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The days
when Betsy
Ross baked
in Meigs

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crazy" one .old timer complained. 'People think competing is tOQ risky.They want

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James Sands unveils Centerville man's
memories of a war's end - A-6

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Vol. 27, No. 21
Copyrlghled 1992

V:nrei- Uncle- Welsh- Nimbly ·ISSUE
... ~ ~adw~Oid~ng the paper. He turned to his
_ , and alik ,
you hear about the MWSPIP8r
4ldtDr who made WOIId affairs an ISSUE?'

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Vulnerable: Botb
Dealer: South

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ASTRO.ORAPH
BERNICE
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s.-at mtriCiiorll that IIIW been
: llaldlnfl you tNICk COUld be lllmlnated In
. :,he year afleed, Thll wilt give you con-

: •trot aver mattWI that hiWo been doml.. natlng you.

. -CANCIII (Juftl 21-.lulr 21) H you'rt
. employad by enothtr. ,_II thl time to

· :put Iorin your beet effort. Your accom-

: piiiii!MIIII wilt Dt notlaad, and good
• _.. will Dt properly acknOWteCfgecl.
' · K - wi11N to laOit lor r~ and
: • you'M flnd H. Till Altro-Grlijlll Match·

romanllcally perfect lor you. Mall $2
plus a long. setf-addreosed, stomped
envelope to MatChmaker·. c/o this
P.O. Bo• 91428, Ctevetond,

newsp-.
OH 44101-3428.

LEO (.IUIJ :13-Ayt. 221 TOday's events

could help llrongthen bonds between
you and an Individual With whom you atready have a goOd rolltlonlhlp. This association lo deollned to take on greater
significance.
VIRGO (Aug. :13-...... 22) Make matters that affect your tamlly security your
priority today. You're fortunate In this
area, and you shOuld be able to achieve
dellrablt rtsultt.
LIIRA (lepl. :a-oct. D) This II a 'goOd
lime to contact people who can help
you lnlll"e your preaent plans. Thl)l will
see value In your Ideal and may juat find
ways to Ulllt you.
ICOIII'IO (Oct.~. 22) You're now
In a cycle where tong-range cteveloprMnll could add to your rnouroeo. Be
alert for opportunities that have substance and not merely form . .

f

thoughlful cteed you did lor another
lew - · ago was not uniiPPfiC:irotadl.l
as you may have thought. Ch~~::;
ual might lind a way to. re
today.
AQUARIUS (olin. 20-Fib. 11) Things
should work out rather fortunotety tor
~ today · in arranoer-rts , - e
lrrends participate wllll you. either socially or in the bulineu realm.
PIICEI (fob. 20 Flo ell 201 A secret
ambition you've been harborif1g 1hu an
er«:ettent chance ol being fulfilled In this ,
cycle. Be patient and tel events run theit'

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AMI (liillrcll 21·Aprll 11) H things
haven't been up to txpect"lorllln the
romance department lately, be of good

"'-&lt;: changes OOUklltlrt taking pl.,.
today. Get out and circulate.
TAURUI (April ...... 20) look for
Improvement• In conciHions pertaining
to two situations that hove an affect on
your !&amp;rnlngs. LUCk will Int.,..,.., but
you'll have to do your part u well.
1Aarrf~(Now. ~.211Come GEMINI (Mar 21-.IUne 2D1 Agr-tt
.plirMntt from you IOday will be tong re- you enter Into at this time have good
mamberad by ti10H you praise. If chances lor longevity, owing to ttll.fllrness and . llnCerHy at the Plrltea
- " ' hu done IOmtllhlng worthy of lnvolvad.
acknowteilgrMnt. let your leellngs be

: : makr lnatlll111' ,........ wlltclllignt are known.
.

CAPIIICOIIN (O.C. 22-.lan. 111

a

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Starr
HOGSETI, W.Va.- Muddy ,
brown wa1er from the Ohio River
mixed wilh clear, bluish-green rain
waiCr in lhe bouom of the Gallipolis Replacement Locks for lhe first
time around II a.m. Friday.
With liule fanfare, the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers began
the week-long process of filling ihc
replacement locks Friday - the
final slep in ihe S224 million lock
replacement project
lnslead of having lhe waler now
in wiih a gush, the locks are being
filled slowly to keep lhe inside of
ihe lock channels clean and to prevent damage to lhe concre1e struclures, resident engineer Des Goyal
said.
.
Col. James R. VanEpps, district
engineer, was on hand to witness
the event and answered ques1ions
from several reporters on 1he scene.
Van Epps said the locks arc
expected 10 go in 10 operation in
OCIOber and will be dedicated in a
ceremony on Oct 10. When 1hc
new locks go imo operation, Van
EpPS said, all1he locks on the Ohio
Rtver will be the same size.
· van Epps said several digni taries and government official s,
including Sen. Robert Byrd , DW.Va., ,have been invilcd 10 atiCnd
lhe dedication.
While the "watering up" of 1he
locks is considered the final phase
of the project, Van Epps said the
Corps of Engineers is commitiCd to
working on lhc si1e until1995 .

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Partl)·sunny. Highs middi•IIOs
tu near 90.

14 Sectlona,112 Pogoo

Mlddleport-Pomeroy-Galiipoiis-Polnl Pleasant, July 12, 1992

AMultimedia Inc. Nowap11por

' 10

The dam itself is supposed 10
undergo renovalion, bringing 1he
total cost of lhe project up to an
estimaied S300 million.
Ass istanl engineer Gordon
Loudin described 1he s1cps lhat

need 10 be comple1ed•before the
locks can bccQmc operational:
Firs!, the lock channels will be
fill ed 10 the level of 1he down·
stream pool, Loudin said. After lhis
is acwmplished, the downstream

'WATERING UP'- Waler from the Ohio River was admilted
into the new Gallipolis locks for lhe lirsllime Friday morning in
the Onal phase of the $224 million lock replacement project. The
locks are expecteil t!! ·be opened for navigQ!iOJI ·in--Ck,tober.. Here,
Col. James R. Van Epps, district engineer for the Huntington District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, observes the start of the
week-long wlilering up proces.~. The locks will be nooded gradually
lo avoid damaging concrete structures and lo keep the channels
clean. (T-S photo by Jim ~· reeman)

retaining wall will be removed.
Next. ihe downstream mi1er
gales will be closed and lhe water
raised 10 the level of lhe upstream
pool. Then, the upstream retaining
wall will be removed, Loudin said.
The replacem em lock s will
replace a pair of 55-ycar·old locks.
The old locks have long been considered a bottleneck to river travel
partly because of their lengih (only
half lhat or th e new lock s) and
posilion on a cwve in ihc river.
niough considered state-of-iheart when conslrUcted in the 1930s.
1he old locks were supposed to be
replaced in lhe 1960s. when inost
of the olher locks on ihe river were
cons1ruc1cd .
Currendy, longer barges have lil
be broken down and laken ihrough
lhe old locks in scclions.
The new locks arc 1200 feet
long compared 10 only 600 feet on
lhe old locks .
Some facL~ and fig ures about the
new locks:
• The new lock channels cut
across a bend in ihe river, creating
several new islands.
• A bridge, about !he size of an
Ohio River bridge, will provide
access 10 the lock facil ities located
on lhe largest island . The bridge
and islands ~ake ihe new Gallipolis Locks umque among olher Ohio
River locks. - ·
..
·
• Aboul 800,000 cubic yards of
concrciC, mixed with icc to rcgulaiC
lcmpcrature and prevent cracking,
(Continued on A-2)

·works out agreement
· By The Associated Press
An aide to the speaker of the Ohio Huuse says an agree: ment in principle involving American Electric Power and
! state officials will prevent the loss of southeast Ohio mining

Riffe,
ment. .
. AEP, based in Columbus; lias said it will install pol'luti,on' ·
~ubber~ to r~du.ce suit~~ dioxide emissions al the. Ga vln •
p(lwer pl~ntln G~~~!l C~unty; .
. .· · ••· . · ·.• ·
!\The nioy~ i~' iil\~nde4 We11~ij that the plant uses . •
sulfur Ohioi:oal fi'om~nAEp"i&gt;wned mine in
•
which employs
tfla~• t;IIOO (ieople. The plan stillm
. .... .
receive PUCO ajlpi:!\val. ' S
•·Marsh~UJI!Iien;~~tri~~President
·
confiritled that th~f~'lcl~e b(itii settlement discussions but
wouldn't elabOrate;
..
PUCO spukeswuman Stacie Gill! suid there hasn 'I been a

ni9te

Fascination prompts area native
to craft Pomeroy in miniature
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Starr
POMEROY - Talcmed Paige
Smith Cleek has always been fa~ci­
naled with Pomeroy' s archiiecture.
bul only recently did she develop
an outlcl combining her arti stic
flair and enthusiasm for old local
buildings.
She has started a series of wood
block art depicting lhe cenlury-old
buildings of Main S1rce1 Pomeroy.
"These arc for people who love
Pomeroy as I do," commcn1ed
Cleek, who was an an major at
Ohio University but ended up
working in retail merchandising ,
currently a1 The Limiled in Columbus.
A collcc10r of 1he series "Cat's
Meow, " Cleek looked around
downtown Pomeroy one day last
fall and decided to lry her .own
block an.
She began skciChing oul some
"roughs" on drafting paper. After

RGchief
taking trip
to Harvard

!11:113) . . .

. . . .7

Along the river .............. B1-8
Business/Farm ...............D1-8
ClassiOed .......................D2·7
Dta Ihs..............................A-3
Ediloral ............................ A -4
Sports.............................C1-6
Weather ........................... A-2

New locks meet.the Ohio River IRiffeai&lt;lesaysAEP

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Steroid usage discussed - ·C-1

by fillin~ in the misaing wordt
d.-.elop lrom step No. 3 below.

