Sprflll Car
~~~:ts;t,_ • Marie Mardn"s "llalvollna••
Win..,n Cup.Bar:e (:ar
• flton Sawpr's "Bed
Ca~atlaasa•Grand

Stone joins
Holzer Clinic

CPA attends
conference

GAlliPOLIS - Charles
Stone, M.D., recently joined the
Holzer Clinic surgery department
A native of Hartford, Conn.,
Stone graduated cum laude with a
Bachelor of Science Degree from
OevelandStale Univenity in 1980.
He earned his Doctaate of Medicine in 1985 from theN&lt;rtheastem
Ohio Univasity College of Medicine and complete his residency at
Akron City Hospital in 1990.
His distinctions include the
National Board of Medical Examiners' Diplomate Status in 1986

POMEROY - Karl Kehler III,
CPA of Kehler Business Services,
Pomeroy, receotly auended a threeday business conference in Scottsdale,
Ariz., to study 1he changing financial
services industry.
The event, attended by more than
600 tax and investment planning
professionals, was hosted by the Irving, Texas-based HD. Vest Inc.
Kehler and other Vest representatives were schooled on how to expand their tax and invesunent planning practices,

l

"

JERRY E. FIELDS, JR.

Fields promoted
at Gav1n Plant
CHESHIRE - Jerry E. Fields
Jr. was recently promoted to production superintendent-maintenance at Ohio Power Company's
Gavin Plant in Cheshire.
He joined Ohio Power in 1985
as a maintenance engineer at the
Muskingum River Plant near Beverly. Transferring to the Gavin Plant
in 1988 as a perfonnance engineer,
he advanced to his most recent post,
plant engineer-senior, in 1992.
Fields, who earned a bachelor
of science degree in electrical engineering from Ollio University in
i in

9ompuserve offers newspap_er archives

llaflonal t:ar

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)CompuServe is offering its members a database of articles from 60
domestic and British newspapers
dating back five to 10 years, the
company announced.
The first information provider
for the archives is Dialog Information Services, Inc.
Members can search Newspaper

Archives by topic and for a specified data range, inquiring by keywords in the headline, lead paragraph or body of the story. Any
name, place or subject can be specified, and a list of qualifying articles will appear for users.
"We feel that out newspaper
databases are a perfect complement
to the many quality information

services offered by CompuScrvc,"
Patrick Tierney, Dialog president
and CEO, said in a news release
Wednesday.
"The company's fast-growing
membership base, evolving technology platform and market position all attracted us to CompuServe
as we sought to expose our newspaper information to a broader
market."

Lyne Center slate

Pool
Today- closed
Monday - 6-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 6·9 p.m.
Wednesday- 6-9 p.m.
Thursday - 6-9 p.m.
Friday -6-9 p.m.
Saturday ...., closed
Sunday, July 17- closed
Fitness center
Today-!-6p.m.
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
~

Thursday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday - 9 am.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, July 17- 1-6 p.m.
Racquetball courts
Today-I-6p.m.
Monday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Tuesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Wednesday- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Thur;;day- 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday -9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, July 17- 1-6 p.m.
Notes: A Lyne Center member-.
ship is required to use the facilities.
Faculty, staff, students and administrators are admiued with their ID
cards.
Racquetball court reservations
can now be made one day in
advance by calling 245-7495 loeaiIy or toll-free at 1-800-282-7201,
extension 7495.
All guests arc to be accompanied by a Lync Center membership
holder.
I

efforts arc chan in how em lo .
..
. .
ccs vrew their w~rk ~ives.
P Y
~hat. IS tmportant to people
Previously. loyalty was a given: ~i~sn l chang~ Just because execu·
If you worked hard , you an.:tined
d cs 1 ~Y. l~ra~ \~estructurJng)
An employee gave the com pan · ~i~n .\{~r. roat~, Scon~Morgan
loyalty and received a steady jo~
d·
c re~rstancc gets pushed
service pins and a secure retire~ ~~cc::;,~ver, \ere ,1,1 turns to sabamcnt
C . treac cry.
''The new reality is that ·o le cos t'~~~~~k went th roug h radr cal
come to the office undcrstarnk,:
guarant -~ bcgrnnr~g ~n 199.1 to
that 10 rely on the paternalism ~·r ' the mid~~~/ survrva · owh 11 ' · '"
the company is a mistake" Stinson effort 1 ala m~r?. comprc ens lve
sar·d
'
"L_ko rc u'gn uslncss.
. .
1 c 0 l CC compan c
c h· I
Although companies have found
roblcm s at im lcmcn~!Js.nwin v:~
0
loyally is hard to engender amr'd epa 1·
h
pf
.
·
r 1cr p asc o re -c ngm cenng
ma ss ive la yoffs. they also are efforts" said Susan Evans head of
beginning to recognize that without busin~ss ev aluation and' bench ·
significan t comm itmcnt from mark in at Citihank ·'We would
workers the changes won't be sue
·
·~ d · · ·
ccssful .'
- Jumthp m o es rgdmug a new phroccss
·
wr out spe n 1ng eno ug umc
"Cost reduction by iLself is not assessmg the full problem Pco lc
a winnning strategy,'· said Don didn't always undcrst~nd S,e
Sacco, head of human resources at changes "
Nynex Corp. "We have to grow
Now: she said the banks nel s
and we can ' t grow without our more time traini~g emplo ee~and
employees on board. They implc- evaluating projecLs
Y
.
,
·
·. ,
.·
men! our stratqzy.
o
Execuuves also have not consld:
. At Nynex, more th~n .0,000 ercd h~w reslructurmg affect's th e
JObs h,,vc been ehmmated srnec wo~load ofrcmammgemplo)CCS.
1988. Another 15 000 wtll be lost
All many compames are domg
.
·.
. . 1. . . .
.
over the next few ·~ars Ju st~ ~e':' ts e lm:natmg people. throwrng
years ago, Nyncx was consrdcred a ~em o cr ,the srde of the boat~~
53
_ffcplace 10 work , aSguarantecd of 1H ey arcn lde h~Ctnatmg wo rkh,
11 cumc emp1oymcnt acco sar
am merwork
sat the
. eompan1es
1 en
·
ha"e
Many compa nt.cs' rca 1-tze now
· · pcop
10
•
r
matnmg
1e
.
• .
. , h
.
,
they have not spent enough lime
ardcr and they become stressed
rc arin workers for restructurin
and unha
"
p P g
g.
ppy .

usiness people

-·" ..

RIO GRANDE - Here is the
schedule for the rest of the week of
July 10-17 at the University of Rto
Grande's Lync Center.
Gymnasium
Today -closed
Monday - closed
Tuesday- closed
Wednesday- closed
Thursday- closed
Friday -9 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday- 1-6 p.m.
Sunday, July 17- closed

July 10, 1994

Downsizing not as beneficial as once thought

Feds to make life vests
required equipment
for all boats in 1995
size and weight."
By BILL SCHULZ
You can test your PFD by takAssociated Pres_~ Writer
Life jackets arc the most impor- ing it swimming with you.
Choose the type of life vest that
tant pieces of gear in your boa~ and
mntches
your boating.
beginning next year, they must be
The
minimum
is the Type II, the
in all boats.
The law now requires each boat "horse collar" vest that goes
must carry a personal flotation around the neck and is attached to
device (PFD) for every person m the body with a single strap. It's
the boat. But for boats less than 16 not meant for long hours in rough
feet long, the PFD can be a cushion water and it will not necessarily
or other throwable device, such as tum an unconscious person face up
in the water.
a life ring.
.
The next is the Type III flotation
Beginning in 1995, cushtons
and life rings won't count. There aid, which looks more like a vest,
must be a life vest for every person or a jacket. It's the most comfortable type of PFD, and allows much
in every boat.
While the law doesn't require freedom of movement for fishing
each person in the boat to wear a or water skiing.
But it docs not necessarily tum
life vest, statistics show the laws of
nature arc vicious on those who an unconscious person face up and
isn't meant for rough water or
~on 't wear them.
.
\ Eighty-five percent of those wearing in a fast boat.
who die in boating accidents were
The Type I. or off-shore life
not wearing a life jackc~ says Hunt jacket, usually zips onto the body
Anderson, chief of boating educa- and has several straps to keep the
tion for the U.S. Coast Guard m vest from being tom off in an accident. It will tum almost all unconWashington.
If you' rc not going to wear your scious victims face up in the water.
life vest, at least stow it where you They come in highly visible colors
can get at it easily, not in a plastic - to aid rescuers in finding you.
bag in the furthest corner of a
With today's very fas~ boats,
locked comparuncnt
keeping your life vest on is espeIt's beller, Anderson says, to cially important
buy a PFD you will wear. Read the
''If you are doing 30 or 40 mph,
label. There's a lot of required and you hit something and are
information about flotation and use thrown out of the boat, if you're
on every label.
wearing a type II, it's just going to
"You want one that's comfort- come right off your body," Anderable. That's the first requiremen~" son says. "It's just not designed for
Anderson says. "The second s~"""'.
requirement is that the PFD will
The label is required to tell the
noat you. that it's lhe appropriate speed rating of the life vest.
size and flotation for your body

Section D

Edition '94 Thunderbird

..lA
•
Le
'
a ...-or ss. ~~~~~~~

'lledCcrpel'

WISEMAN AGENCY HONORED - The
Wiseman AJlency In Gallipolis has earned the
desianation of senior partner aaency with the
Grange Insurance Companies of Columbus. The
Wiseman Agency has "demonstrated outstanding professloaallsm by meetlaa a number of spe'I

by the Grange sales
department,'' the company said in a news
release. Seen above are, rrom tell, Grange President W, Mick Taylor, Gary Roach and Tom
Wiseman of The Wiseman i\aency, and Grange
Sales Vice President Rod Stapleton.
cilk: pldeUnes established

SHARES WINNER- A. Ray Taylor, center, maintenance
supervisor at Ohio Power Company's Gavin Plant, accepts 90
shares or American Electric Power stock from Andrew Mulato,
right, an executive assistant with OP and Columbus Southern
Power while being congratulated by Carl A. Erikson, pre5ident or
OP and CSP. Taylor was awarded tbe shares through AEP's annual Operating Ideas Stock Awards program with an award-winning
idea titled "New Clamps Align Tubes ror Welding, Saving More
than $500,000 Annually."

Rain brings soil
to adequate levels
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
Gallia E~tension Agent

office for a complete schedule of
events.

GALLIPOLIS - Local weather
continues to dominate much farm
discussion. It seems that much of
Gallia County has reached the adequate topsoil moisture level over
the past couple of weeks. The
southern end of the county, particularly the area around Swan Creek,
finally had rainfall on Wednesday
night, with some spots getting three
inches plus. Some storm damage,
blown over and scalded tobacco,
have come along with the needed
rain.

The June 30 USDA acreage
report estimated planted com acres
up 7 pcr~cnt from last year's
acreage. Increases in harvested
acreage of 13 to 15 percent are
expected to be registered in Illinois,
Indiana and Iowa. The report also
estimated the largest soybean
acreage since 1985. The corn crop
condttJon ts generally excellent in
the Western Corn Belt, with eastern
states (Indiana and Ohio) quite
variable.

Two tours for local Tobacco
Producers arc planned in coming
weeks. The local Twilight Tobacco
Tour will feature stops at farms
along Route 7 South on the evening
of Tuesday, July 19. I am a lillie
slow on getting all the details
worked out, but the event will
include a field and facility stop at
the Keith Corbin family farm and
conclude with a field tour and
refreshments at Baughman's
Riverview Farm. We are also
working toward a couple other
stops. In addition to the traditional
cold pop rcues~ments, chances
look good for a sweet com roast at
the Baughman's Farm. Mark your
calendars and watch next week's
newspaper for fmal details.
The lOth annual Gallia County
Pride in Tobacco Association Out·
of-State Tour is scheduled for Aug.
11-14. This year's tour will include
stops at family fnnns and research
. stations in Ripley, Madison, Ind.,
Elizabethtown, Ky., Princeton, Ky.,
and Paducah, Ky. Sightseeing and
entertainment activities will center
around Paducah and vicinity. The
tour is open to the first 40 paid
reservations. Call the extension
•

at the Ohio Agricultural Reseanch

BioHio is the open house event
and Development Center in Wooster. The event takes place July 2224. Admission is free and open to
the public. Hours on Friday and
Saturday (July 22 and 23) arc 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. and Sunday (July
24}, noon to 6 p.m. Exhibits, dis~lays, and guided tours will highlight each day. Among the exhibits
will be the traditional crop and
livestock research. Of special interest, each time I visit the Wooster
Reseanch Station, is the area directly behind the main facility know as
the "Secret Arboretum." It is well
worth the trip.

--

The monthly Gallia County cattlemen's meeung normally scheduled for each second Monday (July
11 ) had been canceled due to several schedule conflicts. Plan to attend
the 4-H and FFA Fitting and Showing demonstmtions for several project areas at the Fairgrounds on
Tuesday evening.
(Edward M. Vollborn Is tbe
Gallla Couaty exteaslon agent
for a&amp;riculture.)

Fact sheets
available on
insect control
lly HAL KNEEN
Meigs E•tension Agent
POMEROY - Our phones
have been ringrng from commercial
growers/fanners and homeowners
as to the control of various insects
and diseases. The extension office
does have hundreds of fact sheets,
bulletins and weekly updates written by Ohio State University staff,
many of whom arc foremost
ex perts in their field of studies.
Thi s informati on is reliable and
research based.
Unfortunately, many callers
want insu.tnlancous ~'miracle" cures
which require lillie effort on !heir
part and/or low cost. Prevention is
worth a pound of cure. Proper
preparation of the area to be planted, selection of disease
res istant/tolerant varieties, correct
irn gatton technique s, regulating
fcruhzation and contro lling surrouncling wee ds can greatly
improve an rndi vid ual plant, garden
or f1cld resi stance to insects and
diseases.
For those farm ers or homeown ers considering fall planting, start
off with obtaining a soi l sample of
the ground in which you intend to
plant. Our office docs accept soil
samples and for a fcc will send
them to the universi ty's soi l laboratory for analysis. If you need assistance in how to take a soil sample,
we do have a fa~l sheet available.
Tomatoes and disuse
Tomatoes have been on the
minds of several callers. Early
blight di sease on tomato plant
fohage has been spotted in many
home gardens and in the commercial growers' fields. This disease
causes leaf spot, fruit rot and stem
lesions on tomatoes and can be
very destructive. The· first symptoms appear on older leaves (so
look at the basal leaves) and consist
of small irregular, dark brown to
black dead spots rang ing in size
from a pinpoint to one half inch in
diameter. As the spot enlarges,
concentric rings may result, thus
giving a target spot or "bullseye"
appearance . There is usually a narrow, yellow halo around the spot
which fades to normal green color.
Spoiling of the leaves occur early
in the season, but usually the greatest leaf injury appears after the fruit
is well set.
Early blight is caused by a fun·
gus, Alternaria solani, which lives
on decayed plant tissue in the soil.
As temperatures rise above 75
degrees Fahrcnhcll and high
humidity is present, the fungus
spores found in the soil are
splashed by irrigation water or min
onto .he lower plant leaves. Control
can be obtained by crop rotation of
at least three years between plantings of tomatoes/potatoes and
spraying with a registered fungicide. Unfortunately, disease rcsistan_t varieties do not yet exist. For
further explanation, ask for Home
Yard N Garden fact sheet #3090.
llioHio
Celebrate agriculture in your life
at BioHio on July 22-24. The open
house event takes place on the
beautiful campuses of the Agricultural Research and Development
Center (OARDC) and Agricultural
Technical Institute (A TI). At BioHro, you'll enjoy exhibits, displays,
gmded tours, food and entertamment. Many of the exhibits will
emphasrze how Ohio State programs lead to products for consumers. Admission is free and open
to the public. Hours are Friday
July 22, and Saturday, July 23, HJ
a.m. to 6 p.m.; and Sunday, July
24, noon to 6 p.m.
Meetings
The Ohio State Beekeepers'
Association annual summer meeting wiU be held 'Qit Saturday, July
30, 1994 at the State Fire Academy, 123 Main St. (State Route 83)
Reynoldsburg, Ohio.
'
The Ohio Ecological Food &amp;
Farm Association has announced
its annual series of Ohio farms and
gardens. You are invited to come
ami witness examples of farming
with fewer chemicals, on-farm
research, the usc of cover crops and
methods of natural soil improvement. Meet with others who are
concerned about improving Ohio's.
rural communities and developing
sources of·locally grown food. On
Aug. 20, the Dutch Creek Community Farm, 13206 Dutch Creek
Road, Athens, Ohio, will be having
an open house from 1-4 p.m.
Excess Produce
Allention homeowners with
excess garden produce! Farmers'
markets have been suggested for
both the Middleport (Saturdays)
and Pomeroy (Fridays) downtown
areas. However! a lack of vendoCll
has sttfled thetr development. If
any grower is interested, please
contact Tom Dooley at 992-3148
for the Middleport fanners' market,
or George Wright at 992-2439 for
the Pomeroy farmers' fll.lrlcet.
(Hal Kneen is tbe Melrs
County extension agent for agriculture.)

•

�•

•
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OK-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Page--02-sunday Times-Sentinel

July 10, 1994

Buyers boost blue chips; broader market mixed
By MARYBETH NIB L FY
AP Business Writer
NE W YORK (AP) _ 0 1 . .
~ bo ut th e outl ook for co~ lmJ s~:
proCiiS attracted bu crs 10 ccb~::~ ic
,·.lii l Sl' nsi uvc slocks rnd ay bo . _
1
" '·' ·tlh· Dm, Jnncs imlusm~; a~~r1,,,. b.h·l. :Jhm c ' 700
· lh·· l'r ,.1l1 r·u1;,, o.f 11 11, .1 ·k .
'. .scsSJon
~'
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'
11.1 .1 .1• '""··d
c oc
UH'
111, ,., 1" '' l·oui d ll ' t .
1q 1 1l.
, J11 u,: ,, 11 11 1l. ""Jlll'l or'.:mTh-~- ; l
rl ~c· h• lld '" ·"' l' l ·
· " '' '"
111 ,. 1\ '" 111 d 11 , 111 ,!1, ,.1, 111 hnl
.,, · · 1 , ; .,,., 11
1
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1,,, 111 " .\ lr.· Ji! h v qu ·llt c· rl y .~ 1111
. . 1 . , ,11 ,·
· ) •
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1(1 1\ 1 1 ~ 1w l"l)illponcnt
\lurnrllu rH CP. lli Am crll'Jh ·l ,· l
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'
111 11
1oil.
I II.~11 11 , ,. 11
_' " '' c np
'
b
cato~
"
.l hl' f :'\. 1l'l 1 .l !J III CT\
)' &lt;lt •OU( 6 Ill

1

2:;

.

5 o n the N ew York Stock
E,,·ha nge. V o lum e o n th .· H1g
ll rr. rrtl's nom amounted to :&gt; :\l.62
mill ron shares as of 4 p.m. ·EDT,
compared to 25R.5 0 rn1lhon Thursd:11:-_

