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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Wlm 1IW' :;' . P' TO TIIIAA. .e TME PlfOOUC.T ""'
Of '-'WOI6 rs YfM!I
a-EYOWnOM

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Television
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Viewing
M

FRI.. JULY 17
MNING

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NewRVHS
tradition
'
becomes
a reality

PHIBOS

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12

SB YS0

IIl ~II

•
~I. MISTER BROWN . -M'I'
NAME IS CORMAC .. I'M
YOUR SWIMMING BUDD'I'..

lII

Overheard at political rally:
"Have you heard about the
Politicians Polka? You take
one step foreword, two steps
• baek then you ........ the
TENAGE
Issues."

D H U EN

l ADMIT I DON'T KNOW

MUC~ ABOVT SWIMMING ...

IS 'I'OUR NOSE SUPPOSED
TO 60 ABOVE TI-lE WATER

OR 6ELOW T~E WATER?

15 16

I,

75 cents

Sunda.'

B-1
•

Boston slips_past Minnesota 1-0
What doctoring was like in Addison
area during 1850s · Sands • Page A-6
Rodney Downing, 1897-1992
By Fred W. Crow • Page A-4

I I I 1· I I

A Complete the chuckle quoted
. V by filling In the miuing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

7

1

lElTERS

SCRAtt1-liTS ANSWERS
,_,,
Vulgar· Cease· Annex· Heckle· NEVER on SALE
Two friends were out shopping. One lady turned to
her friend and uked, "Have you ever noticed that if a
shoe lite ills NEVER on SALE?"
NORTH

Vol. 27, No. 22
Copyrightld tl92

t9842

tAS
WEST

tQ 10

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tAKJIOl
•Qu
SOVTH

(Offfe

tAU
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$~0P

Ttif$~

DAY$. I

:

DON'T wA!JT ;
TO 8~ TtiAT !
wiD~
AviAI'~·

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,.

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tQ~

Guess not
who holds her

MO#lt-JI/'16 N~w$.

.KJt
Vulnerable: Both

Dealer: South
Sootb

By Phillip Alder

~

1•

West
zt

Nortlt

s•Pass

Eost
Pus

Pass
Pass
People like to guess, but prefer to, 4•
know. We guess which numbers to se- ·
Opening lead: +K
teet In the lottery, but we would much
prefer to be told the winning combina- '
tion in advance. A certainty Is better
than a speculation.
The same thillg can apply in bridge.
Sometimes you bave to guesa which
IOPJPDIII!III holds a particular card. But .no guesswork, as tong aa your blackyou hunt assiduously, you will suit tricks stand up. Aller ruffing the
uncover a vital clue, or you will spot a third diamood, cash the ace and king
line of
that makes the guess ofspades,lollowed by tile ace aild killg
of clubs. Nat, ruff the club jack In the
Against J~&gt;ur four·heart contract, dummy. Now ruff dummy'• lui dla·
West attacks with the diamond king, mood ill your band. Finally, wtadrlft
the diamond ace and the diamond by teadina your remalnillg spade.
jack, East dlscardiDg a spade on the
Tbls brings eftfYOM down to three
third round. After you ruff, how should cards. Dummy has the K·t·l of hearts
you continue?
and you have the A.J-10 of bearts. It
You have lost two tricks and are . doesn't matter wblch opponent wins
faced with a potential loser In each the spade exit. Whatever he returns,
major suit. You could take the club fl. you have avoided the lou of a trump
nesse. U II wins, you can dilcard dum· trick.
my's spade loser. But If the club fl.
AJwaYJ try for "Headl 1 win, tails
nesse toses·. you·wiU have to find tile you 101e.•
heart queen to make your contract.
e&gt; -~~•rw••--• ••tm••••l'll:
There Is a better line that requires

L------------1

7-17

ALLEYOOP
IN THI$ CASE tT GOULO
liE /; MIITiill OF UVING
Oil !WING!

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Tbe World Almanac Gil Cros.Word Puzzle
ACROSS

37 Overweight

1 Flnt chief
)UIIIcl

4 Clntrll IIIII
8 All·di111nce
12 Author U,.
berto13 Pllce lor

lkltiftt
14 Enltrbtlner

:·.MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
.---------::~

l HOPS 'THE Ei-IRL 1:
~~ ea.AeDA.Y WII.L.

..

15UT IF e.HE CANT
f3e eleALliiFUL- ...

- llcEnUII

ITI-tc:3J HliR. FA'll-1~ ~ID
ONN A PIZZA F*I'R' OR.

15 FHghllell

bird

18 Gentrll

IIOIIUIItlon

Bli BeA-UTIFUL. ...

1t81f
20 Bulftght
chMr

21 AaiiUn ot un
22 CllnMnl
24 g:,n~om•n
28 Fntert
30 Bulhr hllrdO
34 Uncle
35BIIwHn

41 W111t't Up,
42 -?
_.
contendlra
43 Bet of
lymplomt
45Soltp

lnl'tdlent

glrnlah

MY ALARM

JEST WENT
OFF,PAW !!

Elliott, Rodney Alderman, and Mike Shoemaker; baek, Carlos
Wood, Skip MeadiiWI, BUI Kubn, Bob Howard, Ed Vollborn, Dave
Mills, and Fred DeeL (Times-Sentinel photo by Kris Cothran)

District offtc..ials still seek
GALLIPOLIS • "Contrary to
what loeal citizens have been told
by opponents of the plan, EPA will
write a plan for the districL"
The above statement was made
by Dale Neal, chainnan of the poli-

GALLIPOLIS - Selling Gallia
COIDity.
That',&amp;the goal of the Gallia ·
COIIIIIY ~bee pf ~and
the Community Improvement Corporation, two organizations recently combined in that each now has
the same president and executive
director.
The chamber and CIC were
combined to help them achieve
their goal of selling or promoting
Gallia County. Additionally, with
one executive director, the two can
direct their activities to prevent
duplication (two people doing
essentially the same job) and concentrate talent where it can do the
most good.
The chamber and CIC now have
the same president. Ron McDade.

47 COmpnt pt.

48 Tile (11.1
51 -de rntr
53 SPfillg month

57 "cllftomln-

ltlon
80 Conlldlln -

I

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word

vehiCle

84 Ruutan VIto

2 ........ DOint

ea
ea 11tr1nt
Tint ""'

Colo. lnd llo.
3e Hamburlll

FAIR BOARD MEMBERS • Pictured durln1a recent meetin1
are members of tbe Gallla County Junior Fair Board as they plan
ror the 43rd annual fair, Aug. 3-8. Front, 0 tor): Garry Fellure,
Tim.. Massie, Gary Roach, Danella Greeue, Ken Saunders, Eugene

ratifi~ation

cy committee for the Athens-Gal- ment plan for Erie-Huron.
The OEPA is preparing a local
lia-Hoeking-Jackson-Meigs-Vinton
Solid Waste District, following a solid waste management plan for
release by the Ohio Environmental the fiBI time under the state's solid
Protection Agency stating it was waste law. Because the Erie-Huron
preparing a solid waste manage- Solid Waste Management District

Gallia Chamber of Commerce,
CIC undergo reorganization

31 TVacc-rr

81 C'rtturd
82 a.tor't kin
83 Prlnttr'l

word
3 '-""'·
4 Noble utlt
5 12,Romln

DOWN

8 Not 0111 of
7 Abllltilll

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8111MUII Of

IT'S TIME FER

MY ~OSSIP

BREAK

forearmed.

I •

LIBRA (8epl. 23-0ct. 23) lnsteed of
lool&lt;lng lor justllk:atlon to negleCt teaks,
seek reasons why y011 should accomplish them. Latllng things pile up on you
now could cause real headaches later.
n you roatly take plilll to search It out, SCORPIO (Oct. 24-How. Z2) You'll enJoy
thM II a very good ch8nCO yO\I CO\IId being around people today, but II the
lind a aocond c/leMOI lor Income In the group Is too largo, there's a possibility
yMr ahead.
you might feet raiher uncomfortable. Do
CANCER (Junt 21-.lulf 22) Others somathlng tun with fewer participants. ·
might be able to gat ~ay with telling . SAGtnARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec. 211
till tales today, but not y011. II you em- 1 You're a good starter today but you
belillh 'fOIJt IICCornpll~tl, you're might begin to ieiHn your drive lutt
· oatting yout'llll up to be clllltengod by when the goal line Ia In light: II you do.
~othet'l. t&lt;now where to 10otc !Of roman&lt;:e your admirable beginning might be IOf
· M&lt;! you'll lind ~. Tile Aatro-Graph nought.
' Matchmaker lnatantty reveals which CAPRICORN (DeC. 22-Jen. 1t) Usually,
'

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l

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you're not taken In by others too easily.
Today, however, could be an exception,
and you might buy a cock-and-bull story told y011 by a spellbinder.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fib. 11) This
might not be one of your better days to
bargain hunt, so be careful. Before buyIng anything, examine tile merchandise
closely lor Imperfections.
PIICII (Fob. 20-MMch 211) it could
provo unwise to seek advice today from
s0fne0118 who provided you with poor
counsel recently. Evon though _thlslndl·
vidual means well, a lack of wisdom to
guide you will prevail.
ARIES (Mirch 21·April11) To make a
favorable lmprelllon on oth«s today, ·
It's Imperative you stand on y011r own
two lett. Companions might shy away
from you HtheY teet you're not carrying
your lair lhore ot tile load.
TAURUS (Aprll20-lbJ 211) Try to tem·
per yO\Ir h~ with realism t&lt;!day, so
that y011 won't end up being dlUppolnt·
ed. When making oooeesrnents, 1M
thlngo ao they actually are, not aa you
wish IIIeY(...,
- ··21-JuM 2111 Thil. Ia not
OIMIII
tile dey to II-* too heavily on Lady
Luck in metttrl fttat allect your ltltUI.
She might be too busy hefplng your
Cllmpatltlon.

'CI

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "life mey not be boaulllul, but it'l int-tlng "
- Sir John Robert Seeley.
·

.•

·-~- ....

- I

Partly Cloudy
P•rtly cloudy. Highs mld.fiOs.
Lows In 60s.

A -·PMultlmldlalnc.

County. The public niore closely
relates to a chamber or commcrte
and has a beuer understanding of
their mission in the community. On
the other hand, the CIC works with
reduce expenses.
clients
who in most cases do not
. Each group still has its own
want the public or their i:ompeti·
board of directors.
Although the chamber and the lion to kn9w what they lli'C doing.
"I believe by combining the two
CIC have been reorganized and
combined, they are still different under one umbrella, we have a lot
and work 10 achieve their goals in mm to sell when soliciting memdifferent ways.
bers. They should get a better
rewm
on their investment because
The CIC's focus has been on
industrial promotion and develop- of a closer coordinated effort.
ment, whereas the chamber, an
"The chamber and CIC basically
recent y~. has been more recog- have the same goal. The CIC, hownized as a promoter of commercial ever, has some le~al authority that
business.
does not exist wath a chamber of
According to Fowler: "The commerce 'which is why it is neceschamber of commerce should be sary to have both of the organlzathe primary promoter of G!lllia lions active in the community."
and executive director, Jack
Fowler.
One of the reasons for placing
the twO under one director was to

of plan

By KEVIN PINSON
Times-Sentinel Stair
GALLIPOLIS - Twenty-six
members of the Save Our Schools
commiuee mel at the Gallia County
Junior Fair Grounds Friday ni~ht
and, after forming an assoeialton
and electing offtcers, agreed to join
Steve Sanders, 1594 Bladen Rd.,
Crown City, in his lawsuit against
the Gallia County School Board.
The suit requests a temporary
injunction against the consolidation
of lite four county high schools .
The hearing is set for July 22 at 10
a.m.
Elected were: David Mills, of
Hannon Trace, president; Morris
Toler, of North Gallia, vice president and Odella Taylor, also of
North Gallia, secretary/treasurer.
The association agreed to wait until
a future meeting to elect representatives from each of the fow school
districts because of poor turnout
and because the Kyger Creek and
Southwestern school districts were
not represented at lite meeting.
Wills expressed concern at the
low auendance. ''People have lost a
lot of interes~" he said. "There's no
other way to put it, people coasidcr
it a lost cause."
The association then discussed
possible alternatives to the consolidation issue. The suggestion that
seemed most popular with the
members is joining the county and
city schools and having two or

thrCe high schools in the county to
serve all lite students. The commit·
tee chose nolto decide on an alternative solution until after the hearing.
Sander said the important thing
was that the association had been
fonned to show the judge that they
were willing to work on a solution.
Wills, who lead the discussion,
read a copy of Sander's suit, which
was filed with the Gallia County
Court of Common Pleas June 8.
The suit asks for an injunction
because of safety and health problems of sending the students to the .
old Kyger Creek High School and .
also argues that the building is the
least energy efftcient in the county.
Wills also read a lener from
Judge Donald A. Cox explaining
why he asked the Ohio Supreme
Court to appoint another judge to
the case. Cox said in the letta that
he was too personally involved in
the case and felt that he did not
have a solution to offer, so he
requested to be taken off the case.
The letter was addressed to Sanders
and the school board.
Before closing the meeting,
Sanders asked for people to show
their support and attend the hearing.
"We lh~ association urge the
county to attend the hearing
Wednesday at 10 o'clock in the
courthouse," he said.

failed to ratify its local plan, it will
lose several benefits. stated the
release.
Under House Bill 592, local
officials must ratify the plan priilr
to state approval. If the plan is not
ratified, OEPA must prepare the
plan. At that stage, the local district
loses the ability to collect fees on
wastes disposed in landfills within
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
the Erie-Huron districL It also loses County Chamber of Commerce and
the ability to adopt rules restricting the Community Improvement Corout-of-district waste, operation of poration have a new secretary.
solid waste facilities, and inspecSharon Bowman, Gallipolis,
tion of out-of-state wastes.
began working for the chamber on
Collection of dimict fees at June 17.
landfills in the Erie and Huron
She has nine years of experience
counties has been tenninated and in working with county governOEPA has initiated steps to prepare ment and most recently served as
a plan for the district, according to an administrative assistant for the
the release.
Gallia County Sheriff's Deparl"This release shows OEPA is menL
very committed to House Bi11592,"
Sharon and her husband, John ,
said Neal.
have two children, John and
House BiU S92 provides a com- Angela.
prehensive, flexible framework for
She replaces Robin Halsted who
local management of solid waste, is moving to PeMsylvania where
iccording to OEPA Director Don- she wiU be an administtative assisald R. Schre~ardus. The Erie- tant at Northeastern Bank in ScranHuron District i failure to ratify its ton.
plan means that it gives up that
Robin's husband, Jeff, will
local conlrol, he added.
attend the Baptist Bible Seminary
SHARON BOWMAN
Giving up local conlrol is just at Clarks Summit, Pa., and has
Continued on A·l
accepted a job as marketing direc- tor of National Sporting Goods.

Bowman named new Gallia
Chamber and CIC secretary

Three Meigs County
emergency
crews
will
benefit
from
program
redu.c~~n
Ju
signs are rornanllcally per1ocl tor you .
Mall $2 plus a long, sell-address8d.
stamped envelope to Matcllmaker, c/o
this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428,CleveBERNICE
land, OH 44101-3428.
BEDE OSOL LEO
(Jutr D-Aug. 221 In joint ventures
today, there should be a clear-cut understanding ot expenses so that they
be shared
equally.
•~------· will
agreement,
this may
not beWithout
the case.an
VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 221 Be on guard
In your one-to-one encounters today;
others might not deal as fairly with you
as you will with them. Forewarned Is

.