I RIDGE

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7-:"l ccn t s

Meigs secede from Ohio? Fred Crow
eyes problems behind the idea- A-4

~~~==~·~·..., someone else to take the
G I T KH N
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perfccling her skeu:hes she solicited the help of her dad, Tom Smiih,
in cutting out some blocks, and her
molher, April, to help in 1ransfer·
ring the original drawings onto the
blocks.
After thai came experimenting
with paints and colors. She finally
deciding on muted color - brick
red, gray and counlry colors with
black delaili n~.
Her firsl piece was of Clark's
Jewelry store. She said she was so
pleased wilh lhe way it turned out
that she wcm dowmown with a
camera and pholographed se vera I
buildings.
She also began some research at
the library , and scoured history
books to come up wilh pictures
which showed detailing of 1he old
struclures.
"''m just fascinaied by the
archilecture, ail the shape s and
sizes downlown, and I want 10 1ry ~
lillie bit of everything. So I've gone

from lhe square building, like the
Pomeroy Senior High and the Fabri c Shop, to the more intricate
designs of 1he Ben Franklin building, the ornate lrim of the Meigs
Inn, the old Meigs Theater (pretty
GOihic!)," exclaimed Cleek.
The Meigs Inn, which burned
se veral years ago, and the old
Meigs Theater which was lOrn
down many years ago, were both
created from borrow ed pholographs. Other pieces she has
completed so far arc the Ben
Franklin S10re, the Fabric Shop, lhe .
Pomeroy Pa stry Shop , and the
Senior High Building.
All 10gelher Cleek hopes 10 do
aboul 10 dowmown buildings
before moving on to churches, 1he
courthouse and 1he jail, which she
looks a1 as more of a challenge
because of size and also her plan
for using wood cut in the shape of
the slrUcturcs.
Cleek says lhal she is impressed
wilh pictures of how many of 1he
the buildings used to look - lhe
intricate design, the awnmgs on the
(Continued on A-2)

if

•'

CREATING- Paige Smilh Cleek's fascination with Pomeroy 's
archilecture led her lo create an art series of the cenlury-old buildings which line Pomeroy 's Main Slreet. (T-S photo by Charlene
Hoenich).

By DAVID ESPO
AP Polilical Wriler
NEW YORK - From the
arrival of thousands of bal loons al
Madi son Square Garde n 10 the
drumbcai call for change from Bill
Climon and AI Gore, Democrats
advanc ed 10ward nc x1 week' s
nalional convemion.
The GOP dispaiChed two governors 10 ihc Democrats' convention
ci1y to freshen !heir altack s on Gore
as a Southern-speaking liberal.
Climon coun1ered quickl y, "that's
the only word IIley know .... I don't
think ihatlhey'll be ab le to make
lhat old dog hunt"
Clinlon said he and Gore , a two.
1erm Tennessee senator, would be
hunting ins1cad for the suppon of
votcrs who want change - in their
first joint news conference.
" I believe the American people
really want a change, and 1hey 'rc
looki ng around 10 sec how we can
get il logether as a country," said
(Continued on A-2)

McEwen emerges
as recount winner

RIO GRANDE - Dr. Barry M.
By BRIAN J. REED
Dorsey, president of lhc Univcrsily
Times-Sentinel
Starr
of Rio Grande, has been inviiCd to
participaiC in lhc Harvard Seminar
POMEROY - Ahhough the
for New Presidents at Harvard UniSci01o
Coumy Board of Elec1ions
versity in laiC July.
has
not
yel eenilied Tuesday's offi .
The seminar provides a practical
cial
recount,
U.S. Rep. Bob
and conccplual oriemation to the .
McEwen,
R-Hillsboro,
is lhe appar·
presidency. 11 alens new prcsidcnls
em winner of lhe June 2 Rcpubli·
10 1hc opportunities 'and ha1.ards
can primary for lhe Six ill Congrcs·
they will face, and prepares lh(!ln 10
sionai Distric1 seaL
respond 10 lhe multiple rcsponsibilDR.
RARRV
.J"·
DORSEY
McEwen, 42 , who has '!erved
ilics and constilucncics of their
office. Only 40 new presidcms 500 new presidents arc appoimed lhe Sixth Districl since 1981 ; was
l'tom all sectors of American higher a11hc nation's colleges and ·univer- challenged by another veleran
education who have nol assumed silics," Dr. Dorsey said. "I am for· Republican legislator, Clarence
office or who arc in their first year tunaiC to be inviied to 1hc Harvard Miller of Lancaster, who has reprc·
in office a11end each year.
seminar. I especially look forward semetl the old lOth District for 25
Dr. Dorsey will complcle his to mccling and intcracling wi,th this years. The race between Miller ana
firs1 ycar'at Rio Grande on Aug. I.
extraordinary peer group ·of col- McEwen was 1he only race
The seminar consists of a series leagues from around lhc country between vet~ran Republican legis·
of inlensivc, imcractive sessions on who have been selected to attend lators in lhe nation , prompiCd by
10pics criticallo a successful prcsi- the program. In addilion, 1 will 1991's reapportionmenl, which
dCilcy. The 10pies range from fund- have an opporlunity to renew moved Meigs, Gallia, Lawrence,
raising 10 financial· managcmc01 10 friendships with scvcial individuals · Washington counties and a ponion
providing academic·leadership.
who will serve as faculty for thi s of Athens County into McEwen's
"Each year between 300 and year's program." ·
district.

,.

Clinton set
for partY.'S
nomination

The numbers
The uncertified lotals, from all
12 counties (Athens. Washington ,
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson, Hocking.
Lawrence, Scioto, Highland, Clin ton, Pike and portions of Warren
and Ross) show McEwen ihc winner by 286 VOICS (33,194 10
32,908).
Thai close vote tally prompted
an au1omatic recount of the Republican ballots cas1 in lhe "new" Sixlh
Districl. (Slate law calls for a
rccoum when the difference in vole
wtals falls below .5 percent)
Miller was 1he overwhelming
winner in Gallia and Meigs (4,060
to 1.327 and 3,166 10 1, 190,
respectively), as well as in other
counties that were part of the old
lOih Dislriel.
Nancy Shepherd, director of lhe
Scioto Counly Board of Elections,
reponed Friday that while a tolai
tally has been compiled from telephone reports, one wrinCil recoum

'

TED STRICKLAND
report has yet 10 arrive at lhe board
office. Once that wrinen repor1 is
received, the board of elections is
expected to certify the recount.
. That 18sk falls upon the Scioto
County board since it is 1he most
populous county i~ the district.

-

BOB McEWEN
Claims victory
The McEwen campaign, meanwhile, has no1 wailed for lhe certification to declare vicwry. In a pre·
pared staiCment issued by 1hc campaign on Wednesday, McEwen said
(Continued op A-2)
;

I

�..
,.

~age-A2..-5unday Times

UMWseeks
to stem new
;r~gl!l~ti
9gs
.
f

..

Pomeroy-Middle~rt-Galllpolls, OH~oint Pleasant,

Sentinel

Saturday, July 11

Gore.

Accu-Weathcr 0 forecast for
MICH.

'

a

PA

IND.

•

ihat he feels "deeply touched and
greatly humbled by the results of
the official recount."
. "Now that the requirements of
rune law have been met, we can
continue to build toward a united
effort for the fall campaign,"
McEwen said.
.
Although the primary campaign
Itt ween the two conservatives was
often biting, McEwen had high
p'raise for Miller's performance
o.'ver lhc past 25 years.
· "(Miller) has served with dis tinction , honor and grace. and I

leolumbusles~

I

W.VA.

Fascl'nah'on ...

Pick J

J. 7.J
lcs

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C19Q:Z Atai·Wtather, Inc".

Via AsSDcialed Press GrapticsNst

Ohio weather
"They included a provision to
do jusuhat in January 1988,"
Main said. " But in the final rule,
they eliminated it.
"They talk about increasing
miner participation, bu·L now all
they do is post plan changes on the
mine bulletin board," Main said.
Another concern. Main said. is a
provision that reduces the acmuntabilily of top mine m~nagcr s lO
meet safety standards.

By The Associated Press
Sunday, showers and thunderstorms likely nonh, mainly in the
morning. Partly sunny ccmral and
south with scanered showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in the middle
80s to ncar 90.
Extended rorecast
Monday through Wednesday:
A chance of showers and thunderstorms each day . Lows in the
60s. Highs in the 80s.

(Continued from A· I)

know that I speak for thousands declare him the winner or to
when I say he will be missed iri the declare the results of the election
House of Representatives, " invalid. Any such petition, Brown
McEwen said.
said, must be accompanied by a
Recourse?
petition signed by 25 registered
What recourse docs Clarence voters.
Miller have following the results of
Miller, 74, has said he will wait
the recount?
for certification of the recount
According to Maureen Brown, a before he decides how to proceed.
spokeswoman for Secretary of
Strickland reacts
State Bob Taft, Miller's only
Ted Strickland of Lucasville, the
recourse is to appeal the recount Democrotic candidate for the Sixth
(within 10 days of Scioto County's ·District seat, feels that this is the.
certification) or to petition Ohio year for the Democrats to lake conChief Justice Thomas Moyer to,, trol of lhc traditionally-Republican
scat, and credits the biucr Republican primary with opening up the
(Continued from A-I)
Democrots' chances.
"There's no question that we're
going
10 win this election," Strickand can be pulled up with a system
of electric motors and cables. An land said. "Every day, someone
aerator system will use compressed else tells us how McEwen has gone
air to keep the emergency gates too far with his junkets and 166
overdrafts, and I think that the peoclean.
·; Ground was broken on the site ple of the Sixth District know that I
Nov. 7, 1987, when Byrd set off am sincere in wanting to help
explosive charges. The charges them."
Strickland also dismissed
staned a brush fire which was
McEwen's
claim that the "Miller
extinguished by local voluntccr rorc
Republicans"
will support the
departments.
McEwen campaign, now that it
appears McEwen has won the pri!Continued from A-I&gt;
mary.
"McEwen is mistaken if he
along chair rails.
thinks that those who love Rep.
While her time now is being Miller will now close ranks behind
spent on business and public build· him," Strickland said. "Congressings, Cleek looks forward 10 even- man Miller went to a great deal of
tually doing some private homes in expense and trouble to warn us
the community.
against McEwen, and being the
"Doing this is a lot of fun but statesman that he is, I have a veiy
somehow it's more than lhat," said hard time believing that (Miller)
Cleek. '1t's like preserving pieces could now ask his supporters to
of lhe past for the future."
suppon McEwen."

Pick 4 Numbers
1-5-4-9
Buckeye 5
25-14-21 -10-28
The Super Louo jackpot was $8
million.

Bush and independent Ross Perot,
with the three men within a few
percentage points of one anol~er
less than four months from Election
Day.
Perot campaigned in Michigan,
where he pledged to revitalize the
auto industry and shake up the twoparty system in the process. "You
have thrown both political parties
into a panic and th~t is good for our
country," he told supponers as an
American nag flapped in the breeze
behind him.
Bush, wrapping up a s1x·day
, overseas trip, said, '"we'll fight it
'on the issues, dog-eat-tlog."
Twenty-four hours after he
selected Gore, Clinton's choice was
the subject of continued debate
among politicians and pundits.
GOP Govs. Carroll Campbell of
South Carolina and John Ashcroft
of Missouri came to New York to
criticize the fellow Southerners on
the Democratic ticket "I don't
care about the way they talk, their
accent is on liberalism."
Clinton said he chose Gore not
out of any political calculations,
but because Gore would be able 10
lake over as president.
The two men went for an early
morning jog in Liule Rock, then
stood together at a news confer-

cncc. Clinton said that if elected, he
wanted Gore to be his point man in
Congress, helping enact a .series of
measures in lhc firstlOO days.
" I want him to brc~~ t~e_log
jam in Washington, to give us a
government that work&gt; for all the
people again , and I believe he
can."
Gore said ·the Democrats offer a
chance for the "American people
to break out of this slJ'aiLJackct the
country feels like it's in now, after
12 years of the Reagan-Bush·
Quayle administration."
Richard Bond, cha1rman or the
Republican National Commiuee,
said the pick of a Southern senator
amounted to a "regional
approach," and one keyed toward
Bush's best region at that.
·
Ann Lewis, a liberal Democrat
and political consultant, said the
ticket should have appeal among .
suburban voters in all regions, as
well as challenging Bush in the
South in the three-way rocc.
She and others said Clinton
would need to work hard to win the
support of traditional Democratic
voters.
Clinton said he took no votes for
granted, and noted he and Gore
would address the NAACP convcntion in Nashville today.

COLUMBUS · Phil A. Bowman, president of R. A. Eberts Co.,
Inc. and vice president of Waterloo
Coal Company was named Ohio
Coal Man of the Year by the Ohio
Mining and Reclamation Association (OMRA) at its annual meeting
in Columbus, Ohio.

O

ST. CLOUD, Fla. -Ronald E. Cleland; 46, Montana Avenue, St
Cloud, Fla., formerly of Langsville, died Tuesday, July 7, 1992, from
injuries sustained in a work-related accident
He was born Sept. 18, 1945, son of Wayne E. Cleland of Langsville,
and the late Anna Mac Jenkins Cleland Han.
He was an equipment opcra10r for the Osceola County (Fla.) Highway
Department, a Navy veteran, and he was of the Protestant faith.
Survivors include six brothers, Roger, Johnny, and Edwin Keith CJc.
I:)Tld, all of Columbus, Thomas Cleland of Cheshire, and Floyd Cleland of
Ru~and ; three half-sisters, Lori and Anna Cleland, and Alena Grimm, all
of Middleport; his former wife, Donna Cleland of St. Cloud, Fla.; five sistcrs·in.Jaw; and several aunL,, uncles, nieces, and nephews.
He was preceded in death by one nephew, Jeremy Boyd Cleland.
Graveside services will be held 10;30 a.m. Wednesday at Wright
Cemetery, Langsville, with the Rev. Paul Taylor officiating.
Friends may call al the Birchfield Funeral Home, Rutland, on Tuesday
from 6-9 p.m.

. COLUMBUS (AP) - Political
panics in power in the Ohio House
and Senate continue to have the
1~ost money heading' into this
year's legislative roccs, campaign
finance reports show.
Senate Republicans have
$629,415 on hand in their campaign fund, while a similar fund for
~enatc Democrats has a $177,653
lrJlancc.
Republicans have a 21 · 12
majority in the Senate.
The House Democratic Commince headed by Speaker Vern
Riffe showed a balance of
$210,810, compared with $184,165
for the House Republicans' fund.
However , Democrats have at
least $2 million more ai their disposal through Riffe's campaign
· commiucc, which files a report in
• Scioto County. A copy of that
report wasn't immediately avail·: able at Secretary of State Robert
· Tafl- 's office.
.
' {j
.. DemocraL&lt; control the House by
a 61 -38 margin.
.. The deadline was Friday for
clmdidatcs and campaign commit·
lees to file post-primary reports
lisling contributions and expenses
ftom May 13 through July 3.
; · Reports 'showed Democrat
R:obcrt Gorman with an early
li:nancial edge over Republican
:fhomas Moyer in the race for Ohio
Supreme Coun chief justice.
; Gorman, a judge on the Ist Ohio
Pistrict Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati, had a balance of
S110,243 in his election account
Qfter the June 2 primary.
• Moyer, who is running for a
lccond term as chief justice, listed
~of S33,117 balance.
: Neither was opposed in the primary.
·. Gorman, who began the period
..\!ith $56 ,237 in his election
account, raised an extra 574,694
and spent 520,689 during that time.
f{is largest contribution of SIO,(XX)
came from the United Auto Workcis Political Action Commiucc. He
atso picked up $6,000 from the
Ohio Democratic Party.
: Moyer raised and spent more
moocy than G~rman. The chief justice added conlJ'ibutions of $82,697
to a previous balance of $21,011,
and listed expenses of $70,591. He
received $10,000 from Larry
'Rogers, a Cleveland business exec. utivc whose holdings include an
, insurance compa~y. and $2,000

.loly Is NatlaMIIct en. Mod .H whit 1M
Jl'l'dttne tf sl.ts reniwt FREE . . _. let
a- COM&amp;. CHAIUI'S &amp; CO.

PASSPORT
AND I.D.
PHOTOS

so

Rtadyln
5 MINUTES

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

·SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE I
:Celebrating 126 years of Quahty Clothing Sales •••• 1866·1992
Men's Suits
20%·25%·50% OH

Men's Spoil Coats
20°/o·50% OH

eg. · Now 57600
Reg. smoo Now SJSOOO
Reg.•$15501
s2oo

Reg. s330" Now s247so

Now 1 4

Reg. s165"

Now 131°
5

Dress &amp; Casual Slacks
20% to 50%
Reg. '28"
Reg; 32"

lOW

*18,411

IIIIIDDI'NR XL DTIIDD
V6 eng., P. steering &amp; brakes, a~o.
trans., air oond., driver air bag, dual air
&amp; heal, 7 pass., AMIFM stereo cass.,
@ &amp; cruise, P. win. &amp; locks, cast alum.
styled wheels, rear defroster, rear
wiper&amp; washer.

WAS $21,991

.

lOW

*17t Ill

IIII"IUIUI GL lftftll WIID14 DB.

Reg. s165" Now s132oo R SCJ500

Reg. 5260"' Now s2osoo

VB 'eng., P. iteer., P. brakaa, auto. trans., air
cond., AMIFM stereo/casaette, tlh &amp; cruise,
rear defroster, P. windows &amp; door locks, luel
door Jock, styled alum. wheels, cloth spl~
P. driver seat, light &amp; .conversion!

PISS., 3.8 V6 eng., P. steer. &amp;
auto. trans., air oond,, tiR &amp;
P. win. &amp; door locks,
AM/FM/stereo cass., extra seat in rear,
rear defroster, luggage rack, cast 11lum.
styl8d wheels.
.

rc~crvoir s Columbus depends on ·

most. Hoover Reservoir was KA ·
feet below capacity Thursday. and
Alum Creek was 14.16 feet down.
The Iauer decline was the largest in
any re servoir monitored by the'

state.

Mel G•son &amp; Danny Glovw

In

Tigm of World War II fame arc an
example or the best in mi litary U'a dition.
"The name Flying Tiger carries
with it a certain mystique mat suggests part of the spirit rises up in
anger when it sees injustice,"
Defense Secretary Richard Cheney
said Friday in dedicating a memorial to the Flying T1gcrs 31 the Air
Force Museum.
The S190,000 memorial is a 25foot, pagoda.shaped granite monument topped by a bron~e model of
a P-40 Warhawk, the plane frequently associated with the Flying
Tigers. It was donated to the museum hy the 14th Air Force Association.
Cheney said the Flying Tigers
proved the importance of mamtaining a strong military furcc.
"Just as those who were Flying
Tigers in World War II knew that

aggression had to be met dirc~.:tly

and defeated, so we know the s;tmc
holds Lruc today," he said.
The Flying Tigers were born in
Apri I 1941, when President
Franklin D. Roosevelt signed an
executive order allowing Gen .
Claire Chennault to organize a volunteer group of aviaLOrs rrom the
Navy, the Army and the Marines.
The group operated from air
basc.s in eastern China. It defended
the Chinese from Japanese attack,
launched raids on Japanese air
bases in China and protected the
Burma road, which served as a sup·
ply line to China. The Tigers shot
down 299 enemy planes and lost 12
of their own.
The volunteer group was
replaced by Amencan soldiers in
July 1942 and later became part of

LETHAL
WEAPON 3 a

ESTABUSHED 1895

SOCCO DONATION -Grant Hospital in Columbus recenlly
received a $1,000 donation from Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs
Division. The donation was made by Fred Zirkle, right, administrative manager for the Meigs Division and Larry Raines, in chopper, stores supervisor ror the Meigs Division, Florence Greasaman,
assistant director of development for Grant Hospital development
fund, accepted the donation. The money will be used to support
Life Flight, which serves the Meigs Division and nies out of Well·
ston, Raines is holding an oximeter, an instrument that allaches to
a person's finger and gives an instant readout of heart rate and
oxygen content. The oximeter was purchased with money Life·
Flight received last year from the Meigs Division.

.. Uttlt Reel
Riding Hood ..
Yoath Drama
Sat., July 18, 2:00p.m.

AND
Rollin Wiliams In

Admission Free

HOOK PG

Morna 1nd DorOihy Hlaklnl
AMI ThMtre
426 2nd Avt., Ol.lllpolll, Oh.

446·1088

. CtN 44&amp;·AATS fat mora lnlo.

b .•

AU.MATIN(U' TUI\O"V IAIIGA•MIIfff

S!l... ACIUlT AOMI\\I~Irii\IINING S11C1Wi

a Chinese journalist.
Wayne G. Johnson. 71, of Silver
Bay. M1nn ., recalled thai 1hc
Japanese had wiped out the Chinese air force and were bMmhing
Chinese cities at will until the Flying Tigers became active in
December 1941. Johnson joined
th e group the following July.

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.
ffi'EVE

GOLDIE

MARTIN HAWN

Housesitrer+
-on·-

.!!l ICIOSil~~·
~

"1&amp;-'

·- -1'1"- • ············

ONE EVENNO SHOW 7:30

suo

You're Invited
To An

pen

ouse

Ohio Valley Bank's
New Rio Grande Office

.jrm1111 't'itito - iienmm
(UIIPIIIH-IGO)

Pai!Hohlll 11&lt;h SllftdaJ, 05 'lllinl ......,
Oblo, bJ lhe Ohio Vllloy

QatHpotiJ,

Pablilhtn, ComPaaYIMaUhaedla, Inc.
_.elaN pootop paid al Oalllpollo,

WAS $19,t9:SI0W

..-u.,
0111 ...

OhiD 46631 . En&amp;eftd u .-eond c)UI
n~~Uer at Pomervy, Ohio, P01\

Cbeck Oar Dud Clllllll t'rack I,.Cials

·-"'····

N:erDr: The Aaociatad Prell, ud the
Ohio Newtpaper Altad&amp;tioft, National
&amp;~.. ntiinl RepntenU.Live, Branham
Sew1paper S.la, 719 Third Avenw,
NawY«k,NewYork 10017.

lUNDAY ONLY
BUBBCIIIPTION IIATIB
•
Br Carrl• or Motor llottt.
0no w..k........................ ......................so,
GrMI v..r ....... ...........................- .•..a.&amp;.eo
IIHOUOOPY

.Now s22•o

PBICII

1

l(olnda)o........ .... ......... - .... ..............1&amp; Conlo

Nows26
Reg'. '55"
Nows4400

40

Na tabteriptioaa by mail plrmittM. in
motor caniu Mrrict Ia

....., •••N
~lolllo .

,... lltulday

nmoa-Son"n•l wtlliiOI too

,.~telbr

If cant...

Levrs

from Wendy's restaurant chain
founder David Thomas of Dublin.
The latest reports showed that
winning candidates in the two contested races for nomination to other
Supreme Coun scats ouL~pcm their
June primary opponcnL~.
J udgc John Patton of the 8th
Ohio DisLrict Court of Appeals listed expenses of $82,065 in winning
the Democratic nomination over
Judge Lesley Brooks Wells of
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court. The post-primary repon of
Ms . Wells, who was the partyendorsed candidate , FCflcctcd
expenses of$47 ,559.
Pauon faces Republican Paul
Pfeifer in the November election.
Patton begins the race with a billance of 538,148 in his account and
$30,000 in debts. Pfeifer has a balance of $17,060, but has $365,356
in debts from an unsuccessful bid
for attOrney general in 1990.
,Judge Mark Painter of Hamilton
County Municipal Court spent
574,201 in winning the Republican
nomination ,to a third court seaL
His opponent, Thomas Frutig of
Gates Mills, said he spent S300.
Painter faces Dcmocrot Francis
Sweeney, a judge on the 8th Ohio
District Court of Appeals, in
November. Painter begins the roce
with a balance of 524,925 and
debts of SIK.OOO. Sweeney has a
halancc of S 122,361 .
Painter collected S3,000 from
the Ohio Medical PAC and S2,000
from the Associated Builders and
Contractors PAC. Sweeney' s
largest contribution was SJO,OOO
from the United Auto Workers
PAC.

below normal seasonal levels.
.
" The water supply .. . reservoirs
in central and northeast Ohio arc
continuing to sec the largest
declines and departures from summer pool ," the biweekly report
said.
That would 1nclude the two

FRI., SAT., SUN.

Reports show House, Senate Cheney hails Flying Tigers
(AP) - The nation 's the 14th Air Force. The aviators
war chests fatter than others topDAYTON
defense official says the Flying first were called "nying tigers" by

EVERYI'HING
70 ON SALE! _ .....

30%
. 40

Joy G. Straight

COLUMBUS (AP) - A state
report says drought conditions in at
least two regions of Ohio deteriorated in the past week.
Even with recent rainfall , only
the southwest and south central
regions of the state showed slight
improvement, the water division of
the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources reported Friday.
The division reported that north
central Ohio was back in the severe
drought classification, while the
northeast region went into the
extreme drought category.
The central , central hills and
northeast hills regions remained in
the extreme drought classir.cation,
the division said.
Small declines conlinuc al mosl
reservoirs. and storage generally is

Ronald E. Cleland

Ol

Top coal man named

Drought deteriorates in 2 areas :

Services will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Flagg Springs Church. Burial
will be in Flagg Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call al Waugh-Halley-Wood Funcrol Home on Tuesday
from 2-4 p.m. and 6-9 p.m .. and one hour prior to services on Wednesday.

CARL'S
SHOE STORE
July Clearan1e

VF.TF.RANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - Linda
Kaufman, Racine; Gatha Alvarado,
Pomeroy.
Friday d1scharges - John
Pridemore, Cecil King, Danny Barrcu and Virgie Roberts.

Sunday Tlmes-5entinei-Page-A3

--Area deaths--

cum.

•.

Hospital news

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

PATRIOT- Joy Gaye Straight, 79, Straight Road, Patriot, died Fri·
day, July 10, 1992, at Mount Carmel Hospital, Columbus.
·She was a homemaker and a member of Flagg Springs Church.
She was born Jan. 7, 1913 in Lawrence County, daughter of the late
Callahan Flora Gorf Marcum.
SuTVIvors include four sons, Robert Straight of Columbus, W&gt;Jiiam
SU'aight of Reynoldsburg, John Straight of i"JLriot, hnd James Straight of
Oak Hill; 16 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren; and one sister,
Sada Marcum or Oak Hill .
.
She wa~ preceded in death by her husband, John Franklin Straight; two
sisters, Marie ArmslJ'ong and Mada Jordan; and one brother, Curtis Mar·

______

front, the beautiful signing -and'
her plan is 10 incorporate some of
those features into her block an.
· Cleek 's artwork is on display at
Anderson 's Furniture. Pieces can
~ purchased or ordered and range
in pri~ c from S 10 to 520 depending
on size and detailing.
: As for how to display the block
an. Cleek says they 're attractive in
windows, on tables, over doors and

Men's Summer Spori
Shirts &amp;Knit Shirts
: Reg. ~ooo Now s16oo
: Reg. ~5~~ Now s2ooo
: Reg. ~001 Now s24oo

Ohio Lottery
tiOns:

locks···-----New
.

was used 10 create the locks.
: • Approximately 13 million
cpbic yards of earth was excavated
to create the lock channels.
• The huge miter gates (there are
eight of them) weigh approximately 200 tons each and were brought
up in section from where they were
built in Gulfport, Miss.
• Emergency gates will be hidden underwater near the miter gates

Texas Gov. Ann Richards
checked out the custom-buill podiurn where she will reign for four
days as chairwoman.
Rows of purple chairs were
lined up on the Garden noor for the
delegates who will nominate Clinton and ratify his platform. Balloons by the thousands were hoist·
ed to the ceiling, to be released on
cue when the Arkansas governor is
nominated on Wednesday night
and again on Thursday, when he
and Gore speak.
In all , nearly 5,000 delegates
and 15,000 reponers were expected
in town. Clinton was to arrive Sat·
urday; Gore follows today.
The polls pointed 10 a volatile
three-way race among Clinton,

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Friday night's Ohio Lottery selec-

McEwen emerges...

July 12, 1992

July 12, 1992

Clinton set... _...:..!C_on_tin_ued_fro_m_A-_1&gt;_ _ _ _ _ _-:-:--::-:---:-:-

OHIO Weather

HUNTINGTON , W.Va. (AP)
- The United Mine Workers
union is suing to block new c~l
mine ventilation regulations it says
would weaken standards that protect miners' health.
,
The union Friday asked the U.S.
Court of Appeals in Washington,
D.C.. to review the final rules.
"Most Americans understand
that you can't cut comers on coal
Jtliner health and safety, but to the
Bush adminisLration, the laws that
protect coal miner lives arc simply
'red tape,"' said union President
Richard Trumka.
: The new regulations arc due to
lake effect Aug. 16.
: Mine Safety and Health Administration spokesman Sam Stafford
said he couldn ' t comment on pending legal actions.
Representatives of the National
Cool Association, a coal operators'
lobbying group, were not available
tb comment on the suit Friday.
In underground cool mines, too
little air lluw can allow the accu·
rhulation of explosive gases such as
methane , while too much air can
contribute tO the ropid spread of
ijres. Ventilation al&gt;a helps conLrol
miners' exposure to the coal dust
that causes black lung disease.
Joe Main,thc union's health and
safety administrator, said many
regulation s included in the final
,.Je differ from the proposal sub- .
tniued for public comment.
·: One rule, proposed by lhc Mine
Workers, would have given miners
chance 10 comment on any propased ventilation changes.

wv

•

odv.... poymanllmade

1WL lllllll:aiPTIONS

,
...... OIIIY
dne Yaor..............:........................... l47.8~

lldqlll JOU&amp;' btd deal oa a N.W C... 01' Track and we
·
· wlU trJ to aaa.c or ...t the DeaL
J'OA A GOOD JII.IAI ..
SEE JACit ROUSH or BOB ROSS
Our Service Department 11 Open Mon.-Fri. 11-5; Sat. 8-12

i!bt M..,lllo......................................IU19
I
Dolt.uclludu
1WL ltn18CBIPI10HI

:•
IS

J.W.Cout)r

w.w................... ......................121.1~

u.n--

•TNfMIDa

.P..Ient Llfta
oGowna
oS!MhollCopea
&lt;Oetomr
o&amp; .. k BNCu

o24 Hour Emerg.ncy llnr!c•
•Rnplrilory TIMnipllt on 8tllll
•We do tiM lnt~u~ billing for the patient
· oMoat lteme covered by MICIII:I,.
.S.IM • Rentlll· S.mce

.BOWMAN'S
HOMECIRE MEDICAl SUPPLY

t•-.. . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .ns.to
• w.... .............

·loloo-451·6144

·.

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446-7213

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I

- - -i l

.Chuxa l Dlepers
oLitmbawool
.OUOderm
•TENS Unha
..Jabal Stocking•

at w.w..........................................l49.t6

a w..u..........................................l84. 76

'Muffler Shop Mon.-t=rl. 8-5; Sat. 8-12

-Hoapltlll Beda
•Whwlchltlrt
ofeedlng Pun.,•
•Air

'

'I

"

Wednesday, July 15, 1992
Ribbon
Cutting
9:00a.m.

omo
VALLEY

Open House
· 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

BANK

.....

�~

.

July 12, 1992

.

Co:JD.mentary and perspective

Page-A4
July 12, 1992

•

Democrats wise to seize health-care iss·ue
A Dl'fllloa of
~tC
1251'111rd Aft~ Ga!llpoU., Oldo

111 Court SL, Pomeror, Ohio
(614) 991·2156

(614)~230

ROBERT L WINGETI'
Publlther

HOBART WILSON JJl.
ltwutt.!l Edllllr

PAT WHITEHEAD
Alllltant Publlther-Coiiii'OIIer

A MEMBER or Tbe Auociated Preu, and lbe American
Newspaper Publilllon AJaocialioD.

Ll!mRS OP OPINION ue welcome. They sbould be leas lban
300 wonts. All !etten ere subject 10 editing aod must be olgoed wilb

name, oddleao and lclepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be
publiohed. Letten sbould be in good taste, addreasiog issue•, not
penooalltiol.
.

Not• always a
serious guy
•

•

lly .JILL LAWR~: NCE
.
AP Politk'al Writer
·: NEW YORK - Albert Gore Jr. ha~ an earnest air and a reputation for
deep thinking. His friends say he's more Lhan a policy nerd. He's also a
wiseguy who can take jok()l; and dish them out.
"We spend most of our time teasing each other," said Rep . Tom
Downey, D-N.Y. "I tease him wilhout mercy. If he's running in a race,
1:11 say 'don't bring a stopwatch, bring a calendar."'
. Bill Clinton tapped the Tennessee senator Thursday to be the Democratic vice presidential nominee. The two Soulhcrn moderates arccompat·
iblc on many issues.
. "He's an aggressive competitor in anylhing that he docs," said Mark
McNeely, a longtime friend and associate. "I've played pickup basketball
games with him where he's like a raging bull."
Gore, now 44, won his first House race when he was 28 and ran for
president barely a do1.cn years later. He wa.~ a man in a hurry until his
young son, Albert Ill, wa.1 hit by a car and nearly died in early 1989.
"That was a signal event in his life," said McNeely. "He got very
rcOcctivc about Lhings."
The boy had recovered fully by last summer. Gore repeatedly cited Lhc
accident and his commitment to his wife, Tipper, and their four children
as he tested Lhc 1992 waters, and finally in announcing that he would not
run.
• Instead he spent every free moment in a hideaway office writing a
book called "Earth in Lhc Balance."
Gore was instrumental in pa&amp;ling a ban on ozone-damaging chloronuorocarbons and went to the Earth Summit last month to hlast President
Bush 's cnvironmcnwl poli,ics.
He also is an expert on arms control, science and medical policy, and
advanced technologies such as fiber optics. Last year he ventured into
taxes, introducing the first proposal for a middle-class tax cut. It is still
pending in Congress.
CongressiOnal scholar Norman Ornstein said Gore has been successful
l)y three swndards: He has helped set the national agenda, his views arc
respected by other SCIUitors, and he has shown he can put together coalitions Ill get Lhings done.
Most of Gore's causes look to Lhe futurc in a way Lhat' s unusual in the
election-driven, Short-term aunosphcre on Capitol Hill.
Two years ago, after his failed prtsidenlial bid, he go168 percent of Lhc
vote.
· Gorc's.fathcr, Alben Sr., also was a senator and came close to being
Adlai Stevenson's running mate in 1956. The younger Gore was raised in
Washington, aucnding private schools and Lhcn Harvard University.
The prospect of the Vietnam draft loomed when Gore graduated .
Though he and his falher bolh opposed Lhc.war, the younger Gore dcdded
to join the Army and ended up in Vietnam as a combat journalist.
When he returned, Gore wrote for Lhc Nashville Tennessean and dabbled in law and divinity school. He was clecLCd to the House in 1976 and
lO the Senate in 1984.
Gore positioned himself a~ the hawkish moderate in the 1988 presidential race and made at least one nolablc pomt: It was he who fcrst attacked
eventual nominee Michael Dukakis for Lhc prison furlough policy that set
Willie Honon free.
Mcxlcratc DcmocraLs considered him a prime 1992 prospc" after he
broke with his party and supported the usc of force agamstlraq's Saddam
Hussein. " It is said Lhat sanctions could stop him. I wish that were so. It
may be so. But it docs not feel plausible to me," Gore said in a long and
agonized Ooor speech just before the Jan. 12, 1991 vote.
..
"The time has come," Gore sacd Thursday m Lc ulc Rock, for all
Americans to get off the sidelines."

Today in history
· Today is Sunday, July 12, the !94th day of 1992. There arc 172 days
left in Lhc year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 12, 1812, United States forces led by Gen. William Hull
· entered canada during the War of 1812 against Britain. (However, Hull,
eonccrned about a new alliance between the British and l ~dians led by
Tecumseh, retreated shortl y thereafter to Detroit, and surrendered to the
British a month later.)
· On this date:
In 100 B.C., the Roman Emperor Julius Caesar was born.
. In 1543, England's King Henry VIII married his sixth and last wife,
Catherine Parr, who outlived him.
• In 1690, Protestant forces led by Willihm of Orange defeated the
Roman Catholic army of James II at Lhe BaiLie of the Boyne in Ireland.
In 1862, Congress authorized the Medal of Honor.
In 1933, Lhe U.S. government set the minimum wage at 40 cents an
hour.

WASHINGTON - Democratic
Sen. Harris Wofford's war cry in
Pennsylvania's special election last
fall was health insurance. Wofford
actually had much more to lose
than just a Senate seat- his wife's
health insurance was in jeopardy.
''My own wife was worried Lhal
if I lost the election, her pre-existing condition that she gc1s costly
treatment for at the University of
Pennsylvania hospital would keep
us from getting health insurance,"
he recently told us.
By engineering a stunning upset
over former Auorney General
Richard Thornburgh, Wofford was
eligible for the Federal Employees
Health Plan . He was allowed to
choose from several health -care
programs that, unlike most insur·
ance policies , do not preclude
clients with pre-existing conditions.
Wofford's wife is covered.
Increasingly, being "co~ercd"
is not enough: Loopholes can be
big enough to drive a truck
through. That proved true in the
case of Nancy Biddison, a Maryland woman we recently reponed

on who suffered a stroke that might
have been prevented by a S1,200
magnetic resonance imaging scan.
It was a test her doctors lhought

By Jack Anderst)n
and
Michael Binstefn
she should have, but her insurer
declined to cover.
David White, a spokesperson
for Lhc Health Insurance A~cncy of
Amt;rica, normally champ1ons the
. cause of hca!Lh insurance industry.
But he was visibly shaken after a
recent day of hearings before the
Senate Labor and Human
Resources Committee.
"It was a draining hearing. It
was trugic, absolutely tragic. It was
gut wrenching," White· told our
reporter Andrew Conte.
There was the story of a molhcr
of four who was denied a routine

bone marrow transplant becau se 1980s.
her health insurer cla(mcd it was
Liule progress is expected until
experimental. Before she could Congress can get past the log Jam
appeal, the cancer spread. She posed by political action comc:nct·
lamented to senators Lhat her health tees - medical, pharmaccuucal
insurer was telling her, in essence, and insurance industry-related Lhat "saving your life would be too that showered more Lhan $60 mil·
expensive. It felt as if they had Lhe lion on congressional candidates
power of life and death over me between 1980 and the first half of
and Lhcy chose death."
1991.
Another mother of a diabetic
One Democratic strategist called
child testified that she was forced a consensus a "hypothetical situato sell her home in order to pay for tion that was not going to happen .
her son's health costs, which now You're not going to have all the
outstrip her income. She grimly Democrats agree on one program
suggested that her son might be for comprehensive reform of health
best off if his condition worsened care. My guess is Lhat you will not
so Medicare would foot the bill.
sec the Democratic Convention.
Such stories arc echoing across 'take a vote on a specific heahh·carc
Lhc country with too much frequen- proposal because there won't be
cy. Looking toward Lhc convention, one present."
Democrats sense a window of
Wofford told us that cv(\ll
opportunity to seize health care on though Bush would probably veto
the natioiUII level as Wofford did in any health-care lcgislalion passed
Pennsylvania. First, they have to by Congress, the Democrats could
mend the political rifts within.thcir win by losing. " It will just become
own party, which has so far failed all the more an issue in the presito reach the kind of consensus on dential election,'' he predicts.
health care that Republicans
SKINNER ON BUSH reached on economics in the early George Bush's political fortunes
may be nagging, but his popularity ,
with his beleaguered chief of staff •
couldn't be stronger. Sam Skinner :
recently 10ld White House visitors .
how George Bush was Lhc highest :
quality human being he had ever )
worked for.
;
The example he cited took place ,
in Kennebunkport last year. Skin- '
ncr and his wife stayed with the :
first family overnight. Skinner ·
explained Lhat Bush wani.Cd to play ·
a round of golf the next morning, :
but Skinner didn ' t have an alarm ·
clock, and couldn't run the risk of
oversleeping for an appointment .
with the president. Bush went to ·
his own room and prcscni.Cd Skin- ·
ncr with a clock embossed with the ·
presidential seal.
Skinner set it for 5:59 a.m . At
6:00, there was a knock on his
door. As Skinner rubbed Lhc sleep
out of his eyes, he was astonished .
to sec the commander-in-chief •
standing in his bathrobe that was
monogrummed with " President of
the United States." He was even
more surprised when he saw Bush
holding a tray with coffee, milk .
and sugar. "I didn't know whclhcr
you wanted cream or sugar,'' Bush
thought[ully explained.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

"Looks like the voters mean business!. .. "

Pitfalls of seceding from state of Ohio
Roger Gilmore wrote an intercsting leucr to the editor which
appeared in The Daily Sentinel on
July 6, 1992. This lcucr was wellwriucn and is quite objective.
The writer appreciates the interest of Roger in aLLcmpting to have
Meigs County secede from the
state of Ohio and become part of
the state of West Virginia. The
writer has no objection to this but
there arc some pitfalls whc.ch mc'ght
be difr.cultto overcome.
In order 10 achieve Roger's purpose there would have to be an act
of Con!lrcss ana legislative acts of
both the states of West Virginia
and Ohio approv 1·ng same. In shon,
there would be one more necessary
hurdle to jump in order to accomplish this purpcsc.
The writer proposes the follow - .
ing problems to consider, namely,
1) What if the state of West Virginia would refuse to accept the
county of Meigs as a pan of it's
state? This would indeed be embar·
rass ing . 2) The writer doc s not
know which sUite has bcLLcr wei·
fare benefits. If Ohio's benefits arc
bcucr than West Vc'rgc·nc·a·s, then
Meigs County residents would
probably not vote for this change.
In the event of either change
then it would still be necessary to
build a moat or a canal around the
present borders of Meigs County.
Should the residents of Meigs vote
to J·oin West Virginia , then the
county of Meigs would become an
island at enormous cosLI. It might
also be necessary to have an under·

grou nd tunnel constructed under other three sides by the State-of
the Ohio River for the purpose of Ohio. It's a place wilh seven miles
transportation . This would be of freeway in the middle of
something like the Holland Tunnel nowhere, a bridge you can't get to,
mines in danger of closing, twenty
thousand hard working, hard praying, hard living souls, the State of
Ohio has long forgotten. The vcrsin New
b 1· d cs, Ill the tunc of Tom Dooley, arc
. 11YorkR.
Fcna
y, upc , many e ccvc
as follows:
that it is in the best interest of our
Refrain:
economy to circulate
a
petition
to
Hang down your hcad Mccgs
.
h oh·10 If
h
r
d
· cnoug
sccc c rom t c
County,
signatures arc obtained, it would
Hang down your head an d cry.
h
G
th
ood
s ow our . ovcrno~ c exact m
Hand down your head Meigs
that the cctc,.cns 0 this county arc County,
in at the prcsentumc. The petition
An kiss your prison good-bye.
would be silcnt ·as to whether
Meig s County would become a
They said there was no politics,
State or become a pan of West Vir·
All was fair and square,
ginia. This can be decided later.
Your site is the best one,
Roger • 1 acn happy that you
We'll put the prison there.
wrote your lcucr to the Editor. At
leasdt ~ouhshow ~hat yfouharc inter·
S&lt;Mnc of us arc stupid,
cste 10 1 ~we 1 .arc 1. 1 1Thscounty.
Some of us ain't bright,
Keep your etters ro 1mg. c wnt·
We've all smelled Lhc dead fish,
cr will not
feel
offended
when
· d. ·d 1 d"
·h
This don't smell just right.
anothcr cn cvc ua csagrccs wct
him. provided
his comments arc
·
The State don't have no money,
0 bJCCLMcvc.. C
L
The Trcas~ry is bare
ec~s · ounty
ament
. · ·
d
"M
·
C
A1ong co cs ••
u•J S mc 11 con bucks,
A so,ngh LJL 1c b ccgs ounty
F
·
·
·
loatcng m the acr.
Lamcnt as now ccn rccordcd.

Fred W. CrOW

Hang Down you llcad Meigs
County
It's all to political grufl
Belmont and Noble got the gold '
mine,
Meigs County got the shaft.
Hang down you head Meigs
County,
Hang down you head and cry.
Hang down your head Meigs ,
County,
·
And kiss the prison good-bye."

The lyrics were wrincn by Mike
Roberts. The vocal was done by
Jeff Morris and the recording was
by Alan Hamm. The recording is as
follows:
"Now thi s hear is a sad tragic
talc whcch takes place 10 rural h111 1
country bounded on one scdc by Lhc
State of West Virgcnia and on the

Governor, you'll need our help
Somewhere down Lhc line.
You can count Lhis county out,
Come election time.

A copy of this song has been
sent to the governor's ofr.cc. Likewise, it as been sent to several ;
. slatcons
.
for posscb
. 1c amng.
.. '
radco
Maybe just maybe, something good
will come out of this yet.
Rupe, this song which has been :
wriLLcn i~ •not to downgrade Meigs :
County . All this has been wriLLcn, •
sung or read for one reason only. :
That is to call attention to Lhc govcrnor and show him the protest ,
now felt in Lhis county.
Rupe, 1 feel ihat some of Lhis i~
'ar
" out but c·f you don't let the Govcrnor know how .you feel, the same
•• .cng wc'II happcn thc ncxtllrnc.
·
••
Carry on.
,
Editor's note • Long-time
Allorney Fred W. Crow is the
contributor of a weekly column
for The Sunday Tlmea-Sentiael •
~eaders wishing to applaud, crlt:·
1cl••
any sub·l-•'
- or ..,_,_ton
•v""'"'"
...~
(except relialon or politics) are'
encouraged ' to write to Mr
Crow, in care of this newspaper, ··

These principles do not contradict
one. another · ~nd we adhere 10
h"
'
cac ·
The phrase. "thai may become a
child " offers a touch ot"warmlh to
' ye t · born but whcle
. the
the not
overall decision p;ovidcs obstacles
to their "termination" nol many
will be saved The dociding three
justices ~Y that some people 'considcr abortion to be "nolhing short
of an act of violence al!ainst innocent human life;" but ·r'Lhc liberty
of the woman'' to abort ·'is at ·
stake in a sense unique to the
human condition and so, unique to
the law." Therefore while one
may "express profound respect for
the life of Lho unborn" there must
be no "undue burden" to a
woman 's right to an abortion.
But, as O'Connor, Souter and
Kennedy have profoundly disturbed Lhe advocates for Lhc not yet
born, they havealsogrca~y disap-

abonion rights. By taking away the
highest standard of review in Lhesc
cases - strict scrutiny - the jus·
ticcs have ruled, despite their calm·
ing rhetoric, that abortion is actual 1y no 1ongcr a runu.amcnUJ
.•. · 1consti tutional right. The slllndard is now
whclhcr a restriction on a abortion
is an "undue burden." The slate no
lon~cr has to show -as under Lhc
stnct scrutiny test- a "com pclling interest" on its part to justify its restriction.
This rickety decision, Lhercforc,
hardly justific.~ confidence on any
side- and not only because of the
narrowness of the 5-4 vole. Yet the
Soutcr-Kcnnedy-O'Connor troika
lectures all of us to be upstanding
citizens and follow Lhc commands
of the court Lhal has labored with
such care and an~uish in Ibis case
on our behalf. Thcs is one of Lhosc
times, they say, and one of those
rare cases, wh~n "the Court's

calls the contending sides of :
national controversy to end their ·
national division by accepting a
d
·
common man ate rooted in the .
Constitution."
:
The cour1 cs
· no,t howevcr, he'cng ·
obeyed. The comrnvcrsy hus only
grown more bitter and wearying. A
· young pro-life woman I know - ·
and she has counterparts among
pro-choiccrs - told me after the ,
court's decision, "I've recently
been in Indiana and Kansas work·
ing alongside women who tell me
they have been in Lhis abortion bat·
Liefor 20 years. Twenty years! And .
I've have only just begun! Am I
going to have to~ my life this
way?" She didn't ask me for Lhe
answer. She knew Lhc answer.
Nat Hen torr is a nationally
' renowned ~uthority on the First.
Amendment and the rest of tl¥: Bill
of Righl~.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER

°

The Governor made a promise
To help Meigs County grow.
Instead he gave a press release
Which added to our woes.

How top court rules on non-persons_·________·
T
b
h ha c
.. dhedc nthcoL Y0.1 ~rn, wl 0 ~n
dJVJ
nauon ·~r 50 ong,
count on few fr1cnds at the
S
C 1 J t'cc An ron in
...~Pli~cmc ourf.. uds 1A h a·
~a a cs not
a rccn . s· Planned
e ag m
1 . h. d'
made ch:in ~ csscn,t,~h lalcs
~arem
v.. ascy, . c s ·
may. cf Lhcy wcsh, permit aboru~non-demand, b.ut the Constctuu~~
aocsnot requtrc them 10 do 50:
To hcm, .Lhcsc wars have 10 do WI~
fedcralls~, no.t !he. s.a• cng 0
human hfe 10 all JUrlsdlcUons.
: Nor is another dissenter, the
Chief Justice, a rescuer of the fetus.
1\5 David Savage points out i~ his
t~luablc book, "Turning R1ght:
'!'he Makin~ of the Rehn'lucst
Court" (W1Iey), in RchnqJSt's
~jew, "The Constitution neither
. gOvo women a rig~tto choose a~r­
LiM nor guaranq:cd the fetus a rcght
tO'Iifc, Because neither
was dccid·
..
•I

cd by the ConstctutJon, the states
and their elec ted officials cou ld

potentcal.) In hcs concumng opcnion in Planned Parenthood v.
Casey, he cmpha.1izes that to be a
, ded b h C . .
person guar
y t c onsutuuon,
one f1rs1 has to be born. According·
_
1y, " an abort'con cs· not •Lhc termc-·
decide forthcmselves."
nation of life and cntitl7d to 14th
Byron White may be the only Amendment prmcctcon.' ' At least,
opponent of Roc v. Wade on the Stevens docs indicate Lhat a life is
court who goes beyond federalism involved. He doc.~ not say whether
to a concern for Lhe vast number of it is human life. But it docs not
lives Lhat have been foreclosed by matter. Like Dred Scou, a non-per·
Roc. In his original 1973 dissent, son -as Justice Roger Taney said
Justice White said Lhat Rcc allowed just before the Civil War when he
abortion to "satisfy the convc- ruled that blacks had no rights nicncc ·whim, or caprice of the cannot be a :'con~t,itucnt member
putative mother. " (C larence of thcs sovcrccgnty.
Thomas has yet to disclose on prePotc~tial life docs maucr, howcisely \\'hat grounds he is against ever, to Lhc wniCrs of Lhll dommant
Roc.)
opinion in the Pennsylvania case
On the other side, John Paul -Sandra Day O'Connor, Anlhony
Stevens make's no pretense of being Kennedy and Dav.id Souter. "The
at all troubled by Lhc fate of- as state has tcpitimatc inlcrcs.t from
some justices put it - "petcmial the ouLICL o the prcgiUincy m pro·
life." (A more accurate way of tccungthehcallhoflhcwomanand

iff
Nat Hento

tlr-~rrihincr thf' (r"IIIIO: ic:: lifl" with

lhr frl11-.: lh:11 mnv ~nm f' ~ rhilrl

",. ; ,.,,.rl .~ ...... r: ...... :... ,.. ,,.. ..... ~, ..... ,

inlr.rnrrt:Uinn "' thr f""nnvtitntinn

PN'T'PRPRI~J: ACI:CI:N

Patrol issues citations in 5 accidents

Ceremony
first step
in uniting
3 churches
PORTER - The Trinity United
Mclhodist Church will soon have a
new home.
Groundbrcaking services for the
new church were held 2 p.m. Sun·
day , June 28, on the site adjoining
the old Porter United Methodist
Church facing Ohio 160.
The land was purchased with
money from Lhc Unquenchable Fire
Campaign.
According to Lhc Rev . C.J . Lemley, this is a step forward in uniting
the three community churches of
Vinton, Porter and Evergreen, The
three churches have been united in
worship for the past I0 months and
currently meet at the Evergreen
Church.
The serv ice opened with Pas10r
Chester Lemley welcoming the
people and stating it has taken
about 1-l/2 years of study and
planning for this to happen.
James Waugh, Athens district
superintendent, said he was glad to

GROUNDBREAKJNG - A groundbreaking senice was held
June 28 for the new Trinity United Methodist Church in Porter.
The new church will be built near the old Porter United Methodist
Church. The Trinity Church was formed last year when the
Porter, Vinton and Evergreen United Methodist Churches consolidated. Here, church members turn the first earth at the site.

be a part of the event in behalf of fong, building location commiuec
the district.
member: Dan Evans; Patrick Stout;
board of trustees; Virginia Stout, Pastor Lemley and the D.S., James
Shovels were handed out to:
building fund treasurer; Olen Wil·
Robert Powell, chairman of the
Waugh. The first earth was lifted
togctljcr.
The ceremony ended with a
prayer by the D.S., James Waugh.
The anticipated date of new
MORGANTOWN , W.Va. - Informational meetings on the
building's dedication is early 1993.
Department of Labor, Mine Safety and Health Administration' s
Final Rule for Safety Standards for Underground Coal Mine Ventilation under 30 CFR Parts 70 and 75 will be held at 9 a.m. July 23
in the Hospitality Inn Conference Room in St. Clairsville and 9 a.m.
August 10 in Lhc Ramada Inn VIP Room, Morgantown.

Local News in Brief:

Mine safety meetings scheduled

GALLIPOLIS - No injuries
were reported bul five people were
cited in five wrecks in vestigatcd
Friday in Gallia County by Lhe Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State High·
way Patrol.
A Point Pleasant woman was
cited after a two-vehicle accident at
the intersection of State Route 7
and the U.S. 35 westbound exit
ramp around II a.m.
According to the patrol, Grace
E. Camden, 57, came off the exit
ramp onto 7, moved Ill the left lane
and struck a southbound pickup
driven by Mallhcw D. Reed. 20 ,
MarlctUJ.
Damage to Camden's 1980
Buick Skylark and Reed's 1985
Ford F-150 was listed as light.
Camden was cited for improper
lane change.
A Gallipolis man was cited after
a car-farm tractor accident on Cora
Mill R'oad in Green Township
around 2:30p.m.
,
William A. Leonard, 62, was
northbound on Cora Mill Road
when he turncc)lcft in the path of a
southbound car, driven by Judith
A Sheet.~. 46, Gallipolis, causing a
head-on collision, the patrol report·
cd.
· Leonard 's 1990 Masscy-Fcrgu·
son 298 was undamaged . Damage
to the front of Sheets' 1990 Toyota
Camry was listed as moderate and
disabling.
Leonard was cited for fa ilure to
yield.
A Crown City woman was cited
after a two-vehicle accident on 7 in
Clay Township around 4: IS p .IO .

Four plead not guilty
to charges from probe

Fair camping reservations begin
GALLIPOLIS -Camping reservations for the Gallia County
Junior Fair will be taken starting 8 a.m. July1 0 at the caretaker' s
office. Reservations will be granted on a first come, first served
basis.

GPD investigates accident
GALLIPOLIS - Police invcstigai.Cd an accident Friday after·
noon in which a boy on a bicycle wa1 struck by a motorcycle. Jeremy Collins 14 Ingalls Road, Gallipolis, was struck by a motorcycle
driven by Mahion G.. Edlcn, 26, Ingalls Road, Gallipolis. According
to the report, Collins was traveling eastbound on Ingalls Road, went
left of center and was struck by Ed! en, who was traveling west·
bound.
Collins was treated and released from Holzer Medical Center for
multiple abrasions and contusions. Edlon was not treated. Damage
to Lhc motorcycle was listed as moderate and damage to Lhc bccyclc
was reported as heavy. No citations were issued.
.
Police arrested Craig D. Durham, 31, McClaskey Road , Vmton,
Saturday morning on a warrant for criminal trcspa ss m~.
Police filed a complaint from Raymond Math1as, Chatham
Avenue, Gallipolis, who reponed Lhat someone stole a vcdcocassctte
recorder, four guns and two rings from his residence between June
19 and July 10. The total value was reported at more than S776.

Gallia County deputies make arrest
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County sheriff's deputies arrested
William K. Rice, 32, Orchard Hill Road, Gallipolis, early Saturday
morning for assault.
D;cvid A. Whaley, 2K, Cora Mill Road, Rio Grande, reponed to
deputies that someone stole three guns from his residence Lhc night
of July 8.
.
Amanda Brewer, McClaskey Road, Vinton, told deputccs that
someone stole her belongings from her residence between July 9
and July tO while she was in the process of moving. The report d1d
not specify what was missing.

Area man reports attempted theft
POMEROY - Sheridan Pierce, DcWiu's Run Road, reponed to
the Meigs County Shcrifrs Department Friday that around 7:30
p.m. someone tried to steal his boat trailer and baucry from his Ford
Bronco.
The report slated the vehicles were parked along Shade River on
the Mount Olive side. He and his family were out on Lhc river at Lhc
time of the incident. He reponed seeing a newer Dodge Dakota
leaving the area.

Moderate damage listed in accident
POMEROY - Kevin Goff, 19, Tuppers Plains, was traveling
cast on Texas Road in a 1991 Ford pickup Lnick when he struck a
deer that jumped into his path. The incident oceuJTcd around 4:20
p.m. Friday. According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department
there was modcrute damage listed to the truck.

Vehicle strikes fallen tree
POMEROY - Michael A. Baker, Long Bottom, wa.1 traveling
north on New Hope Road around II :30 p.m. Friday and ran over a
tree that had fallen during the slllrm. Baker's 1973 Chevrolet pickup
sustained damage to Lhc underneath of the vehicle.

Thieves remove plants from grave
POMEROY - Basil Cremeans, Rutland, reported Ill the Meigs
County Shcrifrs Dcparuncnt Friday Lhat wilhin Lhc last week three
live planLI had been taken from a grave at the Miles Cemetery.

EMS answers jour Friday calls
POMEROY - Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service responded to four calls for assistance on Friday.
At 9:48 a.m. Lhe Syracuse unit went to State Route 7 for Tony
Jones who was transported to Camden Clark Hospital.
The Racine unit, at 12:14 p.m., transported Ezra Morris from Lhe
Racine Fire Station to Veterans.
At 8:07 p.m. Lhc Middleport unit was called to Wche Terrace for ·
Paul Houdashclt who was taken 10 Holzer Medical Genter.
The Rutland unit, at 9:23 p.m., responded to Higley Road for
Norma Carroll who was transported Ill Pleasant Valley Hospital.

COLUMBUS (AP)- Two current and two former presidents or
community colleges have pleaded
innocent to charges involving campaign contributions to state lcgisla·
tors.
Atlllrncys entered the pleas Friday for the men and for the Ohio
Technical and Community College
Association and its former cxecu·
Live director, Harold Roach. The
five arc free on recognizance
bonds.
Plea bargains involving 14 other
current or former presidents of
two-year schools arc expected to be
formally approved later this monlh.
In exchange for admissions of
wrongdoing, the 14 will be allowed
to enter diversion programs. Once
those programs arc completed,
charges will be erased.
The presidents arc accused of
giving money to Lhc association via
false invoices and intentionally
overpaid dues assessments. That
money was funneled by Roach to
legislators, usuallr_ with notes

used a lonphole in the law to pa.y
people less ·Lhan Lhc federal mmt·
mum wage in the past," he said. "I
don't care if it's legal or not. I
don't Lhink it's right"
The Columbus Dispatch report·
ed Friday that the fair's gates
superintendent, Larry Weaver,
wrote some seasonal employees a
lcucr in June which sa1d Inmon
"has asked all .departments to cut
back . This means that the gates
office salaries will be slightly
lower for 1992."
One fair guard whom the newspaper didn't
'
. . identify .said he had

.

'·

detailing the contnbutcon from
each college president.
The four current and former
presidents arraigned Frid.ay arc
Richard Bryson, president of Marion Technical College; John Light,
president of Hocking Techni cal
College in Nelsonville; Paul Ohm ,
former president of Belmont Technical College in St. Clairsville and
Jacoh Sec, former president of
Owens Technical College in Toledo.
All four ~rc charged with theft
in office, theft of more than $300
and tampering with records. Light,
Ohm and Sec also arc charged with
making illegal political contributions and Light and Ohm face
charges of engaging in a pallcrn of
corrupt activity.
Both Roach and the association
arc charged wilh engaging in a pal·
tern of corrupt activity, perjury,
Lhcft of more than $5,000, tampering with records and making illegal
poliucal contributions.

A northbound car dr1vcn by
Sandra S. Maxhimcr,42, aucmpted
to make a left turn cnto a pri vatc
drive causing a co lli sion with a
southbound pickup dri ven by
Thoma~ R. Lewis, 40, Crown City,
the patrol reported.
Damage to Lewis ' 1991
Chevrolet S- 10 and Max hi mer' s
1976 Ford LTD was Iisted as modcrate.
Muxhimcr was cited for fac lure
to yield when turning left and driving under financial responsibility
action suspension.
A Gallipolis man received two
ciuuions after a one-vehicle crash
on Ohio 5HR in Green Township
around 10:55 p.m.
According to the patrol, Michael
L. Pollock II, 19, was eastbound,
drove off the right side of the road
•

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00

A Gallipolis youth was cited;
after ~ one-car wreck on Bladca•
Road in Ohio Township al approxi,-:
matcly 6:30p.m.
:
According to the patrol, Virg~ ·
R. Watson II, 17, was castbounct, :
lost control in a left curve, slid oft'
the right side of the road and strucK :
a utilit y pole.
':
Damage to Watson 's 1990 ;
Chevrolet BcrcLLa was li sted as·
moderate.
:
Watson was cited for failure to ·
control.

New 1993 Nissan Truck
New des ign, 134 HP engine, 5

1993 m a 1992 Payment

Mo~tho

$16900... ·· -·-

38
Montha

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payment plus tax, title &amp; acquisition'" down, 15,000 miles

per year.
Great Service and Caurteaus
Sales Treatment Ta 1111 Law
Prtces When Yeu Come To
, otNict

COLUMBUS (AP) - Ohio
State University's president says
the school's new budget goes far
beyond the kind of cutbacks made
in the past.
"We have moved from belt·
tightcnin~ to the poss ibility of
strangulallon," Gordon Gee said
Friday after university trustees
adopted a budget for fiscal 1993.
The budget includes Lhc following major changes:
• Tuition will go up 7 percent
starting in the fall. It is the ma~i ­
mum increase allowed under slate
law.
• As many as I ,000 jobs will be
CUI.

• Most employees won 't get a
raise this year.
• DcparUncnt budgets have been
cut .an average of 5 percent to 7
percent.
Gee said the budg et was
designed to protect Ohio State's
academic core, which he said was
the university's highest priority.
He. said the university was look·
ing at several ways to cut expenses
and increase revenue, including
whether to sell or lease real estate
such as its airport and golf courses.
"If there's a choice between
whether we play golf or teach
Shakespeare, we will always teach
Shakespeare," he said.
William J. Shkurti, vice president for finance, said that even
wilh Lhc tuition increase and budget
cuL~. the university might fall $10
million short by mid -January .
Trustees authorized Occ to find
more ways .to cut the budget or
increase revenues, if necessary.
The board adopted a budget of
S1.27 billion, up 3 percent from fis·

cal 1992's $1.23 billion budget.
But the general fund, which supports instruction and related
expenses. will decrea se by 59.9
million.
Tuition is increa sing and the
budget is being cut to make up for
the loss of nearly $45 million in
state support.
Tuition for an undergraduate at
the university's Columbus campus
starting in the fall will be $916 per
quarter, up $60 from last year.
Tuition could increase by 9.5
percent if state legislators remove
the cap of 7 percent. Gee said a
decision on such an increase was
expected soon.
Most of .the job cuts involve
eliminating positions that arc
vacant because of previou s cut·
backs, Shkuni said.
But he said Lhcrc would be some
layoffs. Jobs will be lost at the
main campus, branch campuses
and Lhc Agricultural Research Center in Wooster. Non-regular teach·
crs, graduate assistants and undergraduates working their way
through school will be affected.
For the most part, the university
is holding the lcne on pay racscs.
Employees with long-term contracts and faculty members whose
status is up for review Lhis year arc
about the only university starr
members expected to receive salary
boosts.
Many employees will get less
money Lhis year because of higher
payroll deductions, Shkurti said.

lnd

SUPER NICE SELECTION OF GREAT
USED VEHICLES!

1989PONTIACGRANDAM
LE, Quid 4, air, C&amp;Sietle,

cruise, anoy wMels,
one-owner local trade.
tilt ,

faSIMCk , 5 speetl , AM ! FM

c.assertt. Cllf, til. r~r defrost klw
miles, 1 owner, local trade.

.

-

' ~-

-- .
'

.. . ..- ."
...... ~~-.::. ·'

No charges
planned

CHILLICOTHE (AP) - No
charges will be broughl against
been paid S4 an hour II!Sl year and three male prisoners who crawled
was told he would be pa1d $3.50 through a utility access panel to
this year.
• reach a women's cellblock in the
Inmon said that about 2,000·sca· Ross County jail, County Prosecusona·l workers arc hired every year tor Richard Ward said.
A woman prisoner said Lhc men
for the fair, which begins this year
raped
her, but two other women
on Aug. 7.
pnsoners
in Lhc cellblock said Lhcy
"No one will be paid less Lhan
did
not,
and
the woman refused
the minimum wage at the Ohio
both
a
medical
examination and a
Expo Center as long as I'm in
polygraph
test,
Ward
said.
charge," he said. "Even though
Two jail employees probably
the fair has been losing money for
will
be disciplined for ncglcctiQg
years, it would be wrong to try and
security
protedurcs that require
balance our budget on the backs Of
hourly
checks
on prisoners, Sheriff
our temporary workers."
Thomas Hamman said Friday.

·.•

:'

rcpml 11 stolen.

spaed, more powarthan Toyota
or Ford.

Savlnga

·.•

and struck a road sign.
Damage to Po IInck 's 1978 Forq,
Bronco was listed as light.
·•
Pollock was cited for failure to;
control and falsification . Accord inc•
to the p;ctrol. Pollock left his vch~ :
clc at the scene ~nd a':c mptcd til ·

Ohio State faces 'strangulation'
point in making budget cutbacks

Fair manager assures worker wages
COLUMBUS (AP) - Seasonal
workers at the Ohio Stale Fair will
be paid at least $4.25 an hour. ·
The fair's general manager,
Billy Inmon, on Frid~y said paying
anything less than that ~mount,
which is the federal mcmmum
wage, wouldn't be fair.
Inmon's statement was in
response to remarks from workers
who feared Lhal cuts in the fair bud·
get would mean some seasonal
employees would be paid lesS Lhan
the minimum.
"Previous fair managers have

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-AS

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

1111111106! ARES WAGON
AutOI'IIIlle, air, ~ereo , et"1se

SS995
Most 01 Our Uallll Cara Ctme WHh A 3 Monlh/3,000 Mill Wamnty

�-

..

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·- -

.... .

a.

~

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-

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... .

-- -

-

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-

- - .... - -

-

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.... '"' -

- - ...

~ · - -...

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

Page-AS-Sunday Times-sentinel

Centerville man saw end of Civil War
Uy JAMES SANDS
that number dying in combat. Four
~&lt;i'pt, ; i~U!I· GOfr~p.C!IIdent
died in Confederate prisons (two at
, ~;:~, ~VIl.!,,E · - ~he 60th Andersonville)andsixdiedinhospiRcg1mcn1 Ohto Volunteer Infantry , ·tals.Thirtccnsoldierswere wounded,
,was reorganized for three year duty nine were captured and four became
in February, Marchand April of 1864. ilLThe 60th participated in the fall of
Thlfd m command .
Petersburg on April 2, 1865. They
ofCompanyBwas
were also ncar Washington on the
1st Lieutenant
day that President Lincoln was assasJoshua Roof of
si natcd. ·
Centerville. The
Joshua Roof was one of about500
60th went from
Union soldic~ lhat were present at
Columbus to AIthe hanging of four of John Wilkes
cxandria, Virginia,
Booth's conspirators. He wus apparfrorri where they
cntly assigned as one of the guards
marched on April 27, 1864, to join over Mary Surratt.
theArmyofthcPotomac in the crossh was in Mary Surratt's boarding
ing of the Rapidan.
house that the plot to kill Lincoln was
This regiment partici pated in the hatched. Roof would have seen Mrs.
Bat~eofthe Wilderness May 5-7, thc Surrdl'sdaughtcr Annie pleading with
auackatMary's Bridgeon May9and military officials and cry ing with her
thc Battle of Spotsylvania Coun mmher as the day for exec ution drew
House May 8 to 18. The 60th led the nearer. Unti l the last hour before she
charge on Mary's Bridge and sus- was led to the gallows, Mrs. Surrall
taincd heavy casualties.
expected to be given a reprieve or
Company B started out wuh Ill even a pardon.
men. Some 20 died, with about half
Ironically. Andrew Johnson who

had 10 sign the execution orders was
111 and hence he did not read the
findings of the War Department
Commission created to convict the
conspi rators. Johnson had someone
summarize it and he signed lhc order
for lhe execution of four and imprisonment for four. Jhe commission
hud actua lly rcconimcnded life impnsonment for Mrs. Surratt but the
order Johnson signed called for Mrs.
Surrauto be hanged.
Johnson later claimed he was
tricked into signing the paper and
Judge Holt, who made out the papers,
claimed it was Johnson who insisted
Mrs. Sulratl be put to death:
Mrs. Surralt fainted a number of
times as she was led 10 the gallows.
Her guards claimed she was already
half dead from her long imprisonment before she ever stepped up on
the platform. Mrs. Surran died instantly as she just swung and twirled
perfectly quiet.
After the hanging civilinns and
'

r /-i

P. ane l fieu ds over draJ l report

alleging iniflation o.f
:J mail stats

By JIM DRINKARD
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A draft
congress ional report alleges that
the former House postmaster inflated mail -handling statistics by as
much as 100 million pieces a year
to justify more political patronage
workers for hi s operation, sources
familiar with the report said Friday.
The draft is being thrashed out
by three Democrats and three
Republicans on a special task force
looking into wrongdoing and misman age ment at th e House Post

omcc.

The report now appears likely to
be delayed until after next week's
Democratic National Convention
because or partisan disagreement
over what it should incl ude and
how to present the findin gs.
The task force was un ab le to
reach agree ment Thu rsday night
;oftcr a so meti mes storm y 4 1/2hour meeting thm fea tured shouting, table-pound ing and one member, Washington Democrat AI
Swirt, stormin g ou t and slamming
the door behind him.
House Administration Committee Chai rman Charles Rose, DN.C., sa id he wants a bipartisan
document. Others on the task force
said they expect separate majority
and minority reports.
Republicans want the document
to incl ude the names of 13 House
members, so far unn amed, who
have been identified as having
QUilSU'oniiDie deali
with the

scandal-plagued postal facility.
ees. we had ghost mail, " said one
Democ rats want to leave the source. '
names out Of the public repon until
Rota ·did not immediately return
the ethics committee or the Justice telephone calls to his home seeking
Department can determine whether comment.
there is reason to believe there was
The investigation by a six-memwrongdoing by any of the lawmak- ber bipartisan task force or th e
House Administration Commiuce
ers.
The situation has brought more parallels a grand jury probe by U.S.
emba rrassment to the House's Allomcy Jay Stephens in WashingDemocratic leaders, coming on lhc ton.
The federal investigation has
heels of the chamber's much
included subpoena s of office
broader bad-check scandaL
One GOP source Said the report expense records for at least three
fa lls short of giving a complete pic- lawmakers: Reps. Dan Ro sture of the lawm.akcrs' suspec t tenkow ski , D-111. , Joe Kolter, Dactivities. It is intended only as a Pa.. and Austin Murphy, D-Pa.
Among mauers being investi guide to the ethics panel and to federal prosec utors, who already arc ga ted arc whether lawmakers used
well into an investi gatio n of their office ex pense accounts to
alleged embe zz lement and drug buy stamps, then traded the stamps
dealing at the Post Office, the offi- back for cash for other uses.
Also under scrutiny is the possicial said.
He and other sources familiar bly illegal usc by some lawmakers
with the draft commented onl y on of post offi ce employees to pick up
campaign contributions at postal
condition of anonymity.
Both Democrats and Rep ubli - boxes and deliver them to House
cans on the task force agree thai the members.
A congressional staffer ea rlier
institution's internal, independently
run mail system was rife with mis- told The Assbciatcd Press he
management and abu.sc of political picked up campaign contributions
patronage, sa id task force mem- for five lawmakers: Reps . Nicholas
Mavroules, D-Mass., Dennis Herbers.
Former Postmaster Robert V. tel, D-Mich., Mary Rose Oakar, DRota, who resigned amid the con- Ohio , Jim Moody , D-Wis., and
Edward Fcighan, D-Ohio.
trov~rsy on March 19, boosted estiAll said then they were unaware
mates of mail coming through the
of
the practice and ord ered it
facility to provide more jobs for
or that they avoided
stopped,
inOuential politicians, the report
invol
vement
of public employees
says.
and
offices
in
campaign activities.
" We didn't have ghost employ-

3.9%

UP
TO

$2.000

July 12, 1992

(

vill7~shuaRooflivedoutthcrcmain-

~fdr~~~~~~~~n;~~~~~v~~~edinthc
It is a good bet, however,thatthe

remainder of their days, Roof and
Jeffries would have been able to re- .
late a lot of the history of the lastdilys
of the Civil War to anyone who would
listen.
James Sands is a special correspondent ror the Sunday TimesSentinel. His home address is:
James Sands, 65 Willow Drive,
Springboro, Ohio, 45066.

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PART OF HISTORY • Demolition 011 tht old
Bet~y Ros.~ bakery building got underway one
flay aRer the photograph on the leR was taken.

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By BRIAN J. RF.F.D
Times-Sentinel Starr

; MIDDLEPORT • As the walls
of· the old Betsy Ross building in
Middleport come tumbling down.
many of the bakery's former
employees must be feeling a liUie
sentimental.
The buildinR, located on South

Fifth and Palmer Streets, is being
demolished to make way for ctght
low and moderate-income houses,
and as those plans arc finalized,
former employees of Ohio Valley
Bal&lt;ing Company arc apt to rcminisce about the "heyday" _or what
was once a map ondu51ty m Mcogs
County. . .
.
The buoldong was constructed on

the 1930's by the Covert Bakery
Company, after another bakery
building in the same location was
destroyed by a fire . (The Covert
Bakery was famous for its "double
potato" bread, a popular staple on
area Ulbles while the bakery was in
opcrahon.)
The Ohio Valley Bal&lt;ing Company purchased the Coven Bal&lt;cry

POMEROY, OHIO

391 WEST MAIN STREET

I'

It's Time

For A•••

This week we invite you to take advantage of the great
savings on Boa! and RV loans.
Because your business is imponantlo us, we arc
offering 114o/c interest off on qualifying boat and RV loans.
Bring in the coupon below for great Loan Sale·A-Bration1
inwrest rates.

TO THF. SLICF.R • Henry Hensley was 011e
or over 100 emplo~es who worked at Ohio Vallfy DakinK Company in 1965. Here, Hensley

li•es up kNives ol bread in preparation ror the
slicer, one ot I he last steps bdore bread was
packaged.

••••••••••••••••
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July 11 ·July 17, 1992

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Your Bank#n~...
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Savings Company
211 West Second Street
.._ ...t.. ~

wav_-

Member F.O.I.C.

. P.O. 8o11 626

PomBJoy. OH 45769
6141992-2136

P 0 . Bo• 339
!uppers Ploon, , OH 45783

@

·-UNOEI'I

.

Vintage photos
courtesy of
Robert Byer

Route 7

6141667-3161

g«H&gt;ds

Thnsc "sweet gO&lt;xls", specifi cally .sweet rqlls, caused a small
problcll,l when Ohio Valley Baking
Company began to manufacture
tbem in the early I%0's, according
to former Ohio Valley Baking
Company office manager Robert
Bycr.
Bycr, who now serves as administrator for Meigs Emergency Scrv&gt;ccs, remembers that he han only
24 hours to loll 20 lo 30 positions
nccdcd at the burgeoning plant in
order to manufacture the sweet
rolls. It took some fetching, b~t
Bycr relates lhat "except for one or
two", all of the position s were
filled by the time the goodies rolled
off the production lines the next
day.
J\ line of doughnuts wa.~ added
later in the l%0's, and Bycr recalls
thai. laiC Charles Hoffman of Mid·
dlcpon and the laiC Waid Spencer
of Chester both served as "sweet
line" foremen before lhe lastloar or
Belsy Ross bread rolled ofr the line
in Middleport in the spring of
1967.

I

:

in 1950, and baked under the Hoisum and, later, the Betsy Ross ,
names, until bakery operations at
lhe site ceased in 1%7. The building was lhcn used by Betsy Ross as
a warehouse and truck dock for
several more years, before being
closed and locked up for the final
time.
During those later years, bread
was tru cked into Meigs County
from other Betsy Ross bakery opcrations, and stored and loaded .onto
delivery trucks for loca l distribulion.
llig busintss
The looming, two-story brick
building's imposing size is an indication of the volume of baked
goods once ponduced there. Several
property acquisitions provided
space for parking and auxiliary scrvice at the plant. At one time, the
plant employed over 100 local residents, as ba~crs , mixers. loaders,
drivers, and other labor and office
personnel . In full production, the
plant operated on a 24-hour ba.~is.
The baking process began
around noon each day. The loaves
were wrapped and loaded in the
evening. for shipment by truck the
following morning . While the com munity slept, and after the day 's
bread was loaded onto the bakery's
rami liar red trucks, "sponges" - or
portions of unraised dough - were
set in vats, where they would raise
in preparation for baking, and the
process would then begin again.
Only on Saturdays did lhc plant sit
idle.
J\t the height of its production,
the &lt;?h•o Valley Bakin~ Company
provtded bread for retail outlets in
a 75-11,\ile radius of Ohio and West
Virginia, including South Point,
and Nitro, Beckley and Logan,
W.Va.
In a "S~ Iutc to Meigs County's
lndustnes, published in The Daily
Stnline/ in March, 1964 , it was
reported that "Holsum bread and
sweet goods arc delivered to grocery stores and branch places every
ntghl for SCrv1ce 10 five Ohio ValIcy Baking Company semi-tractor
rigs."
Sw~l

i•/.t:~oui
I

its boom in lhe mid-1960's, right, the Ohio Val·
ley Baking Company's Holsum plant in Middleport employed over 100 local residents as bak·

e~s, mixers, loaders and in other capacities, ship·
pong br_ea~ ~II over Southeastern Ohio and into

West

V~rgonlll as

well.

Middleport bakery boom remembered

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Rebate

Finance Rates

1~~

guards were u.shcrod out"dc the fortification where lcmoumlc and cakes
were served. ll1c chid executioner
Raih was busy supervising the cutling up of the rope and the wiMKito
sell as souvenirs. II was in c&lt;~rl y July
that Mrs. Surratt. (;,,.lrgc 1\tzcr&lt;xli,
David Herold and Lewis l'ain&lt;' were
hanged. In laiC Jul y, l! &lt;x&gt;f was mastcrcd out with his company.
However, he did not return k&gt;
Ccmervillc alone as going wi~&gt; him
was Wade Jeffries, a young blitck
man who had been one of General
Albert Sidney Johnston's personal
slaves. As such, Jeffries had seen
muchoflhe Civil War while serving
Johnston. During the last days of the
war,Jeffrics,alongwithanothcrslave,
hadescapcdtotheUnionArmy. They
begged to be brought north. One of
the other officers of the 6oth took the
second slave and Roof took Jeffries. ·.
Jeffries was set up in a small fann .
He latcrmarned Carol Bunch.llwas
CAPTJ\IN'S GRAVE - Jnshua Root rose to the rank or captain
• alsosatdthatJcffncsbecameask&gt;lled
carpcntcrandhclvcdtobuildsomeof in the 60th OVI during the Civil War. This regiment distinguished
the structuresstill standing in Center- itseir in 11164 at the battles or the Wilderness and Spotsylvania, Roor
was a guard at the ~anging or Mary Surratt. He also brought back to
Gallia County General Albert Johnston's slave. Roor is buried in
dcr of his days in Centerville where CentervUie.

~mus-~mtinet ·Section B

Along the River

LOAD 'EM UP • Tile Ohio Valle7 Jlakl111
Company'! familiar trucks were lolde4 with
rresh loaves or bread alld 1weelpodl each nl1h1
ror distribution lo area slorts._lll this 1965

photo, aR URidenlified loitder al the Holsum
lant Is seen packlna tile trays or fre5h bread
nto 0t1e or IhoM trucks.

r.

•

.,

Site or inno•ations
In addition to providing important employment opportunities, the
Middleport plant was also the site
of an innovation of sorts in the baking industry nationwide. The Hoisum plant was one of the first of its
kind to implement the now -comman "ponytail " packaging of
loaves of bread. That process
involved closing bread wrappers
with a "twist-tie", forming a ponytail-type end, just like those still
round on bread wrappers.
Prior to the implementation of
the "ponytail", bread wrappers
were open on both ends, scaled
with a sticker-type closure - and
bef&lt;lfe that, bread was packaged in
a wax paper wrapper.
While the "ponytail" sys tem

was being perfec ted, Bycr said ,
men on the production line often
found themselves digging out the
old wrappers and seals so thai the
· bread could be shipped out in timr,
and worrying about how the ncwfangled tics worked when they had
more umc on lhclf hands.
. Fonunately ror the local operauon, Ohoo Valley Baking Company 's state-of-the-art equipment and
ca pabl e mechanic s afford ed a
smoother transi tion to the "ponytail" than many other planl~ had to
endure .
So toda y, as you purchase and
ca t bread and hakcd goods produced at bakeries long distances
away, take a moment and remcm ber the dedication and hard work of
the former employees of one or
Me1gs County' s "lost" industries.

DOWN THF. LINE - Loaves or Holsum bread, like theS4' pic·
lured on lhe assembly line, were shipped throu~houl a 75-mile
radius in West Virginia and Kentusky in the 1950's and 1960's
arter being baked and wrapped at the Ohio Valley Baking Compa:
ny's Middleport plant, This is one or a S4'ries or photos taken by
Ohio yalley Baking Company 's rormer orrice manager, Robert
Byer, m 1965.

FINI~HF;D PR~DUC! - An unidentiried production superin,lendenlas po&lt;:tured m a vontage 1965 photograph inspt&lt;ting 1 loaf
or Holsum bread berore it was shipped to •• a~a ll'oetry store
The adhesive seal at the end tl tht loat indklta that tile plloto ~
taken ~fore Ohio Valley Daklnl Company beaan using tile 111e•·
revoluloonary ''ponytail" packaae, which is still In use today.

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;:,
-.;:

�Times-Sentinel

OH-Point Pleasant, wv

~~~~~~O~H~P~o~i~nt~P~i:ea~s~a~nt;,~w~v~============~s;u~•~t~!~v~;;~~~;;~~~

July

Sizing up your horne's
value through an appraisal

Skaggs-Adams
CHARLESTON, S.C. - Mr. and
Mrs . Freddie B. Skaggs of
Charleston, S.C., formerly of Gallipolis, announce the· engagement
and upcoming marriage of their
daughter, Krisli Marje, to S~phen
F. Adams, son of Mr. and 'Mrs.
William R. Adams of Charleston,
S.C.
Miss Skaggs aucnds lhc College
of Charleston, and is employed by
J. C. PoriCr &amp; Co.
Mr. Adams is a graduate of St.
Andrew's High School, and is
employed by Duncan Foods.
An open church wedding is
planned for Aug . 8 at Heritage
Cathedral Church, 32 Gordon St. ,
Charleston, S.C.

By PATRICK COCHRAN
President Seutheastem
Obio Board ot R.EAL TORS

KRISTI SKAGGS

'

Suit filed against rock band
CLAYTON, Mo. (AP) Lloyd's of London has filed a lawsuit against Axl Rose and his band
Guns N' Roses, over a concert
ended in a riot in suburb~n St.
Louis last July.
.
Guns N' Roses canceled concerts scheduled for Chicago suburbs and Kansas City, Kan., citing
damage_to equipment in lhc July 2,
1991 , disturbances at the concert in
the Rivcrport Amphitheater in
Maryland Heights.
Rose and the band tried to col ·
lcct on a policy insuring against
canceled performances; but Lloyd's
of London argued that the band
could have performed. It also contended in the lawsuit filed July 1 in
St. Louis County Circuit Court that
Rose and other band members
"incited the crowd to riot against
authorities and security and in the
midst of the performance, icft the
stage after urging the crowd to
destroy the stage and equipment."
Rose , facing misdemeanor

thai

AMANDA RISSt:ll and

AARON WilliAMS

Bissell-:-Williams
EDWARD DANIF.LS and MELANIE ARNOLD

Arnold-Daniels

POMEROY · Dan and Patricia
Arnold announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Melanic Sue, to Edward
Lee Daniels, son of Robert and
Fern Daniels, Middleport.
The open church wedding will
be an event of Dec. 5 at the Middleport Church of Christ.

The bride-elect is a 1987 graduaiC of Meigs High School and will
be a 1993 graduate of Ohio University. She is active with lhc Student
Council for Exceptional Children.
The prospective ~ridcgroom is a
1982 graduate of Meigs High
School and a 1992 graduate of
Hocking College.

,.,

POMEROY - Aaron L.
Williams and Amanda S. Bissell
announce their cngagcmcm and
approaching marriage.
Miss Bissell is lhc daughter of
Roger Bissell, Chester, and Sue
Haning, Albany. She is a 1990
graduaiC of Meigs High School and
is cum:ntly employed at Krogcrs in
Pomeroy.
Williams is the son of James
and Helen Williams, Middleport.
He is a 1990 graduate of Meigs
High School and is currently

employed at Taco Bell.
The· couple will be leaving for
Mesquite, Texas, on July 18 where
they will reside.
An informal ceremony and
cookout will be held Friday, July
17, at 6 p.m. at 161 Bullcrnut
Avenue in Pomeroy with Rev.
Eddie Buffington officiating.
Friends and family arc invited.

Wiener roast slated

SARAH RAINEY and
JESSE STANLEY

POMEROY - A wiener roast
will be held allhc Forest Run United Melhodist Church Tuesday at 7
p.m. Since the church is located
ncar lhc road and a large number of
children will be allcnding,
motorists arc being asked to drive
wilh caution in lhal area.

Sisters to unite in double
wedding c.eremony July 18

Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. Rainey of in Gallipolis Ferry. Sarah and Jessie
Gallipolis Feny are proud to an- plan 10 mlide iD Flalrock.
IIOUIICC the engagemen&amp;s of both of
their daughrers, Malgie J. to Glen
A. Stover and Sarah A. to Jessie E.
Stanley.
Stover is the son of Carl and
Marvella Stover of Rio Grande,
OH. Stanley is the son of Glen and
Helen Stanley of Flattock.
Margie is a 1989 graduate of
Point Pleasant High School. Stover
is a 1989 graduate of bolh
Southwestern High and Buckeye
Hills Community Center. He has a
certificate in elcclricity and machine shop and is employed at Gallipolis Parts Warehouse.
Sarah is still attending PPHS.
Stanley is also atunding PPHS.
The double wedding ceremony
will take place July 18 at 6:30p.m.
at lhe Gospel Lighthouse Church
wilh Rev. William "Bill" Banks
officiating. The church is located
behind Krodel Park on Neal Road.
There will be a reception following the ceremony. Friends and
family are welcome.
435
Glen and Margie plan to reside

EFFECTIVE
LY
AT .BOB'S ELECTRONICS

Harris-Grue,n. .r·REEDsvtLLE · The open
church wedding of Mandie Diane
Harris to Kevin Jay Grucscr will be
held Aug. 15 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains United Methodist
Church.
Mi ss Harris is the daughter of
Shirl ey and Dale Rockhold ,
Reedsville, and th e late Donald
Harris. Grucscr is the son of Mac
and Gerry Hupp. Racine, and the
laiC Jolm Grucscr.
A reception will follow the ceremony.

In the movies
NASHVILLE, Tenn . (AP) Country singer Reba McEntire will
portray herself later this month on
the ABC television soap opera
.. One life to Live."
."
In the role, the 31! -year-old
McEntire wi II be a guest on the
radio show of lhc character Luna, a
high school friend . The episodes
aro to air July 24 and July 27.
McEntire is no stranger to act·
ing, having appeared in the film
"Tremors" and the made-for-television movie , "The· Gambler
Returns."
Voted top female vocalist in
1991 by the Academy of Country
Music, her hit records include
"Rumor Has II" and " Is There
Life Out T)lcre."
·
!

