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Pag&amp;-12-The Dally Sentinel •

Beefalo burgers
. .selling like hotcakes

Graf wins· Wimbledon crown - C-1

.

LINCOLN, Ark. (AP) - Larry
Hacker sel.lsored meat, but doctors
an&amp;·others who shun high-cholesterol diets are among his best customers.
Haclcer raises and sells beefalo,
a cross betweeri beef cattle and bufJalo, which yields low-fat meat.that
·is lower i}l cholesterol thail skinned
white chicken and oooks faster than
beef.
'
.
Sales are so hot that Hacker,
, president of the ~ Beefalo
Associlllion and orie of three beefalo ranchers in Arkansas, doesn' t
need to advertise. He's alreadf selling all of the available ammals
from his 75-head herd.
A beefalo iS three,eigl)ths biSon
and five-eighths bovine. The U.S.
Deparunent of Agriculture requires
that meat sold as beefalo must be
between 17 percent and 37.5 percent buffalo.
On the outside, the animals are
iqdistinguishable from standard
beef cattle.
"Before I saw one for fllllt time,
I was expecting a big, old, UJtiY,
shaggy creature with lots of h81t, a
mane and a hump," said Hacker.
"I was very surprised that they
look like a cow, act like a cow and
have the disposition of a cow. But
the real benefit is that they have the
carcass quality of a bison - a very
low amount of fat and very low
cholesterol."
Buffalo and cattle cross-breeding has been around for more than
150 years, and the popularity of the
animals has (Jad ups and downs.
But an increased emphasis on
healthy diets has made beefalo
more popular in recent years,
breeders say.
·
An uncooked, 3 1/2-ounce serving of beefalo contains 47 milligrams of choles~erol, 4.2 grams of
fat and has 119 calories.
That compares with 7P milligrams of cholesterol, 19.6lrams
of fat and 352 calories for the same
size serving of regular beef,
according to the U.S. Department
of Agriculture and Warner Laboratories of Nashville, Tenn., which
tested beefalo meat. The numbers
':roc a serving of lean beef are much
·· closer to those for beefalo, howev. er.
A 3 1/2-ounce serving of
skinned, white chicken, in comparison, has ab.out 60 milligrams of
cholesterol, 1.9 grams of fat and
117 calories.
One satisfied customer is Scott
Taylor, a Fayetteville, Ark., dentist

who said he prefers beefalo to tc!gular beef. He bought a side of
beefalo from Hacker last· year
beeause he thought it would be better for his health.
·
"The roa$ts are high qilalitj
roasts. It'.s ,ood, dense slll(f,'' he
said. A Similar cut of beef would
have fat marble throu,hout the
meat, Taylor said. 'Beefalo
doesn't have marbled fat, but it's
still good and tender."
Attd ground beefalo makes a
great burger, he advises.
"The nice thing about the hamburger is you don't have to fool
with excess fat. Once you cook it,
there's nothing to drain off" Taylor said.
'
Mona Sutnick, a spokeswoman
for the American Dietetic Association and a registered dietician, said
beefalo is a good alternative meat
for those who work it into their diet
in a healthy way:
"If people use it wisely inslead
of meat that is higher in fat, yes,
they are accomplishing something,'' she said, cautioning that
there are few benefits for those
who smother their beefalo in cream
sauce.
A pound of cut, wrapped and
frozen beefalo costs about 75 cents
less than store-bought beef, according to Hacker.
But don'tlook for the budding
beefalo business to put the country's mammoth beef industry under
anytime soon. Beefalo isn't widely

News briefs
Bread Fellows
The word "companion" comes

from the Latin "com," meaning
with or together, and "panis," or
bread. The underlying meaning of
companion is someone with whom
one breaks br.ead or shares a meal.
Interestingly, this is also the root of
"company," which makes perfect
sense when the word means guests,
· but perhaps less so when it is used
as a synonym for corporation.
Monkey Business
Many New World monkeys,
such as the spider monkeys of Central and South Americas, use their
tails to grasp, climb and swing
about. However, no Old World
monkeys, even the ones with long
tails, use them in this way.

available, Jltostly because there
aren't enough people raisin' iL ,
· "A grocery store is notmlerested in·a product they can get just
pan-time," Hacker said.
The ranks of Beefalo ranchers,
while increasing, are still small.
Hacker's American Beefalo Assnciation has about 200 members,
niost in Tennessee and· Kentuclcy,
while the American Beefalo World
~egistty has more thlln 300' members throughoutthe coimtry.
~acker1 56, started his ~falo
busmess m Kent.ucky, where he
served as a fmancial officer. at Fon
Knox;
He started his herd by buying a
couple of beefalo heifers from his'
son's father-in -law, a beefalo
rancher. He has 75 head now and
wants ~o build the herd to I 00 to
120 arumals.
Haclcer and other beefalo ranchers. say their product -could gain
mamstream marke' acceptan~o as
more health-consc1ous A111encans
learn about!L
"~f anybo,dy e':'er buy~. a half
one tune, that s all1t lalces, Hacker said. "They'll almost never go
bacJc to anything else."

Happy

Momements to re~ember
Fred W. Crow- Page
A-6
.
'

Fourth of

-- Jftly

l
Vol. 28, No. 20
Copyrighted 1883

'

team will perform at 8:30 p.ni. prior to tbe
nreworks display at 9:30 p.m, by tile Middleport
Fll'e Department.
· ·

'

2171
Box 427
Pomer.oy, Ohio 45769
F.q·~E.

ThomasA. Durnell, M.D.
ASSOCIATES
opening ceremonies Friday. Scott was selected
out or .11 contestants. (Times-Sentinel photo by
James Long)

QUEEN CROWNEI) CENTER STAGE Luciana Scott was crowned tbe 1993 River
Recreation Festival Queen and named Miss
Congeniality center sta~e at tbe festival's

2625 Dudley Avenue • Parkersburg, WV 26101

Luciana
Scott is named
.River Recreati9n. qu·ee_n
'

.

.

Cereniony.kicks off ~-day stand in City Pa:rk

SIGN-.UP TO WIN A
GAS GRILL. or
OTHER 'PRIZES

Offer limited 1o smokers 21 ar older.

$146

mg ·ra ( l 2 mg niCDllne aw per c1gm1te by FTC method.·

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WARNING: Smoking By
Pregnant Women May
Resull in Fet~l.lnjury, ·
'
' • 'i!',
Premalure Birth, And Low
•
Birth Weigh!.
f

Per Pack
Plu1

Date:_July
Time: 2·8 P.M.

-·~' '"'W' !!

PEPSI
RODUCTS

49

. .

----~--.;.._~
.

. par(!,de ~

$149 .

'

',

',

.. ' . . ~ .

excellence and community
involvement.
. During the ceremony, the
contestants each answered preselected questions on various topics
posed to them by Lo&amp;!lll.
The other contestan~ were Kale
Caldwell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jay Caldwell; Cathy Davis,
daughter of Me. and Mrs. Merrill
Davis; Paula Masters, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Masters:
Rebecca McCormick, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. James Husk; Amy
Mills, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Mills HI; Tara Pennington,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray.
Pennington: Kristin Shato,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie
Shato; ani! Jodie Stanley, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Stanley.
Caldwell, Davis, Masters and
Shato are all GAHS graduates,
while ' McCormick, · Mills,
Pennington and Stanley are
graduates of RVHS . .
Judging the contest were Dennis
Carter, Point Pleasant; Lori
Williamson, Oak Hill; and Charles
,Lund, Huntington, W.Va.

By JAMES LONG ~
Times-Sentinel Staff
"GALLIPOLIS - She really has
the flying bug.
That's how Lt. Col. Pat Helms
explained his daughter Lt. Col.
Susan Helms' desire to be an
astronaut. .
.
Susan Helms, who flew in
January's Space 'Shuttle Mission
STS-54, delivered Saturday's River
Recreation Festival patriotic speech
to a crowd at the Gallipolis City
Park af1er being introduCed by her
father.
She combined her message of the
National Aeronautics and Space '
Administration's benefits with
anecdotes about whal'it felt like to
he in space.'
.
"When you think about what we
do as Americans," she said, "we
explore."
Americans have probed the
oceans and land of the earth and ·
now it is time for space, Helms
said, adding that all of NASA's
programs are paid for by t ·percent.
of the federal budget.
"It's a·small price to pay for an
investment in our future, she said.
The next step for NASA, which
should occur by 1997, is to build a
space station so that humans can
stay outside the earth's atmosphere
for longer periods of time, Helms
said.
"
"We can't just go to Mars from
here," she said. "We can't colonize
the moon from here."
However, she admits that space
night for lrumans may talce some
getting used to. It took a couple of
days for Helms, even though she
has ' flown 30 different kinds of
planes.
"Its like a .car when you push and
push and push on the accelerator,
only there's a lot more shakin',
rattlin' and rollin'," she said,
describing the shuttle liftoff: "Then
we stopped and· we were we1ghtless
as quick as that. Bam."
; The entire journey from the
launch pad to outer space takes
only eight minutes. After adjusting
to that jolt, Helms ·said, the next
challenge for a first-time flyer. is
learning how to deal with
weightlessness.
·
She likened ·her experience with
zero gravity to a perpelual,downhill roller coaster nde. It s that
"feeling of everything coming up,"
Helms said.

l'fASA FLYER ' LL Col. S.-n Helmf!&gt; pictured bere, journt,.cl
to Southeastern Ohio Saturday lo dehver the River Recreation
Festival's patriotic speecb. She told lbe crowd about what it relt
like to be weightless and lauded the SJ:lace program as an American
institution (T -S pboto by James Long).
"My head sweiled up like a zero gravity, she said she was
melon because all the fluid moved confounded by the won\ler of
seeing the Eanh from space. Helms
up there."
said it added to her perspective on
Eating, too, is no small feat in world peace and environmental
space; the food even tastes issues.
different according to Helms.
One of the first things she
Sweet, she said, is sour, and sour
tastes become sweet once you noticed when looking at the earth
from beyond its atmosphere was ·
leave the Earth.
that the countries have no borders.
I;elms
said the sight made her
"I took a lot of chocolate into
wonder
how much better off the
space and that was a bad idea,"
world would be if everyone could
Helms.said.
She reminded the audience that live without being conscious of
humans float the entire time they those dividing lines. ·
are in space. This state of constant
hovering turned sleeping into a -She was also touched by sights of
new challenge for Helms and she destruction, such as forest f~res in
learned. after the first couple of the Amazon rain forests and smog
nights that the NASA issued over Tokyo, Japan:
"We could see the effect of man
sleeping bag had lo go.
"All night long it would .float on the earth from space, which is
against you and float away, float something you really shouldn't be
against you arid float away," she able to see," she said.
said. Helms finally just slept in her
Helms said she expects to takepan in another shuttle mission in
clothes.
,
Oni;e she got used to flying in 1994.

'

.

.

Gallipolis welcomed NAS'A :
space shuttle astronaut SusAn · . ·
J, Helms and ber fatber, ·
. retired Air Force pilot Pat
: Helms to tbe 1993 River
· Recreaiion Festival Saturday
: with a 97-unit parade tbrougb
· the city slreeJS. At rigbt,
· veterans lead tbe way with the
: colors,. while at rar right,
Helms waves to l.b.e crowd.
The tbree·day feltfval ends
tonight witb - tbe annual
fireworks display conducted
. by the Gallipolis Volunteer
Fire Department. (TimesSentinel pbotos by Kevin
. Pinson) .

Marlboro
Ralt~

·Curtis

12 PACK

.....,.'*

13
112 Pag...,
A M~lmedlalnc.

Festival.'

Of

$ 79

By LISA PETERSON
DARE, Sfudents Against Drunk
nmes-Selldnel Statr
Driving, Beta Club, National
GALLIPOLIS _Luciana' Scott Honor Society, Marshall Academic
was named the 1993 River Fair, Ohio.Scholastic Achievement
·Recreation Festival Queen and Testing, Big Sister Program, Ohio
·
S ·
River
Sweep,
Gallipolis
M.i~ Congeniality Friday by kip Development Center carnivals,
Logan, master of ceremomes, as Litter Control County Fair
the 28th annual Gallipolis River volunteer, church services and
Recreation festival kicke&lt;( off its worship, Scott plans to attend
three-day stand in the City Park.
Marshall University to major in
Dena Greene, 1992's River pharmacy.
Sally Saunders, the daughter of
Recreation queen, crowned Scoll
after the announcement. Scott was Mr. and Mrs. Gary Saunders, was
awarded a $500 scholarship from
Sh
the Gallipolis Junior Women's announced~~ runner-up . .. e was
awarded a $300 scholarship from
Club and was presented with a the University of Rio Grande.
corsage from Little Miss Poppy
Wendy Atkins, the daughter of
Jessica Colley, 4-S&gt;ear-old daughter Mr. and Louis Hunt, was named
of J.D. and Susan Colley.
5econd runner•up. She received a
Scoll received a scholaiship from $200 scholarship froni Rio Grande.
· the Junior Women's·Ciub from the The Rio GtamJe presentations were
organization's president, Michelle . made.- by Paul 'Q,.J:iarrisop, the
Jenkins.
'
. . ilniversity's· vice· president for
The daughter of Mr . .and Mrs.: lnstilutionill :A,dyanc;emeriL
.
Steven Scott, she is a graduate of · The -11' queen cpnteStants. were
River Valley High School. As 11 judged 'we p~vioiis WC!l~ ~t atea
student she was active in band, held 'bY:the Junior ,Women's Club
basketball, volleyball, softball, Key . at st. Peter' s Jipiscopal .Ch'urch.
Club, Arts Club. French ·Clqb; , The girlS were jli&lt;Jged on ac'ademic
1

ECKRICH
FRANKS

~on

•

·shuttle astronaut recounts her experiences
in patriotic program address at GallippJis

is pleased to announce the
opening of his practice July 1
in association with

We Appreciate Your Business The Past Six Years! - SAVE · JULY 2 • JULY ·5

ts-

OB!GYN!INFERTILITY

~WOMENCARE

Pardy oloudy. QtcJ&gt; In !101.

Wtather............................ A-2

Spirit of exploration ··

.

·Dues Are Due
·Now-.