Mills to head
s,os committee

1-IHI

•uu

/'10, TtMN~5. l S'TOPP~D Dlll/'1~1/'16
COFfff wtilt.f FfAl&gt;l/'16 Tti~

~~~
¥.!'.!:
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• 4 Sections, 108 Pogee

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, July 19,1992

tK 71

PHILLIP
ALDER

. Along the rir................ 8 1·6
Business/Farm ............... Dl-8
Classined ....................... 02-7
Deaths..............................A·2
Ediloral ............................ A-4
Sports............................. C1·6
Weather........................... A-3

•
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e ~~:c:~~~~ER I I I I I I I I I
BRIDGE

Inside

C-1

17

By JIM GLAUNER
Times--Sentinel Stair
POMEROY • Three Meigs
County emergency crews wUI benefit from a restructured rural fiJ'C
department program underway
within the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division of
Forestry.
Recent budget cuts within the
division have ·forced officials to
reevaluate and resuucture the rural
fu:c dcpartmont program to remain
a leader in rue ptOteCtion.
Aecording to Don Brooks, Forest Manager at Zaleski SWt Forest,
the$e cuts have created the next
evolutionary phase of their wildfire
protection program.
"With few.er people and less
money," Brooks explained, "the
Division of Forestry is still committed to achieve ats mission to
provide leadership in wildfue managemenl by providing training,
equipment and technical assistanee
to local volunteer fire depart·
ments.•
The Meigs County Emergency
Managemenl/Emergency Services
Agency will be loaned a 3SO John
Deer crawler tractor with a transport truck. Olive Township Voluntecr File Depanment has received a
4x4 brush truck. Racine Volunteer
Fire Department has also received
a 4x4 brush truck.
Fiscal year budget restra.int~

I

have resui!Cd in _the
?f
personnel, tm~ng the diviSion s
ability to acuv~ly suppress wild~IJ'CS, Brooks said. The_ Slaff reducuons, through the closmg of some
forestry units in the Athens disnict,
has created an excess of fu:e suppression equipment. Since this
equipment was purchased and
designed to baule wildfu:es, it was
made available to volunteer fire
depanments. The excess equipment.
is being loaned to volunteer fire
depanments in Athena, Meigs and
Washington COIDities.
This equipment is on loan with
the followmg stipulations:
-The ageneies inust agree 10
assume the responsibility of main·
taining the equipment.
-Any fu:e fi.hter working on a
crew using thas e&lt;Juipment must
· attend annual/penodic trai'\ing,
conducted by the ODNR, DiVIsion
of Forestry. Those training class
consillll o( basic wUdllnl suppression tactics, safety, equipment uso ·
and maintenance and fu:e line constructlon with a aawler tniCIOI'.
One training class has llready
beeri conducted in Wuhington
County with a secQnd being
planned during the month of July.
Two more classes wiU be offered m
Meigs County during August,
including a brush fire training
coune for all members of the coonty Emerpncy M~ Service on

August M. A special course will follow that session to train interested
persons in opention of the crawler
tractor.

The Division of Forestry will be refres.h the crew members, as well
monitoring and inspecting this as tram new members.
equipment annually and will pro"The Division of Forestry is
vide annual training sessions to confident that programs such as
·

EQUIPMENT LOANED • ne Oblo De,.-tmeDt !II Natural
Rnources, DIYIIIoe ot F'CIIdtljllu loued llll4a4 bra* tntk to
the R~c:lae Volanteer Fire Department u a part ot ltll wlldftre
manaamenl PJ'OII'IIII• Here, Racine F.Jre Clllel Jolin Holmu, left,
aecepts tbe trueli from Don Brooks, Forest Mauaer •t Zaleski
State Forest

'•

I

l

this
allow the 9DNR to remain
a leader m rural wtldland fue management." Brooks said,"and will
provide lltlltimur:n ljre protection to
tile people of Ohto.

�.• ,. ,1 . . . . . . . . .. . ........ . . . .. . . . . .

Pomeroy-MidCJieport ,Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Plealiant, wv

----Area deaths-:J{enneth Bissell

·.·. LONG BO'l'TOM ~ Kemielh B~sscll, 51, Long BoUom, died

•

July 19, 1992

Ferguson trial
to begin Monday
•

'Qmelery.

Friends may call at the funeral home Sunday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9

-~~~ lieu or flowtza conlributions may be made to the Meigs County

.

.•Heat Fund.

Elizabeth F. Dunkle
POINT PLEASANT. EJilJ!beth F. "Libby" Mayes Dunkle, 82, of Point
Pleulnt, W.Va., diod Friday, July 17, 1992, in Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal after aloog~lncu.
•:;;. Born May 6, 1910; in Alhland. Ky., she was a daughter of the late Al-

Gin llld Map (Biul) Jordan.

:•:A member ollhe ~ Oospel Church, Bas~ ~venue, Gallipolis,
)i)d die SJo1:!net SOciety ol Columbus, she was a Jelired food serv1ce
1JIIIIIger ir. Port Hayes Hotel in Columbus. She also served as a foster
~for Ma.ton County Schools.

•• ·She w• smeclcd in dealb by her husband, Norman Dunkle; two sons.
IOben E. Mlyel; Jr. and Muter Sp. James A. Mayes, and one grandson.
~Yeapr.

·:•SII'Yivon Include lhree dauahlm. Noona Holcomb of Point Pleasant,
~len Doclim:, Tllomville, Ohio, and Erma Miller, Columbus; 15
~ildren, 21 pa~-~bildren,llld one gmll-great·grandchild
· ·The f...erll will be 'l'ueaday, 2 p.m., at the Wilcoxen Puneml Home,
Pleasant, with PISIIlr W'dlard Blankemhip officiating. Burial will be
" the Hendcnon Cerneaery, Henderson, W.Va ..
::Friends may call Monday at the funeral home, from 6 to 9 p.m.

· Point
•

~nna
.
•

Sprague

; : RU'ILAND • Anna E. Sprague. 88, Sheets Road. Dexter. died SaiUr!fiy July 18, 1992 at the Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
~. She was born August 8, 1903 in Piasbutah to the late Abner and LilIlon Ferguson Shafter. She was a housewife and member of the Mount
Onion Church in Harrisonville.
•: Survivors include five sons, Dwight Sprague of Dexter; George and
Arnold Sprague of WellingiOD; Carl Sprague of Vermilion and Russell
~e of Loraine; thJCC daughters. Lois Lane of Fall Branch, Tenn;
~lyn Hendershu11 of Lorain and Dorothy Topinka or Chicago; two sislip, Belly Steele and Helen C~ of Pittsburgh; 31 grandchildJCn, 26
Fat grandchildren and several ruec:es and nephews.
•: She was piCCeded in death by her husband, Charles Sprague; three
~and two sisters.
•. Friends may call from 2 to 4 p.m. and 710 9 p.m. Monday at the BirehOOd Funeral Hlll!e in Rutland. Services will be held 11 a.m.
81
t6e Mount Union Chureh with Pastor Joe Sayre officialin~. Burial wi1 be
i.Q:Miles Cemetery in Rutland.

Tuesdar

•

Thomas E. Ferguson begins Mort·
day, moJC than five years after the
complaint was filed.
Elisabeth Tschantz, a former
regional administrator in Fergu·
son's office, alleges in her·June 4,
1987, suit that Ferguson fortod her
into a sexual relationsllip and
coerced her to pressure employees
for contributions to his election
campaigns.
.
Ms. Tschantz. 48. contends she
suffmd a mental breakdown " a
result
Ferguson 'has denied the accusations and has noted that Ms.
Tschantz was on mental disability
leave.
Ferguson, 63, has been audi10r
since 1975. Ms. Tschantz started in
the auditor's office in February
1977 and quit in Augustl986.
Cuyahoga County Common
PIens Judge Lillian .GJCCOC has not
yet ruled on a motion by Ferguson's anomeys seeking a summary
judgment in the auditor's favor.
Ms. Greene has ordered both
sides not to discuss most issues in
the case publicly.
·
Ms. Tschantz ' s lawyer, John
Duda, said he e~pects the lrill to
last 10 days. He planned to call
several witnesses. including Ms.
Tschantz.
Duda says Ferguson fought des·
ptzately to avoid lrial.
''I believe he delayed the ease
through legal maneuvering ...
because of his political situation,"
Duda said.
Ferguson spokesman John Con·
ley referred questions to Fergu·
son's lawyer, Henry Hentemann.
who did not return two telephone
calls seeking comment
The ease centers on the nature
or the ·relationship between Ferguson and Ms. Tschantz. The Plain
Dealer reported in Man:h that Fer~uson admitted in a November

The trial was delayed while
lawyers for both sides argued
Y(hether it should be heard in Common Pleas Court .or the Ohio Court
of Claims. Ferguson· s lawyers
argued that the Cuyahoga County
court lacked jurisdiction. Judge
Greene agreed and dismissed the
case in Apri11988.
Duda a~ed the dismissal to
the 8th OhiO Court of Appeals. The
state appeals court reversed the dismissal but issued a stay in the proceedings, pending the ouiCOme of a
parallel suit filed in the Coun of
Claims .
Ferguson's attorneys appealed
the 8th Dislrict court's ruling to the
Ohio Supreme Court.
Meanwhile, Ferguson's auorneys bad argued that the case
should be heard in the Court of
Claims - the mna for most cases
against the state - since the suit
involved activities during Ferguson'sterminofftce.
But the Court of Claims ruled in
December 1988 that the allegations
in the suit concerned conduct outside the scope of Ferguson's
ei11Ployment by the state.·
·Ferguson appealed the Court of
Claims decision to the lOth Ohio
District Coun of Appeals, which
upheld theCounofClaims.
The state Sup~eme Court, basing
its decision on the reasoning of the
Court of Claims, ruled in January
1991 that the matter belonged in
Common Pleas Court after all, and
ordered both sides to prepare for
lrill.

Ferguson did not appeal the
lOth Dislrict Court's decision to
the Supreme Coun.

Governor says reJt.f.orm

Aceu-Weather0 forecast for daytime conditions and high
MICH.

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Other sections establish one
Republicans in the Legislature have rural and one urban pilot project
CORle up with a bill that they Claim that provides cash incentives for
can save about $170 million a year welfare families that keep their
in welfaJe costs.
childJCn in school and see that they
Sen. Richard Finan, R·Cincin- get ~egular health checkups. . ·
nati, and Rep. WiJliam Thompson.
Thompson conceded the legtsla·
R-Delphos , introduced it their lion will trigger controversy. But
respecnve chambers last week and he said Medicaid continues to devsaid it inccxporates the reclll!men- astate the state budget "and 1 think
dations of a Voinovich administra- there's broad agreement in Columbus and across Ohio that this is
tion task force.
The plan is SUJC 10 be controverFinan
headed
the task force that
sial.
what
needs
10 be done.''
It provisions include require· came up with the recoinmendations
ments that welfare mothers be which Gov. George Voinovich
instructed in family planning, Jeleased June 29.
Voinovich said the recommenincluding birth control, and advised
dations
could save $169.2 million
by the state to abstain from sex.
in
state
fw11ls
and $164.8 million in
It also expornls in-home care for
the elderly to reduce the need for federal funds in the fltSI year.
Ohio's human services promore cosily nursing-home care. It
requires recipients of Ohio's grams cost about $13.4 billion a
scaled-down General Assistafice year in state and federal funds program 10 worl: 20 hours in public about 40 percent of its all-funds
service jobs and spend five hours a
month 10 a supervised job-search

"

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) Ross Perot's name may still appear
on Ohio's Nov. 3 ballot despite his
decision to abandon his maverick
bid for the presidency, says a
spokeswoman for Ohio's lop elecuons oflicial.
Perot announced Thursday that
he was halting his campaign
because he determined that his
independent bid for the While
House wouldn't succeed. However,
he said he would like 10 see his volunteers continue their petition
effons.
This would let both political
parties know "exactly who the
people are who are so concerned
about their country's future," Perot
said.
Ohio Secretary of State Bob
Taft's office said that certification
of voter si~ to put Perot on
the ballot 1s almost complete and
that Perot is expected to Q,ualify.

of S,OOO signatures came from ~eg·
istered voters, as required by law
for independent candidates.
"It appears he will have in
excess of 5,000," Taft spokeswoman Maureen Brown said Friday.
She said that if Perot is certifted
· as a candidatt, he would have to
send a lettez of withdrawal no later
than Aug. 31 to prevent his name
from being on the ballot.
If he sends the leiter after Aug.

31 , his name will remain on the
ballot but his votes won't be count·
ed , Ms . Brown said. If Perot
doesn't withdraw. his votes will be
counted.
At least one of Perot's key Ohio
suP.porters, Columbus attorney
Clifford Amebeck, says he thinks
Perot may mark time for a while 10
see if there is "a second draft" by
diSCIK:hanted voters.

Computer error

may be costly
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohio Bell customers across the
state who use AT&amp;T received bills
for long-distance calls up 10 nine
months late because of a computtr

error.

AT&amp;T did not charge residential
and business customers for some
long-distance calls made between
OciOber and April.
Bills for calls made in those
months wm dropped by a computer and were recenlly found, said
AT&amp;T spokesman Dennis Fulton
of Chicago.
The error involved calls made
by cus10mers in the 614, 419 and
513 IJCI codes, all of Ohio except
the northeast section, he•said.'
" Both Ohio Bell and AT&amp;T 8IC
sorry that it happened," Fulton
said. Ohio Bell provides billing service for long-distance carriers.

-.-------------~~. .-

"'

Ice

Weather
Extended rorecast:
Soutli-Ceutnl Oblo
Monday throug• Wednesday:
Sunday, partly cloudy. A slight
A chanee of showers and thunchilnce of afternoon ·showers and
thunderstorms. High 80 to 8S. dersiOrms each day. Highs from the
upper 70s to the mid 80s. Lows
Chance of rain 30 percent
mosdy in the 60s.

,Boothe arraigned on charges
after capture in Mason County
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) A man wanted by Matyland
authorities and anested in southern
Mason County, is charged with two
counts of 811tmpted murder, two
counts of assault with intent to
commit murder, and one count of
using a handaun in the commission
of a crime, authorities said.
Dennis L Boothe, 44, of
GaithersburJ, Md, was arreSied
about 3 p.m. Wednesday off West
VJrginia 2, said Otief Deputy U.S.
Marshal~ Demro.
Aulhorities had 10 walk through
about two miles of wilderness
befOJC they found Boothe clearing
weeds ncar a camping lrailer,
Demro said.
Boothe was arraigned Thursday
befOJC U.S. Magistrate Jeny Hogg,
Demro said.
Authorities said Boothe was
wanted in the June shooting of his
wife and son as they lried to drive
away from their house during a
. j;nbq

-.nn.r. -ji;mtiaJ

(VIP&amp;_,
Pablilhed _ . s...uy,

m

Tblrd A....

Gslltpollo. Ohio, by lho Obto Vslky

, _ . , c ... pony/MoltbMdts, Inc.
Second clus postapr.ld el G.Oipolil,
Ohio 4&amp;831. 8DU!ftl u MeOIId ciUI

SUPER

SAVIIGS
OISIIRUS

SIEERRr=l

8::::.:-.:::::::::::::::::: ::::::::: ::::~~:~::li8~
SINOLICOPY
PIICB

Bonda¥ OIIIJ

Sill MIRIU........................................ U4.79
0.0. ........1
MAIL BIJBaclliPTlONS

Radio

"Horn

SUPER BUY

92 SIERU
&amp;'Bed
Air
4.3 V-6
5 Spd. Trans.
Step Bumper
AMJFM/Cassette
Sliding Back Glass
Spare Tire
3 To ChoH From

PICKUP

$10 500
I

laolds Coul,13 W11luo........... ..............................$Zt.IM
2t Wseluo.......... ......................... - .... k3.16
12 W•luo.......................................... $84.76
..... O.taldo c....,.
13 Weeluo......................................... h3.40
, 2t Wseb.......................................... k5.50

3 To ChoH From

$12,700

Lottery numbers

J

nver chanlinelh. . the . bel •"·
It Slidwastewlller
JS m
nver aw"'"
Athens
~reatment
plant
were hurt by discharjes from the
!ant
p The
said fish III'OIIlld the
agency
.
Logan and Nelsonville treatment
1an
• h b 8SICwatcr ·•
p t weren 1 urt y w
...

otrJce located in the Uallia County dren ages _fou~ .to 12 - $7.95
Courthouse,I8LocustStJCet
($9.95);semorcllizensaged~and
The discount pric~s ~ listc:d older ~ $13.45 ($16.95); cbildren
below with the gate pnces listed 10 thJCe and under - me.
p81C0theses.
Kings blaud
AmeriFiora
Single day: Adult - $18.25
Adult - $15.95 ($19.95); cliil- ($22.95); children three to sill and
senior citizens 60 or older -

Cedar Point
. •
Regular, ages four-59, 48-inch·
~-~or taller - $19.25 ($22.95);
luruor, ages four or older, under ~8- ·
1~hes-tall - $4.95 ($4.95); seruor
CitiZens ages 60 or older- SI2.SO
($12.50); childJCn three and wider
- fn:e.
Sea World
51
Adult - m
Adult- $16.50 ($19.50); chil($31.95); childJCn and senior citi- dren three to II - $12.50
zens - $14.45 ($15.95).
(SIS.SO); children two and under
•
Children two and under - fn:e. - fn:e.

~. Bidwell;
David A. Pettry, 22, Cheshire,

· and Michelle Lea~. 21, Galli)IO"
lis•

•

Rick A. Swain, 22, Thurman,

and Cheryl A. Camburn, 22, Patriot;

Shawn M. Sexton, 19, GaJiipolis, and Christina D. Roach. 19,
Gallipolis;
Elbie E. Burgess, 39, Gallipulis.
and Carolyn S. Walker, 34, Gal·
lipolis;
Lawrence D. Sicker, 32, Ann,
Mo., and Rachel L. GJCCnlee, 22,
Vinllln; '
·
Roscoe C. Crosier, 48. Gallipolis, and Barbara K. Joy, 49, Gallipolis;
Robert L. Smith II, 20, Bidwell,
and Kalrinia F. Adams, 19, Gallipolis;
Jwnes D. Cmft, 23 , Gallipolis,
and Roneerverta A. Davidson, 22,
Proctorville;
Roger D. Meade, 44, Bidwell,
and Patricia J. Marcum, 36, Vinton;
Howard R. Wells, 46, Crown
City, and Connie S. Ra!Ciiff, 34,
Crown City;
Randy A. Wilson, 36, Gallipolis, and Elizabeth J. France, 31,
Gallipolis.

Specia/Uu in

HOME HEALTH CARE
MEDICAL EQUIPMENT rOR
HOME USE
OXYGEN &amp; IESPIUTORY EGUIPMENT &amp;SUPPLIES
oHoepllal Belle
•Air
•WheelciHJI..

IIIIa-•

Ugh'""'t, Wldee, Electric

oGowna
ol'eeding Pumpe
-24 Hour EllllrgeliCy S.VIce
ofleeplnllory Thelllpill on Staff
•We do the lfllulllnce billing lor the patient
-MedlcaNIMedlceld l'lovlcler
o&amp;llee oflental•S.VIce

,

Hospital news

of'llllent Llltl
•T111pn 11
oOIIpen l Chuxe
oOelomy Supp...
oBick a •TEHS Unll8

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
July 16 discharges - Mrs.
Ronnie Arms and daughter, Mrs.
Jeffrey Brofford and daughter,
Deborah Ferguson and Lo~ele Hill.
Julyl6 births -Mr. and Mrs.
Eric Arbaugh, daughter, Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Rathburn,
daughter, Galtipolis.

BOWMAN'S
HOMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY
70 PINE St • GALLIPOUS

•

~------------------------------.

'

It's Time For A~ .•

nra Resort•••
Your Place for Pioniet

Fox Fire is ,eat for groups, ·
inclviduals or your company's summer piaic.
ONE PRIQ ADMISSION:
$5.00 MoJMiay·Frlday
$7.00 Sat. 5•., HoiWays
lneludH: Swimming, wata..tlde,lacuzzl,
paddle bolla, eanoea, putt golf, fl1hlng,
bNch volleybell, hoi'IMhoe•, and more.

FOX FIRE HOT AIR
BALLOON FUGHTS
112 mas 01 SAR

WL FO:OIR""~~==,

Groupe of 100 or moNt can Inquire about

our catering. We •peclellzeln B.B.Q.
chicken, pork, hamburge.. 1111d hotdog•
whh 11llhe flxln'•·
'

•
This week we invite you to take advantage of the great
savings on home improvement loans .
Because your business is impottant to us, we are offering
1/4% interest off on quality home improvement loans. Bring In
the coupons below for great Loan Sale-A-Bration! Interest
rates.

I.
I
=v..~Off=
···············~

C.l tetlay: 304·74H622

Fox Fire Resort

I Home Improvement Loan I
I
:
(with thi1 coupon)
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I July 18-July 24, 1992
1
1
I
~~o~ .. _,.,.....,,II""",,~~~~..,_

···-~·-········~

SALES ·AND SERVICE!
Wt offer competitive rat11 and a wide coverage area and best
of all, local salts and 11rvice.
.
Wt offer TECH 995 • lag Phone, NEC 310 I .• lag Phone,
011 II 0 • Permanent Mount Phone,
PlonHr PCM • 500 Permanent •ount Phone

Your Bankfo-t~...
Fo Farmers Bank
&amp; Savings Company

WE HAVE QUALIFIED INSTALLERS AND SALES PERSONNEL.

21 1 Wesl Second Slreel
p 0 Bot 626
Pomeroy, OH &gt;1576'1
6141992·2136

'

Bo6'1. EIIDironiDI
435 UPPER IMR ID. • GALLIPOLIS
446-4517

614-446-2532
Herb 8ml1h
'I

·I

"It didn't stop us," said
DelVecchio, who also owns a nail
salon in the same shopping plaza.
"We '~e still open for business."
·
The former Fotomat booth is
CLEVELAND (AP)- Hmare
painted hot pink and white and disFriday night's Ohio Lottery selec- plays a condom "menu" that
u'ons·
mcludes mint-flavored and natural
·
lwnbskin
varieties, as well as stanPkk 3 Numbers
dard
latex.
9·8·8
' 'Everyone going through has
(nine, eight, eight)
been very professional," DelVecPkk 4 Numbers
chio
said. " They're being serious
8-2-7-9
- no joking, no comments.
(eight, two, seven, nine)
They'JC driving throu$h piclring up
Buckeye 5
·
what they need, knowmg what they
2-19-20-22·36
want"
. (two, 'nineteen, twenty, twentyAnthony Paola was her fnt custwo, thirty-six)
tomer, leaving with a box of glowThe Super Lotto jackpot is SI6 in-the-dart condoms.
million.

CELLULARONE®

133 PINEnRIEI
GAUIPOLIS, ON. 45631

''

.

rom~.

BOB'S ELEaRONICS IS OFFERING

Smith's GMC Truck Center
and

CRANSTON, R.I. (AP) - People accustomed to delivering their
vacation pictures to a drive-up
booth in a shopping center here
may be in for a shock - Condom
Hut is open for business.
Emmanuella DelVecchio sold
her fust condoms Friday and said
business was brisk, despite recent
vandalism and angry telephone
calls from people opposed to having such a service 10 their neigh-

nw.............................. ................ sauo

92 SIERU

8' Bed
Air
4.3 V-6
4 Spd. Auto Trans.
Step Bumper
AMJFMIDigltal Clock
Spare Tire

panying the marshals were Sgt.
GL. Clark of the Point Pleasant
Detachment, West VIrginia State
Police, Sheriff Ernie Watterson,
Deputy John McCoy, and Lloyd
Alcers. also of the sheriff's depart·
ment

Drive-thru condom
store opens in R.I.

11UN11AY ONIZ
8t1118CIIIPTION ILU'U
IIFCurisr Ol'llolor a.o.t.

o.e v................. -......................... k7.1M

1992

domeslic dispute.
Among local authorities accom-

GALLIPOLIS - The following
couples have applied for a marriage
license in the Gallia County Probate Court:
Dennis G. Haner, 34, Gallipotis,
and TeiCS8 A. Beaver, 21 , Gallipolis;
Merrill 0 . Ri!Chie, 47, Gallipolis, and Sonja S. Ri!Chie, 46, Gallipolis;
' .
Gabriel H. 'aques, 30, ~all1pohs
and Mary M. Cox, 34, GaU1pohs;
Steven D. Bradbury, 23, Gallipolis, and Cheryl D. Hammonds,

Member: The Allaelslod Pro., !lid lho
Ohio Newop~~Aosoclalion, Nolillllll
Adwettilinr
~en&amp;atl.-e, Branh•m
Newapaper Sa e~~, 133 Third Annue,
New York, New Yort 10017.

MAIL 8UII8CIUPTlON8

435 UPHIIIYIIIID.

met standards iJ! a .1982 sillily.
said Improvements
81
theThe
lantEPA
· the
19101 and the city's
:Cnt program helped the
pr ea .
water qUIIityd. al • d that the
The stu y so .oun
lower_,. of the river was hurt by
. r-•
d
b'l' .
r
mme damage, est&amp; 1 1z1~g o
stream banks and changes m the

nWiiq' maUer a&amp; Pomeroy, Ohio, Polt
OOic:e.

tocan1a.

8' Bed
Sliding Rear Window
Wldeside Body
4.3 Liter V-6
S·Speed Manual Transmission

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1992 Accu-Wealher, Inc.

Tbe Sanday Ti.,.._Seolillel will nol be
rt1polllible Cor sdnnce psymeniO made

446 4517

)

Perot still may have
name on Ohio ballot

American-made trucks to be pr01d of at a
price you can afford.

'

W.VA.

LISTEN TO THE MUSIC • Amuda Harding ol Adieus, and
ber dO&amp; Obit, lisle• to the Oblo Unlvenlty C0111munlvenity Bud
perform In the dty park Tburaday eve•ing. Tbe concert reaturtd
Ronald P. Socclirelli conducting ud Dr. Reginald Fink as guest
soloist (Times-Sentinel photo by Kevin PiiiM.'n).

•••liable.

BOB'$
ELECTRONIC$

river from Lancaster to Coolville
· 1990 has· at
wh'1ch w~ surveyed m
least partially reached state standards.
.
.
About two-thirds of a 20.5-mile
area around the Lancaster wasteWaI
ta dards
ter treatment pant met s n
fully or in part. None of the IJCI

Couples apply for licenses . S1~~~ Ji~).

' $11,700

W1111u1
. V..BeiJ, D.D.S., Inc.

{

•

No •abKriptiONI by mail pennitted ia

.;

Vlqlnla.Dental Sert'lae

Sentlne~ .

Discount theme park tickets available from park district

83'

.,..u when motor carrier Hnice i•

-:· CALL TOLL FREE 1·800-926-0025
;:
For AD AppoiDtmeat or IDformatlon.

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP'1 _ An
•
•
'
•
OhiO
Environmental
Protection
Age~cy r~port says the upper
Hoclring Rtver has shown some of
the gJCatest water quality im)XIlve·
· th
ment of any nver system tn e
state.
The EPA said more than 80 percent or a 91_.2-mi1e segment of the
.

GALLIPOLIS. The 0.0. Mclntyfe Park District is selling discotint tickets 10 AmeriFiora, Kings
Island, Cedar Point and Sea World.
To purchase discount tickets, slOp
by the 00 Mcintyre Park District
· · · · - ... -

Sondly.................,..,_, .... .......,_75 CeoiO

i::.CWIIDrn Fitted Dentures In One Day At Our Tea}'ll Valley Omce
By our Professlonala And Trained Staff.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualified Technicians.

Wnt

PA .

IND.

~;~;:~s!'::~ :::.:

plan can save $170 million

.i&gt;ENTVRES START AT *143 PER DENTURE!
·:' SMAIJ.ADDrrtaW. CHARGE FOR SAME DAY SERVICE

•

IMansfield 181' I•

th:rit.~:~=~:

DENTURES IN ONE DAY

MD DAY IDVICI8 OK ULilU8 AND UPAIRSI

Sunday nmes

Hocking River water quality said among the s_tate's best

Sunday, July 19

~order.

EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY
AT BOB'S ELECTRONICS

;

·.·.·-·-• ..· . •. ·.·.·. · . · . · .· .·.·. · . -

Pomaroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

OHIO Weather

Conley said 81 the time that Ferguson had never denied there was a
relationship, only that there was
coereion.
Duda said he could not discuss
the relationship because of the

the Gallijlolis Developmental Center. would no longer be funded by
the state through· grants. Some of
the responsibility may have to fall
back on the townships and munici·
J)ll)ities due to the lack of funding
for these things at the dislrict level.
Due to the lack financial commit·
ment on the local level, Riverview
Recycling ceases all operations in
November, 1992.
All drop-off boxes at GDC, and
all curb-side services in the 10 rural
communities wm be shut down.
AG HJMV solid waste district
officials encourage citizens wanting to see the plan ratified, to seek ·
their township trustees and legislative officials befOJC the end of the
August wension period.

Our Regular servtce Is Available At AU O.fJkes.

.

•

pro~bill also requires Medicaid
patients to pay at least a small portion of thetr doctor bills and PJC·
scription costs, while eliminating
dental care and physical therapy
from Medicaid coverage.

.;

. . ... -

July 19, 1992

'Friday; July 17,1992.UaiWOity
ilal in Columbus.
CLEVELAND (AP) - The Uial I 991 deposition that he had a two•:· He was bam Sept.6, 1!140 in Long
IOAdaSwan Bissell, Long of a $1.25 million S¢Jtusl harass- year sexusl relationship with Ms.
Boaom, widl wbom he Jlllided, llld the late Ja.epb E. Bissell. He was a ment lawsuit against slate Auditor Tschantz.

member ol the Loaa Boaom Unillld Methodist Oturdt.
. Besi.Vs his modler, be iiiiUIVivod by lhree sislen and ~-in-law,
Otva Jean llld Jobn !lond. Muon, W.Va., Marilyn and Mark Miller,
WesleiYille, JIIIClllld T~ Groeneveld, Wonhington; a brother and sisICl·in·law, L. Micliaelllld Pllric:ia Bissell, Pomeroy; a sister-in-law,
Rachel Billell, Muon, W.Va.; several nieces and nephews and sevtzal
·i,mts llld ca"sins.
.-:. Besidal bis fllher he was preceded in death by a brother, Joseph A.
. Biasell; a sister, Violet Smi!h; and a nephew, Michael Patrick Bissell. .
·: · ServiCes wiJI be Monday at 11 a.m. at the White Funeral Home m
~!ville with Rev. Chaies Ealon orflcialing. Burial will be at Sand Hill

~

Royle 7
p 0 Bo• 339

Tuppers Plo •ns. OH &gt;15783

6141667-3161

Member F.O.l.C.

•

'.

�'

)

:commentary and perspective
'

Page-A4
July 19, 1992

_t

laS 1'lllrd Aw., Glllllpolla, Ohio
('14) 416-DC .

111 Court SL, Pom..-..,, Oblo
(614) 99:1·1156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

HOBAilTWU..S0N JR.
EDcutiYel!dltor

PAT WHITEHEAD
, Alllstant Publlsber-Conlnlller

A MEMBER of The Asoociattd Press, and the American
Newspaper Publilben Assoc:illion.

••
••

l.l!1TI!RfbP OPINION are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. Alllellln 1n1 subject to editing and must be signed with
D&amp;tDO, lddress end telephone number. No. unsigned letters will be
:: ' published. Letters should be in good taste, addreuin&amp; issues not
,~

penonalitiea.

'

·•' I!::::========.!
,;

~:veteran statehouse wag

•

..~• says

•

•

constitution outdated

•,I•

By ROBERT E. MILLER
~
Asllocillted Press Writer
~
COLUMBUS - A retiml newsleuer publisher who observed state
: aovemment for decades says il's lime to update Ohio's Constitution.
.• Thoma H. Dudgeon said it was adopted in 1851, before such thin~s as
~ Jhc automobile, .nplane, telephones and television. And despite ptece·
-: IIICI1 amendments,il should be stripped of antiquated verbage and given
:."inodem focus, he said.
·
:: Dudgeon gave up his insider-oriented Ohio News Service several
· months ..o but still frequents the Statehouse where he has rubbed shoul·
~ den with governors and lawmakers for about four decades.
:
As 1 longtime friend of former Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes,
'• House Speaker Vem Riffe, I&gt;- Wheelersburg, and others, Dudgeon has
; observed the wotkings of government from a vantage point few experi.• encc.
·· He has wriaen a book about Rhodes called, "Ohio's Govem&lt;r of the
•· Century," published in 1991, and has been retained to write a biography
: of Riffe, who has been in the Legislature since 1959 and speaker Stnce
• 1975.
Dudgeon .sees an oppottunity to update the Constibttion in a proposal
tlw wW appem: on the Nov. 3 ball01, asking voters if they want a conven·
tion to reVIse, alter or amend the documenL
The proposal appears on the ballot autonlatically every 20 years, as a 1
result of ari amendment adopted in 1912. It has never been approved, in
)lilt because no one has ever campaigned on its behalf.
If approved, it would uigger two more proposals requiring voter
approval at future elections. These are the election of 99 delegates who
would dJaft cllan8es and a vote on the changCI.
"It is time f&lt;r Ohioans 10 seriously consider a constitutional convention IS the 21st century begins," says Dudgeon. "As years, technology
llld eommunicllions change, the world, ciltumSI8llCes and attitudes of the
pwemed also change."
He says tbere are numerous issues a convention could consider, including llbortion and gun control. But his own ideas deal more with the govemrnent process.
Dudgeon says the convention should change the terms of the governor
and other SIIIIC offtcials from four to six years, those of House members
from IWO to four years and those of state senators from four to six years.
He also suggestS lhat all should be limited to IWo terms.
Other ideas he is pushing would allow voting by telephone and regis·
ll1lion up to 24 hours before polls open.
Dudgeon also would like 10 see the elimination of what he and many
others have said are abuses by Jhc state of local governments - specifically, the passage of bills tlw mandarc spending but OO.'t provide money.
He says the Legislalule should meet no more than 60 days a year and
thai the Constitution should prohibit legislative skulduggery, such as
adding unrelated, non-money amendments 10 state budget bills.

.§~m:'f.R"'-:'~~~=::~::=:~~~

Fc R

~::~s~~sn::~~~w.~&amp;:§~~~r:~:~:~

PRESIDENT
The ultimate outsider,
working on the side of the law.

«:l 1992b)' NEA, Inc;;. 'lC.

~~

aryu and a ..romantic:•
Political s~~ is something
Gingrich has httlc ume for these
days. His cosmic agenda has yield·
ed to constituent service - sometimes even to Gingrich •s embarrassment
Gingrich's campaign headquarters recently heard that a federal
office was moving from downtown
Atlanta to the suburbs, and
assumed it would be relocated in
his new disuict, which stretches
mostly through Cobb County. Gingrich rired off a press release to
cash in politically f&lt;r delivering the
pork.
"I am happy to let Cobb Counlians know that the new government printing office facility will be
located at One Parlt Place in Marietta," Gingrich stated in the
release.
The only problem· was that his
campaign workers mixed up the
address. There is no One Park
Place in either Marietta or Cobb
County. In fact, the new office will

itntil recently. Since Clark is a conservative Republican, he is buUetproof lo the hail of charJes
Democrats hear tesularly regarding
how "inner-city mayors" and
"nco-socialist Democrats" are
dcsii'Oying Jhc country.
"Never in Mr. Gingrich's
wildest dreams did he fij!ure that
he'd be in a race like thts," says
Clark.
To beat back his challenge has been a mean season for the No. which comes two years after Gin·
2 House Republican, one rich in grich eked out re-elecUon in a
irony as he limps toward a July 21 familiar district by fewer than
primary shoot-out
1,000 votes- Gingriclr appears to
After years oC IIUJcling the gov- be practicing what his old nemesis,
ernment trough, Gingrich is now Tip O'Neil, preached: All politics
touting his a&lt;:eesS to it After deliv- is local.
ering scalding criticism of PresiConsider Gingr!ch's recent
. dent Bush, Gingrich's main selling appearance before the local headpoint bact home has been his quarters of the Ir.ternational Assoaccess to the White House. And ciation of Machinists and
after spending the beuer part of a Aerospace Workers in Marietta
•
decade fomenting revolution, Gin- Ga.
grich now finds the barbarians at
Even the grizzled union activists
his own gate.
- who could be the swing votes in
His challenger for the GOP this Republican stronghold - gave
nomination in the redrawn 6th dis- Gingrich points for having the guts
trict is local lawyer Herman Clark, to show up one recent Saturday
who is out-Newting Newt by incit- morning. Gingrich has never been
ing voters over Gingrich's 22 forgiven for supporting President
bounced checks and the $67,000 a Bush in opposltton to federal arbiyear chauffeured limousine he had tration between Eastern Airlines

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

"On the one hand, consumer confidence is down- on the other hand ... consumer
spending is up- on the other hand .. . unemployment is up- on th ... ."

Rodney Downing, 1897-1992
Rodney Downing's death on
July 5 was in some respects the end
of an era. Many of his friends and
acquaintances preceded him in
death. They arc: Jim Arnold, Paul
Smart, John Zirkle, C.O. Fisher,
David Miller, Bob Coates, Clyde
Ingels, Harry McMaster, Harry
Barnes, Lightning Boyd, Nick Hennessy. Hany Moore, Theodore and
Ted Reed, Edison Hobsteuer,
Alfred Elberfeld, Howard Kress,
Dor Schaefer, J.O. Roedel, Ernest
Duerr, Carl Hobart, Theodore
Ebersbach, Herb Moon:,.,Raw Dog
Lewis, Oan Hartinger, Alben RusseU, Henry Swift, Sen. Tom Jones,
John Lyons and George Meinhart.
When the writer ftrsl knew Rod·
ney in the 1950's, his father, John
B. Downing was living. John B.
was a forceful man and at one time
was the head of one of the two
Republican political factions in this
county. One of them was the
Downing-Swift faction and the
other faction was the Albert Russell-Dan Hartinger faction. Dan
Hartinger and John B. Downing
were political enemies. These men
played hard ball in politics. How
many of you remember the Tim
Bishop kidnapping case? This was
one example of how hard and bitter
politics were in the 1930's. The
strange thing about this situation
was that Rodney was not involved
in politics and he was a good personal friend of Dan Hartinger. Beat
that if you can, Rupe.
Rodney was associated in at
least four businesses in his lifetime.
• He was the President of the Citi·
zens National Bank, Middleport.
He sold his stock in this bank prior
to the sale of the bank itself 10 the
Star Bank of Cincinnati. He was
•

also the owner of an insurance
business known as the Downing
Insurance Company. He sold his
interest in this business to Will

FredW. Crow
Childs.
This business is now known as
the Downing Childs Mullen Muss·
er Insurance Company, Pomeroy.
Rodney sold me my fustlife insurance policy which I slill own. Rod·
ncy was also the head man in the
Meigs Wll.er Company at one lime.
Actually Albert Martin and Nick
Hennessy ran the company but
Rodney Downing was the head
honcho in title. Rodney also was a
shareholder in the COI)JOI'alion owning the Meigs Inn. He was respon.
sible for poviding funds to fmance
its renovation. Later he exchanged
his stock for part of the LaSalle
Hotel in Middleport.
Rodney Downing always wore a
sui~ tie and hat when he was away
from home. He was always neatly
dressed. He owned two hats, one
for the summer and one for the
\\'inter. I have no way of knowing.
but I would assume that Rodney
owned about 30 suits. I have never
heard of anyone who can claim to
have seen Rodner in a T-shin or
any other form or mfonnal attire.
Rodney was a member of three
clubs namely the Pomeroy Gun
Club, the Don Myers (Long Bot·
tom) Social Club and the Leadins
Creek Symposiarch. I also was
either a member or attended these
clubs' functions. Rodney was a
member of the Pomeroy Gun Club
back when meetings were held at
the Joachim Farm .

Today In historY----:r-------In 1980, the Moscow Summer Olympics began, minus dozens of
nations that were boycotting the games because of the Soviet military
left m the year.
intervention in Afghanistan.
· Today's Highlight in History:
In 1984, U.S. Rep. Geraldine A. Ferraro, D-N.Y., won the Dernoc111ic
nomination
for vice president by acclamation II the party's convention in
On~ 19, 1848, a pioneer women's rights convention called by Eliz·
San Francisco.
abetlt
y Stanton and Lucretia C. Molt convened in Seneca R·"s N y
On this date:
.... • . .
In 1985, Christa McAuliffe of New Hampsltire was chosen out of m&lt;re
In 1553, IS-year-old Lady Jane Grey was deposed as ~ueen of Eng~d than 11,000 applicants to be the ftnt seliOollelcher to ride aboard the
after claitn!Jig Jhc crown for nine days. King Henry vm s daughter Mary space shultle. (McAuliffe and six other crew memben were tilled when
the Challenger exploded in mid-flight the followin• January.)
wu proclaimed queen.
·
In 1989, 112 people were killed when a Umted Air Lines DC·10
In 1870, the franco.Prussian War began.
crashed
while lllelllpting to make an emergeocy landing 11 Sioux City,
.In 11141, Brilislt Prime Minister Winston Churehilllaunehed his "V for
Iowa.
There
were 184 survivors.
Vict«y" ~C!f in Europe.
Ten
years
ago: A federal grand jury in HOUsbl indicted fcrtn« CIA
In 11143, · air forces raided Rome during World Warn.
agent
Edwin
P.
Wilson and two other men on cltargr,s oC aclllng weapons
In 1975, the j\pollo and Soyuz space capsules lhat were linked in otbit
to Libya. (Wilson was convicted the following Novtrhbet.)
·
for two days aeparatcd.
In 1979, the Nicarquan capital of Managua fell to Sandinisra guerril- · Five years ago: Residents of Balch Springs, TeJUil, sathered at the
la, two days after President Anutasio Somoza had resigned and t1ed the Seagoville Road Baptist Church lo mourn Jhc 10 teen-agers who died
when a flash flood engulfed a churth bus and v8n two days·earller.
c:oumrv.
By The Associated Press

~oday is Sundtfy,July 19, the 201st day of 1992. There are 165 days

.)

'I

Rodney, to my knowledge,
never shot a shot gun or engaged in
b'ap shooting. Rodney, how~ver,
did like to play straight poker only,
no wild cards please. Whenever
Rodney would raise the bel you
could be sure that he had a powerful hand. He was a good poker
player and usually won desptle" the
fact that he very seldom bluffed.
However, the stakes were usually
small with very little money
exchanged.
F&lt;r the past two years Mary and
Osby Martin took care of Rodney
and everyone should praise them
for Jhcir helping Rodney: He was
given ftrst class tmlbllent by Mary
and Osby Martin.
I should mention that Rodney's
two greatest friends were Jimmy
Arnold and Kenneth Cook. Rodney
was also very close to Bernard
Fultz.
The wrircr would describe Rodney as an extremely conservative,
mild mMtnered and kind penon.
I met Rodney's family at the
funeral home. They were very
pleasant and pcious 10 me. This
was not surpnsing as this was the
way Rodney always was.
·
The 1olfer's dre111
The writer has been connected
with s~ for more than 60 years.
One of dtc most amazina gutsy performances that he has ever seen
occurred Jut Sunday. This event
was s~ by Lany LaoreUi at the
US Seruor Open G"olf Tournarnent
at Bethlehem, PA. To prefiCe this
story it should be stated that
Laoretti had never won a mljor
golf tournament. He has been a
club pro and may have won one
club pro tournament but in Jhc eye
of the pro 110lfen Jhit was an
obscure evenL
The writer lirst cau$ftt his aa on
hole No.ll on his Jut round on
Sunday. At tlw lime be came out
of nowhere and tied AI Geiberger
for the lead. Also breathing down
his neck were Jaek Ni&lt;tl•ts, Gary
Pla)'CI', Gibby GUbert, Jim Colbert
and Dave Stockton. All ~olf fans
will .....,.,.ioe tlteie Individuals IS
and llill are great in
BOif'
From the 11th hole on
through the 18th bolo Laoretli
wOuld drive his ball to the center of
the fairway and would be on each
green, with one exception, in regulation ftgure8.
,
On the 18th his second shot
wu on the fringe of the green and
lo and behold he putted into the
hole making the birdie. This in
itsclf took guts because he could ,
have four puttcd this green, What is

havinJ.:'::•

Police receive complaints
GALLIPOLIS ·Police investiP.'ed a complaint of criminal damaging and a complaint of theft Friday. Pmy Caldwell, no age given,
Second Avenue, Gallipolis, reported that sonieone SlrUCk the rear
window and also dented the rear door post of his vehicle while it
was parked at his residence Friday nighL
. Allen Sieradzki, no age given, Mitchell Road, Gallipolis, told
deputies that his gym bag was stolen from in front of the First
Avenue Fibless Center, Gallipolis, Friday. the bag contained his
wallet, several credit cards, a gold watch and some hand tools.

strange about the whcle situation is
that the man wore a Panama hat
and was smoking excessively at all
times a ci$ar.
His ,swmg could be described at
best as flaL One wondered how he
could be so consistently suaight in
all of his golf shots. At first one
would think he was a hacker. What
stands out in my mind and in the
mind of the TV announcers is the
fact that everyone thought he
would choke before the end of the
round.
This man had never been a winner bef&lt;re and the pressure on him
had tO be eDQilllOUS. One bad Shot
and the whole round could have
gone up in smoke. Instead he hit
each shot perfectly in so far as
being consistent and finished with
a birdie. There arc only three
golfers in this area who could have
played in this tournament Namet;,
Howard Saunders, Gallipolis, Will
Childs of Pomeroy and Lionel
Boggs of Middleport. It is extremely doubtful whether any of the
three could have survived the cut in
this tournament, let alone win. At
one time Howard Saunders could
have achieved this goal.
When Mr. Laorelli holed out, I
know that I had tears in my eyes to
see an unlcnown come forward and
beat the daylights out of the pros.
His victory would give hope to
anyone that one day a golfer has a
chance to achieve victory over
tremendous odds.
.
Rupe, there you have it thi's
week. I hope that you realize that
on a given day you can ouldo yourself and win against fanlaslic odds.
Hope spritl'gs eternal, Rupe, so
keep trying. If you can't win at
golf, try horseshoes.
.
Sbould Meip Couaty
.
secede f'rom Oblo?
Information has been received
that the govem&lt;r is trying to fill his
promise and is going to locate
some SIIIIC project in this county·.
This is more. than just a rumor,
Rupe. For this reason the SECES.
SION movement is now on hold. It
may be that the writer wiU have 10
shine Oov. George Voinovich's
sltocs a1it.r all.
Canyon.

Edllor's note • Long-time
Attoraey Fred W. Crow Is tbe
contributor of a weekly column
for. The Sunday Tlmt~·Seatlntl.
Readen wllltll&amp; to app._d, ail·
ldze or coaam111t 01 ayiUbject
(except rellaioa or political aie
encoaraaed l'o wrlle to Mr,
Crow, In care ollblllleWiplper•.

·"

r

Rain delays work on Route 33
SHADE • Heavy rains have caused a delay in reopening of Route
33 11 a midge construction site between Athens and Shade, accord·
ing to John Dowler, deputy director of DistricUO of the Ohio
Department of Transpor1ation.
Dowler said the bridge wu to have reopened Tuesday, but that
rains have slowed work. The bridge was closed July 6.
A new bridge has been constrocted beside the old one. The closure is necessary so WOlters can connect the new bridge to existing
. pavemen~ Dowler said The project is costing $812,457.

Deputies investigate theft
.GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County sheriff's de~ reported a canplaint of theft from John L. Payne, no age pven, ML Talxr Road,
Vinton, Friday. Payne told deputies that someone stole a 2SO lb.
Holstein steer worth $250 from a paswre near Sherman Road.

'

Gingrich boasted repeatedly thai
he can get Secretary of Defen~
Dick Ch~ney on the telephone
instantly. He told the story of how
he convinced Cheney to block the
purchase of French airplanes.
'Vote for me and you'll have
someone with a proven record,' I
said Gingrich. "You'll continue td
have the second ranking Republi!
can member wolting f&lt;r you."
Rather than applauding, several
in the crowd reacted by chanting
"Boot Newt" and turned theif
backs on Gingrich when he begrul
to speak. Even those union mem•
bers who don't hold Gingrich per.
sonally responsible for Eastern's
coUapse, slill fault him for supponing replacements for striking workers.
"-...
"Herman's basically a regmar
conservative, but the union people
hate Newt so much, they've joined
Herman's campaign," commented
one Republican stralegist.
Clark calls Gingrich "the con·
gressman from Washington," hammering hot~~e the charge that Gingrich no longer has Georgia foremost on his mind. A Gingrich
spokesperson said "I don't think
Newt believes defense is por1t."
Earlier this year, Gingrich
spelled out to us his plans for
"launching the revolutionary wing
of the Republican party" and
defininF "21st-century conservatism.' He realizes he first has to
gel out of Cobb County alive.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Blostein are columnists for Unit•
ed Feature Syndlente, Inc.

POMEROY ~ Units of the Meigs County Eme'llency Medical
Service respottded to three calls for·usistance on Friday afternOon
and early Saturday morning.
On Friday at 4:21 p.m. the Middleport unit weot to Brownell
Avenue for Edna Wayland who was taken to Veterans Memorial
H ilal.
~ Saturday, at 1:34 a.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Peacock
Avenue for Kathleen Anthony who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
The Middleport unit, at 1:55 a.m., went to Riverside Apartments
for Shirley Roush who was taken to Pleasant Valley.
·

GALLIPOLIS • Police answered a call from l.alry SL John, store
detective at Hills Department Store, UJlller River Road, Gallipolis,
who reported tlw he had seen Stephanie Gardner, 19, N. Second
Avenue, Middleport, leave the store with men:handise without paying for iL Gardner was taken into custody and later released on a
summons.

and striking workers in 1989.
Although long-standing custom
bars press from the union's meetings with political candidates, our
associates Ed Henry and Andrew
Conte were present during Gingrich's remarks.
"Fine, vote against me if you
want to," Gingrich told the union·
ists at one point during the stormy
session. "Bull repea~ you need to
understand Whose job is II stake." .
It was a veiled threat from 1111
increasingly desperate incumbent
directed at these workers who are
already ),ittery over defense con•
tracts. ' When your job is on the
line and the defense budget is
shrinking - and this is a good
place to-cut - what risk do you
want to take with your jobs?" sai4
Gin~~h. 'Til lay it on the line,
you re not going to have a local
(union) if you don't have a facto;
ry."

Meigs squads respond to 3 c4lls

.Police investigate shoplifting

Gingrich faces a tough battle .on home turf
COBB COUNTY, Ga.- Rep. be located at Two Park Place Newt Gingrich, R.Qa., once said he several miles outside Gingrich's
had "an enormous personal ambi- district
tion" to "shift the entire planeL"
As this anecdote illustrar.es, this
He added, "I'm doing iL" He has
also called himself a "revolution·

sunday nme&amp;-Sentlnel~age-AS

. . - - - - - - - - - - -.Local
briefs---------:---.....,
..

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH~olnt Pleasant, wv

July 19, 1992

GVFD responds to fire

Breaking and entering probed

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department
responded to a call on the comer of Second Avenue and Olive
Street earlr Saturday morning. According to a report by the Gallipolis Poltee Department, smoke wu sighted coming from a win·
dow in an apartment over the Happy C&lt;rner Bar by an officer on
patrol The offteer entered Jhc apartment and found J.R.Johnson, no
age given, unconscious on the couch and removed him from the
building. The Gallia County EMS was called. but Johnson refused
treaarienL
Eighteen rue fighters responded and the fire was put om with a
5-gallon fue extinguisher. According to the GVFD report, the fire
was caused by an overheated pan of grease on a cook stove. The
aparllllent incurred $510 worth of damage.

POMEROY • Deputies o( the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investigating the breaking and entering of a tool shed at a
constroction site on Highland Road
Jim Clifford, Home Creek Enterprises, reported that Wednesday
night, someone had knocked the lock off the tool shed and stole IWO
saws, a drill, a transit and a couple of toolboxes.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The burglary of the Mary Kibble residence
on Kaylor Road in Tuppers Plains in being investigated by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
Aecording to Jhc initial repon. guns and a VCR were reported
Stolen.

POMEROY • Several Mei~s
County teachets attended the OhiO
Academy for School Improvement
Saategies (OASIS IX) last weelc at
Ohio Dominican College in
Columbus. The academy is offered
as an inrensive five-day residential
experience fir practicing Ohio educators.
Those teachers participating
were Debbie Weber aitd Lea Ann
King of Riverview Sc:hool in Eastern Local School Disuict, and
Paula Whitt, Judy Carter, Kathy
Haley, Todd Johnson, Deborah
Lowery, Lynn McCarley, Linda
Stanley, Marge Felly and John
Amou of Meigs Local School District
Now in its lith year, the acade·
my is sponsored by the Ohio
Depanment of ~ucatiM, Di"!J!on
of Equal Educanon Opporturuttes,
as a means to assist educators in
using the Effective Sc:hools process
in their individual schools and dis·
tricts. This process is an effective
way in which teachers and adm!£1isuat.orS wort together 10 determme
the needs of their building and then
' ilevelopm a comprehensive
improvement plan to fulfill those
needs. Due to the cootinuing popu·
larity of the academy among Ohio
educators, two sessions were
scheduled this summer. During the
rust sesson. teachets and adminis·
traron attended as a team 10 learn
teaming concepts that could be
used in their own buildings.
This year's theme, "The Building Advisory Team's Leadership
Role
in
School
Improvement/Restructuring in
Meeting the Six National Educi·
donal Goals" emphasized that
strong team leadenltip is needed in
order to take Ohio education into
the 21st ccnwry.

1

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Paper mill workers
vote to oust unions

SSIJ»/o
5.640/o
Flxfd
Annual

JAY, Maine (AP)- A vote to
oust two unions whose unsuccessful strike divided this mill town
five years ago was cheered by
replacement workers who tpok the
.strikers• jobs.
.• "Hallelujah. We beat 'em,"
.{)ave Gilchrill 'said after the results
were announced Friday. "I feel
elated. I feel greltl."
.. In the two-day balloting, 616
International Paper Co. workers
voted to 11CJ111 unJOil reprcsc:nlllion
while 361 voted to rewn coUective

3-Year

~~ 94 ballots were chal-

lenged - not enough to mate a
difference in the ftnal decision to
decertify United Paperworters
lntetnational Union Local 14 and
Local 246 of the International
Brotherhood of Firemen and Oil·
ers.

Hospital news
VEJ'EitANS MEMORIAL
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS -Cecil
King, Bidwell; Norman Will, Rut· .
. Jana: Addie Warner, Pomero~:
Winnie While. Raeine; and Blste
"Roush, Pordind.
· FRIDAY DISCHARGES
Maraio Schuler.

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Rate

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6.170/o
fbed
Annual Percen138C Yield
Qrrrent

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MEIGS - Two accidents involving deer and vehicles have been
reported to the Meigs County SheriiT's Department
Frederick Joe Stoban, Racine, struCk and tilled a deer on Route
124. Moderate damage was SUSIIined to Jhc front of his 1988 pickup. The accident occurred at4 pm.

THE AGENT WHO INSURES YOUR
CAR AND HOME CAN ALSO PROTECT
·YOUR FAMILY'S
FUTURE.

•,

.
SUTION TOWNSHIP - A number of persons, includini a :.
dozen juveniles, have been cited to court after deputies of the Metgs
County Sheriff's Department came upon a drinking party at a farm
in Sutton Township.
The juveniles were taken to the office and their parents were
called 10 come and piclc them up.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported that the department had
received several reports on this location. Over the July 4 weekend, a
vehicle was reported pushed over the hiU and was totally damaged '
when it struck trees. Also a juvenile received a broken nose after
being assaulted there, according to the repon.
The report stated no one admiu.ed 10 bringing'beer to the area.

Deer accidents recorded

GfJ.LIPOLIS ·The Ohio Department of Highways District 10
hu contracted with Ohio Line, Inc., of Aurora, for $590.057 to
begin painling hijlhway lines on Aug. I. Hi_ghways to be painted
include U.S. SO to Athens County and vanous routes in Gallia.
Hocking and Meigs Counties. The date for completion is set for
Sept. IS.

Meigs County
.teachers attend
Columbus session

Citations issued

1987 BUICK PARK AVE. 4 DR.

Burglary investigated

ODOT to paint highway lines

Simon Johnson, Pomeroy, reponed that around 9:15 p.m. on
Route 325 he SlrUCk and killed a deer that ran into the path of his •.
1982 Chevrolet pickup truek. Moderate damage was listed to the ~
vehicle.
:

992·2174
() 500 EAST MAIN, POMEROY, OH •

SUNDAY PUZZLER
See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-2
ACROSS
1 Singer Sinatra
6 Extra
11 Unmoving
16 Harrison and
Geraldine
21 River bank
22 lroquolan Indians
23 Japanese
gateway
•
24 Representative
25 Individual
26 Story
28 Cultivates
30 Actor Hackman
32 Fulllll
33 Diphthong
34 Wager
35 See eagle
36 Discharged a gun
37 That woman
38 Couple
40 Fathers
42 Sugar - Leonard
43 Garfield and
Morrl$,
44Pieala 45 Small rug
47 Serpents
49 Comedians
50 Also
51 Glistens
54 Force
55 Impolite
56 Nun
59 Vessel
60 Footllke part
62 Lags behind
6-4 Female relative
65 - Mans
66 Early morn
67 Short sleep
69 Qllaver
70 Shade trees
71 Hurried
72 Billy - Williams
74 Noblemen
76 Guido's high note
77 Poems
78 Depression
79 Indispensable
things
82 Pagan
84 Pleats
85 Carry

86 Twelve months
88 Orient
89 Fork prong
90 Play part
92 Potpourri
94 Dlslnlectants
98 Pedal digits
99 Defaces
tOO Type ol dance
102 Jogs
103 Make lace
104 L.A. lootballer
t05 Froos
t06 Shoe bottoms
108 Drunkard
109 " let II -"
110 Near
111 Transaction
112 Screeches
114 Crimson
116 King : Fr.
1I 7 The human soul
119 " Red -"
120 Jump
122 Fixed portion
124 Island in Aegean
Sea
125 Average
126 Bailey of the
comics
128 Lowe or Reiner
129 Native Egyptian
131 Harbor
132 Insane
133 King ol birds
135 Algonquian
Indian
138 Harvest goddess
139 Doom
140 On behall of
141 Throo: prellx
142 Louise 10
143 Mysell
144 Danish Island
145 Chess pieces
147 " The 39 - "
149 Game at cards
150 Expunge
152 Kind of material
154 Saccharine
156 Bodies or water
158 Chores
159 Lean·IOS
160 Rips
161 Corner

DOWN
1 Raft
2 Renovate
3 Hall!
4 Neon symbol
5 Range of
knowledge
6 Cuts
7 Sham
8 Be ill
9 Concerning
10 " The stxth sense"
11 " West Side ·- "
12 " 0ur - "
13 Fed. agcy.
14 Roman 51
15 Ignites
•
16 Strain lor breath
17 Mature
18 Earth goddess
19 Finished
20 Accumulate
27 Kimono sash
29 Meadows
31 Dawn goddess
36 "- Time,
Next Year"
37 Owl cry
39 Leave out
40 Walk
41 Go by water
42 Retreat
43 Uncouth persons
44 Majority
46 Newley 10
48 Difficulty
49 Toss
50 Containers
51 Shovel
52 Domiciles
53 Lawmaking body
55 Tell
56 Totals
57 African antelope
58 Leases
61 Hindu garment
63 Baked ctay
64 Fish sauce
68 Contestants
70 Newspaper
executives
71 Sellen tn temper
73 High regard
74 Grafted: heraldry

75 Winter vehicles
77 Beginning ·
78 Portuguese lady
80 Vest ages
81 Sodium chloride
83 Possessed
84 Evergreen troos
87 Sharp reply
89Soosaw
· 90 Leather belt
91 Jackets
92 Manufactured
93 New England
university
95 Entrance
96 Forbidden by
tradition
97 Beer mug
99 Distance measure . ,
101 Tolled
105 Ch-s
106 Peruse
107 Pintail duck
111 Highlander
112 Chair
113 Surfeit
115 Challenge
t 16 Spare 118 Barks
119 AI this place
121 Large llat dish
123 As far as
125 Engines
126 Yelp
127 Herons
129 Shooting star
130 Musical drama

131 Equality
t32 Satellites
134 Brim
136 Coral Island
137 Glenn or 111m
139 Wages
140 Nutriment
144 Inquire
145 Gr,aln
146 Fast· llylng plane
147 Ocean
148 Health resort
149 Ship 's record
151 Equally
153 "-, Wilderness"
155 "-,the People"
157 Running

�Page A8 Sunday nme1 SenDnel

•

Pomeroy llddleport Gallipolis, OH Point 'PIN18nt, WV

July 19, 1992

Gallia County's early doctors and their unusual research
By JAMES SANDS
Specill Cornspc~~dent
ADDISON • One of tbe ealy
families in the Addison cooununity

spent teaching school and studying
chemistry. In late 1849 Thomas
moved to his brother's house in
Addison to study medicine under
James who had an established prac-

are buried in the cemetery across

tice.

wastheBanoocian,~orwhich

rrom the Addison

FJeewill Baptist
Olurch. Some
the family also
helped IOorpnize
both the Methodist and the Baplist
Chun:bes in this
hamlet named for
an English poet.
Thele wm three B.wns who
became docun in Addison. the first
beingJameswhosetuppracticethere
in tbe 18401.
Thomas Barton was a doct« in
Addisllll in 1be 18S0s. Then C.C.
BariOn practiced until tbe tum of the
century. Thomas Banllll 'NIIl(c IIIII
published his autobiogqphy and it is
a good source of what doctoring was
like in the IBSOs.
According 10 BariOn it was the
death of bis sister of typhoid fever
that stirred him 10 try 10 fmd ways
to help prolong life through the
medicai.U. In 1847 BartOli began
the study or chemistry on his own.
He writes that be was shocked
when be Bed a veiCrlll doct« in
Meigs County for a definition of
alkaloid and tbe doctor didn't
know. Such drugs as morphine,
strychnine and bucine are in the
alkaloid family. Stated Barton
"Think of this ignorance. ye sons
of Esculapius."
Banon's next few years wr.re

or

DATES TO 1195 • The Addison Pree WUI Baptllt Clutrdl
. dates to 1895. Some ol'tbe early leaden ol work be~ ud aldie
· Methodist Cburell were memben ol the Barloll daD, three mem·
. bers ol whom became doctorL ID 1850, Addison bid three doctors,
two or whom were BartODS.

~allia

County Court news

. GALLIPOLIS • The foUowing Hill Ryan, Girard, Penn. were
·cases have been processed by the granted a dissolutioo of~;
:oallia County Municipal Coon of
Norma J. White, Buck Rtdge,
:Judge Joseph L. Cain:
Gallipolis, and David A. White,
· DanielL. Walls, 31, RL I Proc- Texas Road, Gallipolis were grant:torville, was fmed $7SO plus COSIS ed a dissolution of marriage;
·and sentenced 10 six months in jail
Melissa L. Moore, Georges
:for D.U.I; Michael D. Walls, 31, Creek Road. Gallipol!s. and Keith
:Rt. I Proctorville. was lined $7SO W. Moore, Ferns Lane, Point
;plus costs and sentenced to six Pleasant were granted a divorce
·months in jail for D.U.I;
and
: Donald M. Harrison, 26, Gallia
Wilma l. Morris, Brook Drive,
:Stree~ Oak HiD, was fmed $14 plus
Gallipolis, and James B. Morris,
.costs for speeding; Jack D. Dillon, Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis were
:30, Vinton, was fined $100 plus granted a divorce.
:costs for no oj!erator' s license;
-Mark D. Cremeens, 29, Rt. I
:Ewington, was fined $100 plus
'COSts and sentenced 10 six months
:in jail and six months probation for
:no operalOr's license and Steve L.
' ·Stewan, 23, W. South St, Jacksoo,
FIL liiiU 1US.
:was fmed $100 plus costs and sentenced to sill months in jail for no
: ~t \J O ~t KiD\1 i \
:operator's license.
:common Pleas Court
"
The following cases have been
:processed by the Gallia County
:Court of Common Pleas of Judge
-1 e.IC)O~~~~ •• - ·e 10-c ~~:,.~...
Donald A. Cox:
: Bond has been set for Michael
o•IVIIIIII SHOW 7:31
L. Rossiter, 23, Vine St, Delaware,
ADIISIOI Sl.St
at $10,000 with 10 percent . He
441 IIH
was arrested July 14 on charges of
resistin$ arrest, escape, falsifica·
tion, cnminal damaging and two
accounts of assault
SPRING VALL~Y CINEMA ,.,,
Richard D. Burri$, Addison
446 4524
. ; .
Pike, GaUipolis, and Margie I. Burris, Aorence Avenue, Jackson were
granted a dissolution of marriage;
Vicky Danford, King Chapel
Road, Crown City, and Steve Dan·
ford, RL 2 Chesapeake we:e grant·
ed a dissolution of marriage;
Stephen R. Hill, Chatham
Avenue, Gallipolis, and Debra K.

There was a lot of jealousy
among the doctors in the 1850s·as
there were diverse theories on
treatment. One old doctor from
Cheshire who also covered Addi·
son was fond of "badmouthing" the
youn~ Barton brothers. On one
occaslOR Dr. James and his student
Thomas were called 10 the bedside
of a youn~ lady. They pronounced
the condiuon serious. The old doctor soon showed up and declared
that the lady would soon be up and
around. In a few days the lady was
dead and ironically the reputation
of tbe BariODS as diagnoatic dociOrS
much enhanced, even if it was
doubtful the two would have saved
the lady even if they knew what
was wrong with her.
After only one year of study
Thomas was called to treat a lady
who had cholerL His brother was
himself in bed with cholera. The
WIXIIIII survived and thus grew the
repuwion of Tom BIWIOn.
There were two great cholera
epidemics in Gallia history, 1832
and 1849-1850. During the latter
Barton relates churches and schools
were closed for months. People
refused to shake hands with anyone
or even walk within 100 yards of a
house where cholera had been. The
bereaved families were shunned.

People con~ratula~ themselves
on their abilities to get windwanl of
any person they did have 10 meet.
If people did Jesve home they
wore handkerchiefs dipped with
vinegar or camphor over the nose
and canied llKred rope in tbe pocket. Some .~so wore strange bags
around the neck that Clllltaincd odd
concoctions of herbs and spices
•believed 10 chase away cholera.
Perhaps Barton's most interesting anecdote of his early days at
Addison came when he and his
brother tried 10 retrieve an abandoned corpse for study purposes. It
seems that a deckhand had died on
a steamboat and the ctew had
buried the man in a shallow grave
one mile south of Campaign Creek.
The two BariOns and Mr. Reeves
decided 10 wait until midnight and
row a skiff to tbe river bank graves.
"We were anned with spade and
mattoCk and moved cautiously, one
rowing the skiff, and the others
standing guard. We soon had the
body resurrected. We carried it to
the skiff and reinterred it on the
opposite side of the river, intending, when the excitement incident
10 such an occurrence should subside,to repossess ourselves of the
remains, dissect the body and keep
the bones for a skeleton."
The next day neighborhood
detectives were fast at work and
carriage tracks were discovered
near the grave. S0111e aocused lhe
doctors while others knew whose
caniage made the ll1ICks. The doc·

tors decided 10 let the body lay in
the ground in Virginia. Barton concludes this chapter of his life saying: "My·funds were now almost
.exhausted and my rmancial condition such that I could no longer
remain a student of medicine . I
reso.Ived tberef~ !0 bc$in m_y p~
fCSSlon as a pracbemg pbystetan.
James Sands is a Special Suoday
Times-Sentinel conespoodenl His
address is: James Sands, 65 WiDow
Drive. Springboro, Ohio, 45066.

T0\1 CRl

DfiVID SIMMS

FAR AND AWAY

SAT., JllY 25, L-GO p.a

POMEROY. · ~ licenses
have been issued in Metgs County
Probate coon to Edward Lee But·
terworth, 27, Albany, and Leahnora .
McCann, 26, Albany; and Ill Den·
nis Gaynel Bum:Ui, 47, Coolville,
and Linda LeNelle PoweU Burrelli,
48, Coolville.
Forecklllure sought
POMEROY - A foreclosure .
action l:as been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Bank One, Athens, N.A .• Athens,
against Jack K. Spires, Syracuse, in
tbe amount of $23,272.91.
Judgmeot sought
POMEROY • A suit requesting
declntory judgment has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas ·
Court by Betty Persons Mercer,
formerly known as Betty Lou Per·
sons, Long Bouom, against Action
Homes. Inc., Parkersburg, W.Va. ·

.

-......... ......,

. .AM.lPMM'M---

Automatic, Air Cond., Cassette

$.193

62

ONLY

:-:,th

4.9%APR
$10,951 Sale Price
$3266 Res. Value
Auto. , Cassette, Air Cond., Much Morel

R

.
HOUSESITTER

ONLY

21 0!,

5

5

4.9%APR
$13,885 Sale Price
$4741 Res. Value

PG

SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE!
Celebrating 126 years of Quahty Clothing Sales •••• 1866·1992
Men's Suits

Men's Sport Coats
20%·25%·50% Off
20%·50% Off
Reg.-s16S" Now 5J32oo Reg. ~5
00
Now
s76
Reg. s22SII Now s180oo
Reg. 155°
Now 5 1~4°0
Reg. s260II Now s2osoo
00
5
Reg.
165
5330
Reg.
" Now 524750
Now s132"
01

Men's Summer Sport
Shirts &amp; Knit Shirts
8eg. '2ooo Now s16oo
Reg. '25~ Now s2ooo
Reg. ~ooa Now 52400

ONLY

Dress &amp;Casual SkKks
20% ta 501/o

Reg. 52811
Reg. '32"
Reg.'SS"

BASIC

Now 2t'
Now 52640
Now.54400

2699

PREWASHED

$2 S8°~nth

reiJill!IIIIWIS-'-~ible.

Woodall said he can understand
tbe loyalty and feeling or tradition
people or lbe county have for their
old schools, bul he feels it is time
for some new traditions.
"Ch111ge is one of the hardest

things 10 aa:qJt." be said. "This is
the most signithnt things 10 hap-

pen in our school district." He

added he feels the change is ror the
best because the SIUdents stand 10
benefit from it "The board edu·
calion is goinR 10 make the ride up
here
be said.
With the ~~ the lawsuit
lilell by s~
fc!r a tempc&gt;rii'Y injlltaion lpinst the consolidaiiolrjllf ower the horizon, there
bas bolo some ipecui.UOn as to

or

Wllllhwblie."

'

r

why the school board and adminisuation are continuing with the reo~
ovation work. Woodall said that the
work began before the suit was
filed and to slOp the work until
after the hearing would delay the
school's opening until the middle
rlfall
"There is some concern, but I
don't a bow we can do anything
else." he said.
RVHS will hold an open 00\lse
August 23 10 give parents and stu·
dents an opportunity to explore
•.

their new territory. Stout said he
thinks everyone will be pleased
when they see the finished product
"Our goal is 10 have a rtne facility for the students," he said. "I
think tbe people wiD be pleasandy
surprised when they see."
Perhaps assistant fonthall CI08Cb
Ron Hammond may have lipped
into the collective mind of-lhe
adminislraion when. be devised the
team's new motto:

"The genesis of a new lrldi-

tion."

• . . . . . . . . . . 0¥

f ., ....

.

t ,, '

.

' "

.:r"

••
•,

LIKE NEW • A refurbished classiVOII llllilles fram a new coat
or paint 11d a slripped •Dd wued floor.

·.·,

PAINT JOB· Me•lien rJ tile RVHS At\Wfn 1'oulten pve tile
1tbletic llldlul pr. ball.., COlli rJ,.t Pitbntd- (len to
rJabt): Becky Lloyd, ller-. Gnc LIDyd ud Jo CoeL

David wood~:rorlhe

Gallia Cotltty

School Board.

LOADED I

5

5

r:'l

said he could not comment on the
cost of tbe transfonnalion project,
lxll added the costs wiD be worth it
"For llllking the building fit for
the students, I think the costs will
be justified." he said.
Woodall stressed that the stu·
dents will benefit from the oonsoli·
dation because of the increased
curriculum. He said that over 100
course units, twice as many as what
was ofl'cml at each rl tbe four ~
arate achools, wiD be offered.
The curriculum offered at
RVHS SPUcd the shtde!M•' inla'·
est ud "bmupta lot or (theni)
aroutid" ·to bemg in favor of the
consolidation, Woodall said; "The

7.9%APR
$14,998 Sale Price
S4927 Res. Valae

,

Straight Leg or Boot Lei

media center will benefit from a
combined coUcclion of more than
12,000 boots, She 10d Mulford
have ielecled and inve~~toried the
best boob £rom ~ IJiah school
10 koep fm- the media center. Once
again, the delnenllly schools scand
10 benefit - Ibis time from ·dupli·
CliO boob IIIII boob aimed for a
younger Iader.
·
GCttlclllid tbe new media een·
ter wiD seM W people IIIII txOYide
evcrythin&amp; from boob and oews·
papen to audio-visual sottwaro
such u computer proJfUlll and
¥idOotftpel
•
·
She allo llid thai abe and Mul·
ron! bvc • biJ job abeld of them. ·•
movina the boob and ma~s.
sbelvina them llld ~them.
"HopeCuUy we'll be
when
tbe IChool's reldy," abe • ·
Out In the locker room by the
football flelcl, C01eh Jaclt James
has beea Ill
. .
pUnting and
clean-up
~~~ walls have
been removed 10 make room Cor tbe
larger team. Jame.s, who coached
footlwJ) fm- twelve yen at South·
western, said he expectS tbe number of playas IOjump from 35, the
number at K~ last year, to more
than so players this Y!M·
The coach's wtfe, Beth, has
donated her lrlistic abililieltD dec·
orate the rooms with Raiders
ituilllia. On the door which leads
Ill die' ftelcl is • rhieJd ~th I bel·
m ted Raider and the words
"TivOIII• tlril ·door WQ/k tlrl melt
iJ{RINr Valley.•
The new and improved locker
room will b1vc 1 =room,
wltirlpoolllld . flcili.
ties (or the unifolll!l "so ~nts
don't bvc to mea with it, lamcs
said.
"The bue pbilosoP.hY is we
want to Ita~ it 10 be different for
the kids,"lames said. "'ur goal is
10 make it lint clall and f~ them
somethina ID be puud IS.
Jamet prailed the number of
people donating their time •nd
10 gel the llhletic fll:ilities
for the new school year.
"The boosters are helping a lot," he
said.
.
Jamet said that visitm' stands
and possibly a concession stand
wiD be added 10 the opposite side
of the football field to hold the
increased number or footbaB fins.

v= ::fl

Loadedllncluding T·Tops and Sport
Appearance Pkg.