.

.

I he NYSE comp os ll c 1ndex
'.'l'C 0 .54 to 248.11 and added 1.77
I '' ' · 1-"· wee k . w h _t' l e Stan dar d &amp;
P"" ' s 500 s!ock mdcx mcrea sed
I I 7 1o 449.55 , end1ng th e week
3.15 h1g her . T he Nasdaq Stock
.~ l:r rk c t co m pos !l c 1nde x lll ched
:r l, .rd 0 9 3 to 70 ~ . 46 , whr c h
b" " ' ght Hup0.61 in the week. At
tilc Am encan Stock Exchange, the
m ark et valu e mdex ro se O.KO to
--, - .tS d 0 73 . th
4 -"
. an . '"e~c ek .
.
I he ho nd markcl s negat1 1 c
r,·ac ti on to June's strong employ 1

mcm reading inttially ra!Ued stock
mvestors but the selling moderated
by m1d-momrng.
T he Labor Department said non farm payroll s ex panded by 379,000
last month , far larger growth than
mos t ecollomJ sts estunated . Ana ly sts attached more significanc e to
. '
the payro II datat han to lh e nauons
overall unemployment ral c, wh1ch
remained at 6 perc ent in June for a
second month running .
Bond traders bailed out of the
mark et•mmed•atclyafterthcJob
ftgurcs wercrclcascd.Nearthecnd
of tradmg , pnccs of all matunl! es
of Treasury notes and bond s
·h
·
JO
remamed 1owcrwlt lhc
-year
1ssue off 7/8 pomt, wh1ch drove up
it.s yield W 7.69 percent from 7.&amp;J

percent late Thursday.
Stock inv es tors managed to
overcome their rate-related uneasi ness and focus instead on ho!JeS
!hat the steady economiC expanswn
will generate greater proftts for
corporate Arnenca. The buymg
was selective with investors mainly
.
.
. at stocks .
concentratmgoncychc
Alcoa JUmped 3 5/8 to 78 7/R.
The company said it earned $45.4
million , or 50 cents a share , in the
second quarter, up from $35.3 mil lion or40ccntsa sharc aycar ear Jier.'
'
Stocks of other metals makers
also gained ground as did shares of
hastc industrialcompanies.
Among active issues, Diagnostek tumbled 4 J/4 to 17 3/4 on the

NYSE after the company &lt;1Isclosed
that the early termination of a contract with CignaCorp. will reduce
its !995 net income.
Remarks by President Clinton
and other admini~tration officials
about the ,dollar s recent slump
were taken in stride by the markets.
Clmtonsa.tdthedollareventual'
.
ly w1U recover 1f the Uruted States
continues to pursue policies fostertng noninflationary economic
growth. He spoke at a news conferenceasleadersofthesevenmaJor
industrialdemocraciesgathcredfor
theu annual summH this weekend
in Italy.
1
·
·
n Tokyo, pflces f e ll whllc
stock s made mmor movements m
European markets.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

U.S. Engine
Valve Co. to
~xpand plant
WESTMINSTER. S.C. (AP) - •
U .S. Engine Valve Co . has
announced it will expand its plant
near this city and add up to 80 new
jobs during the next 18 months.
U.S . Engine Valve, jointly
own~ by Eaton Corp . of Cleveland and Nittan Valve Company of
Tokyo, manu.factures intake and
exhaust valves for Toyota and U.S.
automakers .
The expan sion will more than
double the company's current
capacity, U.S. Engine spokeswoman Mary Ann Craft said Friday .
The company, with 125 employees,
has been in operation since 1988.

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRIDAY
For all your glass needs
contact the professioals

cd.
Th e direc 1ors gave Fed erated
1wo wee k s to address the If con -

ers who pr eviou sly supported
Macy's plan 10 remain independent
are " officially in the uncommitted
cer n s o n se veral i ss ue s, said a column today," , aid Robert Miller,
so urce familia r with the ncgotiaan attorney for the bondholders:
!ion s, who spoke on condition of
Mill er said , · 'There are some
anon ymity. Macy will file its own
discrepancies that have developed
plan before Aug. I if !he board i s in the deal with Macy.'' He said
nu l sati sfied wi!h the Federated
bondholders also were not satisfied
plan .
with how much Federated wa s
Fcrlcratcd, operator of Bloomoffering them, bui he refused to be
in gdale' s and other retail chains,
more specific.
said it is "disappointed by the inacBoth com pani cs continued to
tion of Macy's board , which we
negotiate with the bondholders and
find especially confusing in light of other creditors.
the fact that they have absolutely
Federated approached Macy
no (creditor) support."
several weeks ago and asked it to
' 'We arc attempting to sort it all
consider a united plan that would
out, and until them, we' ll withhold
satisfy creditor groups that were
f urthcr corn rncnt."
divided m their support for the two
The Macy directors were also wmpan1es.
concerned about antitrust issues
A combinatiun of Macy and
that could delay implementation of Federated would create the nation's
1hc merger, Macy said. Macy and biggest department store company
Federated stores compete in many
wi ih 341 stores.
pans of the Northeast and in the
The attorneys general of New
South.
York and New Jersey and the FedThe source said the two compa - eral Trade Commission have raised
nies had few differences over the questions about the proposed mergmerger.
financial aspects of the Federated er. Macy stores compete with Fed·
Ma cy said in a statement the
plan, which Federated has publicly crated's Bloomingdale's, Stern's
board had reservauons about operational and business strategy issues valued at $3.83 billion and which and Abraham &amp; Straus in the
- how Federated would run Macy ..IH!s been sweetened in negotiations Northeast, and with Rich's and
with Macy and creditors.
and integrate the famed depanment
However, the companies were
store company into its own operastill unable to win the approval of
tion s - and how the merger would
BRIDGE
affect employees, vendors and the all classes of Macy's creditors for
the financial settlement. Bondholdareas where Macy stores arc localdes1rabl e res ults

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Today even
1nd1v1duals who have been resistant to

ASTRO-GRAPH

PHILLIP

ALDER

your v1ew s and op1nions mtghl alter their
thm K1ng. ow1ng to your persuasive
appeal

· 19\14 NEWSPAI'ffi~NTt;IU'RtSEASSN .

~q'our

~ Cftirthday

NORTH
7-9-94
•976532

·

• I0 4 3

•J
o1oK J 3

Monday, July 11. 1994

0

Exc111ng t1me s romant1cally could be m
the oH 1ng for you m the year ahead Your
chance s for Mr . or Miss A1ght to come
along look very good

'\bur

'Birthday

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Lastrng rela-

Sunday . July 10. 1994

The people to whom you II be attracted m

th e year ahead are apt to be progress tve
~nd tn tun e wtlh th e hme s. Several mtere sttng ne w fnend s mtght hR gathered
from thetr ranks

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your malerr·
a! aHatrs shOuld work out to your satt slactt on today d you're prepared to gtve tn
ord e r to gPI The pump mu s t ftr st be
pnrned to genera te a flow . Cancer, lreat
yourse lf to a b1rthday gift . Send for your
Astr a -Graph predicttons fo r the year
ahead by madtng $1 .25 to Astra-Graph,
c/o th1 s newspaper. P.O Box 4465 . New
York . N Y 10163 _ Be sure to state your
ZOdi2C Stgn .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You·re not lrkely
to shy away from responslb ll 1t1es today
In !~ c t . you m1ght even welcom e an
arrangement that appears to be too trylflg
tor others to manage

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Grea1er grat1l1 cat10n m1ght be der1v e d to day from

hP-1ng helpful where you ca n mstead of
mere ly try1ng to feather your own nest
and advan~:e personal amb1110ns .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Persons wrth
whom you assoc1ate today could have a
stronger Influence than usual on your atll·
tude lf you're 1nvolved w1th pos11!ve
thmker s collectively . somethmg constructive could result.

SCORPIO (Oct ·24-Nov. 22) Don't deliberately seek out competit 1ve S1tuat1ons
today. but. by the same taken, don't duck
them etther Should one anse . you'll be a
capable contender

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Vrew
the outcome of events tn a hopeful manner today _ 11 you hold strong thoughts, it
w1U strengthen your fa 1th . and that whiCh
you env1s1on could help bnng thmgs to
frUitiOn

CAPRICORN

(Dec.

22-Jan .

19)

Change s can be made at lh1s time to
alter a s1tuat1on that has been produc1ng
negatiVe ·Influences. The power to do so
lies w1th you . so don't procrastinate

AQUARIUS
ModeratiOn

IS

(Jan.

20·Feb.

19)

the key to your succes s

Joday . so try to play ever)'1hrng ctown the

Box 4465 . New Yo rk. NY 10163 Be
sure to stale your zod1ac s1gn

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Two sources
today could turn out to be· mcome generators. One 1S an old rehaOie. but the other
1s brand -new and as of now untested

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) A unrque srtuatton rn1ght develop today after you start
out to do a fnend a favor. It may take a
surpnse tw1st·that w111 benefit both of you
equa lly .

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You have a
staunch supporter work 1ng on your behalf
behmd the scenes today to help fulfill an
ambitiOUS a1m Only part of what occurs
w1ll be revealed for ·the present

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 · Nov. 22) Today
you 're apt to be both observant and a
qu•ck learner _You may discover a way to
solve a naggmg problem by observ1ng
how another successfu lly handles a Simi lar comphcat1on

SAGITT ARtUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2t) A
mutually saltstactory arrangement can be
worked out today between you and a person who has someth1ng you need, you
have someth1ng he/she needs .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Usually
you l1ke to ponder thmgs 1n detatl before
mak1ng a commitment. Today, however,
you're a qutck thmker. and your on-the spot dec1stons could be your best.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) A favorable change for whrch you've been hopIng but haven' t thought poss1ble might
occur today where your work IS concerned . It could produce long-lastmg benefits

PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20) You rlllQill
have greater luck today in partnership
arrangements than you'd have in
atlempflng to operate on your own _ Find
someone who needs you as you much
need him/her

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Today rt

m•ddle . w1thout bemg too aggress1ve or
too pass1ve

you're trymg to sell an 1dea or a product

PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20) Loungrng rn

to others. let •I be known you stand'

the shade will have 1ts appeal today, but
d you fall to be prOductive you're apt to
collect guilt from tt later for wasting valuable t1me .

beh1nd your words 100 percent. If you
build confidence. you can build a sale

ARIES (March 21-April19) Allhough you
m1ght not dehberaJely put on pretenses.
your act1ons could still have a dramatiC
flair that w1tl lead others to focus the1r
attention on yru 1

TAURUS (I ·'''' 20-May 20) Success rs
probable today in situations where you 're

motivated 10 do good lor persons you
love . Don't be doubtful about ach1evrng

•

tion ships can be deve loped at this time
be tween you and two persons you've
recently met . Th1s IS because all of you
helve much 1n common . wh1ch you'll soon
d1scover Major c hanges are ahead to r
Canc er tn the com 1ng year. Send for your
Astra-Graph pred1ct 1ons today Mail $1 .25
10 Astra-Graph , clo thiS newspaper, P 0

TAURUS (Aprii2G-May 20) Don't be surprrsed today rf you're more popular than
usual. Th•s ts because your finer qua lilies
are very evident to others. especially your
Intellect, wit and charm .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) There's a
poss1brlrty foday you m1ght t1nd that
someth1ng you've been wanting to buy,
which you felt was too expensive, is
affordable now because of a reduced
pnce

EAST
•QJI08
• K J 9
+QI063
o1ol0 4

WEST

•·.
•AQ862
• 7 5 4 2

18 6 5 2
SOUTH
•A K 4
., 7 5

t A K 9 8
•A Q 9 7

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South
South
West North East
2 NT
Pass 4 •
Pass
41
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: ... 2

The roller coaster
of bridge
By Phillip Alder
~ Life is full of highs and lows.

Tli'e biggest high is actually being
alive. Just consider the odds
against your being born. It
required one specific ovum and
one specific sperm.
In brid~e we have highs and
lows too: h1~h cards and low cards.
In general, 1f you are a defender, it
pays to follow the principle that if
you lead a low card in a suit, you
have an honor in that suit; without
an honor, lead a high card. West
ignored this principle in today's
deal and paid a heavy price.
North's four-heart response
was, of course, a transfer bid.
After West had guessed to lead
the club two ("My stronger minor,
partner"l, declarer handled the
play well. He "finessed" dummy's
Jack before playing a spade to his
ace, getting the bad news. Now
South carefully played a club to
dummy's king and a club back
toward hand. Thinking his partner
had the club queen, East saw no
reason to ruff. Instead, he
discarded a diamond. But now
declarer could win with the club
ace, cash the spade kin~, play off
the A-K of diamonds, dtscarding
one of dummy's hearts, and lead
the club queen, discarding a
second heart from the dummy.
East ruffed, but declarer had only
three losers: two spades and one
heart.
Prettily done by South, yet West
had tried to save the day. At trick
two, he discarded the heart eight.
And on the second round of clubs,
he played the eight. On the second
round of clubs, he had played the
eight. But East wasn't watchin~.
From trick one, he "knew" hts
partner had the club queen.
Nothing was going to unfix hts idee

Burdine's in the ~outn.
I lowever, many analysts expect
some of the overlapping stores to
be sold. A likely buyer of Macy
stores m Georgia and Florida ·is
Dillard Depanmcnt Stores Inc.
They also expect Stem's and Abraham &amp; Straus to be restructured.
Macy owns Ill Macy and Bullock's stores. Federated's 230

stores also include the Lazarus, Jordan Marsh, Bon Marche and and
Goldsmith's chains.
Federated, which wants the
Macy and Bullock department
stores to expand its business broadly and rapidly, began its bid to
acquire its rival in January, when it
bought half of the bankruptcy
claim ileld against Macy by Pru-

or

Phone 675 -2449

Vine Street- Gallipolis

I

1-800-258 -8029

5 gallon Ice Cream
Freezer
Perlect for reunions,

Hunt Reunion
Families of William C .

dential Insurance Co. of America
for $449 million.
Federated said at the time it
hoped to use the claim to acquire
Macy.
Macy was sent into bankruptcy
court protection in January 1992,
hobbled by billions of dollars in
~lkeovcrdcbtand slumping sales.

Senior and Grace Reed
will

have

August

6,

a

reunion

1994 .

or

Loretta

parties, socials.
Call to reserve
446 - 1276

Call

W.C . Hunt Jr. 446-6987
Hunt

FOR SALE

Heck

6 Room Brick House In

446-1822 or 446-9591 for

City, Newly Decorated,

more information .

Central Air 446- 1828

Former Soviet countries importing less grain
By MARGARET SCHERF
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - Grain
use in countries of the former Sovi et Union has declined considerably
as livestock inventories have fallen,
the Agriculture Department says.
The countries imported yearly
averages of more than 40 million
tons of grain in the I 980s, but took
in an estimated 20.5 million tons in
fiscal 1993-94, the lowest in more
than I 5 years.

''Faliing animal numbers arc a
result of price deregulation, which
led to a sizable drop in real
incomes and consumer demand for
livestock products, and decreased
agricultural support to the livestock
sector, as the ... governments (of
the former Soviet republics) eliminated much of the considerable
producer and consumer subsidies
for meat that existed before
reforms," the report said.
"Economic reforms and tight
financial constraints in the coun-

Providen ce Missionary Bapti st Church

tries of the former Soviet Union
have caused significant reductions
in import demand for a number of
agricultural commodities since the
demise of the USSR in 1991," says .
the report by USDA's Economic
Research Service.
The value of U.S. agricultural
exports to the countries in fiscal
I 993-94 is forecast at $1.3 billion,
down about I 7 percent from the
previous fiscal year and down
around 50 percent from fiscal
199!-92.

Teens Run Road
Vacalion Bible School
Ju ly 11 -15 6:30-8:30 pm
All ages welcome
From toddler- teenager

DOWN

as seawater

112 Blessing
113 Delayer's moho
114 Mosl cold and
damp
116 Man of rank
117 Rustic
116 Flutists
119 Equal
121 Restraining
ropes
124 Brass instrument
125 Gratuity
128 Child
t 30 Ternperamental
13t Rainy
132 At sea
136 Puppet - - s1nng
137 Hinder
139 Drunkard
140 Food regimen
141 Numerals on a
clock
142 UndetWorld god
144 Like cellophane
147 Burning
149Artist's stand
150 Tennessee- Ford
151 Bntish money
152 Jockey
153 Sugary
154 Brads
155 Lab compound
156 Youthful

ones

)

1 Foundation
2 Ward off
3 Scandinavian
4 Lively dance
SPoem
6 Facet
7 Singer Manilow
6 Kiln
9 Actor Deluise
10 Na1ural weanng
away
11 Fit lor consumption
12 Kindled
13 Eye part
14 'The - and the
Ecstasy·
15 Upperclassman
16 Innocent one
17 Drs.' org.
16 Swallows greedily
19 CompoSition
20 Memorize
27- and void
30 Dye
33 Composition lor lwo
36 Penned
38 Look at
39 Heavenly being
43 Service branch:
abbr.
44 Second in
command, lor short
45 A beverage
47 Curved line
48 Female horse
49 Ram constellation
50 Evans or McCartney
51 Spongy confection
52 Blueprint
54 Pipe and barrel
56 Focus one's
attention
57 Compleie
58 Like ski slopes
60 "-Free"
61 Ocean
62 Annapolis is its
caprtal
63 Drench
66 City in Washington
67 Upright

446 -8778

LAYNE FURNITURE
LARGE SELECTION
OF
LIVING ROOM SUITES
SOFA&amp; CHAIR

Cancelled/Rejected

PRICED FROM

• DUI • No Prior

$450 TO $1195

Insurance

FREE DELIVERY

All Ages, All Risks

Mon . lhru Sat . 9·5: Ph. 446 ·0322
3 Miles Out Bulav1lle P1ke

Crossword Puzzle Answer on Page A-5
67 Portent
68 Red wrne
90 Mata 91 Beery beverage
92 Gave
95 "- in 1he Fam1ly"
96 Doze
96 Tins
100 Creature of myth
101 Bolger or Walston
102 Buddies
104 Shade tree
105 Lend a106 Thin
107 Klllght's attendant
106 Overact
110 Make drinkable.

$25.00 Pick-up- Deliver

SR-22

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Stnnged instrument
6 Dwelling
11 Inventor - Howe
16 Roll with a hole
21 Eschew
22 Enjoy the tasle ol
23 Funeral song
24 Divert
25 Wool fabrrc
26 Foreboding
28 Lrght wood
29 Tax agcy. leiters
30 Gull-like bird
3t War vessel. for
short
32 Nasty
34 - excellence
35 Ragoul
37 Cold
38 Country house
40 "How do - do?"
41 Thesaurus entry:
abbr.
42 Lifter's smallest
44 Forcible
46 Quantity of paper
49 Nearly
52 Hammer part
53 Earth: prelix
55 Religious pamphlets
59 Lanat
60 Gus1ed
61 Smudges
64 Sing softly
65 Concernmg: 2 wds.
66 Detergent
67 Meat variety
68 Deity
70 Within prefrx
71 Asner and Sullivan
72 Seedless plant .
73 Withstand
74 Slender candle
76 Cry of a crow
77 Of a desen m Africa
79 Rocky hill
60 Knitting essenttal
82 Good-looking
84 Encounter
85 Horse's last gait
86 Fibs

Cars
Hand Wash, Hand Wax

Auto Insurance
Low Down
Payment

We try to insure
everyone!

69 Propriety
72 Emancipates