Sports.............................Cl-8

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, July 4, 1993

~~~~~----~~~
NOW ACCEPTING NEW PATIENTS

POMEROY AERIE
'217-1 MEMBERS.

Deaths.............................. A-7
E;d:ltonl ..........................- A-6

.Bidwell•Porter school was scene of
July Fourth celebrations- Sands· B-6

•

ATTE NTI·O·N!

Along the rlver ..............81-8

Bulness/Farm."'"''"'""Dl-8

Classllled ........................()2. 7

1993

TO PERFORM- The Sbacly River Sbumers will
perform during Fourtb of July activities at Dave
Diles Park in ~iddleport Sundy. The clogging

Inside

~

1

BMW chief o·u.tlines provis'ions of 'groun4-breaking' pact

E· POl

PRESS
Five Points

Intersection of Flatwoods 'Rd.&amp;· State Rouie.7
..

......

'""

By MAJlTHA BRYSON HODEL

Associated Press Writer .
HUNTINGTON W.Va. - A
ne w . contract ' with four
Appalachian coal producers
· promises new jobs for .the United
~ine Workers and increased
production for coal operatots
UMW President Richard 'Trumb'
;

•J ,.

said Friday.

The agreement, which covers
7 500 worki!lg UMW members in
Alabama, Pennsylvania, West
Virginia and Vir-ginia, was
announced W~dresda~. B~t
:rrumkl! had_declined to discu~s It
m detail unul he c~fened Fnday
with local and di, trict union
'

officiais.'
. o~
"This agreement will allow us to
change the way we do business,"
Trumkasaid.
.
''The pact is a grciund-breaking
achievement in the history of labormanagement re!atio!'s in the coal
industry" be SBld.
"We' ,aH · win with this

agreementP.,said-H.-.Oouglas Dahl,- Alliance signed the a'greemeni:
chief negotiator for the four Westmoreland Coal Co. of
operatorS. "Productivity is the 'key Philadelphia, the Drummond Co. of
to competing in . this global 'Birmingham, Ala., Jim Walter
~nomy an~ employ~s who have ' Resources Inc. of B~~okwood,
Job s~cunty a~~ the I most '\Ja., and.U.S. Steel Mimng Co. of
prod'uclive workers.
:
.
Pittsburgh.
All members of the IndePI)IIdent
Trumka said the agreement
Bituminous Coal Ba~gajning provides:
·
·
··
'·,)

&gt;

I

; • That all job openings aj
e)!isting, new or newly acquired
mines will be filled fJ.CSt by laid-off
or working UMW members.
· • Wi.th the consent of b&lt;Jt!l' union
and m~nagem~.nt, each !"me can
estabhsh}~ .al.tern~uye wo_rk
sohe&lt;!ule mdlVlduahzed to 11s
needs. includin~ the possibility of
24 hour producbon every day.

.,,,

�.

'

r.

A2 SUnday nm• Santtnel

Plla•

OHIO Weather

WEST VIRGINIA Weather

Sunday, July 4

Sunday, July 4
AccU-Wea~

conditions and high temperatures

July 4, 1993,

.(

Pomeroy-Middleport 91111polls, 0H Point Ple1unt, WV

J

f

•

.

•

Hot, humid weather ~
will continue in Ohio ~.
.

IMansfield Igo• I•

July4,1993

• IColumbus!91' I

Tax questionn'aires due

.

By The Associated Press . · Appalachians. Hot, humid air was:
Partly slinny skies with a chance forecast in the central and sou!bern:
of·thunder$tonns can be expected .Plains, with isolated thunderstorms. •
around Ohio today. It will be warm · A warming trend is expected in !
and muggy with bi,ghs in the mid the West , while humid air was •
80s northeast to around 90 far forecast to bring scattered storms to :
partS of the.Soulhwest.
;
south.
On
Friday.
severe
thunderstorms
·
The heat and humidity will
continue through the rest of the wilh high winds erupted over
holiday
weekend.
High of the Midwest, uprooting trees, r
temperatures aiea expected to r~h downing power lines and dropping ;
baseball-sized hail in some areas. .
the 90s statewide on Mooday.
A .tornado touched down ·
An isolated thunderstorm is
northwest
of Emporia, Kan., and :
possible during the entire. weekend.
of Elgin, !II. A :
'
n
orthwest
Sunrise Sunday will be at 6:08
thunderstorm in Ohio dumped 1 ·
a.m.
inch
of rain in 10 minutes in '
Record high temperature 101 in
And 3 inches of rain :
Greenville.
1911; record low SO in 1%8.
fell
in
one
hour
iii Lawrence, Kan. ;
Around the nation
In
Olathe,
Kan
., 92 mph winds :
Much of the East 'lllld Midwest
damaged
hangars
at the Johnson •
was foggy and cloudy Saturday
County
Industrial
Airport.
·
:
with some rain, while the West was
Heavy
rains
caused
flooding
in
:
fair and cooler. A heat advisory
was posted across eastern North partS of Fort Recovery in western '
Carolina as hot weather persited Ohio for the second straight day, :
forcing the evacuation of alx!ut 25,~
over the Soulheast.
•
Thunderstorms were expected residents.
Saturday in'Parts of the Upper. Storms also rumbled across
Midwe.st and the northern Plams, of Atlantic Coastal slates, the :
•
mostly west of the rain-swollen southern Rockies and Plains.
The
nation's
higH
temperature
:
Mississippi River, which has
was 111 degrees at Bullhead ~
caused widespread flooding in Friday
.
Ari
•r
Ity,
Z,
•
C
Iowa, Missouri, Illinois and
Highs Saturday were forecast in :
Wisccin5in.
the
90s for much of the country •
The clouds and thick fog in the
with
some 80s in parts of the :
East were expected to yield to
and Midwest, and some :
Northeast
periods of sunshine, but some.
lOOs
in
the
Southwest
showers were likely from · the
eastern Great Lakes to the northern

MIDDLEPORT. Middleport fesldmts need to tum in their in•
come tax (jllestionnaires, according to Village Tax AdministratOr Carol
' H. C"ltrell.
.- 1
•
Cantrell said the village is currently getting everyone in Middlepqrt
registered at the tax office· ~Y sending out questionnaires. The rebifn ·
rate for the questioMaireS has been low so far. . 1
· '_'If these questionnaires are not completed and returned to my office,
I ~ill have II? assume that thesepeopl~ are liable for the payment of the
Middleport mcome tax," Cantrell said.
.
"If they are responsible topay the u x and are not doing so, we will
use all legal means to collect !be tax l11d penalty and interest due," '
Cantrell added.
·

.
Hobson project may be delayed

HOBSON- Due to bad wealher, the Hobson landsUde project may
not be completed by its expected Octo~ completion date.:
According to a letter to Meigs County Economic Development
Director Paula Thacker from Rick Piau of the State and Local Government Commission of Ohio, the total financial commitment to the
project is alma~ $2 million. bolh state and federat. . .
Thacker said several people have responded negatively tOward the
project. The federal money used in the project would have gone to other
!ultes if Ohio ~d not apply fori~ Thacker said.
.
Thacker said !be projeet involves all levels of government working
together.
.
.
~
·I

pans :

Two
killed,
three
injured
.In storm-related accident
.

Inc

Weather

~

'

Extended rorecast:
South-Central Ohio
Monday
through Wednesday:
Sunday, partly cloudy. High 90
Continued warm and humid with
to 95. Chance of rain 20 percent.
Outlook for MilMay, continued · a chance of thunderstorms each
warm and humid-with a chance of day. Lows near 70. Highs in the
thunderstorms. Lows 70 to 75. upper 80s 10 mid 90s.
Highs in the 11lid-90s.

give her name.
By The Associated Press
The person at Miami Valley
Two people died and three others
were injured in western Ohio Hospital was in critical condition
Friday night when their car went this morning, Diegel said. :
Elsewhere, the National Weather
intO a Celina lake. Meanwh'ile,
heavy rains caused flooding in Service issued tornado warnings
parts of nearby Fort Recovery for ·for Knox, Franklin and Delaware
the second straight day, forcing lhe counties .after funnel clouds were
reponed · in the counties Friday
evacuation about 25 residents.
evening,
but th~re were no
The woman driving the car
confirmed
tornados,
officials said.
mistook the Hot Water Hole Bay,
Fort
Recovery
Fire
Chief Jerry
part of Grand Lake SL Marys, for a
Pearson
said
a
three-block
area of
WASHINGTON (AP) - The accord last year, and it already .haS'
parking lot and drove into it, Celina
Missouri, officials of the police Dispatcher Monte Diegel Mercer County town that was Clinton {ldministration has asked been approved by the Canadian
By AARON WATSON
community of 400 were keeping a said today.
closed becauSe of flooding. He said the U.S. Co uri of Appeals to parliament. The agreement would
Associated Press Writer
watchful eye on sodden levees.
·
The five, whose identities were residents of several houses and reverse a federal judge's order gradually reduce existing trade
In tbe 28 years since their last big
"The levees are holding," said not being released until their apartments were forced out of their blocking the proposed U.S. free barriers among the three counc,ies.
flood, Davenport, Iowa. residents Clark County Treasurer Julie relatives were told, were not -from homes.
- !fade agreement with Mexico and over the next 15 years, eliminating
had three chances to build flood Buschling. "When they do get a 1he Celina area. Diegel said.
most of them by 2009.
:
Those evacuated went to stay Canada.
.
walls for protection against the bubble, they repair it with
Mexican
officials
said
Friday
that
and
no
emergency
It
asked
the
appellate
~urt
to
act
with
relatives,
The accident was reported at
mighty Mississippi River.
san&lt;!bags, straw, plastic, fencing, about 8:41 p.m., after the heavy shelters had been set up, Pearson before the end of August. saying U.S. , Canadian and Mexican'
But three 'times !hey rejected city anything they can get a hold of."
any delay beyond that "would officials would meet in Mexico·
rains had passed through, and was said.
proposals, choosing instead to keep · In Andalusia, Ill., residents •pot believed to be-caused by road
The majority of tbe floodin~ was irretrievably undermine" President City next week to conclude
their view and chance the elements. equipped with walkie-talkies and conditions, Diegel said.
-i n the central part of. Fort Clinton's promise to put the North agr~ements on jobs and the·.
Their view I)OW includes water, flashlights kept a r(&gt;und.the-clock
The five occupants were taken to Recovery: The fire station and American Free Trade Agreement environment, the last obstacles to
water and more water,,
vigil along the three-mile. earthen Coldwater Community Hospillll, ·some commercial buildings had into force by Jan. 1 and cause the pact.
"I think the vast majority of levee !hat was built 20 years ago as where two were pronounced dead abouttwo feet of water, he said.
The Mexican and Canadian
"irreparable harm to the United
residents .in Davenport want it the a temporary measure.
governments have described'
The rains had subsided ao,a Ught States."
on arrival and one was sent to a
way it is, living in concert with the
''Rain is our big enemy right Dayton hospital, Diegel said. Two sprinkle late Friday, and the water • On Wednesday, U.S. District Richey's order as an internal matter:
river rather than fighting it," said now," Richard Kaiser said Friday . others were being lleld for had started to recede, Pearson said. Judge Charles Richey ruled !hat the involving the United States and :
City Alderman Larry d' Au tremont. night as he inspected the red.flags observation at Coldwater, said a
Fort Recovery is about SO miles Bush and Clinton administrations said it would not halt their plans to ·
National Guard troops and placed at possible leaks.
·'
northwest
ofDayocin.
violated the 1970 National proceed.on the final talks.
nursing supervisor who declined to
volunteers spent S~f.!lher day Friday
Floodwaters have swamped
Environmental Policy Act in
stacking thousanHs of sandbags thousands of acres of nearby
,C
•
proceeding with the trade accord
--'·
along the rain-swoUen Mississippi, farmland.
I
wi!hout formally addressing its
which threatened homes · and
Along the Mis~oU'ri River, a
..
·
'
env1t0nmental consequences.
businesses in Wisconsin, Illinois, tiibutary of the Mississippi, nearly
He ordered the · Clinton
Iowa and Missouri. •
· ·
400 inmates were moved Friday
a~inistration !O prepare a detailed
Thunderstorms dumped as much from a women's prison near Cedar
enYitOnmentalunpact statement as 3 inches of rain on parts of City, Mo., because of the flooding.
aprocess !hat could take anywhere
GARY, Ind. (AP)- The law garnbUng "in 1989.
Wiscon'sin and Minnesota. Flood
In Wisconsin alone, flooding
from nine montbs to more !han two
Barnes said Gary will set the · years, according to several experts.
waters have begun to. recede in from the Mississippi has caused legalizing floating casinos on Lake
Minnesota, but the river was still nearly $200 million in damage, Michigan and the Ohio River pace for the rest of the state in
"We believe the district court
requires the new Indiana Gaming getting riverboats up and running.
including $140 million in farm
rising downstream.
ruling is seriously flawed and
"We're going to he moving as strikes . at t~e heart of the
· In Davenport, the National · losses. Gov. Tommy G. Thompson Commission to issue the first
quickly
as prudence and common president's power to act as chief
license to Gary; a city desperate for
Weather Service said the said.
sense
would
dictate, and if we exec.utive," Associate Attorney
jobs
and
economic
development
Mississippi would crest at 22 feet
The U.S. Coast ~rd has
Other cities and entrepreneurs don't_move quickly, we've lost the General Webster Hubbell said in
today. Earlier, it was thought the banned all .river traffic. commercial
advantage of this whole thing the emergency motion filed Friday.
river would tie the record 22.5 feet and recreational, on a 634-mile must wait in line.
"Let's face it, the idea carne out we've been fighting_wr all these
s.tretch of the Mississippi from
set in 1965. Flood stage is 15 feel
President Bush and the leaders of
..
While some cities spent millions north of Prairie du Chie~. Wis., to of this city, and there's been no years," Barnes said.
Mexico and Canada signed the
Barnes
said
there
have
been
grea1er
in
vestment
than
by
this
to built dikes after the· 1965 flood, north of St. Louis.
Davenpon is paying the price for
Up to 1,000 barges that transport community," Gary Mayor Thomas informal inquiries from firms Poetic Tavern
Some homes lry to'separate ·
seeking to do business at Gary's
saving its money and its view of crops, coal and other materials Barnes said.
LONDON (AP) -The Mer- ·you from the enviroriment ·~
"We think it's appropriate we proposed marina, and a process for maid Tavern was a famous Elizathe Mississippi River. Mayor have been idled on the vital
Our homes make you a
did
those things to provide us witb reviewing the proposals will be bethan inn and a meeting place for
Patrick Gibbs said.
thoroughfare. Shippers are losing
part of it.
that kind of advanlllge. If it were adopted soon to assure Gary gets writers and poets.
"It's a beautiful river when it's an estimated $1 million a day.
the
best
deal
from
the
casino
not
for
Gary's
effo$
and
the
ileeds
not in your back yard,' ' he said.
U.S. Transportation Secretary
Located on Bread Street in
Call today for more Information
Meanwhile, nearby Beuendorf Federico F. Pena visited St. Louis of Gary, none of it would have operators'.
Cheapside, its name came from the
'·
was protected behind three miles of and toured flooded areas on Friday. happened," he said.
painted sign of a mermaid hanging
'
"Our
bottom line has never outside.
The legislation approving
levees and walls.
President Clinton plans to view
Jtpp.-lachla
'--; .
riverboats was included in the really been that we are so
"You can'! believe ... how it's flooding in Davenport on Sunday.
English literary figures who frel 1 \~thi&lt;;tures,
helping us," said city administrator
"The river is sort of out of sight budget bill passed by the General enamored of the idea of gaming or quented the inn included Shakei
) Inc.
anything else," he said. "We've speare, Ben Johnson, John Donne,
Assembly on Wednesday.
Decker Ploehn . "None of our for most of us," Pena said. "We
More choices make,;; bel1er Uving.
The law authoriz,es five boats on always seen it as an economic Robert Herrick, and Beaumont and
downtown or industrial area is don't appreciate the impact of
Lake Michigan, with two in Gary, development tool.
Fletcher.
P.O. BOX 614
something like this."
affected."
Mean~l. e, communities that
one each in Hammond and East
In rural St. Charles County, Mo.,
It was commemorated by poet
RIPLEY, WV. 25271
Chicago, and one in Michigan City must compete for riverboats are John Keats in his "Lines on the L--~-...;.1-8.;.;,00;.-4.;;5;,;8;,.·9;,;9:,:9:,:0_ _ _.-~
officials predicted at least 400
Like
a
Rock
or Porter County. Five non- busy negotiating potential deals Mermaid Tavern.''
families would have to be
NORFOLK,
Va.
(AP)
evacuated. And in Gulfport, Ill., the George Henry Thomas, born in specified sites along the Ohio River and sweetening their application
las! of the town's 500 residents Virginia in 1816, was a Union will get riverboats, and one will be packages,
The law requires the gaming
on Patoka Lake in southern
were evacuated Friday because a Army officer in the Civil War.
commission to issue licenses only
Indiana.
levee failed a few miles away,
An 1840 graduate of West
Communities must first gain to !be applicants "that promore the
although a levee protecting the Point, Thomas led the Army of the
Let'our expert staff turn your yard Into a dreamscape
public approval in referendums, most economic development in a
town was expected to hold.
Cumberland and fought gallantly at
and keep it that way. Our projessional designers will
.
In Alexandria, in northeast the battles of Chattanooga and then submit applications to the home-dock area."
"We believe !bat the competition
work with you to create and maintain a landscall!'
commission, which has fmal say on
Nashville.
licensing. If a referendum fails, for all of these sites will be very
you'll ·love. Call today for a no-obligation on-site
In the battle of Chickamauga, communities must wait two yearS intense," said Dewey Pearman, a
his courage and leadership ·saved before trying again.
consultation.
lobbyist for t11e Northwest Indiana
the Union Army from defeat and
however, is exempt from Forum, an ecooomic development
won him the title ''The Rock of theGary,
referendum
process, having coali~on of business, government
(USPS SZ5-8ot)
Chickamauga."
gained
tl'lblic
approval
for casino and labor.
Publia;hed each Sunday, 825 Third Ave.,
1
Thomas died in 1870.
Gallipolis, Ohio. by the. Ohio Valley PYblishiriJ

'Midwesterners cope with
unfettered Mississippi

b
t
,
'
RaCe 00 Of riVer Oa S•
Gary get s fiIrst n 0d

·~

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1

- - - - "Tiul Gruudian oflluJ En11ironmen1" .- - - -

••

. ·Deputies investigate vandalism

..

•.,.... ,.. :;;:!~·;.···

•

''

. .,'

Sul}day Tiines-Sentincl /A3

Youtlicharged with theft ·
POMEROY- A 12-year-old fem~.le allegedly caught shoplifting
Friday afternoon-at Fisher's Big Wheel near Pomeroy will appeaf in
Meigs County Juvenile Court on a delinquency theft charge, according
· . to a report from the Meigs County Sheriffs Department.
The juvenile was ~en into·custody. transported to lhe sheriffs
department and released to the custody .of her molher.

••

Work starts on Wayne NF trails
ATHENS - The USDA Forest Service has begun maintenance.
work on off-road vehicle trails in the '•londay Creek area of the Wayne
National Forest.
·
The ,maintenance; which includes some ~nstruction, is being
done to improve safety and ·riding co1 ditions on the trails. Although
signs will be pos.te~here the work is o ;curring, off-road vehicie users
are urged to use caulion and watch out for equipment being used fo!
maintenance purposes.
.
Maintenance oper.~tions are expec~'d to be completed by July 30.
The Monday Creek Off-road Vehicle I .rea is located north of Nelsonviii~ and south of New Straitsville.

ManjailedforD.U.I. after crash
GALLIPOLIS - Gama County sheriff's deputies jailed a local ·
. man
early Saturday morning for driving under the influence after he
•' crashed into a basketball support pole at K&amp;K Mobile Homes, 3411 ·
Jackson Ave.
Jailed for D.UJ., in addition to failure to use tum signal was
Brian K. Johnson, 18, 83 Union Road, Bidwell.
Local authorities jailed six olhers between Friday and Saturday.
Jailed Friday were David L. McCormick, 20,4205 State Route 141,
, • by deputies for. D.U.l., left of center, no seal belt and no operator's
• • license; Steve J. Arrowood, 37, 1011 1/2 Third Ave., by Gallipolis
;
police fqr shoplifting and disorderly conduct; Jack E. Pickens Jr.,
'
24, Rt..2. Vinton, by deputies for domestic violence; and Richard E.
Ellis, :W,\193 Le Grande St., by police for disorderly conduct by
fighting and resisting arrest
·
Jailed early Saturday morning were David ·J. Lucas, 19, 14SI5
State Route 7, by police for underage consumption, and Sharon A.
· Johnson, 32, 1912 Washington Ave., Lorain, by Meigs County
..
sheriff's deputies for D.U.I., expired license and left of center.

'

Man cited for D.U.I.
GALLIPOLIS - Kermit G. Kyle, 38, Columbus, was cited
Friday night for driving under lhe influence, the Galli;I-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol reported.
· ·
. -

-

•

Hills halts alleged shoplifter
GALLIPOLIS - Officials at Hills Department Store. Upper River
Road, apprehended a rePQrted shoplifter Friday evening.
·
Angie )Voodard, 21, Rt. 2 Letart, W.Va., was issned a summons
to appear' in court fot allegedly attempting to steal over $100 worth
of merchandise from the store. The store detective told police that
she alerted ·Hills about the possible theft after she observed
Woodard switching price tags and concealing several items. '
_

'

'

• Deputies probe break-in _
at RVHS
~.

cheshire.
.,..., .
Officials from the school told deputies that the building ·was
broken into sometime before 9 a.m. Friday. Pop, candy and chips
__ were stolen and illl estimated $250 v.;ortb of damage was reported.
Deputies also investigated the tbeft of a Bidwell woman's pUilie.
-Rosie N. Kiser, 379 Skidmore Road, Bidwell, told deputies ·that
sofneone removed her plii'Se from her home aroljlld noon Friday.
· _The purse contained $50.
·
.

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies investigated
Friday
Little Kyger Road, .
'
.a break-in at River Valley High School,
.

l

Man cited,in accident

'·

Woman cited for improper backing
GALLIPOLIS - A Cheshire woman was cited for improper
backing Friday evening after she struck a vehicle on State Route 7,
the GalUa-Me1gs 'Post of the State Highway Patrol reported. ·
Sandra K. Scott; 42, Roush Lane, was stoooed in southbound
traffic when she backed up and struck a vehicle driven by Charles
S. Fuller, 31,207 Wilgus Street, Proctorville.
No injuries were reported. Fuller's vehicle sustained light damage
and·Scott's was not damaged. Both vebicles were driven from the
scene.

GVFD responds to two false alarms
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department
received two false alanns Friday.
,.
.
The-frrst came frOm the Elk.'s Club, 408 1/2 Second Ave., at 6:21)
a.m·. One truck was used and 10 frrefighters responded. It was the
132nd call of the year.
The GVFD received another false alarm at ll:50,a.m. from ,
Federal Mogul, 2160 Eastern Ave.. One truck was used and 14
firefighters respooded. It w~ the I 31st call of the year.
/ •

DeWine to visit Gallia county
GALLIPOLIS -Lieutenant Governor MichaelDeWine and other
representatives of the governor's office will visit Gallia county ·
Tuesday, July 6, for a special presentation regarding 0. 0. Mcintyre
Park District's recent application to the federally funded
TransportatiOn Enhancement Program.
The presentation will take place at !be Gallia-Me.igs Regional
airpon at approximately 12:30 p.m., according to Ohio Division of .
Transportation officials. .

Strickland to meet with local leaders
PIKETON - Representative Ted Strickland will meet with local
leaders at a conference scheduled for Friday, July 9.
.
Strickland plans to meet with the Sixth District's mayors and
county commissioners to discuss federal issues in relation to county
· and municipal government, according to his press secretary.
The meeting will take place from 9:30 am. to noon at the Vern
Riffe Joint Vocational School, State Route 32, Piketon.

ODOT Jo upgrade signs, markings
GALL!POLIS - The Ohio Division of Transportatio~t awarded a
highway contract for the upgrading of signs and pavement ~gs
at railroad crossings ll{l ;v.arious routes and sections in. Gallia and
several surrounding coqnties.
.
·
The contract was awarded to Sandusky Bay Construction of
Norwalk for $98,932. The scheduled completion date is November
I. 1993.

Library Trustees to meet
'i)ALLIPOLIS • The Gallia County District Library Board of
Trustees will hold special meetings Tuesday, July 6 and Friday, July

9.

Bolh meetings will be at S p.m. at the Bossard Library.

Offices closed Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Offices in !be Gallia County Courthouse and
the Gallipolis Municipal Building will be closed Monday to
recognize Independence Day. Also closed wiD be post offices and
financial institutions.

., UNDER SUNNY. SKIES - The 28tb annual River Recreation
Festival opened under sunny skies Friday at the Gallipolis City Park.
Activities for tbe . l993 event began early in the aptly dubbed
"Me Donalds Day" witb special games and entertainmeot for children•
Master or Ceremonies Skip Logan, pictured here, combined with
Gallia County Chamber of Commerce President Jay Moore to
introduce visiting dignitaries and local supporters that evening as the
restivaLofficially got un!ler way. Visiting Gallipolis were Ted
Perroud, Village of Centerville mayor, Walter Lucas, Village of
Cheshire mayor, and Donna Dewitt, Village of Vinton mayor. Also
introduced were Grand Marshals Lieutenant Colonels Pat and Susan
Helms, and Gallipolis City Manager Glenn Smith (T-S photo by
James Long).

IRS exam to be offered
tion.
PARKERSBURG, W.Va., The examination fee is $40 for
Applications are nl)w available for
persons
who took and passed pan of
\&lt;IX practitioners who wish to take the
annual!ntemalRevenueServicetwo· the examination last year. 1be fee for
t!ay speoial enrollment examination. those taking the complete exam is
.
.
The examination' is a neeessary .550.
qualifying step for people who wish ., The examination is scheduled to
lo represent others before the IRS on lle held on September 28 and 29 in the
tax return audits and other tax mat- Federal Building in Parkersburg, W.
ters. Those interested in taking the Va.
exam niust have their applications .. Detailsabouttheexamandenrollcompleted and posunarked no later . \nent requirements are .available by
contacting the IRS and asking for
\han August 2.
This year lhe examination pro- PubUcation 1470, "Package for the
gram has been extended from two to Special Enrollment Examination." ·
four years to give applicants more This material can be obtained by
time to pass the four pan examina- \veiling to Internal R,evenue Service, ~
Attn: Special Enrollment Exam,
Room3102,P.O.jlox 1040,Parkersburg, W.Va. 26102-I040orbyeall·
ing Maria Volpi at (304) 420-6858.

Wyoming gets
winter in July
.

'

'

meeting room of the Gallia County
Courthouse.
The commission will hear an
emergency ordinance to enter into

-·

'

Troopers find robbery
Su§pect during D.U.I. stop
&gt;: GALLIPOLIS - A Johnson 35 for driving under the influence.
The troopers searched the veliicle
l2ity, Tenn., woman "Wanted for
armed robbery in two counties was a,nd found the stolen purse and
n:10ney bag- which.contained $70
~ested Friday afternoon during a
-as well as 'two knives and a gun.
~utine "traffic stop by Stale
At that time the troopers were
Righway Patrol troopers.
.
;'; Melissa ·McKinney, 28, was unaware of the robbery, the
itfrested I 1/2 hours after she spokesman said. They learned of
allegedly robbed a Ross County the inCident when they conlacted
. the P.urse's owner•
,Cemetery office. at gunpoint
Riley was arrested for carrying a
::: She is also wanted for aggravated
concealed
weapon, driving under
fpbbery in Carter County, Tenn.,
the
infl~ence
and failure to drive
'!!t'here she allegedly held up a
wilhin
marked
Janes. ·
convenience store. ,
McKinney
was jailed for
;:, According to a spokesman for the
Gallia-Meigs Post of t~e Stall: carrying a concealed weapon, no
Highway Patrol, McKinney seat belt and the robbery charges.
allegedly entered the ce"let~ry ' It is unclear if R,iley was
· office at about 2;30 p.m. Friday involved in the robbery, the
and stole a money bag and an spokesman said. McKinney was
reported to be alone when she
employee's purse.
.
McKinney was a passenger in a allegedly robbed the office and no
vehicle driven by Richard Riley, one saw the. vehicle in which she
·
Pikeville, Ky :. who was stopped left the scene.
shortly after 4 p.m. Friday on U.S.

..

..

TAKE YOUR
PICK••• ,

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP)
Meteorologists had a snowball's
chance in July of predicting the
weather that hit nonhero Wyoming
on Saturday.
,.
Most Wyoming residents began
the holiday weekend with sunny
skies and warm weather, but peQple
ill northern Wyoming scrambled
for their snowsuits.
•
One .foot of new snow was
reported in parts of Grand Teton
National Park and heavy snow also
fell at lower elevations of the park.·
The National Weather Service
had predicted thunderstorms across
northern Wyoming for Saturday.
But heavy rains combined with a
cold front over the Tetons to
produce snow.

Alteged suicide
County health board suit delayed reported Friday
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
judge has delayed until Aug. 9
heari~gs on a lawsuit that county
mental health boards filed against
the state to try and get more !,TIOney
for local programs.
'.
The group of 11 county mental
heallh boards says th.e De~ent
of Mental Health IS sk1mm1ng
money for the ' state's 14 !Dental
hea!th hospitals from a $243.4
m~lbon poL

The suit contends the department
is violating !be Mental Heallh Act
of 1988, which requires the
department to give the commun~
boards 80 percent of this year s
money.
David Kovach assistant state
'attorney gene;al, said the
department can't give more money
to the boards that are suing wilhout
taki g 11 frOm others.

an agreement with Star Bank as
trustee for the sanitary sewer
system
mortgage revenue
refunding bond, and an emergency
ordinance to authorize public
employee contributions for
appointed' and elected officials and
full time employees of the city of
Gallipolis enrolled in Public
Employees Retirement System and
Police and Firemen's .Disability
Pension Fund plans.
·
·
The city will .hear on frrst reading
an ordinance to enter into ari
agreement with Burgess &amp; Niple,
Columbus, to develop a general
plan for dechlorination facilities for

Wastewater Treatment Plant
facilities.
In reports of city officials, City
Manager Glenn Smith ·will discuss
the appointment of R. Clio'
Patterson' to sergeant in the police
department. City Auditor Debrah
Hughes will discuss the transfer of
a liquor license from Charles
Carter. Dock Inn Tavern, to Billy
Joe and Joann Patterson, Dock Inn
Tavern.
The full agenda is available for
review at the Municipal Building,
518 Second Ave., and the Bossard
Memorial Library.

sAu 5700°0

GALLIPOLIS.- A Gallipplis man
allegedly cgmmitted suic1de at his
home Friday, according to a report
filed in lhe GalUa County sheriffs .
office.
_Shane Keatley, 18, 4301
Bulaville Pike, reportedly shot
himself to death at 12:30 p.m. The
incident is still under investigation.

REGULARLY-$935

SAVE$23S

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave.

Galllpoli•

0

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SERVICE ·

Sundlr)' 1-5 p:m.

r/'

RUBY or
SAPPHIRE
DIAMONDS
· .98 cr. rw

Editor's note: Names, ages and addresses are printed as they
appear on oflklal reports.

City.
commission·slates meeting for Tuesday
..
· &gt;GALL !POLIS - The Gallipolis
~ity Commission will hold its
(Cgular monthly meeting at 7 p.m.
T·uesday in the second floor

'

'

GALLIPOLIS ~ A Sanford, N.C., man was cited for failure to
control Friday morning after Strikinj! a ditch, the GalUa-Meigs Post
of the State Highway Patrol reported. .
·
. Daniel A. Pollard, 36. was northbound on Mt. Zion ~oad
(Township Road 140) when he lost control on a curve and went off
the right side of the road an!! struck a ditch. The patrol listed unsafe
speed as the contributing factor.
,
,.
No injuries were reported. The vehicle sustained light, disabling
damage and was towed from the scene.

•

LETART FALLS-. Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriffs Department f1Cll investigating two vandal•sm complaints.
According to a report from Sheriff J tmes M. Soulsby, Roger Roush
and Randall Roberts, both of Letart P dis, reported Friday afternoon
that someone had thrown paint on their vehicles during the previous
night.
. Deputies also discovered several m 1ilboxes with paint on them.

Clinton administration
appeals order blocking trade pact

r;:::==::====:::;;,

Local

· · ---

,----.__;,-.. . . ..Tri-county tiriefs-'-· ----~·----..;;-·

pans:

90"

-· ·-··

•

�1

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July 4,1993

Ohio/W.·Va.
Ohio News iri Brief:·- Alleged slayer to ente.r. plea:.prosecutor
July 4, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel/AS

'

candidates willlflarch in parade

DAYTON - A federal judge on Friday ordered the city to allow
the mayor's political opponent and other candidates to participate in
the Founh of July paradt;.
·. - "
U.S. District Court Judge Walter Rice prevented lhe· city ~om
l. ~
li poliey this year that would have prevented Republican
'· • enforcing
mayoral candidate Michael .Turner and any other political .
challengers from participating in today's parade.
..
·Turner is facirig Democratic Mayor Richard Clay Dixon in the
November election.
·.
. turner ·and Dean Lovelace, a Democratic commission candidate,
. filed a lawsuit against the city Thursday. They alleged !hat the
policy was discriminatory, and violated their constitutional right of
free speech.
·
•
The judge issued a temporary order on Friday and will rule later
on the lawsuit's request for a permanent ban on the policy.
.
· City officials.have said lhe policy, which allows officeholders m
the parade but not challengers, was adopted to keep the parade from
being disrupted by political campaigning. .
.
.
.
Assistant City Manager Ted Staton sa1d lhe c1ty. w1ll ab1de by
Rice's order but that he hopes a permanent ban agmnst the policy
would not cause problems in the future.

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COLUMBUS (AP) -The slight
dip in the state's unel)lployment
rate in June cannot be_considered
dramatic, but it is a sign of
improvement, an official at the
·Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said.
The· state's unemployment rate
decreased 0.3 percentage point in
June, the bureau reported Friday.
The jobless rate was 5.8 percent
last month and 6.1 percent in May.
In ·other months the jobless rate
has dropped in part because more
people left -the work force, said
Keith Ewald, director of the
bureau's Labor Market'!nformation
Division.
"Manufacturing in genecil seem
to be flat," Ewald said.
Recent growth has bee!) most
significant in service jobs, such as
restauran1S, computer services and
health services, he ,said.
"The decrease in June is
especially welcome becaus~ it -is
the fust drop !his year that has been
clearly tied to an increase in jobs,"
said Debra Bowland, Employment
Services adminislrator.

TAVERN HAMS·

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Join the Big Bend (loggers
on Vaughan's side parking
lot ~uly .8th at 7:00 p.m.
(Thursday)

Check out' the Dunking Booth in
front of Vaughan's and dunk a
Vaughan's Manager or VIdeo
Clerk July 6th and 7th, 13th and
14th, and the 17th from 12 noon
to 2 p.m •.A manager will be there
~ro,~ 12 noon-1 p.m. each day_
and Video Clerk will be there
each day·from 1·2 p.m~ If you
dunk a persor:'l you win a Free
Vic;teo Rental.· Dunking Booth Is ·
50¢ for three balls. ·

and counseling site
Anonymous
(your name is never asked)

' Available at:
Planned Parenthood
of Southeastern Ohio
414 Second Avenue
for appointment c~ll:
(614) 446-0166

leading to the apprehension of th(!
individual who has bee·n distributing
printed material containing false and
· damaging information about the
Gallipolis Kroger Store and
employees of that store.

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Money While You Sleep

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·Loring' s wife, Jeneen, said she
heard about the plea agreement
.Friday night. '
•.
"I'm just relieved. I am glad he
his getting what he deserves," Ms.
Loring said. .
.
Miller, who was asket\ by Young
to assist in the case, said Dillon
made several calls to the media
confessing lhe slayings. WTOVTV in SteulJFnville and lhe Akron
Beacon Journal both reported
Dillon had confessed to them.
Miller said prosecutors had
nothing
to link Dillon to the
·
s!ayings of Welling and Loring, but
"we were convinced he'd done iL"
On Friday, Dillon admitted the
slayi~gs to Miller, Young, the FBI
and representatives from the five
counties where the slayings
· occurred, Miller said:

RD

~

c

and April.
The rate in June 1992 was 7.5
percent, the bureau said. Over the
year the number of Ohioans
working increased by 83,000 from
5.058 million. The number of
unemployed dropped by 90,000
from 409,000.
The national unemployment rate
was 7.0 in June, compared with 6.9
percent in May, the U.S .
Department of Labor said.

areas.

CLEVELAND (AP) - There
were two tickets sold naming al.l
five numbers drawn in Friday
night's Buckeye 5 drawing, and
cacfi winning ticket is worth
$100,000, the Ohio Lottery said
The winning tickets were sold at
Holland Oil in Akron and at
Oakwood Amoco Food Shop in
Cuyahoga Falls, the lottery said. · ·
Pick3
3-2-3
Pick4
3-9-4"8
BuckeyeS
8-10-23-31-33

SHANK
. .ORTION
.

79

The number of Ohioans with jobs
was 5.141 million in June, up
27,000 from May, lhe bureau said.
There. were. 3.19,000 unemployed
Ohioans last month, down from
.333,000 in May.
Ohio's jobless rate has been
dropping steadily since November
when it was 7.4 percent. The rate
was 7.3 percent in December; 7.o·
percent in January; 6.7 percent in
February; and 6.5 percent in March

The five men were shot with a
rifle while ~unting,
fishmg or Joggmg alone m rural

hig~-powered

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PACK

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.'
of the deaths and suspected in two agwvated murder in the deaths of:
-=-Claude Hawkins, 49, o(.
others but not charged. He agreed
to plead gnilty in all five ·Slayings, ,_ Mansfielc!, in Coshocton County on
March 14, 1992. .
"
Miller said.
Miller said Dillon also admitted
- Gary Bradley, 44 , of
the non-fatal shooting of another Williamstown, W.Va., in Noble
person in eastern Ohio sev~ral County on April 5, 1992.
-Jamie Paxton, 21, of Bannock,
years ago, ·Mill~ said. Miller was
not sure if charges would be in Belmont County on Nov . I 0,
.
pursued in !hat case.
.
· . 1990.
Noble County Prosecutor Lucien
Miller said DiUon also agreed to
.C. Young lll could not be reached plead guilty in two slayings in
for comment Friday night He was which he was suspected but not
not at home, a woman answerinj! charged: .
.
-Donald Welling, 35 of
the telephone said. Calls to his
Stras2 urg, in Tuscarawas County
office were not answered.
.
·
Dillo~'s
attorney, Roger on APril!, 1989.
- Kevin Loring, 30, of Duxbury,
Synenberg of Cleveland, declined
Mass., in M\lskingum County on
comment
Dillon was charged with Nov. 28, 1990.

Ohio jobless rate posts slight dip

ICE CREAM .

49

69

COLUMBUS -Gov. George Voinovich reluctantly signed a 20day interim budget for lhe workers' compensation system Friday
and said he was not giving up his plan to divert non-viOlent
offenders from state pri~ons. ·
.
Legislative attemp1S to reach a compll?miSe two-y~ bu,dget ~or
the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensauon and !he Oh10 Induslllal
Commission failed Thursday night, and an interim spending plan
was enacted.
·
.
·
•
The employer-fin'!nced sy~tem provides benefits and
rehabilitation for workers injured on !he job.
Voinovich said 'he was deeply disappointed !here was no final
agreement on reforms. · ·
•
·
. "It seems only one or two players don't want a real reform bill,
and may in fact want no change at all," he said.
.
· .
On prison crowding, Voinovich asked Lt. Gov. Mike DeWme and
Reginald Wilkinson, director of the prison system, to II)' agam to
.win legislative approval of a prisoner diversion pill!\. ·
.
· \{oinovich's proposal to expan~ programs !hat divert non-vwlent
offenders into house arrest, mtensJVe p~obataon an~ other
commun.ity-based programs was ~ut by legislators who mstead
provided money 10 hire 900 more pnson guards.
.
.
''They've made a policy decision: ~e(ve basically srud build
more jails, hire more ~nards, bwld more Ja!ls, hue more guards, and
God knows where were going," Voinovich said.
·

NEWPORT, Ky.- A retired Roman Catholic priest who pleaded
guilty to sexually abusing boys in northtm~ Kentucky was sentenced
Friday to 20 years in prison.
.
Campbell County Circuit Judge Wilha~ Wehr ordered Earl
Bierman to gpcnd two to four of those years m a lreatment program
for sex offenders at LaGrange Reformatory in LaGrange, near
Louisville.
· ·
.
Bierman, 61, of Erlanger, could be eligible for parole m four
years, if he successfully completes the ~;Teatment.
.
At a hearing last month, psycholog1sts for the defense tesufied
that Bierman has a personality ilisorder and feels no remorse r.;-ih'iYJ'
vic tims . They said he cannot be cured but could bene-Qt _!.wffi
treatment.
Bierman did not comment when he left lhe courtroom Friday. His
lawyer, Clayton Shea, w~ml.d not let reporterS question Biennan.
"This has destroyed h1s life," Shea satd.
One man who accused Bierman of abusing him when he was a
boy said he thought lhe sentenee was fair.
" I'm glad he .doesn't have access to the public," said Rick
Thomas, now a lawyer with offices in Covington and across lhe
Ohio River in Cincinnati. ·
-The Associated Press

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CALDWEbL (AP) - Thomas
I,.ee Dillon will·be spared the death
penalty under an agreement he
, reached with prosecutors to plead
guilty in the slayings of five
outdoorsmen in ·eastern Ohio, a
.
prosecutor said.
, , Dillon, 42, of Magnolia, 'is
expected to en~r lhe pleas to five
counts of aggravated murder on
July 12 in Noble County Common
Pleas Court, Franklin County
· Prosecutor Michael Miller said
Friday night.
.
Prosecutors will seek a prison
sentence of 30 years to life on each
charge, to run consecutively. He
would not be eligible for parole for
165 years, Miller said.
Dillon had been charged in three

Voinovich signs interim budget
•

'

•

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.

This mQterial has ·been placed i·n mail
boxes and on vehicl~s late,at night in
the business districts of~Gallipolis and
Point ~leasant. If you have any
ir:-formatio~ as to the identity of this
person or persons,
please call '3 04-736-8920.

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. July 4, 1993

Commentary
Stop·the Re-lyn·ching of Bob Wallach.

•

July4, 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel iA6

-·

-

•

ADi~onof

~NC.
125 Third An., Galllpolit, Ohio
(614) 446-l:Ml .

....

Pomeroy-Mttfdleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

111 Court St, romeroy, Ohio
(614) !19:1-2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI

l'llbllsher

HOBART WILSON JR . .
Encutt.. Editor

MARGARET LEHEW

Controller
''

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, and the . Amerlcan
Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed jVith
name, address and telephone rtumber. No unsigned letters win be
publisbed. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not
penonalities.
.

Old-timers remember good

• MEMO "TO: U.S. Attorney
General J.anet Ren~
Sl!BJECT: SurveiUa'lce Report
A Re-Lynching In-Progress.
On the off-shore island of
Manhattan, N.Y .. a"'fandful of
natives ·are committing a bizarre
legal atrocity: They are lynching a
man they lynched once before. It is
not a pretty sight
The perpetrators work for you, in
the office of the U.S. attorney for
Manhattan. The victim of theu relynching is a fellow named E.
Robert Wallach , whose worst
flllllsgressions, as near as I can tell,
are that he: (!)was a liberal
Democrat who was a close friend
of Edwin Meese III, President
Reagan's attorney general; and (2)
was a San Francisco attorney who
dared act like a Washington
attorney-that is. bragging about
having a highly placed friend and
occasionally .opening an official
door. Washingtonians call it

old-bad old gambling days

____..._...;.._ _.__....;...,_ _ _

Martin Schram
examine its facts froin liberal
journalists, such as myself, to
conservative jurists, such as former
Judge Robert H. Bork. I know·
Wallach as a source, a friend and a
man who was a chronic namedropper, which IS no crime.
In 1988, Steven Brill wrote in
The American Lawyer a lengthy
critique_ of prosecutorial abuse,
entitled: "The Lynching of Bob
Wallach." Later, Bork found the
facts so outrageous that he handled,
pro IX&gt;no, Wallach's appeal of the
conviction that' resulted from his
first lynching.
Judge for yourself. In 1987, thenU.S . Attorney Rudolph Giuliani,
anxious to jump in~o electoral

politics. wante~ to boost his
reputation by bagging Meese in the
scandal of Wedtech, the Bronx,
N.Y.', tool and die COII)pany; so he
tried to 11se Wallach as a legal tool
to get.Meese.
·
Giuliani indicted Wallach for
'"racketeering," then offered to
reduce the charges if Wallach
would provide evidence .of
wrongdoing by Meese in the case.
But Wallach said he could not do
that. So Wallach was prosecuted.
Whit racketeering? Just this:
Wallach wrote two thank you
letters to Wedtech officials for
payment he labeled as legal work
for their shipyard. He did write
hundreds of pages of memos· on
other legal work for Wedtech .
Wallach billed the shipyard
account because, he said, Wedtech
officials asked him to, saying it
was where their legal funds were
available.
Lawyers in _respc:cted firms say

By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI -As gambling fever spreads along the Ohio River,
officials in Ohio, Kenwcky and Indiana are lining up to cash in on float,
ing casinos.
An Ohio House biD would allow gambling on the Ohio River and Lake
Erie, but it's languishing because of a veto threat by Gov. George
Voinovich.
··
The Indiana Legislature on Wednesday legalized gambling boats on
the Ohio River and Lake Michigan, over Gov. Evan Bayh's veto. State
Sen. Johnny Nugent, R-Lawrenceburg, helped write the legislation. He
said it wiD create jobs by encouraging gambling ftrms to build entenainment complexes.
Operators of Kentucky race tracks are trying to head off any gambling
that would cut into their revenue. But if forced to accept casino gambling,
they want it to be' at race tracks.
Everybody seems to be operating under the theory that approval is
coming.
"I£ we don't.get it in Cincinnati, they'D get it over there in Kemucky ,"
said Rob Jones, of Cincinnati. "We might as well get our hand in the

pie~J?Qnents cite studies that say riverboat gambling wiD draw millions

of toWlsts, create thousands of jobs and boost city revenues.
"Downtown Cincinnati doesn't have a lot of after-hours activity," said,
Dan Janevslci, of Cincinnati. "J.Uverboat gamblin!! would bring a lot more
people downtown and a lot more business to the nverfronl"
Some people are ambivalent about the issue. .
~ .
"I'm pro and con," said Cadette Bunton, of Cincinnati. "I'm pro
. because of the jobs it brings and the revenue; I'm against it beca it also
brings crime and people get hooked on it,'' she said.
Others aren't that interested.
"If some damned fools want to go on a riverboat and gamble, I won't
stop them,, " said William Taylor, of Cincimati'.
•
There still are a few people who can· offer a perspective on gambling.
They remember the good old-bad old days when . the Kentucky .suburbs
just south of the Ohio River were wide open.
·. ·
"People came from all over, from New Yod&lt; and everywhere to gamble in Ne~" said Johnny Peluso, whose loss in the 1%5 race for
Campbell County sheriff effectively ended open gambling in the Cincinnati area. ''The town has slipped ever since then.''
Peluso contends it was Newport, which used to have more than twice
its current 17,000 population, that made Cincinnati, not the other way
around.
·
) '\.
·
"The streets were full at night," said Albert Peoons, ~d there
wasn't any trouble in those days- no dope."
Peluso, a former Newport mayor, said he would have tried to legalize
the casinos that operated because of mob payoffs to local officials.
Instead, a reform candidate won and booted the gamblers.
Peluso, 70, has lived and wod&lt;ed within a few doors of the same Newport street earner since 1928. He remembers more than 25 casinos roulette, craps, blackjack, slot machines - operating in northern Kentucky, especially during the 1930s and through World War II.
Tbey had names like the Flamingo Club, Lookout HouSe and Beverly
· Hills, which became a nightclub in its post-casino days. In a 1977 fue,
165 people died in the old Beverly Hills casino.
"I used to repair the jukeboxes•in the brothel houses," said Peluso,
who still tinkers with television sets. "I fiXed the amplifiers in the bookie
joints - and I fixed the police radios in the police cars."
. There were shootings, he said, mostly when one casino operator tried
to move in on another's territory. But the public was safe because the
operators didn't want the kind or trouble that would bring in the state
police.
"There weren't rapes and robberies like there are now,'' Peluso said.
But he concedes that was a more innocent time.
"There wasn't any dope then,'' he said. "Dope changed everything."

.Workers' compensation is about
In Ohio, there are millions of
Once again, Workers' Compenpeople who do the work and get the sation is a hot issue in the General
job done to keep this slate moving. Assembly. At times, the give and
There are also thousands of bosses take has gotten out of hand and the
who run the businesses and industries that provide the jobs.
Sometimes-when we get
mvolved in 'a tough, complicated .:':.:...:J!:..':...:-=..;.;_....:...---:-:--issue like Ohio's Workers' Com··
pensation system-people forget that Workers' Compensation system
we are all in this together. The has been blamed for everything
business owners and bosses are under the sun.
necessary if this state is going to
The Governor and his business
have a strong economy. They supporters have called Workers'
would not, ·however,_get one single Compensation the "silentlciUer" of
thing done without the workers to jobs, but we have heard barely a
lift the loads, run the machines and word of concern about the worker.
assemble the products.
No business is worth it&amp;: salt if it
This year and every year, thou- doesn't have a stron_g, healthy
sands of workers will get injured workforce.
on the job. Whether it is a pure
It ~ime to move beyond
accident or carelessness on the pan ~ and scare tactics. It is time
of the employer or employee, 1t is for reasonable people to sit down
proper that we have a system to get and negotiate a compromise that
that employee back 'on their feet. improves service to workers
That system is Workers' Campen- injured on the job while, at the
sation.
same time, making the Workers'

Rep Mark Malone

~a/

~
.
-

he~ping

Compensat'!On system run as
smoothly and efficiently as possible.
Last week, the Ohio Senate
combined the budgets of the
Bureau of Workers' Compensation,
the Industrial Commission and proposed reforms into one bill. With
that action, House-Senate nef;Otiations to reach a compromise b1U are
expected to liegin very soon.
An all-out attack on Workers'
Compensation is not only unjustified, it is dangerous. Those who are
not flexible in seeking solutions to
problems with the Workers' Compensation system risk creating gridlock or killing the negotiation process altogether. That would not be
good for business or for workers.
Already, the House is on record
in favor of no increase in Workers'
Compensation business premiums
over the next two years. This is one
of the strongest gestures possible
that we are trying to keep costs
down for business.'

people

The House also voted in favor
of new performance standards to
Improve service and effi:iency. At
the same time, the Workers' Compensation budget approved by the
House does not reduce benefits to
workers, a real concern of employees served by the system.
This is a crucial time for Ohio's·.
Workers' Compensation system. ;
People in every ~r of the stJUe
will be watching carefully to see if:
thei ~ interests are being served. :•
What we cannot and must not for- ;
get is that everyone's interest is not :'
the same; and the only way-real ~
improvements will be achieved is ,.
to reach a compromise that is good ·
for all of Ohio.
:
Not everybody will get what ·
they want out of a Workers· Com- ,;
pensation budget and reform plan. :
But if we, in the General Assem- ;.
bly, do our jobs, everyone wiD ben- ··
efit and the system will work bet- ·
ter.

B&gt;;MARYPE~BERTON

ON
'
.
.
.
.
VINT
l~ene Ehas, 85, Vmton (Thurmap commumly), died
Sawr~y. J0ly 3, 1 3 in London, Ohio. ~gernents wiD be announced
later by the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home. Vmton.
'

Jonathaft Shane Keatley
•

GALLIPOLIS -Jonathan Shane Keatley 18 · 4301 Bulaville Pike
died Friday, July 2, 1993 at Holzer Medical Ce~t.er:
'
He was employed at the Stony Brook Tree Farm in Rio GflllK\e and
anended Buckeye Hi Us Career Center.
"
·
Born Oct 7, 1974 in Columbus, he is the son of Donald L: and Jackalin
Garrett Keatley or Gallipolis. He was pre'c eded in death by two
grandfathers.
Sll!"ivi~g in addition to his parents are his girlfriend, Jw;nie Ward;' a
special friend, ¥&amp;11 Ray; his paternal grandmother, Dixie Keatley of Oak
R1dge, Tetm.; hiS 111aternal grandmother, Dorothy Garrett of Minford; and
several aunts, uncles and cousins.
Services will be at 11' a.m. Monday at the Willis Funeral Home, I2
Garfield· Ave., With the Rev. Larry Williams officiating. Burial will be in
Minford. Friends may call from 7-9 p.m. Sun&lt;l,ay at the funeral home.

-

BALTIMORE - Fred Gwynne
shared the Broadway stage with
Helen Hayes did Shakespeare and
Tennessee 'W'lliams, earned
accolades for his movie roles. But
' to millions he'll always be Heflll4ll
Munster.
·
·
Gwynne,· 66, died Friday at his
farm m ;Taneytown, 40 miles
northwest of Baltimore. He had
suffered pancreatic-cancer.
Joe Pesci played the sman-aleck

r"

WASHINGTON, D.C. -' Tbe
DepartmentrifVeterans Affairs (VA)
has recently announced that it ·is
lalinching ~· es of health-care initiatives for omen veterans, including.eslabli · g four comprehen~ive
health centm and four stress-disorder treatment teams, as well as hiring
counselors in 691ocations to treat the
after-effects of sexual harassment and
assault
In anno,uncing the initiatives, VA
Badai recanted an earlier Secretary Jesse Brown said, "I am
statement to interrogators that he strongly committed to meeting the
had smuggled drugs into Kuwait health-care needs of women veterfrom Iraq.
·
ans. VA is moving quickly to irnple"1 didn't know what I was mentthesenewprogramsandservsaying, because I hadn't eaten for . . ices that wiD provide stilte-of-the-art
three days and I was beaten," treatment to specific populations of
Ba(jai told the Slate Security Court women veterans and serve as models
Badai said Kuwaiti policemen for similar programs across the nakicked hir:n in t~e stomac_h and lion."
slammed h1m agmnst a large piece
Authorized by the Women Veteror metal shelrtly _after he was ans Health Programs Act of 1992
arrested. He admttted entenn11
$
·u·
riated'
Kuwait illegally with the other ~me 7. 5 m1 1on was appfO!I
defendants, but he said he just m 1993 forthesean~otherex~~ed
wanted to borrow money from in- semces for a growmg populatiOn or
laws living in Kuwait.
One Iraqi has pleaded guilty in
the trial that started June 5. He
testified a week ago that he had
been ordered by Iraqi intelligence
agents to smuggle an explosivesladen jeep into Kuwait to ldll Bush
when the former president visited
the~ in April.
We have just purchased merchandise from a

Marietta to host motorcyclists
MARIETIA- Marietla will host
the Ohio Hog Club rally from July 23
tl)rough 25 which is open to the public
with paid access .
The Hurley-Davidson group's
estimated 1,200 to 1,400 members
will perform in 'various family ·oriented field events.
The community day wiD take place
on the Washington County Fairgrounds Sunday July 25 from I 0 a.m.
to about 4 p.m.
,
The motorcyclists "!ill compete in
slow races, golf ball drops and water
balloon tosses while riding through
an obstacle course. The public may

..-

stage, screen and releyision for the
next 40 years.
His two 1960s television serieS
each lasted just two seasons but
have had a long life in reruns and
in viewers' memories.
From 1961 to 1963, he played
Officer Francis Muldoon in Car 54,
Where Are You?, the straight man
in a mismatched pair of New York
City cops. Joe E. Ross was his
short, ch ubby partner, Officer
Gunther Toody, who-had a habit of
exclaiming "Ooo, ooo!" when
excited.
The following year, Gwynne
tool: up the role of Herman
Munster in The Munsters, playing~
comic Frankenstein's monster in
women veterans.
the popular CBS series whose twoTbe four Women Veterans Com- year.run was almost simultaneous
prehensive Health Centers will oper- with ABC's The Addams Family.
ate clinics and progiarns focusing on
Herman was the patriarch of a
the unique health-care needs of. . lovably scary family that lived in a
women veterans, providing a full cobwebbed mansion and included a
range of services in specific geo- vampire for a grandfather (AI
graphic regions. The locations of the Lewis) and a pet dragon named
centers are: the SoutheastPennsylva- Spot Gwynne wore green makeup
niaNetwork, comprised or VA medi- and special boo14: to boost his 6.
cal centers in Coastsville, Lebanon. , foot, 5-inch heighl
In
his
varied
career,
Gwynne
also
Philadelphia, and Wilmington, Del. ;
and the VA mMical centers in Minneapolis; Tampa, Fla.; ana San Francisco.
,
The Women VeJerans Stress Disorder Teams will treat stress disorders resulting from active duty military service. Each team will have
three clinicians, including one psychiatrist Teams also will provide
training to local VA and non- VA
clinicians on stress disorders in
women. VA is in the process of selecting the sites, one to be based in
each of VA' s four medical regions.

VA announces initiatives
for women veterans

More defendants claim
innocence in plot to kill Bush
KUWAIT (AP) - A frail, whitebearded man ace used of complicity
in an alleged Iraqi 'plot to
assassinate George Bush limped
into court Saturday, declared his
innocence and said he had been
beaten while in custody.
Aly Khdair Badai, who is amon&amp;
II Iraqi and ~e Kuwaiti
defendants who race death by
hanging if convicted, iestified he
was unaware of any assassination
plot against the former president.
Tile United States launched a
· cruise missile attack against Iraq on
June 27 to retaliate for the all_eged
plot, killing eight people according
to Iraqi count.
·Amnesty Internationalp si·
Friday, that U.S. assertions it f1'
compelling evidence of a h · hlevcl Iraqi plot to kill Bush
undermined the defendants'
-presumption or innocence,

Broolclyn lawyer to Gwynne's sly
Southern-judge in the movie My
Cou.iin Vinny.
Frederick Hubbard Gwynne was
born July 10, 1926, in New York
City, the son of a stockbroker. He
served in the Navy during World
War 1.1 and was graduated from •
Harvard in 1951.
Gwynne began ,his career with ,
the Broadway production of Mrs.
Me Thing with Miss Hayes in 1952
· and went ·on to alternate among

also view many children's events and
a skill riding competition. A spetial
feature wiD be the Murat Shrines
Precision Harley-Davidson Drill
Team from Indianapolis, Ind.
,
Tickets for the Sunday commu- '
r.ity day are $4 if bought in advance
and $5 at the gate. Tickets maY. be
purchased through the Lafayette
Hotel, Marietta Cycle Center and The
Judds Tavern.
_ A parade of over 1,000 motorcycles will take place Saturday J illy
24. The motorcyclists will leave the
fairgrounds and arrive downtown at
about 7 p.m.
'

store that has gone out of business and we
wanttto pass it along to our customers at unbelievable prices. Stop In and see our &amp;election.

VNBII,J.EVABL£ PRICES!

TAWNEY JEWELERS
Gallipolis

422 2nd Ave.

"Celebrating 60 Years"

did voices for commerciais, which
he joked were "the sweetest. most
generous thing that could happen to
an aging actor." The onetim~: art
school student also wrote and
illustrated children's books such as
The Story of lc/c, 1971; A Little
Pigeon Toad, 1988; and Easy to
Su 'Why, coming out later Jhis
year. .
Gwynne's film career began with
a small role in On the- Waterfrolll,
1954. More recent roles include a
mobster in The Cotton Club, a thief
in Disorganized Crime, a coworker of Michael Douglas in
Fatal Attraction and a curmudgeon
in Pet Sematary.
He appeared in such plays as
Love's Labours Lost, a revival of
Cat On a Hot Tin Roof, A Texas
Trilogy, Our Town and Hamlet. He
won an Obie, the off-Broadway
equivalent of a Tony award, in
1979 for Grand Magic.
He last appeared on Broadway in
1983's Whodunnit.
Gwynne is survived by his wife,
Deborah Gwyn11e, and four
children. Private funeral services
were planned.

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-

•.

Moments to remembe-r

Rupe, your friend, this editor, has
seen
many sport events while
Thoughi for·Today: "If the American Revolution had produ~ed noth- reclining
in his big chalr. Sooner or
ing but the Declaration of Independence, it would have been worthlater
you
become known as a
while." - Samuel Eliot Morison, American historian (1887-1976).
professional couch potato. The
reason is simple, most all of your
experiences are acquired from TV.
So here goes. '
On Sunday, June 20th, 1993, Lee
Janzen won the National Open
Golf Championship, Unforblnately,
I did not get to see the last several
holes as Jan zen chipped the baU out
of the sand on #16 into the hole.
However, I did see Janzen receive
the large cup as it was presented to
him. What really got me was the
way he ac-cepted his prize. Tears
came to his eyes and when asked to
speak he had difficulty expressing
himself. In short, the victory really -1
· got to this young man. You could
see that he was shedding tears in a
moment of victory. Everyone who
watched this event could also have
the same feeling . It was really a
memorable sight to see.
Also at the same time, Payne
Stewqrt gave us a lesson on how to
be a good loser when victory was
close at hand. The camera caught
Stewart with his arm around
Jan zen's shoulder shaking hands at
the same time. Janzen had a bit of
good luck when he. chipped out of
the sand trap into the cup on the '
16th hole. Had ~e not made this
shoJ it is quite within the realm of
po9sibiliues that Stewart might
have won. This chip-in preserved
Jan zen's two stroke lead. Any time
a professional golfer executes this
shot should be considereCI luck.
However, Stewart, being the man
that he is. congratulated Janzen.
Stewart's example should go dowri
as being a good span.
CAT AND MOUSE
The writer also remembers the
time when Harry Clllly reh!med to
I
his T..V booth as an announcer aftec
- '

Berry's World

Imogene Elias

they routinely bill that ~ay i~
clients so request. But Gtuham ..
prosecuted Wallach for defrauding
Wedtech stockholders for the way
his bi.lllQg of just $425,000 might
have affected the price of sto(:k. U
Wallach had written a nonspecific
biD "for services rendered" there'd
be no case . The prosecution
contends Wallach•s main value to
Wedtech was his friendship with
Meese-which is no crime.
For what amounts to spitting on
the sidewalk, Wallach was
convicted and senienced to six
years in jail. ·- However, the,
conviction was 'set aside on appeal
after the prime wimess against him
(who got a light sentence in
exchange for his testimony) was
discovered to have pefJured·hunself
on his own · gambling. The.
prosecutor, ~stant U.S. Attorney
Baruch Weiss , was personally
swng by appellate impltcatibns that•
he'd known of the perjury yet
permitted it. Now Weiss is trying
Wallach again for the same actsthis time calling it fraud and
conspiracy.
.
Weiss is down · to one pnme
fo' itness, convicted ex-Wed)ech
official Mario M9reno, who has
bargained for leniency: The other
day. in U.S. d1stpct court,
Wallach's co-counsel Jeffrey
Shopoff got~ to admit that
Wedtech had listed $80 million to
$90 million in phony profits. The
company was virtually insolvent
when it went public-that's a real
defrauding or stockholders.
Attorney General Reno, it is
inconceivable that, after reviewing
the facts you will not conclude that
a miscarriage or justice is being
perpetrated tOday - in your name
and the people's .
In your in-box today, is a letter
. from Bork requesting that you
review this case of prosecutorial
abuse. There is still time for you to
step in, onfer a dismissal, and stop
this macabre spectacle-the (~­
lynching of Bob Wallach.
Martin Schram is a syndicated
writer ror Newspaper Euterprise Association.

Sunday Times Sentlnei-Page..-A7

f!red Gwynne, veteran of TV, ,stage, ..dead at 66

•

.

I

never forget the man who was
bowing out prematurely. The
feeling of sadness permeated the
atmosphere.
,
~veryone who ·listened to this
speech would have to have had a
large lump in his throat and also
appreciate Lou Gehrig's great
inning stretch, Harry got on his feet ability to play baseball. An epic
and led the audience in the song, ending to a great story and to a
''Take me out to the Ball Game."· great man. That's how it was,
When this happened I could not Rupe.
keep from shedding a few tears for
This past week Roy Campanella
good ole Harry. He led the singing, died. Here was a man that was
of course. You could tell that the certain to ~o to the baseball Hall of
volume of voices was less than Fame. H1s baseball career was
normal. This is explainable because interrupted when he almost died
many of the singers had heavy from an automobile wreck on June
hearts that day and could not sing 28,. 1958. As a result of this
as loudly as they .normally could. accident he was confined to a
They were happy, as was this wheel chair for the last35 Years of
writer, that Harry was back. For his life. OccasiQnally you would
your information, Rupe, I stayed see Lou at various baseball $ames
home· that afternoon to welcome being televised: What IS so
Harry back to the old Cub's remarkable about this man was that
ballpark.
he could always smile. He spoke in
Most sports fans can remember a soft voice and always I1PJlC8fed to
the day which was given to Lou be in a happy frame of mind. Lou
Gehrig after he became ill with was a man who could continue life
amyotrophiclateral sclerosis, later without being bitter. There should
known as Lou Gehrig disease. No be more Roy Cl\!!lpanella's around
one can forget the solemn speech today to s~ow j!lu, Rupe, how to
that he made at Yankee Sladium on overcome adversity. .
his special day.
This past week Carlton Fisk was
Gehrig ·was-dre'ssed in street released by the Chicago White Sox.
clothes and 'he looked in normal This release caught nearly
good health. The disease had not, everyone in the baseball world by
as yet, take~ its full toll. Gehrig surprise. "Ole Pudge." was an
thanked everyone participating in outstanding catcher. He spent many
the event and an extreme silence years with Boston and Chieago in
was no~ as he ~poke in his soft ~ the American League . Who can
raspy vo1ce. Gehng told all of hiS· forget especially a Reds fan, the
fans . that he appreciated their sixth 'game of the 1975 World
c~mmg to the game. The TV
Series. Fish hit the ball into the
v1ewer would never see Lou bleachers near the left field fQul
Gehrig in a baseball uniform again. line: He jumJ!ed up and down and
What a dramatic. ending to a fme waved his hands trying to keep the
baseball career. The writer is ball in fait territory.. The umpire
certain that everyone listening to agreed that it..&lt;was fair and Boston
Lou Gehrig on _that final daY._will
a long illness. Harry had G'ust
returned after that illnes to
announce the Cub's baseball g e.
When it carne time for the sev nth

FredW. Crow

won this game. The Cincinnati
Reds, however, won the 7th game -:
of this World Series and were
crowned the Champions.
Other outs landing moments in .
sports, or my life. or otherwise will •'
be published later.
The writer received a very
important letter from Ryan Hysell
as follows: "Dear Mr. Crow : My ,
name is Ryan "Meat Rind" Hysell,
and I am Herold "Baldy" Hysell's youngest surviving grandson. I \lffi r
twenty years oldj and my father 1s '
Charles "Rat" Hy$ell. Mter reading •
your article in the Sunday Sentinel ~
entitled The Tip Dye Story, I
thought yQu might be able to help ~
me out"
•
:
"About three years ago I staned a
bookabout.rl)y grandfather. When+':
finished the rough draft I wasn't :
satisfied with it. It needed more, .
and so !took the last two years to ,.
collect more information. The :
purpose of this letter is to ask if . ·
you might be able to give me some · ·
childhood background on my '
grandfather. I would be very ;
appreciative. My phone number is •
363-1093 and my address is 100 .·
Richards Drive, Delaware, Ohio ' .
43015. As I said before, i~ would •
- be very much appreciated.· With .
Highest Regards, Ryan D. Hysell." :
In God We Trust
,
Carry on.
'
· Editor's note - Long-time :
Attorney Fred W. Crow Is the ~
contributor or a weekly column •
for The Sunday Times-Sentinel. ~
aeaders wishing to applaud, •
criticize .or comment on any
subject (except religion or ,
politics) are encouraged to write •,
to Mr. Crow, in care or this :
newspaper.
"

••

&gt;,1)

"'

The Answers You Need ...
As Close As Your Phone!
'

•ILLNESS or .INJURY
·•PHYSICIAN
.REFERRAL
.
•HEALTH CARE EVENTS
,
•SUPPORT. GROUPS.
.

'

HOLZER MEDICAL CEN'JER
l

�&lt;I

Pomeroy-Middlepoft-'Galllpolla, OH ~ folnt Pleasant, WV

SUnday nm.. Sentinel

••

''

July 4, 1893 ·

....

•. NEW YORK (AP) - Amid fC!IfS Islamic world to the sheil&lt;'s caravan, the· sheik arrived t bout ,
of violeace by his Jadical Muslim detentioq, said spokesman Mike 9 :~0 {l.m. all federal priso~ in
followers, authorities issued an Me~.
Ot.asvalle, N.Y., about 75 miles ·
.
alen to Americans ll'i~ am.d
Walking through a g•untlet of nonhwe~ofNewYorltCity, .saida
as U.S. immigration ·officials took .followers chanting "God is spokesman for tile facility , Rex
Sheik Omar Abel-Rahman into Great!" Abdel-Rahmaq left a Sproul.
.
tody.
. Brooklyn mosque on·· Friday
Earlier Friday; the sheik gave a
The blind Egyptian cl¢c, S!&gt;me evening and turned himself over 10 ." kind of goodbye speech " to·
whose followers are accuslid in federal authorities.
several hundred supportbrs in
World Trade Center bombing ' As Abdel-Rahman surrendered; a Wbi ch he counseled ' again st
a foiled plot to bomb buildings group of Hasidic Jews standing violence and proclaimed his
and tunnels in Manbauan, behirnt police barricades shouted innocence, according to a Saudi
surrendered Friday after 20-hour "Go to Hell!" and "Drop dead! " journalist who observed .the half·
standoff.
The blind cleric , surrounded by 'hour sermon .at the Abu Bakr
In Egypt, Abel -Rahman's aides, walked slowly acr 0 ss the mosque. .
..
followers bad threalened to initiate street and into an ·immigration
The journalist, who spoke on
a bombing campaign if the spirilual service command post.
condition of anonymity, s.aid',lhe .
leader was taken into custody.
Escorted by. a law enforcemenl sheilc told the congregants, some of
In Washington ; the · St11te
Department issued a warning of
possible adverse reaction in the

a

whom were Sobbing: " I might not has been determined that it is no
standinfrontofyou~. " .
.lonJ.er in the public interest for the
" We are not conspmng agamst sheik 10 remam at large.' '
America. even .though we disagree
But ·
in
Washington,
with American wiicy," the sheik administration officials said the
was q poted as saymg ... He also decision to revoke Abdelurged the Muslims not to clash Rilhman •s parole ,status was based
with 'I be crowd of journjllists, on an atiempt Wednesday night to
police and onlookers outside the elude surveillance. .
·
mosque, in Brooklyn's ethnically
U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White in
diverse Midwood section.
Manhattan called Attorney General
" We want to give a ci'f'ilized Janet Reno on Thursday m0111ing
appearance to Islam,' ' he ;and expressed the fear that Ahdel,
repottedly said.
~
Rahmap might be going
Chris Sale, actin!! Immigration undergroun_(l,
said
an
and Naturalization Service administration official who spoke
co11111)!¥ioner, said Abdei-Rahman on condition of anonymity. As lale
was taken into custody bec•use "it as Tuesday, Reno had said it was in

the best inrerest of law cnf&lt;neinent
•
Mohammad T. Mehdi, a·
prominei11 Arlb-American activist
who Is close to the Abdei-Ralunan,
said the arrest of the 55-year-old
sheik would.JIIOillpl "li wQI'Idwidc
protest," but no violence. ·
·..
Abdel-Rahman's
reporte4
prediction that American blood ,
would be spilled, he said, could be · ·
traced 10 inaccunite u.nslation and,
"Arabic hyperbol~" that should• •
not be taken literally.
: ,..
T~e Justice Department said;.• •
Abdet-Rahman, a dia~ Egyptian_.:
national, entered the Uruted StaleS : Oil a toUrist visaJuly 18, 1990.. ':;

•

·I

SectionB
. July4, 1 •

2-5th festiVal exhibit .winners announced
1~

-

, I

.

RECEIVES PURCHASE AWARD • First Place In Professional
'Mixe4 Media, "Shope Window," by Vernon Howell or Bar• bounv1lle, received a Purchase Award t'rom Thaler Orthopaedic
Clinic. ·
;.. McDONALD'S. CHOICES • Pat Sauber on tbe right, and son
Kurt, representing McDonald's Restaurants, chose three palnt·ings, ~own here above: ''Quiet Morning," by Joe Ann Crawfo~d,
•Tornado, W. Va. and below, "Coming In with the Tide," by
cCatherine Steiner from Athens.

lllf Plla

CONVERSION VAN

MID-SUMMER GARDEN • Shirleen Wllemu and Dauahterln-Law, Libby Wileman, chose Ibis ele1ant p,astel by Sandy Perrine from Greenup, Ky. The plctnre Is entided ''Mid-Summer Garand is-ror Wileman Insurance A•ency. ,
SELECTS TWO WORKS • Star Bank selected twC! works as
their gift to Holzer Medical Cenlfr. Shown here is Waleska wray
with (above) ·•'Fern,
Tree and Autumn -Leaves," a photolll'aph by Tom Layma•,
below IS the second Place,
Amateur Watercolor
artist, Katherine Bobel,
"Antique Car Sbow."
·

...

-

'

•

IIIII IIW •aa 1·10 1-1 TilDE PltiUP

, Tahoei'I&lt;CI .. V-8, All,!_IS, Pill ,
'tr , - - - - - - - - - - - - , AM.fMCIA,
IIai~Ym-o,
Slkllng Rur Window,
Loedtdl
Us/ Pr/QJ ........ .......l13.313
OPiionP!gD0. .......... -12568

Motor vehicle,
watercraft title
fees increasing

GALLIPOLIS • The regional
fine art competition, sponsOred by
the French Art Colony, is in its
~Sill year. Over this period, 'the
show has grown from a local event
.
one lhat..embraccs the tri,state
and bcyol!d.
•
Oripnally, primarily 111 'exhibit
· fcatunng amateur artists, as the
presli$e of.lhe show bas JII'Own. the
majonty bf enlnlllts are m the pro·
fessional categOI')'. All artists have
an equal OJlportunity, since works
are.judged by division and caiCgory.
.
Serving as jurors this year were
Connie Campbell. formerly director of the French Art Colony and
now C:ultural Arts Superintendent
foi the Cultural Arts Department,
~ity of Ket!eri!Jg. Also serving as
JUfor was Kevm Lyles, AssL Professctr in the Art Department, Uni- versity of Rio Grande. Mr. Lyles
specializes in ceramics, sc;ulpture;
design and drawing. The third juror
was Brad Schwieger, Assistant
Professor in the School of Art at
Ohio UniverSity. Mr; Schwieger's
medium is clay and his work. has
received favor m nwnerous exhibitions.
· Competition diVIded
Working together. to analyze the
entries, the jurors felt that waleTCOI·
ors were the strongest entries in
both professional and amllleur division. The jurors would like to
encourage more cnaics in creative
craft mediums. They were pleased
to be able to judge amaleur artists
separately from professionals to
allow more opportunity for recognition of new artists.
Their criteria included a diverse
range of craftsmanship, creativity
and honesty in approach. "We Wish
there were more room in the galleries 50 additional fmc work could
have been selected. Those who
were not choseo should not be discouraged but look fo£Ward to next
year' s opportunity to submit new
work,• stated the jurors,
Co·e~airing the exhibit again
this year were Saundra Koby and
Jan Thaler. Thaler has been Of$8·
nizing the show since the begmning. She staled that the success of
tlie show owes much to business
SU!Jport to the arts and entering
arttsts·in particUlar. "Bank One has
funded much of the Cli:JIC!ISC of the
exhibit as wen as prize money for
• the &amp;ftists. In addition, purchase
awards given by local businesses
add a great incentive ·for artists to
j!articipale," Thaler said.
Those businesses, and their representatives, making purchase
awards·selections this year were:
Alin Johnson for Bank One, Connie
Pullin for Fruth Pharmacy, Marianne Campbell for Holzer Medical
Center, Pat and Kurt Sauber for
McDonald's Restaurants, Bill'Gray
for Ohio Valley Bank, Terry and
Carroll Casto for Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Tim Hennessey and
Clyde Hall for Reliance .Motion

•

Control, Waleska Wray for Star ·
Bank N.A., Jan Thaler for Thaler
Orthopaedic Oinic, Shirley lmd Ali
Golji for Valley Diagnostic l..abp.
raiOry and Shirleen Wiseman for
Wiseman Insurance Agency.
Proteuloaal dlYiaioe
In the Professional Division, the
· following artists received
awards: Teresa Baker, Kingston,
Ohio from Pleasant'Valley Hospital
for her watercolor, "American
Arborvitae. • Mary B. Cooper,
Chillicothe, Ohio, from Reliance
Motion C.ontrol, for a watercolor,
Foothilli Farm," which also
received Honorable Mention. Vernon Howell's mixed' media
"Shoppc Window" was se)ected by
Thaler Orthopeadlc Clinic. He is
from Barboursville, W.Va. and also
received First Place in Mixed
Media for this work.
Other award winners were Tom ·
Layman, Athens, for ''Fem, Mossy
Tree and Autumn Leaves" selected
by Star Bank for Holzer Medical
Center .. This also received First
Place in Professional Photography.
A second photograph, "Frosty
Autum'n Morning" was given a
· Purchase Award by Reliance ·
Motion Control. Sandy Perrine,
Greenup, Ky., won a purchase
award from Wiseman Insurance for,
her pastel, "Midsummer Garden."
The Wiseman Agency also selected
"Happiness" a watercolor by Polly
Trumbore of Ashland; Ky..
·
Fruth Pharmacy selected a
warercolor entitled, "Hibis!:us" by
Dream a Perry from Louisa, Ky.
Valley DiaJnl&gt;stic Laboratory
chose two pamtings: a pencil "Tom
Sails-Beaver Island" bY, CalherinC