0

5

ONLY
4.9%APR
S16,400 Sale Price
$5997 Res. Valle

·

.

; CHESHIRE • The building may
stiU look like Kyger Creek High
Scllool froni the outside. but on the
i.!l'ide a transformation is taking
place. The bobcat mascot on the
gymnasium wan bas been painted
o'ler and KCHS 's colors, scarlet
and gray. are steadily being
replaced by black llld silver.
In the minds of tllose who are
worldni this summer to prqme for
cmsotillation, the cbanJe is lin:ady
cctmplete. Justlistenmg 10 Vice
Principal Tim SC11bei17 answer the
phioqe
JliOYCSRtver
t1!at. VaIIey H.tg h
"Hello,
School.~
' """' .
•The high school, at 61,2SO
sq~:~are feet, Is the llli'lc;st high
SCIKlol in the dislricL 'lberefOie. It
was lhe candidate elected bl!d
GaUia County Local School
to: house the consolidated high
schools of Kyaor-~k. H10nan
Ti~co, Southwestern and North
Oallia.
. ·Employees and volunteers are
wOrking around the clock over the
SUJnmer to tnJliiRl the building fm700 incomtng students this lall.
f'Iie tt10sformation involves not
oqly a lot of painting, but also
installing new carpeting 10d new
tiling, stripping and waxing the
floors, and some small-scale renovation work.
: ·~Je may think we're doing
a jot of major construction, but
most of it is just clean"!lJI," Princi·
pal I'll SIOUt ilid.
The building, which hdd lbout
3SO junior high 10d high school
stljdaiiS last year • KCHS, is C.C·
ing a double in Slll!lent JM1l'"•im.
The board recently approved the
lease o1 twelve Jl(ll1abie.classrooms
to handle the influx.
"Presently, tho building resem·
bles an educational garage aale.
The gym floor and lwllwayil are
stacked high with desks. filing cabinets, boxes and other supplies
frOm the other three county high
schools.
Stout said that the best cquipIJICDt will be kept for River
aild the ~ elementary sc
wiD use wbat 11 left over. Anything
thai cannot be used 1iy the elemen~ schools wiD be 101d in an auc·
ti~ m- t1uown away.
:Ill the media center, librarians
B(Verly Gottles llld Mike Mulford
~ taeklina a mountain of boob
and materills from the four high
scllool•: Oeulea..~d ~~e RVHS

c.II441-ARTS for men Info.

5TEVIlWTIN. GOI.DI HAWN

Stories and photos by Kevin Pinson T-S News Staff

Transformation: Workers and volunteers pitch in to
~onvert Kyger Creek into River Valley High School

426 2nd Av.., G.lllpolle, Oh.

AND

GREAT PANES· Harve Ferrell prepara • window rr-e at
RVIIS for • new sbeetolglass.

•

Morrla •nd Dorothy HMidna
Ariel Theldrw

MY COUSIN VINNY

RAIDER'S HOME· RVIIS footblll COIIdl Jack Jutes shows
oil' Ills wife Beth'• ...tWI)Il oa- of the IoeHr 111011'1 doon.
TOUCH UP • Delible Belville, 01 lldder, IDd Mary lbrmoa
..a
il r.,tsJa eoat ol paint to tbl window trial oallide the Cllfeterla•
•

._SSIOI FlEE

FRI,. SAT.. SUN.
JOE PESO
IN

July 19,

Marriage lice~ .~ued

. GallliRJST

.........

Sec-tion B-

Court news

~~

COLONY THEATRE

~nn:o-. Jadiattl

Along the River

ONLY

5 298~!, .
.

Month

4.9% APR. ·
$18,914 Sale Prkf
$6355 Res. V. .

2899
STACKED TO CAPACITY· Equlpmelt rro,a·the roar COIII!IJ
1111111 ~~:boola
1a the .,......... u wen • the llalhnl11t or
.RWS walliDa ID be IOl1cd tlal'GIIIIl.·

•It•

I'

''

I

II

"

VISITORS' SIDE • D•Yid WIIOibU, pmldnt ol' the Gllllll
Coaly Leal Sdloolloard, ..... to die ...... lide fllllle foot.
bill lllld whn •ell ,.._ 'NGiiO GIIIIIIJ&amp;' Sclloollld I ella·
~lolllllld are pbaetd 110 lie ph td flr ,_ rJ •111111&amp; ...._

•

•
. DUST 0Fr • 'l1tl Gt* . . I leallllower liD cleal .... _. • !
•
lilt Olt of •liellter ~~- rJ IJie d iOOILio
•

.

-

.•

�..
•
---

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polilt Pleasant,

wv

July 19, 1992

19,1992

Property owners question whether
or not to· refinance their mortgage
BJ..-;:~cK COCHRAN

is a viable way for many home·
owners to reduce their current
ObloBoardoi'Ralton
mongage payment, pay-off any
consumer loans, tu:., and possibly
GALLIPOLIS - Should I tefi· end up with mon: money 10 spend
nanceniy cwrentmortgqe? That's pes month.
the questionaskin
that many
AdditionaU y, some homcowners
them propeny
and
owners are
g
selves
mav wish to refinance their cum:nt
~localda lenders and REALTORS 3 0-yearfifix~ rate mongage toth a
1 5 -rear 1xou ~te mongqe, us
"""'"' ys.
Many individuals who pur- ~vmg a considerable IIJ'!'Ount in
chased popc.ty when inta"est rates mteit$1 pa~nts and possibly end·
wen: in the 11)..12 pcn:cnt range or ing up wub a smaller monthly
who have adjustable mte mortgages mortgage payment;
.
.
(ARMs) « variable illll: IIIDIIIIBe
The old rule of thumb IS that IS
(VRMs) arc now contemplating pays 10 n:fUIIIIICe if prevailing rates
rcfmancing their current mortgage are at least two pcrcentsge points
due to IOday's low inten:st rates of below what you cwrently are pay·
anywhete from 7 1/2 to 9 314 per- ing, but that doesn't take into concent on a 30-year fixed mte mort· sideration whether you plan to sray
gage.
in your home long enough to
Refinancing when rates are low recoup the ref11Uli1Cing costs.

at, Soutbeuteru

Meigs County calendar
REEDSVILLE - All girls,
grades 7-12, inle~ted in playing
VC1lleyball at ~ Local should
attend a meetmg Monday at 7 p.m.
at the high school.

SUNDAY
POMEROY • Regular SOLOS
gatberin~. 4 p.m., Pomeroy United
Methodtst Church. Theme: For·
giveness. All Christian singles
(unmarried, divon:ed, widowed, of
aU ages) welcome.
RACINE • Cozart family
reUJiio9. Sunday, at the Bill Cozart
carDps!le behind Cross' grocery in
Racme. Family and friends wei·
come.

Thomas-Acree
MIDDLEPOltT- Rev. aod Mrs.
Ridllld "'eed" (LoRua) Tllomas,
Wlleelcrs'burc. announce the
'&amp;C 't llld (oohn,.ing marriqe or !heir oldest daughter.
Clleryl Marie, to Jeffery Alan
lrm1c. oldcll ,.. &lt;i Mr. llld Mn.
Glry (Rollena) Atme, M'""''epwt.
· Miss 'l1lomas the gmnddaughtcr of Mr. llld Mn. theo. (Lil)
Pic:IICM. Wlleelersburg, and Mrs. ·
lbry
Ftlilklin Furnace,
..t die ._l'lul A. 1'homu. She is
a 1990
&lt;i Highland Bend
O.iltilil Academy in Sciocoville,
ud il presentJy employed as a

s

Thom•.
r•

a-t-time 'blbjsilb.

Aaee is die JIQillhoa of Mr.

RACINE • Big Bend Farm and
Antique Club wiU meet Monday at
8 p.m. at the Southern High
School Everyone welcome.

and Mrs. Rob (Pearl) Keyes, New
Haven, W.Va., and the late Earl
and Hanna M. Acree, Middleport.
He is a 1988 graduate of Meif2ss
High School and is present y
employed 81 Ohio Air Fn:ight (Airborne Express) in Huntington,
W.VL
The couple will exchange wed,
ding vows on Aug. 15 Ill the Oarden City Freewill Baptisl Olurch in
Wheelersburg. Music will begin at
11:30 a.m. with candlelight cen:mony Ill noon. Rev. Kermit Webb,
South 'Point, will officiate. A reception wiD be held following the ceremony . The event will be open
house.

Cenlill r • ,- • ..., _.,
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1t u -tltl•llal ... • lilb::s • J" 4 7 1:11 1 Mrt Duay Jolm.
wbcR m.
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home in ..... ,a. will
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buy a - .._aellflii&amp;IDacli- . . . . . b''L 1l1ere will allo
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existq: ltosle ID Dill: *
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MIDDLEPORT The Middlepon Youth League will hold a picnic IIIKI pool party Monday from 69 p.m. at the Middleport Park. Any
member of the ball team and family
memben are Ullled 10 aaend. 1bo3C
attending do not need to bring anything.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - United Methodist
Coopcntive Parish will hold VICB·
tion Bible School Toesday through
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at
the 311 Condor S1reet in Pomeroy.
Martel Place 20 AD is the lhcmc.
B · a salt lunch. Drinks vided.~ 992-7400 or 992-3m for

RACINE The 19th annual
reunion of the Charles and Alma
Heinzman Snyder family will be
held on Sunday at Star Mill Part in
Racine. Basket lunch will begin at
I p.m. Each family should bring a
door prize.
POMEROY • Big Bend Youth
Football League officers and
coaches will hold a meeting on
Sunday at 7 p.m. at the Meigs
County Golf Course to schedule
this year's season.

*

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... ~.Ja a · , tltis
live Ill&amp;)' b r· ..)CIS wi*lilde
down~ •
; if die rcfi..
nanocd ... is
lllis
poses less of• is:
• far a
potentialbupec.
Motivalialls lilr r?
~war
from indiwiduliD iadif 7 nc
Mortcace Bulen
estiml1cs lhalir0
. p e, , . I
with dowzwud adjes!
• of
adjUSI&amp;ble ate wf&amp; I , ....
bomeowtteD SIO.Ii wujaz ialt
year and willsne- -litis
7

I k

MR. and MRS. MICHAEL (SUSAN) ANDERSON

O •

.

Best man was Timothy Ander.:Watts of Ewington, and Michael son of Chariton, In., brother of the
:1.nderson of Chariton, Ia., were groom. Groomsman was David
)ilited in marriage June 20 at the Anderson of Chariton, brother of
·&lt;Jrace Holiness Church in Ander- the groom.
~. In., with the Rev. Mite Ander·
Bearing gifts of the bride and
·ion and the Rev. Ben Watts ofnci· groom were Joshua Anderson,
llting the cen:mony.
cousin of the ~·· who carried
; The bride is the daughter of Bibles on a satm pillow.
Rev. Ben and Barbara Watts of
Registering guests was Diane
~wington, and the granddaughter Andtlson, sister of the groom. Serllf the late Earl and Murl Harris, vice bulletins and birdseed were ·
4nd Ms. Ida Watts of Tecumseh, handed out by Joanne Anderson,
Mi
sister of the groom, and Christie
: · The groom is the son of Rev. Cuevas, cousin of the bride. Guest
Mike and Kathy Anderson of of honor. was Barbara Shockley of
,Chariton, Ia., and the grandson of Crestwood, Ky.
·
j.loyd and Ruth Crigler of Paris,
Music was provided by pianist
~o., and the Rev. Geary and
and soloist Timothy Watts of
::Pauline Sadler of Marengo, In.
Columbus, brother of the bride.
:; The bride, escorted to the alw · A reception followed in the
j)y her father, wore a designer church's school hall Assisting with
:taffeta gown featuring a Victorian the JeCeplion .wen: Debbie Ander·
-neckline onace, mutlOii sleeves, son, Bedt Wilhelm, Cyndy RoberU,
;:and a fitted princess-bodice; the Oaynelle Brown and Charlene
:bodice and sleeves were adorned Brown.
:with iridescent sequins lnd pearls.
The bride is a 1990 graduarc of
-A floor-length sltirting was deco- the Univenily of Rio Grande with
:ntcd by ribbon tie-ups over lace a B.A. degree in Elementary Edu·
::1Iowing into a catbcdnl train. She cation. She has been tcathing at
:,"Wore a headpiece of white roses Waltoa Elei!ICntary School, Wal·
tOri, W.Va., ind will be teaching at
:!nd a tapered veil of lace.
She carried a cascadi"B bouquet the Mormon Trail Elementary
:~&gt;f country-blue, baby-blue and
School, Humston,la.
·
The groom is a 1988 graduale of
~bite roses.
• Matron of honor was Beverly Christian Liberty Academy and
~of Spencer, W.Va. friend of will continue employment at Pulli·
~he bride. Bridesmaid was
ums Healing, Plumbing &amp;: Electric,
:RuthAnn Cuevas of Marion, In., Chariton, la.
:J;ousin of the bride. Flower girl was
The couple is residing in Chari·
ilreanna Wilhelm, cousin of the ton, Ia.
llride.
•

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help you dellnlile ifw="i
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POMEROY • The regular meet·
ing of the Drew Webster Post No.
39, American Legion, wiU be held
Tuesday to honor Buckeye Boys
State auendees and their parents.
Dinner at 7 p.m. IIIKI meeung at 8
p.m. All Legionaires urged to
attend.

7

...

U.S. District Judge Robert
Sweet siped an ordCi' lbwsday
D f I illl tbe from Mississippi liM
P•ifederll court
After Oyiq to New York and
bciila ll:lled before a live studio
Mf cl Ms. IIIII Slid she leamcd
die . , . li• Jd6l ID pandpam1ts
ttyilll 10 late custody of their
JI'P"':•ildRII away from the par·
I

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•

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wi•

Ms. Hall is aJIIII.Cd in an ongollei daqbter and
• . . . OWl' fie Cdldy of their

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,

. Reception slated
. • GALUI'OI..IS • The children of
Faye Rccs invile friendS and family
..10 .. open c:h!Rh reception Sunday, JulY 26 fioln 2-4 p.m. at Grace
Ulliled MethodS~ Cbun:h, to help
c:ddNa her IKJth birthday.
It's Jll!IUCSl gills be omiued.

I·IOMJ7,3771
'"Toeal SiltY/action _
W,a Guarantee Ill"

SYRACUSE • The Syracuse
Presbyterian Church will hold
Vacation Bible School Monday
through Friday from 10 a.m. to
12:30 p.m. daily for children and
youth.
SYRACUSE • Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities will be
held Monday at 7v.m. a1 office in
Syracuse. All mectmgs open to the
public.

R

.

•

PEA
ROOM

llln.2NI

,

$32995

: ATHENS • The Ohio University
fsi Chi Chapter of the National
Honor Society in Psychology
recently initiated new members.
:AmonJI those initiated was Kelly·
1o Chapman, a junior double
J!lajoring in Psychology and Ele·
menwy Educauon.
• Chapman is the daughter of
Steve and Linda Chapman of Gal·
lipolis.
.
To be eligible for induction,
undugraduate seniors must rank in
the upper 10 percent of their degn:c
college and have at least 1 3.S
·ora.M point ave11ge on a 4.0 scale.
~ltlir.ld~tes in the

-carpet Cleaning
...Power Washing
•Water Di•gt-Fiood
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GAlJJPOLIS Dee Unger with
AAA Travel Agency has just
returned from an extensive 4-day
series of prilfessional workshops,
training ;~essions and cruise ship
inSJ!CCtions in New York City,
wh1le attending the lOth annual
Cruise-A·Thon, sponsored by
Travel · Trade Productions and
Cr,aise Lines lnlemational Associa·
tion.
Unger joined witb cruise industry leaderS and professional travel
agents from throughout North
America for an inlensive study of
cruise vaation opportunities avail,
able during 1992. Attendees coneluded that local residents of Gal·
lipolis sh~uld stop dreamin' and
start paking, because 1992 IS the
belt'year ever fCI' the most spectacW. cruiles ll unbearable prices.
During the Cruise-A-Thon in
New York, Unger inspected the
I

Somewhere ...ln your attic,
ba..ment or dllk draw·
......thtrt'l an old family plc
ture that c1Mtrv11 · to be
copied for 1 gift tllat will be
truaurtd for generatlona to ,

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···········-····· ................. ················.,

POMEROY - Racinda K. Fraley
became the bride of Todd M.
Kimes on June 15 at the Syracuse
Nazarene Church with Rev. Glenn
McMiUan ofnciating.
The bride is the daughter of Ms.
Judy Musser, Pomeroy, and
Charles Musser, Letart, W.VL The
groom is the son of Mr. and Mn.
William T. Kimes, Racine.
Pre-nuptial music was provided
by Jane Wise with the help of Jim
Dailey.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore an elegant
ivory bridal gown with a princess
necldine. Simulated pearls and iri·
descent sequins embellished the
fro11t and sleeves. The princess
bodice accented lace-trimmed
basque waist leading 10 a full skirt
with bow pick-ups. Double-tier
lace flounce circled the bottom.
He, headpiece was composed of
simulated pearl loops and spillys
and flowers. It featuted an 1vory
pouf and a fingenip length veil.
She carried a cascade llouquet of
ivory lace, miniat\U'e ivory roses,
lilies, royal blue carnations and ivy,
accented with ivorr. pearls and
ivory and royal blue ribbons.
The bride's mother served as her
maid of honor. Mrs. Tracy Hall,
Pomeroy, was the matron of honor,
cousin of the bride, and Mn. Regi·
na Kimes, sister-in-law of the
groom was the honor attendant.
They wore matching royal blue
lcnee, length taffeta skirts with
matching jacket-style shirts with
puffed sleeves. The featuted ivory
lace appliques around the front and
collar and the sleeves. The shirts
had rails. The attendants carried fan
bouquets of ivory lace and ribbons,
ivory roses and royal blue camalions, including some ivy.
The flower girl was Miss Counni VanMeter, daughter of the bride.
She wore an ivory eyelet and lace
dtess with puffed sleeves, accented
with royal blue ribbons around the
waist and sleeves and royal blue
roses and ribbon on the top front of
the dress. She carried an ivory
flower basket trimmed with royal
blue ribbons and filled with match·
ing petals.

GALLIPOLis • In a garden setting at the home of Mike and Mary
O'Brien, GaUipolis, a wedding ceremony was performed by Rev.
John Corcoran, Rutland Church of
God, for Beclcie Long, daughter of
Roger and Delores Long, Pomeroy,
and Ban Tidrow, son of Jack and

John Phillips makes

Kristopher VanMeter, son of the
bride, was the ring bearer.
Mark Kimes, Racine, brother of
the groom, was the best man. Ray·
mond Kimes, Syracuse, brother of
the groom, and Jimmy Miller,
Pomeroy, served as ushers. All
wore ivory tuxedos, with the groom
in tails, with royal blue ties and
cummerbunds. They wore boutonnieres of royal blue carnations. The
groom wore a royal blue carnation
and miniature ivory rose and the
ring bearer wore ivory miniature
roses trimmed with royal blue.
The church was decorated with
two seven-branch candelabra with
ivory candles and royal blue and
ivory lace ribbon pew bows. A
three-piece brass unity candle with
ivory candles arranged with ivory
roses and royal ·blue trim was
placed on the unity table. Each
mother lighted either side while
Miss Wise sang '1'o Me." After the
vows, including special vows to the
groom, written by the bride, Miss
Wi3C sang "The Vows Go Unbroken."
OIICSts were registered by Brcn·
da Reed, Tuppers Plains.
A reception was held at the Old
American Legion Hall in Middleport with music provided by Tom
Payne, DJ. The couple danced the
first dance to "Love of a Lifetime."
The. hall was decorated with
ivory and royal blue streamers and
balloons and cn:pe wedding bells.
Ivory tablecovers were on each
table and were accented with brass
candleholders trimmed with ivory
and royal blue ribbons and ivory
candles.
The three-tier wedding cake was
decorated in iva-y. Royal blue sil1t
flowers and ribbons were featured
with doves and pearls. The calce
top featured a young bisque bridal
couple accented with royal blue
ribbons and rOsebuds trimmed with
ivory lace.
Out-of-town guests attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Scott Kimes,
Ashleigh and Justin, Homesrcad,
Fla.
The couple is residing in
Pomeroy.

steady recovery
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Pop
singer-songwriter John Phillips was
mating a steady recovery after a
liver tran splant, a hospital
spokesman Slid Friday.
PhiUips, who rumed out a string
of hits as a member of Mamas and
the Papas, underwent tl!e transplant
July 4 at the University of California, Los Angeles Medical Cenrcr.
The 56-year-old Phillips felt
strong enough to wallc around and
even play music in his room Friday. He was listed in good condi·
lion.

PhiUips said he would avoid the
drugs and alcohol that led to near
fatsl cirrhosis, according to Dr.
Ronald Busuttil, head of UCLA's ·
liver transplant prognun.
Phillips has talked and written
about his Conner drug addiction. He
said he weaned himself off narcotics in a rehabilitation clinic after
a 1980 arresL BusuUil said PhiUips
stopped drinking six months ago.
He turned out such hits for the
Mamas and the Papas as " Califor·
nia Dream in" ' and "Monday,
Monday." He also has written
songs for others, including the
Beach Boys' "Kokomo."

'

Beelry Tidrow, Richmo.nd, Ind. on
June 27.
The bride was escorted by her
father b~tween chairs set outside
towan:s a screen-like trellis decorated in bows and beads with ferns
and flowers placed on each side.
The bride 's dress was white
satin, off-the-shoulder design ,
uunmed mpearls and sequins. She
carried a bouquet of white gladiolus.
,
The mauon of honor, Megan
Swain, sister of the bride was
dressed in a sapphire-blue: tealength satin dress.
The flower girl, Lisa Smith
niece of the bride, wore a whit~
dress and hat decorated in sapphire·blue and canying a basket of
flowers for the bride to walk on
after dropped.
Best man was Rob Tidrow ,
brother of the groom.
Escorting those attending to
their seats was John O' Brien
cousin of the bride.
'
Music was provided by Jim
O'Brien, also a cousin of the bride.
A reception was held at the
O'Brien's home, aunt and uncle of
the bride. Serving were Betty
McKinley and Jennifer Tanner
aunt and cousin of the bride.
'
The bride is National Marlceting
Director of Epicurian, Inc., of Pensacola. Fla. The ~m is employed
by Geo. W. H1ll of Indiana in
Cannel, Ind.
The couple honeymooned at
Nags Head, N.C., and are residing
at 867 Late Nora North Drive
Indianapolis, Ind.
'

BRIIGaYOR

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$1495

OLD PIO'I'Oif

TAWNEY STUDIO
424 SECOND AVE.
GALUPOUS

1

ST

BIRTHDAY PARTY
AT DAY'S TONING SALON
•

AAA travel agent attends

there 11 I Beaalllul lilt
IIi
Allie!

..

•Any Typt of Cleaning

::I

of their junior year with a least a
3.8 OPA are also eligible.
C~an was also inducted into
the Ohio University Omega Chapter of the National Honor Society
of Kappa Delra Pi.

Queen
Elizabeth
2, the
theMeridian
Nordic
Prince, the
Westward,
an the Horizon, pime members of
the famed Port u New York OeeL
AJ a result, sho - named a "Mas·

446·7470

················~i········-·······

•

r.,. 111t1 147'-'S 'W.~I

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YOU PICK YOUI PIICEI

·

=

I

POMEROY · Cindy Oliveri of
the Meigs County Cooperative
Extension Service will conduct a
special childten's J?!Ognull. "Mat·
ing Banana Btead m a Bag" at the
Meigs County Public Library on
Wednesday at 2 l'·m. All childten
are invited to parllCipate in the prognun, which wiU cost $1. Pre-registratioo is requested.

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

.$1.4'5

DINEM SET

POMEROY • The Pomeroy·
Middlepon Lions Club will hold ·a
regular meeting Wednesday at
noon at Pleaser' s Restaurant in
Pomeroy.

JEFFREY BASHAM

Suing producers

'fOhio U, student initiated

. . JK.:WOOD

POMEROY • The Alzheimer's
Disease support group will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Center. All interested persons may
attend.

RACINE • Racine Village
Council wiU meet in recessed ses·
sion on Monday at 10 Lm. at Star
Mill Part to discuss the 1993 bud·
get.

Watts-Anderson

.
'• ANDERSON, In.· Susan Marie

I

the Soutr•

''· .

Fraley-Kimes

UCilb

&amp;IIIEOII ._ . _ - . ; . . . . . . . . '

. .:"·:

.

.

Long-

' '

'"! .·.

MR. and MRS. TODD (RACINDA) KIMES

RACINE - Then: WiU be a meeting for girls in grades 7-12 in
Southern Local at the high school
for those inten:sted in playing vol~. at the junior high and high

RACINE • The Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
7p.m.

engagemenL
She is a graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and has been
employed by Bob Evans Restsu·
ranl
He is a graduate ,of Meigs High
School and has been employed by
Don Tate Chevrolel
Wedding plans are incomplete
NEW YOR.It (AP) - A Missisat
this
time.
. sippi who claims she was
· ~rictal_ a.,~ on the Sally
.Jessy Rapblel show_ is suing the
JK!llb:as for • k:lsl $200,000.
lace Hall of Gulfpod. Miss..
a1 11it11 New York-llascd Multimedia F.arutlii•...,. IDc:.. o( luring her
01110 tbe show last ya by teUing
Ia Jbe would be mmittd with ber
esllqed claugltter and pandchil· •

It '.,

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ll~x;·:·~~
Afler
JC:
~,....,-

WEDNESDAY .
RACINE • The 19th annual
RUTLAND - The Rutland
reunion of the Charles and Alma Friendly Gardeners will have a
Heinzman Snyder family will be family picnic at the F'lfCDien's Part
held on Sunday at Star Mill Part in in Rutland on Wednesday with
Racine. Basket lunch will begin at Shirley VanMeter as hostess. AU
1 p.m. Each family should bring a memben arc to bring potluck items
door prize.
IIIKI a piece of lieasurcd wood for
roU caU. Marie Birchfield wiD chair
MONDAY
the program on gathering and
POMEROY • The Meigs Cross cleaning weatben:d wood with cdu·
Country Team will meet at the high cational information on using
school Monday at 9 a.m.
nature's treasun:s in arranging.

CHESHJRE - Stacy L. Bums,
daughter of Mite and Rachel
8 11111S, Cllesbire, and Jeffrey E.
Basham, sou of Gar and Lena
aam.n. Coolville, lmOIIJICC their

rt.

inCarnation.

LANCASTER - The annual
Matlack-Osbom reunion wiU be
held Sunday Ill the Lancaster Fair·
grounds shelter house. A potluck
dinnet will be setvcd at 12:30 p.m.
Bring table service. All relatives
and friends inviled.

POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buffington, Gallipolis, wiU preach at
the Naomi Baptist Church in
Pomeroy on Sunday at II a.m.
Public invited.

Bums-Basham

..

0

7

POMEROY - Mixed scramble
at the Meigs County Golf Course,
Sunday, 3:30-4 p.m.

STACY BURNS and

..,_P.
p·.•·

7

' .'

ter Cruise Ship Inspector" and
received an official Travel
Trade/CLIA Ship Inspection Certificate.
Cruise-A· Than participants
wccdthatofall theworld'sexcit·
ing and romantic ports of call, nooe
is more imponant than the cruise
ship itself, and that there is a pet·
feet cruise out there for anyo~~&amp;­
from the exclusivity offered by the
"Small Ships", to the thrilling
experience of sailing on one of the
new "Mega-Ships.
·" If Gallipoli s- residents are
thinking about talcin$ a cruise, we
have fust·hand expenence 10 guide
·them to the right ship, and the right
cruise vacation, at the ·right cost,"
said Unger. ''They can get all the
infonnation and service they need
for planning an unforgettable cruise
vacation in 1992 by contacting us
at446.{)699.

Get a week Free!
.Now offering Jafra Cosmetics. Ask how to get
a $50 bottle of Royal Jelly Freet.

DAY'S TONING SALON
106061wlnille Plkt

DEE UNGER

CARL'S
SHOE
STORE

..

r-:~---~-------------

ATTENTION!
OUR INSERT IN
TONIGHT'S
~§a:=?=~~ .PAPER
r;ii
SHOULD HAVE
READ:

Buy One 39·oz. Maxwell
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Get One 20 oz, Loaf of
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318~9666

20o/o
30%
40% .
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July '- Nltlo!MIItce CNom Month •d wl1h
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omllll.. - - 11oM Clwlloo'o l CD •

)

�OH-Polnt

wv

July 19, 1892

1882

July

· URG,offers day, evening- computer classes :

RIO GR~NDE • A coqrse in
MS·DOS Disk Recovety pi Halll
Di_sk Baclcu.ps· will be offered by
. the Office .or ~ .Eclncation
at the Unavemty of Rao Gtallde.
. This COinO will I{ICUS .llll DOS ~
grams for IBM and colilpauble
computers which aUow u~rs to
salvage valua':m:f'uter anfor·
mati011 and is
. for expi:ri·
eneed compula' USII1.
The class is being offered in
both evening and daytime sessions.
The evening s.esston will mc~t
Thursday, July 30.from 6 to 9 p.m.
The daytime session will meet the
afternoon of July 29 from I p.m.
through 4 pm. The registration
deadline is Monday July 27. Cost
of the class is $30.

MR. aDd MRS. WILBUR (VIRGINIA) CANDEL

Golden anniversary observed
'

BUCYRUS • Mr. and Mrs. Starlin of Bucyrus, an&lt;l two sons,
Wilbur "Bill" Candel, 4603 StW.er Gary and Lyle Candel, both of
Road, Bucyrus, celebrated their Bucyrus. They also have seven
SOdt wedding aanivasary II Glle· grandchildren and four great·
way Smorgasbord with their faqilly grandchildren.
011 ~y. July 18.
Mr. Candcl retired from Galion
A•reception will be held with Dresser in 1982 ifter 37 years of
their family Sunday, July 19, II the service, and he served in Italy and
home of their son, Lyle.
Africa during World War ll.
Mr. Candel and the forma VirMrs. Candel worked at Fairview
ginia Evans were united in mar· Manor for I 0 years and took care
riage July 18, 1942 in Gallipolis.
of foster children for nine years.
They have one dau~hter, Patty

Swatzel open house slated
POMEROY • Charles and Jane
Swatzel will observe their 50th
wedding anniversary today (Sunday) with an open house from 2-4
p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Olurch.
They are the_ ~~- of twO cbil-

dren, Michael, ot Vmcent, and
Anita Winebrenner, Racine, who
will host the event along with the
couple's four grandchildren.
It has been requested that gifts
beomii!M.

GALLIPOLIS • The regular
monthly meeting of the French
Colonr Chapter Daughters of the
Amencan Revolution was held
recently at the home of Carol Jackson. Hostesses for the day were
Sally Clay, Roberta Roush and
Carol Jackson.
The families of members were
also in artendance.
Regeot Carol Jackson opened
the meeting with the ritual and wei·
corned 21 members, seven visitors
and seven members of die Children
of the American Revolution.
After a brief business meeting,
Flag Chairman Donna Waugh,
gave the program on knowledge of
the "American Flag". Jackson
reminded everyone of the upcoming Fourth of July pamde and how
the French Colony Chapter would
help participate in it
The installation of new offiCerS
was held and the oath of the officers was given by Chapter Chaplain, Donna Lewis. They are:
Roberta Roush, Regent, Christine
Napier, vice, regent, Lisa Richie,
recording secretary, Carol Jaclcson,
treasurer, Gwen McGuire, corre~g secretary, Donna Waugh,
historian, Carolyn Haner, lilnrian,
Donna Lewis, chaplain, and Donna
MUITIIy, registrar.
After the ceremony, new Regent
Roberta Roush made various
iumouncements, issued her safety •
tip, and the chaplain Donna Lewis
closed the meetin$ with prayer.
The next meeUng· will be Saturday, Sept. 12. The chapter will be

Entry blank

.'

l' aPIIcasc return 10 Cham ber office on Slate Street or to loy Nckels,
Shoe Store
------- -

traveling to AmeriAora in Columbus, with departure time at 1 a.m.
from Grace United Methodist
Church parting lot. The trip is
planned to coincide witb the
Columbus Day Quincentennial eel·
ebration.
The National Society DAR has
suggested chapters across the Unit·
ed States attend this event of
National importailce.

'

\

'

~ews

1M

......

95 12-W••••
134.95

c.lt Now For
Fi~ ~ ~~IMI

1;

1-ICIQ.272-6327

gallery

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Gai~OH.

: The former famed ' Buckeye' ty, 2459 Eakin Road, Columbus,
'leteranS of the 37th lnfanll)' Divi· Ohio43204.
:aon of world wars I and II and the
Korean Conflict will meet over
Labor Day weekend, Sept. 4-{), at
the Radisson Hotel , Columbus
North, 4900 Sinclair Road, Columbus, Ohio 43229.
· The meeting is hosted by the
{;olumbus' Chapter and the Ladies
cf the earnp shelby a.apter.
: For more information, contact
the 37th Division Veterans Association, 65 South Front St., Room
7()7, Columbus, Ohio 43m, phone
(614) 228-3788, or contact reunion
chairmen: RJ. ''Chappy" Chappebr, 1664 North 4th Si.; Columbus,
pbio '43201, or James "Jim" Beat'
'

2-5x7

•

(61~) ~41 -1104

-11!1111111!11111- - - -· - ..

8-W..Is

AIISiale
...............
~---··----

bfa!k."

Vice President Theodore Roo·
: aevCit said In a speech in 1901 at
die MlniiCIOII Sllle Fair: "Speak
....
- ,,.,,
... and CIIT)' I bi g slick...

"

Althof and Cara Roush.
The 10·12 category Best of
Show was award~d to Autu.mn
Burnett. sar.ah Mtll~r won ~arst
place, and Vacror Smath won secone!. ·
•
Each Best of Show wmner
receive $20 and a rosette, councsy
of Columbus Southern Power
Company. All Beat C?f Show,. fust,
and second place wmners will be
displayed in the French An Colony
throughout July.
.
Galleries are open Tuesday·Fnday 10 a.m. • 3 p.m., and Saturday
and Sunday 1-S .~.m ..~1 FA~~

POMEROY

236 E. Mait St., 2ad Floor
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
992-5912
.446.0166
8:30 to 5:00 Ma1day·Friday :;~~ :: ~~~~=y·Friday
Closed nunday
Closed 'n•nday
ALSO: Jackson. Chesapeale, Alhens, Chllkothe, logan L McArthur

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

POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304)
'675-1675
'
.

II'S

PilE FUR
ERR

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$299995 Sail Prki

$79995 Sale Prke

( )F C~LC)l'HES

,SOFA, LOVESEAT &amp; OIAIR

At $130.00 Mo. fer 24 Mo.

At $3S.OO Mo. for 24 Mo.
FULL SIZE

SLEEPER

•699'5 Sail PrlaJ

$49995 Sale Price

At $30.00 Mo. t. 24 MI.

AI $22.00 Mo. for 24 Mo.

flEXSTEEL

SOFA

i.fATHER ,RECUNER
S74995 Sale Price
At
Mo. • 24 MI.

W/MATCHING CHAIR
95
Sale Price

$899

moo

At $39.00 Mo.lor 24 Mo.

SOUDCHEIRY

COMPUTER

.BEDROOM SUIH ·

ROLL TOP DESK

$1999'5 Sale~

$799 95 Sale Price

At $88.00 Mo. fer 24 MI.

At

RESTONK lED OF ROSES

lAJSt 33Ibs.
36 inches'

RECLINER
95
Sale Price

$499

SOFA, OtAIR &amp; OTTOMAN

$999 95 Sole Price

$1 09995 Sale Price

At $44.00 Mo. for 24 Mo.

At $48.00 Mo. hr 24 MI.
B. J. QUINN

QUEEN

• Approximate Weight Lou21lis. per week.

"NOT ANYMORE:'
centers.

OHIO RIVER PWA

_

.

.

~...._....

...\.- ~..,.

Sale Price
Mo. 24 Mo.

441 ·1177

.

WEDNESDAY

At $39;00 . . . 24 . .

'

OHIO RIVER PLAZA

At $39.00 Mo. lor 24 Mo.
MONDA'(
TUESDAY

SOFA

*89'9 '5 Sale Prkt
WEIGHT LOSS

*89995 Sale Price

95

fUISTEI

Physicians

' ''

SOFA.J.OVESEAT

SLEEP SOFA

*599

Mo. for 24

otAISE, SWIVEL GLIDER,

549

I

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GALLIPOLIS

""I'VE KEPl~
·rH REE SIZES

••

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Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

· OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

SEaiQNAL W/REQINER

-_....,._

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

when you enroll in our .
weight loss program.

PDIIIT PLIASAIT

Hannah Rumley, a student at
Kyger Creek High School, has
"recently been recognized for academic achievement as a United
States National Honor Roll Award
winner by the United States
Achievement Academy.
Rumlt:y's name will appear in
the orl!anization 's official year-:
book. .
The USAA National Honor Roll
awards provide honor roll students
with many benefits and services
and is a great tribute 10 a student's
dedication, talent and ability.
Rumley is the daughter of
Richard and Liz Rumley. Grandparents arc Larry and ,Nancy Hood
of Gallipolis.

Sliding IN salt. No ant refused servkes btKIIVse of lnabllty to pay.

FREE PIIYSIDJ'S

441·1177

Award winner

BEDROOM SUITE

Weight loss portion of the
program and Nutritional Supplemenu at regular prices. Not
valid willl any olller offer.

( _

p•AI.
.l TN CONTROL CLJNJ C
WEIGHT CONTROL

HANNAH RUMLEY

DINING ROOM SUtn

.PRE·DIET W.l
•

-- -------:---•- ----------

.

FUU SIZE MATIRESS &amp;lOX SPRINGS
95
S
Sale Price
At $24.00 Mo. hr 24 Mo.

HOIII: DAILY, I All.. PI; SUIDIY, 1.. PI
'

••

r

·

5 PIECE

TheyFeel Good'
PHDIE 175~7870

F'' u1Lv PRACTICE
.tUU

POINT PLEASANT • The John
Riley and Nancy Edwards reunion
wiD be held Sunday, July 19 at the
big shelter at Krodel Park. Lunch at
I p.m. Bring gift for auction.

9 PC. SOUD OAK

OFFEREXPIRIS 7nA/9l

KIPLING SHOE EO.

grammmg ts oll~red through _tne
support of the OhiO Arts Council.

club members.
The local representatives were
selected for their service 10 their
home, school and community.
They elected international offiCers
and voted on issues determining.
the direction the organization will
take in the year ahead.
·•
Highlights of the convention
included internationally known
speakers and talent, aa well as educational forums, individual and
club competitions, and sessions
designed to strengthen the local
club and individual members.
The loeal spans« is the Kiwanis
Club of Gallipolis.

IN 'rHE C'L()SE'f
i\LL f\1 '{ LIFE."

notes

The firSt non-stop flight from
Europe to the United Stale ended as
·Capt. Dieudonne Coste and Mau:rlcc Bellonte of France arrived in
Nalley Stream, N.Y., in 1930
aboard their ptane, "The Question

tors competed m fotlr categones
based 011 grade level: kindergarten
to lhlnl. fourth to sixth, seventh to
nintb, and 10-l2.
Best of Show in K-3 was award·
ed to Dustin Beach. First place
winners in the SIIIIC CIICgory were
Kass Lodwich and McKenzie
France· aoi:ond place winners were
Dustin'Beach, Bobbie Gulleu, and
Allison Snowden.
1 Best of Show in 4-6 went to
Aaron Epling. A fust place ribbon
was awanled ta Se).'!ard Schuette,
and second place nbbons 10 Aaron
Epling and Seyward Schuette.

Members of the Kyger
Creek/River Valley High School
Key Club were in Toronto,
Onr.io, Canada, July 4-8 to represent their club at the 49th annual
convention of Key CJiub International a!Qng wiJh ~ 3,000 other
Key Club members, announced
club oresident Charity Eblin.
Members chosen 111 atlelld were
Jodi Hobbs, lieutenant gOVCfllor •
division 9 Qunior); Melissa
McDaniels (so_pbomore); Amy
Beth Rothgeb (sophomore) and
Beth Vinson (sotlhomore representative), all or Gaflipolis.
· Mn. Sandra Forgey, Ker Club
Advisor, BldwcD, acc:ompuned the

ra.2

1-8x10

124

Iwant to be WJf
agent fot Ire
hf
¥v

I
1

~

JULY 28 - 31 ONLY!

2-5x7.

Jared Leach won Beat of Show
in the·grade 7-9 category. First

Key Club members attend
international convention

Balloon ·Daze Special
ra•t

.' GALuroLIS -The 1992 annual Youih Art in the Park Exhibit

~t;g:P:!~&amp;':~:IROBE-RT M• HOLLEY M• D•
ny, featured so_entries. Conlri'!o· ~~~::r~c::,!=:
Miller; second place to Chris

.

.

'
.' ·
wlaaera Aaroa Eplln1, Jared teach, Dustin
Beach, and Aatuma Barnett. All competed Ia
tbe 1992 anaull Youth Art Ia tile Pllrk Exhibit
and Competilloa.

FAC,. an exhibit winners l).aqled .