73 Churtish one
74 Sapling
75 Kind of candle
76 Gas: prefix
79 Catch
81 Feels poorty
83 Fellows
65 TOpiCS
68 Antic
69 Camel-like animal
92 Profit
93 Avid
94 Cloth workers
97 Antiquity: arch .
99 Emmet
100 Floating ice field
103 Pace
105 Zenana
106 Weeps
107 Of the bishop of
Rome
109 Dir. leiters
111 Perch
1 t 2 - the hatchet
113 Women's 115 Head: Fr.
117 Bureaucratic delay:
2wds.
118 Golf s1roke
120 Decay~
122 Throws
123 Circular band
124 Move uns1eadily
125 Drinks to excess
126 Relative by
marriage
127 Stop
129 - firma
131 Flinch
t 33 Oxygen compound
t 34 Temptress
135 Rows
137 Idiot
138 Htndu queen
140 Fender spoiler
143 A leHer
145 Nothrng
t46 Home: abbr.
t47 Skill
t 48 Disapproving cry

AUTOHIO Insurance
Phone (614)446-6111
Gallipolis

NOTICE'
Anyone with a Burlile Oil Co,.
Propane Tank that needs
painting, please call our office
at 446-4119
7:30 - 4:30 Mon-Fri.

Horse Creek Stables now open
for all boarding needs. Full or
partial board. Riding lessons
and training upon request.
441-1121 or 256-1474

ATIENTION :
J.R.'s

Flower

closed

Shop

their shop down

Did you know that Planned Parenthood ol
Southeast Ohm 1n Gallipolis provides
confidential lam11~ plann1ng s erv~ces to 600
Galtia COunty reSidents each year Sinh
Control Services include a phys1C1an
exam1na11on, cancer screening , educ ation
and b1rth control supplies_ Women and men
may rece111e tests and treatment lor sexuatty
transmitled d1sease and anonymous HtV
tests. Sliding Fee Scale , Pri·Jate Insurance
and Medicaid are accepted Planning
prevents unintended pregnancy For an

appl call (614) 446-0166

Automotive
AIR CONDITIONING
Service And Repair
All Makes
Smith Buick-Pontiac Gallipolis
446-2282

For Sa le 1989 Ford Aerostar
XLT extended minivan; front &amp;
rear air; full power; 52,000
m1les; excellent condition.
Call 446-0622

Sept. of '93 and Basket
Delights
phone
are

took over their

#

and Accts. We

not

located

State St.
is

at

at

For Rent

46

Basket Delights

located

Office Space

1 725

762 1st Avenue
Call 446-3481 Daytime

Eastern Ave. You can still
use the 446-9267 No. or
441-0110.

We are sorrY

for the inconvenience this
may

have

caused

our

customers.

Cherokee Classic Tinting

1506 Rear Jefferson
(304) 675-6445
July Special
Beat the Summer Heat
Front Door of house or
Business $50.00
Come in and sign up for your
own Cherokee Classic Jacket
Your name embossed on front
of jacket FREE

Help Wanted
Bob Morris now hiring
tomato pickers
614-24 7-3421 anytime.

Call 446-2342

." ''

or992-2156

.- '

FOR MORE INFORMATION

'

fixe .
01M, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

•

O'dell Lumber Co .

at Classic Auto Glass

Macy board decides against fed_~rated plan
By JOYCE M. ROSENBERG
AP Business Writer
N E W YO RK (AP) T he
board o f R. H . Macy &amp; C o . Inc.
decid ed for the time being again st
supporting a propmal by Federated
Departm ent Store s Inc . to merg e
th e two r etailer s wh en Ma cy
em er ges fr om bankruptcy court
protection .
M acy sa id artcr th e board met
Fnday that it would proceed with
plans to fil e its own reorgani zation
plan . which envisrom !he compan y
emerging from Chapter II protec tion as a publicly -owned company
run by it.s current management.
But the board left open the possibility that it might still back th e
Federated proposal, a move that
would mollify Macy creditors who
hav e ag rtalcd for a joint plan to
speed resolution of Macy's 2 1/2ycar-old bankruptcy case.
Macy appeared to he looking for
guarantees from Federated about
!he future operation, and perhaps
independence, of its stores after a

Rent Now! At

'

CarNan Detailing
For prices and more
information
Call 446-0910

Jo's Craft Shop
going out of
business.
50% off

everything
GooEl selection of
crafts &amp; cake tops.

Public Notice

Gallipolis

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
should be addressed to the
Tho Molgo County Architect
Council on Aging, Inc., P.O.
CONTRACTORS
Box- 722, Pomeroy, OH. REQUIRING ASSISTANCE
45769, wilt accept ooalod IN SECURING BIDS FROM
btdo lor a 1986 fourteen ( 14) CERTIFIED
MBE
paooenger Maxivan until SUBCONTRACTORS AND
Wednosday, July 20th. Tho SUPPLIERS MAY CONTACT
Melgo Coun1y Council on THE
STATE
EQUAL
Aging, Inc . reaervee the EMPLOYMENT
BY
right to accept or reiect any COORDINATO R
or all bido. For mora Infor- CALLING 614·466-8380, OR
mation, contact Wanct. THE MINORITY BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT DIVISION
Vining, 614-992-2t61.
BY CALLING 614-466-5700
(7) 7, 10 2tc
OR TOLL FREE ON 1-800·
282-1085.
Public Notice
Each bid must be
PUBLIC NOTICE
accompanied by a BID
On Tueoday, July 5, t 994 GUARANTY meeting the
tho Cheshire Township requirements of Section
Board of Trustee• enacted 153.54 o1the Ohio Revlsad
tho Budget lor liocal year Code.
1995. Tho on1lre enacted
N0 TE :
ALL
budge~ ohowing tho intend- CONTRACTO R S
ARE
ed uau of funds and lnfor· REQUIRED TO SUBMIT A
matlon supporting the CURRENT
"EEO"
budget actions taken by tho CERTIFICATE OR SHOW
trusteea , will be available PROOF
FO SUCH A
tor public lnspec11on at tho CERTIFICATE WITH THE
township building on FORM OF PROPOSAL.
Tuesday, July t 9, t 994 !rom FAILURE TO DO SO WILL
5:30 to 6:30 p.m. during the RESULT IN REJECTION OF
regular meeting time.
PROPOSAL
Carolyn Holland, Clerk
Bids shall be sealed and~
194 Stingy Creek Road addressed to : Meigs County
Cheshire, OH. 45620 Public Library, 216 Wesf
July 10, 11194
Maln Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Public Notice
Minimum Wage Rates,
Equal
Employment
NOTICE TO
Opportunity and Minority
CONTRACTORS STATE OF
Business
Enterprlee
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
Requirements es provided
TRANSPORTATION
In Chapter 4115, Sec11on
Columbus, Ohio
9.47,
Section 123.151 ORC,
June 24, 1994
Administrative Rule 123:2·
Con1ract Sales Lagal Copy 15-02, the Governor's
No. 94-537
Executive Order ol January
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
27, 1972, and emended
Sealed proposals will be
received by all pre-qualified Governor'• Executive Order
84-9 ora applicable 1o this
bidders at the office ol1he bid lnvl1atlon.
Ohio Department of
No Bidder may withdraw
Transportation, Columbus, his bid within sixty (60)
Ohio. un111 10:00 a.m. days after the actual date of
Tuesday, July 19, 1994 lor the opening thereof. The
Improvements In: Galila Meigs County Public Library
County, Ohio lor Improving reserves the right to wolve
various secUons of S1ate any informalities or to reject
Route 218, by resurfacing any or all bids.
with asphalt concrete.
(7) 10 17 24· 3TC
"The date set lor
completion of thla work
Announcements
shall be as se1 lonh In the
bidding proposal."
3 Announcements
Plans and Speclflcaii91U1
are on file In the Depanment

11

ALL Yon! sotoa llull II Patel In
Adv..,... DEADUNE: 2:DG p.m.
tho d.ay boloro tho ad Ia 1o "'"·
Sundoy odklon - 2:GO p.m.
Ftlclay. llondoy oclttlofl • 2:00

Noodod:B..,._To-

p.m.lloturday,

&amp; Will

VO&lt;J Lor~ Fomlty: ArOiquo
8o1 01
Ott• Anllquoo,

Now occoptlng apptlcollono tor
part-lime cuhier, m'--' be
18yro. old, no fl-l! colll

Bul.lvlllo l&gt;lko,
Ftlday •1 Tilt n II All Oono.

Comer 1114

&amp; VIcinity

131 West State Slreet,
Athens, Ohio 45701
F.W. Dodge Corporation,
1175
Dublin
Road,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Bulldera' Exchange ol
Central Ohio, 1175 Dublin
Road, Columbus, Ohio
43215.
Coploa
ol
Plano,
Spec Ill c a11o n 1,
and
Proposal Blanks 1ogether
wtth any further Information
desired may be obtained by
Prime Contrac1ora trom the
Office ol Relaer, Valontour &amp;
Callahan, Architects, Inc.
131 Waat State Street,
Athens, Ohio 45701. All
bidding documenll wttt be
forwarded ehlpplng chargee
cottec1 upon receipt of a
depoolt In the amount ot
$25.00 (twanty-llve dottara)
por sat In favor ol Aalaer,
Valentour &amp; Callahan,
Archttecta, Inc. The dapoalt
wttl bo refunded to blddora
who return the plana and
spoclltcetlona In good
condition within (101 doyo
after receipt ol blda. Tho
coot of replacomont of any
mtoolng or damaged
documents wttl be deducted
!rom tho dapoalt. The low
bidder may retain the plana
end spoclllcsttons and
dapoalt will be refunded.
Subcontractora
and
material auppltoro may
acquire,
for
their
convenience, Plane and
Speclllcatlona or ponlons
thereof by paying lor the
coat ol reproduction and
handttng.
All quootlono regarding
the plene and apeclllcattona

=-~wford.

Rick Poaroon Auction Componr

full time •uctk!n.r, compteti
auction
Mt'Yk:l.
UcenMd
16a,Dhlo I Wool Ytrglnll, J04.

77W785.
Wodornoyor'o Auctlon Sorvlco
Oattlpolto, Ohio 114-3711-2720. •
Auet~ Col. Ooear E. Click,
Ltconoo I 754-114 I Bondocl,

304-iGS-3430.

_9=-:-W:-a-nt,.,.ed_t0--:-8-:-U-.:Y:---,:7
Complete Houooholcl
o. Eatatoo! Any Type 01 Fum~uro,
Appllono., Anllquo'o, Etc. Aloo
~toot AYOII.Iblol 0\4-3nAntiquo• will buy one p*o or
Wttl,. ho.-oltold, Doby Marlin,
top dolllr pold, 114-11112-JU,!r
lolo eo.. Or
Or Smhh Bulcll Pontllc 1800
Eallom Avonuo, Oalllpotla.

Air Condftloner, 5,000 BTU, 114~1111.

F- Ktnono: 2 Iloilo, U11or

Trslnod,l~.

F- To Good Homo, Fonwte
B~ftany s ..nlol, loodo, Yooclnatod lo Woimocl, IM-1411314.

v-

Largo Dog 1
Old N Oood Country~~~- With

Chltel-1114-381
lllxod -

.

liUIIPIOO 10 good

homo.304-t~

7

pupptoo,

~rd.

Pari

Gonnon

port lab. ~11011.

-

Holp Rnd Homo I Wool!
Old Pupplela. 114 411 IOZZ
Tt"::s':' I"LT :nus Rts. Rvo
LT
Rts. Good troocl, 104171-1110 or •• ue J70S.
To Good H - 11 Month Old
112 Dat..11on Mix Fornalo, 114DIUIJ.
!011"11 IIIIo

Pu!,

CCIUnlry, 114 Ul 388l

H - tn

u.. t.orr.. 1-«10-220-

~:,'lt'"m,

0wnor/()parotono

Cordlnot Frolght Comor.lo ,_
hiring In tho van diYiaton ..tel
toodod or empty mltoo untoodtng poy, llop poy, hoallh ,,_
auranca wldental &amp; Ylalon IVIIJ.
lble, bob-tall lniUf'II\Cle lVII~

able, fuel card ar-tam,_co. PI~
toll aystem, prompt ilnd _.
cufllle weekly Httlen.nta, ridlr
~.....

u.. """-· 1-«10-2:10-

Rul Ellllo CorM&lt;. Prolooolonat
trolnlng. ERA Town l Country
Roof E1111~ __11_.-, Bocll!e

Cloon

Stein, 304..af0o6048.

Tnrcko, 11187 -

Somf.4ruck wo1og troller lor ltl!'L
~-:1604 or 1182-3121.
Stllo ApproVod Nurofna Aut.
tonto: Sconlc Hllll Nurorng Contor to Currontlr &amp;aoklng Tho
Sorvlcoo 01 Ful Tlmo And Po~

lloc«llod ll.,_ro, wolf 1phonoo, old llmpo old lhormomotora, old ciocl.o; ontlquo
lumhuro. Rt-1~ Anllquoa.
Au• Moore, owner. 814-882-

2521. Wo buy ollolH.

J I D'a Auto Porta ond Solvar.,
•lao buying Junk cuw I true a.
30&lt;1-773-5343.
Wanl to buy Ht of

••r. tor

mobile homo, 114-11112-ICii .

Tlme Nu,.lng Aaallltanta (fuK-

Ttmo: 2 P.ll. ·10 P.M. l 10 P.ll. •
I A-11.) (Pa~·Timo: 5 A.ll. -1
A.M. l 4 P.lrt. -1 P.M.Jinl-od?
Apptlelllono Available lion -F~
1:30 A.M. -4:30 P.M. 311 BuckRd, Bid, OH 45031
"0Uoli1Y Cora Thru T - '
S.H.N.C. 1o An E.O.E.
ridge

Wanled To Buy: Junk Autoe

With Or Without Moloro. Col!
Lorry Uvoty. 014-318-11303.
Top Prlcoo Patel: All Old U.S.
Colno, Gold Rln'o, 911- Cofno,
Gold Colra 11 . .S. Coin Shop,
'151 Socond Avonuo, Galttpolla.
Employment Services

TRUCK DRIVERS

Aia You Looking For:
• Stoody PoycMc&gt;k
• Beneflla
•Jrwuranoe

' Pold Vocotlono And Holldayo
• Rolooo
Do Y011 Hovo:
' Claoo A CDL L1conoo
• 1 Yoor Tractor trrollor · Ex-

~:=
Employment Hlo1ory
• Uvo Wltllln 78 lllloo 01 Rlploy
At:

re~lar

~n Exh 132
flll'l&gt;llln, IVY
EDE

VI'RA FURNrTURE
•MttooOut 141
114-441-3161
Oualhr -oltold Fumlllttnga
And Apptllncoo, With Tarrna ror
Any Budgot • RENT ~.OWN 110
DAY BAllE A8 CASH !LAYAWAY
CASH l CARR'/

WoAlooHovo

tMcNng etaft: Soc .. l

Stildloo Toochor II MoiJII Junior
High School (ComP"'honalvt

Soctot Studloo cor11tlcollon
-lrod),
AVON SELLS ITSELF! Poton1111
Eamtnga $200 -$2,000 llonthlyl
SoU Af Work Homo And Moll
-Ordor. FrMtrolnlngi1-«&lt;I-l'l2·
4738.

Bua
Drtvw
lllllnten~nce
Wortlor, Contnte1od SoJYiollo.
lrtUII Ha.. CDL Or So WIIUng To
Obloln COL DriYO Athl.ltlc
T - To And From Athllllc

~v~..'-1:":.!~1~:.~-=

Ablo To Work Flollblo Houno. 12
llonth Pooltlon. No Fringe
Baneftta. Send lnt11'811 latter
And Roaumo Boloro Tho

A CunorO IIVR And Apply
Shorwy'e Inc.

money or want a carMr, eht.r
llo~tyn. 304-882·21145
or 1-800-112~.

way-call

July 10.111, Maoon Co. 4-H
Grounds. Roglltorllton
July 10th, 3pm dnolo. a.
18yi'L For lntom.don, Saro A&lt;copllng -lcottono lor ...liOn Oi1ond.an!, Wtha letCIWtnn, Dlr. 304-t7fi.DCM or 1711- 1or lletlna quollllclllono lo:
4405.
Dolly Sontfnol, P.O. lox m4,
Chrtattan lady, whho, blonde Pou'*Oy, ONo 457'81.
hair, wt.135, ...king m11le Chrt.
tlen companion 4CJ.55 yean~ of A, per Arllcl.l 11 T,.!Wiroro ond
ogo, wll1o lo: Tho Dolly Son11not, v-too, Soct10n B, Poottng
PO Box ~. ~. Ohio ol tho Nogollllod Ag....,.ni
- . . Ifill IILTA and tho
46788.
Board ol Erluca1fofl, 1ho Molga
HIV Tooling ond Counootlng Locll School Dlotrlct to poallng
Anony...,... (Your Namo li tho following voeancy lor ha

114 Ul M81.

Qrvcery,

grose rt~venue pulling comp~ny
frailer• or pulflng GWR trailer,
hNMh &amp;nlwanc:e w/dental &amp; vi-'on avaiLible, bua .,a.t•
•~•liable,
bob-tall Insurance
IVIIIabte, fuel card 1yttem,
wMkty
utUenwrWa,
rldlr

B~ng

8''"·

OlacuooPa,__

Cordnol Frotght Corrlorw to
lll~ng o&lt;porloricod Olo'o 10 run
ltatbod, um porcant.JII ol

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

AVON! AU areu.. Need extr1

SECTION OOOtO
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed proposals will be
received at Meigs County
Public Library, 216 West
Main Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 by: Thureday, Augus1
4, 1994 at 1:30 p.m. and
opened
Immediately
Never ~eel). Pllnned Parwnthereafter, for furnishing the thood
of ao..tl!MII Ohio. For an
material and performing 1he Appotntmorll
eon IM-441-01H,
labor for the execytlon and 414 a.-.d !ll...~lllpolll. Aloo
construction of:
Avalllble II ... nnec~ Pa.....
thood ol Southooll Ohio In
Project N: 940403
Athono Logon. '"Sliding Foe
Project Name: Racine Scale.•
Branch • Meigs County
Mate Conotruc:11on Worl&lt;or 41
Public Library
Pro)ect Location: Fourth &amp; NS 80 Far From Homo Saolul
WF For Com..nlonel!tp l Fun
Pearl Streets, Racine, Ohio
kUvhl-. Send Rooponoo To:
In accordance with the CL.A 318, clo Oalllpolto Dolly
Plans and Speclllcattons TrlbunoL~ Third Avo..,., Qai.
prepored by Retur, Upollo, "" 41131.
Valentour &amp; Callahan, Strut Vow Joono Pagoont, July
Architects, Inc., t31 Wes1 30th, Krodel Part~;, Point
State Street, Athena, Ohio Pt-. Muot ...1 Sholto Hart
""ontry form. 304-785-00150.
45701.
Bids will be received lor:
The General Contract 4
Giveaway
Including ell subcontracts.
.,.1 -:U.::-:-te-:-:Wh::-:-Ko~Kl"'ttt-..,-0 .::,1,....,M,-ont-,..-ho
The lnlormatton lor Old, 1 Brown Whho Ktn.. 1
Bidders, Form of Proposal, W- Old, To Clllng Form ol Contract, Plans, onry, 114 Ul o:m:
Specifications, Form ol
3 Plt BuH mil pupploo, 3 blecll
Bond and other Contract IUid
whho ldttl,. to gl-Wiy,
Documants
may be 1\4-843.1111.
examined at the following
4 Month Old Fornato Black lo
offices:
Whits lordor Coltte, All 81\oto,
Reiser,
Valentour &amp; Good Homo, F"""'' llovlng,

Callahan, Architects, Inc.

H lnto-od CoR llcndoy 11444t.()Jit8, Con Como lo VIew Vord

Ownor/Oparotoro

8

Director.

Public Notice

Lawn Yow•, w..-ater ' O.a.

Yard &amp; Croft Solo-Rt :Ia So.Ah
1mf. from tlght 1 ~ght ohio, WI\Ch taUon 1~1&amp;-7272.
tor eigne, Sunaay.

of Transportation and the

CAMP CANAAN will bo hold

Provlclo

Liwno Woeloly, WIN

OWNER OPERATORS YTractor l Flatbod For Docltcotod
High Paying Llnoo. Homo Ofton
Pluo WooMndo. Plonty 01 Mltoo.
OHioll • ExP"'• T -

Pt. Pleasant

• office ol the District Deputy
Jerry Wray
Director of Transponaflon
July 3, 10, 1994

Help Wanted

&amp; VlclnHy

A~.Boctlon

OPEN lion. - Sot. U /Woe! U.

18

Wanted to Do

Doy eo ... ott ohlfto, CPR • F"ltJ
Aid quallllod, hot moolo, plannod octlvlllto l looming. 1041711-28&amp;1.
Oonorat Mllntona,_, Painting,
Yord Work Wlndowa Wuholt
oun... Cleanod Light Hauling,
Reoldontlot, Stove:

=:;

~Portable

a.-m don,

h.aut your logo to tho miN )uot
..., 304-t7ll-1l57.
HorN Trimming, Over 30 Voaro
. _ Coro,

Doodllno 01 July 20, 111M To I~r::-·
1721.QUotlly
P.hrllto

u.-.,

Dlroc:tor 01

Hwn1n Reeourc.a, Unlverahy

01 Rio Orondo, P.O. Box lltiV,
Rio Orondo, OH 4511!1. EEO/AA
Employor.
Child eo.. Naodod For Two
School
Child...,,
Prlmorlolly N hlo, Shift Work.

:e

Maturo lody willing 1o wort&lt;. Wlll
do houoo ctoonlng, llhopplng or
otntno whh oonloi chi•... good

,.fonincoo,l14-112-2e2tl.

Mlao Paulo's Doy c.,. Contor
~ I A.ll. -1:30 P.ll. Ouothy
l.o•lng Coro For All Cllltelran
0
11lonal
,.. Pnfw My Our 11 Oool. Put·Ttmo, Fulf.
Homo, a.l!n ....... 114-311- Ttmo• Foci. -..nco AYOIIablo.
0561.
Coli "" tnlamtldon Or vt... Infant /Todclor llf-446-lm p._,
CfTY IIANAOER IIIMEDIATE
School, 114 School,
••• 122&lt;

OPENING

lilA

OALUPOUS, OHIO, Saoutllul
Southoollom Rlvw Colnmunhy
01 1,0115 .. Soololng A Chy
Mllnall!lr. City Cciinmtoaton
Fonn 01 Oovorn. . nt. Full S..
vlco, 7D Ful~Ttmo Empioyoao.
Budall SU Million. Condld.ato
lluol' Bo -rctlul And " -

tnt..,._.,

. . . Excellllnl: Admln ...rallwe,

And
Communaton Skill&amp; Deart1 In
Public Admlnlltrlllon" ll'ual!W•
Admlnlltntton Or ~quiYOiont.
Sotory lliMO t:JIJ..OOO -MII,OOO Wll otoom ctoon corpllo - . ,
Dopondlng l.tpon uuottflc:otlono 1o Hnloh my .. ,_,.. on
And Ea""'*-· Prior Pn&gt;lle- ...... 1M412-4131.
otonot Ex..P111- But
Not llonclllory. 8ond Ap.
ptlelllono To Daborolt L
Financial
Hughoo, Clorl&lt; 01 City Commt.

":::lo
N

118 ,.,.,.., Qal.
,Ohlo45131.

o.nc.,. nlllded. asoo....w,.

no nudny. Southtork Inn ShoWbor. Tamn!J or Korry, 304-178-

21

Buslnesa
OpponunHy

--ndo =::::
w..,,

INOTICE!
111165.
OHIO VALLEY PU8Ll8HtNQ CO.
Drtv.,. COL Qualltlod. C1oon
lhotycor
- k
do-.....
Drtvtn - . I Voor Vorltobte -with poop1o
01111
OTR Team Opontlon W1U Mcopl Blngto Dr'- HiMna
Waokonda, - h C... Plan, 1· thoo~ -

::::"nt~":~

IQ0.3U 5191.

VENDING ROUTE:
Got
Rlclt
Quick. Will Got A 8tllody
;::6::::;:Lo~st=&amp;:-F'::o.:.u_nd~:-­
RUlli
And " Soli Cool! - - . _ Ptto.d to 111. j;.
"-"1: llocll Dog, u-r Add-..!, !ltaltll*l ~: IIIO-I2N?I2.
a.-.d " - Ooltlpollo, ·d\4- - . Add- To: HoH'o ln1
lorplt- P.O. Boo 1112, Apo
~
plog-, Wool YAZUOZ.
Real Estate
"-"1: ... , . c-. Haund, ' ::-::'--...:...c...-7---"":::=-':.;_~
1NI' ...., bll!ck 1o opcil&amp; Eam up to 11000 - l y
:ID44'7IoU2Il.
PI acueing mall, 1t1n nc., nou........,INHupptiM,lnlormollon, no-obliQIIlon. 8ond
lAS£: Cucodo 011\1-10, P.O.
lox1421, Son Angelo, TX

Eam

~ndo

vel-.

8tutnng En-

noa

-2.

Loll: . _ , "-rl Chlh"""ua,
Fomllloa Pol, ~ Bpooct
-"-~drY 1111 O n -

A-114-44'1-t:ml.

Loll: To -

trtelt . . . - - 01 ......, Could II

=r-- -

c:.rt """""'

Honto FonM , _ hlllng. Plcll
up oppllollllono ....Ina ...,.
10:~:00pni. lion-

. , through s.turdoy lnd
noan lpm on Iunday&amp;

�r

Page-D4--Sunday nmes-.-sentln el

31

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

Scram-Le ta on Page D-7

Homes tor Sale

T h e young boy was trying to exhockey wa s all about.

FRI D AY

mo m la u g hed , "it's a game where you

ODDITY

keep score f or DI SO RD E RLY conduct "

32 Mobile Homes

Nmltallon or d6scrtmilall0n .·

. tor Sale