28 Door lrame parts
29 Goal
30 Walk

32 Aat
33 Smaller amount
34 South Korean
SOldier

35 Pierce
37 Soft mud
39 ~agal maHer
40 Ravelllngs
41 Siamese CUrrency
42 Break suddenly
44 Mora flexible
46 - beer
47 Bai&lt;er's products
48 Allowance for
wuta
50 Economic
down tum
52 Deposits
53 Equally
55 Let fall
57 Roosevelt 10
58 Kind of collar
59 Simians
60 Molhet
82 Obstruct
8-1 Ripped
68 Marinaro 10
68 " - tu, Brute"
69 Former Russian

BOB'I
ELECTROIIICI
UPPEIIIIEI ID.
4414517

Milton Berle to host
induction ceremony
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Milton Bcrle, once rcknowned as "Mr.
Television," is to host induction
ceremonies for the Television
Academy Hall of Fame at Walt
Disney World this fall, the Academy of Television ArtS and Sciences
announced.
Berlc, who turns 84 on Sunday,
embraced television at the dawn of
the video age with his own hit'
show in 1948.
Inductees scheduled to be hon- ·
ored at the Oct. 3 event arc actoo.;
Bill Cosby and Andy Griffilh, news
anchor Ted Koppel, produccrd ircctor Sheldon Leonard actress·
Dinah Shore and CNN o..:ncr Ted
Turner.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Meigs bookmobile
schedule announced

POMEROY - The Meigs County Bookmobile will make the following siOp!llhis wcck: .WEDNES- ACROSS
DA Y - Racine, 12 noon to 5 p.m.,
1 Tibetan pttests
Portland, 610 7 p.m.; THURSDAY
8 Dread; alarm
- Rutland, II am. to 3 p.m., Dcx10 Meta' stadium
ICf, 4 to 6 p.m., Bradbury, 6:30 to
14 C8Mar7:30 p.m. ; FRIDAY - Tuppers
19 Greek
Plains, 12 10 3 p.m., Success Road,
mart&lt;etplac:es
3:30 to 5:30 p.m., Keno, 6 to 7
21 Fr«&lt;Chpriest
p.m.; SATURDAY- Syracuse, 9
22 Assistant
a.m . to 2 p.m., and Harrisonville, 3
:i3 Last ICI
toSp.m.
24 Aasu&lt;e: endOfS8
26 Comes to pus
GLEN STOVER aud
MARGIE RAINEY

charges from the riot, has until July
17 to turn himself into county prosecutors.

ruler
70 Prickly envelope
ol fruit
71 War god
73 Wigwams
75Meal
77 Whimper
78 ~ISSO
80 Mextcan laborers

81 Tokyo's old name
82 lmpragnales with

DOWN
air

idea; conceplion
86 Declare
87 SpMch
89 TV's McClanahan
92 Goes by weter
95 Packs away
98 Abound
99 Tags
101 "Who's- ot
VIrginia Wooll?"
103 Wlntet highlight
104 Hearing organ
105 "Road to- "
106 "-EI-e"
107 Baseball pos.
108 ProJecting tooth
110 Span. matron
111 Tin symbol
112 Prohibits
113 Halt
115 That Is: abbr.
117 Thick slice
119 -gordo
120 Connery r~
121 Bftlonglng lo
Cyblll
124 Sand lorth
128 Alight
127 Mast
128 Cause to
remember
130 Real estate map
132 Father
133 Space
134 Vehicle
135 Bound
137 Falsehoods
139 Fall behind
140 Seasoning
141 "- Instinct"
143 Pare
145 "L.A. _ ..
146 Gastropod
mollusk
148 C4ilings
150 Suggest
152 Supple
153 Habit
154 Appear
156 Anchored
157 Dispatches
158 Hurricane cen1ers
159 Rend
160 Out ol date

t Intertwines
2 Repr-.tatl3 Biting: caustic
4 Skill
5 Cap\lc:hln
monkeys
6 Astalre tO
7 Recede
8 Cain's brother
9 Arbiter
10 Soupy11 Comedian Ben_ny
12 Sullivan and
McMahon
13 Diphthong
14 Transgresses
15 Pismire
te Shakewearlan
character

17 Apportions .
18 Escritoires
20 Newts
23 Clenched hand
25 Shout
27 Olsinellrled
28 Fasting period
31 Indigent
33 King of beasts
36 Poe1
38 Bard
40 Diving bird
41 Rl•er Islands
43 Saucy
45 - Actors Guild
46 Created a
disturbance
47 Equal
49 lnstrumenl

51 Cubic meter
52 Freshets
53 Hebrew month
54 Ranee garment
58 Suggestions
59 Murderers
60 Stubborn animal
god

61

war

63 Wander aimlessly

65 Paradise
67 ,Eds.' concern
69 Tantalum symbol
70 Red72 Atmoapheric
dls1urbance
74 Prdcead

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"T ,

Gallipolis
360 Secopd Ave.

and Mrs. Rob (Pearl) Keyes, New
Haven, W.Va., and the late Earl
and Hanna M. Acree, Middlcpon.
He is a 1988 graduate of Meigs
High School and is presently
employed at Ohio Air Freight (Airborne Express) in Huntington,
W.Va.
The couple will exchange wed- .
ding vows on Aug. 15 al the Garden City Freewill B&lt;iptist Church in
Wheelersburg. Music will begin at
II :30 a.m. with candlelight ceremony at noon. Rev. Kermit Webb,
South Point, will officiate. A reception will he held following the ceremony . The event will be open
house.

79 Devoured
Legtll maHer
85 Stal8n88 Word of sorrow
87Tha-sop
88 College ofliclal
89 Concerning
90Long,overcoat
91 Bar legllty
92 Sodium chloride
93 A_, as valid
94 Negative prefix
96 Had on one's
person
97 Gr11C81ul bird
too Twtce: prefix
102 Small valley
105 Wedding ring
109 Large umbrella
112 Skeloton part
113 Pretense
114 Short pHhy
expression
116 R~ICI
118 TV's Cosby
120 Shopper's coup
121 Blemllh
122 Most uneanny
123 Cut
125 Clothesmakers
12e Answerable
127 Food fish
129 Profound
131 Plagues
132 Strikes
133 Rage
134 Two-wheeled
•lhlcles
136 Suffix signifying
skin
138 European
140 "My ThrOB-"
141 Poison
142 TV's Summer
144 Noooe
147 Younga1er
148 Timid
149 Caspian 151 Genus of grasses
153 "- tha People"
155 Raye 10

SUNDAY
BURLINGHAM - Burlingham
Modern Woodmen will hold a picnic on Sunday at 12:30 p.m. at lhe
Northbound park on U.S. RouiC 33
ncar Darwin. Everyone is welcome,
and should bring a potluck dish,
table service and a lawn chair.
Meats and soda pop will be furnished . Mrs . Eua Cullum .&lt; and
Christine Fruth will be rccogni1.cd
for their outstanding community
service. Bring a friend, and guests
arc welcome.

POMEROY - The Di sabled
American Veterans and the Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the hall , 124 Buucrnul
Avenue, Pomeroy.
RUTLAND- Rutland Village
Council will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the Rutland Civic Center.

TUESDAY
RUTLAND - The annual HalliHARRISONVILLE
· The Har. day family reunion will be held
Sunday at the Rutland Park adja- risonville Senior Citizens will hold
cent to the civic center with dinner a blood pressure clinic at the town
house on Tuesday from JO.a.m. to
at 12:30 p.m . or I p.m.
noon . All members arc urged to
auend
and bring a covered dish .
HARRISONVILLE - Th e Harrisonville Holiness Chapel , Route
WEDNESDAY
684, just off Route 124 at HarHARRISONVILLE · Rev.
risonville, will hold a missionary
service Sunday at 7:30p.m. Special Calvin Evans and his singers, from
speaker will be Mike Kline Family. Channel 13, will be preaching at
They arc with the Montc1.uma the Mt. Union Baptist Church ncar
, School in Couonwood, Ariz .. serv- Harri sonville on Wednesday. All
ing the American Indians. Rev . churches arc invited to worship
together.
John Neville invites the public.

'

•

Award winner
GALLIPOLIS - Erick Jeffers of
Gallia Academy High School, has
been recognized lor academic
achievement as a United States
National Honor Roll Award winner
by the United State.&lt; Achievement
Academy
Jeffers is the son of Perk and
Beverly Jeffers, and the grandson
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Harrison
and Mr. and Mrs. James E. Jeffers
of Gallipolis.
Jeffers will appear in the USAA
official yearbook , published nationally.

Bllltery powered ecooter will
toke you where you wont to
go. Dleo11emblee to lit In
your ear trunk. Avolloble at:

Hallmark

An!ique

TRILLIUM"' Cl US RINIS

BOWMAN'S

Free Opti- on All Stwlel

Ho•c•re •dical
Supply

Tawney Jewelers

70 Pi•e
St. 446-7283
I-80D-4S8-6844

422 Seco•d

G.m,.r..

ROBERT M. HOLLE1, M·.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)
25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-1675

.w) '

MONDAY
RACINE · The Racine Board of
Public Affairs will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at Star Mill Park.

liNDA KNIGHT and JAMES ASHU:Y

· MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Presbyterian Church will hold
bible school Monday through Fri day from 10 a.m. to noon. Lunch
wil[ be provided.

Knight-Ashley
NEW HAYEN · Mr. and .Mrs.
Robert Carroll Knight, Hartrord,
W.Va., announce the engagement
and forthcom ing marriage of their
daughter, Linda Louise Knight to
James S. Ashley, son of Phyllis
Ashley, New Haven, W.Va.

The open church wedding will
be an event or July 18 at2:30 p.m.
at the Lutheran Church in New
Haven, W.Va., with a reception to
follow.
The couple will reside in New
Haven.

Car~

DARWIN - The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the town hall.
POMEROY - Practice for the

and Caring

At Veterans Memorial

,

.,
'•
'•
'

"

...
,...' ,

"
..

I

'

,.

Your
Hometown Hospital - our well-trained
.healthc;are staff,offer~ . "care a~d caring"
round-the-clock, 365 days a year.
J
Our staff is' equipp~d and ready to c~re
.
for you in a complete healthcare settmg
from diagnostic testing through life-threatening bmergencies.
We offer Home Health nursing ·services, a Skilled Nursing
Facility and even helicopter.service when serious injuries or critical
illnesBes require more specialized treatment.
.
Look to us for "care and caring" in meeting your h~althcare
needs.

VETERANS
MEMORIAL .HOSPITAL.
..
'

.

Meigs High School Marching Band
will resume Monday at 9 a.m . at
the high sch(XII and last until noon.

MIDDLEPORT - Hope Baptist
Church
in Middleport will hold
RACINE - The 1992 Theiss
family reunion will be held Sunday vacation bible school Monday
beginning at 11 a.m. at Suer Mill through Friday from 6:30-9 p.m.
nightly for ages nursery through
Park in Racine.
adults. The theme is "Follow Jesus
MIDDLEPORT - "Dare to With Us On a Fantastic Journey."
Dream" will be presented by the
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Youth of United Pentecostal
Church and the Kent Christian Col- Presbyterian Church will hold
lege Drama Team on Sunday at 2 vacation bible school Monday
p.m. at the United Pcnt.ecostal through Friday from 10 a.m . to
Church in Middleport. The public 12:30 p.m. for children and youth.
Public invited.
is invited.

.

ERICK JEFFERS

Meigs County calendar

83

.

week 10 complete. lf,as probably
will be the case, it is fell to be satisfae.tory ,the house is ready to go on
the markeL
If tlien: is any question about the
suggested price ,a second opinion
can be sought. After all according
to Auger, "appraising a house is
not an exact science. It's the·
appraiser's best estimate."
So don 'I be disappointed if the
appraisals come back indicating
your home of several years will
provide a healthy return on your
initial invesunent but not enough to
allow early retirement. Keep in
mind current economic conditions
and other outside factors have as
much influence on the selling price
as llle beautiful deck you added last
summer or the fresh paint job
inside.
When you put your home in the
hands of a professional appraiser
and any of the 90 members of the
Southeastern Ohio Board Of
REALTORS,you can be assured of
top quality service in selling your
home at its fair market price.

'

76 llalian river

"

September 10-17, 1992 , ·
Hosted by Lenzie Hedrlclt
Don't mill it! Umited apace avaUable!

MIDDLEPORT· Rev. and Mrs.
Richard "Cree" (Loretta) Thomas,
Wheelersburg, announce the
engagement and forthcoming mar·
riagc of their oldest daughter,
Cheryl Marie, to Jeffery Alan
Acree, oldest son of Mr. and Mrs.
(Roberta) Acree, Middleport.
Miss Thomas is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thco. (Lil)
:Pierron, Wheelersburg, and Mrs .
;Mary Thomas, Franklin Furnace,
-and the late Paul A. Thomas. She is
1990 graduate of Highl~ Bend
:Christian Academy in Sciotovillc,
and is presently employed as a
pan-time babysitter.
Acree is the grandson of Mr.

GALLIPOLIS - In determining
what a home is worth when it is
time to put it up for sale, many
homeowners look at what they paid
for it, how much they owe on
it,ltow much they need for a down·payment on another house and
what it would cost to vacation in
Cancun. for two weeks and then
calculate the selling price.
While through lots of luck this
method could work a much .;ore
sophisticated method.and one more
likely to determine a·price someone
is willing to pay-that lending institutions rely on is an appraisal.
Real estate appraisals have been
getting quite a bit of media coverage lately because in following federa! legislation, Ohio's lawmakers
have established guidelines for
appraisal certification. Two ~lasses
of certification-general and residential-have been established wilh
each requiring a certain amount of
education, a number of years experience and the successful complelion of a state-administered examination.
Harvey Auger is president of
PHH Homequity, the world's
largest relocation firm that includes
appraisals among its services, and
he recently offered some advice on
real estate appraisals.

77 Separates

THE MOST HWSTEO NAME IN TRAVEL.

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For_Yourself•••
- - - i Spectacular Alaska!

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a

See Answer lo Puzzle on Page C-5
8-1

JEFFREY ACREE and CHERYl THOMAS

,

"A professional appraisal g(yes
the homeowner a realistic view of
the home 's ·current market value
and is a benchmark for prieirig it" Auger said. He add!Jd _that it is also
useful m negot1allng w1th a
Prospecliv~ buyer and speeding the ·
selling prOCess. . .
·
He rccommen_ds bemg ready:for
the appra1ser w1th a plot pl~n or
survey; deeds ; property w bills; a
hst of Improvements smce purchase; the mongage, if any, and its
current balance; and any data on
comparable home sales mthe area.
Your REALTOR can provide the.
laue~ throush the Multiple Listing
Sen:1ce, a hsung of homes for sale
ava1lable to your REAL TOR
through h~s or her local board.
Appra1sers use three types of
data to evaluate a home; general,
covermg local supply and
demand)ocauon and economic and
fmanc1n~
. condlllons;_
comparauve,the pnce ranges ol
houses sold recently_ m the_ nel~h­
borhood that were S1m1lar m Size,
style and construction and specific,
the sizes of house and lot plus any
features, s~ch as a patio, garage
and swtmmmg pool.
Also affecting the estimated
price is the reason lhc homeowner
wants to se!l, whether there's an
urgent deadline or a more extended
_lime frame, giving the house more
market exposure.
An appraisal takes about one

115 E. •••rial Drive
Po•eroy
992·2104

Losing ~..Wight was the hardest thinR, J've ever done.
, I triid ewrything. .. except eaflng right/
All my life I've been strugglmg to keep my weigh( J,,~'f\ . 1',1try 1he latest fad J1ct.
Lose weight. Then put the pounJs nght fx1ck &lt;~n.
Then I found Weight Watchers
At Weight Watchers, I hegan to fed in contr. 1l ,1 my1-&lt;xly. I b meJ that 1hcre arc
no forb idden foods- JUS! forbidden QffiiiUnb ,,f hxl. E•·cl)· Jay, I was fcclmg more
comfonable with me And I found somc1h10g l 1hnught I haJ i&lt;~t a long nmc ago.
My self-respect
So call Weight Watcher. and give il a try.
~
They did for.me at 35 what nolxxlyelse could
Jar~do my whole life. They taught me howt&lt;l cat.

Join

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NEWMf.MIII'Il'( I'IJ'..\'1' ARRI\'1'. .~ 1 \11 \I "ITS
. I'ARIY fORREGI,TRATIO~ ANn WUGII·I\

GALLIPOLIS
ST. PrnR'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7:00p.m., Wed: 9:30a.m.

AT-WORK MEETINGS
Lose weighl where you work .

Weight Watchers will sel up a meeling lor
youandyour fellowemployees. Call lor
lurther in1orrnation.

Phone and askabout
Community meetings near you.
Cai/Toi/Fret
Otltr.,IICI.Itliy 12 tllrDUfh A~\41 1. 199211 Gi~~\t!Q IOUI!OM !Aru 20 ~- rQ.13, 12)) ~fy IH IOIIij~\lqutlll Wfti:l U Otll! IIDI ,i~
with lAy 0111t1 Qlte! OI ~~~ rtlt . DHI' ~ahO 1of llflllll'ld lt!lfWIIIQ ITIII!Un Oftt Oiler vllldiOI 1rlll&lt;bDI'IIII W.,Qilt W'k.het\ ~~~II' AI
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WATCHERS IJITiRNATIOIW.. lfriC. 1~ . All nglltl tllfMII

1-800-487-4

�OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

JohnstJn-Crank
Amy Leigh Johnson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Johnson.
Point Pleasant, and the late Diann
Queen Johnson, became the bride
of Dr. William Ray. C111Jlk, son or
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crank, Henderson, on May 30 at Grace Baplist'
Church. Pastor Robert Graham performed the double-ring cetemony.
Escorted by her father ll!ld given
in marriage by her parents, the
bride wore ~ long-sleeve, highbodice antique white silk·face
gown. The bodice and cathedral·
length train were adorned with ap·
pliques of lace, sequins. and pearls.
The bride wore a ballet·length veil
that cascaded from a wreath of
pearl seeds and sequins. She carried
a bouquet of daisies, pink roses,
gardenias, baby carnations of ivory
tipped with burgundy, baby's ~th
and ivy and ribbon, which cascaded
down from the bouquet.
·
The matron of honor was Dawn
Goodwin, Point Pleasant, aunt of
the bride, and she carried a nosegay
similar to that or the bride's
bouquel The bridesmaids were
Valerie Johnson, Baltimore, Md.,
sister of the bride; Brooke Johnson,
Point Pleasan~ sister or the bride,
and Heather Crank of Urbana, Ill.,
sister-in-law of the grpom. The
bridesmaids carried fans made by

t

I

MR. and MRS. DON (LINDA) SNYDER

Howard-Snyder
POMEROY -Trinity Church in
Pomeroy was the scuing for the
June 6 double ring wedding cere·
many of Lisa K. Howard, daughter
of Barb and Gene Howard, Athens,
to Don L. Snyder, Pomeroy.
Rev. Roland Wildman officiated
the ceremony and Ralph Werry
provided music.
.
Given in marriage by her parents the bride wore a light blue
tca-l~ngth gown made by her moth·
er with a floral design accented
with pearls and lace. She carried a
handcrafted bouquet consisting of
liiiCS, cream roses and pink roses.
Her veil was wreath style with blue
JOSCS and pcatls.
·' The maid or honor wore a white
Dora! print tea· length dress accent·
ed with lace collar.
John King, Rccdsvilllc, was best

mun and ushers were John Snyder,
Pomeroy , brother of the groom,
and Kenny Howard, Athens, brother of the bride.
The bride's mother wore a pink
nora! tea-length pront dress. The
groom's mother wore a blue nora!
print dress.
A reception wa s held in the
socoal room at the church. Guests
were registered by Ann King and
Misti Musser.
..
.
. F&lt;?llowmg a wcddong trop to
Conconnau, the couple res odes on
Athens. . .
The brode os a 1979 graduate of
.Alexander H1gh School and os
employed at the Ohio University
Inn in Athens.
The groom is a 1980 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
employed with the Meigs County
Dcpanmcnl of Human Services.

MR. and MRS. WILLIAM (AMY) CRANK

Quartet to perform Sunday

~a:.s~=·anddecoratedbythe

AJI of the attendants wore off.
located in he Ironton/Coal Grove the-shoulder ivory intermission
area, is a mixed group. This group · length dresses with a iloral print of
rcorgani r.cd about 12 years ago. mauve, burgundy and green and
The members arc Marlene Fergu- were adorned with lace and a bow.
son, pianist and alto singer; Tom The dresses were a designer collec·
Carey, baritone and or iginal lion of Jessica McClintock.
Pathfinder; Phil Carpenter, bass;
The flower girl was Jessica
Sonny Haas, lead and Brent Fugiu, Barker of Point Pleasant. cousin of
bass guitllrist.
the !:ride. She wore a burgundy and
The group will be performing at ivory satin dresa made· by Letha
th e First Church of God, 109 Queen, the bride's grandmother.
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis on Sun- She carried a basket made by Many
day at 7 p.m.
Rhodes and decorated by the
winds tOUr
mother of the !:ride. She wore a
wreath or ivory and burgundy
baby's ~th in her hair.
PARIS (AP) - Pop star Prince arena filled with more than 16))00
Mark Meadows, Pinsburgh, Pa.,
is winding up a European tour to fans.
friend of the groom, served as best
scll·out crowds, enthralling the
· Supported on stage by 17 musi- man. Ushers were Dr. John Bryk,
French with hi s performance as cians and back-up vocalists, Prince North Royalton, Ohio, friend of the
well as a risque stage set shaped pranced on a piano and belted out groom; David Crank, Urbana, IlL,
like the spaceship in the logo of his 19 tunes, most of them from his and Daniel Crank, Henderson,
group, Nc w Power Generation .
new album, "Diamonds and brothers of the groom, and Peter
A series o( concerts this week· Pearls."
Van Vranken, Henderson, friend of
end began Friday ni~ht at a·soort
the groom.

GALLIPOLIS · The Pathfind·
er's Quartet was originally organized in 1957 as an all male group.
They have been si nging gospel
music throughout the Tri-State area
for the past 35 years. The Pathfinders were the fcstured group on the
TV program, "The Lower Light·
house with Willard Wilcox in the
late sixtic.&lt;. This program can still
he seen on Channel 13.
The present grou~. which is

Prl.nce

July 12, 1992

1992

up

Sunday Times Sentlnei.....-Page 85·

Gallia County calendar

...

The groom w&lt;n a biacl:, fiued .
tuxedo willl lails, an ivory sllirl, ·
blaclc lie and cummerbund. The
f811lers and groomsiJICII w&lt;n blaclctUxedos, ivory shirts, burgundy .lies
and bwgundy cummerbunds.
The groom's boulonqiere was a
liaby ·camation and pink rose fonn ·
lhe !:ride's bouquet. The falhm and
groomsmen had boutonniers or.
SlepllanOlis.
.
.
The !:ride's lllOiher w&lt;n a rose,
tea-lenglll suil acccnlCd willl sequins. The groom's molllcr wore a·
rose suit acccnlCd willl a scallop- ·
trimmed jacket Bolli motlicrs wore
a gardema and baby pink rose corsage.
·
· Music was provided by Mrs.
Mary Schafer, organist. Soloists
we~ Ms. Kathy Stebbins. Randy
Searls and Lisa Searls. Music .selections such as "Wedding Song," ·
"Endless Love" and others we~
used
A reception followed at the Na,
tiona! Guard Armory. The tables
were decorated with ovary and lace _
tablecloths and burgundy ribbon.
The finger food and cake were
made by Linda Meadows. The
three-tiered cake was decorated
with baby pink roses, carnations
and greenery. It was decorated with
a fountain ·and four descending
stairways to four oilier cakes.
Presiding over the ~eption
table were Susan Queen, Debbie
Simpkins, Carol White and Sandy
Van Matre. Many Rhodes served as
greetcr at the reception and Edina
Van Matre registered guests. Photos
were taken by Putney Photography
of Point Pleasanl
Following a wedding trip to Or·
lando, Fla., the couple will reside in
Hcnder.;on.
The bride is a senior at the
University of Rio Grande, majoring
in marketing. She is currently
employed at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
The groom graduated summa
cum laude in 1988 from West Virginia University with a bachelor's
degree in animal and veterinary
science. He received the professional degree of doctor or veteri· .
nary medicine from Ohio State
University in 1991. Dr. Crank is
currently practicing in Henderson
at the Animal Care Center.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. .
Jody Renee' Crawford, d~ughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill A. Crawford, Jr.
of Point Pleasant, became the bride
of Mark Stephen Darst, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Stephen Darst of Point
Pleasant, on May 16 at the Belle·
mead United Methodist Church .
Lester L. Errett, Jr., uncle of the
bride, performed the double-ring
ceremony.
The bride is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lester L. Errelt,
Sr. and·Mr. and Mrs. Bill A. Craw·
rord, Sr., all of Point Pleasant.
The groom is the grandson of
l'vlrs. June Rogers of Mason.
Music was · provided by
pianist/vocalist, Cindy McMillin
and soloist Danccn Rosenberger.
The sanctuary was adorned in a
garden scene. The end of the pews
had bouquets of fresh daisies,
greenery, baby's breath and pink
pa_pcr bows. The aisle had two topi·
ancs of eucalyptus with white and
pink carnations . .At the end of the
aisle were two nca trees decorated
with pink paper bows. Candles
were lit on the communion table
along with a bouquet of fresh
daisies, greenery and baby's breath.
Holy communion was served to
the bride and groom during the cer·
emony by the bride's father.
Given in marriage by her par·
ents, the bride wore a handmade
gown by Gerry Duncan. The gown
was made of white bridal satin fca·
turing a swcethcan nee kline with
off-the-shoulder pleated cap
sleeve.&lt;. It was adorned on the
bodice and train with appliques of
alecon lace, pearls and sequins.
The dress had a basque waistline,
filled bodice and church-length
tram.
The bride had a wreath or fresh
daisies and baby 's breath in her
hair. She carried a nosegay or fresh
daisies, pink roses, greenery and

baby's breath. From the nosegay
hung small pink paper bows. The
bride wore a diamond pendant
necklace, given as a gift by her
maternal grandparenL&lt;.
Karen Ko.sut of Martinsberg
served as matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Vanessa Shell of Point
Pleasant, Carla Lieving Young of
Columbus and Daneen Rosenberger of Spancnberg, S.C.
Matron of honor and bridesmaid s wore tea-length dresses
make of pine green and pink polished cotton printed material. The
dresses had graduated necklines
and princess bodices with dropped
waists that fell to a V·back. The
sleeves were a petal design . The
aucndants carried stems of fresh
daisies and pink roses tied with
pink paper bows.
Jason Darst, brother of the
groom of Point Pleasant, served as
best man . Ushers were Rem
P.crkins of Lewisburg, W.Va., Jim
Atwell of Ceres, Va., Kurt Doss of
Point Pleasaiu and Billy Crawford
III, brother of the bride of Point
Pleasant. The ringbearers were
Stephen and Michael Gi ssy of
Parkersburg, W.Va. The groom
wore a black fitted tuxedo with a
white shin and tie. His boutonniere
was a fresh pink rose. The fathers,
ushers and ringbcarers wore black
tuxedos. white shirts and black tics.
Their boutonnieres were fresh pink
carnations.
A reception followed in the
church fellowship hall. The cake
was a three-tier cake with fresh car·
nations, baby's breath and green·
cry, made by Johnna Crump.
Jennifer Errcu and Erin Northup
regostered guests. Presiding at the
reception table were Jennifer
Teague, Pauy Rogers, Cindy Gissy
and Erin Nonhup.
The couple resides in Blackburg, Va.

~·.

oinltnnce CIIIIM
Proce11ed
&lt;Compenutlon; Mldlca111
end Mldiclld icceptld

··; •W1lkll'l

.: •H01pllll Bids
:~ oCommodl Chall'l

SOLID OAK CONTEMPOURY CURIO, HUTCH, BIG THICK TOP TOLE
MR. and MRS. JOHN (ANDREA) C.ANAD.A Y

.Rutan-Canaday
BIDWELL · Andrea Lynn
Rutan and John Scott Canaday
were united in marriage May 9 in
the Sanctuary at Vinton Baptist
Church with the Rev. Marvin
Sallee ofnciating.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Rutan, Bidwell.
The groom is the son or Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall F. Canaday, Rio
Grande.
Escorted by her father. the bride
wore a white satin gown trimmed
with irrcdcsccnt sequins and pearls
with a sweetheart neckline and a
cathedral length train with three
lace and sequin insets at the bottom. She wore a vail of French illu·
sion with miniature white roses,
sequins and pearls. She carried a
bouquet of cascading blue, pink,
and white rosebuds with English
ivy.
Matron of honor was Gina
Rutan-Biackburn, sister of the
bride. Maid of honor was Leigh
Ann Layne, friend of the bride.
Leann Dunn, friend of the bride
served as bridesmaid . Junior

bridesmaids were Katy Canaday,
niece of the groom, and .Amanda
Hays, cousin of the bride.
The train bearers were Ginger
Canaday, niece of the groom, and
Alison Hays, cousin of the bride.
Flower girl was Holly Ca naday ,
niece of the groom .
Bc.&lt;t man was Brian (Tex) Oliv·
cr, friend of the groom. Mike Bran·
debcrry and Gary Flint served as
groom sme n. Mark Dillon and
David Brandeberry served as ushers.
The guest book was aucnded by
Joyce ·Smith , sister of the groom
and Elaine Dunn, friend of the
bride. Pianist and soloist was Charity Ragland, friend of the bride.
Stephanie Stover arranged the
nowers for the wedding and rcccp·
lion.
A rec eption followed in the
church basement, with Betsy Canaday, Stephanie Stover, Joann Hays,
and Delores Williams serving as
hostc.~ses .

The coup le resides in Rio
Grande.