NEW OFFICERS • Members of tbe Freacll Colony ~apter
D1111bters ~tile Amerlcu Rmllutioll rect~~dymd at lbe liome ~
Reaent Cll'OI JacU.. lacluded Ia lle DAR's maaWy meetiag
w11 the lllltlllatioll of aew afllcera.lnmiW were: Roberta Roush,
Regeat, Cluistlne Napier, viee- reeeat, Llaa Rldlle, recordial sec·
retary, Carol JaeU., lrtllarer, Gwea McGuire, comspoadiag
secretary, Donna Waap, blatorian, Carolya Haner, librarian,
Donna Lewis, dlaplaln, and Dollna Murray, registrar.

~~~ SeaMid Avtt~~t

:¥Buckeye' veterans to hold reunion

'
·
LOCAL ARTISTS • Bill ,§taadlsh, omce
· aapenlsor, and Clareace Robson, line supeni·
mr, of Columbus Soalbern Power C0111puy, are
pktured wltb Frenc• Art Colony Best of Show

Myers will be held Sunday, July 19
at the Racalon CRdc"County Park,
shelterhouse S from 10 a~m. to 3
p.m.

CHESHIRE • Burnett-Smith
BIDWELL • Gospel Tide will
reunion,
Sunday, July 19 at the
be at the Poplar Ridge Church, 7
Kyger Creek Employees Club. For
p.m.
information call446-3648.
Monday, July 20
CHESHIRE • Annual Emory
GALLIPOLIS . Rev. Meenach
Vanco
reunion, Sunday, July 26 at
and The ·SunShine Gang will be at
12:30
p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Good Hope Baptist Church. July
Clubhouse.
Families are 10 bring a
20-24 from 6:30-8:30 p.m .• and
dish, beverage and table service. A
Sunday at 7 p.m.
table will be set up for the display
BIDWELL • Tent revival July of photos, newspaper clippings, or
20-25 at 7 p.m., Route 554 at B&amp;N special interest items.
Stone Yard. Sponsored by Meigs·
GALLIPOLIS • Decendents of
Gallia-Mason counties Crusade For
Levis
Campbell and Nancy Rife
Christ.
Jones are having their 57th annual
Jones reunion, Sunday, July 26 at
Wednesday, July ll
GALLIPOLIS • .David Clark, noon. Myron and Barbara Jones
Kroger's manager, will be guest wiD host the potluck at 1579 Shafspeaker at the Senior Citizens' ferRd
Center beginning at 11 a.m. He will
present a food label reading ses(films for the community cal·
tlldar appttJr two d4ys prl6r to an
event. They must bt rectl~td by
sion.
Reunions
the Galllpo/1$ Daily Tribune in
GALLIPOLIS • The family advance for publlelllion)
reunion of Steph~n and Stella

French Colony-Chapter DAR
holds installation; 9 new officers

able to work things out," Morrow
LOS ANGELES (AP) "Northern Exposure" star Rob said in a Slatement released by Uni·
Morrow has resolved a conuact versal.
Under
Morrow's
original
con·
dispute and will remain with the hit
traCt,
the
acror
was
to
receive
annusenes.
Morrow's decision, announced al increases that would raise his
Friday by Universal Television, per-episode salary from about
ended more than three weeks of $12,00010$21,000 over five years.
negotiations in which he demanded
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Rapmore money, while producers
per
lcc·T's album "Body Count"
threllened to replace him.
is
falling
on the charts, even though
The actor was nominlled Thurs·
it
has
received
wide publicity
day for an Emmy for his por1rayal
because
of
its
conuoversial
track
of Joel Fleischman, a New York
doctor who ends up in a small " Cop Killer" and explicit lyrics.
"Bod Count" fell 11 spots on
Alaska town.
Universal wouldn't say whether the Billtoard magazine charts,
according to figures released FriMorrow's salary was increased.
" I' m really pleased we were day.

"Discover the Tale11t"

. Suuday, July 1!1
GALLIPOLIS • A Prophecy
seminar will be presented at Frmch
City Baptist Olurch, located on SR
160. The seminar is Kheduled for
July 19-25 11 7 p.m. Lorna Gwinn,
Professor of Bible Prophecy at
Cincinnati Bible College, will present the seminar. A nursery will be
provided. Sunday 116p.m.

a take homo practice disb:tte. PreMS.DOS .
regiSirlltion deadline for both ses·
Utnltla
...
sions is Monday Julr 20.
.,
A course in MS-DOS Utillncs ·
Lotus is the ieeding application will ~ _offered b&gt;: the Office C!f
program for MS-DOS computer ConiJDwng Edbcauon at _the Una·
S]li'Cadsheets, In this intermediate ~ty ol Rio Onode. This course
class; participants will learn more will focus on DOS ~and ~u
advanced funcy,ons. such aS: intro- popams for m~ and c:ompatible :
ducrory macros, grapliing, dllabase computers and as desagned for .
functions, windows, range !18J11CS. experienced ~~ uscn.
.;
and printing func:tions. Panicipants
The class as betnJ offere.d an
~d already ,be familiar with the both evaaing .and da)'IUIIC ~ons. :
basic LotuS spreadsheet functions.
The eveni11g session wall meet :
. Instructing the class will be Tu~day1 July 2~ fro~ 6-9 p.m.•
Chuck Clark. Continuing Educa- The dayUme SCSSIOII will meet lbe"
tion Classes at the University of morning of July 29 .fromdcadl9a..m. ~ ­
Rio Grande generate Continuing noon. The rcg~strallon . liiC IS•
Education Units. Participants will Mondlly, July 27. Cost of. the cL.ss;
receive 'a Continuin~ Education , is$30.
. Ch •
Certificalc for .7 CEU s.
Instructing the coarse IS uc:k;
Clark. A certificate for .3 CEUs:
will be issued to pmiciplllts.
Ever since desktop computers:
started using large lwd dlst *ives, •
using computers efficjentl)' _has
bcoome IIIOIC confusing and diffi.
cult. Several commercial and
shareware programs are avii.lable;
which make us in' the computer:
easier for both OOVICCI and Cllpcri• •
cnced users. This course will .
demonstrate Uae many opti~ns .
available. A through undenllnding
ol DOS commands is imporlallt for
thisclass.
. •
Further information on th4;
workshops and registration infor"·
mation may be obtained from the
Office of Continuing Educaticm,
University of Rio Gllllde Box 878,'
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674 or by call·
ing (614) 245-5353, extension 325,
or toll·free in Ohio at 1·80().282.7201.

Names in the news .

Gallia County Chamber of Commerce
ftench Oty Revue

Length of act:_ _ _ _ __ _
Chorus only :. _ _ _ __ __
Interested in helping in other ways (please list):

lnll!ucting the course is Chuck
Clark. A certificate for .3 CEUs
wi,U be issued to pWc:iplints.
Locu 1-:t-3
Two classes in Lotus 1-2-3 •
lnlerrnediate Speadshcet ApplicatiOPS are being offered by the University of Rio Grande Office of
Continuing l!ilucation.
Evening class sessions will meet
on Tuesday and Thursday, July 21
and 23 from 6 to 9:30 p.m. An all
day session will meet on Wednes·
day, July 22, flmt9 a.m, to$ p.m.
Both classes will meet in the College of Business Computer Lab,
Room 108.
Cost of the workshop is $75.
Course participants will receive
instruction, course worksheets and

THURSDAY
SATURDAY

ALL MONTHlY PAYMENTS
ARE FIGURED WITH
SALES TAX AND SMALL
. DOWN PAYMENT.

REaiNING SOFA

~

•5t995 Sale Price
At $26.00 Mo. for 24 Mo.

EVERYTHING ON SALE.
COME ON IN AND BUY
WITH LOW, LOW

PAYMENTS

au.
nL
5 P.M.

FRIDAYS
8U.-8P.M.
FREE DEUVDY l SET UP
REMOVE OLD ITEMS FOR FREE

I

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&lt;
'{ '

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�1

-----Gallia County 'Farm Bureau

1

August 8, 1992

OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Talent show slated
' -· OALLIPOl.IS - !he Gallia
County Fann Bureau Talent Show
will be held Saturday, i\ug. 8 at the
Oallia County Fair. Registration is
at 10 a.m., with the contest staiting
atl0·30
$ow wlll be divided into 3
s- IZ ycarnnd under -13
c
years throug~ 19 years - and
!"ixed;agc grouJis. Out of county
JUd~cs will select the winners, all
decaslqns,of the .judges will be
final. ~irst a~d sec;ond place winners wa~l receave a plaque.
·
. Basas for judging will be on
ori.ginality, ability, showmanship,
poasc and appearance. All performances arc limited to 5 minutes.
Entries may include musical skit
paniOmime, balOn twirling, et~ .• ali
types of talent welcome.
Any band with equipment to be
set up - please come one half
hour before show time 10 get equipment an place.
All entries must be in by Friday,
July 31, and will be accepted on a
farst-CQITlQ, r.rst-sci'Vc b!iij$. No li!IC
en trio! will be B).COPIC( Send
nume, ud~~. age, and type of talcntlO: Oallla County Farm Bureau,
P.O. Box 349, Jackson, Ohio
45640.
.
For funher details, contact the
Gall ia County Farm Bureau office
at 1-800-777-9226, or chairperson
Janette Elliott at446-4950.

l.:

HARLti:ss HONORED - Kim Harless, eta·
ter, wu reeeatly hoaored by the Ohio Farm
Bareaa Fedentloa for her efforts Ia the 1992

Talent 'Show ~

II .

Gallla County Junior Fair

1

·'

Age
'

Type of talent
Send to:

1

7-UP

1

12 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

II
1
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Nam!!

A44ress

OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Gallia County Farm Bureau
P.O. Box349
Jackson, OH 45640

s

STORE HOURS
Mol'ldayflKu Su~day
8 AM-10. PM

298 SECON 0 ST.
. POMEROY. OM.
WE RESERVE
RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES GOOD SUN.~,
19 THRU JULY 25, 1992

ZESTA

c. William Swaak, Ohio Farm
Bureau executive vice president, left, aad Glean
Pirtle, vice president or field services.

with Harless Is

i',
GALLIPOLIS ·The Ohio Farm
~ Bureau Federation honored Kim

ship campaign.
Harless was recognized recently
Harless, organization director for as organization direciOr of the year.
Athens, Jackson, Vinton, To qualify for this honor, Harless
Lawrence, Gallia, Pike and Scioto conducted the best all-around camcoanties, for her outstanding efforts Jl8iJtD,
is the 1992 Farm Buresu member-

• She was also honored for
achieving a gain of more than 200
members during tile campaign for
her counties, and for having the
most farmers gained in a four-ormore county area.

~ Accident victim defends and
:~. appreciates those who help,ed her
•

•b
s
1
09
Spare R1 s..................La.

Ann
Landers
.tNN UNDERS

"lm, LeoAactte
'= IIIII

••
s,...·
c......ns,.......

stonn, these simple precautions can
minimize risk:
I. Take shelter, if possible, inside
a building or car. Close the
windows and doors. Keep away
from water and gas pipes, fireplaces,
stoves, radiawrs, electrical appliances and telephones. Postpone
washing the dishes or taking a
shower or bath.
2. If ouldoors, don't take refuge
under any tall, isolated object such
as a rent or a tree (although standing
under a group of trees shorter than
others in the area is better than being
in the open). Put down any object
that might con~uct electricity:.
umbrella, rifle, bicycle, golf club,
carbon-fiber fiShing pole, kite, metal
bat, or the like. Remove metal or
conductive items such as a helmet,
a hearing aid, glasses, jewelry,
hairpins, barreues or metal-cleated
shoes.
3. If outdoors in an open area, seelc
low ground. Curl up on your side,
prefembly in a ditch or gully. Lying
on a rubber or plastic raincoat
provides insulation. Avoid railroad
tracks, isolated machinery. elccui·
cal fences, flag and telephooe poles,
and bodies of wlller.
4. If swimming, return 10 sha'e; if
boating, head toward shore, take
shelter under a bridge or stay close
to a cliff.
5. If part of a group, spread OUL
Should you feel the hair on your
head, neck or arms stand on end,

lightning may be about to strike.
l~~~~rUdiarely kneel down, bending
forward with your hands on your
knees, 10 become as small a target
as possible.
DEAR READERS: The Harvard
Health Letter costs $2A, and it's
worth iL Write to: Harvard Health
Leuer, P.O. Box 420300. Palm
Coast, Fls. 32142-0300.
Gem of the Day: Never insult an
alligator until after you have crossed
the swamp.
Is lift passing you by? Wlllll to
improve JOII.T social skills? Write for
Ann Uwltrs' new booklet, "How to
Malee Friends and Stop Being
l.oM/y.• Send a ulf-aJdruseJ,/of18,
business-siu envelope and a clttck
or money order for $4.1 J (lhis
iiiCiudes postage and handling) to:
Fr~nds. c/o AM Uwltrs, P.O. B~

1JJ62, Chicago,IU. 60611--0.562. (In
Canada, send $.5.05.)

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Activists protest as
bear wrestles people
PLYMOUTH, Mich. (AP) About 300 people showed up at a
Wayne County saloon to watch
Caesar the bear wrestle hmnans as
animal rights activists pickettd outside.
"We're here protesting on
behalf of the bear's rights,'' James
Hansen or Dearborn said. •'These
people don't respect life."
The IS protesters at the Urban
Cowboy Saloon claimed tile OWner
and trainer, Sam Mazzola of
Cincinnati, declawed, defanged and
starVed the bear and cut tendons in
its arms. They charged he used
electric prods to punish the bear.
Mazzola, 29, said Caesar has
had no such abuse.
"Bears wrestle naturally in the
wild," Mazzola said. "We tell
people this is his play time, and
they're just his 10ys."

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Veterono MtliiCHiol Hoopilll

DR. PEPPER

L----------------•---~

rKim Harless honored by .OFBF

- Dear Ann Landers: I was
:: appalled at the accident-scene
. horror stories recounted in your
.. column.
:
Three years ago, . I was on my
•· way 10 a family wedding. I had a
- tmifying accident on an interstate
: highway and Ullaled my car. The
::; first person on the scene held my
:• hand and said a prayer:The second,
:i an off-duty paramedic, knelt amidst
,.., the broken glass to hold my head so
:: 1wouldn't move my neck and injure
"'· my spine. A quick-witted state
:: patrolman had traffic slOpped and
~ · called an ambulance.
.• The ambulance crew got me to
..;. a hospital where the staff took
; wonderful can: of me. They plugged
~ in a phone so I could let my family
- know I was OK. When I was
. released from the hospital, my purse.
::, with all its contents, along with my
''. suile3se and papers that had been
·1 loose in the car, was relllmed to me.
: Later, when I went to the junkyard
:': 10 get personal items out of my car.
~- everything was there.
:;,; The world is full of honest,
~· caring, wonderful strangers. Tell
·: them they are loved and appreciated.
:' -- M.C. IN KALAMAZOO
~ DEAR KAL: Beautiful. I'm so
~. glad you wrote to balance the
J picture.
: Dear Ann Landers: This
: in(ormative piece appeared in
· :the May 1992 Harvard Health
: . Letter. I learned a lot from it. It
'' could save lives. Please print iL -- BOSTON
;: DEAR BOSTON: I printed
: ·something similar several years
• : ago. but the infonnation is worth
:;;; repeating. Thank you. Here it is:
-:=- Thunderstonns are most likely to
-:_: develop on ho~ humid days. A good
indicawr of electrical activity in the
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a mdio broadcasL In the event of a

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July 19, 1992

At the British Open,

Faldo gains four- stroke advantage,
•

'

By BO~ GREEN
GULLANE, Scotland (AP) On ~olfs moving day, only Nick
Faldo could move: still at a record
pace and farther away from a windharried field in the I 21st British
Open.
A solid, workmanlike twounder-par 69,.coaxed from 25-mph
winds, enabled lhe lall Englishman
to expand the spread to four strokes
over Americans Steve Pate and
John Coot and six over the rest of
the field going into today's final
round.
Faldo completed lhree ttips over
the wind-rated Muirfield-links in
199, matching the record be set at
St. Andrews in 1990 for the low
54-hole total in lbe 121-year bistory or golfs oldest tournament
And it plsc:ed the results of this
tournament solely in his hands.
Now it is bis alone to win or lose
over lbe final 18 boles.
Cook and Pate agreed it is
unlikely be wiD lose it
·
.
"If anybody doesn't beat him·
self, it's Nick Faldo," said Cook,

wbo scoled an ea~le-3 in a round
of 70 while playmg in thy ame
twosome wilh Faldo.
"He doesn't do lhaL Nick will
be awfully tough. He's pulling
well, swinging well. He's got that
look - and !hat's tough," Cook
said.
Pate, after an erratic 69 that
included seven birdies and five
bogeys, concuned.
"I haven't seen anybody I want
to give a four-shot lead to, espe·
cially him," Pate said. "He's probably lhe least likely to go out and
shoot 74."
Even Faldo, wbo set a 36-hole
scoring.mart and bas a couple of
more records in reach, was bard
pressed not to predict victory.
"How do you answer a loaded
question?" he muttered to himself,
lhen tned:
"Ir I ean maintain lbe way I'm
going, if I can carry on in lbe same
mode," be began, letting that sentence trail off unfinished and
adding:

"I'm feeling p-etty good."
And weD be should.
The last time be had a score this
low, be went on to a second British
Open title. Now, be's an odds-on
favorite 10 do it again.
While be was taking his lead
from lbrce strokes to four, none of
the challengers could maintain a
threat in -lbe winds that gusted to 35
mph off lbe Firth of Fonb.
Gordon Brand Jr. of Scotland a
middle-level player on the Euiopean tour, once got within a single
sa-oke of the lead but feU off to a
72 and was tied for fourth at205.
Also at that figure were Donnie
Hammond, who last year lost his
playing rights on the American
tour, and South African Ernie Els.
Each had a 70.
Chip Beck, with a· 67 that
matched Hale Irwin for low score
of the day, and Spain's Jose Maria
Olazabal, who dropped a 55-foot
eagle pun on the 171b, were next at
206, a distant seven strokes back.
Olazabal shot 69 in the third

round, known to tournament players as "moving day," the day contenders attempt to gain a position
for a last-round challenge.
Except fll' Faldo, however, most
of the movement was to the rear.
The major casualty was 49-yearold Ray Floyd, the fi!Sl-round leader here who was mating what may
be his last ron at the one major tide
that has eluded bim in a JO.season

career.

Flo d's
e deserted him in a
s1111giing that left bim at 208,
nine shots back and out of 10ucb
wilb the lead.
Hi~ problems were nothing,
though, compared with those
ecountcred by PGA champion John
Daly, who scrawled an 80 on a
scorecard after hacking and llnsbing bis way into and out of 10 of
Muirfield 's dreaded pot bunkers.
He's dead last at 223.
Defending champion Ian BaterFinch of Australia had a 72 and
was at 214. U.S . Open champ Tom
Kite matched par 71 and was at
210.

¥r

UNHAPPY SOUL -Britain's Nick Faldo shows his disappointment over his shot at the first green during third-round British
Open play Saturday at Muirlield, Scotlaod. He started the day
three strokes ahead ol his rivals. (AP)

Olympians to get sendoff Wednesday
By PAT LEISNER
TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- To send
U.S. Olympians off to the Summer
Games m a big way, the city put a
shimmering 20-foot medal around
the neck of il skyscraper bearing a
message that says it all: "Go for
lbe Gold - from Tampa.' •
The 360-pound gold metallicpainted medallion, attaChed to a
red white and blue ribbon, towers
over downtown from the precipice
of the 36-story Landmark Centre to
cheer athletes leaving for
· Barcelona.
Banners line the streets. Bill·
boards border Interstate 275 welcoming Olympians during a twoweek send-off designed 10 showcase the country's athletes.
Tampa is serving as a staging
area for 6SO Olympians. They
come to be briefed, collect lheir
designer Olympic outfits, learn
some dos and don'ts for Spain,
receive last-minute training and
undago medical and dental screen·
ings.
It's the last stop stateside bef~m
boarding charter flights to Europe
and the XXVtb Olympiad, which
begins Saturday. The final plane
leaves Til!npa International Airport
on
Wednesday.
nal attion Siturday Ia Frankfurt, Germany,
According
to U.S. Olympic
wbk:b Gral WOII 6..0, 6-3. Germany moved Into
Committee officials, the send-off is
today's champloubip round against Spain. (API
unparalleled in length, events, community involvement and fund-raising.
"From lbe very beginning lhe
suppon from Ibis community has
been the most outstandin$ we've
ever experienced in our btstory,"

HEADED FOR F1NALS - f'oerman ace Stel·
fi Grar returns the ball to America's Lori
McNeD during Women's Federation Cup semifi·

American team, minus stars, falls
in Federation Cup semifinal action
'

•

•• ....
''

.,..

...••

....,•
"'

•

Geollf V. Voimh

Goi!mllr ol,Ohio

"But it's more disappointing
By NESHA STARCEVJC
FRANKFURT, Germany (AP) that players who did not want to
- The Federation Cup ended at lbe come here are playinjl somewhere
semifinal stage for the United else Ibis week,' be said.
Capriati and Fernandez, claim·
Statts, leaving the team disappoint·
ing
lbey wanted to prepare: for the
edandangry.
Barcelona
Olympics, opted to sldp
Disappomted that it lost Satur·
day to Germany, although the the Fedemtion Cup and are playing
Americans were the underdogs instead in a $150,000 exhibition
against the lllp-swlcd team. Angry event in Mahwah, NJ.
Without its top players, the
because the 10p American players
Americans
were seeded only sixth,
bad chosen to skip lbe women's
but
u~
No.
4 France 10 reach the
version of the Da~ Cup. .
Martina Navratilova, Jennifer last four.
But Americ;an ~ of defying
Capriati and Mary Joe Fernandez
bad declined to play in the federa. lbe odds once agam came 10 a devtion Cup, an event the United astating end against the powerful
Statts has won a record 141imes. "" clay court game of Steffi Graf and
Navtatilova is ranted fourth in Ante Huber.
American Pam Shriver was
the world, Capriati sixth and Ferhappy
for the opportunity 10 play
nandez sevenlb. Wilh lhecn around
and
refused
to berate those who
the U.S. team would have been
didn't.
among the favorites.
"If our top players were here, I
"Yes, I am disappointed that we
probably
wouldn't have had a
lost because I thought we bad a
chance
to
play
and this may have
shot," U.S. cap!ain Many Riessen
been
my
last
Federation Cup
said. "We came tb is far and we
match,"
sbe
said.
"I also had invididn'twanttosl.Op." .
tations for two exhibitions this

week but I chose to be here.
"No one should be made to play
for !heir coWltry, it's an emotional
thing. But if we were playing at
borne, I guarantee you that they
would have played.''
The absence of the top players
was blown out of proportion, Gigi
Fernandez said.
"I don't lbink they would have
done any better," sbe said. "I am
not sure they would have beaten
Germany. We bad a good team and
we reached the semifinals against
expectations,
"But Ibis shows where lbeir pri·
orities are,'' sbe said of the missing
players.
Germany will meet last year's
champion Spain in today's final.
Spain downed Australia 3-0 in the
olber semifmal.
Huber, a 17-year-old ranked
IOlh in the world, beat Fernandez
7·5, 6·3 to put Germany ahead .
Then Graf, the Wimbledon cham·
pion and the No. 2 in the world,
swept past Lori McNei16-0, 6-3.

said Harvey Schiller, USOC executive director.
Since July S, when the alhletes
began arriving, well-wishers have
jammed training sites in cities
across the Tampa Bay area to
watch swimmers, divers, soccer
players, cyclists and others work
OUL

And despite sweltering afternoon beat, hundreds line up daily at
Busch Gardens' outdoor Olympic
Village hunting autographs from
gymnasts, fencers, archers, sailors,
wrestlers, boxers or whichever
team mates' an appearance that
day.
.
.
A pricey fund-raising gala featuring retired Gen. H. Norman
Schwarzkopf, 1984 gold medal
gymnast Mary Lou Retton and 50
alhletes was a quick sellout About
1,000 paid $250-a-plate. Another
1,800 fans were expected at a $20
weekend lnakfast banquet.
It didn't bother fans tbatthe
U.S. contingent was absent big
name athletes like basketball and
track and field standouts, who went
straight 10 Europe for prior commitments.
Karen Manings of Forest Hills.
N.Y., was visiting relatives and
went to Busch Gardens, a popular
African-lbeme wildlife and amusement park where paying guests
gain entry 10 lhe Olympic Village.
"The whole country is in tune
10 the Olympics, but to be able to
see the albletes themselves - any
of them - is great," she said.
"That was my big incentive."
Joyce McManus, a special edu-

calion teacher from Gailbersburg,
Md., drove 150 miles round trip
from bee Venice vacation spot.
"I'm a fanatic about the
Olympics. I tape everything and
watch it over and over for lhe next
four yem. I'm here now and without a doubt going to make it to
Atlanta when the Games come
there in 1996," she said.
Suppon like that was what John
Krimsty Jr. was looking for when
the deputy general of the USOC
scouted sites, including Washington, D.C. and Orlando.
It was impmant to him lbat all
teams share the limelight and competitors not considered medal contenders get a chance to bask in public adulation.
It's the 1irst Olympic experience
for a majority of athletes. Even
~ughtheytnOOOOlongandhard

and had to win a spot on lhe team,
they won't command attention like
returning gold medalists Carl
Lewis or Jackie 1oyner-Kersee.
Less than IS percent of the U.S .
albletes are expected to medal.
"I was looking for an opponunity to get community involvement
and a place that would sustain lhe
support. I wanted each team to
have !be same quality or experience," Krimsky said.
He found Tampa not only wiUing but ready. Training sites wilbin
a 35-mile radius were tapped. Hundreds of people volunteered to
shuttle athletes from place 10 place,
handle baggage and tend a litany of
needs. Galas were planned 10 add
an anticipated $600,000 to USOC
funds.

Atlanta, Boston record afternoon victories
HOUSTON (AP) - Tom save.
It is the longest winning streak
Glavine and two relievers combined on a six-bitter Saturday as of the season for Atlanta, which
the Atlanta Braves shut out tbe has won 32 of its last 42 games.
Jimmy Jones (4-4) was the
Houston Astros for their eighth
loser,
going six innings ang giving
straight win.
up
three
runs on eight hits. He
It was also the eighth straight
suuck
out
four and walked none.
victory for Glavine (14-3), who
Red Sox 1, Twins 0
rebounded from his disastrous out·
At Minneapolis, Roger Oecnens
ing in Tuesday's AU-Star game by
allowing six bits and walking two pitched a two-bitter Saturday, earn·
in seven innings while striking out mg bis bis first victory since June 6
and carrying the Boston Red Sox 10
seven.
a
1-0 victory over the Minnesota
Marvin Freeman pitched a bitTwins.
less eighth and Alejandro Pena did
Clemens (I 0-6) bested Scon
the same in the ninlh for his ninth
Erickson in a matchup of 1991 's

top two ~ Cy Young vote-getters.
In tossmg his fourth shutout of
the season and 33rd of his career
he gave up only Shane Mack's sec:
and-inning infield chop and Gene
Larkin'~ fiflh-inning bloop single
for h1s e1ghlh career two-hiuer.
Clenw:ns sllllck out live, walked
none, retired lbe last 14 bauers and
didn't let a runner past fii'SI.
Erickson (6-7) allowed only five ·
hits and suuck out a season-high
seven in his first complete game of
lbe year, but still couldn't extend
Minnesota's winning streak to six
games.

Indurain -leading Tour de France field
SESTRIERE, Italy (AP) Defendinf champion Miguel
Indurain o Spain vaulted into the
ovezalllead in the Tour de Fnnce
on Saturd11y while three-time
champion Greg LeMond of the
United States sttuggled to stay in
themce.
Claudio Cbiappuc:ci of Italy won
the grueling 131b stage wilh a long,
solo effort on the 1S8~mile leg
from St Gervais to Sestriere. !tal·
ian Franco Vona was second, 1:34
behind, and Indurain was third,
1:45 beet.
"Cbiappucei started vay strong
and I thought he would have the,
vellow jersey," lndurain said.
1'Butl came back."
.
LeMond was tbe big loser on
the course· featuring rive major
climbs. He ended up 130th of 148
tiniJbell on the day.
He was more than 18 minutes
behind the leaden at mid·mce and
never recovered, windinftD 49:38
behind Cbiappucci at ihe"finisb.
That lefl LeMond him just five
minutes shy of bei!Jg knocked lionl

Thanks to you, Ohio, our sales for the Fiscal Year ended
June 30 were the highest ever: Over $1,680,000,000.
And that means more money for Ohio schools. Because
the more you play, the more they get. Thank you;Ohio,
for making our 18th Anniversary our best year ever!

0

]OININ1HE
All Ohio Lottery players are S\lbject to laws and regulations of lhe Ohio Lottery Commission. FOI' more lnformaliOn,
cal our Customer Relations Oepallmenl, (218) 787-3200, during regular businesS hours. All financial data·is unaudited.

•

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)

lbe race because of a time limit
He ended up in 41st overa11 1
50:53 behind lndurain.
Pasc:a1 Lino of France, the lead·
er since the third stage, started the
day with a 1:27 lead over lndurain,
but flllisbed more lhali 10 minutes
behind the Spania'd. Lino dropped
in!O foue~lace. m&lt;m than seven
mmutes
.
"I felt my effort in the first
mountain," Lino said. "I bad a
very bad time when Indurain and
(Gianni) Bugno went away. I tried
to limit the differences in the ftnal
climb."
Chiappooci moved into second
overill, 1:42 behind Indurain, and
worl~ ch~pion ::.t~o, also of
ltaly,IS 1hird, 4:20
Cblappucci, who finished second to LeMond in 1990 and third
to Indurain last year, made bis
move almoat from the starL
"If I don't win the Toor, it's
imnnrbllt fll' me to win in Italy,"
chia-· · said.
·
~ing out with a group of
1oriders for the fu1t 30 miles, the
Italian moved away alone fll' the

..

...

... ..

"

next 125, building bis lead to more ·
than four minutes on the major
contenders.
"The olber riders didn't want to
work so I decided to go out alone,"
Chia
i said.
InilJ:::n and Bugno, joined by
•American Andy Hampsten and
Vona, started to chip away at the
lead about40 miles from the finish.
"When it was time to attack, I
took it," lndurain said.
Hampsten ended up in fifth
place for the day, 3:27 behind. That
was good enough for bim to move
into eijlhlh overall, 11:16 bac~ of
Induram.
"I'm happy but it's not
enough," Hampsten said. "What
ho"""-t today clarifies things but
far."
.
After gelling within two minutes
of Oliappucc~ Indurain mado a late
move 10 chop thaiiiii!Jin in half.
But CbiappuCc~ spume! on by Italian fw, got his second wind and
. stretched bi.IICIIIL .
''The last five kilometers were
diffiCult," Chiapplcci said

Mi.-.m

•

'
ENJOYING the EaaiiiiiHuhiae are t•ese
faDI lllttiDI oa the rlpt neld llde bleachers at
the Kylfl' Creek Emplo,ea Club lleld, waltial
for the SUI to lppear durlq I rala delly in the
'

roP..

third iuoin1 o1 the Rutlaad-Polot PleaUt
game Friday evealo1. For~ 1tori111d ~:
tloaal pbotoll, see C·Z aid C-3. (Times-Seatllel
photo by G. SpeiCer 01~)
. · .
:.
:--_
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.

~~· C2-suriday nmee sentinel

Reds, . Indians capture opening•nightwins

~.

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slap hi~n.
,
"His. Ioc~,tion was bad and he up. th~.t' s "the sign of a quality
That s pretty much what tl!ey ve got behmd, manager Joe Torre pilther.
.
af
been so far, languishing near the said. "That. was s!UJ!risi~g to me
'!he Cardmals' run ~e ~r
bottom of the ~ational League in bec&amp;IJS;C of his last ouung.
.
Zeile ~ ~home 1111! nuUified by
homers after leading it last year
Swmdell also was struggling an umpues reversal !ft the.fourlh.
wilh 164. That's why their 8-1 vic- with his control. ije gav~ up nine Zeilc led off with a line drive that
tory Friday night over St. Louis hits and . four walks ~n seven appeared to boun~e hig~ of~ the
was so satisfying.
innings•. but was .ab~ 10 pitch out of 1~-f~eld wall! leaVIng Ze~ wtlh a
Darnell Coles hit a three-run trouble m every innrng but one.
srngle, but lhird base ump1n: Paul
homez and BiU Doran folloWed an
The AII-SU.. break took a toU on Runge ~ignaled a home"!":
inning later with a two-run homer his control.
After manager Lou Pmiella ran
to end tbe Reds' four-game losing
"It was just a ~r of ~lli~.g out ~f the dugout to protest, the
streak and raise their team home the feel back a~am, he said. ·t ump!I'Cs huddled and reversed lhe
run total to 49.
·
was a little wild. '
call, sending Zeile to fll'St base. He
''We haven't had lhat many at
He made up for it by picking off scored eventually on singles by
least not three-run homm " Doian · a base runner and inducing a pair Andres Galarraga and Cormia.
said. "We've been struggling."
of double-play ~den.
.
Zeile initially thought lhe ball
" That's what we've been lack"I've seen him tougher," wd bad cleared the wall and rebounded
ing, " said Greg Swindell (9-2), Todd Zeile, wbo scored. tbe Cardi- . off the front of the stands. The
who won his sixth straight deci- nals' run. "We ~ot 12 hits and four Reds got lhe ball back to .sec~nd
sion.
walks. But he p1tched tough when base while Zeile was breaking mto
It's been their main wealrness as he was in trouble. He'd get a dou- the trot, forcing him to retreat to
they bold onto fll'St place in the I':IL ble play or a ground ball or a ~ fii'St base.
West while the Atlanta keeps win- - - - - -..
ning. The hitters know ihey're
going to bave to start producing
• IS8. - • 10 IIAI W11U11TY
more to pad the one-game lead
• IIIIIIILIIII Lie.
ovez the Braves.
• AIIIIIUIK 11!11111&amp;11111111
"With our piu:hing, if we score
• YACIIIIIII'I!IIII
• liiWI IDYll
some runs we're going to win some
• ClaW TilT liT
games," Doran said. "We just
• AUa WID
haven't been scoring runs."
• 20 &amp;A. YIITL UNO:
They
broke-out
against
Rheal
GOOD POKE, A,J. - Tbe GaltipoUs Judi·
Creek Little League Tournament near Chet~hire.
au oNLY
Cormier (2:8), who gave up eight
ana' AJ. JobDSOn (tight) Is coneratutaled by his
JobllllOD'S homer was the centerpiece of a aiDeten......:............... ..•t'PI.OO
hits and five runs in just four
run riot tlaut propelled the Tribe to a 15·5 victoteammates rollo"j:.~nbis 1rnd slam otr Eric
21 n .................... •tuo.oo
innings. He gave up Coles' second
2..... ................. ,.• , , . . .. .
ry. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Smltla Ia the ~ . . 1 pt the nightcap ot Frl·
homer
with
two
oul
in
the
third,
27fT
..................... IUJII.OO
Osborne)
diy algbt'l Opellllla'cloulileheader Ia the Kner
1 2.~~ 240YAl .... .. ,, _ll . .l.00
and Doran's sixth with none out in
the fourlh .
&lt;Continued fro1ll c -2&gt;
Cormier was coming off his best
.l\.' L
• • • - - -- - - - - - - -performance of lhe season. He
Bailey, who got walks and later struck out 11 in seven innings of a
straight hits - a ount single by
GIL 1Ddiansl5, c•ester 5
scored
on Brandon Bucldey's two- 3-1 victory in Los Angeles one
Ashley Miller, a single to left cenThe Indians sent 13 batters to
Hurry, Do
ter field by Kinnison, a two-run the plale in their half oC the first, out double to center field. Chester week ago.
If Ho,.!
ground-tule double to left f~eld by and there weze nine dents bearing stayed alive for that inning, but
Gallipolis
ended
it
in
the
fifth
when
Joe D' Augustino and a single to their signatures when the smoke
FREE VIDEO TRANSFER
relievez Bob Kauff's wild pitch got Meigs, Gallipolis AL
left center field by Chris D' Au- cleared at the end of the frame.
Bring
In
any typo of 8 mm film and we wllltranafor up to 50 feet of
gustino lhat scoml his brolher The Raiden didn't help them- Johnson home before first baseman teams in tournament
film onto VHS Tapo.
to~ fust three runs. Af- selves much in that inning, surren- Bailey' s off-target throw to the
We hav. biMk vld.o lapel avollable lor purchan, or bring In your
own, unuood ouper high grade tapo.
ter AJ. Vau~ struck out foUqw- dering more walks (live) lhan er- plale got Selh Davis home wilh lhe
ATHENS
COUNTYThe
Indians'
15th
and
final
run.
ing Chris D Augustino's stealing ron (fOlD') or hits (three). But one
FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WIU COME
Gilmore whiffed seven, walked Meigs American Legion basebaU
second, Halfhill grounded a 1-1 of those hits was the first bomez of
INTO YOUR HOME ANO VIDEO YOUR
pitch into center field to score the tournament - a grand slam to five and gave up two hits - to team wiD play Gloustel in the fust
POSSESSIONS.
Chris D' Augustino and create tbe right cenwr field by Indians left- Buckley (1-2) and Dustin Huffman Eighth Distnct tournament game
BE SAFE, VIDEO FOR
handed hitter A.J. Johnson (his (1-3) - in a complete-game effon. Monday at 4 p.m. at lhe Glouster
final score.
PERMANENT
RECORD.
viUage
park
field.
Eric
Smith,
Chester's
starter,
struck
Joe D' Augustino, providing tbe only hit and only offiCial at-bat; he
In
Athens,
Gallipolis
Post
27
oew ann on tbe hill in the bottom was walked in each of his three out one and walked II in two inof the frame, proceeded to throw successive plate appearances), who nings before giving way to Kauff, will take on Wellston Post 371
six pitches - one to Blain lhat re- followed leadoff hitter Jimmy who struck out two and walked one Monday at S:30 p.m. at Dalton
Field on West State Street
RT. 2, BOX D, GALLIPOLIS, OliO 45631
sulted in a popup to shortstop, one Gilmore borne following Gilmore's to finish.
WORK • 446-7310 • HOME • - D
The Meigs-Glouster winnez wiU
The
Indians'
other
hitters
were
to John Norman lhat resulted in an home plate dash earlier in the inremm
to
the
Glousler
field
Tuesday
Davis
(2-2)
and
Jones
(I
-2)
.
infield hit and three balls to Aaron ning.
at 4 p.m. to commence secondOn tbe mound, Gilmore got into IDning totals
Williams before inducing him to
hit a fly baU that started an 8-4 (left several mini-grooves - his first Gal. Indians ........913 02 - 15-4-2 round action against the Pickeringfield to second baseman) double saw him hurl nine straight strikes Chester................003 20 - 5- 2-7 ton-Athens victor. The GallipolisWellston victor will n:tum to DalWP-Gilmore
(including pilclles put into play) in
play - to get tbe win.
·
ton Field Tuesday at 5:30 p.m .
LP
Smilh
Also contributing to Rutland's a span slraddling the first and seca~ainst the McArthur-Lancaster
Today's
pmes
offense were Miller (1-3), Joe ond frames - that were instrumenwmner.
Today's
action
will
start
with
D' Augustino, Halfhill and K.inni- tal in keeping the Raiders from es·
the
Mason
VFW
-Point
Pleasant
3on (all 1-4). FOP's hitters were
tablishing any sustained offensive
Connolly (2-3, double), Norman thrust lhat would keep ahem in con- Cochran's Euon game at I p.m.
tention with the opportunistic The Green No . 1-Tuppers Plains
8lld Patterson (both 1-3),
Giants game, slated for 2:30 p.m ..
· _lmalia 'toliJs
', ·
Tribe. • ' .
Rutland ...........oooooo 4 - 4-7·1
With Chesler,
13- will complete fll'St-round play. Seca mez- ond-round action will begin with
FOP ................()()() 000 0- 0-4·2 3 and three outs away
WP - J. D' Augstino (in relief cy-rule defeat in the top of the the Rutland-Mason Westmoreland
fourth, Gilmore tossed IS balls out game at 4 p.m. Following that
ore. o·Augustino)
LP - Patterson (in relief of of 24 pitches. Ten of those pitches game, the Indians will face the
J«bn C.nty's """'' C. &amp; Tnd E""' ol, YEARI
went to Chris Krawsczyn and Beau Green Senators at 5:30p.m.
Williamson)
By JOE KAY
Cincinnati Reds expected their after trading power for pitch!ng.
CINCINNATI (AP) - The home run total to drop this year They never expected to turn mto
·

tess basebaU. The walk received by
Joe D' Augusiino in lhe lhird was
the one intemJpted ~Y the
which dampened tbe rnf~eld enough
to mate bunling successful.
The closest Rutland came to
scoring early was in the four!ft ,
when No. 5 hitter "!athan Hai~U,
~who advanced to lhird on a plllf of
infield lhrowing erron, v.:as doubled up at the plate on a strike from
left fwlder Joe Patterson to ~r
Scou Connolly . Patterson .had
caught a ny from No. 6 hiller
Adam Moodispaugh to start the
double play.
In tbe ieventh, I1Je Reds got four
(See KCLL on C·3l

•ez.

4ald l"ia C•aty Jaaior Fair
DemoQtloa Darby

....
Miai DamoDtloa

: • RELAY MIDDLEMAN- As tile mlddlem~ Ia tile Rutlalld
' lied&amp;' tlu'ee-11,11!1 pitciiJ!II relay team Ia Friday aipt's Kner Creek
' Litde Leape Toanameat opeur qalut Polat PIUIIIIt FOP,
: C:llrll D'~ llumed 13, pve up two lilts ud 011e walk lia six
: lialllp bef(l!'t Pial uy to brotler Joe D' Augustiao, ,., p the
: iiiut011t wiD. ~Dtlael pboto by G. Speacer Osborne)
•·~ 'f'#&gt;•
•

'jf.·'· \,.... ,... ,. . "
,. •' '•·"
.,,

.

't

·~·~

.Iii..... ;..
. '· ••

.~~

'

'

Derlly

Gallla County Fairgrounds
Mini Derby: Monday, August 3, 1992
Top -Prize $400
Demolition Derby Saturday, August 8, 1992
Top Prize $1 ,000

'

.,., ~"'

.• • ,&lt;·. '

··&lt;'c.tt:l

y-

saso.oo

u.c· .,.L acti·on

**No c•rysler l•perl•l• Allowell**
For ..,pllcllllone contllct: Glllll• County Felrgrounde, P.O. Box
1131, Gllllpolli, Ohio 45631, (614) 446-4120, O.nell• Greene, or
Carloe Wood Ill 446 4612

..
•
• .
.' '
•

••

~

.,

SHEARD SCORES - The Gallipolis ladi..s' Beu Sleard
arrivl!tl at the plate just abead ot the throw from Cbester cakher
Joe DiDo• (bottom) ~ pikher Eric Smith (upper right) duriDg the
lndlms' ftrst·bualag J81lbreak In Friday Dlght's Kyger Creek Litde
~e Tounameut Dlgbtap. The IDdlau .weDt on to will 15·5 in
five 1n11ings. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. SptiiCtl' Osbone)

.1 £:

1991 Presitient 's CCu.6
Taylor Motoll has oamed the NisYn AWMI
ol Morl lor outslandlng pe~ormance In
sales, ~. service and customer

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Cincinn~ti downs St. Louis 8-t ·to end four-game losing streak

In Kyger Creek Little League Tournament,
By G. SPENCER OSBORJIIE
decision.
.
Kinnison in the fmt inning after
~DtiDel Starr
~eel$ 4, PO~ 0
KinilisOn allowed a double and two
~~~~~~ :.:... Opening-n!ght
Two~ ~ve Ibis~~ the walks to the three batters he f~.
acuon m the Kyger Creek Little . ~of distmction :-.a ~-~JU!!Ute got out of tbe bases-loaded jam by
League Tournament Fri~y nig~t · !3111 delay and tbe SIX-~ pllt~- ~etting two strikeouts and a popup
f~ two games as diffcmtt as 1Df duel ~een Rutm; s alris 1D foul ground. All told, Chris
mght ~ day, as;the R~ ~ D .A!igustmo and. FOP s Aaron D' Augustino, who also ted die west
bea:t ~1111 Pleasant FOP 4:0 ~ sev- Will~~on the ·ram showez tezn- Meigs nine at the plate wilh a 3~ mnmgs bef01e the Galli~ In- porardf IR~.
f~-4 performance, claimed all of
dians.routed ~ ~hester'R11den
~bns .D Augusuno, WhO came the Reds' 13 strikeouts, surren15-S m 1 five-mnmg mercy-rule on m n:lief of Slartet James (J.R.) dered one walk_ a fourlh-inning
free pass to No. 7 hiaec Brian Blain
- and saw only three baserunoera
after the firSt.
Williamson turned in a solid
pedormance of his own, fanning
eight and walking five during his
six-inning administiation of score-

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, Ott-:Polnt Pleasant, wv

July 19, 1992

July 19, 1992

Pomeroy-Middlepc)rt-Galllpoll•, OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

~- 1C+

ANNOUNCING
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Fanners
Bank
"Your Bank For life"
In choosing a financial facility, most people consider convenience and high returns. However,

shouldn't personalized service and attentive financial advising also be included in the criteria? Once
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.
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Damon Stapleton, Manager • Judy Bird, Secretary
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.

�July 19, 1992

By DOUG 11JCKEIJ ·

He came to the park with a .24 7

• KANSAS ern:, Mo. (AP) • Aa Brent Mayne walked to the
~ pllfe widuwo.out in the ninth and
: the winnina run on lhin1 bue. a lit• de YOi!:e seemed IIi whisper In his

: ear.

·

A moment later, several thou. sand fans were screamin$ in his
. ear, celebrating .the oppostte-field
: single that lifled Kansas City to a
-4-3 victory over the Cleveland
"Indians.
. ",Going up to~ plate I_ had a
feehng I was go1ng to wt.n the
,,game right there," said Ma,.ne,
• who connected off reliever Eric
' Plunk (1 -1). "It's a feeling I've
:never had before. I knew I was
:goinf to hit the ball Well."
• It s 1101 as lhouah Ma)'IICI always
:swaggers around with confidence.

Plunk relieved N!ifY. the lil&lt;li· didn't come through."
Montgomery went! 1-3 innings ans' biggest winner this year, startGcxdon cniCICCI the game startand walked two, but got his first ing lhe ninth.
. the sixth when Rick Reed, who
victory since lasl SeoL 13. Mont"Plunk was fresh. We had a ~ a11owcd just two bits, left wilh
winner.

·~·
"I w had three or four opponu-

nities like this in my career, to
. came up and win a game," be said. gomery, who ~eHeved Tom Gordon
"I've ~ver walked up lbe~e think- with two on and one out and Jetircd
ing I would mike an out, but I've Carlos Baerga to end the eighth,
never felt so positive about it. I had been successful in 20 straight
ha':e no.~ why I had the feeling save opportunities.
tonight..
.
.
Gwynn and Jim Eisenre·ich
. Kevm McReynold~ ' one-?ut knocked in runs after Kansas City
double launched the rilly, wh1ch loaded the bases with nobody out
the Royals needed when Jeff Mont- against Charles Nagy in the sev·
gOliiCly (1-S)_~w his~~ save In
enth.
21 op!IC?numues by glYlng up a
Nagy took a three-hit, 2-1 lead
FOO-tymg hom!:!' to Paul Sorrento inlll lhe seventh but thJee soft sinm the top of the mnlh.
.
gles loaded the bases. Gwynn's
After an intentional walk to sacrifice fly scored Geor~e Brett
Wally Joyner. Chris Gwynn barely and put McReynolds at third, then
beat the relay to fli'St base on what Eisenreich followed with an RBI
was almost a double-p!&amp;y ~under. grounder to the right side of the
Mayne followed wtth h1s game- infield.

fresh bullpen and Charles had
thrown 110 pitches, and showed
signs of getting aliUic tired," said
Cleveland manager Mike Har·
grove. "He got the ball up to a few
ba«as. He was 11110 pitches, and
I thought lhat was f• enough. We
had some chances. But we just

tbe flu virus.
Bac:rp's lriplc tr,eyed a two-run
third inning against Reed. Mart
Lewis hit a one-out single in the
Oeveland fourth and came home
when Baerga tripled into rigbt
field. Baetga then scored when
Albert Belle grounded to shorutop

David Howard.
The Royals toOk a 1..0 lead in
the third after Curtis Wilkerson
reached on a fielder's choice a~
SIDle second David Howatd'S SID· '
gle put him at third and Brl~n
McRae ' s grounder brought htm
home.