This newspaper W11 not
lmowl"ijjy IICC&lt;lp1
acNe rtlse ments tor rea l estate
which~ In vlola11on olthe law.
OUr raaders ate hereby

FrM Cen1r111 Air- FfM Air On
Any New Sing le S.ct ion HorM
In S.ock· Mt . St1t1 Home•, Pt

l Bedroom Mobile tiome, Parthllly Fw-nlahed, Waqr Paid,
1100 Dopotat, $225/llo. 114-:15&amp;-

Plooaanl, W.VA. 304-675-1400.

S.ve SS,OOO.OQ-. Norrt. 2Bxn

lnlorm&amp;d that all dwellings

S. ctlon~J

Dlsplav,

Don,

Flrtplace,

MotnlrlliJ

Room

-Red uced 5.5 :ooo.oo . Frenctt

a&lt;Nen lsed In this newspaper
are avaUable on an equal
opponunlty basis.

Ch y Moblte Hom. . • GllllpoUa,
O H 614--446-8340 .

35
3br., 1 beth, .. rge kttchen, tun
buemenl: unflnfahed , nice ~

C.mp
Conloly, Gi'uo- uno. 30&gt;HI75-

blcky1rd,

3828.

4 lodroomo, 2 Slory AC, 2 112
Bothe, LR, OR, FR Whh FPh Eatbor-

Lot s &amp; Acreage

Mx70 1V7'8 Trt~ll..- On 3 Ac rea ot
LAnd, 3 Bldroome, 1 112 81the,
8 MIIM From G1Uipoll1 Down
218 . Und Conlr1ct, $1 6,800 Whh

Down P.yment MOO. Or Will
Soli Caah Ou1 For $15,500, 814388-IINe.
5.32 -.: rM, $13,160. 8.M ecree,

hood, Ctaoo HUC, 114-416-6415.

$14,570.

Fo&lt; aolo ill' _,.,. tog homo,

r~~uonabM

a.,

1880 eq.

full

42

blument

Raybum
Rd,
reatrk:tlotw. lnfDf'-

matlon mallld on reqUMt. 304875-5253.

wlfamlly 100111 woodbumo&lt; 3
bodroorne, 2 iilt.:~~ono, 3 botiW, S! AcrM Of land In War,no
CIA. central vtecum, cathederal County w... Vlrglnll , Pr me
colllng, olono l~oploco. toreo Hunting, $10,000, It lntereMed,
dodl,
u.ae outbuilding 114-256-1001.
wn.tld work room, 2• KtH In
wooded .,.. cao. to town ,
llolao School Dlatrlcl, cloytlmo

8 Adlalnlng l.ote. 2 Acr11e. All To
Go lo 1 Buytt. All UtJUtlM

114-tl2-2311, ovolng 814-111:1- Avallobto, 114-4o4&amp;-3657.
7133.
Mac:hlrw,
Auto
Shop
01
FOf Salol In Rio Orondo w.-.., (12,1l00aq. ft conNear 'The Baptl.t Chwch. Ph. crolo, 11,000oq N. building
~:14-3S3-81128, Evonlngo 814- · 1oc. tolaQ, good
378.
304-671h28114.
'"""" •YIO homo Ptonto Two 10011300 on SA 1110 ..,__
oubodlvlalon, :lbr., 2 bath, •ono From Old North Qolllo H.S. 814on front l dodl, olttlng on 2 388-111211.
kJCe. 814 448 1433.
Wa.-.od To Buy: Lot 1 Aero 9&lt;
Pol18cl boglnnor homo. 5 Mc&gt;n1, Call ANor 8 P.M. 114-446- . tlu ,_ lnoldo, rural 755l

-•r.

Wltlf', 2/lM:,,

S12,500.

304-8Q5.

3638.

Wa,...cf to buy- two or more
acrM, eutt.tH to buUd on and
8 ctoee to • blecktop roed, l"f4..

Roducocf.llt. Vomon Avo.,
100/no, luH bolomonl, garoeo a 11411-2481.
cerport, k:lt 50xt00', u:c. 1oca.

tlon, oooy Hnondng ovollablol. 36
Real Estate
SomonUio Aoolty, -.G75-3030
o&lt;l75-3431.
Wanted
Roducocf.Piymall Rd, largo oot· Wo.-.od To Buy: land In
In kitchen, 3br. 1 ettached Country Clallla County, Sand
goroeo. lol 1110x180'. -y 111&gt;- Roptloa 'ro: 11510 Old Stato Uno
IIICing avallabla. SomorvUto Rood, Swonlon, OH 43558.
AMity, :IOU?I-3030 or 875-3431.
32

Mobile Homes

Rentals

lor Sale
41 Houses for Rent
1br ""'-· Hlghlond Avo, 1110
$100 rent, you poy
utllKt.. 304_.78-3570, 5:»7:30pm.
2 br. ""'- In Mlddlopon, $3!10

do~ .

12xll0 lllcland, 2 br In Lang
Bottom, Ohio ·~·~~-3111.
ISGOO',
good condnton, 1

per month plua depoelt, call I"M-

. 1872 12x110 Whh 18111 8112-6225.
·Trallor R - o 12ll28 3 eR 2
Air Condltl....,.. N,OOO, 114- 3 BodrOOfA Brlc:k In Rio Grondo,
No Polo, Soc..tly Dopcolt,
'3884121.
12?!1/Uo. 114-245-5438.
111711 14110 Mobllo Homoi) a.o
Hoot Partly F..
ndof. 3 BR Nouoo In QoNipotlt. AC,
olnnlna, Btocu1 _ Tie Downo, $31Mio. No Polo, Dopcolt, 114~oody 'To Movol ...800. 114-246- 4411~800 Ahor 5.

n-.

0311.

11182

For rent or ..... 5 room, ~

T--.""'-

FumAOOIN
Cloon,
No ,Polo,
Rotwonco ''
l
Dopooll Roqulrod. 111~1111.

1008.

2 Bedroom, NNr

614-3~2678 .

Ev~trg reen ,

No Sunday eallt.

2 Bedrooma, A£, No Pete,
O.pot;h
And
Rel.-.nc:ee,
$400/Mo., Wullo!, Oryor; 2 llod-

Apa11ment
tor Rent

=
:::;a.

Attu='fJ;n~, Prtv!t':
~:';":~11 '::4.::;:

1-;========:::::;

It

In Memorv ol

"Bill" Hendnx 7·1 0·80 &amp;
J. Hendrix 11·21-86
Sadly missed . but will never
be lorgonen .

135'1.
Attontton -1e.ao Now
Avaltallto In W. VA. -MI. Stato
Nomoo, Pl. p -.... w. VA. • IL.----~.:..;...;;;;.~

1

Card of Thanks

· ....
pllancoo lumllltod, laundry
room t.ciiMiolo .._ lo ochool
In town. A~&gt;o~lcOitona ovollallto
II: VIIApll. M8 or
Ca111144112-3711. EOH.
2br. apl, u.-., WV, partly fur.
nlohod,
utiiMiolo
lncludod,

Junior Long on Behalf
of Freda Halfhill wo shes
to
express
the
sincerest of thanks to
Or. Sabboah . the Staff
of Pinecre st, Waugh·
Halley-Wood
Fu neral
Home. Fnends and
Neoghbors. for all the
help
and
support
dunng the loss of my
mother.
Card of Thanks
The
famil v
of
Thurman Boggs' would
like In thank everyone
who expresse d their
sincere gratitude for the
kindntss shown by our
family, friends , and
neighbors in the recent
death of our Husband
and Dad.
We appreciate all who
sent card s, no"'·en ,
provided rood, and
visited &amp; mosl of all

J u ly 10, 1993 July 10, 1994
On e

y e ar has
s ince she

gone , but her
memory is with us
all the time . Gone
but not forgotten .
Thought

of

and

adly

missed
by those
knew and lnvPr11

her.
The entire family

"prayers".
We afso extend thanks
to everyone at Willis
Funeral Home, the
Gallia
County
Emergency Squad, Tum
&amp; Jan Duncan , pall

bearers, &amp; our Pastor
Conn. Sadly missed by
wife, rhildre n
&amp;
grandchildren .

·

May God Bless
Everyone

Happy

Anniversary
Mom&amp;Dad
july 11 , 1949
Love your kids. Jimmy
-1 Dale.
Johnny,
Ar&lt;mda., Jerry

Ono

BR

p:::r· '::''$
180

,,.__.341
Pold.

Allor

51

Apar1mefll
for Rent

Household

llarhorl - . . l 81..... UnMo,
5x101 10.1~1 _10l115, 10112~. 10d0.
Mobllo Homo Lot In ~·...
1100/Mo. 114-44&amp;-8'781, 114-11112- Qrond Oponlng. -.
1137.
VI'Ro FumHuow l Appllancoa.
Mobllo Homo Lolo On Stato Month of July. Vaughan, S...
G.E.,
Rout• 7. K.anauga, 114-44~-f'~U, Holpotnt. Unooln PIU. c mlloe
114-11112-11837.
out141. 114-448-3118.

-., w-. --.

8

Sat.

Help Wanted

WANTED

Program Nurse R.N. (B.S.H. Preferred)
Full-Time Employment Must serve children and adutts
with a wide range of handicapping condrtions. Salary
approx. $20,00Q-$30,000. Depending on degree and
experience . Call or wrhe:
GALLIA COUNTY BOARD OF MR/00
P.O. Box t4
Cheshire, Oh 45620
(614) 367-7371 .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

of July 15, 1994 to:
Phyllis Mason. PHR. Personnel Officer
University of Rio Grande
P.O. Box 969, Roo Grande, OH 45674
I OppMunity/Affirmative Action Employer

Lunch by Eastern Band Boosters
Not responsible for accidents or loss
Owners: Mr. &amp; Mrs. Charles Moore
Auctioneer: 1.0. (MAC) McCoy

$1200

3117-7801.

53

July 16, 1994
9:00a.m.

Antiques

yooro oxiiOIIonco. Pttuo coli
814-t1112-:la22.
Miscellaneous
Merchandise

12 Ft. Trollor HI-Top, Carpoljl
Llghto, Uu - · 12.300; 12 H
Murroy Troctor Noeda A Pulley
$250; Aorolor For Sapllc:, Now
$450, 114-38~ .
15 llotal Door Fromoe 32 Inch
ThN 40 Inch. Motol Fromo WI"'
dows, Call Fo&lt; Slzoo, 1 Sot 8 Ft.
KMchon Cablnoto, 811 116 6308,
1-800-217-4306.
2 Bodroom Mobllo Honw Fo&lt;
Rant On Bladon Rood Rr.lolorod Coon 0oa Pup oo
Engllah; 18'77 ll'ulck
ork
Avonua For Salol, 114-2511-81110.
2 boltoe of ladl• unllormo,
mu• toka olt, 11·12 up to 15-16,
814-1182-t458.
S Ton - l o Pock Air eor..
dMionor lna1allod. Financial

Ma...,- Fwgnon 15 Tractor

Building
S upplies

WMh -

Buah Hoa l Bl-,
$3,1100; 1~ .._ ., Dlolool Whh
L.ooctor N,350; 103 Cooo 14.800.
114-286 f 522

i
5 rooms and bath,
(no upkoop), front
and out. Could be
THIS ONE NOW.

1696
BUSINESS OFFICES l SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AVE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE
CLAUDE DANIELS, Realtor-Ph.38&amp;-9612

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

AKC Goldon Aolrlavor lomolo
P..pploo, Roocly Juty 5111, 1'150

54

687!1.

RIS Fwnlture. We buy, eel! and
1nllqut1

MW/uted

houa-ld tumlahlnga. Will buy
any amount , llrgelemaU. so&amp;
Second St., Muon, WV. OwnerRocky Poo,_,, 304·773-8341.

R•trlgeratOJW, S.ov•, Wat hen

ThomA~

And Dryerw, All Reconditioned

DcHt

c.nt•r,

McCormlcl&lt; Rd., Galllpollo.

And GaurllntNdt $"100 And Up,

17'8

WATER UNE SPECIAL: 314 Inch
Riding LAwn Mower, Sean 200 PSI 1'18.15; 1 Inch 200 PSI
Cr11fteman 11 HorN, 1.550, 614. 132.50; Ron Evono Emorprlooo,
114-2141-151130 Jacltaon, Ohio
367-0131.
8-10 T'2':. 1'100; Brlgga 12 HP SUNOUEST WOLFF TANNING
t1so;
cB no. 814-387B~~~ Homo •
Now Common:~
76113.
,
Unuo,
From 1'188.oo. umpa~ Loltono,
SmHh Colona panoonal word Acceuorl•. Monthly ..,eyment1
. , _ . . . D-350. - - - '-- Ao 1'18.00, Call Todoy FREE
lncluclod 1 momha old, · · - NEW Color Calolog. 1 . - -.
tont ;;;;;;dnton, calll14-lltl2-t121. 11187.
.
Real Estate General

1

·

Dalmollon Pupploa Fo&lt; Solo:
1100
Each,
a-paoU, Ohio 11Wtl7-3221.
PurtbM,

Wl'l• ln1 I
01994b~"l!A

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

63

56

Pets tor 5ale

1

oown

50,000 original enlln, nur mini
cond~lon ,

tor Nle I "M-

lnqulrloo.
5:30pm.

'

uklng NIIOO!Iaorto...
114-441-otlS altor

NICE HORSES FOR SALE

Qulol

1979 Buick Rep&amp;, V-e, 11.000,

buckaklrw, etc. Fot trail , . ...
tern pl••ur•, penning, lwn-porlonallah, oovarot to ehoooo

1ffl Dodgo
Dlplornol,
·
nice
car, uldng
$13002 090;

mannorad galdlnga l
ma,..,,woUPalamlnoe,
palnte,

Sehnauz.- puPPiM, mlnature,

un &amp; pepper; l.l•o toy poodlee, 1903 25 HP Baa.rw Tractor,
AK_!:1 _t:_~mplon llloodllnoo, 114- Dloool Whh Uve P-or, HydIIIN4U4, CoolvHiol.
routlc CCinnocllono, 5 Ft . Bruah
Hoa. I I Ft. Bloclo, 28 Hro.
Trf.Stoto K-11 Acoclomy, Tupporo $6,0011, 114-44e-3040.
dogo for aolo. Roll I Shophonl groin hood dlool; 11600 Ford
Stud Sorvlco• bv appolnlmonl frackor wleab ond dualtl; hay
only, I14-667-P"El9.
and gr~~ln •vatotj tO' wheel

Clot ncK probloma? HAPPY
JACK ENDURACIDE lol lho oolu-

fiT .

1981

26U3.

Chryalor

lmportot· 114-114•
I

•

Real Est ate General

Ptaln• bulc oO.dlence, lew .n- I :-::,:..:.:=:=-:....:..:.::_:,~:._...,-­
lorcomonl, poroonat protoet lon, AUto Chalmor11 N two bottom
kennel HrYic•, pupa and young plowe ; JD oombhw 4400 W/13'

Floh Tank l Pol Shot&gt;, 2413
Jackaon Avo. Point PIOaoont,
304_.711-2083.

304-675-:1352.

from . lthono, OH. t14-IIIU138
or 762-2548.

OFFICE 992-2886

dloc; 13 holo OI.:S";J.'"'n drlliil
llu lift: 114-1
aftor
pm.
tlon. Klllo 11cu a
Clltv·lmmune to older k,;~~~:~ j ~:--:---.,..-,--,-.,.- Chain Sow boro l cholno 1o Ill
BlobEGRAOEABLE. "
Plano for oolo, chorry tintah, almoet any uw. a... Pflcee In
O.T.C at R&amp;G FEED l
good oondhlon, 1&gt;100, 814-11112· oroo. Sldoro Equlpmonl, 304515-11121 Of1-8Q0.277-31117.
114-8112-2164.
5347.
Musical
Instruments

Real Estate General

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
LONG RUN FIOAO- App rox 56 acres w1th a 4 bedroom 1
1/2 story home Al so come s wi th a 2 ca r garage, satelh1e
d1sh. ba rn . tr a•ler hook-up , a nd cellar hous e
$59,900

WANT SOMETHING A UTTLE DIFFERENT?
Take a peek at this homo. Large living room,
dining room and kitcilon wllota of nic41 cabinets!
2 Acre lawn more or less, Iota of fruit t..... s. Call
immediate
1664

2
Silos
snod, 20'x28' bam , 1B'x42'
mifkhous. , plus several other buildings.
Fencing, pond, oeverel foet of road frontage.
"""'t2-3 bedroom home. ldoallocation . 1677

POMEROY- Mulberry Hetghts A 2·3 bedroom 1anch home
with anach ed garage. A very neat lookm g place with a large

lol. Close to hospital schools

ASKING $58,000

CHESHIRE - 3rd Street· A 2 story frame w1 th 8 rooms. 3-4
bed rooms. finished basement one bath . fron t and s1de
porch, storage building and a big lot
$38,900

IIU 11ft. -.e75-44114.

~,··~;,­

Doop FI'MII, 22 Cu. Ft. Runo
Qood, 11&gt;W46-412110.

Canaday
Realty
•

-

tz 1

'C1

Dnlftll!g T.-, P r o -

111M, Oi&gt;o Wood, 0no Slool Whh

· 3 acr• with view of the Ohio
2 story home with lots of room, 4
bedrooms, 2 112 baths, living room. dining
room, kitchen, family room and more. Call
today for your showing!
1636

RUTLAND - Nelson Road- 2 lots with a 2 bedroom ra nch, a
large living, d1ning room . one bath and a seperate detached
2 car garage. Al so has a finished storage building . $39,500

ACREAGE WITH LOTS OF ROAD
FRONTAGE and a 1 t/2 story 3·4 bedroom
home. Nice view. Lots of fruit trees, small pond,
tobacco base. Approximately 38.5 acres more
or less. Some matl&lt;eteble timber.
f64G

7 Lot Dnlworo, 114-2811113.

•..m$31.,_
l 2 •orm
wt-.,
IDr oil. 30&gt;HI1540111.

Qood

446•3636
P

Dotta a Proclouo - . . . . 304-

882~111.

NEW
LISTfNGf OWNER
WANTS TO RETIRE l RELOCATE AFTER 25
VEARSI Car Wash, 3 bay with 1 automatic.
Excellent location frontage along Eastern Ave.
Will be ideal lor offices or other type of
busniess willl some renovating!
1671

...

Hondo 210 ATV lh- whoolor.,
oond, $150. 304..l'fl.1242.

-

-·
-.
m.uDriahl
~75-61188.

llka
STATE ROUTE 7· Chester- A I 4x70 mobile home with a 2
bedrooms addilion attached.AII 3 bedrooms are good siz ed,
1 1/2 bath s, large living room, newer ca rpet thro ughout ,
newer heat pump, and approx one acre of land . Must see

._CAI'•n•,•••

to love.

sit11ng on approx . 11 acres. Home has 3 bedroom and 1 1/2
baths. Also there is a garage and above ground swimming

pool

1511 Kanawho 81., Pl.

KILLS BUGS

HISTORIC HOME OVERLOOKING THE CITY PARK AND THE OHIO RIVER I Spacious homes that are Ideal for
restoring or a nice home/condos, or simply just investment property. Some have been remodeled. Call today for your
own private tour!

and doo d lilo TOOl ENFOR·
CER
COUNTRY
FRESH

pod, Gnvoly, 1181
Cadllllco DIV!Ito, 11181 Ford 4114,
111118-10. IOW'I5-all2.
oorpot •

TAKE A DfP IN THE POOL OR RELAX ON THE FRONT
POACH OVERLOOKING THE BEAUTIFUL OHIO
RIVER .. .3 BEDROOMS ...GLASS DOORED MASTER
BEDROOM SUITE OPENS ONTO THE VERY PR&lt;VATE
POOL AREA. FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE AS DOES
THE BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM ...THERE IS
ALSO FAMILY OR HOBBY ROOM. BRICK
EXTERIOR...OVER AN ACRE LAWN ...PLEASE CALL FOR
AN APPOINTMENT TO VIEW THIS HOME SOONf

LDtt lpllllor, Qood CondMion,
Cell AI• 5 P.ll11WM«&lt;II.

Not w.tor Tanltl, Gao, 1100
Eaolt, ~Allor I P.ll.
Nloo 11001 dodl, ~ oond.,

ClOG. itM-771-91112"' 17Wtll3.
THE FARM HOUSE YOU HAVE ALWAYS WANTED TO
RESTORE II OWNERS HAVE DONE AU THE WORK FOR
YOU. FROM THE CUSTOM DESIGNED KITCHEN TO THE
ENORMOUS FAMILY ROOM THIS IS A BEAUTY!
FORMAL DINING. DEN ... LIVING ROOM HAS
FIREPLACE .. .3 BEDROOMS 2 BATHS TWO CAR
GARAGE. FEW MINUTES FROM CITY... CALL SOON!
BRICK RANCH HAS 3 BEDROOMS .. . 1 1/2
BATHS ... FAMILY
ROOM
WITH
DINING
AAEA. ..ENORMOUS RECREATION ROOM IN BASEMENT.
SPACE FOR 4TH BEDROOM IN BASEMENT. COVERED
PATIO. ATTACHED GARAGE. KYGER CREEK AREA.
VACANT LAND APPROX. SfX ACRES. LEVEL
GENTLE SLOPE. CALL SOON THIS PROPERTY
PRICED TO SELU
1tl82 PARK WOOD MOBILE HOME .. 14'X70'
OF LIVING SPACE. 2 LARGE BEDROOMS,
KITCHEN EQUIPPED WfTH RANGE AND
UTILITY ROOM WITH WASHER AND DRYER.
UNDERPINNING, STORAGE BUILDING.
ONLY.
VINDALE DOUBLE WIDE ON 1.58 ACRE LOT. 3 BR,
BATHS, CARPORT, COVERED PATIO. $411,000
LISTING I

CITY SCHOOLS! tO acres. county water
available. AcnNige situated in Green Townshtp.
Call todayl
t634
LOOKING FOR AN AFFORDABLE HOMEI
Then you might want to consider this t 1/2
story homo with v~nyl stdtng, newer gas
fumance, 3 bedrooms, bath, kitcnon, living
room, batn, laundry. 2 car detached garage.
Call today. .
1632
ACREAGE· GREEN TOWNSHIP- 1992,
14'x70 mobile home. 3 bedroomo, 2 baths,
excellent condition. 7 acres more or less, pond,
private, other acreage available. Make an
appointment today I
1647
HEALTHY INCOME- ie received from thio
Income producing property. Two-2 bedroom
apartmenll plus retail area. All un~s pnt-tfy
rented. CioN to down tDwn ~1111. Comer of
Cedar and Third. Cal for more Information.

K3t

D.C.Ielll . .s,l-.

Cannelburg, Inc. 45719
Specializing in Pole
Buildings.
Designed lo meet your
needs. Any size.

: CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
. FREE ESTIMATES ON
Post Buildings and
Paekaga Deals. Save
~undreda, even Thousands

ol Dollars.

$86,500

RUTLAND· McCumber Road · Approx. one acre with a 1973
Kirkwood mobile home . Has 3 bedrooms . equipped ""ilcheon _.
and front porch
$22,500

TUD!Avotlble •: Pl. PI-nt

FRAGRAIICI Pool Contn&gt;t
Producle . , GUARANTEEOI
Anllabl• et: ~ Dl).lt C..
tw, m ...,.. nllldl. Rd., Qal..
llpotlo.
Uwrt tnctor, ,.lrigM'Itor. 11120

$26,900

HYSELL RUN ROAD- A spactous ranch home with free gas

KILLS BUGS
and dndctlln TOOl ENFOR·
CER
COUNTRY
FRESH
FRAGRAHCE Conln&gt;t
Pro ducie
oro
GUARAH-

"-·

Pull type disc, 6' 3 pt. hitch, grader blade, 6 1/2'
Utility trailer, 12' tilt bed trailer (approx . 1 yr. old), 3 pt.
hitch round bale carrier, 3 pt. hitch box, 3 pt. hitch Sub·
·
135 MF tractor LPPS, 6' finish mower, 5'
I•R,.~
Slip Scoop Ford 3 pt. (rear or front). post
a~g7k:ta~2 t~on chain hoist, Ralchet come-a-long,
.
. 5 gal. gas cans, small work tabfe
IVIidra'Her, large 3/4 hp air compressor 200 PSI, 028
I
saw, Craftman wrenches open and box
ends, many other tools, gas grill, pipe frame for
baseball back, metal potty chair, 2 to 3 cords firewood,
used car tlres, window fan. THERE IS A RESERVE
BID ON THE MF TRACTOR.
Looklnp forward lo seeing you at this auction. Bring
chatr, umbrella, and slraw hal! Refreshments and
available.
AUCTIONEER: Finis "IKE" Isaac
Phone: (614) 388-9370 or 388-BBBO
Ucensed and bonded:
Ohio #3728, W.Va. 111030, IN 11724B.
Terms: Cash or approved check. Not responsible for Accidents.

Livestock

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

AKC
Rogl01arad Mlnloturo
SciWlluaor Pupploo" -~U For
Groat Prlco, 114-38,.....8, 1143&amp;7-7.17!1.
61 Fann Equipment

Real Estate General

1881 Chavollo Body WKh Body Porto, 17110, 1114-3117-G5011.
1illl Fonl Falrlano 500 12 Dr. HT,
OrialnaJ,
Trophy
Wlnnor,
Sarloua tnqulnoe Onty, N ,ooo,
114-248-0311.
1Vl't Dodgo Chollongor, VS, AC,

.

40 h• d of
3118-85112.

Clooloy oloclrlc SO" rongo, $250,

PUBLIC AUCYIOI
SA'I'IJRDAY, JULY IIIII, 1884, 10 a.m.
12283 St. Rt. 110, lllftll, OHIO

ll

Chovetto, ootC 114-

tenor, saooo, eM-Mwm.

hay condKionor 1'100

875-5253.

1"&lt;.

Ron £vena EnterJ)I1Ma, Jack·
eon, OH 1~37..0528.

Co-op,

1

8112-6280.

lypo

eonc:r.te l Plaatlc Sopite
TanU, 300 ThN 2,000 Qollona

985-3944

This auction is due to health reasons.
OWNERS: JACK AND SUE PICKENS
DIRECTIONS: 1/2 mi . north of N. Gallia High School
10 miles north from Holzer Hospital.
Claw footed drum table, claw footed table stand,
rocker, two matching oak units, matching pairs of
lamps, floor lamp, sewing stand, Color trak 2000
TV, remote control, 4 pc. patio set, matching
table lamps, halltree w/mirror, octagon oak end
~:~~~~~~·~ B trak AM -FM Soundesign stereo (tapesoccasional chair, B&amp;W Portable TV, trestle
6 chairs, vanity stool , fireplace set, 10 pc.
set. stereo, books, encyclopedias, BluehWillow
Di,,hes. stoneware, Avon, grinder, tins, punc bowl
~~~:;:b,-b';~~~~P·~it~c;h~;:e;~r and bowl, 30 cup coffee maker,
set in case, miniature organ, pots
and pans, numerous pictures, plaques, Home Interior,
much blue glass and blue decor Items. oodles
of~&lt;,~i:;k:!.~~-~k~ all in good condition. MANY OTHER
0'
WE ARE UNABLE TO LIST AT THIS