$2999

95

~~
~~
\

12

BEDROOM SUITE

$1188

~~~~

88

; Supplies
:' •Mastectomy Products

Mark Dillon,
SIIIIMan1ger

FREE

•
•

Dee Dillon, R.N.
Certillecl Fitter, Owner

565 Jackson Plkt • Gallipolis, Ohio

•

SOLID
CHERRY
5 PIECE

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MONTHS

ST!UKING BACK
AT

•Fr• Delivery

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446·2206

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"' Artt Ftt Onr tS Yurt"

STRIKING BACK AT

lllll'llllrt for publielllioll)

GALLIPOLIS .

Album adapted for the stage
L.A JOLLA, Calif. (AP) - Pete
Townshend, former guitarist for
The Who, has adapted the British
rock band's 1969 album
" Tommy" for the stage .
" I am keen for people who have
never seen the work live to do so,"
said Townshend, 47. "I want them

D~v!'rcc

Sup·

DR. JAMES .COIDE
Is anno11Hin1 tH closl.. of his
•Hkal practice at
155 H. 2nd lw. In Mlddle,Ort, Olllo
Effectlwe J1ly 15, 1992
MHical record will 1M transfened to
the physklan of choke •po• f111Nst.
I wish to thank IIJ patients for tlllir
support and wish JOI th llest of
health in the future.

MR. and MRS. M.\RK (.IODY) DARST
The bride graduated from West Va.
Virginia Institute of Technology
. The groom is a ~e~ior at Virwith a degree in dental hygiene. gmta Tech (VPI) maJOnng m daory
She is a practicing dental hygienist science. He is presently employed
in Parisburg and Christiansburg , by Southern States Coop.. Inc . on
Va.

to appreciate that 'Tommy' is a real
drama.
"It is popular because it is full
of recogni zable relationships and
struggles, not because it was an
early rock opera or part of Wood·
stock or a sick joke about child

liliES P. COIDE D.O.

abuse.''

COME AND SEE RUTLAND FDRNiftJBE'I NEWLY
ENLARGED APPLIANCE SBOWIOOMI.

tillS IS ONE OF TIE 1·1 1GII! APPLIANCE
·saOWROOMS IN .ftll fti-I:OUiftY AIEl.
OVER 1• APPLIANCES ON
AND ftiii'S

LARGESt SELECIIOI OF CHEst &amp;
UNIIIII FREEnts IIIIHE 1 111

THOSE HOT AND HAZY DAYS OF
SUMMER ARE
HERE.
SAVE NOW 01 AIR
CONDITIONERS

5, 10, 16, 2G,23 &amp;26 Cl. ft. Cliett fm II I
5CL ft. Oest Freezers Sl•liltllt ~7fJM
13, 16, 19 ... 21CLft.llprllittlfMylllly
Free1en 13 CL fl.

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LARGE SELECTION
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UARnNGAT

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All Styles and
Colors. Black
Glass Doors,
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Available.

$299

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LOWEST PRICES 'IN THE AREA ON
REFRIGERATORS

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14 cu. ft. Glll101 or Ktlwlnator
s.. At *449"

DISTIL TABLE OAK TOP Wkltt BeN, 4 Oek &amp; Wkltt c•eln
URIKING liCK IT S58811

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15 cu. II. Glbaon ............_ ............................ s-471.00
11 cu. ft. Adrnlrlll ... _ ..................................... $&amp;11.00
21 cu. II. Kelvllllllor ......_ ...._ .................... ...-.00
22 cu. II. Whiii/Wwllngho- Sk!Hy-Side
with Ice I W11tr In door................... S12811.00
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wllh w1111r In clllor···-···-.............. $13811.00
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11 cu. II. lillrllll lillh wh.lllllll ...............00

All Furniture At s,riking Back Prices.

I• ... No - rtluslll Hnkts NeaUlt of lnabllty to pay.

Reunions
GALLIPOLIS - Smeltzer
reunion dinner July 12. I p.m. at
Dale's Smorgasbord.
·
· Monday, July 13
(lltlllsfor tht ro••••il1 tr1/:'
GALLIPOLIS · Faith Temple
Independent Church revival, July e11itar ap{Nar two dtlyr prior to 1111
13- 18, with Brother Grover trtnl. Thty IIIUSI be rttti.,4 by '
tlrt Gallipolis Daily Trib,.t ;,.
Blankenship.

'

OAK FINISH COMPUTER ROLL TOP DESK
STRIKING BACK IT *68811

Confidential Services;
· Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Clnc:ar Screening
Pregnancy Testing

GALLIPOLIS - PERI meeting;
3 p.m. at the Gallia County Scni!l'
Citit.cns Center.

CENTENARY - Copley family
will be singing at the Centenary
United Christian Cllurch. 7:30p.m.

GAS .UIIGES Ill 20
IND 30 IN.

BEDROOM SUITE

$1999 99

CROWN CliY · Victory Bap·
tist Church youth meeting, 6 p.m.

Tuesday, July 14
GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County
District Library Board of Trus~~:es ·
meeting, 5 p.m. at Bossard Liln:y.

•

STRIKING BACK
WITH

OAK
FINISH
PAUL BUNYON

·:•AU.ncla, Chux 1nc1
:: Incontinent Supplies
· t81th Slfety Ald1

::ourlnary 1nc1 Ostomy

STRIKING BACK AT HIGH MATTRESS PRICES
SAVE ON SPRING AIR • RESTONIC • SOFT SIDER WATERBEDS

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

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URIKING BACK AT

Dinettes, Sofas, Rediners, Swivel Rackers, Lamps, Mirrors, Tables, Decks, Cham
FLEISTEEL • ENGLAND • lASSEn • COROLLA
CLASSICS • SPIIIG AIR • SOFT SIDER
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OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
. POIUOY .

GAUIPOLIS

236 LMaii.St., 2•d hoor
414 Sem•d Ave., 2nd Floor
992·5912
446-G166
1:30 " s:OO •••ay·Frlday ~~ro ~f~a~=r·Friday
a-1 'llllnd•J
Closed Tll•nday
AlSO: IIIII1M, a..., ukt, Atltens, Chllkotht, Logan &amp; M!Arthur

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FRIDAYS 8 A.M. TIL I P.M.
SATURDAYS I A~M. TIL 5 P.M.
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY I A.M. TIL 5 P.M.
STRIKING liCK WITH
FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP
FREE FINANCING.- 90 DAYS OR 6 MONTHS
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pon Group mceung, I:JU p.m. at•
New Life Lutheran Church, 225.
Jackson Pike. For more information call446- 3808.

MORE II OUR WUEBOOSE
BESt PRICES IN fBI fti.CODift AREA

. oCIIIH lncl Crutehel

&amp; 6 PASTEL CHAIRS

Sunday, July 12
NORTHUP - Northup Baptist
homecoming and basket dinner.
Morning services, 10:30 a.m. with
Gary Warner speaking. Richard
Unroc will speak during the afternoon service. Singing bY. Catcrbury
Gospel Band and Btll Ward's
Gospel Trio.

Crawford-Darst

oHorne Oxygen

'

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----·-------.- ··-- ·•

FO

co.

,,

�OH-¥otnt Pleasant, WV

July 12, 1992

omens·
zary
names award recipient .
POMEROY - Mrs . Louis"
Bcarhs, lhe only active charl&lt;~r
member of the Womcn's"Au•iliary
at. Veterans .Memoroal Hospot:1l,
was awarded the first cash pri'A'
given in the hospital's new "I DoHIC
Good at VMH" emplnycc/vnlun ·
ICCr rccogni\iori pr:ru:r;un. ·
· The pmgram is being carri&lt;'d out
not only 10 lt'~ognize employees
and volunleers for exua effort in
gucsl/patient 'iclations but also to
re~ogni7.e those· doing an e•cep!ionally good job on a special Jlll?·
)CCI. Those receiVIng the rccogmlion arc presented badges reading
"I Done Good at VMH" and at the
end of each three momhs, names of
those so recognized arc "placed in
the hat" with the winner of a S50
prize being selected via the lottery
route.

The m1me of Mrs. Beams. was
1lmwn h1•n the 33 employees and
vnhontcets who bad been rccog"'""I durin~ the program which
lirh1l nil in AJiril. Others earning
n·cn~nitinn included Bill Call,
Sro~t Lucas, Chuck Adkins, Doris
Ihie. Jim D;.1ilcy, two awards; Edna
Triplcu . Jane Brown, Bob Hocllich. Dun Bccgk:, Abbie Suauon,
Jessie White, Elizabeth Smith,
Rhonda Dailey. Cecelia Li~lc. Bobbie Hobsteuer. Marabcl Frcckcr,
Bcux S:1yrr. Grarr Warner, Goorge
11nflman, Lihl&gt;y Fisher. Helen
Corsi, Margaret Corsi, Linda Jones,
11clcn Hill, Kathy Varealle, Teresa
Wilson, Jeannette Lawrence, Selma
.Call, Jackie Starcher, Mary Ann
Wagner, Ruth Spaun and Donna
Williamson.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasam,

wv

Consortium pursue~ program ideas
RIO GRANDE - Jan Rhea,
R.N., director of Health Services at
the
Unive~ity of Rio Grande, participated in three conferences conducted by members of the Ohio College
Networlc: Consortium.
Funded by a grant from the U.S.
Department of Education, the consortium consists of 13 small colleges and universities designing
strategies to combat substance
abuse on their campuses . Rio
Grande is the lead institution in the

\

group.
In the first conference, at Heidelberg University , Rhea said th e
group discussed the creation of a
non-alcoholic dance club to provide students with a place to social ·
izc without drinking alcoholic bev·
crages or using drugs. The next
meeting, at Malone College,
focused on planning an alcohol
awarcricss week, which Rio Grande
has conducted for several years.
The final meeting, at Musk·
ingum College, discussed involvinA

Senior Pieture1
With STYLE!

Rice open house slated July 19

CALL FOR SPECIALS!

RUTLAND- Harold C. and
The open house is hosted by
Marjorie L. Rice, Ru~and, will cel- their children, David, Paul, Ellen
ebrate their 50th wedding anniver- Brooker, and Rosemary Huffman.
sary Sunday, July 19 from 2-4 p.m.
The couple also has five grand·
with an open house at the senior children and two step,grandchil·
eiti7.cns ccnll:r multi-purpose build- drcn.
ing in Pomeroy.
II has been requested that gifts
The couple was married July 21, beomiucd.
·

Spring Valley Plaza
·Gallipolis, OH.
(614) 446·7494
1·100-272·5327

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. Anending were: Don Woodie ,
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thompson ,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dixon, Mr. and
Mrs. James Young, Bonnie and
Brei Tabor, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Jones, John and Don Brown , Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Stewart , Heath er
Folden. John Folden, Ben Folden ,
Leslie and Lindsey Niday, Mr. and
Mrs . Wayne, Brandon, and Beth
Brown, Mrs. Karen Rathburn , Pat
and Jeremy Skidmore. Mrs. Kim,
Brooke and Tyler Canady, Mr. and
Mrs. William Bobo, Doug Bob and
family , Emil and Sidna Dulaney,
Mr. and Mrs. Stan Dulaney, Mr.
and Mrs. James Fraley, Mrs. Deb·
bic, Stefanic, Rebekah and Laura
Scitcs, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Wat·
ters·and grandson. Jim Waucrs.
The next years ' reunion will be
held the third Saturday of June
1993.

Ave~~ge Wligllt
loss 3 poulllls I
Plfllllk.•

• Set iniiiMille
results, rigid
llollllle lllrl.

'Team Up with Jesus' theme
of Paint Creek Baptist program

The Ready for the World 4-H
Club met recently at Raccoon
Creek Park. Leann Bycr brought
the meeting to orderand Leann
Byer led the American nag. Mary
Mohler led the 4-H nag.
Those members present were
Christina Roush, Leann Byer,
Angie Waugh, Mary and Tina
Mohler, Chad and Chandra
Starcher, Jeremy Thorton. Jami
Gn:cnc, Johlllllhon and Eric Baker,
and Todd Carr.
·
Advisors were Jcanneue Beck.
Sandra Greene. There were five
gucsl
The group talked -about a car
wash and its 4-H fair booth. The
treasurer took up due.~. l.tann Bycr
adjourned the meeting.
News Repon.c:r
Jami Gn:cnc

: · GALLIPOLIS - The 1992
reunion for desccndenl~ of Charles
and Salley Maude (Severt) Woodie
was held recently at 0.0 . Mclntrye

right here in your
neighborhood! •

Gallipolis.
The couple was married by the
Rev . A. H. Wilson in Beckley,
W.Va. They arc the parents of three
daughters, Judy Gannon of Seh·
encctady, N.Y., Sandra Mcfarland
and Peggy Callihan of Bidwell .

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Reception slated

The Atwood Heritage Volunteers of the University of Rio
Grande recently visited the Blenlco
Glass Factory in Milron, w.Va.
Prior 10 the IOUf, members of the
group lunched at Morrison's cafeteria in the HuntingtOn Mall. Lunch ·
was provided courtesy of Morrison's Custom Management's offiCe
at Rio Grande.
Dedicated 10 the preservation of
the university's history through its
anifacts, the Alwood Heritage Volunteers meet. monthly under lhe
direction of University Archivist
Jean Cooper.
Members in &amp;ttendance included
Irene Brannon, Jean Cooper, Beverly Crabtree, Suzanne Frazee,
Bess Grace, Susan Haft, Irene
Lloyd, Jennie Myers, Peg Thomas
and Arlene f.racy. Also auending
from the University were guesls
Miho
Paul Harrison
and Dr.
M. Dorsey, the uni-

95

m

'Little Red Riding Hood'
to hit Ariel Theatre stage

URG volunteers
visit glass factory

Sug. Rtl. $249.85

ATHENS · The West Ohio·
Conference United Methodist
Women arc promotinb a program.
called Project Teddy Bear. The
Athens District UMW arc in thC:
process of suppl ying bears to eigh(
county sheriffs to place in their'.
cruisers.
:
These hears wi ll be used Ul give'
to children to comfort them in crisis such as instances of domestic
violence, accidents, etc. When a
child witnesses an inpidenl which
scares and confuses them, it is nice.
to have a teddy bearto hug.
&lt;
This is an,on-going project witll
initial need for al least two bear(
per cruiser,. and a supply on hand to',
rep lac e--those which arc given~
away.
•
United Methodist Women arC:
asking for donations of8 to 10 inch!·
new bears to help keep a supply on;·
hand. They ask that they be taggc~
"Project Teddy Bear" and placed irtC
a clean plastic bag.
~·
The eight counties which make":
up the Athens District arc: Athens,:
Gallia , !locking, Meigs, Morgan t .
Perry, Wa~hington and Vinton.
j
Esther Jean Lackey, coordinator{.
of Supportive Community for the~
Athens District United Methodist
Women is hcadin up this project.

BIIDUPICY

BA1MOBILE ~NNER ·Heather Daayel Riffle was the wianer or the motori1.ed batmobile given away by McDonald's or
Pomeroy Friday ahernoon. Her name was drawn from those who
registered at the restauraat. Pictured with Heather as she prepared to take her first ride are R - Mills, reslauranl owner,
and Heather's mother, Debbie Rime.

Davis. Dennis Hurt Jr., Arnica
Griffin, Brian Adkins, Jean Bates,
Gil ben Craig Sr.. Althea Howard,
Dcsi Hun.
Announcements were by
Roscann Hollinshcd. Presentation
of diploma~ included pre-school hy
Brian Adkins; kindergarten by
Joyce Davis; Primary by Dcsi Hurt;
Junior by Latonya Anderson;
Youth by Jean Bales.
Presentation of certificates to
staff and refreshment commiuees
was by Pastor Hun.
Remarks were by VBS Director
Mrs. Dorthy Gordon and Pastor
Dennis Hun. The song; "Alleluia"
was sung by the Paint Creek Bap·
tist Sunday School. Mistress of ceremony was Mrs. Charlollc Craig.
The benediction was by Pastor
Hun.

Teddy Bear
project begins ·

COLUMBUS (AP) -The gen- auendancc has nothing to do with attendance pace needed if the
eral manager of Ameriflora '92 ·Fontana's departure. Caborn said e•hibit is to reach th e 3.5 million
says he's leaving because he has about 900,000 visits have been reg· visits officials said arc the break·
completed the job he was hired to istered through the Ameriflora even point financially.
gates since the show opened April
do.
.
Am criFiora is part of the city's
"My responsibilities a.. general 20.
commemoration of the SOOth
That's a little more than half the anniversary of Christopher Colum·
manager have been completed,"
Thomas E. Fontana said . "The
hus' voyage 10 the Americas. II is
10 dose Oct. 12.
major responsibility of the general
manager was 10 get 10 opening day,
and we did and we've opened a
good projccL"
COLUMBUS - Keith Nicholas
Fontana said his other reasons
graduated
with honors, summa cum
for departing arc " personal, and
laude,
from
tl1c Ohio State Univerhave nothing to do with AmcriFiosity
during
commencement cerera. It's time to spend tiine with my
monies
held
June 12. He received a
family."
B.S.
degree
in
Electrical EngineerFontana has hccn general manmg.
ager of the international horticulDll~tECTidiN - Mike Schirtzinger, Park Playhouse Teen
Nicholas was named to the
ture exposition since September
Theatrl! director, is p~tured providing close range acting pointers.
dean's
list eve ry quarter while
19R9. He will leave July 31, said
The PPTT or Columbus will be presenting "Little Red Riding
auending
OSU. He is a member of
show spokesman Rod Cabom.
Hood," Saturday, July IR at 2 p.m . at the Ariel Theatre.
the
Professional
Society of Engi·
Fontana said he isn't sure what
nccrs.
he will do next professionally .
He is the son of Ron and Bar·
Before joining AmcriAora, he held
bara
Nicholas of Scouown, and the
managerial and administrative
grandson
of Carter Belville of Galpositions with Wendy's Internalipolis,
and
the late Darlene
tional and Bauellc Memorial InstiBelville,
and
Leon
Scarberry of
tute.
.8 Eut Brotld Street,
Huntington.
He
is
the
great-grandCabom said the general managSuitt 900
By EDNA WHITE:LH
new ones, wry forest folk who join er's position was mainly important son of Goldie Belville of Ironton:
Columbus,
Ohio
Nicholas
and
his
wifo,
Lisa
GALLIPOLIS - Just when Red's campaign to get back at the during the development phase and
1·80G-886-0LAW
everyone had prcuy much· agreed wolf for downing Grandma. There early days of the event. Frank Dil- (Boswell). reside in Columbus. He
is
a
1987
graduate
of
Symmes
Valthat something can ' I be had for will be more action and laughs t11an lon, vice president of operations, is
(1-8110-886-0529)
;
liothing , the Park Playhouse Teen the story of old and some political largely IC$ponsiblc for daily activi- Icy High School and valedictorian
KF.ITH
NICHOLAS
Theatre from Columbus comes overtones that will zing over kids' ties at the exposition now, Cabom of his class.
''
along and proves otherwise.
heads and settle into the funny · said.
; At 2 p.m. July 18 they 're stag· bones of the adults who bring them
Fontana and Caborn said low
ing "Liule Red Riding Hood" at the IR.
Morris and Dorothy Haskins Ariel
While the Ariel Promotion
Theatre in Gallipolis. No admi s· Committee is spreading the word to
sion, not a penny. It's free.
the nooks and crannies where kids
GALLIPOUS - The children of
Park Playhouse began in 1970 gather, no special invitation is necas one of the Columbus Recreation essary. Circle July I&amp; on the calen- Faye Rccs invite friends and family
and Parks Department's artistic and dar now. It's possible that seeing to an open church reception Sunrecreation activities. Doing more this remarkable kids for kids effort day, July 26 from 2-4 p.m. at Grace
and beuer productions and gaining cou ld tum out to be the highlight of United Methodist Church, to help
celebrate her !alth birthday.
respect over the years , it offers the summer.
It's request gifts be omiucd.
u:cns a realistic training ground in
theatre, making them the lifeblood
of a production bmh on stage and
~ind the scenes.
EFFI~IEICY.HEIT
The Park Playhouse "Red Rid·
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WINS FIRST AWARD - Mrs. Louist Bearhs, the only active
chart!r membtr of the Women's Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial .
. HMpltal, won the first $50 prize in the bospital's new ''T Done ·
Good a~ VMH" employee/volunteer recogaition program. Mrs. ~earhs IS photographed receiving her prize from Hospital Administrator Scott Lucas..
" .

HAROLD and MARJORit: RICE

GALLIPOLIS · The Vacation
Bible School and Children·~ Day
Program was held at Paint Creek
Baptist Church on June 14, with
the theme was "'Team Up With
Jesus."
Pr;cludc was played by Sabrina
11urt. Devotions were led by Minister Willillm Ward and Pa~tor Dennis Hurt.
Pledges recited were; American
Flag by primary class, Christian
Flag by Dennis Hurt Jr., Pledge 10
the Bible by Arnica Griffin. Welcome was by Briuany Hun.
The closing program's theme
was "The Great Team Up Mi~ ·
Up." Cast members were: Latonya
Anderson , James Williams ,. Ben
Carroll, Nikkic Tillman, Donavon

l ;~eu hy und mhcr campus pcrsonne·l
in ami-abuse programs.
"'The consortium continues to do
well, and the schools appear to
enjoy the co ncept," Rhea said. "We
want to carry on with programs that
have been es tablished at sc hools,
and at the same tim e, look for new
ideas."
Meetings and workshops spon·
sored by consortium members will
continue through next year. Other
members of the consortium include
Defiance, Findlay, Hiram, Mariel·
ta, Urbanu, Walsh and Wilmington.

AmetiFlora general manager to leave post

Receives degree

BIDWELL - Robert and Wanda
Alha of Bidwell will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary Saturday, July 18.
An open house reception will be
held from 1·3 p.m. July 18 at
Woodland Centers, 3036 SR 160,

-

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�Sports

July 12, 1992

ADE
(

Mo~tday fhw Sunday

BOSTON (AP) - Tom Brunan ~ky had a grand
slam and Mo Vaughn added a three-run homer as
Boston routed the Chicago White Sox 11-2 on Saturday.
Boston has won four out its last five games; the II
runs were a season high.
Leading 3-2 in the fifth, the Red Sox added three
runs on Vanghn's homer against Kirk McKaskill (67), who had a personal three-game winning streak
broken. Brunansky had a one-out ~i ngl e and after
Jody Reed walked, Vaughn hit his fifth homer.
In the sixth, Brunansky hit his fOurth homer and
fifth career grand following. h was the second
straight day a Boston player hit a grand slam rookie Bob Zupeic had one Friday night.
John Dopson (6-4) was the winner, pjtching five
innings and allowing both Chicago runs on six hits.
Angels 2, Tigers 1 - At Detroit, John Morris and
Ron Tingley hit back-to-hack home runs in the fifth
inning to give the California Angels a 2-1 victory
over the Detroit Tigers Saturday.
Going into the game, both Morris and Tingley
were hitting under .180.
It was the second straight victory for California
. after an 11 -gamc losing streak, but they lost starter
Jim Abbott in the fourth inning with a strained mu~­
clc in the rib cage.
Chuck Crim (2·2) combined with Joe Grahe to
allow just two Detroit bascrunncrs in tile last five
innings. Crim retired all seven batters he faced and
Grahc piu:hed three scoreless innings for his fourth

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Athletics 3, Blue Jays I - At Toronto, Mike
Moore allowed two hits in eight innings, outduelling
Juan Guzman and pitching the Oakland Athletics to a
3-1 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays on Saturday.
The Athletics' offense was highlighted by Eric
Fox' first major-league hit, a leadoff home run in a
two-run third.
Moore (10-7) struck out five and walked two
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atlusc of sLcroids is growing among

high school athletes (a 1988 Penn
State study concluded approximately 262,000 U.S. teens have
cxpcnmcntcd with steroids, and
one study done in the last year stat·
cd that I million teens have used
them) wouldn't exist. And if that
weren't bad enough, steroids arc
now reported to attract junior high
4nd elementary school students.
Prompting the usc, especially
amon~ athletes from the NFL (that
•

has bCcn cut down in that league
considerably since the advent of
random drug testing) to the myriad
of high school football teams, is the
short-s ighted-but-true logic "If I
don 't usc them, I can't compete,
because the other guys arc using
Lhcm ."
Arc area youths list£ning'
"Of course it· s a temptation,"
said junior ·Jamie Smith, projected
to play guard and lincliackcr for
Southern's Tomadoc.~ this season.
"However, I wouldn 't think about
it," he added. "It's not natuml."
"We just usc plain old muscle,"
sa id se nior Aaron Wamsley , a
Point Plca'&lt;ant tw.o-way tackle who
indicated that no specific tests arc
done in West Virginia for steroids
beyond what is acquired through
annual physicals. "I sec no problem
with testing for steroids, because I
don't usc them and no one I know
uses them," he added .
Though he sa id no one has
approached him about steroids, "A
couple of my friends have done
!hem," said senior Dave Dobbins, a
former North Gallia running
· back/defensive back projected to
play his farewell season at those
positions at River Valley.
"I think teslS should be given for
high school athlete.~ ... he added. "If
they ' re doing steroids, they
shouldn 't he playing."
Substance alert
"At the beginning of two-adays, we talk about substances, and
steroids fall into ·that category,"
said Southern head coach Dave
Gaul, who will begin hi s fourth
season leading the Tomad'ocs this
fall.

•

A~ib~ii~ steroids - synthetic d~~~~atives or the male horIJ!ODt-teroat"- were used by SOviet and F.a.~t.ern-bloc ath·
letes as early 1111 the 1950s. They hive b«t1 a staple m the professlonal'bodybuildiil&amp; cmnmunity In America since the 1960s. But
only within in the last five years luis steroid ilbuse been widely
considered a problem In the American sports cnmmunily.
Steroids are used primarily by athletes lnvoh·ed in streng1h
sports'such as football and wrestllna, but in the last rew years
there are·reports !I abuse aniona athl~tes in track and field, vol·
IeybaII players, swimmers and everi JitiQ;athletes, who use them
· to look "bull'' (sleek and well·boiilt) o~' lhe beach.
;· Thrr(are null)erous' storles: of l'!G; ·and !50-pound you,ng
men whti; iiRer using steroidS 'for six to eight week.~ and combining that usage with a strict dletuy and an exhaustive e•en·ise
regimen, became solidly-musded 170-to 190-pound specimens.
Steroids hav.e a wide variety of legitimate mediral uses, including tbe treatment of certall) blood diseases; growth disorders; b.reast cancer, asthma a•d artliritls. . .
Howmr, abusufsterolds ieneraiiy·teads to such psychologi·
cal problems a.~ sudden mood swings and violent outbursll as
well as several physical side effects. Acoe, hair loss and 'gyneco·
or
amoog males) are
cancer, kidney
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Guzman (11-2) allowed three runs on eight hits
. over seven innings. He struck out seven to take over
the American League lead with 122 strikeouts, two
more than Roger Clemens.
Mariners S, Yankees 3 (12 inn.)- At New
York, Omar Vizqucl's 12th inning single drove in
Dave Cochrane with the go-ahead run Saturday as
the Seattle Mariners defeated the New York Yankees
5-3.
Cochrane opened the 12th with a single to center
and moved to second on Tino Martinez' one-out hil
before Vi zqucl slashed a hard one-hopper off the
glove of first baseman Don Mattingly.
Shane Turner's sacrifice ny drove in Martinez
who had moved to third on Vizquel's hit as Ru ss
Swan (3-5), the fourth Mariners' pitcher, earned the
victory.
John Habyan (3-3) was the loser.
New York tied the game off Rich DeLucia in the
sixth on Charlie Hayes' RBI infield single. It scored
Don Mattingly. who had singled and moved up on
two infield outs.
Giants 3, Expos 0- At San Francisco, Bud
Black pitched a six-hitter and Will Clark hit his lOth
home run on Saturday to lead the San Francisco
Giants to a 3-0 victory over the Montreal Expos.
Black (7-2) retired 16 of the first 17 batters ana
improved to 6-0 at Candlestick Park as the Giants
won for the sixth time in their last eight games. He
struck out five and walked one in pitching his first
shutout since May 10, 1991.
The Giants took a 1-0 lead in the second inning
when Robby Thompson scored on Jose Uribe's single behind second base, knocking the ball out of
catcher Gary Caner's glove in a col lision ncar the
piau:.
Clark homered to lead off the sixth inning off
Dennis Martinez (9-8), hi s first homer ever off the
pitcher in 53 at-bats.
Cardinals 4, Dodgers I -At Los Angeles, Tom
Pagnozzi doubled in two runs and Ozzie Smith set a
major league record with his 15th \Onsccutivc scason
of 20 or more stolen bases as the St. Louis Cardinals
beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1 Saturday.
Mark Clark (2-3) allowed an unearned run an!)/Six

Steroids: Monsters in the mist

$
S29?
Ice Cream. . . . .sat. Pan

TV

'

.

•

A Commentary
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Times-Sentinel Starr
GALLIPOLIS - It's not like
they don't know.
In today's information society,
no one has to be told about the dangers of steroid abuse. Massive muscles, tom tendons, dislocated shoul .dcrs and shrunken tc.sticlcs. Former
PitL~burgh Stcclcr and Tampa Bay
Buccaneer offensive lineman Steve
Courson and a heart that was one
or two beaLs per minute away from
a heart attack. Canadian sprimer
Ben John.~on and the Olympic gold
that was stripped from him . And
the late Lyle Alzado, probably the
best -known athlete among th e
scores - maybe hundreds - of
athletes permanently sidelined in
the last year because of steroid
abuse.
Arc American teens listening?
Some arc, but many others obviously aren't heeding the warnings
trumpeted on "60 Minutes,"
"20/20" and a host of other TV
documentaries on ESPN as well as
in Sports 11/u.rtrated and other magazines. If they were listening ,
recent studies that show that the

•• &gt;·

BOR·DEN'S

Spaghetti·O'L•4.7s ... 2
MUELLER ELBO MACARONI or

$1

July 12, 1992

h1ts over six-innings plus in his first career appearance against the Dodgers. Clark struck out three and
walked three.
Lee Smith, the third St. Louis pitcher, worked the
ninth for his National Leag ue-leading 23rd save.
Mike Scioscia, a two-time All-Star catcher, experienced one of his worst innings, commiting a throwing error and a passed ball as the Cardinals scored
three times in the thinlto take a 4-0 lend against Orcl
Hershiscr (7-7).
Padres 3, Phillies 2 (II inn.) - At San D1cgo.
Jerald Clark continued his hot hitting with a one-out,
lith-inning single to give San Diego a 3-2 victory
over Philadelphia on Saturday.

Pinch-hitter Oscar Awcar singled to open the
inning and wns sacrificed to second by Phil Stephenson, hitting for Tim Scott (2·1). After Tony Fernandez was walked intentionally, Clark. who now has 14
hits in his last 30 at - ~ats, singled off Mike Ha rtley
(4-4),
The Phillies have now lost seven in a row and II
or their last 13 games.
Philadelphia starter Kyle Abbott, who al lowed
two runs and six hits in seven innmgs, remained at OIl, one loss shy of tying the National League record
for consecutive losses to open the season. It has been
set three times, most recently by the Phillies' Ken
Reynolds in 1972.

LEAPING is the prererred method or movement for Toronto shortstop Manuel Lee, who
fires to nrst base arter rorcin~ OU[ Oakland's

Troy Neel in I he second inning nr Saturday's
American League game in Toronto, which the
Athletics won 3·1. (AP)

Area youths heeding warnings
~n -dangers of steroid abuse

JUICE
46 oz.

$149

Section C

Boston, California among victors in afternoon action

32 OZ. BTL
STORE HOURS

"arimts- ~entincl

l'

"We've got to cover that now,"
said Jack James, the longtim e
Southwestern mentor whose 13th
season in coaching will be spent
guiding River Valley in its inaugural campaign this fall. "You hear
rumors about it at the high school
level. I've had kids ask me about it.
You warn them about it, because
they don't Sec the long-term cffecLs
·(of using !hem)," he added.
"If I know somcone's usi ng.
he's done," said James of his way
of dealing with a known user, a
species he said has never have been
associated with his program. "We
have to be on the lookout for it."
"We have definite policie s
(about steroid abuse)." said Point
Plca.&lt;ant head coach Steve Safl(lrd.
a health teacher at Point Pleasant
High School who will litgin his
26th season in coaching thi s fall.
He sa id that suspension , depending
on the severity of the case, is the
option for first-time offenders. Dismissal, with a "strong suggestion '
for co un seling," awaits repeat
offenders.
"Steroids haven't been a problem for us, as alcohol has," said
Safford, who said thai he hasn't
found anyone guilty of using
steroids in' his 17 years as the Big
Blacks' boss.
"Kids tend to em ulate their
heroes, those in . profess ional
sports," Gaul said. "But it's fool 's
gold."
Because of this, Gaul added that
when an athlete uses steroids, "that
person needs help. We're looking
after the welfare of that player.
That person might not be playing
profe.&lt;Sional sports when he's 40,
hut he's still goi ng to usc tlmliver
then."
•

All-Star Game proven nightmare
for some of baseball's greats
Ry GEORGE ROBINSON
NEW YORK (NEA) - Playing
in the All-Star Game isn't only a
dream come true. For some base:
ball greats, it's also a nightmare.
Their in vitations to the Mid-Summer Classic arc ticke ts to the disabled list.
The honor paid to ill-fated Ted
Williams in 1950, for instance ,
may have cost the Boston Red Sox
a shot at t/Je American League pennant. Likewise perhaps for Harmon
Killebrew and the Minnesota
Twins in 1968.
1L was even worse for Dizzy
Dean in 1931. And Ray Fosse in
1970. Their injuries in the starspangled exhibit ion meant stu nted

. French cyclists
taking control
in Tour de France

careers.
Aascball's best wlil he hoping
lor the be st when they play the
1992 All-Star Game at Jack Murphy Stadium in San Diego on Tuesday night, July 14. For CBS -TV,
broadcasters Scan McDonough and
Tim McCarver will call the shots.
Is the All -Star Game risky business?
"One thing that may lead to
injuries is that players don't know
eac h· other that well ,'' exp lains
Llo yd Johnson, president of the
Society for American Base ball
Research . "D izzy Dean would
pitch against the New York Giants
22 times. But when he faces the
other league, there 's the clement of
surprise."
Which might ha ve led to the
most notorious All-Star injury ever. ·
The St. Louis Cardinal ace was
the National League starter in the
'37 contesl at Griffith Stadium in
Washington. Dean had two outs
and nobody on base in the bouom
of the third in u scoreless g:1mc.
Then Joe D'iMaggio singled for his
first ever All-Star hit and Lou
Gehrig blasted a 450-foot homer to .
right.
Obviously upset, Diz tried to
throw one past Cleveland sl ugger
Earl Averill. But the muscular

VALKENBOURG, Netherlands
(AP) - French cyclists continued
10 domina!£ the Tour de France on
Saturday, as Gilles Delion became
the second Frenchman in a row to
win a stage and Pascal Lion
retained the overall lead through
seven stages.
Meanwhile, the favorite s and
former wimicrs continued to jockey
for positions leading up to Monday's important 41-tilile time trial
in Luxembourg.
Svnday, the Tour goes 10 Germany for a stage that finishes at
Koblenz, 128 miles away.
Saturda~ was Stephen Roche's
turn to gatn on the field, just as
Greg LeMond and Claudio Chiappucci did Friday.
Roche gained more than a
minute -on the other con lenders and
was making his best showing since
' winning the Tour de France-Tour
o,f Italy-World Championship triple
in 1987.
·He was in fourth place, 4 minutes, II seconds, behind Uno.
Lino held the lead for the fifth
conSecutive day, with Sieve Bauer
of'Canada second. 3:11 back, and
Chiappucci third, 3:34 behind.
I

Cleve land ou tfielder lined a pitch
back through the box . The baseball
clipped Dean on th e left foot ,
breaking one of his toes. Ncvert/Jeless, he chased down the ball and
nipped Averi ll at first.
The 26-year-old Dean mi ssed
se vcml weeks of the season, came
hac k too sooo frOm the 1·n·JU ry and
changed his pitching mechanics to
compensate for tile toe. In the process, Diz hurt his ri ght arm . He was
never the same.
With the inJury, Dean fini shed
the 1937 caman"ign at IJ -10, end •f
ing a four -season streak 0
or
more victories. In fact, it was hJS
last year in double figures for win s.
He went on to c;1m on ly 16 more of

first base and lcanmg lor a throw
and his hamstring JUSt popped,"
Lang says. "Yo u cou ld hear it ·
th roughout the whol e stadium . It .
was like someone shot off a pop- :
gun ."
·
It was the Twins who got shot.
In fourth place two weeks earlier
on I)' a game and a half out of sec:
ond , lhcy plumm eted. Killebrew
was lost until September. Minnesota finished in seventh place , 24
games he hmd.
The most spectacular co lli sion
1n All -Star history took place in
1970. Pete Rose of Cinc mnati levelcd catcher Ray Fosse of Clcvcland in the 12th inning to give the
National League a 5-4 win. It hap-

his 150 c.:arccr viuorics .

pcncd in front of Rose 's horne Iown

zo

The mhcrunr of Diuy Dean's fans at Riverfront Stadiu m in
All-Star mi sfo rtun e was Ted Cincinnati .
Williams.
The head-on co lilsion between
Like 01 ' Diz , " Teddy Ball - "Charlie Hustle" and the " Mule"
game" wasn't known for his field- left both players bruised and bating. But it was solid glovcwork in tcred. But it was Fosse who got the
left field that hurt him in the All- worst of it: He had a fractured
Star Game at Comiskey Park in shoul de r. The injury left him a
Chicago in i9SO.
diminished version of the promising player he had been.
Jack Lang , executive sec retary
h' k R
of the Baseball Writers Association
"I 1 In osc probably co uld
of America, recalls: "Ralph Kiner have slid around Fosse," Lang
hit the ball, Williams went back for says. " He' ll deny it to hi s dying
it and crashed iillo the wall."
day . He says the onl y way he was
It was an impressive catch. But going 10 score was to knock the
Comiskey Park 's walls were guy over.
unpadd ed and Williams broke his
"A close play like that; he had a
elbow. Unknowingly, he stayed in hometown audience. He was like a
the game and even managed an guy driving up a one-way street: 'I
RBI single in the fifth.
can do it because I-' m Pete Rose
Thereafter, the injury forced and thi.s is my hometown." '
Williams to sit out liO regular-seaIf nothing else, recollections or
son gamc.s. The Red Sox, who hud Dizzy Dean, Ted Williams, Har.
missed the AL nag hy only one . mon Killebrew, Pete Rose and Ra y
game the previous year. slipped 10 "Fosse should put to rest the canard
third place - just four games out.
that the All-Star Game is "onl y an
Maybe the Minnesota Twins exhibition."
would never have caught the surg"They talk about it as an exhibiing Detroit Tigers in the AL pen- lion," Lang says, "but when they
nant race in J96R. But losing slug- get out on the field, they are just as
ger Harmon Killebrew during the hyped up as if it were the pennant
All-Star Game certai nly didn't race. Once you cross the lines, you
play hard."
hcp.
I
Wh
he
•
Lang has a vivid memory of '
atcver I cost.
how Killebrew got hurt in Hous·
(C)I992
NEWSPAPtR
ton's Astrodome: "He was playing ENTERPRISE ASSN.

�Page . C2-8unday nme8-Sentlnel

July 12, 199~

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

In Hubbard Memorial LL Tournament'

Pome~oy

llodgers, Middleport White Sox move to semifinals

l!y S&lt;IOTT WOLFE
T·S Correspondent

l

SYRACUSE- The Pomeroy
Dodgers and Middle~ White Sox
advanced to the scmt·fmals of the
Bill Hubbard Memorial Linle
Leag.ue Tournament Friday
cvenmg with two very exciting
one-run VIClortcs. .
Pomeroy defeated the Gallipolis
Royals 4-3 and Middleport claimed
a 6-5 wm over R1o Grande.
Pomeroy's Dodgers will play
M1ddleporL's White So~ in the 6:30
game on Tuesday evenmg, July 14.
Nathan Cremeans and J. Bentley
h~kcd ~p in a good old-fashioned
pttchmg duel early m the game
between Pomeroy and Gallipolis.
Cremcans ~ave up a single 10
R. Ramsburg m the lOp of the ftrst,.
but Ramsburg was lcrt stranded at
third after a pop-up to shon-stop.
Arter stri_king out the first baUer,
Bentley walked Craig and Cremeans, but fanned the"third bauer
and got a ground out to second to
retire the side.
Pomeroy's J.T. Humphreys singled to lead orr the second,
advanced on a ficldcr'·s choice, and
came home on two errors to give
hisclubaat-Oicad.
Meanwhile, Bcn~ey fanned two
of the three bailers he faced in
retiring the side.

..
Baseball

..·,.

In the NL ...
Eaatt rn Dll'lslon

W L

~L

l'iuabwah ........... ..47 !9

.l47

T~m

Cl

Monll'CI! ................44 42 - ..S J2
.506
St l.nui• .............. .. 43 42
f'ew YnrL ............41 45 .477

l
ll

C:h.icagn..................40 4S
Philadclphia ........... 36 .SO

6~

.471
.419

Wa tcrn OlwlskHI
CINCINNATL .... ..S l 33 .«17
Allanu ...................47 37 .S60

San Dic:go ..............4.S 42

.SJ7

San Francisco ........41 44
!IC'IUSton .................40 46
Los Angclca .... ....... 3&amp; 48

.412
.46S
.442

6

II
4

7.5
IO..S
12
14

Friday's scores
ALianla 4, O.iQgoO

New YOik 7, Houston 6
San Diego 8, PhiladelphU 7
St lAuis 3, Los Angdcs I

Monli"CCl 3, San Fnncisco 2
Pl••bu'ih 4, CINCINNA 11 0

They played Saturday
St. Louis (Ctulc 1-3) at Los Angeles
(l lcnhiscr 7-6), 3 p.m.
Philadclphil (Abholl 0-11) al Sa n
[)ics,o (Leffc~ 10..6),3 p.m.
Mon1n:.a1 (D. Mu1inez 9·7) 1\ San
Francisco (R\ac.k 6-2), 3 p.m.
PiuAhurg.h (l. Smilh 7-7) 11 CINCINNATI (llrown 0-0), 7;05 p.m.
Atlanta {Avery 6-7) &lt;~I ChiCigo (Mor·
a•n 7-3), 8~05 p.m.
New York (Cone S-_.) 11 llnuston (J.
Jmes 4-2), 8:05p.m.

Toduy's ~ames

In the AL ...
Elllltrn DMiion
Tum
W L
Pet.
To rnnto ................ 53 32 .624
1htlimorc ...............49 36 .576
Milwaukee: .............44 40 .!524
New York ... ....... .. ..42 43 .494
11 Mtnn ....................40 43
. ~2
Oct:mit.. ............ ..... .41 46
.47 1

C\.EVEt AND ...... .l5 51

.407

Western l)l" blon
Mlllne!oll ... . .. 5 1 34
.600
(hk land ................. 49 36
.576
leu.~ ..
..47 41 .534
rh1cagn ............ 43 41
.5'12
K1nm C11y ....... .36 49
.424
Scaulc ................. J4 53
.391
(Jhfnmi l ...
.33 52
.3118

Pomeroy struck for two more in
the third when G. Abbou walked, J.
Roush walked, Ramsburg hit into a
Helder's choice and C. Ohlinger
smglcd home two runs, the score
now 3-0.
Pomeroy scored again in the
fourth when Wyall walked and
Bentley lr1pled ror a 4-0 score.
Defens1vcly, Pomeroy surrercd
through some shakcy mom?nts in
Lhe bouom of the firth mnmg, as
Gallipolis rallied with a strong
orrcnsivc error! and capitalized on
a couple Dodger m•sc ues.
J. Coburn smg led, Spradun
walked, and both advanced on two
errors. Then R. Perdue slammed a
home run 10 push the score to 4-3
berore a pop-up and ground out
back to the puchcr got Pomeroy out
or the mnmg.
Despite Gallipolis threatening
with two runners on base in the
rinalc, Pomeroy held on for the
win.
Bentley was the winner with ten
strikeouts, and six walks, giving up
just four hits along the way.
.
Cremeans surfcrcd the loss wuh
rive strikeouts and seven walks.
S. Powell was 2-2 with two singlcs ror the winners, whle Ramsburg singled, Bentley tripled, and
Humphreys and Abbott singled.
Perdue was 2-3 with a home run

OOl!III .ES -- Dvnc.n, Philadelphit,
25 ; VanSlyke, Pitt11hurgh. l!'i; Murray.
1'\cw Y(lrk , 22; Grin&lt;Wn, Montreal , 20;
Bigg,io,Jiounon, 20; W. Clark, S•n Fran·
cisen, 20; Ranilla, New York., 20.
TRIPLES - D. Sanden, Atlanta, 1I;
Finley, lloustoo, I 0; OutiCJ, Los A n sel~ .
7; Alica , SL louis, 6; OffcrTnln, l.m An·
s elu, 5; DcShield~. Mon tre. l, S;
VanSlyke, Piu~hurgh , .S.
I lOME RUNS - McGriff, San Otcg(l,
1H; Sheffield. San Dlcao. 17; L. Walker,
Montreal, 16; Bonds, Ph11burgh, I S;
Pendleton, A\lanu, 13; 1&gt;1ultm, PMadcl·
phit, l3; Dawson, O.iclgo,1 3.

STOLEN BASES - Ori11om, Mon·
45; DcShicld&amp;, Montreal. 33; Lank ·
rord, St. Louit , 28; Roberti, CIN CIN·
~~eal,

NATI, 24; Finley, Hou l ton, 23; Lewit:,
San Fnnc:isco, 22.; Gant, Allanu, 22.
PITCHING (10 dec ili ons) D anlr. he~d, CINONNATI, 9-l, .818, 2.04;
Glninc, Atlanta, 13-3, .&amp;12, 2.57 ;
Swindcll, CINCINNATI, 8-2, .800, 2.94:
Tewksbury, St. Loui1, 9-3, .750, 1. &amp;7;
Morgan, Ckic•an. 7-3, .700, 2.7 ?;
Leibrandl, Atlanll, ?· 3, .700, 3.64; KlliU,
Mnntl'CI], 9·4, .692, 259.
STR IK EOUTS- Cnoc, New York ,
145; Smoltz, Atlanu , 123; S. Fcm1ndc.l,
1'\cw Yor\ , 111 ; G. Mtddux, Chictgo,
I06; Drabek, Piusburgh. 101; B. llufllt,
S1n Dicao. 98; Rijo. CINCI ~ATI. 92;
Candioui, Los Angeles, 92.
SAVES - lAc Smith, St. Louis, 22;
Charlton, CINCINNATI, 21 ; D. Jones,
Houston, 19; Mitch Wil liams, Philadel·
ph il , 17; Wcucland , Montn:~ l, 16; Mycn;,
S1n l)icgo, 15 : Hc1indl, J'itL,hurgh , 12;
Dinhlc, (I~(]S\ 1\ll , 12.

American League
HATTING - Puckcu, Minnesou,
340; R. A1ornu, Toronlo, .328; Molitor,
Milw•ukec:, .320: E. Martinc7., Sr..aulc.,
11 9: Raerga . CLEVELAND. 313;
Thom a~ . Chicago, .306: Knohlauch, Min·
nc.~nta,

Pi tldnugh (J, R n hi n~n n 3-1) at
CINC INNATI OliJO {,.6), 2:15p.m.
A. tlanll ( ll iclcc. ki 2-4) 11 Chiugn
(Cutllln 6-7), 2:20 !'J.m
New York (Femandc.z 7-7) at llomon
(llcnry 2·6), 2:35p.m.
Sc LooiR (Osbclme 7-4)at Los Angeles
(Candilllti 7-7), 4:0S p.m.
Mrwnma1 (Gardner R-6) at Sa n Francisco (Swirt 6--1 ), 4:05 p.m.
Philadelphi a (I&gt;. ROOinron 1-J)at San
Dicao Olcne~ 6-6), !Ut5 r .m.

GB

4
8..5
II
12
13

\8.5

2
,. 5.5
7.5
15
\8
1R

Friday's scores
Sc.mle 5. New York 2
IIM\on 6, Chic1gn 5
Minnc..otntl .5, ]h1timnrc 2
O,ld•nd 5. Tnrnnll\ 1
Ct1ifnmia ti, llctrOII 1
Kanm C it ~ 3. Milwaukee I

.

.JOS.

tHINS- Puckcll, Minncsnta, 63;

ror Gallia, while Cremeans and
Coburn each singled.
Rio Grande plated three runs in
the first inning, but Middleport's
Whtte Sox erased that lead with
three of their own in the bouom
half of the inning.
Rio 's Miller led orr the game
with a walk, followed by a Hager
single and a Young home run.
Middleport mirrored Rio's luck
as Hill reached on an error Murray
walked, and Fowler walked. Two
throw ing errors let in 1wo runs,
while a Topps single brought home
anotherto tic the score at3-3.
Millhone singled, advanced on
an error, and gave Rio a 4-3 lead
when he rode home on a Miller singlc in the second inning.
Middleport tied the score aL4-4
when Meadows and Williams
walked before Leach had an RBI
single.
The Sox led 5-4 in the fifth as
Fowler reached via an error and
scored on a field er's choice by
Meadows.
·
Rio tied in the top or the sixth
frame, when with one out Castor
walked and Brown cam'e in to
pinch run Two errors and a
groundout .by Skidmore brought
home the tying run.
The exciting finale came when
Leach and Murray walked, then

ChiCigo, 5.
IIOME RUNS - McGwi.rc, Oakland,
27; Deer, Octroi\ , 21; Ju1n Gonzale7.,
Tcxu, 19; l'cttlcton, Detroit, 19; Caner,
Toronto, 19; Delle, CLEVELAND, IS :
C.ni&lt;IM, 01kland, 18.
STOLEN BASES - tnriM, CLEVELAND, 32; Polonia, California, 30: Lil·
1ack, Milw1ukce, 29; Anderson, Ol ltimore, 28; R1incs, O icago, 26; R. lien·
dcrsnn, Oakland, 26; Knobltuch, Min·
ncsotl,

22.

PITCTII NO (10 d ec i s ion~) - J ua n
Guzm 1n , Tornnlo, ll·l, .917, 2.01 ;
Kru eger, Mi nnesota, 11-2, .1100. 2.96;
Acmin,ll, Sc.aulc, 11·3. .786, 3.20; Jamie

win with six strikeouts and three
walks, while giving up rive hits.
Leach, Fowler and Topps singled for the winners.
Hager led Rio with two si ngles.

Syracuse will play Nelsonville .
in the 6:30p.m. opener Monday, ·
while Coolville plays the Middlepori Cardinals in the finale.

Pittsburgh blanks Cincinnati 4-0
By JOE KAY
. CINCINNATI (AP) - The
Pmsbur~h Pirates provided wild
fesl!Vlll~S oq a night when the
Cmcmnau Reds' flfCworks fizzled.
The. Pirates sat through a throehour ram delay, made a mid-game
trade to shake up their pitching
starr, and fmally snapped out or
Cinc (nnati 's spell by beating the
Reds ~-0.
·
The. game rinally ended at 1:37
a.m. With one last bizarre twist: the
Reds calling off the post-game fire·
works show that had sold 42,438
tickets and made the team reluctant
to call off the game.
The Reds promoted the fire works up until the end, then drew
boos from the several thousand
remammg fans by announcing
there would be no show arter all.
. "It h~d something to do with
l~e (cny s) an11-no1se ordinance,"
team spokesman Jon Braude said.
The way things turned out, the
Pirates didn ' t mind the long night.
. Doug Drabek (7-7) pitched a
SIX-hll shutout and singled home a
run to get his first win against an
NL West team th1s season. Cecil
Espy also had a two-run homer to
hdp the Pirates snap a rive-game
losmg streak against the Reds.

Morr11: Toronto, 10-3, .769, 4.41; K.
Drown, Texu, 13-4, .765, 3.14; Mussin1,
Baltimore, 9-3, .750, 2.4o-. Appi cr, Xansu
City, 9•3, .750, 2.35; McDoweU, Chicago,

Sports shorts

12·4, .750, 3.50.
STRIKEOUTS - Clemen~. Boston,
120; Juan 011trr11n, Tnrnnto, llS; Peru,
New York , 109; K. Dro wn, Tc:us, 95;
Appicr, Kanu1 City, 91; JD~e 0\lzman,
Tu.n, 19; McDowell, Chicago, 87; Ryan,

Cycling
BRUSSELS , Belgium (AP) _
Greg LeMond made a big move up
in the standings during the sixth
stage of the Tour de France.
LeMond started the day in 14th
place but joined Claudio Chiappucci of Italy and two oth ers in a
breakaway rrom the pack with 12
miles to go.
When it was over, LeMond had
taken a large bite out of Frenchman
Pascal Lino's overall lead, pulling
him self into fifth place, 4:29
behind.
Lino's lead actually improved
- from 1:54 over ROM teammate
Richard Virenquc to 3:1 1 over
Canada's Steve Bauer.

Tcxu,l7.

SAVES - f:ck:cnlcy, Oa kla nd, 29;
Aguilcrl , Minn~n11, 25; Ol! nn , Raltimnrc, 21 : ~nntgotncl)' , Ktnm City, 21;
Jeff Ruucll, Te~a~. 21 ; Tlligren. Chtcasn.
19; Kcardm,lkt!ltnn, U!.

Transactions
Da~ebalt

American I.CIRUC
OALTIMORE ORIOLES - Dc£ignat·
cd J(tll;c Mcu, pitcher, for rcassisnmcnt.
CIITCAOO WIDTE SOX - Aq"ired
Eric Yelding, outfielder, fran the llou&amp;·
ton As trw to campk:t.c 1n Clrlicr tnde and
auignod him to Vancoovcr (If the Pl cifiC

Cout Lclguc.
N1Uonal League
FLORIDA MARLINS - Releucd
Rusty Bumprdncr, fLl'lt bueman.
PlnSDURGH PIRATES - Traded

It was only Pittsburgh 's third
win in nine games,llnd one or their
most long-awa ited. Two thunderstorms delayed the stan or the
game by three hours and t 6 minutes.
"At first, 1 didn 'tthink we were
going to get it in, especially after
the second time when we came in
here and sat so long," Drabek said.
" You try to rcla• and not get too
comfo~U~ble or too stifr in here."
Pirates manager Jim Leyland
didn 't raultthe Reds ror waiting so
long.
"They had a tremendous crowd
tonight," Leyland said. " That 's the
name of th e ga me. The show
should go on ir you can. This is the
big leagues. If you can play , you
should play. "
The Pirates provided all of the
intrigue with an unusual mid-game
trade.
Third baseman Steve Buechele
was one or several Pirates who
passed the time during the rain
delay by rlinging balling-practice
baSeballs into the stands. Buechele
started the game but was gone by
the second inning. The Pirates traded him 10 the Chicago Cubs ror
left-handed starter Danny Jackson,
who will join Pillsburgh arter the
All-Star break .
Th~ Pirates went on to end th e
Red s dommatwn by piling up
e1ght. h1~s and rour runs aga~nst
Chm Hammond (5-5), who has

81Jcchcle, th ird bucm1n, to the
Chicago Cub1 for DIMY lack son, pitcher.
SAN DIEGO PA.DRES - Acqui~d
Ch ristopher M1 rren, pitcher, from th e
acvellnd lndi•n• \n cnmrl ctc •n earlier
• tndc and •~-~igncd him tn Spokane nf lhc
NonhWCII l.caguet

l~

.J•. P~I-:t•r~

Fc••tball

Give It the best

,;(

1

I

,

,

R~eeway

Steck Cu racln1 tt Its flntlt
Futarlng •• ,.•., em.
lett f11: $S
10 tnd under free
lhtt1 ·~•n 1t: 11:00 t.rn.
Ract time: 1:00 p.m.
Fer men l•f•n•etl•• cell:
188·9617 It J88:9JOO

s•ow .....,.,

Leeds, lrldlts,
Groo11i11 Stpplies,
luclcets, Lt1 Wraps,
Lar.tt S.ledio1 of
Clippers.

.

1'\allnnal 1\a~kdb.lt Auncl•linn
ATLAI\'TA IIAWKS - Signed Adam
Keefe, forwa rd, to 1 l'ive·ye.u conllllct.
CHI CAGO BULLS - f'l acc d Cr1iG
lloclgcs, gu.ud, on waivcn.

VInton

GET READY FOR
FAIR SPECIAUI

To each his own ...
home 11 a special place.

Basketball

lost his lasllhrcc deCisions.
John Wehner, who moved to
third base when Buechele lcflthc
game, had an RBI doubl,c ~~ the
firth and scored on Drabek s smgle:
Wehner, called up rrom Class AAA
{luffalo on June 15, has made JUSI ·
two stans at third. .
.
Espy, who p1nch hll for .
Buechele in the second inning, hila
two•oul homer off Hammond in the
sixth, his first.
Drabek pitched out of four scaring threats to preserve his third
shutout in 19 stans. This one was ·
meaningful - he was 0-4 in eight
previous sulfls against the NL West
this season, including two losses
against the Reds.
·
" You run into a buzzsaw now
and then," Reds shortstop Barry
Larkin said . "Drabek is a good :
pitcher, and he pitched very well ·
tonight. "
.------------,

Now

1O%oH

protection possible...

~atiunal

t'nuthllll.taaue
SigneU
IIOUSTOS OII .EKS
llcmard D1fncy, niTcrn;iv~: lacklc, George
Bethune, ddcnsi"c end, 1nd Bucky
Richardson, quanerba ck. Wa ived Jnn
Reed, wide re ce iver, and Anthony
Wil lism~, linchlckcr.
LOS AMii ~ I.I: S RAII JI ~ K S - Siancd
Mike All• rrl t, placc·k!d:cr.
MIAMII)()I.PIIIf\S .. Signed W1hcr
Wil~on , wide receiver. Agreed t n tcnn~
wi th Larry Wehstcr, defcn~ive e nd :
Dw1g)ll llol licr, Roosevelt Collins, Andre
Powell, lineb•cMcn:; Tony Tellington , cm·
ncrba ck; Rsoul S peu~. fullback; l.oc Mil·
er.t, wide rocei"cr; Milton IJ iSJins, tight
end; an d K•mcnn Ucll, runn1ng b•ck.
Waived Chrb Gray, qual\c.rb.lck, and Horaein Momma. noM: tick le.
TAMPA BAY BUCCAN EERS/\greed to tcmu wi1h Crais Erickson,
quutcrb1c.k. S1gncd M1rk Wkcc:lcr, nm.c
IICk ]c.

Auto Club

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Authorized Purina Chow Dealer.

Call Angle
Iota

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399 W. Mal•

992·2164

Pomeroy, Oklo

The Store Wllh "All Klnda of Sluff" For Pete, Slllbl•,
Large l StNII AnltNII, Lawnel G•rdene.

Soccer
M1jor So&lt;:ccr l..tiJ:UC
MSL - Announced it will discontinue
npctllions crrcctivc immodilttly .

CMC h C..~ .

CI:NTRAL FlORTDA - N1med
Dwildn Ev1ns men'~ usi111 nt bukctbaU
coach.
ST. AMBROSE - N•med Robin
Recker women '1 bukctbaUc01ch.

Call The Profes.sionals

Teu1 6, CLEV Iii..AN'D 5

They played Saturday
Chicago ('McCukill ti -ti) 11 Rnunn
1:05 p.m.
Cali rornia (Ahlmu 4-11 ) at Octroi\
(Gul!u: k~m 9·5), I :15 p.m,
O.Kllnd (Mootc 9·7) 11 Toronto (Ju•n
C:nnman 11· 1), I :3S p.m.
Sc.anle (1\gotlo ().0)11 New York (C.
Ynung 1·2).2p.m.
_ MiMCSCKI (KI'\ICgcr 8·2) at Baltimore
(McDona ld 11-5), 7:05 p.m
Kanus Cit~ (Rocd 2-3) 11 Milwaukee
{Wegman 7-7), 8:05p.m.
CLEVELAND (Muti l 0. 1) 11 Tcllu
(Urown 13·4), 8:35 p.m.
(f)n~nn ~ - 4),

BIG PRICE
REDDC,.IO
.

• RESIDENTIAL

•COMMERCIAL

.

7 MORE DAYS! ENDS 7·18·92

TodaY's games

•INDtJSTRIAL

Chie~go

(Alvuez 2-2) at Boswn (Viola 7-5), I:O.S p.m.
C•lifnmi• (flnlcy 2·9) 11 Octroi! (Ritt.
2-J), 1:35 p.m.
Oakland (Oarlina 7-7) 11 Tornn1o
(ll cmgon 5.0), I :J!i p.m.
Seattle (Oranl 0-l)at New York (llil·
· lea.u0.3), 1:30p.m.
Minnuota (hal'lks 3-2) 11 Raltim orc
(Milaci i 5-6), I :JS p.m.
Kansu City (Appicr 9·3) 11 Milwau·
kcc (Rumn 1·2), 2:35p.m.
CLEVELAND (Cook 2·5) 11 Tc1U
"(nums 2·2), S:M p.m.

Leaders
National Ltaaue
BATTING - KNk, Philadelphia,
.349; VanSlyke, Pinsburgh, .336; rtk
Oriff, Ssn Dioao• •322; Sheffield, San
Diqo, .321: Gwynn. San Dieao• .321; W.
ClarX. Stn Francaco. .319; Gncc, Olica·
ao, .316.
RUNS - Biuio. Houstort t !li9; Oril· .
10m, MC)Uta~l, 56;_Deshiold1, Monlnlll,

1992 Cadillac Sedan Deville 4Dr... 22,995
1990 Chevrolet Corsica 4.Dr............. 56995
1990 Chevrolet Cavalier 4Dr............55695
1990 Pontiac Grand Am 2Dr............ 56595
1990 Dodge Spirit 4Dr............:....... 56995
1986 Pontiac 6000 4Dr................... 52595

SS: Robcn o, CINCINNATI, ll: T. fer·
_G ,ynn, San
o;'l!o,ll: Kouk, Pliiladclliul,l2.
RBI - Sheffield, S'an Dloso, 60;

i

,_Area sports briefs__,

KCLL drawing date Monday

ACS tennis tournament Friday

GOING TO RIO GRANDE- Shayne Price (center), catcher for
Dawson· Bryant High School, will play for the University or Rio
Grande baseball team next year. Flanking him are Redmen head
coach Daw Oglesby (left) and Price's mother, Sharon Griffith.

GALLIPOLIS - The annual American Cancer Society tennis
tournament will be held rrom Friday, July 17to Sunday, July 26 at
two Gallipolis locations - Forest Mullins' court on 25 Henkle
Avenue and the Haskins Community Park court.
The entry rce is $15 ror the first event and S10 per additional
event. One new can of balls is required for each event.
Divisions orfcred will be men's open singles and doubles, intermediate men's singles and doubles, ladies' open si ngles and double,
intermediate ladies' singles and doubles, boys' and girls' 17-andundcr singles, and open and intermediate mixed doubles.
There must be fou r entries for any given event, and players arc
limited to three events.
For registration rorm s, contact Pat Boyer, Gallia County ACS
executive director, at 446-7479, tournament co-directors Steve
Mullins at 446-R3 tO or Tom Topkins at446-R755 (home), or the
Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recrea tion Department at446-1424, c•tcnsion
37.
The reg istration deadline is Monday, July 13 at5 p.m.

GALLIPOLIS - The fifth annual Shrine Open Golr Toumamcm, a roue-person A-B-C-D scramble open to men and women, is
sc heduled ror Saturday at9 a.m. at Clirfsidc Golf Course.
The team auction and a social hour will begin Friday at 5:05 at
the course. Those playing in the tournament arc invited 10 a steak
,dinner for lWO artcr the auction.
The entry fcc is S50 per person ror non-members. Cliffside members entering the linkrcst will pay $40. All proceeds will go 10 local
Shrine Club projects.
To enter, call Clirfside at446-GOLF. The deadline ror entry is•
Wednesday .

MIDDLEPORT- Hol zer Clinic of Meigs County will be doing
physicals on Saturday, July 25 for area schools.
All Meigs District students should plan to arrive at 7 a.m. All
Eastern District students arc 10 be there at 9 a.m.
Bring a signed sporl~ physical card 10 the clinic located on the
"T" in Middleporl at I 50 Mi II Street.
Holzer Clinic physicians have donated their time to provide this
service 10 the community .
Further inrormation may be obtained by calling 992-2188.

AND SERVICE CALLS
LICENSED • BONDED • INSURED

Rademacher to visit Meigs linkfest
Pete Rademacher, the 1956
Olympic heavyweight boxing
champion and challenger for the
hcavywcigh1 title of Floyd Patterson in his first professional bout,
will make his third successive visit
to the Meigs Cancer Golf Tournament Thursday.
Rademacher is the director or
golr tournaments sponsored by the
Ohio division of the American
Cancer Society.
The tournament will h.nefit the
Meigs County Cancer Association
and will be held Thursday at the

PLANS TOURNAMENT VISIT- Pete Radamacher (second
from left), former Olympic heavyweight boxing champion shown
with pro heavyweight champ Rocky Maricano and two young fans
nanking them in a 1957 publicity photo, is scheduled to appear at
the Meigs Cancer Golf Tournament Thursday.

NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - Twotime U.S. Open champion Tracy
Austin is among four Jcnnis greats
10 be inducted into the International
Tennis Hall or Fame.
Philippe Chatricr, rormcr president or the International Tenni s
Federation, and the douhlcs team or
Bob Hewill and Frcw McMillan
also will be induclcd.

Malee It A Long Cool Summerl

GAGE - There will be two United States Slow-pitch Softball·
Association tournaments - a men's Class D&amp;E state qualifier and
a women's Class E fast chance qualifier - scheduled for July 25
and 26 at the old Southwestern High School .
In addition, there wilt be a men's and women's open tournament
on the same days.
The entry deadline for these tournaments is July 23.
For more inrormation, call Ed Caudill at245-5919 .

Gallipolis football camp July 27
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Area Football Camp, ror all
area boys entering grades 5-8 this rail, is scheduled for Friday, July
27 through Monday, July 30 at the Gallipoli s water treatment fields.
The camp, which will stress fundamentals, will be held from I to
3:30p.m. daily.
Registration fees arc $35 if turned in berore July 13 and $40 rutcr
•
thai dale. Registration rorms may be picked up at Galtia Academy
High School or at the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation office in the
Gallipolis Municipal Building.
For more inrormation, contact Gallia Academy football coaches
Brent Saunders at446-3354 or Mau Bokovitz at446-2399.

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POMEROY ~&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY
2:00.3:00 p.m.,·Phone 614-992·2164
W~needey,July 15
BIDWELL- BIDWELL CASH FEED STORE
12:00.1:00 p.m., Phone 614-3118-8688
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2:00.3:00 p.m., Phone 614 4 46 2985
M..-UM ORDER 25 FISH
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GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation Department
is sponsoring two rall softball leagues - a co-ed league and a
women's league - 10 begin play in August.
The games will be played on weeknights at the Ted Perry Memorial Fields. In both cases, the entry fcc is $125 per team. For the co. ed league , th ere will be no fewer than six and no more than 12
teams in it.
To gel a team roster or league rules, contact the P&amp;R ofrice at
· 446-1424, ext. 37.

Meigs County Golf Course with a I
p.m. tee-orr. The cost- $42 for.
members and S50 ror non-members .
- includes lunch, golf and dinner.
In addition 10 prizes furnished by
local merchants, a trip 10 the Firestone Country is ava ilable to the .
winning team.
This year's tournament is dedicated to the late Hugh Custer, longtime owner and operator or the
Pomeroy Golf Course.

:OSH FOR POND STOCKING

sporL~

.
Softball tournaments set for July

Ohio for his crrorts.
"We arc very pleased to sign·
Shayne, who I believe is the best
catching prospect in the area," Redmen head coach Dave Oglesby
said. "S hayne has good size, an
excellent arm, good speed and hits
with power. He has outstanding
potential on the collegiate level."
He is the son or Sharon Grifnth
of Rt. I , Ironton . Price is also a
member of a summer league team
coached by Dick Brammer.
The Rcdmen were 17-2 1-1 in
1992 and made their fourth appear- ·
ancc in the NAIA District 22
Pl ayof rs in five years und er
Ogles by's dire ction. Oglesby 's
record is 95-89-2.

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RIO GRANDE - Shay ne
Price, a catcher .for Dawson-Bryant
High School and his team's most
valuable player in 1992, has agreed
to a11cnd the University of Rio
Grande and play for the Redmcn
baseball team next year.
Price, a recently gradualc,
comes to the Redmcn program w1th
some impressive senior year statistics, including a .350 batting average. He was also credited with six
horne runs, 31 runs, 30 runs batted
in and eight stolen bases.
Price, who was third in Coach
Fred Conley's batting lineup dunng
hi s se nior campaign, was an all-distric t pick, was named to the all Ohio Valley Conrcrcncc ror Jwo
years and was chosen first team all -

. STEW ART - After gelling in most or the qualirying heats, the
rams washed out the rcaturc races in the Bob Adams Sr. Memorial
race Friday night at Skyline Speedway.
· The remainder or the event will be run on July 24, paying S2,000
to wm the event Skyline will hold its Mid-season Championship
races Saturday wnh mcrcased purses in all divisions.

CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek Little League Tournament will
hold its drawing ror pairings Monday at 6 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Employees Club's clubhouse, located off Ohio 7 across from the
Ohio Valley Electric Company's Kyger Creek plant.
The 26-tcam tournament will start on Friday, July 17 and run
umil Sunday, July 26.
For more inronnation, contact Mark Werry at992-6118.

Sunday Tlmes-Sentlnei-Page-C3

Price signs with Redmen

Skyline action postponed

. FOIILL YODIIDILDIII UD RIIIODILIII liiDi.

See These Cars At•••

n~nddt. San Die&amp;.~. 53;

01L11lnn, Aliladolphi1, 51; M1.1my. New
York, 58; McGrifr, San Dicao, SS; L.
Walker, Montf\111. .53; Pendleton, Atlanta,
Sl; Daw10n,Chicaao, 51.
HITS - Pendleton, Atlanta, I 03:
K.rut:, Aliladclphia, I 0'2; VanSlyke, PtuaburgK, 102; Owynn, Stn Diaao. I 02;
Shofl'lcld, San Dieao, 101; DeS~iald•,
Monttc~l, 100; T. Fcmand-. S.n Oicp.
. lOll

NEW

5

wv

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

Softball leagues organizing

ColleAe

APPAU CIIIAN STATE - Named
Todd Sanstcdt and Mile Crdt assistant
bulccthall

1992

Sports physicals set for July 25

Ste~e

Phi llipS, Detroit, 63; Knohlauch, Min·

ncsnta, 62; E. Ma rtinc:r., Suttle, 58 ;
Mack, Minneaou, S~ ; R.: Alonur, Toran·
10, 54: Ca"cr, Torm ~. S4.
RBI - F'"acldcr, Dcttoit, 73; McClwitc,
Oakbnd, 6?; G. Bell. Chicago, 65; Puclt·
ell, MinnC!o ta, 63; C.mer, Toronto, 63;
Thomas, Chietg_o, 57; h yman, Detroit,
57; Juan Gnnnlcz, Tcu~. 57; Anderson ,
Baltimo~, 57.
HITS - Pucke tt, Minnesota , 119;
Daerga, CLEVElAND. 107; Fryman, Detroit, 104; Sierra, Tcxu, 101 ; Dc"cn.:auJ.,
Bal timo~ . 99; MolitM, Milw•ulcec , 99; E.
M1nii\C1, Scaule, 97.
I&gt;OUIILE.'\
Hal l. ~cw York, 27: 1:.
Mart inc1,. ~caulc , 21i; ~hll ins ly , t'\cw
York , 25; Joyner, Kan~u City, 24; Y&lt;Nm,
Milw1uicc, 24; 1\ICkcn, Minncs01.1 , 22;
On:u, Kansu Cit~. 22.
TRIPLES - 1\ndctson, D11timnrc, 6:
Dcvcrcau•. Baltimore, 6; Limck , Mi1 waultoc, 5: R. Alcmar, Toronto, S; Sicnt,
Teu1, .S ; White, Toronto, 5; Raines .

Fowler delivered the game winning
·single 10 give the Sox a·6-5 win.
Castor had 10 strikeouts, andll
walks while giving up only three
hits for Rio. Murray picked up the

J~ly 12,

,.

}

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NEW STORE HOURS: MONDAY·FRIDAY,9:30AII•8 PM
SATURDAY, 9:30 AM·5 Pllj SUNDAY, 11 AM·6 Pll

BY MASON COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS, POINT PLEASANT
'··

·.
••

''
•
'
.,''

�P'*Ge C4

Sun~y Tlr.nes-8entlnel

July 12, 1992

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

. Whatever the answers, it was
· ~~~r ~~~u~~~~~~th~f~can~~rst~o
offense had been ~nou ~ til 'hclc
starter Brian Bohanon (Jg O) gctl
win to end a victory d;ought b~
Texas lcfthandcrs that stretched
back87gamesand48winstoScpt.
30 oflast season.
.
Bohanon. brough! m from
Tn~le A Oklahoma Cny for Friday s start, allowed four runs to
score in the flrstlhrcc innings, but
recovered to retire 14 of lhe final
_16 batters he faced m h1s seven1nnmg performance. In Apnl,

Bohanon had _lasted only one-third
0 ~~n~n~ng m h1s last two starts
WI.. c angers.
1 was cmbarr.~sscd by those
~~~tarts 10, Apn~\ ?ohanon sa~d.