" It was a good at·bat for
Mayne," said Royals~~ Hal
McRae. "He was overswmgmg a
liUle bit bta on the game-win~!« he
put a good swing on it and put tbe
ball into play. MoniBOJDCI'Y hung a
CLEVELAND (AP) - Pitcher around' to anchor the pitching stall. · slider Ill Sorrento."
Charles Nagy has won lhe confi- So the role fell to Nagy.
dence of his lC8III1IIale$. says Indians Gencni Managtz Ion HarL
"When be takes lhe mound, the
whole teams knows they have a
chance to win,". Hart said. "He
brings us confidence, something
you really need to develop on a

Nagy has teammates' confidence

young learn."

s-.

PITCWNO (10

l\.1wh,dl

d~&lt;ioioao)

-

•bled Jilt.. ~... w Jul' l:Z. JtacelW
TtmJ1oxtusno,pi-. r . . . - o l

CIICINNAn, "2. .111. 2.15;

ioli-.- -

BlllkhM, ClllaNNAU, f.2, .Ill, 1.90:
Oll'liae, Adoma,IS-3, .112.157; Black.

Gl

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. CINCINNAn._ ..sz 36

-'91

A.- ---····--'1 37
S.Diop·...........47 44
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LooAqM ........40 50

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8.5
12
13

.516
.494
.456

.444

FrldaJ'&amp;IICOI'tl

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St. l..oiU (Tou' ' 1 9-!) 11: CINCIN·
NAn (lijo '"'l. 1:05.,...

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Jl!rBMhlphl• (Muk WiWamll· t ). 1:05

(Wolt :1.-3). 7:05 ......

•
Su PraaciJoD (WU.. ~9) at New

Ylll:(l'- I 7-&amp;~ 7:10p.IIL
,.. ..... jSomiMn 4-:Q .. (D. N), 7:35p.m.

raga!,'_a-

S. Dioto
1~ II hbt!IOIJ
~ 1-7). 1:3111'-'!'.... Aqoleo (Ojeda ~) .. l'llilldcl·

S.. , _ (BarliMS 6-5) II Now

Y'*~l -3),1o40p.m.

Ill. . _ (Cal&lt; :1-1) II CIMCNNAU
('I
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,
A1laeta (Leibtuclt 1·3) al Hou•toa
' Qloal7 U), 2:311 ~
·' 1 OUeot• (C.IIillo 6-1) 11 l'llubmF
(Soollh 1-1), &amp;:Olp.m.

--

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c.tillllllia t:l, New YOii 4
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Amerlao Ltaeue

Scrm~aa-Wilka·Bun rLm.lnlemaliaad .......... Ploooi 8tn Ri..... ~· "'
tno 15-da~ diublod lill. lt'tiOICCtve aoJuly

I.

ST. LOUIS CARDINALS - S~
Scan to .. 111d Stow\ MOillJomety, pold&gt;

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WASHINGTON BUU.BTS Mstcbod l.be New Yort Kalcb' offer
sheet to H.uwy On.nt. fonra:rd.

•d= c:n.IOl ; Malhar,Mlwauk-.101 .

DOUBLiiS - IIIII. New Y... XI: E.
MardHI:, Seattle, 26; Mattinaly, New
Yolt, 2.5; Y(l.ltlt. Mll.wau.ker., 23; lo)'!ler,

~-

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399W...

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PDIIInly,OWo ,

The Stole With • All Klndl of Stuff' For ..... St.blelo,

a,.,g. a BIMII Anln.la, Lawn• a Gerdena.

we!~

By BOB GREEN
· The old recor~ of 132 was set
&lt;:JULLANE, Scotland ~AP) b~ Henry Cotton m 1934 at SandMuirfield .turned .tougher m brislc, w1ch, and matched by Greg Norblustery winds Friday - but it was man and Faldo at SL Andrews in
no m~~;tch for lh7 artistry of Nick 1990.
Faldo m oneofh~ fmestmomcnts.
Faldo, who won his fnt British
The tall Enl!hshman subdued Open Iitle on this course in 1987,
.lhe famed old links with a second- went on Ill a second at St. Andrews
round 64 8J!d pulled away fr?m lhe and ~ow is an. ~nprccedented 4-7
rest of a wmdblown field wtth lhe favonte by Bnush bookmakers to
low~t 36-hole score in alllhe 121 get a lhird.
Bril1sh Open golf championships.
"I hope I know ·enough about
Faldo completed two trips over Ibis game to know whall have to
lhe ~d dunes along lhe Firth of . do," he said.
Forlh, m 130, 12 under par, three
Faldo rolled along for six
strokes ahead of his closest pur- birdies and an eagle, and a record
suers and two beuer than anyone and .the lead in the tournamenl he
ever before al this slage.
covets as no other.
"Good luck to anyone who
"Considering the circum· wants to shoot 129," Faldo said.
stances, what! was doing, it was a
.
·

By RUSTY MILLER
Common Pleas Court.
The coaches had taken the
. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In
' baseball terms, they split a double- OHSAA to court in an effort to
• header. ·
ovcnum bylaw 10.3·5 of tbe ath.. Both sides claimed victory letiC association, which limits
. Thursda¥ as a group that included coaching during the summer. The
', lhe states baseball coaches associ· coaches had gotten a restraining
~~ ation reached an agreement with order on June 26.
; · the Ohio Hi$h School Athletic
Under the agreement signed
': Association m Franklin County Thursday, tbe order was extended

Ol
• ifji
~ :ympzc 0 cials promise
..~ to bar Reynolds as competi"tor
~

•
By ROB GLOSTER
squad.
· BARCELONA, Spain (AP) Reynolds claims he dido 't take
-: otympi!: organizers said they will - steroias and that the drug testing
· not allow suspended American procedUJe was flawed in his case.
· 400-meter runner Butch Reynolds
Though the IAAF and IOC have
. into the Olympic village, or give said Remolds will 1101 be allowed
·him accreditation, if be tries to to run m the Olympics, the U.S.
:attend tbe Olympics as an athlete.
Olympic Committee included him
~
But Josep Miquel Abad, head of on its list ofathletcs.
.•the BllltCiona Olympic Organizing
"Our job was to submit his
;committee (COOB), said Friday name, then it's up to the IOC to
' that Reynolds will te allowed decide if he's. ehgible," USOG
·accreditation and a place in the vii- spokesman Bob Condron said.
:lage if he attends as a United States
•team official.
• Reynolds, who is serving a twoyear drug suspension after testing
Vlnttn Ruew•y
positive for steroids, has been
banned by the International Ama- 1111~ Car rael•l 11 Its Anut
teur Athletic Federation and the
Ftlllrl•l ••111•tr eeu.
International Olympic Committee
8111 ftt: $S
from running in the Barcelona
Reynolds, who holds the world
,record for 400 meters, went to the
U.S.
Coun in June to get
·
to run in the U.S.
trials. He flllished sixth in
~a spot as an
I, -meter relay

.

MnTvrt., ww....n..

t~}"'! oodnct.

PIIILADEil'HlA I!AGI.ES - Sipcl

----

ClwJc:k DuDcu~ 1' illll" ±r,IOIWO OliOyear ccmmcu. Reluled Mite S~~.nvol.d,

101;AwJeo,twuu City, 95; R. lolwon,

s..uto;91; Ryon, Tuu, 91.
SAVES - Eci:enley, Oakland, 30;

dcfcnaive linemaa. Named Sponnr

Apilcra, Minnesota, l7; Momsom~ ,
Konno Cily, :12; 1o11 lhoadl, r ...._ 22:

RTISBURGII STI!I!U!IIS - Sipcl

RuN C...pbo!!. ti;n end, end Mikos..,.
den, n&amp;mlnl bact.

OHI. Boltim..., 21 ; "Jbiapai, Chicaao,

lf;lloudoo.-11, "

Transat.:l ions

a career sweep of golf's G~and
Slam events, matched par 71 and
was tied at 13S with Donnie lfam.
mOOd and South African Ernie Els
Els shot 69 and HanunOnd 6S ·
Many other American stan w~
· closed out. Among lhem we~e Masters champion Fred Couples and
Davis Love m, each a three-time
winner this season and ranting
one-two on the PGA Tour's
money-winning list.
Both failed to qualify for the
final two rounds Salurday and Sunday Love had a 77 and a ISO llltal
Couples finished off a 78 and ~
148 total with a triple bogey-7 on
the final hole.
.
. Other_e;asualties included five-

10 ......., ,,.,
81111 tpt1 II: lf:OO 1.111.
R111 tl111t: f:OO p.11.
Ftr llltrt llftrllllll•• ull:
Jll-9617 tt 511-tJOO