Steiner, Athens, and • Water Lillies" a mixed media entry by Linda
Tracy of Huntington. Catherine
S~iner also received a second Pia'·
chase Award from McDonald's
R~staurants for "Coming In with
the Tide," a wateltolor. ·
Amalfur dlmion
In . the Amateur Division,
Katherine Bobel,. of Gallipolis,
received a Purchase Award ·from
Star Bank for Holzer Medical Qn.
ter, for "Antique Car Show," a
watercolor which also receiv~
Second Place. McDonald's selected
two additional paintings: "Quiet
Morning': an ink/warercolor by Joe
Ann ·Crawford, TornadQ, WV, and
"August Contract" by Bernard
Miller, Hurricane, W.Va. Mr .
Miller received two additional Pla'chase Awards for his wa~olors, "
Joe T. on the Ohio" chli'sen by
Ohio Valley Bank for Holzer Medical Center and "Aunt Eihel's
• House" purchased by Bank One
also for the Hospital. Completing
the Purchase Awards, Pleasant Valley Hospital chose a second paint:
ing, an oil, by Fran}( Miller of Pt.
Pleasant, "Ye Ole' Bucket"
'!'he top honor in the Professional Division for Best of Show, as
well as First Place in Sculpture,
Continued.on B'3

purcu

~'::'!~iiiiiiii -mo
Tom _,Disc............ ·f/Nll

A l l - (110\MMtd/ .. ·WIII

FOOTHILLS FARM· Tim Hennesey, Manaaer
:MI~ti(on Control, selected Mary B. Cooper's waiercolor, "Foothills
•·arm:· Ms. Cooper Is from ChUUcotbe.

POMEROY - Residents of
Meigsand Galliacounties, along with
other Ohio residents purchasing
motor vehicle titles will soon find the
price of titles and' other documents
increasing.
Substitute House Bi111S4, passed
Thursday, allows for an increase in
motor vehicle title fees effective July

~-ec
· lnl1
lllr.... Ait
Concllon.
Adq
loll, P/8. .,TI\ Cluill,

P.W-. P111001 Lodii,AIIJIM

Coqolll, Clv- llol'lllp
~.
Coop Tln1od - ·
Roly-.l-1

·,AUNT ETHEL'S HOUSE' • Representing the sponsor of the
exhibit, Bank One, Manager Ann Johnson, cbose as.the bank's girt
to Holzer Medical Cenlfr, Ibis watercolor, "Aunt Ethel's House"
by Bernard MOler.
·
·

Lis/ Prlal....... ......... . .....$18,!165
/JPIIM Pffg Dilc..... ........ ·11400

6.

Tom- DIM:... ....... .-$2077

Fees being raised include: titles
- from $3 to$5; memorandum titles
- from $2 to $5; duplicate titlesfrom $3 .25 to $5; lien notations from $2 to $5; and replacement titles
- from $3 to $5.
Fees not~ging are: late fees$5\ inspections - $1.50; affidavits
- $1; certified copies - $2; title
searches - $2; and salvage titles .$4.
In adaition, the bill also allows for
an increaSe in watercraft and ·out. board motor title fees effective Tuesday. Watercraft and outboard motor
title fees are the same as motor vehicle fees.
,
All titles coming into the Meigs
County Title office after Tuesday will
· be assessed the new fee regardless.of
the dale of notarization, an employee
of the Meigs County Clerk of Courts
office said Friday. The only exceptions will be' titles already in the offace or ffiailcd before Tuesday.
I

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10 let the sheik remain free.

Sixth graders
sorry for plot
to kill teacher
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP)- They
tried to poison their teacher'.s iced
tea and trip her down the stairs, all
because they thought she was too
strict..
On Friday, seven sixth-graders
were sentenced to 48 hours of
community service and placed on
indefinite probation for their
efforts. Juvenile Court Judge Aaron
Cohn also forbade the seven from
associating with each other.
''If these children had been more
sophisticated, I am afraid we could
have had a big tragedy in the
community," Cohn said.
All had pleaded guilty the day
before to reckles·s conduct, a
misdemeanor that's more serious
that the disorderly conduct charges
filed when they were arrested last
month.
On Friday, the three girls and
four boys from Georgetown
Elementary School filed into the
Muscogee County courtroom and
sat down facing nine of their
parents. Also in the courtroom was
the teacher, Sherry James.
One boy, about a foot and a half
shorter than the others, had a pixie
haircut and was too short to touch
the floor with his feet when sealed.
He was one of two children who
apologized, standing to say, "I'm ·
sorry, Msr
• ames. "
__ ..- ~.. ,
A girl said: "I'm really sorry. I
know wl)atl did was wrong.Jn_lbe
· future, I will try to be a better
person.'' Her lawyer stopped her
when she put her face in her hands
and began sobbing.
Mrs. James, who had never
commented publicly on the case,
asked to address the students. "I
accept your apology. I still love
you and· I hope you do good next
year'in school," she said.
Police said the seven children
planned and bungled several
attacks on Ms. Ja.mes, who has
·been a teacher for 27 years,
because they thQught she was too
s.tricL
.
.
· They attempted to put chemicals
from a home chemistry set in her
ice·d tea, tried to trip her down
some stairs, and brought a handgun
and a knife. to school, police said.
Ms. James wasn't injured.

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¥\long th~ .River

·Followers threaten terror spree after Muslim leader is· jailed ~
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84

'WBISCUS' • Shown here, Conuie Pullin's choice for Fruth
Pbarmacy. This watercolor Is by Dreama Perry, who was ·reatnred
.
recently In tbe FAC Gallery. The title Is ''Hibiscus."

' ' ..

~ P-VH'S CHO.CE • Attorney Carroll Casto tavored a second

painting with a Purchue. Award for Pleuan• Valley Hospital.
Arborvitae" by Teresa Baker or Kingston, Ohio, was

"~merican

I

TH FINANCING!

ON APPROVED CREDIT

""'

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48 MONTHS .
ON
ONSELECTED MODELS

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~SheeJa. DeJayn
sings
.

Monday in Rutland
RUTLAND '- Meigs County
nativ~ and rising country and
western singer Sheela Delayn Will
perfoim Monday ~t the Rutland Ox
Roast.
Delayn takes the stag~ at 7 p.m.
following Dee and Dallas.

•
WESTVIRGINIA'S #1 CHEVY, ~:~Lu.,., PONTIAC, BUICK, G~O AND CUStOM-VAN DEALER.

422·0756 •.372·2844 • 344-5947

Mon • Sat 9:00 to 9:00

Suil1 :00 to 6:00

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CHQOSf,S TWO PAINUNGS • Mr. and Mrs. All Golll, purchuiDI ror Valley Dllp01tlc Laboratory, chose two pafndnp.
· Sbowa here, AU GoUt diiiJIIIYI "Torn Salls-Beaver bland" by
Catherine Steiner of Athens On tbt rlalll. Shirley Goljl llolds,
"Water LDlles," by Lhlda Tracy from fbmtlnaton • .

TOll fR~~ 1·800·822·0417
·.

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OVB CHOICE· Bill Gray liked this palndna• tbe Oblo Valley
Bank Rift to Holzer Mf!ll~ Cenlfr. The palatial "Joe T. oa 111e
Ohio"ls a watercolor by Bernlll'd MUier of Hurricane. W. VL
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PomeiO!f llddleparl a.'llpolls, OH Point

nm11 sentinel'.

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wv

4, 1883:

" 'Bur Readeh: TOday is July
Fauna. Cia . . . whit beaer day
Ill td R J011r iMct» h den..

amotlq, driatla1 100 much,

piigb'l out, OUtlilpondq IIIII the
ptMII ol Ill ainl ol omillicln r.ilina 111-ay , - ,au" 10 !bole
Who IN 7 I lllllld dcawt?
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.. SJDdl&lt;-'&lt;
c_s,..._.,

. Folmer-Russell .

LONG BOTI'OM - Michelle Tate Chevrole~ ·
Combs is a 1988 graduate of
Renae Cannean and Jeremy Lee
NEW HAVEN, W.VA. - Mr.
·Chester
Christian Academy and is and Mrs. William E. Folmer and
COJIIbs annQIIIIce their engagement
employed at precision poured con- Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Russell
and approaching maniage.
·The bride-elect is a 1992 gradu- crete.
announce the engagement and
The wedding will be Friday at approaching maniage of their chil·
ate of Nonheastem High School of
Springfield. She is a li~sed cos- 1:30 p.m . at the 'Ohio Valley dren, Anita Marie, to Jeffrey Allen. •
mctolojlist and is employed at Don Church of God. ·
Miss Folmer is a 1990 graduate
of Wahama High School and is
currently employed at KrQgers of

Pomeroy.
.
Russell is a 1983 graduate of
Wahama High School and is curren~y e.mploy.ed ~~ Sm.ith Buick
Ponuac m Gallipolis.
.
.
The open church wed~ng will
be an event of Aug. 7 at 5.30 p.m.
at the; New Haven Untted
Methodist Church.

amuae many

....

p.m.
Monday, JulyS

PORTER • The Schwartz family
will sing at Clark Chapel Church at
7 p.m.

GALLIPOtiS ·The Lafayette
Post No . 27, American Legion
PAINT CREEK· Paint Creek meeting and dinner has been
·Baptist Church will hold a union canceled, due to the July Fourtb
·
Ji\eeting at 2:30p.m. with Rev. hoUday.
David Witherspoon to speak.
KYGER CREEK • The annual
GALLIPOLIS • Faiffi Baptist reunion of the Emory VanCQ fa,rnily
Church, -750 Jackson Pike, will will be held on Sunday, Ju1y 11111
hold special patriotic services. The .:!he Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Gel
10:45 a.m. service will feature toge~er for coffee and juice at 1~
Pastor Dennis Hankins of Franldin" a.m: dinner is at 12:30 p.m.
Furnace Independent Baptist Families are reminded to bring a
Church. the 6 p.m. service will t ~ish to pass, beverage and tabl~
feature Charles Lusher to speak. service. For more information ca}!
there will special patriotic music (716)392-8987. ·
:.
provided by the church choir and
•
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guest soloists.
'
GALLIPOLIS • The annual
Russell Family reunion wiU be hel4
CROWN CITY • Uberty Cha.P:I Saturday, July 10, at Shelterhouse
Church will feature Rev. R1ck No. 3, Mc,ntyre Park Disttict.
Barcus and New City Singers at 7 ·

. STACY GREENE, I) ON ALP HARPEN

Greene-Harden
GALLIPOLIS • Sracy Lynnette
Greene and 'D.J. Harden annou!ICO
their engagement and upcommg
wedding. Stacy is the daughter of
James and Sandra Greene, Gallipolis. D.J. is the son of Don and

Angie Harden, Gallipolis.
The wedding will be held at the
Gallia Baptist Church, July 10 at 3
p.m. with ~ recepr,ion following at
the church. '\.

Wedding policy
the publication, and may be up to
600 words in length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by the editorial department by
thursday, 4 p.m. prior to the date of
publication.
Those not making the 60 day
deadline will be published during
the daily paper as space allows.
Photogaphs of either the bride or
the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories is
desired. Photographs may be either
black and white or good quality
color, billfold .size or larger.
Poor quality photographs wiU not
he accepled. Generally, snapshots
or in stant·developinj! photos are
VATICAN CITY (AP} - Pope not of acceptable quality.
Questions may be directed to the
John Pau I II got a clean bill of
health afler undergoing a CAT scan editorial department from 1-5 p.m.
to C'hcck for any new growths Monday through Friday at 446following last year's surgery to 2342.
rcm'ove a benign tumor from his
intestine.
The sophisticate!) radiological
exam was performed Friday ' 'to be
on the safe side," said papal
spokesman Joaquin Navarro.
" From the clinical point of view,
the Hol y Father is a healthy
person," Navarro said.
.
Since his operation last July ,
there have been periodic news
. repons questioning the 73-year-old .
. pontiffs health.
Navarro said the CAT scan had
been planned since the surgery as
part of followup checkups and that
the checkups would conbnue.
"We're . in ·the area of
preventative medidne," he said.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards wedding of Gallia, Meigs
and Mason counites as news and is
happy to publish wedding stories
and photographs without charge. ·
Howe ver, wedding news must
meet general standards of
timeliness. The newspaper prefers
to publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible afler the event.
To be published in the sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prior to

Pope declared·
in good health

ELAINE KISKIS AND GREGORY FORBF.'i

··•Kiskis~Forbes _.

POINT PLEASANT • Mr. and
Mrs. ~obert Taylor and Mr . .and
Mrs. James Kiskis announce the·
enga¥enient and approaching
weddmg of their daugh~r, ·Eiail!e
Z. Kiskis to Gregory A. Forbes,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Forbes.
Kiskis is a 1985 graduate of
Gallia .Academy High School, as
well as a 1990 graduate of Ohio
University where sbe received her
Bachelor of Fine Arts in art
education. She is currently

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LANGSVILLE - Gale and "Marshall University's School of
Kathy Rhodes, Langsville, Business .with an anticipated graduannounce .the engagement and ation in AugusL He is general manapproaching marriage of their ager of Fin and Fur Pet Shops and a
daughter, Margaret Ellen, to James human resource assistant at HCA
Edwin Parsons, Huntington; W.Va. Hospital, both in Huntington,
Rhodes recently received a W.Va.
The ceremony will be an event
bachelor's 'degree in public relaof
Sept 4 at the Dimbar Olurch •of
tions from Marshall University.
God
m Dunbar, W.Va., wi!h Rev.
She is the ~er ofFin and Fur
Pet Shop East m Bat'boursville, Harry MuUens officiating. A reception will follow in the church activW.Va.
rarsons is currently_C~Jrolled at ~ ity building.

MONDAY, J'ULY 5, 1993

COAL GROVE
The
descendants o.f Jame s V. and
Lucinda Brammer Rice will hold a
reunion in Coal Grove at 11 a.m.
The event wilt' be covered dish.
For more information contact
Linda McComas at 867-5 {93 or
Carl Swanzwelder 894-5363.

446·9515
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Brammer-Rice reunion

employed with the Gal1ia County
local schools as a middle school art
teacher.
Forbes is a 1980 graduate of
·point Pleasant High school. He is
employed at the West Virginia
Department of Highways.
The wedding will take place on
July on 24, 2 p.m. at the Good
Shepherd United Methodist
Church, Route 2.
The custom of an open wedding
will be observed.

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Gallia County Cornrnunity Calendar~
Sunday, July 4

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•

MORNING' • Clyde Hall, Hamaa
Resource
for Reliance Motioa Control, cbose a photo. graph by Tom Laymaa, Athens, for his awar.d. The title Ia ''Frosty
Autumn Morning.''
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Continuedrro!D B-1
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Carmean-Combs

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·~n while otrencling.DObocly..... ·
prinlllla Gem of the Day tblit went R.C.W., WASHINGTON, D.C.
like Ibis: •you !mow ,ou're rri"l
DEAR R.C.W.: The poem ii
, old when everytbina. clriea up or simply delightful. Thank you tKi
leaD llld takca a hcc'k of a lot mDnl much for ICIIding it on. Here it it
lime.".
foralltoenjoy:
~
IIUipCCtlhiiWII inren&amp;ld to be I
ICllual reference. If 10, it's a 11111ty
Mama's NighlgOwn
one. It's die tlllll ollhiaa that made
This morning, Marna's · .
••
me squirm witll 'embarrallment
lllliling llld hlilllrning
wben I Wll I kid and jolt beginnillg
and her nightgOwn's
10 .tllldentand "ildult" jokes. It is
inside out.
ca llinlynota "Gem.
.
. _..
The boys are noisy,
Wane yet. it is pail of .. ugly
the dog's barking,
·
Jllllel1l ol raat1ng fun of&lt;*! people.
lhe docln't even shout.
rm diaguatecl with the American
Allll'lpa.
.
tendency Ill view old age mainly u
be'alaughing tllld clancmg
a time wben ,ou're wuhed'up llld
lhiougll the house,
"'
falling aptUt. We not only ridicule
'cause Mama's nightgown
~·
our eldcrly,but inviiC them 10 mate
is ialide out
•
fun of lhernsclves.
Pear ADD Laadera: I am
You're 111pposed to be dispell$ing enclosing an article that appeared iii
ldvit:e lhll CXIIIIel rrom 111e wiJdom the Chicago Tribune recently. A .
of expaienc:e. Sneerina at the old is woman 11110ed Pearl Wild sent her
for boon, and ~ is JIIOOOCIII*ion sister a pos!Card in 1911. It wu
with body functions. No more Of delivered 82 years later.
this, please. •• FUTURE GitAY
Family .memberi are quoced as
PANTHER IN VIRGINJA ·
saying, ,tmalresyouwoncler~ .
DEAR VIRGINIA: rm a ICIIIior the post.card had been" Ill those
citizen and not the Ieist bit leDiitive years. Well, Ann, lilY wife woo
about it. I'm llhicl your · of rea4s your column could tell you. "
humor hu either dried .., or leaked . ObViously, Mn. Wild gave her .
out
h~ the postCard to mail, tllld
Dar Aq LUden: Reteieoc:es like lilillions of other husbtlllds, he
to ICll CUI be earataining. Unfortu· simply forgot. - D.S;, VE~ ,
natdy, the cumat trend is heavily HllLS, D.l...
wei.gbtccl fDWJid apeclfics aaid awy
DEAR VERNON HILLS: I love
from IUbclety, which I rmader to ill I wonder how many wiveS are
be uupaior .:t.
p!lng io clip this c;olumn and haDd
. To !Dike my poinl, I am enc:IOi- tt-10 lheir husbal!ds. Thanks for my
lng a poem by (:hades A. Weber laugh o£the day.
•

ANlTA i'OLMER AND JEFFREY RUSSELL

'

ANN·LANDEU
"19l13, l,oo ""'....

'Deaf Aq baden: YClllleceildy .

MICHELLE CARMEAN AND JEREMY COMBS

..

Ann
·Landers

CONFIDBNI1AL TO MY SIS:
HAPPY BIRntDAY TO YOU! •

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. . DINEnES
STARTING AT

staa~·

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25(h .. •

went 10 Taylor Frazie{ II, Athens, Place in 3-Diffiensional Wort went
for his hammered sreel.piece enti- ··tO' Mona Arritt, for a stoneware
tied "Lamentations."
piece "Oh Law I, Two Electric
· Best of. Show in the Amateur Boogaloo. " Other artists ~epiCd
Division went to Carolyn Potter into the 'galleries for exhibit during
from Oakhill for ."Misty Morn," July include Danny Brumfield and
which also received First Place in Irene Roush, both from Pt. Pleas. Amateur Watercolors. She also ant, Evelyn Pierson, Jamestown,
received Honorable Mention for an Ohio , Rod Brand, Southside,
acrylic, "Our Friend Sleepcth." ·
W.Va., Gary Sauls, Gallipolis,
Additional artists and their work Richard Stevens, Athens and Todd
GALLIPOLIS . Lori Ann Sexton • beads and sequins. The bride's receiving ribbons were: Dori Baker, Osborne from Huntington.
ancl Malthew James Cremeans waist length veil marched the gown Kingston, First Place Professional · Altogether t!lc jurors choSe the
were united in marriage May 22. with adommen!. The b~de earried . Waterco~ for "Cypress." SecOnd worJwof 28 of the S4 artists who
MR. AND MRS. SHANE FACEMIRE
Rev. Chester Lemley, Vinton, a ~ou9uet of 1vory wtldf!owers Place in the same division went to entered, selecting SO paintings for
a
~
I'
officialed the ckiuble. ring ceremony W.lth Ivory ~nd black ribbons . Jlll!ice Ro.che •• Athens, for "Edge exhibit in the galleries during the
at the Church of God, Garfield a~ented ~·th 1vory pearls.
. .. of FC)_rked Run." Honorable Men- month of Juiy.. All First Place lind
··•
· bel h
·ed
Avenue, Gallipolis. The bride was
. The bridal party wore ~atchmg lion in this category went'.to Paul Best of Show enlries receiye cash
~ · CROWN CITY · Jennifer Rae greensatm L ecam agreen esco~ed .byh,erfather.
s•lk.tea length gown.s w1t~ blact. ~radford, Athens. for "Cows in awards sponsored by Bank011e.
The bride is the daughter of b&lt;ldices .a_nd·.floral.pnnt skuts and Shade."
·
The exhibit open
·· s to'the.t'i
. ulilic·Sa··
.Gonner and Shane David Facemire bJ!Sket decorate&lt;!. ~ith peach roses
were ined in marriage May 15 in and ribbons.· The guest
book
attenI
Th
ed
bo
IS f
'
· th ·
h Rick and Cindy Se)(ton of Bidwell. s. eeves. e.y cam
u9ue . o · Second Place in Professional urday, July J at 10 a.m.
....,-.;ft,
1
'(he Crown City .United Methodist dant wore a tea eng satm peac
The groom is the son of Ivin Cre- • 1vory blac•·.. an d mauve WI Idflow· Sculpture went to Rhonda White ing enti'ies , many e)(tepu.·'·--·
011aDy
:Church. The bride is the daughter dress accented w1'th a corsage.
·l'if Rev. and Mrs~ Franklin Conner,
The bestman was Eric Lester, of means of Gallipolis ·and Judy ers. .
.
ed for a stoneware.piece, "Antaphy." beautiful, will be cxbibiiCd in City
•
G · I'15 G
Larry
Shriver of Bidwell. The bride is the · The !1!0011! wore~ black tux o · Both Ms. White aild Carolyn Potter Park July 3, from 10 il.m.-5 p.m.
~rown
City. The groom is the son
albpo • roomsmen were
granddaufhter of Joe and ·Ruth with ta. •.Is w1th an ·1vory rosebud · have studied art at the University of Most .of the work is available. ~or ·
Th
.
'of Mr. aild Mrs. David Facemire, Conner, South Bend, Ind., brother
u 11 • I'
of the bride and Matt Barcus, Day- Phillips o Gallipolis and Orville boutonntere. e groomsmen w~ Rio Grande.
.
sale.
a 1po ts.
··
.
· fthe
and Amy Sexto.n of Kerr. The m. archin~ black tuxedos with tatls
Mise.ellaneousawards
• " This'andothernmgramsareparMusic was ,~vided by pian
. ist ton, cousm o -"dgroom.
and blac ues.
·
,..- the Ohio Ads
·
"-·-·
groom
is
the
grandson
of
Eleanor
Additional
awards
in
the
Amatial)y funded through
The groom au rmg"""'"" wore
i. oe Whitfield.
e double ring cerA
·
h
ld
t
th
·
·
1
d
. h·-""' 'th
h
Black of Marysville and James reception was e a · . .e · teur Div1sion tnc u ed an Honor- Council. For additional. inforrna- '
. emony was performed by Rev. matehmg,UAW...SWI a_peac .rose CremeansofGallipolis.
church fellowship ,hall followtng able Mention to Tim Malone. tion, contact the French Art
:Raymond Bragg.
·
with baby~s breatb boutonmere.
Music was provided by soloists, .the cc:rll!"ony. The hall was.d,eco- :. Athens, for. "On Water'.s Ed~e- · Colony, (614}446-3834 .
, .. The bride was escorted by her The bestman ilnd ~h smenh wore Becky Hess and pianist Gwen rated m 1vory and black. Atteildants Geese Family" an acrvhc . F1rst
·were Carolyn Burris, Heidi Brum·
·
father and given into marriage by_ black tuxedos, Wit peac rose Phillips.
her parents. .
'
'boutonnieres.
dec'' ted
. ' 'th
The maid of honor was Jamie field, Debbie Clary, ~hristi
Maid of hOnor was Ta.mmy
The church was
ora WI
Sexton, sister of the bride. Brides- McGuire and Shirley Graham . · . .
· 1
~...
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ty,
s
'
ster
of
the
two
seven
liranch
candelabras,
·
ird'··"
·
b
J
·
M
f
h
1
Conner. Crown Cl
ma•ds were Dawn Haney and B &gt;&lt;NU was g1ven y ess1e ur- .. The families o t e 1ate Karen J·ohn·son • Stoney"Jobn·son •
bride. Bridesmaids. were Brigitte vases of while and peach roses and : Norma Oiler. The best man was phy.
Chauncey Laud and Ruth Johnson Gallipolis; Vance .Jobnson; MickKensinger of NorfQlk, Va.• cousin kneeling bench with roses and Jason Shiver, brother of the groom.
Following the reception the cou- met at t11e home of Mr. and Mrs. ey, Brent, Becky, Bethany, Breof the bride!'and Susan Facemire, bows .throughout the church.
·Groomsmen were Mark Kinney pie left for a honeymoon in Gatlin- Milc:e McCalla for a family reun\on anpe and Haylie, Gallipolis; Ade·
of Gallipolis, sister of the groom..
A unity candle ceremony w,s and Donald PeiU'Ce. Registering burg, Tenn.
·
recently.
line J. and Edmund D. Andrea,
Flower girl was ~conifer Mgel, also observed with each mothers guestS was ·Gina Shifflett.
.
The bride is a 1990 graduate of
In attendance were Opal Halley, Columbus; Barbara J. and Michael
Q.f Gallipolis. Guestbook attendant' lighting a candle followed by the
The bride wore an ivory floor North Gallia High S~hool and a · Oallipolis; Kenneth Johnson, Mary Huber, Philadelphia, Pa.: Mary E.
~as Amanda Stapleton, of Gallipo- bride and groom.
length gown of taffeta. The gown graduate of Holzer SchOol of Nurs- . Ellen, Sally and Mal Orebaugh, Johnson, Bill Gene, Janet, ~tt
hs.
·
Concluding the ceremony the featured a high neck and vee cut ing at the University of Rio Tara Irwin and Ryan, Tressa Cre- Andrea , ·Kathy McCalla, Mike,
': The bride wore' a white tulle bride and groom presented their back' with long sleeves and a fitted Orande. The groom is a 1990 grad- meens, qallipolis: Phil Cremeens Stacy and Jodie, Gallipolis: Bill Joe
g'own with a high neckline and mother-in-laws wtth a long ste111 bodice with a full skirt cascading . uate of North Gallia High School ·. Fort Laprilale, Fla.; Merrill John·- Johnson, Todd, Sherry and Kevin,
puffed lo.ng sleeves. The bodice peach rose.
· . ·
. into a cathedral train. The gown and is employed by Mounds Dairy ls6n, Jane Artn, MiJc:e, Betty J(), .Joe .Gallipolis; other guests Barbara
was covered with lace, sequins, and . Tlie couple and their attendants ·was emblazed with ivory pearls. Fann.
.
and Jill Carter, ,Gallipolis: Meirilyn Tascher and Jazzie, Columbus; ind
· teardrop pearls. The sleeves were were escorled to the reception in a
Pridemore, Jamie' and Teresa Dorothy Nib.e rf and Amy Pope . .,
~ccented with satin bows with white S!retch Umous~.
. '
.
~al.e.
.Pietce~ Point Pleasant: Nick ~nd. Gallipolis. Pau~ne Johnson Clark
1eardi'op pearl centers. The. floor · Music at the recep~On was J!l'?' ·
~1
wu unable to attend.
Iength skin was made of multi, lay· ·Vided by Rasco~ Dav111 an4 Davts
eled tulle extending to a chapel Adkins.
l_ength train. She, wore a finger tip · The bride is a 1992 graduate of
·
Q
ypil designed with ·a wreath o.f Hannan Trace High School. She is
·
·
.white roses, sequins, and pearls and ·employed by Bob Evans Res tau·
GALLIA COUNTY FARM BUREAU WI' ALENT SHOW"
c'arried a bouquet of white' and rant
.
.
peach roses.
·
The groom 1s a 1992 graduale of
SATURDAY, AUGUST 7, 1993 REGISTRATION: 10 A.M./
CONTEST STARTS: 10:30 A.M. GALLIA COUih'Y FAIR·
• The bridesmaids wore high-low Gallia Academy High School. He
•emerald green satiQ dresses and is. employed by Holzer Medical
GROUNDS
1. The show wiU be divided •into 3 classes.' A. Individuals • 12
~·arried ~mall bouquets' matching Center.
·
'
the brides.
·
The couple now resides in Gal·
years &amp; under. B. Individuals · 13 - 19 years. C. &lt;l!'llups ·Mixed
The flower girl wore a white lipolis.
..
ages.
..
,
dress with a tulle layered skirt and
(
2. Entries are open to residents ofGallia County.
·
3. ·Basis for judging will be on originality, ability, s~owmansbip• .
poise, and appearance.
·
·
4. Out of county judges will be named to select the winners. All
decisions of title judges will be final.
r,,
.
5. Entries may include musical, sldt,,pantomime, baton twirling,
'~": LOS ANGELES (AP). - Ro$er -t.iADRID, Spain (AP) - The
etc., all types of talent, welcome!
·
6.
All
firSt
and
second
place
winners
will
receive a plaque.
:!flinton 's acting career is takmg cabinet approved a royal decree
7.
All
performances
are
limited
to
(5)
minutes.
&lt;Off, but can he possibly be doing granting Spanish citizenship to
8. All entries accepted on a fllSt come, first serve basis. ·
liis presidential brother proud with Peruvian author Mario Vargas
9. Anyone not registered by 10:30 A.M.. the day of the show,
liarts like Mayor Bubba in a low- Llosa.
,.:
wiU be disqualified from competition. ,
'·
,
Vargas Llosa, 57, is Peru's best·
:l!udget horror flick?
TO ENTER: Send 'name, address, •age, and type of latent to:
:.. Clinton has landed a part in known writer and social critic. In a
GALLIA COUNTY FARM BUREAU 212 PEARL STREET,
:! ~ Pumplcinhead II: Blood Wings," · rare foray into politics. he lost a
SUNDAY, JULY 41., 2:00.5:00 ••Ill.
SUITE A JACKSON, OIUO 45640 PHONE : 1-800-777-9226
1i sequel to " Pumpkinhead·," the pres idential bid in 1990 to
·tyrmion Picture Corp. qf America, President Alberto Fujirnori.
ALL ENTRIF.'i MUST BE IN BY FRIDAY, JULY 30TH, 1993
.CLOSED MONDAY, JULY 51.
There was no immelliale word as
(NO LATE ENTRIES ACCEPTE!&gt;)
:a·n independent producer, .said
·~riday . It ' s due fot rel ease on to whether Vargas Llo§a had
requested Spanish citizenship or_.,
Halloween.
·.
why he might have wanled it. ·.
:~: ' ' Roge r ha s a very honest,
Vargas Llosa, who has liv.ed in
1l!ectable look ," said producer
Brian Unroe of Crown City was · , Brian is ~ son-of Mr. and Mrs. · ·
England,
the United States, Spain named to the dean's list at Vander- R1chard Unroe of Crown C1ty and
Brad Krcvoy. " He's a natural born
and France, will formally become a bilt University, Nashville, Tenn., is e~r~ll~ in .the School of Engipolitician."
.:;:Clinton has already been cast in dual Spanish-Peruvi!lJl citizen for the spring 1993.
neenng w1th h1gh honors.
\f:ie comed y film "Nation al when King Juan Carlos signs the
li·ampoop 's Last Resort " as a decree approved by the cabinet on
~:·n o n e- too-bright hulk of a brute
Friday, the Justice Ministry said.
~ith a soft spot."
...
•
fRANKFORT, Ind. (AP) - ' Add
· But if you~ an A'IM card
:;,THE HAGOE, Netherlands (AP) Kentucky basketball coach Rick
with one of these symboJs•••
7- Queen Beatrix may have the Pitino to the cast of "Blue Chips,' ~
• cpmmon touch, but the government a basketl?all movie s.tarring Nick
'
· isn' t keen on. a new tel.evision Nolte and featuOng some of the top
::;iQmmercialthat portrays her as just playerS and coaches in the country.
:::!bother shopper ~~ one of the
Pitino will. portray the coach of
"'"' · • 850 di · ·
k
the fictional Western Texas
~uon s
tra uon mar ets.
University in a game against ·
,..-The government has demanded
you have 2+hour access to your
~h a t the Central Board of Nolte's Weslem University. Nolte
a£COunts evC!'f
of the year
:l-ferchants' pull an ad .that shows spent much of laf't spring at Indiana
:Jhe queen, flowers in luuid, walldng to research his role as a college'
at our SuperTeUer maclliites.
;~long the s talls of one of ~he c~~a·s Bob .Knight wiU coach
"'llarkets, wh ic h sell everythmg
l rom fresh PfOduce to used two games during ,filming this
Marietta Dowmown Offill!, Second &amp; Putnam Streets'
' ·
•
:i to thing.
month. George ~ve~ng, ~e coach
Frontier Offill!, Frontier Shopping Cen!fr
:.. As she appears a background at So~them Cal!fom•a. w1U .be ·the
Kroger Office, Washington Center
:;oice says: " Hey isn't that ... ?"
opposmg coach m one. .
. .
Second &amp; Scanunel Sts. Drlve-up
: Th e Central Board's · Frans - ... Players who plan. to partiCipate
Athens
I Nonh Court $Creel ·
:zappey sail) the ad 'won't be pulled: 1nclud~ NB~ roolne of tbe. year ..
• "It's not an ad fcir a trademark Shaqullle Q Neal and a host of ·
80 I Ei5t State Street
·~·s 10 let people see that the markei college stars.
Belpre 1902 Washington Boulevo~rd
· is for everyone,'' he said "It's pan
The Plains 70 N.Plains Rd., COunuy Comers Shopping Pl:l7ll
. :Of our culture."
.
Other office; In lowell, Middleport, Nelsonville, and Reno
·~ Governmela spokesman Hans Triumphal Arch
·
PARIS
(AP)
·
.
The
Arch
of
::Vail de~ Voet ~fused . tC) say w!tat
'"l!ction the governmeilt would take Triumph, located· on the Champs ·
t;:Iysees where 12 ave'nues meet,
~n' light of the board's refusal.
: The national commercial code was begun by Napoleon in 1806 as
. :forbid~ advertisements shoo/ing a monument to his tioops. · .
. it was compli!ted by Lo~is
jreal people, or actors mi~jcking
Phmppe
in 1836. Its desi~ was
.them, as opposed· to f1CUonal ·
Jean
Francois
Chalgrin.
A:harac1ers.

-

Conner-F. cern re·
s·

JO
'

• he·ld
Laud Jo hnson veunzon
1

•

Fa·r·Ill ·Bur·e··a·u'
nt' .
Sh W E'ntry Blank

:~Names

•

•

STOREWIDE·~~ ·

FIRECRACKER
· SAVINGS!

in the news

.AT LEAST

20%.OFF

EVERY ITEM IN THE STOR.!
3 BIG HOURS!!

Middleport Depad11ent Store

Unroe named to dean's list

Our lobbiftS will be cl~d
Monday,July 5 in

olJSenlance of Independance Day.

• ••-----=----------day

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1893

llmes

Sunday llmea Sentlriel Page 15

Meigs County
Community
:Calendar
.
SUNDAY
· . RACINE • Racine· Legion Post
:602 will have a bWt dinner Sunday
. ;at 11 Lm. Cost is $2 per ~n.
'•
\
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,'
--··
.
: RlJ'ILAND • A ''Giand Celebra:tion" will be held Sunday at 9 a:m. af
·the Rudmld Church of the Nazarene.
:ca1ce and coffee will be served until
:9:30 a.m. when the outside program'
;begins. Events will include vetenms
-recognition, scout flag presentation,
:Special cluuacters, solos and the
:chun:h choir. Public invited.
. ... ,.
; POMEROY • Hillside Baptist
:Chm:ch, revival, with ~Dr. Marty
·Holman, Fremont. Sunday, 6 p.m.,
:through-Wednesday, 7 p.in. Special
.smgmg niglitlf.
1'

:

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•

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.

STORE HOURS ...
Monday thru Sunday

STORE HOURS
Monday ·thru Sunday
8 .AM~10

~- ~~~lOPM _

.•

.

298 SECON.DST•...
'

POMEROt. OH
. •.

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,

I

. . ROYAL
.
CROWN .COLA
·. PRODUCTS ·
'

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ROCKSPRINGS -Sf!OHAPoint

2 LIIER IOMES

:Farrl GIO!lnds, 10 a.m., 40 classes.
;Cai~:Pete Scott, 992-3885, for infor.mauon.
·

79•

· I..PNG BOTIOM - Deroo Smith
:will ~ing Sunday at Mt. Oliv'e C£!m·
:mun jtyChurchinLongBottom.Olher
:local singers. Paslor I.,awrence Bush
:invites the public. ·

'

ECKRICH

'

I

'

'

'

'

'

. BUY 2 •·

.

Lunch Makers.J!Il..L...FREE ·

.

: CHESTER • The Chcoster
·Bow hunters Club will have a string
:shoot Sunday at noon. A pollock
_;dinner will be heldat4:30p.m. There
·,will be frreworks at dark ..

, LOTIRIDGE - There will be a
:smorgasbord dinner Sunday from
. noon to 1:3(} p.m. at the Loltridge
Community Center: Cost is $5 for
adults and 52.50 for children under
• . 12.' Public invjted.

.

1·190·

•. $
Chopped Ham.....LOAF
IU'1'ERBALL MIXED
, .
Turkey Breast...........3 LB.
SWIFT' PILLOW .PAC
.
Pepperon1...............~ ...6 oz.
ECKRICH I 0 LB. L_OAF

: POMEROY • The 12-step AA
·group will meet Sunday at 7 p:Q). on
.:Mechanic Street 'in Pomeroy a'Nhe
:old Elberfeld Warel!ouse.

.

·

BALLARD'.S SLAW, BAKED BEANS, MACARONI or

$ . 49

1

Leg Quarters~....-11. 39c Sau
.

t .

ECKRICH

$~ 2f

·

~

Smorgas Pac...........lb.

1

PORK_BUn

$ 59 .

S~IFT PORK or BEEF .
Sizzi.,~ ...................LB.
ECKRICH I LB. ROLL

·

.

.

$189 .

Sausage..................Rou ·

.·

5 LB. TUB

Chiclien

.

9·9(
I

·

$ 169 .

~,

.

. . ..

POUND BOX

s

. MUELLER
SPAGHETTI
POUND BOX

s

REYNOLDS

ALUMINUM
FOIL··

$2 79
L1vers.........Tua ·
•

.

· . .. .

25 SQ. FT•

(

•

9
9
Snack Makers....................
.
ECKRICH_.

·

HEAL!"Y CHOICE
~...----"-----' V~r1ety Pak............ t

.

· ROCK SPRINGS ·The Salisbury
:Township Trustees will meet Mon.day at? p.m. at the township garage.

j '

J

· MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
:Pool, swimming lessons, Monday
:through July 16 - 8-9, swimmers; 9·10, intermediate; 10-11 advanced;
:ll to noon, beginner. Call Ryan
Cowan, 992-7999 for information.

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oz.

C-

REG. or BLEACH .

TIDE ULTRA

$249
· .

D.ETERGE~T

ECKRICH

·

.

'

. '• 49(

Peaches. . . ~. .~. . . . . .~. . . . LB. ..

,.

. BROU~HTON'S

12

.

· 2°/o Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL.
. KRAFT ~ARKA!

POMEROY · TheF.O.E.No.2171
Auxiliary will mee1 Tuesday. A potluck will begin at 7 p.m. with meeting
at7:30 p.m.
POMEROY · The American
Legion Drew Webster Post No. 39
will meet Tuesday with dinner at 7
p.m. and meeting at 8 p.m. Officers
will be inslalled.

ECKRICH

POMEROY • The Meigs Band
Bo&lt;istcrs will meet Tuesday at the ·
-bandroom. All band pareniS welcome.

ITALIAN .DINNER SAUSAGE . or
ECKRICH_,~
.

REEDSVILLE · Olive Township
Trustees will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at the Shade River State ForesiJ)' Building.

Bratwurst............LB.

.

TO~Y'S

.PIZZO$_.__~

·

'

SWIFT PREMIUM

Canned Ham..........3Lil.
SWIFT_PREMIU'M :

.

Sliced Bacon ..._...La.

. ·

$159
·.

GALA· TOWELS . ·

I

2..s1

_.,TOILET TISSUE
.

ROLl$

Good~~ AI Powell'• SuperV•Iu
July 4 thru July 10, 1883
Umlt 2 Per-Cualllnw

011.-

.

$299
.

12
ROll
PKG

· .

·s189

GROUND

.$.

BEEF

3 1
.·$299

PAIL

3 .6 .

MAXWELL'"HOUSE

390Z
•

I~

$

1
' 1·
Only At Powell'• Super V•lu • 1
. July 10, 1993 ' 1
111 Offer Good
LlmH6

90

GROUN·D

'CHUCK ".
:10 POUNDS

$
~d

POUNDS

$

--------·
·· -- COUPOII - - ..
., ••r"":'--:...-=.o;r;
.I:! PURINA ...".
~-- ·

.'

$, . 39

-

18.

y ....

$_2 39

.

_.·

Marganne--.. . .
KEMP'S 5 QUART PAIL " .
Ice Cream
.
.
.
.
~. . . . .
. .
·

$.119

Pepperoni...3 oz.

42 OZ. BOX

'.

c~:kH Ham....................., oz~ $) 79
$379
Cooked Ham.. ~.......... oz.

TUESDAY
.
· CHESTER · Pomeroy Order of
the Eastern Star No. 186 will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at Lhe Chester
Masonic Temple. All .,past parrons
and matrons wiD be honored. Officers wear street dresses.

..

.

Steak/Roast. . ~. . .~. LB: ,
COUNTRY .STY!E,. ·
,
$169
Spare R•bs_......._,..ta. .

..

: . SYRACUSE • Sutton Township '
:Trustees wiD meet Monday at 7:30
·p.m. in theSyracuseMunicipal Build- .
:ing.

,.

·. ·

.MOUNTAINEER 1 LB. ROLL or 10 OZ. LINK

: ROCK SPRINGS · "Ark Parade"
· isthethemeforVacationBibleSchool
: at the Rock Springs United Method: ist Church Monday through July 9
: from 9:30 a.m. to noon daily. All
·children welcome. There will be bible
· stories, songs, games, crafiS and re: freshmcnts.

.

..

ELBOW
.
MACARONI·

$2
· 69

Legs ~ . _Th1ghs...26-2a oz.

'

MUELLER'S.

·99·

1·

Potato Salad. . . . . . . . . LB.

.

.,

s

'•

WEAVER BATTER Dl! . CHICKEN . ~lNG~

RACINE- Theiss family reunion
will meet Sunday at 2
:p.m. at the David Kucsma residence
·across from Southern High School in
'Racine to plan for the July 11 reunion.

MIDDLEPORT • Middleport
Community Association will meet
. Tuesday at~ : 15p.m.atPeoplesBanlc.
Paula Thacker will present a program
; . on worlcers compensation. •

$229

.Round -Steak.....................1a.

$., 89

:~ommiuee

MIDDLEPORT - The regular .
meeting of Middleport Lodge No.
363 will be Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at
the.masonic temple.

.

USDA CH9~CE' BONELESS BEEF BOUOM

:

HEMLOCK GROVE -Vacation
Bible School, Monday through Friday·. 6:3.0-8 :3~ p.m. Classes for ages
:two through highschool. Crafts, sing:ing, recreation and refreshmeniS.
:Closing program Sunday at 7 p.m.

..... . .

.

: Ho~ Show, Sunday, Meigs County

MONDAY
ROCK SPRINGS· "Ark Parade"
is the theme for Vacation Bible School
at the Rock Springs United Method_tst Church Monday through Friday
·from 9:30. a.m. to noon daily. All
:children welcome. There will be bible
:stories, songs, games, crafiS and re:freshments.

..

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.

Eckrich Truckload-Sale
.

-·s·

PM .

.·298 SECOND
ST.
•
POMEROY, OH.
.
WE RESERVE
THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUIIITITIES
.
.
PIKES GOOD JULY 4 THRU JULY 10, 1993 ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE JULY 4 THRU JULY 10
•

20 PACK, 12 OZ. CANS

~

,.;:

.

PEPSI·COLA /
.PRODUCTS . .

90.-

�'

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0

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0

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Pomeroy •ddleport G8lllpolla, OH-Polrit Plea.,nt, wv

JUly 4, 1993

• .
1993

wv

~MaxTawn

.•

Community association·meets..,

travels to -Yu oslavia

Br. MAXTAWNEY .
It s disturbing to me when I see
news about people who were once
~ful , but.who are now warring
With each other. . · ·
·
· .
· I wat~h the lliltionat' news every
··n ig()i and rca«! the.. Columbus
Dispatch and the Wall Street
, Journal : about. ~be , war .~ ·in
Yugoslavia and .see the killiri~ of.
women and children. It is temble
wbat one human being is doing 10
anot)ler. o • ·
.
·
I was in Yugoshlvia,five years .
ago and I found it to be a bealiCirui,
friendly country. I wal in Belgrade,
Sarajevo, Tuzia and Zagreb, the
capital of Croati. The people were
very· friendly ·toward me
everywhere I wcnL
· .
While I was there I met a school
teacher in Sarajevo who.spoke very
good· English. He asked m~ if I
would come to bis class and tell his
s~udents about America. Ofcoutse.
I said I would be glad to. But i told
p lctured with local children he spoke to in a
him I could only speak in Englisll,
MAX TAWNEY VISITS SARAJEVO. Max
·
classroom.
'
·
·
He said that was ,not a prQblem
Ta.W!ley visited Yuplavla ftve 7ean ap aaci is
because he would translate. &amp;eell)ed to get along. I guess 1 did .
·
· Initially I thought this would take not stay long enough to see what.
about an hour or less, but the was brewing up or·going on.
students were so interested that I
The Serbs who were once .our
. was there about two hours, These allies in World War II now have
children were so enthuSiastic about become the ethnic cleansers,
learning more about America tluit purgin~ the Muslims. The Croats
they continuously asked me who s1ded with the Nazi's and
queslions-and .the questions were fought the Serbs, now imitate them.
very intelligent ones.
Every side of this conflict uses
•,
I always give people like this historyasproofofiuinnocence.
Ssl~s. Rel)tals &amp; Seivlce
some kind of souvenir from the
It just doesn 'I make sell'Sil they
HOME OXYGEN
United States and that day I had a way they are killing each other
24 Hour Emergency Senke
'
eHospHal Beds •Whetkhalrs ·
roD of 50 new shiny pennies with over there. I think President
Respiratory
Therapist
on
Staff
•P!dlent lifts -commodes
me. I went down the rows and gave Clinton and the other countries
each child a penny. But lhele were should lift lhC embargo against the
•Diapers &amp; Chuxs •Ostomy
.
62 children in this class. One of the Muslims so they can defend
•lift Chairs
•BIIthroom Aides Th.lrd a.446·1283
children who didn't get a penny themselves.
Pine St. · Galitpoiin '' ,
was crying so I gave her a quarter:
Anyway, 1 am glad to- have gone
~~----------~~~~~-- ·
I gave the rest o( them local to .lhat once ~tiful country. I'm
money. That talk at the school was . also glad that I talked !Uid shook
the highlight of my trip to · hands with the farmers and
Yugoslavia.
common people throughout
I also went through lhe country Yufoslavia. These are memories I
and talked to the farmers with the wil never forget. And I hope they
help o( my interpreter. I saw them _c.im . soon come to a peaceful
milking cows b)' hand and ,J agreement in efforts to restore
. showed them I could do that roo. beauty and happiness to that area of
There was no animosity aniong the. the world
people. I couldn't tell the
Tbi.s column was contributed
difference between a Serb and a by Max Tawney, a Gallipolis
Muslim. E:verywhere I went people busiDessman. ·

· LONG BOTT~M • The _Long. Larkins and grandaughier Amanda. . after tlie meeting. There wil be a
bottom Community Ass.oc,tatton·...Get,well ·card was signed for •Aita potl.uck dinner for next meeting,
met at the CO!l!mumty building on Baliard, who is in the hospital.
beginning at 6 p.m. on Wedneday
June. 30 for 1ts regular monthly
Bingo was played by the group July 2'8.
meellltg.
.
'
A ix&gt;tl\ICk 'dinner was enjoyed by
the l\fOUP, followed by' !1 busines~
mceungandann~elccbonofoffi
NASHVILLE T
AP ._
mstead.
\ .·
cers. ~e followmg officers .we': Roy Clark, Buck 0e:}g~s (ani the
It would be the fll'St time die one. · elec~. Melody ~oberlS: p~1dent; 'rest ofl)Je "Hce Haw" gan might hour show. curren~y broadcast on
J 18 Wells, Yu;e.pr~1~ent, Ma~ beheaded~dusively forca~le.
160: local. statu:~ns, has been
.secr,etarr"ilml'leFIICh,treas .
Negottattons were under way to available exclus1vely to cable
Juamta WeDs.newsreporter. lake reruns of the cornball ·country viewen. , .
.
No new trustees were elected. Pres- music show outof syndication this
· ~Meel,'ng s. h~ve bee.n ~?mg on
. ent tr}l$~ are Harlan Ballar~, Dor-, fall and broadc~t them Satltrday b~t nothm~ 1s m grantte, Susan ·
· sal ~g and Stan!~ Wells. It was mght on The Nashville Network •S1zemo~e , a spokeswoman for
dec;ided that the treasurer's hooks
·
·. TNN; &amp;ald Thursday.
·
·
willbeexaminedbythetrusteesprior
to tbe next meeting.
Tbe annual
ice cream
.socialwas
.
cancelled
for 1993,
possibly
to be put

i

He e n· aw se(Jcor Cab[.e .

I d' • •d

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

CREATING AN ,ATMOSPHERE WITH FAC .
• Lee Miller, director or ~he French Art .Colony
helps Megan AU(ins create au atmosphere at the ·

BOWMAN'S
HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

w

.

MR. AND MRS. NOEL MASSIE

Massies celebrate a~iversary
GALLIPOLIS • Noel and
Kathryn Massie wiD ~lebrate their
40 wedding anniversary wilh a
reception hosted by their children
on July 11 from 2:4 p.m. in the
church social room oflhe First
Baptist Church, GaUipolis.
·· The couple was married on July
12, 1953 by Rev. Greene at First

.
Baptist Church.
They are the parents of two
soQs, Timothy S. Massie and
Robert E. Massie, both of G;lllipolis. They have six grandchildren.
All friends and family are cordially invited to the reception. The
couple requests that gifts be omitled.

HMC receives donations for ·P.ediatrics

Adults rangj.ng.in age
from young to elderly
How can we help?:
. . .
Woodland Centers employs a group of energetic, dedi·
cated and caring mental .health professionals to ensure
that every client receives apptojlliate services. 'Tiie staff
work intimately as a team to provide you with the most
llUilable services to rrieet your unique needs.
.~. Wt\y should I seek help?:
·' Each and everyone of us, at some time in our lives. may
need someone to share our burdens with ...to help us
solve problems so that we can fui!Y enjoy and partie!· ...
pate in our day to day rootine$. Early intervention can
prevent small problems from becoming overwhelming
ones.
Services Offered:
1. Outpatient Clinic
3. Crisisline
2: The Residential Crisis ·4. Adult Community Training
Intervention Center

If,' . . t!
.

.

LlKE TO SAVE 40°/o

so

The
years of life together was
narrated by Andrew Karschnik and
with songs by the quartet.
The couple renewed their wedding vows with Deacon Marvin
Kocar. nephew of the groom, officiating.
On the following day a picnic
and barbecue were held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs . Andrew
Karschnikj Germantown, Tenn.
Mr. and Mrs. Karschnik are parents_of three son(, five grandchildren and three grt'at·~!fBDdchildren.
Mrs. Karschnik IS the former .
Jean Alee, daughter of the late Mr.
and Mci. John Alee; Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
.

ON AMERICP:S #J

. POMEROY-The~igsCounty
' PublicLibraryhookmobilewillmake
the following stops this week.
Tuesday: Americare, 11:30 a.m.
to 12:20 p.m.; Darwin, 1 to 2 p.m.;
Burlingham, 2:30 to 4:30 p.m.;

·

.

·

,

SIZE - SAVE . $80

•1-19'5:i~Only

I

refuSed and after one more inning the
game was called.
There were several more horse
Probably the fll'St school districts races that year with Mary D., driven
· to voluntarily merge were the,Porter by E. Ecker, winning a one-mile ttol
·and BidweD districts. Tbe year wp Theoral9rforthedaywasE.D. Davis.
. 1898 and while
In 1908 thC crowd was estimated
at4,IXJO and there were .~.vr.rnl hn~~
·each commuqity
· maintained separaces.ln fact, horse racing became so
· rate grade schools
popular in Bidwell and Porter that
for awhile, the
other races. were conducted during
high school was .. •. ,
the summer. the biggest of which
. uilt between the •
.
was usually held on Labor Day.
: two villages.
·
About the 1909 event the GaJiipoThe fll'St comlis BuUetin reponed:
:binedschool was torn down when a
"Everyoneseemedtoenjoythem- '
:new school was completed in 1928.11 selves as they always do at this park.
·is that school we have included with Well shaded, with plenty of good
-lOday's article. But the school was water, fine ball grounds and an ex.not the only pro~tlhe two commu- cellent track, it ·is an ideal place 'to
nitiescooperatedon. .
·
spendadayandthereisstrongtalkof
From 1906 to 1923orso',the larg- holding a county fair next year.
, BUlL T IN 1928 • Tbls Bidwell-Porter School was buRt In
1928. Tbe Bidwell-Porter Park was located across from the school;
est July 4th celebration in GaJiia
"The Dodging Coon, the OCean
Between 1~ and 1923, the county's largest July 4 celebrations
:County was held at Bidwell-Porter Wave and other amusements were
were_
held at that park.
•
'
·
·Park which was located across the well patronized while the lunch stand
:road from the old Bidwell-Porter· was fairly glutted by the hungry pic:school.
.
mckers,manyofwhombroughtweDCharity
•
·
ston founded a bOys· school here
. That park conlinlll:d for several ftlled baskets for themselves and Sweet
BRISTOL, England (AP) and
~ndowed hospitals and homes
years after'1923 wheri it became friends."
Edward Colston, born in this sea- for sailors.
.known as Bush Park. ·
Bidwell had a good baseball team port city in 1636, made a fortUne in
Colston Hall, Bristol's performltwasinthespringofl906thatl2 that year with Kincaide, Winston, · sugar trading with the West indies.
ing arts' center, is named in his
stockholders organized the Bidwell· Lutz, Watkins, Eoo; Morehouse,
·
A generous P.hilan_thr~is~ ~ol- honor.
·Porter Park Corpoo~tion to purchase Grover, Kent and Cllarey.Robinson,
:tand from the Dustin sisters. One of who was the best pileher and hitter.
•
the 12 men was C.E. Thomas, who
Bidwell won 'liver Rutland 6-2
SPARKs ARE
helped with the building of a half· that year.
mile rag: track.
The band coilcert was given by
. - .. ·~'\ .:I. : / '; .....,
FLYING AT
·:···
Near the track were built a band· the Porter Band and by the Colored
stand, a judging stand and 12 stalls for Orphans Band. Most community
4-·:.~····. A8JAOUrCK.SUIIUI1efl
Jllrlla·'S ·
race borses. The baseball field was bandsfromthiscraconsistedofabout
.· ·.I .:·\.:..,..,
... .·..\ .. ·..·... .n.' ·' ..~ '
18
located in the middle of the track, A 15 persons. Every band had a bass
.. ·- ..
·· __........•
smallgrandstandwaserectedin 1907. drum, asnaredrum, bass ho/ll, tuba,
--·· ~ ··-· · ·
Also adjoining the track was a ftve or six comets. and an equal
/.:~;
, .. .
. .
grove of trees of 10acres in expanse. numberofaltoand tenor inSirumcnts..
. In the grove was placed the Speaker's
·In 1912the Bulletin reported the .
j· ' ·
~"'
stand and some simple se,ating facili· crov.:d at 2,000 and the principal at- ·
ties.
. .
·
. ttaCttOii was horse racing. Winning
At that ftrst July 4th celebration, that year were Kanawha BeDe. Alma
Gallipolis beat Bidwell-POrte{ 14-5 · T, Red Will Jr. and-l'aek R.
.
in baseball. Tbe only horse !lice was
The last races were held he're in·
wonbyDanlrwinonabaymarc. The 1923, but. the track continued tO be
horse made it around the track in 53 used afterthlU to train hones - the
.' (Toddler ttiru Sia 14)
seconds.
.
- - · mosl famous of which was Wreath
· Cllecko1t our
tbe 1QO.yai'd foclt race was won McKinney train¢ by ~ley Den·
by Nick Hennes)' o{ Pomeroy with a _ ney.
.
,·
·
·
••cld
time of 10.5 seconds. Dick Jacbon
Others who trained IKnes there
won the sack race and . Max •Eno included Charles ThOmas, Niles
Sptcl•l ~ to OHJ
climbed the greilsed .pole. Eno was · J?cnney. the MiDs br!&gt;tliers, 'Floyd ·
aidedbyaslaband~dozeniiSSistaniS. Ward, A.M. Grover.and.L.E. WarThere was also a wild bucking man. When BidweD-Portcr Pirie ·
bronco that "the ~toitt of heart" cool&lt;! became Bush Park~ Emanoipa&amp;ion
try to ride. ·
.
.
celebration became the most famous ·
In 1907 the attimdance was 3,000 event atlhe park.
. 326 Second Ave. .
'
aod lhe Gallipalis Slags won the
JIJmes Sands Is a specilll-j:orre. Galllpoiia
·
Ul -.,.~
liaseblll doubleheader. Leading 2-0 !lpO.cltlltoi~Sulida7·nmes-Sta·
i. the niaJilC&amp;p apinst Carlton, the tlDel. His addre111 II: .6! }YIUOW
Sta&amp;'Sastedforanewumpire.C.Iton . Qrlft, Sp.rlaal)oro OH 45!1"

........ ., ....5

PORUREPEDIC
Full Size
'1!9z.95
Qu11n Size
49Y.95

byJ!m Sands
Special Correspondent

y~:-,...

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·:;-:,;.,;_ :(..::&lt;ij,.,

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.I"\....·,·.::,. _,. . . . .:

i

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DIAMONDS! DIAMONDS! .
HUGE SELECTION OF ·
•SOLITAIRES
•CLUSTERS ·
•DINNER RINGS
Excellent selection of One Quarter Carat and up
to One Carat of fine white diamonds.
Excellent quality!

.All SIZES - ON SALEIII

30% TO 50%

SAVE

GOLD PRICES ARE
UP'15%

Spring&amp;Summer
Fashions.

ACQUISITIONS PRICE OF
GOLD CHAINS·IS UP 0%

ou'·.·
Yt

)ACI\ &amp; ·1tLl.'S

-

'

:~ppalachian

.........

.. '25%
Swimwear 25% Off
Sleepwear 25% Off

· GALLIPOLIS • The June
contributions to the Ear!Neff
Pediatric Television and Toy Funds
of the Holzer Medical Center were
made by two repeat donors this
month.
" For the eighteenth consecutive
year, Naomi Lodge No. 55 of the
Knights of Pythias of Gallipolis
provided the funds to add to the
· videocassette library on Pediatrics.
· For the seventeenth consecutive
.

The prl~e of bullion g'old has risen from
$326 oz. to .$376 In the last 9 weeks . .,

:•s.oo a•1o.oo

SAVE 50%.. to 70%*
'

*from Suggested Retail Prlees

COMPARE ANYWHERE!
ill

im. . •

.

J!l ' ,;

uisitiotis
,
•Diamonds
.,. ""'1 ·
•Gold Chcins

· . f]J·r .11.

· FINE JEWELRY

581l 0 WafCheS
•Cross Pens

.. Comer Stcond~Ve. and Grape Sl e
Qantpolta, oh.
448-~2

-

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·"

' 1,.

'

Gallia
446-5500

Meigs
992-2192

Woodland Centers, Inc.
A Privat'-Not tor Profit Agency Working
Hard to Serve You in

DONATION BENEFITS PEDIATRIC FUND·· Offtcers or the
Naomi Ladle #55 of.tbe Knights or Pythlas left Tr~urer Lloyd
Blazer, Secretary Smith Runyan IDd Immediate Past Chancellor
Commander Ra71Dond DeLille donated in June for the 18th year
to the HMC Pediatric Fund.

Galli&lt;!, Jackson, and'Meigs.Counties.
Woodland Centers; Inc. is funded in part by llllt
Gaiiia.Jackson-Melgs Board of .Alcohol, Drug
Addiction &amp;.Mental Heakh Services.

year, the Marchi family made the
Representing the Naomi Lodge office at the Holzer Medical Center
June donation to l1le Toy Fund.
in th1s effort were the ChanceDor · by calling 446-5055.
Th.e pediatric Television and Toy Commander, Jim O'Dell; past
Fund provideS toys, books, gaDjleS, Chancellor Commander, Raymond
·stuffed animals, dollS, etc., to be DeLille; the Secretary, Smith
used; Iloth in the Playroom as well Runyan, and the treasurer, Lloyd
.. ·
as in the children's rooms when it Blaze.£.
is necesbry for these · young . Representing the Resraurant was
patients to be confined. The Tom Morgan ; Manager of the
childfen are able to select programs Stowaway.
Anyone interested in· supporting
from tbe library fro viewing in their
rooms. · _.
either of these projects should
contact the Community R"ations
.'

Two.eXampleS of
flexj/Jiij plastic.

.. r

editor retired but not resigrzed

·By TED ANTHONY ·
lapghs seriously an.;J seriousness
.~ssociated Press Writer
laughingly.
~ · J{ICHWOOD, W.Va. (AP) T~y. 6,0txl people in 40 states
When· the Saturday Review and 'six foreign countries subscribe
proclaimed Jim Comstock's West tO th.e Wesl Virginia HillbillY., and
Virginia Hiijbilly "sophisticated" 3,000 more copies are distnbuted
reading , he demanded a retraction.
to classrooms as part of a West
" I knew I couldn ~.t circulate a Virginia Studies course.
paper in West Virginia if I was
' "We send more pies to New
consid~red sophisticated," be said.
York than .the N Yorker sends
When Comsto.ck published his here," he boas
newspaper with ink scented like . .Com~tock's ritings ~l!)'e been
malodorous mountain onions, he antliologized n · a-111:' revered
aroused the ire of the Postmaster and revile!llocally. Still, only 19 of
General himself.
,
Richwood's 3,000 res1dents
"Now we're the only newspaper subsCribe:
under orders from the federal
"Never caught on here,"
government not to smell bad," Comstoek·said.
Comstock said . "That's an awful
In retirement, Comstock will
thing to do to a striving coiuinue to. pen 'his oft-ac~r~ic
newspaper."
back-oage
' feature "Comstock
,)
Load.
· When interstate highways were
new, Comstock saw their potential
The new publishers, R.L .
in keeping troublemakers out of his "Sandy'.'' apd Carolee McCauley,
mountains.
,
r»
have a l.ot to live up to. .
"You ·. have
assumed
. " Traveling newspapermen and
magazine writers won:t be able to custodiahship of a West Virginia
see a thing," he wrote.
treasure,' thanks to the lifetime
Few would see as much· as work o'f Jim Comstock," wrote
Comstock has in his 35 years as Richard Marks. a West VIrginia
editor, publisher and writer for the
·"
pugnacious weeKly known for its
l&lt;een doses of Appalachian
FRI. THRU THURS.
cpmmon sense and humor.
ONC~ UPON'A FOREsT o
· "My dad once told me that the
Lord paid special attention to fools
IHOW TlMEI
apd dru.nk·s, and kep( them pretty
' FRI., fAT., SUN. J:IO, I:IO
, C
.._
SUN.: THRU THURS.
much from harm, . omstoc.. once
. oNE IVENINQ I HOW 7:30
Wrote. "I add country e4itors."
,.
01
1
described
Co.mstoek,.
troublemaker
S.I. r.haa"tieen
foramuch
self- .
•=ADM=I=IS=I=QN=•=,IO=Of his llfe , always dismissing
himself as "a couniry editor in the
boondocks." ·
.
' Inside his hei!d lurk a melange of ;
roountitin morsels aboul the.
amusing men and .women who
make up.his much-maligned Slate.
•'There are so many stories to
tell," Comstock said
·
'
·· .Now he has passed the torch. On
F,riday·, Comstock turned over the .
HillbillY . to tw.o Lancaster, Ohio,
publisfiers and rehnqutshe4 a
generation-long tradilion:
.
Through it all. he 1cept things
modest:· The Hillbilly's Page One ·
· nameplate labels itself, ••A
newspaper for people who can't
· read, edited by an editor who can't
write."
.
ft, is wrong. Comstock takes

·:·~.F.·

· Due to our heavy buying this spring we are
maintaining our super loW:prices.on all
: gold chains, bral:elefs and earrings.

'

',

Gallia, Jackson
&amp;Mason
FAMILY DONATES FOR 17 CONSECUTIVE YEARS. Tom
"Morgan, manager or the Stowaway Restaurant presented a
donation to. the Earl. NeiT Pedia~£ Television and Toy Funds of
Holzer med1cal Center on behatr or tbe Marcbi rami!y. '

Thursday: Tuppers Plains, 2 to 4
p.m,; Reedsville, 5 to 7 p.m.; Long
BouomPostOffice, 7:15to8:15p.m.
Friday: Maples, 12:30 to 2 p.m.;
Overbrook, 2:30 to 3 p.m.; Pomeroy
Pike, 3:30 to 4:30 p.m.; Chester
Wildw~Esrates,Sto6p.m.:Baum (Keebaugh's), S to 6 p.m.
·
Addition, 6:15 to 7:30p.m..
Saturday: Rutland, 9 a.m. to 1
Wednesday: Racine, nOQn to 4 p.IJ!.; Danville, 2 to 3 p.m.; Salem .
p.m.; Letart Falls, 5 to 7 p.m. ··
Center, 3:30 to 5:30 p.m.
...

·

,' .k

'

Bookmobile makes stops

Bidwell-Porter school site of record· celebratil&gt;ns.

•)

French Art Colonies' Youth Art Exhibit tent
Friday at the JUver Rei:reatloo Festival (Tbnes·
Sentind photo by L.isa Peterson).
·

backontheagencfuforl994. smor_. .,
gasbords were scheduled for August,
October and December. Stanlex and
.JU81)iraWellsare .roplana"Country
Music Night" for Saturday nights.
Harold Brewer reported that he
and Harlan Ballard had repaired, .
painted and erected the flag pole. ·
. Attending .were Harten Ballard,
. Adl!.BisseD, Mae McPeek, Melody
• ·RobertS, Delo~ ijawk, Georgia
Mount, Stanley aild Juanita Wells,
Harold and Ruby Brewer, Janie and
Brandon FilCh, .Phyllis and Dorsal

} d
·. n·:·.•.vl ua .a.n.
Fa
Serv1ces
-..
·. fior
Adults
·
··
.·
·

'

50th anniversary ceJebrated
NEW HAVEN, W.V/It.- Mr.
and Mrs. Louis J. Karschnik, Scott
Depot, former residents of New
Haven, recently celebrated their
'50th we.dding anniversary with
their family in Memphis, Tenn.
Family members attending from
Out of state were guests at the
. Homewood Suites, ~!?'!is.
One evenin~ a coatail hour was
held in the swte of Mr. and Mrs.
Jon P. Karschnik. Later in the
evening a dinner was held in the ·
banquet ri&gt;Qm with Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Karschnik as hosts.
· Entertainment·was provided by
tbe "Notoriety" Quartet of which ·
Virginia'Karschnik-i&amp;"'1! member.

Sunday Ttmea Sen~lnel- Page 87

native( who now·lives in Gambrills,
Md.
Disease
has
shriveled
Comstock's left hand, and the
weathered old Underwood
typewriter that was his trademark
sits unused.
He now writes all his columns in
rapid longhand. He laments .that he
has lost "the grasp of
expressiveness I once had.''
Yet many credi.t the former
schoolteacher with . being the
essence of Appalachia.
• "He's given a glimpse of West
Virginia to the outside world.'' said
Maxine Corbett. executive director
of th'e Richwood Cham.ber of
Commerce.
West Virginians, who see
Comstock as an expert promoter of
West Vitgi 0 ia and of himself,
recognize the publisher is but one
facet of the man.
Pan sincerely and part tongue-incheek, Comstock founded the
"University of Hard KnOc:ks" to
honor overachieving Americaqs
who never eamed·coDe.l(e deJUCCS.

(;umb)l®A·nns stretch to ten .times IIOmlalsize, cans/ide ulflieranydcor, ~ OWII TVshow.

KANAUGA DRIVE-IN
FRI., SAT., SUN.
DON JOIN.HNSON

'

·

The Bank One Credit Card So f/eiibk, it can ~ve you ~three ways.
(Doesn't have TVSltou! but can diJ commercials.)

GUILTY AS SIN R
AND
MICHAEL J. FOX
IN

LIFE WITH MIKEY PG 13

~··=•==~=. =~~!!!!!!~~~!!!!~:

flank On~ gives its customers thr~ ways to save with aVisa: One, if you don't usually

=·

~IN

MATI-11 lAT. I

pay_offiour balance each month, choose our law interest option. You'll getone of the best

JUN.

I.UCIAIN NICIHf'NIIOAV
91n· CDttrtci!'U Avl.tWr.&amp;t ..

'------"---' rates around and inore manageable pa~ents: Two. if you noilnally pay off yi)ur balance, ·
optfor our no aQIJual fee. (You'll still get a very competitive rate.) Or, three, become a Preferred One, or

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'

Classic Onew customer and get both no annual fee and our low variable

rate. Th arJply,justcall or stop by. In 1966. we were one of the ftrSt banks to
introduce the cre&lt;Jit card. This year•.Bank One is making plastic flex~ble.
C 1993 BANC ONE CORPORATI ON

-·
BANK:ONE.

Whatever it takes:
Member FDIC

�•0

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SenUnel

OH -·Point

wv

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· ~im~s-· ~mtinei

. .Sports.

SectiOil:C,
July 4, 1$93 · ·

r

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•

At Wimbledon,

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Graf wins fi'th championship

'
'
By STEVE WILSTEIN
. ·long and looked ready to cey. Two coun, tossed her lliCket behind ~ ,.
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) ~ points later, she netted a bac~ and raised her arms as sbe did_ in.
· .Steffi Graf didn't exactly grab her approach to set up doullle match triumph in four of the past ftve ,_
fifth Wimbledon championship, poiDL
.
·• _ .. __ , ·· years. At "24, it was· her third .
Jana Novotna handed her the silver
Graf only needed one as she straight on Centre Court !Dd her platter as a gift with one of the drilled an overhead into an open ·13th Grand Slam title.
WQrst chokes in Grand Slam
, • ·
·
------,,_..- history.
.
. . Graharely required more. help
•
than she did Saturday, whe.n. she
'•
drifted aimlessly through the
'
second set. and she never got more
at , a ·Cruc_ial time than wllen ·
Novolnll caved in at the end of the
third set to lose 7-6."(8-6), 1-6,6-4.
"There were a few matches
when !'ve choked. 109," Graf said,
though she never did it so b1tdly for
so presti~ious a title.
·
Take It, Novotna said with a
double fault as she sei'Ved needing
one point for a 5-11ead in that fmal
set
Take it, please, Novotna said
with an easy forehand volley she
whacked long and an overllead she
knooked into the net on the next ''\,
two points for a_break that ~de it
4-2.
Here, it's all yours, Novotna
offered again when she blew two
break points in Grafs next service
game.
-,
Anything else you need, Ste{fi?
Three more double faults? You've
got it. And no,w the score was 4-4.
Grsf, ·lucky not to have Monica
Seles iii the tournament or Martina
i\ ") .
- \""~
Navratilova in the final, could
- ..
scarcely believe Novotna was
showering her with so many
. presents. Graf ·had tried so hard,
•
herself, to give away the match "in
the second set and through the first
'
five games of the third. But why
-'i . '·
not take it if NOvotna didn't want
'
it?
So Grsf.s'erved again and, boom,
three Novotna e(Iors Jnade it 40loye, and a Graf volley gave her a .
5-4 lead.
Would Novotna, in her first
Wimbledon final, now stop
throwing away the biggest
opportunity of her life? A, ·chance to
be the Ul6th Ladies Champion and
...-winner of $400,000? ·
\'
No. She slapped an easy
IN
TEARS
- Jana Novotna weeps as sbe accepts the runner-up's
backhand volley wide on the first
plate from the Duchess or Kent after the Wlmbledoo women's
point of her service game and
shrugged her shoulders and shook . singleS title mateh Saturday, whicb saw Novotna lose lo Stem Graf.
{AP)
.
her head in resignation. She
clubbed an easy backhand 10 feet
'

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match Saturdar afternoon, which saw Graf beat
RETURNS VOLLEY - Germany's Stem ·
Grar returns a volley to Jana Novotna .. during "' Novotna 7-6 (8-6), 1-6, 6-4 to win her fifth
Wlmbledoo title. {AP) • :
the Wimbledon women's singles championship·
CUB SCOUTS- Patriot Pack :ZOS sbows It colors.

~ Gallipolis
·

.- Brewers, Rangers no.tch wins

celebrates the Fourth ·with space age.parade
L,

PhotOs
By KEVIN PJNSON
Times-~entinel Staff

unit - North Gallia Junior .Higii
Cheerleaders;
Best baton group - Super
Strutters; Best old car - Joey
GALLIPOLIS - Nearly 100 Wilcoxen; Best motorcycle unit units participated in the River Gold Wing Riders; Most original
-:f(ecreation Festival's .parade float - SceniG Hills Nur.;ing Center;
: Saturday to celebrate the Jaycees Award - Gallia County
Independence Day weekend event Democrat Club;
Myron Bud McGhee Award Awards were presented as
Agriculture
Mechanics, Future
··follows:
·
Farmers
of
America; Best
- · Best marching units - River
equestrian
unit
- Twin Cedar
Valley~·h School and Ga!lia
Farms;
Best
decorated
bicycle ~
-Acade
igh School marching
Wee
Care
Day
Care;
Most
bands: Be theme float - All My
outstandfng
float
Modern
Children 4-H Club; Best walking .

Woodsmen· of America: Best
overall float - Reliance Electric.
Trophies were sponsored by Bell
Contracting, West Virginia
Electtic, Last Chance Carry Out,
Fruth Pharmacy, Bill Medley,
Steve McGhee, Tawney's_Jewe!Jy,

-Norris Northup Dodge, Jeep and
Eagle: Riverside Honda, Country
Carry Out, Gallia County Area
Jaycees, Crimjpal Records, Willis
Tire; Haskins and Tanner Company
and McCoy-Moore Funeral Homes
of Gallipolis and Vinton.

MINNEAPOLIS '(AP) - Resurgent Ricky Bones pitched a strong game,
leading the Milwaukee Brewers to a 3-1 ·victory Saturday over the run-starved
Minnesota Twins.
.
" After struggling for most of the season, Bones (5-5) is 2-0 with_, a 2.08 ERA
in his last three startS. He allowed five hi.ts in 7 2!3 innings, outpitching Kevin
Tapani (3-l 0).- who lost his fourth straight decision. .
.·
· Tapani received no ~upportfroni the 1\vins, whos~ offensive woes continued.
In losing 14 of its last 18 games to fall into last place in the AL West,.Minneso~ ta has been outscored 94-49. The 1\vins rank last in the league with 322 runs.
Rangers 11, Tigers S-At Detroit, Julio Franco's fourth career grand slam
capped a six~run seventhinning, leading the Texas Rangers to an 11-5 victory
Saturday over ·the tattered Detroit Tigers.
.
· Texas, winningl_or the sixth time in eight games, led 5-0 after one inning,
Detroit for:ged a tiC" in the fifth, but the bullpen failed, ,sending the Tigers to .
their 11th loss in 12 games.
Kurt Knudsen (0-1 ), the third Detroit pitcher, walke(l, Geno Petralli to start
the seventh, then gave up consecutive singles to Butch Davis and Dean Palmer.
That loaded the bases, and brought Bob MacDonald out of the Tiger bullpen.
He gave up a tie-breaking sacrifice fly to Doug Strange, and an RBI single to
Mario'Diaz. A walk to Gary Redus preceded Franco's seven1]:1 homer.
Mike Schooler (2-0) pitched 1 2/3 shutout innings of relief.

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Rotary Mile,RuD: results posted
HORSE _DRAWN FLOAT representiog Twin Cedar Farms.

C(ydesdales pull a wagon
BUCKET RIDERS - Three .youths ride to

the bucket or a tractor pulling
Gallla County Democrat Club.

a noat ror the

YOUR DENTuRES IN ONE DAY
Cuatom Fitted Dentures In One Day At Our Teaya Valley Olllce
• By Our ProfessiQnals And Tn!lned Stall.
Made In Ow; Dental Laboratoey By Oualltled Techhic;lans.

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- For AD ApJIC!IIltment or IDformaUon.
.
Evening Appointments AIX11lable "· .
' · .
Our Regular Servtce Is AvaUable At AU Olft!:es._
SAME DAY SERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS I

$143 PER DENTURE!

DENTURES START.AT

SMALLADDrriONAL CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

West

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GALLIPOLIS - Chris Roettker, Sara
Walker, Erin Nehus, Lee ijarley, William
9-underBeegle, Tessa Rothgeb and Clarke Saun1- Clarke Saunders (7:06.6)
ders were the age"group.winners in the Ro2- Shannon Drummond (7:29.8) .
tary Mile Run Saturday morning.
3- Jeff Mullins (8:01)
The course ran from the Shake Shoppe
. and ended at the bandstand placed halfway
GIRLS
down the pan of First Avenue passing the
14-1993 grads
~allipolis city'park.
- 1 - Sara Walker (6;28.5), second,over- ·
Here are the top-three finishers in each all
age group.
2 - Susan Facemire (6:46.8), third
BOYS
overall
14-1993 grads
3 - Bbii.r Simpson (6:55.4) _
1 - Chris Roettker (5:07.3), first overall .
2 - · Seth Montgomery (5:15.9), secOnd
11-13
overall
'·
·
1 -Erin Nehu.s (5:58.6), first overall
3 - Nathan Moore (5:56.1), third over2- Ariel Brinker (8:08.6)
all
3 - Lc?ri Drennen (9:-12.3)
I - William·Beegle (6:11.2)

Wllll•m V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.

2 - Lee Earley (6:11.9)
3 -Dustin Deckard (6:25.2)

1031 OUARR!ER STREET
. 3011 .Adu Bldg., Chlllol"" • 303-21154

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_ The Most Efficient Heat Pump in the
Manufactured Housing;Industry.
. MARCHING BAND ~ Tbe River Valley HJgh Scbool Marching
Band matches by after playlog patriotic selections.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
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FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN
CLINIC
. ;CONTROL
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: WEIGHT CONTROL -·
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II I i!D I
R I 1:11 I IEnlrJ;

chairman Breot Saunders, Sara
Roettker, Erin Nehus and William Be&lt;egl&lt;
e.
{Times-Seotinel photo)
·
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Featureti:
•10 Yr•.Limited Warranty
&amp; Copeland Scroll Compressor
•12 S.E.E.R. efficiency
.•De11igned f.or your ·
Coleman, lntertherm &amp;
. Miller Furnaca
. _

•Free Estlinat111

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•Very,affr ..11ble

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•I you are

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UiWhrDI• ..._11114

RIDIIILIIIFI.

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TO A&lt;1:COMMODATE THOSE WORKING PE()PLE, .
WE ARE OPEN 'TIL 9 P.M. ON TUESDAYS
(POINT PLE.ASANI' MEDICAL CENI'ER)
25TH&amp;. JEFFERSON AVENUE

POINT rLJ~I!iA~
..

ROT AR MILE RUN WINNERS "- Tbe
Rotary Mile Run age-aroup winners are {front
row, L·R) Tessa Rothgeb, Lee Earley and
Clarke Sauoders. In the back row are event

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, •Fin•naclng -avallilt&gt;' · ~ · ·
. tweryone no m••· Jr wh;l

Conaressman Ted Strickland aatures to
·

. 10-under
1- Tessa Rothgeb (7:47)
2 -· Ariel Pratt (8: 17.7)
3- Monica Pratt (9:31.6)

ULTRA HIGH -EFFICIENCY HEAT PUMP SYSTEM

HER MAJESTY- 1993 River Recreational Festival Queen
Luciana ·l!cott rides by the
.·

CONGRESSMAN supporters.

-

10-13

Virginia Dental Service

..-

. &amp;ENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
-HEATING &amp; COOLING
(614) 446-8416 or 1-800-872-5867
. llpoo-ln ma"""""undhouolfto "-ling 1

c:oolll!l_e~ ""-h_~ ~"· ..... lo -

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lltlllfiOII KIIOOL 10., IAUIPOUI, 011:

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FIRST FII'!fiSHER '- Nathail-Baloy ·or -Pomeroy, a.'recently
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retired tracki!I&amp;D ·at Meigs: lllllh School, was tile llrst fJinner to
· ~rogs the finish llne ..durlnelatorday'a Rotary Mile Run In
. Gallipolis. not~~ll Rotary ollldala ~ Baloy torun·the race, he
didn't receive 1 trophy for hll accompllslmlent lleeaue be Ia a noll· .
Galljlin. Hilwever, he ~pt the shirt. {Tima-Sentlntl photo by G. ·
Spencer Osbllrne)' .
· . ·· · . . . . ,. .· ,.
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l'umtl

CALL

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YOUNGEST RUNNER - With i little help from dear old Dad
FIIJST ·LADY - With ber blonde pooytsD flowing, Erin ll{eiJus .
{right) dOles In on Grea Mon1gomery ot Crowo City en route to, • (Glenn Pratt), four-year-old = e 'Pratt takes the nnal iltrldes in
the Rotary Mlle Run in Galli
Saturday morning: The youoaer
becomin1 the first remate runner to lbalsb the Rotary Mile Ran in
Pratt
Will
aonoun~ed
as
the
JOUDaat
rnnner ill this year'al'ICe and
Gallipolis Saturdn mormna. ·Neh111, ~pet~!~&amp; In the 11-13 yearIn-the history Of tbe event. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Speneer
old age eroup, ftolslled io 5:58.,, (Times~Sentlnel photo by G.
Osborne)
·
·
Spencer Osborne)
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Page C2-$unday limn Sentinel

In NL action, _.

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Phillies, Padres, Reds, Pirates

~spfit twjnbills

money's wonh.
.
doubleheader at Veterans Stadium
~Y the time p!e Phillies and_San on Saturday morning, it was 4:40
D•e.go Padres completed their: a.m. EDT.

The first game was delayed
nearly.six hours by rain and didn't .
end until1:03 a.m. with the Padres
winning 5·2. Philadelpliia gained a
split by taltipg the second garne 6-5
~~ 10 mnings bfCore a few faidtful

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FIRST IUT A WINNER - In his first at-bat
or. the season, P,hiladelpbla reliever Mitch
Williams (second l'rom right) celebrates with his ·
teammates the aame-'lrinnln1 RBI lin11e be bad

ScoreiJoard
Blltimorc (McDoriald 4-7) at .Chicaao

NATIONAL LEAGI$
Eutera Dl•llkln
·
T.W L Pd.
PIUlodelphi&gt; .......... 53 Z1 .t\63

S&lt; LGui&amp; ................46 32

.590

Mom•aL ............ ..42
38
1'111abwJh;.............31
Florida ...................36

.532
.500

31

cm:.,o..................

38
41
42

.411
.462
New YcD ..... ...... :.. 23 S4 _.299

W..... DIYIIIol
San Praneilco ........53 'r1 .663
· Alianla .......; ...........45 35 ,563
LooAn................41 36 .S32'
"""'............... ......40 !7 .m
CINC!NNA11 ........ 39

42

.411

San Dies• ..............30 SO

.!7S

52

.!33

Col...do ................26

GB

6
IO.S
'13

.14.5
16
28.5

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li.S
14.5
23

26 1

Friday's scores
S1n Dioao S, Phil1delphia 2 (hl

aamc); ~ddphil

6. S•n Dicao S

(~d

1ame,IOinn.l

Pitllbur&amp;)l 10. CiNCINNATI 9 (ht
same); CIRCINNA'tl 9, Pittthur&amp;h 1
(2nd pmc)
............ 4, Mao.....J 3
Sm Frmcilc:o 3, New York l (S iM.,

i

nUn~da4,AtlAn~2

HOUSLOn7, SL l..caW; 1
OtiCISO 11, Colondo I

r

,

• Tbty played Saturday
Pit(i~~a~.~Wilk 9-5) It c•NCIN~.

NATI

PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES' Re·
!cued Mark Davia, pitcher. Recalled

(R. Bolloa 0-4),1'35 p.m. &lt;
&amp;c.t.on (Quantrill 3-S) at Seattle (Bo-

Mike Willlam1, Pitc:hcr, !rom Scranton·
Wilkca·Bure ~ lfae. (nUirnalionalla.pe.

lio 2--3), 8:0:5 p.m.
Toronto (Stolllemyre S-5) at Kanau
Ci1y (llancy 4-1), Ul'i p.m.
New York (Key .10-2) u Oakland

SAN DIEOO PADIU!S' Aaai!P'e&lt;flof!

Bmw~~,pildlor,IOIMV-oflhel'loif·

ic Coutl..cap

(Dulin&amp; ...). ,,,, ~-m.

CllVELAND (Mc::aa 7-S)
nia ~ 8-2), 9 p.m.

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Basketball

Cdifor·

National Balblbllll Uoclatlon
ATLANTA HAWKS: Sipcd Craia

- .......

Ehlo. auard. to. thrc&amp;-yar !XIftln.Cl

• Transactions • -

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Football

Baseball

.

MILWAIJKEI! BREWERS' Aaoi!P"'d

Kelly Wunach, pitcher, to the Belqit
Brnoan; of the Mid.,.t IMp and Pat
Fetty, pilcher. 1o Stoc:ktoo of the Cali!or-' Loo
ft1l MUfNBsorA TWINS: P1acr.d Pedro
MWIOI: outfielder, on 1hc IS-day dilabled
liJL Actiwalild Bu:ie I..ailti.!l., &amp;It buanan,
ri-cm the diablcd lilt.

NaUonal Lupe
CINCINNATI REDS: Placed Dip
Robeau, inflCldcr, an the IS-day diaabled
lilt. Recallod Jc:ny Spndlin, pitcher, fmm
lndianapolia cllho American 1\ao&lt;iolion.
NEW YORK METS : A.ctivlled
Howard Jotuilon, \bird bacman, from the
lS·daJ diublcd li11. OptiOned Doua
Saunclcn, infWder, 10 Norfolk of..the In·
Ltm1tional Lclpat. Sianed Eric Ludwick.
pildler, and •lli1J1od lUm to Pilllfidd of
the New YcU-Pwnn t.c..suc.

• NaUooal FoGtball Laaeu&lt;
NFL: Uf&gt;beld Wdba- MamaaD'o 1993

contract walh the Hollllon Dilen. The
Wubinatoo RcdWni will receive tho Oil-

.,.• l~.lhiol- IOUIId dnl\ pick and lhcir
I 995, lifth·round dnll pick u _ . . .
tion.

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Pony league ream remained undefeatedbyclaimingthreebigwinsthis
week in Big.,8en(1 PQny League aclion.
" ' ·
•
· Middlqx~rt's firSt win came with
a 11-2 triumph over Point American
LegionatMiddlepon. 'lbeMetsuscd
four pitchers in paining the win with
Paul Pullins coming home the winner. Also pitching were Brent Han·
son, Seth Cremeans, and Gary
Stanley.
Stanley· hit a monster two-run
home run over the left field fence to
liit the dugout of the other field.
Stanley also had a triple and single
with5RBI's. WillieHohnsonwas2~ with a duuble, Donald Goheen was
2-3 with a triple and, lhree RBI's,
Pullins2-4withatriple,CbadBurton
a triple, and E4die Sarver a double.
. 4 Pl~~.ens was the loser for Point

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- • Baseball • -

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HOUSTON OJLERS: Sianed Brad
Hwncr, delcmive encl.
NEW ORU!ANS SAINTS' Sianed
Fnnk Wainriahl, tipt end. lo a two-year
cont.n.ct and RCIIU1ie Dixon, note tickle.,
to I threD-- )'011' con&amp;rlct.

Hockey
National Hoc:b)' Leque
ST. LOUIS BLUES : Eucnded tho
conna. of Ron Caron. a-m man•acr.
.....,,.. Junei99S.

The Mets then went on to defeat
Hanford. w.va.9-6inagreatcomefrom-behind _victory.
Hanford scored four runs i.n the
second irlning, but the Mets earn
back with five big runsoftheirown in
the third. The big blow in the frame
was a three-run home run by Travis
Cwiis.
Hartford's Mike VanMele!' hit a
· home run for Hartford in the llfth, as
the over-the-border team took a 6-5
lead into the seventh.
: Middleport salvaged its undefeated season with five big runs. That
charge was led by Pullins and Sarver
who each doubled.
\,
Gary Stanley came on to get the
save in relief of winner Mike
Franlc:oviak. Roach absorbed the loss
for Hanford.
MiddlepOn hillers were Pullins~
.whowent4·S with a double, Cunis 2·
4 and three RBI's with a hol)le run
.and single, Sarver a double, Fran- ·
choviak, Stanley, Goheen, Burton and
J.P. Fisher each with singles.
Fisher made a great catch in left
field 16 keep Hartford off the scoreboard in the fll'Sl iMing.
' Miildlepon blasted Mason 4-0 at
Mason as both reams were credited
with playing tough defense. Brent
Hanson made a divjng catch on Joey
Mayes ground ball up the middle,
fben got up and threw the runner out
at first. That play saved two runs
from sCQring.

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ln~;:;h~~~:: [~~i~ge:!;~ iri