Blake awarded scholarship

_Montgomery named AL All-Star

601)0/o 6.170/o

S·Year "Classic Rille Changer" CD

Soccer
NEW YORK (AP) - The
Major Soccer League, the only
majOr nationwide professional soccer competition in the Unitcd
z States, folded after 14 seasons.
r ·• The final blow came Thursday
~ evening when efforts to arrange a
~ deal to. sell
Louis Storm fell
. the St
c through.
.
~
Dallas. Baltimore, San Diego,
• Wichita and Cleveland all were
!l commiucd 10 playing the 1992-93
...~$C3SOO. but Foreman said the own• 'ers in a conference call decided
~ unanimously that the league
~· shouldn.' t remain in business fol. -lowing the departure of Tacoma
~~and St Louis.
~
The lcagu!l' s existanee has been
= 'tHreatened each year since 1988.
~ The league's salary cap was
::;1c~uccd
four limes from
. -~$1 ,275,000 10$600,000.

.

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197-4~7

By KF.ITH ROBINSON

Reimer with a pitch before losing
the lead for the second time when
he walked Brian Downing.
Texas added a run in the sixth as
Palmciro singled in Thon.

1
-

Green pounds Fruth's t"n 16-7 romp

By Rex A. Young
· Fruth's Pharmacy and the Green
Senala'S met Friday night at the
Hartford baseball diamond, with
the Senators scoring a 16-7 win
over their opponents and advancing
further in the Hartford LiuJe
League Tournament
The Green Senators scored
quickly in the fitSt inning and con•
llllued to add 10 their score. They
used the combinalion of walks and
basehits to score !heir runs. They
were led by Jeremy Griffith and
Josh Bodimer with three hits each.
OthetS having hits for the
Senators wei-e: Bobby Angel (a
triple, 3 RBI's), Billy McBrayer (a
double, 2 RBI's), Charlie McBrayer
and Josh Adkinson all with one hiL
For Fruth's, Joo Casto and
Andrew Nibert had two hits each
while Scou Slewart, Bren1 Rollin~
and Chad Jobnson and Rick Blazer
each had one hit. Fruth's got stalled
slow scoring aU their runs in the
middle innings.
The Senators will play Saturday
(today) at3

dlepon Cardinals
11 a.m • MIL'IOO Westmoreland
MasonVFS
I p.m. - New HIVcn Orioles
Syracuse Hubbanls
3 p.m. • Green Senators
PomeroyKFC
S p.m. - Winner 1 p.m. game
Loser II a.m. game
7 p.m. - Winner 3 p.m. game
Loser 9 a.m . game

In the second game of the day
Friday, the Cochran's Exxon nine
went up apinst die Pomeroy KFC
ttam. Jason Roush for KFC pitched
a one hiaer. His bid for a no-hiuer
was put' aside for another day
when, in the third inning, Nathan
Simms or Cochran's smashed a
shot 10 left cenJerfiekl for a triple.
Pomeroy Slar1ed tarly and kepi
the heat on throughout lhe game.
When the dust cleared, KFC, afler
pounding oul 16 hits and pushing
across'the pi&amp;IC II runs, settled for
a comfortable 2-1 win.
KFC hitting heroes included
Juon Ncigitr (3 hits), Jason Roush
(2 hits), Wayne Bamhan (2 hits),
Daniel WhiUikind (2 hits), Clay
Crow (2 hits), ll1d Nale Sisson,
SleYCn McCuUough, David Anderson, 1~ Warner, and John
Ambrose, aU with one hit each.
Pomeroy KFC will play the
Green Senators Saturday (today) at
3p.m.

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COLUMBUS , Oh~(A~ ­

John Cooper, who hasn' t taken any
of hts teams to the Rose Bowl in
hts four yc.ars as Ohio State' s
coach, has a little more incentive in
h1s new contract to do just that.
Under his previous contract, he
got a bonus equal lo two months'
salary if the Buckeyes played in
any Jan . 1 bowl game. An invita·
uon to any other bowl game got
h1m a one-month bonus.

The new agreement stipulates
that he has to take the team to the
Rose Bowl to get a two-month
bonus, which would amount to
about $19,000.
A Rose Bow I berth would mean
a Bi~ Ten Conference champi onshtp, something Buckeye fans
arc hungry for. Ohio State hasn't
been to the Rose Bowl since !985.
Going to the Rose Bowl also
would probably involve dcfcatinJl

Michigan, Ohio State 's bigges-t
rival. That 's something Cooper
hasn't done with the Buck:cycs.
Under the new contract, Cooper
would receive a bonus equal to 1
1/2 months of his salary if the
Buckeyes play in the Hpliday. Cit~
rus, Orange, Cotton, Sugar or Fiesta bowls. Trips to other bowls arc
good for a one-month bonus.
The university on Friday
approved the four -year wntracl.

wv

which is retroactive to April 1. It
replaces a five -year contract that
was to expire on Jan. 3, 1993. In
effect, it gives him three additional
years as coach.
His base pay remain s at
$114.CXX1 a year and tollll compensation, including fcs from radio and
television shows, tops $500,000 a
year.
Cmpcr is 27 -IK-2 in four sea sons at Ohio State.

vs

Ohio fishing report

vs

Ohio Power Co. strip mine areas bass oases

vs
vs

Sunday's schedule or games
(weather permilling) will be
played:
.
2 p.m. - Wmner ol Saturday 9 a.m.
game vs winner of Saturday II
a.m. game.
4 p.m. -Winner of Saturday 4 p.m. ·
game vs winner ol Saturday 7 p.m.
game.
6 p.m. • Loser ol Sunday 2 p.m . .
game vs winner of Sunday 4 p.m.
game.
The championshp game wiD
begin Monday at S p.m. WMPO
Radio Station wiD tape the cham·
Satunlay's schedule of games:
pionship gamc for broadcasl on
9 a.m. - Hills Indians vs Mid- July 18, at 10 a.m.

$1500 Rekte or 6.9 APR Fil••dll

($5,000.00 alia. blluce • Subltutlal peulty
far early wiGdranl • IAimlt a~~~~pouaded
moalbly • RaSe~ subJect 10 dlaa,e 1111 Tbuncla)J)

Cb ,

with a bunt single and was moved
to second on a single to center by
Ruben Sierra . Armstrong then
loaded the bases by hilling Kevin

you' ~ns~~~~~ ,J·g~g!,fc'~h:~ In Hartford LL Tournament,

oncpersonout.lhadtodosomc
docp soul searching. This organizalion has always stuck behind me
and 1 needed to do something posi·
tivc."
Harrah joked that his short-term
memory served his starter well.
" Fortunately for me 1 can't
think back far enough to remember
his bad starts," Harrah joked after
the game. "He's a young man with
a good arm .
•
" I wa1n't worried or nervous,"
ors, Blake was named the Meigs
By DAVE HARRIS
Coumy Jaycccs Offensive Player of Bohanon said. "I know I can do it
T-S Correspondent
up here. I needed Toby to stick
Frank Blake, a former fullback, the Year in 1989. He was named with me.
defensive back and IIi-captain for Associated Press aii-Disllict 13 as
Kenny Rogers pitched a. perfect
the Meigs Marauders, has been a sophomore and first team all-dis- eighth
and Jeff Russell gave up a
&amp;\!larded a . scholarship from lliet his junior and senior years. He single run in the ninth bui was able
National Gridiron Coaches and was was honorable mention Associated to claim his 21st save of the season .
one of the five finalist for the Press all-Ohio as a junior. Blake
Being able to come back from
wa s named first team all-Ohio
nations top scholarship.
his
troubles was something
Blake also was awarded the defensive back as a senior by the the early
23-ycar-old
said he needed
Ohio High School Football Coach- United Press International and sec- rrom the dugout.
·
es Association Scholarship in May, ond team all-Ohio by the associatCleveland manager Mike Hared Press.
one of six awarded state wide.
grove
said Bohanon's victory was
He is the son of John and
Blake was a member of the
no
nuke.
National Honor Society and a Margie Blake of Middlepon. Blake
" Bohanon deserves the win,"
member of the Tri-Vallcy Confer- will aucnd the Ohio University Hargrove
said . "He threw the
_cncc All Academic Team from School of Business this fall as a changcup for strikes and was effec•1988-~82. He wa1 the vice prcsi- Copeland Scholar, with hopes of tive gctung the groundball outs."
'dcnt o his senior class and student going into the field of sports manRanger outfielder Juan Gonzalez
counci a member of the French agement.
lead
Texas with four RBis in a 2Club, S icncc Club and Teen lnstifor-4
performance. Gonzalez start·
Jutc. He attends the Heath United
ed
the
evening with a three-run
Methodist Church.
home
run
to center field in the bot·
: Blake graduated in May as the
tom of the first inning after the
second-leading rusher in Meigs
Indians
had taken a 1-0 lead against
lfigh School history with 2,275
Bohanon.
yards in 418 carries and 30 touchGonzalez, hitting in the fifth
downs (5.5 yards/rush). He caught
spot
of the order, was one of-six
a school record 16 interceptions for
Rangers
with multiple-hit games.
218 yards and a touchdown. Blake
Cleveland
starter Jack Armcaught 34 passes for 426 yards a
strong
threw
his
first complete
two touchdowns.
game
of
the
season
but fell to 2-12
Blake was a four year letterman
to
lead
the
majors
in
setbacks.
.and earned 1I varsity letters in his
The Indians had leads in the first
four years for the Marauders . He
and
third innings but Texas
also received leuers in track (4)
regained
the lead in the bottom of
basketball (2) and wrestling (I).
both
frames.
·(,lc is the first player in Meigs High
Cleveland's Thomas Howard
S chool history to be named first
led
off the game with a walk,
learn all-conference three years,
scored when shortstop Jeff Huson
-o~nd was the Tri· Valley Confermishandled Carlos Bacrga's single.
-ence's Most Valuable Defensive
Both
runners advanced on the
Player his senior year.
error.
with
no ·RBI. The score was
: Besides all his conference honFRANK .IILAKE
Texas'
49th
unearned run of the
.year, which leads the majors.
The Rangers slluck back m the
bottom of the first, all of the scoring coming on Gonzalez' blast to
By DA VF. HARRIS
center. The 396-foot homer was
&gt;· T-S Correspondent
Gonzalez' 19th of the year and ran
••• KANSAS CITY, Mo. - Wcllhis RBI total to 56, both team
·~ton native Jeff Montgomery was
highs.
named to the American League's
Bohanon quickly got him self
-All-Star team Thursday by Ameriinto trouble in the third inning,
can League manager Tom Kelly of
walking Howard and then giving
theM innesota Twins.
up consecutive singles to Mark
Montgomery, a !980 graduate
Lewis and Bacrga that went
of Wellston High School, aucndcd
through the left side of the infield.
Marshall University before being
Baerga ' s hit scored Howard to
drafted by the Cincinnati Reds as
make it a 3-2 game in Texas' favor.
their ninth pick in the June 1983
A fielder ' s choice by Albert
free agent draft.
·
Belle loaded the bases bc[orc CarMontgomery made his major
los Martinez hit a grounder to
league debut on August I , 1987
short. Dickie Than made the play,
with the Reds against the San Franbut second baseman Jeff Frye comcisco Giants and earned his first
milled the Rangers' league-leading
major league victory the following
83rd error as his throw to fir st
day against the Giants. Mont..,
sailed by Rafael Palmciro to score
gomery appeared in 14 games with
JEFF MONTGOMERY
Lewis and Belle.
the Reds in 1987 going 2-2 with a
6.52 ERA. The Kansas City Royals
acquired Montgomery just before
the start of the !988 spring training
in exc hange for outfielder Van
Snider.
Montgomery started out the
19KK season with Omaha before
the Royals called him him up in
June. He posted a 7-2 mark with a
3.45 ERA in 45 games and was
named to the Baseball Digest's allrookie team.
Heading into this season the
ri ght handcr has posted a 24-14
mark with a 2.44 ERA and 76
saves in four seasons. His 76 saves
heading into this season ranks second on the Royals ' all -time list
behind Hall of Fame favorite Dan
Quisenberry 's 238.
Despite an 0-5 record this season , Montgomery owns a I. 71
ERA, the lowest on either all-star
pitching staff. He picked up his
21st save in 23 chances in the Royals' 3- 1 victory over Milwaukee
Friday night. He was named the
Royals' pitcher of the month for
the month of May.
Th e All-Star game will be
Qlrrent !bed Rae Annual Percentage Yield
played Tuesday night in San Diego.

Sports shorts

Texas regained the lead, 5-4, in
the bollom of the _third. A single
down the lme at third by Go~zalcz
scored Palmeiro, who had led off

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

'

Sunday Times Sentinel Page-c;s,

Cooper agrees to four-year pact as OSU head football coach

Texas launches 14-hit assault to post 6-5 win over Cleveland
ThcAt~:~N, -~~as (A~)ucd
slash out hiJ~ bu=~:\ooy
10
night as a 14-hit attack earned the
team 'a 6-S win over the Cleveland
Indians
· By game's end, the questions
mostoftcnaskedintheclubhousc
were whc!hcr the 26 hilS and .382
tcam baumg average put together.
o.vcr a two-game stretch under
mtenm manager Toby Harrab were
the norm, and whether ·the bubble
would burst OllCe the _second half of
sca~on started follo~mgnext_Tues·
days All-Star game m San D1ego.

July 12, 1992

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Here is the weekly fishing repon as
provided by the division of wildlife
of the Ohio Dcpanmcnt of Natural
Resources:
· Southeast
OHIO POWER- The Ohio
Power Co. recreation area offers
many good fishing opponunities in
the sllip mine ponds. Most anglers
fish for blucgills and largemouth
bass. Some overnight camping sites
arc available. A free user permit is
required to fish and camp.
BURR OAK LAKE - There
arc largemouth bas s up lo five

·
pounds. Try using buzz· baits or
plas\iC worms fished around areas
with drop-offs and submerged
structure for best results. Opportunities for taking channel and bullhead catfish arc rated excellent.
S1iuthwest
ACTON LAKE- Usc larval
baiL~ or red worms fished in shal·
low water to take blucgills. Channel catfish up to 10 pounds arc best
taken at night or during early morning when using traditional baits.
Crappies average eight to II inch·
cs.
CAESAR CREEK LAKE-

English recalls period as field
boss of women's baseball team
$7 50 a month and a darn good job
in the winter.'"
English accepted the offer, but
his first day was a disaster.
"The first day I mana~cd was
the Fourth of July," Enghsh said.
"We won a doubleheader and,
after the game was over, the ballpark caught on fire. Everything
burned down, and the owner said
he couldn't afford to rebuild.
"We got some businessmen to
take the team over and finished the
season on the (Grand Rapids)
South High School football field."
Improvements were made to the
field and it became the permanent
home or both the Chicks and the
football team.
For five years, English managed
the Chicks-, guiding the young
women to the league championship
in his final season.
According to the movie, directed by Penny Marshall, aucndancc
was poor when the league started.
But by the time English g01 into it,
the league was already established
and accepted.
"Fort Wayne was the bestdrawing team," he said. "On
wcckcni!r; they'd have· S,OOO or
better. We would probably have,
on the average, about4,000.
"People were taking it in stride.
It was an evening out to take your
mind off the war.lt was fun for me.
I enjoyed cvcl)' minute of it"
English said he was not bothered by women entering the rrcviously male domain of bascbal .
"They played well except for
one thing -reflexes," English
said. "It took them a while to run.
They fielded well, they threw well.
They gave it all they had."
Although the women were playing a "man's game," they were
.supposed to remain ladylike.
''They wore short skirts, but had
heavy underpants, so they could
slide," English said. "They were
neat and looked clean and nice.
BURT WOOD
They were well-behaved.''
Most of the players on English's
Grand Rapids team were teen-agers
or women in their early or mid-20s.
"I think they were a lillie bit
afraid of me," he said. "I had a
pretty good reputation as a
ballplayer and they figured I knew
GALLIPOLIS - Burt Wood, what I was doing and respected my
son -of Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Wood judgement''
of Gallipolis and a rrcshman-elcct
at Gallia Academy, won two
national championships from the
TAC/USA Youth National Track &amp;
Field meet. held from June ·30 to
July 4 at Auburn University in
Auburn, Ala. ,
' f'
•·
.
Wood, competing in the·discus,
shot put and javelin, won the discus
with a toss of 166 feet 2 1/2 inches
- 13 feet 7 3/4 inches better than
runner-up Greg Uhcr of Wilber,
Ncb. - and the shot put, which he
won with a heave of 46 feet 9 1/2
inches - 4 feet 1/14 inches better
than runner- up Jason Moore of
Atlanta, Ga. Wood placed fourth in
the javelin with a thro~ of IS4 feet
8 inches. Only Uhcr (third, 154-9
1/2) and Napa. Calif. athletes Chip
Lilienthal (second, 156-5 1/4) and
Paul Hartman (winner, 163 feet)
did better.
Today he will compete at Ccnllal SUite University in Wilberforce
at the Region VJunior Olympics.

NEWARK, Ohio (AP) Woody English appeared in three
World Series with the Chicago
Cubs. But the shortstop of the
1920s and 1930s, had another lesser-known job in professional base·
ball.
The movie, "A League of Their
Own," depicts the beginning of the
All-American Girls' Professional
Ba~cball League in World War II.
The league existed from 1943 to
1954 in Midwest cities such as
Rockford, Ill., Fort Wayne and
South Bend, Ind. , and Kalamazoo
and Bat~c Creek; Mich.
"In around ' 48 or '50. a man
from Grand Rapids (Mich.) called
me and said, 'I own the Grand
Rapids Chicks and I'd like you to
manage it.' I said, 'I don't know a
thing about girls baseball,"'
English told The Advocate of
Newark.
"He said, 'Jimmy Foxx makes
5750 per momh (managing the Fan
Wayne, Ind., team). We'll give you

Wood wins
two field events
at nationais

Fish around deep points, drop-offs
and submerged humps at depths of
10 to 20 feet to take bluegills.
These same areas will likely offer
the best opportunities for taking
largemouth bass. Usc jigs, spinners
or crank bailS in open water to a
depth of 20 feet to take whcrank
baits
Ohio Rivtr
The tributary backwaters of the
Mcldahl Pool in Clermont, Brown
and Adams counties provide good
fishing for largemouth and spoiled
bass, crappies and catfish . The
river and its tail water areas in
Columbiana and Jefferson counties
in northeast Ohio also offers good
ba~ s fishing . Fishing can be exceptional at times for white and hybrid
striped bass when using twister
jigs.
Central
ALUM CREEK LAKE- Good
largcmoutlt bass fishing opponuni·
tics for anglers using crank baits
fished at depths of 10 feet. Some
anglers arc using sluggos fished on
the surface during early morning
and evening. Boaters arc advised to
usc caution as the lake level
rcmai ns well below normal.
· INDIAN LAKE -Try 1\ight
fishing in areas with current ot take
channel catfish. Usc night crawlers,
chicken livers or cut baits fished
along the bouom for best results.
Try using small crank baits or night
crawlers fished around the riprap
areas to take largemouth bass .
Northwest
PAULDING RESERVOIR Channel catfish averaging 13 to 22
inches can be taken during evening
using traditional baits fished along
the bollom. Tty the shoreline areas
when using wax worms or mealworms to take bluegills.
FINDLAY RESERVOIR N0.2
- Drift a nigh! crawler harness or
troll crank baits to take walleyes

averaging 14 to 28 inches . Shoreline fi·shing will produce good
results for taking largemouth bass,
bluegills and channel catfish.
Northeast
WEST BRANCH RESERVOIR
. - Usc minnows suspended
beneath a bobber, and fishing in
areas with brush piles in the cast
end of the lake to take crappies.
Try using plastic worms or buzz
baits fished in areas with tree
stumps to take largemouth bass in
the channels and along the west
end of the la~c. Try the area ncar
the dam for muskies.
SPRINGFIELD LAKE - Usc
wax worms fished in shallow water
around weed beds to Ulke bluegi lis.
Try the northwest corner of the
lake and usc minnows fished at
depths of six to 10 feet to take
crappies.
Lake Erie
In the western basin, walleye
fishing is best in the Toledo shipping channel and the areas ncar FCan and G-Can along the international border. Anglers arc trolling
deep-diving lures and using
weight-forward spinners tipped
with night crawlers. Walleyes arc
averaging 13to 16 inches.
Some yellow perch averaging
eight to I0 inches arc being taken
on minnows ncar the bottom in 35
feet of water in nearshore areas · ~.!of~
around Avon Point and Lorain.
In the central basin, walleyes
averaging 23 inches arc being
taken norlh of Geneva and Conneaut. Anglers arc using downriggcrs with Dipsy Dives and blue,
silver, black and gold spoons fished
at depths of 4810 55 feet.
Walleyes arc being caught at
depths of 70 to 75 feet in the area
from Ashtabula to Conneaut. and in
60 to 65 feet approximately eight to
I 0 miles north of Cleveland's
Wildwood Park.

And then there's that school
By DAVID GINSnt!RG
BALTIMORE (AP)- Olympic thing. Come September, Nail will
swimmer Anita Nail has endorse- have 10 deal with life as a junior at
ment conllacts, her picture on the Towson High School.
cover of this month s "Baltimore
Magazine" and enough l!ophics to
fill a dozen showcases.
Clearly, this is no high-school
kid. Then again ...
"Oh, Anita acts like any ISyear-old," insists her' mother, Marilyn Nail . "She's just a teen-ager
who happens to be a rccord-hoJdcr
in the brcastsl!Okc.
"The biggest thing in her life
right now hcsidcs the Olympics is
getting her driver's license. She's
studying for it between practice
sessions, and one of the first things
she's going to do when she gets
back is take the tesL"
If she can find time, lhat is.
Upon her return from the Summer Olympics. Nail won't have to
practice four hours a day anymore.
But she'll still be bogged down by
interviews, photo sessions, promotions and cndorscmcnLI.

71
- .. I

( ''Jolll.ilm ..

/- ~~

income. The old contract required
onl y the athl etic dir e c tor ·~
approval.
·
The university's president, Gordon Gee, said the added contro1
would help protec t Ohio state ' s:
image.
" It 's in the best interest of the
uni ve rsit y no maucr who we
have," Gee said. "The coach feels·
very, ve ry comfonable with th is."
The contract says Cooper must
encourage the academic progress
· and graduat ion of hi s players. tl
says the relationship between the·
football program and academics is·
of " utmost importance."
·•
Coo per and former offen siv e
coordinator Elliot Uzelac were crit'·
icized for their handling of star run-·
ning back Robert Smith, who left
the team las t year in a dispute over
academics. Smith said he wasn' t
given enough time for his studies. .
Uzelac later resigned. Smi th.'
returned to the team th is winter. :
Gee said ihe clause invol vi ng .
academic s wasn' t related to the
Smith episode.
··
"Thi s is s1mply Gordon Gee 's
philosoph y," Gee sa id. "Whatever
we do ... the hollom line is studcnLs .
first, athlclcs sc~.:oml. "

See Puzzle on Page B-2

Nail unchanged after Olympic
fame, endorsements, awards

·LARGE SELECTION

r-;-;: -

Athl etic director J im Jones
announced just before the Michigan game la st November th at
Cooper would be retained as coach.
Al that time, Jones said Cooper's
contract would be extended for
three years.
The agreement turned out to be
a new. negotiated w mracl.
Cooper couldn 't be reached for
comment Friday. Hi s o[ficc said he
wouldn't be in all day. A message
was left at his home.
Jone s was on vacation and
unav&lt;~ilahlc fm comment.
Under the new contract, the uni vcrslly would pay Cooper the rest
of his salary on a monthly basis if
he is fir ed before the contract
expires. The university wouldn't be
liable for his other income in such
a situation.
If Cooper took another coaching
job that paid less than what he
made at Ohio State, the university
would pay the difference.
The old contract didn't deal
with the iss ue of Cooper gelling
another job if dismissed.
One clause requires Cooper to
obtain approval from the university
president and the athletic director
for any deal that involves outside

.... •'

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Registered Investment Representative
BANC ONE SECURITIES CORPORATION

Available by appointment to person«ily
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Page-C6-Sunday Times-sentinel

~Coming to

Julv 12, 1992 ·

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

Barcelona July 25,

. Farm/Business

_:otympics to bring.forth new faces, less politics, more cops
· · llyJAMKIIDlJNAWAY
• . SARCELONA, Spain (NEA) _
'fl\c Sarc~lona Olympics - officially the Games of lhc XXV Mod·
em Olympia~ - will open a new
era tn ontemaloonal spon.
TheathlcticColdWartbalraged
between the Soviet Union and the
United Sl;ltes since 1952 is over. In
sunny Spain, ihc focus will be on
the individual performances of the
world's greatest athletes.
From the opening ceremony
before a worldwide TV audience of
up to 3.5 billion on Saturday, July
25, to· the extinguishing of the
Olympic name on Sunday, Aug. 9,
the action will be non-stop.
. h.'s to be the crowning achievell!~nl of Spain ' s Juan Antonio
Samaranch , 1hc powerful head of
lhc International Olympic Commit·
lee, He was the chief advocate of
the new open games without convoluted amateur restrictions.
Carl Lewis and Ja~ki c JoynerKcrscc , in trdck and field; Michae l
Jordan, Magic Johnso n and their
NBA-Ied " Dream Team," on bas-

ketball; Mall Biondi and Summer
Sanders, 1n swtmmmg ; Ktm
Zmeskal, in gymnastics; and, of
course, Dave Johnson (of ' 'Dan
and Dave" ad fame), in th e
decathlon - these U.S. sLars will
be among more than 10,000
Olympic athletes on hand from I 70
nations.
They'll compete in 25 spans - ·
encompassing 257 cvcnlS- for a
total of I, 754 gold, si lvcr and
bronze medals, There arc also three
demonstration sports: roller hockcy,jai alai and l.ilc kwon do. Action
will take place at 43 sites in
Barce lona, its suburbs and elsewhere in Spain.
Look for American athletes lO
lead the medal parade. Four years
ago, in Seoul, Soutll Korea, Amcricans lOOk home 36 gold medals and 94 Olympoc medals on all. Both
loW Is sho~ld go up on Barcelona.
The cho c( reason os lhal the two
maon U.S. roval s - the Sovocl
Unoon and ~ast Gcrmany. _Lhc lop
two medal wmne~. respectovely, on
the Summer of X8 - no longer

cxisl.
.
.
most of l~e year; ~ c reportedly and -nig ht before and during the Barcelona crowd.
.
Most former Sovtcl athletes woll cams more than $1 million annual- Games in ads and prommions, their
For bcucr or worse, American
be competing for the new Com - ly.
· executi ves and business guests will TV viewers will be able to sec
monwcalth of Independent States,
Two countries that haven 't had also occupy many of tile best seaL~ almost everythin g thai happens in
which has prcci011s liulc money Ul • much Olympic impact in recent at the "hot" sporl~. such as gym· Barce lona - if they can find the
spend on s ports . Other former years - China and South Africa nastics, track and field, basketball time and monc·y.
Soviet Sl.ilrs will be competing for could make noise this time . China, and boxing.
The TV fees, jncidcnwlly , arc
the newly-freed, tiny.Baltic nations which first entered the Olympics in
tile highest in hislbry . NBC is pay·
of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. 1984 , is th e new ·· Bi g Red
Sccuroly - as it has bcen ,sincc ing 3 dizzying SAO! million for the
But some ex-Soviets, especially in Machin e." Chinese alhlctcs arc Lhc 1972 tcrrotisl murders of Israeli U.S. righl s. It prcdocls up to 190
team sports and minor Olympic cxpcclcd lo win medals in anum- athletes in Muni ch - will be m ~ lion Americans will sec som e
categories, were unable 10 find new her of sporL~ and could win China's ex tensive and expensive . Manned part of the network' s coverage.
sponsorli to replace the sUite subsi- first track and field gold medal in hy IO,O!Kl police and 5,000 civil
Because Barcelona is six hours
die5 that fed, clothed, housed and one of 1hc women's throw in~ guards, the Barcelona ·n Olympic . ahead of Easlcrn Daylight Time, ,
trdined them.
event.&lt;. And South Africa , h:mncd Organizing Commiucc's sec urity the NBC-TV prime-lime coverage
East Germany , whose athletes from the Games since 1960. will operation will cost S360 million . will usc same-day tape. .
won I02 medals in Seoul, ha s enter a team that includes diswncc- The chief source of worry is th e
In addition 10 161 hours of free
merged into Germany, and its pow- running sl.llr Elana Meyer.
domestic Basque' separatist move- ·nclwork TV on NBC, the Summer
c_rful co~munisl sports organizaBarcelona will also probably be mcnl, which has a long history of Games will al so be covered for the
uon has dosappcarcd.
remembered as the first totally violence .
first time by pay -per-view tclcviIn trac,k and field, however, "corporate" Olympics. Worldwide
There may also be local demon· sian, via three cable channel s m a
most former Sovoct stars (and many sponsors - Coca-Cola, Kodak, 3M Slrations by Catalonians, just to cost of 529.95 per day - or $ 1:~5
East Germans) have landed shoe and Vosa, for example :--- woll _com- remind the world th ai Catalonia for the rmirc. 15 days. The Olympic
contracts and other forms of spon· pete for aucnuon wuh nauonal . considers ilself a nation _ not just TriplcCa st, offered by NBC and
sorshop, In fact, some arc far bcucr sponsors such as Budwcoscr, a region of Spain . In 1989, when Cablcvi.&lt;ion, will feature live, unin·
off than they were under commu- AT.&amp;.T, Xerox and Nupron, a_nd the king of Spain was introduced terrupted ,
comm crcial -frr c
msm. Pole vault world record-hold· ondovodual and ,leam sponsors Joke during the World Cup of track and Olympic covc mgc 24 hours a day.
er Scrgc1 Bubka of Ukrame, for Nokcan~ Adtdas,
..
field in the Olympi c Sl.ildium, he
So let the Gam es begin . As
onstancc, now loves on Bcrlon for
They II not only be vosoble day- was heartily ·booed by the always, there's much to watch.

Chris Mullin of Golden State.
Jordan, Ewong and Mullon were
on the la sl U. S. Olympic goldmedal winner in 1984.11 was a bas·
kctball squad that also nm up big
scores against foreign opponcnlS.
" AI the Lime, I felt the 1984 team
was the grealcstlcam ever a~sem·
bled," says Ewing. "Now I feel
this team is,"
The currcnl embarrassment of
U.S. riches al so includes forwards
Charles Barkley of Phoenix, Larry
Bird of Boston, Karl Malone of
Ul.ilh and Scmtic Pippen of Chiea·
go. Lacuncr is a 6-11 pivot man,
Helping out in ihc backeourt arc
guards Clyde Drexler of Penland
and John Stockton of Ul.ilh.
"If we lose, il would be the
biggest upset in the history of bas·
keLball," says Barkley. " Obviously, 1 don't think we arc going to
lose."
Malone adds: " I'm concerned
abour bringing back the gold ,
We're eoinlt to lcl our basketball
speak for iiself. We're professional
athletes, and we arc not going to
rub wins in anybody's face."
Johnson retired from the Los
Angeles Lakers las1 fall when he
tested positive for the HIV virus,
But he was the MVP at the NBA
All-Star Game, which removed
doubts about his physical condi·
Lion, In fact, he played so well at
the Tournament of the Americas
thal he began to hint about an NBA
comeback.
. " I missed my chance in 19RO
woth the boycott of lhc Moscow
Olympics," notes Johnson. " Anybody who really knows me has
never had any doubt about me
being there. I am ready."
According 10 Dal y, the new
coach or the New
Nets,
" Teamwork is the

put log ether team concc p~~ both
offcnstvclyanddcfcnstvcly,
. One of hos few _real _problems
wtll he t&lt;} fondplayong tome for all
of the professoonal egos .. He may
stan a dtffcr~nt group on every
~amc on order to keep everyone
onvolvcd- and rested, of course.
Loke ot.hcrs, Jordan constders
the Olympocs 10 be panof hos vaca·
loon. Alonll wnh Poppen and
Drexler, he os recovcrong from the
long ~ro sca~on and strenuous
work on the fonals . Chocago beat
Pot;t!and f~r lhe NBA utlc on June.
I don 1 look lo . ~c playong a
~hole lot of,monutes, says Jordan.
If ~c can l beat Chona wolh ~c
playong seven monutcs, we arc on
trouble, We have enough talcntlhal
you can shofl groups of fovc out
lh;re and ex_tend or maont.aon leads.
II sa free lrop to Eu~pc, a free _trop
to Momc Carlo. That s how I vocw
iL"
The NBA heroes were ca lled
upon after a laundry list of U.S .
basketball failures in world compe·
lilian. Using collegians, the United
Slates finished second in the 19H7
Pan American Games, lhird in the
19HH Olympics, second in the 1989
Goodwill Games, th ird in the 1990
World Championships and third in
the 199 1 Pan American Games.
Prior to thai, U.S. ba sketball
Lcams had won nine gold medals,
one silver and one bronze in
Olympic competition since 1936.
The rival Soviet Union has won
Lwo gold medals (1972, 1988), four
sillier and three bron7.C.
The Americans failed to win the
gold medal in basketball for th e
firsL timc in 1972, when tile SoviclS
were given an extra two seconds
and hit the winning shol. The U.S.
team never officially claimed 1hc
silver in thai dispute.

XXV SUMMER
OLYMPICS

Yugoslavia also has one gold
(1980), thrccsolvcrandoncbronze.
Boris Stankovic of FIB A ~ays
he doesn' t mind the Amcrocan
resurgence, powered by a Dream
Team of pro basketball stars:
" We , of course, know the U.S.
will win everything for the time
being. But we also think th e only
wuy others can improve is by plar·
ingagainstthchcsl."
Leading foes?
When the Olympic s were
opened to pro basketball stars, the
Soviet Union and Yugoslavia were
thought to be the chief threats 10
U$, domination in 1992.
·
Then the breakup of the Soviet
Union led to the Commonwealth of
Independent States, which is sending a rcca~iUnificd Team. Now the
civil war in Yugoslavia, a form er
communist state, has left Croatia to
field its own squad.
Croatia has four top players:
NBA slars Drazcn Petrovic of New
Jersey and Slojko Vrankovic of
Boston; 6-fom-10 Toni Kukoc, the
world 's best player outside the
NBA; and Dina Radja . .
Lithuania . with NBA star
Sarunas Marri ulionis of Golden
State and Arvidas Sabonis, might
also give the United Slates a good
contest
The first U.S. game will be
against Angola on Sunday, July 26.
The Unilcd Sl.iltcs is a mcmhcr
of Group A, along with Angola,
Brazil, Croatia , Germany and
Spain. Group B includes Australia,
China, Lithuania, Puerto Rico, the
Unified Team and Venezuela.
After round-robin play, the top
four teams in each group will
advance to the quarterfinals of the
Olym pic toumamcnl.

-(Ci 1992

NEWSPAPER

GALLIPOLIS · Four officers at
Ohio Valley Bank i""-.Gallipoli s
have been promoted in aclioo laken
by lhc board or directors accmling
lO James L. Dailey, president and
chocf executive officer.
Promoted to the positions of
assostanl vtcc presidents were E.
Rtchard Maban, Bryan W. Manin,
Larry E. Miller and William J.
Gray.
Mahan, who joined the bank in
1991 , has 16 years experience in
the banking industry and received a
B.S . degree with a major in Busi·
ness Administration from 1he Uni·
vcrsi ly of Redlands, Calif, He is
OVB 's manager or commercial
lending.
Martin began his career at OVB
in 19R I and previously served as
assostant head teller. He is a graduate of lhc Ohio School of Banking

Farm Flashes

0 00

By F.D VOLLBORN
Gallia County F.xt. Agent
Agricullure &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS • Those of us
: ·who complained all spring about
:-the cool weather sure were more
than satisfied lhis past week. The
ca.~cm third of Ohio is still repon. ed to be shon on top.soil moisture.
· Wheat maturity continues 10 be far
: behind la~t year. As of July 3, only
· 2 percent of Ohio wheat had been
,harvested. That was far below the
five year average of 43 pc~~:cnt for
that dale.
During the past couple or
¥fCCks, particularly in western
Ohio, corn plants in some fields
have been exhibiting leaves and
leaf sheaths lhal arc profi.Wlly purple. According 10 Dr. Bob Nielsen
at Purdue Univcrsily, the problem
· has been related 10 some restriction
: in the development or the perml·
: nent rooL system , coupled with an
abundance of' plant sugars produced by photosynthesis , The
~~:suit is a large amount of photo·
· synlhctic sugars built up in the leaf
: tissue, Such a buildup of sugars
: leads to the development of anlho-

•

and presently is OVB's administra·
live services officer in charge of
the bank's buildingund grounds.
MiiiCr. a graduate of Cedarville
College with a bachelor of arts
degree in Business Administration
came 10 OVB in 1986. Miller, who
is the bank's internal auditor, was
the recipient of a certificate of
achievement fro.m the Bank Operalions for Examtncrs School in Sl.
Louis in 1990.
Gray ha.~. been wilh OVB since
1987 and is a graduate of lhc Ohio
tlankcrs' School of Marketing at
Miami University, Oxford. He is
rssponsible for the bank's corporl te communocauoos,
· Ohio Valley Bank , a community
bank foundcd in I872, has more
·than 270 million dollars in assets
with offices in Gallia, Jacksoo, and
Pike counties in soutllcm Ohio.

F.. RICHARD MAHAN

By &lt;;INDY ~F.NKJNS
Dtstrift Forester

SPAlN
1

APR

7.75APR

60 Months Axed*

60 Months Axed*

· GALLIPOLIS • Many lllldown·
: crs throughout Gallia County have
· ·!lad lhcir limber cui at one lime or
·. another. Those cut~ thai are three
" years old or more have probably
already rcgencralcd with some kind
of herbaceous species whclhcr it be
trees or forbes. and not much can
: lx: done 10 alter it short of dozin,g
·. or applying herbicides. Natural
; · selection processes will eventually
, ',jilin the vegelalion and crop lfCCS
' l!I•Y be selected in 10 10 15 yean
', for man-made thinning.
, • Unlike the past. many people
• 'ioday prefer a selection cut to a
··clear:cul. These individuals will
;have to take ex 'tra measures to
· •insure lhc rcgcncmion of lhc valu"'able species removed in a cut such
!· 'as oak, ash, and poplar. These
::,species are shade intolerant and
: '!'ill not regenerate properly under
• :a closed forest canopy.
; • · The first step then in a sela:tion
r:Cut is lo leave openings in the for' :est canopy so adequate sunlight can
:•reach the forest noor. The ne.xl
·:most important consideration is site
:,preparation. Three lhings are cru·
::c:ial for good regeneration. They

•..arc:

:7

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o

GOOd seed supply or seedlings
Suitable seedbed
, • Minimum competition from
::undesirable vcgCLalion

..

:Money Ideas ·

cyanin, a purple pigmcnl
Blue mold is now active in most
Kentucky IOIJacco producing counties. Because lhc 101al spore load is
increasing rapidly, new outbreaks
could be very strong where these
spores hit unprotected crops. Ken·
lucky reports sllow outbrcalcs as far
north as Mason
Counly
(Maysville). So far all indications
arc that lhc current isolates can be
cootrolled with Ridomil and grow·
crs that used recommended progmons have been prota:ted.
Mark your calendar on Tuesday
evening, July 21 for a Twilight
Tobacco Producer Tour to the
Cody Boothe family farm located
just south or Mercerville on Route
218. We will have a chance 10 look
atlhcir 1992 crop and review some
of their production pracliccs. Bill
Peterson, long-time cxtcnsion agent
from lhc Maysville, Ky., area will
be our guc.~l resource person.
Dr . Don Ball, Ex1ension
Agronomist and Professor al
Auburn University will in Meigs
and Galli a Counties on Thurday,
July 23. Dr. Ball will be brought to
(C011tiwued on D-11)

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SHOE AND LEATHER REPAIR · Meadows·
ShiM! and Leather Repair opened this week al
104 Mulberry Avenue in Pomeroy. The shop will
be open on Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday
from 9:30 to 5:30, on Thursday from 9:30 to 3
and Saturday from 10 to 3. The shop is also a

Site prcparat~. whclhcr delib·

forest floor, which is a layer of

cructal '~the cstabhshmcnl of
rcgcncrauon than the mcLhod of
reproducuon cuuong,
.
dc:ma)ll amounbeL~ off slashbe(logf~ong
ros may
o rca
ne II to
young seedlings by protccling lhcm
from ,exlrcmc.~. of temperature, desoccauon, _grazong anomals, and the
c.ompcuuon of ontolerarn vcgcta toon.
Thc-repar1ation of scedorbedhcs
ordmanY onvo vcs ln:almcnt l

lies on iopofthc mineral soil and is
compo.'!Cd of fallen leaves, twigs,
and other plant remains in various
stages of decomposition .
This material docs nm make a
good seed bed for most small seedcd species. Mincral soil can be
exposed by burning or mechanical
scarification. Often heavy equipmcnl such as dozers or skiddcrs
used in harvesting can scarify the
soil suffi ciently for a good seed

cracc_or l!"mtenuonal, ~y be II10fC unincorporated organic maucr that

1

17. Rhylhmic Gymnasll&lt;s, Volleybali - Barcelona
Municipal Spons Palace
18. Opening/Closing Certmonies, Alhletl&lt;s Olympic Stadium
19, Modem Penllllhlon . Pau Ncgre Stadi um. Migdia Park

2. Tennis - L.1 Tcixoncr01 Municip:~l Cluh

3. Jai Alai · Municipal Pclooa Ccnocr
4. Volleyball . Municipal Spnn' Palace
5, Ar&lt;hery · Arc hery Range
DIAGONAL area:
b. Taekwondo, Judo, Hockey· Blaugrana Palace
1. Modem Penlalhlon, Equestrian · Royal Polo Cluh
8. Sorter . Barcelona Football Cl ub Swdium
9. Sorter . Espanyol Sama Stadium
10. WtigiiUIIIIIIII · Spanish lndu,, orial Hall
MONTJUIC area:
11. FendnJ, Modem Pentalhlon · Metallurgy Palace
12. Wreslllng . Catalan National Institute of Physical
Education Hall
13, SwlmmltJi, Wattr Polo. Modem Penlalhl~n · Bernat
Picornell Pools
·
14. \lolleyboiL Hanitball, Gymnaslics · Sant Jordi Spon&lt;
Palace
•
iS. Alhldlcs . B""tlona Marath&lt;)n Cour.;e
16. Allolellcs ·. Olympic Ring WalkingCourse

20. S wimmin~, Dhin~ . Montjuic Municipal Poo l
21 . Jai Alui - Colom Frontun

PARC DE MAR area:
22. Table Tennis · NonhSoaoion Munici pal Spons Hall
23. Badminton . Mar Bella Spons Pari&lt; Palace
24. Yachllng · Ba!l'eiona' Olympic Harbor
25. Olympic Vlllag~
OlYMPIC su ~ites {near Barcelona. or elsewhere in Spain):

Baseball · L'Hospitaleo de Llobregat: Viladecans
Baskelboll, baKing - Badalona
Field Hockey· Terra«a
.Handball · Granollc"
Socctr · Sabadcll; Valencia: Zaragoza
Rowing - Banyoles Lake
Canoeing · Castelldefels: La Seud'Urgell
Sboollng · Mollel del Valles
Roller Hockey . Reus: Sant Sadurni d'Anoia; Vic.

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WILLIAM J, GRAY

showcase for Kathryn Meadows' customized
slate paintings and welcome slates. Pictured out·
side or the shop are, 1-r, Paula Thacker or the
Meigs County Chamber or Commerce, Mary
Powell from lht Meigs Counly Parks District,
and Kalhryn and Dudley Meadows, owners.

bed. If a bare patch of soil can be
left every meter or two, it is ideal
in which to plant seedlings. (I n
fact, machines have been de veloped in Scandinavia for th is very
purpose.) This gives the seedling a
cha nce to grow unhampered by
vegcUttion compcLing for the same
growong space.
.
Subsequent killing of vcgeUition
1hrough years two and three will
mosl certainly allow for a healthy
crop tree . This can be don e by

spraying a low-residual herbicide,
such as Roundup, in a 1wo to throc
foot radius of the lrCC . This pmnioc
should be done to end witll around
90 to 120 trees per acre for crop
trees.
For more information on site
preparation ealllhe Gallia Soil and
Water Conservalion District at4468687. All programs and ass isUince
of th e Gallia S&amp; WCD &amp; 1hc
USDA-SCS arc provided rcgard less of race, creed, color,
age,
handicap, or national origin.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Farm Bureau Talent Show
will _
be held Saturday, Aug. 8 atlhc
Galloa County Fair. Registration is
at 10 a.m. , with the coolest starting
at 10:30
The show will be divided into 3
classes - 12 years and under - i 3
yea rs through 19 years- and
mixed a~;c groups. Out of county
JUdges woll select tile winners all
decis ion s of the judges wili tx;
ronaL Forsl and second place winners will receive a plaque.
Ba SIS for judging will be on
originalily, ability, showmanship.
poosc and aprcarance. All performances arc lomoted to 5 minutes,
Entries may include musical skit
pantomime, baton twirling, c~ .• a1i
types or talent welcome. Any band with equipment to be;
set up_- please come one half
hour before show time to gel equip.'
mcm on place.
All entries must be in by Friday
July 31' and will be accepted on
fo rst-come, flrsl-serve basis. No laiC
en1ri cs will be accepted . Send
name, address, age, and type of lal-·
em to: Gal loa County Farm Bureau ;
P.O. Box 349, Ja ckson Ohio
45640.
'
.
For funher delails , contact the·
Gallia County Farm Bureau office '
at 1-800-777-9226, or chairperson ·
laneuc Elliou ai446-4950.
·

a

Application
·deadline set
for July 31

COLUMBUS - July 31 is lhc
nex L deadline for submitting :
apploc atoons for the Ohio Enviro_nm r ntal Education (OEEF)
mono-grant program. Mini - granL~
can he awarded for up to S5,000.
Elogoblc grant recipients
include primnary and secondary •.
sc hools, colleges and univcrsilics
environmental advocacy groups'
ondustry associations, local gov:
Agriculture Secretary Edward
crnm cnts and others. Projects
Madigan. "Ensuring an adequate should enhance understanding of
food and feed supply in these ossucs affccling env ironm ental
nalions is important in helping quality in Ohio.
them ach ieve slablc govcrnmcnl
OEEF is funded by pen alty ·:
and co n1inuc lh cir dcmocra lic ~onics collected by Ohio EPA's ...
reforms."
aor and water pollution control
programs. Conlribulions also am
Nul production in th e Uni ted acce(llcd. Up to $50,000 will be
Slates fell 8 percent in 1991 from a awarded durin~ this gram period.
year carlicr,to 883,100 tons.
The next application dead line is
The va lue or nut crops was Ocl. 30.
S1. 2R billion, up I percent from
For grant applications and
lasl year, th e Agriculture Depart · addoto onal onformation, contact
ment said in a rcpon this month.
Grant Information , Ohio Environ.
It said larger crops of hazelnu lS, mental Education Fund, Ohio
pecans and walnuL~ were produced, EPA, P,O. Box 1049, 1800
while production was lower for WaterMark Drive, Columbus, ·
almonds, macadamia nuLs and pis· Ohoo 43266 -1049. The phone
l.ilC hios.
numhcr is 644-2873.

sc•.