the lOth.
The roll continued with birdie

power locka, low miles, one owner car, one owner care.
SEE: ED, MDUt OR GEORGE

~~~~h~~~~~!'S~~~ Y1~:
14 7), three-time British Open

SMITH·NElSON
MOTORS, INC.

so baseball coaches will be allowed champion Seve Ballesteros (75-

manage lbeir teams through the
end of July without penalty. But
the coaches also agJeed Ill not bring
suit again on tbe mBiter and to pay
all court Costs.
"This upholds bylaw 10-3·5,"
OHSAA commissioner Clair Muscaro said. "They wm challenging
our referendum pncess. They were
saying that it was not done proper-

145) and Jack Nicklaus.
Nicklaus, now 52 and a lhreetime winner, struggled home on a
string of 5s. He shot 73 and missed
the cut at 148.
"Tbere were a few shots that
welell'l so good," Faldo said "On
seven, on eighl, on 17."
·
On lhe seventh, a 4-iron found a
bunker and cost h,im his only bogey

10

putts of IS, 20 and .IS feet on lite
12th, 14th and 15th.
!!!-~--~lllllll....

This car h11 all the equipment you expect! Power seats,

t~Bn~~win~hm

992·2174
500 EAST lWII, POMEROY, OH.

~oE~~~~saysitwasdone of~~eighth,anolherirondrift-

~-!_nato20-~~
- but he saved par
"'"'
t..,._

anton altomey Bill Heichel,
representing the OHSAA , said,
"From our viewpoint, this is what
we wanted established. First, the
bylaw is still in effect; secood. the
process by which the bylaw came
about is unaffected; and third, they
end up paying coun costs,1101 us."
The coaches also said they wm
satisfied wilh the agreement.
"The best we could've done
today is to extend the temporary
restraining order. We could not
have attempted more . So we're
very happy, ' said Brad Frick, an
attoiney for the coaches.

On the iw-S 17th, a S-iron second went astray and left him wilh
no chance of lbe expected birdie.
"Not perfect," Faldo said.
His run to the record began with
a two-puu birdie on lhe par-5 fifth,
and he added to it wilh a 7-iron Ill
eight feet onlhe nexL
The little glitch of a bogey on
the seventh was m01e than offset
by a 3-iron second shot that
arrowed wilhin four feet of tbe nag
and set up an eagle onlhe ninth.
Another four-footer, this after an
B-iron, produced another birdie on

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'SNOTOVER,
TILL IT' OVER!

MIAMI DOLI'IIINS - Si ..... Doa
Shull, OC*h. \0 llWOoytUCCIItru1.
MINNESOTA Vtr;INOS - Sisn..
Roy Butw, clefenaive tackle, and Bud
Johnson, qUIJU:rblck. Apei 1.0 wms
with Allied AltoltaoD, ..... bock.
NEW OIW!ANS SAINI1 - A.....
to ICiml wi1h Dont '-mud. of!'cn&amp;i..e
lin.nan, 0111 •

uni~ue feelin$.''_F~ ~d.
I was cnJO)'tng 11. I Just set my
target, what I wanted to do, and on
almost every hole, I did iL "
John Coot, a two-lime winner
on the American tour this season,
and Gonion Brand Jr. of Scotland.
a middle-level player 011 the EtJro.
pean tour,~~ ~t 133. .
Cook, who ts playmg m only hiS
second British ()pen, shot a67.
Brand, 33, who scored tbe last
of his eight career victories three
years ago, had a 68.
Steve Pate, who shared tbe ftrstround lead with veteran Ray Floyd,
was next at 134 afu:r a hard-won
70.
Floyd, 49 and seeking to
become only the flflh man 10 make

:. Coaches, OHS_AA o_fficials claim victory

Games.

GREEN !Itt.Y PACEEIIS - Sip4
Orluulo Mdtoy 10d Cluia Holder, irido
racei;wcn.
,
HOUSTON OILERS - Asrccd to
\ctml with Mike Mooooy, -~""' EJ.

- ..,......... 11-3, .716, 4.31; Moooilll, BalUmoro. 10.3, .7fl9, l-23; Appicr,
X..... Clty, 11).3, .769, 133; McllOWdl.
0Uca10o 12-4, .7SO, 3.50.
STR.IKEOUTS - Juall Gutman,
ToralltO, 122; Perez, New York, 120;
aem.., &amp;o.on. 120; K. Brown. Toua,

1 sr Anniversary
Sale Continues!

Hockey
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A I R

IHI

He lost alllhree and was sent

back to the Eastern League.
Last year as a rookie on Cleveland's staning rotation be posted a
I 0-IS record.
.
When Nagy came to s~
training thiJ season, he had
pressUJe thru5l upon him. Ve1en111
stanlng pitchers Tom Candioai and

-..-. ........

PITCHINO (10 decisions) - Juan
Ou&amp;mld, Toronto, 11 · 2, .1.. 6, 2. 11 ;
Knteacr, Mlnnunaa, 9·2, .111 , 3.19;
Sooa1o, 11-3, .716, 3.20; lunio

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T - (Wollo 4-4) II S.ulo (Dol.a·

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Toa11. 19; Bolle, CLEVELAND, 19;
Canooco, Ookland, 19; TcttlctGn, DOIIoit,
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Gr0011ll1 Stppllts,
:IKk•lll, 1.e1 Wnp1,

N-IPoolboliiAopo
CINCINNAU BENGAL! - S....
Cn iJ TbomptGil, tiat end; Lance 01·

HOMB RUNS - MoOwito, OUW.d,
21; Doer, Dmoit, 21; J uan Oonulcz,

(~oa 6-") al Minneaou
_,.:!).2:05p.m.
· Milwntoo (lloooo 5-l) II Chico ..
o-.. 7-4~ 2:35p.m.
.
t..UVILAND (Scudder 6· 1) at
1.- C.,.(Aquinoll-1).2:35 p.m.
Doaait (ailz 2-3) II OUialld (NciJon
1-1 ~ 4:05 ......
Nllw Y.t CYouna 1·2) al Cali!omil
( I l l - S-3~ 4:11! p.m.

8ET IIEADY FOR

~·spring training, I didn't
think anything like this was going
to happen. I was only trying to
eslablish myself," the 24-yc.~
right-hander said prior to Tuesday
night's All Star game In San Diego.
It was just two ·years ago dial
Nagy was pitching in Cleveland's
. minor league system, pitching at
Canton-Akron of the Eastern
Leagne. The Indians brought him
to Cleveland and gave him lhree
starting assignments.
"Talk about scared," Nlg)' said
of being brought up Ill Cleveland.
"It was the kind of scared when
you don't even know what's going

Greg Swindell no lonJer

FoolbaU

Anda"ld.. Blltim.... 6;
Dove:eaux, Baltimore, 6; Liltach, Milwaukoe, 5; R. Alanw, r....., S; Siom,
Teu1, 5; White, Toront~. 5; R.ainea,
0Ucai,0,5.

10-1), 4:05 .....
MilwsllkM (Bolio 6-5) •• Cbic•ao
• ()leD oill:l-4), 7:05p.m.
a.EVELAND (Anaolt0ft&amp; 2· 12) ot
' - Clty (Appior 10.3~ 1:05" pm.
Baltiman ()(eDoMW 1-6} at Teua
(1-. ~ 1·7). 1:35pm.
T - (1ua Ouzmoo 11-2) ot S.ulo

"'*'

cti~~etoJuJyiO.

Rqooldo, pitdlcr,- r......r tho ....
cilic: Cout Leuuo.
PIDu.DI!Il&gt;H!A PIIILUI!S - Rocalled Orca Muhew1, pitcher, from

s-

Doaait ~5-4) It Ooklonol &lt;M-

. Now"Y'* "
.
U)
,_.,(I 5
&amp;-1). tom p.m.

HOUSTON ASTROS - P'ICoi lllod&lt;

...................
"' .... 1i!!i..diHblod
lill,uca
Shane

R.UNS - ~lips, Detroit, 6~;
KnoN ..+ ~ 64; P'lldt«t. Mift.
DCIIOI.I, 64; B. WaniJu1z. Seaule, 61 ;
Wsct. Mi
60; c..,Tan~~~.to, 57;
a.~. r - ..54; Aadonat. Balli·
-.54; MoOwito, Ootllttd, 54.
llBI - Pltidor, Deaoil. 75; MeO..U..
Ootllttd, 69; Puc1&lt;011, ~. 66; G.
Bell, Cbi"5o, 66; Cuter, Toroo10, 63;
Thomaa. Cbicaao, Sl; BcUo, CLEVElAND, 51.
HITS - Pu.ckoU. MinaNota, 124;
Cl.llVELAND, 114; E. Manin01,
Scalllo, 1117; Fi)mu, DOIIoit, 106; Siom,
Ten~, UM; Dcvcn.aox, Baltimore, 103;
lnCihlau.ch, MiMt101.1, 101 ; Anderson,

Bollon (CiemeM 9-6) •• MinnCIOU
(Eli- 6-6~ I :Ol p.m.

-11·3~ 10:05 p.m.

CINCINNATI IUWS- , _ R...
aM S.1den, wtn.lder, 11 lilt 15-cb)'
dfalbled UtL Recalled CeuM' Hn11o
dez, ou.t fteldel\ rrom Nuh•lllt of tba
Ao...tean AIHdatk&amp;

BAmNo - Pud&lt;Oit, Miotaeooto,
.339; 1!. ....-, -~ .332; R. Aloau. TOfHIG, .323;: Buraa, CLEVE·
LAND, .311: aom.k, Oakton, .315;
Molitor, Mihreui-. .314; hoblau.ch.

no, played Saturday

•

NotlonoiLnl\lf
ATLANTA BRA VBS - Released
Niclt l!.oulry, filii burnwl. .

laasu City, 2.4; Reimer, Teall, 23;
Pu.ek«t, Mianuota, 13; Brett, Kaaau

flO! ~O-Il~ 1:35.,....

.

167; S...... Allomo, 133; S. F New Y... IU; Dnbot, P'lllllotp. 101;
0. Naddua, Otlclto• l06; B~~ne~, San
Di'l",101; C........ Lao A11ao1oo. 101.
SAVES - Lao Smilll, Sl t..ulo, 23;
Chululo, CINCINNATI, 21; D. lon01.
H..-, 19; W......,d, Ma\11011, II;
Mildl w-.llliladolpllla. 11: MJ'ft,
s.. Dicp.ll; llolinda,~. t4.

I

Tlil1 played Saturday

W L
r-. ...............54 35
· -·--·····-··j() 39
--··----" 42
a-...............
.42 45
NowY. ............. .42 47
Dolnoil. .............. ..-42 49
CI.I!VEI.AND ..•.... 36 l4

Y... ll)-4, .714, 141.
STIIUOIITS - C - New Yart.

~--· .

NowY. . I ,S . . - 0
Pi'W;&amp; ll,l..oo"-loo 3
CNC~NNAn 1,111. Looilo 1
IJDoof&gt;
. .. I
_ ,2,__P' I .n

T-

MINNESOTA TWINS - Roloaooi
llutmio HiD.• Wioldor. RICII!od Jell R..
boWot,
olthol'l·
cilicCoutl..oo
"lllXAS ~ - Aaiped Don- •
ny Loon, pitcb«,IO OOalwmo Cily cilhc
Amcdan Aaod.atiCII, aa. a modioal nhl·
liltalion .........

San l'Radlco, 1·2, .100, 2..90; TcwkJ.
bwy, SL t..ulo, 9·3, .750, 1.17; 1'- llill,
Moatteal, 10-4, .714, 2.69; Cont. Now

In theNL ...

.•

tho PodllcCoUtiM.,...

Nagy is the one undeniable
bright spot of the Cleveland Indians pitching staff, but at the All·
Slar Game he said he bad 10 keep
reminding himself be belongs
among the best in the American

Sunday Times Senllnei-Page--&lt;:5

Faldo scores record 12-under par in Round 2 of British~Open

, Mayne's_clutcb single gives K.C." 4-3 win over .Cleveland
·

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpolla, OH-Polnt Pleasanl, wv

COli II UDCHKI OUT ®I
SlLKTIOI Of PJE-OWIIID WS
AND TIUCISI LOW PIICIS AIID
fiNAIICIIIUYAI ULE. .

'·'

'

.
ltt2 CADILlAC SMW STS

.- 1992 CAIIIUAC
111 ~

Sible blllck with biiCk
It llw lmsrlor.
MUST SEE

308 EAST MAIN

ELDOIADO

Polo .... nelitrallelthtr
· lnttrlor. S.utlful.tyNng.

10 NUIIT FOI H DAYS
WltliPPIOVID CIIDIT

. POMEROY

CONYENENT HOURS: llon •..frl. I:ON:DO; Slit. l:oo.t.:OO; Sun. 1:ON:oo

r... aTl1lt .,_ Not lncludld- All Rtbat• eo 0111et

'•

.

..

�P~ga

Jutr 19, 1992

PC)meroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

C6 Sunday nm• Santlilel

Ohio flshiltg repqrt .

· ,

White bass, drum fishing
rated
fair
in
Ohio's
Greenup
tail water _
zan.
wJillll•' ···-::-f.
wei&amp;k-f••••.
U.•N• -~'Omm
"' . · . I•ttee keep s v,
I ugOSIav
*"
athletes waiting for Olympic n_ews :rLI:~~\::!:z~~~~~ :?~:m~whenpunuingchan- .,:::.-r"':~a;;;;

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (A!)OllloRiver
Hele is the weet!y lilbillg ·tqJOrt is
In the Willow Island pool,
provided by the division of wildlifc anJiers are using crank baits and
. o(dleOhio •DepiUIIt&lt;iiltorNIIIiual ,spmller baits .to tate largemouth
RcscUtcs:
'
bass aVeraging 12 to 17 inches. Usc
'

By ANDREW KATELL
of Ecuador, said lhc sanclions comUNITED NATIONS (AP) ~ A mittee would meet Monday 10 dis·United Nations committee on Pri- cuss the IOC's response before
·day prolonged the agony for issuing a ruling. The lot ExecuYugoslav atblctea waitinBto leam ti vo Board meets Saturday and
·if they will be allowed 10 panic!- could clarify iiS
!hen.
pare in IICl!.l Wl:dt's Olympics.
Under the Brilisb compromise,
· Sources said a commiaee of die the Yugoslav athletes would not
·U.N. Security Counc:il poslpOIIed a wear the·same iltiforms and would
.decision en a.compromiSe plan that not para_de ·as a team in opening
would allow alblclell from tile tur- . ceremorues.
·bulent c:ountty to panicipare in die
U.N. Sanctions approved May
. Olympic:s, which start July 25.
30 prohibit Yugoslavia. a former
· The Spanish government bad six-republic fedention now con: requesliCd a quick decisiOII because, sisting only of Serbia and Moowithout U.N. approval, it w~uld ~gro. ~ taking part in intel·
have to uphold U.N. sancuons 11811cnalsportmgevents.
. against Yugoslavia and bar the
The sanctions were imposed
·entty of Yugoslav atbletes.
. ~y 30 to ~unish Ser~ia for its
· Tbe International Olym.,IC mvolvement m die warm the forCommittee bas pniposcd allowmg mer republic of Bosnia-HerzegovYugoslavs 10 compete as individo- ina. ·
'
als onder the Olympic flag and
The fm1 day of the IOC meetanthem. They would wear white ings at Barcelona was domina!Cd
uniforms with no markings and be by the Yugoslav issue, including
known as the Independent Team. the IOC's efforts to bring in albUnder the plan, ·the competitors letes !'rom Bosnia and Macedonia,
would represent only themselves another former Yugoslav re~.
:and not Yugoslavia.
Each would send delegallCIIS of
· Sources en the sancliens com- about IS people, including 10 lth·
:miuee said Austria, Hungary and letes from Macedonia and seven
:Ecuador had objected to the pro- from Bosnia, according to IOC
:posal because it "looks like the Direcror General FniiiCOis Canard.
:Yugoslav team in disguise."
Carrard said Macedonia accept:Brilain's representalive suggested ed the IOC's proposaliO IBkc part
'the commiuec ask die IOC to coo- under the same terms as
:sider allowing the Yugoslavs to Yugoslavia.
.participate as individuals without
He said it was "quite likely"
:being grouped as a team. The sug- the Maccdonians would ll;k~ part,
-gcslicn was accepled, and the com- regsrdless of the UN. deciSIOII on
:mittee's chairman was dnfting a the Yugoslavs. Macedonia has bro·letter to the IOC seeking die clarifi· ken away !'rom Yugoslavia but has
:cation.
not yet received international
: The chairman, Jose Ayala Lasso recognition as an independent state.

proposal

Spook lures to take hybrid tails are being used in dtc early
striped-bass. Chubs and ch 1clcen morning hours to take hybrid
livers fiShed DCM" die bottom work stripers. White bass and drum fishbestf&lt;rlltingc:llfJSh.
,ingareratcdfair.
In the GICCDup tail water, buck·
Southeast
SALT FORK ~ - ()pportunilics flir largemouth bass, Cftan.
Del catfish and muskie are rated
exccllcnt Fish at night with uadi·
tiona1 baits Ui take channel ,catlisb.

It was not yet clear wbat the
MacedoiQn ICilll would be called.
Canard soggestcd dlerc could be a
series of Independent Teams,
refcm:d to as A. B and so on.
Bosnia refuses to compete along
with the Yugoslavs and wants 10
send iiS own team.
"They have indicated clearly
die would lite 10 ~- under
tbck own colors, ' Carrard said.
"They don't wanlto be on the
same team as atb1ctes from Serbia
and Montenegro."
"We will ccnsider this request

with sympathy," Carrard said.
"The IOC is doing its best to
enable Bosnian atb1etes to participate.... The desire of these athletes
to compete is very rouching and
very movin~&gt;."
The capllal of Bosnia is Sanjevo, which hosted die 1984 Winlel
Games. The city has been under
siege for three months by Serb
irregulars who oppose Bosnia's
indepeftdence from Yugoslavia. .
Carnnl indiclllcd il was possible
the IOC would gnnt provisional
rccognilion to tile Boaniln Olympic
Committee, even dlough it has not
yet met die :•cats set out in
the Olympic
.
"We'd like to find 1 solution,"
he said. "I think we can find
exceptional so1ulions to cxccptional circumslanccs.''
Two other former Yugoslav
republics, Croatia and Slovenia,
received IOC recognilion earlier
Ibis yerJI. They competed as indepeadent nations in the Winter
Games at Albcrtville and will do so
again at Bam;lona.

Comeback of bears to Ohio years away
AKRON, Ohio (AP)- Can die
:bears make a comeback?
. No, nol the ones in Chicago.
:Theae are the beln tbat used to for· e throughout Ohio until they
::Jere pushed aside by progress.
: An established bear JXIPI!lation
·in Ohio appears to be years and
:years away, but then there's no
. ··
ha ·u h
d
teII mg J~t V.: I WI appcn an
how lcng 11 will take 10 happen.
After all, deer and turkeys have
reappeared in the pate in numbers
beyond the imaginations of the
giandcst OIJ(imists
Deer and turkeys were SIOCkcd,
but there are no plans 10 do such a
tbing with black bean,
It's up 10 the bears, and if they

move in from the mountains and
woodlands of Pennsylvania and
West Virginia, Ohio Division of
Wildlife bi~~~sts wiU do what
thek: to
the animals feel
we"We'~ not going 10 IBkc bears
u pod in Ohio and dump them in
p!.lSYJvania and West Virginia,"
said Sara Jean Pcten, an education
offiCCf for die division. "We're not
going to just assume the bears
came rrom out d SIBle.''
Instead, bears lniPIIed in cl!:nseiy
populated areas wilf be ~
ro die rugged, run! COIIIIIrYsidc of
soudlern Ohio and permitted to go

Pc'f: :fs~ and 1990, bears were
shot by wildlife officers ncar
Youngstown and East Liverpool,
rcs~tively, an~_lhese i~c}dents
led .m part 10 ~ tralfUDg for
o~f1cers e~countenng problems
. With bears m ~ ~ln_1990, the ~VISien trapped_a
bear m McArthur m southeast Ohio
and tlliiiSPOI'lCd ilro Shawnee State
,__. ·10 die extreme soudlem por·
':"',_
uon of die stale. Thai ~ was. the
~tabula County bear s destma11011.
. ~otb bears were males, which
~ t the bc:st way 10 get a popula11011 expJos!on under way_.
Bears st!".~ so rare~ die state
1hat the diVISIOn docsn t have a
bear m~nt program. But the
probablhtr of ~n eventua~ bear

As the n11111bcra in these states
grow, the need for habitat will
grow, soil's likdy tbat more bears
will COlier Ohio.
The Illite OIICC had a good number of bears - so many that 21
reported killed during a cne·
day bounty hiiDt ncar Hincklcy in
Medina County in 1818.
As progress came, the bear and
virtually all other prized gMilC animals either fled the stale or were
exploited to the extreme.
Al:cording to aomc accoun1S, die
last native Ohio black bear was
kiUcd in Paulding County in 1881.
In 1925, a dozen black bears
were released in the area that now
is Shawnee State Forest, but all
eventually were killed.

w=

goodopportuniticsfortakiqdllalalzllrie _
nel catfiSh :when drift fishing or
~ ~ • • • ~·~
ball~ fishing.
fi ' liS llal• de · WILLARD RESERVOIRDrift or uoll deep-diving _craak Ca-' 6-Ca llill'l
~
baits 10 talre walleyes awragmg 13 1*-1 ....... A . . . •
to 24 inches. Try the shorcliac deqHii'riq I~ ud ~ng
areas with soft cnws fished alo1ll
s Dpped
the bottom 10 take smallmoul.li ........ uaw' s Wd JCS are
bass. Drift fishing is die best tech•..;.13 atl6 • '
.

By VIVIAN MARINO
AP Business Writer
. The Democrats had more than just colorful banners and flags 10 wave during dleir national convention.
~
They had economic numbers - lots of them and most that pointed 10 continued wcakness in the
nation's economy, some welcome ammunition for
the Clinron..&lt;J(II'e presidential ticket
Among the data released this £::;;eeil: were
reports showing retail sales rose a ·
inting 0.5
percent in June; domcslic car and lrUdt sales fell6.7
percent in esr1r July; industrial plilduclion slipped a
seasonally adJUSted 0.3 percent in June; housing
starts tumbled 3.2 percent last monlh; and die trade
deficit surged to an 18-monlh high of $7.38 billien in
May.

Nnrdleast
•
• .,. ~ del••• •
BEACH CITY RESERVOIR- feet of 'WIICI' •
~ areas
Use night cnwlers or cut bait to •• 'A-Paill~ 1 P"
take brown buUheads averaging
Ill die u:aaal baia. ~be
eight 10 14 inches. S~ wmms avcrqiitJ23 iacks ~.. ,.181
and larval baits are best used whell llke8 aonll of C •• - '-~!"·
fishing for blocgills.
. -..! 1" :• • ~~ ~~LEESVIU..E LAKE - One of p widl DipiJ
- .,._
Ohio's premier muskie lakes, siwg,blll:t811PII¥ •slisllcd
anglers caught 76 fish weighing •dqldlsof41at~ill:t. W~
over 20 pounds in 1991. Anglers are ~ lfr' • dq8s ~ ....,ro
South~est
should use large imitation baits and 15 il:l • die . ..rn.a_A • - •
PAINT CREEK LAKE
lures trolled KDUDd areas of VCF- to 0
I _,_• 6D at 6S ~eel
RQ!:ky areas hold good numbers of tation. A variety of other popular ~J apt 10
iarlemoutb, smallmoutb and spot· sport nsh is also available in this .... or Clew
w
tecfbass. Locate submerged struc- I,OO().acre lake.
PilL
lure and drop-offs to enjoy good
opportunities for taking cnppies.
Some fbitbcad catfish weigh over
20 J1011Dds.
.
~
CJ. BROWN - Fish with jigs
or minnows around the artificial
structures 10 take crappies. The
marina area is good spotiO fiSh for
Electric Key Stan
10.5-HP
channel catfish when using soft
Synchrocraws or night crawlers fished
Shift Lever
Balanced'
along the bottom.
On Column
Briggs &amp;
Ceatral
Stratton
GREENFIELD LAKE- Try
1/C Engine
using lOp water plugs or rubber
worms 10 tate ~cmoutb bass in
Automotive
areas with vcgetallon. Red worms,
Pinion &amp;
meal worms and larval baits work
Sector
best when fishing for bluegills. Use
Steering
a slip sinker and nsh along the lake
bottom at night wilh night cnwlers
C:~~~-lmo Front
IW&lt;W'...
or chicken livers 10 take channel
Gmoal!li:
No-Tools
catfiSh.
Spiolh
Attach-A-Malic'·
OAKTHOR.PE LAKE - Fish
Hitch System
the deep drop-offs along die westJ
em side of the lake with minnows
38,.. Mowing Deck iluldtl . . . . Oplia•ll
or night crawlers to take largemouth bass averaging 14 to 20
No Payment or lderest 111111 Oct. I.
inches. Early morning hours are the
best lime to fiSh. Use minnows sus·
pended beneath a bobber in deep
watel around submerged saucture Havm't you dooe
withOut a'ho... .
to take cnppies. ·
~~ ·
Northwest
VAN WERT RESERVOIRS Drift fish with night cnwler bar·
ncsses or weight-forward spinners
when fishing for walleyes. Use
minnows when drift nshing along
the bottom in deep water to tate
yellow perth. Both rescnoirs offer
115 3301

..........

of

11695

•

·-1"

....
I

CKESRR

MIDDI.:.EPORT • Jen M. Sulli·
van, M.D. is the newest member d
Holzer Clinic's Pediatrics DepartmenL
Dr. Sullivan is now seeing
• IS at die Main Clinic location
-~isits the Clinic locations in
Meigs, Lawrence and Jackson
Counties, and Mason County,
W.Va.
He earned his Bachelor of Sci·
ence and medical degrees at Wright
State University in Dayton. He
completed his Pcdialric R.esidmcy
program in 1988 at the Brooke
Army Medical Center, Fort·Sam
Housron in San Antonio, Texas.
He was certified by the Amaican Board of Pediatrics in 1989.

Star Bane Corp.
reports 16 % gain in
quarterly earnings .
CINCINNATI· Star Bane Corparent company of Star
llan.t, achieved strong gains in
earnings during the scoond quarter
and first six monlhs of the year
which ended June 30.
Secood quarter earnings reflcct
a 16 ~increase over earnings
for this sane period in 1991.
This is die second consecutive
quarter in 1992 that Star Bane CorpD1ation !Jas ~a 16 percent
liiCI'C8SC m eanungs.
poration,

DR. DON BALL

Prior to joining Holzer Clinic:, Dr. fn Ohio. He and his wife, Debra,
Sullivan was OlicC of Pcdialrics at have two sons, Daniel and Samuel.
Irwin Almy Hospilll, Fan Riley in
Appointments are available
Manhaltan, Kansas.
from the Pediatrics Department at
Dr. Sullivan was bcnl in Cbica· 446-5371 or any Holzer Clinic
go, m., but his parents now reside location.

Value of farm land down
49 percent since 1981

Dollar General
reports increased .
sales for June

Upd~te ·On

auto
and related' stocks

C:,:,

l'lloo

TINIIII

'llrwlllo

P2WIVIA15._........--. .. - . . . .
P21-I
P211f701R11 ..
- _ ..._
- - ·-_
- -_- -

Attends conference

··- ---ISUI

..... P21-··------- .

·~·'---1'21117111114----111-11

Extension Pllblications and nearly
300 farm magazine articles. Dr.
Ball is the past president of the

Money Ideas

oSpHd r.tec1 tD 118 m.p.h.
oR-letter styling
&lt;Superior handling, ride, quletneu,. oii&amp;S dulgn.ted
tn1ct1on 1nd 1ppurance
Mounting, Complltlr Balancing, New V1lve Stems
Included In Price!

F:Dimlll11-----·
1'21117111111-----·

American Fongc and Gnssland
Council.
A I p.m. session will be bcld at
Meigs High School at intersection
of Route 7 and 33 in Pomeroy. Call
Meigs County Extension at 614992~ for details.
A 7 p.m. session will be bcld in
Gallia County at the Raccoon
Creek Coumy Parle (Sbclier House
5) just off of State Route 77S
southwest of Gallipolis. Call the .
Gallis County Extension Office ll
614~7007 for details. The pro- gram is being sponsored by the
Soutbem Hills ExiCDSion Ouster. ...

WASHINGTON (AP) - .The
The report set the average value
value d U.S. f11111 real esta1e IS 4? of farm real'estate on Jan. I at S68S
percent below its 1981 peak, agn- an acre.
cultural economics researchers say.
The per-acre value of farm real
: ' BARNt;rT FORD'S NEW QUARTERS •
Ja-, ta a aewand modera llu:liJty at tile cor"With a 3.6 percent inflation CSiate is expected 10 avemge from .,
_. of SR 32 ud Mayhew Rd., just outside or
nte in 1991 more than offsetting unchanged 10 2 percent higher in ··
c...-.a
....
n~otat­
Jacksoa
011
July
13.
the 1 pat:att increase in f11111 real 1992, die report said.
.
.
v
'dill rr-111 lon&amp;-lkae
q~i~rl:ln ·aula. . ' Route 35dast aortb or
estate valiiC, the inflalion-adjUSitd
"Underlying the forecast arc . ·
value fell 3 percent from January expcctalions that net farm income,
1991 " says a recent report en agn- interest rates on farm real estate. ,
culttWalland
values fly USDA' s loans and inflation will be lower in ·
··~
EconomicR.csealdtSavicc1992," it said. "The weak U.S. ·.
die
community,"
Barnell
said
in
die
: JACKSON • According to last north of Jackson, to a new and
The decline continues a down- economy continued to dampen '·
Monday's Jackson Herald. Baniett modern flcility It the cuncr d SR. Jackson paper.
ward
trend in real values, it said: invesror demand for farmland for
Barnett
purchased
die
6
and
1/2
32
and
Mayhew
Rd,
just
outside
of
Flird PresideQt Charles Barnett
"reducing
die current value 10 49 nonagricultural uses, particularly ·.
acre
lot
in
the
fall
of
1991
and
Q(flcially relocated his 20-ycar-old Jackson.
"""'""'below
die 1981 peak."
land near some urban areas and in ·
"We feel this is not only a good began construction or the new
NASHVILLE, Tenn .._ Dollar .--·
dealership rrom its iong-lilnc quarthe East Coast:"
13,101
square-foot
Morton
buildters on Business Route 3S, just move for Barncu Ford. but also for ing.
·
General Corporation recently
He explained The Ford Co. 1iltes reported increased sales for dtc five
for dealers 10 keep bcutr facililics weeks e!lding July 3.
so he obtained the Ford Construe·
Olainnan and CEO Cal Turner,
tion booklet on struetnres and Jr. said retail aales for the five
square footage 10 design his mod· weeks rotaled $82.2 millien com·
em facility.
pared with $66 million in 1991, Ill
Operational changes include mcrcase of 24.6 percent. Same
longer sales hours. Also, in the store sslcs for the period increased
18 .s percent
future, Barnett bopes to run an
For lhe rust two mcntbs of die
evening shift in die service departd
D II 0
I
By STAN EVANS
meniS to better serve customers. =nsal~:::;;, s~.:.S :ii1
Presently, be employs IS and hopes compared With $119.4 million for
to add 10 that number.
.
the same reriod last year an
A lot of new tccbnologiCS were •
'
· lemcnted in die project such 15 mcrcase o 24.6 percent. Same
::::'bcaiCd floor sysiCDl in the scr- store. sales for the quarter to date
.
d
· 1 have 111aeascd 18.4 JICICCIIL
VIC~ d:~~~ :;rcla
For the first five mcntbs of the
desiln
It dispolal furnace year, Dollar General retail sales
11le new wasth
.
totaled $340.4 millioa compared
sy1tem burns e waste 01 1 at
'dt
'll' • the same
IIIIIOil 100 percent cleanness and WI . 5271 .7 ml ~ cor
alin bcali die bui~ Saving en . pcnod last year,an mmase d 25.3
clecaic beat and soiVmg dtc prob- percent. ~arne store sales for die
.1cm of dispolin&amp; moror oil wastes year have increased 19.7 pcroenL
makes the changes 100 percent
eflicienl, Barnett pointed out
Bank One employees
Tbe new all-scrvicc department
has up-to-date equipment and all receive awards recently
tec:bnlcians have attended service
schools.
GALLIPOUS • Ann Jolmson,
bnnch manager or the Gallipolis
Office of Bank One, At.bens,
announces that Gina Jones, loan
clcdr;, and Mi1incJa Mcaip, lcllcr,
OAWPOUS • Gn1i Crawford have roccived We Care" awads for
of River City Farm Supply, Inc., their exceptional community
Oallipo!U. RICCIIIIy amded a feed- effortS in the Colts for Kids proing aii4 lllliiiPftCI!l school at the ject.
hll hpbi oliCenl Feeds, Inc., in
Bolh Oallipolis cm[Jio,ocs went
MuiC 111 ine, Iowa.
fRANCHISE CHANGES HANDS • Jolla Saaa, left,
above and be~ in their collecThe acbool was for employees tion and disuibution d CoMs. hats oner/opentor or Tltnplke ol G~U"Ua, aad Mike Nor6ap, :.::
of busirleael tllat sell Kent feeds and mi!IOD$ for liCICdy childreo iD vw~~etloperalllr ol NG •it-Nortllap
u...ad FrldiJ t111t • •
and Animal Care prodiiCts and was Gallia Coaaty this 1*1 win.-.
Tal'llplb II• aold tile Jeep-Eape fnatblle lo Norrii-Not..ip
Tbli Bane Oae Corporation
Dodae. Tile ..Y...
ud npportld IIJ-... . .
[Mr. g,.. II u bu at deliped to help them betU:r acrvc
their
It&lt;
!i~k
lind
pou\11}'
p'Odll::tr
aWIId li signed by OainDal John
rorcr Moeor co. _. QrJillr c.rp. 1o pi'OIItl'ly IIIII&amp;• 111e
Broker for Tile OMo c-.-J Ia
C\dbiiCD.
B. McCoy.
Eaale r.-•••~ wldlllle eilltllta OtrJIIer delleiMp.
ill Gallpolll olllce.l

ll'lp'••

JlEYNOLDI TURBO·PLUS

P1iillllll14-- -- " ' - "

GALLIPOUS • "Fescue Man·
agemcnt" will 'be lhc topic for two
edncatimal programs en Thursday,
July 23. Tall Fescue is often associated wilh die jRIJCIICC or an endophyte fungus. Toxins produced by
tb1s fungus can cause elevated
body temperatures and reduced
perfmnancc in c:att1c.
Dr. Don Ball, Euension
Agronomist and Professor at
Auburn University will be the
guest resource person for the
Thursday activity. Dr. Ball, a
native of Kentucky, has been at
Auburn University since 1976. He
is the author of more than SO

Dr. Sullivan new memberofHolzerClinic

300 TREADWEll

. -"'·"

do~s or prOgramming options, from pay-per-view
moviCS and sports events 10 university courses and ;
publi&lt;: access. It may laice aJ10iher decade, lhough, 10
fuRy develop die necessary ICchnology.
-.
FCC Chairman Alfred Sikes says Thursday'11 . ·
decision opens die door to competition for cable TV
that could bclp control die escaialiqg ntes and deteriorating service that have irritated viewers. He urged
Congress 10 drop lhc legislation it's considering to
regulate cable TV.
COMING UP:
Fcdelal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan testiftCS before the Senate Banking Commitlee Tuesday
and Wedaesday, North American automakers
relcasc mid-July ssles results Thursday, die Commerce Department reports on durable goods orders
for June Friday .

Topic for Thursday, July.23
farm program is announced

~~ds

Such was the case last month
with a 240-pound bear nnquiliz.cd
in Ashtabula County and taken for
lhe ride of his life.
Wildlife officials were ttying 10
get die animaiiO underSIInd that it
shouldn't want 10 associate with
people, and by all means should
avoid !heir palios and garbage cans.
"We'd like the experience (of
being caught) 10 be so distasteful
that it will permanently remove
from die bear's memory die idea of ·
wan ling 10 be around people," Ms.

P1~4_;_

.

HELLO, IS TWS 'MURPHY BROWN'?: FCC
Lets Ph011e Companies C&amp;rrJ ...........Ia&amp;
· Couch polatoes may have yet anoiher reascn 10
stay glued to the tube. But tbcy'U want to keep lhcir
portable teJephoncs handy. .
. .
The Fedetil Communicalions CcnuniSSIOII ~ave
phone companies tile~~ to IIIDSIIIit ~
prognmming over theu lines. The FCC CDVJSIODS

He is also a member of tbe
Columbus, and from 1973 until
1983, was tbe assistant execulive Regents Advisory Council, .AJea B,
director at Grant Medical Ccnlel in Slale of Ohio, ACHE, and tile ProColumbus, with direct rcsponsibili- fessional Services Advisory Commiltee of die oHA. Childs and his
ty for their professional and suppcn
wife Judi, a registe.red nurse, have
servicca departmeniS.
cne,
daughtel, KeUy, and a gnndNllllecl Fellow in 1988
Active in both professional and daughlier, Cbelsca Porter, who are
mcn1 functions, bos[lital wide.
conununity orglllizatiCJtS, be was a residents or Granville, Ohio. In his
Additionally, Childs will be member of the American College spare time, he enjoys all sports.
respcNible for openlicns and pro- of Heallh Care Executives from widt special emphasis en golf and
doclivity improvement, teChnolOgy 1976 until be was named a Fellow fishing.
In making the llrtll1l1DlCCJI d
asscssmeDI, new service develop- in 1988. He is a member of lite
ment and will continue to act as Ccntnl Ohio Health Adrninislraun die COO appointment, Albls said,
liaiscn with die .......,tal's medical Association, the Ohio Hospital '1t is with real pride that I conpat·
ulate and welcome Tom into his
stalf.
Association, the Hospital Associanew
position as Chief Operating
A native of Aleron, Ohio, be lion of Central Oliio, and tbe
Oflic«
of the bospil81. Since joinatiCDCied Akron public acbools and Soutbcrn Ohio Hospital Council.
ing
our
administrative stalf in
received dual Bacbclor de~ in
A member or die Ohio Valley
Labor Eccnomics and Labor Rcla· • Management Associalion and lite · 1985, he has shared his growing
lions &amp;an die University d Akron Al:utc Care Planning Task Puce of leadership stills with us, piding
in 1968.
the Ohio Hills l;lcalth Planning and directing IS professional and
. Following his military duty as a Aam:Y, Inc,., be 11 also 1 member five support servi:e ~bllilii&amp;•
Adk:ins ccntinued, his wort ill
THOMAS CIULDS
captain in the Medical Services of~- Oallia _County ~mcrgency
Corps at Tripier Army Medical ~!Cal Services AdviSOry Coin- medical staff affairs and commit·
tees as dtcir liliDI with the bospiGALLIPOLIS • Thomas R. Centel in Hawaii, be went on to nuttee.
.
181,
as well as aclive J*licipation ill
Childs, FACHE, has been named · ~ his M.H.A. in H~ital and
A ~bel: and past president.of
the
Holzer Hospital Foundation
Chief ()per~ting Officer of ~he Health Services Administration the M1d-Ohlo Valley lndustnal
Board,
Executive and Finance
Holzer Medical Center, according trom Ohio State University in Emergency PlanninJ Council
Commiuce
Meetings, and serving
(MOVIEPC), Childs 11 a trustee
to Charles L Adkins, Jr., President 1973 ·
as a bnan1 member of Holzer Van~ two )'tlfS before joining die and vice chairman of the Family
and Chief Executive Officer of die
guard,
the for-profit subsidiary of
administntive stalf at Holzer Med- :.A4d!ttion Community T~enl ,
the
parent
Consolidated Health
came to Gallipolis in · ical Ccnlll!r, be was an inclepondent Services (FACI'S) d Gallia CounSySiellls,
Inc.,
bas been d inuna:198S from Columbus, Ohio, to advisor(clinsultant for the Ohio !f, and a board member d the Gal·
surable
value.
All of this experi·
accept the posilion ~f vice.presi- Hospital Association (OHA) in tipolls Developmental Ctlttier.
ence and experlise has prepared
him well to like m llis new role u
cbicf opcntinl ofliccr of the hospital as we go forward, setting the
pace for bcabh care in die Soudt·
c:ss1a11 Ohio River Valley."

Barnett Ford moves into new quarters

Prlot

muted.

dent for professional services. In
his new role be will be accoun11ble
for die day-to-day operation of dtc
Holzer Medical Center, including
profcssionalllld support services,
with the lddition plant operation1, human resources, and all
quality assessment and Improve-

'
Tennis
MAHWAH, NJ. (AP) - TopVirginia and Pennsylvania are suf.
seeded
Monica Sclcs and second·
ficient 10 p~~il hunting, w.ith seeded Jennifer
Capri.lli advanced
Pe~nsylvama s bear populatu,m to the semifmals of the $150,000
e~~~ted at 7,000 and West Vu- Patluruuk Tennis Classic.
guua s at 3,000.

P 1 - 1 - - - ·· ..·---S41.41
_ _____ _
·~·----Pl~l---·---•1.11

ing unemployment and delaiorating middle class.
Republicans counter dUll the economy is en die
mend aftel a cyclical downturn tbat followed eight
years of unintcrnJploed expansion, die longest in postwar America
Many economisiS also predict ~ ~Y. will
pick up before the November ~ eiectJons,
aldtough the_ratc of growth Jslikely 10 be more

Childs named COO of Holzer Medical Center

tilod::!:

free.

TIN-

Inflation, though, remained in check, with the
Ccnsumcr Price Index rose
Just 0.3 percent in June for a 2.6 percent annual inflation nte. The number of jobless applications also
dropped to a niJJc.:montb low earlier this menth, but
eccnomiSIS said more declines were needed before
tbcr, could ~ die job malket improved.
'I dtinll: that if tbcsc numbers raise any animal
spirits they're die spirits of donkeys radtcr than elephants," said Robert A. Brusca, chief economist for
Nikko Securilics lnternaticnal Inc. "June has been a
very cruel month as far as the president is concemcd.''
- To be sure, die Democrats have repeatedly used
dtc economic slowdown in their bid 10 UIISC8I President Bush, blaming the Republican l~p of die
pastl2 years for leaving a high budget defiCit, grow~ovemment reporting the

Sports sbQrts

!KlP:}:~:O::Cn::Sso~dWcst

July 19, 1992

.Latest economic numbers give boost to Democrats:

for lwgemoutb bau. Locate IJider·
W8tel struc111re and fish With minnowstotakecnppies.
DILLON RESERVOIR White crappie, bluegill, largemouth
bass, channel calfiSh and 6uilbcad
fishing opportunilics are rated~~
10 excellent Cbeck with ares bait
shops for the latest conditions and
mcihods used 10 catch these popuJar sport fish.
·

·-·s

Section D;

'Farm/Business

.

PMIMIIII-·-..
P1Milllll14 - -.. ----~""'

P2111111R14--

PMIOIIIII14-

---

-·

- -

"'aeowaaoed

·'

.

..

,

..
'

".,

•

*'"

�.

Pao• D2-SundaY nmes-Sentlnel

'

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

July 19, 1992.

Increase iil rural poor straps agencies
By MITCH WEISS
~llted Pr-. Writer
BOWL{NG G~EN, Ohio Mary Bunwick has worked hard
most or her life. She never millie a
lot of money, but enough 10 take
;care of ~If and bet daughter.
The 52-year-old single mother
:was wotting two iobs. seven days
a week when she found out she had
breast cancer. Her breasts were
removed in February.
She wanted to go back 10 work
after lhe surgery, but chemotherapy
·sapped her .strength. She had to
· stop working.
· Although she had some health
·insurance. bills began 10 pile up :rent, gas, elecaic. She found herself one step away from being
homeless when her landlord threatened 10 evict her.
That's when she turned 10 the
Salvation Armr.. It he!J)ed her pay
some of her bills, includiD~ rent,
·and gave her money for medicine.
· "Without that help, I wouldn't
have made it," she ssid. "I would
have been out on tile Slreet with my
daughter. I was hanging by a thread

Man isfound
guilty of murder
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Franklin County judge set sentencin$ for Monday for a man found
gwlty of murderin~ Ohio State
University student
Norwallc.
The common pleas jwy deliberated 10 boon befcxe fmding Jason
C. Thompson, 21, of Columbus,
guilty Friday night in the death of

and IIley RSCued me."
meet tile lieeds in rural communiThe .number of rural people ties in n\)rtbl"est Ohio, up
seeking help from private and pub- $S00,00() from tiJe JftVious year.
lie agencies is increasing drarnati"We will probably fall sh&lt;rt of
cally•. Ernie Unholz, .a Salvation lbat." Unbolz said
Army field representabve in northOther private and public agenwest Ohio, said the group's cies a1.1o say !hey are having a difcascload in rural Ohio has ficult time meeting the needs of
~ by 30 percent in the last rural poor.
•• ~me· rease?
In the last 10 years, welfare
Wbyearsy
funding bas increued 87 percent iD
One reason is that jobs have left Ohio, lrom $~ million 10 $953
many of these towns. Men and million, said Slate HUQIIIII Services
women for the first time in their Department spokeswoman Susan
lives are unable to suppon their Mmin..
families.
··-s~ workers have ~n a 33
"The middle class is in a free percelll incJcase in cases during the
fall. People who are laid off from same period. Ill 1982, they handled
their jobs are not just in unfortunate 592,®0 cases a month. In the
circumstances - they are in near 1993, that figure is projected to
dire circumsrances bec•use jobs are ·
10 790.000
very hard 10 fmd,'' Unholz said.
UX:S:Csaid there 'aren't enough
. _In additiop. families from big social workers to handle tbe
Clbes are movmg 10 rural areas, try· increase.
mg to escape from poverty and
A recent report by the Council
despair in the inner-city. And they for Economic; Opportunities in
believe they will be lreated beuer Greater Cleveland said 443,000
in a smiiiiiOwn.
Oh ·
ha fall ·
loans ve
en mto ~verty
"Small10wns have a compassince the cady 1980s. It said more
sionate heart for needy people," than .1.6 million people ....:: about
Unholz ssid.
one-seventh of the swe's residents
The Salvation Army projects it _are poor.
will need $2.45 miltion this year 10
The problem is se~cre in rural

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH
U653

1-11·11

'"Q4

tAKSI
+to 4
EAST
+Q 10 7
'Jt075

WEST

+HU

...

•uu

t9

tQJ!086

+J9763

SOUTH
+AK
'K2
t732
+AKQ8 5 2

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Sootlo

Weal
Pus

3NT

Pus

I+

NIt
&amp;NT

East
Pass
All pass

Opening lead: t Q

The quote is
oft misquoted
By Pbllllp Alder
Certain proverbs are actually misPr d
quotes - for examp1e," i e goes before a fall." The original words are,
appropriately, in the book of Proverbs
in the Bible: ' Pride goeth before destruction, and an haughty spirit before
:a fall."
Many bridge players are haughty,
and some of them play so quickly that
·they end up self-.lestructing in COlitract&amp; thai are guaranteed with a dif·
ferent line of play.
·
How would you play in six no-trump
.on today's deal? West lead.! tbe dia'IIIO!Id queen.
• South's rebid .of lhree no-trump
'lltowed a solid six-card or longer suit
.aad stoppers in the unbid suits. North's
.raile to six n~trump waa · quantitative.
Declarer woo Irick one Ia the dummy and immediately led a club to biJ
ace. Wben Weal dilclrded a beart,
:South slopped in biJ tracks. Suddenly
;hil 12 'certain" tricks had shrunk to
•II . Eventually declarer conceded one

;down.

• The anly dancer to the contract was

;a&amp;-0 club split. which happens alm01t
.four pemmt of the time. U declarer
,bid ~ this . polllbillty, be
·wwld have noticed thit be bad allfe:ty-piay available.
• At trick two,- to hsnd With, say,
:a spade 10 tbe ace. Tben lead a low
cltlb toward dummr'IIO.
~ u Welt hsl aU live clubl. be Will
•coUect only tbe jack, either now or latU Eut hslallllle ~lubll, after dum·mt• It 1 - Ill tbe Jack, cleelarer e&amp;D
~ 111 dunllay, lead tbe club four lltd
:t~De~M biJ tJpt. Ia elk we, tbe

:.r.

~-!lome.

: hill IDa ·D IIIIIIin, temember
that J'OII can _.ford to lile 0111trlclt.
....
. e-.wa• ..... ••••
~~
··,

If

Help Wanted

W~J~ted

Fmanc1 al

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

· Business
OppOrtunity
!NOTICE!
OHIOVALLEY.PUBLISHING CO.

ASTRO-GRAPH

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

study the situation seriOUSly. It could be
a wise move.
GEMIIIIIM8r 21-.IUM 20) Geminis fr•
quently wortc best when they tackle several situations simultaneously. You
could be a good achiever today - If you
establish more than one Important
objeCtive.

July 20, 1112

July 11,1112
You might establish yourself with a new
circle of friends in the year ahead. You
won't forgel or Ignore your old pals.
however you're not apt to bring them
together with your new ones.
CANCER (June 21-.luly 22) You have a
gift today for turning things you're Involved In with others Into pleasurable
activities. Even the sourpuS$88 might
cracf&lt; a grin. Know-~ to 1001&lt; lor romance and you'll lind II. The AstraGraph Matchmaker Instantly · which signure romantically perfect for
yoo. Mail $2 plus a tong. self-addressed, stamped envelope to Malchmaker. c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428. Cleveland. OH 44101-3428.
LEO (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Some lmporlant
changes you dldn'l orcheslralo might
take place today. H.,_, they could
benefit you more lhan anyone else.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) If !here Is
something lmporlant you hope to
achieve today, you'relikely to be luckier
doing It with a parlner than on your own.
Find an ally who's a real conlrlbutor.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) An unexpected opponunity to utilize your special talents might present itsell today. It may
parlaln to a situation that could provo
profitable.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your popularity with your peers could be ralher

recommends lhll you do bus!·
nHI with people you know end
NOT to ..nd money through lhe
mell until you hl¥1 lnvntfgtled

tM oHtrlng.

impressive today. Wherever you make

to advance an ambition.
allocate some time today lor a recre·

your presence felt, when measured ational activity. Select one that has eteagainst you, others will pale In menls of friendly competition.
comparison.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) Your fiSAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Desir- nancial prospecls look encouraging to·
able results are likely today In two Im- day, particularly in an arrangement with
portant situations. Much to your credit. an individual with whom you pre1'iously
you may achieve them unaided by Lady generated rewards.
Lucf&lt;.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 11) You might
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-.1111. 11) This Is a have to deal with someone today who is
good day to try something fun you al- a trifle testy. lnstesd of reacting angrily,
ways wanted to do but never got be tactful and cooperative. Vour exam·
around to. It parlalns to something that pie will melt a hostile heart.
PISCES {Feb. 20-Mirch 20) Perform
has strong competitive elements.
AQUARIUS(Jan. 20-Fib.11) You might any tasks you're responsible for Ieday
be a bit extravagant today and still to the very best of your ability. If the
come out on the prollt side of the led- work is done well, a happy surprise
·
ger. Don't be foolish with your re- could be In the oHing. •
sources. but don't daprlve yourself ARIES IM•ch 21-AprH 11) There may
be some specific things you'll want
either.
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20) Be asser- ·done your way today. You're not likely
tive today in pressing forward In a ven- to have trouble In doing so, thanks to
ture In which you recently beCame inter- your. ability to manage others without
ested. You could be very lorlunate at making them feel usecl.
this time where naw endeavors are TAURUS (April 20-MIJ 20) A matter
you've been anxious about looks like It
concerned.
ARIES {Mirch 21-Aprll11) Strong. In- might work out much better today than
tuitive feelings should not be Ignored you dared to anticipate. Negative eletoday, especially those you think might ments that concarn you won't be
enhance your status or material securl- opera11ng.
ty. These signals could be very GEMINI(Miy 21-.lune 20) A friend you
revealing.
haven't seen lately might lilt In and out
TAURUS (April 20-Miy 20) 11 you've of your thoughts today. There may be
been contemplating getting Involved In positive reasons for contacting your pal
a new endeavor, this is a good day to at this time.

HUTCHINSON AUCTION INC.
Saturday, July 25 at 5:00 P.M.
Take U.S. 50 l 32 W. of Athena end exH onto 50
W. towarda McArthur. Auction le e quarter ol a
mile on the left. Sign• will be polled.

Nice 3 pieCe bedroom •uke, depression 3 piece .
bedroom suke,. walnut hutch with sliding glass doors
.on top, painted oak
oak dressers · wkh,
i
dresser base, chesl
painted cupboard,
standi, .old pictures,
,c:lishes 0 el~ic . mower,
(J!mps,
sweepers, and
.

..

I

;.1".'~

"'

.,; '

.~

.

'f4

Terma: Caah or check with positive ID. Not
re~ponaible for loll or accidenta.
Food
available.
Auctioneer, Mark Hulchinoon 614-698-6706
Llcenoed end Bonded in Ohio
Aaaoc. Frank Hutc~inaon 614-592-4349

ANTIQUE AUCTION
TUESDAY, JULY 21, 7:00P.M.
MYSTERY FARM· This week's mystery ,
farm, featt~red by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservlltloa District, Is located somewllere In
Meigs Couaty. Individuals wlsltlng to partlcl- '
pat! in the weekly contest may do so by,IJiftllnl
the farm's owner. Jlllt mall, or drop off your
guess to the Dally Sntinel, Ill Coart St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Dally
Tribuue, 8l5 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Oblo,
45631, aud you may wla a $5 prize from the

LOCATION: D.A.V. BUILDING, Rt. 35 Bypeaa In
Kenauga, Oh. Aeroaa from Pt. Pleeaent, W. Va.
FURNITURE: Walnut wuh stand w/marble top. mantel
clock, rodwaod blanket box, sq . oak tabla, platlorm rocker,
four plank bottom choirs wlwindsor backs, oak drosNr base,
bird's aye maple hi!tl boy. oak stand, porcelain top tabla,
celluloid manbil clock, 3 pc, watortal bedroom suito,
smoke~ stand, ftal top trunk, lootstool w/noedopoint, hig,

Oltlo Valley·Pubu.blng Co. Leave your name, ·:
addreu and telephone namber with your card :
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. AU :
eGiltest entries sboulcl be turued Ia to the news- ·
paper ollk:e by 4 pJD. eac:b Wednesday. In case •
of a tie, tbe winner will be cbosen by lottery • .
NeXt week, a Gallla Couuty farm will be rea- ,
hired by the Gallla Soil and Water Conservatioa ·

chair, low boy drassar w/mirror, oak dresser w/mirror, art

deco night stand. art deco buftet, doll chai~. quHt l~amas,
childs oak rocker.
ANTIQUES a. COLLECllBLES: Van Briggle bowl wllrog,
RoHville bookends (pino cone), 6" WoHor vaso, pottery to
include: Hall, Roseville, Brush, Royal Copley, Shawnee,
McCoy; J.P. Coates adv. mustache cup. printa~ tray, child's
cobalt blue water oot, lard p10ss, cosiumo jewelry, adv. signs
&amp; boxos, sev. coUoctible cast imn items, ho""' collar, iron
skiRets, 6 pc. ruby stamwaro, dep. glass, carnival &amp; other
glasswaro, Iiane ja~. old milk bottles (Rio Grande Collage,
Burnett Dairy, Kanauge, Oh.), old books, adv. tins, minillu18
sad iron, sev. pes. Occupied Japan, g~anitawal8, imn kettle
dated 1884, 4 qt. glass chum, Gallipolis post cards, sav. pes.
starting aver cowbell, buggy jack, old wood boxes, S&amp;P's,
old dlshos: Jumbo peanut jaro, kitchenwa,. items, kraut cut·
tar, apple butter sti1T11r, stoneware. coUoclol$ late, Coca-Cola
adv. canis. Grindey item, Amish boy &amp; girt (cast),
wood'b~ass jewelry box, Hop·a~ong Cassidy milk bottle,
Gaiupous ar~~a booka, tin match holder, old buttons, br11ad
board, wood toot boxes, othor misc. smal itoms.
THIS IS YET ANOTHER FINE OFFERING OF ANTIQUES
I COLLECTIBLES! MUCH MORE NOT LISTED IN THIS

District.

f card of Thanks
I want to thank all
y family and
Jrianda for Jhalr
!ova, support, prayera, cards, gifts of
,flowara during my
hospitalization and
·Jifta r my return

·home.
: I appreciate It vary
,much.
•
Dohna J. Lathay

.

~

'

· abQve, your own Interests. What you

SAGtnARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Even
though II is very early in the wsek. try to

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Thlt auction conelata of peraonal property
moved to our auction lecillty from a New
Merahlleld home.

New lriendshlps and tresh'outslde interests could be In the offing In the year
ahead. There are Indications you may
be more active socially than you've
been In the past.
· CANCER (June 21-.lulr 22) Material
conditions look promising for you today. so don't put situations that could
yield a profit on tho back burner. Instead, make them priorities. Major
changes are ahead lor Cancer In the
coming year. Send for Cancer's AstraGraph predictions today. Mall $1.25
plus a long. self-addressed. stamped
envelope to Astro-Graph. c/o this
newspaper. P.O. Box 9.1428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to $tate your
zodiac sign.
LEO (JIIIJ 23-Atlfl. 22) Your greatest
asset today could be your gift for guld·
ing others without making them teel
you're Imposing your values on them.
Your suggestions will be duly noted.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Desirable re- ·
suits are indicated today - II you pill
the concerns of OlherS on par with. or

sow you will reap.
LIBRA {llepl. 23-0ct. 23) If you have an
opporlunlty to deal with people on a
one-to-one basts today. you'll be very
effective. Try not to get Involved with a
group.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Hov. 22) Members
of the opposite gender might be more
helpful to you today than usual, especially In situations where you're striving

8

21

in northwest Ohio had ~ people
Olf welfare, M•. Moning said. In.
()ciOber 1991, .lhelc ~ 3,336. ";
"It's real obvious that when yOtt·
get iDIQ th.~ non-~an counues,:,
you're fuoking at h1gher percent·
ages of people on welfare," Ms~
Mooing ssid.
·

By comparison.llbopt 9.3 per•
ceot of tile ~le iD urban Cuyahop County Ri:eived welfiiR: and
14 pen:ent rood stampS.
And there is poverty in some
rural areu where it wasn't a major
problem 211 yean ago.
In October 1971, Seneca County

·
· Ill~ County last year more
than 13 pen:ellt Of lhe people' in lhe
southeastern Ohio county received
Aid 10 Dependent Children. About
26.5 perceot were on food stamps.
Those figures are lhe highest in lhe
state.

11

Sunday

u...

kevin Shumllle, 25.

Judge David Johnson will be
Jtquiml10 hand down a 15 yearsto-life prison term, plus three years
because Thompson used a gun,
Assistant County Prosecutor Jeff
Plunkett ssid.
Thompson will he eligible for
parole in 13 years, Plunkett ssid.
Shumate was driving in the
Ohio State area early Nov. 24 when
several shots were flted from the
street
A bullet struck Shumate in the
back, police ssid.

countieS Ms. Moning said.

wv

Ott-Point

TO

Sealed PfOIIONI• will
received by the board
educotlon
of th~~:~~~
Local School
Pomor,, Ohio, 11
ol the , _ , . , 320 Eaet
Main Binet, Pomeroy, Ohio
45711 unUI 12:00 o'clock
nowt, -""' daylight aavlnge dme, Aupt11, 1112,
and II IIIII IImo Gpelled bf
the r-.trw oiNid ..._d
" provided bf lllw for c.f•
111'1• llenagomonl lervlcN
lor all eolloolo Within the

lhlgoloaool 8ahoal Dlolrlcl.

lnatructlona to blcldere
•nd apoolllallono lor thle
11rvlco are on llle at tho
Olflco of the Suporint•don~ 320 E•t Main Stnot,
Pomoroy, Ohio 457•.
~ ore to be oolled end
.cldrseaed to: Molao Local
School DIHiot, OlftOo or.,.
T,_rw, UO Eaal Main
Stroot, P. 0. Box 272,
POIIItrDY, Ohio 457ee.

Thom•• MocMI 31 70S or
equlvelent

ClttHicllf--71
~
o.llvend
unit
to 111set Ill
Federal, State and local
epocillcalione al Um• of
1111111118ctura.
m. Wll be .....tvec~ With

...,.a to tho chaaele end

body typund will elall thet

the bue compll• with all

eohool dlettlct epoolllOlllonl, Ill e.rety rogu ...
Uono ond current Ohio
Mlnl 111 um Bllndiudo lor

llohool Buo COnotruotlon of

:=:::f:'."t,,~~
·~~. , .. I edu u

, ~..._to"!....!.,.,_ Cl I

on

-.n-- --.. ... owset
rseponliblo bid lor the proioc~ but rwervee the right
to rojoct 1111Y and Ill, or

p~ ~=:r'tho'\':d of

PUBUC NOnCE
NoUn le h•oby given
lhetlhe Wt.go of
,.. -.ptllllled bldl•n•

lyr•-

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
lhullldly, Auguet .. 1112, ll
7 , ... lor. f114 CMwolet ALL Vord Sileo lluot 8o Paid In
lmp•l• 4 door, pollee AdVInco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the doy "'fora the oct Ia to run.