~~~~·ur'?'s~.:~~~~:~~~~~d~ir~

lNGROUND OR AIOVE GROUND
SWIUIN&amp; POOlS

SPRING SPICIAI,

(Leakanie 0-1), 9:05p.m.

::JPio-: 304-429-4718 Mon.·Frl. 9:30-5:00; Sal.

WE WBUOME YOU TO

BOSTIC MOTORS

Today•sgames
Florida (Bowen 4 -8) at Atlanta

(Smoliz7·7), l ,IOp.m.
to. An&amp;clt:il (Candioai 3-S) at Montreal (Nobho.. 4-S), DS p.m.

NqW UNDER NEW MlNAGEMENT.

Larry Pierce ·
Former~

of Norris .NorthuP. Dodge,
is reacry·to do whatever 11 takes
to put tlle deal together for you.
WEEKLY SPECIALS!.

Come In and We WILt Deal!
Come see Larry or 1111•••• 446•1172

'S STORES
.....

San Francilc:o (Black 7- 1) at New
York (fanana 4·7), 1:40p.m.
PitubwJh (Wapcr 3-4) at ONCIN·
NAll (Om..,;,&amp; B), 2'1S p.m.
St. Loui1 (Aroeha. 6-2) at Houston
(Dnbd&lt; 6-8), HS p.m:
.
Chic•so (Moraan ~ - 8) at Colorado
(Ruffin l-4), 3&lt;IS J""·

.san D!e&amp;E. (lim Wonell 0-1) at
Pililadciphio (Ri,.,. 1·3), l,o&lt;l p.m.

•

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We offer a complete marketing program
PLUS top competitive prices.•.The best
wheat prices In Central &amp; Southern Ohio
We carry a complete line of MANNA.PRO Feeds
· · .and Premier Feeds.

Call Dave

1·800.523-2217

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eutem Di•lllon

. W

L
32
34
3s

PtL
.600

GB

Toronto .................. 41
New York ..............46
o...oi&lt; ...................44

Tn"'

.S7S

Baltim(R ............... 42 37
801wn., .................. 39 39
CU!VELAND ....... 37 42

.S32
.SOO
.468

2
3.5
S.S

8
IO.S

Milwaukee ............. 32 4S

.416

14.S

.m

Wllkt'll DI•IIIOI
Chicaaci..................40 n -~19 .
Kanau Cily ........... 39 31 .S06
s..wo ..,................. 39 41 .411

I

2.'

Calilomil ............... 37 40
Tea. ..................... 36 41

.481
.468

Ooklind ................. 33 41

.446
5.5
.434 ' 6.5

MiMooGia ..............,

43

3
4

Friday'&amp; scores

.0.U.U 6, Toul •

(10 IM.)

Oti&lt;a.. l:l, ~-·
X....uCity3,
TGr'Cd02
MiMtloU 11, MU'It'lllkeo 10
Ookiand 4; N.- Yodt 3
a.£VE.LA.ND 10, c.J.ifomi•.
s-9.11oaalol

Tbey played Saturday

Taua (aopa H) 11 Doln&gt;il (Moen
H), l:t'5p.m.
MiJ"aU. caon,. 4-S) It Minnet~OUI
(T,_j :1-9), 2.-b5 p.m.
•

~ongratulations,

YOUR BIG &amp; TALL MEN'S' STORE
.-PLUS REGULAR SIZES
•Yes, we have men's work, dress and casual pants to
72 - Shorts to 70 and

ax

•Ye_s, we have sport, dress, work, knit shirts up to

WE HAVE LAYAWAYS!
,, '

: Jim Walker
Congratulations ·
Jim Walker.
He is Salesman of
the Month of June
at Gene Johnson
ChevroletOldsmobile

•

Located on the Corner of Eastern Ave. and
Madison St. (Nut to Pizza Hut)

'

Before You Market Your Wheat •••

&lt;J-3-:1),7~p.m.

TotdftiD (N~

,..1) .. KIIUIII City

(Caw H), I :OS p.m• .
a - {l)ofOon 6oS) • ..... (!'1om·
inal-IJ,IGmp.m. .
CLI!YELAND (Cllf( You~•J l-2) II
C.llfomia ()kii&gt;I••Y 1.0), 1~\1) pm. .

Toobly'•l•mn

Tuu (Pnlll&lt; !-4) 11 Doln&gt;i1·(M. J..oil.
• 6-4), 1 p.m.
Ml!'lt'..U. (llfavarrv S-4) It MinnOKU
(&lt;Naodaclo 0.:1), 2.-o5 p.m. .

,s,

Jim would like to thank all of his customers for
purchasing vehicles from him last month. Gene
Johnson Chev.·Oids. offers an excellent .selection of new Chevrolet·O!dsmoblles and . pre- ·
vlously owned cars, trucks and mini vans plus
convenient financing and award-wlnf!lng ser·
vice after the sale.

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happening aren't great. But he
doesn't want to regret not .baving
tried.
.
.
"I don't want to .have to tell my
two-year-old daughter when she's
older that I could have played
major-league baseball," said
Ybarra, who is from San Jose,
Calif.
.
Each day Ybarra drives 40 miles
;NLgames ...
from a hotel room, his temporary
•
(Continued from C-2)
' home, to Pikeville High School's
major-league record to 25 baseball diamond. .
While his dream might be of
consecutive losses for New York;
!falling to visiting San Francisco in pitching in a.cavernous stadium, in
reality he is preparing to pitch
~ game shortened to five innings by
before a sparse crowd in the new
~rain.
Frontier
League in the eastern
:
Cubs 11, Rockies 8
.
Kentucky
coal
fields.
• Sammy Sosa went6-for-6 to be a
Ybarra,
22,
started the Rifles'
~ club record' and he established a
inaugural
game
Wednesday against
~ Chicago record with · qine
the
Ohio
Valley
Redcoats, a team
; consecutive hits over two games as
from
Parkersburg,
W.Va. He didn't
: the Cubs beat Colorado at Mile
·, High Stadium. The last NL player get a decision in the Redcoats' 6-5
: to have 10 straight hits was Bip victory.
The Rifles will split their games
• Roberts of Ciocinhati in 1992.
between
Pikeville and Paintsville,
· .~
Marlins 4, Braves 2
about
40
miles to the north. Eastern
7 Chris Hammond won his eighth
Kentucky's
other team, the Tri·
:slraight decision by piU:hing three·
State
Tomahawlcs,
is in Ashland.
hit ball over 7 2/3 innings as
The
independent
rookie league
visiting Florida beat Atlanta.
from Wayne,
also
includes
teams
• Hammond (10-4) struck out two
W.Va.,
and
Chillicothe,
Lancaster,
~nd ..walked three before being
Portsmouth
and
Zanesville,
all in
:replaced by Matt Turner. 'Bryan
Ohio.
'tlarvey finistaed for hia 24th save.
"We're all here to get picked
t· The Marlins scored two runs in up,''
said Ybarra, who played
'the fourth inning off Greg Maddux
collegiate
baseball at South
'(7· 7).
Alabama.
,
Astros 7, Cardinals 1
·· Scott Servais hit a three-run
liomer to highiight a five-nJn fifth
;off Joe Magrane (7· 7), helping Edwards Memorial
~ouston cool off St. Louis at the ·
Tournament set for
:Astrodome. It was only the
July 10, 11 at Logan
~ardinals' second loss in their last
rone games.
;• Mark Portugal (6·3) was the
LOGAN-TheZachEdwardsMewinner, ~iving up one run and eight
~orial tournament will be held July
ltits while striking out eight in
lOth and llthatMingoP&amp;ltinLogan,
:SCven innings.
Ohio. The tourney is open to 7 and 8
t:
Dodgers 4, Expos 3
year old reams who play coach pitch.
~ : Eric Karros hit a two-run double
Entry fee is $40 and two baseballs
:and Ramon Martinez survived a with the proceeds to benefit Zach
~aky first inning as Los Angeles
Edwards who suffers from Leuke~!'apped a seven-game losing streak
mia. Too tourney is ilouble elimina:llt Monueal. The Dodgers are 3-19 · tionwiththedrawingbeingheldJuly
'at Olympic Stadium since 1990.
7 at6p.m. Trophies will be given to
f.: Martinez (7 -4) pitched seven p, thetopbteamsandT-shirtstothe
mmng_s, allowmg. one run on five
players of the winning team. For
h,tts. Jim Got! retired the last ~ve further information please call614·
Expos for h1s 14th s&amp;ve. Brurrr,, 385-9372.
~ felltQ 2-4.
·

• BUGLE BOY • SEDGEFIELD • HANES • CARHARTT
BIG BEN • WALLS • DANBURY • HO_LE IIJ NONE
MUNSINGWEAR • LEI= SWEATS • ERIC
HUNTER SWEATS TO
8X • BLoCK
•
SPORTSWEAR•CAROUNA
WORK SHOES
•DEXTER
CASUAL

BAU.M LUMBER
COMPANY

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,
homers keyed a 13-hit attack and Ellis Burks also homered for
gave homestandinj Chicago its Chicago, with Ventura and Guillen
fint victory in five games.
·
each driving in rout ru·n ,. Alex
Bo Jackson, Oziie Guillen( and ·
(See AL on C-4)
•
.-------.:..
· ----------------..

· . The players say they're not in !he
league. for the money. Fronuer
League players are guaranteed
$625 for the two-month season.
That's about $12 a game.
The Rifles' manager, Roy
Cutright, said with the addition of
the expansion Colorado Rockies
and Florida Marlins this season,
there is a greater demand for more
professional baseball teams.
"It's a concept whose time may
have come,'' Cutright said.
Many of the players in the league
have used up their colleJ!e
eligibility and were passed up m
last month's major-league drafL
Ohio Valley's second baseman,
Nick Cosmo, was nearly ready to
sign with San 'Diego. He said a
Padres scout assured him he would
be drafted. Now Cosmo is
wondering if he will ever play in
the majors.
·
"It's professional baseball," said
Cosmo, who played for St. John's
in Nevi York. "It's be'tter than
nothing."
While the players w~)ITY about
their future, executiv~s of the
Rifles will attel!lpt to sell basebBll
to a market that's tried it in the past
but with mixed success.
Paintsv.ille and Pikeville had
rookie teams in the Appalachian
League in the late 1970s and early
'80s.
Rilles catcher Rob Taylor said he
saw Mike Maddux, a Cy Young
Award winner now with the
Atlanta Braves, pjtch in Pikevjlle.
•'I remember I saw Maddux pitch
atwo·hitgmnehere,buttherewere
mily 40 people," Taylor said.
Fans-in eastern Kentucky are
used to watching high school
football and basketball, not minor·
lea~e baseball.
' Everyone here says there's
nothing to do in the summer," said
Rick Bentley, sports editor of
Pikeville's tri·weeldy newspaper,
the Appalachian News-Express.