Answer to drought -may be found in moss
By MARGARET SCHERF
As,~iated Press Writer
The
WASHINGTON
fanner's WMt nightmare, dOOII_ghl,
may be le~s devastating in the
future ir a common moss found
acro~s North America yields the
gene lhat molecular biologist Mel
Oliver thinks it holds,
A simple experiment with the
humble star mos,~.shows why Oliv·
cr is so interested: When a few
drops of water arc poured onto a
dried-out specimen, it becomes a
lush green mass.
The dried 1110!15 shows massive
cell damage when viewed through
an electron microscope. "And yet
it somehow rcpai rs most o( this
damage within minules," Oliver
said,

He hopes to find the gene thai
enables lhc star moss to recover so
quickly from dro,ughl and incorporate it into croplands, lawns and
pa.~wrcs .

" We're 1alking about using
genetic engineering 10 create a
wa.~s that can approach the capabillly of the star moss 10 completely
dry up, turn brown &lt;tnd recover
quickly when il rdins," said Oliver,
who works at the Agricultural
Research Service's Cropping System~ Laboratory in Lubbock ,
Texas.

ties. For instancc,lhc Dow Industrial
Average continues 10 outpacC other
major marke1averagcs and lhc avcraac stock. As a result, ponfolio returns in the firs1 half arc likely to be
different from whatlhc Dow's first
half return equaled.
While Fed policy and lower intcrCSL raLCS helped SIOCk prices in lhc
final six monihs ofl991, lhcy have
done liulc 10 benefit sloclc prices in
the rorst hair lhe year. Funhcrmon:, we do notllllicipltc any fur·
lhcr help in lhc SCOOIId half or lhc
year, While we look fer improved
common stock performance in lhc
final six mondlsoflhC year, ciimmon
M~~Chelcclioll, baled upon lonJ·Ienn
supcriorflllldan!alllll*llingspowcr,
regardlcssoflherumgdloflhcoconomy, will diclltc stock pcrf01111ance
in tile S!ltond half. We ex peel invc~­
Lm
again return 10 growth is·
sues, particularly smaller _cap companb, 11\(1 interest race scnsi liyc
SIOCks for lheir invcstmcnl ideas.
IMr.E-Isawltlvnt-tbrnktr ror Tile OllioC•PI"7 ill their
Galllplllilelllce.l

or

will

"'

JOHN MARKLEY

Receives promotion
CHESHIRE · The Ohio Valley
Elcclric COFpolltion announced lhc
romotion effective June 17, of
ohn D. Markley from. AssociaiC
Enginoct 10 Production and Environmc~~~al Engineer at iLS headquarter in PikCiolt
Markley joined OVEC in 1991
as an A~oc iate Engi nccr. He is a
graduaiC of Ohio University with a
6achclor of science in chemical
e~gin.ccring degree.. Markley and
h1s w1fc, Cheryl, restde on Gallipolis.

f,

He desc ribed hi s s tudy in a
recent i .~uc of USDA's Agricuhur·
al Research magazine.
" We're one of a few plant laboratories looking at lhe gene pool of
a wild organism," Oliver said. " It
shows why it's so imponant to protccl the genetic variation of planlS
and animals in remote pans of Lhc
world.
" In star moss alone, we might
find genes that could make crops
truly droughl·lolerant, allowing
them to survive severe dc.~n- lype
droughl and not justlhe mild moisture shortages crops arc currcnlly
bred to survive."
An additional 2 million metric
tons of U.S. wheat may be sold to
the 12 independent slates of the
former Soviet Union und er the
Export Enhancement Program .
The allocation announ ced this
week brings the lOlal quantity of
U.S, wheat available 10 the former
Soviet Union under thC program to
2,116,675 mcuic tons.
Under the program , exporters
receive cash bonuses that allow
them 10 sell U.S, farm products at a
more compcti live world price in
certain foreign markeLs .
''In the case or this si1.ablc allocation, the program no1 only bene·
fits U.S. producers, but also helps
the newly independent countries of
the former Soviet Union ," said

Equities

RySHNHANS
GALUPOLIS - CrosscurrcnLS
'arc playing havoc with invcstmcnt
JC!ums in 1992. During 1992's rU'II
.;ilaff, invcwnent funds moved from
; l)IASDAQ i!ISucs
" IOS.tP400issucs
.
.from
growth
""'stocks 10 cyclical
.~ks, from inLCr·
.\lst rate sensitive
groups to indus- .
ltial groups. The
s hifl5 developed
f~tand :were furiou~. In the past two
· y,ean, ~omolar sudden ~ifiS dcvel.iliJ&lt;:d in invi~tmcntclccillions, but IIIey
hccurrcd uring a 5trong stock-li~ enVii'QMICIIt While lllc shills
~ere sudden (and to some proi"Jtajlle), invc.~tors ultiiiiiiiCiy found
n:IOIICY was redirected back 10 smaU
.CliP iMues, growth issues and intm.st
'racc ~itive stocks. '
, This year, thc.o;c shifl~ emerged
during a much weacr market cnvi'fOIIIIlCIIl and with lhi: major markCI
IVCI'IJC.' disguising lhe btu.dcr decline thai has occuncd r~mostcqui·
' .

VAll D'HEBRON'"ca:
I. Cyding · Municipal Vclo&lt;lmmc

LARRY F.. MILLER

Gallia fair
talent show
set Aug. 8

•

I Mile

'

RRY AN W, MARTIN

·Property owners find they prefer selection cutting

Vall d'Hebron

7175

July 12, 1992

Ohio's wheat harvest
:far below average

ENTERPRISE ASSN.

1992 SUMMER
OLYMPIC GAMES

•

OVB promotes four

America's 'Dream Team' has solid chance to capture gold
By NORMAN MaclEAN
Is the USA "Dream Team "
really basketball's best ever?
We' ll find out when 11 NBA
stars and Duke's Christi_an Lacuner
go after the gold medal atlhc Sum·
mer Olympics in Barcelona. From
all indications, it's ccrt.ain to prove
that baskclball is still America's
game.
Coach Chuck Daly led the U.S.
squad - featuring superstar guards
Michael Jordan and Magic Johnson
:_ to an easy qualifying tillc at the
Tournament of tile Americas, They
wcnt6-0 and won by an average of
51.5 poinL~ per game.
Perhaps center David Robinson
has the highes t hopes for Team
USA. He was the leading rebound er and second leading score r at
Seoul in 1988 when the disappoinl·
ing Americans earned only a
bronze medal for third place.
" I didn't c•pen 10 gel a rhancc
to reverse 1988," says Robinson .
" The 1988 team , was all very
young . All of us had a long way to
go, as far as knowing how to win.
The lasl Ol ympics arc dead and
long gone. Thi s is a whole new
opporlunily . This is a chance to
make history."
11 came about because the way
was cleared for NBA players to
compete in the Olympics for lhc
first lime. Members of FIBA (Fedcration lntcmationalc de Basket·
ball) vo ted overwhelmingly in
1989 10 welcome any pro or amatcur player. The United States. by
the wa y, voted against accepting
professionals.
Along wilh center Robinson of
San Amonio, ex-U .S. Olympic
amateurs returning to Lhcse Games
as pros include guard " Air" Jordan of Chicago; center Patrock
Ewinl(
New York · and forward

Section D

Reclaimer named
COLUMBUS · Brenda Arthur·
Weber, a vice president of Sands
Hill Coal Company, Inc . was
named Ohio Roclaimcr of lhc Year
by the Ohio Mining and Reclamation Association (OMRA) at its
annual mccLing in Columbus,
Neal S. Tostenson , president or
OMRA prescnuid th e award 10
Brenda who was rccogni1.cd for her
ou~tanding leadership and coolri·
buuon to reclamation or mined
lands in 1991.

MYSTF.RV FARM • This WHk's 111~ery fllrw~, ratwl'ld .,
tilt GaiDa Soil and Wattr C011wrvatinl District, is lnratetl ~~-where in Gallia Cnuwty. Individual~ wlshi11g lo partldPIIt ill tilt
wtekly cllllltst may do so by 11uessinglilt rar111's OWHr. Just •all
or cfrop orr your guess to the Daily Sntinel, lll Co•rt St.'
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or tilt Gallipolis Dalll Tribullt, 125 Dird
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631, and you may wen a $5 pri7.r fi'OIII the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and ttlt·
phont number wilh your card or leiter. No telephone ralls wll be
accepted. All conlnt en,lries should be turlled into die lltW paper
oll'ke by 4 p.111. ach Wedwesday. In clie 1'1 a lit, die Winer will
be rhnstn by lotttry. Nert week, a Mtlp COUiliy ran~ willie ftalured by lilt Meip Soil111d Water Couenatloa Dltttrlet.
·

,.I

'

,
'•
.,

·:
·:.
':
' '
-~

.,

.j

�12, 1992

v-,

located on lbe aoulbem
ollbe Arabllll PesdDiula, II a
..... o1 201,3H IIJUII'I! mDtll. Ill
llllly eoeitalltrlp leadt! to weU-walind fertile ffiQIIDtailit in tile
~

lalerlar.

~I

I

f/

Court upholds waste dumping ban
WASHINGTON (AP) - A federal appeals court has upheld an
order permanently barnng the government from shipping nuclc.ar
waste loan underground storage fac1h1y ncar Carlsba!l, N.M.
A unan1mous panel or the U.S. C.rcmt Court of Appeals for the
Dtslncl or Columbia ruled Fnday lhalthe Intenor ~partment had
overstepped liS aulhomy by makmg public land avmlable for the
SllC.
The Energy DCparunent had planned to sh1p as many as 8,500
drums of pluton1um -contammatcd waste from Idaho to lhc plant 26
miles southeast of Carlsbad. The test program was intended 10 help
offlcmls det:~dc whether 10 usc the underground salt beds atlhe New
McxKo lo&lt;:ullon as :1pcrm,ment lhsposal S!lC lor md10UCI1ve waste.

- TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - A jury
awarded at least $3 btllion to
investors cheated by Charles Keating Jr.'s savings and loan company
in a verdict intended to send the
financial world a message.
"I hope we scm 11 out w1th a big
loud roar, that Charlie Keating and
guys like him can 'I gel away with
thai," said Robert Jones, foreman
of lhe federal jury that returned the
award Friday against Keating and
three co-defendantS.
Keatmg, imprisoned 10 Califorma; mounted no defense.
U.S. District Judge Richard
Bilby had ruled earlier in the 3 1/'l.month c1vil trial thai Keating
engaged in a paucrn or racketeering and conspiracy mvolving
invcstmcrits in his Phoenix-based
Amencan Continental Corp.
The Jury's task m etghl days or ·
dclibera110ns was to find whether
three co-defendants also were
liable for investors' losses and to
determine the amount of damages.
It was not 1mmcdtatcly clear
exactly how much each defendant
w1ll be ordered 10 pay and how
much the mvcstors -many of

them elderly people who lost thw
life savings - will be able 10 collect. The defendants all claim to be
broke.
The 11 -mcmber Jury ordered the
onc11mc fmanc1er and developer 10
pay S600 mtlhon m compensatory
damages and $1.5 billion m puntlive damages. A foreign bank and
two developers who did business
with Keating were assessed a total
or $2.3 billion.
The judge must usc a complicated formula lO ·compute the actual
amount of damages. Plaintiffs '
lawyers said it probably would
ran~c from S3.05 billion to S3.95
billion.
.
The ruling Cal,l!c m a p,atr of
class-action civil lawsuits by
20,000 1pvcstors who lost money
on American Continental invest- .
mcnts, many of them JUnk bonds
sold by subsidiary Lincoln Savingf
and Loan, ba.~ed in Irvine, Calif.
The $288.7 million m Amcnean
Continental stock and bonds
became worthless m April 1989
when Amencan Continental f1led
for bankruptcy and Lmcoln was
seized by federal regulators. The

not exphcttly prevent abortions.
Many polls show majorities support many of those restrictions,
such as requiring a 24-hour wruung
period and informmg a woman of
dcta1ls of the aboruon procedure.
W1th the court now inviting
other states to adopt them, those
restnctions have emerged as a
moderate position between the
polarized sides for and agamst
legal abortion.
•
Rep. Lcs AuCoin, D-Orc., and
other abortion-rights supporters in
Congress acknowledge the difficulty they face if opponents offer
amendments that would permit
such restrictions by states.
"We will fight tooth and toenail
to defeat those restrictions," said
AuCom, a Senate candidate. "But

burdens on them. Yoo've heard about
1
the straw thai breaks lhe camel's back.
GEMINI (MIJ 21-June 20) You mlght be
Ediltd by CLAY I. POLLAN
called upon today to perform a service
lor another that you will resent doing.
Rearrange the 6 !ICrambled
The way you handle •I may also cause
words
below to moke 6
resentment In the Individual who requested lhe favor
simple words Print leiters of
each in 11s lme of squares.
July 13, 1112

::~:~~, S©Rcij~-~£!rS'

ASTRO·GRA~H

O

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

Actour
~'Birthday
Julr 12. 1812
Success andlor advancement rn your
chosen freld of endeavor are strong

probabilities lor the year ahead However. be prepared to pay a pnce, you
mrght have to work harder than usual
tor your achtevements

CANCER (June 21-Julr 22) Try not to
take yourself or srtuatrons loo senously

lO&lt;lay Makmg a lew bum shots In golf
or tennis shouldn't be allowed to spell
the day for you and others. Cancer,
treat yourself to a birthday gift Send tor

Cancer's Astro-Graph pred•ct•ons lor
the year ahead by mailing $1.25 plus a
long, self-addressed, stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, clo lh1s newspaper P 0 Box 91428, Cleveland, OH
44101-3428 Be sure to state your zod•ac SIQO

LEO (July 23-AIIII. 22) Under most con-

dttlons. you're

a generous

tndlvtdual.

BuiiO&lt;lay you m1ghl not be too eager 10
share w•th others lhmgs they had a

hand m help1ng bnng about

VIRGO (AIIII. 23-Sepl. 221 Stand up for
your beliefs today. bul don't deliberately mtroduce controversy tnto your diS·
cuss10ns With others If you re lookmg
for a ftght you II find one

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be extremely
careful '" fmanc1al dealmgs today, espectally 1f 1t s w1th someone who has
stung you prev1ously

Th1s mdw1dual

hasn't changed
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) II you
aren t

prepar~d

to turn the other cheek

today. there s a possibility you m1ghl

---

m;sm.

I
I
I

II I I

Appralsol Avollablol 114·2455152
Booka, Bough! And Sold:
Rtlialaus, Hlttrolcal, Nov.,,
Comlco: Thtophllus, Box m,
GallljlOIIo, Ohio 45631, 814-4411-

Old ma~... toyt, comic boob,
lantarns, plctur11 and tumlture,

Transportation,

.QI0765

SOUTH
tQB743

U4

I I

19

'
Eul

Pass

All pass

3.

Opening lead: • K

Pressure bidding
-·and pressure play,
By Pbilllp Alder

I

I

I II

C B I DE

1

11

SAGmARIUS (Nov 23-0ec:. 21) Seroous responsibilities should not be •gnored IO&lt;lay 1n Ihe hope lhallhey will reparr themselves What you neglect

8!,

I1 0•

could become\ compounded , causing
you addlt1ona1 comphcat•ons
·
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jon. 11) In your

Involvements with rrlends today, don't
appomt yoursell cha~rman of the entertamment comm1ttee Your pals co'lld
have another candidate •n m1nd.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab. 11) CompeliI!Ve s•tuallons m1ghl not be your long
su•l IO&lt;lay, so. 1f possoble, lake measures to avoid them Lei other knights
JOUSt With the WindmillS.

PISCES (Feb. :IG-IIarch 20) Be on
guard today when dealing with thote
who hold opposing views as equally
strong as yours Th1s IS not a good day
to debate religion or pohlics
ARES (March 21·Aprll11) Do not take
anyth1ng lor granted tooay In your financial affairs There could be something leslerong beneath the surface thai
coold erupt
TAURUS (April :~Go_, 20) Co-workefS
are likely to have their own problema today, 10 be careful not to place exira

a--,

PUBIJC NoTICE

Nolle• Ia hereby given

lhlllhl! Village of Syraouaa
wll.-pt Mlild llklll unlll

ThuNday, AuaUall, 1~ at I!M.
7 p.m., far 'a f114 Chevrolet
2 Malt 1 Fomolo, 1."')9 Hotrod
lmpalli 4 door, polio~ Cate,
kDuubrah, Approa: 7
P•*•• ~~~ IIIIa..
Wu. Old, 114-25111081.
' 'JIM·whiDia Ill IMIIIOid can
Fornolt Cocker Sponlll, Goad
conlllollng the lrracuae ~.J Yoor Aogllforod. 114•
polloe ohlat It 114-1112-1113 :141
F- Klttono, 4 Yollow l 1 Gtoy.
or lha lyracu.. mayor at 114-216-11341.
11+1t2·7777.
The vlllap ol ly,..UH Klttent to giveaway In • •
,..,..,.. .... right to ~· loUry, 114-1112'1328.
My or II blda aubmi!IK
Khllno, 10 W11u Old, 114-

"_..,.....,._...,

." l.l E&gt;NI~30I:mw eJ,noA,

'panws JelS!S Aw. •J&amp;pUOM ON. •Jl)lfl
Aw PJOI &amp;4 :ew liliUnlnl II 88r18HCI
eum 1841 wn4 1. ·eun1 ei!JOJI&amp;I
8 6uiWWn4 8A8MJ8 88ft\ 84 lllq '&amp;Uf11
8 NJB:&gt; I,U8:1 M81-U!•J8410Jq

Aw

,

J./ EJNII:J30tln1V

3a1aos

.J.SII:Jnr
I:J3HSnEJ
OJ::JV1d
. ·IVI:JO;iNI
1n:J.J.I:J'fl

S.L37iV'fii:IDS "

Ol SIIMSNY

lnoUn!riCWI

-

...

paniH: ctn 11v1 thoustndl of

In ptoduellon limo wllh
o •-bUng nrr otmplt

dolloro

uctt tt honil tor them.

ltl tklllt or axptrilnce not

n - btcluM lnl!ructlont

an11 maltrills are tent 10 you.
AI!Jr rou comploto worll, oond

ln. Memory
Hliock lor Plymonl Tho - • 2
w.,tl 20-45
you do,mlnultt
lho mooo
youWOrk•
o~m ~=======~
JUit
I dtV
,.

lng It home, you can um tam•

lmpr11olvt wogn. Krt(llr
Publlshlntr h.ts • lllllna of 1
vorioly ot dlfloronl warlt lh.tl
vlly

tun,

bolh men and women.
Bttt ot 111, you work when you

wohl

company lo paying
pt&lt; Wttk tO IIIOinblt
lil(lpte pltnl ho-.) Fot more
lnlarrn1tlon ond 1 FREE llsllntr
ol•onr eo comPinloo -uy
hiring, "'"' lc: Kragor Publllhlnt, 301 LctlvOII St.. OHIIH,
TIIMIIon, MA. 02780. Krogor
pytlilhlng ....... 13.90
ond hlnlfllntr lar
1~. Ordon! .. n not bt llllod
wlfOUI pootogo ond hondllng.
AI,. 3-4 doro.
J Occupollonol Thoroplll
Ohlot
btood
Rthobllltotlan
COI'tlponr oxpondlntr Into
..cfiMBI Ohla trta hit opporlulilly lor O.T.A. or COTAIL 0.,.
PD"~nlty to -~ wH~ loom,
vaM1 commitment, prol...
tlanollom, ond porfO!lll
d...lopmont Fltxlbla -u1t1
oxcollent llllry, plut bonuo ona
borlolllt.
ContOCI:
Tom
Glldloux,. 41~417· lor lnttNiow.
RohobiiHolon
(Ont

134~.00

' ""'"""'lit

Po riling lal IYord Sill: '127'"
Fourth A"n""L . F....,.hi own
Aplo, Br Fr.,.mowno F~
Orgonll111an &amp; Club. lata '01
~vorrthlng. Cl119 · - Cholp. •
Frldoy 10fh. •1 Non.ProiH Or· 1

Sptclolllll, Inc.

1 catd of Thanks

114-ti2-33M.
...
'
, '
Loot. lllddttpott vicinity, July, ganlzltlon.
4th, geld horrlntrbono llllcoltl, Toot SOlo: 1508 Jaaolo Crak Ad. " r

•

114-1112·2155 doyo, 114...5-4211 C,..hlrt, OH Clll20 114-317- ,., '
1VIning8,
7305, Torch S.l, Air l'aofl, Tire '{\ :
Cllongor, 1100011. ltolnltll · ,
7
Yard Sale
SIMI W.lor Tonlt And Pump.Eic. t •

====~
Gallipolis

·' •

P~eroy,

&amp; VICinlly

Middtepon

.dit:O.

Slbtrlln
-~~~
- OldR"""'
t~
To
llun1 Allo
H Wk.
Kit- llundoF~·
·-Y·,y,~~
_ _,.
,
•-· f1o 441 1310.
I!:"':::"':.:·"'=u::rda::;Y.:;__ _ _ _ .
Oltltftlc Votd ' lolt: Ant!IIUH,
W.llllrlt EIIIIIOI.., - · Ooo4l Cltln Clolhl1
AnnoJncemrnls
Frta,Y, ~llurdor la.m.-4 p.m.
O.rl1110.
Loat&amp;Found
Lalit ~ - : lllllto loulh
I'OUND oa- 1ft Hlrtr.;~ - , On lloult
304..
Qlwllwly
4
-.ng ..... Glrlt Ctothot
Fllllnd: F-It IINglt •In IIID G11ori HI.... 0111111, Orlfllf
Curl...,., Tano ot Tnoo,.,.,... IIIII Pug I Totrior, 'wl• Gn1ndt Ylolni(J, 1,...,_1100
111 clogt, l04-U2-2t1 or Found: Goldan Altrltvor (llllljly, c- Ylno, lotmont. ~
•.am.
,ottow
aon. IM-IItl-2211j 11,1tlh. 1-4
SOft,Qirk

(7) tl, II, If; . .

nt1-, ....

a-.

1

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"'"

•

ft. . . . . _

=

=- f

,

6'15-4252.

From Gelllpolia,
left onto At.
775, tum right onto Patriot Rold. W•ch for algna.

Will Do Lown Mowing,

TO(I"NoiCh SIIH Poroon
ot milling rnonor lor
aomtontl tiM? Trrtd of making
othor people rich? Eorn 150111

nrod

&amp; Odd
Jobs1 Atatonablt 814-446-I&amp;SG
Ltt U. Help Do Haute Cltanlng,
Wmdow•, Somt Ptlntlng, Have
Atterencts! Ttrtu 814·.-41·7851

PuGfic d!uctio

Public Sale
-.Auction

THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1992 AT 7:00P.M.
THE PERSONAL PROPERTY OF THE LATE
VIOLET COX
HOUSEHOLD, ANTIQUES AND MISC.
Seth Thomaa clocks, color TV, fireplace mantel,
rugs, dollt, books, lana, work bench, lamps, double
tubs, folding lawn chairs, gaaoline lawn mower, nail
kegs, antique bed, crocka, milk cans, gnll, grease
gun, Hoover apt washer and dryer, chest of
drawers, metal shelves, wooden cabinet, kkchen
cabinet, wooden bookcase, dryer, wash kettle,
linens, tractor seals, sweeper, foot stool, dishes,
what-nots, chairs, scales, alum. extension ladders,
gun rack. hydraulic jack, push plow, grinder, jig ~~w.
chains, chain binder, wooden box, ice tonga, qu1~1ng
rnatenal, kn1ck-knacka, aH kinds of toolt, bunk beds,
lois of baseball and football cards, pump organ,
upright plano, pols and pans, electrical knchen
appliances, lots of boxes to unload. Much. much
more.
LOTS OF MISC. ITEMS NOT USTED
Ella
C.eh
Poa~hre LD.
MARUN WEDEMEYER, AucnONEER, Lie. 3616
114-2. .5152
of
Not

IN GAWPOUS - BRICK 110111; - 3 "t'!:.on:j,;:~~
room, kliChll!lliii
'"U
' CIJ.'~lilybath,
DaHmonl
wiU:
room,
llorage room. .
1n-ground
a ollllll(ll builling. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO
OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS- Located on AI. 7
(Eureka) 30'x36' block building With ston1ga In
basem..;l. 70 ft. frontage on Rl. 7. ).ol runt 10 Ohio
Rr;er Was uoad aa convanianl mart. DRASTICALLY
REDUCED. NOW ONLY $34,900.00.
FOR SALE - 40 acre tann local8d 8 mM" on State
Roula 14 t on Uncoln P1k1. Tho horne ""' 7 rooms
and bath. The,. It a bam and olhar oull&gt;111dings. Also
a lann pond and lobeeco baH.
IN GALLIPOLIS- 3 bedrooms, balh, kitchen, livmg room
basement, 21ots, 20x150 &amp; 37x150 Call for appo1ntmer.•
HOME ON STATE ROUTE 553- 1t rooms, 4 badiDOIIIs
h

~ baths, livng room, din1ng room, 2 kilc:hons- one
baseman~ .almost 3 acn~s. trun llllts, cellar, gataga

Slolllga building. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO
SEE!II
HOME AND 2 ACRES II or L - 3 badroomo, 1 ballt.
living room, kitchen, fireplace, and ~nfinlthlld
basemanL PRICEO AT $36,500.
LOCATED ON LINCOLN PIKE - 3 badroomo, IMng
room, kilchon, fanoly room, bath, new ca!pel, Slolll(ll
building, ~ ec.. Mor L. CALL TO SEEII
LOCATED IN GALUPOUS - Vino Slraet - 4 n~nlal
umls, good Income property. Call for more ,
Information.

HOUSE IN GAWPOLIS - 3 rooms and bath, walking
distance to schools and ston~s. Priced al $18,000 00.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Floctlay Vdllga II. Cal
for mo111 intonnalion.
rvn tvun

It hal been four
years since you
pasaed away. All
our llvea have
gone on without
you. There Isn't
one of ua that
hasn't awakened
sometime, thinking
Just for 1 moment,
that you were still
here with ,u t. Thlt
we heard your
approval of our
aecompllehmenta
or aaw you smile
at our lltpplneaa.
We know you hllve
aohleved the ultl·
mate aPJrltull plateau and are at
, , .,,.~. I gu... we
wlah we
have one
more Chrlstmae,
or Thanksgiving,
or New Yw'l.
Anyway, . th II II
Just 1 lltUe note to
tell everyone how
much you meant
to us and what
warm memories
wehlveofyou.
With loW;
witt, Cllale;
*ut!*t Eneldl;
lll'lfllllhllll'lfl
Jolin, Aloia llld
Mary; ...,-In IIW
l broclllr.lft IIWI,

1-IQO.IM-tOCI

.-

~,.

AUDUY f . CANADAY, BRODI
.OmCI. IS LOCliST 5T • GAWPOUS. OHIO

ITOP IV OUR OFFICE ANO WE WILL BE
HAPPY TO 'IHOW YOU ALL THE PROPERTIES NOW
AVAILABLE IN THE MULnPLE USnNG BOOK- WE
ALSO HAVE INFORMATION ON CONVENnONAL, VA,
FHA AND FmHA F1NANCING. LOOK FOR OUR SIGN
AT 21 LOCUtT STREET ACROII FROM THE GAWA
COUNTY COURT HOUSE.

July 18th, 1992 9:00a.m. ~., 1
Located •' 252 Huron St., Jackson, Ohio
1

.,..

t••

Oak five leg taljle, four pressed back cha~rs, buffet,
Oak settee, oval. library table, guilded frames
pictures, several rockers, two Oak dressers, two
washstands, two highba,ek bads, mce wooden churn,
painted pie safe, wic!ler chair, wicker flower stand, old
wall clock, Gilbert k1tchen clock, two carpenters
chests. player p1ano and rolls, childs rocker, three pc.
Waterfall bedroom, many stone jars, crocks and
churns, several nice oil lamps, nice wardrobe
combination, fern stands, sewing machine and two
cab1ne1s, glass chain, graMeware, painted dishes, lots
ol glassware, carnival glass, Nontake (Daphne)
service lor six, several sm. china dolls, costume
jewelry, rings, many folk art 1tems in wood and cemenl,
12 nice old quills bright colors, lndiap art1lacts, CIVIl
war era canteen, bayonet, Ohio C1v1l War Reg1ster,
other good books, clay pipes, bent needle, gramte
hatchet, old tools, hetchel, planes, wool wheel
old copper splloon, tongs, canes, crout board, • 16 ' 6" I
scope, hal pins, rugs, washboards, old 11ns, rug
beater, marbles, Mellink safe, household furn11ure,
many boxes ol things from the attic.

STEP BACK IN TIIIEI THE A90VE TURN OF THE
CENTURY SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUL OLD
HOME PROVES IT ONCE WAS ONE OF THE MOST
ELAaORATE HOMES IN GALUPOUS. IT COULD BE
NOW WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION. IF
RESTORING A VINTAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM,
CALL US FOR A TOUR OF THIS ONE...AND MAKE
YOUR DREAM COME TRUE. $63,000.
CHEBitRE TOWNIII*P - APPROX 25 ACRES WITH
LARGE 3" BEDROOM HOME. NICE COUNTRY
SETTING. $39,500.

I4S IECoND AVENUE IN GAWPOUI - 2 STORY
.VICTORIAN STYLE HOME PRESENTLY USED AS A4
• UNIT RENTAL WOULD MAKE LOVELY ONE FAMILY
RESIOENCE. $48,000.
·

.W tine ...,..Itt! .......w lllli • .. ~ IIIIo.

c.• •

iilllo .Ws w/LD. • Tmalon CMck

•

Auctioneer: Terry L Lloyd

.....

..

.....

. (6 ~ 4) 2'86·1229· '

CONVENIENT lOCAnON QN ITATE ITREET IN
, QAlUPOUI - WALk TO DOWNTOWN SHOPPING,
CHURCH ANO SCHOOL. 3 BEDROOMS, 2 STORY
HOME HAS LARGE LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM, iAT·IN KITCHEN, BASEMENT. VERY
AFFORDABLE AT $36,000.

JackS01,0Wo
......... MMI4110W.
F1141 ... DrWtl11 dtlth
1aww .t.llrolllvillll
llal
farlan•..._h

_.,,.

,

• il?

~·

SURROUND THIS OUTSTANOING REDWOOD
INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA.
BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND DINING
ROOM, 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND
FLOOR. FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM ,
WOODBURNER IN FAMILY ROOM. 2 CAR GARAGE. 7
ACRES. $115,000.
CAMP AND FISH IN YOUR OWN BACKYARD-ANO
WHEN YOU ARE TIRED OF ROUGHING IT, WALK
ACROSS THE PASTURE TO YOUR VERY COM·
FORTABlE 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH HOME.
FAMILY ROOM HAS FIREPLACE, NICE KITCHEN, 2
CAR GARAGE, APPROX. 24 ACRES, NEAR CITY.
L-SHAPEO RANCH ON JAY DRIVE- FEATURES
NICE OPEN KITCHEN I DINING I FAMILY ROOM AR·
RANGEMENT WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL UVING
ROOM 2 CAR GARAGE, NICE \!lEW OF THE SURROUNDING AREA FROM THE POOL DECK, COVERED PATIO. LOTS OF HOME FOR $58,000.
NEAR HOL2EA HOSPITAL - SPLIT FOYER DESIGN.
HAS 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, LARGE LIVING AND
DINIG AREA&lt; EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH SNACK
BAR FtRE AND SEC'URITY SYSTEM, GAS FORCED
AIR 'FURNACE, CENTRAL AIR COND., 2 CAR
BASEMENT GARAGE. $65,000.
TWO YEAR OLD FRAIIE RANCH WITH BRICK
TRIM ON LARGE LEVEL LOT. HOME FEATURES
CHERRY KITCHEN CABINETS, SNACK BAR, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE, ELECTRIC
HEAT PUMP. PRICEO TO SELL FAST AT 157,100.

-·,
•

'

'I
•'

•

____ _...... _.....,____ ______________ ___ ,,._.""' -----""',..______
....._......____. .."

"'"""........... _ . . . . . .

- -

PAro;iTE WOODED AREA - BEAUTIFUL PINEoS

0,111r Mlt E!s•'l~ wll offer
following
"' fro• tH late Ulle'Ly011s property.

'

$21,000 BUYS NICE HOlE
WIREN1ED GARAGE APT.
IN CITY! HURRY!

-~ASE

.

r..s:

'•

APPROX- 25 ACIES - OLD
HOUSE NEEDS REPAIRS.
SMA~
BARN, RURAL
WATER TAP, NICE SITE
FOR NEW HOME OR
MOBILE HOME. OHIO TWP.
$15,000.

Io11 or ll!ckltntl. Food
IVIIilble.
,.
Auction-, Mark Hutchlnaon 614-6118-6706
Llcenlled and Bonded In Ohio
"--· FnnlfH111Chlneon 614-6112-43411

Norma

~

BULAVILLE-PORTER ROAD
- PAVED ROAD, APPROX.
60tf ROAD
FRONTAGE,
SOME WOODED AREA,
$18,900.' OWNERS WILL
CONSIDER FINANCING
WITH $4,000 OOWN PAYMENT. BALANCE AT 10%
INTEREST. 10 To 15 YEAR
TERM.

ot Auction: C:Uh or check with poaltlve

... lltlolo •

ACRES lllll,

2I

't-

P~blic Auction r.J~.,

TRY "

Real Estate General

Toole end Equip.: 16 speed dril~ press, Craftsman
12 in. band aaw, Craftsman radii! arm aaw, Sean
table saw, air col'lllresaor, 6 in. jo1nter, Craftsman
1y, hp router, router table, riding mower, push mower, eleclric mower, wood lathe, acroll saw, vibrating
sander, be~ sander, ~ drill, BD auto. sander, wood
clarrps, aeve,l hand toola, rough sawn hardwoods,
several of these toola are o~ly 4-6 months old.
TertM

t..UAt'ltNII:NCE

OUR TOLL FREE NUMBER

101 ACRES 1108Tl.Y
WOODED - LOCATED IN
OHIO TOWNSHIP. SEVERAl
NICE BUILOING SITES.
$23,000.

10. Not mponalbla for

CELESTINO
CORDERO
(Grandpa),

......

'"l

Ahlll, IO'jl,lilll • "

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

window llnllng. For advance
prices tnd tpPolnlmtnt 304·

'our

All
Yord Saito- 1o~
Poldlho
1ft ' •"'I
•d"a~·
1'
"d•J' ""·-· .,.._,_,
tho od lo o run,~'•• ''
Sull&lt;IIJ odlt- 1:OOprn l'rldoy, 1.j
- r , odllloft 10:001..,. ,
Soturdar.
·, 0
Oorogo 1111, ii.ndoy, July 13, ~ &lt;,'
10:00il,..?
Woftor ltnti • ••!
,.llldanco, F - Rood Clothot1 ,
11- llimllllftl, .,. :,
no..ohold 1141,.,
· ;
•
!!11, Ill 8-1143 l ~
rollll (IIIII lllniH!Mic •
• Pumllure, olothot,
-o, lllrd
lltll tollko,

,._..

304-67lio6252.

FURNITURE AND GLASS: Walnut dropleaf table
and four chaint, wood round table with four matching
chai._, five drawer cheat and other dreaaers, baby
bed, entertainment centers, restaurant booths and
tables, bar with stoola. bucket bench, kitchen cabinets, bicycles, over 400 pieces o( glassware,
depression; milk glaas, press glass, new glass.

IMWinct,
worbr'a
compenuUon, and Olher com•
pArtY ••pentn, many com·

-··

July 11, 12, 13.

residential

8

Cltsllc,
auto,
and commercial

•

SpiCe,

• fiH

Found; Molt Blonde Oormon
Sho(&gt;hord. 'llclnllr. eontonorr
Aru. Rod Color, l14-446-32n
Loot: Brllllny Solnlil our 41h
or JIIIJ.:kinGi. IUnion Avtnut
""·
.,.,, )4-1112-7725 or

Cherokee

S.cludtd hoRM 8 acraa, 2 mllea
oui Sand Hill Ad trom Pt Pit,

1

JOBSAVAILABLE
~~rl"ff
Wttllly)
~!AI-cw Po~·T$5Q.
....
Duo to tho high coot or llctory