Autos lor 5ale

'87 Chevy

Ollvw N ed dr111 , $100. ' Chal~
drag
harTOW, 1'100.
Cutlpaek«, 1100. AU oo to. 304-

''

t Pt~"\

Hold,

Merchandise
. AKC taglotorod 2 yr old molo
- - - - - - - - - SholllolJ100. -cia o country
Aldin~
llowor, Auno Good, 814- homo- :IU4-61'&amp;-6418.
245-11 ·
AKC Rogt•orod Baaon Hound
STORAGE TANKS 3 000 Galton Pupploo; 8 Woou Old With
Upright, Ron Evono Entorprlooo, Sholo,$125, 114 446 3314.
Jackaon, Ohio, 1-800-537-0528.
AKC Roafltorod P-anlan
UGLY DECK OR FENCE?
P,po, ~
Roolora wood doeka l to..,.. to AKC Yollow LAbo Wormod Firat
llka now contiKton wnhout ••- Wit bo R0 octy - ~ kl
acrubblng whh ENFORCE A _._ I
""• ra ng
D.ECK CLEANER. Avollabto at: ~ Coli Aftor 5p.m.

Condhlon, 1300 Pop-Up ea ...
por, Stoopo Eight 1300, 814-:15&amp;tr11de

~43o:&amp;;: ...v:J"

54 Miscellaneous

M isc e llaneous

__
M_e_r_c _
ha
_ n_d:_l.:
se::__

NH 404

115-411113.

Real Estate General

71

1geJ Pl)'moutlt Valiant convorOlok, $1 ,178; Plc:k.Up Dill&lt;, Plowa tlbto,
oomplololy -oowd, all
1 Through 4 Bol1om, Com Pickera, Oth.- Equlpf'nWIII:. Howe'• oratnot, I cty, outo, rod w-'&gt;1 In-

AYIIIlable. IM -448 '3M, 1-800-

S Uoocl Bruo Calling Fono WMh
Ughto, 114..245-57T.I.
311 Galton Flah Aquorlum Comt&gt;lola SIOO; King Wood Stovo
With Blowor 1100', 114~"-3040.
IIG WhHo Dolt l.oao, 10"lll" 12
·11 A. Lang, 114-3~, Allor
I P.ll.
Amona ak candMionar, 18,000
BTU, •xc. cond., been uMCI
:lyra., $210. 30W75-32111.
BNnnrlcl&lt; Pool Tollto t150;
Chool Froozor $100 814-448-&lt;1141
Aftor I P.M. 0. On WooUndo.
Callor ID box, 14 momory, brand
now, $43.116, 114-1112-6111.
Cannlna quart taro 12.001dz.,
pinta SUB. Zono Gowy booko,
.ea... lod-d. M.oo. 304-

Transportation

Now Hollond Hoy Blnoo, Rakea,
And Sq uar11 Bal.,., $1,000 6 Up;
Hoy loddor 1850; Hoy Wogona
1350; 8N Ford Trodor, 112,350;
John O..r11 11 R Wing WhHf

Pets for Sale

"'Remember ... when we res ume thiS car ch ase

Will Dollvor. 614-668-6441.

54

{

Farm Machinery, Jac k8on, Oh&amp;o,
61&lt;-286-51144.

OuMn S.z. Watert.d, Good

dollar pilei. One piece or one
hundrod. APPRAISALS, 40

....... $1100; 114-948-2171.

446~148 .

Gooom and Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. Julio W-. 814-446-

on the ma•nland .I'm tOO yards ahead' "

Livestock

Orav~ty ettachmenta. mow.-, Jorooy llrll calf twltar, 1100;
hal lor
calf
., 18;
rotary Uller, plow blade, eulky, Jonoy
• • I ekkle ber mower. ~~ OuomMy hollor to lroohon In

11231.

-

DONALD SMITH ASSOCIATES:
FINE ANTlOUES- Amorlc:on ort,
chino, ort g...., .,,_, lumMUII,
McCoy A-villa, otc. COLLEC.
naLES- prima, pootoow, toota,
pottery, clocka, boxoo, taro botHoe, boolta, to~1 • ~tc . ALWAYS
BUYING ARRO.,HEADS. Top

63

61 Fann Equipment

287-83118.

II

~:~~~~:~:s::h:~
o·~u~ld, subm1t
their vita, three current letters
~
and transcripts before the closing

56

cu~

lnve.ted will
oocrllleo or lroda lor lruck, 114-

Real Estate General

Sat. July 16, beginning at 10 :00 a .m . at
Orvi lle Brown Farm loca ted midway
between Chester and Long Bottom on SR 248
Moving from the area so will sell the following :
TOOLS &amp; EQUIPMENT
2 "A" ladders, 2 H .D . 28' extension ladders, 16'
- 20' &amp; 32 ' extension ladders , 2 single ladders.
hand tools (some antique) .
HOUSEHOLD
Cordata Computer. Sony word processor,
i
Elec . range, Kenmore refrigerator,
portable dishwashers, G .E . washer, Kenm
dryer, Signature washer, Kelvinator dryer.
singer Elect. sewing machines. Bissel sweeper
rug shampooer. 2 pc. living room suite (beige) ,
pc . living room suite (blue) , L shaped sleeper
couch. Lazy-boy recliner, library table, 3 stereo'll
sets and records, lull s ize waterbed, twin bed
chest, 1 set bunk beds. 2 entertainment centers,
19" color TV, table lamps, pots &amp; pans .
ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Pineapple poster bed, dresser &amp; mirror, dot'Tle:stic
treadle sewing machine, Longaberger &amp; nth.Arll
wood baskets, Fisher-Price game table, ant.
scales. 2 trunks, school desk, wooden rocker
odd chairs, lot dishes &amp; glassware,
canes, Santa Rosa guitar, 2 sets golf clubs, Silver
Plate tray, bowl, 2 coffee pots, 2 tumblers
creamer &amp; sugar, 5 mocked maple chairs, lots of
misc. items.

READING/LEARNING STRATEGIES SPECIALIST
The University of Rio Grande is seeking applicants for
non-tenure Specialist in Reading and Learning Strategies
posiloon lo begin Augu st 8, 1994.
Thts ten-month annually renewable staff position will
report to th e Director of the Learning Center.
Responsibtltlles include normally teaching at least two
ading/learning strateg ies courses per quarter.
agnosing students ' readtng /learning difficulties,
developtng appropriate instructional programs and
materials. recommending and helping to secure conlPUier
and the audiovisual instructional resources, training and
supervising student tutors. maintaining records, and
compiling data related to the reading/learning strategies
ponent of the institutional developmental education

OVer

57-68· 1344
Auction starts at 9:00 am oulstde.
Cas h
Postive ID
Refresh ements by Bashan Au xiliary

PUBLIC AUCTION

.Applications will be accepted through July 15, t994.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Located on Sl. Rt . 124 in Portland , Ohio . Items already
consogned : NH 850 baler, steel fl at bed fo r 3/4 ton hke
new, NH PTO's and JD manure spreaders. potato
cutter &amp; plant er. round baler. 4 row Oliver corn planter,
kitchen cabinets for built in kitchen, lots of farm items
and lots of items for yard sale. Items will be taken from
9 a.m . til 2 p.m. on Fri ., July t 5.
Dan Smith- Auctioneer

Public Auction
Thur. Eve . July 14, 1994
6:00p.m.
Located on Bradbury Rd . Middleport , Ohio watch for
auction sign on St . Rt. 7.
" Household"
4 pc. bedroonysuite, couch &amp; chair, RCA console TV
with remote, end table, lamps, Maytag washer &amp;
dryer, linens (Bedspread . curtains. rug s. blankets.
tablecloths), magazine rack. heater. ottoman, 12x48
mirror. elexro1x sweeper, glass door cupboard . base
cabinets.
·
"Mise"
Alum . step ladder. mosc lawn furniture, ladder. mosc.
hand tools. wheelbarrow. saw horses. 2x4 lumber,
table. vice. water hose. clocks . steel traps. &amp; etc.
Owner- Anna Frank
Dan Smith- Auctioneer 57 -68·1344
Cash· Postlve ID- No Food

• mov....

pr-lto&lt;

S unday nmes--Sentlnei-Page-05

24UI21.

H - EdgoCef clubo ond bag,
3 lion lhrou
SW, looo lhan I
yoor old,
0; Big Bonito
Drl- 1\ 11!10; 814-1182-6tn.
dock,

WV

Block, briQ, - • Dipoo, .,.,.
..._llntolo, otc. Cloucto Wl "'
loro, Hlo Orondo, 0H Call 114-

oortod walghta, boro, bollo.

Consignment Auction

DUlJ-t;lu- u

'

Plol-.

•

tubulu ..... conatructlon . .

Equal Houaing Opportunity

8

•

55

bonch,oupor Ill moehlno, 114"

FmHA Rental Aaolstance

8 Room Aportmortl, Socond
Avonuo, Qollloollo, 114-446Poy Utll~lolo. 1114-3811-11162.
0542, 114-381'0221.
Fumlahed 2 Bedrooma, In
Choshlro, •~. 814-llil:l- Fum- EHic:loncy $ta5/llo.
Utllhlolo Pold, Shore Both, 807
8637.
Socand A-~ Galllpollo, 114-41&amp;M..on arM, nice 3br.L....attached 4411 Ahor 7 1'.11.
pordl, yard, AC. :IOU,..7783.
Fum- Efllcloncy 701 Fourth
Smoll 1 Bodroom, In Kanuogo, Avonuo, Galtlpollo, WO/Mo.
Ut llhlolo Pold, 1'180/Mo. 814-446- Utllttl• Paid. 114 441 1411 Altar
7P.M.
11101.
FumElllcloney tall Fourth
T,.llor lor ront, you poy utllhloo
Avonuo, Galtlpotlo, 1'118111o.
pluol50 dopoo~ . 304-a7W538.
Utllh'- Paid. 114 ue 4411 Att.r
44
7P.II.
Apanment
Air candMionocl. Pl.
tor Rent
2br., portly fllmlohod, HUO oo1 and 2 bedroom ap~~ttrnente, ooplod. ~7783.
fumllhed •ncl unfumt.hed, eEAUTtFUL APARTMENTS AT
-urny dapooll twqulrod1 no BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
pota, 814-182·2211.
ESTA~:. 538 Jacltaon Plu
to 1281. Walk 1o altop
1 Bod100111 Aportmlnt. Da-. from
_,, Romodolod, ClaUlpolki
C.l 114 Ul 2511.
EOH.
Aroo, 114-24$-5illl.
.

&lt;

Bornon Dornon ~ ,Bow
~tJ E111-1 112110 OBO, 1141117.
Compound Bow, Jonnlnga
Forkocl Lightning Cobra, 4-Pin
Sight, BoW Outv'!!, Stabi'!!!J
hltlcl Modot :JT :N!Oigun ...llodlllod llarrol, 814-448-41144.

Poe

Over 62, diaabled or handicapped FmHA 1 bedroom. Rente for $0 to 5405, baaed on Income.
Range, refrigerator, carpet, Ilk:, on olte laundry,
parking.

TOO

\(

Frwo Datlvory.

OH-Polnt Pleasant,

KILLS FLEAS I
Buy ENFORCER Ftoa Kilton for
palab homo l rord. GUARANTU
efhctlve A"alt.ble at:
Point ,..._,. Co-op, 1~8
Kanowho St., Point Ploooanl.

52 Spanlng Goods

Goods

OPENING IN JULY

4-949-2012

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE
Complolo homo fllmi~I~J:·
Houra: lion-Sol, 8-5. I
0322, 3 mil• oul Bulovlllol Rd.
SWAIN
AUCT10N l RJRNITURE. 112
Olive 81., Galllpotlol. Now a Utod
lumMuro, -oro. Wnlorn I
Worli boolo. 814-446-3158.

SYUCUSE,OH.

3 AOOfAO Fumlohod. UDIIalrl
Aport..-, No Polo, lllltltloe
Pold, M Locuol 11250/llo. tlqtl
~· 114-446-1340, 114-41&amp;-

Holzer Medical Center's newly established Hospice
Program is seeking qualified candidates for the
fol lowing postilions:
Patient Care Coordinator: Full -time registered nurse,
lice nsed in the State of Ohio , whith a minimum of 2
years experience needed to coordinate the care
provided to Hospice patients/familie s by the
interdisciplinary team .
Thts individual will provide direct nursing care and is
on call .
A BSN •s preferred and the successful candidate w111
have the opportunity to assist in the development of
the department.
Medical Social Worker: Full ·time LSW with a
Bachelor of Science Degree is needed to become a
part of the Hospice interdisciplinary learn . This
indi v idual will work closely with hospice
patients/families and community and · governmental
agenctes.
Previous experience in health care setting preferred.
Registered Nurse: As a member of the Hospice
interd iSCiplinary team is responsible for providing
direct care to home based hsopice patients and
fami lies . Part-time day shift position with on -call
responsibility.
Candidates must be currently licensed in the State
of Ohio . Minimum of 1 year RN experience preferred.
Holzer Medical Center is a 249 bed acute care
hospital with a 20-bed inpatient physical rehab unit; a
JCAHO accredited , community owned, not-for-profit
hospital serving · the southeastern Ohio Valley and
located along the Ohio River.
Competitive salary and fringe benefit package .
Send resume to :
Rosie Ward
Director of Human Resources
Holzer Medical Center
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. Oh 45631
Phone : (614) 446·5105
TOO (614) 446-5106
EEOC/ADA Employer

...... 1-·MA.~.......
Merchandise

Unlumi-

WATER'S EDGE APARTMENTS

·c,...,

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

Te rri Lynn Nutter

Nk:o

:lbdrm. ....... total -

304-:f15-1400.

In M e mory o f

.....