~-ngest in

the majors this
Sparky Anderson tied Walter
Alston for fifth place with his

~~~~~- f;e::cc~~~~rls f~~r~~

with 2,126 wins. ·
Cecil Fielder pulled the Tigers
even in the eighth with a two-run,
484-foot home run onto the left
field roof of Tiger Stadium,
capping a four-run mlly.
Mike Henneman (2-1) pitched
two perfect innings. _Bob Patterson
(2-3) lost.
White Sox 12, Orioles 1
· Robin Ventura's third career
grand slam and three additional

Outlaw Sprint
. Speedwe'ek tonight
in Findlay
FINDLAY -The eleventh annual
all-Ohio OuUaw Sprint SJ?Cedweek
· begins tonight at MillsQeanl Speedway, wheresomeofthefinestnames
in open wheel outlaw sprint racing ·
will begin a seven-day tour across'
Ohio.
nie "Fourth of July" event pays
$4,000 to the winner as does each
successive nighL Fremont Speed·
way pays S?,OOO to the winner on
Friday and the classic ends with a
giant $10,000 to win show at the
famed Eldora Speedway on Saturday, July 10.
UMP modifieds and Stock Cars
will join the sprints at Millslreanf,
located three miles west of I·75 on
U.S. 224, then one mile north on
Twp. Rd 136 at Findlay.
Mom!ay, the tour stops at Buckeye Speedway in Orrville, moves to
Muskingum County Speedway Tuesday, July 6;AUica Raceway Parle on
Wednesday, and Sharon Speedway
in Hanford Ohio on Thursday.
Drivers entered are Bobby Allen,
, FrankieKerr,KevinHundey, Rickey
Hood, Johnny Maclc:ison, Joey Allen,
Jack Hewitt, Kelly Kinser, Charlie
Fisher, Rodney Duncan, and Keith
Kaufman.

J

;\rea sports briefs

Salisbury to run in regional meet
. ' CHARLESTON; W.Va.. Penny Salisbury bf Bidwell will compete in the Region 5 Junior
. . .. .
.· . ,.. ; . ·
Olympics ttaclc: meet on Sunday, ·
·
·
July 11 at Laidley Field, where
the top three finishers will ad'
· vance to the national meet at
· Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La. from July 27 to
July 31.
.. TJw 14-year-old Salisbury
eame'il the right to run $l I:.aidley
by laking founh in the 200-meter
hUrdles with a 3Q.6-second fmish.
He also placed third in the 100meter hurdles with a 15.5-second
fmish that was half a second behind the )Vinner. ·
Region 5 consists of Ohio,
Kentucky, West Vir~ia. Michl·
. gan and the Lake Erie area (also
northwestern Pennsylvania).
PENNY SALISBURY

Green ·Jumbo beats Foodland

ATTENTION·!
'

POMEROY AERIE
2171 MEMBERS.
Dues Are Due
Now.
F.O.E. 2171
Box 427
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

; '

.

, • Pabtlble, safe and economl&lt;;al.

--- -...

CBII!IR ·

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK- FREE ALTERATIONS

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The SID,. with "AIIKinda of S1ufl" for Plls, SlabiM,

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1991 CHEVY
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CADILLAC

• M•xfmize growth and fast, efficient ·

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GALLIPOLIS - .Green Jumbo !mocked off Gallipolis Food·
land/UCCI 16-12 Friday night in Ohio Valley Athletic Association
Pony League baseball action.
'
.
Green (7-4), which also took advanrage of 12 hits, I0 walks and
· four Foodland errors, got the piu:hing it needed from winning starter
Moose Clarlc and reliever Josh Cook. Eric Humphreys (3-2) took the
loss, and reliever David Wright finished up for Foodland (5·5).
· Green's hitters were Cook (3·5, triple), Justin Smith (2-2), Chris
Casto (2-3, double &amp; triple), Rick}- Perdue (2-4), Robbie Woodward
(1·2), Clark (1·3) and Cor}' Wilsdn (1-5). Green's scorers were Casto (four), Coole (three), Perdue, Woodward, Ratliff (two each),
Clark, Wilson and Chase Borton (one each).
FOOdland's hitters wete.Nathan Cremeans (2·3), Wright (2-4),
Bert Wood (2-4), Humphreys (2·5 (double) and Drew Dunkle (1-4).
Foodland's scorers were Nathan Cremeans (four), Brian Angel
(two),. Jeremy Cremeans, Wright, Wood, Clark, Dunll;le and
MaxweU Bruce (one each).

1989 MAZDA
SE

• Helps musing females and gets
newborns off to a great stlrt.

.

CHESHIRE- Open gym for boys' basketball at River Valley
High School will be canceled for Monday.

gray, one owner. • .

Calf Manna' •

weight (!aiDs.

• •

4 door, automatic, air,

,

· MONDAY, JULY 5th
lrom 7·A.M.to ·10 A.M.
WE WILL IE CLOSED
AFTER
.
10 A.M. FO.R THE · ·.·
JULY 4th HOLIDAY

J.

R·VHS open gym canceled=

1991 HONDA
CIVIC

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protein, vitamins and minerals than

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calves, goats, pigs, sheep, milk cows,
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One For All

.

VISA • MASTERCARD • DISCOVER • AMERICAN EXPRESS

'\ . .

-:e

•'
By DAVID KI.,IGMAN
• PIKEVILLE, Ky. (AP)
: Kentucky Rifles pitche&lt;r Jamie
. • Ybarra is ready to try once more to
: catch a major league scout's
; auention.
·
• He knows rhe odds of that
•
•

lt#tft Yor* (l•rn $· 6) at Oakllnd:
~O.l), .,MJUII.

laldm. . (IDtcWI't 1~3) .• ' Chic•ao

.

Sunday Times Sentinel-Page C3

olir

hoping for Ch ance at maJOr eagues

HO'LIDA
Y POOLS, INC.
2973 Piedmont Road - Huntlng1on, WV

.

, . ·.

r
~...
Tim Salmon of a homer with a
"That wa~ . a pathetic game,
_Puckett_beat out a hit to open the
catch high above the wall m center · .uacrly patheuc," _Anfels m~er runth agamst Fetters (2· 1) and took
field.
Buck. Rodgers satd. 'Every!hlng second &lt;!n Gene Larkin's sacrifice. .
" After they went ahead_8-3 , I we did was lousy. E~rythmg I After Winfield was walked, Harper
thought we could keep pecking .., tho_ught we learned, -we forgot ~ lhr?Dl\h with ~s in-your~f!ICC
away and catch them. It happened tomght·- what base to throw to, shot JUSt msule the third-base line.
in a hurry, but that's baseball," when to throw to it, who\th~ · Larry -Casian (2-1) pitched two
Lofton added. "Wayne Kirby got c~tof~ man, pitching ... "I:he JIOOCI innings of scoreless relief..
'
the bif hit for us, that two-out thm'- tS, we play tomonow and we
Kent Hrbek and Wlnf1eld also_
homer. '
don t have to wait a week like' t/ley homered for the Twins. Winfield's
· Kirby said "1 think we were do in football."
..
hit was his 2,927th and tied him
tired beCause 'or
trip out here,
The Angels' Luis Polonia said, with AI Simmons for 25th place on.
but we finiilly lc:iclred it in. W~ot . "We just didn't lc:~ow where· to the carcer,list._
. , ·
.
so'!"e timely hitting, and we · 't thro.w an_d we d1dn t know '!hat
. ~arper s ~mth-mnmg heroics
quat when we fell behind."
was gomg on. It was JUSt fmashed a wild game that took 3
.
somethingoutofthis~odd." .
h~urs , 36 minutes. It f~tu_red 28
_Alvaro Es~moza had a career_Els~where on_a hagh-~conng
ht!S and a seven-run mnmg by
btgh rour hits, all singles, and mght !n the AL, II was ~ncsota ~wa~ee.
Junior Ortiz went 3-for-3 for the 11,_Milwll!k~ 10; De~t6.:rexas
We
played some funny ,
. Indians.
4 m 10 mnmgs; · Ch1cago 12, games w•th the Brewers over the
"We lcnow we have the hitting, Baliimore 1; Kansas City 3, years,'' . Harp~r _said. ''There's
so we felt we could come back Toronto 2; Oakland 4, New York always lots of httling and runs. We
after they WCIII up 8-3," Ortiz said. · 3; and Boston 9, Seatde 8.
~ve ver&gt;: similar teams. We b&lt;'lh
"They helped us by making some
Twins 11, Brewers 10
like to ~wmg the bats."
errors."
.
Brian Harper said Mike Fetters
Milwaukee's Tom Brunansky
Heathcliff Slocumb (3·1) got the just made a bad piu:h.
(!idn't think anything abont .the
win although he gave up four runs
What Harper didn't say -but ' game ~as funny.
- including a three-run homer by may have been thinking - was
"Thas g~me was ugly,"
Salmon - while pitching just tW!)· that the bad pitch may have been Brunansky ~d "Both teams were
thirdS of an inning, the sixth.
the -fourth ball_ in an intentional shaky and •! seemed neithet·team
The loss went to Gene Nelson (0- walk to Dave Wmfreld.
. wanted to _wm. It was·toogh to lose
I), who was victimized by four
"They walk~ Dave to se_t up the after scon'll\ 10 ru~s a~d havmg
unear~ed runs as the ~ng~ls
~o~b1e play, H_arpe~ said after that outbll!'lll m the SIXth: .
commmed three errors m the. hmng·the next ~·tch ms1de thrrd
. The ~!JIS led S-3 gomg mto th~
seventh. He gave up four bits and b~se to SC?re Kirby l_'uckett and SIXth, trailed_l0-5_coll!mg ou~ of 11
got just one ouL
gt.ve the Minnesota Twms an 11·10 and then rallied With sax runs m the
-In 'the seventh, pinch-bitter Jeff victory over the Milwaukee final four innings. The victory was
Treadway had an RBI double, Brewers on Friday night.
the Twins' fourth in 17 games; the
Kirby, Albert Belle and Ortiz bad
"Fetters has a great sinker and loss was the ·Brewers' lOth in 13
RBl singles, Paul Sorrento bit a I'm sure they were 'looking for a games.
·
· sacrifice fly, and two 'llns scored grqund ball:,but. he happened to get
. Tigers 6, Rang~rs 4
on a double error by Silmon. The the ball up, wd Harper, who also
Mickey Tettleton s two-run
· Cal~fornia ri~ht fielder bobble&lt;! hit one of the Tw~~· thr~ homers homer !n the lOth i~g snapped a
Espmoza's single, then threw to m . the game.
He made . a 4-all tie and Detroit s 10-game
third when no one was covering.
mistake."
· 1osipg streak.The Tigers' skid is

1 1 U

.

,

Y·b a••n am·ong F.•on. n·er Leaguers
• l

7,0!5 p.m.

l...ol Anaclt~~ (Gml• 6-6) at Monueal
(D. Manincoi·S);7,JS p.m.
St. Louil (Cormler S-4) 11 kounon
(Kilo I · I), l&lt;ll p.m.
Chicaao (Canillo 2-S) at Co~ondo ·

S:i

POOL FOR THIS SUMMER

San Diet_o (Ona Hnri• 7- 1) 11
Philaddphia (J•cbc:wl. 7-4), 7:0S p.m.
S1n Fnnc:iaco (Swi!t 10-4) at New
y ad&lt; (I'cipdct 2-0), 7' I0 p.m.
Aorida {Aquino 4· S) 11 Atlanll. (P.

Smilh 2-7), 7:10p.m.

oo

Cincinnati didn't end un~l after 1
a.m. EDT as ihe Pirates and Reds

MERCHANDISE
WHEN YOU PURCHASE YOUR .....,;:;;.;;.;;;;-,:,

WORKING

Colle&amp;e

.

.. .
By ·KEN PE'Jl:RS
.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) . Wayne Kirby,-a 211-year-old rookie,
- doesn't seem at all disillusioned
that.he spen.tiO &gt;:eai"s in the minors
' before getting has shot at the big
leagues.
· .
. · !'!e considers his time well spent.
I,thmk maybe there were some
specific skills I n.eeded to work
. on," . the Cleveland outfielder said
', Fri~y niglit after OO.:had three hits
incltid!ng a three:run homer and
RBI smgle, to lead the Indians to
· their seventh straight win 10· 8
, overth!CaliforniaAngels. '
' "I feel like now that I'm getting
my chance, I understand a lot of
things, like always trying to hit
behind the runner move the runner
up, hit line drives':• Kirby said. "I
. feel real relaxed and comfortable "
'. Kirby is hilling .310 in his
· appearances this season, including
·44 starts with three homers and 26
RBis. '
'· His homer tied the game 3;3 in
. the fifth inning, then he singled in
another run as the Indians scored
seven times in the seventh to retake
the lead after California scored live
in the sixth. .
.The seven-game winning streak
is Cleveland's longest since 1986
a_nd currently the longest in the
majors. The Angels have now lost
five in a row.
The Indians didn't seem to flinch
when California put together its
rally in the sixth.
·
, "Hey, they had just scored five,
so there was no reason we couldn't
score at least that many," said
kenny Lofton who had three of
Cleveland's 16 'biis and also robbed

"'

and a 43-minute break in the
Stanley added another home run seventh.
in the slugfest, while Burton, Fran·
Oj&gt;n Slaugh! hit a paif of three·
choviak,Sarver,Goheenaddedsafe- run homers and drove in a careerties,
.
.
high seven runs in the opener to
Goheen madeagame-savmgcatch rally Pittsburgh. The Reds won the
in left field, then doubled off Kevin second game 9· 1 by reaching Tim
Shields at fust to stop a Mason drive Wakefield for eight ·hit~ in six
in the sixth.
innings, including homers by Jacob
. Stanley got the win with 13 strike- Brumfield and Kevin MitcheQ. ·
outs and three walks. It was. his
Elsewhere in the NL it was San
fourth win this year in addition to a Francisco 3, New York I in five
save. Mayeswasraggeswiththeloss innings; Chicago II, Colorado 8;
despite ·a nine strikeout, three walk Florida 4, Atlanta..2; Houston 7,
performance. Jeremy Tucker did a . Cardinals 1; an~ Los Angeles 4'
good job in relief, fanning one and Montreal 3.
walking two. ·
Giants 3, Mets 1
·, · MasonhitterswereDaleJohnson:
(5 innings, raib)
Shields, and Cory Johnson.
Anthony Young extended his
(See NL on C-3)

·•

CLEMSON: Ann~ tho.ft'ltinlncnt
oiBiD WUhelm, buoloall coach.

Po""roy-Middleport-Galllpolls, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

·Indians.d_
own Angels 10-8 to cQllect sevent~ Straight victory

after rain delays
..

delay in Phillies hiStory totaled five fans were leU in the stands by the
hours, June 9, 1980, against San start of the second game.
Francisco. That game was
Fred McGriff hit a two-run
c~pleted at"3:~ 1_ a.m.. EDT.
. homer for th\' Padres_to 'help ~ive
We treale!lat JUSt like any otl)er . -reliever Mark Etdes h1s first maJOr·
game," umpire Dana DeMuth said. league victory. Terry Mulholland
.ans.
" Our job is to J!CI the game iii. (9-6) took the loss.
·. The opener was held up a total of That's what-we did."
In the se·cond game, Mitch
5 hours. and 54 minutes by three
The announced attendance was Williams (2-3) singled off ~vor
delays. The longest previous rain 54,617, but less .thari a thousand , Hoffman (2-3) to dri_ve in P!~te

The high-flying Middleport Mets

.

'

In itL affairs, ,

. t .M ts . • .th. .· .. .
MI•ddl,
ree :
B. .B eporp e · WID
·
1g end ony League games
.-

July 4, 1993

July 4, 1993

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

r

. By The Allloc:lated Press ·
The fans at Philadelphia and
Cincinnati certainly 110t their

.

I

..

••na. Ha~ Honda People"
810 E. Stat•St. • Athef!,, .Ohio • 594-8555

�-

....

,.

·-·

.,._ - · 1

·.
Page C4

Sunday nmes Sentinel

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

At .Wimbledon,

'1.&gt;

6

•

•

•

•

· Auburn, NCAA end three-day
· probe; penalty watch. begins ·
school, .
.
Former player Eric Ramsey
triggered the investigation last year
when he ·said he was given cash
and other prohibited benefits by
assistant coaches and boosters
. while Dye was coach.
•
The charges led to the resignation
of Dye, who was the' first person to
emerge from the meeting room
Friday and head for ·the elevator.
Ramsey was in the hotel where the
hearing was held, but checked out
and left town without appearing
before the committee. .
Asked Friday if he felt he had
been treated fairly, Dye said, "I
can't comment on that.
Everybody's got a job 10 do. I think
we probably needed all three days
because of how complicated these
issues were and the need 10 give
everybody a chance to speak."
It wasn't known if tapes made
secretly by Ramsey were played itt
the hearing. Ramsey's lawyer,
Donald Watkins, said he let
Auburn officials hear the tapes last
month at the request ofthe NCAA.
M
h d
'd
·
use . a sat earher 1.hat
Auburn hired an expe£110 revtew
thetapes.

By DpUG TUCKER
KANSASCITY, Mo. (AP)The waiting has begun for Auburn.
The Southeastern Conference
power; accused of, paying football
players, ended a. three-day session
with the NCAA infractions
committee Friday:
The school, facing sanctions that
would restrict television and
postseason appearances as well as
scholarships and recruiting visits,
should learn its fate in 4-6 weeks.
"They gave no indication of
what the penalties, if any, might
be," Auburn president William V.
Muse said. "!just can't give you
any indication of what lhe outcome
could bi:."
'\(
Muse. who was accompanied by
school lawyers and .new football
cooch Terry Bowden, who replaced
Pat ·Dye, termed it a "full and
complete hearing." ·
"We're pleased with the way the
process went," Muse said. "Now
we just have to wait and see what
the verdict is."
The unusually long hearing
began Wednesday before the
committee chaired by David
Swank, dean of the Oklahoma law

By STEVE WILSTEIN
,
WIMBL)lDOJI{, England (AP) Forget ali-AJl!erican. It's the Ugly
American final on .the Fou~th of
. July at Wimbledon.
.
At least that's the view on this
side of the pond, where Pete
Sampras and Jim Courier are
widely portrayed as boorish and
~ crass colonials. They aren't
interviewed so much as they're
· .. tnterrogated by Britain's selfappointed guardians of propriety in
the press.
,_
Sampras and .Couriei, among the
most mild-mannered players on or
off the court, hardll deserve the
roles in which they ve been cast.
And after the way they perfonited
~ in the semifinals Friday, setting up
a duel for the tide and the world's
No. I ranking today, they should
have been praised rather than
buried in abuse:
Sampras, elegant, efficient and
quietly effective, nursed his injured
shoulder through two weeks of
pain to produce .one of his finest
triumphs, 7-6 (7-5), 64, 64 over
three-time Wimbledon champion
Boris Becker. ·
·
Courier, a slugging baseliner
more comfortable on clay or hard
qmrts, overcame his aversion to
grass to beat serve-and-volley
master Stefan Edberg, a two-time
champion, 4-6, 64, 6-2, 64.

day evening.
McGill in the Doll Brothers Special #87 claimed the fast car dash to
earn the pole alongside fast qualifier
And Bond in the McDonald's A-10 .
McGill got the jump on Bond at
the start, but Bond challenged severa! times in the early stages. Brother
AL
LarryBondinlheFacemyerLumber
#10 made ita three way battle as that
. (Continued from C-3)
Fernandez (9-4) allowed six hits trio began to pull away from the rest
and struck out three in eight of the field. ,
.
1nnmgs. Mike Mussina (9-4) took
AdamsintheCTI/MorrisonBroththe loss.
ers/ J.D. Drilling #A-55 worked high
Royals 3, Blue Jays 2
and low to find the fast spot on the
Brian McRae scored from second track,butheandfellowRacinedriver
on a wild throw in the ninth inning ScottWolfeintheMark'sAutoSales
to give host Kansas City the 1 JM Do aid fG
v1ctory, Mark Gubicza's first in
nc c n so allipolis#l4had
more than a year.
· to settle for fourth and fifth spot.
Athletics 4, Yankees 3
A lateracec'lution on the23rd lap
Terry Steinbach's tie-breaking bunchedupthefield,allowingAdams
homer and Bobby Witt's six-hit to make his bid. Adams challenged
complete game gave Oakland its Larry Bond for third, then two laps
fourth . straight victory and ended latermadea bid on the runner-up slot:
New York's four-game winning
T1me ran out as Adams made his
streak: Witt (8-5) struck out a bidforthewinbehindMcGill.Andy
season-high 10 in his second Bond was third followed by Larry,
complete game.
Wolfe,MikeMcDaniels,BobbyHill,
Red Sox 9, Mariners 8
Bill Childers, Dan Morrison, and
· Mo Vaughn; Scott Cooper and Steve Steele.
.
Andre Dawson homered and Jeff
McGill claimed the fast car dash
Russell stov.ped an eighth-inning over A. Bond, L. Bond, Adams, and
rally for h1s 17th ~ave, making Wolfe in the Precision Automotive/
Frank Viola a winner for the fust Ebers' Citgo car.
time since Ap~il 28. Viola (5-7)
Childers and Hill claimed the
aUowed four runs in five_innings.
heats. .

games...

,

Crossword Puzzle on Page D-2

LEMC:~f.0r~~~rA~-Nick
Price retained a two-shot lead in
the Western Open after the day-late
second-round fmishers posted their
scores Saturday morning.
Price had a 13S total, 9-underpar, after a 71 on Friday.
·
Greg Norman, four til!les a
runner-up m th"KJ;event, gamed a
. share of secono place_ af,ter ~6
holes, but Grant Walle s btd
collapsed under a final-hoi~ double
bogey·
.
!'forman and Watte, .a New
Zealander and a recent wtnner of
the Kemper Open, were among the
Sl players _who ~ere stranded by
darkness Fnday t,ught after secondround play was mtertupted by a 3
3/4-hour storm delay.
,.
They marked tl_leu posmons and
returned to the s~l-wet Dubsdread
cou~se at Cog Htll sh~rtly after
day h~ht to complete theu rounds. .
Watle, who· had three holes to
play. was 8 under par for the
tournam,ent and was only one back
of Prices 36 hole pace.
.
Wrure,. however, bogeyed hiS ftrst
hOle, the 16th, and chopped U,P the
18th. He m1ssed the green, chtpped
well short of the pin and· threeputted for a double bogey.
That finished off a 71 and

A year after Andre Agassi won most unpopular man . at
the title, Sampras and Courier Wimbledon.
assured another American victory
"Too bad!" Sampras said,
in this o1ctest of all Grand Slam shrugging off a popularity poll and
events- da'ling to.l877. .
criticism and insistin¥ that he 'II let
,
Sampras reportedly shouted his racket Speak for hlDl.
som!thing nasty to a hostile crowd - And hi&amp; nicket spoke poignantly.
when he walked pff after beating
He never lost ·&amp; scrvtcc game ,
Brit last Monday ...:. a remark no . wielded his racket at the net as if it
official heard.
were a foil, ani! stabbed volley
Courier eame.close ro getting winners ill cyery direc.t ion. His
defaulted when he cursed during a · shoulder gave him no problem at
match last .. week. The · umpire - all, as evidenced by serve·s-that
thought the words were directed at reached 124 mph.
him, the referee ruled they weren't
"Sometimes I didn't .know the
and let.Courier go on.
difference between his first and
"It was just such a bizarre second serves because he was
.moment," Courier recalled Friday ·really hitting them hard," Becker
about an exchange that almost cost said
him a chance 10 go far the title. ''I
Becker displayed the power and
really ,thought it was like the creativity at lhe net that made him
'Twilight _Zone.' I didn't know a finalist six times, bt!t his serve let
what was going on."
·
him down at key moments. He
In the semifinals, Sampras put on double-faulted three iimes while
a show of graceful tennis that won losing at love in the only break of
warm applause from the crowd as the second set as he fell behind 2-1.
he left.
.
And he double-faulted on the frrst
"I hope they consider me a and last points in the opening game
prettr nice guy, which I think I· of the third set, again the only
am,' Sampras said. "It was a break Samp&amp;s needed.
situation (Monday) that was blown
"I think the problem was my
out of proportion. But it's in the legs," said Becker; who had 12 .
past and here the people have double-faults. Retuins will be just
already forgotten about what as ,important for sampras against
happened." ·
Courier, who may-not be a natural
Not everyone forgot, not those grass-court player but is benefiting
who asked him how it felt to bi: the from the &lt;!ry weather that's making

the ball bo00ce higher and higher.
Courier got Edberg out of his
smooth serve-and-volley rhyt)lm by
pounding winners from the
baseline with his two-fisted .
baseball-style swings and making
occasional forays to lhe nel
.
Courier had lapses of his own in
a ra~ged match that saw many
servtce breaks and errors, and he
let loose with one loud curse at
himself when he was broken while
serving for the second set at 5-3 .' -

a.

&gt;quishy by that time. The wealher
forecast called for more
thundershowers.
. Norman shared second with
Curtis Strange and Mike Hulbert
who, like Pria, completed secondround play Friday.
Price, who opened a 64, said he
played conservatively i11 the second
round.
"It's difficult to follow up on a
round like that. I had my good
score .on the board and I didn't'
want to mess it up with some
Sll!Pid shots.'' said Price, the
current PGA titleholder and a twotime winner this -season.
Strange, a struggling, frustrated
non-winner since taking his second
consecutive U.S. Open title in'
1989. shot 68 and Hulbert had a 70.
Mark Wiebe finished off a 73
this morning and joined Keith
Clearwater and Brian Kamm at
138.
'
.
The qualifying score for lhe final
two rounds was established at 144,
even par.
Lee Janzen, making his frrst start
since winning the U.S. O[ien two
weeks ago, was amon'g the
casualties. So .w.ere Payne Stewart,
Tom Kite, Tom Watson and Long
John Daly, who recorded a fiveputt triple bogey in a second round
77.

Sports briefs ·

.m

Marshal~, ·Oilers

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Phone 446-4290
446-4518

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436 SR 7 a'Galllpolls, OhiO

· -· PaLRRIS.
I kill'\ l' I!.
I'

;

·''

til at the player and tile Oilers had
reached a binding agreement on
Julie 2.
At the same time, however, .
Tagliabue said the Oilers had
properly called off trade ta~~~s· with
the Redslcins when Adams decided
to pull out of the deal, although that
1991 Ford Thunderbird...........•23~
.
\
.
did not end Marshall's dealings
2door, Sha~l loadod Milos, &amp;0)1.
with the Oilers. The Commissioner
1988 Chevy Cavalier... ...............•99said Redskins general manager
By TERRY KINNEY
·
"My drives were 'b"ouncing leaders included defending U.S. to take lhe lead.
Charley Casserly improperly
" doof. iUIO .. af, 4 Cyl.
· · MASON, Ohio (AP) -Mike backwards," Hill said. "The¢'s a Seniors Open champion Larry
"I shot! under on the front nine interfered with Houston •s efforts to
191!9 Chevy Corsica.................'126....,.,
Hill ·and DeWitt Weaver played. definite advantage to the long Laoretti, who had a 4-under~par 31 and it _could have been a lot halt negotiations with Marshall by
4dr., 6 0)1., loododl
nearly flawless ~olf en route to hitters."
·
on the back nine.
·
.)letter," Trevino said. "Then I was offering him a substantial sum of
five-under-par 66 s Friday to take
Hill had three birdies on the front
Bob Reith was among that group. going along on the back nine, cash- reportedly $150,000 - to
1990 Chevy Lumina ................ .'13Bthe lead in the first round of the nine and two on .the back. Weaver He thought he missed a real chance doing nothing until I got to the · accept lhe Oilers• offer.
·
4C)1.. 2door, aiAO., u, low, low Mlall
$850,000 Kroger Senior Classic.
was just the reverse, but both Friday.
15th.
'
Because of that interference,
1989 Ford
LX ............'99Seven players were just a stroke played without a bogey.
"Six-under is there for the '
"I hit my irons 1000 percent Tagliabue reduced the terms of the
2door, loaS..!! 011arp1
back, including Lee Trevino, who
"The course is not playing real shooting,". Reith-said. "I missed better than last week. I couldn't be trade for Marshall, awarding
, WaShington the Oilers' third-round
waited until the 15th to begin a hard because it's wet," Weaver two short putts. But this is my rest pleased more." ·
·
1988 Buick Regal Umiled ..... ..'140three-birdie charge, and Larry said. ''It's like playing target starring round of this year. I've got
Gary Player, making his first draft choice in 1994 and fifth2dr.. 6 0)1., WeiEqu~. llowllioal
. Gilbert, who had a pair of eagles.
golf."
- ..
sometJ.!ing to build on." .
appearance in this tollfTU!Silen~ w~ round pick in 199.5 instead of a No .
1987 Ponliac 6000 ...........:...........'75..,_
Ten others were within two shots
Play was completed before
Trcvmo, who changed hts stance all1Jnder. Crowd favonte Chi Cht I and No.5 in 1994.
"The Oilers were entitled· to
of the leaders.
thunderstorms gave· the course over the ball earlier this week, also Rodriguez was at even par.
4dr.. 6 c~ . loododl CloanardShafPI
Hill predicted it could take a another soaking Friday evening.'
thought that he failed to take
Forty-two of the 78 pros shot par expect that, having received
1991 Chrysler
•tRn"'-1
permission,,to negotiate with and
score .of IS under par to win on the
The group one shot behind the advantage of several opportunities or better.
2 dr., 6 0)1., AI Tlw goodie!, llodl Shalpl
sign Mr. MarShall, there would he
-yard Grizzly Course with its
no Redskins interference in those
1989 F.ord Aeroslar Van ..........'17?-"
y fairways and slow greens .
1993 GALLIPOLIS AREA FOOTBALL CAMP
contracfnegotiations," Tagliabue
t would equal defending
6 0)1., 5 !pOOd
saidin a statemenl "The Redskins
champion · Gibby Gilbert's
(Registration Form)
1988 Chevy C1500 PU .......... ..'164~-•I
could not interfere with - or
tournament record of 198 for the
Name:
____________________________
__
54-hole event
Age:..·_ _ Grade This Fall: _ __ . 'facilitate' - a relationship that
""'"ail,6cyl
"You've got to play very
one of those parties, the Oilers, no
aggressive here, got tQ make
longer wished to puisue.
·
Address: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ City:_;_
· _ _ _ State:·_ _ Zip Code: _ __
Monthly Payments Based
birdies," HiU said. "When you can
"When an owner of an NFL club
1 1,000. 00. Down Or
Upon
.shoot at the flags like we can this
)
(Houston) properly directs his staff
week, there will be a lot of low
Phone#: _ _ _ _ _ _ Parents Work #:_ _ _ _ _ Emergency#: _ _ _ __
to end trade talks and contract
Equal Value In Trade-In
scores.''
·~
negotiations with a player, an
and Balance Financed Thru
Week-long rains at ·the Jack
. official of a second club cannot
Lending tnstilullons.
T-shi~t size (Adult): Please Circle - S - M • L • XL • XXL
Nicklaus Sports Center near
with impunity force the
Taxes c$ Fees Not Included
Cincinnati wiped out most of the
negotiations to an opposite
LIABILITY
WAIVER
two-day pro-am. By Friday, players
conclusion, as Mr. Casserly did
I hereby grant pe.rmission for my son to participate in the Gallipolis Area Football
were getting no fairway roll but
here by agreeing to make a
were able to stick their approaches
Camp. I understand that although every safety precaution will be observed, the City of substantial payment to a player to
close to the pin.
with another club."
· /
Gallipolis and the camp instructors will not be responsible for any personal property sign
Marshall's agent, Richard
lost or for any injury sustained during the .camp. 1 also understand that I ani Benneu, ~d Tagliabue "came to
only conclusion that he could ."
responsible for providing insurance coverage for my son while he is participating,in the theBennett
denied that his
camp.
conversations with Casserly
J
regarding the Redskins' offer to ·
augment the $2.75 million that
Signature: (Parent/Guardian)
Date
Houston would pay Marshall with
another $150,000 was improper.
By ROBERT MILLWARD
WIMBLEDON, England (AP) Please make checks payable to BRENT SAUNDERS and Mail To:
Jim Courier is surprised he'll be on
Gallia Academy High School
Centre Court in the Wimbledon
final. He figured he'd be on the
C/0 Brent Saunders
golf course by now.
· ·
~0 4th Avenue, Gallipolis, 6H. 45631
"I've been in the finals of the
other .Grand Slams but this one
feels differen~" Courier said. "I'm
more surprised than anything. I
th:Ought I would be playing golf
tomorrow afternoon. ''
Instead, he'll face Pete Sampras
on the Fourth of July in the fust allAmerican final since 1984. Only
twice before in the 116-year history
of the tournament have two
·Includes
Americans met for the men's title
42"
Mower
ori Independence Day.1
Deck
The match also will have a
bearing on who wiD be No. Un the
world. Courier can replace
Sampras as No. I 'by winning the,
title.
The top-seeded Sampras, noted
for his. serve-and:volley game, is
.th_e favorite. But No.-3 Courier
hopes to emulate Andre Agassi, ·
another American baseliner who
39895 SILVER RIDGE ·
REEDSVILLE, OH.
surprised by w,inning the title last
year.
· PHONE 985·4425
· Today's match will feature ,
Sampnis' ·big serves and Courier's
•Fast, I .
service
deadly returns.
·
History would appear to be
•Competitive rates ·
against Sampras because the last
time a No. 1 seed won the tide was
•Serving all brands of major hou~ehold appliances
in. · 1984 when John McEnroe
~umphed. But S31l)pras has a 7,2
-over 15 years of experience
career record against Courier and
has won all three finals in which
• Cast-iron compone~ts: engine. front axle, wheel hubs. ·
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·
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The two Americans reached the
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_·
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Sampras downed three-time titlist
mmutes.
Wlllllltb.
SATURDAY
8:00
A.M.-5:00
P.M.;
CLOSED
SUNDAY
BQtis Becker in· straight sets and
• Check out the deals at
.
""""'•""'.-'
Courier rallied from a set and 0-2
'!"- .. - - - - - - - - ~ - your
dealer
today.
.
down to beat two-time champion
I
.
.
COUPON
.
.
..
:
Stefan :&amp;!berg.
Ha\len't }UU done.
aTom long enough?*
I
. •
Sampras and Courier have won
I
other Grand Slam tides but neither
I
I
had previously made it to .the
I
I
Wimbledon fmal, Sampras won the
I
U.S. Open in 1990 and Courier has
I
I
collected two French Open and two
CHESTER
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I
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•· But Sampras said this final' will
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Americans square
.off in Wimbledon
men'sfinalfor first
time in nine years

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SPACE
- Pictured from left to
rigbt are Kenny Crossen, Jeffery Cr~n, BiUy
Crossen and Hattie Ryan of tbe Space Aged
Pioneers 4-H club in Gallipolis. They walked

HOUSTON (AP) - Three
At the same time, Tagliabue designated a franchise player by to talk with other teams. If he
months in football limbo ended for · reduced the draft choice . Washington under terms of the new signed, a trade would bi: arranged.
Wilber Marshall on Friday when . compensation due the .Washington collective bargaining agreement
Marshall's talks took him to
NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue Redskins for Marshall, ruling his between the NFL and its players. Houston but on the verge of a
ruled the All-Pro linebacker has a old team improperly interfered in When the Redslcins could not sign · ·contract worth a repoerted $2.9
¥alid contract with the Houston the ne~otiations.
· .·
him ; they released Marshall from million, Oilers owner Bud Adams
Oilers.
Orgmally, Marshall had been the franchise'status, permitting him changed his mind and ealled off the
deal. Tagliabue .xuled, however,

®PRODUCTS

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In ending three months of waiting,

BANKRUPI'CY
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at Saturday's River Recreation Festlval ·ln tbe
Gallipolis City Park (T -S photo by James Long).

-

Hill, Weaver lead in KrQ!!er Senior Classic,'s first round

IS 'W OFFERING UP TO A

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• LEMONT, Ill. (AP) -Nick
Price finished at 71 and retained
the lead in the storm-delayect and
uncomple~ second round of the
Western Open.
The storm ,halted play for 3 3/4
hours and caused 51 players 10 be
stranded ori the par-72 Dubsdread
' course at Cog Hill by darkn~s.
Grant Waite of New Zealand and
Greg Norman were in rest position
to challenge Price's lead. of 9under-par 135~ Waite was eight
under for the tournament, on,e
behind Price, with three holes to
play. Noirnan was 3l)Other stroke
back ;with two 10 play. ·
Curtis Strange shot 68 and was
tied for second with Mike Hulbert,
with 70, among finishers atJ37.
Lance Ten Broeck, with 68, and
Keith Clearwater, who shot 71,
were at 138.

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Norman was sev'en under par
wit.lt two holes to !&gt;lay when he
returned, and parred m for a bogeyfree 68 that tied him for second at
137.
"I played solid, but I'm not
making the putts I'd like," said
Norman, who didn'~ make a putt
longer than 10 feet. Half his four
birdies came on par-5's which he
reached in two.
. ; 'The a;mrse is squishy," he said,
"and the greens could be bad by
the end of the third round. ••
They could be ·much more

offers more. ·

.

to meet:in men's finals

Price leading Western Open
after rain-delayed second round

McGill edges Adams at Skyline - this
~~=;~~g~~~~::rp~;
afternoon.
·
.

STEWART-Racine's
Bob
Adams, Jr. · made a great late race
drive, but his bid was too late to
overcome winner Butch MCGill in
. the Late Model Mid-S~n Championships at Skyline Sjleedway Fri-

Pomeroy-Middieilort-Galllpolls, 'OH-Polnt Pleasant,

. '

Sampras, Courier

TOURNAMENT SATURDAY - The Howard . Baker
Saunders/Ohio State University Scholarship Tournament will be
held Saturday 'at Cliffside Golf (:ourse in Gallipolis. The
tournament, named for the GaUipolis native and OSU alumnus wiD
be an A·B·C·D formatted linkfest featuring a calcutta Friday' at 7
p.m. Interested golfers may caD committee chairman Bryce Smith
at 446-8~99 or 446-3!13!1 for more information. (Times-Sentinel
photo) ·
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In wake of 9heiJc'gjaUing,

Pomeroy.....Middleport Gallipolis, OH

July 4,

Point Pleasant, WV

.

1993

•

Police expecting angry backlash Jr_o m Adbel-Rahman followers
By RICHARD PYLE
hqw quickly his deportation.pasc
NEW YORK (AP)
mtght be processed.
- ·
Authorities braced for the
In a SUI]lrise move, an Egyptian
possibility ~heik Omar Alidel· judge on Saturday issued an arrest
Rahman' s iP!prisonment could order for Abdcl-Rahman trigger a violent backlash by angry prompting speculation that Cairo
followen.
was preparing to seck bis ·
He surrendered to U.S. . extradition from the United Stares.
Immigration and Naturalization Chief I udge Ahmed Ezzcdinc clofficials at a mosque Friday and Ashmawy ab'eady was retrying the
was taken to a maximwn-security blind sheik in absentia - along ·
lockup 75 miles northwest of the with 48 others - for panicipating
city.
in an anti-government riot there in
INS officials didn't indicate how 1989. They were acquit~d in the
long the 55-year-old Abdci- fust trial.
Egypt and the United States have
Rahman might rell!ain there, or

an extradition treaty but President federal bqilding, two tunnels and a
Hosni Mubarak's government has bridge.
been described as relucunt to riSk
Ab!lel-Raltman has not been
returning the sheik. who has been cllar$ed' in any tenorist plot but the
blamed (or inciting violence Jusltcc: Department said it was
against government officials and revoking his status as a permanent
tourists.
resident alien on grounds he posed
Friday's detention was ordered a "dapger to the community" and
by U.S. Attorney General Janet might.flec:.
'
Reno after w~ks of government
He entered the United States
uncertainty about how to dea=t
'th illeglllly in July 1990, despite being
Abdel-Rahman, who was · ·
on a "watch list" of undesirables,
suspects in the World Trade Ce
· and Wb ·able to come and go
bombin$ and in the plot to blow up ·
.
.
the Untted Nations building a sev~ ames ilince because of w~t
··
'
offtctals called bureaucratic
blunders.
After a court ordered him
dcpoocd in t9?2. he forestalled the

Manhattan prostitutes confining
.
.services to regular customers
prostitutes are older and wearier
By DANA KENNEDY
NEW YORK (AP) - They work than the flamboyantly dressed
a dingy, desolate stretch on the hoolrers near West Side strip joints
Lower East Side, the Same seamy and the higher-priced prostitutes
section of Manhattan where Joel farther uptown who wear suits and
ll.ifkin told police he picked up carry briefcases.
Jackson said she and other
women and murdered them.
The prostitutes-who linger in the prostitutes in the area were
shadows of the Williamsb.urg frightened after hearing about
Bridge say lltey don't know Rifkin, Riflcin. a 34-year-old unemployed
who claims he killed 17 women, gardener who so far has been
many in their, line of work. But linked to at least 13 killings
. committed in two years.
they know his type.
'
"It's scary," Jackson said. "I try
"He may be in jail. but there's a
lot of them like hun out there, real to stick with my regulars. But most
weirdos," Anita Jackson, 36, said of the time I try not to think :zu
as she stood on Houston Street, it and just hope for the best."
A woman who said her nam as
waiting for business.
Cherry
and her age was 48 waited
Another prostitute, who
under
a
comer streellight.
•dentified herself only as Angel·,
"No
more
inside the cars," said
31, said she cut back to three nights •
Cherry,
whose
first language is
a week and tries to avoid getting
Spanish.
"I'm
too
scared. Wackos .
into cars.
out
there."
"It makes me nervous but I have
Jackson said she studied Rifkin's
to make some money," she said.
photo
on television . She said he
"I just pray nothing bad will
didn't look familiar but his truck
happen."
When police pulled J{ifkin over did. She said she had worlald with
for running a stop sign early the Yun Lee, 31, whose body was
morning of June 28, they found a found in a steamer trunk last
,
dead woman in the back of his November.
On Wednesday, police linked
ll'llCk. Rifkin told police he picked
her up four days earlier just two Lee's death to Rifkin.
"We called her 'China,"'
blocks from where Jackson stood
Jackson·
said. ~ 'Then she got
one recent night.
chopped
up."
Working without pimps, these
Dressed in a simple orange dress

,

process by seeking political
asylum, a bid •that rem'ains on
appeal. •
'
Despite the reasons the Justice
Department cited for picking up the
sh_e ik •. the detention ~ppeared
driven m Pl!rt by a growm' public
ou!C(y thai he pose~! a SCCIDlty risk.
In Egypt. Muslim fundamentalist
leaders threatened to avenge the
U.S. action with a new campaign of
terrorism in the United .States and
abroad.
'
Political analysts, noting that
nearly 200 people have died in
fundamentalist-inspired bombings,
armed attacks .and political
assassinations in Egypt in the last
18 months, cautio~ that the -

and sandals, carrymg a black purse,
Jackson looked as if she were
wai.ting for a bus.
Jackson said she lives across the
bridge in a Brooklyn housing
Jll'Oject. Her mother has raised her
t9,ycar-old son. Jackson said she's
worked on Manhattan's streets for
15 years.
She works, she said, to support
her crack habit She carries a pipe
in her purse and periodically
smokes it at a dilapidated park
between jobs. Most customers pay
her about $1510 perform oral sex.
But she is always aware of the
danger when she steps into a
customer's car. In 1989, she said, a
customer lashed' out at her in his

car.
.,.
"He just totally tripped out," she
said. "He beat me up bad, he
roughed me up. When I got out of
the car, I swear to God I kissed the
ground. I thought I'd never see my
son again."
Angel said she barely escaped
alive two years ago. A customer
pulled outa knife and "did what he
wanted 10 do" for more than two
hours, she said.
Another customer stabbed her in
the leg, she said. Another
threatened her with a hammer.
· Like Jackson, An$el makes an
effort to stick wnh her few
regUlars.

threats should be taken stziously.
However, a source s~ng on
condition of anonymuy who is
clo~ to al-Gamaa al-Islamiya; or
Islamic Group, which urges the
overthrow of Mubarak's secular
government in favor of an lfanlike
theocracy, said Abdei-Rahman had
instructed followers in J;:gypt lind
elsewhere not to attack U.S.
interests..
In New York, where security was
increased at key sites after the
World Trade Center blast tllat
ldlled six and the cracking of the
latest alleged plot, prc~autions
again were being put iniO effect.
Sal Samperi, assistant chief of
public safetr for the Port Authority,
said offtcers at sobriety
checkpoints a\ bridges and tunnels
linlting New York and New Jersey
were checking trucks for safety and
compliance with cargo restrictions.
Police patrols were reinforced at
airports in New York and New
Jersey._

a

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u,s.

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"";,"!.'~

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V8 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
-~ trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
~ 5 Fl .....,..~ cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows &amp;
locks, P. seat, rear defroster, cast
aluminum wheels. This car is like new.

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1992 FORD ftiUNDIRBIRD

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V6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.
trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo
cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P. windows &amp;
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defroster, cast aluminum wheels.
Was $14,495
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A nSfiue
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4 cyl. eng., P. steer., P. brakes,
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High Prescription Costs
Do you feel you are oaylng too much lor
your prescnptionsl then you should be
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our responslbut ty to offer our ·
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You see, we've made It a pomt to know
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Then, worklng hand-ln·hand with your
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In-the

Open~

Pepsi 400
lineup posted
&gt;

DA'YTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
-The lineup for Saturday's Pepsi
400 NASCAR stock car race, with
residence. type of car and lap speed
in mph:
. .
1. Ernie lrvan, Concord, N.C..
Chevrolet, Lumina, 190.327. .
.
2. Kyle Petty, High Point, N.C.,
Pontiac Grand Prix, 190.030.
3. Davey Allison, 'Hueytown,
Ala,, Ford Thunderbird, 189.873.
4. Derrike Cope, Charlotte, N.C.,
Ford Thunderbird,189.215.
While fishing in the Ohio River production.
'
5. Dale Earnhardt, Doolie, N.C.,
seems to be pretty slow·at this time,
The improvements will' permit Chevrolet Lumiita, 188.869.
anglers on the West Virginiatde the ponds to be filed in about one6. Bill Elliott, Dawsonville, Ga •
of the river near the ·)3elle lie h_alf the time it currently takes to Ford Thunderbird,188.853.
· Locks and Dam are catc&amp;ing h rid ftll them which will result in a
7. Harry Gant, Taylorsville, N.C.,
striped bass, walleye, sauger and higher quality of fish production.
Chevrolet Lumina, 188.652.
A water pumping station is to be
8. Darrell Waltrip, Franklin,
-channel catfish from the bank
. according to Meigs County Gam~ bUilt which will pull water from Tenn. Chevrolet Lwnina, 188.616.
Protector Kejllt Wood.
~eneca Lake using existing inflow
9. _Rick Wilsqn, Bartow, Fla.,
. In additio~. anglers .along the lmes. The water supply is provided Ponllac Grand Prix, 188.580.
, nver. are havmg plenty of action through a gravity-fed system.
10. Ricky Rudd, Chesapeake,
' bi~ht fishing for channel catfish Water hnes entering the rearing Va., Chevrolet Lumina, 188.513.
, usmg liver or similar baits, Wood ponds will soon be expanded in... II. Michael Waltrip, Davidspn,
SBld.
size to increase water flow and · "N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 188.4:26.
Anglers fishing Forked Run red~ce the_time peeded to fill them.
.12. Rick Mast, Rockbridge
Lake are currently catching shovel- Dramage tmprovcments will- also Baths, N.C., Ford· Thunderbird,
· head catfish and crappie using min· permit the division to remove fish 188.371.
;., nows and small jigs, according to from the ponds during high water
13. Pale Jarrett, Conover, N.C..
•: Park Manager Randy Wachter.
release periods from Seneca Lake
Chevrolet Lumina, 188.068.
......,
•: Wachter commented one person which previously was 11ot possible.
14. Ted Musgrave, Troutman,
: recently caught a shovelhead catThis year, the hatchery reared 3 · N.C., Ford Th':IRderbird, 188.056.
·Jish weighing about 14 pounds 112 million saugeye, ,walleye and
15. Hut Stnclclin, Calera, Ala.,
:; while another caught an 11 112· hybrid striped bass fmgerlings. The
Ford Thunderbird~ 187.903..
~~inch crappi~. In addition, anglers- 50,000 yearling channel catfish
16. Brett Bodme, }j:arnsburg,
· are begmmng to catch saugeye normally produced each summer N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 187.825.
c; y;hich were stocked several ye~ will be produced at other state
17. Rusty Wallace, Collj:ord,
hatcheries during the construction N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 187.719.
•ago.
:;, Bass are not biting too well period at Senecaville.
18. Mark Martin! Jamestown,
:: while trout fishing has died out for
Many of the fish reared at the N.C., F~r.d 1bunderbud, 1~7.699.
:•!he summer, he added.
hatchery are stocked in Gallia and
19. Jtmmy Hensley, Rtdgeway,
.;: · Forked Run State Park features Meigs counties.
Va., Ford Thunderbird, 187.680.
Store where .anglers can purchase
"The improvements at Senecav20. Morgan Sheph_erd, Conover,
c•Oait, snacks or ice. In addition, the ille are being iJI'lplemented to N.C., Ford Thund.erbud, ~87.586.
.{lark offers boat rental
improve the operational· efficiency
• 21. Geoff B~me. Juhan, N.C.,
"·
and quality of fish produced and Ford Thunderbud, 187.406.
.
&gt; The Division of Wildlife will will result in more consistent pro- 22. Sterhng Marh~, Columbta,
,eegin renovation of lite Senecaville ductiQn of fish for stocking in Tenn., Ford Thunderbu~ 187.406.
23. Greg Sacks,_ Wmter Park,
:.Ftsh Hatchery in Guernsey County Ohio's public waters. This renova··t,his month as part of a statewide ·Hon is part of our continued com· Aa., Ford Thundcrbud, 187.293.
'effort to upgrade tlje division's five mitment to provide more recre24. Dave Marcis, Avery's Creek, ,
ational fishing opportunities across N.C., Chevrole~ ~umma, 187_.227.
· active fish hatcheries.
: :.. The Federal Aid in Spon Fish- Ohio," said Gary Isbell, the divi25. Bobby Hillin, Jr., Haqisburg,
'I ·mg Restoration Program, adminis- sion's executive administrator for N.C., Ford Thunderbud, 187.149.
• •!!Ired by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife fish -management and research
26. Bobby Labonte, Trinity,
·~:service, will provtde approximate·
N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 187.114.
• Jy $700,000 for the renovation.
_ _.Back to the subject of wetlands.
27. Jeff Gordon, Charlotte, N.C..
• Construction should take about
1 recently received a tetter from Chevrolet Lumina, 187.106.
28. Jimmy Spencer, Mooresville,
• 'one year to complete, accor!ling to Paul T. Gruescr, Carl R. Thomas
' the Division of Wildlife.
and Millard Spaulding, president, N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 187.079.
;; Much of tl)e renovation is vice-president and secretary/trea29. Wally Dallenbach Jr.,
~ designed to improve and increase surer, res~ctively, of the Meigs Greensboro,
N.C..
Ford
• the hatchery s water supply County Ftsh and Game Associa· Thunderbird, 187.025.
l tprough constructi6n of a pumping tion.
30. Bobby Hamilton, Nashville,
~talio'n and installation of new
It appears I inadvertently failed Tenn., Ford Thunderbird, 186.990.
~ water supply lines. The project will to mention that representatives of
31. Terry Labonte, Archdale
• jllso include improving hatchery the association were present at the N.C., Chevrolet Lumina, 186.788. '
~ di"ainage, construction of ll 5,000· dedication of the Joseph R. Wilson
32. Kenny Wallace, Concord
': sguare-fooi storage facility and Wetland in MiddlePort and present- N.C., Pontiac Grand Prix, 186.74'5.'
~ providing electricity so aerators can ed him with a fme plaque.
33. Jeff Purvis; Clarksville,
· b'e installed in each pond to
1 apologize for the exclusion. I Tenn., Chevrolet Lumina, 186.648.
·; ~IJlprove water quality during fish hope this note helps give credit
34. Jlmmy Means, Forest City,
• ·
where credit is due.
N.C,, Ford Thunderbird, 186.548.

.Times-Sentinel Staff

.
·.c rappie, shovelhead catfish
biting at Forked Run Lake

~}ndurain
seeking 'double double'
. ,

N.l?::~~!a:o~~e~~~·
36. P.J. Jones, Torrance, Calif.,

The second i s July 24, a 30-mile
'.; PARIS (AP)- Spain's Miguel stage just south oCParis.
• .J;)ldurain wants not only a threeBoth stag~ are flat, good for a
.; ;peat, but something no one in . powerful "roller" like lndlirain,
~:cycling has ever accomplished who h!15 won every major time trial
· the "double-double."
. · over-the past two years in boJh
~:' lndurain is the overwhelming Italy and France.
: {avorite to win his third strai!tht
lndurain's top rivals are-Italians
;'.Tour de France, which bcgms Claudio Chiappucci and Gianni
• :Saturday, after easily winning his Bugno and Swiss racers Tony
; •second straight Tour of Italy in Rominger and Alex Zulle.
,, June.
. "I hope Miguel g9(l5 slower than
:; Only Eddy Merckx and Bernard m Italy, especially in the
: Hinault won the Tour of Italy and mountains," said Chiappucci, who
• 'the Tour de France in the same won the best climbing award in the
: lyeai more than once. Neither did it past two Tours, "I also h~ more
: ·ip consecutive years, but now people join me in attackmg him
: , ,ndurain takes his shot at the when possible."
;. •"deuble-double."
Bugno feels he is ready
• ' The lasi to achieve a three-peat in
"lt' s a good tour. a well~ :tJ!e Tour de Fran€c was Belgium's designed course, on which I want
~ Merckx, who won four straight in to do well anct avenge my failure in
~ 1969-72.
the Tour ofltaly," he said.
~ The race begins in western
Indurain's seeming invincibili)y
and
follows
a
2,312-mile
reminds
people of American Greg
France
: clockwise route around the LeMond, who won three titles in
: country, ending July 25 in Paris. . France. Health problems and age
• ' lndurain's plan: Stay close on the seem to have_caught up with the
:·flats and in the mountains and 32-year-old LeMond, who is
~ (lemoli.sh the field in lite individual skipping this year's race after
•1 J•meb1als.
finishing seventh in 1991 and
: The first time .u-ial is July 12 at dropping out last year in the 14th
: J;ac de Madine in eastern France. stage.
- ~...

Ford Thunderbird,185.724.
37. Ric~ie Petty, Randleman,
N.C., Ponbac Grand Prix, 185.644.
38. Dick Trickle, Iron S~tion
N.C., Ford Thunderbird, 184.869. '
39. Jimmy Horton, Somerville,
N.J., Chevrolet Lumina, 184.400.
40. Loy ADen Jr., Raleigh, N.C.,
Ford Thl!Dderbird, 183.703.
41. Ken Schrader, Concord,
N.C., Chevrolet Lumina 182.567
provisional starter.
'
'

~: • By SALVATORE mi.NCA'

Now 8

··By PETER JAMES
politiciu crisis were being held.
SPIELMANN
Earlier Saturday Aristidc had
NEW YORK (AP) -In the face rejected the deal which aimed to
of concerted international pressure, bring him back to power by Oct.
ousted Haitian President Jean- 30.
Bertr,md Aristide on Saturday said
Diplomats at the talks said
he would sign an agreement Aristide demanded all the officers
returning him to office.
who overthrew him in September
"Yes, I am leaving to sign the 1991 be drummed out of the army.
agreement," Aristide said as he left The U.N. plan called for him to
the U.N. Plaza Hotel en route to appoint a new military chief of
.Governors Island, where talks on staff, wh() would then reassign
ending Haiti's 21-month-old those inVolved in the coup.

.

Su'lday Times-Sentinel /C7

By Jim Freeman

•

--

'

r..'

photo) on their way to the rmisb line. Tbe event
was one of several youth games featured as part
of the three-day River Recreation Festival,
which concludes today. (Times-Sentinel photo
by G. Spencer Osborne)

CELLULAR ONE
AND

NATE COMMUNICATIONS
ANNOUNCES-

OPENING

::a

'

which also has handled the bulk of increasing majonty feels .that the
the "peacekeeping" in Bosnia. U.N. has a right to intervene in
The American people seem places where the U.S. may not,"
enthusiastic about this growing Luck said.
. But since the .United Nations
U.N. involvement
Tuepower to
By 61 percent to 31 percent, relies heavily on
those polled said the United make its demands stick, the debate
Nations has the right to apportion tends to shift tiack to questions .
power in Bosnia. Support for that about whether the United States
type of U.N. role in Somalia was should serve as "world
an even higher 69 percent, to 25 policeman" or even has the ability
to.
.
percent opposed.
Half
those
polled
·
a
majority
"Clearly the public sees the U.N.
as having global legitimacy and o( the men bot not of the women authority to intervene .where the said the United States can fight
U.S. lacks a legal basis to do so," violations of ~temational law and
said Ed Luck of the United Nations aggression wherever they occur.
Association of the USA, a private But a substantial 46 percent said
the United Stares does.not have that
. supJ!?.tt group.
While many people are still ability.
critical of the U.N., a ,rapidly
..1
'

•

WHAT WAS IT UKE? • A question and answer period followed
Lt. Col. Susan Helms' patrlotle speech about her mission aboard
the space. shuttle. Sbe fielded questions l'rom the audience about
her experience, Including one l'rom Dorothy Rainey plcture(fhere
who asked what the rood was liker Helms replied that tb~
B;Stronauts . ~ere on a bealtby, low cholesterol diet and that by tbe
hme she got back to earth sbe was dying for a cheeseburger (T-S
photo by James Long),
·

Americans favor interve-ntion in
Bosnia~Herzegovina, but by U.N. By HOWARD GOLDBERG
NEW YORK (AP)
Independence Day is traditionally
time to take pride in this country's
strength and vitality. But how
much should the 217-year-old,
undisputed heavyweight champion
of the world throw its weight
around?
An Associated Press poll finds
that when it comes to intervening
with crumbling states like -Bosnia
and Somalia, Americans approve a
role for the United Nations, but not
for lite United States alone.
Americans are split almost
evenly in evaluating the way their
country is responding to world
problems, with 45 percent satisfied,
46 percent dissatisfied, the rest not
sure.
Beneath those ftgures, several
conflicts are tugging at American
public opinion: uncertainty about
the proper role of the,domiiJant
superpower in a tf8!1t·Cold War
world, domestic and foreign
interests clamoring for President
Clinton's attention, and a gender
g~
Fifty-two percent of rpen are
satisfied with the current U.S.
response to world problems, but 52
percent of women are dissatisfied,
according to the polL The
dissatisfied men and women are
much more likely to doubt U.S.
ability to play "world policeman"
and discount a U.S. responsibility
in the former Yugoslavia.
The telephone poll of 1,008
adults was taken June 25-29 by
ICR Survey Research Group of
Media, Pa., part of AUS
Consultants. Results have an
overall margin of sampling error of
3 percentage points, plus or minus.
Most of those polled, 59 percent,
said the United States has no
responsibility to do something
about lite fighting between Serbs
and Bosnian Muslims, which ~s
left 138,000 people dead or
missing.
· An even higher 76 percent said
the United States has no right to
determine who holds power in
another country even if that
counu-y has problems as grave as
those in, Bosnia.
@\'tty 17 percent said the United
States, which has called. the Serb
leaders of the former Yugoslavia
war criminals, has a ri~ht to
intervene in that country's ethnic,
religious and nationalistic power
struggles.
.
As an experiment, the name
Somalia was substituted for Bosnia
in half the poll interviews. In that
African country w~ere anarchy
wtought a cruel famine eased only
by a U.S.-Ied multinatiohal
intervention, 69 percent said the
United States has no 'right to
determine who holds power. Just
24 percent supPorted a U.S. rightiO
play kinglliakcr in Somalia.
Of course. U.S. military muscle
has been flexed in Somalia under
the insignia of the United Nations,

Outdoors

July 4, 1993

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Golf
~ASON, Ohio (AP)- Mike
Htll and DeWitt Weaver took
advantage of wet conditions en
route to ~-under-par 66s and shared
the fust-round lead in the $850 000
Kroger Senior Classic.
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Scotland (AP) _
Great ~ntam regtstered its ·first
vtc~ory m a b'8ck meet against the
Untied States smce 1961
Linford Christie led ihe way in
the 199-190 victory., clocking the
second-fastest time this year in the
100 meters, 10.06 seconds.
John Regis won the 200, at
EDINB~GH,

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpoll•, OH

Page . C8 SUnfay TII!IM &amp;entlnel ·

.

By DAN BLAKE
·
·
AP·Buslnea Writer
. NEW YORK While
Northwest. Airlines executives were
!Biking . openly about possibly
-Wcing their airline in10 Banlauprcy
t:oun, travelers were mobbing the .
'phones to bu' tickets as m~h as
.three months m advance.
- ' These seemingly contradictory
events. of the past few weeks l)iow
thlll the conventional wi~ about
'aiilines in bankruptcy has changed.
Eastern, Pan Am and Midway
shut down while trying to work out
a Chapter J't reorgailiza'(ion.
• ·Wqrries about safety, buying a ·
ticket that will eventually be
worthless or a cornbinaqon of both
sapped their ability to attract .
passengers.
·
That's ancient history. More . .
recently America West, de$pile its
ChaDter . I 1 status, .10ined

C'MON, LEAPER! - These
boys are eacouraaln1 their
frogs to leap to the finish line.
durin1 the rrog race held
Friday artenoon . at the
Gallipolis city park. The event
was one or several youth games
featured as part or the three·
day River Recreation Festiv~,
whicb concludes'today. (TimesSentinel phqto by G. Spencer
Osborne)
· ·
ATLANTA (AP)- Crai¥ Ehlo,
an unrestticted free ajlent, s1gned a
t!uee-y!l8r contract w1th the Atlanta
Hawks on Friday nighl
Ehlo, who spent lhe last seven
seasons with Cleveland, will rejoin
Lenny Wilkens, his former coach
with the. Cavaliers. Wilkens was
named coach of the Hawks last
month. ·
Ehlo just completed his lOth
NBA season, averaging 1I .6 points
in 82 games. He shot a career-high
49 percent from the' field and is
being counted on to give the
Hawks the outside shooting threat
they were seeking.
He was 21st in the NBA in threepoint shooting at 38.1 percent.
Ehlo, who also piayed 1hree
seasons with Houston, has
averaged 8.!1JOints ~uring -\'is ·
career.
·
.

(These games were sponsored
by the Glillipolis Lions Cl"b)

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NNOC1J/J12

POINT PLEASANT

Southwest Au.hnes as the only
money-making U.S. carriers early
this year. Continental Airlines
succ:essfullyleOI'ganizedthisspring
and 1WA is getting closer. .
Continental has lower costs,
more flexibility and the scorn of
bigger, ·supposedly healthier
airl\JI~s. that say it isn't fair.~. big
auhnes say the bankrupt a1rhnes
should have died.
Calls to Ncxthwest's reservation
center set a record high last m&lt;!nth
from passengers w~o ·wanted to
take advantage of d1scounts up to
30 percent on advance. purchase
fares.
.
For Northwest, bankruptcy ha&amp;
not only lost its stigma, but &amp;PJl!WS
to be. a useful tool to negouate
concessions from its unions.
~fter Machinist . unionists
rejected a plan to ,swap three years
of wage and benefit cuts for a stake
in the Company, Northwest began

emphi$1ZIDg the.,poSSibhty of a
bankruptcy filing.
.
Through letters to unions and
employees, the company said it
would ask a judge 1.0 impose cost
savings if voluntary negotiations
failed.
.
Teamsters leaders, ilt a recent
'Telephone meSsage to tbe fl.ig~t
attendants they represent, wd tf
North~st sought banlcruptcr, the
airline would seek more hac pay
and work rule changes . Flight
auendant pay would be cut by up to
24 percent and they would be
reql!ired 10 work more hours.
'"
The·openness of bankruptcy 1a1k
wasn ' t without risl:s. In Japan,
where Northwest once made most
of its money, bankruptcy is far"
from just another tool to work
tluough hard times.
Japa11ese business in general,
including the huge travel agencies
that handle the bulk of all tourist

travel, lOathe ro: be associated With traders are fnghtened that Iraq
failure. With trans-Pacific traffic eventually wiD resume 'exporting
weak, !pur operators would easily crude and the other OPEC
fin4 seats on other airlines if they members won't be willing to
want to avoid NcxthwesL·
. reduce production to avoid·a gluL
Bankruptcy also isn'tjust another
This past week, .oil dropped
way or doing business. Once in · nearly $1 jler barrel at the slightest
coun, maj&lt;!r business decisions and hint that Iraq could soon self $1.6
expenditures requir!l a judge's billim W&lt;!rth 10 fund hllllllllitarian
approval. Moreover, i( Northwest effons. By the end of the week,
failed to assemble a reorganization crude was at Irs lowest point since
plan, the judge could let credi~ early 1992., tile last tiine the market
decide 'bow to revamp . the focused on a possible return of
company.
. .
. .
Iraqi production.
.
B_ut for N_orthwest, wh1ch ts
The oil market was looldng for
try1~g to sutch togethe,~ broad . any excuse to move lower, analysts
sacn~es I!Om .bankers, umons and
said. '
. .
suppliers, 11 m1ght ta!te the strong
"In a bear market any hmt of
arm .of a. bankruptcy JUdge 10 push anything negative is four times
!ill Sides m10. an agreement.
more bearish and anything bullish
OU Gets Drilled
,
.
is ignored," said Peter Beutel,
Iraq .has t~e 011 .m~rk~t energy specialist at Brody, White
shuddenng agam . Tb1s ume, 011 and Co. fnc.
•

Beutel smd the plungm~ pnce
might be enough _to enuce 111
emergency meetmg of the
Organization ·of . Petroleu111
Exporting Countries. Kuwait ud
Saudi Arabia are squabblinJ &lt;!Vet
whether the Saudis should gJ"'e np
some of the production if gained
~ng the Gulf War so Kuwait Clll
mcrease output.
Ticker
.
Boeing Co. will offer a lOilgeE·
range version of its popular 737 ~ ·
Alcoa is droppil_lg about a f&lt;!"rth Of
Us U.S. capactty an~ laymg off
about 2 percent of us wo~kers
because of the ~oft alum,num
market A. federal Judge ba4-thrown
a wrench mto th.e
North ,\mett~an Free; Trade ·
Ag~eement li.Y ordenng an
envuonm_ental 1m11act statement
(Contmued on Page D-8)

:Guya11_Fire Department
·installs 'first dry fire hydran~

Ehlo signs' with -Hawks
-

Sack race
7-under boys: Mau ~
7-under girls: Wesley Stckels
7-13 boys: John Gill
' ··
7-13 girls: Mindy Lopez
13-over boys: Hector Lamben
13-over girls: Jennifer Cremeans

'

Northwest not.shy .about -bankruptcy possibilities

Youth games
winners p~sted
GALLIPOLIS -Winners in
various youth &amp;ar.nes at • the ·
Gallipolis city park Fnday were:
Turtle 1ames
6-under: Scott Schra,!!er
7-11: Jennifrz Nichols ·
12-over: Sally Gatrell
Best-decorated turtle: Carol
Alexander, Step~anie Cain and
Andy !)envoe (all lied)

Section·D

•

-

8.

MAKING THE CATCHThese youngsters give new
meaning to the word
"outreach" as they catch waterfiRed balloons duriDg the water ·
balloon contest Friday In the
Gallipolis city park. The event
was one or ,e~eral youlb 11am~
reatured 88 p&amp;Ft Of lb' three•
day River Recreation Festival,
which concludes today. (Times·
Sentinel photo by G. Spencer:
Osb&lt;!me)

.

~·

with ro~nds of 4-under-pai- 67. Six on the final five ~
· ·· ·
- "- tied&lt;
....... 68 11
Jordan, who has struggled ori lhe
mwe~at6re9 and t'6'orsh~ot"'70~. at ' . tour with an average of 75 .56
·~
.. d h f
Sharing the top spot were Hollis strokes per round, ,.a er ITS!
Stacy, Suzanne Strudwick. Barb • under-70roundoftheyear.
Bunkowsky, Amy Benz, Patty
Robbins ~Ja~ed a bogey•free_
Jordan and Kelly Robbm's.
round and b1rd1ed
thedied
final• hole,f
ky b'
s••~y s·-~.-~ .. ..:. round w1
'
th
•our
.
while
Bunkows
1r .
.our &lt;!
"'"''" '""
''
0
birdies in the flfSt seven IK&gt;Ies and the final! holes.
had just one bogey at the 6,295- · Benz who tied for second last
_yard,&amp;ar-71 ighland Meadow.s. ))leek· ~t the ShopR!te LPGA
Classic, matched Stacy s round of
,Golf lub.
·
five birdies and one bogey.
"The course is in great shape and
..1 feel 8 little mote solid with
the greens are holdipg and my g'ame than 1 did last week. I
. CQIIsistent and that's why yliu hav.e
the low scores," Stacy said: "I couldn't ask for anything more,''
only missed one fairway and bit she S!lid
every green. Most of my putts were
Defending champion Patty
under six feet. I hit llle ball close Sheehan, who earned her way into
today."
.
the LPGA Hall of Fame this seasoo
Strudwick had three birdies in with her 30th tournament victory,
her flllit eight holes and two mdre was at 70.

Track and field
VILLENEUVE D' ASCQ, France
(AP)'- Canada's Mark ~cKo:t
won the 110-meter JumJJes m 13.08
seconds, fastest lime of the season,
at the BNP Grand Prix meet.
.
Andre Cason won the, 100 m
10.03 , Kevin Young the ~0,0'
hurdles in 47.73, and Algena s
Noureddine Morceli ran the fourth·
fastest 1,000 of all time, 2:13.73.
Kazakhstan's Gregori Yegetov
won the pole vault at 19-1 1(1..
Gail Pevers ran the fastest 100 of
the year at 10.96, and Sandra
Farmer-Patrick won the 400
hurdles in 54.78.

.

.

Fartttll:lusinesS

Tqledo Classic re~membered
for Fleming,
.
caddk saving fan more than for six-way lead _,
SYLVANIA, Ohio (AP) - Tara
A~ming mar, not reinember her 74,
bu~ she isn t likely to forger the
openini round of the LPGA Jamie
FarrToledoCiassic.
Fleming· • and her playing
add'1e may have helped
partner•s c·~
)
save the 11e u"f .a spectator who
suffered a heart .attack. Fleming
started chest c:roression and
Jason Hamilton . . ormed III()Uth· to-mouth resuscitation· on
Raymond Henzler; 63, when they
found him lying in a fairway
adjacent to the seventh green.
'I just reacted to a situation,"
Aeming said. "The guy's helpless.
It's not a question - you just go
out and do thoSe things. It wasn't
even a decision," she wd. .
Paramedics took Henzler to
Flower Hospital, 'where he-was
' listed in 'Serious but stable
corutition. .
·
Six players were tied fm the lead

•

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Point Plea..nt, wv

..

'

tl18·pm
Tue.--.·Thur.SaL 1115 pm -

at
1-800J.i60-LEVI

ilrPattyDyer,
DtStrict Conservatioaist,
SDA·SCS
GALLIPOLIS - The Guyan Fire
Department recently, installed the
First Dry Fire Hydrant in Gallia.
County. The purpose of a dry fire
hydrant is to provide ~uick and
easfYacceThss ~ha dedranpendat I~ solallurceed
was 1ns
• o water. IS Y
in the old snip mine pond next to
the Guyan Fire Stati011~ This installation will greatly enhance the
-~amount of water available for fight;
-~ing f1tes in the Men;erville Area.
· In many rural areas, a lack of
.large 'i.varer mains and domestic lire
' hydrants can somelimes impair a
.. Jire department's ab~ity to do. its
job quicJcly IUld effic1ently. •Tanker
. ·trucks must be used to carry large
amounts of warer to the fue scene.
·The success of the operation hinges
on the distance the tr.ucks must
travel to water "fill up" points
around the county. Unfortunately,
' the fill up points are often a long
distance from the fire, and fire
·fighters are unable to retain an
.
d
I tth
umnterrupte water supp Y II c
seene in many cases.
..~, - ,
.The reco~ended ulstance
between a d
ydrant or other
water ·sus,ply one every thrc;e
sqO.:smhy~t assembly was pro-

Council (RC&amp;:D) through the-Gal- Guyan Twp. Trustee-Roger·WatJia Soil &amp; Water Conservalion Dis- son; President of the Gallia County
lricL
.
'
Fire Fighters Assn. Bob Poling:
The fire department provided Wise Exeavating-Cecil Wise; Ohio.
the pipe and labor for the installs- Valley RC&amp;D Coordinator-Skip
tion whire Cecil Wise of Wise Edminster and S.C.S. DiStrict ConExcavation provided the track hoe servationist-Patty Dyer.
'
and dug the trench for the installa- '
Through the hard work and
tion.
·
dedication of all these people the
A major benefit of installing dry installation was completed and the
hydrants besides the increased . firemen were pumping approxiwater capacity for fighting flteS is mately I ,000 gallons per minute
the likelihood of decreased insur- within four hours of when the
ance rates. As the fire fighting installation.started.
.
. .
capability increases. the insurance , . Oth~ FlfC ~en~ or·mdi·
tating (amount you pay) decreases. Vlduals mteresred in Jearnmg more
This can be accomplished thrOujlh about the ,installation of Dry Fire
, higher training levels, better eqwp- Hydrants m your area .shoul~ con·
ment, etc. If a rlfC departtnent can tact Patty Dye~-Gal!1a .Soli and
demonstrate the ability 10 keep 250 water Conservauon D1stnct at 446gallon.s of water per minute for,· two 8687.
hours at 8 fire scene, the area s lire ·
rating could potentially decrease a
significantamounL
There are also benefits (rom
·
.
cqpserving energy (fuel) from not
.
.
shuttling water as far, and conser:v- '
ing treated water, by using raw
from
ds
warer . pon .
.
~lm
. Tbose in.volved in. this t~rst
mstallation ··mcludecl Guyan-F1re· ·
,.. " · men-Fire Chief Ronnie Waugh,
By I&gt;lsa CoUins,
· Torn Wright, Mark Cummons, Roy
GaiUa ASCS
Jones, Allen Waugh, Bryait Rose,
GALLIPOLIS • The AgriculturGlen Cline, Robert St.Ciair, Matt al Stabilization and Conservation
·Houck; Retired F'lfCIIIen and Harri- Service ailnounces the signup data.
~!'!e~~~o~h~~J~:~e~:m~ · ·son Twp. Trustee-R.onnie Slone, for the 1993 Feed Grain and Wheat
Program. The sign-up ·period for
1993 farm programs ended AJ?ril
•
J
30, with 1,800 acres Qf elig1ble.

Crop·Iand
acreage
enro ent ..

INSTA!,-LATIO~ ·llQJinle Wau&amp;!J,,Cblef,
Robert Watsoa-Tril'stee, Glen Cllae and ·M att
Houck, Lower the dry hydrant 1155embly into the

trench duriDg the insialladon. Cecli Wise II
· waitlnlln ids tracil hoe to mver the pipe a&amp; It II
placed on ·grade.

Mon. efl/deaS

Weekly observations ·
•

.

J}ow Jones Iadllltrlal Average
~ntributed by Stan Evau

;:X

ndav, July,5111
9am to m..
.. --·

LO'i.Jf~~~f;ns\

"" supef
our (ll_\{eauJ s &amp; Mens

00 \(i&lt;IS,~~.

L

'

It's' 0·ur rI
BIGGEST I
~

GOOD MONDAY JULY 5, ONLY

'

~l!!el!~,!~os~!~i!!~
:.
P~ices
I~~

The summer
doubt'.;. the BEST EVER I
have been SLASHED
to make room for our major upcoming back-to-school
fc;1shions presen'tation in store! There's MEGA SAVINGS
ON TONS OF SUMMER FASHIONS for. kids &amp; ladies.
.
.
Men, too! So don't you dare miss itl ·

1

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..~ --~ ~ - ------ ~ --; ·-·-·-··t ··-· ..
~

:....

~

:.. .....
·-

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volatile.
However, bull markets have these
characteristics in their last stages.
The question is, how long can such
"last stages".last?
It can gci'on (m many months or
end rapidly depending on sentiment,
money flows'and interest rates. In the
·
present mstance,
. ••or example, one
significant plus, despjte the growing
signs of auging cycle, has been the
'd shif
·
·
that
tap!
trocaunous senument
dev~
~an::!:':'~ bullish

)(ft

U S Sh0e elis
cl'otht·ng 'stor·es

I

.

Farm program parUc1pants

can get even more speculaU ve and agreed to take 410 acres out of crop

production_and devote them to con- .
· uses.
·_
servmg
•
: Thestockmadtetas measured by
USDA's acr~ge rediiCtion report
'"" DJIA has been
shows that Gallia county farmers
-.r
·
enrolled 48 wheat acrea and 1752
ins:~
corn acres in the I 993 programs.
ceks
final)
Producers inrend to plant 112 acres
1 Y
0w
of flexible acreage to soybeans or
e*ceeding
other
comply
at\d hitlinl 3500
new
'th crop's. Those. who
.
. be
cfosing all-time
w1 program .proviSions WI11
·highs four times. .
eligible for pnce support loans,
•
deficiency payments and other ben. l· While this
eflts ori the~r 1993 crops.
.
~~~be a perfOfllliiiCe to be celeNationally, farmers enrolled
hlated and apprec;ialed, it has been a
175.6 million acres of program
s4mewhal hollow victory. The mar· enthusiasm for the new DJIA highs crops and intend to idle 19.9 milappears to be gJ'OWing increas· sh&lt;!uldmeananyimn\ediatereaction lion acres under the 1993 acreage
to the recent ilon-conflfmations and reduction programS&gt;-.,
· · Jy ~lective and speculative.
Leadership is also sporadic rather speculative voJatility is likely to be
sustained.Evidenceofgrowing ·wellcontained.
S
~lectivity is that daily breadth has
We would' be careful, b&lt;!~ver,
• •
blenflarforthepasttwomonthsand.. aboutplacingtoomuchemphasison
~ not confumed lhe new DnA receitt poDs ·that suggest virtually
h!ghs; new individual stock. highs e"'erybody is bearish. The poll that
.I'Q!IIain less than half their peak lev- has altracted most attention is the
CINCINNATI · (AP) - U.S.
e~; ni~st major large capitalization American Association of Individual Shoe Corp. has agreed to sell two
CHECK EQUIPMENT • Guyaa Firemea
iqdexes such as the S&amp;J&gt; 500,NYSE Investors weekly survey.
women's clothing chains to A.IJ.J.
Glen Cliae, Robert St.Clair, Bryan Rose, -Ailen
Composite and theWilshire 5000are
In recent weeks, their polls sh&lt;!w Enterprises for an undiscl&lt;!sed
Wau11h, Tom Wright, and Robert Watson-Twp.
'sllJJbelowtheirMan:hhighs,andlast the lowest bi!Uish percentage since a~s~~hoe announced Friday that
Thursdays new DJIA high was IC· the,low last October. This is impres- it would sell its Caren Charles and
cQmpanied by three stocks in lhe sive. but mly twO months ~go this Ups 'N Downs chains, losing $6.4.
a~rage making new highs.
samepollshowcdthCmostbuUssince million, or 14 cents a share, on' the
. , While this narrowing might be · before the Crash in 1987.
881
it does detract ft9m the
Whichreadin&amp;ismoreimportant?
will acquire 124 Caren
technicalporentialofthenewDnA . Whatweaeeinsentimentisalackof Charles stores, 61 Ups 'N Downs
lilgh and is indicative of an aging corrcctionthatle8datorapid.shiftSin storesandbothlradenames.
n1ar1tet cycle or another'correction. opinioo ri1lll have more sh&lt;!rt rerm
The sale should iinprove
_ : Evidence of increasing specula- than long term signific:ance.
o~rations in U.S. Shoe's apparel
"ti!ln is also not hard to find. Last
ItismoreimportantiOtrackwhat division, said the !Jivision's
week, seven of the ten mos!, active people are IJ9ing with their money president, Michael Searles.
·NYSEstockswereunder$25ashare bec•tseoftenrbeysay'onethingwhile
U.S. Shoe said it also plans to
and four Were under $15.
doing another:. The AAD also con- ·close 30 Caren Charles and Ups 'N
I DesplrethenewhighaintheDJIA&gt; ductsamonthlyswveyofindividual Downs stores when their leases
vOiun'le in DnA stoc1ts relative 10 · investor asset allocations.
expire this year .
•4dtaJ NYSE volume fell io a nine · At the end of April, it showed the
U.S. Shoe, based in Cincinnati, is
.
best
k
11oc
·
•
fl
·
a
specialty retailer of w&lt;!men 's
' lifonth low. On the other hand. re1a- h1i
Sloe L auon 10 over l"'e apparel, optical products and
•11~ volume hill been rising on the years and the lowell cub allocation. ~
·.· · StoclcExcbld-andOTC. This is in contradiction to lhe low ooAtwlJearJ' based 10
• Brookl.
Ny
..bullish
--'"'
II
·
·•
yn,
~ NASDAQ vo11011e has expen:emage .._.y po ·
· th F
1 th ··ng·•
NYSE volume in three of the
Wesuspp:tinYestols~yare ol:trates e oxmoor co I .
11wt four weeb. When tbele back- talking bearish · ~w:an., the news c n.
'
gioand racrors are COOlbllled with background has not been encourag- Miller honored
·e 'denceof
· individual stock ing f&lt;!r Clinlon and the economy but
v · 'lity~~::,\:es up andover- are still !~vesting in stocb.
GALLIPOLIS - Phyllis Miller ,
t colhpses on news with huge
.: CaUtious complacency as we of CENTURY 21 Big Bend Realty,
, the market clearly is -mung wouldd!Ht, is more likely telling us Inc . was recently recognized by
a igher risk profile.
that the bull market is not yet over Douglas J. Stranahan, Century 21
,.;1 ....
Great Lakes, Inc. ·Divisional PresiIN BUSINESS • The Guya1 Fire Depart·
at wort and with growing
Stao EVIIDI ill I llnuc:lal COli- dent, for being 81110111 the top proment truck Iii· booked directly to tbe nelioly
Installed dry hydrant and Is pnmplna app~ ­
for perfumJulce 1111011g 181tant w1t1t Mts'rlli LJ!Idt Ill tllelr ducing Sales UIOCiales in the CEN:. Yidull ~ llld institutional GaiUpollaofllce. HeeaD .,_ readied TURY 21 Arheni,IMarieua Broiers . mately 1,000 aallons o~ water per 11lnute
Council during the month of April.
th!ouah tbelr biR ~t~~n. Oalooken Include AileD ·
- money managers, the environment . at 446-1176.
DJ,O!'l
.