3 Fomlly Yord Ioiii: Eurllia,
&amp; VIcinity
•• :
Furtlllr, the allwe vehlola 4027.
, ,, ,
wllbe aolilln ... IICIIMIIIcn l.ona hll,.d whHo klttl(ll, Mill, EBR Sol Only 11th 01 July.
HI 'a-.1 Hotllrlfl!, llldo .,&gt;1. ,
.Ia In wllll110 up! II 11d If 304~·m7orU2-17111.
AI.P.,.tSIIHIIulfloP~In d~. ""'J 1t 14, 11. lolri &lt;;J~
........... DIAliUNE: 2:00 (Lm. k--ll!ttriot,clollllllt,, l~ ..
~~~·;·~ To Good HorN: 2 Purolllod tho
dlr lltlora lho ld Ia to ~~~~ mloc, .
,
.. ,
....... ,

hootJ'II

'

••
Giveaway
2 .... both mutt go, 1m Fonl
LTD wag"'', 1M7 Fonl Folrllno,
englntt run, 21Z MktwiJ Dr,
Now Hlvon, 304.ea2•3155.
2 KH!tno, t F-11. 114'381-

Ore~n 1t:hool dlatrict· Exetllenl
condlllon 3 Yr. old ronch, 38R, 3

Sun.y, July 19 at 11 :00 A.M.

'

4

1000 Ext. H-931181ar cur-llol.

Taka U.S. &amp;0 i ' 32 W- of Athene end exH onto 50
W_ toWIIrde McAithur. Auction It a quaner ol 1
milt on the left. lillgne will be poated.

"

Public Notice

Hom1a,

HUTCHINSON AUOION INC.

,

e"pect&amp;tlons

Aapo

Real Estate General

{;J

yourself lo be lutky, you can see 10 11
th&amp;llh1ngs come ootln accord with your

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Ftb. 11) AlthOugh
you mlghlleel more comfortable calling
the shots, you could be rather lortunate
today 1n an arrangement where you ac·
tually have hllle or no control
PISCES (Feb. ZO.March 20) If properly
approached, lnends will be cooperallve
and helpful today. This cout~ be especially true with someone you regard as
your fllOSIInfluenllal pol.
.
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll 11) . You're
p,_lly In a trend where -•rds lor
'work well done could be mora get)erous
than u.Ua1 - even lor mundane tasks
that are Hldom acknowledged. Perform.ll your hlgllett level. '
TAUIIUI (April
20) f:le opllmlsIIC regarding com~lllve lnvowements
today, especially if they're SOCial or
aports-orlenled. Thete endeavors
could produce peripheral benefits In
other lrMI.
01-. (MaJ 21-.luna 20) Arrange.
menta wllh Individuals yoo have strong
emotional bonds with could prove mutually -~~~ today Each of you will
Upgrlde lhe othllr.

~~.0:

aa

·

114-245-5887.

8

cross swords w1th an mdlvtdual who
shares your philosophy A ·no-win ' Sll- you do, m S1tuat1ons where you envtSIOn
uaflon could result

Ohio IIcon• Locotlon. Moscn,
W~ Hou.. 40-50 llondoy.
Frldoy. hllry: 840,00o pluo :Ia%
not prolll or llullnooo. AllponolbiMIIoa: ptl'hlnn all dulloo,
CUO!omlflly pt&lt;rcrmod by ont
In ouch poaltlon. Fringo

I

West

June 15 614·446·2205

eM In Play Arta Rtfar•ncee
Avallab... Rodnay Ar.. Calt

-~·
lwo - u PI ¥1CIIIon, PI wHk gutranleecl telling lr•'lll· L.uve Mesugt
holldaro, doro pold 1ar canii!U- tows. $50 0001 1100,000 pot· Mise Piula's Day Care c.nter.
lng oducollon. Contoct: Kim tlblt 1ol yoor. Compltlt !rain· Safe,
affordable, childcart. M·F
EdUcaUonal And Community Wnl .....and, 31)4..m.asas or lng. Muat bl 1mblt0U1 &amp; reMiy
Ia work. Clll Frtnk for lntervitw, I o m • 5·30 p.m Ago• 2~10.
S.rvicn, F1ciiJtatmg Parent 304·7n-133J.
Befort, after achoot Drop-In•
304-354-6492.
Training And Other Support
Photo Trimmer•
welcome. 614-446-8224. New In·
Setvlc•s For Dysfunclional urn to $125 ~ dol.Yi no exp. W.nlod co•lllod Nuroe Aldtt, lo tanl Toddler Ctrt, 114-44&amp;.6227:
Famlll...
OualiflcatJons· todod 1 ·•3
work In clinlfs homes In Meson
a.:Chelor"t Dear• And Ex~ n
County. Pltatt, 11nd rtsu""
Ptrionco In Ecfuclllon, lltnlol
NURSING DIRECTOR
Financial
Wilh CDpW of ClrtiiiUII ID 801
Haol!h, Or Voclllanal Trllnlntr
H
·9
11. Pt Ph. Ao9loltr, 200 lloln
Prolorrod. Slrong Sklllo An&lt;!
HERE WE GROW AGAINI
Sl, PI PI!, WV 25550 Pllooo,
Previous
SUcc... tut
Ex·
ptiioncn Wllh OlfllcuH Kid• Wt Art An Ellobllahod Sup- opply no Iller lhon July 17, 1982. 21
Business
Aro Tho Moll lmpottom pltmonlol lledlcol Slotllntr And W1ntld· line cook. •v•nil)g
Opponunlty
OuaNiiclllono Volld Ohio Homo ea.. Sorvlco Now Ex- thlft. Experitnce rtq~recf.
Drivara Licente And Avalllb~ panding Our Home Care But:I- Oualllild appllc1ntt may Hnd
INOTICE!
Transportallon Melded. It Inter• ne11. Carar Opportunity For r11um1 ta: Box CLA 227, cfo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO
astod PINit Sond Aooumt And BSN Or AN Wllh Aocont Oolllpo11 Dolly Trlbuno, B:la ,.commend•
that you do busl·
Lot!or To: ACCESS, P.O. Box -~~~ Hcmt Hoollh EK• Third Avenut, Galllpalls, 0H neu with peoplt
you know, and
910, Golllpolls, OH 15631. Allon- porltnco. Aoqul ..o Aolocallon 45631.
NOT to lind money through lht
lion: Ptr1onnll
To Columbus Call Or Sand Wtnled: Malntentncl EnglnMr mall
until you have lnvtltigattd
DI~ot::.ol::.lc::.T:..:.oc::.h::.
nl_
clo-n-·c"'h-ol-lo-ntr"'ln-g A-mt Including Solory A• Muot bt okllltd In hilling, olr the offering
And Atward!ng Position AS qulremenlt To.
condlllonlng,
elecfrical
MIMQI yow own high prohl
Ptt1·TirM CliniCal Dl•t TechTom Aupttcht
Oparotlonoln owlmmlntr pool I tour!
lranl comptny, no tJip.
WESTERN
nlci1n In long Tern Care. Dulin
-•a• 1roo1monl pion! hllplul Meeeury
Compltlt training &amp;
P•y commeMuf'ltl with II• au1111011. Coli
lncludo. Dovoloplng Nulrlllonal
MEDICAL SERVICES
Frank 304·354·
porltnct. Atply: Box CLA 223, 114.2.
Asa..sm.ntt And Cara PlaM. 1315 E. Dublin Granvllll Road
clo Oolllpollt Dlllf Trlbuno, 126
Somo Travol Mar. Bo Roqulred.
Sullo 420
Third Avo., Oolllpotlt, OH 45631. Vending Aoulo: Loco!. Wo Hovo
Polonllll For Ful ·Timt Apply In
Columbus, Oh 43229
Poroon Or Sond A..-. l'o:
614 84" •3~
Nowtol llochlnu, lloklng A
boy Worll! Excollom Payl A• Tho
Scenic Hilla Hurling Cantor, 311
. ~Nlct Sttady CISh Income. 1Nmble Products At HDml. CtU
Buck
Tell Froo, 1-1100-417-15641, Ext. ~13-113113.
45614 Aldilt Road, -sldWIII, OH 1
II~~~~~~~~:. 313

..

&amp;

below market value F1nt11IIC
tevlnga. Your area 1-805-962·

407·212..llt7, Pharmael•t, Will VIrginia or

Ell 571. lo.nHOp.m. Toll
Roiundtd.
A~N t All Arooo ! Shl"oy
Spooro, 304.e7s.1429
Child And Adolooconl CaM
~-"1
IIIM(IIr. FUII-Tl1M ~•
Cofll
ll11n1gomont OIAito on.
Inelude Ellobllahlntr Aoppor1 Wllh
"A,I·Aiu" S!udonfo, Notworldng,
Provldlng And Arranging For

+J

Complataly Alnowat•d . 2 Full
Balt'tl, 3 ltrg• Btdrooms, New
MVAC, New C~rpel Available

Wanted to Do
Will Bobyolt In My Homo. Fon·

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Up To SIOO Nlkly, Eom $4000
lllanlhlv On Flshintr V-11.
Ovor ec!oo Otltnlngo T..noportation IHOUifng Male /Female.
No Expt&lt;ltntt Noconsry Call
1-205-73t-7COO
Ell. 1511484.
Employme~t Services
PARK RANGERS
Game
W1rcHnt,
S.turlly
Malnl:. . nct Ete ~ Exp.
11 Help wanted
'
'*'Hiry. For lnlo Call 218, AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
1111449 Ext 8710 9 A.M. To 9
EROIIom
Poy,
Bonolllo, P.M. 7 Doro.

EAST

I.

Help Wanted

Lony Llvoly 614·31111-9303
Top Pr1cos P11d All Old U.S.
COinS, Gold Rings, SUv•r Coln1,
Gold Coins. II T.S. Coin Shop,
t51 Second Avonut, Golllpol(o.

+A KH

Soulb

11
11 Help Wanted
'AVON' ALL AREAS IShoro your
time with Ul. You'll IOVI the
company. t..OD-1112.e356.

Fortcloud

3 Nlwly Completly AllltDdlltd, bath, CA, gorogt. 61~5-1967.
Momes, Locat•d 4 Milo Home, 20 acrtt 3BR, 1·1!2 bath,
cloGalllpollo Dolly Trlbuno, 825 2br
Third Avenue, GtUipollt, OH From Ctnlervllle, Toward Oak h11t pump, rwal waler. Rio
Hill, On At.27'l, In Ook Hill
45631.
School District, S2•.90o E1ch Grandt arH. 614-245-5893.
614·245-9315
Locttttl On Carner Lot In
Business
14
Choshlro. Prlctd $:10,000 Moro
3bdrm
home,
many
ex1r11,
22
lnlcrmallon Call 614·317·0244,
Training
acres, clott to Meigs Mlgh. 614-446-3488,
Rttrlln
Nowti!Southust•rn Prlco mid $70's, 114·992·2454.
At. 160 No~h. 3 BR, llko now
B~nooo Collo(ll, Spring Valley
HOUSE FQR SALE condHion,
$38,000 C1U tor IP.
PIIU. Cllll Todir, 614-446-43417rl BEAUTIFUL
~lslorlcal Area Corner lot • 818
polntmant 114·388·1115 or 381Roglotorollon IID-05·121118.
Main St. Pt P111sant, W Va 8711

Air Condhlonors, Elc 614·256·
1238.
Good Uaod Above GroUnd Pool
4h. Ottp. 614-446'1315,

•z
tQ763

1'184 Nathua mobile home 14x70

whh 'h:24 expando, 3 bedrooms,
large bath, all tltctrlc wJcentral
tlr, undtrpennlng, 2 dtekl,
blocks, nice, $14,000 a304-&amp;75-

Send Nam1, Addr111, Phone
Number To: ClA Bor 22D

Color TV't, VCR't, Microwaves,

~ll·tl

31 Homes for Sale

tlflod, roloriiiCOI, 114-94..2610
Femolo Sludtnl Ntodo 2 Fomolo
Acommlttt To Short Aonl AI
Ohio Slalo 92-93 School Yur 2568.

Don't Junk hi Sell Ue Your Non·
Working Maior AppU1nce1,

tAH2

Situation
wanted

Babysllting in my homt, eer-

7282

PHILLIP
ALDER

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer· West

12

(

Allen C. Wood, RtaftoriBroker-446-452$
Ken Morgan, Re1Hor/Broker-448-GQ71
Mote CMterbury, Ra•ltor-448-3408
Jeanette Moore, Rteflor-256-1745
Tim Watoon, Realtor- 446·2027

Real Estate

Appllancn, Antl~ue'a. Etc. Alto

Osby Mo•ln, !14-992·11141

oau'IPoua

446·1066

••tnl Any Type Of Fumlturt,

Wanted To Buy· Junk
With Or Without Motors.

t A9 2
tQB 3

32 Locust Street,

Wamed to Buy
Compfllo Houllhold Or Ea-

446.0175

+10765

71)ood 9?..f,a{tu, Inc.

non, 114,500 304-e75·6621

Dolly Tribuno, 825
Avo,nuo, Golllpollo, OH

Wul Vlrglnll, -

I

15

R US T

I

I

&amp;

Sm1ll 2 bedroom, good h&gt;ca·

lo: Bo• CLA 228, cJo

9

i II was a sweller!"'! day; the atr-con- '
. ' dtUoner was unsuccessfully trymg to _
keep our bridge club cool. Even the Se-11 behooves you to gel out and
f-.,.L,....A...,..T_,..R_U.,.,..F_,,.....-tl
mor Life Master had taken off his .
In the year ahead with as many new
12
Jacket
and ue
groops as possfble. You're 1n a cycle
He
came
over 10 the bar llld orwhere yoor popularily could help you
dered
an
Iced
lea. Suddenly,,as if by.,,'
make contacts who can further both
prestldlgilatton, we 1l'el'e loolting at a
your Interests and ambitions.
f R0 MN I
btdding-and-hand diagram.
CANCER (June 21-.IUIJ 22) Listen to
That deal (be began) occurred dur~~
the advice of others today, but reserve 1---r~'l:"l-~r--r~--,~--r~::-~-1
lng a heat wave like tile one we are ex-··
the right 10 make the final decis•on
per1enciog now Silting South waa."
yoorsetl.
You're very MaJor
good atchanges
evaluating
lhe
best ahernat1ve.
are rl.=========~·
fllontague Bicester, playtng with h~r,
fiancee, Brtony Uppiilgbam.
·
aheadlor
forCancer's
Cancer Astra-Graph
In lhe comingprecllcyear
DA p L I C :
Send
After West bad opened with one
llons today. Mall $1.25 plus along, sellb
-, heart and Briony bad doubled, 'Easl,"
addressed, stamped envelope to Astraappbed pressure by making a pre-M
1
1
1
emptive
raise 10 three hearts. But,
Graph, Cleveland,
Clo lh1s newspaper,
P 0 Box
9t428,
OH 44101-3428
Be ~======~==~
so often happeas, Ibis pushed North-:
sure
state23-Aug.
your zodiac
sign.could be
H U GE RS
South iota a game they might not oth· •
LEO to(JUIJ
22) You
erwtse have bid MIHIIague refused to
rather fortunate •n material areas tooay.
My brother-in-law can't carry a be silenced, and once be had bid lhrt!e ·
Although luck will be an •mportanl fac- 7
tor, you must still be Industrious to gen- _ 1 1 1 1 18 tune, but he WaS always humming a spades, Bnony could hardly do lOSS"•
":
erato rewards.
L......l-.L....J~-L--L-...Itavorite tune. "I hum that t.me than raise to aame.
West
led
the
heart
kina
and
conliD·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-S.pl. 221 Look•ng out
'because it haunts me," he told
ued with the ace, ruffed in the dummy.-·
for the Interests of those you'll be •n-~
J
N
nd
·t
·
volved with today will serve as 1nsurSISter • 0 WO
"my SIS er sm1 , Montague saw that he bad two red-sui(~
losen, so he couldn't afford two trump
ance for lulfMIIng your own e&lt;pecla0 "yOU re ••••••••• •• •
,
tlons. ll's an 1n1errelaled network
losen. He knew that the normal play •
LIBRA (lapl. 23-0cl. 23) Keep upperwith IbiS spade combination is the aee;~
most 1n your m1nd IO&lt;lay lhe tact that
and anotber. Yet here West's openiDa end results are of greater consequence
Q
-•t
bid suggested that be probably bad the
Ihan beg1nn1ngs. Vou may not start out '··-..,:.....:.,.......,;__,....,....,..,..,...!
1
h
h k
d
spade kina. Also East's lbree-beart bi~ ~
too strong, bul you could be a dynamite r
Camp efe 1 e c uc le quole
made it not unlikely that be bad a sin- "
f1n1sher
by lililng in the. missing words
1 1
1
gleton. Backing his judcment, MoataSCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) A pos•llve
you develop from step No. 3 below.
pe played a club to his queen and theli •
allllude Will have a profound effect
upon others today. If you are genu1nely
led the spade queen. West co¥ered,.
enthusiastic about a venture. you can
with the kine, declarer played dumeasily arouse the Interests and support
my's ace, and East's jack dropped. [)e. •
ol associates
clarer now continued trumps 10 drive; '
SAGtn.uuus (Nov. 23-0ac. 211 Don't
out West's 10, and the contract could ·
be alraid lo elevate your sights today,
no Ionaer be defeated.
- especially In commerc1a1 dealings. You
"Beautifully
played,
darling,"
cooea
:~
could be luckier where big lh1ngs are a
Brtony
lovingly.
cdncem as opposed to where the
e-. .........uu-..-. . . . .
stakes are small
"
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) Mainlain a ph!losoph1C81 ouuook today. If

c~rculale

.

W~w·s Auction S.rvtce,
Rio Gn~ndt, Ohio 614-24Wt52.

BRIDGE

tJ85

Real Estate General

Opponunlty

Drior experience preferrH. Must

auetlon

i166,0hlo

31 Homes tor Sate

Busl11811 •

hnt ltasJe oHiet skills Send

Ustd Mobil• Homas, Call 61•-

NORTH

make no mistake : Those will be more is al stake: that even the
close votes. "
weakened Roc is only one JUSUce
The push for the bill IS dnven away rrom being overturned and a
by elcct1on-year pol1llcs. Prestdent woman's nghl to choose an aborBush is expected to veto any abor- tiOn would disappear.
tiOn bill that passes, and supporters
But they acknowledge uncerhope his doing so w1ll reap a voter tainty about how the newly defined
backlash,
debate will translate 1010 House
The bill's stated purpose IS to votes. They have tentatively schedwrite mlo federal law the nghl 10 uled a Housc vote on the bi II
an abortton established by the around Aug. 5. to g1ve them
court's Roc vs. Wade ruling 19 enough time 10 check and recheck
years ago and seemingly m danger their vote counts.
of disappearing lh1s year
A leading opponent, Rep Chns
But the court 11sclf upheld Roc. Smith, R-NJ., said he believes the
though m a weakcnell state. As a outcome 1s in doubt.
result, the only 1mmed1atc effect of
"We do have a changed situathe b1ll would be to prohibit some uon," Smith said. "It's compellof those rcstnCliOns such as 1n tivc. For the first 11me, members
Pennsylvania's law.
arc going to be voting (whether) to
Supporters plan to argue that authorize abortion on demand. "

Rick
full time

Lmloln bailout was the b1ggesL ·
S&amp;L rescue, costmg taxpayers S2.6
billion.
"That guy ObVIOUsly inJured all ~
or ourSelves and what we· can get
out of h1m - if anything - 1s
great," said Don Maxfield, 62, of '~
Mesa, Am., who lost $21,000.
"But it doeSn't look like we arc
going to get anythmg out of h1m."
Keating, 68 and tmprisoncd in
California on criminal convictions
stcmmmg from the same investmenLI, took the Fifth Amendment
in his only appearance' al lhe trial.
He still faces federal cnminal
charges.
Five defendanL~ were d1sm1sscd
and 90 sclllcd out of court before
or during the trial. The settlement
total could approach $250 million.

Middle ground emerges in battle over abortion
By WILLIAM M. WELCH
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON- Abortmn
nghls supporters, preparing to push
a btll through Congress, have seen
their task grow more d1ff1cull stnce
the Supreme Court established a
middle ground m the abortion
debate
The court's m1xcd decision last
week, allowing most of Pennsylvama's abortion restr1Cl1ons but also
upholding the fundamental nghtto
an ahor~on , dented proponents the
explosive public rcacuon they had
hoped would propel their "Freedom ofCh01cc" bill.
The demmn also pushed the
debate away from the fundamental
nghl and onto the issue of those
stale restrictions that impede but tlo

21
Help Wanted
WANTED: Opt-ric Asololom·
11

'

'

LOOKING FOR KC SCHOOL DIST.? VERY NICE
FRAME RANCH WITH FIJLL FINISHED BSMT. HOME
HAS 3 BR'S AND 1ll BATHS, NICELY OECORR'EO
WITH OVER ONE ACRE LOT. BASEMENT HAS LARGE
FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, OFFICE ,SPACE,
SMAj,L WORKSHOP AND STORAGE. GREAT ~RICF
'OF f48,100.

-

MIAMI (AP) - Legal and
political issues surrounding Manuel
Nortcga's ca.o;c remain far from settled even lhougb the deposed Panamanian leader has been sentenced
10 prison for drug ttaffickm~.
Noriega, the only foreign leader
ever captured and brought back 10
the United StaleS for trial, himed as
much whtle pratsing his lawyer,
Frank Rubino, before hearing his
40-year prison term announced Friday.
"Bless Frank, who fought like a
Spartan to the last bullet - which
we have not yet shot," Nonega
said, with emphasis.
Then he tried to implicate the
Unilcd Stales m general, and President Bush on particular, in several
nefariOus plots, mcludmg the assassination of another former Panamanian leader, a sabotage campatgn
inside Panama and an effort to k1ll
lhc shah of Iran.
He also seemed to he trymg to
curry favor with a posSible fuiUrc
DcmocmiiC admimstration, quoung
candidate B1ll Clmton's w1fe,
Hillary, and pra1smg former President Carter. H1s auomey jOmed m.
"Some day m the future, m a
different admimstraliOn, the truth
will come out," Rubmo told U.S.
District Judge W1lham Hocveler.
The ease already has caused ripples in Congress, in part because of
plea bargains made w11h drug-trafficking witnesses who pomtcd fmgers at Nonega . Many recc1vcd
cash or were allowed to keep drug
prof11s. Most also rece1vcd U.S.
residency visas and sharply
reduced sentences.
These deals grew from " a paltern of feverish worry thai Noncga
m1gh1 be acqunted ," sa1d U.S
Rep Charles Schumer, D-N.Y .,
head or the Hodse cnmc subeommiucc overseeing federal prosecutors. " When the whole thing is finIshed, we ought to carefully examIne how the government went
about all of 1h1s."
These legal leftovers remam:
• The baulc over CNN's
November 1990 broadcast of Nori~ga' s prison telephone calls - a
mauer Hocveler says IS the most
important 1ssuc ansmg from the
tnal. The judge ordered the telecast~ stopped, but the network tnlually deftcd htm and still faces
contempt charges. A conviction
against CNN could weaken the
U.S. Supreme Court' s trad111onal
ban on pnor restraml of lhe press
under lhc Fnsl Amendment
• The judge ordered Nonega 10
remain m h1s Miam1 Jail cell for
two monlhs while lhc court detcrmmcs whether lhc onc11 me gcneml
is a prisoner of war cntnl cd to
treatment specified by lhe Geneva
CO(lvention. The defense says that
decis1on could affect how other
na11ons treat U.S pnsoners 1n
future wars.
• Noncga still face s lnal 1n
Tampa on a marijuana-traff1ck10g
indictmcnl, though the U.S. auorney' s office wouldn't say when
that m1gh1 be.
• Defense auorney Jon May is
ready10g an appeal challenging the
lcgahty of Noncga 's arrest durmg
the U.S. invasion of Panama m
December 1989, the handling of
class 1f1cd documents and other
mailers.
The tnal also offered a glimpse
into other apparent cnmmal acUvlty linked to the Noncga case and
has g1vcn m e to more mvesugauoos
"I'm 10 the process of pulling
three of them logclher nghl now,"
said Thoma.~ Raffanello. the superVISing Drug Enforcement Admm~&lt;­
trallon agent on the Noncga ~:asc .
He would not elaborate , but
there arc many to choose from .
Cuban leader F1dcl Castro, an
unmd1cted co-consp~raiOr , supposedly mcd1atcd a d1 spu1e between
Nonega and Colomb1a's Medcllm
carteL Castro's brother Raul also
allegedly protected cartel drug
sh1ppcr Carlos Lchdcr's coca10c
shtpmcnts through Cuba.
Trial tcsltmony had former
Nicaraguan Pres1den1 Daniel Ortega makmg deals with Medellin cartel ch icf Pablo Escobar to ship
cocaine through Nicaragua The
Sandinista leader strongly der11cd
the charges
Lchdcr also tr1ed 10 •mphcall: a
U.S. consular officml 10 Colombia
in a plan to allow him to move
drugs through the Bahamas 1n
exchange for sh1pping arms to
Onega's oppos111on , the Comra
rebels. The State Department has
repeatedly refused to comment on
the charge.
And drug pilot Roberto Stroi dingcr, one of Noriega's co-defendants, has p~ovided information
aboUI·CorrullUon by a DEA super- '
visor in Cahfomia.

Keating hit .with $3 billion in damages

PUblic Salt .
&amp; AuctiOn ·

-

of Noriega

WASHINGTON (AP)- The Suuc Dcparuncnl is strongly condemning an incident in which a grenade wounded two U.N. guards
; in the Kurd1sh area of nonnem Iraq.
·
The guards, both ·Austnali~. were wounded Wednesday when a
hand .grenade was thrown 1010 tho g:~rdcn of a private house where
they were staylng'in Irb1l, about 210 n11tes north of Baghdad.
Stale Depanmcnt press officer Joseph Snyder sa1d Friday the
United States expects the full cooperauon or lrdql government ·
authorities in ensuring the safety and well-being of U.N. pers,onnel.
The Austrians arc among aboul450 U.N. guards protccung 700
other U.N. workers who arc d1Slr1butmg humanitarian aid 10 Kurds
and other groups m northern Iraq.

8

-

'

U.S. protests grenade attack

July 12, 1992

-

~·ttJ;nvietifJn·
:...
.

-Washing~o·n ~,riefs:--.

wv

Sunday Tlmes-5entlnei-Page-D3

~

Legal issues
_will still dog

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Pomt Pteasant,

wv

P

-

Page D2-$unday Tlme.....Sentlnel,

OH-Potnt

·- --·,----

...

···~~

�-•,

Tlmes-Senllnel

41 House1110r Rent

41 Housas lor Rant
Sm1111 bedroom, 5 roOm houu
wlshower, 1410 Ltwls St, Pl. Ph.

814,418-1930 oftor 5:30PM ,
2 BR houu, 5 miloo oul 91. R1,
218 oull!da of Galllpotlo,
Dopoolt l
roloronco, $250
month, :JM:675:56'/t,

-

- . lA -

1b:ll ...... I l11 Jrou-. 2

......

8

::.':;U: :;;:.a;a._~

-~-liM
. - . ,.. -ion.

. - . 114-lQ.2114.

1f1i ,_,

II, 12J115,· 2 bid--

42 Mobile Homes

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUaiON
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1992
-10:00 A.M.
Located 2% miles from St. Rt. 124 In
Rutland. Watch for Auction signs.

42 · Mobile Homes

42 Mobile Homes

tor Rent

8

tor Rent 1

Mobile Homo In 'crown Cit1,
Range And Attrigerator Furnlshld, Phone: Ptoclorylllo, 114888-6269.

and references, 614·992-7503.
2 BA unfurnl•htd. Cabl•.~, air.
Overlooking
Ohio
Hiver,
K1n1ug1. Clean &amp; quiet. Fo•ter'l MObile Home p1rk. 814-446·
1602.

2 BA t111lltr In country. $200
month. $200 dtpoall. 2 milts
from Point PltHint. 3Q4.93?.
2010,
.
2bdrm., central heat &amp; air,
rlngt, retrigtrltor, washer/
dryer hook·up, new carpM,
wtttr &amp; Hwage ,provided, lg.
privtlt lot In country, $250/mo.
Reference &amp; depoeit r~uired .

&amp;14:843:5286.
2br $200/Mo, 614:367-7802.

8

July 12, 1992

July 12, 1992

3'

I

wna. MalO

--Oi
l
... - --

d, 2 lA, IGIII

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

Mon

....

CooiDIIIIIJ F....-,
Ullo
"WIIh 4CIFI, llobile
Pilla.
l.ooltlill: · .lohnecMII
-

·

....

I

-

- .

----~
1t17 P I - Malll, 2 boci-.QaZOIIMiod-fhnl
. . - . ..... 301:57Wl11,
1tl7 Wll diu 'MilO lraillr,

...._, 1112 .......... VI' c..
• o~ Wry nico,
SQ.!IeO. CIR 114-912• 11UI21534, 114-t4f:

:"J

...........
__ p.,__

S100 Se&lt;urlly Dopoalt 12•60 2
Bedroom, Vinton Aru. Call V.L.

Smilh 114-388-1826.

PubliC Salt

;44

JULY 16, 1992

PUBLIC AUCTION (ONSIGNMENT SALE
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 7 P.M.
Located Rt. 35, Conelgnmentlllken 10:00 to 11:00

ct.y oleale,
TOOLS: 1o• Radial arm saw Sears Craftsman, 10"
table saw Sears Craftsman, Craftsman wood 1haper
and trimmer, 6Yr jointing Craftsman, truckload box,
Nota: Tools are in good shape,
Something k!r everyone, Ter1111: Caeh or c*k
with proper lD,
AuctloMer: O.VId Bogg1, Lie. 45116
Refrahmenlll- 61ot-446:T750
LlcenHd and Bonded In Stille of Ohio
Not r•ponelblelor IICCidenta or lon ol properly,
We are booking Ill•,

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS"
Furnlahed mobllt hCHM• and
High back bed, mahogany bed, iron bed, iron skillets,
opta, 304-675:8512 or 675:3900,
cast iron gas heating plate, fancy single bed (be·
longed to Jessie Rupe), 10 gaL milk cans, mise,
Real Estate General
chairs, trunks, cedar chest, kitctten cabinet (needs
repair), mise, dishes, 1984 and 1985 Cabbage Patch
Kids,
dolls, and etc,
"HOUSEHOLD"
Hidabed couch, 2 pc, living room suite, end &amp; coffee
tables, Sharp carousel microwave, dresses, chest of
4 bar stools, bunk bed, table &amp; chai11,
queen size bed, Tappan green wall oven and gas
table top burners, wood booth, misc. tables, piano
bench, lafl1)s, desk, entertainment center, carpet
pieces, bed cor111lete, plus extra box springs &amp;,
mattress,
"MISC,"
5 HP Troybuin pony tiller, porch swing, mise, wind·
ows, girl's bicycle, material &amp;sewing items, trailer lie·
down strtlp8 and lots of boxes with 77?

I

, ....

c:a.M::I lr: 2tar Wilh Gat Hell
00 .12 klo. Moo Ellro T --Up. IM 441 1213,

poll

Fotllll•-: 201

.......

·-~-;~:1
....
,.
11111,

For Sole 0. Rent:
I2IO/IM. SliGO Dooooil, Moo
labllo -

......, .ory., llual -

A I *I PJ.IM3111t7S.
Land Mama Died p •••, &amp;

• -Cent• Will- You
---~
=:~=-Goo
LaM
:::.::. . _
II, CltiM Ula

s.

.... Ugllild ....... , ....

mo,

34

Business
Buildings

_.., ... _....__

Coccueacill . . tor _.. or

-

1101100 .. ...... fn.

35 LoU a AcN&amp;IIa
Lind For. Sole: AIM I
.,_ Rood, 00 land

_ ,,,..-.
5

HlppyAds

,,4,
,., ,,,
ltrly,

,,~

,, f(J/

SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1992, 10 A.M.

DENVER HALE, OWNER
DIRECTIONS: From Galllpoli• follow 160 N, to
Wilkesville to junction ol Rt 689, tum right and
go 1.3 mllu, Watch lor auction •igne, From
Jacbon !like App, 32 to Rt. 124 E, to Wilketvllle,
tum left on 160 N. to junction ol Rt 689 1nd go
1.3 mlltl. Watch lor auction elgnt,
COME EARLYIII SALE IS MOSTLY ITEMS USTED
-VERY UTTLE MISCELLANEOUS I
TOOLS: Hydraulic cylinder, hand tools, electric fenc·
er, nails, bolla, nuts, electric motors, tools and tool
boxes, c81buretors, chain binders, electric saws,
iqlact wrench, bench grinder, body grinder, vice, 16'
ext. ladder, 3 ton chain hoist, cable ratchet come-a·
long, 2 wheel hand cart, assortment of tires, 55 gat
0~ drum with hand pump, 4'x8' umily trailer, 14' flat
bed lor truck, set of 14" 3 pt Mch plows, 5' Massey
Ferguson brush hog, 8' and T hydraulic wheel disc8,
2-3 pl. hitch seeders, 3 pt. post hole digger, front tine
rototiller, horse drawn shovel plow, scraper blade, 3
pl hitch wind rake, large sawmill circular saw blade,
. small air COilllressor, chain saws, riding lawn mower
for parts. John Deere pull hay rake, 3 pt. hitch r
Ferguson and a T International sickle mower, Model
H Fannall Tractor, 1250 Oliver tractor, 1550 Qie"l
Oliver tractor, gas 310 Case dozer, 1917 1 ton 12'
Ford ltat bed with rebuilt engine, 1983 Ford 4 door
Escort, 1978 Chevy Leisure Van (6 cyl. and std,
shift), 1987 CR 80 Honda Motor Cy9le, New Idea
manure spreader, 300 gaL fuel tank, 3 pt. hitch culti·
vat9r, motorcycle for parts,
HOUSEHOLD: Maytag wringer washer and 15 cubic
loot freezer,
Auctioneer: Finia "Ike" l11ac
Telephone:
(614)388-8370, 388 8880,669-6151,245-5939
LlcenHd end Bonded 13728
Not Reapon1lble for Loa ol Merchandlte or
Accidenlll,
Food 1nd Refreehrnenta Will Be Avalt.ble.
Check ue out I Avlllllblllor Eelllle, HouHhold,
Farm, and Charily Auctlone,

wotor~111h

pold.

-Ill!--

-..-OPal·-

~ - , . tAJI.' To .IP.IIf.
- O f t - , ., LOCATED: 4
7OftWI,
h .Ct:;.....,. 114
... On Un-

.lbdrm, opl, lor rent, $225/mo.,

... urity d-11, no Pola, 614,
1192:2218.
1br Aparlmonl, 614:l7f:211'1 Ask
ForTorry,
·

2 blldroom opl, $350, month 111
utllltlol pold, no HUD, 304:6752722.

Rlloronco And DtpoaH
qulrtd. 814-446~1511.

2111••• 4:01 Pll.

·CAll

In lown, · Appllcotlono oYiillblo
4
' ' or

:~:11 ~~'1:2-~~~nE~~··

' ,.,.,....,

:JM.

~.

C!mfllotly Fumllhod, 1br, noKI
t~ 'L.,_,, plrklng. hu1, air,
rtllronco•d-'1 roqulrod, 114,
441:0338 aoloro 7p,m.

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTIES

Fumlahod Apl. 1bt, $235/Mo,
Ulllllloo Pold, 807 Soc:ond
Avonuo, Golllpotla, 114-446-4411
ADor7p.m.
F~mlohld

Apl: oil IAIIIIIeo pold,
bolh, 1125/mo., 111
Socond Avon,., 114:418-3145.
•lllro

Furnllhod Eftlcloncy 1185/mo.
Ulllltleo Pold, 120 Fourlh, Gol·
llpotlo, 114-441-441t Aaor 7p,m,
Fumllhod

oHicloncJ

opl.,

Ctntrll hNI &amp; lir cond., quilt
1ncl pri~at•. NCuriPy clep.,

'
BEECH
ST, - Appro._ 24 acres with a beautiful
twa s~ry colonillllo!M overlooking Pomaroy,
EKecutJve style home ,.;th lonnll entry, family
room w/llreplace, formal dining room
basement haa rec, room with stone firep!Ke:
1n-g~und pool, 2 Cllr ge,.ge, Many more
amtnititt, Raducad Ill a low price ol 11311,500,

,.,.,encn.l14-4~ .

Fumllhod: 21 ,3, 4 Aoom1, Bllh,

06wNttlra, up. Cltln, No Pw11,

Rot•once, Oopoolt Roqulrtd.
114-418-1511. .
G~clouo

living, 1 and 2 bodroom lpirtmenla It VillaaManor
ond
Rlvorolilo
Aparlmonla In Middleport From

MIS

$111, CIJIIM-HH78t EDH. ·

c-

2br, Downt-,
""'' KMchoni Carpeting, AC,

A SPEDAL' HOlE - Combining a peecelul
wooclod setting with lots o1 chann and
comfortable living. OVer 4 acres, 3 bedrooms,
2112 baths, large kitchen, dining and iving
rooms. Approx, 1,700 sq, ll Detached 20'X24'
garage and moral Ownero raducad price
$3,000,00, New Usting prict $66,500.00, Within
minutes of new 35 by bypass. Cal today! 1448

Real Estate General

WIIEHOISE

Jamison sofa bed, Wizard Holiday eye-level range,
Seafs refrigerator, ooHee table and end tables,
vanity, double dresser, cane seat chairs, child's
rocker, k~chen can, old TV, 2 Heisey cream and
sugar, cut glass cream and sugar, 5 pc, Depres·
sion glass, glass cookie jar w~h lid, 8 Cambridge
dessert plates • Elaine pattern, Heisey goblets, 4
glass bowls, oovered glass relish dish, 8 cham·
pagne saucers, 8 WV tumblers, glass pitcher,
Coming teapot, Lance cracker jar, Pyrex teapot,
collector plates, OCC. Japan ooaS1ers, Fostoria
china press cut, bell collec1ion, candlesticks, whis·
keydecantor, S1one jug, Seth Thomas clock, post·
cards, silver plate 1ea Stt'Vice, costume jewelry, old
kkchen ~ems, old sheet music, old camera, 78
records, Hat iron, waHie iron, toaster, electric try
pan, 30 cup percolator, Smm camera and projac·
1DI, bowling ball, telephones, CB radio, elec1ric
blanket, ad)l~ walker, hassock fan, old goW clubs
(woods), portable typewrher, bathroom lights,
ldtdlen light fixtures, books, hunting jacket, motor·
cycle helmet, RICairplace acc&amp;Ssories; ship model,'
1ac1aJ aauna. 3 gal, sprayer, lawn spreader, cherry
lumber, old tools and more,

WEWTOI. OliO

AUCTION CONDVCUD BY

J..ord,, Lordy,

Owner/Broker
Eve, 446 4618

Eva. 446 8655

Sales Agent

·

Eve: 441·1514 · '

CATHY A. WRAY

Eve:37N184

Eve, US 4255

~~~~~gent

17x19 Mini Vanity with •We Tap
Whne with Gold Jrin_ __ l29.9S
Med. Wood Tone..
SS9.9S
SimulotedWooL
-549.95
30x 19 Vanity
&amp;Marble Top.-..- 519.95, SS9.9SSCJ9.95
36x22 Vanity
&amp; Marble Top._'89.95, SCJ9.95,SJ 19.95
Medium Oak Medicine c.lnt
Single Door.--·-'29.95 _. 2t.r SSO.OO
Double Door••• __ •5S9.95 .. 2.. '100.00
Counter Top._.__
SS.oo.....
36" Bar Top.__
'5.00 .....

BR

IUCftDN CO.

.w•..

·LUNCH
MASON, WV .
773-5785
OWHERS!WILLW11nd BEATRICE SHIRA

MicroWive sland $15. Zenith
color console TV $25. 304-67512n.

Real Estate General

AT AN AFFORDABlE
.._ itiD ... cauntry and..., . . bMutiU
. . . . . up. A iargl2 ecre tot will plenty ol
good . . graund lor lll'lim..._ 3 badloom
f
!age ~ with 3 ligh
ou ..... cbora. plus bldor and i ..........
lllblll'lly 150,000.
1101,

·=

1

1

-

.

PRICE? THAT YOU CAN IIOVE liGHT
liTO? - Then you need to !aile a look at IIIia
boauty. Lorge lvinglclning room combinelion,
nice kitchln with laundry

aru, 3 bedrooma,

and 2 baths. Nowty painted celllngo and

IIX!Arior. Combine this tow price ,.;th low
interest ralas and you can lullill your
homlo-(s dream. $29,900.
H13

"

EXCELLENT CO'M RCI.'L BUSINESS
Greel potantill for 111011 any typs of buoinsao,
This 3,112 "'I- ft, building meet - f y bt'olqlt
in $500.00 per month, 2 bedroom ..,.,._,
_,_., Building could ba lnllalolllltd into
residential property very ealily, Prtted at
$80,000, Run a bullineaa below 111d Five
up1trc"n.
1210

.,

DON'T SEnLE FOR A HOUlE .IUIT

TO UVE tH - From o momtnl you llllp inlo

the largo toy• you can .,..,. your family living
thla claosic, Formal iving room, dinlfiO roan,
suMy kiichtn, very livable family roan, 3 nice

in

bedroom• plus 2 lui baths, Storage gala,. in
the large attic, 1 car gal8fll, lull ~L H
thafs not 111wgh, in town convenitncs, · , _

RNALLY A STARTER HOlE YOU DON'T
HAVE TO FIX II'IH - Yau witt need to lhil 3 bedroom with - t l y replaced vinyl
tiding, 1001 and gulloring, ptoonbing, 200 amp,
electric aervice and new gao tumsce. Lorge
family room, 2 Nit betha, convsnitntlaundry
room ond prlvale patio, Thia 09J)CM1Unity il only
minute• IIOmlown on Sl Rt. 141 . City ldooola,
$45,500,
lilt

,.,.,InC..aparlmll)l.
304-IIZ·

lu"llohod

Dtpoalt &amp;

25f6,

45

Furnished
Rooms
A WOR1lfY
- For tme who lww
echieved oucca01, w ohr flis ...premety
opecioua (over 2,700 aq. ft,) end beautifully
handcrafted home on 2,24 acrea mA, 4
badloorna, 3 bella, IMng room, ciMig room,
lltmily room, 2 kilchena, den or ollct,
Prolluionelly lllndlcaped, 3 car ga,.ge,
inglound pool, For thoM who lww tamed I~
... Clrolyn for your privata vining.
1114

AltO 1r11ter lpatt. AN hook•Upt..
Cd afttt 2:00 p.m., 304·773·

5851, Muon wv,

46

Space tor Rent

Country Mobile Homo Plll'k, Rt.

33N,
underhome
- ,.nlalt,
""""""'"'Loia, SIS;
$235;
IM,IIt2·211T
Mobile Homo Spoct For R... In
Rle Orondo, IM.. 41-311t

Ro11il 0. Olllcl si&gt;oco Avo-.
LoloyotlolloM, 114-441-4222:

MOi

47 Wanted to Rent

NEW USTING, SPRING AVE , il thla 4
bedroom, ,1 bath, wood and brick nll1di ,.;th
family room, dining room, den, lull baMrnlnL
fireplace, and ge• hot water heal, buUer's
pantry, endosed front porch, baoutilui bow
window wlwlndow oeat and much mare, 0!\ly
$32,000, Call today, It won't !all long ~I that
price,
1445

Nlu, ciMn 2 or 3 bedroom
- · · ,,,., privlll -Ina,

lltllt2·2421, INvt .-golf

naan1W81'.

·,

Merchand1se

st

HOW .ABOUT 1817 - A 1-lillllita Ml5l ... 3
badtooml, 2 lllltt. _ . . • • sl • •. -~~

lkytlghl. llejll &amp; . . . . . - 5 I 7 ' • ..... all.
this home 'i lliM NEW..,..,_ IlLII _,. gooalo-rarulioustolllland_,_,.
elel!l l
you 1nnt allordlble &amp; ,.. f .._.- I ill Alllille
S28,QOO.

Household

CREW RD, -lothio unique conlllin~ry with
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family rrn, dining area,
living nn, and ~ilchen . Two decks all way
around house. Full baMmtnt end more, Only
$56,900, 1427

Goods

11DW 11MT U.S IIMIE 'IOU UID-1
llilll I could IIIIard a ....,. oual I i1l ...
""-'? - , . . . catl Otlfl' S48,800 • get ,..
• ._.._law::et&amp;aw,_, r i¥3
....- -...
. 2 ....... Mtg - · ciMig - ·
...... and 2 . . 11"'111!" ........... cllh,

.... _,....,not"'..., .. .,.,

NEW UITWG - -

E

IDRl' - Alii Sl. 0.. ...

liiiii'Bhome3 - llall.....,---·~
F,A,N,Cl, . . , . _
. . . . -llliiilla
-&amp;goa ....... a I

,_,...,aiii!IF 7 . .

~ -~$11,100.

NEW ut'I1IIQ -"'llf OUfOFAM -lb ~~
ocreage, Yauea~ ,..,_ -••ID 5_.... CIIIDr
more dNIII s--11111
' 'I

MARTHA L. SMITH
Sales Agent

1'01 AOY- C

Eva.37to~1

loof ......

I '---.. _,_

-.r

3 aN

llill 1

. .FAa.&amp;l

'

Eva.241-1887

1

112 011,

)

young or .aid, Mice ' - .
SEE,_MAICEM Q 4Ud

AIPiile .... , COlliE

Ev-.7424111

__

~ a1 1l"RHITUAI,

Olllo .,

..

Got.,,_
fiMI o,-'-

tuiilwt, Mllw, Wtstern_
a
,

=-""""". .

..,

12

HEJIRY£.08 . . . "'

T•WI• IChllra I Wnit . .
. DIMw ...... . Ontw

'•

Col:_• - "

•

8'11-.,._. ,

al fiiiiJ*'III, 180 8CI81,

111 A. RNdr for you Ill me inlo for only 162,000,
lliol hi oliono .-1 Ml7
DOGWOOD DRIVE - LOVELY HOSE FOR

SALE - Ohro 3 bedrooms, 2 batha, heat

pnp, -wood ltooro in living room end
llilchtn. I .4 ~~erwa, morw or leu, city achools

__ tocaled_.,. __ ,.

S711,500, 17111

I

..a A IOUI"f

NEW uanNG - Ranch style home, thrM
bedrooma, family room, ext,. nice lliza Ioiii,
hanlwood ftooro, Homt .Is wei built, Ruhnd
.,.., Aoklng $35,000, . .
...

PRICE IEDCIICED IIY $7.GOOf n-•a jull·
no COIIIP"'ilon 10 tltil,,,3 bacflooml, 1 bath,
Iorge 1iwinQ room, deft, latge r.nly room or
dning roan, 20x40 lngtouncl pool, lataa bam

w p heel 111'9o 2 cailnga fonl, -.g
_.s d lind and · Priced Ill ....

...,
Ill - and ....
....
- capet
...,.,-_ lumece,
_Laoge Ill
tot"""·
City
PID ....... lo $38.000. l'a .., to •
.._.
1211

1412

J. DR4JNGOWSKI CHERYL L. LEM~Y,
SlleiA(Ient
Malgs Co. Agent

., ~~

3

EAIT TO AFFORD! - Ran ~~ h ~ 2:3 bed-

MEIGS COUNTY

CYNTHIA

()A

1711.

NEW USnNG ON FRANK RD. - A pollial
~rick ranch on L03 Ac. mn with 3 badtootnt,
1Yr bath, living room, dinln~ room &amp;' kitdwl,
0{18 car oarefll•ttached, Alking only $52,500,

CIIJDdey,

,.,.

a1-. .,...oom
. _ ................... , •• 1,..._,2!*
A PICE STAAlEII JIOPE

.,.... 111 l'llile, 11.74-

RICK PEARSON

,.....,..~

446:4023.
Ninhmdo player wlacce55ories
$60.
Crossfire
game $10.

- · - • - ---

Sl11plng roomo wllh cooking.

PHYLLIS L. MILLER
Sales Agent
Eva, 256-1136

J. MERRILL CARTER
Broar/Agent

Nlet wtddlng gown, utiMact,
size 9!10, worn one time, 614·

s-·-.•.

.... ball INt. . . . . . . . . . . . . .,......., .........

TAMMIE DeWITT

N• Clwllllln PraMIIon
Gun• $120, withIOIIN. New llryco ,380
Pistole $106. Alnmo,
too, . . four ww 2
Mllchlne Gun• 011
cleplay.
446·1822 or 2310
E11tern (Bfn:h LaM)

hoOk up, 614-192-2805.

LARGESt SEIECIIOI. IIIII&amp;.

FARII ON LONG HOLLOW ROAD - Thia
home haa 2 bedrooma, 2 batha, lving nn,/,
dining nn,, kitchen, ..... .ec~ front pon:h, hut
pump, canl air, 40'.:J/Y pole lhed, Allhit end
more on 1071C,.a rn/1, Only eoklng ssa.soo,
1423

~tManagar

Mywa ahlllow well weltr pump,
11rge holdtng tank, ready to

Norlh Fourlh 91, Ml-porl, 2

STORY'S RUN ROAD
7 yHr old home with 3 bedroomo, 1 bath, 2 car
garage, 33 ecrea, bam and lliltda, Aoklng only

PATRICK A. COCHRAN

1-800:548-1923

Market SUndar, 1011H ?,

. . . ., tiiS

...

RUSSEL D, WOOD

FREE INSTALL-liON
SWIMMING POOLS
0n1w sm.oo INutltul Above
Ground 191131x4 POOl lncludos:
Fll•, O.CII, Ftnet, Ladct.rs,
Etc. Don, llollovolt? CIU BPI

Fairground'• FIM

5~11.

Real Estate General

Roome lor ronl · - o r month.
s;r.1:2 Ill NO/mo, Oallla Holll,
I
1510,

545.000.

QUAUTY HOllE - Owner baing trenslerrad
out ol .,.., 5 BR, 3 batho, iniiiQUnd 20x40
pool, BeaiiNiy dacorlad, Cll now,
M54

Folding ltd, Slmmono Sioopor

Electric llovt, 1150, r•frlger~lor,
$200; ldlclttft counter unit with
douiM sink and 2 wall cablnela,
$11GG; 6144112-3489.

i

LOG HOlE OVERLOOKING RIVER Owner wants ~ sold. Makt an offer. Listed at
$25,900.
1410

WE HAVE SlRICT ORDERS TO SELL
NOW! - Raducad prica SS,OOO,OO, 2 story
homo with 4 bedrooms, living room, kitchen,
la1g0 walk-in doN~ callar, large front porch
and more, Cal today,
14113 -

1:100-537-15211.

SKS~IItiiM

Ntoo Hovon
bod,_ fur·
nllhod opl, dop &amp; ,.~ ·
2581,

OWNER DESPERATE ANO ANXIOUS TO
SELU this 3 bedroom ,.nc:h home! Needs a
hnle sprucing up. Nice sizad lot 72'x150',
Attached 1 car carport, MAKE OWNER AN
OFFER TODAY! Asking low $30's, 1452 .

1421

FOR SALE

Movklg Solo : 5 HP Air Com-

Enne EnterpdMI, .ltckaon, OH praaaor, Air Toole, Toyota Par11,

~I&amp;A

Sundock, Clll - ·'
N,. Thlnl Mldd.,., Ohio, 1
blldroom fllrnlohld apl, clop I
rei, 304-1124516.

HAPPY HOLLOW RD, -lelhle 1lind 11211111)'
log home ,.;lh baaornen~ 3 bedroomo, 2 lind ·
t/2 bath, flmiy room, living room, ltilchen.laun
dl)' .,.., akytlght, lltelli'- ayaltm, cov~
parch, t-1 pump, centntl air, t2'xt2' bulldlna
lind much IliON, Cll for diCaiL
1425

PRICE !EDUCED! To $411,1100 oo thla nice 3
bedroom vinyllidod home With 2 batht, living
nn,, dining nn,, lomily nn,, din, hlat pump,
cantril air, ba-', 2 batnl and much more,
On 8.2 acres rn/1. Call today for appointment,

mattress, IM;1'12·23t8.

IN PENN'S wraallllftlllrE
RaDJVU,JI; ~-n

Filii Avt, Galllpollo, 1215/Mo,,
~
1!f,!l, I Ror.,.,...., 114-256·

SPRING VALLEY AREA is this apacioos.
lmrneculalll ronc:h with 3 badtooms, 2 baths,
f11tnily &amp; ·dining room on lovot lol Afoo l.rge
declt You need 1o ... thla one,
1414

I . . S u r e -· Good condi·
lion. $375. JIM.6JS.2195.

Two uNCI HYinG roo... tulltl,

c:Map ; al.o tingle bed wtlh new

11------::-::-:-L--:--------.l..-:::~:"::'-:-":-::---::.,:,-----::-:-::---:::--------

·

Saturday,July18, 1992·10:00a,m.
LOCATED AT 419 FITZHAGH STREET
IN RAVENSWOOD, WV
WATCH FOR SIGNS

... 11122.

Soil! 114~58-1117.
lumber: poplar, wild chlrry,
baiMibolrcf trim, door jams, ltc.
114..46-iOll.

pupo, good gun dogo, lor allfor
trodo: l' UlMAr bid wllh locking
lool bollor ooll or trtdo, liking
$300, 114·lll2-2l28 ....,lnga.

-1.;:.!1\''I, airno cone!,
pall,
EVERYD
'
'.,.,
.
. UJW r .·.-

!Jo(u11 1br, 2 Clr Gorogo,

PU.BLIC
A

21 Plumy :u UOid
' - Tflon 2 - - $115. 114-

7iGioll

Ev1n1, Jtekton, Ohio. 1-IOQ.

!137-8128.

And Tr•namlealOn Priced To

7

IOiironco
&amp;
304'
:17Wtl2,

TWO HOMES ON 14 ACIES - Thill's
you fill two hotneo, one hoving 2 big
rooms, 2 bothlj',now flrept.ce, new lumaca
and air conditioner, VI!Yiliding. Other ~ 1
bedroom, bath,"laundry, living room &amp; kitchen,
S0x60 bem, tobacco baM, new fence &amp; tlo
house and much more. Call for. more Info,
1451

•sc •

54

2b&lt;frm, opla,, ""'' lfoctrlc, .,.
plilncee fumlshtd, laun*Y

Cllln 2

1312

44 Uognum. 314:675-

top·---

ulilh~•. !,~&lt;:&gt; ·:"'::":,. :•:"~' :~~~~~~::~~~
me dw

:::2~

VINTON VILLAGE Is this w.M built brick home
with 2 bedrooms, 1 beth, laundry room, living &amp;
dining room, kitchen, 1 car attached garage.
Large walk~n attic, nice patio and L·ahapad
lloot poroh 1nd more, RNJcad ID $49,900,

1111 T..,.., SR-5 Coupe, 2 dool,
4 cyl, ..... !IH " " - · Don
1112 Cullus Suprwnt. Gla1s
304-675-

no polo, $220 per rroonlh,
dopooH roqulrtd, 614'912·2381
dayo
ntwty remodtltd, low

- h St Mlcldloporl, OH, 2 BR
hfmllhod
opll'loMnl. UIIIIIIH

BEAU11RJL ALL BRICK HOME situated o.1
50 acm rrVI with 3 ~s. ivlng nn,, dining
end family nn,, 3 baths and lui baHminL Heat
pump end c:entral air, 2 car lllac:hed lind 4 car
detached ge111ge, Asking $124,900,
1412

1*112-2421.

_._ ...0 •• ' " old 0
125I 000 B1U lurnlco, usod 3 -~··· a-::,
months, •• Mit tot S350, CIH m• an ofttr, 304-175-6&amp;33 If·
614-112·3111
ter 5:00PM.
11ft. 2 h1o Car &amp; Ulilily Trailora Concroto I Ptaallc Septic
Tonkt, .Ill Aorallon Tonb. Ron
614-iMS:$515,

1114,

R•

lltolllc And llodlll Cutvort linch
ThiU 10 Inch In Slotk. Ron

IJorl 20" Huffy blcyeto, hind Konmoro Air COftdillontr, 22,800
brHo, oxcotlont CONI~Ion, $80, BTU'o Chl'll' I Cjllndor Engine

-

2 lA ioport"""" In llld&lt;tloporl,

Real Estate General

.,

'

2 Roome I Bath, Downstllr$,
Cllln,
No Pets, Quiet ,

~ITATES .

GALUPOLIS CITY - Ia where you lind
attractive and well maintained home
fenced in backyard, alum, siding, two
bed!ooma, one bath, a large enclosed back
poroh for those wann .IUflltiMir nights or enjoy
the central oir, Also a one car garage "with
storage and much more, Call for more Into,
Only $48,900,
1444

CARRY

911 With 4 Podded

Ont 30" ple-hUIIII !!llorlor dool '
wllh trim, 1:10, 114'112:3537.
.

Two AKC Aogillortd looail ·

n r •• ""· 211 SuM ....,

• •-

54 MIIC8fllrteOUI
Merchandise

Merchandise

Aoololgowllon S!Ming AI 1311,

01

~ afttt lpm.

dra-.

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

-And
CASH
AND

'*"""* required.
114:446:3302
114.. 46-

OII)OSII &amp;

8EAli1'11'U~ APARTMENTS AT
JUOGET PRICES AT JACKSON
1 531 Jlcooon Plio
IJOal l1t;umo. Wolk to slloi&gt; •
~leo, CIU 114-:25M, EOH .

F.... ~

U.. 1 - . . , Flnoncing A.,..
..... M!4-11t-1220.

1--------'"*·

- .Choir"'
- ·$5.24-.
·-

downlown Gallipolis. Air con-

lleme will be on ·dleplay at Middleton E1tatw
(aero.. from Cllflelde GoH 'Couree) from 10 un.
until 6 p,m, Sea~ bkll will .be !liken and the
highest bidder will be notified by phone on July
17th, All bide muel be eubmllted by 8:00 p,m,
July 16th, Payment due when ~eme are picked
up, All ftema to be picked up by July 20th,
•••craft item• will be on eele the diiY of the
auction,
....Refresh mente will be available also,
Come and join lhalunfll

WE NEED
LISTINGS IN ALL
PRICE RANGES

53

·--

.1 112 BR u..,mllhod oportmont,

Item• Include: a variety ol wall cablneta, beM .
cabinela, alnk cabinet•, etov.., l!ullt·!n oven, ·
etove top, buill-In dlehwaehere, ehower unite, ,
bath tube, outdoor light lbrturee, chandelltre,
indoor ceiling llghlllxlurea, and much II!Ortl

Real Estate General

Household

wv

Buy • MI. loftllquoa,
1'124 E, Floln Slrtll, .PorMroy.
VI'RA~AE
: II.T.W. 10:00 0:01, lo 1:00 1,000 gal, Willi'
1250, 114,
p,111., Sundoy 1:00 lo 1:00 p.m, 245:1215.
114-112:2521.
Air Condlll.-, Window Un",
-~
25,000 B1U S400. 114-418-2125
And 0.,., $17.11-.
O.,.OriJ,
aunk IIIII Ccu;l 11. aa
54
Mscellaneous
-. 4 Clllll $3.12

room facilities, clott to school

"Not reepon1lble for acclden'- or loH ol proptrty, ~

5I

Apanment
lor Rent

dlllonor,

OWNER - FREDA DURHAM
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER 11344
614-9411-2033
John Smith-Apprentice lt5518
cash- Positive ID - Ralrashments

w.,.,.

Porn1 Pleasant,

Goods

SAVE, SAVE, SAVE
AFTER RENOVAIION AUCDON

&amp; Auction

._., 2 'nsdllobieHollln.
.........

KIT 'N. CARLYLE®hy Lany

43 Farms lor Rent

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

msc,

t.s.......,

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH

Mobile Homt Rtntll: $200/mo +

lor Rent

Furrilthed 1br HouH, 114·446· Nic:t 2 bldrooin mobilt home,
1759.
.... Roush Line, Chnhlrt, Ohio on
HouH For Rtnt: 1300/Mo. 4 nlct lot 304-773-5828 uk ror
Rooms &amp; Bath, Kanaug1, Gil· :-B•_u:-'·-:---:--::--::-'--:lipolis. 814-448-7444.
2 Hcfroom trtiler, RtciM,
$225/mo. plus utilhles, deposit,

"'-' ~-. .....
IIEIC. 11WIUIII.

141111 -

wv

OH-Point

OF A ..,_ wmtOUT
A 1U111Y OF A PRICE? -Thin Iii 1988
Fa H: • •(t4X101 illllf ,.., Large
.... ciMig . . . . . .-in built.
.... , _ Ldi:OIII willl ldl-ln ciMk and
i
2nd .............. will getdln
.. [ I
,.....,a.tlllt,_TJD.\ •
. . . . IIIII dly-. o...toor- olm ...
. . . QIIUIIII block I '
I I and ......
• s5 .,. L t 1111 ara.-IIDt or me Ill Jllll'
- l l l l OlaNd • • pricllthlt
Onlr$15;50011
,.,.