Aefrloerator, Wat•- Fum..n.d,

3 Bedroom•, 2 Batt., Near Porter ArM, On 160, O.poeh, You

11

wv.

~~~250/~~o~~-~1No~Pol~~_!l1~4~t~ll~803~1~

&amp;p.m.

44

Ret.rence.e. hcludM WaiiN, 114-

1837.

111151, ... _

W.nlod To Ronl: Clallla l..ooal
Adul ..... Nk:o Homo FOf

304·&lt;1'1&amp;-2-.

room HouM , ~umlehed, No 13$0/mo, dapoolt - " "· 304Pota, $350/Mo. Dopooll, tM-'IW- 173-8843 oftor lpm.
4345.
3 Fumlohod AOOfAO And Bath,
2 Bod100111o, Prlvota Lol._S_II II~ Wotor ITrult Pold, $300/llo.
South 218, S200/Mo. ........... ~~· Por1or Aroe, 114256-67118, 114-:15&amp;-1337.
3 Bodroom Doublo Wldo In CW.
llpolltl, 114-418-1781, 114-11112·

CaN oftor 2:00 p.m.,hoolo&lt;I.,J;:
304-

Fum!MM Aportrnonl, UIIIMioe ~=·
Pold, 1 ...._,, Upoblll, ~
Socand A_,uo, Qolllpollol, No ~lo~ --:Po1a, Excollonl Condlllon. 114- Roquna.

Folrmont. mwd: , AI::. , t.noed backyard, 3011
14170, CA, All elec., llt.-eo ~ 71h 91., dopooll, ........... 304tern ttwoughout, garct.n tub, l'llHI6711.
tron1 porch. Boo bw lppolntmont
New eondhlon, 3br., ralerance,
Oflfy. 114-388-81111
dopoolt, no polo. 304-6~62.
1883 Schuft 141164 Now Carpel,
New Undeum, New 81th, One Furnlehed And One Unfur$10,500, Call 814-367.03211 Allor nlolhod Hou- For Rani, At. 7N.
Golllpotlo Umlto, No POlo, 814I P.M.
4411-.24111.
188'7 14110 Eutwlnd w/12x311
program.
'
~-. 3br., 2 lull balho 42 Mobile Homes
Qualifications
include
at least a Master's degree in
one W/IKUUI IUD, now carpol,
for Rent
llr.eacl inn with appropriate college experience in teaching
OJIC. cond., aUlng 110,500. 304.,-:-:-:--=-:~~7-::--::----: lho~''' nn and developmental education. Preference will be
115-4141.
14x80 2 Br, 1 milo South of
those with experience in a academic support
1187 Redman Rlverv.._, Mx&amp;CI,
Euroka, on SL Rt7. No polo,
and those capable of also teaching an occasional
2
1 both,air,'
au,lumaco,
1composition course.
2112 t'"'·_,.,.,
vlnyt un- Nllr-. l14~lll-6088.
dor111nnlng, pluo applloncoo,
commensurate with qualifications and
posotion may develop 1nto a tenure-track
111000, e14'1t12-.
2
In Memory
18114
MillO
Brondy
3 Bod2 FuN
Bolha,Wino
3 Ton
CA,
Whh Hoot P..mp, LAundry

tllooplng , _ . . wMh -'&lt;Jng.
Aloo ttallor · All

441-11121

44

54

I.Moe: Ono lledloom
Aport..-.c, - . I - . Cor-Io.
.
. - Por • lllolllh.
Qoldpol
1210
SI0¥0,
Rolrlgorolo&lt; And Walor Fur-

• a.tt..

J)

Bt•att it

Utod Solu 175 Each, 114-37827:10, Aftor I P.ll.

1120/mo.--

nlahid.. No Petti, C.U I~ Nice z l1droam, 4 112 Mil•
4248 0.114 441 2325.
F"""
Qolllpollo,
Slowo,

...........---~~~-- --- --------------Mobl'ie Homes
for Rent

In KMchon, Doolrabto Nolg

get it ," his

GRAVEL
D I S ORDERL Y

or1gln. or ~ny lr1enUon to
rna)(e a/'1 such prel erence ,

wtt.nc.d4n

"I

BEATTI E 1\ I.VD. ' " hy

Antiques

AOOINior'""' · - O f _,h.
lltortlng Ill
11111f;8810.

FOf

p lai n to hi s mom what the game of

53

Furnished

Pomeroy-Middleport~alll

IPI,_. _,.........,

Apanment
for Rent

dopoel, no polO . .-.~112.

NOBODY

thts newspaper Is subted to
the Federal Fair Housklg Aa
ol 1968 which makes h Ntegal
to adVertise · any prelerence,
Ymttatlon or dl scrlminat+on
based on race. color, reMQkln,
sex !amiNal statu s or naUonaJ

46

July 1 0, 1994

10, 1994

Room•

44

Apartment
tor Rent

EffiCiency

W ILDLY

AJI r6B i est&amp;le adverttsflg In

July

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

44

BA N IS H

WV

LOOK $15,000 OR make an offer. y;nyt oidng
home conoioting of 2 bedrooma, lllltng room,
bath kil£hen. Nic41 front porch. Level lawn.
•

1588

COMFORTABLE RANCH! Roomy living room
&amp; kitchen • bedrooms, 2 batha. Homo 11
apptoX. 3
old. Over 2 IICIW lawn. CI080 to .
Rio Gtandl, city IIChool l)lllom. $59,tl00 1173

yoaro

25114 BULAVILLE PfKE- 83 Plus acres.
Fencing, pond &amp; buildings. 3 bedroomrancil
otyle horne. Tobacco allotment
1676
STILL
UNDER
WARRANTY! Low
maintonance home (brand new). One story
ranch, 3 laru- bedrooma, dining room, living
room, kitchen, cathedral ceiling. 2 baths with
skylights. Over 1 aero lawn. Electric neat
pump.
1617
GREEN TOWNSHIP· Mobile Homo &amp; 1 acre
mil with edditionaf mobie home hook-up
complelol with septic and water. Call for
complelol liotingl
1671
"NEGOTIABLE" Flllllly Slza Hom• Roomy,
Modem, 4 bedrooma. What do you want?
This one has it alii I FOI!r plus acres(surveyed).
Grassed lo~ almost level. County water, wall or
!pring lNIItor. livestock cement watering
trough. Greet place for children, animals, pets.
Good bam, 36'x711 . Joins Wayno Narl Forest·
Hundrada of acres joining lo~ Hunte~s
Paridioe. Ao a sjft, if noeded, a ltDiler pad with
all lac~ities in pia&lt;:e. Located on State
HighlNIIy- Make your appointment lo-day. 1628
GREEN TOWNSHIP· Mobile Home l 1 atn
m~ with eddltional mobile homo hook-up
complete with Hptic and water. Call for
oomplelol btingl
.
1671

kttchen 1s eqUipped .

:local Sales Represenlalive
: DONNA CRISENBERY
1t366 Slale At. 7
I
\

fireplace, dining room , 2 baths, full basemen1 and a garage
in basement. Nice big level lot
$47,900

home, has four bedrooms and mora. Call
today!
1671

MIDDLEPORT· N. 4th · A 1 1/2 story hom e with 3
bedrooms, dining ro om . carport , and outbuildings. $10,000

OWNER REDUCED PRICE TO $42,900.00 IN
TOWN UVINGI 107 Cedar Stn~&amp;ll Newer roof,
kitchen

POMEROY· Crew Rd .· A large t 1/2 acre lot with a

combination, bath, laundry, attached car portl
All apptiancea inclutlod, including washer &amp;
dryer! Must 180 tD apprecietel
··
161t

Barrington doublewide, s1ning on a full basement . Home
4 bedrooms, dining room. family room and in-ground pool,

living

room ,

dining

room

and

back deck, and much more.

THE OUTOOORSMAN'S DREAMt 75 Acres
m~. pond, 2 lakes totaling approx. 4 1/2 acres
stocked with plenty of fishl10 yr. otd vinyl sided
3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch sty to home. 1 112 car
dotached oversized t car garage. Call for
complete listing!
1668
OUfET NEIGHBORHOOD, MINUTES TO
DOWNTOWN! All city utilities, 3 bedroome, 2
bathe, family room, kiEhon, living room. Lots of
cioool apeoe. CENTRAL AIR CONDlTIONINGI
epprox. 3 yearo old.
1685

Home,..,.,.,

OWNER HAS REDUCED PRICE ON THIS 2
STORY RUSTIC SYTLE HOIIEI Featuring a
14'1132' mastoor badioom, family room with
fi..p-, lonnol dnlng OVer 3,000 oq. It living
IIJ!IICII, bam, private. ExceMont country view, 2
IICIIII plus much more. Cal for m0111 details!
1614

Russell D. Wood, Broker.............................. , .• 446-4618
Phyllis Mlller ••.•••••.•.•.••• ••••.•••••••256-1136 Martha Smlth •••••••••••••.•.• 379-265t
J. Merrill Carter ...................... 379-2184 Cathy Wray .................... 446-4255
Tammie Dewltt ....................... 441-1514 Cindy Drongowskl ••.•.•.•245-9697
Judy Dewltt ............................ 441 · 0262 Cheryl Lemley ............... 742-3171
Ruth Barr •.•.•...•.••.•••••.•...••••.•••. 44&amp;0722

REAlTOR

$35,000

POMEROY· Union Ave nue· A larg e fami ly room with

GREAT FARM LANDI OVer 35 acres. Road
frontage along two paved roads. t 1/2 story

(jive f{.ls .9L Ca[C. ..

l:H.

MIDDLEPORT· A large lot wtth lots of flowe1s and lrees. A 2
story stone home with 2 bedroom s. dining room , and 1 1/2
bath s. full basement. Has nice ca binets in k1tchen and

Muot see $49,900

MIDDLEPORT· S. Third· A 3 bedroom. 1 1/2 bath . 2 siory
home w1th famil y room , newer shingles, and fireplace with
buck stove inside.
$45,000.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY- A 3 car garage now being
used as a used ca r lot. Could be mechanics garage , has
welders-elec. and gas, and air compressor. Has 14x65 Holly

Park mobtle home also.

With mobile home $100,000
Without moblla home $90,000

POMEROY· Batley Run- Appro&gt;. 56 acres with tree gas and
I

royalties . A one story small house, and a one car garage.

$32,500
RUTLAND- Ever th ink ol going into business for yourself?
Step right inlo busi ness in this Slaughter house that was
stat e approved come s with all equipment needed to

operate slaughter house and butcher shop. Also has 2
mobile home hook ups and approx. 2 acres of nice laying

yard and approx. 5 acres total.

$47,000

At. 143· A 1 1/2 story. 4 bedroom. 1 t/2 bath home that has
a beautiful stone fireplace between living room and dining
room . has spacious eat-in kitchen , a large 2 car garage

w/workshop, cellar w/storage above, and is all sitting on
$4i,SOO

approx. one acre.

DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..........................ljg2-5892
BRENDA JEFFERS ..... ................................ 8112·3056
JERRY SPRADLING .......................... (304) 882·3498
OFFICE ........................................................ 99~·2886

�•
\

Page--D6--Sunday T1 mes-Sentlnel
71

Autos for Sale

71

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Autos for Sale

71

Autos for Sale

1!185 Dodae Omnl, 1000 ol&gt;o,

1171 Z~ Cllrnoto wrH-. olr
lml'tm cauette, new engine:

814-~&amp;.

tllll3 GEO Metro like now otlll
und.r Wlnnty. Grut gee
1!187
Pontioc
T~rbo
Grand
Am,
2
1t81 Pontiac Orand Prix. aulo,
PW, PB, PS. 304.a7!1-32N.
Door, '-dod. 80,000 Mlioo, 114- mllooJIO coli: 114-441-ll808
44e-7118.
88 Dodae Doytono, $500, 8141881 Falrmon:, Run• Good, New
llll2-64d.
Point. Cr\Jioo, lolo 01 New 111111 Borr-. wrockod, will Mil
Porto, $800. 114-441-4847.
""porto, 304-871-7188.
MERCEDES ' 3000 1882 Flr&gt;l
Turbo, 5 CyUnder, Dlootl, Low
1!182 Oldomobtto N Aegoncy, 1188 Grand Am ~,bo , SP..Wlroof, MIINge, Excellenl Malnten~nce,
Exceltorc
Shapo.
02,000
Mlloo,
~ . 000 Mlloo 1 Family Ownod.
114 448 41885.
Full Powor, Extra Clun1 $3,500. 814 446 8387.
Will Toke Guno Or Boo1 In Trodo. 1!1811 Probe 12,!100. 1lll7 Portlloc
114-256-8413.
SE ft,89tl. 11187 Blozw $3.llll5.
1984 Hondo Sobro. r.... good. 19!11 Cllt• s 10 $4,250. 1988 72 Trucks for Sale
Aangor $2,685. 1!187 F150
17110. 304-571-2!103.
13,295. 11181 'VW JoHo ft,1ll&amp;. 111111 Fonl brMd f!v,ck, 480 o.. o,
1!184 llolk-og.., Jot1o1 4 1!188 Connoro T-Topo $2,895. dual whoolo ,a- goo
Polo Ohllngot ,_ mllooJIO, fteoo' OBO; 1!180 Oklo
Spood, Gocd CondMion, t880, Como monogor. Sconlo'o Uood Cora, CutloOo, 1700; 814-llll2-3568.
080, 014-3674468.
Clltvy Plck.IJp, . 3&amp;0,
1!185 Chew CllmotO, lcyt., ...o. New llovon, WV. 304-1112.J71i2.
304~7S..1Mo •her Spm M a..w 111at Tayoto ComtY, 4 r1r, 2.0 1"'"..."!.tic, PS, PB, AWFM eo ..
meaage.
lltro, S op, ornllm cooootto, olr ootto,
Gocd, $725, 090.
ocndtlou, ruloo. tilt whotl, pw, 614-441-GlOO Aftor 1 P.M. Or
1!185 Plymouth ConquOOI Turlto, pdl, 4 MW Uroojj OlhoUII, Anytime Sotwdoy Or Sunday.
lolided,
power
enrythlng, $5000; 111110
ulck loSobro
omllmicuo. $3500 obo, 614-Vll2· UmHod, 4 dr, Ml powor, air ma Clltvy, 414 314 ton, tool
Ba:W.
condUon, crulM 1mltm etlrN, bozHIIadder rack. $2500. 814-0
38l
::-.f71
.;;..;;:.:.·-:-;:-....,..,.--- 1811 Hondo 250 4 tru, noodo gron louring 01111oft. $11000, IW. ::
li2·7332
attw
S
pm.
11184
Ford
E 350 ton c.~b and
mognoto, $060. 30oH82·323e.
1GDO Nlooan pick up wlco~&amp;
wHh ..._ and 11 loot
1!181 Ponlloc Floro, Block on · - roclo •• 8- e•• -· •
bodhPS, PH, llh, omftm, Roooo
Groy, 24 000 Milo on Yl 4 -....
• - -. .....~...
hltc 460, auto. l8k mu...
Spood, Air, n ntod Gl- Nloo 1llll2 Honda Aoc:ord ChlftTJ Aod $3000, 114-Vll2-21!78.
$3,,$00 Ol4-3N-2608 Afief e p.m.
6 Spood, Coil AHot I P.ll. 814- 1888 Dodgo 0.100 V~. LWB,
1!181 Toyota Torcoll, 128,000 446.0026.
Auto, AC, Stweo, cu.tom T•
llltoo. Vary Cloon, Dopondoblo 1llll2 Hondo Accord EX. om73,000 Mlloo, Ellootlont
Cor, $2,000, 080, Call Scoll, mocutote ocnd., ganga kopt,
ndHio';j $7,000, 114-~38
v.ry ~ mllaga, la.ditd 304. =
A:::H=or_a::P_....,..·
1087 Ford EXP, 40 mpg, run11 882~356.
1!1811 Ford 1'260, 300 I cyl..
g-~ ftiOO ol&gt;o, 114-llll2-6284.
automatic aunvisor blue whh

•hue•

·-3m.

g:;·

==---:----

10112

Uuatang

Hatchback.

~ue lnterlo;, new

4

Real Estate General

tf,..,

&amp; Motors
for Sale

18811 Dodoo Rom Von 00 000
lllloo. $4,&amp;lo: Con Bo SMii' At:
Dolly Trlbuno, 828
vary gocd -.c!Hion. 114-- Goiiii&gt;OIIo
Third Avor-, Golllpollo. 1141172.
-.:1342
lliDO S.tO Chovrotot, Ellotllonl
CondHion,su ue ea48.
74 Motorcycles
1llll1 Ford A~ XLT 414, olr, :1!i80:=:-::Kawo'=:".u.;.;.~LTD:-:.:440,:.,.,-oc.
v~. 5 op., 47,
mlloo, bodllno&lt;. cond, $700. or olltr. 1DOO Nl ...n 214, Mw Ur•, I
•peed, bed Unp, · 14,000 mUea,

1

IW.llli2·70M or IW.Ilii2-M87.

812-3131.

1~!11 S-10 Tahoo, VI, A£, block.
304~75-27110.
1ii2 Chew. S..10 T1hoe LAu

ll181 CB ~ Cuotom Wfth Fair·
log Ellotllont Condhlonl 1142:i8-Gl80.

Than 28._000 MI., PS, PH, PW, P
Locka, 1.W. U Engine, A.. o.
AC, Towing Pkg., Topper E•collonl Cond, 1114-441-34111.
1l181 Hondo CB850, Alternator, $32S, 114 448 3040.
18!12 5-10 Tohoo pockeJIO, 5opd.,
!~, U VI, black, o1c. ocnd .. 1H2 Hondo Cuolom Ellcollonl
~00- 304-47&amp;-nse or 875- Condhlon, Shaft Drtven. o.wdrlvo, ft,200,114-388.-.
4638.
l~M Chevy 4.3 kyt ., 2WO, 1186 Hondo Shadow 700 Low
ohort bod, INJ groon, ft4,700. Mlloo. Now Tlroo, Shan Ortvo
:3:_:_
04 -t::7._: _..:
S.768
= ll::..-----~ Auno Groot! ft,IOO, 1 - . :
11555, 114 us tllt3.

~.

f14-llll2·

6591.

0

Rearronge the 6 scrambled
•
words below to make 6
somple words
Prinf leiters of
ea ch 1n ils li ne of squares.

8024.

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

I

Budgoo Priced Tnonomloolono,
uoocJ • roiKIIn, 111 1Yooo. oto~­
lno .. ~i_ownor 114-245-Mn,
~~..... 814-ln-2263.
tMw gu tanka, or. ton truck
whooloJ nodlotDf111 malo,
Ole. 0" RAuto, Aoploy, WV. 304-

SNABHI

I

DWILLY

I

372-31133 or 1.eoo.27:1-93:ll1.

Automatic Trono For 1.1 Gil $00,
114-2J56.e780.

79

75 Boats

&amp; Motors

for Sale
Chovrotll, FOld, ll&lt;&gt;dg.. pickup
bodo. Short 0&lt; long. No tull . 19711 Modot Joyboo 11 Fl. Boot
304-t7H288.
wnn 7&amp; HP Jollnoon 52.000• 114256-6100.
FOld I Clltvy Truck Portlb~=
Scutilwoot Cabo, Bodo
1m StlrcJaft 1811 rWl aboull
Hoodo, 1972 Ford Bed Sharp/ boot 7011j&gt; Jolonoon, OIC cond
1
&amp;14 ue 0440, 114-256-8018.
304~7'1-2181.
'

14 000

..~

I

camRers &amp;
Motor Homes

12 Fl. Al~num BoM • Trail•.

1GJ4 :1711. Ttton malor homo,
tullr •t-contalned, get'WIItor,
llr,
NfrtgeratDf/frwez.,,
micrOWIIve, rntuw lnteriot,
lli,OOOml, - Y b rood, $8000.

304-t7!1-2MI.
11m Dodgo 20 Ft. llolor Homo
Clooo c 88,000 Mlloo, $5,000,
Bool Oflor, -111.
1!183 &amp;lor Croft Pop-Up Compor,

ADIRFY

The young boy was trying to
L........L--'_....__J__.L..__J .z explain to his mom what the
V AL E R G
~ game of hockey was all about
~---.-::--"T'""-n,---.,.----.-~ ::: ' I get 1t," h1s mom Iaug hed, "1t' s
7
8
a game where you keep score
L--'---'-..L...--'--.l..._...J ,._ for - - - - - - - - - - conduct."

THERE IS NO PLACE UKE HOIIEI Aluminum sided rarv:h
home. Den, 3 bedrooms, full basomenL lois of attic storage
could be easily 2 additional bedrooms, t car attached
garagel50'x200' 1ot mit CENTRAL AlAI $35,000
1858
LOTS OF SPACE FOR THE IIONEVI 4 bedrooms, I 1/2
, family room . Ow nero moving aoon I
sold fasll

9

Real Estate General

•

2.38 ACRES
St. Rt. 588 Area
Mostly all wooded' This would
make a stately home srte.

bedrooms. 21 /2 baths , 24 11v1ng rm w/fireplace . 1B' t11n1ng
rm. equ1pped k1tchen . full base ment , 47 acres MI L of
PARADI SE Tra1ls throughout the woods M1neral rights
and the boundary IS fenced Large barn &amp; out -bwldmg
Al so a mob ile home pad w/elec . wate r &amp; se pt 1c
$89,000 00 Call V~rg 1 r11 a 388·8826,1 446 -6806

I
I1--r.:"ls-.-1-~r---r-1--r-~6 ~
I
I_ 1 I I' 1 I .'
I
O
by
I ll

brick ranch home oitiJaiiKf al 38241
State Route?.
OY9' 1,700 aq. ft plus a fuJI basemeL 3
BR, 2 baths, kit. DR, FA, a morel Ceniral otereo a vaccum.
Large detached garage . Amentitieo too numerous to
menlionl
1030

0

I

1.

.

•

I

I

•

•

Complete the chuckle quoted
filling in the missing words
• you develop from 51ep No. 3 below.

PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS

BUHLMORTON
ROAD

~~~~AMBLE

35

West Area, 5.66 acres.
Blacktop road, excellent neighbor·
hood. Priced 20's .

~~TTERS

I I I I I I I I I I I

---Answer to Scram-Lets on Page D-4--formal dining room with china cabinet, eat-in

Lovely home, maintenance free.
Close to city. Lol is partially wood·
ed. 3 bedrooms. large living room,
lots of windows, full basement.
CENTRAL AIR. Priced in SO's.

kitchen, den, plus full basement with fam11y
room and rec. room. Very private backyard with
inground pool and la'IJ&amp; patio. 2 car garage,
• gas heat and central ""· Newer roof. Priced to
move quickly at $70,000.
·
1401

79

Real Estate General

COOl Hem's an
outstanding 3-4 BR home thafs in baautiful
condition. Fealumo include an outstanding oak
kitchen looking ovar the bast back yard dock
around. 2 full baths, both remodeled in
eKcellant taste. Large living room with
attractive fireplace, 2 car garage and full
basement. Don'l wail to call because believe
me, it won't last long. CaN David.
12tt

uc. CoNI.• $1100. ~2117,
oftor lpm 3CJ4.4175.1031.

Services

WATERPROOFING
Unocndltlonol Mfettmo ._.....,..

Henry E. Cleland ••••• 992-6191
Tracy Brinager.........949-2439

Henry E. Cleland Ill. 992·619 1
Kathy Cleland ......... 992·6 191

Offite •.•.•••""·········· 992·22S9

OFFICE 992·2259

OFFICE SPACE FOR LEASE Nice office
building designed speci6cally for offico space.
Ownoro are flexible on leoma &amp; apace. A.
much as 3600 sq. ft. ava~abla.C&gt;ood location
just off At. 7 clo.., to bridgo. Call Dave for mom
mfonnalion.

NEW USnNGI A littlo dough will do you I Oon1
be fooled by tho low price on this I 112 story
homo located on a la'l!e lot in Vinton. Offers 3
bedrooms, 1 bath, liv1ng room, donong room,
e•tm laoga kitchen plus a full basement. All tho
work hao bean done for&gt;·you, all you have to do
is move in. Priced at only $35,000. You ooulck11
rent for this monthly payment, so now's the
time to become a homeowner.
t602

HOME IB WHERE THE
your
heart will tall you to make this houoe your
homo. Remodeled 1 1/2 story home includes
all the chann of your grandmothe~a hom•··
juot updated! 3 bedrooms, living room, eat~n
kitchen and dining room. Bonus: large block
building v.ith potontiaf for many u... o. $52,000

POSSIBILITIES ARE ENOLESSI Over 14,000
oq. ~. of office, warehouse a garage apace.
Namly 1 114 acre land in the heart of town with
322' of street frontage on 2 different streets.
Over 21,000 aq. ft. of parl&lt;ing 1paco. Muchm
much mom. Building in very good repair. Call
Oavo for mom detailsl

lt.odyt118n1'a Speclolll II you like a challenge,
then
house io for you. 3·4 bedroom• with
potential for more. Large lot close to grade
ochool. At tho low price of $17,500, you can
afford to make the needed improvomenls.
1220

BUY TODAY, MOVE IN TOMORROWII You
can have immadiato occupancy of this 3
bedroom, 2 bath homo located on a large flat
lot. Great room, equipped kitchen, largo
laundry room· washer &amp; dryer stay, garden tub
in master both. Heat pump with central air. 2
car dotachld garage. All thio can be youra for
$45,000. Call Carolyn today for your
appointment 10 - ·
f&amp;04
INVEST NOW For your future in thio property
with potentially good rental income. Two
apartment&amp; plus large show room lor bulinalt
and an unfinished second floor. Priced at
$75,000.
1503
OWNER DESIRES QUICK SALEI 30x40 atNI
buiki~ situated on a flat 0.2276 aer., mA, lot.
12' lliding entrance door. Price at $10, 500.
1201

that

features 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms. 10-t acres with

large yard . Many flowers &amp; trees. Large field
with Pine Tree Grove. The home indudes

blinds . curtains . wood shutters, newer
plumbing , ceding fans, handmade Birch
cabinets. built in hulch on dining room , large
front porch w/ awning, covered patio area, 1
car garage, attic space, nice carpeting, newer
repairs throughtout the home, built in range &amp;
oven , disposal. Several out buildings, TPC

waler A WONDERFUL PLACE FOR A
FAMILY TO GROW UP INII! CALL FOR AN
APPOINTMENT!

"' '

NEW HOME FOR SALE
BY BUILDER
1 1/2 acres, 3 br., Rural Water.
$62,000 OBO. Call 379-2240

Well Cared For Split
located on At.
160, this home has boon well maintained and
is in move in condition. With a slightly diffal8nt
lay out than your average ranch, !his home
offers 3 bedrooms, 1 1/2 bathe, iving room &amp;
eat in kitchen. lot maasuNI 100x300 allowing
for plenty of back yard fun. Priced at $64,900.
.
1211

GARDENER'S OEUGHTI Beautiful gardens
and landocaping lltJrround this large attractive
Cape Cod. Much laoger than it appears, this 4
bedroom homo offers 2 112 baths, loVIng rootm.
dining room a family room plus basement.
Large dock. Large 2 car garage. Much mora.
Call lor details.
1218

.......uu&lt;c et;" PO MERO
Y- f-'eacoc~~ AVe.~
frame home wnh 3 bedrooms. one bath .

bath . carpettng and drywall, includes front and

rear porches. anic space. garage. and garden
area on lol of 62x119 ASKING! $37,000
NE W LI ST ING "' - DYESVILlE - 1 1/2
fra me home on 2 lots, approx . 100x50
Home has 3 bedroo ms &amp; 1 bath .

with aluminum siding .

features 2 bedrooms. 1 bath. N.G.F.A heal.
appliances , nice woodwork, storage closets,

12x16 deck, screens &amp; storm windows .
ASKING• $32.000
MAKE AN OFFER II
TWP ROAD 348· Appro&gt;. 73 acres of vacant

vinyl stdtng and newer storm windows.
land with 2 story barn . stocked pond, Old
cellar, wood storage building and ceiling fans. house site with well . Approx. 20 acres
100 gaL sept ic tank Newer covered pastuoe with balance 1n Timber. Abundance of

patoo/carpon Al so has garden area. ASKING! Walnut. Get a return on your investment from
$20,000
sale of Timber. ASKING $40.000

RACINE· Localed on Third St. - 2 River Front POMEROY· Corner of Flalwoods &amp; Rock
lots, publi c water an d sewer available, no fees Springs Rd. - 1.24 acres with 26x51 Modular,
paid. ASKINGI $9.000.00
large utility room, garden lub, walk in closet,
3 bedrooms. 2 baths. out building , electric
NEW LISTING " AT I COOLVILLE· 32+ acres F.A. heat, deck and TPC water. ASKING

with 3 Mobile Homes, presently rented . I

$44,500

BUSINESS OR RESIDENCE OR BOTHI
Locatod along Bulav~la Pika, thia home can bo
Ul8d u both a busineu and moidonca. Pluo,
them io • rental unit v.ith separala utilities. Buy
as an investment or use aa maidanca with help
on paymonto. Good location for either. ·
Rasidanca has 2·3 bedrooms, hing room, eat·
In kitchen. Easy to heal
1210
LOCATED ON BULAVILLE PIKE- Thil 2 otory
hom• oflara affordability. 3 bodroomt, 1 both,
living 1110111, eaHn kitchen and lull basemenL
Dade ovetlooking nice liz.od lol $39,900 1205

AFFORDABLE BI·LEVEL • lmmac:ulatoly
mU\tained home offers mora then moot In thia
lllllga. Conoider 3 bedrooma, 2 batha, living
room, !emily room with fireplace, garage, pool,
deck, heat Pl!mp/CA &amp; comer tot. On top ol
that, ira aU in grat lhapal Priced to ooll at

$58,800.

flUS

I

WHEN YOU BUY A HOUSE THROUGH CLELAND REALTY THERE REALLY IS " "NO
PLACE LIKE HOME-. COME ON DOWN AND LET US HELP
YOU FIND THAT PERFECT PROPEATYIII'

r;:;;; ...-EMAN

·HOUSE. BUILDING I a ACRES MORE OR LESS,
·locatod in Lawmnca Co., 2 bedrooms, liVIng room, clnong
room, kitchen, bath, lg. garage 24x40. CALL FOR
APPOINTMENTIII
NEW USnNG-3 bedrooms, two baths, new roof in 93,
new lliding, 10xl4 metal building. aatoMite, nice laval lol
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.
. NEW US'nNGbodroomo. 2 batha, Nving
room kitchen
, ity IIChoOI district, county
wale;, Located'
Iota. Call for appointrnanL

Owned.

•sos

VACANT LAND • ApproKimataly 10 acraa located on

. Bob McCom1ick Rd. cto1 for mo111 Information.
OLDER

kill:hon,

I •
FOR YOuR CONVENIENCE mY
OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER
. ' 1-IONM-1051
.

DJ

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE USTINGI
·PICK UP THE FREE QUAUTY HOMES
BRbCHURE AT SOME OF lHE LDCAL BANKS,
RETAIL ITOREI, 8UPERIIIARKETI, MOTELS
AND RE8TAURANft.

Carolyn Wasch • 441·1 007
I

'
· -· - ·· · ·-·· · ·- -·· ··- .. ·· - ·· - -

5i~tlving
1110111, cinlng 1110111, .
·
t .8 ec..1. PRICE IS

REDUC~

446-3644
•

LOCATED IN GREEN TWP.· On State Rt. 1.41· 3
bed1110111a, 2 bathe. living room, di~ing room, kotchen,
utility roon, 22Xt4 garage. Homo it IIX Y"'· old, hao noco
laval lot. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. REALTOR
OWNED
LOT .. GREEN TWP. FOR SALE·.t56X100 city water
and Mwer, electric to polalevol. Priced Sl4,000. CALL
FOR INFORMATION.
ACREAGE FOR SALE· t6 acms mom or laaa located
ctoM to Rio Grande. PRICED AT $64,000.00 Realtor

t200
ATTENTION CAMPERSII Just minulat from
town, lhia wooded campsi18 offers acc:a.. to
Raccoon Cmak lor boatinA and fiohing. Prlcod

REAL ESTATE, INC.