'

~~base ~~~Cd in Gal~.coun-

--

.porary.

Trustee che~k out new bydrant-a_ssembly ia
preparation .to testing it.

i:u.J.

.F-' . ....__, ...............

WaiJib, Glen Cllai, Robert St.Clalr, by pu11per,
Tom Wrillht, operatlna pumper aad Patty D,w,
. oa pamper, Bryan ROle, Roy Jones, kaeell..
and Matt Hoock, ttandlna.

.: . w•

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' .,.,J

'

. ,.; ,.

.~ .... ~

't

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I '

' \

i'
•

'•

1'

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.t

J

�•
•

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•

Pomeroy-Middleport (klllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

July 4, 1993 ··

Cubans iriterCep(_U.S.
boat·(J_three killed
.

VIOLENT AFTERMATH- Tbe remains of
burned cars al)d a truck litter a Belfast,
Northern Ireland street Saturday after a nigbt
or riots. Pro-British "loyalists" ·rioted until

~dawn, hurling gas bombs; nrlng oil pollee and

burning veblcles In tbe worst civil unrest_seen In
the country for years. (AP).

Sarajevo heav_ily shelled,
centratBosniafighting spreads
during the day, it said.
·
The heavy shelling coincided
SA~AJEVO,
Bosnia- with the first anniversary of the
Herzegovina (AP) - The capital Sarajevo airlift that opened the
suffered its heaviest shelling in capital to world aid and helped it
weeks Saturday and fighting spread survive the ongoing Serb siege,
in central Bosnia, wheTe now in its 15th month.
But the situation in the capital
government troops sought to hold
has steadily deteriorated with food
their ever-decreasing lmitory.
More than 1,000 shells fell on supplies running dangerously low
both 11overnment· and Serb-held and n.o.. water ~r electricity for
posiuons in Sarajevo artillery weeks
"The situation is that the basic
battles. Ten shells landed near U.N.
headquarters, one as close as 10 resources nlle\led for human life are•
be in$ denied," said Tony Land,
yaids away.
~
At least two people died of SaraJevo head of 'the U.N. High
shrapnel wounds, including a 15- Commissioner for Refugees.
U.N. missions 10 restore utilities
year-old boy, witnesses said.
Tension was also heightened by to the capital were suspended after
fighting among Muslim-led two attacks on .U.N. personnel, Col.
government forces defending the Marcel Valentin, U.N. commander
of Sarajevo, said Saturday.
city. .
....... leaded
Small arms fire raged through the
International aid wor....i• P
·
night and machine-guns were for he1p in saving Sarajevo's
positioned outside the Jleadquaners 380,000 residents from hunger and
of tl\e city's army command. Entry disease.
"The situation is deteriorating.
to the old town was complelely cut
SarajevQ is rapidly dying," said
off.
Tile Bosnian army, in a . Anna · Cataldi, a UNICEF
staJement, said troops oh renegade spokeswoman. She said : her
commander "disarmed" two _organization had just one month's
police patrOl~ and a police sration, sup~ly ~f food supple~ents for
apparently in retaliation· for the. $araJevo s 30,000-plus children.
lntemalional .aid wo~e~ wo"!ed ·
·ru:rest of. one of the commander:~
about
the lack of electnc1ty, wh1ch
d~puties. The crisis was· resolved
By PATRICK QUINN
Associated Press Writer

drives water pullips and the sewage
system. Without clean water. f~r
drinking, washing and coolcing,
Slirajevans face an increase risk of
typhoid, they said.
•
Until Saturday, Sarajevo had
been relatively quiet · since a
nationwide cease-fire was signed
by the commanders of all three
sides -Muslims, Serbs and Croats
-three weeks ago. ,.
Fighting was also reported in a
triangle of strategic towns in ·
cenlnll Bosnia. U.N. monitors have
withdrawn from the area, malcing
independent
confirmation ACROSS
impossible.
1 Sprinkle with
Bosnian radio reported that Serb
flour
a!ld Croat forces were attacking
7 - -o' -nine-tails
Zavidovici and that fighting was .
tO Vat
continuing-in Zepce in the central '
13 Record company
·
19 Dally records
reg~on.
Fighting bet~.Yeen government
20 Mature .
and Croat forces reportedly erupted
21 Ginger- .
Saturday on two other central
22 Sea nymphs
24 Merits
Bosnian fronts farther south, at
Fojnica and Prozor.
25 Father
2.7 - and oft
An estimated 138,000 people are
28 Myself
dead or missing from the war,
29 Therefore
which erupted last year after
30
Detective Sam .:.
Bosnian Serbs rebelled against the
31
Fruit drinks
decision by Bosnian Muslims and-32
Changes
color of
.
Croat_s - the majority of the
34
Corrlda
Cheer
population -to secede from Serb36 Southeastern
dominated Yugoslavia.
·
European •
38 Journey
39 Gaelic sea god
40 Helium symbol
4
I Duplicate
.
44 Teutonic deity
46 Perform
47 Printer's measure
48 Rodent
49 Be In debt
we are concerned by any proposal
50 Curtainthat targets advertising levels for
51 Hy~ .
reductions, no mailer how seem·
53 Tellurium symbol
ingly worthy the objective," tes·
54 0· T linkup
tified Peter Tortorici, CBS .execu55 Road to Rome
tive vice president of entertain- . 57 Indian weight
ment
59 Small rug
60 Grant use of
"The notion that the chip would
61 "-Elsewhere"
discoUrage advertisers from sup62
Detestation
porting programming containing :
64
.. - Without a
violence IS very troubling," he said.
Cause"
'
66 Moat painful
Tortorici
and executives from
66 Arabian garment
.ABC, NBC, Fox and the motion
10 Mistake .
picture industry urged the panel to
72 Condition of:
withhold judgment on the effecsuHIK
tiveness of the parental warnings,
73
Stalk
ot grain
coming this fall, until they've been
. 14 Choose
used for awhile.
77 Dude
"We are concerned about being
78 Staggl!ring
crowded bx additional government
60 Holds back
control," said Thomas Murphy,
82 Fish eggs
chairman of Capitol Cities-ABC
83 ScotchInc.
85 Make moist
Warren Littlefield, NBC presi·
86 Accumulates
dent of entertainmen~ said not all
87 Poker stake
68 Auricle
violence on television is.hru:rnful.

.

Lawmakers: Parents should be
~ble
_
to_
block
violent
programs
.
.

'

often watch TV while home alone
and parents "need to have the
power to exert control with tech·
nology based fixes in the TV set."
Even today, viewers could block
programs if they ·were electroni·
cally coded by the networks, said
Marlcey, who has been pressing the
networks to reduce violence in their

·
By DIANE DUSTON
: WASHINGTON (AP) - Tcle_vi·
sioo viewers should be able to
blOCk out violent programs by a
push of a button, according to
iriembers of Congress who say the· ·
industry's plan to warn about
piograms !hat contain violence
041ght to be only a first step.
· the technoiOj!Y for view~rs ~
block out certam programmmg 1s
already available. For-example, it is
uled by the c;~ble television in·
dustry to keep adult programs from
being warched by children.
"If you have determined that
parental discretion is necessary,
why wouldn't we want to allow
parents to block out the program·
ming?" asked Rep. Edward
Marlcey, D-Mass .• chairman of the
House Energy and Commerce
telecoinmunications subcpmmittee.
Markey, ·at a hearing Thursc!ay
on the networks' new ~ung
proposal for violence, sa1d ch1ldren

programs.

New TVs already are equiJlped
with the block-out technology because it is included on the computer
chip that must be in sets to decode
captioning for the hearing impaired.

But the networks would have to
code their violent programs for the
equipment in the TV s to be used as
a blocking device. And net~o executives show little enthusias for
the idea, noting such a move ould
reduce atlvenising ra s · for
programs that might be· blocked
out
"With free television totally
dependent on advertising revenue,

II

;

' I

II

on tlie mainland.
"It's the favorite date for
statehooders" even if,. unlike the
independence movement, "they .
don't have many local dates or •
heroes," said Aaron Ramos, a ·
political science professor at the
UniverSity of Puerto Rico..

.

.

..

176 Frock
177 Sufferer from
Hansen's ~lsease
178 Landed

•

1 Crowns
2.Scarcer
3 Sea eagles
4 Underworld god
5 Earth goddess
---&amp;Catch light of
7 calcium symbol
8 Time gone by
9 Choir VOIC4!
10 Domesticated
11 Rubber tree
12 Exist
13 Ox ·of Celebes
14 Concerning
15 Fed. agcy.
16 Clan
17 Coronet
18 Habituates
1.9 Merchant
23 Group of seven
26 Danish leland 29 Winter vehicle
32 Hindered
33 Stitches
35 Behold!
36 Highlander
37- Day
40 Mad42 Equal
43·MOuntains of
·Europe .
45 Renovataa
48 Inlet
52 Paid notices
56 l&gt;eruae again
58 Rule
59 Repairs
60 Parrots
62 Occurrence
63 Capellke cloak
65 Jackson or Derek
66 Looks fixedly
67 Twirling,
jlestructlve
winds
68 Astern
89 - constrictor
71' Torn
73 European
ermines
75 Ve&amp;IBI
76 Goller's need

By RUTH SINAl
A~ociated Press Writer
'• Wi\$HINGTON . (AP) fresiderit Clinton will announce a
~onditional ban on nuclear
weapons testing Saturday along
with plans for negotiations on a
permanent worldwide end ~ such
tests, according to a Defense
Department memo.
·
, In his weekly radio address,
Clinton plans to declare that the
United States will not test its
weapons until at least Oct. I, 1994
- unless another country tests
during that time, according to the
document obtained Friday. ·
The president will decide next
year whether to extend the
moratorium further, depending on
the status of the Comprehensive
Test Ban negotiations and on the
willingness of the other nuclear
powers to forgo testing; the
document said.
Clinton alsO will announce be is
prepared to send emissaries to

London, Paris, Moscow and
Beijing· to start negotiatin!l a
permanent ban on nuclear tesung.
by the world's' five major nuclear
powers, to go intp effect by Oct. 1,
1996, the memo said
Clinton's decision com.eths. afthter
months of fiery debates wl m e
administration among ad vocates
and opponents of testing. Growing
opposition · :to testing from
Congress, wh1ch :Iast fai_I passed a
. nine-month moratonum that
f' 11 . d
expired Thursday. ma Y Uppe
the balance,
,
Russian President Boris Ye1tsm
Said Thursday he had spoken this
week by phone with Clinton and
the two agreed to work for a
Comprehensive Test Ban treaty.
Yeltsm said he and Clinton plan to
discuss the subject when they meet
in Tokyo next week at the annual
economic summit.
.
Yeltsin also pledged that Russlll,
Which like the United States and
France has been observing a

, .
.
moratonum smce last year, would
not be !he fus~ to lest
.
\
In h1s rad10 a~?:ress, Clinton
plans to warn that •fbetween now
and September 1994 another Slate
breaks the moratorium. the
president would ask Congress for
th
th ·
•"
ding 10
au only 10 tes., accor
thee memo.
China. which has not declared a
formal
moratorium;
has
th 1
d ·
1 51
1
none e ess not tes e smce a
September and is said to be
· weighing its future policy. Bri!Wn
is bound by the U.S. moratonum
because its nuclear devices are
tested at the Nevada Test Site.
Clinton had been under strong
pressure by the Energy
Department's three nuclear
laboratories and some in the
Defense Department to renew
lesting in order to ensure the
nuclear warhead stockpile was safe
he · ban
t
before a compre nslve
wen
· into effect
·

j' •

'

,.

"
0

(

'

'

.ftt

~

&lt;
&lt;

•.I
t'j
~

''

1"'-f

!'
l'
'..
'

.,

·~

·

'·

'.
i

DESTROYED JEEP - ~ young Somali boy
looked at tbe wreckage or an Italian l!lilitary
vehicle Saturday In M~adishu. The vebl(le was
destroyed during ngbtmll between Italian U.N.

&lt;

.I

"

...
' '

colonnade at tile Wblte·HOllie. Tile coloJuiade Ill
decorated wltll Alllerlcaa lltlp for the Fourth of

.

.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

· AKRON, Ohio (AP) - A
· woman who tried to stop alcohol
sales at-J:Uossom Music Center has
been indicted on charges ofbelping
-friends deal marijuana.
A StJ111!11it.County grand jury on

FridayindictedBarbaraDeRi~41,

of .Cuyahoga Falls, on one count
eac:h of complicity .to traffic in
marijuana, drug abuse. obsuucting
justice alld being a convicted felon
with a weapon.
·

Li,;

1

- - - - - - - - ··
BRIDGE

general are rather favorable today, with th·
exception of making impulsive commit·
ments which you may laler have to rescind

PHILLIP ,
ALDER

after. .thinking them over.
GEMINI (May 21·Jul\e

20) You're quite
adepl today al helping others sort things
out so that they profit or gain in soma man·
nor. However, you may not do as well. lor
yourself In lhe .process.
·
NORTH
+164
.7145 .

Mondily,July 5, 1993

•

t6U .

+6 -~4

possible il you're responsible and industr._

The low c
rule the roost

..

By' Pbllllp Alde_r

take care In selecting your companions. lor concluding critical situations to your sat- day's deal, the declarer had many _
Don't include pals who do not mix well wilh isfaclion are remarl&lt;ably good today il you · great nien _ honors _ but he fell to" ,

'

'

'.

·woman
indicted
'
on charges

Turkey into an Islamic stale;
.·
"With such fundamentalist ·
oulbursts, they will never bC ~'I? · •change the secular state structure,
said Deputy' Prime Minisrer.Erdal ':
Inonu as he toured the charred ··
hotel with military olfu:ials.·
.sCi!!o'nelero,fathUe.~e·w-trainedw·ome
· necononusto~a :~."
Musi 1"m count-ry and the fa'rst 1'0 · ·.
Tll!:key. · .
.
.
•
.. ·
She favors integratwn w•th the · ·
European Community and has
called for privatization and ··.·
economic reform.
·
··
Islamic fundamentalists bave 40
lflhe SOseatsm' Parliament
·
4

accomplish.
pleasurable oullots away from home thai
Jean de Ia Bruyere wrote, "Even-.. .
VIRGO' (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You'll want to provide a change of pace.
the best-intentioned of great men need
be involved with ac~ve friends today, but SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your chances a few scoundrels around them .• In to-..

\

(

ASTRO·GRAPH

Egypt, Algeria and other CO!IDtries.
On Saturday. the eve of a
COIJ.fiderice vote sought by new

done more . Be satisfied with what you-·~ that bind you to your household. Seek

'

{

its secular course by_ Islam 1c
extremist. vjolence such as the riot
that Idlled 35 people a day earlier.
Troops patrolled the Streets of
Sivas, 275 miles _east of An~a.
enfmcing a 24 .hour curfew in the
city o( 800,000. It was imposed
after extremists torched a hotel
th tha
h0stm' --•
ce
a cuoueren
ofere
writersI was
and leftistg intellectuals,
kiUing the 35 and injuring 60.
· Officials said the extremists w.ere
ed b th
fl:inC of
enrag
y e comments.o
the guests, a newspaper editor who
had· rePQrtedly told the c()!iference
that the age of the Koran had
passed.
The attack was the worst case of
Muslim extremist violence in
modern Turkisti history . and
showed that the nation that

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) II you portorm your aus.
'
work up to the b_est at your ability today, LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) If possible today
don't berate yoursell later lor not having . disengage yourself tram mundane routines

--

J

~~~~~:;~ ~~:E:.t: E1=.=:~ ·

state your zodiac sign.

commander

158 Jab
159 Cash drawer
162 Compass pt.
164 Poem
166 Brim
167 Natural spring
170 Tantalum symbol
174 Three-toed sloth

.

....

I

July celebrado!loflndependeac:e Day. (AP)

..

Fundamenbilistramp~r~~ks'Thv;;

0

a

..

• ·

'

d th
tU... . you should be 'able to advantageously
MOGADISHU Somalia (AP) _
Mohameq Farrah Aidid's militia finished searching a c~mpou~ a1
-.u\1£
expand upon a promising situation you WEST
EAST
S
Ji militia'men repeating killed 24 Pakistani U.N. troops on was suspet:ted of bemg an Illegal
.
~...lwl_r
already initiated. This is. a _base an which +K 10 7 5
+J z
•'
.KQJ 10
l{lo:~ they used m~nth ago with June 5, shows that a potential weapons cache. After leavmg the -uu U"'"V
you can build a goad foundation .
•uau
• tOt 7 2
!l~dly efficiencx ambushed tl.N. quagmire lies in store for U.N. comJl'illllld ~bout 8 a.m., they wee;
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Regardless of tJIS
•
4
1993
+H
+sz
F 'da Icilll g 81 least three peacekeepers bere
blocked liy several makesh• t
"sunday, July •
what ciccurs today, Lady Luck is still apt to
\:~ ~di/~ and ~ounding 21.
Despite a U.N. a'ssautt on Aidid:s barr_icades where Somalis began
•
be sleadlastly determined to tilt lhings in
SOU'l'H
+AQI3
· Hospital officials said at least . headquarters on June 17 • ~IS h.~,ling rocks.
· .
II· In the year ahead ~au could be luckier than your favor. Trust your hopeful instincts.
1010 Sll!a
f'v
Somalis
were
killed
and
42
supporters
have
staged
nearl)l
daily
The
rocks
turned
usual
where
investments
or
joint
venture~.
Major
changes
are
ahead
lor
Cancer
in
lhe
1
+AKQ
e d d
h U N forces attacks on U.N. troops, showmg an arms fue, and that turned mto are concerned. If someone comes to you coming year. Send far your Astra-Graph
+AKQJI07
~oouuli~e:att:csketd ~ith . ~nks and . ability to calc~ the bett~r-armed machine·~?n and rocket-prope1. lied with a good proposition' in these areas. predictions today. Mail $ t .25 and a lang.
' .
Vulnerable: Both
u s an,d Italian helicopter forces by surpnse and drive th~m grenades, SBid the U.N5 · mklltaryll study it thoroughly.
self-addressed. stamped envelope to
Deale« South
. . ·
al' J'
from militia areas
spokesman Maj. DaVId IOC we · CANCER (June 21·July 22) Strive to be Astra·Graph. cia liTis newspaper, P.O. Box
'.
g~nshgl~~~
t'~
~
~ie~s~:~~:
Friday's
·six-h~ur
firefight
took
It
appear~d
t?
J;le
,a
well-planned
·
cooperative
w!th
others.
especially
in
your
4465 , New York, N.Y. 10163 Be sure to
W.sl
Eul
Ul 10
• •• •
k
place in an ·area that contained the am buSh by AH)ld s supporters, social involvements today. II you persist state your zodiac sign.
Pass
Pass
-·
w~unp_ed, a mlhtary spo esman city's main gun market and some ·which mirrored the June 5 attack upon having you r awn way, it could spoil LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) There's a chance
Pass
Pasa
said.
·
loodiest a ainst refugee camps and homes. ·
that began when gunmen am~ushed everyone's tun. including your own. you may nol do all that is expected ol you
Pass
All~
TNhe
atro;~e~e
~ince
wa~lord
It
began
after
Italian
troops
U.N.
troops
as
they
were
leaVIng
all
cancer,
treat
yourself
to
a
birthday
gilt.
loday.
Fortunately,
however,
you
might
U
· .·
area after a
search.
• Send lor your Astro·Graph predictions-lor have a loyal friend somewhere behind you
Opening lead: • K
the year ahead by ma~ling $1 .25 and .a covering your tracks.
"
long, sell-addressed. stamped envelOpe to VIRGO (Aug. ~3·$ept. 22) Do not shirk
Astra-Graph,,c/o this newspaper, f'.O. BoM your duties today and y1eld to yaurfrivplous .
4465. New York, N.Y. 10163. Be sure to . Impulses. Larger rewards lhan usual are .

l

MR. CLINTON'S HOLIDAY- President
Clinton, orr to a holiday roand of golf, waved to
photograp~ers Saturday as he walked down tile

-war.

Three peacekeepers killed, 21

115 "M8gnum, -"

116 Cried
119 Ancient
121 Tardy
i 23 - Paul John II
124 Demon
125 Jackel parts
126 Stud.lo
128 "Diamond-"
130 "Ice132 Perceptible by
the touch
133 In musiC, high
134 Flag
·135 Most aiiCient
138 !)elty
141 River Island
144 Agave plant
146 Whiskers
1&lt;4,8 Prophets
149- garde
150 Katmandu Ia
Ks capital
151 Liquid measure
152 A, E, - , 0, 154 Keyed up with
Interest
156 Arabian

•

Clinton and Yeltsin 'at tlie G-7 meetlnJI in
Tokyo. Talbott also delivered a message from
. Clinton on tbe U.S. in,tention to extend a
moratorium on nuclear testing until September
1994, according to Tass. (APr

Clinton to announce
ban on nuclear tes(ing

•

79 Neon symbol
81 Latin conjuncllon
84 Dine
' 87 Bother
89' Remaln~r
92 Wild revelry
93 Seed container
94 -Mr. Vlgoda
95 Profound
97 Tille of respect
98 Freshet
99 "Growing -"
100 "Sanford - Son"
· 101 Morays
102 Baseball stat
. 103 Old French coin.
106- tide
109 Prejudice
113 Distance measure

DOWN

' '

"

'

•

-

MEETING AMBASSADOR -Russi•n
President Boris Yeltsin, lert, welcomed U.S.
Ambassador at Large Strobe l'alboU .Saturday
at the Kremlin. Talbott met with Yeltsin to
discuss the upcoming meeting between Preside~Jt .
.
-· -

Crosswo.-d Puzzle Answer on Page C-4
Bounce; skip
91 Roman bronze
92 Harem room .
93 Gasped for
breath
96 Robert Stack role
99 Strokes
tO 1 Wears away
104 Kimono sash
105 DC notable
t0'7 Plunge
108 Part of Q &amp; A
109 Supplicate
I 10 Spanish gold
111 Lair.
112 Abound
114 Swift
116 Crafty
117 - de cologne
118 Proceec!
120 Bucklil
122 Sn Is lis symbol
123 - and carrots
124 "This - Your
Life"
125 Armstrong ID
127 Lavin ID
129 "Peyton 131 Halts
133 Early morn
134 Italian river
136 Near
13 7 EKcavate
139 Airline Info
140-Sultable
141 High mountain
i 42 Spanish article
143 Fondle
145 Tennis strOke
'147 Prime character
151 Illuminated
_ 152 Sell-governing:
abbr.
153 Lamb's pen name
155 Ruby or Sandra
157 Doctrine
158 Fruit seed
159 Melody
160 Roman 51
161 Evlgan ID
163 Soap plant
165 Helmsman
167 Yes: Sp.
168 Equally
169 Surgical threads
171 "Easy172 Similar
173 Sow
175 Rant

sets

u· s •

Cow

SUNDAY PUZZLER
90

•

the Vietnarti War.
32
~va;ed in aU Of_ 1992. It
Th e niled tateo has bloc ked __sa~.,
' d -. ·
teamS
JOIDI uS
•. ••V'etnamcsc
t.
offers by France and Japan to pay had this year mvesbgatcd-2QO MIA
United States will stop opposing -more than $140 million in arrears cases and the United States had international loans to Vietnam, bu.t . that Hanoi owes to the been_.provided access to 18,000
normal relations with the Han~ International Monetary Fund. If related documents and artifacts.
·government will depend on further Washington drops its objections
Clinton said .he ha4 ·invited ·
progress in accounting (or and Vietnam •s debt is paid, the represenratives of tbl: three largest
Americans. miuing in action, IMF could decide this month 10 veterans groups to aceompany the &gt;President Clinton announced make . new loans 10 the official U.S. delegation to V~. :
Friday.
·
impoverished government in Hanoi wHich will include Ass1stant ··
Clinton !tad struggled with the for the flrsttime since 1975•
Secretary of Slate Winston Lord, ~
decision for months, seelcing to
The president warned that "any Depu-ty Secretary of Veterans :
balance.the anguish ilnd concern of further steps in US-Vietnamese Affairs-Hershel Gober and Ll 0en: famili~of m'issing Americans with relations will strictly depend on Michael Ryan, a dec,orated :
ex~rts recommendations ~~ the further 1 ogress by the Vielnamese Vietnam War veteran who works :
Umted States must reward V1etnam • on the
·MIA.issue." He smd, for.rhe Joint Chiefs of Staff.
for the' help it has given i;o far 011· "Prouress 10 date is simply not .-- Clinton consul~ with veterans :
the accounting process.
·
sufflcfcnt to warrant any change in groups and mcm15ers of Congress •
"To encourage further progress, our trade embargo or any further wh~ ser~ed i~'.Vietnam ~efore :
making~ deciSion.
.
:;:
it .is appropriate at this time tO steps toward normalization."
recogl)ize what the Vietnamese -. The U.S. embargo was .imposed
The Wh1te House made pu1llic a •
have done in our effort to account after lhe CommuniSt north defeated · !et.ter. from law~ers. who serveil :
for the missing," Clinton. said in a south Vietnamese forces and ~n v 1etn~m urg•ng ~1m to allow
staJement. ·
reunited theCQuntry in 1975.
lnternau.onal lendm~ b.~e;ause
The president opted for li twoMore than 2,200 Americans are V.ietnam. ha.d ma~e S1gn1f~c~nt
, pronged approach: allow.ing thf'_ .still .listed as missing in actio!! ~1,1 pro~ m accountmg for massmg_
International Monetary Fund to · Soulheasl Asia from the Vietnam Amencans .
· lend money to Vietnam, and at the ·
The group said it was concern~
same time sending a high-level
The Whitr. House said Vietnam that further progress was "m •
delegation to Hanoi to press for · had returned 28 sets of remains so jeopardy if our nation does not ·
more information about MIAs from far this year alone, compared with make a gesture to acknowledge the - ·

By RUTH 'SINAl
Press Writer
Associated
•-w ASHlNGTON
(AP) _The

Statehood campaign invokes all-American symbols
Independence Day to sign a bill
authorizing a plebiscite Nov; 14 on
the island's political slaws.
The ceremony in a hall. diiting to
Spanish colonial days precedes a
traditional day of speeches,
fuewor and marching bands with
baton·t
Qg majorettes - all in
rican flags, just like

Sunday Time• SenUnel Peel' D3

Clinton to stop opposing·
.lending for Vietna_m

.MEXICO CITY
Cuba's -. telex said, acconling to Dye.
. who answered the phone at the1r
coast guard said it intercepted a
Pren~ Laiina quote&lt;! HoddinqU home said .Hoddino!l•. who.is 33
as saymg 11\e U.S.-reg•stered boat and works m construcuon, did not
U.S. speedboat that-was inlended to was to pick up Cuba,ns who had oWn a bOat hiinself and the family
talce Cuban refugees ui the United
h
th Mid · h
States. Officials said three people paid large sums of money to be had no idea w ere e
mg t
were Idlled and the American boat .taken to-the United States. They Express came from or. that ·
captain was wounded.
were wailing on the beach, it said.· Hoddinott was going to Cuba. . ,
• The incident took place at 10:30
But Hoddinott, who lived in the ·
The U.S. Coast Guard in Mianii p.m. Thursday north .of Cojimar Key West ares all his life; lilred to •
received a telex Friday afternoon about 6 mile.s from Havana, the fish and was familiar with the .
from • the Cuban government · 1·
d Pre La ·
'd
urroundin
said th f iJ
informing it of the incident, Petty · te ex an
nsa llna Sill •
s
g waters,
e am Y
Officer Jile Dye said
.
Two of die dead were identified spokesman, who asked to remain
as Alfredo Evelio Caballin Marin anonymous.
Among those wounded and and Loamis Gonzalez Mansini. The
.Cuban authorities asked for
· inflirnlation about the vess¢1. and its ·
captured late Thursday aboard the third was not identified.
Midnight Express was Ricky
The Cuban telex did not give the crew that would assist in their
Uo4dinott of Key West, Fla. The number of people aboard, Dye said. investigation.
Cuban· telex said · he was · · He said suclt telexes life routine
Cuban authorities called the
hospitalized in Havana with when incidents involve U.S. incident an example of the "grave ~
wounds in both legs.
citizens,
consequences" that can.result from •
All others aboard tlie 36-foot
Jackie Hoddinott of Key West, encouraging illegal emigration.
cigarette boat were Cuban- sister of lhe injured American, said: frqm Cuba, Prensa Latina said, ·
Americans, the telex said,
. · ."He's risking his life by doing
The agency noted that the Uni)Cd
The official Cuban news agency someihing like that·and that's not States failed to fulfill its announced
Prensa Latina, monitored here, said him. He will not risk his life to go quota of 20,000 visas for Cubans a
three Cubans were killed and an ' .over there, get Cubans and·get shot year but receives all Cubans who
undisclosed number of people were or kiUed for money. It's senseless. arrive illegally. It said that policy
wounded.
'II
I ex•' ts I'k
The 225-horsepower bo.at That's not the brother I know." ·
encouraged ~a
I ~ the
violated Cuban lmitory to smuggle
A friend of the Hoddinott family . one foiled Th
y 'night.
people to the ~nited ~tates, the
-~

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)Old Glory, the Fourth of July who knpws, even apple pie may
enter the campaign to have ~rto
· Ricans declare themselves in favor
of statehood.
Pedro Rossello. the pro-statehood
governor, is evoldng all-American
symb~lism . · by
c)loosing

"

•

Pomeroy-Middleport C'-.alllpolla, OH Point Pleasant, wv

July4, 1993

~

'.

;

troops and Somali gunmen Friday in an area
north or Mo~adisllu. Tllree,[talian soldiers were
reportedly k1Ued and 20 we're wounded. (AP)

Pentagon undecided on g~y policy

WASHINGTON . (AP) - •·stalled. ov~.lejal ~finitions to be against
. ·
.
Defense ·secretary Les Aspin and co~ tamed 1n pohcy docu~ents
"This is hard for everybody."
the Joint Chiefs of Staff bave met be_m g prep~r_ejl !or Pres1dent said As pin spokesman Vernon
in sessions marked by •'a Jot of Clmton, ?fficials wd.
. . . Guidry. ''They are continuing to
disagreement' • to review proposed . The ch1efs. have taken a JlOSlb~ , work on it(
.
policy changes on homosexuals in that leaves mtact the Penta~ on. s
Clinton nas asked As pin to
th military Pentagon officials statement t~at hOII\~sexu~IUy •s propose a · new policy on
~
'
"mcompat1ble" wllh m1htary homosexuals by July .. 15 and
S31A~pin and tile Pentagon's top ~rvice. However, the White House Friday's ~ffort appeared directed at
..admirals an~1aenerats. confe~ . in . . 1s concerned that SUI:h ~ stand runs preparing a.proposal for Clinton
an extraordiJ'uy Fpday evenmg counter to the ptesldent s plellge to before brs departure for the
session in an effort to find conunon al!ow gays fl!ld les~ians. ~ serve economic summit in Tokyo next
· · d . They were..apparently wuhout be10g ducnm1~ated
)Yeek.
groun
•
,•
~
l;l

'

.

.

'•

:

.

'

h-

one another.
.. . . use your abilities constructively. Make this defeat because he didn't make the best
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Your probabrh· . day count.
use of bis scoundrels - the spot-cards.
ties for personal gain loot&lt; very good today. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Jus I _. South picked up one of the strongest
However. if you think you're entitled to because things might come easy far you bands ever. North telephoned me to
more than you get, you're going to be dis- today does not lessen thM value or worth . ask for advi~, knowing ·I am the
enchanted with the results.
· .
You won't wantro look back larer and won· world's numlier one authority on
SCORPIO (Oct. 24,Nov. 2~ottow dar way you didn 't make the mast of 11.
Yarborough!.
through on the plans you envision today. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In your
South opened with an artificial two
. All should go smoothly. provided you don't material affairs today. there is a possibility clubs and rebid three clubs to_sh~w his
alter your blueprint jusl because another you might be quite a bit luckier than the -suit. North wanted to pass, but l tOld
questions your methods.
persons with whom you're involve~ . ~· him I had done that once and miaBed a
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Be lair very carefui'M'w-you hapdle this devefop· laydown five clubs. N~rth h~ my
In your business practices and lina~cial mont. .
. ad.'lice. Now South showed his second
dealings with oth~rs today. Don't give away AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19) Your great-...,. ~u1t. Again North wanted to pass, but I
more than you should, just because some· est asset today is your ability to take your 1ns1sted that he g1ve ~reference. South
one whines about the arrangement.
good 'Ideas and the good ideas ol others passed, somehow havmg gathered that
CAPRICORN (De.~;. 22·Jan. 19) Try lo and provide them with a practical appllca- North held a ~ry weak .hand.
avoid Individuals today who are wiShy· tion that is mutually beneficial.
West led the heart king. Peclarer
washy and indecisive. If you teel youj e in PISCES (Feb. :ZO.March 20) Friends who ndfed, drew trumps and continued
need of supporters. select pals who 'know are nat,directly involved in your confidential With the ace and anothed spade. East
what they want and aren't afraid to go after affairs aren't entitled to a running accounl :
wi!h :he
~n la;:ur~a
it.
, ol the. status of your operations. Be· more earl.. du
~t
1
AQUARIUS·(JIIn. :ZO.Feb. 18) You're pret· ,secretive.
.
.
_ 1t~w 5~
wo
,.
ty good at making snap decision~ today. SO• 'ARIES (March ,21·Aflr1118) Your probabU•·
~I bad U points ~nd oi.ly t.;, Ioeen.
don't be leartul or your aUIOfii'\M raspons· - toes fO( realiZing. ~ometh1ng for which Hciw could 1 go down?" latnelltecf
es. Yau'lllose momentum ol you overana· you've .been 1\op~ng are strong today. South.
·
lyze.
However. you could lessen your chances
North didn't need me at ihla poillt. ·
PISCES (Feb. 2D;II•r~h 20) Some valu_. by berng unduly forceful w1th persons "You .,_lOoked the power o1 the.•
able information can·ba ~arnered today _,, whasahelpyouneed.
. .
eieht aniLriille of spades," be a- :
you mingle with friends who talk about TAU II US (April 20·May 20) Obrectrves plained. •u theapadei are brealdn&amp; s.interesting subJects, rather than JUSt about that may be unanernable lor others today 3, all plays work; 10 ISSUIIIe they are ~
-- themselves. Avoid 'I"ar~ented types. . , might not necessanly. be as difficult for you. 4-2. Tben you need an honor to be:;;
ARIES (March 2t-Aprllt9) Th1s "'!~ be a Don't let their negative thoughts stop you doubleton. Your. play work&amp; If 110111e- .;:- •
day al substantial achleverl)ents. especoally from trying YO\!"""·
one has king doubleton. But If you fol• : 11 you set the wheels in motion as early as . GEMINI (May '21·June 20) Try to tr]!al low the -spade ace With the ~de ·
poss'lble. The Important thing is ''! be-a . .tciday's eveniS phllo~phlcally rathe~ than queen, you will a11alnst either 10 doubdoer and not ona who merely formulates emotiOiially. II your logiC prevarls. you II see teton or jack doublelan, a ebaoc:e that
ideas.
things lor what lhey are. II your feelings Is twice u Ukely."
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) CondnionS In @minate, you won't.
·
~-••niwitia~"'"""•••n••••-•••.,
.
~
.....
_--:. __: ,, ~.
·.. . \
\.
...
·
...
- ... ' -

011

1;,u,/:k

!i. c!'::n ,

"·

·:·-

t:::b t!

�.

.

'

OH Point Pleasant, wv
7

Yard Sale

a.

Galllpoll• &amp;VICinity

1 epeed tranoaxla tor Soan
rf!l!nt
· 30+f7141111. lawn -

Want8cl to Buy

'Ant.... and .-cl lumKuro, no
Mom too 1arao ..,,_ .....n, will
..., •oM ,._ or OOIIIJIIOII•
houuhalll. can O.by M~ln,
lt4-112-11141.

.

lluy Slandlr!tl Tlmbor1 __Pino,
Poponoood, l Sow Tim- 814o

ll2·ntl.

,

..,.

fullly, JulY Jnd oftcl 3rt!, t
mila put Hofzer on 110, olgno,

3

4 FamilY: a• vanco

ALL Yard Salea lluot Ia Pold !n
Advua. OIADUIE: Z:OD p.m.
tho c1aJ .,..,.. lho ed Ia to run.
llundoi' edlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. llondoy edltlon • 2:00
p.m. Soturdly.
Friday ond lllt...Uw , "- Hultbardlvo. ~ _ , ' ". .
lor,
:l ..... • ......,..

==f.'*
J&amp;

D'a Jj,oto PIN ond Solvaa•.

ca,. &amp; truc;il.

ooramloa, and olhor...,_

E.M.S.:

poramodlcs,

cei!1!ll

NOTICE TO ~RS
Sealed propoeala will be
recolved by Melgo Local
School Dlolrict, In the ofllce
of the Tr-uror, 320 Eaot
t.Aaln 8tr•t. P9maroy, Ohio,
45761, until 12:00 Noon,
EST, July 2t , 1993, and then
publicly opened and reed
aloud for

SAUSSURY ~LEMENTARY
· SCHOOL UFT STATION
AND SEWER LINE
The propoud work
· lncludeo •ewerage lilt
s tation, eanit.ry aewer
Ioree main and greaoe trap.
Copl• of Drawing' and
Contract dooumenta miY be
obtained or eumlned at the
Su~fa
Ofllca,
Melg. locei 'School Dilllrlct,

320 E01l Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. A S12.00 f•
wll be requlreil for _ , sol
of drawlngo and Contract
documents taken from lhe
abova ollie-. Checka ahail
be made peyabla to Meiga
Local School DlstrlcL .
Propoaala ' muat be
s ubmitted on the Propooal
Forma contained In the
Contract documanta.
Each bid ahell contain the
lull nama of every paroon
interested In tho ....,., and
muat be accomP"ftled by a
bid guaranty In the form of
either a bid guaranty bond
ra r the· full amount of the
bid purauanl to Char,ter
t53.54 of the Ohio Rev oed
code, or a certified chack,
caohiero chack, or caah
purauantto Chapter 1305 of
the Ohio Revloed Code in
the amount of ten. percent
(tO%) of lie bid.
The oucceulul bidder
muol be an Equol
Employment Opportunity
Employer which prohlblto
discrimination becauae of
r&amp;ce, cr~ color, national
origin, aex, .ge, handicap,

polltlcol
bellelo.

olfillatlon

or

The Owner reeervae the

right to rej.CI any or all
propoaala ..-.d .to waive any

NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Tho underllgned will oell
at public oelo to tho hlghoat
bidder on ~uly t2, t993, at
tt :00 a.m. local tlmo tho
following deacrlbed -..ulp· .
menL
(t) Catorplllar.EL 3008
Excll\lator SIN 3F~002t8
(t) Caao 580K Loeder/
Backhoe SIN t7425852
(No Backhoe)
Said public aalo will bo
hold at Wal~er Machinery,
tt069 Chillicothe Pike,
~ackaon, Ohio 45640.
The property may be
inopeclod during normal
bualneaa houra.
Associates ii not a
manufacturer of the
equipment or dealer ln.
goodo of ttiat kind, and hao
not made or doea not
hereby
make
any
repretentation. warranty or

covenant with respect to
the condition, quality,
suitability, or merchant·
ability of tho -..uipmenl in
any r•pecL

a.

3005, $3.99 Per Minute, Must
18 Year•. Procell CornPinY 002·

631.0615.

.

THE GAY CONNECTION 1·fl00.

1110.3337 $2.51J.mln. 11+ rnoo1
1DO'o of oxclllng mon In Y!K'r
or• tonight. Gof phono l'o. CCI
BOCA FL.

~b~~"g~'J~E~~~~ 4 ·

"'i'Q.;;;;;;;'iii;:;;;~;;;;m

Honoot, Atfoctlonato, FaHhlul,
Ono-Man Woman To Cor·
respond Or Perhaps Moro With
Whlta Dlvorcod Male, 3t; m
lbo.; &amp;'2''; Tan Complollllon.
Soriouo
Rooponoo Ontyl Sond
Photo. P.O. Box 423, Crown City,
Ohio 45623.
Jo'--,.1 -'eo
'--'--unt-ry--,Ta-nn-=ln!_i_
eJ:-~:-:y'o
Spacial, 15 tor $25, &amp;14·
7.

good wHh ldcfo. 8
-2.
2 Boautllul L.ona Hotrod KHtono
To Good Homo, 114-448-4921. ·
2 blk kHttno approx 12 w1co old;
tHtor box tralnod, 304-8115-3348.

~60=2.e_:31::..:.Q6.:,15:::;·:__,.,-,---=-c:::-:-:-

Live 24 Howe A DIYIII T1lk To

Boautllul Glrlo!ll 1-IOQ.211-2192
Ext. 5379, $3.H Por Min. Mull
Bo 18 Yro, PI'CICall Co. 602.a3t·
0615.
LIVE PSYCHICS ono on .ono 1·
9()0.288.0328
oxt.
7172,
3.8tlrnln., mUll be 11 yMre.

112

Cllaolar Hooting .Cooling lo
Toldng AppllcatiOne For A &amp;oro
Ylca Tochnlolon l lnllallar,
AppiJ In Poroon: ao2 Socona
A - Golllpotlo.
Not Tv Lato · To Moko . Elllra
llorloyl Soli Avon! Muot Llva In
GoliiOptlo Chy LlmHo Or So~h
Of Rt; 351 ,0alllo COunly. 8to~
Frao For A Umhod Tlma, l-800-

Gor-n

Slloplierd

3897.

3 Cuto KHtano, 8 Wooko Old 1

Pt. Pleasant
Black, 1 Yoltow, 1 Yollow ' &amp;
Whh1, NMr Woodlencl Drfv•
&amp; VIcinity
114 44U281A~or 4::10 P.M.. '
4 klttano. 2 Wlllla &amp; black bob- 2218 Jalloraon Avo, July 1111 I
lth, moving lrvrn Iorge tiouH to
tollo, 2 black,l14.,.2-221t.
amon aP!. ·aoautllut glloowore,
Boby bod wHh 1111111r- 304- Cooll, p&amp;cturtt. piiM, dlthH,
571-2048.
'
'
raclo l otoreo wllpooken,
ovorythlng you coUld tmaglno.

8

I.Jiol: ~ cloal, - · tan w/ holr
cut 4yn alii; Doohund mix, Ide~ 4 mo. old. Deoporate to

lind; oubltontlal rnoril. call 30W75.94e or 814o24fl.
5533.
Looi: Buhanl Cormel • - old
yellow
ond whH• - ·
female, ·- hu erookM £i.ll,
raward, B1W411o21M.

All Yard Solea Muot Be Paid In
Advance. Deocllno: 1:OOpm tltt
day, bofon lho ed le to run,
SOindaW edftlon· 1:00pon Fri.y,
Monday
ooltlon
10:0Cio.m.

Saturdioy.
,,.._ Sate. - Y . July lth,

Npin.~c-only,oln

1-12, oulfo, ovonlna - . long

oldllt, 4 oooto (2 ano --no},

d,....,
~~~·~-~·
blouooo,
and •
Laele)'
Sti'Mt,
IDml, ...,.,