_,be --

and Ioiii me. Own111 woold like an offer.
AfFOIIlABlE BRICK RANCH - V.. nice ~
badmom home often much fll4n lhlln mall at
INa pries, Lorge hing room with firoplace,
1ann111 cllnilg roorn pries, Large living room will
li~e. lormll7 dining room w~h china
callinel, 1111-in llilchtn, don, ..... 11M b a lanily room ltld rec, .room, V.ry private
r t wad - fr9ound pool and r.rge polio, 2
. . tllfllfll, JIOs hilt and oentntl air, Nowsr
ftllll, Priced Ill move (Jiickly at $79,1100. 1188
23t NSf£ DAIRY FARPII- Over 100 ecreo of
1111111 gi'OUIICI. 70 IICI'M of .,...,., 2 bame,
dairy hGuoe and milling equipment, _ , . .
....., buildngs inclucllng a 3 bediOOft) ranch
will W b_ _ ,, and • 2 bsclroom renlel
pllll!lltf, 1 pond, 1 mill oft Rl. 7 .in Mtigl
Counly.., •IUdltop roal, $178,000. 1233

a

contemporary with vaullad
cailingl, 3
2~ batls, formal living
room, dining room, family ooom, beautiful
wooctwo~ and llaircaM, large eat~in kito;hen
and beautilll oaf&lt; cabinsts. 2 car garage plus
extra atoreoa apece aituated in a great
neighbortoood on 111 o...r.llized tot in Green
Twp, $102,500. Call Cltolyn today for your
privata v;.wing bofoN itoloo latell
1&amp;01

SO WHATI NEW? - This comlortable f'lnch
it lll'lly 3 YMf' old, Feunslarge iving room,
3 badtootns, 1'h batla, Ml·in ltitchen. 2 car
11".111t18' t-t ~ pluo • 10,.. mit Country
· Hv111g CIR bo youra lor the aoking, Only
$49,500.
t507
FIIST AVENUE - Vary nice 2 ato')' home is
~ lor ,.. end your family. Tloio homo has
been oomplo4ely remodeled in very fine taale,
Featurea included • .bectrooma, 2~ baths,
lamlty room, 10111181 dining 100111 and forrnll
Nvlng room , Beautiful kitchen with chetry
Cllbinsle, 2 lreplacas and wry eftiiCtivo oe1t
UircaM. l7uuiUy lanclacopod lnground pool
In back yard, 0 1 - pellcing.
IW'PILY EWJI Af1ER it how you'l live In
Na 3 badtootn, 2 bafl home IMIUI!ng a Jaovo
greeiiOOIII, lonNol dining """" and ..,.....
maaler Mill, Enlallllining continues outside In
.,.llllcM fiiOUnd pool, Prioad Ill $54,11110,

ISCie.

WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!!! _
REAL FSOOE Ire
446~44

•

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·8555
carolyn Waach- 441-1007
........ McDide- 44.1129
Sonny Glmaa - 4t8 2107
8. J. Hllrlton- 448 4240

.

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',

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�wv

OH-Polot

Page---06-Sunday

71

71

Autotfor

1980 Buick R~tal, good condl·
lion, onglno noldo !Oq!il, V-41,
$450,11(·112·3454 '""' lpm.
1811 Chlor C'--o, 4 - ·
GOOd work car, 114-112-5344 or
lt4-117-68M.' .

Transportatton

-

Autos for Sale

. --·-

~
-· ~
· .' . . OJ7_

Real Estate General

July

71

Autot tor Sale

1982 Flrt"'rd V-1, Auto, Air, PS,
PSI PW, RNr Spollor. RNr
De rott, Ntw Sport Tire•,
$2,500. 114-«11-2422 Aftor
7:00p.m.

1

... ,~;

1985 Dadgo Shol"l Chorvor

turbo. 5 spcl., redftiiY.,, gOod
mpg &amp; sharp. Asking $2400.

~

/.}

FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1992

7:00P.M.

Slltlltt dish fof ult, equipment
Incl-. $800, IM·w.l·2313.

FIRST STREET, HARTFORD,
MASON COUNTt WV
7 LOTS, 2 HOUSES.
OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVER.

Tondy \DCCI Compltlo Sot,
Koyllolrd, Monitor Prlntlf,
Tobit, $1,200. 614-367-0I:tl
WATERLINE SALE
314 lnoh :1011 PSI 1115 I lnoh 2110
PSI 133.10 Ron Evono Eotlf!lri- 1-100-637-1521.

.rt=.:::O:

opoc:lacullr Yil,w. You wll -

Cas18Ua. l.ol!dld! All Black,
'M,OOO Miln. 15H5. Call Pal

Boyor
4223.

Building

614-446-7419,

614-446·

1987 Dodge, AT, PS. $1900. 1987
H~rlzon , AC, 42 mg. $1050. 1985
Eacot1 . $800. 30441'5-2440.

VIRCIINIASMITH, BROKER,311·1126
OtAN CAlLAHAN, REALTOR, 446·&amp;806
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 441·1117
• RUTH BARR, REAlTOR, 44&amp;-0722
DEBORAH SCITES, REAl TOR, 441-411011
LYNDA FRAlEY, REAllOR, 4-06

1987 Plymouth Turillmo, Sllvtr,
Automatic, Air Cond, Good
Condition Inside And Out. 614•

MICHAEL MILLER, REALTOR, 44e-OOB
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 245-9575

PS, TW, clean. Good mechanical. 70,000 miles. $3600. 304·

367·7264

1988 4 dr. Ford

Eseo~

GL. AC,

675-'1474.

wnn

1988 Buick Ragal limited,
lolded, silver, low miles, 614·
992·7161.

...,. lhln .... OM,

moplt, dogwoo&lt;l
·
lrMI on
-Whll
· llioRd.•
I4DIIbln
~-....
Alto
lollcllrorllng
Fotlullponiallln callo ._...

1989· Ford Probe GT, 45,000
Milts,
$6,800;

VACANT LAND IIAJOA SWOIYIIION KNOWN
AS "LAKEVIEW ESTATES"
Lot f1 2.25 ... ..,_ l'llct $16,500
Lot 12 2.348 ... M.t.. l'llct $22,500
Lot 132.348 ... M.t.. l'llct $16,500
OVf LOTS FOR SALE••.
Lot A 5.322 acno m.W34.SOO
Lot c 5 ..... ~.500
Slbllvlllon iolelo 11to11 Ml C1 lildriC: lniiiiJIIOn.

Excellent
Condition,
1985 Pontiac 6,000

$1,200. 614-441.0731 ·
1989 Olds Ciorro, PSIPB, casstllo. 614-446-6911
1911 Camero AS, Whitt /Grty
Int. V-8, Auto, Loaded, 4,600
Milts, 614-446-8853 AHer 6p.m .

1991 GEO Matro, air con·
dillonod, oulomollc , S6250. 45
milt• per gallon. $750 btlow
book priCI. Priced to Mil. Aalph
Proll, 227 S. 51h Avonuo, Mtd·
dlaporl, Oh.

I) lWO STORY, 7 room house with great restoration potential. Nice wood trim and
hardwood flOOrs. fireplace. Sunporch overlooksthe river. Formal dining room with French

Wiftin9 Dltk, WMh Choir And
Whlill&gt;oal AutOIMtlc W11htr
AIIOOoii-114-«11-"IIH.

55

446.;.6806

71

1916
Oldsmobllo
Royolo
Brougham Y-1, AC, P~ 1 PB, l&gt;W,
Power Seats, AMIFM Stereo

CR~..J- PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THl DiffERENCE
--

Autos tor Sale

Qptlon, like new, brand nu
ilros, 305 V-8, $3200, 614·992·
6119.

Real Estate General

23. LOCUST ST.

12, 1992

1985
Pontiac ' Praaiannt
Braugh11m , 4dr. sedan, every

:JOC-175-53011.

RE$1DENTIAL ·INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL • FARMS

fUI. LAKEVIEW LOTS: Cholco lolo

71

whltls. Very Shlrp! Ami fm/ Y-8,
$2375, 614-949·2045 or 614-MI2819.

, Muot Soil! 614-446·ll14.

~ • \::f/m.«A, ~ ({)tJ«ue-

MASON COUNR
REAL ESTATE AUCTION

Autos tor

1985 M1rcury Cougtr, PSI PW, .
A.C Cragar spun alwninum,

Real Estate General

17"/

71

Autos for Sale

198: :~moulh ConqYtlt Turbo,

5S

-·- - -

Real Estate ~aral

'

1992

1H1
ndy,

~' -

Pontiac

Sunbird,

Bur·

1 Orty lnltrJor, Uk• New,
614·258-1335.

Autos for Sale

1988 Ford Taurus. New llres,

72

Trucks tor Sale

1910 Ford Spon custom 1ruek,

74

Motorcycles

=====.

wo·s

Cox Duai•AIIIt GtiY. Trailer Wittr
Power Winch S.S. Prop Lift
1982 Durango 5 ·10 pickup, V·&amp;,
V11to, And t Polr Sklo. S3,450
11
500
304
~~~~ ~~j..~d. topper, • · • 1982 4 Wheel Drive Model 4 Firm. 614·446·9636.
Spd, Air, Has Front Winch. 814·
BOATERS
1983 GMC short bed, diesal 6.21 3&amp;8-8622.
J.S. Mlril'll Service Ntw Mer•
eng. 4 spd. 4 wheel drive. Good - - · -~ ~-· · - ----condition. runs good. $1850. l986 Chevy Conversion Van, 3/4 cury Engines In Stock. PaiU &amp;
304-8 82 •3793 ,
'
ton, front and rear AJC, hi-top, Ac:ctsiOrles In Stoek, Factory
TV, CB, beautiful condition, all Tralnld Slrvico. ll4·256-6160.
1986 Ford Ranger Club Cab, PSI the extras, 614·992-5242.
PSI AMI FM, $3150. Comes wt
lighted runn•ng boarda, new 1988 Bronco II Xi..T; AMIFM air
lool box, new glass topper, tret five apeed, 40,000 mllee. '614: ~~~~~~~~~~
wl lruck! 614-949-2045 or 614· •46-6336 '"" 5:Dil. &amp;14-446-11i57. I:
M9·2679.
84 Ford Ran9"r, 4 Wheel chive,
1989 Ford F-150 V-8 Eng Auto new engine, new pain!, 2" llfl,
Trans (62838) $6,500; 1990 Ford aluminum slot wheels, V•6, Ssp.,
F-150, V-8, Eng Auto Trans $48110, 6t4-949·2Bn
(62699) $7,000; 1966 Ford F-250
6 Cyl. Eng Man Trana (62312) 74
Motorcycles
$2,500; 1989 Ford F-250 6 Cyl :-::::7.'-'-:-:-...,-;;_=-=--:Eng Man Trant (62379) $3,500; 1981 Honda Twlnstar 200. Excel·
1988 Ford F-250 8 Cyl Eng Man lent runnina. BodY, In good
Trans 162366) $3,500; 1988 Ford shape. 58ol&gt; orig nai miles.
F-150 6 Cyl Eng Man Trans Electric star1 &amp; street legal. $600
(62634) $4,000; 1911 Che• C15DO linn . 304-773-5833.
LWEI ~U V-6 Eng Auto Trans
Budgel Tr~nsmluions, Used &amp;
(63623) $7,000; 1968 Che• Ct500 1914 VT-700C Hondo Shadow. rebulll,
starting at S9t; tronl
SWB PU V-6 Eng Auto Trans 6800 mUtt, great condition,
whttl
drlv.
11 $149.00
(63827} S6 ,500i CONTACT DEN· leather llddltbags, helmet. 614-245-5617, starting
614-319-2263.
NIS WOODS OR GARY OLERUO $1,600. 6t4-446-9t2t, 11-5.
AT: 304-675·7050 MONDAY t987
Hondo 4 Whealor, New gas tahkl, body parts, one
·FRIDAY, B:OO A.M. TO 4:00 P.M AutoMilic, Electric Start Full ton truck wheels, radlttors,
G
eo L R CONSTRUCTORS P.O Rac ka, Wind ahi II d NIW T1 res, Uoor mats, etc. D &amp;. R Auto,
Ripley, WY. 304·372·3933 or 1·
X T, PT. PLEASANT, WV St,950. 614·446-8111.
800-273-8585
Shape, Clean, PB, PS, Atr, 318
Engine, 6\4-446 ·1304 After &amp;p.m.

'
~~~========~2~55~50~
- -----------Real Estate Gene(al

Campers

&amp;

81

Motor Homes

~984 Honda ZSOA Mini Ilk,,

bantry, tit rods. 61,000 mHu. 302 twa barrellstandard'lhltl on 304::-8:7:::5-2::::358=
.
Asking $4,800. 304-675-1349.
column, 62,000MI , sharp !ruck, 1•
1
$3500 ' 614 ·11tNoao.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
197t Ford p.u. huck, 112 lon . .,.
for Sale
72 Trucks for Sale
Ira ntct, aulo , V·8, ami lml cas·
!.,-,..-=-,-,-=.~-::--.
1987 Cha•y Pick-Up Slop Sldo, 11111, AC , $1995,614-992-6119
. Fibtrgla•• Fishing
400 Small Block, 4 Spood, E•·
Ntw ; 1f2 HP Motor,
eononl Condition, 614-4•6-8093 1:-:--------614·388-1583 Ahtr !p.m.
73
Vans
&amp;
4
1980 Scottsdale tongbed, 305,
t913 FIMrlomr t9' Ski eoat Woth
auto., PSIPB, AC. 614-245-5637
aher 5.
1974 Dodge Window Van, GOISd 165 HJ.f Mtreruiur 110 On 1917

2

79

1979 Starcrah pop-up camper,
tlllpl 8, good condhlon, 614-

843-5250.

1989 Holiday Rambler, Aluml·
Ult, 29 h. Towed Ins than
2,000 miln. Twin beds, center

b.lh wllh shower, microwave,
air and more. Phon• 304-675-

3300.
Cruiat Air, 28 h , low mileage, air
cond, tully tqu1pped, must sell,
aariou• Inquires only, 304·675·

1204.

For Salt· V.W Camper Elad
Motor, 614-367-0260 Call Afltr
6:00pm.

Services
81

84

Home
Improvements

Home repatr and malnltNnct,

Rttldlntlal
or commercial
wiring, ntw Hrvlct or rtpatrt.
Mast11 llcMMd tttetrician.
Ridenour Elt(;trical, WV000301,
304-675-1716.

roollng, siding, guilt,., room
edilions and Tnterlor remaHI ·
ing, 614·992-2866.
J .W. ConstrucHon. Roam Addthont , Aoofl, Otcka, Skiing
And All Types Of Exterior Ana

lntartor Painting Will Give l.Dw
Btd. Licensed. 614-245·5194.

JET

General Hauling

Do Hauling A~inM,
Anyplace, No JDb Too Big Or
Too LHHe. Bs10menl Cltlnlng,
Gtntral Work, Any Kind! ,,._
Wt

37'9·2278 Anylimt.

87
Upholstery
,..-__:.:.....:...,.......,..:...........,....
..

Mowrey's Uphollllring Mrllic· .,
lng trl countr arta 27 yurt. Thl !

btat in lurnllurt upholltering.
Call 304-675-4154 tor fr• H ·

ttmltta.

Reliable Wallpapering,
mercia! And Residential
*Fr" Estlmatn
'Experienced

Septic Tank Pumping $90, Gallil
Co. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES,
Jackson, OH 1·800·531-'il528.

lilellmt guaran•
I references furnished.

Fr• estimates. Call coilael 1·
614·237-o488, day or night.

•

....'•

.•
'

Will build paUo covers, decks,

Basement Walerproo-

Curtis

Heme

82

lmprovemenls:

Years Exparience On Older &amp;
Newer Homes. Room Additions,
Foundation Work,
Rooling,
Kitchens And Baths. Free Estimates! References, No Job

Too Big Or Small! 614-367.0516.

'

I•

446.0294.

Aoge11

Plumbing

&amp;

Heating
Cart1r's Plumbing
Fourth and Pine
Galtipotls, Oh1o

614·446·3888
Real Estate General

doors.
~

RYE ROOM COTTAGE with garage. Stone
fireplace. Needs repair. but has good potential.

OPEN FOR VIEWING:
FRIDAY, JULY 17, 1992, 4-7 PM
OR ANniME IY APPOINTMENT

TERMS: 10% DOWN, DAY OF SALE,
NON-REFUNDAILf,. WANa AT aOSING.
SOlD WITH OWNERS CONRRMAnON.
W.f CODfiCJfl, If

RICI PUUOIIAUCTIOII CO.
UD HOIIESTUD REALTY, IROKEI
'-IJMJ675-5540- 13041112·2447- 13041 m-li715..ifl'
H14. LARGE COMIEACIAI. BUI.DIIIG on Slalt

R&lt;xdo2. 2-.lpl.on111_. .._3_,

opii.Mt!Oitltomo-lnlht . ...

Real Estate General

1712. WANT A CIAEAT STARTER HOME? - HOlt

1 11. 3 .........,., bolh, ltlchtn, •lnrl -

hOmo

IO ltaopllll 11111 OOIWtflionl IO IIIOIIPing .....
v.y quill~- ,. tlio lor $32,000

-

OFFICE H2-2888

1712. t713. OWNER lAYS 2 HOliES FOil Tl£
PRICE OF 11 GREAT RENTAl HOMES OR
FAMLI" HOMES. CALl. FOR DETALS.

TOWNSHIP- 53~ acreS, mo111 or
nico rwtch atyle homo offers 3 or 4
bedrooms, LR, kltchon, bath, full basemen~
csupol, docl&lt;, garage, liding: Tobacco baao and
tciHICCO bam, Addilionailand.
loss.

f7t7. NEED A GOOD LOT FOR A HOME? •
~ to ~ivlrlly, convtMnl locallon lo rww
blaoldoip_, ..... Sopilc on
. Col lor-

1173. SELLER WANTS TO RELOCATE Nico m111i lann lor lhlllamily. 3 BR homo

m1. CALL AND A8K ABOUT liE -I'm a
VIIY nice home In town end my O-Il !1'41
offoring mo al ·a good price. AaractiYII
kltclton, dlning aru, OW, ovon, range,
ditpl., LR. largo balh wllaundry, 11111 heal,

2 balhs, LR, DR, kilchon and olhor ulru.
Owner says bring us an offeri 24'x32' QIIIICII.

conL air, coiling fans, largo_lencod backyard
lor tho kldo or pota.

1117. SWEET a LOW - Comlorloblt small 2
beclrm., ltomo. Lot &amp;8'x186'. nnl wallr, b. gu on • • ...... $15,1100.

...........

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
ONEI - largo log homo can be purchased
wilh 162 101111 or 2 ecras. This home offaro 4

-

11113. 800 BLOCK

hu o lot to oller, 3
unattachld hlated garage and
Convenient to

chickenl, Uon

·

BRo, 3 balho, equlppod kllchen, LR, FR, 2
f~ropla..t, hoat /umplcont. air (backup
lyllem), ovollize 2 car auachod garage.

Frontage on RIICCOCII Cllllk.

,JooAaulh.304Musical
Instruments

1172. UNCOLN PIKE -WELL KEPT HOME
- 3 BAs, I~ baths, equipped kilchln, LR,
attached garage, dock. partial baMment,

t.lloo now F - wood cllrtntl.
1ft oao, 025 080, IM.e67-3t07.
nors Orvm, Slond 1cau, 3
, 4 Sticks, Proct,.. Pod,
Key, SM. 6-5-5115. .

••

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock
'•

Q'1

-It

home wlh big hing room. dining room with buik-in
hutch, 4 Mdrooml. 1"' baths, wrap-around porch,
3fireptacea, and nice big lot. Much POTENTIAL.
.·
$28,100

Farm Equipment

1858 Oti'm lrldor,

bar,

111kll, plows, IIH•, &amp;2200 090

bJ 1'tlm. C.H IM-t!l2·216l

5C!OO Fo'rtt Trldor I VormMr
llltt' $1,550; I H Ford Wrth
at- Mowing Mochlno &amp; Aoko
W-450. ttc.m-6522.

F..... HHI flll!llll M. 11119 hsll
tOn Cht• pick-up, 304-175-1452.

Jb 3010 Troclor Mowlna Illchloe Roko I Bollr, *1,150; 1110
Ford Wrth O.odor BIICII,- I
0110, S3,350. 114-211H522.
KUBOrA
Sliol P..l Stmco
HURST lRM:i'OII SALES
21HP 4 W0 -;:Ill HP 4 WD
P,IIM, Rout• 7 Nortll,lllfltno.
114-3'111-4111

63·

Llveslock

POMEROY- o.k StNet- A 1'h story lrame home
that hea one bedroom down and 2 bedrma. up,
dining room fon:ed air gas furnace, and 2 lots.

•

RIO CIAANDE - Hornllll prlcld lOr~'"
... 3 .. bllll, ......... ..,.,.,.. ,tjlprol!. 314 cl

.......
_.._tllld
Locllld on SR 35. $30,1100.

lo--

opclloboildl - -·

fliGHT on IIIII 3 BR, 1 bllh IlliCit
w1t1t LR, DR, eal-ln l&lt;llcllon, 2 oul&gt;ltlgs.. rww rool.

$3111.

11731. COMIIIERCl'IL ot RESIDEIITIAL - LAHO
CONT1IACT - l'flml loedM. e.«t1 Ave..

~
-w/lppllnoll,
- ..
VI&lt;'/,1111111.
ful bar

and~- Olio

1lia3 Is -• may IMidng

pn!IIOIIIOn. Col lor oppoioJIJUonl .

1758. PATRIOT AREA.
neighbolhood,
aaay living, homo offers 3 BRs, LR, oat-In
kllchon. nico Cllptt, all8dtad garage.

MIDDLEPORT-North Second - A commercial
building wkh 2 buainenea downttlirs, and approx.
23 room1 and 10 batha on the 2nd &amp; 3rd floors.
Could be converted into apartments. Cell for your
appointmenttoday!
$4&amp;,000

DOmE TURNER, lkoker.................._ ............lt2.fill2

·~

IIREHOA ~EFI'EIIS------····--···----····------···--·--··to2-3051

DAR\.IIiE IT'EWAIIT..._ .................................-t12-e31S

8ANOYIUTCHEIL-·--·---·--·····----·--··----.It2-A11

IHEIIYLWALftRI.CIIeeltlre.....--··---..311-41421
JERRY 8PRAi&gt;UtO ......-~..................1»1) ..24411

.•

RIVERVIEW AIOM YOUR OWN

3 BRs, LR wlliroplact, oquippod ltlldton , lull
buement.

H1t.lllW LllniiO wllh 3-1 BRa, ·~ .......
pertilf bll milt, gal IUITWOI,

RACINE - F11111lly, Neecjed - For thil 1X' atory
home, 3·4 bedrooms with 4 porchea, lull baae·
ment, dining room, family room. and a amall out·
building, Good sized lot.
$28,500
MIDDLEPORT - S. Second - A roorrPJ executive
type 9 room home with 4 bedroome. and 3 full
baths. This modern kitchen il every woman'•
dream with 10Hd cherry cabinela, Jenn-air range, .
Corian countlll'lopl, diahwaeher, and ialand work
area. Now on to the famly room with ftalkylighll,
cathedral ceiHnga, peach tree doon and winclowl,
and beautHul tireplace with a buck stove lneert.
The man of the houee Will tnjoy the 2 car garage
with atorage over top, the new wiring and the full
beHment. Bring the family to - !hie home today.

t110.

BACKYARD - V•IY nico all brick lt001e ollero

$3(11.

LOTS - Very nic. homo
t1._ LeGRANDE BOULEVARD - AI brid&lt;, 3 1150.
olllro 3 BAs, balh, kildten, carpel, firoplaca, 1
BAo, LR. ldtchen, bath, lull baaemenl, gao
car dtiiChod garogo.
lorcod ..r• .nodtod garogo, cily achooll.

f7JI. 10.12 ACRES MIL BEAUTifUL ROlLING

LMG

-

ctan be pwrct red u , ...: 1. 2 acna
; 2.31&lt;1UC11C. - I n d 2 -

-.oll: 3. 5--111114. Tolal . . . . . cl
10.12 _ _ ..._136,000. •

ADDISON - Honeyauclde Dri'lll- Recently NmOdeled. Nice rental or atarter home. haa 2 bedroome. one bath. Haa new Hplic and new wiring.
Need to - tinea remodeled.
524,000

........
.-..- ...
=a,;--.,..-

kitchon, DR, contral air and loll ol ulra
leaiUros.

tm. PRICE

513,000

Pt,IOO

HIY&amp; Grain

1733. EXTRA NICE MOBILE HOllE FOR
SALE - '86 Holly Pali&lt; 14x72, 2 BRt, LR,

lencod yard.

5•.

OOFIIER OF lA 1 4 1
AND GRAHAM
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~ Air fares:
lz•ke kl.dS
:·~ an·d candy
~-

::

-:. _
~

By BART ZIEGLER
AP lasiHss Writu
NEW YORK - "Cheap Air
_, Fares Oonc," blared the head:: liiiCS this past week. "Airlines
Nalch Continental's 25 Percent
Cllls.;. they asserted a few days

"·
~

~

lila.

lt100111s only one thing is cer• lli1 lbout air fares: they always
, cllln&amp;e.
Like 1 1Cid sitting in front of a
cady bowl, the airlines have litlie willpower when it comes to
Cllti"g fanes - a quick way to
fill up piiiiCs, though often a bad
'lilY to make money.
Continental, a troubled carrier
.. apcrlling under bankruptcy coun
.. proiCCtion, said it remained largely on the sidelines earlier this
summer while compctilllrs threw
• themselves into a low-price feeding fn:nzy.
That strategy, Continental
Slid, means it still had many seats
!cfl on its nights this summer,
allowing it to cut fares this past
week by an average of 25 pcrtcllt.

Only days before, competitors
were ICtually talking about raisinl fares a bit. But they couldn't
sit back and let upstart Contincn111 be the only one to offer bar' pins, espocially during the peak
VIICalion travel season.
American, America West ,
• Delta, NorJhwcst, Southwest,
TWA, United and USAir said
they would match the fare cuts in
cities where they compete with
Continental.
The lower rarc.~ were not the
o11ly news from Continenial. Far
more significant · was fts
aMOUncemcnt that it had found a
fi111ncial sa•ior.
Maxxam Inc:, a conglomerate
controlled by Houston financier
Charles Hurwitz, said it agreed
wilh other in•cstors to infuse the
struggling carrier with S350 million. In exchange, Continental,
the nation's fifth-largest airline,
would gi•e the invcsuncnt group
' 1 controlling stake in the company.
The proposal, which requires
court approval, is a big move
toward Continental's emergence
from bankrupiCy protoction as an
independent carrier.
Too popular
It's a problem many companies would like to have.
Compaq Computer Corp. said
it couldn't keep up with demand
for its new low-cost personal
computer line , . which it
announced la~t month. The chief
culprit is a shortage of crucial
pans. But the company also says
it just plain underestimated how
many of the PCs it would sell.
While the predicament evcntu·
ally should be good for Com paq's troubled bottom line, it has
the short-term consequence of
upscuing some of Compaq 's
resellers, who aren't gcuing as
many computers as they ordered
or won ' t sec the machines for
weeks. That could prompt some
custOmers to buy a nval' s model.
COMING UP:
Troubled Orion Pictures
Corp.'s reorgani,.ation plan is due
Monday . Two major corporations, AT &amp; T on Thursday and
IBM on
Friday, arc expected to release
their second-quarter earnings. an
event eagerly awaited by Wall
, Street. Time Warner Inc. holds its
annual meeting Thursday. In the
economic numbers arena, the
• government will release June
retail sales and consumer prices
on Tuesday , June industrial production Wednesday, June housing startS Thursday and the May
trade deficit Friday.
Ticker:
Amoco said it would eliminate
8,500 jobs, and another oil giant,
Unocal, said It would c~.100
positions, adding to a s!Uprising
· number of job redu ction s
' announced in recent weeks .

..

...
.;:.~•Wheat
(Continw1Urom D-1)
~ us

through funds granted by the
.r Tcnncsscc Valley Authority for the
;-development of improved forage
· , programs. Dr. Ball is one of the
..' leading "experts" in fescue man::. aecmcnt. He has written nearly 300
-' popular farm magv.inc articles on
~ tllat topic. ·
: He is the Past President of the
~ American Forage and Grassland
, Counci I and has been Ex tension
~ FIII'IIC Crops A'ronomist at
~· AII!Mrl'll Univcnity SIIICC 1976. A I
:-p.111. session wi 11 be held at the
~eo~~fcrencc room of the Senior
: Cenwr in Pomeroy and ~ 7 p.m .
:·seaion in Shfller House 5 at the
-:Raccoon Creek County Park in
::-oallia County.
; Dr. Ball will have some time for
. } illdividual contacts and wants 10
•learn more about our area. Please
:call to update me on how you
;: -ld like 10 be involved to get the
: -.from this ~unity.

Favorable news -ori\-lnflation. boosts stock prices
By CHET CURRIER
AP Business Writrr
NEW YORK- The stock market edged upward Friday, squeezing some modest benefit out of
favorable news on inflation.
The Dow Jones average of 30
industrials rose 6.48 points to
3,330.56, to finish the week with a
nct gain of 0.27.
Advancing issues outnumbered
declines by about 3 to 2 on the
New York Stock Exchange. Big
Board volume came to an cstimated 164.76 million shares as of 4
p.m. EDT, down from 207.97 million in the previous session.
The Labor Department reponed

that the producer price index or fin·
ished goods rose 0.2 percent in
June, compared to a 0.4 percent
increase the month before.
Excluding its volatile food and
energy components, the index's
reading for last month was down·
0.1 penccnL
Ana Iysts said investors took
those figures as favorable portents
for the inflation outlook. Bonds
managed no more than a mixed
showing after the repon was publishcd.
Enthusiasm over the news was
muted in the stock market, furthermore, by an awarenes s that the

price trend reflected sluggishness
in the oconomy thut hus raised new
doubts about recovery prospocts.
A similarly positive on inflation
is expoctcd Tuesday when the govemment issues June figures on consumer pri ces. Advance estimates
call for that index to be up 0.2 per·
cent, snatching its May increase:
Conner Peripherals was actively
traded. up 1-3/8 at 20·3/8. Late
Thursday the company reported
second-quarter.earnings of'77 cents
a share, up from 45 ccn~~ a share in
the corresponding period a'year
earlier.
Bank stocks took a leading iolc

in the advance. Citicorp gained 3/K _ sidiary.
to 21 -1/8; BankAmcrica 1 to 43Elan Cmp. jumped 2-J/K to 411/4; J.P. Morgan 1-5/ll to 61-5/8, 7/8 umong ·the volume leaders at
and Chemical Banking 5/8 to 38- the American Stock Exchan~c. The
7/8.
company declared aJ-for- stock
ln l hc mortgage-finance sector, split. _
Federal Home Loan Mongagc rose
Unilab Corp.; traded in the Na~1-1/4 to 42-1/8 and Federal Nation- daq over-the-counter market ,
al Mortgage 1 to 64-1/2.
- dropped 1-1/8 to 5-1/8. On ThursSierra Pacific Resources tum - day the company said it would take
bled 5-3/8 to 18-3/8. The holding a S12 million charge relatmg to a
company for a California-Nevada change in the billing system at its
electric utility cut its quarterly divi - operations in norlhcm·Califomia. dcnd from 46 cents a share to 28
Among Big Board issues, Boccents a share, citing new capital ing fell Ito 39. The stock has bocn
requirements and lower rates of under pressure since midweek ,
return allowed for the utility sub- when the company lost out to Air·
'
bus of Europe in the competition

for GE 's.aircraft engine plant in
this, Cincinnati suburb, also
declined comment Fnday.
The newspaper sa1d GE would
pay a S70 milli_on fine to sculc
cnmmal and CIVIl charges. Its
sources. refused. to disclose the
charges mvolved m the plea.
Federal prosecutors allege that
GE ~;ave Israeli Ai_r Force Gen.
Ram1 Dotan $7.9 m1lllon to mflu·
cncc his decisions regarding jet
cngmes contracts. .
The Pentagon bncny suspended
GE from competing for contracts
last month ~ausc of the alleged
fraud mvolvmg Dotan and former
GE markctong employee Herbert
Steindlcr.

GE fired Steindler in 1991. The
Israeli military demoted Dotan,
who is serving a 13-ycar prison
term in Israel for skimming mil lions of dollars in U.S. mililary aid
that paid for Israeli Air Force projccK
The alleged scheme came to
light when former GE employee
Chester Walsh sued the company
;n federal court in Cincinnati. The
Justice Department took over the
suit, which was scheduled for trial
Nov. 2. and was asking for Sl20
million in damages. ·
·
Wa) sh. who managed GE 's
engines operation in Israel from
1984 to 1988, could receive as
much as 35 percent of any money

By DAVE SKIDMORE
Associatfd Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Prices paid
by wholesalers rose modestly in
June as widespread doclincs nearly
offset a run-up in oil costs. the government said Friday in a report
illustrating weak economic
demand.
The 0.2 percent gain in the
Labor Department's Producer Price
Index was half the 0.4 percent rise
in May. For the first half of the
year, the index increased at an
annual rate of only 2 penccnt.
"The good news is you need a
microscope to sec innation, but the
bad news is you nocd a microscope
Ill sec economic growth," said Ron
Schreibman, vice president of the
National Association of Wholesaler-Distributors.
In June, energy prices were up
2.3 percent, the biggest advance
since October 1990, when Iraq's
invasion of Kuwait was sending oil
prices soaring.
But food prices rose just 0.2
percent. And excluding the volatile
food and energy components, the
index edged down 0.1 percent, the
first decline in five years.

Economists said the mild inflation outside the energy sector is
both a symptom of the extraordinarily slow recovery from the
1990-91 recession and an imponant
condition for better economic
growth later on.
"Low innation ___ is about the
only good news coming out of the
weak economic environment," said
Mark Zandi of Regional Financial
Associates in West Chester, Pa.
" It lays the foundation for
stronger growth going forward,"
he said. "It's good for the prof·
itability or most businesses. Producer prices rcncct the costs that
most businesses have to pay. If
they're not increasing , that goes
right to the bottom line.''
The lack of inflation pressure
has allowed the Federal Reserve to
cut interC-Il rates, in an attempt to
stimulate business and consumer
borrowing, with liulc fear of rekindling inflation.
Friday's price report, a~cording
to analysts, offers no reason why
the central bank cannot cut rates
again if the economy weakens further. The Fed's most recent cut
came last wack when it reduced its
'

SUPER

By Wire and Staff Reports
Storms caused flooding across
Ohio today and left thousands of
people without electricity. Tornadoes were reported in northwest
Ohio, one rippin&amp; off a high school
roof.
At least seven people were
injured in the stonns since Sunday
night, including a man struck by
lightning.
The National Weather Service
had issued flood warnings for
much of central Ohio !his morning.
The stonn dropped about 5 inches
of rain in Columbus in about six
hours overnight.

Auto.-Rentals

1419 State Rt. 7
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discount rate, the interest charged
on its loans to banks, to a 29-ycar
low of 3 percent.
This week, in response, mortgage rates fell to new lows .
According to the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corp .. 30-ycar ,
fixed-rate mortgages averaged 8.13
percent this week, the lowest since
July 1973. One-year, adjpstablcratc loans averaged 5.56, the lowest
since the corporation hegan tracking ARMs in 1984.
Gasoline costs rose 7.4 percent
last month following a 2 percent
gain in May. Fuel oil prices jumped
9 percent after a 5.7 percent rise.
NatW'Bl gas was up 1.6 percent but
residential electricity fell 0.8 percent.
Fresh fruit prices fell 10 percent
in June and vegetable price.1 tumbled 13.7 percent. Beef an&lt;! veal
were down 2.2 percent and pork,
4.2 percent. There also were drops
in the cost of eggs, rice. turkeys
andcandy.
·

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Top Prize $400
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·""8t!AE-OY'SH0011NG':.... A State 8!~.~:1
Patrol dispatcher and her eslranged b
were killed Sunday moralng Ia an apparent
murdrr-suidde. According to Shrrift Dennis
Salisbury, Jobn.Micbael Sommer, 28, apparent·

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Troopers of the Gallia-Meigs 'Post of the Slate Highway"Paual
investigated a l!it-sldp accident on US. 33 in Salisbury Township
'Friday at approXimately 6:30a.m.
Kevin C. Johnson, 33, of 4755 Bo..ssemer Rd., Nelsonville, was
northbound on U.S. 33 when a passi11g vehicle pulled back into the
norlhbound lane and struck the Iert-front of his car, the patrol
reported.
J~hnson identified lhe other&lt;· If as a green 1978 Chevrolet

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"We have a winner," said party
chairman Ronald Brown, who
would be bringing down lhe gavel
to open the festivities. "That winner 1s Bill Clinllln. We need to get
behind him and support him.''
Clinton was ~ractically out of
sight on convenbon eve, attending
church before returning to his hotel
to work on his acceptance speech
for Thursday. Today, he planned
more speech work plus a morning
visit to a century-old prognun that
provides health care and other services to the poor.
Thanking Jackson for his
endorsement, Clinton sounded the
change theme that will echo
throughout the convention hall this
week.
"Reverend Jackson, Senator
Gore and I share a common goal of
rebuilding America and pulling
people first," Clinton said.
"Together our message of real
change will restore dignity and purpose for all the American people.''
Gore was far more visible, making the round of lhe Sunday news
shows before flying to the conven·
tion city, where he was warmly

-

welcomed by his homcstate delegation.
"We Americans are better than
the Bush-Quayle administration
says we are," Gore said. "We ·are
going to do our very best, with
your help, to offer the American
people the best chance for positive,
progrcssi ve, constructive change. ••
Outside, workers scrubbed the
plaza around the historic entertainment hall, police paced everywhere
and delegates enjoyed a little sightseeing, shopping and partying
before getting down to business.
Unimpressed by the hoopla was
67-year-old New Yorker Earl Sanford, watching the cleanup of his
favorite part ncar the Garden.
"Company comes, you've gotta
spruce up," said Sanford . ." In a
week it will go back to normal everybody dog-eat-dog_''
As always, !here were protests.
Both sides in the abortion debate
were massing throughout the even~
as were advocates for other causes
ranging from better treatment of
the homeless to better treatment of
women in the military.
Continued on pllge 3

Pomeroy police probe accidents

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to commit himself to "a verbal ftg
leaf of endorsement... some kind of
balloons and false unifomiity. ••
He rcitenlled that the pany must
change its positions and come closer to his views to get his endorsement
Brown wants the party platform
to endorse raising the minimum
wage by $1 and fight the administration's trade treaty with Mexico,
among other things.

,...--Local briefs-__,

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In Logan County in west-central
Ohio, some Lakeview residents
were rescued from their homes by
boat, said sheriffs dispatcher who
would not identify herself.
Three bridges also were washed
out in the coWJty, she said.
Heavy damage also was reponed in other parts of the state ,
including northwest Ohio, where
tornadoes were reponed Sunday
night.
A Lucas County sheriff's dispatcher said a tornado damaged
houses and blew the roof off
Anthony Wayne High School in
Continued on page 3

Democrats to open four-day
national convention tonight

NEW YORK (AP)
Democrats open Bill Clinton's
crowning convention tonight minus
their traditional internal warfare,
hoping a unified front propels the
Arkansas governor to a summer
A handgun was found near the lead in this year's confounding
From Miff and wirr reports
Mrs. Sommer was a dispatcher
three-way presidential race.
body,lhe
sheriff said.
A Gallia County woman was at the State Highway Patrol post in
After a turbulent, triumphant
Mrs. Sommer had worked at the
shot to death by her estranged hus- Gallipolis and had worked lhe 4
primary
season and weeks of
paual posl about seven years. Mr.
band who then killed himself, Sher- p.m.-to-midnight shifl Saturday.
iff Dennis R. Salisbury said.
She was C\lfl'ent dispatcher of Sommer worked at the Bob Evans buildup, Clinton's moment is at
sausage plant in Bidwell, Salisbury hand: Some 4,288 delegates will
Mary Ann Sommer and John lhe year at the post.
crowd Madison Square Garden
said.
Michael Sommer, both 28, were
Salisbury said the couple began
found fatally shot in the woman's arguing when she got home from
The coroner and assistant coro- beginning tonight for a four-day
ner were both unavailable for com- parley that will send him off to bathome on Ann Drive in Clay Town- work.
tle President Bush and Ross Perot.
ship ncar Gallipolis on Sunday, the
A sheriff's deputy who was ment Monday morning.
For a party known best for its
Willis Funeral Home in Galliposheriff said.
called to the scene heard shots as
"We still have some witnesses he was approaching the house, Sal- lis is handling arrangements for bitter feuds, all was remarkably
calm.
to talk to, but we aie ruling it an isbury said.
Mr. and Mrs. Sommer.
Clinton's choice of Tennessee
apparent murder-suicide," he said.
Sen. AI Gore as his running mate
was panned by some liberals, but
for the most part was cheered for
its moderate, generational message.
Jesse Jackson's endorsement was
tepid, but delivered.
Jerry Brown was the sole Clinton primary rival withholding his
An Apple Grove man died Sun- lion released by the Point Pleasant dove from lhe diving jloard at the bacldng. and Clinton held out hope
pool around 4:26p.m. and was ob- the former California governor
day at Harmon Park Pool, possibly City Police. .
by drowning, according to infonnaMark R. Creamer, 29, reportedly served to have some difficulty un- would join the fold.
der lhf water. According to a
~kesperson for the city police,
lifeguards at the pool dove in to
recover Creamer, who reportedly
seemed to be in some son of medical distress.
The Pomeroy Police Department investigated two auto accidents
According to the spokesperson,
over the weclcend.
CPR was performed on Creamer
At4:05 p.m. on Saturday. Rebecca Davidson, 27. of Welchtown
prior to being transported to
Hill in Pomeroy, was drivin~ a 1976 Ford owned by Lisa Lilley at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Pearl's Exxon ·on East Mam Street. She backed into a vehicle
Creamer's body was later
owned by Martha Boynton of Spring Avenue. Light damage was
transported to the stale medical ex·
sustiined Ill the dri•er's side of Lilley's car, and moderate damage
amincr's office in Charleston for an
to the passenger side of the Boynmn vehicle.
autopsy.
No citations were issued.
The spokesperson said it has n01
On Saturday at 8:44 p.m., Judith Flowers of Racine was traveling
been conllrmed yet whether or not
on Welchtown Hill in a 1981 Oldsmobile, when she drifted too far
Creamer died from drowning or
to the left of the road and hit a stone wall.
some other cause.
Her car suffered light damage, and no citations were issued.

Apple ·Grove, W. Va., man dies
at Point Pleasant Swimming Pool

84 mootb fmancing

900 CARS, TRUCKS &amp; VANS PRICED TO SELL

8'Bed

' ly shot and kliled bis wire, Mary Ann Sommer,
28, at ber bouse and then turned the gun on
himsrlr. Shown here is Mrs. Sommer's home on
Ann Drive in Clay Township, south or Gallipolis. (OVP photo by Jim Frec11111n)

Apparent murder-suicide probed

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Brown, aeteated by Clinton in
the primary season, said he has
spoken twice by telephone with lhf
Arkansas governor in recent days.
Asked whether he would
endorse Clinton without the
changes he wants in the party platform, Brown said, "No one would
believe me. It wouldn't help Clinton. It wouldn't help anyone.''
On ABC's " Good Morning
America," Brown said he refused

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Columbus, said no evacuations
were ordered.
"We don't consider this situa·
tion life-threatening. People should
:.. ;t be careful," he said.
The storm cut power to about
20,000 customers of Columbus
Southern Power Co. in Franklin
County and southern Delaware
Councy.
In Plain City, about 20 miles
northwest of Columbus. authorities
offered to help any of the 2,200
residents evacuate because of
flooding in the Union County city,
By mid-morning, about 40 people
went to the ftre station.

~

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ton neighborhood on the west side
of Columbus was flooded.
Many roads in Columbus were
blocked because of flooding,
including some major highways
through the city .
Although the heavy rains had
later in the morning, water levels
were still rising.
"It's bad all over, and it's still
coming up at this time,'' said Darla
Nicklas of the Franklin County
Sheriffs Department.
Columbus police officer Jim
O'Donnell at the city's emergency
operation center said flooding in
Franklin County, which includes

NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry
Brown said today he would not
give Bill Clintlln "a verbal fig leaf
of endorsement" but added he
hopes to be able to throw his support to the Democratic presidential
candidate soon.
"I am hopeful that sometime
this week, next week, sometime in
the next couple of months, we are
going to be on the same track," the
former California governor said on
CBS's "This- Morning."
.. -

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Ron McDade of Columbus
Soulhern Power said linemen and
repair crews were kept busy over
lhe weekend because of local lhundersuams.
After scattered outages as a
result of lightning striking trans·
formers Friday evening, workers
were out repairing isolated cases
until 2 a.m. Saturday in lhe GalliaMeigs area.
Saturday, around 5:34 p.m.•
lightning struck a transfoniler near
the Rt. 7 roadside park above
Kanauga, leaving 1,072 customers
of Columbus Southern Power in

the Addison substation service area
(from 0-Kan Harbor to Cheshire
and back ofRt554) without power
for 42 minutes. ·
Workers were out again late Saturday evening and early Sunday
morning clearing debris from lines
throughout the area. Approxmately
two inches of rain fell during Saturday evening 's stonn.
Buckeye Rural Electric reponed
that the weekend smrms !mocked
out service out to 1,07 5 customers
in Lawrence and Gallia counties
over the weekend. All lines were
back on by Sunday morning.
Much of the low-lying Franklin-

43fd GaDia C•aty JUDi• Fair

FREE POPCORN AND SOFT DRINKS

"HOT"

Area bit Saturday

Jerry Brown withholds
endorsement of Clinton

Inventory Clearance

Radio

•

614·446-0736

MasterCard

Low tonight near 70. Chance
ol rain 30 pen:enl. Tuesday,
partly cloudy. High in mid-90s.

1 Secllon, 10 Pages 25 cents
A Mullimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio Monday, July 13, 1992

Near Kanauga Drive-In

l«bot C..ry's t.,at C. &amp; hct f.,., 1f IN YUill

8'Bed
Sliding Rear Window
Wldeside Body
4.3 Liter V-6
5-Speed Manual Transmission

4640
Super Lotto
14-20-32-33-37-46
Kicker: 220853

Storms cause flooding, power outages over .weekend

RIDE (I E-Z PAY

Food prices up 0.2% during June

Pick 4:

Vol. 43, No. 50

RodgerS w:'
'Z Ride
,;:,- ·
'

870

Copyrighted 1992

the government recovers.
Blue chips that contributed to
His attorney, lames Helmer, the Dow Jones industrials' gain
sa1d Fnday that he hadn't read the included United Technologies. up
published report.
718 at 51-1/4; McDonald's, up !"There really isn 't ~.nything I 3/8 at47 ; Procter &amp; Gamble, up
can conflfm or deny , Helmer 3/4 at 49-5/8 , and Ameri can
said. "The criminal side of whatev- Express, up 1/4 at24.
cr mvest1gat1on 1s gomg on IS bemg
The Nasdaq composite index for
handled by the Department of Jus- the over-the-counter market gained
ticc, and as counsel for the whistle- · 2.96 to 567.71. At the Amcx, the
blower we could not have any market value index was up .48 at
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Pick 3:

Page4

Reported GE settlement draws no comment ~~~~~;~~i::s~fr,~:~~

EVENDALE (AP)- General
Electric Co. and government officials arc being quiet about a newspaper report that the two have
negotiated a settlement in a fraud
case.
GE's Aircraft Engines Dvision
is ready to plead guilty July 22 to
criminal charges that it filed false
claims totaling more than 549 million with the Israeli Defense Minis try and the Pentagon, The Wall
Strtel Journal reported Friday.
" We just have no comment at
all," said Dean SL Dennis , a
spokesman for the Justice Departmcnt in Washingl011 .
P.Jula Kollslcdt, a spokeswoman

Ohio Lottery

Pirates rally
to defeat
Reds 7-6

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The Meigs County Board a Education will hold their regular
July meeting on Wednesday at :i p.m. instead of Tuesday at 7 p.m. .

EMS units answer calls
Meigs Emergency Servica units answered 12 calls for assistance
_
Continued on page 3

Blaze caused
by arson
Arson was listed as the cause of
a late-night ftre Sunday that caused
minor damage to the Dan Tax
office building at 53 Coun Street in
Gallipolis.
According to a report from the
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depart- •
• ment, the fire was set behind tbe
building in a used-clothes depository for lhe Outreach Center.
The fii'C spread from the depository to the edge of the roof and an
overhang at the rear of the building, a report stated. The fife was
confined to the first floor.
The Galli~lis Fire Department
responded wtth 33 firefighters and
six trucks. Neighboring fii'C departments from Rio Grande; Point
Continued on page 3

SUIT.NG UP • A group or ~allipolis Fire
Departm'eDt members are plctur!~Cf sultbla up as
they bead baek into the smoke ftUfd Dan Tu
oMce building on Court Street Sunday ~lght.

Tblrty·three GaiUpolis tlrdlgblfts raponded to
tbe sc:eae while VInton, Rio Grande, Point Pleasant, aad Middleport departments provided
mutual ald. (OVP photo by Jim Frrrman)
(

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