Loretta McDade· 446·7729

th e tak e All amenit ie s avai lable Ru ral wa ter.
underground electric ity, aerator s ystem s accept able .
Rest rictive covenants apply Clo se to H olz er and
shoppmg. 5 acres $33.000 Others $1 5,900 &amp; $18 ,900
Two story home . lull basement and garage has a great
deal to offer Designed fo r great l1ving First floor has
form al entry with open stairway, formal liv1ng room with
!~replac e . format dmmg room . Cherry caD1nets 11ne the wall
of the extra large k1tchen. Breakfast room and powder
room . Second floor offers fou r bedrooms and bath.
Be drooms are kmg s1ze. c arpet over hardwood floo rs.
bath has all now fixtures and Love Tub. Baseme nt has
huge fam il y room w/flreplace. bedroom. exe rcise area.
laundry roo m and storage room This home is ol superb
quahty as the plumbmg Mas been replaced All new all
covenng, beautiful new c arpet throughout. new windows
installed Spac1ous k1tcnen w1th c nerry cabinets, island lor
Jenn - A~r range Only pnvate snow1ng W!ll dec1de the value
is here
CALL VIRGINIA L. SMITH 446-6806 or 388·8926

M935. COMMERCIAL BUILDING- 940 sq. ft., quarry o;oe
floor, new rubber roof, 200 amp . 3 phase electric drive
tt1ru wmdow. 5 ton heatmg 8 cooling unit. Will sell or long
term lease Virgmia 388-8826 .

1971. LAND CONTRACT - Make

a

deal here Older
home with some work compl eted. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath ,
new cabinets m kn .. good garden . Barn Ira garage 4 ac .
This will be a good spot to s tart or retire $45 .000

M954. UNUSUAL LOG HOME- w/4 2 Ac. mft. TI'Os home
is so easy to care lor il's like being on vacation 3,168 sq

in need to repa1r 11 7 ac m/1 Call for location Price
Reduced .

1887. SPACE FOR REAL LIVING - Imm aculate 4
bedroom home , new carpet pa.nl , new kitchen with oak
cabinet5 . di5 ~1washer. range and ref .. attached garage,
outbuilding Beautiful landscape Ready to move m

$65,000
1958.

JUST IN TIME FOR SUMMER • 22 fool camper

plus a lot 1n Big Foot Park all for only $5,500.00

"945. NEW LISTING - Conve nient to the Freeway. 3
bedrm s . ra nch wtnew kll &amp; bath . Lg tam•ty rm
wJwood burning l 1reptace On acre m/1 Only $45,500. 388-

6826
1874. RANCH HOME with full basement , app. 1710 living
space. gas heat. cent a1r, 2 firepla ces , 3 bedrooms, 2
baths 2 car deta cnea garage, 30x t6 shed . 2 small
outbu1ld1ngs. small frame home with 2 BR and 1 bath, 2
homes and buildings s1tuate don 5 ac res more or less
pncea m tne $70's .

M944. NEW USTING - PRIME POTENTIAL CORNER.
2,180 SQ. ft. block bldg. bath , 1 ac m/t , Equ1pmenr extra
Located on SA 388 -8826

M630. APARTMENT BLDG. · 7 Unit s Well ma1ntamed &amp;

1848 ·GREAT BUSINE SS OPPORTU NITY AT HO ME
3 bedroom ranch while br 1ck with a 4 COO squa re loo t
commercial Oulldmg a'l on 4 a: res close to town

1939. COWBOY'S RANCH . 3 roo m log c ab m ancJ

c1 3

bedroom mobile home on 25 acres tust o tf St R1 1111
Askmg $38 ,000 00 Cal! 2'15 -9070

1968. ACREAGE · 123 acres w11t1 good

t1mber and

pasture land, pr~ced to sell qurckly so don r tlPS•tate ur1
th1s one call today lor more 1nto

ctlo1ce loca110n overlook1ng the Oh10 R1ver

1962 . NEW LISTING - lovely 16x80 Tangl ewood mu1J 1 I~

1972. A PLEASURE TO SHOW • Lovely 3 bedrm ,

home With heavy in sulati on, 3 bedroom. large ma ster
bedroom w1!h extra large mas ter bat11. be aut1 l ul k1tche n
cabmets. on 3 acres m the R1o Grande areJ

ranch . new decoraled 18' x 22' k1t . pantry. 15' x 1a· LA .
Charm1ng LA &amp; Master Be drm . C1ty school s, Pnvate
location. $47,500

M901 . MAKE OFFER · One of the best th1ngs m life IS
home ownersh1p. 3 bedroom ranch , charmmg LA , eat-1n
k1t , 1 1/2 bath . full divided basement w/office room and
outside entry. 24'x32' garage w 10' doors Mak e th1s
yours now. FHA or VA. NOTICE REDUCED'

HSS. HOME W/2 UNITS one rents lor $275 mo., can be
reverted to one large home Th1s !lome is 1n good repair.

1967. GREAT FARM LANO READY TO BE FARMED
• th1s IS tne best ever, 100 acres w1th a be au ll ful 4
bedroom b i· level w1 th p lenty or space lor everyone
46x388 loot oarn plus other out bu1ldmgs

1973. NEW LISTING • 3 bedroom mob1le home close to
town w1th 1/2 acre. paved dnvewil'(, great lor mom a'ld
pop or the new couple stamng out. pnc eo to sell

Call VLS 388·8826.

1946. OWNER

WANT'S SOLO VESTEROAV, 3

1943. NEW USTING · HOME &amp; INVESTMENT· Can be
bouoht together. New 3 bedrm ranch home wJiarge rms .
White briCk front , charming LA , din rm ., large rms.
throughout . loads of oak cab1nets 1n kit . 2 ca1 garage, 2

1938. JUST FOR THE FARMER - 50 acres ot n1ce

Dedroom mobile home 1n one of the areas n1cer parks
jUS! reduced to $8800 00 Call W1lma lor more 1nlo. wilt
also land contract

ac . MIL wmome .

pasture land fl at to sli ghtly roll mg wtth a 4 bedroom farm
house m the EN1ngton area

1975. STOP! LOOK! L1sten to what ll'11s hom e has to
offer 3 bedrooms . 2 batns. 11v1ng room . kitchen. barn . 2
car garage and 17 ac. more or less Call lor deta1ls

1953. REDUCED AGAIN · ow ner &lt;lm 1ous to se ll !hiS

1894. NEED LOTS OF SPACE? Th1s 1S tne one tor you.
2 story 4 bedroom w1th new roof, furnace and si d1ng w1th
nice size yard. close to the Gavm plant

1936. GREAT FOR THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN , 3

1957. LOVELV COLONIAL ON THE RIVER · besl
house on the nver for that grea t v1ew o f the nver 5
bedrooms. new barn. above ground sw1mmmg pool, 8
acres, th 1s one won't last so be"er hurry and call us

Ieday.

lovely bi -level on a secluded lot w1th lots of sh&lt;lde tr ees m
a mce neighborhood a must to see

bedroom mob1le home w1th 7 lf2 acre s JUSt off state
route 14 1. pncea at $1~ . 900 oo

1932. Nt:W LISTING • lovely 4 bedr oo r' l ran ch !h al
needs a little TLC on Brenrwood Or1 ve Hla t would make a
n1ce home tor you. o wner w anrs so ld 1rn rned 1ately so
don 't he5ilate to see t111s untl and make your ol1er, can be
seen an 1me

.J__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.;._ _ __

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

CKBURN
a

Allen C. Wood, Realor/Broker-446-4523
Ktn Morgan, ReBitor/Broker-446-0971
Mosa Canterbury, Rea~or-446-3408
Jeanette Moore, Reahor· 256-1745
Tim Watson, Reahor-446-2027

·.

•

of $900.00 a month from all. All
the 60's One is 12x60. the second is 1Dlcouu MIDDLEPORT· 2 Siory Brick Home wilh
and the lhird 1s 8&gt;35 . 2 sheds , 1 porch and older garage. part fenced back yard that
some furnishings 1n all the homes . Located includes shed &amp; herb garden. Home features
approx . 1-1 1/2 mo les from Hocking ·
8 rooms. 4 bedrooms. 1 t/2 baths. cellar &amp;
ASKING! $43 .500
attic space , carpet, wood/vinyl floor ing,
POMEROY- Located on Peach Fork Rd . ceiling fans, Some remodeling completed. 3
52.41 acres of vacanl ground . I
flreplaces, blinds, refrigerator. Unique older
barn , royalties of $101 .00/monlh .
home wilh large rooms, high ceilings, large
free gas with properly. ASKING $29,900
around porch with a view of the River
IMMEDIATE POSSESSIONI! 1

11638. LOT IN LAKEVIEW SUBDIVISION - A CHOICE
PLACE TO BUILD - 2 to 5 acres more or tess Onve to
White Rd. to Charolais Lake Or. to Lakev iew Ct. Offenng
2 flat to rolling lots. variety of trees and beautiful v1ew of

TRULY DEUG HTFU L - Tt1e rernMk able
spac 10us flam e w1th v1ew of the C01r n1 y ltdl,;.m 111o toyer
cathedra! ce Jt ,ng INI!h td lcon ,-, 3 BR 2 , oa th s 11 v1r1y
roo m w 1th w oodbu111&gt;~ 1 y f1re p1ace. c qu 1p k11CI'e1
tl rea k1 as t roo m ha s a lg Nlndow !. toreo speake's
ttlroug hout . bra ss l1gh t l1xtures and much mon: 2 car
attac hed ga1age . athe storage 2 acres 111 t Ttus Mouse 1s
maintenance !reo of best 1111ahty Make your dppoultment
and see if you don 't agree

REA~

514. Second Ave., Gallipolis, Oh. 45631
Hanny Blackburn, Broker, Phone: (614) 446-0008
Joe Moore, Associate 441-1111

t444- 31.10 ACAEB- nv1. Tycoon t.ka, 28.5
A. in Raccoon Twp. ll1d -wrox. 10 A. in
Huntingtln Twp., home on property ollera 5
BRa, bath, LR, lcilchon, new furnace, wood
buming at&gt;wo, aiding, eomo new CBIP"l Bam
on property.

1440- ROOM HOME IN TOWN· home
offers 3 BAs, baths, LR, DR, FR, kitchen,
workshop, gas heat, cent air. Home qualifies
for FnHA financin Cal for more details.

HOME ON ROUTE 1•t· 3 bedrooms. 1 112 baths, family
room in baoemen~ kitchen ramod&amp;lod, now carpet In
living room, lot 150X180, tencad back yattf, 12ll20 dock.
CAIII0-1

LARIAT DRIVE Nice neighborhood. huiat.
Cfooa to hoepitaf and lhoeping. 3 bJ~
bricll ranch ia compfata w11h eat·in kilchon,
living room, 2 batha, family room and mo...
Nice patio, large flat lat. Priced at 177,500

at se,ooo.

1849 -

11970. PICTUR E PER FECT HOME - 15 what you l1 ave
been neodmg Im macul ate 3 bt!drrn 2 fu!l Oa lhS EKtra
large k1t w1tn load of oak cabmets grac1ous LA . lovely

LOT TO RIVER- • A 12 x 65 Mobile home, 3 bedroomo,
1 bath, 1 Gar garage, front &amp; back poreh. Priced at
125,000.00.

The Mtllldowa. The pe~act place to build your
dream home. Restricted 5 acre lots otter
protection from external inftuencas. Large liza
allowa lor elbow room while still having
nelghbora. Beautiful rolling Gallia County
moadowa end wood loti provide aesthetic
value. G1H11 achoola. Two paved tlmata with
cul·da·ooca. Price• vaty. call lor mora
information.
't230

COUNTRY RANCH fmagine living In tho
country. Peaco &amp; qu;.t. Beautiful rolling h~laide
ICOIMiry. But not too far. Only 5 minulaa to
Holzer and ohopping. Small family oriented
neighborhood. This spacious home otlera il al.
3 bedroomt, 3 bathe, Ia~ family room with
woocllumar, ramodeled kitchen and more. If
~,.a handy man or need extra atDtag, you'l
lova the outbuilding• • 24x32 pole bam &amp; 12
x16 worl&lt;ahop. Ptuo large 24x30 drive·thru
garage. Homa in great condition! Graon
ochoolo. $114,500 ·
1228

1980. NEW LISTING · Cha rmmg count ry home. 3 BA ,
k11 . range &amp; ref LA. DR . family room . wllireplace. full
base ment, pati o, 1 A . M/L Verv c le an &amp; goo d
maintenance

unusal f1mshe&lt;l 1n beauhful wood The LA has cathedral
ce1lings &amp; loft The wrap around dec k 1s a great pla ce to
sw1ng &amp; rock 2 car garage &amp; build1ng

446-1066

.•

IN TOWN LOCATION Good neighborhood.
Ooap lot. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living room,
dining room, eat-in kitchen. Won't find many at
thio low price. $29,500
t20B

power You can l1ve m one un1t e~nd rent tile nther Clo~e
to schools, stlo pp1l"lg &amp; ch Jr: t'os Ca ll for full 1nforma110n
and an appo,rllrnent VL Srr11H1 388 88 26

32 Locust Street, Gallipolis

ATTENTION INVESTORSII Here'a an opportunity in town you lhoulckl't pua up. Locolld
on First and Second Avenue, 3 buildings. 4 rental units in good condition , Good rental
income. Call for mom information. $94,900
12t2
wilh

tlmoto coli a.ot, ~-~.
Curtlll Home lmpnn~ementa. No
Job Too lila Or Smolt, V•ro Ell·

1933 . HOME A ND IN CO ME - DouOIC w11t1 earru ng

Wood Realty, Inc.

,•

newer roof and vt nyl siding , 3 bedrooms. ~
bath . N G.F A. heat , butlt 1n dishwasher, newer

homo ropolr, complete -

ropolr, _ . . wnhlng ond
mobllo ,_, rwpotr. For frM •

1966 COUNTRY

carpet Full basement wllam11y rm on the lowe r level 2
car garage Cement parku1y 111 fr ont Deck &amp; cement
pat10 m rear Home 1:. only 2 yrs old $60'o;;

Real Estate General

23

RACI NE · 4th St. - 2 story frame

II-, -ling ond oomploto

-Eitlmotoo.t11441Jto0811.

'"

$27 ,500

Homo
llotnt--. wollpopar, llonft

~OME!GREEN TWP. - 3 bedrooms . 1
1/ 2 story home. garage &amp; outtJUfldmgs, 5 acre5 an tenced
Remodeled wllovely ki tchen cabm ets. lg LA &amp; DR . new
heat pump &amp; good roof

1963. BRICK &amp; VINYL BI -LEVE L Hornfl IOc&lt;~ ted on Srl
160 3 brms 2112 baths . LR. lg eat 111 k1tcnen. lower
lev el wltam11y rm . taurnlry rrn oaTh kll &amp; 1 Cd r QaraqP
1 ac m11 $48 .000
-

1947. NEW LISTING - KING SIZE FAMILY HOME or
use this super n1ce 5 bedrm for PR IVATE HOME CARE
3 Daths. 3 ac m/1 Virgima l Smith 388·6826

cac

Otna..r

23 LOCUST ST.

1974 . NEW USTING - 3 bedroom mobile home and 4
ac m/lland IS fenced &amp; spr1ng on property Groat place
for k1ds 2 car garage &amp;bu1ld1ny . $20 s

1976. CUSTOM BUILT HOME -Very neat 3 bedroom . t
1/2 story home w/2 bathS . 3 ac m/l The mter10r IS most

1873. PRIME DEVELOPMENT LAND - Land lays well
Older 2 story home w1lh 4 bedrooms and buildings. Home

aortenoo lin Oldw rlll-r
Homoo. AddHiono, Foundotlono,
Aooftng,
KRchono
Jlotloo,
Aoptoc:.- Wlndowo. lnourod,

Real Estate General

.:• ll

new T he r'Tlo Payn e wt ndo ws, electri c 8 .8 .
heat , remodeled tn 1990-91. Newer wirtng,
p!umbtn g, carpe t . wtnd ows front porch, side
decktng . blown -1n msu latt on. Forced atr electri c
fur nace 1n fu ll ba sement NOW ASKING!

Real Estate General

IJ'940. SWEET &amp; LOW • S39,900 3 BR. carpe t. v1nyt
s1d1ng, gOOd roo f. hot water tank , furnace. Lovo ly cab1nets
1n kitchen. Located 1n the city

ft . mil wltn an oak: wrap-around deck . Rooms &amp; doors are
extra large to accommodate the handicap. Barn and
building, fence tor a horse . etc . Garden spot, too

tobllotoocl1f7tl.

IMMACULATE HOME.
homes on tho marl&lt;et today! This homo offers a
large master bedroom with room size walk in
closet, sludy and bath. Thma mom bedrooms
and lwo full baths complete your family needs.
Tho family room has a cozy fireplace. Nice two
car garage, inground pool and located in a nice
neighbootlood. $96,000
1400

Hoot Pumpo. Air CondHionoro, Raldlrtlal
or
commen:al
lnotollotlon And Sonico. EPJ. F~o~rnaoee, U.et• E'-drtd.n, wiring, new Mn"ice or rwpaln.
Corllflod. Aooldontlot, c;om._. 114 418 8308, ~W-41301.
M..ter Uceneed elec1riclan.
clot. 014-25eotl11.
Aldonour Eloctrlcol, W'/000306 ,
304-t7!1-1768.

FrMman'e HMtlng And Cooling.

o

Coil 1.aoo.2B'I.o571 Or 114-23l0488 A~ w•._nng. E.

1a. l.ooll .......... furillohod.

in
Middleport, lovingly
by particular
owner. Large comer lot, 2 car garage, enclooed
front porch and nice basement with outside
anttance. Call today to sae this one priced al
$55,000
11507

Sherri Hart •.•.•.••••.•• 742-23S7

country

· Home
Improvements
BASEMENT

Real Estate General

NEW uoTO•"'-'"
Lovely, well

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

n Slarcnft pofHip camper,
...,. I llectrlc rafriQentor,

81
Real Estate General

Electrical &amp;
Refrig eration

N959 . COMMERCIAL BUILDING . Olivo St 16' door &amp;
ce 1t1ng w/lofll or storage 2 1 &amp; 220 elect water &amp; sewer
6' ceme nt to load &amp; u nl oad 1n fron t 30x 80 budd mg
approx 3900 sq f1 block &amp; frame $4 5,000

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY

AFFORDABLE BRICK RANCH- Vary nice 3
EASY ON THE EVES,
BUDGET TOOII Lovely 2 story homo located
in a nice country setting, yet just minutes aW81f
from tho pool and golf course . Offers 3
bedrooms, 1 balh, living room, dining room,
nice front and back patches, plus patio area.
Priced al only $47,000, you can't afford not to
call
todsy bofom ifs too latell
t600

84

Refrigeration

Real Estate General

1gs5, SECLUDED HOME - 81g 1n everyth1ng but pr1ce 4

Real Estate General

Lovely trailer lot. Corrplete except
for water. Price $4,000.

coiTo, wv
:104-6714:181 Ohio 114-448-:MM.

Electrical &amp;

84

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR ................... 446-1897

~__,,.,.....,-...,..,..,-,.--r--f

this price. Large living room wilh fireplace,

--._trw.

-..!dna moot

82

JAMES WILLIAMSON , REALTOR ........ 446-6806

111'72 Dodgo Conlentlol campw,
211R., gonorotor, AC..._rofrlgorolor,
otovo. $3800. 3()4.8,..24«.

DOTYID

STATE RT.
588AREA

Aon'o TV SoMoo, opoociollzlng

In Zonltll oloo
octoot brondo. 001111

PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR ................. 245-9575

23 Ft. Phoonlx Compor, Dual
Axlo, S ' - I, ft,200, Or BOll
Oflw, 114-3~;rl20 ARor I P.ll.

bedroom home oHers much more than most at

J&amp;£ Homo ...,......,_.pointIng, vinyl aiding, roofing and
drywall. Froo . .rmot•, •~m4232. ak tor Joo or Eor1.

Home
Improvements

LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR .................. 446-6806

1!184 211 Ft. Nomod Compw, 114-

304-67!1-2523.

B1

Home
Improvements

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-07

WILMA WILLIAMSON , REALTOR ......... 446-0632

Outboard Engine, &amp; Trclllng
Motor $550; lletoJ 13 Ft. lloof,

367-4558,

1814 tl-10 Btozor T.u-, AC, PS,
PB, 118,000 mltoo. S3800 linn.

81

Real Estate General

2 ..--.--1
1---T-1--.---1
I -.----11

Sl- .. 114-388-ill03.

Real Estate General

ST. RT. 35 WEST AREA
In a serene neighborhood! Home
featu res 3 bedrooms, 1 '/, baths,
dining &amp; krtchen. Home is in excel·
lenl condition! CENTRAL AIR and
in-ground SWIMMING POOL' You
can conquer the heat in this home.
Proce in 70's.

GAME

Edited by ClAY R. POllAN - - - - - - -

$00, 114~4HIIhl.

7:1 Ford F250 4x4, oU ,_ body
parte, new intwlor, r.bulh 390,

rolioblo truck,

T~~~:t;~y S©RJ)~-~ttf~ ~

Real Estate General

Booton Whoior 100 HP Jollnoon
17 Ft. Trolling Motor Groot Flof&gt;.
lng Bootl $2,200 Nog. 114-44e-

76

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-;-Polnt Pleasant, WV

-~--~~~--~---WORD

75 Boats

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1
mlloo, $6500, 114-84~2100 ,.yo
., 614-848~44 ennl-.

Cylinder, Muhl.Port, Rod, Uke
N-. 23,000 Mlloo S8.500, 614- · Evorythlngl lola 01 Ell· 256-t780.
.... , $5,000 090, 814-3~2111
1V87 lroc Bilek Mt't T·Topa.