Pomeroy.

July \

2, 3,

Mamory

CA 34 bohlnd
Cometary,

Gordono

Brur)ty reeldence. Bathtub, ltut-

-·

ftd chair, lg. 8 drMfer dre.,r,

ckJih• of 811 81zee; Rain can·

(7) 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, SJ, 11,

8

In Memory

Got!IO .Jaclloon ....,tgo Boord 01
Alcohol
Rick Peai.an Auollan Company, DrUg Addiction And Mental
luU tkne ouct-. oomptol•
Hoalth Sarvlcoo

In Loving Memory of

auction
eorvlce.
77W7U.

CORNELIA

thOU!#~~

Happy
Kyle Sinclair·
,
July 1 •
Shelly Sinclair -16
'·
July7
Got-ya:
Dad

·d~k

beiUleen lhe you"8'
arul re1tle11,
ArullheOW&amp;
'

.

· aeruele...

54

Miscellaneous

5152.

514

Golllf!OIIo, Olllo 45631

---...!..::===--- -11

_....__ _~---......; •
23 Professional

SeiVIceS
Food C:O.O... Natural Foodo A~
Wholaoalo Prlooo. For lnlo CoN '
114-258-1400.
•.

'J. ·

&amp;.Auction

"'·

Wanted

FULL TIME PHARMACISTS
FOUR DAY WORK WElK
Sol'-n OWo Medical Celter lias • ope1ilg ~or

Fei-Tilte ~st.
Primary respoaslbUltles lacl1de comp1terlzed
11lt dose, IV aci!UIIres, Pltaiiiii!COkiletk dosl~g,
oetpatlelt edlcatloa .d code blee respo1se. ~
bcellnt s!!t!ry •d b..flts package. Mest
ke•sed or elglllle for . .111r1 II OWo. ·
S..d nst• to H•.- Re101rces, 1248 Kil1eys
Part111111.._ OH 45662 .or call614·354·5000,
7607.
Soetkere Oltlo M..kal (eater pro110tes t~e
•~r~~g of lldlvlcltals wlla are 10.-smokers.

EOE/MFH
.
. SOUTHERN OHIO MEDICAL CENTER

.

2 otMI ptpoa, 114"x8"x1.5' t25
- h 114-44fl.lll1.

HOME FOR SALE locat&amp;d al Rodney· 3 bedrooms,
living room, dining room, kitchen. Call lot mora
lnloml4tion.

LISTING • TUPPERS PLAINS • l.ocllod rlgN on SR' 7 thlo
2·otory homo olle&lt;W 3 BR, LR, OR, Ell·ln Kit Will loll ol cal&gt;tnota,
o'a!h wHh &amp; iub, and lllachod 2 car garage. Lola ot oxtrao
,... lnclldlng 1 trdor apoco,
3 cltloNIM Yilrloty ol trul lroes,
2 addl- outb,.lclngl. lmmoclale p o - l On~ $39,0001Lot
11,1 show you tf1lo todi!Yl
.
PRATTS FORK· L.ocalod on 3 oc:res ._,, LR,IlR·KI combo, 5 BRs,
2 Balhe, FR. Oen, Uti. Rm., Collar, Garage. In tho SO's.
POMEROY· Mulllany Heights ronch styio, 2-3 BR, Bolh, LR. KH, Lg.
GMoge , Fonood yar&lt;l, Low utl'lel. Low SO'o. .
IIIOOLEPORT • Low maintenance olone home. Good condition. 3
BR, 12 Bath, Close to town. $22,000
SYRACUSE • One floor plan, 3 BR, 2 Baths, LA, DR, Kt1.,2 ..
garage. ClOse to pont and park.
HEMLOCK GAOvE • Ono floor plan, 3 BR, 2 Baths, LR, DR, Kl.,
IOcalecl on 1 '"""'" CO&lt;lnlry oettlng. $34,900 MINERSVILLE · ·Block comme!Cial building with 4000 sq . II.,

gr-.

'ro:!'l

••• cotoni111 t~m, 3h72"
Dlolo mlrnll', $20. Vtnol oldlng I

POMEROY • Small homo noods oomo -Irs. LotlliOna wonh tho
pflca. Near store $9,500 COOidt&gt;e fond contract.
POMEROY · Brick ranch home . LR , Eat·ln 101.: 3 BR, 8oth, Bsmt
wipalllal balh, 1 car garage. Applances. Clnli $34,900
ROCK SPRINGS Rl). • Locatod on .8 acno nvt. 3 BA, Lg. eat·ln K• .,

~Itt

comode,

liDO. 30W7._,.,
.
VI'RA FURNITURE
814o44Wt56 Or 114. 441 4428
'10 DAY BAllE A8 CASH

.

FOR INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS PICK UP
THE FREE QUALITY HOMES BROCHURE AT lOME Of
THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS,
MOTEtS AND RESTAURANTS.

LR, Bath. Bsmt w/garage. Insulated. BGIFA Furnace and
_ , . . ,, Mid 30's.

RENT.Z.OWN (NO DEPOSIT}

I' room hoUH Vtll llu11Mnt &amp;
flonop, 1 ocro, vlnolokl~

wt-, M\000. 304-8
oftor 5pn untlllpm.
5 Room Acr- Undor
$25,00!1 Route 7, SOUIIi, 114-251-

1779.
'
Acrooa from Radno High
'*hool, I IS room~ 4 bl~ 1 1

-

_,dtyor hook·

l!oth,~oat~n ldlchon, hoe

&amp; bMIIMflt. Dl" ' home, 11,_, 2 ~- ol

..,.. In

orchord, ellln
11-ae tiillldlnp, 2 oar
fi'Hind, fll!rdon.
cilrpciit. Coni
Gold,
8:14 ttl taL

114-884o4;r,

GREAT
lor a place ~ra your
can pl~y on
quiet strMts? Where you convenience
shopping Is only mlnul'!• away? Wall, hare's a
wall cared for 4 bedroom home that indudes all
lha necessary comfollt of today'slifaslylas. 2'/,
baths family room, living mom and more .
Larga,dack. add on heat pump (with central air)
and t car ga~~~ge . CloM to University. $79,900.
'
12t3

!:..'!!"

21
lo
or Ul Kahlor,

fiOf
- On Land Contract: 3
Bodraom Ranch Slylo, 1 lolb,
~R. IQI, FA~ UA, With f.t. Dook
On Sack, l&gt;ldcfrnor• Rciild, 011

110, 1111111 Frvm HMC,IM-241~·

Hloo
2 - - wHh lull ~. on Ridge Avonuo, Alo

We specialize in alllypes olsales

0,._, 1 blocll .from campw,

IUaiONEER: FINIS •111• ISAI&amp;
PhoH:(614) 311·9370 or 1614) 311·1110 ~ ·
Ucaaself &amp; lo'aHd
•
· Ohio Indiana VHit Yirglna 11030
•·

114-1112-3033..

Ranch o1y1a home, 3 boclroomo,
, 1 both, ...garogo, -

w1r1c1ow3 .control olr,
~'*"' 114, · -77Wt50.

11M bedr- Iorge ba00fll8nl,
~. cor
dltochoid P"'l"•

~

ESTA~i~ 531 Joobon Plko
/mo. Wollt to oholl •
movlll. CaM 114 4t1 2811. EOH.

1rorn

Real Estate General

••WNI
blck porch, acr1 more
or laoa, At.82 South noar •r.

·•

304-IN-1712.

Wont to trado 3brJ 2 bath brick

-

.'
..

hoime

on 1o10ra tor nice small
on .ere or more .,.., At.

», 114-t~M378.

· Good neigllbo1mood.
Deep lot. 2 bedrooms: t bath,
room,
. dining room, "t-in kitchen. Won't find many at
!hi slow price. $34,90(). 1208

~£al

for Sale

Pomoroy, Ohio 41178V

(8t4)N24325

BUY TO RENT - Add to .your investment
portfolio with this 2 bed.room mobile home,
already ranted. Hal 2 car garage Wtlh
woodbumer, ooncrala noor, walar and 200 amp
alactrical service .- has bean ranted in psst.
A1111 mom lor oacond mobikl home. All of this
income potential locatad on .9t8 of an acre.
Prica•:l'at $t9,500.
ft 02

'71 Schultz, 141i'lll, Iaiii otectrlcJ
Coleman furn8ce, 3 bedrDOI'I'I, i:
lui bet,., ,.,... r.,..,ator,

dlahw_._ ond ~ . ln­
oiYded muot be movod qiOD

::Z. tM-'1'12·2157

LOCATED FROM NEW HAVEN, WV,

6 MILES OUT UNON CAMPGROUND ROAD.
WATCH FOR SIGNS. •

or

ilt4-182·

10.55 good candHion, hove to

. . to apprenlete It 114--311-

ml&lt;.

THE ESTATE OF THE LATE JOSEPH ALLEN KAY SR.
WILL BESOLD.
Early Amerlc:an Slyie ltide+ljed, like new, lovaoeat,
•
tablel, La·Z·Boy
Sylv8nia oolor oonaole I, :;:~;
table I 8
· apool type droplaef table, dlairs, K
Gold
Hot Point 30'
' kitchen

1

Ttllford'a Future Property of the Weald

1. . Holly Parl4 14'&gt;72' 3 IJod.
,_,., ~ Balho, Uti!Ky Room,
AC. E-ric, 114-2111·1&amp;a Allor

S:OIIP.M.

Riverfront Properly· Sll on your honl porch and
!he river. This 3 bediDOtn, 2 bath homo '(lillt
acras could "" !he one for youll ean lor mora
nfonnati&lt;.,.Asking $45,000.00
Rutland ,.,... lllis unftniohod homo 'could bo
inlo l:~~'Aoma. t ~ ~raa and~ prload to

yours on
lrol,lacta along Raccoon
CrHk, you -.n
R an. Ramodel&amp;d
older 2 alory home
of character. 3
bad100111a, living room, family 100m and iaiiJO
balhiOOIII. l.oto of oulbull&amp;nga aro included on
the larm. Beautiful view hom atop the pastura
fieldo. Must - r pf!.Neiate. Call Dave for
mora info11nalion. ,
1218

1 ·::~~:~r:E' _
;,:

30xS 2 STORY FRAME
Good 2start on apartment
b,:~~~~· commercial building or re sldanca.
~
on Jackaon Pil\e just past Spring
1202
area. Prioad at $28,900.
·,

·-

'

,

USTlNG • A SIGHT FOR SORE
EYES! -This adorable 3 bedroom 1811dllooka
Jha. way a homo's aupposed to look? Modal
sharp condition will1 nice landacaping and
pleasing decor. You'D like !he location, !he rear
deck, ·2 car carpon and everything else about
olhis immaculate home. Pratty aoon it wiM heve
a now owner and~ could be you. $52,900.

.

WEEKEND RETREAT! • You don't have to
drive for milooto got away. You can have your
own camping sp&lt;il among tall lrees In a
paacaful selling and have access to Raccoon
Creek for booting and fishing. This lot in a
privala campgiDUnd Is priced at $7,000. 1505

YOU'LL BE SURROUNDI;D - By Wayne
National Forest. Why buy a la11J8 farm to hunt
on when you can accomplilh lhe aame thing
will) just a lew ac,.a? 21 .82 acres with 4
mobila homo hookupa,,2 mobile homea and a
camper, PLUS a 2 ·bedroom home' in good
condition. Hunttl'a Paradise! $29,900. 1210
·, .
,
.

A PIECE OF THE
ACTION - This 3 bedroom, t bath rantal is
located close to town. Needs oome rapai• but
is prioad right at $29,500.
t506
INCOME OPPO.RTUNITY - Rental proi&gt;arties
- 2 mobile homea, situated on .92 acre
prasenlly baing Mlttad by good ranter&amp;. One 2
bedroom with woodbumor, nnge · and
refrigerator, and one 3 bedroom with
woodbumar. Each has its own septic, water tap
and electric. Easy care lot on blacktop road.
Pnced al $25,400
. ttoo
~EW USTlNGI - STOP! Tha Hunra Overl
1YO Got IU - The ps~oct lot to build or put your
mobile home on. Fl_at lot containing 1.6 acras,
m/1, on Chany Ridge Road. Cily achooia
$1t,500, Call Camlyn for details.
· tl06.

·We Need Li·sting.s!!

WISEMAN. REAL ESTATE, IN.C.
'

Remember When

Dllply llllulll by YOII'
glrlllnd gntndldda.

Dave Was :rtalrty
Well Now
Good Golly Gordy
ROB IS FORTY

446-3644
DAVID WISEMAN, Bfi6KER- 446·9555
.. Loretta

.....

B.J. Halrsto•· 446·4~40
'htrlck c.-rll•446-1655
~·

.

ate Ex at Sacond Street

3~ ' Mobile Homes

·

LARGE LOT - LARGE
FOR
$24,9001 - 3-4 bedrooms wilh potential lor
more. C.l ole to gratia school in Vinton. Call
Carolyn lor mora detais,
1604.

BEAUTIFUL APAATMENTB AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON

-

SATURDAY,
JULY 10, 1993 -1.0:00 A.M.

IIICii-.

7511, 11WCl·1NI.

c;arpeted concrete ftoor. exrr• slorage bldg., 10 minutes
Pomeroy
~ ·

irtm. Slollle mower tor gravely,

ISAAC'S AUCnON SERVICE

.E ATE
AUCTION.

446~ 1066

bomo ms. w/US.
Excollalt Condlll"'!j 12 Ft. btl
delivery • .....,, •lttrve. 8ldoro
Storcnoft With 1noy lloter Equlpn\anl Co. 304.a76'.J1421.
&amp; Trollor;. 15 fl, Banltio ,
With
15
HP Evinrudo - · ..... uctlleN
portable Oopth Flndor l Toallor; ApjlfoL lop. 2 burner,
tor bam
30,000 -boll C.Onlo, 114-441- or campM', · aood condlUon.
IHB AllerS P.M.
.
Salao - 13511, will to'- $125
.,. 4411111.
2 Electric Fry- Hot Food
Table, Sneue GUird, Salad B1r,
Roalator Uahlod SJ9n, IIW82·

40a•l gu w•ter t.ater, tH.
Folding attlrwey, $30. 24" I 20"

vtnldii, tuea.

Location: t5 miles north of Pt. Pleasat, W. Va. and 15 mil"'!&lt;
south ol Ravenswood, W. Va. to the junction Rt. 2· &amp; 87
tum on Llale MIII ·Creek Road waiCh lor sale signs.
'
Antique• &amp; Collactlbl.. : Old hutch, Vanity wlwlnged.
mirror, white .chimney cupboard, WQOdon high chair;"
Duncan Phyla drop leal table, wate~ll bedroom suite,
,waterfa!l vanity &amp; chesi draW8t's, ladder back rocking chair,·
2 wicker bottom chair, oil lamps, metal toys, beer signs~
cast iron hor.l 8 I wagon, Quill tops, 5 gal. stone jar, 3 gal: ·
chum wMd &amp; dasher, crocks, flour sifter, many kltchilt\
·aonactlblas, Iron.skillets, bottles.
•
FurnitUre: Broyhill so,la, 2 Broyhill chairs, coffee cart, .
.several odd chairs, loveseat's, Queen water bed, drop leal· .
table, qlb bed floor model amllm cassette stereo, baby,
beds, baby walker, ligh chairs, several beds, night stand,
malble stand, maple hutch, cedar chest, microwave carta,. .
coffee &amp; end tables, cheat drawers, dr11ser base, hall tree. · ·
Glaoowore: Hel~oorn· chl,na, McCoy, Hull, llreklng, frosted.
glass, camlval, blue, Japan hems &amp; - ..
Ml~: Cookie jar, brass Items, linens, balls, Afghans,;
lamps, jewelry, jewelry box's, plctu~es, frames, electrolwr .
sweepers, stoneware,records, llreplace set, silverware ~
sewing machines, talephones, jogging mach., weight
banclt a. weights, meade high powered telescope, radloi
dish's, bra lor a camera, craft hems, many more hems to
numaroua to mention.
.
~
This Is a good clean sale, bring your lawn chair &amp; spend
the day wilh us. Lunch available.
:
-- '
Cash or ched&lt; wilh proper I.D.
"
••

Nat responsible for accidents or loss of proP,erty

:12 Locust StrMt, GallipoliS'

call 304-111-14110.

Slooplng with cooking.
tno~• · All hook-ups.
c..n after Z:Otl p.m., 304·713- 53
, Antiques
11811, Muon wv.
::::::-::-::=:-:::::':-:===~
Buy or ootl. Alverlno Antlquoo,
46 $pace for Rent
1124 E. Main Stroot, on At. 124,
Ponwoy. ' Noun: II.T.W. 10:00
Oftlce
epace.
downtown o.m. to 1:00 p.m., Sunctoy 1 :Oil
-~
to courtho,.o, to 1:00 p.m. Bt4otl2-21126.
-and noor, aboll 1100 oq. II.,

&lt;·

Public Sale

Wood ~afty, Inc.

ft-

1187 GMC Truck 4x4, Low Mlteo,

P'7l ,.... Couplo. lllllllad Tlcll-

!'!: 407·117- Exl. .... P.M.ThN Satunloy, I A.ll. To 10 ~

USTING·2 bedroom house, t batti, with 3
or lass, Pricad to selLCali today.

"

Happy 40th
Debbw Beegle!

-·

Anil BIRTHDAYS art but
GATEWAYS to ETER·
NALUFEABOVE
Where . "God'• children
llvt FOREVER In the
BEAUTY ol HIS LOVE

414 Second AMnue; P.O. Box

Woiloonoyor'o AuctiOI! s..tco, For Addftolnallntormallon, Con·
Rio Gnondl, Olllo 114-24fl.atll2.
tact Ronald Adkln•, Encutlve
Director, AI 614-446-3022. Ap.
9 · wanted to Buy
fr.;~ion Dlildllne:. July 14,
Comototo Hoo uhokl Or e.
tot•l IUty Typo 01 FumMuri, Thlo Board lo An Equal Oppor·
Applloncoo, Anllque'o, Etc. Aloo
tuntty,. Emplo~er.
Appralul Avllloblel 814-2411-

Bir1hc:lay, July 4.
BIRTHDAYS
come
BIRTHDAYS go and
with them come tho

And once again W•
proven lhltlltt restllll
brain cif man
Is powerltll to alter
GOD'$
GREAT
UNCHANGING PLAij.
But while our step grows
slower· and we · grow
more'Urtd, too,
Tht SOUL goes soaring
UPWARD ,to 111lma
untouchtd end new,
For growing older only
meana tht SPIRIT
grows..,.,.
And we, behold things
wHh OUR SOULS that
our eyes hiVI never

Llc-

....OIIIo I - · VIrginia, :J04.

BUNCH'S .

comeaaller~IGHT.

Public Sale

'.&amp;Auction

PubliC Notice

.._M r!!'lulrod, 114·H2·

Merchandllie

14

"R'al Estate Gene.r al

81 Inch Davonport z Cuohlon
L.ovo - · _Wing Back Chair,
Ex-It ~liOn, 814-44113711 Allor S P.M.

54 Miscellaneous

'

Apple lie computor. 2 .,._ I
prlnlor. Like now. SHI. et4-44f.
1115 dlyo. 441-1244 ..onlngo.

act./anlseclln this newspaper
ara avaJiable. on an Bquat
opportunity basis.
·

HOUSEHOLD AUCTION·
SATURDAY, JULY u», 1993r 10:00 a.m• .,
OWNER VERNON COGAR
:

mlec.

brought
And looking back acro11
tht years lt'a a joy to
reminisce,
For MEMORY OPENS
WIDE THE DOOR on 1
happy day like this,
And with 1 ·sweet
nostalgia we longingly
recall
Tht HAPPY DAYS OF
LONG AGO that 1111111
lht BEST OF ALL
But TIME cannot be
halted In lis swln and
endllll ftlght
And AGE II auro to
follow YOUTH 11 .DAY

C'~

~~==~==:----;;.

Pomeroy,
MiddlepOrt
&amp; VIcinity

'

Lost &amp; Found

lftllf' Splli or •.Unck

Corpoto, 111. 7 ". • It+
tx12 Can1ol MD, All
VInyl In itoek M.4tYd.

.

'

llh.o... CrWoo • Doya

Nlaht!t Undlrtl a akacf, IliuM ....

wNchls In violation Dl the
, law. Our readars are herwby .
• Informed that all dweMin"'

NOOmmonda
thll you do - and ··"
•-with
_..you..._,
NOT to Hiod money t"'-h til!!:·
mallomtii .YOU lttvo lnv:oollglled;•

1854.

El R TREE SERVICE. topping,
Trimming. Frao Eotlmottol Bf4·
:teJ'o79117'Aftor 4p.m.
Gonoral Milnto.lan.., POinting,
Yard Work Wl-o Waahea
Guttoro Cleanod Llgllt Hauling ,
Comnwlcal, RoolciOntlol, Stove:
814o441-1856.

boya and ildun c::lotl\lng, 10t1 o

Of all the happy
MEMORIES that the
passing .years have

lctierllsamenls tor real estale

thootwlng.
:
Co!)vlant &amp;ton, npld •""""" ..
eommuntty, ~ ...... exoeP
font proporly, Pooo. OWI)ar lin'
1nclna w/ 175,000 dawn, out ""
llandfnil ln_t_, 304 en. '

Trimming, Tree AMIOYI.I, Hedg•

4 family, ~"'.To:'· 2 mlleo from
Chaolar on
aroy Plko. Glrlol

2

cd.:

Nlca 2 b•droom
tor Mollohon
Nnl In Por.•r. • 1+MMIII. 441-'ll444

Merchandise

2 young eatt, 1 male and 1
tamale, liter trained, 114o448-

Public Notice

. t2, 13, totq

This nowilpapor wll not
knowingly accopt

· Gooels

From
EOH.

814ofl:,lo61177.

Frao IIUIIIIIoo, all ....,.lo, eM-

Fan? lleoun Sprood
Trtvil1 can Nowlll 1·90CJ.:zaa.ot22'
Ext. 3MB U .H Por Min. Mull
Be 18 Yeoro Old, Procsll 602·
631.0815.

tralnlntl: ERA Town I Co~ntry
Roo! · lllat!! Bnokor, Backle
Stain, 304-Gl0-5548.

OHIO YALL~~,Ci:.SHINQ

v

Al&gt;ert"*II:.Cin
'*!2.Coll

Household

· PICKENS FURNITURE
Ono bodroom llflclency apart• Hol••holctNowiUeed
112 mL
ment, furnlt:hed, ·third ftoor, no ~oho. Rd.ru~Wng.
Pt. P!Moant, WV,

lmH.Uon or discrimination.'

·~

VII' - 51

Rlvonlilo

P.M.B~:IL

IIX famlllaJ ltalus or nllkmlll
origin, or or\y tlt8ntlon to
make any such preference,

.•

II

and

Fum- · Smell
· . 127Sirno.
+ Uti!Hieo,
PortckiG.
No P04o. Coli Batora 7

bUed on race,,cok)r, religion,

Ftnanc1al

Ill""

Complatty

oll988 which mekas Kllogal
to adVarUse •any prole(Once,
lmHallon or &lt;lscrlmlnallon