........ 51,800 IIIIM.
SUnday adhlon • 2:00 p.m'l
The ..... to ... Hid All Friday. Monday odltlor! . 2~
be bf lfllpoln-1 bf p.m. Setunlly.
oonlllcUng lha lyreouae
polloe ohlel at 114-112-51U
Pl. Pleasant
or the ay,.ouaa m~~yor at
&amp; VIcinity
114-112-7777.
The
of ayr.cu.. llovlna Solo, 1 doy only, Wad
July 22, 2113 Spruce Sl, Pt. PK. :

·~~·
lllova vehicle

.....

tho Dop1rtmont of Eduoalion purauant to hotion
4511.7• o1 tho Ohio RftiNd
Code end Ill other pirtlnont
proriolono ollllw.
Sptclllcatlono and inotrucllono 1o bldclo,. m.,
be obtained 11 the Olllce of
the T,_ror, 320 Eset Mlln
Stroot, Po1111roy, · Ohio

457111.
A certilltd cMck, pay.a.le
lo the Tr..ourer ol the
llllove board of eclucllion or
lol- .... ,_._bid ........ ·

Blda ere to bo
morkod on the
tho
ion: CAFETERIA MAHAGEIENT SERVICES.
ov •- wl ........ wn
No bid m-•
""""

...ted_.,.. •

BODY: '

-u•
tho

•-•--•
outed bf the blddor end
1urety oompany, In an
oiiiOUnt
to llvhJ'b:111
::.!ts.!!.wi:"!!k
Said board of oduoallon
rNIIVN tho tight to wllve
lnlorlllaiiU., to occ!apl or
reject •y; •nd .. or p1111a
Olllrf llld .. bldL
No bldl- be wwll ltlio.!Mitk&lt;raw-n

:'!\""

J~ F~.\=
(7)

(114)112.-o

19, 2e; (8) 2, 9, ...

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Announcements

8
3 Announcements
p,.. Single NoWa Lollar Por_, Ada. Writi To o.P. P.O.
Box 1M M11oliton, ONo 44MI,

4

Giveaway

Public Sale
· &amp; Aucllon

•

Ak:k Puraon Auction Company'lo

full Ume IUCilone.r, complet~
luct~
Hrlicl.
Ucitn...t

IIM,Ohlo A WHt
173-5785.

Vlrginlo, 304-

•
•

WMtemeyer't Aucllon Strvlce '

~Vol~tmr-,,-.-n.,..lor...:;.po..,rt.,---,.304-,.- Rio Grandt, Ohio 614·245-5152. •.

==..

115-3rr.l.

1 112

,

,.

v- Old Mole llollmU1o

~ Frilndly, Noldo Room

T

. IM-44i-eaao.

'

f ::.".:'..:t

(114) 112-1110 Collto; I ,.., Old. 114-2SS-MIII.
ISWk. old l"'ppita, Z ,.lo, 4
19, 2e; U. 4tc
-lo......... Reg. ............
120 Laurel II., Mlddflpott.
PUbliC Notice
(lltck trallar).

~ · Wanted to Buy

•

Complete H-old Or Es-o
t1tnl Any 1\'pt~ 01 Fumlturt,'
~lancu, AnUque'e,

Etc. Alto

Approi111 Avllloblol 114·245-:

'!52.
•
8ooko, louahl And Sold:·
Rottalouo, Hlotroiul, Novel;

Steven Stinson and
fllllily wish to thank
all thoaa wJ!o
•. raapondad 10 will
:Jha night,ot Slavan'a
accld.-tt: EMS
operator, EMS
~ aqtlad, EMS volunJews, State Hlghwey
Patro~ Sherlfl'1
,. Dept, Ln•FIIght
,Craw, nalghbcn, co•. Worklrl, churc:hla,
. . family. Slnca hll
ratum homa, Steven
flu racalvaclloldl of
· vlalta, Clll.-, canta
ltld glltl. We with lo
: lhlnk everyone tor .
llllhalr pray.. and

.

Ohio 4lle31 114-4•• •
'
~

{8)

aupport.

Slaven StlniOII
l Family

Conik:a: Thtophllue, lo• 731 ~

Oolllpollo,
7212

HAZEL E.

ADI

DAVIS

2

614-311-1075
Lioanood I Bonded in SL of Ohio

CUIIIChKk wlpropor ID eon-.ion

hand sech dey.

Stand by D.A.V. Chltptar 5
Not tNpoMiblllor Accldonta or t.o.t Property
Air Condillonad BillaTh1111ai lor Not Smoking
Call 111 to book your olio lor you or II you have itamo to
beconalgnedl
AUCTION FEVER - CATCH ITI

lima hal • lnlfill•d I follalna lilnce

you-cJIIcJ...,;

Mllllr __... oi •YOU
lirlnll
- - -fort
llliltseUllend
IMIIY ._.
You .... eo Much of
yourMII In warythlng
lhrouglt they--.
.
"God plobd - of Hia

HEMAKETHNO

-0.
Onpilhll dey
JOU·
11ft
We long ao much Ill heir·
your voioa •d -

II STAKE
My Fl.._'l
may.
twill end tum,
My hMII
throb and

Wa latow the Lonl Will
0111 on - h ol Ul

eche,
Bulin my ooull'm glad I

,..... .-.

m.,

.

aomedly to moat you

on that
llhora.

He meUth no millllko.

My . . . .heel ,._ may

8lldy miMed bf your

go •tray,

family.

m.,

fly hopse

,.,,

lade

lllleed,

For He doth know the

w.,.
Though

PUblic Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

PURCKASE QF ONE USED
IICHOOL IUS FOR MEIGS
LOCAL BOARD OF

night be dafk

endltMiyTiiat dey wil nevor
brallc,
I'U pin my r.llll, my Ill In

HimHe malrAith no Mil like.
Thera'• ao 111uch now I
cannot . .,'
My eyollghfo fir too
I

clln;

But come what m_,, I'H

limply !lUll '
And lolvio II all to Him.
For bf 111d br lie milt

18 wanted to Do
Will Bobyah In My Homo. Fonc.d In Plly A.1'81. Refertncn
Avolloblo. Rodney Ana. CaN
114-245-5887.
tor bad pot lent ill my
Tliaropoulic Foolor Cora Caro
homt, beet of ca... rNIOnlbil
CoonllnotDf. RHponolblo For ,.IM, 614-Mi-:1381.
Monogomont Of Tl'•"poulic
Footer Care Componont Of A Chtrokll
CIUiic,
IIAO,
Montol HoaNh Cantor. Job rtll~en11tl and commtrclel
Dutlto lnctuda Racrultlng window llntlng. Far edv1nc1
Thorapoulic Footor Paranto, ortcoo ·ond ojlpolntmant 304ProvkllnJI For Troinlng And On- 675-4252.
Going lru- SorvfcH, Nat·
working Whh Agonoloo Sorvlng
"AI·RIIk" Children In Gollll,
Jockoon. And Maljjo Countloo.
BechlkM''a ~r.. In Hum1n
Sorvlcoa Field And Prior Ex·
...,...,.. Prola&lt;racl. Hill Or Ful~

brotber, daughters Mary I
Sue and C8rol Ann,
Grandcblldren and
Great-gran&lt;li:hildren.
Alfl1:d Burl Windon.

In Memory

lito...,_"'"'"' •

dly will

break.
'
Through Ill
w.,,
though dark to me,
Ill moda · fiat one
mil tab.

tho

...t.ll. a..-.

8acly nllased by

Ellz • alii l Howle

AUtntlon: Personnel.
Trt B~nagar I Sono Produce,

Roodovllil. Form Hold workaro

nNdtd, mu•l bl al tent 11yra.
old, urioua lrequlrila only, 11...,
378~184 or opply In poraon It

tho form.
~

Annoul'lclments

NonCE:
David Sta'nlly II no
longaruaoc"-1 with
Lambert'• Sanitation.
Think You,
Rlchatd Lambert

72 Trucks tor Sale

T~••c-.r,

Ita' nut 10hoduled meeting
se provldo ~ bf lllw lor (1) uaed 71 pt111n1•
eohool ..,., 1001nln1 to

. ..FORSALE
1975 International,
Model
1800
•
'
l
Truck, 404 engine, 57,000 miles
wl.t h a 20 cu. ft: .Cobey ~rash
compactor. · · · ·

. •

........ oqulvlllenl .
Elllln• 1.0 .......
••

......

I twhlll~lo

cleo

Trenomle•lon--1 aplld

FUll c:.p.cllr-eO .......
IW II AjtprolllftMIIIIy

7fi»&gt;IIIIIel.

Light houlociNnlng In lha

Rut-

lln,l erwe. Cl..,. and hon..a
lldy, 114·11112-2135.

Ml•• Peuill'a Dtv C.111 Clnter.
Solo, aflordobll, chllctcora. M·F

a·un. · 5:30 p.m. Ago• 21'r-10.
Boto.a, olta&lt; ochool. Orof&gt;-lno
walcomo. 114-446-8224. Now tnlant Toddler Cora, IM-44W227.

· Dewayna Good
turned 3D on
Saturday, July 18.
I hope you have

many.mora.

Your Slat•,
Dlena

8
&amp; Jt&amp;tellon

PUBLIC .AUCTION
SATURDAt JULY 25, 1992-10:00 A.M.
Localld on State Ro..._ 243 appro"xlltlllely on1
mila - t of Buckeye Auto Parte or one mile Welt
of tha Law..nce County Vocation•! School
{Getawy~

llbuiiUd, ...... report ....
ool noo* Ia allld ~pant 11J

CHAlliS:

•

'AIIOI!I' ILUIIEASt 11ttort IOU!' o
- r.1
wltli _
... ,.....
_ _lovo
, ""' .,
"

3.000 lbs.
~v~is~e~.;m~ot~oir5~~ba~tt~eiry~§~:~?.electric
assorted weld·
hyd.
0' metal lathe

I

Atlfllllt11, 1812, end lllhll
time opened by the
Treaaurer of 11ld Boord,

1 - lnt•nellontl 1100

C.rflg laW• Chain-All Day SaiH'IHty of Shade)
DIRECTIONS: From Glllipolia take 35W to
C.ntervHia (epproa:lmately 17 milea) to County
Rolld 17, tum right, then another •h•rp right to
Plla Road, go 1.6 mllellollowlng euctlon aigna.
From Jeckaon take 35E to Centerville, turn right
onto Plaa Rolld and follow auction algn1.
OWnara are Kenneth and Dorothy Howe

i

Due to the daalh of my huabend, the lollowlng

olecltM?etlco••tollowe:

SATURQAY, JULY 25, 1992, 10 A.M.

i' a·

will buold: .

ipeolllciMone olllllid 11oM!

1131 PW ROAD, VINTON, OH. 45686
(OlD ClARI &amp;EVANS ROADI

THIS IS ONLY A PARTIAL usnNGI
TOOLS: Hydraulic floor jack,
jigsaw, drill press,

Tlmo Poaltlon Dopaftdfltt Upon

EDUCAliON
Belled propoaal1 wiU be
received by tho Bo•d of
Edua•llon of ths Mtlga
Loc•l School Diolrlot, of
P-y, Ohio, II the
rr..u...·, olllco until
12:00 noon on

·Lana u that
you?
Happy 36th

The Naodo Of Ouallllid a,.,
ltlicanta. Schedute F"•lzllll Aft
lgonc:y Policy. Sllluy c....
mensurate With El~.,ae. F jj);j;;;;:=
Bond Rnume To: ACCESS, P.O. I
Box 110, Golllpoflo, Ohio 45e31

will lift.

And

PUBLIC AUCTION

Rat,.ln
NowlliSoutlioollom
8ulinas1 Cotllgo, Soring Vollay
Plou. Call TodAy, 114-448-431711
Ragllta&lt;atlon tiiCHl5-1iM8.

w.,

latow

Huv111ly

In Memory of R. GARY HOLTER
on his
.blrthckly,
1992.
·'
•

FOR INFORMATION, CALL:
L.ESUE A. LEMLEY, AUCTIONEER

1·11·1~1
7-18-18111
We c.-.y on with Nle,
mDM,Iod by..,,.._

luletlll'l tru11 my Lord

-::Ai;:-1Y;;:a:::,d;-:So~lto:7.M:::ult::-.::lo~Po-,.ld.,ln,...:
Advonco. lloodllno: 1:00pm lht
day before the ad 11 to n.in, :
Sundoy adhlon- 1:00pm Friday,•
Monday adltlon 10:00o.m.
Solurdoy.
•

lor II leal thlrtr ~~~:•
=:::·,~~~
1118r the IIChecluleil
nt - . 304-IIIS-1104.
Educ1tlon, llolga Local Umolorncelptolbl&amp;
Sohool Dlatrlct, 320 EMt
M11ge locllllci!trd
llalft SIIMI, P. 0. Box 272,
ol E• M1n
Pomoror, Ohio 41711.
J.,.. r:ry, T , _ 6 Pulltlio!!L 4Molo, 1 .. 112
lhigl Loolll.....

\

The family ol Ode
tBaiver wllh to extend
to ell tho..
1howed aympe·
thy end 1uppon
lng aur recent tl1111 of
loaa. Speclel thank•
to the phyelclan• 1nd
nurelng 111ft ol HMC,
Waugh • Halley • Wood
Funeral Home, Rev.
Relph Workmen end
the many people who
extended their aympolhy during our time
ofaorrow.
The Chlldrllt end
Fomllle• of
Ode Beaver

In Memoj.y of

CONTAC'r. .Harold George
c/o HoiZII Medical Center
,• '

John Deere 950 tractor (360 hrs.), BN Ford tractor,
Farmall Cub iractor wlplow, cuttivatore and sickle bar,
t 2' turning plow, drag diac, 5' King Kutter rotary
mower, JD 2 row corn planter, 3 pt. one row
cuklvllore, 8' cullpacker, eplke tooth harrow, round
ball mover, utility !railer, 3 pt carryall, boom pole,
Ford 2-way dirt ecoop, T buah hog blade, potalo
plow, 3 pt tub lartlliztr epr11der, 1978 Dodge pickup
ttuCk (37,000 rriiea), JD lily conveyor on wheell,
amaH 1n11nura f1Preader,' Stlhl chain aaw, small anvil,
grain lllder, Sunbeam clipper~, apple butter kettle
wt..lr, John1on boat motor, melel gate, ofd harness,
.wooden ba"'l, whallt cradle~ RR jack one large lot of
1maH band tool&amp; and mlectllaneoua ~ams.
, Lunch Avelllble

1otr1. Carl Hlllon, Owner

Lee Johnson
AUcnoNEER
OhiO

GUNS: Crossman 22
rille, 30·40 Craig r~le w~h
Asrny action, L. man All American rifle and pistol
reloader w~h assortment ol dies, and Daisy BB gun.
HOUSEHOLD: Dishes, Vision Ware, pols and pans.
kkchen utensils, glassware, Tappan microwave,
home or workshop technical books. Kenmore sewing
machine, Fisher lurntable and cassette player. VCR.
Coll'fl&amp;Ct disk player and video, electric roaster.
linens, some furniture. electric organ. electric heater
and fans. electric e.toveJop, slide and movie projec·
toll, CB and AMIFM radios. sheet music and
luggage.
ANTIQUES: Spol light, cast iron bath tub with feet,
1/3 hp t 2 VOC elactric motor, t gal. milk pasleurizer, ·
cuckOQ clocks, Seth Thomas 8-day clock, oak washstand, llal'l1) collection.
CARS &amp; PARTS: '77 Cadillac Eldorado, '69 Buick
GS 2/4 spd. transmission (25,000 actual miles),
Culbalde ven for perts, 318 Dodge engine, 4 cyl. .
Rabb~ engine, 455 Okls engine, assortment of '40·
60'a car pill• including stem wound dash clocks.
Gravely tractor w~h mower lor parts, Troybi~ rototiller .
lor parts, John Deere riding mower for parts, lawn
moW.r parts, %ton front axle, 6,500 wan generator
wf10 HP molar, Snapper 8 hp mower wlextra new
engine.
IISC.: Garden sprayer. lrailer holding tank. 20 lbs.
propene tanka, 5 speed bicycle. 21 wheel utility trail11'1, HVeral tool boxas, charcoal grill, applianc• dolly,
air hosea, W~&amp;deater. 5 to 6 rolls tarpaper aiding, ,
Lennox Heat Pump, lawn spreader. Sears 5 hp
ahreddtrlbagger. steel table, Coleman gas healer,
Coleman propane camp stove, hydraulic ...ptl~~k
paint guna, extension cords, wheelt!arrow.
ne~ electric typewriter, liahlng equipment, t cut iron
bathlub, many more kema too numeroua to lial.
Auctlonalr: Flnll "Ike" lsaec:
Llcenlldltlld Bondld 13721
Av•llloble for Hou•hokl. Farm, Eatate end
·
Chlrlty Auctlon1,
. Tellphona:
(814) 311 1370, 318 1110, Hl-81&amp;1, 241 5131
Not RaaJ19nalbla for Accldenta or Loot hriie.
RehahiNtlll end Food will ba Avalllbl&amp;
Thla will ba II) 111 cllr H1a. Bring your llwft
,chlln, Ill In tha ehade,lnd •JoY tlte -.t1D11.

�JuiJ 18, 1

;~~~~~~TIFm=•~S~e~nt~lne~l~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~wv~;;;;;~;;;;:;s;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;July 18; 1812
31 Hom11 for Sale

~tod

On eomor

(GC

..,

Ch.hlre. PrM:ad 130,000. M••

~~ ••Coli '*317-0244'

.

Split " ... ...,.,., 3 mlloo ..,.
Bond Hill Ad, 3 bod,_, a 112

~=~"': ~':~.:::

:.r
290a.

lind, ~.e=.tr:9::

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale ·

·MX70 I XC concf, 3 btclroon')l on

private ac:N, tn~I~_.,~,U•nce•,
lots of ntrii,Z
Grav•,

J14,500. 304:671

3.
tt71
121116, 2 beef.
rooma, lair cDnd, $3.100. 304-

p..,._

..
.,'

112-3105.
:
l tlll, Zbdrin., furnl-, dllf&gt;.
wuMr uncJtr~nntd, '""- on
..ntoc~ loi,
614-ttz-5800.
.t f84 NllhUI mobilt honw Mx7D

118$ Wlndoor Mobile Homo,

: 1: '1

.. ) . ~
c

.

.J

Mx75 Cornptocoty Fumllhod,
Ub Now, WM~ 40Ft. P111o.
l.acatlld: Johntons
Mob&amp;tl
Homo Pari&lt;. 304-'113-&lt;1351 . .
liSe 14152 For- Pork mobile
home, ~2 porc~n end undorDinnlng. 11500, OBD. ~tlill In

-oy. Mike DNI-, Atbony.

, _ 1 t 2.
.
IW Mx52 ForM Pork mobile
homo, 2 pore~•• end undoroln·

1
. ·-112.

nlng, Sll500 080. ~tod In
Poriioroy. Mike 01111-. Albony.

I·~

~I

~

EVEJY FRIDAY 7:00P.M.
M"•-s
HOUSE
Vlollm AUI'ni\N
\.I IV
202 N•.2ND, MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Our regular. friday night auctions will .
. resume Friday, July 24.
Antiques, Furniture II Misc. ·
Consignments taken Noon-5:00P.M.
Thursdays II Fridays
Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden

614-742·2048

44

Lila

3134.

bot~

ond haD, 3044'11- IICwily

Plo-•k 14xl0, 2 bod·
""'"''
lrootod304-llll-2111.
fronl
.,...h, 12120
holt pump,

1117

' 110 RHrm~n, 3 Mdrooms, 2
lui blithe, 1111 coVO&lt;od troolod
l"""h· 304.e75-1127.
..40 troller=
/ rongo, 30,000
ITU, ACt :
fDr rt.,... e~mper,

-

moo

worlnatplumblng,

0110, IM.QI.1227.

...... Roctolmod

Mobile

Han.o, .

Down Poymont Various
- · 0ro11 loloCtlon, FrM Sol·
!If&gt;, I DofiYory, Ftnonclng ·"'•I~
..,... t.eM-m-1220. ·

Will - • tNI mobile homl,
MillO, very nicety fumlohad, fn.
&lt;IUdlng woollortdryor, TV,

stereo.

wlchaln

wood dlnlng t1ble
&amp; ~utch .Homootud

Rutty
,,.,..,.
«

~-11U540

~. no

112-22111.

polo, 114,

~2~h~d;;row;m;&amp;optat,:"i$ii350io..iiimon;;,jth\;oiiifl
utlfHioo

2722.
'Nice 2br Troller, Out st.Rt. 211, I

pold,· no HUD, 304-6'11-

2 Roomo &amp; 8oth, Downttol,.,
Ctun,
No
Poco, Oullt,

MIIM, Dopoofl I Aofwonct Ro- Rtflronco And Dopool1 RoquiNd. 11H51.e2!11.
qulr0d.l14-44f.1511.
44

Apartment
tor Rent

=

2 IR ap~rt.IMil• In Mid#
ONly romodolod, .... irut
no polo, 1220 ,., month,
lfot&gt;oOit roqullod, 514-HM311
doyo

I

8

BEAUTFUL APARTMENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 131 Jockton Plkl
from $1t21mo. Wolk tr&gt; ohotl I
movloo. C.lll14 ue 2511. EOH.

Saturday, July 25, 1992

10:00 a.m.
LOCATED AT RODNEY, OHIO, 1.6 MILES OFF 588
ON CORA MILL ROAD. WATCH FOR SIGNS.
MRS. liT.::HEll HAS SOLD HER FARM
AND WILL BE SELUNG THE FOLLOWING:
HOUSEHOLD &amp; ANTIQUES: Oak flaiWall cabinet. laney oak
drasser, KroNer sofa. 2 swivel rockers. rocker. 2 n~ occasional chair$, coffee table and end tables. 3 plank bottom
chairs, 5 pc. dinellll se~ 3 bar slools, walnut 6 drawer onl
Clark spool cabinet, oak Singer sewing machine, ·Bemco
queen size bed,likll new large 28 cu. h. Amana chest lreezer,
older Kelvinafllr relrigerafllr, Maytag washer &amp; dryer, kitchen
appliances, green and while siDneware pileher with cows, 6
minlallKe hen on nests, hen on nest. s1one jug. washboards,
magazines, old horse clock. rodio. quilts. comfons, be&lt;lspreads,linens, books. 3 sets Encyclopedias. 2 McGufly 51h
readers,luggage, fishing supplies, 3 new lite jackets, portable
Reedy heatar 50,000 BTU still in box, iV antennas, old pop
cases and bottles, 22 J.C. Higgins rifle, H&amp; Rshotgun as is
antique rifle, pump BB gun.
.
'
TOOLS &amp; MISCELLANEOUS : Buckel, hand lools, fool
boxes, sander,drills, vise, saws, oxy·acel.lorch hoses, Black
Smith forge, hydraulic jacks, lard press, air compressor,
Home~te E.L 14 chain saw, Homelile XLI2 chain saw, t t/2
HP, rcuter. sprayer, draw knite , chains, shovels, lawn roller,
lots of cement blocks. fuel tanks, roll offence, 2 roUs olpicket
fencing , grinder on stand. lawn mower cart. wheel barrow,
Home~te gas weeder, hedge trimmer. 6 loads ol firewood,
lumber.

- h II. Mlddlopotl, OH. 2 BR
fuml- apo~mont. UtltHIII
pold. Dopool1 • roforonco. :104-

112..:1568.

Contonory Arlo: c- 2br
Stove, Rofrlaorl1"!1 Wotor, Fur·
nlohad. f244illo. NO Pill. 114441-8031.

CINn 2 bedtoom ept, 1lr conct,
,.,.,..,.. I dlpoolt, no polo,
304.e7Utl2.

been worl&lt;ing overtime for
wetlka. One night he arrived. home
after midnight and I informed him that
he had to alphabetize, which meant
wife comes BEFORE WORK,
had

8

Public Sale

ISAAC'S AUOION HOUSE

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1992
AT 10:00 A.M.

Plus the fteiTII left over from our Salurday, July 181h
sale. App. 22 ft. Walls Fargo tandem axle trailer (with
a raaeiVe bid).

wood phone stand, chair bed, glaaaware, rock· ·
ar chairs, Singer sawing machine desk, wringer ·
washing machine with 2 tubs, school desk, haW .
mattress plus much, much more.
·

Real Estate General

.
Salol
1H2 M' Wide $10,185. Fr11
filollvory, Sol l Llvot. 3CI4-1S7-

-

3181.

Rainbow Homn
1-64, Elh

oatol

39

tt92 14x72 Thr• B.droom•
$1,YO Over lnvolco Pluo lox
And ntfo. 304-1S7-3689.
r-1
A1lnbow Hom•

l.e4bh31
Teay•,WV
"S lal"
14170 July t~uty 211~. FrH
Wnhor. Dryer, Froo VInyl Ski~·
lnG. Rnanclng Avlftoblo, 304-

ln-3&amp;11.

RalnbowI-414Exh39
TNyo,WV.
Tho Dutch HouH II Horol
Rolfdontlot Roof Phch. 211 Ex·
1 - Well. A·30 Roof lnoul•

'

-·
.,

Slondotd Foolurool 304-1S7-

FARII
J.D.
3t7 garden and lawn mower.48' deck, Power King t8 HP
lraCIOI' wnh IUm plow&amp; and cultivators, Gravely with cycle bar.
Ford 6 h. mowing machine, 41t King cutter bush hog disk set
of 14' I!Jm plows. N scraper blade. 2 boom pole;, ...;am
separator, harrow. homemade tandem trailer.

'
I
)

34

BRING A LAWN CHAIR &amp; SPEND THE DAY!

AUC110N CONDVcriD Br

liCK PEARSON AUCTION CO.

8

I

-rl:.....:;l~l~

$150:
Sw-.
looro Lawn Oordon Troctor,

I

114·W ·9'435,114-388-1M196.

Real Estate General

As a financial analyst my husband

9!.

after midnight and I Informed him that

t-..r-;.;;.9 ~~:...;...::..TI~.hewilehadcomes----··
to alphabetize, which meant
.....

1 1
1
L-~-L~---L-~~

r-1--:-B-R-:-A-V_E_l---,1

,the chu~kl_e quoted
by foll•ng
the moSStng words
you de~elop from step No. 3 below.

AIIENT10N HOllE BUYERS

Apartment
tor Rent

53

Antiques

•

Merchandise

TE RMS:C.h orchec:tl; wilh LO.
Nol Rleponlllillof' ICddlnts or 10M tf prapttty
l leeftMcl and 8oftcled kl. 01'110, Klnlueky, I Welt v•glnll tee

45

41 Houses tor Rent
2 Br. Homt, Garage, Llrgt Lol,
$350 /Mo. 2181 Enttm /Gipt.
Evenings: 814~41-tnS, Or 814•

111·4340.
- ----~-

Furnished
Rooms

nn1.-

OFFICE 912·2886

EASY TO AFFOADI - 'Remodolad 2-3 bed·
room homo located one mile from town Ia
Nldy lo move Into. New lu,_, now roof,
new carpel and much IliON. Llrge ftat lot City
IICI!oolo. Price ..Wcad tO sae,ooo. rro ...y to
offordt
121&amp;

VERY

Perflct ..aing lo enjoy
coniiiNCiad
log home. Largo front pon:h
onjoy ,coof
aummor b,..zoa; attractive woqdbumer and
hearth 1o wann your IOUI on lhoM oold wint.r
ni9"t1. Apptu 2,300 aq. ft. ol comlor1able
Nmg opaco including 3 bedroom• (room lor
4th), vary attractiv. countty kilchln,living room
.with pine ceiling, nev.ly finiohed family room
and 2!4 batho. Laogo 2 car garage wilh
overhead otorago. Approx. 5 years olq,

-

3 Room HoUH For Rtnl, C1U

.,..-....,..-lnan__,.o-.Eflllln

5151,MnonWV.

--.. .

lotll ,..... ,.~ thrH _ _ .. Foyor Will open
,__ ...... room w~~~-.ma fi'IPIICI ,
II ~--,;,;;;;:'gourmet-. tantr room lnd
open ftNI*O. _,..,. w11 114
you orjoy kMir _.... Four - o d - . . ..

p.m., '""773-

-room-on

46 Space lor Rent
C:O..~

4 Room Duplex With 1 Car

P11lo 6 Y1rd, AI: 503
Ore..
Avt~ .
ClllllpoUt.
$350/Mo. Llwn Malnltnanet In·
dud.d For lnta S.nd N•m•, Ad·

new m~~nt.

l,fbl; &amp;al; home IWIWIII, 1235;
..,~·2117
f'I)R RENT: 0000 I.DCATIOH,

flotlfl or Office 8PK1 AvaUoblo.
lallyoHI Mol. &amp;M44e 4222.

AfoiD
THOUGHT
rr ~~=.:
FOR SALE,
but now
'lj

WANT A BEAUTY OF A HOME WITHOUT
A BEAUTY OF A PRICE?- Then lhit 1988
Fainnont Townhoutt (14x70) ia for you. largo
living room , dining
With built-in bulle~
laogo maator bed100m with built-in dollk ond
drelltr, 2nd bedroom, largo bath with gordon
I!Jb. EncioMd laundry area with new Whi~pool
washer and dryer. Outdoor arta offers nice
dock. concrele block sidewalks and storage
building. Locatad on a rontAKI lot or me to your
own lot Prica reduoed 1o $15,00011
HIO

*""'

QUIET COUNTRY UVING
Move into fle country and enjoy tljia bolautiful
little .HI up. A largo 2
lot witll plenty of
good nat ground for animals, 3 bedroom
remodoled homa, Iorge building with 3 high
ovemoad doors, plut tractor and implomonta.
Alllor only $50,000.
.1201.

ac"

for Rent

,.,. .

2 bedroom tralltr, nNr Akzo

Plent, ctntral air, priY1t1, no
=~·
15·1221 oftor 5:00

-

Wcrowtve,

Dlohwllhar,

81erto, W11her

DIY•, Control Air, On K~nor oil

_,,

111.211 · -· Dopoolt. 114·

" "~12orl'll-3100.
' - mobile ....
'f••

,..,., Ddtltd 12xl0 MoWle Home.
ftlvor f'foniJifll With Nloo YIIW.
2 ••rooms1• N;, Hit. Gee,

-"'P.· Klo11111, Af&gt;o
....... FumliMd. Polio. lxtl
Clllfo

llorogo ·euffdfno. Nice, Oulot
HtMghborttood. P1,. ''"' Ia«

Lt,.,..,..

-.w. Kygor
........ WHI!In 2 Mlfiro. UtHIIIM
Hollnofudod. No Poco. l22f Ptr
-11. D1po1ff Con II On ParUti
Col 114..-ICI1Hf*o).

Pty-. ,_

.,. _ ,., -=

POMEROY - Do Y"!' nHd I LARGE home, or Mcould bo
4 apar1rnenla. ThllltouM hu t 5 roorno, largo hllwoyo,
oncloold front porch, one car QII'OQI. 4 batho, and 4
kill:hlrto. Hal a - r ~-- and ooof. Wu .-ntly
rodocoNIId. Poulbitfly of torr1t 0 - financing.
REDUCED $41,000
·
.. DDLEPOAT - PlltMr Shot - Awol t8Un c... of 2
otory home with 2 bedroOm•. Hat I NG ru.-. buoment, and front and rear porchM. ·
S17,100
CROW'I IUIDIVIIIOH - Five Polnla '" ·A nice ..,.
..,,. lot with -rand lltctric avllilabll. Agtut building .
till. CloiiiO town.
15,000
THIS II AGREAT OPPOATUNITY for any..,. -ling a
bullne• In Mil hopolt, buy liquor llclnll D-e for
Sllllbury TUMtllhip;OM ollha batt llclnlllo UMt • plua
you gtl ftxiUNI. Can twnl building.
...000

DOniE TURNEI!.!'rolla!;..:.:.: .: ...................-.te2·&amp;e92
BRENDA JEFFEtr.~.......... I..............................-.M2o305e
DARUNE8TEWART....................................,......M2-AI5
BANDVBUTotiER.. ... - ............................:.........912-537)
SHERVLWAL~!!!a_Chellltlre....................- .....317-11421
JERRY BPRA~ .,.........- .................(304) 882-341111

1117,., llootlnfo. Col .J -

•

DON'T BE U.TEII - Cal now for an· appoint·
mont on thil very a~ 2 olory colonial in
pring Vahv. Pllfect family home in a gtut
nolghborhood TNt homa boutl 4 bodtoomo,
2112 bolfla, large family room, living room, din·
ing room, eat-in I I i - with iV """" oil d ll
Plinty of IIOIIIQI. Pallo and dock in blcl&lt; tor
outdoor fun . Prlcodflllll at $87,500.
1213

TENANTS • STOP CLIIIB..G ntE WALUII
Settle Into IIIIa homey 2 bediOOm with nlct
4.38 acN lrH llhlldod lot Two car IIOI*QI and
extra building for ahop or offi.,., Your
atl8mativilo Nnt lor juot $34,500.
1503
ATTENTION EXECIJTIVESII - Ev.rything you
need and .,.. eOrnl will "" lound heralll
Approx. 2,738 oq. ft, of living 11M. Formal living
room ond dining ~ •.family room, 2 kitchana,
4 bedruoms, 3 ~otho lnd don or ollica.
Profeationdy landlelptd large Ia~ in11round
pool and 3 car gnge. Call for addilonal infor·
mation and your privato viewing.
1614

DON"T SmLE FOR A HOUSE JUST TO
UVE IN ... From the moment you otop inlo lhe
largo !eyer you can '!HI" your family iving in
thia clulie. Fonnal livini! room, dining room,
.,MY kilchon, very llvoble family room, 3 nice
bedtoomt plua 2 lui bolfla. Slo~~~ge gejore In e
largo lltic, 1 car gnge, lui buernent. If flll'o
not enough, in lown ...,......,..,
HOe

TAEAIURE - 5urprlll9y lOw pofca

lui homa for the first time.
loadad
'ljitlt Ia!* ol cham ollering 3 blii"oom, 2 bdit,
living room, dining room, IMily room and t.Jgt
' kllchan .....llololdng • largo pond. Allhillii!J·
alld on 3 (mil) blaulful waadod ICNI. Call
earo1yn for your lhowlng today. sn.ooo. ,..

· -· 2 cor gonrgo. til noor llllndry.
1713. 110 GfWIDE HOllE OR IIVEITM£Nl - 3
211ory. 1:1 Dllhl. portllf biHmlnt. &lt;1Y
Wiler one!-. Olio loi.IS~170'.

NO IIAYBE'I - NOT EVEN PROBABLY Undoublldfv the IIIII Cotlttry 'rlew llltllnd.
PERIOD! EVillY ;ilme you drtv. tltla lllrelch o1
I!I4ICI. you mal\'elttt how belllllflll and wo1 klopt
the .,.. it. Imagine UMting nearly 7 ..,~.,
perdlfd on a knol~ CMIIooldng llellob EvFann at Rio Orondo•.Whaot a ploatuN Mwould
boo lo ...U up eiCh morning.
wa~
the""'- and catt1o graa. E'*'r an~
ing ..nNI ...ry ellllling. Oldor 2 bedroom
homo and pond induclad. Fancad. Call 0.....
for mort infoi!TIItfon.
1201.
HERE'S A DEAUII
Buy boltoN July 14, and ....,. will poy $1 000
toward• your financing pofnta. Thlo very n;;,. 3
bedroom home I'Nfly neoc1t no inoontlvea 1o
HI, bul the O-N want It SOLOI Localld In
Pleaoant Vday Ellatet, thlt homa hu a now
1001, new fu"**cenbal air, new aiding and 11
nev.ly redocoraltd. OiMt buy at $58,900111

1110. EXCELLENT
fiiYUTIEHT:

1114. LARGE C-RCII\t. BUILDING on Stile
2. 2 - · 11'1· on 1111 noor. P - 3 , _
111*-- - - l n b l l l l ..

lfll -

E'*"'

IDEAL BUILDING . LO.T I NEAR .110
GRANDE - LMalad approx. 1 mill IOUtll on
Rt. 325. W. hava -~~~ very nloe bulclina loll
llil avtlablo. Each hu 5 tiCrtl, ttveral .,.
~ing aaah other (lor a lalvfr PIRlll).
County
available. Priced $8,000 t1 .
St2,1100.
1207

·-r

WE NEED NEW LISTINGS!H
REAt FS WE 1l'l:
446Z644

:

C~lno

lablo I
Larklno

mi.
•WV,

LAtCEvEw LOTS: Choice

loti

· C0UNTAV AT ITS BEST - 73 .serer nV1 o1
-luf -.g fond , alia..- - 4 8R ....... 1 ~
. . -. lll·ln lolrt.I,LR, OR. FR. tun basement. now
fumoco, AIC, a~m . !lldlng. Also large 87:1' 1
55' 1M111 bam lnd 2 car gaiago. Take a loal&lt; today.

wl1h

117&amp;.

.-,

SWAIN

Now.

- - 1 ..114-446-3tlt.
TtUndlo Lohopo bod w/3 b•ih•ln.

d"'-··
1210.
, VI'AA f'UFIHtTURE
114-441-3111

-.z-own

Mtlw And 0tyor $11.11 WMk,
-

lad Cot If II, $1.21

-L
· 4!l'oftnlt
Chill l'ltak,
P .12
·$1.24
IGIIMIIChaf!,_.WIIIL .

= =
..,._
AND

CAAIIY
•
..... ...~"" At PH.
1141, Ill ....,.k ......

~\7'".70PW::::
4
tA.II. To If'.•.
On8uilder. LOCATIO: 4
In C.ntenory, 114 IIIIo On Lin-Ofi~TOn~Mt.

bllhl. ronc11 opol, 11C. ,.,,

oulbultclngo, gonion
lloml .

A·E·D·U·C·E·Dtt LOVELY

blthl, fuel oU Mal, AC, IIIIII!Qie&lt;l
eorport, lui-mont. c:fly ldloots on 1 •~ Mn.. CIJ1

carptf,

ror-.$501.

1752. REDUCED 110,000. GOOD LOCATION Very rioo 3 BA, 2 bllhl, madullr (VkG!o) ... ~ fllvO

111-12-rM.. $35.000.

LR. OR, _ . , . ""'"'· oxcoptlonaltf fllvO
tamtly roam. enctoud palla a11 t8'136' •.--~~
pool. - · fumiCO, AIC, Ill .. DNI, ~ . r11'4J1
(dbf. oven), llrop- oncf · 2 car ontiCNrM.- - - -·

POSSIBLE OWNEfl FIIWICII~ On flit one acN lilt
landiCIPod for mobile homo or bulldilg. Located on
Mar-* Rd. In Litatt. Alldng $3,500.
.

21 '1 70'

"FIIfENOI..." OOUBLEW1DE RANCH wllh 3 BRa
2 bat ~. I.Aofll, OR, klchon w.to or, mngo, OW,
room, ettc. HP, CIA, tlreplac e, vinyl sldlng, ctty
ld'tooll on .1 acrt m4.
t7ll. 10·12 ACRES 11/l BEAUTIFUL ROLUNQ
LAND c.n be purch•Mtd •s follaws : 1. 2 acrea
wooded; 2. 3 acres (t ac. wooded 11nd 2 acrea
cloarod}; 3. S lcrM cleBtod ard 4. Total
01

'"utY

2-3 BR.

quilt

1711. KYGER CREEK NfiA • 3 l&gt;ldroaml. 2

11lellile dilh &amp; appllencaa negotiable. Thlt It 1 lovely
home YOU REALLY MUST SEEI CALL FOR OETAILSI.

hunting cabro on

AUCTtDN &amp; RIRNITURE. 112
Diva 81., Oolllpollo.
Uood
fulnhllft, - · · Wlllorn 1

-

.

N TOWN. Largo
ljltl.; 2 . .. bodnn.
two opartmenta. Tlil

F«ful portkllllro &lt;II tolnlpi&lt;l.

Racllne - YellowbNIIh
NE'IVER HOMEI 211ory hMie With ~ bedroorna,
booths, full bonrnon~ 2&amp;40 oq. fl olliv!nv apace, drywall,
carpal, Pennapayno windowa. 2 heat pump1, comont
liivawly and pallo, 30MO QINQI with 3 baye. Play 11111,

NEW USTINQ - lltarron Hoaow Rd. -

~

Carolyn Waach441·1007 ·
.
Sonny Games ..; 448-2707 ·'" •

APARTMENT BLOQ.

nwptt, cXlgu aad tnd twOUI'IIII treM ~-~
.,.,-. AIIO 1010 ol trorlfnll an .... .

I

DAVID WISEMAN, BROKER • 446·9555

...h 3 1WO -

dintne, fftmlly room (flriiP'ace). uiiiKy rm., LA,

-nod In ~ack pon:fl, 2 c. fllltlll an 4 ICI. M/1.
MUST SEE.

apoci..,.llr vtow. You Wll Wllrl """' lhan one. Ook.

•

'·

Good--

t?a. UHfGUIE IIH.EVEL Will 3 BRa, 3 bllfw. b1tc1&lt;
ond alum. IIGinD. tdtcllon (cherry cablnota) with

aptl., ptuo 1 con11111 with
~1110- ... ~- Ro®Cidprlce.

1104-17..31131.

Loretta McDade.;. 448-n29 ·
a. J. Hairston448.42at0
..

showrv.

homo .. lomly
2 billie.
Mig,
2 wb 4hPfiOI,
nn., bul-lnlnilkldlon

. 1712

OWN YOUR 0~ BUSINESS
and lat
inoorne tram Nritll hllp wiWI payment•.
Conctelt block bliklng wit! driv•tloru lor car·
ry-out incbi1V .. IQUipmlnt and lnvenlory.
Rantal lnoome !tom ~ on property.
Call IarmoN dotllta.
H13

·~· Col tor a

tm. PRICE IS RIGHT on tlola 3 BR. 1 bal~ randt
LR, OR, lll·ln ldlchon , 2 outbklgs .. now root .

ut •no,ooo. ~~or. ._ s,ooo oq. n. "' 1v1n11 IIIII largo rn. ............ Thlo wei conllniCtld

YOU'VE~

4_2 Mobile Homes

2"

kl1chen and IMng room. located In qul• l
neUibcrhood. Close to clly pool and converient to

-

-r

mz. -

I;M-307-G5M.

· 114.. 41-3107.

HOlE

SPAC£ THAN YOU CAN BELEVE t&gt;ecm&gt;m homo haal .. baiiOI!IIRI wl~ family
room, bodu.. ulllll bath upotalrs; 3 bodnooma, bath,

tlf&amp;. This~

CABIN I RfVEA BOTTOM
...motdoa Olio RMir. $37,000. 3 bodom. rand!, lui
ciVfdocfb-. 11/2b111B,1Miffllng. Clly.

Nk:t 3br, 2 Story Homt With Full
a..emtnl, Chr..hlrt Villagt,
$325 !Mo. Rtlmnce, Deposit.

City , _ ., Po~ly Furnished,

·

AfO GRANDE.I14 Ul 31117.

17U.

drnt , Phone Number To: P.O.
Box 181, Choo~lrt, OH 4!5620.

2br All Ellc:trlc, 1 Milo From 141
~bomnd R•d. Gallipolis

cb1g · LR oncf both. born -lit. tool - -. 10 ... m/1. Maltly · -·

11111 _
..........-CIItlg.~- " " ' Fnl flllndly.
Al1odlod 2 . . gonrgo. Two llolt pu""" will
-.po. 5.441 IC. mol. I you 1111 lrldllldllllf.!OW
,..... con bl on h ~·· Ouillll41 tluylrl-.,.

Mobile Homo Park, At

~ · · u.-r

1714. IECLIJDBI COnAGE FOR TWO • 2
bodroomo, fllvl LR, ,.. bllh. oot-tn klellln. 2
porchol, now nopllrl hawo I&gt;Mn modo to mll&lt;o thllo
com!- homO. 120,000.
1771 VINTON CO. FARM: Locllld an SA 160.
Rett0... 3 bedrm., bfk* hDml w-tJMimtnl. Alto •
11711 Ac::odomr hOml ,_ 2 bodrml.. 1111 ..

au.:;;aiiOF YOUR OWN Will
home
IMng
......... ~far
AI tumltiii'O lnd
ocMJmonl ""*-. lflo 2 bl&lt;tm. Fllrmorl homo
Wlglrdlloll.l&gt; and....-.3 oc. rM.

PORTLAND - Barrine- RldQI Rolli - Hero's a nice 3
bedroom home with 2 lui balhs with whirlpool tub in ono
of them. Hat beautiful oak cabinlll in kitchen and a large
Hving room. Home hat frN gea and is lilting

1 building 281124 with propooty.

•

-..t
-... L...., ,... tO r-111.
pq ..,_

614-446-6614 Evanlngs.
Oar~gt,

POIHT8 OF PEAFECllON IRllllll

81 ; ' 'I nMNft8 wllh cooking.
Aloo trollot - · All hook-upo.

Cltl ••• 2:00

1211

IIDDLEPORT- Coli StrMI- Avery wall kept t Y. olory
homo wifl vinyl lidng. 2 bedrooms, FA NG lumaca, fuH ·
$21,1100
· baoornant wifl shower, ond 2 full baths.

To~.

a11ff, 2 Cit gorogl. pUI I 2 bodroom hoom. l jOUti&lt;O
SECLUSION - heN I Ill Modo• price.

ROomo far
or month.
~~--Galli&amp; HoteL

Real Estate General

CHESTER- Ook Hll Aoood - Spacious living in a baou~­
lul counlry setting. A2 otory homo wifl 4 bedrooms, 1!4
balhl, family room. vinylliding. small bam. full base·
mant, pond, FREJ; GAS on approx. B2 acn&gt;s.
S80,1100

1787. PAillE OEVELDPMENT LAND: land lays
..... Older 2 ""'~ bri:ll homo wlh 4 and
bUiklngo. Home In neod ol -~- 121a&lt;. rM Oft S R

IUS. 1 ROOM VINYL SillED HOllE, lot alzo
6f!X111 .... gorogo tSX24. Coul:l bl good - - fl"'llllfr. 514,000.

Mtt. cowaor1 RANCH - 24 ..,... ,., -

cPntriC1. 114·1117-30.W.

Rentals

H08. REAOY FOR OCCUPANCY • NATlONAI.
REGISTER: Vlc1ortan, oxceleri condllon. Down by
tte Olio River II gallpotls, 011. Vory olegarf lunHlfo
century homo. 4 boG'TII.. 3 balhs. ll&gt;rary, ...,.. IIIII ~~~ biHmlnt. 5 lnptoces, gos llolt wlh
central ofr, · RomantiC gazebo, potloo,
belulluly tonci!Giped. AI kMngty mU!talnod.
Poterdal bed and breakfasl or remain resld&amp;rtlal.

1765. FlO GRANO£ - Home to prtco&lt;llor saki. 3 .. l&gt;llh. hos hosl. carport. AWOl· 31• ol
an "'"· BoiiUIIIUII!MIInd llflOI to bulcla now-·
LOCIIod an SR 35. $30,000.

Business
Buildings
3. SIHI Btdga. Foctory Cloll-

No -

HOME, 2 BATHS . Roomy
ro1rll:l! home IOCIIICI 1n tho country. Extorelve ~afollawa: nowlMmOOA-wlndows.
!IICIIIIy o»oro, ~~~~ olclng, llel\'y rout. Ill., caramlc
file entry oxtondod Into tha ldtcllen, 18x53 deck,
comont wlh lnd pad. Sot 11111 home 1n&lt;1 atop
loolclngllollllhn.
SWEET a LOW - Comfortable amall 2
, homO.
·. """' wotor. b. gas Ileal

dlflgiCful3 bodrm., 2 bllll homo. lArgo born wholll

Lots 8o Acreage
Land For Soli: Ponar Aroo I
Lqwor Rlvlf Road, On Land

l

tni F0U11 BEDIIOOIII

35, dO!Ml iO Plnacntsl Nursing Home .

35

'

DIAN Cl\t.LAHAN, RE IlLTOR, 446·6106
' EUNICE NtEHM, REI\!.TOR, 446·1197
RUTH BARR, REALTOR, 446-0722
OEBOIIAH SCHES, REAL TOR, 446-6106
LYNOA FRALEY, RElit. lUR, 44H 806
MICHAEL MILLER, REAL TOR, 446-6106
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOR, 2U·95 75

54 Miscellaneous

- · Seve Thauoondll Quick
Cilllvi!Y •vlfltblo. Bob 114~410721, E""' 1131.
,

'.
'''
't
•'

EQUAL

Real Estate General

01111. 3011.0, 4Gd0, IOIIJOO, Act

\

(2/md{ ~ ~Wak PROFESSIO'!~R~l~~.~~!!R~~~-!~HRENCt

- NO DOWN PAYMENT • LOW
INTEREST LDANI Cllllllty for 1111s progl'om lnd
llllkt you · liodU1 Income can buy In tho
$101-- Don'!- out. Coii44Ha06.
DPPOATU~

I' 1': I

WE ARE NOW BOOKING SALES

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

,.,,

property.

614-307·7818.

RE~IDENTIAL · INVESTMENTS· COMMERCIAL • FARMS

t

I
I
I
I
e
Compl~re
on
I
I0

BROKER 446..0001
446·7075

a.-.

I

M U QR U 0

I

Slopfllt'
1200· 12HP

$150: Lorge Sactlonot Solo WHh
$100; 12 Go Shottun
Grata Ctrpet 530; C111 Clulln SOlo Sllopor 1110; Bitsao; NlnWoH- illotdllng Fabric S80: Ill stoom
1 Oaal. Apple Butttr 1CetUtl12&amp;; tondo SIO; 12 Tapoo, St5 Eoch.

~-~~·:;:::·=·==·~.had
been working overtime for
weeks. One night he arrived home

L.

r

I

F..r ErtrciM Mtchlnt

Whh stolr
AI-

LUNCH
MASON, WV
n3-578S
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: BEULAH B. MITCHELL

lAval Building Lot•Dol&gt;br Drive.
1001110. 10 Sell fm.
modlafoty. Price Reduced. &amp;14441-1Z31AftoriP.M.

537-1521.

Fronts on Vinlon St., Neal Ave. &amp; SR t60 (former
de of stock sale). Home on property at present off.
ers 7 rms., 2 baths, new kitchen, new window•.
Cal for more details.

AFFORDABLE HOlE IN
GREEN TOWNSIIIPt
Piclure yourMII In thi1 3 bedroom ranch
lotalld on a llmily oriertlld neighborhood lhat
your kld1 will lovat You will like the
convonlenca lo llhoppittg, hoipltal, otc. Homt
olara fonnal living room, famly tiMim, larva
Hl~n ldtdlan, 1~ kfl1 and 2 car garago. cal
IDday lo view thil homa.
. 1232

Farms tor Sale

38 KNI wMh limber, rul'll waler
.....ric. 132,500. t.tlrt .,.. • .
304..15-3812.

'

t-eoo-m-1521.

Spr'• rgllold

.:

'

ConcriC t l
Plntk: Septic Pteatlc And Medii Culvtrt llneh
Tenb, Jet AeriUon Ttnkt . Aon Thru 80 Inc h In Sloc:k. Ron
Evtftll Enttrpr..... J ackton, OH Evant, Jtck.or~, Ohio. 1-aoo.

MerchanciiM

Good lfllll01. $26,000.

Rockag!L Low Rotoo, Opon L11o
Wit~ Llll"tod Homoo. 1-IQO.SIII-

'

Cotamlc KUn I about 15 motdt
11200. 304-4115-3044.

54 Miscellaneous

MerchandiBB

l73fl. COIIIEIICIAI. or AEStOEIITlAI. • LAND
CONTRACT • Prtm1 E-.. Avo ..
0ppoo1untty to comt&gt;tM homO snd ""'*-· Ol!lo
River fronlage . v.ry nice 3 boG'TII. wflltlplar&lt;oS. lui ttasomont. TN!t ts 1 moy .-.g
pooposlton. cal tor apf)OinlmOnt.
1712. 7 ROOII HOllE wlh 4 toldiOOmS. tocatocl _,

Doubfo. Well, Sot&gt;llc. Foundl·
liOn l Driveway, Allin One Loon

'

I1--..1,;-;;-1-;:.

44

Land .tiorno Dove-. E~
. . Homl Center Wllf Show You
HDwl Your Ntw Single Or

33

Butchar Block Kitchin Counter
Top &amp; WI!Ho Pofctoln Doublo
Bowl Slnfl.l14-44&amp;-o02e.

Sport

LlcenM No. 45118

th&gt;n. Core F- VInyl Clod
Thwm"p·ne Windows, 103

'

I I I I 1

Term~: Calh or check wHh 1.0.
Lunch
AuctlonHr: O.vki'Boggs-t14 448 7750
Not responsible for accldenta or loss of

. Rell!l Estate

54 Miscellaneous

30W8N405.

A1lnbaw Homes

,•'

6

WHBEER

OWNER, TINA CALLAWAY

13728 Lie. l Bonded
Not reapon1lbla lor lo•tltoma or ~ecldenll.

54 Miscellaneous
· Merchandise

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 4
SALE - 3.4 ACRES, MIL in the City of Gallipols.

KREEPE

I·

Lcicated II 7381\W Ave., Gcillpels, OW..
Widdt for lifls.
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS: Cabinet
with flour bin, 141righl piano with bench, GE _ref.,
gas cook stove, lift chair, old stereo and cabinet,
table, 3 chairs, long buffet table, metal cabinet,

388-7370.
ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE 388-8880
ISAAC'S FEED STORE
Auctioneer: Flnlalke f -

Page-1)5

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

DROTA\~

PARnAL UST: lawn -mowera, bike, delk. ch~ln1,
alec. heat1n1, elec. fans, clocka, IIJ~caaes, dolla,
blower lor tum~. bird cage, TV, tihl, atael door~
magazine rack, end tables, canning jara, truck whee~
and_tires, curtains, coftee pots, glassware, rockers,
recliner, lawn seeder, c~ain saw, labia saw, alec.

~lora, oil heater, lamps, kitchen ftems, buller, slorm
Window tcreena;

Sentinel

PubliC Sale

&amp;A\Ictlon

SPECIAL
AUCnOII
.
.
WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 7 P.M.

Sunday Times

F R0 VAl

&amp;Auction

For lnformllllon call Auction- or I&amp;MC'a Feed

114-

,_,,

As a .linancial analyst my husba!¥1

JACISOII ST., ¥111011, OliO

AUCtiON

~\\.()'tA-&amp;'E~S

'

SCRAM-LETS
FLAVOR
TOWARD .
KEEPER
HEBREW
OUORUM
. VERBAL
BEFORE WORK

tlldnft. apt. for ront, taa5fmo,,

modo! 2 bedroom mobile

home,

ANSWERS TO

Apartment
for Rent

for Rent

moo.

wHh 7d4 ••!&gt;~•do. 3 bodrooma,
Wgl bot~. all lllctrfc Wlcontrol
lfr, undorplnnl'lf 2 . dlckt,
blacb, nice. 304 ~2568 .

;. ')j

·CONSIGNMENT AUOION

42 Mobile Homes

wv

''""'110

.

I

Slc:!it&lt;lad

approx. 18 ICNI. 40IC28 eabln hu W.B.
111M, 1011111\frnllhingt and ClfliOrl TheiW Ia 1 '*ivew..,.
lniO cabin. Thla Ia parfoct deer &amp; lurby arNI Graat

location lor the hunter or the .lover of lltt outddbnll
ASKING $17,000.

-In

..DOLEPOAT - GO INTO BUIINESI' with tltl1
com!llertill IMIIIdlng. Currwnlfy houMI b.. uty th.~p.
111100 lhop, w/2 -tly IWmD d1lod
upalllirt.
Don't want lo bo In bull-.? OK, buy thll and JUII Ml
bock and collect lhe monthly rontal incamet ASKING

•-Is

J53,000.

.

-.ENJOYABLE TO LOOK AT,.IUOlkotln,hU
tPaal torflmly
a - n -•an
room wilt rorgo t~. :1-&lt;1 - · spedoua

Tllll- ...... ""'

•

- In plflo
all - 'J • 1yowrwedi.Siulltd
·
andyour~.
lw?!
on

IYAACUIE -1M Clnla- Ranch ilylo home localld in
• verv nlclnaiGhbolflood. lncfudoa '3 bodiooms. etirport.
lfiPIIancae. Thll h0111e hal a. lot of •.~1 ASIONO

Sl4,1100., .

.

1oc.mll.

•

YOU IIAV HAVE WHAT IOIEBODY NEEDII WE
HAVE BIIYERI LOOKING FOR ALL nPEI OF
PACI &amp;en II Ai.L 'AAEAI OF nE COUNTYI YOU .
MAY HAVE JIMT WHAT OlE OF THEil WAifTII LilT
WITH Ul TODAY FOR FAll; COUATEOUI, •
I!FFECTM ACTiONI •

HENRY
E. CLI!I.AIID......-·- - - --·-·····-1111
TRACY:~---~~--._._ ..1.1!!!
•

JEAN TilliE .

- ·- ·- - - - - -Mil •••
oFFI= - - - - - -· - - - - - - , N-1111

.,;;

'.

t1a. 8AICK RANCH - llflllltod on 1 oc. rM, At 7 - t o - l n g conlor. Thll3
l&gt;ldroamo. 2 fill b'all'o, klc1111! onct dfo*'O - . 2
toodrOOmt. ,. llty room, family room, tn
_ _ o8 cordolacllld-.
-Clll lor _
. 3cor-oncl

r-.

UOI .
NEED A LOT 1Q BUI.D ON II crrt
UllfTS? - Thlo lot 11441&gt;1150 and hU 11 ...... on
lat. Prlcad $10,750.

1107. BULDfNG
1110 1 2 cor -

$21,500.

LOT 40xt&amp;G In etty - · Thlo 1a1
go- 2Slc311 olrtldy on lot. Ptfco

H11 . LOCATION - LOCATION • lOCATION a bullnlll .. ~lon . Thla OOIIMI&amp;dlll
property hU 15elt50 olopoca IOCalod on Elll.,
#&lt;Vo. OOcopjolng IIIII p!Operty lo 1 ~- boy, doflfii '"'Pitall!nd
8UCCIII of

- . . , -·For...,.

�.

wv

OH ·Point

July 19, 1992'

July 19, 1992
74

.
".

'

54

Mltctllaneous

'

Mln:handl18

61 Farm Equipment

71

Autos for Sale

71 Autos tor Sale

Nlw Hodlnd bl._, c1n ... In tm Cho~lo a.w. 350 1187 Ponlltc F~tblrd Formulo,
Auto, AC,
bfe Car, $100 H ,OOO llllto, Loododl 114-441!!Old
-kl"ll lhlt - -· Or OBO,IM
00.
1175.
good ...... :104-571-2894.
1181 AMC Eagle Am llol« 4
WID e.V, Auto, Ru!W Good
$1,000 114-31'1-2240.
• - Filllu!OO And Equlpononl
Hobool Moot law Mul Cubtr 1
1981 Oldo Brougham, new
Yr. Old, ac. CrNm C., 2 UMt
brown palnl:, V~ , motor I
~.,
Dllry eu•c:~~ Feed
trentmillfon. 11,300, F11lley
CoN Ant.
Pop
r, llart
whttlo. 304-675-2410.
9111Mng, let Chtal Allin Elct4llol COndition! 114-441-3161, 5 month old Point Colt, nlct I 1182 Blk Bor-ta Camo10 350,
1,.._7711.
vory gontlo 1250. or lrtclt lor 4 v.a, 4 opttd, T·Top, Rolloy
1,
month Of - r - typo htlltr whHio,$3,100. 304-875·1331.
WATERLINE mE
314 ltloh 100 Pll 1M5 1 ltloh 100 Of Olttrt ctll. 304-111-'IHI.
1183 Buick LIStbro, 4 dr, Air, 4
PJI 133.10 Ron Evtno En- Llvttlock Htull1111; Anywhtro, Now Tlfto, hcllltn1 Condillon,
lorpri-, 1-537-1121.
Anyllmo. RNoonoblo R-. 114-317·7891.
Triolo Crook Trucking, Chuck
1183 Chryoltr Now YOfkor
Wlfllama, 114-245-BOII.
L....,ry, Elllrt Nicol 11,000. 114Two 1 YNr Old Jorooy Slttrt, 314-8435,1M·314-el91.
BUilding
55
Groin Fod.l14-441..!1720.
Supplies
1183 Lincoln Town C.r; "'000
11t 446 0213.
-k. brick, _
olpoo, win· ,.64-.,.._H_a:..y_&amp;~G~r:-:al~n~:::- . llnllla, ole. Cloudt Win- Hty lor 1111, 10und boln $20. 1184 Ford f.350 Ton Du.t
In, Rio Grandi, OH Coli Ill· NC!I. "'~"'" bollo 12. up. 304· l'!hHI~., DitHI, Good Condilion,
Mtny """'• 14,200, 010, 114-\
111-3110.
314-8113l
.
:;::..:.-:c:.:.:---.-~=:-:--.:­
56 Pets for Sale
SirtW I« tait, cltli..,., ovoi~ 18~:.~moulh Conq- Turbo,
able, call 814·192-1281, 114·eu. 5 S
'Mull Still 114-446-ll14.
ond SuPPlY Sllop Pol 1010,114-H2·111511.
1185 Mercury Cougtr, PSI PW,
o-~na.
•n lit'HIIa, """'·
Pol Food Dttlor. Jullt
AC, Cr11gar apun ahnlnum
·- .Con IM-441-0231.
Transportation
whools. Viry Sharpi Ami 1m/ Y-8,
12311, IM-141-2041 Of 114-llobr Forrolo, I WMkt Old, 114·
2171.
.....me. ·
71 Autos for Sale
1tae ChtYtUe Hlltl nice c.,
304-875-1111.
1852 MO Roodolor Aoplica,

'
a

Roolollrod Dol&gt;onmon
I Wotkt Old. Tallo
o.ctiWI RMIOved,

:.::- ;.:.;~-... ~ Cdoro Avoiloblo,

~-·
~ Atgiotortd Aualrtlion
PuDDito.
Vol

I4!0IIhtrd

C6Mitod. &amp; Flrll Viccloio Qivon,
$1fi. IM ... II·IIIO
AUolr- Slltphlrd Mix, Smell
Te Sind. EKCO!Ionl Pll
Or Walch Doa, 101 Shott, Wor·

1181 Ford Tornpo OL. 4dr, 1111 OIIC Slorlo SLE, tully
12,000 lliloa, Aut.,.~~d PS, PB, fot"::MI ft bod whh !!nor, 304-

~~. lv.n.,_.~ ;;'1111"'=-=·:c:-:=--=--=:-:-:-:-.,112
11n Black Ford Probe lltndard
Oodgrr
Ton PU V..!l,
~· ••40
Auto, Air, AMII'II, u. Mlloa,
Shl•• · 1••
~-·- ·
Auno Ooodll14441 8351.
1112 Ford .XlT p.u. truck, 302
ongino, 11,000MI,IM.gl24184.

=
73

Vans &amp; 4

WD'a

CJt f")]r/mid
Ac:R

76

Kawootki OPZ 750 turbo,
black &amp; rod, tooko &amp; runo iikt

1114

rn

Hllllll
. I'A..,
~ (:J.Jtz/,
M•U. 0/[u:t -JBB.BB16
8TG.C. Of{ict -446.6806
P51 Clork Cltol"l Rd.
21 L«wt St.
Bidwtll, OAio 45614
Gllllipolis, OhiD 4l611

1fl!l Oodae Wlncfotri Von, GoOd

Cloon, PB, PS. Air, !111
.1-·1304 Allor lp.m.
1114 Ford 4o4 thor! bod wiD
lakt gun tar por1i1! lrodt.-18111
Chtvj 4r4 lhor1 bod. 304-811-

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

Services

Harle~par1s: complete chrome

wlnda ltld,

1N5 CROO Excellent Condition,
114-404-7'110.

bago, 30H7~312.

Home
Improvements
All lypoo mltonl"f, brick, blook

tubta'
IIOCk air cla1nar, laathtr sadd'tt
damper

Home
Improvements
• BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

81

new, $2700, 114·992oo2247 atttr haadl ht, Inner prlma.ry cover

a,..

81

cludod. l14.,.46·737'1.

800·273'1585:

225 Vamaha 4 whHI•r. Hi-low
r11ng1, rtVtrst tlactrlc start.
GoOd COI1Cfillon. 11500. 304-87520'N.

79

Room AddiUons, Garages, Ex·
ltrlor &amp; Interior Palntfng, Ex·
perlanctdl Insured Located lo-

.

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

colly.l14-4....568,

Cond tlon, Must S..l $3,2t5i
1178 Nova 350 Higll Ptrlar·

1973 Dodge Mldn Mini Motor

JET

Home, 23Ft, Air, Otntralor,
39,000

8358.

Aer.tlon Mclors, rapalred. New

llilos. $4,900. 614·388-

Hom• lmpravememe:
Yeare Ew,.ritnce On Older &amp;
Newer Hornet. Room Additions,
Foundation Work, Roofing,
Kitchens And Bathe. Free e...
limat•l Relerenc11, No Job

&amp; r•buiH motors In stock RON

••

EVANS, JACKSON, OH. \.aoo.

Home repair and

BTU, AC,

for rtv.r camper,

$1500 OB ,IMo6116-122l

..

Allen C. Wood, ReaboriBroker-446-4523
Ken Morgan, ~•HoriBroker-446.0971
Mon Centerbury, ReeHor-448·3408
Jealllllle Moore, Aealtor-258-1745
Tim Watson, ReaHor - 446·2027

ing, 1*"2·2111.

Lit...
~·~~,

,.

AUDRit!' F. CAIIADAY, BKOKEll
U11DA G. BKIDJIORlt
IWlY~. n,om
REALTOR. 3711-26118 .
UALTOit 446-SS&amp;S,

.

Real Estate General

FUMFORSILE

WEU PLANtED UVING SPACE - BEDROOM WING
W/3 BEDROOMS, 1WO BATHS IS to THE LEFT OF
THE ENTRY. STEP DOWN INTO FORMAL UVING
ROOM. KITCHEN, DINING AND FAMILY ROOM
W/FIREPLACE ARE ON THE OPPOSITE SlOE. WEU
LOCATED LAUNDRY ROOM BETWEEN HALL AND
ATIACHED DOUBLE GARAGE. LOCATION JUST OFF
ROUTE 35. $58,000.

By owner: 115 Acre Farm,76 acre
tillable, 14,000+ lb. tobacco base,
8 room modern home, new 22x26
family room, 2 full baths, CA. One
of the better Gallia County Farms!
Call for an appointment today.

, WE HIED
LISTINGS IN
P.RICE
GES
DON'T LET THIS ONE SUP
Attractive and well mllntalned hoiiHI with
fenced in backyard, llum. lldlng, two bed·
rooms, one baUt, 1iargl endolllld bltck potth
for thoM wann tummer nights or 111joy Ute
cenlralllir. Also a one Cllr garage with 1111mgo
and muclt mora. Call for mora mfo. Only
$&lt;48,900.
1444

37NIII

LOG HOllE OVERLOOKING RIVER Owner Wlllll ~ lOki. Maka an on.r. Ulltd at
$26,900.
f.410

Real Estate General

\lllriolll Plono • AI PIIYtr Plono
. . . Rol.., N48a.t3a.

THIATY..fiVE THOUSAND DOUARS - BARGAIN
PRICED 2 STORY 3 BEDROOM HOME IN CITY.
CONVENIENT LOCATION. WAlK TO SCHOOL
CHURCH AND DOWNTOWN SHOPPING. IlLS K58

NEW UITIIG. 1PA11G AVE. lo lllo 4 bod·
room, 1 blllt, wood and brictc rand! wiUt family
room, dining room, din, tutt b a - t ftra·
place, llld gu hal Wlltr hMt, bu!IM'a penlry,
~t~elotld f111nt pon:lt, blllutitut bow window
wlwlndow - t and nwch rrtOM.
$32,000.'
Cal-y. "-'lutlong at lhlt
....

OWNER WANTS BOLD - This well bull btlck
home wllh 2 bodroomt, 1 boUt, laundty room.
living and dining room, klldttn, t cer ~
gamge. Large Wllk~n altic, nice patio and L·
shaped Iron! pO&lt;Ch and mora. Reduced to
$49,900.
1312

....,

WE WERE AFRAID TO ADVERTISE THE NEW
LOW PRICE ON THIS HOIIEI BUT QO AHEAD,
BOIIBAAO US WITH CALLS, WE'RE AEADYI THE
PROPERTY IS LOCATED AT 228 THIRD AVENUE IN
GALLIPOLIS. A TURN OF THE CENnJRY BEAUTY
JUST BEGGING TO BE RESTOREO TO ITS FORM·
ER SPLENDOR. THE NEW LOW PRICE IS $60,0001
WE'RE WAITING f'&lt;?R YOUR CALL
IlLS 13&amp;5

58

IV~ -!lA 124- a-dul
roncll typo w.,..tt I •• l
oldk1g od-. TNo homo hlo ..
,..,. txltollhll you htvelo -

NEW LISTING -

BroiidjOiJ

11., Rlclnt. Thit ronch typo
homo hii311R. 2 biii'O,...,..
iivklg room, I.C*Y 100m. Alto,
lttll ontl
canlnl llr. Call Ul toelly lo
·
propoNCI
lr*r
lot.
U
aaoo mil, priced !WIIIor a quid&lt; took olllil - · Prlcid tor I

-mort!. -

-·COli~, 10 - · ·

IPA..G VALlEt MEA II' thlo apacloua
lmmacullta ranch with 3 boocln&gt;omt, 2 bolht,
family and dnilg room on ie....t lot. Aloo largo
dod&lt;. YounMdtG-IIilone.
1444

I P.M. 14 211 U11

!it&gt;

~

FJrrn Supplies

'

' _._Ci -

,

'~;:..(

...

•

FOR BALE - 40 ..,.. tann locattd 8
on
Roulo 1~1 011 Uncoln Pika. Tho home has 7 roomo
lrld balh. Thora ia a bom and other outbuildings. Also
• lann pond and lobacco bo...
ON STAlE ROUTE 553 - 11 rooms, 4 bodroomo
living room, lining room, 2 kite/tens - 011e it
bulllllitt llmost 3 aen~s, tru~ ttHs. celar, f11118Q8 an•,
building. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT TC.
'N QAWPOUS - IIAICK HOllE - 3 bedroomo, livir ..
oom, kitch~iii'"U'
baUt, finish.&lt;
JUOmenl
:
!tty room, and •
4orago room. :
tn-gtOUnd ad • DliiQO buiding. MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TO SEEIII
1114 DOUBLEWIDE IIIOBILE HOllE Only- 24x50,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths. FA Eiaclric heat. PRICED TO
SELL
HOlE AND 2 ACRES II or L - 3 bodroomo, I bath,
living room, kitchen, fireplace , and untintshad
' - - l PRICED AT $36,500.

CID1'h.

CREW RD. - it Ilia u...,_ oontom~rary wilh
3 btdloomt, 2 bllltt, flmily nn ., dining 1111,
11vtng rm. and kitchen. Two deck• aM way
around houM. Full batement and mo,.. Only
1427

SPUT ENTRY DESIGN. MAIN LEVEL CONTAINS 3
BEDROOMS, 1Yo BATHS , KITCHEN AND DINING
ROOMS AND UVtNG ROOm. THE LOWER LEVEL
THAT WOULD NORMALLY BE A BASEMENT HAS
BEEN TRANSFORMED INTO MORE USEFUL UVING
SPACE. GARAGE IS ALSO ON LOWER LEVEL LO·
CATED NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL. $85,000.
•
IlLS 1363

l:lllt now I t t - wood clorinl!
~""-· $221 OBO,I14-117-3107.

Rlwr V&amp;ew F1rm1 Product, 7112

446·1066

mainten~nce,

fAislcsl
Instruments

111!11 So. 01 Oolllpollo On Sl. AI.
7.*"riAt Baughm1n't Farm
rwn Pri&gt;duco, 10 A.ll. •

11'~~!~!.~~~0,[nc.

roofing, aiding, gutlert, room
tdltlont and lnltrtar r.mod•

· HOMES FARMS &amp; ·coMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
25• U?CUST STREET GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

,,....... 115• •

\

\

J::·

-

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

25ACAES 1M.- LOCATED IN CHESHIRE lWP. NICE
PRIVATE SETIING. LAND IS PARTIALLY WOODED.
LARGE 3 BEDROOM HOME. EXCEPTIONAL BUY AT
$39,500.
IlLS 1351
lWO YEAR OLD FAAIIE RANCH WITH BRICK
TRIM ON LARGE LEVEL LOT. HOME FEAnJAES
CHERRY KITCHEN CABINETS, SNACK BAA, 3
BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, 2 CAR GARAGE, ELECTRIC
HEAT PUMP. PRICED TO SELL FAST AT $57,1100.

LOCAlED ON UNCOUI PIKE- 3 bedrooms, living
mom, kitchan, family room, balh, new carpet, sll&gt;rage
buldint. )I acre MOf L CALL TO SEEII
tN GAWPOUS • 3 bedrooms, balh, kitchen, livi~ room
basement 21ols, 20K150 &amp; 37xl50 Cali tor appotntmer.•
LOCAlED tN GALUPOUS - Vine Slreat- 4 ronlal
uniiJ, good incoma proparty. Call tor more
intonnation.
'
HOUSE IN QAWPOUS- 3 rooms and boUt. walking
dstanCII to schools and siDras. Prictd a! $16,000.00.
WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rod-ley V~lage II. Cal
tor morw intonnation.
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY
--;.;~ OURTOLLFREENUIIBER
...

t .IIOI).ft4· ' 0&amp;11

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

STORY'S RUN ROAD - 7 VtUr old home wiUt
3 bedroomt, 1 batlt, 2 Cllr gan~g~, 33 acrat,
bom and lhlda. Aaking only $45,000.
MOl

&amp;Ltvestock

'
CLOSE TO TOWN - 4 bldroomt, 2 boUta, liv·
lng, tinlng, family roomt, natural filii heat,
-lrallir. Aoking $74,1100.
f.424

BEECH IT. - Approx. 24 acraa wiUt a
lui two ltory colonial homo overlooking
Pomt111y. Exacutiva alyt. hoiiHI with lonnal
entry, family room wltiraplace, formal dining
room; battmtnt hat IIIC. room will! l4one fire·
placa, in-ground pool. 2 car flllrage. Many
mora
· Reduced to a low price of
$1 •
f.413

PIICE REDUCED! To 148,1100 on flit nice 3

IN THE MOVIES A WHITE HAT
YOU SPOT THE GOOD GUYS.

badroam vtnyt oidld " - wllh 2 baUtt, living

lWO HOMES ON 14 ACIIIES
you gal two homoo,
roomo, 2 batht, new fl~plac:e,
and air contilionor, vinyl
bedroom, bath, lau~, living room and
on, 50x60 bam, tobtcco bott, new fenCII end
tio houtt and mucl1 mont. Call tor mort into.

nn., tinlng nn., llmlly rm .. din, hilt pump,
-lnllllr, boMm111~ 2 bomalrld much mora.
On 8.2 11111. Cal today lor eppolnfmll1l
f.4H

-·

fl71. CORNEA OF SA 141 AND GRAHAM
SCHOOL ROAD - 2 or 3 BAs, ball!, kitchen,
LR, central air, al1aelttd garage. Prictd tor flr.l

M58

IN REAL ESTATE THE REALTOR®
·LOGO DOES THE SAME THING.

3 btdnJom ranch "-1 Nlldtt 1
lilllo oprucing up. Nice oizld lot 72'x150'.
Attached 1 car carport. MAKE OWNER AN
OFFER TODAY! Aoking low $30'o. .
M52

RUSSEL D. WOOD
Owner/Broktr
Eve. 446 4618
TAMMIE DeWITT

REALTOR®
Look for the REALTOR• Logo to find the commitment and
full services of a real estate professional.

SOUmEASTERN OmO BOARD OF REALTORS
90 MEMBERS OFFEIDNG PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

Sales Agn

Eve: 441·1514

tim•-·"·

WE HAVE mtiCT ORDEAl TO BELL
NOWI - Reduced pile; $5,000.00. 2 atory
home will 4 bldroomt, living lllOm, kllchtn,
1aJV1 Wilk-in clotll, Cllfler, latge f111nt po~~:h
and mont. Callodly.

PATRICK A. COCHRAN

Otllct Ma~~~g~r

1453

•

BrolrMIAgent
E'tl'l:3~14

NEW U8TINQ - Rench llyle homt, thtH
btdroomo, family room, ext,. nice alzt Iota,
hltdwoocl ttoo ... HoiiHI ia w.ll built. Rutland
•f.4N

Sales Agent

MARTHA L SMITH
Sales Agent

Evt. 256-1138

E'tl'l. 371-2851

PHYLUS L. MILLER

Evt. 448 8815
J. MERRILL CARTER

•

CATHY A. WRAY
Salt1Agent
E'tl'l. 441 42H

CYNTHIA J. DRONGOWBKI CHERYL L. LEMLEY
SaiiiAgent

Malgs Co. Agent

E'tl'l. 24HII7

E'tl'l. 742-3171

.

11M IECLUIION _ 11 you war&gt;t to juot get
·by our11K have 1 privata cookOUI. walk
~~~~~Ja opal Mjut! enpy netu,., !hen don't
t.t IIIIo ..,. get away. 4.6 .. ,.,, mit, 3 BAt,
LA DR. kitchen accaot to boating on
~~· cra:..C. city Khaolt. Call Ruth tor
moN details.
11 .... OWNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE
TO PI lOOt- otdar home wilh Iota ot polanlial
located In town juot a taw blockt lrom ali
*'-"' H- on.ra LA, DR, ldtchan, 1ll batht,
1 BAa, gu heat. latge attic.
1171. WANT TO HAVE BOllE RENTAL
PROPERTY? Thll p111pttrty It loeatsd on
Uncoln st. lind 0"'" 2 unltl. Coil for mo,.
dltalla lrld price.
·
2.
LJHCOUI
PIKE
WEU
KEPT
HOllE 117
I BAt, 1\!o beUto, equipped ldtchtn, LA.
attached geiage, clack, partial baMtnent,