72 Trucks for Sale

.utly , 0, 1994

July 10, 1994

t«&amp;-GREENBRIAR AVE... Gmet home for
tU2- MOM &amp; POP OPERATION FOR the. famlly: .. 3 BRa. FR, DR/LR combo,
SALE-Small restaurant with two rantal equipped kitchen, gataga, II"' hoatlcanl
houoea. Property ia located In Oak Hil. Cal
11420. $21,000. Five minutaa to town.
tor mom details.
qapa Cod styta home w/3 BAs, bath, LA,
t401- Four Iota, 4 BR hcime, raduoad lo kitchen, gas heal, full basement.
144,000, 2 bathe, lR. DR, full ban-.nl, gu ,._, NEED A NEW
~ A.RENTAL
haatloanl
air.
Comer
lola.
APARTIIENT7
250
Sac.
Ava.
Nice olnca
-dllaiL ·
downallolra and ap~~rtrnent and llotaga up.
FACING THE OLD FRENCH SQUARE·
ConYaniantto.banb ll1d lhopping.
Relum to yaalalyaor. Thma raoidoncaa, two t•t .. JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD· ~
unita In eac:h. Too much 1o da10riba. Cell Twp., 3110 lann, 3 panda, tobacoo baa, ttot31 $17,000 Ewington araa, 3 BAs, Bath,
Renny Blackburn at BLACKBURN REALTY 44xtDO bam with conc ..te floora. May ~kitchon, gaa heat, cont. air, BK12 utility
for mora details.
conlldar oaplil (578)
t4t4- OWNER WANTS TO RELOCATE AND
HAS PUT THIS NICE HOME ON THE
MARKET· Ranch homo oftars 3 BAs, l.R, OR,
kilchon, 2 baths, attached garage, hoat pump,
conl air, ..U. nico yard.
t452· RIO ORANDE· t 112otory brfclt home
ofltra 4 111'1, 1 112 bathe, LR, FR, OR, tuH
~ b&amp;11men\ atlachod llfltaga. Call lor

t4U. CHERRY DRIVE· juat at the edge of
lown. 2 BRa, t balh, LR, kilchon. Gaa heat. 1•U· OAK HILl, former clothing
city water, good lnveatmont property.
atora ... $27 ,800, comer lot. Call for mo..
Information.
141G- St2,eoo, 17.5 acrea rn11., a-llald
lWp., be._ Potta RD. and JIICkeon Co.
line. V-I lot.

OFFlCE

~It· GREAT LOCATION

IIINEII, dalty bar-drlwo-ln
lata of new equip Cal tor datal '
•
L

14 71- $19 '9XJ KaTper ftll.l.clol Fmd
1 acre lot cn::J 12X65 &amp;:1-ultz M-1,
Ill, LR, ktt..ctm, bath, 001-cri FR

2

ac_-.

mit, Sardis Road, Madison
1455- 10
Twp, Jackson County, 40Jc56 bam 2 ponds

fancod. Gmat hunling \POOOd.

'

'

ATTENTION
DEVELOPERS
AND
INVESTORS...EXTRA NICE PIECE OF
PROPERTY .LOCATED NEAR PORTER ...
·Large lako withlake front titoa, mobile home
on .property at presant time, county water
anti .. tract consists ol77 acms, mA.
'
FOR A 1..t- $11,000, ~0.2 acms, m~ Potta Ad
Centanaov GIMnfillld Twp. vacant land.
·
.,
· '' '
1 t45t· 151 ac..a, mota or Ieos, Graonfiold
· Twp. $47,500, comar of SA 233 and
Kennison Rd.

�)

..
July 10,1994

Land value surveys avaUable at ASCS
Dy LISA MEADOWS
ASCS Executive Director
GALLIPOLIS - The U.S .
Department of Agriculture's Economic Research Service (ERS) is
cu rrently conducting a land va l11e
surv ey in cooperation with the
Agncultural Stabili1.ation and Conservation Se rvice (ASCS).
ASCS is responsible for provid ing county- level estimates of farm land value, and estimates of rental
rates for crop land and pasture.
ERS will evaluate these estimates
and develop useful, cost-effec tive
altern atives for co llecting future
land price data.
The 1994 land value question MYSTERY FA!{M- Thi~ week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
Gallia County . Individuals wishing to participate in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop ofT your
guess to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, or The Daily Sentinel, III Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio. 45769, and

nairc contains the low , average and evaluation of ASCS programs. Surhigh market values, and estimlj)es vey resu lts showing statewide averof ren tal rates for crop land and ages will be available later this
pasture land and woodland, year.
(Lisa Meadows is the county
improvements and unused lan d.
The report also contains the aver- executive director or the Gallia
Agricultural Stabilization and
age rent for crop land and pasture.
ERS uses the information to Conser\'ation Servke.)
eval uate current land values and
cash rem data coll ec tion methods.
Survey forms have been mailed to
Whatever else may be said about
sta te ASCS offic es across th e the Sa lem wi tch hunts. they did not
nation for di stribution to coun ty result 111 the bu rnmg of a single witch
ASCS offices. Based on su rve y - or a nyon e e lse . Nine tee n people
data responses, ERS will determine werr hanged . anrt one crushed t o
state average estimates and furni sh death , after bri ng fo und guilty of
this information to ASCS. This wilchcrafl. bul burn ing supposed
data will be used to improve the witches was str idly a European pracdeve lopment, administration and tice .

you may win a $5 pri&lt;e from the Ohio Valley
l'ublishing Co. Leave your name, address and
telephone number with your card or letter. No
telephone calls will be accepted. All contest
entries should be turned in to the newspaper
office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In case of a tie,
the winner will be chosen by lottery. Next week,
a Meigs Co unty farm will be featured by the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.

11 wi ll also offer systems to pro- exc hange for Westinghouse's two
clucc clcc lrJ CJly for small, remote mill1on shares in Photocomm Inc.,
diesel -power utilities, and wireless a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based supplier
power syste ms that depend on pho- of ph?tovo ltai c systems. New
tovnl~li cs. ce lls capable of convertWorld s ownership of Photocomm
1ng sunli ght direct ly into clcctrici - will mcreasc 10 about45 percent.
tv .
P1 ll sburgh-bascd Westing. Renewable power systems, con- house's ow nersh ip of New World,
siJer'"' alternatives to more tradi- now 5 percen t, will double after the
tiona I sources of power. usc wind, dea l is co mpl eted. Austin said.
water or sun shine directly to pro- Westinghou se's power generation
ducc electricity.
uni t is based in Orl ando, Ra. New
New World will give Westing- World Pow er is based in Lime
house 463,330 of it s shares in Rock, Conn.

USDA beef buy boosts cattle futures
By DAVID DISHNF:AU
AP Business Writer
Near-term cattle futurcs prices
skyrocketed Friday after the governmen t said it will buy an addi tional $50 million worth of beef for
school lunches and other food programs.
Live cattle for Augu st delivery
leaped the permitted daily limit of
1.5 cents on the Chicago Mercan tile Excha nge to 66.37 ce nt s a
pound; Augu s t feeder ca lll e
climbed I cen t to 76.85 ce nts a
pound; July hogs rose 0.30 cent to
45.92 cents a pound; July froze n
pork bellies rose 1.38 ce nts to
37.40 cents a pound.
Cocoa futures surged while coffee futur es fell sharply on New
York's Coffee, Suga r &amp; Cocoa
Exchange.
Unroastcd arabica coffee beans
for September del1very dropped 5
cents to $ 1.8835 a pound .
September coc oa soared $77 to
$1 389 per ton on buying that may
ha~e been prompted by co ffee's

You're Hot, We're Hot, The Cars Are Hot...
So, Let's Have aSale!

1994 GRAND AM 1994 GRAND PRIX
2 DOOR
* Power Windows
*Cassette
* R/C Deck Lid.Release
* Defogger. Electric Rear Window
* Steering Wheel Radio Controls
* Deck Lid Spoiler
* Dual Airbags
*Tilt Wheel

*Automatic
*Air Conditioning
* 15" Wheel Cover &amp; Tires
\ . * Delay Wipers
• Cruise Control
*Defogger
• Cassette

RUTLAND FURNITURE
NOW ACCEPTING
JOB APPLICATIONS
FOR:

Good color selection of
Buick Roadmasters,
LeSabres, Centurys,
Park Avenues, &amp;
Skylarks.
In StQckl
'2" Riviera's Coming!

1

1994 SUNBIRD

COUPE

$11,895°0
*Air Conditioning * Cassette
* Rear Defogger
* Tilt Wheel
* Rear Spoiler
* Delay Wipers
* 15" Aluminum Wheels
* Power Door Locks

Low Mileage Faetory Program Cars
"Balance of Bumper To Bump.er Warranty"
1994 Grand Am 4 Door ............................................................. 511,990
1994 Sunbirds •••••••••••••••••.•..•.•.••.•••..••••••.•..•••.••.••••.•••••••••.•••••••••.•. 59990
1993 Cadillac Deville••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••..••••••••••••••••••••••• 521,900
1993 Pontiac Trans Sport •••,...................................................... 514,900
1993 Grand Prix 2 Door ............................................................513,900

CDL LICENSE AND
HAZARDOUS MATERIAL
QUALIFICAT~ON REQUIRED.

Page4

1993 Century Custom 4 Door .................................................... 512,900

RUTLAND FURNITURE

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC

RUTLAND, OHIO
742·2511
1·800·837·8217

"We Proudly Continue To Offer Ethical Pricing Practices"

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Tonight, mostly clear. Lows
SS to60. Tuesday, partly sunny,
high ln tbe 80s.

•

en tine
1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 11, 1994

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

By JIM ABRAMS
Associated Press WritH
WASHINGTON - Despite setbacks, the Cli nton administration
in sists it isn't wavering in its policy of pressuring the Haitian military to
give up power while seeking safe havens for thousands of refugees.
"If you're for democracy, you're fur democracy. You don't allow
those with guns to throw out an election because they didn't like the
results of it," William Gray. the chief pres idential adviser on Haiti , said
Sunday.
Last week, as the administration redoubled efforts to force Haiti's military leaders to leave. some 10,000 Haitian boat people ned the economic
hardship and political oppression of thetr homeland.
The refugees swamped U.S . efforts to process th ose with leg illmate

Experts:
execution
unlikely
for O.J.

Section,

10

Pageo

35

c.,ta

A Multimedia Inc. N-o paper

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Prose cutors probably won ' t seck the
death penalty against O.J. Simpson
because he' s too popular. legal
experts say.
" There is no way that a jury is
going to return a death judgment
against O.J. Simpson," said
defense lawyer Barry Levin, a former Los Angeles police officer
who has handled nine capital cases.
"What it boils down to is, the
only way a jury will kill your client
is if he is a complete animal, they
hate him," he said.
Not many people hate Simpson.
Recent polls show that most 'PWPie
sec him more as a football hero or
celebrity than a man accused of
murder.
His only reported criminal conviction was a no-contest plea to
misdemeanor spousal abuse in
1989. He was sentenced to two
years' probation and 120 hours of
community service and required to
auend counseling sessions for battercrs .
"O.J. Simpson has the advantage of being known for something
other than allegedly killing his wife
and another person ," said Bryan
Stevenson, director of the Alabama
Capital Representation Resource
Center.
"When you're forced to sec the
defendant as something more than
the criminal act, it becomes much
harder to say, 'We're going to kill
you."'
Prosecutors still haven't decided
whether to seck the death penally
against Simpson, who is accused of
murdering his ex-wife Nicole
Drown Simpson and her friend
Ronald Goldman.
He was ordered Friday to stand
trial for the June 12 killings. Simpson, who has been jailed without
bail since his arrest June 17, has
pleaded innocent. His arraignment
(Continued on Page 3)

p· .

r s •· •·- : • • •u

t m n,.

n a •

•

0

"They were all very vigoro us in saying that the military leaders should
keep their commitment and should lcavc," ,lhc pres ident said.
Secretary of State Warren Christopher. acco mpanymg Clinton, insisted
the tough economic sanctions imposed on llaiti were havi ng an impact on
Its military leaders ami their supporters, and not the Haition poor.
Christopher sidestepped again whether the United States would invade
Haiti to restore democratically elected Pres ident Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
bu il!Jld reporters, "they ough t to leave this afternoon ."
A Newsweek poll released Sunday found that more than two- thirds of
750 people surveyed opposed p U.S. invasion as a way to end military
rule 1n the country. More than half also opposed U.S. participation in a
multinational invasion.

school standards

WHERE IS IT? - Finding one particular gun out or about 1,500 guns is one problem officials
are likely to encounter during the process or returning firearms conriScated from the Robert Fire
residence last year, Here, prosecutor's investigator Jeff Miller looks ror a lirearm this morning.
See story on Page 3.

COLUMBUS (AP) - A federal
program that se ts up education
standards for students and teachers
could provide more money to Ohio.
but the tradeoff might be state control, an education leader said.
President Clinton sig ned the
Goals 2000, Educate America Act
on March 31 to set up voluntary
stand ard s and provide grants to
states that participate.
"We're well on our way to
Goals 2000 already," said Judi
Hahn, a state Board of Education
member from Cin cinnati . " My
biggest concern IS JUSt the matter of
more fqlcral government intrusion
into our state rights and loca l
rights."
The act establishes a panel to
rcv1ew guidelines on how to meet
eight goals that include ensuring by
2000 that all children start school
ready to learn and that American
students can compete in a global
economy.
Each participating state would
have to develop a plan for reaching
those goals monitoring whether
standards arc met.
Ohio, which has until June to
apply, could get $3.7 million in
1995 and about$ 12 million in eac h

of th e following four years. The
money would be used to develop
new curricula and set up outcomebased performance standards.
John Goff, an assistan t superi ntendent of public in struc tion, predicted it co uld wst as mu ch to
admini ster the program as the federal government is handing out.
He sa id reform s already taking
place in Ohio arc based on work
rrom national ed ucation organization s and the federa l educat ion
department. Gelling involved in
Goals 2000 is perhaps a logical
extension, 1f the state keeps th e
authority to decide what it wants to
accept, he said.
Despite concerns, Go ff said it
could be worthwh1lc for Ohio to
toin wh at will become a reform
·network of states and the federal
government.
" A lot of thi s is voluntary ...
we're trying to figure out exac tl y
where arc the catc h points," he
said.
Mari e Pfeiffer, a state board
member from Columbus, said the
board will scrutinize Goals 2000
before it recommends whether the
state should participate.

N. Korea postpones meeting with neighbor

Late Communist
Chief'S he/r keens
•
I"
grtp On COntfO/ Of
mou•'..n,·ng natl"on
•

Dy PAUL SHIN
Associated Press Writer
SEOUL, South Korea - North
Korea, making its ftrst foreign-policy moves since the death of longlime leader Kim II Sung, today
postponed indefinitely what was to
have been an unprecedented meeting of the North and South's presidents.
The North has also told the
United States it is putting off further high-level contacts until after
Kim's state funeral Sunday. Talks

Group: competitive
edge threatened by
school weaknesses
WASHINGTON (AP)- The
nation's economic competitiveness
is improving but remains under
threat, particularly by persistent
weakness in elementary and secondary education, according to a
survey of business, labor and academic leaders.
The Council on Competitiveness said Monday that while there
has been "some important progress
during the past year," survey participants believe by a two-to-one
margin that the most difficult challenF.es lie ahead.
'The competitiveness challenge
is here to stay,' • said Paul Allaire,
chief execuuve officer of Xerox
Corp. and the council chairman.
"We arc making progress, but are
in for a lengthy struggle."
The council's f994 Competitiveness Index notes SII'Ong growth
in living slandards, manufactured
goods exports, manufacturing productivity and investment in plant
and equipment in 1993.
Still, the council warned that

claims to political asyl um . Meanwhile, Panama retrac ted an· ear li er
promi se to take in some refugees, sending the administration scrambling
for other nations who would provide safe haven or processing sites for
Haitian refugees.
On Sunday, however, Panamanian President-elec t Ernesto Perc1. Balladares indicated he would reverse his successor's decision on accepting
refugees when he assumes office Sept. l. He said the current president.
Guillermo Endara, should not have refused to help the United St.1tcs and
called the Haitian political situation "a hemiSpheric problem ."
Presiden t Clinton , in Naples, Italy, foJ;, thc ann ual economic summit uf
Western democracies. said other Western leaders had fully endorsed U.S.
efforts to restore democracy to the Caribbean nation.

---Where is it?--_, State leaders mull

short-term cyclical improvement
must not be confused with the resolution of Ameri ca's long -term
problems. "We must not become
complacent," it said.
"' Although American companies have cut a lot of fat, many
have not yet built the innovative
capacity that will be necessary to
compete in the fuwre," contended
Professor Michael Porter of Harvard Business School, the survey
project adviser.
Allaire added that, "with Asian
economics gathering strength, with .
competitive pressure spreading·
from autos and electronics to software and telecommunications, with
U.S. savings rates at stubbornly
low levels and with intractable
problems in our elemenJary and
secondary schools, it is easy to sec
why many people believe that the
biggest challenjleS arc still ahead.''
The survey tdentified improving
education from kindergarten
through 12th grade as the nation's
top priority.

.t

• ·•

-~--

White House won't bend on Haitian policy

Dealership wins excellence award
cy, professional taclilliCS and com munitv relations , a press release
from tltc corporation said.
This is the first time that Norris
Northup Dodge, Inc. has received
the "Award for Excellence," which
is presented to approximately 10
percent of Chrysler Corporation
dealerships each year.

\

Super Lotto:
2-3-6-17-28-38
Kicker:
6-1:1-9-9-o
Pick 3; 1
o-o-3 ;
Pick ·4:
7-8-4-1

Vol. 45, NO . 47

clcc lmc.
Wh eat and soybean futur es
Sep tem ber deliveries of frozen prices were higher on the Chicago
concentra ted o"mge juice leaped Board of Trade .
10 ccnLI on the New York Cotton
Julv wheat rose 7 1/4 cents to
Exchange to 97.20 cents a pound.
$3. 14 ;. bushel; July com rose I 1/2
Crude oil futures gained on the cents to $2.41 1/2 a bu shel; July
New York Mercantile Exc hange.
oats rose I 3/4 cents to $ 1.16 3/4 a
L1gh t swee t crud e for August bushel; July soybeans dimbcd 7
delivery rose 36 cents to $ 19.48 a centsto $6.3 ll/4abushcl.
barrel ; Aug usth catingoilrosc0.61
On New York's Commodity
ce nt to 48.79 ce nt s a gallon; Exc hange , August gol d fell 60
August unlcaclc&lt;l gasoline rose 0.65 cents to $385. 10 a troy ounce; July
ce nt 10 52.78 ce nt s a gallon; silver rose 4.4 cents to $5.253 a
August naluml ga' fell 4.9 cents to troy ounce.
$2.023 per l ,000 cubic feel.

Norri s Northup Dodge, Inc: in
Gallipolis has been names a recipient of Chrysler Corporation's top
dealership award.
The "Award for Excellence" is
presented to Chrysler Corporation
dealerships demonstrating outstanding achievement in the areas
of customer satisfaction, sales performance . admini strative efficicn-

hands Reds
7-6 defeat

Copyright 1994

Companies to market renewable energy
PITTSBURGH (AP)- We stinghouse Electric Corp. and New
World Powe r Corp. have
announced an agreement to jointly
build, market and operate renew able energy systems.
The transaction IS worth approx imately $5 million. AI Austin . a
New World spokesman , said
Thursday.
The all ia nc e's product s wi ll
include wind farm s and hydroelectric facilities to produce clcc tncity
for large utilities. ...

--r;)h i~ i~&gt;H:· ,:_; T

-----~~f-;;
.,.d. -~lliiE~
Pittsburgh ~

...

...__..,

on the long-running dispute over
the North's nuclear program had
resumed Friday, the day of Kim 's
unexpected death at82.
Observers said the policy dccisions were the latest of growing
signs that Kim's son and designated successor, Kim Jong II, has sueccssfully taken the reins of power.
Many inside and outside Saudi'
Korea had feared the elder Kim's
death would trigger a chaotic
power struggle. The South's military remained watchful today, but
Southern officials said they were
acting on the assumption that the
younger Kim, at least for now, was
in control.
In the North, frenzied mourning
marked the passing of the elder
Kim, who during his four decades
of rule was the center of a worsh1pful personality cult. ln a central
Pyongyang plaza facing a towering

statue of Kim, tens of thousands of
people knelt, weeping , wailing and
touching their heads to the ground.
The secretive North provided
TV footage of such scenes to
Japanese television, whi ch was
seen as a sign Northern officials
believed the threat of instability
had been staved off.
The North also appeared to be
trying to restore some normalcy to
day-to-day life, although grieving
for the elder Kim will continue all
week.
Official radio has again begun
broadcasting regular news reports,
instead of the all-mourning fonnat
following Kim's death.
In what could be another sign of
growing confidence on the North's
part, South Korean reports said former President Carter, who met with
Kim three weeks before his death.
had been invited to a !lend the

funeral.
In the first hours after Kim's
death was announced , the North
had said no foreigner s would be
allowed in for the funcral, raising
speculation authoritie s fea red
unrest.
In Atlanta, Caner's spokeswoman, Carrie Harmon refused Sunday
night to comment on whether
Carter had been invited.
While Kim long II is apparendy
in the scat of power, he has not yet
formally assumed leadership. But
some North Korea watchers believe
that could happen soon.
South Korea, meanwhile , was
struggling to find a path through
the peninsula's changed political
landscape. At a Cabinet meeting
today, official s
Jared they
would continue to
·
tion with the North.
"We hope that Ul '\') 1"--HI

North Korea will keep the momentum for dialogue going for peace
and security on the Korean peninsula, and for a resolution to the
nuclear problem ," Foreign Minister Han Sung-joo told reporters.
U.S . officials , meanwhile,
voiced optimism about prospects
for the resumption of high-level
talks with the North in Geneva,
although the North did not suggest
any date for resumption.
A senior U.S. official traveling
in Europe with President Clinton
said the administration look it as a
"virtual certainty" that the talks
would continue.
North Korea says its nuclear
program is peaceful but has refused
to allow full inspections. The United States suspened ils push for
sanctions against the north pending
the outcome of the Geneva talks.

Report finds
half-cent hike
in gas prices

LIBRARY AUTOMATING - Patrons of the
Meigs County pub6c Ubraries are being reminded that the library is automating, and as a part
or that, plastic personalized library cards are
being issued. There is no charge for the original
card, although ir It Is lost or mutilated then there

will be 11 $3 repltlcement charge. Once the
automation process is comP.leted, then only
those with the plastic cards WJU be 11ble to check
out books, videos or other materials. Here Janice Curry, Pomeroy, picks up her new card from
Darlene See, library clerk.
·

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Gas
prices at the 'pump rose a half-cent
during the last two weeks , said an
analyst. He attributed the rise to a
strong summertime demand for
gasoline and a hike in crude prices.
The average price of gas for the
two weeks ending Friday was
118 .94 cents per gallon, up .54
cents from the previous period
Trilby Lundberg, author of th~
Lundberg Survey, said Sunday.
But the rate of increase slowed
over the period, indicatinl$ that the
rise may be ending, she sa1d.
"What happens next, or course,
depends on what crude oil ~rices
d~ and s!rength of demand, ' she
sa1d.
The b1weckly survey is based on
a review of prices at 10,000 gasoline stations nationwide.
. At self-serve pumps, the average
pnce or regular, unleaded gasoline
was 112.16 cents per gallon. Midgrade unleaded was 122.63 cents
premium 131.09 and leaded
115.57.
•

•

''

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