- - ---"---........·:
Buslneaa
..
Opjxntunlty
Rill Eat1t1 ClrMr. Prore..lonal

~~~i!M-~ :C:::'ci.-=~

=::1&lt;
•=ment

,_ opo-

c-

1112·1000; .

Spo~o

tho Fldaral Folr HouqACS

and 112

Parkway, Suite.245
P. 0. Box 23407
Louisville, Ky. 40223
502-426-066t
JUNE 27; ~ULY 4, t993

PUBUC NOTICE
The &amp;o.rd of Truat- of
Orange T-riohlp will hold a
public hearing .July 14 at
7:00 p.m. at tha home of tho
clerk, Patricia Calaway, for
the Budget of Orongo
Townahlp for '1993.
Patricia Canoy, Clerk
46686 Guthrie Road
.Coolville, Ohio 45723
614-a&amp;S-3860

a-., fl4.448.1111
'

~!Ia, t montho ~Ia and

814 448 430e,

Corporation

Sc-

"My f1ad doesn 't spank me anymore," the pr.eteen bragged to h is
buddy, "he just gives me a lecture."
"What . does hflt.....say?" h is buddy
asked. "I ,.do~w," ..,e teen
e hrugs. "I DON'T LISTEN."

Grsclouo, living. 1 and 2 bed·

t.~~~h'=

All raal oslalo o&lt;t&lt;ertlsilg In
111111 ne.wopaperls .-blocs to

MEDICAL BILUNO

Unlotar Company 102-G31.oB15.
MISTRESS MADONNA UYE 1·
900-7411-1115 u.mtn. 1-.ufl. Freo Klttono To 1 Good Homo: 2
Whit• Onn, 1 Bluloh Gray, 1·
7890-MC.YISA 18+.
Black Ono, 1 Yollow and wtifto

305 North Hurstbourne

41 ,Houaes for Rent •

Giveaway

2692 e.t .. 1004 $3.HIMin. Mull
Ba 18 Yn. Procall Compo~y.

A1eociate1 Commercial

PUBUC NOTICE
A budget heorlng will ba
held ~uly t3, t993, for oil
lnterealod citlzona In
Cheater Townahlp. Budget
propoood will be lor tho
flacal year of 1984. The
meeting will beoolleld at the
Chooter Town Hall and will
Public Notice
begin at9:00 A.M.
The regular meeting will
follow.
PUBLIC NOTICE
Karen R. Smllh,
Tho Village of Cheohlre
Chao tor Twp. Clerk
will hold Ito Annual Budget
Hearing on Tuoadoy, July 6, (1) •• ttc
t993', ·at 7:30 P.M. In the
Village Office located it 8
Main SL AU r.. . idonto of the
Announcements
village are welcome to
attand.
Jennifer L Harrlton 3 Announcem.e nts
Clerk!Treaourer
CALL YOUR DATE NOW! 1·fl00.
~UNE 24; ~ULY 4, t983
288.0320 oxt. 1110, $2.99 por
min ., mUst be 18 y111. ~d.
1 Card ot Thanks
PROCALL 602.e31-0615.
EXOTIC LADIES LIVE 1.S0o.BBS7B90 $3.!10-mln. MC.VISA 1·fl00.
7'111-1115 $2..,1n. 18+.
Thanks to all my
friends who sent me
cards during mY stay 1 Car\f ot Thanks
at Holzer Hospital
Allen Ball
The tam lly of
DANNY BERRY
•
would like to extend
o11r
heart
felt
We would like to
appreciation to all of
thank our family
the kind and generouo
rlends, neighbors,
people who ware there
during our recent 1011.
and many church
Thank you to the EMS
prayer 1111es whose
technicians, the staff of
continuous prayefs,
the Holzer Hospital
calls, and cards
Emergency
Room,
were given to us
Revs. Elmer Geloer and
Dale Geiser for their
nd to the surgical
spiritual " guidance,
team
In
Te~
Evaleah Curry and
during the recent
Kar.en Jackton for their
surgery 'or our son,
beautiful I '
and
lntplraUonal aonge, Plit
Bill. We were all
DICiementa, Pat Pope,
raying to God to
Mike
Pope,
Curl•
healing power, and
Gilbert, Terry May and
oday
we
are
Bob Kormanlk for their
HI'Yica
11 pall beerare,
raising Him for
all of the thoughtful
Bill's continuous
people
who
sent
progress. Bill Is no
flowers 1/ld fo.od, and
• doing well and
spacial thenks to all of
our
friends who paid
recovering at home.
their
teepocte and g~~ve
Again our sincere
their love end IUpport
nks to all.
during
lhle
moat
The Hysell Famll
difficult end trying Uma.
. jnformalltias or lrragu.
larilleo In the propooelo
received.
.
MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL
DISTRICT
~ane Fry, Treaourer
(6)29; (1)4, t1 , t8,4tc

GIHod Phyolca Sonoatlonal
Rnulta C..ll 1..00.218-0328 Elll.

-

Aller4 P.M.

tnal'riCodToWI

3 Announcements

Rcn1Jis

.

A -, ~uty llh &amp; 8th. N P.ll .
Clothoa, Kno.._.,., T-, Uka Tci luy: C..blnot Out 01 ~
BiCYclo. Uti!IY T.-. Evorylbo Condo Home ·Or Homo hlng

3 Announcements

Fumlihod ~ . 1111 nut
IG Ul1rlrJ, porfllnl. _ , - ·
• • ,...,.. en 114 441.0331.
-7p.m.
F - EfllclencY $115
Ulllllloo
107
- . ! . -~
814......
141 1411
A"-r7PJI.

6

1111o4101.

•n,.....,

SCRAM·LETS
· ENSIGN
MALICE
PRETTY
YONDER
AMOUNT
HIDDEN
DONTUSTEN

EMTo,

prol-lonol In·
dlvldual, ploaoa- coli 304-5712788 tor lflpolrMmon1.
Exoy Work! Exoollent 'Poyl Aa·
oornblo Procluctt At H&lt;!mo. .Coli
Toll Frao, 1.SOOo4117o55BI, Elll.

54 Mlacellent10U8
-...rchandl•

ANSWIItS TO

drtvws nMded fot new 1 m ~
bulance -.rv~. If you are a

~-:111-

Tom DoWn, 114-448-4832.
July 51~ 1 1111 1 71~. I AJI, •1 Slot• ~ Gordon Tractor, 18 HP Or
lloUto M1, • - l Tnoller ~~.Kind Good Sllopa,
Bllldo 01 Jumbo. Couch And
Choir, Sewing 1111Chln:!1 _Bunk Top Prien Plld: 'All Old U.S.
led•, No
C~G~hl,., ~. Qold AI.-. SMvor C..lno,
PI,. 81- Tool Lalo Of Ot!W Qold Colna. M.T.S. ~n Shop,
Sluff.
111 Socond Avonue, Golllpotlo.
JulY t1111 1-4. tiCIZ Yo,_ Rood" WorMod to buy: -d mobile
Clllldran1o Clothoo &amp; Toyo, • - 1 1 4 441 0179
Clllld'o lluo Dovtl Jacklla
Chlld't Scoatw, Weed Eettr,
lltoc. Houooh!lld ft-, Rain Employment Services
Dolo July 71h.

Prof..tlollll

23

oornpany.1-.no1351.

ilpotlo, ~ 45631.

Quill.

o~olnt Pleasant, wv

4,1993

·A-' ALL ARIAS! lhlr• WOUO'
tkno with uo. You'll tho

Exporlancod
Auto
B&lt;&gt;dy
ROI'IIrman Sand Reoumo To:
CLA m c/o Golllpotlo DollY
T~buno, 821 Third Avenuo, Gof·

And '101h, 10-4; """"""·
Ctothoa, Tnonpoc, Cor, crafto,

''

Servlc:u

31S.

!!a.d~ llh

'

..

to De

t8

Help Want8CI

11

•

SOIIJ

Gltlll-446•2707

,DaanoMS·
\

.
•

�•

•

..,
.-

•

•

.•

71 Autos for Sale

-·-···,.·--·

.

a.ntra,
-·ootto, · · · - ·

.ay.
uooo 080, ·~·-· .

'tO IUlclo-Skylirk, M.- mltoo,
PI, PI, AC,- 1rnlfm 111•0. new

tnohJ;,;•
"'2-

mufftor, fl200, 114-

1814 lm.... 1-S .Camr., :127

=~ V4 oondMion, oold"t

•· -·- . 1 - p m.
18111 a-olio !100, 4dr., layl.,
ltd., MCOnd owner, ukfng

DPAir-.IIOidbaoldng

.... .,. . ..

tn'O 114-1411. . .
,., . . . 2.1N#d ..._..,.

tiiOO, IM-7143, 10o. . . ..
18111 llllpolli lupar IIpari, :127

,_a
Plooe U.lntl..... li4-44t.cnDI.

_
_.... ...

_
_.....,.____
Nulrldon Pra d·ecte
Amino . lodr

Alii Phan!Ntcy.

elo

Tho .... ..,

.

F,nm Supp la cs
&amp; L1vcstock

I' ll'b' C.rvw wl IIIIa ltVIIII.

t

-ng .,.

61 Fann Equipment

3M-etWII4.

1-

8 N Ford Tractor l
""'!_1.!11 Rau, Buoh Hoa, Bledo,
$2,nu; Oll¥or 1l1511 WMfi Lcedo&lt;

$1,150; 2020 John
11,110; 114-:lll-tl22.

DMrt,

Holl 3 lon -'-air con. Hoy wllll rap, 3 point hRch,
-r, big bale, ~lc wrapper,
dltlaMr $1,2H.Inolalfid.
21/21on air oond. 11111.00 lnoto~ aokfnt $1300 080, Gal"'f
Mlcholl, 114-81111-30111.
•
led. I~-

--

-.. ,_...:.":,...........
.........
-

- n d Ill bayler, good

~­
PIIIIWI wood 1ft .,_,.., ...
chino, good oorid. 304-llii'IIH.

-

1m ....., c.aa, Good Condtloll,
f1.800 0.1.0., ttllll Braclty ar,

11111 Th.......,.rd, AMIFM, a"ood
tlrw 1nd battery, rune o.k. t315.
114 ... 0014.

1111 Plymoulh Horlaon

P•~•.

Tranamlulon From Dodao Plcf&lt;.
IJD: Ifill lnlomotlonar Truck .
1.00 Long BIN, IM·:IM-

1018.
1111 Pontloc T;IOOO 4 Sotecl-1...4
Door, 4 cyllfldor, $500, 614·1,...
21&amp;11.

•.-n.

-Cot-·

•

.

11112 Trone Am, 'U 4aD., 78,000
mUM, 1-tDpl, ll'nffnVCIIMIII ..
bloc~ wMh gold trim, t2300, 1141112·2357.

ane msrkel, 3 bedroom, 1 balh, porch, 2 enr ~ago .
~modular 24164. Rural Waf.,. 2.4 oc. oM. "Mike

huge IOIJ!IIy-room, wnlreplaea, bedroom, oxoreloo
area, 11\ln&lt;IIY IOOI!l and -.ge room. Thll homo 1o o1 •
oupert&gt; qualty u 1110 pltlrmlng ond eleotrtclil wiring
hla boon ""'laeed. AN now wall covo~ng. beauiKul
new Cllrptt throughout, new· wtn&amp;wa lnslalled.
Spac:lousldl- wllh clleny Cllbli1els. lslard lor JannAir Ranga. Only a pl1vllo lhowlilg Wll clodde lho vaf.
Ut Is here. Cal 'VIrginia L SmMh 446-6806 or 388.

~~r.

ldlchen, lg. LA, 2'1• baths, 1 ac~ mil. triunedlate
possession. $4UOO.

1117. SPACE FDR REAL LMNG - lmmaouhdo ~
bedroom hml, new carpet, ~nt . new kllehen whh
oak cabl'"'la, diahwasher, range and rei., attached

8826.

out bulldlnq. BoautHullendS&lt;IIflO. Roady lo
move ln. $65,000.
~ago,

-

1118. COMMERCIAL, CITY WATER, SEWER a
GAS - 1ali. m'l,"bulfclr"G w/2 batha, - . , rm., hu holst ond eorrptotor. OWnarwaJta offer.
1885. OLD FASHION C11AR11 - In town locallon lor
'Mr. Fix n·. Largo 2 olory homo, 3 bodroomo, LR,

formal dining room; klchen, bllh. Allachod

.

~age

•··

3711-G1f.

En· ~114-fM-"1142.

Building
· Supplleil

wlh _ ,
lormol !vlng """" ·wlh llnlplact, .
lormol dining room, mony 1no 1111 o1 1110
o.ara Iorge BrallldUI 100111 ond powder room.
Second floor oHera four bedrooms and bath.
Bedroom&amp; ... a...g ..... ....,;.. ... haidwoQd .......
balh llaallll now llxtureo and Love Tub. IIMernohl hu

Hi1. MAKE A DEAL - OWnar wonla acllon. Juot on

snCt corner lot. Waf~ to iochoot lndllllopfmg.

............. .... ""'""·

lltdt • 4 "'· -

55

·-y.

ELEGANT ALL BRICK BEAUTY -TWo Slory home,
WI baoemoJt and gon~ge hoi a """' deal lo offer.
. Daslgned 191' g!MI lYing. Fn 1100&lt; 11aa lormalll'llry

front and back parch. Ful buemenr, anileiMd
~1~: 1 te. mn. RI'OUCED $$2.~00. MAKE

. . - aato. oomon tar*: 114-

to buy: , _ traciOr, prolor
¥40 Dlch Witch - W i t h "'""
4 ditn or ..,..1 dozor.

-

tlali. .LOCATED IN CITY OF GALLIPOLIS -

1834. BI·LEVEL HOME - 3 bedrooms, oat·ln

Burgo 4 mlllll"t .,.....,
-..Plot•
with tonu; oa.o ano

-.nu ...m.. machine, aM-

owage, attic atoraa-, 2 acrea n'\11. Thla houle Ia

1832. FAMILY HOME WITH ELBOW IIOOM TO
I.P·R-E·A-D O.U.T. -4 bedrooms, both, kit., OR,
LA, lam. rm., 111 floor bednn. and 3 up. Eneloatd

11111 Zdr., Cldlllec Eldorodo,
very low " ' ' ' - · c1- to
Vtua,..... 181 Src- II ..
llldil1part.
.

EUNICE HIEHM, REALTOR.................. 446-1887
F.IOTH BARR, REALTOR......................,44&amp;,on2
DEBORAH $CITES, REALTOR ........•.•• 446-68D6
LYNDA FRALEY, RI!~T!)R,................ 4~6-6806
MICHAEL MILLER. REALTOR .....-..•.•...446-UO&amp;
PATRICIAROSS, REALTOR .........•...... .245-V575
STEVEN- SGT. SWORDS. REALTOR....24S-S100
WILMA WILLIAMSON, REALTOR. ....•••24H070
JAMES W1LLIAIIISON, REALTOR.......245-907D

bolcoey, 3 BR; 2 112 bolha. living room wllh
. woadburrilng fireplace, equip. kitchen, brelldul
100111 hU alg. wlrdoW al8reolpNicorolhroughout,
..... IIW!t fixiUrn and rnuc:h mono. 2 .,. attached

~75-

SIJCIOo.•.o.• - -·

63

LivestOCk

·--oflll.._
..., ......lon. ...... Seilol,
D.AJ. 1111114--N.

:

w~

-

2

-owner

oppolnlmolt.

•

.
1181. BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM HOME with lull

Doo&lt; BliCk, Lceded, Enotilont
CDnilnloll, Aoklna: $4,-m, 114-

"

441-t223, After S P.M.

baaomont and carport. Juot rocontly rernodOIId. On
Oak DIM. ConveniRiy localod lo ohopplng aree and
hoopllol. Cal to&lt;faY 245-9070 IO 1M llq one. Won1

fail long .. """ price.
.
1710. lEW LISTING - 2 or 3 boclroorri ranch homo
wlh family room loealed In lown. Pr1cod to oall. CAll
for localloll and price.

11113. BRICK RANCH - Sftualod on I oe. nV1 Upper
Rl. 7, cloea to Shopping Conlor. Thlt liome laaluroo 3
bodrOomo. 2 llill bllhl, kltc!lOfl and dining oroa, 2
bedroonw, ul)lty room, fomly room, kltchan In bastmonl. 3 car g.age and 1 8 car dtlachod ~ago . Call
for more lnfomudlon.

.
OFFICE m-2886

1181 Pont. Orand Prix Qqod

Condition,

Lcedod,

se,ooo. 114-441-2350.

Aoldng:

·

IIOi. IF A HOME OF HIGH STYLE AND LOW

1872. STATE ROUTE 160 $15.000.00. CHsrolala Hills..
1866. 78 ACRES MIL wn~ 1a!Q0 barn. SCottown, I

OH.

beautiful arched wlndowa. First floor laundry,
bsoemenl, onclosoltporch and 20111 onaehtd garage .
,lljlpolnl.,....• .

1861. NEW· li ~TING - 3 boci'oom mobile nOme with
1.5 acres ol ·la:nd located on MI . Tabor Rd. Wanllo
know more. contact lhe SARGE.

MAINTENANCE lain your fulure, eonalclor lhls 4 bodroom cape COCI tlflck 1'1orne. Home Ia sluated on 2');- ..
acrao and hU 1900 sq. n. of Uvlng spaca, 36x48
metal building, ond 14x24 building uaed lor a· small
buslnaaa.

1821. PRICED TO SELL. TIU l"ool"nl hiS1,000 sq. h.
of ltilng
3 bodrooml,ll!llll -ulklng and Ill·

op-.
411ed on .,, acre

rM. Prtced $20'1.

1813. NEW LISTING - 3 bedroom, 2 bath raneh
holM located on 'It ac. mJ1 In Addison Township.
corpon, Elec. heal pump end eont. air. River VaJoy
Sehooll. Priced, 640"s."

·.

ho.. loealed on MI. Tllbor Rd. and comes with t .S

acres, Including

~.000.00.

1 pond. Very nice location.
Cal tho SARGE.

f&gt;.•

I

· words below 10 make 6
simple words. ' Print lellen of
eoc~ in its line of squares.

I

~----------,

114-112•7143. tOam.epm.

"" Ford Ranger, XLT. Supor·
:::~~ ...o., AI:, t o -.

GES I NN

.....

\

......,I-...,I-:-'-T.I2~..,.1-.,I --~

"-'_..__-....1.'--'..L._..__-....1·'--'-'·

ChtVrofol,
Fonl, lloclp- pickup
bode- Sllorl or long. No ruot .

-

· ', 11---rC_L-r:-A"TI_M,....E"T"'-11

wo·s

l~~n:~;:: =:·J'.i:r.

.':~::::::::::~~==~~~:::
I I: I I I~

tell SUDIId
Samaria,
4&lt;4,lhrow
now
choleh,
-ur•
plato,
out
bHrlnga,
lnclud•
aluminium dlttdlonal ~mo and ·
bl~lnl top, uldng 13200. 304175-1111.

,.

tlon,·1100, 114-3i'l'-0238.

1.

T RE Y p T

I I

15 16

I

I
~.

• ~

overlooking dam. NIW roof, new sldlffll, well·
.

Motorcycles

..
'
...

tell Honda 800 Cullom, mony
tJiral, IJCC cond, 304-'T'r.t54Z4
anor 5:00 PM.
,

t~e ~huckle quoted
in the missing words
No. 3 below.

19M Kaw-kl 454 LlD, bolt
drive, 3100 mllea. like new, 114·

it2-77SI. \

Honda CR125R SIQO, 114-:JN.

me.

111123. MRS. CLEAN LIVES HERE- 3 BR home Wllh
amllll acreage. Closoln. LR. eat·ln kltehon, IQ. FA,.
bath, 1 c. r~~rage on 5 acres mil This home ls just
rtgtt lor a young famty or a retired coupte alSo. Make
on llflll(.lo see. Cal Eunice Nlehm today 446·1897.

1178. SMALL FARM CLOSE IN - Neal, dean and

cozy II what lhll 2~3 BR home Is Whh .LA, OR,
kllchen, bath, 1 car garage, one outbulkflng, fuel ol
lumac:o, CIA and now roof. ~8x32" born lor an_,als,

..
.,

..
...
.
' ..
' .
' ..
"

'

.

1810. FOR NEWLYWEDS OR RETIREES - Low
mllnlenance 2·3 boclroom.ranch homo wlh LR, OBI·In
klehen, balh, gu tumaca, range and 30'&gt;1 5' oulbuldlng !"' ~.88 ocras m'l. COM lot appolnlmalt to - 1111s
neat sa a pin borgaln ola homo today. $28,909.

446 4033

'II '(JmohiiOOI'X Radian, 5500

Wlllllre lhll2 BR balh Kajon MH With oaf-In klchon
goa heal, LR. on 1·2 ocroo mil. BONUS : Older m1ki
homa I n -- 420,000.
.

..

.

ED

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
tl' hiiY!f aluminum ...t-V bol·
tom bolt, 2 .wfvel INti, llhD

-a

Johnl0f1 motor, trolling motor, 2
Hla tack~, · gooo llnll, trolltrl
$1DOil. 11 ll~&gt;trglan lrl•hul
bolt, 2 awlvtt
30hp
Johnoon motor,._ 2 lito "lackllo1
gaa
tro-. tlzliO. 10
iluinlrlum lohn boat, ~
aomo -lrl, Uhp Saoro
motor, ruM aood, 2 llf• Jaobta,
$200: 304.e"75-3SIO or leave

'*'*·

--

Established pizza business
and laundry lo9ated on old St.
Rt. 35. Owner anxious to sell.
Call ~uth for more Qetails.

Very n1c:e neal Clean, 3 BR rionch homo
wlh LR, DR, oal·ln kitchen, balh, nsw roof. Plonly ot
room lor garden.
·

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1817. BIDWELL- Smal2 bodrm. homo on SR 554 .
66K1661ol &amp; oufbuielfngs. $15,000.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

lnbollrd/~rd
- - I·
wlntOr
..-, buln"In'AIIIFM
tapa dtck, aual wMol lraller I
apart,
conoptoiiiY . rocondklontd,
aood aflirp - ·•
$49410. C.allll04.e711441111.

lllorcU'l

'•

1161. NEW LISTING ....LOOKING FOR A HOME,
SMALL BUSINESS AND SOME ACReAGE? II so.

•
.'

By
OUt-, FuM
Une Ptrte kc 1 niH, 1tt3
Voyager Jon Boolt On Bolo JS
Marino Btrvlct 3021 SfRoad, l~a..IIIO.

Four Pontoon

-o:

e

[i MLS
-·--

I'

®

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.

510 SECOND AVENUE, GALLIPOLIS, OH

. Russell D. Wood, Br~ker ... .•• 446·4618
Phyllla Mlller •..•.•••. ...•.••••. •.•.•.• 256·1136
J. Merrill Car1er ...................... 3711-2184 ·
.Tammie Dewit1 •••• :.•..•.•••••.••••••44"1·1514
Judy De.witt •...••• .. ..•.••••• ....••••.. 44Hl262 '
Martha Smith ..•••••..•.•..••....••••• 379-265t
Cathy Wray ••••••, ..................... 446-4255
Cindy Drongowakl ................ 245:9697

lhrM 7 ft.

&lt;II"ln.; 0nt I Ft. xllln. 114-258-

....

6051.

Auto Parts &amp;

76

tun buement, famly 100m with fireplace, appro1c.

1100 sq. ft. ol ltilng spaoa. 2 car block gerago, 30x16
llled. 2 bedroOm, 1 bllh ~ with smal outbuldng.

ACcessories

2 homes lor thl price of one. Located on 3-4 acres n
A&lt;Hson Twp. County scfloolo. Pr1cod In lho $70's.

4 B.F.

Good~eh

:IIIII/lOR 15"

"'" pn .... lug ................ lor

, ..... $2711.114'31'1·7113.

•

1ft. truck topper, Ilk• nr,N. 304IIN541.

Budaol TranarniMionll, Uotcl I
rebulli, all typu.lla~ing Ill $81;
ownaf 114-245-11177. ~14-:JN.
2213.

Nj:W LISTIIG! MOBILE
I lOT
$24,500.00. IMIEDIATE POSSESSION. 14' X
1r:J Shultz (Lim. Ed.) contlaling of 2 bedrooms,
balll, living room, applianoeo inclucing wasl)lor
&amp; dryer, control air concilioning. Storage
building. Nica deck on lront of mobile horM.

372·1133 or 1

OHI COME ON, AND
AN OFFERI
Asking pri.,. $8,700.00. Home locatad at 84
Mill Craok, living 10om, bath, ba111mant
carport, kitchen &amp; cining area.
'
possession!

IN

LOCATION·

AVE.• 2

Sto~ homo with ~n oxtro nl.,. kitchen fiiUy

equapped wllh apploancaa, 3 badroomo, ~ving
IDOrll, 2 baths, famtly room, carpon. PLUS an
add1tionll 1 bedroom apal1rrNinl. Really niee.

1565

Now gao tanko, one ton truck
w-.
roclatore Door matt,
ttc. Oi. AA~{ofty, WY. 304:m:t:IZI.

~

·"

Molar Homes

1m Star Creft pop up camapor,
18 II, $5011. --2812 olttr

5:ooPM.

1G83·Starcraft C.ampar, oleopt I .
6J4.311t.N03
11ft. Holtcloy Rambler ....,por,
... . - . ...... Good condnloll.
$1200. 114 4. 3411

' MIDDLEPORT· POwtR St ·Acreage-Setting on' the edge
of lown 00111d be .,. spot you•,. looking tor. City water
and sowago available. One acna for $6,0do, 1 3/4 acres
for $11,000 or both for $14,000

21 ft. p - 1171 ,_,, air
$2500 010. 114-441-1713 anor 7

p.m.
llratNam 31' r81r ban twin.
Factory roturblahed In 1988.

Garago kepi atklng 11500." 114441-2987.
Wino 1biQO

~ .~

~

MIDDLEPORT· S y r - St · A 1 112 story home ailting
on 2 lots. Could be uoad aa 2 ,.ntalo or aa a 9 room
"hoUH. Apj)tox. 1,500 sq. ft., 2 betht, and partial
basement
ASKING $28,000

'.r

''

......

~

I• ~

.. '

CIHI

"A"

rT

Chltftaln ,... P-30 Chav f!l4
CID 38,000 PI• Mltto S!&gt;IH
Bath, FuU Bad'- Slttpo t, D\lal
Air. SteNo

,.ront

I

RMr,
Conviction OYon

Mlc,..vo I.
Solid Ook Wood, 4· K.W. Oon.,
Air sa-ka, Btorrlng Stablllzor,
- n..e, • - Balttrlto, Thlo
And More Roady To Go f24,500,
114-:1¥:1738-

...
'
·~

Serv aces

Home
mprov1111ents

81

IIABEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unoondltlonol Hflllmt guaran;

Local retwana• furnished.
Col ,_217-l1871 Or 114-2370481 R._ Wit-""'" En-

5
Is
aaning for this
WANT TO BE YOUR OWN BOSS? WITHOUT annactive home. Approx. B years old with 3
ALL THE I!IG BUSINESS WORRIES? Call badiooma, living room, dining fO&lt;lm. kitchen, 2
today for an appointment to aae this baths, laundry room. Stoawga"building + mobilo
, 1554
commercial block building. Perfect for a oman homa hookup. Priced upper $30's.
grocery. Eam extra income from rantl 2
bedroom apallman~ mobile home hookup,
OWNER SAYS THIS IS SERIOUS BUSINESS,
upstaira of building·
be finlahed
WANTS HER FARM SOLDIII (NEW PRICE) ..
S143,000.0G. One of Gallla County's bettor
Ianna. Approx. 115 acaws, bam, silo, unloador,
elevator, mod. leading syotem . Super 4
bedroom remodeled 2 atory home with nioe
family room. Over 13,000 lb. tobaoco allotment
MAKE HER AN OFFER!
1546

BRIICK &amp; 25+ AC.Homa consisto
of 3 BR, FA, 1 1/2 "bath, ,LA. kll. 20 X 40
in ground pool wlballl houM, 1o X 20 brick
shed. Energy officiant heat pump. 1 car
anached garage plus additional 24 X 48
garago. Cal tqday lor an appointment. 1513
OWNERS WANTING TO RELOCATE
YESTERDAY! REDUCED PRICE! WANTS
SOLj)l "Spacious family room haightans tho
pleasure of lllis tastafully doco?.;tod lri·level, 4
bedrooms, 2 IIIII baths, 2 112 balhs, equipped
i
wilh recently replaced range &amp;

~;:~~~~£~l~.,.r:·~

car gara:ga,
.aHached
Sloraga 2building,
plus
araal
1520
NEATI TIDYI l SPARKLING! Cozy 3
bedroom ranch home, bath, living room, -eat·
in kitchen, bath, lull ~asement with second
bath, unfini&amp;hed. 1 car carport. Immediate
possession!
1531

OWNER SAYS MAKE ·AN OFFER!
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Just waiting for
you. 3 bedroom RJMh olyla homa, living IDOm,
family room, 1 car'garage With auto. opener
and mo... Excetlantlocationl
1488
247 EVERGREEN ROADI IMMEDIATE
POSSESSlONI· Start packlng today. This 3
bedroom homa with balh, kitch!n, living room
needs a family! Owner haa replaced roor
!lima.,., watar heater and mo,. within the pest
couple ot years. Gome and 188. Priced $20'1.
1$15

VACANT ACREAGE! Ovar 12 acres Cheshire
Twp. Good homa si!e.
·1542
Raccoon Township."...•.......................t ui Acr•
Rapcoon Township ............................. 50 AcrM
Harrison Township ..... ........ :............ ..•.81 Acr•
Ohio Town&amp;hip ............................ .....•133 Acroo
Hunlinglon Township .......................... 16 Acr•
tWEST.VACO

. Di~{()\ lT

IM.

: : "'

tabl)thtd 1m.

· m you can have two
one,
the other.
Each side haa air conditioning and ,.stroomo. GlUt
placa tor a buoinosallld haa partcing, 1o0 ONLY $29,000

.'ilK· Hl\\tT

4 YEARS YOUNGI Brick and frame (vinyl
sided) ranch style home. Consisting of 3 bad·
rooms 2 bellls, lots ot cabinet space in kitchen
&amp; fulfo/ equipped willl appliance• &amp; washer &amp;
dryer. Dining room living room. Attached 2 _car
garage with automatie openaro, pavlld dnva·
way. Niee 1OO'x300' lot. Lew utilities.
1548

or 1

RANCH HOME with eolhedrol ceiling in family
room with patio doora that laad to deck 3
bedrooms, living room, 2 baths, laundry nice
""!&gt;inetsln kitchen.
ltsss
90 CLAY ST.· Ni.,. oldar 2 otory home wnots ot
character. Lg . LA, 4 BR, 1 112 bath, DR, klt.,
laundry rm. in baoamant. Lot 115x127 plua
smaller lol
1517

--.

WILLS HILL RD.· A large mo6Jiar, willl an addition on
llle 188r. Has.9 RX'Ima, 4 bedrooms, and 2 belhs. Haa a
heal pump, 2 acr~~s of nice laying land, and an older
gorago. Haa a spectacular view of lilt goK cour•.
$49,000
STATE ROUTE 124- App111x. 8 mills !rom llle
Ravons-.1 Bridge· A 3 bedioom Nlllc home ihit it
block witli · llerr log elclng. Hu new the~
windowa, cute a-abo, I~ garilbNI ftlllf, olof1111e
buiklng, nice front ponoh wllh a vitw ol ... river. Sitting
on epp!OX. 2 .:..• hat part a.-~ and comea willl a
country c11atm &lt;*I Iron eleclric atova. $65,000
POMEROY PIKE·Appii&gt;X. 1 mile froin Stall Roote 7· A2
.:,. llof'ne or ~ .home aile tMth Wllter 111d tl.clric
avlilabla. A llfNI foQalfon and a great builclng IIW.
'
ASKING $8.000

Real

. m~.

LIVING - Come In look at IIIIo
nico homa. Equipped klk:h111, FR, LR,
fumace, cent. air; FP, patio,

worf&lt;alic•o.
NICE HOME LOCATED JUST AT

.:..-::~·...:.::.:·.=OF TOWN- 3 BRa, 1'/o ballla,

I, kllfcht,n,, gu Ilea~ lreplaco, 12X12 patio.
may be juol what you want
,...,;,.,·rn&lt;oR - Raccoon Road - 40 A. mil,
Wooded. $150 per month· I~ 11om
homepads.
·

A. In Raccoon Twp.
approx.
5
Huntinglon Twp., hqme on property
BRa, bath, LR, kitchen, new hJmaca, wood
llir. Newly redone front llwn.
buming stove, aicing, some naw ca~pat Bam
OLD CHEYY.OLDI BUILDING - ~20' front on property.
.,
onSecondAV8. 1nd62'honlegeonGrapa.
NEEO A NEW OFFICE + a rilnlal
apartment? 250 Sac. Ave. Nice office
3&amp;60 A"CAEI WI.. n - "IYCOO!I Lake, 28.5 downalalra 1111d apartment and atb1age up
·
70 ACREIII/L- Sect. 12, Madloon Twp. A. In Raccoon Twp. and approx. tOA. In Convenient Ill banka and shopping.
IPPIIIX. 20 ao,.. llabla, 50 iiOodl, old ~ .HunlirlOIDn Twp., home on property ollaaw s
on property hu 3 BRa, lR, fdlchan. Cellar BRa, balh, lR, kllchen, new lumttOa, -.1 LOT FOR SALE ON IT. RT. 110, NORTH
houM and theda alao on property.
bumlng llove, aklng, eoma new carpet Bim GAl IIA ESTATES ·- Approx. '/, ac:ra m•
on Pfllparty.
Beautiful tpo1 tor a home.
' "·
JOHNSON RIDGE ROAD :_
'
TWP. - 38e acre farm, 3 ponda, ·tobacco FOR SALE- COAL TIPPLE willl an loading COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.4 mA, 248
baaa, 55X!OO bam, with conc..lllooaw. May . lacilltin 1,687 ft. riverfront. CaH for more frontage all)flg Sfl 7 just acrose from 'Ohio
consider apl1t (578),
dalolla.
River Plaza. .
· ·
·

AoasoN ·

NICE FLAT LOT - 'I• acna mn Willi 1888
CHI:RRiY DRIVE - 2 BRa, 1 bath, LA, mobile home in vary good condition. Pllced In
kl!~:~.'r~,~h~ea~t,(888)
city water, uoad aa rental llta 20'o. Cal Ruth for dolltlla.
p
'
$1,500. VACANT LOT· On Kllckar Rolld.
Twp.
MPio on ti.

a....

78 ACRES MIL, Up Creek Roocl Morgan
CARIEf ROAD - 4 mi. N. of Rio Grande. T~., 3 BR homa with bath, LA and ~Iehan 4
Approx. 24 ac.. a of aurvayad vacant land. buildinga on property.
'
lda"al farnaw llollll. $19,000.
COIIIIERCIAL PROPERTY - 2.~ mil, 248
along SR 7 just acrou from Ohio.

4 BEDROOM, 2V.
bath, central air and
... '. ·,

4 car garage on 5
lovel
acras. Also

.,

LARGE 2 BR Apt.
and Effie. Apt. and

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•.

'•'

.

•
•

.

..
' '
'l

. .

"'

Bmple storagB or
soother large . apt.
See it and yo,u Y!ill
want it.

'

John White
Realty '

'

(614) 593-3333

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'&gt;

•

I

General
-~··'

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•"

RIVER FRONT LOTS app,ayx,.J aero starting at $10,000
great camping locations ju Si south of the Ravenswood
bridge.
MIDDLEPORT- 2 story flame home with 2 bedrooma,
bath, nawer roof and heating atova. ASKING $8,000
Owner will accept reasonable oWe~
SR 325 Peacful country living- 92+ acms with mobllo
home lllat has additions, fireplace, cellar, bam, garage,
hayland, pastum &amp;,.woods, REDUCED TO $70,500

..

OAK HILL RD. naar Chester- approx. 76.33 acnas willl
3 bedroom farm home, ponds~ shed" silo, bam, was once
a dairy farm (could be onca again). TPC watar and weN.
ASKING $98,000
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 2nd St. in Pomeroy- large
size commercial room downstairs 2 apartments upstairs.
Graal investment property: ASKING $20,000
MIDDLEPORT· 1 floor frame homa with newer f111nt
pon::h, drywall and carpeted inlida, ~ bedrooms, balll ,'
·soma newer wiring and ~lumbing on tWo lots along main.
roa6, ASKING $18,000 maka an offa~
WOLFE PEN RD. - 35+ acras wilh 1975 2 bedroom
mobile homa, appliances, front pon::h , bam ," shed; some
lancing. ASKING $35,900 maka an offa~
CHESHIRE· Roush Lana excellent rental opportunity
ona-2badroom· mobita home plus an alllcianco apt pluo
additional hook-up on app111x. one acre. ASKING
$24,900

.

,.

SR 124/"ust before entering Rutland- large 2 story frame
home pus smaller one story lral)le home, 2 septics,
sheds, brick buHcing, 98.99 acres, producing oiVgas well
w~h- free gas to home plus royalties. Graat SA locatio~.
ASKING $105,000
·MIDDLEPORT· Front St. great river v1aw· with ~
bedrooma, FANG heat, large front pon::h, nico size lot,
Boon reduCid to $32,000

MEIGS COUNIY

• POMEROY·l.oeutt SL ·A 3 badiDOm, 1 112 story home
lhat neoda some 'work. Haa some paneling, 2 porchea,
and a basement Lot Ia 40 A 100.
JUST $4,000

MELLON &amp; SIDE~:,~~~·
That sounds like homel Enjoy lho 01
bream with lllis 2 aiDry lloma with 2 badrooms, balll ,
basamant homa, faatu ..a newar belli &amp; kitchen, new
aleblric' hoat pump C/AJ attic apace approx. 1 acre,
firapiBCII, and large aida pon::h w/awing. ASKING $49,900
MAKE AN OFFERI
RACINE· 1989 Clayton Sectional Homa 24 x 40 fealuraa
3 badrooms, 2 NH baths, electric heal pump/CIA., blinda
&amp; curtains, ceiling fans, Iappan applianoea, lois of cabinot
space. Vary wall kept home! ASKING $35,500 (Owner
may accept oWe~)

79 ,: campera &amp;

POMEROY· Main StiNt· A commercial buicing with
2,000 equ.,. Mel and 3 apartmanls above that have juat
been remodeled and all have new fllmaoea. The upataire
has a $775 a month inoome. Grut place tor a buoineM,
and an income trom the apartmanls to pay the biNo.
$511,000

1B88
'like now" willl 3
badrooms, 2
garden tub, walk ill cioN~ utility
room , built in hutch, &amp; otereo, Hoat pump/S.A. gao
Iuman.,. .,.illng fan , 12 X 35 covered patio, siD,.ge
building, 'fancod yard, 3+ acroo in tha country yet only
minutoa I rom Racine! ASKING $27,000

RMJNY 81 A\.KBURN. BROKER 445 -000U
RUTH GOODY. ASSOC . 379 2684

·• 11' Mort&lt; Twain ~ Hull, 140 hp,

te64· Ow- 21' eebln crulaer
'""h t"ralltr,
tnlflnt 225 ltp.,
many oxtrai $1100. 114-441-7812
oriM 4484833.
19113 Alumawwld Bnae Beato All
Wlldod Aluminum Uflllmo War·
ronty. Comlllolt With llolor
Guido Trolltna. Moton &amp;
l.ftrlnct Fish Flmlora P-NCI

YOUR OWN
BUSINESS

v..

1m. 30't -

1874. NEW LISnNG - 3 bedroom raneh home wlh

J.:J&lt;rv

~

• WOlD
IIAMI •

mil•, 114-1124202. ,

IIIlO. VERY WELL CONSTRUCTED HOUSE wllin
city llmHs. Loealed on SA 588, 3 bo&lt;toom ~rick. lire· •
plaoe, basemonL lwo car garage With shop or apart·
ment on top. Too many extru to n'lertlon. Contact

cal lboul lhls 3 or 4 batnom ranch home, 2 baths,
ltvlng room, kitchen, 1 car garage, 2Bx30 sMp and a
wood shop. Ttis prope~y Is alluated on 8 acres m'lln
Adcllaon Townsltlp. Prk:ed In ltlo $60"s.

•

Q Rearrange 1~e 6 scrambled

1113 CIIIY¥ v.l ton Stopoldo,
hll 41111 Oklo l!'llno, 400 auto..
"""' . . . - .. aoklng $11!00,

74

Has three phase electric. For more lnlo can the
SARGE.
.

.

N,_

~ Q.. 411

_ _ _ _ _.;,·_.;. Edited by CLAY ft. POLLAN - - - - - - -

72 TrUcks for Sale

;~: u

.( ._ f) ~

';'

1648. COMBO. Home end Buslnosa. Beaut lui whfto
brick homo with 3 bedrooms, li"oploce, 2 car garage,
heat pump. Also lndudes 4,000 sq. ft. com(Mrclal
building, p,...Jtly baing usoll lor a welding b~slness.

hayloft utd workshop. Call Et.llloa Nlehm IM appt .

THAT DAILY , (j_ ~ ""(} " ,i\ ,._
PUUUI ·p~ . J.'QU

:f-~.~A.J..OJ.t
..,.,
tiZ.ooo Ml~e~; """'"~'
p,IOO, 114-44f-4121.

• Home

81

.,'

IIIGO. NEW LISTING. Lots ol space In this 4 bedroom

1881 . IN TOWN JEWEL - 1137 2nd Avo. Do nol
judge t~s one from the cur:~&gt;. Mucn new wortc has
modO Ia lovely home. Hoot pump, now oak cabloots,
lovely balhs, garago. Make sn appolntmonl.

1811. DOUBLEW1DE ON AN ACIE LOT With a 2 car
aaya rnuot 1011. Price .... Jtly rwduc8d.
Must ••• to appreciate. Call 245-9070 for an

.

tlrepface, solarturn, 4 overslied bedrooms. Master

bedroom has calhtdral c:elllng, wlirl&gt;&lt;&gt;ol bath end

*871. NICE FARM WITH EQUIPMENT- 4 bedroom
·

·-

total rooms with lhreo bathrooms, toyer entry wllh
open stairway. lergo living nn. w/..tJip, lormll dining
nn., gourmet ktt., family and game rm . share an open

Steve for mora Info.
llllli. BE Q U Cf Ql j COUNTRY LIVING 1- You

Thu""an aree. Callloday 245-9070.

1811 Ford CrOwn Vlolorta, oxcof.
lint oondMion, SIIIIOO, 114-112·

graclous_home tocaree11n an exclusive area. Beven

1833. SPRING VALLEY AREA In lhls spacious brick
homo wlh 3 bedrooms, 1''• ~hi, living room, dnlng '
ioom, lull~- with llimlly room, 2 ear garage,
18x3B lnground pool. You noe&lt;lto -lhll ono.
IH2. .MAINTENANCE FREE HOME lor lht young
couple or tho retlreoo. 3 bedrooms. beautiful ldlehon
wlh bV, lanced-In ylld, poved dmowsy. l.o&lt;:alod on
Kelly Drive. Call Wilma Wllllamocn 245-9070 for an
"'&gt;P?'Itmt ft.
home w•h .C5.69 acres, tevelland ready for farming.

1.. OhlemobUe Deft• 81

~.

t841.REDIICED GREAT BUY· &amp;Mbutl&gt;ln bHuty·
•
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERHICE · ·
Tho...,......,..
...........
witH vlaw ot""
VIRGINIA
SMITH,
BROKtR
..................
318-1826
1871 . POINTS OF PERFECTION SURROUND thll
County.. Italian die lo\'tr, calhtdrll &lt;*llrto with

. - root
, aold!! PGDO,
114-812·7143 ...........
1m Ofdt CUtleoo s u - . 41111

engine, · auto, t2300.
2Mt.

......
..
-.

.

.

..,

'

-

(,

mllntenonce lroo of boat qullity. Mollo your
..,.,..,...., and""" you don1 aorao $130,9115 .
1818. NE$TLf;D IN THE 'rREES - You W11 ftrd 11111
&lt;harming homo. Counlry loJiehon, lomlly rm .. 213
bedrooms, 2 bothl, ,front pordl and rur polio ard a
lOvely aero yard. owner waltl to 1rav01. $&gt;15,000.

auto., con:~ ...... gaUgN

•

(]!. "rdmdt .
446-6806
~~ cs~-

zv ~=t ec&gt;

'II Vall

tllllmlloo, 1100; I
'11 "" NleMn

.loilw'
•..........
.............
'v.., .. ,..to.....

...

---.-· .

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

. ~

_....

·Real Estate General

Real Estate General

Real Est!!te General

Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-07

wv

~oint

Cheryl Llmlay..............................,.....742-3171

MINERSVILLE· Trailer lot ~eady lo be moved onto·
loeated alongSR 124 lot measur.. approx. 80 X 100. •
ASKING $6,000

'

RACINE- Approx. 20.05 acros 40 X 28 hunting cabin
great hunting/camping sita. ONLY $11,000

ON FRANK
A pa_rtlal brick rlfiCh on
1.03-4oc. mil with 3 bedroomo, 1'1. balha, living
room, cinlng
and kllchan. One C:ltr gerage
AlvtiA FRONTAGE! Over 2 ac,.a and rMCh attached. Aaklng only $52,000: Can lciday. 1523
atyle homo. 3 badroomo, balll, laundry room,
living room &amp; kitchen . Pavlld drivawayl LOOKS' LIKE SOMETHING OUT OF A
lmmadioto Poooaation.
.
1144 BEmR HOMES I GARDEN MAGAziNE!!
Toke one peak atlhlo attractive log home and
BALEM STREET·
Good lnvlltment
you'll be aoklll 3 bodroomo, 1'/o bailie, fully
property, oldar 2 otory consisting of 3 BR, , equipped kitchen, lving ioom with callledral
bath, FR and more. 3 aewage and water
oaiNHQ. Elactrlc h¥1 pump with oen,_. air con·
hookups on plllflllrtY· call for more info. ~11
dltlontng. Storage building. Warranty lefl on
IMIIEDIATE POSSESSION! RIVER FRONT· home. CaiiiOdayl You will be lmp,.aalldt 1553
AGEl tzs,ooo. 2 bedroom home !!lith bath, iv·
· room, kitchen l.opplt)l(. 1 ..,.lawn. tu:1

n&gt;om

ot chwacter and lhe
of
houoe haa loti ot .good taste when it
comet to remodeling. It'&amp; a ,2 atory home
with 3 big t:oidroom1, nice sized Uvlng room
and plenty of apaca in the kilehen and .
cini"t ,...a. Full basement 111d la!Ve attic:
Roof tust 2 yra. old. Take a look- for only
$24,99().00 "
1522

tuPPERS PLAINS· 4,400 sq. II. building mada ot
brick/block one floor with 3 baths, unit air, kitoh111 &amp;
bedroom.,... approK 1 acre. ASKING $66,000 make an
offe~
•
VACANT GROUND- Harrisonville -.28 .289 acras located
on SR 684 ASKING $18,000.
.

'''

,
•

•

DEALS HERE ARE SIZZZZUNG HOTI
STOP ON BY AND SEE WHAT WE' VE GOT!!
HAVE A HAPPY I SAFE 4111 HOLilAYI
HENRY E. CLELAND ........................................ 1182.-111
TRACY BRINAGER ••••••- -·····-·-····················MN/131
SHERRI HART•••••:••••••••••••- ........................742·2357
KATHY CLELANP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1182.-111
OFFICE ··············~·-:~.....,•.••••--········· ..•••.••:.... lt2·2251

•

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•

�I
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.

Sentinel '.

PaQa DB

· Pomeroy--Uiddleport-Galllpol!s, OHo;-Polnt Pleasant, wv

July 4,1993

Rural physi~ians remeptberedin farm museum exhibit
t

-.

=

.a, Roy.Biessing

•

•

· same schoor," Maryland Medical
College of Baltimore, Md. IX&gt;Dfer·.

If lbe Walls of this doctor's office red on (lim the degree of Doclllr of
could lilt, what interesting scenes Medicine. His first pmctice was in
COIIId .~be as this faithflll, lbe . tQIII_ fiel\1$, working for· the
. Jib~ tteated numerous Pocahontas Coal Company in Me·
Jlllilllll m this same small suuc- · Dowell County. Here he met a
~!JR. Dr•.Lilly's ~fice, now starid- young school teaCher, Rellll Moore
... onlhc Farm Museum grounds.
of Roanoke, Va. who became his
• ~ Clct, a number of the countless bride. In 1908. Milton and R~tta
YIAIIOn. 111 lbe West

'

v· · ·a Fann

,Mulewn have recoun~w

with an infant daughter moved to
Upland where he eventually asSI!.mect· the practice of Dr. John
Rowsey, who moved to Hun·
ti,ngton.
Thus began an extended period . '
DOCTOR'S CmLDREN • J'ictured above.are tbe cbiidren orr:ir.
of ·service to the residents of this
area of Mason County.
M,J. Lilly, Sr. Shown, lert to right, Bernice, Clara, Helen, Audrey,
His . service, however, was not , Lucille, Evelyn and the late Milton J., Jr. This photo was taken In
limited to medicin~. Records indi· · 1968.
elite he became a friend, a
counselor and conimunity leader in
every way. He pointed the way in people. He is said to have had the primitive conditions, and delivered
economic developmen~ in educa- first Model T car and also later hundreds of babies by the light of a
tiopal advancefl)ent, and in the models and a Jeep. But these do not kerosene lamp without the benefit
practical applications of new note those times when he walked to of a nurse or assistant He had to
agricultural methods. Far sighted, keep" appoinunents. People recall balance common sense with both
he saw the need for improved how Dr. Lilly wore that black fur his experience and ' instinctive
,
cap pulled low over his ears with a medical judgmen1. •
mads; a telephone system.
Dr. Lilly served .Pile term in the
dary
schools, · the
tobacco knitted muffler wound around his
West_
Virginia legislature although
neck. And house calls by day or
cooper;~tives, and keeping up with
pohucs
were not a main interest for
the changing trends.
night were common.
.
him.
Appreciation
for his work was
Dr. Lilly, reflecting to friends in
Dr. Lilly went through a tremenrecognized
by
President
Woodrow
later life, commented on the vast
dous period of transportation
Wilson
after
World
War
I.
He conchanges made in treating human
change, Many older residents will
ferred
on
Dr.
Lilly
a
special
Certifi·
rememlier how Dr, LillY,. and other ills. He hall set bones with no anestate
of
Honor
for
his
work,
his
tbetic, extracted ~th. · performed
doctors of that era, made good use
courage
and
valor
treating
people
simple operations under the most
of horse and buggy to service
dunng the great influenza epidemic ·
of 1918.
·
Dr. Lilly was the father of seven
children including Bernice, Clara,
H~len, Audrey, Lucille, Evelyn and
Milton, Jr. AU are living with the
exception of the son.
, , . Visitors to his office at the
""'"'i"'"' museum will find it interesting and
amusing. As you e.nter the office
you will notice a stand holding ~
number of bed pans. In the rear
office, you will first see a glass
sided cabinet consisting of three.
shelves and holding numerous and
various kinds of instruments. The
iable, earlier mentioned, holds a
couple of his "lit~e black bags" as ·
well as a mortar and pestle, used to
grind up medicines. Lining three of
the walls are shelves holding various sized bottles for medicine. Op
one shelf are two boxes of different
sized corks;
·Visitors are urged to read the various papers on the walls. For example, one is headed Schedule of
:
MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
Ohio ValleiP.ublishing c.:o. Leave your name,
Prices of the Mason County Medi:; farm, featured by the Gallia Soil and Water
address and telephone number with your card
cal Society, 1898. We might list a
• Conservation District, is located somewhere in
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
Gallia County. Individuals wishing to particicontest entries should be turned in to tbe newsI
• pate iD the weekly contest may do so by guessing
·paper office by 4 p.m. tach Wtdntsday. In p15t
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop off your
or a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
guess to the Daily Se'ntinel , 111 Court St.,
Next week, a Meigs County farm will be fea(Continued from PageD- I)
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
tured by tbe Meigs Soil and Water CoDStrvation
from the C!into11 administration .
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
District.
Consumer confidence fell in June
45631, and you may win_ a ~5- prize from the
to its lowest level in eight months
and
·
Voter registration to unemployment rose to 7 percent
6.9 percent. A former top
be held at county fairs from
PepsiCo executive, Michael H.
Jordan, found. a new job as
COLUMBUS - Secretary of chairman of Westinghouse
State Bob Taft announced Thurs· Electric. The Bundesbank cut
day that voter registration will be German interest rates for the fourth
GALLIPOLIS · Ron Bonfiglio tation by the American Board of offered at 53 of the 87 county fairs time this year.
M.D., Physiauis~ joined the Holze; Physical Medicine and Rehabilita· being held statewide. At 37 of Upcoming
Financial m~rkets, banks and
tion.
th~ fairs, mock elections will also
Clinic Medical Staff on July l.
government
offices are closed
Dr.
Bonfigilio
will
be
working
be
conducted.
or. Bonfiglio is Board eligible
Monday
for
Independence Day .
with
Daniel
R.
·Black,
D.O.,
in
the
Fairgoerg
may
vote
on
the
foiin Physical Medicine and RehabiliPhysical Medicine and Rehabilita- lowing issues at the mock election: Late June auto sales are due
tion Department on the second Should the school year be length· Tuesday. The Group of Seven
noor of the Main Clinic. He will ened for Ohio's public schools? leading industrial nations begin
their three-day annual meeting in
also be seeing patients at the lnpa- Sh ld th
tient Rehabilitation Center; the
ou
e Ohio presidential pri· Tokyo Wednesday . Lincoln
Holzer Clinic Rehabilitation Cen- mary be held earlier than the month Savings chief Charles Keating is to
ter: Fourth and Sycamore Streets in of May? Do you favor a ban on be sentenced Thursday.
Gallipolis and at Holzer's satellite smoking in all public places? Do
clinics.
you favor t!'e l.cgali~tion of river·
Dr. Bonfiglio is a native of boat gamblin(\ m Oh1o?
.
Greenville, Ohio. He received his · Should Oh10 conbnue to reqUite
undergraduaie de~ree from Ohio that the _9th grade profic1ency test
Northern University in 19 84 . He be pass}!d as one of the requuerec.ejved his Medical Degree from ments ~ rece1ve a h1gh school
. C.
. d1ploma?
the Med1cal ollege of Toledo m
R
. f h
k
.
1989.
. esu11s .o t e moe e1ecuons
His residency training has been w1ll be avrulable from local boards
at Men:y Hospital in Toledo 1989. of elechons at the ~nclus1on of the
1990; Schwab Rehabilitatio~ Cen- f811'. Gallw. CountY IS not mcluded
ter, Chicago, 1990 -!99!; and Mar- m the hst of 53 counues.
Announces
ianjoy Rehabilillltion Center and
Loyola Medical $:enter, 19911993.
Old Swedes Church - erected in
Dr . Bonfigilio and his wife
1698
in Wilmington, Del. - is the
Patty, have two ,children, Ryan, 7,
otde.
s
l
Protestant church still in use
and, Amy, I l/2. They will reside i n the United
Stales.
in Gallipolis.
RON B-ONFIGLIO

they
-~t treatment on that table
Jll lbe back .
of this· small
l1linic in the Upland section of
Mason County.
:: .It could be called an epic tale; ·
. ibis ~ded practice of Dr. Mil. too J. Ully, Sr, who spent 59 years
·c:!f his Ufe ministering to the mediO:al ~ of the ' people in this
c.ommunlly.
. Let's review the life of this man.
He was born Oct 24, 1878 in Merc:l:r County, a lad wfio · loved to
watch the long uains of coal pass
ncar his home. However, after he
!'ad completed his early education
m a one room school, he realized
!bat more than anything else, he
'!~filed to be a doctor. It was not
easy following up this~- especiefiyfor a country lad. ·
·•. But he' was faithful to' this task.
dertificates on d)e . office. walls
denore .he was granted degrees in
operative surgery and anatomy in
]){arch 1903. Then •. in 1904, this

l

few of the prices for service. An about to give birth at lbeir home iq
ordinary visit with examination and Staunton, Va. before they moved to
prescription cost $1.50 in corpora·
Mason c;:ounty.
tion limits. For dOCtor visits outside
Finally. Colonel William Flernthe town, the cost was higher, ing attended soldieis who were
depending on the mileage. A 50 wounded in that first batt~!: of the
cent · extra charge was . made for Revolutionary War, fought he~ at
night visil.Ji. Staying with a patient the Point Oct· 10, 1774. Dr. Flem·
all night or all day costS 10.
, . Jng was here with the Virginia
Surgery costs were defined, in.. troops from Oct. 6 through 31 and
part, as follows. Setting fractuies • was also wounded in the battle.
ranged from $5 to $25 but were
·
hijlher for large bones such as a
th1gh. A tonsillectomy could cost
from $5 to $10, vaccination or extracting teeth was 50 cents, and
amputations could range fmm,$510
$100. For delivery' of a baby in
·
na~ ~s and within five miles,
the cost was $10.
These names may be familiar to
the older population: Doctors W.P.
Neale, A.R. Barbee, C.B. Waggener: ~.E. Craig, John W. Ellglish,
E.J. Mossman, A.R: Girat:d, J.H.
Dunlap, E. McElfresh, Hugh A.
Barbee, HJ. Campbell, D.A. Sayre,
James H. Rowsey, W.S. Reece
A beautiful Rock of Ages Manu~
W.P. Love. J. Spencer Owen,
ment
is backed by the strongest
Roush, C.W. Petty, R.T. Stone EL
guarantee
in the industry. It is thll!
GiUiam, J.H. Hereford, and' Wil:
ideallribute.
A ~rfect way 10 pn,.rve
ltam French.
for all time a family name and the
An interesting booklet. which
memory of those you lOve. Choose
was compiled by Lilly Faye Lan· . from the largest Selections in Central
ham with some . assistance by
and Southeastern Ohio.
Violette Machir and other friends
and Sue Brady for computer assis:
10% deposit and
tance, .reviews doctOrs who prac·
balance in conve·
uced m Mason County prior to
nient low monthly
1950. Lilly is a granddaughter of
payments.
Dr. Lilly.
Convenit!:nt
We cite three of them shown on
credit terms - ~ Wr.
the front page as unusually interest-'
mg. !'erhaps the first doctor to be
carry our own
with his patient. in this county was
accounts. •
Dr. James Crmk, a Philadelphia
WGAN
physician .who came -to Pqint .
Pleasant \li1th George Washington
on his surveying joume~ October
POMEROY
31, 1770. Later; Dr. Cta~k was atMelgo County
tending Washington at the time of
Dlopllw Vord Noolr
his death.
Pomoroy·M•on Brldgo
Many people have noted the
JomM A. Buoh, Mgr.
1112·2588
highway sign stating the first
caesarean operation in North
VINTON ·
America was . performed by Dr.
McCoy-Moore Funerll Homo
Jesse Bennett who practiced here
165Moin Sl
for 45 years. he performed this
38814()3 .
operation on his wife as she was

room

secon-

Northwest.••

_Physiatrist joins
Holzer Clinic staff

KRIS

G.

r----------.,
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e
M emory

That Lasts Forever

L.F.

,.
I

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TROMM BUILDERS
OH.

"Dedica_ted to enriching and
improving the life of Senior Citizens
in Mason, Gatlia and Meigs counties."

MONUMENT CO.

Opening July 6th

Heritage Day at Central Elemen

*NEW*

Wei.ght Control Ce.nter
Big . Bend Health and Fitness proudly
announces the expansion of our weight con·
trol classes to a, full service, year round, .
·
weight control program.
•

We are happy to announce the addition of
an experienced weight control counselor,
Wanda Serey, to our staff.
For appoi11tment or more information call:

992·3967
Taking Appointments July 6-

Big Bend Health and Fitness
87 Mill St

Middleport; Ohio
Mick Davenport- •Owner

· The Point Pleasant Senior Cit·
izens Workshop #12 was i11vited
to participate in Central Elementary Herilllge Day Celebralion.
They were asked 1Q show the
children how a quilt is made.
The ·ladies took their quilt in
the frame and quilted, aQd
answered the many questions.the
children and even teaChers wanttid to know about quilting.
The kids were also shown by
others, how soap was made, basket weaving, butter -making, and
were entertained by a story-teller
and some guitar music, and a
pony ride.
Quilters going from the Pt.
Pleasant workshop were Mary
McDaniel, Frances Kearns,
Goldie Smith, and Eva Bader.
Dorothy Tyo and Judy Jones,
supervisors, went along to help

OuL

The Seniors were invited to
sllly and have lunch with the children, and to see all the lovely
projects the children had made
for their l:lertitage Day Celebration.

More Heritage Day
'Pictures .on Page 2

MURTHY; M.D.
the Opening of His Medical Practice in

NEUROLOGY '

Custom-1Jesignedj'or 9""ou

,_. ..

DIAGNOSIS AND TREATMENT OF DISEASES OF THE NERVOUS
AND INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND SPINE

SYS~M
.

Suite13

Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building
2520 Valley Drive
.
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Office Hours: 9 a.m.- 5 p.m., Monday through Friday

(304) 675-2551

•

Call for Appointments BeginningJuly 6

ilL~. PLEASANi VALLEY HOSPITAl&lt;&gt;&lt;

v-. The family of profe~nals

.'

·

.2520 Valley Dri'le, Polnl Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) 675-4340

In Meigs County

RSVP Volunteer Golda Frederick worked atthe Lead Probe
Clinic conducted reeently in Chester. These clinics held by the
Meigs County Health Department will be con.tinued sometime in
the future. If testing is required it can be obtained thru the Well
Child CliDic. ·

In Gallia County

Our Senior Citizen Center
' It seems lilce a long, long time
ago when I first heard of Gallia
County Senior Citizens. Th&lt;:te I
was in a hip cast for a tnple
break, and a fully dislocated
.
ankle. And a friend asked me to
go to the Senior Citiz,ens dinner
with her. Why I couldn't carry a
tray thru the lunch line, and.han- .
die those crutches at the same
time .. She assured me that she
SOAP MAKING
would take care of me. Yes, she
did - that evening and many times
afterward. The meeting was in
the old Holzer Haspillil building.
Later when the center was moved
EVELYN ROTHGEB
out on Route #160, I volunteered
my car and what help I could
books, or just sit and talk.
give- but they couldn't use me.
Meigs Museu~ . Ess~ys were ond, Brandon Wolfe, son of
I think one reason I've
So after the Center was set~ed
judged by qual1fied retireeS who nis and Cindy Wolfe Riverview,
enjoyed
the Seniors so much is
and dues time came around, I
based their decision on the stu- first Cassie Rose, daughter of
that
I'm
with others in the same
joined the Senior Citizen Center.
dent's own ,words and under· Kenneth &amp; Ruth Rose, Sec'ond,
group,
have the same prob-·
age
standing of .their work project. Leigh Ann Bigley, daughter of l have enioyed being a member !ems, like to visit and exchange
First and second place essay win· Eddie &amp; Jackie Bigley. Rutland, of the Center-! made new · memories of the past, or how we
ners were selected from each par· First, Josh Sorden, son of David friends, renewed old acquaill· lived without the modern-day
ticipating class and their essays &amp; Heidi Sorden, second, Brooke tances. and found out that I conveniences. Since our prob· ·
wasn't the only person needing
will be displayed at the Meigs Williams, daughter of Richard &amp;
lerns are all similar, we can share
'Museum begmning Heritage Barbara Williams . Salisbury, help. At the Senior Center, we and we can rest while we are
Weekend. A reception will be ftrst. Morgan Matthews, daugh(!lr find many that need all kinds of sharing • and give our love and
held for the winning contestants of Dr. Craig Matthews and Bar- help • it may be companionship, friendship to each person thru
bara Crow, Second, Marjorie it may be a lift to the bank or the supporting our Gallia County
and theil: parents in the fall.
Winnen are: Racine, Fttst and Halar, daug_h_t~r of Michael &amp; store, we often find we can share Senior Center and our second
a new quill pattern or some beau·
Overall ComliY WinJI'ers. Dena
(Contlnued
on
Page
6)
tiful flower slip. supply some horne. it'sours.
Sayre and Bobbie Scarberry.' set·

RSVP "Yesteryear"' essay winners
Bobbie Scarberry, daughter of
Anne E. Scarberry and Dena
Sayre, daughter of Dan &amp; Donna
Sayre, tied. for ftrst place as well
as Overall Meigs County Winners in the Yesteryear essay con·
test.
Fifth grade students who participated in the Meigs County
Retired Senior Volunteer (RSVP)
Yesteryear Program, beld in con·
. junction with the Meigs County
Pioneer &amp; Historical Society and
the Meigs County School System,
submi~ essays about their work
project and their visit to the

Den-

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