1172. UNCOLH PIKE - WEU KEPT HOME
- 3 BAs, 1Yo batho, aqulppttd kitchen, LR,
attached. garage, dock, partial baMment,
fenced yard.
NEW USTiilo- CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN
LOCATION - Owner hat ratirad and wants
"""""'ing tmaller. This 4 or 5 BA home hu 2
batho, moclam llitchtn, contra! air and mucl1
mo,., I.Dcalad 11 4t4 3td Ave. $52,900.
1173. SELLER WANTS TO RELOCATE Nice mini r.nn tor Ute family. 3 BR hom• on.,.
2 bathl LA OR, kitchen and othlr axtrao.
o-r uya bring Ullll1 offort 24'X32' gtr.gl .
1110. RIVERVIEW FROM 'YOUR OWN
BACKYARD - Vtty nice a! brick h01111 ofllln 3
BAt, LA wl!lraplace, equipped kitchtn, lull
beuTMI.

1171. DUPLEX FOR IALE...In city, 11ngo and
refrigerator In each unit , ..ys, city utitltioo.
Good lnyo-t property.

r.no.cl yard.
1142. ltf,IIOOII - WHY MY RENn- AMch

1110. WHilE ROAD - ~ aeroo, mil, viCIItt
l1111d, apptox. ~8111»:Wdm Chorolalt laka.
f2C),OOO.
'.

t171. JOHNSON RIDGE AOAD...Acldllon

..... LOOKING FOR A PLACE FOR A NEW
BUIINEII. SA 160 ntar Bulavillt Pike,
appiiiX. 2Qar:l.(l:/ lot, all tdllltti!VIIIabll.

~ holllll on SA 1e0, 3 BAa, LA, kitchll1,
balh, attach«~ gerago, 1OOli300 lot.

'IWp. -3M ae,. tann, 3 pondt. lobacoo batt,
ISxttO bam w/Qoneratt nooro, mar oo,noldar
aptlt.

1612. PRICE REDUCED
location in town. Very . nice
oriented
neighborhood. Home ofle11 3 BAt, both, LA,
DR, kitchen, gat heal, cent. air, extra nice
unatttehed 2 car garage with 1to11ge.
lmmaciata poaNslion at ctolino.
12•1. PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS
ONEI- l.atge log home can ba puldlattd wllh
162 acrto Of 2 ecrao. Thla homo otlaro 4 BRo,
3 batht oqulpptd kitchen, LA, FA, 2 flra·
placea, haat pump/cent air (badatp oyttom),
ovllllizad 2 car lllllehed gortgt.
1224. TAKE A LOOK AT THIIII- l.oealad on

$33,1100- GREAT STARlER HOlE localad
near town 011 SA 141. LA , eat~n kitchen, 2
BAs. baUt, latge carp~l Wei kllpl
1235. LET YOUR IIIAGINAliON TAKE OVER
with thit latge homo. Situolad ac111ss from
GAHS !his home otftt1 5 BAs, 4 balhs, kit~ ·
en, LA, 16X18 FR. II you Wlllltm room !his
Is !he ona tor you.
1540. GET COZY IN FRONT OF THE
FIREPLACE - Att..clive homa offel1 3 BAt,
belli, kilchtn, 12JI24 family room will! fi,.P.,.
and living room willl firoplace. Silualld 0111.12
IICAII mil, oppn&gt;x. 10 mirotloa from lown ..

COZY, COMFORTABLE HOllE, neat ao a
pen, otters 4 BR1, FR, LR, kitchen, balh, cent.
air, 1 ear flllragl. Green Elomanlary School.
Cal Ruth tor datllilt.
1115. IINI FARII...You wanl a tann with
very ntce okllr home, this one has been

remodeled, 3 BRa, LR, kitehen, bslh.

daclt. flllrdlns, fruit traes. berries, approx.
a. wooded. Call AuUt lordelails.
111S.IIID BLOCK SEC. AVENUE - Homo hu
a lot lo ottw. 3 BAs, LA , kitchen , DR, unat·
tachld heatod garage and workshop.
Convenient .. shopping.

16t7, NICE HOME, EDGE OF TOWN, LOTS
OF POSIIIIUTIES- LA, kitchen, DR, 3 BAa,
bolll, laundry. ' Pricld tor beginners. G....,

Stcondkto., wt1&lt; 1o 111111, eliun:h, achool and
ohopping. 2 mry " - of.,.kitcllon, LA, DR,
FA, 3 BAt, 2 balho, gu hilt central llir.

tlt1. INVESTORS - 4.PLEX tor sala... good
incoiiHI, aac1t unit hlo 2 BAt, LA, tcitelttn &amp;
bath. Call tor mo111 information.

MOBILE HOME juot at the tdile of tovot nat·
ed on .5I acre With a latge tilodc flllrtgll , city
ulililiN, gu halt and cenl air.
1150. CORtER LOTI - Vtry nkil " - o"·
ell 3 BAt, balh, ldtciMn, c.a!pet, flraplact, 1
car dafltclted gorogo.

t11t. LaGAANDE BOULEVAIID - AI brick, 3
BRo, LA, kitch111, balh, full ba10men1, ges 1151. PATRIOT AREA - Quiet neighbomooct,
eaty living, homo offers 3 BAs, LA, eat·in
!arced llir, ~ goiiQO, city tchools.
m:hen, nice ca!pet attaelttd gertgt.
1114. $21,1100 - 3lola + oldar home. Bidwel, 3 1264. COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - 1.4 A.
BRa, boUt, LR, kllchtn, wotlclhop and gar.ga. mil, 248 ltonlllga along SA 7,juslacroll 11om
Ohio River Plaza.

CARIIEL ROAD- Rio Chncla AM - 5 aert
!ott lor lillie. 18,900 uelt. Clil lor dalaila lrld
dir;rc:tlona.

U ACIIEs,lliL.- Huntington Twp., approx. 31
COZV, COIIFOATABLE HOllE, neat as a ICNI crop, balanca pootura &amp; wooda, 2 IIIDfy
pen, oh11 4 BR1, FA, LR, kitchon, bath, coni. home, 4 BRo, ball!, LA, kilchen, oonertlt blook
air, 1 car gorago. Graen Elomentary School. bam wllot tab. baM, tronllgo on Raccoon
Call Ruth tor doIIIII.

Ut,OOO - Cheny Drive, edga of town o" SA
180, small home lrld .816 ae11 11111.

.'

Mowroy'o Uphololorlng - ·
The
btlll in tumHuro u
tllno.
Coli 301-87~154 tor lrtt "'

tlmatu.

Curlis

=,:c;

Fruits &amp;
i
Vegetables
IIIII Aunnor bttno I fftth
f!lnOV, )01.77.1-5131.
·! !ill """"' btonll, $15o11uthll,
114-1112..11251 ori14-371-135S.

Upholstery

Fqe HtlmatM. Call COII.c:t 1•

446~636cA~~

7V09.

ot tunauo on doai I honto
.,..houf Corlloonor SOU'IHERN
~ATII 304..!175-2780.
Peodlo pupploo, loyi ond
oioo odua dogo,

'

ff1

Unconditional lilltime guannIM. local referencM lumlthtd.

Too Big Or Smoiiii11-317.Qii11.

537-1528.

Condhlon, Hiah Mi!etgt, ~
1187 Plyonc..n. HorizOn,
Condllon,
tlil:tOO; Oodae
Ornnl, u. !lot, 1:1,000; ,1111
Plym&lt;MIIh Rllltnl Slolion
Auto, Air, 14 441 0871.
Wogon,$3,200. IM4H.e251.
1185 BtiAir 4 Door Hardtop 283 1186 Ford . Eocort, 4 cylindor,
E1111lno, Auto 58,000 Actual 1utomatlc, good candiUon, no
Mllttl PS, PB, AC, Erctlltnl ruot, now lfrta, $1200, 114-1112·

wnho&lt;A Corti..;;;;!' ~ D
NQRTH PRODUCE -.
f!!!PPY ~ACK MANGE LOTION;
....,_ -~~~ ond htir
jj!Owlh IO ony mt"ll', hoi opol

'

Home
Improvements

New gn tanks, body parts, one
stone. Fret estlmatn. 304· 114·237-0488, day or night.
1181 Hondo XR·200, Good Con· ton lruck whHII, radlalort, &amp;
Rogtr1 la•m~nt Waterproo773-15052.
dlllqn, Recently Overhauled, floor mats etc. 0 &amp; A Auto
ling.
.,_. Boote And Glovn In· Rlploy, WV. 304-372·3933 or 1: Barnstt Home lmprovamants.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

ProltulonaiiY Buln, LIH Than
800 Acluol lllloo, Approiood AI
Ovor $11,000 Makt Oltor Or
Trodl For ALllo Modll Full Sill
Ton Lon\ Bod Pick.Up wnh

E:arr;..=. ~"9!:..,H~

'

81

lng trl county aNt 27

~naday

~ACK IIANOE LOTIOH:
~H HNIInti And Hoir

'
'

Home
Improvements

Real Estate General

tf,PPY

~

81

1Ht.

Oldornobilt
Royoll
manct Engine, Auto, PS, PB, 1186
AC, Runt Orull $"5, IM-441- Brougham Y.., AC, P!~ PB, PW,
Soola, AMIFM SloNO
8158.
CtotMIO. lotdodl Ali Sitek,
1H7 Pontiac Gr.nd Prb:, 2dr, 111,000 Milot. $SH5. Coli Pll
- . 114-241-033.
514-251-1317.
Boyer 114-111-'11171, 114-441llnlgonwynd Ctllory: CFA Por· 1171 Chtvollt. S2000 or will 4223.
··~ _l_ SliiMII Kittens. 114· lrtdt for 4wd Chivy l""'k Of
Mf-3114
Aftor 7:00p.m.
Oldt Cwllttt. :J04.811H215.
fWI Tonk, 2113 Jtckton Avo. 1m Otd1 II one Family Owner,
Pltootnl, 304-IJS.20U,
ljl lno T,...,...i llth 1 blrdo, 18,000 Acluol MIIH, Ali P-oro1 I:::::--=--:--::---:-:fiCiory Air, hellion! Condhion
...... anlmaltlnd 1~111.

Real Estate General

72 Trucks for Saie

Motorcycles

Sunday

Y-6, Show Clr, 1181 Chrylftr New Yarkw, Goad

Auto, Air,

oU&lt;C

71 Autos tor Sale

OH-Polnt Pieasant, wv

School.

c-.

�-.. •
"•

~,

~,
~

~

.P..ga

Pomeroy-MI~dleport-Galllpollt,

Sunclly llme.-Santlnel

July 19, 1992

QH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

Agriculture officials say Ohio still too dry in spots despite rain
~. TOU!DO, Ohio (AP)- John
larivl.. likes what he sees this
l'lltrilc-. His &lt;Uil,IIDYbeans
IIIII fn:lb procb:cuie ~g tmellilnb IOmcent heavy rains.
• ·
.

Farm
Flashes
,

But 1101 all areas of die Sllle can cry fiollllast yeu wben blisltring • Slate offieials say heavy rains
eX)ieet to ldwmd qllk:kly from 1as1 hellllld alaelt of rain withered his bave helped aqJS in some pans of
summer's drough~ agricullwe om- cror.! in die fields.
die re but have done liUIC to end
cals say.
'Last year wu a eatasttojlhe. a drc!u&amp;hL
Kurivial said this year is a far But riablnow '1\'C'~ in &amp;ood shape.
"Despite aU Ibis rain we've had
Exeefienl. The best in a long ... it's not going to change the
time," said ·Kurivial. who openlleS dr~ughl condition very much,"
a 6IJO.aae Wm and flesb poduce satd Walter Schmidt, an
mamt near die village of Swanton, agronomist with the Ohio Stale
about20milesweslofTolcdo.
University Extension Service in
"We've had over 3 inches of F'Uidlay
rainindlelaslfewdays. Too much
S,ome areas ofth~ Stale ha~e
.
of a ~ thing could be ttouble. rccetved IIIORI than 6 inches of ram
M · H' h But nRht now, everything looks since S"""•y. While the rain was
·
a I p.m. sesston at etgs tg
JIIQI.'rhe Slid.
good f~ps, not eilough water
School and a 7 p.m. sessioa at Rae·
coon Creek County Padt in GaUia
County. Dr. Steve Boyles, newly
appointed Slate Extension Beef
Specialist may also be in atten·
dance at die ~ session. No
pre-regisllation or enrollJilent fee,
JUSI show-up and learn.
Local dairymen may want lo
attend die 1992 West Virginia
Holslein F'teld Day on July 23 at
the Bumgarner Farm near Letart.
West v· · · The r.m kiW' will
start II ~(Fa! with die spel'km at
I p.m. Lunch reservlli0111 should
be mllde inuneclialely by ealllnJ die
Bumgamcn at 304-882·2066. Special youth activities are also
planned.
. ~ your c:alent!&amp;" to spend a
lot of time atrendtng the 43rd
Annual Gallia County Junior Falr
the week of August 3-8. After 43
years die ~ is still in die arowth
mode. Exhibtl.l by 4·H andF.F.A.
ACCEPJ'S DONADON • ContiDIIIDillll c:ommltment lo C1JID•
members alone are expected to DIDDily IIUvlct, ScMitlen O.m Coal CODipaay'a Melga Dlvlllon
exc~ the 2:600 m~. The fair· rectally donalecl $200 10 the Albany Volaleer Fin DeputmenL
board IB entcrtng die third yeu of a Neboa Kidder (left), eaaiaeerillcsuperlntfldeat for the Meigs
liveyearimiJI,OielllentJl]an.Onc~
DIYisloD, praealed tile c•eclt to Jim Fer,_ (rlabt), volunteer
the most noueeable changes thts flrt11111. Tlte
will be llled to purdWe aew eqalpmml for
year is a new roof for die Cammer· lbe departllleDL
cial Building.
B&lt;llld President Gary Roach, in
the president's m~e i~side a
front cover of this years fair booksays, "The volunteer usisl,ance 8l)d
CHESHIRE • Mark A, Simpson
community support put !nto thts
has
been promoted fiolll opentlions
event are tmmeasurable. Plan to
engineer to senior opaalions engi·
enjoy die fair!
neer in the operations de~ent
'
effeclive June I, Bl die Ottio ~
Elec!ric Cctlpontion's Kyger
Plant, according to Norman H.
Tm, plant m811ger.
Simpson joined OVBC in 1985
as an MMICiale engineer in the per·
formance department, and a year
later he wu promoted 10 perfor·mance engineer. In 1989 he was
appointed to aeting assistant chief
oerfmnance engineer, and in 1990
he was promoted to operations
engineer in the operations depart·
sta
.

'!"FL-.!J"
· ht ,...,.aObacco producer
1 WI Ig
·

·meetingscheduled July 21
ly EDWARD VOLLBORN,
Galla

c-t,.

Emulall AJe•t,
~

. " GAUJPOLIS • Hot 11111 humid
weather toatinues with severe
. . . doin&amp; wind IIIII hail damage
-~~~ IIlii¥ ol GaDia County last
-weetead. Muc:~ of the Gallia
·. c-1'1 ·- ....v. is in the 14·18

-A
-....
~=' =~.:',.,i::S:i:'W::

;&lt;da•a•ed by early season wet
:;, t i or ~ece~~t SIOl'IIIS JJII)bably
;)ave lite best potential (or good
:1ieJc1 lllat we have seen in ~nt
_,.._
~ A reminder of the Twilight
~TaMc:co producer meeting to be
:llelcl Tllelilay evening, July 21 at 7
a~_ne eVCilK'wilL\Il bOsled by
!djii'!Ci:My
family. Field
)i!iQ will st~~t' • die location near
:Jiit ' 1 iiiiCibi ol Slllle Roule 218
,ltitlllockr. Fork, one mile south of
;)o(ercervtlle. Mr. Bill Peterson,
itcMiaty Aaent from Maysville
:J , ty will lea!~ the dlscussioli
« tile bam 111eeUng later in the
Cold.IIOft drinb will be
5
' ided c:oarlesy of the local
' obac:co Association. Plan to
,
;; no lint in a series of special
lvea~~ thlll foeus on ForaJe pro·~tuc:llon and efficient utihzation
:,.m be lhiiThunday, July 23. The
:iopic: will be "Fescue Manage_.,, We a honoled to have Dr.
:Doe Bill from Auburn Univenity
jo vilit IOIIIhem Ohio and conduct

Jooefie

:o.em..,.

fdlered into ihe subsoil to relieve
the problem.
"When you get that much rain,
you get a lot of runoff. That runoff
helps some of die reservoirs. But as
far as buildlng up die subsoil, that
takes continued rain for several
days. You don'tlose· it overnight
and you don't pick it up
overn•$ht," said Terry King, a
statisticlllll with the Ohio Agricul·
rural Statistics Service.
The National Weather Serviee
said seven of die stare's 10 climate
regions were in sevm or extreme
drought. Three regions were in
mild droughl Extreme is die most
sevm eateg~ as measwed by die
Palmer Drought Severity Index.
The index did not take into
acrount this week's storms. They
will be refleeted in next week's

Agriculwre,_said hea.vy rains will
heln some drought-stricken areas.
1'11 is really. going to help tile
crops. But we still doil:t ~ hoW
much of the water ts gomg to
replenish the subsoil_... If Ibis rain·
fall - 5 and 6 inches - had been
spread over a period of time, it
·COIIkl have been a litde better ~
having il all come down at once,
he said,
oL:J'recipitation across the state ~""
year is about normal, Benedtct
said. The problem is that Oh~o
hasn't recovered from last year s
drought, when Skecipitation was 50
percent below normal tn some
areas. he said.

Amerlean Built Slnee 1946

LOWELL C. SHINN TRACTOR

•
•

employee of Cheesebrew's Veal
Farm and Bob Evans Farms. He is
presently enrolled at ATI in Woost.·
er.
Lambert, son of Eli and Ella
Lambert of Centerpoint, is president of die Southweatem FFA. He
was also active in football and
choir. His agrk:ultural experience
program includes farrow to fmish
hogs, beef cows and tobaceo. He
was an employee of Cbeesebrew's
Veal Farm, Altizer Farm Supply
and Spwloc:k Farms. Tom will be a
senior at River Valley High School.

GILUPOUS, OH.

ARNETI FORD

One Of The Oldest.Ford Dealers
Is Now The Newest!!!
I

Areal Stihl. Rui!!!ed. Dur11ble.
Long-Ltsung. Yet lightweight and
easy to handle.
Features Include,

ETTFORD

• Llfeume w~rranty on electroni c
Ignition
• Dual-line cutting head with auto·
matlc "bump" line adv.lnce.
• Powerful )0.2 cc engln e that runs cool
• Flow-through primer for easy starts.
All the qu.1l1ty that has made suhl the most
respected n•meln out·
door power tools at an
unbehevably low price!

.

.

....STIHC.
....,,....,_
O'DELL LUMBER
,,. ••••• $1.
.p••HAIIMIDICE

.

Has Moved To Their New Location At The Comer
o1 Mayhew R"d and St. Rt. JZ,
. Jackson, Ohio

,
129 5

$

POMIIOY,OI.
992·5500

Page4

Low lonlghlln mid&amp;.

Tuesda,,·, chanct or rain 60 per~
cent. High near 80.

1 Secllon, 10 Pogoo 25 '*'II
AMuiUmodlo Inc. Newoooaer

Some protest
prison plans

LOADING TOMATOES • Tony Rood, 1 worker on the Buck·
ley farm Ia Reedsville, loads tresbly picked lom1tues onto a trac·
tor, drivta by George Buckley.

614 446·1'"

Neal, Lambert receive
State Farmer's Degree

10-11-14-25-37-41
Kicker:
102682

DOES MORE
COSTS LESS

240 UJiiiiR RIVER RD.

MARK NEAL

Super Lotto:

t .......,. ....

ihe Ohio Depanment of

I

Saeet, Middlepon.

COI.lJ)GIUS -!Utner South·
...., Hillt Sc:hool SllldeniS Marie
Neal aad fom ~bert received
die Stile ~~ Degree on June
19 al the Sl&amp;le Future Farmers of
A-a (FFA) eonvention on die
Ohio Still: Univasity cantpUS.
Neal, 1011 of Mark and Adra
Neal or Centerpoint, served as
:soathweslerD FFA chapter vice
presideat ia addition to being
active ia twttmeJI and choir. His
aJfkultural cxperienee program
·iacl•ded market steers, Angus
eow1 and tobacco. He was an

nator with

drough ___.,

Plows, Tills,
Cultivates, Rakes Hay,
Cuts Grass, Dozes, Harrows, Plants,
Grades, Furrows, Thatches, Lifts
Heavy Loads, a!"d Removes Snow.

,menL

TOM LAMBERT

.

Bruce Benedict.

Pick 3:
8%
Pick 4:
4598

POWER KING™

••e,

Simpson and his wife, Reaina,
are die piRIIts of one son and one
dat&amp;hrtr, and they live at ~ Prarl

report.

0 hio Lottery

Kyger Creek
LL tourney
resumes

FRESH PRODUCE • Clifford Hill, owner of Clifford Hill
Farms in Letart Palls, •aids a bo• of tomatoes just picked from his
144-acre farm.

Farmers'
produce
ready for
markets·
By JIM GLAUNER
Sentinel NeW8 Staff
Tomatoes. cabbage, sweet com,
green peppers, cantaloupe, water·
melon • these prod~~:e crops are an
annual $2.5 million dollar Meigs
County ~iness. c~tin$ summer
jobs at a time when work IS scarce.
Meigs County farmers have
begun picking and packing their
produee, readying it for marlcets in
l&gt;etroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh,
Indiana 811d other wholesale mar·
kets.
Produce farming is good for
both the Meigs economy and Ohio
eonsumers who want Ohio prod·
ucts, according to Hal Kneen of the
Meigs County Agricultural Exten·
sion Service.
"Local people want Ohio-grown
stuff," he said.
Kneen said farmers are benefit·
ing tram a small upl!J111 in the produec market, a result of drougb•
li conditions in California. However,
Jeff Harris of Harris Farms and
Greenhouses in Portland said the
California drought only helped
farmers last year, and he has
noticed.a decrease in area produce
farming.
"There used to be hundreds of
small growers, and they're just not
around anymore," he said.
When produce farmers die or
retire, few people stan new farms
to take thetr place, acoording to
Harris, because the business is
labor inlenSive and difficult to get
off die ground. Also, it is hard for
small farmm to oompere with larg·
er farms in places like California,
where produce can sometimes
grow rear-round.
This year, however, Ty Brinager
of the 144-acre Ty Brinager and

~shonfall.

'the ne!"spaper said the Coury

the community that the majority
definitely favors the prison and the
expected boost in the economy that
it will bring to the area," John
Meyer, spokesman for Gov .
George Vomovich, said Sunday.
He said he did not want to speculate on whether state officials
would change their minds about the
prison if they determine most of the
residents opposed iL
Rodney Rohrbough, 42, owner
of a trucking company, said he has
mixed feelings about the plan.
"More jobs would be good, if
that really happens like they say it
will," Rohrbough said. :·aut you
know how these things go, seldom
like it's supposed to."
Jeff Braden, 23, said the area
needs the economic boost the
prison would give 10 Noble Coon·
ly.

"I've heard the pros and cons
on both sides," he said. "I feel this
county needs all die help it can get
when it comes to jobs.''
He said he does not think plans
for the prison can be stopped.
"From what I've heard it's a cutand-dry deal"

Road work underway
on SR 7 at Chester
four miles of joint repair and
shoulder paving on State Roore 7·
beginning at the intersection of
State Route 248 at Chester is
underway by the Ohio Department
of Transportation.
The Shelly Company of
Thornville is the prime contractor
on the $511,503 project. John
Dowler, deputy director of
ODOT's District 10, Marietta, said
that there will not be an asphalt
overlay on the road .
Completion date on the project
is Sept. 30. Traffic will be maintained throughout construction. The
project subcontractors include Tom
Mayle and Sons, Construetion,
Bartle!~ and Eawn Asphalt Paving
Co., Covington, Ky.

The Ohio Line, Inc. Awora, has
been awarded a contract for paint,

ing lines on VS,SO in Athens
County, and on various routes in
Gallia, Hocking and Meigs Coon·
ties. The contract price for the
painting is $590,057 and the eompletion date is Sept. 15, Dowler
said.
Guardrail on Stare Route 32 in
Athens County, along with various
sections of guardrail in Meigs and
Vinton Counties, will be reeon·
structed later this summer.
Dowler reports that the Lake
Erie Construction Co. of Norwalk,
plans to begin worlc by mid,AugiiSI
on the $472,750 projecL The date
set for completion is OcL 30. All(),
gether, approximately 10 miles of
guardrail will be reconstructed.

Clinton, Gore visit Ohio
PICKING 11ME. Sieve Jenldu or Clifford
Hill Farms plucks 1 tom110 from one of thou·
Sons Farm in Reedsville is starting
his own produce busineJS after
being a pattner a1 Harris Farms foc
four years. He is employing more
than 40 people this swnmer to pick
aboutlO,OOO tomato plants.
The produce busmess is tough
for beginners, but Brinager said
there are three keys to successful
farming: healthy crops, good labor
management and favorable market
prices.
"You have to have two out of
three of these things to have any
success at all," he said.
One of Brinager's keys to suc:·
cess, healthy crops, has been hard
to come by this year. At Harris
Farms, a recent hail storm seriously
damaged dleir tomato erop. Unseasonably cold weather in late April

sands or tomato plants on tbe 144 acre farm.

banter by weather than we have,"
County farms to begin picking sev- said O'Brien.
Some fanners hold other jobs to
eral weeks late.
"Last year, we picked 10,000 supplement their farming income.
baskets before the Fourth of July, They would not be totally devastat·
and this year we didn't pick one," ed by poor crops or low prices. But
said James Adams, owner of Steve Jenkins of Clifford Hill
Farms in Letart Falls is a full-time
Adams Produce in Letart Falls.
"This is what
Harris said the unexpectedly farmer.
chilly spring weather does not bode I've got," he said. "If I don't make
well for any farmer. "It was overall it, what am I going to do?"
Jenlcins said good labor is vital
cold all over the country this
to a produce farm's success.
spring," he said.
"If you don't have people in to
But Adams said the drought that
plagued the Columbus area recent- pick, you're hlll1in' ,"he said.
O'Brien said he found it diffi·
ly has not affected Meigs farmers.
Neither his farm nor Adams and cult this year to get the help he
O'Brien Produce in Letan Falls. needs, but Jenkins said he gets by
owned by Jim O'Brien, were dam- with less pickers, because he
recruits good help. Pickers some,
aged by hail.
'
"A lot of areas have been hit
Continued on page 3
and early May lorted other Meigs

High salaries come from subsidized centers, report says
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - At least
71 operators of Ohio nursing
homes ·that receive much of their
income from the government insur·
ance program b the poor are earning $100,000 a year or more, a
newspaper repQrted.
The Akron Beacon Journal
reported Sunday that a computer
analysis of Medicaid cost records
for W'subsidized nursing homes in
Ohio found that th.e operators had
!!Bid themselves or telatives die sill·
figwe salaries in 1990.
Gov. George Voinovich has said
Medicaid, which is estimated to
cost Ohioans more than $4.3 billion
over the next {ear, is one of the
main causes o die state's current

CALDWELL, Ohio (AP) State and local officials say a new
state prison in this southeastern
Ohio community would boost the
economy, but some residents are
questioning how many local jobs it
will genelllte.
Jodi Carter, with Concerned Cit,
izens for a Safe Community, said
the medium-see urity prison was
supposed to bring about300 jobs to
the area.
"Then, later, it was revealed
that about a third of the positions
would bt. filled by llained people
from out of this area," Ms. Carter
said. "Then they told us that a third
will have to be fdled by minorities,
and this area has no minorities.
"So how many jobs does that
actually leave for this area?''
Ms. Carter said the group has
collected about I ,200 signatures IQ
protest plans for the stare prison in
the village of I ,800 ~sidents.
"We don't want it, period," she
said. "The governor stated that he
wouldn't put the prison anywhere it
wasn't wanted. Now they're trying
to force it down our throats.''
"We've been assured by the
commissionerl! and other leaders in

family of l:uyahoga County paid iiS versity Hospitals of Cleveland at
various members mm than $2 mil- the time. He was paid $272,000 in
lion in 1990 from die operation of that year to run the 947-bed, DOD·
live nursing homes with a total of profit complex with operating rev155 beds, 60 peltetll of which wm enue of $307 million.
occupied by Medieaid patients.
Nursing home owners said it
1990 is latest year for which isn't fair to compare them with
computerized m:ords are available. · hospital administrators because
Stale reconb showed that in thai most hospitals operate on a non·
year, Coury brothers John, 'l'hoolas profit basis. They said most nursing
and Robert paid . themselves homes are profil·making ventures
~5.00&gt;, $500,797 and $512,625,
and their opc:rators deserve a fair
reward basks dley assume.
respectively.
Revenue from the Courys' nursThomas Coury told the newspa·
ing homes totaled $22.6 million, per he can't sptat for his_brothers,
including $13.8 million from Medi· but defended bis own 1990 salary.
"Whatever salary I'm paid is
eaid.
The newspaper said each of the well-eimed," he said. "It's by no
Coury brothers earned more in means a cakewalk. It's absolutely
1990 than Dr. James Block, who hi1h risk."
"1 don't need Medicaid," he
was chief executive offteer ol Uni-

said, adding that he had altruistic
reasons for retaining niiiSin~ home
residents who end up ~lymg on
government help to pay their bills.
"You can ' t kick people out
when their money runs out," he
said. "lt!s not the humanitarian
thin todo."
.
JI haven't seen the story yet, so
I can't comment on it," Robert
~ said Sunday. '• As far as our
salaries, though, that's all public
mcord and anyone can ... check for
themselves."
The newspaper said nursing
home interests have given more
than $62S,&lt;XX&gt; in campaign contributions dumg die last live years to
politieians who have been in a
~lion to pmerve Cl' enhance die
indiiSiry's standing with Medicaid.

UTICA, Ohio (AP) - Demo·
Clinton said it was the biggest
cratic presidential nominee Bill crowd since the campaign left the
Clinton brought the promise of bet· convention in New Yorlc on Friday.
ter times to this farm community Police Dispatcher Ken St. John
that gave him his biggest reception estimated today that 5,000 to 6,000
since leaving the party's national people attended.
conventiou on a six-day bus tour.
Clinton criticized the economic
"We have got a plan, AI Gore policies of the Reagan and Bush
and I do. A real plan to imrtement administrations.
our vision of an America in which
''For the first time since the
every man and woman ean earn a Roaring '20s, the top I percent of
decent livin~ from working hard, Americans control more wealth
support theu children and every than the bottom 90 percent. And
child can grow up w their fullest, what has happened? We've lost
Go&lt;J-given abilities," Clinton told jobs .... We've lost our position in
a crowd of at least 5,000 people ' the world economy. We're in deep
Sunday nighl
trouble today because we have
The candidates planned to speak gone on with an idea that has failed
at a health care rally this morning and failed and failed and failed,"
in downtown Columbus and at the he said.
Earlier in the evening , Clinton
Clinton County Courthouse in
Wilmington at noon.
chewed on a piece of straw as he
People stood on lawn chairs in and Gore sat on hay bales tallcing
the village of 2,000 to catch a to 50 local farmers at the fann of
glimpse of Clinton and Gore, his Ohio Democratic Party Chainnan
runnmg mate, and their wives. The Eugene Branstool, about 30 miles
candidates wore blue jeans and east of Columbus.
sport shins.

,..---Local briefs--..
Bridge to open in another week
The bridge on US-33 approximately midway between Athens
and Shade will not reopen until July 27 atleasL The bridge was to
have reopened Tuesday. However, last week's rain has caused at
least a week'sdelay in reopening.
The bridge was closed to traffic July 6. The closure is necessary
so workm can connect existing pavement with a new bridge whieh
has been built at the site.
DJM, Inc., Beaver, is the contraCtor on the $812,457 projecL
Another project, the resurfacing of 8.7 miles of US-33 from die
south Athens og;~ugh Shade to the Meigs County line is
also underway.
· for the murfacing began in late June.
Shelly and Sands, (nc., Zanesville, is the contractor on this
$619,246 job. Completion dsre·on die project is Aug. 31. Traffie is
to be maintained as the project pro~sses .
·
Coadnued on page 3

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